HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-12-20 - Orange Coast Pilot..
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TUFSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1988 2S CENTS .
Mesa lifts buildin moratorium
Council ends 2-day permit prohibition,
exempt category is allowed to proceed
•1 r·· L · ·· vOLZU or .. ~6:: .
Most of the buildina ~rri· in Costa Mesa have I llftn Ii t apin
today after the City Couna revtsed
iu moratorium on iuuina permits,
which wu adopted in the wake of
growtb-limitina Measure G.
The city last Friday atopped'iuuin1
buiklina and plannina ~rmiu at the
direction of the counal to aive the
planning department time to study
Nation.
President-elect Bush's
lead Ing contender for
secretary of health and
human services says he
favors a woman's right to
an abortion./ A5
World
A member of the PLO
governing body rejects
Vasser Arafat's recog-
nition of Israel./ M
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A3
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88-10
A10
89
810
A7
A9
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81-5
A2
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the citizen-initiated measure, which
links lafF developmenu to traffic
improvemenu. ·
The measure also requires the
Plannina Commission or City Coun-
cil to rule on projects that meet the
measure•s six exempt cateaories,
mainly for projects under I 0,000
square feet.
The complete moratorium took
effect Friday and was in effect
Monda}', but the council late Monday
night lifted the prohibition to allow
Midweek
weather
rerun of
weekend
BJ GREG nERltX °' .. ..., ........
The Roman philosopher Juvenal
once said that never does nature say
one thins and wisdom another. If that
is true, wisdom dictates that um-
brellas should not be placed in closets
just yet because nature -and the
National Weather Service -says it's
goina to rain again. ~ Countians, drummed into
submiSSlon by rain over the weekend,
are likely to get more of the same this
week, possibly as early as tonight or
Wednesday, as a storm that de-
veloped off the Gulf of Alasu moves
toward the area.
The storm will also lower
temperatures by several dqrees
throuahout the rqion, and winds
shoula begin to kick up in the
mountains and deserts tonight, reach-
ina soeeds of 30 mph in mA!1Y areas by
W'"ed"nesday, forecasten said.
Higbsalona the Coast should ranee
from the mid-to upper 50s Wed~
day, with ovemisht tows from the low
40s to low 50s tonight
The snow level is expected to dro'p
to S,000 feet in the mountains where
hi&hs will be in the 30s Wednesday
affer overnight lows in the 20s.
It Will be partly cloudy in the
deserts with a chance of showers in
the north tonight and Wednesday.
(Pleue Me 1100/ A2)
permits to be issued for exempt
projects. said Donald Lamm, deputy
city manqer for developmental ser-
vices.
i.Tbe only cateaory that I am
comf'onable to proOeed with at thi'
time ii the eumpt fjojects," Lamm said ... We are sti I not ready to
proceed with any of the non-exempt
ca~, still meeting to try and fiaure out Measure G." .
Lamm said about 85 percent of the
projc:ctl in the city meet the cxem~
ti on.
"Measure G aPOlies to every sin&)e
buildifll permit ·ror improvements. ..
(Pleue Me 188A/A2)
Country Club Drive to stay open
BJ JONATHAN VOLZU! °' .. ..., ........ elimi.naled.
Country Qub Drive in Costa Mesa wdl remain open
without any barricades, but the City Council on Monday
decided to step up improvements to inttnections near the
affluent.Mesa Verde area because of residents' complaints
about whizzina commuters usin& the tract as a shoncut
After nearly three houn of public testimony, the
council also voted to add a riabt-tum lane at Placentia
Street and Adams Avenue. The left-tum lane from Mesa
Verde East onto Country O ub Drive also will be
A poup of Country Oub Drive homeownen, callifll
themtelves the Residents Against Traffic and Sb'ell -
RA TS-ubd the council to consider closina their atreet
to bait u many u 6,000 cars a day frorii strcamina throuah
the ~borbood.
Residents on doz.ens of surroundina streets proleSUd
that susstion, which came from a city traffic enaineer
and a Sinta Ana consulting firm, contendina it would
force the commuters onto their streets.
............. '--.....
The debate over the possible solutions to case the
(Pleue Me COON IRY /A2)
Hyandai Motor
headquarters ·
may shift to FV
Nation'sNo. 4car
impqrter will move
from Garden~Grove
By GREG XLERIX °' .. ...., ........
The nation's fourth l81JCSt car
importer, Hyundai Motor America,
bas submitted a proposal to move its
national headquarters to Fountain
Valley and may double its workforce.
The proposal was submitted to city
officials on Monday. endina specu-
lation that Hyundai, which has been
seekina a permanent U.S. head-
quarten, miJht relocate to Anaheim,
Mission ViejO or Irvine. City officials
said they have known of Hyundai's
interest an Fountain Valley for about
a year.
Hyundai Motor America miaht
also double its U.S. corporate staff to
l.250employces. Thecompany1sone
o( the &arsst in OraOF County. With annuaJ sales of more than SI billion.
Councilwoman Laurann Cook
pointed out that while city officials
want Hyundai in FountaJn VaJley,
nothing bas been set in concrete.
Cook said city and Hyundai of-
ficials have met several times in the
past few months and wiU meet apin
this week.
Ted Kade, corporate spokesman
for Hyundai, alsoetnpbasizcd that no
deal has been struck yet.
"It's a possible move," Kade said. ~There's a lot of work to do."
Kade said the company is not
neaotiatina for sites anywhere else in
Orlnat county.
The Fountain Valley Plannina
Commission, which meets Jan. 11,
must still ~pprove the proposal and so
must the City Council.
Garden Grove City Manlier
Geor'8C Tindall said officials tried to
keep ltyundai in t.Mir city, where it
~ ~~ since comi111 to tbC.t'J .s. in 1986. --.. They were loOking for property,
and we couldn't find a piece of propeny that suited their requiJ'e..
ments.' Tindall said. "It means lbat a
national corporation will be leaviaa.
We're sorry to see them 90."
Tindall said tbe city wouJd Jose a
source of employment but its tax base
would not be affected bccaUte Hyun-
dai CUJT'ClltJy leases its bu.iktinp
there. About SOO ~pie work at the
Garden Grove facllity.
Brian Ward, 31h, nae tlanMIO a paddle on the Newport Pier
da.rta& an oatlnC llonclay afternoon.
-,-"Jhm:'1 JlOt been I deal cinched
yet," Cook said. "We think it would
be p~tigious, but we have a lot to
talk about We just know we"d like
them here."
Accordina to preliminary plans,
Hyundai would remodel a two-story
build1na at IOSSO Talbert Ave. for-
merly oa:upied bv ITT Cannon. The
(Pleue.w.BYONDAl/A2)
HS library's cost hike shocking Testing
confirms
gas in soil
at station
Council reviews support for financing
children's wing as price zooms to $5M
By ROBERT BARKER °' .. ..., ........
Huntington Beach officials voiced
shock Monday that "the sticker
price" for a children's wina and other
additions to the Central Li~ has
zoomed to more than SS million
dollars.
City Council membe!", who had
been asked Monday ni&ht to give
conceptual approval to expansion
plans, instead told library advocates
to come beck in 30 days with answers
to how they would raise more money,
scale back plans or phase develop.
ment of the expansion over a number
of years.
In addition to a 20,7~square-foot
children's wins.~ ~library consultants
also pro~ a ~seat auditorium. a
children s story-time theater, a tech-
nOIOIY and media center, a children's
tide pool and an independent tutorial
center.
Councilman Don MacAllister, say-
ing he was "kind of shocked" at costs,
sugested that it was time to thfok
about charging non-residents to use
the IS-year-old facility at Talbert
A venue and Golden West Street.
His colleague. Jim Silva, suggested
the city ask voters to approve a bond
issue to finance construction.
Peter Green said that he was
suffering "sticker shock."
"There must be a way to bring costs
down," he said.
City Administrator Paul Cook said
be was "rather shocked" by the
estimated cost that climbed within a
year from $2.S million to $5.S
million. Cook said he was concerned
because the city also faces "tremen-
dous capital improvement needs" in
other areas.
"Maybe we should look at p~
in1t" be said. "I'd hate to have this
sittan• around (unfinanccd)'for 10 years.~·
Ruth Bailey, the _president of the
Library Patrons Foundation and
former mayor, said that!lans for t.M
'40<Heat auditorium an parking lot
improvements were chiefly respon-
sible for the increase in the cost
estimate. "It is the most beautiful building in
the the city and ccnainly the most
used," she said. "It would help the
community to know that you suppon
it 100 percent"
Later, she and other library ad-
vocates said they weren't disap-
(Pleue eee LIBRARY"S/ A:a) Rath Balley
Image ollrien"illy druggist may cha.zig.
Proposal to use trained assistants to
I prescriptions worries opponents
BJ BOB YANEY~ °' ............
A propc>led chanae in state law
that would permit pharmaceutical
llliscants to oerform many of the
tub now &eina performed by ~111 has tome oblerven worried. particularly in liaht of
recently ~ed instances of
botched preteriptions in Newport
BeKb.
The cha"IC, still beina considered
by the l.qislature, would permit
iridependeftt ~ia to operate
the way holpiw pharmacies already do. With trained llliswats per-
lormi• routine wks suda a count-ial piUi and mcatUrifll liquidl.
Molt pbarmllCilU "'"°" the c:baW. lccordilw to a 1ep1aen•
tive if the CalifOrnia ....,._iltl
AllOdatioa. ""Ovenll our mcmbenhip sup-
IW'ltl it -·-h ..... -~to do ..... ..., .... riO ... eoca .,.._~ ..
said Susan Boyle, director of legis-
lative aff'ain for the association.
"for exam~\ . a lot of senior
citizens are tllifll 1everal medi-
cations repalarly, and they wiU often
need tOme help to make sure what
has been pracribed to them is
compatible with their other medi-
cations."
But there are diuenten. Boyle
said, who ht auistants will im-
Dl'C)Deffy ~ re~biHtiel that ire better left to profellioMll.
One dillident is mired Corona
del Mar pharmacist Roman
Zweber. Citn'I two la...UU that
have been filed lllinsa a Newport
8eKb OICo pbatJMcy b ......
misbancllina of prncription1.
Zweber laid he was concerned that a
loolenilll ol profalioeal controls
milbt ina I I If that IOrt_Of problem. "I never Md problcm1 with
m....._ ia Ill the ye.an .ti.a 1 ~ .. llid Zweber. '"W we
....... ""pl'.'are.iwl = • IMt • 8IWlf 111911 v.,..ai
people touching prescnptions. ••
l..al'IC chain i>flarmacics, Zwebcr said. Ckpend on high volume for
their commercial success. Those
pharmacies might run into prob-
lems with the proposed relaxed
standards, he said.
.. At some of these outfits, phar-
macists in charae are told, 'Fill.¥>
many prescriptions an hour or out
you to.'" he said. "I think you're
court•RJ disaster by havina non-
professional hands on pre!C'rip-
tions."
Trained assistants are already
beina used effectively in several
other states, however. said Bob Orow, an inspec_tor with the Cali-
fornia Board of Pharmacy's Los
Anlela resional o~. And thole hospital pharmaclCS
tM& are alrady usina superveerd s•nnt1 would benefit from a
-.dlrdilation of ~ualif\cations m I libla of QUlhfied people,
OrOwMid.
........ DOW. you rould have
-· ~ llile proper train. U&· • ii would be more ~•_.,"tie aill. '"Ullder ... "=' '••··· ... --.. llt*ud IO -..W oa•Jllllh ... •1 ,,...,,.,
board and to have obtained a
ccnificate of completio n."
The ~led lenath of the stan-
dard trainana course is about
houn, Grow said.
In other professions. such as
medicine and dentistry. many tasks
are routinely &iven to trained assis-
tants, ~le said.
.. I don t think history has shown
that the use of medical assistants.
for eumpk, has incrated prob-
lems or resulted 1n mairctice," she said. .. And the rm1e1st
would still be fully ha for all
prescriptions, so I can't ifnaline that
they would allow their technicians
to Work beyond the 900pe of their
trainine, ..
Tbe two laW9'1its filed last Octo-
ber lllintt the OICO pbannecy on
Irvine A veaue an.ct patients took
the Wl'O!ll drup 1*8..-of m1s-
W:eaty ftlled PftlcriJ"ionl.
In one cate. u lrvillc woman had
I pracription b . 'Wn a her 7-~-old .,. ft.c:"!: lM pbar-= only to recei~ I th~ tor i......_ Aclcordilll IO laer
.... .. the dWd .. ..e *mid •• m. fof the ..... -
' IM•ior ~ PN J 111 ¥ely more ....,.,
In the other incident, an infant ~ent into convuls10M after takma a
dose of colic medicine that had been
mdicatcd at 10 times the comet
dosage.
Four other Newport &e.ch resi-
dents have told the ~t that the)
received 1ncorrcctly filled pretenp-
llons but recopazed the m11takcs
and did not take them.
Grow said he behcved the
number of complaints leveled
aaa1nst the Newport Beach Oleo
was unusual for a safllk pharmacy.
No one has fonnally charted.
however. that technicians or assis-
tants were raponsiblt fOr the al·
qec:t mistakes..
And the -~..--chlnae in the
law could. in fact. reduce the
incidence of mettakes 1n tbc future
by msuri.. that . all tebrucsans
Worb"I ... ~ .... tnJned
and cen.ified. •id ~ tt.ms.
assisWlt CMntiw oflka ol ~
brd o(Phlnnliey.
Harris -lM propGeed ""'" lallOG wa lbll bei• .._ ........ .. ._.t now we're loc*ifta k • ........ .. • taid. .. ,, lllMiuld be
iauodllced ia tM Ll!lli1l1Nre ICMnc
time ill J•.-y."
By 1.F.U.IE EARNEST
or .... ..., .......
Soil contamination has been con-
firmed 1t a Laauna Beach ps station
where testina is continfag to de-
termine tf the station is the source of
gas Stt~ at a nearby ocean bluff.
The Jiffy ps sutJon on Thalia
Street, owned by Oxnard-based ~
sen Petroleum Inc., was shut down
last week after preliminary tesu
revealed soil contamination at the
station.
"The soil borings were initiated
ycsterdav and thefll ~y be
con11nu1na this week; said John
Hills. of the county's hazardous
matenal depenment. "They found
contamination at the site down to a
2S-foot depth.
"It more or less confirms the feet
that contanunauon is pretent at the
Jiffy site as we suspected."
tlowever. d.nlhaa must be com-
pleted It SIX propoted sites beb'c tbe
extent of rontama.nation is known.
accord1na to Hills.
Whtie Detat Petroleum will be
rnpon~ble for cleaDi111 up tbe coo-
tam1nation at the ps siation li1e.. it ia
not yet known wbetber the company
w1ll have to mop up JllO&iae wtudl
has apparantJ~ at the bluff.
Some beet are worried tbc
teeJ)lle alon& bluft' would SM* a
fire hlzard. la an dlOn to.__
stra~ the danfer. a sar1er' wbo Md notaced the swn crlldled IOlne alibi
loil i• his bands while ....... li1 ii
With a IMldt. eccordi .. IO laillM ~~~.L... ...
"nc,h9d IC)jtlli .... it------· 111, or me tMy ..... lllaw been ......... ....... -.ow .... Dl••I)
MtMKCp ......... II la ftre.._..._ ........ .. .........
-o.-. ...... ::;c:-'• lW .. , ... _.
ilhioM. .. °'"""'' c.-, 7ti::i 1•m~•lll-=~---
llBS.A BUILDIKG PROJBCTSRESUllE •••
r-AI
Lamm llid. .. Baoct .Us, patio ocmn. ,... llddiliom. ev~i!'I
tbal 1C* --I buiW'na petmlt for.
Wbea 1pplyina for a ....Ua fOr a
project of'1M 1baD 10.000....-ht.
the builder rnust now fiU out a sinale-
PllD for'lll oudinina the project and
regUesti111 an exemption, Lamm
aid
The list of the approved appli-
cations will ao before the council or
Plannina Coinmisaion-the bodies
meet on alternate Mondays -•nd
wiU be considered totetber on a
content calendar, where they can be
passed with a sinaJe vote, Lamm said.
r----'11tle-11V1Jttamtnn111nfttn rtlOm o
City the day after the meetina to
pick up ~ir permits, ~mm said.
The first bAtch of permits is
e~ to_pin apP!"OvaJ at a .special
Plannana --COmmawon meeona on
Tuetday, Lamm said. Meanwbile, the
moratonum on the latter projects
remains in effect through Januuy.
He said the measu~ requires more
time and paperwork even for the
exempt projects, which previously
were approved at the planning de-
partment counter.
-we're back to 85 percent of our
operation, but now there's-more
paper to process and it takes lonter to
do it," Lamm said.
He said the measure is, unclear on
some exemptions. which may lead to
confusion. The measure exempts projects less than 10,000 square feet
or those that produce less than 120 car
trips a day.
Lamm said planners think the
measure's authors intended to cx-
emp~ _the projects that arc less than
l 0,000 square feet "and" produtt less
than 120 trips, but the word "or" in
the measure may allow larger projects
Rangers to issue tickets
Costa Mesa's part~ were aiven lhe authority Monday to tickd
people suspected of ~io<lftl city lawt. The City Council app1oved tbe
1ncreued powen without dilCUllion.
The city's two pert ,..... have l!lltrolled COIUI M-'• puts lince
Auaust and have come aero. hundreds of aJcohoL leelh ud other violationl.
Park Superintendent Dave Alkema said. Altbouah not armed, the rarwm carry walkie-talUel to summon police if the~need help. They have issued moR than 600 wanainp for drinkina in the
pa and l 56 Wlminp for ash-law violations. Alkema said.
he council on Monday increued their power to include ticket-writi,_ The council voiced strona support for the prosram at a study lellion IUa
week. Mayor Peter Buffa raised the question of 1ncreasint tbeirautbori~ even
more,or-mOtlfttina them on bo11ttJeck: - -- - -
through.
City officials must monitor the
smaller projects, so even one that
produces iess than I 20daily trips now
may fall under the measure next year should the number oftript increase.
"They'd be in trouble; we'd have to
shut them down," Larnm slid.
City Council members. tbe ma-
jority of whom carnpaiancd apina
Measure G, unanimously approved
the altered moratorium.
Newport man s h ot
A 36-ycar-<>ld Newport Beach man
is in fau condition at UCJ Medical
Center today after he was shot in the
stomach with his own gun Monday
niaht during a stru&gle with a bandit,
police said. David Allan Kazeck, a ftiaht in-
structor, had just returned home from
the m&Bet around 8:50 p.m. ·when be
was confronted in front of bis Oak-
wood North apartment in the 2100
block of 16th Street.
The susl)C'C11 armed with a knife,
forced Kazeck into the apartment and
demanded money, accorcUna to a
police report. .
1nsidc the apartment, a ~ broke out as the victim atttrn to
arm himself with a hanctsun.
sustained a sin&)e sunshot wound to
his midsection durina the ltf'Ullle,
police said. He was also stabbed.
The suspect Red, escapias with
$10.
Kazeck called police and WU taken
to the medical center where he underwent surtery for bis Utjuriea,
wbicb included teVeral llab wounds
on bis left arm, cheat and neck area
and left upper shoulder.
COUNTRY CLUB DRIVE STAYS OPEN •••
ProatAl
commuter-cl<>tfC.d drive pit neighbor against neighbor
and the fight might not fade with the council decision.
"It's unfortunate this has become as divisive as it
bas," Mayor Peter Buffa, a Mesa Verde resident, said.
"Any issue of 'your street or my street' these days is like
sayin, 'Your end of the lifeboat is sinking.'
"We're all in the same lifeboat with the traffic problems."
Philip Burnes, the leader of RA TS, said the number
of can using the two-lane Country O ub Drive is slightly
less than the levels on Mesa Verde Drive and Baker Street,
both four-lane streets.
Safety is the group's major concern, he said.
"What we're trymg to prevent is a tragedy," Burnes
said before a carefully orchestrated presentation. "We
don't want someone hun or killed"
Two members of the group surveyed Country Club
Drive residents on traffic accidents they've seen in front
of their homes.
Ed Bell said the residents at 3110 Country Oub Drive
refuse to have pets anymore, after losing two cats and a
dog to can. and nearly every borne rcponed cars parked in
front of their homes were hit by pusina drivers.
Erma Serafin, a .. neighborhood crossing guard,
received applause when she expressed concern about the
hundreds of children who walk and ride their bicycles to
California School.
"Any day now, it's going to hap~n. and it's going to
be soon. One oftbc kids 1s going to get burt," Serafin said.
rccallina episodes when she had to dod&e oncomina traffic.
But Janet Dukes said she is worried that any Steps
taken to discourage commuten on Country Oub ..Drive
will only force them onto other Mesa Verde streets. She
said. Co.untry Club Drive residenu knew what they were
gcttma into.
"I don't know that any (traffic). increase is such an
outrqeous amount," Dukes said. "Your decision was up
to you. When you bou&ht your home, you knew you were
buyil!I on a major thotouabfare."
Councilman Orv Ambu~ qreed. He said be bad
measured the time it took to dnvc diroup Mesa Verde on
a Saturday mornina and on a weekday rnominaand found little differentt.
"Many, many more residential atreeta in COit& Mesa
have more traffic than Country Oub Drive," Ambuftey
said. "Traffic on Country Oub Drive is not new. It's been
there since day one."
The council vote wu unanimoua. While a review is
scheduled for 90days after the improvements are in place,
closina Country Oub Drive is not favored by the council.
"I'd hate to see us become a city ofcuJ*-ca, moats
and drawbridaes," Councilwoman Sandy Genii said. ~ouncilwoman Mary Hornbuckle said lhc is so
opposed to street cl01Ures and she hopes to find new
sofutions for Monrovia. Federal and Cont.inentiaJ auee11,
which were blocked off earlier. · ·
HombuckJe said she supported the move at the time,
but would not vote the ~e way today.
MORE RAIN EXPECTED FOR AREA •••
homAl
Highs should range from the 50s in
the high descru to the 60s in the low
deserts. Lows will range from 32 to 42
in the high deserts and from 38 to 48
in the low deserts.
With the highest ude of the month
expected Thursday, the storm also
has the potential to wreak havoc:
along the Coast, but lifeguards say
they have not been advised of any
problems.
HYUNDAI •••
"Usually we have a lorofproblems
when the real high tides are coupled
with a storm." said Craia Farmer,
marine safety officer for Newport
Beach.
While the tides are not ex-
traordinarily hiP.!, "we'll be watching
for the storms; Farmer said. The high tide was 6.5 feet this
morning and is expected to reach 6. 7
feet by 7:05 a.m. Wednesday and 6.8
feet by 7:44 a.m. Thursday.
The surf was only I to 3 feet this
mominaaJona Oran9c Coast beaches,, and there is currently no projection
for larae surf, accordina to Hunt-
inaton Beach lifepwd supervisor
M"tke Beuerlcin. lrU Y•t.I eM,,..fH ,. W. ,..,.,.
LIBRARY'S COST UP •••
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11 "
14 • == .. IO._...._. 1' .. .. _. ..
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.~ II
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Surf Report
Tl dee
Experts say more awareness
about child abuse not enotigh
NEW YORK (AP} -The public day's editions that dwin• a l 986
bu slim~ the aiptmariah world custody .._...... wel~ .. officials
of dOmeltic violenc:le throuah Hedda called the;;;: a sood mother even
Nullbeum's latimony in the Lila tbouO the city's $pccial Services for
Steinbers cue. But apena •Y more Chilclren ~nment had med a than increued awmew is needed to ncalect ~t.JOn apinst her three save the lives of dtildrea like 6-year-years earlier.
old Lisa and, now, S-year-old Jessica ••Ninety-five percent of the Ameri-
New York City police ... Thjs case is
very impon.ant because it is that
muds more detailed, and serves to
show the dynamics of violence in a fa mily situation.•• AIJ'eed Carol Diairolamo, ex-
ecuuve director of the Governor's
Cornmission on Domestic Violcnee:
··There clearly is some increase in awareness.·· Cortez. can public knows child abuse exists
.. We were aeeiDll fi~e deaths a day -that's not the issue anymore," laid
(nationally)beforeusadied,andfive Kruarnan ... My impreasaon is people
deaths per day since then," said Dr. make some cosmetic chanaes-(after
Ricbard ~ of the Kempe rekindled awareness of child abuse); National Center for the Prevention of it's like firint a football coach when
Child Abute and Nealet\ in Denver. you•ve aot biger problem than just
.. , can't blame the public. I don't thecoecb."
think the public knows what to do," "Now, we need a new kind of
said Krv,man. public awareness -that physical
Lila SCeiaberl made headlines abute of children, the Lisa Steinbcra
when she died in November 1987 -a type cues, are pteventable if people
symbol of a system eone wrona. She want to do sometbina." . ·
made froat...,..e news ... last The National Committee for the
Md, at the trial of Joel Steinbera -Prevention of Child Abuse estimated
I.be man she knew u o.ddy, tbe man there were l, l 32 child-abuse fatalities
ICCUled ofmunkrina her. in the United States last _ y~
The deaths ofSteinbera and Jessi~
also ill ultrlted ·one of the more
friahtenina aspects of child abuse: it croucs all lines of race, cq:>nomics
and te<>lfaphy. And domestic viol-
ence is rarely limited to j"'t one
family member, e"pens in the field sar.
Steinbera wu a lawyer. Nussbaum,
his live-in Jover, was a children's
book editor. They lived a comfonable
existence in a historic building in
Manhattan's upscale Greenwich Vil·
lqe.
But last Wednelday -when the Kruaman puts the fi&ure at 2,000 to
beatina death in Brooklyn of S-year-5,000. M R bl fjJ t old Jessica Cor1e:z pabbed the~ There were 2.25 million official ax 0 nson, rs
lines away -it was tbe same old ~of abuted children nationally bl ack TV anchor, dies story~ only the name had chanted. •'in 1987, includina 25 percent who
Jesaica eortez•s mother, Al>ipil. were physically abused and 1'4 per-WASHINGTON (AP) -Mu
and the mother's boyfriend, Adrian cent who were sexually abused, the 'Robint0n, the nation's fint black
Lopez, were unemployed. They lived committee's repon said. Jessica Cor-network television news anchor, died
in a city-owned housina pro,ect in tez fit into both those catqories, today 1t '49.
Brooklyn. On the surfaOc, they bad police said. Robinson died at 9:30 a.m. EST at
nothina in common with the She also fit into a third cateaory: at Howard Univers.ity Hospital in the
Steinbera fami ly -except that chil-least 103 children died of abuse lut nation'• capital from complications
drcnint&irhomealsowercbattered. yearioNewYork City. rcsuttina from AIDS, accordina to
One day after police found Lopez Authorities say those numbers hospital spokeswoman Tonya standina over Jessica's limp body1 aren't likely to decline despite wide-Swanson.
they returned to the apartment ana spread .,.,a6licity about child abute It bad been three years since
found Jessica's ~-old half-and the Sleinbal case -live na-Robinson worked rcsularly in tek-
brother, Nicky n Alvarez, tional television coverqe on Cable vision.
From Al pointed by the lack of total cndorseo.
ment. "If we could raise $2 million,
we could probably raise $4 miUion;•
she said.
quivcrina in a c1oeet.. He had been News Network, a cover story in He earned his spot in broadcasting
construction fund from the city's badly beaten and suffered from 10 Newsweek., hours of local TV cov-history in 1978 when be bepn co-
general .fund. The intention was to bones broken. Cf'llt ofNUSlbaum's testimony. ancboriDJ the ABC Evenina News headquarters would be located about
two blocks from the proposed 2.5
million-square-foot Southpark de-
velopment.
A fivc~ory office building and
four-story garage have also been
proposed for the site, Kade said. The
total site would encompass J 8 acres.
including n~rly 400.000 square feet
of office space, a training center and a
sales facility.
The first phase of the prOJCCl could
be comJ>!eted sometime this year, Kade wd.
Tom Harman. another member of
the library coalition, said that &J*:C
devoted to children's needs takes up
only about 8 percent of the library,
although children make up about lO
percent oflibrary users.
Council members agreed to put
about S l.3 miJlion into the library
have pnvate donon match the "nest Family Coun authorities charled But it will have some positive from ChlCllO with Peter Jenninas jn ea." Monday that well'an otraciaJs knew dl'cct. they believe. London arid frank Reynolds in
City officials said that expansion that Cortez had a history of child .. The Steinbera cue puts the spot-WubiJllte>ll.
plans would encompus about 49,000 neaJect but failed to tell ajucta about liabt on the \Opie, .. said Detective In 1959, be had become the fint
square feet. it. accordifta to a publilhed" rcpon. Joseph Ryan, cobrdinator of black to anchor newscasu on a major
Consultants said the 82 ()()().. The New York Times said in Tues--domestic violence propams for the Wuhiaatoo station. sq~foot library is one of the r=------------------------------------busiest and most responsive of li-
braries anywhere.
A recent survey showed there are
about l 50,000 library card holders.
Headquartered in Seoul, Hyundai
stormed onto the American auto-
mobile scene in February l 986 with
three vmions of a low-priced com-
pact called the Excel. The compan,Y
sold 168,882 can in 1986, mak.inJ 1t
the seventh largest automobile im-
porter in its fint y~r.
SOIL CONTAMINATED •••
Hyundai sold 263,6 10cars in 1987,
a 56 percent increase. and became the
nation's fourth la1'J'CSl automobile
importer behind Honda;. Toyota and
Nissan. Kade said l 9a8 sales are
expected to top the 1987 fiaure.
The company recently introduced
its second model, a mid-size vehicle
caUed \be Sonata. By l 990, Kade said
Hyundai will have a full line of cars.
~A~E Illy 11111
llMN Ol'PICE
----... CO..MeM.CA
Jl'romAl
ps fUmes, ordered a fence erected to keep~ .from setting too close, .accordina to fliUs.
Desert l»ctroleum officials, who say
their tanks tested leak-free in two ~ae 1:e1t1 durina the put year, hired a pnvate contractor who bepn
the on-site inveatiption Mondly in
an effort to test the depth of con-
tamination and to try to locate the
source of the leU. The county is oveneei111 the investiption.
Drillinc is tcheduled to be com-
plete this week., acx:onlina lO Hilla.
Soil samples, which wiU be takm
from 5 to 30 feet deep, or until there is
no contaminalioD evident, will be
tent to 111ate-«nified laboratory.
County officials lbouJd hive a full ~ Within JO days. Hills said. In the interim, we batt directed
staff, on a routine bail, 10 monitor
the bluff .,-ca with an lir monitorina imanuneot 10 make a dctcnniaalioa
tbat there ii no ~" public belhh npoaarc with rapect to tbe
VIJ'Oll ernanatiQI from die bluff:" Hilll laicl
.. E .,
... ..._ ... 1MO,C-..._CA~ ~ .... ..,.,.,.. ._._ & 9Clllorilll. ...... , Ja.tcaU 842;..so88 . ~.-: ...... ............... .............. , ............ ..., .... ....... ~ .... ~---..,.1tio....i111GN1 ..._ ........ ,., .. ,,.,_~ .. ,•a•..., ................ , I'J ,.,....,..._ .
I
.............. ,.. .. .-.. ... ..... , ..... ..... ......... ,.. .... .. .......
Clu lilaa , •• ;I 1111
We extend
our warmest holiday greetings
ro all during this
festive time of year
and hope thejoy
this season brinp reflects
the start of a year filled with
prosperity and happiness.
561 Newpon Center Drive. Fashion Island, (714) 6"0-8310
()qnge COMI DALY N.OTIT ....... 0111..-. ao. 1W M
· College s eeking
n omin a tions for
its Hall of Fame
Restaurant's dance request.denied
1 I
Nomineti Oranee Coast Collqe's Hall of
Fame are now beina southt by the coUete's alumni
auociation and and lllOCiated student.I. Nominees
muat have enrolled in their tint OCC dauet no later
than 1979 and needn't be plduates to qualify.
Put inductees include novelist, Oive Cunler; Oranae O>un~Bnd Ol1es ~ -
County Municipal Court Judae Susanne S. Shaw.
Deadline for nominations is Jan. l I with the
induction ceremony set for September.
Nominations should be sent to Douala
Bennett.&. OCC Director of Institutional Advance-'
ment. 210 I Fairview Road, CoSta Meta 92628.
Eztea•loa coane. .et
Business, pbotOIJ'aphy and entertainment are
some of the clauel to be offered this spring throup
Cal State Long Beach Unversity Extension.
Nineteen professional ccrtaficate programs will
be offered in various fields, from business and
professional dcvelopement to education and the
arts. Other classes include a wine study to China and
f1owcr arranaina. -Extension courses and seminars arc open to all
adults and enrollment at CSULB is not required.
Classes meet primarify on weekends and evenings
on campus and at other locations. A catalog will be
sent by calling 840-00 I 0.
Amnesty program offered
Classes .in Enalish an$f citizenship arc being
offered at Golden West College as part of an amnesty
prOIJ"&m. The nine-week sessions start in January
and April.
Enalish classes arc offered on weekday evcninas
and affemoons, and citizenship classes arc on
Saturdays only.
RcF.strataon is on a tint-come, tint-served
besis with applications now beina accepted. Further
information may be obtained by calling Olga
Benavides at 89S-8151, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. or
the Hispanic Center at 895-8299 after 4:30.
Daily Pilot readers and advertisers are
urged to donate unwrapped new gifts to help
make the paper's fourth annual .. Give a Little
Christmas'' program a success.
The JJfts will be turned over to the group
Share Our Selves in Costa Mesa, which in tum
will distnbute them on Christmas Eve to local
needy families.
Gifts can be left under the Christmas tree in
the lobby of the Daily Pilot offices, 330 Bay
St .. Costa Mesa, on weekdays 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Gifts w1ll be accepted through Dec. 23.
The .. Give a Little Chri stmas" program was
started in I 985 when Daily Pilot employees
realized many children -esPecially teen-
aaers -would not receive aifts because of
family hardships. In the first three years, more
than 3,000 gifts have been distributed through
the program.
Goel: 2,000 gifts for local children
Current mertc: 525
Wednetfday, Dec. 21
No meetinas scheduled
Tluusday, Dec. 22
No meetinas scheduled
BJ ROBD'I' BilU!ll ..............
Tbe Huntinaton Beach City Council
pulled the 1'\11 OUI from under a request by
ownen of Teus Looley's restaurant to
have a disc jockey, noontime fashion
lboWI and dancina seven ni&)lts a week to recOrded country and Western music.
Officials unanimously sided with resi-
dents that the stepped-up tempo wolild be
detrimental to the sleep and well-beina of P._CO~ ip homn less than 200 feet from the
ihoppina center at Adams Avenue an
Brookhunt Street.
Rudy Johncola told officials that his
Three's a crowd
.. niabtll. pcac:c was interrupted and ~~ Ind that he was .. bnieled by
drunks" wMn the activitit-s were per-
mitted for previous ownen of the ra-
tauranL
Another raideal, James Goodwin, saad
that Teua Loosey's. formerly T J . Mac's,
was sold as a family restaurant when he
and bis family moved to the area. He said
the request.. lbouJd it be arantec1, would make the mr••the focal point .. of activities.
Stephen Jamieson, an attorney for
CUI I ()OIC)"..S. aid the da.ocioa would
attract clients JS to SO years of ate who
would be lcu noisy and troublesome than
YOUftlef people.
He also wd that Teus tooeey•s owner,
Anthony J. Tarantino. planned to bite two
*11ri1y pants to keep cootrol.
Jamieson also said the restaurant bad
permuted lave dancina for more than 60
days last January and February when
oWftc}i were uaaware that they didn't have
proptt ~its for such activities. The
manaeemeni durina the penod received
no complain, from residents, he said.
Citv Counctlman John Erskine, thoup, ui4: '·!Ut-~like, ~&iU.aACi....U.
like a raucous restaurant, then it probebly
is a raucous rntaurant. I think that at
would cater to the bar crowd."
Tbe 9btb annaal triplet reanlon at St. Joeepb
Boepltal drew a bandful Monday. Here, 12 Mb of
·triplet. .tatber aroand Santa Claaa. barely Ylalble
in tbe eea of look-allkee. Tbe boepltal bu
dellftl'ed 14 Mta of trlpleta, one Mt of qud-
raplet. and one Mt of 9eptaplet8 9lnee 1982.
Firefi~h ter will refuse
$85, <JOO in AIDS case
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A former county firefighter who says he faced
discrimination after he gave mouth-to-
mouth resuscitation to an AIDS victim
said he will reject an $85,000 settlement
approved by the county Oaims Board.
The board voted Monday to g.ive Jon
Neil Galiber of Paso Robles the money in
exchange for his droppina a $2.2 million
lawsuit against the Fire Department.
Galiher said he had aarced to the
settlement but only if the <foliar amount
was not reveaJed. The $85,000 fiaurc was
contained in a printed agenda for the
board's closed-<loor meeting Monday.
"I'm not accepting that settlement
because it was not what I agreed to. The
amount of the award was not to be
disclosed," Galiher said. "They did not
keep their part of the agreement, so I do not
consider tltis a valid agreement."
He added he would not dro{> his suit and
would instead meet with his lawyer to
pursue his legal options.
Deputy Countv Counsel Dennis
'i
Gonzalez said he had 3lfCed not to discuss
the settlement with the media. but added
that GaJihcr's lawyer bad been told that
Claims Board documents arc public re-
cords and that therefore the count} would
have to disclose the amount.
"I said I would not 10 Lo the media. and
I upheld my end of tbe deal." Gonzalez
said. "As far as I'm concerned. we shook
hands on ii.'·
Galiher, 47 a 17-year Fire Department
veteran and former captain, said he was
forced to accept a discharge and file for
disability retirement after he came to the
aid of an automobile accident victim in
May 1985.
Galihcr said he came in contact with the
victim's blood and tried to rcsusci talc him.
After the victim died of injuries from the
car accident, it was learned he suffered the
acquire immune deficiency syndrome.
The Fire Department had no policies at
the time on the handlina of AIDS victims.
said Galiher's attorney, Morse Taylor.
Funeral for
Robert Sheflin
held Monday
Robert Sbeflin, a stationary cnamccr at
Fairvaev. State Hospital in Costa Mesa.
died Saturda_y at Hoag Memorial HospitaJ
in c~rt Beach at the age of67.
Shefltn worked as a bncklayer in Costa
Mesa for over 30 ~rs before ta.kins a
position at the hosPttal in the mid-I 970s.
While he was serving on board the U~
Gambier dunna World War II. the ship
sank in the Danie of Leyte and Shefl1n
spent over 72 hours in the water before
·being rescued.
After serving four years in the Navy. he
returned to Costa Mesa where he took up
bricklaying.
He'd lived in the Harbor Arca since 1932
and graduated from Newport Harbor High
School in 1939. where be and his three
brothen were noted for their athletic
ability especially in football.
Shet\in was born in Santa Ana on Feb. 6,
1921. He ts survived his wife. Ruth. four
cbiJdrcn and five arandcbtldrcn. He was
buried at sea on Monday.
Deer rescued from ocean kelp bed
Officers in tum notified lifeguards at
Zuma Be.ach. and lifeguard John Baker
rescued the animal fro m a kelp bed where
it had become entangled Monda).
Baker, a 17-year veteran. had to swim a
half mile out into the chilly water to free
the antmal. then chase n back to shore. .. This deer could've died of fright.'' he
said ... Deer have weak beans and the)
don't last too long in the sea. .. What vou do is you kind of herd 1t
back.·· he ia1d oft he rescue.
The Planftina Comm111ioa Md turned
down Teus l...Ooley'a aooeal for a ClOlt-di~ !lie pmn1t in AU.U. and Ila apan an October.
The Plannina Commiuaon held that
dancana and a disc jockey would b(
detrimental to welfare of rcttdents due tc
the potential of noase from customm
leavana after 10 p.m.
Commauioners also said the lunch-time
fashion shows would have the potential of
crq\in& lrlfTJ.C.C:Ol)ICSlion
Teus l.ooscy's has a 6,30S-square-foot
dinina area with a 357-squarc-foot dance
floor.
Teehsays
father told her to kill
stepmother
A teen-age girl testified Monday that her
father told her to k.ill her stepmother ~to
prove her love for him, then fake a suicide
to take blame for the slaying. ~
Cinnamon Brown, I 8, appeared durjna
the first day of a preliminary bearina for
her father, David Arnold Brown. 3S, who
WU-arrested tn September after the teen
chanted her story about how her step-mother, Llnda Marie Brown, was killed.
David Arnold Brown, owner of a Brea
computer service called Data Recovery,
has pleaded innocent to the cons~ and
fint-dqree murder clwlies with special
circum1tanccs1 mcanina fie could face the death penalty 1f convicted.
He wd his dauahter has accused him of
rpurdcr to act out of custody.
"'She's enpaed tQ another inmate, and now she wants to tct out of jail," said defense anomey Joel Baruch. "It•s her
only way out. h's a bold-faced lie.''
Brown, who has spent the last three
yean in custody of the California Youth
Authority for her stepmother's slayina.
sull admits firina two bullets into the
abdomen of Landa Marie Brown on March
19. 1985.
But she said her father masterminded
the plot to kill the woman, alons with
Linda Marie Brown's sister. Patrioa Ann
Bailey, 20. The teen previously took sole
blame for the killing.
Bailey, who also is charged with the
sla) tn& of her sister, allegedly was haVlnt
an &ffair with David Brown at the time the
slaytn& was plotted, prosecutors allqcd.
Brown tesuficd thiat Bailey told David
Brown that she heaTd Linda Marie Brown •y she wanted to kill him. David Brown
said he would either leave the family or kill
himself. Brown testified,
"I s~ted d1voroe," the teen said
dunng tearful testimony. "But he said that
she would kill him anyway, it wouldn't
change anything.··
Bro\.vn said her father sugestcd an
alternative: "We could get rid ofber ... kill
her.
"It didn't seem ~ssible for him to taJk
like that," she said. "He'd stan taJkif\I
about it more often. and I knew be was
serious and I believed him." she testified.
Brown told his daughter that if she loved
ham, she would k1U her stepmother. the
teen tesutied. Brown, his daughter and
Bailey v.ouJd discuss ways of kimna the
stepmother. such as hitt1na her over the
head. elcctrocurion. or a traffic accident.
she said.
She said Brown had her write a note
admattina the slaytr'lo sa}iftt sbc was sorry
for at. and that she was ao1na to commit
sutC'lde. She saad Brown told her that as a
Juvenile, she would not have to spend any
llme behind ban for the cnme.
The Jl rl shot Landa Brown twice as she
slept. The gut was later found inside a
backyard dOlhoute nearly unconscious
from drucs sbc took after the shootina.
With the note near her body.
Prosccuton said David Brown planned
the k1lhng to collect S 1.5 million in life
insurance on his wife.
Former bus driver admits
be is 'underwear bandit'
• • • An in-<lash compact disc pla)'cr
was taken out of dash from a
Volkswagen Jetta. The music ma~cr
was vaJued at $800.
I 000 block of San Carlos .\ "enue
late Monda) night and and stole 100
Chnstmas li&hts decoratana the front
ra1l:ng of the house.
door to a residence in the 16000 block
of Dolores and stoic a VCR. $200
cash and some steaks from the
freezer • • •
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An un-
employed bul driver ~ no
oontat to bci~ the underwear
bandit" who ~ women em-
ployees a1 the stores he robbed to remove their undaprmenll. Bnlcle Allen Lyons of Moreno
v.uey eatered into a plea ~n witb Loa Anleln County authontics
Monday. ecfmittina bis role in 23 counts of robbery, four counts of ea.a banery. two counts of lewd
condK'tand oeecount of usault with
intent to commit rape.
He las similar clWJel in Orange Count_J, wbere be ii 1uspected in 19
lobblfmliaoe A..._
••QodUaa "°"" were the robber's
...-••a• A tbief'broke into can pertled in the 500 block of OU Street 10metime
darint tbe nilhl In one caae, the thief
IOot a Qlf atcreo and clotb1111 valued
at S27'. In the other, a camera and
two puna valued at S265 wett
milliftl. •••
Aho overailli. an~ in the 500blockofNjea l'llceUd ia tbe lOO block of .... IUell ... ...,_ ...... c. ............. , ..
iaa 'iwddsaa A Wlllt .. -.
favorite taJJN, .. said Al Alberpte, a
Los Aneelel County district at-
torney'• spokesman
Lyom.,... the "underwear ban-
dit" DM:knamc durina a half-<lozen
beiltl in which be herded a tot.al of I 0
female employees into t.ck rooms
and had tbem rfmove their undcr-
aarments. Alberpte said. Lyons, 33, was charted with the 30
felonies after having 6een unianed
on aepuate counts of robbery, evad-
ina 111 olker ud reckleSI drivina
•*'mi111 from 111 Oct. ll heist at a Buldn-Robbins ice cream 1tore in
Rowland HeiabtL
Tbe Los ~re.a robberiel
occurred between Sept. 1 and OcL 23.
Lyons was expected to be g.ivco 15
)Ul"S in st.ate pnson at bis sentencing
on Jan. 9.
Deput)' District Attomey William
Hod&man said prosecutors agreed to
accept the plea barpm in exchange
for the IS-year sentence bccaiue he
said it .. was the maximum penalty
possible under presently existing
law."
Allegations of using a firearms
durin& the crimes were dropped.
Hoct&man said. because at appears the
defendant used a rephai JUD.
"It's gotten to the point where it
doesn't matter 1f you've done 10
robberies or I I 0 robberies if you
didn't use a real aun," Hoclaman saad.
'
taken in the Nyes Place theft. one stok his l11i1ndry from a drier in
• • • tbe comple• Hinh was arrcsu:d for Police were called to Mermaid tbe crime and allc-&edly was dnvi~ a
Street between Second Sllftt and 196$ Mustana scolen from Fou.nta1n
GltnneyreSUect M~~ominaat Valley.
1:27 where a fire na en a An Anaheim ·~n "POf'ed she dum~. The blue was ut· think.I her bmbencl. who livtd in
inpished. C<*I Meta. took olf to Anion& w1tll
C... .._ tbe couple's S-,....old dalillheer. The ..-.....: _..... mu ud ........ divCwced. but ~ ~na ~ to a si~n car "8d joint ft..wh of me hnle 11rt. anaL fdWMI Hinh. 23. o( Santa -.----~ • • ,
Ana wa .._ ilMo cus10dy after a · The buctct Mall were stolen from a
rnident of a Coriander Onvc How* Ptdude ~rted on Liu Lue. .... '*'""'~' IWPOIUd ~ The"'" cany • S l.ClOO pncu ...
.._ ..
Newport Beacb
Two can parked in a multi-stol')
parkina prqc at Santa Barbara and
Newpon Center dnves were bur· alarizcd Sunday nl&ht. The wind o"s
on a 1987 Ponuac J:ircb1rd and 1985
Toyota Cressida ~re smashed and a
wallet. a tape cassette and an um·
brella were taken.
Two Corvenc ~ rtponed
theft of their can' t-tops sometime
between Su.nday niaht and Monda)"
momina. Windows were smashed to
pin muy to a I 981 Corvette parked
at Seashore Dnveand Prospttt Street
and a 1985 model parked 1n the 300
block of Amethyst A venue. The
owner of tbe I 98S Corvette already
had two other Mops stolen in the last
~ar.
P-talaV.U.,
Two daUll ...Sa metal pape en an
attempt'° ....... IM window of a car ~rbd at die AMiatlia Vallry Bowl.
17 ll 0 lrootllurll SL. I p.m. Mon-
day. WIWll dll ... 611.c break. the
duo lrild kickiftl in* window. They Red when spoUed by an employtt
wwth tht car's window tlill unbroken. ' . . Two tam ua runs wete mno"ed
from a Nmn tnd paned on the
10000 bled of 9ltef A\991 IOIM-bme betwun tp.m. SUndly and I
a.m. Monday.~ tires were valued
at SlOO • • • • ne onndf .-a._°"•
Hunttncton lleacb
The males ..._11 ... ved to be an their Burglan broke into a vehicle at the
uc: '" rear of Jeremiah's rataW"ant at late teens gathered an the parking lot Warner Avenue and M-atlolia StKet
at .\lbertson's, 10114 Adams A'c.. and stoic GuCCI wnstwatches valual
and challcnacd a market emplo) ce to at s 1.200 and SS in cash. come out and fiaht One of the men. • • •
who ~as armed Wlth a bat. was Members of a cleanina CttW at
idcnufied as a skinhead. The me n Carrs Jr. ~t Brookhunt Strttt and
ttpontdly had been cauaht shop-Hanulton A "cnuc reportedly were hft1na but the maDIFf let them ao ~ I'. fi · b when thcv returned the Items. cat~ ior re \ISi• a rcq~t )' a
J. • • • rtstdcnt to tum down their radio at
Thieves pned open a rear shd1na about I a.m. today.
Ruh-hoar crash on 56 Freeway
cl01e. lanes onto 405 Freeway.
Israel's new govemment
won't negotiate with PLO
JERUSALEM (AP) -leaden of
Israel's two main political blocs nr "•nUtow.r.nmo .... cfngterron.m ..,eect to maintain their lonpt.andina r W r · .. ~. .,...
refusal to talk to the PLO in their new •NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP)-lndicatinaa possible serious ~it in the Pl.O's
coalition aovemment, foreip Min· top ranks. a member of its 1ovemin1 body says Vaster Arafat s ~ition of
ister Shimon Peres said soday. Israel and renunciation of terrorism represent "Arafat's penonal opinion."
The ri&ht-wing Likud bloc and the Mustafa Zibri, a member of the PLO executive committee, said Monday ~nter-lel\ labor Party were expected that the PLO chairman's s&atements lut week were "i"S9rqptliblc.wilh..•hc
t<>ttUtt.irUiltr COili1lo 1>iCf Today rcso ut1ons orthe latcstl'alritine"'Nat1onaTCounc1 mcct1na. •
after neaotiators aaree on final details The council, the PLO's parliamcnt-in<xilc, met in Alaeria last month to
of foreign and economic policy. The declare an independent Palestinian state. It indirectly rccopized Israel's
formal sianing is expected in a day or existe~ and condcmne4 terrorism, but did not go far enoup to pin U.S.
two. recogn1t1on.
The qreement Monday to form Arafat's statements in Geneva did, and a first PLO-U.S. mcetin1 was held
another coalition resolved a seven-in Tunisia on Friday.
week stalemate after national elec-The PLO is an itmbrella orpnization of ei&ht different Palestinian
tions Nov. 1 in which neither party guerrilla factionsdomiblted by Arafat's mainstream Fat.ah aroup.
received a clear mandate. Llkud won Zibri's statement could represent serious disseat becaute of his seat on the
40 scats in the 120-scat Parliament PLO's IS-member executive commitee. which includes repttsent.atives of six
and Labor won 39. · Palestinian guerrilla pou~ as well as independents. Fatah has three seats.' Peres. who spoke to reporters after • ·
Labor ministers ratified the agree-
ment, said the pact reiterates the
guidelines of Israel's outsoing gov-
ernment .. that there wall be no
negotiations wi1h1he PtO." -
The ban was maintained despite a
U.S. decision last week to open a
"substantive dialogue" with the
Palestine Liberation Organization.
The decision stunned Israel.
The agreement also docs not re-
quire the government to fulfill a
.demand by religious parties to pass a law that would narrow the.definition
of a Jew to exclude those converted bY
non-Orthodox rabbis.
The. amendment to the so-called
Law of Return, which fixes eliaibility for lsrae 1 CiUzenship~ply anpred U.S. Jews, most of whom .are non-
Orthodox.
"The JOvemment will work to keep
the Jewish people united. This brings
an end to a chanae in the law of
Return." Peres said.
The new Cabinet, to be headed by
Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir of
Likud, is expected to command a
majonty of up to 97 seats in Parlia-
ment. or the Kneuct, including
several smaller reliJious parties ex-
pected to join.
It will contain 24 or 2S ministers.
10 each for Llkud and Labor with the
remainder aoina 10 1he smaller parties. Most key posts wittbe held by
the same oftkials as in the last
aovemment. with Yitzhak Rabin of
Labor remainina defense minister
and Ariel Sharon of Likud industry
minister.
Peres, leader of the labor Patty,
will become finance minister.
World summit
sought to help
save children
'NEW DELHI. India (AP) -More
than half a million children died in 16
developinc nations last year becau1e
their debt-burdened rvemmenll have had to cut bee on social
spendina. UNICEF 11id today in its
annual report. ' UNICEF Executive Director
James P. Grant called for a world
summit to 11ve an estima Ctr")
million children who he said die each
year from easily prevent.able diseases.
Formally releasina the report dur·
ina a worldwide telecast, he said
leaden ofindusuialized and develop-
ina nations should participate in the
summit. Grant 11id cuts in social spendina
have led to problems that over-
shadow substantial prosreu made by
most developini nations in health
and education in the P.9:1t decade.
.. Three million children died ·1ast
yearbecaU1Ctheydidn't have SO cents
worth of vaccine in them," Grant told
a telcvilcd newsconference relayed to
40 countries. He said l.S milhon of
these deaths occurml in South Asia.
Grant said he propoeed the summit
becaUlt the way to reach the victims
is to fint reach their leaders.
In the UNICEF annual report.
.. The St.ate of the World's Children
1989:' Grant cited the debts incurred t>Y developina nations and said, ··ey
far, the heaviest consequences are
beina borne by the children." ·
SoTieta have too much aid,
need rehabWtatlon money
IJ fte A.111 e ..... PNll
OENEVA -Soviet oftkiall have receiv~ more foreian ~id shipments than~ can handle and donon should focus instead ~n se~•"I..... money for rehabilitation of cutbquake victims. Red Cross offi~1als ~id. lbey cal.led
Monday b' IUlpenlion of aid shi~ts to Armen11 un~1I f\anber notJcc.
There have been about 140 foreiJl_l retiefni&hts. and t~th1rdt ~the 27,000
rail can &bat carried reliefmalerW to the earthquake-stncken repon have Ytt
to be unloeded. Andrei Ki•lcv, an official wit~ the ~ue of Rtid. Cro11 and Red Cracent IOdetin, said that due to a lack of internauonal coorcbnation the
donor raponae bu been .. fir too tenerous. I think t.here arc more ~idney
diablis 11alilnapenaJftl tft AftftliUflllln ~eremt • . saicf, citi~ news reports that 11id up to 7S machines were sent to the Soviet
Union whale only 20 were requested.
Japan'• JloUIJt Tokacld erupts
TOK YO-SCudtnts sll)'ed borne toda¥ from schools near a volcano after
it erupted for the ftnt time in 26 years. belching columns of fire and a plume of
smoke that "* to 6 000 feet, authorities said. No casualues or da~ were
reoorted from Monday ni&ht's eruption of6,81~foot ~ount T~'-•. ab:«>ut S60 miles nonh ofTokyo and a reported mudslide subsided b~ this momma.
Local residents were warned that the volcano could erupt .ID. Ashes from
Monday's eruption were found in two cities more .than 60 miles northeast of
the volcano. ~
SoatJJ Korean• receive amne.ty
SEOUL, South Korea -The government todar, ~nnou!"ced an amnesty
for more than 2,000 "politically motivated offenders, '1nclu~11~1 two who ~re servina»~eentences forbuminaa U.S. aover:nment.bu1ld1nf. The ~u~ticc Minisuyuid the clemency wasapproved ata special Cabinet ~ion. ~1n1s~ry
officiali laid 21~ prisoners would be released Wednesday, 1nclud1na Kim
Hyun-jana and Moon Boo-shik, who were servina 2~year sente~ for
lead.ins a raid on the U.S. Cultural Center in the southern a ty of Pusan 1n early
·1982.
Vloleace man Sri Lank• election
Tbrouah'out most of Africa and iiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil .snuch oT Latin America. averqe incomes have fallen by_IO percent to
COLOMBO Sri Lanka -Prime Minister Ranasinahe Premadasa.
vowina to ball dhnic violence on this Indian Ocean island, ~ elected oresident with llichtl~ _more than half the vot~. the aove"!'ment .111d ~y. Premadasa received S0.4 l'CfCCnt of the vote m Monday s ~~t1on •. edsin&
former Prime Minister Sinmavo Bandaranaike of the opposition Sn Lanka
Freedom Pany accordina to Commissioner of Elections Chandrananda de
SilvL Earlier tOctay, Sinhalese extremi~ts hack~ and sho~ to death nine supponenof Premadasa'saovemin& United National Party ma town east of
Colombo, potiee said.
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11ys. In the 37 poorest nations, per
capita •ndina on health has drop-
ped by 50 percent and on education
by 2S percent over the last few years.
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Bush cancels Cabinet arinouncements 1na.t1oaawto:JS:clotb•rwpnc.t.a
WASHINOTON (AP) -leftetioe deceleraled 1Mt .,... 10 a _ _.
W ASHINOTON (AP) -PraidellWlect ~ ecc:ordjJll to IOUR:el who apote only on the
Bulb canceled plans for announci111 new Cabinet Condition of UODymity. Sullivan and retired
appoiaam.taeoday after tbe ~coalCDder for tbNHCar Army Gal. Juliua W. Becton.
WWWJofhealdlladbuman1er11c..wquoaed Tbe Adalila Journal and Constitution re-
• •Jilll be favored a woman'• n,tn to an DOl1ed Sanday that Sullivan. pretident of
abonion. . Moreboule School of Medicine in Atlanta, uid in
rue of just 3 perceat. thepcrnmeat repona, •dotbina prices fell lw1be ..
l.! •• Ui ........ _; ... ILil-...1-.. i... be ba . time unce Ausust and tOOd prices stabilized for the fint time lince Febrw_ry. ~ YID All!" -wI ~& WU Vllll Tbe LabOr l>epm1ment llid IOd8y ill Conlwner Priol (Ilda, llfter
uo.blc lltUlll c:aUs to dlle White Hou1e retumecl 1111pea1 _,..........., ,._jUll 0.3 peftllllt ia November, com...-widl a 0.4
.. I liave. t1Jnply coecladed that, 11 a resuh of _ percpt pin a month earlier. Before the ICUOftll adjustmenta, prices roee jUll
my not reclCIVJlll a cal! beck. the th~np have been 1Jll P4rcnt. the department Mid.
put <?!f. and l)opdUUy 11'1 not anythana wone than lfbe rou~fl'montbly inflation r11we was actuaJly o.2s. addina up to
thaL . . )~cent annually. Commeata by medical · educator Loui• aa interview tbat be aupPOned a woman•1 riaht to
SulliVID over the weekend in aa Atlanta news-cbOOIC to bave aa abortion. ~".II' ~ the newspaper h11 .11and on The new~ alowed the aaaual inflation rate from 4.6 per can b die a~ 11_ ~va~ and ~ ~ not .ante~ to fint 10 months of the year to 4.4 pm:ent for the fint 11 months. paJ»er_ resulted in an unexpected lftll in bia That aDDared to be at oddt with a atatement
telectioD by Bulb to bead the aprawtina aemc>'· releaed by·Buab·a transition office last week after
tramition tourca Mid. the two men met in Waabinaton. The atatement
d._ee P!IDlicly ~th Bush a anh-abonion v~ With only December left. uoCber month limilar to November could lie~ be &elieves .. there ~uld be that f'iaht enable the Reapn Administration to finiah its last year in office meetina ill (to abonionl) .... At tb!.•me ume_J am aware of~ iaflarjoa Jalllt• u ,..._, ler lNI.--a.It eMCllled-• tGhtMhlled l .-....... -... .--· .. Salli"Wae Md •o•ed the •ice p;esiden nouncemeat of Cabinet choices. shared Bulb's anti-abortion views.
He bad been poiled to name Cbicaeo mall I EventboupSullivan,atiiendofBulhandbis
~ Tia llial 11ii"" prai&nt-e"led rula that t1i"at liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii abould not be the cue, and I would have to, IS
~ ahould 1·be appointed, carry out his transit official Samuel Skinner u bia trampor-wife, wu reported to have said that he, like Buah,
talion tec:retary, and sources had uJd an additional oppoea the use of federal funda for abonions, the
appointment bad been likely, to add the tint black weekend interview threw an obatacle in his path to
to the new Cabinet. the Cabinet.
Two blacb have been in line for Cabinet The Atlanta Constitution reponed today that
~Bulb transition official said that Bush had
not formally offered the poat to Sullivan, despite
widespread apeculation and despite Sullivan 'a own
commentt.
NASA blueprint envisions Mars missions
WASHINGTON (AP)-NASA ii layina the The repon examined several strategies for that policy.
-·......_.. to tend tbe next -tioa of exp&orina tbe inner racbes of the solar system, The undea pinninp of any IU'aU:IY to send ~'be,ond tbe Eanh'a ~eutYin dae iacludiaa eatablilbina a manned lunar ob-SJ*eexplorentotbemoonandbeyoodintbenext
2111 century, with miwic>m to Man and a~ terVatory,settinaupas~stationon the Martian two decades will be increased NASA fundiaa for
llldionoaaManiaamooa the ·bilitiel. moon Phobos or teDdina utronauts to the red development of new technolop, life 1Cience1
In a report relealed =y. ~ational planet itlelfearly in the next century. research, unmanned robotic mtsaiona, develoP.:
Aeronauticl and Sl)ICe Admiailtration aaid the The ambitious blueprint addresses President ment of a new fleet of launch vehicles able to lift
Mlioa m• malae a "modell inveatmcnt of Rapn'a directive on apece policy iuued last heavier loedl. and continued commitment to
reeoaftlll" cblrial tbe 1990l to IMepme tbe naaioD J=. Tbe directive 1e1a u a lona·ranae goal .. to Spece Station Freedom, which ii planned fOr Earth lw a~ al_ ~ties in ss-e. ex human pretence and activity beyond Earth._ orbit in tbe mid-l 990s.
""1bil ability ii c:ri1ic:a1 to United States o t into the solar system." . lfthoee conditions are~ the United States
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olthe Solar System in the 2lat Century~·=---~ind~M;a~tio~n~"~tbe~Bl~usb~~ad~m~irustra~· ~ll~-0~11~wi~·1~l su~pport~~~wbicb~·~astro~~na~uts~co~uld~build~· ~a~Man~~ou~tpost.~:__J~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f
Electoral
College vote
has 1 iwttch-•-1-..,,
WASHINGTON (AP) -A West
Vinrinia elector who uya the nation
h&S"'r.outarown" the Electoral Collete
provided the only SurpQIC durina the
conatitutionaJ ritual officially elect-
ina Georae Bush as the nation'a 4lst
presidenL
Marprette Leach switched her
Democratic ballot -·votina for
Uoyd Bentlen for president and
Michael Dukakis for vice president
-IS abe and S37 other electon
carried out their constitutional duty.
Otberwile, all voted u pledeed to
pve Buah and Republican running
mate Dan Quayle each 426 electoral
votes, far more than the 270 needed for election. The switched ballot pve
Dukakis one vote fewer than the 112
presidential electon he earned in
winnina_ 10 states and the District of
Columbia . .. , did it fora reason, and the reason
was to make ~tcment about the Electoral Col " aa.id Lach, a
Huntinaton. W. a., nurse. "It was
fine theft (when it bepn), but we've
outarown at.••
For eum~ Leach said, she and
the 269 other female electors .. could
have put a woman in° as president if
they hadn't wanted to vote for the
nominated candidates.
Light sentence
for gays' killer
starts protest
DALLAS (AP) -Scores of sian·
c1rryin1, cb1ntin1_ protesters marched outside the Dallas County
Courthouse Monday callina for the
ouster of a judle who said he pve a
convicied killer a liahter sentence
becaute bis victims were homosex-
uals. And in other parts of Texas,
orpnizations leaped into the con-tro~. mostly with criticism of
state District Judie Jack Hameton.
About 200 pcOple j~ined an the
Dallas rally apinst Hampton or-
unized by the National Orpnization for Women, Lesbian Visionary and
the Lesbian-Gay Political Coabtion.
In aa intervaew with the Dallas
Times Hcnld, Hampton last week
Mid be tea&enced 18-year~ Rich·
atd Lee Bednarski to 30 years in
prilon imtad of a maximum life
1e11tencc P8l'dl' because the two men
be WU convlCted of ltillint were
.. queen."
''Tbele two au>" that aot killed wouldll't bave been killed if they ~'t been cnailiaa the snetl pick-
ina up eeen • boYI." Hampton told the new1P91*· .. , don't much cue for
queen cnaisina the atreell pickins up
teen-llC boys. I've aot a ~
boy."
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A8 0nnge COMt DAILY Ptl.OT/ Tue.day, DeoemMr 20. 1888
Governor considering four Judge blocks Insurance firms ask j~~~~~So.~~~oo~~~m~~~~ N~ft~ ~hi• ~f£~~!f ~~~yi•• ~!fd=.~Hi! to103
George Dcukmejian is considering aovemor. office. The aovemor's office uad the she wanted time to review data on &he
four appeals court justices -~o • However, Dcukmcjian is not Commission on Judicial Nominees exten.t of. substance abuse i~ the
men .and two women -as potential bound by the commission's evalu· h~s 90 days to complete the evalu· truck.int andustry, a fcckral Judje nominees~. to succeed state Supreme ations. ataons.. blocked a federal . plan to ~~·re
Court Justice Joh~ Arauelles. . . Onl the evaluation of Dcu-Benke, the first woman appointed !'lndom d~& test ins of. 3 milhon The four candidates arc Patncur i..-.. Y , fi al . t th h~ by Ocui..-e·i••n to the state appeals mtentate dnvcrs na11onw1de. 9-of_San Qitap· H Wal iu11ej1an s m nominee o e . 1 , ...... ,,.. . . . . 1----ace1roiask~e,...J SS of Pacil'ic" Palisades· COUJfYln~~lRl court, ~ IM fttt ~lewd by -U.5: District .fuds Mmtyn. ~tt Joyce YLuther Kennard 46 of dunng the formaJ confirmation hear-DcukmeJ~an s office. The &<>vemor Patel issued a temporary restram1na
Sherman Oaks· and Fred w Mirier i!lll, conducted by the threc·member h~s a~1~ted o~ly two women to or~r Monday qa1nst random drug
56 of Sacrame'nt . Marler s'erved i~ Commission on Judicial Appoint· hi&b Judacaal posllJon, and both -~una of truckers and interstate bus
h • Sc ~ De k .. ments composed of state Supreme Benke and Kennard -were amona dnvers. Slit told aovernment lawyers t estate nate wtth u m~Jtan. c rt 'J 1· M I I L At-those on his list of state Supremo she will review the dan•~r of such Arguelles, 61 was apppomted to ou us ace a co m ucas1 C d' I -·-..11 r. .-• the ~u rcmc Court last ear by the torney General John Va!' ~e Ka~p ourt can 1dates re e!UICU Monday. drua use be1orc a fu~ure hearma.
Repubftcan governor and is the only and lester Ro~h. ~he presiding senior Benke. served as a dc~ty attorney The Transportation. Dcpartme~t
Hispanic on the court He announce<j appeals court Ju~uce. general m the state Justice Depart-had ordered the test1na to ~n
recently that he pla~s to leave the ·The other evaluations will remain ment,assianed totheSaD Diqoofficc .Wednesday. More than I million
court March I and return to Orange confidential unless Deukmcjian from 1974 to 1983. She is a 1971 other private employees in the rail,
County. nominates someone the bar has rated graduate of San Dicao State Univer· airline and maritime industries arc
Deukmejian asked the state bar's ~ unq':'llified. in whic~ .ca~ the bar s!tY, and ~~uated from the .Univer· still. scheduled to begin random
Commission on Judicial Nominees 1t~lfw1ll reveal the n°"'mec s cvalu-sity of San D1cao law school m 1974. testing. ·
on ~onday to cv~luat~ ca~b of th_e auon. . Kennard, named an appeals coun Patel ~low~ other testing pro.
candidates to assist him an nom1-"I am hopeful the state bar will justice last March, served as a Los grams. mcludmg pre-employment
nating a replacement for Arguelles. complete their evaluations in an Angeles SuperiorCourtjudae priorto and post-acciden testing, to talcc
The panel -composed of attorneys expeditious manner, enabling the her elevation to the appellate court. effect for truckers and bus drivers
selected by the bar -will conduct newnomineetojointhecourtassoon Beforethat,sheservcdasaMunicipal who cross state lines.
confidential evaluations of each can· as possible," Dcukmcjian said in a Court judae. The order expires Dec. 30.
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Insurance
industry lawyen, callina on the 1ta1e Su~ Court 10 s1riu down Prop-
OSJtion 103, charted that the in· itiative1s 20 percent rate cuts would dcpriv~ iuutcn Gta fair MW .. -OA
their investments.
In a SO-pqe brief filed Monda¥, the lawyers also araued that a prov11ion in Proposition 103 allowina the state
insurance commissioner 10 exempt
insurers from the ra&e cuts if they arc
found to be "substan&ially threatened with insolvency" is fraught with
problems.
"It requires rate adjustments to be
made on a case·by-ase basis, throuah
a cu mbersome hearina . process,
wi&houl specifyin~ any time limit for
rendering a decision on an insurer
application for an increase and with
no provisions to prevent loss of
r.rcmium income durina the process.
n sum; no insurer is assured of
prompt rate relief," said the brief
prepared by several auorneys and
1iped by Frank Rothman of Los
An,eles.
The defendants int se-Gov. Georsc Deukmejian,. ln~uran~e Commissioner Roun1 011lesp1e,
"mtt ~t-Johtt K. VM
de Kamp and the State ~.of
Equalization -mus& file their briefs
by Jan. l 2. The insurers then have
until Jan. 23 to answer them.
Oral arauments are expected to be
set by the hiah court in February, and
the panel coa>ld rule within two
months af\cr that.
On Dec. 7, the court continued an
earlier stay it had imposed on the 20
percent rate rollbacks and rate freeze
portions of the measure as well as on a
clause that allows the creation of a
corporation to represent consum~rs·
interests in the insurance rate-settm&
process.
However. the court voted 6-1 at
that time to allow the measure's other
provisions to &<> into effect.
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'Babes in Toy land' opens Thursday
By MICHAEL RYDZYNSga
o.lr .... Cern ' •1 I
In the musical "Babes in Toyland,"
Peter Mark Richman said he plays a
role originally desiancd as a badly
dressed, "miserly, ugJy, Dickens sort
of character."
Yet the part of the villain Barnaby
ha-s been-chanaed in Ult updated productionto show off Richman's strengths: he's handsomely debonair,
decked out in an attractive cape and
Aadltlons set
for'Mame'
Open auditions for the musi-cal, "Mame," will be conducted
Wednesday at the Harlequin
Dinner Theater.
initially turns on the show's heroine,
Little Bo-Peep, played by Stacy Sullivan.
"I definitely pose as a threat (to the
show's hero, Tom Piper1 played by
Timothy Smi~h)," .said R1~hman in a
recent interview JUSt prior to per-
forming as Barnaby in the Californ ia
Music Theatrc...p.r.oduclion bl Victor
Herbert's 1903 operetta. which then
played in Pasadena and is opening a
two-week run at the Orange County
PerfonningArts Centeron Thursday.
The second joint venture between
California Music Theatre and the
center, "Babes in Toyland" stars Robert Morse ( 1962 Tony winner for "How to Succeed in Business without
Really Trying") as the Toymaker.
The shows director-designer, Toby
Bluth, has completely contemeorized and reconceptualized .. Babes. '
fonunes, regardless of other people."
he said.
Richman -who's perhaps best
known to television viewers in recent
years as Camngton Blake's attorney
and confidante Andrew La1r<i during
the first four years of "Dynasty" and
as Rev. Snow, Chrissy's father, on
"lbrCC:S Company" -;:...iS.a..modcm-
day Renaissance man. fie not acts but
paints. writes and directs and is a
licensed pharmacist in Pennsylvania and New York. In his high school
days, the fullback and team captain
Richman even catapulted his team to
the city championship.
the soon-to-be-released ''The Third
Hand," filmed m Manila.
R1~t alongside acting 1s Rich·
man s passion for painting. "I really
believe acting and painting con -
tribute to one another." he said. An
internationally renowned. well-re·
spccted artist. he has held 14 one-man
.Dows of his.Mlworlc-; th~ tnest Tast April.
Married for 35 years to a former
actress who's sti ll involved directing
and appearing in co mmunity theater.
Richman has five children who arc
~cry much invt>lved in the ans,
including Lucas Richman, who was
recently appointed assistant conduc-tor of the Pacific Symphony. Rich-
man has done his best ins11lhng in all
of them the dictum by which he has
abided: "Know that the use ofume is
so imponan.~ in one's life because it's cumulative.
DAILY PILOTITU91d8Y. December 20, 1111 A7
Auditions will be held 11 a.m.
,o 1 p.m. at the thealtr, 3S03 S.
Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana. All
roles are open expect Mame.
Richman says his pan not only
contains "erotic, sexual implica-
tions" but also .. very humorous
overtones." And yet for all the
complex ities Barnaby has received,
he still "represents the evils of the
world ... (such as) greed, selfishness
(and) an individual desire to ... amass
A professional actor for 38 years,
Richman has appeared in more than
500 TV shows and episodes, includ-
ing "T. J. Hooker," ''Knight Rider"
and ''Bonanza." He has played on
and Off-Broadway -the latter. including more than 400 per-
fonnances as Jerry, in Edward Albee's
"The Zoo Stol)'' -~ regional
theater, including a revival of
"Twelve Angry Men" which opened
the Henry Fonda Theatre in Los
Angeles almost four years ago. His
movie credits run from "Friendly
Persuasion" starring Gary Cooper to
The Toby Bluth production of
"Babes 1n -Toyland.," which premiered at the Pasadena Civic.-=-~=-==::....:.:.:..::..::::..;::;.;;;:.:;;;...;.;.;......;.... _______________ .
Audjtorium °"=· 8. will run ni&htl)'
(except Christmas Eve) through DcC.
30: curtain 1s I p.m. on Christmas
Eve. For tickets and other infor-
The musical opens Jan. 25.
matioh, call 556-ARTS.
Candice Bergen
I likes her new role KNOW
-.
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HOFFMAN CRUISE
RAIN MAN
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SPEND 1llE HOLIDAYS
wnH AMERICA'S
*ICOMEDY!
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•
Al OtMQe CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Tueeday, December 20. 1988
_Daughter's confinement
Is tragedy for whole family
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My wife and I have been
married 21 years and bave • IOC>d mamaee. Our prob&em ii a 17-yar-old daulbter wbo became involved with
clrup and aJc:obol tour yean •.
Wbien .. Alice" wu l 3 sbe wu expelled from school. We~ ber into~ but it didn't help. She wu kicked
out Of three ldlooll wadlin 10 months. ~ ye9r1 llD Alice came borne one iiialit U<1
... utted ber mother wbile I was at work. My wife wu
balpitalized few sis weeks with a fractured skull.
Jtilbt after tbat we moved to Michipn and bought a
bome with a f\all buemenl Al a form of punishment. we
lt.lded to keep Alice in the buement for 24 bows when
lbe broke bercwfew, or iflbecame bome hiah on drup or alcobot
Tbe 2.._bour punWiment somehow stretched into
leVCnl months. Our dauabter bas been chained to her bed
frame in our buement fOr three months ·now and we are
ahid to let her out for fear of tettina into natble wit)! the law. We know what we~re doina ii wrona. but we take Care
of our dauabter's needs and at least we know where she is.
Her attitude bas become very hostile since she has
been locked in the buemeol When we serve her meals she cu.nesusand tbrowstbinp. The other day when I brought
ber llpltain for ber ooce+Week shower, she broke the
t.tbroom window and cut her arm bedly. We were able to
stop the bleedina but we are afraid that her arm is infected.
The antibiotics we've been &ivin& her don't seem to be worki.nl-We don't know bow we can aet b~r medical
attention without arousina the suspicions of a doctor.
When Alice turns 18, we plan to release her from the
buement and allow her to be on her own. Please ask G6d
to forsive us and tell us what to do. -NEEDING
GUIDANCE IN DETROIT.
DEAi\ DETROIT! Y • matt do several tlaJaaa -la .... ~
Fin&. weN•• ,..,. .. .,....,. ... take lier te die
e......-eJ roem of die HUfftlilHpUaJ at we. Al w.p
..... , ...... plUy of dlW ....... u die ...............
mMkal atie.U. prompdy )'H eo11W be pllty of .........
s.e..A: Get a lawyer. Yo• ar~ 1olq to aeed OH.
'l"Mri: Coulllt a doctor•• to .... , alMMIJd be 4eM .-a die Prl· 11 lite retues lo be treaa.4 for lier 4rq ...
alcMol pnblem alle ma1t be ..._pltaliled.
Yov 1tol')l I• trqlc. I feel terribly aorry for .U of ,... . • • •
If in doubt, Greeks called Jupiter father
If the ancient Greeks weren't sure bathtub.
who'd fathered the baby. lhey said it
was the child of their greater god. Jupiter. · Am now advised human beings more than three mon1hs ora are lhe
only land mammals that can't breathe Read this twice, ifncccssary: Sixty-and drink al the same time.
five percent of all people who've ever
lived beyond age 65 arc alive today. This notice turned up in Britain's
New Milton Advertiser and Lym-
inston Times: ··Residents ofWarry's
Close and pupils at Lan&don Junior
School would like to thanlc the person
who stole Eric Mulley's comet."
A giraffe in the wild may 10 several
days without drinking. More than you can say for some, what? It's
awkward for a giraffe to r· into
position to take a drink o wa1er.
Straddled-legged and all that. Be like Q. Where'd we get the "tale" in the
you having to drink out of the phrase "'the late John Doe" or
Last Minute Santa
'89 B~E-ROQT
ROSES ARE 'IN
whoever'?
I
A. From "lately d~' Star:ted
in England fou r centuries ago.
Does the Mona Lisa look cheerful?
She should. Model was the wife of
Francesco del Giocondo. Leonardo
da Vinci while he painted her always
kept a musician or storyteller thereby
to entenainer her.
Recent surveys indicate 22 percent
of the physicians still don't approve
of the policy of swi1c~ing off life
support systems m tennmal cases.
BY
THE
HoRoscoPf
1Vednesday,Dec.%1
ARIES (March 21 -April 19): What had been "trapped" is released.
You'll have more freedom, creative
project featured, romance is back on
POOL
SERVICE
SEA the~CA»Ut
Re1Ua1*" Frieadly Service
Doc &mwaH alO'dme rr•• •• •••
•
Complete t ... vl•lon ll•tlng1 In Sundlly'a TV Piiot
track. Focus on writina, communica-
tion, reachina "imponant people."
Gemini involved.
TAUl\US(April 20-May 20): Focus
on payments. collections. abilitr to
add to assets. Techniques wit be
refined, you'll ,et credit Iona overdue. Oandestine meeting involves my~
tery,.. intrigue, J)amor. Pisces plays
role.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Moon
in your sisn coincides with initiative, pcrso~it , sex appeal. ~le hi'11-lights uctivity, rapon11bility, an-
tensi 1ed love relationship. Some will
say, .. You are havina it all your own
way."
CANCBR (June 21-July 22):
SYDNEY
01111
better than fair.
SAGmARJUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21):
Get ideas on paper, check calls and
correspondence. Brush up on tech-
niques, be aware of legal rights,
permissions. Attention cen1ers around publicity. partnership, mar-
riqe. Observe.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Unique .. mcssqe" is received, relates
to family member in tl'lnsit. An open
secret is bandied about, could be .;::;=:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:::;;:::=;:;::;;::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::fJ source ofamusement.Plansohanae. . keep opiions open. AriC$ figures
Domestic adjustment relates to basic
issues. costs, lease requirements. Pet
could require attention, family mem-
ber seeks your counsel about job. Gift
symbolizes token of affection.
BAKERY
HOT, FRESH OUT OF THE OVENS DAILY
• BREADS • PIES • MUFFINS • ROLLS
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19077 BEACH BL VD., HUNTINGTON BEACH (RALPHS CENTER AT GARFIELD)
h C o n v e n 1 ~~ n t A I t 1 • r n d t 1 · · • • ' : •
P 0 ~) T 0 F F I C t
prominently. ""
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): Your performance is l'lted outstandin&.
Scenario features love, creativity,
fresh start. chance to prove major
contention. Emphasis on drama,
showmanship, style. Another Leo
plays top role.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Intui-
tion rinp true, former teacher is on scene,~ news received in connec-
tion wuh royalties, aeneral money
s.ituation. Focus on prestiae, career,
promotion, vindication. Aquarian
10volved.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Your
varied int.crests might cause some to
comment, "Ifs fantastic the way rou
,et around." Emphasis on eduaitton1 philosophy, travel, publishina. Sociat
evern ~~ires additional aJ)lm'CI.
ICORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Check delaiJs, protect riabts. review
aa:ountina procedures. Plans arc
reviled, another 5cor1"o becomes
valuable ally. News rece1ved concern-ina health of dole relative -it is
aYCHMLUWa MD OMAR IHAIH,
North-South ~lnerable. South
deals.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
What had been missing will be found
in drawer or .. green container.''
Spotliaht on chanae. challenae, specu-
lation, romance. Vacation {>lans surge
to forefront. Secret meeting brinas
dC$ired results.
PISCD (Feb. 19-March 20): Some
will Ufle you to act on last-minute
information. Hold back, play waiting
pmc. Friends arc sincere but could
be misinformed. Older individual has
your best interests at heart. Capricorn
involved.
IF DEC. U IS YOVR BIRTHDAY you've been under pressure, you
recently met deadline, you now arc
seriously beina considered for
promotion or bonus. You arc ver-
satile, sensitive concemina body
imaae. you do plenty and sense of
humor 11 tremendous asset. Gemini,
Suittarius people play imponant
roles in your life. You have overcome obstac~ financial loss can be re-
covered. February and November
will be memorable for you in 1989.
with lhonneu in hearts. That killed
Nortb•s hand riaht there, so be
lianed off in four spades. Note that
a slam, which depends on even
NOltTB breUt in both pointed suits (spades
• & 7 4 and diamonds), would be a heavy
Q Q I t~ oddl-•hut proposition.
O t 3 Declarer'·wu an attractive youna
• I ' 5 3 lady. Afraid from the biddin1 that a
WEST EAST club letMI would help decluer, West
• II I • QI tried a low diamond. Declarer cap-
e;;> A II 7 ' Q & 1 5 J 2 tured Eut's queen with the ace and
O I I 4 o Q ' 5 drew trumps in two rounds, endina
• & It l • Q 10 4 in band.
IOUl1I Had the same been rubber
• A t ' 5 3 2 bridle. the band would have held no
Q v... interest. But at duplicate. overfricks
0 A & 10 7 l ~vital. When declarer now con-
• A 7 tlnued wtth a low diamond, West
The biddhla: decided that his putner had to have
IMda WllC Nortll ._ tbe tiq. Since he wanted a d ub
I • ._ 2 • ._ leed throqh declarer, Wat naively
.. Q ... 4 • ... followed wttb the eiaht or dia-
... ... monda. The roof fell in. .
Opmiaa i.d: Four of O Dummy•a nine of cUamondl won
Don't Judel a book bJ lu eovtr. the trick. Declarer came to band
or a bridea plaJer bJ qe or ta. A with a heart ruff, cubed the klq of
farms U.S ~learned diamonds for a club dlac:ard IDd,
dm a.on tbe Urd.., Oii dala dlal wbeD the j9ek dropped, look two
from a pm,. tournament. more club dlarch on trinllina dia·
Soutb•a Jwnp to foar aa.na monda. lbe then ruffed her club
.... dM yaJw for ..... -lolll' on tbe board for au the trick• •t------------... -•lrilbl top.
.... ,
" ?&£••: n ••
~ •
Nole tlall ..,_,,pity of low
#nrOlld OCMlld 011JJ baw pined.
llMW•.._IM~of··
........ wouJd 11111 bift ....................
............... wllll ...
-12 .,.., ...... dMrt ,_ ..................
.t.
Fitness center
-plan~ colliGe
with reality
Oran~ County wa~ still basking ~n the glow of the 1984
Olympic Games when plans for a U.S. Physical Fi'tness
Academy evolved from the talking stage to the doing phase. It
was the right idea for the right time.
Wtlo could have opposed a national center to produce
better coaches and athletes for future Olympiads? What
groups would have dared to argue against promotion of a
higher standard of physical fitness?
~ptans·for the academy-touched alllhCi'ight bUtrons.
would have tennis courts. running tracks, soccer and bicycle
trails. About 150 people would work at the academy's
research and medical cente r in Aliso Viejo, and thousands-
would visit the center and its library.
The proposed 120-foot-high "Flame of Fitness" and a
vast "Gate of Strength" were woven in a Greek motif that was
and still is downright seductive in a county where youth and
physical fitness are revered. ·
Most of the opposition was token, but County Planning
Commissioner Douglas Leavenwonh was one of the few
skeptics who did not mute his criticisms. He argued that
physical fitness is a concept best left to high schools and
colleges and predicted the fitness academy would be a white
elephant.
Two years of fund-raising failures, missed deadlines,
autocratic leadership, high overhead, questionable spending,
poor time management, prickly relations with local officials
and a lack of SJUm9rt from rospective. ben.efacto.rsmay prove
liim n t.
If plans for the academy were human, a trip to the gym
would be in order. The concept is good, but the execution is
flabby, out of breath and appears to be a candidate for failure.
The sad state of the fitness academy dream must be a
bitter pill for former NFL coach George Allen to swallow. He
was the focus of plans to get the center built. His leadership
and reputation as a head coach with 14 winning seasons were
supposed to ignite the plan into action.
Allen had all the right backing. Endorsements fro m
Ronald and Nancy Reagan, Bob Hope, Walter Payton and
Donald Trump helped raise about $3 million to get the ball
rolling. .
Now, that ball has gone flat.
The money is gone, and the finger of guilt points at Allen.
He admits he is not a fund-raiser and that he is naive. Allen
says he didn't think anyone would object to .. something to
help the future of this country."
Objecting to the idea is not the problem. Organization
and money-about $70 million -is the gritty reality fitness
academy advocates must grapple with.
There's no doubt that the academy would make an
important contribution to the future of physical fitness in
America. It could be a model for other centers, and Orange
County residents would be proud if it were located here. But
there's an ugly reality fitness academy advocates have to face.
A big name an sports and a good idea is not enough to turn on
the money tap. There are thousands of good causes without
benefactors. Only those with good management, discipline
and planning make it to the winner's circle.
The U.S. Fitness Academy's organization lacks those
attributes and abilities. We ho pe it is not too late for some
regrouping and another effon to make the dream come true.
Opinion• expressed In this spece are tho9e of the Delly Piiot. Other
views expresMd on this page are those of their authors and 1111st1. Readers'
comment Is Invited and can be sent to The Dally Piiot. P.O. Box 154'0, Coata
M ... 92626.
Defense spending
. *
Everyone knows there's too much waste in military
spending. And it runs beyond the occasional $700 hammer o r
$600 toilet seat.
Pentagon procurement policies have historically led to
waste, poor quality, unmet deliv.ery schedules and outright
fraud.
Yet knowing there's a problem and doing something
about it are two different things. As a House Armed Services
Committee report observed the other day. although study
after study has pointed out Pentagon flaws, little progress has
been made in correcting the situation ....
President-elect Bush says the job of improving military
purchasing policies is one of his top goals.
Let's hope so. The Pentagon would hardly notice tighter
budgets if wasteful spending were reduced substantially.
EvealDg Expn11, Portlud, M•hle
·B-1 crashes
Flying involves some risk. That is panicularly true with
military atrcraft.
Last month western South Dakota was stunned when one
of the nation's newest warplanes, a 8-l bomber from
Ellswonh Air Force Base. crashed shon of the runway and waB
destroyed. The crash closely followed another in Texas.
Because of the controversial nature of the 8-1, the two
incidents raised questions about whether the airplitne was
inherently flawed.
The 8-1 has shoncomings. But it would be unfair at this
p0int to say the airplane is not flight worthy.
Perhaps it was Just that the local accident caused us to pay
more attenton, but since then it has been clear that military
aircraft of all types crash at a rate that would close down
commercial aviation.
ORANGE COAS T .., .....
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Publisher
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• •
Tu.day, December 20, 1HI
-' L[!TfR,
America
~10~ needs good ~~~ a~~,.~-statesm_e_n_,,_~.
1f,~~~~p'l{':!.lf We haveaonen 1bro...,.aodeclioo
-but have WC I Otttn over it?
• This past election shows one lhina
very clearly. A whole lot of people did
not have a candidate at the state or
federal level to vote for. They did not
want to vote for or iive their suppon
to the candidates wno were runnina.
A whole lot of people say they voted
for the lesser of two evils.
Leaming how to make political
pol!Jts from school of hara knocks
"Learning the ropes" in Washing-At least, there were none around
ton took on an new meaning for me when I left the drug store that •
the other day. evening, stuffing the cash register
Is this a sick society?
l..ct's face the Cacu lf...a-.man-li~--..--.H
George Washington, Thomas Jef-
ferson, or Benjamin Franklin. not to
mention Andrew Jack.son.I. ran for any
high office in the United ;)tatcs today
he would not have a chance. He might
be elected in some places at the
county lev~ but if he were to seek
nauonal omcc J am convinced be
would not Jet past first base.
Spcc1al-1nterest groups would
scream and howl like a pack of wolves
-would n't they? And the so-caJJed
free press would meticulousl-y report
on all the_groupsthat wercap1nst this
all-Amencan candidate.
Let's look at some of these SO<alled
special-interest groups.
In the last election we heard about
the La tino vote.
What is it these Latinos wan t for
themselves - and maybe for all of
us? -
Pugilistic metaphors are common receipt in my wallet. A young gentle-
-perhaps excessive -in politics man an his late 20s -I didn't get his
these days. Candidates "go for the name - asked in straightforward
jugular." Debating Mi chael Dukakis, fashi on whether he couldn't have all Georsc Bush scored a "knockout." of my money.
Isn 't ll not so -we aU want to
work. to be paid for our work. to have
a home and to move freely around
and participate an the free American
t enterprise system.
Is 1t these things most Americans
are concerned about, no matter what
ethnic background the voter bas.
Body blows. black eyes, even hitting Obviously, he didn•t recognize me
below the belt arc endemic to the as a fresh man congressman who'd
rhetoric of political combat. j"ust finished an incredibly expensive
Sometimes, however. life in the election, and who hadn't received a
natiop's capital transcends language pay check in a full year. Even the IRS
and gets downright physical. You IS likely to lose interest in me this
may recall for example, a few years year.
back when Congressman Robert Mistaken identity or not, he dc-
Dornan strai&htened Rep. Tom maodcd an answer. Of course. I
Downey's ncc~tic to impress upon declined.
him a particularly important legislat-Like most of ~ou, I'd seen
ive detail. "Crocodile Dundee,· and knew per-
Most likely Downey was surprised fcctly well how to handle myself 1n
to find himself in a real battle zone. this si tuation. Perhaps it was the lack
That's how I felt last week when of an authentic down-under accent,
leaving People's Drug Store on 7th howe ver, the man seemed unfazed by
and Pennsylvania S.E. at 9 p.m. On my reply and locked me in a bear hug.
the way out the door. I rnet with an At this i)oint Carl Rowan seemed a
a.ggress1vt resident who wanted to bener role model than Paul Hogan.
liberate me of the contents of m) . There l was. a Republican endorsed
wallet. by the NRA. without a "eapon.
Now, Washington, D.C. is replete It was going tO'come down to bare
with people of all stripes wh'osc goal in hands and sharp wits.
life is to separate other people from Think."' Chris, Think! What to do
their money. There are lobbyms. who next?
want to put the tax payers' money in The clums¥ bear hug made me
their clients' pockets: there are street think my assailant "as a pickpocket.
hustlers and panhandlers who oper-But when I felt for my wallet. 1t v.as
ate 1n like fashion on a person-to-still there. I began trying to break free
person basis: and there's Congress. from his gnp, which -unlike his
wlftch puts the competition to shame breath -was not overpoweri ng. A
with its zeal and efficiency in the distraction was needed ... If it's money
enterprise. you want, .. I baited him. "they've ~ot
My previous tenure in Washington plenty in that cash register inside.'
was "downtown" from the Capitol. at It worked. His drug-mottled brain
the Wh ite House. At that end of dully considered the poss1b1hty that a
Pennsylvania Avenue, therearefewer bonanza wa1tedJUSl beyond. while he
pickpockets of all kinds -lobbyists, wasted his time wrestling w1th me. i\t
panhandlers and Democrats. that instant, I pushed him awa)
As a result of my new job. however. sharply and bolted for the door.
I'm enjoying the ppportunity to He was hard on my heels. Too late.
explore other parts of the city. The I grabbed the door handle. The
area surrounding Capitol Hill and attacker swung around and intcr-
extcnding eastward towa rd RFK posed himself between me and the
Stadium and Maryland. unlike down-entrance. Then. wnh all his force. he
town. features few government build-"smashed the door towards me.
i ngs - and even f ev,.cr Secret Service It cracked across my forehead. I
agents and Capitol Hill police. was stunned, but still conscious. The
noise and attention it drew from
those inside the store caused the
highwayman to Oee.
The drugstore's sccunt) guard -
like Clark Kent amving at the scene
oft he disaster afte r 1t"s over-rushed
to m defense. He wasJUSt in time to
offer first aid. Fortunately. ~nd
A1ds were in ready suppl).
Once home, I put ice on my head.
Next morning. the lump on my
fo rehead a about the size of a
hardboiled egg. The headache stayed
wn h me on the plane ride all the wa)
back to Orange Count).
It's true. I have returned from the
battles in Washington, and It 1s rcall)
aJungJe out there. There 1s a school of
ha rd lcn,<X:ks.
But like an) poht1c1an "011h his
salt. I've lc.arn ed some valmtblc
lessons from this expencnce. In the
fut ure, rn avo id late-night solo walks
cast of the Capitol. And of course, I'll
draw upon this incident v.henevcr
possible 1n campaign speeches.
Just last Saturday c\en1ng. I was
the dinner speaker fo r the Republican
Club of Leisure World The red lump
on m~ forehead required some C:\pla-
na uon. so I shared the stof) with mv
dinner guests. and I concluded m)
remarks thusl):
"Ladies and gentlemen. I didn't let
that muggcrtake m) monc) .\nd ~ou
can be sure. I won't let the muggers in
the Congress take )Ours.. ..
It got the message across nicel). I
think l"m beginning to learn 1he
ropes.
Cbris Cor is cw Co111ressmu-
elttt for lbe 48ii Collvnsioul
District.
Not-ln-my-back-yard is the
mark of social immaturity
SACRAMENTO -Residents of
East Los Angeles and a suburban
enclave in northern Los Angeles
County organize against pla ns to
build state prisons.
South-Central Los ngelcs ralhes
to block a trash-burning plant.
Aging refugees from the Age of
Aquari us come down out of the
North Coast hills to ptbtcst offshore
oil development. ~vcn hundred
miles to the south. the affluent
residents of Pacific Pal isades
promote a ballot measure to block
onshore oil drilling.
A y_ear-long deadlock amo.ng Co~
tra Costa County supervisors 1s
broken with an agreement to establish
a new solid waste landfill near
Pittsbura and almost immed1atel)'.
resadtnts of the area vow a never·say-
die fiaht. Traffic is pihng up on Tiburon
Boulevard in Marin County. but
when the county announces plans for
another artcnal road throuah the
aflh.ent area. rnadcnts orpmzc an
OU~ protest.
Residents of a suburban Sacramen-
to nnpbomood. d111ur'bed b)' in-
aasina auto traffic: to and &Om a
nearby thoppena ttt*r, ~
c:Gllnty SUptl •-:.= lliocl f1ll all acceu r'Od or laclDlll ..... -----·-,.. ..... --"' ... ,
neighborhoods. Eve n our slums, as
bleak as they may be. arc a cut above
those found elsewhere in .\menca.
Not surprisin&ly. that hfest) le 1s
attractive to others. which is the
major reason why Cali fornia's popu-
lation is expanding with nearl)
700,000 million newcomers each
year.
DAN
WALTERS
The scope of that gro"th. and the
cultural diversity that ll also entail .. must be "'1lhr1J not onl to shell out
has stunned Cahfom1a's pohurnl the b1lhons ot dollars to build and ~hcymaken. espcc1ally those 1n the operate the ne"' pnsons that requires.
Capitol. They seem congenitall} 1n-but to 1olcr:ue the presence o( those
capable of understanding it, much pnsons in our commun1t1e
less making the soph1st1cated pohc) Do tho~ who rally against 011 wells
decisions needed to cope with 1t. or ne"' h1ghwa )S in their com-
Thc v15ccrally s1mpl1suc. self-de-munaues fortsa._e personal autos? -\
fcat1n1 anti-growth movement 1s one fc"' ma), but it's also true 1hat most of
manifestation of the frustration that those "ho .ittcnd protest mectmgs
Ca.hfom1ans feel about the change am' c \ 1a cars which consume re-
occumng Wlth aston1sh1n1 rap1d1t) fined petroleum and tra\ cl o n h1&Jl-
And another, 1s NIMBY. a large!) wa\s that someone ca~ed out of raw
1lloaical and wl\olly h> pocnt1cal S) n-land. drome. It's espcc1all) hypocnucal for Cah-
Do those anu-pnson demon-fom1an to agitate ap 1nst e\plo1-
straton vote for pollt1c1ans who talion of onshore or offshore 011
promi1e to ~l crime" Demon-resen es when this st.tic consume so strably. lbeydo. The ~or reason for mu h more 011 th.in 1t produces
lbe styrocketina n.unbef'.of prison Lafe 1s a scncs of tradtoffs and
inmates as IMt state Jeaaslators. value c.hoica. lf we·want the bendits
womcd about \Mar own polmcal . of an ,nd...,.. IC)Cldy, and the).' att
skins. wtnt on 1 btntr of passina nc"' man), we must alto be wdhna to bear
laws that touahen ptn11t1cs for the burdens v.h1dl ttm11n even when
mmes. the most 1ens1h\.C maupuoe dl'ons That's what ve>k"n .. an1cd the arc made. poht1C1~M ron(luded -a con luc;1C1n 'lllMBY 1~ a ~ ol Nt
validattd b) the clttt1on a_nd ~-cqual10n. It 1s a nmt al locill
election of Grortt Dc'uk~.an 1mmatunt} -and ol to-dict •
IOYC1"ft0f on an anu""'nme platfonT\ 1ht pen of·"°'i0(18M .-•t ••
and 1~ OU5tcr of Ro~ Bud .inJ other to uch ,hon· lah• ••a 1 11 hberal' from the "1ate \uprcm( pttuu~
Coun. n. ffalftts & • 4'98 nrf 8u1 tf•~ want ftl n\ I kC'd un wt ~c.
•
Do Latino voters want something
that American voters should no\
have?
The politicians seem to cater' to all
these special-interest groups and arc
helped by the press.
I mentioned the Latinos, for this
group is talked about so much here in
Southern California, but I couJd just
as well have mentioned Asians, Jews,
blacks or homosexuals.
When we hear over the news about
one of these groups and their special
interests, it sound un-American.
Why don't they vote for what is best
for America?
All of this foreian interest shows up
an a lot of places. You can hardJy buy
a calendar without 1t marked with
several days of ahen commemora-
tion.
When arc we going to S« a
candidate ru nning for high office who
is a statesman -not a politician? A
man who does not listen to spccial-
interest groups. who keeps his prom-
ises when elected, who docs not give
away what 1s left of our national
wealth. who bans all domestic and
foreign lobbying in Wash111gton D.C.1
wh o wall not ratJfy trutics with
heathen nations but aboljshes such
trcaues already signed. who is con-
cerned about the needs of America
and Americans, who cuts off any
attachments to an) bills from Con•
grcss which ha\'e bttn linked on by
special interests. and a man who will
refo rm our system so each bill only
concerns subJCCb of related matters.
Statesmen hke these have been
needed for decades 1n this repu.blic.
DITLEV THYSSEN
Corona dcl Mar
Fascination with
LB mayor irritating
To the Editor:
I ha' e become bored and more
than a ha le 1mtated by the proliferat-
ing pubhc1t) an the media about
Laguna's new mayor and his li festyle.
peak for )Ourself. Robert. You do
not speak for me!
W. J. PLUMLEY
Laguna Beach
TODAY IN Hi s TORY
Today is Tuesday, Dec, 20, the
355th day of 1988. There arc 11 days
left in the year.
Today's H1&hhght 1n History:
On Dec. 20. 1803. the Louisiana
Purchase was formally transferred
from France to the United States
dunng cercmorues 1n Ntw Orteans.
The U.S. had paid the French about
SIS m1lhon dollars for the temtory,
~h1ch cffect1vel y doubled the sia of
1hc country.
On this date:
In I 90. the first succnsful cotton
mill in the United Slates bepn
operat1n1 at PlW\uck.e\. R.l.
In 1820. M1uoun 1mpoeed a
bachelor ll\ on unmamed men bct~eocn the qcs of 21 and SO. The
ta\ $I a )tat.
In 1864. Confederate forte1 ev.cu-
ated Savannah. Ga., as Union Gen·
eral Wilham T ~rm.an continued
hJS "March to the Sea."
In 1879. Thomas ~. EdilOll pn-
\ atel) demonstrated ht1 iDCUdtl--
cent h&ht at Mento Part. NJ .
In 1963. tbe Iman WaD ._
opmed b' tht ftnt lime eo Wna
BerftMrt. wbo ~ alloWed O• day
Vlllb to rftMiYCS lft .... E111 I.·--
for IM babdays.
Tm ~ 'ID= H.ll H1tf11 n Pretidcnc Riclllir4l M. ,._., .....
....... Ito.. ""' ., ... -....... ~ • •i I :,; 111 -r.-::.~i.'T ... " -..... ~ .. ., fttAml-··-
.,
AlO ... ()ange Coat DAILY PILOT/ Tueeday, December 20, 1988
NAMf BRAND
J -1
"Mommy gave us these cards to play -" ..
with. One from the plumber. this
J
I I
8
on&-s from-the insurance man~y" ----------------•
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"One at a time! One at a time!''
PEANUTS
GARFIELD
l OOT OOR CHR15f MA5 TR££. CL05£. THE '700P., WILL YOM?
l \•
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
R08El8R08E
..
~ 1'2·10
Yoo eETTER Ctw:K wmt IAY ~S. fM SURE 1HEY1l.
W>l(r TO GIVE~ SCWC STUFF,llX>."
by Charles M. Schulz
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
H~'S' S1}U~1lN61t> 6EI rrr '°'-L-1~.
by Kevin Fagan
~!~Uf:U. ~~~Of
WAlER ~ TIMf. WE~~
by Pat Brady
'
ARLO AND JANIS
FOR BETI,'ER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
JUDGE PARKER
FUNKY WIJQ[ERBEAN
IV\Al/Bt l-.051 ~G (Vf..) HE.ARI~ 15 A SIGN , ..
DOOJl'ESBURY
MAC;BE 1-rs iTME 1HAT
I FINAU..'1' STEPPED ASIDE ,.,
by Garry Trudeau
by Jimmy Johnson
DtDN'T ~ ee@ CHRJ!,'D\A!i~
~A~I
by Lynn Johnston
f!>/ lt-e~·-~ "'°"" ~N'~yTftlNG Gero,~~? ......__ __ ,, ____
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Ooux
I 'VE TOLD SAYLOR
MANY 11ME5 THAT I
WISH I 'D MARRIED
SOMEONE UKE SAM DRIVER ... NOT HIM t
by Tom Batluk
AND MADE fJJPf;> FOR
SOMEONE OF LE55E.R ABl~11lT> !
A.,,.._wfto_a --................ lier.-. OUI ~ .. 11111 --................ . .tiy..,., __ ,_,_1 ..
.... ,.
TUESDAY. DECEMBER 20. 1988
Area quintetsstreaking on fast break
Mater Del. sea hawks, Saddleb~ck hot, ~~m'!~~~.,:;n:ib~e}~~~n-:.!'~
b ut Va_gu eros, Eagles Barons are hotter which.~;u::~at!~ ~ht
• . ' n~ the last shot in the fadina
It's b~t two weeks old. b.ut the Saddleback Coach Pat Quinn's ~s, ~t unli~e , Saddlebec~:s
ndataon foranother blue ch~ prep only apoloaies for his team at the difficulty _J01ng ~inst Mater Dea s
ketbell campeip for the OranJC seventh place finals Saturday was, defense1, Dylan ~1adon came down-
st area ~~ to be set an "I'm sorry it wasn't more interest-court, sad off a p1clc and had. a clear,
concrete and at s dry1na fast. ina." unopposed 15-footJumper with three
Three of the area·s best. on an • . . seconds left.
Jnnual •is, arc ri&ht on taraet with .Mater Dei .lost to Saddleback an It missed, they went into overtime
Mater Dei (lO-I), Ocean View (6-I) double overt1me at the Newport d Saddl ba k JI
andSaddlebeck(S.-l)holdinauptheir Mesa Tou~ament final~, ~ut the anSaddlet!ckc d~:i~~ (h;o~ctory
end of a prese.ason rankin& which Monarchs, wit~ the ToK:~itlean hand andaot it, but ifl were going to put my
boUled them as No. 1-3-4 in Oranac for the fourth time, remain No. 1 · chips down again on the game, and
County by the Daily Pilot. Why? another may weJI come about at the
Mater Dei•s only loss is a double I JUCSS it's just because until it's finals of the Orange Holiday Classic
overtime decision to Saddlebeck and really clear cut, it's pretty hard to go at Chapman College Dec. 30, I would
Ocean View's Seahawks' only loss is a ~nst a proven commodity, com-back Mater Dci again.
Tournament of Champions finals b1ned with the best defense and setback to Mater Dei. offense around. As stat~. however, ifs not just
c was upset ant e sccon t cnse.
round of the Irvine World News Saddleback could not get a shot off
Tournament, but as a North River-. in the last 30 seconds of the first half,
side assistant coach muttered to and only a miracle shot saved them
anyone within listening range in the from the same fate in the late goina.
final moments of a 76-46 loss, "They Ocean View was held to just 43 ~in ts
knock down the free throws, hit the by Mater Dei's blanket. which is
outside shot and push the ball down manufactured from the hand of one
the court. You couldn't ask for much David Taylor.
more." Taylor 1s an unsuna assistant under
View that is keeping the area as a focal
point for the Southland preps.
It's the add1t1onal firepower that
has been provided by three uo-
beatcns. none of which figured.
Good. yes. v cry aood.....1 maybe. Un-
beaten? Hardly. But they are.
Steve .Keith came to Irvine a year
ago. heralded as a I 0-ycar winner at
Orange
eo..1~~~
Area
Glendale High.
. His initial campaign put the Vaqs
into the CJ F playo ffs for the first time
ever. Now, in Year II. the Vaqueros
are 7-0 and on the way to the ~Hawaiian Islands where some very
unsuspecting opponents at the
Kamehameha Tournament figure to
become Nos. 8. 9 and I 0.
Radford Hijh. touted as Hawaii's
best, is Irvine's first-round foe
Wednesday night.
Tim O'Brien. another second-year
coach, has Estancia's Eagles at 7-0
with back-to-back tournament c~ampionships.
Neither tournament (Garden
Grove or La Quinta) compares with
Crippled Oilers can't
plug up the leaks, fall
at LB Wi lson, 71 ~59
....,,... ...... _ ........ c......
Ma t er Deirolls on ,
sends Austra lians
away in 6 5-48 win
<
Huntington Beach High basketball
coach Roy Miller is trying to find
some win nins ways with half.a team,
and he's finding out it doesn't work.
His Oilers went down for the fifth
time in eight starts Monday night as
host Long Beach Wilson took advan-
tage of a soft Huntington Beach
interior to record a 71-59, non-league
victory.
With 6-foot-4. 220-pound Jeff
Long still sidelined with an ankle
injury since the second game of the
season (he scored 31 in a 90-83
victory over Serra) and his replace-
ment. 6-5 Scou Drake o;,it with back
problems, Miller went "ith 6-5 for-
ward Steven Lucas inside in an
attempt 10 offset the MIAs.
Lucas came through with l8 points.
but it wasn't enouw. nor often
enough as Wilson toolC"advantage of
38 perccRt shooting ( 19 of 50) by the
Oilers from the field.
two centers. Miller had a direct
answ9r.
"Ybu lose." he said. "You end up
3-5 when yo u thought xou were going
to be 6-2 at this point. ·
Huntington Beach has also had
Joey Katter on the disabled list.
missing two games 1n the La Quinta
tourney with a hip inj ury. He was
back on Monday but scored only 6
points.
One ray of hope for Miller at th is
point is the play of Joey KiJewks1.
who posted his second straight 15-
point effort. but until Long return s,
the Oilers apparentl y are going to be
struggling to maintain a winning
pace.
"They·re not sure whether the
injury is an old one or a new one."
said Miller. ··So n's still up in the air.
If it's an old inJury. he could poss1bl) be back b) January."
In other non-league acuon:
M•ter Del U , Merrlm•c 48: The
Monarchs recorded their I 0th v1cto1Y
in 11 starts. but 1t "asn't one wh1di
had the Mater Dc1 coaches glo"1ng.
the 32-team Irvine World News
Tournament which Irvine rolled
through, but the guard play of· Mike
Curtit -and Augustin Hefedie hH
already surfaced to the extent the
Eagles must be considered as a.threat
to Saddleback in the Sea View
League.
And then there's fountain Valley,
now 8-0 with back-to-back tour-
nament championships.
The Barons waded throuati th.cir
own tourney. aod at Arroyo Grande
with runaway victories. These, too.
don't compare with a finals berth at
the Tournament of Champions, but
it's obvious herc1 as well, that Foun-
tain Valle) 1s gomg to be more than
JU St a passing mtercst for Ocean V 1ew
an the Sunset League race.
Sull. this isn't all of the story ol
range oas area s e ug
just two weeks.
University's overtime victory over
Long Beach Poly 1s probably the most
signficant win in the school's baskt"t-
baJI history.
The Trojans arc 5-4, and another
vi~tim was highly-regarded Kennedy.
How about httle Laauna Beach?
The Artists have already P.Ut away an
RocE1 -
C11uo1
SP ORTS CoL uM~:~
improved Huntington Beach quintet
(3-5), shocked Palbs Verdes n.bt out
of their slippers and came within an
eye lash of adding University and
Foothill to their list. Lagu na Beach 1s 4-3, as is late-
blooming Corona del Mar. ud
NewJ>()rt Harbor is 4-4.
Mari na. with 6-fo~t-1 0 sophom~
of many big time college coaches, is
6-4 despite staning two sophomores.
And there's another unbeaten team
from the area -Newpon Christian's
5-0 Conquero rs.
Newport Christian isn't a threat to
an)'one in the Orange Coast area,
aside fromAcademy League rival
(Pleue Me AUA/112)
BandJICton Beach'• llark Toetado (left) 1oea ap for a
baeket acatut tbe defeDM of WU.On'• llon Dublell.
To make matters worse. the Oilers
could manage only 4of16 from the 3-
point range (25 percent).
Asked how he docs 11 without his
Despite playing on their home
court and agamst a tounng >\ustrahan
team which has not had a lot of
success over the recent few da)s,
Mater Dc1 shot Just 37. 7 perC'ent from
the floor (23 of 61 ).
Merrimac held the lead into the
(Pleate tee OILERS/BIS)
Steft Lacaa of Ban~on Beach (32) battlm Jolla Deppe
of Lone Beach WU.On for po••e•lon In lloaclay"• pae.
Purnell seeking another ring BENNY
RICARDO Only this one would have a Super flavor
for h is role w it h t he Seatt le Sea h awks
Thegoaldurinatraining~mp for Cal, got to savor this victory in front
the Seattle Scahawks was to win the of the home folks.
Western Division of the American Purnell wbocoached at Corona dt"I
Football Con-Marhiabschool In 1972and Ed ison
ferencc. This Hi&hSChool(l973-81 )before joining
past Sunday Jo6n Robinson 'sstaff'at USC, is now
they C~'!\e to the in his third year as an assistant coach
home'Qfthe Los with theSeahawks.
An~lcs "Thisis1hesametypeoftbrill that
Raiders and by I had when we were playing in theCIF
virtue of their playoffs, the players may be bigger
44-37 victory. and faster. but the thrill is exactly the
became the new same no matter what le vel of play,"
Western said Purnell "You know it's going to
PuaeU Division be a dogfight all the way to the end
Champions. ~ you·rcgoing to have to play your
Seahawk tight ends and assistant. ""'tllilofftowm."
special teams coach Russ Purnell waS' "'Purnell transferred to Huntington
especiall y deliahtcd with the out-Beach Hi&h in his senior ~rafter
come. Purnell who prepped at Hunt-auendina h.is freshman and
inston Beach Hiah School and later sophomore years in Kirkland. Wash.
stanedforOrangcCoastCollcgcand H1sjunioryearheattended hi&h
Bucs.drop
74-67 tilt
to Hancock
Oranee Coast Colleac's Pirates fell
into oonsolmtion action •t the Loa
Aneeles Valley Collqc basketball
tournament followin& Monday's
74-67 loss to a 1trona All•n Hancock
quintet.
The Pirates. who entered with a
10.2 record, trailed by a 3S-30 count
at halftime and were never able to pull
bllck despite t0me 1trona reboundina
from Alan Schlines. as well asdouble-
diait tcorina from four different
s&anen. Scblines led the way with 20 points.
and lie hid 1 l rebounds. Danek Crane and Derek Johnson
each Md Ii• boerds and ~ in
double ftsum ICOn"I -c ... ne with
15: ~-... with 12. uimont !.-ct 8dded ll·pointa tor
the 8ucl. whO fell into contOle•ioa
DllY ll!liDlt the Loi Aftleles Tnldl
Ttd-CA Valley loeer. ,....... hefd ttorelal ia die ..
half. ""' row ~·· .,.. • • ICeOIMI hal(
school in Kcdmond, Washington.
So Purnell knew what he was
leavmgbehind and what he was going
to in terms of weather. In Seattle It can seem like i._ou live in a car wash all
year long. The weddinggowns and
tu edosa~adeof rubber. Your
firs wee m that rain and y~ou th ink
you should start pairing off. In fact
you begin thinkingstrange thoughts
hke if underarm deodoran ts can keep
a pc:rson dry. why don't they make a
b1gbatch and set upa big spray on top
of the Space Needle and spray the
City?
A Super Bowl ri ng would now
make Pumell's next goal come true. It
.would help balance ham out with his
Cl F championship rings from 1979
and '80when an assistant at Edison
under Bill Workman.
"During trainingcamp we set the
Division tnle as our goal ... said
Purnell. "We just accomplished that.
now it's a new season and the Super
Bowl is our next goal."
You look at the stat sheets and you
see that the Seattle t1ght endsd1d not
catch any balls. In the Seatt le offense
it is thercspons1b1htyofthe two 11ght
ends Mike Tice and John Spagnola to
primarily block. A Chuck Knox-
coached team" 111 al"a)'s feature a
strong running attack w11h the light
ends lc•ding the way.
. It's Parnell's rcspons1b1ht} to make
sure these tight ends understand their
~lockingresponsrb1hues. How man}
times have you seen the Sea ha" ks
give it to halfback Cun Warner on a
pitch and then let him read the tight
end 's block? In this ~me ;,ou sa" the
Seahawks let the Raiders ke\ on
Warnerandgive11John L. W1ll1ams
for 59 yards and a 4.2 yard average
"Wehadalotofsucccssagainst the
Raiderssettingthem up with
previous plays before stri k 1 ng w1 th
the big one," said Pur:oell "On John
L. 's (Williams)scrttrfpass for a
touchdown. wecauaht the Raiders in
their s1ron1 side formation ti) ing to
defend apanst the run of Cun
(Warner) and we ran pla) ncuon.
PR o FooTBA LL
John block.ed down and then came
out for the screen pass. then he turned
on the after burners and scored.·· said Pu me II.
It "asaJO\OusSeahawk lock-erroom after the game and Seattle's
President and General Ma nag.er \11l e
\.1cCormack made an 1ntcre ung
poin t.
"When we-hired Chuck (Kn o\ l we
told him we needed tocatC'h the
Raiders fo r the D1v1s1on 111le. but we
forgot about the Broncos." he said.
othe Rasder mastcr; b> Chucl Kno~ continues a Knox ups ha s
record against the Raiders to I 0 win~
and 4 losses. The seventh w1nn1ngest
coach in the NFL KnoA adds another
di\ ISIOn ti tle to h1scred1t
Jets can pick up some cash if
they can locate grateful Rams
4-g_ame s lump could be blessing
in the drive for Super Bowl berth --
From Tk A1Mdalff Press
The Rams looked like one of the good National
Football Lape teams again. but II almost meant
nothing.
"When I ,_Al Toon. l'm1oing to11ve him a couple
dollars." Ramscomcrbeck LcRo) Irvin sud.
Toon's S-rard touchdown reception from Ken
O'Brien with 3' tee0nds left P "e the tw York Jets a
27-21 vtetoryovertbe New York Giants on unday And
that ~ncd the cloar for the Rams.
They only lllldlcl to beat San Franc1sro later an the
day•o ........ E "Wheft Ill tl\at tou(hdo"'n pass. Doua Rttd •
ud I ..... • off and ao• our stuff toerther •nd came ~owerlile. That ll'e us somt li~.··1n1n said T1li .....,.. ln-ift IPC)kc of was C1ndlnt1d. Park in
Illa Fa•ilc• wMrr tht Ramso\."ttpowt:ml th<' (•Hlrtd .... 16...., lrilbl •
a.e·Gilirii bNtcR tM Jets. the Ram' .. uuld''t' ~--n· 1a1tld~theoll)(>Wsbdorc 1htpmc. Their O¥erW 49cn and their I~ rcrord "A0Uk1 ha't' .__....-.,.U~) n<Mh1n1
Now. the Ramsw1ll pla) Mmnesot.a ID the FC \I.lid·
card game next Monday.
"We're 10 the tournament and "'e beat a couple of the
better teams 1n 1t:· said Fritz Sh"urmur, Rams defenm c
coordinator."\\ e th ink we gotas good a shous an)bod\
nght now And 1fwe got to pla) an C\trap.mc. that's o.ooO
buckscxtra. Thafs the wa~ I lool at at. I got nothing to do
next Wttk an)'WI\: .
"I thank wc'rt an great pos1t1on." said Reed. a
defensive lineman. "I thml we''e aone through .all our
tnals and tnbul•11ons. If there's an) time I felt hil.C' "c
could ao all the~•). it's no~:·
The Rams Sttmed 10 be lrg1t1m•tt uper 8o"'I
contendcnearl) 1n the season. v.-anning~"cn oftttcir fif'\t nu~ pmn.. Then c•mc ovcmber and four \lraapt
losses: But an Ott'Cmber. the) 've looked \.Ct) &ood 1n
be111na the Oaaaieo lkars. .\ tlant.a Falcons and the •9c" ... We wm1 thf"OUlh our shamp in mMheaton." Rams
saft1y Johftftit Johnson •Id. "EVft) tcw1n hn a lfump.
and ~ rally -.ntc'd to tr" 9'ot about this ttme of )111'." A~ Ille o«ensa~ mndcMm IMw bttn 4uar-ttfbect Jam E¥tftft Ud wide receiver Henry Elmd. who
a.rt arnona tk NA.'1 best at tbeir ~
EVttftt tbrcw four ICNChdoWn ..-S M Ila f ranc1KO. It\ ina ham a d..,«ard l I a11 die.....,., ~
alrtfd) had broil~ team com'*'*' ()GI) and ytrdq: ( 3. 9M) f'C'('OOJ
Estancia bl
Bolsa Grande
tournament
title game ------Rancho Alam itos,
Eagles square off;
FV loses at TofC
E tancaa H1gh's Eagle~. with the
helping hand of i\ngehca Sunoto's 12
third-quarter points and 9 rebounds
from Robyn Cordrey. improved to
6-1 overall and earned a cham-
p1 onsh1p finals berth against Rancho
Alamitos to ntght (7) at the Bolsa
Grande H 1gh girls basketball tour-
nament.
h 's a mnoatclt of last )ft.r's fina)s..,.
El sew her~. Monday's girls scheduk
wasn·t as kind to area teams:
Newpol1 H•rb« H , Auitejm II!
The 1lors. behind the career-hash
output of J.Un1or >\h lzumita (23) and
22 point from ta~y G1em. a pair of
JUntor guards. gained their ftnt v1e-
tol)' ot the sc.son m seven stans.
quahfy1 n1 for a consolation cham-
p1onsh1p ho'A'down with Trabuco
Halls toda) at Bolsa Grandt.
lzum1ta had thttt 3-poant pis
du nn.g the game
HeeWtMraH, r .. 1a111 Va.lleJ n:
The Barons found out the hard way
what happens when you shoot at a
sub-10 percent f'8"1C Monday as No.
6-sceded Huldsbura put toerther a
17-point victor) 1n the first round ol
the Santa Barbara Tournament of
Champions at Santa Barbara Hiah.
Carol Str8usbura's Barons dropped
ID Just I 0 of 49 from lhe ftdd ~ 19.1
pcrttnt) 1n falhna to 4-3 ovet-'l;
The loss puts Founta.in Vally into
the consolation round today llllli•
t J09eph H11h of Santa Maria.
StaC'C> H1sala led Founlllia VllleJ
with 12 po.nu.
The Tournamtnt of O_OS!ltiW "81um 11 of the 16-~ field._
No. I rankanp '""'"' .... I I IJJ I Ed'9 """'°" or illvil6oill pall _. la comiderild bf_~ ........... No. I ..,.. ~ ICt.ool ,, rt IA I
--•:nl. "°h°I~ I IHI • 191 • -. ... ,_. ·-·· Lea l..ocW ... E'Wlll;W:.·m;11a '°"""'*1"C ... pllyen. ..
..
.................................... mll!llllll!l~IJ!!lllllllllll!lllllll!!!ll!!l!I~~~ ........ "'.
After flve·years,
Mancini, Camacho
agree to disag~ee
P,.. 'ftte AaMda&e4 Press
NEWYORK -Fiveyearsafteritwas •
first discussed. former li&)ltweight cham-
pions Ray .. Boom Boom" Mancini and
Hector "Macho" Camacho agreed Mon·
day to meet in a 12-round fight at Reno March 6 ..
The match, promoled by Momentum Enterpnses,
Superfiahts U nhmited and Warner Brothers Pay-TV.
wiD be s-119y-per-view. dosed q~ pt<K~1tari.on and
will mark 1 comeback for Mancini, who retired in I 98S
after two strai&ht title fight losses
to Livingstone Bramble.
Camacho has fought just five
times in the last thtte years.
. 'Tm IQOkina forward to this
fight." Camacho said. "But then
again. I looked forward to it five
years ago."
·The two fighters will share a
S2 million purse, ctinsiderably
less than the fight would have
generated in 1984 when Mancini
ltlncl•I was WBA lightweight champ and
IN THE BLEACHERS
"Listen up. There's a minute left and we're
behind by 50, so when the ball Is Inbounded
punch out your opponent and make a run for
the exit ... " ·
Camacho was a year away from the WBC title.
Mancini will get the hi&J:ier auarantee ,_;w~il,.....h-Dod-.. d~r• will open at Clncy ~ .... ~Mrcho6sing-bonosef anapcrcentage. "They a--
could double the guarantees and more," said promoter
Lou Falcigno, president of Momentum. "They could
come away wtth $3 million each if it does as well as we
expect."
Mancini's losses to Bramble upset original plans
for the match but not his appetite for a shot at Camacho.
"This is a fight I've wanted for a Ions time,"
Mancini said. "I've been offered seven title fights since
I retired and I turned them all down. They didn't mean
anything. But I'm coming back for this guy. The time's
come."
Mancini said he left boxing at age 24 with a record
29-3 because he had lost his passion for the game. "But I said this was the one fight I wanted." he said. "It
tapped my emotion and hunger. I feel good about it."
Quot.e of the day
"Now we wear -khab .. and work-boots and
hard hats. We don't wear business suits any more.
We have to wait until we get on top again. Then we
can go for the executive rook. Now we're just one
of the teams and we have to approach it that way."
-Boston center Robert Parlu, after the Larry
Bird-l~s Celtics won their third straight game
Sunday, defeating New York 117-104.
Charger Coach Saunders fired
SAN DIEGO -Coach Al Saunders, Ell
who was P.ublicly critical of the players he •II t
was supplied by team management, was
fired Monday by the San Diego Chargers.
Saunders, 41 , posted a 17-22 record in 21'1 years.
after replacing Don Coryell midway through the 1986
season. This season, the Chargers were 6-10 and
finished fourth in the AFC West.
Saunders, who had three years remaining on his
contract, was informed of his firing in a meeting
Monday with team owner Alex Spanos.
Spanos said a list of potential candidates for the
position would be compiled by Steve Onmayer, the
team's director offootball operations.
"We feel at this time tt is necessary to make a
change in the head coaching position," Spanos said.
··we wish Al well, and a search fora successor will begin
immediately ...
Saunders. the team's seventh head coach, refused
to discuss details of his conversation with Spanos ..
"This is a tough business ... it's just one of those
things. I'm not bitter at all." Saunders told a news
conference.
··1 know that this team, in the futu~. will be an
outstanding one. The young talent is here. and I'm sure
that with a few select additions in a few critical areas.
this football team will be a successful one in the future."
"My regret is that we weren't able to finish what we
started. We hope that we laid the groundwork ... for a
strong future for the San Diego Chargcn," Saunders
said.
The coach had been at odds with team manage-
ment since training camp because he thought he was
given inferior talent. He aJso drew Spanos' ire by
unfavorably comparing his team with the Raiders
before a Nov. 6 game against Los Angeles.
Oilers salvage 5-5 standoff
Jimmy Carson's ~oal with 54 seconds m
remainin in the third period gave the '
visiting ~monton O ilers a 5-5 overtime
tie wittl the Buffalo Sabres Monday night in
National Hockey League play. Elsewhere Monday, Al
Secord'• power-play goal with 2:29 remaining in the
third period gave To ronto a 4-3 victory over St. Louis .
LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles
Dodgers will begin defense of their World
Series victory on Monday, April 3 against
the Cincinnati Reds in the official National
League opener, the team announced.
The Dodgers will pl!}' their first nine games on the
road before entertaining the Houston Astros in their
home opener on Thursday, April 13.
After the opener, the·Dodgers play at Cincinnati on
April 5 and 6 before playing three games at Atlanta and
three more at San Francisco.
After the season-opening road trip. the Dodgers.are
scheduled to play I 0 home games -four against
Houston, three against Cincinnati and three against San
Francisco.
The Dodgers will play their 81 home games on 81
home dates with no doubleheaders scheduled. They
will play 59 night games and 22 day games at Dodger
Sµd1um.
The Dodgers play lO_bome-games in April 16 i
May. 14 in June, IO 1n July. I'S in August and 16 in
September. They conclude the regular season Sept.
29-30 and Oct. I at Atlanta.
Los Angeles begins its exhibition season on March
3 apinst the Kansas City Royals. The Dodgers' first
spnng training game at Holman Stadium in Vero
Beach. Fla .. will be against the New York Mets on
March 5.
The Dodgers and Ansels meet in the Freeway
Series starting Thursday night. March 30 at Dodger
Stadium. The teams will then play Friday night, March
31 and Saturday night, April I at Anaheim Stadium.
Smithson accepts BoSoz offer
NEW YORK -Mike Smithson Ill accepted a salary arbitration offer from the
Boston Red Sox on Monday, the deadline
for 10 free agents to accept or reject
arbitration.
Jim Gantner of the Milwau,kee Brewers was the top
player who had to make a decision by midniJht EST.
Texas had three players, pitchers Cecilio Guantc
and Ed Vande Berg and catcher Jim Sundberg.
Others were catcher Alex Trevino of Houston and
pitchers Rick Honeycutt of Oakland. Charlie Lea of
Minnesota, Mike Flanagan of Toronto and J im Acker
ofTor<'nto.
Gretskys gain a daughter
LOS ANGELES -Actress Janet m
Jones, the wife of Los An&clcs Kinas '
hockey star Wayne Gretzky, gave birth to
the couple's first child, a airl, at Cedars
Sinai Medical Center Monday.
The child named Pauline, was born at 11 :54 a.m.
PST. She was 2 t inc~cs long and ':"eiJhcd 7 .pounds. 13
ounces at birth, said Cedars Sinai Medical .Center
spokesman Ron Wise.
"The baby is very healthy." said Wise who added
that both of her parents were also doing fine and that
Gretzky was present at the birth.
Gretzky. 27, and fones. 27, were married in a
lavish ceremony in Edmonton. Alberta on Julv 16.
Television'-radio
TELEVISION
,:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Indiana at
Kentucky, ESPN.
S:OS o.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers at Chi·
cago !delayed at 6 o.m.. Channel 9).
6:30 o.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Otilo Slale
at Soulh Carolina, ESPN.
7:30 o.m. -PltO BASKETBALL: CtlPHrs at Golden State, Channel 5. ·
7:30 o.m. -PltO HOCKEY: Qtoary al Kl119s,
Prime Ticket.
RADIO 6 o.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers al Chicago
(delaYedl, KLAC (570).
7:30 P.m. -PltO HOCKEY: Cal!Jary al Klt19s,
KPZE (1190).
.. Center G•y Carboue .. ·1 13th goal of the season
snapped a tie at 17: 17 of the second period and gave the
Montreal Canad1ens a 2-1 victory over the Hanford
Whalers ... Kelly Ki1io'1 goal 27 seconds into the third
period broke a tic and the New York Rangers went on to
a 3-1 victory over the Washington Capitals ... Rookje
goaltender Troy Gamble kicked out 30 shots as the 1 Vancouver Canucks ended a two-game losing streak 1-
with a 5-1 victory over the Minnesota North Stars.
7:30 o.m. -PltO BASKETBALL: Clippers al Golden State, KRTH (930).
7:30 o.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: North·
eastern at Cal Slate Fullerton, KMNV < 1600).
Oklahoma· s Switzer
'Ciilbarassed, · vows
ltwon'thappen aln
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) -Barry
Switzer, sayina he was "~mblraned
and disappointed" by cha,.es of
wroned<>ina in the Oklahoma football
1'f'Oll'lm, tlid MOI~ t~hn'bem
no pattern of rec~\nina' violations
dunna his 16 years as head coach.
"I know, and I believe that our
coaches know, that we do not violate
NC AA rules." Switzer said during the
univcnity's response to NCAA sanc-
ations handed down Monday.
The NCAA put Oklahoma on the
three years' probation and binned the
Sooners from bowl pmes for two
years and from live telecasts next
season. There also were some recruit-
inf. restrictions.
·we do not orchestrate ill~I
recruiting of any kind," Switzer said.
his voice raisin at times. "I btlie_ye
'has to lie an aso aied Incident. not a
pattern.
"I support enforcement. I believe
in enforcemnt and not violating the
NCAA rules," Switzer said. "We wiU
adhere to the NCAA regulations."
Two assistant coaches and a former
recruiting coordinator were named in
most of the recruiting violations, but
Athletic Director Donnie Duncan
said they would not be fired.
"We're not going to fire anyone
because it does not warrant it."
Duncan said.
He said former recruiting coordi-
nator Shirley Vaughan "been re-
moved from her position. and assis-
tant coaches Scott Hill and Mike
Jones likewise were disciplined.
Duncan said the coaches' salaries
were frozen and they were placed on
-university probation. -He also said
Jones was taken off recruiting.
Interim president David Swank
said Oklahoma would appeal the
penalty, but Duncan hinted other-
wise. noting that in 41 'Years "no team
has made substantial progress" in the
appeals process.
The penalty was a little more harsh
than most expected, Swank said.
"The penalty was very severe, we
think ... maybe more severe than we
expected," Swank said. "It's more
severe when one considers the
financial aspect of the penalties."
Swank said Oklahoma's athletic
depanmcnt stands to lose betweccn
.
Vikings win
home field
site, 28-27
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Walker
Lee Ashley intercepted Mike
Tomczak's foolhardy pass near the
goal line with 2:37 to play and
rumbled 94 yards for a touchdown as
Minnesota held off Chicago 28-27 to
give the Vikings the home-field
advantage in the NFC wild<ard
game.
Minnesota, 11-.S, will host the
Rams neXt Monday afternoon in the
first NFL playoff game at the Metro-
domc since 1982.
The Bears, trailina 21-20. drove to
Minnesota's 8-yard line1 seemingly
perfect position for Kevin Butler to
kick a gamc-winnina field aoal. But
on third-and-2, Tomcuk dropped
back to pass, was rushed by Staff'ord
Mays and threw the ball right into
Ashley's arms. ·
After makina the first interception
of his five-year career, Ashley
sprinted to the left sideline and went
untouched for the longest inter-
ception return in Vikings history and
a 28-20 lead.
TomCZ1k came back with a I-yard
touchdown pass to Dennis Gentry
with 1·J5 remaining, but the Bcars1
on-side kick was smothered by
Mirinesota.
Although the Bean. 12-4, lost twice
to Minnesota, they won their fifth
straight NFC Central title. Despite
the game's lack of importance, Bean
coach Mike Ditka spent much of
Monday niaht prowling the sidelines.
growlina and scowling as Minnesota
built a Zl-0 lead.
Barry Switzer
$750.000andSI million ineachofthe
next two ycan. Those figures take
into account television contracts and
the payout given to bowl teams,
which the team splits with the
conft1ence. ---
The football program reportedly
earns 97 ecrcent of the athletic
departments revenue. Whe n Dun-
can asked how the school would
alleviate the loss of television and
bowl revenues, he said, "Raise ticket
prices," provided a spell of laughter
from reporters.
Swank said the players and recruits
the NCAA lists in its sanctions will
not be named, but he identified the
boosters as former state Sen. Norman
Lamb of Enid, Bill Lambert of
Lindsay and Jay Thomas of Cali-
fornia.
Switzer. by percentage the win-
ningest active colleae coach, said his
staff was surprised by the severity of
the penalty.
"I think most people were," Switz-
er said. "I think I was, our staff and
our players were."
The NCAA report said Switzer
supplemented the salaqes of assistant
coaches and staff and paid for rental
cars of student hosts from his check-
ing account.
"We have never faced probation,"
Switzer said of his 16 years at the
school." I have never asked any coach
to go out and oft'er an illegal induct-
ment to any player."
Lamb, who lost in the general
election, said he took Todd
Chambers, the brother of Han Lee
Dykes. to and from an Enid
taurant. .
pykes, .an All-~ wide •
c:eivtt th11 year. later siped wlda
Oklahoma State. ·•1 think I bouattt him a cbid•
u1ad sandwich for S 1.34," Lambllill
Monday. "I am an Oklahoma=
and the NCAA told m!J ~t du 11J11
tht sea,on. that's a viola~aon. ()b:
viOUll,J.J I didn't know n was I.
viOlatlon. 1 was ihocW."
Lamb said he was still in "IOOd
1tandin1" with the univenity and
athletic depenment.
"I am not the booster that Wll
binned for five years," he said.
Ron Watson, a former NCAA
employee who now is an ulistaat
athletic director for Oklahoma •
charae of compliance, said die
Sooners may have ~tten the mutt
a "p,ublic cry for stiffer penaltia.-u"twl · I came away from the com ..
hearing feeling very aood ... W8UOD
said. "To say 1 was not 1urprilld
(about the sanctions) would not be
trvlhfw . 1-fftiftk-thef~'MHMlhHetl-'1
outcry for stiffer penalties ...
Watson said he couldn't say if a
lawsuit Oklahoma filed ... inst the\.
NCAA in 1984hadanybeannaonthe,
investiption or the penalty.
''Possibly, I think maybe, it could•
have had something to do with it,"~
Watson said. "I would hope not.'' '
David Betst. the NCAA's dirtctor4 of enforcement, said the television
suit had nothing to do with the most
recent investigation.
The Sooners penahy is aimilar to'
the one handed down the University
of Houston on Friday. The NCAA,
had reported more than 200 viol-~
ations apinst the Coupn, while 20
were reponed against Oklahoma. "
"There arc more violations in the
Houston case," Berst said Monday.
"But one of the_ sian}ficant differences
is that the v1ofat1ons at Houston
involve people who arc not there. The
Oklahoma case does involve the,
people currently associated with the
staff, and it involves some serious-...
violations."
Duncan, meanwhile, said the
NCAA "wanted us, and they got us,"•
but he said he wasn't bitter at the
governing body.
"The fact we're here today isn't the
NCAA 's problem," Duncan said.
"It's our•problem. our fault. I'm not'
bitter and upset about the NCAA.I
They wanted us, and they aot us. '
"They way to not ~et wanted again•
is to follow the rules. ' l
Bears, Bengals 5-2::
parity everywhere ;
ams open as 25-1
longshots in race
for Super Bowl title
LAS VEGAS (AP) -After an NFL
season in which parity reigned, od-
dsmakers in this pmbling city were
in aarecment on only one thina: None
oftbe 10 NFL playoff teams is a clear
favorite to win the Super Bowl.
Althouah the Chie&IO Bears and
Cincinnati Bengals opened Monday
at area sports books with the best
odds of w1nnins, bookmakers said the
lack of a dominant club among the
playoff teams makes this perhaps the
tou&best year to handicap the games.
"This year, I think anybody can
beat anybody," Keith Glantz, sports
book manager at the Palace Station,
said. "Whoever peaks at the right
time is going to win the whole thina."
.. If you put them on a neutral field,
with the exception of Seattle, you
wouldn't find any of them more than
a three-point favorite," Jimmy Vac-
caro, Golden N uget spons book
manager, said.•
That promises to be good news for
the state's legal sports books, where
betting on the eight ptayoffpmesand
the Super Bowl is expected to break
all records.
"We ended up with perhaps the
best I 0 teams, betting-wise. that
could be in there," Vaccaro said.
"The action will be tremendous. It's
I bu11d1ng already."
Most sports books posted lines
Monday, offerina odds on the 10~
playoff teams winnina the Super'
Bowl, although some waited until 1 after Monday niaht's pme bet~n
the Chicago Bears and Minnesota1
Vikings to get a clearer picture on the'
playoffi. I
"Whoever looks the best in the,
Bears-Vikings game will probably be
our favorite," said Glantz, who did
not put up an early line.
At the Golden Nugct, the Bears
and Benpls opened at 5-2 co-
favorites, followed by San Francisco
and Buffalo at 7-2 and Minnesota and
Philadelphia at 6-1 .
Seattle and Cleveland were listed at
I S-l each, with Houston at 20-1 and
the Rams lastat 25-I. .
The odds were similar at the
Frontier Hotel's ~rts book, where
oddsmaker Bob GfCJOrka made the1 Bears S-2 favorites, with Cincinnati at
3-1 and San Francisco and Buffalo at
4-1 . Minnesota and Philadelphia are
8-1 , followed bl Seattle It 12-l,
Oeveland at I 5-and Houston and
the Rams at 20-1 .
"I think Buffalo w'ouJd have been
the favorite, but they lost the home.
field advantaae," Grqorka said.,
"Traditionally, the stronfC't d~
fensive teams (tO on to win.'
Grcgorka said he based his odds on
the matchups the teams have aoina
through the playoffs. notina that
Cincinnati only has to win twice at
home - where they are 8-0 this
season -to get to the Super Bowl.
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SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO -
Tom LewisofPepperdinewasnamed
the West Coaat Athletic Conference
player of the week on Monday.
The 6-foot-7 forward from Garden
Grove and a Mater Dei Hiah School
product, scored 68 points in three
pmes, includina a 27-point prne
apinst Northeastern in which he hit a
record 19 of 22 free throws in a 96-91
victory.
-
Proa81
Liberty Christian (S-2), but there are
few who are toina to feel easy about
meetina Newport Christian within lht scope of smaH schools.
Others?
Edison is 4-S and comina. One newcomer is 6-foot-i freshman Bran-
don Jessie, the 10n of the Rams' Ron
Jessie.
Jnaie'1 breakaway dunk in his first·
ever appearance for the vanity at the
Irvine World News Tournament tent
the Cha1Jm' coach, Jon Borchert.
into the Toyota look (airborne). and
his fluid moves and coun sense was
impresaive, indeed, 1Pin1t Dana
Hills Saturday.
Wbll'a 10 im~ve about 2 rdM>undl. a foul. l·for.3 from the field and 2 tumoven in a 6-minute run?
The ~st two weeks are the sum IOl&I of JCMie'1 athletic~. He bu ~played iaapmefl•y son
•tilllM&
. Coaa Mela ii 2-i, very mon and very lbia. ne Mut1Up lllO haw 1
..
coach (Dean Cooper) with 27 years of
exocrience and a lot of faith.
Woodbridae is 1-4. Those four
losses were to Fountain Valley,
Servite, Brea-Olinda and Saddlebllck,
so don't be fooled.
This week's menu is liaht. so
Christmas dinner will ao down easy.
lben it's the 16-team Cout
Christmas Classic at Estancia and tbe
16-team Orante Oauic at Chapman
Collqe.
Stay tuned .•.
Retirement
forColldan .
NEW YORK-Eamonn c.-.n.
the wortd record-holder i• tbe iildoor
mile and 1even-time winner of •
Wanamiccr Mile, anftOUllCld hil re-
timncnt from tnct CD111pebeian
Monday.
"I will not be~ ~live trKk any aon.r;· a . .., will not i. 111 _,...., or
oaldoOr net ia 1919. BA•••, If mytraitai111il1UdlllMt lc.m U•P••
OD a llil!ll·le~ ift ----1 wll r;.w a Idled* of._. rw ID
...
Almn•l, naft, puena c enged
Cer1a1 del llar 111'1a'• ~ llubtMll ..... led 1tJ CWll Tom DitdDe (rn. left) ... ,..,_ Lee, dMI a oollectloa of ahuaal,
.ea& aDi1 pueat. lD a fmadraWat neut
toDIOt at 7. laol....., facalty member9 LID6 Bart ......... JM•etO!a, Ad· ......... $2 ,_ adtdt8 ... $1 ,_ ....
dent.. Proc1111d8 ID to Cdll llrla propaa.
49ers have 3 straight IOsses
in NFL openers to recOllect
Loss to Rams was
meaningless, but
t h eir n ext one isn't ..
SAN FRANCISCO CAP)-A third
straiabt NFC West tjtJe caused liUJc
. celebratina among the San Francisco 49en, still stinaina from three straight
opeDJDl1&JDC playoff losses. But there were a few more jokes
than miaht be expected from a 22-
point wliippina after the Rams beat
them 38-16 Sundaf night. San fran-
citc0 played as if it had nothing to pin and it showed. "We're fortunate that they don't
racind division titles bued on your
lut pme," 49en center Randy Cross
said.
Coecb Bill Walsh eraised the Rams
for beatina his team in every phase of
the p me, then quipped, "I sound like
(M iCbld) Dukakis, don't I."
Al one writer noted, the 49ers
finally fl&ured a way to kn-0ek the
New York Giants out of the playoffs.
Their loss handed the final playoff
spot to the Rams at the Giants'
expense.
Two of San Francisco's playoff
IOlleS in the past three years were
administered by the Giants, by a
combined 66-6 margin, and its only
previous December loss in the past
BWWal9b
three seasons also was to New York.
The teams will meet again next
season in Candlestick Park, and there
could be a little extra emotion in light
of Giants quanerback Phil Simms'
embittered comment that the 49ers
"la_y down like dogs" Sunday night
The 49ers have more immediate
concerns, however. A loss of momen-
tum, faulty pass protection a~d
injuries at corncrback head the list as 'they preparefoullome playoff pme
Dec. 31 against Philadelphia or Jan. I
apinst Minnesota. dependina on
whether the Vikinp or Rams win
next Monday's NFC wild card pme.
.. We're not a great team,"' Walsh
said after the team's most lopsided
rqular-scason defeat in ei&bt years.
There was a definite lack of
pe,atness in the offensive line, whose
members griped last week about
beina shut out of the Pro Bowl for the
third strai&bt year. The nine sacks
allowed, including seven in the first
16 minutes, tied a 25-year-old team
record.
Earlier in the year, holdin& penal-
ties hurt the offense. The 49crs manaaed to clean up their act in that
department. finish1na one penalty
and 11 yards shy of the team records
for infractjons, but now their next
opponent has another weakness to
probe.
"It is so frustrating to stand out
there andiet beat like that," offensive
tackle Harris Barton said.
Has the 49ers' passing game. No. I
in the NFL last season but in the
middle of the pack this year, become
too predictable?
The Rams not only employed trick
"stunts" and "twists" on defense to
overwhelm the offensive line but held
Jerry Rice to two receptions and
Roger Craig to SI yards rushing.
Aikman appears destined
to become a Dallas Cow boy
IRVlNG, T.exas (AP) -Dallas
CC>Kb Tom Landry never has seen
UCLA quarterbeck Troy Aikman Dlay, but will personally scout him aunna practices for the Cotton Bowl
nnt week.
"rd like to see him at practice when
be comes to town," Landry said
Mondar_.
The Cowboys, by virtue of their
3-13 record this season, the sccond-
wont in franchise history, earned the
riabt to pick No. l in next year's NFL
ctnft, arid there arc strona indications
they will take Aikman.
Aikman. touted as one of the top
quartert.cb to come into the NFL
lince Denver's John Elwa)', will lead UCLA apinst Arkansas 1n the Cot-
ton Bowl Jan. 2. The Bruins will
prK!ic:e in Texas Stadium, home of
the Cowboys.
• ..It would be hard not to take him
(Aikman) if he is as aood as every-
body says." Landry said.
t.andry said if he ~icked Aikman be
wouldn't Nib him into action.
"Everybody wou ld want him to
,'1w p1ay too soon and I've see~ itf'tlain
i tome players," Landry sa1d. "He milbt be the kind who could be ready
10 IP the second. year." If Dallas drafted Aikman, Landry
Slid be would like sian him as early as
JM)l8.ble. . .. If we could have him by Apnl or
May1 that would be 1 big bonus,"
Lanory said.
Landry said the Cowboys wouldn't
trade the No. t pick.
.. I don't see us tradina." Landry
said. "Of course, you could build a
pretty fOod team off a 1rade."
Landry ~n preparing for the
1989 season after Sunday's 23-7 loss
to Philadelphia
If the Cowbo_ys sign Aikman. then
quarterbacks Danny White, Steve
Pellucr, Kevin Sweeney and Scott
Secules all won't be in training camp.
"We'll have to cut down on the
number of quarterbacks we bring to
camp," Landry said. He is expected to
carry only three quanerback:s on the
team next year.
Landry said he thought Pelluer still
had a briaht future, althouah he
suffered three interceptions apinst
the EaaJes.
"Only one interception was his
fault," Landry said ... Steve had a lot
of heat on him this year and be
learned how to handle it. We still
think be can be a top quarterback, but
it's aoina to take a lot of work."
Asked if he would fire any assistant
coaches, Landry said, "I'm not com-
mentina on an y coachina chaqes.
(Oub president) Tex (Schramm) and
t will talk at>s?ut il It's been a very
touch season. •
Landry said decidina on some of
his assistants' fate wouldn't be a
pleasant experience.
.. It never is when you have to
release somebody who has been
valuable to you," Landry said.
·"Sometimes you just have to do it in
the best interests of the team."
0...,....C...DAIL't'N.OTn.,.._,01111*• a_. •
............ __ ,,.,,,,_
. nc. Op Pro of~ .. competition, the oaty all-po 1nv11alJOnal event, wiU be held at June Moualaln on Jan. 6 and 8. Si~t.Y.-~ men and women wiU compete for
S l 0,000 1n. punt money and nallOnal 1elrvlsioft exposu~ 1n three evmu.. The pnt 11aJom will
be a t~llional alpine downhill eveot, the haJf.
ptpe. will feature a downhill ramp lllowina mu1mum freestyle potenual and an obaacle coune wall be the final event. •
W'l.aNr..._...,,,....,.
The Fowua1n Valley Communuy Services Division is ac:ccptlftl applications for us Winier Five-Man Baatetb911 Lape.
Fees are S2X> per a.earn and ecciepted on a first-come basis at the Fountain Valley Recreation
Cencer. The ie.aue will be divided into three divisions, pqyina on T~y. Thutlday or Sunday/Monday niahts. ~nnma Jan. 8, 1919. Roners Ale limitecho 12.players, 11111 years or older. For more information, pbone
839-8611.
l'ldt card •t Jlarrlott . Promoter Don Fraser will kick off ltis fif\h year at the helm of his monthly boXIJ\1 series at the Irvine Manion lioiel with a tte.vywciatn main event on Tuesday niltn. Jan. 31. Marie (Chill) Wills of (.os An,eles, wilh an
J 1-7 record, is pai~ with Donnie Coats of San
Jose, who bas an S-4 mar\. The IO.ro4\ndcr is ~xpected to produce the No. l coniender for the Cahfomia hea~iatu championship.
Wills oomes off a pair of knockout wins over !<very Rawls and Mike (The Giant) White in the
M.motl rina.. The 6-foot-2, 24'0-.pound Coats was a surprite one-round KO winner over Rocky Pcpeli Oct.
27 at the Marriott. _, Fraser also announced lhat the stanina time for the 1989 series would be advanced to 7 1un.
J'JICA Neb co.ell•, referee.
The Santa Ana-Tustin YMCA 1s seekina coaches and ttfen=es for lbc upcomina Youth Basketball Leaaue. For mott 1n(ormation. phone 5'2-3S 11.
'ltne. coane at occ UFitness for SO Ptus.." a physical education
courK for people over SO years of ate and desi&ned for those enaqed in low-to-moderate levers of actlVlly, is ocina offered at Oranae
Coast Colle&e. lnsltUC'lecl by Patricia Feruzi. the cla!St PE
lOIAD: mcct.s Monday. Wednesday and Fnday mornings from 7 to 7:SO a.m. 1n order 10
accomOO.te full-t ime workers. In ihe course's first Stmcs1er last fall. studcn1saies 4610 86 took
pan.
Topics covered in the class arc SU'C$$ and wea&ht ~1Kt1on, nuinuon and acina. S1udents will learn the difference between
proper and impro~r 1rainina 1echniques. how to implement a cond1uon1na proaram, under-standing the role of exercise and fitness.. and how
to 1merove one's diet for health and weight loss. Spnns rcgisuauon 1s under way.' The office is open Monday throuah Thursday from 8 a.m. to
7 p.m .. and Fridays From 8 a.m. to S p.m.
For more information or an appointment. phone 432-S678.
._..., llldoor nu
TheSunkist Invitational Indoor Track meet is ICbedWed for Jan. 20 at the Los Aftldet Spans
Arena.
The nation's second oldeJt indoor invita-
tiou.I. I.be meet will featutt a number of otympic aold medalisll u well u a full propam of
competition for the best hip tchool un in
c.lifonlia and.Other stat.es.
The bilb ~ evenis are scbedWed IO besia at 4:30 p.m. and the invitational at 7 p.m.
Reserved tickets are available Uiroup the be>• office by callinc (213) 471-2164, or tbrouab
ticatron and tichtmasier. Tidtet prica 8l'C S7. Sl2.X>and Sii.
1n1ae .. ....u--. .... ..-.
The Irvine Bueball ~ the i;;;. city-hued youth bueball propam in Calib'Dia, is .Wna corporations for donations for~ 1919 seuon..
The tBA sctVes more tbaa 2,000 Irvine fiLmilies. but receiv~ po dim:t support from the city. 1be non-profit orian.ization is Nn entirdy
by volunteers, and despite revenues from
resist.ration, ~venisina ala. spon_,,..p and
snaclt bar operations, will meet &.cal shon&lls this year. With a lat'ltf' number of iqjstrations this year,
un1fonn ana equipment OOll Ulcnwes and a ~to live .. ICbolanhip-teParatiom '°needy
YC>Ulll*'I do could "°' cidae.nrile play, die IBA is &stint i>r tbe betp of the~ leCtOf. For more 1nbmation, pllOllC 154-1414.
~~·£-c~:~ 1 T1ie 1919 BIC'yde Rally, a · event. will beheld Jan. 8, st.arti .. at the Promenade in Loa&
Beach and endi .. at the city's Con\lenUott Center.
Prior to the raUy. an avenee time for
completi .. the c:oune will be computed and
riden will try to meet this a~ time. The rally is bci .. hetd in coQjunction with the
Wortd !Eair. BOS Expo. the ""1d's larJCSt annual · tndc show, will be open to
consumers oroneday.Jan.8.
Rqistration and cbed-1n for tbe rally belins at 6 a.m. Jan. 8. Riders will be te11t off in poup1 of2S or D IW\lllf at 7 a.m. Lt is expected that
all ndm will complete the counC by I 0:30 Lm.. in ume b the Wortd ()de Fair.
Rcaistration fee is S 12 and include$ ~
entrance IO the Wortd Cycle Fair~ value).
Jlqistratioa forms and rally in tioD 11
av11lable at health clubland bic:yck stora, Of
can be obcained by phofti .. (213) JOU790.
Ticket prices up, profits up,
but Cards-finish olit of tb.e $
PHOENIX (AP)-Gene Stallings'·
first season in Phoenix ended like his
first one in St Louis bcpn -with
five straight losses. If the Cardinals
arc ever going to be contenders, they
must do some major rebuilding. their
COICb says. ••1t all adds up to an uncomfonable
off-season," Stallings said af\er Sun-
day's 26-1 7 loss to the Green Bay
Packers. "We're better than 1 7-9
team. We have to evaluate thinas to
see if we are going in the right
directfon."
The Cardinals. who moved here
from St. Louis last March. appeared
headed for the playoffs for the first
time since t982Just a month aao.
They be.at the New York Giants
24-17 here on Nov. 13 for their third
straight victory and pined a share of
first place in the NFC East with a 7-4
record.
Then came lcey injuries. an aya-
lanchc of penalties and turnovers and
the five straight defeats to mark the
Cardinals' fourth consecutive loslna
season and thud in a row under
Stallings.
"It's a horrible muon. Ablolutely
horrible," said Pro Bowl offensive
taclcJe Luis Sharpe. ..It's like a
nightmare. We blew it There's no
question about that. It was the same
thin, the last five weeks-penalties,
fumble$. mistakes."
Durina the five-pme skid,
Phoenix fumbled 17 umes, had 19
passes intercepted and committed 39
penalties for 270 yards.
"Over the last five weeks. every-
thing went wrona,:' veteran quar-
terback Neil Loma" said. "This is
very embamssina. I feel sorry for the
city of Phoenix. Thc people have
supponed us, and we come out and
play like this. I juit want to dig a hole
and hide."
The Cardinals. with the h~est
averaac ticket price in the NFL at $38
sull had a club-record 472,937 totai
attendance for their ciabt home
games.
But a season-low crowd of 44,.S86 at
72, 17.S-seat S\tn Devil Stad1&tm
watched Sunday's loss to the Pickers,
who entered lbe pme with a l-12
record yet held Phoenix's third-
ranked o&nte score&ess in the leCOOd
hal(
.. Yuk, .. said Cardinals owacr BiU
Bidwill when asked his opinioa oftbe
pme ... It toots like some of tbem
might be playi._ out their ca...-.."
Phoenix bu two finl-rouad dnft
picks in April, and Stallinp l9id he'd
Ii lee to see bis team either tncle for or
draft middle linebacken._ cor-
ncrt.cb, defensive and oflmive linemen.
The Cardinals intetcepled 16 puses this teat0n -only one by a
h nebecker -and allowed 60 MCtl
for '4 I I yards.
"Our needs arc all over," ~
man&Jer Larry Wilson said. .. Tiie
draft 1sonlyoneavenue. we·re.-.
to be very active in all •~ to improve the tam ....
Phoeni" enten the 1989 -.on
with tbc NFL's ~ lolilll llreak.
The franch11e bun' Ioli u .,., pmcs Sll''K:e 1978.
Wilson said if the CW'ftft1 Cardinals
don't know bow to win, "we11 ftDcl
the people that do ...
II ILL llW 'II s
I I
Or1ng9COMI OAtLY PILOT/ ru.day, Oeoembet 20, 1N8
Born again Bengals 'vindicated'
CINCINNATI (AP) -They were booed.
They were disowned. They were the 1987
Cincinnati Benpls. 1
They were known for mismanagina the clock,
blowina fourth.quarter leads and for a feuding
coach. Sam Wyche. One ~r ll~r. the Benpls are on top of the
AFC playoff picture, a team that went from a 4-11
recorcl to 12-4 with essentially the same players and
coaching staff. "lt ajves us an air of vindicatjon, I guess ...
quarterback Boomer Esiason said.
"It.really i.uweet especially.aftulast y.ear. All
of the things that happened last year were aga inst us. It made it tougfl to walk around (in public) last
year."
"We bad our t.cks up apinst the wall last rear •. no~jUS! in .the Jocker roo~ but !n .the streets of the clly, satd linebacker Reu>c Williams, who is
also a city councilman. ''The turnaround i11pccial,
not just for the team but with the fanL ••
The Benp.ls played with much more con-
fidence this sea.On, one main reason for the turnaround. They simplified some of their schemes. They learned from their mistakes. And they got the breaks.
A remarkable turnaround in a 24-hour si-n
during the weekend demonstrated the difference in the-Dentals' fate this1'Qr. - -
They went into the final two .aames of the season with a two-pme lea<) over Houston in the
AFC Central: But they played their worst aame of
the season and loll 41-6 on Dec. 11 at t<OUllOI!.
wutina an opportunity IO clinch the division aide.
Saturday,~ let die Wuhi~on Redskiaa
-a team ehminaied 6-Dlayotr concentioa -control the ball for neatly 43 minutc1 ud march
into position to win the pmc. But Wubi~'• Chip LohmiUer hit the u~t on a tio-breakina
29-yard field pl try in the wanina. leCODdl or
reaulation. then the Benpls .,. a lieJd ... in
overtime for a 2~ 17 victory thal tumect their &loom into celebr1tion.
Lohmiller's narrow miu wu a bia bleaina.
.. llold (Redskins cmch) Joe Oibbs bef'ornhe pme that this is the most important pme I have ever coeched, not just becaute this pme wu
apinst the Super Bowl champions." Wyche said.
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Seahawks _ready
for chilly Cincy
It's the fourth trip to
playoffs tn six years
for Knox and Seattle
SEA TfLE (AP) l.... Coach Chuck
Knox is confident the Seattle Sea-
hawks will heat up in chilly Cincin-
nati. "We will handle the cold better this time than when we went to New
En&fand, •• Knox said, referrina to a
loss apinst the Patriots in the cold and wind of Foxboro, Mass., two
weeksaao. The Seahawks, 9-7, won the AFC
West chamJ)ionship for the fint time
in their I 3-ycar history Suhday,
beating the Raiden 43-37 at Los Af\ICICS. They will play at Cincinnati, 12__.., and the _..FC Centf'll winner,
either Dec. 31 or Jan. 1.
It will be the Scahawks' second
straiaht trip to the playoffs and fourth
in six years, all under Knox.
The Seahawks won their final two
regular-season aames with im-
pressive offensive performances after
beina held to two first downs and 65
yards in a 13-7 loss in friaid con·
ditions in New EnJland Dec. 4. ·
"Now that we've sot that done
(winning the title). we want to go on
from here," Knox said. In the Raiden' pme the Sea-
bawks' top runnins back, Curt Warn· er, suffered a sprafoed ankle in the
final quarter. His status for the
Cincinnati pme is uncertain.
Warner was held to 21 yards on I 0
carries as Seattle relied strongly on the
passina of Dave Krieg. Fullback John
L Williams cauaht seven passes for
180 yards, includins a 75-yard touch-
down on a screen pass. If Warner can•t play at Cincinnati, rookie Kevin Harmon probably will
replace him.
Warner missed. the Seahawks'
23-20 overtime loss in the AFC wild
card pme at Houston last season because of an ankle sprain. · ·
He has rushed for more than 1,000 yards in four of his six NFL scasoos. He led the Scahawks with I ,02S yards
this season. .However, unlike last season when
they had only one week to act healthy
for the playoffs, the Seahawks now
will have two weeks.
For Knox, the Seahawks' reaular-
season finish was especially arat-
ifyina. In 16 seasons as a head coach
in the NFL, he has taken teams to the
pla_yoffs 11 times.
The Seahawks won their division
this season althou&h they lost Kriq for seven weeks because of a separ-
ated shoulder. When Kriea was out.
rookie Kelly Stouffer started six
pm es.
Although Knox has three years
rcmainin_a on his contract after this
season, for .a reported total of $2. 5 million. there w11 speculation .that
new Seahawks' owner Ken Behring-
wanted to replace him.
However, Behring gave Knox and
Mike McCormack, the team ·s presi-
dent and aeneral manager, a strong
endorsement. . "Chuck is our coach for three more ycan," Behring was quoted as saying
after the Raiden' aame. He also said McCormack's job was secure. "We're
winnina." he said. "You don't change
a winner."
Realities settle In
for New England
Patriots had to see
it all on television
before it was final
.. I'm not really think.ins about that
now," the soft-spoken Stephens said
'Sunday, anc:tually sheddina his reti-cent mood. "Numben are fine, but we didn•t make tbe playoffs.
··1 was lookina forward to the playoffs more than anythina else."
' It was a season of unmet cxpecta-
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP)-It was a t.ions for the lint-round draft choice
sad, stran1C sensation. John Step-from Northwestern (la.) State. He
hens, who had run so far, suddenly expected to be a t.ckup. He expected
had nowhere to ao. to make the playoffs. And be expected ••0ec>rtc, •• he shouted across the otbets to tel the runnina back spou in
New E~nd locker room to the the Pro Bowl.
team '1 equipment manqer, .. can I tet But Stephens will unpeck his shoes a box'r' so that on Jan. 29 he can iojn his idol,
The carton was delivered. and the Eric Dickerson, in the AFC• 1tartin1
rookie, whOK strona 9 were the Mc:kfield at the Pro Bowl pme in
drivina force of the Patnots' offense, Honolulu. That doeln•t mean as
went beclc to work. The footbaJJ lhoes much u the playoffs, but Stephens
that had tr1veled yard after yard had a~tes bcin& cbolen by bis peers. become so much clutter to be cleared. Every pme r play, I try to wtn and
One by one, be lifted tbe red and be a s-rt oT," he uid. ··rm sure 1i1 ao
white sil.e 121 from bi• locker and out Ind play hard. ru play u hard as ~ them neatly into tbe plain I pouibf_ycan. Cardboard container. ..But rm the onJy IUY other than
.. It feels difticmlt rilbt now to be (JinebKker) Andre Tippett on this ~DI tbele lboel in a boa and not team~ to play in tliat ~·"
reedy for nest week's pme •• StePbem didn't feel like reflectina
laid. "It feels very cslr. onbil.uonorpicti111onebiahliabt .. But wbn Mked" what be blld Jcaried
Ba._ lbe Patriots ..... week•• 11 a rookie, he ~t briefly dlen
..-Ibey woa'I be bl tlUI week's amwered with tbc weekend'• ftus-AR:· wild'" card ~· ney IOll at tradon fmh in his mind. Dellwr 21-10 s.-.....-wbea 1 win .. Like the COlcbel •Y. •you live
..ad .. ve Ii.wen -~:=yotr ud .JOU learn; " be llid. ..I'm berda. 11leY ICill could have ten in =~ Do it younelf wl don't if Cleu'1at ud I · ii bocll on other teams to do il for loll_.,, INt boda won. ~ You have to be ClC'"li•• If ~ eould hmdly be blamed you're not. odler team1 are ud dac>lt
b ._.Y'• le-. are tbe team• that are eotlll IO make He ,,.... for 130 ~ bis tbe Dla)'Oftl r:::t..~'r_,.,..~ :l.ia.:..":t in :~"conlittenL We"rt not = ..... ~ ...... ·---~to oely toudldowa. He ftn. leive. He u.ef I bpttll ~ ll09th-m willt 1,161,_. die ~die canae _, ..-. w. =::r~ --~·ar::.=1:;1 ..... tlllNfL ............ aalol'lll oidk•~ ~=::.w~~ ~~=.:=. ..... a .. two.... 297.,... ~JliHrf9Cs' .... ........... ..... .... ..... ..,.., ..... -..... .. ~ -::r+ .. ,_. -............. , ................... ., ..... bid. w' ......... ..
. .
Lf IJ,..' :·1 Rr 1, t'
• )'~-.
NU ITANllllH
...... CUii MCI hCllc ....... w L ~. Ga ,La.., 16 1 ·"' -S.ltte 12 ' .511 3
Portland 13 10 .56S 3
Phoenix 1l 10 .S2• 4
Golden Slate ' n .Of 6 ~ I IS .3" I
Sacramento s IS .250 91/;i
MldWest~
Oelet-, ... , .aT"-
Denver 1S I .652
Hou11on 14 9 .609 I
Utafl 13 10 .565 2 f San Antonio 6 IS .216 I
Ml•ml I 19 .050 121h
I
IASTIRN CONPIRtNCE
AtlMlk DMllen w L ltct. GB
New York " 7 .696
Phllede4otlla 14 10 .513 2th
Bolton 12 1l .522 4
NewJerMY 10 15 .400 7
Ctlarloltt 6 IS .216 9
W•lhlntton 6 IS .216 9
Central DMUtn
Cltv ... nd 15 s .750 'h
Detroit 17 6 .739
Atlanta IS 9 .625 2'h etttcaoo 12 10 ',56 41h
Mllw•ukff 11 10 .524 s
lndl•na s 17 .227 ll'h
MIMIY'I kerM No Olmft Klledultd
T ........ 1Gamn
L.Men at c111caeo. s o.m. Cll9Mrl 11 Golden Stele, 7:30 p,m.
Indiana 11 New York, 4:30 o.m. o ... , et Piii~•. 4:30 o.m.
Selltle al Allanll, 4!30 OJTI.
u1e11 11 Cltvet.nct. •:30 o.m.
Miami et Detroit, 4.:30 o,J\"I, Cllarlollt at Mltwlull", S:JO p,m.
Sacramento 11 HouSIOn, S:30 o.m.
Portland 11 Otllvtr, 6:30 o.m. Sen Antonio 11 Pl'loenlx, 6:30 o.m.
C ..... Keret
W•ST Denver 12, Wnltrn St .. Coto. 11
E. Montella '°· Chico SI. '3
ldlllO "· Wiiiamette S2 N. Coiorldo 14, Doane 11
Hew .Mexico SI. 13, Min . V•llev SI. " Oregon St. 7', GonzlN SI
St, MMY'I, Cal. 76. E. Wulllngton 56 Wetler St. 7S, U11ll 'St. 7'
IOUTHW•ST
Ark.·Lllllt ltocil "· <>-ol• SOutllern 1'
Lamar ''· TIXH A&.M 67 Oklllloml SI. 109, Mo.·K1n11s Cllv .,.
TIXH 117, S. Utah 71
Teu1 Cllrl\tlan 6', N Ariz-SO TtH\ TICll IS, Porll•ncl 62
TexH·San Antonio •6S, Houston 8aotbl
Raiders
clean out,
.go home
Shanahan holds
one-on-one visits
_ with hi~ players
El SEGUNOO (AP) -The Los
Angeles Raiders' cleaned out their
lockers. packed up belon1ings and
lined up for one-on-one meetings
with Coach Mike Shanahan Monday.
a day after their NFL season came to
an end.
After the 43-37 loss to Seattle,
Sunday, Shanahan scheduled the
end-of-season meetings, which were
to be followed by meetings with his
coaches and staff.
"We talk about their plans for the
off-season, if they're going back
home, and what we expect from them
in relation to weight, positions. and
what they need to do to improve."
Shanahan said.
"We go into a synopsis of the year.
and what they feel arc positives ~nd
• ~tive~. and what we .need to
improve.\
As for speculation that the meet·
ings ,with assistant coaches would
lead to some changes, Shanahan
would only say, "there's always
speculation."
The Raiders finished the season
with a 7-9 record, a two-win improve-
ment o ver the Raiders of the previous
year, a team coached by Tom Flores.
But they finished third in the AFC
West dcsp•tc havin& a chance of
winnina the division with a victory
over the Seahawks. Shanahan talked about the way his
rookie coaching year has goric.
"People ask what kind of year it's
been, and obviously it's been a tou~h
year," he said. "Anytime you re
below .SOO, or at .500 in this
profession. if you're ha ving a good
year, then you won't be in the
profession very long.
"The season is ovc~ but as I've told
the players. the onscason bqjns
today."
OILERS .••
I hom81
• KCond 9uancr. surrcndenn& it af\cr
last hokhna a 14-13 advantqe.
Dylan Ria<ton led Mater Dei's
sconnacolumnwith 18points -14
of those comina in the final period.
Mater Dei entenains South Lake
Tahoe in a 7:30 contest tonight.
In 1 consolation semifinals pme at
the San Oiquito Tournament in San
Oiqo: Su ~la. U, N~ Hart.er
S7: The Slilors (4-4) won from the
fteld, out1eorint the host San
Oiquito Mustanp 32-20. but lost the
war at the line. where they wctt
outscored. 19-3.
A l-for-12 dry ~II in the second
quanrr from the field got Harbor in
uouble in the first half. and San
Diqu1to never trailed apin.
althOuah the Tars cut the mtl"lln to
one w1ih a minu&e left and had the ti.II
btfM sucannblnt. . Scott Oray and Chns Ltt led
Newpon tc0f1na with 12 e«h.
Harbor ftnilkd out contolation
en1on todly 111inst Sin Marco1.
which 1s C'OICl.ed by fonn~r H••· .~1, iltllOft 8eKh Hiah standout Rico
Tfiompt0n.
MIDWHT
Clnc111nelf .,, lttflutle·COOkmen 4l
cr-..iten "· Merquette n e ,..... n. >eev•. OlllO 10
!.,,.,,at 11. ClllcHO 67
lllinolt f1. ~'°""' .. KeMM It 7t, Allton 6t
Olllo u "· Y-.1-n St M Purdue 71, W1'111ta SI '1
SOUTH
AlaOeme IOl. Soutlltrn U. 17
Austin ll'en '4, HenderMfl SI 7' aut11r 66, E KlftlutkY Sf
Florlcle l~.!t Mleml, Fie. 11
Geor ... ""· NC ·AWYMll 65 J-MaOllOn ... Redtotd 65 l\Mflflall 122, Cllannton, W.Va. M
NIGH SCHOOL IOVS ....., Del ......... . ,_, .... .,
1WMM-.uto1tww-.r: M1W Del
OLGMl<k
ILGtlkll
Luclllele COUdl
Mallca ~
Mftfflt
T"lc
........ .. ......
2 I I S tovte 4 3 3 12
1 4 4 II l(ll'ICfl 4 0 2 I
lllt SI-32J I
I I 4 4 ltieOon 5 6 l II 221 6QulM 121 ,
I 0 0 2 AnOrn 0 I 0 I
102 2Morrt\ 2 01 4
O O Io MnevHMvl,g 1 2 GretfM 0 'O 2 0
Nolen 1002
8o¥d I 2 0 4 lvev I o O 2
Totalt 17 11 15 41 TOll 1$ 2~ 16 1' 65 sar. 11'1 OUlftw1
Merrimac 10 11 10 17--
Mater Del ' 11 ll 2S-.S
N c. Cllettott• 71, coa.... CarollN "
NW Loul.i-M, SE loul1llf\a ... Slettofl 17. Samford 61
Tn,·Cllallanooea .,,, McNeffe St 76
Vendlfllill 7', MlJl'tlY SI. 57 J·llOilat JHIL Maccamao-e, ~~ t,
-Couch f. Mater Dei-ltleOon 2. toylt I Vlrellll• 16, Jacksonville 11 DST
OvouHM IO, Pitr.oure" 76 TOUtlNAMSNTS
MetUleOIHk ""' .... )i1111all IO, lnd1ane SI '1
C ..... ToP 20
·~ "'~ I Dllae ( .. ) 6-0 12" I
2. Mlc11'1Mn Ill t·O 1235 2
3. svrecu11 l1l 10-0 I 167 3
'-low1 (I) l·O ICMO ' s. Illinois 7·0 1003 ' 6. Geor111own (6) 6·0 991 S
7. Oklallotna 6· I ... 7
I. Norttl CerO!lne (I) t· I '35 I
t. ArizON 4· 1 no . 9 10, Mluourl 9-2 m 10
11. FIOrlda Sl1le 6·0 ~ 12
12. Ofllo Stilt 6· I 564 1'
LB WIMl'I 71, H"""""'9n ... di St , __ .....,.,
NI nnn•1 hedl LMlt leedl WIMll . ........ .. ...... T~ 3 0 5 7 On llletl I 0 S 2
l(alllf' I 4 2 6 ~ 0 0 I 0
KlllW\kl s 2 2 IS Grlm v 2 0 ' 5 Lucu s I ' .. Herllel'I 3 2 I I
P111nll O O 3 O Levine 3 5 ' 11 Stewert o O 3 O De1non 3 6 3012
Tostado 2 3 I 1 S11ward S 2 2 16
Harrloan 3 0 I 6 Willon 1 0 I 2 Smith 6 I 1 IS Tot~ WTI 71 S9 Tolli$ ,, 16 22 71
kw• by OUlrten
Huntington Beech 10 17 II 21-59
Long Beach Wilson 11 19 I' 21-11
...... 61, ..... Gr .....
, ..... ._..T__,...l ·--..... .,....
•
.. " .... 1 3 I 17
0 0 s 0 0 0 2 0
2 I 2 5 •• 2 20
2 I l S 1 2 l ••
0 0 s
.. .....
Ll Flor" J I J 6 Funes 0 0 I 0 COMtant I 0 I 2
Sw111aoer I 1 > l Tracv 4 4 2 n 8r.ntrw O O 1 o
P-tn 0020 8uuev 11 23
Ls Flor" J 0 l 6 Klie\s l 0 0 6
kn#ender 0 2 I 2
26 II 23 6.;i TotalS 16 I 11 40
Scere by Ou.-n Ellancia 8olM Granat 13 1J 21 1..-.l 6 IS I 11-.0
l·OO<nl tolls None Tec"nlc:11, Hone _
Newtitrt Ha!'Mr 5', AMM!m 31
(lelMGflfldeT~l
~ .......... .....
Montz
Ltmlltr
Barber
HOIM
Wrlent
DeSllve To1111
.... .,.,. .... .,..
2 1 o s G em 10 2 • n • 1 2 IS lzumlt1 9 I • 2?
3 J 0 9 Gregg 2 0 2 ' 3036Somen 01 '1
l O o 2 Kooickl 2 o I '
0 I I I 8-rrv 2 0 0 • 13 12 6 ll Totlls 1S • lO SI
Sc-by Ou.-n An1rieim 12 1 10 9-3'
Nt woort HarOor ·16 17 12 13-SI
3·oolnt 901!s N~iem 1. l1um111 3
T tclln.ca•s NOllt.
13. Nevada Las VtHs· 3·2 S29 ll I•. Loulivllle S-2 ... IS
3·POlnl goals· HB-TllOmo\Gn I, ICllewslll l
LB Wibon-Grlgsov I, Steward ( Sm1111 2 Ttchnlcalt__DeoJ>t 11._l WJIJQnl ____ _
815lletball KhMules
COLLIGI MIN ,...., -
IS. Seton Hell 9·0 399 17
16 Gl«ol• T Kii '. I 2n II 17. N«lh Carolina Stele 2· I 197 II
II. South Caroline S·O 123 1'. TennesSff ,.1 IOS 16
20 K111i.as 7· I 70 °''"" rtce•vi119 vOIH Wldllll Sl•tt '3;
Gaorol• 52, COllnecllcul SO; Stenford "· Nor111
Carolfn• C11er1ot1e 33; 8111 S1111 24; Noire Dame 11, UCLA 11, Vhlenov1 10; SOutllefn
MetllOdlsl I, WHI Vlf'olnla I, UC·Sanll
Barbati 7; Memc>ttls Slelt 7, MIChlN n S111t 7,
Purdue 6; lndl1111 5; SI. Marv's, Calif S; Kans.as Stet• 4, Texes·EI Peso 4, Ark.-Llllle Rock 3,
ArklnYI Stitt 3, Calltornl1 3, Ci.tnson 3,
Pillr.t>ur9" 3; ·HOlv Crou 2, Le Salle 1, St. John's 1; Tn11 I; vanderblll 1
COMMUNfTY COLLeGE MEN
HMCKll 74, Onnee CtHt 67
(LA V...., T---.tl .._.. cw-ca.11 ....... .. ....
Colon S • 3 16 Crane 1 O 2 15
Lanauze I O 1 2 SOffd · 4 5 S 13
Giiien 1 ' ' 19 Jonnson 4 o 2 12 Buller 6 S S 17 SC:lllinei 1 6 4 20
Jonn ' o 3 1 Hanlon 2 1 4 5 Skinner 1 O I 2 OeS1tf1no I 0 2 2
Webb O O 2 o love 0 0 I O Brandl I 0 I 2 (.,eig 0 0 I -ii
Mason 2 1 0 5
Jetter son I 0 0 3 Totals ,. 14 20 7• TOlllS> 2S 12 20 67"
H1H1ime; H1ncodt, 35·30. •
3·1X>ln1 ooals: Hanc:oclt~olon 2, GO~n 1.
Jeffer1on 1. OCC-Jot1n1on •. Crane 1.
San Dletlult9 41, NewPOrt Harber 37
CSM °'"'*9 T~l
~ HatW Seti °'"'*9
L" Grav
Nouven
Parlin
Martinez Freeman
De Bulk
TolllS
........ .. ..... 5 · 2 3 12 ~lewicz 3 I 2 1
6 0 I 12 FltmilMI 0 2 I 2
2 1 ·t 6 DeL1Pen1 '2 10 '°') 15 I o· s 2 Kn1ut1 0 I 0 1
20lSSMeh 2206
0030Houk 1022
O O 3 o Olmstead 2 l 2 I 16 3 20 37 Totals 10 19 10 ,,
Seer• by OUertlr\
Newoorl Hert>or 9 3 ' 16-37 Sin 0"9Ulto ·· 9 12 1 ll-41
3·oolnl ooals. N1woor1-Nouv1n I. Martinez 1. San Dleoullc>-Oe L• Pene I, OlmSIU d 1
HtGH SCHOOL GIRLS
Heakbbur9 50, l'tunt.ln V ... V 33
CIMel a.rtllrl T_.__,.)
F__.. V..., HI...._ flftllf1" .... .,.,.
LmbriOMI'
~=a Workman
Fox
Berbaro
81r10w Kurktndlll
1 • o 6 Movnlllln 2 0 S ' 5 2 • 12 Tenke<sle'f 0 0 I 0 2 2 I 6 Cnartes s 2 I 12
O ' 2 4 L.Bebber 2 0 S ' 200 •.C Bebber 4 3311 O I I I BlrdSIH 0 2 0 2
OOSO Miiier 1012
O O I O MaclCttn 6 I 4 ll Dormlnt I 0 0 2
To111s 10 13 1' 33 Totals 21 I 20 SO
Sc-by ~ Fountein Vetlev 12 6 I 6-33
H .. ldsburo • 19 S 14 12-50
J·ooinl OOlls: None.
I
Soring Aroor (Mich ) 11 Soul11trn California
COl!e9e, 7.30. ..... .,
UCI 11 Virginie, 4:30.
COMMUNITY COLLIGI MIN T ........ Orange Coast 11 LA V1111Y Tournament w.-..v 0<111111 Coast 11 LA V111tv Tournament
HIGH SCHOOL llOYS T ........ SaddleOlck al D1n1 Hllll, 7:30; Sanll An.a
11 Westminste<, 7:30, South L.llle T1110e> 11 Malt< Del,7.30. Lt9Ulll H1Us 11 Un•versitv, 7.30 ........
Eoison vs. Caolstrano V1ftey 11 Sljkl1111>1e1t
College, 7 .30. Irvine at K1mtlllmtlll (Hotlolulu) TOUl'namenl <vs Rldforo, l'.JO P m.l
~ Coste Mesa 11 Coron• del Mar. 7.30, Wood· brldOI II E sl111Cla. 7.30, Marina 11 M1lllk111,
7·30. Irvine el K1met1amen1 (Honolulu) Tour·
namenl fridl'( I
Lakewood 11 Edilon, 1 30.
HIGH SCHOOL ~U T ........ Founte n Vallev 11 Santa lltrt>ara Tour·.
namen1. Es11nc11, Newoor1 HarOor 11 8ol'8
Grande Tournament, Woodtlr100t, Hun11119ton a..cto. Ocean View, Marine , Mater Del el
Cypress Tournament.~ . WedllndlY
Founteln Va ~ 11 Slnte 8arblr1 TOW'· 111men1:-0 Es11nc11, Newoor1 H1roor 11 8ol11
Grande Tournament, WOC>Ot>rldllt, Hunt11191on
Beach, Ocean View, .M11lna, Maler Del II
Cvoreu Tournament
Or.nge Coeet DAILY PllOTIT~, Oeoember 20, 1111 •
•L
WALIS CONl'l••NCI hlt'IQ DMlitll w LT lttl GP GA
P ittU>uroh 19 11 2 40 lS2 136
NY R•neen 17 •3 4 31 133 126
Phlladtlohla 17 17 2 36 1'2 124
Walhlneton 16 14 4 36 116 116
New Jenev 13 15 s 31 114 131
NY ~ t-tt 1 " J7
Adami DMMttl
MontrH I 21 10 6 " 143 114
Bos1on 13 13 9 '3s 111 104
Hanford 13 17 2 21 113 111
Buttaro 12 17 4 21 114 139
Quebec 12 20 3 27 123 157
CAMl'SELLCONl'ERENCE Ntrrls DM5'tft •
W L T lttl GP GA
Detroit
SI. Louis
Toron10
M innesota
Chicago
Caloarv
Kines
Edmonlon
Wlnnli:>eQ
Va ncouv.,-
17 11 4 31 133 123
13 14 5 31 106 106
12 20 2 26 lOI 1•9
10 17 6 26 100 123
I 21 ~ 20 121 161
Smythe' DMlitft
23 S S Sl 143 16
21 12 1 43 171 137
19 12 --'-42 166 Jl9
13 12 5 31 126 130
13 17 5 31 117 115
MIMIY's k«ft
Montreal 2, Hartford I
E0""°'1ton S. B~ S. lie New York Raneers J, W1.lh"'9ton 1
Toronto •. St Louis 3
Vancouver s. Mlnnnot1 I
T ......... s .......
C11Nrv a t KINI. 7.35 o.m.
NY I'*""'' 11 Pltt\Oufgll, O S om St Louil 11 Detroit, 4:3S P m. ......... c.-
Mlnnnot• at K--. 7:JS o m
Boston •I Hlnfofd, •:lS o.m Buff•IO 11 New York ltanoers, "35 om.
Pit1'°"'8"1 el Toronto, 4:3S o.m.
Quel)tc 11 MonlrHI, 4:3S om
Htw Jerst'f 11 WiMi"9, S,JS o.m
WH lllllOIOfl 11 Cllica90. S-.3S o m.
Vancouver 11 EclmOl'lton. 6:3S om.
SOCCIR
""" KMel ""' SM VALLEY TOUltNAMSNT
, ..... Vlllft l, C...... r-... 0 FV s<or1110. Coot 1
Alillln 1, .. __... Vlllft 0
x·S.n Frnaco
v·RM'll
New Or~ans
All•nla
x·Chleago ·Mlnrll50..--Tr-
T 1 m pa Bav 5 11
Dtlroll • 12
Green Bev 4 12
EHt
0
0
0
0
ftd. ltP PA
62S 36t 2'•
.62S 417 293
,62S 312 213
.313 244 31S
.750 312 21S .wr• m-
.313 261 350
.250 220 313
250 240 31S
JC·Pnll•delpnia
N.Y. Giants
Wllhino ton
Phoenix
Dallas
10 ' 0 .625 379 319
10 6 0 .625 3S9 304
7 9 0 ... J,4S 3'7
7 9 0 ... 3"399
3 13 0 .1• 26S 311
ArneriQft C.• f'ICl9
x·Sea trle Oenv.,-
Raiden
Sin Diego
Ka n'8S Citv
w .. ,
W L · T
9 7 0 I I 0
7 9 0
6 10 0
4 11 1
C...al
Pct. ltt' ltA
.56;) 339 329
.500 'J27 M2
.431 375 369
.37S 131 332
.211 254 320
..x·CuioMau...
y·Clevela nd
v·Houston
Ptllsburvn
0 .... ,~ ..... "'329
10 6 0 .625 304 289
10 6 0 .625 •24 365 s 11 0 .313 33' •21
EHi
x·Buffato 12 4 o
lndiana POlis 9 7 0
New England 9 7 0
N. Y. Jets I 7 I
M iam i 6 10 O
.750 m 231
.563 354 315
.563 250 284
S31 372 354
.375 319 380
x·clinchec:I d ivision title
v·cllnched wlld ca rd berth
MeMIV's Sare M"nnHOll 21, Cll>CIOO 27
NFL ....... 5CNdUle
SMllNIY's ~ ." .... ~ Houston II Cleveland 10-.30 a m.
MIMil'#, Dec. 26 NPCWM~ ltlli" al MiMnOll, 10-.JO I m
Dec. 31 .... Jeft. 1
NFC Wild Card winner 11 Clllcl110, date and
time TBA
Pftiladelotlie "'' San Fr.nc.sc.o, slit, date
and time TBA
AFC Wild Card wlnner el 8 ufft l0, dllt I ncl
tlmt TBA
Sealllt at Cinci,_11, dai. and time TBA
~.Jl&I
AFC CllatT\Plonstllo, TllA NFC clllmolonslllP. TllA
~.,,_n
, .. -...... lliMlllm, Milmill 23rd SUMr 9owl
NOTE If Mllwlftotl wlm Ille NFC Wiid cwo, lheV _,., olev 11 Sin Francisco Ind
~ _,.., oleV II Clllcaoo.
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Result in Fetal
lniury, Premature Birth. And Low Birth Weight.
• OrMge co.t DAILY PILOT/ Tue.day, December 20, 1tel
Friendly acquisitions of -
U.S. firms byforel!~~~s up F.'
But General Accounting Office report Tht slHdy rite until last year of the I .. ji\J
1 k tJ 11 U.S. trade dtfacit has put mo~ dollars 1 shows hostt eta eovers are S rare in the hands offoreipen., who have A
in tum Spent them bn investments in £ ~
takeoven durin1 the 4'h-year period, the United Statn. Altll..ca • "' WASHINGTON (AP)-Friendly
acquisitions of U.S. companies by
foreian inves,ors arc on the rise, but
hostile takeovers by foreigners are
still rare, a congressional report says.
· "I think that raises some aeneral ANM "' H•
only 17 were hostile, or resisted by the policy quc>tions that Con•-has to I ,."' I target company's board of directors. ..~-theGAO said in a letter to Rep. Byron address.: .. If you ha~e broad foreisn v.
L Do D-N D ownership of Amcncan assets, the ... · raan. · · question is. WlM> ~ -Americans ... _ Ihe.. General Accoun&in1 Omce,
the invcstiptive and auditing .,ncy
of Congress, said foreign acquisitions
as a share of all takeovers has
increased from 6 percent in 1984 to 9
percent last year to 13 percent in the
fint halfof this year.
Dorpn. a member 0 the---"'iii-workins for7 Whett is the income • '
writins House Ways and Means stream from th~ assets directed?"
Committee who has proposed tax Dorpn said.
measures designed to curb hostile Other economic observen, among
takeovers, sa.id in an interview Mon-them Federal Reserve Board Chair-
day that he is concerned by both the man Alan Greenspan, say foreign
increase in bottilc merJCrs acncrally investment can be seen as a vote of
and by incrusina foreip investment confidence in the strength of the U.S. However, of the 1.28 1 foreign
' economy. They point out that foreisn
-------------------------inve5tment in American firms creates · jobs for U.S. citizens. H F Ahmanson presi~ent Between l984andmid·l988,there • • U were 2S attempted hostile takeovers
ill h d A i S&L by forci.aners. and 17 of them were W ea mer can successful.Thatcompareswithatotal
---of ~ hettilt~~ out ef-W1 • --NEW YORK (AP) -The Bass the larJCSt home-mortp&e lender in
Group announced Sunday that Mario the thnft industry and second-largest
Antoci will become chairman and resident mo~ lender nationally
chief executive officer of American durins AntOCl s 2J.year association
Savings and Loan before Dec. 3 I. with the savin,s and loan.
Antoci, ~ ... now president and chief In a related announcement, Bass
operations\ ~fficer for H.F. said William Popejoy, the current
Ahmanson ahd Co .. will assume the Chief executive officer of American,
new post when the afQ!Jisiti~n of the will join an afilliateofthc Bass Group
Stockton-based A~encan 1s com-as a principal af\cr working with
pletcd by the Bass GrQup. Afitoc1 in the transition proceu. t
"Mano has demonstrajed that a Popejoy will remain on the board of·
thrift can prosper in its traditional directors at American.
role -generatins~me mortgages "The branch network {of Amcri-
with tennsand pnci that will meet can)issolid, the California industry is
consumer demands. is knowledge strong. and the thrif\ has an excellent
of the market and reputation arc .... ~reputation for service." Antoci said.
excellent," Rohen ifs said. "Most important, the Bass commit·
Antoci's experi includes a ment to the institution should
tenure with Los An,e based Home provide conf~ for Ameri'7f1ln's
Savings and Loa -a H.F. costumers and the financial streligth
Ahmanson holdina. Home became to expand."
Roger's Gardens
"Christmas Fantasy 1988"
CluistllUll Trees
LIWtlLt/Hlb Oiummll ,,... .,.,,,,,, ., """ Yard Displays.
"Enchanted Candlelit Walk" EHtJ~
" NEWPORT BEACH
San Joaquin Hills Road (at McArthur)
Hours: 9 am to 9 pm Daily
(714) 640-5800
~ ~~-
c_Airporter qnn
Wot el
Dancing To The Chuck Battaglia Group
Reservations
833-2770
•special room rates for New Year's Eve
c_Airporter qnn
Wotel
18700 MacArthur, Irvine
lacross from Oranae County Airport!
attempts.
Dorgan said the rclati\'.~ss
rates -68 percent for forritn hostile
bids versus 40 percent for contested
bids generally-indicate that foreisn
ta" Jaws or some difference in
regulation may give foreian bidders
an advantaac over U.S. bidders.
NYSE UPs & DowNs
OTC UP s & DowNs
~.~ ... , .. s.. ...
~ .• ,.. ..... .,
}.
NYSE Cu.,,POSIH lRANS~CTIONS
OrMge COMI 6AJLY PILOT/Tueedey, December 20. 1111 * 87 •
TWIDAY'I CLOUIG Plllem8 ~
I w H ~ i Ny s E D =·
NEW YORI( tAP) 7 2'0 1 ~ 1 12 1 =:iows u
AM EX L E~DERS N Y S E L ~ : ) f ~, _.
GoLo Quons
ME TMS Quons NASDAQ S u~~~4P !
· When you think the world of
someone, give 'em a taste of it.
HICKORY FARMS
SOUTH COAST PLAZA .................
~ WO CHRISTMAS 9 e LOCATIONS 9 e e e SEARS OtR5l1W LANE e
-. INSIDE SEARS MAIN MALL e LOWER LEVEL THIRD LEVU e OJST. SVC. AREA OUTSIDE NOll05T1tOMS
··-····-·· -PHONE ORDERS
CHRISTMAS & YR ltOlN>
54(H,991
'\ ,
88 Or.nge Coat DAILY PILOT I Tueeday. Deeemw 20, 1988
CALL 642-5678
l ~ASSIFIED INDEX 6U.A71 I ... ,rt IHC• .... c. .... ••I .. , llU ··-.... 11• c.te ... _ ==::=gg: :=-:tr. l'M•--Hr~~;~t!:t~-~~.= 8:::C::Wc~TM~:Tl~ F~t~l\llf!: 'fii~J..~~ Ww,.....,.., ..._ ~""'.::,.~~~ -D111U.LIT NEW 3BR QI 2 l den FURN wleverythl"gl No .pets. eaettlde C,M: the ........ GrMt ~ 11~7.001* I up. 1214 ..-. ....... ~ Peri-*"91,,,._...
TI4E DAil. y PM.OT CHICK YOUR AD Beeutlt\ll S8R 28A lg fR condo. Fab. we. Herbor, I 1•50 mo. u"""" 11250 5'8-4111 ~' ComptM~ ,... N-.pt IMa, CM ... .,~ CL~<>:!~ ~AS THE '"'ST OAY eunny I brite '47i.OOO ' OC*ll, cfty~. Yrly Of mo. 2 car~ ger~ 8-ty tM; ~..__. tmaj renced ~--OIW, .-at al ta :iiatl
IOOAl.l·6J0 PM , .. "••"~•••·..,,.. ..... _, 111111• • mo.10mo. $00 1et~·sal ·--" pmlOe I. encl 0-eeee. ~~~"M ...... ,.,..,., "'""' """'•-...... --. Ytlfd, 2522 8-nt• An• fireplace. Clo•• \O a--eouniw M f ...... .,. .,.,.., ....... ...... ..... M.-lculoul •BA 2BA. ftam-BIG CANYON 28R 29A Ave .. '630/mo.146-3112 ~ 1 ltloOolno. C4ill 1-.... •,..•••--•1
I OO AM·SOO PM .................... ._. .-lty an. 1 bit to tchool. llM.TmU1·1• condo. tennle, pool, frp6c:, 18 .... ~ ·--·pool 5'40-3111 OI ta0-50N MAM~'! ...
ououNH .., .. • •-• ...... -·-comm pool, grnblt Need 2 petlo1. S 1100/mo "--· -"' ~.a --..... o0.,, ,.,. r .. o. • .. .,. .... ,.,.. fut Mlel ... 15 ooO Sub-DELUXE 2BR Ht.BA 2 11•·720-3713 l pee. Ot<, ut1 Induct, mM•lll!I 6-t, ft1M, I ... Qoee eo ..,, ... ,.,,.,H DEAOllN( .................. .,. ............ I c -• . 0 ltDfY, oar•· w/d hkup. SllO/mo. 5 min to Jdhn ,, c etll.,.. 21M77 ...... 7
-· ... 11 >0 '"' -....... ·-· ........ -mt. •II JULIA LIA Oo••n•ld• of /'~ PEN. PT. 28r HOUM. w~ elrport 754-5728 28R .,,.,. arpetl, .
;;::;;,.. '::: ::~ :;;;', :,:.. ::..: .. :;:; 780-5000 °' 769·¥08 $1250 Agte75-4112 ~ 11, 175. . df.,_, bit-Ina. Fenced .-.-.-•• -.1 ..... --•• --.... ,-.-,-,• .... n• ,..,, ••• ............ .., .., .... ._,, BAL.BOA,., tp $1475 •OCEAN vu cSeMu 2811 yentw/petiO. Wateroaid. llll
''·Cit• '""" •lfl'N ........... LG HOUSElnCdM.2BR,2 BAYFRONT 'condo 2Br Htbeth,frplc;,dedl,ger. &36-<4120Cell 1-5PM
w•.tou •• >If .. .,. •tudlea, new c.rpetl"Q, 11'75 2218 E. Padflo ept B. te7 Victoria 'H' ... 1720 . u .,, Old WWW m "' ... --· ___ \_. _._ .... _...... ::·.::-::· ..... :.~~:.~~ !. .. ..: h. rd w 0 0 d fl 0 0,.. I BAL.BOA Covee 28f, den, • lelOlmo. a.. 1st. C.it loalclng tor,.,....°' room
..., ..., .., , ,,.,,.. < ....... <.,.,......., $1950/mo. &73·7&33 trplc;, epa. dock. $2300 798-1104/E &oM-8722/0 . Pf.._•*V In MMf1 ... ~..'." .. °',~::".:•:.~'";;:: Lovely Jatmln• CrHk SEAVIEW 38r, 2.58a 28A, 19A, 1 car aar.ioe. metlliBJl8 ASAP. WW OOf •d111 !ft. Ill• WTI guerd-getsd community. Hou., comm pool & ten-groundflOof. patlo, all land .,... Handyman '-;jliiilll••lll.. Cuatom 2•6\DfY wlluSh 2BR, den, 2BA. tennis, ms. $2,750. '*' palnl a carpeclng, INllmTI Nemltr. C.. 777-0060
lat\dtcaplng l pM Sf'· 8 ~:~ini!l:i. ~:,•:o:: ~~ ~ =.: MIO/mo 541-7729 Ao' lperldlng clMn, 1•.rp FEMALE "°°"'"'9'9Wllnt· me end my ~ ones.
YMfl old, SBR 2~8A. l9Ct 819 345 ;830 ywty "4750 2BR 18A Kida welcome Owden apt1. BeeutlfUlly sd for HI bCfl hM, ger. Amen
fonnal & brMkfett din-LA.19-341 21'9 • or LINDA ·ISLE 2 9tOty SBr "-" ~ a lhop9 n0 le"dac:aped ground•. et.n. Qlllet. teOO/mo. Pwtonl "'81 praj this l"O.fam~rmtoo!A!,klng . • b0atdoc:k.S1o,ooo • peta. WHtlld• CM POOl&ape.petl09/decka. A"911111.-..11 pra~ a coneecutlve
only S 75,000. EX-W•rtr• .... IM. 1780"110/mo 145-2911 'CdlQe °' catpOrt. FefMle Wltad to .,..,_ ~. A"9r tM ttWd Ny, ,...1..,.. ~ for CLUSIV~,~~d Pfa~. W&LITIMllllll IUL1mll1·1• 28R 2ii. Endoead gar. ~...,!~e. =~~ SIA 28A Houaeln Coeta ~,,::.:.be~-:: llaht pick-up l
b Enjoy COM It "' .,... 1" ege new cerpel dtapee, 131E18th SI 141-M11 Meaa. 1370/mo '*-',\ be Than .............. ' .,__have own cs .
• •;~~I; •. thlupac:loua & luxurlou• Cozy Ila Cenyon Twnhm. JeuNtryRM.upstalnunlt. --------utlll,.,.._.111 mmege ~· "*;:.;;,;;;; ~ onty Mon-Fri. C..
--3BA2~8Abeauty.Short 2BR,2BA +den.1700.f, NoP9ta714·2S0...220 1Bedroom S70& M1Ftoltwe38D28Aept ~ • '/04lf favot hM JotlNOn(71')'5&-M27 -·---· ~'7~~~c~'r'~ ~~.50~!'0 1~1~1:k~· 2 BR W/gfll, carpet1, Call 2Bdrm 1!1.Be $115 =N.8. '410mo + beerlgranted. MCP ·---....... Nwp,.,.....-1_,Nor-,-t.,..h-::T:--wn-Ml-,...,2:-::B,-::R:-,1 & pell ok. S2800/mo, ~120 1·5 pm. 151 E2tat St 5'8-2'°8 · AYllll lmmed entect for 1oc:af
1BA. many d.COf'llor up-Call DOUG HERBST Gelsd 2BR 28A condo 1571 Orenge '8'. .. M85 W•talde 2BR Apt, petlo, /142·7222 ~ ... compeny In 8. Or
gradH. Mu1t H iii 720-3180or750-5000 w/d,d1~"9'T1215'·aH ** ... ,_** lndryfac,2prk"98f:· PAOFIF ..-1ng..,,,. to -WW county. Minimum
S227,000Agt.850-419e ~Al..A.V · ;~~~·· mo A..,,.. Qlllet complex Newpalnt, ltove OfPl . .,_.2M8tr~Home Nlflm month• uf:' Cel t.. tit KU"rFllll\. .. / StudtO is~ l 18f w~· 1750/rno. 731-1488 In CdM. N-amkr, no peta. Aaal8tant In the lAOll 0... 24().77 7
• \'t\Wi'\-...""ff iu.·v ~I LARGE almoat new 2Br. bectcyd peuo saso mo'=~·· P.!J .. 75/mo. 721·1148 partmei/lt Must type 40 l=jiiiiiijiiifiiiii •Prnt•etmtiwz lSSI ' ·" ~ '\... 'h.: JL "-I den, 28&. 2·•'Y. dble gar, "Uk• n.w & WlllY P.,.·< uc1 Town Center, tern, "" wpm. w0rk well with• No:1Ji miOfe Maul, Hewail REALTORS~ frplC. micro. aunny petlo. POOi, ~ lndry. 11t + APT • amltr, fur" HR hm, people end he"9 general
2.1 ac:r ... new 2BR home ----11585/mo * 721•8508 MC. NO PETS. 5'9-2"47 ~~pW= ~~~i 1~8A. w/d, 1450 + \Mii, office akllte. Pertac1 for
with panoramic views, Ctltl .... 2124 LIDO ISLE. •Br 3Be home. •BAY TIMBERS* Ot 417-4511 av .. 111/89 l54-0015 etudent or hou11wtfe. Nob--,,.__,.,..,,..,,-,...,...,,,......,=""'= prlvete, with palmt &. * Lg gar .. pvt p.tlo. FURN. C :Li . legal ~ ,,..._ troPICaf flowers for farm 1 d Winter $2500/mo Biii 1811• frplc, cable, pool.w---. ety c.11 ~ Oettlna. at ~t~~:'eJ245K/OBO s:;· .. rl~ac.~/~t'. GrunclyRltr.175-8111 ::ayers::.~:; •=et .... 1111 I.I.Ille~~ 8424321,.....-on,3°11.
e s&de. • 1250. 8*0l45 LIDO sANos fu~ •CHRISTMAS SPECIAL D""8m 21r 1L. FIP. Cii-/6iiiii_._. li,;::aiilnaiiiiiii•iiini.ini1i-~~~~~~~:--
---------------_... .. tall 3~t~~8A H~SE ~r =:-i!·~o:= ·~100RE8A-T.£.-ir 2 car~eo5W -If• FOf .. af""9 PM I Full IMl ..... hr Salt . ... mJrm able no:.·~ ~ot~:.; mo. (wtoter). ,..a:.·599, 2~~:"~~~ Bay Ave•A. 87W777 . . ...... i1U•• :::.0. ~ M : l m'lllar zfR carpet, big Yatd, kids ok. NEWPORT SHORES 2BR Av9'1 now 1795+ dep. 28R 18A, P9nlnlUla FULL SERVICE ~,,.. penon at 11111 ..... /C.U. *.-y TIWlllllll S975. ca11 557-5747 2BA. 2 •tDfY houae, cor-831-esst or 142..018' Stove. Aefrlg. uu1s. ptlld. w...om & !MM, Npt Bctl s. P.C.H. SunMt Beech 1---------W/MIAT LIUTlll REATXL§ XVXitXele 38R 2~eA 2•11y coNoo. '* 1ot. oar. qutet .,.. 1111 _ 1arge y.,.d. 211 32nd st. 91gn apace avt on W•tdlff °' c:e11 211-592..-.2 l•llal 1"2 Juat doorl fl'om Pinkley Short term & winter dbl gartQe l<g patio 11000 mo. 175-4912 Agt * -* '950/mo 175-8143 .... 111
Lisf6FA6M@stri.t n:d P•rk. Approx. 1aooa1. w t~~n:oH= Inc Back Bay' locetron: NPT.HTS.4BR(orl+den). ~ 2~~~ya~:"~:! •tu.fr-I-1~•fJn '9f)elr. Buy for S1.00. 38r 2.58a w/3 car park-• · · S1295/mo 557-578'*' trg yd view $2500/mo u • w• • adUtta_sfoO..., FIX &. SELL FOR SS$ l"O. NEW ON MARKET at Aeallora 173-8900 AQt • K th • 15'-2235 . ~I. drepes 1950/mo pool, I 1117 IT LIFF tVE WM with grMt peopte In l---=-:::==:--=-::=:::---
(l 1t) 872-'753 S205 ooo. Call &M-721 1 • -IUa Hll .[ Co!m~ i::o.:.:.Hv 314~ E. 11th St. * &3l..0211 * Nwpt Bctl, A9t 5'1-5032 a comfortlble .wlron·
' ...... Ar~ dilh'WUMf 2 · ·-·, TSL. MGMT 142· 1I03 ~ SJll ment. The Orange COMt
I ..... Nlmt1 haiaaall ltO'l car' gei'tQe. $'1250/mo ...... LI 2111 •EASTSIDE 28DRM• Fri! dlaltwaeh« '!rove 3.m.·~~ Delly Plot ,_ .,, lm-
w.·11 give you the doWn In CALL 5'$.918' GartQe no pet• Fenced Ind No S*a S.Ml55 • -mo. mediate OPaOlnG fOf •
exchg fCK a share of own-2BR 1BX HOUSE. Frpk:, 38R 28A llngte Q«IQe I M'lllM-yard. Chlcl Ok M75 mo · Nwpt Bcti. Ao' 5'1·5032 etrong = '" the Real =~PY~~&"'!e.n~'::AETIREOLOCALftnt1to :,-=~:~~"yearly, new paint. new c.rP.,: 18R~~~., .. CALL.5'M1U F ·~~~!rove UITWmflm& =.:,,,:~~=-.:~~
appr•c. You receive buy CM/NB home. Prefer 8'2·1217 °' 675-2437 new drapea, $1000/mo. I e 5 0 i mo Pf aft ... L9llll [lfli No -54~55 OfllCae 1¥811 from 1170. arMt benefit•. Cell Peggy.iiiiiiii";iiil-1 100% tax benefits. Mu1t fixer Can trede Npt. pk.la deC>Ollt. 6'6-6273. Pre>pert ... 142-9797 18R w/IOft, 28A. Ftplc. ~ M:. • . Good locatlon I. oft atr• a.Wit for an llPPOin1·
have clean credit. Agt Cr•t c:ot1d0. &4&-8473 111+11 I. ......... 48A EXECUTIVE holne, tNdral c.ltlnp, view, ... ,... sd'IO· 8oottU4a.2301 ment eo 111 ... .-.
957-80020ys.Ev.Wknd1 ~W .... IMI 2BR BA Duplex s1000 mo Wlmbodon Village, built· Lat• Ceut ••trt garege. 1pa, re-BEAUT. 28' 2a.. 'h bloclc ... 11.IPT Ml-Gl1
_ yrty, 673-4928 In ceblneta •"d aun 1111 dec:oretsd. $995 No pets. to bey, 2 eat gar., w/d hi< 2"° floor ~· street 01-M1
AllUl8UI Ofnt£ HOUSE. lrplc, Wilk to room. 18R downatalrs 2151 P9dftc e31-e107 up open be9m cell· ,..,,. tfanc. Lido ________ 1---------
SEAASFWNQALNETWOAIC ' beach, utll paid, •v•H Cenu ..... 2122 W{th lh<>wef. 3-c:ar g•.r· 2BR 1BA upstan condo tnGbelCOnY $1100/mo Pia& ·nso, ,,.., ..... • ........ n
now. saso. 318'' s.c:.. • s 11001mo. Cell Kay nr SC Plan. MC, dtw, *_ ..... * · ,25 E BAY 3331 vi. Lido ":}s!'12ee Mlli'tll'fl ~rt. Muet rwve COLDWC!U. BAN~eRO
ond Ave .. Sou1h LAQuna. •Spaclou• & brlgtll 1BR + 941:2092 Agt. balcony, pool, M95/mo. 2BR 29A, 1000 aft, new TSL MGMT · 142·1803 · I I II II CM. M .00 hr. 850-4111
Can818-818-2253 corwden.Wh.•tavleW11 971-78110l 751-2787. dec:Or. prvt petlo. Ger· OfflCES,17th at. BL.DO. -11111•-111 '' iw•llllm ... IUJ list $1900/mo lnct utlla. •WTllM 11•M• 28 R2BA P teiracondoln tQe. Partl-Mttlng. Child .... TllUll* CM Full Serv Aentel .._. ••-•
EKpet1 the bbl.
I •Open & lite 2BA 2BA W/yard &. alrlgle car gar· gatsd e~munltyt D/W Ok. From 1950 Free LMR. 38A 2Be. encl. gar., w/d ::/~ox 175.2101q/ft ~ growtng dally and rtendly~& ... --""u•Pd•RX-o .. e•o-3"'a•R wllrplc. View of hllls & tQe. $775/mo. ~t &. baklony CIOM to lndry: 2151 Padflo &31-6107 h~ up, new carpet 332 weekly "a.1swipers have Ing.cal practlee
28.A 2-Car Attached Gar-close to bch. $1200/mo. good credft req d. CALL pool ,· spa. 17001"'° 1 ._. $1125/mo "'= open1nga for AMI Eatal• In tlngton 8eactt av-. Skylight. $15',900. • 1BR tor "quiet peraon" CURT 11 631·1266 H0-1810 or 751•2787 . * ..-* 201 Lugon1a & 210 Grarit end Tertl10ty ..... ~ loottlng fOf a c:apa IUlllTIU . agt 493.5340 S750/mo t73-S3$4 .Agt E'810e IM DUP\.P T8l MGMT 942·°1903 "'°'19. Pnof ~ hardwofttlnQ per90n w/ S11&.-•••••TTDllll• 4BR 28A Twnhc>UM, pV1 Fen<:*'yd,oovdperltlng& experience preferr•d. INll 2 yra c.tfomla Ht WELL mmtifn9cf2 BA 1 • ..,.. .... .... ~ .... TIW&Tll Spedou• 3BR 2'A8A 2 bacityd. 2 c;er gw. good lndry. Sm pet OK. $800. •llTllllZY* Send reeume In Con· exp. Salary 0 .0 .E.
BA upper pl1t1 5 In ••c9!-I.I. S Exec remodel 2BR 1'1'BA ltDfY, lrptc, petlO, lndry Int. OOnd. comm. pool, Me-•902 1111 "'1 Appt-o. 1200 s/1, xlnt lo-...,.,_to Peggy -.vtna. (714)147-t041
lentlocatlon.Carpet1& ..... 11N w/tunMl,1....turf &. jetty rm, pool. Sml pel Dk. ctubhMS1275.957-1'93ALL.NEW3BR 2C9roar· VERY ATTRACTIV E. catlonnear~Clty TheDalty~.330Wnt I
dra?M ere approx 1 yr Veraafll• 1BR. FUN aecur· view. Lg mstr, skylight. $1076/mo. Agl 87~912 CONDO 38A H~BA dble :rs •-~ yard QUIET 28r 2Ba MW Halt Agt 173-635' Bey St. Coete Meaa CA •1111111 I
G I lty. G,..t loc. 144-7211 Jae tub. S1750tmo. Drive • • • -.,... · • 12m ' · rowing HB IMtrument old reat pr oe/9re11 by 214 fernleat 67S.8'27 BMYtiful 3BA, 28A, lam gartQe, petlo, w/d, •veil 5 Ptumer, upataln carpet, weaher dryer hk· ..,_/LlfT . ma"aufaoturer ""da
va!Yel · rm. 09r. Grdnr a waler now. '950/mo plua aec:. S1050. Bertleta 173-5711 up, garage, M50tmo. AJ»proa 2 ooo alt 90 ft CNC end c:onventlonel
...,.... FURN OR UNFURN HOME pd. L. .... S13501mo. No &31-1He Pttll/Jackts or E·Z MOVE IN HOWi lrM-apan. M•"Y wl"· BILLING CLERK for Coeta lathe/mill operetOt'I and 2 matr Br. 2Be F/P, S1495/ petl. Agt 14&-2389 75'-0878 Terri 4101 HLAAIA dow9 AC reetrm .,,,pe Meea Electrlcal ~ machltilatt. "Some flfM,
ILPlm'd•L .. M&~-3_B_R_2_B_A-.-.1'--5..;;..95-. .;..w-'a11t"'"-t-01 =~~isr~290dep. BRIGHTONSPRINGS2BR •. b •Nti8Jl8 ~~~att::~~ll03 ~.Agtt4Mnt ...,1111· !.'?~,, ~t· butmeinfyaecond,ehiftl
. .,_ beach ellOC pool/ ten· 1'ABA trl·level; MClucMd -.--.. -. ..,... a ~ Famllartty wMfl
PRESTIG us "G" p1111, 3 nts 2so Colton NB * LITS If UllT * wood• a. atreama. ,a... ~ •SHARP 4BR 2BA atepe ......_ between 8:30 I. ~ .. m•c:hlolnQ • ~
BO. w. BA. eJtpanaivs 122-9730 or 722·7251 48R. 3BA. new c;rpt, d/w. ment gar w/opnr & lllaM .. Beautlfully 1and1ca&*S. to beadl. Ger wlopener. 5PM M&-n75 c;r'~abUlty • mu•1· •bu~kgbreenbbela..!:.!"~ •.a-.-.ur 1n<1ry.S1575 494-4262 cerport. WID hkup•. c iPW-!128Riif-qutet, iarge. dean Apt.. dedla1eoo. l1350ty .. ~n8ter7._°' 111 IBPB daysl41-3183. -r; ovvooyv._... __ ,_. micro, Woodburn frple, .,,~ .... _, ._,_. POOl&apa,natlooroec:tc. yMI' ·--'"·'"' TDal 110000/ No F Q1Me Co In ,.._t ACHINIST ne.ded Ill Beamsd c.lhedral cell--•.Tiny quiet 18A colftQe. pool & ape $950/mo + ly. Nice patio, 2 oar parlt· Prtme loca ~ • up °' · ..._ • •-"'-"" ._ __ l"O. walls of glass. tits + beamed celli~. yard. MC VELMA 5'9-2"47 Ing. H95 Incl. ulll. t · • ...,.. WALK TO BCH NR HOAG owd.V' /no pan. Call 0.. M.-142-00M -· ...._, ,........_,. .. _. entry with mtrrCKed llalr-38R 28A + charming Neat lhOPI & beach. • 173-3031 1 Bedroom _, • Lg 18R. gu pd. FIP nlaOn Aaeoc. 173-7111 • wtttl 5 .,,. INn Job eflOP
way w/hand turned mother-tn-lew quarters. $795 NO PETS 722-8011 SHARP EHlllde 38R 28dnn w.e. S805 1725' • LG 2BR 2.Be .1 ... 1111 lllhl• eicpertenoe. a..,n eflOP banltter and ralls 3 hOI• Lg lot w/tpe. Wet bar. B 2BA. completely r•· lal~H ftalaHll 1111 f:lllllM WIT TWnt1M 1925. POOi. ape, ~ront Office, ertttiuelMtlc w/ "'*-'lnO WOftl. To,
put llng green Huge pool & bonu. parkl"Q 3 R. 2BA. neltl to modeled. Pet ok. S995 lllT COSTA MESA c:ov. prkg. 1401 Superior end c:MerM, good omc. pa Y & b • n •flt a.
kitchen with pickeled Thia la 1 must 1ee. park, F/P, decic, huge ger mo. Avt now 148-4902 ... 1111 Ave. ltl 1831 altlll, ~lttve aalafy, e1e.277·"31
bl S lty S359 900 Call Liz &. $1500 Linda 721..0111 191.D . FIT lnd&dnQ let. Con-MAINTENANCE ~a ~is ~ur sys-Chucic JoM. 931-1216 or Grubb & Elllt SPACIOUS 2BR 28A 2 I l300/mo "° P9t• ll9P\IR •HIL &•Ill....... wet Cerol af 131·518' ecMtclan. Reeponalble
em lit' 1100 8'f.5743 COM 28A 1 BA HOUS.E. ltDfY townhOme. GertQe, sc:::,:cloua 28R Apt• CLEAN 18R, $700/mo. fftllllft ADS fOt ma.Int-·-. _ _.... • small y.,d, fl~. wet • Partllng. utlll Ind. No uunu ---·--• I ·~~~'\· frplc, wld, walk to beeeh. bar Small pet o k poo1.,..., 1arge pMa. ~1292 errand1l omc:iec:teen • Cl'Of~~I-l·I KJ'-:~fb :· od cond. ~1000/mo. Call 11025/mo. Agt675-4912 rec. room l ••~= ID£ FRE£ Muat work wen wtdl rr=. i\I!'\'-' ___;!___... Mark5'53210d1y1 room. ONLY IMO ._..... M ... ,.... peoptelhaveavalld~
6ii!l ~·. \l TtlR:-• • CHANNEL. REEF 2BR. ..... ..... 1141 "'°u· ....... --CLEAN-2aR. lg ltv rm. Cal: om...~-. FUii tlmlt
BIG CANYON waterfront. fab views. ....... ....._..,. P«'dnQ, utlll IN:f. Ho TM Delly Piiot le rtOw ec-wtttl beneflta. lalMa CUSTOM "llkll new" 5 673-6900.$2000 .......... ••+• ........ pet1.S1175. 723-12t-2 141_.11 09P!:'t.,llPPflcMIOnl forlN9!•89M17irtW~~
Pnianll 1111 ~:i";i::,f,:'~C::::!~ :,,:::I W1ttrtre1rr~Tlll••111 a Plue poo1, uun ... gym a Y~.'=~ =-n .. •,. Ill!! 1_ ·~ ~ fm• ::.! u =·~ 142-7511
exsrclM &. steam rooms ~ clubhOuM. New pWl)t & 7 • •-· -3BA. 2 ~ on the ~. ow, proof of Ina. end W HIRING Full°' pett-.U flllT .uJ . cetpeta. 1 't.BA, 2BR •• ._._••ti• .--.. • ..... Cloee to ahOpplnQ l din c:1Mrt OMV t900rd S7 00 ti h I .. U Br/2Be uppet Llvlah arnenltl•. rolllng r $1750/mo lit 1u1 '1'mo _ _..,.,. -•r Ing 86gdedt~pinlew LOSTCAT8Loetlnareaof hr+ baMfttt · · me, caa ler par .. lng lawns. landscaped C l . 9~·1 so' .. F Deck, utlls pd. No pet• y .... -2... • ...... E. 11th and !MM 19' . booth ettendama. Ml*) •3Brt2e. loww grounds a. totally prlv1te ass lC dep. .. -• 1 .... 957.1n1Of780-1713 ""-"" r -"" mo. --Domedo Mir. • Hta! 1PM-IPM weekdaya. Mlhr trw.(714) 1795.ooo poo1 a spa. s 1.875,000 I 114-6918 evee & wtcnd1 E'alde 2BA. gerege. terge Via Udo 175-1289 and whh• = .. ,...:;r end 3AM· 11AM Sat, Sur\, 543-!7'4 Jim °' Mill•
&31 -1400 Q · 1 I •• ,L-, ll.tl ATTRACTIV E 2 8 A yatd ~h petlo, watw h~· lll'llUff.Uf fllW and .... ,,_ mix ~ + llOfldewa. r---.------:f--u l t UL ---.. townhou.. near F«ry. up S715/mo. 28,. 29A trpc patio .,,«Mn mele "Batman" call 142-4321 • 205 . ~~ 2iR faeX. gar. d75. Garaoe. patio, '"dry. 254e OAANOE poclU1l50/m0':2.715i NWAAot a2oo. Coe1• IAM--5PM llaNc• ,_._...
. ' , ; ~ Ala<>. 38R 2~8A. gar, S1050 yrty. l 7S...ate TSL. MGMT 142·l803 Meea Anlmet Hoepltal tlal,.... ...... In N.I . II
associated
R .. •t•, '''"' • 1'4 H ~ h"'
/' ~ p ,,t •• I ~ Iv
$end I Happy Ad to 1111 a
friend OU1 Of the dog-<Say
doldn.ima
A cleutfted ad It an ... , ••1 to "" your merchend ... , and lt't ... , on your wallet, too.
~JlnNI
Three bdrm. 3 bath, 2 frplea. EutsJde
Costa Mesa deteched townhome.
French doora. hardWood floors. &
large yd. $279.000
751 llOO
let Ut Help Y"
S.11 't .. ,,.,.,.,1
Cal ea ......
641-5611
for information ·
& surprisingly
low cost.
I.. , .• :·. S1175. Both clON to ITINTlllM!.ll,m COZVHOUSE 18A £Hcutlve TownhouH 541-3794 DAILY PILIT IOOklng for oftlCe .....
••• t>Mc:h. ce111 ... 1821 wie-. Yrtv StSOlmo Aetnger•t0t. pr1va1e yard. ~~ lr.:. 2 ~ r:t i.o.t Gokl.,, Aetri.v.r. now.. a.y st. ~ =t ·~~: 't
L.RG luic 2Br 2~Ba twnhM, Aat 722·1771 Deya no peta, 21M M..,._ J. 919 UI 11193 "'919, trvtne A'4 l lJnl.. Coeca Maaa. CA eon. accta peyable. FIT
f/p, 1ttch gar, pool, apa, 7f0.1755 EY9nlnQS M2& UCM252 verally. No COiier. ,._ poeltlon. must be,._,..
CIOM to bctl. $1250. Avt OetuM 38A 28A EaetalcM went. 722·1IOI , ________ , & d. p. n d. b I •.
now. 8'0·611218'0-1712 C......... 1111 w/frDIC. petlo, d/w, c:o¥-Wll•-lfll 11300/mo. Pia call
.... pnlng. lndry rm. *Wlftl 1Mf .... Oarteen 714 _., IOIO llM COTIAOE. 28f 18&, frl*, .... No .,_a 142·1479 IXCLU8IVI IEACH ~iiiltiiiiiFe:'"' Q9rllla, HM .. utll. pa6d, COMMUNITY areat In w I •• 1NMllll• Oerdenlng dlacount. 1111111 l1W Hee .,._...., 11A Apt tue end ' 1" "*lldee: •'II
Over 2000 t/f. Dbl Qtlf. 3101 3rd Ave.144-lOM 1311/mo. No klklhan. 0.. w/aAY YleWI LO pe11o nw klnemen of .---• II
11550Agt173-5354 LARGE 38R, 28A, .._ poalt I \ood credit. trpec. dMwltlr. micro: Chr .. t, faltl'lful Inter· M Kl
ptaoe. laundry ~. 2 CAU. Curt ea 1· 12tl ... ht bell • 1350 mo caeaor °' .. ~ irwoec• .. Harrie 1UO • unb. EJICll.
car ~· f15001mo. ttGOOFF 1STMONTH ..... Plllln* =~~= ... ~,,.. o.lty Plot 11..-ino tant~andbM-
oce91 ,,., .;., of matn AVllll 7M-07•5 1·:=:..-:..~: IOMVllLL -._!!111a. he"9 recourM ~-perMI,... drlvera for •flt a I C •II H • "k,
bWfl, 11175. 8tO Ce-Large. PN 11A, NW pelnt. • ... ,.. ..... ....... depth of ""' heert end •".,"°°" dellvery of 142-4321.
nyofl vtew. l4S·12S3 CfPC, blnda, • lgfllng. Gl'Mt elfft08PM,.I No NW" HGTI 280 18A. humbly beg'°....., God M •Ptl*• In the folow. ·--,-n-... ---.,---
.... II.. =.. ':'V.:.~'17~'11' P9tl. l110 . ...._803I frptc, JtJt rwnodeled, dtw, hM .,_, .-..... ~MAC 1tW£A .... m~ .. •10landeer.lmmadocc. powartooometomy• •co; Ml.aA H No~ nae. ltu-.... _ ---... ;e;;. llllmo.14W170 =~In~ =~APOIN'T dantOll711~31
31t , .. ~loft. 11p, up. 21" 1 .,.IA, c10•• to c tOM-C v..._ Cl "°" .,. ,..,.._ l prom1ee • SAN WNft I H Jm 1111
greded, dbl ger .. fa'drW, bWft, IMO/mo. 9001175Nopeea141-7-.. -t•Hll llft to 'm•• y0ur name • LAC1UNA 11ACH Malet...,.,. Mloro OOlft.-conwn. PoO', '*"· IO yd lee Lane. 144-1911 m •a61i1MKMI 11_._ .. __ __... ---· to Ttww hrs per~~ ....,._ ~ ln'W'M-••1001 ...... ,7.71--....._ ,__.,, -... __... --,_ -.._ .,. 1 _.. '-. ....__._ :_-t· ,. ... , ·L -"'°· -· _., -· iTUOIO . 1 bll eo ~. -1 .... v-1 . '" ..._. ....._ a... • lrWotl.cs -... ... --_,. --...
•DCLUSIVEGUAAO• 9'oofftlbeth.kltcNI-. ifio.:;'. iioodr:. a.n ....... Glnlae. . 3PM. --~ IAM ....,7 .. 233 •GA·tt·o~• ~~ .... =:--1 ~ .• .,.,....,_., etww..=....~n:= =-=a':i.:..8=: lllLDTID
IEAUT,,UL 21fli-HA 173-1511 LAW 1• 11e teellmo. ~ "* ~ tW be PIOii Ind. It. Jude .,...._end~~ fm"? I
7015 Cl .......... ..,. t400 .curtly. AV9llllble ._.._ llllD. "-· ..-. C..:'°' • w .. ""° Int "'°"'· e.... ao.oo LlfNled ,.,,...., '° )Oln : ose-up or wlfJJIJJI oour. .. -..... .._.. UOPer 2 BA, 2 IA + ofc NcM. c..1 fe>t -pt. tMry, Mii fllOd vct. Wiii -.. ..... ~ to ao 00 per dey ---... --from a distance. the ""avail.,,., ... w . AV911 Dae: 11. 310~ ""' •1-1111 -to bell 11aa. 4ff·1• ,_ -· · ell N-411'1 ·--·--"*· Mtc:to, W/O -~ 2 CM 11300/Mo Yrl.J .. Cati ::. ~to":.= ... Ullftl ~ .... _. pufted wreath design ger w/JCtra "°'• _... 1..en-1231 "'17M141. u...ae 1.,., OIW, _,.. ,: '1~~ ~ "'1,...... .,....C. AIK '°"INC 9L.AOI ~,:n11:1 ~~ on this.quilt s tands trat ""· All !Mini. lfld. TV '*11P· No ,.... Aeta ,.,_ 1...aA ~---MCP · Ayer9 .. Ua.iCi out. Charts, patterns, SOrty, no,... 144 0101 C-... ... ....... lllOlfftO. __ ,.,:.., • ..,..,. a&ll • w .,. ..,.,.,. ..,._. 1 d. . , 1n.....,•1 . ...,,.1 __ . ._ ...... ,........ TIM:AN>. ca.. -•• r-..1 1rections, orslngle 1MaD11111-eaw1at11www1t1n.,.. (714>137·7'11 YouteerclTodllr.°'*'d .,._..,.. GNm••
&doubles1zes. Yr1yf1'7i-v.r0111nJM ................ . • = .... le.I(,. eo..aw...CA MALUTATW7t1.-00
S3.2S PLUS $1.25 PIH 2IA. ,.,.., Olw, Moro, 1 l .... ca. ..... =-0... out di .-I 'HUii 1.a.......,734
FOAEACHPATTERN •1• ..... tw ...... ~.°"*'wliiQ.lndfy --=:r:a. JiiliC ... Q1 ..,......._..,.1~~~~~~~!j ORDERED "41' 712_..,.~ rm. No,.._ •1...,., =1iiEB: -1;;
. llMl11 _... "*" ....-. ~ C'::: ':'*I~ .. to Your.tlratpet, c;r..1111111& ~iiiPiiiii-"l OffEi:...~r.=UGH .=.•1c:.t+1:."~8A l'MJ':,.~ ~~. IOOl"'o 1ourt1ratfob, ·~=-="""' ,...
._--. PllO. ,... INll ii ,.. li'elw ..._ oc Alrpoft ... ,... -
: , ........... ~'*-toail'M ..... ~ === .... -1111 • .,.., CALL ha~==~·~= ._..,......._°" ~ .... ~.. ,..., ............... 1 • · .,...... ••Nii&IA rourtitllolne _._.. •• .., ... ,. , .. ._.en~Nr n11Mot11 • '2., C... ..... "-' ==-~-= .'&.~.:::: =.'=F FIND~~=-Cl ...... .... ;'..:"'..-..~' =:1u:r "'*· VA ~~ .. ....:~ rour11rat === ·r • 1111 .. llll .... tfvoulhclmlfled ~==· "-----------------....---..ui.;::.:::;:;.;:~~J!:;:::=======-:
11 Yea.rs & O lder
Work Evenings & Satur day
YOU CAN AVERAGE PER WEEK s7500 ·
OR MORE!
PHONE: 498-3321
All Tran1portation Provided
By An Adult Supervisor
CLA§§IFIED ADJ'EBTl§IN6
§ALE§
We are ADDING to our sales staff.
If you can type at least 4 5 wpm and have
great telecommunication skills -We can
off er you a base salary + commission AN D
a (jrMI place to work.
hH l'l•e .I Part Tl•e A t'allallle.
Do youneH a favor -Call us.
P efO' B levl•s er J I• V eanea•
842-4321
llilJPillt
330 WHI Bay St.
Coat•M-,CA
•OTOl IOUlll
CllTI ... •allTIEICI ..........
CALL 642 4333
r.etwee11 IAll a 7PM
0r .. 1• Co•t Dtllty Pllet
•A-1Wll* 730-tJI ..
ClfAN & DPl"T UC CliT·1 ..... 2 ... , ..
.111 ... 11*
H~MOtlttr
lie ~T1*'9
•
<>r.,..C..OM.Y'9LOTIT.,.._,Oec ....... 20, 1W -
1 AC.I·••!"
S ..,eao
9 ODSOit'ltt
1' Genlltt 1s uSSR l)Oloce
t>OO~
16 Among l)ff'I
17 ~Wf'lry ,tf'm
t& E••St~
'9 W •tl'>f!r$
20 R1gnttu1
22 FtrSt-11me.
24 R•Oges
26 Prtt!lel\11!< r Signs
29 lf'fO
30 Bel'lcn
33 tncarnatoon
3; TemOl!SI $ ~'" J 8 •ntenOs
39 l'r-•~ Ott•IV
•O T.,f'(S
4 1 '1(\~!(t ~
4;;> 11.IQSl t~al
.. .. art-or er all
•5 Dot
46 Sf' ~on ng •r c-"·••f'<I •9 no .)r
'IC\ol N l'•l'•,
"3 W.u "° :;.-84' l''
S8 ..-.~sm 'I
2 •
6 t cnu1 sound
62 tn •H4"f'le
63 Green Uta<le
6• JKilf'I !Yoe
65 Hard wood$
66 11.•nd ol c•11b 6~ H.on .. eys
DOWN
1 Romen g ro
2 O.m•nlill
3 Por1ra•I
• fllm•ly
S Cro .. o
e Hoary
1 0.1oa1cn
8 Hu ogear
9 WHP<>"
10 Ll!f\O
11 Mu 1a1 O<
M•li.•I•
t~ So•n s1>
••1151
13 lr Jn Gl!f'll(
2 Gr~nl!
~) S1and•·d
ouanl•h
25 R.,n t~
~•c~s
le Small tmoun• io O.m
JI GrN~ 1..-:;~
:32 Otte:>•• lf'O .JJ ,,_
3• Fooo lt1r•
JS Tnwa ~
C.•tt'< t>ltl!t
J" ~t>J•t.. eel
•0 Rttoon •:o e., .. ,
•3 ""t.O!I) ·~ ~11 !oOt"
f'T\'111'1••
•• An ma ;:irour.
41 Lvc '"
.. Ill.II
50 Gro...,ng OUI
~ 1 r,.,,.
C.l WW-II guns
SJ Small atea
~· Rl9Sltng 55 L.mb
Mi Va~
60 Born
12 13
...
810 Ormnge COMt DAILY ptLOT/ TUrllday, Oeoember 20, 1888
o ~. N !@!Pg 37' ..
' ll01'IC9 OP 1.... ..._....., .... •= NIE' caen.11 "°"' t111 ••os•: ._ ,._ .......... ,,.,,. •... •• I D11MUm01t 0. -••_.CM_,__ A ,,..._, =:a.• tclUI ~ cervlCllt.. .,_ OI WTM --'""
I PMn••• ccn.=-~. ,., ... , ...... , ... ANO OFTHI ......,_... "----·-7111\ M90fNllllOW ......... ~!.iii l(JtBl.,BA Memorial 1ervlce '"* "°"°' ,. '*tbY NOTICITOOlrnr· ... , ............. CtTY COUNCIL OF TMa nill .......... go11of ... ~.......... TOAi I ..,.. '°.:!i!!!i!'., ... J~pbift• Pritehard QNel\"'-tAl!lllonrV.e.en. __. ............. CITVOPNIWPORTllACH 26 llll*09fll dlNIMnlWd e ~,.._,..:C"*' lftATIOI -•••• • ~. bom ~-w.... held n.-ct.y. Joe Temero. 1tM '1NI. end r.~ • A~t::~ U. .... e .. ._.. AUTHONZIM AM AMINO-1M1rW 11M91Pf'M IDllE) toualr\ll#'Y ""'*-with CMM.11 I. ..... KAMI•-• • o.c.nbet-IO, Ulel at Anolr••Ot) Support ftfoct-YMOOT E MM UL 111 I I I -........ MINT TOT .. CONTMCT ~ .... l'a ........ , •• of ••• 11• I o--....i ber 7, 1889 In -4:00P.M.atSt.Jame. "'II. Irle ... Oellfomle OOI· ~NS A~·o "'0011 , ,. I 1111 4 .. ' ., 1111 WITH THI ADMINll· No pt9-tlld INetlnf .. cMlt ... " ....... OOf\-cw....., A--a I deJphla, Penn-I ltc I Ch h pewation, ,_...,. doWIQ TH..OUOH50 INCLUllVI ..................... TMTION OF TMI CALI-~torttllaptOjtcl. tue6oftl01Mi.ftrlb•• A-tW To......... .... ~~palled away P opa urc tMiMM""'"' u. tlc(itlOllol YOU AAE MINCI IUID ... .,,, ... IH ••r· ,OANIA fl'UILIC EU· THIS Pf!IOJICT II SUS-ct.~'°• rtaM 1111119 To .. "*'· • ....., .... or9dllOf9. •"""'"' ...._ bet 18 1988 in whh the Rev. GUbert""" neme Met ltyle of I YPLAINTIF,·(AUd ........ 11~.~ ...... 1 .. fl'LOYlll' MTINMlNT .llCTTOTHl "8UYAMl.AI-.................... OOI-CNctltort .......... ~..,., ... ,.... ..... • Prince officlatlna. Tr°"°"'9d ANC>M .... at ctemendendO) MAM eoe-.,,,. *' 11 ..._....,.SYSTEM lfl'IMI ANO THE CA" ""'°"1llONS °'THI....,., ....,_,. ••· •tor•. and,.,..,,. wt1o ~ ... ---..,_...111._ Irvine, CA. She i. 8wia1 WM&!;:a\e at 3111._,.,,., City of Sente LEY end GEORGI ... le .... _.... ell CITY 0, NEWPORT SU"FACE TAANSPOA· well .. ""9rnel derenoe-beottlelwlM~in lM •or..._cw .... ofll). IW"Yived by h« 90l1 0--Me, OOuMy of Orenee. IT NOvtC -. IEACH. TATION ASSISTANCE ACT"*'' of -11"99..,. ...... or ....... cw botl'I OI WAN> ICAAAQOZJAN
John Keeler f Cor ._...aa AM tet"Y· St••• o4 c.lltornia, did on .f H .-AA • ..... ,.. ,,_.. • The Oltr ~ o4.,. °' 1N2. ""'*°"noted encl•-.. CHAN.all 8Tl,._NS Afl'lllTION,_...,_ ....
""·l Mar:~ h -Arranaemenu by "" 11t ~ °' DeceMW. DA::=::: .... .,.,. 1111 • ...... ...-Cit)°'~ laed\ ctoet .._ •• tequlred tor 1t1e ....,'!.:'"""'••to 1t1e A fl'fTrTIONllM'*"llled lwl.DWNDICAAAGOZIAH. one ..-• U8 • Fairhaven Mortuary. \Ml, by lllUlual c:oneent. Ill ....... • ,_ .... e ,.,_et-. f .. ,.._.. ordeltl • lollowl: eMW. WOtll cteecrlbect ,_. right le ~ GIMlD O. ITIPHENS ,,._,In .. hpertor Court .. \er Joeeph.ine Peanol w 1442 dlleoM the Mid PM'*""P "" ..... .. --.. ....... .. ..... S.Ctiorl t "' At Ille tifN lllle contrK' PtMdl9 ........ -.im. In Vie"'"''°' Coutt OI Celli-~County of Orlflla of Follom CA; ~ __ --MCI •mlnllte "*' ,... .. on. ;:;;: ,.., IRII ' .. ,.. ..... ff .. Thet *' ... ~, lo N .. -...rded. "" ConctKiot of • ...,.. collelor'I ... ..,,. Coumy of 0r-..,.. ,............ .... IDWAN>
J M v ~Jer f SH.EFUN M Pllr1'*1 thertln. A .... •,.._ ..... ,r1sl1 kll ... ..... .._ Conttect lleMMn the Qty If*' P01MM elt'* • ca.. on M1*9'e ~~on queetlng thet GEAALl> O. KA'MGOZIAN, ""' lie IP-ames • n.llOI:' ° F1111t1er noea 19 ~ "::C,_..._ ....... Council of._~ of.._. A...._ or• combination .Mya7, t ... etor,...,.w ... llEfl'HlNI lleeppojnted • pointed • ,.,eonei ,.. Canyon Lake, CA. ROBERT (BOB) g1119n lhet lfte """'lloned ::.c•::•~_:e::r:. ..,_re•!?• r ponleedlM11the8oerctof o1 eny 01 IN lollowinel 1NtbOa w 42ftcl 81,..., per.ona1 rep~'° r~to.....,.let•ttl9 Numerous 1 rand-EARL SHEFLIN. wlll not be r~. lr°"' 111 .....,:... ..,_ • ,_ ....,_ ,__ ... ..._ Admlnle1retlon, Celtlornla llC9fWe dwlflc.adoM wNcil CllY of ~t 8Mctl ....... ....., the ...... ol lhe ••of aw ctecedent. hlldtt and t p.wd away Decem-thll 0., on. tor ll"Y Gt*-.-. .. ...,. •..., ,_, .,.... ...., a ..... Public ~· Aetlt• CC>MtlM9' • tNJ0tlty of tn. County of Otenee. Sw. of deoectent. THl NTITIOH ,...._..
c d hnlld gresh· ber 17 1988 •t ffnad ~·ion lnWrred by Ille otllef .... lrn I • I R I •• ·----· Syatem 11 het•by WOtll· C-•. c-to. C· 12. c -1s. c.llfomle. Tllil ~·... THE PETITION ,....,..,. eutllOrlty to ...,...., the aran c ren. e • --1n Ills her tlleir own nwne or • 419 _. • .. • • a1111111 ...-eutt1orm.cs. • c»py of Mid e-21. C-:t7, C-42. ptOlllrNtely cei.d wtiett auttlOrlty to .ominieter 1t1e •••• unctet IN lnclepen-
wu a resident o1 Or-Hospital, Newport In the name Of the ntm. ,. .. ::. •...., ,_ = ....., ••..,,,....•ref-emenctment beif'll ettecfled Thie contrec• 11tubJect10 oefelldenl, Ula ~ .-eatae• unctet tt1e 1nc1epen-ctent .....,. .... , ..... of &-
ange County lince Beach. Bom Febru-DATED AT Sen&a Ma, .._ lhe -. _. ,_, ... • '••••rr • • '*9to. "*91ed "bhitlil A", 11ete contract non-truetect •~owned by dent Admlnllttr•ffon of Ee-w.e Act. CT1lll aulMrtly al-
1908 d F"' ... ~;.... ary 6 1921 in Sania c.lllor'nla, this 11t dllY of 0.-....., ......, _. ,,.. .-...... • .,.... .._. end by IUCtl ,...,ence made ClllCflrnlnelfon end com-lier"'°"*·~ Jan« ..... Act. {Thll authority •. !Owe tM penontl repeeen-an • ..,__.."6 • . cember, t.... M ....,. t':.. .. .,...., .. t.i.. •S*'....,.,•thOuQfl,_.. pllance requl(emenll O. 1,Aw11 ""° wM In......, iow. tfle !*'ION!,....,,. tetlve to ... ~ acltonl Member of St. James Ana, CA. Ht+' 11 ANTHOllY v. •lllAN, =-:-r • ...::-.... .._ ''· !ntetoutlntull Ttill_. pur1Uant 10 Oovernm..,1 •• tn. tlfM of u,. acc:ider'lt, t.eM 10 lek• meny act1on1 -""Out *elnllll cowt IP-Epilcopal Ch web in survived by hia kMnc ~ TMIAYO, ITM , .. , ...n. C... .... _,, ment ~· tt;e poeltlon Code, Sctlon 12"0. lo Ltu'1 ~lend. Scott wlthoUt ~elnlng cour1 14>-pr0¥81, llefot9 tailna .-ta'ln
Newport Beach wife Ruth Sheflin of Mlfl'MATCNtY "'"'°"T .,.._._.....,....,,.. The,_enoeddreelot of "P<Mlce C.O.t'' encr Plene,9"Cfflc:atlonl, end Joeepfl~Jueru.wtlllt proval.Befor9talllngcerteln ectlonl, ~. h I*'· . C.O.ta Meu ·c1a .... ,,. ~9'0DUCT•. IMC., •Y: --. .., .. .., ..... the court II: (El nomtn y "Potiee AeMrve Offlcer" propoul '°""'tor bidding ectM!PtlfttttOmek••u-twn. ecttona. however, lhe I*• eonel , ........ Ne .. ,..
-----------. • '-""-; Ch·~.:· ~ Y, ..,., ......,_ :"'... -...._, ,._... ctlrecclon de la OOtt9 •>:SU· hired on or etter the enectlve ltlll P'otec1 '*' only be 00-twned In front o4 plelnllffe, eona1 r•nentetNe 11 r• QUlred 10 glW notice to t.en, ........... wn;n, deM .. .,. • ,_ ._ _. iu..ww Pf"'°" COURT CW CALI-elate of 11111 emeodrnent to lelned eyhe Depertment of .. In vtotatlon of 2 UIO t(•> quired to glW notice to ln..,...ed l*90N Uflleee
PACIFIC VIEW
MOIORJAL PARK
Cemetery • Monuary Chepel • Crema1ory
3500 PecillC Voew Drive
Newport Beaell
6'44-2700
HANK>R LAWN·
MT. OLIVE
Mortuery • C.melery
Cremetory
1625 Glslet lwe
Costa Mesa
540-5554
NlllO« MOTHERS
aEU. IMOAOWAY
Morturery • Chapel
110 8roedwey
Coste Mese
642-9150
le1rtr'1 Flewers
2983 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa. CA
141-1111
Chrlatine Martinez Ro«>ert ~oxon, Attorney ... -.,_,,_Met ... • F'OAHIA, COUHTV CW OR-IMOontrect. TrentpOftetlon. PWll Md CVC..,..._turnlnOleft,..._ lnterelted l*90fte unleal IMy have wellled notice or Robin Sh fll d et Lew, 1308 P.,11 Avenue • ......, ..iettet..,,,... ANGE . 700 CMc Center Seciion 2. 8ICI Doc:ument1, Aoorn 31, ~ol lo yteld Md WM eneated 1t1ey have ~ notice or coneenled to IN prapoeect
IO Ro ... ! t n(Boanb) hlboa llland, CA 92862 ...... _...,.. ~: Or1ve W•. Po9t Otta Box ~~the City of Tren1pot1ellon Bullellng, et ttie lcer'9 '°' vtoletlon of c:clnMnted to ltle proP099d ec11on.) TM 1nd9Pe!ident n , ~r Publlahed OJenge eo.1 138. SM•• Ana, ~ Newport 1e hereby t t20 N Street. P.O. Boit 12500(•) eve. unllcenMd action.) The Independent ectm1nt1tret1on ~ wtlf She fl in ; grand -Deity Pllot • December 20, --;::::, ~~ le -92702-0l.Se , empoweted, end 9'2174, Sacramento. Cell-ctrWer. Pleltttiflt "'9telned edmlnlluatlon eutflOflty wilt be grented un1 .. 1 an
children Keri Becki 1988 .,...... .... cltaclon ,... The name. edelf .... etld directed to ••KU!• Mid loml• M2!4~1 lpl'lone ~ lntunee arid were be 9ranteel unleu en lnferelted per.an -M Suian' J~mi ' T3M leiel>hOMnun\berofpleln. emenctment for end on 91M45-33~5).enelmaybe ~•uNd to unctwgo ••·tn•eetect '*'°" lllel en ot»JectlonlotNepedtlonenct
• e • 11tf'1 ettorney, or Plaintiff bell.if of Mid Afene:Y. ...,, •• the llbove Oepwt· tenellle •°"**Ion lnelud· Ol>)ectlon 10 ltlll petition llncS etlOWI QOOd ~ why 1t1e Ruthellen; brothers without en ehorney, le: (El Secilon a. mentoflrenae>otUtionofllce Ing but not llmlted to, lreet· IJflOWI DOOd CauN wtiy IN COUf'I ~ not grant the Frank, Harold and nombfe, 18 ctncclon y el nu-Tiie Mayor 1t1a11 11gn end end et IN officel ol the Oil-ment, •• ,._ therapy end to ~ ~ not gtent the euthoftty.
William Sheflin· nu-Motor Routes mero d• teletono Clel IM City Cletk IMll ...... lo trlel Difec\Otl of Trenepor-..... medtcetlone. o.t--authority. A H£A"9NO on the .. • ebogacto .. demanden ... 0 IM peeaage of ltlll Or(ll. ••lion ., Loi Anglell. San oent. Jenee 0 . L..... I• A HEARING on IN petl· tlon wlll be held on ~
meroua nephewa and del demendant• que no nence. The City Clerk 111e11 .Frendeeo. end the dielriet In liable•°"'* of IN neall· tlon w1t1 be held on~ 5, 1N9 et 9:45 P.M. In Oepf.
niecea. He lived in the llence •boOeCIO. •>: LAW cau.. the._ to be put>-wtllCh the work 11111ue1ee1. Qlntfy ctrtven veNc:le, ~ 5, 1Nt •' 1:45 P.M. In Dept. No. 8 loeeted et 100 CMc Harbor area since available Ir o FF 1 c Es o F Jo H N lllhed once 1n the offlclel The eueca11tu1 bidder left 11er Ger 11ey1 In t~ No. 3 1oce1ed 11 100 CIY\C center Ottve w.t. een1a
1932, •u.nd.ini New-West..i11ter =:1.L~1.1~. ~~:_~; :='11~~":::.1 11$1 ::".~~~ :_1on_:i~.::=111ow-~'.U~:~~·t.891111 A';·~~~tio the
port Harbor High H ...: • ..._ I h Beech, Oelltornl• 9284T Section 4. The Department of Tran. Ing her • aGGeea to If YOU 08JECT to IN granting of the petition, you School where he and Un11-.ivl eac Phone: 7141841-4149. Thia Ordinance wu in. PQt1•tlon hereby nollfies e11 1hevehldeln1P11eott11etect gr1n11ng of the petition, you ehould ... ...., .,.,..,. et ttie hla brothers exc:elled f • DATE: (F'edlal JUN 11 troduoed •• • regular meet· bidder• thet it wlll et-thet ehe l\aCI been atrlc:'lly ~ ellhet l!PPMr at the heerinO end atate 'lfNI ot>-. 0Uftf all y •••• , 1881 lr19 ot the City Council of the flrmatlwly lnlure thel In eny PfOhltllted from ueirlQ ttie he9rin0 end etete 'J04H ob-Jectlonl «lie_...,.. ~-ln athletics. Durin& Garr L ._...., Clerk, City of Newport BMc:h held con1rec1 entered Into vetllcle. Jecllonl or Ille wnllen ob.lee· tlonl with the CCM1 belore WW Il he aurvived 9J; Defte 9wh,.,.,., on the 28th 0., of NcMom-~I to Ihle ed'*1iee-DATED: November 11, tlOnl with the CCKKt before the Mering. Your ..,.,._.
the sinking of the NO COLLECTING PubMheel Orenge Cou1 b«. tMe, end adopted on men1. dllectVantaged buli-1NI the tiewlng Y041r tippMr· encemaybeinper90ft0fby
USS G ... , 0 _ Deity Pllo! December 8. 13. the t2ttl Clay ot December, neee anlerprllel w4ll lie at-DAvtD 90RC>S. Attorney ~ m.; be In perlOn or t>y yout e«orney. amuoer ._y, NO SOLICITING 20. 21, INI 1911, by the tollowlng vote, forded fuli opportunity to tor Plelnllftl. 2300 EHt 'J04H ettorney. · IF YOU A.RE A CREDITOR Battle of Leyte on Oc-T378 lo-wit: lllbrnlt bldl In rMpOllM to KateOa. Suite 205. Anaheim, IF' YOU ARE A CREDITOR Of • corrtlngent credtOf of
tober 25, 1944, he was 0 A Y E S . C o u N -lhll lnvltatton end Will not be CA 92808 °' • contingent crectftor of the ClecHnd. ~ lnll9( flle in the water for 72 3~15'~~ravenedeopae~ adawb~e cka·r PlBJC fl)TIC( CtLMEMBERS: TURNER. ~led agelntt on the Pvblllhect Orenve CoHI the cteeHnd. ~ mu1t ftle your c1a1n1 with tne court and 1---------SANSONE. PLUMMEA, groundl of rece. color, Of Deity Piiot December 6, 13, yourelelmwlthlMeourtand mall• copy to the peraonal hours. He was em-and proof ol 1nsoranee NOT.Cl cw •TIMOID STRAUSS. HART, CO)(. netlonel Oflgln In conllder-20. 27. tNa m•ll. c:opy to the peraonel repl'eMnllll\19 eppolntect by
ployed at Fairview ~--UNDllR MC· W/.TT a11on fof en ewerd. T374 repreMnletlve eppolnled by the court within tow month•
Hospital as a Sta-842 1444 T10NI...,, AND MO?., NOE S . C 0 UN · Mlnltnuln wege retes tor tllecOUftwtt~fout'month1 from the elate°' tint i.-tionary Engineer Call • CALIPOtttltA •u••••• CILMEMBERS: NONE th 1 • pro I• ct • 1 Pl8JC fl)TIC( trom the d.ie of ""' 11-.uencaofletter••P'oYlded AND "90flaSllON9 COO. A 8 S E N T C 0 U N • predetermined by te tee· 1U11nC9 of lettert u provided In Mellon 9100 of the Cell· before retirement. 1. Nerne of 11cer1 .... his CILMEM8ERS: NONE retary Of LabOr .,. Mt forth MOTICa TO In MCtlon 9100 Of the Call-fomle Probete Code. The Arrangements by Ask for Joanne Craney Soelel Seo\lflty ftlll'ftber, and DeHl4 A. .,,.., .. , in 1n. .erleHy nt1mbeted .ctllDfTORa °' 1orn1e l>rol>al• Code. The time fof ftlll'O deltM w111 not Neptune Society. eddru1 of llcenuo MAYO.. boOll1 luuect lot bidding 9Ul.K ~ lime for tlllne ctelm1 Wilt not eiiplre pr~ to tour months ~~=s••••L~=~====~=d----~~===~=======~~~~~ ~~~ng ~P ~~ ~~~and~•••~ (~~ -~~~~mon~trom~~ofh~ .,.. Code: STUDIO CAFE. INC.. Wende E. Raggio. City "Propoul end Oontrect," UC C) from the d8'e of the hMtlng noticed ebow.
" A Celllomie corporation. Clerk end In coplel of Uld book Notlee II jW.by given to noticed et>oo.lt. " YOU MAY EXAMINE IM ~-----------------~-----------------~mt&~ ~~~w ~reb~~on~ln~~beu~~~the«~~~~ ~~thin YOO MO~M~~--~~IN~.Hyou
Highway, Coron• del M.,, Clty Clerk'• Offlce UIM otfieel .. deec:rlbed naornect trenslerors that • ,.. k~ by lhe cour1. "you ., •• '*"°" .,,,...., in
CA . PubliSMd Ofenge Coell herelnbetore where the bulk trenlfer 19 •bout to be ere • peraon lnlerellect in the ••te. you. may Me wttfl
2. Name, Soclal Security Dally Piiot December 20. plen1, ~Ilona, and made on l*IOn8I property the "'•te, you ~ file with the COUr1 • f«maf Aequ.f
numt>w. end eeld,... Of In-1N8 PfopoNI IOfmt mey be llwe6nefter cMec:llbed. the coun • fonneJ Aequeet for' Spedel Not!Qe of the Ill· tenelect 1ren1ter ... lnctucllne T389 eeen. Addenda 10 modify The ,__ end bullneN tor Spedel Notlee of the 111-1nQ of an "'-'tory end a;p.
Zip Code: CHAYOTE'S Federel minimum wege eelelr .. of the Intended Ing Of en Inventory end ep-ptelMmenl of .......... ta STARTING A NEW-BUSINESS??
The Legal Oepartl"flent at the
Daily P ilot is pleased t o an-
nounce a new service now avail-
able to new businesses
P lease stop by to file your
f1ctlt1ous business s tatement at
the Daily Pilot Legat Depart-
ment. 330 West Bay, Costa
Mesa. Cahforn1a. If you can not
stop by. please c all us
GAILL. INC.. A Cellto<nle "8JC fl)TIC( rat• wlll be I~ only to trenifetori ere: STUDIO prelMl'Ml\1 of aetete UMtl °'of eny petition or ec:count corporellon. 8535 EHi ~ of the aboVe r-.r-CAFE INC A Calltomle Of of «ty petition or eccounl u prO'llded In .-ctlon t250
Coe•l Higrlwey, Suite 3-45, ww;ect boc*1. If ·-· II • corpo;.••lon .. 320t Elll Pe ... pr0¥idect In NCtlotr1250 Of IM Calltomle Probate
Coron• Clel Mar. CA 92825 Clltterence ~ the rnlni-cltle eo..1 HIO"weY. Corona of tM CelHomil Protlel• Code. A Aequeec fof Spedel
3. Kind of llcenMI ~ m 11 m w • g • r • I • I del Mer CA Code. A Aequeet tor Spec:lel Notice IOfm 19 ...,....ble from
lenelect lo be trensfWeeel. pr~ by the Sec.-The .OC.tlon In California Not!Qe form ii aveMable from ltle CCMt daftt. · We will now SEARCH the
na me for you at no extra charge.
and save you the time and the
trip to the Court House in Santa
Ana Then. of course. after the
sea rch is completed we will Ille
your fictitious business name
s tateme nt with the County Clerk.
publish once a week for four
weeks a s required by law and
then hie your proof of publi-
cation with the County Clerk
at (7 14) 642-4321. Extension
315 or 316 and we will make
arrangements for you to -1'\andr&
this procedure by mail
If you should have any further
q uestions. please call us and we
will be more lhan glad lo assist
you.
Good luck in your
new business"
ON-SALE GENERAL FOR tetery Of Lebor end the of 1119 ctllM execulNa office the court clefk. Attorney tor Petitioner:
BONA FIDE PUBLIC EAT-pr111e111r19 .,.. rat .. a. or J>rlnclpel bullneu ortlcle Attorney lo< Petitioner: A08ERT w. LITTLE, Al·
ING PLACE •47-157854 !ermined by the Stele f0t Of the Intended trlnifefor It: Phllf4) JoM Go6CI, AllomeY•t torney. 4875 Mec:Arthur
4. Tole! contoderatlon to 1lmllar claUlfleetlon1 of 100 South Main Balboa CA Law. t201 ~..St.~ Court.. ......_.'40, ,,.wport -
Mpejd tor the~ and (VMUM09t 1111:1or ...... ContlactOf MO-92881 ~ =='-' ~ • 'liliWt>ort IMeh. CA lleech. CA t2teO
llcenM fl St.200.000 00 MO.•• tubcontrector11MM pay not All Other butinell nemea t2MO Publlahect Orenge Coat
Cutt 10 ()p9n eeerow NOTICE IS HEREBY .... then the higher wege end eddr ..... uMd by the Publilhed Orenoe OOMt Delly Pilot Declernb« t3. 14,
lt0,000.00: Demand not• GIVEN "'•' lhe H\lf'lllnQton r•I•. lrenet.or Within the peel Delly Piiot Oecemb« t3. 14, 20, , ...
l0t Iha bllence ot ealtl to be Beech City Council will hold PuflUWll lo Section 1773 thr .. VMr• ere: None. 20. '"' TW382
depo1ited soo.000.00: •public hearlne in the~-Of the Labor Code.. the gen-The namea ene1 l>Ullnese TW383
Note and Secur1ty Agr.... ell Chamber et the Hunt· erel ~ailing rate of wegee leldf-of the 1renster ...
merit In l•vor of Ille Seller lngton BMc:h CMc: Center In the county In Whieh Ula Irr. CHAYOTE·s GRILL Peale N011C(
1700.000 00 TOTAL CON-2000 Mein Street, Hunl~ worll •• 10 be done ha• beet\ INC., A C•lltornl• Corpor: MOTICI CW "8.IC fl)TIC( S I D E A I< T I 0 N : lngton Beech, Celfornla.. on determined by Ille Dltecto< elfon. 3535 EMI Cout High-fl'UatC HaANNQ I( ...
11.200,000.00 Ille Clete llrlCI .. Ille lime In· of the Department ol Indus-wey. SYit• 345, Corona Clel BY THE REDEVELOP-MOnca °'
5 The piece where It. Cllcaledbelowtor~end \(el Aelatlona. T~ wege Mer,CA92825 MENT AOENCY Of THE tNTaNDID~,_
coneleleretlon tor Ille lren .. oonelder Iha •l•lemettll of ret• eppear In Ille 0epar1. The property pertinent CITY OF COSTA MESA TO AND LIA8m8ACIC fer of Ille OU""9ll end IN .. l*'90nt who w11f1 lo be ment of TrenlPQf1•tlon pub-hereto' II O..Crlbed In Qin· llcenM Of lioenMI 11 to be '-'Cl reletlw to the eppll-lie•tlon enlilleel Gen9'el ..... ; Slodc In Trede, FIX· REVIEW AND EVALUATE Notleell~QN9nthat ~ th.,i ~ -pe1d 11: Action Elefow. Inc., cation Cleecrlbed below. Prevelln"il Wege Rel•. turH, Equipment anel THE PROGRESS Of THE EL T 0 RI T 0 RES -
• _ _: ..--• ': ~~..._ ... ~~ -:;~ 800 NOf1h Tuatln Ave .. Sulla DATE/TIME: TuHCley detect October, 1N8. Future GoodWIU Of 1 certlln AM· REDEVELOPMENT PLAN TAURANTS, INC. ("ETA")
-~ "' ~ o.:J-~ ••Q ", Sant• AN. Cll1lomia J9'tWl'f 3, t989, 7:00 PM • enectlw wege rll• wNeh ••urltll bUllMU end II FOR THE REDEVELOP-Tr1neleror. of 2450 Whit•
•• '"'°)~~ •.. 'f J
1
1A ,:> 1 • '.'--'-._ r'(( o' onoretterJ-.-.. t2 t"9 PPLIC TION B .. heW been twedetermlned MENT PROJECT AREA Aoed City of IMM. C.... ·-v _ • ~ ~ ~ -... , ---; , ---• • A A NUM E.,· r localed et· 320\ East Pacffie NUMBER 1 (THE DOWN· t0tnl&, 92ft3, 11MnC11 to Mii
.'>'a1 ... : . ., . ,,, .. ~...-. :~ . i f ~'i • .. ! ....... -...-• ,.r·• "!'-¥
-• • • . ~ 1 t..~-t • .. i &. The pa11iel egree thlll A,ppeel of Plennlng Com· end •• on Ille with Ille 0. eo..1 HiQhw.y Corona del TOWN PROJECT AREA). C«tafrl l*IOMI property tor. .., . L~.i..-1.1 ..._ I •" -' J..._ the conllderetlon tor the mlellon'1 approYlll ol Con-partment ot ln~1tral Rele-Mer,CA.llle~elneuneme NOTICE IS HEREBY Clllzen'1 F'ldetlty lMling
_ -~· ./" ~ • • ~ • .... H ::J ,,.,,.._ of the~ and Clluonel Exception Wert-tlone.,. ,..,.,enced but nol uled by Ille NICI trwwf9ror1 Gl.-N that 1 ....... ..........._ corporetlon("CIUien'1"),
" .. if 1he llcenM or liCentel 1110 ance> No. 81-20 printed In Mid publlcetlon. at Mid location le: STUOfO ·~ ·-.........._..
' / 1 be paid after the 0epar1. A p p L I , DE P ART M EN T O F CAFE RESTAURANT merit ~ of the City of Trenet.• (Leeeor), Of 419 .• <'-' ment of AlccnOli€8ewrege CANT/APPELLANT· Aober1 TAANIPORTATION Said bulk lranefer II In-~. 1~9. •t 8.,~ ... p,,;:~n ~ ~~~u:-yc~~ • • t. ~ OontrOI hllS approved the end Shell• Goebel/Jolin Deputy Dlrec:t0t tended 10 be coneummeled .... \ . I 'fr '!/.~ ' \ propoMCI transfer. C.H. Chang Dated October 3 1. 1981. et lhe office of: ACTION Councll <:namberl. 11 Fl# enO thet .. Id Intended -~I~ .r • ,~ r d '"--• -7. Herne end addr"' of LOCATION: 19201 Ty.. ~ Orange Cont ESCROW, INC., flOO North DrlYe, Coste Mesa, Call-TraneferH (Leuor),
Pl•I " I (A ~' . .,._ A.,-. theeecrowhol<let·ACTION p!'loon~ OelyPllotOecember20,27, TueUn Avenue Suite G tornle,••hetlmeandplaee Citizen'• lntenel• 10 ~ c..-r . ..-.· ,::/ --.... _,>_:Q: ESCROW INC , 800 North ZONE: R 1-CZ (Low Oen• 1tei Sente Ma c.i11orn1a. ar: for e publ\c helirlng 10 be IMNbeck to Hid ETA,
;~ ... ·
J.-
. , ..
~Dail Tu1tln Av~, Suite "G ... ty'Mldentlel-Coe•telZone) T395 erige eoun1y on or '•tter :::.:::.!C!;;:!: ~=~~=
SantaAne, alll<lfnil92705. REQUEST: To e11ow a IU! ... .,. llftTV"r J9'tWl'f 12, 1989. T1'111 txllll tll9 Aede~I ProJectleleleflpllonof llaltol------------------~·-----------------~A~· ~M~~ ~~~~~~ ~~·~ n~~~~)ect~~~t. ~~~~~~
,. C~ CAR. INC~ croech flw (51 '-1 Into lhe Calltor-nia Unll«m Com-At ll"Y time, not later thin' equlpmenl located et tt tO
OUR FAMOUS
DIMES-A-LINE
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY
AMOUNT ENCLOSED
IJNl.S
I.
2.
).
••
s.
••
7.
•• ••
HAS RETURNED!
Back by popular dPmand D1mes·A·Lone will run Friday, Satur-
day and Sunday m 11s own c1ass1l1cauon In rhe Class1f1ed Ads
Smee this 1s a specoal offer. we nave a Thurs.day noon ~ac:tllne
and ask prepay~nt tor au ads. This Is open to all private part,y
advertisers t~ merchancltse not over st SO (JWIGe musr be llsred
m adj and no abbr~oat1om w1N be acceptN. Al ads wol run
Friday. Saturday and Sunday. There Is a 5-line minimum at 20C
per hne So yOU< low COit Dtmft·A-Une ad II ot"Y •..
Sl.00.
DEADLINE: Tnursday noon
PRICE: 5-llnt' m1n1mum • 3 days • 20C per hne • S3 00
• All ads are prppa1d by coming into the Dally Pilot ro
plact' your ad or ust' lhP coupon ~low
• Pnvall' pa11y mPrcnand1se onf)' ads No com·
merc1al ads ptrs, hvl'stOCk, produce or plants
Each 1tt'm must bl' priced In the ad w1m no items over
SISO
MAIL TO: Dlmes·A·Une
Daily Potor
330 West Bay Strl'l'I Costa Mes.J, CA 92626
D.tl/y Pilot hours
Monaay·f flddy 8 ()()AM to 5 ()()PM
PHONE
STATE ZIP ------
DATES TO RUN
IHO
.., .... 642-5678
.._,.___ --
... , ... -::=...~ · =~r~ :".:;!11::i~,:: ~"'c:;~~ "r.:' ~ ~=~~t :::-: ':.W~1":; !~~, ~=or~~92~ ~"'ft:; ..... y, ..... ,Of denllel IO(. c~ lh• peuon with whom ,,,.... --'-Ion on t .... ftl~ Mid .... end leeMbadl CHAYOTFa OfUU, A ENVIRONMENTAL COWITY Of ctelml mey be 111eC111: AC-.... --· ....,.., ,,. ,....~ c......... OOfJ19f.eton, 9y: STATUS: CeteoorlcaMy •it-~ TIONESCAOW,INC.,llOON. gr ... of lhe 1edevelc)pment lreneectlonlltobeconeum-LMfJ C... lecrJT,.. Sec1 EDWARD GUARJARDO plen mey ~. In Wfitlng, a meted on or efler Ille 30th Tr••lll .... ..,. __ • .. em, .. ~ ~~~51 !: -,..~ cu""'K LUC"'•) ,.._ .... tit! . !'!STIH AVENUE. SUITE 0 , llelement of hl1/her Cley of Oecoember. 1N8, et ,...__ ~'" ..-.,. .. ,. ~ """' ""'· ..--• I, .... NTA ANA, CALIFORNIA """nlonl. Al the above.-10 e rn. et the Law OftlcM Of PubMSMd Ot8"i19 ..,.,.., fornla En'Nonmertlel Oueilty YI. 92105 end the .... dey tor .,...... Dally Piiot oec.mber 20, Act. JANET G. LEWIS, LISA thing ctelml ~any creditor lteteel piece encl time 1ny WAYNE A YBARRA et 4400
1918 COASlAL STATUS: The LEWIS.I Oetendantl "'8ll be Jenuery 11. t919 pereonorOl'genlUtloneleeir-Mec:Ar1hur BouleYetd, Ste. T397 ptopoted blockwell le wttllln OA8E NO. 522587 which .. IM buelneel dey lnQ to be .,..,Cl '#Ill be ... 100. City of ~ 8-cfl.
---------1the..,.,..,.bleportion0fthe STATEMENT Of be!Ofe the coneummatlon lorded thet opportunity. Callfo(nl&. Dated IN 18tti P\a.JC· NOTICE Coel,.. Zone (exempt from DAMAGES date lp9Ciflect .oove The •r•• ot th• Re-Oey of December• , .... 1------------~-e eo.t1110..•cpmenlP9r-TO: DEFENDANTS, 0.ted:No~7.tNe :-••a=:.:r:rc~-WAYNEA.YIARAA.My
LIQAL mll purwent to SctlOn JANET G. LEWIS, LISA •TUOeO CAN, INC., A =t=LOPMENT PAO-•1 ~bllehed OJenee COMC ADV.~NT N9.5.3 of the Huntington LEWIS: • c ... , ..... "'--;;.!?: JECT AREA ~ 1· DOWN-Dally Piiot December ~. DIPAllTmlfr Of 8Mc:fl OJdlnence Code). Plelnt.lttt Cletnegee ., ...... ,.... .......... TOWN PAOJECT AREA \Ni ~:.:rNT pr~~CO:onofllle": '°':,;~IAL DAMAGES Of ~~=---.:.....INC., Thie.,.. II roughly de-T3M
UMIKllll9MTAL the Oepwtment of Com· PLAINTIFF' EDWARD A c .. 11.., _,...._ ICflbed .. being bounded
MIOURCal •CTION muntty Devet°"ment, 2000 GUARJAAOO: · 9f: Ur1J C--. leet.IT,.._: ~ ltth :treet on the north, ---------
CITY Of Mein StrMt. Huntington t. Medical ~--10 T,....... 11:"':,,.:""9 on .... "" ~· Peale fl)TIC(
MUWTIMGTOll •ACH BMc:tt. Calllomle tn4f. fof del« Publllhed Orange Coelt on ,,,. '°"' · ---------
Notloe le hereby gl¥en by lnec>ectlon ~ the public. A (•) AneMlfn Rahib. In-Delly Piiot Oecemb« 20, enct,Pomofta AY91'1Ue on the ·-Ille Oepwtmem ot Com-~of tN 1taft rec>on w111 etltute 11.373.40 1Ht ..,.. · NOnca or
munlty CleYelopment, El'· be ...,....,.. lo ln..,...ed (bl Todd L. PMIOff, M.D. T3M ,_,! C09Yf .~ ::!..~ Re-..... NDID TUMPD wonmental Aeeourcee Sec-partlel et City Hell Of the S2.315.00 ...... • or .... .._,....,,..rnenl AND LIA ... ACIC
tlon of the City of ~on Mein City lll>r~ (7111 (c) S.... Servicee I 140.00 ~~!zing 1he IC-Notlcle 11 hereby~ that
llMcfl that the followlng Tlllbert A"""9~ (Cl) C. Medlcal 155.00 .._.eYelopment TMtty CorporetlOn, Tr.,,._
Orett Negetlw Dectwetlon Al.l INTEAESTEO PEA· l•l~ Hert>or ReCliO-"9lJC fl)TIC( Project Nee No. 1 la evell-teror. of 3424 Wll1hlre
requett ha bMtl prepered SONS .,. lnYhed lo ettenel ~143.&o eble '°' rewtw •1 the Offlce BouleYenS City of Loa M-and will be tubrnllled to City uiCI heMnQ end bPf.. Hoeg Memorlel Hotpl-f'ICTmOUI ....... ! lhe City Clerk, 17 F'elr geea, CeNIOfnia. lntendl lo ~ Cornrnllliott f« oPlfllonl or lllbrnlt ~ lel .. 5 IO ..,... ITA~ ..,.Na, eo.t• Meu, °'a c»py NII Oll'lein 1*tOft81 prop.
their oonllderetion en Jenu--fof Of IDl!inlt tM ~ &lb Totel $.4,472.70 lhe toloMng P9'80"t ere mey be obleined by contact· eny to: MLTO Funding, Inc..
ary 4, ltH. The ctrett • outliMCI •boW. If there E1t1meted coil for dolnQbue!MM•: ~:97~S::°"ment of. Intended Trenaleree
negatlYe Clederetlon will be ere eny furtl'ler Queltlone ertlwaecople llnee ~ OAMMAPHOTO, 393 · (leaaotl. of 25 V.-y Stre.t. • ..,.....,,. f0t public r~ ~call Thomes Aooen. $t3,40000 Hamilton St .. Suite R1, For furt'* tnformetlOn, World flninclel Center,
and OOlflfNnl for' ten (101 Admlnletret""9 Aide 11 et htlm1t•d coat for Coet• meea. CA 12127 ~1 ....._ ~· North Tower·2&th Floor (c/o
Cleys c:omm911Clng Decem-536-5211. arthtoecople .,,.. .. 111r09'Y Herry Chartee B«ett. 393 ••• Cpmejll ... ~ Merritt Ls Ctipltel Mer-
.,. 20. 1.... CO ...... NOCKWAY, lt2,IOOOO Hemuton St .. Svlte R7, ~~~r, of 0oeta • llet.,.Pro 1 end LH ..
Oreft NeQ811ve Declet· CITY CUM, CfTY OF ~Total 121.000.00 Coela ~. CA 12e21 · Flnencl oupl. City of New etlon No . .._.7 (TentetNa MUlfT1NOTOll 9aACtt ~ DAMAOU CW Tlll1 bu.m... 11 con· MM ...._,, ........ , Yortl Hew York end that
Perce! Mep No. li-317 end DATED: 12/14/N PLAINTIFF EDWAAD ducted by: en lnctMduel ::..:: llMH ....... Ht Mid ' ln19fldect Trart1I••
ColldltiolMll &ceptlon No. Pulllehed 0r.,. COMt OUHUAN>O: The regl1trent com-~ Or Cwt (Leuor). Ml.TO '""ctlne.
81-50) ... ~ to lllb-Delly Piiot December 20. • 1to.ooo.oo rnenoed 10 freneec:t bulol· = Piiot "==.,. 20 -Inc.. in...-to II I I ....... '°. dllllele one Pli'cel Into two t... ........, OuerJerelo ..,.. .,._ under the ftctltloua ......intlet • n . MkS Ttwltt't Cofpotetlon. Iota, one of wtllch .. have nit ..._,.,..fOlowlntlnjuriel: buelneM ,_,,. or nemee 1 ,January 1. ,... . Tr.....,.(leeeee).tNMkt
.... "'-" ttie ~ 30 e. Mi•u•olgementoue in-....., eoow on 12-t..S T392 per.ona1 prope11y, • ..-11
.... of lot "°"'• ,_,.,_ ..UC ..,. ....., .... ...... . ~ c. 9oreCI ·-.... -ctwc»lpllcw!Of wtllcft• • ~ by City cocte. TM .... • .. '· ~ lnl*IUlolglmaf'I-,.,. .... ....,t ... ""'° ,._ ftUUK ... to-wit: llM Point °' ~ 7.IOO ..-. w _. -. lntufy INW8Cle "*'9 wlttl IM County et.1t of Or· ltOTICa .... comovtetlnct celh • toceeect M • eouetwt ..,.._ I OP c. ~ .,...,,,,~ .,. County on OM1mller ~ ~ lftcllUctlt'I
oomer °' Har1fvfd tMr1Ue TMJ1M.ra1'0el toueinturyium.,W..,.,..-te.,... wnee-;:;;-,.. ,..:co....,_,. w AlelleMe ltrwt. The llOllC810 mulUple contnlone, MtM1~'::'0: ':; ~ and reletff petlPll•r•I '*°" • .... Oldtown ~ ...... .,.. .,,,,.... '° PuOIWled 0r.,. coeee ,. ..... c.-,_ ~ ~ .... ...,"""',.. loeclk~Zone-.............. .......... =fltloto.:.mbef20,27, ~ • .. 1711. :IMC•,,. .. ~ .. Oletrtct. 2 (0Tlfl'Q4) w ....., propoa.1a tor the ct.,,...,. of.,.. ctllltef t ,J.-ryS. tO. , ... =l~~· P1°9.':': 1 CA comDOMn••· • Mtemte
le 1111 ;rMed • .._.,. wort;"'°"" on the....,..,.. -... °" tN l9ft 8'* .. wlttt T393 tS unttl '1:0o e.m communtoet1on1 •1•t•"'
Dlnlley ,.111111 ICM In N lllled! "'"""*'' ln=o Ute on ,,,. 1119\ def d ..__. oelj•• .. of•..,..,...,.,.. °'Y'I o..111 flten. TM ITATR OF CA&.llONM. ...... HR I .. of ...... __ ,, mm.rt,.._ anct ......,
Pf'OPOMI 11 In COftfOt11•• OIPA"1UINT OP TRANI-.. a.ft.,..., !Nit 9"11 • ftlt. • t.llM IUdl trantmltt•rlr•c•l..,ere.
"""''""",,. CIUn9ftl ..... f'OflTATIOM; fl'flOJICT llff 1'1D11F ...... fr.aura. -..c llJ1IC( = .:-be ..,.. .. ..... """' '1p11cement
end .. ,._ ....... ._. ff'LAM POR COHaTRV-•· ...... oolMeral ,.._. Tiii el ~ IALllOA ~. a"4 wate-
,....,_.,. ,...., TIONOMITAft.-.WA'f _,....,_ .... ,._.-.... ..Cnnou9•••M fl'lNIMIUl.A HAWAll ,._.......,.... ~ A ~of ...... ta on IN OMNG1 COUNTY IN Wlllt .......,.. 1nterM1 cf9.o Mm ITA~ I D I .. ._ ... ....,_.. ._, ... ~ fll""" l'9 Cllr Clerl. Dir COITA MUA MOM PAIR-, ......... _.., ......,._ TM~ l*toM.,. 1 LAN T"U 1 TO 11111tl1cei ·.,._.Ion le to
of ..... _.. leld\. IOOO VllW ROAD TO ~ INCIAL DAMAGd OF doln; llulllnW •· ~IT~ lie oou..,,<mlHf on or.,..,
Yalrt ltreee, """"""°" TONDRIVI "'-AINT1"CHUCf<LUCAI: GIL~ .. 221 eou..t~--_ _.._ofDmmMI.
.._.., C1•a ,., ""1 ...,_ ..... ,.._ .. ,.0.-1. Medlcel ·~ to Ceoll fl'I .. Coeea MeN, CAl,:;~9:) • l •tlmete. 1tll. c...in...,.. °',..
_, ......... IO ""' coll of ..,..._. ol Tr• 4 , ....... ,, -.: tall7 a ii ..,;., tlY tN City ...,..,...~ .._..,
... ,......., •• wllltll tao...,....,_......., .., ~,..... 1n-~ L . ....., ~c91':.-, .. -.. .,....,. .. ......, .. m 10 :1 of ...... '1 Rootft tOOO. iAe-Aft911ee. llMe lt,M.40 LMlcle L MtleOalf,..,. -.... t11fl ...... Cott•
flltl =-... -* C1•1 1119 toOtl, will t ~ Todd L. ,..__, M 0. TIM ~ la oon--:-.-,,.. -...... ,.._ .._, ONft11 CeuriCY. CA '°.. ::.:., C..... •. _. '"' °" ~ 1. It.Ml.GO dllC:eadtty .....,.,.._, • ._, -·• -= ..r..,.. ...,_ .,..., du II, In-t• ............. ...,.. (CJ ..... 9er\ltoell14$00 Tll• r .. leOeltt CHI Ti .. lll S......,., ._, .... C-...... er.. ..,.,.,.,.Ree1ur .. ._. -~ ............... '40~"-'*"811o-fMMSll te .,_ -....-..,. .... °'._.~.CA -1; .eoo
llft, P.O .... ttO. Hunt· tn"-'ttaMlllld....-.1:111.00 ,_ _., .. ~-.,.. ................ ""'· trWte. Or· ~ ....... CA, t3'4t ,.,..._, ..... .., M ..... Meonol1lrl Holpf-IMllW ,... • .... ,._ CA 117t•:
Ce11u11e1111 .. b1 con• wort; .. ....,ine....,.. ... Ille ............ 1111111 :::.~:-:i= ... ~.,_.,
..... _, .. CleOlllon-...... ..-.: MTotetlUtUO ... L....... l .. tni.d 11'0 ... ,.,. a..... ~CA •Tt4; ,,_....._In"' dSllNr• ITATI OI ~ lltllHIH Hit for Til9 111111w11:=•••••rt 8eaell CA tltl ... am.,
Mft .. """'* M In-DIPNmllNT OP nw.. .,..119"'1 .,.. """" .-.. ~a... ii Ot •=" lt1I • ........,. 0rMf9 *•••• """'1 "8pcwt POMATION, ~L l ta.•.IO ... CouMr Oft C....CAiiiii ......, .. ..,....,.. .., .. MDCOlftMCtPCMCOlf. MTetell ta.•.oo tt. -' ..,._ lllllmAl tn. Dlllii• ""•ofOt-
......, ITlllUCTQll ON ITATI ~DMM-01 ~Uf'~ ..... -. ~ *' ~ C... HHIHWAY Ill CNWllel WTW CMUClt WCAI: P *' °'Wll' ,__,:. '1.C... 't ,. JI or.,. C..-
o.111 "°' Du•1 .. IO, COUMTYllCOITA~ ~00 ~,_Du ........... ,,:: ... , 0.. .... DI a1 IO.
ttll "'°'9 '~ROAD TO U.. ...._ ....., I. 10, ,_ -• -TIM ~DIWI ... ...._...,._: ,._, T* =----