HomeMy WebLinkAbout1990-08-06 - Orange Coast PilotTHE ORANGE COAST
GOOD
MORNING I
It's Monday. Au1. 6, 1990,
and here's what's happening:
ORANGE COAST WEATHER:
Mostly clear and sunny.
Today's ~p/low: 71-14
Yesterday's hi~flow: 68-64
Tomorrow's h1gh/l9w: 72-6S
SPORTS:
Majer LMpe Baeeld: I
Oeklud '· A.as••• l DMc•n 11, Su Frudec. I
H-HOU• HOTUN•
TOTH••OITO•
642-6086
c..--.na • np. ... ,, ... N,_....,
INSIDE THE NEWSROOM:
Don't get the idea that an
Iraqi attack is under way just
because dozens of aircraft
blasted out of El Toro Marine
Corps Air Station on Saturday
morning ... The 33 A-6 In·
trudersand FA-18 Hornets
were heading for training ex-
ercises in Utah and Nevada,
said Master Sgt. Steve Merrill.
The exercise was planned
weeks ago and has nothing to
do with the Iraqi invasion of
Kuwait, Merrill said.
The aircraft will return later
MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1990
Off-duty policeman shot
\
Coast officer walked into hotel robbery
ly TONY DOD!RO Scharps Memorial Hospital, where
o.-y,... luff.,.., he was listed in serious but stable
HUNTINGTON BEACH _Two condition, said Huntington Beach
. h f bb' Sa Police Lt. Jeff Cope. m~n an t e process o ro mg .a n While his fiancec and daughter
Diego motel shot and ser:iously waited outside in his car, Barr
wounded ~n off-duty Huntington walked into the lobby of the
-~eh Polt<ie . officer .~ate--S.turday-Hampunrmn-;-S~Kearney Mesa n~t. a San Diego Pohce spokesman Blvd., at about 10:40 p.m. to register
said. for a room, police said.
Thirteen-year veteran Officer As he approached the front desk
Robert Ray Barr, 42, was taken to Barr was confronted by two armed
men wearing hoods over their head~
who entered the inn behil)d him.
San Diego Police Lt. Peter Cruz
said while one of the men robbed the
desk clerk of his wallet and the
contents of the cash register, the
other man ordered Barr to lie on the
ground. He then told Barr to give
him his waJJet. ,
Barr responded that he did not
have his wallet with him. The man
armed with a shotgun, then fired
twice at Barr.
Cruz said a witness told police
that Barr had strugled with one of
the robbers, and there was evidence
that the off-duty offieer fired one
round from a weapon that was not
his service revolver. However, it was
unknown if Barr wounded either
robber.
After shooting Barr, the pair rob-
bed the front desk of an undisclosed
amount of cash and fled. Cruz said
that witnesses saw the two men
jump ~ycr a nearby wall, eludina
authonues.
No arrests have been made in
conncctJon with the sbootina, Cruz
said.
Cope, the Huntington Beach
Police lieutenant, said docton per-
formed surgery on Barr's leas and
arms. He was resting in the bospi.-
tars intensive care unit.
Barr's fianoee and teen-qe dauP·
ter were not injured during the inci-
dent.
Carport fire destroys 10 cars
Ex-roommate
suspect in
arson case
ly TONY DODlltO
.,.., ,... IC.a« Wlftla<
-this-,month-,-he..sa-· .,___ ___ __..._
COST A MESA -A dispute be-
tween former roommates erupted
into an early morning blaze that
destroyed 10 cars. dama&ed four
hers, burned. an apartment
carport's roof and left a man injured.
authorities said.
Sip O' Times: During a re-
cent Newpon Bc.ach City
Council confab. Coun-
cilwoman Evelyn Han won·
dered aloud ifthere was any-
thina that could be done to
notify beachgoers ahead of
time-that there are no patking
spaces left on the Balboa Pen-
insula ... Post some signs. per-
haps?
Newport Beach City Man-
ager Robert Wynn said peo ple
will ignore such signs and con·
tinue onto the Peninsula any-
way, thinking. "I can find a
spot."
WIATHlll MIO
oaAN CONDITIONS ........ ,., .......
INDEX
Bridge 85
Business A4
Classified 83-6
Crossword 85
Entenalnment A6
Horoscope 85
AM Landers A 7
Opinion A8
Police Log Al
Public notices 86-7
Society A7
Spotts 8 1-3
TV listings A6
W eather A9
TODAY'S THOUGHT
"At t/W bOmb fd ovrr
H/roshltM M'td ~1Cplod«J. we SllW .,, M tlre clfy
dhlflP#M. I wrot~ In my
Jog: 'My God, what,.,,.,. ... ~., ...
... n NvlnL~
Enola Gay co-plot
awned-out cars serve •• lln9erlr19 , .... enders of •n ••rly
1110rnln9 ftre ttNlt broke out In the carport of • Cosu Me ..
.............................
•partment complex Sund•Y· l'ollce uy tlte Mala• followed
• feud between • terNlnt •nd his fonller roowte.
Michael J. Denicola. 26, was ar-
rested on suspicion of arson and
held at the Costa Mesa Jail in heu of
S2S.OOO bail.
Francisco Lopez burned his foot
when he tried to move his car away
from the flames. said Costa Mesa
Police Lt. Gary Webster. No other
injuries were reported, and the
apanments sustained no dam-.e.
The fire s\artcd at a little after 4
a.m. Sunday in a carpon at the Our
Town apartment CQmplcx, 1250
Adams Ave .. Webster said.
"Ten cars wett totally engulfed in
flames and four others were damaa·
ed." Webster said.
Fire investiptors believe the fitt
started in a Geo Tracker, spread to
the carport roof and ultimately to
the other cars, Webster said.
"You could sec the shells of the
cars thro\.lgh all the flames.'' said
Barry K.nby. a resident of a nearby
a~rtment. "The fla mes were real
high. 10 to 15 feet above the prifC.
and you could hear the (cai1 wm-'
dows cxplodanf ...
"In fact, thats what woke me up,"
said neiJhbor Brenda Garnett .
Dcmcola, of Huntington Beach.
f Please '" '91tf /a.ck ,._.,
Healthier food trend moves
into the school lunchroom
Irvine demonstrates
the advantages of
year-round schools ly AMANDA \lfltAY
o.-y .............. ...,,,..,
It depends on who you ask.
Children wiU say. in a perfect
world, lima beans and brusseJ
sprouts would be relegated to
herbivores or potted plants.
And their parents. well ... those
who know better promote the more
odd-tasting legumes.
And where shall the twain meet?
In the school cafeteria.
Despite a continuing suspicion
amona youngsters toward good-for.
you foods. school administrators in-
creasingly arc sncakina more
nutritious meals into the menu.
It might look like ordinary pizza.
but the c rust of Newport-Mesa U ni·
fied School District's venlon is
made with whole wheat flour, and
next fall the cheese will be mixed
with a lower-fat product.
Jan Monforte, the disJrict's food
ser\licet director. says the changes
comlna in area tchool menus arc
lf'lldual, but steady. Pizza. by far the most popular
lunch meal. is just one of many
dilhcs llattd ·for a healthier future,
Monfom sa~
The diatnct is offmna more
chicken than in ye.an pest. sticks
strictJy to vqetable oil, doesn't fry
any foods, and is continually netc>-
tiatint with fOod companies to supp.
ly reduced-fat products. especially
battered fish and chicken. ih1s fall ,
Monforte is switching from milk
with 2 percent fat to I percent.
"We're buying more nutritious
foods every year," she said. "We·ve
'' What good is
nutrition if it's
in the trash f an? ,,
tned to cut su11r. fat and salt."
If meals differ too much from
what's served at home or even at
fast-food mtaurants. child~n avoid
them, Monforte laments.
"What good is nutrition if it's in
the trash canr
Consequently. Monforte says she
is always lookint for new ways to
make meals fun.
At the hiah tehool level. she has
offered aalacl hers. taco ban. potato ban. and an intttnational food day.
She hopes to soon bring in a sand-
wich' bar and rqular outdoor
bat1xcues.
At the dcmentary level, however.
she i1 still wortins on ,ettina di tric:t
approval to give children two or
more lunch menu choices.
Such a chanat might Jive a child
the option to C"8t fresh fruit rather
than canned fruit in light syrup or a
sweeter item.
Lunches at the elementary level
cost students S 1.25. and at the sec-
ondary level. SI .SO or $2. Ahho ugh
the d1stnct received fewer aovern·
ment commodities to help case the
cost of providing some l.S million
lunches a year. prices will remain
the same next year.
"The pr<>vam is supposed to be a
break-even PfOITlm. but we've had
to deficit spend," Monforte said.
"We're bopina to tum it around ...
In a move that could cost Mon·
forte her job, the district is lookmg
into havina the Marrion Corp. man·
.,c the food services prosnm.
should the company be able to do it
cheaper.
Monforte said the distnct already
makes the most of the food it does
receive from the aovcmment, some-
times askina neatby districts for
ROur they won't uae. Monforte said
New~·Mtu makes all of its bread
products from 1eratch.
Oiant mixing blades capable of
stirrina 60 pllons of product and
wirt wbisk1 Marty 5 fttt in tenath
ttst.ity to the volumes of douah
produced at the di1tric1'1 ht Strtet
,... .... POOD/9edr ......
ly TIM HUGHES
Del!r ,_ C..••+z-lt
IRVrNE -What do kids do dunng the summer?
Some imqcs come immediately to mtnd: Endless hours spent
an the front yard doinJ the patented "Pete Rose dive .. onto the
neighborhood Slip n Slade; tradinf. three Larry Bowa bascbalJ cards
for one highly coveted Bobby Gnch card; making skateboards and
doana damqc with whatever houS(hold tools were handy.
School was a distant memory. with the fifth-lf'lde roller coaster
ride of cititcnsh1p reports, tarches and notes from the principal all
banished for thrtt months.
Most kids weren't too anxious to climb back onto the sixth·
grade coaster in the fall.
Ex<iept in Irvine.
Sin<ie 1974, Irvine Unified School Distnct. which operates 21
elementary schools tn lrvtne and one in Santa Ana. has kept two
elementary schools open on a ye.ar-round school schedule.
Both schools. Vista Verde and El Camino Ru!, have principe.11
who claim the year-round schedule 1s a chanec for the better and a
break from the past .
"The traditional qranan mockl of education was 10 have the
kids help with the harv«t." Vista Verde principal Bruce Terry said.
Terry said that as fewer and fewer families relied on the IMIOUI
crops for their family mcomcs, the need for the traditiOMI
September thro~ June tehool term diminiahed. It is now 1
question of confhct in teheduhng bctWttn the lf'ldt achooll, whida ~n easily shift to a year.,tound sy tem, and hiah tehooh.. whidl have
for years thrown themtelves at the mmy of the athletic ICMdlale
maken.. ICXOl'dina to Terry.
"Wbat drives the hip tehool• (to IUI.)' on the U'ld1tioMI ldlloOI
tchtdule) is the CIF cakndar. •hkh is a dllldvan• to-. .. e. llid.
Terry explained tba\ the CtF bu always dic'8led aa Mt'nk ,. ... -~ .....
-.. , __ .
c n mn Ir q, t p up his
nnlng with advisers, mllltary
W AIHJNOTON -Praideal 1'bcy reviewed the situation in
.... llid •::: tbal Iraq .. tied the Oult., laid White HoUte .....
-...... 1a111d oo ha &nail Doua Davidlon. He~ not
---pull its iavadinil forces OUl elabota&e. ii Kuw.iL ~ ud fOrceful, the 8uab turned uick reporten' qua-
flllldrt1 lllin condemned Iraq's uonubout whether Turkey or Saudi L Jl!ioo Ud aid, '1'hil will not Arabia woukt shut off' pipelines criti·
cal to Iraq's oil djstribution, and he
, allb diloatcbed Secretary Dick refuted to diteuss any military ac-
Cbeftey to "Saudi Arabia to confer tion the United States miabt be
Wi&b leaden of the desert kinadom, plannina.
idminisvation touroei said. ·:rm ~ot JOin& to discuss. what
, 8'llb conferred Sunday evenina we re dou~a 10 terms of movin.t of ror I YJ boun at the White House fo~ anythina of that nature,' be
:.-Ith his top civilian and military said.
advisers, includina Secretary of State . Bush said be will meet Monday at
:James A. Baker III and Gen. Colin the White House with NA TO Sec· ~oweU,:.. chairman of the Joint Chiefs rewy-GeneraJ Manfred Woerner
bf Stan. and British Prime Minister Marpret •
•
Thatcher, on her way home from
Alpen, Colo.
Speakina on condhion of
anonymity, an administration
IOUl'<le said it bldn't beeo de·
ICnnined whether Cheney will visit
only Ryadh, the Saudi capital, or
other Mideast nations as well.
Bush praised Japan's decision to
j_oin an 1ntemational boycon of oil
from Iraq and Kuwait, and said he
~ned to speak apin with Turkish
dent Turgut Ozal as part of the
"intensive diplomatic activity
around the world."
He said he had offered Kuwait's
emir, now in exile, "certain as-
surances" in a lelephone conversa-
tion on Saturday .
lka11l 11i4 Illa toll as iOla&e
lr:-qi leader s.ddam HUACin. The
Unned Slates IWiftly impoeed an
economic bo)'COll on lfMI after its
Ii=. invuion of Kuwait lut
Yle y, and BUib bu spent
much of his time since then uflins
Other nations IO join in preauri"I
~economically.
• Thete are outlaws. international
outlawi and re~" he said o(
the Iraqi leadenlUp.
"There seems to be a united front
out there that says Iraq, havina
committed brutal, naked agresaion,
ou~t to aet out and this concept of
their installina some puppet leavina
behind will not (be) acceptable," the
president said.
-By ~ bHCUIH Preu
~spin outlines U.S. military options
WASHINGTON -Here are the
United States' mili tary options, as
outlined by House Anncd Services
Committee Chainnan Les Aspin, 0-
Jlis., shouJd Iraq invade Saudi
&.rabia. ~ Aspin discussed the choices o n the
CBS news program "f ace the Na-~-.. ll&Un.
~ Asked if the United St.ates would
launch an attack in the event of an
Davasi on, Aspin said: ~ "I tbjnk that the question -the
lnswcr is yes. I think that's almost
Jnevitable. Those Saudi oil fields arc
50 important to the national security
of the United St.ales, and I'm assum-in& that when the invasion comes
Ulat Saudi Arabia would say "OK. ..
1 would think we would do it."
Aspin said the attack could be
.manaaed. although the Iraqi arm) 1s
la!Jer.
• Well, I auess the first question IS,
a n you do it with air power~ I
' I
mean, it's a race to the oil fields.
Basically. the oil fields are the key,
and the Iraqis, presumably, most
intelligence think. would go right
down the G ulf Coast heading for the
Saudi Arabian oil fields, and it's a
race to the oil fields.
"Now what we have available to
stop that first and foremost would
be some air power. Not pro~bly as
much as we ought to have in the
region, but some air power. The
question is can you stop the anvad-
ing Jraq1 force with air power
alone?"
Asked whether the Iraqis would
be able to use the powerful anti-
aircraft misslcs supplied by the Sov-
iets. Aspan said:
"No. no. I think that's not a
danger in the area of Saudi Arabia.
The} would be moving down with
tanks. It's a great territory to go with
tanks. It~ fla t, it's hard, they could
move very quickl y with tanks. but
they're in the open. There's no
cover. There's no conceaJmcnt. It's
essentially the air power against the
tanks. J would suess maybe a 1-in-4
chance of stopping those -and also
as you said at tht show here today
is the logistics problem."
Besi des trying to stop Iraq with air
power. Aspin said there are two
other things America could do.
"None of this is ideal. but option
number two is to carry the war to
Baghdad. in other words. to, when
the war comes. use air power and go
afier the Jraq1 homeland. The third
option -high risk -high risk -
and 11 needs Saudi Arabia to invite
us an earl y enough -an other
words, before the attack -1s to land
some Amencan ground forces along
that route down to the Saudi oil
fields.
EanhWorks
"We can't fet enou&h in there to
pro tect the oi fields, 6ut essentially
act enouah in there as a tripwire, a
deterrence. And the messaae to Mr.
Hussein would be, 'If you attack
those American troops, right along
that line, I mean that is war right to
the end.'
"Now, those troops would be vast-
ly outgunned. They would have to
retreat very quickly. but it would
essentially be the kind of thing like
the brigade -like the brigade we
had in Berlin through all the years of
the Cold War. I mean, they were
there more as a symbol of anything
and as a deterrence than as an
effective m1htary force. High risk to
put US troops an that kind of situ·
auon."
-By l>e AH oclalftl PttH
Recycling habit taking
hold with our children
The co-owner of the Newport Ski Co .. and a former college and
professional basketball star, who grew up on the Orange Coast and
attended Corona del Mar High and Orange Coast College.
DREAM TEAM------
He transferred from OCC to UCLA and pla}ed under John
Wooden on the 1969 and 1970 Nauonal Champ1on'ih1p basketball
teams. Jn 1969. he played with Kareem Abdul Jabbar. "ho was then
known as Lew Alcmdor. and was the captam of the I 970 team .
PLAY BALL-------
While he said he doesn't keep 1n touch "1th Jabbar he dues ~e
coach Wooden ever) once an awhile . ..\fter l 'C L.\. Vallel~ .i I. of
Newport Beach. played professional ball "Ith the .\tlanta Ha"k<>. the
Houston Rockets and la ter an Europe "1th a Belgian tc:im
RESEARCH TOPIC-----
In 1977, he started Newport Ski Co. w11h hi\ partnl·r Jeff Jone'i. r Small quake shakes
: Santa Cruz Mountains By JOHN JAVNA Bush and am "rating one 10 the
sc:nators and rcpresenta11,es of Vir-
grn1a lfpcuple me~~ up the Earth "C
need to clean 11 up ... -Pa1m:1a
Kinser. "arrl·nton \'a
But. for Vallely. snow skiing 1s JUSt a hobb). Mo'>l 111 h1') 11me 1!>
devoted to his pct project -The Pl'd1a1m C ·ama Rcscarrh
Foundation
..
. .
.. .
,,
••
.. ...
SAN JUAN BAUTIST ..\ -..\
moderate earthquake shook the
Santa Cruz Mountains on Saturda\
night, but no tnJunes "ere reported.
The U.S. Geological Su"<.'} re -
ported the 11 :52 p.m temblor
measured 4.3 on the Richter scale
and was centered near the to" n ol
San Juan Bauusta. about 75 miles
southeast of San Francisco
"It was JUSt enough to rattle thangs
and make the pots s" 1ng. But 11
seemed ver> small... said Landa
Parker. a clerk with the allnas
police department.
The temblor !>Crved as anothl'r
reminder for Northern (ahfom1 a
residents of the dcadl) Oct 17.
~989. earthquake an the San Fran·
c1sco Ba> area that measured 7 I on
the Richter scale. killed 67 people
and caused b1lhons of dollars 1n
damage.
Quakes of magnitude 4 10 5 are
considered moderate and could
cause some manor damagr such a~
brokeo c:.hma and cracks an poorl>
built structures.
-By 'ne A.Hoclated Pre11
Knott's Farm reopens ~ .... ~.-.-;•.'.•.•.1 ...... '.'.'.
BUENA PARK -Knoll's Berry Farm.
forced to close early when a electrical trans-
former fi re knocked out power to the amuse-
ment park. had all of its ndes runntng again
Sunday afternoon. offi cials said
NEWS
BRIEFS
The park opened at its usual tame Sunda) morning with
most rades operating. but took $9 off the $21 admission pncc
because of the 1ncon..,emence. said Knott's spokesman Stuart
Zanv1lle. All of the ndes we re running agaan shortl) after noon.
Zanv1lle said.
Fire ottic1als said the blaze broke out an a power station area
near the southwest end of the park shortl} after 9· 10 p m
Saturday. No one was 1n1ured. but the park had to close about
two hours earl>.
Zanv1lle said emergenq generators PO'-"Crcd rolkr loastcr\
and other ndes long enough for passengers to get ofT sale I). and
emergenc> hghttng was used as people left the park
OC College gets grant funds
COS!A MESA -Orange Coast Colkge 1' one of eight
community colleges selected b) the Chancellor-.. Office of the
California Community College for grant monies to pro' 1dc
increased technical training for local manufacturing industries.
The ~ant. valued at SIJU.000. wa ll fu nd a C ·enter lor l.\pplted
Competiti ve Techno logjes. which 1s expected to become sclf-
sufli cient 1n three years . ..
. "Amencan manufacturers have lost their competttl\ e edge
m recent years. not because of a lack of technological toolc;. (but)
because workers and managers have not been adequatcl) trained
in using new technology.·· said Richard I.\. Chard. OCCs as~iate dean for v~ational and occpuat1onal education. "We'll ~SS!Sl small firms m 1mprov1ng the skills of 1he1r personnel. and an 1mprov1ng product quality ...
The center, which wall serve as a clearinghouse of h1gh -
tcchnology information. education and training. wall be closely
alianed wi th OCC's Computerized Numencal Control Lab. Co~pu ~er Drafting L:ab. and Roboucs Lab. Many of those
trained in the center wdl work an one or more of the adjunct labs.
UCI Cancer Center honored
IRVINE -The Association of American Cancer Institutes,
an orpniu tion which fosters collaboration betwee n research
institutions for the control of cancer, has admitted the UCI
O inical Cancer Center to its membership .
The UCI facHi ty1 whic~ was established in 1981. is the only
Oranae Countt memoer. Director Frank L. Meyskens Jr. rcccntly
received the Year 2000 Award" from the National Cancer
ln.Utute for his contribution to the national aoat of rcducina the cancer death rate by half by the year 2000.
The ueociauon wlll belp support further cancer research at
tbe center, wblCb ia located at the UCl Medical Center. IOI The
C'lty Drive. <>ranee.
• •
There's a nc"' kind of en-
" tronmental problem to rontt>nd
with. frustration ome ..\mencans
arc begannang to fc:cl that their sin-
cere efforts to protect the Eanh
aren't bearing fruit The} ·re de:·
moralized b' ne"" that Therc~s ''too
much" gla'>s being reC}cled. or that
··green" wnsumcr products aren't
alwa)s "'hat the} 're cracked up to
be.
But 1f }ou·,e found ~ourself "on-
denng ··w hat's the use')" take heart.
We ma} not ha'e con,anced our
grocers 10 stock organic produce }Ct.
but "'e'rc rcach1n~ our children.
How do I kn o"". EH·ry week. kids
wnte letters 10 EarthWorks and
share their enthusiasm about work·
mg for our planet Herc are a few
excerpts that might help lift yo ur
span ts:
•"My couc;in and I formed a club
called KAP (Kids Against Pol-
lution). It's become a wa> ofhfe. We
wnte le tters to officials and we clean
up places 1n our area. Once. m}
friend. our brothers and I cleaned up
all the aluminum cans out of a
stream near u!>. We collected 53
cans' We 'aduplec.J' that stream." -
Gina Young. North"est Washing-
ton. DC "P.S I used both sides of
this paix·r. not t"o sheets."
•"Toda} I'm "n11ng 10 }OU be-
cause I want )OU to kno" "hat I'm
doing to \3\e the Earth I rcc\ck so
v.e don't ha' e so much g.a rhagc I
don·1 go tu fast-food places !>O muth
an) more lx:rnu\C of St) rofoam and
ca rdboard I "'rite on both s1de'i of
the paper r 0 sa \ e paper. v.c planted
trees 1n our had.\ard " -Da,1d
Solwa}. ( 1nunna1i
• ''H11 M> name.-1s Su1anne
Raper I am !J I am cu111ng c;1x-pack
Coke holder" \O that birds and fi'i h
don't gl't \lud.. It works. too' I e'en
tool. 11 11110 m> th ird grade class and
shared that 1dl'U v.1th all JI ofm>
friend\. e'en thl' teacher."
•"I hope more people "'II -;tort
to notacc our Earth an a pos111ve wa}
and v.orl. to hnng about change. I
ha'e "nllen a le11er 10 President
Marguana plants
worth S2.4 mllllon
destroyed In raid
SHELTER COVE -The street
value of 80 I man1uana plants pulled
up by erad1cat1on teams an the fi rst
wee k of "Operation Grcc:o Sweep"
was shah:?.; more than Sl.4 million,
federal o 1c1als said Sunday.
On Saturday, 97 plants worth
about $290.000 were taken from one ~rdcn in the Krna Ranae National
on~rvat1on Area. ac:cordina to the
U.S. Bureau of Land Ma~ement.
Bureau personnel. the Ca ifom ia
National Ouard and U.S. Army tt~,P? from Fon Ord's 7th Infantry
Oiv111on compnsc the teams tak.ina ru" an the pot raids which ~n last
unday alona the ruuc<t no coast or Cahfomia.
The opera11on, with more than
200 personnel, is 1ehedulcd to con·
tinue t.hrouah this week.
The bureau said that 16 marijuana
prden1 were hit tbroUlh Saturday.
\
•"Although I am 14. I foci a'i 1f
m~ gcnaa11un has a lot of control
OH!r the rn' 1ronmcn1 Thank \OU
for l'hang1ng m} at111uck to\.\'ard
Eanh ·· -'I \Cite Rob11a11lc. \an
Diego
•"Me and m> broth(·r and 'il'itcr
have decided to start rec)clmg to
help save the Earth. I didn't kno"
}OU could rcqclr paper. What a
great idea'" -Katherine Keller.
Middleburg. Fla.
• "J decided to adopt a stream
two weeks ago. now 1t looks Jrcat' I
usuall> have rec and sw1mminf. but
instead of dm mg J nde a bike.:· -
Courtney Pe1ss1g. Dorchester. Wis.
•"In our class. we are working on
recycling. We are 'S mashing cans and
our class bought 1wo acres in the
Costa Rica raanforest with 2.000
cans. The world looks pretty now
but 1f people don't start rcc}chng.
the world won't look the same:· -
Joshua Hackel, Wil~on' 1lle. Ore
•"I am a fifth grader al the
Memorial huol 1n Burlington.
Mass. Nov. I am more careful about
what I thro" awa}. rcc)cle or use
agaan. You reall) got me thankang
about what as happcnang to our
wonderful planet and I'm glad there
arc ways I can help.. -Jason
SufTred1n1. Burlington. Mass.
So even 1f }OU get a linlc fru'i-
trated, don't g1"e up Your commit-
ment to the en"1ronmcn1 1~ helpmg
to foster a whole new set of values
that our children will carf) into the
21st century. Thai·~ real progre11<> It
may even save the world.
II yo• tave q•e•llo1u or com·
mtot1 about our eovlroameot and
wtat you can do to lltlp, pleHt
write to Jolla JIVoa lo care of
EarlllWorb, P.O. Box 411141, Kan-
,.. City, Mo. 14141. Btcau1e of tlle
vol•mt of mall, Jollo 11 Hable to
reply persoaally but will addreH
l1,.e1 of 1toeral latertll 111 tlle
col•m•.
A CANCER-FREE WORLD--
..\fter seeang his I I ·year-old daughter ~ilrll ~l·n h' t·ann:r. \ alkl~
!>Cl out to "1pe out the d1o;casc. "" r·, l' got w tr) to nd tht· "nrlll
of can(·er ~ J'm going 10 II') 10 do \Omt•th1ng .1hout ti"
DO I HEAR A S 1,0007'---
Each Noq~mber. the lounda11on holds 11\ "Btd'i for Kach:·
wh ich is a d1n m·r and '>llent auction :11 the Le Mrnd1cn lfotrl 1n
Ne"port Beach .
CASH FOR CURES-----
He said the foundauon raise~ about $ 'no.ooo a \Car "h1r h 1.,
dist ributed to the research lab at ( hildren's Ho..,p11al 1ri Orange. The
mone) 1s then diverted 10 Much <aim. "ho \'alkh l'allcd tht'
"forcmo~t can cer research sc1cnt1\I in thl· count~ ..
SMALL BUT BIG------
"This as a small. local chan t) that 1'i getting h1g 1h1ng' dnnt·:·
he said. and he: pc>1nted out that unlikl' \Oml' c hant~ group' II
percent of the monc} 1'-going lo research
EDITOR'S 'VOTE If iou i mm ~omeonc "ho shouhl fl<
featured in "nr;rngt• ( oos1 Pi·opk" ml/ lh<' Daily Pilot's \1t\ [)\· .. ~
at 642-·U21 . or lea' c a me\s.1gc on tht' fd11 or-., Hothnl' -M~·MH<fi
News of the weird
Fisher, Price co-presi~~nts
of Fisher-Price; no relation
ly CHUCK SHEPHERD
Fisher-Prier. thr to) makt·r
named a!> co-prc'i1dcnt'i of thl· firm
recent I> Da' 1d h\hl·r <1nd Paul
Pnce. m·1tlwr of "'horn '" rclall'd 111
the Fisher and Pncc who founded
the firm 1n I 930
0
In Januan . Rrun• Behna hl.·ut
Rohen '\pcn.l·er for a 'it'al on the
(Hl'ihen ((>h10) To"nsh1p hoard of
trU'ilee'I o n a lOln IO'iS. af\cr thl' tv.o
"'ere 11ed in \Otl''> Four }eal"i ago.
Behner al.-.o heat Srx•ncer on a coin
101\S
ORANGE COAST Telephohe numbers How1rd l . Schramm
Clrculatlon Vee President
I Advertising &
laily Pilat Orange County 642-033 Marketing Laguna Niguel 495·6800
MlchMI Sho-.11 Advertising Vee President Classified 642·5678 Circulation Display 642-4321
VOL. 14, NO. 211 Edlt0t1al Pramod Shah
News 5'0·1224 Vice President
Sports 642-4330 Controller Editor's Hotlln• 642-6086 News.sports fax 646·'4170
YtM comment• .t»out the Oalty Pilot or news tips wil David Holett
be rtoonild end gMln dlrec:ty '° Edtot W••m Vice President
l.obdtl. The Mme 2A-how enawering MMo9 may be Mllnomce Production
uMd '° record lelilrl '° h editof on .,Y topic Bu1int11 otfk:e 642~21
COMlbutora 10 our l.Mtlra cobnr'l mutt lndude fleir Busintu fax 631 ·5902 w111aam s. Lobdell n.me end .....,..,. .. number '°' ~. lhla la ):JO W .., 14 . C.. .._,CA tM27
your communlly ~; .. wane YfNf lnwtYe-.......... P 0 los IMO,C.... Meu,CAtra2' vie. President
~ ... -.................. and Ed1t0< ment ................... lw\,,_, ......... • ..................... ~ Delly Piiot delivery gu••ntMI ._.._,...... ... c... C4111Dtftll Cheri Freemen ~ , ...... .,_,.,..,,.IUl l* Cla11ifled Manager " ~ do not t.-. 'f0/11 peper by e a.m • cal be*" .............. ., .... 11 .............
noon end 'f0/11 :n will be dllW!td Ctll be*" 10 n..o..,.. 0.. ~ .............. ., , ...
a.m. end •1 ... '° ~ by noon Our CvMOmtr c... .... ~-·-...~---LIN Tanney ......... ~,,..,....--~ ~ c.n.r. Ma""333, It °'*' "'°"' e a m. eo a ~--··••hr a.c..-. Pre Pre11 U.nager
p"' autdllr•. untl noon on• 11t•ldl. '° auiat ~ ,.e... .... ~··· ...... --.., 'fOW «*aie.tlon ,__. ...._, ...... o...~-Htnry Knight ..._.L ..... Preu Room ManllQ., To maka • correction .......... Clllill I ....... CMi.. .. ......
I • .. Or-. Coele 0., Plott,., IO pl'omply ow,,.. OecwflAnluz _....al.,... of 1lltl1•• Te Npef\ M MW°' ..... ........ Dt.trblllOnl ~--..._. .............. ....... oa1w-4321Md.-.. ,.~.-. Ptenc_~
• • •
;
Predictions for
the local airport
.As workers rustrro finis t erminal,
the question of the future surfaces
In 40 days, the new terminal
at Oranae County Airport will
opcB. (Note the non-use' of that
. fine cowboy actor's name.) Here
art a few facts and opinions on
that event's sianificance.
Finl off, business will in-
crease 75 percent This conforms
with the I 98S settlement of a JI lawsuit between Newport Beach m
(over which planes take off) and Wood
Oranac County (owner of the air···••miiiiiiiliiiiiii port). Specifically. the old terminal
could handle ~. 7S million passcn-
acrs a year: the new one, 8.4 million passenacrs a year. That's an
allowed increase of 3.65 million annual arrivals and departures.
When the new terminal opens, average daily departures will go
from 85 to more than I.SO. The airport operates 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.,
so that means going from less than sill takeoffs an hour ... to more
than 10.
The good news is that there will be no increase in "noisy··
takeoffs. Let me explain: Flights are classified "noisy," ·1not-so-
no1sy'' and "whoosh Jets." These cateJOries have decibel levels. fancy
codes. etc .. but for now. let's keep It simple.
The "noisy" jct takeoffs, in ~eeping with the 1985 agreement.
must remain at 39 per day. Ttiese are the McDonnell-Douglas
MD-80s with the long, skinny bodies and Oown by Alaska. Trans
World, Continental and Nonhwest airlines.
The "not-so-noisy" takeoffs will increase from 16 10 34 every
day. These are Boeing 737s and 757s. The 757. carrying 187 people,
is the largest Orange County jct. Soon, however, the airport will test
a Boeing 767 capable of carrying 200 people non-stop to New York
and Boston. The 76 7 will fit into the "not-so-noisy" category.
Finally. when the new terminaJ opens. "whoosh" jet takeoffs,
the quietest ones. will double. Thc)"are allowed to increase from 35
to as many as 85 average daily dcpanurcs. These arc the foreign-
made, high-winged aircraft that look like moths. These guys will
carry the bulk of the 75 percent increase in passenger traffic.
In talking with pilots. Orange County is known to have the
toughest noise abatement procedures in Lhe country. In summary:
Opening the new temunal will nearly double daily takeoffs. 85 10
as many as 160. but most nights will be of the quietest. .. whoosh ..
jct aircraft. How does that sound?
How does the new terminal look? I sneaked to the other day
and poked around. First off. it's hard to believe the place will be
read y for a black-lie reception on Sept. 7. That's just 31 days and
122 hours from now. Af\er 21'2 years. construction looks three-founhs
fini shed.
terminal looks spiffy. h's gray on gray. with marble borders around
carpeted floors. The ceilings are lofty and the light fixtures nqu1s1te.
What's missing are the originally planned skylights. What's hokey
are the freeze-dried palm trees surrounding the bronze statue of you-
know-who. (Note: the Hoka Hey Foundry did the casting.)
From the approach, the new terminal at Orange County A1rpon
looks maJCSllC. Some will say it's a row of Quonset huts squ1shl'd
tOiCther. Don't ltsten. Lighting and landscaping will alter that
impression.
As tor the future. here are two airport prcd1c11ons:
Prcd1ct1 on No. I: The name s1tua11on will remain confusing as
lon8 as Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley remains 1n office.
Claim checks on baggage designate 1t Santa .\na (SNA) Pilots on
approach call 11 Orange County. Tom Riley pushed through the
cowbo) mo\le star's name on June 20. 1979: IO emollonal da) s afll·r
the .. Ouke" died. Prcd1c11o n: w1thtn weeks of To m Rile) leaving
office. the name will be changed .back to Orange Count)' Airport
Pred1c11on o. 2. El Toro Marine Alr-s:3se is stllfthe onh '1abre
alterna11H for an Orange Count) a1rpon II has fo ur run9.a~s. '"o
that arc I 0.000 feet long and two at 8.000 feel. 8) compJnson. our
current commercial a1rpon has but two runwa)S. both are 5.7()(} feet
in length Prcd1ct1on: Despite the end of the Cold War. El. Toro "'II
not he ~nou'll) d1~u\scd as the: ne:itt Orange Count) .\1rpon "htk
Tom R1lcv as 1n office.
(Tame 1s running out. fhe Newpon-Orange Count) agrecment
expires 1n 2005 Af\cr that ... thl' sk) 's the hm11. .. L11erall)' l
Bonom ltne: Supervisor Rile). a fo rmer Manne ( orps gc:neral
at El Toro. ·~ running unoppoS<'d for a fifth 1erm this No,embcr.
He will then be 1n offi ce unul 1995. when at age 84 he ha\ prom1-.ed
to retire ... and lhl' agreement has 10 >cars to go.
Meanwhile, the S70 m1ll1on terminal .will open 1n ~t) da)s al
Orange Count> Airport. It "'" be named in honor of Supcn 1o;or Thomas F. Rak). the man who~ d1s1ric1 will endure 160 tnkl'o!T<.
a da).
Jim Wood'• col•mn run1 S•nd•y•. ToHd•ys and Is runnln,
tod•y In pl•cr of Frrd M•rtla, wbo I• tdla1 • w~~k off. M•rlln s
columa rrHmri .4111. 15. ~
S30 million Lotto
jackpot expected
SACRl\MENTO-Nobody picked a w10n1ng
ticket to the weekend "Lo110 6-53 .. game. and the
$23.2 m1ll1on Jackpot was estimated to grow to SJO
million b) Wednesday.
Seven players guessed fi ve of the six numbers
plu~ the bonus number drawn aturda) naght. state
lottery officials said Sunday Each ucket is wonh
SI 12,9 18.
The uckcts for those winners were bought to
., .... ,.
East Palo Alto. San Leandro, Fairfax. Pixle y. Hemt't. Santa Monll'a
and Santa Mana
Another 184 players had fi ve of the sax numbers. each winning
$4.295.
The winning numbers to the twice weekly game wen~ 26. 27. 23.
29, 12. and 3 I. The bonus number was 20.
The S60 prize for guessing fo ur of sa' numbers went to 11 .809
people. and 224,435 people won SS each for picking lhrer number~
The fopper c111cs chosen were: Santa Clara: Canoga Park and
Santa Mana. and 11 players got them nght.
Corona def Mar
annexed in 1923
• la Newport Bead1: Most of Corona del Mar -------.
was annc"<ed to Newport Beach afkr an elcctaon
Apnl 3. 1923. The vote was 181 to 32 for
annexation. which auarantced Corona del Mar a ... __ ,__
dependable water supply.
• la Costa Mesa: In 1929. Leroy P. Anderson
of Costa Mesa wu elected president of the newly
formed Ncwpon Harbor Union Hi.,, School
District which would build the first h1ah school
an the area.
• ta H••tl•1toa Beacla; Pliocene~aac oil de-
posits arc located as shallow as 4.000 feet. and ~me wells have been produc1n1 for more than 60
years.
• la La1H• Beac~ The pepper tf'C'ts an Or-
anae County arc a lepcy of lM Ma s1on pne ts who 1mponcd lrttj
to 1mpro'-'e the blukness of the landscape. Pepper trees are nat1\le
to Peru, but like the ohve trees brouatft from Pak tint'. they hl-YC
comfortably sculcd an all over Oranac ounty.
Your lim1/)' rrtt could SpnlC't up Dtd You Know! nd our
hlSIOrK'll l'KU ro Otd You Know. OrMp C.U•.,.., ....... P.O. Bo~ I $60. CMtt M~. 9~16. ......,. -0.,dW ~ _. ....-
Or .. c... rnideDat eqioyed •
variety of nucnalnmcm lhi1 wta•
enckbilbliltned by lhe fiuk o!JbL
Op PrO 5Urfl1t1 CUmpionlhip -at
Huati..,aoo leech Pier. O\ber di·
Yenionl iDduded tbe California
VolklWll'ft Jamboree at the <>ranee
County Fail'lrC)Uftds and pcrformen
on Llpna lach'a Main Bach.
About I 0,000 spectalOll turned
out to watch the worid's belt aurfen
coms>ete for the 1urfina title Satur-
day. Todd HolJaDd of Coc:ol Bacb, Fla. took the men's title, while fel-
low Aoridian Freida Zambe took
the women'• title.
Sunday, Volkswqm enthusiasts
found entertainment with the Volks-
w.,en Jamboree and Hawaiian
Party at the county fairarounds in
Cotta Mesa. The show featured nm
and mint models as well as Baja Buas and other custom jobs and
classic restorations. More than 500
cars were entered in 30 classes of
competition for cash and other
prizes.
For the more rcla1tcd or those
a,iven to more spontaneous. ac-
tivities. strolling performers on
Laauna Beach's Main Beach are
always a favorite. Jugler Myrna
Byrd and Myrna Byrd's Comet
Circus will continue to perform
there through this week. J.,...., Mrrn• •1rd does • 1pHt
..., ..... ,......, ............ ..., .......... ., ..... -.
Men .. wit M wOftllen during Op ftro •••t •tlllnl contest. This 1965 Volll1w-eon bus 11 owned ltJ llJ•n He.cock.
\Xlork begins on Triangle Square--
1y I08 VAN EYKEN 0.., ,.... Staff ..,_
COSTA MESA -It ma y sttm a
geometnc 1mposs1b1hty, but the cat )
"111 soon have a 1hree-s1dcd square
Triangle Square. the latest proJt-c t
to break ground to Costa Mesa's
200-acre downtown redevelopment
area. 1s e"J)('Ctcd to open some tame
to earl> 1992 with an assonment of
shops. restaurants and entenain-
me-nt a1tract1ons, including an e1gh1-
• sc reen movie complex.
The 185.000-square-foot project
raised some controve rsy when 11 "as
first conceived. when shop owner'!
to the three-sided block bounted b)
Harbor and Newpon bouk' ards
and 19th Street resisted being
mo"ed out to ma wa) for th t' ne"
complex.
The city's redevelopment agl'nq
has since sculcd w11h the former
tenants and owners. howe\er
And its pToponcnts. mcan"halc.
point to the project's promise 1n re·
1nv1gora11ng downtown Costa Mesa
"It's going 10 basacall) bring n1gh1
hfe to downtown Costa Meo;a. some-
thing n's never had before." said
Rach Shapiro. a panner in Tnangk
Square Joant Venture. which 1s dc-
velopmg the two-stof) shopping and
entertamment center
Shapiro said deals ha \C al read)
been made for a 40.000-squarl'-foot
Manna Market food store as well as
the 2,200-seat Edwards Cinema
complex.
He said plans include a mix of
Ground h•• been broken for Trlangl•
Squ•r•, the 18S.000-1q u.re-foot p roject
..., """ ....... "7 ~ ... ·-
planne d •• p•rt o f Costa Me .. ·1 do wntown
redevelopment.
restaurants and bou11qucs. s1m1lnr to
the: new sccuon of Fashion Island 1n
Nrwport Beach.
The half-acre Mcd1 terrancan-sl) le
center is expected to cost S60
m1lhon 10 build, Shapiro said.
Redevelopment officials sa)' Tn-
anglc Squatt as probably the neu-to-
last maJor shopping development m
the Cit)' 's downtown core. defined b\
the conO uellce of Harbor and Ne w·
pon boulevards and I 9th . trl'rt. at
least for the time: bcmg
One other commercial parC'd re-
mains. beh1'd the Court)ard'i
center Still known only as parcel "·
the tract 1s the.-sub)CCl ol nego-
11at1ons be-tween the Ct l) and Cham-
pion Development.
··w r·re a small agcnc). and wfll
prctt) much have our hands full
wuh these two projects for a while."
R c d r,e l o pm cnl Age n cy
spokeswoman Ann Gyben said.
Bicyclist killed on Pacific Coast Highway
CORONA DEL
MAR A-----. bicyclist riding on
Paci fie Coast
Highwa y was
killed Saturday
when he was hH
by a car tumina
into a driveway
near C ameo
Shorn Road. IC·
cordina to an Or· •nae County Cor·
oner's Office
spokesman.
Deputy Coroner
Cullen Ell ·
i~burah laid 42-ycar-old James
Bain of El Toro died from chest and
head injunn he suffered in the 12:30
p.m. colhsion.
Bain was ridina nonh 1n the
bicyck lane on Pacific Coast Htgh-
way when a car lumcd kf\ into a
dnveway. stnkint Bain and throw-
thief v.ho 1lso 1pparc-nll) 111cmptcd 10
steal the car, ""'h1c:h ""'Is parktd 1n the 200 block of Bren twood Pta« The car's
1an111on ""''' punched. but the 111emp1 was unsuc:ttuful The inctcknt otturrcd
bctv.cen ~ pm Tuctd1y and 7 30 a m Wcdnnday
0
A mtth and Wesson 38-c:ahbt'r hand·
aun ""'onh S21S .as s1olcn from a car 1ha1 had bttn taken 10 a dt'1ler"h1p at
2600 H1rbor Blvd for rtpa1n The theft
ts bt'hcvcd to ha vt' ottumd dunna thr
Wttk pnor to July JI
0 A stereo valued 11 SSSO v.as '10kn
from a Honda C1v1 1n the 3000 bloc._ of
Rcd Hill Avcnuc between 7 anJ Q am
Thund1y.
Fountain Vallf'y
._ thief Ntl*i up his d1nnrr Thun<La'
1fttr he took S 106 .. orth of IJ'O('t'rtts
from the Albcrtion's ''°" The man took a caK of bttr. K\tral piKk-aH of m~1
and bottle of ·I tu li. Sa~ and ran out of the "o~ into a car v.a1t1na 1n the
perk1na lot
Lane "'as reponcd to bt' out of rnn1rol
1v.o houn after m1dn11ht ( 1uc~t, v.rre
throwing bolllcs. )Cllin1 and 'P•thnr. hit· tel') acid on can par\C'd 1lon1 the \trt't"t
a ne1&hbor said
0
" v.oman on her "'" to v.1,rl "'n robbt'd b) 1v.o arm('d men as she "'ail ed
bt'h1nd • K man SIOrt 5Q~ ~ttl l)r
near Maanoha llttt ant.I C 1arftclJ \' ·
cnut' Befort arabb1ng In unlnt'"n amount of t'l sh, 1he mrn thrt1lcn«1 h1•r
wtth a small, bla<'k mr1al handaun \hr
said.
Irvine
Cash was rtportcd t1lcen from a de k
drawl'r b) '°meont' who cntrrt'd 1 rc:\1 -
dcncc on f>1nr\1C• throui h an oprn
door
0
A ptpt m1Ch1nc ~alutd II S ll.Xl "*' n:ponC'd saolcn, po ~1bh· b) a v.t>rker 01
1he "hon Par\wa) 11e from 111-h1lh the
m1eh1ne Y.IS a ken
1na him 10 the pi\'Cment.
A Lafe A.Pt helicopter took Bain La~una lka~h
to HOoll Memonal Hospital 1n New· Hunti"lton Be..-h A woman totd Polltt ihf M• anothtt
purpl~ top •0<1 snon~ puttma palm t~
OUI of I planter ne'll 10 I OoWtt shop II
)SQ hirt'\t "~e
0 " man putlcd out a chrome automa&IC
handaun and thruten('d a man who had
come 10 rTpo~~ his vctuclc:
0 mcont reported los1na a blKk
ltathrr ""allr\. ""'h1ch contained an l~land1c pa\sport and 1 Mas1cfCard. 11
Bc:nn1r the Bum's diner
0
" ~s1dcnt c:ompl11ned 1hat a man ...ho
wu wpposcd 10 ronstruct a kltclatn
cupboard never ~tumcdJhe door 10 lhe cupbo1rd The ~ 1den1 st11rd that 'lllh1lc
the door 11~lf 11 ,,.onh abovt S60. 11
would t'Otl him about S~ tO replace I\,
f'Wport Reach
,, fith•nt rttlt WOf'tll U .227 ~
1101tn off 1 sa..r00t boat d«Md ac chf
Balhoe Ba nub. 1 ll I 'W C'o.M .. .,.
0
Vandals .-)'·peintfd mt paftitt on
1ht north sickwalll of llJMI Boutt\'9td
JUJ\ 'tllt\I of 19\h ree\. Tllir .... ti oomuttd or "H,ll.... "Sit.a ct,n.i."
.... F;' Hd .. WHITE "'DE... . port 8c9ch, •here he later died. A peny kn ,~ 17400 block of -oman, about 2S )tan o6d. wean"' a Elh•flh said. -.:.:..::;~;.;.;..:,;.;~~~;..;.;...;~=--~.;;.;.:.:..;~~..:...;;.;;.;..;._:,,,;,.:...;.__.;..;._;:;...._...,.--......._ _____ ~
The C..l1fomaa H14h.way Patrol 1
lnvat•hnt the accident. he said. -•1 * Dell¥,.,,.,
C... M..-
A •few ht \lokn from a car b a
.... ~.
conomy, regulations
eal · est · te-ma·rk
Se•n Collln1 alts ...... contputer equip·
111ent •t hit office In Surfside. Coltln1
turlMtl Illa c:::" for aurttne Into • forecMtlne ; .. allH Wave·Trllll.
Surfer cashes in on knowing where
and when the big waves \Nill hit
SEAL BEACH -For surfer Scan Collins. the
business of predicting which waves will hat what
beaches is like an idyllic day at the beach in the
middle of an endless summer.
Collins figured out how to predict wave pat-
terns for fun -his own. He wanted to know where
the best ones "'ere when he wa~ surfi ng. But then
he got so good at 1t he decided to go into busi ness.
"I was getting 20 or 30 calls a day from people
I didn't know, so I figured there must be a wa y to
make some mone) from th is." Collins said.
Now he spends a good pan of his ume in front
of a computer. determining ho" the "aves will
break on various beaches around the world.
His company. Wave-Trak. pro\ ide~ the infor-
mation to surfers who dial a 900 tckphone numbcr.
Others. such as magazine ed11ors scheduhn~
photo sessions at the beach. producers of surf-based
movies and e'en e\ecu11ves ''ho Ill e to ~uee11;.·
surfing 1n on the side. hire Collins on a retainer
basis.
"He's phenomenal." says forma professional
surfer Michael Tomson who nov. runs Gotcha
Sponswear in C'o~ta Mesa. ·')', e made man) tnps
to man) pans of the count~ on his ''ord. and he's
alwa}s come through."
Bill Sulll\an. a \pol rsman for thr Professional
Surfing Assoc1at1on of .\menra. said Collins ar-
ranged the assoc111on 's 1989 tour schedule and
surfers met outstanding cond111ons e' rr~ where the)
\\COL
''It's a re,olu11on.'' he !>aid ol the \urf-pn·d1c-
11ng bus1m·ss
Collins started out predicting for himself and
his friends. but in 1985 be went to work for Surf
Line in Huntington Beach.
At the time the company collected daily .surf
repons from a network of people on vanous
Southern California beaches and passed the infor-
mation on to surfers by a telephone line. Collins
added his surf-forecasting expenisc to the com-
pany's repertoire before lea ving to form the rival
, Wave-Trak.
Both companies claim 90 percent accuracy in
forecasting wave conditions.
Colhns puts his forecasts together with infor-
mation on ocean storms and swell size from boats.
buoys and su ch sources as the National Weather
Service. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad-
ministration. and various private weather fore-
casting services.
Am ong the services his com pany ofTers to its
estimated 1.000 callers a day: ·
-Surf repons and forecasts for Cali forn ia.
Hawa11 and Mexico.
-A "rockin' fix hot line:· with surfing ne\\s
and contest results.
-The "surf exchange." a series of classified
messages for ltsteners to buy. sell or trade surfing
equipment.
-The "riptide surf pany ltne." which Collin~
calls an "open forum totally go for it nationwide
sounding board ...
-And finall}. "Back\\ash.'' a suggestion box
for ca lkrs to lea' e messages.
-By tb~ Associ•t~d Pr~ss
W1w OD anb is blppenina to the
real estate market?
Southern California experienced
1ianificut economic arowth
throuahout much of the decade of the 'IOI which, in tum, fueled a
tremendous surae in real estate con·
struction and values.
But has the tide of dramatic ~I
estate· a~iatjoo begun to recede?
Most of the experts teem to think so
-at least for awhile.
What is slowina the torrid pace of
activity? Most notably the P.rinciplc
causes arc chronic overbuJldina. ·a
decline in the rate of economic and
~pulation growth, and a recent
tightening of the availability of
financing.
With the addition of millions of
square feet in new building construe·
Lion, the Orange County-Jnland Em-
pire office and industrial markets
have faced double-digit vacancy
rates for the past several years.
While positive absorption of space
has been generally consistent in both
segments of the market. construc-
tion of new space has continued to
outpace the actual use needs of
tenants and owner occupants of
buildings.
Compounding this temporary im-
balance of oversupply has been a
gradual reduction in the rate of
economic and population growth -
otherwise known as demand. Econ-
omist Al Gobar. wh o tracks a var-
iety of economic statistics. cites a
"reduc11on in the creation of new
jobs down to roughly 25.000 an
Orange County on an annualized
basis from previous historical
counts of approxi mately 36.000."
He points out that the general
economic slowing 1s tied to cutbacks
in both defense and construction
emplo> ment as well as some impact
from the sta~nant natio na l econ-
omy. Gobar 1s quick to point out
that .. this 1s a period of adjustment."
He docs not sec Southern Californ ia
in danger of heading an to a rc<.-ess1on
because there is still positi ve growth
-;ust slower growth.
Concurrent with the economic
forces working to slow the pace of
deHlopmcnt 1s thl' impact of the
a 'a1lab1ht} of financing. Sinrl' tht."
Goodwill Games no major financiaf'boon
By AL GIBBS
McClatchy Nf'W• St'rvl<r
TACOM.\. \\J,h I lmd
.\dchst could tell almn')I lrom tiix·n-
ang da) that 1hc ( 10od\\ 1IL C1aml"'>
had an impart on h1') hu~incs.,
Thr number of pl'r<,onal tht.•t I.\
being used to pa) lor rurchast.>' .1t
Brentano·~. thr up-scak hook storl'
he manages in cattle\ \\cstlal.l'
Mall. had dropped dramat1call)
That and a similar dl·rl1nt.' 1n
special orders for latt.•r dell\c~ v.erl·
~ong 1nd1ca 11on'> that the lU \·
tomcrs "ere from out ol tm" n. not
his usual local resident<.
"It was clear a lot of the lex.al'> hJd
bailed out." .\dcli<;t sail.I "Thr) all
took olT for Hood Canal and the ~an
Juans."
Adehst's e\pencntl' "'a' C\at.·tl~
the ernnom1c 1mpau a number of
expens had pred1t tcd befort.· thl'
Games began: Far from being a
maJor boon to the region\ eronom).
the Gamrs \\-Ould c;1mpl~ replace
local \pcnd1ng with toun'>t ~pcndinit
dunng thl' 17-<la) C\l'nt that ends
Sunda' night
.\nd· that accord\ng to ob!>l'rH'r<i
an J cru'>'>·'>l'l't1on of the Puget ~ound
fl'tJ1ling and hospitaht~ 1ndu')trt<'s.
1!> l'\actl~ "hat happened
.\lmo\t alroSs the board. thosr
ollil'lalc; sa) tht.> Games ma) ha' e
helped business a bit -increases of
up to I 0 percent arc cited -but
the~ didn't help hus1ncss ar, much as
mcrt·hants had hoped. or as much as
C.,oodv.111 <James organ11ers had
trumpeted
-Most hotels didn 't r,ell out as
thr) had CApl'Cled
"Our business "as below "hat \\C
"ould ha\l~ an11c1pated 1f the
Gotld" 111 C1amcs \\ercn't here." said
Robert E. Lough ran. mark eting
manager for the Sea-Tac Red Lion.
-.\1rl1m•s weren't swamped with
hordes of ')plirts fans heading for the
\enueS.
.\laska Airli nes. fo r example. rc-
poncd a Seattle-Tacoma lnter-
nauonaJ Airpon July traffic increaS<.·
of 4. 9 percent. but a S} stem-\\ 1de
...
Your single source
f or conipr ehensive
tnedical services.
increa1.e of 6 percent.
"You can't draw anything mean-
ingful from tho~ numbers." said
1.pol.csman Greg Witter.
-Rl•tallcrs aren't cenain whether
thr cro"ds the} '1rc been e'pencnc-
ing are Gamc!.-related or s1m pl) a
conti nuation of an expansion trend
that 1s S(.'veral }Cars old .
"The economic impact on retail
sales has not been great." contended
John Buller. spokc!.man for The Bon
Marchc. "Sales ha"e been good. hut
sales have been good for thr,·e
years."
Added Sea-Tac Mall general man-
ager all} Mantz-··our increa~e~ arc
doublc-d1g1 t. but 1h1s has tx'l'n a
strong retail year anywa~ ..
Some merchant!. arc grumbling a
bll about what might have occn.
"We've not hcen hun b' the
Games." Brentano·s .\dehst · said.
echoing the )('nt1ment of man~
others. "But 1f the locals had sla}cd
around 11 \\Ould ha'c bcc n hctter.
•·A buck 1~ a buck." he gnnnl·d.
"but 1f some 1~ good . more 1s bct-ter ..
Stan Ph1lhps. general manager of
the Quaht} lnnTacoma Dome
agreed.
"People geared up for millions
and millions of dolla rs in e\tra
business. and 11 JUSt hasn't hap-
pened ... he said.
.. For the most part. people arc
disappointed." added Mike Hamil-
ton of the Downtown. Scattk As-
soc1at1on. "Businesses cxpet•ted a
stronger surge ...
That doesn't mean there was no
cconom1e impact from the Games.
Wanetta A)crs of the Tacoma-
P1erce Count\ V1s11or and Conve n-
t1 on Burrau cc;11ma tcd d1rn·1
Gamrs-rclatcd 'ipe ndang of about $::!
m1lhon in thl' arra
But lhl' retail and hos.p11aht~ in-
du 1ncs "ere nonetheless d1'iap-
pointed.
"If you're going to measure the
Gamr!i in terms of dolla rs 1n the
cash register and rooms and res-
taurants. I think (the impact) •'> a
ltttle soft ... !>aid Barr} o\nderson of
the Scatt le-Krng Count) Ne"s Bu-
reau. "It "as probabl) a bit O\t.'r-
sold ..
Others. howrver. smd the C\·
po'>ure the Nonh"cst and m athkt•l
\enues fCCCl\Cd during 17 da)\ of
national and international tck' 1s1t1n
co,erage can S(.'t thl' Mage for fu ture
C\ cn ts.
"Thr rc IS absolutel) no arsumcnt
that this t)pc of e\posurc 1!1 'rr)
pos111,c." ..aid Tacoma Dome man-
ager Ja> Green
"Events organucrs look for people
with a proven track record. and
we've done absolutely nothing 10
damage that," he added. "We ha\C
a nice feather an our cap'i O\'er this
thing."
The major fear of local offic1als 1s
that Games organizers won't ha"e
enough money to pa} what is owed
the c111es of Seatt le and Tacoma for
fire and poli ce protccuon and hah-
1h t) insurance.
Seattle 1s owed around SI m11l1on.
according to Games coordinator
Da' id Moseley: Tacoma expet:ts to
receive a lillle more than S2 m1ll1on .
said assistant cit} manager Jim
Walton.
Money for those bills was to come
from the sale of tickets to Gameo;
events.
Tom
Gibson
bcainning of the year. the real estate
industry as a whole has been faced
with a significantly diminished
supply of funds to begin construc-
tion of new projects and. in some
cases, even finish projects already
underway. While this would seem a
natural result of a cooling economy.
in reality it is the direct by-product
of new federally imposed regulatio ns
upon certain groups within the com-
mercial lending indu~try.
Reacting pnmanty to the large
number of failed savings and loans.
Congress recently enacted the
Financial Institution Reform. Re-
covery and Enforcement .\ct ( FlR-
REA). Among other things. this
legislation places tigh t restnctions
upon the thrift industr) relative to
capital requirements and real estate
loans as a percentage of total loan
P.Onfol ios.
While generally most 1ndus\r) C"\·
pens believe greater control and
supervision is necessar). the ap-
parent impact 1s that regulati ons are
far too SC\ ere. When even funda-
mentall} sound. poslli'c cash flo"
driven projects are not able to bc
fin anced because of art1fic1all) con-
trolled factors. some corrections
need to tal.e place.
Even Rep. Christo pher ('o~ agrees
that some fine-tuning is required
soon to help alleviate the over-
aggress1' c t•flects of the leg1sla11on
At a recent address before the Or-
ange Count~ Chapter of the Na-
tional Assoc1a11on of Industrial and
Office Parks. Rrp. Cox admmed
that "hllc thl·re should tx· po'i1tl\c
long-term elTect'> from thl' ne" legis-
lation. there also " ancrrasing
e\ldencc of \l'\l'fe har1.hh1p surfac-
Ina now in the sh<?rt:tcrm. Com-
poundin& the rcstnct1ons of the
reaulations is a new leaisJatively
created bureaucracy that. becaute of
little administrative lc~nhip,_ is
moving slowly and caut1o u'1y. 1 ne
conarcssman is optimistic about
change for the better, but it will take
time. So. where do we go from here?
Faced with a moderate oversupply
of product. a cooling demand, and a
temporary shortaae of finaocina. real
estate developers and broken arc
focused primarily upon improving
occupancies and income strUms in
existing projects. For ~o~,. l~c thrust
will be awa)' from m1t1at1na new
developments and instc~d toward
improving and strcngthenina market
balan~.
While this. 1n tum. has tended to
impact a plateauing of values. it
nevenheless will add a more funda·
mental sta bi ht } to the overall com-
merciaJ and industrial marketplace.
And best of a". 11 presents a terrific
opponunity for users of space to get
out and make deals while property
owners compete actively to attract
tenants to their proj ects.
Tom Gib on. a membt'r of rhc
Orange Coast OaJly Pilot Board ol
Business .\ch 1scrs. is a distncr man-
ager wirh lli/T Thorn & Co .. a com-
mercial fl'al cswtc.· brokerose based
in /nine.
Orh er members or rhc Pi/or's
Board of Bu~incss Advisers are:
Ernest C. Bro"n. managing partner
of Emesr Brown & Co.; Walter
Crurrcnden 111. founder and chair-
man. Crurrendcn & Co.: <\Ian Free-
man. 'ice president. Shcarson
Lc.•hman H urron Newport Beach;
r>cborah L. Hamngron. ''ICC presi-
dent. Norrhcrn Trust of California;
KMPG Peat Marwick & Co.: John
I 1nA.. founding partner, Link Murrel
.( Co .. M1/ron £. Na' /or. e\ecutH'C
11ct' pn.·s1dcnt :rnd reg1onal manager
for Grubb & Ellis. Ken Nicolas.
president. Financia l rrategics
Group: ('hip . tassel. Stare Farm
l nsurann·. Costa .\1esa. Gar)
\\ escomhC'. partner. K enneth
Lt·1 enrhal A ( u . antl Gloria Z1gncr.
prcs1dl·nt. L1gna .. { ..\ssoc1ates.
Hospitality industry
boom seen on Coast
By RUSS LOAR
OM)I l'llot 9u>MWn 111'"''
fhe Orange Count) '1-.1tur~ and l'llf\\ entmn andu .. 11~ Illa) gro"
b} as much ao;. io h1ll1on "'11h1n tht· nnt decadt> 1f the arm~ of hotd'
planned art.• actuall~ built. acrnrd1ng to a repon from a N<.'" pon
Beach accounting firm
The predicted economic boom for the count\ l'conom~ 1\ ha~d
on an a'rragt.· of 1.000 ne" hotel mom~ a )t'<ir through thr l'nd of
the decade. according to Ga~ \\c'il'nmbc. a panncr \\Ith the
Nt.•v. port Beach onice of Kcnnt'th LC\ cn1hal & ( o.
Four ho1clo;. ''1th a total I ASO rnom'i arr pan of the \\ :11crfmnt
proJe<.·t an Huntington Beach. int.lud1ng the rccenlh openrd Wa ter-
front H1hon Three hotel'> "1th a tlllal ~ I <in room\ arc planned for
the Nc\\pl)rt ( oa'it de,t.•lopmcnt h~ the ln1ne ( n \nd l\\O hott'f.,
plann<.·d for Monarch fk;1ch \\ill tmng 11n l1nl' an add111onal I . I ~6
rooms. ·
FiJures recentl\ puhh,hcd h) lhl' Orangt• < 11unt~ C on,1.·n11on
and V1s1tor., Burl·au shn" that ncarl) half ot th e SI ' h1lhon \pent
on con' cn11on act I\ 1t1e\ in thr count~ 1n I QK \\l'rc <ipcnt on hntel
accommodations
There arc no\\ about 4. 700 re\ort hotd mom\ planned lor the
Orangr Coast. and Wcscombc prcd1l l., tha1 the numhcr of m.ort
hotel roc.1ms in the count) could int. rea'>e b\ as mam :l\ I 0 000
rooms b" the end of the decade ·
"Our estimate of the fiscal impart of the count'·., futurt' re~on
hotel 1ndustl') 1s 'Cl') con~namc .ind }l't the doliar figure-. "e're
looking at arc qu1 tt' \Uhstant1al for the rnunt\ ·., ernnom1c outlook "
Wescomhc said. ·
The county's rc'ion hold 1ndu,1n ru11~·ntl\ gcncratt'\ an estimated SHO m1lhon a }Car. according to \\ '\(.' mix·
Orange Counl) no"' ha' a subswn11JI need o our .ind ti,c-1tar
quaht\ hOtt'I accommu<l:111on\, arrnnl1ng to \\ l'\Ltin1tx·
. "the t:ount} has become one of thl' top dl·~1in.1t 1lln '.11.a11on and
business con,cn11on spoh 1n tht.• lln11ed Stall.," ht· o;a1d. "und the
count) has an excellent opportunll\ 10 hu1kl h1~hh amcn1t111.·d.
reson hotel accommodations to \3ll'lf\ 1nuca\ing demand ...
Wcsc.·ombc said his firm's cconom1r prnJCl tHH\\ are 0354.·d on an
average room rate of S'.:?00 a night. an a'erge b7 pcrrcnt tx:cupancv
rate and assumes that guests at the up~ale hott•b ''Ill 'Pl'nd ahout
three ~·mes the room rate each dn) on eatin~. rn1cn:11nment and shopping.
T he Mcdtt,\I Plan Ac;-.ocl'ation. localed next
to Fa~hion h land in Newport Ilcach, prmid cs
the m ost com prc hc n 'iivc g roup o f phys icians
and o utpalicnt medic.ti . cn iccs in Southern
California. Jn o n e con"cnicnt locat ion !
Nearly 200 health care profc sio n als arc
availa ble to mC'c t your indi\1dual h ealth care
needs. Physician s arc tt\'ail:thk in ea ch of the
foll owing pcciahics:
Allergy
f'..ardioloicY
:"rurosurgc-ry
Otmcu1u
Administration drops its opposition
to special commission for S&L probe
Colon &c Rrrn1I StlfK<''Y
Cknt.al &c Oral Spc•t iAlt1N
ur. NOM" k Thm.u
f'.nrlocri not ogy
Casllocr11rrol0f(Y (GI)
Gener.ii k FAm1ly rr..rtifr
<'..cnenil SurJ{rry
GynecolllMY
I l•nd Surgrry
lntern.-1 Mr-d1cinc
Nrurology
Oncology le I lrm:uology
Ophtho1lmology (cyr)
Onhopc-tilc S1irgcry
l'f'<ll.llfl(j
Phys1al \icdicinc le Rrhaholttauon
l'lo1siic le Rcconstrurtlvr Surgcry
r1ychia1ry
l'ulmonary
Rh<"umatology
Thoracic Surgrry
Urology
VaM"ular Surge,;
For information regarding physicians and ~rviccs,call
756-9000
lly MIRRIU. HARTSON panel.
In a le tter to Sens. Bond and
Dodd. made public Saturday, Oepu-
WASH INGTON -The Bush ad· I)' Assistant Attorney General Bruce
ministration hftcd its ob1ect1ons to Navarro. rt1tated admint tration
lqaslation creat1n& a commission to concerns that the Hou!( version of
probe the savings and loan collapse the lqjslation "could pose real
after being assured the panel would danacrs" to onaoina savmp·and·
not interfere with criminal pro • loan criminal inveniaations.
ecut1ons, Senate sponsors or the bill "We arc particularfy pleased that.
said Saturday. unlike the House bill, your proposal
Sens. Chnstopher Bond, R·Mo.. takes care to ensure that onaoina
and Christopher Dodd. O.Conn .... criminal inves1iaauons and pros.
released letter from the depan. ecotions condut~ by the de_pan·
ments of Justice and Treasury in· ment are neilher compromised nor
dicatina the adm1n1strat1on ''drop-impeded ...
pcd its ob1ection.s" to a Senate-fhe executive and le&.ts~ivo
ponsored bill se11in1 up an ei..,t· branches of aovcmment blltonally
member bipan1san 1nves1ipt1ve havt ftuded o~et tbmpenJoll .in·
commission. vestipuons of nrious IQlndaltl by
Administntion officials bid said the Jutticc Department 9ftd con·
the.y would fiaht a rivaJ version of ~onal com.mhtcn. ~ lcsi.Ualion. the lutine Law Tbis •• dratMlized ruen•I> in a
Enforccmetu Act or 1990, pated by federal appelllte coun'1 decision tt·
the HOUie on July 31, and had vcn&11 one of' bma Mannt Lt.
apokea out •Mt 1 ~ by tbe Col. Oliver Nort11'1 lran-C'ontra con·
National OOvcmon' Allociatioa vinio¥ and ordmne a k>Mr coun
lut ..eek for tuetl an i•~tl~ IO revaew other c.oevictiont to ~
• \
tcrm1nc whtther immun11cd tcst1 ·
mony Nonh aave the Congress wa
impermi sibly used apinst him by
Iran-Contra prosecutors.
Bond and Dodd sot the adminis-
tration to Lin its objections to their
S&L fact-finding commission by
aareeina 10 amend the lt"tisla1ion.
Undrr the new versfon. the com-
mission would be required to inform
the Jus11et Dcpanmcnt when it
plans to c.11 witnesses implicated m
savinas i nd loan failures.
The two 1enators taid in a state-
ment Saturda)' that 1f 1he depan.
mcnt or the Resolution Trust Cor-
poration cenifics that commttsion
ICJLimOn)' could jeopard11c a pend·
ina criminal 1nve111ption. "the
commission wouJd not call •he wit· ncssc.s.''
"Howe~er. tbe commillion has
the authonty to requnt 1dcht1onal ~a~ 60 da)'I 1f ii ~n 1be
invntipuon is 1ms-h°" an any
way.'' &hear lta~t •id.
Jn his aturr, N1vano •id: .. \\t
hlw cond8drcl tbtb your pt'Ope)lal
constthHl'' 11 worlablt' compromise
solution that adcqu:11cly takes into
account the lt.-g111 ma1c concerns of all anvoh ed
Bryce lltfrlo"' an us is tan 1
Treasut') lltC'rNal) in charae or l'JiS·
latn c ~ITairs. said 1n a 1eparatt letter
that his dcp;1nment is satisfied the
natc propoS41 "has sufficient safe-
auard5 to protect onaotna c1v1l and
cnminal in"c\11aa11ons "
host or conarcs 1onal commit·
!CCS a~rtad> 1s conducti"-vanous
1n\·tst1pt10M into the sav1np.and·
loan debacle, and the Administration
had pre\ 1ousl> shown no
enthu 1um for the ~paratc cffon b)'
a '1ud) comm1 >•on.
The b1~msan commis ion ~ould
be .constituted of two mcmbttl ap-
tkri1'Jcd b) Prt 1dent Bush. t-o by
ltn1te Ma,,ont) ltadcr 0eoqr
Muchcll. Q;.Mainc .. two by Hou.tt
Speaker Thomas . fo&ey, 0-Wuh .•
•nd one each by Stftatc M1nori1r
Lader Bob Dok, R·Kan .• and Houte M1nontt Ladef Bob MK'ht-4 R·lll '
UCI cent r sees rise In met noma
The UC Melano1n1 Cmtet hM teen an illcreate in the number of ca1n of lkin cancer
lhd pre.alK"ft'On Wons. The inctate waJ
hiahliahled. durint the fttt skin cancer 1ereeninp
co.nducted an Apnl and May, center ofticials said thas week.
.. Cucer facts A fipm." published ~y Tht
Amcric:aa Cancer Society, estimates 600,000 new
skin cancer catet for the United Sa.ates in 1990
-'27 ,600 to be dillftoted as melanoma, the most
aerioua form of wn cancer. The incidence of
melanoma is expected to increase at the rate or
4 pen:ent per year. accordina to the ACS. Some
6,300 deaths due to melanoma alone are npected
this year.
inc:rcai~ rate o( 111!'1 cancer ia womea .
Althouah the rcuons IOi lhi1 are no& mtirely
known, it i1 thoqbt that increased ..crationa1
expe>SUre to the 1Un since the 19509 accounts for
m01t of the rite ...
Of '7S new patients teen at the May screen-iftJ! the melanoma center diqnosed 20 percent
wuh 11Un cancer includina three melanomui 31
percent had pre-cancerou. lesions (actinic
kcratotet), and 10 pen:ent with atypical moln
(atypical nevi). In addhion.l 7 perunt of those
screened had some form 01 non~ccrous skin condition.
Matthew Goodman. M.D., c<Hiirector of the
melanoma center, 11.ated in the sprint edition of
the clinical cancer center "forum," "The rapidly
increuina rate of melanoma is second only to the
While the vast majority of moles (nevi) ate
completely harmless. occasionally oee caa
chanae into melanoma, which may be life. threatcnina. Moat .. beauty marb .. ate prob9bly
nevi. made of the same piament cells from Wh~
melanoma may aritc. Dr. Goodman caution
people to watch for cbanaa in me, color, or
shape of any beauty mark or mole.
bTwo talks
.. on seniors'
Issues set
.. ~na Parents: Who is Re·
sponsable? and "South Coast
Seniors: How to Communicate
With Your Adult Children" are
two free lectures scheduled in
Auaust by Women's Pavilion
Health Resource Center at South
Coast Medic.al Center in Laguna
Beach.
Aging parents have become a
common, ye t complex. issue,
which many of us are forced to
deal with on a daily baSIS.
"Al.inf Parents: Who is Res1;><>n-
s1bfe?' with speaker Diane
Meadow Ph.D .. will cover this
issue on Aug. 16 from 7 to 9
p.m.
Communicating with your
children once they've grown up
and are no longer dependent can
often create tension not
previously experienced. KaTcn
Greenly. a marriage and family
counselor. wi .. discuss this issue
during her lecture "How to
Communicate With Your Adult
Children.·· on Aug. 17 from
12:30 to 2 p.m.
Phone 499-7202 for additional
information.
'(
Court rules epileptic fired
unfairly by Dept. of Labor
Work ... quota increased seizures
SAN FRANCISCO - A federal
judae bas ruled that U.S. Depan-
mcnt of Labor supervisors unfairly
fired an epileptic employee and en-
aaaed in actions that increased the
frequency and severity of her seiz-ures.
Barbara Louise Reynolds, who
was fired in 1980, died in March
1988 of a major epileptic seizure.
U.S. Magistrate Joan S. Brennan
ruled Wednesday that Reynolds'
supervisors at the labor depanment
had shown "conscious blindness"' to
her epilepsy and failed to follow the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
That act requires federal em-
ployers and contractors to give equal
JOb opponunitics to handicapped
people and to reasonably accommo-
date their handicap. Employers
must make a "reasonable inquiry
and assessment" of job require-
ments and how a worker's handicap
affects performance. Brennan said.
Attorneys for the Labor Depan-
ment, who contended Reynolds' job
performance was unrelated to her
epilepsy, could not be reached for
comment.
Reynolds. who had a serious form
of epilepsy since childhood, left her
job at the Veterans Administration
in 1979 to process farm laborer
applications for the labor Depan-
ment.
She suffered a severe seizure her
first month on 1he job. Bclievine her
to be a slow worker. superv1sors
then ga ve her a special production
quota to make her "buckle down,"
the court said.
"Reynolds' supervisors never con-
sidered that a strict quota system
would crca1e severe stress ... causing
her seizures 10 become more fre-
quent and powerful and her per-
formance to worsen. not eve n after
Reynolds produced lcltcrs from her
physjcian and attorney," the coun
said.
She was given a negative job
performance rating and was fired
after 14 months on the job.
Larry J. K.ina. Rernolds' attorney,
sajd the 99-page ruh"J "should rina
a bell of warning for private em-
ployers."
Epilepsy is a chronic disease of the
nervous system characterized by
convulsions and sometimes un-
consciousness and can be aaaravated
by stress. With medication. most
epileptics function well.
"She said to me that the main
thin_J she was interested in was
having her name cleared," said Dr.
Fem Goodwin Kelly. Reynolds'
aunt and a retired San Francisco
school administrator. "This would
mean a lot to her.''
-By De A.,ocl•ted Pru•
Orthodontists advise exclm by age 7
By Or. FARREU G. HINKLE
Treatment taming 1s cnucal
\\hcther )OU arc a parent con-
cern~d about )Our c hild's de-
velopment or an adult intercstt.·d
in a new. healthie r smile.
fhc best tame lO SCC the
spcc1ahst "ho applies brace is
"hcne\cr a problem is detected.
Ho"e\er. the .\merican Assoc1a-
t1on of O nhodontists o ffers a
guideline that each child should
be c\amaned b) a specialist at
the age of 7. or sooner 1 f a
problem 1s apparent.
Sance onhodontists arc trained
m gro" th and development. the)
can detect a m alocclusion (poor
b1tang of teeth) before 11 becomes
ob' ious to the parent o r dl·nust.
Intercepting these problems may
a\01d c>.tract1ons or surgery in
the future.
Adults fear the} may be
tx·}ond the age of orthodontics
or that braces wall affect their
bu~ancss or social hfc. ince the
1950s there has been an increase
in the number of adults having
treatment. This may be due to a
new a-wareness of health benefits
and of modern appliances. which
arc much less visible.
sues.
Parents "Onder wh' some
children are treated tn t~o separ-
a te phases "h1lc other~ ha\e one
continuous phase of treatment.
Eal:h chtld·s problem 1s different
and not e'er) patient would tx·n-
clit from earl ~ treatment. 1.e ..
before all pt.•rmanent teeth ha'e
erupted.
There arc som e excellent
reason s for phase I or earl) treat-
ment b\ an onhodonllst. These
include:
•To guide growth pattern'i o f
teeth for the best functional and
cosmetic result.
•To prevent the fracture of
protruding upper fro nt teeth.
•To a\oid detrimental fun~:
t1ons such as lip pursing a nd
DENTAL
IMPLANTS
A REPLACEMENT FOR
MISSING TEErn
Sat.. July 14th -10 a.m .
FREE COMMU:O.TTY llEALTII SEMINAR
(714) 771-7555 c-.1--., ••-"••
tongue protrusion "'h1ch can
nl·atl' a malocdu'i1on of the
teeth.
•To encourage normal ~JX'l'Ch
UCH.'lopmcnt.
•To bcnclit the child's a t-
t1tu(k h~ 1mpro' mg h" or her
sl'11:.1magl' .ind pride.
•To cllm1natc ad'<.'rsc habit
pattcrn'I ~urh as thumb or linger
sucking bd'orc the~ ha'c a pcr-
man~:nt l'lkrt.
•T o protcl·t the Ja" Joints b~
earl\ lOrrcl11o n of crossh11es.
tooth antcrt\.·renccs and man-
dibular or J3" d1splarcmcnt.
•lo rnltJCl' the amount of
t11ne that thl' compkte set of
braces arc on the permanent
tCl'th.
Ever\ child's s1 tua11on 1s
unique: and special rnnd1t1ons
mJ} uu.:tatc that treatment not
be ~tarted until growth has stop-
ped.
Is It umc to sec )Our or-
thodont1 sl'.'
(This column deals "ah com-
mon medical topics. and que -
twns arc an si.,aed b' medical
and dental spc.·cial1sts 'in the ap-
propnafl• f1dd or e\pert1St'.
PlcaSt' for"ard questions to the
,\frd1cal Plaza -\ssoc1at1on or
Ncn port Cc.·ntt•r. c/<J the Health
Educ:won Foundatwn. 360 San
/\,/1gucl. u1tc !06. Nt•wport
Bt·ach. C.\ 92660.J
The Smartest & Sharpest
Drug Store in Newport Beach
PROBLEM SOLVERS fOI\ PRESCRJPTJONS
COSMETICS GIM'S l ST A TIO NERY
IO 16 Bayside Dr .. Newport Beach
&\)'SIDE. TER
~
760-0111
TM
-----------------------------------------------------. Things to look for in
nursing home insurance
I
ly CAIKX. GENTRY
St ,_t"'°'"
More than 50 perccnl of elderly people are likely to end up in
a nursing home at some point -an expensive proposition.
cons1denng the cost of basic care now averages S25.000 a )-Car
But 1f )Ou·re thanking of bu} mg nursing-home insurance. watch
-n111 "Savvy customers should look long and hard before they ~ttle
Oil a pohq," said Wilham Wcisscn. professor of heallh care
managemen1 al the un1vcrs11y's School of Public Health.
We1sscn concluded that a reasonable annual premium for
people age 65 'WOUid be bct""ttn S 700 and S 1.400. He suggested that
be-cause most peolc lake out nursing-home insurance maml} 10
preserve their children·s 1nhentancc. their children should pa} the
insurance premium.
Newport Center Pharmacy
N E W P 0 R T 8 E A C H
For all your health needs
And mo re
prescriptions • fine gifts
4lltl :--. ...... pon ( ,•n1.•1 ()n, 1-i1 I A~· .. ,.,. "''' U•
1714) 044 2131 t7 141 M il· l '20
\ol) .._,,n ""11qu.•I
17 141 75q.<)117
There arc even patients over
the age of 80 who are undergoing
o nhodont1c therapy. The limit-
ing factor 1s no t the age of the
patient. but the health of the
tee th and their supponang tis,.
PROVIDENCE PROSTHOIX>NTICSa..:.--------------------------------------------L------------------------------------------~
Niles F Gutehet. DOS. Inc
Speaa~sts 1n Tooth Replacement
Members American Dental AssoaatK>n
American Coll e ol Prosthodontists
help
\ littlt' h(•lp <-'an make a hi diff r ll
THE II TINGTON ENIOR RESIDENCE
18851 Florida A .... H-=-Bwb (714) Ml-7
' • .
D~kTales' hardly worthy of Disney 'How to Make Love ... '
comes~ shon as sat/rt Ir JOI llALTAa
~--.....
It's IC'tina ltfUlt.
Or maybe it•a me. rm IC'tina strante. Why? Well,
became I've had this rather atranae rather emotional reaction to one of
the little characters in the new Dis-
ney animated featu~ ... DuckTales:
The Movie" (which 11 further subti·
tied .. Treasure of the Lost Lamp").
But foraet the lumberina title.
1..et•s talk about women.
While most men 10 pale at the
&ills whenever Meg Ryan acts
flirtatious (which is all the time) and
others have eyeballs that 10 boin-n-
g-a-a·a! out of their sockets when-
ever Julia Robens flutters and rolls
her vowels, m y heart aoes out to the
little femaJe duck -named Web-
bigail Vanderquack and nicknamed
Webby -that keeps this treacly
affair anoat.
Webby has these wide eyes and
sli&htly startled look that perfectly
complemt'nt her miniaturized,
feminized Donald Duck gobblede-
quack. She's so cute. what with her
cuddly manner and look -a co-
quetry and precocious little body
that rivals Shirley Temple's when
Temple was in her prime.
Meg Ryan'! She·s better than
Jessica Rabbit!
I told you matters were strange.
Aside from Webby, "DuckTales"
has little to hold the attention of a
child, much'kss a grown man. Love-
lorn movie nerds and desperate car-
toon archaeologists might have a
reason to endure the film's seeming-
ly endless 70 minutes. but an)one a
bit more d1scnminating -or s1mpl}
hung(} for entertainment -~ill
have an impossible time trying to
cope with D1sne) 's inim11able brand
of patriarchal terror here. as the
unpleasant Scrooge McDuck domi-
nates aJI 70 mmutes.
'Simpsons'
fall debut
put back
The ballyhooed Thursda)
night showdown between "The
Cosb} Show" and "The
S1mpsons·· ma) nol happen unul
the fall TV St"ason 1s well under
way. Reason for the dcla) Ne"
episodes of the animated
"S1mpsons" ma} not be read)
before mid-October
Meanwhile . 1mpso n~
creator Mall uroentng ~)) he's
thtnktng about a feature film for
his popular cartoon famil} ·•If I
can find a stor}. somethtng I can
sustain.'' Groening said. ''I'd
love to do 11."
Groening and "S1mpsons" ex-
ecutive producer Jack Brooks
also confided to reporters that
they weren•t thrilled with the
Fox network's dec1S1on to move
their show to Thursdays.
"There's somethtng magic about
Sunda} night. It's family night."
said Brooks.
-By Scrlpp1 Howud N~,,, ~r-
vlc~
----• ---.-VCISAl Sl\ilMOS fDUilll --·-·
DENZEL
WASHINGTON •
SPIKE
LEE
Attila the Hun.
lvui the Terrible.
Al Capone.
11aey were all seven ontt.
~ ~
}~~.ft~
-..__" --" .J
I
Scr009e McDuck fvolce of AJ•n Voungl lets Webby fvolc•
of Russi Taylorf keep a .. worthless teapot" from the
treasure of Collle Baba In .. DuckT•les: The Movie."
The Jaunt) carelessness ~ct 1n.-
scnsitl\ itv that ha\t~ come omt'·
nate Dasne) ·s so-called adult ov1es
("Three Men and a Bah)." "Pretty
Woman") seem to ha' c trickled
do" n to "hat few famtl) films 1t
Backstage
produ cs thl·~ <la)s ("Hone). I
Shrunk the Kids"). this poor cartoon
included.
"DuckTale~. The Movie," "'h1ch
O\\CS morc to te"en Spielberg ( 1n
tam~ of plutllng) and to Walter
um•a Woody Woodpecker (ln
terms of creepy ambiaace) &ball so
Walt Diaaey, act...Uy hu cbc feel
and contours of a canoon ahott. And it pla11 that way, too. It moves
tentatively, in 10.minute aputta.. u
Uncle Sciooae and Donald ~1t·1
three nephews -Huey, Dewey and
Louie -and little Webby ao in sca~h of buried treasure in f n(iiana
Jones territory and end up canina ·
back a maak lantc".', replete with a
nervous, chatty aenie.
The whole center section of the
film -which plays like a lot of
canoon shons spliced t<>sether -is
set in the McDuck man1ion. where
the kids ao on a "wishfest." sitcom-
style.
Then, it's bacl( to Exotic-land. .
I don't want to aive this little
movie a brutal shellackina -it
actually has its charms -but aner
what Disney achieved with "The
Little Mermaid." J found it to be a
tranquilized waste. (It certainly
doesn't have the plushness or depth
of "Mermaid.") Maybe, on tele-
vision. in half-hour segments.
"DuckTales" works. But here. on
the big screen. stretched out to more
than twice that length, it looks desti·
tute -and leaves the viewer, this
viewer. feeling famished.
I think what a triflt' it is and then
I remember llule Webby and m y
love for her and I get all mushy
inside and realize. hey. something's
wrong with this picture! This isn't
healthy.
I probably should have skipped
.. Duck Talcs'' and conserved what
little strength there is in my
dilapidated frame for "Aathners"
later this week. That one stars Julia
Roberts. but she'll have to roll an
a" ful lot of vowels to make me
forget Wcbb1ga1l Vanderquack.
Julia Roberts. She's no duck.
That's for sure.
8y .,. ITllCICLlll -· ,, ....... _,.....
The title of the rKial and teiuaal satire ·•How to Make t:ove to
a Nqro Without Oettina Tired," now playina at ~e 8aJboa Cinema.
ii so provocative that a theater in New York City refuted to show
it. ad . i Protesters ficketed theaters In Lot Anaelea, and the vertas DI
departments o manr, newapapen have demanded the name be
shortened in ads to • How to Make Love." . .
If only the oonLent of the film were half u provocauve. But t~11
French Canadian spoof of stereotypes has been waLered down an
both content and canematic a~b. . . The film is bued on the sem1-autobiopapb1cal novel. of the
same name by Dany Laferriere. who e<>-wroLe the scnpt. In
interviews, be has reveled in the controveny be started. •
"If Woody AUen can make irony with hi1 OWP, people •• why cant
a black writer do the sameT' he told NeWlday. I~ wasn t done by
a couple of white guys that wanted to make a racJSt statement. As
a writer, I want to be provocative." ,
Laferrierc's novel, with cbayter beadinas such a~.·. Th~ Black
Penis and the Demoralization o the Western World, 1s wickedly
angry.
The fury that drives the novel has been replaced in the movie
by a playfulness that doesn't convey the messaae with. the sa~e
conviction. lsaach de Banlcole ("Chocolat") t>lays the WllCCrlCki~
Man, who interrupts scenes to provide a runn1na com~~ntary of his
various exploits. most of which involve ninina or ~t1ng a ~ovel.
The approach i1 amusina at lint. Man w~rk.s 1n .some ~1bcr&!·
bashing with qui~ about how whites never d11tu,rb. him '!'~1le hes
reading because it's "a triumph of the Judeo-Chnsuan spint to~
a black man read."
And he teases his well-to-do white airlfriend, Miz Literature
(Roberta Bizcau, "The Dead ZDne") about how easy it is for hif!!
to attract white women because of "the myth about the black stud.
But the flippant attitude comes up short when the theme ~oves
into weightier matten. Man and Miz Literature are attending. a
hiJhbrow gallery openina when their drunken host lets I~~ a scnt'S
of racial slurs. Man clearly is bun by the assault, and M1z Literature
is appalled. The issue b_efs for more exploration than is allowed by
the mm·s format of makina a quick joke and then cutting to a new
scene.
De Bankole exudes a bubbly charisma t~at',s hard to ~ist. And
there's an undeniable cleverness to the scnpt s observations. But
"How to Make Love to a Negro Without Getti.na Tired," which
seems to promise scathing social commentary. ultimately makes the
viewer tired of its shallow cleverness.
ri
#
.1
Ci
)
r
1
'Le Miz' is too easily missed in a one-week run
By TOM TITUS
O.ity l'•ot COfr«opon<knt
The fol ks at the Orangc Count~
Performing -\ns Center ('an't hi:
blamed for pat11 ng thl·m .. ch e~ on
the back o'er last "cek's an-
nounr cmcnt of the 1990-91 Bro.1<.l·
"a) <)enc'
In one sea~on. local aud1l·m·c\ '"II
be 1rea1cd to the magn1fic.cnt "I e\
Miserable!> ... thl· 1491) l on\ ,\\\Jrd·
dom10a11ng ··frroml· Ro hh1n,·
Broad" a'·· Jilli "(irand 1 lotl'I ·· thl·
fare,,ell nat1onal tour ol .. \ ( hlll ll\
Linc" anti a rn I' al of thl' 11lt.ltl'
.. Mcct ~k in <)t Lout'i ...
But pruspcll1H' au<l1cnle mcm
Movie I/stings
llAUOA CtHIMA 1CJ.., t 8.•lt•• ..-9,..,,, 'J\ I '11
HO• To ...... Lov• t o • lil•f'O Wlt,,Owt
Gattlnf Tire• 1 q
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1 ~, ........... h'ui•ocent , I I .. \ I .. " I\ ~
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l Al'edtnopf\ot.a. r , , J 1' • ~ I •; • '•
WOW-OS Ill.AHO CINaMA r '"""" ' •••I ''""' pr.A'1 r Prtf-t li40 } A
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"71111~
Ouc.11 T•tet , ti f ~ • t(J ~ •n "••ttr w ..... " • ' •
~OWf THIAT•I l~•'• i. •U , •• ,~ 9'\11.t't f I 1 ,,_,
Ma1 ,_I I "lQ
Costa ~f'lila
aOWAltOS CINaMA CINTfa /II.II ""I ·• ,,.,,,.,, V•\ • .,,,.,d,. ( ,. Ill , .. ~ • 14 1
I JMn.ete &oott ft,, 'I''• JI\ 4 1\ f " Dklf
Tr.cy '""' R I \ tr hJ / P'foll>le"' CNfd 1~t•I I I II 1 I I\ I I\ \ I\ 7 IS q I~
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II I\ 10 lO
lx'rs had bcuer gct th eir orden 1n
~I}. Each of these <>how'> will be in
n for JU'il onc Y..eck -the nor-
al engagl•mcnt for musical theatcr
at thl' -\rt'> ( cnll'r.
"Les M1~rahk'i" for onl' a \\Cl'k''
Thl· '>ho" pla}cJ m·arl~ a ~~ar at the
)huba t in I m \ngdc' t"o 'il'a,o nr,
agu.
'cs. but the Orange ( ount~ Pcr-
forminK \rt\ ( cntl'r ., ac; 1t'i naml·
1mphl·\, thl· fururn for al/ ol thl'
pcrform1ng Jrh -.,~ mphunll ron·
u.•rh. bJlkt. urx•rJ. 1a11 and µop.
I he Broad" a~ ~Crll''> 1<, JU'>t one
p1C:ll' ol the pie
"I hnc arc so man} other things
... ,A CINaMA """" •I e· .. 1 /I q,,, \1 6• .. \l)H
Hawr Saalt 1•1 I I H 1 4 JO 1 q Jn
TOWN CfNTaa CINIMAS \QOJ!h < °"'" Pf~IA
1\1 4HU
I Ov<lr Tele1 IC.I I I 10 I JI) J lO ~ JI) I lu
~ " I Yovnt Gwn1 II .~,. I 11 I I lU I H • ~ '\
,. 10 10 ·~ I Th• ~ ......... " 1rc,, I/ I\ 1 !O •• ~ 1 q I\
4 Nevr hell l~I I } )() I \ l() ll IU j(I
IOUTH COAST P'UUA 8• \Inf t\uM<>w•• \Ht 111 I
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1 01• Har 1 1•1 11 1 \ 7 •\ \ 1 s I! 1n ICl
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TV Listings
ti
D
II
II
7:00
Wl\ttl ol
FMunt •
7:30
Jtoplrdy! :;
8:00
going on here that we cJon·t have the
spate for an cxtcndcd run:· explains
Sha" n 1-raM'r. public relations man-
ager for the Center. "By extending
one '>ho". "" would be pulllng the
o ther groups on hold ...
fhc rcn·nt t"o-weck engagement
o f .\ndrc"' I lo\d Webber·~
·· 'tarhght hprc!l!I .. · "as a happy
cxccpt1on 1n the normal Tuesda~
thruugh-the-follo" 1ng-Sunda) hook-
ing slot -\nd \\ ebbcr's ··cat., .. pla~.
cd not JUSt one but t"'o "l"ek-long
c:ncorcs 0 ' cr a 'ear and a halt
\\ hc.·thi:r "Les ~" .. "'"' be .back
for <.tt:cond!I is an> bod~·~ gues~ at the
moment. but 11 \OU ha,cn·t scen
• o.,. of T"""··· IP<• I ,, 11 H 1 I\ b II lO
!OH
\ P'r•-•• l"no<en t ti t 11 I \ 1 H \ I() ll I \
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aDWA•OI HUNTINGTON YWIN 111\4 I MA•" \r
l!•ll 0!118
I Yo .... t Gvn1 II tPl t I Ii 1 l JO 1 4\ \ J I\
q !O ll lO
I Tio•~•••""'•" rP<,1 r r\ I IO It II 1\ 111 10
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wooo••1ooa c1111 1MAS B "''" • ,, ... ~Wlf'f '(uf'vf"I o~ ._,. \I\ I 1'/t \\
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4 P'rMf-C:..... PC.I I/ I 4 b II 10
what may be the greatest musical of
all time (at least from this a1sle-
sitter's viewpoint). you'd belier get
vour orders tn now. The show plays
nex! June I 8-23.
Original theater -which suffered
a setback with the closing of the
Unicorn Emporium and ~the Ne"
View Theatt'r -ma) sull be al"e
and well in Oranie Co"nt).
Illusion Entenainmen( which op-
erated the Ne.,., View, has Joined
forces "•th Center Stage Pro-
ducuons at the i\nahe1m Cultural
Arts Center and will co-produce two
shows fhts season.
The first. openin~ Aug. 24 for
~ J-tie ..... ICil I I JO I IS l IS \ I\ I
Q..idl o. ..... 1•1 q 10 4\
'OVNTAIN VALLn TWIN lroo1thv"l/fcJ1~1 l!Jq 1\00
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8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11 :00 11 :30
Murpft, 0.11g111119 Ftct to Ftct Wittl Connt. News
lfown Women C In S1ereo t'
Movie· "Hiroshlm1· Out ol lllt Aahls" (1990 Qfama} Mu News
Von S OOw Judd NtlSOfl Premiere 111 Sta1eo •
21 Jump
StrNt
T onigllt Show
In S1~eo
three weekends, 1s "I Want It
Wednesday," a satire on the tele-
vision and film industry by local
playwright Lew Riley. Jeffrey Ault,
art1suc director of Illusions. will
stage the play.
The second show, scheduled fTom
Oct. 26-Nov. 11 . has not yet been
announced. More information on
the company can be obtained by
calllnR Ault at S) 1-6 766. ..
Jeanne Sanner. an actress and
director 1n local community thcate~
will be settmg up an acting work-
shop in Orange this month. and WJ~
offer frtt orientations Tucsdi
Wednesday and Aug. 14 and IS.
The "very affordable" acting
classes will be hdd at her new
studio. 320 E. Katella Ave .. Suite D.
The cumculum will include per·
sonal auditioning assistance. chara()I
ter development and analysis. and
other related topics. 1
Sance space is limited. those Wlsh"
ing to attend should call the studio
at 744-6860 for a reservation.
Crazies seek ·.
snapshots
for ~Pageant',
The comedy/improv troupe tht
Orange County Crazies art' calltna.
on all residents of Orange County to
submit photo entries for thei~
"Pageant of the Peons," a satirica
recreation of the annual Lagun
Bc:ach "Pageant of the Masters,"
that "111 highlight the Crazies' ney,.
come<.!) re' ue. "It's Not Easy Bein'
Orange." '
H-90• TWIN CINaMAS H,w!)t)I 81¥11 /I W-""' Sii~~· (>J I l\01 • M'A'S'H Cumnt Alw 21 Ju111c1 S1rM1 (In Slnol 0 Aleft Neleft The Game (RI N1wt
tn Sttreo
Each year the "Pageant of thC'
Masters" features staged repro-1
ducuo ns of an masterpieces. Thr
Crazies. however. are asking for
favorite snapshots of local famil}
parties and outings. such a,
backyard barbeques. btrthda)' or
graduation parties. wedding rcce~'
lions and s1m1lar events mvolving
two or more ~ople. The chosen
photos will be recreated hve and if)
detail dunng the Orange Countt,
Crazies' new re vue. set to open Oct"
13 at Irv ine Valley College in Irvine
I Otodr T ... t IGI I I IQ I !O J IQ \JO 1 IS '
1 Y-t0-11t 1Pc,11 l/4S )IS S•\ 11
10 IS
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
....,.,_o...~-.i
,.,, HAnOltaYO. COSTA MISA-S41-11M
··-
• • • • •
AdwMwt The Wtldmln of
AtHftio H9I (In StertOI
Edward No¥a The 8omt> s l ethal
l
TONgllllllow
In Sttteo
"We want to encourage everyont
to help us out while we have som("
fun with this renowned event." said
producer and an1st1c d irector ('herit"
Kerr. "Our revues continue to poin<
out the funny side o( life and event~
in Oransc County. so the 'Pageant of
1he Masters' is a excellen1 taraet."
In addition to havina their phout
reproduced live during each per-
formance of the new revue. winning
entnes will also receive a spccia&. Oran1~ County Cru1es Oif\ Pack.
ancludina a T·i;h1n. poster. frq
tickets to the Cru1e • nut revue and
other 1upr1scs.
Kerr asked that submissions bf
limited to one snapthot per entry
Eich photo hould 1ncludt 1 brk-t
dctcr1ption of the e\lent and tht
people in tbe photo, •nd a contact
name, address and phone numbtf.
To atau~ mum of entria.. •Ml~
a .wlf-addmeed, tCamped en"c'°Pr wuh each subm1uion ~ daldlene for "Paeeant or tl'f Peona·· enuin n Aus. 17. fMI ,,.,...... ,.. entrin 10; "Plerant of 1tw Ptons."
t/O kft'r fOmj»fttCI, 16892 loet1 CompMte TV 11ttngs In L _......,, TV UpdMe ~eca Sum, Suite No. 102. Hunt· . --z 1n1ton Btach. C\ 926-49~' •
•
Artist's work· applauded
at Mondavl \lllne Center
O ver 70 works curr:ently on display
i• it IUde of lflpe vines .. ~It. Jeff Low Thursday eve..
po&auna out a Diece of his work
exhibit at the A.obcn Mondavi
ne and food Center. .., never
med when I did thia. my im-
ion of a woman, that it would
day be lbown In a wine center."
he purple.tinted sculeturc, entj-
.. Viniqe of Dianity ' will be at
center aJona with 70 other works
Low for the next three months.
ore than 100 members of lhe
nae County Business Committee t~c Arts were 1mon4 the ftnt
c nt!an~ to see the eit~abit. They
1nvated to lhc openmt to view
to celebrate the ninth 1ut-
n1 crsary of OCBCA.
'This is an on-the-house reception
fo mcmben," said 'reeter Henry
rstrom. past chairman of the
e utive committee, who was fill-
in in for vacationing chairman
H rry Bubb.
rstrom introduced Low, a
re ident of Scottsdale, Ariz., who
s kc briefly of the 20 years of life
h has devoted to hi s art. later,
d · na the reception, he made the
r nds and seemed to be chatting
w h everyone, but he couldn't shake
h ds ... "I developed a bone spur
a r autoaraphina posters for hours
at a 'benefit.' he said.
Vida
Dean
Tiffany's; Deborah Denne, president
of Denne Dcsi&n Group; Bob and
Oeva Howard, Howard and How-
ard; Dorothea and Peter Perrin,
Bramalea c..Jifomia. Inc.; Reed
Royalty, Pacific Bell vecpi Elizabeth
and John Stahr, Latnam and
Watkins; Marilyn and Thomas Sut·
ton, Pacific Mutual were among the
auests welcomed to the reception by
Betty~ Moss. c1tec director of
OCBCA.
Cathy Michaels. director of 1he
Children's Museum of la Habra, an
on-hands experiencing facility was
also among the guests. "Yes, l see
some pieces that arc touchable and
WOUid fit in OUf muscum ... the chil-
dren would havcl'ftln with some of
, them." (That did not include "Para-
doxical Fragment Form" which
could pose questions such as where
are the rest of the lep?)
wine aiPOina and hon d·ouevre n&M
blina alio aave IOme aunu thdr fint &lance of the center and if they
loobd out a t.ck window they
could Ke that a vineyard is bei~
planted. Toren Seeentrom is credi-
ted with plannina the center and
eettina it in Costa Mesa. He i1 alto
responaible for the vine plantina.
The now-bearded Toren wu min-
alina and ahowina off bis projects.
Otbcn there were Louis Spisto,
executive djrcctor of Pacific Sym·
phony; Cornelia Mazer, manqjna
eartncr of Mar"ct Performina
Group; Charles Desmarais, director
of Laauna An Museum.
The OCBCA, now in its 10th year,
is a broker, a facilitator. according to
director Moss. "We make the needs
of the arts known to businesses. I
lhink we have made a lot of dif-
ference si nce we began. Currently,
we are involved m a study of the
economic impact of the arts in Or-
ange County to show the financial
benefits the ans provide for the
comrnunity. We are working with
Dr. James Doti at Chapman. The
arts .,-oups can use it as a tool , "
explained Moss.
ura Koput, an attome.r at Mor-
n and Foerster: Jo Qualls of The late afternoon reception of
The annual Business in the ans
awards will be given Nov. 18 at
Pacific Mutual and "the traditional
celebration dinner will f9llow at The
Ritz.. . Clev• •nd hit How•~ wttll LoW'1 'Glnlro •~
Jo 01N1H1, D•bor•h Den"• •nd Mlchael Aaell•
l 59& Holding
TOlll Sutton, Ellz•b•th Stahr# Marilyn Sutton •nd J ohn
Suhr
piet-crossed lovers face tough odds
I
What happe ns when a ~aut1ful
~1dow on a suP.r-free diet falls
madly 1n love with a rt't1red bank
ires1dl!nt ~ho can·t touch salt? Will
their passions survive the powerful
seasonings that stpa rate them?
Romance barely surv ives separate
bedrooms. separate ba nk accounts.
and separate political persuasions -
~t separate diets arc the greatest
challenge. We're not talking mere
mone}'. sex. or power -but food .
the last of the sensual pleasures.
Watching }'Our lover pohsh1nf off
those succulent goodies }'OU can t eat
1.kstro}S so mething beauttful be-
tween a man and a woman. A
mamage of oppcs1tcs 1s destined to
be too sacchann or too salty.
Some newly~eds make the su-
preme sacnfice and adopt their
spouse's diet. If you think acqumng
~tcp<htldren 1s difficult -tr) cop-
ing w11h a step-diet It's a lot rougher
d~Just1ng to a salt-fr« egg than a
'
Nancy
Mcintyre
smart aleck bab}-boomer.
The best soluuon 1s choo 1nK a
soul mate wnh the same d1etar)
restnct1ons. People with 1den11cal
d1gcs11'e problems share an instant
kinship. They can alwa)S spot a
fellow sufferer shuffiing around a
buffet table agon 1L1ng O\ er "h 1ch
morsel "'on'1 backfire. .\s 1he
damsel 1n distress glances long1ngl}
at the sour cream shnmp-d1p. her
knight u l inc round 1ao1e l01tlml'OI\.
.. I bet )Ou can't tokrate da1r) prod-
ucts an} belier than I." Flashing a
calcium-poor smile. hr adds ... How
do )Ou make out on lac1osc-frC"e ice
cream'?"
It's not easy fi nding a star-crossrd
dining partner. but computer dating
has been a boon for older singles in
matching up di eters -from gregan-
ous 'egctanans 10 "hcat-allerg'
loners. Some dating organ1La11on·s
even sponsor Low Cholcs1erol
dances
A fnend of mine had grrat success
with a personal ad 1n th e ne" ~paper
"l\tracll' c "1dow wtth di\ C'rt1culit1\
Sttks gentleman "1th same com-
plaint "'ho can't eat nu1s. seeds. or
ra1S1ns -but who enJO~s bndge and
square dancing.··
Let's not forget 1he old mamed
couples who gradual!} lapse into
separate diets. One has high blood
pressure. the 01her low. one 1s tr)ing
to lo!IC v.e1ght. lhl' olhcr. l:11tcn up
fhe modern Jack Sprat can eat no
fat or '-'alt -but hi\ wife can eat no
heans. bronoli. cabbage. corn. or
an) loocls 1hat produce more gas
1han E\\on
Who c6uld ha'c 1mag1ned 1n our
Dul k Salad Da)!. thl' 11mc would
come when we couldn'1 handle those
sensuous ')auce'I and 'civet) wanes?
We were 1he generation who fell in
lo\e in litt k fou, Frenlh restaurants
with chC'ckem.I 1ablccloths Our
1umm1c'> V.l'rl· )oung and ad"en-
turous. Nuv. the) ·re crank} and
SUSPICIOU') uf an}th1ng bul plain
~mencan UX)kang
The "'orst d1etar) calam1t}' to
befall an} marrnage 1s one partner
being cu l off from th e eh\lr ofhfe -
coffee There·, nothing meaner than
a re formC'd cafleine-gunter sipping
Postum al the breakfast table
Nu~y Mdolyrr /1 • rr11deo1 of
LaguH N/pe/.
Readers warn women of zipper gag
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I nearly
went into shock when I read your
w mmcnts to Mane, the 20-ycar-old
typist in the office pool who was
.isked by her boss (after hours) 1f she
wo uld fix the zipper an has trousers.
It seems the boss was hurrying to
&<? to a dinner. directly from the
office. and his zi pper broke. She did
get the Zipper back on the track and
l,ter wondered 1f she had done the
r;aaht thing. You said you needed
rpore information. Did the boss re-
move his pants., If so, whe re was
Mane when she fixed the zipper'?
Ann. you really were off the wall
on this one. F1'\in• zippers is not
pan of a typist's JOb description.
.+nd she is not his mother. Ap-
parently, because Ma rie is a woman, 51'c is considered "domcsuc help." It
~ms to me that this is an open and
"1ut case of sellual harassment.
There are laws to protcc1 women
~nst jerks like him. -Topenp,
Calif. , Dear T.,...a: SexuJ llulrH1-
Ann
Landers
meat'! 1 wMJd Mt p tlaat far, !Mlt a
1reat muy reaclen .W.'t care for
my uswer ucl felt IM ...._lei 1.e.
R~a41 -.:
From Bakenftelcl: Annie, baby.
&ct with it! This is the '90s!!! No boss
should ask an employee. man or
woman, to fix the upper in his
pants. That 1uy is either a letch or
an oinkina chauvinist. I've been
reading you for nearly 35 years. and
this is not the kind of answer that
made the Ann Landers column
famous. Arc you on vacation or
what'?
people In the News
Lake Geneva, Will.: I can·1 ochcve
you thought 1t was OK for the boss
to ask a }Oung typist to fi, the 11ppcr
in his trousers. There "'ere SC\Cral
alternatives -1f he reallv wanted
one. For example. he could ha\e
stopped in a clothing 'itorc. a <1hoc
shine parlor. a ta,ern "'1th male
bartender . a shot repair shop or a
hotel where a bellhop "ould ha'e
been happ) to obhge. An) female
emplO}C"e who 1s asked tha1 question
should sa). "SofT)'. Mr. Jones. I'm
not mcchamcall> 1nchned ... and get
out of there fast.
Pasa4eaa: Yo u blew 11. kiddo
Take )Our lumps. The unz1ppem:t
boss must have really gotten his
JOlhes pulhna the broken zipper rou·
tane on that }'Oung kid. You should
have advi5Cd her to tell the old
acczer, "I don't do zippers. He-re's a
safety pm." That Pl 1s older than
you are, Ann. I can't belie\<C you fell
for at.
Hullla1H, N.D.: A aentlcman
who .. , rcspe<; s .. men prof cs 1onals
would not ask a typist to till his
zipper. He would call the building
su penntendent who would surel)
have a pair of pil ers hand}' and
could do the JOb. If he asks Mane
again. I hope she chooses a nail file
a her tool of cho1l'C and g1,·es him
an uncApccted J&b )OU know where.
Lo•l1vm~ ls 1h.at 11pper plo sti ll
.iro und., I had a boss 40 }'Cars ago
"ho used to pull 1t on C'\Cr) new
S«rctaf} he hired. "Hot Pants
Hanson ' had a pair of trousers wnh
a broken zipper that he kept 1n his
office for that very purpose. The las1
woman he tned It on had been
warned 1n advance. When he asked
her to help him in his time of nttd.
~he aarttd. happil). p ve the stuck
11ppcr a sudden )'Ink, got his shons
cauaht 1n the damned thing. handed
him a pair of scissors. told him to
"cut himself out" and left
Gem ef die Day (Crfflt S..
Hope): ··virus" is a word uS('d by
doctors a areat deal. lt means, "Your
gucs 1s as &ood as mine.''
Audience cheers Roseanne Barr
One fan carried a Stan 'hat read, "We love ... didntl want 10 be on drup." he ad, "bul ST. PAUL Mann. -Roacanne Barr tokl a
fricndJ y a~JCnce over the ~kend that she must
be the "world'• areateat anacr.''
And why does she th1nlt that?
"Bcaute my vottt can stop a (blcepi~)
natton," Barr said Saturday an her fint pubhc
1lqt performance '-Ince sanam& a shnll rendition
b f "The tar pel\l)ed Benner" m Sin Diceo-
No hecklers or pro\es\cn were 1n the crowd
.of about 5.000 11 .the R1\'erft11 outdOOf •Ullt ll
Harrit't I lend
you Roxanne." my publiast •Id 1l would· help my comeback ..
.. ,~'b.ifMiitaon of tht national anthem at a Hdtn Corbett. a spectator from Bloomtna• Padta I llfnC *"boot fn>m '1w ~. ton. said there was "too much of a fu .. made
he capped t.M performance ._ _......._ htt abou1 Barr' NUonal anthem petfOf'manct ... Half
CfOtCb ud IPiUinl oe -~~·----...-• 'he nation can"t ti" the nauonal aft\hcm any .aid WM a peivdJ ol a ...--.u .. IJildllf. ~~ ....... ~"!'tcr th.an she did.' Corbtn II.id. COllUMllU~lllll ,..._ \mctlmb from Barr's •5·m1nutc. profan1t )·laccd u t
htt 11e1 in Sell • lln ~ .-• wu pm.tdtd a ptrfonnantt b)' 1~ roc k 'n' rolkr
••recendy rrlm wt dM ..., fOfd dnil Chuct lkrry.
ct1n1C... -II die Autfdatt(f rr..
TODAY'S
DAILY PIWT K-OCEAN
LUCKY. LICENSE
PHOtO WINNER
LICENSE # 1 JMU689
DEADLINE: 12:09 Noon Tomorrow
(Saturday attd Sundey w;n,,.,, hav• until noon th•
following Monday to cl.llm U..lr priz•I)
WINNERS RECEIVE $2 5 PLUS A $25
BONUS IF A CURRENT SUBSCRIBER.
PAID BY PAGE GROUP PUBLISHING
DAILY K-OCEA N
PILOT 103.1.
FOR LOCALS ONLY
OllJClAl. avus AND BOW n> Cl..AIJf ft'ZU:
1. Adhere l~y Ucente Bumper Sticker on rHr bumper of vehicfe u clOH to the licente plal• ... po11ible. M sure buf!1P9' ie dMn. u IM bumper atictler will not stay on a dirty
Mtla.
2. ~lld the Pilot and llaten to K-OCEAN dally. The winning
licenM ptllte numben will be publilhed In tM Pilot NCh day.
3. Winner mutt ctelrn ptl.H by deadline slet..:t in the ed.
4, ~:~~~Ion m·c:~=
No dlinte .. '*-9d on~~°'~·
5. Emplo,H1 al1M Li'ieo... tejllol K~. ''*' ~-----=--· .... I IUcft 8,..... ·~""' .. ,..... .
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P\lbl15hed by ... Gtoup ,obldtl~, I~
leltert I. ,..., P!~ & ch•I •11ecu11v• off.It;_.
Elliot Stein, Jr., cho11mo11
0-aW W.· Ack••. Jr., general monoger
Walter lurrovghs, 1901-1919, loundtng publ1d1er
Editorial
S&L scandal fuels
a backlash that
can't be ignored
A s protests go. what happened in Newport Beach on
Thursday was small potatoes. No one was carted ofT
to jail, and the demonstrators n.·n·ived little ncwc;
coverage outside the Orange Coast Daily Pilot. But that
doesn't mean 1t went unnoticed.
Even the fact that the protest was led by county
Democrats trying to take pan1san advantage of the S&L
mess doesn't diminish the importance of what it signals.
What happened here Thursday was part of a growing
backJash that could send elected offi cials and bureaucrats
from Sacramento to the White House running for cover.
Political analysts began worrying about the backlash
when the first sordid detatlc; of the savings and loan bailo ut
and scandal became public. The) squirmed at the conse·
qucnces of what could happen whe n the American public
finall> realt1ed how much the) would pay and how httk
those who perpetuated the mes~ would be held accountable .
Charles Keating Jr. was the first maJOr tec;t. People were
~~ockcd that so many people lo<,t c;o much money at Irvine's
CJincoln Savings & Loan and angred at the poss1hilitv that
Keating could come out of the \candal !lt1ll a \Cr\ nch man
at tht tll\flJ)l'r"'· t'xpcn<,l' ·
Then tame 8111 Waltt·r, I 1lo.c KcL1110g. he v.a\ a high·
11 ) ing. puv.crful insider until tm dom:Hn at 51h t•r:ido
~hi\ 1ngs & l oan toppll.'d Waltt·r~ told a congre'i\lona l
wmmlttct• Im S&L dealing.<, had left hi m rx-nn1lcc,,. hut ti
v.asn·t long aft er that da11n that photogrnphc; of the $1 .ll
m1 ll1on homl' \\herc he ll\l'\ cropped up 1n nt'\\\papcr' and
011 tl'le\ 1s1on m·, .. s broadcac;t.,
l l'thnttdll~. the hunw dol'\n·1 belong to \\'altrr\ It v.a'
pun.hawd b) a tru\t '>l'I ur m h1c, v.tlc'<, nanl\.· Th.ti
teth 1mall~ 1c,n·1 "a ... hing v.11h man~ pt·opk Jnd till'
dcmonc.tia1111 'I ''ih<> c.h1l'•'l'd up .it \.\altl·r<,· homl· f"hur.,d.I\
J"lr<l\l' 11
The publtt ts ang~ and tha1 a nger"" gro"irlg hl·r~ cn1
the ()range < 0:1<,t and alro\c. thr llni1t·d Stall'\
Somt.· protcc;tcrs \aid thl'} '-'l'rC morl' ang~ at cllTlnl
111liualc; ''ho allU\H'd the )&I dt<,ar,tcr to happen than thn
:irl' at those "'ho pt·rpctratl'U and lx'nefittcd Imm 11 I hat
'" .in int. umbi:nt'' \.\orst n1gh1man..· tx·rnu'>e thl' hackla'>h 1\
not rcstm It'd to t.'t thcr polt11ral part)'.
.\s prolc\t'i go. v.hat hap1x·nt•d hcrl' 111 Ne"port Reach
un fhur\ua~ ma ~ ha,t· tx·t·n <,mn ll pot<l lc>t.'<> But ck t tt·d
o ninah had lx-tter talo..t• nol1n' h<.·rau"'-' th<it c,mall potato 1<,
a polttttal hot potato.
Therl"'> 'it_tll time to rcc11 f~ 'lomc of the "rongc; heapn l
on the back of the .\mcncan t:l'<pa)ers and nght abuses th:it
J1l'rm 1ttcd the S&L scandal to happen. All that has to tx·
done 1s fur o ur elected offinals to begin n.•prcst·ntmg amJ
prntcrt1ng the public intcn.'\t rather th at perpetuating their
1ncumtx·nl~
Today In history
r 1.Ja\ l'i Mllnd.l' \ug f1. thc
~l !!th c.J.1} ol 1•1•111 Thnc arl· l.l '
da}' ll l't in t hl' \l'.tr r odJ\ ·, l1 1ghl1ght Ill H 1'ilor~
()ne h u nc.Jrc.·c.J \l';H\ .1g11 on .\ ug f\
I l-.'ll J. thl' ckllfll lh.ur "ii' u-.ed for
llil 111\I tlllll' t11 l''ICCU ll' a lllll
d• 11111nl u1min.1I I hl· dn trcll ut11111
11t \.1111\ ll t\.•i.l 11111rikrrr ~ tlli.1m
l\l 111111ll·1 .1t \uhurn '°11a1c f'n \on Ill
\: i.: '~ '\ or k ll'q 11 irl·d hH> t nn :111u
tun!.. 'l'' 1.:ral n11nu tl'\ to atcompli\h
Doonesbury
'
It ral\cll a \IOI m 111 l11nlfo\\·1" "' l·r
whether the ml·thod "'a' humanl·
On thl\ dalt'
In I Y45 th1.· l nltl'd \1.11 n drop-
pnl dn atomic. homh on llirw.h1ma.
Japan. l..1ll1lli .in l \tlm.1tl'll I .tll 000
people in thl' lir\t u-...· ol .1 nut kar
\.\l'3pun 111 \\,trlall'
Om· ~car d{IO J;11mt• Pai I amor:i
"'a'> rllauguralt.'d J \ pre'9tknt 111
Boll\ 1a
-By Th <' Assoriat~d Pr~11
By Garry Trudeau
---
Letters
Amburgey a victim of politics
To the Editor:
Costa Mes,a Councilwoman Mary
Hornbuckle 1s known for unqucs·
ttoncd 1n1cgn1y. Recently. she asked
our city attorney for an opinion on
whether she had a conflict of interest
in voting to create cul de ~ars in
neigh borhoods. including her own.
The city attorney advised th at de·
c1sion to crl·ate such cul de sacs
would not crea te a benefit of more
than SI 0.000 for the Horn buckles
Onl) thl·n did Councilwoman
Hornbuckle bchcH' 1t "as proper to
\.O te for the prOJCel A fair shake for
the Cit), for pubht' perception anJ
for the Hornbuckle famih .
Is thl'rl· a difference lx:t"l'l'll thl·
Hornbuckle' otc and the ' ote < 'oun-
nlman On Ille ..\mburgq ca\t to
rc1onc a prof)Crt~ his '>On "'an11.·d tn
build single fam il) Jetach\.·d homn
on''
0~ Amburgq alw askl·J thl· l It ~
attnrnq ahout a pm<,1bk lont11u u l
rntt'fl'\I in 'oting on an l\\lll' that
111\nh t·d a tamll) llll'mlx·r. I hl· l 1 1 ~
attorney ruled that since Orv re·
ceivcd no benefit from the proposed
home development th ere was no
conflict of mtcrest. It wasn't a ques-
tion of whether he miJht gain more
than SI 0.000 1n derived benefits.
Orv didn't stand to gain one red
cent.
Orv's son. Ron Amburgey. 1s a 42
year~old mdepcndcnt businessman.
with thrCl' children. Orv had no
fi nancial interest in the project. In
fact. unlike a I} p1cal American fam·
ily "here rclat1,e!o have the op-
portunit) to "ork together when
possible. a" an electrical contractor
On "un·1 e\.en work on his son·s
proJl'tl\
l:vcr~ tlung aoout Amburgq ·s
\Ute n:111311l\ \.'OllSIStcnt With the
high stJntJarth tn the Hornbuckle
e\ampk l hl· uni> difference is that
If o rn bulk k "'and\ to ga 1 n
finanu.111 ~ "'l11k ·\mburgq docs
not.
He onl} \land\ to IO\l' pol1t1rall~.
Where's the justice?
Integrity is a double-edged sword.
it cuts both ways.
In the spirit of integrity, Mary
Hornbuckle should help clarify the
Amburgey issue to the public.
There's a lot of talk about avoidina.
"the ap~arance of a connict of
interest.' I'd like to hear some talk
about avoiding "the usc of and
appearance of political tactics."
Hang in t.hcre Orv.
I've enjoyed the pleasure of know-
ing you and working with you for
the past fo ur years.
As I said before. I too would vote
on an issue in volving a family mcm·
ber if the end result was good for my
city that I serve. Unfonunatcly. we
no longer have that option and our
fami lies arc penalized because of a
desfrc to serve Costa Mesa. That's
not the American way and that's not
the way Costa Mesa used to be.
BRIAN K. THERIOT
C'osta Mesa
Good hikers are careful hikers
To thl' hlitur
I am an t.•xpcm·nc-eJ had..pad1er
who ha ... h1krll io 1hc top of l\1ount
Wh11ne> a 1.nupk uf 11mr'. and th1'
J'I 1n .tn'l\\l'r to }our arttdc 11tlnl
"Mount W h11nc~ death trup tk·
~l11lx•d ..
E\er}On{' rm \ure. rl'grt'I\ 1lw
death of Ma11hn' :-..ordhrod nn lop
of Muu n1 Whnnq . and fl·1.·I, \)111·
path~ lor hi'> fam il) and friend\ Wr
al'io kl'I \adtlent•d \\-hen '"u foll tn
report thl' fa l I\ ·
r huu<,ands of people h1kl· lo lht•
Inside Repon
top ol Mount Wh11n9 cvcf) }car in
safct} hctau\c the trail 1s reasonabl y
adequate!> matnta111cd and the For·
cs1 Sen ire g1' t''> out lot\ of good free
ad\ ICC
On an) ntlC da } m Jul) }OU might
c~pcll to \l"C ~U(J or more pcopk on
the r,umm11 fhat da} there "'ere
onl ) I J lx·lJll\t' the ranger\ warned
pcopk . 11n lud1ng Mr. NcmlhrtK k''
part~. not 10 go there t>t.·rnuM' a
ma1or \101 m \.\3\ 1mm1nent . 1 ht'}'
\\COi 3ll}\.\3).
You hlamc th l· hut 111 }Our artKk
Thcrt• \\l·rl' I Yl> l1gh1n1ng ~tnkn
around the top of Mount Whitney
during the i.1orm. It seems logical to
believe that if lJlc I J people had
Stayed OUISldC during the storm.
more than onr of them may have
been killed. The hu t probably helped
them.
People die every year because they
choose to be on top of a mountain
during an elcctn cal storm. It would
be nice if more of us could learn
from our mistakes of o~rs.
RICHARD H. LACOCK
Hu n11ngton Beach
Moscow, councilman has solid
advice for better U.S. schools
WAS H I N(, r 0 N -I h l'
phenomenon of a world turned ur-
\1\.k dO\\-fl \.\J\ unJerhncd thl\ \.\l'CI..
"hen cdut.atton reformer Wilham J
Hcnnc:tt wa<, g1.,.cn advice h) a
Ru '.i'i1an go"crnment oflic1al on how
to improve ..choolr..
Valery Borschov. a member of the
reformist Mosc:ow City Council v1s-
111ng Washington. ran into Federal
Drug C1ar Bennett at the Heritage
Founda11on (a conservative think
tank). Borschov said he and h1~
colleagues had known of Bcnneu's
call fo r school reform as President
Reagan's secretary of Education. He
expressed his pleasure at meetmg
him.
The Russian then told Bennett
that the Moscow l'1ty Counci l had
abolished kindergarten. I nstcad.
Muscovites were being gi ven
vouchers to use as they saw fit -(or
church schools. if desired. The
"choice option.'' Borschov sug· aes•cd. miaht well be considered by
the America ns.
Bush Is crabby
Days before lniq created crisis
conditions by invadina Kuwait. a
peeved President Bush decided to
come home early Thul'$Clay niaht
aner his defense preparcdncs
speech in Aspen, olo.
Bush told advan« men early in
t.he week he had no desire to spend
the nilht near Aspen as oriainally
planned and WU cqct" to ,et beck 10
hit family in Maine. Aides arum~
that the ~1ident's lmp11ience
would Cott SI0.1,.000 in unuted hotel
rooms for Jtan. quite 1p1n from
Mditlonal niatu Cllptntet. Bu.ti hid prei.dinner cocktails with Am·
balMdor Henry Cano, b9ck from
the U.S. Embuay in Londonho~
11e dinner on the plane ftfint .
£.artier 1n the week, the usually
chttry Bu h hid comptained about
the need to 1uend k>nt•planned ~·
ception "The bolt i1 reaUy mb-bx." one 1nStdef told u Titt ~•son
'
Rowland
Evans
1s believed 10 be th e bud,et su mmit
stalemate anJ th e dt'Cpcntng savings
and loa n cnm (1nclud10g the prob-
lem!> of his \On. Neil).
Speaker's soft soap
Speaker f homas Foley 1n·
advenently Jrew muffled chuckles
from the House DcmOC'rat1c Caucus
Thursda) when his pre-summer re·
cess pep talk praised what a terrific
session of Conarcss this has been.
folc}' pointed to the lead editorial
in that morntng's Washington Post
extolhna the pace of lqislat1on in
Congress. He then 1pecifically
lauded his colleaaues for ca mpalan·
reform lcg1slat1on. the civil nghts
bill and passing 10 o ut of 13 ap-
propriations bills.
That aenenited a little minh
amona the Democratic House mem·
bers. "Has Tom Mard that we
haven't aot a bud,e1 ye1r one
senior member whispered to
1no1her.
Where Is B•ker7
Usually 1ucn1ivc to Repubhcan
ri&ht-w1n1 leaders in 1bt Smatc,
Jah1cs A. Baker Ill has pun~d Sen.
Jew Helms. top Republican on the
Foman Rclluons Commintt. and
many or his OOP colae..uet by
ta1Una 10 an wer hit July f 9 leucr ntina if the 1«retary of Stale ral~
doa favor the IMt new bill f'or U.S •
aad to Eutcm Europe and the 8o" Id
Union.
Helms. who finds ihe bill hiPIY
Robert
Novak
Objectionable. wrote Baker that Sen.
Claiborne Pell. the Democratic
Forcian Relations chairman. told
him the Bush administration "docs
not oppose" the bill. The measure
was approved by the committee
over Republican objections.
Telhng Baker that "my under-
standing is that the adm1n1stration
opposes the bill.'' Helms pleaded:
"Jim, I need to know as soon as
possible whether the chairman's
statement is accurate." Two weeks
later. there h11 been no answer from
Baker.
Pressuring Israel
Rep. Joteph P. Kennedy of
Masuchu11eus has warned Am·
bessador Moshe Arad if Israel does
not rorm1lly announce that 17,000
Wesr Bank Arab university students
will bt allowed beck in the
classroom within sill months. the
House will pass a lon~pendina res-
olution dcmand101 that the schools
be ~-opened.
Two stronaly pro-Israel Demo-
crats. Reps. Cfary Ackerm1n or New
York 1nd Mel Levine of C1lifomi1.
joi~ Kennedy in wndlna that
mcssaer to Arad. The amblt.tedor
has p1w1tely inured ~mben o(
Co~ for months that the inttitu·
tions of hiahtt lamlns .-ould to0n
"be optMd. .......... .., ..... ,,... •t• fl•1tl•1••• OC·t•••I .,, •'•• ,., .. ..... Ollill ...,.,.,.
Looking bade
Remember
when OC .
was farm
country?
The aradual loss of land once u
by farmers is. among other thinas.
o:minder of the vast variety of veg
..:. et.ables and fruits Oran'e Count
once harvested during its aoldc
years that stretched from the lat
1800's to mid-19SO's. That wa
before concrete and asphalt change
everythina.
Not so long ago. at the "cgetabl
section in the Hughes Market a
WcstclifT, I observed a spunky three
year-old boy seated in his mother'
lhopping can. His eyes were larg
and filled with curiosity. His mothe
went about her business of pokin
and squeezing a bright red stack o
juicy tomatoes.
1 he little boy looked up at ~1
mother's face and with an 1n
quisitive look 1n his eyes he asked1 "Mommy where do tomatoes comes
from, huh? mommy. where'' ..
She carefully placed a few
tomatoes in a plastic bag. then
patted her blouse in an abse nt
searching gesture.
"Uh. well ...... she said over her
shoulder tugging the shopping cart
and boy alona with onl) the loosd
Jrip of a curled index finger,
" ... tomatoes come from the store,
where else?"
You know. answers like that make
me believe man's descent from 1hc
ape hasn·t 'itarted )Cl.
To set the record straight. here 1~
a brief composite. the A to Z. from
alfalfa seed to p1stach1os. from wild
rice to pomegranates. of "hat onCl'
"came from the ground'" during tht.•
&olden years in Orange ( ount ).
And. ti you arc hke nll'. \OU ma)
find th is a ht1le surprising
l.)ccadcs before thr nh of
Anaheim imagined a Splash Moun-
tain. wh en lntcrslate 5 was a dusl\
horse trail. th e lanJscape "'a;
.flooded wi th graJX' vines.
In the )Car I tstsb. the surrounding
area of Anaheim otaintaincd 50 111·
dependent 'inter'i "ho produced
wine from the local!) grown grape-;
The leading counties for graix
producti on toda) arc Tulare. R1,rr
side. Kern. Frl'Sno. San Joaquin
Napa. onoma and Madl·ra
The u1~ of Anaht•tm a'I o( toda)
has no operating w1n(•ry and no
vinc)ards
About a ccntuf) ago. earl> '<'Iller'
stum bled across celcr} gro"' ing "'1 ld
in vacant field s JUSI south ol \\c\t·
minster
The crop was hane'ltt•d anu Ill thl'
first l\\-O )ear\ of cclcr) produrnon
about 1800 car loads of rl'lcr} "'ere
reponcd sh1ppc:d .
Today. Ventura. Mon tcre) and
Santa Barbara counties not onh
produce th e celer) for hungl) ( ali°-
fomians but rank number one 1n the
United States for cclcf) pro<luct1on
According 10 Leo J . Fm!>'<; hook.
.. Ora nge ( ount} ... at onl· time all
chili peppers gro"'"n 111 ( aliforn1a
were ra1\Cd 1n Orange Count\
Toda~. the leading coun11e' for
ha rvc•u1 ng chilt pcpprrs art·
Monterc} and \anta < Iara rnunt1 l''
In an amcle for the H1'itonral
Soc1ct) of Southern California (..)uar·
tcrly. Ra)mond llolt noter, 111 IR7'i
a Rev. Henr} Messenger grew
bananas. The crop Oounshrd unt1l 11
lack of water t'auscd the hanana'i Ill
dry up.
In the earl) 11120·... the Cll) of
Costa Mesa re101ced o'er th e largc'it
harvest of apples in 1t'i h1\IOI)'
The apple growing da)" wen·
numbered. As Ednck Miller po1n1'
out in "A Shcc of Orangt.'... tht•
amount of cheap land a\'a1labll• lor
apple orchards simply shrank
In 1901 James fr v1nc Jr. boJ!>tcd
in th e Ch1caao Producr Ne"s t<>
have operated under one manaac-
ment the largest bean field 111 the
world.
A brochure quotes Dr L. W..
Wherry stating 1n his very own
words. "There is nothina that "111
not arow at Fairvte" Farms ...
"1 have almost every va net) of frui~;· he cont inues. "but (I) sp«ml·
tze m lemon and peaches:·
Wherry fimshcd his praise by \tat· ina what most farmers acrnall y be·
licved years back. He concluded by
promis1na. "not. to sell my Fain 1cw
Fum It any pnce ...
In time. he broke that promise.
In the county's rapid tran11tion
from avicultural to urban develop-
ment, the landscape once used as
fenile farm land, where (as Or.
Whmy 11ld) practically anything
IJ'fW unckr the sun, now take o
b•d,sc11 and wek:omci 10 a new
ttnant laratly made u~ of rrtt\\a}'\
hilh·ritn 1nd houtJnt dcve1op2
mm11.
In 1917 <>ranee County ront11ncd
'°4 farms. Compere that Oaure to
our ne•t door neiahbon or n Diceo C'ounty •ith 6.2S9 farms and
Loi Aaetln .-uh 2.0.H. .... ......... , ,, • Nt..,. • .... , I',,
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today Ind I uud1y With 1 chwt ot
thndt1Uo11111
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toclly * luetdlf ltot Mid 1111"'111 ••th
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nMMDW: Mostly clelfs
.. Witt! 1ftlt110011 ..
10 to 15 min per
OCEAN REPORT
IOA11G
TODAY'S SUN
4 13 t m
10 31 .'"
3 31 pm 11 43 pm
4 41 I m
1103 e m
4 11 pm
10 20 pm
FISlllG
~
44
20 ai
Good tllthn ot \anll ban bolll11 ffld
Ooll4o "' •IOOlted
Sunrise ........ 6:07 a.m.
TODAY'S MOON
Moonrise..... 7:58 p.m.
Moonset.. .... 6:09 a.m. Sunset.. ....... 7:47 p.m.
0
Full Moon Aug.6
()
last Otr.
Aug. 13
New Moon
Aug.20
--
STATE
FRQNTS:
• • ca.o
• • • • • WARAI STATIONARY
ORUI• COAIT NILY MOY ....... -.. ......
6HOW£RS RAW T.STORMS FUJRRIES SNOW K;E StHIY PT CLOUOY CLOUOY
TRAYElER'S REPORT
NATIONAL
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•Tide source: Astronomical Data Services, Colorado Springs, Colo.
Washington Cal/Ing
Middle East crisis puts
Bush in a tough position
WASHINGTON -The Middle
East cns1s '" fraught 'w'llh peril for
President Bush.
Amencans trad111onall) rall) be·
hind the president tn a fo reign cri'it'i.
but 11 will require finesse b) lhc
While Hou\c: n11.1s managcmc:nt
team to prc"c:nt Iraq'\ <1uhm1'is1on of
Kuwait from spelling rrouhlc for the
president in the fut ure
A few of the landmine,.
•Bush U'iCS sut:h words a\ "1n·
1olcrablc" to dtspla} U S. anger at
Iraq. but rnn't bat:k up his word'I
with q ui ck all1on If Iraqi 1roops
sla) in Kuwait. Bu\h looks weak and
nsks the wralh of <:on~·~at1ve' 1n
his own pan) •A surge 1n 011 pmc'i "ould hun
voters 10 1hc:1r pod.ethooks. hamper
efTons lo <:urb 1nna11on and make
the balllc to cul the deficit more
d ifficult.
•Bush and C10P proponen1s of a
strong defense argue the Iraqi 1n-
vas1on 1s a first-ra te argument for a
strong m1lital"). but Dcmocra11c
cnucs of defense \pending will argue
that aficr a decade of enormous
defense outla>s the .S. s11ll doc'ln't
have the mll ttal") wherew11hal to
qu1ckl} defend 11s 1n1eres1s 1n the
Persian Gulf.
•Once agai n. ll .~. 1n1dligenl:e
looks bad. The CIA 1ni11'lts 11 was
aware of the \enou'!ne'ls of the Iraqi
threat and warned the Wh11c House.
but pressure ma> mount on Ru sh to
clean house at 1he Cl'\
Dim trade outlook
Prospects for a new mtcmattonal
trade agreement look dim. despite
trade negotiator Carla Hills' tongue;
in.check assurance tha t the talks
have a SO I percent chance of \UC·
ccss.
The European~ refuse to back
down on farm sub 1d1es and sup--
pons to protect their farmers against
U.S. and other competition.
If the aa talks fa il, Hills says 60
countries that favor freer trade will
walk out of the broader ncaotiauon.
makina 1t difficult to make deals on
services, 1ntelleetual propcr1~ and
investments.
, More budget talks .. Look for White House and con-
lfCISIOnal budtet n~OtlltOrs tO ICt
, back to work af\cr Labor Day at
Camp David or some tiny vacauon
"1 spa.
1 Praldcnt Bush has offered Camp
David for the talks, which have so
far tone nowht'rc. Democnls wtnt a
more neutral pot.
"We need '!lace where the politi·
cal kni\'e an pt5tol• can be taken
off the table and checked at the
door.'' Y~ Houtc Oemocrallc
Whip 8111 Gra)' of Penn )'l\'an11
' P•ssport surge
U. s>tSSPor1 offitt1 bnicc for a
m1.1or incrcatc rn ac11v11y •hen the
Ors& bl&ch of I 0.>car pa •ports ~·
to expire in I 99J.
Government auditors "arn that
the passport office will need a ma)or
overhaul to cope with the anti< 1·
pated sur~e from the 4 mtllton
passpon s issued annually toda} to
10 mtllton npectcd b) the turn ot
the ccnturv.
Fraud 1s· expected to worsen. too
Experts beli eve tha t counterfcttcr<.
alread) churn out at lca111 40.000
phon) passporb cvel") }car
Relations broaden
The United State'i wi ll open a
consulate-general 1n Kiev. capital of
the So' 1et l 'kran1an republic. th1\
fall . with the So' 1cts opening a
matching office in "le"' York
The deal has been in the "ork\
since lhe Nixon admini~trauon, hut
11 was dela)c:d b) FBI fears of So' 1ct
espionage. anger at the Soviet in·
vas1on of .\fgha n1stan and con·
gress1onal pique at Soviet buj!.iing of
the new American cmbass} 1n Mo'i·
cow.
The Kiev post will be small. hut
will give the St.ate Department e)C'i
and cars 1n the SSR's second·
largest re public. The U S. now ha\ a
consulate 1n Leningrad. The S<l' 1c:t'i
have one in San Fra ncisco.
Numbers game
Pentagon planners keep their
cards close to their vests 1n the
budget game wi th Con,rcss.
Officials 1ns1st they re stud) mg
how to tnm only )8.000 from the
2.1 million people in uniform. far
fewe r than Congress 1s hkel)' to
demand. Sttretal") of Otfensc Dick
Cheney has ordered his number
crunchers to keep a ltd on secret
s1udies that show what much deeper
cuts would look like.
Sa ys Pentaaon manpower chi ef
Chns Jehn of the studies: "If those
numbers get out. they tend to be·
come the hiah·water marks."
More S&L fallout
Environmentalists frtt that their
cause will be a loser in the S&:L
bailout.
Failed Sells owned a lo& of
substantially undeveloped land -
some of it wetlands1 coastal barrier
islands and otht'r habit.at for en·
danaettd species. Now the land i
~ina IUCtJOncd off by the Rcsol·
ution Tru&t Corporation wuh little
rcprd for its environmental val~.
warn the National WakUi~ Feder·
alion and otht'r Jf9ups.
Conarcu ufltd the RTC to WClah
the rttreat1onal and 1C1tnttfic value
of the land ~fore puUtr'I it on tht'
block. but so far the 00fp0rlt1on ha1
had other pnonti«.
Quid pro quo
SUte Otpanmcnt pe11et the -ont
that new btlda F~ ~lttt
Dlvtd Levy's chancn it/ a to.
face meeting "•th President Bu\h
depend o n ho" Oe\lble Le'~ 1<; in
prcliminar) t.ill,' "1th Sec re tar) ot
State Jamn Raker.
Le'> '"'t~ Washington Thursda~
for hi-. lirc,t ml'eting "tth Baker
Baker plan'> to Ix-opt1ml\t1c, but .,. ill
point out that l e') ·s bo'\!i. Premier
YttLhak Shamir. torped~·d Bakt•r',
attempt to c,tart the first Israeli·
Palestinian ix-ale talks la'it \pnng
The Israeli emhas\~ " "ork1ng
O\Cn 1mc to wt up a Le') '>l'''>1on
with the pres1dl·nt
Hotllne's benefits
a11onal \.\ t>athcr C\cn ire"• hur·
ncanc hotline 1s pm' 1d1ng a double
benefit
A rclord 95.000 peopk used the
hotline la"t 'car a\ Hurricane Hugo
neared the C arohnas. and 'i\.\ 'i 1\
lOn' 1nced the hotline reduced
Hugo's death and damage toll
.\s an added dt' 1dend. the ~\.\ C\
collected S9.000 from the rnlls.
which a"eraged SI 35 a call at 50
cents for the first minute and 44i
cents for ealh add111onal minute
NWS donated the hotline's profit 111
the Red ( rO!IS
Humcanc update' arc a" ailablc
aga in th!\ ;.c ar b} calling
1-900.41 0-66.:!.:!
Polluted r efuges?
U .S wildlife e \gcrts sa\
thousands of m1gratol") "bird dca1h'
occur each ~car bccau\C the go' em·
ment docsn t moni tor chemical con·
taminat1on ol wildlife refuges
In one cac,c. farmers d1o;pcrS<·d
hazardous pcst1c1dcs o n leased ref·
uge lands tn Oregon's Klamath
Basin. co ntributing to an e<1t1 ma1<.•d
46,000 wildfowl dcath'i bctwt't'n
1986 and 1989.
New audit or the U.S. F1~h and
W1ldhfe Service says no government
proaram exists to identify and
monitor contaminants and calls for
lona·ranae planmna to attack th<"
problem.
No humlng trip
The Brittsh press, legendary for its
ability to hype a story. had a field
day with Secretary of tatc James
Baker's Monaohan hunting tnp
before he canceled 11.
Said the Londons Observer: "Fear
sozcd the wild aoat population of
Monaoha .. as news spread that a
1un-totin1 (Baker) has them in his
siahts. The U .. forc1an Polley tsar 1s
to JOtn nomadic htnbmcn of the
aoutht'rn Gobi dcscn for a hun11na
tnp , .. Tht' tnucr·h•pPY Tenn wu
reported forced to switch lal'JCtS and
loc.allons after it WIS SUlltSled he
was 1unn1~ for the rart\ lona·
homed arph thccp and endantrrcd
lpttl ••
£~ .. St1111;11111t .. :-• ~~1r:r.: .., .. ...,, -' ... ScrWlf
,.,,,. ""'" ,., .. (Jrl. ... ~· ,.,,, ,.,,.,,
Texan: I'll prove my dad
helped assassinate JFK
..\l 'STI:-... l l'\3\ -.\n un cmplOH'd 1111 t'QUIJl-
mcnt sak.,man da1mc, thJt ht\ latl' lathl·r a former
Dalla.. pohll' olliu·r "'a' one ot th rel· men "ho
assassinated Pn·su.lent John f Kenned~ in I lit\'
Rtek\ \\h1ti' <.<.hcdukd a nll'ettng with fl"
portc:rs ~1onda) in Dallas to oiler l'' 1denn· hl'
bchi''cs 1mplllatc' hi\ fothl'r. Rn.,coc White. 1n
Kenned>'<; a'i'ia\\1na11on in 1961. the ..\ust1n ..\ma1·
can-State\man rl·portl'd "iunda)
White. 2Q. an uncmplO)'Cd Mu .. lland oil equip·
mcnt salc:\man. '><l\'i he "had nu lOnn·ptton ol l'\l'r
ever g1v1ng th1!t <;iol) out."' but di'Udl'd to do '>O
after the FBI began que'>lt0n1ng him 1n Ma' IQXX
in rl'la11on to h1'i da1ms
White \31d he can prO\c that hi\ fa ther fired
t"o of the thret' hullc1c, thJt l.1lled the prc<.1den1 .ind
that hi s father. not I cc H ane~ O'"ald also 1.tlkd
Dalla\ police olfaer J I> T1pp1t
\\ h1te c.a 1d O\walct wa<; IO\ol,eJ 1n the pint
but did not fire am c,hol\ Thl' t"o other 'hooll'f\
"ere referred 10 rn h1\ father"\ di.If\ nnh h' 'tltk
names. \.\ h11t.• ..a1J
The \\ arrcn < omm1\.,1on rnndudcd that < )\.
"aid. 3lllng alone fi red the \hots that I.tiled
Kennl'd\ and "oundcd Tc,as (ill\ Jnhn C'onnalh Ru~nl' \\ h11e dtl•d in a lirl' 1n 14'"' I
The c:\ldenre W hlle rcponedl) "111 pnH 1dc
1ncludci. a ntle "1th tclc-.cop1l 'i1ght that u't''
ammun1t111n \lm1lar to that u\Cd 1n <Kwald'<. gun
records showing O'i"ald and \.\ h1te 'ienCd together
rn the Manne' and three laded me<.sage<; hl'
belte' c.-. "ere '><.'nl h) l 1 1ntell1gencc oniu.il<.
ordering Kenned\·., a'l..a\s1nat1on 1n Dalla\ 1n '.J"
vember 1%' White 'ia1d that he and h1\ mother rt•ad h1'i
father\ d1an "h1lh detailed thc a~\aS\1na11on His
molhn. C1l'OC\a \.\h11e. 1\ senoush 1ll 'and unabk
to be 1nten •l'Wl'd fclm11\ meml:X'r., told the ne"'i-
pa J'l(r
The: d1Jrv d1'>Jppeared from his homl· alter 11
was 1n\pt'l tl·d h\ the fRI Wh11e \a)fl
( luc:~ tnund .1mung hi\ father·~ dlccts and
a'atlahlc goH·rnmcnt reronl\ 'ho-.. that Roscoe.·
\.\ h1te and < h "ald c,cn l'd toget her in tht" L .~
Manor ( orr" 1n the late IQ4i0... R1l'k;. White ~1d
Dalla\ pohll' n:wn.J'i \ho" that on Oct 7.
IQ6l Roc,rne \.\ h1tt' J<'int"d the department as a
pho1ographer .i nJ clerk and tha1 he became a
patrol olliler rn 111M
\.\hill" 'ia\\ hi\ tuthl·r \hot Imm he-hind a fence
atop the gm") I.null that "'" to lhe nght and front
of "ennl'lh ·, llm11u\lnt' "'hen he wa' ">hot Ht' <.a..s
the othc:r i"11 gunml'n "l'rc h<•htnd the hmou\lnt"
1n lhl' f l'\J\ 'M.hnol Boul. lkpo'>1tor) "here ()y
"'aid Jl\o "'J' Jnd 1n ,1 "4.'lnnd building
'' the 1nu1min.111ng e' 1Jencc hcgan Ill mount
ag.i1n'1 hi\ lathl"I R1lk\ \\hilt' a'>l.t'd the JF1'
..\'1..a\\lna11on lnformJtmn (enter 10 nana, tu
'('rt!\ or d1'!>prnH h1\ latht'r"\ '"'oh emenl center
d1rel.tm L..1rf\ 1111".uJ 111ld r he .\\\OCtatcd PrC'i'I
The 1nforma11nn l l'Otl•r 1' d pn\Jt<' group that has
pur\ul·d the 1dt'a 1)1 a con\p1ra<:~ and co\Crup in
Kl·nnl"d\ ' dl·a1h
'He'<. :ll tualh 'l'f"\ u1uri1geou\ to tollo" th1\
1h1ng through·· I li1"ard said \unda} "The amount
<1f dol um1·ntJt1on we ha' e In had. hi\ \tor. up 1c,
1u'>t 1m n·d1hlc ·
-By Tllr AuoclatNI Preu
Marines rescue Americans in Liberia
WAS HI NGTO"J -l l S Mannes
plucked 59 o\mcncans from "ar·
torn L1ben a in a prc-c1s1on hchcoptt'r
re\Cuc Sunda) and 'ihored up l
EmbaSS) delcnscs wi th 200 5harp.
shooters
About 225 Manne 1n I 7 helicop-
ters and escon JCls swoop<"d o'er the
capital of Monro"•a at ·47 am
local ttmc. hf\1ng the Amencan~ to
safct) aboard l '. warships ofT tht·
coast of the west .\fncan nation. the
Pentagon said The m1hta11 at t1on
drc"' no fire
President Bush ordered the C\ al u·
a11on af\er one of th<' rchcl lrader'i
tr)ing to oust President Samuel Doc
ordcrrd the arrest of all forcignen in
an attempt to prO\IOke outstdC' inter·
vc ntton 1n tht' blood) c1"1l war.
Wh11e House spokesman Maritn
F1t1water said. The United . talc\
has 'teadfastly refused to 1ntenene
tn the 1ncrcas1naly violent dispute
"The lJ. Manne Corps rein· fo~cd ntle compan)' " 1n place
prov1d1n1 protcc11on fo r ll S
c1t11eM." F1t1water said "The in·
111al opcnillon -.ent well and "'e arc
una-.arc or an) 1ho1' being fired or
re '"ancc encountered "
The Penttaon said the operation
was "conducted \moothh· and
without 1nc1<knt "
The rc5euc. codt ·namcd " harv Edtt," was laun h~ from w1nh1sx
that ha"e bctn nat1oned 1n 1nttr·
n111onaJ waten. off the c t of Lt·
bena '1ncc earl)' June. The aoal "'"
to sccurc the .eas1de lJ .. Embass)
compound and to rein("\•(' 21 men·
can Potltd at tw·o t~Mm1ttcr \1tc~
ju\t o-..t11de the ca pital
-81 ne AIHt'lat..i ~"
Rescue at a glance
\.\ -\'itllNC1TO -tkrc a1 a glann• " a 'iummar. ol the
"' acuat1on of '\mcncan' Imm I 1h(-na
The order
P"'"1den1 Bu'ih ordcr<'<l thl' e'a("ua11on of ..\mt•man' fro m
l 1hcna after one of the n:ht-1 lctld<'" tf"\-1ng tu 11u\t Pre\1dt'nt \amucl
Doc on turda\ ordtrt'd lhl' .irre\t ot all forc1 nef\
The oper at ton
About 225 Mannt•\ 1n I, hd1u)ptcr\ Jnd t'"4.·on Je t\ ~woopcd
o"er the capital ol Monnn ta al !\ 4"' am IC'llal 11me ~unda) al the
. . Emban> i\flcr the .\mC"nl.ln'i' 1dc-nt1tica11on "'a' chc'Ckcd. the)
"'ere transponed h' nine CH·4~ \c, "night h<'hroptcn to off-shore
ships. Two CH-5' ~a ~tnlhon lhnppcr' cnmcd CIU'ftO. wcapon1. and
transport vch1 le\ Four AH·I ~a C nhra att<•l l. choppcn OC'w to two transmtttC'r
$i tts to secure .\rncnnm'I thC't(' .ind ~cunty for the :ur rescue
operauon was pnw 1drd h' .\ V -~R llnmrr h&ht atta l Jets.
The ll 'ih1()'1 '"'oh l'd in thC' operation include the
nmph1b1ous as'8ull hd1rnpter cume1 l ' . 1pan. 1he l lS Ponce.
an amph1 b1ou, tran'lpon dock 'ih1p. the l 'S • umtc~ a tank land101
\htp. and the dt'tro\cr l 'S~ f'eterwn
The ~.~no Manne~ ohoard the 'hips art ba\t°d at ('amp LtJeone.
('
The rescued·
fhe S9 .\mcncan\, all Y1d 10 be \J. aovtrnmcnt employcn.
were rcponcd to he 'ilft' aboard tht' l ' Sl1pan. awa111na tran•ftr
to ne1 hhonna Sierra L~ne
Amertc.,,s In Uberta
boua 70 l I ~. offic11ls and other mnicans were 1n Liberia
wht'n the OJXrat1on staned. Man of the )()() lJ .. c1Uttm ·~Mid
l1benan Cllllenstup. Most of the other mcnnnt I~ mt~tet
posted tn 'ano-..1 pen of the roenlry
I
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J
FIRE
From A1
wa.s arrested shonly after the fire
occurred, when police officers spot-
ted him standing near a dumpster in
the parking lot of the Stater Bros.
market on the comer ·of Fairview
Road and Baker Street. Webster
said.
The officers noted that Denicola
appeared nervous and when they
questioned him he pointed to the
dumpster and said, "Hey. I think
1bere is a fire in there." The dump-
ster then exploded in flames.
Webster said.
MJr• arown 11 buq making e99 ulad undwlche1.
allons. ·
''I've been involved with some of
the school lunch programs ... and
I've seen· quite a few nice changes,"
she said. "l think they're heading in
the right direction ...
Huang said getting children to cat
nutritional meals is ofien an
aesthetic matter.
"It kind of depends on how it's
packaged. If it's presented in an
Webster said Denicola was ar-
rested on suspicion of arson after
one of the officers remembered see-
ing him earlier at the Our Town
apanment complex al the time of
the fire. .
Michael Likens. the owner of the
Geo Tracker. said he also saw De-
nicola at the apanment complex
Sunday morning.
Likens said Denicola had been his
roommate for three months. but he
had recently told him 10 move out
because he had failed to co-sign the
lease.
"He seemed like a nrce guy at
first." Likens said.
attractive way, many times they'll
cat it, even if they've never had it
before."
Huang said parents often face the
same problem when packing lunches
from home.
"The thing with lods 1s you can
plan all this wonderful food ... and
then they come home with all this
junk stuff. They'll have swaP.ped
their lunch with someone else. •
According to Likens. Denicola
knocked o n his door at about 4 a.m.
Sunda}. but he chose not to open the
door. and Denicola left shonl} after-
ward.
A few minutes later. Likens s~11d
he hc.ird someone yelli ng that hrs
car v.as on fire. and he looked out
the windO'!\' to sec the flames engulf-
ing the carpon and hrs Geo Tracker.
"h was burnt 10 a cinder:· Likens
said of hrs car.
Fire 1nvest1gators es11ma1e the
damage 10 the carport was approx-
imately SI 00.000. No es11mate on
the damage to the cars was available.
. Mom gets respect and salutes
HARRISBU RG. Pa. -Dis-
cipline is observed more closely in
the Richardson family than in most
others.
. Diane Richardson doesn't just
gi ve orders to her 19-year-old son.
Don. She expects him to salute.
For years her son said he wanted
no pan of military hfe.
"He was emphatic about not JOIO-
ing the Arm}:· said Ms. Richardson.
38. "He JUSt d1d n·t lake being or·
dered around."
But he J01ned the Arm) 1n March.
mind.
"It's going to be an experience."
Richardson said.
Even when the two arc in uni·
form. Mom's captain's bars do n't
command absolute respect.
"It's a usual mother-son t} pe
deal." she explained. "He doesn't
speak to me because he doesn't
1h1nk I'm sa)ing anythmg.. Bui he's
a good kid."
Ma[ath
-ut-lllty
SAN DIEOO -Neerty three
moadal of leltim~ in a ata&e bear-illl oe SoutberD fornia f.diloa'1 ~ labov• of San Dieao Ou : Co. ended this weekend.
At•-for E.dbon and IS --~tbei =Dini this Y«keDd of 128
witnellel Who testified at the Public
lJtilitiel Commiu.ioa hearina about
the propoee.cl dears expected econ-
omic benefits and environmental
immctt. .r'fbeie ia .. voluminous record,"
said Admini1ttative Law Judp
Lynn Carew, who no• beain• pre-
sidiq over the filiq of leul briefi
by parties-in the case, wrucb will
arpe for and apinst the merJCr
bUod on the testimony which bepn
Ma_y 14.
Carew's recommendation to PUC
commissioners isn't exoecu:d for at
least three months. or loqer if the
hcarina is reopened to take ad-
ditional environmental testimony.
She may recommend approvaJ or
rejection of the planned merae'" or
approval with 1ovemmcnt strinp.
A final dccis1on by the five-mem-
ber PUC is anticipated by the end of
this year if there arc no more delays.
If approved, the merger could be
delayed for up to another year by an
appeal from lawyers for opponenu.
several of whom reportedly have
already started preparina appellate
briefs. ·
An aJmost identical review
proceedin& is under way in Washin&-
ton, where a federal administrative
law judge is studyina 60 days of
testimony and evidence before
preparinJ a rttammfndation on the
merger for the Federal Energy Regu-
latory Commission.
.... ··~-·-:" .... S2.4 bi11iOa atock-twap wbicb
would create the aaaon•a lartett
investor-owned utility.
··0v~ we feel we bave made
our cue • f.dilon spokawomaA
Dianne Witlenbera llid. ..We've
made a lll'OQI sbowlna that tbe SI. 7
billion (ia) customer benefits are
there, and nothh'I we presented has
been shown to be talle."
However, opponents aay their leul briefs will cballenee most of
Edison·s evidence, arauifta that the
meipr would increue customer
rates and smoa levels.
The emeraina utility also would
supply or transmit electricity for all
of SOulhcm California except the
city of Los Anteln. which oppo-
nents contend would violate federal
anti-crust laws.
"We bave shown how the air will
be cleaner in San Dieao and
Southern California after the me,.er, and on competition, we
bave demon.st.rated how there will be
mol'C transmission access (for other utilities~ after than betorc the
merser. • Wittenberg said.
The saa&e·attomcy aeneraJ, the city
of San Dieao and attorneys for scv-
eraJ other mcrter opponent.s in-
volved 1n the cue have indicated
they will seek to reopen the hearina
after the state finished a study of
potential environmental impects
from Edison•s planned takeover.
"Unless the PUC wanu to lose
this case on an appeal, the hearin'5
must be reopened to hear this
issue," said William Shaffran. a
dcput)'. city attorney for San Diego.
"Millions of dollars wiU have to
be spent by Edison to mitigate the
pollution t~ merger will create, 1nd
..
we dell'! know the COits of that until
the report is releated. ~ money
Ed.ilOD will have'° spend in cleanup
will i have a direct bcarlna on
whether &Uson can deliver on the
(customer rate) ~vi~ its ea·
ecutives have l'rom1sed. .
Edison officials have said they
would achieve S l. 7 billion in cua.
tomer aavinas over a loq period of
time by usin& four mothbelled
power plants in the Los A,..ela area
to meet power needs in San Diqo
while delayin4 construction of two
power plants an San Dicao. .
Meanwhile, the South Coast Air
Quality Manqement District board
voted 10.l Friday to back Edison's
merger plan, which would shift the
aeneration of electricity from older
San Dieao power plants to more
efficcnt Edison plants in the South
Coast Air Basin.
"This qrecmcnt is technically
sound and pr~vides f~r the ~i~
tion of all s1gn1ficant aar-quahty 1rri-
pects... said James Lents, the dis.-
trict's executive officer.
The plan llso requires Edison to
more than offset pollution increases
in the air district by underwriting
the cost for other poUuters there to
switch from intemaJ combusion en-
&ines to electrical motors.
"It blsically eliminates the air-
quality issue as an issue in the
me'ler," Edison executive vice
president Michael Peevey said.
The South Coast Air Basin, which
has the nation's dirtiest skies, in-
cludes Los Angeles, Oranae, River-
side and San Bernardino counties.
Environmentalists contend the
merger would worsen pollution
there.
...., ..... ,._.., Ye ,..,_
1Pupll1 In Debbi• Rider• 1 feadershlp c1a11 have answers for her question •
SCHOOL
From A1
calendar dependent on a September·
June school schedule, forcing Vista
Verde to accommodate its sched ule
to have eighth-graders ready for the
traditional September stan of high
school.
tive school system. Students hvang
within the limits of the Irvine school
district can attend the school of their
and their parents' choice. providing
there is available space in the school
and transponation can be provided.
Unlike the inner-city schools of
Los Anaeles, Irvine educators can
provide students with advantages
not available in less-affluent school
districts.
"They (students) retain what they
learn.··
Bill Rukeyser. a s~1al assistant
to state schools chief Bill Honia.
agreed with Burby, adding that
grade-school studies have shown
that "1here 1s a significant drop ofT
in achievement levels from June to
September."
"He calls me ·captain Mom.' I
call him 'Pnvate Son."' said Capt.
Diane Richardson, a 15-year mem-
ber of the Army Reserve.
He leaves Aug. 13 for a one-year
tour of duty in South Korea as a
pnvatc. The ehan~ to become a
food-service specialist changed his -By nr _.11ocJalff Prrn
El Camino Real pri ncipal Gene
Bedley said that by operating on a
year-round schedule, students as
well teachers gel a much-needed
break from each other.
"The schedule gi ves us all a
chance to relax." she said. There arc
a lot of chances for new educational
beg.Innings 1n a year-round school
year."
As a result. both El Camano and
Vista Verde have been able to tailor
their educational aoals to the desires
of parents and teachers in the area.
Rukeyser explained that a
proposed year-round school ap-
propnat1on of S43.2 million was cut
as pan of the recent state budget
agreement. He said the state is en-
couraging school districts through-
out the state to look into year-round
systems similar to Irvine's. Survey: Gasoline prices
up 9.5 cents last week
LOS ANGELES -Gasoline deal-
ers paid 9.5 cents more per gallon
last week for regular unleaded
gasoline following 1he Iraqi invasion
of Kuwait. a survey of suppliers said
Sunday.
The Lundberg Survey of whole·
sale prices, the amount gasoline
dealers pay for their product. show-
ed nationwide average pnces check-
ed fnday rose to 76.5 cents a gallon
among the most pricec.ens1tive
wholesalers.
The survey 1s taken weekly of
about 75 percent 10 80 percent of
suppliers of refined gasoline in the
United States.
Fiaurcs gathered since Friday in·
dicate a weekend of increases.
Rough estimates show prices from
the most price-sensitive suppliers
have aone up another 6 centsJ.. survey
chief Trilby Lundberg said ;)undar.
Crude 011 bought at last week s
biaher prices won't be refined and
flowina from U.S. psoline pumps
1 for about a month. But Lundberg
and an oil company spokesman said
increases in the spot market for
psoline translate into higher pump
prices more quickly durina the sum-
mer.
Many 011 companies sell more
gasohne than they refine during the
heavy-dn v1ng summer months. so
they have 10 supplement their sup-
plies by buying on the volatile spot
market, said John Lord. a spokes-
man for Mobil Oil Co. 1n New York.
"The refinery industry 1s cranking
out every gallon of gasoline it can.
and still has 10 buy on the S{>Ot
market. The impact on the gasohne
distributing system 1s faster than
ever." Lundberg said.
Lord also said many are apparent-
ly antic1patin1 hi&her costs from the
Iraq-Kuwait conflict.
Since Friday, estimates show
prices in the middle market have
risen 3.25 cents. and 3.50 cents for
the upper. or most stable. market.
Lundberg said.
All the prices were for rcaular
unleaded psoline, the nation's most
popular aradc.
The mmt price-tensitive are the
independent wholesalers that have
few, if any, lona~term contracts with
psoline dealers. and meet demand
by aettina supplies on the s-pot mar-
ket.
The most stable are those who
U.S. Crude Oil Prices
Iraq's Invasion of ~· s~
Kuwait caused the ''
price of crude • '
oil to rise in the U.S.
$30 ------.1 Aug. 3:
$24.41
$20
$10
July 27:
$20.04
23 25 27
JULY
31 2
AUG.
lk~ 1MMme1 it llf'Ce on fie New Yen
Mwmntle EadW\ge I* 42•fllon ..,.,..
of W... Tew In~. fie beief"61'
u.s audllClll
deliver branded p soline to Stations
under a contract. Their hi&her bite
price alloWJ more of a cushion
before chanacs affect their costs. -ay 7'N Al.Ndalefl ,.,_.
Presently. each school 1s in the
second week of the school year.
Classes at both schools began on
July 25th and wall continue for nine
weeks throu&h September. A thrce-
weck break follows, and the cycle is
repeated again with extra time off
taken at Chnslmas.
The Irvine system is unique be-
cause, unlike the Los Angeles Uni·
tied School District. which recently
switched to the year-round system to
alleviate overcrowded conditions,
Irvine operates its two ~r-round
schools within a districtwtde altema-
Vista Verde emphasizes science
and technology in us classes. while
El Camino Real stresses the power
of positive think.in& and building
self-esteem as the foundation of its
curriculum.
"It is an effort to match the school sy~lem to the particular needs of the
child." Terry said.
As a fifth-grade teacher at Vista
Verde and himself a product of the
traditional September-June school
system, Bill Burby thinks the main
advantaae of the system is that
students ''don't look at school as a
daily &rind ...
"It's arcat for the teacher. my
enthusiasm is up," Burby said.
Eighth grader Andi Drayer.
having continually attended Vista
Verde since kindergarten. said she
looks forward lo high school but is
glad she we nt to school on the yea r-
round system.
"It (the year-round system) helps
me remember math and science bet-
ter ... she said.
There arc other advantages to a
year-round schedule. Drayer said.
"They (friends who attend tra-
ditional schools) say they like the
Iona summer. but when they hear
about our thrce·wcck vacation while
they·rc an school they act mad."
Rofex costs businessman his life
LOS ANGELES -A busi-
nneman who refuted to hand over
bis Rolex wa&ch 10 an anned man
wu lbot in the chest and died
1 dulCIU~ the SI 0,000 timepiece,
audMwitJa said.
DoMld McK.intey, who was kiUed
Friday II his mid-WUlbire area
)McK.iuey Nu~, bed heard about •,...,rash of Role• robberin in
f Loa Anetta. said his office m.naeer.
Ken Steller.
But, Steller added "It was OM of
his Jipatures," and he wouldn't quit
wanna the expensive wa&ch.
Police Oct. ~Dan Andrews said
McK.iMCy, S2, was sbowina plants
to two men who bad inqu1mt about
rentina eomc for a weddina when
they demanded his wa&ch. When he
refuted to hand it over one of them
lbot him in the chest. Andrews said.
"It was premeditated, tct up,"
said Steller. He said after McK.insey
was bit be yeJled to him to 1t1b the
men, then staaemt toward his of-
fice and collapted.
Police aaid the two men neaped
on foot. McK.in.ey, who had three children
ranaina in • ftom 18 months 10 9
years.
-•1 fte Al#Clale4 "'"-,,._. chi*-••fMI ~ of dlelr --;-• Ill Cl ...... dn11n.
•
Bany
F..ncner
Moreno's
program
picking
up steam
To believe in what Erich Moreno
says, you fint must see what he
does.
For now, the muscular Costa
Mesa resident is bis own best
advertisement for a sports trainina
prOJl'lm he has built from modest
bepnninas to a clientele of more
than 60 high school, colleae and
professional athletes. But the S·
foot-4 assistant track and field coach
at Corona del Mar has an ace up his
sleeve - a blue-chip, ~ l l billboard
who may attract as much collqe
recruiting attention by next sprina as
any athlete in Oranac County prep
basketball history.
Marina Hiah basketball star
Cherokee Parks is Moreno's tint
and most eye·poppina pupil, havina
hooked up with the then·Marina
&iris cross country coach durina his
freshman year with the Vikinp.
The gangly (boney miaht be a
more accurate word) Parks, then ~8.
had potential surpassed only by his
spiraling arowth patterns, and
Moreno, barely taller than
Cherokee's naval, wanted to help.
You could say, Moreno aot in on the
ground noor.
Moreno, who was finishina up
work on his strenath and oondition·
ina credential at Lona Beach State,
had worked previously with athletes
in physical therapy and rehabili·
tauon. But he was lonaina to apply
a method oftrainina be had used
him~lf to overcome his size disad·
vantage.
Moreno somehow sold Parks1 and
his mothd'Debbie, on his trainma
r~en, which beains -aet this -
w1th a medicine ball. lmaaine selling
a future prep All·American on the
idea of driUina with a ball he could
barely lift, let alone palm. This was
a post man. not a palooka.
Moreno admits his medicine ball
routine needed a little extra sell job,
so the trainer was pleased to demon-
strate.
"I do get some funny looks when
I first introduce kids to some of the
thinas in the program like the medi·
cine ball, but once I give them a
little demonstration, they usually
warm to the idea," Moreno said.
Moreno's "demonstration"
doesn't take long-about the time
it takes him to sky well above a I 0-
foot basketball goal, smacking his
forearms against the rim.
"From the moment Erich sat
down and talked to Cherokee and I
about his program, we liked what we
heard," said Debbie Parks. "He
stressed a long·tcrm approach and
has kept Cherokee's best interests at
heart the pa.st three years. I have full
confidence in him and I would
~mmcnd him to any parent who
wants someone to oversee their
childs talent." -
Moreno's program applies re·
sistance training. nutrition. coordi-
nation development, cardiovascular
work and several other aspects to
help supplement an athlete's abili·
tics. He uses some wciaht work, but
steers younaer athletes clear of the
weight room until their bodies have
matured cnou&h to handle the stress.
"A lot of kids see athletes they
look up to and want to shape their
bodies to match those athletes,"
Debbie Parks explained. "Cherokee
has always wanted a body like
Jerome Kcrscy's, but Erich educated
him about the neptive aspects of
heavy weifbt trainina. ·•
Moreno s pr~m has worked wonders with ks, who is current·
ly playing in an ntcmational tour·
nament in Swiu rland. His list of
clients also inclu es professional
beach volleyball playcn Scott
Friedcrichsen and Eric Wurts as well
as Orange Coast area basketball
standouts Jeff Fryer (CdM Hiah.
Loyola Marymount and currently in
the Houston Rockets' camp), Andy
Karich (Mater Dei bound for Santa
Clara), Mark Aint (CdM Hiah).
Melisa Sortino (Marina bound for
f"9 ... lft fAUU<Nllt/821
INSIDE
• U.S. • ... en capture
basketball gold/12.
• ..... n·1 six-game wtn-'*'l .ltNak endl/ll.
• D• .. 1•n rip GIMtl be·
1*1d Mun.YI homen/IJ.
Finley unable to slow down A's in 4-1 loss
lty RICHAllO .DUN~ o.-y ,.... ..,.. w ....
ANAHEIM -Rickey Henderson.
having an MVP-type season. set the
tone apin for the Oakland Athletics.
who pushed the An¥1s 16 games
behind Sunday by takJng their third
of the four-pme series.
Henderson. who leads the Ameri-
can League in stolen bases. batting
average. runs and on-base pcr-
centaae. opened the game with a
home run for the 44th time in hi s
career. an ongoing major league re-
cord.
He would later score the go.ahead
run as the A's defeated the Angels
and Chuck Finley. 4-1 . igniting an
onslaught of bad news and negative
feelinp in the Angels' clubhouse.
Finley was told after the game that
his eight·month old nephew. James
Cory Cox. had died late Saturday
niaht in a New Orleans hospital
because of heart problems. He was
the son of Finley's sister. Susan Cox.
Finley will fl y to Louisiana this
morning for the funeral.
Furthermore. Angels-Manager
Doug Rader, whose two.time All·
Star pitched well enough to win.
offered no excuses for this loss.
After briefly talking to the media.
Rader slammed the phone down on
bis desk. screamed an obscenity and
closed his office door.
Things aren't getting better.
They're getting worse.
And Henderson didn't make any-
thing better.
Scnedure
ATBAT <I Mon: Idle
OM DECK
Tue: Boston sc 7:35
IN THE HOLE
Wed: Boston SC 7:35 -
All garnet on KMPC radio 1710)
• On TV, Ch. 5; SC SoonsCtlannel.
Finley ( 145) retired 12 in a row
following Dave Henderson's first in·
ning single and settled into a com-
fortable groove until the ciahth
when Oakland scored three times to
win it.
"The ~me speaks for itself."
Rader wd. "(Finley) pitched an
excellent ball pmc -he pitched
well cnouah to win."
For the first time in 1990. the
Angels lost with Finley on the
mound after being ahead or tied
af\cr the founh inning.
single made it 4-1 .
"He's got a bunch of them."
Rader said of Dave Henderson's
game-<>n·the·linc hit.
The An,els' only run against Oak·
land starter Dave Stewart (I S.8) was
unearned in si.xth innina. Devon
Whitchwho's hitting .300 ( 12 for 40)
since is return from Triple-A f.d.
monton, tripled home Dick
Schofield with two out. Henderson led off the eighth in-
ning with a walk. then stoic his 49th
base of the season an out later.
Oakland center fielder Dave Hen-
derson, a longtime Angels nemesis.
drove in Rickey Henderson with a
single to center to give the A's a 2-1
c.d&e.
Early on, before the pme even
stancd, it wa.s apparent Finley didn't
have his all·star stuff. He strualed
with his mechanics and none oThis
eight warmup tosses were strikes.
Schofield had ruched on an error
by Oakland third baseman Lance
Blankenship leading off the sixth.
but Stewart -who ha.s won 20
pmes or more in three consecutive
seasons -tightened his belt and
won for the founh straiaht time.
to cap the rally. catcher Terry
Steinbach doubled to lcf\ field to put
both runners in scoring position
before Mark McGwirc's two.run
Finley. however. has matured
quickly since he became a starter in
1988. He's able to solve problems
and make adjustments on the
mound, just as he did in this one
before 51.597 fans at Anaheim
Stadium.
"It was an cx.ccllcnt ball pme and
you have to admire both pitchers."
Rader said. "We tried about every-
thina we could (against Stewart). We
Saints may have had
extra help in victory
over Raiders, 17-10
9y LAft'Y SIDDONS Al..,....,_
WEMBLEY. England -Jim
Mora reminded everyone that a win
was a win, no
m atter how
early i n the
year or how far
from home.
Alt Shell re-
minded every·
one that, under
the same con·
ditions, a loa
bunt just the same, maybe more so
when you feel the officials may have
blown it on a key play.
Mora's New Orleans Sainu beat
Shell's Lot Aneeles Raiden. t 1 ·to.
Sunday in the fifth edition of the
American Bowl at Wembley
Stadium, "An NFL ~son show·
piece of the lcaaue s efforts to ex·
pend its imqe and martcetina power
OVel'ICIS.
1 Tbe pmc wasn't pretty, but it
kept a near-ap.city crowd at Ena·
land's national soccer stadium
happy and tent the Sainu home with
a shinina ailver·helmet trophy.
"We've bad a aooct tj~ spent a
fantastic week," Mon said. "8ut
we're ready to tet back to a n:aular
trajnina camp routine. It's always
nice to win, and the whole purpose
of our comina over ~ was to play this pme ...
qui shed.
Mora and pme officials were
aonc by the lime Shell made his
claims 1n post-pmc interviews.
But Shell also acknowledged that
the Raiders helped to beat them-
selves, tumina the ball over on thrtt
interceptions -including two that
ended. drives deep in New Orleans
territory.
"We had a lot of opponun11ics
and we didn't put the ball in the end
zone." Shell said. "We stopped
ourselves. but that's to be expected
early in trainina camp."
The first four NFL-sponsored
exhibition pmcs have featured such
British touches as streakcn. bqpipc
bands and rain. Aside from the
Union Jack flyina over the stadium
and a ttndition of "God Save the
Queen" before kick.off: this one-.was-
all football, American-style.
lt ooWd just u well have ~n in
Louisville as London's suburbs, and
that may say a aood deal about how ·
the sport is ~ived here.
Britain is catchina on to pro foot·
ball and Sunday's pme pve local
fans a chance to feait nn the bnt -
and worst -of the sport.
John Fourcade and 0.ve Wilson,
oompetina for the Saints' st.anina
quanl"tblckJ'ob, each directtd Iona
touchdown rives. Kim Phiflips in·
tetcepted a Raiden' pau in the end
zone in the. third quarter and Gene
Atkins picktd off another to end 1
fourth~uarter dnve. white Elvis
Pattenon aot LA's only touchdown
on a blocked punt. ......... ,,,,.... .... ,,., ...................... ..
... ,.. .. ... ... • Tl8f .,,, ....... Otfll•&
Tbe Raiden. like the Saints play·
ina on fottian 10U for the fint time.
Mre burned by a l«'Ond~uaner
touchdown by nannina t.ck Rueben
Maya SMll .. id I.be Saints bad t 2
playm on the r~ld when Maya
ICOfed from 3 yardt out to .a~ the
Saints I te*9 they never min·
It wu the f<Mtrtb tune in ftve
American low11 at Wembley
Stadium that the mallin of victory
WU ltvtn po1nt1 Of lea.
aot one run off an outstandin& pitch·
er and it was aoiDJ to take more ,,,._
than that to beat btm today."
This is Stewart's longest winnin& ·
streak of the year since he opened
the campaip with a 6-0 mark.
"For a Iona time, people were
scttina on Stewart if he wasn't the
winnina pitcher," Oakland MaDIF"
Tony La Russa said. "Bllt there's
nothina wrona with him. He's been
in a lot of pmcs where be can't
finish.
"In bis last two pmcs he's been
locked in pitchina duels -fint
apinst (Erik) Hanson in Seattle and
now today apinst Finley. It's where
you can't ma.kc a mistake. but he's
pitched well au year."
Stewart won a 1--0. I t ·innina de-
cision on Aua. I against the
Mariners. the longest outina of his
career. Stewart has allowed only one
earned run in his last 27 inninp.
Rickey Henderson pvc Stewart
an early cushion, but it wasn't until
much later when thinas were de-
f"9 ... lft ~LS/Ill
.&wa. TENNIS
Reid
McClatchy
Martina
pays visit to
honor King
Last Friday niaht. the Newport
Beach Dukes were officially denied
any opportunity to participate in the
Team Tennis playoffs by the Los
Anaeles Strina;.t.
It was only fittina that the ~t
two names to ever play professional
Team Tennis wett prcacnt on this
ni&ht and both were former Strinp.
Earlier 1n the evenina, Billie Jean
Kina. 20..time Wimbledon cbam·
· and EO of the TcamTennil
caaue. ~s 101ned y new ,..le. croWiiia -
nine-time Wimbledon si cbam·
pion Martina Navratilova at a
cocktail pany and silent auction at
the Four Seatons Hotel IO benefit
the UCI Athletic Foundation ud
the Women's Sporu Fouad9tioa.
Then at intermitlion of me
Dukes' match •nst the S1rillli M
the John Wayne Tennis~
Navratilova praented a y IO ==memonte IO)IW'lol • Team Teed. .. Befofe lhe praented .. ,.....,,,
trophy 10 Ki111t NaVl'llilova ..... a
bit about Wblt K.i111 .__.to ,
TcamTeanit. • .. Fi .. of all. rd;. IMle to my
boww:hed ... '° ...... "
Navraliloq-...,......, •-" .......... ~ .... -· ii • .,.. ........ . -..i--.-..------bl MftllFW'l '111111
fllf Ill --lliilMllWllil
••
wlltsure first to San Diego
9Jf Al ... LOCICMIY la odl.; ~ ~,.. ......... • ..,_. NeW 7-Md Yldlt ~. a Nelioa-Marek-61 SQuldr'Clo ol Aucklled, N.Z. won ~ by Qemwe Follner ot s.a ..._ Yedat aub"• JW11i1ious
ptell) '!Ida• etub aana .~w.a•• ~·· aap for * .conc1
filll·M>-ftnisb in tbe 71-mile New-~1 yeer i land part Belch to San Dileo yac:bl na •.., New :,., ___ team wu com-
Sa1urday with an elal)led time ol 7 poled of Kelvin Ham~ ak.ipptr
boun, 37 minula and 19 tec:0ncb. Witb crewmen Gavin Brady and
The run knocked more than 1hree Stuart Catke. ho~ oft" the elapted lime of aliabtly Tbe OoverDOt•a Cup is a ju~or
mc:n than l I hours in the inauaural match recint reptaa alo!ll the lines
1989 race. Swiftsure also aaved her of ~na Beicb Yacht a"!b's. ~n
hand.icat> time to ICOfe lint jn the lfCSS!Onal Cup except that IS hmatcd
Jn\ernatJonal Offshore Ruic (IOR) to sluppen and~ under 20 yean
division. of_ge.
Second in IOR on handicap time The Oovemot•1 Cup ~ deeded
was the 82-foot maxi sloop lady to Balboa Ytebt Oub an 1967 by
Godiva out of Southwestcrm Yacht then Gov. Ronald Reapn.
Club (San Dicao). and 1hird was . The Ne':V Zealand club became t~e
Reliance. an N/M41 sailed by Chuck stxth to wan the trophy two years an
Nichols. 'sDYC. a row. A'l)'lc ~ml>bcll won it for
ftve ol •ven l'8cel lliled over lbe
two days. ne MW nalioNI cbam~ ID .. Fl~ Jr. is Andy Ziu OI C»rilo
ae.di' Yacht Ou6 with Tua lloerty
u c:nw.
llunner-up wu the team ol Waft
Ivey and Allan Carmicbael, ..._
Yacht Oub. and tblrd Wll Amber
Morrow and Muaie Frid. Hunt-
inaton Harbour Ylcb1 O ub.
•Dana Point Yacht Oub'1 Henry
Hardina Reptta drew t9 boats in
three claslcs Sunda)'. Winds were
litht and 9C&S were flat.
Rcsulta: ll'H•F·A-l. 1'N11tom, Don ~ff'. ~"'° 9av 'IC; 2 S11owdow11, "9te Mlede, .c..evc; s. Av~ of Evll, Stew ~. Dene ~t YC. ll'H•F·9'-1. Take Fl~. C~... ........,,
OPVC; 2. RH·Ml·TIJ, ft~ c.,,..on,
OP'fC; 3. hftdof•'• ao11, lob StllfWoocl, OPYC.
NON ~POilAKE•-l. Serene, JoM WN!t, OPYC; 1. Ariel Norm ...,,..,., DPYC; 3 lnvMtf', a111 Pollodl, DPVC.
In the four-boal 12-M elcr class, the host club ln ~967-1968; An~y
which started with IOR but was Rose also won It for BYC 1n
scored separatelx, the handicap win-1969-1970;. Brad . Wheeler of eye
ncr was Defender. sailed by Brian w~s the winner. tn 1?78-?9; Mike
Mock of Newpon Harbor Yacht Pinckney of Ba~1a C<?nnth1an Yacht ·
Club, saving her time over first to Clu~ was the winner ~n 1982-83, ~nd FAULKNER
fini sh Hean of Amenca. skippered Chris Redman w~n 1t for Alamitos
by Vince Sims, Kona Kai Yacht Bay Yacht Oub in 1984-85. . . Club Twelve teams were entered lO this
h ~as a fast race for all hands as year·~ regatta. Final standings, based
the last boat across the finish hne on wms and losses:
Sh ~'-k.i d b S , 1. llovaJ N.w Zffi.ncl v~t SQuadron WIS Ort1.AAe, S J:!per Y . t~\ e (KeYln H1rr1PI, 10-1; 2 St Frel'Cl1 Veehl CluO Ford of Cortez Racing Assoc1at1on IMor11111 L1rson1. 10-1. l . Richmond v1Ct11 ~San Dieoo) at 8·28·58 a m Sunday Clul> l8reov Slk), t·l. •· ,.. __ , Harbor D : • • • YI Cl'tt Club (JOty Twill), •·?; s. Senti Monie• or an elapsed umc of 20:08:58. YKllt Club tPeter w111,1, 6·S, "walklkl vecnt Trophy winners in PHRF classes: Club IJolln Mvro.11. s-.. 1 111100. vec111 Ctub CLASS A-1 Lone Stir Ill, llurton &.ni.mln, (JOJh NICllOlt l, S·6. t. S.n OleQO Yectll Clu«> SOUthw111ern YC; 2 Otlnkl, 8ob Miiiett. 8ahla (01ml1n Crelol, 4·4: 9 Ai.mltc>t llav Yecllt C0tlnt11lan YC, 3. L11r\lt, Sam Tollln, KOM IC.al Club (JonathOn Grtentt'8), l ·7, 10. S<Mlthwlltern YC; 4, Shockwave. Norman lluO.n~rg, SWYC. Yaellt Club (Preston He>!Onerl, ?·t, 11, Chlcaoo Cl.ASS 8-1 Locomoceen. llomv Greble, Yecht Club (Wl1tl1m 0 8rlen), 2·t ; 12. Soulll 811boa YC; 2. RHO!utlon, Tom llllev, SOVC, Shore Yacht Club (Kiri< GOOOlng), 1-10.
~=.•·8tf°~,:;,~;~;:::O°' e~~v :t· • • N~wport ~arbor Yacht Club
CLASS C-1 Pionelro, 8111 t. Cerole 8vrne. kept dmghy sailors busy Saturday
8Cvc, 2 Tloreu. Gil Knu0ton, 8CYC. l and Sunday with the national cham-Oubonn11. Will IC1ufm1n, C0ton100 CaYI VC. . . ~ . •. Juice. 0on Funon, swvc. p1onsh1p 1or the Club Flymg Jr. class PHRF ·0-1. 01un11es1. Paul P1orr1. swvc. and the Western Re11onal cham-
2 CM>seuioo. ein Aoo1. Vov•~s vc. l • h' ~ th La Cl RU111w1Y 11. Jonn w1et1e1. vvc; 4. Hot Potato, p1ons 1p 1or e ser ass.
Mlcha-4 Pflaum, Mlulon &av vc Each class was sco~ on lhe best
Froma1
the University of San Diego) and
Olivia DiCamilli (Costa Mesa
H ilh).
Other recognizable names work-
ina with Moreno at the Los
Caballeros Spons Complex in Foun-
tain Valley arc Corona del Mar
tennis standout Keri Phebus. track
standouts Shanon Wi nkleman
(Marina and UC Riverside), Chip
Rish (Marina. Arizona State), and
football players Ryan Motherway
(Mater CXi bound for Oregon). Reza
M ehdizadeh (Fountain Valley H igh.
Long Beach Stale) and M ike Cook
(Fountain Valley High. Saddleback
College).
Moreno. who may leave coaching
afier th is season 10 devote all his
time to his budding business. {>lans
to eventually fund his own training
-;;ii~;;;;;;;;,.i;,.iiainiiiiiii;iiiiian facility thought tha1 may take five to ti _I O_years~ _
----t, ''Originally. I wanted to be a
strength and conditioning coach for
a Division l college. but l wouldn't
gjvc up the contact with the yo unger
kids." Moreno said . "Ideally. I want
to stan "'orking v.1th kids at ages
Another Japanese supercar? With the phenomenal
Acura NSX mid-engined sp orts c ar preparing to make an
assault on the likes of Feram and Porsche. Nissan-derived
lnfiniti looks to be preparing for a similar move.
If your gasped at the thought of a $60.000 Acura. then
sit down. because the lnfin1ll M45 is rumored to be heading
towards the.$100,000 price range. lfinit1 is said to be entering
the final development stages of a V-8 powered m id-engined
supercar. Propelled by a 4.5-liter V-8 that shares compo-
nents with the powerplant found in the rapid 045 sed an.
lnfinltl's M45 should boast variable valve t1m1ng and direct
ignition.
These technological tweaks could boost power to
between 350 and 400 horsepower. II has been suggested
that the M45 will use Nissan Super HICAS four-wheel-
steenng. active suspension and a sophisticated four-wheel·
drive system. The M45 looks not urnike a street-legal Group
C racer 1n its d isguised prototype form.
If lnf1nit1 can play in the $100.000 price club. then
certainlyMercedes-Benz will be no stranger to the six-figure
window sticker. In fact. Mercedes-Benz is preparing for the
launch o f its 1992 600 SEC to replace the gorgeous but
aging 560 SEC The flagship coupe will be powered by none
other than a 6.0-llter V-12.
The SEC will also be available with 4.2-or 5.0-liter V-8
engines. For this lofty sum. you will receive styling that
reflect s the current SL roadster. The new SEC looks much
like a larger SL w ith a fixed roof
A year later in 1993. Mercedes-Benz is expected to
stretch its already gigantic S-class sedan to limousine
p roportions and possibly install an 8.0-liter V-16 engine
c apable of producing 500 horsepower. This car will be a
successor to the regal 600-senes limousines o f yore and will
cost well over $200.000.
Fine then. If Mercedes-Benz can have an 8-liter V-16
then why can't Chrysler have an 8.0-liter V-10? That's right.
five cylinders on both sides for a total o f 10 pistons and at
least 400 horsepower and 450 pound feet of t orque.
If your thinking about the Dodge Viper. then you're nght.
Chrysler has decided to go ahead and produce the aluminum
engined two-seat roadster complete with side pipes Instead
of JObbing the Viper out to a small s pecialty company hke
Roush Performance Engineering. Chrysler has decided to
assemble the c~ 1n one of its existing plants. The initlal
production slated1for 1991 as a 1992 model will consist of
only 200 to 500 cars.
At the end of that run. Chrysler will decide whether or
not to continue with the project. If the first year is successful
(and there ts little doubt that It will be) then Chrysler plans
to produce as many as 3.000 to 5.000 of the $30,000 to
$40.000 cars. Lamborghini will supply the aluminum engine
castings, and the car will have a removable hard top. . . .
The crusaders for clean air are coming to Orange
County. The Atr Quality Management District has been given
$700.000 this year to fund its fight against heavily polluting
cars. trucks and buses.
With four officers in Los Angeles, two In Orange County
and two more In San Bernardino. the team prowls the streets
looking for vehicles that are spewing excessive amounts of
pollution Into the air. Last week. the entire team came to
Westmln lster In their white patrol cars to concentrate
enforcement in the area.
These officers are busy men. writing 1,000 to 1,200
tickets a month for offending vehicles. Most of the citations
ere given to diesel-powered trucks and buses th::..t are poorly
maintained and belch massive amounts of soot Into the air.
Starting Jan. 1. the fine for excessive exhaust Is $250 for the
first offense and $500 for the second.
Drivers beware. though . because If your vehicle leaves
a trail for 10 seconds or mo re. you could be next. Using
what's called a Rlngleman chart that rates the density o ' the
exhaust with 100 percent being black and zero being totally
clear, vehicles that color the atmosphere 20 percent or more
are potential targets.
In the two years that the AOMO mobile teem has been
In operaton, t hey have written 20,000 tickets to help In the
effort to clean up the South Coast air. As the folk• at AOMO
say, "you darken our sky, we lighten your wallet." look ror
more Information on AQMO'a activities In future Driver' a
Seat cotumna.
•
12-I 4, so the)' can be read} 10
perform at a high le\ cl b) the lime.-
the) arc seniors in high school. 1
can't guarantee a scholarship. but
that's obv1ousl) a b1.~ goal for an~
onc in m) program.
M oreno said fees for his Sl'" ires
val) du<.' to 11me c:ons1ra1nl'I and
intcns1t) of tra1n1ng, but he C\ll·
mated h1~ ~1n11.k·'>C'!ls1on fee'> at ;in~
" here from $~0 to SI 00.
""(' h~c 10 \\Ork ''llh dtlfrrl·nt
s11ua11un~ and '-"c·rc lr)1ng to lie·
\clop 'lpon,or<oh1p program!. for ktd\
from lo"·trHotnl' fam1lie'>" Mort·nn
said
"The big re"ard tor me" to sec
a kid 1mpruq~ and that's \\hat m~
tra1n1ng 1s all about If someone t!>
looking for 1mnll'dtatc re<,Ult\. I'm
not lhc gu} for me I'm intcrc'>lcd in
beginning "'1th lhl· ha\1l'~ and pro·
grcs!>1ng o'er a period of )Car's 10
attain top ph) s1cal potential. ..
B•rry F•ulltnu Is • aa Orange
Coasr D•JJ)' Pi/or Sports Wrlrtr
wbose column •PJ>t•rs evuy Mon·
d•y.
VOLLEYBALL
From BJ
and one founh an 21 rvcnl\. The)
have al')o won all four of 1hc tour·.,
SI 00.000-plus tournaments nnd
could become the first team C\er to
win the three high stakes Jose
Cueno-sponsored even ts 1n the
same <oeason (onl~ nnt weekend's
San Diego tournament remains un·
conquered).
Smith ts the all-lime mone> and
tour \ICIOI) leader. ha,1ng am~ssed
11 2 open champ1onsh1ps. Stoklos is
second in lour wins w11h 93
"Wc·,e "on as man) big mone)'
events a!i an) team around." said
Smith. "so we don't look at that as
a big deal this )Car We go out to win
ever') tournament and we don't try
any less for a S60.000 event than "e
would a SI 00.000 e\Cnt."
The champions built leads of 6-0
and 12-2 before closing out the
match. utli11ng their balanced h1t-
1ing attack and l haractens11c ball
control
"l wouldn't say we pla)Cd a par-
llcularl} good tournament, but n's a
v1ctol) and that's a heck of a lot
better than losing," Smith said.
"When you play 24 tournaments.
you're bound to hn flat spots. but we
don't want 10 lose to nn~body.
That's our mou vallon and 1t s only
getting stronger."
Dodd and FrohofT. wh o have
plared together an pract1~c for scv-
era years. ma y con11nue neitt
season. but Frohoff will play with
Kiraly through the remaining events
this )'car.
Stevenson. the defond1ng OranJC
County Open champion. and· What·
marsh could nol hold on to lead" of
6-0 and I 0-5 an the winner's bracket
final. but finished an 1mpren1ve
third an their fin touma~nt
together.
Whitmarsh. a former basketball
player at the University of San
Diqo. cons1s1ently frustrated Smith
wi1h his block. promp11n1 S1oklos to
ult him a strona candidate for the
tour's Rookie of the Year awa~.
Dan Vrcbalovkh, a former stand-
out at Co ta Mesa and Estancia
Hiah. as well as Oranae Coast Col·
lqe, advanced to the loser's bracket
quarterfinal with panncr Andrew
Smith before settlina for founh
place.
Former Laauna Beach H1pt stand·
out l..t1f Hanson and Enc Wuns
from Corona dcl Mar lost their fint
two matches Sunday afler remainina
unbeaten 1n th~ contests Saturday.
Rudy D vorak. another former
Anlst was also a w1nner'1 bnlcket
1emiflnaJ casualty. alone with pan.-
ner Bruk Vandewqhe.
Spotts break ·
College coach uses
easiest way to get 1'91# ·nanm-..
close to his player-s
OXFORD, Mi•. -MiuilliDDi foot·
bt.11 coach Billy ~ believes ln beina ~
dOfC to hit pq~ra.. but Jitht down the "-=>' baJn ~~~-
On July l, the eiahth·year coach and his wife,
Kay, moved into Kinard Hall, the athletic donnitory
on the Ole Mi11 campus, and he will be the dorm
superviior this school ·year.
.. That is a full-time job without bcina a foo1ball
co.ch,'' Brewer said. ''But it was kind of a last
altemalivc.''
Jn June, the Brewers put their five-bedroom
houac up for sale. Within a day of &oin& on 1he
matket, they had an acceptable offer, but nowhere to
ao.
"It sold so quickly ... he said. "We looked at a
nu.mbcr of home~ and really didn't find anythina to
suit us, and we didn't have an opportunity to build.
AU of a sudden, we had no place to live."
With 1be encouraaement of his wife of 30 years
Brewer says he "gave in at a weak moment' and
moved into a fitst-noor dorm suite.
One thing is su~. Brewer says. this won't be a
permanent arrangement.
"I may move ou1 by Christmas. I may be crazy
by then." Brewer said. "We'll wait and see.''
Brewer. 54, now sleeps. ea1s. showers and goes
home from practice each afternoon to the same three-
.story building as some 90 football players and some
other male athletes.
"We're close as a team and this will draw us even
closer," said j unior running back Randy Baldwin
who lives on the third floor of the dorm. •
"You don'I see him that much," senior defensive
back Chris M itchell said. "And it's not like Coach is
JOing to come knocking on our doors or an)'lhing. I
imagine being 1he head coach of a Sou1heastcrn
Conference team will keep him bus} enough.''
Bre"'er says he has been interested and always ~as tnc~ to monitor the dorm hfe of his players. bul
1s worried that he may become too close to them .
"II docs concern me because I'm around them so
f!lUCh," Brl'wer said. "You need 10 stand off from t~mc to \lmc. Seeing ~h1ngs and feeling things all the
lime. )OU can some11mes get 100 close.
. "But. it 1s a good opportunity and s11uation to 1~prove our football tca.m and their living con-
ditions. That's wha1 it is all about."
In the month Bre\\cr's been in the first-floor
suite. which 1s about th<.· size of si~ dorm rooms. quite
a fe" pla)ers ha\e slopped b\ -and most of the time
the} want to talk to his w1te.
"Sh<.· likes being around people and will do a 101
of things for the pla) ers." Brewer said. "Maybe she
"111 straighten out some of 1hc gu)s 1ha1 need to be
straightened out. Wht·re the} ma) not tat~ tu me. 1he}
\\Ill sometimes talk 10 h<.'r."
Kite first S6 mllllon man
Tom l\.11e rolled 1n a I )-foot hirdu: ----
putt on lhl· first pla) orr hok Sunda) to • I
defeat John Cook 1n I he St. Jude Cla'>\IC flil:/
1n Mempht'>. fcnn and hcC'tHl1l' the PG.\ ----
Tour'~ l1r<,1 $6 million man
Kite htt a la1r"a) 1run to thr gn·cn on lhl' I .,th
hole. the fir'it of<1uddcn death." h1tc Cook'' approach
landed 1n a kfls1de hunkt•r K ite ncctkd onl· pull tor
ht~ fir<;! tour"' 1n ol 1ht· \l'Jr and tlw 1.tth ol h" carl·cr.
The fir'lt pr11c of $I X0.000 l)U\hl•J "11c\ career
earning' O\er Sb m1lhon. "h1k ( 110!. "'on S lllt<.000
In othn golf Sund<i).
• Barh Mucha. "'ho foiled 10 quahh for the 1988
tour afk1 pl.t)tng an llJ87. "'"n her liroa LP(i \
tournament "'hc:n <ohr h1rd1l'd 1ht• \Ccon d pla)oll hole
to beat Ll·nort· Rtlll'nhou..c 1n the Bo\lon F1H' ( lao;<o1c
in Dan' ,·r~. Ma,.,
•Bruce (.'ramplon \hot a final-round 61< to win
a Senior\ eH'nl 1n Charlotte. N { in JU\t h" third
1uurnamcn1 <.tnrc rc1urn1ng lrom a length) 1:1}011
( rampton m1.,scd 11 "'l'l'I.\ thl\ wa~on for a \lrl'\\·
related tllnc'"'·
•Helen -\llrl'd'>"Hl. last )l'ar'' European l{ook1l'
of the Yl'ar. \\OO a \Uddl·n·death pla)OfT to taJ.c the
Hn11sh "onwn·, Oix·n 111le 1n \\-oburn. England
TELEVISION, RADIO
BROSTERHOUS' TURN·ONS
*White Sox-Royals. WGN. 5 30 pm * Bo111n9 from f o rum. Pr1mt' Ticket. 'i pm
With patience, 1 good eye and no dlscernable
strike zone, Floyd waa able to lead the league
In walks year after year.
U.S. women roll to gold
SEATTLE -The U.S. women were ~
in tune all the way through an 82-70 romp •
over the Soviet Union on Sunday at the '
Goodwill Gam es. They even belted out a----
snappy r1p song after the gold-medal victol).
It wat almost too easy. The Americans wem on
a 16-l run in the second-half and led b) as many as
2.S points. They didn't even score in the final three
minutes. They didn't need to.
T he victory ran the U.S. women's int<.'mauonal
winnina streak to 41 pmes.
Other biJhligh1s on the final day of the Goodwill
Games:
• Bedey: The Soviet Union needed a penalty·
shot shootout to beat the United States. 4-3, and win
the aold medal. The U.S. team was on the verge of
winnina in regulation. but Valen Kamensk~ ~nt the
game into ovenime with his third goal of the da) with
only 21 seconds lef\.
Sweden won the bronze medal. b· I over a
Canadian team that had bea ten the S"cdes m the
preliminary round
• Boslas: Two Americans. 106·poundcr Enc
Griffin, the world champion. and 17.year-old teen·
ager Oscar de la Hoya, won gold medal~. Griffin. of
H ouston, easily outpointed Anatoh Filippo\ of 1hc
Soviet Union. 5-0. De la Ho)'a, of Los .\n$cles. beat
teammate Ivan Robinson. 4-1. in an e'cttmg hout
1ha1 had 1he crowd on its feel.
Unser Jr. outduels Rahal
Al Unser Jr. out-raced and out-luck-----
cd teammate Bobb) Rahal 1n Sunda} 's ~pt;,
Marlboro SOO m Brookl)n, Mich .. v.heel· ~
ang to '1ctOf) 1n th<.' faste!>l SOO-m1lc raCl'
of all time
Unser and most of the other top compc11tor\ rst
M 1ch1gan lntematronal S)X'cdwa) ran som<' laps at
more than 224 mph on the t\\-o-m1lr. high-banked
O\al and the wanner wound up a'c.-ragtng I 8<J.n 7
mph dcsp11e eight caution pcnods
• Dale Earnhardt led ever) lap Sunda) nn th<.'
wa) to a \ICtory at Michigan ln1ernallonal Specdwa)
that brought him the championc;h1p of the Inter·
na11onal Race of Champions series Th(' N ·\ T-\R
stock car star fough t off challeng,·s from fellow
Winston Cup dn .. crs M ark Manin and Terr)
Labonte. as well a~ two-lime IRO< champion and
CART Indy-car star -\I Unser Jr
Fame ceremonies delayed
Jim Palmer and Joe Morg.an "'erl•n'1 ~
quite read} for this ra1nou1.
Onl> minutes before the~ "ere ~I to •
Jn e their anducuon spcech<.'s on ~unda) ----
1n Cooperstown, N.Y .. a hea') rain fl'll and forced the
postponement of the Hall of Fame ceremonies for thl'
first lime an almost 30 \-Caro;.
The anduc\lon ccremontc!> \\Cf(' reschedukd for
10 a.m. EDT toda). with an cAh1b1t1on game to folio"
at 2 p.m. between Baltimore and Montreal at Double·
day Field.
''I'm kind of disappointed. but I'll gnc m}
speech tomorrow." Palmer said "M ) arm didn't
bother me when I got up this morning ..
• Vinny Pazienza outhustk d Greg Haugen to
capture a 10..round unanimous decision in the third
meeting between the two former lightweight cham·
f,ions in Atlantic Cit). N.J . Haugen and Pa11cnza sphl
ntcmat1onal Boxing Federation hght\\-ctght cham-
pionship bouts in 1987 and I 988 This wa'i a non·tllk
boul at the Atlantic City Conven tion Center.
•Dethroned hcav)we1ght champion M1kl·
T )son IS the nchest athlete 1n the world l41th an
esllmated S28.6 m1lhon in income 1h1s -..car accord·
ang to Forbes M aga11ne. Buster Douglas. who Ix-at
Tyson for the heavyweigh t lttlc. 1s SC<'Ond at S2b
m1lhon. followed by another boxer. Sugar Ra~
Leonard. at S 13 m1lhon Next come l\\O auto racing
dnvers. Aynon Senna al S 10 m1ll1on and -\lnan Prost
at S9 million.
From Tb«! A.,oclated Pre••
McCLATCHY "'°"' 11 and we're all here is Bilh~an. King.
ina money earner, as well as
women's singles champion. doubles
champion and m illed doubles cham-
pion.
II seem lo be a slow penod for
tenn15 tournaments at the local
clubs. but her~ 1s a look a1 some
thinas to look forward to.
The Costa Mcu Tennis \lub has
two tournaments left for the year.
They arc part of the junior tour·
n•me-nt tcrin and witt ~trc1tt!Wg.
29-31 and Oct. 13-1 4 and Oct
20-2 1.
Without her there might nM'!lvc
ever been a Team Tennis leaaue.
She's done unbelievable things for
womtn'nporu11l1"d forreli111rin
pen1cular.
.. We all owe her a ~at deal or
aratitude. and l doc.specially. I'd
like 10 present her th1 spedall~
made 1roph) that ~1&!'1fies her in-
volvement m Team Tennis."
Kina act-cptcd the trophy. then
talked about why she stanCd the
lea1,uc.
· When we stancd Team Tennis.
our hope wu to help make tennis a
team span as well as an ind1v1dllal
one, and mort impartantly 10 have
boys and 11rl team 10 work tascthcr
just like in rtal fife.
"I want 10 chankJou for havina
me here toni&ht an it means a 101
to me. We ire only in our infancy.
so pkase kttp romj na out and sup-
pon1na your Ncwpon Beach Dukes.
They are a pat atam. •·
The leaaue'1 initial season was
1981 ind Navratalova was i11 lead,.
In 1982 and 1983. Kina wa the
league's top money winner. The next
year she made history by becoming
~~1Tm woman tommiuttm?r in
professional spon s history.
0
From the better lale than never
department. he~ are the results of
the mixed membcr-11.CSt tour·
nament finals held at the John
Wayne Tennis Club July ll:
3 . .S-AI Dubrow and Wynn def.
Kristen hobe and Dick Resaden.
6-1, 6-2.
4.0-Alex Lovera and Mary
Stcwan def. Gres Super and Lorinne
Nu nu.
o4.S-Whn Kennerson and Marci
Wahtn def. Rid\ard Cumcnt and
heri Shunnan, 6-2, M .
S.0-Cham Lateella and
Kahell def. uunne McO.ire and
Oary Adami, 6-2. 6--4.
S.)-J1m Barno and Mid~lae
Wilson dc:f. Tr.cy Rlb&nt and Oa.-poc. 6--4. ~.
The Newpan Beach Tennis C'lub
will be hav1n111s Calcutta in Sep.
tembcr.
The SeaClifTTenms Club has us
founh annual top Oun Tournament
the last two weekends in October, its
Calcutta on Sept. 22-23 and its
milled doubles round robtn on Aua. II.
He~ arc the winneT1 from the
Sea hff Tennis Clubs adult j unior
tournament on July 21 -22:
Omsion 1-Robin Roust and
Ja50n Weaver.
Division 11-M•dae W"t ind
Breu Hankey.
Division Ill-Pennie ind Zack
l.qeielL ,..., Mtt'll"*,.~• fMIM ..,..,.. ..... Or-.. a..t De117 N.1 nw,,...,..
'
Boston's win
streak halted
at six By f igefs
Shelby's three-run blast
keys Detroit's 7-2 romp
Shonstop Tim NaebriQ& made two fourth·innin.t
erron that led 10 three 1&neamed runs as the De1ron Taem beat the Red Sox, 7-2, Sunday at Fenway Park
and ended Boston's 1b11me win-
nint streak.
Dan Petry (7-7) allowed six hiu
in 1v, inninp, struck out five and
walked one. Jerry Don Okaton
pitched 111> inninp for his fifth save.
John Shelb~ helped Detroit put
the aame out of reach with a three-
run homer in the ninth innina off
reliever Dana Kiecker. Dave Beriman bad four hits for
the Tiaen.
Mike Boddicker (1 1-7) lost his fourth consecutive
decision. allowinj six hits and thrtt unearned runs in
seven inninJS. H1s last victory was July 2. when he beat
Teitas to wan his 10th consecutive decision.
"He pitched a great pme, reall y, and he deserved
a better fa te." Bos too Manaaer Joe Morgan said.
The Red Soll had outscored opponents. 49-16. in
the winnin& streak, which lif\ed \hem past Toron\o into
the American League East lead.
Detroit went ahead 3-0 in the founh. Larry Sheets
walked and Naehrina fumbled Lloyd Moseby's poten·
tial double-play grounder for an erTor. Gary Ward
followed with a grounder lo second. but Nachrina
dropped Jody Reed's throw. loading the bases.
8e1J1T1an then singled in two runs and Chet Lemon
doubled in one.
"I made a bi& mistake as a fielder." Naehring said.
"I let the play before affect the second play."
Boston scored in the bonom of 1he fourth on an
RBI singJc by Dwiaht Evans. Lemon's run-scoring
aroundout in the eiahth made it 4-1 but Wade Boags
hit a run-scorin& single in the bonom of the inning off
Gleaton.
• Yaakfft •• hMllut S: Roberto Kelly hit a lWO-
run homer off Steve Olin ( 1-3) with one out in the ninth
inning at Yankee Stadium after Wayne Tolleson beat
out a &rounder to second for a s1ngJe. Gret Cadarc1
(4-4). the founh Yankees pitcher. aot the victory after
striking out Tom Brookens with two on and two outs
in the top of the ninth. Candy Maldonado's RBI single
off Lee Gueuerman tied the _pme in the eighth as the
Indians wiped out a 3..0 deficit.
#1.4 I JP
......_ ... Infielder JOH Und evolda aM9
bf PlllMdelpNa•1 CINwlle H•J" w"ll• tfwowlnt to flr•t to c0111plet• .,.,..,. pa.,.
In the NationaJ Leaaue:
• lldt I, Pa4ret t: llal Morris' timing was perfect.
Ri&ht after a fielding mistake pu~
stumblina Cincinnati behind apin, .• ':~
Morris perfectly timed a fastbaU from
Calvin Schiraldi and hit a two-run
homer that sent the Reds to the t-, • I(
victory. ' ·~
Morris' first career homer at lfi)t'\
Riverfront Stadium ended a three-..,,> ~ --
pme losing streak and gave Cincin-
nati only its third victory in 14 games. But it allowed
\he Reds lo avoid a four-game sweep by the Padres and
increa~ their rapidly diminishing lead in the National
Lcaauc Wcs1 back to 4'11 games.
"It was good timing," Moms said. "The momen-
tum shifted ba<'k to o ur d1rcc1ion. It was good to h1l it
m that situauon. so we didn't get shut out for the ncitt
few innings ...
The homer highlighted a three-run rally that put
the Reds ahead to stay.
Jose Rijo (8-4) allowed just fi ve h11s in his sccond
complete game, throwing 134 pitches despite pain 1n his
right shoulder.
"The whole game 11 bothered me:· said RIJO. who
was on the disabled list from June 29 to July 21 with
a sore shoulder. "I didn"t think I was go ing to make 11
in the beginning. As the game went along. 1 felt better
and better.''
SAN l'L\NC9CO-!ddil Mur-'8J, Kirt oa.. .... die ,. ot..., LOI~~ an bittina weU ...i-SU fraDdlco lllia eeuoa.
1'1lity Jal wilb tMy Md IDON IO
IMW for IL
Munay Ilia a ~ of three-nan homen and Kitk Oiblon bolMted twice and drove in four nans Su.n.
day. powerina me Lot ~
Qodeen J)Ut the Su f rancilco
Oiull. 11-6, at C'.andlettick Patt.
Mumy and Gibeon hit home runa
in the 11me aame for the fint t ime
thia teaton. The ION dropped the
Oianu 4VJ prna behind Cincinnati
in the National Leaaue West. ~ Oodaen have outl(Of'ed the
Oianta, 69-4l, this seaton, but havt
split their 12 pmes.
"h's either feas1 or famine apinat
them,'' Oodtcn Manqer Tommy
Laaorda 11id.
Murray homered in the first in-
nina. helpina the Dodaen take an
early 4--0 e<Sae. After San Franci.co
tcored su times in the second, Mur-
ray hit 20th h9me run in the founh
for a 7-6 lead.
Gibson hit a solo home run in the
siAth and added a two-run shot. h.is
ANGELS
l'rom 81
cided. Setup man Rick Honeycutt
1.h~w the eighth inrwns after Stewart
allowed a leadoff single and stopper
Dennis Eckersley notched his 35th
save with a scoreless ninth.
··1 saw a fastball from Finley (in
the first inning).'" said Rickey Hen-
derson, whose prowess on lhe bases
in the eighth caused Oakland's rally
and the Angels' downfall. "It was a
3-2 count and I knew he was 1oing
to come m with his best stuff.
"That's what I hke about Finley
-he's very competitive. but I ~ust
happened to gel him the first time
around. When I walked in the
eighth. I knew he had to come into
me again w11h the game tied up
( 1-1 ).
"'He fell behind. then a 2-2 pitch
was fouled off and the catcher (8111
Schroeder) d1dn 't catch 11. I was
try•nJ. to concentrate and get on
base.·
UllaotlM-.iatbe..._He
ldded • RBI ._..:ta 1be Bid•
tbe Docteen ftnilMd •ilb l6 ......
"h'I pretty fMY IO win thele kinds ol ......... Giblae IUcl. .... d MU IO
• 111 win more ot mo.t 2-l ..-..
like I.be one we Ioli s.turday. Tlaole ue I.be types o( 11mea you tot to wia
to stan catchina them:·
The Ood8en beain a Wee lllM •ritt Tllttday at Cincinnati.
Murray hit two home runs in a
pme for the third time this teaa0n.
He hu 24 m1<i-homet panes in hi1
career. Oiblon tot hit 10th mwti-
homer pme and fint since July 14, 1988.
Murra)' bat 21 RBJ in hi1 lut 16
pmes, hmina 11fely in l S of lhem.
He has five home runt and 17 Jl81
this teaton apin1t the Gi.anu and in
his two yean in the National
Ballin& ,,.332, Rickey Henderson
swiped an important base when he
stoic second.
"I've aot to ae1 10 second base no
matter what:: he sa1~. "I've got. to
get into sconna pos1t1on and 11ve
our big boys a chance to knock me
in.'' 1 •
He scorco two runs. 11v1og him a
leaguc-leadtn& 84 on the year.
Hts teammate, Jose Canseco. 1s
also an MVP candidate.
··1 th1nk right now at this point in
the season, between Jose and
R icke~. you would have to 11ve a co-
MVP,· said Stewan, who struck out
seven and walked one. "When one
has been hot, the other has been cold
and when the other has been cold.
the other has been hot."
Tbc A's. who arc S4-9 this year
... ~.bu nine hometl uc1 n am .
venus San fraocatCO.
··1 can't say 1 lik.t \hele pya." .
Murray said of the Gianu ... rr MY-
thiQ&. I hate 1he pitch (apli1-hter .
fasctiell) lhty throw."
Mike Kartley (J.-1) pitched five
inninas of scorckts relief for tbe
victory. Rafael Novoe ((). J) wu 1he •
lOKr.
0 oooe.a ..ans -""' ......., la .. ,
llfellmt at Candlettlck P9r1' • T"9 ~
tCOftd lhrM run• In the tlr•I lnnlllt Mid .,. ' J0-10 when lhev Kort ltl .._ ~ IMIM •
Tilt G >enlt Mel hllrfttrtd In ll COMeCUtlW
NI"" before be'flt •1-.d 0......
INrl•lot> JeM Ut-. wat out DI ll'le ...,,....
llneuo •fl• 1u11a1n Ill • ~ ''-"' ,_,,
Clurll)f • lleldl11t Dlev S.tur•v
when they score first, no.-bold an
8·2 scnes advaniqe qainst the
An&els this season. havina won three
of four in Oakland and fi vc of Ii.A in
Anaheim.
0
ANG•L NOT•s -TIW ....... .,, off lodav.
theft ocien a 1,., ... ffmt Mt wlll'l tne lotion llad
So• k"-Ouled PllCl>fl9 tNllc.hUM '°' H loftotl ...-let Mlf1I ~--(S• ll) n T_,. ..... (S•ll on T""°911. l(lrtl McCatldl (7·1) n. ....
H.mt (f.41 on w'°""'°'" and.-,..._. ,7 .. 1 .,., • ..., 0..-I 15--S) on T~tdev .
I~ o.lllle NII, wt>o has 1'111 Mf9iv In .....,,
ol 1111 lul nine O&l'M\, I\ ttle Mven111 IMtdln.e hlttw In Illa ,.,,,.,oc;an LH9ue after lht slain
lnn'"9 ••lfl • m ,....,."' 121 for 111. accwdlnl
IO ST A TS, Inc.. • nahonai HOfU ••etllla comoenv t>aMd '" ClllcNO wllicft servlclft !?le USA Tocuiv and ESP,. SllontN» 1*11
~ ha\ aoe>earad In 49 11tmet lhl1 -ton
ancl I'll\ avera11e nu beoeill balow .200 In U of
lhOlot coni..1s TM "'""'let are on a ~ to attract more 11\an live mllllon Ian• thb ...-i
comlllnacl hOma •NS awn Whlcl'I WOUid M a
Cfut> •teel'CI Al lhe•r current rate , lheY w9IACI
Clrtw 2 I mllllon at hOma ano 2 S mtfflofl on !ht
road For 111e loUf' oame Mrlet '"' Anteft and A't a ltrac1ad IM,616 fam. an ,.,., ... ol
47, IS. _. Clala Tiiie Iota! n laol•"'9d a '°"'' .-w ~lfl •ecoro tw "" Ante!• "'-'.,. "-!Mrtr. ol 173 347 Ml JI.IA• 1·4, lfll, ~
I(~' CllW "'"'' oa-n \At --119' 1111 In ,,. ol r1<s IH I ~en o•mn ( •1' 12 for '!Ii
raising '"' e•ffaot lrOfl'I 1IM to !Ille CU"ran1 1a
""'"' • Wlld&e Sex I , Brewers 1: Jack McDowell pnched
a five-hitter and lance Johnson drove an three runs as
Chicaao completed a fi ve-game sweep at Count~
Stadium. Milwaukee has lost eight consecutive games.
all at home. McDowell (7-6) pitched his third complete
pme of the season. walked one and struck out none.
Dennis Powell (().3) gave up six runs and seven hits in
61/1 innings for the Brewers.
• Cardlalt 8, Met1 3: 0211e Smith got fou r hits,
drove in two runs and scored twice to back John Tudor
(1 1-3) at Busch Stadium. The Cardinals have won two
of three against the Mets in the four-gamr scnes. St .
Louis is 3-1 under new manager Joe Torre. For the record
• Bl•e Jey1 I , 1t .. 1ers 4: Nolan Ryan was tagged
for 12 biu, equaling the second h11hesl of his career.
and failed an his bid for career win No. 301 whrn John
Olerud's tie·b~aking double an the sixth inning helprd
Toronto to the victory in Arlington. Ryan ( 11 -5 ). who
became the 20th pitcher to win 300 pmes last Tuesday
ni&ht in Milwaukee, had a personal six-game '1ctory
streak snapped. He walked two. struck out lht> and
thrtw two run-sconng wild pnchcs in hurhng h1~ third
complete game of the season.
• Martaen 4. Twins t : In the K1ngdomc. Minne-
sota's Brian Harper went ().for-4 and had his ~5-game
hituna streak, longest in the ma1or lc:i,Juell this season.
broken as three Seattle pitchers combined for a thrt'l'-
hiner. Starter 8111 Swift was htt on the nght side of his
forehead by Gary Gaetti's hne drive in the founh inning
but he was able to walk ofT the field asmted by two
trainers and was taken to a hosp1t1I for X-ra)s
• PllJlllH a. PllilllH •: Von Hayes· two-run homer
broke a sixth·annang uc at Veterans tad1um as Phila-
delphia snapped Pmsburgh 's lhree-game wmnmg
slfeak. The Phillies 1w1l·c overcame three-run defic11s
and stopped a three-game losing skid. Relic' er Don ·
Carman (5-0) go1 1he '1ctof) and Joe Boever pitched
t"o innings for his 11 lh save.
• Astros •. Braves t : Danny Daf"" in. "ho has
never lo!lt to Atlanta. also rem:uncd unbeaten as a
starter this year as Houston completed a four-game
swccp in the Astrodome Daf""tn (7-1) 1s 5-0 with a 1.30
earned run a'crage since moving into the \tan1ng
rotation on Jul) I He 13'' up l'-'O runs on 5e\Cn hits
1n fi\C innings. \truck out four and walked onr
• Cab1 3, Expos l: Mark Grace doubled home tht·
t) ing run tn the six.th inning and ~ored on .\ndre
Dawson's triple. leading Greg Maddu~ and ( h1rago to
a three-game S\\ecp at Wngle} Field Montreal lo\t its
fifih straighl game. The Cubs won tor the 15th 11me in
20 games. Maddux. (9-9) won his fifth r con«<cut1'e
decmon. He struck out sill. and walked three.
From Tiie A.,ocl•IH Preu
• Royelt et Orioles: The g.ame bet wt-en Kansas
City and Bah1mor~ was postponed by ram after a 66-
m1nute delar. The game was stopprd in the bottom of
the first inn1n1 with the Royals kading 1-0 on George
Brett's home run.
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Seaver won't confirm report
NEW YORK -Tom Se.a\'cr says he has talked
with new York Yankees owner Gcorae S1eanbrcnncr
reprdina a job with the club~ but won't confirm a rcpon
he will be named 'he team's ttneral m•"*IC'·
"Mr. teinbrenner and I h1Ye hed a ron"enet1on
about mx possible usociatton with the New York Yankca. \he th~limc Cy Youns Award winner Ntd.
"We do not have a date for another mcctlna if. in fact.
'1lerc wlll ever be one.·· The New York 0.1ly Newt rrponed 1n 111 und.ay
editiona that Snver, the ,._, of the New Yotk Mets 1n
the 19609 and 1970$. will be named ttncral maMfCr of the &tam before owner 0e()fF Steinbrenner qu1ts a
1tMral penner •
.. The pit of' whit '4WC talked about "· 1n m
opnion, pnY1te;· Seiver 11id. "M to the contut of tht
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WATER POLO
NATIONAL LEAGUE
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642-5678
GUii• W8TDM.YMOY .. ....,,Alz•t-..
, .. DALY PILOT
CV.59"1£0
OfFICE HOUAS
TeiephOM S..vte~
Mon F" ...... j 300M
.....
PueLJCA TIOfil ~IN(
liolondly Fri 1'30 AM• r...., -. u o PW wtdll...,-Ti.$ 10 Pfl1 T~ Wed $IO"°' ~~ Counrar '•OCMy Tllln 5 IO PW
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.......... 12, IOO alt l2'00/l'ft0. ar ?lf.1117 a pwt Bee. ~ ,._ tr. t142 =-. ~:.. = 1:-:~. • deoor,,! :c.. •:..:. Tt.'E1 -._-, -,-•. -~-• .,.-...... -... -.-. OOIJ-.-.-,,-~M~-~ :O"=. c;:"~ '**-II 2107 new paint, U '"' negot. 712 ... tw..... pnlne ~ """! fee •
meeure produdng cltrua 2 1 IA. Maw peilnt, gat9dl guardad, pool, . ~.. IMl/mo. aa.°"2 • MMn v...,
tr-. 1-v P9Y..,... a carpt, Maturt lduftt. No tennl• etc. SIOO/mo . ...., ._.. ~ rii61 1illA...._tl1 . ...,_,.._A"'811
ortty atepe to ~. pate. 3•08 Marcue Walt• l40-ft00. .,_-........ Md9n. No pMa. llllfmo, MIO
OHE-OF·A-KtNOt 1116/mo, 873-7353 O.W'• ..a .. ,_,.,., -1IO E. 21" St. eQwl fl •*DltloOdlt
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•lloCfl •I "'3Y be rtSPOntol>lt ••~I lor !fie~ of die
'PGCe Klua..., nc:cuo-ecs I>) Ille et•or ~ c;an ~ Ille •"°'"O '°' 1 ... l•tSI 1n-lt0n
~:-W~ ~~ 119501.:" 1nc1 ~ Aot. 17..._ !'liOE '~;.,,~ ... "'nratou• Y•-~.~ 17w100
140-255 Fr9d Albuquetqut .,_., ~-. ' -oondo, eac guard I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Hatur 1
131..e1toRe1MuAltre ..._,..,., 007 ~i;'::;~Ma-~ ..-.2.....,-..,2. 111111111/F
"'1y amoun1 not P8'<I ••lllltl 30 days n reciuwed Wll Ille
IUl>feCI to OVI noc l•mttecl to ,__en.gee~
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38R 2W 2.-ory anct •MWU•T..aT• 809. be1vtaw.1-... &1ra..,.28A2BA.ana ~-:~~ Aot541-5032 :!;,. ~ l":.~Nn!lle 2:,y~~-~;c,,=: 3 BR, 2~ BA condo Ind ~~•=ii 17501"'°· :':."::51~ df:: piamriu 1 OfosFae. ~E =~
• .....--1-11ut + MC Avl 911 Matr Suite wlpaek+boo !Mt I aac. 142 IDU · 1311000 Call &Mt .. • • oc.et1 view. Quiet and 28R 1BA. 11,200/rno Yl'fY PEI battl, 525 eq ft. '450/mo. .Blu.Ml-8583 • Cell 7 1'-&2l·Sl4t unit w/prtv11a dbte gar-Incl. utff,,..,. Bey Front, U.•ITH •780-11t21t
NIWrn...,. 1069 21::5::=~~ :um-:~~~·t:=:: :~:-~.:~d:,~':.:;r· ~~==~'.:~~t ..:L=sm T?:,~Z~~,-:e·
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ARE FREE
Cal:
142-1111 lllT llT.. °' $525,000 AgU75-2311 51·500/mo. 111 + tee •SM SURFER STUOtO• Large 3 BA 2 8A dOwn-*2 & S 9edlooma AgU4t-5032
SBR 2BA cMtacNd Mngla 1-'tNE TER .. '"CE ~ &tl~~2 t.ava Open HM Sat 12·3. 303~ etalre. ~ decorated. !~fum61ftadlo---. ,.__..a u.---office .,,.,.. •FOU~N~D~bl~ ...... ~&~,.,..,~~. ~ .. ~.--~ femllyhome.Onty tnchee "" ""' .. -__... 34thSt.NottOYe.Utlltnc Sngt enc gar SM51mo. ;~ ... ..&"U'rOOAYt ~ -;: ....... -, ,._. 10 bMeh large lot and Spacious 3BR fBtcK,trptc, * WllTa.lff '440/mo. 118-285--0223 No pet• 913-1512 ,.. IEITIU ~ '::·. ~'"1~: 1,.,,1n S'*P Dog. on
yard. Bonus parking year laaaa 2
7 Imo. Garden home •BR/2BA · .._. Y•da 28A upper, VIW 111 MO. FREEi! B1tbo• Pier, mata •
w I co m m u n I I y e
7s-•29
w/lrg gr1Ssy yard P1t10 !T•••l•I• le t d t I 2 71._.94-7957 °' 675-1246. poola/recrHtlon •rH . LG 3BR 2BA hOUN .,,,,....... .. ,, le. A 1i * qu t cu -•UC. enc 111-4 1 -2 ca.r gar. p . VI YH ly 3BR 28A, new garage, H95 + MC. Ste-aee-9055 FOUND Dog. 1129. Mala Highly upgra.dad. Euy w/d, refrlg. wd ftrt, pvt nowst $2400Almo. RMonlca cirpet & paint. Very 498-1938 or 75MM83 ..__t .. -· .. ..-a-. furn EXEC Offloa Sutt• Mar apricot Toy Poodle In pay. $.421,900. patio ct.ck. Tip.top cond. or uzanne "0''· ema1t. 11 11 ,....., '""' -·-T · H
11
ton ...___.. CHUCK& LIZ JONES $1900/mo692-5311 M-F 11t 760-5000 * cle1n, 8 •man H . , __ W/.U Ocean view. Stap1 to JW Airport, 4170 Von un ng ,__.,
148-5743 S1500/mo. _ beectl. S.CUrlty, poof & Karman Ava., NB. FAX. 840-8382
*'1111 .. """* 3BR 2'ABA twnhse Frplc, IA .. Y IBTIU, IM •••w lndry. $800/mo 722-n23 f9CaPI, coe>*. conf rm. FOUND keys, Ylclnlty 8th a.st location 3BR 2BA gar1ge, p1tlo, pool, 1tlnt lla..tlll 2BR. 2BA & patio. No l)etl kltcti, fr .. parking & cot-St. & W. Bel~. call to
condo, all new pllnt & loeatlon 51200/mo. H50/mo. 2151 Pacific SPACIOUS Townhoma-tea. 1-aty bldg, turn. mo-Identify. 675-2579.
clean, tots ol ex.traalt Call Linda 24"97367 Ava. S.. Mgr i 8-101. atyte 2 Story Apt nr to-mo 11 5350/mo. Con-__,,,_=--..,.,--:-.:--=;:--
$ 1700/mo yurly 111 E ULlll ILYI 855-0M5 Faahlon lstind. 2BR tec1 Al Oulnta.n, 933.9550 FOUND yellow lab, mala, %.. LIM ISLE* ••w•y 1mw 2'hBA. frplc, very prtv•t•. =---..,..---,:-:-----:-•bout 9 mo old. Newport _. • llJFIHT e Upper Apt. 2BR 2BA, OUIET 18R, petlo. pool. S 1145 SS.-7855 Lv Mmg FULL Nrvlee office In Hta vicinity on 811. W1tertront tot on Vl1 Lido 17..... ocean View from cMctt. EnclOMd garage. Frplc. Newport Center Fashion
NMd. Very rare property L~~ l allpS He'~ $875 • utlls, y11y. Onlre 399 W. S.y St. H85. No fll llAIYl.U 18'and. Answe;lng ave -=$4-=8-=9-:864=-:=
7
· -:---;-=::: LAST CHANGE Spy GllSI Hiii, 180" ocean BA $1; o«:'· · quiet couple 673-3152 Pata. 6~57 SpaciOu9 2 & 3BR + den, only allO ivallible LOST 7121 grey & white
(408) 625-537' y I e w. p 0 0 I. • BR CAROL 64~7362 Rent ~tif\11 apt. t BR. IOme with ocean vlewe, lll m1111n a.TIS fem cat. med. long hair.
4BR 3BA newly decor1ted S3.550tmo 640.1388 °' Gnibb & Ellis Rltrs Corona del Mar 2622 llp, deck overlooking on Falrwcey 01 ~ ~-S.70 3 yrs, shy & ecatad.
condo in the Blutta. by ~·~21 ~200 2eR 2BA upetalrs apt w1terlall1, rec and pool, 2 ~:~: CO:~~~Yty 2 ~1---------!~n~ll~t=~ owner Lease opt poss-5t050/mo no pets old car gar. $800/mo. please · LAGUNA Niguel IUbleUe 11 Ible. S500K 760-9313 COSU ~SI 2124 CO M .;,,d , reir lg , call S.9-5241. =-;:::.•or:::, :::; 1000 IQ ft. e..1 r•t• In alghled83f.~~~=e ca
FOR SALE BY OWNER 2BR 2'hBA Condo a. ....... .... 759.161_6 _ -111111 fll PUlll! hkupS. Fredi 526So/mo. ~.!:~ g:~~9-~;~~ge -L-=o-=s-=T=-:--=1'"'1""'2""'5-. --=B-=-11=-c=k
Newport Heights. 2 BR, 1 E'aide Frplc. lndry hk Hill blod< to ooean. L•rge LARGE 2BR, 2BA & study -•••r No pats. (At Newpor1 I=---::--:::::----:::----::=;;--Lab/Chow. mile neut ~lall---oa·------BA, prime tocatlon ups, mlCroweves, sec, fimily home wtth ~al Avin now. 3 l0'1t lrl• St _-
11
-wa•=•an CenterOr&GranYltteOr). Small offlcel lrom $350, Co
'450 000 548-3607 subterr parking St 150 & quart«s lor teenagers°' So. or PCH $1'00/mo, •• _,.. Shown by Appt 8'4-0e03 grou leala, E 17th St. ~ !~~ si:~67• all Pri!suil 1007 . up G1tler11. 646-4472 guests. Ocean Ylew from yurly. 676-2238 Top ll'N, plftt-like set----•111•La• Coate M .... Ask lor Bill
'" ..... ..-.. '
i ,,,.. 1.• _....,..,...., __ ..,......,..I L....t Prlte4 l1 TrHff 2BR 2BA 1 Story 2 car -ling. B .. utllutly main-wa••_.r & ~ 646-tee3. IHI llUIFlllT E1tqulsltety remod-"'d i nd girige lmmac ' quiet master BR, and dining OCEAN VIEW 1BR 1pt. tained 2BR+ 18A w/encl Townhouse $900/mo. No -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ... ~-""'!"!!!'9'"""'---·l3BR 3BA 3 3BR 2 58A · room. Private patio, th t t o pets •• o a 7°533 """ u---1c·---. ' yeira new cleoorlled, . nghbrhd S9001mo Open d k $950 000 WI pa IO, quie . n . g1rage -so m?. REA y pets. 54 • Commercl1J Property ~ --$875,000 Blulla. at11ched home S-6 D•lly. c11154s-3328 sun ec · · S I 0 O O I m o NOW• 1BR poolside """":-:===--=~~:----::::~
LOii 7130 black & wtllta
mile cit. long hair. Wnt-
ctltt1Do11er Shores 1rea.
REWARD, ii found call
646-9107
COLD Well
BANl(eR 0
wlfam rm overlooking -----OPEN SAT/SUN 2·5 7141644-,242 Juli K. wt c1r.port or garage, WINTER RENTAL. 3BR, _____ ....,._2_7_7_8
'
•• -irlllll wide greenbelt '4•9900 *IUll IEW* 22 t NARCISSUS _ - -56501 0 & P Avt Sept 2BAOpl1t.Furn.2cargar.,. Pl•lnlll ....-· HOLLY673-6111 Sp1clous 2BR 1'~BA 3 d Studlou ~/carport Steps to beach. Avlll 1727 E OCEAN BLVD agt.
524
"
1293
18 Townhouse apart-Grubb & Elhs Rltrs twnhme. Close to belch 5;9·5/mo. Avl Sept Jrd. 9/15. $1350. &45-<1127 NEWPORT BEACH
smell cute house LSEIOPT watkt o beach ments, 3 BR. 2"• BA, 2 644-6200 & shopping S950tmo No ,...11_ Ci ll VELMA I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; S/E corner Waatctlll Dr & 717 W. BALBOA, 4BR 3Br 2Ba beach condo, car gar, wl d hkups. pool. 900 Sea Line 644-2611 .,.. Misc. Rentals lrYlne Ave. High vtalbillty 'BA, bunt In t988 sundeck. pool. 2·car gar spa Many delu1te lea-(7 t4)549-2447 lrilflc 1290 eq ft HPlU 1411,000 6.C2-8759. 213·456-t939 tures S t.250/mo Lease Biyrldge-:-i>eautifut hlihly Cost1 ~ 2624 TRAILERS for rent in Adult 2706 ~1101 Wltlt h ' t -one now upgraded 2BR 2 A, Park No pets 1 or 2 Rooms =::----:,,...-~--ltr 1 11 ·IWIJ SIHILH IEAI, ILTI 2233 Fairview Road lower, quiel location *UITllll* 1dults tBR/2BR av11I. •COSTA MESA BLUFFS 875 aq tf office space+ The H Se •It. lat, PHI, BALBOA PENINSULA S.tw Wilson & Avocado $ l ,•50 67S·72t8 tBA S6•0 & 2BR $740 Incl 642-1353 Shire beautiful home. 550 al warehouae '°ace ome llers~ PnlU.. 11171·1120 SPECIALIST Streets (across lrom Be1utllul lg newly remod gas, water & garage WESTBAY APTS--pvt ba, over 40, $450/mo for rent. 19th & Pomon1
L• llUll -llJ·lotl P061 Olllce) 2BA 28A, 2 car gar. wl d. 2323 Elden No Pets 1200 OFF MOVE-IN" 873-8219 642-t 196/mmg !900/mo 645-0664 Corona del MM 1022 --OPEN DAILY TIL 6 p M all appls xln1 loc (7t4)548·7854 11,210.cNMI 1076 For 1nto 722 8529 s 500 972 4735 Sorry, No Pets EASTBLUFF unfurn Kite/ ,_ ...... _.._, 2788 OUTSTANOIN(fnew home 2BR 2BA co111ge on San ~mttltf . 1 Imo • 1 BR. 1 BA In 4-plelt With t Bedroom $680 llUndry priy Semi PY1 en-•"~-~"o!o'!-!!!"'-~--
on on.of the llnest street bulldable lot Hazet St 3BR 2BA hOuse. cathedral BIG CANYON Townhome patio, carport & tndry lee 28drm 1• •Bl $795 trance $350tmo.1nctuda 2.eoo SO FT w/lront
to street loc11tons on Buck Cyn & ocn vu poss-Ill• a1rll CLllE·llT ceilings lrptc ndwd llrs tmmac 2BR 2BA. 2 car No pets $590/mo 2250 Vanguard 540-9626 uhl. Reis 760-t691 office. large re1r drive-In Lido Landscaping done 1ble $530000 72t-11t8 '--2 car ger large yard iar goll-C view No pets • 649-2400 • ----------door Close to freeway
by Rogers Gardens 3 •WEI * ""s 112o00rd1~0 2~~~ale~g~ 1700/mo 644-24 t6 tBA Apartment Gas & Bachelor SS6
7001s '~!~~~~s h~1 N~ St575tmo 1240 Log1
2
n.
LOST 8131 LhlSO·Apaq,
gr1y, old. deal. and sick,
on Bllboa. Rew1rd. CI H
collect d1y1
8 181509-8228. eve.
818/76 t-8363.
LOST J1de, gold & pe1rl
bug pin. REWARD.
720-9469
PMONls 3002 ...... ,., ...
From Europe 35 yra exp.
Tanya hell» on all m•t-
tera 1 FREE QUESTION
BY PHONE.* &42-<1321 BA with 3 BA Large tor· 63 t.2748 CIH •ti,..... electric included t Bedroom kltchenllndry priv Utlll Costa MeM 540.·935 mil dining room and DISTRESS s•LE ltHtffal MIU ,,... • .,_ Cen s 28drm 1' .ea $830
llbrery n ' 1'1BA. 2 car gar St250 820 te< 1 131E18th St 646-6816 Incl $400/mo 642·1873 1111' llt/~ft IHI sn 1·1Pll ....... w. ,, ... s. 3BA 2BA. new crpt. p11nt avt 1mmed Agt 631-0680 -SEE MANAGER Apt. LI uri3 e .. ch Rooms, 873 '·e" w 15th l'Mwport PlnONI ~ )()()4
ltll 411-llll & flooring gerde"e<, ulll Exclusive Siu-tis area tBR upper, encl g1r, elec DIN Point 2626 ~.mile. over 30. prt.I Beech. 2131433~1 ~ .... 1 llOO lalt ... Ha Ttrr p1Jd, wld hookui. near 3 BR range. relrig, p1110. Y8te entr1nce. COOklng.1---------
•SHU llMlflll
YA tr 10tJ.hn
3br S 179K Buena Park
3br $208K Cos1a Meaa
3br S t79K Garden Grove
4br S204K Hunt Sch
3br S 169,990 Santa Ana
And we h111e others•!
Pr1nc1p1ls only
South Western R E
(114)111-1217
Excetten1 locauon. lg lot, --..chools 4 shopping ava11 TownhOmes L1tge · carpettng & drapes no 2BR 2BA. den, WI O hk 49..._._.59. We'll show you exactly
roomlor e1tpanst0n 38R .Aae~ llZ5 8t t. St.375/mo and 2'> BA. large patios pets s550 642•5954 upa.frptc.tenoedyd.enci _ howtofi1tyourcredltre-
2BA Walll to Balboa ::.?:. s 1,025 dep 548-0290 S 1.250-S 1500 per mo ' -0., no pet $850/mo Nr SC PIU In beautllul lg port for under 550
tstand No reasonable Build your memories on E d 3BR 2, BA 2.sl Like new 837 Amigos 1BR enclosed g1r , 33,'t1-o Chelt1m W1y. home/furn Shr blth, llAIAITlll
oller relused Lowest Memory Lane• Pou1bly est91 e Ir Y Wey •644-6•58 waterttrash Incl, 240.189 1or661·3208 w/d,pool,apa.'400tmo Am•zl ng recorded
pr1c4!dhome1n1rvlneTer· sptltable 5 acres! twnhme 2cirgar lrplc. $595/mo , $400 dep. -dep 556-1737 I'!!"'""!"'_""!"_,""!""-~~ me.aagereYe•l1det1i11.
race Wlnches1er1 Sewer com balconies. smell pet oil EIECITIYI V1IW 631·6'87 Hunt lelCh 2640 ...._for Slit 29CX> 714-251-3263 ex.t 890
IAUtrUllA ing apprOlt t99t' Better St250 Nr 20th/Newport •NWPT HGTS are• 2BR 1BR . s•501m o. Near Hot.tts/Motefs 2718 ~ ... ,~ ... ---------
111.1 .. -.,111-1010 Homes & Gardens John Blvd 675-4912 Bkr TIWMllE 2BA II pt v -
._ O R air 672 1966 Ne1r Fllhion l1land. 3BR · p, gar. nu er ' beach front unit '·Plelt SU l.111 llTIL HI Interest. Wiit rade for Re/Mu ol Irvine, Rltrs enller e67 Y 9. USTSlll SHIP 2''-BA, x.lnt condition Va-quiet duple1t, lndry rm, no ,..._..; 1 ..... ,, ' 1 den' T"'"' or ? C111 ••7 60.C 1 EvtU-2·2 t t 3BA t '~BA duplex ,. pets $895. 720-1565 Cl,...,,. c ... ng. g r Wkly rentals now ivlll. ..,.. "" •
#A3232S twnhm Frplc .. dinlng rm, cant-$1895/mo. _ _ _ pitlo.969-2251 $147.00 wtc & up. 227' Wettalibttahede1tecutlve FIRST Tiii IFFEIEIU 2 car gar & yard IHf 11..,.11,., •CLEAN downst•lra 2BR 3 BR-1·~ BA Twnhse Nwpt Blvd, CM M6-74.C5 suites & 1m111 bullnns
f~ ..... tt
H1rborV1ewH111s Ocean& R.E.W1nttd 1625 St075t mo TRW re-710-1114trlH-llOO H~BA.l1rgecloseta.dlw. Froniyard Lndry fac.N; lncub1lor businesses In Oomtstia 3018
UllU IUCM Harbor view 1n Fashion FORECLOSURES Wlnted quired Curt " 63t-t266 REAWAC I ml~~ le~~~i':'2'&5 Huntington Harbour VIUdon RMUls 2722 the lnl1nd Empire for CARE GIVERS
LANDMARK Panoramic laland 3 BR. 2' •BA pool House, condo·s. unlls RENT Ilse opt 3BR 2,ltBA __ $895/mo. 841-168' Liz RENT /TRADE SBR Lake Nie. 8 e:ara left on 9 ye1r FOR THE ELDERL y
coaslllne ocean & city & spa 2 lrplcs, large lot Shopp1ngt Reta11 Center new trg Med·S1yle twnhm •EASTSIDE 1BR Ouple1t, 3BR 2'hBA lrplc wetb1r TI hoe h m Re n 1 lelM. 23.000 to '41,000 PIT Sit/Sun 8-12 FIT
fight views from fabulous By appointment only Fiim studios & Entertein· nr NB Obi gar ll p. fr1ge, \t'\\ t 1.,11' l'"t \ 11 ~=~~5S~8~ ~le~ townhouse style 1pt0 5200/DAY °' tr•de lor ri:. ~;9~~n~,~~ Llve--ln. Catt 5•0~102
custom masterpiece 4 721 -6050 ment comple1tes Any & micro, dryer s12001mo qr ALT()I~<., • enol pitlo Min 8 mo lae Gar1ge, y1rd, $1050/mo hm on 81lboa 855-9988 furnishings For prospec· ;:;:::;~-~~
bds thea1er lormal din 1~-~~---~~ all areas 647-6634 • dep 8t8·706·8003 No pets 645•7234 Nr Beach/Heit 968-9588 tua, call 7~320 E"f'OYJMnt 5530
1ng. den bar '°t~ g~ Costa Mtsa 1024 -TRI LEVEL CONDO 2 BR , ....... ,TUL ---Nr OCl'I Nice 1 BR, 1 BA Roomm1tes W1nted ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;......;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 •iiiiiit ............ _ _. __ _ r°'9: ~a llST llTI 1•, BA 2 car gar wllndry. Fe1turlng 'BR, 2'.<,BA, •UITllH* New grey crpt, llp. glf. 2724 Business $J/tl + CO. 1,7 • S I secluston and total re-,..,_ 2 BR 1 BA S t .... 1703 Calif St 5BR 3BA fruit frees. great h 1 r P c o m P e • model This Stutts beauty ..,..1n. . • up-m pe .,.. · · New luxury condo, pvt Opponundts 2904
-
", 11 HI Ht,, 1 area 4 super value S289K wt strums. pool & spa 11 not lut lmmed ite at•irs, laundry llcitlllu. S715/mo. 841-282• Br/Bi QWIQ9 pool IPI _
1111••11 .., 1,.. Trt41itt.Hllltafty s1.050tmo533·'2.C2 wi Chld 1 • nopeta $725/mo 269C mle1o' wl d. 'se~tmo. tNCOME GUARNATEED
Rf Al Tu u• (l1•\A•1.7•7g I ::i:~~YShort' c:ren long 18th PllOe 644-0452 8W Newport leach 2669 f>taaM IY maG 8''·7115 . M1nager naadad for Of· ltmm Wllllmt .. ,.. • Houws/Condos Hunt lelCh 2140 · S-EA -lice Prep1rtng b1ck-•DPll-•1 -· term leue. S1750/mo. •NEWPORT HT AR · *1.91 UJF.-r• ground verlllc•tlona
IEWUSTlll
IEWPllT IUIM Fiil
.... 1111,0001
lllLIHICllSl-lft ~al 2102 tBR1BAS625 vme w arn-W .. llllST 2BR 1'i'tBA. lrplc, encl. •W•llTlllllUIPTI Fem oanr 2BR 2BA Re9onable 100to5200K
2 homes tett• Prime E'slde er C1rpets. drapes, bit· 120-JIM tr 111-IMI g1r1ge S765/mo. No *""11-'T .. -· 5820 ~~ 9/t 723.0•ee net. Cost $55K for turn-Call between 6am-noon location Single lam1ty *" YH UYE ms. slorage, pool, clbhS, pets. 642-5722 -_.. · key operitlon Cill lor lor Interview ~:~~chj131;:0 ~r~~:r •llfWTAlPllPfllTn g1tedcomp1e1t 842-8748 RfAll( ./ *tlliTLllATlll EX~J'~~~:i~cH •LOUYFlllT* det1111 11800-225-•82t c.oo~e ra t 1v e OPEN We can rent •1 We are' . "\Vl ""l"'fj' ju·" ·11 11111FF 2BR 2BA w/beautifut b•y NB twnhOUte block to axt.808 This beeutlful t bdrm 1 SAT tSUN or call ror ap-full· service rental agency 2BR 18A. ground floor, no \t. \\ '( t.... A '-E . s Ide 2 BR 1 '.+BA view & pool! Micro, dl w, beach. 3BR 21-+BA, MC. LETS STRIKE A DEAL ON
bath un111n 1he Verse1lles po1n1men1 548· 700 t lrom cleaning painting. one· above. enc gar. REALTORS ' townhae Frplc dlw 0.,. 11repl1oe & garage EnJoy frplc. wld, Pltlo, prkng. VENOINGS TOP MONEY
has Just been made avail· 320 E 21st S1 CM AKA l11t-1t to l1nd1ng the right I $775, 7 t41970-2223 HARBOR View Hilla. age pai10 la~ndrY rm our prvt belch $1850. All $517/mo * 5•8·9149 MAKER Cell Norm.
able Freshly painted 1n Collna V1s1a Court tenan1 WE DO IT Allll Edison HS diatrlct 3BR lmmed occupancy. •BR new' carpet, $875/mo ' m1inten1nce Incl. Balboa r.-2 BR furn hM. 1-800·7.c t-3332
114-Ml-1111 ..........
1·900-654-2255 Ext 124
Flight Attendants S35K
Ticket Agents S32K neutral colors. mtrrored You invest, we do the I 2BA, bonus rm, wt d, lrlg, 2BA. 1mmac. $2200 0 80 2617 Orange Ave. *ALSO I Bdrm 51490 AYI 9/90. Nr b•y. WIO, Own your own buslnell.
dry bar. looda ol closet lllLIHI CLISE-Oil rest CALL 965·2699 fenced yard, $1150/mo 26t-98611d 722-7806/e TSL MGMT •leetlllM lltrt* g1r. S495/mo negot S45 start up. Work out of
space There 11 a nice 2 homes leh• Prime E'side 675-9360 •LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT 832-2232 or 722-9012 SORRY, ~6 PETS 722·9185 IV meuage _ your own home. Free de---*-,,,...~m-=.-1--*-
deck with lo1s of greenery location Single family COST A MESA . 3 bd twn Charming furn 3BR 3BA 2 WEEK'S FREE RENT. UU 111-1111 COM 2Br 2Ba twnhouM. t1ll1 1(213)773-9514 ext. to enJOy your summer derached 3BA. 2' 1BA patios 1 150 i--21 44 K Newport Harbor 1ree.
evenmgs Bicycle to the As111ng S299 000 Broker PENINSULA . lower 3 bd lrv .. 1'11:' home $3500tmo yrty lee 2BR 2BA. low mo*ln, pool. 5 btks to ocH n. No · M-F Neat. clean OMV.
Cu1tomer Service S2DK
8AM-8PM 7 01y1 S 1• Fee
beach or en1oy the pool. cooper a11ve 0 PEN S t,275 TURTLEROCK • 2 BR. 2'.+ $6000/mo Summer Rent tndry, carport. $745/mo 1 Block to beech! 2BR amk/drufa prof 5450 VENDING ROUTE: Local Compi ny car Apply
spa & clubhouse on 1h11 SAT/SUN or call for ap-LIDO ISLE . 2 bd b•y. BA Townhome Decor· Btll Grundy Riiy 675-8161 5•8·5091 or 775-1719 1BA. yrly Street parlllng +'h utll. 20-1705 Grell ex.tr1 Income. Must Miiier Blueprint. Sff
gorgeous ga1e guarded po1n tment 5•8-7001 views S2000 itor perlact $1,,00/mo L 11 ... 1 5525+dap Mobile home only. $900/mo Incl u111s. COM I Vlll lmrned Share NII cheap and quick. Fred. S.0·4174
community Can't last 320 E 21st S1. C M AKA HUNTINGTON BEACH . 3 Lindi 721-0116 Grubb & I •-O<ilat mature ldult No Avt 8115 Cheri 673-1582 2BR 2BA. WID, frplc:, 1-800-284-8363 1..------
long at this price• Colina V1s1a Court bd hm bonus rm, spa Etha Rltra 644·6200 Lovely 3BR 2'~BA home pat1 1991 Newport Blvd ·--11111* cloM to bch M/F 20-27. Vending Route "tn1t1nt *lllln••y
711-1100 52500 completely lurniahed 2 846-8373 ..... $500/mo+dep. 282-311& CASH Miker" Prime Lo-An
Fountlln LIDO PARK DRIVE • 2 bd, lelCh 21 48 C1r g190r1ge. $3000619 /moA WES-TFIELD '"PTS Fri * 1d ... I-.. --.~. *ato-d1ye or 723-0409/avee catlone Setting quick· Nead one anatgatlc par-(il Of\(. ,I I I KJ :"~ 1034 view $2800 AYI 01 to 1 gt ,... g, .. ,___ ... F 22 • .,, ... CHEAP! t-800-74M230 IOn for FIT polltlon In V*Y 100 PARK DRIVE . Furn. 2BR 2'hBA, 2 car gar. 1/c, 675·4912 S200 OFF MOVE-INt Incl. No pats S.5-4855 COM. em .._, to ... are cellul•r phone office. rr= 1
')\ti "\ lllTIESS •HE l/p v1Ult cell 2 com ----Sorry, No pats 3BR 28A apt. $395/mo. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 Mon-Fri. 9-5. Call Jaatle ~ Iii \I l llH'• ~ 2 bd, view $3500 ' ' beach LS3BEl02P8T Wbeilk ~o ~-28drm 1'/•B• $785 •EAST9LUFF 2BR 1~BA No pate, non 1mkr. lnt.rtwnt IM lntenriew, 55e·eea3 -::::::::~---~~-•BR 2'-+BA. pool & ape_ LIDO VLO 2 bd den, lab pool1, f ~~IN stf 5001 o' r a ac ...,...,o, 28drm 2a. S800 Pool, flreplace, view. '40-2474 n.---. 2----------=--M k It 722-0582 bay vus $3750 view 0 1' ' m aundeck, pool, 2~1f gar. 3a• w Wit •" 1-5583 coin-op w11harl dryar ---.. 7VV Stop e.xlatlng end Sllrt llv· I •in o er BIG CANYON • 5 bd, goll 714/.C97-5941 8'2·8759, 213~56-10,39 .., IOn ..., $999 NO PETS 722-8011 COM Fm to lht w/lafTle. ENJOY 14-15~ r.rurn on
Ing• This 2Bdrm 2 Sith --courN at1te S10 Ooo SOUTH Lagunl 2BR 2BA LUXURIOUS-BAYFRONT WESTBAY APARTMENTS ad 2BR, 1BA, Wl d, 09'· 3 Trult Oaads SI0.000 to ~=~~1~:.·~~.:~e:.~~; Hwtt.leleh 1040 • ...,.,....~ .... houM . Wiik to beech. PENTHOUSE LHH S200 0FF MOVE-INI 1"NEW28R1BA,covar blttltObdl.$525 •dep + $1,000,000.CallDenleon
Fireplace & much. much For Sate By Ow'*. 3BR IULTlll la 1· 1•s Fr1plc07;.1 dac!.1y ~~3~~~ 1v11t1bte 1mmedl1taly. Fu~lng t!:t.:.. :rng•. ~~~~n:· bs~'s'~•; mpovt 'h utll. 790-a1t5 Aaoc. •99-4135 NOW!
morel $103,000 e.uer 21.hBA, 1 block from "mo,. · $3,875/mo. &46-1952 pat 80< fine, No p.f.r 114.979.9991 · COM lg "8e to ahr Flnon l~;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,~~I Homet & Gardena JOhn belCh, highly upgraded, -ry, NC S . tmkr $450/mo tut & ~0 lOlft 2914 Oenve<Reatty672-1988 custom •P•. 2400 tq ft, Ha11uoeragualewltl\Out Kh 2169 Luxurious penthOUM llPl. Bachelot s70 •Wa1tNawpof1 38A28A MC. nag AYI. tmmad
Evu&72-2119 well below marltet value. t"-98'199• .... yc)Uftltnlt JBR 3BA, 3000 IQ ft. e 28drm l 'AS.17&0 Apta yrly $12251$132.5. 780-6501918/552_.._.,1 · * HASm•TDll $375 OOO 989 2817 m lllelfled * LU tVE GUAAD• mo short term I•. Avail 825 <Anter St · 142-1424 Nawpof1 Shor• home, 110,000 up. No crad""
.tH3214S • · • · e •GATED COMMUNITY• Sept t * 641-5070 llll lfFJ--Sl600/mo. Btlr 142-3850 C.M. Aoommete to efW No penany, Call Danteon ---,,-,==,.,....,_--
DEAR READERS!
PLEASE BE ADVISED
EFFECTIVE AUGUST lOTII
TifE DEADLINE TO PLACE A
CLASSIFIED AD FOR SATIJRDAYS
WILL BE J:OOPM ON FRIDAY.
YOU MAY STILL PLACE ADS
UNTIL SiOOPM FOR SUNDAY.
TI-IANK YOU,
THE CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT
•• Ulfll NEWPORT CREST" 38R twnhouea. New 3BR, non AMOC. •et.-4135 NOW!
2 & 38R 28A Apt1. frptc, 2~BA. er, pool, tennis, 1t ALA MOANA APTS * 1111111111 IPfl lmkr 21·28. $.475 or OUICI< NO-QUALIFYING
wet bar. micro, wehrl dryr $1800 813-S.8,...oe7 or 1 & 2BA. tlA. 0/W, ON THE BAY S550. c.tl 845-8378 Contt. a Land Loenuval._
hkupt, centr•I •Ir, 2 car 213-378-MM No Pat1 ~tlful ~~·: 2 BDAM, 2._.8A ...... S2. IOO NWPT HACH Stir 38A able. Ownr/ltdf, f•t
gar wtxtra ''°'•· All ••"•n-l'acroom --~,:.,__. 2 BDRM, 28A ......... ll.350 28A. etec>e to beach, fundlne lkr 7to-2535 malntan1nea tnct. Sotry, -·--• ctoM to lh098 • ..,.,_ No pets Dally 9--5 42nd St. M1' prof. Very ftiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiii~~
No pet•. 144.0509 L:r:, 2:g,::l:r::: S515-a:7::.":itton 541501 CIMn. J.C. 722.oetl MOfta!l!IJ~• 2f 18
Pool ,.,,,. & doM to TIL ~ ~ . °" Non/tmkr mll, 2~. to , .. T5 IB m .. IS~ 1•WA111.wl beec h . S 1750tmo. 122-to12orm-m2 canat, near N .. PC: lhara, 21A 28A ~ ~ ..m11040/mo. '°''NWfMltt'nebelna Enjoy br"thtall~ view I 17M120or54113&4 S«ty No Pet1. llfand. Maw carJ*. near bMCti, Wlttl ...,... Prima tooeaon. eold In 50 e1.-encl
1unHll from thta pet1. StrMt parking. •lrJrw. $.450/mo plu9 ..., 1IO•llH ~ OpportWtity for
•P•ctoue 38R 2 HA • ... • llA... . 1725/mo. 115-eeoe utlt. '48-3130 · aomaotl9 wttf\ Income. or
8fuff1 ~ty Comptal• Oplx, lrpte, lifll•. •t=~ ~bte ':.~ Exctu1tve llUffe arH. "'°' Ml' 2s..31 ttoJ•• ... tolletPbuayln
ly r~. ~• S1515tmo. 81 -t20l MQ ~ ieofl &. IM Town."lomee Large 3 BA. 2~8A CM """""· wld. tfte oomf.-.ot ~own ocoup•ncy poutbta . ._ ,..,. ConOo 1 ..,_ fUll _,...Nop..., 131 ..... 27 2~ BA. ,.,,. pattoe, NOf',..,..,, IMO+", hom• C0"""1Hlon.
CMckan&peteo.k Shor1 IP9ti•noaa lnC wtci 1 Sl,250-11500 par mo. no.. Aatlecca. 722-IOM ..,..,,.., ..,,.,.....,.,
or '0'114~~ IHH refrlg. POQI, J~. W• to •1111111• Ura '*'' 137 AINgoe or 541 tal laewe fMI it P'*8 11 rwc-· -•In bcfl 117S.M1-34M IH&llr.... W~•M4-MA br!IM. _., 1 = ':';! ...... ....! . 1111 WUTCUff COHOO ftp LMve 18'11 IOft, Petlo. --m IPT m Apt In Coron. dll Mer. 4 ,...._ ..,.... ..... .._ Tll 28A 28A, 2 petk», n naw country -"Int· 1145 No YUMd °"""" blleony, b1k1 10 bdtt ,,.., OIMI ....,.,....,. ~ (714)
rtnO¥etiOn. lite. Open .,.Cl 141-4H2/t45-Mq ttr• lllCJ No ..... TY , I 417 U I M•· 1'n-Nl2 Olt ~.
Sun 1to 3, 1221 Auttllnd, LO l'llOI 'TWNHaa ~ 1IO-t7130t157· 1711 111-ta* Mil,....... ~ lolMl10 __ A.-e 1'fl for A111*t1
... 142•1211 eca ''-.. 11~. ·"PIO. CSOMftifCNtt c..en 11fll Get some vacation Cllh by 1ellina thole 1•·11K ~"'"•°"'-ow.. '::!·=::,,:· =:· carpet:·...:=· item1thattbe'8mily'1ouearown -~."::'·~:'ft "/:t :'~.,.....,.~"" No pet• noo 1eo-oe11 '"°'mo ...a.3443 _!ith1quid«ti~da•ifiechd. ' t
--
Affit.,...Jlilllilli ~·~..1== ............. ,. t-------
"AnN: GOWAiiltiit JOll • YOUll AMAi
S17.MO • -.-. C.. , ....... ...
:-Jm~..,. c.11,,..,., ... ,.
Ill •••PIT Gr ... for llud9nt Of mom. You _. "°"'9. Cefttr ..
Coet• M9la. 141-1120 ..,. ....
SUMMER
JOBS
• PW1 ttme WOf'll. 3 houra -=tt---~. Mlllf'V~lone for
the Deity Piiot
• Eern $40 to I 100 per
wMk ANO MOREi
• Win prlnl end bonu9ee • Mu.t be 12 to 18
yeatlotd
• T renec>Ottetlon II prcwtct.d
llilJPlllt
APPLY TOOAYI
... ..., . .,...; ..... eon... e.vereoe Shop. FIT. Benefits 1:30-12:30 250 Ogle, C.M.
.... lllTllUIT --•WAITEIVWAITRESS •AM /PM COOKS
Apply In '*'°"· 2131 Wettctitf Dftve, N.8
CIWCTllS
.......
II&
.....
FIT Mon--Frl 7:30eirTMom. H .30 /Hr. 8eneflt1. 5-41-5525. eek for Liie
St 1 part of the wi1nitc
team, bt a part of Heit·
Inc promotions •• ttis one, and earn EXTRA
MONEY for the stlt-
MO. Apply now!
Call 714-642-4333
Ask tor Carlos
II now -=ceptlng llPPlic•tiona for
management poeltiona. ~la
MCMNry. Ability to woftc well In a
fun, fast.paced erwtronment la
eaaential. Futl m9dical 8nd dental
t>enefita a t>onua p&.n. a.aary
commenauratie with experience.
PleaM call 8'9ve Wlli8ma tor .,,
~tmenl
o.m-11 am, 2pm-4pm
7JU fMIJYffJ~
HICIUf1I
What action do you take?
A.-Your hand is su11ablc for play
in clubs, and nothina clst Clue
partner in on your ~vcn-card ~u11
by rebidding three clubs
Q.4-Both vulnerable, as South you
hold:
+ IU9 Q1"'3 '1 J52 • 1•
Partner opens 1he bidding with one
heart. What do you respond?
A.-Therc arc tho~ '4hO belin'c
.. .. .. ..
.. .. .. .. .. ..
..
·.
that any lime you have five-card
\Uppor1 for partner's major. and•
limned hand. }OU should lnp to
~ame. lndudt u\ out \.\ e insist on a
\Ingleton \Omewhcrc. This hand i1 · •.
tOO balan..:C"d (Or 8 JUmp lO game, SO • ••
'<'C would \Cllk for a raise to two
heart\.
Q.S-Both 'ulnt'rablt'. as South you
hold
• \.old K.143 KQ7 + KQJ964
The b1dJmll ha~ proceeded:
\.\HI North Wt Souti.
I • Pa~ 2 • '!
What acuon do ~ou take~
A.-Normall)', when the opponents
ha'c bid one ma1or and you hold
the 01hcr. vou 'hould enter tht" auc-
tmn "'"ha takeou1 double if ycu an
,11ong enough to compete. Here,
ho'<'t'"CI. there'' too great a d•spari-
t\ in the 'u"' \.\ t' '<'ould opt fOf a
thrcc dub O\crca ll.
Q .6-Nc11hcr \Ulncrablc. as South
\OU hold
• A95l AJ K~ •K.fJ
T he b1dd1ng ha.' proceed~:
"ioulh \.\tsl 1'or1h EaJf
I ~T 2 Pa Pus
\\ ha1 au.on do you take?
A .-A v~ do~ decision. We
would not blame you af you passed.
Howcvcr, our four-card holdina in
lhc othcr ma1or prompis us to dou-
hlc. In thc pass-out ~al. under 1he
overcallcr. that action is primarily
for takeou1.
For upscale Pf'Of ... lonal cllentele . 20 ·30 houra/wk Mu1t be energetic and detail· oriented. Call Kerl , 714-435-9078 I SYDNEY OMARR :Tc ftATRtC WALKER • Counter Peraon Y Altarnoona. Groom-Mondey, A111. I onday. A111. I
lnjtSupplles 988-837 1 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Full Moon pos1uon acce nts ab1ht) ARJES (March 21-.\pnl 20): .\ matter of the heart reall) dOl..'5
H · to chase any hmt of Monday blues. Pnvatc chee nng section exists seem to be the heart of tht matter at the moment. but "h> as!>. for
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
DELIGHTFUL trvtne Co out of sight. Fulfillment of aspirauon more than mere poss1b1ht). guarantees and assurances "hen deep do"n ~ou must kno" that
need• Inside customer Take the lead nothing of an~ real value "111 be ach1eH'd unlll certain financial ACROSS aarva rap. Take and fOI· · osbstacks are remO\ ed~
low up phone orders.~ TAURUS (Apnl 20-Miu 20): Focus on Po"-er. authont). TAURUS ( 1\pri1 2 t-Ma) 11 )· much seem~ to depend on tlle i:ooriy
~ l .. ..e ott
,sg HIOflwaY '°' ~=:' :"'~ t: willingntss to compete with big leaguers. Full Moon highlights successful outcome of nego11at1ons. and the reactions of close 5 Ruuian,..
Min typing & flllng. business. c.:arcer. chance to put concepts into action. Spec131 'lu cccss associates 0 ,er a financial arrangement However. the influence., of ,: ='°"t>ua c-
60 ~tlT*I
6 1 Otttn«1tle
Ntamkr Xlnt benefit• indicated m dealings with older men. a lunar cdipS4.· m .\quanus are far too trong no" for )OU to put ts Soft or1n11 c.tl 724-0555 M·F be-· h ti c.n.o 62 Cat ·O-• lailS
113 H111d tween T:30-3:00PM GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Emphasis on 1deahsm. commun1ca-up "1th dcla> ing tactics muc longer 17 E1ec:tr1e111 t1on . chance to let others know whtrc you are and of }Our GEMINI (Ma> 22-June 21 l: No one seems 10 understand JU"t un11
6-4 Potato Ouds
6!> fJI llC\l1M llLMIY•lftll In Newport BMdl. llHlble hourt, great working condltlon1. Call
548-~880.
DOWN capabilities. What had btcn shut down "111 be rtopened . .\cccnt ho" scns111' c and t'mot1onalh vulnerable \OU arc Howr,cr at the 1e Frenct1 city
oubhshing. education. distribution. momrnt )OU cannot afford to wear -,our heart on )Our <,lec'c or. ~~ valld
worse. :ill<>" }Our feelings to 1nfluenCl' \Our Judgment and decision~ Valencia oolO 1 Fa1nray 1>o1
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Answcfr to q~csubo1n: Yes. 11me1 for o'er a financial arrangcmcn1 or agreement. ~~ ~~ ~ ~o::'nat
fresh start. more independence. Let goo com1ona c past. pot 1ght CANCER (June 22-Jul ) 23): You hn'c nn l'normous admiration 23 Most nervous 4 r11 tOf IEITIL OUllllll on romance. St)lc, creativity, willingness to take risk. Leo will figure for those who ha'e preceded )OU to the top of the mountain 25 Atr~ s Cotttron1
NMdedforpteuantgroup prominently. Howe"cr. don"t spend too much time con'11dermg othc.-rs· ach1c'l'· ~~~~~bl 6 lambH•e practice In Newport I r. l h f l 1 Away from ttwl Beech. 4 day.-. + ·~ LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Answer. Time for partnership cooper-men ts now. an< 1a1 mg to sC'C J USl ow tu you can travc once ct'rtain 29 01t1 ot ~ w;nd
dey alt9fn•te Saturday. ation. commitment that could include chanie of mant~l status. praC't1cal or fin~nc1nl P~~b.lems hn'c lx'cn rcsoht'd 32 -plexus a An 9<Jb1«t
Good beMflta. 840·1122 Focus on intuition, teaching and learning, settling of family dispute. LEO (Jul~ A ·.\ug .•• ). Cnalkngmg a~pects seem to md1ca.1c that ~~ ~~ecsr!., 1~ ~.
HITIL IY.E.llT Silver coin could figure prominently. you. arc torn bct"-CCn holding on to the pa'lt and making quail a fc" ~ Suwot1• 11 eun1c .. radical changes. Plump for the latttr. and go against the ad' ice of 39 Holldey ~ 17 "Bron•• NMded fOf Toeadaya & Thurldays In a pleaMnt
group prectlce In New-
pon BMctl. C.U lor Int•·
view, 840-1122. ....... Muat l'leve eXP9(1ence.
Se 50/Hr. New hotel. 722-2"9 Ext. 302
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Diversify. be aware of dress eodc an) doubting Thomases "ho 1ma1inc that )OU can't be md<.'pendcn1 40 P1en1-11.-13 Nl tMm
lcpl requirements, documents that must be located. Take cart 0 j and self-sufficient. 42 C'!v.~ 71 1n •
practical matters early -ev('ning hours could feature entcnammcnt VIRGO (Aug. 24-Sept. 13): The Full Moon in .\quanu' onl~ •3 ~ 24 ~:: •• romance. Saginarian plays role. · cauttons ~ou not to become invol ed 1n an} form of mtngu(· or 44 Carry n Coe! untts
,, . Po"-Cr-strugalc. Those "ho ~m desperate for )Our suppon at the '5 Vehlde 21 1rrf!OU1111•v ~BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. •• ). Some ma)' feel )OU arc tied '" knots. moment "ould soon forget and C\en blame )OU 1fth1n1s "'<'nt "rong. ~ ~c:'.ch• notehed
You II soon prove them wrong via crcall\C act1 v1t) that includes LIBRA ( pt 24--0ct. B>: -\ challenaio.g Full Moon in ihc mo~t 5, ~ 29 a.tOfe lonQ advent~tt. discovery. addt;d populant). Full Moon position scns1tl\c arta of \our solar chr n should put )Ou on \our mt"ttk. and 54 Mena. ~ ~ ''"'
tmphaSIZCS Jkrsonal magnetism. SCX appeal. hopeful!) also mal>.c )OU awar: that no one can fortt ~l)U 10 fC\eal 56 ~I 32 Chuf'Cf\ 9roue>
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Negot1at1ons that had been matters )OU f~l ue too persc nal and pnvat(' e'en 10 he' d1~ussed s1 FllfNCI YIQ6on.. : F~::'.
36 Nof\·tH C1MI
38 CON(>tt Ky
• 1 f eleOflOne
compeny •o 42 l uaurlate
4S Poem e>ertl
441 Rod
47 Esc~t
48 ~OCIOrtoort
49 Oeugt11er of
EARN $395 A DAVI Work At Home Call
1 ·f00...M4..2255 Ext 778 114 ... moribund suddenly come to life. Property. sccunty mvolvl'd along at the momt'nt. m•uw 35 Bil•"•
with relationship including older ttlat1ve. Thrtt md1v1duals are SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)· Whal )OU arc c\pcnt'ncmg or r::---Y::--""T:"-r:--. .,,.__,,,,.....--r.:,....-""'""-
playlna sianificant l"Oles in your hfc. encountcrtn• no" ma ) "'ell relatt to tvents or dt' tlopmcnt "'h1ch 1 2 3 • e 7 8 .......... ,,..
¥/T for wel tinown galery.
NB. Exp. raferencea. bondable, 1'11,1'1 com·
mleelon. 875-1 73.
Mft II di 11111
llD TUUllU
Red Cron eutflorliact provlct•r looklnt ror
oer11ftact lnttrvctOf for
Mlle ftttt Mt and C.P A. .,..,.., c.lt ..... It ...
M(n4)S41 .. 3.
SAGmARJUS (No"" 22-Dcc. 21 ): Focus on homt, security.
money, desire for afTcction. Full Moon htghlt-hts tnps. v1s1ts.
revelation by older relative that provides solution to dilemma.
Maintain emotional equilibrium.
CAPRICORN (Occ. 22-Jan. 19): Fundina 1s available followina
delay that will not cxCCC'd two weeks. PcrfC'Ct trchniqucs. streamline
procedures. act clear outline of what 1s rxp«tcd. Lunar postt1on
hiahliahts money, income valuables.
AQlJARJlJS (Jan. 20.Fcb. 18): Full Moon 1n )'Our s1•n
cmpha lies intri4uc. publicity. romance. Relation hip 1 trona.
rontrovers1aJ. exc1tina. fulfilhna. Pre urc of dcadhnc c~"" C'a ncer.
Capr1com persons play roles.
took place SI:\ months 110. Ho"cvcr. now ~ou kno" who to 1ru t t---+--+--t--
and who has an C)t to the main chance end would ha' t nQ qualms 14
in join1n1 forces apinst you.
SAGm'ARIUS (Nov. 23-D«. 21): The full Moon in <\quanus 11
marks a major tumma point in close/personal rclat1onstups. How-t=-:-1'--.----
cver. il is entirely up to you either 10 say your fond farewells or to 20
hold on and firmly btlic"e that rvcn the arcatNt of financial ~-+-t-~
obstacles can and will bt ovrrcomt. 23
CAPIUC01'N (Dec. 22.Jan. 20): It is true to say that Wt'lll
transpires now will afford )Ou the chanct you have been waiting for.
whether 1t be to reveal more about }'Our true character and feclinp,
or 51mpl y to brina an C"Ctrcmc1y d1f1\cult cpisock. as far as financn
are conctrntd, to an end.
AQVA.IUlJS (Jan. l 1 ·Fcb. 19): Ltke Gtm1n1ans and Librans you
art captbk of p&a)ina man roles.. and no doubt )Ou have quite a
numbtr )'Ct to try. Bui the one of man)r no lonaer fh lunar
PllCa (Feb. I 9·March 20): You could be called upon to be cthptr m qua.nus means lhat tbett can bt no mott ufTenna 1n l':':'-+-t-~
chaperon. Lona·tttm ttlationship undtfJOC! combination of test and s1knct.
transformation. Sccrtt mttti~ plays s1antficant role. Pt>Wb1bt y of •PDC-ca• .. (Ffl>. 2()..Marcb 20)~ You have so much dcttmunauon.
joumcy will be rcvHltd tonilJlt. Cnct'I)' and uniappcd ertall\C abthtics it mu t be .,.,..vall"I 1n t~
ii!_ ~ ., c tl'fme havi""S almost to pkld for an opportun1t to prove your
IP AUG. ' II YOlJll BlllTHDAY: You art mu 1cal. aruslJ(. worth. Ho-ever. "'hat )Ou e'~ncn« or d1tc0"'Cf no.,. will be
cttali"e:C:in tic 1elf-1ndusnL Taurus.. Libra, Scotpt0 penons play tnvaluabat th~• tM ttma1ndcf of the )ft' lrP-t--4~ ..... _...,~
imponant roles 1n your lift. umat ~ cmpl\alua ~
ldjUlllMIU •ha• could include cha• of'raecltntt or mantal ltllUS. IP AVG. I. YOUll amnmAY: thm lMtt is onl)' OM WI)'
OUnna A•utt you'll travel. •rite. commun~1e and n1n. RolT\lntic to top othtts 1n llwtr tl'9Cts "°"' and tlu1 is ht al1owtf'I •hrin to 1nvolv~mcnt could bKome "'°" xnoua than Of'111n&lly pla11ned In bt1it"C thal thq havt "°" 1 bettlt and aft cn1111ed to tCMnc kind hr+-'"4~+-.~
$q)tembtr tmphb11 will M on famil~ ttt111onthips. income. chance o( rc-ard Of tcttkmcnt Very thonly, howevtr. )OU wtll bt IM OM .!::!!..!::.!!!~~!"r'!L,..--~to=..,:c~nhancc · 1ftdcuti in on ~idta=.::=~;.._--.._ ______________ ~.;.;..:.:.ho::....:c~m~e:.:.-::.:..;s~tron~11e;,;;r~fi~M1';;.;...:lnd.1.bo~~~t--•l-l.Mfttt-.--.~--~-------~~~~~==:::!=':::
Zeus
~ AQncuhur•
dell)'
St Tops
S2 Siie> CMlf
53 Alto
SS W .... se .... 110•
10 11 t2 13
35' Newport Beach private
slip S 175. gated. good
parking, Jjm , days
847-3581
DOCK-15'. lront tje on
channel In N Bl Musi be
low enough ror bridge.
5350/mo 675·6606
SLIPS AVAILABLE
36' Sllp & 40' Slip
at 3 10 1 West Coast Hwy .
Newport Beach Call * 646-1236 *
Misc. TraruportatJon
Camptrs/Trai~rs 00 I 4
1975 Terry Trailer. 30' fully
equipped $4 500
646-9238
LET US
SELL YOUR
CAR
no strings
attached
the
Daily Pilot
and
Independents
Guarantee
We will sell your car. If after 3 weeks
your car isn't sold, we will run your ad
for free!
NO STRINGS ATTACHED.
Just call us to renew your ad.
Run 10 words for 3 weeks at $18.50, 55t each
additional word. Must be prepaid. A word conshtutes
anything that has a space between It.
For individuals only
r -~-----------------------, I NAME I
: ADDRESS :
I CITY ST. I
I PHONE ZIP I I • I
: CHF.CK# MASTERCARON ISA# :
AMOUNT ENCL. EXPIRATION DATE
I SS¢ each addi1ionaJ word
I I
I I
MAIL 10: DAILY PfLOT. 330 W. BAY ST., COAST
MBSA CA 92626ATT'N: NO STJUNOS AlTACHeD
I
I
I
L-~-----------------------~
.. .......... ....
37K ml White. altcellent
condition S t 2 500
4 9 8 • 1 0 2 2 I H
775-3306/W
VW 1815 CM>frofflt
llllltlEW
1110 LE IAHI 4·1R
One Only =7030
$11,117
HITlllTll IHCll
CIHSLH
11111 WCI ILYI
142-0111
IHIWEYlll
IUClll
TllROllll OIR IEW
l•PllOYEI
LOWER RITES
VIM" J 1---J
$2.44 per day
That's ALL you pay tor
4 fines, 30 doy minimum
In the
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For more 1nlorma11on
CALL TODAY"
ISi FOR LOIS
Your
Se111ice D11ec;101y
Rapresentauve
142-4321
Ext. 310
Moving down under. mut t --------•I Mii Perlec:t white. con-.,...
verllbla. 54K m llaa. -·n•T 11.SOO Cati H0-13 12 5 8')Md. t.cl, A/C Am/fm
A CIUttllld .0 • lor I hllla
VUY lie commanoe 11o1 of ati.nttoft
C.aeetl•. •Int cond
mt au
.... llJ~I
Why
run all Oft!' town when you
can locat. ~for your an-
tique auto in cJa.iliecl? .. --
r••kfHt , hmct\ and
"'•• uree prd Lott Of l'luDt ~ pl•y. ... ~
LOVING mo1'"9f often
lunch. INIClla. TLC. top,
to Y°"' 0-Syr otd Me*el
becicgrnd M 1·tcM• C M
Japanese Cteanlng Svc -
Complete Home & Small
Busmess Reliable Hard·
C,,ir,1q1· :; "" "'
Opt•n1·r, • • • • • working Call 545-0679 S 1 ecllonal & 1 p ece doors
RELIABLE Houseclean Springs-Hardware-Opnrs
Elo:penence Relerences Lie " 518398 9e3-8466 Very Good Pricn. L1t11c
Engllsh LUPE 543· 7652
HIHTIAYIU
Rt>gular Hou secleaning
Svc Shampoo carpets.
floors-windows 631-8511
*H H Al
•Paint • Rafur blshlng
•Carpentry •Drywall &
more Gary 645-5277
• RAINBOW C»cle M•lnt.
Cua1om Conc:t94e I M.-P.Jnting. Int.EAi HouM &
IOfWY. Lie. 512913. Quell-Apt. Ouat. Job Fr .. etl.
ty guwanteect. M0-7739 St. llC.,569897 636-1758 --~ --
~.!' t , J' I' t
• • .. .. • ·1_ mnP&1m11
HI I
HANGING/STRIPPING
LIC"560875 VISA-MC
673-1512 SITTING SERVICES
"Senior" Sllters Live-In.
Lie Bonded. 720-0707 S & S WALLPAPERING
L E T T H E P R 0-Custom Installation ..
FESSIONALS DO IT! 95% Removal. Interior Paint
ot cases no lee involved. Free est Jim 540·6~
House and/or pet tit WE gals snd hang togelhet
Worried abool leavmg an Total Interior Remodeling
elderly person 1n your Service ADVICE TO THE
home for ext ended CRAZY 633-7172
pe11od1? Our job 11 •
eltmlnating your worry "
Construe t1on
& Bu1ld•ng ' e.gt~!~~~:.r I
CALL Bruce 847-0780
while your gone · not add-Int I t patch a1tetlng.
1ng to 11 Responsible. custom texturing. quality
heal1hy. bonded mid-work Problems-No Pro!>-I
aged persons will rune<-fems' •326864 554-7631
~~~~: :e1~~k!h~r~o:;: El'S PUSTilllf ,
,, ...,., . ' ' ') .. ;
REMODELING
YOUR HOME? ..
Call
ZAZA Construction
v-18 Years Experience
V' Financing Available
v-FREE Consulation
v-Excellent References
200/o Discount on Blueprints
Norm Zaza Builder
854-9464
l •MMll
away Leave & en1oy Resluccos. Patches, I
yoursell wlconltdenca Textures. Rapalra lnl/Ext
t2 yr1 In CdM 675-3873 Free est. 963-3418 t
11Ynet-.LMll Ouellty ilina.d
Cuttomera. Alcn9rd Sinor •~== It.~ Int Raft) 84&-7toe ------PlllTmlWIUllPll At MOVAL Prompt •nd
AMIOn•ble &42·5937 ..... ,.,..
S t2/Hr t MATEAIAlS
Aet«enca. 875·400e
CUT l ROLL PAINTING
tnt/f1tl Lie Bonded. Fr• •t All work .,.,_,,MO
Lie • 5 t03'4f 4M-7020
THE 8£Sl, NOW TAY
THE BEST
'**BOST *'* WIND<)W ClE.ANING ave
Aetidtntl .. /Oommercl•I
Conttructlon C!Mn Up.
HI PAESSUAI! ST!AM
CL!ANINO
••2St-1171 ••
.... ,im!m •MtNI blr'8 V .....
INT !EXT. SPI CtALllST PtMted tMdM. Wood b~ reft 1424111 binds. Oev6d M0-1114
tSERVICESf
!':;r,:':' CLASSIFIE
Read the classlfted paces
and you will find someone
to handle your needs.
_mll.l!!!l._ Sl!mta ..... .,.. !WUC .. ~ ..... lllO-~ •OT1Ct
1:r" .. 1ntt1 adl:I,,':. ..:=f,'l:ln Wla\&11 1Wi = ~ • lltllr 11' c::al.,lllfrll 0
.. _llllf Te .... "' CH'N,_W ,..-,aw llle ...... ..,_ .. ,,_ ........ ..,_.. W ,,. ....... __. .. 1--:.:llm:lw:lill .._ ~.,:1.w. ....... DlllrtM: MIW· . U.& ..... .....__ ___._ "-Ha.._. Or ... C... ....._ ~-!!!!' .. llO"T·MllA UNl'11D -·-·· AT\.AI 0. ... -H W1UV OOllPN«, 0.,... ...... tt ... ,_ flOllfT ~ M-RftlJ!al I II
...,_ WHn !O "otect N91M 0...0-'"-Ctty of Hufttlft,_Oft C111 tat17 , C111 .-a M-Oll .. 1a • ......,. ....._ Cllf. n. ~.,.. .. .. ·-°' ..... Nit-ICHOOl. DllTNCT NcMloell.._IMn.,... ._ColleLw.CWMw. ,., ...... , W.· 11, 1tlO Ma. 1300 ..... ~ .,.., ii •
NO •Alne Alm •ANn Mlonl'111n-COtOMdetMer ...... c...-. ~ Jedi~ aoea ......... l-.... ~. ... ~-;~::=~lmll ... .i 1 i...i;... ~ ... ~~.!. ..... w H !:...~ ~=~one ,., T ... Cowe LaM. eoe.. ....... t .. '"' w"'"'lftlttw, w... ~ ... ·-,,,:~~· = ~~ OUTTUl.A~"'=!t (I 'It ,o -.....,. • _..., 81 ..,. ---· ~ 2l, ol II "'°'· ,..._ c.11 tatl7 .._, c.11 '*' ...... 1 '•· 1e141 ,_. c.urt T AYIL IM ,.•daa. ~~:: ~ 1tl0et H·OOe."' ...... ._..,__,., piMI, llll9 ~ .. oon-TNI ~ II COft. '9C1lftlue-I pion...,,.,Calr tatlO ~y~ c.11 •M ...-, ecJL1 -~··· ... • ~ tMPfop-Ptwolllct"9oelpt:Mef\. Md leb«MOfr ....-.. on ..,.,,,..,.lnclM.... ducted~M....,,dl.llf MmlTAW Til6e ~ .. OM-~ c.~· ....,... ............. ~ -.._ eny ~ 11' ~ ~ ........ • UfM Md ,,...,... ....... TM , ..... ,_...,, COM-TM r ..... rant(•I OOM• TM'°'°""" ....... .,. ducted biJ' M IJrldlt••• • -11e 111an1111111i.1111• .. 1d lfl 12.naoo us. CUAAl.N· 2116-A..., en... co.a MC1111, '°',,.,....... ...... '° .,.,... ..,. '° tteftWt ..,.... dOlll9IMilMll• TM ,._..r.,.l(•I '*"· :v~c.m.ttitafoun. ~.,. .. """' ..... -.. ~rili c~ ...... CA... -dlllpOMf Of ........... '""'",,. ~ ,_.. ......... ,.,... CMt.UM COUHllt.M .. .,..... ....... -· c• --,... ~.~ 1 -~E .. _'!!! ~~CW!,....!._O ~ ~Oooumwtlt ~ "°"' -iou. fC>. htlMM N•IM(t) lltled 8utlwe NMleCtl t*ated CC.NTI: ... In ~ It .. ~~H•~ ,..._) II .,.... 1~'f~ ~= =-::: ..... C11L ..._,. .._.....,..,_~, Od9_... to ... picked 1IP IWM 11 ~In N Cltt Of Hunt• ab0\111 on: NIA aeiowe on· Aclfll 1. 1Nt hltl n . ~ ..._, ---·-..• "-· m bleft tlOn I 1471/ 11'18 by the ~ or at walltttwough 1n41tOn hactl Jedi AuiWtl8C:ik H T wie.y Ce* taM3 aeiowe Oft: N1iJ tteO taln Vt/ltey, Cell! lt10I 1
by CECL MAN< NtwPort hach POilet 0.-WALl<THAOUOH Awelll· ~Of the~ lot TNa ..... ,........... Thia ......... it........ Tefft p .... In L.C.a.w .. VICikl L Wlcallftton .!:.~,,.,:,,.. ... .::. :~:.:.--In N .....,, pan~1. ltwough of .... tit• II ICflad. 011ot1UC>fll A fJ.W. HO. wit!\ tM County Clwk of Or· Wltfl,,. ~ty ~Of or-9141 ..... 1....-n or.. Thll ...... ,.. ... hied _, =:: Tiit . .... ..... court~....,.,._ ~.. The Pf~Y WU Mind "*' for Auguat 14, '"° It I0-42.a.ot 1t mtrt be • lf'\08 CollnCy on ~ 25 ..... County on .My 24, HunllnttOft -..-. Callf • ..,., the County c... ot Of· ,..!:.cti t=. = ......,'r ._ ~ of OA . wtth rtepect 10 ~ viol· 10:00 a.m Pr~ bid• t8'Md from the oflloa o1 the 1MO 1MO r.tMO lt\08 Coun1y on Jut-f 14, ...., .. flt r a THE .... _ PETITION ••Ion• of Section f 13&9 of data era to"*' at tN Min· ~~lot tM ,... .._ .,.... bUeiMM ta con• 1MO ;: llll'tOWN•~•~) 11 .. _ ;:,_. ...,,,,,..; ::.. ,....... .... t CECll the HMlll\ Md Satety Code llGM*\I Suopor1 SWV1CM Cffy of Huntington lead!, PutleleNd Ofln08 CoaM PublW!ed Ofllll99 Co.at duCted by. an lndMdual r.-MN .. -. , 11 1llO
MAN< SIU.I lie :Z:::.'" You are '*IC>y notified that ~. 2'85-A 8w StrMt, 2000 Main BtrMt, P.O. 110a Da1ty Piiot Aueuat I , 13, 20, Daily Piiot J..ltiJ 30. ~utult I , The ratl11r.,,t(t l com· ~ublllMcf Or:.r: ~ ~ ~ ~ :~ic::::: ~~~.~":~n~l.~ ~~c:im:.,~;~2.1:~': ,':C:·n~·~r4~·,c::; 21· 1"° M-413 1'·~·1"° M.oer :::*~ 1~1ct= ~~-July:IO. •· wlttl~=6:°'~ Mlhn.:.-=a:-~
.. decedltnt. PfOCM<llngt to forlel1 the d91111t. Bid• will not be ac-531-6221. OuotMloM etl8ll ~ NMle(tl tlttect M..o60 County on i. .... 1i County --11. THE PETrTION 1.l>O.,...dncrlbed properly oepted lrom contrecy10tl be tublftllMd on the City •-,,. llftftH: ebo"9 on: NIA = · -1 • = ~ lw dtc:ledefll'e put~ant to Health and Sat• not a111ndlng 1hlt waMt-lotm, Md Ill*' be Pfepered ,.._ ...,,,_ "9lJC MOTIC( Twrl P. ,_tldn MUC llJTJC( 1 ,_., 1 ._.. WILL 8ftd codlcll, W My, ty Coclt S.ctlon 114M.4. lhrc>ugh. In accordance with the ,.. '1Cnnoul .,_.. Thie et..,,.,. .. ni.d • ~ ()fl C... be~IOPf*te. You11e1n11ructedlh1111 NO~tCE IS HEA!8Yquir~ttOftheAf.Q .. MMmlTATW '9Cnnoul.,._ll wltl\ttieCountya.kolOf· '9Cnnou1Mlll•M ~~~3~ Dally PIOt .-=•n 10
Tht .. 8ftd eny ooclcll youdMlr11ocont•tlhetor· GIVEN lhat th• above· plan•\ 19«lflcat1on1, cs. The~,.,....,. um tTATlmWT 111199 County on ~ 25. IUlm ITA~ ,., t 8 13 lMO · • Augu9t • 13 ,..., • ' .. 8Vlllli* tof felture or llllt property, nam.d Schocil"Olatrlct of Or· ilc:riclt1on of wort!, Md /or dofno ~ •· The followlnQ '*'°"' 11• 1990 TN fOllOwlng pwlOftl •• l9t' ' ' M..o34 ' ' .....a ~ In "9 • Mpc pursuant to HeaJtj\ and Saf9. 111199 County.CA, llC11ng by otw ~ti fufnlthad. Uff PAOOUCTS 983S doirlo bueltllla U ' ,.._ ~ ~ •: ~ the coutt. tr coci. Sectloil I 14N 5. and through It• Gollefnlng Ouo!Atlon INll be .,.,_ H~ • . l ts LIE ANN c 0 s. Publlehtld Orano-COMt p ' s PAOOUCTS 19083 ·-I# -THE PETITION you mutt Ille• Vel'lfled ctaJm Board. herlnatter referred to mftted In a ....o ~ °'~ Aw., eyp, .... METICS. 300 CagMy Lane. Delly PllOt A~1 I. 13, 20, Syc.-nore Glen Of., TretNco ---------_.....;.--;..;:::=;..;;..,~•.;;;;;;;--...._ ~ ~ to 11ate1ng your lnltrest In the u "DISTRICT". will bMtlng the firm name and Callf~ Mceotd etS3 Ute 112. Newport &Mdl. 27 1tto Cyn •. Calif. m7t Pia.IC .,TIC( '9Cnnaul • I 911 11C111•11911f the -... P<Ol*tY You must fl .. thlt up to. but not lattt 11\an the , .... and lhell be clMf1y Or .____:..A cYPrw. Calif 92$43 M-oe5 Pu La Roc:cO. 19083 9U1m ITAi IT undef h l~IC cltlm In Ille Superlot Court •bo~atalad lime, ..-ct mulltd "A.F.O No. c.:f~ 119 ' Poractiwerllt Inc , Cali· SyamoreGlenOr TratlYco l'tCTTnOUe.,_11 The...._ ........ AdnWnllilralon of ~ of Ille County ol Orange bld1 '°'the aw.td of 1 con-80-422-otHI" lot the RE· Th.la b sl 1 ton"8. 710 W. ti St .. Coet. P\aJC MOTIC( eyn Calif t287t MAim ITA,._-, dolfll ~-Ad. (Thie authority .. within thirty (30) dtyt Of IM l18GI lot the at>oYe Pf()ject MOVAL ANO DISPOSAL Of ducted b u .::;~con-...... Celif. t2827 &;. La Rocco. 19013 The foMowlng l*'IOfl9 .,. K (VIN MCFADDEN.
elloW the ~ flrtt publication ot thlt No-Bids shall be receNecl In HAZARDOUS MATERl.ALS The r~lllrant(I) com-Tl'll1 butlnMI It c:on· rteTITIOUe ....... SyeamoreGlen Or , Trtbuoo d<*IQ ~ •· t55•5 Comput• L•ft•,
19pr...udYe IO .._ tlce, unless YoU receive lhe place ldenUfled tbov9. FROM VARIOUS LO· menced to transact bull· dueled by• c:ofPOtlllon MAm ITAnmwT Cyn .. c.111 t2879 THE 125 TOW SERVICE. HIHlllngton a..cti. c:.MI. IYWl~lofw wflhout actual notlee Please uM Su-and 11\111 be opened and CATIONS IN HUNTINGTON nw undet the Flc:trtlous The regltlrant(t) c:om· The fOllowlng perton1 are Thlt bu1lnes1 11 con-1312 Sanla Ant Canyon Rd 92149
obla COUtt 8PPf'OYlll. perlor Court Number publicly read aloud at the BEAC. But1net1 Name(•) titted menced 10 lranNC1 bual· dolngbutlneu•· ductedbyllusbanc:landwtte •291. Anahlfm Hiia, c.t. Amertc:an Oppom''"''
8eklre ~ '*'I 82~25. You must--.. an above 11atad UrM and plac.. OucMatlon ~ be auO-•t>ove on Juty 12 1990 neee under the Flctlllout HAIA An EA, 1055 El Th• reg111ran1c11 com· 92I07 Publiet\er, inc.. CeMlomlll, ~I ~1 endorsed copy of the Clalm E.ctl blddlf mutt Mlbtnlt mltled on or before 4 00 Robef"t J Mce0rd BualneH Name(•) lltted Camino Or . Suite A. Coll• menoecs to lrlflMCI 11u• Sandy Kamel, 1312 San .. 15545 Compc.1Utr l•M. tioWeWt. ~ per90n• on the Dls1r1c:1 Attorney ot with~ bid a certified Ot P.M on Thuraday. AUOUll Thia staierneni wu filed abolle on June 11. 1990 M .... Calif t282e ,,... under tht FlcOtloul An• Canyon Rd •211, HunUngton e..etl. Cellf. ntpr.-ni.ttv. Will ~ Orange County IAUn tom cashief • cMek payable to 18. 1990. to Ille Purcl\allng with Ille County Clefll 01 Or· Mlfll CoolcMy Ptlll J Hayea, 123 w 15th ButlneH Name(t) ll•l•d Anehelm Hlltt, Calif 92807 92949 19quw.t to give nob IO 8om1, Deputy 0.1trk:t Al· lhe DISTRICT or• bid bond Department ot Huntington • Counly on July 18 Tiils 1t1tement wu fifed s1 • 1D. Newport Beeell. at>oYe on JUiy 12. 1990 Thil bu11ne11 la con· Thi• tMlaineu la con-lni.r.e.d J*'eoM in.. torney) al 700 Civic Center, In the lorm Ml torlh In the Beactl. 2000 Main StrMt 1= · with the County Clerk of Or· Calli 92663 Paul u Roeco ducied by· an lndMdual duCteCI by: 1 c:orpOratlOn they MW walwd nob or Ot1ve West. Santa Ana. CA contrect documents In am PO. Bo• 190, Hunlington ,..,..,. ange County on July 24, DouQlU c . Haya. 823 w This statement wu tiled Tne regl11rant(•) com· The reglttr111t(1) oom· ~e.d '° the propotll9d 92701 wtthtn tan ( 101 days ol amount not leu tl\an 5% of BHch, Callfomla 92848 Publlshed Orange Coaet 1990 15th St • 10. Ntwport with the County Clefk ot Or· ~ lo tranNC1 bu111-mencec:1 to tr....ct """°' KllOll.) The ~ndenl the flllng or the cletm In tne, the maximum 1moun1 ot bid Quotaliona received atter 0 ii Pilot Jul 23 30 ,....,.. Beach. Calif 92ge3 ange County on Juty 18, MM under the Acrttooua ,,... under ttie ~
admlniittr•lion •ulhoritv Superior Court/ Clvlljas a guarantee that the bid· the above time and date wi" A~~•t 8 13 1Jo ' · Publllhed Orang• Cout Tnia butlneH 11 con-1990 8 ualne11 Name(t) lltted evalnes• NtfM(t) lteted !!Wil b9 ll'M uni.. •ii DM11on der wlll tnler Into lh• be refeeted. The Clly re· · • M-036 Daily P110t July 30, August 8. duetec. by husband and wife ,_,,.,, above on. May 24, 1990 abOYe on: Jliff s. ttecl tnl«"li<t aon fllea 811 The tallure 10 llmety Ille proposed con1rac1 11 the Mfllfl lhe rlghl to rtj41ct any 13, 20. 1990 The reglslranl(I) com· PubllSheCI Orange Colet Sandy KlllM4 Jam. w. A.,..n objection the P91111on and tHtc:ure a v9fllled clalmlsame Is awarded to tueh Ind all quotatlon1.·lneludlng M-054 ni.oced 10 uanaac:I bull· Dally Pilot Juty 23. 30, Thll 111tement wu llled Thlt l1atefNl'lt ... ....,
and 8howe oood C8U8e stating an 1ntllfflll In the bidder In the event of failure lmcompltl• quotatlont, "8.IC M>TtCC nut under the Flclltlout August 6. 13. 1990 With Ille Co.Inly Clerk of Or· wtth the County a.ti of Or·
why U'9 ooutf~ not property 1n the Superior lo enter Into Hid contract. quotation• with Ir· flCTfTIOUllUIMll Bu11ne11 Name(•) llsl•d M--038 111199 Counly on July 25, 111199 Co.Mtty on~ 25, 9f8"l h attM>rity. Cour1 will result In the prop-such seeurlly will be fOt· regularltlel. or quotations NA• STATl•NT "8.IC M)TIC[ above on Augull 15. 1990 1990 1990 A HEARING on lie t1tty being declared or or·1fe11ed. with quallllttt Pll1t I Heyea ....,,TIC[ ,.._ .......
pe*ion will be hMd on dered lorfatt to the State of The DISTRICT reMl'VM Quotation• ltllll be open. TN following persons are FICTITIOUS.,..... This 11atement wu flied rta.JC "" Publlttled Or111199 Coast ~ Or111199 CoaM
AuQYal 30, 19GO .. 1 ~5 Ctlllornta and dlSlrll>Uled Ille rtgh1 lo rajeet any Of' •II ad Immediately afler lhe dO:.i'o bu~= '!No SPA NA• ITATl•NT wtlh lhe Counly Clerk ol Or· FICTTTIOUa ....... Dally Piiot Aug&nt e. 13. 20. Delly Pttol AUOU91 I. 19, 20,
P.M. In ~l 3A locat9d at pursuant to th• provisions oil bids or lo waive any Ir· above lime In Iha pretenee 2•49 l SI •B Coal • TM IOllOwing pereons tt• ange County on July 16. NAm ITATl•NT 27 1990 27, 1tto 700 Civic t.n• Dftlle Health and Safety Code Sec· regu11111oes or tntormalltlel ot any bidder 0t bidder•, 0t ,_ emon · • dotng l>Ullnnt u 1990 M..ote M-414 w .. t. s.nia An8. CA tton 11489 wrthOIJI lur1her In any btdS or tn the bidding 11 ther• be none on such day Mesae . Calif 92828 y IMPRESSIONS BY ANN ,...,. TM:::::::;: P9'1onl .,.
92701. notoee or l\je1r1ng No l>tdeltlf may wllhdr-and time Mlec:ted by tile radley Allen eager, MITCHELL. 3334 E Cs1 Pubhthed Orange COU1 ~ " ------------IF YOU OBJECT TO Pvbl**' Orange Coas any bod for a period of forty· Purctoltlng Manager 2M9 lemon SI •B. Coale Hwy Sta 185. C0ton1 del Delly Ptlot July 23. 30, C UISE VENTU~S . --.---.,.-""-----"8JC nu1~
h gran*'a Of the~. Dally Pltol July 23 30111ve (45) Clays after the date The 1vcc:esstul bidder MesaThl. Calbil ~282fl 1 • Mtt. Cahl 9282S August 6 13 1990 =. ~1C::2~n · 11 l"VUU\f ""'~ -'9C-1Tn0Ue--....--..-. ....... -.-.-.. --you 9hould' 8PP9• .. lie Augusl 6 1990 sel lor the opening ot bids 1t1at1 tvrnlltl all 1nsuranc. ' us ntss 1 con Ann M 11che11 2 1 4 M--04 1 IOU9 .,.._ -J M~ 8nd elate Y'OU' · M04., A Payment BonCI and a oertltlclt• or 0111er required dueled by •n lndMdull Ftlfnteal Corona de! Mar Jaell Auerback, 2082 SN r.cmr .. IUlm ITATW
AhlArlionl ot ftl9 wnn.n Pe<10tmance Bond st\111 be aubmlttal• prior lo any The registrantC•) com· Cakl 92625 •-It' ""T'rr Cove Ln · eo.ia Mesa Ctllf H~ ITATl..wf file~,__ .. ~ with ttw court Ml.IC NOTICE required prt0r to execuhon pu1Ct11M ordef being II· n'l4lllCied lo lransaci buSI-Thll buatness 11 con. ..._"" """ S2627 The fotlowlng ~.,. dolr'G ~ea:
b9lore ttw tie.""" Yo.Jr ot Ille contract and lhall be aueCI nea under the ~oc:11tlous dueled by an individual This busmen " coo· 40lng bu*-a 810PHOTONICS ENGl-••nce "''V be In NOTICE on the form 911 forth in the llUeti AINdrie, Pwc~ Buslnets Name(s) ltlled The registrent(I) com· 'tcTtTIOUl IU ... 11 duelecl t>y an ln01v1d\41 SPEEDY COURIER SEA· NEE"AtNQ, 300-8 Sente ~orby ""',Y8 INVITINOaeDS conlractdocumenis Meftater for the Cit of above on September 1. menced to trant1e1 busi· NA• ITA~ The regtttrent(tl com-VICE. 9481 Neolant Dt , 1Mt11f A.,._, coec. MeM.
pelf YO\JyotJ AR~A Notice 11 hertby given th11 Eacti Otdder snan be 1 Hllftll t9fl hech i .. 1• 19811 nesa under the F1c:t1110Us The lotlowtng ~·are menceC1 10 transact bust-Hunllnglon Beach, Caltf CaM 92827 the Board or Trustees of the ftf ' Brldley A YllQ4lf 8 11 d dotng bullnels u ness under 11\t F1Ct1tlOU8 92668 Albert H Q,eto, 300-8 CR~r cred.:: 1 fl• Coast Community College ~:Un.~~ dto ~~" 1~~J~ ~•Shed Orange Coast Th11 1tatemen1 was hied a~:,i;e: N~!me(s) st• HEAL TH CONNECTION Business Name(sl llated Tem long Pl'lan. 4208 Sent• ....,.. Aw.. eo.ta :;-~ OI ri: Otstrtcl ol Orenge County anCI ProlessJoos Co<le Ind Dilly PtlOI AuguSI 2. 1990 •llh the County Clerk of Or· Ann Milchell 177 RtV«Side. Suite 1092. above on NIA Sim.t>vrry Common, Santa MeM, Cellf. 92827 d8ifTi ~ :: oourt Ca11forno1. w111 1ecerve sell· 09 licensed tn th• IOllowtng 'nh.578 ange County oo July 24, This etatement was tiled Newport Beac:h Cell! 92663 Jaoil .a.uerbellc AN. Clllf 92704 Thll buslneu ii oon·
yOUt WI ed 01ds up 10 but no taler C 8 1990 lie C I Cle k I 0 Diane Mltle I.Ill. 518 Thtl statement wu filed Tt111 bualneH II ec>n· Clueted by: 811 indMdual ilnd mail • copy lo fie than 10 30 am. Mondey. classoltcthons A. · · O< F...utt :ith 1 Cou~n Yon ~ulo 2~· 381h SI . Newport Beach. w11h 11\t County Cler1' of Or· dUCled by 11'1 Ind•~" The reglt1r1111(1) com·
personinal ~Pf!9!"la~ Augu11 20, 1990 at the C·~~VUtNINO aOAltD P\8.JC NOTICE Published Orange Coul 1~ Y Y ' Cahl 92663 ange County on July 6, 1990 The reglstranlC•I com· menoed 10 tranMCt ..,._ appo led "J ,,,.. co.,., Purchasing Depar1men1 of Dally Piiot July 30 Augual 6 ,....,. This bullneu Is con· ,..,. menoed to tranaac:t buSI· neea under the Ac:1ttioul
w1hln lour months ll"om aald COiiege dlstrtct located Carol)n •· lloclllf, Dlfec· "'VM ltANCH 13 20 1990 · ' dueled t>y an lndMdual Publlsheel Orange Coast ntta under the FiCUtloul Butlnest NafM(a) ftat.O
lhe d8'8 ol fnl lseuanoe of at 1370 Adams Avenue, ~~· SllPPOff WATllt DtlTltlCT · · M-052 0 P1ub~l~::'J ~~ug ~:• Th• reg111r1n1(1) com· Oa1ty PtlOI July 16, 23. 30, Bullnn• Name(•) lllltd IOOYI on. NI A let~ as PfOYlded In Costa Mesa. C11tlorn1a at P bl~eel Or Coast NOTICl Of' '!LING 1;1 ~O 1 1~ · u • menced to 1rannc1 buSI-Auousl 6. 1990 a.bove on July 30. 1990 Albert M. Cueto
section 9100 of fie wl1oen ume said t>•ds will be u ' ange Of MP<>f'T AND OF nun•ic NOTICE · · --049 net1 under tile Flcttttous M-022 Tam Long f>han Ttlla et..._. -fllad Cal1fomla Probal• Coda. pubhcly opened and read Da9•1
0Y Pi!ol AuguSI 6. 13. A TIMI ANO PLACE '"""" l\A Business Name(tl listed Thll 1111ernen1 •u fifed wttn the County Clettt of Of·
The time for filtng claims tor 19 Mon Of A .. ARING FICT1TIOUI aUllMtH above on July 12. 1990 "8.IC NOTICE with tne County Cletk of Or· 11199 Co.Mtty on Jutf 10, wil not expwe before lour SERVICE MAINTEN~CE THl:RIOH MlATIVE P\8.IC M)TIC( Diane lara enge Coun1y on July 26, 1tto
montis from tie hearing OF PAINTING PRESS TO HAVING llWlfl T~A::O!~T!,"'!,~ are Th11 1111amen1 WIS "*' FICTITK>Ul IUllNIEH 111to ,_
dale noUoed llbove EQUIPMENT ORANGE nunllC NOTICE CHARGal '°" Clot business as flCfrTIOUI 9USINllS with tile County Clerk ol Or-HA• ITATl•NT F.,.14 Put>IWled Oranoe eo.t
YOU MAY EXAMINE COAST COLLEGE ruu CERTAIN PAACIELI H'?RTKE CONSTAUC· NA• STATl•NT ange Counly on July 18. The loltowlng pwsoru .,. Publlllled Orange Coul D•llr Pi4o1 Jufr/ 1(, 23. 30.
the ... Mpl by the co..irt. If All btdl are 10 be II\ ac-DEPARTMENT OF Of' LANO COLLECTED TION ANO DEVELOPMENT The fOllowlng e>e<sont ••• 1990 dOlr>g business.. Olllly PtlOI August 8 13. 20. AUQUI\ 8. 1990
WIU are 8 person cord1nce wlln 11\e Bod Docu· COMMUNITY OH THI: TAX ltOll t0402 Trask Ave Untt E dotng business 15 . F41Mt2 (a)COSTA MESA BRIDAL 27. 1990 M-02t '1-... ttd In the .state menta which are now on !tie DlVllOt'MIENT ANO Garden Grove Catil 926-43. MODERN CONCEPTS tN Publ•she<l Orange Coast DESIGNS lblCOSTA MESA M-087 ----------you ln8Y file with the ooUt1 and may be securl!CI In the ENVlttOMllllNTAL NOTlCI Of Michael David Hartke. CONSTRUCTION 2430 Datly PtlOI July 23. 30 w EDD I NG 0 Es I 0 N
• lonnal Reolesl tor olftce or tne DtreclO< OI ltESOUltCll SECTION PUeLIC HIAlttNG 1948 Anahe;m Costa Mesa Sanll Ana Ave Unit E·2 AuguSI 6 13• l990 (t)COSTA MESA FLORAL ----------Sped.al NoOoe ol lhe llltng Purcn&S1ng ol said school CITY OF NOTICE'' hereby OJYef'I C1111 92627 Cosla llA.,. Calll 92627 M..037 CREATIONS CdlCOSTA PUBlJC M)TIC[
of an Inventory ana d1stroe1 HUNTINGTON HACH thll 1 r9001I hH been hied This business is con· Oetroc.k lee S.rt>e< 2430 MES.A BRIDAL CONSULT· ----------
9f>Pfailal of eslale as!lets Each t>oddlf musl sul>mll No110e •S l"lefet>y given oy Wllh the Sec:ralary of lhe dueled by an 1nc:f!v1Cluat Sania Ana Ave UM E·2 P\8.IC NOTtCC ANTS !elCOST A MESA FlCTfTIOUI ~•• or of any pellllOn or with"'' b•d a t>•d se<:u<1ty in the Departmenl ol Com· Irvine Ranch Water Dtstrtel The reg1strant1sl com· Costa Mese Cal•I 92627 FLORAL (!)COSTA MESA NAm ITAT'lmWT
8CCOUnl as proVlded In an amounl not less 111an live muntty Development En· relallve 10 naving sewer menced to transact t>uso· Tn15 t>usineu 11 con· 'ICTITIOUS IU ... 11 FLOWERS fg)COST A MESA The foMowtng P9ftoN ere sec~ 1250 of lhe per t en 1 1s•,1 or one wonmeo1a1 Resources Sec· charges IOI C9'tain parcets ness uneler the Foe1111ous ducted t>y an •ndivtdull NAME STATl•NT FLORAL DESIGNS 117 doong busi-M TRACT OAS. 1n Ah•tldil
Calilom.a Probate Code A 1nousand dollars 1S 1000 00) 1oon ol 1heC11v of Hun11ng1on ol land within tne Dostroet col· Business Name(sl 11s1ed Tne registrani(st com· TM IOllowong persons 1<e Broadway Costa Mtsa FASHIONS BY HIOUI Or . ~ Beadl. C..
Request lof Soecial Notice wnoene11er •S lt>ne• ol the Beacil tnat 111e lollow1ng •acted on ine la.a rotl Said above on July 18 1990 meoGed 10 transacl l>UI•· d0t09 buS<ness as Calif 92627 42S3 Marting ... w~. Unit 92'M3
form Is avat&able lrom fie sum t>1d as 8 guaranlee lhal Dr alt Negative Ottctarahon report conlains 1 descrtp· Mike Hartke ness uneler the Fict11tous A r I 2302 Redlenc:ls Ot Grtg0<y B"an SwtUet C. Ntwpor1 Beach. Calif Richard !i'lrlle11. f10 OOUf1 der1'. Ille bidder ..,,11 enter •r>IO lhe reques1 Ms oeen preptted lion OI each parcel and lhe Trors Slattment wa5 l11ed Business N1mtn> listed N-POf'"I Beacto Caltl 92660 336 Sydney 1.ane Costa 112660 ~18'. ~ Beadl.
Attanteyfof P.,ltl~ I"~ Con1rM:t of ll"le and will be subm11teel 10 the amount ol 1,... cnargn 1°' with 1roe County Clerk ol 0<· above on NI A Anne Pe1erson and Mesa C•h1 926l7 HaJkool Aghatanlan, 1 c.rtf 92M3
Jey Ad•m Siiia same is awarded to n1m In City Zonmg Admon1stretor tac:n parcel IO< lote•I year ange County on July 2•. Derrlc:ll l Baroer Fiorenza Comun11n Inc Susan Annette Swiu.r Cw rOll Avenue Irvine. Calif Pu M Albet1., 1n Afww·
3717 Arlington Av•. lhe evem ot l111lure 10 enter 10< cons1dera11on on Sec>· 1990·91 Said report ts on 1990 This s111ement was filed Cahl 2302 Redlands Dt 336 Sydney L-Cosll 92714 aloe Dr .• ~ lead!. Alv.,.lde CA 92506 1n1o such contr.ct tne Der 19 1990 Tne dr .Jft hie with the Secretary of the FeMZM wnh Ille County Clerk ol Of. NIWQ0<1 eeacn Caltf 926&0 Mesa cam 92827 Thia ov~""' " con· c.... t2M3
Orange eoas1 Daily Ptlol P<OCee<IS ol t~ negative declartllon Wiii oe 0.stflCI .. tne D•st•ICI Off tee Published Orange Coasl •noe County on July 16 Th11 t>uSlness IS con· ThtS business II con· ducted by .,, lnd!Ylduel Thia bu9lneu .. -·
Aug 8, 8, 14, 1990 lorletled, or 1n 1ne case ot a avatlable 101 put>hc 1ev•-!8802 Btrdeen Avenue Detty PilOI July 30 Auoull 6. 1990 dueled oy a c:orporllton dueted t>y l"lutt>lnc:t anel wile Troe reg111ranll•I com-ducted by: co-parjllllt
Donel Ille lull sum thereof and comment ror 1n1r1y (301 Irvine CA I nd is IVllllt>te 13 20 1990 'tlMCM Tne reg1str1nt(S) com· The reg1111ant(1) com· menc.d to trantae:1 bl.Isl· The reglatrant(e) ~
will be ro1111ted to said cot· da commencin Augus• 9 lor publlC inspection ~ · M--0!>8 Pul>llShed Orange Co1S1 menced 10 1r1nsac1 butt· menced 10 tranuct bu,._ ness under the Flctlttova menoed to traneeot ~ P\a.IC NOTICE 1ege d1Slrtct B•d secur11y 19~ g • tween Ille hou•s ol 8 00 AM Daily Pilot Juty ?3 30 nMS uneler thfl F1Gt111ou1 ness under tile FICtthous Bu11neu Name(•I lllled .,... unOer tN ~
,.CTITIOUI IUSINlll shall t>e one ot tne lollowtng Or alt Negative Oecl••· 10 S 00 P M Monday MllC NOTICE Augusl 6 13 l990 M·O•O Bu1lnen Neme(s) lllled Bus1neu Neme(sl 11111d ab<>Ye on July 25, 1990 ButiMN NalM(tl Hated
NAME STATIMINT Casn Casn1er's Check. ahon No 90.7 1n con1uncllon lhrough Friday Thttsreport abQve on July S 1990 above on July 1 1990 HlllllOOI Ag.h•fanl•n •l>OYe on. July a, 1tl0
Certtlled Check or Btdder's wtth Adm1n1strat111e Review 11 ftled pursuant to ecuon UllNESS Anne A Peterson G B Swttzer Thtt tllternent wu tiled Ricflatd 8ar'llett
d The following persons are Bond made payat>le to lhe No 90·2 '' a reQueSI lo tn-5473 ol the Healtn end Sal•-FICTITIOUS ~MfNT "8.IC NOTICE Tn1s statement was loled ThlS st1tamen1 wet hied •tth tile County Cle<k ot Or· TNt ata1emen1 wee tlled O:.~u~11~~s 8.:MERICAN order ol lhe Coas1 Com-creast the amounl of allow-ty Code of the State 01 Call-T~A=o!~,: persons are with thtl Coun1y Clerk or o,. wtth tne Counly Cltlfk 01 Or· •= County on July 27, with ttl9 County Clettt of Of·
TRADING 10413 Sieler mun11y College D1s1r1ct at>le tonriage ol waste oe;ng lornla C 1 do. business as flCTITIOUS IUllNIH ange County on July 6. 1990 ange County on July 9, 1990 1 enge County on Mt. 1MO
• Boarel ot Trustees processed at lhe Ralnt>ow NOT! E is ullher given C~ p TER SOLUTION NAME STATIM!NT ,...... f-7• ,.-, ,_ !'dgc~~I :~?o:oun1aln Vel No l>•dder may w1111draw Disposal TraMl81 Fac11t1y 11111 Mondey. Ille 131h day ot 195 T~1 Ulane Costa Mesa Tiie t0Uow1ng persons are PubttSl\ed Ora.nge Coasl Publlll"led Orange Cou1 Publoahld Orange Coul Publllhed Of111199 Coell
YSun Hee Woo & Estl1er hlS bod for 11 period for torty· The appltcant 15 requesting August. 1990, II lhtl hour:' Calif 9~27 · do.ng t>us.tness 11 Dally Pilot July 16 23. 30 D111y PilOI July 16. 23 30 Oatly Potot "ugufl 6. 13. 20. Delly Piiot J4Ay UI, 23. 30,
Woo 10413 Slatllf Bldg 19 ltve 1451 days llllf the date to increase the ionnage from 6 00 p M o: UICI day (or ~ Raytlne A Anderson. t95 I a IF LICKER & AS. Augutt 6, 1990 Augull 6 1990 27 1990 Augutl 8. 1990
,,20i Founteln Valley, Cahl set lor the opening theteol 1,SOO ions per day 10 2 000 :':." 'r;:,•:.1~-.::.:;s ~~as~e Tultp lane. Costa Mesa. SOCIA TES (blFLIC_!<ER M·02• M-025 M-oe& lliM>21
92708 Tilt Botrd ol Trustees re-tons per day Tht lacthty 11 Y Calll 92627 CHECKBOOK BALANvlNO
Tht1 t>us•ness 11 con serves the prov•tegt' ot re1ect· located at 17 t21 N1cno1s ~•rd 0~ ~~:C't;.~1=11~ This ousiness 1s con-& Bill PAYING SERVICE •---Nl--IC_NO_TICE___ "'8.IC *>TICE "8JC M)TIC( NlJC llJTIC(
ducted t>y nust>end and wile ing any and ell t>1Clt Ot lo Street •S zoned M 1 flight =2 o B d A ducted by an ondMClual 2718 Portola Or Cotti
Tne •eg1strent111 com· ""a1veany.,1egu1o1r11tes or in lndus1roa1>andh111Genetal 1' I CA•: et: 11,;:n::c; The r191strent(s) com· Mna Celtt 92626 NOTICE OF GENERAL MUNICIPAL ELECTION/ menced to tranHCI bus1 lormahllH in any t>•d o• in Industrial Land UM Desto· rv ne. I eel ~ lhe Boatd I menced to transac1 l>uSJ· Kristine A Fl1c:k9f 2718 ~
ness under the F1e1tuous the t>•dd•ng nalton in tne city s General plDtaoe ta '°'Y helll ,:C, nest undet the F1ct1lt0Ut Portota Dr Costa Mese CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH GENE 'AltAEll. Vice Plan No new consttuctoon •eclO<S ng BuSlness Ntmeltl 11stad Ct11t 92628 Business Name<•> !lated Chencetlof. a111IMH Af· will result lrom this l>'OJ9CI consideralloo by Ille Board above on May 11 1990 This ou11ness •• con· a~;:: w"t;," t987 faire, CoH t Co.nm11ntty Copies 01 this request 11 °1 all Obf9CllOO• °' protesll Aaytine A Anelenon dueled Oy an 1nd1vte11.1•I
Thll statement wts tiled Coffee• Dltlrlct on lile wi1ro the Commun11y 11 =:: ':;9 =., l.c· This staiement wu ltle<l Tne reg11trant(ll com
wtlh tn. County Clerk ot O• Publtt/'led Otange Coast OevelOpment Deptrt~nl. . . .with Ille County Cleflt ot Or· menced to 1ransac1 bull·
81nge County 00 July 24 Daily P1tot August 6. 13 Ctty ot Hunllngton Beach ,..~ Rench W t Ott-8"09 Counl)' on July 24 nest undef Ille Fie1111ous
t90 1990 2000 l\Aatn Streel Hunl· tftct a er 1990 8uStness Neme<sl l1steel
,..... M073 1"910n Beach. C1Jllorn11 Or C0tst ,....., •bove on NI A
Publttned Orange Cotsl Any person w1Sh1ng to com· 0 Pl.I~~ ly ~ 91 6 Published Orange Cout Kristine A Fllctoe<
Dally Pilot July 30 Augull 6 MUC NOTICE ment on the rtQuesl may do = llO u ugu · Daily PtlOt July 30 August 6 Th11 1111emeri1 wH hied
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a General Municipal Election will be held In the
City of Huntington Beach consolidated with the General Election on Tuesday.
November 6. 1990. for the following Officers and Measure:
For four (4) Member• of the Cit'/ Councll (Full term of 4 ,..,.,
13 20 1990 so tn wrlltf'g wllhtn lhtrty (301 1 M033 13, 20 1990 wuh lhe County Cieri< ot Or·
M-Os 1 LIOAl NOTICE d•ys ot thJS no11ee by provid· M.048 ange County on July 6 1990 For e Cltv Attorn•'I
NEWPOltT·Mll A mg wrouen comments to tne •tn•IC ""TICE ,.._., "' ----------UNtFflD SCHOOL Departmenl ot Communlly f"UU.. "" 111-IC NOTICE Publl"'ed Orange Coe.ti
(Full term of 4 ,..,.)
MllC NOTICE DllTAICT Development. Envlronmen· ,ICTITIOUS .,...... '"""" Delly Pll01 July 16 23 30.
NOTICE IS HEREBY tal Resourus Sectton, p O HA• ITATl•NT FICTITIOUl IU .... SS August 6 1990 FIC TITIOUI IUllHHI
NAMI ITATEMIHT
The lotlow1ng person• are
doing business as
TWENTY·FOUR SEVEN
268 1 Crestview Or Newe><>r1
Beach. Calif 92663
Natalie R1g1et 2681 Crest
view 01 N-port Beacn
Caltl 92663
Th11 business is con
ducted by-an 1nd1111dulll
The reglstranl(•I com
menG4ld to 1ran1ac1 l>Yll·
ness under Ille FocltllOUS
8ustnau Nam11sl lltled
above on July 23 1990
Nata11e Alg<>let
Thia ttaterntnt wu fifed
with the Counry Clerk ot Or = County on Juty 24 , ...... ,
Publttl"led O<•nge Coas1
C>llly Piiot July 30 August 8,
13 20 1990
GIVEN thel Ille Board of Boa 190. Huntington Beach. The tolloWI tone 111 TE•NT M..020
Education 01 lhe Newport· CA92648 Commen11w11tt>e dot buaine':::' T~A!:0!,TA •ton• 1,8 1----------
Masa Unttled Scnool D1sir1c:~ consideted by tne declston· T~E HOME IMPAOVE· d0tn bustne'::: P\8.IC M>TICE
OI Orange County wlll re making t>ody tn 111 dellt>era· MENT GUIDE, W PC H . S~ORCO PUBLISHING 1--...;...;;..;;.;;.;.;......;...;;...;..;;...;.. __
cetve Mlled bids up to 2 00 lion on whether en En· Newpor1 Bttch. Calll 92813 INC 474 E !7th St Cost• flCTITIOUl IUlfNlSS
pm on th• 14th day ol voronmen111 Impact Repott R1c:nard Hays. 2221 l as Mm Caul 92827 NA• ITAHMINT
August 1990 11 the should l>e prepared lor the Patm" •H Carlsbl<I cant Sh<>rco Pubhstling inc A The lotlOWlng person• are Purchasing Offtee ot said protect 92008 · C 11 C atlon 474 CIOlng bualnNt ••
School Dtstrtet 1oca1ee1C at Puo111nee1 Oranr Coas1 Alfredo S.r>guineui. 300 E 1 ~f.;1;1 .. ~pCost• Meu. OOSSIR'S. 11211 MeFld·
21185-B Bear Streel, OSll Daily Piiot ,t.uguSI 1990 W p C H Newport Beach Calll 92827 den •D. Tutlln, Calif 926&0
Mesa C.a. 92826 I II WlllCh M07 I Ct lll 112663 . Tllll bullnesa IS con· 8eYerly J ThOmU 17279
time Sltd t>•d~il :;1 pub-Thi• buatneu 11 c:on· dueled by 1 corporallOtl McFadden •D Tu111n. Calif
llCly 099"ro:.~: or MllC NOTICE dueled by • genettl part• The reg1tt11nt(I) com· 92880 AAA
----------neran1p menoed 10 transac:I bull· Wry W Ttlomn , ..,..,1 All bids .,. IOC~ .. ln K · IUPIRH>ft COUltT The regtelrant(I) com· ,,... uO<W 11\t FIChllOUS Cerritos • 1 Anetlelm Calif cordenc• with vnvlliOns I I ·~-..... L 92804 ln1truet1on• and Speclfl Of CALWC>ftMA met1C*1 o r.,_, _... But1'1eU Name(•) lltled
ceuons whoeh are on me 1~ COUWTY Of ORA~ neu under Iha Ficlltloul above on NIA Tflil tM111neu •• con·
IM office of the Purct\Umg In the Mttt., ol lhe Pell· 8ualneu Name(t) lllled HtffY S Carm~ ducted by • general pert.
Director of said Sc;t\OOI Dts· uon to Change ttie Name or abov9 on Juty 1, 1990 Ttlll 1lattlfT*lt •at l1ted ner"''P
trtel 2985-B Bear Str .. 1, SHAUB. SANORA ELAINE Alfredo Sangulnetll wilh the County Ci.rk OI Or· TM reQ•tlranl(t l com·
Costa Mesa CA 92826 No A t54940 Ttlll tlll~I wM nted anoe County on July 2• mer'¢eCI to 11•naac:1 bu$1-
Each Bidder mu11 tut>mtt ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE wtlh 1'6~tyly ~~!1 rc· 1990 ,.._ ::n:.c*Ne'r:c:i~~~~ a bid depOl41 on Ille torm ol a FOA CHANGE Of NAME 111199 ~, • i. .... 1 • IMO
Ce<tlfled °' c..nier·1 Ctlecil PETtTIONEA SHAUB. 1990 Publlll'lld Orange Coul •b<>Ye on vT''
or a Bond equal to ten per. SANORA ELAINE hit tiled I ,_ Deily P1101 July JO Augu11 8 .-ry W t ~ llled M-0~ cen1 (t~I of 111e amount of pellllOn for an ""sder~ ~~~:fr ,c;o:' 13, ~. ttto M-05! ;:::~ c.-:' or Or·
----------th• Bid, mid• payable 10 the c:hange name trom AN 27 1990 • • 111199 County on Jvt'I 1o Pla...IC NOTICE order of Newport·MM8 urn· ELAINE SHAUB TO SA.NOY • M-Otl IMO ·
tied School 0;11riet In the 8E.ACH "9l1C M)TIC( ,_
,ICTITIOUI IU8MI• evenl of 18IUHI or lallur• to II II hetetly Otdtfed thet . Pvbllthed Or Co.at
NA• tTATl•NT enter into tueh Contract. ltle alt W. ION lnterea1ad In Ihle P\aJC M)TIC( ACTITIOUt llUIMll o.ny Piiot .tuly ';T. 23 30
The toltowtng perlOl'tt ••• llkullty of an untuCQettl\ll matter llf>PMf before tllle ---•llll•M ~ ITATWmNT UQUt\ e IMO · • dOltlg blllineet u. 81<10.. ltlaU be retvrned COUf1 In ~I NO ~ '9C'm---The fallowtlig '*"°"' _.. ' M.off
V!RTICAl VISIONS •llhln 1 reHonable pertod, of Ille OrMOa County 8\1· ~ ITA,......, dOlnCI butlnell ...
18375 Marutpe Cir Hunt• l>Ut In no ~I ltlall thal .... perlor Covtt It the addr... The followlng peraona tre SOMUHINO SPOATY
lnQton Beactl, Callf t2649 curlty be l'llld by the OltlrlC1 thown abOYe on SEPT EM· doing bulirleee M: 17tt '**1119 Ave , Cotta .... IC llJTIC(
Carotyn E 1rv1n1. 16375 beyOfld thew (60) dtyt from B!JI t t, 1990 at 2 00 o'CIOCll ADVANCID CONSfRIJC.. Meea, c.itf tW7 I
Marutpa Cir . Hunt109ton the tltn9 the award It made pm .. and then and tw• TION T[CHNOl.OOY, 133 N Jffn ~.on. •21 f ACTITIOUa .,... ..
e.tch. C•lll 92649 A PetfOfm•noe Bond may lhOW cau ... II IWIY 1~ hive. llrn, Of111199, Callf tHel 17th 8t. uu. O<let• MeM. NAm ITATl...n I
$1<>41M 1<1r1tln Padef'sen. tMPrequl'9d at ll'le C1l11C1et1on why the petition tor c:f\6ngll AoClert A HlltlCOCll, ttS3 Callf 92ea7 TN fOllooMt't '*"°"' ••
18375 Marull)e C•r , Hunt-of the OlttrlCI of name tflOUld not be tlden. Coeta MeM. CaM TNa tMlalnees 11 con· cfo"'9 ~ •
lnQton IMach. Ctkl 92649 No blddet may withdraw oranted t2ea7 ducted by "'~ J J MU"PH" "IAL lS-
Con1t 111c1 A•becc:a htt 8MI tor a perlOd of tlxty II IS flKlfW Ot'det9d ltlat • ~t M Menno, "'3 The ,..ttef'll(t l com· TATI! ANO INVISTMINTI. ,.._ten 18375 Marutpe (IOI d•p 1ftt1t the dete Mt 009Y Of tNt Ofdtf to etloW Eden, Cotta Mee&. Cllllf ll'WflCed to ~MMCt ~ 14211 VOl'tle I.,.., ~
Cir Huntlnglon Beach for the open.no thefeOI ~ .. be publlltl'led In Or· tH27 MllM 11f101r "-Ac1ttlOUI 100. Tuttlft. Celt t~ c.11i 921•9 rn. eo.rc1 ot EdVcation Of enoe CoMt Dally Pltol • n. bull~ 1• con-'""MM N•fM(•> 11a1ec1 J .wry ~. "' , n Thia Duttne'* 11 con· the ~t·MeN Unln.d new1pap1r Of oeneral dlleted by I ltmiWcl pen,_. IOO'le on· NtiJ n . 1tl0 frepanl, rrw.. C4lill N714
ctucted Dy a 09f*ll patt• kt1o01 0. ttlet ,....,.,.. the Clteulttlon put>lttMcl In ltHI ~ JW11 ~ TIM tiwlif\W ._ eoft·
netehlp right to rei-ct any or 111 llO• county at .... , once•..----Ar .. tol•!!= ~· Thie "*" '*" .. llecl dllCted by M ~ The reg111ran1c•I COM· and not ~ily acc.c>t t0t tour coneecutiw ..-• ..._,._. " _... ~ ,_ C°""'Y Qert1 ot Or· TM ,..._trent(t) CC>fft.o
menc:ed to tranNCt DUii-lhe IOwell ltd.1114 10 w.,... ttt.o ttlt day Of the heat· MM lolftClet the fctltlolla ... County Oft JflJl1y t 4. inenoect to tranaact ~
neaa unclef IM F<tlllOIJt My 1111«"1'819') or Ir~ 14111""9 N~•I listed '"° ,... ......... flctlttOut
811alneu Ntme(t) titted ty In 1ftJ IMt r~ TE AUO 1 ltlO ~Oft Nlv 21, '"° ,._ tu....,... HefMCt) lllt ..
llb<MOtl ~ tt 1tt0 ...... , ..... UM· -'MRI A. '~ "°'*1A ~ ~ OfW9t Co.I ...._Otl JuM 1, ttlO StoMt K P.darw Pm 9CMOCM. MTMCT .. .IUOGI Oii THI T'Na ~ ... fllecl~~ JIJlot )0, _... 1, J Jen)..,,,._¥ Thia atat-1 wu filed ON1119C..., COUM wlttl1M~C"'1tot0f· U '"° "TNa ............. _..
wltfltMCountyC:..ofOt• ...,._L .. 11ll'r.Ot-,_...*"1on,A.nonr..::~-Clll -a1 ' -M-011 wMllM OertlotOf•
MEASURE TITLE: A CHA.RTE" A•NOMENT TO "HTIUCT THE IAL.E,
LEAH. EXCHANGI ANO OIYUOl'MIENT Of: CITY OWNED
OR OPERATED llAMC ANO MACH lANOa.
SUMMARY:
This proposed ballot measure would amend section 612 of the City Chartef to
Impose a restriction on the disposition and use of park and beach lands of the
City.
Any sale, lease or other disposition of park or beach lands would be subJect to
the prior affirmative vote of a majority of the members of the City CouncH end of
the electors voting thereon at an election mandated by the measure. Such
approval Is also required prior to construction of any road. gotf courM, drMng
range. building larger than 3000 sq/ft tn floor area or of any structure costing
more than S 100.000.00 within any City owned or operated park or beach.
Exlttlng leeses. tranchlM end concession agreements and renewals of MH:tt
agreements on parks or beach lands Which are being performed on Januery 1.
1989, would be exempt from approval requlrementt.
ShOuld the City of Huntington Beach City Cher-
ter be amended to require that no City park or YES beach may be told, IMMd, exchanged or trana-
ferred or lmprowd wtth e golf courM. drMng
range. roed. bultdi09 over 3,000 equare feet In
floor ar.... nor structure coetlng more than
$100,000 without the affirmative vot• of at teut
a maJorlty of the tote membeflhtp ot lta City NO
Council and of the etectora voting on tueh
proposition at a gen«al or apecfal etectlon?
It no one or only one person 11 nominated for an etecttw omoe. 11ppoinm.nt to
the etective otnoe may be made u prMCrlbed by S.ctton 22843.5 or 22144,
Ei.ctlona Code of the State of Cafftomia.
The pottl wtll be QP«l between the hOurt ot T;OO a.m. Md 1:00 p.m.
co••• MOCKWAY cmCllM
lf'08Counly0f\July l IMO ,...., .............. _, ...... IOMf.l40I.,_,,, 1 PW UA.-l--L' L_ fvll_.e.:__~:.. ,_,,, WMet 1 1lr1 m.111}. AM. CA t2701 ' nnwn fVV"1f'9 ""0 .,...-.-r-'# n
· ~ ..!7.n~ ~~:T .. C::. ~·=T. .~ ~~:T 1~ takes prodkaly no tWM to chedt the
Aufliat I 1st0 tltO n , )MO 27• 1"° -ftftftftf'tUnitMn in clauiffed
Detect:~ 1, 1990
Pu~Orlnge Coat Oelty.i.;_Pll,:::llk>t::....:..:.A~.:.:..:I.:..• 1:..::..3:.:..;, 20::.:..:...• ...:111C~O ---.~--IA~•-..•-' M-oH M-Olt _ ...011 M._ -rr= _ ·
.,
~BllKMM COUNIDCOLTUa& byM•atta&Maratt8 PSAlftJT8
., .... _ ...
a...,c:-........
.. I'd like to have a car that color."
llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
WMUIOI09'el
iO?""'-' .JUN? ~MJ'tQJ?!
GAllPIBLD
by Hank Ketcham FRED BASSET
"I spend all day 1ust trying to get my nerve
up to come home · ·
NANCY
MoM? How COME MEN ONLY MARF<Y WIVES ?
by Jerry Scc·t t
JUDGE PARKER
rw;,EN B L A INE
B ILLINC.,S TELLS
SAM D R IVER 'THAT
HE STOPPED AT
HIS BROKERAGE
OFFICE TO TALK
WITH THE RECEP
TIQNIS"f S AM
ARLO AND JANIS
f 1V£ A.M AOO I~ WID€
A'WAKf, •• 1 ""IG MT A~ W~lt. £4f UP
by Jimmy Johnson QUEST ION S HIM I
DRABBLE
ROSE IS ROSE
1MAf'~ W'MAf I'LL DO' GET u.r A Cll/lt.IZW B/?E.A(fA'::>T, G~f UP' aa UP1 If'!> A DRt~D AT A ~~lel.E. LIA)(i€R ()Jf.R Cl>fF£f-... OJA~E.R OF' EIGHf'
PACE. FOR 0~6! Rf.AD .•. f?E~AX ...
by Tom K. Ryan
M'S Sll .. VEU< ANP HIS 1¥$('/f.
HE'S A'.)11\16 SOLO 616S
WHILE: 1HE RAIU6f.Rli; LAIP
I.JP WtfH ~RASH.
by Kevin Fagan
by Pat Brady
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
FOR BETTER
OR FOR WORSE
by Chartes M. Schulz
'DiAl MOWNIE 04AllES,
'tUU NNl TIUSTEO Mi, DtO
'«JU? l TMOU&MT V00 LIKED
ME ... ~M 60IN6 HOME . .'
•
by Jim Davia
by Alex Graham
Thank you! &ut
I hod r10 ~ou9kt. ~ riwcvd.
0
0
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batluk
'1t)() HAVEN'1 C~D
A Bli!
by Lynn Johnston
IARM"'9 Ma ll et. . l(»4•...U,..-~ ... ,..:.--.... ._.,.,. ................ !-..... ~
~·~ _,,,.,,.,_ ,,,..... ..... -~
,