HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-11-22 - Orange Coast Pilot..
•
TUFSDAY, ~flVEMBER 22, 19 25 CENTS
Oil drill-ng ~ear homes app~o'\.'ed
Huntington Beach allows oU recovery
project in netghbOrhood near City Hall
neuwoman and residenJ clalmed
she'd prefer oil wells to more homes
at the site near City HaJJ. The
neiahborhood is bounded by Dela-
ware and Huntinston streets and
Toron\O and Rochester avenues.
The recovny and oil wtJI con-
solidation prnsram was approved
two years .,o but later rescinded after
conflict or interest cba,.es surfac~
apinst former City Councilman
John Thomas. AQavs sued the city
and the residents laier sued Anaus. •
environmental complatnts, voted
with Jack Kelly, Tom Mays, Peter
Green and Wes Bannister in favor of
the operation.
there from here. .. be said. 'Td like to
act at (the oil in West Texas) where
they love it. Bui you can't move oil."
WincheU said she bet.ievcd An&us
wall have a aood project, but it
shouldn't be 1n "that neighborhood." BJ ROBERT BA.RUA JV?-hour hearing, many of them °' ... ...,,....... residents raising fears of noise, safety
Angus Vice President John
Camuchael, speakma at the end of a
bearing that draaed on well pest
midni&ht.. said ilic 58 conditions
tacked" onto the ·project by city
officials arc the most intensive m city
history. :
A bitterly contested oil recovery and poJJution ~ds they worry wi~I prognm that will operate in the accompany opera~o!"s by Angus Q!l
middle of a residential nei&hborbood ' ~o. to recover 9 ma I hon barrels of 011
1WaS approved eart_y today bl the 10 the area.
Huntincton Beactf City Counci . A like numbcf of speakers sup.
Terms of the ~nient~ permit
Anps \0 drilt wells with 1,000-horse
power enaiQn for 24 hours, seven
days a week for two years. After that.
Anaus can <trill six days a week
betw_een 8 t ·'ll· and 8 p.m. for . a
maximum of 40 days a year. .
Jn the end, Councilwomen Grace
Winchell and Ruth Fioley stood
aJone-.ainst the pro,ect. Mayor John
Erskine. who succ:eufully proposed
that Angus pay for a part-time
employee who would coordinate
.. l wish tbeoil was an Costa Mesa or
Fou~tam VaHey. but ~ can't IC\
"Angus has chosen a more conve-
nient. economic way for Anaus. 1t
could be moved but the reaches
(drilhng) might be further."
Mark Poner. wtio" served 13 years as a city planl'!Jng commissioner, said More than 40 people spoke at the ported the. oil program. One busi-(Pleue ~ OIL/A2)
People In Dallas stop at
the memorial for Presi-
dent John Kennedy on
the 25th anniversary of
assassination./ A7
Index
Sutletln Board . Bu8'ness
Cl~fled
Comics
Crossword
Entertainment .
In the Servtee
Optnk>o
Peopte
Ponce log
Public ·Notices
Sports -W•tt*
..
A3
81-3
C6-8
86
C7
84
A8
A10
85
A3
C5,8
C1-5
A2.
Beating.
victim
' . . remains
critic&l
By-P AUL-ARCBIPLEY °' ..............
An assailant remained at large
today while his victim from a savaac
beatmg lingered in critical condition
for the fourth day.
Buffie Louise Hoose of Huntington
Beach was rushed to Humana Hospi-
tal Westminster in critical condition
with a fractured skull following the
Saturday morning attack by an un-
known suspect.
· A hospital spokeswoman said
Hoose, 19, suffered extensive head
injuries with multiple skull fractures.
Police are looking for a white male
between the ages of20 and 25, S feet
10 inches to 6 feet tall and weighing
from 175 to 180 pounds.
A man fitting that description was
seen in the area of the duplex at 610
14th St.. where HOQSe was living.
He was wearing a Kelly green
hooded sweat.shirt and ~ blue or
black.sweatpants and had short. dark
hair combed straight back.
The assailant was scared off during
the 4:30 a..m. attack when another
resident of the house went to Hoose's
bedroom after hearing the strugle.
The suspect, who was beating
(Pl_.., eee B&ATDfO/A2) Police cadet Jon BaaCJlt abcnn type of aweatnlrt worn by .wa1 .. 1-.... ...
J •
OCJail
escapees
fled in
stolen car
Three fugitives
freedcar·sowner
in Garden Grove
By BOB VAN EH.EN °' .............
Three of the four men who escaped
from the central OranlC County Jail
Sunmy evidently commandeered a car in Sant.a Ana after the breakout
and f~ its owner lo take them as
far as Garden Grove, the Orante
County Sheriff's Department re-
vealed today.
"The owner reported that he was
.. wort.ins on his car in • carport at an
apartment complex on Bristol Street
not far from the jail when be was a~hed by three men ... sa.id LL
Dick Olson. a spokesman for the department. . .
"~~ wearing sbons but no shirts. tokl the owntt ofthc car
that one o t.bcm had just had a bean
anack and that they needed a ride to
the bosp1ta.l •••
Once 1n tM car. ~"Ofthc: •= confronted the dtivff with a
TriO stand trial in Laguna.gay bashing
obJcct rcxmbhna a lcctcr opener. The
man drove the three suspects as far as
Garden Grove and was released
unharmed.. Olson wd .
.. He identified the three men from
mug shots as three of the escapees.."
said Olson.
The stolen car is described as a BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN °' ................
Three young men described as
members of a white supremacist
••skinhead" gang visited Laguna
Beach one ni&ht last summer specifi-
caUy to find gays and attack them.
their prosecutor said Monday.
Deputy District Attorney Thomas
Avdeef Said because the July IS
attack was alleacdly motivated by the
victims' sexu.al orientation. the three
_Court may
consider
.QC Jail's
food suit
• BJ JONATHAN VOLZKE °' ...............
A lawsuit filed by Orange County
Jail inmates who contend they do not act enouab spicy foods in their diet
may be ,ettina a taste test from the
st.ate Supreme Court. .
Assist.ant County Counsel Lon
Wauon said his office received a
&et1er Friday in which the hiah court
requested an informal point-6y-point response to the lawsuit filed by
jailhoute attorney Thomas Mani-scalco and a host of other inmates.
Wauon said the coon's decision to
bear the county's arpuneots in a brief
mans the court is takina the suit
ICriou&Jy to some dqree. but he
didn 'l .,.r a Juess how smously .
.. , think what they're doina by
virtue or the infonnal response ... is •yi' ·we don't think we can deny it out or band, so file ~ntn.' ..
WallOft •id. "I don't rad into it one
way or the other beyond that."
After the county files its responses.
whidl are due to the coun Monday.
the jusc~ can deny the suit or onler
a hearina on the demand. Watson
said.
Tbe case reached the Su~me
Court late last _year after it was
~ by tbe OnJWC County Su-
pcriorCourt and 4th District Coun ol
Appal in Santa Ana.
Manitcalco an ICCUtCd kiUer said
a ~ty of the inmates in the Santa
Ana ,Jail are Latino, but are lucky to
receive more than a couple of Meit-
icaH&yle dilMs a~· -rM iasnaacs ad..._the near--tcKal dqw'iva~ of' !Jtcir. UiCliUON_I Cliefs
and lalOft••" uftJMlt. unncca.ary (Pll J ID W ft'IOO/A2)
men have become the first to be
charged under a new state civil-rights
law designed to thwart crimes of
hatred.
In addition, the defendants -
Stephen Walther. 18. Aaron Com-
pean. 18, and John Moore. 23, all of
Huntington Beach -are charged
with attempted murder. attempted
robbery and assault with a deadly
WC<lJ>On.
would face a prison sentence of up to
17 _years.
·The trial. which opened Monday in
Orange County Superior Court in
Santa Ana. is being watched closely.
eseeciaJly among the py community.
Lquna Beach City Councilman
Robert Gentry testified that Hersler Part. where the attacks took place, is
often visited by pys, who he said
make UJ? about 30 percent of the city's
population.
Gentry, Orange County's only
openly gay elected official, has said be
believes th( three defendants visited
Heisler Park specifically to attack
aar.s there. 'It's rcall~ a p~ent-setting
move. es~aJly the civil rights
viola.lion.· Gentry said in an earlier
interview. "It's a real step forward for
our community and It sends a strong
message that this will no longer be
tolerated."
Robert Joyce testified Monday th.at reddish-orange 1986 two-door Ford
he: was grabbed from behind and Escort with a sh&htJy damav.!1 pass.-
attacked with a lead pipe, boots and engcr door. It bad South Dakota
fists as he strolled along the bluffiop · license plates. number 49R298.
in Heisler Park. As he was being allhou&h Olson said car thieves
pummeled for several m inutes. 1he gcncraTly remove the plates when
48-year-old Los Angeles man wd he the_)' take vehicles.
recalled one of thc youths scrurning. The fouresa{>CCS. who were still at
If convicted on all charges. each
.. Kill the fagot!" large thlS momma. include Michael
The severe bcaung left Joyce with a l..ec Taylor. also known as Anthony
broken shoulder. numerous bruises Gaanetu. JS. an ex-convict from
(Pleue eee GAY I A2) (Pleue eee ESCAnBS/ A2)
Closed campus .noguarantee for security
By GREG llERJtX °' .............
Las1 Tuesday. four Corona del Mar High
School students were injured when the car
they wtJ"C riding in slammed into a liaht pole
at an intersection near the campus. lwo of
the students were injured seriously and
remain hospitalized. Reckless driving
charges may be filed apinst the car's driver.
The students were on Jheir lunch hour and
only two of them were allowed to be off
campus.
The followina day, a senior at HuntinJton
Beach Hiah School reported he was atiacked
by several students who carved .. X" marks ..
into his chest with a knife. He was not
senously injured. but the school was shaken
by the incident.
The victim was also on his lunch hour.
Corona dcl Mar is a closed high school
campus. Huntington Beach is also closed. In fact. nearly every schdol district in Orange
County has what is technically known as a
closed campus policy. meaning students
must have special permission to leave
Cl!ll(>US and non-students must have pcr-
m1ss1on to enter.
But a clC>SN campus is not always a safe campus. as both incidents last week pro'e
Even undc1'idcalcircumst.ancc:s., accidents-
or worse -happen and school officials sa>
1hey arc hard-pressed to find 01her ways to
mamwn student safC'ly wbile not tummg
schools tnto pnsons.
..It's a battle because you hlve to spend a
lot of man hours to monitor the campus. ..
said Derck Hamson, dean of students at
Huntington Beach High ... You don't v.ant 11
10 look like a pnson. and t.heT'c'sonlyso much we can po with hm1ted raC>W'CC$. ..
Hamson said all hilh schools 1n the
Hunt1naton Bcac'h Union HiJb School Dis-
trict have a closed campus pohcy. This me.an
that anj-one -.uhinato viS1t a d1stnct campus
must first obtain a pus from the admm1s-
trat1on office. In addition. visitors can onl)
be on campus for businas or to pick up their
CM building moratorium
must await new council
BJ JONATHAN VOLU! °' .............
A building moratorium io Com
Mesa is ~ry with the P9•1F of a controvenial slow"lf'OW\h ln·
iliative, but the ban won't be im-
plemented until the city's new council
t1 sealed neJlt month. otftciall said.
Don Lamm. deputy cit1 rnaueer of developmental ten'~ rec-
ommended in a memo IO councJl
mftllbm mat the city impote a 4S.
day moratorium on all proj«ts became of extra wott necessary #tth
the ,.c''"' of Measure G. montoniam was not ap-proved.. howe~. became of a <klar
an 1tatina the new City Council Ed ~ and · Sandy Genis -ett
deCtid 10 ~ l\la10' OolJft Hell
and Ila~ tihedu. but ~ 00( teated -.use tbe couty Im )'ft to
plannu" department .
.. Anytbina constructed from this
Point Oft must ao to the plannina
commasaion or City Council for
findinp... Lamm said. "Even pro-
J«U ~1.tmptcd mus1 t° before the l'lann1na Comm1ss1on.
Lamm said the bu1ld1na Matf now
iswes t0me buildtnJ pmnats on
manor pn>jccts. such as pattO CO\-en
or block walh. but under Measure G.
evn thole plans mu.st ·ao to the
C'Om"'illioft. .. ,, adds a trcmendO\&s amount of
~ tame.·· Lamm •id. .. We
ddiaatcfy M\lt to bave addtt10naJ s&afl' eo MIMftt ,._" ~
Lamm Mid the 4j.dly motalOftMt
wo.ld live $c C1ty time to pnparc
rcquirei lnlClia and a ''*"' b llimNli"I lllc Uki 111 Id Wonloied.. ...... _........,..,
1
sons or daughters.
Students arc also bound by stnct entry~xit
gu1dchn" and may only leave campus at
lunchtime v.1th a pass.. and then they arc only
allowed to cat at home. But Harrison
admitted 1hert 1s hnlc school officials can do
about students who decide to go elsewhere.
.. We rcall~ can't keep track of them after
1hey leave.'' he said. "We provide as much
steurity as we can and there arc rules and
pcnalttes.. But -.c·rc li mited."
Students who arc caught off campus
v.1thout a pass or somewhere not authorized
b) a pass face pcnaJues ranainc from
(Pleue w Cl.08SD/ "2)
J
Btisfi tells GOP governors
he 'Illackle budget deficit Clouds move in; rain possible
POINT CLEAR. Ala. (AP) -
Praideat-dect Oeorte Bush said tod8y daaa as IOOn as he becomes
presideot he will name adminis-
tration officials to neaotiate solutions
to lbe ~ deficit and will talk to
mcmbtn of Conpess himself on ttie
problem.
"On the fint day of my presidency, l will name negotiators to ~nt
the executive branch in deficit talks
with the Conaress. I. too, will be
'hands-on' in talkin1 directly with
members of Congress, on both sid~
of the aisle," he told Rwublican
governors.
He reiterated, however that the
vote in the presidential election
endorsed &is stand that .. ,he solution
to the federal budget deficit is not
taJlcs."
The president-elect spoke to the
National Republican Governors
Conference in a crowded ballroom of
the Grand Hotel resort on the
Alabama coast. The GOP governors
earlier had stressed that close ties
. already have been formed between
the new White House team and
Republican statehouses.
Wuhinaton and return it where it didatn at all levels in his new job as
bdonas, to the states. I mean to chairman of the Republican National
continue this tradjtion because it has Committee.
worked and because it i.s consistent Atwater told aovemors tbat in the ~i:'J'. ou.r party's philosophy," Bush last three presidential races the part~ ~ bas won enouah key • .-.aies and .. l believe all of us share the same ltO&l'AOhic territory tbt h "could and
pl: a land of limited aovemment ihoUJcf win the presidency ritht on
and unlimited opportunity," he said. thtoUab the next century:•
Bush cahed on the GOP governors Sununu taid Bush has bclun form·
to w9rk with the administration "to ·~his econontic team with nis initial
provide compassionate and respon-Cabinet selections and will be del-
sibJc kadenh1p. As Republicans, Jet's vcJopina a defense team, pro1?9bly
work t()lethcr. and 1 mean this, to be after a brulc for the TbankJ&jvina
the party of all the people. Our ideas holiday. .
arc riabL" Atwatn accused by Democratic
He also touched on themes e•-critics of iowerina the level of the
pressed earlier in the four-day GOP presidential cam~i&n aod aivina ii
governors conference by membcri of an eJemcnt of racial divisiveness. ,.id
the new White kfoust team, including the party has .. an oppo'nunity in the
the goal of expanding ttk Republican black community, .. which has voted
Party at all levels of govemmenL ' .heavily Democratic. In the con-
" My point is that we are on our way ference ball as he spoke Monday there
to becoming the majority pany in were on!_y a couple of blacks In the
America -1f we don't lose siaht of crowd ofperbaps 400.
what is driving our success." he said. ··stack outreach is_ a top priority,"
At the start of his speech. he Atwater said, along with ··Hispanic
mentioned the conference's ho_st gov-outreach."
ernor, Alabama's Guy Hunt. who in As for his own role, Atwater said,
1986 became the first Republican to "I'm not going to try to be a national
wtn the state's governor's office this celebrity. l'm not JOing to try to be a
century. statesman. Thatam't me."
Bush has tapped one GOP chief Thombuflh said his office will
U.S. Temps. E:stended
TOOAY
Bush said the I 990s can be the "the
decade of cooperation... with the
party offeri114 compassion along with
leadership. 'This. is a time for
brin.Jina people t<>tlether," he said.
"Simply put, I mean to continue
what Ronald Reagan and I began in
1980 -to stop the flow of power to
executive, New Hampshire's John have a "fufl agenda" in the Bush
Sununu, as his chief of staff. And administration. which has labeled the
Monday he said Attorney General drug trade as "publice enemy No. I."
Dick Thornburgh, the former Penn-He said the statehouses ~ in the
sylvania governor who once was "front line" of the fiaht and that his
chairman of the GOP conference, will office will be working with state drua
hold the top Justice Department job directors as well as law enforcement
Smog Report 5-ICI IOw 2:ft p m.
8-ld ..... 1:13 P.11\.
--IN\'
1.2
4,'
Two houses burn
in Laguna Beach
in the new administration. personnel.
Sununu and Tbombuflh both Thornburgh also said there must be
spoke. to the confe~nce ~onday, major change on the demand side of
stressing close rela~1ons ~th ~he the drug problem to bc&in resolvina
states on a range of issues including it. He said programs in the nation's
fiahting drugs. Bush campaign man-schools should "make sense" to
ager Lee Atwater also promised a full· · young people about living a drug-free
scale battle on behalf of GOP can-life.
t:Je Lift. 1:MLll'I ):14 p.m. ... p.m
11 7.0 u 4.0
Residents escaped unharmed
Monday night from two Laguna
Beach houses that caught fire. hurling
flames nearly 50 feet high. ESCAPEES COMMANDEERED CAR ••• From Al ~ Laguna Beach fire officials are
investipting the cause of the 6:25
p.m. blaze along the 1300 block of
Skyline Drive.
According to reports, the blaze
started in a greenhouse behind one
house and quickly spread to the roof
of the house next door. Neighbors
said the two houses were occupied,
but residents were unharmed.
Firefighters took about 10 minutes
to control the fire. but not before it
caused an estimated S35.000 damage.
OIL DRILLING1>K'D •••
Prom Al
the . project is a~ ex~mplc of spot
zoning because 1t mangles a heavy
industrial use an a residential area.
But Jean Mclious. an attorney.
claimed the recovery proeram com-
plies with city zoninJ laws because of
an "oil overlay" (desJgnation)alrc:ady
in place for the area. .
John Murdoch. an attorney for
residents fighting the S2S million oil
recovery program, said t.he plan
violates equal protection laws be·
cause it takes oil wells from other
areas and consolidates them in front
of the residents' homes.
"It takes the miseries from other
areas and put.s them in their yards,"
he said.
Chicago accused of a Huntington
Beach jewelry store robbery that
erupted into a gun battle last April.
Also at lerge were Richard Fluhar-
ty, 26, Eleazar Gonzales, 20, and
Steven Wilson, 26.
Olson said the three who com-
mandeered the car were identified as
Fluharty, Wilson and Taylor.
"That means Gonzales probably
went off on his own," he said. "He's
from Santa Ana and be has extensive
contacts in the city."
The four fugitives, along with a
CLOSED CAMPUSES NOT ALWAYS SAFE ••• fifth man who was injured and
recaptured. cut a hole in a security
fence on the roof above the fifth floor
of the central men's jail in Santa Ana. Prom Al
detention to weekend classes to
transfers to allernauve high schools.
Harrison said.
Still, Harrison sajd, there are many
loopholes in the system ·that are
difficult to enforce. Some students 'Ji.ave work-study classes that take
them off campus. while others have a
li&btercourse load which allows them
to leave campus earty.
.. There are a lot of built-in prob-
lems that allow students to leave
campus when they shouldn't." Har-
rison said.
Harrison declined to comment on
whether the closed campus policy had
any bearing on last week's reported
attack. The victim was apparently
walking home for lunch when he was
assaulted.
who are mobile and maybe one or two
people trr.mg to keep track of them."
Nicoll sa16.
Tom Jacobson. principal at Corona
dcl Mar, said about.balfof the junior
and senior classes at that school have
permission to leave campus for
lunch. That amounts to abou1 400
students. he said. Four adminstrators
and two security guards patrol park-
ing lots at lunchtime. making spot
checks of students entering and
exiting the campus.
Jacobson said the checks do net
some errant students from time to
time, and said that two of the students
involved in last week's accident did
not have permission to be off campus.
But his answer to the question of
greater enforcement was similar to
other school officials.
"To do that we need more staffing
and it's not there," Jacobson said.
Avenue durinJ a lunch break. scaled ~own three stories with a
Only two of the injured youths had . mak~sh1ft rope to another roof and
permis.si'on to be off campus at a time then Jumped to the gr~und and fled.
when University High students, with · ~ Santa Ana res!dent reported
parental permission. could leave seeing .S<?~cone getllng out of_ an
campus at any time for any reason. orangeJ~llJumpsu1tan~ reported 1t to
Two of the students' parents socked aut~onues. who then ~1scovercd that
the district with multi-million dollar the inmates werc m1ss1ng.
lawsuits allegjng that school offi~ials County Sheriff's Dcpanment of-
were at fault for allowing the youths to ficials say do not know how the
slip off campus. breakout esca~ the notice of jail
The accident and lawsuits prompt-guards.. Olson 5:11d Monday that ~he
ed the school board to change its I 0-rooftop recreau~n area f!om which
year-old open campus policy. Now. the men escaped 1s supervised by two
students arc onl>: allowed to leave guard~. . . .
campus at lunchtime and only with An inmate at the Ja1l·sa1d Monday
parental permission. Their riJht to t~a.t the entire recrcatiof\ arc~ is
leave campus for lunch is indicated v1s1blc from the guard station,
on a photo identification card issued although there are blind spots that arc
to all district high school students. visible only with mirrors.
Leah Laule. assistant principal at Thomas Maniscalco, an attorney
University Hi&h. said about 87 per-awaiting trial at the jail on a triple
cent of all stucfents there are allowed ·
murder charge, said there is a red line
that inmates arc not allowed to cross
three feet inside the security fence.
But Maniscalco said he was not
surprised the inmates had been able
to obtafo tools to cut through the
security fence.
"Anything is easy to get in here if
you really want it," he said.
The fifth man, Hung Ly. fell during
the attempt and broke his leg. He is
being treated at UCI Medical Center
in Orange.
Ly, 22, is accused of a gafW)and-
style murder in Garden Grove.
Taylor is char,gcd along with two
allcacd accomphces with an armed
rob6ery at Designer Jewelry. 16841
Algonquin St. in Huntington Beach.
April 14.
The bandits reponedly took rings,
necklaces, diamonds and scrap gold.
The owner of the store. Jack Price.
confronted three armed bandits in the
store and chased them into the
parking lot, wielding a sholgun. A gun
battle erupted but the robbers es-
caped.
Three suspects were )lrrcsted in
August including Taylor, who had
fled to New Mexico. The three are
suspected in as many as 20 armed
robberies in Orange and Los Angeles
counties.
Taylor. who bas a long history of
violent crime, is considered danger-
ous, as are the other three fugitives,
according to Sheriffs Department
officials.
Gonzales, of Santa Ana. is accused
of shootillJ to death 20-year-old Juan
Picon dunng an argument Ian July.
Fluharty of Garden Grove is
charaed with a burglary in Stanton.
Wilson, a transient from Ontario, is
accused of panicipating in a botched
robbery at a Coco's restaurant in
Orange.
They wanted to sell Brooklyn Bridge
NEW YORK (AP)-The ultimate
con -selling the Brooklyn Bridge -
is no joke to city authorities who
accused two men of prying off pieces
of the historic span and selling them
to-f«rap metal dealer.
Dama&e was estimated at $37,000:
The theft severely weakened the
walkway and catwalk of the bridge,
and both were closed temporarily for
repairs.
Ruffino Sauco and John Berisi
were caua.ht dismantling aluminum
pieces ofihe I OS-year.old suspension
bridae's pedestrian walkway Satur-
day. said Officer Joseph Gallagher, a
police spokesman.
The material was apparently sold
as scrap, Gallqher said. John Nicoll. superintendent of the
Newpon-Mesa Unified School Dis-
tnct. said his district also has a closed
campus policy. However. individual
schools are allowed to modify that
policy to suit their concerns, he said.
An accident similar to the Corona
· del Mar crash prompted the Irvine
U nified School District to change
from an open to a closed campus
policy a few years ago.
to leave campus at lunchtime. Still. ,---------------------------periodic -sweeps" of local student
Transportation officials had been
watching tM walkway after they
found large pieces missing earlier this
month.
"Our campuses arc not prisons,··
Nicoll said. ..The basic policy is a
closed campus policy, but it's ~bjcct
to local control. Students arc allowed
off carJ?pus under ccnain ctr~u m
stanccs.
Nicoll also lamented the dif-
ficulties of keeping students on cam-
pus.
uwe have a couple thousand kids
In February 1984, 10 University
High School students were injured
when a pickup truck driven by a 16-
year-old student went out of control
and smashed into a curbside on Yale
haunts by school officials do tum up
an occasional violator.
"There arc some days where we
don't find any students without IDs,
and there are other days where we'll
P.1ck up two or three," Laule said.
'But the policy seems to work fairly
well."
BEA TING VICTIM •••
FOOD •..
From Al
and <'liscnmanatory punishment." the
suit says.
The suit does not seek money, only
chih peppers and Mexican food.
From Al
Hoose with an object that police have
declined to identify. ran past the
witness and fled out the front door.
Sgt. Wilham Peterson said police
were investigating several leads in the
case. but he declined to elaborate.
Police so far have refused to release
any information about Hoose,
although she reportedly moved to
Huntington Beach from Florida
\
"This is a real problem." Man1-
sc-1Jco said earlier. "When you deny
pnsoners the diets they are used to
eating since they were kids and force
them to eat strange foods.. stomach
and bowtl problems arc bound to
follow."
Mamscalco said Monday he was a
bit surprised the state's highest court
gave any consideration to the suit.
l.lthouah he filed it in all seriousness.
GAY BASHING ••• From Al
"It's not really a small thing."
Maniscalco said. "No one realizes
until they don't have a choice on their own diet just how significant it is."
A.ftct the county flies its response.
the inmates will have five days to rcsPond with further points of
autllority, Maniscalco said.
ORANGE .........
COAST ·-· r•I
llA8N OFFICI __ .., ... ca... ...... CA
andapshin his head that required 80
stitches to close.
Also allcaedJy attacked by the three
defendants that nil.ht was James
W,ade Crocker1 24. or Laauna Beach.
He reportedly nas moved" out of state
and may not be able to testify.
Dcfen1e attorneys Monday dis--
puted Avdecf's claim that the three
men intended to kill and rob their victims. The trio voluntarily left their
victims, beaten but alive, attorneys said.
"This cae is not about an at-
tempkd murder. What this cu. is
about ispy bubina," attorney Jar 1es
Sweeney said, ··and it is not enouah 10
convict the defendants of crimes they did not commiL ..
o:i:::· 1eo ..... 111d
Mii ..._. 9011 tNO, C..t• ......_CA tHM
~ ... W ·M71, ...,_ a _.ot191.
W-4111 Ja.tcaU 842-6088
~ ,.., __ ...._ ... ,.._,.alloflll --... __ , .... ..,.,!My .. , .. ~ ....... _ ... ·-~-................ ,., ............. ... .._..,,.""-.... ..... ................. ........
ClflutJlll
T1t1,ll1•1
Ere-..; ....
TURKEY TICKETS •••
From Al ,
From A Cottage • lD
Donegal
Individually handloomed and
crafted in Ireland of the finest
cotton yams, a sweater so
comfortable it m,µst be worn
to appreciate. Our own desi,1n
in eighteen distinct color
combinations and patterns.
1'
Christmas tree
·11~hting party at
F"ashion Is land
The public is invited to Fashion Island's annual
Christmas trte·liahtin& ceremony Saturday.
The ceremony will be held from 6:40 to 7 p.m.
with special guest actor John Schneider from TV's
••The Dukes of Hazzard.··
Entenainment will be provided the Kids are
Music and the Fashion Island Entertainment
Company, a1ooa with Santa Claus and his elves.
Parade ezcunlon •lated
The Newpe>rt Beach Parks. Beaches and
Recreation Department will offer an excursion to
the Santa Claus Lane Parade in Hollywood Sunday.
The $35 fee includes irandstand seatinJ.
transpe>nation and refreshments. Departure time 1s
• p.m. from the Mariners Park. parking Lot, 2QOS
Dover Drive at Irvine Boulevard, returning at
'~roxif1?ately 10 p.m. Call 644-31 51 for additional
information.
Postal booths planned
Postal booths will be placed at several Orange
County malls for the C hnstmas'seas0n, beginning
Friday, to offer a con~enience to holiday shoppers.
Malls offering the booths will mclude the
Huntington Center. Laguna Hills Mall, Mission
Viejo Mall and Westmmster Mall. The booths will
offer Christmas stamps, padded envelopes and
shipping cartons. •
Thanksglvlng dlnner set
Westminster's Shelter for the Homeless and the
Westminster Mall will co-spe>nsor a Thanksgiving
dinner Thursday at noon at Cafe 405 on the upper
level of the mall.
The dinner is open to all needy. people at no
charge. Call 897-372 1 for further information.
Notre Dame pep rally
The Notre Dame Club of Orange County will
host a weekend of activities in conjunction with
Saturd~}"s football game between the Fighting Irish
and USC at the Anaheim Marriott Hotel
The activities will incfude an indoor pep rally
Friday evening and a communion breakfast Sunday
mornmg. Limited game tickets are available for
members. Call president Greg Kell y at 645-4540 for
more informauon.
Booster cl~b party set
The men's booster club for the General
Federation of Women's Clubs will host its annual
holiday party Sunday from 2 to 6 p.m. at the Ebell
Clubhouse. 5 I 5 W. Balboa Blvd .. Newport Beach.
The event will include a silent auction. music.
dancing a_nd dinner Admission is $7.50 per person
and reservations may be obtained by calling
548-6888.
Toughlove meetings
Meetings of the parents' group Toughlove are
held Tuesdays at 7 p.m. in Career Center Room 307
of Newpe>rt Harbor High School. 600 Irvine Ave ..
Newi><>rt Beach.
Further information may be obtarned by calling
631-0858 during the day or 557-8358 and 532-4991
evenings.
Drunk drlvlng vlctlms
Accident Victims Against Drunk Driving, a
new, non-profit agency m Irvine. 1s seeking
volunteers to assist with 1he growth of the agenc} ..
Accident victims or volunteers can help with
public relations. fund ra1smg, accounting or volun-
teer coordinating. Call 1he Volunteer Center of
Orange County at 953-5757 or 582-3I16 for
additional information.
CA LENDAR
Tuesday, Nov. 22
• 6:30 p.m. Irvine City Council, council
chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
• 7 p.m. Laguna Beacla Scbool Board, d1stnct
office. 550 Blumont St .. Laguna Beach.
• 7:30 p.m. Newport-Mesa Board of Trustees,
Harper Community Center. 425 E. 18th St.. Costa
Mesa.
Wednesday, Nov. 23
• 7:30 p.m. Fou.atata Valley PlaDDiDg Com·
mlssloD, council chambers, 10200 Slater Ave.
FoOd from the heart
Thank~ftna came a little early for bomelae famlllee at tbe
<>ranee oanly Interfaith Seiter tfaanlr• to the Newport·lleea ao,a
I
0renoe Coml DALY N.OT/T.....,, Nae• • 1 a, -
and Girl• Club, wbida .._...a Tha•lrWCi~ ~Inner at lta factlltJ
oa Monday. At rl&ht. Rwweu a.,.., 5 , is1aJore a piece of ple.
BolSa Chica channel plan debated ·
By ROBERT BARKER °' .. .,..,,... .....
Ke y players in a recentl y formed
coalition seeking to find a compromise for
development and wetlands preservation of
the Bolsa Chica marshlands sparred over
plans for a navigable channel Monday.
Shirley Detloff. a member of the Amrgos
de Bolsa Chica -an environmental
organization that has battled SignaJ Land-
mark Inc.'s development plans for more
than a decade -sajd the navigable
channel should be stripped from plans to
be di~ussed by the Bolsa Chica Planning
Coalition.
The city and county ar~ "less than
enthusiastic" about the !,()()().foot ocean
channel because of beach erosion, she said.
"What we had hoped to establish is to
look at alternatives without an ocean
entrance," she said.
However, Jeff Holm, project manager
for Signal, said Signal's intention to cut a
oavigable channel "is the only plan out
there."
· "lf ifs pushed aside. there will be no
plan."·
For that reason, Holm said the company
wants to continue with public hearings to
meet timetables on plans that include the
channel. The plans have been approved by
the county and cond1tionaJly approved by
the state Coastal Commission.
But Orange County Supervisor Harriett
Wieder. chairman of the planning com-
mittee. urged a delay on the hearings. ~our purpose 1s to find an alternative
plan to the present one," she said. "If we
are looking for an alternative. why are we
discussmg the present plan? We should put
the public pohcy meetings on hold."
Huntington Beach Councilman Peter
Green, an environmentalist and another
member of the coaliuon. said holdfog
heannes on the current Signal plan at the
same time the coahtjon is seeking aJterna-
uves will send mixed signals to the
community.
"If the two proceed. there will be
mevitable confusion," he said.
SignaJ hopes to build 5. 700 homes in the
Bolsa Chica bluffs and lowlands along with
a 1,600-shp marina and navigable ocean
channel. Tbe plan wouJd preserve 91 S
acres for wetlands.
The City Council voted non-suppon of
the navigable channel Nov. 7. City
Administrator Paul Cook's stiff reported-
ly bas developed a plan for the Bolsa Chica
that has no channel and no marina. It also
scales down the number of homes, otrlcials
said. ,
The Bolsa Chica is located adjacent to
Pacific Coast Highway and south of
Warner A venue. It currently is in Oranae
County temtory but is expected to be
annexed by Huntington Beach.
Irvine·JusticeJohnArguelles·
will retire from top state court
By BOB EGELKO ,._.....""-.....
SAN FRANCISCO-In an unexpected
announcement, State Supreme Court Jus-
tice John Arguelles. an Irvine resident who
1s considered a relative moderate among
Gov. George DeukmCJ1an·s appointees.
said he is retiring MaTch I after two years
on the court.
"I've had many years ofheav} calendars
as a lawyer and judge." .\rguelles. 61 . said
ma statement Monday. ''While rm Slill·m
good health and have some sand 1n m}
hourglass lefl. there arc some other things I
want 10 do.'·
Arguelles is a.;longt1me friend of Deu-
kme11an. who appomted him 10 a stale
appeals court m Los Angeles in 1984 and to
the Supreme Court ·in March 1987. The
only ~istered Democrat among [)(u-
. kmc11an s high court appointees. Arguelles
had been a tnalJudge m LosAngeles since 1963. •
His retirement revived talk among
commentators that the coun·s heavy
workload. particularly in time-consummg
and emotionallv draining death penalty
cases. would dnve justices from the court.
"It continues what 1s nov. an alarming
trend toward shorter and shorter service
on the eourt:' said UC Bcrkele) lav.
professor Stephen Barnell. c1ung the
retirements dunng 1he last decade .of
Justices Wilham Clark. Frank Nev.man
and , Otto Kaus after relatively bncf
tenures. "One has 10 thmk that the death
penalty workload has something to do
With It.'•
"I have been predicting that the burnout
factor is JOiog to be a sjgn1ficant one and
we're gomg to sec shorter tenure!I on the
part of the JUSt1ces." said Santa Clara Law
SCbool Dean Gerald .Uelmen. "I certainly
didn't anuc1pate that any 'would be this
short:·
But. refemng to Arguelles, Uelmen said.
"You can't bum out unuJ }OU catch fire. I
don't thmk he's been thett long enough to
leave much of a npple.''
However. Barnen said Arguelles. author
of a major nJJing this year rntncting the
scope of the 1986 "deep pockets" damage
hm1tauon in1uat1ve. had shown sign s of
becommg a ccntnst or swmg vote .
.\rguelles and fellow appellate JUStlces
David Eagleson and Marcus Kaufman
were appointed bJ the Republican go\'-
emor to replace Chief Jusucc Rose Bird
and Justices Cruz Reynoso and Joseph
Grodin. unseated in 1he November 1986
clccuons. Reynoso was the first Latmo in
the coun 's history: Arguelles. the son of
Mexican immtgrants. 1s the second
Washed-up bottle·came from Navy ship
By JONATHAN VOLZKE
Of IM.,..,""'°' llAlff
The U.S. Navy identified the source ofa
prescnption bottle that washed ashore
near La Jolla as being from USS Van-
couver. but authont1cs said that bottle is
unrelated to any of the other medical
debns found on sands stretching from Seal
Beach to San Diego.
More than 70 vials of anuscpucs and
mec:hc1nes washed ashore on the Orange
Coast last week. Naval officials confirmed
the flotsam was military. but did not
pmpomt its source.
Orange County officials. meanwhile.
have removed themselves from the case.
County health officials turned the in-
vestigation over 10 the federal En-
vironmental Protection Agency. and the
county d1stnct attorney's office said an}
cnminal violation was federal. not local.
In San Diego. bags of blood and other
medical biproducts have washed ashore
smce October. Authorities acknowledge
the possibility of a common source for the
Orange Coast and San Diego Countv
waste. but no definite hnk has been found.
The prescription bottle from La Jolla
was dumped from the USS Vancou' er on
No'. 6. Navy officials said the pill bottle
was improperly disposed with the ship's
trash. The}' said that single bottle "as an
isolated incident unconnected to the other
waste. which did not come from the
Vancouver.
:-.la'' policies allow trash dumping
when the sh11) 1s more than 50 miles from
inhabited land. officials said.
Medical wastes. hov.e,er. arc earned to
port and disposed of. officials said.
Na' al authonues sa) the) arc in·
vesugatmg the poss1b1ht) that a pnvate
hosp1taJ. disposal firm or other defense
department contnctor may be respe>ns1ble
for the ocean dumpint Smee 6 a.m. Nov. I . more than 70 vials
of anti-chemical warfare medicines wash·
ed ashore from San Oemente to Seal
Beach. T~nty vials containing saline ~lution. 12 vials of a.nu-bacterial mcdi-
cme and several vials of military issue
tetracycline also came ashore.
-\ m1htary flashlight and plastic disposal
ba& also were found. as was a can of
military aircraft cleaning compound.
Finally. last Thursday. a plastic PllllC
stamped "Department of the Navy, Sea
S)stemsCommand .. was found ntL.acuna.
Bodies of county couple
recovered from wreckage
~pen the side dcx1r of a 1985 Honda
CRX parked on the 17000 block of
W1nterberT) treet Monda) night 1n
order to steal stereo cqu1pme~t
vaJued at $700.
Bantlngton Beach
A aunman "1th a beard and
mustache came 1ntoa res1dencem the
I 7000 block of 1'.cclson and held up
the occupant and took mone' and a
gun. The weapon used Monda~ b) the
man was behe,t'd 10 be the same aun
that was stolen from the rn1dence a
few weeks ago. the·' 1ctim said ...
$400. at Pla,ers restaurant. 18100
Von Karman· A' e. The empty purse
was recovered ma men's rest room.
The theft occurred between 12: I 5 and
12:30 a.m. Sunda) • • • ". ~) 198 To)ota +.Runner was
stolen from a lot at Ir' inc TO) Ota, 30
Auto Center Dme The theft was
reported Monda). The date and ume
of the cnme are no1 known.
dom1nium complex in the first blodt
of Bnarwooc:t
Newport Beach
Six watches valued at S3.200 and Sl.OQO m cash wen: stolen from an
office at 1300 8nsto1 North. The
owner said be was keepi"I his watch
collttuon at the office becau1e of a
recent burglary at his home. BJ 808 VAN EVU:N
Of1119 o.llJ NetlUlft
The bodies of an El Toro man and a J..aauna Hills woman were retrieved
Monday from the wrecka&e of a four-
wbeel..ctrive vehicle that plunaed over
a cliff near Santiqo Pak Sunday
eveninJ. · ·
The two were identified by the Oranae County Coroner's office as
Tbornu Griffin, 2.S, and Leslie
McPartland, 22.
Another pwenJCr. 23-year-old Todd Buresh, survived the SOO.foot
drop and manaaed to crawl beck up
the clitl'to the road whtre be flqaed
down a pessina vehicle, which took
c.-11-
A ~year-old airl was arrested for
alletedly µyina to steal $8 worth of
lipttick from FedCo on Harbor
Boulevard. She alleaedly told
authorities .. , rueis~·ust did some-
th•na stupid. tho t 1 could att away with it," She ad $35 in her
purae. • • •
A aunman etcaped with $2.000
after po1n1ina •sun at the manqer of Von• on Hal1M>f Boulevard. He fled
on foot after tellina her "Give me the
money, not the fOOd sLamps.. OK.
• \;
him to the Silvtrado Fire Station.
Buresh, of El Toro, was listed in
good condition Tuesday at Western
Medical Center in Santa Ana.
A spokesman for the California
HiJhway Patrol who visited the scene
of the crash ~onday afternoon said
be was amazed that anyone bad
survived it.
"If you had seen how smashed up
the vehicle was. you'd wonder how
anyone could possibly have hvcd
through it," said CHP Officer Keith
Thornhill. "And then 10 have scaJed
all the way back up the cliff. It's prett)
i ncrcdjble.''
Thornhill said the tno was ndtna in
now let's ao to the re11slers.''
JACan&S.Cb
An Ocean Avenue business wa$ bu~nled Monda). the v1ct1m told
pol1CZ. When officers amved. they
fo und a window smashed and a stereo
radio, vatUf:d at SIOO, stolen
• • • An unknown amount of Jev.ell")
was ~ned stoltn Mond~y from a
home on Bluebird Can)'on Dn,c.
• • • Four yoaun machines.. toatther
wonh an rsum1ted S4S.OOO. v.-err
t
a GMC Jimmy.c"idently at excessive
speed, shonl}' before 6 p.m. Sunda~
when the vehicle began to skid.
"Bas1call). it slid sideways and
tumbled over the cliff. ..
Early estimates had placed the
height of the cliff at 700 feet . but
Thornhill said a rou~h measurement
made at the scene indicated it was
closer to 500 feet.
Because of the rou&h terrain. it "as
not untiJ late Monda}' afternoon tha·
rescuers were able to rctneve the
Wrtekagc and rcmo"e the tv. o bochcs.
ldenuficat1on of the v1ct1m and
urvhor "ert mitiall) "•thheld
pcnd1n1 not1ficat1on of families.
reponed stolen Monda) from a South
Coast H1ihway business.
f'CMUltalD Valley
Someone slashed •he tires on-a
t 9S I Ford tnick perked at Johnson
• • • A bro' n Dodge pickup repe>rtedl)
went o'er the side of the ch ff at Bolsa
Chica State each earl) this momma
and got stuck 1n the sand befpre bemg
tO"-'cd. • • • A thief stoic a bottle of ~ h1ske)
valued at S 13 from the Circle K store
at 16369 Bolsa Chica t • • • Two would-be robbers broke into
Mandie Motors on \1am Street
though a sk\hght bu1 v.cre fnah tened
away at 4.15 a m toda)' b) an
cmplo ee who ~as in the bu mess • • • Somone u~d a kty to unlock. the
front door in the 400 block of
California and tole a purse and Sl7
cash
Elcctnc at 17474 Santa Mana t lntne
Monda) n11ht. • ihel'arc and Slhcr place scttinp
The praac hxk :as broken at a were \tolcn 1n a burglar) 1n the first
rt11dcn« on the 18000 block or block of GunniU>n The cuct date
YellOWStonc Court 1n order to pin 1nd umc of the brt'ak·•1' •re no\
act"CSS late Mondly ft~ The thtd' known • • • ·
stoic tires and nmp·aJucch1 SI SS. Someone tolt a "oman·s punc.
Somcc>M wed a·~wdnvcrto Pf) with conttnu 'alucd at mort than
• • • Three tires wre stolen from a
company car parked at 1799~ Cowan.
The theft occurred betwttn 10:30
p.m. Sunda) and 7:30 a.m Monday. • • • Stereo equ1pmcnL a telc' 1S1on set.
a videocassette recorder and an
undiSC'OI~ amount of cash wcrt
stolen 1n a dayhJht burg1ar) Monda).
The break-in. m the first block of
Eulc Point. occurred betwttn 8 a.m.
ana 4 p.m. The intruder e\ 1dentl)
cnte~ through an unlocked "1n·
dow.
• • • ~ ma1lbc:n "" blo" n up with an unknov.--n e,ptos1H de' l("( Monda)
bct~n 3 and 4 p.m. at a con-
• • • • Several cases of beuery WCf'C re-
ported at a party on the lOO block of
42nd Street where five or six men
.,,.ere hnnng people and ~
bncks and bottles. No ma,ior injuries
were reported. • • • • Several p1~s of record•~
ment. mcludn\I a drum
special effects unit and mi••na ba11n1._
were stolen from a c~r parked btbdd
Rumplest1luk1n's restaurant aod
nightclub, 114 Mcflddcn Sc. Lo.
was estimated at $2,000. • • • 4. 7.S horsepower outboard molal' vat~ at S 1,200 'QS stolea from a 26-
foot sailboat docked at the Udo
Sa1hna Club.
Me.an abot; &lrlfrlead arreetecl ,
Ground broken .
for $40 million ·
Reagan library
SIMI VALLEY (AP) -In the
twiliabt of> bis presidency, Ronald
Reapn stood on the biUtop site of his
future presidential library and spoke
in solemn tones about how future
Jenerat.ions will study the con-
servative tide he ushered in.
.. The iourney has not been just my
own," Reagan said Monday. "h
seems l have been guided by a forcc
much larger than m yself, a force made
upofidcasand beliefs about what this
country is and what it could be."
The president and Mrs. Reagan
gathered with close friends to break
ground on what will be the $40
million home for the largest ever
accumulation of presidential papers
and memorabilia.
Former cabinet members William
Clark, Ed Mccsc and William French
Smith, industrialist Armand Ham-
mer, MCA chief Lew Wasserman.
actor Charlton Heston and kitchen
cabinet faithful Holmes Tuttle shared
the moment with a beaming Reagan.
ushering in the beginning of the
Reagans' California homecoming.
"This is a most humbling moment
for me." said Reagan. who will
relinquish the 8rcsidency to Georse
Bush on Jan. 2 . "The story that will
be told inside the walls that are yet to
be built here is the story not ontr, of a
presidency. but of a movement. •
Rcagari takes credit for a re-
surgence of conservatism in America.
and much of the 1988 campaign
rhetoric dunng the Republican pri-
mary season was about what man
cpuld best carry ion the "Reapn
revolution ...
After his six-minute speech, the
president was pven a chrome-plated
shovel and qu1ckly dug three hcapina
mounds of dirt in the around-
breakina ceremony. The first lady.
however, strualcd with her shovel m
the hard soir and wobbled while
trying to scoop it.
The Ronald Rcapn Presidential
Library, which will be the repository
for an e~pected 62 million papers,
exceeding Richard Nixon's record 44
million, will occupy a 153,000-
square-foot. Spanish-style building in
Ventura County's Tierra Rejada Val-
ley. 45 miles northwest of Los ·
Angeles.
The selection of the Simi Valley
site, about 70 miles southeast of the
Reagans' ranch in Santa Barbara
County. came after planners of the
Reagan library were thwarted in an
attempt to build it at Stanford
University in Palo Alto.
Appeanng at the ceremony at the
outset of a 'six-<iay T hanksgiving
vacation at his ranch in the Santa
Ynez Mountains, Reagan talked re-
flectivel y of his eight years as presi-
dent.
The Rcapn imprint was based on a
fiscal policy at home aimed at
stimulating economic growth
through tax cuts and deregulation of
business, and a resurgence of U.S.
international influence brought
Museum celebrates
Old West heritage
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Holl~ood cowboy Ge~e Autry,
accompanied by longtime movie sidekick Pat Buttram, former
President Gerald Ford and others. celebrated the heritage of the Old
West at his new museum.
Several hundred guests packed the $54 million. three-story tile-
and-stucco Gene Autry Western Heritage Museum for a pany Monday
night. The museum. on a 13-acre si te in Griffith Park. was to be
formally dedicated today.
"Gene Autry has captured and placed in this museum the true
story of the Old West," said Mayor Tom Bradley.
Bradley joined veteran Western film stars Roy Rogers. Dale
Evans. actor Charlton Heston and others at the pany honoring the
rcahzauon of Autry's longtime dream of a Western museum.
The facility houses a saddle owned by "Buffalo Bill" Cody. a rifle
owned by former president Teddy Roosevelt. frontier lawman Wyatt
Earp's revolver and a 225-scat theater.
about pnncipally by a major miJitary
buildup. projections of American
power in the Third World and
warminJ. if unsteady, relations with
the Soviet Union.
"What this library will house is the
record of ideas and palicies that have
undergirded our accomplishments.''
i
Reagan said. "There will be much to
study here, much to discuss, much to
mull over.
"This library will allow scholars of
the future to cast theirownjudgments
on . these years, -and I would not
presume to predict the result of their
researches." he said.
One of the 7 victims
of boardinghouse
killings identified_
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Autboritia bave idenufied one of the
teven victims ofSacramento•s bmrd· iapow killi but coroner<!baries SimtnOM aid ne basn ·t #'identified
any ol &be other victims or de-
tamined _,w any of them died.
sammons said that the body of ~in Ftnk, 60, a former resident
of Dorothea Puente•s Victorian
boenliftlhoule in downtown Sacra-
mento, was identified Monday
th~ finterprinu..
No fwtbtr information was re-
leased on Fink. But Rohen Fink told rcponm last week that his brolbcr
had been a chronic alcoholic since aae
. 17, that he ..,ent mostofhislife on the
streets in SICrafncnto and that he had
moved into the PUente board-
inahouse earlier this year. ·
Accordina to court documents,
another boarder told police that Fink
disappeared after he became drunk
and "Dorothea told him that she
would take hi m upstairs and make
him feel better."
Meanwhile, Puente, 59, the
matronly landlady at the board-
inpouse where the bodies were
buried ftl tbe front and side yards,
remained in jail without bail on one
murda' ctwae. Authorities uyina
they e•peaeCj to file additional cbaftes IOOft.
Police said in sworn statements filed Monday in Sacramento Munici-pal Court I.hit searches of tbe boatd-
1npuse have tu.med up carpet
Slalned with blood and a handwritten
book that may be Puentc's diary.
Durina two ica.rches of the two-
.s&ory, wOod-frame house, police seiz·
ed. various papen, photOF'pht and boOkSi includ"'I a ~k titled .. The Smell of Evil, .. iecordina to the
c-0urt documents. AmOf'J the seized pal>Cf'S arc some "pcrta1nina to fu-
neral plots." •
Police Detective Us Murphy said
in an affidavit to support a warrant to
search the house Friday that a former
boardinahouse tenant told in-
vestiptors Puente kept a personal
biotraphy inside the house. Court
documents don't say who owns the
handwritten book seized by police.
11 companies request
rate c·ut exemptions
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Eleven
insurance companies have requested
exemptions from rate cuts mandated
by Proposition 103 State Depart·
ment oflnsurance officials reported.
five of the state's 10 bigest auto
insurcn.
Gay councilman sues
three men in assault
Officials identified the 11 com-
panies, which include fi ve of the
state's 10 bigest auto insurcrs.z but
declined to release copies or the
requests they filed.
Proposition I 03 mandates that
such copies be made public, but Reid
McOaran, staff attorney for the State
The other six companies arc Wil-
liamsbura National Insurance Co.,
National Automobile and Casualty
Insurance Co., California Casualty
Group, Contractors' Sure!)' Co.,
Surety Co. of the Pacific and
Wawancsa Mutual Insurance.
Insurers arc eliaible for an exemp-
tion from Proposition 103's rate
rollbacks if they can prove the
reductions will force them out of
business. SANT A MONICA (AP)-A West
Hollywood City Councilman has
filed a la\vsuit against three men who
allegedly assaulted him outside a
West Hollywood restaurant in April
because he is a homosexual.
John Heilman filed the complaint
Monday in Superior Court accusing
the thrtt of assault, battery. false
imprisonment. emotional distress.
conspiracy and slander.
According to state law, victims of
violence resulting from sexual orien-
tation arc allowed to Sttk civil
damages.
The suit identified the thrtt as
Bogart Dirk McGarrin, 26. of Los
Angeles; Edward David Heckerson.
20. of Redondo Beach, and Lewis Department of Insurance. said Mon·
Charles Brutocao. 20, of Covina. day the law is not in effect bcausc it
Heckerson. in a statement to has been stayed by the state Supreme
sheriffs deputies. said McGanin Court pendina a review.
identified Heilman as having made a .. Under 103, they're public records.
sexual advance toward him earlier in But since 103 is not in effect, we're
the evening. going to use our previous practice, in
Heilman d ismissed that as which we consider theJC confidential .. .. . correspondence under Insurance absurd. addmg that he had never Code Section 129.19."
seen the men before. The 11 companicsfilinaforexemp-
McGarrin pleaded guilty in Bever-tions include Farmers Insurance
ly Hills Municipal Court last July to Group Co., Northern California
disturbin& the peace, a misdemeanor. Automobile Club (California State
said Deputy District Attorney Elden . Auto Association), Automobile Club
Fox .. He was fined SI SO, placed on a of Southern California (lnter-
year's probation and ordered to write insurance Exchange), 20th Century
Heilman a letter of apology. and Mercury ln~urance. which arc
•
The decision to withhold infor-
mation on the fili nas was blasted by
Proposition 103 campaign manqer
Bill Zimmerman.
"This is an outraae." Zimmerman
said. "Insurers who have aouaed the
public for so many years refuse to
accept the will of the people and want
to function as if the old rules still
apply, which is not the case."
State Sen. Alan Robbins. chairman
of the Senate Insurance Committee,
also condemned the move.
.. The public bas a substantial
interest in this." Robbins said ... It
would seem as a matter of public
palicy to release the information."
Enriched flavor:" ultra low tar. · A solution with Merit.
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking
Causes Lung Cancer, Heart Disease,
Emphysema, And May Complicate Pregnancy.
I
MERIT
rtLTER
U L TIU LOW ''°"
Merit Ultralights
~ 5 .. "t1C O 5 .. llic'lt•-100'1: 8 •t "tar:'
01 .......... ,., .... 91tFTCMtbed
• '
I. I
...
'
i
U.S. visa
approval
claimed
by.Arafat
CAIRO (AP) -PLO chief Vasser
Arafat said today the United States
bas..,.eed toaive him an entry visa so
' he can addiess the U .N. General
Assembly in New York. The U.S.
Stale Depanmcnt said no visa was
issued. •
Arafat 1ndicated in remarks to ~ that the visa was obtained
with Praidcnt Hosni Muberak·s
help. Spcakin' after a meetina with
F~ Minister Esmat Abdel-
Mqwd, Arafat also said more than
SO countries have rceopized a
Palestinian state 'proclaimed lut
week by the PLO's parliament-in-
cxilc.
••Presid,ent Muberak informed me
today throu&h Dr. Esmat Abdel-
Mquid that the U.S. administration
haslpeed toarant mean entry visa so
1 can address the United Nations."
Arafat said.
Abdel-Meguid said last week that
· £aypt was intercedin& with Wa~hing
ton an an attempt to secure a visa for
Arafat, bead of the Palestine Libera-
tion Or&anization.
In W-ashinaton, State Depanment
S{>Okesman Charles Redman said no
visa application bas been received
from Arafat. He said that if an a~· tion is received, it will be su · to "severe scrutiny."
Nov. 10, Redman said the
administration would take into ac-
count "al>l>licable laws and regu-
lations arid other pertinent cireum-
stances" if a visa request is received.
Under the U.N. Headquaners
Agrecmentofl947, the United States
is not supposed to "impose any
impediment to transit" of people .
involved in the United Nations.
On the other hand, Congress has
authorized the denial of visas to
supponers of terrorism.
;-
UL I r1a 111
Canadian Prime 111.nlater Brian Mulroney celebrate.
Yictory witla wife 11.Ua and eona Benedict and Mark.
Mulroneyvietoq assures
U .S.-Canada trade pact
TORONTO (AP) -A victorious d1cated tbt road they w11h to foUOw.
Prime Mine~ Brian Mulroney said Now it 1s a time for healint in tbe
10day Canada bad chosen the road to land."
free tndc with the Uni1ed Staies and He defeated two rivals who baled
claimed a mandate ao enact a con-thea.r campeian on opposiuioa ao tbe
trovcnial U.S.-Canada trade pact. trade pact Mulroney_ Uped with
"Coaservative Majority, V.01trs Pttsident Re111n. They claimed
Back Trade Deal," the Globe and MuJroney's free uade prosram would
Mail, wtiicb calls itldf Canada's subordinate Canada to the United
national newspe~ and had en-~tates an~ uhunatcly rob Canada of
doned Mulroney s J>rosressivt Con-us sovere1pt).
servative Party, said in tts benner Official flJutt"S with 95 percent of
headline. the vote counted showed the opposi-
The Toronto Star, which had t1on Liberal Party led by John Tumtt
bitterly cnticized the trade ICJ'C'C-: wt th 82 sea a. more than doubk its 40
ment, $Aid in an editonal that the of four years IJO• and the socialist
··people of Canada have spoken New ... Democrauc Pany of Ed Broed-
conv1ncina)y. bent with 44 scats. up from 30.
'!With this historic mandate, Tbe ~&>olar vote broke down to
Mulroney assumes an awesom~ re-about ~3 percent for the Con-
sponsibifity: Canadians have put servat1ves. 32 percent for the Liberals
their future and that ~f their children and 20 ~cent for the New Demo-
' in his bands."· . crats.. ~'ith the turnout at about 75
Voters returned Mulroney to office percent of the 17.S million ehgible
with 169 seats in the 295-seat House voters. ·
of Commons. He said he wouJd call The Canadian Press news agency
legislators promptly into session to said the Conservatives had 5.4
pass the bill. m1lhon votes. the Liberals 4.0S
Mulroney told a midnight rallr. in m1lhon and the New Democrats 2.4
Quebec that Canadians have ·an-m1lhon.
The Canachu dollar. wbicb bad
been jittery th.rouahout tbc cam= as investors haitated at a polli
Conservative defeat. IU,.ed on inttt-
nauonal markets to trade at more
lha.n 83 cents.
The Conserv1t1 vcs saw their Power
erode somewhat. in the newly Cl-
panded 295-seat f;lou1e of CommoM.
They won 169 rattS Monday as
compared 10 211 out of 282 seats in
the 1984 election.
Businessmen in Canada and over·
seas reacted favo~bly today to
Mulroncy's r'eturn, the fint time a
m.;ority government has served two
succeSSJve terms since 1953.
Trevor Taylor, ~,.i mana,er o(
the Bank of Nova Scotia in Toky0;
predicted "a stronaierCanadian dollar
by th( end of the year.·
Canadians aa:cpted tl}e ·;;:r of faith" that .the l~ycar to
eliminate all remainina t.rade1-rrien
with thetr economically intimidatin1
southern nei&hbor was &ood for the
countr;y.
Turner and Broadbent vehemently
opposed the trade pact, sianed Jan. 2
by Mulroney and President Rcapn.
Israeli planes hit guerrilla bases
in Lebanon: three in PLO killed
South Africa backs pUllout
of Cuban troops in Angola
By Tiie AsMdatd Preu
SIDON. Lebanon (AP) -Israeli
warplanes blasted guerrilla bases near
the southern port city of Sidon today1 killing three PLQ g~rrillas ana
wounding nine, pohce said.
Jn Jerusalem, a military spokes-
man confirmed the attack and said
the targets were guerrilla head-
quaners that served as launs:hing
points for attacks against Israel. It was
the 22nd attack on Lebanon this year.
Police said fighter bombers
rocketed guerrilla bases in the Ein cl·
Hilwch refugee camp in four sonics
that lasted five minutes. Two heliC9p-
ter gunships pounded the camp's
western entrance I 0 minutes later,
police said.
Smoke billowed from the camp as
the jets and gunships fired eight
rockets, hitting a PLO checkpoint and
two guerrilla jeeps. police reported.
The three guerrillas were killed in
one of the JCCPS. said police. They
identified them as belonging to the
Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine, the Manust group led by
George Habash. The other jeep
belonged to PLO chairman Vasser
Arafat's mainstream Fatah faction.
police said.
inc others were wounded in the
raid on tbe tccmin& shantytown that
houses 60,000 Palestinians, the larg-
est among Lebanon's I l refugee
camps.
The Israeli spokesman, speaking
on condition of anonymity; said all
the Israeli jets returned suely after
making accurate hits.
The warplanes struck the outskirts
of Lebanon's third-largest city as the
country marked the 4Sth anniversary
of its independence from France.
Police said smoke billowed from
the teeming camp as ambulances
raced from Sidon to evacuate cas-
ualties.
PRETORIA. South Africa -The government announced today it had
1omcd Cuba and Angola in approvtna a southern Africa peace plan that would
lead.to the pullout of an S0.000 Cuban troops from Anaola.. The qrecment also
clears the way to make South-West Africa mdcpendent after 73 ycan of South
African rule. Foreign Minister Pile Botha said n~tiauons were continuina to
establish a mutually a~tablc system for vcrifyina all pbascs of~ Cuban
troop withdrawal. which ts cxpecttd to be conducted ovp-a ~7-month period.
If this matter 1s resolved, Botha said, the three countries would sip a formal
agreement and tbe United Nations would proceed to set a timetable for
1mplementina its plan to hold independence elections in South-West Africa. . ,. Chun faces subpoena 1n Korean apmlng
Secretary of State George P. Shultz
bas told Congress that he had "no
desire whatever to see Arafat in the
United States." He made the com-
ment in a letter responding to a
request from S 1 senators to deny
~~:t1~-n~tspecifyadatcforhis Soviet scientist: Shuttle launch worthless second address to the ~neral As-
SEOUL-A National Assembly committee probing the bloody military
suppression of the 1980 Kwanaju upnsi.o& votrd today to subpoena former
President Chun Doo Hwf.11 to ex{>lam his role in the incident. 1bc subpeona
came a day before aides say Chun, in~ landitcb attempt tocalmsrowiJl&public
anger. will apologize on nauonal television for corruption and abuses of power
during his rule. Opposition lawmakets on the National Assembly committee
ignored picas from government members to wait until Chun Sl)elk.s to the
nation before decidin& whether to p1"0CC'ed wi\h a subpoena.
sembly. His first address, in 1974. followed U.N. acceptance of the ~EW YORK (AP)-: The recently
Palestine Liberation organization as resigned head . of Soviet. space. re-
an official observer. search says his count~. s maiden
EaYJ>t's state-owned Middle East space. sh~ttlc laun~~ had absolutely
News Agency, in a report from no ~1cnt1fic value. and the !J.~. and
Tunisia's capital. Tunis. quoted. SovJct ~~uttle pr<?&rams arc 1n deep
Emad Shakkour, an adviser to Arafat. l!"Ouble cconom1cally.
as sayifll the PLO leader planned to R?1tld Z. Sagdccv. who headed the
address the General Assembly Nov. Sov1etS~ce Research l~sutute for IS
29 or Dec. 1. -years, said last week s inaugural
Soviet shuttle flight -like the 1981
flight of the first U.S. shuttle -was
an .. outstand"'g technological
achievement:·
The shuttle. however. "is tech-
nology of the 21st century. Wh)
should we pa) 20th century money
for it?" .
"M) personal view 1s that Amen·
can e<tperiencc w11h !ht shuttle in-
d1cates that from the point of view of
cost efficiency> the shuttle is in deep
trouble," saia Sagdccv. who has
followed closely the U.S. dcc1sion-
makin.1 process on the shuttle and is a
kcr science and arms control ad' 1scr
to President Mikhail S. Gorbache\.
"his much simpler and cheaper to
fl> a payload with any kind of
expendable vehicle.··
Queen open• Brltl•IJ ParJlameat KUloa
LONDON -Queen EJi.z.abetb II opened a new ICSSlOn of Parliament
today b) announcing government plans to fortt pOlitic:al candidates in
Nonhem Ireland to renounce violence and to im])C>Sencwcontrolson Britain's
sccrtt service. The monan:h. "'urina '1oas white aown and the state impcna)
crown. outhned the far-reaching leglslattve program before ermine.robecl
pttrs, diplomats and other members of the royal famil y in the Houscofl...ords.
By tradition. Pnme Minister Marpttt Thatcher. whose officials ~ the
spccch-.!..nd the other members of the House of Commons stood at lhc beck of
the chamoer.
r-----~---~--rn~oFF~~-~---------,
( •
,.
•
-----h.' ~ ..... >--i '
Buy ~ Get ~IE.HI I . Free
Good ha free pack of any style Merit Ultra Light \\hen ~ou tuyone.
~ L.-.it-ot"9C\NOOftOl•Ol."".l'.AW ....... o.~a!'tl..,..,._ tOllOtt~ Ml-'°""""--~ Y ,....., ~"",..,lo.....,.. .. , 2• •••·• • -,. ..,... ~'°"'-"'""9 Dr-• --o• ·•~ ..,. 9'lOcJ oNy "u S .-CO"WMef' oa.t .,., ,..,., t..• ':)f oroc:tuM ourttiateet
~~Mot~\--~~Jlf•OU"fOin()f,..~ '~1 onot~..._. ... ..,_.,. ... proo.,r .. ,.
~f"t.l"'d ~Ol09~ tQJ•~ t..,.... -.~ "•4 re.-Ofli.o.-."'9' ~·~ VM ~,_.·,.. ~
Dy ......... _,..,-"' -··.,. ..... ""' """""'.... ·--·-----tie ""'"~~ ·-· ~°"'--·-'-'"°"' ..... <..:! c-...... ,,;roe ""°""'11'1~1<> ......... ....,. ..... p 0 eo. ·~ 111r••· .. II. llO'IOl ..,_....._.,,,...., _ _,._, ___ , __ _
r
•
i t.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two
former presidents and II con-
pasionaJ •ncy are callina on the
next prnidcnt to stop rescuing insol-
vent savinp institutions and start
closin& them down.
"The current approach of mCJlina
or sellina insolvel'\t insutu-
tions. ... dcfen but does not solve the
problem," former prnidcots Gctald
ford and Jimmy Caner said Monday
in a .report to President-elect George
Bush. They ~recommended closing all
insolvent Sells within two years.
The GeneraJ AccountiPJ Office. in
one of a series of transition repons
addreSsed to the next administration
and Conaress. made a more urgent
appeal: ''The time has come 10 move as quickly as possible to close insol-
vent institutions."
Nearly SOO of the nation's 3.000
~Ls are insolvent Another 400
don't meet federaJ capital standards
and are considered weak. Estimates
of the cost of cleaning up the mess
range from SSO billion to SI 00 billion.
The Federal Home Loan Bank
Board has "res<)lved .. 146 cases so far
this year, but only 26 of them by
closing the institution. Most of the
rest have been rescued. The govern-
ment has provided cash and guaran-
tees against future loss to entice
Ponaer pneideata Ford (left) and carter adYiM Prmldent-
elect Oeorse Buh to cloee down falHn& MW.
pnvate investors and heahhy S&Ls
into taking over failed institutions.
GAO analyst Craig Simmons said
his agency was not against all
mergers, but said so far the bank
board hasn't had the money to
recognize all the losses and is covering
them with open-ended guarantees.
Karl Hoyle, a spokesman for the
bank board. defended the current
practice. He said selling too much of
the property from failed S&Ls too fast
could drag down the value of property
held by healthy institutions, further
de~ilitating cconomically troubled
reg.ions.
However, the GAO argued that
keeping failed S&Ls open has in the
past "simply delayed the inevitable
while adding to the eventual costs."
But, it said, closing insolvent thrifts
"means fully recogruzing and finding
the money to pay for the losses in
those institutions -money that
FSLIC (the Federal Savings and LI>an
Insurance Corp.) does not have
today."
...
Bu h still hasn't decided
~n defense secretary pick
POINT CLEAR. Ala. (AP) -
President-elect Geo'F B&alh said &oday be has not ~ decided on bis cboiCc for teeretary of defenle despite ~re~ that he will name
f'onnef Sen. John Tower of Tua
'tNo decision has been mack,"
Bush said when asked about news
reports sa)'i~ Tower would likely act
the key C1t>inct job. ''The Tower
story is not riaht."
Bush said he hopes to finish
naming top-level members of his
team within a month but expressed
mild irritation about "readina these
stories about what I have decided."
He indicated the defense job would
riot be filled this week.
In Washington, Kim Garvin, a
Tower spo~cswoman, .said, "He at
present has not been askCd .... He is on
bold." ,
The vice president spoke to re-
porters traveJina with him aboard Air
Force Two 10 a Republican iovemors
conference in Point Clear, Ala.
At the meetina. be told the iov-
emon he had not wavered in his ~veto avoid raisins taxcs11a way
of uyina to reduce the federal budaet
deficit.
However, he said, .. This problem
of the federal deficit is presuna. .•. On
the fint day of my prnick~. I will
name neaotiators to re~nt the
uccutive branch in defictt talks with
the Conaress."
balance of aovemshipJ, one seat in
the Senate and three seats in the
House -in all of which they hold
majonties.
Later today, bush was beadina to
Houston for a set-acquainted meet-
ina with President-elect Carlos
Salinas de Oortari ·of Mexioo, who
takes office Dec. I. ·
"lt'saaood time to do it. it becomes
much more complicated after both of
us act in office,'~ he said. The meetinf
"manifests the importance that
place on Mcxicao-U.S. relations,''
Bush said.
He told the 20 GOP aovemors and
two aovemo~lcct at the meetina
that results of the election two weeks
qo show that a majority of Ameri-cans "~ with our philosophy." The leaders are expected to discuss
And he--Said, '"We are on our way to lhe economy. trade •. druJ e~force~1"ing the majority party In men~<and possibly 1mm1graJJon at •
America 1f we don't lose sight of what . the pnvate talks and lun~heon at the
is driving our success." John~n Space Ce~.ter in Housto~.
Thouah Bush won the presidency, according to Sheila Tate, Bush s
the· Democrats pined one in the spokeswomAn.
Sn.lpers tled Congressma n vows to·
t~1~~!~~~. fight scandal charges
police believe that snipers who fired NEW YORK (AP) -U.S. Rep. in Garcia's South Bronx con-
on a three-member Rio Grande Robert Garcia, indicted with his wife grcssional district that became a huge
rafting pany, killing one, were d~ in the Wcdtcch ~ndal two weeks defense contractor through a Srnall
traffickers who resented the Amen-after bis re-election to a sixth term, Business Administration program
cans' unwitting intrusion into a drug vowed to fiaht the corruption charges thatallowcd minority-owned firms to
deaJ. . . "with all o( my God-given strength." obtain government contracts without
U.S. and Chihuahua state poltcc The indictments against the SS-competitive bidding.
Reagan leaves rosyeconoznic forecast
sea!"Ched the rugged area Monday and year-old Democrat and his wife, Jane But all~tions of bribery, in-
enhsted a top. tracke~ to find the Lee Garcia, 48, were issued three days fluence-pcddling and other wrong-
attackehrs w~o killed M1ch,ael Heffley, after Rep. Mario Biagi, 0-N. Y., was doing enmeshed Wedtech in a series
4Q, as e .1ned to drag his wounded sentenced to eight years in prison for of federal and state investigations
wife, ~am1e, 32, to .safety. extorting cash and stock valued at up that forced it into bankruptcy
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Re-
agan ad~inistra~1on !s heading o~t C?f
office as It came in. with an opurrusuc
economic forcca.st that many private
economists believe will be hard 10
achieve.
But it will t. left to President-elect
George Bush to grapple with the
consequences for the budset deficit if
the economic growth projections arc
missed.
how the economy will perform in
1989 were being released today by
Beryl Sprinkel, chairman of President
Reagan's Council of Economic Ad-
visers.
1987. Police have not 1den~1fied suspects to $3 million from the Wed tech Corp. proceedings in December 1986
But many pnvate economists be-or made any arrests 1n the attack. Al least 19 people, including for-· . . · lieve the administration is being far which occlft'TC'd Saturday during a mer White House aide Lyn Nofziger, "I ma~ntain my innocence an.d that
too optimistic. They contend that rafting excursion outside Bi& Bend have been convicted in the case. o~my wife and pledge t.o fight this ca~
while higher farm production will National Park on the southwestern NofziJcr was found guilty of illegal with all of my God"'.&lven strength,
help the U.S. economy next year, Texas border. lobbying. . said Garcia, a two-time Bronze Star
vanous other factors wiJI depress Authorities later combed the area Jn Monday's federal grand '"jury winner in the Korean War who in
growth. on horseback and discovered tracks indictments. the Garcias were ac-1978 ~me the second person of
The administration has often been that indicated the assailants fled on cused of extorting $76,000 from Puc no Rican anC'CStry to~ elected to
attacked for basi~ its assumptions horses toward MuJato, a Mexican Wedtech plus a $20,000 interest-free the House of Representative~.
about budget dC\t1cits on so-called town about 15 miles from the shoot-loan from one-time Wedtech vice "My brush with thecrimjnaljustice
.. rosy scenarios· ing scene. chairman Mario Moreno in exchange system has left me deeply shaken as I
-------------------------..-------------------------for obtaining "favorable, lucraJive haveobscrvedthegovemmentharass ~-•••••••••••••••••••• defense contracts for Wedtech,'' said and intimidate my staff, colleagues.
The administration projections for
In August. the administration pro-
jected that the overall economy, as
measured by the gross national prod-
uct, would nse by 3.3 percent in 1989,
even better than an expected GNP
increase of 3 percent this ytar, when
measured from the fourth quarter of
I Terml.tes Are Now Swarming James Fox. head of the FBI office friends and family to induce them to • here. say something negative abour me I The_y_ also were accused ofreceiving while virtually ignoring polypph
I Bugs Flying Around Your Home? • I $77,500 and a diamond and emerald evidence demonstrating my inno-FLEAS? ANTS? I necklace from Wedtcch founder John ccncc and all other exculpatory II FREE EST I MAT. ES Mariotta and his wife, Jennie, in information and testimony," Garcia I 1985. said in a statement issued through a
1 SA YI S S S t I. I Wedtech was a tiny machine shop spokesman, Bill Danvers.
• ur~. .
1. With This 1 G lfC b · • I AD ':~~!~ontrol. hie. I u oast racing
I L1cense.d Contractor -#PR534 I ~or· tropi• cal storm · I . Serving The Orange Coast I I.~
Smee 1974, Wholesale Fumigation PRICES! I SPECIAL DISCOUNT WITH THIS AO I MIAMI (AP) - A sliaJ:itly weak-tional Hurricane Center said a cold ened Tropical Storm Keith churned front from the north was. minding CALL THI BISI! &•8-1377 ! over the Gulf of Meitico toward an with Storm Keith in the Guff of
•• SUNCLOUD
r-----------1~·~ llYFIB I only • 1K If
I s35. oo ..,:::.t:-~evo .. •••!!Im•••••••••••••••••. •• expected Florida landfall after Mexico, keeping it from st.rcngthen-_-----------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~i· a~~from~x~w i~whurrica~m~ the flonda Key~_ and forcing the 'It's extremely unlikely it would
evacuation of2.SOO people in Cuba. strengthen," said forecaster Colin
Entertainment in The Burro Room
296 E 17th St .. Costa Mesa 645-7626
"WE HAVE A LOT OF COMPETLTION • : •
BUT OUR RIBS DON'TI"
llOW SERVlll
FRESH LOCAL LOBSTERll
Open 7 Nights-Dining & Tak•Out
2000 Newport Blvd. (Corner of 20th St.)
Coeta .... 111·2110
The Beat Kept
Secret In Town
0" I""'"""' wleee we aee?
CHEAT
DINNERS
,,.... s12s
• _, ..... ,...., ......, Prime IWt ad ........ !
Reservations (714) 650-1750
428 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
....
Forecasters said the storm still -? McAdie. "It will lose strength as it
packed winds near 65 mph, and crosses land."
emergency planning officials urged Earlier today, Keith's winds were
people along Florida's GuJf Coast to put at 65 mph, but the 11 a.m. EST
batten down and brace for heavy advisory from the hurricane center
rains and winds today. said the winds had slightly eased, to
However, forecasters at the Na-near 65 mph. ·
Atrium Court Flowers
" WE COLOR YOUR WORLD"
OPEN EVERYDAY
8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.
Custom designs, tropicals, Exotics,
balloons, & baskets -worldwide and
local deli very.
-Commercial Accounts Are Our Specialty-
Atnurn Court• Fashion Island
401 Ncwpon Cnt. Dr./Suite IOI /Fashion Island/ M0.2879
P~ts Unlimited
f0ifikf~tst~;1
I I I GRAND OPENING I"
I SPECIAL I
I Prime Rib Dinner ( reaular cut) ..._ I
I Aled Com-fed Choice Eastern Beef s79s t I -or-I
Brochette of Fruits De Mer I I Shrimps, Scallops and Fresh ft$h I
NOLllT I I CIU 7 DAYS • AllPlE FIE[ PAllllC I
l 2642 Newport 81 .• Costa Mm • 646-2774 __) ( ....... o.c. ,., ..... ii ......... """" ... 1111) -------------
Wool Berber
Carpet Sale -
Now s1500
1 OOOA> Pure Wool ••• from S/Vd
~~®
PURE WOOL PILE
The Woolmark label is your
assurance of qualtty·tested
prcx1ucts made of the world's
best Pure Wool Pile
• g ... Why Wool?
A. Because wool
looks better
longer. Pure
woOl C8!J>Cts and
rugs offer great-
er life
~ctancy.
Q ... Why wool?
A. Carpets of
100% pure
wool clean
better and stay
:-cleaner longer.
Q ... Why Carpets of New ZA?aland?
A. .. Because we make our own carpets and
sell them directly to you. our prtces
and quality simply can't be beat.
Q ... Who (S the largest wool carpet speciality
retaUer tn the U.S.?
A.. Ca11ttts of New Zealand
1423 VIiiage Way
Santa Ana. CA 92705
(710 835-WOOL
sutent and Eunice Shrt.er. alater and brother-in-law of the
JobD Kennedy. •pend a moment thla morntnc ii;' prayer at
tile p•e of tile late preeldent.
"The people were all so fnendty.,"
she said. "1 loved the state. 1 was
shocked to hear it happened there.··
Mrs. Weir returned with her hus-
band to the assassination site Mon-
day.
AMLING'S --·
~ NUl'ltt)' ..... c.wn Cenett •
1500 l'iSI C~\t hw • M'Wp()rt beM:h
4-
BAKERY DELI
• Try Our Fresh Fruit
Shakes & Juices
• Ask About Our Catering
ZOii Harbor Boalevard
Costalleea 141-8161
CATERING
HOT. FRESH OUT OF THE OVENS DAILY
• BREADS • PIES • MUFFINS • ROLLS
PREMIUM MEATS & CHEESES • SERVED
ON FRESH BAKED BREAD AND ROLLS •WEDDINGS
•BIRTHDAYS • COOKIES • CROISSANTS • CAKES
• PASTRIES • CINNAMON ROLLS
• SUPER SANDWICHES MADE TO ORDER
•SALAOBAR•HOMEMADESOUPS
(714) 841--5080
• SPECIAL OCCASIONS
190n BEACH BL VD., HUNTINGTON BEACH (RALPHS CENTER AT GARFIELD)
~-------------~----------~--P-----------~· I I · I I I COWOM I COWOll I c.... I
• ~ 11111 • n1P111 I F1111 I
l ••IJI! au J PIE l mFFlll I
$19!:
~
I I I I .... u.11.. I ... u..n.a 1 ... u-o• . I.
L------------..1...------------U..------------~
l~CLUOll IMAM=
HAIM:UT & S1V&.I Cl
HA ... SLIGHTLY ....
~ Con~enient Alternative t0 th~·
POST OFFICE ••• _ ......... lttlpp=c= a U8Poet81) •FAX• XEROX•
• Ollloe lupplae • And Much, Much. ....
----_---~--
-~~ ---=--.. ~.z
1 ....... ~ ..... a...(114)1tl ••1 .. .......... ._... ...............
Irvine grad completes aviation school
Ensign fMlla• B. 0.ff, son of completed basic training at ~ort
Ronald and May Duff of Irvine, was Leonard Wood, Mo.
commissioned in his present rank Airman Rl~rd J~ Kasparoff, son ~n completion of Avtation Officer of Rkhard Kasparoff of Irvine. ha! Can~~te School at the N~val Air graduated from basic training at
Stauon an Pensacola, Fla. ~e isa 1984 Lackland Air Force Base Tex.as. graduate ofW oodbndge H •ah School. • • • •
Lan,.. Cpl. a~-~ o• -o·ley son of Pvt. Grady L. Carl1oa, son of Bill "'" · · ..... ·" ·• • · and Ava Carlson of Huntington Brad Worley of ~os'-Mesa, ~as Beach, has completed basic training reponedfo~dutyw1th the 3rd Ma9ne at Fon Dix, N.J. He rsa 1987graduate
A!rcran. W1:ng at t~e Manne Cotps of Marina tf igh School. Air Station in Tustin. • • • . • • • · Seaman Forrest C. Yous, son of Navy Auman Recruit Ronald J. Hsiu Yang of Huntington Beach. has Bosse, son of Ronald ~sse C?f ~osta duated from the Naval Science
Mesa, has .comp!eted his traann~ !lt ~titute at the Naval Education and
the R~run Training Cornman '" Tr~ining Center in Newpon. R.I. He
San Diego. 1sa J985graduateofFountain Valley
Pfc. Alie• S. Ad~.ri. son of Sammy High School.
and Sue Adham of Irvine. has Cadet Jdfrey•J .• S:ou, son of Navy
received the parachutist badge upon Reserve Capt. James and Joy~ Scott
completion of the three-week air-of Huntmglon. ~ach. re~1v~d prac-
bome course at the Arm_y lnfantr) ucal work m military leadership at the
School in Fort Bennin&-Ga. He is a Arm} ROTC advanced camp in Fort
1984 graduate of University High Lewis. Wash. Scott is a student at
Pendleton. Klrllmaa. son ol John and Maralyn
• • • Kirk man of Costa Mesa. has com· Spec. 4 Daalel A. Leta.er, son of pleted his trainin& at the Recruit
lre(\C Lt1her of Costa Mesa. hu Training Command in San Diego. He
completed an Army primary leader-isa 1984graduatcofCosta Mesa Hilh
shid course. Lclher. a 1979 graduate School.
ofCos\.8 Mesa Hiah School. isa heavy • • •
wheeled vehicle mechanic with the Air Force Reserve Airman 1st
76th Field Artillery in West Ger· Class Mellua >.. Qll .. &ua, grand-
many. His wife is tFie former l,aurie daughter of lttnc Garay of Irvine,
Doody of Costa Mesa. recently completed the clini~I train-
Airman J•• w: Browa, son of ina p<?nion of the medical service
Gordon Brown of Costa M~. has specialist career field at David Grant
graduated from the Air Force telc-Medical Centtt at Travis Air force
communications systems mainten-Base. Calif. • • •
ance course at Sheppard Air Force Ray L BeM41c&u Jr., son of Ray
Base. Texas. He was an honor and Carot Benedick.tus of San
graduate of the course. aemente, has been promoted to the
Navy Fircma~ kr,bl L. Folkstad. rank of major in the Anny. He is an
son of Mike and Sylvia Folkstad of executive oflker with the Army
Huntington Beach. recently made a Supp<?n Command at Pohakulos
port vish in Subic Bay, the Philip-Training Arca i~ ~a:-aii. .
pines. and Okinawa. Japan. He is a . Capt. Job T. Sarap, son of John
1982 graduate of Marina High and Shirley Sarap of Costa Mesa, has
School. · re~rtcd for duty with the 2nd Marine
• • • Division in Camp ~eune. N.C. He • • • Cadet James D. Stead, son of isa I 9ngraduate of Costa Mesa High
Cpl. Patrick L. Saldana, son of Sgt. Vincent p~ Dellin, son of Maria James and Marsha Stead of Hunt-School.
School. use ·
Mary Newquist of Huntington Delfin of Irvine. has been awarded ington Beach, received practical work Midshipman Ta~k R. AJuJ son of
Beach, rece ntly re~ned for duty with th• Marine Corps Good Conduct in military leadership .at the Arn:iy Randy and Pamela Heredia of Hunt-h I M · · · ·n Camp " ROTCadvanccdcampin Fort Ltwts, tp c dist anne !Vision 1 Medal. A 1982 Jraduate of Irvine Wash. He is a student at Cal State inaton Beach. was one of many Navy en cton. • • • High School. he 1s current~ serving midshipm en who panicipated in a W. Long Beach. Army Reserve Pvt. Doeald A. Vita, with the 3rd Manne A1rcra t ing at • • • su mmer training cruise aboard the
son of Donald Vita Jr. ofEI Toro. has the Marine Corps Air Station. Camp Navy Airman Recruit Jeffrey M. tank landing ship USS Peoria. based
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--.in San Diego. •
Your child i:m 't J u!-l
11':.irning about HL.;;wry
• md English in ..chool. He'>-a\"'41 learnmK
about :.impheulmi~. b;irbituale>' aml
marijuana..
Oru$ZS an' rampant 1n our "":honJ,.
tOO..\·. Kid:. <tre t.akinl( tht!m hefure «'houl
They'"' taking tht!m htotw\'t'n c1.._ ..... ~,..
School hilS even ~:ome Ont' nf t hi' mo!'\'
mnvt'nJt'nl pllM.'t'>' to buy dru"".
Thi' NAd part .,.. that all lhl>-<),,..,.n't ju•t
afft'ct tho~ locL• "ho ,m, tdkin~ lht>
dru~ It afft>rt,. J ll th .. 1-.Hb I lrul[• kt"t"I'
WHAT&
NllW,_A ...... AWA
e\·ervune from lt'arnml{.
Our :-chool!4 need uur help.
A,-a parent. you l'an do yuur part .
'falk with vour child. t'in1l uul how bad the
J1"1bl1:-m L~ at hi~ .;choul
Then talk w other piil't'nt.' And ck>c1tft..
" hdt \'UU ii." a JZT'IUP l'lin <lo lo jl\'t dnJgl<
'•Ut of the da..,,.room.
Al:<o, l' intiu.'t your hal ~Of) on clrug
,1hu:-t'. Tht') c>dn PnJ\'tflt-)1>ll \\il~ \'aluable
111f11rmal1011 a.• Wt'll ~ ,..1uncl ad\'ll't'-
Schoot 1,.. \'uur l'hil<I'>-tw::t rhanc·t' to _g1-t
ah1•ad 1n hft'.' ll.in't let clf\1i..-i-take lhal
d1a1,ll't' a"a)
••• Llmaamu L. Arm1troa1, daughter
of Maria Armstrong of Cost.a Mesa.
has completed her training in funda-
mental military skills at the Army
ROTC Camp Challenge in Fort
Knox. Ky. She is a student at Marion
Military Institute, Ala. • • • Sgt. Kevl.D B. Carpeater, son of
Carolyn Carpentr of Mi,sion Viejo. has been awa rded the Marine Corps
Good Conduct Medal. Ca~nter. a
1979 graduate of Mission Viejo Hi&h
School, is currently serving at tne
Marine Corps Air Station Futenma,
on Okinawa. His wife is the former
Irene Cannales of Mission Viejo. • • • Casey 0. Loploa, son of Connie
George and stepson of James George
of Costa Mesa. has been promoted to
the rank of private first class in the
Army. ~nion. a 1987 g.raduate of.
Manna High School. is an indircct-
fire infantryman wjth the 31st Infan-
try at Fort Sill, Okla. • • • Capt. Viaceat M. Compapo, whose
wife. CapL Mavis Campasno, is the
daughter of Eldon and Marilyn Thorp
of Huntington Beach. has arrived for
duty at Altus Air Force Base. Okla. • • • Capt. MJcbel G. Naylor, whose
wife 1s the former Susan Jenkins of
Irvine. recently panicipated in ex-
ercise Cobra Gold 88 while serving with the Marine Medium Helicopter
Squadron 268. 15th Marine Ex-
ped11ionary Unit. at . the Manne
Corps Air Station in Tustin.
WARNING
..
Freeman to head
arts festival board
Philip Freeman. a 32-year festival cxtubitor. has been elected new
president of the Festival of Arts board in Laauna ~ach.
. Freeman -an accomplished ceramist. painter. sculptor and
weaver -was elected at the board's annual membership mCCling in wh~h two other board members were re-elected and four honorary life
memberships were awa~e<S. Re-elected were Anne Chase. who has served on various festival
commiuccs.and Jack Kemp, a volunteer cast member in the Pageant of
the Masters' recreation of"The Last Suppet" for 18 years.
Oflicersel(cted to serve forthecom1naseason arc Jacquie Moffett,, vice president: O.E ... Bud" Schroeder secretary, and David Youna.
treasurer. Also on the board are Richard Jahraus, John Rayment.
Glenn Vedder and L.aauna Beach Mayor Dan Kenney, who is servina
as an ex.officio member. Life memberships were awarded for outstaodin& service t~ the Festival and ~ant of the Ma,ters. Honorees were Glen Eytchison.
pagean\ director since t 919; Diane Challis Davy, assistant director
who receiv~a festival scholanhi'J>; Judy Parker, pag~nt sculptress:
and Fred Bouman. a lonatimc festJval controller. ' Dates for the 1989 festival and paaeant are July 7 through Aug. 27
daily at Jrvine Bowl Park, 6SO Laauna Can)'on Road: •
UCI name• development director
Shar Bucklin, associate director of development at UCI, has been
aru><>inted director of development for the university after serving as
acting director in that capacity since June.
Bucklin. who came to UCI from a development po1t at
Pennsylvania State University in 19B~ spent two years as
development director for <he UCI School of Engineering. During that ~riod,_ private suppon for engineering more than doubled from
S 700,000 to $1.8 million and the school experienced its largest
expansion ever. including construction of two new teaching and
research fa<:ilities.
Overall, UCI raised a record $24.7 million in private support
during 198 7·88.
-Her outstanding record of success in the development office and
in her previ9us position in ensineering speaks for itself," said John
Miltner. vice chancellor for university advancement. In her new position. Bucklin will coordinate the decentralized
development work in UCl's schools and programs and recruit
additional development officers ' to assist in the university's
astvancemcnt effons. She will also oversee UCl's annual fund.
OC Fair wins its own ribbons
The Orange County Fair rcccived two top awards from the
International Association of Fairs and Expositions for promotional
work in the 1988 .. We're BcefinJ It Up" fair theme.
The fai r's media and public relations department was awarded first place for the colored print newspaper advenisements and for the
outdoor promotions. The IAFE judged promotional work from fairs
throughout the country and Canada. ihe awards will be presented at an upcoming IAFE convention in
Las Vegas. Creative and promotional work for the annual Orange County
Fair is provided by Jill Lloyd and Associates. a Santa Ana-based
marketing and public relations firm specializing in the fair industry.
Larry Sippel is creative director for the finn.
Business chancellor for UCI picked
UCI appointed Michaer Webster associate vice chancellor for
administrative and business affairs.
Webster. a Costa Mesa resident. was vice chancellor of business
affairs for Coast Community College prior to his appointment by UCI.
He had been witll the district since 1978, holding positions as dean of
administrative services at Orange Coast College and associate director
of business services at Golden West College. _,.,
C h em icals kno wn to t h e State to cause cancer, birth defects, or other reproductive harm are
found in gasoline, crude oil, and many other petrole um products and their vapors, or result from their
u se. R ead and follo w label directions and use care when liandling or using all petroleum products.
C h emicals known to the State to cause cancer, birth defects, or other reproductive harm are
found in and around gasoline stations, refineries, chemical plants, and other facilities that produce,
h andle, transport, stor e, or sell crude oil and petroleum and chemical products.
O ther fa cilities covered by this warning include, for example, oil and gas wells, oil and gas
tr eatin g plants, pet role um and chemical storage tanks, pipeline systems, marine vessels and barges, tank
tru cks and tank cars, loading and unloading facilities, and refueling facilities.
The foregoing warning is provided pursuant to Proposition 65. This law requires the Governor of California to
publish a list of chemicals "known to the State to cause cancer or reproductive toxicity." This list is compiled in accordance with
a procedure established by the Proposition, and ca n be obtained from the California Health and Welfare Agency. Proposition 65
requires that a clear and reasonable warning be given to persons exposed to the listed chemicals in certain situations.
Ashland Oil, Incorporated Mobil Oil Corpor•tlon, Tex•coUSA
1-800-223-1000, Ext. 906 Its •fflll•tes •nd aubsldlarles 1-800-223-1000, Ext. 906
ARCO 1-800-221-1000, Ext. 906 Time 011 Co. Atlantic Richfield Company Newhall Reflnln~ompany, Inc. 1-800-223-1000, Ext. 906
..
1-800-223-1000, Ext. 906 1-800-223-1 I Ext. 906 .
the Chevron companies
1-800-457-2022
Pacific Refining Company
1-800-223-1000, Ext. 906
TOSCO Corpor•tlon
1-800-223-1000, Ext. 906
CONOCO INC. Phllllps Petroleum Company Tri-Color OH Co. Its subsidiaries and afflllatea 1-800-223-1000, Ext. 906 l-800-223-1000, Ext. 906
1-800-223-1000, Ext. 906 Santa Fe En•~ Company TXO Production Corp. Edgington 0 11 Company, Inc. 1-800-223-1 , Ext. 906 1-800-223-1000, Ext. 906 1-800-223-1000, Ext. 906 Santa Fe Energy
Exxon Comp•ne, U.S.A. Operatl~ Partners, L.P. Union Pacific
a division of Exxon orporatlon, l..S00-22 -1000, Ext. 906 Resources Company
and afflllated companies ShellO~ t-80()..223-1000, Ext. 906
1-800-833-2202 endltl UNOCAL Corporation Fletcher 011 and Refining Company l..aoo-872 .. 7392 1..soo .. 992 .. 1976 1-800-223 .. 1000, Ext. 906 Sun Explor8tlon
J•ckpot and Production Conlpenr U.S. OH a Refining Co.
l .. 800-223-1000, Ext. 906 1..S00..223-1000, Ext. 906 1-800-223-1000, Ext. 906 ,.
Macmlllan Ring-Free OH Co., lt.c.
1-800-223-1000, Ext. 906 Tenneco OH Compen~
1.;S00-223-1000, Ext. w..-.. Fuel Oii Com~y
1-800-22 J.: 1000. Ext.
,1
...
Homeless join
convention on
housing plight
WASHINGTON (AP)-Conven-
tioncers trying to figure out wh~t to
do abouJ the homeless didn't have to
waJk far from their Juxury hotel in the
nation's capital to meet the problem
face-to-face.
Mitch Snyder. who runs a shelter in
Washington. told the 800 people at
the home builders symposium that they were ringed by the homeless.
It was not much ofan exa.ueration.
Two blocks from the Washington
Hilton, in an alley. a 64-year-old
woman in a smudged. ankle-length
wool coat complained about her life
on the streets since her husband died
in 1976 ind she rost her apartment.
"It's a crying shame that p:ople
have to live this way," said the'
woman, who. is among as many as
I S.000 people who are sleeping these
cold autumn nights in the doorways
of the nation's capital or in crowded
temporary shelters because they have
no place to live.
A couple of blocks funher. at a
subway entranceJ Brian Curley, 32.
held up a cardboard sign: .. Lost
a~nment to lire ... please help ... all
gifts are welcome.··
Curley said he can get occasional
, work with demolition crews for $70 a
day, but had not earned enough to
afford to eat and to rent the cheapest
rooms available in Washington.
which he said require a S 150 advance
paxment for two weeks.
or tent revival than a Jlthering of
mostly conservative busutess people.
Participants gave a ·..anding ovi-
hon to Snyder, whose shelter takes 1n
hundreds of people every night.
Snyder. who has slept for months
on city grates. fasted and been jailed
in his I 8-year battle for the homeless.
accused the government of turning its
back on the nation's neediest citizens
and challenged the builders to cut
their profits to help solve the prob-
lem. .. No one has a right to more than
they really need to live. Anything
beyond that is theft," he said.
"I may not be dressed as you are,
but I ain t nd different." Snyder said,
standing at the podium in an olive
drabjacketand a knit shirt open at the
collar. Most of his audience, about
half of them builders. were in busi-
ness attire.
After his speech. Snyder told a
reporter the well-dressed crowd was
made up of "decent people who
struggle to be decent people. That's all
anyone can expc<:t ·~
But Snyders suggestion that the
builders forsake profits to make low-
mcome housing more affordable
didn't si t well with some of them.
"When you continue to talk about
giving up some of )our profits. that
ain't the wax that America works,"
shouted builder Leon Weiner of
Wilmington, Del.
-Of9n09 COMt OAtl Y Pt LOT fTUllder. November a. ,_ -
Tombstones show
ptlllution trends
NEWARK. Del (A P) -Two
Un1\.ers1t>' of Delaware researd~rs
have found that marble tombstones
provide a unique record of air
pallution that shows the clean-up
effons of the last two decades appear
10 be "orkmg.
By meuunng the deterioration
rates of about 2.000 tomMtoncs in
cemetenes frorp Newark ·to Nor-ristown. Pa geograph y professo/
Thomas C Me1erd1ng.an<t graduate
student Johan Feddema ha'e
produced an outline of air t>Olluuon 'history 1n the Delaware Vatrey.
The stud) found extensive dif-
ferences 1n pollution levels between
areas and suggests that pollutants that
have nearly dissolved some bead·
stones likely have extensively dam•s·
ed other structures.
Man~ tombstones 1n central Phila-
detph1 .. -the hardest-hi1 area 10 the stud~ -are so weakened from
decades of sulfur d1ox•de depos1rs that they "'1ex under slight pressure,"
Fcadema said. Their surfaces ·are so
disfigured from flaking that man)
mscnpuons have disappeared.
In contrast. tombstones examined
tn Delaware cemetenes show less
wear, and those m areas with excel-
lent air quaht). such as Ha"'a" and
rural :'\ebraska, shov. almost no
detenorauon.
The researchers surve)ed
tombstones placed between I 790 and
1840. restncung their study for the
most pan to markers made from
marble extracted from southeastern
Penns) h an1a quarries. They
measured the base and tops of 30
tombstones 1n each cemetery and
compiled an average weathering fig-
ure per cemetery.
tombstone ma) detenorate at JO
11mes the race of a stont in a ruraJ
IJ"IVC)lni.
They also found that a distance of :J
even a few miles from an industnal J
area can lead to markedly different I pollution rates ,
Because tombstones are wJde-
spread. remain relatively untouched 1 over time and are easily damaacd by
atr-bome poUutants. thC) presicnt a
fairly sample gauge for air quality,
said Me.ierding.
The researchers said the
tombstones appear 10 have been most -<
affected by gaseous sulfur d1ox1de. /
which spurs the growth of g)psum t
Cl)Stals• that cause marble to shed "
large flakes and lose strength. .
However. both Feddema and
Mc1erdmg beheve acid ram. which
can carry pollutatns great distances.
has made only a shaht ~ontrib~tton to ..
tl1e detenorauon. They poull instead '
to local sources of pollution. such as "
coal-fired power plants, ·steel mills
and refinenes. • '' The p1oneenng stud}. reviewed
last week dunng an environmental
forum 1n Nt'wark. also suggests:
• The v.orst polluuon damage
occurred between the 1930s and
1960s.
• ulfur d1ox1de damage to mal"ble
tombstones probabl) depicts the way "
air pollutants have damaged building
matenals hke cement. brick and
metal.
• .\ar pollution controls to hmrt
em1ss1ons installed in the last two
decades appear to be workinJ. After
1970. rates of deteriorauon in
tombslones ~m to have improved.
reflecung the cleaner skies.
·1 t'"Y, not to look like a street
person,· he said. ··eut rm lucky to get
a shower. Hopefully I will have
amassed enousJt of a fortune to spend
Tbanks&ivingmdoors."
Estimates of the number of home-
less Americans range from 250,000 to
several million. Experts agree that
they will be a major challenge for
President-elect George Bush 's ad-
ministration.
Weiner said homelessness cannot
be treated simply as a moral issue. He
said it re~uares a Strong federal
housing policy and subsidies of low-
income housing comparable to the
billions of dollars in tax deductions
allowed on home mortgage interest.
The difference between the bases
and the tops. which were more
• "'~ exposed to the wind-borne pol-These two unldentifled men are amon& the 15.000peopleon lutants.. shov.ed the rate at which the
• The companson of tombstone
damage may be 1.tscd to compare the
costs of pollution damage between
rcgi~ons. If central Philadelphia has
suffered I 0 umes the pollution of
Newark. costs associated with that
polluuon should be 10 tJmes more in
the •treeb of WuhlnCton, D.C .• who liave no home. stones detenorated.
All surveys show that the numbers of the homeless are growing, that they
include increasing numbers of famil-
ies with children and that they are
found mall-parts of the country.
Kent Colton. builders association
executive vice president. said many
builders ha ve cut profits to build low-
income housing. and the industry has
more than us share of bankruptcies.
The researchers calculated the de-creative financing. job training and calledthehomeless"ourbrothersand tenoration rate according to a 100-
construction methods. Some partici-sisters." ~ year scale and found that an urban
pantsalsotouredhome~~shelters in ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
the Washington area.
Philadelphia. he said.
Many are people who hold Jobs but
don't cam enough money to pay rent
or qualify for mortgages.
The symposium. sponsored by the
National Association of Home Builders and an odd mix of establish-
ment organizations and homeless
action groups, sometimes sounded
more like a human rights conference
.. Builders arc willing to be pan of
the solution," Colton said in an
interview. "but leadership has to
come from the federal government.
The new administration has the
opportunity to focus on the positive
side of housmg as a national pri-
ority."
The symposium included two days
of meetings focusing on how bust·
nessmen a net others can help shelter
the homeless. mcludmg sessions on
A woman at a floor microphone
during one sc~ion shouted an appeal:
"If we get together and pray together
w~ can do something about this
situation."
A Missouri priest. the Rev. Gerald
Kleba. challenged each of the nauon·s
400,000 church congregations to join
local builders in constructing one
house apiece for the homeless.
ABC-TV anchorman Peter Jen·
nings. m ~conference keynote speech.
r.-111ts1e-.n a....,...111......-
I COUPON I
SAVE 20o/o
......... &l*slt ... _,. .........
DOGHOUSES
Keep Your Pet Warm And Dry
$15ooOFF
•
3 snLES - 9 SIZES
(}Vewport 8urf c&. 8port, /~.
GREAT SAVINGS
FOR THANKSGIVING
STARTING
.~ ~
WED. NOV. 23 TO TUES. NOV. 29
..,,
..
HOURS
&OOem SOOpm
OAILY
.
10% TO 50%
OFF
SALE
ll&anOP,_._ ---lf•GW llDA'9 Ana ................
•
~U{e·~
673-5245
q,uality ...
a suaran tczci. from
et ·cui9'Z. m "l l of ou-
mctrcbandi.scz.. and.
vc.czmp!1 f1czd. in
our fabulous
5<z.a island cotton
shlrt&
o combmot.ion of
dureb11lty end
unbzl i.;:vobla.
sof'tM5S, lt 15 tru 1\'
~ fin~&t cotton ·
avo1loblq., onll. touch
<Z.Xple1ns why
P.l~S<l \.1s1t our OZ\\;
stonz. soon ~nd.
appnzc idtcz tiYl.
d i ff cz.nz..nca..
Z>c4 'tilt 1ts1e Jz,,, 27d.
n¢WpOT'l, 'ocu)ch. • !>19 ~Po,.'-c.c.ntA.r c1T • 1l'l,/eit:it·5070
poSO<Xno • !>29 ~t.h t.el<q. evct • 818/ 30'f -9~.)~
wcietwood vlllogtz.· 100\ ~t,wood. b1vd • ll3/ 208·3273
TNnnpllJc«Z./&antoone· 2800 nort.h nwun at· 1l'V~~·l2~~
r
Justice must
balarice urge
for vengeance
Crimes against children arc particularly difficult to
·comprehend. The motivation that leads to robbery or even
murder is palpable in many cases. Ana while we don't
condone those misdeeds, we can sometimes understand
them. We can forgive.
But when a child is the victim, our capacity for
understanding wanes. We are like the victims, weak.
Emotions dominate. 'Intolerance overshadows reason.
We hold the innocence of youth inviolate.
Damn him who violates a child. Calls for vengeance and
retribution seem more appropriate than those for justice.
Punish the bastard: our hearts cry. Make him pay.
And then, ,stop. Try to understand the circumstance of
the one accused of a crime against a child. Feel the burden of
utter helplessness the unjustly accused m_ust carry._He speaks
of innocence but we can only hear the cnes of the innocents.
Watch a respected community leader, a teacher perhaps.
as he is tossed into such an emotional cauldron.
Guilty or innocent, the facts are to be determined. .
A judge and a/·ury will decide wheth.er Fran~ Tozzohna
Jr. did what four o has students accuse ham of doing.
The veteran of 18 years in the classroom stands charged
with molesting those he was entrusted with the responsibility
of nuturing. He is accused of violating a sacred trust, of·
shattering the pristine cloak of youth.
Did he touch the f rls in a filthy, vulgar way? Did he leap
the chasm of decency .
Or is Mr. Tozzolina the real victim here? Is he the ta!let
of a vidous. destructive plot batched by dirty little minds.
Only four grade ~hool girls and Mr. _Tozzo!ina Imo~ in
their hearts what their legal representatives wlll seek an a
courtroom later this month.
rrhe truth can be elusive.justice is not an absolute.
We can.only ho~ it is not as difficult to find the answer
as it is to find the ability to understand.
Missing farm money
The General Accou1lli11g Office reported i~n rther day
that the U.S. Department of Agriculture can't properly
account for SI .6 billion worth of commodity certificates used
during the past two years in Washington's huge crop-subsidy
program. .
The certificates are issued to farmers in lieu of cash as
support payments for wheat. feedgrains. cotton and rice and
as compensation for taking land out of production.
The certificates can be re(ittmed, sold to others, used to
buy government-owned commodities or to pay off govern-
ment price-support loans.
The discrepancies reponed by the GAO. a federal
watchdog agency, include certificates being presented for
redemption when there is no record of their having been
issued and instances of certifi cates being redeemed more than
once.
How much of this is due to processing errors and how
much to fraud apoarently is anyone's guess.
It's painful enough that Washington's intrusion into the
farm economy costs taxpayers more than $20 billion a year.
But to let S 1.6 billion of it fall between the cracks is
intolerable.
KaoxviHe (Teo.) New1-&atiJJel
Soviet changes
The coincidence of two statements by the Soviet U nion
on matters of history and humanity indicate that the nation is
slowly moving toward the more open society that ... Mikhail
S. Gorbachev says it is.
First came the admissison in a Soviet publication that
every Soviet school child's understanding of history -that
Josef Stalin's 1939 non-aggression pact with Adolph Hitler
wa~ a clever ruse to stall for time unul the Red Army could be
prepared for war -was a lie ....
Now has come the official reopening of discussion of the
case of Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat who saved
hundreds of Jews from extermination during World War II.
The official line continues to be that Wallenberg died in a
Soviet prison 41· years ago.
The significance of the official publication of the two
events may not be large. Some: doubt that Wallen berg is really
dead. and there have been reports of his being seen in a prison
camp within the past tw~years. And the casualties of World
War II cannot be brought back.
But if the people of the Soviet Union are allowed to see
their own history whole-in the round-then the world will
be a safer place for everyone.... ..
Tri.City Herald, KeuewJct, Wasb.
Welcome to reality
Michael Dukalcis did not have lo ng to rest after his l 'h-
ycar quest for the presidency ended. Returning to work as
governor ... he began working on Massachusetts' budget
deficit -roughly half a billion dollars. '
That's peanuts. The national debt grows by that amount
every 24 hours.
Welcome back to reality: The budget deficit and the
national debt arc the biggest problems Vice President Georae
Bush will face'' president.
ORANG( COAST .., ....
.._.,auc1nn
Publisher
~.-y~---~ .. ~ w .., ll. Co1i1a ...... CA Addr-.
•• a ............. '* C-• --.CA ....
Cbrln• tW. Va.) Dany Mall
,., ..
£•
O.F..,
AulcllM (dltol ,.a..
..... l.-......
~[·
.... c.... """~ f:..,.= c... ... .... """
.......
~Ont......
letlll~ ..... ........ ....... ,......,
~~ ... ,..... ... c....... ......
~ ....... _..._ ,...........,
Without.Oswald, U.S. would
have a far: different-history
This is a month for gut-wrenching
anniversaries.
For most Americans.. however, the
most significant of the observances occurs today, the 2Sth anniversary of
John Kennedy's assassination in
Dallas.
Television broadcasts and the
pages of newspapers and magazines
ha ve been filled with Kennedy re-
membrances and just about everyone
over the age of JS can recall exactly
what he was doing when he learned
that Kennedy had been murdered in
Dall_as.
A quarter-<:entury later. the events.
as conveyed via television, remain
etched into our coUective conscious-
ntss: the filmed accounts of the assassination, Lyndon Johnson's as-
sumption of the presidency. the state
fu neral, the televised murder of what a presidential commission was later to say was the lone. deranged gun-
man. Lee Harvey Oswald. by a sleazy
nightclub owner. Ja<?k Ruby.
But putting thal aside, as difficult
as it might be, what has been the
political impact of John Kenned y's
brief pr~idency?
It's become buried in the trauma of
later events, but one must remember
that Kennedy's election to the presi-
dency was itself clouded.
Many political historians bdieve
that Ke9nedy actually lost the 1960 election to Richard Nilton, and won
only because the Richard Daley
machine in Illinois and forces allied
with Johnson in Texas stuffed the
ballot boxes.
Had Nixon, rather than Kennedy. been inaugurated in 1961 , the course of American and world history would
have been greatly altered.
Would the Vietnam War have
expanded, as tt did under Kennedy
and then Johnson? Would, then, the
social fabric of the United States been
ripoed apart by the war'?
Would the black civil rights move-
ment. which gained great momentum
under Johnson, have continued to
languish under a Nixon presidenc).'?
Would Nixon himself have exhibi-
ted the vindictive streak that cul-.
minated in the Waterpte scandal-a
syndrome that may have evolved
from his sense ofbej~g~heated out of
the presidency in I~
These and countless other ques-
tions flow from what haP-pcned in
1960. Certainly. however. 1fKennedy
had not claimed the office he would
not have been an assassination target
in 1963.
And what if he had not been
murdered? Would he have continued
the Vietnam War as agressively as
Johnson did? Pro-Kennedy his-
torians say he wouldn't. but that's just
supposition. Perhaps he would have
been hounded from office as Johnson was. his legacy that of a vi llain rather
than a mart)rt'd hero. Or perhaps he
would have found some graceful exit
from the war. It's simply impossible
to say for certain.
The current issue of TV Guide
magazine contains its own Kcnnedl
tribute and labels him the nation s
"first television president."
That he was. in both life and death.
Nixon. in the opinion of most
expcns, displayed the superior arasp
of facts and events when the two met
durma the nation's first televised
debate.
But Kennedy clearly came across
on television better, thus chanP.ng for
all times the chemistry of pres1dential
politics -and those below the
presidential level as well.
The ability to perfonn well in front
of the c«imeras has become perhaps
the most important quality in a
candidate for high office. There's a
direct line between John Kennedy
DAN
WALTERS
and Ronald Reagan.
At the same time, however, the
Kennedy lqend has been a huge
burden for has own party.
Perpetually, the Democratic Party
searches for another Kennedy, some-
one who can connect to the public via television, who has· that certain
undefinable something.
Brother Bobby Kennedy filled the
role until his own assassination five years later. Then brother Teddy
stepped into the picture, tcasina the
party and the nation with the prospect
of rediscoverint a lost Camelot but
provina, in the end, that he wasn't
quite up to the task. ...
And then there have been the
pscudo-Kcnnedys. such as Gary
Han, who discovered too late that
what was forgivable in Kennedy was
tawdry in a pretender.
Even Michael Dulcakis pve it a try,
.trying to evoke a connect1on between
has presidential candidacy and Ken-
nedy's campaign in 1960. But
Dukakis was no John Kennedy and
he had no Richard Daley to fix the
election.
It would be better for both the party and the nation lo put John Kennedy in his proper historical perspective, to
end the fixation. He was what he was,
for better or worse, but that was then
and this is now.
Du "~n 11 • 1p4Jate4 c.lluu&t
Guatema la offe rs t o uris t s a
loo k at Lati n America's p ast
"The Adventures of Humpty Dumpty in Central America" is my latest idea for a book and I've just
finished researchina the first part -
Guatemala! When I say researching you'd think
I was prcpanng my spiel for the IRS.
Actually It was the latest odyssey of a
band of traveling f ricnds led by
Nonna Hilker. My intrepid buddies love to be on
the cutt~!ll edac of danacr and
tourism. We've aot to sec the country
before the .. U.S. Advisory Apinst
Travel" IOC'S out. Some or au of the
sroup have been to South Africa, the
Middle East, China. Russia. Greece,
Europe, lndia, and now Central
America. In travel, these is a window in time
when tounsts can make their move.
Norma told us that this was the
optimum moment for Guatemala.
Just four boun from LAX,
Guatemala -about the size of
Louisiana -is squeezed between
Mexico on the nonh. Belize and the
Atlantic and Caribbean on the east.
Honduras and El Salvador and the
Pacific on the touth and west. II is the
cork in the in Central American
bottle. Whatever bubbles up from
that turbultnt ara must pns throuah
Ouatemall first.
It is mostly mountainous and
inhabi1ed by eipt million of the n.ices&. moec DOlite. mo.t honnl oeODle ~will.ever meet -~ ror . the deltb IQ'*h. currently lft
mnitlioft.
0"*"'811 .... been peM::cftal for
two ran. It ii 1 quiet, buddi-. de~SowMlwe-......a 10 .. ;RI JI of dlJI IDed Willt ==t"•. wwy, ._.
Our ~ 't Tona ol a.rt
Tours. •llllkd to belp • .....
stand and love his country. My own
special guardian angel, Edgar (actu-
ally helper to Julio our bus dnver).
-magically appeared at my elbow for
the too-steep step, the impossible
cobblestone pathways and the
ancient, dccayedjunaJe trail. .
Oneofthe~onsofourtravehna
aroup is lo vasit ancient civilizations.
So our first destination was an early
momina_ fliaht to Tilcal, six sq~ miles of spectacular Ma~ nuns.
Imagine the sheer theater of the place
-2,000-year~ld,. skyscral".Cr-tike
pyramids towenna above the JunaJe.
Temoles. pat.ces and ceremonial
platforms are sunounded by one of
the world's last tropical rain forests
teemina with monkeys and birds.
The Marans were inc:ns.nt
builden. ln freeways of stone, com·
bined with the symmetry of the
pyramids •'!d ~orm~. !bey fashioned a city a of its ume.
Tik.al was built with a vision f'or
eternity. Yet for no apparent ~
the Mayans tet the last S10ne Mell 1n
the Great P1ua in 869 AD. Tbiny-
onc ~ laaer. Tikal stood daened. ~junp =kly Crept in to cover
upats put . The mytteriout Mayans devded a com~ system of writiftl, chanecl
the heavens aad built ~ificent
temples of llOee. And dMy did Ill this
wittiout tbe.... metal ioolt, beatt1
of ...... or bt;wt1dal ol IM
revolutioal of IM .... -moon.
We left 1M -to retunt to Ota•rnh City IO wail oua electioe ., ........ ~-=--· campMaiob. n.Mjt; deov· .......... '** ...... MCwurbkn•t:..•mformecl. T1leD we ,...,... •,JD hd ..... °"' ~117111 .... ldll ....... ...
W'!Rd l:.-So m.cla lbt --iml
I$ IOI • •
JACKIE
HEATIEI
If you think our ballot was com-
Dlex, in Guatemala's election, the Indian majority is not primarily
Spanish speakina and is lartely il-
literate. So the ballots are marked
with the symbols of the candidates'
parties: a bullteye, a arcen tree, a
~·ico·s praident~lect. Carlos
Salina de Oc:irtari~ wu at our hotel
to meet with otber unlrll American
officials in preparation for the follow-
up on w AriU ~ plan. If only I
soc*c S,Uitb. Tiiie ddepta were clebatina die i11Ue rilbt IC'f'Oll from my room. It wa torture not to tct the
inlide . Beck~ tourist trail we saw the
old colonial capiw, Antilua. hurried
ofl'to ~ for tbe mar-~ and ended up1l vi>k:afto rimmed
LaieAtidu.
In a w111btlq-m11nt11tl column M1 lbare
the K9QcbiUI llldilnl' nali ~· It c:oukf rnofaliolUze our C'fty C<Man-
ciL 1 rm IW'I Ibey lft ltill ~ .. their ._.. dleamy AmnicaallGJMo .......... '° .. ~--CCNld 19e ...-'HO. could I aara·.-...-...-.1 ... ..-o1 IMM1.._
""Wei H~ DilmlfY, .... ~ ~ .... ' ,_, adftncum ... :m.1::..,. ... , •• :.a;, a
• lldlf .., ...., ...... "' ... ••
We don't
need fur to
keep Warm
To the Editor. · . Now that we art. fully enaulfed 1n
winter (at least as "winter" as we Fl
here in our coastal 119radise), many
people~ thintinaofkeepinc warm.
I would like to appeal to your
humanity and uk you all lO not consider buyina a fur (for yourself or
anyone eltc).
We have many lovely fake furs that
do not need to be killed in order to
warm us. Thepeatsufferineand 119in
caused by our so-ailed need for furs
is just sometbin1 we human be1nas
should be aware of and not let happen
under any circumstances. As the people at .. In Defense of
Animals" say ... "fasbion shouldn't
cost an arm and a rea. •• Somethin1 else we should think •about is the fact that alona with the pain, aaony and mutilation of the •
mtended animals. many dop, cats
etc. arc killed or maimed by these
steel-jaw t.raps.
Let us all rally be HUMAN
BEINGS!! and be HUMANE.
JOY PATTERSON ,
Laauna Niauel ·
TooAY 1~ H1sroR¥
Today is Tuesday. Nov. 22, the
327th day of 1988. There are 39 days
left in the year. ~
Today's hi&hli&ht in history: t
On Nov. 22, f963. President John :
F. Kennedy was shot to death while
ridin& in A motorcade in Dallas. • Texas Gov. John B. Connally, in the same car as •the president, was
seriously wounded. A suspect, Lee ..
Harve_y Oswald. was captured. And
Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson •
was sworn in as the 36th president of
the United States.
On this date:
In 1718, EnaJish pirate Edward
Teach -better known as "Black-..
beard" -was killed during a battle !
off the Vil'Jinia coast.
In 1890, French President Charles •
de Gaulle was born in Lille. France.
In 1906, the "S-0-S" distress sianal
was adopted at the International
Radio Telqraphic Convention in !
Berlin.
In 1928, ·•ao1ero." a musical work by Maurice Ravel, was first per-
formed publiely, in Paris.
In 1930. listeners of the British
Broadcast.ins Corp. heard, for the first •
time. radio coveraae of an American
colleee football pme as Hal'Vard
defeated Yale, ll-0.
In l 93S, a flyins boat named the
China Clipper took off from
Alameda. Calif., cafTl!ng more than
100 000 {>!eccs of mail on the first •
tra,;,..Pacific airmail fli&}lt. .
In 1943. lyricist Lorenz Hart died
in New York. •] ln t 9-tl, President Franklin D. • Roosevelt, British Prime Minister ;:
Winston Churchill and Chinete •
leader Cbian& Kai-~bek met in Cairo
to discuss measures for defeating the ,
Japenctedurina World War II. •
Jn 1967, the U.N. Security Council
approved Resolution 2<42, which calls •
for Israel to withdraw from territories •
it captured in 1967, and for Israel's
adversaries to ..ftCOIJtize the Jewi$h
state's ri&bt to exist
In l~7S, Juan Carlos was
proclaimed kin& of Spain after he • swore fidelity to the pnnciples of the !
rqime of the late Francisco Fran~.
In 1977, reaular passenger service •
between New\' ork and Eu.rope on the
supersonic Concorde bepn on a trial
basis u ssrs from Air France and I
British Airways landed at John F.
Kennedy Jntemational Airpon.
In 1980, Hollywood teaend Mae
West died at her Hollywood residence
attheqcof87. ·
Ten years aao: Peoples TemP.le
member Larry Layton was arrested in
Guyana and cbarsd in connection • with the killinp oT U.S. Rep. Leo J.
Ryan and four others whose deaths •
preceded the Jonestown mass ~
murder-suicide. (Layton was eventu-I
ally convicted in the United Slates of
aidina in Ryan's murder, and was
sentenced to life in~:·> . Five yean 190: orues were
held to mark the 20th annivenary of
the asuuination of President John F.
Kennedy indudir11 services in Dal-
las, WMhinp>n and Hyannisport,
Mass.
One year •= The aovcmment of Nicaf'llU8 releued 98S political pcis-
oncn. lllOll of them believed to have '
ties to the Contra rebels, in a show of
compliance wi&h a Central American
peeceptan.
-n. ..U.1dl•I r..... --
ec-mamwelcome
Tbe Daily Pilot weleoma your
opinions on m1\ten of pubbc
intll'llL Leacn lllld lonler anictes or com-
ment111 •• be silned. tYDed or c~Dd leit IO lEtTERS ~....._P.0.loa '"°-C.. W... CA 91626. ..._. ilKlude JOUI' adilhat and ::C' 7 I •1 IO tMl we mq • s Oa,.. .:1 , • If ,. ,,. ID iiiMe a ftlW I
=n:c;.c:~~ -1111 a •D iMI •11 1 , ......... -•• ,. brilt •
,
Gour1net status
pops up for snack
. as Corporate gift
El Toro firm· s treat
used as a fund-raiser
for charities, teams
B1 BEA ANDERSON °' ................
Ideas just keep popping up for
Roger C8meron.
For someone with restaurant and
marketing background, aoing into
business for himself seemed o.nly
natural.
But selecting the type of business
took some brainstonning with his partners-wife Jennifer and brother-
1n-law Eric Jones.
"We were looking for an idea that
was not overdone and we wanted
something we could develop and
expand and possibly franchise after a
while," he said.
As the trio kicked ideas around.
they were munching popcorn. a
favorite snack of theirs.
So Cameron's wife suggested aoing
into the popcorn business and he 101
,excited. From there Pop's Com was
born ... but it was more than a year
before it opened for business in EJ
Toro.
Althouan they had leased property
on Lake "Forest Drive, they had to
wait for the building to be con·
structed. So the~ spent the time at·
their iec cream candy store in the
Upper Pcninsu of Michipn, ex-
penmenting and perfecting recipes.
Their gourmet _popcorn comes in
such delectable flavors as caramel
(based on a Cameron family recipe
that dates back more than I 00 years),
caramel with nuts, praline with
pecan, cinnamon made with red
cinnamon oil, confetti that uses
colored candy syrup, Monterey Jack
cheese and a blend of Swiss and
Monterey Jack, and for sodium-
conscious caters, plain white with no
salt.
Of special interest is a gourmet
white com that 1s grown only in select
areas of the Midwest by families who
Newport
Place is
taking
shape
Snyder-Langston Builders in
Irvine has started construction on
Newport Place, a $20 million office
building with connecting athletic
club and commercial center, accord-
ing to Jim Carlson, company vice
president.
The 208.~square-foot office
structure and retail center wil be
located at the comer of Newport
Place and Dove Street in Newport
Beach. one mile south of John
Wayne Airport and the San Diego
Freeway.
\ .
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1968 * I: J
•
. '
Caalat.en of Pop•• Com can be cutom-decorated with holiday motlfa, team emblem. or compe.ny loeoe.
have been growing and processing it
for more than 80 years. This com.
~pcd in 100 percent com oil, has a
li1. t all natural corn taste. lt bas no
c olesterol, is very low in calories and
yet high in fiber. Special pack.aging
keeps the product fresh for at least
two weeks, Cameron said.
And while the popcorn can be
purchased in plastic-lined resealable
t>ags, the company also offers gift
canisters that arc decorated in hol-
iday themes or can be personalized,
such as with corporate logos. This
idea has captured the attention of
Fortune 500 companies for use in
sales promotions as well as thank-you
gifts for clients.
The custom printing can be done 1n
four colors. and can sizes range from I
quan up to 61h gallons.
Another special service provided
by Pop's Corn is coloring the product
to match the theme or logo. such as
orange and black for HaJlowecn.
green on St. Patrick's Day or having
the popcorn at the top of the can form
a logo such as the blue and gold Rams
j
symbol. off. Members can then sell the cans at
And now the company is off!rina the suaested price, making 40 to 4S
its product as a fund-raiser for percent profit"
chant1es and non-p.rofit organiza-. With the exception of a few uons. ··An organization can have spcciaJty markets in southern Oranac
canisters custom printed to sun us County, the com can only be
d ·• dC F · purchased at the two Pop's Com nee s. sa1 ameron. or instance. a loca1ions. 2S40 Main St.. Irvine, and
booster club could have its logo and 21 73 1 Lake Forest Drive, EJ Toro. the team's schedule printed on It.
The wa~ the fund-.raising works, Orders can be made by c.allinJ
explamed Cameron, 1s .. ~ sdl an 800-822-POPS. Delivery in Cali-
order at a suggested retail price and fomia takes two to three days; outside
g1ve the organization 40to 4S percent the state. five to seven days.
PG&E, BofA see
slower growth for
nation's economy
Rate.of2.5 percent
predicted in outlooks
made by utility. bank
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
nation's economy Will arow for the
seventh straJ,ght year in I 989, but at a
slower rate, according to economic
forecasts from two of the state's ·
largest corporauons.
Bank of Amenca's 1989 U.S.
Economic Outlook said there will be
no recession. even though economic
growth will slow to 2. 7 ~nt from
l 988's 3.8 percent. Paofic Gas and
Elcctnc's chief economist said he
expects a growth rate of 2.S percenL
Inflation will increase to 4.9 per-
cent from 4.1 percent in 1988 while
the \l,DC11lploymcnt rate will be
around S.5 perttnt next year. W• pins are expected to increase
an averqeof4.3 percent compared to
J .3 pcrctnt. the forecast said As a
result. consumer prices will be 0. 7 of a pcrccn• point higher in 1989 due
to wage pressures.
Tapan Munroe, the chief econom-
ist for PG&.E.. said inflation will rise to
abOut 5 percent next year. lnterat
rates will climb by about 1.5 percent.
with to 11 pcrctnt. be said
Munroe also said the California
'economy will continue to outperform
the mt of the country.
Owned by Mclachlan Invest-
ment Co. and designed by Ware&.
Malcomb Architects of Irvine, the
nine-story office struc:<ure will be
connected to a three-story building
desiped for commercial tenants on
the first floor and a fully equipped
athletic club on the second and third
floors.
Mclachlan is expected to occupy
the fifth floor of the tower as its
corporate headquarters and lease
the remaining space in the building.
Thti>roject is scheduled for comple-
tion late next~-
Rendert..n& aboww tbe $20 million New-
port Place deelCned by Ware a: lla.fcomb
Arcbitecta of Imne and beinai con-
atracted by Snyder-Lanaaton Bullden.
"'The annual growth rate, however,
masks weaknes~s 1n tM economy.
.,,.,h1ch will become evident in lhe last
half of 1989. •• said John Wilson. the
bank's chief economist.
After a strong growth rate in the
first quarter. the result of bouncing
back from the 1988 drought. "econ-
omic growth ~•II slow to under 2
percent for the remainder of the
year .. the bank·s stud) sa.u1.
"The slate•s supenor ~
perf ormapce is a rcsuJt of its econ.-
om ic dJversit), its largr share ofhilb-
~wth manufacturing and services
1ndustncs. and its role as the Pacific
Rim gateway," he said.
Munroe also had bad oe.,.,a for
Californians: lhe state's home af.
fordabahty problem will only Jtt
worse. Highenntercst rates will result
10 the construcuoo of fewer new
homes in Cal1fom1a, he satd.
Oad in a high performance glass
and polished granite exterior. the
office tower will feature a four-story
interior atrium with stepped
balconies and prov15ions for a
restaurant on the first floor.
Newport Place Athletic Club Wlll
feature two racquetball courts. a
basketball half-court, two Jacuzzis,
sauna and steam rooms. Adjacent to
it will be a five-story park.inf
structure with capacity for 1,07
vehicles. ·
Snyder-Langston Builders. head·
quartered in ·the Irvine Business
Complex. 1s a mulu-discip.l'lnary
commercial/industrial construc-
tion firm that specializes in provid-
ing its clients wtih computerized
project cost analyses. technical
planning. schcdulong support and
consultation for obtaining prOJCCl
entitlements.
The company offers both shell
construction and intenor improve-
ment services. and us clients in-
clude Mclachlan In vestment Co ..
Trammell Crow Co .. The Sammis
Co .. The Irvine Co. and Donahue
Schriber Sn¥der-Langston has of-
fices 1n Irvine. San Diego and
Ven!ura County.
.. The most scnous economic policy
challenge that the Bush adm1ms-
trat1on will face 1s the federal budget
deficit. even though both the poli-
ticians and the general pubhc arc
suffenng'from battle fatigue on this
issue." sa1d Wilson.
Nationally, a median-priced home
costs $9 I .000 and as within reach of
haJf of aJI Americans. In California,
only 24 ~nt can now afford a
home with a median price of
Sl72.000. ..
U.S., allies move to shore up sagging d~llar abroad
Economists predict the Federal Reserve
will be forced to boost U.S. interest rates
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
United States and its major c<:on-
omic allies successfully intervened
last week to halt a slide in the value
of the dollar, but economists pre-
dicted that the federal Reserve will
be forced to boost U .S. interest rates
in a funhcr defense of the
beleaguered U.S. greenback.
The coordinated intervention in
the currency markets by the United
StatcSi_ Japan. West Germany, Eng-
land, France, Italy and Canada was
the most widespread dollar rescue
effon s.lnce last April when the
markets were stampeded into a
dollar sell-off following a bad
monthly trade report. ·
Despite the succ:css oflast Thurs-
day's rescue effon many traders
foresaw renewed schina pressure in
the months ahead because of fears
that President-elect George Bush
and the newConsress will be unable
10 reach agreement on ways to trim
the budget deficit.
lnvcston are concerned that the
enlarged Democratic m~oritics in
Conaress and Bush •s touah no-tax
stance auarantee funher 6udaetary
1ri4lock.
For this reason, many econom-
ists predicted the Federal Reserve
will be forced in comina weeks to
betjn pushin.a interest ra~ hi&her
in ibc United States. Some anafysts aaMl they ~Id not rule out an
increase in the discount rate, the
incernt tho fed Chaf'ICS to make
lolans 10 member blnu.
A boost in the discount rate is t~
most dramatic sianal the Fed can
tend of its in&eation of dnvina
intcrett rates hiahcr.
Hi&herintemtratesmaltedollir-
dmoinanated anvestmcn&s more at-
lllCtive to foreilMn and help
relieve t~ ~ &o ldl off such
• ..is. H~. i,nterat ra1a also
dllnpcn tftftationary preuures
brought on by a weaker currency.
Intervention is the process by
which the Federal Reserve or other
countries' central banks buy and
sell currencies in an anempt to
influence the market price.
The intervention Thursday was
begun by the Bank of Japan, which
started buying dollars after t~c U .~.
currency fell to near 40-year lows in
trading m Tokyo.
After the initial purchases by th'
Bank of Japan, currency traders
reported that the central banks of
the major European allies of the
United States bought dollars. fol-
lowed by buying by thctU.S. central
bank.
The concerted dollar-buying
helped to push the U .S. curTCncy up
to 122. 70 }'Cn by midday in New
York trading. It had closed at
12 l . 52 yen in Tokr.o, down 2.02 yen
from WednC$day s close of 123.5~
yen. But traders said they doubted the
joint intervention effort would
have more than a temporary res-
tainina effect on the downward
pressure on the doli.r.
"This will only provide tcmpor·
ary relic ... said William Hand. a
trader at ~~int Pennsylvania Bank
in Philadelphia. 0 Tht market wants
to see some concrete kind of plan on
how the budatt deficit is 10•"1 to be
solved,"
Rohen Hormats, an economiSl
with Goldman, Sachs., predicted
that the cumncy markeu and the
Stock and bond markcu would
continue to be in turmoil between now and Bush's inauauration on
Jan. 20.
.. , think the mari(ct has con-rtc1encc in the economic team Bush
ispuni• aaeethtt. but the market is
impatient biecaute the ~ and
trade imbalanca are so b\a." he ~
guestlons, answers on falling dollar
By ne AslOclatecl Pm•
For a currcn~ as powerful as the dollar, the prospect
of it ''wcalcening, • or worse yet "faJling, •· conjures up
friahtening images of economic collapse.
What does il mean when money is suddenly worth
less?
And what is all this about buying and selling dollars"
For most of us, dollars are used to buy things, settle
debts and reward chlldrcn for good report cards. The idea
that the currency itself is a commodity whose vaJue 1s
detennined on the open market is bard to fathom.
Yet the buyini and sellina of dollars in foreign
exchanao markets 1s fundamental to establishing the
value of a currency. And that process is key to inflation
and interest rates.
Is a faJling dollar good or bad for Americans'> The
answer. economists sugest, is -it aJl depends.
Herc arc some questions and answers about the
dollar's recent decline:
Q. WM determiDes Ute exeU.1e-rate val11e of tlae
Miiar!
A. Until 1971. its vaJue was ri&idly set. first to a
certain weight of aold and later to exchanac rates of other ~or nations' curTCncies.. But since then, its pncc has
Ooated, determined by market forces.
Each day, hundreds of billions of dollan arc bought
and sold by traders in foreiJn exchan&e markets. These traders are usually commercial banks or other latte institutional buyers who trade: currencies seclcina to
profit on fluctuatina values. CentraJ bank$ like the Federal
Retef'\le or the Bank of Japan also art involved 1¥hen an
euaer&led move by a currency reqwrts them to buy or tell the currency to stabilize the market. l..atdy, for
instance. central blob have been counierina a sell-off of
doll.an by b\lyin& lht CUtT'COCy.
Q .... , ...... a •Uar "•trws" • ·~r
A. The dollar is subject ao the same laws of suooly and
ckmand as al\Y commodity traded openJr. Hcav)i "bUyina
of clollan on uchanlt markets drives \IP ttl pn~ mak.lna
it ·~stroaa" com~~ to other~ Sdlina dollan
.ends lhe ~down, maktna at '"weU... •
Q.leWMt'aMtter,a--.Wuwa .... ..ua.r!
A. It depends. A strona dollar maka Amtttca.ns' cub
IO fu~oveneuand m!uces imJM)ft pnces-~1)' JOod for U.S.. consumers and for fattip ftMlll\lfaawen.
lf the dollar as o"crvahaed, as ...ty all ccooomitls
..._it waata theeuty 19t0s. U.S.~~ Urda_,
ldJ . ..,,... lad It home. where they CG= with ~
COil 1m~ Tha• helped .. ~ tM u StaleS '"·
record-breaxmg trade deficit.
.\ v.eak dollar can restore compeuuvencss to
.\mencan produru by making foreign goods com-
paratavel~ mort e~penSJvc. But too v.eak a doUar can
spawn inflation first through higher 1mpon pn~ and
then through sp1rahna prices for all goods
Even worse. a faJling dollar can dnve foretgn
in vest ors awa' from U.S. secunues. v. h1ch lo~ value
along wnh the dollar. Foreign investment 1s cnucally
needed to help finan~ the ~ t.:. budget deficit
Q. Wbat bas btta Ute Rea1u administration's poUcy
oa tbe dollar?
.\. The adm1n1strauon u.nul earlv I l}S., promoted a
weaker dollar to help ba~ trad~ acrounts But in
Februl) 1987 1t agreed furtherdccl10es m the dollar could
lead to renewed infiauon. It joancd its u~dtng partners in
tht "Lou He accord .. to try to bold the dollar tead)
Q. Why bas t11e dollar faUea la t'e wake of George
Bush's eltttlon'!
..\ Nov. that the election has been dcc1dC'd. traders
v. ho bu> and sell dollars arc loolrir\& for qgnals on hov. the
nc\lo president wdl deal wt th t.bc budatt and trade ddic1ts.
t:nul some clear pohcy dittetion as Sttn on those two
economic problems. traders may coonnue 10 sell dollars.
l\lthoug}}, Bush has moved swiftly to name key
e-conom1c ad' asen to h.is staff 1n an effort to calm the
markets. one economist who counseled him dunn& lhe
campaign. Maruo Fcldstcm. called J\&St last \\ttk for a
funhtr decline in the dollar to cut lh¢ trade detk1t
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Grttnspan added to
the an\1ety 1n the marltet b) say•• tlus week that uraent
cff ort.s "'-ere nffiicd tQ reduce t1K' bu1'1c• deficu .
. Q. U tlle dollar's valw ha....., t«'J IUfttl ferca. •'-t 11eps cu C'•enmats tllle .. 18*111e lt'!
.\ Throuah t9.<0 be 1c ..,.Y • e~cha.nae-market
1ntcl'ent1on and coordsnatcd 1ntett11-ta\C chan&e
Intervention 1s the duut buyina or tclhna of
cum ne1 by cntral banks. If lht P'U'Chucs att lartt
eoo1.1Jh. that can influence pncn di~y. When the Fed.
or the Bank of Japen, or the Wett Oennan 8undc$bank.
bu) _,ollan dutttl • that rcduas lbe suppty of dollars
available and send up the pntt.
Cliaf\&'C$ "' 1ntcre1t rat~ a~ ~ rates m0rt
subtly. !tut lt'M'fllt)'.-h"" interea tMet it'I 1ht Untted
tat com~.!°""' interest nuea ...._. will attnact m MY«> onunatcd 1n•esttM•n. :n.' raJtcS
the val~ or the dol\ar. ln,~on will flock to •heft tlwy cu ltt tilt bilhal
~tum,
Market unrest already has
prompted Bush and T rcasury Sec-
retary ~1cholas Brady. ~ho ~LI
stay on tn the Bush adma.mstratJon.
to issue rcassunng statements that
the new administration con.sidcn
cutting the budact deficit to be a top
pnonty.
Last Wed~y. Federal R~
serve Chairman Alan Greenspan
added the strongest voi~ yet to calls for urgent action on the deficit.
telling the National Economic
Commission that the deficit, which
climbed 10 St 55. l billion in the last
fiscal year. "already has bepn to
cat awa~ at the foundations of our
economic strength."
However. Bush spokeswoman
Sheila Tate, asked about Green-
span's warnjna, said, "Economisu
never agree on anything. For every
economist you cite we can trot out
one who is diametrically in opposi-
tion."
Davtd Wyss. chief financial
economut for Data Resources Inc.,
caUed Taie'sremarkson ABC-TV's
'tGood Morning America" s\Kl)ri .. i~a.. aiven tbe need for the ~
admimstrataon to pn:scnt a united
front with the central bank to
n:assurcjittcry markets.
.. The market naht now is lookina
for somt reassurance ~t t0me-
th 1na ts aoina to be done about the federal budaet deficit ud about llile
trade deficit, .. Wyu said ... They are
afra.id that the lkath adminisa'MioD
t.S more wtllina tO IOlve tbc cklcit
by lcttins l.bt dollar fall .._ bJ cumna the budltt defici~"
Wh1ka Weakerdolar m.aka U.S. iOOdS lell ~ve °" 0•1P1111
martcu and im~ IDOfC •· pm.live for AIMIKW. .......
insisted that be Cklll • alla .•
abiildOitMC..O-!llf ...... ~
to lllbilia tMWI ..... w,.iiicl .... 1111 ....
•111Jiicw1wym11ll11.llllN .... lllft ...... , .......... ... --·
t l n.. l>t1\ta.r
t ' IO • Pt!fllt 4 i., i" P/Ql\Hl ,. ) 21 Po.,.. ' Ho I 'II ltowttl
'"' t <t Prw• '7 • ti Pll$NC 3'"-,. ... P\1<'111 ... n 1 13~ Oliff•• JO, 21 , QuakCll
10 .. ~ "·-, .... 10 • ReV"ld n>. U \ie Reootr It • 1+, A .... ,
2 • 7 "J lltJ!H • t 1 '• Ro.dSv ••• 1 • RooMvr JOJ,o lO I 110..M 71 • '1 s.oi..-
" 11 S.ltco 21't 1r-, StHIOO
11 11 1 !>tPaw It'• 11 1 XM<•r 2S • lS 1 Sc.rioH
)I 1 J5 . SH ,paie 19 .. 20 11 SEEQ •t. •'• Se<l~
""" 19 • SvcMe< S > S"' S~r~o t 10 • Sl\ilwN! s~ s. ' s 1.ct1•
wmt AGUP•IM• MD ... MGatM r.---------, . .._,...., ·•10::. '1 ·=••11 I . . CurM••··· = '°' • ~ I · eontro1 •-*1nt I -Pfllt VlalT • ~ NIUllllOn L-----------..J • , ... more••glit6c
DR. LOUIS LU, O.M.D. C.A.
19072 BEACH. SUITE C 23311 EL T~ omcl HOUM; ( .. ~ N> MON_,._, ~ 8eldl turrl 101 '9m-7pm
CALL NOWI 112·1'05 e Toro w.t11ftd111YAW1·
,&,td~at~6
Calamari
Abalone Style
• dloice of potato
• ~ wittl muJlroom1 & boy
shrimp
· tenoad With Q'Mfl IOlod or cup of °"' own clam chowct.f
ASK ABOUT
OUR DINNER
.. SPECIAL S12.95 .
Jenny ls Back at the Oyster Bar!
. 11:30 -3:30
Mon'1ay • Saturday
ALL CHOICE!i
93.95
Ask vour food server about
these soeclots
Fish & Chips
Basket
Served with Oelanev's
homemade tarter
sauce, green
salad or cup of
our own clam
chowder.
We Interrupt
This Movie For
An Important
Announcement
·Introducing
Tureen of Delaney's
famous clam chowder
and t/2 sandwich.
-112 sandwich of
vour choice
-Monhaftan or New
England chowder
United Airlines ~ilver Wings PlusSM
Travel Club.
It's free with our 1 year CD
and at least 60 birthdays.
It's a once-in-a -lifetime offer from Pacific Savings Bank. Just open
our 1 year CD, with as little as $5,000 in funds new to Pacific
Savings Bank and you'll be able to spend your high interest on
discounted travel all ove r the world. Because when you open a
qualifying account, you'll receive a free Individual Lifetime Mem-
bership in United Airlines Silver Wings Plus Travel Club.
This 1 year CD will give you travel--·---------
ing money for years to come. You'll save CURREN!'
with discounts on airfares: cruises, IIlGH RATE IDGH YIELD'
hotels, resorts, car rentals-even spe-·s 25°' /8 5901
cial tours and exotic cruise packages, 1• • -;() • -;()
because you'll be a Club member. ONE YEAR CD
You must be at least 60 to qualify
for membership in United Airlines Silver Wings Plus Travel Club.
But if you're a little younger, you can give the membership to a family
member or friend who does qualify.
· Tu open your CD, or to find out how you can qualify for this special
offer with other Pacific term accounts from six months to five year~
.. just call 1-800-PACIFIC. or stop by your nearest Pacific Savings
Bank office today. And get ready to •unnwn AtMJnn
spread your wings for all of your ~~lJI1Llll& ...
tomorrows.
PACIFIC S\VINGS BANI\
In our own •malJ way, we make • bil dJ.frerence.
~ ~ I I
• .
In the Costa Mesa area call: (n4) Ul-GIOO;
Costa Mesa Courtyards area call; (714) Ul-7Ul
l
Of.noe eo.t DAILY PtLOTIT~. ~ 22. 1• * -
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW YORK (AP) Nov 22
AMEX LEADERS NYS E Ll~DER ~
Go Lo Ouons
---
ME TALS QuorEs NASDAQ SuMM4Pl
NY SE UPs & DowNs OTC UPs & DowNs
84 Tueectay, Nowrnber 22. 1988 I OAIL Y PILOT
Suspense drama
strong in Newport
It may be getting a little gray at the
temples from repeated exposures in
Orange County, but Louise Fletcher's
suspense drama "Night Watch .. still
packs a considerab(e psychological
wallop. Toi
Tnus . In its fourth local production. at the
Ncwpon Theater Arts• Center. this
"Ansel Street" with a bit of reverse
enghsh is a thoroughly absorbing
study in calculated criminality. Its
ingredients of psychosis. betrayal and
murder mesh neatly in a strong.
tijhtly knit paclca&e. authoritative!)'
wrapped by director Scott Zuckman.
"Nlgh1 Walch" focuses on an
insomniac woman. haunted by a
iragk event in her past. who sees -
from the wtndow of her New York
townhqusc -a body. then another
through the window of the building
across the court. Stncc she 1s the only
witness to these sights. we can only
assume she is etther crazy or is berng
driven so by her cold. philandering
husband, who means to pack her off
to a sanitarium in Switzerland.
ed in when required. but there is a
variation 'of tone and charac-
terization essential to the role which
is somehow latking here. We need tb
be virtually seduced by the character
of Elaine, and Snead seems to keep
her audience at arm's length.
~itchell ~unn, as her distant yet
pa11en1 husband, uses the coldness of
his character as a weapon in his subtle
mind games. Nunn possesses an
understated but menacing strength
on siagc which bears watching as the
plot advances.
As their friend and house guest.
Dani Ballew successfully Texanizes
her character. but never fully de-
velops it. More upstage interplay with
Nunn is needed to com{>lete what
essentially is a romantic tnangle.
At Newport, Zuckman and set
designer BiJI Cole, both in their first
assignments for the theater. have
creaied an impressive, depth-laden
selling handsomely bedecked with
richly elegant accoutrements. It's all
covered with an outer scrim, lined
when the action begins. that com-
pletes the hemmed-in atmosphere.
The central role of Elaine, who may
or may not be hallucinatory. is a
particularly demanding assignment.
requiring shock waves of emotion at
the drop of a hat (or a curtain). Katee
Snead turns in a powerful per-
formance. wuh the afterburners kick-
Dimi1ri Christy, in the role of the
busybody gadfly who always arrives
a1 an inconvenient time, breathes
some fine comic relief into a heavy
situation. Sondra Hunter is capable.
but requires additional authority as
the esteemed psychiatrist brought in
to attend to Elaine's noc1urnal visita-
tions.
In the minor roles. Karen Jackman
adds a rough, bouncy touch to the
opionated German maid. Greg lu y 1s
THINKING ITALIAN TONIGHT.
lry the homemade lasagna u1nnellon1 man1catt1 or any of the traditional
pastas Also Linguine al Fruto l>el Mar • Fettuccine al Pe~to •Shells Marcello and
~ny mo.re II you like veal• se?atood • pouhr>. we otter a large selection, too Of
B
lOurse. we have homemade pizza
I L L
The spirits
. you1n
odd and
hysterical
SPECI 4.L DINNERS
FOR ONLY
$765
p(}-t) ~~_,,_qO, S· c ·B. a. a. G· E-Il
STARTS TOMORROW -. -··---TOii---STMTOll -
__ ...,, ... _c-c-l-OWWC------r..-sn.!oD .,._..,t ... ¥11 -.. ~ -·---~--~·---WDIWtUI .,.... UA---C-0 (--~ (-1111-1$1 ..... ,.,_ .,. nl'l --_,_, ..
~ ...... ,.,. ~ IL TOllO I.A---·-... _
-... ... .JMJ U....C....tl _., .... -· ... -=:,.--1 .... -----D ,,. ,, .. ··-.. _
And At Other Selected Theatres
Ef!•Hi:tHM ..... ~
213151~
IOUf l~Mf lldMT'S
OtM1 a cO#lllff .,,.. ,,,, ., ... ., ... .,.,
OOUYtT..0
DOUY J~Mf _,.,
OtMI&~ ... ,,.,,. >·• .... -7'4J •.»
UMAmlMll-~IJI t---------~ "* t:JS ., .. ,,. ....
IOOtl fOl"9AllU Y ~
1'11 ACQIMD Ill
"'°'1f....-i.a
-llittC.tlWIY llffH NOIMS ~t 11 .•. ,, >·• ... , .. 1•u
t1-4J >•J JrU 7'4J IHJ t-----------4
"" I.Mii '90lf NI( 101 I,,. tr• ........ ,.,. ....
eouTmlltO
OllLD1 ~' ,., .,.., ,.. ....... ,. ......... ,
otU'l~Y Ot1
I IS > U MO 7•S t:t0 1•.JJ
Ul TU fl'llllO\OlllS OOINn Jll ...........
HS><» SJ&S ... l•U
.... POtnl.CIUf ......
ftllCa.1111
INJ 1,SJ S'11t ,.._I ....
•·•5@
B l----------4 .,.._ -~=
1141111 .. tTt
,..,........, llllllU8 .......
DOllYS"90 l.llCAIMlfl .... .._
""Wll llJOlf Ml ... It:• J:Jt •:» ... .,_ .....
U&JUAlmO
-O'TOOUIOMY\ ..,_...
lllGMSIWTS 1,.111 ,,,. >·• •. ., .,.. "'''
llOMt1 IOMllT .. I( .... ..,_.. , ... ... ,, ... ,u ... ..., .... .....
IMT\M IPI .. ..._ ..... IHI ...........
.... C.-!INt ,,,,, _., IWIT Mf I .....
COCl'IM4I) 1---------~-....
---,--;;r..;-1 .......... ....... ~·-•tt• -... ~ ... .,,,,.., ..., .., . ... .. ,.. ..... Gml'tM' ... -...
L
n.nJ a.new, Sondra Banter and Katee Snead (from'ieft) tn
.. PllCJlt Watch" at tbe Newport Theater Ana ~ter.
fine as a police officer who's taken
with the family's art collection.
Gordon Marhoefer is uneven but
effective as a harassed police lieuten-
ant, while Malcolm Silver contributes
a strong cameo ~ as a heated-up
delicatessan owner.
"Night Watch.. continues
Thursdays through Saturdays at 8
p.m. (except Thanksgiving night) and
Sundays at 2:30 p.m. until Dec. 11 at .
the Arts Center. 2501 Cliff Drive.
Newport Beach. Reservations are
being taken at 631-0288.
CALLBOARD -The Garden
Grove Community Theater will hold
auditions for the comic musical .. A
Funny Thing Happened on the Way
to tht: forum" Dec. 3, 4 and 10 from
IOa.m. to 3 p.m. in 1hc theater, on St.
Mark Strttt at Chapman Avenue in
Garden Grove .... director
Christopher Cariello will be seeking
nine men and eight women, and
auditioners should bring an up-
tempo song and a ballad .... also
needed is an elecironic keybourd
musician proficient with jazz and
ballads .... c.all 879-5122 for further
information.
Tryouts for the dramatic musical
"Evita" will be held Dec. 6 and 7 at 7
p.m. in the McKinney Theattr' at
Saddleb3ck College in Mission
Viejo .... Patnck J. Fennell is directing
and all roles except that of Eva Peron
are open, and details are available at
582-4763.
Polished playing
by Debussy Trio
Harmonious chambrr • playina of the
lofhest order 1ranspircd 11 the latc.t
Laauna Beach Chamber Music Society
concert Sunday afternoon. The Debussy Trio p vc polished.
cohesive performances of old standards
and new fare at Laauna Beach H1&h Sc:hool
Auditorium on the second con~rt of the
Socicty's•Youna Anists Series. • ~unique sol.wfd of the conctrt -due
tothcuio's unusual makeupofnute, viola
and harp -produced a n:fcshin&fy
piquant ambiance 10 the alr~dy well·
m~cd. exc111ngly presented proenm.
Contemporary Welsh composu Wil-
ham Mathias' "Zodiac Tno." Op. 70. was
the most thea1ncal offour works. Harpist Mama Dickstein balanced her markedly
(jramatk opcnjngs of the "Pisces" and
"Taurus" movements with lhostly soft,
ascendint and dCSC'tnd1n1 alissandos and even some pcrcussi'"e tappinaon the wood
of her instrument (both m the "Taurus").
Violist Chnstopher Redfield. who plays
rcguarty with the P~cific SymphOny
Oichestra. expressively 1n1crpre1cd the "'Aires" movement's pricipal theme and
executed the tremolo harmonics in the
other movemen1s wuh concentrated
precision.
Flutist Angela Sc:hmid1. doin& no less
than her colleagues. played with eloquence
and taste. ·always mindful of fiuinp her pan flawlessly into the fabric o the
Manhias and other pieces.
Schmidt's flutter-1on1uin.g passages in "Pisces" and "'Taurus were not only
1mpressivell accomplished. but 1he com-
binatton o her flutter-tonguing. Rcd-
field's harmonics and Schmidt's softer but nonetheless restless, os11na10 accompant·
ment <'rcatcd one of the best examples of
the highly d1sc1pbned ensembk work the
tno Pf:OVcd t'onsistently. Dit'kSk1n·s Clltremely qllkk and facile fin,erwOJt produced, crystal clear lines
whlt'h h1pfightcd the lhint mo~nt
t•lleJl'O viv~) or French composa Jacques Bondon's -Le Soleil Multi-
colon:." ln fact. the en tin: wOttt, with its
bnlhantly varied and vivid tone-<olors.
lived up to its title ("The Multicolored
Sun'"). thanks to the trio's consummate
concueness and intricate interplay. The
work en<kd with a splendid~t of the
flute-viola duct with harp o "to. Red field 's p<>ignanC)'. 1ckstein ·~ powerful expression and Sc:hmidt's flow.
1ng movement generated meaningful but
by no mearu hcavy-han<kd pa thos and sadness in the Sonata for Aute, Viola and Harp. one of Claude Debussy's final
works. (Debussy. sufTcrin1 from the loss of his daughter, was likewise sick with cancer and knowingly two years away from his
own death.)
The least suCC'CSful item on the prosram wa.s the opcnin1 one. GeoB Philip
Tt'lemann 's Concerto in F Major for Aute.
Viola and Harp. due mainly to its limited expressive range. Still. the Debussy Trio
managed a well-coordinated. pleasantly
smooth pcrfonnancc.
-~r--------------~------~~~----~~----------~--~----~~
J.R. finds he can 't buy his way out of this one
By LYNDA HIRSCH
DALLAS: C'ascy 1s unaware that he has
made a b11ttHnd-danae.rous..e~ofSI)'
by tell in& her she was not good enough for
him. J.R. continues to be held prisoner
after Cal Ire helps ham in an aborted escape
attempt -and his bribery offer falls on
deaf cars. The continuinJ laC'k of rarn
causes Clayton to fear losing his herd. A lone1y Lucy finds herself attracted to 1he
DARYL HANNAH
treacherous ( ll5C)' Mc Ka) continues to
m1S1rea1 the young woman in his life.
~ . .
FALCON CREST: The pohcc sull be·
heo.c 1ha1 LanC'e started the lire at Fakon
Cn:st which killed Mchssa. With Richard
back in the J''cturc. Angela feels n:-Juvenated an plans to n:pm Fakoo
Crest. Richard sets out 10 prove he was not connected w11h the murderous Council of
STEVE GUTTENBERG
STADIUM n
OMll 1115 \!I
l~ 1110 ,, •• " , •••
OLIVER
& COt,tPANV lGI '''" ............ "'I
ERNEST SAVES CHRISTMAS lPG) ,.._ ... , .. r.. ... IPGI
A FISH CALLED WANDA IAl
.............. t ll'GI
CHILD'S PLAY (Al
r\,.(•H•I ... 1\'141111
THEY LIVE (RI
Pltn II l Ro.-.
'"-''' l)t
ALIEN NATION (R)
,.,..O,.Hnflll
OlllVf llfS Ol'tll
1uonst JtJWtCl•OSI"
u•Olll 11 nu U•llU llDU
13. Fcclrng hun and an&l) that Richard
did no11ellherhcwasalr vc. Mau1e. who1s
still rn love w11h him. 1s not ccna1111ha1 she
can get OVtr"tht'-betratal.
• • •
L.A. LAW: Ro>.anne's husband. David.
seems incapable oftalkmaabout anything
but his boring business. both at home and
at Roxanne's office. where 1t embarrasses
her. Amie reminds her that she agreed to
NOW SHOWING
AAl.._ w
f I f e .. " . -.., .. ... ,, .... •
.....,...l'Olf KM UlfTA AHA
I I .... •ra •llA ,,.
"'~ , .. , _,, ....
............. ... .......... .
marry DaVJd even though he knew she d1dn'1 lovebim. and now she should either
act a d1vortt or be fair to David. She dccut 10 make the best ofit, but David's embrace eaves er-told. Abby opens her
own law office. Amie, reprcscntina the
wife of a millionaire who has abused and degraded her. feels betrayed when she
drops her divorce action because her
husband has increased his suppon pay-
ments.
RUFFELL'S '
UPHOLST£1Y llC • ... , ..... c..s ....
lt22 -.... Clll&ms&-Ml-1151
.,.. "'-.,,..,... ----..... ~ ---·-----··----·-· ""'----.,_ -· .... .,...,... "'..... -·--°""9 ---.,...\4, .... -...... 't ..---°'"""---· ---· ~ --·-...--~--· t::':t''" .. ::..':".. :i-::--------=---.-:W4:". ...~ ....
"=t=. ==. ==-----.;;:-==:::i
·nlt'1 rulltd 111 10 12. ~11111., t.'\t'll
If ~eur.i a).\o. when I larhor l{:mk
\\';~ ~tthl1,ht'tl \II 1ogt.'llwr. lht'\ 1e
~en on ooartl tor })l) \t'ill"'
htNllt'\\, lhc Cll\(Cllllt'I) lht'\ -.Cl"\l'
\ml thl'' ~110\\ ho\\ rc1 ~·l\c \Oll
Qurckh ta1rh. complt:1th
~HarbocBank
Fmm ;L'!lr .. 1a11t 111:111a~l'"' :111d 'rrt·
pres1den~ to loan ~crvt:mt.~ .ind
the rr:o. lhl'\ ~11()\\ th~ hank. the
\\lull' 111lwr h.mJ..., arl' rn111.'t'nlt'd
\\ llh '1:1' 111~ :1110:11. 11.ut>or Hank
rnm111uc' 10 hf ~1.1hle. ~trong :ind
'lt':lll\ )ll'I Irk~ IL\ ere\\
\\1! ~ 1ntl'~tl'tl 111 'our hu~1m:. ~
I•~ Joi h1 1d1 Ii" \lJOlll•i-lku111111(t1111 IL1rh<JUr l·~11·t 1111 \.1 In l!'l mt •
: l 1111·1111 ,, ...,..•f'!~ 1"1•1'1" _-, \' mh1'ftlt1<
~' ''""" ~~
..
Bttsiness patrons honored
f Or investment in the arts
BJ \'IDA DEAN
Of ..............
The largest crowd of business arts
petrons ever -more than 300 -
pthered Sunday for the seventh
annuaJ Business in the Arts Awards at
the Newport Harbor Art Museum.
"More and more Orange County
compenies are getting involved in
support for the arts. and the awards-
prcsented by the Orange County
Business Comm1tttt for the 'Arts -
salute their most outstandin& ~on
tributions," said Betty Mess, OCBA
exec director. •
i\ champaane reception and key·
nole addrcs5 by national BCA chair-
man W~ B•adler set the s_taJe for
the award presentation. OCBCA:
fo.under chairman David Tappan
introduced Butcher. who is chairman
and CEO of the Chase Manhattan
Bank. and pointed out that it was a
former Chase Manhattan chairma·n.
David Rockefeller. who started rhe
national Business Committtt for the
Arts 21 years ago. \
Conducting the evening's acll vit1es was chairman~lect Harey Bttbb,
standing in for chairman Henry
Scgcrstrom who was on the East
Coast. This year. 12 awards were
presented with four each in the first·
time, return and distinguished award
categories.
09llr,.., ....... _, o-191 ..........
BUI. Patricia Podllch, Walter Gerkin admire palnt1a1.
\'JCe president ~ Tom PaKOe, and
Western Digital Corpora11o n. ac·
cepted by chairman Roger Jolaasoo.
Return awards were accepted by
Peter Oclll1, president of The Field-
stone Company; David ffolmaa,
senior vice president of First Inter-
state Bank; Rfftl Royalty, am vice
president of Pacific BeU: and Eliza·
betlll Tierney, for her husband. Tom:
president ofVitatech International.
S.ttoa. president of PaClfic Mutual.
and Amtoo Segerstrom .for CJ .
Segerstrom & Sons.
A special ~"iuon award was
also presented this )ear to Dcloiue.
Haskins & Sell~ for its seven-year
provision of free-lease space and
other services to the Committtt.
S&epMe Musfield, partner in charge
accepted.
Catherine Michaels of the Ch1l·
dren's Museum at La Habra accepted
the arts award. which was accom·
panted by a S 1.500 cash gram from
Marsh & Mclennan Inc.
The first-time award recipients were Latham & Walkins. accepted b~
panner Rope Hemley; the Los
AnJeles Times/Orange Count)
Edition. accepted by general manjl#r
Erale Vlhltti; Kathryn G. Thomp-
. son Development Co .. accepted by
Dts1ingu1shed awards for winning
three times before were presented 10
Tom Nielse•, vice chairman of the
Irvine Co.; Jack Raab, chairman of M 1ssion V 1ejo Business Properties for
the Mission Viejo Company; Tom
Award rec1p1ents rttei,•ed limited·
ed1t1on cast bronze sculptures by
local artist Ed Cbllla. First-time and
return honorees recewed a work
entitled .. Falcon Watch ." Dis-
tinguished award winners received a
work entitled "Ergane" depicting the
mythological protector of sculptors.
builders and architects. The award
sculptures were underwritten by
Nonhern Trust ofCahfornia.
ll E_RMA BoMBE Ct<
A celebratorr dinner was held at
the Ritz restaurant immediately fo l-
lowing the awards ceremony and was
underwritten by Barratt Amencan
Incorporated. the Boston Compan)
and First American Title Insurance
Company.
Also among those who enJO)cd the
festivities "'ere 1988 a"ard Judges
Jlm Cooper, executive producer at
KOCE-TV: Gary Joa.as.a, managing
partner of Arthur Young & Com·
pan): Tressa Miller, VP and director
of cultural affairs for Sccurit} Pacifi c.
WUllam Otton, president of the o\n
Institute of Southern C a!ifom1a. and
Priscilla Pe.ser, program officer for
the .lames Irvine Fo unda11on.
..
J InvisiOie cord hard to break ~ l lett over? • •
If ifs true that life begins when the
kids are grown and the dog dies. then
: why do mothers have all that wisdom
Yqu'd think at the end of20 vears
of ch1ld·ra1sing. we'd all come o ut
e'en. but "'e don't. I've seen mothe~
fi_ght to keep from running dO\\ n the
aisle at their daughters or son's
wedding screaming. .. Wa111 I'm not
finished with you )Cl!·' • :
i • t By CHARLES GOREN i ud OMAR SHARIF
• Both vulnerable. North deab.
We feel compelled to pack th~m full
of every bit of sage advice handed
down fro m our mothers. plus all the
omnipotence we haH assembled on
Norths chose to open one club. and our own.
both North-South pairs arrived in When mothers rnlk about thl·
six spades via the most direct route. depression of th~ empt~ nest. the) 're
I. :or,e, 5 4
Q AQ
i 0 0 I •AKJ6 3
• V.W • K J 1 I WF.ST EAST
Q 11532 \} 964
0 K lt I ' • 0 7 5 3 l
••• '' • 0. 4 SOUTH
•Atol6 3
Q It J It
0 A J 9
• 5 l
The biddin1:
Nodlt EMt . . . ... , ..... ... ... Sot!~
I • '.
West ...
Pua
Boch Wests led the ten of clubs. not mourning the passing of all those
At each table declarer rose with wet towels on the Ooqr. or the music
dummy's ace. One East followed that numbs )'Our teeth. or e'en the
suit with the four. Since d~larcr bottles of capless shampoo dnbbhng
li b down thcsho"crdra1n. The) 're upset was so · d everyw er~ except for because they've gone from supervisor
trumps, he elected to make a safety of a child's hie 10 spectator. It's like
play ro insure his contract. He led• being vice president of the Cnited
low spade from dummy and, when States.
East produced the two, he inserted It's some kind of fall from grace.
the three. A bemused declarer Kids look up at )OU and sa?,·
scooped in the first trump trick with .. Momm\. am I .soing to thro\\ up'··
the four, and as a result he had only and )'OU rcpl) ... Of cours< )OU arc not
one trump loser. goin~ to thro" up. What a sill) 1de;i
At the other table, East dropped You re going to march right out on
the queen of clubs under the ace! . that stage and pla~ 'There's a Fail) 1n the Botto m ofM) Tl·acup· on that big
Declarer realiud that it was possibly piano and not mal>.c a single mis·
an attempt to pull the wool over his ta~e "The' bu) 11
eyes, but be decided that be '1idn't On fam1h 'aC3tll.)n~. the l\st thing
want to risk a safety play and find )OU do bl:iore )OU pull out of thc
East ruffina the second club to de-dn'e\\a' 1~tothrca1cn."E'e"one1n
feat bis slam. Since be was safe with th1 scaris going to ha' ca good 11mc or
Openinl lead: Ten of • any 2-1 trump distribution or a 3-0 rm going to hrcal. \!\Cl") bone in ~our
split where West held the Ions bodies."
Terence wrote in praise of the trumps. he elected to play a spade to You tell them "ha1 10 e.11. \\hat w
man who can make wrons seem the acc. Now East bad to score two wear. "here the' ·re going and ho''
ript. He would have been proud of trump tricks for down one. thl') ·re '01ng to Ul't \\hen thl·~ ~l·t ooeofour~onthisb&ndfroma there 'ou tt'll thl·m \\hl·n the> rc The band has an interestina sleep~ and \.\hen 1hc~ ·re cold Then 1t hilb-llirYel team pmc. point. While a club ruff misht well begins to taper off \Iler m) Ii.ids \\l·rc
There II pat dispute amona ex· beat the slam if trumps were 2-1. in collcge.thconl) th1ngsthc~ "anted
paU about wbctber and when to sometimes even the threat of a ruff to kno"' from me \\l'rc. ··what do ~ou
opea ooe apade or oae d ub with five can sway declarer from his appoint· do v.hc-n all 'our undel"'ear c:omM
euda in ~ suit. Herc, both ed line onto a losina tack. out oft he washer pink"!' and "Do ~ou ___ ...:..-------=-------..-------------. sttll have that boo!. on condensed
Roger's Gardens
"Christmas Fantasy 1988"
Rooms of decorated trees ...
Ornaments from around the world ...
Roger's-made decorating accents ...
''Enchanted Candlelit Walk .. nightly ...
N~ u'R f BEACH
San J09quin Hills ROid (It McArthur)
HoUn: 9 am IO·!!?' Daily
(714)•, • ..-.:i .......
plots of .\mcrkan hteraturtclass1cs""
I had so much to tell them I wanted
to share ho w the numherofrhl'Cks lctl
in a chcd.book doc not al\\11\')
coincide wlth the amount ofmone) in
their chcd.1ng a«'oun1. ho"' fcdtr:il
tall.cs nrc not an op11on hke joining n
fitness club. ho"' lood that bccoml'S
rest le-s ldt 1n n refnicr:u or cannot bt:
made "ell b' rthea11ng..
..\ moth1..·r 1n 1\ltch1g:in "'rite that
o' cm1ght 'lhC' bc.'\·amc :a mere "ad· '1~r" to her san He. too. u~ ''l
dcpc:nd on her far C'Cl)thina. Ho\\-
C' <'r. "hen 1t cam~ to h1 &l·ltin
married .. nd ~""'''n 1n \he "'""'r. 'he "~s the I 1 to It.no" The on ~
thing he u \her "'r nu" 1s hHhcd. tn
\Ct \\h:I\ O:lJ ncl-d' lor h1\ tMnhJa,.
Th:n' "h) th~ empl) nc\t h1t\ '''
h. rd C>mc \OU '-'11.'t~ th~ ,enler ''a '
H'I their h,,·,., o~ nn"' \OU ~k out
and tht audac,_,'C h;i,. kt't the 1h(a1,·r ~ didn·• c~<'n turn out lhc' ••ht
•IWll 1hc) If ft ~ h) am I not
IU~
TV L ,,., .
I &:oo I a:30 I 1:00 I 1:30 I 8:00 I 8:3o I 9:oo I 9:3o l 1o:oo11 o~o l 11:oo I 11 :30 l
...... * ......
... Ult flo• W. 11111Ruum...,..1'9t'•1)
...., 111111
Her si-tuation isn.!t hopeless
DE.\R ANN LANDERS: M'
mother's favonte child was her onl\
son. M> father's fa,onte "as m)
)OUngcr sister. Since I was alwa)s on
the o utside looking 1n. l could.n 't wait
10 get ma med and out of the house.
The man "ho c hose me "'as
wonderful. I "as thnlled to be "anted
b> somebod). E'el)thmg was divine
the first ~ear Then the tights started
-aboutc,el"\thingandan,th1ng. He sa~s he IO\eS me but he puts me down
e'e" chance he gets He magnifies m-. Oa\\>s and thCfC 1s no respect or
aff'cct1on bct'>'e<:n u~
We ha\t.' ont' child 11 n<'H~r '>'as
abk to .get prl-gnanl again ~ Is thl'
child a JO) to mc·1 :"-o. he 1s not T.h1s
kid is c;o rebellious and pencrsc he
makes m) ltfe hell. I haH' tah·n him
to thr~counsdors but not one "ould
conttnue to see him. I Imo"' the
reason. The boy has inhented m~
··problem" -"'hate, er it is.
I ha'e asited m,sclf that """'· known .\nn Lander~quesuon V.-ould
I be better otT 1n this marriage or out
of 11'1 The answer for me 1s to sta' l
ha'e a degcnera11,e disease that V.111
e'cntualh lea"e me lotalh 1n-
capac1tated . .\nd that is "h> · 1 am
sa' mg up the sleeping pills I'll be
damned 1frll let m~selfbedependent
on m' husband to puc;h me around 1n
a "'h.celcha1r and feed me w11h ·a
spoon.
: L.M. Bo vo
----------=--
It may be that 95 percent of the
people who wnte to) ou can be helped
by roun~hng. but plea~ be awa"' ot
the 5 percent like me. Fo r those of us
wbocan't be helped. su1c1de isn't such
a bad altematl\ c . .\nd the "'orfd will
ha' e one less craz> "ho ne'er should
have ~n born 1n the first place.
You do a great JOb. Ana. Ne\er
stop. -NO CITY. 0 ST.\ TE.
DEAR FRIEND: rm H1 Civt•c.,
on yo•. For tlllose wt.. cauot be
belpH witla couselia& ti.ere is
Hodan~· Qiemiea_l tttannnt.
Go to a psyc:M.atrist _. tab ~
column witla yoa. (All psydllatrilts
are MDs and cu pffferibe ,..,.,s.I
Yoar doctor will bow wlaat &o do.
Please, please write qala altd tell me
Uaat yo. took my advitt u4 wlaat ii
dJd for yM .
Good IKk ud GM blH•. • • • DE.\R .\~~ L.\NDER& M o~
people behe'e that their tekphone
con' ersauons arc pn' ate -and~~
are. with t\\O e \cep11ons· cordless
telrphones and cellular mobile unus
People "'"h s1m plt' t'le<:tron1c c-qu1p-
ment can tune 1n and hear"' hate' er 1s
bc1ngsa1d.
I "'ould hke to knO\\ 1fthere are an)
la"s against listening 1n o n phonc
con,ersations. \\hat about scrambl·
1ng equipment? \\ouldn·1 that solve
the problem? -O~ HOLD I~
.\~T"-.\N.\.
DEAR SANTA:. We ceatac&d J.u
IL Cuact. direc:c.r •f otenal af.
fain at Ameritttll. Be was most
cooperative.
.Jlere's lite 1t•rr. My ~espoMnt
lr"'corrttL C.nlJess UMI ttlhlJar
mobile pfltues att really n4*.
ConersaU.U ca k Mani ii a
•..W-W lisee.er bl lite cerrttt
.-eeL A scrambler ...W k a
sol•tiee ht &ky ar~ yery upeuJve.
'he Eltttrotlk CommukatMH
Prh·JCY Act ... ys it ls illdeed lUetaJ to
listea ie oe coaversatiffs, Mt at tkis
momeat tltett is " way Uais law eu
be eaforce4.
So -to tJaose of yM la.ave cordless
pltoiles or celluar aJts .. yMr
a1tomobilH, doll't say aaytJaiac Y"
wnlda't wut &k wMle worW 10
!tear. Big Brolkr. 81.c Sitter, yov
spoue, yoer boss ... you 11ext-4oor
HipMr '"14 be listffiaC.
They'd rather clean than fight
When this coupk got marncd th,·~
decided he·d clean the bathroom. <.he
the kitchen . .\nd do so e' er\11me J
tight staned. lnst('ad oftradin·g tough
talk. In the carh 'car'>. 1he11·s "erc the
cleanest bathroom and l>.11,·hcn 1n
town. I gather E' entuall). argument'>
"ancd . lm1a11nns arose. not O\'.'(C"'·
anh blamed ,)n calh other. To tho-.c too: their re,.pon~· \\3S deaning
The~ ·,e said th(' pa111:m ha<. "''r'-"'J
Catalogues 1nd1catc models m
dresses arc photographed sm 1 h ng. but
models 1n hngenc aren't "h~ the
d1tlercnce?
Japanese bow to greet "'hen the)
met"t,. Am told of a small twist to 1t It
t¥-o men in hats and o'ercoats meet.
the) first pretend not to see each
other. tum around. rcmo' e said hat~
and o' crcoats. then bov. to greet Q. E actl) "'hen \\as the Jazz .\gc '
.\. Bet\\>tcn the end of\\ orld \l.-ar I
and the 1929 toe~ marl.et crash. .. , ou can 1udge )Our age b~ the
.imount of pain }OU feel "'hen J OU
c1.)mc in contact wuh a ne"' tdca Sc
<.aid one John U\Ct"n.
for 40 ~ear . •
Chent namld Ruth sa~s he's
scared of the water Her hu\band
bought a ne"' boat But she refu,.1.'d to
go aboard. He named the boat
Ruthless.
Our Lo'c and \\-ar man alS<I till· ltm~ncks fra m clients "There onn~
\\JS a girl ~11hou1 guile \\ho 1hnugh1
1>.1 sing ""as c' 11 and '1le l nt1l c.he d
been kt scd ""d 1ound "hat 'ihl· d
m1 scdtThen sh,· cm·d tears thJt
tlo\\ed like the l\1lc ··
1 t ~ ou ha'<' a Gem1n1 in the fam1l l.
1nqum· a to v.hether said \l.Onh\
t' er goc\ to the races or the fights
Tht• C1em1 n1 t"'1 ns arC" supposed to
rcpl'Of;ent a horseman and a bo'\er
) ou'd thinl a true Gemini might
rl'lkd ,1n,• or the.-Olher Both ma be ) ou lr'nn~ ho\' the tradnw nal
HoRoscoPf
We4""4a)'. OYt'mNr u
By SYDNEY OMARft
ARIES (Marrh ~1 -.\pril I~> f-ull rnoon P0"1t1on
accents rclauons \I.1th dose rdatt' l'~ <'~P'-'<'•all} h~thcl'\.
sisters. Focus on trtps. '1•>1t' fultillmcnt of m1 s1o n
cn-t ammgcmt·nt "111 uc.-tuall' "url-10 'our ad' antqc.
TAURll \-\pnl :?0-\la' :·h Emph:>'il'i on mpl1n,1-
b1h\). add1t1on:il dU\11..'S promot1on. proJ\Jd1on. chan<"t
to h1\ tinanualJa'-~pol \\hat ,,,n·n11'. "a" IO'lt <'an no"' ht'
r\'\'O\ cf'C'd LOH' rc,h.11111n<>h1111ntt"n"flc<.
GEMINI (\fa~ ~1 -Jum· :01 full m1"m 10 ~our 1gn
h•shh hi chamm.a. ~·~<'nJht~ pul\11~ <IPJ"'ar:m,'t' •
dcJltn&S""h"'tlm1.•n \l.rn' '"111,1~. · '1wtlc)()~,.H.<"'C"'
.ippcafrng. e'en ... ,~ · \m'" ~IJ' ou1\1.1nd1ns role
ANCER 1Ju111. ~1-Juh -~l L°''~ ~h1nJ ~-cncc; fi.ll .in~-.<rs. "hJl h:id tx"l.·n h1dlkn 111. 111 ~ re' eJk'<i -"'
d"'mltfC f;'l\h1on. hlu II ~ 1n mmwnt.11 m bnn&m&
togtther tho~ '" \\h Uf'J".Nn~ tdl'tl l •t» r 'f\rC ·nt«I LEO (Ju" ~ \. \ ~-) 'ou'r<' JU( \l\ tum 1n
OUl\\OlOJ"'t ~ttOf n) n,-.: -ekmcnt\ Of t1m1n lud. "111
be nd1f\I ~•th ~ou f tXu' on frt\:nd\. ho~ de~I'\:'>
Pl'"cn ut J'.'(r,ua\l\ln IQtu11" c 1ntdlcc1"111 h.: on u1 ~,
\11800 1 \ ~\-pl ~~l \\ht T'\'<'cntl\ .. ,hS'JXU
h\ "'"·~int-,•"' 11 bk. \upcn'" ..;,,,, .. , ou dt" r,,,
ano1h,·r \~l\\"C anJ \OU'll &l.'t 1t' )1.1:) I\ dl\l'NI~ 10
tommun~atc •Uh 1h 1111.·11 a di'~""' (1cnun1 1n p1, turc
LIBAA cS..·pa :~ ( t 2~l \t~~"'l ., ~h .. '1.! h&l'lt • ..
\h~t on an:a p~\ ll'U'h ··r mh1h11cd St11.'" \ll''1ll\lt~.
... ·-~ ...... "• It nan'''" to t'l\;11.; • ft\'\ '1:111 f l'<'U" on
pubhsh1ng. d1\SCmLnallon at pc:mnent informauon.
SCORPIO (Ck 1 13-"'o'. ~I)'. Focus on domesuc1\).
fam1h harmon,, '>'1lhngncss \O be patient in connccuon
"1th tinanc1al tran\3 uon ~one~ relaun.g to pann~rshtp.
mantal statu commands o;.pothght Soultt ~ten I
rtqu1rcs re' H:"'-
SAGm ARJUS ''{'' ~~·Oec ~n Go 'low. 1ot~u
d1ploma1.·' n•ahic rcputar1on could be Ill stake "'h~lt
lcpl ron1ro'c~' 1\ 1.onccmed Emphasi on pubhc rtla11on~. pn"' 1t'>tl" ~nnt-~h1p. roopcr1t1\C dfon CAPRICORN I~ 11-Jan. 19) \lanf mcanina 100~ tich1ruJ \C'Cncc. be'· in touC'h .. "•th kc\ personnel.
t...ttp l'\'C'Cnt rc~lut1t1n~ lHl«m1na diet. nutnt1on Job
ork1 rt'qu1rt'' 1urthc1 !\:""°:lf'(h P1 prornmcnt.
Ql ARll ' t l.10 :?lq ch HO \t\cnhun t<"n\1:1"\
"' unJ ~un\'. rr pert~. durabl<" s('l()(k. fam•h mem-
ber ""'"' to m.l'I>.' l hangt" ~ut 1~ n:h.tetant to a.\k. lk
r("(CPll\C ~1thou1 ~om1n inc tne&N\ 1n,n\\cd
PISC£S ,r ch 11.1.\1,m:h .Ol \'ciu·u ~~ ... .\t ttit I
ha\t the fr\: >'dom tn ""'~' m)~lt: .. fO(\i\ \M\ hOmc. famil).dra~ k'n1..J1 tantttummunt<"auon rctM1na\O
" ,~I. Mone~ com fr m wtpnK ~rte. '"
Pl\.tUn.'
., NO~Dl&tll lS IS vooa anlTllDAY )OU·~~ ~"('n ron<'\.•f'ncd •tth hkM)k. r idmtt. mtll'UI llMa
l>unna peM ll'"tt~\. dfont. w.tte Ofl&ll•ftd. )OU .cul*'d
(h;afkhti!UC ,V('atC'r rM.pnft~lhihh:. fU1tat90"°"" ..._
thl'"' ti m('(11n1 dcadhn<-. ("'tCmml. v., Sliljellriiri
~ "'' r ' lll\J".\f\8"\ "*' '" 'ovr tift
'
ee Ofwige Coast DAILY PILOT/ Tueeday, No1tember 22, 1988
.,,......_ ----..
by BU Keane
"Could I call you back in a few
minutes. Elaine? I'm 'it' for
hide-and-go-seek."
llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Uh.oh! You got into the all-natural
peanut butter!"
PEANUTS
COUNTgR CULTURE by Maratta & Maratta
I
I
I I
I •
:
1,
STAPLE
GUN
w\TH
SiLENL ER
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
M.Y /kJM. 1$ A SUPER COOK! SHE
EVEN COOKS BAD SlUFF GC(:().'
by Charles M. Schulz
W~EN i"E 5TA6ECOACH STOPPED
THE BANDIT POINTED HIS
RE'JOL'IER AT THE DRIVER. AND
SAID, "PUT UP YOlJR HANDS! ''
WHAT WOULD '(OU ~AVE
DONE IF YOU ~AO BEEN
THE STAGECOACH DRIVER ?
GARFIELD
DO YOO TMINK t(00''7 f.Vf_R LIKE
fO HAVE A STATUE ERECTEP
IN YOUR MEMORY, &ARl=IE.LP?
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
ROSE 18 ROSE
e 0
by Jim Davis
IF fHEY C.OOLV' MAK( IT !>O IT
COU LP EAT
PIC:JEONS
by Tom K. Ryan
NO ••• HWWKE 10AA~A~
c.offif'JW"( l\WVIW
A~HffVI.
by Pat Brady
BLOOll COURTY
11/Ar$ IT?' },()Jt,11!6(
f"/111.I'
\
SHOE
JUDGE PARKER
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DOONltSBURY
DtD YOU ASK DAN IF THE MARE H AD HER FOAL?
r-
by Lynn Johnston
MEPC f!J
by Jeff MacNeUy
by Harold Le Ooux •
YES ... ANO MARIGENE WAS THE MIDWIFE I Tl-IE VET DIDN'T GET THERE IN TIME!
-'
by Tom Batluk .
1 CA~ 51iL.L 5E£ Plt-¥-
FEA'f~ER5 00 rr !
~o-f 1b MEm'ION BEll\\G E~ HIGH IN FIBER .'
by Garry Trudeau
•
l
I
Bulldlng on proud tradition
'TUESDAY. NOVEMBER a 1988
Joi
f EICUSOI
SPo R 1) CoLUMN 1s r
OCC took .
' ari Option.
tO.Josing
Fort he last several weeks. as
Orange Coast College's football team
was mired in a five-same losing
streak, head coach Bill Workman
must have felt like he was running out
of options to get a sluggish offense
moving.
Things started out last Saturday in
quite normal fashion as Rancho
Santiago builta 16-0 second quarter
lead. one touchdown courtesy of a
long interception return for a touch-
down.
But the Pirates rallied after insen-o.llf,...,....."' Lee..,_ ini fullback Travin Lui as an option
Tlae Newport Barbor Bilh alrla croea comatry team la beacll.nC to tbe 9tate Matt.cm. Kelly Weber. Lotta Lejcleborn. Sule Jacob9oa, Saaclra Raftlnl. quarterback. Lu1ranfor67yardsand
ftnat• beJalnd tbe efforta of"(from left to rl&bt) Coach Bob Van Slcllle, ~ Lena n.llboar. Kim Roblnaoo, Stacy Pando and MeaJe 8telnlaauer. three touchdowns_ wbHerunning backs Tyler Riddell and Jason
McGehee each ran for over a 100
861s. AU three were career highs at Barbo~ girls aim to start new trend ~§t~~e~
, h1&h school and just came m and did
Cross country team vies
to e end s tate crow n
and finished second last Saturday when the top
teams in the Southern Section ran head-to-head
at Mt. San Antonio College.
'Look.ifs your record, not mme: All lcando1s
tell them tb run the best race fo( themselves and
for the team. They put enough pressure on
themselves without me putting on more."
Championships (in Fresno). it was really it. lfewasabsolutelyftawless-
stressful," said Stacy Pando, one of five seniors never had a fumbled snap from
Newport Harbor also has a' tradition of
winning the Sea View Leaaue Finals. It has
taken the last six, including this season when it
had five of the top 11 finishers.
on this year's team. ..There were so many center.didn't make mistakes. gave us
people therc, liniQg the course, making so mµch confidence.
Much of that pressure comes from nearly a
decade of winning at Newport Harbor. The
tradition beaan wi. ·th outstandina runners Buffy
Rabbitt an<f Maggic Henson.
noise, we really got nervous. '"'We've been work.ingon it forth.rec
"Now thal we've been to Fresno, it c weeks. Ifs not like high school. Yoy By ~Jt WOLCO'M'
• .,.., .... C.11 'I flll
By winning the first California State
Cham{>ionships last year. the Newport Harbor
High girls cross country team may have staned
yet another tradition on a program already rich
And when' you get right down to it. the
. Sailors cross country team has a tradition of
winning -period. Since Bob Van Sick.le and
Eric Twcit started coachins the team in 1981 .
Newport has a 52-2 record in league.
After writing the records at Newport .
alot. We know what to expect and we ca tell don'tjust throw somebody in there.
those on the team that dido •t go there w t to We had ~put in an option pan to fit ex~t. I think we should do well use of (PleueeeeOPTJOJll8/C4)
this."
Throujhout the season. Pando a
with them: .
Over the years. the Sailors have built a
tradition of strong finishes at the CIF 4-A
finals., now the stepping stone to State. They
wonCIFin 1984,placedthird in 1985and 1987
"After winning 35 straight meets. we came '1p short by one point apinst Tustin," Van
Sickle said. "I think the kids expected me to be
upset, but Eric and I never get mad.
"I talked to them after the race and said.
Rabbitt ~duated to a successful running
career at UCl, while Henson moved on to the
University of Mississippi. In their wake. the
Sailors now have a team even stronger than
those of the pasL The reason fpr this 1s a greater
quality from top to bottom. coupled wtth
expenence. · .
"Last year, when we went to the State
Kim Robinson have led the Sailo who
finished SttOnd 'to Palos Verdes at last
Saturday's CIF 4-A finals.
Pando finished 14th at the 4-A meet.
Robinson. who helped Ncwpon win the
(Pleue eee BUILDIRO/CA)
StreSs-basher: Ju_$t go:_out and have some fun
Mulli an· s Anteaters will go for it with
playin to win ph ilosophy from the start
By JON FERGUSON
Of .. .,..,,... 119'1
There's tittle doubt the UCI men's
basketball players thrive on the
running game the Anteaters wilJ play
this season. It's hard work. but it's fun
-which i~ just what Coach Bill
Mulligan wants for himself and his
program.
As UCI winds down its last week of
preseason-workouts Jn. preparation
for Frid~y's season opener against
Gcorsia State in the Frce<tom Bowl
Class1c at the Bren Events Center.
Mulligan may be poised to have more
fun with the pme than he has in a
several years. ··A lot of schools play not to lose ...
Mulligan said earlier . this month.
"We're playing to win this year.· What
I have done' is take all the Cf&!-'/ things
in the last 32 years of coaching and
thrown them all together this year.
I'm getting old and I want to have
some fun this sc.ason ...
Mulligan. who will tum 59 before
the season ends, wasn't at bis usual
noontime Monday post this week.
instead fulfilling an on-ampus obli-
gation to speak on a panel discussing
Slrcss. It was kind ofappropnatc that
he should be speaking on the subJCCl
this year. said assistant coach Mike
Bokosky. who subbed for Mulligan.
.. I've been with Coach Mulligan for
nine years as an assistant and two as a
player. and of those .. : r ve never sttn
him more energetic than he is this
yea r ... said Bokosky.
\'He is involved in practice from
beginning to en4. involved in evcl)
phase. Before. he used to delegate
things to me and (assistant Bob)
Thate. He deals with every player
·schWeer ignites
confidence in
Warrior squad
He found success
quickly to advan ce
squad in playoffs
repeat as CIF champs.
lt took little ume for Schweer and
the Warriors to set up shop against the
Conquistadors and run to a 21-0
halftime lead.
"They were a httle stunned:· said
Schweer who completed 16 of 30
passes for 209 yards (two intcr-By lllCRARD DUNN ceptions). "Their defensive backs ._,...c., • ...,., ;;r.icre confident comina in. but they
The question as to whether or not · weren't as good as th~y thought.
Woodbridge High could successfully thoup. After the fir:st senes we knew
throw qainst Cabrillo was answered we couJd throw against them.
the first time quan.erback Fred "They played a man coverage the
Schweer chttw a pass. whok itamc. and for us. we thouun
Then, there were no more ques-
tions. Just touchdowns and a bund1e Player of thew----or spirals into the hands of Wood-""'& bridae rccei vers.
"On the first play of the game we
opened up a pass play for 30 yards," SChwecr said. .. And that got our confidence up. We felt we could
throw all niaht after a big play like
tbaL And then on another play durina
the same series we threw one in the
end zone (for a touchdown).··
Confidence does wonders. That
first series trifle~ an avalanche effect for Woodbf'idae's offense. led
by Schweer, who connetted for three
touchdown passes in the first half to
ad the Warriors (10-1) to a 31-14
victory over the Conquistadon in the
first round of the CIF Division VIII Jr~f& las' Friday ni&ht at Irvine
We ~ pretty cxofos.ive in the
first half, probltblr the &est half we've
olaytd tb11.r:~" .. Schweer said. 0 h all tame Iott . the tbrowu-. block·
ina. ~-it all ctic:Md.1 think it was the first time we·ve tCOftd 21'
points in tt.e first MlhU )Ur."
bweer the "'°'°' bdai..S WOOd-~'I dF ~·MMMaia c_.. ...-~.---,..
..... ... -10.1 at "'" • • ... _.. .. i•volved in= ol 1111 _ .. ICIC'WoWM lut .... as
-Wurioe •• I their pin IO
that wis pat. We hke 1t an}11mc ifs
one-on.one with our athletes qainst
somconcetx•sathletes. Our receivers
are aood and ~ fell good the whole pmc throwina the ball. We had a lot
of time to throw and our hne blocked
well."
So thanks to the fine pass protec-
tion and block1na of John Solarayk.
Mark Simpson. Stan Huang, Joe
Miller and Ryan Mattox -and help
from ti&ht end P.A. Emerson -Schweer vaulted onto this weck·s
Daily Pilot Playe~ of the Week
plateau u Woodbridse leaped into
the CIF Dlvist<>n VIII quarterlinab. Eartv in the first quarter, cappina
the Wamon' first dnvc. Schwttt
hooked up with runn•na beck Srott
Seymour for a S-yard touchdown
.... Early '" the t«Oftd qUllner. another S.yard touc~ pasa
woulMI up in the hands of tilht tnd
Gary G1beoft.
Finelly. but not c:omptdd)' in
tttmS Of P9ints put on the "'°''bol!N.
Sch-.ecr foUftd Seymour ~· • a 12.,... ............. 2:41 JIA •
tht _... Mii'. For .... Mill to
Sc ...... ,...,~·· .... ...
....... -8CllWm/CS)
QO'-'. from first smng to waJk..ons. Ifs
not that he didn't do it before. but he
used to be a head coach who allowed
~is as.s1stanu more freedom.
.. He still allows us that. bu• every
.once in a while. someone who·s been
on the )Ob through a long pcnod of
time wtll ~valuate himself. Bill 1s
really starting to en1or life now.··
Running the make-shot break.
pushing the ball quickly from out of
bounds after a basket instead of just
taking it when available off a. de-
(PLEASE SEE UCJ/t4)
Monarchs to
duel Loyola
at Western
Ma\C'r Dti HiJt:i's Clf Division I
football game wtth Loyola has been
scheduled for Western High School
Fnday night. according to CIF of-
ficials this morning.
The Monarchs thought they h.t a
home pme at Orange Coast CoUegc
Saturday mjhL but Loyola officWs
would not agree bccau~ among
other thinp. 1t has pla~ involved
in the USC-Notre Dame game Satur-
day afternoon.
··1 thought we had the home game.
but it looks hke they (Loyola. with the
help of the CIF Southern Section
office) arc taking it away from us. ..
said Mona~hs Coach Chuck Gallo.
"I really don't have any comment to
make about 1t. ..
Abclul-Jabbar o~n•
farewell tour In city
where it all began
Pnta ftle AtMdate4 Pren
. NEW YORK -K.arecJ1l Abdul-
Jabblr is Sllrting a 2S-stop fafcwell tour
Tuesday niaht in New York. the city where
he fint slitted attracting attention IS an
eight-arade ba$ketball player 28 years ago.
Al>dul-Jabbar. 41. who thinks of himself as a
Californian now rather than a New Yorker. nonetheless
said bis final pme for the Los Angeles Lakers at
Madison Square Garden against the New York Knicks
will be a special event.
"It's been a long time since my in tense association
with New York," Abdul-Jabbar said Monday. "I feel
LA.js my home now, not New York. But there stall as a
lot of emotion associated with my hometown. I'm not
used to beina greeted warmJy at Madison Square
Garden."
• Abdul-Jabbar's final season already i\ being
equated with Julius Erving's whirlwind farewell with
the Philadelphia 76ers two seasons ago.
"This will be a distraction," Abdul-Jabbar said of
his.farewell tour through the NBA in his final season.
"But the team shouldn't be too adversely affected
because we're prepared for it."
He called Erving "a more outgoing, public person"
who dealt with the hoopla better than he could.
··1 had a lot of caution and suspicion with the press
early in my career. but about eight years ago I found that
if I gave them {reporters) a chance, they gave me a
chance to be myself." Abdul-Jabbar said. "That's
changed the image of me for the better."
Abdul-Jabbar said a farewell tour like the one
planned this season "would have been inconceivable I 0
years ago. I probably would have just slipped out the
back door.··
The 7-foot-2 center as less a part of the Laker/
offense now than ever in his career. After having his
787-pme double-figure sconng streak stopped last
season, he has scored in double figures only once in
eight games this season. "I hope my retirement isn't coming too late. but
there's still a lot of season to go. so I haven't faced the
end of my career yet,·· he said.
Abdul-Jabbar is averaging 7.4 points and 5.9
rebounds per game. with his best effort a 16-point. 12-
rebound performance at San Antonio Nov. 5. He has
not scored in double figures since then.
But Abdul-Jabbar said he has no regrets.
Q•~ of the day
Mike Bokosky, UCI assistant men's basket·
ball coach, on sophomore swingman Justin
Anderson and his hesitancy to shoot as a •
freshman: "Justin is the most concientiou5 gu.x
on the team. He doesn't want lo shoot the ball if
be doesn't thank the other 14 guys would
approve."
Pacific's Cope will not return
The University of the Pacific an-[!]
no. unced Monday that it will not renew the c •,
contract of head football Coach Bob Cope, •
whose Tigers finished this season with a 2-9
record. when at expires next month. UOP President Bill A~ey added an a news conference that the entire
athletic program. was ~ing ~estructured. Atchley also
alluded 10. but dad not 1dent1fy. a new funding source
for the athktJc program worth $500.000 annually.
Atchley descnbed the 51-ycar-old Cope as "a great
example to >:Oung pe~ple, .. and said that "a decision of
thts nature 1s very daffi~ult, especially in the ca~ of son:acon~ who has made s1gmficant contnbutions to the
U01vers1ty and the ~tockton community." ... Woody
WWeaalofer, 45, resigned under pressure as Missouri
football coach. He had a four-year record of 12-31-1.
, NO-SHOW
APPRECIATI<>N
{)t\Y -
Sherrill speaks. has support
COLLEGE STATION, Tex.as -Em-[!]
battled Texas A&M football coach Jackie •II t
Sherrill made his first public ap~rance
Monday since the George Smith story
broke and reiterated that he will make no comments
about the matter until after the season and the
completion of an internal investigation by the school.
Sherrill missed Saturday's 18-0 victory over Texas
Christian while Smith recanted the story he told to The
Dallas Morning News about receiving "hush" money
from Sherrill during an NCAA investigation of the
A&M football program. Smith said he tofd the story1to
make a proposed book sell.
"J will talk about the footbaU game and that's it."
Sherrill said at a news conference. "I will address tbe
{Smith) issue at the appropriate time after the season."
Texas plays Texas A&M in Austin on Thursday
night.
Sherrill said he was not evading the issue when he
remained off the sidelines when the Aggies played
Texas Christian University on Saturday.
"lfl was trying to dodge the issue. I wouldn't have
been here today." he said.
University regents backed Sherrill, saftng his job
as coach and athletic director was secure.
Sherrill said he made his decision to remain off the
sidelines apinst TCU because he felt his presence
would be distracting to his players.
''The players deserved to have their focus on the
field," Sherrill said. "They art not involved in this and
their battles should be on the field.··
Most Aggie players contend the George Smith
issue is not a problem and support their coach.
Kings recall goalie Fitzpatrick
INGLEWOOD -Goalie Mark lii.1
Fitzpatrick, winner of nine &&mes in 14 ~
starts with the New Haven Nighthawks of
the American Hockey League. will be in
uniform Tuesday night for the Los Angeles Kings when
they play al Philadelphia.
Fitzpatrick. 19. has played one game with the
Kings this season. winning has NHL debut Nov. 6 at
Chicago when Los AnJeles beat the Black Hawks 5·3.
At New Haven this season, Fitzpatrick was 9. 3-1 in
14 games with a 3.07 goals-against average and one
shutout.
In addition to recalling Fitzpatrick from New
Haven. the Kmgs reassigned goalie Bob Janccyk,
defenseman Wayne McBean and winger Craig Dun-
canson to the Nighthawks.
Robinson: we 're not panicking
Rams1ryillgfo find method-
to emerge from black cloud
From T~e Associated Pren
4
It's not time to push the panic button. John
Robinson says.
"We're 7-5 ... and we have the opportunity still to
have a great season," the Rams coach said Monday at his
weekly meeting w1th reporters. "But we have to return to
the form we had earlier.
"We're not panicking and we're not making
changes.··
After wann~ng ~ven of their first nine games, the
Rams have slipped into a three-game losing skid.
including a 38-24 loss to San Diego Sunda). and have
fallen two games behind New Orleans m the NFC West
race.
··we've sot to get the team out from under this black
cloud. -Robinson said. "It's not Halloween. there are no
Panasonic.
1111~1000 • A 0 FOCUS • VHS INDEX U:ir•ilifAECOAIJllNd'
ADD THUE FEATUAES ·~~e¥. : WHHEni~OJus--.FAOM SAME'MAKIA .
11951 BEACH a.VD.
goblins. It's Just something we ha ve to fight through."
The Rams have had trouble in virtually every phase
of their game the past three weeks. and Robinson said
there's no single reason.
"We're making mental errors that shock me ... he
said. "We also seem to be getting mesmerized, just nQl
making the plays."
Robinson said trying to figure out what causes a
slump and finding a way to snap out of it "can be a
fascinating subject to deal with ... when it's somebody
else's team. It's not much fun when it's your own ...
Although the Rams coach said the loss to the
Chargers, who were J..8 coming into the contest "was a tc~ble bl.ow. to a!I of us. a personal blow to all of us ... he
said he dadn t thank there was any lack of effort by his
players.
"Effort is not our problem, nor is desire." Robinson
said. "Technique is. We seem unable to play relaxed and
confident hkc we were earlier. At times. we seem almost
numb ....
··whatever state we're in. we've gotta find a way to
get out of it. You have to trust youFSClf and work it out."
ISCOtJNT S~LES
Huntington Beach (Corner of Talbert) (114) 141-1111
141 4114 .......... .-... -~ .... -A
'
IQ ...... .._" Madal and
Heec.r "lllaeM" Cuaaclle will ''* their comeb9ck fllht io Rmo. Nev .. March 6
under a formal Mlftnlml reached over the
weekend. The fiahl will be the latest of the cornebuk
fiahts which have be(ome fashionable in boxina. By
March 6, ii wiU have been four yean since Mancini
retired from the rina. Mancini, 27, the fonncf Wortd
Boxins Association liatuweiJht champion. retired
followma bis lS-rouncf decision loss &o U:."4 llM
BramMe in Reno in February l98S. C.macbo~6. bu"
fouaht only sp1rio&Jy in the last two years ... The
Oa[Jand Athletics promoted the tWin brother of Jeee eauee., outfielckr Ollie Caueee, from the minors.
Canseco. 24, spent last season with HuostviUe and lbe
Madison Muskies of the Midwest Leaaue ... Seventh·
ranked Jlmm1 CoMon will underao fool surgery that will force him to miss the season-endina Masters tennis
championship ... Goalie Alaill CMvrter, who posted a
1.66 goals-apinst average in leading the Winmpca Jets
to three road victories. was named the NHL Player of
the Week for the period endint Nov. 20 ... The Soviet
Union's top sport.s official sa1d that if athletes were
tested . dunng trainin& -not jusi before major
competitions -it would "practically rule out" illegal
drua use. SQviet sports minister Mant GralMv made
the rommeitt•t the openina of a UN ESCO anti-doping
conference. • · · . .
Irvine takes over Pacers' helm ,
Geerce lniae will be interim head m coach of the Indiana Pacers while the
search for a permanent coach continues,
club president Doaale Wal" sajd Monday.
Irvine will take over immediately from Mel Dulel1 and
DavW Twanldk, who have been actina IS co-interim
coaches since Jack Ramsay resigned last Thunctar.
The Pacers arc·now ().9 and at the bottom of the NBA s
Central Division. Irvine, a former assistan1 coach for
the Pacers, posted a 48-116 record in two seasons as the
team's head coach from 1984-1986 ... Boston Celtics
star Larry Bini, the star forward who is expected to be
sidelined three to four months after underaoing surgery
Saturday to remove bone spurs from both' heels, was
able to walk well with a new cast and was discharaed
from the hospital Monday ... Maril Davis scored 20
points and pulled down nine rebounds to lead the West
End 36ersof Australia's national professonal basketball
league to a 75-66 exhibition victory over San Diego
State.· .
Peete captures Pac-10 honors
University of Southern California •
quarterback Rodney Peete (16 of28 passes 4 •
for 189 yards) and Oregon State comerback
Billy Hughely (interception. fumble re-
covery to key rally) have been selected along with
Stanford University kicker John Hopkins (four field
goals)as Pacific-I 0 players of the week ... San Jose State
quarterback Kea IAta (28 of 39 passes. 3 72 yards, five
TDs) and Fresno State linebacker Tracy Roten (10
tackles. 3 assists. 21'2 sacks) have been named the Big
West football players of the week.
Television, radio
TELEVlSIOH
'S o.m. -BODYBUILDING: Women'' national
chame>ionshle>s, ESPN.
5:05 e>.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers al New
York, TBS (delaved on ChanMI 9 11 6 e>.m.).
6 o.m. -BOXING: Scheduled -Ras·I lalula
Bramble vs. Bryanl Paden In a 12-round lkJl\lwelghl
bout al Atlantic City, ESPN.
6 o.m. -PRO HOCKEY: Kings at Philadetphla
(delayed), Prime Ticket.
9:15 ;>.m. -BOXING: Scheduled -Genaro
Hernandez vs. Refugio Roia1 In 12-round sue>er-
featherweighl bout al the Forum (delaved), Prime
Ticket. RADIO 6 o.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers al New
York (delayed), KLAC (S70).
. 6 o.m. -PRO HOCKEY: Kings al Ptllladele>hla (~Ved), KPZE (1190). ~
Stockton
leads Utah
by.Clippers
Hts 22 points. 15 assists provide
key tn I I 7-98 victory for Jazz
From fte Aleocla&e4 Preas
John Stockton scored 22 points, had IS assists and
four Aeals to lead the Utah Jazz to a 117-98 victory over
the visitiftl Los Anaeles Oippen Monday n~L Darrell Griffith had 2S points, Thurl Bailey 24 and
Karl Malone 23 points and 13 rebounds for the Jazz. \1
Los Anaetes Coach Gene Sb~ credited counterpart ;
Frank Layden for the success oftbe Jazz.
'The Jazz are just too pawtrful, .. Sh~ said. "Frank.
does a areal job with them. He sets them in-the right •
positions and they set the job done." --•
Rookies Danny Mannina and Olarles Smith led the ~
Oippen with.21 and 19 points. respectively.
San Dieao's Regic Williams left the pme with 6:48
remainina in the second period afler takina a finaer in the
ri&ht eye. He never returned and the team, later
announ<:ed he bad a scratched "cornea. He ~ the
Clippers' lcadina scorer with nine points when he was
injured.
In another NBA game:
Reellets 117, Hawu 113: Sleepy Aoyd scored five of
his 20 points in lhe final 2:20 of play to spark host
Houston past Atlanta. Ao~d also contributed 12 assists as Houston had six
etayers in double fiaures. Buck Johnson and Akeem
Olajuwon each had 18 points, while Otis Thorpe added
16, Tony Brown 14 and Mike Woodson 13. Ol~uwon
also had 14 rebounds.
Atlanta. 6-4. was led b~ Dominique Wilkins with 29
points, Reggie Theus with 26 points and Moses Malone
with 19 points and 17 rebounds.
A free throw by Clifflevinpton tied the score at 93
with 8:33 left in the Jlme. Houston then outscored •
Atlanta 17-6 to lead 110..99 with 3:22 left. .
HOCK EY
Montreal sp.oils
Lafleur'& reunion :
From Tiie Associated Press
Russ Courtnall scored the tie-breaking goal in thc-
sccond period and the Montreal Canadiens went on to a
4-2 victory over the host New York Rangers Monday
night. spoiling Hall of Farner Guy Lafleur's first
appearance against his old team.
The prne featured Lafleur's first appearance against
the Canadiens since coming out of retirement this season
to play for the Rangers. Lafleur. a Hall of Farner who
scored 518 goals in 14 seasons for the Canadiens. had one
goal against his former team. Lafleur's goal came in the
first period to tie the game at 1-1 .
The victory was the fourth straight for the Adams
Division-leading Canadiens. who have only lost once in
their last 11 games (8-1-2). The Patrick Division-leadin1'
Rangers were 2-0-1 before Monday night.
E1sewhere in the NHL:
· Maple Leafs 4, BIHi I: Tom Fergus scored three•
consecutive goals and goalie Allan Bester made 21 saves
to lead Toronto. Ed Olczyk also sco for the Maple Leafs, who had
three power-play aoals espite enteri a the contest'witb
the worst percentage o n-tagc success in the
leag~e.
49ers leave
Redskins in
dire situation ~\ ....
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Jobrf
Taylor returned a punt 9S yards for a
touchdown and Joe Monllna ac-
counted ror three scores. spam"' san .
Francisco to a 37-21 VlClOI'}' over
Washinaton Monday ni&ht that lef\
the Redskins in peril ofbecomina th~·
ninth straiaht NFL champion to fait
to repeat. •.
In a battle ofsurvival involvil)I the
NFL's winninaest teams of the
I 980's. lbe 49ers prevailed. thanks in
tarse part to Taylor's return. It was iM
fint of two touchdowns in the final.
4:24 of the second quarter as San
Francisco took a 23-7 halftime le.ad.
Washinaton, 6-6, lost for tbc third
time in four ~mes and fell to fourttf
in the NFC East behind Phoeni-.,"
Philadelphia and tbe New Yora-
Oiants, aU 7-S. Washinaton, piqued
by mistakes all year, turned the bell'\
over four times Monday niaht. · .J
The Redskins may now need to win
all four remainina pmes to have a
chance at the playoffs. '
San Francisco, which bad Iott three'' ofitslastfourpmes. improved to 7.j ..
and moved into a teCOnd-Dlace tw(.
with tbe Rams in the NF'C West. '
"'
Shanahan won't pull Beuerleln111
...
...... BlyaDt
Community college
players of the week
GOLDEN WEST
For Rusdcrs· 31-24 Mission
Conrercncc Central Oivislon vic-
tory over Riverside.
OFFENSE BlaJse Bryut
The 6-foot-I . 202-pound
sophomore Lailback out of
Cypress Hiah had a career effon
wuh 330 yards-on 46 carries to
establish a Golden West and
Orange County single game re-
cord', and ran for touchdowns
from 23 and I() yards out.
DEFENSE
Mlle Cover
The 6-foot-3, 235-pound
sophomore outside linebacker
out of Westminster High had a
seven primary tackles, four assists
and a pair of quanerback sacks,
includma one in the final minute
which helped stifle a potential
rally.
OllANGE COAST
For P1rues· 29-19 Mission
Conference Central Dav1sion vic-
tory over Rancho San11aao.
Ol'f'ENSE
T,..taLei
The 6-foot. 215-found
freshman full~ out o Bolsa
Grande High came off the bench
in the second quarter to run the
option at quanerback, pjning 67
yard$ on 16 carries, including
touchdowns of2. 6 and 12 yards,
and compleled one pass for 8
yards.
DEFENSE. G....,.w.uc
The 6-foot, 185-pound
~phomorc comerback out of
Edison High had one inter·
ception, ti ve tackles. three assists.
made the hit of the week. and
performed great man-to-man
coverage. TraYlnLal
. ~
High school Prep fo0tba11
players of
the week
SCHWEER IGNITES CONFIDENCE ••. From Cl
football log , ................. , MAJllNA (0· l0-0)
C:OllONA DCL MAJl (f-0·2) (Sllluf Leffue, O·S·OI
(Sel View u..ue. l ·0·21 0 -Ell*'•llr• 13
7 Huntlnoton 8ffch 0 o -servt11 ..
23 s.n Clemente 0 10 Foothld 21 S2 SantlNO • O Los Atamllo' 29
14 Leeune Hiiis II 6 M1Nlken za
21 COiie Mese 12 6 W~tminstef'• 16 14 Unlvenltv• 14 10 H tington 8eac11• ?I
14 EltencJe• 1 0 Editon• 41 0 SeddllCleck. 0 20 Flklllteln V ... v• 36 17 Tutlllt' 0 O Oceen v-· 29 27 NewPOf1 Herbot • • MATllt DEi l6·S·O) CIF
'4 Trov 0 c-..-,1 LH9W, 2·l·OI
N2S-Anehelm let GIOWf") 17 Fount•ln V•llev n
COSTA MeSA U·S-U 34 OcHn'kll 36
17 Sent• Ane 10 (ltlldlc C.st LAfflft, l·l·O> ' EdllOll 21 13 Ettancle u 31 Huntlnolon Beach 14 n R•ncllO AlemlloJ IS 14 81"'°9 Amat• 21 34 Gerdtn Grove 7 21 81"'°9 Montgomery• 7 7 K1tttta 7 42 Crespi 21 12 Corone del Mltr 21 2S St. Peu1• IS 7 WOOdbfldM• 14 24 Servile' 42 12 T reouco Hiib • za 29 LIOUlll Hiiis • 21 c" 14 0r1noe• 13 16 LB Jor.S.n ' 2t LffUM BMch' 0 N2s-t.ovota (II Western!
Ctff NEwt"OtlT HAlt!M>a (l ·7·0) 21 Bloomlnoton 41 (S.. "" lAHlle, 2-J.0) lfDtSON lf·1·0) 0 Sente Ant 2a
(s.Mf LMtUt, 4·1·01 10 Oce•n VllW 0
7 Et Modena 0 1 Huntington &etch 10' 21 CIM)(1lrano Valley 14 10 La Hallfa 14
2a Lono a.ch JordM! 14 14 Lano &eech WitM>n 2t
2i Malet' Del 9 14 Saddlet>ack• za 42 St. JOM Bo~ 0 a unlvt nlty• 24
21 Huntlnoton 8uct1• 6 11 Tu,tln' 10 ZI Fountain Valttv• , ?I 11 Estencla' 0
41 Marine• 0 • CorON dtt Mer• 27 16 .0c .. n View• 0
42 wn tmlns tw • 7 OC&AN Vl&W (S·S·OI
Clff ( S4MMt LMtiut, l ·Hl
16 Font-21 19 CVllfHI 0
lfSTANCtA (7·l· ll 0 NewPOrt Harbor 10
(See "'" u..u.. 2·2-11 20 Senta Ana 11,,_v 3 14 WHl9t'n 0 23 Costa IMM 13 o Tustill 10 21 Ueuna Hiii\ 10 o -Fountain V•t1ev• 32 17 Los Amleos 1 ll Wes1mon,1tr• 11 lS~ hKfl 1 11 Hunll1191on ~ 6 14 Or•nee • O Edison• 16 13 TU$tln• 13 29 Marine• 0 7 CMone def Mlfr• 14 14 Unlven11v• 9 SADDLl8ACK (4:6· ll O NewPOrt Har00r• 17 ISN View LfftlW, 2·2· 1) ll S.cldltt>ack • 10 14 C•rlsbeCI 11 CfF
TY PRICE
Corona del Mar
A senior quarterback, he
completed 9 of 16 for 160
yards and thitt touch·
downs. and scored a touch-
down as well in 44-0 win.
RICH SCHONES
Costa Mesa
Schones. the Mustang
quarterback, passed 5
tames for 129 yards. and
rushed 11 times for 92
yards at Bloomington.
Delatorre. a 6-foot, 190
pound senior, played well
on both sides of the line in
the Eagles' 17-14 CJ F play-
off loss to Kennedy.
noRICPOWE
Fountain Valley
He had 161 yards on 13
cames, caught 2 passes for
5 yards and scored 20 .
points on 3 Tf?s and a two-
pornt conversion.
Seymour after a lateral. but picked up
only one r.ard.
.. (Cabrillo) was running a man
coverage the whole game and chars
tough to do," said Schweer. who
topped his impressive out.in.a with a I·
yard touchdown run in the fourth
quaner to help the Warriors pull
away.
"J didn't get that much pressure
and that's where we get our success. Jf
I would've gonen pressure, then 11
would've been a lot 1ougher to
complete passes. It all starts al the
line.
"I'd say that it was possibly the best
game and definitely the best half
we've had this year. Everything went
together.
"Of course, everything goes
together on paper before the game.
but you have to do it in the game. It all
came down to the first drive. We were
concentrating a little harder because
the seniors knew it could have been
their last game and that atti1ude
earned o nto the field in the first half.
"We didn't have the killer instinct
in the second half. th.ough. We
wanted to blow them out. At halfhmc.
we knew we could do a lot of things on
offense against them. We weren't
satisfied, but we weren't as aggressive
(in the second halt) as we could have
been."
For Schweer, one of many leaders
on the team, it was a season-high for
sconna tosses. He'd thrown for more
)ards before, like the first game of the
~car when he paled up 227 against San
t'tcmcnte. And 1hc founh game of the
season against crosHown rival Irvine
wJien he racked up 217 yards.
His Pacific Coast League h1.gh was
21 4 yards against laa:una Beach, the
team which defeated Woodbridge last
year co steal the league championship
away.
This year. however. it was Trabuco
Hills which deflated the Warriors'
league utle hopes. winning a 17-13
decision on the lastpme of the league
season.
It ended as a co-championship for
the Warriors. somewhat tarnished.
though, as they entered the playoffs as
the league's No. 2 reprcsentauve.
"We have what H takes to win (the
CIF utle)." Schweer said. "If we go
out eve!) game lake the last pme
against Cabrillo, have our goal set to
win and concentrate. we can't be
stopped."
There appears to be no question
about that. If only the cocky defensive
-backs would ever learn.
Game-busters
Lua week's plays of 40 re* .,. .. re
•9(>-Duby Ospina (Costa Mesa). touchdown run with kickoff.
•69-JefTClark (Corona dcl Mar), touchdown pass from Ty Price.
•64-David Salladay (Costa Mesa), 1ouchdown pass from Rich Schones.
•57-Mike Ammann (Mater Dei). crucial punL
•54-Tony Pena (Mater De1). pass from Danny o·Neil.
•S4-Warren Johnson (Corona del Mar). touchdown return with
an lerccption.
•48-Kednc Powe (Founta1n ValJcy). touchdown run.
•47-Kednc Powe (Fountain Valley). touchdown run.
•42-Tony Pena (Mater Dci), touchdown pass from Danny O'Neil.
Last wffll'1 ruW.. icMen
1. Kedrit: Po.we (Fountaan Valley), 13-1~1: 2. Rich SchonH (Costa Mesa).
11-92; 3. Manny Bomlla (Costa Mesa). 11-92: 4. Josh Wojtkicwicz (Estancia),
23-82.
Lua week's pu1ht1 lea4cn
I. Danny O'Neil (Mater Dei). 12-17-0, 238 yards, I TD; 2. Fred Schweer
(Woodbridge). 16-30-2. 209yards. 3TDs; 3. TyPricc(Coronadel Mar), 9-16-1 ,
160 yards. 3 TDs: 4. Rich Schones (Estaneta), S-16-2, 129 yards. I TI>. S.
Donnie Smith (Edison). 9-12-1. 105 yards, 0 TDs.
Lu& •ffll'• recetvtaa &eMen
I. Al Togonon (Westminster). 6-n: 2. iony Pena (Mater Dei). S-143: 3.
Patnck Reilly (Edison). 5-59: 4. Alex Zaldivar (Woodbridge), 4-70.
Last •cd'• leOl'tllil ~ I. Kedric Powe (Fountaan Valley), 20: 2. Scott Seymour (Woodbri<lgc).
Warren Johnson (Corona del Mar). 12 each.
1' KtMedV " f'OUlfTAIN VALU!Y ..19·2-0l (SWIMt ._...,., S·O·O) n Mater Del 17 JS El TOt'O 31
6 S.nl1 An1
7 OOmlnguez
71 Serre
0 Senti An1 Vellev 2t illewPOl'I Harbor' 1 Tu111n•
30
20 12 3
1' ,,
PATRICK REILLY
Ediaon
The Chargers' top re-
ceiver. he caught 5 passes
for 59 yards 1n Edison's
Division I opening round
21-16 loss to Fontana.
Notre Dame faces stop along way
3 Mlulon "'* 24 2iet~ 7 20 LonlJ Poly lS 32 OC..1r View' 0 ,>-21 EdiJOn' 11 20 Wntmlnsttr' 10 36 Mefine• 20 42 Huntin91on 8eac11• 13
Clf'
39 SI. Frencl5 0
N2S-RUO!doua (II OCC)
HTM. HACH 12·1·0)
(s-.t ......... i-4·01
0 Corone cMf Mer 1
2 Peclflce 7
10 NtwllOrt Harbor 1 1 Lone lffch WillOtl 16
IC Mei.r Otl 31 6 Edison• 21
21 Meflne• 10 ·~ vi.w· 2t .. at WtttmlnJter• 26 13 Founleln ve11n• 42
• .., .... ,, .. ·0)
ls.tel (Nit L-.ue, 2·l·O) 13 University 1
21 Vlllt Perk .lS
13 Tustin 1
7 .WoodOridM 27
14 FoothlM 13 27 Sen Cltmtntt 7 o C•Plstreno v111ty• • 13 Minion vi.io· 14
21 Dene Hiib" 14
2to El Toro• 27
LAGUNA HACH (2-7·1l ,,.edlk C..Jf u..ue. l ·l-01
0 Corone oel Mar• 0
2t Uruv1nl1y• • II
10 E"anc..• IJ
CIF
11 LA Hellr1 7
N7S-P1C1llCI (II SA Bowl/
UNIVERSITY 14·5·1)
ISM V... LM_., 1·2· ll 7 Irvine 13
O Mlulo" Vteio 0
17 WOO<lllflOQt " 7 Foo1111n 6
31 D•na Hills 20
14 CorON oet Mltr' 14
24 NtwPOrl Herl>Or • • 9 E11encl1' 14 la SecldleOeGll.. 21
J2 Tustin• 17
WESTMINSTER (4·7·01
(Mwt LMWt, l·2·0l
• Vllene•• '° 30 Miiiikan IS
l2 E'"'•nza 14
T C•oistr•no V•tltv 12
6 Mission VielO 3' 1' Merine• 6
II Ocean View• 13 10 Fountain V1n.v• 20
76 Huntlnoton 8t1Ch' 19
1 Edison• .,
CIF
10 i..ovota 30
WOOOllUDG& ( 10· 1·01 ,,.edlk , .. ,, u..u.. 4.f-01
22 Sen Cltmttl!t ' 23 Foollllll 0 14 Untvtnlrv 12
ALTOGONON
W estmlnater
A 5-fool-7, 145-pound
senior wide receiver. he
caught sax passes for 72
yards, including an 18-yard
touchdown reception.
AARON BRIONES
Mater Del
A 5-foot· I 0. 200-pound
senior insade linebacker. he
had 6 unassisted and 7
assisted tackles. grading
out 80 percent.
KELLY JACKSON
Sadclleback
Holtz opes USC
provides another
Step in being No. 1
SOUTH BEND. Ind. (AP) -For
Notre Dame Coach Lou Holtz.
Southern California 1s not a des11-
nat1on. it's a stop along the way. ,.
The Fighttng lnsh. still the nation s
No. I team after a 21-3 "•clor) O\er
Penn State last Saturday at Sou1h
Bend. pla) No. 2 Southern Cal nc'<l
turda) at Los Angeles.
It's the second clash of unbeaten
l1lans LhtS )Car for the lnsh. who
defeated then top.ranked M1am1 .
Fla .. 31-30 on Nov. 30 v.hcn Notre
Dame was rankcd!ourtb.
"They have a gttat team." Holtz
said of Southern Cal, "and I'm
looking forward to playing in ~arm
weather WJthout the kind of ram we
have had for about six weeks.
14 l.Nlin9tr 42 o Norte Vlst• n
l D•ne Hilb l
1 Ellantle JS
' Sen '""*'" 10
t1 trvlne
14 c.n-..on
14 Cos11 Mtse0
21 Le9Utlt H•lll'
14 Orenet'
1
0
7
6 •
A 5-11. 220-pounder. he
had tv.o tackles and an
r.--'---assist. as v.ell as putting
.. Th1sisn't1hcend ofthe1oumc~ b}
an) means. This isn't where I wan1 11
to end ...
The Irish face No. 4 West V1rgin1a
m the Fiesta Bowl. and at could be for
a national championship. 1f Noire
Dame can aet out of Southern (al
with an 11-0 record.
• LHUl'e Hllll • 2 17 Leoun• e.ec11• 1
3 Oranoe• 2t 13 Tr•buco Hill$" l7 t Tr~o H11t5• 1 Clf
7 Woodb<ldM' " l l C11)flllo 14
0 (Olle Mele" 2t N2S-S.nt1 Cl•r• (II frvlntl
OCC tops Victor Valley in OT
SAN JACINTO -Orange Coast
College's men's basketball team
pulled out 1ls third straight victory
without 1 loss Monday afternoon
here in the first round of the Mt. San
Jacinto Invitational, but it wasn't
without taking some of Coach Tandy
Q;llis' emotions.
Gillis watched his team misfire at
the line with ei&ht seconds to go in
reaulation. resuftina in a breakaway
bucket by Vactor Valley wnh three
seconds remaining to send the game
into overtime.
The Pirates, however. led by the
scoring of Lamont Speed, Darcck
Crane and Alan Schlines. dominaicd
the overtime session and came away
with an 86-76 victory, outsconng
VictorVallcy 11-t in overtime.
The verdict sends Coast back to the
tournament's semifinals today at S.
defensive pressure on the
quanerback seven limes.
BY
THE
POOL
SERVICE
tJel'Ying SE A the Orange coui
. lWfabic\ Frieadly Serrice
Docw Hau.wald AIO'dme ,,, ......
10 ALL IEw 'II
LElllS
'Tm cenaanly happy about our
progress so far:· Holu said. ·Tm
happ) for the seniors who wettable to
be UJldefcated al home the las1 two
years.·· .
The Tro1ans. 10-0. defeated UCLA
31-22 Saturda~ at Pasadena to help
set up the showdown.
This is the foonh consecuu'c week
1he Irish have been No. I in Tile
ASSOClated Press poll. Monda). the)
received 3S of 60 first-P.la~ votes and
1.167 points ofa posS1ble 1.100 from
a nationwide panel of spons "nters
and broadc.asters.
Southern Cal. o 2 each v..ttk
bchand Notre Dame. rt'CCt\Cd 22 tim-pla~ VOies and 1.158 potnlS..
In the last four poll" Notre Dame ·s
lead has shppcd from 47 points to 38
to H-to nine.
Saturday·s loss dropped UCL'\
from sixth to ninth
Miami. West V1rgin1a and Aonda
State remained an Lhe 3-4-5 pos111ons.
c 0 M
Miami received one first-placie vote
and 1.081 points after defeating No.
11 LSU 44-3. West Virginia n:imved
tht other two first-place vorcs and
1.01 6 points aft(r beating No. 14
Syracuse 31 -9 to complete an 11-0
regular season.
Florida St,ate. which , was idle.
received 954 points.
Nebraska. a 7-3 winner over No. 9
Oklahoma. moved from siventh to
sixth wtth 883 points. Oklahoma fell
to 10th.
Idle Auburn climbed from e•ghth
to ~venth wnh 846 pc11nts. and
Arkansas.. also idle. v..~nl from I 0th to
eighth with 155 points.
Rounding out 1he Top Ten wee
UCLA wtth 720 points and Okla·
homa wnh 637
The Second Ten consisted of
Michigan. Okl~hom.a.... u.i~.
Clemson, Houston. Wyommg, lSU,
Alabama. Washangton State. Syr-
acu~ and ~flla.
p A N y
FREE . CAMPAGNOLA
LONG-SLEEVED
T·SHIRT
With any $50.00 purchase ($16.99 retail value)
C. ()qnge Coeet DAK.Y PtLOT/ T..-.,., Nov.nber 22, 1988
OPTIONS •••
f'nmiCl
him and the ~m.
"Surprisj nalY tnO\llll we ran 1 n
awful lot of Just strai&fat i-fonnation stuff. Some of it wu their adjustment.
You don'lstuntan ~n. so that
allowed us to Nn our offense.··
Had he c:onsideted usina the option
earlier, since teams were st.acking
their defenses and blhzinalike mad because ofthc inefficiency at quar-
ten.ck.
"You can consider it, but until
you'rereMtytodolt... we could have
done it last week. But I don't have that
kind of a crystal ball." It wasa tint for Workman, who has
always<>pet'lted a balanced attack
with a fancy for the pass. "lbavehadsomeoptionpla~wc
threw in once in a while, but that's a
new wrinkle for me. I would consider
usinait ifwe bad that kind of
personnel-: There'~ not too many
option teams doina well, but I can sec
itasa valuable piece to have in the offense if you have a guy to run it."
On Riddell. who missed four weeks
earlier th is season, but came back
with a strong finish to cap his OCC
career, Workman said, "You're talk·
ing abouta kid who had a broken
handforfourwceks. Hecameback
and could not hold the football. He
basically returned kicks and played a
bit on spot things. Now, last three
weeks. be'stheTyler Riddell he could
have been all year."
After two successful overall
seasons which ended on a losing note
forOran~Coast College's football
team, the Pirate flag -which mes
near the south end zone after victories
-didn't fly for the off season.
Ironically, after remaining folded
for five straight weeks in I 98S. it should fly this winter to symbolize a
successful finale.
"ltreaHywas(a big win)," said
Workman of the ~9-19 comeback win
over Rancho Santiago. which is
bound for the Pony Bowl Classic
opener ... The kids felt good about it,
and (the coaches) felt good about it.
We were a pretty dam good footbaJl
team but lost an awful lot of close
games, gave away a lot of close games.
We were not t.hat bad."
0
Huntington Beach High and Gold-
en West product John Donnelly.a
senior at Graceland College in
Lamon~ Iowa , was named to the All-
Hcart or America Athletic Con-
ference football team as a defensive
tackle for the 6-4 Yellowjacke1s.
He also earned conference de-
fensive player of the week honors
Nov. 5 when he registered 12 tackles.
a forced fumble, two sacks and ran a
blocked punt back 8 yards for a
touchdown -his first -in a 12-0
shutoutofMissouri Valley.
Hewa
Hub
SC01TSDALE, Ariz. (A P)-Carl Hubbell's
253 lffetime victories wcrcn '1 nearly as memorable
as five little strikeouts.
Hubbell, a Hall of Farner and the National
League's dominant pitcher of the 1930s, was 85 when he died Monday. 54 years after fanning five
of baseball's greatest hitters in the 1934 All-Star
Game. The left-handed scrcwballer, a 2().game win-
ner five times for the New York Giants, was the
starting pitcher for tbe National Lea&ue AU-Stars
and faCed a lineup of nine future HafJ of Famers.
including Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig
Hubbell had pitched two scoreless innings in
the 1933 All-Star Game, the first year it was played,
but in 1 '134 he staned slowly.
Charlie Gehrinser opened the game with a
single aod advanced to second on an error _Heinie
Manush walked. Ruth, Gehrig aod Jimmie Foxx. who com-
bined for 127 homers that season and 1,741
lifetime, were the next three batters. Hubbell began throwin~is famous screwball. which C\lrved away
from ri t-handed batters.
Hu II once described the pitch as "unnatu-
ral" and certainly none of the American League
sluue._rs were accustomed toil He lhrew it so often that after several years his left arm hung at a strange
angJe from his shoulder.
Ruth, nearing the end of his great career. took
a called third stnke on the outside comer and
looked "decidedly puzzled." according to one
observer. Gehrig, who would go on to win the
Triple Crown that season. then went down
swinging, with Gchrin,gerand Manush pulling off a
double steal on 1he third strike.
A frustrated Gehri~ informed Foxx, "You
mi&}lt as well cut, ii wont get any higher," but the
Philadelphia Athletics' star fared no better. going
down on strikes.
Frankie Frisch's homer gave the National
League a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the first and
Hubbell resumed his ma.stery the next inning.
striking out Al Simmons and Joe Cronin to lead off
the second.
After Bill Dickey broke the string with a single.
Gehringer remarked. ··1 was happy to see that. It
was starting to gtt embarrassing.'
When opposif1$ pitcher Lefty Gomez came to the plate, the umpire rcponcdly snarled at him.
"Are you t~ina to insult Hubbell, coming up here
with a bat?' Gomez struck out.
Hubbell set down the American League in the
third on two fly balls and a grounder. He left with a
4-0 lead to a thunderous ovation from the 48.363
fans at the Polo Grounds. Their appreciation of
Hubbell's performance was hardly dampened by
the fact that the American League went on to win
9-7.
... ruess J won't ever fo!Jet that '34 game."
Hubbel recalled years later. "I veoften been asked
what I was throwing Ruth and Gehrig and
Simmons and those fellows. Well. it's a little
complicated.
Jim Babbell (left) of Lincoln, 1'eb., .
and brother Carl Babbell Jr. of
Lapna Ktauel, dUplay a photo of
•1 was throwing everything J knew how,
including fastbaJ~ and curves. but the only thing
they got a chance to hit was the screwball. I saw to
that very carefully. It was the only thing they hadn't
seen, and I knew what they could do with the other
stuff ifl ever got it within range."
Nicknamed "King Carl" and "The Meal
Ticket," Hubbell earned the Most Valuable Player
Award with a 26-6 record in 1936 and set a then-
record of 46 1-3 consecutive scoreless innings from
July 13 to Aug. I . 1933.
"Young left-handers still look on Hubbell as
one of the legends oft he game," Giants spokesman
Duffy Jennings said from San Francisco~
Hubbell's control was so superb that he
admitted he would often deliberately throw his
first two pitches out of the strike zone. If the batter
didn't swing. Hubbell said, the pitcher believed he
still bad the batter "set up for something with some
stuff on it."
Hubbell. elected to the Hall of Fame in 1947.
threw a no-hitter for the Giants. against the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1929, but some who saw him
pitch said his most remarkable game was on July 2.
1933 at the Polo Grounds against the St. Louis
Cardinals.
With 50,000 people in the stands, the slim left.
hander with the baggy pants shut out the Cardinals
their father, Ball of Famer Carl Bab-
bell, wbo died late Sanday from ba-Jarl• 811ffered ln an aato accident.
for J 8 innin~ before the Giants finall y scored in
the bottom of the 18th to win l-0. Mixing up his pitches perfectly, Hubbell
permitted six singles. struck out 12 and didn't walk
a baller. He retired the side in order in 12 of the 18
innings.
Later Hubbell, in ch~ of the Giants' farm
!lystem in the 1950s, recalled: "I remember that
one, all ri&ht I thought it would never end."
The Giants won the National League pennant
with Hubbell in 1933, 19.36 and 1937 and the
World Series against Washington in 1933, when
the left-hander won two pmes. His major-league career, aJI with the Giants,
ran from I 928 through 1943.
"We still considered Carl a part-time scout for
the Giants' organization, although he wasn't verx
active in recent years because of his health. '
Jennings said on Monday. ··He was a frequent visitor to the Giants'
spring-training workouts in Scottsdale each year.
He remains one of the legendary pitchers in the
Giants' rich baseball history," Jennings said.
Hall of Fame umpire Jocko Conlan. 88. who
batted against Hubbell when both were in the
minor leagues. was a longt ime neighbor who called
Hubbell 1 "high-class guy."
"You couldn't get in an argumen1 with him,"
Conlan said of Hubbell.
Halos' offer
""-~~~
notenoµgh
to lure Ryan
fromAstros
An&els say they'll
make another btd
pefore gtvtng It UP.
HOUSTON (AP) -Veteran
Houston pitcher Nolan Ryan has rejecied a feported Sl.S million offer
to leave the Astro1 to play for lbc
CaJifomil Aneels.' ··1 have rejected the Afteels' only offer," R~an said Monday. ··Now
we're wa1tina to hear ftom the
Milwaukee Brewen."
RY.an uid he wun'• com_J)&etely
satilfaed with the ~ts· offer, but
died that neec>tiattons with the
Anaiels have not ended.
IUchard MOIS, Ryan's •nt. said
he planned to meet p with Ansls
teneral m&l\lltr Make Port today.
.Moss Mid be also expected to receive
the Astros' second proposal today.
But Astros' Jenera! man..-Bill
Wood said no fiart.her proposals bave
been made to either Ryan or Moss.
Ryan uid he problbly would talk soon with the Brewen.
"They had contacted us 1 couple of
weeks aao, but {Brewers general
manager) Harry Dalton was~1naout
of the country on vacation, be said.
"He asked us not to do anything until
he got back. I understand he's back
now."
Dalton was the Anaels' general
manqcr who en&inecred the lrlde
that brought ~yan from the New
York Mets to Cllifomia in t 972.
· Ryan, 41, reportedly earned Sl.2
milbon this year. Tbe Astros' first
1989 . offer was said to have been $850,000. With incentives, the con-
tract would have reached Sl.25
million.
But Ryan isn't the only player the
Astros arc in danaer of losing.
Veteran catcher Alan Ashby said he
wasn't oleased with his contract offer
from Wood.
"They want me to take a minimum 20 percent pay cut." Ashby said. "I'm
not aoing to put up with this any
more."
Ashby, a t4-year veteran, who has
spent the past 10 seasons with the
Astros, madeS4SO,OOOthis year. A 20
percent cut could leave Ashby with a
1360,000 salary.
"Unless this changes. I definitely
will not play for the Astros nest
season," he said.
UCI READY FOR FREEDOM BOWL HOOPS •••
1 fJ88-89 prep schettules
From Cl
fensive rebound. the Anteaters prom-
ise to score a lot. although it won't be
the 126-point average they racked up
against two exhibition opponents two
weeks ago.
known quanuty to UCI.
"Usually, we scout opponents or
get a tape, but they didn't play an
exhibition," Bokosky said. "h's hard
to get an evaluation when they're so
fat'""'away and we don't talk to too
many coaches in that part of the
country. One person was saying they
like to run and score in the I 20s."
whether ifs a 5-2 midget or a 6-10
giant, it hurts, but you have to go on, ·
said third-year Maryland Coach Bob
Wade by conference call Monday.
"Brian was a very important part of
our program. We felt he bad an
outstanding freshman year, but Brian chose to move on (to Arizona)"and we
wish him well"
,.,,. .
Corona del Mar
-Motl .. 0tc S-S.nt• AN V•kv. 7
Thur., O.C. 1-81 l.IHIUM Bffcll. 7
S.I ·S.I., Dec. 10-17-S.nl• A"8 V•llev
Toum.menl, T8A
Tues.. J8n. >-O•NI Hilb. 7 Tues • J•n. l~Unlv•nltv', 7
TllUr., J•n 12-et Nltw-1 Hartior•. 7
Tues., J•n I~•·. 7
TllUr., J•n lf-E ll.nci.•. 1 Tun.. J.n 2~1 Tustin•, 1
Th\lf'.. J•n 2"""1t Unlvenltv', 7
Tues.. nn 3l Nl•POI t H¥00f'. 7
Thur .• Feo l-et ~·. 1
Tues •• Fet>. 7-t Est•nci.'. 1 Tl'IUr. Feo ~Tint1n•, 7
·~tn Sn View L-oeme
Ca.ta Jfeu
Thur -Tues .. OK 1·6--trvlne Tounutment
T8A wao . OK 7-Horco, 7 Tllur , OK .._.,._oort C~lsllan, 6
Mo<\ ·Set , Dec. 17-17-BrN Tournament,
T8A
Tues.·S.t, OK. 27-30-<°'t• MeM TOVI'· nament. T8A
Thur .. J•n S-.1 E51anci.. 1
Tun., J•n ll>-11 WOOC1bffd9t•, 7
Tllut . J1n 12-Tr8buco H111s•. 7
Tues, Jen 17-el ~ Hilts' 7
Tll\K., J•n Tt--Or ... •. 7
Tues .. J•n. 2~ 8"cll', 7
TllU<'., J•n. 2'-Woodllrld9e'. 7 Tues., Jan. 3l-9t TrM>uco Hiii\" 7
TllUr .• Fm. ~ Hills·. 7
Tun.. F•. 7-t Or11191•. 1
TllUr., F• f-al Le9UM llffcn', 7
'-dene>tft PKHic COlllt ~ oeme
Edlaoa
T11ur.-Tue1., Dec 1-6'-tr•ine TourftM'nent.
T8A
Tllul'.-S.I .. Dec l-IC>-8uene, TBA Tllur., Dec 1?-et Lynwood, T8A
S.I ·Fri. OK 17·72-s.nl• 8¥1>8r• Tour·
1181Mftf, TIA
Tuei.-Frl.. Dec 27·»-EOl.aniM•rln•
Tournement. T8A Tues., Jen >-r Mat• Del, 7.JO
Tllur ., J•n s--Hunt"'9ton 9Mcll'. 7 1S
Set., J•n. 1-1 El Toro, 7
Tun., J•n. IO-f'ounteln ve11wt•. 7'1S
Thur., Jen. l~I MetJN•. 7 IS
Tues., Jan. 17-el OC..n View'. 7 IS
Tlluf., Jin. l~lminst_.., 7.IS
Set , J.n. :Z.-•I Hunllnelon hacll'. 7 IS
Tues., Jen. 3,..._.I F-••ln v....,•. 7 1S
Tllur., Feb >--Mwlnll'. MS
Tues.. Fetl. 1-<>cMn View', 7:15 TNK., Fell . .,_., Westminster .. , MS
'-dlftOtft ~ ~ .-me
HuntlZJlf_on Beach
T11ur.-Tues.. D« 1-6-Unlversltv Tou ..
"8menl, TIA
Wed,. OK 7-Mater Del, 7.lS
Tl'Vf'., 0ec. ....... , C~. 7 Tun., o.c. ,,._., Lone 9ffCl'I MfttiU n, 1
Tues.·Frl. Dec 20-73-Cvorns Tour· namenr, T8A Tues.·Frl . Dec 27-30-M•rln11Eo11on
Tournament, TBA
Tllut . J•n. S--t Ecfison•, 7 1S
Tun .. Jen. 1C>-M¥1M'. 7 IS
Tllur., J.n. u-oc..n VJew• 1 IS
Tues., J.n. 17-1 WHlmlnster•. 7 IS
Thur., .i.n. l~Founteln V*11ltv'. 7:1S
S.t., Jen 2'-Edlllon'. MS Tues., Jari 31-.1 MarlN', 7 IS
Thur., F.O. 2-t Oceen View•, 7 IS
Tun .• Feo. 1-wntmln1tl<''. 7 IS Tllu<., Feb. ,._,., Fount•ln Vatlev'. MS
·-oenorn Sunw• L.._ veme
Ocean Vlew
Fri., Otc ,_., L.Oll9 &ffcll Potv, 1
T\lff., 0«. 6-11 T(OV, 1
S.t.·S.1 .. O«. 10-17-S.v•nN Tovrnllment,
T8A
Tues.-Frl., Otc 20-23-Cvpreu Tour·
na ment, T8A Tu.s.·Frl., Dec. 27·»-M•nnalEdlson
TO\lf118tnenl, TBA
Tues .. J•n >-Newpan H•rtior. MS
Thur., Jen. S-Fount•ln V•llev•, 7:15 Set.. J•n. 7-•t s.ddiebKk, l.-00
Tues.. J~ 10--Wntmlnster•. MS
Thur., J•n. 12-t Hunllnoton a.acn•, 7 lS
Tllft., J•n. 17-Edlson". 7:1S
Thur., Jan. 1~et Marin.•. 7:15
Set .. ~ 21-•I Fout•ln V.-.V'. 7.IS
Tues., J•n. 31-.t WHtmlnster•, MS Tllur., Feb. 2-Hunllt19ton 8ffef\, 7:1S
Tues .• Feb 1-1 Edison", MS
TllVf'., Feo. ~rin.·. 7 lS •-c1eno1n SunW1 Le-oue veme
Saddleback
Thur.·S.1.. o.t. 1-rs.ddlet>ac• Tour-
nameru, TBA
Tues.. Dec. 6-Sunnv Rm1. 7
Tun., Jen l-l..°' Am<oos. T8A S.t., J•n 7-•I Otun View, T8A
Tue'-• J•n. 10-e 1t•nci•". 7
Tllur.. Jen. 12-Unlvenlt\I'. 7 TUH . J•n ,,_t Catone de! Mar'. 7
Thur., Jan. ,,_., T1411n•, 7
Tues., Jen. 24-Newoort H•rt>or'. 7
TllUr.. Jan. 26-et E sl8"1Q", 1
Tun.. J•n 3l-.t Unlverlltv•. 7
Thur .• Feo ~or-de! Mar'. 7
Tues.. Feo. 7-Tust1n•. 1 TNir., Fet> ,._,., NewPO<t H•rl>Ot'. 7
'-1»n0t11 Su vie. lM9UI Mme
Valvenlty
Thur ·Tllfl, Dec 1·6--lrvlne TourNmeftt,
T8A -~ .• DK. ....... , D•ne Hilts, 7
S.t • Dec. 10-17-S.vanna Tournament, T8A
Tues.·Tllur .• o.c. 77-~.,,.. Glen Tour·
T8A '
n. 3-lrvlne. 1 ........ , W~ldoe. 7 , Jen 10-:C«OM det ,,,.,., 7
Tllu<., J.n. 1~+, 7
s.1., J•n. 1.-.1 Edison, 7
TYft., J.,,. 17-1 T1n11n•, 1 Tliur.. Jan. tt ... _ t HetW.. 7
Tues., JM. 2 ..... t E11encie•, 7
Tllur .. J•n. »-et Cw-oet ,.,,.~., 7
Tues.., Jen. 31-t Sect•ae.dl•, 7 Thur., Fa. 2-Tlnllft•, 7 Tun.. Fa«>. 1-1 ,..._, Herbor•, 7 Thur., Fltl. f-E11enci.•, 7
•-dellatft SM View LM9U8 Mme
"What he really wants to do is
~rform the break." Bokosky said.
'He's one of the best fast-break
coaches in the nation. I don't think
any coach in the nation runs it better.
"Sometimes people will say the
assistant coaches do all the work.
Bill's quick to hand out the comQli·
ments after the game. Bill Mulligan
doesn't perpetuate his image after a
game. But when comes time to make
decision in the last two minutes of the
game, he is Jood."
Friday night should be a rousing
introduction to the .season when
Georgia State rolls in. Georgia State
a veragcd 80 points a year ago and
returns nine players under Coach Bob
Reinhart, but are a relatively un-
"I talked to their (sports infor-
mation directorl. asking about their
team," said UC Sports Information
Director Bob Olson. "He asked me
what the NCAA record for points
was."
In the opening game. Texas Chris-
tian meets Maryland.
The Terrapins has several players
-including standout freshman
Brian Williams -drop off the team
in a controversial series of incidents.
leaving them with few returners from
an 18-13 campaign.
"Anytime you lose a player,
But all-everythinJ freshman Jerrqd
Musta{ a 6-foot· J 0 forward who led
DeMatha High in Washinaton, D.C.
to a 30-3 record and the city title, will
team with 6-foot-9 jumor Tony
Massenburg ( l 0. J points} and several
returners who saw little umc in 1988.
''He played a very f.ood all-around
game." Wade said. • ~ have three
good freshmen, but MusW' is the
most heralded of the three and had an
excellent debut.
Mustaf bad 24 points and eight
rebounds in an 80-57 exhibition win
over a Brazilian club team.
All-Big West Conference
FIRST TEAii
Community Colleg~
All-State, All-SoCal
•
Kyle Kopp, Lona B•~b St., So. (llVP)
Tom Warile, UCI, Jr. =Bell. UCI, Sr. u hllm••n, Fnmao State. So.
8eott a.rt. UC 8uata Bubua, Pr.
Daftd Planuaer, UC 8uata Barbua, Sr.
Qoal latllerland. Paclflc, So.
Jamee MecNp•aoff, L. 8each St., Sr.
8SCOIQ) DAii
S= Patmaa, UCI, Fr. ~ Wiiiiam•, ~Beach St., Sr .
lllb ...... ~=at.. Pr. IUclllllel OlborD, 8tate, Jr.
...... ~ UC-tallubua, lo.
CnM :m· Paclftc, .. . ........ . ............... .
"
MOTm: f'lrtl .... M ........ •••r.t1•• .............. .......
HARBOR GIRLS BUILD ON TRADITION ••• rr-c1
9rule County Invitational in Octo-
bet W'lth a fint·place fillilh, hat been
uoubled by chest cokl the lut few
weeks and finished in 32nd place after
pi.cina 11th at I sophomore •
.. ,,., toulh for lier, .when lhc could
have. and bu. run lbat coune a
minU1e"And4 half laster than she did
last week." Tweit aid.
However. Robitlloe IOOk the fN~ trarioa m ilride. "IW~lll the tam is •••• i•ponant ,..,, .... tud. ..... s
ddferait, ud in a .. Y more fun. nmai~ from behind tbt ms of tbe _ ..._.OI. froGa ofdacm. T1aij
way I an to• where mt tammata lfttllilUJto ......... . _.ne Won Will Mid Robiuoo'a
~ ~ 1kJ I! lbr aheir iecOtid 5'11110.a_. r~ams.-=:
Woodward ""' Fnillo. Newptwoellleim.,_.._ ,... ................. ..
.. 1)119 -.... ~ Stein.._, ad Lem Dltt.liau
~·r.~~T..:$·,,
out dlt -.,. lllUarl Slll6i •
..._ ITLUIDllll ....... c 11 "
N9w0r ...... ..... San Francisco "!ten'•
ChkMo
MIMftOll
Oetroll
TwnNlav OrMnhv
... W L T
' 3 0 1 s 0
7 5 0
• I 0 c.Mret
10 2
I 4
3 '
3 ' 2 10 ....
0
0
0
0
0
Pd."' ,.. .750 210 lN
.513 lOO m
.513 262 226 .333 20I 260
.133 253 152
.'67 JIM \IS
.250 161 242
.250 .213 30I
.1'7 112 2'6
N.Y.Glants ~la PhOenlx
WHhlnetot1
O.iias
1 5 0 .513 253 2'6
7 s 0 .513 213 2S.
1 s o .513 m v•
6 ' 0 .soo 271 '3/07 2 10 o .1'7 1'6 m
AmlriCM C•I eMlt
Oen11er •' ......,.
SMftle .s.noi.oo
Kansas Cltv
'clnclnn.11
Houstot1
Cleveland
Plttsbuf vtl
Wftt
W L. T_.
6 ' u 6 6 0
6 6 0 4 I 0
3 I 1
Cener• 9 3
I 4
7 s
2 10
East
0
0
0
0
x·8uffal0 11 1 O
New Enge.net 7 S O
Indian.POiis 6 6 0
N.Y. Jets 5 6 I •Ml•ml 5 7 o
x-cllnched division title
MIMIY'• Scwe
ct.",.. .soo 237 255
.500 219 ~
.500 212 231
,333 167 230
.292 ltl 211
.750 :uo 240
.667 301 m
.513 2CM 193
.161 m 333
.917 2S2 154
.513 f96 225
.500 266 211
.11151 239 21115
.A17 195 240
Sell FrenciKO 37. Wulllnoton 21
Tilllr'Mllv'• ~ MIMftOI• •I Detroil. t-.30 p m
Houston el o.-.s. 1 P.tl'I.
S..V• GMMs
"-a l ~Yer \ P.m. Sun.lo et Cindnneti. 10 e.m.
cie.....no a t ~. IO a m
Grelft e.v et ChicatlO. 10 Lm.
KMNs CllV al PillstllKOtl, 10 • m.
Miami al New Yont )th, 10 a.m
Ptloeftlx et ~. \0 •..m TMYIN hv e l Ati.tlle, 10 e.m. s.n Francbco el $en Oie9o, 1 p.m.
New Enoland al tndlen.PGll,, 1 p m
New Yant <Pienls el New Orlffns, S 1> m -.....,, Nev. 21
........ at Seellle, 6 P.m.
COL.L.EGE
A" Tep 20
llecenl "' ""' t. Nolrt Dame llS) 10-0-0 J, 167 I
2. Soulfleffl C.t 122) 10-0-0 J, 151 2
l.Miaml.Fle.(11 •1-0 1,•1 3 '-Wetl Vlrtllnle m 11-H 1.01' 4
S. Florida $tale 9'-1-0 ts. S
• 6. NeOr •It.• II· J-O 113 1
1 Auburn '-1-0 14' I
L ArUl!su 10-0-0 7SS 10
'·UCLA f-2·0 120 6
Ill. Olli.home t-2·0 "31 t 11. MlchiHn 1-2· 1 StO 12 u. Olllehome SI. l·H sse IJ
' 13. ClemMlll f·2·0 '91 IS , 14. Houston 1·'2·0 33t 11
u .. wvom1no 11+0 291 "
' 16.. UU 7·3•0 2JS 11
17. Alebem4! 7·2·0 234 11
11. W..nlnoton SI l ·J·O 207 "
lt. Svracuw 1-2-0 1•s It ·'ICl..GeorM 7·3-0 106 20
Otw reaMno ¥Gift: CcMoredO 97, Mlal!Mn
Stale JO, Soul'-fl Miuiulooi IS, r. .. s·EI
Peto IS, FrKnO Stale 3. Inell-2, AriaOM I.
-Arm'I' I, Noni! CerOline Slate I, S0...111 Cerotone
1.
COMMUNITY COLLEGE STANDINGS
MlSsiefl c...., •a
TOf' FIVIE
(Al~ ... ,
Cenf. OWr ..
"T-WLT WLT
F..,....IO!I 9 0 0 10 0 0
, El Camino 7 ' I • 1 I $edclle0ack 7 2 0 I 1 0
•l.on9 8eacn 6 21 •l• • Ml Sen Antonio 6 3 o 7 J O
CENTRAL OIYIS'ON
(FIMI)
Diii. c-. ewr.-.
WLTWLTWLT s 0 0 ' 0 0 10 0 0
t lO 720 1 10
230 44 1 5 4 1
130 SJ I 631
1 4 0 360 4 60
14 0 4 SO sso
OfVfS.ON
4 0 0 1 1 I
2 20621
220 6 30
2 20 5 4 0
0 4 0 090
SOUTHE•N OfVtSION
S0ul11Wftlefll 4 0 0 S 4 0
I I I
6 l I
7 l 0 s s 0
1 10 0
• Palomar 3 1 o l ' o 6 . 0
4 6 0
t I 0 t I 0 ) 1 0
i Gfo.smonl 1 l o 2 7 o
Sen Dle9o 1 l O 1 I 0 S.nOlevo MHe 130 360
•, 90WL SCHEOUl.E ., Dec. J
~y .... Oauk
(11 ~ca.at C-..l ltendlO Santlato (6-J· I) YS MoQrpefll 19· II. o.m. .. -• I SadctleOedl 11·21 vs. El Cemi"° 17·1· II. 1
P.ln. I
' I I SlwtM ....... ....
(at .......... ,
Fullt<'lon 110·0) \IS. a.llefttleld 110·01. I 30
p m.
S.W.•• ... .... kM11. C1 .. .... R«. ""-L'# I. FUllWton, ~siotl Cwt 1 IJ) 10-H llt~ I
2. ellnfleld. Wntwn St. So.II) 10-<H !Of 2 S. Mooroerll, Wslrn SI. Ho. f · 1·0 16 6
4. El Camino. ~sslon No. I+ 1 II 4
S., Gi.ndele, Wettern St. Ho. f·l·O 76 S
6. ~. Miu.Ion Cen. 1-1-·0 st 3 1. AlllllC>H Valley, FoollllU 1•1-1 36 9
I. l..Oft9 8eecll, MIS\lon No. 6·3·1 30 JO
9. San fNf°nef"dino VIY.~ Foorhi• 1·2-0 24 nr
10. Ml. $etl M tolllo, Mission No 7-l-O II 6
Otners: ltancl'IO s.ntl-vo 16-3·11. 9 • so...111· weslerlf (._4), I. Senta 1_lon1a (6•41. 6. .... ,.....,,
OlltAMGIE COAST <4·61 • (Mb.._ C.....,_, 1·61
3' Rio HondO
9 Et Qmino'
11 Ml S.n AnlOl>IO'
JS Sen Ole9o'
9 Sen Oie9o Mne'
17 Sedalet>Kk.
3 Fullerton•
10 ltlversl<Se•
14 Golden W9'1 •
29 ltenaio S.ntlago •
GOCDEN WIEST (S·4· 11 ~ Ca•1-. 4-4-11 11 Long a..cti
16 ~iedene
14 SOuttlwesttf'n•
l I El Cef'nino' 25 P91omef•
11 F uller'ton •
13 •ltancllo Santino• 11 $acldleback.
:rt Orange C~I C~· 31 lllver$lcle•
• cttnotea conference oeme.
• denotes division gerne. A~ oernes •I 1 uni.ss noltd
14
10
13
IS
16
19
31
17
2t
"
6
S6
10
31
11
" 21 31
14 ?4
AP llOme ~ al Or•"" COH I College.
""" scMd GIF •uvOf' .. S <~•--1 OfVtSfC* I
Le¥tle lll·Ol ¥\.Maw o.t l•·Sl •• Wnlern Hleh
8"'-Amal lf•l) at Fontarie 110-11 S«Nite
l9'-21 vs. Cr~ l6·S) et Pletct C~ 1tu«iioou.1 <•-21 v'-F...,... v~ 1t-21 ., Or~ Coe\! COIMOe
OIVis.ott 14
Pelmdale (1-3) vs BtverlY H•lls II-JI, •I
Santa MonicAt COllelle
Antttooe ValleY 19'-21 at Leur•noer 19-J-H,
1l1t Iba
Buena 19"21 "'· Muir 11·31 el Gttncsale Hi911
Cenvon 19-21 •' HawlllOrnt
OtvtSIOM Ml Miu lon V'ieio I 11·0) .,,, E;I Oor.00 16·S) •t
V•te!ICI• Par.inount <•·II VS Sant• Ane (l ·l ) •I
Tuslin
~ 110-11 et El ~ 16·Sl
Scnurr lt-21 n Los Alllmltot t!0-0-1) •' G-'!r
OIVWOM IY
Olremont (t•21 et 8tll <Pardens 111-01
Los_A!tos 110-ll vs. Wonun1n <I-2· 11. at Le
Puenlt
Norlll"iew (lO-II a t EI II llftCllO If· 21
Ramone 111>-11 ~Don Luoo 00-11 •' Olino
~v
San Bernardino (t ·21 •I Coacllella llelle"
Cll·OI
APPie Velle'f 16·Sl •I COf'on• 11·41 ,\rrovo (9·2) et NOf'C:O (1·31
C•nvon $~1nos (10-I I •I Ceion 18· 31
OfvtSION VI
Valende LIO·IHI vs $uony Holl\ 19·21 •I B....,. P•rk •
l(fN'tdV 11·2-11 el Fulltf'ton 16·4· ll
C-.. Mat lf•t•2) YS lt-Mllf<m 17•'1
•• GIOYef $1.oium
PKifk• 19'-l·ll vi. ~ 14·4·tl •I Senta An. 8ow1
DIVISION VM
C,,.m1nede 11·31 at Sant• Nian• ( 10-IJ Serre 17·ll el T~ Crtv 19·1·1)
Mornm;s.cie (1·21 •• Lom.ooc (S·6l
San Merino lf·0· 11 vs veroum Del (9·31,
el Plus X
OtVISION VIII
AIHQderO 111·0) et 8100mlng!01> ( 10-11
Tra tMKo Hiib (t-7) •' S.nte P11M (f·21
Puo ltOOlea "·3) •• AllOUf• (7·l · 11
Sent• Clare (11·0) "' wue .._ (f-ll 11 Irvine
~·" Valev Cllrlslian 110-1) et T~ Cl·21
ICern v.-v 1t-21 •• O.• Pm 0 0-11 WMtoer CIWtSlian lf·ll et OtMr'I 110-11
CerDlftllf'la lf·21 at Trone l!t-4· 11
EIGMT·MAN FIMALS
LMw OMMM
P•Mdtne Polv 110-0) et BrentwOOd 19· 1),
S.lurdn. 1 P.m
Sm.-OMtlell B~Ni.1~111•0)~ ~ Crva~
li•n ( 10-0), S.tur-dn, 7.30 p m et E t C.mlnO coaeoe
Nore: All oama Frf#U\I, 7 JO P"'. unless
ot"'4'wlse no'-d.
Ml.JC flOllC[ NI.IC flOllC(
•
tfftt. ST Alllll lllS ~<••llw SmvtMDM.-W LT "91 ,, .. 3 31 G, GA ,, 54 CafGlrv
KMll EclmOnton
Wlnnioev
V•ncouver
lJ 7 0 26 107 17
o.1ro11 ·
Toronto
St. Louis
Chicago
MlnneM>t•
12 7 2 26
9 6 3 21
9 11 3 21
' Hems DWIMel\ 11 5 • 26
10 n , 2~
• • 3 " 6 12 • 16
• 13 J 11
w.-s c11r11w.
~·"1cll OMlieft
W L. T "91 NY Ranoers 11 7 J 25
Plttsbuf"gh 10 10 0 20
Phlledelc>hl• 9 12 1 19 New Jers.y I 10 3 19
Wa1nlno1on I 9 2 11
f1Y Islanders 7 10 2 16
Mon I reel
Boston
Buff•lo
Quebec
Hertford
' Ac:i.n>s OMsien
12 I 3 27
9 7 s 23
• 11 2 11
1 12 2 16
1 l2 I IS
~ ... Sc-
MonlrNI 4, New York R~\ 2
Toronto '· SI l..OUIS 0
T ....... ,.,~
'2 IO
76 70 n n
IO 76 ...
fl
60
71
13
72
106
t7
Gff GA
87 70
92 " 17 13 70 12
66 67 57 12
" 11 19 66
73 19 76 91
61 77
KIMI a1 Pllitaoet1>111•. c·3S e> m
Wasll1noton •' New Yorll b tenoers, S.OS e> m
8uttel0 et Venc1111ver, 7:35 "m .. ~.,..~
I(._. •I Oelrolr, CJS p.m Boston et Montreal, 4.:JS pm
Quebec et Harllo<d, 4.lS o.m.
Hew YMk R.,_1 el Plltsbur9'1, 4;JS 1> m
Cll!CatlO •t TMonlo. 4.lS Oft\.
'""" York ISlancMrs er Wa'1rin9Jon, S:OS p_m fdmonlon e l Mlnnffote. s.JS 1>.tl'I
New Jenev at C.INrv. 6:JS 1> m.
AUTO It.ACING
Sftadl can
NASCA.It l'lNAL STANDINGS
I 8 111 Ellaoll. 0.WIOfl\ltllt, Ga.. FMd Tllun·
Olf'btro. •.•. MJS.000
2 RuslV Waltaca, Clle<lot 1e N..C.... Pontiac Graoo Prll1. 4,.-... '375,000.
3 tnte Ee rl'INrOI, Ooolle, N (. Cl'levrOlel
Monie Cerro, 4.154, 12cs.ooo
4. Ttf'ry LatlOl'lle, Trl11llv, N C , Cntvrolet
Monie Cerro, c,001, SIS.S,000.
S, Ktn Sc:llra oer, CO!lc:CWO, NC , Cl'levrotet
Monte Carro, l .. St. I 120,000.
' Geott BOdine, JUiien, N.C , Cntvroi.t Monie CarlO, l ,7tt, ,tS,000
1 Darrell Waltr11>, Frenklln, Tenn , CntvrOlet
Monlt. Cano. l ,764. ll0,000 I D•Vfl All1M>n, Huevtown, Ate F~o
TllunderOlrd, J.63 I, MS,000
9 ~ PerJOM, Otnvef NC Olosmobate
Cull•n. ),430, S7 I 000
10 Sllf'la119 Merlin, CQMnOoa, Tenn . Olds·
motllte Cuttan. J.621 '51 ooo
11 ltlckv Rlldd. Crinaoeeu , Ve Bi;i<:t< lteNI. l ,547, SJS 000
12 BobO., H1Mm Jr • Hams1>ut11, N C . 8i;icll
lttNl. l ,446, SCJ,000
13 l<vtt Pellv, Hlon Point. • N.C.. F0<0 Tnune1trbtrd, l ,296, Sl I ,000
"· Alan l<uCwtCkl, CPnCO•d, N c Fora
TIWnOerblrel l .176, I.JO.JOO
IS Merk Maritn, 8etnv111t. ArJt,. 1'0<0
Tlluf\Olf'D1rd, 3 142, S21 000 ,. ,..,, llonnell, &ftsem« ..... Pont•«
Greno Prix, J OJS, 117,000
17 L•ke ~ Jack)Ol'I. MAU , ~
Cutten. 1.99', 116 000
• 11 MICl\ael Wallr1P, Hullllf'\V•lee ... c ..,,,,_
t.ac: Graod Pr111, 2,'49, \1S,000
19 O.ve Merc:ii, Avwv's Crtt.11 N C
C11evro1e1 Monte cwio 2,1~. sn ,ooo.
20 Br ell 8odJne, Cntmung. N Y • "ord -r~rci 2.IJJ. S70 000
MISL STANotNGS
8e1t1more uun OaU.s
Sen Diego
Wichita
Kansu Cltv
lKoma
W L. Pct.
) 0 l.000
3 I .750
J ) .soo
2 2 .soo
2 2 500
I 2 .333
0 ~ .000
Wedlleldl't'S ~ Laun •t Tecom• 7.35 Pm s.n Ole90 el Kens.s '''"'· S.JS Pm S.ltomore er W<llll• S.JS e> m
GB
,
1 ,
1 > 1 ,
2 J'a
.,. > -.
•& STA•RIH ...,.,C' C•
hdk~ W L ,.ct. Ga
L.Men 6 2 750
Gotdtft State S 4 SS6 l' >
S..llle ' ' 500 2 PhOeni• ' 5 4'A 2 .,
Portt•nd • s .4'A 2 .,
~ ''AOO J s.er,mento l 7 125 S
. ~·DMl*t
Utah 6 2 750
Houston 1 J 700
OallH 6 3 667 l l
Denver 6 3 667 ,
S.n Antonio 2 6 250 ..
Mlarru o 7 ooo 5 ,
Ea...,... C1 lfl Mee
AIMlk DM.-
W L
New York 6 3
Philldelc>l'll• s ' New)eney $ s
.Boston 111 S
Wuhl1191on • 2 S
Charlotte 2 6
O.trolt
Clevtlend
Atlanta Ch~
M1lweuttee
Indian•
CMlrat DWbieft () I 1 6. I .
6 • s •
3 3 0 9 ... ,,..,SC_.
Utan 117, Oi1111era " HouSton 111, Allam• 11a T__..,~
Lallen at N-YOl'k, S om
,.ct,
.661
.SS6 ~ ....
2t6
.250
'" 157
600
556 .soo
000
Ge
1 1'.,
2
3 3 ,
1 2 ,
J
) l a
Clevtte lld "' Boston a1 HarllMd, c lO Pm
Pll1ledefe>nl• et wesnlnoton. •·JO P m
Detroit a t Cllerlolle. •:lO P m
MllwaullM et lndiene, 4:30 o m
New WJeY el Oenv«. ':JO P.m PO<lland et S..ttlt, 7 P.m
Cll!Qgo et Sac:ramtnto, 7.30 P.m
W...s4llW'1Gwa l.Men •I Miami, 4.30 o..m
Cri.c.oo at a.en, 1 lO 1> m
C11erto11e •I Boston. 4:JO 1> m.
c~ ., P111....,.., 4.JO o,,..
New Y o<ll at Del roil, 4:30 o.m
Denver el D ... s. S P m.
Wullin9ton •' MltweukM, S:JO 1> m Allen!• al Sen Antonio, S:lO om
Houston •I Ut.,,, 6:l0 P.rt'I
New .JerMy ., ~-. 6:30 p.m Seelllt el Gotoen $felt., 7:30 Pm
MIU 117, ~ ti
LOS ANGELES(ftJ -Norman '•10 0-0 11. Sm1t11 7·11 S·• 19, een .. mln 1-10 1-2 J Nu 1111
4· 10 0-0 I, Williams 4·7 1-1 9; MeM illQ I· IS s-• 11, Gerrlck 3-4 l ·I 14, Grant J-1 0-0 '
Kilt 0-0 0-0 O. Daltev 1-6 3·4 S PQP'°" 0·0
0-0 0, <Ponelrt.vc:k 0-3 1·2 1 To1al1 37·90 24·2' " VTAH (ll7)-Malone t0-1S l -4 23. ~''' •·• 0-0 I Ea tOfl 2•2 0-0 4, $t<JGktOI' 7· lt I · 10 21
G riH1lll 9· 14 4-• 1S, S.•ln' 9· II ,.7 24, L.ft 0·4
3·4 l , Leck'* l·J 0-0 2. ltotll 1·2 0-0 1
le¥aron. 2·3 0-0 '· Ko!otd 0-0 0-0 0 Tol•·l 4S·91 14·'9 I 17
Sc-. by Ouat1ws
Los AnM!ft '2 I 1S 10 31-" Utan 26 l3 )S 7J-111
TnrM-llO<l'll goats-{>riffitll J FOUltel out-
Nont Reoounds-L.os A~ cs (Sm11n fl.
Uten 64 (Ea ton U). AnlSls-Los An~ 17
!Nixon er. u1a11 30 1s1oc:1uon IS) Total
fOUls-1..01 A~ '24. Ulell 21 Ttclln1·
cats-Melone, Ulall CClllCll La lf'Otn, LOS Anotlel
Hlegel oeftnse A-12.CA.C
COLLEGE
.AP T°" 20 •ecwe f"h ~
I Ou>.e ('61 l·O 127' I
2 C.eot11ttown 161 0-0 I IOI 2 l M ·C:ll•Qatl Ill 0-0 1100 l
4 Oil lanoma (I) 0-0 IOJ1 S
S Nortll Car04•,.. 2·0 10?9 6
6 Svr ec:u\e 1 ·0 "6 I
1 Iowa I II 0·0 901 1 I Ntv ·LU 1119as t l 1 0·0 16' 10
9 1111no1\ 0·0 IJJ 9
tO Ar1tbl't• 0-0 5'9 11
11 "·~no ... • o-o 562 n 12 LO\o1\V It 111 0· 1 541 4
IJ M•ssour• 2·0 513 14 It Gtorgia Ttc11 0·0 118 IJ
IS .Fior.oe 0·0 312 1S
r• O".o S1e1e 0-0 111 11 11 Ftorfel.ll Stele 0-0 110 16
II Norin C••OI-Stele 0-0 17• II
19 r..,... o-o 1•1 " 20 lncl•ne 2·0 13'
Otllef\ rtce1v10Q volt.~ Lovote Mttrvmoun1 tot, TenMSMt IS. Conn«llCUI..,. S1•11loro tJ
N-Meaico 44, ~Ole lS Wt11 V.r11.n• l1
Xe vi«, Otilo lO. Hortll CarOl•n• Cf\¥1ollt 11 W1~1t• St••• 23. P11tst1oro11 11 Nolrt Dame 19
Mtt•¥1all0 17. Hous1on 14, Br•on•m Young 12
A•"-•"~' II. Tuu·EI Puo 11, .t.teoeme 9
DtPeul 9. UCLA 9. Louisiana Slelt I C~M>n
1, Memonl~ St••• 1 !>out ...... n MIU•UIPO• 6
COMMUNITY COLLEGE MEN
Or~ CNst 16, Vidtfr Veley 76
(Ml.SM~~)
Or-.-CMsl YlcW Vain """'"' ....... Cr•11e t 0 S JI c .. " 1 1 ' I~ SOMO 10 1 1 21 Loorn•S t 3 l 20
Koon 1 I 0 S PuQll 4 4 ' 11
01Stefano I l I S K."'9 • 1 ~ 14 H•nton I 4 1 6 D•vii l 0 0 2
Scllhnes 7 4 I 11 Frenk I O O 1
.IOMIOll 6 0 2 IS
Totals ~ 13 J4 16 Totals ll 11 20 76
Hatftlm&. DCC. 3~23,
RH\Nlion 7S·7S Tt1r"~DOll'lt ooets· Johnl>Oll IOCCl l He•11ns1
•v 1c:1or llelievl. Loomis 111.cror Vallevl I TecnrtlcM ,.._
Orange Coeat DAILY PtLOTflueecley, NoYemb1r 22. 1.. C8
TElllMS ATP meM¥ ~
(~5-*Y'•~)
I ~•etan Eotier; St27.90'1 2 Mais W•lan<ier "81,731
l 8or118«ter SMt.fS.J
4 Al'Ore A11.11ss. '627 ,067
S lve11 UllOI Utt.fll
'-Kent Cerouon • 5'12.S>l
1 T•m Mnolle «ls.75'
I Em11;p $enc:Mt M16,S5'.
' Amos M.llnMIOr1 '37','91
10 H..vi Lee.ante 1349 ffl
11 JQM F111~•1d 1346.)11
12 Jon11 Mc:Enroe s.n•..-
13 J.111100 Hias.t. SJ22,4'6
le Anoto Jarr"Yd 12tf 5.3'
IS Jlll'VIW C_,.s '2'9 16' 1' Braes G·lbtf• SM,75'
11 Anclrfl Gomer lll0.022
IL T11omu ~~., U16,7l7
If Aer°" K.ri<1u1"n 1275.411 10 Dvren Cal\lll 1266,'34
21 Gi;•llermo Pwti·Rotde S'.165, 1'3 n NlllO\lav Mec:tr 126"1.171
1J R~t Seouso t2SS.734 14 Ven1>1Clt. Noan S2S7,.,I 2~ Jonlls Svens\O!I S'24'7.GS
26 Jttt1 Pwn nu.~
21 Kev'" Curren S242, J90
21 Mll<M! Pernfou ttlt.397
19 SioOocf•n Z,..-vic U2t.SOf lO Al'drei Chewlolt.O'>I Sll4,S70
'I Ke<1 Flach S213,753
)2 P•ul AMa<ont s21V'4 l3 ,,,_.,.,, WOOdforoe sio. '67
34 Guv For9tt s 117,374
JS s.r11JO Cea.I SllS Sii l6 Pat CHI'! S114 m
3 7 Dan GOid e s 169 ,Cl.JI
JI Jot~ Lozano '"' 2'l l9 Pettt Luf!OOren il66,964
.0 Jonen Krltll. s 165,643
41 TPCSo w'"""' SISl ,618 42 RICll. Leeeh 'ISS,340 4J Jim Greoo H•9.2J9
o TomasSm10 114'.111
4S Ma~lln Devis Sl4.S.623
40 D•v10 Pete I 144,JSl
41 Wl~V 111\elU( $14:1 091
41 M.ien Srtltltr 1141174
49 Ma•llfl J•ile 1140. 147 so M<l\MI en.no 113' S53
WITA IMM'f teaden
ITlw--S4Mdie'1"1 ,...,,.,..,.>
Pos NI.IN M«rtv
I Stfffi Graf s 1.J11, 121 7 Me,.-tin. N•vr•htove 1.m.m
3 C.•11'~ S.Dah/11 9'5,399
4 Cnr1s Evert 691,"9 S. Pam St>ri¥e< 621..JV'
6 Helene ~kO\tl :Jtl,311
1 l ine GarriM>n 31 l.S3S
I, Neteha Z11~ev• 3'1.J.54 9 Lori Mc:Nt1I W , lll
10 Manuela Ma'""• 150,17•
11 CteUC116 KOt10e·K11M:n m.s12
12 P•llv Fl'llCl.c:J< 1fS,IS7
13 Slt.l>llanl4P R-llO 164
14 Laflse Se~o 111.I07
lS 8¥oere Potlef 117,905 16 f(al..-1na Melet.v• 1n,J61
17 Gl90 Ft.rnanoti 156.421
II Helen Kl'ln< 1'9,711
19 Roo-n W/1114! Ill.~
20 Noeott Pro¥1J 137 "'4
2 I Netllalie T 8111••1 llS, 143 n Roseivn F•tr"Do111A 134 in
23 Svlv16 H.11111ke 132 • ...0
24 Arantu S.oc:nez 124.227
?S Jena NoYOlll• 111.294
2'. S.tsv N•llf.I'*" 11l,Sl6 27 S.ndrll Cec.c:11in1 1 U,430
21 AMeMmt•r 111 21?
29 h ll•M Fulco 109,606 JO Elna lte oMCn l06. 9l9
l 1 Grttcnen Meoen ... 160
n lseoei Cutto ts.•n l3 Juc1a111 w_. '3.s.sc
J.l ,,_.ry Joe F,..na"Otl 97 1• l~ Jl'rllell"' ""lllOfl "·"° l6 Terrv ~ 9 I .JOI
l7 IS.Otlle Oemon9eot 90.te»
ll Ketrin• Ao.ms 90..lll
l9 R•ffHlla II-• ~.12'
CO C.l•flne LondQ"'" 13. 727 41 Pase.it P•radi\ n ,21s
42 Eve~tt nooo
43 Susan ~~ 74,97J
.&4 0 1nkv llen lt8'\\b\;r9 n 40il
4S Ann HenrtCl<SSO., 11,llll
.. Brenoa Sc~•• 10 •1
41 Wtl'ICl\f TurnOull 10,t90
4' Jo Our-t. 6f 971
VOLLEYBALL
CommunitV ~ Wemett
SOUTHERN CALlf<~NIA ·~GtONAL.S Finl lte4Md Metdlft
T--f el 1 ia.m. No ' Pelomar 11·• 01 No I f l Cr n.f>Q IU ))
No 12 c~ 01 ,.,. ~' 11 l •' No
S Sent• M4fl•U 11•·•1
No II R•v~1t0e l "·•l 1• No • Cerrotos
1•-l
No 10 Ful\t.r'OI' t 14 4 a1 No 1 s. ....
8eroere 20-4 5-Mll ...... Me~
ITUftday, N911 1' et 1 a..m.I
Peoorner-E I C•rn no ... .,.,... 11 No I C>olclt.n
Wes• 119-1
OeJ.eft·$11n1e Mon <• ,,..,,.,., •' 1110 4 C•"'" i17·ll
R1vtot0t·Cet"rito\ '""""~ •• No l Cuesta (11-JI
Fullel'ton-S.nt• 8aroer1 ••nner al No 1 G~smonr-1 11-3'1
NOTE Ouerterl1ne1 ••"nerl ecvence 10 ''••e c11.11mp,onM1-o' DK 3-4 •' S... Jose C tv
Colteot
Snctt.,Wlll
C.....IMft
"°"'·GOWD•IKI Mewall 111, UC1 ltl , .. ...,.... ,..,.,, .,,,....,
200 tnedltV rtiev-1 Hewell. 1:37 3'. 2 UCI
1.31 J9 (SClooi rec;ordl. 3 UCI 1 42 .. 200 ,,_, ltou lH), lM.73, 2 \.'oefl ner
IHl. I 44 IO, 3 Judd IUCll, 1.As.41.
50 1r..-1 ltoct-woeo IHI. 2:2 oo, 7 Cutrv 1ucn, u. 3 J1sirems111 1111, n 10
100 1M'-1 aorc"9fr11n11 011. 1 56 21. 2
Wactnet HI. I S:.9' ) P•-.r IUCI), uoss
\.-mellf' fl•~l JMciaA IUCll. 291113 2 C.,.tv IUCll. 20l IO
>-meter d••ino-1 Cerev lUCll. 245 S>, 2
Jo<oatl IUCll D7 • 100 ftv-1 Sllo<oe lHJ SUI. 1 Klell (UCll
5'Al. i Y-10 (HI S4 JS
100 •rd-I Wacntll IH) 47.69. 2 Wr 9111
IUCU. C717. 3 ROCkWOOCS (H), •. 06
100 OKlc-1 Currv (UCO. SS 7S. 2
8orc"9f'1v1t1k IHJ SSl9, 3 YemamotP 00. S6 14
500 ,,._I V~llotle' (H ), H I JI, 2. Judd
IUCll, U 217, 3 Bek 0-1), U4 ...
100 11<eas1-1 P•ler IUCI), 57.31.; 2 Yamaha
IHI. I 02.20 3 Ro, IUCtl. l~.21
200 tr'H rtlav-1 Hewe'll, 116.JS, 2 UCI,
I 2917 j UCI 13HI c..... .
alG WIST COMFElllEMCE•
Hewliil Ill. UO tS l•t...,... .. ..-. ~)
100 ,.,..., rtlaY-1 Hewell. I.SS J2 2 UCI 2~.l3 3 UCI 7~ J6
200 lr-J Tnoma' !HJ 1-51 67. 2
wencnoc;. IH 20061, 3 P.llrtos 1vc11. ?-G2 13
50 1r..-1 11.0CHOWSJ.• .H), 2S~, 2 8'*11
IUCll 2S S6. l McE•11anev IHI 2S 12 200 lM-1 Oouo (MJ, 2 11.JO 1 Coe••
IUCIJ 2 13 OI, 3 6o\llOH (HI 2 17 It
1-meler olv1nll-1 COiemen IUCI), 261"3, 2
WOii IUCll, 7SOS •
l ·mtte< divl119-I Colemen (UCIJ, no KO'e. 2 Wolf tUCll. 7~ IS
100 ltv-r Jaslrem.-.1 (H), 5'34. 2
U"l>no<n•VI IUCll. 1:02 02, 3. 8udd (11), 1:02,34
100 frff-1 McEll\ane'Y IHI 5600, 2. 8osno+t
IHI. S. i6. 3 Coate !UCO, .56..59
100 OKk-1 Torrance IHI 1·03.63. 2. Blolev
IUCll. I Ot Sl ) 8-!t IHI. l;OS 6S
SOO ir.-1 Thomes (H). S 12.51, 2. Pe~
lU(I) s 14 JS, ) Williams IUCU • .5:20.SS
100 D<tast-t Oouo (HJ, 1'09.'6, 1. Coate
UCI). 111 61, l ~ IHI, 1117'
200 lrM rfl.ll-r-1 Hawan. l:Sl.11, 2-UCI.
IU .19 3 UCt. 146 ..
0...IM91Nne
DAVEY'S '-OCKER I......_. a.a) -,
00.IS 4 ~ 137 IC"°'". II Wflile iw,, f
blll4P \llef1< 1 ~. SI S.nd Dess, 20
U llCO DISS J OOMO, 4 ~el
Pi••,... ....... i:si.s
MAMl.L ~u...·
CLEVELAND INOIA~amea Cllel
~ dlreclor °' 1COUflAI. Mil.WAUKEE PEWE•$--AcldM NwdKo Etotn, OoUIJ ..-rv and Leo Pwu. lftllcMn.
T .m Mclntosll, ce1c:r.. ~ c.n.iit. ln-tlftllf, and Mat.as CerTillo and G .... VIUlhl,
oulllflQen, 10 ltleor w1n1w roster .. ...,,.~
EL-Aerowo the .,.,_ of ttl4t Wll·
lie~. Pa., lrafldlbe IO Hatler1town, Md , tor Ille 1919 ... Miii
aAJKET9ALL
.............. A~
CHICAGO 8ULLS-ltetMMd Anlflelnlt' .Jonft. vuaro
INDIANA .. ACE•S~-<>-.. IN.,,.
"'"''m !lead ~ MILWAUKEE BUCK5'-ACJ111a1ecl Jtfl
Grever. vuaro Pleceel Jev H~..-s O\afO,
DI' 1114! oniureo •SI
HEW JERSE Y NETS-.. amecs JoM
TUClllOOe eui1••nt d+reetor ol OUlllic: reieti-tt<>CKEY .. .-..~L-... LOS ANGELES Kl~ Merli
F1•toelri<:1<, ooettencltf trom New Hll'tefl ol Ille A~ican HoCUY LHOYe Reesstvnecl 8oo
J•n«Yll: ooe11en0tr. Wevne Mehall, • tenwman, ~ Cra19 Ounc:anson. torwaro. 10
New HIVefl
NEW VC>ltK ltANGERs-ExttnOed Ille con·
tr.a o1 Ptl• E'°°'''°· ~al maneoer
tfltQUllll ,... ""-90 ""'°" NEW J ERSEY OEVtLS-.eturneo COt-eY F°''"" o.!ettMman 10 Pe1er11orouen ol me Ont.,.io Hocuv Lff.INe
WASHINGTON CAPITA~ Jttn TllOmson ,_.,Cl trom Bait~ ol lflte
A!ne'IU<I Hockn \..._
COLLEGE
MANHA TT AH-N~ S•i; Scllmeu aws·
la111 DIM«lel Coacfl
MISSOUIU-A.rinounced tne f"'9flahon ot
Y\looelv W~le< IWIH! 1001oa• Coad\
PACIFIC-AMOYneeo ,,,., Ille aintr.c:t Of
8oo c-. llted 1001oe• coec11, will "°' 0t ·-•td WASHING TON-Foree Oen Oor•tio ol· lr11i1ve l•"f coac
PlBJC NOTICE "8.JC NOTICE
T
..
CALL 642-5678 Prtvata patty onty
,,
I cLASSIFl~b INDEX 6U-5671 I .. ,,.. .... . ... C..UJ-1.. 1111 ..... .... 1141 •se•.... .... ...... ... .. ..... .. .. c.ta... lllt ... ..,.. -·-co. ..a. .~ HOUE• ON I.AK!: PARK Ht 2Ba. ...... .. OCIAH ·-• , PMlllOUTMO&UIGICO. • 1111 *'-.lll''Fll 2"*11t.aa,~1..s1 frplc, 2 car oer. ~ •CITYUOHTSVIEW... t~bdl~ aM jiiA:"l l .PFrL •t lUI --... ·v-o .. 111111 ::~":,' ... 2 ... _,,,•· clUdesQatdeniw.AcMt•. 2BR Town.'IOIM loeded MnllW LlllW.. 2218 e.' • -~: ._11 .. 11.-e ...... · aoaaAdlw . ..-o~. ,._ -~ T C .. CK YOUR AO s.-MYS ttiey Wiii ,._ -._.... .,.. .... .., 11-peta. 11300. l40-0020 w/ut)tl.._. COly ~ 28', 11el00+ a/f, llUndlY lllOlmo. S.. '"' C.. ....,. -~ ,..._, .-. llOOMo. ?I0-01M ~~~ TitEFtuTDAY ducad th• price to,,._., 38R. 2BA. wean-A9kf«Ohuc* pew. A"ec:Nd gwaoa. fedllt•,nopata1oer901. 750-1104/E~722/D liH+ dip. 1M mobla W111ekl91ifiApt pttto
eOOAM-UOPM , .. o.;,....,.,.,.,....,..,......,. 1475,000, If Hcrow at/dt)IW,F/P,dec:k,~$1275,4BR,28A,fat11rm, c.IOAEG.11400/mo. Y~l1100.17s:.1111 ' tiome. Saoure. Me4w. 1nc1ry-.1..,euwip..: Se1ur~800A..,._11lOAM ..... < .......... ._ .. ,..-. cloaea thla ~I Thia gar 11500 L in da near~alr n 405 •PALM DUERT HIDE· CUTEam.12BRlBA)'Nf·28A, 1~. ~· .. edub. No...._ 118' Newf: 1110we&or,t.
,,__•
00
A~S
00
P~F ..... , • "''"' -......., -bti.. .. 1 ~ l8A -· 721--0119 Grubb & Elita .....,.. • 11122• ' AWAY... l!JCtra private 1u ....__ ........ 2 ,..., __. pl909, dlal\•--. ~ Nawpott Btvd . ........,,, 1750 _ !,,..,....... · ,... -...,, .... ·---·-··-.,,.iou home "'8" .... ,. hofnewalllng~to ., • ._ ..... ...,, ..... ..-"· complex , P•t ok .. _. •># DeAOUMa :,".:'",:,:;":;,::';'..:..,-::;::; apac t la on a FABULOUS New contem-HU Paula Clrcle El p..., Pool PNtat 1 11\9, H25 Incl. utll. S746/mo541-5S48 ' 1
• ... ---.,...,...,...---..... --
-.c:••-04!"°'-... E -· ............. ~... ........ IUpet extra large lot. potaty. 2BR SBA condo, 818-578-0573 yr .......... 2...aA •t· 973-3039 ·-····-IWiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii----· =·· !:.':::: ................ ...., -... -... = ~er1alnlng. PanorwM: vtewsOOMn & FREE RENTI New baecn-teched 2 cat gwage.'Call ...... • ........ 2 .... '!} = ywd, ~= ·-WWW w. .... moa.
-· ,_ u1 .,... ::=.:.;;.,:';'...;' .. :'.: ~=-~ -.&.I-. Whatborl ,. .... 131-.... 140013 ..... liOO front condo. 28A 2'A&A, ROCHELLE LISS Mlf irt&1mo+l75o~. -:at-.cl:?::llr, ,Indy,=·
""'-• -s• ... , ... -.. ·-... -.... •• frplc. w/d, MC, ~ '2000/mo I AYall now 131_.... ••I ii ... · =:=... '1.~:::: --WLIB IULlm vtewlrom~p.tloa.$1550 •UNIVERSITY PARK oe-fiOmo.yriy 216 new • Sparkling c ... n. 1a_r9• -1 orlS1.ftM -. ..... .,._.., ....... ~.. • .... 711; I• er ..... 111 C IM-7580/d ...,_21MI• TACHEO HOME... 3BR dee.Mature ectult/no LAAGE 18' 1Ba 1586/mo, 0.den apta. llMutlNIY ..... ... R ............................... ""' • HANNEL REEF 2BR. w/NIW CllFP8I• & ,,..,, petaBl fr OCMl1 & bey. ct. '400 aac:urlty, Avallab69 landacap•d ground•. iiii9wP.iil!'ll!'!"'li!iii!i.io --·-.. ---R£llW wo...,,onl, lob•'-•· 11•11,-la,i. f:'"'·-'°'"'"hol-.-.173.aa24(17M2"' -·Coll""-"'· ...,, ___ ,AC&IMU .. ;Q =.:::::.::.;.~,;::. . I ~1 • ..:,.,n:.:=.... ~~·... agT·~:~·\&:C:Ett'E B~~Lo~·~ •EAS1=~~~:1BA• a::,orcarport. seoo r~. ~·· ~.: . RE\t.A~Tl \~'fJ' I~ \ 'I I IULlm Huntington P-=z.QUnd .LbSS.o ~i2go~~ E EX-15001:'o·t Inc l ut111. Pool. no pett. $700/mo + ~o::':aa = pekt. SlaOlmo. * •154
l ~ floor. on the • beat ECUTIVE DREAM ... THE • 142-3850 BKR aacurlty. 142-«MI 131 E 18th St Me-9819 BacMIOt •410· 5 blOc*• to
' ·.:t
.... .. -.. ... . .
vtew of boerdt#alk, nu BLUFFS Maid _.,__ -• Newpon Fltat Aaatty beaeh, range, frta, no
BAYSHORES. 24 Hour 111111 • • palnt/crptt 1~BA 2BR · _,,...., --------P9ta. ud pd on etrt pkg. guerded community. Prl· 2Bdrm 2 Bath front unit s17501mo •1,1 lut 'Amo tWlce monthly & com.-C.......... MU 2BR 1BA refurblahed. 28dml 2Ba ~ 1196 llOI A Ith ai 97Mm
vat• baechea, 4BR 3BA. with 'yard and privet• MC •• S..1-eo.1 M·F p I• t., y furn I• he'd 1Btoek FR 8EXcRlii Laundry facllltlea. 2250 125 Cant• St 142-1424 ~
Move-In cond. Owner patio + getage ftreplac:e 914-6988 eves & ~ w/avarythlng. Pro-Extra Lrg tum 1BD/frpl Canyon, #8. MSO/mo. BEAUTIFUL 28R & 1BR ....... .... ..
.transfwred. 2535 VISTA. and dining rm'. Walk to 1 .. a1onally decorated. decl( & • LMaa ,,,,...· No pet• 495-9028 In ~ comp6ex Pool 9'!115'111if;a:: • (714) 831-1 595. (714) ~. 11200/mo. NRTHEOCEAN-3BR2BA. 2BR. Pata ok. Call 11175 llW3311 s.avt.w' 2BR 2BA garage garage cable TV ,,.,; With .....,-:: ~
14M219 (818)7-...858 Ulllllbln ~·%;~~~· R~~)!,LISS 975-8731~9122 ~&Ctr-..~ carpeVpaint •• ALLUTIL-paid. :'1na & Ind~ • .... Yllw..... 111... grndr a1aoo +MC No •BRANDNEWWi OCEANtBR area walk I facll l ty. No pate. 111E8PAID• walltobctt.-..UO&up.
49R, 2·~BA. Palermo • peta. Avl 12115 840-3102 VIEWlll... Duel muter Chtn• g coe.. Avail~ 250-4220 or 754-19" 1725 & Sl15/Mo. CALL 497...qe1
rnod ... luacloua land-°!i~X~ar= w1,~B~up2 ti ••tt-IUlt• w/Walk-ln c:toeet.. Immediately: $7~/mo 2BR 2BA UPSTAIRS,
722
"
1832
Stud.loal 1BAaptaM00&
acaplng. $499,000. Oceinald• •of PCH. w...,. iUi Luxurtoua!Mngc:omplete 975-417•*** MOO/mo, l500 MCUt'lty IUITlfallllW up, alaO Vacatk>n Aan-Owner/Btotter 11250 ..... 97., • · with Hr~ eunounded •· No peta. Avail now 2BR 1'A Townhouea tale VIUAOE RENTALS ...,,. .-912 2BA HOUSE. Blt..ina. w /glau. C all the 2BR 1BA $995/mo. 1BR Cell f« appt 754.5440 . f • . •J:;i 417:.....
11111 •111.D frptc, 2 cat get. yard, BARBARA'S $1850/mo 1915. Artist's Studio ' /p, lndry rm, patio. l~iiiiiiJIM;i6tiiil
''""• gmdr. ua .110501mo + •MovE uP . To v1Lt.A '200. Nr bctt. N/trnkra. ******** to amoot 1850/mo, =,.UM rA 2BR. ocean . .wt & jetty utlll. No pelt 142--0138 · BALBOA En'-' 8 view No peta. Vrty. 975-3383 2314 SANTA ANA. --__ --vt.w from thla 2BR H~BA ... ,.,, TSL MGMT 142-1803 on . one
remodeled. Mutat Jae ••pd ..... ill t Of the bey from ttllt 2'A BLOCKS TO BEACH JAii .... UI ftlll · way from Mnd, 2 car
¥1
tub, lo akyllghta, frplc, -I u x u r y 2 BR + D • n . Lg 2BR, Incl utH, cable, • Ull t•-E/SIOE 180 Mobile Homa, . garage, Winter rental,
$19507mo. 214 Femleef. 1~UITITllU. Furn/Unfum. Privacy u-w/d, frplc, deck, garage. M -'571 mo. gaa/wetat pd. 1725/mo. Celt Mlchelle ••I•..... Sheryl 67s-&427 Yrty$1375-VeryctMn38R aured In gated eommunl-11025. &73-1039 1111 Adult Partt. new carpet. 418-<4328 •. -••-28A. frplc, d/w Micro ty. Call JOYCE BARNES 75t-5580 or 973-778? •: BTU um LIT ./ASMINE CREEK. 3Br w/d ttkupa. 2 car garage'. '1950/mo. A.>ry 1BR Apt w/prvt patio. Rent .,, ~pett!Mlll during WALK TO BEACH. 28r
Pnca drutlcally reduOed 2'1'1.Ba, 2ttory. CIA, 24 hr AQt 722-4520/975-4e06 •LIKE NEW MEDITER· Waaher/Dryer. Avl 0. the montha of November l'IWe Ull ltf 11t-. 1Ba upatalta. 2 cat d'1v. forqutckaale Beautiful sec . $2400 /mo . RANEAN ... Slnglefamlly camber 1at. 700'A orDecemt>er&rec:.IVea •3BR2iei815.•2Br1Ba waypattclna.new~ & • • ., t -' _.,, 3BR 2BA lg iamlly rm 850-1150/0 aftef 7pm, *::~iUSIVEOUARD* home In Newpon North Avoeado.675-5895 glftcertlftcatefora 1795. •18' tBa$550. tt75/mo.(21S)5CM4)23
eunny & brlghL F0t ~ 640-147• * D COMMUNITY* Vlllu. Pfuth 3BR w/vtew BRAND NEW vacation for 2 atthe 250-8002 or 95().5194 YEARLY rwntal 1 8lk to
tallt,ceHJULIALIAO MATURE SINGLE OR •• ..,. of&adl~CellORE03ar 1B• w/vlew huge Fl.AMINOOHILTONlnL.ate·s16E 2BR t 'ABA 2 bMCh 2ar18a.gerage
........ ,. .... ...... RFHA<780-5000 COUPLE WANTEDllll B!tr:UT~~~~ i: •PRIME'~lR~~· RIDGE aundack. $10V5/mo. ~,~ T:Hc:~·(K~YATT atory, patio. gareg•. laundf\., frpk:, '850. . P..Ww 1117 4 bl«t. to bctl. Wood pan-• · Avail now. 646-0845 • •r• pool .. gt.at atmoapMr9, 8n-to2.t aftr 9pnhlfttdy ..... JC... .. / I ailed 2BD/2BA + den 1B avail. Frplc, wet bar, RENAISSANCE. •• Newty Ir .. with parenttl) no pet• ,790 14&-too9 1....,.....__-------aw If--\ltWf'V"r'IT' . . F 1 · mlcto, W/D hkup., 2 car painted, car1)eled I up-Latge, llgtlt, airy 1BR, new ' ' m 1U~ 1•••11 IWJ •-.'i . '\...+..'I t't~ II ,;~o'om•~1 •,~h ga~j garw/xtra1t0tage,cen-graded. Large tam-palnt/carpatlbllndt, CellourL...ingCantert0tE·tlde2BR1BA,gar,frplc.On1Naand,W.Newpon IY'lllllAI REALfORS 673-1734 ften1,!·
1
c a tral air. All m.alnt. Incl. Uy/bonus rm w/wet bar. potCh, frplc, microwave, delallton howtoquallfy t>Mmcalffng,S750 + 111 S13751mo.Blcr'42-3150
A-..onHE .& Fat>utous~vtewsand ""' Sofry,nopeta.644-0509 Ught&alry.VeryPrlllate. dbllot,875-M11 for your vacation + l500 MC. 2 penont. ~,,-.,..,,..,.-----
NMSNUllKW.HEYWOM>A. ~·la the word for •••• , IUll'I NEW CUSTOM HOME. Call GI GI THOMAS -·... cartlftcat•. No pate. 650-1798 2BR 2BA. 2-c.r gwage.
thla wonderlu4 Duplex. A m'f JM.II! 4BR, 3'~8A, pan0<amlc $3500/mo. -H EASTSIDE 1 do flteplace, ralngarator, 1
COLD Well
BAN~eRO
atreettoatteetcomerlo-Thlagorgeouahomehatlt ocean & NII vt9wt lg 1••WAIDNW •NEWPORT CREST·j2BR H~BA, cloH to BRANDNEW"PTS WIU t2BR w.:r.bu~ btocktobMdl."30/mo.
cation. N9wet unit and a all: 4BA 3BA, IClf'l'NI din-M9ttbf w/aundeck, lg 'tam .. EnJoy breathtalc}ng vtews fSLAN "2" -BEST L.0-=:ch, $950/mo. 900 BE AVAii.ABE IN PHASE :. 'patio '57951;:; Avallabta now. eaG-3751
atone'• throw to the Ing rm, family rm. 2 car rm w/frplc:, 3 car gar, & aunMtt from this 38R CATION OVERLOOKING ur. 144-2811 Ill FOR MOVE-IN ON S42·t '795 or MM227 ~-.......
aand. Two large Income garage, lg awlmmlng 13500/mo 673-7382 2BA bM4.lty w/IMtur .. TENNIS AND POOL... VERY nice UPP« 2 Bdrm DECEMBER 1ST AND , F: ,_,.... E.~"ttJ~besl. P!~R.... ""cH~M· BECARLLS pool oourt yard low Ii::&:-~-Jl"Jll too numeroua to "*"· 2BR. Pattact condition. with encl garage view FIRST MONTH'S RENT Ealde triplex, large, 2BR, r _ _: . • ... atove ..ARB.AAA ,.. maintenance. All 'the9e ...... --tlon. lmmed occpy ~ .. RMdy to mow-In. Cell 1875 mo.' 415'h POinaet~ MOVES YOU INI VERY QUIET. new paint, ''"'"No pet• -MM5 .... ,al & GIGI THOMAS amenities In Newport 'B( 18Xfut1Jde, nu oak ~~;,.?'lldren & pelt OK. BARBARA CHAMBERS Ila. 241-8282 patio, lndry. adults, no ** 2BR, 28A, ARE· • ··~II Beect1 tor only '539,000. cabinet kltch. dllhw, lg -~/mo. Doug Hwblt I 1500/mo. Bachelor, 1, 2 & SBR APTS pets 1785/mo 873-3900 Pl.ACE, POOL. adulta
suNSefS.dtyllohta.trom c.11 Ann• McCuland latticed rear ~d. Privacy. 720-3NOor 780-5000 c.ta... JIM IMa~~~:tt llTIAl.Alll• 1950/mo 844-4402,
tNt be9utttul 2 BR, 2.5 631-1266 1875. 642-38 1 rtr -'ia.A.V I •c™-..., s:=J .... • Small qul•t complex 831-0211
BA townhome. Formal I 2BR, modern, view. pool. 6 IQ;'l"lrlltl\. " O~;;··~a!d;"'~ ..,. ... mPUfll C81'p0n, lctry. From '57S -*,_*__,..,Ll~DO..,,...,B,...A-Y .... FRONT,,...,...-.--~ ~ ~ ~ I ~ ~d~: ':' ~=-. \t:\\1 ::t:Yr l'f \ 11 1 & 28drmt. Gar. cable mt·-· 'Ill Ceble-rMdy. 146-4549 Spaelou• 1BR, lndry rm
front of you. MocHI pet· ,. __ ... •~-1-CM. appt 914-6047 RE.ALTORS -allf. Gmblt w/BBQ, lndry mYJ IP mfl mi lurnlahed studio $495mo. 435 ~mo7~ "''""" feet ~ -•-OR rm. No pets 631•8427 ttaat & water paid . ' .. ~ . a.a.a NEWPORT E·SIOE 2BR nr Tustin & *HARB VIEW HOME BLUf'FS 148-5330 leaYe ---U---------....... .. • 'Ill llllllT COTTAGE jusl ttept from Santa Ana Ave New crpt 3Br 3Ba+loft. f/p, up-3BR 2'hBA, Avail lmmed 111111 ft.Ull-meaa. * f •••* • .,. JASMINE CR~t Buy sand. walk to shopping . d/w, tncd yard. Pet ott'. graded. dbl gar .. gardnr, 2•~ mo IM, s1ooo/mo 0< ~..._a nu AfMl•fl KIDS REOUIREDlll E/alde BEAUT. 29r 28a, '.t bloc*
1
..... II YllW all LOWEST PRICE 2 aty 3& FrHhly refurbished 2 1825 Water pd 7eo-aa62 comm. pool, parlc, lg yd St200/mo furn 780-4384 ~u ,.. 2500 Mwrlrnac Way 3BD 18A Verd & gar. to bey, 2 car gar., w/d hk
FEATURED In SunHt tam. rm 2'nBa guard gate bdrm beach house with $2100/mo. 8'7-7528 agt I HOO mo. S500dep. up, Ol*l ~am calt-
Magane, tNa tiom. ex· $429,900. 991-1702 /I.gt new kitchen& bath plus 1 I •EASTSIDE" LG 3BRl2+BR I 11 f JUST WEST NWP 1BR 1895 APllY•lltl IH2 146-4&31 lna·~t 1~:5/mo
Pf' ..... lndMdUallty and ... • 1-• bdrm guest Qrtrs Ovef' 21ABA. 2-sty, gar, lrplc, LISTEDu ~ u~ condo Ml'f mlTI fllll• a .. utlfully landacapad. MES" VERD!. 2BR 1B•, TSL .u.... • .. 2.1..,....
excellent tut• In decor-•-double garage patio, ldry hkup. Sml pet , L80 quiet, large. clean Aptt. ******* -" .....,_, .-~ atlng and land9caplng. BVOWNERlif 631-1400 Ok.$1250.675-4912Agt w/gar ~blk fr sand BA . A48t,lpS1500 Poot&epa.patloordeck. upper.OUleteuldesac:. --------~ed on aqt#et ~ OPENHOUSESUN.~5 $329,000 l1500 wlnter.721-811S 8:1v::,o,.4T Condo 2Br Prlrnelocatlon. ** ..... M95+.2987Hlckory .... n ....
ct.uc It oner. 5 bd, 3 EJllde twnl'IM, 280 2'h&A •ftlf z1e1 Jlr2~ OUPLEX-$1000/mo. 3BR 1 BAL~Covea 1 Bedroom $670 A amall, quiet complex. 498-ttse, 751·9483 38R 28a, encl. ger., w/d
b9.lamilyroomand poOI Custom bookthelWs 1n -\4.\llHfHo,1 2-•tycondo.Dedloffmu-2BA.1yr1M.Frplc,patlo, fr 2Bt.den, 28drmt14Ba$805 StudlolS&>&tBrw/trpl, _.,1111 hk up, new carpet,
In a apadoul garden Mt· F.R. Frp1, new carpet• & 111 >Mt .. ,__ tat :'E~· d~ .. oar. trg 1 car gar. Walk to OCM11 B~R NT ~~Bt Hll Y•HID WAY ~fn.!8':> ~pvt~·. 1111 _ -.. 1129~'™t·uoONIA
ting. Expenak>n and r• paint. Patio & balcn. ~ REAL ESTATE pat,. alde..-Baylo-1-800-523-5281 M-F.9-5. den dock'°' 80' boat' COSTA MESA ·-· .......... moCSe1ng m-'te thls hon'le $
1 8
o o o o
811
um cat on. No pell. Lee y~ 14750 · •• •• , Pool, ape, tndry. 1tt + 2B 2BA, f/p, new carpet, TSL MGMT 142-1803
truly apac1aJ complete 142~ . I 1295/mo * 557.57~ llll .41112 LINDA ·ISLE 2 -..... MC. NO PETS. 54•24'7 and. gar .• all Dlt-lna, l'IMI with oc.el'I ~ mountain OPEN DAILY 1-5 PM on .... .1ory ., .... tBR ht ear-d ~ahope. 1195/mo. •Eaatbluff lg 28R 2BA vtewa Cell tor other ct. CUSTOM HOME BALBOA PENINSULA 3!.R 1BA houN, lg fen<led PENINSULA YEARLY boat dock. $10,000 ...., ' _., rapes, ... 11111a.n1., 810 CENTER w/new decor, frplc, D/W,
talla ~ vtftlfng of thi. 4BR. 13 yrl old. Country Cypr ... & Bay Aves 7v · gar, nu pnt & drapea. •Cut• tBR 1BA llPJ* WalltfrMI........ •love. lg lance patio, Quiet bldg on e·Stae. ~ TSL MGMT 142-1803 patio. poot ltM No P.-•
lovefy lamlly hon'le of-Kl1chen. $2"8.500 Agl ., I un ~r:"°:a.~~tt. duplex~·· nice In-IU&.Tm 111· 1• =:: ,::,_~ avail w/lots or wood.~ 722-4011 Ewa 722-4140
feted at S780.ooo. Pat Cobb 675-2013 •NEW• 2 bed 2.,., bath mo -58 .·~· 2B5/Rmo2. • ... ..,,,E 1 B R L 0 P.!!,1Clna a,.~ry fllcill-NEWER 2BR 2BA. new •111111•un• 111-11• e·slde R-3 lo1 w/SFR 257 condos. only •t• to Bay 3BR 3Ba houM $1350/mo ._.... BA lower uv.... atmost new 2Bt, FT A p T t-'530 ... o. 938-0652 paint, mini bllnda, frplc:, 11111
l&th Pi. 1279•000. Dusty & Ooeantronl beeches. 1700 •· All 111n paid, dupte.~. C1oM to den. 2Ba. 2-aty, dble gw, i 'l::,eplace & carport. *fm Lmm gar .. lrg balcony, nr bch '1• ... (,!Of~ .• I 11 KJ\!~ 673-2810.Agt Frptc,2cargarage,lovely gar. & gardner lnot. Avl .~ 2BR,~BA lower ~51~0·:'m2 patio .... ~t~":!i/J4 Avoc:ado. 1BRw/loft 2BA F......, • 1795/mo.818/333-0572 a...t.2-38'aJc,ger .. w/d
. •
SEA PROPERTIES LTD tile & carpet 631·1400 now.2153Puenteott ~ a $1S mo* .8508 ...,, ' . ,..,..,ca NEWPOR C hie-up, NIW C11rP91, tradl ~ l ' ''ti'\'\.\ . . From $336.oOO torla. Ot call 831·5892 dUptu. new crpl/bllnda, NEAR 33RD & LAKE E'SIDE 1Bt tel cable thedral celllnga. view, STF T A ROSS THE =· oall fan, nr Hoag
10 \I IUR:-• E1~~~-:a~~~~~ "f.:J~':e'l~~6~0MES. $760 Cut• 28r hM. gray/ .~3. :S2~B /mo .. No paB 1:,o.1Bt.o.. ~:· 0::: ~ ~d.~k~:s:r5 mi*=·~ pet7r ·.: :r~~~ t'=i~ • = ~050/mo. • ..... P&YmT1 673-2810 Aot wtlt ttluttert. wood ftrt. ·38 A, garage, frplo, $749/mo 213-258--5479 352\Actone145-8191 • 07 • TSL MGMT 142-1803 .•
wa·HglYayouthedown ln SEA PAOPERTIESLTD lllUTllUL n::d~¥~~:~:.,~' r,~~-~75Unlt NEWPO~ ISLAND 2BRl250CWF2ndMO'SRENT ·-....... 111""81111 0t5'8-<'
198
aft•
5
:
30
:
exchg for• share of own-11111111 • Tll No pets. 145-2W . VIW IEITIU ,.,.,BA, quiet ngtlbrhdl No E'SIDE 1BR Co. ttage, lrplc, 2BR 2BA, 1000 elf, new 2BA w/gar. Carpeta, VERSAILLE lrg bechatof ::
.-.hip. Vou make the .-JUITlll lllT ..... IAIU pate 11100/mo Avail encl patio 8•10 storage decor, ptvt patio. Oar-drapea, bit-Ina. Fenced w/aleeplng elcOW over-•
mthly pymtt & we there Thia cozy 38R 28A home The a.veny sought-out BACK BAY VIEW 121; eso-.749 . rm IM5' + 1795 MC age. Pn-aettlng. Chffd yard w/patlo. Water paid, tootling IOUl'llaln FUii aac. •
apprec You receive la cloM to both IChoolt & re-atocatlon of space In 3Br 1Ba, trplc, lrg yard, Attr 3BR. 1~BA hm, . 145-7234 * NO PETSI • ok. From 1950 Fr .. LMR. ~120 Call 1·5PM No petia. Agt. No.fee TRW '
100% tu benellta. Must lhopplng. Hunywlth your Uva thorOUQhly custom-gar. Juat r•modeled. woodsy, frplc:, gar. no SPACIOUS 4Bdrm 2B• • 2151Pacfflc931-9107 987 \Actona 'H'. .. $720 1115/mo lle.144-7211 :
have clHn credit. Agt check & palntbn.lthl Thia lzed hOme gives a maxi-11295/mo l4&-0M5 pelt, gard/Watat ~1 IM duplex, bak:onlea, dbl •:
957-9002 Dys, !v. Wkndt ona won't last at only mum of efficiency & BRIGHTON SPRINGS 1BR $1,SOO/mo. 5'&-1;sao gar .. $115()/mo. YMl'ly. :•
$115.000. Call now... 9'agance. F0t your P«-Condo. Sec:luded woods •BEACH HOUSES• <213) 597-4704 I :: ~mu-•-1_.. ........ ....., sonat vtewtng. ~call & atreems.. Ground floor 28R 2BA. 2 car gar. Fp, Uppat 48R t~BA, 2 car •;
...
~ _-;,• 111 II• er .... lJI 110.H i.vel. Wthr/Dryr stack d/w, xlt conct 11050: garage., small patloo112 !• r-• _.... ho<*-up. micro, lrplc, gar • tBR Bac:Mlor pad, fir• 4.<eth St. $1950/mo • J:
•4Br/2Ba UPP« r'tlllr ~ ... &V w/OfJN + carport. A« place. vtew $950 I Avl now. 213-597-47 ,•
•3&12aa 1ow9r flltU",rVh .. / ar-.~. ape. 1750 + •2BR + o.n, dtw. frp1c:, 2 ~ ~ 1:
1795,000 \t"V'TV'l"Yr ~·.v .,, dep. ELMA5'•24'7 cargw ... S1295 -~ ,·i v. ~ '\.. .,.._, 1 1 ~ \. ••-•• DOCKSIDE RE 722·9730 1 REALTORS ~ -•-m 1-
1
•
RETIRED LOCAL went• to laa J ... Cit l iti Y~~5~ i:-~pt. B~~6~~· .. ~i~o~~~Et, BN"r ;r1; wt== ~i ~~M~~~Pr~ ....... 'u·--E-81de SBA 2BA lwnhM .• ~v:·';'::l 2~:; Aemod1l1d,4dntobey: ;:
Crest condo l46-8A 73 -••• 111 Yard, gar. quiet arM. Xlnt gar l2700mo 831-oeao Avl now. ae50 + '50 utM. .• . fll lllJ condl $1080. 966--4019 . ' NO PETS.* 9~220 •!
associated
W ,.,,., ,.,. • • ,. "• I' '"'
" 1-"'i,1r.,,. ... · _,,,,,.
Pl•lll.A..., OHL y S3000dnrtl Dys 640-2429 Ev/Wknd ...
5BR 4BA, 2400 aq rt. 3 car l u t. ..... I BIG 2BD/2BA CONDO!! L~x condO nr beh 2BR -.., rv· ~~ ~581~ _ .. m LIT1 0 NL y • 1 . 0 5 0 m 0 I 2.,.,BA. 2 •ty. frpfc. pN 1111· ly Plllt :
(714) 973--0129 . 48R 2BA, RV acce ... ~[~1 .OOOlplll * :i~w·~o~ul21~ar :
$219,900 Bier 983-&an HS-73•9 '* Cal a LUXURY 2Bt 2Ba condo . •• ,.t .... I Dbl gar. frplc, pool.
Oa:ly Pilot --$995/Mo. 111 & latt " ..a.... ... 1114 +'300. 142-5290 •o VISOR JM Pet .... 38R 2'hBA. FR NEAR Pt..ACENT•A n • w/frplc & dine rm. 1'-+ yr1 .. .... 3BR 28A twnttm rt tor
642•5678 new. Sac gate. Poot & 3BR Poot home on lg lotl cp1' °' exec 1i~1mo
ape, $4HK. Submit all of 1219,000. Bkr 152-1298 -4 ,,_, 213-~79
fwa.~854-1113
"1 --·
>~ Merrill Lynch Realty
cozy LAGUNA C01T AGE
Loated on 2 lots. Walk to Woods Cove
belch, ~oppf,. and afes. S.refy a~
lot val~. M2S,000
759-6600.
~if •• ""' y. ... y. ,,.,.,,,,
w ........
Mt-1611
for Information
& aurprl1lngly
low cost .
i.-ACIOUi 39t 2~8• ....,. ..,.. °"*· ,.,...
nn, .......... ''*· ~-~
8~tis R cuddly 25· doll Naaah~
E = chlld.
R Tiasue pattern
pieces and all
<hc:'*>i. tor doll
and clothe•
lnduded.
The Daily Pilot has a new w ay to turn
your H ic;lden Treasures Into CASH
.$ 1 O!t~epayment
4 Lines, 7 Days s 1 o~so
NAME
No dwpl In aipy • ar -tlon. ,,,...., ~ only No COfTllMrdal
Real Esrat•. Automortve, lloMlng Of bipeoy1M11t Ads. There IJ no ptfc~
llmlt co wNt you an lldWrtlK ti you~ to Mt yow couch Noh Chair
Or rr/ unused IMf'CMnd4se-ul rtw DM!y f'lot C~ Stan or UM Che ·--llliihll
0-. Not. JJO W. m.,SL. C.... ...... CA 92616
642-5678
ADDRESS
CITY STATE ZIP
AD COf'Y: 4 ffne mfnfmum. appropttatety~s per HN.
.
I
j
' ' t
MOTOR ROUTES
AVAU81.Ell
CllTI •IA ..,., IEACll
...... IUCll
WEEKLY PAYMENT
CALL 642-4333
between IAM & 7PM
Orange Coast Daily Pilot
.
Today's News
f oday! /~
,..,. \A
·.;;a~--.,
In newsracks
by3pm
.FUN
AFTER SCHOOL
WORK
11 Years & Older
Work Evenings & Saturday
YOU CAN AVERAGE PER WEEK s7500
OR MORE!
PH-ONE: 498-332 I
All Transportation Provided
By Ao Adult Supervisor
WOU 11 YOUI OWi IDalOUOOD
Delivery Drivers
PART-TIME
Newspaper Delivery Drivers Needed .
Monday-Friday 2PM-SPM . Weekends
& Holidays 4XM-7 AM. Earn up to ,
S600/month. Must have reliable
transportation, insurance & a good
driving record. (
Call 714/642-4333 ext. 205
Between 8AM-7PM
Ask For Rodger
CLASSIFIED ADYEllTISIN6
SALES
We are ADDING to our sales staff.
If you can type at least 45 wpm and have
great telecommunication s~ --We can
off er you a base salary + commission AND
a (julll place to work.
hH n.te ~ l'•n Time A v.U.ile.
Do younelf a f aYor -Call as.
Peggy B levlu er~ I• V e-e••
642-4321 ..._ ....
330 Weet Bay St.
CoetaM-,CA
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 s-ms 6 Htlft)OOn
11 • 'ffutll"
14 Su-110'1
15~
16 s.nc.
17 Noc.aut~
19 Sunburn
20 G,._ c>e.a
21 l~ll
22 Copy
24 HuMy
26 NMr .. or
27 Fw..-1ti.1
30 Zoroea\rlan
32 Ot • l()eQe 33~erln
Canada
34 $\)Mg
37 Spoll1
38 WM angry
3t Sonen
40 Bua. letter
abbr 41 Opoonent
42 Corny
'3 Primat• °' •
90!'1
45 °""*· -.ng .. Two OS poe11
... PomOgt
•Row. 50 ltalloan Qty
52 --Chine se "'--
2 3 4
14
51 NOt1hem-eo _ • .,,.
&1 PrettNlf &2 ltltlnd ,,..,
Soly
&J sooner ltlat1
6' Young yeers
65 Man s Mme
DOWN
1 EdOo
2 G,..... region
3 Ova
4 lnctt.n sagee
S Ftlllld
6 Angle
7 Hu"
9 ConckAlons
9 ~nusn
cwd
10 MOii ru04y
1 1 Fleet unl1
12 Mafble
13 Oecof atlOl1 , e Rabbit'• 111r>
23 -dU Dlable
25 P .. n
2& Tramc>led
27 Arr.....O
28 Algeria port
29 Ot r4"aihng
30 HNthen
31 AC1or Walter
33 Beer• !elf
35 Noodle
le Mtgntdy
5 7 8 9
48 ln'*-
50 0..0. Fr
51 Britllh O'lfl
S3 Ml a..,._
54 F"igura
ss~·1son se Hert)
58 T""'°"' alff
••• 11111 ••• ............. • ...... 11 "'' -.,.......,.c ..-1r,an+ •=•• • " "9dwlltt~.Centr• 151111111010t,Kanwood amF
wl'IHle, evper fllce CO • .,._..,~.,.. AIM!MtlOi ...., dOOf
.I .' •__--
1
menc ,.,, • ., 1tcn Appttj eontr.,_ ""°'*· ... lteteo •'•" StH OUMUNl MCM....,_.. '31,DOO e1'1t17-2111 MU91WT " ... '~ -~ tooll, eNIM. ,._, ...,.
•• - -• 1830 ~Alie ~ -,.~ • boc*· Al,M Htnee 8-ltioe ~ry ftt a.10 CMvv. ~ 2 11tl ... t-04H _,.. lnQ. CMlllM. AJO. Wt.
'-"'...,......_Ming •OIGTownlNIMI* -l !'Mplno IMlc llnOWI· plic '35 121-1010 mon1h1 otd •Ut. M d • 1171 4 eyelndef, a.,.... men-tfl,111'2UGl71l
1t1e holldiwt. lmmedl•t• -, lllllY&nllllT ee1ge of~··._,. tsMeu •re~• ••-•n1 · ue1.r.--.CN1M,p0-*' 11111111111 opeNflga.~ffOf'f/T,exp .. -. ..neededimmedl9tely. I ""' Hn -10-J. ... /I.it .. L.~ 118 CRE IER ...... ~~.::' ~-... AMIN , W• "°' '*· _.. trllln.. AWt I E·Z pteuent ~ ~ negotlel*. lf3..1897 MIS ... =p== ~ MJ(V redl .. • • ... AlC htr• Mete»I ..., __
In peraoni. WHtcllft1•Wlllt•a&Waltr ..... I $10hr.NoMllinQ.GrM•j fllllB'lllt1 ••11111 '°"Y CO tt.,.o, ca; ""•nctno Available ....... U
,....., """ INIM. N8. • Dey Host... fOf •tudenU.. l'IOY••Wllle& Small Pr"'u.!.. ofC,. 8llc b(oedQll 1..-nb ~ IA 3'.. .. ... Ill" ~. told pad!.. ( tSRF1Ht ..... --111111111-• Bookk..,., I 1 extra Chrlatm• uistt C()M...Wonf~ 5 o. coet·fllewr ... to lthr Ital. 6 ~ 5 ~ rNn· ~ wetn •en leetw""" •••IN Automatic 4 oytlnder
TllM f'IOme '2004250 per •Coe*• , Katny •5s-t1n . 2-ts>M. IBM PC. erwmt · hi tealliOn lit• wt tur. Own ual. ~ 00ot tock. 181 I *"°'· ""'"'°°'· ..,_,.... •1.nn power clOOr IOclk, ,.....: ..-tt Dey tlma tvs.. Muat I! Dell UTll. UUI I N·M ~ at S3200 r.cjlal1. t1u1... s>O"' a FEW llmlD cw •1uoo «*>. 61t-t012• vw ·ee . QOOd orul... PG"' .... ,.
"9Yecat.1n-.-'·=•Baker 2•'fr--~· 1 PT& m.naw ..... , .... 8.1~74 t>ratl•. AM/,M, ~-... .-... • .... ,.. ln•lof ... .nor. MW lng/bfaMe.AM/N,AJC,
LllM.lllllYMY 'Apply In person Monctay,1 ~::.,-::.:~a"'c:-, F t r 11Jl .o:~Wlll !.l\':t=~.~·: ~n:::·~~~a~':. l4llh•.--·--1 '~·~-~ ===1~ iuri=;.= f= c= .. in~~I\ Fr~ 9-5. 14962 Seod l Oeptator•exi>•+.~t Traln/advano pou. repu .... ..,.,.e7:J...Or52 Fl1'an~o1o:v•llabl•. :nt.=:=.~·0 All Pow•rl u 't ,HS vw '74 IUO. ~ ~ .....
lngto Canyon Ave lrvln•I ~ a«>Je to ~ s.t & LAGVNA CHEVRON IOC (27131 . (2C~73') I nine condltron wnlt• .... , tor~ =b:.'°::c£ a57-9t;e Sun.~ m,~~tam. S.CoMttiwy. Peblie&eeJ1 Nit --ft ~-s.Moe lllllf1lflfl .122lo1obo.97~2 .. 71PP
wonting per.on w/2 ~1 I ( )4 .. L --..U...... •RWWWXA p:;;t;;:cs;1 •1-UJI 1":1-~1"1''1~ .. ,..... 11·1v1un --... C...tom'a llt exp. Salwy ~HHM RETAIL SALES OlERK h--= aeu. Point SM Point !TOYOTA '14 c.lica 2· • • "' .. ~ •••
o.o .E. 147-4041 ! PRE~ I PIT. noewnli'IQs,....,., + ~-n.-$:1:: ~ CfA •• a .... , d00t 36Kml automatic 1500 Auto Matt Dr 1111toE 22lr l5'31 ,a .-ct, rnenuet. ,..,...., comm eo.ta ~ ., .. ~ old ...... _ ...... 7a"' ""57 • ' ' • 77 3000 .. -(30$1) c:ru ... power ., .. ,_ MIT.•BW I Plllllflll.111 I 831-2222 • wr ator. ,_...._ ........ .,... •unrool. eufl' clHnl Santa Ana U3108Lht.N0(401t) ll'fOlbrakH. AMJFM.
For ""9rior p&ent tec:ha. 1 1245. a AtNna treenr ADORABLE Otd EnglJeh 18.400 ,... 2.. SS F t Edtngec 17 Wgn 11k m1 C'°'4l ctaee1•e. A/C. 811 on till. 546-I 200
ElcSI ,.q'd. ~ 'Harrta 1550.11 unit•. Excel-' Full u':"NL SAL~ liQtll $45.00, bOth exe411tent S"-0 doge. ' "*-· 1 YITITA .... G4 ,:];, ·1 o•YS .. 61D9EL 143.NO (2te0) With tlnl WlndoWS. ectr• Jt28H11Mr -<••llne
Medical Back Office· p/11 hint QPPOf'tunlty and ben· ..... W~n I afnc conc:l1tlon, 545-2452 f9male. 1 yr Old. ~-... IP WLR " •'ft ... 1411 c:IUn. F~ Av.,._
tor t>uay family pr.C.a l erttll Ctll Hank .1 jc>bt intout. Noexp~~I REFRIGERATOR. Searl S..OON. 840-7ee9 5 speed menuel. P<>Mr ~ H,._ ~on-Frt."'-abte.*i:lli~~UI! Ulllll I 'II
Newport a..cn Pny .. 142~21 .......... ColdspoJ. 14 cu"· Run9 Al<C Reglat•ed~ b(~ ... AM /FM, c:uMt· 7.00.,,, to 9.00 pm •••• ·-llftm-~·:}!.!'t:::r:,:.,, Production Inspector , 2300Herb0r81vd, j' grMt&~J,rr:1·5150·J ~;:--& hNlthy te, till. ~·CW.. c~::,Of'I\) . W •1~11 Automatic, e cytlndet,
aTn:'ct1ona c:1f1Mlcroecope e~p pref ~t , 8u1te1a.Coe1aM... . $22S 5"5-2579 • ~ .tfft.SO Automatic. powet" door ....... PW power door lo«*,,_.., AL1t..~ • ·not nee. Goo<I benefi1s. -llllllllal Seer• afde/llM lrosttr.. • ~ltt•lll--IATm'11111 lock, radlala, crulH, ·~·-'dlPMdiMn-crulae, power •teer---,--SS.00/hr AWfYlnperson• -·~ ••·-refrla .. w/lcemtker,23cu!Fr .. totgoodfemlly.blk a.A ITA.,.Wa. power etMring/l>feha uei. AM/FM. ce.-tta. 11\Q/bfak••· canette •
• SIC .Lis I Scrantom Englneerlng1loc:at. PeilltCant.rolCo. j tt,111Tlunoermalntenance & white medk.lm-alled •••.... Automatic. a cyllnder, AM/FM. ceaeet ... MC'. ShOwC#'eondltlon.Must A/C, tilt. S3 .2t$
Inc., 3550 C1dlllac Ave. I Need• route teen. We contract, xint cond $295 female epayed dOg. 3 yre -power 11..,lng/btell" Sun root Immaculate ... 10 ~-~ (10 MYl80) • •
II IMt•--~~~~\nurH•rt>or g:!~ r=~ '£8~Eog:1 873-3900 I :?3-.~ family jjog. 11ml'IMIWU A/C.$1,"5(514TYN) • co0ndltlon. $14,996 ::=:bl•. (18KB340 IHIMl•liall -1 Cnatlle 919-6o21 AM I WHlTE-WESTINGMOUSEI Autometlc, power door lllnmt•... (1 IM3e31 • 1 .... Fullttmepoettlons&retlO* P/TMllW&SIU . . Gas dryer. almond Col0(.1 POODLE PUPPY SALE 1 1ock. fadlal•. crulH, •nLD •• ,...... •11111nr 141.-1
avllllatlteforentttu.iaatlc.,Needed. ExP9'. pra1d. ' MITW.D•AI mid alt•. ai>pro11 6 )'I'S. Home ralaed (Tee Cup. power ltMrlng/brtk .. , Ml-IU1 a.A M1.U11
out-oolf\il 1tleapeopte Must~ Englilh Apptyl Outfleld Marine la Mek•1 runs welt $100. 142--0107 Toy & Min.) All colon. AM/FM, cauette, A/C, ..,. --'ll NI ...
WhO enjoy mu.le: and~ Verde Convalelcent up'd utesman 1t I $250-1700. 751-34e5 tilt.Perform~Verslon. Conllder H faty, '"''e _..... VWVanllQC)n t912,14.000 II
tnO\llaa. We oftet •d·1 Home, ae1 Centlf St.,I baytront 1ocat1on. Ftn-1 14 $8,195(1HVAN9) value .... Y 60 month •MERCEOES ·11 300SO. mllea. •ut omatlc, t ~~::~In °s!,:, c.ta Mesa See Alan. I =nf:,,f'~~:' ~ =~-:c. Ethan n;; 1'2!J:' 1 HUI~ IUll ~·Hc!:~n0~1~~ :~ .. ~:."o:n'e•P~.~~~,1~ ~eo~~ ne:= 110~(i1~r:S::
aon this Tueec:t-v. Nov. 22 ' 1111111-PnMltMI I I boys bedroom Mt $1200. cftmlt:A:u:r; • SCbWG'n -porU & be ..... lowered Pert.cc con· 840-1931 PG"' ltMflng/brak ... = 11am-3pm with FTtPT nex nrs. $61nr. gd s-.,.&YI WI. iclnt cond. Antique Fr. =·n!,~~,;: 142.... J11171••11BD dlttontie.400. 1 .... 11.iltll ftll =~•;6~·(~~12\ow
. beneffts.CM~2-<>41 t F•llAL • I bedS1200.854-3604 I QalwrS50.~ view alt ~~·Gettlfgherdo!Wv9Nefol 146-2990days -'llllYUM llllMl•--
llM5 9eedl Blvd. -~111m I I ... •12111• a NEW 5 SPEED . STAR! ~~i ~ay. y 0 u r pa mp. r. d NISSAN 1"88 Sentra, 11111 .... lllL man I Eatabll.lhed financial com· Le11 face It how many ad• Footboard wllh rtlll, l LADIES CRUISER with Comp.,. House ot Im-Mercedea-Benz. Com-l~ mMea. red,~· Au1ometJc: cr"'9e power 141-1111
pany In Newpor1 Center. 1 don't u.,. ~P to wntt they I queen '*2•· MM293 I b1by , .. , & bHk•t. port• a be ufe I*• HOUM of Imports & ~1:::,-:15-: te. iteerlnQ/brak• • eaaMt-=,,,..,,..~~-...,.,=:--'.~ .. ft' I EJic•llent pnone andl ci.lm. We ofter rMllatic OININGtablew/8c:hairs& S145.14&-1105 l 211111••ilaa beeure. ce. J..t C h 395 FORD EXP 1H2. fully ~°'='=:o:I ~~~:e,::':!.!.~I :-Ot~~ni'r.5. ~:1~1 ~'h~~Ph:'ctici:~:':1~t:l1 N~~~~1,o<i,°:P ~1ol~·~ YW.;n;• J111l1•m .. s ... ='f'J'!,"'!n. 11turl:*1~~. =~~1':•
11 .. Ang aystem with~ ful.Sandy,640-2722 ltles,Mlllngadepacefor1 w/111tctllngdr..aer$250; Legend. 21", $160/obo.15 speed manual, radials, _.......... ual,radiell,l)()Mrsteer-£ --... GOVERNMENT SEIZED
Hrntted eerninga. Fot In-. -~ local ponce. Good voicel brown plaid~ sofa' Both>tlntcond. 759--1277 l>OW9f bra«", AM/FM. 5 apMd m~. radlala, lng/brakH. AMI FM, ._,_ VEHICLES LOW AS formation. call Jack _.., 11rN• I & enthullaem a must. s100· 552-5278/ev C8SNl1.• AIC Cu1tom power 1teerlng/brakn. cuaette AIC (29H) Ml-IU1 s 1 0 0 BM w s
Aywa at SELECT I Tra\'el egency need11Mrp Call Mr. RobefU 455-9819
1
· lu1t• Lift wheels ·sun ~oot tow AM/FM. c:anette. A/C, -·-1·1 N CADILLACS CHEVYS•
BETTER HOMES & receptltypl1t with ··-... -GAME DINING ROO~t -miles. ... 995 (2FBY993) tMt. Sun roof. CUiiom --... 1111--FORDS M'eRCEOEs' GARDENS periecice. Call Frank at ---TABLE ... cflalrt. also 111 f· e1-• w nee I 1 S 9 a II 11 •1.all -• ._, • • REALESTATE7~1-5000 1 ··---·-IExpl&Hlsper'JOn fOf FIT teaYe 11ln1 cond. $175. ,...,..,._ 1111111111IUll (1LPSa25)· ' . .. PORSCHES. PLUS EARN poa Woman• clothing 557 4oc1 ~ l 1111& -... .. ... .. A f ti e II d TR.VCKS ANO VANS.
• *$300 A DAY• i' $400 $1000/WK I store Call &1a-.140 -a ... ~ ... t CUrttrt ...... l&llMf• llAll 5 ......--~·'"" AM/FM !!:!,a ... ~ .....,.cY_~.~· AMAZING RECORDED Taking phone orders. • . King size bed WllPfd -•-a -,._....,, ' ..---"""" """'· ,..,_, ME88AOE! REVEALS People call you . Ul.llnasll Sheet•. antique din tble RUNA Xv FOR WEtk-1 -cHHtt•. ~IC. RHI crulH. power •tHr· DETAILS. 71o41531-62'1
219-1860 Elct L-10 I •&AM· 12 Noon I For STATIONERY S~ORE., w/.cjbd, coucl'I & love-ENO. ,Chart• Stat•Of·: ft 'II .llTTI . 142.... (~9~ m11M. S5.895 ~,g;r•~11'i c;~•~t~a5 EXT. 105
1l'No NIQnta/Wknd• CdM. FIT, 5 O.ya. Xlnt Mlt, a few tttc 646-9195 Art le C'99fod(. F>tto 4 c:ytlnder. radlall, P<>Mr llll•T•-•-(2EXP4'1) · • ~ ULIS I •S71HR + comm/training 11WOftclng conditions. Ex-NEW Daybed White & de91 w/lklpper. t 75-71oo brtk". One only-hurry ~ 'll Pm.• II-,. ... ... . ... ... ... I mtl mu ...... .,. I ceptlonalty fine cllentele. Brass. w/manreues & IUJl/Dllb/lttt... ~ aW:b1i:''b~1> Automa11c, radi.t•. erulM. ...,. Ill:!!!..-,. UAL -U. •-12.._. 1 Phone for eppt. 673-4762 trundle Complete. $245 TIU U 975 · power 1teetlng/brak... aa..-a I ... ,..,... -··.. -· -I •M0-8733• . AM/FM. caaette. A/C, I 141-1111 Let'• face It making b6g fft •• amw ULll,._f/T . 1 beam. llPIWWW tllt. Power windows, lllUl'Mmtll I money .. eicc:lting when 11a-11n w1a-1 ... ,oood arty for adv~ oc~k~: "~;. 2 b':!1 Chol,., location near n1-1111 moon root. mag•. Autometlo, power ltMf-UNIUl'll
you'1'90f"tywOf111ngMon-I •a• ment or ~r poston. tables 2 oomty brownl e.lboa F9fty. $100/mo $14,995(20XW509) ~. cauette. AIC. tllt. UIW
day-Friday '9-5. Ag-UHlll-.11 1 875-4353 Of 75-0821 I Chra. All >Ont. 645-5862 I 1•t & last. 7~567 BMW 325 198&. 2.4,000 llllM11£ lllll 14.&95 (1KHK353)
1
lllVRI ..
gfeAM. sharp person to I ~ llllJ UU'I I TRADE alip In Newpor1 mltel. brand-MW tlr... ... ..., nm& Autorti••lc power door FlllT PAeCE8 AT 11~ ae11 .cj ~ ln 'Neeclaomeextraahopplng Sound Tracks tt Balboa WATERBEO,Kingalzed.lg BMch. We nave 28 .. we automatic, wh ite. •••.-. 141-1111 lodl,c:nni..powwatMf· •-thebeetlocalpolic:epub-• money? Earn S400-1 FunZoneneedeOU1going ... Poiter, headboard. needupto 32• 12.beam. SU.500. 873-348,. _... I Ing c:aaa.t1. A/C tltt AJI UYR-
licatlon. Call Mr. Reed $1000/week work1ng1 person w/lales exp. calll rootboard, 6drawerped-c... Ruben at S50-948S. (M05419«) ,.... ...... -a• ... -" po.;.., V-~ L•ather Uncoln-Mercury. ManlUf.
Call now for 'tocallons. tt. t4-1.._ 1tan<11.H .. terlncl.$325.,WANTEO:rentallpfor32'BMW 3259 1 •no, Automatic, 8 cyllnde.r. ~ $18,995(M120e) Vol~ ,.55-9821 &am· 12 noon Moci-Frl Seo 7 123-...... ! ellal. 2 matcf\lng nl1• 985 ...,. 000 --,... ---•-· · · Jaguer, lluN, Honda.
RECEPTIONIST COSTA MES 8-6919. , Save ~ 786-8183 power 12· beam '87 mltee. etec:trlc sunroof, power door lock radials, llllY l111TI B Appl onty Contact For full·aervlce racial A 54 IAL.ll TIAml I Pin · I 'Famtty boat· Call c:tl<ome wheela, 5-speed. crulH power' ••••r-5 apMd ~. redials. ..,.... y Co&i.ttl Im
salon, 30 fl<a/wk, eves & SOUTH O.C. 582 1240. '"WORLD'S LARGEST'" I II&·.... 1115, =at 650-9486 . excellent condition ing/b;akea. AM/FM. power •teetlng/brekft. -~:.:.,I at ~C:OO
Mndl lnol 54&-3030 GARDEN GROVE COIT DRAPERY ANO • I $19,500. &40-~ ...,... c111ette AIC Fully AM/FM. CUMtte, AJC, • Cen · l74a..1o 17 or 748-tOS6. I CARPETClEANERS. I ••HIBi• !he.Wu .... MM n1ng1 & wHkend1. loadedl lmmaculet•con..1 '"t.Cua1omwt1ee1a.sun ~'lllUDI INlne AUto t• __ _. I Hu Immediate openings IHI AIU Ulll. 550--0&38 days. d 1 t Ion I S 2 e 3 9 9 roof. SHARP! $5.9951 a. Kii '12 .nm ..
•-•-I W 1 •.._ .__ L .. ua buy your P#flpered (2BU'"""51) • (2FJG lot) '" t ti • ,_.I d •Me111c111 Hotel Rep & TOO< or NleS people. e l I pay trana ... ·-· I Merc.edel-'Benz You will llllA 'M MIHU LI """' . ····---I "u ome c. v .. ,. n er, Autom•tle. e cyllnd•r. ' organizer In Laguna I ofter............ (805) 966-1156/565-1179 I get out-right cUh Com-I j lllT•Tll llAll . pow.r dOOf loctt, CfUf... PoMr door IOC*, ,_,..,
I Be•cl'I '' look.Ing lor • Paid training 'CENTER CLUB member-pare House of 1mPo.,t• & • 5 le>eed manual. C(UfM, am& ... power atMflnQ/brak... crul1e, power ateer·
qualllled enthusiastic • Ptld medlc:tl snip. Significant di•-be Nf• , I ~511(~~1r-9) • tte. •••.-1 142.... csao•••5tte2.JCALAl,.C..·, Ult. lng/brekH, AM/FM ,
I reMfVatlonlst Comp\.ll9'" • Paid vac:a11on _, . -1 1 ,49 ( 1.. canette, A/C, Ult. Vinyl
eJCp a must. Knowledge • Paid llek leave llUIY 11YITI l l&DA 'MW If ..... 'U 211 D I 11.,..TIA 11111 t09. 13.995 (1E8E.eet)
1 o~:~~:;~•n:r:+. CALl.Jan540-1366 MJ-1111
15
apMd manual, AM/FM. Automatic, e cylinder, ---HdlMTllW 4 -. Of an .,...,...._ _.,.1 ...,. RHI clean. $3 495 powerdoortock,raotali.' 141.-a1 a.a I ... _, -( 8262) ' crul1e. power 1teer-.... e!'~~~/~ot ln~~O::n~nf~: Automatic, 4 cylinder, --..... tng /brakH, AM/;M. •fllll'llltl '41
P Ou , -raonabte nar1on to ca••• t t e . S 2 ... 9 5 c:a9Mtl•. AIC. Utt. T toe>. -•Ll•llll.I .. _. •T& neoesMtY· t-mcl. ... -,...... (l8WPU38) AM& cu1tom wtleela. Sl,395 ,._. •--·-fork lef'hng. able to lilt up ans. pns, file & do lrte llllmtll llAI& •••.-. 150720) ,. automatic. ,. cylinder. lllAI
to 60 ltn, packing. Must , typing. Hrs 9-5 Mon -Fri. -l ll .. •T• -a-power door locit, radlala, a ~ power door
f'l•ve goo<I OMV. Gr .. t ' Call fom 4 673-8555 mmD 1• •I IDll J.211.;, -crulH , power atHr-lock, radlal1, crulH,
medic.ilbeneflt1. 1:30-5 1 141-1111 Run• good. $3000. a.A lng/brakH. OHHtte, power at..,lng/brak•,
Call 54&-3e'71 l am UllST&ll 760-9243 ..... Al c . tll t . • 5. 0 5 AM/FM, cueett•, AIC.
1 • ' 1 1 WllDllll•Y R=~c~:Cdi:',7:,t!•~: FIND ME~EOES '12 300 SO Shop the,..,_., • .,._ (1MJWICM) tilt. '3.llS (2AXNt59>
.-S5 ht. SurMrs Altferlee. •slat. Muat type ee>wpm. N9w engme, eice4111ent ofctasslfledtorthe~acatlon HllW•... .llDl•l•--
Warel'louM exp. needed. S2t,OOO per year Cell ml9C. palntlnQS, ~r• M ..... h I f d col\dltlon, $18,950. ~OP9ftyYoU'¥ebeef!wan1-.... ..a
M»ce957-1.«1. M1.Ka12.714-752·7936 &mlrrora.&4S...ot2 ~ '111111'•-• t roughcassiie Me--02-M Ing. 141-1111 141-1111-
l"\ll.IC M»TIC£ NI.JC NOTICE
PVeLtCNOTICE a.-K<MOZI Stor1199 M ... llgel'Mflt. Inc;. fornla generalp•rtn.,ahlp DU9ifleee neme "' ~ Monica Perry, Sp Notloelsheretiyglventhat
NOTICI OF NOTICE OF FtCTITIOUS 9UIM98 Telephone (818) 2'""'8080. herelnalter ("LLL'"), and Ill*' at>ove on October 20. C317--dth0 REGENCY ASSOCIATES. e ~SALE 01F "*..IC IAU MAm STATEMl.Nl Agent tor Owner CORONADO 8 PARTNER-1"8 Cl'ltlttCIC)l'ler Butcher. Si> Celffomla general pertner-PAii
L•NU> ~ OF ""IONAL The tollowlng ~ -Publlshed Oranoe Coast SHIP, • cal!fomla gener.i Hlr.on and Klllmeyilt. • C3N-dth0. llf l>td, mlac ship, IUCCeUOJ-ln-lnter .. t TEDDY L . FALK, Notice 11 herby gn.er. tl'l•t I ~ •00101 S e1o1119 t>uslnffl as: Dally Piiot Novemt>ef 15, 22, partnership, heretofore Prot.ulonal Cofpor9tlon, • b.u to BFO PW1nerel\lp, a Cali· pMled away Novem-the un0er8igned Wiii •t c>vl>-NOtlCle I• hereby given 11111 THE SHOE OOCTOR. 440 t988 doing tlutlneU .. Qe!*ll CA corp.. Oevld HlflOn. Robert McBride, Sp fornl• Dlf*alpert~lp
lie •uctlon pursu•nt lo lpurtuent 10 Sections E 17th Street. eo.1a Mesa.. T361 pertners under !tie ~ Prellderlt 0405-Wlhr/dryr. frig, llteh, (hereinafter "REGENCY"). ber 18, 1988. Born De-Ct\aptet 10. OMSIOn 8 corn-21701-21715 01 Ille Celt-c.til 92e27 OR\.EANS PARTNERSHIP, This •tatement Wll flied mite bu. d9k, wtrbd, hat and LARRY H. PAMER, 1r1 cember 10, 1895 in
menetng with SecUon 21700 tornl• BuSIMN and Pro-Heung Sllik Sun. 12638 E PUBLIC NOTICE at 17802 Skyptrll Clrcte. '#Ith the County Cletk of Or· rdc. tbl/4 ctlr1. deer heed, 2 lndMduel, nwetofOf• dolflg Grandy, Mlnnelota.
Mt. Olive Chapel on
Wedneeday. Novem-
ber 23 at 2:00 P .M. In
lieu of flowers mem-
orial oontribu~ to
the American lieut
A.-odatioo. of the Bu91neas and Pro-j rHll<>ns Cod. •. Section 2328 LemmlnG Street. t..Jcewood, I Suite 100, trvtne. CatlfOfnla ange County on No¥amber lfnpl. ~ buelneta •general pertners He ia aurvived by lelslons Cod• or Section of IN California Commercial C•llf llO? 15 K..-. 92714, nave CSIMOtvecl their 2. t9811 Owner ,...,._ the right under th• name VILLA 1988 of the Crill Code ol lhe !Code Section 535 Of the Mee Sun Suh, 12638 E '1CTITIOUI auttNEU Partn«at14P as of Oecemt>er P111'14 to bid at ti......._ PUfctlUff MARIN.A PARTNERSHIP, 11 dauihten. LaVenier----'------Sl•t• olCattfomla the tOllow· Callfornia Penal Code ano Lemming Street. LekeM>Od, NAMI If An....,. 31. 1987. by mutual content. PublllMO ar.nge COll9t mu1t be made wttn ctlfl orlfY 11802 satyp&rk Clfcl. Suite (Frank) Aiello and LANDO
•no m1eee11mn.oua l\OUM· lthe provisions 01 the c.i1. ea111. 90?15 ri... lolloWlng per1e>n1 ere LLL flu the s.oM eutllortty Dally Pilot Nowmbef 8, t5, and Paid IOf 11 ll'le time of 100. ltvlne. Callfomit 92714, Eleanor Andenon· . hOld end ~al PfOC*'tY tom11 Auction Llcensl119 This business Is con-dOing ~ M to NII pertnerlhlp 8$Mtl. to 22, 29, 19811 purchaM All purcl\ued Mlle cJlleotved tN!f Pert-_, __ ~_. __ p ; Antotnetta Lando, •
to-.wll ldenhfoed Dy Mime Aet. the underllgned will ... duc:1e0 by hust>and •nd wit• SAN8 BUILDINGS, 2"2 pay end d llC:htrgHll T342 goodt .,. told ..... and ~-ot o.o.nbet ''· -.a -.uw eanon;.. 85, tesident of New-
and ator~ unit number at public se1e by C01T1P9!lllve Th• reg lat rant com-Alrwey Avenue. eo.ta MeN. lltbltltlM otthe ParttlWll'llp, tn\19t be remoftd atthetlme 1987, """"" c:on-.it 1randchlldre1', 7 port Beach, puaed
N A M E r o m bidding on the 30th csa~ of mel'C9CI to traneac:t bust. c .i11. 92821 _ to cohet and rac:elve all or.-. S...1Ublec1 to prior REG NCV haa the .IOle ,,.eat-arandchUdren awal November 19 OgaOffOHIOg•ncroH, Lot No.,.,,..t>er. 1988. •t 9·30 ness undef the hct1tou1 tOC Enterptltee. •limited moni. to ttie PartnerstNc>. rtaJC flOTIC( ~Ion In tM event ot euthority to ... partnerlhip and two ::i---t 98 . N •
•0.7338 o·etoca AM on ttie Pfeml9a ~ name or na,,_ part~tp, by Irvin C to per1onn existing con-Ntttement between Owner _..,to pay and dllc:Mrge • --1 in ewport
NAME Jim Cevaliont ~· Uld proe>erty h.s !lated at>ov• on NIA Ctlapmen. , gener11 par1Mr. tract•. and to act In any IC ._ and ot>llO•ted party. Dated all llabllttiee ot th9 Partner-1randchll rtm. Mr. Beach. Born Febru·
Cavalier, Lot •A-0226 .,_,stored. and wfllCll tr• Heutlil Shfll Sufi 2"2 Airway Avenue. Colt• manner OecnMrY to wind recrmoue .ueMN thll t5tf'I and 22nd day ol ~. lo COiiect encl recelVe Falk w.. a put Post Arv 3 1903 in C..t.ania, NAME Cerotyn Hen-toceted al PubffC Storege Tiii• 1tttemen1 was filed Mesa. calff. 92$29 up th9attalfs of the Partner-MAim aTAT-..T November. 1988. Public 111 mon1ee to tne Pwtner-Commander of VFW -1.._J1 •She ,_ • . .-..11 nes.y. Lot •A0928 2065 Pt-U• A~ in with the COunty Cleflt ol Or-cnene &eumgerdnef, Clo ship. The foMowlng pertor19.,. StOfaga Manaoetnent. Inc. INC>. to perform ui.tlng n...-.4loua w..y. .,. survh~
NAME. LAIS. McCall, tnc: Ille City of Costa Mes.. ange County on November 2"2 ~A~. eo.te 0.ted OC10t>ef 25, 1"8 doing buliMM ea: Telephone (116) 244-80&0. contractl, and to act In..., ..... ~1"-~ the by t WO aiatera,
Lot 0.-0770 County of Otenge. Sl•t• ol 9. 1988 MIA, Calif. 92$28 LLL PARTNl lllSHIP, a WESPA~. LTO.~ Oell-AQ9"1 lor Owner. m.anner neceeeary to Wino American Lel)oo of Josephine (D.avid)
Thi• sale wttl be com-California. the good•, ehtt· ,_,.,.. Tl\11 bu1lneu 11 con-C......,... a--• PartMt· fOfnla Umit9d Plr1~iJiet\lp, Publithed Orange Coast up the atfalft of the Pwtnw-ec.ta Maa. Mem-Muran f N .-P91ittve bl<l<llf19 on the 17th II• or perSOtltl property de-Publilhed Orange Coat oueted by' jojnt vwnture ......_ ~ ,_. Mw9t, 0... 18102 Sky P1R Soultl, Suite Oelly Pi4ot NoYenlber 1S, 22, INC> ........ _, _...__ will be O ew...-~
December. 19811. et 10 00 terobed below In the mat-Oelly PllOt November 15. 22. Th• reglatrant com-efat 'ert-1 Davl4t A. A-1, lnllne. CA t2714 \ 19ei ~tees· Nov9fnber 3 19811 uheldn•i _..u':.~ 7 _ Beach, and Anna
Lm on premlMS where Mid •er• ot 29, beoemt>er 6. 1988 menoao to tranncl bull· ,...,.. ~ ,.,,.__ Wtwr91'1 H. Jamee, 11102 T3e0 Ill a a I N c y 'A I • at P1U1N1 ... wn-Tropea of Coaia Mesa;
proo«1Ylattoredandwfllch Kenneth Ouuerrei. Sp. r.353 neu Uftder Ille flclltout C~t PMTNI"· Sky Park South. 'Suite A·l, IOCIATll. e C...._"'8 brother Josepb
IS tocated •I MorrteMOY'"9 & 0073-eng. drssr 2 bd• ' busloea name or names .... c ..... 09Mf8' lrvfne, CA '2714 ....... ,.,....,...., -,: •
Storap. tnc . 1~1 Etec:-lhrH m11C c:tthg P\llJC NOTICE ll•led aboVe on October 11. ,_._ f Is a,:,_. Hw9t. Jedi R. Maurer. 11102 P\a.IC llOTICt ,_. Hint. Qaw.t hit: HA VE (Rose) Pavone of Ironic Lane. Huntington Br~ K Carllon. Sp t988 GeMfet PwtMf; o..td A. S.y Pllttt Soutfl, Sul1e A·t, ""1 .,...., A. ...... OM-Cleveland, Ohio. F\l-
Beech, CA92M9.1n the C11y 18066-2 ed 1t>11. 2 cs111s. alMSI IMrlC.Cflapman,General ~.O-.tl ~lftMr lrvfne.CA927t,. NOTICE CW ere: i-ettlMI; L.,,, H. A NEED? neral M .. was held of Huntington Beach. Coun-drssr. msie bu. file etbnl. MOTfCC °" Par1ner P\ibllatieo Orange Ca.tt Ne.eon 0 McHuHy, 18102 ~'1!J!!*11_.0f' ,.,.., Alt....,...,,., lOda Tuelda N
ty of Orenge. State of C..._ bd tt>lf4 el\rs, t>oo1c stllW, ~SAU This statetnen'I w• filed DailV PllOt November 22. saty Park Soutfl, Suffe A-t. .,.._. -... Pu~ Orl.nge eout y, 1Y 0-
lomle Mr Jot>n Pitdllk•. ·•mp cw ""90MAL wtth the County Cl«tl ot Or-1984 T ·369 trvtne. CA t2114 'GA Delly Piiot ~t>er 22. Reod the closs1f1ed poges vember 22. 1988 at
Auctior-.LJcenMnumber Bri an W 11111 , Sp "'°"'""'•2'5178 ange CountyonNowmber Thlabualn ... 11con-~· 19ei ondyou'resure1ol1ll11l IO:OO A.M. at St.
A170ll. w111 conduct ..,. on 1.oa,-trck body. dlil. 2 Notic.llheret>yglYenlhtt 7. t984 "8JC NOTICl ductedbY-•IWt\lt9doartner-_,,___. T-368 Joachim Catholic: ~..,,.-Salee 11 told with el\r1 2 wtr dllC>ntrS pursuant to Section• ,_411 tlllp Ch h I · 11m11 and,_ The 1ano-Owner r_.... the rtg11t 21701•21716 of the Call-P\.lblltMd Orange Coaet re Gin ft1• regt1tr1nt com· urc . nterment •
lord , __ the rlgtlt to bid to bid It IM .... Purcfl .... fomla 8uliMtU and PrO.. Daiei Nowimt>er 15. 22. '9Cm10U9 au_.. menced to traneact bull· Good Shepherd <Am. -
at ti... ..... Purch._ mu.11 mu11r.>emedewtthcall'lon1y ~Cocle.s.ct•on2321 29. .,.,,, 1988 MAm aTAT'lmNT neaa under the flctttioua etert tluntington
be pelO with c:8lfl and pelO tnd Paid '°' ., •he lime °' of the~· Comrnerdtl T--357 The ~ pel'IOrll .,. bUelneM Mme °' ...... c A L 1 roA " 1 A 0 ---• °'--Broa. tor •t the time of purc:t\ue pureh1se All purdlued Code SecC1on 535 of the OOlna ~ • ~ lbo¥I on ~ 25. ~ · ~ g,......,
Al PUfehaMO gooclt .,. goods.,.. aolO .. ls. and CalltOrni. Pen.i Code llld .,._.,.11111\ftl'r S~M'I MOBIL 21602 11111 ~ Bell Broadway
told "u 11" Ind mutt be must be remoYed •t lhe 1111'19 the provltlon• of the Cali· ,.._ ""'RoL BfQol11'1ur9\ Street, Hun!· JIClk A. ~ u (',AN HLP Chapel. P\erce Bfoa. ~by3~P.M.onlhe of..,. $11119Ubtee1topr\Of fOfnie Auction Lic.nalog M0'1CaOP lngton Beech. C.i1tornl1 Thia llatemlnl ._ t"8d Bell Broedwav Cost.I dey ot the .... Thia .... .. eanc.lttllon In the ~ ot Act the undettAgned....... tll4I wlttl the~ ~ of Of--., • ~ to pnor c:anc.ll•tlon wttlament between Owner at~ .... by oompetltlwl IAU °' OH ml Lut II 115 t 5 anQe County on Nowefl'lber ' Me.a Dinict.on.
In the ...,..,t of Mtttemenl and obligated party. Dated bidding °" tne 30lh day or Not.!UT~ OIWn 04~1d A~. Whittler, 2. ltN (714) 842-9150
c.twMn Morrta Mo'llnQ a lhlt 15th anc1 22ne1 <Sey ot ~. 1988. •I t2:30 ....., ~71 CA 90t04 ,.,.,.
Storage, Inc . encl oOlglted ~ovembef. 1988 PubOc O'dOCk PM on the prem!Me ~ :ll'le~CodaOI TIMI t>utllMM It con. . ~ Orange COll9t party. Storage Manegernent, lftC .,,,.,. MIO prOPerty hat dUCted by: an lndMdual o.lly Not NoWmOet '· 15,
Pubffllled Orange Coast Telepl'lorle (111) 244-IQeO, bMll ttored. ano wtilc:h are t~._: ~ow.:!;' Th• r•oietrant COlft· U . 21. 11111
Delly Piiot ~bet 22. 29, Agent lor Owner located et Pvbllc S.Ofage :::C: t5! w9et 1"" an.t' ~ to tf9nMCt ..,.._ TS44
Deoember S, 13, t9N Published Or111ge Cout 1725 Pomona Awnue In the ' ' ,_, under tM fletltlout ---------1
T-37Ci = P!IOt ~tier 1S. 22, City of C.a MIA. County~~~,. J:':i oue1M1e neint or Nmet PlaJC ll)l1C(
--------19 TJ50 of Or111ge. Stet• ot Call-1t'puCMlc muatlOn IC leld Mo ..._, ~ °" nt• "8JC ll)TlC( tor• the OOods. enatti.. or dr.._ IC 10:00 •.l'ft. on 0-.W L4ltff • .. ~ "'°"""' deecf1bed Ti·--.... -. ~ ....... Ttil9 ..... ,.,.,.. ... .... ...,.... °" ..._ ftaJC llJTlC( bttow h'I ""mettwa ot: ,;;;;;;/' 1i'itf'ne~ .. ,,. ~Cieri!°' Or-.....: UU Aennoul..,..... --------John Cramer, Sp .,.~ 10 _... ..,.. County on No•-W OPJ•IDIML MAim ITA,....-r '9CTlnou9 .,..... 0187-rnllc bQ. llC dlk, 1t ... '. u I G 11 1 c p 2. ,_ ........ .., •
Tfle ........ '*"°" .. ,, U.ITA~ cunoc:aoM.cHdM,tcfV't, 10UU7YHU104H: MrW Nottclltll~ ..... dOlrie~• .,.,..~ ............... ap1u,or*'eequ19 1HVWnO CA...,_. .... 19 ~ 0r-.,.. c... pul'llfll'I to ••etton1 AA COPI CENTER doing~-John Cremer, SP·torttiepurp-.o .. MllflifnO Ollw,_.~l.15, 2110t-2171S of tfla c.1-
IOUTH COAST, 2790 FAA IA.IT CONIUt.T· 0185-ChlM lltdl. 2 dren. lien Of tf1e "'"*'•\,;4'k,, 22, ti.,.. bftla ...,.,_ .S "9-
Hw'!Mlf ate. 301. Co.ta AN1'8. a4'N Via Buen• tblllc:tv9.. c:rtb, plnblftnaoh, T~enc11tottne---. ~ ......,_C.....,._IM .,..._Call. f2'2t tuen., Yorti. l.Jnda, CA rc:t<r 'Ofe'her """ Ceetl of of•C•s 1•Conuc• .. lr'fe .,..feel*" c.11-f2tM Lee Otll, Ip. !1M-flflnl ecMf lleitM and -II-of co.ta, e..elon NI of tM fom1a. 27'0 ~ ••t. 9reotev George Potte, ,..., mllc bill. llcl equtp e;; ~:; c.M1 * ,__ Code ... eo.. ....... Callf.9*1 a..et Vie .... au... JOHPll Yohe, 8p, oMttle1hlHl .. ofNo-N ,rD'ISIOlll Of .. C. Thie -..1neM II con.. YorM Llnlk.CAt2tM m11 ......_dikicatinla, ,... .... ..,_ ,..._ ~
dUCt9d "i uorper*"' me "'"',,... lt con· ,,_ .... '*-... ,...... -. ., e; MOftll-!ii! 2 r-:~· .. u •• •• .. 811 Th• reglatrant oom-~e.y. enlndMduel ltadler ~ M!Mt. 8p w --INft.un ~.!"---••111 =-..J:, ":-11et= ...:::. ':.''~ o.::: ~=-:a~ -~·:o .:= ... ~ ~n. ....... ~-= ~--: -:... ... --~ ....,_ ..... 01 ,_.... MM ~ .. flctl(lowa .,,._.._ ,_... -"8M tt1t , 'Olm .,._ ..,_ -.. -
............ ~ 7, ~ .,.,.. or ,.._ to !ltd•.._ .... PUf'CtW T417 -. IRWll. .... -,..,_., ._ ,_ ..... -.weon10JM111 ,,.. ....... _._.. •M ._.....,_..._.,.
bmln ..... C40 ltedG.Poctt ............... of ,__.:••=·A ....... •,_......._
niM ...,..,_. -.... n. •• ••" -.... ~· All ~ ~go•Jt" • -,.. • ~lit _. tN c.nty a.ti of Oto _. ._COllMY Oel1I of Of'· .......... • to. "" CIL-... ., .. Cllt " Cllll -. .... OoUl"Y on NO ......, Mlflc...ty0fl0.W2t, ................. ... ... -...... fl --
?. "9 -., ........... •llJftar Q ... A M .. _. ' .... ,_ - 7 ,......... ,. ' ,.,...... • ...__ ..
NIA ted Oftllll C.... ll lA Plsd~ C.. ....._ 0.. ~If:........... ..... Ill ... -_.
[ ~[JiMbWl,N!-
Some cancer patients need o
lift to and from treatment. If
you con shore o few hours o ·· ..
week. please coll your l~A:ol
American Cancer Society
office. Join "The Drive to Win"
and discover the reword of
helping in the .fight against
cancer.
cn~:--t .. n.g~ ····= .,.J_e!I_., ...................... ':r: ... =~"-""'Ma••• .. I. ,_ T . a LU,........... e Celo -!!!J!_,!! .. ~·~-e~A!!!K!!l!•~·~-~-!!!11;!;.l!~-!!!,~...-~·-----liillil-..-191'!1--m;;il!lli(li; _________ lli_l-lJ••~--.C.::