Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-11-30 - Orange Coast PilotWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1988 25 CENTS I Landmark ruling means Newport-Mesa district may have to pay back $3 million residential and commercial proiccts within district boundaries. ., Goldsicin agreed with a lawsuit by the Ora• County BuiJdjng lndu5try Aslociahon. which olaimed the dis. trict bas not been justified in collect-ana devck>pcr fees because of dcclin- in& enrollmenL commeraal and SI .SO per square foot of residential development, are used to offset the cost of school "improve- ments or construction deemed necessary because of studenu gencr· ated by those projects. pon-Mna d1stnct reported 1 1987-88 enrollment of l S,693 students, about l SO SlLMknu less tl\an the 1986-87 enrollmenl. 1 proposal to recoup fees already ~ and possibl> modify future fees. ~ d1stnct has 30 days to respond to the proposal. IJ GREG llEll&X ............... A Superior Court jud&e ruled Tuesday that the Newport-Mesa Uni- fied School District ma)'. have to pay t.clt m~ than $3 mdlion in de· veloper ~ collected over the oast A sailor aboard the USS Nimitz was killed today . and another was Injured when an aircraft gun ac- cidentally fired and hit a warplane./ AS Coast A $17 million trust has ·been estabJished to ben- efit severaJ arts organiza- tlons ./ A3 A LITTLE OF 25 lhoppil'I dip Jo Christmas Indez Bulletin Board BoaJness Classlfled Comics Crossword Death notices Entertainment • Food Mlnd&BOdy OJ»nlon People PoHce Log Public Notices :J::.:;---/ A3 A7-8 8~, 86 B8 C6 Ct-t C5 A6 C6 A3 B8 81 .... A2 Deceniber ·gets warm greeting on Coast BJ JONATBAN VOLZK.E ................ The winier month of December should blow in10 tbe OranF Cout with unusually hiala temperatures. althou&Jl die Sln>ftl Santa Ana winds that ~t warm and dry con· djtion1 have bealan IO &de. The wind adviloria iSIUcd b mountain and canyon eras. where winds pasted up to 60 mph Tuetday, were caKded today 11 auau dccn:as- cd ao 20 to JO m~. the National Weather Service llid. Tht p11U are still atronc mousta to wreak IOme havoc °" die Orullt Coat, thoulh. Ailltts at Jolu\ Wayne Airport were forad IO rcverw their normal t.akeofl' anc1 1anc1i111 • piwbel bccaule of the wind&. and police in ~ cities report an _mesa.a nlUllbcr Olllbc alarms. In Huntinaton 8each. the motion· cktectina buqlar alarm 11 the Hunt· i!_llton Bericti Union Hiatt School Dittria ~uanen weat oft' 10 limes earty today. and police blamed lbcpasu. 8Ut evn as the wincts Cite~ I ~. at.able air mua has ltttled over 0 SoUthem CaJjtQmia. Ind it shoukl • tcmpnalures I 0 10 12 deatees ~ aonMI W'oueh the mt of this ....._ Oear *ia are ca.--~die,._. "' ...... dll/Aa) two years, a rulina that puts ·the djstrict's five-year school improve- ment plan in jeopardy. The Iona-awaited landmark de· cision by Judie Leonard Goldstein also puts a question mark next to the school trustees' decision last week to continue charaina fees for future Tbe district tw collected about $3 million in developer fees since carty 1987 and has spent about $800,000, with the remainder in reserve. The fees. 25 ocnts per square foot of Both the commercial and resideo-tw rates charged by the district arc the maximum allowed by state law. The buHders' associauon filed suit in July J 987, clajming developer fees can only be coll.ectcd when a district has growing enrollmenL The New- Lesa than 20 years ago, the d1stnct's student enrollment was nearly 30.000. Newpon-Mesa Su.pen ntenden t John Nicoll sajd Goldste,n his not made a definitive decision about 1he district's ability to collect future fees. NicolJ said the builder's assoctation has 30 days to present the district v. 1th Both sides will then go before Goldstein. who will mne I final ruling. Nicoll admmed that Goldst~n·s ruhng does not bode weU for future construction and rebuilding projects.. The district's ftve-ycar rec:onstruc· lJon plan places the toll school (Pleue eee JUOG&/ A2) ·CM' s tropical paradise in Jimbo Newport doctor faces sex charges Freeway's progress forcing out orcQ.ids awaiting project OK By ROBERT BARKER °' .. ..., ....... Paul Brecht has created the malt- ings of a botanical paradise on two acres of a freeway right-of-way between north and south traffic tancs of Newport Boulevard in' ·Costa Mesa. Brecht, soon to tum 70, collected and cultivated the orchids and other tropical plants over a lifetime in the orchid business. His dream. he said. is to help his plants take root in a botanical prden that he's proposed to Costa Mesa officials. But he's been running into major problems that arc keeping him awake at night, worrying. In the worst case scenario. he imagines the plants being evicted from the me- dian strip and dumped because there's no place for1hcm. Physician accused of molesting young female patients By PAUL ARCIUPLEY Of .. a.-. '9e4 .... Police arrested a NcwP<>n Beach mcdtcat doctor Tuesday on suspicion of ctuld molcstauon after one of bis patients apparent!) a netnpted su1c1de. Qr. Francis James Williams, 64. remained in custody this morning in heu of SS00.000 bail after being arrested on 10 counu of child molestation and I 0 count$ of {>Cf\-., errauon by the use of a forcisn ~ polic::c spokesman Bob Oakley said. Williams' wife. Jean. said the charges were .. tot.ally falJc. ·• -My husband 1s a dedicated pns.- t1an, and tle "''OUld never, never. never touch a child hkc thaL" she said ... h's absolutely ridxuk>us. •• Police were contacted by a counsel· Brecht. who's operated Brecht Orchid Gardens at 1989 Harbor Blvd. for 25 years. leased the median strip six years ago from the California Department of Trans- ponatjon. He believed the state wouldn't extend the Costa Mesa frttWay until the year 2000 and that be would have plenty of time to find a permanent home for his treasures. . . " ~----'-...... ~BIJ.l~.lat91acnn eaodc plant. tllatban to be mo•ed from freeway...,, .. 11. or wbo was work.mg-.;~ ~ sirl who had attc,mpted SU\Cldc. Qakley said. ) Dunng, the counseling SCSlions. she 1Jl~y sa1d htr treatment by' the ncur~n prompted the su1c1de auempt. he said But that wasn't to be, and he finds himself in 1 real time crunch. He's been told to be prepared to relocate his planu by Thursday as Cahrans plans 10 move ahead with long- delayed work on the freeway. botan1cal gardens and 1rbrary to cuy investment by the cu" and no temporary sto,.. at the agnrulrurc officials earlier this year. probably decisions have been reached pend· center at Costa Mesa High School, for the ~ndevelo~ Fairview Parle ing completion _of financial stud a~ but those ncgouattons arc up "' the m the cny's west side. · In the meantime. Brecht and city air. Wilhams· wife said she didn't know why an)one v.ould make such charges about ~r husband, but suggested the &Jrl who attempted su1Clde may be Brecht had prooosed the But the project involves a heavy officials ire trying to arrange for (Pleueeeee<)TAlOCAL/A2) .. (Pleue eee DOCTOa/ A2). Mesa~s say traf(ic city's top pro~lem . BJ JONA THAN VOLZKE °' .. ...,,... ..... Costa Mesa residents rate traffic congestion as the city's top problem and want the city to widen inter· sections, add bicy~le routes and construct more sidewalks1 according toa$30,000surveycomm1ssioned by the city. The survey was conducted by ()pinion Rcscan:h of California tn llt1aart Karl Jr. · Long Beach for an upcoming review of the city's general plan. said Don Lamm. deputy city manager for development services. The general plan acts as a road map for growth. Approximately one 1n three resi- dents questioned said the quality of life ··had become worse" since they moved to Costa Mesa. while an equal number said it had "remained the same.·· About 27 percent said life had become better since moving to Costa Mesa. About half the longtime residents -those livi n& an the city at least 10 years -said hfe in the Cit} "as v.o~ than when they first mo"cd in. v.-hile those who have hved tn Costa Mesa for five )ears thought hfe was about tbesame. Those who said the city has gone downhill blamed lraffic and popu- lation growth. Dttenorat1ng ne1gh- borhood s. noise and over· development also ""-ere hsted as · solutions to what the) saw as the things residents thought were wrong cnv's problems. -.1th lhe Cll). th1n)·sevcn pe~nt of the suges- The surve) appeared to be m h~ lions were related to limiting. slowing with the approval of a growth-or even ·Stopping further de"elop- mtnct1ng mcasurr b) Cost.a Mesa mcnt. · voters Nov. 8. .\t leas1 80 pcrttnt of the respon· Respondents cited Costa Mesa's dents said the c11y needs to widen climate. close prox1m1ty to the tieach ant~ions. provide more bicycle and convenient location as the city's routes and construct ~w sidewalks most anract1"e features. throughout the c1t'.r Th~ SUt\ C) also asked rtSldCn\S for (Pleue Ke COST A / A2) K~rl to.plead poverty fn court Video entrepreneur selling Big Can yon home to payoff 1.25 million in debts From staff u4 wire r.,U Video entrepreneur Stuan Karl Jr. of Newpon Beach. who is cooper- ating in a federal invcstiP.uon of illcPl . campa1an fund-ra1s~na. will plead poverty at his ~ntenc1ng Mo n· day. Karl, who made a fortune m,rket- i"g Jane Fonda workout videos, 1s S l.2S million 1n debt and 1s 1n the proccu of sclhna his Big Can)on home forSl .8 m1lhon to raise money. But Assistant U.S. uomey Nancy Wieben Stock, still wants Karl. who has been spared pnson for helping an the invt1t1ption, to pay a "substan- tial tine .. and serve 1.000 hours of community service. court documents show. Karl. 36. pleaded gualt)I tn 4.ugu t to 1llcplly contributing $185.000 to the Gary Han prcsidentaal campaign and to other Democrats. Federal law proh1btts conmbutors from donatma mort than St .000 to each candidate 1n an elcctjon and mort than S2S.OOO per el«tion. The illepl fund ra1s1ng b\ Karl "tears at the intearity of the e)ecuve process as a v. hole ... thC' pr\JSC'Cutor said in ber sentencing memorandum "The harm done ... adds further weight to the grov. mg burden of public cynicism about the .\mencan political process ... Karl.a 1971 graduateofCoron.adcl Mar High School. reportedly ~me a mill1o na1re beforr he was 30. largel~ with has su«CSSCS 1n the video 1ndusll). i\t one time his company's annual sales v.tte estimated to be as hi&h as S 100 malhon. lie faces a maximum $27 5.000 fine and five )Cars' probation when he 1s sentenced Monda) by U Dtstnct Judge Ahc::cmane Stotler Defense attorneys hne told proba- tion officials prcpanna the ~ntcncing rccommcndat•on that Karl 1s $I.JS m1lhon 1n debt. with S 717 .000 of that . O\.\-ed 10 the Internal Rc\enue Service for unpaid mcome la'-CS Kart ts selling his home to raise the mont\. the pr0Sttu1or said. In her sentencin~ memorandum. tock noted kart s .. intense and C\tenstve" cooperation m the FBI '"" esugat1on. The probe 1s focusing on the campaign act•' 111cs of Laguna 8cllcb dc,eloper Da\.1d te10 and Hart financt dil'tt'tor Douglas Roxn. .. Government tn" esttpto~ have bttn impressed with the manner in v.-h1ch Karl has undctiaken the not· ' SO-{>leasant ta k of ·ta ,ng himldf out on lbc record:· 1hc said. Kar1 had been 1nd1ctcd on 12 counts by a federal vand Jury an June. He pleaded guilt) to tv.o counu 1n (Pleue eee SA.aL/d) Robbery victim says jail escapee CJ*afty fOUAd tnlO their 1Claway car. shatter· iN the rear wtndow. The three CtQPed. despite Prk."e's collntcr- at~ but we~ eventually captured by policc. Allofthcwspccts remained 1n,a1J until 10 *J: ..,, when one of the .. ._,. ........ ·"MicMel Lee Taylor. ancf tow omer •• • o pulled off a bokt ~"°"'a ~ftC'tation 1ree at \be en• -·•;Iii m San\& AftL OM ol • mw. howeVCf, ....,....ay ... hVUnd ... -CQ~ --C91"..... MolMr laler ••<actered. PnC'C said Tuetdl)' that he had fow ~-omcs about mttt1na Taylor 111in .. "I did feel more comfonabte v.hcn he was in there:· Pnct s.id. "But he's a ~tty smart IU~. and l thank h1S pnOC'\t)' 1s savil\& h.s own skin. rathet than any \and of revenee. lie 'NU raana so )'Cat'S and l'm Mitt he was looluns at that as 1 hfc ten~. M>' guess •s. that ht 's.JO'n& to con«ntrate onst1y1 .. ~. Prict said lus fteq~nt ~tacts w.tb ~a invtttieaton ®rina tht maabW\t fOf Ta,IOt last sp;"I aftd summer \cd tunt to beheve lht .. \. fu11t1\t v.as an 1ntcll nt and re. sourttful man. "'He's 1 prett} sharp gu)," 5ald Pnce. "l thmlt he's ~n c:ons1stcntly u~tunatcd by ~t of the people •ho have been after him ... On• County Shtntrs Otoan· ment officlah ad:no-kdfC that 'ra)'· · lor IS 1 mft)'. ~ mminat arid behe\le 1t was he Who matcnninded tbcncape. "I lhink he's eotlll to bt out a *'a umc. 1f lhc'Y caldl lum ac 1U ... Pritt ~-He'1Mdplcatyo<timc10Aath t'nOM')' snd ;ewm. t() he .,_... be • f ' ablt \o at~or a sood -Ntl1lc." But he lhatT1~1or ... hohaaa long hi Story of en me. m•f not be ablt to sta~ awa} from tus cnmulllt profl ion fottvct. "His caSh could run low. and tbn ma} be bc'll rtmembCr blow eat)' it 11 lO knodt off ~lf'} 11ora and he'll reactivate his crack,"' Price M.: "Thtn \he pol1tt w1U hmttt a~-­ a.nd tlileJ may ~ him. .. ~w:rM=~~ Dt01R•ea1 ~Cllliftty. iJll•-ac .... 1A11 Jury selection dr~tng on. in LA ,.s Night Stalker trial LOSANOELES(AP)-Officially. rape, murder and. in one ca1C.. lite the trial of Ni&h• Stalker defendant IOUlina out of 1 victim'• e,a. Richard Ramirez bepn four months ordered Ramirn to stand trial aao. but not a sinsJe juror bas been Ramirez.. who was said 10 have seated as the notonous case stretches dabbled in Satanism and once into its founh year. shouttd. 1Hail Satan!" in coun\ ~ Attorneys were asking their final 13 counts"Of murder in the ltnl'lll of questions Wednesday in the second ni,httime auacks, mostly in I 98S. He of three phases of jury selection -an a1So is charted with 30 other felonies intensive inquiry into the views of includina rape. robbery and at- prospective Jurors about the death tempted murder. penally. The shaaY-baired drifter, linked to But testimony about the killinp the crimes l11rouah items stolen from that spread fear throuahout Los vic:tjms· homes. ~ captu~ and Angeles in the summer ofl 985 is still beaten by angty residents of an East months away. Los Anaelcs nei&hborhood IS he tried In Los Angeles and across the tostealacaronAa& 31, 198S. country, witnesses wait for 1 call from If ju'rors convict nim of even one ~r.uty District Attorney P. Philip murder and special circumstance Ha pin telling them it is time to alleption, they must then decide recount their &)\astly talcs of horror whether to imeose the death penalty fora,·ury or decR:e life in prison. . . 'fyi I . f he . L ' • Man_y of their tern ng accounts n spite o t paanstaaJDI JUry were first told two yeaJ! qo at a selection, Ramiru' lawyer, Daniel preliminary hearing for Ramirez. a Hernandez. insists publicity bas 28-year-old from El Paso. Texas. A made it impossible for bis chent to judge who heard that testimony about receive 1 faar triaJ. '"We·ve ICCn IOme very ftnc pCople come~~ Hawda laid in •n interveew. .. ~ uve .,.. a commitment to be. fiair and impaniaras t~ can be. But it•s an im.POMiblc positton to put them in. .. He said many ~vejuron lived in fear when the Niaht Stalker crimes were toi• on. -Because of the (publicity) satura- tion and the fear and terror they would be unable IO be fair." be said. Halpin vehemently diuarees. "We have been in 1 process of jury seJection since July 21. 1988, and that process has validated our belief that Loi AnttJes with its lalJt and diverse population does ~fford the defendant I forum in which he can ,Ct I fair trial, .. said Halpin. "We have confirmed that there are indeed a larae number of prospective jurors who fnow little abOut the facts of this case and are capable of malcina unbiased judgments upon the facts as they are ~nted during the coune of the trial," he said. ESCAPEE DESCRIBED AS 'CRAFTY' ••. FromAl., ... "The only thing that bothers me is overnowdingand with thecounsand that it's a repetitive thing. that it's the ACLU always nipping at his heels. happened before," he said of the I know they're embarraSsed by this, rooftop escape ... You'd think they and I don't want to be too hard on could put dogs around the perimeter them." of the secrity fence or something. "But I know Sheriff (Brad) Gates Taylor. JS, escaped from the jail has his hands full over there with the Nov. 20 with four other inmates who Newport man shot to death cleaning gun cut throuah a security fcnc:esurround- ina 1 fiffh .• floor rooftop reciation yard. The five then lowered them- selves to an unsecured roof several stories down using a rope fashioned from bedsheets. They then either jumped or lowered themselves to the ground and fled. One of the men, Ly Hung.broke his lq in the attempt and was unable to flee. He was recaptured shortly after- ward. 'Three offugitives. Taylor. Richard Autw1y and Steven Wilson, •com- mandeered 1 car belonaing to 1 Sanaa Ana man and fon::ed the man to drive toO•rden Grove. There have been no repons of tbcir whereabouts since then. Eleazar Gonzales, a 20-ycar-old murder suspect, evidently stayed in Santa Ana, where his family lives. He surrendered Tban~vina Day. A Newport Beach man fatally injured himself Tuesday while clean- ing his shotgun. COST A MESA.PROBLEMS ••• Hany M. Baker Jr., 63, suffered a mortal wound to the head while cleaning a Browning 12-PU&C. $hot- gun, police said. When Baker's wife left their Jasmine Cruk home. he was takinJ a shower. She returned to find him slumped over while sitting on a chair in the patio just after 4:30 p.m. H is rifle and clcanina materials were nearby, including a rag still in his hand. The retired executive was planning a hunting trip next week. his wife told police. Investigators found no evidence of foul play and no reason to suspect Baker intentionally shot himself. His wife said he had been in good spirits. His death was ruled accidental. From Al Three-fourths of those surveyed suPt>_Oned the idea of "conductina a feasibility study for a local shuttle system in Costa Mesa.·· The youn~r ~odents were mott RlCeptivc to the shuttle su~tion. The I S-mtnute telephone inter- views were conducted between ScpL 16 and Oct. 6 and included 61 questions. The firm polled 600 resi- dents, obtaining a confidence level of 95 percent. The vast majority of the people contacted. 91 percent. were wbate. while 3 percent were Latino and 2 percent were Asian. The remaining S percent were classified as "other." The averqe age was 46 ycan old, and the average income was S4S.SOO. Slightly more than half of the rcspon- dents, S4 percent, were women. A poup discussion with Cosaa Mesa residents and business owners cond~ by the research company also found that traffic was the ptimary concern. In the poup discussions. thouah. the most popular solutions to traft"ic: were to synchronize traffic liahts., improve the bus system and extend bicycle lanes. In both surveys. other items aside from traffic were alto ranked as "serious"~ respondents, indudina; Ulct of iffordable aenior housina. an increase in ~ts and con- dominiums; d1~ir of streets and sidewalks, unsi&fllly and unkcpt houtcs. traffic noise and an increase in number of hith-rise buildings. DOCTOR FACES MOLESTATION CHARGES FromAI sufferi~a from mental problems. "I heard the $irl of the family that started all thas is in a mental institution," she said. Oakley declined to say how many alleged victims were involved in the c.ase, although all were minor girls. The alleged incidents date back to 1985. he said. Williams allegedly examined the girts behind loc~ed doors in his offioe when no nurse was present, Oakley said. "He conducted repeated pelvic exams of minor girls with suspected neurolog.ical disorders and photo- graphed them in the nude on each visit." OakJ~y said. For example. one patient went to see Williams· about a neurolog.ical problem in her neck. he said. The doctor still asked her to disrobe and ~onductcd a pelvic examination and 1ook photos, Oakley said. Jean Williams called the charscs against her husband "lies ... "The polioe arc sar.ing a lot of false thinp." she said. ·These are such lies. Armed with an ~t warrant and search warrants for his home and offioe, Newport officers confiscated more than 400 videotapes and photo- graphs. The photographs were not of nude &iris and investigators had not yet &ecn able to view the videotapes. Oakley said. Williams was pulled over and arrested at 9:45 a.m. while drivina cast on Coast Highwa)' near Jam- boree Road. He is a longtime resident of Cameo Shores in Corona dd Mar. Williams about seven ,YCl1:'. having worked with him prcvaousJy at Col- lqe Hospital of Costa Mesa. "I know ham very well," Faden said. "He's a neat guy - a very religious guy, and very caring. He comes from Just a beautiful family." Tami Parrott, hospi&aJ adminis- trator at College Hospital, said Wil- liams is .. hiably regarded" at the facility where be has staff pri"ilegcs and performs surgery. Polioe are asking any other past patients of Williams who allqedly Reeived similar treatment t<>conaact Detective Mike Morri'son at 644-3776. Hejust recently opened an offace near Hoag Memorial Hospital in the Oakley said Williams was expected new Superior Medical Center build-to be arraigned today. ing at 1525 Superior Ave. Williams' wife said she· expected Building administrator Barry her husband to post bail today. His Faden -shocked to hear about lhe attorney was unavailable for com- allcgations -said he his lnOwn • mem Olis morning. - BOTANICAL GARDEN IN JEOPARDY ••• From Al "People should have a garden that they can go to to get away from the hustle and bustle of modem life." Brecht said. His prized possessions include about 5,000 pots of epidcndrum i>rchids, the sin&)e la~t collection 1n the West. he believes. The epideodrums, which look like tiny versions of cattleyas that used to be the m~or floral decorations on g.arls' formals, come in every color of the rainbow and "would look like beaven" shimmerina on the slopes of a botanical prden, Brecht said. Epidendrums arc native IO the bighcr elevations of Mexico and Colombia.. Brecht said, sivina them the abiliity to Oourish in cbilly nighttime temperatures. "Orchids can arow outside. People just have to do at." ' In addition to exotic orchids that he hybricfua, Brecht has a number of e>ts of rare species of cymbidium 'raccyanum that he said was dis- ~~~Piii .... Ol"PICa lllO .... .., II, Cclele ...... CA covered in Australia .. before I was born." That plant. which he said received an aWUd from the Royal British Horticulture Society, will get a favored spot in 1heprdensaJong with banana groves that currently provide his employees fresh fruit1 manao trees, a .,-ove of Norfoht Pines.. poinsettias, fems, bromeliads, sue; culcrlts, papayas and many othet planJ$. He has 1 mature papaya tree in his yard at bis Irvine home that produoed three cro_.PS a year before IMt years cold lpdl, Brecht said. The tree is mak.ina • comebtlck. Costa Meu City Council mu Pttcr Buffa aid he lites the idea of a botanical prden '"'Very muda" and SU'OfW)' IUJ)POftl the concept ··11lunk1t would beapae thins for the community. But t~wiU bavcto be a study on what the COlll would be. "I undetltand that Paul has a wortd~lus coUc:ction. I'm vay •ti .. fted with anythina not to do with (addinal more traffic. .. City Manqer Allan Roeder said Brecht's proPosaJs .. have a lot of promise" but that cost is a real concern. He expects to make rec- ommendations to the City Council on the feasibility of the proposal in two months. Roeder said the prdens would r'q)letent a multiminion dollar in· vestment and that operation and maintenance COllS would be .. in the hundreds of thousands of doflan a yar." lrecbt Slid be bas o&red IO be c:waecw but would apect to be pmcs. He llid tbe llrden 11rill be a m...um olpllntl ancJ an educatioMI plllce for the public and 1 beautiful place IO vWL '°Ccl1a Maa has just about every-thina." Brecht Mid. ••A pat boc9ftical ..... would make tflinp eo111plele. .. a .. ............ , •• Colta ..... ()At~ ~ -. ...,....,., ......._ a ..,..., ...... , Ja.tcall 842-6088 ..... ,....,.,,.. .. =--=-==-' ..... ,....,, ..... °""""" ~ _____ ........... .....,... -................. ..., ... ,....a"' ................ ,, .... ...,......_, , . . i __ ...,..__ ---..._ ........ ..... ,_,... .. .,,.,,._ ..... ........ ..,, .. ---Olil 9 f I T T ;t 11 I s; ........... Coast Palm Spring~ a\Vaits Angels' move PALM SPRINGS (.4.P) -Mayor Sonny Bono says it's time for the California Anaels baseball team to decide if it wants to play ball with city off.a.ls. The A•ls. based in Anaheim, have used Palm Sprinpas thcirhotne base for Sptina trainana since 1961 , playina about a dozen exhibition pmcs a year and holdina preseason workouts there. But the team, owned by movie cowboy turned entrepreneur Gene Autry, is being wooed by cities in Arizona. "You guys better get four act together and let us know i you arc coming here," Bono told team of- ficials at a meeting Tuesday. "The ball is in y~ur coun." City officials want the Angels to commit to playing exhibition pmes in Palm Sprinp for the next 1 s·years. In return, they say they will ask voters to aeer!>vei 1 bond issue to either refurbish the current stadium and workout complex or build a new one. Team officials have said the cur- rent complex is too small. They want 1 stadium with more scats. laraer clubhouses and more parkina spaces as ~II as an extra practice ftekl. JUDGE INVALIDATES SCHOOLS' FEES ••• homAl. faciJibes cost associated with all planned development in the district at about $48 million. District officiaJs had hoped that developer fees would pay (or about S46 million of that cost. "The repercussions of this decision couJd be serious," Nicoll said. "We have a large list of things that need to be done over the next few years and we've been operating in a deficit situation. Anythin. that takes money away is a problem. · Building lndust~ Association spokesman John Erskine could not be rcactied for comment this momina and other association officials declin- ed to talk about the ruling. Erskine is the mayor of Huntington Beach. District officiaJs presented a report to the trustees last week that they claim justifies cJlarsi9 developer fees, The report predicts that an additional 6,61 S homes will be built in Costa Mesa by the year 20 I 0. More than 11.000 new homes arc expected KARL ... ham Al Aupst. including one count of·con- spiracy involvingefforts to impede an investlption by the Federal Election Commassion-.nd onc--count of mak- ing a s><>Litical contribution in the name of another person. Fonner employees testified that Kart asked them to contribute up to S 1,000 each to various candidate$, then reimbuncd them in cash. • for Newport Beach, the bulk of those in the •~yet-undeveloped Irvine Coast area. Using a standard of .23 pupils per home, the repon states that those new homes will produce an additional 4,080 district students. "You sell houses partly becaute you have a good education system. Most ReaJtors will tell you that," Nicoll said. "Had we not been able to sell property over the years, we wouldn't have been able to keep up the district and have award-winning schools." Spencer Coven. attorney for the d istrict, said last week that even if the judgmel\t went against the district, it would be difficult (or the builder•s association to reverse the district's fee structure. ••They mi&ht be able to do some- thing about Tees collected up to this point. but we'd still be collecting fees," said Coven. who could not be reached for comment this morning. Nicoll said the "justification re- port" presented last week is the result of a new law -AB 1600 -that ~uires school districts to tie residen- tial and commercial development lo school facilities needs. The Jaw docs not go into effect until January, but Nic:Oll said district officials were hoping to avoid any future developer fee djsputes by preparing the report this year. Ac:cordinJ to the/justification re- port. five district scHOols will need to be reopened in the next few years to serve new district students. One school, East.bluff Elementary, was reopened IS a kinderprten-only fa- cility this rea!· The district is predictina re- construct.ion costs of about $2.S million for the 1988-89 9Chool year1 including work at Eastbluff ana Ada.ms 9Chools. Of' that amount. the report states that abo~ 26 pm:ent, or $593,400, is "paniaUt attribu&able .. to development-related pow. '"WARM DECEMBER ••• Jl'romAl Hi&hs at the beaches Thursday shoufd nlftlC from the mid-70s to low 80s, y.ith inland hifhs from 80 to 86 antJcipatecS,..OvcnU.ah-Llows toni&ht should drop· to the hiah 40s to mid-SOI &Jona the beaches and the m~ to low 50s inland. Hiah desert bi&bs will ranee from 64 to i2 with low de9cn biabs from 78 to SS. Ovemiaht lows will"'be 28 to 38 in the hiah detens and 42 to S2 in the low deteftl. Nonb to non.bast windl of lS to 2j mph arc alto expected in thedeleru. The mountains should see hiah temperatures in the mid-SO. to fte .._,.,_ Prw c..,._,_ micMOI with lows from 21 lo 31. ,. ,.., ,..._ ~y~.:= -r:tLA.::::-1'0 .. • SeitllCYau. ,. Or8ft09 C0Mt O.U.V PllOTtw• If <zu. ND II 'IF a -M.1. Christmas W alk s lated Sund ay in Corona. d el Mar UCI, arts groups to get $17 mill o The Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce wiU spoosor ill annual Christmas WaJk Suaday from noon to 5 p.m. The event wiU feature enlenainment - iochadina suotlina mimes. minstrels., carolen and jualen-u well u a puppet show, a zoomobile and musicmobile and seasonal refreshments. Drawinas wiJt be heJd for 120 prim. The pUblic: is invited to the annual merchants' promotion and admission is free. GeaealtJ6lcal talk la BB John Hanssen of Costa Mesa-a descendant of Benjamin Franklin and Daniel Carroll. both sipen of the Constitution -will display artifacts from the Revolutionary War era in Huntinaton Be.ch Saturday. The c~hibit at the city's main library will be highlighted by a pTCSCntation by Hanssen and other members of the Orange County GeneaJ~caJ Society at I 0 a.m. The display wiU run through Jan. 27. CaH Hanssen at 646-6333 for details. Tax 8eJJJlnar ln •esa Senior membes of Kenneth Leventhal &t Co.'s Oranac Couftty office will present a free seminar on how businesses ca11 take advantage of recent tax legislation Thursday. · The presentation is scheduled from 3:30 to S:30 p.m. at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa. Call 640-5000 to secure reservations. Fitness program In NB The Newport Center office of the Newport Beach Public Library will present a proararn on "Fitness After Forty" Monday at noon in the library, 8S6 San Clemente Drive. Dr. Susan Hutchinson will conduct the session. part of the library's continuing Brown Bag S~kcr Series. Call Jackie Headly at 64~3 I 77 for additional information. Networklng seml nar set A seminar entitled "Networking for Fame and Fortune" will be pTCSCnted Monday from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Little Inn on the Bay, 617 lido Park Drive, Newport Beach. Susan Linn, a public relations writer, will be the course instructor. The fee is $20 and the class is limited to 18 people. Call 786-1320 for funhcr information. Centerpiece workshop The Natural Holida)' Centerpiece, a two. session work.shop, will be offered Monday and Dec. 12 at the Newport Beach Center of Coastline Community College, 3 I 0 I Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar. Supplies will be available at the first meeting, from 7 to 8 p.m., with the second session scheduled the following Monday from 6 to 9 p.m. The registration fee is $19, and more information may be obtained by calling Coastline at 241 -~ 186. Cancer support g r oup Living Options. a support group for families living with cancer, will meet Monday at 6:30 p.m. at the Health.Ed. Center of Mission Hospital Regional Medical Center, 27451 Los Altos, Mission Viejo. Registration information is available at 364-l 770. All support groups arc offered free of charge. Volunteer n eeded The Easter Seal Society is looking for a volunteer to work two or three days a week in the society's Costa Mesi" office, 151 Kalmus Orjvc, Suite f·l . Duties include light typing, answering phones, bookkecpin& ·and direct mail maintenance. CaH Jeannie at S4S.2033 for further information. Wednesday~ Nov. 30 No meetings scheduled Thursday, Dec.· 1 No meetings scheduled •1ow11n1cX ............. An insurance compuy heirns hu escablisbed a S 17 million trust \0 beMfit 1evcral ans ~nizationl and thc UCI Collcle o( Medicine. whole portaon of the trusl is the lafltlt privaae aift in the unavcnitf1 24.ycar history. Edra E. 8,ophy. cta•ter of Farmers lnsunnce Group co-IOunder WiUiam Cheney, unounced the establithment of the tnast TULHday: Broohy. 76. is a {Qnner Santa Ana resident whole father farmed Irvine R.aoch land around the tum of the cen1ury. She now lives in Palm Sprinp. Exactly half of the trust, $8.S minion. will provide the UCI Collqe of Medicine witb tUnds rot medical reteatCh, educa1ton and=· care. The Sl.S mtllion trust 11 me .. priva~ donatM>ft in I.ht WUVcnity's biitory. .. Fot UO. the ·Brophy sift servei to ecknowledet the many advanctS that have been rude an med.cu~ and other fidcb and ~leftl our awareness of break· tbf'OUlhswbichhave~ tobem• ... UCI Chanttllor Jeck Pelwon said. The lariat prcviousdonauon wua SI .S mil hon pant made earlier thas year by Don Bren, diairman of The Irv int Co. The ~mainina $3.S million of the trust wilJ be divided between the Oranat County Performina Ans Center. wh&ch will rtccive SS. I million; South Coast Repertory, S l . 7 million; the Oranat Coun· 1y Pbillwmoftac Socittr. S l.l 9 null ion. and me PKlfle Chorale, 1s10.ooo . ··we ~. ol courw. dd~ Ind paecful to * ..,_Y faauly. Thomas Ktndrick. pmicknt of the ~iftl Am Center, atd. "A sapafK:ant endow· met11 is key lo k>ftt~tmn finaocial stability for the ttnaer.- None of the rcci~1 ~ruzatiol\s. indud1, UCl. will actually ~vc any money or about 20 ycan, saad UCJ spokesman Scou Ntlson. The family will' earn antrrcst income from * tnast until that ume. or unol Broohy and her soa. William Gll&Hptt, dae. 1'-e family also has the option to cbanaie wbtch ans poups receive the money and bow much they receive. .......................... Repairing damage Bill Pleld of tlae Soatlaenl CallfornJa Edl8on Co . cata a power lille tbat waa da••&ed when another llae anapped TaMdaJ morn.tac on lnhae A •enae. Some 2,200 EdUon caatomen la Costa llaa and l'fewport Beech were wttlaoat powa for •ore tMn 30 mJna te. wblle repaln were •Nie. State preparing to reinstate Cal-OSHA at voters' request , '. . SACRAMENTO (AP)-The state will hCflS Proposition 97 and reinstate the full Cal-OSHA worker safety program. a state official said Tuesday. Ron Rinaldi. director of the lndustnal Relations Department and a main oppo- nent of Cal-OSHA and Proposition 97. issued a statement saying that S8.5 million will be spend dunng the current fiscal year on the program. "I don't believe the voters of this state. the PmPOsition 97 authors:-or the leRiS- laturc expect Cal-OSH i\ to be restored O\crnaght.'' R1naldi·s statement satd. -sut the~ all expect it will be mnstatcd as rapidly and effic1cntl)' as possible. ··we tfave alre.id) taken the ncccssaf}- steps to completely restore Cal-OSH-'\ an acqordance with lhe "1sbes of the voters.'' Pftsannouncemcntcamea day before an ASSt'mbly subcommltl~ plannro a hear- ing on lhe status of the reinstarcment The subcommittee on safety in the workplace 1s chaired by Assembh·man Dick Flo;.id. 0- Hawthorne •. Rinaldi said Cal-OSHA wttl be ~ established at lhe same IC\el 1t was in June 1987. JUSl before Gov. George °"1· kmqtan ~etocd the funds and icmunatcd the pri"Vate-"orkplacc pomon of the stale pr~ram. Rinaldi said the proposed 1989-90 budget which wtll be announttd m Janual') b) lhe Republican governor. will propose spending S32 m1lhon for Cal- OSH A. Body of missing fisherman surfaces in Hi.zntington 's Central Park lcike BJ ROBOT BAl\UB °' .............. The body of a fisherman who b.ad been miuinc for seven days was found Tuesday ftoetina on the surf.ace of Lake Huntington bl Huntincton Beach's Central Part. Tbe dead man was identified as Hans Timothy BJ.air. 32, a resident of Weed in Nonbern California. He and his ~ ~Y were visitina relatives in the area. LL Ed Mcf.rtaio wd today there were no si&ns of foul pe.y and t.Mt the death Q appears to be accidental or a suicide. Blair suffered from Hodakins Disease and his health apparently had been dctertoraung, be said. · An autopsy is schedWed todar. McErlain said Blair and • m end went fishing at the lake, located between Edwards and Golden West s~ts. about 4 p.m. Nov. 22. The! friend went to the restroom for a few minutes-and when he IOI beck,_ Blair was missing. But bis fisbina Pole. bat and smalf dog were still there, Mcblain said. The friend searched the area and then called Bl.airs wife. -.'bo ~ her husband missing the next day. McErlain Slld. . Police officen. accompanied b) )'OUDI E.Jlplorcn and M.arioc Safety Caplaln Bill Richardson v.~nt to the area Tuesday to map out a drcdpng plan when BWt's body surfaCcd. be said.. Richardson. who pulled the body asbbrc. said it resurfaced on a mudflat about l 0 feet off sbott in about the same area that Blair-was last~ ias. T~~ Rkbardson satd Lake Huntington \S ... to 25 fttt deep. Bu:rgl a cy__,..,_, suspect linked to slaying ~ By JONATHAN VOLllE '' .............. r. 1k pn~ ~ ID the slaylftl ol • '-' Tustin attorney tS beins bdd in <>.r-. County Ja.d in conDCC'tlon with a H_... j lng\OD Beath bu.pry, where a ha= similar to w murder weapon was • police wd. Edward Dean 8ndFs. 36.. of I ...... Hills was arrested Tba.t\kslivins Day by Chapman CoUcte police as ht ..._..,. tried to cra-.i into t.bc psychoilo&Y bUiidf.S on t.bc campus. Hunti.,.u>n 8acb ~ • Lt. Ed. Mc£arla1n said. Authontin in Oraner ran Bridp' amt ~ a records ~ aad fOUlld -.. "-~~on Btac:b authorities bdd a si.w-~ warrant for 8ridlits. ~.· ina him with a rcsMlmtial rol*:r)' llllid burglar) of the ~ Kedsoo l.aM apartJnent. ~ Meanwhile. Rivcnidt police Set. Dilll . Borden Wd ~ii \be onl:f llllP'Jd .. the sla.>1na of au~ Seiler. whose bod)' was found · viftl Day near Lake Mathews in Ila . · CoUaty. ( The attorncy•s bod) was ~ bf a ' IJ'OUP of otJ-ro.d rnotorcyc:le nck:rs.. lk had been shot tevenl umcs in tbc be9d with a .44-caliber handaun. 8ordco said.. Borden said a .44-<:abber baodpn was taken to the Hunllftl\on 8'ach bwi1arY in .. which 8ridgn IS accmed. ., Thcaun au f<MAnd ~ somcduklttn in• Gardm Gro'-c tchc>olyanl but 8ardra saM1 balllSlic lats ha~ not becD completed, to dctttnunc -bether it was iDdecd \be murder weapon. Sciatt. 50. was ~ miuins Wedncsda) afternoon Whta be &itccS w• appear for a coun heann& at Harbor. Mwlictpal Coun in Ncwpon ae.ch. H• car .. a J986 bufs!tnicfy Con"Cf1r. ... foulMI" near Chapman CoUCate. BOfifm md. -we found t0mc YCIT •ficant C' tdencc lft the \ IC'tim. S ~"Chick that links Mr. ~ lo the murder. -BonkD said. ~fusina to c:ktarl the ~viclentt- -we also ha\-c reports that the suspect was Sttn dn\ana a car matduna the dcscnpoon of the ,,.ictam's car 1n Ora.- Count) on Nov. 24.-·thc scqieanuaid. Robbery •U the a~t motive fOr the killing. Setler. a civil attorney whoec work included davom:s and cbikkustody ca.ses.. ~"IS can) 1na money wMn tut sctn.. but no cash was found on the bod). 8onkft said. But Borden satd Ri~cnidc County Hthontics do not o,ptC1 to fUc murder cba.rFS apaost 8ridltman until laat tlm ~or early next week. -we·\c got to finim the papcl'M)f\ and ~t the reports lOllCthcr:· Borden said. -From ~hat 1 unclcntand.. he is not in ~parch of ~tJn& out. -· McEnaao said Bridles alk:aedfy bu.r-11,anztd the Kttlson Lane a.partmetlt Nov. 2. stealing tM sun and a piw-. tk alkatdl> re1Umtd 10 the same home on O\. 21 ina robbed the occupants ofS.SOO ugunpoml McErta.1n said t~ robbn)' "'icums ~ 8ndgcs and 1c:kn11fied tum to J>!)hCC. Motorist drowns at Dana Point Harbor $16 from a v.oman as she ld't a liquor store at 18880 Brookhurst St. Mon· day at 10 p.c:n. The thief fled on a 3:5S a.m. today a m o1100 detector alarm had gone off about I 0 11mes at Hunung1on Beach. L'nion High School Distnct headquarters. I 0231 Yorktov.n Ave. It was bet.c'C'd that the wind may ha\C set off the alarm. carat dtamond nng and a S40.000 :? cara1 men·s d1.amond nng. • • • Sc~eral 1tcmsof .)C'l>-"t-lr) ~ stoliea from a home in the 20 b&ock of Oca.rp.w T ucsda) aftcmoo:n by someoM v.ho entered the home through the ~1tchen wi ndow. By BOB VAN EftEN Of ... .., ........ After .appe~ntly sutTerihg a hcan attack while driving. a Laauna Niauel m•f\ drowned Tuesday after his c:ar rolled down an embankment into Dana Point Harbor. auahoritics said- A witness said the victim. Robert Brick. ~ was attemptina to parlc al Michael's Supper Club on Dana Drive at 6:3S p.m. when he slumped over onto the stcerin1 wheel. "A P.tkinsaatcndant who spoke to him jusa before the accident uid it looked as if the man had had a heart atud, althouah that's JU.SI a theory c... .... A 47-year-otd man rcponed an u - cmploycc Oueattned 10 tend the ••oetroet 8oY!" out to talk to hun. The Detroit Boys. the u~mplo)tt oplaifted. are two )()().pound men who .. ltke to bmik bones." • • • A buralar •n IM 200 t*>ck o( POrnou SU'eC\ slipped in'° a second· ftOOi l .. tlilttnt t~ en '9ftk>c'kfd ~ door and ilippcd out wllh SJ.J90 wonh of ~ The vtct1m wn in tht procas of movina OU\ ol - pendif\I an autopsy." Officer Greg Moo~hcld. of lhc California High· wav Patrol. said. Brick's car continued to accclcra~ and departed the parking lot. over air embankment. and into the harbor channel. the witness said. "The car became completely submersed and the victim was t111pped inside." said Moorehead. Moorehead said two bystanders dived into the water but were unable to get Brick out of the c:ar. Rick Pk>ws. a dtpu1y coroner. said Brick WIS pronou~ dead It the scene and an autopsy will be co,... dU(ted to drtcnninc c:aust: of death bic)de. ~ • • • Gardening tools valued ai S630 were taken from an unlocked garage on the 1000 block of Calle Indepen- dence Monday aflemoon. LapnaBeach Police were called to Los Robles and El Camino dcl Mar following ~~rts Tuc-sda} of suspects armed w11h a handgun. Officers found onl) threcJuven1ks plav1n1 with a lO) gun. • • • A Center \Cnue n.-s1dent rcponed a burglary Tucsda) with a loss estimated at SJ.2~. • • • Poticc arrested Karen Ltt L\ght· cap. 31. of t...guna Beach. on suspi- aon of drivina under lhe 1nfluen~of akohol. L•lhtcae_""as topped shortl) beb't I a.m . Tuesday on Brooks Street. ............. llCla Bu~rs kicked en the front door of a homt in the 16000~k ofB trttt the apertme1't. but as>l)ercntly didn't • and Slok Sl.600 an )C'"A'tlf) and a move fast tnouah. lclc' 1St0n tel. VCR. and a telephone ---~-. • .. tu A thief on f ainu Dri.,.c cscap('d answcnna mac nt. of-A . • •• wtth $900wonh .,.._.s.. 1ncluclina• Thit,·cs ~open the front door dodt tldao. annm~ mach.inc and at tM Radt0 Shatt. I '976 Spnngdak ochtt hoUtthold stuff. St .. at about l l 20 p.ID. TKtda) and 1 Y•''-stole Sl.500 in tkc11oaic equ1pmtnt ~-~I ••• Laa.iao mu~ suwt the ~ UIN a ~nvcr to c:-lcrt ae a 7-Ekvtn store• 1:'$ 1.m. bttak into a 1911 "=• parktdon IOdu..alcdiD1.whitt:~• .... thSll the I Mm tilOCl Of A ~en~ to won1' o( Matfboto ~ sttal a s1ttt0 Tundll nieht. won • ··~ lei. A man vuit~ ~ waltft ronta1n1n1 A camput police Olftcft R'PQftCd at I II • • • A woman who was shopping at Ralphs at Beach , Boule"Vard and Garfield Avenijt said someone stoic her waUel from her closed purse 1 n a shoppinacart. She lost herCahfomaa dri vcr's f tttnst. c:red.1 t C1l rds and S 360 • • • ~ v.oman ~·alk1na aloni S:an Mtgucl atutt T~1l ~poned Stttllla man around JO >cats old l~1ng on the grass masturbat1n1., ~ • I • Bu~rs toot a .)()().pound safe from a homt on the ~ block. of onh Star with contents 10dud1ng $110.0001n bond SlO.OOOcasb and S I S.000 1n ~"'~Ir) in cash. she said. ._. __ . . . .. ....... Two men rcponcdly grabbed an -\ slo'e and d1sh"ashcrwett stolen armload of clo1h1"1 at Men ~ n ·s.. • from a home under ron~tntetlOft in 9811 Adams \C .. Tucsda) night. the 50 bk>ck of i\losttno bctWttn 6 and fled 1n a Sold Camaro. p.m. Monda' and 8 a.m. Tucsda). • • • • Jtewport 811cll Someone sto&c S300 (rom •. lod~ dnawer 1n a da»r00m at °''ttSllY Buitlars c:a~ off a SOO-.pou.od Hl&b School sotMnme cartitt thss safe Wlth an ntamated Sl.36.500 in month Jewelry from a ho~ on the 2000 • • • • block of S...tiat0 .,htle the \IC1tm A red 1984 ~ 0.)10na •-as ~as on ucation. Amona the 1tem$ stoliea &Om the 1900~of8anan· stolen wttt it\CTaJ ~ b) Paul ca Plft.W.y bctwttn l·l Lm. thls PancntaQS. ancl~J~ a S l 50.000 6 morn•._ Plzza parlor bl FV robbed • •• Po•tt and hand tools ~ stole'9' from a construction silt an \be &100 block of lotne Bouk,•ard M-.Y momma. ••• A mobtlc tc~~ and •vitioa set 1111-ctt stolen from a htn0'8iM parked 1 n a par\.1na stl'\ICtwe 1a dlle 90 block. ofCofl)Onte Park Drive~ ta~ O\ er the wottktnd. . . . ' " ar SIC1't0 \ alued II s I so -stokft on Jambortt 8oulevatd ._ the San DQo frttW&)'. on S....,, bclWttn mtdn11tn &Ad I a.a ll I Aquarium pump causes house flre Bush mending fences with rivals, environment groups WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent-dcct GeOf1t Bush met with le8dcrs of envaronrnental aroups 9oday and displaytd an attitude that oee of the lieaders said showed a ""nilbt and day .. difference from the ltalpn ya.rs. r. . r. ~ 1or the "Bluepnnt 1or me Environment... a coalition of IOlllC JO environmental aroups that presented Bush with detailed Pf090Uls, ·were uniformly positive in dW'acterizina Bush's response to lbeirpls. Ho~. they acknowledacd they bid ruei'ved no commitm.ents from him other than that he would con- sider their proposals and would aSlip key Cabinet nominees to meet with them. Later today, Bush was meet int with former Democratic presidentiaJ can- didate Jesse Jack.ton in a newly conciliatory atmosehere after months of harsh campatp auacks on t.chotber. Bush derided Jackson at one point durioa tbe prnjdential campeip .Sa "I<><* ~nnon," but T~ an aide to the prnicknt-dcct · today's post-election meeti"! typifaed Bush's wish to talk to interested and concerned" people. · -Jackson said durina the campaip that Bush was "not morally fit to lead this nation... but a source close to Jacll<>n Tuesday respectfully re- fem:d 10 Bush as the nation's "team captain.·· One of the environmental· aroups' Weather may halt laan·ch of spaceshuWeTh~y leaden. Jay Hair of the National Wildlife Fedttation, said afta thrir mtttina with lush that hew told the vice praident, "Read my tis-; ProlcC'I the environ~L •• Hainaid Bush reacted positively to the wordplay on his own no-taxes cammip phrase, replyi-.. l wilt. I will." ·- John Adams. ~t of the Natw-al Resources Defentc Cou.ncil. said that hued on the positive reaction of Bush and his aides to the group, .. it's bant to believe that President Bush will not 9ddlea thew issues. We will bt on bis team." Hair said -it's simi>fy niabt and daf' from the Reapn years durina whacb Bush served as vitt president. Deadline for amnesty nears By Tiie AnedlllM Presa Blast killing six firemen · called arson KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) -A dtvallatin&. chclnicaJ aplaeioe \Mt killed lia lirmptm at a 9-illt~y COMlnlCtioa a1e aDd .unaea ..... dows I 0 miles away was CMaled by ~said. ~va~ '*'people to "evaluale &heir alibis" ia T..e.tay•s Dft-dawn fttt that u=.-lllC....., but no anat1 have medc. -.id Set-Grqory Mills. a police spoka- man. . f"ue bdls tolled tlaroueboat \be aty tor the m fht'fllb1e11. who were killed wben a coastruction trailer mded with l0.000 pounds of .,..._ monium nitrate exploded. ri ..... a W. craler in the pound and vir-~ tually obliteratina a fire tNCk. Another explosion ()(lCUJftd 40 minutes laler in a nearby trailer tbat ltOftd I S,000 pounds of the malerial, which is UICd in biahway construe> tiol! ~ to make dynamite ex~.~ evenly. A lot of pays lust find it hard to believe," said fire Capt. Owen Gilcluist. .. No one wants to. Another five OI' 10 minutes. there could have been 20 or JO pys down there ... CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. -Weather officials saKI today that. an lldvancina storm has reduced the odds to one in five that Atlantis and its five astronauts can be launched Thursday on a secttt military satellite mission. A leaki~ tire on the shuttle's main landing gear was a less bothenome concern. NASAs 21-member Mission Management Team met 10 assess the wonenina forecast. which called for winds up to 24 mph. heavy clouds and the possibility ofli&ht rain at the planned launch time. Agricultural workttS who are in the country illeplly have until midniaht to apply f« immiaratioo amnaty. a deadline that is passing quietly and is tainted with cha,..es of fraud. Pde:ad ol ftre e• HC1e la **I 'Illa• -'-ted. Mills said investipton de- termined arson from the pretence of &wo separate fires bumana almost simultaneously at the site. . . Colamnlst Dater trins Natloa.i Boo.t A ..m SACRAMENTO-Pete Dexter, a columnist for the Sacramento Bee wbo also appears in the Daily Pilot. won the l 988 National Book Award for fiction Tuesday night for his novel .. Paris TrouL'' The National Book Award is considered to be second only to the Pulitzer Prize in imeonance in American literary circles. Previous winners have included Thomas Pynchon, Pfulip Roth and John Updike. ' Federal immiaration offices around the country bnced fOr a last- minute rush as the laslcall is made for tbe illep.I aliens' applications for U.S. ~·a special provision of the 1986 immipation law, forcip farm- hands must . prove they harvested fruits. v(letables or other perishable crops in the United States for at least 90 days in a one-year period that ended May I, 1986, to bt el.bit. More than half of the applications ChHd recoverin111 from 5-or~an u.itsnJ.nt filed for the Special Aariculturat e It' r· Workers Prooam have come from PITTSBURGH -A toddler's five-organ transplant was "smoothtt and CaJifom&a. followed by Aorida with much easier" than the only other time such surgery was pcrl'ormed. and she . about 10 percent and Texas with should do as well as a liver recipient. doctors say. Rolandrea Dodge. 3. of about 8 percent. Sia.nificant numbers Fruitland. N.M .. was awake today and was being weaned from the respirator. bavealso been filed in the Northwest. said Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh spokeswoman Sue Cardillo. Arizona and New York. Cn••toa ~ee,,. tltle bl Seaate suaes News Sena WASHINGTON -Sm. Alan Cranston of California was re-decled Senate majority whip Tuesday, easily fending off a challeftee b the position be has held for 12 )UfS. Cranston defeated Sen. Wmddl Ford of Kentucky on a 30-12 vote. He sa.id the SS.member Democratic caucus stopped countina votes when it was dear he bad won the numbc:r two party leadership position. Survey shows men clOsing ·housework gap Wright ur~es Bush to submit Dudget WASHINGTON (AP) -House in bis own bud&et rccommen- Speak.er Jim Wri&J'lt caJled on Prcsi-dations." Wright said ... We trust that dent-elect ~ Bush today tQ. he will submit those rccom~­ reject the SUllCSlt<>ns of some of his dations no later than the middle of own advisers and instead rnove February so that our~ commit- qu.ickly to submit his own bu<!Jtt tees can consider them carefu~ P.fa.n to Congress as a way of calming wci&li them apinst the nation's Jinny financial markets. ano make such modifications as the In makina the suggestion. Wri~t legislative branch is required to make joined a chorus of Democrats who in in time for the passage of the budlet rettnt days hav~ been turning up the resolution... . ~re on Bush to spell out his own Wright's comments came in re-- ideas forcuttirag the federal deficit by marks to .. the National Economic an estimated SJS billion in the next Commissiort. a hiJh-level advisory fiscal year. . -. &tQU{> created by Coqress to draft a WASHINGTON (AP) -Men arc wielding University of Maryland. Robinson compared the housework by Bush bas bttn silc.nt on-the ques-defaat-reductfon plan. ' th .. mop and tendinft the stove more often than 1 . ud. f tionofwbelhtthewiltsubmithisown Another speaker before the com-" f h By companson. in 1975 women spent thrtt ana yzina st 1es o how people spend their time. spendina ~ or simply go directly ·mission today. former Federal Re-eveT before. yet sti doing only hal as muc times as long as men on housework, and in 1965 done in 1965 and 1975 by the University of into nqouations with Congress over serve Board Chairman Paul Volcker, · housework as women. a new study shows. the ratio was nearly six hours of housework for Mic.higan and in 1985 by bis center. the 1990 budgtt. echoed warnings made two Weeks aao Women toil about two hours at home for women for every hour JNOrkcd by a man. The shift in the housework burdtn. he found. Under law. PJni<knt Rcapn must by his successor, Alan Greenspan. every one hour of housework do~e by men. reports .. Several important trends account for shifts results from both an i~ in the time spent on submit a budget for 1990 by Jan. 9. Vokker said the .. risk of doiq sociologist Joh~ P. Robinson 1~ the ~mber in who docs how much housework." Robinson housework by men. and a decline in the time spent Whik Bu.sh would have the option of nothin& woul<I ultimately raise the edition o( Amencan Demographics magazine. reponed in his study. These include declines in the by wom~n. submitting his own bud&et plan to ~nger ofa "severe recasaon.. sprad- Yet this represents sigmticant progress in just share of households with children, a smaller share In 1985. Robinson found. men averaacd 9.8 Congrcss once be takes offitt Jan. 2g. ·1ng ~d. and cha~enz.ed by 20 years. according to the stud) by Robinson. of married-couple bou~holds and increasing hours of housework weekly, while women put in asReapndid 1n 1981.someofBush s stroft§doubtabout Amencan leader- dircctor of the Survey Research Center at the number of women in the paid work force. 19.S hours. advisers have btto urging the presi-·ship.' ---------------------------------------------------dent~lcct to skip this step. · ·. ..The cffon now must be to 1tt the Wright and other Democrats want deficit down." Volcktt said ... It is to force Bush to be ~fie on how he esscotial to suppon what can and would cut tM defiat without.raising should be a strona economy com- taltes and still keep his other cam-~titivein world m•rketsand capable paign promises to boost spending in of rnanr more yean of sustained such areas as education. day care and growth.· OFFERS . •• % • Current Rate* Annual Yield \ PRE Cl I F:CKING. •FUNDS f'SUC INSURED RR SAFETY •EARN A PREMIUM RATE WITH COMPLETE UQUJDrIY -AT ANY TIME •A MINIMUM BALAl'CE OP ONLY $10.000 AND YOU MAY DEPOSIT AS Muoi AS m.m •PREMIUM CHFCKI~ AVAil..ABl.E AT MORE THAN l&s LOCATIONS nfRCXJGHOUr ~IA •NO PF.NALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL! YOUR RJNDS ARB AVAil..ABl.E WHEN YCXJ NIE> 1HP.M IF YOU HAVE ANY QUES'fiONS.IUDARDING AMERICAN SAVINGS WE WErJX>ME YOUR CAIL . l-800-247-7197 • M9f)day-friday 8 a.m. to S p.m .• Satutdaly 8 a.m. to noon environ~tal cleanup. Most of the witnesses before the .. At the beainning of a new p('C'Si-commission warn of the economic dcntiaJ term. ~·want very much to dangers awaiting the country if the give fhe new presjdcnt· ample op-Bush administration does not deal portunity to address these problems quickly with the deficit. - .. EXPLORE THE INCOMPARABLE CCESSORIES. FINE GIFT ·ITEMS AND CHRISTMAS .a~~·~·&Jl~a .. GS OF RAUL DESIGN • 5572 MCFadden A.e .• Huntlnltoo Beach, CA 92849 (714) 89Ul05 HOURS: MOnday thru Sab.aday I 0:00am-5:00pm • l ~ ' ~!~cartk toc1 olomhbian4 _ =:r~ san 0 or killed, another himlurt r ':~(AP)-A ! ~~-~-·-upgedlnU.N. in igbtdeekftreODN tz [ lil*blta ... 1Colomlliudru&cartel yean llO• authorities said. UNITED NA~~) -A MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) -A spokesmen in the Penaan Gulf reaion Tbe en.W111 fire ca....S .. .,..,, or _. 1M ci:IJ'• aimHDfes1ecf south DepUty Lot Anteln Police Chief U.N. committee o illlb de-laiJot on the USS Nimicz wu kiUed and at U.S. Central Command bead-manor dam.ls" to .U aircnft, IDOlt b lldl Ml ..... Ima.bed with the Glenn Levant and U.S. A~ nounc:ed the U.S. re6IM1 so lea Va.er today and another wu injured when quanen in Tam~. Fla. of them A-7s, Banlett said. Fi~ a! ..-ol two mca. one of whom Robert C. Bonner called Beaaett 1 Arafat into tbe coutry Md U...S a an 11ttr1ft pan accident.ally fired and Theldentitiesofthecasualtieswere fiahtmusinafoamandwatetbrouabt ,, ~ S 10 millioe a weet worth of arrest one of the most sipificaat in revenal of the decilioa iD a lill'lb hit another warplane, causina a fin witbhekl pend1n& notificaiion of fam-\tie blue under conuol. be said. n eoc:ai•, Athoriael laid. recent years in the war aeaimt illicit molution 1ent ao the Ocneral At-on the ftiabt deck, military officials ily members. Theoffiaals uid they did not know ..._ .. Wllel'beed Bo" Bennett, dNo. 1embly today. said.. • Navy officials said the injured what .type~f .un wu involved, but q wt.o recen~ moved to Tempe, Ariz.1 .. Bennett is the biebnt~ street ·The 121-2 vote Tuetdayevcninaby The fire was controlled in about 20 sailor was flown to a U.S. military the COiuir 1er~mber is nor· ftom~Vlll.olAiwelel.ana ~ua who'• ever coDnected with the the ueembty's lepl comminec in-minutes,butsixaircraft~ontbe hospital in West Gernwly. U.S. mallyequi with 20mmcannons. Mario Erne11o Villabona-Afvarado, a Colombian cartels. and tltil i1 the diclled how a.ided the voie in the deck were darnaaed, the officials said. sources said he suffered burns over at Tbe A-6 uuder " an aU-purpoee Colombian national, were orpniz.en sinpe most important parUtienhip fUU aRmbly is likely to be. The 90,944-IOft, nuclear-powererd least 70 percent of l\is body. combat aircraft.. " ol a ..aioewide drua ri111 bead-ever esaablisbed between a ~ The United Scates and lvael op. aimaft carrier continued its mission Chief Petty Officer Joe Bartlett, a The officials said an inveuiption ,. ....,...... iD Loi Antela that di~ Sout&Central drua dealer and the poeed the resolution, which rec. in the North Arabian Sea. public atrafrs officer aboant the into the incident had bepn. .-,i tribuleda10naweekofC111Ckcocaine, Colombians," Levant said. ommended the State Department The incident occurred about 2:50 Navy'sPersianGuJfflqship,USSLa TbeNimitzarrivedintheArabian •s ..,.. and local officials said Tues-.. He wu dealina rouahly SlO iuue a viu to the Palestine Libera-a.m. while crews were performin1 Salle, said a 1un mounted on an A-7 Sea on Oct. 29 with an eiabt-thip dat. million worth of cocaine a week in non Orpnization leader so he can "troublMbootina maintenance" on Corsair fired by accident. bittina an bettlc,poup to suppon U.S'. oaval Bennett. 24, was arrested Nov. 19 Loi Anlelft and all over the coun· addresa the General Astembly on the the parked aircraft. accotdina to A-6 lri'l\-uder parked nearby. operaoons 1n the Penian GuJf. at a haxury home he recently try," Levant added ... He wu suooly-Palestinian issue. • purdlaled ill Tempe. Villabona-ina t.houunds of rock houses Tiom Arafat. in Sudan for talks on the Alvarado. 28J.. alle8edl1-a rankina LOsAneela to Detroit You won't see Middte East situation, was quoted u member of l,;olomDia 1 Cali drua a biaer dooe dealer arrested in callina the U.S. decision not to arant cartel, wu taken into custody the Soutn..CCntral fora Iona. Iona time." him a visa "illepl." The Middle Ea)t same day ill Malibu. lnfonnation was pthered from News A&ency quoted Arafat as saying Bennett and Villabona-Alvanido wiretaps on both men's phones. that if Washincton does not let him into the United Stat~ the General 49er quarterback pleads for return of kidnap~ child ., ,.. A.111dai.I Pren SAN FRANCISCO -Quarterback Joe Montana and his wife made an emotional teievised aooeal to the kidnapper of a 9-year"'<)ld girl who is the ~ofan intense FBlSean:h that has yielded few clues and left police baffled. Tiie Su f rancilco 49er sw said Tuesday the thought of losing one of his two daUlb&en to a kidnapper "just about brings tears to our eyes. To watch ~other· parent toiftl throuah that is just devastatin1 to us. We1ust pray that 1t never bappeftl to us and that. bopefully, lbese children will come back. .. Michaela Joy Guecbt wu abducted Nov. 19 from a supen:narket parkina lot ~ be1' borne in Ha~ across the bay from 5'n Francssco. An 8-)U!-old gad ~o wu with Machaela delcribed the man as white, 18 to early 205, 6 feet tall ~th sboulder-leftsth, blond hairand a pockmarked or pimpled face. "We're here as puents ... to ask the kidnapper of Michaela to please release her," slid MontanuaicL . . Assembly will convene 1n Geneva "in the second half of December." Britain abstained from Tuesday's vote because it op~ strona tansuaaic in the resolution. European nauons joined the Arab and non- aligned countries in supporting the measure. · The legal committee, formally called the Sixth Committee, has delegates from aJI 159 member na- tions, bµt not all were present for the vote. The PLO's permanent observer at the United Nations, Zuhdi Labib Terzi, said Arab nations would offer another resolution to move the General Assembly to Geneva if the first resolution passed. ' It would be the first time the General Assembly has shifted its session in protest. Chess player can enter U .S. ; FRANKFURT. West Germany (AP)-A leading Soviet chess player w,ho SC'C]ttly married the U.S. team captain and defected during the Chess Olympiad· received permission to enter the United States, a U.S. consular official said. Elena Akl\milovskaya. the second- ranked player on the Soviet team, married John Donaldson, the U.S. team's non·playing captain, in Greece on Fnday during the chess toumamenL The couple arrived in Frankfurt on Saturda~ to wait for an immigrant visa for Donaldson's wife. .. She ~ived entry documents today and is cleared to enter the United States," U.S. Consulate SJ>Okesman Craig Springer said on Tuesday. Springer could not say whether the couple had already left Frankfurt. AIDS right# act1ri•t tiles of f!Je dlsea.e SAN DIEGO-Dr. It: Brad Truax, a leadina advocate of laW$' protec:Ung ~with .\}DS from discrimination and one of the city's first admittedly gay DbysicianS. died of complications from the fatal disease. He Was 42. Truax, the fi,... chairman of the San Dies<> County Regional AIDS Tas~ Force, died a( 8 p.m . Tuesday in Mercy Hospital, said Bri<lgct Wilson,· a friend and nurse who worked for him. "He had been copsCiousand with us until (T1,1esday) morni~ Israeli La~or Party favors relig~ous-(ree coa)ition when be became unconsciou:S," Wilson said. .. He died q·uietly and peacefully. · JERUSALEM (AP) -The No. '2 Truax. who diqnQsed himself 17 JROnU\s ago, K c~ted with helping ~unty man in the Labor Party said today be ofticials developastratep for fiahting AIDS as a pubhc health problef!1 instead favors renewing talks with the riJht- of a oredominantly p y issue. Most recently, he urged county superv1SQrs and wing Likud bloc and cuttina religious the City Council to enact ordiDJnQCS'"last spring intended to eliminate activities partt~ out of a coalition aovemmenL in py bathhoutis which may oontribute to the spread of AIOS. . The ultra-Orthodox Shas Party set . . • a deadline today for Likud to sign an CaptabJ aJinJt. slJootlng hro self llOIJS . :_m~~tth~nsa~:~~~~~ :~~~( SAN DIEGO -The captain of a commercial s~rtfishing ~t was · rabbis ins~rµctcd the ~udat I~I 1entenced to 2'40 ho\lrs community service for admittedly shoou~g two ~rty lo discuss a possible coahtton California tea lion' in violation of the federal Marine Mammal ProtectJon Act wtth Labor. . of 1972. U.S. Muistrate Ba!JY T. Moskowitz imposed .the sente~ Tuesday The Shas and AJUdat Israel parties after Blaine Noel lfu&heS, 33, of Morro ~y. pleaded guilty to a m1~e.meanor con~~l 11 seats 1n the Kneuct. or chaf'Fofunlawfulty taking the two sea hons near San Oemente.lsland during parhament, e".'<?U&h to !Jlake or break an Oct. 22 sportfish1ng trip, . . . a narrow coahuon. d Semi-Gloss .. TANGERINE If YOU'VE GOT THE SWATCHES, ;_· ~WE'VE GOT-. YOUR CARPET COLORS. Decorating a room and shopping for carpet? Bring 1n your swatches of wallpaper. upholstery. drapes. and paint colors We'll help you find the perfect color and style 1n famous Ou Pont Cert1 f1ed STAINMASTER• Carpet-and at great sav1ngs. We're an off1c1al DuPont Decoratlng Cehter -featur1ng decorat- ing ideas and DuPont STAINMASTEH* Carpet 1n the broadest range of colors and styles . All cert1f1ed and war ranted by Ou Pont. $}899 F s1199 .... c.e,.. VILftT s13c9 ....... " _J)uf\x\t Uttllldll!<.[ Center ( .s13c9 l fJ I ~ () --r=. .... 'aJl:f~•a c;;z;eo11 ;_, ~nterior~ 3723 Birch St. Sutte 10. Newport Beach 7Y: 1420 ..... l'l•A• CAL&. Me cotf"A/9 ..,._ Z !&ml Ukud won 40 seats in the 120- member Knesset in Nov. I elections. Labor won 39. Prime Minister Yitzbak Shamir of Likud planned more meetings with Shas leaders. Labor's Central Committee was meeting to decide whether to reopen negotiations with Likud on forming a broad-based coalition much like the ou~oing Cabinet. Likud's effons to meet Onhodox demands for Joining the government have angered both non-re1iJ.ious J cws in Israel, who form 1he maJority, and foreign Jews. • • J ._._.., .... c..•-_.. Prison releases due for two in Kuwait boDlblngs . -II -r KUWAIT (AP) -Two of the 17 In March 198-4. the two were terrorists convicted in the 1983 car 1enteooed to five-year prison tenns ) bombinas of the U.S. and Frtnch with bard labor by the state 1CCUrity embassies are expected to be released coun after beina 'found auilty of 1 quietly when their prison terms end possessina anns and explosives sb~ajy. informed sources said today. without a license. The sentence also Officials at the Interior and lofor-called for their deponation when the ~ mation ministries had no commenL prison aenn ends. "' Members of the pro-Iranian Other. officials, who s~e on , Islamic Jihad orpnization of Beirut condition of anonymity, confirmed A have demanded the release of the 17 that the two were to be released after , from Kuwaiti jails in return for the fulfilling their jail term. They said , fiudom of American and other that KuWait does not want to discuss foreign hostqCS held in Lebanon. this publicly. \ The embassy bombinp left five The ~tences were the most • dead and 86 injured. · lenient meted out for the bombinp. The two terrorists the sources Three of the otben who faced the • referred to were 2S-year-old Iraqi· more serious clwJes of mas1er-r national Abdul·Mobsen ~ minding and carrying out the attacks , Abbas and 30-year-old Nasser Matar were condemned to death. althouah :: Dahash, whose family lives in Kuwait the executions have not been carried , without official citizenship. ouL ~--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ toNY JOHNSTON wUl lacronce llier W. boot, r AGES or llUSIC, ~II m~-, TOllOE M PAOLA,• SacmUJ, Dec-IM!r IN. At 10:t0 .. r.., wm .-.. a "*'81 ~St«Tlltlflrf•~-- 5-t.SMwOl ......... aD.tMrMob l•·efiatel1 f......,ta.e-,M.r. 675-14!4 1111 .... °""' ACftll tr.. •....-r ... . . . . . ) n ~ , . • , , ,. .Secret meetings erode public's faith in council h 's easy to understand the Newport Beach City Council's concern over a possible violation of a. settlement.apeement limiting expansion of John. Wayne Airport. But It s .equally difficult to condone the way at handled that concern this week. Monday afternoon, council members huddled behind closed doors to talk about a proposed half-mile monorail that would link Douglas Plaza, a con:'m·ercial and residential project in Irvine, to John Wayne Airport. The excuse council members used to conduct the secret -meeting was p<?SSible future _litigation. . California's open meet1Jlg law, the ~rown Ac~. pent),~s such closed-door meetings 1f the "ouncal has decided or as meeting to decide whether to initiat~ litigati~n. . City Manager Robert Wynn said council members hke the project. but were concerned that it not "'.iolatc the 1985 agreement intended to reassure N~wport res1dc':'lts tha~ they would not be subjected to more noise and traffic 1fthe airport were allowed to expand without controls. ' Council members were worried that the Douglas Plaza monora i I might include or evolve into ticketing and passenger stagins areas for the airport. Ball Schreiber, spokesman for the firm that reJ?resents the monorail's developers, said NewP<?rt has noth1.ng to fear because there are no plans foran air travel staging area at Douglas Plaza. keas~urance that the monof"ilil is intended as a people mover and not an end run to furtherex~nd the ~irport should make Newport council me~bers rest a httle ~asaer. However, cou nci I mem hers should stall feel a pang of guilt over the secret meeting. . 1· . · At best. Monday's close~-door ~ssaon was a border me violation or barely in compha.nce with. the ~rown Act and makes the council look paranoid and a httle silly. Council members should realize that every tame they pull the veil of secrecy around their discussions they distance themselves from the people they are supposed to represen.t. Newport's council members didn't accomplish anythmg · but melodramatics on Monday and would have don!? both ·themselves and the citizens of Newport Beach a favor 1fthey had discussed their concerns in a public forum rather than in a secret session. · Child care One of the once-burning issues of the now-burned-out presidential campaign :was the need for affordable child-care options for working mothers., . Democratic and Republican candidates proposed plans to help the women of America return to the workforce ai:ter time off to have a baby. But It a~pears a comprehenS'lve federal cfiild<are act is far from reality. Republicans .. claim . Democra~ic proposaJs are too expensive. Democrats claim Republican proposals reach too few. . ·. Of course, !')OW that the election as o.ver, t.he b';lrnang concern for child care has flamed out on Capitol Hall. With the increasing concern over the burgeoning federal deficit, nearly everyone an Washington agre.es find~ng dollars to pay for any type of child-care program will be difficult. For 1.5 million women who stay home because they cannot find adequate, affor~ble child care, the issue still burns hke 1.000 points oflighl. WortbJagtoa (Mlaa.) D•Uy GIDH Workfare education Across Wisconsin hundreds of women on welfare attend college. generally the surest route to self-sufficiency in the nation. . Yet. the state's workfare program .m effect ex~ts t~em to drop out and either get a full-time JOb or enroll tn a JOb- traming program .... Just (recently) came news of a two-year study concluding • that young Americans who do not attend college have a hlgfi chance of facing dead-end jobs with poveny-level pay or no Jobs at all. . . Yet, ucording to t.estimo~y before . a state leg1slat1v.e committee. welfare officials a~v1sed or:ie single parent to .quit the University of Wisconsin-Parkside. where she 1s a fre shman. and learn auto mechanics .... This rule is completely upside down. Workfare ought to encourage college attendance .... Sure officials should monitor attendance closely to make sure that' welfare recipients ·are genuinely working toward degrees. But punishing them for going to college is an inanity · begging for a legislative remedy. Drug bill MU"••ttt J011rUI ~ President Reagan ... signed into law the drug bill Congress passed in a fit of election-year excess.. While the country's severe drug problem is real enough, ... inclusion of the death penalty for drug-related murders is just one example of the law's overkill. The law does create a Cabinet-level drua "czar" (provisions seem to disqualify Vice President-elect Quayle from the jpb). But a sign of election-year subtetfuae 11 that Congress provided only one-fifth of the S2.6 billion needed to pay for the programs it proposed. H...illlrl Ahriur ORANGE COAST ... bWJa.dinM Publtsher ~..,_,,~or1119-""° ........ C.... ...... CA~ UI 4 II • IO .. 1N0 0-. ..... CA .... ,., .. lMtt .. ...., ---(lie. , ... a.61 ..... l.Mw ....... ~(Mir ... c.-s,.taU.. ....... r"""'~ c.1111-.....r..... ...... ~°"""' ...... .................. ..... ................. ~":.=...., ....... c..... ..... DmMll ..... ........ ,...... ..... All l ws Enjoy all that extra weight; you earned it The Friday after Thank91ivina I was eati~ a piece of leftover pump- kin pie smothered with w~ipped crtam. I bcpn to read an ~nacfe~ on weipt. ~ost artic~ on thas subject 11 triacr guilt or anxiety or boredom. r Not \his one. \ Let's let all the areas share in California growth bo~m SACRAMENTO -Jn the main. Calif9rnia has experienced an econ- omic boom during the 1980s. We have absorbed four million new Californians and dropped u.n- employment to near-cccord lows. Entirely new industries have emeri- ed. Worker for worker. California.. may. have the world's ~ost pro- ductive economy. surpas.smg ~ven that of fabled Japan. Inc. . · One must say .. in the main,': because there arc significant pockets of California. both socially and gco- graphically. which have ·been bypassed by the good times most of us have experienced. · · Inner-city barrios and &hettos and the state's rust belt of rural areas with resource-based econQmies have not shared fully in J 98~style California prosperity. Some areas have even moved backward in terms of employ- ment and other measures of econ- omic activity. The state government has made only token effons . to relie ve . the chronic 'recessions afflicting those areas -.cffons that have been more hype than subsrancc. Titles such as "rural renaissance" and .. enterprise zones" have nice rings. but in real terms they have meant little to California's poveny pocJcets. That neglect has been depcssingly -evident in how the state spends 11s own money. It has tended, lik.c private investors. to locate its opcr· ations in areas ttiat already are feeling the impacts of growth. A case in point was the state's awarding of a huge contract to process · claims under its Medi-CaJ proaram. h meant the creation of hundreds of well-paying private-sector jobs that would have been a big boost to a depressed rural or inner city com- munity. But the processing center was DAN WALTERS located in Sacramento, which already has more high-impact development than it can readily handle. for the convenience of the bureaucrats. One could ,arsue. in fact, that the only real economic favor the state has done for areas of chronic unemploy- ment in recent y~rs is the construt- tion of prisons. Rural communities such as A venal. Corcoran, Blythe and Crescent City. desperate for any generator of income and jobs. have eagerly sought outposts of the state's rapidly expandins prison system. State officials, anxious to find prison sites with a Minimum of controversy. have just as eagerly complied. The prison program notwithstand- ing. it would be good govern ment and e~ politics if the govecnor and the Legislature found ways of spreading out the effects of California's econ- omic boom. Not only would that help the poverty ~ets but it woul~ , relieve the strain on hi&hways. schools and other public facilities that is at the root of the anti-growth movements in California's fast-grow- ing suburbs. There soon may be another chance for the stare govc;rnment to move in that direction. University of California officials now say they need three new cam- puses by 2000 to handle the crush of students from California's popu- lation growth. The siting of those campuses, the hrst in a generation. is aq op~nunity for the governpr and the Leg.1s~t1;1rc to demonstrate a more ac11v1st. involved approach to shaping Cali- fornia's future. There will be immense political pressure -it's already ~nning - to place the campuses in or near existing urban/suburban areas. Those areas have the numbers and the political clout to promote them- selves in the political arena. Some of the boosterism, however, borders on the ludicrous. Roseville. a suburb of Sacramento, already has more growth than it can easily handle. Why should it seek a UC campus.that will bring more direct and indirect impacts on an already overimpacted co mmunity? It's likely that the new campuses. if tbey arc built. will lft divided amonJ Southern. Northern and Central Cali- fornia. The San Joaquin Valley, for in- stance, is almost certain to acquire it.s first UC campus in any expansion. But it would make more sense to locate such a campus not in F~!'O but in one oft he smaller communities of the vaJley. Lik.ewise, a new northern campus would make more sense in an area such as Yuba City-Marysville. with its chronic econotnic problems, than in an already booining Roseville. And perhaps a new southern cam-pus could be the catalyst for economic revival of south-central or eastern Los Angeles. Oppo.rtunities to mak~ a fu~ mental 1mj)lc\ on the soc1oeconom1c direction of a society are few. One hopes that the politkians and bureau- crats won't blow this one a~lhcy have so many others. Du w.irvs 11 • •yMkalff <»lllllW•I. 0 -U.S . d enial of Ar afat v isa politically,. m orally w r on The denial of a visa to Vasser Arafat, far from being the only "alternative" open to the State De- partment, is pretty flatly indefensible. Bad politics, bad morality. Does Arafat endorse terrorism? Answer: Yes, he dOC$. A lot of people do and some of them become heroes. It is an old saw that history is the polemic of the victor. But it is of coune true. Algeria got its indepen- dence by the most relentless acts of terrorism in modem times. The profiteer of those acts of terrorism not only became a national hero, he became somethin& of an inter- national hero. It is not correct to uy that 1Jne1 attained its i~ by acts of terrorism, but it 11 cenainly correct to say that tem>rism was widely Uled. Indeed, Menachcm Bqin wu the leader of a lm'Orist orpnization. When, setviftl in 1973 as a publk delepte &o the 1Jnited Nations, I pve a speech (under the di~lon of the State e>epenmeat) urJina the denun-ciation of tem>rism, the tnoeion wu handily defeated II a mull of the qualiftm intened by the Third Worid. Theireya, in tboee mys, were u always on SOuth Africa. but allo on PortUlll. which continued to nalc over~ and Mozam~ cannot confute a war ol · widl emoriun. is what the lllljarilt ol lbe TIUrd Wortd lp0ke1111111 con- tnded. 1l9eft ii • 101 ism ia SiMl9 A6iCa ...................... '° ~a iL Ha tbal COil llhil die atean oltbe 1nti-w1Dtlllc:mamai· tt? trNcllon Maftdelil ._.,_.out Of'thebOIDital and~-· .na to visit die United S.-.. I Wi1 • • Uncobl Manorialitu.-~ melllcllllielllimlMl.-He"llllil llMl• ........... A-. 11 .... ~~-d ....... ... abani• . 10......d91 so~u .,......._,._ A"'8n-..butonlyaftlr,~ 1.2 WlLIAM F. BUCKLEY • m1lhon men, women and children. many of them by action that could not be interpreted as military (what do ~ caJI it when you put explosives inside doUs and sprinkle them about cbildrm'1 playarounds?). But did anybody ever IUllCll a year or two or six yean • that a viu should not be panted to the Soviet rep11t1entative -on the DOUnds that he era 1 d in 1em>rism'f Anyone desirina a rule of thumb on who is and who is not a tenorist can safely eeneralize: If your a>untry Ml a nuclear bomb. you are not I tcrrorilt. What is dismayins about the State Depertmmfs deci11on is that thert '-in tiict betn movement within the Pala&ine National Council. Certainlr not die kind of movement wt should i_~ll .u~ befort ~iziftl &be Palestine Liberation C>rptiation. Tbe decision of the counal '° abide by RetOlu1ioft No. 241 it dis. iJllCllUOUI to the Hint that it is :C1Cd 1 u 1equiacina__ in the of an lncti state. The not· IO-fi• prim o( ow couadl's mol--ulioe ••• , .... the Ind they wou..S conent to live with is the Incl Of 1947. Tbm it certainly J qua&iOn of .-.r Incl Ml UJ. •• IO COIMinue to~ dlt W• llDk. .. dim isn't mid q111•iolt over ... ~ ill ill liiiin ti ... Oallli lllWlll. I llCWk.J ZIC i,. :..:·=:.:='tc ....... ~ ..... kn ..... .... ill .. ••··· Still, there is-motion. The PLO has fou&ht a terrorist war 111inst Israel for 40 rears and for its pains has lost contro o( the Gau Strip, UM West Bank, Jeruialem and the Golan Hei&hts. It has imposed on lsratl an ugly policy of repritSSion, which leaves many. _F.oblbly most Israelis. di51usted. WJthout quite knowin& what arc the al&en11tivcs. There is a ?~II ray oflifht ait~is moment, and It IS WTOl\I IO~U. Yehoshafat Harkabi, a dis- tinauished Israeli scholar. sar,s to his countrymen in his book 'Israel's Fateful Hour .. ~ Uok. lldies and ptlemeft, We c:an·l dWJOle whom the PalesliniMs ~te .ao reprelC'nt them. and die fkt of it it that the,Y have cholen Yauer Ara&L That IS limply die way it iSt. even u the Afncan National Consrcss hu choten Mandela. A very~ lllUn\fftl can be m* for •11111 mat the United Nations lbouldn"I exist. But DO arpmeat can be rude tor M • llilll lbat Arafat should not be permitted to come here now 10 addraa the Oenera.I Ammbly once ..-in. Tbe United Nationt Hadq...vn Aereemnl of 1947 more or lal ~teed dllt the United Nations could mvite to ad- dreu i1 wbome~ ii me.. c:edint to the United Seata only t1ae rilh• to deny a vi• to IOmeOftC wbo dltaten-ed the emarity of the United Seata.. h .. -~ 1hat -lrillY old leilOlila ii llM"I IO paU1e-W9'a1t in New Yoil 10 toll a bUd IJCMdc up ieto die Waldorf Towers.. •• our rd1mf 10 In S.ilD ill MMM11 .°"* drillla .... UI tllie GpllCllft•atty IO put ..-! ae him IO dilll up die ...,NlD,aae:zwllktaM .... IO Clllll -. ,._ re w _. IO llllw a1p:_. tltt •••n ~rL.,Jr ........ This literary sem said !hat you should not worry about.Pimnasome wei&ht from the qe of 20 O!"· It even stated that ifwc wanted.to hve a long time, we should restnct our food when we are youna and cat more when we arc mature. R. Paul Abernathy. head of Purdue University's Department of Food and Nutntion, c~ims that. tests ~ow pinina some we1&ht dunna m•.dd!e aac is not hanniul. Instead at 11 nonnaJ. The wei&ht of an average man increases a6out 17 per cent between 20 and 40. Women usually · pin a little more. Abernathy says that this normal increase in body weiaht helps a person live longer. People who arc obese or extremely thin at middle age have a shoner life expectancy than those wei&hina 20 per cent over the so-called desirable weigbL I pondered over those words, "middle qe" and "desirable wei&ht." They arc both hard to pin down. Personally. I prefer the word "mature" to middle qe. Middle qe is not easy to accept un~il "senior citizen" looms on the honzon. When it comes to ''desirable wei&ht" each person ~ his or ~r own idea of what that is. A tennis player's desirable wei&ht would differ from that of a wei&ht liner. A model has 1 different desirable weight than a woman wrestler. For some women desirable wei&ht is the one that permits her to tel into her favorite batbina suit and nat be embamssed to leave her own patio. Another thi"' I questioned -who wouldn't quesuon beina given the green light to increase our wci&ht by 20 per cent -was that these tests were all done with rats. Never trust a rat. I believe they are on to these tests and fake some of their reactions. I don't buy the theory that mice and men have anatomies so similar that we react the same to calorie intake. nicotine. alcohol. exercise -you name it. But nutritionists claim we must depend on rats and life insurance ~ords because it is impossible to conduct controlled experjments on humans over the coune of a lifetime. The study concluded that after age 20 a normal, lean person can put on one pound a year without any dirt results. I read that apin. Wouldn't that depend on how many years you live? If you staned puttina on a pound a year from say,~ 2S and you lived to be 85. which isn t unusual these days, you would pin 60 more pounds. Wheri I wu 2S I wei&hed l OS pounds which I thouaht was "de- sirable weiabt" for my S.3 heiJhL If I live&obe8SIAdend upweipang 165, I will not consider that to be a desirable wejsht. On the otlier hand who am I to quettiOn an aUlbority such as R_ l>iul Abernathy? H~ cenainly has im- pressive crtdentials. At the end of the article Abernathy advises. "f.at a wcttUlancied. varied diet, exercise rqutar~y and enjoy your middle-age ~ did it. The pie and whipped crtam wled better than it did the day before. OMm·bf AM Wel& Un. Ill i..,_Nlpti. T~ ii Wednaday, Nov. JO, the l35dl-ofl911. Thmuell days left in lk ll9"· Todn's hiPHlht ln history; . •• rus. Simuel Lanahornc ClemeM -better known u Mitt Twain. the author of such clatlicl u "Tom Sawyer" and "Adventures of Huctleben'y Finn .. -was bom in ~Mo. On tbil date: • la 1804, the first U.S. Supftm• -· Coun ~ice '° be impached. Samad Chile, wtnt on trial in WalailWIOft. ~=acquitted.) In 1174. • · · l\lteeman Sir WiMIOft ClnarniU wa bom at Bleabeim Pallce. In 1939, the Soviet Union inveded fiaUd. la 19490.tbe Chinese Commaaills cac~. u~ HoclD of m ML.-~unld.-.e.u IDftDOritt mlllrd dwouP the ollaer .... •• 1'62.. u n.ea ol .... .. .._. S.e•r<J• ... oldie i:r..:::a;.:c ..... . ........ = ........ ... == ,.;m:n= ........... .,,.. ....... ,, .... 22% of Californians can buy median-priced home LOS ANGELES (AP) -Just _22 ~t of California fanuliet CIOUld ..,.. to '*t a median..priced borne in October, and tbt ~ty index liood at just 10 pm:icnt in the San Franc:itCO ........... ral nlate poup llyt. 11ac ltalcWide allOnllbebty fipre was down from 23 perceot in .,....,._...__ber and tom 31 _peroena in October 1987, the California Alilociatioft of Rcal&on said Monday. Theuaociation'saft'ordability index compares household income ftpra compiled by the 90vemment with its own monthly tally of the median price of a home on the raale martet. The median -calculated from repona by relional real estate boetds for aalet of exi1tin1 houlina -ii the price at which haJf the homes COit more aod half were cheaper. In October, 22 pen:ent of hoUICholch ~ the SS..163 111nual income needed ao QUalify for a ~ oa a home at tbe stateWidc median price of SI 1S,29S. the ueociatlc>n said. Monthly pa_lments on IMt, iacludina insurance and property cua. would bes 1,372. In the San Frucitc0 suburbs-includina Marin, Santa Clara and puu of Alameda and Contra Costa counties &ut excluding the city of Su Francisco -just I 0 perteftt of the households could qualify for a loUl on a home at the median price ofS229,223. Nationwide, 48 percent of households bad the S27,S73 needed to g~ify for a mortpge on a home at the October median price of $11,100. The index calculation assumes a family makes a 20 ~nt down payment and puts 30 percent of its monthly income into home e-yments, property taxes and insurance. The calculation uses the september average inter'C$t rate for fixed-and adjustable-rate m011111eSof9.41 percent. Rerc arc the association's regional figures for affordability index, income needed to qualify for a mortgage and the median price. REGION Oranae County San F"rancisco suburbs LosAnaeles San Di Riven~n Bernardino Sacramento California United States Pct. bcome Priee 17 $70. 980 $226. 796 10 $71.741 $229,223 17 $59.926 $191,474 24 $48,597 $15S,215 39 $35.435 s 113,220 49 $29,576 $94,SOO 22 $54,863 s 175.295 48 $27.573 $88,100 ' ,; Otenge C4Mt DAIL't' PtLOT/W9dneedey, ~ 30, 1f118 ~7 S&L losses shrink 60 percent WASHINGTON (AP)-1..o.s ia tbe •villl ud loU indusuy *8ftt by 60 perceoc in tbe IJairct ~. reflecUna rac:ues of inlOlvmt 1 nstitu- tiou that trUlkmd the red int to the aovemment's boob. a top rtau· lator said Tuesday. Federal Home i.nd Bank Board Chairman M. Da~ Wall, in a luncheon mee1ina with reponers, also hinled at his qency's recommen- dation for resJiapina the federal rescue effort. Wall said the nation's 3,028 feder- ally insured S&Ls l0$t S 1.52 billion in the July-September period, down from a revised $3.82 billion in the second quarter and $3.93 billion in the fint three months of the year Earlier this month, bank board economist James Barth predicted third ctuarter losses would narrow to about S2billion. The SttOnd quarter loss had previously been reported at SJ.6 billion. The industry's earnings from cur- ren·t operations rose from $224 million in the second quarter to $364 million in the third. Non-operating losses, reflecting mostly write-offs of loans already gone bad. shrank from $3.SO billion to S 1.3 1 billion. Bank board member Lawrence White said operating profits would continue in the fourth quarter. but said the chances of the industry posting an overall profit depended on ho~ man)' bad loans remain to be wnttenof[ A complete report on the industry's performance throu&h Sept. 30 is not due out until Dec. f4. The $9.27 billion loss for the first nine months, up from $7.8 billion fo r all oflast year, 1s the industry's worst Federal regulators con•lderarl7laterveatloa WASHINGTON (AP) -ftdtta.I rqulators are v.-nung new rules cksianed to make uvinp and &oan failures less likely and fet the aovcmment step in before l()SSICj ,ct out of hand when an 1nstJtutioo does IO unckr . The Federal Home Loan Bank Board, which ovel'See$ the nation's 3,028 federally 1n,urcd S&Ls. on Monday proposed an "early 1nkl'Vention" plan lhat would permit tt to install new manaaement before an 1n muuon about two weeks by the board. which will allow 90 da)'I for pubhc comment before t.abn& final action. Capital ll the difl'crence bct~n an •astJtuuoa's IQlns and other asset.I and its depolits and other habtl1\Jes, An in1thution's lones come out of its capetal. Thus, Sckl.s with m<n capital are leu li.kdy to &iJ ud require rescue by ~ aovemment depolit insu~ fuAd. actuaJly becomes insolvent. · It is also corwdcrina regulations fe9uirina insutu- tions with riskier real es&ate and commerctal investments to hold more capital, or reserve funds. than inst1tu11ons inYestina mostly in residential mortpges, the traditional mainstay of the thrift industry. The proposals "seek to prevent problems before they arise and to resolve those that arise before they CO$t ... si~ificant sums," bank board Chairman M. Danny Wall said. The industry's capital level has falltn dtamattcally dunng the 1980s. £.arty in lhe decade. biah internt ralel ate into profits. Later, the collapte o( oil prices and SouthwHtem real estatt pushed many S&LI in10 the red. Cnt1cs say ~ capitaJ standards made the probitm 11110f1C. Bank board officials say capital at lbe typical, or median, institution was S.6 percent in 1980. feD to a low of 3.5 percent in 1984 and has since rebounded to S.2 percent. A draft of the new rules ·w111 be formally issued in The new risk-based rule would require capetal of 8 percent by January 1993. The current aoat is 6 percent. with no fixed date set for reaching that since the Depression. , Wall attributed the partial stem- ming of the red ink last quarter to the more than 140 closings and forced mergers of failed S&Ls. He said the battk board hopes to have handled 200 by the end of the year. Some analysts and members of Congress have cnucizcd the deals because the bank board in many cases agrees to absorb much of the rescued institutions' future losses. They ~ losses continue to mount. aJthou the losses don't show up on e industry's books. Meanwhile. Wall said the bank board next month Wlll forward to the Treasury Department its recommen- dation on how to structure the ...,,.,.. co ntinued cleanup of the S&L indus- try. Wall said the proposal being dis- cussed is similar to this)car's bailout of the Farm Credit System. That provides for taxpayers, th rough the T reasury, to pay t:M interest on bonds sold to Jaisc bailout money. It also establishes a special board including the Treasury secretary to overscc expenditure of bailout funds. "What we have on the agenda isn't far from that," Wall said. He declined to elaborate. Treasury spokesman Arthur Sid- don said the department's S&L plan would not be released for at least several ~ks. He said the depart- ment mil was trying to arrive at a finn estimate of the size of the problem. projtcted at bctwecti SSO billion and S l 00 billion by variousanalysts. L William Seidman. chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp .. which insures commercial benb, was expected durina a speech today to present his agency's recommendation for cleaning up S&Ls. Planning firm goes Hawaiian The Keith Companies. a Costa Mesa-based land planning. civil enp- necring and architecture firm Wlth more than 450 emplO>CCS. has an- nounced the o~n1ng of its 12th office. The Keith Cos.-Hawaii, 1n Kapaa on the island of Kauai. Donald Karpinen has been ap- pointed vice president of the I~ person office and will be responsible for PfOJCC1 management and new business development. .. As The Keith Companies con- trn uesexpand1ng. bccomin• a force in the Pacific Ram. a Hawau locauon was the next logical step to heir us capture a greater market share o the enginecnng and planning market," said Aram H. Keuh. president of TKC. "Coupled with our multi· disci_plines. our Tokyo oface and TKC's conscientious approKh to planning and enaioc:enllL ~arc in a strong position to offCr Hawaiian island clients tol>o(luality, pro- fessional services which will be com~ pleted efficiently and effectively. and with the greatest respect for the natural beauty and integrity of the islands ... said Keith. Among the first projects TKC- HawaJi will undenake arc a «-lot residential subdivision on nine acres m Kilauea and survcyinc and civil engincerina forthcdesagnofa 90,000- sqoare-foot 1ndustnal/office park. in- cluding a 7 .200-linear-foot on-site water transmiuion main line service. • V American Heart Associo,m· ~--~~ Vv'E'RE FIGHTit'..G FOR 'tO.JR LIFE Decorative Metal Rcfinish~rs Quality smce 1930 We will make~ holidays shiD ! BRASS • COPPER • COLD • SR.VEa • TIN (7M)m.3111 Al * OrMQe Cout DAILY PILOT I W9dnelday, Novemb9r 30, 1988 • NYSE CoMPO SITE TRAN SACTIONS WEDNl!8DAY'8 CLOSINCI PRICm8 Stocks prices climb NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices closed higher today as strength in the Treasury bond market and ~ Federal ReteTVe repon on the economy allayed some Wall Street concerns about rising interest rates. W H~T NYSE 0 10 NEW VORI( (AP) Nov. 30 1~ l· ~ 'U =~ws' 'ii r Ar.ux L E~DERS M ET~LS QuoHs NASDAQ S ur/~URr NYSE UP s & OowNs OTC UP s & DowNs ::'l :1! . =J~ -. ---· =. ,, ~I .. . m WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1988 • Golden West's Bcyanttops MisSion~team . . Back honored after leading nation in rushtngyardage BJ JON PEl\GUSON .............. The first of what promises to be several post-season honon rolled in for Golden West eo~·s reoord-scttina tailback Blaise Bryant this week with his selection as the offensive Player of the Year on the Mission Conference All-Central Division footbal~ team. Bryant. a graduate of Cypress Hilb, rushed fo~ a national best l,Ml yards and 14 touchdowns. averaging 169.1 yards per game as Golden West went 5-4-1 to finish tied for third in the division. Riverside outside linebacker Steve V~pulu ea.med the division's defensive Player of the Year award Bryant was one of six Golden West arid Oran~ Coast playen who were selected for the fint team and an FIRST TEAM OFFENSE PH. Player, sclaool BL WL Yr. QB Victor Williams, FuJJerton S-11 170 So. RB Blaise Bryant, Golden West ~ 19.S So. RB Jeff Andrews. Fullerton S-11 18.S Fr. RB Mike Miscione, Rancho Santiago ~ l 7.S So. WR Scott Miller, Saddleback S-11 180 So. WR Tim lmperiali, FuUerton 5-11 180 So. TE Dan Westmoreland, Golden West 6-3 238 So. C Brian Woods, Fullerton 6-l 2SS So. G Roger Haeg. Rivenide ~ 210 So. G Ben Moraon, Saddleback 6-.S 275 So. T Brad Heidelberg. Fullerton 6-3 26.S So. T Shannon Illingworth, Saddleback 6-4 265 So. PK Kirk Hainline, Fullerton ' .S~IO 180 So. P· Scott Stark, SaddJcback 6-2 l 8.S So. additional 11 earned second team honon. Also eamina tint team offensive honors was Rustler ti&bt end Dan Westmoreland, who caught 22 passes and provided strona blockina, The Baker, La. native who returned to football after servina four years in the Marine Corpl was the offensive spiritual leader of the Rustlers. Ddiensively1 Oranaie Coast"s highly regarded outfit placed three on tDC first team. Nose .auard Bruce DuBois, · a key vocal leader, was third on the Pirates in tackles with 99 and led in sacks with S'h. Outside linebacker Gari Calhoun, a sure.fire Division I prospect, accordina to Coach 81U Workman, bad 8S tackles, 11 tackles for loss and five sacks. Comerback Gunnar Wolfe tied for third in the c-0nfercnce in interceptions with five, including one returned for a touchdown on the first play from scrimmage of the season. Golden West placed defensive tackle Larry Stuppy on the first team. Stuppy had 41 tackles and two sacks. Earning second team offensive honors were Golden West's offensive lineman trio of guards Kevin Fairman (Pleue 11ee lllSSION/B2) FIRST TEAM DEFENSE Pos. Player, ldleel DL Pat Mason, Fullerton DL Todd Johnson, SaddJeback DL Bruce DuBois. <>ranee CoasJ DL Larry Stuppy, Golden West OLB Steve Vaipulu, Riverside OLB Gari Calhoun, Orange Coast ILB Ernest Johnson, Fullerton ILB James Ramsey, Rancho Sanuago DB Rick Lane, Rancho Sanuago DB Derrick Hale, SaddJebaclc DB James RoUins, Fullerton DB Gunnar Wolfe. Orange Coast DB Craig Glatzhofer, FuUerton KR Tim lmperiali, Fullerton BL WL Yr. 6-5 lSS So. 6-0 197 So. S-10 190 So. 6-4 2.SO So. 6-0 210 So. 6-2 225 So. ~ 220 So. ~ 205 Fr. 6-2 180 So. 5-6 170 So. 6-3 200 So. 6-l 190 So. 6-2 190 So. 5-11 180 So. ·Mater Dei loaded again this season BJ ROGER CARLSON °' .............. Gary Mcknight, Mater Dei Hiah•s seventh-year b&sketball coach. lw just one requesc .. Hey," said Mc~t. "don't m* us No. I aoina in. We're talented. but we're very young.., Request denied. The Monarchs are Onlnae Coun-ty's No. I-ranked tam. How ebe do you treat a prosram wbicb bas retnit1ea the record boob with five CJF dwllpioallljp1 ud a runner-up finislt in a mlb finals appearance; .. weU as one stale tide? McKni&ht'1 Monarchs have over- -..--....-e-- ~red the opposition over the put six ~ to the tuM of 16& victories and just IS defeats; they are S8-2 in (Pl ... -. llONAJtC~/BS) •First games: Thursday •First league: Jan. 6 •FirstOIF: Feb. 17 •First State: March 7 SECOND TEAM OFFENSE POI. -P1a1er, sclloel Rt. Wt. Yr. QB SCott Swk, Saddleback 6-2 180 So. RB Darrin Sweaz~. Saddleblck S-11 205 So. RB WillSmith, Riverside S-.S 140 So. RB Alvin Price Rancho Santiaer> 5-9 190 So. WR Nick-John Haiduc, Fullerton S-10 170 Fr. WR PaulPetcn.RanchoSantilao 6-1 17.S Fr. WR Kerry Reed. Rancho Santilao S-9 I.SS So. TE Shane Wiley.:.. Fullerton 6-3 230 So. C Chns Rose, tuncho Santiaao ~ lSO So. G Kevin Fairman. Golden West 6-2 280 So. G Todd Little, Gol.ten West 6-2 2S5 So. T John Bardon, Rancho Santiaao 6-5 21S So. T David Lannon, Golden West 6-3 28S So. PK JB Holhs. Saddleback S-l l 180 So. PK Kevin McKelvie, Orange Coast ~ 185 So. P Brian George, Oran~ Coast S-10 185 So. SECOND TEAM DEFENSE Pot. Player, 1claool BL We. Yr. DL Scott Hager, FuJlerton 6-1 2SO So. DL Dan Rovira. Rancho Santiaao S-9 220 So. DL Wiley Thomas. Rancho Santiago S-1 L 220 SQ. DL Scott Schmitt. Orange Coast 6-1 220 So. OLB Wes Aowen, Fullerton 6-2 2lS So. OLB Chris Dickerson Saddleback 6-2 2 l S So. OLB Mike Cover. Golden West 6-3 23.S So. OLB Chns Matney, Oranee Coast ~ 210 So. OLB Jonathon Todd. Saddlebeck S-1 l 210 So. • ILB Gary Renteria. Saddlet.ck S-11 22.S So. ILB Pat Knowles, Golden West ~ 220 So. JLB Byron Lewis. Riverside 6-2 21S So. DB John Christensen, Fullerton 6-2 190 So. DB Bill Craft. Orantr Coast ~ 195 So. DB Len Mclntyrc~back ~ l 85 So. OB Sean Turner, vraogc Coast 6-1 195 So. OB Tony Gonzales, Rancho Sant~ S-1 l 170 Fr. KR Paul Petcn. Rancho Santiago 6-1 180 Fr. Eaison features green look By ROGER CA.JU.SON Ot .. Ollllr ........ Htgh ~hool basketball coaches must marvel at the IWtury most collcsr programs have. where of the eight or so who play consist of a couple of S(niors. two or three juniors, a couple sophomores and ma_ybc even a freshman. There's always somebody com1na back. the waves JUSt ktti> com1na. IUNDA Y'S PREVIEWS •Corona def Mar •Marina •Woodbridge •Saddleback Not so for Ed190n Hip baskttba.11 coach Jon Borehtn and l\is OwJm. as he brinp a new aop of faces onto the floor 1n the form of last yeu's 11-lljunior varsity. as well as junior ·Steve Tbobe from the sopbom<>tt team and sophomore Todd Smyta from 1be freshman 1quad. Jac"-"a set for. coaching cb.ldlezwe at UtJlverslty ' in his busied ICbedule. .. It'• not a diflkultu it miaht havt bfta. bealute I coecbed here IWO ~ llO and~ wslh them and tauPt &km, SO l"m no a tocaf st,..r . .. , ltnow wMt Steve hM been runnina and there are no wholesak cha..s. . "'We're Soi~ to nan when we can do it QPPCW'\UtStically and we"U u:w ...,... ..... defew as nailcb as we ca~" . • Hc11 be • wilh .... amounll 10 r.:::.. .. ...... &om foUr~ o. ... ..,... time wrw: ............... . (1111••-DMfl I Bll/811 llOlmAY'I PREVIEWS •Est9nda •Fountain Valley •lrvtne •eo.taMeea • It "VC$ the Charwers the srccn look and Borchert. 1n "\Is sixth )Qr at Edison and 13th as 1 heAld coech 1n the Sunset Leque. said a reeflstJC ~roech to the teat0n 11 to tcq> tht CIF playoffs down tht road u a lqJtimatr pl . .. We're JUSl real )OUftl,." said Borchert. We have a lot of new racn.·· ~mona \be new fices. howcvu. " one wbteh is atop a 6-foot-9 ftamt ift the prnenccofjunior Bin Martineau. •• 1 th ink he "'111 be eood... laid Bo«hert. "He needs .,.. leUOftiftl and v.ork. but ~ i~D are all thcre " · It's 6-root-j seniOf' Bryan MurvhJ. t\OWC\ef, '11100C'Ommlnds mGlloldile ancntioo. .. ... He'~ otobably our btsl ,..yer. iJ 8ort'hcrt. •·For someone WM us nc~cr pla.:1 a ~U\lt) eameo:. MDy ,, ......... ,.., I 11 L I~' >Ii 11 . \ J ( \ I c > .\ PRO -GAMES The Bob Harmon Pro Forecast llFFILI 11'1 S ....................... 24 .... "T•l llY l•llEm~......... 7 twd to ti ...... tlut euc. hold 3-1 ........ °'* Bila ... way out In front •AFC E..a'a top teem, Bun.lo Mould stlfte 8uca ... .. ftYe gllfNe of ..,._ pl9yed In TB. ••1•1•11n IEIUU. ............. 11 111••••• ............ 21 ~won 3rd *eight °'* 8ena9ll mt yw, edging "*" 1N during Mrlk• ... C6ncy held ~ .... ttwu 3 quarters, so r coming up wtth 10 points In 4th ..,., to wtn. 111111 .... JS .................. 11 Cowt>ova, In wlllaTWE rc>le •NFC EMt's ceMar twn, f8Ce three ftnal ...,.... In Browne. Aedlklna, &glee ... Browns f8Ce uphill tight tor 9"11 a spot .. wild-card te.m. ••• , DfT i..111 ....................... 21 •m Iii PICIEIS .............. 21 TI-. two l*ved just two weeks llgO In Green Bay, Oetrott wtnNna 11-t to go one up 1n ns struggle to keep out of NFC Centrli b11111181'1t ••• Uona enjoyed 1~ MlC8 T-CMy. •••••• •ms .................... 31 Pl I ISi-ITEELEIS .......... 11 e.tw, Oler8 beat Stt1f1ra In Plttlbwgh 34-14 .. 1 Q8 Wwren Moon NltUrned to Houston lineup ... time In llx week.s ... <>Her d .... turned e Pitt~ Into 21 points. lllllllllPILIS •TS •••••••••••••• 21 ~ ~~ ••••••••••••••••••••• 21 In ftrat ·aa n..elng, Cotta' Dwi B•m kicked ftY9 FGs ford lnd'apole points to be9t Ootpt'6rw 15-13 ... Eric Oictler80n rushed for 125 ywds, Colt defa• had faut seeks. **UISIS .cm •IEFS .............. 24 IEW YI• .IDS ..................... 23 In pnwtous meettnG. Chiefs, Jets played to 17-17 tie, KC tying score with Steve Oe'Biorg pea for TO In ftnal 51 MCOnds ... OT - nothing ... NY don*\ated statistics, not acore. **LIS UIELES UllS ................ 21 IEIWEI lll•S ................... 11 In 8lll1ier Monday nlte matdH.lp In Oenwr, Raiders won wtld one over Broncos In OT, 30-27. Chris Bahr kk:klng wtnnlng FG ... Den\W had held 24--0 hatftime re.ct ... Raiders again. .... IESITI YlllllS ............... 11 ·, IEW •I E•JIS Ulm ............ 11 llw two met In wlck8rd playoff .... yw, Vikings aurprlltlig ~ wtth ~ 10 on-elaught, Minn. ICOr'"IQ most points ewr In a W.C. game ... '88 playoff spots r1dtng here. **IEW Elll DI PITllm ........ 21 SEITILI SUllWIS ............... 21 Pats leed ..,._ wtth Silha• 5-2, Seem. wtnnlng 38-31 In 1988 ... SelNwks. comN1g off Mondey nlte lqUabble with Raiders, coutd ha¥e trouble °" this rolld trtp ... coin Np. **IEW Ylll llllTS .................. 23 ~ CllllULS ............... 21 Cerda whipped Gl9ra ....... llOO In Phoenix 24-17, Nell Lomu compMdng 23 of 35 ~ for 351 ywds, two TDe ... Cwda rolled up 485 ywda. most egalr\8t NY MlC9 1980. •••111.11111111 UP ES ..... , ...... 21 WIS•llTll lmlllS ......... 21 A9dlklnl nudged E.-... in dllfeellllhe atruggle In Wah'ton wty In Wl 17-10 ... Ski.a took quick 14--0 ..... then d•• tootc CMW Udllng R8nd8I ~ llx tlmea. Ill RllCISCI ••••••••••••.•.••••••• 21 **ITLllTI FILCllS .................. 17 Flk:on dllf•• atunned home-st9nclng 4hn w1y In w.. 34-17, Attenta beatllig Sf first time 1ince 1983 ... F81cona, led by Chrte .... scored 21 points In ~ quwS. ~11~11 ................................. 21 "LIS AmLES .................... 24 RP -Mondey nit• that could be prevtew of NFC title game, .... holcllig leed In Central, Rame In :r.T In w.t ... ()llcllgo IMda long Mriee P'9 back to 193 , 21-3. SPOMSOIED BY • Clllll CIEEI 71-48 Edinger. Huntington Bwh 141-7421 .I. C. loUIS 18121 8eect'I Blvd., Huntington Beectl IUIUES -.1 Bolla. Huntington Beectl smEYI 2201 Miiin St., ~ ~ I Wbor & Wllon.. C-. Mw ' 141~11 11411• .•. , .. u1~m \Vest Virginia coach ~ya Miami out of title picture CHARLESTON, W.Va. -Any Un). 0 vc:nity of Miami claim '° the national cMmpiomhip ii flawed by iu loM to Notre Dame, and there's no way the Hwricanes can cfwlF that, West Virsiftia coecb Don Neblen said Tues::i!mi COICh Jimm~ Johnson said Sundar lhat if his team wins the rest of its pmcs and No. Notre Dame loses to No. 3 West Virainia in the Fiesta Bowl.: the Hu.rricaaes should succemuHy defend thetr 1981 title. That defies ~. Neblen said. -At the end of the Ncttre Dame-West Viflinia pme. t.berewiU beone11ndefeated team. That team will be the national champion," Neblen said. Both Notre Dame and West Virsinia arc 11.0. No. 2Miami is9-I withapmcsmnaininaapinst Brit.ham y ouna on Saturday and, Nebraska in the Oranee Bowl. Tiie Hurricanes lost to Notre Dame, 3 J-30, missina a 2- point conversion lJ)' in the final minute . .. Jimmy JohnSon's just tryina to plant seeds in everybody's heads, but his team lost to Notre Dame and he can't erase that fact.·· Nehlen said. .. The No. I team will play the No. 3 team in the Fiesta Bowl and the winner of that pme will be the national champion because the No. I team already has beaten the No. 2 team." West Virgjnia's schedule has been criticized as too weak to gjvc the Mountaineers a national cham- pionship. Brigham Youna's 1984 team is cited most often when there is talk is of weak schedules contributing to national championships. but Miami, too, once bcfl. cfited from a rclativclr easy schedule. In 1983, Miamis schedule included Houston, Purdue, Duke, Louisville, Mississippi State. Cincin· nati, East Carolina. Notre Dame under Gerry Faust, and West Virginia. Miami won those pmes and lost, 38-3. to Aorida. But Miami beat Nebraska. 31-30, in the Orange Bowl and won its first national cham- pionship. .. Schedules arc something you can't even get into," Nehlen sajd. -we're a Division I colle&c football team and we're undefeated and so is Notre Oame. We're the only ones left." Even if schedules arc considered, West Virginia still would have a claim for the nauonal title, said Syracuse Coach Dick MacPherson. "He's had a similancbcduJe before and never went undefeated," MacPhcnon said of Nehlcn, a longtime friend. ··1 think that what everybody needs to realize is that when anybody goes through 11 games undefeated. it shows the quality of the team and the coaches. "Let them do it before they start knocking West Virginia." Quote of the day Jael Kemp, former Buffalo Bills and San l)iego Chargers quarterback who is now a Congressman from western NeW York: .. Pro football pve me a aood ~ of per:spcctive when I entered the political arena. I had already been booed, checrcd, cut, sold, traded and hanaed in effll)'." ' 11' THE BLBACllBRS ··rou Idiot! It's Just a trick to distract your attention. That comet won't be vialble to the naked eye·for at leaat another 50 yeara." Sacramento routs Clippen l..S-De n..,... scored 18 points m and pabbed 11 rebounds and Ke.J a.I .. and llueN Pnn1eJ scored 17 J>Oints each Tuesday ni&ht, leading the Sacramento Kinp pest the visitiDJ Los Anades Oippcn. 123-95. Eiabt Sacramento players reacbcd double flpll'CS. 1'egle WllllulS scored 19 points for the Oippcrs. Gra.aGnt mild added 17, ..... 18-Jamla l)and 0..., M I I 12 with nine rebounds ... ln other NBA pmes, a. am,... scored 22 points and Charlotte beat winless Miami at borne, 99-8-41 in the first pme between tbt expansion teams ... ReMl1 Paridi scored 21points,pabbed1•reboundsand Boston shot almost 68 percent in the first half and wen1 on to defeat host New Jersey, 100.93 ... In Atlanta,,... Battle scored seven points during a I S-2 run in the ICCOnd quarter as the Hawks turned back San Antonio, 120-104 ... J.-~scomt ISofhis 18pointsinthcsecondbalfashost lnchana won for the second time this season by knocking off Detroit, 107-98 ... Terry C-.Jao scored 29 points and SWMy M..ertef 23 as the Bucb beat Portland. 119-114, in Milwaukee ... In Houston, M1Dee Gilliam scored a career-high 35 points and Phoenix beat the Rockets. 124-107 ... In Denver, Alez F.mclllll scored a season-hi&h 41 points and Pal ~ notched 17points,bad 13reboundsand 12assistsasthe Nugcts beat New York, 139-119 ... In Seattle Jerry RefMI .. scored eifht of his 25 points durin1a 13..-0 run at the end of the third quancr, lcading the SupcrSonics past Utah. 109-102 ... Qril Mallia scored 29 points, including 13 as Golden State erased a I 0-point deficit in the third quaner. and the Warriors beat Chicago in Oakland, I 09-99. snapping a four-game losing streak. Schroeder to start vs. Denver EL SEGUNDO -The Los Angeles Eil Raiders will change quarterback.s once •II• again this week ..-hen they play the Denvff Broncos. W1th Jay SchroCdcr returning as the staner in place of Steve Bcuerlcin. Coach Mike Shanahan made that decision in the •••••••••••••••'--wake of the team's 35-27 loss to the Seattle Scahawks Monday niaht and announced it Tuesday afternoon. Kings shell New Jersey, 9-3 Den Tayler, Mite A.I.In-and Wa,.e ri1 Grebky scored two goals apiece Tuesday ' night as the Los Angeles Kings to_ppod the New Jersey Devils, 9-J. at the Forum to snap a twe>-pmc losing streak. Taylor's first pl at 13:05 of the first period pve the Kings a J.O lead. His secoe!! at 5:51 of the third period make it S-3 and tri a fivc-aoaJ uprising in the final 14:03 ofpa.y . . . scwherc,,. Drwe resistettd his first NHL point when he scored with I :25 remaining to lift Wash= to a 4-3 victory over visiting St Louis ... IUet T bad two goals and lllb ~ scored his first as a Ayer as PhiladclpMisnapped a four:same losingstrcalt wt th a 5-1 victory over Boston at the Spectrum. Bullard, ~uired Tuc"1ay from St. Louis in a trade for ccnlff Peter Zae1, pve the Ayers a 4-1 lead.early in the third period ... In Detroit, Stne Yaermu and Mam Gran. scored I 0 seconds apan midway lhrou&h the second period as the Red Wi• beat the luqden. S-3, extendi~ New York's losang streak to five pmcs ... an. MicLella had a JOll and two assists and Matt P·het.eW had two pis as Minnesota bea=· , S-2, in ~miftaton ... In Winnipea, W. scored has first aoaJ of Che season at 16:47 or third period to break a 3-3 tic and give the New York R.anecrs a 4-3 victory over the Jets ... DMt G....._.1 powcr- play goaJ with 8:09 lcft in the third period lifted Calpry into a 3-3 tic with Va~l1~~~-cxtendina the Aames' unbeaten streak at the ~me to J 3 pmes ... In off-the-ice Mws. Marte LemJeu. the NHL's Most Valuable Player and leading scorer. will get dote to Gretzky's S2 million annual salary under a ,~J substantially sweetened PittsbutJb contract he sipcg for the current season. Thomas takes Batkaa Award ORLANDO, Fla. -Alabama's EiJ slasbina play-breaker Derrick Thomas c • t nosed out bis buddy, Broderick Tbomas of • Nebraska, to win the founh annual Butkus ~ward Tuesday as the nation's outstandina ooUeae hncbeckcr. Alabama Coach Bill c~ called the 6-foot-<t. 220- pound outside lincblckcr one of the areatest in Alabama history ... On a 3-2-1 point system, Derrick Thomas received fOur fi!'t-Placi ballots. and a IO&aJ of 22 points. ~Thomas Sot three first-place votes and lO polfttl. Columbia •s McElreavy reelgna LarrJ Md!lreaYJ resigned as Col-• llmbia football COICb Tuesday, a week after one of his assistants accused him of professional misconduct. McElreavy dc-ni~ the dwss and the univenity said it believed his denials. but McElreavy fell he could not continue amids! the con1:J1>versy. O..C ,..._, Columl>la's offcnS1vc coordinator, bad aQCUlcd McElreavy of drink.ins before~ missina team meetinas, and said McElrea-ry was reekina of ak:OhoJ" durina Columbia's pme apinst Dartmouth on Nov. 5 ... The Boston Red So.x sipcd IUdl ~ to a one-year contract Tuesda~ that reportedly makes him the bilhcst paid catcher 1n the American Lcuue. Gedman, who camcd $955,000 las~~~l <i«ided T~y to accept a con lJ"lct that rqJOrlCIUJy wilt pay him sti11nlr_ more than ~I. I million ... Florida State University officials were informed Tuesday by the NCAA that no violations were found during a nine-month invcstiption of the school's football and buketbell propams ... Denver Broncos quanerbect W. BlwaJ was nursing bruised riba as a mull of a seek in Sunday's 3S-24 victory over ~. Ra~S, but trainer~ I I Ir= said the 1ajury ISD I 9el10US ••• OdllMeC....'-ked OUt ~ ~ ~3~ into the lint round Tuelday_ nisbt in San Antonao an h1s first defente of the International Boxina Federation butamweiabt boxing championship he won four months qo. TeleYlaion, radio TllLaYIMON 6:lO P.m. -COLUH 9ASKllT9ALL: New Mex.k.:o al ArW>na, ESPN. 7:30 p,m. -PllO aASIUITaALL: S..ttte al l.Mters, Prime Ticket. I p,m. -HOltlm aAC8Mk HolhiwOOd Park r.,._n, Chennel 5' (Prime Tldlel, 10:30 p.m.). .... p.m. -PllO aAJICRT'aALL: New Yen at CINen (deW't'ed), WOR. Mldnlettt -Tll...., Tournement from New Yen (dMved), ESPN. RADIO 7:JO p,m. -PllO MSKSTaALL: SMtne at Uken, KLAC (511). 7:30 p.m. -PllO aASK•TU.LL: Hew YOO! at CIPlws, KRTH <m>. 7:30 P.m. -COLLaM IASKSTULLr USF at UCI, l(PZE Ulto,. n••IDAY nL.a~ 2 p,m. -Tll.-S: TounierMllf from New York, E.SPN. 49ers prove n6 match for Purdue Fn. fte AlledaW Pnll Jimmy Oljver ICOnld 11 Points and Melvin Mceants 8'tded 11 u Purdue ~•ltl.oallwlaS.., 100.SJ Tuelday .t fa I oolles tlllltetbaaf 11111e iii W• llllifdk> ltid. nc ...... lied 2.-2 in the .,.,.. ..... opener. but PwdUe.1·1 ..... • ,., ......... 2 •• 7 ... oe l.clra ~·· ~ lliJllP ..... wwa 10:•s111• hll•• lrllWC 1lte .. ....,. .... ').20.c .... ........... LOllla ..... ... ~ .... .,. .... , ... ., ... --~·,· .. ~.., 1J.;J4 ----~ ..... aiacc... and Clans Moore added 2• u un. beaten USC won its fOunb pme in five days. overpoweri• vilitina United Sta.a lnlemltional Univer .. cmtrillllllll .......... to .... ,.. -.~~ ............................. llllilllil ...... CIMr ... lft. ~ la .... calllii .... WC tr, .U I 7 111 I U: AMlmy_,.,, ........ 25 ..... ' Pirates host teurney. Eight-team field to participate In Miles Eaton event BJ JON FERGUSON °' ............ Off to a quick start, which includes an upset of the pre-season No. J team in the state, the Orange Cout Colles men's basketball team heads into t6c meat of its pre<onferenoc tour- nament season with its own version starting Thursday ni&ht at Petenon Gym. The 18th annual Miles Eaton Basketball Tournament features an • eiaht·tcam field with the· likes of toUah squads from LonJ Beach, Mt. San Jaanto and imperial Valley in addition to the Pirates. Also in the field are MiraCosta, Santa Barbara, East LA and Mt. San Antonio. OCC opens with MiraCosta Thun- day niaht at 6 and with a victory would meet the winner of the 8 o'clock pmc between Lona Beach and Mt. San Jacinto on Friday at 8 in a semifinal. ••Our tournament and the one next week (at San Jose) will go a Iona way toward telli!'ll us how stron1 this team is," said OCC Coach Tandy Gillis. Leading the way for the Pirates bas been rctumina starter Oareck Crane who bas avcrucd 17.0 pe>ints, •.S rebounds and :f.O assists. Cfanc was moved to the point with an experi- ment with freshmen Martin Love and Paul Kos proved to be too much, too soon. "Love's playing a little at point," Gillis said. "But they've never had to do it before. They'rt freshman still." Freshman Alan Schlines should be back in action after missina last Saturday's pme with a bed foot. He bas a.vcragcd 9.8 points and 7.4 rebounds. Roundina out the startin1 lineup arc wing players freshman Chip Hanlon (10.2 points, 5.7 rebounds.· 2.8 assists), sophomore Lamont Speed (I 0.8 points, 3. 7 rebounds) and freshman Scott DeStcfano (6.8 points, 2. 1 rebounds). Gillis commended in particular the play of Hanlon, an Edison Hiah product who made the all-tourney team at the Mt. San Jacinto Tour- nament. OCC earned second placie at that toumcy, losina to the hosts in the ... · final. . Also a key off the bench and a potential starter is Derek Johnson, who averages 9. 7 points includini 12 of 14 from thrcc>point ranee. Of the other top contenders, de- fending Miles Eaton champ Lona Beach returns four players inctudina 1987 toumament MVP Shawn Wil:. li'1ns. But the hopes of ViJtina Coech Bill Fraser's squad repcatiQI for the fint time since Saddlet.ct in 1980 will be hotJy contested ·by Imperial Valley and Mt. San Jll.Cinto. .. Imperial Valley is loeded with talent as usual this year," Gilliuaid of the state's No. 6 team. '.'And Mt San Jacinto is stronger than ever this season." MISSION ••• rro.a1 and Todd Utlle and tackle David . Lannon, and the Pirates' kicti= of punltt Brian 9eorlC and kicker Kevin McK.elvie. Ddelllivdy, Oolden West piece linebeckers Mike Cover and Pat ~ and the Pirates Dlaced defensive Udk Scott Schmitt. linebecker Chris Matney and do- feMivc blcb BilJ Craft ud Seu Turner. Fder1oa •1 UDdefrllled I 0.() IQuad. ranbd No. I in lhe •doe· IDd heeded for • Potato Bowl lbowdown witb tbird-ranbd llbnfteld. bid I J of lbc 28 fln&-tam~lllm iDdud-i o&ntive stan Victor ' ~Uiama. die con '• topftted .,..,, ............... s.ill8clr Jeff' Aadrewl and wide receiver Tun lmperilli, "° ............. 11e1m •a tick rctm ncr. ~. a..land ..... forlbc PONY Bowl C1lllic. 1111111 lh ..... wm.li111wideNClivisleou Miller, Mo cMllill I • 1 .... 71 ~ PONY IO•I Clasuc-ioaad ............ wMda bltd 6-J.l, ... ;; ~·· r 'N 1lld ~a:;.; wl.o ~ .. =r.. '1:'c..i Ill•= = . .,...,._r a• •-n =.:.:.:.r.t sl" •• v ...... ' EDISON ••• ....... blrc .... "8Y be'• playiq_ •• ..... y ii I ddinite ltlner and Tllobe, wbo a&abblhed I ...... for IWmelf as a IQPhomore ·tdailll .....,,... With ~ .,,.,..r ...... AlaM widl Manineau. r.ra ~ ia tMNlcoun. JllOtl Cam. 1 6-4 .enior, is Ibo a key ftauN up lronl. It's at auard where the Cbartm are not set. Tommy Tyler (S-11 JUnior). Dan Lovelady (&:I junior), Brett Baird ~S-10 ltftiot) and Brian ColcJoUlb S-J I) are all in the ~icture and all 11u.re to play, but none has surfaced to take control of what is anticipateCI to be a balf~oun 11me. behevc." Edison has good size and Borchert saad the .. talent is there," but he predicts the tournament trail in Decem bet, as well as non·league \ienrures with such powers as l.Ong Beach Poly1 Capisarano Valley and Lakewood, 1s goina to be a slow one. ''We're aoina to be more of a controlled team than we have in the past,." .aid Borchert ... We'll be look-•na tor the hiah perceniaee shot. We • rebound pretty well and defensively it'll be more of a sauina man, rather than picking up on a fulf court press." Borchcn's optimism surrounds his ~m's basic shooting abilities, but he bas a concern in terms of leadership, which comes from the fact there arc no returning varsity players. "By the time league starts we'll be OK.,' predicted Borchert. .. It's a team which I have lo be very patient wilh. But the players ned1 to feel good ~bout l.hemselves. It's going to be 1ntcresung." .. Just about everyone shoots the ball preuy well and they all have things they can do." said Borchert, "but one of the keys is that we need * Chareen·~ Dec. l-t Long Be~ Polv. 7.30. Dec.. .-10-.1 Fount•in V•llrl Tourn.menr Dec. 12·17-ITv/119 World N~ Tournemtftt Dec. 2l-Edlson et C.olstr-Velltv, 7JO Dec. 23--l.aikewOOd (home), 7.30 Dec.. 26·»-Co.st Chrlstm.s Clesslc Jen. ~ont 8.-ch WillOtl (l'iomt), 1 )0 Jen. 6'-H\lnti119ton e..c11• (home), 7:30 Jal\. 11-Founllln v en..,.• {/lome >, 7 30 Jen. 1)-et Merine•. 7:30 Jen. 1 ..... 1 Ocffn View•, 7:30. people to step forward and take leadership roles. ""\ .. The key for my ~uys 1s some self ~ confidence. They re uncertain. They're not sure who they are. Over the years I've found our it's not so ·important what I say, but what they Jen. »-westmlnsr.,• OIOme), 1:>0 Jen. 27-et Hunllnoron Beech', 7:30. F.O. 1-1 Fountefn Veri.v-. 7..30. Feb. f-Merlne• (hOme), 7:30 ... Feb. t-ec.en view· lllOlliel. 7.JO Feb. 10-.t Wntmfn,rer•, 7:30 •denotei Sunset Lea11ue 11e!Tl9. UNIVERSITY PREVIEW • • • From Bl combined total of about SO percent of the Trojans' games. ll starts with 6-foot-81h forward Stefan Mumaw and 6-foot-7 center Pat Ferrell. "Both of our big guys run the floor real well1" said Jackson, "and we'll try to exploit that." Although he was a full-time starter, Mumaw averaged just 5.9 points a pme as ajunior, and Ferrell averaged JUSt 2.4 pouus a game on his 14 appearances. Both are double-digit threats now. and they ha ve two slick guards to offset things in 6-foot Dave Dicier and Junior Oliver, who quar- terbacked the football team this past fall. Oliver averagecj 6.0 points a game and Dieter averaged 4.7 in an attack which featured the outside shooting of Steve Stol~off ( 19.6): AH have had starting expenencc and all obviously loom high in Jackson's plans. Among the new faces arc 6-foot-4 Erik ("that's 6-4 today: he might be 6-4Yl tomorrow") Glassen; 6-l Alex Williamson; 6-l )Unior guard David German; 6-l senior Jason Harris; 6-2 Chns Chase; and John Cotliar. Also, awaiting word on their eligibility status. arc West ~rman junior transfer K.Jaus Perwas (6-2) and 6-1 Mission Viejo senior transfer Lance Elmore. Glassen is the younger brother of former Uni standout Lassc Glas.sen, and he combined w11h Williamson as the one-two punch of a very success- ful Junior varsity last season. Chase. a sohd rebounder, has been .out with a broken hand; and Cotliar is on a day-to-day basis with a knee iAjury. . As for contending in the Sea View, Jackson said he's taking a realistic view of the situation: llumaw Fenell "Saddleback is way ahead of every- one. but I 1hink the rest of the league 1s going to be a dogfight. The team which plays with the most consisten- cy will come in second and third. It's one of those leagues where you have lo be ready to play every night." As for making a career of it as a walk-on coach. Jackson said that's not in his plans. ··rm only interested in it for one year.·• he said ... It's awfully hard to be a walk-on coach. The communica- tion you need within the school ... it's so hard to establish when you're not there full time. I just hope things work out for Steve to come baok and resume things." * Troi•ns' schedUM OK. 1·5-Ne ... oort·Mew Tournemei'I Dec. t-er Irvine, 7 lQ OK. 12·11-lrYine World News Tournernenl OK 20-Levune ~' (hOme) 7.JO 0ec. 2'·3-1 RedWOOd (L61'kMMJrl TOUl'neV .Jan. >-Footh1• criomeJ. 7 JO Jen f-Sanle An• \/•li.v (hOme), 7 lO J-11 t 1-CorOM def ~r· Cnom.I. 7 JO Jan. 1).-s.ddlel)eek• (home) 7 30 Ja11 1._11 Tus11ri•. 7·30 Jan '°""11 Newdot1 Haroor• 1 30 Jan 2S-E\lenc1a• (llOnwl 7 lO Jan. 21-ar Corona oet Mer• 7 lO Feb. I-er Secldi.oack ·, 7 JO Feb 3-Tusrln' (hOme), 130 Feb. 7-11tewp0<f Harbor' Cnome l, 7 lO Feb. 9-er Esrancia• 7 lO ' 'denote\ S.• Vlew 1 .. aque 1>amt Laguna starting off year at disadvantage By ROGER CARLWN Of ... Dlllr "* .... 'Laguna Beach High basketball coach Ed Bowen has been around Iona enough to realize the situation and he'!not one to put forth any false hopes. Reality being such 1hat the Artists are traditionally 1Q a hole to stan with, it's easy for Bowen to see he's not starting with a full deck of cards. .. If nQl>ody gets hurt we're going to be pretty good." said the veteran An1sts' coach. ''But I don't think we'll win a game before league. "I'm 40 summer games times four behind ( 160 games). We're spread out all over the place and have 6SO kids. "These k'(i~ are four years behind lie Keown everyone e1se·s basketball programs. lfwe win one game we're lucky. lfwc win some th tournament play, we're getting better. If I can be,at other (Plea.e eee LAOtmA/84) ..... MIL& .. r• alCU KAI -ua· ••••lie 1989 Great Aloha Run "Ke kuklnl me ke Aloha ~ole .. (The RllC9 with Compuslonate Lcwe) OnefitheTopSll.c.s in the W.td MA.JOA SPONSORS WHO HAVE HELPEO MAl<E THS RUN SO SUCCESSFUL ARE. Tbe Bonolwu ~ ( '°"'*' °' N 0.... Alot'9 """) THmQWPrS lll DICALaNid Entry tee $1350 (tax deductible) ·~ludmg nrnshef TM st1111 Enuy d .. dhne Jan 17 1889, lale enlry lee until Feb S 1989 $1850 A"'"'9on Noft..t*"**' ~-Due lo 11m11*d hotel •nd 11rt1ne 1va1lab1hty 1n Februery, •t IS vital lo gel Yol.W NIMMhons In by~ 1, 1•. To'**_.. In .. 0.... Mohe """ .......... c.tl TOU· "'a: 1~FUNMJN (•·1M) C.0...,._ .. U.S. MofM11y • Fltdlly 11 AM &OT to 9 PM EOT HIWIH A.taella and f0l9IQ.n Couotnes 808·~-«IOO Of wr11a 1980 G,...t Alof\a Run c.o Island Holiday Tours. PO Bow8519 HonolOIU ~w1111 96830--0519 Rememt>« registration is °" a hl'$t come first aerved l•m1teo t>ui1 0..0ltne s Januery 7 1989 waoo KilidaYS 1burs OMciel ...,... cooro.n.IOf t.eO..~Allfl ............... -.T .. p 1•111 ............. _.. ........ Orange COMt OAJLY PtlOT /Wedneldey, ........ 30, .. - MONARCHS' BASKETBALL OUTLOOK . • • Pn.Bl Anatlus Lnaue pla~ in that spen: ~ won three Tournament of Chimpaons 10 a row, have sent I 3 plaYft:S to Division I schools 1n that pcnod~ and there teems no let up. The Monarchs .. strua&ted" to • 21-8 campallJ1 last season and com- iq up are the cream from a Junior varsitywhK:h went 21-3, as \\ell as the 19-3 sophomores and 21-2 freshmen. McKn1&ht insists his team may start slowly and he does have cause for concem with the tentative status of seniors Mike Morris and Dylan Rigdon. Jhe 6-foot-S Morris, a one-ume Echson High standout, has a possible stress fracture or tendinitis in his shin area, and may well be out for the entire month of December. Rigdon, at 6-4, whn has already verbally committed to UCI. went down wtth a Charley horse in a ~reseason scnmmage with Santa Clara and Serra. And then there 1s the schedule. Los Angeles power Palisades is an early-season foe: among the Tour- nament of Champions entncs at Ocean View are national power Westchester of Los Angeles, Ocean View and Capistrano Valley, among others; and St. Paul will again be 1h the hunt for Angelus League honors. The Monarchs w1ll be featured at such home .. gyms" as Chapman College, twice at the Bren Center on the UCI campus, at Orange Coast College, Cypress College and Ocean ~t~~I as well as their own 700-seat pit. Australia sends Merrimac Staie for a non-league duel and from Nevada will be SOuth Lake Tahoe in a non- league game at M;uer Dei. Artesia. a Jan. 4 foe at OCC, features 6-8 standout Ed 0 '8ann1on. who 1s being hailed by some as the No. I junior m the nation. Never· theless, the Monarchs appear to have the perwnnel 10 deal wuh such a schcduJe. At the point ·~Jason Quinn. a S-11 JUntor: and the 6-" R1adon is 11 the ofT-1uard. Moms, when he's a~au­ ablc. 1s at a foN-ard ~pol. but David Boyle(~6-4junior)wtllmove in there to start. Up front at a b11 forward JS 6-7 jun1orCharhe Andres with 6-8 Derek Stone, aJso a JUnior, at center. That 11vcs the Monarchs four juniors 1n the stanana lineup with Moms out. • "We'll step up the pace a liule bit." said McKnight. wtth intentions on using a great deal of tus 18-man squad. "We have 10 underclas~men and tt's the youngest team I've ever had," he noted. Another 1rcc in the attack 1s 6- foot-10 center Mark Moneypenny. but right now he's in a reserve status as a sophomore ... He:s a }Car away from being real good:· said Tournament action opens Thurs- day night with the "'le""port-Mes.a Invuauonal. a 12-team prep basket- ball tournament spread over two sues (Newport Harbor and Costa Mesa) and ovtr four nights, extending to the finals on Monday night at Newport Harbor. · Mater Dei High's Monarchs, who have won the CJF (large schools) champ1onsh1p fi ve of the past six years). are top-seeded. while Saddle- back. No. 4 in 1he Orange County preseason rankings. 1s the No. 2 seed. Newpon Harbor's host Sailors arc pitted agamst Trabuco Hills in Thurs.- da) 's first round. while Costa Mesa hosts Saddleback m the format at SAVI D• HOLIDAY GIFTS! ::x~ 1~ •C--• e'2l)O.,.... •• McKn•aht. .. Moneypenny was 6-61h, l40 pounds as a frnhman. Now he's 6-10 and 200 ~uods. about 30 pounds away. lit s bctna recnuttd by evrry- one. but really he's a year away from pJ.ayi'!Ja lol. He n~s to be with us to learn. Rigdon was an alJ-leaaue choice as a Junior and can play the point or guard, and Moms scored l S points for the Monarchs 1n the Cl F S.A finals a year ago, so the Monarchs appear solid in the backcoun. as well. Others who figu.re prominently 1n McKnight's plans are 6-4junior Andy Kanch, 6-3 juni9r Paul Nolan, 6-0 iunior TravtS BOyd and 6-2 junior Danny O'Neil. There aren't a lot of secrets sur- rounding Mater Oc1 -the Monarchs had a good summer, winning the 5~ ,ca:m Bosco Teeh Tournament and were sem1finahsts or finahsts in all of the tourneys \hey entered. Mesa Thursday. Drawing b)es in the first round are University. Cypress. Los Alamitos and La Quinta. Also in tournament acuon Thurs- day 1s Ocean View. which is at 1hc San Luis Obispo lnv1tationaJ. In non-league action Thursday . ntfthl: Capistrano Valley ts at Corona delMar (7); Edison 1s at Long Beach Poly (7:l0); Fountain Valley 1s at Mission Viejo (7:30). HeWP9rt·MeM ...,,.._......, ntURSOAY (11.......,,M..-r) 6 pm -~le<> D.i VJ Glenn. 7 SO o.m -Newoor1 HW1IOr vs. TraDuc:o Hill\ tat G1P1 Mtu) .. ,,_ -El TOl'o "'-MaotfMI' 7..SO 11m ..... ~ V\. Cci&te Mn41 SAVE ON LOW .PRICE AUi'O .. VALVO LINE MOTOR OIL • lJm11 12 quot!\ • SU,flt H'O SAE I ~ 30. All·CltMAJl lOW·lO, 10W_.,, 'l<IW·SIJ !~~ .V : ~~t FOfd ond VALVDUlf e ~ ..h~L cAJJ-Oiml*• ji9~ A\\.n: , (llf c:... MeA) •:JO 11.m -E1 Toro-Mlmlr loMr "'--. ~-Coste~ lowr <( 6-ID P.m. -u QUlnte V$. ~k ·C051•, ~winner · • 7:50 0,,, -LO$ Ai.t'nllos ... ,. El Toro•Mlvi•lf "'Inner UTUIU>AY (If ........, H.ner) 2 50 and UD -Fifth ~ s.rnlflMls • 10 and 7:50 -Cl\lmoloftshlp ftNls MONDAY ( .. ........,..___, 7 IS -Sevenltl pteca 11N1$ l..SO -Flfttl !Mace fl~ S:JO -COMOittl9!1 ffnM 7,0S -Tlllrd Ollee llnlls 1«1 -C~ .. .. . . NaA ITA•Hlll .....,.cit ... .... °""""' w L L.Men ' 3 Por1Wld 7 ' SMttte ' ' c;..,.stat• ' 1 ai.en ' 7 Ptlotnhc ' 7 s.crernento 2 ' MNw•t DMlleft Oa-.S ' 3 Denver ' ' Ut.t\ I ' Houston • ' Sen Antonio ' t Mleml 0 11 En ... C••wie A-..C DMlleft PhledetPhla 9 5 NewYork I S Bolton 1 7 New.Jerwv 7 I Wnhlneton 4 7 CNnotte 3 10 c:.tr9' DMllerl Detroit CllW!and AtlMla Mllwauk• Chlca9o lndlena 10 3 I 3 I 6 6 s 6 1 2 11 ,.....,., SC.. 5ecrwnel1to 12'3. Cllil9wl tS OW1otte ", Mleml IM ............. J«wy '3 A._.. 120, Sell Mtonlo 104 lfldlane 107, o.trolt " ~11'.~114 ""'*"• nA, ....... 107 O«lwir 13', New Vortl lit S.f!M '°'· Uteh 10J GcMdln Stele IOf, C~ '9 T.-v'aO- S.tttl et LMWI. 7:30 P.m. Pd. .150 .Sll .soo M2 M2 .~ .112 .150 .692 ·"7 .511 .J3,3 .000 .643 .615 .soo .467 ~ .231 .76' .171 .571 .5'5 .462 . 15' New Vorti et~. 7:30 p.m New JerWY el lo6ton. 4:30 p.m Portleftd •• ~. 4:30 o.m. SM MtoNo et Mlernl, 4:30 Cl.II'\. ~ et o.froll, 4:30 P.m. ~ton el 0...., S:30 P.m. Ctllcaeo et Uteh, 6:31 p.m. TIM•~a 0..... Pl'illdai.hle et Ct.notte, 4:30 P.m. WMNnefon el Allente, 4:lO o.m. OIWIMd et NlllweukM, 5:30 o.m. o.nwir el s.crwn.nto, 7:30 o.m. ""-lD. a.ers ts .. 2\Al 3 3~ 3~ 31,\ 6\Ak \Al 1 2 5 11,.; 1 2'h 3 ' • QJPPllM (95) -Normen •·10 i-. t, IMNlil'9 5--f M 12, 1en1etn1n 5· 11 N 13, Nlll.lfl 2·7 H 4, Delley H H 7, Grent f·l2 2·2 H, Kite H H 0, Wiiiem$ S-15 MO 19, Woll t-2 1-2 1, GolldrNlcll MO 3-4 17, Pol>$On 1-1 H 2. Toteta; M.a 20-29 ts. IACIUMllfTO (ID) -Mc;Crev NM 5. Plndlne¥ S-9 2•2 12. "'°"'"°" "l-13 , •• 11. K. Smll'I t-12 H '7, D. Sml1h 5-11 4·6 1', K191ne ~7 .,_. 12, P9terMn 4·7 .._. 12. Del Neero M H 2, ~ MO H l7, lefTv s-7 H 10, Wlttmen M H !, GUWv 1-1 O'O 2. Tota •• 21-:N 123. ~ .. o-tlf'I °"'"" 23 19 21 2.S--tS Sec:nmento l3 40 24 2'-123 ""'-llOlnl 9091$-f'rnaley 3, W1lllems 2, Grem, IC.. Smllll. Fouled out-eenlemlll. It .. ~' SO tl'Mnnl!W 91, Secremento SO (T"°'""°" 11). Aull~ 20 (Nl•on 6), Saa-to 34 (0. Smltn 6). Tole! foutt.-<.._,. 21, Secremento 22. Ali.nde~1'.S17. c..... tceres WIST ·ltOCIOtlS USC f'1, U.S. lnltrnen-1 61 ldello SO. WnhlnelOfl St. 40 Cel lepllal 67, Pomone·Pltr• 6l Tiie Mester'• 102, Point Lome 17 Cel Lutlleren "· u Verne • Whlltl9" 106. UC Sell 01e9o n Maftto 71, Hevwero St. 6S Cent. Weahlneton 12, Pee. Lut~•n 64 COMMUlllTY COLLIGI WOMIM Et C.... M. 0..-.. Cent S4 (-8 WWW) 0r .... c.... .. c...-....... .. ..... AmOOll 2 0 2 4 9ooller 6 2 1 14 Ellerrnen J 4 2 lO ltown 3 4 2 10 L..IUte 2 2 1 6 Crew-> 2 2 I Tllomn o•o I 0 llv I > 5 It ...,_. 1•s•lklllt• 11 4 > LOlll o o o o Roeers 3 O o 7 ltltteMouw 3 0 • • Pw1er 0 0 , 0 °'"" 1517 Wrltflt 2 0 0 4 aell°' 6 1 3 IJ Totell 21 12 11 S4 Totels M ll 22 .. Helftlme: El Cemlno, J2·2'. Tlw .... llOlnl ..-: El ~°""' I. Tedlnla6a; Hoftt. MML ~--­K.11191 9, New JerWY J WeM!ftlltOll 4, SI, LOU" 3 Ptllll d 1 Ip hie S. Bot Ion 1 o.tron s. NV tMeftdlrs J • NY llW191n 4, Wiftnltlee J Mlnnesote S, Ch!Qeo 2 VWIC04JVfl( J, CeleerY > T.-v'IO-Monlrffl el Hentord, 4:35 o.m. Quebec el luHelo, 4'.lS o.m. WMNneton el Plthoburtll, 4:35 o.m vencouwr et EdmOflton, 6:35 o.m. l"llwMllY"s O- T Of'OlllO el Kllll&. 7:35 o.m. M#vMtote e l Boston. 4:35 p.m. MontrMI el Plltledt!Pfli., 4:35 o.m. Quebec et o.trolt, 4:35 o.m. NV blendln et SI. Louis, 5;35 o.m NV ltenetn el Ce!Oerv, 6:35 o.m. Kines t, CWllb 3 sare.., ~ l'lnt ......... 0 I 1 J I. Los Anoelft, Tevlol' • (NlchoHS, Rob· ll•ille). ll:OS. sec..-......... 2. LOS Anoe!H. Aftlson 2 (Ceroenl«. Kru'11eittvskl), 10:09; l. New wwv, MecL .. n t (VllilCM!t, VMl>eert). 1~6; 4. Los ~. AlllM>n 3 (Kru'11eittvslll, o.Grev), 1':31 (P9); S. Los Anoeles, Kennedy 2 lltobllellle, TevlOr), lt'..2S. Tlllnl ..... 6. N•w J.,ww, Suncbtrom 10 IYS8C>Nrt, MecUen), l:ll; 7. New Jerwv. MKLMll 10 CMelrf. 0r1wer > • .as IPC1>. a. Los Meeln. TeYlol' 9 (Gretzkw, Cronmen), S:S7; t. Los Aneeln. ltol>ltellle 17 (~tlltw, Croumen), 1:2t; 10. Los AtlNlft, Gretlltv It lltOOltellle, Oucl'llMe), 11.17 (PCI), 11. Los Anoetft, o.Grev 4 (°"9ueY), 16;A9; 12. LOS All9elft, GrlllkV 20 (Hemill), 19-AI. Stlot1 on IClel New Jersev 13·12·1l-3'. Los """"" 14·17·11~2. Pow.-olev OPCIOl'lunlllH-Nhl JWM\I 1 of 4; Lot A"9lllS 2 of S. GoellH New JerMY, Burke, . 7-1~3 142 .... 33 unt). LCK Anoe!M, HHIY, 13-7-0 (J6-J)t. At~ll,SOS. WR•STUMG """ "'*' NOM.LaAeua 1 .... 11 • ...._..n ,._DKl«le (M) o. NICCOf'mlcll, 1:S2. los-Merdledo <Ml won tty tom11. 112-Nledrlnlllleul (El won tty lniurv o.feult over Autlln. 1 l~leutroe (M) dee. Te111ere, 6-3. 126-e. lurefts (E) dee. ArdM. 1'·'- 1,,__..llt tEl dee. Yunll.,, 1•9. 13t-K. lurllftl (E) dee, Arnold, 11·4. 14s-RldWds IE) dee. Flelllroe, 11·3. 1 s.t-Nvtius IE l p, Pet'll•, S:l 1. 1'S-0Ulov (El tied with K,,.rr, 9-t. 177-Sdletnl'nenn (El dee. Mc:Nelt. 4·0. ltl-Hend (El o. MorTltoft, 1-AO, Hw~orllls (Ml won bV fol1elt. O....see......_ NIEWPOaT L.AMOIMG - 1 lloet, 19 ~ 5 und bell, 24 whll• fish, I ICUIPin, 1 .... •• Med DAWY'1 LOCKIR {........, 9-dll -3 bollts, 35 ..-rs. 75 bonito, '1 cellco besl, 1' sand tleu, 10 m.ckwel, 2 IC\#ln, 4 ~. '1 ..,. Mrc:h. nn weelr's treut .-.es LOS ANGIL.IS -lie R~ CrMk, C.stelc Lekt, C.1telc i..e.-i, El Ooredo Pwk Lek•, Cmiel Lek•, Ellretleth Lek•, Lew-. Lekn, P9ca Roed Pet1l Lek•, Puddlnettont l.eM, Sen Gebr... River (Msl fort!). otlAMGI -··.L.eoune Nlouel Pent Lek•. IUVIRsm. -Fulmor LMI•, Hemet Lelt•. SAN MltNMtotNO -lie 9-W l.ell•, COlot'edo River (NMdlft). Predo Perk Lell•, YucelH Perk Lelle. VINTURA -C.altes LM•. L•~ TUlllOAY"I USUU1 T...o uca. 1 m11e 1rot ,,,_ .. 11 ...... -__ , ... IT IUCL I "* trot '"°I!-(T.-1 IUO .__, )IO ~ o.ic. C0.-1 S.JO >IO K-.o ll ..... (1(-1 ,,. Tlnle. MJA. 0 IJUICTA 12-11 Mid M6M .. co.> ••a. ' .... -·· ....... """ Gf1 , __ , uo ,.. I.JO ~ '°""""'I '-IO l.IO ·--1~1 ,,.., TlrM: t:k'-12 IJUICTA lM I -U IM ~ E-(~I f.111 U0 1A -.IO leecfl IT-•l "" UO v ... v HI t0.--1 SIO Time: t.tt l. U llXACTA 12·lJ °""' UfM 'oi.™ uca. 1 Mill -. Hy S... Sl>.'-t (C>wnfl t 60 >.Jt 2 IO llN .. ,,_ ISllv•l UO 2.10 -Vinet (li'leMI UO 1-MlA U IXACTA0 ll-11 Mid 132.60 Pll'TM aACa. I mlle MC9 MW• (V .... IClll • ....,l U0 >• JM ~ HUil ~fer lT,,_•l llO >.GO Sb H SW CltalOlfotdl S 60 VOUftULL ca: ,,, __ SOUTM ... CAL II .. _.._ALI .......... GollNft wa! ... 11 Canllllo, 1 .. 6. IH, IH, .............. ITATa MW I ... 9 Irvine def. I.GI .U., IS-11, lS-7, lS-7. All-South Cout League ~e BIO'• ID 8oo Lim wu r.ecentlJ Mlected u tile =I Defeaalft Pia,_ ol tbe Year, and tM•ee ... .. llolle (ofteaalft llne). Pat Wlalte ('buk). 8oott (defeMlft line) and Va9'1m · Sbackleford (lillelPMker) were alao accorded ftnt team lloaon. LAGUNA PREVIEW ••• P'ram88 teams before all of that time that was As for those four retumen, as well lost, it•s because my kids arc pretty as othen, Bowen has a solid core of good basketball players. athletes to work with. "There's just no way you can stay "I've aot some kids who have IOUTMWIST OIUehome SI. 70, semtofd " °'" Amttbn f7. TrlnllV, Tu . 67 Sen 0teoo SI. 93, .. ytor SI MRDWaST ... SI. fS, Cerdlnel Sll'fld'I S3 II.~ '1. LIWOll&, Ill. 14 ,... 16, /Miro St. SS Irvine, Golden West post sweeps with &ood programs 11\c Corona del played a lot." said Bowen. "Brian Mar, foothill or Woodbridge. Wood-Buss (6-1 senior) will be out tbr bridle's lilbtwei&ht teams are win-another week because or a football nina everything. That ~mmunity injury but J have. four who have just aivcs them too much for us to played a lot -Dain Blanton. John play them... McKcown, John Trevino and Buss. lndlenl "· Mleml, °""° 70 ~ St. 70, T•us W.WVen U 1owe "' 0r.u n towe SI. •• o.lehton 51 ~le 97, Vounettown SI. 6' N. towe 104, AU9Ullene, S.O 16 P\w'dlll 100, LOlll IMdl SI S3 Wldllte St. "· Geor .. Meson 7S The Irvine High girls volleybalJ team qualified for a shot at a second straight state Division I title Tuesday niaht by di1patchinJ Los AJtos High. IS:ll, IS..7, 15-7, rn the Vaqueros' gym. dominated the tirst part of the first game." After closing out the first game, Irvin~ t~k quick control of game two.Jumping out to a 14-1 lead. The third pme was close, tied at one J>Oint at S.S. but the Vaqueros scored fi ve of the next six points to win easily. SOUTM Aa.Mme St. 15, FIOf'lde A&M 66 Auburn 74, Geor.ie St. 70 Florlde SI. 100, Fie. lnternellonei 7S Jemn MedllOfl H, VMl '2 Loultlene Tedi U, FfftllO St. Sf N.C. ·Wllmlneton 7S, Ohio U. .. Irvine, 21-0, won its 35th straight match and in doing so. will plaf in the championship match at C.a State Fullerton Saturday night at 7:30. The Vaqueros started slowly, faJI. ing behind in game one, l 1-4, before raJlying for the victory. Bev Oden led the winncn with I 8 kills and Melinda Norton added 15. Jenny Fu was credited with doin,"an outstanding job setting" by McKenzie. Old Dominion 70. Wiiiem & Merv '2 IAST Cent. Connecticut SI. 7'1 Honlre 61 Chevnev to. Oelew.,. ~t 19 IOI) ~ n. MMNllen S3 Oer1mouttl IO, Boston Colleoe 7• Oelewere n, WHhlnelOll, Md. 11 Uf9Y9tle ... ArrnV 6 I Lono lllllM u. '3, Concordle. N y 76 Meris! llN, Mounl St. Vlnc:e111 SO .. We just started/icking up our level of play," sai Irvine Coach Mark McKenzie ... We started passing a little better and capitalizing on their errors. In a community collcac match: Golden West S, El C8ml90 t : The Rustlcn advanced to the st.ate cham· pionships at San Jose City Collcae Saturday and Sunday with an easy Md.· a.lltmore COUlltY 711, Towson SL '1 New ~ '3, HeNWd 74 "They (Los Altos} played very well. They had two real strong playcn who UCI HOSTS USF. • • From Bl ~at any cost in the style of Loyola Marymount like fint anticipeted. there will be the Anteaters' typical efforts to move the ball out fast on the break offensively when UCI hosts the University of San Francisco tonight at 7:30 in the Bren Events Center. .. We're not aoing to go completely conservative:· Mulli .. n said. ''Our mistake was prcssina Georgia St.ate when it was willing to play with us .... In a way I'm glad it happened. We'd have had to shoot about 80 or 90 percent to do well (UCI shot 36 percent). But shooting can hide a lot of the problems. "As much as we would like to play with the Loyola philosophy, I hate to sec people makina la~ns. The touahcst thing is to ~uard the ball. because there s so manx good playeB. So we re aoing to back off a bit on defense. • But the Anteaters will still try to force the hand of a team which tries to slow the tempo down. "The bia difference is. we didn't care what the other team did before, we were going to take it at them," Mullipn said. "Now we'll prepare for what they do." Mullipn had an apolOJY for his players near the end of a special Sunday practice to re-orpniu the team's emphasis. "The coaches met from I to S and the playen practiced from S to 8," Mullipn said. -1 told them we've Sol thinss we have to make adjustments on. J apololizcd to them about S until 8 and iaid sorry you have to be tlierc. "When we were down 57-44 at halftime, we probably should have bllcked off the preu. But me. in my perverted way of think.ins, I thouaht we could come bllck and beat them." In another weekend development. senior forward Mike Ookt~k will continue to start in place of ~Jeff Herdman, who aot the call in the opener. DOk1on:zyk. #ho started upon arrival at ua two years lflO and had a ttrona first few pmeJ before fadina into reterVC roles-numerou. onts, responded with 14 points and nine rebounds •inst TCU. .. What he's doi.nt this le8IOn it KOri!'W in pmn.." Mu...,. •id. ''Lat year he shot Hke bec:k in pncticie but · ciluldia't hit in the:~ TI;;•u 6-9py, who can 90ou1 8Dd hit t.be jumpeftOt. If he can continue to do that, he's IDial_IO bdp U1." • Tbeft'a eomc rcallipmcnt in bandlitls thc: ball 1do ~ pointdpard ltod Palmer,~wfio ~ ~ ~-k•Mt TCU, mede alae namown la addiuon co Ml 2S ~~ in the win. · -We're lilttilt1 IO the P:Oint where I don't tbiak ...... ..rilM'f'llheWllllMd~ M ... mct. 1e'D liptit it upwtln ,.._,{kma) f10yd aad (Mike) ......... it~olta.t-.· ·=-...... ,, ... ~ llicty ..... --··· F.llia l-'..0.Wbe1heftr'M lhree ,.. Ol'dle1llllCll wlllehM-M lrteaMcOaeUyeolllitaw eo .-t • cenw. S!UJ Fr&ZJclsco at UCI at Bren E•ent8 Center TV: None Radio: KPZE ( 1190) SEIUH: USI' teeds, 1·0 GAME NOTIS: The Dons hll 57 percant from the ttoor M • 1 .. m In wlnnln9 the Coors Llent Claulc al Fresno Stata over the weetcend. Kewlft Ills had 24 PGlnta to lead the wev to • 90-76 ~"me win ovw Idaho State, while cent« Mir• McCatlWten ""* tourMY MVP honor1 . . . USF returM Mven letterm9n, tht• starters, from a IQUad which went lJ.·15 • vMr "° and flnl1hed 1lxth In the Wnt Coast Athletic Confet eoc:e . . . McC&thrlon, who IHds USF In acorlne and reboundlno, 11 "bie ~ atrone ~ lhoots well," a«ordlno to UCI COKtt ......... He •nd 6·1 lunfor forward Jell o.e.-. who "POPI out to teke lurnMA," form • t.. duo for ttle Antea,.,s to d9el wlftl. Mir• .,_..,avll wl" lltletv trv to Mlldle McCathrlon wttltl Min UMt ••~ uo thr• lndlea but dr•ws ttie anlement of Oe8ot1off .•• UCI lunlor ... °"'"'~ ttie 6·foot·t vounoer brOltler of MIU, Nia beef! taken out of precffa by MulllMn ~ of bunltt. In both knees. Doktoravk had knee sureerv .n.-a ,_,. "'*" tt1e besket late In ttle 1916-17 ._ton -.ct red•lhfrted laat .,...... "I don't know H he'• be out .r.-. two ..-. 0t WNit. We'• have 10 oet hfm tr•tmem end ... how It ooet/' Molflean Mid. Dona(2-0) Probable atart8n ........................... ft JO Ken Hert, 6•6, Sr. F J2 .-Deewtll, H , Jt c ,, '*"' ~ ..... Sr 0 14 KIWI Moutofl .... , II. G JI Kt¥111 E .. , t-f, >r. -........ ...... s.o lU •• ..... 1U .. u u u t.t u "4 .l9ff Olrtln.n, .. ,, So. CU, I.ti; tt .,._ hMt, ... 1, k . CU . I.JI, 41 tc.tt ~. H , So. W. U>. c.. Jim ......... C*""" YMr' et ""8, •e: Iii. UCl, t-tl Aa• ... (1-1) Pra•1Mit-.rten ...... -.Ed.... ..... ... , J ... ' .. ,. •• ~ ... , » ... . .... "· u c tt ...... 'M'cOllt• ... ,, ,, u • 11 ... ,.,., .... •• .... ... . .................. .,. .... ... 11 _ ~91: n~. :T ..... =·~ tt f:1l..-r& T-~ °'1... .. .1.. ,fr':.,. ........... n. ......... •n l 5-6. I S-6, I 5· 7 verdkt over the Warriors at home in the second round oftbe Southern California Rqionals. Jaekie Cook Jed the way for GWC (20-1) with 20 kills and four blocks, while Sabrina Dennjs added 12 k.ills and five blocks. .. We were ready to play," said Rustlers Coach Albert Gasperi.an. "This was the best match we've played aU season. El Camino never knew what hit 'em ... The Rustlers jumped out to a 9-3 lead at the outset of the match and dispelled Gasparian 's fcan that they wouldbeflatastheresultofan 11-day layoff. El Camino. the South Coast Conference co-champion, finishes at 17-4. May~:. but the fact is, the Artists , And, Sean Stafford ~6-3) bu exccHent do pli1 woodbridge twice in Pacific ability and is expcnenced." Coast ~ue play. McXeown averqed. l 1.4 poinu a Lquna s schedule in December is game as a junior and 11 6-3" but an limited to tournaments only -at ankle injury. as well as the nu, have their own tournament (the Artists him behind at this stqe. open with ChartcrOaks);at the Irvine "Jfl have any health problems I'm World News Tournament (the Anists aoing to be in big trouble," predicted QJ>Cn with Palos Verdes); and the Bowen. Coast Christmas Oassic alEstancia. Blanton, at 6-3, has excellent There is some lightat the end of the lcapina al>ility and is a solid re- tunnel, however, with four returnina bounder. standouu and what appears to be a Trevino's all-around abilities and possible shift in prionues at Laguna shooting give the Artists three solid Beach. fiaures to start with. He was the As for priorities. Bowen is happy he Artists' l~ding scorer when a junior bas another semester of sixth period at 11.9. Blanton dropped in 9. 7 per PE and it appears it may be a year-pme, so the Artists have their .toP round item for him, in contrast to ihRe scorers t.ck -Trevmo, years of no sixth period PE. · Mckeown and Blanton. "Those three could play on any Newport Christian hasexperien~edlook team around," said Bowen. "If they were mixed m with a cous* of 6--6 kids who like to hit the boards they'd have a bard time stoi?J>ing them. It would be a aood team.' Buss is an excellent shooter, but bis size (6-1) hurts at the post position with Mckeown ~t a&Wd and Stafford a forward. Conquerors return complete. starting five from last year Quick quiz: Which Oranae Coast area PfCf) basketball team has the dream situation -with all five starters blck for their senior season? That's the ha_ppy situation for Newport ChristWl Hiah's Con- querors, who'll be tryina to improve on a 6-13 overall record IMt seuon with the entire lineup beck for c:o- coaches John Diebold and Robert Morpn. It's Diebold'• flnt ~ and after three ~ with the Junior vanity, Morpn has moved up, a well. An-Academy Leaaue returnee Wayne Everett. a 6-1 forward. is Joined by bonorable mention~ )on a.hnten (6..()), 11 well • 6-7 center Jeremy Oark. 6-0 pant Mart (:arflll aad 6-0 ....... O.vid Hum lier. AncMher returnil!ll vanity let· cmnaa it s-10 .aior pan1 Jaon ADdrews, wtaiJe DIW IO~ propam is 6-2 IOllbomore Pat Villl, Wbo it n~ to 1ec duty at-...... ..We shouldn't have any prob- lems." said Morpn. "This is a areat team comjna up and the lequc (Academy} had some switches with leffinpe{I Christian, Avalon and Whitney out" That laves California Lutheran, Heritaee Christian. Libeny Cbris- tiant St. Marpret's and St. M_~l's as tne Conquerors' com1>91W1111 in leuueplay. "Ivercttand Bahnson will bcdoina most of the scorina." said Morpn. .. DefeMively we'll ao with a 2-3 zone and try to take ad van~ or our size in lape. Offensively we II be in a 1·2-2 tet with thewilnasdoinaa lot of front coun play." lrvlne Soccer Tournament set . ne lrviae Hilh Socar y.,. • 711111 •i. · ...... ~ ii die=-.......... ICMGll~ .awd......., for.... _. Tom nzm IN: Im.. -..~..-.-. --.w~u.u~ . _..... ---· T1liie l4-lllm ......... ..... Al .............. ln'iM iMl7dGDllhli0...-0a•, §•4J2fW.._A.,... a .......... 'I ...... la .._ ......,, ~ ... ..!!* • ., ill»_.. H lid I _,. .... s..--..... .. • ,,,.. . "If'J have to move McKeown to forward, then I'll move Stafford to the post aod Pat Quiatey (S..l l) to a auard," said Bowen. "Thinp really aren•t set yet. .. Quigley is considered one of the best athletes in the school with his qoickne.ss an asset, as well ts his ·defense. · Anotherwith_aood leaping ability is 6-1 senior Jon Cumminp. and Aaron Brauer (S..9 senior) has shown he can handle the ball and shoot from the perimeter with consistency. A1111ts' Mt11•111 Dec. s-~ leKf'I ~-Dec. 12· ll'-4rYl!le WWfl9 N9Wt T......,.,.., Dec. •.-c..t OWll4mae Clllllc. Jal\. ..-.Sllfll WI(...,.), 7:a. Jell. ..-.st ....... ,'(Mme),,.. .. Jell. ll-et~t411a·,1:a. .Jeft. q....()r .... , ..... >, 7:a. Jail. ...... Trl9ucll -7:a, Jail. ........... ,.....~-Jail. &--Celle __. ,..,,.,; 7• =-~~~·'· , .... ::f,... ... ,..,.,,.,. .............. ,~1:JI. , ........ Celle ...... r.w. ·-"9ctlc c..t LAllUI -· SCGopea• llomew•oa ., - ~@~DD D ----4 lines 7 days ~Na .. petty •· .. ,_... CALL 842-5878 FROM NORTH ORANGE FROM SOUTH ORANGE • I 0 80 ~. COluwu•a.t. ~ • mocM ....... Of ... Waina.d You cen now cell the D.atr Plot Cl111ltled Dept. on 8eturdef "'°"*'I from l:OO to 11:11 a.111. to pl•• row .-.., Md Mond., ede.. NNlllAft ...... MOUlll/COMM>I ....... I. . .I-...__ . ·-........... ····-~..... . ""' C-411-. . ltl2 c..-........... .. _,_, ...... ·-.,.. •••• " ........ IOlll2 ,_ Yllllr· . . . . . . . ... ............. •••• ••• 14MO ............ .--... , ICMll ........... .10.. '-.... .ICWI '--·· ·-'-....... IOD ._,_ ,.., ........ ..,.. ..., ..._..... •• IW ._ c::i..-IOIN .. -c.,i..-• . . • . ,.,. ---..... : ··-...................... .... c--............ .. .... '-....... ··-,..... . . . ........ '°'° MllC. .... ........... ,, . ........................ 112' ...... &c-.ioe .......... 11• ..... ,__... ................ IOt ~...._"-" ....... 1m _ .............. ·'* _.......... ,. °""Cit c.. .,_., . • .. . ,., o.Ot ... ......, .... ,_ ~ ....• ., _.,_., ·-......... . ... u..._. ....... ,..... ,. ..... .__..., ........... ' ,., •aft AU MOUIU/CONDOI 0-.... ....... . . . 21CD ............. '* ..... -..-..... ... ,,., ~ .............. "" C-411-. ........ ·"" '--··. .......... ""' 0-.'-. ,,,. ....... . . ....... fl» ........................... JIM ......................... 21.0 .-...-........... 21C2 -........................ , .... ~ ..................... 21• ~-.............. ,,. ~ ..................... 1111 .-.................... 21st ...... ..-...... ........ ,.., ............ ........ .. , ... s-0.... ................. 217---~········· .. 2111 CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5678 FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY ~1220 411 llOO ils sociated rlSSOCiated ------- .. Merrill Lynch Realty • let Ut .... Y• S.n Y • p,.,,,.,t . ~ .......... , 642-5671 for information , & surprisingly low cost. ..... _. ~ ...... 21• _ ... ..,... ............. .. A1•11•1mrzn• .. • •1 •1•11 : :·I al•Y .... c.._ ........ "" .... .._ ..... ....... ,,. ,_ .. . . .... . ,, .. = = ..... ~~ 2722 .. ......... ~ ....... ·-..... ~ ............ ... ..................... ,.. c..--.............. ,.,. c-.. -......... .. ,,.., '--···· ........... ... _ ...................... M3t •t-.. ....... .. . Mn ,_.. ._..,. . . . . . . . . . . . ,.,. =~t:.::::: . = -1................. ,..... .._...... ... •• • . :aie.-..__ .... .. ... ,.. .._ .................. ·*' """',,.,.. ... ••. .... a.IS ....... ..,.. . ... :aw ................. iMf a.a..-....... .. ,., • .. -c:..i--. . . . . . . ,.,. m. 17» 11.0 110 Z7 ... IMl'l.OYllDll ..................... a. ..... -.................. ... .... c-............ ~ ............... ..._aw = .. .................. ,... ..... --. ....... ............. ... -Gui T "' _._.. -.,i.i-. ....,~ ... . _.,.., .......... . • PUBUCA T10N DEAOUNE Monav .. -....... Sat. 11:30 AM 'f~ ... -...... Mon. 5:30 PM Wedlmday ..... Tua 5:30 PM Thurlday .......... Wed. 5:30 PM fftd9y ............. Thurs. 5:30 PM ................... Frt. 5;30 PM SuncMy ............ Set. 11:30 AM Cl.ASSIAEO OfflCE HOURS T~Senlloe MOIMM)I~ 8:00 A»-5:30 PM Setwdey ltOO A»-11:30 AM amn-eoun. ~ 8:00 ......._5X>O PM ea.an Diiiy Piat a-.. . .. "" ......... '* ..... 1'012 ..... ......... "°' ... -C-411-.. ,, .. 1'114 tt• c--.,,. ........,. 101• ..... ,., . ,,. ---.... .......,..._...,,_... ,.. ,.. ,_...., .. ..,. ~ ,., ~ ............ ". »•• ............... '10 MllC. im -..... -'-.... .. .. -••• tDS '-... "'° ~,, ..... ltl• ~-... .. ,, ~: •t• _..,.... tl61 ........... "" ---••IO ---....... '112 OUR FAMOUS DIMES-A~LINE NAME ADORtS.S CITY AMOONl ENCl.OSfO UNCS I 2. J • 5 HAS RETURNED! ~k Oy popular dt!Nf'd 01~S·A·L·~ w•• run Fn<Uy:Satur· ~ M'lCl Sunday rn It$ own cl.issrflCcttton rn t~ c1au1f1f'd Ads Slnct this 1s.• ~1.i otf~r. ~ .riavt .a Thurs~ noon dHdltrw .and ask prt~nt '"' all .Jds. Tl"us 1s ~ to illt pr1vatt party .av~s~s I-OT mirchMld~ not ovPr s I SO tprlc~ must ~ hstf'd "'.t<SJ .and no ~1•t1ons Wta ~accepted All ~s W1ll run Fndily Saturday .and~ ~ 1s .a 541M min.mum• ~. ~ It~ So yout tow COit Dlmlfos·A·UM M II Olf'fly ••• S3.00. DEADLINE: lnurSdciy noon PRICE: S· n~ m.n1mum • 3 days • 104 IH'' nf?' == SJ 00 All 11ds a•~ prtp111a oy coming nro rnt D"rly Ptloc to plM,. /OU' ao or ust tt;'t coupon t:>f>•ov. • p,,,.at~ p11•h ~rcl'l.1nd•st onl)-lld\ "-O com- ""'Ca c>O~ ,p,.ts •'-t Sl"'Clt: orOduct 01 DI""'~ • Each •tt rn must be pr c~a on r~ ad w ith no •t~ms ovff SI SO MAil TO: 6'nws·A·Une ' Da 'I P•OI .HO WtSI Bay Strttt Costll 1\.1,.~ CI'. 9]b2b o.. v ,, IO< "<)lJf\ \.40f'Oc>v Fr a .. y 8 00 --~ :c S 00 PM --~ Zif' OATES TOJtYN 6 -~---"' 1., __ _ ··~----'· soo ... ... ... ... " -. • . . I TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ' "'4•-1 ~~-... 6 "'' ""• e-.~ ~o o.,., • .,,,, ..:lOC• -"'• 'S r.,.,_ sr- '99 ..,.,.., 6 il"Oed .... .,..,., '8 itil'r<4'• 20 S1•,ft1 ~I S• ........ a.- ]) ,,,,... 1• Loa!llO 16 w 0 18 f n •ty 0""f' )0 SO'..-dCY )' u n .. )] S ... ro ill or•IO lf' .... 99.,,,,. ) 7 Jn! "I) .. le I( "9 U t' l9 EMJU''• 42 .. oc;an •·me « Puls 10 .. o•• 4 !> lltew50e~' 46 l•t:l9<•1D< s mot' 49 h M 50 011oc1< , S USS~ c•tr 52 Neu1ica ,,,..,, . SS PG A g<NI S80·•1s,,_ •e ., ..., 60 "K>un eno "'9 61 Uatr' 62 Co-t>o) ~ 63 ESQO«I r;. '"'-"'OS 6!> S.Ot DOWN . r,,.,. OV9"' 10 0. - 2 Mona -3 Tropoc: o• • 8'ec11J1>ro SP•ane••M 6 l OOlotlO Ot>IC 1 l"•""' 8 San 9 1., .. •O Spec1ece I I Altr •Q"' •2 ,,..,,,ll .. ... 13 P1ac:. 19 Oown·•Q"'' 22 V>C'O"f \ Q" 25 C on1,.,01 o,. 26 c: ............. ~ 21 ~areo 28 •oot"' 29 8411., •on-c JO P.;r,,.tu•• 32 p,.,., ro- s-o 33 Al)nO<rn•• 34 E nc:o;;nt..., 3!> "°'-- ' G E A N~ T A S T E A C A T L AIR A A 8 0 I L PO LO A S AP I C T UAE ~ N EU OE1BA1K • NnlM E TAT S L E OS A ,._ 1C IAIR P E P t •HAR ASS IOIMEGA• S NEES • V I A L 0 1C A l GO V E RN ME NT OIRIO • T I M ER •T AN G Y RIE!G RE T• S -NoDsr I N PEER IE A F 0L il1T HA:U •GAS S IE S L l t JZ IA 00 N E1R E_Q.Q_Y ~ )7 9IOOCS ~· 4() Solt01"r 41 8oos • •2 V10,.l9$ '3 Confine •S O.OC- •6 Woes •7 Sve>00se 0 V E R G A 0 Wi T H REN E E IM I NE A STI R E G AD •• Plwe» 49 Shuft*°dl• 51 Cat>bege S3 --t«Otd S4 Pfloto 56 TCU t """ 57 Ycwng - 5t l(lndleO 10 11 12 ,. 13 $2.66 per day Thet's ALL )'OU rwt for 3 lines. 30 day mfnlmtJm In the SERVICE DIRECTORY 7. 730-1313 CL!AH & EXNlrr UC.C.T·111142 ••n111 ....... Hol'Nt-~ . l $400 PER WEEK (To Start) . With Pot ... tlal to $1,000 PER WEEK Insured Van, Wagon, or Large Sedan Is Required Leb ef O,pertu11f~ t.QrewWltlHhl Wwk 111 Yew OWa An• .. CALL MR. STEVENS (213) 477-31&3 11111•11 M II .... CLERK .. Rentel mini ator~ge. YOU NAME YOUR WORK SCHE~ ULElll PERM. PI T FLEX.HRS tor mature S*90l'I.~ Construction CARPENTER LOOklnQ f()( QueMfted tll'6eh CWpent• '°' cu.om. ~ WOftt f« SMh & Dool' Co. Gd. 8eMflta. PleMent .otttlng oon- dltlont. "'"*" In penon; M-F 7:30-3:00 to: F\ne Ani.h Se9h a Ooof. s1..- R • •• • r c h Or. H.B . 191-2391 COUNTER HELP/DELI FIT, °' PIT, good stenlng pey. N.8. w-. Cell Abr9hMI tl3 , .... Delivery Drivers PART-TIME Newspaper Delivery Drivers Needed . Monday -Friday 2PM-SPM. Weekends & ~ohdays 4AM-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 Motor Routes available in Westminster Huntincton leach Fountain ¥11111 NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING Oetiver.One Day a Week - Must have dependable car and proof of insurance. Ask tor Joanne Craney Ale~~mld nMd ~Ate you bftght. ... groomed mid eeger to~? Trew! 11 ~ ...... mid reecw1 llLlllllY CUI ---·~ that .. • good ,.,... tetton. J .. P. ~ l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J .. .,.,.. lmmadtate °""•• tor thoae 11 PU111 mid 00*' In our l'Mtttetlng 5 Y1 up In gold/modlum dlvlelon. NO EX· ftnleheL AWi M-Th et NNENCE HECESSAAY. °" bMUtltul MW ,... 11 ...,. ... peld dUrtnll ttea et RSC ....,,... ttWnlnQ pM lmmedl9te Pettc. 980 Cele Negodo, lnoome. ..atJng bOnue San Clemente. 381-toel e:=;,~ 9'19 •1leecl. For aippolnt· ::"~.or,'~ ........ through FtlcMy. Heme 1eeo. e untta. e.. lent~ mid ben-., afltel Cell Henk, For~ ........ IC& 142~1. :: t.~s.:' Eno--P, ...... T__,O_a-y1-.-.1-or_t..,.../c-o-un-t dothaa & price out Lndty ., tie*-. Wll tretnl Hunt. Waflled FIT. W11ng to Bch. JoM, 191~1114 :....1: ::eden•no 1111. man ,, ... ~~t ~ 11,..,...,19 WOf1c. TY1J1nG nattonal ,..., ..... mar-,..,.,... eo.ta ...... ketlng ...,,_ wlttl un-.,.. ,., , """*' ..,.,.._ For In- MOTOl IOUTES CllTI --Ill IUCI ......... ' WEEll.Y PIYMEIT --~-....... .,.. ••"'•••• UI -.... muo.:1 •UI B CALL 642-4333 betw .. n IAM & 7PM Orange Coast Dally Piiot formation, call Jack 1111113 '! M ~et SELECT ------------11!1!111-------~ T .. ...,. S1aO-UtJO per BETTER HOMES & .-n ~ttn•tn. Muet GAAOENS hewecs. 722-IMt AEALESTATE 751-6000 DO-IT-YOURSELF IDEAS A READER SERVICE Of THIS NEWSPAPER _ .... a .. r... ,,. NO-SEW COUNTRY CREATIONS No-sew cOUfltry·slylt OtcOfations art euy to make and Wtll llflflllen up your kitchen or brNkfut room This • cOlortUI tf....ot guidebook will st1ow you step-by· step flow 10 INk• t va111ty ot charm•no cowntry Pfotttts Mo neectlts °' sew109 macfl•nts are rtquued. 1wst otut. ecmors. taboc. bitting tmbfoldery l\OOPS and '°"" .... "'" 141pplltS ... l~__,--,--,~~ "'* .w.,,....... ,........,. ~ \ ·------= ·r oday' s News Tod~r!/ ·' -~ In newsracks by3pm MOTORCYCLES :10 4 WORDS DAYS Move Oat! Need to sell anything that rolls, floats or flies? ... We have a Fantastic Special to help you Move 'Em Out for only $799 .. Extra words 50¢ each. Ads that run 7 days are an additional $4.00. Call for more lnformatlon. Because this Is a special rate, we request prepayment by check, MasterCard or VISA. -----------------· aJllllClil ---------------- NAME CITY PHONE CIRCLE ONE MASTERCARD/VISA ADDRESS STATE ZIP AMT ENCLOSED $ EXP.DATE __ -· - .. j __.. Orenge CoMt OAllY Pll.OTI Wednaday, NoYembef 30, 1986 a.. '\::ial ... 11• a.... l1•titlt .. ,..._ l1a11t11 ....... Is altls .. lldll ••-• 111111 l1a1st's f&YOTI'o.ra 1111, 5 .... an, cXB 'fl e60Ji bi mrtfln .. ...., ........ 11 ,ORD MUSTANG • .-c!· AJC. .......,.t 4 ~ mllll•. POii* I Villi. 1 OWl'IW 31,ooo 4 ~ 1 .-ct l'IWI• _ .,...,.._, NM toM. ooi.Uon. ta 1001090. brek• OM onty-huny ""'--Bfue, ~ flrm. uel. po-;., ..,._ l*• ,_. MOO 141-ttllO ..,. or TM-2.211111k tot Miki on tN1 onell Anenclng ~13 ,. ('MT t•. "5 Autom•ttc, 4 cyttndef, 1~ 1'11Tl•-.Z Av•lltbl e. (2J 8ZOH) _ IDBI...... :;:ctoorlodc=, ....... 1200 -... --5 ._, menu.t ~ sa.tn I llL'M'llllWIJ.I ... ..,.. Poll* • .::: cwtte' ~ ,.._ ,_... bnk-. AM/FM.' cwt· •WfW IUllll1'I ..... , A/C,tlt (Maf)l6,4t6 • HJIHnOl •CetufMw "';: .. o:=~tcPo:..,~; -. AIC, M . Hurry fOt tNt •1..UTI AutOtMtlo, cn.ilee, ~· I ·-------~/brakH, CHHtt•. one. Sun root,~ wlio-. M AIC, Ult All po.--oowt. pow•r lockt VW '74 BOG. QJ.at NO-(2BVG371) S1$,"5 .... Dodge Omni 1NO, 9*eo, · Liii• Ml#. 01-$43) (2215) .. -nl"9 condition, wtllte, ---nm· -·-1 eutom.tlc. eo.ooo true 13."6 • 11500/ot>o. 873-2478 pp -· • ....... rnlllle. .. rMty. 11500 ..... I'll, ... , ........ ...... I .. ,..... Automllllc, v .. cylndar, ... ,_... 7fl0.3813l2MIM432) .... •1.Qll . crulMftr ~~~Jn.A, f-'119111• ~ = c::=:: LI...... FORD 1Mt Prob9 Qf ltl-1111 IWWU..lml I e....n.. AJC vwyele&n AutOfMtle power ateer-11013fl>tett5 Automatic, 4 ovllnOw tutbo, 81ackl0r9Y. op-~~-----=---,,..,==• AMI™· ~e. Muat Wiii l ake tr.d.ln. (2251) Ing, A/C. Low mllet. .... ... ._.., ,.,..,.. c.rulM. J>0!'91 tlonel Cet ~. GrMt GOVERNMENT SEIZED ........ ~I• $6875 (4'3TY)()l2,ff~ _. -••• ~br--AMIFM, ptloelQfeo7U.1512' 'IEHICLES LOW AS ".....,~·w:~r· IPUllAN llUIYmtfl ...,__ AIC.tlft.(l--1H>•.• .... ..,.. ~~O~Ltics.8 ~H:w's: ....... 11111)$3"', n1 ... 11 .. ,..... __._'11 II'!!!!'~ Auto.utlC, 4 cylinder, FORDS, MERCEDES, HH _,__ _,_. ~~AM/FM, POASOH.ES, PLUS IA'l ., .. ,. bt• liMltle ··1 omn11•a.... .. •• ,.Hiii ltl-1111 A/C.(10-IOl)l2.... TRUCKS AHO VANS.• •• V OLVO 'It 780GLE ... u•••tt Vwy Oood condition! All tulltutomaUc,P~_,AICbla 11£i81MW ~ .. E.AAZ88 1!'°0 .., R!CEOVEA~ELOS 1 ... 5 LI...,..""' ... ~·""• 111-111• TURBO WAGON. Whlte.J19 orlglnel, 327 engine, ~. bMut""' concf. Areyoulhe~aort. ..... ,.. " .. " " ... ,...._.." -~ Mlntoonct.11,000mll-. O.Vlll9S1 150.0rMt I SHOO. 8 3 1 ·5879 low mll•g• 12800. Ancf_,.eqo!Wl )'O\I .___-411 DETAILS. 714/531-e211 S«let2'-toned btua. •-------w .ooo. 170-1034 eondltlOnl 862.3200 <•AJB314) 142-0432 needlndaulfild. ....... EX'\'. 105 S1U001ob0 4M ... 111 D· · ... N . _ __,rta--...;9C-..*>..-T __ ICE ____ 1 _ __...Ml..........,IC...,.ll>.........,11Cl ....... _j NllC llmC( · Ml.JC IOTICE I 1CAGn the bid 11 by a eo<pcw1Uon • ...._QA9Mr?. to.,,., Into ... ~ 1111'1. priottoltledlYOIMldhelW· -Code, AT THI MAIN· Oflallf ~Of~ teOnctTO stall the ne!MI ol tM of· TN.-..,...._, T~ auc.ti MCurity •Ill ff ,.... .................. Ing, NOTICIOP l lHTMHCITOTHECOUN-Countv.~ CMDITO.. llcer• WhO can ~n en .. 1 1 •enylleblMtyforany tol'ttlWd. ' ' ..... '9 ._.. OMeO 1111•/tl ,..,.. wa TY cou .. THOUSE TOO ,~ 2: An wndMdlld mAfllAN a. euLK ""'""'*'' on behllf ol the lllOOii** ... OI ltle ..,_ TM OtSTAICT ~ ...... .. .. .... efl Mme L llllTM. Ta-....... CIVIC ClNTEA DRIVE 1/Unt .,.,.... In \.OC I OI KSTHD llADECK 1MMM'D (..... I COfporallOn and wMl tt9f ..,,.. Md athef ~ ... ttgM iO Njeat.,, Cf .. llOYAL aec•ow COft· .Ndge Ol tM YOU ~ IH DUA.ULT WUT. SAHTA AMA. CA .. Trect a1 ... ~ tM -°' CllAPllAN 91 .101 .. U.C.C.) mor. then one olfleer must ~·· " tl'ft ahoWl'I bid• Ot to ••Iv• •ny PORATIOeL un It.-.. ~ CcM#t UNDER A DHD Of T..USTI rtgtll, .. encl ....... con-coaee ...... COllf'ltt ~Or· ' :t!!em' I ......... ......, ...... '° llgn fl the «>Id 11 01 a l)e/1• MnJn. ~or lllb111811t11e A-. ......... 1.. C .. • KlaM Pet•t O••••r, DATED Ot/13/IS Ut4LE8 ~IO Md now Mid by" .......... of c.ltotflla. • ·~ ·1.....,, ............. lnertflilp ()(a jOlnl Yenlura, ............ IMde,but lntl'ftbkilor~--~ ..,... ____ .,. -.....-.... LeM, YOU TAKE ACTIOH TO under ... D.d'OITNM In"' IMP...,,... ... .,. , 1M8 ln Three__. ~at ... • state tN nemee Md Id-.-out~ or.,,.. PutlUlrltto"'9pr~ ........ -. H .............. ._, CA PROTECT YOUR 'A<>f'· tlleptOpstylleuMNlnMd s.4,,.... 31 Md M. ft. Arc:b Bay South ... ......., .. -... .. -. drMses 01 allQeM!'al 1*1· ~.t11P1m1a'orlil'Plled. ofSectlotl 1Tnoltflel.abor 111111111111111......., ..... ..,. ERTY. l'TMAY RSOlOAT councy, ceMornle. ~ ~ Of "'*'' PID'lf L B• l d ................ .......-,ners Wld joint Yetlwr.I H ,....,... .... pc11111lco1, Cod• of 1"-8tat• of .... te CAft N9 ~ ~ °'lln09 C0Mt A PU8UC SALE. Ht YOU lflCltMi.nd"*'*1: ...... fOOfdll Of °'1lnle i..a1una.of Pe ~e . ._.,...., •• 1 tt t the bidder II • sol• or-~.topeytM ~"'9°'8TAICTMI C..~ u• C.-....._ DellyPlotNowmber30,0.-NEED AN EXP\.ANATIONI A CONOOMINtUM COM· C:OU::.~ mother 8u1Cla n. ..-(e) Mii ...... ptoptlelot11'11p Of 81!Cther ~~ 8'11'/1 of otlt-.cl frota tf'9 Dholor .. oemri.r 7. 14. 21. 1MI Of THE NATUM OF THI PR181D OF: encl • tlle Olapmari Hadden of ..... ....... .. .. .... entity tNt Ooel iw.lnetS the ...... ~ ... of the o.t»•rtinent Of n................ W-2.49 PAOCEEOIMG& AOAINtT PA..cel 1: Are8I on -·~ ~ Ed-1......, Ir• fa etfa) .,.I \lf'lder a fidlllous Mme. Ille Deed of , wftll IMtteM lnduatttel "-laOona the ... ,.._ -"" WtMfft YOU, YOU ltt()ULD COK-UNfT 2. IH THE CITY OF "'9n" end Dldeildol1 of MCK HOIUNaACtic Mdl bldahell t>a lnthe real n~ thef90n,M~lneekS genert1~ellll10rWof11* ....._.., M NM la "8JCll)l1C( TACTALAW'fEA. C08TAMUA.COUNTYOF ~ CoodltlOI• Md TbcmM Chap-CHIT ANDMWa, P.O. ... 1 ol the bidder wfth • daslQ-nottC•>. act-I09I. It ,,,.,.,, Cllettl .._.. ancs the QlnWll MY~ 1ec1tow CO"· On 11/11111 at t:45 Ltn. OAANGI. IT An OF CAU· A9etrl0tlone and ...._. man ot Sonama; Ju· 17'12. rm-. c.....,_la nation IOllowing ahow1n9 under the *'"'Of the Deed ~ rN for hoM9Y PORATIOeL -ltMetla C<MMTY w 1eeurtty MleCI ...,._ • P:OAHIA, Al 8"0WN AHO vation of E8Mlnel1te ,. ditb 0-pman Pen-11111 "OBA (ltle tie1111ouS nem.}' • Of Tf\1111.. ..... ~ end 0'191'41fM 'WOf1c In tM A---. ua9'•1•, Cell· Oll•W. dUly appolntO TNMM under OE11Nl0 ON THAT CE~ oonted ~ 20. tl14 In f L IU a l"9 ........ •~1 1><ovl<led. hOWeVW, no fie· Clhargeeendeiqnrw.Of"'9 loOllt)'lnwrl6cfltMawontll ...... W eM tllll9 ._. STAftM end puttuent lo Deed of TAINCOHOOMIHIUMPLNf look tttt4, Ptel 17• of nN~..J 0,... __ ~ .... °:__ etlM....,1•1nlt•etflkl9 tltlous Mmtt shall ~ uNd TMIC• Ind of ... tNtla to be~ for wtl • ..,.._...._...,eft) CAU'WA Truat. Recorded on MCON>IOJUNE21, 1t71, Offtdel ~of Orlft99 .. ._...~.a ., ,., .. 1" 't I ........ uni..a tllere Is I current er..-~ ..... Deed Of craft ot Cype of W!Of'k91' ......... '9011 d• l!WmCOMT 02/0 1113 .. Document no. IN IOOt< 131tT, PAGE 171, County, Callforn& . ol ~ ... t pnd· et tile Ua: ••• .,.,.._Of registration with the Orang4! T""'-... 1"4...... MeCMct lo edCUt• the .. ,_ w1t1i11t le .. ...... ,,._H,,l'n 83-().49700, Book NIL, P8Q9 Of'FlCIAL AECOAD8 OF bcept thel•Ofl'I. Unite 1 mother ol llx Slat.er 1e: ,.._. • -...", eo COunty ~der. In~ ta.lleillfltl8IY_..,...., contrect. TheM,..... .. on w ::Z -...... tile oen-CMa'TMCT NIL. of ~ Aeoofdt 1n ORAHGI! COUNTY. CAL>-to ~. lndullw, • lflOwt'I of Alkle R. siurr of-=-~=:,::.. :a•:,n~·h.1~~=--=:'.!:"~;: =.:c,~.::.z:.,~.= ~ '-. "'1 11ec1 990~'t~o ~~8!u,,"':,=::. 'Off~i!L2: ,a. :;:.:o .. ~ Duluth. MN. Private elld eddr 11111 Wd tw h Sec:retary," Treaturer, and ~necl a wrlt'8n Dao-Ptannlng T,....,. co.,iea inay Dee.d ..... "'"' 11, "'°"11U eucut9C1 by: T!LFOFIO A. AN UNOIVIOEO 111Clln4 Pten" encl O.CWtUon. ~ beJd. Mem· .................. ...,., Manager. wetlon of Dlf ... Md 0.-bl COtallned on 19qU991. A ..... o ....... -WALKEA AND 8AR8ARA 8. INTEAUT IN AND TO LOT 1 Allo .. otPI thefehom. oria1 contributionl to ttwM,..,. 1aet ...... w Tl'll City Council of the mancl tor Sele, Md a wntten copy Of theee ratee IMll ~ MYUNQOK CHA QOTM, MCOllDtMG WAU<Ef\ HU88AND ANO M~CT NO. 10378, IN nurMMI tor acceet. in.. • llMwft .. h llit..ided Olly of Cos11 Men r•terVel Notio.ot Dlf9't Md Eectlon poet.CS et tN JOb th. lntend9d Tr.,.,.,... Of' A ... llllDlf WIFE WILL SELL AT PUB-TH ITV OF COSTA ere-and 811"'118 aP la._ J'lnt Cbw:cb Chrlat, lf-far•..:;JN .._...,., ll1e rlQlll to reject any°' ell to Sell. The uildel.ag.led IUNillbernendetoryupon Publlahed Oranu-Cout NOTICE IS HEREBY LIC AUCTION TO THE .. E • COUNTY OF OR-lorfbed In ltle ~men-Sclentlst, La~;:: ....... , . .._ bidl . ceuaed aelcl Notice ofO.-theCONTRACfORtowhom D9llY Piiot NoYltrllbef 30. GIVENthalonthetthdeyof HIGHEST 81DOER FOA ANGE. 8TATE °' CALI-ttonecl "Condomlnlum. ....... .. Niluel; Qranae Q -TM MIM(•) elld 1M*-Dated. Novembar 2 1, feult and Election to Sell to hcontrec:tlaewded, and 1tae. Noveniber, 1tea, tiler• wa CASH. f:t.et16e et Utne Of FOfllNiA. A8 PEA MAP Al· Md OecM!Mloo. ty ~ .~~~ =--===-~:; .!: 1~bllstled Orange Cout ~,.: :-~~ = :;J. ~~~ W· 2 '43 =~ :u~~r = ~: St .... ~":: mraD &IN Tgcx:.< ~~~; 11~~= tr~~ 527 ......,, nnmAJO:U..1.1, MYUNQOK CHA GOTH. Daily Pilot No°'"'IW 26. located. to pey not .... then the Md PlaJC llmC( County of Orange. puraaant 2924-H of the CiMornle CM1 CELlANEOU8 MAPS, IN .... Md egr-. aP • 0. CA ln804, cc charity 11111 QrlHen .... c1. 1988 DATE: 11/08/18 IC)«lftedr9*to .. woniers to S.Ctlon 10402ofthaCell-Cod•, AT THE MAIN-THE OFflCE OF THE ecrlbed In the ··con-"" cho6c:e ""4tM ....... Cetltern Sa123 UCUNT't AU.--. ~ ~ 'tMm In the teOTa a. fomle Streett and Hlghwaye ENTRANCE TO ntE C0UN-COUNTY AEOOAOER OF dominlllm PWI" anctOecW• • _, 1 VICU, .. TrwtMi. -•ecution of tt. conlrec:t. WOLUTIOte Codr. (I) .,, ..... 1m.nt TY COURTHOUSE TOO SAJ0 COtMTY. TOQET>tER etlon d ~ CCln-TW .... ........,, ..... PUlJC M)llC( ....... ......,. ...... ..... No bidder "Wit wtltldr-OP PMn••• ~upon ell ltlat property CIVIC CENTER DRIVE WITHAU. IMPAOVEMEHTS dlttonl end ..... lellona end lldLROY __. ........... ~. 1111 'ielleJ: Cellt•t•le ltt'fbld forapemdof alxty ,--. ....._II..,_, In an ai-ment dl9lrlet In W.EST, SANTA AHA. CA .. THEREON, EXCEPTING ,.....,.lb, of Ewtta DA.NIEL WARREN ....... w L.MlftdrOMet .:=:'0tr 11111 •s l~ ,.,..JW; (80) ~ 8ft9r tM deW l9l ...,_ ... ,.._ DdMlli. theCOuntyof Orange.~ r10ftt. ttt'9 and Int.,_ con-THEAEFROM CON· •••teed tibcM. YdLROY 73 18Mf'9 ......... _,...... ---•••• 8Y ANITA A"IAI, tortheOf*llngofbldl. ,..,._......,_....._. neted ·•rrv lne Coaat ~toandnowf*dby lt DOMINIUM UNITS t TN..,...~ or· • a,e • ,_. ....... C.... ...... • nv• ••• -TRUaftm aM.I OPPK:8 A s-yment bond and • .,.. _. KAlllW ....... A ..... "*lt OlsVlet No. under Mid Deed of Truat In THAOUOH 10, INCLUSIVE. OIMr common ~ rwj away in eo.i. c.lf.,.W7 TSNo.....,. "'*'*' Orat199 Coul ptffcnnanoe bond .... be ...... ft ............. 98-1" ~the tarn-U»proper1)'alt~ln aald LOCAT'lDTHEREON. cf the ..... property--- ..... Oil November TM1M181Mae,.....llMCI YOU ARE lN DEFAULT DellyPlotNowmber23,30, ~ prtor to ~Ion --.......... """toryd9ecllbedandpl'OYldad COUnty. CeJltornle. Oeecrtt>-PA~L I: ebOU deaorlbed It 28, l88& Born Sep-1tf tM Mid ~-Lat UNOE.R A DEED OF TRUST December 7, 1t11 of IM contraet Md et'9ll be .... _. _.. el ....... tor In Re•olutlon No. Ing the lwld !herein: AN EXCLUSIVE EASE· purpor1ed to be S4S UnMr· ~~ .7 1910 ln Mid ......... ~T DATED 01117/&3 UNLISS w~m In the fonn .. tontl Ii\ Che T .......... cei ....... 98-1273dulyadoptedby the A CONDOMINIUM COM-MEHT A.PPURl'ENANT TO f//lty OfM,# 7, Coata ...... ~ , •IA C~ LAUNDRY. YOU TAKE ACTION TO oonnd doCumenta. a--. CllJ et o...e. Boerd of 8upeMeore of the PRISED OF: EACH UNIT FOR THE USE Calltornle. Butte. Mcntana. He la T1llrt Mid W11........, le PROTECT YOUR PROP· ..UC l!fflCl Pllr9Uallt to 8eotlOn 4llO ~el 0.--. ..... et County of Of*'Ge on Sep-PARCEL 1: AND OCCUPANCY OF The undar•lgnad dla~ survfwd ~wife ........... be _. EATY. IT MAY BE SOLD AT -ot Ille Go\lllt:• ... oeCle cf C • .......... ., .,,,ber t3 1tea, wt1ere1n It UNIT 4, IN THE CITY OF THOSE PORTIONS Of THE delma aP 1181:1Mty for tl'ft In-• ...... .. .... ..... el': A PUBUC SALE. IF YOU MO I .... 'W'MC1'0M 119 8'ate of Cellforftla. ltle ., .,.., -. .., ....... ct.dered it. lntentton to COSTA MESA .• COUNTY Of AESTAICTEO COMMON COHectneae In Uld ..,... M.le C. 'I of "OYAt. llC9110W COit-NEED AN EXPLANATION CAU.819 contrac t wlll eon1tln ................ h Mid ()(def cen.in wor1l to be ORANGE. STATE OF CAO. AAIEA DUIGNATEO IN THE eddf.-Of other common Co.ta Mesa; ton.a, f'ORATlON, -K ...... OF THE NATURE OF THE FCM.. PtO'MIOn• permfttlng the ............ -e.n ..... done Wld eoqulaltloM end FORNIA, AS SHOWN ANO DECLARATION OF RE· ~1oc .. Gary Mcilroy of ....... ANlielm, Ceff· PROCEEOINGS AGAINST Setlool Dlatrlct: COAST •UOCHllui bidder t o ....... ,....... -,.,....,. lmpfcwementato t>amadaln OEFINEO ON THAT CER· STAICTIOt48 ANO 8HOWN aeld ....... be mede eo.ta ~-Robert ........... M •after De-Vqu. YOU SHOULD CON· COMMUNITY COLLEGE 1Utlalftut9 eec:wtllea fcf tl'ft ..... tha Co unty tor th• TAIN CONDOMINIUM PLAN ON THE CONDOMINIUM wtthout..,...,,~,...,,....or -OMIWM,.._ TACT ALAWVER. DISTRICT rnonletwtthhekl~ .... ......__ ..... ...._ .......,,.,,t dlttrlct. all In AECOAOEO JUNE21 1971, PLANFOAIEACHUNIT. lmpll9d,Ngerd1n9utle,poe. Mcllroy of Mimloo Tlila Mil.,_..., .. .-.. On 12119/18 at •..t5 a.m. Bid DMOllM: 2 o'c:IOdc atflct to enacn .. be _....._ ~ ,.._ accorcsence with th9t r9IOI-IN BOOK 13197, PAGE 178, The atreec eddrw Wld ....ion, rx ~brencea. VI e j O , M t Ch a el tect to C .. u .. UNfofftl Security Aiied SefWl9a u , p.m. ol Iha tOth dey of under IN contract. ert .,.. -' Ketltr .,_., utlon to wtiloll ratwenca 19 OFFICIAL RECOR OS OF other common deelgnatlon, to Mttafy the unpeld ()bit.. Mcilroy of Costa c ............. c.-eecdon duly ~tdT,......under J•nuary. 1te9. GCV9<nlng 80erc1~yr: .... ..,.., ............ hereby mad• and (U). df•· ORANGE COUNTY, CAlf. If ltt'f, or the,.., ptop«ty gatlona MCufed by Mid d t10I. and purwl to Deed ot Pi.:. ot Bid ~pt: AUMD '· ~MDIZ. • ....... Md...._ of g r •m •h~w ln g t l're FORNIA deac rlbed ebove la DeeO of T,,., WIUI ""9Nlt Mesa; 7 gr•n -'TMWM8'id..._of Trust, A•corOed on OUloe ol Director ol P.HJ)., Cl'lanc:ellor, eoe.t a. .,,. .., ,..... ....... ,l"'«lt dtutrlet and the PARCEL 2: purpotted~obe: tt71Tuttln and ott1auu1MM prowlded cblldftn and 1 grMt-thol '9'90li •lttl WMm 02101/83 u Ooeument no. Purellb lng, Betty Kalin, Community Col1g9 018t:1ct ......._...,...... te h flrM. bounOariel and dtmen.lont AN UNOll/IOEO 1/10TH Aven~. No. C-2, Cotta ttiereln: plut eclY•teae. If ~ He WM • otellM ..., ... .... .. 83-0'411700. Book NIL. """" Cout Community Ocll9 Pul}llltled 0rang9 COMt ,...... ....... ..., of the paroelu ...... wtthln INTEREST IN AND TO LOT 1 Mee.a. ~ t2t21. tl'ft, u.r.under llnd ........ Newoort Harbor .... M>YAL 1ac .. ow CO"· NIL. of Ofnd .. Aecotds 1n Dlt trlet . 1370 Adam• Dell)' Piiot ,.,_,,ber 30, ....................... the dlatrk:t. OF TRACT NO. 10378, IN The unOenlgned TruatM tl'refeon; and plu• .... . ...::.;:~-f M PORATION, Ila "• ..... tt1aOflloeoftMA1caoderot A"'9!MI. Coeta ...... CA o.c.noar7, ,... ... ... -"'''"''"'· Allwmaaaeeteed orH l\9 THE CITY OF COSTA dl9cMlmatl'ft .. bllltytorltt'f etwoeundexpenwoftM ~t 0t .;w years A,,._., A......_, ~ OAANGECounty.Cellfomla. t282e W..V.7 "-' .. -.... t. Mf percellwlthln lhedltttlct.,.. MESA COUNTY OF OR-lneotreetnete of tM atreel T'Nulee and of tM tNtt and .... a member of!....... .... .. .... ., by. TEIJ'()fU) A. ProJeet ldenlltlcatlon ...... I....,......., ... due end ~ lmmldl-ANGE' STATE Of' CALI-aOdrw and otller common creet.dbyUldOeeOofTNet. ENlks Lo~!~_:' (1207, ::.'::. ':J C::-::o~ :!t~=.A~ul:,..~~N~ ~:"' ~!~::! MlJC MJTICE :::t:/ _.'':,. ::::...:•; ;:~~T.!h~n~ ~~i:o ~/~P 4~~ :-'Ion· If -9hown = :::'..:.~ ewport ~uuo ,, .. 1M _....ta ct.-..,. wtfE WIU. SELL AT PUB-H I I tr . V o I t e 9 e Man tM...... Illa office In the Ananc:e PAGES 3 TO 4. MIS· Seld .. wlll bemede. but ~ ot ttlle Notice, le year member). Mesn· ,_ c1eJ ........ tM ._. LIC AUCTION TO THE ~7/W ~ MOTa TO DATID Af 0....-, C... Bulldl Room 226 530 CELL.ANEOUS MAPS IN "'""°"' COll9Nl'lt rx _.. S51.588.87. or ial n rvlce on ........ " ... 1119Ctfled HIGHEST 8tDDE~0!! ~-~No.2-S5 Aw. c:-'..::' ............ -... Nofth'i'oedw9y.Senta Ana.. THE OFFICE OF THE rMty,.,,,.....Sorlmpll9d. Oeted: November 2 1, Thunda .December .....,., CASH. (ptlyable M ''""' ... ~ ,.__ .,. on . • ........ ,... c.llfomla.. Peymant to the COUNTY AECOROEA Of' ~ ""'· p 011111' an. 1tea. y, Dated Monmber 17, .... tn tawf\lf ~ ol the 0-.0IOlracD-ot~ nUllT~(a... KAT'NY8ftRI County Tr....-·Tax ~SAID COUNTY. TOGETHER or~.to~lhe MAL UTATII UCUM-l, 1988at3:00 P.M.at ,.. UnlteO Stat .. ) punuent '° F ..... PlanNne. ~ ~u.c.C.) Publlhed Oranu-Cout lec:1ormu.t bemede ti.fof• WITH AL.LIMPROVEMENTS ~~..,,of tm~ec .. 11• =wi:;~.=~ ln~UMtc::. GERTff.1~::~~~~A~1=•~tr~i -==-·~ "::'M': = Piiot NoYenlbel-30. :nc:ecft~.: ~ ~~EE'W~~RJ~CE~~~~ ~off~:..= :.-ro--~Tl~'l.:.::r eo.ta Mesa. Prtva. Publlhecl 0renge eo.t~~TY C T TOOTliE.I ~ ~::"~= t :-:.:...: .. ':l'l ::-.: W·242 SO-day caa" 0 colleetlon DOMI NIUM UNITS 1 !Nr9on, •prowtdeO lrueld ._., _ ........... . Deity Piiot Nov9mt>ar 30.1TY Coum«nlS!, t • __. -•-.,. MftTM'C period hu been wel\ltd In THROUGH 10. INCLUSIVE, l'IOM(e). ect.encea. H tl'ft, .... -..... AM. CA interment. In lieu of tNa. CIVIC CENTER DRIVE FaclltY (114)'32-8707 --"!.~---... --·,. r-..., "'11"4 wrttlno In wtNcll CMe Ille LOCATEO THEAEON. underlhetetmeoftheO..O .,., nae,11 ... (IH) flowen donations W-243 WEST. SANTA ANA. CA &Il l NOtlCE IS HEREBY .... _.., •11 ... , weu;,...,,tl wwe due and PAACEL3: cf TNlt, .... eetltnaMCI ...... may be made to !right, 1111• end lnlafMI eon-GIVEN tllat the al>ov.. l"9 ....... , .... ..... ~COURT peyllbM on Nov9mbet 9 AN EXCLUSIVE EASE· c:Nrveeandexpenwofthe PublafleCI Or-noe eo.t Pl&.IC NOTICE V9Y9d to and now held by It narneO SehOol 0!9trtct ol ..... ..... .. .. ~ Oft c~ 1tea • MEHT APPURTENANT TO Trust• Md OI the trutta Delly-Plot ~ 23, 30, American Cancer So-under Mid Deed of Trust In I Orange County, Celllornl9, ......_ Ir• aru .. {a) .,.. COUtfTY Oft~ NOTICE IS FURTHER EACH UNIT FOR THE USE cneted by Mid Deed of December 07, 1918. dety. Pierce Brothers NOTICE the property tltuated In Nici ae11og by and through II• MC« "°' •.... u ... In the MetW of the GIVEN that If ... 9Um9 ANO OCCUPANCY OF TIWt, to wh: •t53,S115.eo W-231 Be 11 B r 0 a d w ay I tNVm NG BIOS County, Callfomla, de9crlt>-Gov• r n I ng 8 o •rd • CHIT ANDMWa. P.O .... ~tlotl of ......_, .,. not peld at TttOSE PORTIONS OF THE TM ~under M10•--------- 81D ITEM HO. 137 Ing Iha land lhefetn: hereinafter ,...,,ed to .. tnt:I. '"'"'· cafftoml• Kieut Peter~ .. EST .. ICTEO COMMON Deed of TNtt Mr9tofof• ax-"8JC ll011CE Mor tuary Costa NOTICE IS HEAEBY1 A CONDOMINIUM COM-"DISTRICT" wtll ecetveup ~ torCtlenoeofName 11#1 time. bond• to rec>-" ., M n.:__.'..._ • r -... __....__ lli C • _,_ ..,_ a 1 .. 57.,,. r..ent unpeld uuument• AREA DESIGNATED IN THE ecuted and delWrad to the Tm.--•Ull•• esa~..._...,.,.. Gil/EN tll8t sea1edlPRISEDOF· to, but not later tNin tlla ·--• Umsa ,... .. ,. ""' andbMrlno lnter .. t at DECLARATION OF "E· uildertlglled.ewrtttenOeo-AC - ---------tlle Cuy of Costa Mest 10 UNfT 3, IN THE CITY OF blda ror Ille awwd of e • lktlll 1 .. 111111 ...... oMoe FOR CHANGE OF NAME 111:'J" In ~. manner ON THE CONDOMINIUM mend tor SM, and 1 ~en The folCMlnQ pan1on9 are (714) 642-9150 I proposals will be rec11ved by PARCEL 1: at>o-..-ttated tliM. Mel«! ............ ID ..... °"'°9 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE be tttid law wilt"':! ST .. ICTIONS ANO SHOWN letltlon of D9f9Utt end o.. tlAm aTAW Wit The City Council. PO tCOSTA MESA.COUNTY OF eonlrael for the •bove of.................. (S.0.eo&4) ~by OIVll lOfl 10 of PlANFOAEACH UNIT NotlceolDlfaltandEi.etlon dOlnQbullneee•· BolC 1200. Cosla Mesa. Cah·iOAANGE. STATE OF CALI· Pf'Oj«:I 99: (.._. • .....,..,., eo KlllU9 Pet• Denner hal IN 'CellfMnla St,.,_. and . Tfl9 llreet addr .... and to a.If. The und«algned NlJMIUIO· UNO PIZZA, PACIFIC VIEW forn1a 92628· 1200. on 0< IFOANIA. AS SHOWN ANO Bid• ehall be ~ In ...... i::,-M A90VL med a petition In 1t119 court Hlghwaya COda being the ottrer common deelgullon 09Ueed Mid Notice of o.. 19t20 8n>Okhunt St., 8ul\e MEMORIAL PARK l t>elore 1ne hour 11 00 a m DEFINEO ON THAT CEA-Ille piece ldenlltled ebove, All hltneee _... tor an ord« fllio'#lng petJ.. lrnprowrnent eOnd Ac1 cf If eny ot Ille real ~ rautt Wld a.ctton to &.n to 2, Foun'8ln V...,, CA 92709 c.rnetery . Mortuary en Friday December 16 TAIN CONDOMINIUM PLAN u.nd lhall be °'*"° end ~ 8U 11111 ..... "r h tloMf to dlang9 Illa/Mr ltl& end IUd'I bonda lhell Ctete'rtbed t b o v e II oa recorded In the county M""9mmtd t . ,._,..Id, C"•~ • Cremal<>< y 1988 ti Shall oe 1he re· RECORDED JUNE 21. 1979.1 publlely read aloud at the la. I 1nt .,."'"'• ..... nema lrom Kleue Peter Oen-mature "' not 10 exceed 30 pvrponed 10 tie: 1871 Tuetln wtlere the ,... property 11 5401 NeleOn St., Oyprw, 3500 Pacil~ View Ori•e spons1b1llty of the 1)1dde1 to IN BOOK 13197, PAGE 176, at1011e-1tated llm• and ttwM,... .... ,... •'-'*to Kleue P91.er0toea. -.1rom thalt date Avenue No c-1 Cotta loeeled CA tOt3Q Newpori Beecn deliver"'' t>1<1 to Ille City OFFICIAL RECORDS OF pteee. ee "-.. tfle ..... Mlad IT IS HERE.BY ORDERED t -OATEO• November 9 Meta dA m 27 ' OATi 11/0l/18 HeeMn Alt Jtikhaa, 5401 60-2700 Cle<k s Ottice by the properlORANGE COUNTY, CALI· Thate wlll ~ a &10.00 ........ ~~ .._ .. , thet .. pettOMlnt•.._,ln 1eee ' ' T't19 ~ Tnntee UeulnY AU.mD UR-NeleOn Sl. Cypr9M. CA HARBOR LAWl>l- MT OLIVE M0<tuary • Cemetf'r• Crem•tory 1625 G1si.r Ave COSlll Mesa 540-SSS• '°'EACE BROTHERS &ELL 8ROAOWAY Mortur1ry • Ci'laoett 110 BrOadwll~ Cost• Mesa 642-91~ Ctar•r's Flowers 2983 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa. CA 140-3131 am-ounoed time B•dS Wiii l:>e FORNIA. depoelt required tot eedl ..... ......, . the matter •lofaeeld ~ "O•l"T L CITllON dlac:lelma any hblllty for "'Y wcaa. • ,........,, -90930 1PUDhcty opened and rea<l PAACE.L 2: of bid document• t o n. Miiie(•) erld ......, bef«e tNa court In 09per1. Tre9anf·Tax ·Collect°' of tncorrec'lnw of the ",......,. ....._ ....,, ...., T'l'll9 buelneea la con- uloud at 1 I 00 e m or as AN UNOIVIOEO 1110TH guerant• tMtr '9tum In .... ........ el h • merit No. S at 700 CMc the County Of 0raflg9 ~ Wld other oommon ya 11 eA Ce 111etA1 e ~ by. a ~ 1*1· soon 41\efeet:e< as orac-INTEREST IN ANO TO LOT 1 good condition Wltllln ten ...... IT• .... ~~ Cent• 0rtve WMI, Senta Putllllhed ~ Cout delllQMtlcn If an shown I I -~ Ttt•1111t ~ 11c11t>leon F"day Oecemt>er OF TRACT NO 10376, IN ldaya 1fter ttla t>ld opetllng llYUMOCMl CMA AM. Cellfomla. on 12./27, o.llyPlot..,.;;,;.;;;30 0.. herein. • Y eY AM11'A · A•IA• The r•glatrant com-16 1988 1n l"e Counc•I THE CITY OF COSTA date . 11111 OrlHO" lte•d, 1tae, at 2:00 o'c:lodc P.M . b9r 7 lt68 1 ' Stldulewll bemede,but ~aM.aOl'f'ICIR ' manOld to tnnwt ~ Chamoers C.•ll t<a '' Fa11 MESA. COUNTY OF OR· E.llCh bidder "'814 be a LAie ......... C ..... "6e and then and ltlera 1hoW cem ' w.241 wlthOul covenant or ._.,. Publthed 0ranoe CoeM .,... under tM flctltloua Or1~e Costs Mesa Calo-ANGE. STATE OF CALI-lle•n•ed contrac tor _. c.uee,lfltt'ftheyllew,wfl)' ferrt1 ~or lmplted °"'YP!lotNoYtmW23 30 ~ ,,.,. or ,..,.... torn1a tor '"~ •urn1sn1ng ot FORNIA. AS PEA MAP RE· l)Uf'1Ualll lo the 8ueklW TW ... ""'"'! ,_. Mid petition for dWlnge of '99Mdlng tltle p 1 II I I I Ian' D9celnber 7 1MT ' • PMed ~on October 23, L.ABOFIANOMA"ERIAL TO CORDED IN BOOK 45 1. and Proftulooa Code end ......................... nemuhouldl'IOt begrtinted. "8.JCllJ11C( ()(ancurnbrtnC.a.toC19Yt~ • w.237 1N8 FURNISH ANO INSTALL A PAGES 3 TO 4, MIS-be llcenMd In IN tcPowlnQ ...... 8*l LlllAilf.....t IT .S FURTHER ordered ~ pflndpel of M. T . ..._., Rf PLACEMENT C11rP-CEUANEOUS MAPS. IN Cl •H llleatlon•· C-10 ........................ INt. copy of "* order to *"1CI M tne note(•) MCUNd ::"Mid -..c flJTIC( Tiiie .....,.,..,, ... ll9CI PER DUMP BOD• THE OFFICE OF THE aectnc:.I (Qaneral). llMI" ...... C.... ..... lflOW cau.. be publletled In lfTWI) Deed of Trust Witt\ Int.,.. tlftl'l tM County 0artt cf Or· Add,11ona1 sets or llle lCOUNTY AECOADEA OF &ch ~ mual conform e.at1n.re-7 tMOrange~ TRA JIF•UNDO thereon.•~ In aeld YOU AM • WAUl.T *'99 County ott No~ spec;•ltcal•c.ns may be ob-SAID COUN'TY. TOGETHER and be r.apo111Ne to the TM ti Har--.-1 a MW~ of •cnotta no;.t ). .ov.ncea. It u.mmt A aaD M ~ 1, i"8 ,_, la•ned 11 11>e Oll•ce 01 tt.e WITH AU. IMPROVEMENTS oon1rac:t doc:umerlU. lillf .. Mid tr•ldWOf(a) .. ehUlatlon, pu In tNa _,.AM> ~the *"'I of the o:; OATW ~ ~ 11M. Ult-Publafled 009t IPurchas1ng Agent at 77 Falt THEAEO'M. EXCEPTING &ctr bidder th&M IUt>mlt, ............... ~ oounty et .... once..... ..,.. of TNtt ...... •tln'\Med L.119 YOU , ... AC110M OelY Plot~ •• 11. Drive Costa Mese Call· T 11 ER E F R 0 M C 0 N • on the lotm 1Uml1hed wlttt ,Aef'M: CoefMW lMM-for fOUf OOntecUtlW ..._, C~ ctwgea #t<J apenw of N TO "'°'9CT ~ ...... n_ ~ 1MI l0<n11 B1<1s snould be re-IOOMI NIUM U NITS 1 lhe con1tftC1 docur'Mn11. • .._ .. ..., Trua. Md of ttle tNttl tKTY,rTllAY•IOt.DAT ' Wl21 turned to Ille anem1on of Ille THROUGH 10, INCLUSIVE, 11•1 ol the propoud P\llUC NOTIC£ PtaJC NOllC( ~ Ct99ted Mid Deed of A PUl&JC wa, • YOU•---------C11y Cterlt 1N1tt11n said time LOCATED THEREON. t ubcontraetort on tl'rll COO. Tf\1111. to~ lt58723.11 tmD AM llft..MAT109' ftlUC IG'l1C( hmll, 1n a seated envelope I PARCEL 3: proJeel ae required by the T058249 Th9benaflclatyUnctarteld a. 1MI Ml\m OP 1M11--......,....,..-. .......... __ ldenltfted on Ille OUISlde with ltN EXCLUSIVE EASE-s u b I • I I I n g • n d HOTICE Of' TAUITU .. IALE 1. Name ol llcaneee, Illa Deed of T~ ller9tofore 911· PltOCUDllle AUIN•T ...cnnoue ... ... theBi<lllemNumberandtlle MENT APPURTENANT TO Subcontr•etlng Fair T.S.No.18111 SodelSecurltynumbel-,Md edanddeltYaNdt Che YOU YOU 1MOULD CO. MAmftA~ Open1n90ete EACH UNIT FOR THE USE Prl!Cttcee Act. Government VOU AREJN OEFAUl.TUN>EAADEEDOFTAUST,DltTEO adOrea1 o f llc enHd ~Md wfttt ~ tACTALAWYa Thetol0wtn9'*'°"9erw Each t>td shell specify ANO OCCUPANCY OF COda Sedlon •100 91 MQ. /IS ~ BELOW. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO ~remlM•, Including Zip ,..,__ a .,, MOTa M ~~ea: each 81'<1 every item as set THOSE PORTIONS OF THE Each bidder ~ tubmlt PROTECT YOUR PAOPEATY, IT MAY BE SOU) AT A Code: EDWARD 1... VIN· :::C,'°ror ~ ~ ~c: TNMTa"a 1AU A' '°°LET, nN1 Allele lor1h 1n the s~11ica1tons RESTRICTED COMMON with eedl t>ld a certlfteO or PU8UC SALE. lF YOU NEED N4 E~ATlON OF THE CENT, 4521 W. eoe.t ~ Notice of ' and Election T.a. .... 1*1 ~. l.8gune ......... CA 1'nyand all e~cept1011s lo the AREA DESIGNATED IN THE ceuhler'1 cf** pey11t1M to NATURE Of= l'HE PROCEEDING AGA.IH8T YOU, YOU wey, ~ a.ach. CA to W '=" underalglled NOTICI 18 HUU:ev t2111 spec;1llClll•Of'ISmustbeclear-DECLARATION OF RE· theOISTRICT or at>ldbond SHOl.A.DCONTACTALAWYER. .92tt3: AONAl..0 E. o.uMd.Nld Notloe °' 0.-OIVEH,IMtonW~. ~...,.INn,33191 2 ===;:=::==:::::=.._ ly 1n ltle D•d af'l<l l111lure to STRICTIONS AND SHOWN In th9 fomt Mt forth In tn. A pubic IUCllon .... 10 the nw-t bidder tor mah, ~ PRESTA, 421 W. COMt fllUtt end Elec:11on \0 Still to Deoembet 14, 1"8, M t 1:00 0.,. eo.._ lAigun9 ....... Mt lorth any item In tf'le ON THE CONDOMINIUM contreot docUrnenta In on d'ledl clrwwn on a .... Cf Nlfonat blnk. a dleCk dr1l'#n by a HIQIWlw, N9wDOrt 8'11Cft. o'okldl .. m. of Mid -In CA t2t61 SELL spec1l1ca11ons shall oe PLAN FOR EACH UNIT amount l\Ctleaafl'IM 10%of Mal• ot l.o.r.I credll Irion. orechadf~ by a 111111 °' C.A"Htt3 ~~,..: ~~~ fMt.,.. ....... tor~ Jacob Vlnogred, 1141 grounds •or re1ec11on ot the The air... llddr... and tM mulmum amount of btd **"' ..wvi end to.\ •IOdallon, MMn;I •aodallon. °' 2. N41me, 8ocltl s.cuttty loeeMCI ducting TnietM'• ...... loM Dttwe, Llgun8 ...,.., btd other common d9Uignatlon ... a guatlr'tt• tMt the ~ b1W* ~Irr S.Olon &102 ol lhe f!'llwldal COO. number, and addt-. of !no fl!: IOI II .-.n h ot10e1 Of NAL CA taM1 Eacll Dtd shall set forth the tt eny. of 1M reel Ptoperty tMdder 111411 ~-Into tM end auchortHd to dO ~Irr 1"9 •• .. Ila held by the tended ti•lefel•. lnclUOlnO DA 11 I ""° UTATI MCUN'fU ..,._ 1"* but1neee le oon-1hrou~h cla'>'>1f1ed 142-1118 lufl n•mes af'ld reSldencesol de1crlh d abo ve tu propmed oontreot If tM dUly flC)90li"lled ,,,.... • lhoM\ beloW, of • rlltt. lllle, end Z. Codi: OTTO OVALL.A( ..:.,~ iAU..m» -VCl. IOGMed • 1IOO Nor1tl dldld IW: a 91f*9 '*"" ell persons •nd p1r4les PUl1)0f\e0 to be" 167 t Tuttln _,,. le ewwdeid '° 9'ICtl 11'11.,.. ~ 10 n nl* held by the ""*'-In "1fiil 2648 ~ Cln:M, LaQune ...,. .....,. '=. ...., .,..,...,, .,,.. 100, In .. ~ tnterest~ tn lf'le oroposat It AYenUe, No C-3, Coete IMdder. In the-1 of,..,,._ herainaJler daCrtbed fl'Ot*fY und1f .,,0 pultlMl4 lo a Deed Hlllt. CA 92tla, 91Mn'TA y •IT• r, Ce Tl t., A I e Oley al ... Ma, COllf'ltt of T"e , .. Iii tent OOift• STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? The Legal Oepar1ment a1 the Daily Piiot js pleased to an- nounce a new service now avail- able 10 new businesses We will now SEARCH the name for you a1 oo eKtra charge, and save you the time and the 1rlp 10 the Court House In Santa Ana Then. of course. after the search Is completed we will rue your hc1itlous business name statement with the County Clerk. publish once a week for four weeks as required by law and lhen file your proof ol publl· cation wllh the CO\Jnty Clerk \. Please stop by 10 ftle your t llct1t1ous business statement af ,\the Dally Pilot Legal Depart· ment, 330 West Bay, Costa Mesa. Caltfornla If you can not stop by. please call us et (7141) 6412-432 1, Extension 315 or 3 16 and we wlll ma1ce arrangements for you to handle lh1s procedure by mall If you should have any further questions. please cell us and we will be more than glad 10 Hslst you. Good luck 1n you, new business!! ofTNMdMC!ibedl*oo#, Q't'AUAl,25435G81upCW-• 11111 IMI c.-,an.~ °'9n19. ..... 0f~,...,.., to.,,__,. ..... The Mid_,._. 119 mede, i... wit10UI CIMnll'll cw ....-y, de. ~ .... CA t2M3 a y AM e''f A · A a 1 A a, NAL DlATI llCUNTIU nw Uftdtr fie ._.... •SW-OI lmplld. • ~ tllle, pwlon. OI $. Kind ol ~ lft.. TMleftl UL,8 °""C. llfMCe. e C .. D 1• OOt• ..,._ ,_... or ,__ ~. to P-r the Nnllllnlng pMdpal •um o1 the WldeO '° be ~•eel: ~ Or...-c... ~ • *"" "'al ltlld ..._-..on NIA noc.(1) N:UWd 11J fhe Deed of TMC. wtlfl i,,.._ flld ... Off ..... Gen9re1 • ...,_,.. ~,...,.MOU Iller' 23 IO ,.,._... ilftdlr encl P1ftUMC .-... ""'°"*' =r.'11e~: .r::-= ~ t~::ii==. " ..... 'Wlf. No. tMl12tO. i);C~ ,_., 7 1:. ' ' to "'9 pow Of -0.-'n. I I 10~ -... -... -·-·--~ 4. roc.i OOI...,~ to w.ne · fllrrecllft.,.....-Deadot .--... ~Cltsrtlof()r.. ~ Wof ~ OI ~ ... tor ..!_Ila~ Mlounlf I'll<•) be paid for 11'9 buutliW Md T"'8t .......... br JoM M. 81'19 ~Oft Mooc1 .. ,,_ 1..,,. .... •-,...___, "' w,. ,_ 0 .. ...,_ 11 lll0.000.00. ft81JC ll)l1C( T~. 8 ,...,...., ..... • 11, -,_ -Oftllb'r _.,,....., tD be ... '°"' .,.,.,, lbe ""°"" c. to °""' eeo'OW, .... ....... "°'*"· ,.. Pl .... °"'* Com ~be or--on •tie• of...._ 11.1,DQO.OO; o.w.d ,,.,.. -COfd8d .iw. M, -. ~ ... 08llW Jl'IDt ...... -. Dito -1Nlltot . : W. ICOll Hwf, lilWI for h ....... cf..,_ to M 110nC1 a. °""' Of lie Cauney ......... f 14 11 ,._ mtnendW1118mC.MM1Mn,..,._men ~'" "" 000.00; ,.,..,....... CIOfdlr et 8llld cow.ty, • • ' ' ..,.. ~~p:~=~..;._ Conlmol1111•01 l.8nd1ll• ~rlDiAAnott ,. .... , .... " "m:..,.• ..... __...... ..uc.,.. -!MloMoO.. : Ode*ar14,1-.. ~ ........ ~:"'ou'Sc:"~~ =.:.!!!~.::~~ ~18Q)t'~ '?..-'.-.. : ~!· ,.. -11•1 -....... DATID 01/14/13 ~ • ,.,.,__cf..... P1Cm-• 1n 111 ...... -Ml*'ll-• w -.. el ... ....._ encl 11'9 YOU TA9ll ACTK>N TO ............. ..._ ft. ..-naw ~In Coour:IYot : o,.._ llale ef~ ...,_ or ...,_. le to M ,,_OTICT YCMM Pf'OP· ..._ .,_. .._,.. 01 ·._ TI'9 ................. ~ flld Thied.... : ~ 14, 111t • Plld Ila; Mn'IQel DCllOW, IATY, IT MAY• IOU> Af ..._ .--. ot wNatl -doll'8 ....._ _ 10'()0 A.M. llO.. -.... T-... A,,.. A P08lJC IAll, • YOU 1too1.:::::,.• ti, ,... QI lftlll...-;.19, MM ~OfSMJ 1 etlheNortrlll'onl...,.. -. .............. AM, NHD AN ECPLAHATIOM a e 11•""*'' Clllr9Mtr A--. Ceet9 IOINCCll#WyCounhouM, ?OO OlllCC .. erOl!ww-.a.u cam .. Oft or.,., 0.. OIF,.. NA.TUM°' 1MI ..... lf.4t0111. WIU. ~ ..... GA-~~ • U4l.l10 ~ _..., 11, 1tll. PM>C~ MIAIMlf AT llUklC AUCTION 10 fl ..... O&a fillet. --Ultf~•Of~ ; c.oe 11 oiTrma No. SW. .,: !:.t:!:on•.: ":! ;~Icrl~ 00... =.c,._..:,=.:: =i: C.• In tna ety of 0... ....... • atlOWft on a .... ReClorcMid In .,.,,.._ Of .. ~encl Of\ 1111t111 • 1:41 .. "'. ~-. « • ...,_., L .,.._ ., Le-ll)Ol t;311, ,._,.,.., .._,.......,, Dl.9 ... , In tri. ._..__or.._ .... ~,...,..,._•.._.._°".,,...,..,. ,_-. Olllceofltle~~olteld~ M,.,....., the~ ......... "'*-..., --.. ........... CA.,. _..( ~...,,.. ~~ : !0.2!. ..._. ~ Olttoe. ,,... of Alooftc* .._... _, llUfWC to Deed Of lli&ll 11111flf1n "' I n f 'TM& _... • .-. or .... _ OGm4iMlfl __ ,. _.. -ColtlrOI Ml 1llPtw'OM _.._ Tn11t "•corded • ., In ... -. ti _,....... .._, IW: a .... __.. ;:>111.....,_. TMllee .....,_ ~ !or ........ ~.~.-otJOtia. •~If"°' ...... ., .......... TN ,..e.trMI ..._ ---.. - ------f ...... ..,. ..... Of D-t-•· 9oOll Nil. p_. ............. ~ ll. ........ --... ·-·-·-...... -------CIOl'Pllllf\ .. _ ....... ..-..:.,.. ..... ., Cl9dat ..... lit~........ -...... ..... ......... ~..,. .......... noll ........ er-.. -·-._ -_. •Ollaeelthdl ID .. of_._ ...... ~ .......... • ,_ EC"iifi:~-=-~:.::::: == --~ ~,=~~ ... , w.:mr~ ... ~ = ......... •1•• '· ... ,. .............. ,.11•1 ... ATTll~ .J.:1',w.w...~a. MMJ&t:.-,1 ..... 9'; .... Q , e ...... BU • L , Wiiiiii. WAU-... ._, N1D _... ~ "'9-1Nt 1 ~ -... Ge'* --'hlo -., a _!!!!!!!""-____ ..._AT_& __ ,. _____ .,,_ .... "111; , ....... 1 .....•• CMH. ....... _.. i=: ..... ,,,,, .. 0.... ~~ .. ·!!'..~'-P RMa...aee.-1n-..........,t1 --.. 'ti•-.. a. ........ ....., ==kc-:r,-;-,,~"":,~~ ...... -~---~=r:o:x = --ODJ' ·1 ... :.-.::--·'! --_,,,_ ~PIM .,._. .... ,....,_ • ...... Allellt .. ., ...... f ,1'11. ~==~~~~:":'::~==-'~=======:!'!::====~=~=~~~~°'=·= .. ~"=-:::.:•::.::""=-_.. ................. Cillsf*Clllll .... , ..... , ""., I' FOOi) WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30. 1988 Italian sureets that rival mamma's Comedian's cookbook· tribute to family treats If the tantalizing aroma of fr~shly baked cookies, heavenly pastries and creams emanating from an Italian bakery has no effect on you, then read no farther. If, however, the scent of wonderful down-home Italian dessens makes your mouth water, then read on. Italian or not, you probably have memories of a S\VtCt, loving mother, aunt or grandmother w~ose remedy f<>r>every single ailment in tife was warm, right-from-the- ovcn cookies and a few words of encourage- ment. If the cookie did more to lift your spirits than the reassuring words, then there's little doubt you're a dessert lover. And like comedian Dom Deluise. you probably need only a whiff of a homebaked pastry to be transponed back to those days when home cooking brought greater security and joy than just about anything else in the world. OeLuise's new cookbook, "Eat This ... It'll Make You Feel Better!", is a tribute to his mother and all of the terrific dishes she taught him to make. Following arc a few of the kinds of desserts Deluise enjoyed while growing up and still enjoys today. Don't be reluctant to try your hand at these deliciously simple, down-home, Italian-style desserts. ALMOND MERINGUE ~ES ! ea wllites, at room temperature YI tea1pooa almond extract 14 teaspoon cream of tartar '1l cap Hgar '1l cap finely ground almonds Combine egg whites. ex tract and cream of tartar in a bowl. Beat on medium speed until foamy and white. Conintue mixing on medium speed, gradually adding sugar until whites are very stiff. about 5 minutes. With rubber spatula, gently fold in almonds. Fill a gallon-size plastic storage bag with meringue, twist bag above meringue to force towards one lower corner (this helps eliminate air); close bag. Snip l/•-inch of the bag at lower corner with scissors. Pipe meringue on parchment-lined baking sheet in spiral motion to create I-inch diameter dollop with pointed tip. Repeat to use all the meringue, spacing 2 inches apart. Bake in 325-degrec oven. I 5 to 20 minutes until lightly browned. Cool: remove from paper and store at room temperature until needed . Makes about 2 dozen. CHOCOLATE CREAM-STUFFED PEARS 1 pacta1e (I oaces) cream c:laeese, sof tae4 14 cap dloeelase 1yrwp 14 capHpr 1 tablespooa 1troq coffee or coffee-- flavore41~r ! cu1 (ll oaces eac•> pear UJves, ell Wed Beat together cream cheese, syrup, sugar and coffee until smoothly blended. Fill a quart-size plastic storaae bag with cream mixture, twist bag above mixture to force towards one lower comer, seal bag. Chill until ready to serve. Drain pear halves and arrange two on each serving plate. Snip¥• inch of the bag at lower comer with scissors. Pipe chocolate cream decoratively into cavity of each pear half. Makes 6 servings. SICILIAN CARNIVAL CANNOLI 1 cap ricotta clleffe '1l cap COllfec:tloaen' ••1ar 14 cap (1 once) grated semi-sweet c•ocotaae 14 tealpooa croaad cluamoa, optioaaJ 1/• n p ctlopped sllelled plsta~o natl I caaaoU 1'9Us• Beat ricotta cheese and sugar together until smoothly blended. Stir in chocolate and cinnamon. Fill a quart-size storage bag above mixture to force towards one lower comer. seal bag. Chill until ready to serve. Snip l inch of the bag at lower corner with scissors. Pipe mixture into cannoli shells from each end. Decorate filled ends with chopped nuts. Makes 6 servings. • Purchase at Italian import stores or Italian bakeries.• IT ALlAN CREAM WITH BERRY PUREE ~ C:IPHIU I '1l tablespoons constarcll t capt laaJf-and-laalf or milk 2 egyolb l tabtespeoa baster l teaspoom vanilla extract l pac:ka1e (10 oaac:es) fro1en raspberries In 1ynp, tlaawed H fresll wllole raspbenles for ganllab Combine sugar and cornstarch in saucepan; stir in half-and-halfor milk. Cook and stir over low heat until mixture is hot but not boiling. Beat yolks in mixing bowl. While stirring, gradually add hot cream mixture to yolks. then return entire mixture to saucepan. . Cook and stir over low, heat until thickened and just beginning to boil. Remove from heat; stir in butter ·and vanilla. Transfer to bowl to cool. Covei:and (Pleue eee SWBltTS/C2) Harvest fruit stars . in holiday baking Traditionally American, the pumpkin has long been heralded as a fa vorite harvest fruit. Early set- tlers used the pumpkin as a staple during the fall and holiday seasons. Today, the pumpkin remains a versatile item for floliday baking. The two recipes offered here pres- ent new twists to Its dependable. delicious taste. Prepared by the Kraft Kitchens, both Pumpkin Swirl Squares and Pumpkin Muffins With Honey Nut Spread are designed to meet the needs of holiday baking 1980s style. These treats take little time to make and ca n be served from morning till night for snacks. brunches. buffets. teas or desserts. times for marble effect. Bake at 350 degrees. 2S to 30 minutes or until wooden pick inserted in center comes out dean. Cool: cut into squares. Makes about 2 dozen. PUMPKIN MUFFINS WITH HONEY NUT SPREAD '1l cup mar1arlH 34 capsapr Zeus 1 teaspoon vanUJa 2 capt no.r 1 lf. teaspoons baking powder 'fJ teaspoon bakln1 soda 1M teupoon aaJs ~teaspoon cl.uamoa I/• seaspooa groud allspice 'I• seaapooa sroud cloves PUMPM ___ .,.,.._ pampklll SWIRL SQUARES I 11.oance can pumpkin 134 cupt sugar '1l c:•p oil 3eu• Z Cllpt floar z aeupeom bakln1 powder % teatp0111 cianamon l teupom bating soda I l-o911Ce package cream clleae, Hftened Combine pumpkin. I V2 cups sugar, oil and two eggs, mixing until well blended. Add combined dry ingredients; mix well. Combine cream cheese and remaining sugar and egg, mixing until well blended. Spoon pumpkin mixture into greased and floured IS ll I 0' I -inch jelly roll pan. Spoon cream cheese mixture over pumpkin baller. Cut through batter with knife several ~ cap rai1J.a1 Honey Nat ~read Beat marganne and sugar until tight and fluffy. Blend in eggs and vanilla. Add combined dry ingre- dients alternately with pumpkin, mixing well after each addition. Stir in raisins. Spoon into greased or paper-lined medium-size muffin pans. filling each cup 'fl full. Bake at 350 degrees, 20 to 25 minutes or until wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean. Makes 11/J dozen. Serve with: HHey Nat Spread l 1-ouff pach1e cream cliteete, Mf&etle4 14 ~ C'lfpff Htl % taWe.,ua ltoeey Combtnc cream ch«SC and honey, mixing until well blended. Stir in nuts. Chill. FOod.f es ti val ft.inds feedingOC'sneecly By CHERYL WALJ(ER Dlllr""'C.••••••·1 Good food. good cheer and fellowship sparkled under the dome of South Coast Plaza's Crystal Court. Costa Mesa. when neart) 800 guests raised about SI 5.000 for the Food D1stnbut1on Center. The reward for their generostty was indulging their taste buds with hors d·oeuvres. entrees. sajads. soups and dessens from 22 Orange County restaurants and beverages from 16 Cahfom1a wmeries. a eoffec and tea 1mponer and a sparkling water compan~ The festi val "'as p~nted for the fourth year to raise funds for the center. which helps feed Orange County's more than 320.000 hungry men. women and children. Elegant displays of the edibles and potables nnged thesccOAd.alld third-floor balconies. The eclccuc menu included steak tartar. boneless chicken" 1th Grand Mamier. cscargot and li ver pate from the R1v1era; chicken Curr) and peas eulao with saffron from Gandhi Cu1S1ne of India. leek and goat chce!e q ucsad11la. tn-colored chips and salsa from South of Santa Fe: rosette cookies from Posh Prod~ lobster bisque. fruit tart lets. tea sand" 1ches. truffles and chocolate-dipped strawberries from the Four Seasons Pavilion. Also peel-and-eat shrimp and Bermuda fish chowder. J.W.'s Sea- food Grill: sweet beef. cumed chicken and nee noodles, Bangkok 4~ chicken Marro Polo. brown nee and carrot cake from the Good Eanh: creme brulcc. The Ritz; and ltaltan sau~. homemade pasta salad and b1t~s1zcd meatballs 1n marsala wi ne and cream sauce, Pronto Ristorante. On the we hst were pinot noir, chardonnay, sauvignon blanc, chenin blanc. white· zinfandel, c:abmlet sauv1gnon, petite 1 sirah and champagne . from Amero, Ballard. Byron Vineyard. Callaway Vineyard, Chateau Souvcraiu, Glen Ellen. Inglenook.. Markham Vineyards. Roben Mondav1, Par- rott & Co .. J. Pedroncelli. Piper- Sonoma. Q uail Ridge Cellars. Sea Ridge. Sebastiani and Vostau winc- nes. Other donors were Calistoga \\-ater . .\mbros1a. Bistango. China Palace. Counhouse. Jo hn Dominis. Em1ha's. Fon ) Carrots. Gianni, Rubt'sSalamagund1. Vie de France and Cafe Cahfom1a. The bount~ at the food fair. hkc a ThanksgtVlnt-feast. 1s meant to remind res1dc;-nts "of our blessings and how me must share Wlth those around us who are less fonunate. .. said Thomas Fuentes. a center founder and chairman oftbe direc- tors ... We call this a friend ra1ser/fund-ra1ser." said Dan Hamey, e\ccuu'c director. ··Our philosophy 1s that Orange County people JUSt need to be made awa~ -0f the hunger problem 4nd for us all to find a solutaon:· The tenter rctncvcs.. sorts and stores about IS percent of the 2.$ milhon pounds of usable food discarded each month in I.be coua· t)'. which 1s then distributed to 218 non-profit agencies. said =· Mauncr. c'ent chairman. Th these agencies the center about one-third of the count}'!t • hungry each month. . Catering busin.ess Specializes for calorie-conscious NEW YORK (AP)-She has no credentials as a nutntion1st. but she has slimmed down film, music and television stan and made them ;l,eyotccs of healthful cauna. i Yolanda ~man is 1 hthc. ~ Califom11 type who hails lh»m the New York C11y borouJh of 5 She'u fonmr profnsional , a former trainer at Jane ·s Workout studios. and a penonal ,,.iner. lt was while she was a pcnonaJ traiMr that she became a rcfri&tr- ator reformer -teachll\I ncr clients not only how to slim down and feel better by work1n& out but by eati,. rilbt. "I'm not a fad. I'm not a diet," she says. ..From the tJme I was dancina. I was intcmted in the body, in nutrition." At first, Bersman woukljust raid chents' kitchens. dumpina all the food she considered nutnuonal no- no's and tetlina them what to buy: healthful snKks. aots of fruit anti veaetables. whole pains and lean prc:>teins such as fish and poultry •. Soon. she betan cloi na their shoppins -and cookina. dehvcr- in& com'Plde me.ts to 1hetr dooB. Now • has a staff of eiaht in a kttcheft in Shermu Oak1. tum•"I out tc0ret of entrees. salads. snick foods and desterts ateh Md for her faithful followers. Tbe$trvtce1sas h1ah an pnccas 1t is m nutrients -upward of S250 per week. And since Hollywood types spend a lot of time dtina out. she performs yet another 5ttvicc. She w1U ctU the restaurant in advance and order jud.Ciousl)' from t'hc menu. "You can cat ~lthy in any restaurant." he says. empha izina "any." Jn a fast-food restaurant? • "Sure. eat lhe hamburaer.-he says. "Bui remove haJfthc bun and alf thcotherstuff c~cept the lettuce. to.mato and. mutt.ard. Chefs Weer. Remove the ham and checte." What other bits of advice for people who •~ S1ll'Wd for ~ tha• a poeched chaen brClllt atld le'ltucc "1th lemoajaice? "Eat Chinac ~.. site •Y'- . ........ _.... .. AST BEEF ROUND LL 1.69 ~oner John 12·0z. ~USAGE PATIIES ....................... EA •• ft Enlel'taini111 is movina away from the sit-down dinner and towards informal tel tQle'lben. As the hoHday season approeches and an alrudy busy schedule ICU busier, creatina unique buffet ideas can P'* a challeftlC. This updated VCTllOO of Beef Boursujponne provides a savory and simple tolUlioe for tbe hurried holiday cook. Beef' Bourpiponne ii lpdy aamed after die nsioD of RuNutMtv ia Plance,.,.. which it~ Tlaildilb ii• WOllderfuJ marrillFof fine bed' -wine, both proclUced iaBurpridy. fdishsa It is I happy coincidence lhlt California also produces superb beef and award-winnina wines - the two main clements of this daslic dish. Traditionally , Beef lourJuiponne is prepued from larded beef, braised 1n red wine and pmishcd with white onions and whole m\lltuooml. This updated venioD sanamlines some of the lellldaY c:ookina ~ures. yet lellva all the tnMlnion of the dish iallCt. . Tiie bell cut ofbeefto use in this recipe ii dauck. Altbouah • laS lillder ad; it ii rich in Oavor. The 59 Lii. k>nl. slOw limmerillaof daclc cuba of chuck produces ta*r and flavorful monels of beef -an euential inpedient of this dish. Not only 11 it both sumptuous and familiar, it is alto quile simple to prepare, which only takes three steps. The beef is mannaud for up to 48 hours. then browned and simmered until tender. This step may aJso be done 48 hours in advance. The finishina touches require only IS mjnutcs preparation, leav-in& more time for you lO devote lO pests and the holiday festivities. ffUG•• 1110••• WINI DllAIU .. 1'°91 • • •111 1 •••• PAN ... y na1••• • ••••• 8LACK I.A-· llACO• SA9SA.. ~ M•IA .. HOT OR HOT 8E£F LL 2.69 12-oz. 1" . HO~~llo .... 2.29 Whole 2 98 FRESH COHO SILVER SALMON .................................... ta. • ASSORTED =a-....,. BATHROOM PB•LL'S SOUP CREAM OF CHICKEN, 10.75-0Z. eLO•I A-1 · ..-:-.....,. UAel&I ii ~ ... ~~' 2:' • 1 ,~ "''n~· 1·UI. --•PKG. M. 1.69 l ·LB. PKG. SLICED Empire, Froi.n KOSHER HEN TURKEYS .............. LI. I A• KAL KAN --• 14-0Z CAN JO.lb. Bonus Bog (5 lb$ FREE) JONNY CAT LITER .......... .. Citrus Hill Hoff Got. Chilled Corton 2.ff ORANGE JUICE.. ........................... I.ft 32-0i. R99. Of' light KRAFT MAYONNAISE ..................... 1.79 LB. sw-f Juicy ANJOU PEARS 20-0i. Tr~ ................... l8. A9 FRESH TOMATOE_s_ ••• _ .............. EA ... . t-Oi. ~g. ... Tops Off 25 FRESH MUSHROOMS ................... EA. FRESH CARROTS ........................... l8. • DOWNYFLAKE WAFFLES ICJOZ 129 PKG 31 NI I \ ~r----· ---· ~,..:~ ~------~. ----.. .c .. M0111 NU TOf U 10.5-0Z .••• AJKIDMDTO KATS•O•D•WI• 2.29·0Z. 1.35 CUtTlll 80X Giff WllAP 100 2" 50 SQ. FT. SO n . CHRISTMAS 5-0i. ""9· Mkrowove PICTSWEET EXPRESS VEG ET ABLES ................ A9 Kodo MocM10 16-0i. SWEET RICE FLOUR ....................................................... 71 log of 36 ASSORTED BOWS ................................................ M 10.75-0z. • ... . SARA l£E POUND CAKE .. .. ............ . Wei Poe. 12·0z. I.al RED BEANS-AZUKI ................................................ .. 400 Ft. ft CURLING RIBBONS ............................................. ·• ·--~~--•. . . ' ~ . ·-··· a••• ••••n •·OZ. PKG. ~s~o .59· l<*•To-l°"•· 9-0z. ~· MONTEREY JACK ......................... I .ff Grillmostet. I ·lb. ~g. . , M CHICKEN FRANKS ............. : ............. . KAMUIAlllA 1.7 ........ Yl•llA \ 7.99 5 99 I ' •••••••••••••••• •••••• ••• .,, .1 •••••••• Winner ... ..,.. ..Imo.. ---· • cW at tlle lntae lllltDll ... Towen,woaeaeila1C leat die lateraattw·I ~ Ol)a~ la PraUfart. Get· ...,, la OctalMir. ·----foar .Uftl' _. two ............... Illa ..... ......... SWEETS ••• rro.c1 chill until ready t.o serve. Drain thawed raspbcrri~ push fruit tbrouab a fine mesh sieve into a small bowl to extract seeds. LadJe chilled cream onto six deslcr1 plates. ·fill a quart--size plastic storage his with smooth raspberry puree; twist b9a above puree to force towards one lower comer, seal ~nip v. inch of the bg at lower comer with scissors. Pipe puree onto cream in two concmtric circles. Draw a pick or knife tip through cream, altematitta aacb stroke with push-pull motiom.. to create spider web daip on plate. Garnish plate with whole raspber- ries. Makes 6 servinp. CATERING ••• "'-Cl For a rtfreslaina drink. lbc ~­P.'S mineral water mixed with th.lit J~· ..rm ahead of my time." Berpnan says. .. but the rat of America is ca1Cbina. up. Tiaey·re IJ:elinni.. to rad latJell, and by lhOppiJll c:ardU.lly )OU can buy -~-lftllll iMJCll Cbac ere ......,." • 6" L B · s Red Poinsettias . Zacky Farms 69 Variety Pack ,,,,. Clir:AiM ~G-U. .• Q. uarter Pork 149 Loin Chops f,T!, N.,_tJ ,.,,,,._ U.. Lb. Vons 11h Lb-'139 Sourdough Bread ~ , Li•it Fo11r-6 Padts Channin .. Bathroom · Tissue ' • WhilrColor 4 Roll Pttelup u.,;, 1 fo~cll Ht>use 189 uo..rc.. Friskies Buffet OitFoo1' 'a-ire. Parkay 4~100 M~c ' ,._.,. -QMrtrn (T-10...C, I.HJ .69 \ CITRUS HILL eleJtr.t Half Gatlon I. Citrus Hill Orange Juice SMt, PI. CJciwn or G,.,frllil pt,. C"'°"1n uo..crc.a. Fanner John Sliced . • . ' . • ., '• ~. Bacon 09 ., 160wtcr p ... 8Vons Londiom 219 Cheddar Cheese . v-a.-u.. F.-,1'.Jt Vons Meat f 19 ~2~.,' w 7W • · (a.( l a' 1 Apr"' nd-12 Ot. L1!IJ Knudsen Sour Cream 159 Fanner John Me-A Franb "0-. 1'.a;,,(8.f ,,.....,_,, ,.....,,, Kraft American Sino~ • W~O-Foetl-1'~1';;... 259 : Plurtm:R Sliced Ham 3 19 : ~ '"--',. .... Jf ~ OUp Cookies 269 •Minute Maid. }09 Ades . ,,..,...~,... 1..---"1w0. 4 t "Ot. C... d.. r=~ Margatilie ~~= ------FROZEN------~ }15 }f!) Little Juan~ ... ~jo..,...... .59 SMi Brown & SerYe Unk.5 .... C...,Lltlt s-.. "'-0. ... 0..,... .99 Klondilir 2M\ ; Ice Cream Bars T7 i ""--' .. °"""* . ,c-...,,,..... -· ... OFiental-style pork, fruit simply elegant, delicious (New Crop) A knife, a cuttillll board. wok and choplticks. That's all you'U need to prepare this elepnt Oriental Pork and Prune Stir-fry. Simple inpe.- dients, prepered and served in minutes are IC>Od reasons for the rapidly srowina appeal of Orienlal diaha. Port and Prune Stir-fry was ·crea1td by Martin Yan, a muter of Oriental ClOOkllw who helped popu. larize the flavon and cultures of the Far Eut tbrouah his popular "Yan Ca Cook" public television show. Yan ii alto widely nmpiNCI for hiJ .. Yan Can International Cook-ina School" Chinae Cbef'Trainina ~· at the California Cul-i~ Academy, Univenity of Cali-fom1a Eatensaon and the Univer- sity of Su Frucilco. Yan Wll the featured attraction at the fin1 California Prune Festival held this fall in Yubl City, where he demonstrated his culinary skills in prepuina this recipe and other BEEF CHUCK ---7·Boae LB SUNNY DELIGHT CHILLED Citl'llS ~ Paacb 128-0Z Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites Garden Fresh Produce Family Steak:::04UQ( Chicken Franks ::=m'~ Round Bone Roast ::~ Shoulder Roast:::04UQ( Sliced Bacon __ Whiting =.- Lunch Meats::=tll_,.. la •1 • Vegetables ~~LEN--~Mll 49-Ca~bage MNCYIQU)(IMBIHIAOI .Mll ag• Vegetables :::=:c--. Mll 59-On1ons ~,~A.W>.., ~'1 29 Pizza ~=~Qfl ...ai•359 Potatoes ~NO.•..-r.-. .. •1 • Fish Fillets ::=.·.':": _ ,...sg-~ •.OZ 99-Breakfast ~-uM• ~,..,'229 Waffles :===. ____ ~•1• aAO ~49• Nice'n Light ~:--'4«12°' t#7 ~ lB Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials ==- ST'°"' MO&. t VNIETIEI tEMTt4 van.,. Gndnr llR•d . ~, Almaden:..~ Cascade 119~----UQUI) CIETMlllNT<t YAM'la Dawn Dish Liquid ~ . Cluny Scotch ___ . __ •1MITM'10" Seagram's Gin ~-~'9" Budweiser =-Oii~ 1wiaor •4• -~ .. ' quick and euy dishes ulina prunes. ••'fbe Chinete have a sweet tooth," he •YL ''Prunes can ldd tbe sweetness and, for an extra bonua, fruity tam. too ... Even without Yan•a incredible dexterity in :ina mu,tiple pans, inp'Cdients. Is and knives, any- one can make this quick and simple stir-fry. POU AND PRUNE ma-FRY ttUlelflW•J .. 9ee ..... , .... ...,....,.., I ..... , .. Oliealal ...... ell 1 .................. ,...., w.JJllkM . 14 c., cMd• '*' ~ ....... ...., '141 &e111p1• wMte pepper I tablelp11u Yepg.ltle oU 1 tabletpMa ..... prUc 1 tablnpMa .... freU .... 1er 1 larle carrel, C11I dJae...Uy .... tila llket ~ np pette.t praes, .-mm z....---.<1ae11M11q1op1>, C111 late I-lad pleeel 1 table1p1• cenatarc• mbed • wl~ I lablelf1oa1 wa&er In bowl, combine I tablespoon of the soy sauce, the sherry, and 1 teaspoon of the sesame oil. Add pork; toss. Cover; marinate 30 minutes at room temperature. To make sauce, in bowl combine chicken stock, the remaining l tablespoon soy sauce and 1 tea- spoon sesame oil, the sugar and white pepper; set aside. Heat wok or broad skillet over high heat. Add vegetable oil, swirl- ing to coat sides of pan. Add garlic and ginger. Cook, stirring, until fragrant. Add pork with marinade; stir-fry 3 minutes, or until browned. Add carrot; cook l minutes. · Add prunes, green onions and sauce mixture. Cover; cook l minute or until carrots are tender. Add cornstarch mixture. Cook, stirring until slightly thickened. Serve with steamed rice. Makes 4 servings. Mediocre Zinfandel hard to find· By MME DUNNE llDCI llJ..._..,,... Mediocre Zinfandel is getting more and more difficult to find. What isn't just plain good is exceptionaJly good, and for this we apparently have White Zinfandel to thank. for one thing, mediocre Zin- fandel srapes, which in the past yielded Zinfandel wines thin, lisht and simple, these days are more likely bemg ·used to produce White Zinfandel, for which depth in color. flavor, tannin and so forth isn't as pressing a need. Jn short, only the best Zinfandel grapes are being retained for tra- ditional Zinfandel wines. Secondly, winemakers who really didn't have the intecest, patience and knowlcdgt: to produce tra- ditional red Zinfandel with this most demanding of grapes have given up on it to devote their eneraies to White Zinfandel. Tile upshot is that as a aroup, red Zinfandel is in top form across the board. The latest release to come my way that seems to validate this reasonma is the 1986 Paso Robles Zinfandel of Martin Brothen Winery ($7.50). It's deceptively light in color, thouab it isn't likely to be mistaken for a White Zinfandel. Despite the restrained piament and a young floral smell that sugests that at's been made in a ~layful nouveau S!yle, this is a Zinfandel with stuffina. thou&h it isn't ~ively robust. It's s1m~ly an exceptionally well- balanced Zmfandel, with a berry fruitiness, black-pepper spiciness, sli~t herbecc.ousness and crisp aadity comina totethcr in one easily drinkable pec:kqe. Paso Robles 11n•t one of Cali· fornia's hi.ah-identity viticultural rcaions, but its Zinfandel repu- tation 11 old and noble. The late clusical pianist Janacy PMlerewski, later to become the prime minimr of Poland, arew Zinfandel in the area in the Qrly 1900s. By that measure, the ltaJ)eS that went into the Manin Brotbera Zinfandel are from two relatively youna vineyarda, both just 20 to ..0 ~ old, and both just nortll'Mlt of Puo Robk:s. Both amall ~arc dry fanned. and both yieldJu•t a ton or two of com.-i and concentrated -r'J:Stions: Dominic Martin, the· brother who is the winery.~ maftllll:r, M'C that the wine 81XlOmpany .. tba. peOole tat u they W.tdl a football lal .. -barbecued c:bicbll. ~·-bambullln. t8C01. .. We~::1b.ci it wit191 lot olrml..,, .......... Mlniii:; Amerlcanlleart MIDllalan ... ... Can a computer solve all yourproblemS? . . By VIC JOLLY ...,,...OI:: 0 • He has ~ndered the questions for years. ·He has convened with hundreds of people in the process. It has been 1 ~-arduo~s search fo~ answers to questions ~led has own hfe and the laves of others. : Wbl~ West. Cc?lleae philosophy instructor Pierre Grimes came up wnh 1s another set of questions -about SOOofthem. They are ordinary questions, yet ones not to be taken liahtly. Grimes says his questions--based computer proaram "To Artemi.• -i:he Pu~ui~ of Penonal Exccnence throuah Ph1losol)h1cal M1dw1fery" will "help people undentand why they do thinp." The concept of philosophical midwifery can be traced to Plato and Soerates. The Pf'Oll'am is named for the Greek aoddess prayed to by women in labor. "Socrates used to say, 'I deliver ideas in men who arc prqnant in lhcir souls. As some women need midwives to help the~ brin1 th~ir child to bi11h, some men need philosoJ>!!ical m1dwaves to hdp them bring their ideas to birth,' ' Grimes said. "When people find themselves getting into dif· ficuJtics or facing failures," Grimes said, "then they can benefit by reflecting in a certain way that would make clear to them w~y rhey keep missing their goals, especially the most meaningful goals they have. Jlie questions af'C'<les1gned to lead one to lniigfits about oneself, one's beliefs and attitudes. "The heart of the program is that we don't know what we have learned that has affected our lives orwiJl affect us in the future," Grimes said. "This program lets you sec what, in fact, you believe that you didn't know you believed." But the user has to be up to accepting the challenge, Grimes adds. And a challenge it is. Running the entire program may take anywhere from a few hours to weeks or even months. Grimes' colleaiue and program designer Carole Duncan likens it tOaJoumeyofself·analysis taken at one's own pace. "It is not simply linear;· Duncan sa.id. "You circle around and make connections (between behavior patterns) in many ways." Doing so, she added, might make a person sto~ and think about how often they have behaved in a ccna1n way. . In the course of the program, the computer diagrams the user's responses to a certain situation, thereby enabling him or her to compare a response to the same situation at different times in that person's life. For example, a person wanting to examine procrastination uses recent examples to form a pattern that links the behavior to certain feelings. Those Jcclings arc in turn linked to times in childhood when similar fcclinp surfaced. Often the feelings and the childhood cxpenencc provide the key to understanding adult behavior. Grimes' program will probably raise some eyebrows. most likely those of the institutions of psychoJogy, religion and medicine, whose answers it questions. "It is a challenge to the institutions for going into their systems, and yet this kind of program is not likely to be aHowed in the' institutions for a good reason: institutions are didactic," he said. ..They want you to know about things. not to be changed by the programs. They only want people to get more of what they already arc, not to change them in some fundamental way. Grimes says his prctram will bring about changes in individuals. "Everyone is looking for peak experiences. for all kinds of t.hings. This (program) 1s saying (that) understanding yourself will bring about changes." Regina Uliana, a Huntington Beach clinical psychol- ogist, has gone through the program herself and is now trying to promote its use by psychotherapists. She says it also has applications in the mental health profession and student counseling centers. Uliana would also like to sec educators use the program, "primarily because it deals with blocks to creativity and excellence." ~ ~ I ndeH Journal Diagrams Reflections Quit 17 .Jf!f.Hnl lUmalt.l1JL1t .... · --"~·ma Mv MOtbf.r cm Mr.-f.tllnd _______ _ Stetem.nt of the Problem: I play out my motnefa rOle and can't atop being confrontive and, so, lose 6 Later, there ls an opportunity to apologize and make 1t better but I leave it as it Is But I miss his friendship. Surprised to find out later that he 5 I don't otter to help him make 11 better but d1sm1ss him. My attitude is justified and not offering any possiblhty for discuSSIOn. That ends our relat1onsh1 of man ears. 4 I tell him, "ll's bull, there's nothing in it. It's nothing but empty rhetoric. My words are final, matter of fact _.;_.JJI _____ ·---- .Jtllt; AMAMll 1H7 A friend invites me to hia ho~. He la with his wife. He invites me to read a proposal he has written. The atmoshpere ts .matter~f.fact. 2 I read 1t and report: ·1r1 no good. There 11 nothing good in it.· He 11 humiliated in front or his wife. I'm p.resentJng a matter.of.fact 3 I present myself as uncofTl)romislng and not giving an Inch. He is taken aback and asks what I mean Abo•e la an aample of the problem-.ohiq tecbnlqae employed In •• Artem.1a· •. - ·. The advantage of confronting a problem throuah the program is that "there is no fear in dealing with it. No one 1s being blamed," Uliana said. ways an which an alcoholic understands his problems. .: Thu was followed by an article in the Rutten Quarterly JoumaJ of Studies on Alcohol. tn which Grimes dealt with the roots of alcoholism by exploring lbc ways in which alcoholjcs reason. ··There is a sense of relief in the people who use it. because they find the problems they face could be cultural or generational. lt relieves a lot of guilt a person might have." As director of the Huntin11on Bcach·based Noetic Society·s Philosophical Midwife Ptoeram for the past 10 years, Grimes tested his method with people and adapted 1t to meet the needs of hi$ computer prosram. ... The price tag of nearly $100 makes marketing the self-help computer program a challenge. Grimes and Duncan attend conferences and exhibits and arc depending on word of mouth until they raise enough money to spend on advertising. Being a philosopher is nothinJ new to the 6J.year--01d Grimes. He s been exJ?loring this style of thinking for nearly 30 years. While doing his graduate work 1n 1>hilosophy at the University of the Pacific in San Francisco he was a sodaJ work.er who dealt with a large number or alcoholics. He said he decided he wanted to get to know the people he was going to work with, so "I teamed about why they drink. I sat around them, ta)ked to them and J saw a pattern and explored it philosophically. And the philosophical side is what Plato called midwifery." The Yale Quarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol published his early anicle on lhis subject, exploring the A vaJidation study of this philosophical approach was presented jointly in August 1986 by Grimes and Uliana at the 94th annual Convention o( the American Psychological Association in Washinaton, D.C. Verification of the universality ofh1s program isalso on Grimes' mind. He said be would like to sec bow a • person in anotbC1' pan of the world works through it and what conclusions he draws. .. They should be the same," Grimes said. '"This p~ 1s designed to be used apin and ap.in dwin& ones lifeumc." Additional information on the practice of philosophical n'l1dWlfcry can be obtained by writing to 419 Main St., Suite 143, Huntinaton Beach 92648 or calhna 53().2083. I • .......................................................................................................................................................... ' ., Men who go on a diet do not also lose their manhood In earlier times, men were hunters. Woman stayed home and cultivated the wheat, fed the chickens and took care of the children. Men went out and killed game because meat and fat were needed for survival. There was just no such thing as having too much or eating too much meat. .. La111 Auaza The hunl was a male-bonding ntual~ huntcn cooperated to maxi-10 diet and sacriftet to look good for a mize their efforts. Aller a successful woman. He may want 10. but it may effort, they shared the meat, cooked embarrass him to be seen doing it in The adycrtising industry knows all said that he had a medical motivauon conv1ct1ons. this stuff about men. Therefore, light fordroppingthe lOpoundshencedcd Other men without specific medi- bcer is not billed as having "fewer to lose. cal ploblcms. however, may need calorics" bu1 just as being "less "I had open heart surgery a year ago strong-reinforcement from a woman filling." The im~licataon is, of coune, and didn't like that r had gained some to get started and suck with some diet. that by consuming a so-called lighter weight ... " he said. Once he makes a persona) commit· product a man Wlll be able 10 move There was no quesuon in my mind ment. a woman can help her man wath And. of course, there arc also the psychic rewards. It's not a woman's JOb to keep her man on a diet, but when he's had a tough day it won't hun to encourage him to reach for h is mate instead ofh1s plltc. It's not bad for a woman's diet either. faster -be a belier animal. that this fellow had the courage ofh1s encouragcmcnt·tn this d1rce1ion. lsn'titap1t}thatexccptamongthc ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ most sophisttcated, educated men, 11 dieting has to be done in secret ... and/or for a good and tangible reason? Secretaries' Special . t • . 5"°' OFF INITIAL FEE ·. U /0 Undudinc Corporne f>Kbtesl some of It right on the spot, and bl' feasted and drank to celebrate their .-p_u_ic_. _______________________ --1 victories. I met a man at a diet center who •Home of the Orange County Yoga Center Men still do these things. One of the most popular beer commercials shows a group of males engaged in one form of tile hunt fishing. The men end up around a table, laughing together, eating and, of course, drinking beer. "It just don't get a,ny better than this," says one happy fellow. - From the smiles on the face of the other men, we know they agree. So, apparently, do the men who watch these commercials. However, everybody knows that when it comes to dieting, fat and calories OOcounl and there IS such a thin~ as eating too much. It sjust that when you ask a man to cut things out (like a steak or a few extra pieces of pizza) you may be slicin& into what he sees as his manhood ... especially when he's called on to deprive himself in front of another man. for several generations now. women have dieted. From a man's perspective. his woman counts calorics and watches her weight because she wants 10 look good for him. "Diet'' somehow sounds like a feminine word. No self-respecting man should have to surrender to this female ethic SUPER BIG DISCOUNTS! / THl ; PORTING HOUSE • 2 complete weight rooms/F~e lnstn.actJon • Over 50 aerobics classes each week. with certified instructors • Raquetball ~squash courts/ fRt.t clinics • Ucensed massage staff ~ • 25 Meter heated outdoor pool • Sand volleyball I fRtC clinks • FRf~ Child care • Basketball Gym • PWS many additional amenities Under MW maaagement complet.ely renovated~ re~. b plres l 2·7-88 New Club Hours: 3601 Jamboree. "ewport 8each. CA 92660 (714) 752-0565 M-f 5;30am-10pm, S.t/Sun Aam-7pm • J I . . ---------------------------------------------------.; RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. ... ,_ .... C.... llwe! llU -.... •Tl IUl-541-1151 r.~------~----~------~-~--~---~ Attent ion Women! E IEPllCEIBT llEU..PY Se minars Schedule d Dr. N~rmal K. Beals, Med. Dir. of the Women's Health Core Clink: in El Toro, wlll conduct o number of sernh1brs on hormone replacement theropv Ctsfrogen &. prooe~terone>. Dec." 7:30 Deci.14. 7:30 Dec.11, 7~ .. Mercury Savings 23021 Lake Center, El Toro Best Western Newport Mesa Inn 2~2 Newport Blvd, Newport Beach Mercury Savings 7812 Edinger, Huf'.'tlngton Beach ., PROJECT: FRESH START "ERASING" THE PAST WITHOUT GOING BACK Next Workshops: SttA>heo M. Verdon, Ph.D and Friends will t>. demonattaunr new meth(-.dJJ of EruinaH emotional pain. Permanently Neutralize: Bloch . Fea~ Anger. Hoet.ility, Frustration, Depr111ion, Burnout • . . ' Galll a tret• aew penpectlte f0r Um,t• Saturday, December 10 9 a.m. to 11:30 am or Noon to 1:30 p.m. or J p.m. to S:JO p.m. See you at The Balboa Bay Club 1221 West Coast Highway, Newport Beach The r .. it SU •t the door. Brine your piUow and blanket.• bfin, aomeone apedal. 'l'o Oftkr hil boe>ll A tape ()fqlrtm. "S.fCl!'d W•l\tl," •nd ~.00 I• '2. l6 ul W 6 II ..-..1 Ce 8. 'V•,.._ ft: 0. U....•• .,._,, HO l'few .. rt C••t•r Ori,,~ New.-. a..4' CA eaeeo, (11') 'fll ... 1'7 ne Perfect Gift For You Mu.di ; DIAMOND BACK ... THE RIGHT BIKE FOR CHRISTMAS DIAMOND BACK BIKES CO. IN ALL SIZES fOlt AU. TERRAIN TO A COWl.ETE UNI ~ YOUTH lllKESl ALL 88 MODELS ON SALEI ~ ~ sgg and .. Models As law As up ~ ~ s1.49 and ~ ~ MoOets As Low As up ~ 2=,= s19·9 .. and ~Allow Al up USE YOUR -Oil LAYAWAY TODAY ON SALE ON . SALE ON SAI E ·~ . 08 Wednwsay. No"9mber 30, 1988 /DAIL y ptLOT Holiday movies sell like the Dickens at boz offices BUI Muray. Carol Kane ID ••Scrootect. •• HOU. YWOOD (AP) -Charles Dictem' new c:aRU in tbc movict was a unaabi .. auc:caa lut weeteod, u DictenHDljMted films were No. 1 and No. 3 at the nation •a box ofticie. Aa:ordina to preliminary fiaura rekased MOnda,t by Exhibitor lteta- tiom Co. Inc., ·Scrooted ... swrina BiU Mumy 10 a melJina or the Dickens Christmas clau.ic, collected S 13 million durina the weekend, euily toppina second-place finisher .. The Land Before Time.•• No. l ·•Scrooted," tbouah ~ coolly b)' critics, set a new ~ for the best five-day Thankscivina open-inc (S 18.S million) for a non-sequel movie. AU box-office proceeds. in fact, were significantly bi&her than last weekend, thanks to the holiday and a flurry of new releases. .. The Land Before Time, .. which a week qo enjoyed the best openins ever for an anunated film, colleaed $8.1 million. The film tells the story of a baby brontosaurus• danlm>us journey throusJ1 a prehistoric world. Dezter Ecbl..-errl 18 tbe eenter of att6ndon ID 0 Dreamcoat" ma.teal. 75 million view 'War' Another anunated movie, .. Oliver and Co.,'' finished in third, up a notch from last week. "Oliver and' Co., .. employina a variel)'. of ~le~ty . voicn to recount Dic:kens Ohver LOS ANGELES (AP)-The ABC eagerly look forward tocomplet1on of Twist-inspired tale of a homeless 'Dreamcoat' a biblical romp miniseries "War and Remembrance" ·war and Remembrance' next May.-·kitten grossed $6.3 million. , Before he gained world renown for attracted an audience of more than 7S "War and Remembrance" is the Oebutina at No. 4 wu the sequel "Evita" .. Cits" and the current hit milJionviewersoversevennights,the sequclto"The~indsofWar,"which "Cocoon: The Return," an u~ted "Phantom of the Opera," British network said Monday. averaged a rat~ng of 38.6 and a 53 look at a sroup of senior citizens composer Andrew Lloyd Weber went The 18-hour presentation of the pcrce~t share m. Febru8!)' 1983. At enjoyinf everlasting youth. with rev-throur.h a "biblical period" that first part of the World War 11 saga that time a ratings pom~ equal.ed enues 0 SS.6 million. It was followed included the creation of the somber based on the book by Herman Wouk 830,000 households. A ratings point by "Ernest Saves Christmas," in "Jesus Christ Superstar" and the ave~ a rating of 18.6 and as~ today equals 904,000 househol~s. A which an oddball cabdriver (Jim lighter, more accessible "Joseph and of 29 percent over the seven nights. s~areis~epcrcentageoftheaud1ence Varney)savestheholidaysbydrivina the Amarina Technicolor Drcam- Toi TITUS Thesecond 12 hours will be telecast in with thc!r sets tu.med on._ . Santa's slci~ with sales of SS.2 coat" May. Herc 1s the n1&ht-by-n1Jbt raungs million. · The latter, first unveiled locally "We're gratified so many viewers and shares: SunClay, Nov. 13. 21.8 The horror movie "Child's Play," several years ago at the Newport Watched the program," ABC said in a and 31; Tuesday, Nov. IS.t 19.0 and featuring a homicidal doll on the Theater Arts Center, is sheer enter- statement. "While the size of the 31 ; Wednesday, Nov. I 6, I Y.8 and 31 ; rampage, finished in sixth with $4.6 tainm~nt using the story of Joseph audience may not have lived up to Thursday, Nov. 17, 16.8 and 25; milbon in sales. ••Hi&h Spirits," and ms coa1"of many colors as the everyone's expectations. we're Sunday, Nov. 20, 17.0 and 26: starrina Peter O'Tdble as the starting point for a freewheeling dash pleased to have broadcast a program Tuesday, Nov. 22, 17.5 and 29..t and proprietor of a &host-infested Irish into musical comedy, with the em, French Apachedancingand Elvis sendups thrown in to spice the mixture. It's a toUJh show with li&htnjna-quick costume cbanacs on a relatively small siaae. but Nelson and his cast acquit themselves quite well. of such extraordinary quaJity and Wednesday, Nov. 23, 16.9 and ~8. castle. ended up in seventh with eme_hasis on the latter description. ---==---=-------------------...-, receipts ofS2 million. ··0reamcoat," now on view at the Dexter Echiverri, a veteran of Johnson-Nelson musicals, isan excel- lent choice for the title role of Papa's favorite amonJ 12 brothers whose special attention makes him an insufferable snob. We hardly blame &he. other 11 for selling him into slavery, yet the eathos of his pli&ht wins us back to ~tnun short order. "A s1Tn1J_"111' ~Y' IV\11111'117 ~'I• !AI lneiah\hplacewas'•TbeAccused," La Habra Community Theater's !.l.U.IY\J.C.14J. J.ll~ \AA.'1.DllJ. ~·~.. starrina Jodie Foster and Kelly Depot Playhouse, is, first of aJI, an AN 'D'AT IDlJ 1\IU.1"1111!-..,..,.. 'IO m.m" McGillis. with sa1el of $1 .6 million. exceedingly funny show, rich in satire Cl\a.l J. .11\Jl, J. n.Bn J. ..Dl,.U. RouodingouttheTop IOWCR .. Ftah andaboutassubtleasMelBrooks. It's M B u I R L R L A y Horses," with Molly Ringwald, col-also the first directorial venture for lecting SJ.SS million in ninth and Tim Nelson) who's been one of the "Iron Eagle II," starring Louis better musical directors in local Gossett, with a reported gross of theater for the past few years. S 1.35 million in tenth. Nelson, a classically trained mu- S·C ·R·O·O·G·E-Il .. ······· .. A IWMllT llJlll ft Tbe holiday film season continues sician, has picked up the fine points of to expand this week. with "The musical comedy from his mentor, Naked Gu'n" and "Tequjla Sunrise" Kent Johnson, and his "Dreamcoat" opening Friday. is a rich, well-balanced blend of the 1--------------, lyrical and the lau&hable. He has amassed a strong. predominantly youthful cast and has recruited choreographer Jennifer Simpson from the splendid Johnson-Nelson production of "Grease" at West- minster to keep the large cast moving smoothly. Bright, beautiful namtors Nanc,Y Calabrese and Beth Hornung partici- pate in nearly every major number and control the show's tempo skil- lfuUy.John L Moreno is a command- ing presence as Jacob, the father, and also as Potipbar, the powerful captain to whom the lad is sold. ···---.. ~ -=-· Gtu-e a LettQ.e ~S"tMOS · .. • Research \VOrks. ' TO A NEEDY CHILD WHO . HAS SO MUCH LESS THAN YOU Bring new toys, games, clothing or other suitable items for children from tots to teens Give yourself a lift by knowing that your gift will be appreciated by someone who would otherwise receive rlo Christmas Gift. Please do .aot wrap 70B ll/t. Dally '1!ot Holiday Gift COUectloa Now thru Friday, December 23 The result is a brisk, ~unchy all- sing.ing. no-talking (as is Weber's style) romp in biblical Egypt and its environs, with a little country-west- The 11 brothen arc a well-coordi- nated ensemble who function in various utility roles as well. Jon Gale exels as the lead sinser in the countrified "One Mo~ Ansel in Heaven," but James McFartane needs some work on his Evis im- e_ression: (what, no sideburns?). Chorcosrapber Simpson stepped in • !=o~lf" ...... tl'IU IU ti UI tt 16 • FULIJlCWI \11ILU£ a•• .. ••••11• * FRESH HORSES CPG·13l u:Ju ... •·111.11 •·tt CHIL0'1 PLAY (A) UMI 116·• J Ill It • HHiH SPIRITS <PG·1ll ••• ... ,,. J .... EVHYIODY"S All MERICAi (R) tl:tt 1:• 6:ft UI 1&11 • ma-....... u ....... 1WIM-2• WIClllolll llC-'°"' 1.-0 ... _., OLIVER • COWAIY(G) ... .......... HIUTIAVU CMAllTllAI IN) .......... '" . A FISH CALLEO WAIDA (R) ........ tCI009 .. ,It ltolllllt S;ts7.U ""'• ~-------... ,...., -fOlftMCIUY .....US . .-... COCOOltM .... .... ,,,.,,,. ........... 1-----------_...., .. ll:Jtt!U ... ,.,.. ..... ---------OOUTAmo•t_..'t .... F -... ,_ C11"91CWMf 411 .... . U2 tAnU • • .... IJ) I _ _:':"':.:ti.11::_:•:: .. :.:: .. ::;.:'.::M:.;t:=:#:.-t-'tJ-!4-S1-!4-H_ .. _ .. _ ..... _ ... _ .... -:-• IYl .. itfJIJ .. ...aa••111 ._, __ Ml....... ,.:--.,,;:,:: ..._._ ,,.._.-,.-.-.. , .... ~ aus.u•1111 ltH..... .. ................ '"" '9CA ........... ·-----~ .,., .•. ,,. ........ .. --~, ...... •cam"' .... a.a. ...... , .... .... ,.-.0 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:~:--.._. ., ... tot ..... ~~~ •ti••:t@ i'.iiij; ml ,. .._ • "... • .. , SOlll!I TWaJt ... n --.... ..... ~ .... on short notice Saturday at Potipbar's. seductive wife and wanned up the Stage considerably. One of the best numben in the show -done in French cafe style with masochistic Apache dancen-is "Those Canaan Days," wherein the brothers lament their ill fortunes. Ensemble work is crowded but classy lhrouahout .. Jose~ and the Amazinc Tee~ nicolor Dreamcoat" continues ra.r· two more week.ends., playina fridaf9 . and Saturdays at 8 p.m. throuab Dec. I 0 at the Depot PlayboUIC, 311 S .• Euclid St.. u H~brL Call (213): 905-9708 for tick.et information. CALLBOABD -The La Habra Childen ·s Theater will hokJ auditions for the musical .. Once U90n a Mattress" Monday and Tuesday at 7 p.m . at the Depot Playhou1e at the abovcaddress. ... rolesareopentoaecs 11 throua}l hi&h school senion. ... Call Linda Hollana at (213) 947-1689 for details. Readi~ for the drama ""The Diviners will be held Dec. 12 and 14 in the Studio Theater at Oranae Coast CoUqc .... direc:tor Alex Golson will be casting five men and five women of various aaes for the show, which will be stqCd for two weekends in February. Tryouts for the musical .. Ll'I Abner" have been announced for Dec. 27 at the N~rt Theater Ans Center, 2SOJ OiJT Drive, Newport Bcach .... Tim Nelson is directinc the sia,e version of the popular comic stnp, which opens Feb. 3 for five weekends. ... call 631-0288 for more information. Siskeland Ebert review video gifts \ 1-Jlfattonal Claartty ~e debatantee l!:eated ~ at tM lntne Blltoa ballroom are ( t row) AA*• Dallaoae. TUia.ai Tbcla, L ... Cbnhal. lkUIH llelellt. aad Clartadae Roberta; (middle nnr) 8oltllJe Lefeb•re, Katrina Walff80a. Nicolle RaJJDoad, Baltaa Mir ............ .,.,....~ Taketa. Alm Steele. ••a Rlttenlaoa•, Leelle CUlaJoa aad Kana DaYla, aad (tap row)Nallq 81aackletoa, Kimber- ly Bellwood. KrlMa Le.la, Beadier llead, Eden Werner, A.at Patrick. Jmlf• lleacla, A1ll8oa Becker. Anne ..... Amber ........... Alana Dcmcrna.. Charity Leagtie debs bow in Irvine . By VIDA DEAN °' ........... "Throuah the Eyes of Love" was played as mothers of the Natfonal Charity ~ue debutantes entered the Irvine Hilton ballroom Saturday ev~ ~tout Hearted Men" music sipaled the arrival of fathers. Music with special significance t0 each dallghter and father was played by the Ron Rubin On:hcstra as the duo walked arm in arm the lenath of the ballroom followina her tra- ditional St James bow that marked her entrance into society. Twenty-four youna women were Claalnromaa h•n Robl8oa, ~t Karen Boclladel. Painting no problem; this artist had it licked Pretty popular in the 1920s was that Chinese artist Huang Erh-Nan. Different What made him different was his technique. He put the black paint in his mouth and used his tongue for a brush. Another distinction owned by the ca -ifs the only food that gets tWder the longer you cook it. 0 . In what U.S. city arc you most likely to get rain on any given day of tbe)Ut7 A. Hilo, Hawaii. With at least .0 I incbel on 270 days. Runnerup is Juneau, Alaska. With that much on 234days. Hana onto your 1989 calendar. It'll beaoocJapin in 1995. Nobody was thought "punch drunk .. when John L Sullivan fought. Took the likes of Willard, Dempsey and Tunney to inspire that term, thou&h none of them were so caUed. One Dr. H. S. Martland coined it in 1928. Later, curiously, it was re- garded as bunk. Lately, the medicos again say it's valid. Boxers lose brain cells, far more than those otherwise employed. What's your mouo? If none you have! how about .. cum grano salts"? Thats the Latin for "Take it with a grain of salt" Your heart rests more than it works. In a 70-ycarlifetime. it'sat rest for 40 years. about. Who makes snakeproof trousers? Somebody. surely. There's a patent on such. presented at the 28th annual debu- tante ball of the Newport Chapter of NCL For the occasion, chaired by S.U R1•1-. an elegant stqe of stately white columns, ccladon gn:en moiie drapina and carved silver c~s provided the backdrop for the Each youna women wore a noor- lenath white gown, white gloves and carried a Oower-tnmmed satin muft Also, worn was the sold and pearl medallion that signified years of community service. After all the debutantes bad been individually introduced by Dr. ~ a.N Sellers, fathers and daughters danced the first waltz of the evening until escorts approached the couple and presented the father with a long- stcmmed white rose. The sso aunts watched as fatbcn returned to their dinner tables and passed the floral gifts along to the mothers. Table centerpieces were arran~­ ments of white dendrobium orchids and sP@rtling tina-ting sprays spilling, from fill crystal trumpet tubcswith Pitica and Lady Di roses at the base. Also, in the arrangements which appcarul to float on the mirror to~ were tulips. daisies and freesia in shades of pale each and white. The youna women presented in all the floral splendor and being toasted b~ members of their family and by fnends have been involved with the · Ticktocker propam of NCL -the daughter port.ton-of the -mothcr- dau&hter oranization. More than 5.300 hours of community service have been donated by this year's group of debutantes. It was a Iona day for the debs who arrived at the hotel at 3:30 p.m. already in their gowns. Picture-takina sessions and abd checking out the stage were in progress until guests began to arrive at 6:30 p.m. The ball was over at I a.m. when the band Both vulnerable. Nonh deals. NOltTR • 012 Q A ctl 16 0 '' 3 '-• Q 10 WFSI' EAST • A I I 5 • 10 6 ' l Q 3 2 Q ' ¢110' O Q75 •Kl6' •A753 l SO VTB . "' Pflcolle Raymond and dad Carl Raymond. stopped playing and clcar-N the dance floor, which had b«n crowded all evenjng. "Our ball is not a fund-raiser.·· said chapter member Eve Belmgre11. "It's a cclebratton of the volunteer work the girls have done and hopefully a launch into a lifetime of chamy work." · Having their time m the spotlight were Jeulfer Beac•. Alllsoe Beeler, LaUe c.a ...... Usa Clmial, httll DaYI•, A.Mtta DeSi.DMH, A1ua O..•u, Aue a ...... IUmbuly Baw"4, Amber Ktqunl, ~ Lef~, Erina Led, Beadier Me.4, Melissa Mel~r and Amy P•trick. Others were NIC9lle Ray1DoM, s.... RJtteaoue, Cllrlstiae Rob- erts, Nucy S..cklelM, Alex.a Steele, 8aUaa Taketa, Tlffaal 'nadl, Ede• Wener and Jtatriaa WalfflOll. diamond lead and draws trumps, East can signal with the seven of clubs on the second round of trumps and the cat is out of the bag. For shame!" Look at the lessons before givina them away. You mi&ht decide to keep them for yourself and order another set for your friend! Orlnge C0Mt DAILY PILOT/Wedi~.~ 30, 1111 Cl . Fans stand up·for national authem DEAR ANN lAND£1lS; This 11 for yourZtlltons of readers who would hu to 1ee "The Sw-Spanpd Ban- ner"' dumped and ~ with .. Ammc:a the Beautiful Tm a close look at the wonts: Ob beautiful for 1p1eaous lkies (thr~ which thouundS of air- planes fly every day), For amber waves of aram (which is at the mercy of floods, drouahts and other natural calam1tacs), For purple mountain majesties (whole hiaflest peaks cannot escape pollution) Above the fruited plain. (under which we have buried nuclear waste) America! America! God shed his grace on thtt (He has certainly done that!) And crown thy Sood w1th brotherhood (hence millions of legal and illcpl immigrants), From sea to shining sea. (reeling from oil shcks and waste dumpmgs) I am not a pessimist but I believe 1n beinarealtst1c. I hope we wake up and do something about the deterioration oftheenVJronment before we run out . of time. -R.J .• DALLAS MORN- ING NEWS READER. DEAR R.J.: nu.s fer 11aariag yev wtMem. Here's ... titer letter •dle••Ject: DEAR ANN LANDERS: I wish that those who would like to trade "The Star-Spangled Banner'' for another .song could have been with me on Dec. 7, 1941, on the tsland of Oahu. That surprise attack at 7:S5 a.m. sank or damaacd 18 American ships and destroyed 200 of our planes. Tlt•nay, l>ettmber 1 By SYDNEY OMARR Thert were 3, 700 casualtJeS. My cruiser was one of the rew that remained intact and she was t.d.ly damaged, able only to run in circles because of a broun rudder. The po&e that held the Sw-SPH&lcd Benner aloft bad been cut by 1lyi~ debris but was quickly repaired and Old Glory was proudly wavina in the breeze by mom mg. I am not a vocalist but the only time 1 can't sing our nattonal anthem is when I get choked up with emotion. Replacc"TbeSw-Spanglcd Banner" and you Just might start another war. -J.R.R .• C H1LLICOTHE, ILL DEAR CBIUJ: Wlio, me? Net • yoer We! Tlaukl fer writlq. ••• DEAR ANN LANDERS: For a long ume I have read other people's pct peeves in your column. And now will you please pnnt mine? Why is it that when people call to ask for mformat1on and )'Ou start to g.ive it to them. they invariably"Say, "W11t till I ~t a pencil"? This really drives me wild. Am I too critical? - VALPAR.t\ISO, IND. DEAR VAL.: Nel rully. B•t It~ preve e.ce apt. &Mt e»mm• l8'e is ~te acemm ... ARIES (March 21-April 19): What had b«n ~m issing" will be located. Papers will be in order. you ·11 have greater understand mg of money and how it "got that way." EmphastS on research. credit rcferencxs. dca.hngs wttfl Scorpio. TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20); Scenano highltghts sclf<xpression. creattvity. adventure of discovery. Member of opposite sex says. -Ptcasc.. you are going too fa.st for me." Gain indicated through reading. writing. imprinting own style. GEMINl(May 21-June_20): At1en1ioncentersaround family mertiberwho t.alksabout "need forchangeo(env1ronment." Focusondomest1cadjustment.. acquisition of art obJCCt or luxury Item. Money comes your way if diplomatic. CANCER (June :! I-July 22): Mood changes dommate sccnano. Dcalinas with women prove successful. surpnsc public appearance 1s on agenda. Protect C)CS. espcctall)' left e)c. from sharp obJCCts. Pisces ts m picture. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Prestige restored, Views att verified. )'OU arc vindicated. Focus on ~yments. collcct1ons. power. authority. pi:omot.ton. Older person says, ··t did not know 1t but nowt realize )'OU wett nghL" VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Focus on travel. discovery, ability to enlarge honzons. Circumstances continue to tum tn )Our favor. you'll be invited to panicipatc 10 unique JO~mey. Aries. Lt bra play roles. LIBRA (Sept. :!3-0ct. 2:!): Member of opposae sex says. "There is romance in )Our soul" Aattel) 1s fine. but get "tntcnuons .. in writing. Backstage maneuver has direct effect on your immediate future. Leo. Aquanus dominate. $CORP10 (Oct. 23-Nov. :! I). You could sell almost anythtn&-emphasis on showmanship. display. creative concepts You11 nsc above petty differences. famil) member Sttks rapprochcmenL CanC't'r. Aquanus nauvesm picture. SAGl'nARWS (No~. 22-Dr:c. 21): Focus on versauhty. humor,cunosuy, short Journey involving close relative. Individual who previously said. ~1 am soing to rcmam neutral. .. wtll now declare ··fun pannersh1p ... Gemini tnvolved. CAPRICORN (Dec-. :!:!:Jan. I ~): Restr:ict1ons remam but now begin to work to your advantage. lnd1v1dual m pos111on of autbonty Oashes green light. you get needed legal permission. Focus on romance. emotional involvement. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You arc being pulled in two d1rect1ons - two ~pie are mvolved. both arc sincere but only one can really afford 1t Message due to become cryst.al<lcar. Be pos1t1ve concenung bank references. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): MaJOr changes occur which affect hfcst)'lc. budget. long-range aspirations.. Check legal rights. realize partnership and marriage prospects can no longer be ignored. Libra native figures prom1n~tly. 1F DECEMBER 1 lS YOUR BIRTHDAY dunng this month. you travel and c-xchange gifts. most tmporutnt )OU team who means most to r.ou and which rcla1tonsh1psare based mercl) on wishful tlunlcing. 'l.ttcn11on"Wlll center around money. payments.. collect1ons. carccT and busm~ proposals. Leo. Aquanus natives play important roles 1n your hfe. Your father has had more influence than mother. You arc independent. d) nam1c. creative. sensual. stubborn . .i\pnl will be profitable. memorable for ~ou 1n I 989. Q KI 10 9 5 O A&ll I 6:00 I 6:30 I 7:00 I 7:30 I 8:00 I 8:30 I 9:00 I 9:30 110:00 I 10:30 I 11 :00 I 11 :30 I • L • 19 The biddina: Nortll Eal ... ... J Q ... ... ... Wat ... . .. 0paUna lead: Jack of 0 Lookfna for a holiday lift for• bridp-playiq friend? You could do a lot wone than set him the act of lO Kanw Leaons (available fr Edwin B. IC.-w, P .O BoJt 427, Vmicc, Calif. 90291-042'7; S35 poltpUd}. The ltrics includes both tJicldina and play, and is one of the most comprcbemive lesson manuals available. Tbis bud is from the ICC- doD "Deccpdon in Declarer Play." Four beana ii a normal contrKl to rmcb. It '-virtually no play only becau• of I.be wasted values in dubs, and DO auction coukt reveal tbat. Kanter writes: .. Eut ....... with the diamond ll'¥CD ud bib plays low! South a... a di1-0Dd bu in uy cue and, lf dilt.-dl .. )-3, Soutb can ue bis founb dhnoed to dilcatd one ot chuluDJ'• ..,._ dubs. However, Soullll .... ....._e Ills deCleptiw play cWIY befan'IM oppaa-11 can tad .......... ··11 ~ .... t.M op-lea s-t wt .... lrill IO ....... .... for I dab • t•d, the oppoecnll .. bow ... Soudil ..... fourth ........... wll shift IO dubl. Alie. .._-.It ID a IUlt II ii dla- ......... lnllllll I I# PtlJ, ••--•ar:~••ctlMictto ...... , r IMI..,.._._ -· ..... ar.., .... . ........... 11~ .... tM . 0 ..... C'-" Tui "-NJtllliN ,._ .... 141..i Lo.e Cenl.s'n Gl9"""1 M1M o1 Wone.t ltooper. NigfltliM .... I .. a_..,_, - ITMI Wiii T1--Tild It Nol9 111 as •• CE E--. • C8 0...,. Cout DAILY Pll01' / Wedneedtiy, NoYembet 30, 1988 TBS PAMILY ClllCU8 by Bii Keane comn&a CUL~ by Mara1ta & Maratta r I I IWT£ "STATE "5 NEEDS i.£·ST~\f\NG. ' i . "The sun's goin' down and pretty soon they'fl turn on the moon." by Brad Anderson "Yoo get the o~ shpper after yoo feed him." PEAIWTS GARFIELD TUllBLEWEEDS Roa& 18 R081t , .. I • ·' '"' Ji i 1 ! •Wf All AAVE 6ELLY8UTTOHS,~Y. THATS WHER£ THEY~ OFF lHE PRICE TN.3 AT "THE HOSPITAL..• by Charles M. Schulz WELL. MA'Y0E 'f'OU CAN vse TME FEATMER5 AMO n~E STICK M~SE SOME OTMER TIME .. by Jim Davis by Tom K. Ryan ' ARLO AND JAMS JUDGE PARKER by Jimmy John80n J1MNC~ ~"' ff> AN'! by Jeff MacNeUy by Harold Le Doux COME.~.~ SAM ' THE JU(X,E DISMISSED WHAT !"VV"'PENED CHARGES' NOW TELL ME I SENT HER UPSTAIRS TO GET SOM E REST AFTER S HE SPENT IHE; NIGHT AS A M IO· WIFE TO THE MARE ' I FOUND THAT SHE IN COURT WITH AOOUT MARIGENE I RICK? I DID LIVE ON A FARM FOR FOUR YEARS W ITH FOSTER PARENTS I AFTER THEIR ... ANO WE. DID SO WEll.. Wf4EN WE MARCH ED IN -rnE ~ PARADE IN m2 ... DOOIUSBURY J DEATHS, SHE BECAME A LOST SOUL t , l 1 ..-::t J I I i ~==""" by Garry Trudeau by Tom Batluk