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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1990-08-21 - Orange Coast PilotD§ I of pri football .· Are you tOday's winner? lllP•c..tTl,lllml• SUNNY THE ORANGE COAST 25CENTS GOOD MORNING! It's Tuesday, Aug. 21, 1990, and here's what's happening: ORANGE COAST WEATHER: Early morning clouds clearing to sunshine. Today's ~/low: 7Z-H Yesterdays hi$h/low: 71-66 Tomorrow's high/low: 71-6S SPORTS: *J•r Leape ~U: 09qen Z, nlldel~la I Aqel1 5, Detroit S Zif-HOU• HOTUN• TOTH••Dn'O• 642-6086 Comm•nts • Tip• See ,. ... AZ'°' tHUlls INSIDE THE NEWSROOM: Janet Zimmerman is gone but not forgotten. Zimmerman, our former legal reporter who went on to biaer and smogier things at the San Bernardino Sun, play- ed a major role in bringing us one of our A I stories today. And she doesn't even know it. Garry Concannon. a former Rolls Royce dealer. called Monday to tell Zimmerman that he had JUSt pleaded guilty to charges that he stole hun- dreds of thousands of dollars from the owners of eitpens1ve cars he'd been g1\'en to sell ... The cit-Costa Mesa dealer was caJhng Zimmerman. who had covered the tnal for the Oru1e Coast DaJly PUot. because be had previously promised her an eitclusive interview ... When he was informed that she no longer works here, Concannon told his story to staff writer Bob van Eyken anyway. We'll be thanking Janet just as soon as we can confirm the Sun didn't beat us on the story. INDEX Bridge B4 Business A4 Classified 83-6 Comics 88 Crossword 84 Entertainment A7 Horoscope 84 Opinion A6 Police Log A3 Society AS Sports 81-3 TV listings A7 Weather A7 TODAY'S THOUGHT "Old a~ Is th~ most u~xp~ct~d of an tM things chat happen to a man." Leon Trotsky TUESDAY, AUGUST 21 , 1990 Coast residents held in Iraq lly TONY DODERO 0..,, ,_ tulW Wttw COST A MESA -Now that George Busti finally uttered the dreaded "H" word on Monday, a local congressman has disclosed that local residents arc being held in Iraq against their will. Neither the number of local residents being held nor their identities could be con- firmed Monday. Hostages Iraq's human shields canous position of either rislona the hostaacs' hves by ta.k:inJ further ac- tion apmst Iraq, or s1runa back and waiung for the neitt move or even withdrawing from the region. "Doing nothing will result in the death of the hostages because he will starve them and deny medical care." Coit said. "Withdrawal will leave Hussein free to contipue to take hostages, invade his neighbors, com- mit tonure and continue bis outrafeous behavior without check.· lly The AllodMed ,,... Iraq announced Monday it had carried out a plan to move Western hostaaes to vital military installations to deter any U.S. attack and warned its (>CO{>le not to try to hide any of the thousands of forctanen trapped in the country. With the United States buildina up iu armed forces in Saudi Arabia and blocking Iraqi ports with States attack. an armada of ships, the Iraqi rqime moved to use the Westerners as human shields. For the first time. President Bush pubhcly referred to the 3,000 Americans and the other Western captives as hostqcs ... Whattver th~ innoctnt people are called, they arc in fact hostqes," he said in BaJtimore. He demanded their f'9e.-lff SHIELDS/a.ck f'aget On the other hand. Cox pomtcd out that m1htaf) action is not without consequence. Rep. Chnstopher Cox, R-Newport Beach. said that although he was aware of Orange Coast residents stuck in the Middle Ea.st, he was not allowed to reveal their identities. He did say, however, that he indirectly helped some escaP.C· "One local famJly got out by the skin of their teeth." Coit said. But the question remains on what the United States must do to counter Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's threat to place British and American hostages in strategic locations throughout Iraq to prevent a United "He's using what little remaining advantage he has in the most cynical way ima~nable." Coit said. Coit said Hussein has threatened to starve the children being held as well as deny medical treatment to them and their adult counterpans Thus, Amenca and President Bush have been placed 1n the pre- ··onving him out of Kuwait will also result 1n loss of human life," he said. "There's no cas) answer." (Please lff COAST /a.ck f'ageJ In and out Bob G•u of .. ,boa lsl•nd finds • foldlng wooden r•H handy for keeping th• 0..,. N9t ~ ., Lee l'epe chlldren In •nd ftH keeping them out, depending on the clrcumlt8nce1. Auto parts store executions stun quiet neighborhood Newport firm offers S50,CXJO for information on murders By JIM GILLESPIE 0,, -l«Yk• TUSTIN -The bodies of three young men slain eitccuuon-st) le were discovered Monday 1n the Tustin auto paru store \\here the) worked, leading the head of tilt' Newpon Beach-based chain to offer a SS0.000 reward for informauon leading to their killer. Police believe the motive was rot}- bery The incident marked the second ume a fatal shoot1n-has taken place at one of the chain s locations. but the company president downpla~c.-d an) conncct1on even though the earlier shooting remains unsof\ed Rick LaBare. the manager of the Super Shops storr at 100 N Tu~t1n Ave.. d1SCO\'ered the emplo\et's· bodies in a storage area of the one- stOr) building when he amved for ~ork at 9 a.m . said Tustin Pohcc Lt Houston W1lhams "Our best gucsstLmate 1s that 1t happened !>Omettme between closin& ume at 5 p.m. (Sunday) and 9 a.m. this mom mg. .. Williams said Mon- da> "Each of the young men was sho1 1n tl!f head eitccuuon-style. Each was oound by the hands." W1lhams said each VlCtJm's hands were tied behind his back, and one man's feet were aJso bound. He declined to sa) what was used to bind the v1cums. or what type of weapon was used. The workers were identified as Darrel Esgar. 22. of Huntington Bea h. Chad C'hadWJck. 22. of Or- ange. and Russell W1lhams. 21, of Seal Beach All three had worked for the Super Shops chain fo r more than a year. officials said "It's the most homble thmg I've ff'tease lff REWARD/Bade "•t Moon colonization breakthrough re ported ly RUSS LOAR D.ily ,,_ ......... \If,_., HUNTINGTON BEACH -Will hu- mans ever live on the moon? Well, just m case they do. McDonnell Douglas Space Systems Co. as working on a way to tum lunar sand into building ma- tenals. McDonnell Douglas. along with Akoa- Goldsworthy Engineering of Torrance and the New Jersey-based Space Studies Institute have discovered how to use solar energy on the moon. The discovery. announced Mon· day. could JrCatly increase the chances of moon colon1zat1on. Researchers have successfully used re- flected sunlight to melt simulated lunar soil into glass and glass fibers. Engmeers have heated crushed. gray basalt to more than 2.200 degrees which is then melted and transformed into shiny black glass and fleit· 1ble fiber materials. With additional processing, McDonnell Douglas officials say the materials could be used to build structures on the moon. reduc- ing dependence on building supplies from Eanh. If President Bush's Space E\plorauon ln1 t1at1ve program s1gn1ticantl~ e\pands. fl"· searchers say full-scale solar power operations on the moon could ~ under wa) h> thr \t'ar 2000. McDonnell Douglas 1s using a "solar concentrator mirror'' to melt the s1mulatt'd lunar soil. a mirror that can focus 75 lolo· watts of the sun's energy 10 more than I 0.000 times its normal 1tens1ty. Thr mirror was fi~t developed by McDonnell Douglas in thl' early 1980s to produce elcctn ctt) on E.anh Alcoa manufactures contamers used for melung the soil which can wtth'itand te-mpcratures of more than 1.000 dcgrccs. Researchers say so lar energy 1s much more efficient on the moon than on Earth because of the absence of atmosphere. allow- ing 40 ixrcent more sunlight to reach solar collectors. The lo~ lf8\'lt) and lack of wind also gi vei. engineers the ability to design much lighter supoon structures. Engineers arc also cons1dcnng usmg !>Olar energ) on the moon for oitygen pro- duction. road and landing pad preparation and the poss1hlc recovery of hydrogen and he-hum from the lunar soil heeling an~ dealing Car dealer to stars admits shady deals ly IOI VAN IYKEN .,..,, .... ~.,..,.. COSTA MESA -Garry Concan- non. a former Rolls Royce dealer who once sold cars to the ltkcs of television evanacltst Jim Bakker and movie producer Carter De Haven. pleaded 1u11ty Monday to characs that he stoic hundreds of thousands of dolJan from the ownen of ex· pcnaivc can he'd been aiven to stll. .._ .... __ DA curbs worldwide Lamborghini raffle lly NttS YOKOt .,..,, .... Suftllf- NEWPORT BEACH -.\ real estate tn\'cstor who charged S 1.000 per ticket to a raffie of a rare Lambofl)\1n1 has agrttd to pay back all 213 ticket buyt'rs and {'lnC'cl the draWlf\I that authonttes have de- emed 11lqaJ. Concannon. 39. faces four yean in state prison for four counts of srand theft, plus an additional aJltpuon of .. excessive takir\I." due to the enormoua Mle of the tmbculemcnl. ~ly Distnct Attorney Ted John· son NHS. 8\at lbe former owner of Concan· non'• Horvlns table on Red Hill Avenue ma1ntau\t he 11 innocent and blames his conaidtrabte troubks ,,.._. '"MALS/lledi , ... , Viken Kcuyltan l&rccd last week to repay the Sl 13.000 he had col· lectcd from donors throu&hout the Uruted States and the world af\tt the District Allomcy'a Office filed a civil iQJunc:11on 1111nst him to protubn him from runn1f\I •hat authorities bchC\'C waa an 1Ucpl lotttf)'. f,.._ '" RNPLl/a.dl ft•t . . ; ., ' 't • • • -.1 -.· r ... ' • •••·.-~, '-". '• , .. •.•~·,..-?-·-~ . .._ -·-~.~ .. -... :-.~,..........., .. .-~---· -. . . ·-· ~· . ··~· ' . . . . , I t • • , ' . .. Ora~e Coast People Rebecca Mit chell SHE IS:------------- Co-owner of Personal Xpressions. an image consulting business in C'osta Mesa. ROOTS:------------- Born 1n Massachu~tts. Mitchell got a markeung degree from Bentle)' College before coming 10 C aliforn1a 10 sell compute~ "M> famil y 1s slov.I} m1grat1ng here." she said EXPRESS YOURSELF;------- On a break from her JOh at ( ompu1t•rland. she slopped h~ a boutique that offered people ath ire on clothing an d hairst) les .\her working there for a )'ear. she opened her own busine)'> FROM H EAD TO TOE:------- Most clients arc looking for head-to-toe mak eovers after some dramatic change 1n 1he1r lives. such as a d ivorce. Men are 1augh1 10 avoid out-of-date tics. Women arc <."ncouraged to ex pres) thcm~h c'i "The most emouonal makeover I e'er had ." M11chell said . "involved a client whor,e son had JUSt comm111cd su1c1dc " The customer. "a \octet) woman." had alwa)s worn npen\tH' 'itlk dresses Bui at hean. "\he was rcall~ a count(} girl ." Mitchell \a1d. After an ex1en"1'e questionnaire the customer learned \he v.a'i mort· comfonablc in Jean'> and a T -'>htn FIRST OFFICE;---------- W1t:h her panner ( arne (JUa) \1 11chell upcncd he r fir\t olfac las1 Jul) There. she doc., most ol the clieni 1n1er' tl'"'' and pape~ork Bui ')he frequcnth lca,es 1he office to \hop tor d1t•n1' and 1nten 1ev. them 1n 1hc1r home' -CompJJ~ bJ' Jo) Antbon_y . News of the weird 'Distraught' murder uspect totes gun into sheriff's station INDUSTRY -A man carried a .4S-caliber hand&un into the lobby of a Lot Antelet County 1herilt1 station and told ~ties there were t•o dead people in a car parked tn the station pu'kina lot, authorities said. A deputy confronted him about the weapon and \he Oreaory alJqedly stated; .. No, no, you don'i understand. I ju.t ahot two ~pie in my car that'• parked ... the parkina lot,' lCXlOrdina to Oonulez. - somebody." The deputy said. "At no time were the deputies threatened." Bnm said he believed the tun would have been used for suicide. 'He never really seemed to be a threat to us," Brett said. The victims, whose names were not immedi- ately available. were described as a woman in her mid-20.-and a man in his late 20s. Ther were d iscovered in a buraundy-<lolored Ford Taurus perked on a side lot. Deputy Liiie Brett was work.int dispatch at the time the man walked in. Orqory alloaedly threatened sufoidc. The station about l S miles southeast of downtown Los Anaeles was evacuated at S:30 p.m. when he waved the aun, said Sit. Joaquin Herran. Jimmy Joe Grqory. S2, wu amsted for invcstiption of murder after he surTCndered to crisis neaotiators. said Deputy Fidel Gonzalez. He said Gregory had walked into the station holding the gun loosely at his side. "Somebody ~Ued there was a man with a aun in the lobby. The man had staled be had just killed two people," Brett said. Deputies on the Crisis Ncaotiation Team spoke to Grcaory fo r 90 minutes. Durina the conversation, Grqory placed the aun on the counter and then deputies made the arrest, Gonzalez said. Another deputy and the man talked about the weap0n. Breu said he heard a reference to family members who "don't need me any more." Breu continued, "He seemed very dis- trauaht. He acted as if he wanted to talk to Costa Mesa to sale Three slain, deputies hurt before gunman surrenders S 1 5 million in bonds ly 801 VA N EYt<EN COST A MESA - City Council membe rs here Monday night ap- proved the sale of S 15 million in bonds to finance a major street widening and two other projects. In taking the action. the council was also acung jointly in its roles as the cny's Redevelopment Agency and llS Public Finance Authority. Funds from the sale of bondi. will pay for the widening of Victoria Street, the Costa Mesa Senior Center and a new fire station. While the council maJonty sup- port<"d the bond issue. one membe r said she would ha'e preferred to see a debt tha1 large placed before the \Oters "I bclle\c the spmt of what was passed into the state Consti tution by the people of California would in- dicate a bond issue of this size should be put before the voters," Councilwoman Sandy Genis said. Genis cast the lone vote against the bond issue. Co uncilwoman Mary Hornbuckle, who supported the issue, said she also had reservations about the huge bond debt. But she said she felt the bonds would save the city money in the long run. "If we were to put ofT these pro- JCCts and save the money in the bank, we would be faced Wlth paying for them 1n future dollars.'' she said. "This bond issue enables us to pay for them in pre~nt dollars. So although 11 1s with some reluctance. I believe this bond issue 1s the least e~pens1ve way of doing 11." Council votes to spare family's cypress trees ly ROBERT BARKER D.tlly l"llot St.ti llfrlf•• HUNTINGTON BEACH -Cit) offi cials hedged on an old and unen· forced ordinance Monda) night and \ otcd to spare a couple's Italian C) press tree'> The 105 trees. towenng 35-40 fee t at Jern and Glen Hestnch's resi- dence on C.,arden ( ircle. ha ve touch- ed off a buusa\\ of contro' ers}. The tree'I have become a sky-high hedge that blot out the sun and \ 1sta!. of the outside world. ne1gh- hur!o da1m Others argue that the bamer of trees cons111u1e an unfnendl) act. 1nfnnging on the rights of neighbors. But the hedge's owner said direct city ac tion against trees could branch out across the community. "What happens to me will effect all the trees 1n Huntington Beach,'' Jern Hestrich told City Council members Monda). "If you require cond111onal use permits (for tree hedges). II will pit neighbor aga1 nst neighbo r." Hestnch said. "Let disputes be scu led in coun and not be used as a weapon in petty disputes" After ltsten1ng to arguments of the Hestnchs and their supponers and opponents. the Cit) Council voted to prune hedges from the ordinance that regulates fence and wall heights . LAKE ELSINORE - A gunman shooti ng wildly while holed up in a mobile home for 10 hours wounded two shentrs deputies and apparently killed three ~ople inside the home before surrender- ing Monday, authorities said. Heinz Joachim Podszuweit, JO, descri bed as a survivalist with a military background, was arrested at 9:05 a.m. after keeping a Riverside County Sheriffs Dcpanment special weapons team at bay since late Sunday. Inside the home. deput ies found three bodies as well as a hiJh- powered rifle and hand grenades. said Detective Henry Sawicki . "It ap~ars we have an individual wh o went mentally over the bnnk ... said Sheriff Cois Byrd. Speaking of the deaths inside the mobile home. he added, "it appears there was some kind ofconflict." The names of the dead weren't immediately available. The shoo11ns began about 11:30 p.m. Sunday when deputies responding to ne ighbor complaints were met with gunfire. Sawicki said. One deputy was shot in the foot: another grazed on the shoulder. -By ,.e A .. oclatftl Pru1 Another winner Worker videotapes Florida 's roads Neighbors with tree di sputes will no"' be able to .. cttlc their dif- ferences in coun. not City Hall. The City Council last March rec- ommended remov ing hedges from the ordinance. and !.Cnt the law to the Planning Comm1ss1on fo r ac- tion D..,.,_,._. Ann Sherelhew~ of Costa Meu won US In the Orange Coast D.ety ~lot-K-OCaAN Luctcy Bumper Sticker Contest tttis weetc. fthoto1 of tfte Ileen•• plat•• of cars wltft dte bumper sticker are carried In the Piiot. Th• ownen can ctalm the prlae plus an ••tr• US If they are 1ub1crlber1. aumper stlcllers are avallabl• at th• Piiot's offices at JJO w. ••1 St. In Costa Meu . ORLANDO. Fla -Ooug ( 1au,._· offi ce 1s a Dodge \an "-Ith a lamera and microphone mcJ unrt·d on the dash. His m1\c.1on 11> to produce a video inventor) of Flonda'<, cn11 re road system -all 23.000 mile' "Actuall> 1t'\ 11.500 miles. hut I dn e 11 1n both dirccuom .. ..aid Gauss. v.ho takco; three )Car\ tu log eve!) mile of e'en road maintained by the state And when he''> dune. it's time to . stan again Videotaping roads ·~ C.1au,.,· lull- t1me JOb "'Ith the Flonda Depan- ment of Transpona11on's Roadl.'.a\ Charactenst1cs ln,entol) Section His work is housed 1n Tallaha\\ee where 11 sen es as a reference librar. fo r road ~holar') · Engineers and planner'> c.hctk out videos to inspec. t a 'itretch of pa' t'· mt'nt "'11hou1 e'er lea' ing 1hc1r ol- fi ce'> Oepanmcnt lawyers can take a tape to mun 10 suppon their cases The c.oun1~ roads Ctl ) roads. cx- pre'>'>"il~ '>. 1ntcrs1a1cs and all of the Florida Turnpike ddd up to a \IC"· 1ng 11me of 611() hours That'\ ll 25- da' tnp "'11huut lea' ing the rnuth V 1e"'c.·r d1scre11on 1'> ad .. t\ed "Don't bother burning the pop- e.om ·· ..aid ~IC' e Human a <;po ke\· man 1n the dcpanmen1\ Dd.and office "The\ are perhapc; 1hc mCJ'il honng 1h1ngs }Ou'll e\Cr 'ice in \our life .. But 1t'!> a "-Ork of lo' c for ( 1ausc. "'ho hec·amc the .. 1deo logger 1n 191{' "I alwa}S wanted thl\ JOb," hr said last "'eek "'h1lc taping 1hc Or- angc Blossom Trail in Orlando H1f> annual ..alar} 1\ n(1t mul h more 1han the total n11lc.1gt· hl· rat k<. W lf ,J I~ Vl ~IA~-J : tlA:t I X tl lAMll.I CN ff·-'8A.I,_. t WA :1 1 lAM tf)~f .JA ti I I,_. tMf>VAl)(J .. • _ ..... ,,a_._-•• < .. up t.'\t'r} thrcr }car!>. and he earns 11 the hard wa} on the road fi ve days a wed.. 26 "'eek'> a )'Car. driving and taping. taping and narrating. up one side of a road and down the other. all h) ht\ lonesome He hates offi <.e'> and calls 1hc enllrt• \late "m> hometown." One regret I'> thr 100 nights a }Car he 'pend'> 1n motels away from his r .illJh.w.ee home and his wife of e1ghl )Cdf\ "fhat\ the downside." he' said. "hut \he.· know!> ho"' miserable I am 1n 1he offitc .. He ex pects to complete his second lour of flonda roads in March After that. he 1!> 1ntngued b) a propo~I to tape Ronda's rail lines. "I think I'd li ke to see rails." C1au\'i !>aid. "It would be a nice change." -By Tbe A11oclated Pre11 • But comm1ss1oners voted unan1- mousl) 10 keep hedges in the ordi- nance. belie\ 1ng disputes should sta) .... 11h1n Ct\\ 1unsd1c11ons Editor'• Hotline 642~ Y°'-' ~ ~ 1t1e()e.tyP*-0t -lipe ... be rec:iord«I Wld ~.....,..,to f Ot10r Wll..,,., Leodlll The ·-2• llOllf -~ ~ce mtty be UHd IO -d i.1 .. 1 to lhe edilot on tflj !cpoc Cof!lribv!Ofl to OUf How to reach us at the Dally Pilot Clrculatlon Onlnge Counry Advertising Cl&M1'1ed Oosplay L111...a oo1vmn ,,_,.. lnduo.1,.,...,,.,... 8"d ,....,,_ 1 Editorial 11\ilfC>ef kit _.ia.oon T ~• ,. 1~ COt'IWT\lnlly ,_. News '*·.,._your 1nvoi-'•"1 Sl>O'll 5-40 122• &42 4330 646 •170 , O.llvery guarentH! • you do 1101 hil¥e your P1C* oy II a m u l be10te tO News. SP<lflS laJ I m and -'ti gel I IO you by l'OOn Ou1 Cuttom9f M I ffl StMc:e c.ntet ... 2~333. II oe>en flom e • m 10 ~ P m 8 0 0 C8 -.., •• un1H ,_, on -i..noe. '° .... 1 '°" 1111111 Bu1meu otf1oe '°"' CMM.llillfl '*'°' 1 Busmeu la• &42 4321 SJ1 sgo2 To make • correction • II ,,,_ ex-. C-1 ~ PtlOI 1 polCy 10 Pf01!111'1' COl90I II •IOnl ol MA>lt.,_ To ~ "' -Of c:llllilalloft. Clll .. 2-4l21 It'd •• kit ,,,. c:ly del.lt HewM L ldw.- Vm P_...., ~· .. .,.,.,,. ..._--.... \lceP_.,..,. ~'°" ...__ ..... \lceP,....... CollltOlllr Oe-M ....... VlceP ..... PMdUOloll Owri~ C&alfl..O M11N99f U.. TltWWy p,.p,_,..,.,... J30 W Bay SI Colla lil..a. CA tlll9:11 .... .oclf-P,O 8o• 15'0. C.. Maa CA ll282t CC!Of'lght No ---· a.1r11111r11 ....... .,,..... Of....,....,,_ Nf9lil,,.., be•~ -"'IOIA-1*1*-• ~ -s-111a..pc11&eipp11N• Colla ..... ~~ (UPS '"-«IOI 91 lt rro*M• 111r eMIW 16 ~ s-r '°"' ...... s-IDCl. llf,,... t 7 .. '°"' --'*"" r.,. o.-. c-i om, Plllll •~'*'or Paoe Coell W..~ Inc.A .... ~ecMIOll .. ~...., -,_.,.,. ..... The pl~ ~pi., •• J30 w a., Sl. Co.11 ..... Paoe Co.141.._I ~/Wl9 Inc. a a -"Olr _.., ....,.(.,... PNlldellt & Ollll Ea..,..~ u.tM!ll\Jt. C::..ITWI a...•.~6 . £_,.,. Vlo9 ,....,. a O.-• MlfWIOlll Cats banned to save shy mice SAN RAFAE L -Small and en- dangered mice are roaming salt marshes near a housing develop- ment where cats have been banned so they can't prey o n the t -mch-long rodents who come out at night. OK. so residents of the $300.000- $500.000 homes haven't actually re- poned seem& these endangered crit- ters nea r their houses. but they exist and they prompted a unique ord1- nancC' banning cat ownersh ip. .. As for the mouse. well. peopk JOke about that." said Kathi Eglcs1a\, a sales repre~ntative at the si te and 1n the area fo r 16 years. "To be honest, l have not seen one." Prospective buyer Rochelle Mis- hkin of Sausahto said the ne><at ruk "wasn't any issue with me. I don't have a cat and I'm interested m preserving the birds. I haven't met the mouse, yet." A year aao Roben Paul and his wife. Carolyn, became the first resi- dents tn the development arranied around a laaoon. "Personally, I hkc cats." Paul said. "I wish they had restricted dogs." -By n~ Anocl•ld PttH ~Id from IN DURHAM SUN DEVELOPER OF GAS SAVER AWARDED $22 ,000 BOSTON -With tht oil Jlut worse than ever and OPEC ri naina i1\ hand~. the federal Couns hlVf 1wa1<kd a ret of Ul,747 to Naoonal fudjlvet Corporation of Boston, dcvtlopcn of the Platinum Oas.ver Tht Qua\la, ~tuch takes only IO min· UIC'S '" INCall, r~ INCfOllCOf)l(' qu.an tilln or pta11num into lhf lir·futl mixlurt cn ttrins the m11ne Platinum has 1ht unlqUt 1bil11y of makma unhurn1 f~I bum Wnh plait· num In the name z.onc, you 1ncrc&K the percentqe off ud burnina In tht cn11ne from 68'• to 904!'t. fli;orm1Uy, that ll'lt or tht fuel would only bum If k eamt In contld •hh tht platinum coettd turf em of a catalytk • converttr Unfonunately, thi' ron~tntt PfOC't\\ ti lts r lal't OUl"Jt nf Ill( enJIOf, where the entTll)' produ~ed I\ IO\I W11h tht Ga\.,\tr dt)f'(nsma pl111num into the combumon chambt-r~. 22r, more or ca.:h a.11lon burn\ 10\ldt lht mame 50 1hat 2:•. ftv.er flll\lnt llt' Ttqu1rtd I•> dn'e thr \aJTle d1;.11nct The pro~'"'°'~' on boch !faded and unladtd aa.sohne. and mttl' lhe mus~IOO $1andards of all uatf\ In cone ud1na the l~\ernmenl'i fi , t year adminbtramc prc>ctdure atud)'lnJ the vL'lvn , the F«kral C'oun lilted •National f'1.1tl~vcr Corp. and \llfiou lnckpmdenr panJn ha"t uKd a ' antty of IMhodo!oaln 10 Int tht valu. of OuMr. 1lMle lndcptndmt Pl"if" often make stronaer claim~ for the Gasa'rr than d~ h' dt,elo~r. Na11onal Fuel· .aver Corp." Theaovmunent had air~> confirmed 1n 1984 1ha1 lhe Gwvn r11lb the octane or l llOhnt, chm1n111na the ~ for premium (uel Jotl Robinson 1he d('elopt'r. com· mmccd. "We'vt atread) wlld O\er 100.<XX> Ga\a\Cf lrorucall), -e find mort p«lPk buy tht Ga\l"n for 1u third ~fit of dc•mna out ca rbon to uttnd maiiw llft than buy 11 for us fuel saviJ\I\ or octarw boomna." For further 1nform111on nil 1·80().LE.SS·OAS (1-800-537 7427) °' J(ll. 361· ll 1'. , Recommended summer reCldlng Radina enef)izes me, especially on a summer trip. rm on the Kona Coaat on the Bia Island of Hawaii with little to do but play tennis and read. The tennis i1 exbaus1in1 and reaclint addictive. I've aone throu&Jl a arippina auto- biotraphy1 the local ncws- p1per ana a Fortune maaa· zine article on Don Bren, Jf you've enjoyed "War and Remcmberance," "Kane and Abel" and "Call of the Jim Wood Wild," you'll enjoy "Father. Son and Co .. " The former arc fiction. the latter is true. It's the type of book you feel smarter after ~ading. This one gives insight to contemporary history, current busine&s and a little bit of yourself. You, or at least 1, identify with this guy Thomas J. Watson Jr. He stumbled through schools. flew WWII lend-lease airplanes across Siberia, romanced several ladies, fought with his famous father. developed a billion-dollar business, dabbled in Kennedy politics and constantly sought out adventure. He almost died half a dozen times. loved sailing and skiing. had a terrible temper, pursued gJobal disarmament and in the process brouJht IBM to worldwide prominence. "Father, Son and Co." is summer reading that gives great protection from sunburn. I couldn't get my nose out of it. 0 Surprising to many. the sunny, dry climate of Hawaii's Kona Coast is similar to that of the Orange Coast. Also similar is West Hawaii Today, a Kona-based newspaper. to the Orange Coast Dally Pllot. Both have local news as a main focus with local stories of national significance often on the front page. Senator Majority Leader Bob Dole is on the Island. stumping for a local senatorial candidate and backing the sending of local Marines to the Middle East. Also on the front page is a Hawai1an- bascd Marine claiming to be the first to say, "I won't go." He's opposed to U.S. intervention p0licies in the Persian Gulf. A story of interest to Orange Coast readers was on page 4 of West Haw~ii Today. It concerned a Hawaii-to-LAX ~1ght delayed from 3:30 in the ·afternoon until 9:30 the next morning. The 345 passengers were gi ven $9 for dinner. $5 for snacks and left to sleep on the terminal floor. Fights nearly broke out when the midnight clean-up crew turned on the tights to do its JOb. Finally. at t.ake-otT. the article quoted passengers vowing ''ne ver again to fl y Hawaiian Airlines." 0 On the bnght side of my summer reading ts Fonunc maga11ne's Aug. 27 issue headlining a story. ··America's R1ches1 Land Baron." Yes, that's "our Donald," Don Bren. For the most pan, the an1cle covers old territory. his S2 billion net wonh. his gutsy 1983 bu yout of East Coast.panners and descnb1ng the Orange Coast as his "raw canvas." But the Fonune 1nterv1cw was rare and recent. and k 1surel} vacation reading allows time to ferret out fresh facts on this reclusive Or~nge Coast resident. The lead photo shows dashing Don on h1~ boat in the Turnmg Basin in front of his Linda Isle home. It notes his boat 1s 28 ft>et and apparently his beer-of-choice 1s Budweiser. The an1rle also stales he "tends to be a loner with a small circle of fncnds." and has a deep desire to make the Oranie Coast ··a better place 10 li ve." fs Don Bren developing hts vast holdings with the thought of one day selling them off? Apparently not. According to Fonune's interview. developing the land ti\ Don -Bren's life work and he has no intention of ever selling. Very specifically, the an1ck quolel\ him saytn&;. "There is no pnce that is acceptable" and. ·· ... I intend to be working on this into my 90s." Don Bren's age. according to Fortune. 1s 58. The an1cle cleverly digs tnto Don's past as an Olympic-caliber skier at the University of Washtngton. It bnngs out a new side of the man now running the billion dollar-stronf Irv ine Co. It reveals that even 35 years ago. he was a stylish devi and the onl) one on the ski team 10 wear st retch pants This liule dress habit earned the now Chairman of the Board the sexy nickname of ··Buns." Ahh. how tntngutng 1s summertime reading: a best selling book, a familiar-feeling local newspaper and a ne~ look at Donald Bren. Some might JUd~e this column old gossip. Not so. I repl). This reading material 1s weekend fresh. And to gel 11 from the Konu C ·oa~t to the Orange Coast. I relied entirely on fax . Jim Wood '• colama n111s Suad•Y• .ad T11~1day1. TODAY'S DAILY PIWT K-OCEAN LUCKY LICENSE PHOTO WINNER ' .. J~-· I \ 1. . , ~"'t. 1' . .j I . I .' • l ~ •. L I ' ·~ ~,.DAILY K-U~£AN t! .. l~~qT. .. 1~03.1 1 .~ LICENSE # 2DMV517 DEADLINE : 12:00 Noon Tomorrow (S.turday •nd Sund.y .w,,.,.,, hav• untH noon th• folbwlng Mottd•y to ct.Im tt..lr priz•I) WINNERS RECEIVE $25 PLUS A $25 BONUS IF A CURRENT SUBSCRIBER. For information regarding rules and regulation• can the Orange Coast Daity PUOt at 842-4321. OlltW COMT IMILY M.Or T~.At9 .. 21,90 Candidate's campaign ends City clerk says qualifying signatures fall short . • , • ,. " lty IMS YC*Of Dlll!1 ""' ....,, ...... NEWPORT BEACH -Mu Dillman's fint bid at runnina for City Council was derailed Monday when it was djscovcred the fonncr restaurant owner had pthered more than a third of his needed qualifyina siptatures from the wrona council dlStrict. Oillman's rookie campaign was undone when City Clerk Wanda Ragio noticed the Balboa resident had pthered the signatures of 11 Corona del Mar residents along with the ~i1mature of one person who wasn't even reaistered to vote. To qualify for the bellot, a can· didatc needs the sianatures of 20 resistered voten from the district in which he is runnina.. Ragjo said Dillman submitted 30 sianatum but still fell shon. Dillman. former owner of Oillman's restaurant in Balboa, was said to be out of town Monday and could not be reached for comment. The tum of events means that incumbent Councilman Donald Strauss will only face one chaUenger in the November election. Strauss, who is seeking a fourth term for the distrk l thl'lt ri-nrt"~nts Pollce chase down fleeing teen HUNTINGTON BEACH - A 17-year-old boy suspected of stealing a motorcycle was taken into custody early Monday after he allegedly led NEWS police officers on a shon foot pursuit. The youth, who was not identified because of BRIEFS his age, is being kept at Juvenile Hall. He reported- ly came out to California one month ago from San Antonio, Texas. and has no family here. Hunt- ington Beach Police Lt. Jeff Cope said. The events leading to his arrest began at 6 a.m. in the 17000 block of Pacific Coast Highway. The owner of the motorcycle. Scott Bergman. 33. heard someone start up his 1985 Yamaha motorcycle. which he had locked o utside his house. Cope said. Bergman immediately called poltce and ga ve a descnption of the vehicle. About 15 mtnutes later. the motorcyde was spotted on the highway at Admirality Drive. Officers then fo llowed the motorcycle as it sped nonh to Mariner Dnve, where the dnver abandoned the vehicle and fled on foot. Officers chased the suspect over walls and through back yards until he was finall y found htdtng under a pickup truck, (ope said. Man killed trying to stop fight BUENA PARK -A Buena Park man trying to break up a figh1 in an apartment complex parking lot was shot to death b) one of the combatants Monday. pohce said. Ronald Louts Brown. 28. died of a smgJe gunshot wound 10 thl' chest shortly after the 2:45 a.m. shoottng at 8550 Commonwealth Ave., said Buena Park Police Sgt. TerT) Branum. "He attempted to tfreak up a fight (between) another imalc and a female. and dunng that confroniauon he was shot once 1n the chest," Branum said. Brown was pronounced dead on amval at Martin Luther Hospit.al tn Anaheim. the sergeant said. Branum said police were called to the apartment complci1 aero\'\ the street from 1he Fullenon Mun1c1pal Airport b~ residents who heard loud argutng outside. Brown lived 10 an adjacent complex, Branum said. No arrests have been made. he said. -From •Uff aad Dally Pilot wire servic'es Public comment sought on project NEWPORT BEACH -The-U.S Coast Guard 1s solic1ttng public comments on a proposal to hu1ld a pedestrian bridge across the lagoon in Newport Dunes Aquatic Park. The Newport Dunes Partnership and the counl) havt• applied for a Coast Guard permit IO build the footbridge. "'htch 1s part of the park's S50 m1llton renovation. The bndge will cut across the northern portion of the lagoon. al- lowing pedc-stnans 10 tra,er;e be· tween the boat launch area on the Cl}Stern side of the park and 1he manna area on lh e western side. where a waterfront restaurant .,.,111 Ix· constructed on the s11e of the forml'r Anthon) 's Pier 11 restaurant The bridge will be an cx1cns1on of the pedestrian trail around 1he park Motorized vessels will continue 10 be proh1b1ted from the lagoon. hut the bridge .... 111 be designed to provide adcquat<.' clearance for emergenc} 'e~scll\ and a remo,abk secuon to provide access fof dredges. A vertical clearance of 8. 5 to 13 feet abo' e the water surface 1s planned under 1he bndge. and there ~111 be 29 feet bct.,.,een the pilings. I he .S Arm) Corps of Engi· nc:ers has determined the prOJt'Ct will no1 impact the en' ironment. Thc- Arm) Corps and the slate Coastal Comm1ss1on ha'c both granted pc'r· m1t' for lhe proJt"Cl t omments should be \uhm11wd 10 the Commander of the I Ith Coa!>t Guard D1stnct. Building I 0. Room ~ 14. ('oas1 Cluard l\land . .\lameda. C.\. 94501-5100 .\II commrnt~ rt'· CCI\ cd bdor~· Sl·pt. 4 ~ 111 he made pa rt of lhc ofTiual rt•cord and gt\l'n tons1dera11on on the permit apph· cation. Final ac110n "'II be laken h~ lhl' commander -B.r tbt' D•llY Piiot Balboa, aod his other oppooent, businessrn.n John Hed&es. collected the required number or nomination sjanatum to rn.ke· the ballot. Dillman made headlines earlier this year when he had an illeaal oceanfront wall constn>eted on the beach in front of his home. The bootleged construction prompted neiJhborhood outraae and the-city eventually demolished the structure and sent Dillman the bill. Dillman hired day laborers last May to build the waU. which ex· tended 10 feet beyond Dillman's existing retaining walls, wlthout t111 i"'ine or encroachment permits. Neiahbon complained aboul the · new construction, puticua.rty 8ace ~ Oillrn.n built it u the city WM i9, the middle of dtaftint a PoticY OD . the controvenial itlue til private• struaures on public ~ : • • Walls such u Dillman'• bave : popped up on the beach for decedes.! pro(ll~tina a state order for the city. to ~clean up its shoreline. City Manaeer Roben Wy.no Nied' that Dillrn.n's wall could not be permitted while the city wu draftina the new laws and city crewt Jcnocbd the structure down two weeks after it was builL Two more bodies found in harbor By HOUY J. \JI AGNER LONG BEACH -Two more bodies were recovered .from Long Beach Harbor Monda}. the remai(I· 1ng v1cttms of a m1d-a1r coll1s1o'n between two light planes around 3.30 p.m. Sunday, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Coroner's offi ce said. The bodies. who had been P.•loung a Cessna 172P. were 1dent1fied as Gabnel Gerard Zepeda. 29. of South Gate, and Lars Gunnar T'edt. 21 . a Norwegian ctt1zen. Tvedt had been 1n the Un ited State!> JUSt a couple of weeks. Na- uooal Transportation Safct} Board in vesugator Tom Wilcox said, add· 1ng Tvedt's onl)' local address was that of his em ployer. Ra1 nb0w Acadcm~. in Long Beach Tvedt was a flight instructor. Zepeda his student. it was unclear v. hlch v.as pilotmg the plane at the time of the crash . WilcoA said. "If there was an) son of a prob- lem. the 1nstruc1or would probablv ha ve t.akcn the controls," Witco• said, adding that would make it impossible to tell who had been at the controls dunng the collision. ~A witness said a wing came off of one plane. so they were pretty muc}\ guaranteed an uncontrolled de- scent." Which plane lost a wing was still unclear Monda,. Wilcox said. The bodies o Thomas Sc hot" SI. and his son Loren Ross Schon, 21 , both of Redondo Beach, were re- covered from the harbor Sunday evening. The pair was flyina a Piper Turbo Arrow. Divers from Huntington Beach. Los Angeles County and Lona Bea~ lifeguards, as well as Los Ansel~ County Search and Rescue. broUf,bt up the Schott bodies Sunday aod tbt others Monday. The teams wert work.mg to brina up wrecbac frora the Piper Monday. "The Piper 1s in ~verat pieces." Wilcox said. He added he expects 1t to t.ake two days or more to recover all the wreckage from both planes. Herc are the ~tnnmg playing card numbe~ picked Monda) night for thl.' California Lotte~ 'c; 5!.atl)' "Dccco" game· , Hcans: 10 + (1ubs· 6 4 D1amonc:h' fa<'k +Spades: 7 Players ~ho currcctl~ gues«d all four cards will wrn S5.000 Gabrielino Indians left behind many artificats 8 ID Crystal Covt: At the time of the Spanish m1ss1onanes. the park area was mhabtlc:d br. the Gabnelino India ns who have lcf\ behind villa~ sttcs. shell mounds and 1001 artifacts. which were" preserved b) the use of the land for cattle grazing b> first Mission San Juan Capistrano and then Rancho San Joaquin The Irvine Ranch esta~ ltshed a small reson commun1t~ called Crystal Co"e on lcaS<"d land there 10 19~0 and 46 small wood frame couases have perched on the ndge abo\ c the bcal'h stnce lhen. • ID Hutington Beacb: The peat which makes an usually nch farming soil can also bum when dr). with a blue flame that 1s hard to extinguish. Smoke from peat fires 1n the area betw~n Bolsa Chica and Westminster were na' 1gat1onal landmarks for shtJ» dunng the Rancho era of Southern Cahfom1a L1gh1 our fife' ~1th 5ome concnbur1ons ro Did l''ou Kno .. · Send wur h1s1uncal facts w 0 1d }'ou Kno~. Oru1t Co .. t DaUy Pl .. 1 · P 0 Bo' I ~60. c 'osw .\fesa. 9!6!6 -CompllH by Aut' Splall Man killed after crashinQ into divider, tree LAG UNA HILLS -A 22· year-old man was killed earl} Monday murn· 1ng wh en his pic kup truc k struck a nmt"d centt'r d1 v1der and a tree. J 0 s (' Guadalupt' Bravo Noya of Laguna Hills was '---•• pronounced dead at tht scene b) authonnc-i who responded to the 4 a.m coll1'l1on on Pasco de Vaknc1a. Noya was dnvmg a I 98J To)'Ol3 truck northbound on Pasc-o del Valencia approaching Laguna Hills Onvc when he dnf\ed to tht" left and struck the di' 1der. according 10 Ken Daily, ('ahfornaa Htghwa) Patrol spokesman. The truck Jumped 1he d1v1dcr and htt a lree. Noya. who wa~ not wtar- '"I a scat heh. wa'I flung into 1hc St«noa wheel and appart ntl) died immediate!) of tnttmal "'June<., Daily said. The h1ahwa} patrol had not de- termtnt'd whether No)& had fallen asleep at the whct'I o r been 1nto--.- katcd. Dail)' \aid. lovcniptorl did Htimatc Noya was travehn.a abou• 40 to 4.S mph, Daily said -lly IN 0.1/y Pilot Cott.a .Me• A fann) pee\., ft,hin1 r«I !ind &-1' ~ttd11 C'ard -v.onh • total nf SH 1Wrt ~tOlt'n from a \.JI ~r~cd t thC' South Cout Plaza bc'1v.~n • an11 J ~~ p.m on unda) Q A 'ftOman'• pl.IN ~nn1•1n1na s i tt\I m)s~noutl) d1Mppcal'C'd u m o"' nrr Ir.at litavtl\f ti ~ Alrm1(hllcl \ her 19 6 Nt"'POn A1~d earl\ und•~ 1 hr "oman rtportrd that 'he had hrr pur\f on her shoulder a\ \hr ltft the NH ,11 I '" a m but that she nouced 11 m1\\1ng S(\eral momenu later 0 A robber ann~ ~Ith a handgun \llllt' a case nf ht-er 'alued 111 S I~"~ from lhr C1rck K ~t\)rt" 1~1 1 Pnmun01 ·\\r .11 4 15 a m Sunda' f ounaain \' allf'y Four Fountain Vallt) anlt Hun11ng1nn lk'ach te<'ns agr\ 15 to J .. ~rrc affl'~IN.I Saturda) on susp1c1on l'' l00mmrrc1al bltrglal) afk r tht) W<'I'\' caught 1n\1d(' the offict" of Fountain Vallt' Elemt"nlJlf) School, I en I I Bu~hard ~I when pol Ke rcspondl'd to a burilar alarm o\ "'1ndo~ to the offrcc was broktn Tht \Ouths wt!"(' arrested and rrlu~d to tht"11 parrot\ 0 Two ~nta Ana m('fl >'e r<' .m<'\ted Fnda) on susp1c1on 1•t l hild mnlt"~•ntaon strmminJ from the tondhng nf 11 ~·\enr old 11rl in thr 16000 hl(x l. 01 Vernon "'cnuc Mano { < 3,1cl11n. ~O and PC'dru M (1on1ilc1 I . v."t:rr trimming trct"\ 1n the aru whrn lhr girl tolt1 htr mother the mC'n had 1011< h('d her The t h1ld "u treat~! llnd r~kaS<'d from Fountain \'alle\ ( ornmunit~ tlosp1tal The mtn wcrr t>u<ikeJ into Oranae { ount~ Jail an l1('U of S 10.000 bail r11ch Huntingtnn 84-at'h Rt~tdcnl\ in the ~000 hlod. of OltMtone C>n"t said \OmconC' \tole an Op(mum trap 'alu('d at S ~O from their bl k \ar'd 0 A rt\lc.lrnt 1n the 700 l)l()(k r,f Cuultr Or1'C' ~1d " m.tn who rcponedly wu \hoot1n1 .at hml\ 111\0 ~hot out a Wlndo"' 1n hi. hm1\t \ l\llnn a1 tht' tfun11ngton tkath Inn di ~ 111 ~ Pal1fil ( (14\I Htg.h"a' u1d th1t'' t'' 'IOI<' a dufT<'I ha& and a punt from th<'1r .,.. htt<' I <J&~ ( )ld~mohilc in the p.trk '"i lot 0 ~ llnf\M'\ \31d J m.in .i"'1u1 l~ 10 40 \C'll~ of age "a~ tl'1 n~ to get a \Ot1ntt NI\ lo go I<• thr mo''<'' ~ 11h him nt"ar thr \ilia Yurha .\panmetm .11 INl<I \ilia 't orha L..inr 0 "bout ~O ··gang hangrr"· '' l'C' rr· ponC'dh tou&ht v.11h holllr\ an tht" I .. !M)(I block of l\nlrdn l ;.111t" 0 Somt"onr ~1>c•n<"dh \Ink the 11111 h11hl\ from a hlut" "''\-.a n tru~·k 111 th' 't (1eorgc\ <\panmcn1' i-'Q~ Warnrr \\t lrvinf' " man "-A' \f)llllN.1 J1..Jsm~ ,ar, 11n Jrtfrr\ Rl•3d nr11r th< \an P1C'&<' FI'«"' a' Sundll\ at\C'rnoon Poller otTtcrr' 1nol the miin tn C (>liege llo<>p11al for O~f\ :t· tum .J Su,ptll) ~nt 1•n it 111·c .. ,1.,,han11 'fllN' 1n tht' 4 ()(l l'\l1x I. ,,, P;1\C'o •Ir \<'(!.II .am1 tht l~"OO hkxl. 11! Pa\C'o PKa,-..1 h<' twC't" I \U anJ \ pm. ~undl\ l hr ~uSl>('\t\ \la\hr,1 1hr lllT\ of fhe car' most M thrm IT•I at tour addrt't~' Cl " man 3t1rmNffi w rapr 11 fcm111C' 1c-qui11n1anc·r an th<' alle) ~hind Taraet at t I \0 p m '-aturda' 0 Kev\ u.i lou1 'chick\ v.cf'C" \IOll'n from a locked bth at '1('( onn1ek & Sthm1d;°\ Scafocld Rrnaurant. 2000 Main St . wh1lt the pArk1na attendant wa' occup1t"<I at lht valt't \l8t1on 0 A toolbol., a camera and an •~ chn• •trc stok'n rrom lhe trunk of I To:rota Cam'"' at lhr La (juant11 Inn. I •972 Sand C'an~on Rd Laguna Bt"at'h o\ 19.yea.r-<>ld man who turned bsmaclf an 10 poh(( hert for th(' murder of an Anzona postal "'·orker was ('ltrad1ted h) Anzona law enforcement officals Satur di} Bnan Allen Budun&ham. 19. of Murfttstx>ro. Tenn win fact murder chargts 1n .\mona He tumrd himself 1n 11 the Laauna Beach police station at about t p.m Fnda\ The Mohave Coun-t~ .\m shenfT and l 1 S Postal lnspec- 10"' took 8ud.1f\lham back to ~nz.ona h) po-ate au·plan<' afkr he s~nt the n1lh1 at the 0raOJ<' < ounty Jiil ~t-wpclrl Bt"at'h Two -,,ouna men v.11h ~hon blond hair st umhlrd. ob' 1ou~I) drunk. into SUI l 1Quor 1 l' Mcfadden PIA<'C, lucked an th(' al.a\\ door to tht hecr l't't'ri1tntl0r, ~r('11mt'tl kicked a holr into tht •unaAut d1,pla' l1rkrd the lea of an cmplo)'tt "'h<i thrcatrn~ 10 eall pohct and ttiim pulltd tht door motdina off as they ldl 0 An S 1,800 pedal boat was stolen from a dod 1n the 4000 block of Marau o\11enuc 0 Someone put aJur 1n the doot lodes of 11 I Q88 l'>t11lat•u perked 1n the SOO block of Eut Balboa Boulevard. 0 A tear P' canr,tet wu mluina from a prq.c on CovHtry. 0 Brake Ou1d wu thrown on tM lidl of 1972 Corvtttr periled at tlw ccnw:r at Ra~Nck Avtn~ and Oiff Dri¥C. ORANGE COAST BU rlbutors sued over unsafe toys ~rsmMMUY ._.. __ ~AIHINOTON -Seven IMjor '8r ......._. were sued Monday ~ ... J.ac. Department and t.be gr FR Product Safety Com-illllioa for .Wns imporUd toys the ........,., COGtnded vio&aled fed- ... ldaty llUdards. ~ Tbe .Wu llaiut Toys R U1 and iia odMlr COlllOUies charae that the '°'9 an UDU becaUIC they contain .....mve amounts of lead a-int or MW unall pens that could choke email cbildten. TM -.eociet uid tbey were un- aware of any ir\juries or deaths rc- tuhina from the toys, some of which were ICized from store shelves by 90vernment investiptors. ln a statement. Attorney General Dick. Tbomburah called the lawsuits "an 1mpo11&DL ftC:P toWani prevent- ina even a linale ~us toy ftom rQcbina innocent cK1ldren." The &awsuiu eeek ~unctions ber· rina the compenies frOrn importina or 1ellina 1M toys that contain too mucJl lead paint or ~ considered unufe for children under aae J. The lawsuits detcribed a variety_ of rattles and toy airp&anei or stuffed ·animals that vjo&ated the safery reau- lations. Many of the toys cited were labeled for use ~)' children over lfC three, but the CPSC contended m court papen that the items were, in fact, intended to be used by small children who could choke on small pans. CPSC spokesman Dan Rumelt said the toys werc mostly imponed from Taiwan but also were made in Hona Kona. China and South Korea . Be\ides Toys R Us, wbicb is head- quaft.ercd in Paramus, NJ. the aov- emment also sued Cblld World Inc .. of Avon, Mau.; l.ioocl Leisure lnc., of Philadelphia; Value Merchants lnc. of Milwallk.ee~ lllco Toy Com· peny1 USA, Inc .. of New Yorki Beacncomberl International Inc. 01 Fon Meyers,.. Aa.; and Division Sales Inc. or Itasca. nt. The complaints also named the chief exccuttves of the companies as defendants in the civil suits. The court papers said each of the com- panies had been previously notified th~t the toys violated safety regu- lations. Some of the toys have ~n re- called by distributors, thd./ CPSC ~1' iri S280,000 in fines asked for job safety violations at UPS W ASHJNGTON -The govern- ment proposed $280.000 in fines Monday against United Parcel Ser- vice accusin& the company of willlully violaung federal safety laws rcquirina that job-related deaths and injuries be reported. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration said the al- leged violations took place at the company's Watenown, Conn.. fa. cility. "\'SE l .. t~ADERS UPS, the nauon's largest packaJ.e deli very company. was cited for fail· ing to notify OSHA about a job- related death and failing to record more than I 00 other 1nJunes and illnesses. The company also failed to record the number of lost workdays caused by the 1nJunes, the agency said. John Fhck, a spokesman for the compan) based m G reenwich. Conn .. said there would be no 1m- med1ate comment because lawyers had not reviewed the allcgat1ons. which were issued late in the day. Last Apnl, OSHA proposed a AMEX LEADERS S625.000 fine against UPS for al- leged record keeping violalions lhat occurred at the company's Unton· dale, N.Y .. office. OSHA launched the Watenown 1nspcct1on af\er UPS failed to notify the Labor Depanment that a worker had been ltilkd by a moving vehicle while crossing a street. The probe was widened 10 include a review of all accidents and worker-safely prob- lems at 1he facility. UPS also was cited for allegedly not ~ving workers in Watenown 1ra1n10J on how to handle spills or prov1d1ng them with breathing equipment while the) clean up sp1 Its. -By 'De AHOCllfff Press NASDAQ SUMM.4Rl' NEW YORK (AP) -Most acllv1t over-the· counter stocks suootled bv NASO ust or Che. -1-16 -1 A woman wbo anrweted tbe tele- phone at Uonel Leisure declined to comment, uyina she was vnaware of the lawsuit. "Until we receive lcpl tervioe, u far as we·re concerned we1 haven't been sued by anybody;• uld the woman, who refuted to identify herself. An official of Division Sales, who also refused to identify himself, 'de- clined to comment. sayin' he "didn't know anythina about n." Mike Mervis, a spokesman for Value Merchants. said the compa_ny had recalled all nine items CPSC cited as unsafe. Value Merchant• purchased the items thinkina they met aovemment standards but "the product bouaht and the product that was shipped may have been dif· fercnt tbinas." be said. 'Dlal-a-porn' rule upheld WASHINGTON -Parents be warned: the &ovemment has been frustrated again in its len1thy fiaht to help you keep "dial-a-porn" messages away from innocent young ears. In a continuing battle pitting free speech against the government's nght to protect kids, courts in New York and San Francisco last week temporarily stayed federal enforce- ment of new rules designed to make sure the S2 billion marketplace for phone sex remains an adults-only busipess. Testimony in the New York coun had described some of the messages as "re-creations of masturbation, simulated rape. sadomasochism and group sex." -By n~ A••ocl•led Prffl NEW YORK (AP) Aug. 70 li l'rrv. Adv~nced 1 vec' ned nct1ange<1 01a11fi"ues 5 New n QM 6 N~w lows '" New survey fio.ds auto insurance claims costly SAN FRANCISCO -The best way to ~uce 1u10 in1unnce premiums is to cut the coats of claims. accordma to state tnsura~ Commilliooer Rouni Gillespie, who released a new survey blduna her ~ument. . __. Tbe aurvey reteued Monday concluded th~t auto insurers u~ 8.S cents of every premium dollar to settle claims. , . ··since biab claims costs aencrate hiah rat~. it s obvtous that any attem~ to rtldU<le insurance prices must whtttle away at that 8.S cents, .. uid Gillespie. .. The De_pertment of Insurance said its surve was. the .fi comPft!:beo11ve·view of how payments such as ~ut repair_ ccs, medical and 1ep1 services and others arc ult1m cly dtstn uted amona claimants ... Auto repair, lcpl fees and medical ~osts were the larsest component• of claims paid in 1989, accordina to the survey. Auto rcpain took 28 cents, medical costs '· 4 .ce~ts. aeneral damaaes -of which about 9 cents went to pay plamufTs lcpl oosts -were taped at J 8 cents. apd defense lcga~ cost~ averqed Ii:> cents. Auto insurance comparues collect premiums in advance to C<?ver anticipated claims costs for accidents and thefts. The .Premium dollars an invested and cam income until they are paid out as claims. . . . "Between 198.S and 1989 insurance companies in Cahfom1a earned an averaac of 7 cents i~ investment income for every S 1.00 of premium collected," the depanment said in a repon accompany- ing the survey results. . "Out of this Sl.07 in revenue. 85 cents went to pay cl.aims and related expenses, and 23 cents was used to pay for. ot~er ins~ran~ company expenses. As a result, insurance companies tn C'~hforn1a -on averqc -lost one cent after tax for every dollar of premium collected." The survey was based on a database of about 40.000 claims paid in 1989 by the state's 11 leading auto insurers. -Br ,..~ A .. ocl•IH Ptt•• Faxed escrow SACRAMENTO -It may be one small step in spccdin& up an escrow, but it could be one &Jant leap in the fax revolution or the business world. Without a dissentina vote, the California Lqislaturc sent to Gov. George Dcukmejian a bill which would authorize the use of elec- tronically transmitted documents WHAT "\''SE DID bill advances for filin1 of a lender's notice of final settlement of a title company escrow. The bill is AB42-6 7 by As- semblyman Elihu Harris, D-Oak- la nd. It won final approval on votes of 64-0 an the Assembly on Monday and 35·0 tn the Senate last Thurs- day. NEW YORK (AP) -Final Dow Jones NEW YORK !API AUii. 70 ,,~~· !lf.!;:.w.lirr«;~&i+. ,I: Il ~,k m ft m , .. I1 •. n itH1:ai:+ '· lnjlus J'"°' 376 Tran I ' Utlls , , 65 Stir. 1 w Advanced OecClned ¥ncnanQed olal ruues Ntwnlgl'ls New lows +1-16 -1•., ~ .. , ... -»· + , '.\l'SE COJIPOSITE THA'\SA("TIO'\S PHENOMENAL INCOME Ad· ~ancect oecllned -1\t + • 693 Make millions in FCC approved wire- less cable project. Short windows of opportunity. Minimum SK invest- m ent. ¥nc"iange<1 olal 1ssu9' New l'llgM I New IOW\ ~otar sai.s H~~ 077 19 n ,. Ca ll now (714) 866-8506 ask for Ron. NEW YOAI\ t"'PI - l.AO<>O•y _........,_ 78!10 Pet pOunO NV Com.a tC>01 month I.AO" SEARS c...-s 1 0 30 • pOunO us _,,,,..,_. C-• 131 30 c.t!ll pet oouno NV C~· OC>Ot ~th "400 lMd • so-s:r cen11 • POU"d Z'lnc 7H 1 c-111 • p0un0 ~ed Tlfl . S3 91U ("'9\llla W-~lll)flOI pe< II) 1 lllwf • 15 130 H--., I Har....,, (only CIMy OU01 .. Ill,,..· U 1~ Pe< l•Oy Ol NY C-IPOI month ~°" .._c...., ueo OO.U6s oo '* 11 '" n ... ,...... VO<' ............. ~~ SO•UO& 00 tro.,, oz N v Icon tr eel) ,...,_, $41111 10 N y 1,1.,, IOOI 1>91 trov Ol "'°" GOLD PRICES NEW YORK L~P) -MoMv '''" for Mondav as reoortect ov Telerafe svstems ~ .. ra•t lnteresr rate 1n<1ex. 7 913 Prime Rale 10 00 iiscount Rale 1.00 roker call loan rale 9 00·9 ,S tderat f1,1nds market rate ~lgl'I I 06,S Low Lui cer1111ca1n otrC>O'" Pr1merv l d•v,, 7. davs. 7. l dav~ .61 Ca~1T1Tt;1., rl>0,11 ov <IHler H davs. I davs. . dav,, 120day,, I.iii 1 oavs.1·81 1 davs •. Law Schod in Irvine "WsTERN STATE U N IV ERSITY College of Law is proud to announce the opening of its third law school ca mpus at 23 Pasteur in the Irvine Spectrum. a WSU's Irvine campus will open August 23, 1990 for day, evening and weekend dflsses. • Other WSU Jaw schools are located in PuUerton and San Diego. • Scholanhips and financial a,sn,tance are available. C•ll an t1ll,,.Q,io,., COflJUt/or Ill (114) 131-1000 for4tt.iu. 1966 • fo undrd to providt outstanding ltgal tducahon in Southtrn Cal1fn rnUl 7972 90 • Cal1fo rr11a's LArgtSt I.Aw School 1973 • ltn-red1ted lry Committee of &r Elaminm, Sta It &lr of California 1976 • Actrrd1ted lry Westtrn Associatio11 of Schools and Colleges 1990 • Third campus~ in /rvinL WESTERN STATE !!!!!!!!!!! UN JVERSl1Y iiiiii COLLEGE or LAW Or•• C•nlJ illiJ ,_ Dw1• NEW Y°"K !AP) -TM fOllowl119 11•1 t.hOw• IM Ovtr·ll'le·Counter stocks •nd werren" ltlat tlavt ~ uo Ille "'°'' •nd down IM most baMd on MrC:.111 of en.nee for Mondev. No MCurllles tr•dl11g below U Or 1000 '"''" ar• lnclud9<1, tffl and pet''91\lls Ctlantft art !M dlff.renct t>etwtef\ Pf'•vlOus dot nv ork• and Mond•v'\,~l or bid orle.. I ~~w.· ... "ffi rm M: I i~;=d, 11/l"'I+ ~~ ~i IAntCornm "-~ Uo UCll un :2 I~ 8: \ ntt -Uo • DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY BRIAN MICKAS Marine artist Dale Ter Bush wtth Wynne Grant. Carol & Company Ocean celebration has serious message Actor Ted 0.MOn atroUed into dae Dana Point Reson with Casey, bit wife of 13 yean, and their two youna dauab~· Nothi~ alam- orout about this star. The • Cheers" leader spor1ed 1peciacln , a baseball c.aP.• blue jeans and tennis shoes. 'Get active. Get pohtically active. The ocean pollution p roblem as so bia. We must eet the federal govern- ment. the president, involved," Damon uid upon bis arrival a t the retOrt for a weekend-long benefit for the American Oceans Campaign. Danson is the founding president of the national advocacy orpn1zat1on dedicated to the preservauon of America's oceans. Damon amved late. "We were stuck in traffic. Fony thousand pounds of tuna spilled on the free- way," be explained ... Are there any o ther actors here yet?" Nope. None showed for Fnday's opening night party. Those who said they'd attend included Ed Sealey Jr . Woody Harrelson. SaJly Kelferman. John Ratzenberger and Robert Urich. "All stuck tn traffic," explained Penny Elia, the resort's PR director and orpnizer of the staMtudded weekend fund-raiser. "We're sure they'll be here tomorrow." They were. The kickoff was fish). En· v1ronmentahst Scott Sanger played new age music on has synthesizer WhaJc. o tter and dolphin paintings and sculptures dominated the ballroom. Seven manne artists at- tended and thetr displayed works were on sale. Artist ~rge Sumner created the event's commemorati ve poster ... We use the sea for a toilet. Carol Humphreys h's filled wtth tou c waste," Sumner saad .. And people Just look the otheT way ·· The fishy fare was superb. Lobster cakes. m ant flavored shrimp, salmon. crab and dover sole were amon& the gourmet treats prepared b)' the chefs of Fi ve Feet, Kachma, PreJo's, Sorrento Gnlle. Tutto Mare and WattTcolo~. Robert Mondav1 provided the wane. Ru Chandler of the Rex res- taurant said he donated to the buffet because be believes in the cause ... , hate to see our resources !>quandered. I'm a spon fisherman and am very supportive of the tag and release program.'' Bob Suln1ck . .\CX:. director, said the ocean problem as very serious. "The oceans a re the lungs of the planet If the oceans d1e. we die.'' Event ~ha1rman Doug Thompson. a manne b1olog.ist who leads whale and dolphin exh1b1t1ons throughout the world . agreed Thompson planned the weekend of act1 v1ues to raise funds (esumatcd at $50,000) and the conscio usness of our need to protect o ne of earth's most vital resources "We must save our beautiful coastlines " Inside Advice/Divorce .,. Judge will only order financial support for son Dur Raady Soe: I !lave a n adopted clllld from a former mar- rla1e. My u -llHbaDd aad I divorced wllea my son was %. His fatlter lives oot of toW11 aad tlle vlaltatloa ac lled· ole wi~ oor aoa llaa varied over tlae yean. Now tut my 10D la a ttta- qer, villtatloa aad teleplaoae con· &act llave become almost aoe-exla· ·.!_~t. Randy Sue Morrison without a lawful excuse 1s actual.ly a criminal offense and is punishable by a maximum fi ne of S 1.000 or a year term of imprisonment, or both lleS. Need alone is no t eno ugh to tng- ger this obhga11 on created by law The 1nab1hty to maintain himself by working normally requires proof of a mental or physical handicap which prevents the adult child from being able to wo rk. NOW thru SUNDAY At a reHlt of a dlfflcalt blrtla for my SOD, It llaa bffa cllacovered over ti.e yean tllat lat Ila• severe learn· la& cllaabllltles aad I am DOW ID· formed tbt lie may Dot ever be aelf- aaffk:lnt. la U.ere uytlla1 I caa do to 1tt Illa fa~er lavolved aad If M«taary, !lave my toD'• clllld aop- port CODtiDDed past tlle •It of 18? - D.M.L., Newport Beaclt. When your son is out of high School and over the age of 19. and 1s clamficd as a child in nttd who 1s unable to maintain himself by work, he docs have a nght under Cahfom1a law to receive support from his parents to the extent of the parents' ab1hty to pay. The parents arc (collecuvcly) responsible for Randy Sue Mom son. a State Bar ~r11fied famil) law specJal1st, prac- uces law in ln·inc. If you have • dn orce-relatcd question. you can wnte Rand)' Sue Momson c/o the DaUy Piiot, P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626. father o ver the )cars and be reluc-prov1d1ng the aduJl child support in tant to all o f a sudden. walk into proport1on to their respective ab1h- your son's life Explain to him that -----------------------=--.------::-:-=::i In answer to the first part of your question, there IS very little legally that you c.an do to assure that thr father will become more involved in your son's hfc and upbnngrng. If you have not already done so. I would suggest either telephoning o r wnttng your former \pousc and ex- plaining your son'!. learning d1s- ab1ht1cs 1n detail He may be somewhat embar- rassed over not having been a model your son and yourself. but more importantly your son. need has emo- uonal as well as financial support and that his involvement 1n your son's hfe will be most welcome. While a court can make a v1stta· tion and custody o rder. a Judge will not force a parent to maintain a relat1onsh1p other than a fina~cial one. You might su~est going into some joint counseling so that Y<?U have a neutral third party to a ssist 1n redeveloping the father-son rcla- t1onsh1p. For purposes of child support. an adopted child 1s treated the samr as a natural!) born child. A w11lful failure to support a minor child Entertainment is lacking, so longtime reader quits column Ann Land m) colamas ud 10 1tra111tt to tbe Sy en comics. Yoe doa't llave tlae fo ulest DEAR ANN LA NDERS I've aotloa of wllat tltla colama la all bten reading your column for a long about or wllat I'm tryla1 to do. time and have co ncluded that you Goodbye aad 1ood lock. think when you pnnt a sad letter you ....--------------; wtll no t only help the perso n who wntes in but others who might have the same problem. (Misery loves company.) My dear woman. you are wasting your tJme. As my wise o ld grand- mother used to say, "Yo ur pneu- monia won't cure my measles ... I don't care to read about misery and grief. Lafe 1s sad enough as it is. I tum to Ann Landers strictly for lau&hs. If I want to cry. I can read my own mail. Fnends and relatives have been dumping o n me for )cars. -OON'T NEED MORE TEARS DEAR DON'T NEE D: I llate &o a... a rea4er, bet I 11an• Y" Mlp ADULTS $6.50 MNIOttl f1.50 °".a.to ... THUf!S OtollY SATURDAYS 10 AM to 10 PM •• SUNDAYS 10 AM to 9 PM CHILDREN (6-16 Yrs ) .,..00 MON lhru FRI 2 to 10 PM (Under6Yrs ) '"EE ~----------- ACRES OF ADDITIONAL PARKING Anaheim CONVENTION CENTER 800 W Kntella A c r o !fs f ro m D 1sneyl11nC1 (714 ) 9 99-8900 DIFFUS I 0 N~~ C O\T E \IPOR A RY \\0 \1 E\'S .\PP .\ R EL "I F 1NALLY F o u ND WHAT l'M LooK1Nc~ FOR ,, - GRAND OPENING ,'-1.\\'l AuGlJST 2+, 2 .c; tY 2t~ \' t K) I I II'-.\ l I · . l I II ,'11 'I \. I \l l \'l l .._, l ( 11\ ('.I \\ ,I\ ' ()11< /00(1 \/ n f>ftlll \f>rt t • 1 /rt1 ~/(Kl (rt/I ( t '11Jt.,1/( I .,,, ~ l ntnrnul Mndc.:lm~ _, -- / a\llM COMT DALY N.OT M Tu.cley, Auguet 21, 1990 ORANGE COAST ..., Piii An Independent Newspaper P11bt11hed by Poge Grovp Pub11sh111g. Inc • ..,.,, e. , .... J)fes1den1 & chief e .. ecu1111e olf1ct< Wllltarn S. ~. ed1IOf & v1ce-l)fet1de111 Steve MotW., monog1ng edllOI Stan Wyman, n1gh1 ed•IOI Don Fenley, ed1t0<1ol poge ed11or ... ., lleom, leoru<es ed11or ... ., C:O. ... n. sporis ed11or Carol Hvmphre)", ~or 001y ed••Or Elliot Stein, Jr .• cho'"''°" Gerold W. Adcox, Jr., gl'nernl monogl'• Walter l urrov9h1, 1901-1919, found rq pub•·~l•t"• Guest editorial l)se military might to defuse the crisis in the Persian Gulf EDITOR'S NOTE -On Aug. 8 an Orange Coast Dally Pilot editonal advocated mi/Jtary interven.tio,n. inc:tuding bomhing of Iraqi mi/ital} taf'8t'ts. m response to Iraq s invasion of Kui,a1t. Monda). William Safire. who writes for the New York Times' cdironal page\. proposed the same response to the Persian Gulf Crms. By WIWAM SA FIRE The quesuon is no longer "will there be war?" between the world and Iraq, but "what is the best strategy to win the wa r alread} begun with the least loss of life?" The connic11ng choices now before Mr. Bush are not secret; two different strategies have been laid out in public by f~rmer national ~unty ad"iscrs Zbign1ew Brzezinski and Henr) Kissinger. Our obJCCt should be "to squeeze but not strangle Iraq." says the author of the Carter Doc trine. Zb1g holds that we should defend Western access to oil. but not seek 10 roll back the conquest of Kuwall -to rely on mLemauonal cooperation to negottate a compromise wtth Saddam rather than try to defeat hi m. Henry differs. Our goal should be the removal of Saddam as a threat to the v.orld's economic lifeline says the author of the N1"on Doctnne. A settlement lea ving Saddam with growing m1lttar) might would be "Onl} an inte~lude ~tween a~ress1ons:·. wntes D~. K.issinaer; he urges .. a surgical an~ pr?re~s1ve dtstruc11on of Iraq s military assets" before the worlds w1I d1ss1patts. • I ~heve the Bnez1nsk1 "squeeze op11on" was destroyed tn the past few days by the Iraqi decision to hold We~tcrn nationals as hostages. Saddam's promised starvation of Western children would squeeze us. not him. to negouate "peace in our time." . But 1f Mr Bush moves quickly. we can counter the Iraqi threat 10 use our nationals as human shields at m1h1ary mstallat1ons. He need not be the third consecutive l '.S President 10 be humbled tl\ kidnappers. Saddam has alread} told Westerners trapped in Kuwait to assemble at three hotels to be saved from a threat he will soon cook up. Mr Bush -wtth Mrs. Thatcher and as man~ other leaders a' he can induce 10 JOtn him -should announce that an> "roundup" or harassment of up to 10,000 non-Communist Western na11onals taken tn the capture of Kuwatt would b'! co nc;1dered an act of war tnggenng potent m1htaf) retalaat1on Suppose President Bush goe' on the air qu1ckl} to tell thl' putative hostages tn Kuwait to evade capture as long as thq can and to urgt lo)al Ku"'a1t1s to hide them: and suppoSt' hl· adds that an> attempts at a ··roundup" "'II be answered b> bombt-r\ taking out all Iraqi strategic s11es. In that carcumstanct. let us consider the options open to Saddam 8 He rnuld ignore the 1hrea1 and order h1<; troop\ 10 hunt do"n the foreigners. or prom 1'ie death 10 an ) "ho d11 not '>urrcndcr at a gnen ttmc •Saddam w ukl kt the foreign national\ k a'l' J'> l'' t(knu· o f his desire for pcat.c. • He could neither round them up nor lt·t them out. he ran "·') defiantl} he"''" take them pn,oner Y.ht•nl''t'r hl' deride-; 10 hul not yet He 1s hkcly to select the first . to order his arm} w arrc!.t, all,e. ever) non-Kuwa1t1 in Kuwatt The .S. with whatever supporttng Clner II can get from th e U.N. would then carry out 11s solemn comm11ment We "-Ould homh every key war-making center 1n Iraq Jn 1h1s way. the shooting war would be begin as a d1rcll re~ull of Saddam's grab for hostages Hts hostage "roundup" would pull our tngger: kidnapping on top of inva"11on would rail down thr ensuing destruction. 'What 1f he outsmarted us. choosing op11om 1"0 or thr<'c"' ThJt would prolong the cns1s, which 1s 1n hie; intcre\I. but would '>3\.C th1: lives of thousands of trapped innocent'> -not vur central purpo\e but no small 1hin1t. By wag.ing a dec1S1ve. conventional World \.\ ar ~· .. "'C ~nen a nuclear World War Ill Our national 1ntere\t " not pnmanh 10 protect an 011 supply, or to save our wa y of life from dcpresswn or to make the world safe for sheik.s. or even to as~n the nohlc pnnc1ple of co llective resistance to aggreS'\lon. What makcc; an 1n1crest .. \ 11al" 1s 1ts centraltt) to life and drath The world 1n1ere\t 1n hnnging down Saddam Hus-.ein '" to en'iurc that the means of mass destruction ne"'cr fall into the hands of J mas'> murderer. Doonesbury PCIFP IM .;,,x:;w 7AtnN6 TO MPS JOAN CAl.)(Jf:,, WfO WAS A!<'£ f AIOt TO UH l /,Arel' IJ4VENffJPT ~ HAVE T {;(TT THAT flJGHT MPS C4U I f ()Bt 7Ht/?£ /0(/,81/T 17 «JASN"f Iii;,,, a.JS? By Garry Trudei\u Community comm~ntary California consultants thrive on special status \ SACRAMENTO -The Capitol i1 an arena in which those who represent com\Xtina social values and economic ante~ta do battle. Leaislators and other el~ed of- ficials their staff aides, senior bu· reaucrats. and lobbyi1ta ~. the ~ fnaional ~iators. Their .adentitJ.es and affihations arc offictally d•!- played for those who watch their pm es. But in recent yean. a new species of Capitol warrior has emerged, the consultant who is not quite a lob- byist (as far as the rqistration ~aw is concerned, anyway~. but who 1s be- lieved to make lhtnp happen be-cause of special conncctaons and access. Save education by giving Steve Merksamer is the archetypical ex.ample. Merksamer worked for Georse Ocukmejian in the Oc~ment of J usticc, then moved ~th .De~· kmejian into the governor s s~1te 1n 1983 as chief of staff. Midway through Deukmejian's gov· ernorship, Merksamer . left the of- ficial payroll and joined a Re· parents freed om of choice By JOHN GUSTAFSON Unquestionabl} one 1nd1c;pcn~ble necessity of life 1'> food To suppl) a nauon with the abundanCl', the qualtl) and the 'anel} "'.h•th 1he American con\umcr takes lor grant- ed is 1n foci cx1raord1naf). It is t:\ en more e' traord1nar~ when compared Y.1th thc near !am- ine cond111ons of man} olhn coun- tnes lntcrestingl). man\ of the~ countnc\, whose c1t11en\ 11\c 1n nu1nt1unal po' Crt\. ha \l~ 'a\I Jrea\ of mh s01I and fa , Clrabk l lim.\lll cond111om What 1s the setret'' V. h' 1\ \mer1- ca SO SUCCC\\ful'' \\ h} arc rnuntne\ such .t'> Ru,o;1a. ( htna and lcrntortr\ under their dominion abJel 1 fall · ures'> The ans"'cr 1s simple f hc'>e u1un - tnes ha'e a 80'l'rnmcn1-man.ignl ccunom), wherca'> .\mcnta. at ka'it 1n regard to agrn:ulture. has an eton- om} based upon free enterprise. Surpns1ngl) . .\mcnc:a has one 1n- st11u11on which 1s third world 1n concept and operation -th e educa- tion of its children Test S(.ores continue 10 plummet. high school graduates are unable to read and wnte. and an alarming number of ~oung adultc; cannot place the centur} of our ( "11 War They cannot pick out Y.Cll-known nations on a map and dcmon\tratc deplorabl) poor \kllh 1n math and science As the Orange CoHt Dally Piiot has well noted then· 1\ an an<,wer to the failed poltue\ ul cdutJtton 1n the 'n1ted ~1atc\ The h1ghl> n:'>P<'< tl'd Brooking' lnslllUlt' ha' on th" one onJ\11111 agreed Y.1th thl' h1ghh n·.,pctted Heritage Foun,1..i11nn (thl· ltheral and conservative prestigious "think tanks" 1n A.mcnca). They have both en th us1ast1call) endo~d a sys~em of freedom of choice 1n educatton. where parents can select the school their children will attend. rather than the :current system of com- pu lsory school sclectton. The freedom of choice system allo"s parent'> 10 \Ole "1th their '' Am~rlca has on~ Insti tution which Is third world In conc~pt and op~ratlon - th~ ~ducat/on of Its chlldr~n ,, feet. If the} do not approve of the education that 1he1r children arc receiving the) merely ~lcct a dif- ferent school, JUSt as they would ~feet another grocery store 1f the one where the} usually shop has either too high pnces or too low a qualit) o f merchandise. Tht'> 1rad1t1o nal Amencan system insures that the more talented. more energetic and more committed teachers will ~ rewarded. If this 1s a nation that trul y ~­ hcves in freedom . and 1f both the lt beral and tonsef\at1vc intellectuals of this countf) 'iupport a free system of education hov. could there poss- ibly be oppos1t1on" r otalltanan rl'g1mes of nil govern- ment\ ha' e "'11hin them 1nd1' 1dual5 Y.hmc '>l'lf-1ntere<tl makes tl de- wahk lor them 10 rcw.t change. The ~anw thing l'i true of the tutalttanc1n regime of 1ns11tut1onal cdutat111n 1n .\mcm:a First of all school teachers' unions publican-onented law firm that rep. have negouated rhe insidious prac-resents dozens of business clients. ttce of tenure for 11s members. Once Merksamer not only has retained a reacher 1s tenured (after about fi ve his close relationship with the Ocu· years). he or she cannot ~ fi~ed kmejian administratio n, but has be· regardless of how lazy. how in-come a senior member of the state competent. or how bizarre h1s or her Republican hierarchy and 1s an in- teaching practices become. Teachtrs formal advi~r to Pete Wilson. the arc not compensated because of GOP candidate for governor. their reaching skill or ab1ltty. bur While a number of the firm's merely because of the number of lawyers are registered lobbyists, years on the job. Merksamer is not. He s.ays that he ts Also cltngjna desperately to this merely functioning as an attorney fa iled and outmoded system arc the when he negotiates details of ICl)s.- school boards and administrators of ration on behalf of clients with our public educational inst11u11ons. aaents fo r other interest groups. or A glance at the parking lot of most otherwise operates on the fringes of admm1stration build1n1s gives the lcaislat1ve process. ample evidence of the vast number William u mpbell. who was a of bureaucrats whose overly bloated Republican state senator until a few salanes consume our tax doUars. months aao. is another who operattt If this monopohs11c system were at the marJJn. replaced by one which required per-Campbell is now prcStdcnt of the formance. the market mechantsm California Manufacturers Assoc11- ll!1Clf would reduce the num~r of uon, a powerful spec1a!-mtercst unneeded bureaucrats and reallocate lobby. Campbell himself 1s not a prC"Cious tax dollars to where they reaistered lobbY_ist. For that re~son. should be spent -on teaching. he can exercise the unwntten Control would pass from remote prcrogauve of former lcg.islators to arrogant administrators to the walk onto the noon of both houses parents whose concern for their ch1I-and schmooze wt th members as they dren ts highest. are debating and voting on bills - A democracy is not a self-per· a pnvileae denied ex-lawmakers petuaung type of government. It who arc registered lobbyists. relies upon an 1ntel1Jgent and in-Campbell. who reponcdly 1s paid formed c111zenry . more than S I S0.000 per year to It seems Lhat every week there is ..-pfotect the interests of malfufac- an article reminding us of ~he de-tunna corporations. was wandenna cline tn public educa11on in this around tht floors of both houses as country. Of course freedom of the Legislature considered measures education 1s not a pan~cea and tf 1t to impose new taxes on business to 1s enacted solutions will not occur close a yawnina gap in the 'tate ovem1gh1. But isn't 1t time 1ha1 t.h1s budact. country adopt a system of education Not all of these unofficial ~. tn· Joh G11•W•o11 11 • N~wport not by a long shot. W 11h Dcmoc ts Bucb rr•ldrol. in firm control of both houses of hr designed for success'! flucnc.e-pcddlers are Rcpubli~s. •~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· ~s~tuu. those with ron~~i ns to legislative leaders also att th v- More Californians willing to call themselves liberal ina. The most obvious example. although not the onl y one. 1s Bobbie Meu aer. Metzacr, a one-ume telev1s1on re- porter in San Diego, came to Sacra- mento to work in fo rmer Gov. Jerry Brown's press offict in \)'le late 1970s and also worked on Brown 's cease- less campaians for higher office. Analysts : Young voters more likely to bolt from GOP fold When the California Dcmocrattc Party's share of voter reg1'itrat1on dropped below 50 percent this year for the first 11mc 'itnce 1934. the news was greeted w11h smiles of sa11sfact1on in Rcpuhlu;an c1rdes Bui few people were 'iurpmcd. fhe decline has been fai rly 'lteady 'lance 1976, when Dcmoc rat\ accounted for more than 57 rcrt.c nt of the state's voters. The latC\t drop wa'i seen a\ Just more e" 1dcncc that tht' nauon'\ largest state eonttnucc; 10 become more conservative Yet while Democratic rank~ grow relatt vcl>-smaller -49 71 percent -and Republican ranks larger - 39.07 percent -the recent 1dco- logical trend has not m1trored the panisan trend Ne w polling data 1nd1c11cs that Californians. 1n 1he1r 1deolo,y. have moved sharply 1n the opposi te d1rcct1on. at least O'-'Cr the last 18 months. At the same ttme that rtlattvcly fewer voteN are call· in.11hemsclve1 Democrats. more arc 1dent1fy1n1 thtmsdves u liberals. Surveys taken by Markel Opinion Research. a Washan1ton 0 C'.·bascd firm , still shows Cahfom1a con· scrvatavcs a more numerous. bu1 not by much. Forty.four percent of voters surveyed last month 581d they were contcrvat1ves. and 41 r.rttnt liberals. In Otttmbcr 198 • sclf- identified conservatives accounted ror 50 percent or the survey sample, liberals only 3S percent. Th11 newfound willinantu lo ac- «Pt the "l WOtd" II a label is greater 1n Californ ia than tn the nation as a whole. Another 'iurvey by Market Op1n 1on Rei1carch tht'i year found 52 percent of the nation's voters saying that they art con- scrvat1 ves. and only 38 percent ca Il- ana themselves liberals. Changes in the character of the state's electorate have been deeper and more subtle than generally rc- cogni1ed. Votcr-reg1Strat1 on fi~ures and polhng num~rs alone don t lell the whole story at a time when the labels Democrat and Req.ubl1can. liberal and conscrva11vt. may he acqutnng new meanings. Jan van Lohurzen, a Market Opinion Research offi cial and a for- mer Republican ~natorial Cam· pa1gn Committee staff member. said the firm doesn'1 have a full cxpla· natton for the rc~nt increase in self· identified liberals. but he notes that 1t includes a arowina number of Republicans. In 1he last ye.tr ind a half, the percenta,e of California Republicans who say that they are liberals has Jumped from IS percent to 26 percent. But thote numbers alao need quahfication. Van Lohu1zcn su~sts that the inc"asc in self·tdenttficd Republican liberals reflects, in pan, the views of younacr GOP voters who show 1ron1 suppon for a pr0: choice pos1t1on on abortion and for .,.eater environment.al pro1ectiona. The hbcrahsm of thetc Re· eubtian yupptes is hiahly sel«tivr. On economic issues and on •~ Martin Smith seneral issue of aovcmment spend- ing, these youn~r Republi~n voters tend to remain conservative. "Liberal Republicans arc younaer1 conservative Dtmocrata arc older.' he said, ''The tona·term implica- tions, if this trend bolds, are interest· 101. Over time, u the youn.ter aae voups become more likely to vote and as tumout amona older votrn declines. contcrvative Democrats will be less important 11 a swina- voter lfOUJ? while liberal Re· publicans Wllf become more impon- anC' Tbete cha~ may be setti!.'&_ a trap ror the GOP. The key to OOP aucccua in California over the last lO yean tw been in capitaJmna on the strona loyalty of Repubrtcan voe.en 1nd on the willinpaa of conservative IWi"I Democrats to cro11 peny lina. Van Lohuixn's data $UllltlU lha\ \bit ttnlelY will bceomc.lne rel.iable u COnterVativc Democrats aee and their ranks lhin. Y<MlQFr U_bml ~ on the otba' UDd. are Ii 10 lhow much 1a1 pany loyalty n okter OOP v ..... .................. ...., JR' 3 f ,., .. ,,...., c.tllf ,,.., ....... Afler Willie Brown became speaker of the Assembly an 1980, MetzJer moved up a few floors in the Capitol 10 take over his press operation, then left the official pay- roll to o~n a Sacramento office for a San Diego public-relations firm. now called Stoorz.a. Zicpus and Meuacr. Meu,er has remained a part o( Brown's inner circle of friends and advisers -a status that was sealed when Brown made her husblnd. Michael Galiz.i~ his chief of staff'. Mell:fCr and valizio are one oflhe Capitol 1 few true power couples. Her public-rclationa flnn ttpretel\U a broed array of corporate and pol· itical cUents, and a number of them alao have strona connections to Speaker Brown, such as the CAii· fomia Trial Lawyen ANOC:iadon and 1everaJ Democratic A11embly mcmben. Havina tueh clote penonal and profaajonaJ con.nectiona to Brown bu enha~ Me\s(s businat in-ftnitely. Recently, ror cumplc. M1 ftnn was siven a contnct by ele-menu of the liquor ind\&IU)' to promote' a November ballot meaure that would raise tun on liquor. but ftOl. u muc.b .. H04Mf rneuure. Tbe milder liquor·w propoal bed been wedsed throuth the M- tembly and onto tbe ballot by Brown ll the behest of the inddry. and he latct helped Mftlltt ttt the pn>motionaJ conll'ICt. Meup.r, in the meanume, ICtalChet Brown'• t.ck by protnot• ine Iha iacerau trilh t.bc polidc:al. media. ...... Si,. ......... ...., 111 ' r tw .. Drillllft ~,,..,,..... n ll .. ,, ( j It c , All QUAUTY 0 ,.,,,, clo••r ....... .., . .. '-' ..... ........,, °"" _ ........ . ., ..... ..,. ....,dllr .. .... -u, • ., • ., .. ,, .. , .. ,~ ...., .. Ill .......... to 2' ....... .,.., .... .,.. "' -.. '''''' lo • dNb 1111 toe --llw '°"" ~--late ...... ......_ 1~1 thru ch ...., Otller· ............. " --.. ,. "'14111111Y hw111- .. 0r .. c-cy d ,., .... ,. " "°'..., -. PSI ,.-,. 41 72 71 73 •• • .. .. T__,.: Partly cloudy 111 the mornif11, othtt'WIM f alr Wtth chance of variable Winds. 74 75 II OCEAN REPORT BOATllG IMf -llflltt1.. lllOSlfy IOlll!lt.St lflllds S to 10 •110C1 t!lr .. IOflllllt. eufl)I SOlllll wnt to lltSI 10 to IS lllOCS Wttll Noot - tlternoon llld t'ftrll" "°"'' s ... soultl.m 3 fMI Pll1ty tlcMlcly lilt "'Cllt Ml mofftj,_ llovls ~ 1111 IMf M lf •tiers, lllOltly aoest to ftOltll lltSI winds I to IS hots witll l toot -llll041f! tOfllllll s ... llO<lltwnt 4 fttl Pwtty cloudy Wes. OCEAll •• TODAY'S SUN Sunrise ........ 6:18 a.m. Sunset. ........ 7:31 p.m. Slllf AND TIDEr em eMAN '"' .,_ :l·• ,., :1-3 ,.., 4 3:1 a m 10 47 a m 4 11 pm 103:1 pm 501 a m 11 11 ."' 5 11 pm 1111p'TI -· 5 :1 12 59 0 1 u 1:1 53 Good uttlln ot und t>tu bonott 1111e•ert1 llld -ttloWIH llld dol ldo "'" betft ltllOflN TODAY'S MOON Moonrise ..... 7:30 a.m. Moonset.. .... 8:07 p.m. () 0 () 1st Otr. Aug.28 Full Moon Sept. 4 Last Otr. 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Concd ....... ._, ......... (1185, eo.cM "'"'Y Fondl ........ ,, ,... ,..,.,.. ,,.., lK ............ c.orc·d ..... tt• ...... W (1-M8llllll Orllll R 0 ........ "Tiii ,_ " u.-. --11.:n PG' TIIT ..... Conc'd ........ "'""" """'(1.1) ... "" .......... ,....... (114.11 £rroi F'tyNI ....... ~ ........... Ull ..... (Ill~ .......... , ...... ---• .. -..... 0 ·-,.&. ....... ..,.. Am c.llct .. 11•1. ~ -.... ... _'-..._ .... v ....... lllDllm"'*-llMt ...... ............ ........ .. ... OM~ '" , ...... .....m; .,.,Liil ..... Complete TV ftstlngs In Sunday's TV UpdMe Sinatra carries old tunes, co -stars By Al.FRED KAY MrC'latd\)' l!Mwt ~ CONCORD -That unhkel> tno of Frank Sinatra. Don Rickles and Pia Zado ra app<'artd Sunda) eve- ning at the Concord Pav1hon. whe re they sold out the ho uSt' The~ had previous!) been scheduled to p<'r- form tn Sacramento's Arco "rcna. where they apparent I)' d1dn 't Y ct. 1f theSt" celebrated enter- tainers canceled the1r acramento p<"rformance. what took place tn the Concord hills was m o re appropnat<' for Arco Arena . home of the Sacra- mento Kmgs. For this basketball team has produced its share o fthnlls and d 1sappo1 ntmcnts. and stars and underachievers. So too 5tnatra. Rickles and Zadora. The thnlls were evoked b) 1n- atra. who o perates no"' w11h a d1m1nishcd and roughened '01cC' but wtth an artistry that dehght'> people of an age to be touched h-. nostalgia and youngsters who ~an t to hear a living legend while there " still 11me. T here 1s a ht tie tame Ph> ~11..alh the singer looks hke the Chairman o t the Board. a dcscn puon he pll 11.t•d up whale doing thanas his wa~ '\t tht· age of 7 5. his ha.ir is thinner. the rc\t o f him as thicker and his face ha' the: ro undness o f one of tho\e ha' C'·3 nice-day stickers. But the areat dancer Rudolph Nureyev came to town a ~h11C' hal il. unable to act very ht&h ofT th<' t1oor yet overwhelmed an audience "'1th a profound undcntanding of ht\ l rail. and many an opera star gets h' on s1m1lar anastry. If Sinatra 1s m1'l'1ng a few notes at the top and bottom ol the scale. the man can sttll turn a song and an aud1cncx inside o ut He can intefl>r'Ct lyrics and melody to a ._ ....... ,__ ·--"'-"' ~"' ' aw--...... AWi ' ~ .. ·-----... .._.'°' -·-... 1-\ -·~·..... ttll• I I-._._.Al !IO\-"I~.,..,--~1111 _..,,..) ··-...... , ... ..~ I •- farc -thcc·"'t'll and rncal ncv. mean· ings and old ftcl1ngs Dunng 'unda' -~program dr<'\\ed 1n a blu(' bluer "'llh gra) \lath h1~ hair p1ck.1ng up the \3ffi(' gra~ tone. inatra sta~('d prt'tt~ much "'th 1hc fa,ontes -"On(' tor the Road · "Mack the Knitc .. "'I Get a t-..1ck Out o f You" and the ltkc , ~um(' 7.000 people lr.ept Jumping up 10 g.i' e him standing ovation\ aftcr c.-ach n um~r M1ddlc·age "'OmC'n !>Creamc.-d a' though the singer "-Crc still th(' skmm kid from Hoholt.cn :-.;J.. and C\C.-O a male \011.e ofJ baseball-park p<"r~uas1on kept shout- .ng. "Lo'e ya hank'" Thi~ wa'I partl> 1n remembrante of thtnp past .ind certaml~ not for inatra s conversations "'1th the au- dience. dunng which he tned 10 read bad JOl es that had been wntten out for h im. though not dearh enuuith But IO\C )3 C'\t'r,bod) did C \lmcdtan Don R1cklr.,· true 'cnue 1s a n1~1duh "'hc.-rc.-hr can tx-close to h1~ customcC'\ and U'-<' them as a launching pad for 01ght\ ol inventive and \lndiclt\C.-fant.\ The <. oncord Pa' 1l1on "'ould hardl) \l"Cm to be that l~IX' of 1nt1matC' llXclk. \\llh thC' Jud1cnce spread h1e.h and \\tdC' on dn outdoor ll'd'-"> ''"IX' l 'stng patr11n' 1n the lront W"' a~ hi\ str.11ght ml'n R1rkl<'' took 1•IT on a sene~ o f unt.h. r h. tll 1\tt•31l) lo"' 'Plrltcd and ru "" "' rthnll iol c\ including the usual ~l1chc'i of ph\SI RU FFE LL'S UPHOLSTE RY INC . w .... • '.,.. t:>.11.. c.. ... ""'-. 1•7l MU IOt lkVO COSU ~fSA s .. llS& J.------ ral app<"arancc and ~1mplt<1l1c na- t1onal tnua hon. d escnpt1vt "'ord\ ~err u~d for 'anous rares and ~.\u.tl onc.-nt1ons And though the comedian·~ naughty-bo~ mile. a "God ble\s 'ou" here and there, and a pied 10 enJ h1go1n showed 1t wa a ll 1n fun the barbs. I believe. Cl.It dccph dnd lingered tn thei r rural, outdoor tontr\l. far from Las Vega, :"t•\ The.-dc<,c, nptteln "und<'raC'hte' tng" t~•uld hJ'' tlcen applied to P11 l<1dor<1 for a ~(l(){j ran of her c:tr("('r \hr "J\ om l' 1.k"'" n~d a<. a \t'\\ "'Oman "h11 mdrncd nch. and lx'Hh arc una\..atlahk IJl '' Ladora ha' ap(X'arcd tn such had film' dS "Ruttt·rO' .. and "ln"as1t1n of the Ko~~ \ltcn, .. and ung<'nerouo; pcoplC' \did \he \f'l('nl a good part ol her pt'r1urm1ng hi<.' 1n hotels o wnc.-d h' her hu'>hJnJ and 1inagkd 3 (1old- l'n c 1l11tlc ''"'.trd GHOST ·.V.1 .' ~ p(; It : . ,... ~ . .. . .....,_ ... -• \All ........ ...., ... .. . ...., .. .._ -.,.,_ . . Com e On In ... SKATE FORfUN! , ' .. • .. . ,., ' : • • l Meet & Make f rt en ds JCE SKATING LESSONS Enroll Now! MMCI Verde C.ntef 2701 Horlter llvtt. Cotta Meta, CA 97t-tlto ' ... ':."' ... 'IllE BACK PAGE DEALS l'.-AI OD poor kal defense. .. Today f went down and accepted a deal &Om a judae that's IO~ to ltnd me to prison ror four ~ he told the Oral• C...t Da.Uy PileL .. Four yars for something I didn't do. For IS years 1 ran a p-eat facility in Coaa Mesa that supported the community and took care of every· body. ~t happened was the result of a baiikruptcy proceeding and the t'lct that my attorney took off with all of my defense papers.." Concannon wu accused of bilking cU$tomers and banks out of more than S l.S-mijlion throuah a series of phony sale4 switched titles and other confidence games. His 1 S-count indictment in 1989 included allegations that he forged pink slips from cars consigned to him, ostensibly sold them, then used the duJ?lieate pink slips to obtain SI million in credit from banks. Concannon said he had always intended to pay customers the money due to them. but that his former corporate attorney, Michael T. Kenney. botched a bankruptcy settlement las1 March and. several months later, dropped out of sight with documents that could have proven his innocence. RAFFLE From At Deputy Dastnct Attorne) Jan Nolan 58.ld Keuyhan violated state codes on unfair business pracuccs because he failed 10 provide free tickets to the rame. Keuylian and has Law and Justice Foundation sold tickets at S 1,000 apiece to a raffie of exotic cars. with a 25th anniversary Lamborghini Countach valued at S 156.000 as the grand prize. With only 4.000 tickets to be sold, Keuylian told the Oruge Coast Dally PUot tn Ma > he expected 1he raffie would net $4 million. half of which would go to several homeless aid charities. The other $2 m1lho n would pay for the cars and othc.-r prizes. Keu~han said. The drawing was onganall~ sched· uled for Jul~ 15. but Keu) han Post- poned it un ul Nov. 11 because he hadn'1 sold enough l1ckets b> the earlier date, according to Nolan. Meanwhile, the District At- Lipo ·uc tioning $990* N<> [)()\X' PAY:\1E;\;T #b.60 PER ,\10 '1 0.A <. Johnson confirmed that Ktnoey hid ceased repmentina Concannon and that the anomey had developed .. some lepl problems of bis own.•• But he d11missed Concannon'• claim that he was the innocent vi<> tim of a dishonest or incompetent lawyer. .. Mr. Kenney wasn't his attomer. in l 986 when all of this bepn. • Johnson said. "He wasn't there when Mr. Concannon told cus- tomers their cars hadn't been sold when in fact they had. He wasn't there when Mr. Concannon switched license plates. It sounds to me as if Mr. Concannon is simply lookina for someone to blame for bis troubles." He said Concannon's present at· torney, Patrick McNeal, could have obtained any documents necessary to his defense. "If Mr. Concannon had been able to produce any indication that there was a shred of evidence in the form of records that could be reproduced, I'm certain Mr. McNeal would have been able to do that," he said. Costa Mesa Police De tective Steve Labbitt. who investigated the Concannon case. said there was no question that Concannon had com- mitted massive fraud over a penod of several years. "Judges in Orange County don't torney's Office and Newpon Beach police gol call s from people who questioned whether the raffie was legal. The consumer and environmental protection unit of the District At- tomey·s Office 1nvest1gated and found that although Keuylian called the S 1,000 ti cket charge a donation. he didn't publicize the fact that donations weren't required. "You ha ve to make it known free uckets are a' lilable." Nolan said. "He kept 1t a secret that }OU could get them for free. Onl) the state can hold a lotter) ... The D1s1nc1 Attorney's Office de- termined Keuyhan acted without criminal intent, so a civil sull was tiled against ham to stop his lottel) Authorities offered him the option of pa) 1ng the ticket buyers back or holdan~ thr .-.me le~ally b) advents- REWARD From Al ever seen an m\ whole entire hfe." said Steve Wfupple. West Coast head of sales fo r Super Shops. ··The store manager phoned me this momtne. when he walked ID .. .'' Whipple said. "He was extreme!~ upset. I couldn't make out what he was sayine." The kalhngs also shocked busmess people and residents of the quiet community. The owner of the Blue Bird Motel. located across the street. said he did not see or hear anything out of the ord1na r). "I've been here 30 years and there's ne"cr been a single sneident IC'nd white collar crimiftlls to jail '"1leu ~ really deterve it," La~ bitt u.id. • It's ridiculous for him to blame Kenney, when Kenney didn't bave anythina to do with the two or three yean of fraud Concanbon per- petrated. In fKt. I tho~t Mr. Ken· ney did a aood )Ob at the smliminary, oonsidenna that fact that there really wasn't much of a defense to be made." Labbin C1onJirmed that Kenney was under invcsti1;1tion by the Or· ansc County District Attorney. Deputy District Attorney Guy Ormes, who is handling Kenney's case, could not be reached for com- ment Monday. Kenney also could not be reached for comment Monday. There was no answer at his Santa Ana office Mon- day afternoon, although an answering machine late in the after- noon did indicate it was the office of Michael Kenney. A spokeswoman for the State Bar of California said Kenney was in good st.anding and fully entitled to practice. Johnson said Concannon would most likely be given the full four- year sentence agreed upon Monday. But if he fails to show up for has Sept. 19 sentencing and is later re- arrested. he could get more than seven years. Johnson said. ins no donation was requfred, Nolan said. Keuylian chose the former and agreed 10 the following payment schedule: • Repay the 30 ticket holders 1n Orange County by Aug. 16. • Repay the 35 tickel holders an other parts of California b) Sept. 16. • Repay the ticke t holders in other pans of the country -who accounted for about S 176.000 -in November. • Repay the I I ticket holderc; an foreign cou nines an December "We're fo llowrng up to make sure these people do get paid back ... Nolan said. Keuylian could not be reached fo r comment. The Law and Justice Foundauon·s phone numb<:r was di sco nnected. like 1his," said the man, who declin- ed to ~ve his name. "I ha ven't seen anything unusual. It's a very quiet area here." There was no sign of forcl'd entry mto the store, which opened at 1he end of Ma} and 1s located in a commercial area at the comer of Tustin Avenue and First Street. W1I· Iiams said. Investigators were still tf)ing to de1ermine if anything had been stolen, but noted that Sunday's re- ceipts were on the counter instead of locked up as usual at fhe end of the business day Three ca.rs. apparent!) belonging 10 ~ Y~L were parked 1n the rear pi'iiiirgT<>T.-which was roped off with JCOcn_. pei;ce tape. Breast Enlargcn1cnt No~c $1990* $1990* :\0 l)()\X N PA'\ ~1 f.. T #b. 00 Pl H \10 '17 <>A C NO DO\X'N PAY\1 E~T lb. RO PF.R \10 '17 O.A (. Experienced Surgeons with over 2 5 ,000 Plastic Surgeries Performed Brea .. t Lift Eyes Face & Neck $2750* $1990* $2950* NC) 0()WN PAYMENT N() 0()WN PAYMEN T N() DOWN PAYMEN T $11S p~~~\~() lb.no PER MO '17 OA( $120 P~\R~\~() •Plus surgery center oneslhes10 or .mplonl charges 1f oppl1c oble t Board Ccrtifit:d Pla stic Surgeon~ t Outpatient Surgery Ct·nt<:r t In urancc Accepted v.·h<:n: Applicahk t WHI Accept Co-Sign<.:r for Financing + All o meti<: Surgery Procedures Avai lable COSMETIC SURGERY INFORMATION CENTER TM for Information Call ... 1·800-53S·0380 t 1990 ROCO Mork,.t1ng • U.S . rofe In Persian Gulf protest staged for Bush PROVIDENCE, R.I. -A small poup took to the streets Monday to protett the deployment of U.S. soldiers and sailors in the Persian Gulf reaion. About IS people waved~· and lof\ed a banner in protest of the U.S. policy in the Middle East at a b\lsy tntersection in North Kinptown, where President Bush made a cam- paign stop on behalf of Republicans Gov. Edward 0 . DiPrete and Rep. Claudine Schneider. The president never saw the dem- onstrators, who took up a post that his motorcade didn't pass. They moved their protest to downtown Providence later in the afternoon to catch the rush-hour crowd passina in front of the federal buildina. SHIELDS From At .. U.S. troops out of the Middle Eui. No war for the oil companies and Wall Street. Money for jobl. homes, schools at home, not war abroad," their banner said. They likened the deployment of thousands of U.S. trooPJ. planes and ships -intended to protect Saudi Arabia and block trade with Iraq's becavse of the Iraqi invasion of neiahborina Kuwait -to the early staaa of the Vietnam war. ''We're responding like in 1963 when advisen were sent to Viet- nam." said BiU Bateman of the All Peoples Co~ss. "This is the open· ina shot of an antiwar movement. They're makina all the war moves." Althouah he conceded it was un- likely that his small protest would drivi~ down world oil prices and depriving Iraq of biJlions of dollars in revenue. Iraq declared six days release. later that it had annexed Kuwai t and In a blow to Iraqi President Sad-began referring to it as a city in dam Hussein, Iran announced Mon-southern Iraq. day that at will abide by a U.N. Two senior U.N. officials went to resolution ordenng economic sane-Baghdad to press for release of tions a'8anst Iraq. This followed foreigners held in Kuwait and Iraq. Saddam s moves last week to make Secretary-General Javier Perez de peace w11h Iran. his long-time Cuellar said Saddam asked that the enemy, so as to better focus on his envoys be sent. confrontation wi th the West. Eduard A. Shevardnadze, the Sov- The official Iraqi News Agency iet foreign minister, appealed to a quoted a spokesman for Baghdad's visiting Iraqi deputy premier in rulin~ National Council as saying: Moscow to free the foreigners. Tass "Iraq s foreign guests have been in said he "expressed satisfaction" to fact moved to all vital and military Saadoun Hammadi that Soviet installations. They have been citize ns were allowed to leave and provided with all modem facilities as.iced for "a si milar decision in and they are all in good physical relation to c1t1zens of other states ... condition... The United Arab Emirates jomed It did not say how many the list of allies helping the United foreigners were moved or gi ve 01her States in its land and sea bamcade details. of Iraq. In Washington, the State Depan· Defense Secretary Dack Cheney ment reponed that at least 12 announced in Abu Dhabi, one of the Americans and some other emirates at the sou1hem c:nd of the foreigners were taken from their gulf. that U.S. C-130 cargo planes Kuwait ho1els and mo\1:4 to un · had begun operating from llAE ter- disclosed locations. A U'.S. official ntory. said the 12 included both men and OPEC said 1here was not enough women, adding. "they may be going suppon among members to call an to Baghdad." emergency meeting on Saudi EarUer Monday, Saddam's gov-. Arabia's request for increased out- emment informed diplomats they put to make up the shortage of 5 had until Friday to close their million barrels a day cauS<'d by the missions in Kuwait or lose thdr loss of Iraqi and Kuwaiti pro- spec1aJ status. ducti on. Several countnes said they had no Hisbam Nazer. Saudi Arabia's 011 plans to close their embassies. Tbey minister, said Saturday his co untry included Austna. Britain. Denmark, would mcrease production b) up to Finland. France. Italy, Spain. 2 million barrels a day with or Sweden. the Soviet Union and Wes! without support from the Organ11a· Germany. uon of Peiroleum faponing Coun· In warning their own people about tnes. harbora ng fo reigners, Iraqi Ship rad ios crackled Monda > with authorities said any.one doing so the sounds of U.S. ~arsha ps faced the "stverest punishment," challenging nearl) every commercial accordjfll to lraqlJadio. The JCpofL_yg,St'I in the southern Persian Gulf, said the rule applied 10 Iraq's "ent irc--0\Jt no Iraqi vessels were found in adm1n""8t1ve bonier." appM'Cftttr"""e area. shipping sources reponc:d. including Kuwai1. U.S. Ma nnes are confident the) Iraq in vaded the small emirate can handle wha1ever problems ansc, Aug. 2 after accusing 11 of cheating despite punishing co nd1t1ons and on OPEC producti on quotas, thus log.1St1ca l challenges. COAST From A t Etel Solingen a professor of in tc:r- na11onal relations at UCI. would lake 10 sec a d1ploma11c solution to the hostage cns1!>. hut ~he cau11oned that U.S foreign pollc) cannot be dmcn b) 1hc demands of those who arc holding Amcncan c111zens. "Man) more soldiers could be Josi b) not taking .l<.'t1on.'' she said. "If ) ou surrender 10 the dictates of terronst groups or states. yo u arr prone to al"a)s be the target of hostage taking:· Hussei n kno"s that placing the hostages ' la ves in danger wall divide the Amcncan pcoplr on tht" question of taking military action. she said "B> doing that he lends to m1n1· m1ze the "1ab1ht)' of a surgical stnke... ollngen said. ··He'o; tr) ing to mtn1m1Lc the chan tc that will happen.·· Solingen docs not believe, as ( <>X doe~. that solel) ndding the world of Saddam Hu!>se1n 1s the answer either. "He as not al one," she said "I thank that there 1s an Iraqi prob1em move the United States to re- consider its policy, be arauect that U.S. opposition to the Vietnam War also atarted small, arowina into • nationwide movement. "They only respond when the numbers arow1 when the people start coming home ln body bqs," be said. Another protester, Timothy Sprouls of the Rhode bland Middle East Committee. said he was par- ticularly opposed to the U.S. response because of the rapid buildup of forces in the G ul f reaion. "The United States j umped in there with both feet,· be said. "There's been no discussion or dialogue." -IJy Th A.uocMN4 Pm• "We arc ready to do whatever we need to do," said Maj. Gen. John Hopkins, head of the 7th Marine Expeditionary • Brigade based in Twentynine Palms. Addrcssina the national Veterans of Foreign Wars convention in BaJti- morc, Bush said: "We have been reluctant to use the term hostage. But when Saddam Hussein specifically offers to trade the freedom of 1bose citizens of many nations he holds •inst their will tn return for concessions. there can be little doub1 that whatever these innocen1 people are called, they are in fact hostages. "And I want there to be no mis- understanding. 1 will hold the gov- ernment of Iraq responsible for the safety and well-being of American citizens being held apjnst their will.'' On Sunday. Saddam offered to release foreigners if the United States withdrew its forces from the Persian Gulf region and promised to hfi the economic embargo. U.S. of- ficials refused. He said later he would free c111zens of nations that remained neutral an the conflict. includana those of Austna, Swi1zerland, Sweden. Finland and Ponugal. They account for only about 600 of the 21.000 foreigners 10 Iraq and Kuwai t Iraq said Monday that Indonesian and some Argentines wo uld be al- lowed to leaH. China's official news agenc). Xanhua. said the first group of 97 Chinese was leaving and Tass said 122 Soviet c1t1zens crossed inter Jordan on Monday. Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal of Saudi Arabia v1s1ted Damascu~ on Monday to discuss the gulf cnSIS with Synan leaders. Iran's official lslamac Republic News Agency said Iraqi soldiers con- tmued withdrawing from occupied Iranian terri1ory, freeing thousands of troops to face U.S. forces Iraq and lran also are repatnating pns~ oners from their eighl·}'ear war. and II is broader than Saddam H us~1n . but 11 is e'<acerba1ed by him. Cox disagreed. "Saddam Hussein himself 1s the proble m.'' he said "He as. I feel. an aggressor in a wa) that other states an the Mideast have not been ·· The ObJect1 ve of .S. forc1in pol- IC) must be to "1n1emat1 onahtc tht" force... and ultima1ely uni1e the Arab world against Hussein. "It should be Saddam H us~m against the world:· Cox said "Not Saddam Hussein as leaders of the Arabs aga1ns1 Amenca and Israel " Congressman Flake denies tax evasion NEW YORK -l!.S Rep. Flo)'d Flake pleaded innocent Monday to conspiracy, fraud and tax evasion charges stemming from allegati ons he di vened money from programs of the church where he is pastor. After the arraignment., the two- term Democrat assured 250 sup- poners he will be vindicated at tnal Flake. 45, was indicted Aug. 2 on 17 counts of conspiracy. fraud and tax evasion. His wife. Margarett, 42, was ind1c1ed on nine counts Lawyers entered pleas for 1hem at a fave-mmute coun appearance before U.S. Dastnct Judge EuJene Nickerson m Brooklyn. Neither Flake nor his wife spoke; but 1hey stood erect, looking confident lhroughout the proceeding. The Judge released them an their own custody and scheduled the next heanng for October. Afterward, Flake thanked the: ap- plaud1ng supponcrs a5 he lefi the counhouse . "I am not gu1hy," he told them. "My record speaks for itself." The supponers had arrived an chartered buses; many were from 1he Allen Afncan Methodis1 Church in the borough of Queens. where Flake is the pas1or Some earned signs. including one that read: "Come. sec the great work he has done." -By ~ ~Auoclated Pnn THE DAILY PILOT 'S ULTIMATE FOOTBALL SECTION Will be appearing Thursday Sept. 6t h T o over 100,000 Readers INCLUDES: • Extensive Coverage of all Local Schools • Schedules of Local Games • Coverage of College Games • Raiders & Rams Support Your Local Team and Cheer Them on with a bord~d message FOR ONLY '19 Goooooo TEAM! CIF ALL TH E WAY GOOD LUCK FIOM EVE&YONE AT JORN DOE'S SHOP ACTIJAL ~AOE 1ZE DEADLINE FOR YOUR MF.SSAGE I AUGUST SO So call your Clasaified Representative Today! 642-5678 Trojans practice at UCI • Trojenl 11•11•rH/•I. IRVINE-The USC footbell team bepn a week of pnctices at UCI on Monday with mom· ina and afternoon workouu on the field acljtcent to Cnwford Hall. Ca.ch Larry Smith's team, picked by many to captUR their fourth 1traiaht Pac-10 title this . aeason, wilf practice each day throuah Friday at 9:30 Lm. and 4:30 p.m. before headina t.ct to Los Anaeles on Saturday. The Trojans will then beain final preparations for their Aus. 31 season opener Ip.inst Syr- acuse in the Kickoff Cluaic in East Rutherford, N.J .. with on- campus workouts on next Mon- day and Tuesday mominp before takina off for New Jcney on Tuesday afternoon. -BJ dNI DallJ PUo• Raiders deny TV report 'Official' refuses to be identified, says LA' s still the f?lace for Raiders • LOS ANGELES - A Los Anseles Raiders of· ficial said Monday there is nothing to substan- tiate a broadcast report that the team might move back to Oakland in time for the start of the National Football Lcque season. "The same source said a few weeks ago that wi thout a doubt. the Raiders would play the Dallas Cowboys in their prcscason game at Oakland in- stead of Los Angeles," said the of- ficial. who asked not to be identified. "As we all know, the Raiders beat the Cowboys 16-14 Saturday at the Los Angeles Coliseum:· ESPN. Cltlng unidentified sources. reported Sunday niaht that Raiden owner Al Davis was scramblina to work out final details of a move to Oakland. including a buyout of the team's lease at the Los Angeles Col- iseum. ESPN also reported that the NFL has j>ecn prepared for months fo r a quick switch back to Oakland. Davis could not be reached by the Associated Press for comment. Don Pcrata, prt$idcnt of the Alameda County Supervisors and a leader in local attempts to brinJ the Raiders back, told KCBS radio in San Francisco that he thinks a move IS likely. "It could all come together. and I suppose even though I've never. ever assumed they would be back this )car. 1f Al Davis can say. ·we have a contract and we have a release from L.A. and we have the approval of whatever 1s required from the NFL.· yeah, it could happen," Perata said. The Raiders drew a crowd of only 28.273 to their game against the Cowboys. The Raiders are scheduled to open the regular season apinst the Denver Broncos Sept. 9 in Los An- geles. Oakland has made a S 127 million relocation offer, and Davis has until September to accept or reject it. Los Angeles mayor Tom Bradley met with Davis last week to en- courage him to accept a new offer to keep the team in the city. Spcctacor Manaaement Group, the private manager of the Los Anaelcs Col- 1scu m. has an offer on the table which would advance $20 million to the Raiders. The money would be paid before SI 00 million in proposed reno- vations to the 67-year-old Coliseum arc com~leted. On Fnd.ay. the city of Fontana and a private company announced they bad submitted to the Raiders a proposal for a sports complex that would include a 75,000-seat football stadium. Under that proposal, the Raiders would be part owner of the complex, which is proJccted to acner- ate S600 million in revenue durina its first IS years. From De A11ocute4 ~ INSIDE • &.Men sign Campbett to mufti-year pact/12. • Yanllee1 get a new gen· .,., m.napr /12. • Al•• ...,. and their minor ...... lhltl/12. • T~·radlo/12. • ~ u..,..111. • Hone radng/•J. Dolly Piiot's r.vm.flW !C'C ,_ A"ilHC'HfJ)lll I.Alf H f! Kl"'1H(W114 ltOUU GN.•- CLASSIFIB> /U COMICS/• . TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1llllO I :J Football factory, U.S.A. ·use . ,. Trojans' record off the field doesn't measure up to Top 10 l<EEPING COUNT Ten ,days from this eve- nina the USC football team will play Syr- acute in the Kickoff Claslic i n E a 1 t Rutherford, N.J ., one ofl 2 pmes on the 1990 · Trojan schedule -not countina. of t:oune, an anticipeted bowl pme appearance on or about New Year's Day. I was reminded of this by Los ~ Timescolumnilt Melvin Durslq. who last week interviewed USC's coach,~ Smith. Smith, already11s bqinnina to wo'try because massina from the Tro- jan defense arc two players linebacker Junior Scau and defensive back Marie Carrier, who each had a year of eligibility rcmainina but chose instead, to tum professional. Smith, not unexpectedly, objects to playen lcavina school premature- ly 1n hope ofbeina drafted into the NFL. On the surface, this would seem to be a lqitimate complaint. inasmuch u (a) the player some- times doesn't land the pro contract he envisions, and (b) the player loses bis collcsc ehgibility,,}nd (c) it makes Smith ·s JOb more dimcult. Smith says this makes him mad because schools have spent money rccruitina these playen at consider- able expense. He docs not seem nearly as mad about the player not obtaining a university degree, probably because USC f ootbaU players seldom padu- ate. anyhow. It has been documented that while USC continues to lead the nation's universities in providing NFL performers, it also ranks among the worst in educating same. Nevertheless, Smith is unhappy. When asked what he would do about this NFL inuusion, be sugested a chanac in the NCAA scbOlanhip rules to give more money to football players for livinacosu, plane tickets, girl-slappinacampus parties, etc. One assumes Smith believes this added f rce money would penu.ade a player to stick around campus lol'l&Cr. The USC coach would also li&hten the player's academic load. Makes you want to aiaJe, doesn't it? ..In order to stay in school," said Smith, "the player is compelled to carry a specified number of units. With all the time he spends on foot- ball, this isn't always practical.•· Really? You mean a student is asked to carry a specified number of units to stay 1n school? What radical thinkina. OK. let's review this: So far, the USC coach wants more money for his playen and fewer classes. Any- Rookie lifts Angels to 5-3 win Langston gets. second straight win, now 7-15 DETROIT -Mark Lanpton sianod a S 16 million contract with califomia before the lt'ISOn and has strug)ed ever sloce. But Monday niabt he won • sec- ond •traiab• start fOr the fint umc all season u the Anaels beat the Detroit Tiem S-3. Lan.-ton (7-IS) went 1even inninp. yiddi'-" thrtt runs and flvt biu while ltrikina out eight. .. , think I'm finally tettina in the ~io~~ ~e1:."t!':rn!sbe:ri; and I just wanted to keep it close. Schedule AT IAT T~: at Detroit• •·35 ON DICK Wed• at Detroit 10-JS IN THI HOLi Thu at Ct1iu90• S-OS An oames °" KMPC radlO 1710 • On TV, Ch S. sc SoortsCrwtnM4 The hmen dJd a sreat Job to ~t tht lead back and the bullpen clost'd tt out." Rook.le Ptte Coachman had two hits and two RBI. 1nclud1na a ue- break.ina double 1n a 1eventh-1nn1n1 rally. Paul Oibson (l-3). who faced only one better. was the lo~r in relief of Jeff Robinson. The A•l• trailed 3-2 when Ot~k Schofield sinaJed Wllh one out in the seventh. It was only the third hit off Robinson but be was rchtved by Gibson. "Robinson had thrown over 110 pitches and our bullpen all had fi ve days of rest." Detroit manqer Sparky Andenon said. "A week aao. when our bullpen was dead. I would have left Robby 10.'' P1ncb-h1ttcr Dante 81chene tnpled off the center field fence. tyi~ the pmc and Edwin Nuoct reheved Gibson. But Coechman doubled to put the Anacts ahead and IOOrcd on a 11nale by Ouli 0.vts. ·rwe needed a big 1nn1na and we aot one:· Antcl• manqer Doua Rader said. "That was O.nte'i best at-bat of the season. then Ptte corMS .......... ~LS/Ill thina else? · "A third pouibilitr_ tha~ mi•ht be helpful," Smith told DunJa&, T.fs a con tract of sons whereby a player you recruit is bound lepJJy to the ICbool for four ycan. This would protect our investment.•• Apin. no mention ofa lack of education. The thin.kins behind Smith's ~r­ fect world, thoup, is now clear. He would pay more money to football playm who would not so to class but couldn •t tum pro until he was fin- ished with them. Not only was I bothered by this l<>&ic, and by Smith's blatant stance, but by the fact that the lA$ Anieles Times interviewer found no reason to question it. Have we reached the point where USC not only doesn't mind being called a Football factory but also expects public suppon for it's pos-ture? Rick Talley Perhaps SO. Certainly~ must be a few hundred thousand of those in Los Anitles who wouJd aaree. YOU can tell by the bumper stickers. I am not naive about~ foot- ball. I undentand it's bi& bull.DCIS and I understand the must-win press-• ures under which some hi&bly-paid coaches must function. It hai be- come the system. That dot-sn't mean il's riaht or that I like it. In fact. I abborit and smccrcly believe collqe football players should receive less moaey and attend more classes and maybe, fl'lease lft TAU.Ff /aJJ Races wide open as Junior championships get under \/Vay behind light tNinds 9y ALMON LOCKAKY ...._,...._,._ Sailors in all three divisions of the Lf) USYR U-Rolcx un· 1or cha~p1ons~1ps • ban.led li&bt south- southwcsterly wtnds Monday in the open· -ma two races for the coveted Scars. Bemis and Smythe trophies. Leadina the Scars Cu p compcta· t1on in the four-handed Etchclls-22 sloops was Area F with skipper Scott Ehina of Houston. Tex. Yacht Club with finishes of 1-4 for 5. 75 points under the low sconng system Tied for first in the Flying Jrs .. com{>Ctrng for the double-handed Bemis Trophy werr Bill Hardest)'. Mission Bay Yacht Club (Arca J). and Jesse Andrrws, Amencan Yacht Oub. R.t.yc N.Y. (Arca B). each \\llh a first and a second for 2. 75 points David Houser. Coronado Yacht O ub, was leading the single-handed compctilJon for the Smythe Cup W1th finishes of 1-2 for 1 S points . .\rca J is the USYRU's Southern Cahfom1a area. The Sean Cup 1s the oldest of the l ' YRL' Junior sailing trophies. dat· ing back to 1 9~ I Top five scorers in each da' mon after two of I 0 races. SEARS CTP-1. '\rea F. Scott Elt- ing. Houston.Tex 't C'. 1-4. 4 75. 2 Arca D. Manning Montagnct. Pass Chns11an YC'. Mm1ss1pp1. 3-3. 6. 3 o\rca J, Jor) Twist. Newport Harbor YC'. 5-~. 7. 4 >\rca B. Meg Gaillard. o\mmcan 't C. Rye.NY . 8-1. 8 75. 5 Arca E. Dean Balcarak, Bavv1ew YC. Detro11. Mach .. 2-8. I 0 · BEMI TROPHY-I. Tae tx'· tw~n Arca J. 8111 Hardesty. M 1ss1on Ba) YC. I ·2. and Area B. ks~ An· drews . .\mencan YC. Rye. N Y. 2-1. 2 75, 3. .\rea C. Sarah Carlson, Shrcwsbur) \'C. N.J, 3-3. 6. 4. Tic between '\rea D. John Rawlins, Southern YC. Ne\\ Orleans. 5-4. and Arca G. Matt McQu~n. Ri chmond. Calaf YC. 4-S, 9 MYTHE TROPHY-I .\rca J. Don Houser. M1ss1on Ba) YC'. 1-2. 2. "S. 2. '\rca H. Grq Miller. Royal V1ctona YC'. 2-3. S. 3 o\rca F. Mark Ha rt, Houston 't'C'. Texas. 5-1. 5 15, 4 .\rra E. Rem M1lhgan. Ba ) view YC. Detroit. '11ch. 3-5. 8. 5 o\rca B. Nicholas DuBois. Indian Harbor YC'. C onnect1cut. 6-4. 10 Leach gains a reprieve, but ... McEnroe show·sure won't help The whole thin& started two weeks aao at the U.S. Tennis Assoc1at1on Boys I 8s National Championships 11 Kalamazoo. Mich., and although everytbina seems patched up be- tween Laauna Beach's Jon U-ach and the U.S. Junior tcnm team. the re· pc~ussions m11ht last for a long time. Lach was ptayina 1n the third round of the sm&Jcs champ1onsh1f"i when he flat outlost 1t. He wa upset with his opponent, he alledatdl> spat at him and made obtcenc anturH. In other words. he d1!lf'llCCd h1m~lf and the team be repretCnted on the court. After all wu saad and done. Coach Stan m1th kicked Leach ofhhe U TAJun1orteam-asoundde- c11ion. J un1or ten nu has no room for McEnroc--tike antics. But after the fonnerC'lF individual champton ~ TENNIS Patrick Larkin wrote a letter of a.oolOI)'. Leach was reinstated as an alternate on the team. That, in 1t1elf, coukt be to"lh on Leach. BcJnaa mcmbaoft.htjunior team bti,. ucmptaon rtom qualify- '"'for ~JUDKJr tourname'lltl such u W1mbtedoa'uaion., dllie U.S. Opc:n and otbm.. It 11 liiiWJiftlin • .......... -/q \ - George makes last move, names Michael new GM NEW YORK -Oeor,e Steinbrcn· ~ oer played The Bou until the end Mon- day, mwna one last chanae by once • ap1n namina Ocne Michael aeneral man- aeer of the New York Yankees. Steinbrenner bad until midni&ht to give up control of the team under an aarcement rcached·July 30 with commiuiooer Fay Vinoent. Shortly after 7 p.m. a federal judae in Oeveland turned down a suit by two of Steinbrcnner's limited partners that sought a temporary restraining order that would keep him in power. Steinbrenner, spcakina at Yankee Stadium before Monday niaht's p.me against Toronto. said his raipation leuer was signed and would be submitted by midni&ht. He must resi&n as the Yankees' general partner, althou&h be can remajn as the team's princi- pal owner. "I've always said I 0 years is maybe enough for a corporate chief executive." he said. ··Perhaps it's time for a change." Two ofSteinbrcnner's limited partners wanted to block the agreement with Vincent. but U.S. D1stnct Ju<!Je Alice M. Batchelder refused to issue a re- straaning order. .. We obviously arc pleased and grauficd that the decision of the court in Cleveland is consistent wHh our position." Vincent said in a statement. ... ports Lakers sign Camp~ll INOLEWOOD -Fint-round draft --~ choice Elden <;uiE>bell lianed a multi-• ~ year contract with the Loi Aftle)et Lakm ' ... on Monday to put an abrupt end to ---- rumors. that Campbell miabt play in Italy dwina the upcom1na season. No terms of the contract were announced except that it was for more than one season. Campbell, a 6--foot-1 l forward~nter, was the 26th player taken in the NBA draft in June. He played at Clemson where be was the school's career S<lonnJ leader with l,880 points. As a senior last season, he averqed 16.4 points, 8.0 rebounds and 2.8 blocked shots per pme. Before goi!lf to Oemson, Cam~U attended Morninaside Hiah in lnaJewood -within blocks of the Forum where the Lakers arc housed "We 're very happy to have Elden Campbell as a member of the Lakers," General Manager Jerry West said. "We think he's got a very bright future with our ball club." Campbell was in Europe last week practicina with an Italian team, fueling rumors be would play there this season, but as it turned out, nothing materialized. A Lakers spokesman said at the time that he didn't believe Campbell was doing anythina more than checking out the situation abroad and that negotiations between the Lakers and Campbell would bcgjn soon. BLEACHERS " ... All of a sudden there's a gunshot, followed by a blood-curdling scream and ... Oh, look! The jury Is starting another ·wave' I!" 49ers rally for 27-24 win DENVER -Defensive lineman ---- Dennis Brown returned an interception ~ 23 yards to set up Mike Cofcr's field goal 't..:>" with 14 seconds left, climuina a 20-point ---- comeback and Jivina the San Francisco 49crs a 27-24 victory over the Denver Broncos in a rematch of Super Bowl teams. The 49cn., who trailed 24-7 early in the second half after John Elway threw two touchdown passes and ran for another, rallied behind backup quar- t.ert.ck Steve Youna. Elway staked Denver to an apparently com- fortable lead as the BrODCOl aouaht to erase put of the atipla from their 5S.l0 Super Bowl blowout loss Rams forced to move Gray ANAHEIM -For now, at least. the ~ Rams have decided to mpve Jerry Gray ~ from aafety beck to ~k. Tbe Rams thouabt Oray, a four-time . Pro Bowl comerbeck. could have an even biller impact at free safety, the ~lion he played 11 an All American at the Univm1ty of Texas. An unuaual mulcle pull suffered by ICCOnd-year comerback Darryl Henley abruptly put a halt to the experiment, Coach John Robinson said Monday at Rams Park. . ..We think there'• a chance Darryl will mi ss the rest of camp," Robinson said. "We're movina Jerry Oray to comerback. "We like the way Alfred Jackson and Bobby Humphery have played at comerblck ~nd . the way our other three aafeucs have played. This 11ves us a little better balance." Henley, projected as a starter, suffered a~ ab- dominal str11n in which the muscle pulled sli&htly away from the hip bone. He'a missed the team's first two p~n pmcs and is in the finaJ stages of his recovery, trainer Jim Anderson said. Henley's status for the Rams' final two prescason games is uncertajn. As a result of the move, the Ra.ms have three healthy experienced comerbacks and three healthy safeties. If Henley recovers completely and safety Michael Stewart ends his holdout, things could still chanf.e, Robinson said. • This move is for the next two weeks," he said. "(But) this is probably for the year. "We're concerned about Darryl's injury. The way I understand it, if the muscle comes back. he's OK. "But you can't rush it." -By Be A11oclatefl Pre11 WIN FREE TlacEIS m MAGE .aNT• IN THE DAILY Pl.OT'S m IEST 1 . Contest is open to children 5 yeors to 13 yeors. 2. Two (2) Grond Prize Winners-each winner receives ten ( 10) Mogic Mountain Tickets for family ond fri ends. 3. Four (4) Runner-Up Winners-each receives four (4) tickets. 4. Colored entries should be moiled to the Doily Pilot, 330 W . Boy Street, Costo Meso, CA 92627 .Entries must be re<:eived by September 3, 1990. S. Winners will be notified by September 10, 1990. TENNIS From It whether Leach W111 sull maantam has exemptions by just beang an alter- nate. But more importantly. Leach has a reputation now and it will take a long ti me for him to get rid ofat. "There arc some tames when you have to realize who's calling the shots," said Bob Walton, Leach's coach at Laguna when he recorded a 253-7 record. "These things tend to follow you around for a while." Tennis is a game played between the lines and unlike the world of the professional, the Junior has a lot more responsibility on the court. First and foremost is line c~lls. Occasionally there is onelinesman to aid the players in decidins points. and even so, the lincsman'sJob as not to make every call . but settle appeals from players. Ninety-nine percent of the calls are placed on the shoulders of the pla yers and that's where things can act ugly. Leach was havang trouble with his opponent. who was ranked lower and the match should have been a breeze. On that day. however, Leach wasn 't on top of has game and the schedule of events went something like this, according to a member of the Laguna Hi&h boys tennis team. [each and his opponent made sev- eral close line calls, and with a few going apinst his Opponent, an ob- server went to get a linesman. which 1s against the rules. Only a player can request a linesman's aid. r------------------------ Next. his opponent hit his second serve long at a crucial point of the matctt and wch half-heartedly re· turned it into the net calling it long. He was. however, over-ruled by the DAILY PILOT COLORING CONTEST I linesman, who called the strve in. I Leach ended up losina the point. Name Address I was ~naliLed another poant by the official and went on to lose the ---------------------1 match. Af\er it was overhhe refused I to shake his opponent's and. al- lc&cdl) spit on him and flipped him J.;. I off. .,. f He was barred from the rest of play ---------------------1 an not only the sin&les side, but the doubles as well. wfiich may ultimatr-1 ly prove to ht the most costly for Phone # f Leach considerina he's one of, 1f not I the bcst,Jun1or doubles playert in the world. -------------------1 Messqn were left at the Leach Age I houaehoJd, but were not answered. .. Jon wau tertor when he was ----------------------------------------------------:;J 10-1 2 ycanold.'' Walton said. ''He wo n·t back down when he thinks hr IS nl)lt. •• Maybe Leach was nght. Ma) be hr was Jobbed on lane calls dunng the match. but there comes a time in tennis when }OUJUSt have to walk away and fo rget about at. Hopt'fully he will be able to forget 1t along with the people who were in volved. It would be a shame 1f Leach's childish acuons affected a career -a career that at least in high school resembled a man playing among boys. 0 Irvine Racquet Club as currently hosting the UST A J unibr Grass and Clay Court Championships through Sunday. The boys are competing on clay and the girls are on the grass. First round singles started Monda> and continue throu&h Wednesday with the quarter and semifinals in I 8s. I 6s and I 4s later this wet'k. The girb start action on Thursday. Also in Junior tennis news. Irvine will be the site of a USTA chnac designed to de,elop highly ranked players into top-notch cla} court spccaahsts. Accordang to head professional Jason Strothrr. the UST A 1s also looking to establish healthy com- petitiveness between players. All too of\en. the U.S. Junior players havt been hung with less than favorable reputations (see lead item). The pla yers will meet three days per month beginning Oct. 28 C'an- dadates were chosen from the I 2s. 14s and I 6s d1v1S1ons by ranking. 0 Two local tennis teams took top honors at the UST A/Vol vo Tennis Lcaauc Sectional Championships held last weekend at Los Caballeros Tennis Cl ub in Fountain Valley. Winning the men's 3.S cham· p1onsh1p was Lindbora Racquet C1ub. The team will go on to compete in the nationals at the Sheraton El Conguastador an Tucson. Oct. 4-7. LCSD Red and White from Los Cab. won the women·s 3.0d1vision That team will also play in Tucson a1 the Doubletrtt at Randolph Park on Oct. 2S-28. L1ndbora as captained b> Tom Gcal)', while Los Cab 11 headed by June Evans. Both teams will be one oh problble 17 compctana . P•lrld wrt'8 l1a0...... C..11 Dally,,,.,~ ..... 1rl.e c1• ...,. ~ .,._n •tWT "'~": Disney Pigskin ·Classic OMNQI COdT DAILY PILOT Tueeday. Augu9t 21, ll80 • • Pigskin game a classic for McCartney ly .HMMY HYAMS kYWIH9w_....,.~ season.'' BOULDER. Colo. Bill McCanney considered Colorado's 11-pme schedule one of the nation's tou&hest. Fi ve teams are nationally ran~ed. tract, but not because he agreed to play TcnncsS« on Sunday in Anaheim. Actually, he agreed to the pmc before he learned of the oppo. nent. But he knew it would be a tough matchup. Knowing the pitfalls of opening against a quali ty team, McCartney still fell the game was "just too at- tractive to pass up." T he reasons: Then. the Pipkin Classic called: How about a 12th game? "We thought It mi~t be Miami or Florida State," he said. "Then when It turned out to be Tennessee. it's the same type of situation. When you get to a certain level of football, th ere's really not much difference betw.:cn those few programs. -Location. Colorado has 35 play- ers from California. -financ.es. The Buffaloes will rece ive a $550,00 payoff. $775.000 1f auendancc exceeds 50,000. In oraani:r.ed crime terms. it was an offer McCartney simply couldn't re- fuse. "They told me if 1 took that game. I'd get a 15-year contract." McCartney said. McCartney did sign a 15-ycar con- ''This will be a real tough opener. as tou~h as they get. But you have to like th as kind of challe nge to open the -Exposure. "Two or three years ago. we were begging for attention." McCartney said. "Now. we get a chance to kick off the entire college football season. We just couldn't pass For the record MAJORS STANDINGS Amerklln L•eue WIST OMSIOtl 10a•1ano Cnlceoo Ttaet ....... W L l'C1. Ga s. ..... Kanta• Cit• Mlnflot<llo &oo1on Toronto 8tlllmort , ...... ..., Oe1roh Mll•eu~H Ntw Vor~ n o 631 10 •• set s·~ 6l Sf Sl6 " " .. 500 " 40 ,, .., 17 s• ., • "'' u " •s1 n IAlT OIVIMON .S SS 0 S1 SI 6l s. •s It ., ~ .. so 70 _.,..,Sc .... .so Ul I OS t .., '1 OS 10'1 •SO 11 Ol IS A ...... S, OetrOI! J New Vo" • Toronto s f 11 '""'no•i &otton 2 &atflmG'e I C111eaoo 11. Oakla"" I Kanu • Cltv I MIMffQta I Mhwau•ff •. 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I 0 1 J2 f:JIA(TA 6 IL 7 00'0 IUCIOO U DAILY Tlll"LE •\• ot d .. ,., 00 NINTH RACE 1 '-''\O"'IJ\ 81•c• o,,,,. ~!''" \)IO 100 •IO lilo~a At ' Of" M•U 9 .. 0 a 60 ,.,_, Mr Q ue \or•r \ )(" } 60 rm• t 11 • 11 DAILY DOUI LI •I, 1 Ot •d .. 160 12 IXii.CTA <l & I o .. o 117160 •"•"'<l•"<• .. 90I M~'tA "it "d"f .. ().i\ t .t-"" ~ NFL NFL EXHIBITION ~ •• , l<ttf't \af'I ''•"< H O 11 0.,..,.,, •' ,ndo.,., G•-• Ra~f'l e• (•.,tago ~On"\ C'"<.·""'•' •' .._,., f f"IJ •"'l a &>""'" • '"'•' C '• t r Ot''"'' •.JO ",.. 1 t rr'IP• 8•' •' ~ • .,,. t D r'\ S4f\lr0ty'1 Ga,.,_, Pf'l()f""I• t i •• .,,,, 1 o,,.. "'•"'• ~' G,, .... a • .,~·""" ... 1••• • .~ ~''"''~u•o~ •' (. r ••1•• o • p .... 8wM~ 11 "'liilt• (1, ~·· \ S P..., ~ •• , I ' ~·•"' \ I' ... "-•* 'rO" J•'' I' N•• •O•• t..• 1 r•\ \ . "' p '''°"'""' •. 0 1 1 ., * ",.. ~·" f.., •"'-\(0 •' ~· 0 4'iJO • r;..,. '°'"""•'•Go"'" .... °"''~" •' ,,,,, ""f\1'11. '0 • - -....... 11 Pl\lll Of'IOflt•e 11 l"dl•"-fltt0'1\ ~ D rT" e1 St'lrt 111oor• Le ,-. o.t. SI 11 4J •' Je"111.\<.11n S• a c 1 (~ftll M•U'l•O•" IS S· 11 11 l{f'nfv1 .," 4 SI Mott~•o S' 0 6 •' Mar\,,t lt t ~· ,,. V1r9 l't1I f#t-h •tt·C '' -'' M-tr• •"0 '' t II An, SI ! S ., •• M....,,O.,,\ ~I ~ J·t1 "' f t nnr uf't 5it ' S ~ t • ~ M1C)O~ 1 f', l't•'"'' ~' • ' •' "",,,,.., ... ,, r,,,,, ,. (•,.lrt l A,"..f'\8\ it I •' M tUYU OOt l/ane .., \1 S •1 " Wf\ft t" '·'~'tf\t ) 7 II •' Notlh CetO '•"'• \• <7 ~· fllt6cYtP'! (1ro11tt• ._, T )·t 1t1\ ""'<>' •~ c.,o..,,• ,.,,, .•. ., ~' •• c.,,.,.,,11. NC M em• 0 ., o l I 1, at NOtff' (lt~~l'tl ' 10 o. •• ~' • J ,, •' \.<k.itf\f"'"' M iu u 10: I • n •1.0.m• ~' ~ ~·I •' S•~•oro 1• I ,, Ov• t I • •' »"'" C aro11ne 1 t ' I ,, s= • .-1• 1 101 ,., r .. ,,""•"-" 11 1 "' l OCll H• ~•" 1 'I •' f etu'\•U H T f<" \ s ,, ... SW LO"'j' •"• I 4 el r v••ttt ' I '' MIOWUT 01-no+\ \• ~ • .~ A"on • •' " I 10 'f,0'9•1" \! •• t •' ( •f'I". St °" 0 t. t n•r • 'ti u ovr ~ • •• '""" •"• '' It I V+•v•~ • 10 J et t ti\\·~ a I E t \'t• l•t·"'Q•\ t 4 1' No''"•'" llhtt<tt\ t I • ~Jtneni ll•+l"IOi\ 1 t ; •' Not•~,., 10..w1 . ) 8••N>r U 4) Al ~f'~H•• 110 1• ,, Af•dnl)\ MC>"'•'' ~ • • •• W•\'•'" IM-nn \ ' I ' .., 8toom\Ourg '' 1 •' "O"f'9\tt)t11tr \I . . . S()OTHWf:ST f ~ U t t •' 0• ahOt~· ~I ' 1 • fl Nt1•t f Ort\1 7 I I •' ~ c• l t T I\ "'°"''"''*"' , .... , ~· ~ • •' ft ••\ •• 10 ' <Nav• ,,O'O" \• 6 ~ •' fr•u '""'+i•" . ' . .,.1,..0'0'" \.; f 0 I Al Tt t i \ \ot,,1f"4tr l't ) 'I 8r 9f'.IT •..,v""9 10 l ., r ••• , E Pu o ~ 10 WIST v•tu )1 '~' 11 A''wct ''' \lfP' r f A..,\1,,. 1; 1 et 8 0·\tt \' . . . Ee\''', M.(. .. ~ .. ,. 1 1 ' •' r • t \"9 '>' It l ,. \cnotr'I• S• • t o c. • \•••• ~ .,.h•• '<"''· •I \1,.14 ... 8 8 Ito 0 • 1 f •llH A<4 Vt t f e• •~••• f .) I ¥()111.,.. ,. • I •I tJ•'iO f ) llrfO'''°' 01/f! \' • ' ... Nor '""•'",.,, I C"• \ . Nt• M•• fO , IQ •' ~--.... IVI.•• \• 0 • M4,1fll•'t ~ I 4tQrt>~ • \! C ] I " A<rt·f ' \ I t •' \ ., ., Vlt " \1 1 11 LO,.•\'!'•I • t ~ •1 )4 .. JU\"\' t ) )0 •·~•\'A/.\\•' \' 10 J t ' UN1." , , \.,... • ' •' .... \1 • 1 '-~~a t .. .t' '°''1J""'+"'G ) t DODGERS From 81 Orange Coast Daffy Piiot Dodpn l'lay~r of Day {X'rhap~ Jhoul ht:ing l·alkd uut 11n sln~c~ en hi\ prn mu., at-bat ~ud· <knl). D) ~slra ,ind Dcmp'l'' l'\- ~·hangeJ .,,ord' .1nd, after remm 1i1g h1<; masl.. Dl'nlP'>l.) thre'' a punch Mulholland (7-7) was making h1~ first stan since p1tch1ng a no-hitter against San Francisco last Wednel>· da) night. Johnn) V:inder Meer 1s the onl) ma1or leaguer to patch con· secum e no-hattas. doing 11 in 14 W for C1nc innat1. and Mulholland's had ended on his Sl"Cond pitch when Jo!tc Offerman led ofT"11tf a single. Mulholland ga ve up eight l111s in his fourth complete game He struck out four and \\alked one. Jim Gou ( l-2 ) got his first .. 1ctor~ since Aug 14. 1988. when he pitched for Pinsburgh. He rcttred all six hat- ters he faced. Mike Morgan pitched 'ie\Cn in- nings for the Dodgers. gmng up seven hits. Hl' struck out ~" :ind walked none. Offerman. pla) ang 1n ha s ~econd big-league game. lined a single to center 10 stan the first rnnang . mak· ang him 4-for-6 as a maJOr leaguer In ANGELS From 81 through with another bag two-out RBI. ihey da d an outstanding piece of hitting ... "Both hits I got were on fa stball!.." Coachman said ... With Chili Da' 1~ and Dave Winfield aner me. the pitchers don't want to put me o n. so I sec a lot of fastballs." In three maJOr league game'I. Coachman has s1~ hits and four RBis. The Tigers trailed 2~ after two inninas but took the lead 1n the third TALLEY froml1 ;ust once in a while. graduitte But have some schools alread) aone too far to turn back? Indeed. we'rr talkinj about such a bi& busi · ness that use took out a quan er- ~·e ad 1n scltcted L.A. news~a~~ this week. buschns the fac t th3t "Tht' Proud Tradition Continues," and that a ltmltcd number of season tickets for the school's fi ve home tootball pmes could l>e purenasco at the low. low pri~ of SI 02 each. Antr all. Football Facto ries cannot function without fuel. llkt "-lle.1'1'*9 .. .,,_,.,11 lff an_. C..11 Dlll1 Pl,.t r~ry s-.1. '1Wt4•1 •"' n.,...,. • Miii• stt.rpenan~ who w•2 for4wtth • sdo home ,.., .,, the '*1th provtdlng the ~·•te .... ,.,. has fir!>! gaml' Sunda~. Otlerman homen:d in hi s fin.\t b1g·kague ht-hat kad1ng off th l' ganw aga1n\t l:knn" Mart1ne1 of ~l untrcaJ, hcnim1ng thL' hist pla)l'r tu homer in h1' tir .. 1 t11g- kague at h.11 Stan Ja, 1er\ intidd hat .rnd .1 \\ llu p1tL·h b) Mulholland put runner' Jt )ceond and third "'1th nohnd\ out OITerman '>Cored a' Kai 1>'an1 l'I' grounded out. 8" 1ng thl' Dndgl•r., .1 I ·O lead The game was stopped lot .ih11111 eigh t minute\ in thl' top u t lhl' ,e.,enth "hL·n l>) k'tra and fk111pw) got into J light "11h l\\.O 1101' and nohod) on ha sc O)kstra appeared 10 sa' -.omt·· thing to plate umpire Ron Rarnc~. Orange Coast Daily Piiot Angfi1 Pl.., of Day Pete C.H ... M. a roolde Who wa 1 for s wtttt • ........... two ... and. Nn acored. on t\\>\l wa lks and .\1<111 r ramml'll'~ thrt·c-run honwr. ht'> 11th (ahlornaa ~·or\·d a run 111 thl' fir~t inning on three "al~~ and l cc Ste,em; grounder fhl' ·\ngcl'> made 11 1-0 in the m:ond on Johnny Ra~\ single. a sncnfil·e and Coachman·s Ju.in ~amul·I p11h·h h1 tttng tor \!1HgJn. tnrk<l \\Ith l\\\I llUI\ Ill ihl· hntlllnl-' o f thl' \e\ t•nth. hut ~l ulhulltlnd <,trul l. 11ut Otli.·rman 10 rnJ thl' 1nn1ng OFFERMAN From Bf hu'lt him II\ l\) 'l't' ho" hr'<t rc.1~ t . .trhl hl' fl'Jl'tl'd \\l'll Hut I kit 11 in thr 1111ddll· lll thl· plJtl' lw "'·'' n·.1d •• 111d tw 111111. nw tkl'p .. 11·, n111 rmb:irr.l\'1ng I(, !l,rl'.11 fur him 111 1 ,imt· nut that \\:I\ 111 h1' tir,1 ganw in tht· h1g kJglll'' \n\· hod\ "hu nirnn tu thi: big k.1gut''-· tt', ior J 11,ood n:.1~un .. From The Associ•ted Press RBI s1ngk Bryan Han C) p11ched l ' 1 anntng'> for his 16th ~aH'. gl\1ng Lang.-.tnn .t \ ICIOr) 011 hi\ .~llth h1rt hda ) "Thi\ '-'J'> onh the \eeond 11nw I had pttl'.hl·d on m~ b1rthdn~. and thl' tl''>Ult!. '-'l'R' u lot b<:lll'r th1.-. ttmc:· I ang'>h>n 'u1 tl "l hr tir,111ml' "3' 111 Double·.\ and I tWI h1.·awn arnund ·· 0 ANG&L NOTES -Mu V-tlle w~n1 0 lor 1 •"0 '' 1n • b • lor ..0 \lumr ht1 II~. on tl•t cll\abl.O II\! ... m 1oreneu •n '"' rlgt>I 1~uld1r wet t\am1n(KI Mon(la v bv 01 Ltw11 Yocum, •l'>e Angel\ o•tflOl>flll( tuf11aon T"e •t\Ulll OI 4 M811"111C lh\On•n<t lm •111tlll (M~ll IHI wtr t ""•"•• •IWllCatlno no 1u " 10 81vten n ' rotator (ytt From Tit~ A11od •IH Pr~ss Trojans hit hard with loss of cornerback Dechon Burns IRV INL l.X."'l.·hm1 Ruins. a prom1!<1ng wrnerbul'k. at llSC '!lated to stan 1hl\ )car. must g1 '<' up foot· bill due to a M"nous inJurl to his spinal l'or<l. team doctor .. \Gtd Mon· day. The •f\IUf}. a contu'icd spinal cord, was \ulTet\'d ln't fhur\<la) dunna practice at ll ~( . the phys1( 1ans said. A contusion ('3n be •~ mild u a bruise or sprain, or as serious as muulauon or impairment to muscle. "The docto~ did another test and f't'o(Umincd the X·rays Their ad~ v1ec to Dcchon 1s not play foothlaH .ln} more:· ~•d C oal'h l urn Sn'11h Bums wa" horn "1th u \ntalkr. bonier spinal rnlumn and '>ulkrc1I prt'\.IOUS in1unc~ that hn\e healed. formtn& scar m~uc, mllh ~1d "l here 1s no room for the spinal cord 10 mo,c ... Smith ~id. "It's a blow to our t<"am ," the coach added "It ma) be a blc~~1ng 11\ disauise because it was ~nt to u'I a' a sianal btfore any pcrmantnt d. mage was done." 8uma played backup. run-supron comcn.c« and on kc) sf)C(·~J 1c.tm' u a "-Cbbin f rc hman il up. But, it might not have been real smart." McCartney. 3-5 in openers. has a high opinion of his first opponent. lieve, 1s Webb. lie rushed for 1.236 yard!) ai. a redsh1n freshman last season and gajned another 2SO in the Cotton Bowl against Arkansas. los~i. wooer or later," Wituams ~ad. "But there are virtually none." Tennessee's defense:, as expected. docs not command as much respect.· When 11 was mentioned the Vols have had trouble stopping the op- tion, quanerback Darian Hapn said: "Tennessee migh t be the best team we're-· gc:ring to play." he '>aid. "They've been on our minds throughout the summer. Their of- fensive line is being heralded as the No. I ltne 1n the nauon. Chud'.ie Webb. next to Barry Sanders. is the best thing I've seen at running back. (Andy) Kelly (at quarterback) reall) looks _eood on film . They've got l>ome headliners." "He's the best I've seen." said Colorado's All-America outsidc linebacker Kanav1 s McGhee. "We have our work cut out for u11. We can't underestimate him al all" "We're aware of that. But it doesn't make any difference. Each year you· get better. The} probably had empham on the option this year." Alfred W1lhams. the Buffs' other All-Amenca outside linebacker. said he was most 1mpres~ed b) the fact Webb lost JUSI 21 yards on 209 <.:ar· nes. Saad Mc-Canney: "They weren't: qu11c a!I good b} comparison on defense . so the~ went out and hired Larr) Uicewell (as coordinator) .. That defense will be sticky. The main headliner. the Buffs be- "When you run the sweep a11 murh as the) do. the gu) ·s got to take some White Sox remain In the hunt with 11-1 rout over Athletics Sammy Sosa•s two-run homer and a two-run triolc by rookie Frank Thomas led Jae~ McDowell and lht Chicaao White Sox to an ll·l rout oft.ht Oakland Athletics on Monday niaht in Chicqo. The triumph cut Oakland's lead. 10 S1fl sames over the ~ ond-place Whitt Sox in the American lequc West and ended a personal siA· pmc winnina streak for loser Dave Stewan (l 7-9), 1t wu the third time this sca50n the White defeated Stewart, who is seeking a fo urth straiaht 20.win stason. McDowell ( 1 ()..6) gaintd his St<:ond victory over 1be A's this year with a thret-hiner as the White Sox beat Oakland for the fifth time in ciaht mcetinp . The A's took a 1-0 lead in tbe first innina when Carney Lansford walked and scored on a double by Joa Canseco. The ·White Sox came back with three runs in the bottom of the first. Ivan Calderon singled with two out and Dan Pasqua walked. Carlton Fisk 5inaled to sco~ Calderon and Thomas rripltd to put the White Sox ahead 3-1. Fisk singled qain in the sixth and scored on Sosa·s 12th homer and tht' White Sox added a run in the seventh on a run-scoring sinjle by Calderon. They scortd five times off RCPJe Hams in the ei&hth. Tbomu !Caned the uprising with a double and the innina included Ollie Guillen's RBI double and a two-run sinaJc by Caldtron. Elsewhere in the AL Monday: •.Rff Sox %, Ori.oles I: Jn Boston. Elljs Burks hit a. sacn~ce . Oy to drive in a n unearned run in the e1~th u:-ninJ. Carlos Quintana openrd the eighth with a htt off first baseman David Scgui's glove and took steond when Sc-gui threw to an unrovered ba$C for an error. 8 YaMtet I , Bl•t Jays 5: In New York the Yaf!kces won with one out in the 11th when Aivaro E.sp1noza chopped a bases-loaded single over the head of shortstop iony Fernandez. Greg Cadaret (S-4) P!leb~ 7 2·3 scoreless innings for the victory yaekhng three hits. ' • R.1&11 '7, Twla 1: In Kansas City. Willie Wilson and frank White hit two-run doubles u Kansas City banded Minnesota ib six th straight los-s. Storm Davis (7~8) yieldtd a run 1tnd and four hits in e.iaht innings. -•Rusen t . Mariaert S: In Atli.naton. Julio Franco sjn&Jed home the winnina run with the bases loaded and none out in the bottom of the ninth innin1: The Ran.gers rallied from a 5-0 deficit to give Mjk~ Jeffcoat (4-S) a rare relief victory. Mike Jackson (S-S), who came in dunna the Rangers' thret"-run seventh tbat tied the game. was the loS{r. MINN( SOT ii. tlii.HSAS (ITT (, •1'~ .. ' • \# • , ... ·~ \. ~ I~ It V iii,.,. I P , •flf • • "'"'' 4 ''*'P" 9 \.IV •• I .,. "' , .. ""'" Jr ............ \\ .. '~ .. I • • •ti " • •t • . \,I II "" \ • 0 ~ ' ... f , .... '• t • • u t • 1 '"•" kl , • ' )t.,.• b• I~~ ~, ... ... ~, .. (~ 100 000 000 I .IOO 001 Ot. I F ••"' =>P .._.. ""' ·•• .. oe v ... \\'t ?i. l 9 '11 • U A A \ Ye 'It ,. ' 'AA Y• 'i" • • .. . . ' . ... '" " • E• "9 «> M~, .. a ... [1• l(•l"U\( ..... ,("!,. ,.,,, .• 0 ... . . ... Y1nkH\ 6, Slut J a Vl S f 04t0 NT0 r • • ' '''~"I H ¥1 l1• H 1t l!I• • "~'<>*-'\ GH ,,., ... l .. 11> .... ~ \~ t t) I ft 0t ~ ' • t • -.. \A• •1 . ~ , ,, "' ; -0 . . ... ..... 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' ~ ' ~ 0 l 0 Red-hot Pirates keep up pressure Neal Heaton kne..-.. he -------- wa) heddcd either to the bullpen or th\' d1 .. ;ibled h'it so he figured he'd bcner make the mo)t ot ht!. last scheduled ~tart Heaton. p1tch1ng "1th pain 10 h1~ ldt )huuldcr. thre"' ~Ill )hutout innings for his first \anon sinct' '-------~ June 24 and (ian Red us h11 a two-run homi:r as Pittsburgh b\·at the Houswn i\strus 7-1 Monda\ night. the P1rati:s' SI\ th rnn.-.l'tUll'e '1l.lon Heaton endt"d his six-game losing streak as the Pirates C'2·4Y). 23 games O\l'f .500 for the first lime!' since 1979. marchrd their longest "'1nn1ng \treak of the '>t'ason The l\;attonal Leagul· Ea)t DI\ 1swn lcadl"r~ al-.u "on )IX straight trum ..\pnl 24-29 [lsl''-'hlrc in thl.' '\;L ,l\lonJa\ 8 Cubs 3, Reds l: In ( 1nnnna11 Doug Da~Lt·nzo got thret h11~ and rohbt-d Paul O'Neill ol J l'-'O·run homt·r al> ~111.e B1ckck1 and the ChKago C ub\ sent ( 1ncinna11 to 1t<; fifth straight IO'>\ tx-at1ng the Red\ in a game lalkd in 1he ntnth 1nn1ng ~T<iust· ul rain 8 Cardinals 7. Braves 2: In \t Lou1-. Ken 11 111 r1tlheJ J '>l\·h11t1:r and Re' Hudler got thrl'l· hit\ and Uf\l\<: 1n threl· run' .i\ thL· <;t l.rn.tl'> t arJ111Jb d~kJtl·d thl' \tlantJ Bra' C'\ • Padrt>s 3. Mt-ts I. In 'iil n ()1i:~t1 Brul·t• Hur\t p1tl hl·J '>t'\l'l1 -.hutti ut 1nn1ngl> dnd Rob- cno \lumdf homaed a-. tht• ~an Du~go Padres b<:at "Jc" 'or~. dr\!Pr1ng the Mets three game~ ht-hind 1n thl· '-at111nal League f .1"<t 8 Giants 4, E~pos !: In ~a n Franusco Don Rl•h1n"1n p1 tdH•d J f11ur-h\ll('f \\Ill< lar\.. hit hi'> lti1h h11nlL'r JnJ l\.n1n ~11tthl'll Jrl\\l' in t'-'o run'> a'> tht• 'i.in f ranr1sco C 11<1nt' heat tht" ~luntn•,sl l \IW'' 11111~ their lourth "''" 1n I'- game' From Tb~ Assoc1a1rd Prrss •Brewen t , Man ~ ln Milwaukee. Dave Parker homered and dro~ 1n 1brec n.tns as Tom Eden sot hi first carctt victory u a s1aner. £.dens ()·I) made his second start of lbc sea50n and fourth of rus career and lu ted a cafUt'-'hilh SVi inniQP. He P ''C up ~Yen hiu and thru runs. (H!(A(;O t \ -i • •t "'"' • , 't (IHCIHHO fl l\, •••• .. Frw. ftr Au«MW Pm• 0 Gi.ntt 4, E xoos 2 •V'~\ n • ~ I •· I y .. , '. 0 . ,..._, • .. ,.~ ... . : ~ • I • • l ......... ,,,. ., .. .., ... 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C)-T-tH •-1',_ Wt'anke, who turned I 8 on Juli ''· rt'lCIVCd Q $375.000 Slllllf\I bonu' fmm the Blue Ja)s. Wc1nke. a quancrb1d.. worked out 1n t~o-a-da)' pra<':icn for th~ Scmanoltl for 10 days, n. AJ1r$W ,,,,_ CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5618 PROM NOlt'Tff ORANGE C 0. FltOll IOUTH OfltANGI CO. $40-1220 .. .... TitE DAILY Pit.OT C~A$$1FICO OFFICE HOURS Telel>notte ~VOC!l MOl\-Fr• 8el'l·5 10pm 8u$inen Counll.'• M-F 8 OOam 5 OOP•" OIAOU•H PU8l ICA TION DEADLINE MOOdly Fr1 5 30 AM. I uet<!•y Mon 5 30 PM Wt<1nadl1 lues S 30 PM IN•.Oey Wed 5 30 PM f•tOllV l"'-i!i 5 30 PM S11u•O•r Fri s 30 PM ~undl) ftt S 30 PM CHECKYOUAADTHff~STDAY lne Daily P11c.1 >llt>t'S for elh<••ncr an<I ac;curllCy Ho .... •ei 0c;cas•on.l1t, iouors oo occu• Please 11s1en .. htm your QO •S •e.id baC~ ilnd C'lee' r°"' lid daily Rl"1•011 ""O•S ul\n1ed1a1e1v 10 641 5678 Ile Daily P1lol .SCt<!'PIS no h&D•hfy IOI "'"Y {11101 •I• an ld•fllll!M!IT'll!nl '°' "'"!(" ,, may be '"'l>Ol'S•ble <'•Cl!PI '°' I"" COSI OI lhe •PIKt' .c;1ually nccupieo D) 1~ f'f•Ot C•Nl•I can only be •• uoweo to',,, .. f1,s1 .n,e111on Any amoufll nol pa•O 1 .. 111u1 30 0111 .is •Pquired will ta ~b1ec110 Dul 0011i..-.. 1~ 10 hnanca cne•oes eornpyted i.1 I >'!I. ol the unp•·O balance ~ monll1 a" co11ec11on cosls and any 1eaM>11ao•e a11orney s lees Mt•-..i let -•~r '•• "' . ..,._,, .. ,. .. ' • . ' •. I l 8 1 •0 11 \ ~-'S. ~ . . II.I • "'4 .. -'4, ~ ~· -.-.-· .. •i • ~I , I tl • S s ... ,,. ·V 0•11e1011 I"\ '.>U,_ :,A Hou••• ~ f or Sate •• COLDWeLI. BANl(eRO IEWUSTIH IEWNIT IUCI FOii llHIS1H,OOGI •&n•l&IU1 3 BR hm Remdld kit Lg yard S209K Agt 673· 124 ----Ytw11•m twlll CHOICE LOCATION 3BR 28A, att gar S 194K Ne>Ct to SC Plaza 2131598-7251 • '. . ... -t 11 1 .. ' .J .. , 1'1 ~ ......• ..., I ' ~. l It( (j '-4•'•oW• ~ ')11• •• ... ,... "'·' Open HouH .... Dlr9<101y •• ':>A l ':>Ullj From North Or•nge County from South Orange c~ 540-1220 496-6800 ., I N I HANGING/$ TRIPPING LIC•560875 VISA-MC 673-1512 s & SWALLPAPERING Custom lnstallallon Removal lnttrtor Paint Free esl Jim 540-6587 we gal• at1e1 ha~ tOQetrwif Total Interior Remodel!~ Service ADVICE TO THE CRAZY 633·7172 ;.,. ...., .... ... .. * 2 llCUNTV~ ='" "°"'='=: "-!!.~!}!:.• "'c.1~ ' ..._ Z •••• E'" ....!! '..~ h· mPllNI ,.:$='r':',t0u'J~ I Mii 1111.tiM-frtl. OOft ...... ""· m: 'OUND IMa ll wltlle Ol If.::-.:.. ,.,...., put111tanet ,.. ....... ,.....ny OlyMplc flopefula. Oiii. iM tlA...... "*"......, • *"· lurlnw. *Y cl McMwOIWla MU ePM 1 o.,. S14 ,_ ~· ftMded * nHd• uperlenud •1o+1tw. c.i Yr. 111111.f """""' ....-.. ..., • Cel,.. 1 .. 1010 a~ tn-nn • L.llll"W ...., llllftOr· ...,.. on .,..1,.., '°' ~. u1 ecMa. ... .. Ill a •Int nelgttMrttHll. COIT ' ..._ * iiilh ~-!!'I .-.,y, ......_ • •· "'"-'-and tlr'8I In-1 I "''°'"'°· 1..,._.+w llNI OG "°"' tiiO c;orp. w. w .. Har To NllAL•• ....,.OOfMln lllti•.Con-...-. ... ceHIO·tMO --------i ..... 1 •· .. f7Mlll ......... r. 1711\ .. : CoM9 HOtMI DtNP· ..... Gen. Cofttreotor ~:~1-1a';t "' • I • • -11 CdM 2 "" I IA DUPiml: eo... ....... Alk '°' • ...... 1/14. Huntlngen ,.... ,.,. ..... ...... Tm .... ,, - W/d, deelk. 1 bll to IMlt\. f4I Ha. It & A'*"8 Vic. GOid Clettl 24 _. • Wall. ._ -•• ,. 11362 MurJftY, lfWle Fein ptfll • ....,..r, n-•!Wtltnoae&f9el,,.._ ColftpuMraMPf'IOrtlllP• ...... _, ·-• dfUD8. l6IO f~ __,dai '°'ml "-Pt Nf..7t2t plUa. lend ,.__. to: '°' ~ Co. _.... be 21 HecMe¥ luldert, IOtO Mrtoua.......,.. and CdM 2 II', 2 IA~. 1 LOST dog Hunt ~ Dr .. a ... tOO, ocuteoua.lftngDMV,. Mi&llPUITTm W/d, =· ,= ... ,_ llUI. Ilg ~ . ...::".::::; N•wport BHCfl, CA cord. 211-7"4 0r.,. COunlfy lntetlor Fein saeo 17~ n-Nl!WPOftl llACH lflfx. ta-1211. tHeO. Attn: Lynde P6Mt mall"IWnanoe oom-11 Will .... Ill 1114 l?t! druga. Ill oomer Weatdlft Dr a LOiT "* ~ AOVlfWiiiNd IAld 111¥111 pany. FUii time for o. CDM· Arnmt to ltw n,. lr¥lne A\19. High Vlllb41tty tebby nw s"*1 := '°' Mii atNetlC publ. &p !Mry, lnetall Pf~. Good Upecale retell groc9f}' tBAhae,ffplc,W/00/W, tl'•fftc.12t0 aq.ft. lneo9t.Mw REWARD prel. Muet hell9 wt .. ,.,. time an.tnoona. De-OMV repor1.M1.073t atONhMopenlnga~ 11110.,.. ~ ~111111 4 blk• 2 " 1 om 1 orbf=..mo. Mi-1111 648-1231. ' · pear & tPOf't• knowt1dga. IMry of blulipttntt In Or-.,., .. .,. ..,._ toten•oettc ftllndly A-mi-.. IUIN ~vanity. ""'* 759--0 115 eq ft oftloe LOST . Commonty. 1-.1Mt 8ft09 County. eomoeny Trecet9 needed locelly to peopl9to...ietour~ YOU CAH !ARN 9IO cNat. ~· Tw-La rge .. 1ect on of CDM-Shr 4IA SllA, w/d, 5&0 If ww~,.:= 1,,3 :0~~~ ~ t15K-75K car. It/Hr. Mon~,,(. swoceaa FHA "'°"~ tomer.. Experienoe MIP-s1oo AHO MON !ACH ::,.~~ pelt 8llcM d lamondt, vlnt•t• garage, 23+ ptofMelonlll for ,.,.t 11th & .....___ . . W* train Hlrlna alt ....._ Brina OMV print-out to refundt !Jccellent fut bUt not reQUlr9d. Mule WHK WORKING PAl'IT ' ~ ..eoMt lnol. ~ and n/emkr r.g_5~= + utlla. '800lm0.M~·-... r~~':~T;. ~a~~AA9o~ 1tlon1.' Call Jf3> ~~~1 ".:r.~~~~P1~f,:; Call 1@14M-OMO. . ~ 1~ ':.t=. TIME!. =·.;:. 2rn ::*·;'!:~·':i= ,. LUii tll-0275 or 875-tfM Ml-HOO ut. A 1 ( n ea r Red h 111 ~ 1111... ComptithW. talary end We NM a NfW PAO-Har«*I Ja all a, S 111 Corona Del M«, OH THE LOST whit & blaok M/ llllna.. MacArthut). excelent ben9ftta. Appty ORAM for 8TUD£NTI ...... lfClll 6011 ~ lllld .. S2nd BEACH, 38R 28A, prl-=· h6gtl trafftc, euto-Mme ao:.w. wired teg~ -I IDM ITITllll In peraon at: ~YEARS Of AGE ADiiiML "-frlaef•tor. na.w . vate~te.w/d,dec*,tor uee.7eo..esM c:ollar, long hair. vie llllMDI !AAHS315ADAYI ~ e.per. req'd. .._,,..,... i;:;;;':wgacnewa. 8*111detlcult.S150. 9/t e 3-0421• WllTD Hunt.Harbour. REWARO...-.n Work At Home. Call Smoollcpr .. dforatallon 1llOSanMIOUel0r. peper1 our news-HatWel GOid coeor. good ij ... ~.attt1Kii"iPi;; ...... ;;;;;ii;;;.:;ltiiA1•0~ ... ;;;;. FEM non emkr there ax-M6-5064 Two MtlleMt ~ 1·900..e54·2255 Eld ne In Npt 8Mcf\ ., ... Send Newport BMc:h, CA t2llO HEM'S THE DEAL: cond. 14}.5937 ~~ wlttl.,. hlddenlOO ~ ck.ltlve Newpot1 BMc:h *111111'-* LOS . 114... reeumeendaalaty1"119tory ~fofMeQar'IGreen. "9fr1 ..__ 2 ...... .._ •• ,, · .. _ nome Soa. prtyate BA Arti.t .,.... T WHITE MALE KIT· areneadedforOelfy to· PO BOX 11123 EOE7mlf 1. Thlt le not a papel'109fMOr, no".,..• c:ell 150-7571 i.awe S550+utll.831·55" that:-:.·~~ cro~AC::·. ~ ~rn~:'~: Mutat':-cJ'l:,'!eo Co.ta~.CA92827.' "-tautent ~.NO~ In-::r·~:,~= ga. Fem n/emkr lhr 28R tBA =••Cell leland. 8734124 Out• lndude route de-eyprw. 8*y a ear ~ mllm'I • 1111 2. We prcMde tranapor-142·75M. '-i "-* 6049 Mc:Url'Y c:omptex In HB, IMYe m1111ga. LOST yellow lab ~ and Mtvkle error 1owenOa. 21Slil2·1"5. VQl.llllTrrDS Hiring Hott/Ho1teta tetlon end trllfq. pool. w/d, c:arpc>ft. a'fl 1~ mo'*' bk'9 :::l re-delivery. 17/Hr. + -Ul11UJ\ Coot!. Flu tn. Appty !ft 3. You would be wonting Fumllan 6014 AKCadot..,...,....pup- nowt $400/mo. 531-5147 lncUlrtll 2788 mate. vtclnliy of IMrle & mMeege. .... .. urrncni peraon 1-11arn or 2-Spm, wlttl klda your own aee on * Patio Stldtng door, ~on piwu 1111 M* 21 to lhar• 2BR 180080" 2. large Font CllftDtlYe &50-3545 Cel Part-Tlrne, Telftporary nLUIUI, 401 E.171h.CoetaMMa. anedutt-~--$100. Furnlt1K• aot. _. ~· 1 ......_ 1 wtia. 1BA. houM In COM: OHlce1, drlve-rn : .. r • . for :.=.,~t 842--4333 ~·,n:;-....: AMon ~for Troy. .~~ GOOD MOHEY oak, country~ MOO. l300. 7 IO-l817 1-4•0/mo plue 'A u111, Iv door· 58c/tq It or Htallh & f11nta 300() The Huntington BHc:h end haw a c:Nnce to oak din.,........_~. llJI Uii-7 tlb meat. 1-8001117-25«10 $1,000/mo. 1177 Whit· • "ATTN: EARN MONEY .-T .. /ULll CommunltyCllnlclalOOk· UTAl.Mf'W' w n dally & ..-1y c:Mt1 7141722-1s7o. Variety ot colort. FREE to • 2013333. tier, C.M. day 540-9352, TYPING AT HOMEI Imel twcury he*!, ftexlble Ing for dedicated ~ fuhlon c:onecloot. IPOrtl t>onuMs p1ua r on out· Beeutlful lofa, lo\l9eMI, good home. •t7-4511 M/F. Hunt. Baac:tl hOu... .,,.. 846-0M1 TIIEl1 '32,000/Yr lnc:ome "°""· Syrarnln. exp. Xlf'll to train In varlout medl-m In dad Ind llddual Ing• and more chair. ottoman. new con-MIXED KITTDI 11_ amenltlee. "450 H\ ulll, 2580 SF. Sir. "ntga. Nr pbtentlal. Oet•ll•. ( J,> working c:ondlllont & ~. c:lerlcal and educe-needed to manage New· d It Ion . 0 • k tr Im Blnnan ~ ·~ dep.893-010leve/w!(nd. 405/Harbor.40fca/3RA/ of wonting herd to !OM I02-838-el85ex T-311 benefltL Call KathlMn. llonal posltlonl. If you're port Ski Co with a tm"4l. CALL US TODAY 714-141·~ '35. 548-1327 • . 5se,,4Ql3 deyt 3 OYtld dra. 1380 Logan we6ahl only to gain " The Uttle Inn On The Bay. c:ommllted end are:: For more Information. MJ..az1 bt.111 BMutlful walnut e xec. NwPt Bch ret0f1 Apt, 2BR C.M. • 1eootmo "2-35e2 bedc? NEVER AGAINI 10 * 11•m1111T 973-llOO :~ i:n ~::i·t,t:. .! pl.... call Vicki• a t a. ~.. clellc ' tmall oek deelt. 2BA, fuH gyitl, lg pool, TWO 1375 SF edJ untta. ~of~ r• FIT, Mondal·Frlday, l111nllfllM Medyounowl 831•3280· StOON.545-1150. 1 • , ....... 11nnl1, etc:. Owrtooka ltg ofc:/2RR/ovhd dr. ~hat,....... In a 8 :30·5:30. Benefltt . Eltabll1hed Newport CUSTOM made tile dining REMEMBER MMle the Dog Back Bay, n/lmlilr fem. Sir. fmtga. Nr 55/0y9r b;·-·-new ~ lo Grubb & £Ille. Mk for Baac:t1 General Contreo-P ..... ~I Paige at an•• .a••• . ,....., ttble, 4 c:halrs. SOlld In "Down and Out In $525 + •.t utlla. 142·7280 SIOO « 11500. "2-3512 lnQ '/OAll body Into ltt Phytll1, &44-l200. tor. Typing 80 wpm, 11 •142.2121 -_. Pretehool IO Co-teech. M.,._ 3 cuehlon lofL &ever Hiiis?" y natural ba&anoe. CALL ahortMnd or 1peec1 writ-... Fine 1tallonet)' 1tore, ellte UCI c:.mpua & lrvlne, 12 Offef, muat go. 850-M&t btadt z white Border~ PENTHOUSE ON WATER! TODAY (714) 771-7234. Ing ao wpm; computer cllentele. FIT, 875-1010. unltl ECE ·minimum. Ex-DI R .. _... lie _......,. _ ... _Ar-_. In 3BR 3BA. hUQe tun pedo, (Dlatrlbutorafllpa are w4fl t e1n .,,, 500 <*lent Ml & .......... _... n m, ..... rm Mtl, • "-· _......,_, a ele'lator, gated perking, avatlable) *m"'"llM* exp., 1 • -• • ltfll... PT/FT 1 .. ~ .. ,_,.-...... i . walMr/dry., frig. ate. deMr1 motel. Storied by $650 + dep. 723-5414 plua benefit•. 780-8850. Mature, energetic:, reepon-· ...._._... Reeaonable. Merc:6e hnl people, c:onMquenlly •41::z:::------I~;;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;;;;:;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; LootclnQ tor protuatDMlt FIT position. Wiii train tlble perton ror Laguna I.I....... 97~136', • •7'-5765 blind In one eye. Stlt low· IMATIWllTD 1rn; thatllietowontln apro-GenOfftce/Secty Newpor18Mch84•-7148 8Mch Retell Store. Full s 1390 per hour Your MOVING mua1 .... Sota. lngand ln deepneedoft Fe:nale to tflare 2 bdrm fttnanlll 3002 ~· yet r9lued at· .. llllllTI llP lllD llll f /T or PT. 49.4-3002 ATM. No exp NeC P"'f ~t & ottoman + femlly This one ta onMn- 1 -t b• houM w/coupte. ~ 2904 *'"'ml flll•I moepneie. H you heY9 8ttght hlgtl energy~ ' (219)836-~ ext 130 almoat new c:orner Mt e-mllltonl Cell a54.o5IQ_ Mu11 Ilk• S)Mt. Smotl• MAKEllOiilHV£NOtNQ ·-· •• good eommunlc:allon wtth good EnglWI IPMk-Mon· Fri 5am, t :30pm I · l300 lor all or bea1 offer Ok. $385 per month plua Sn** route for ..... From Europe. 35 Y" tlllP· **"· regardlW of ex-lngabllt;neededtowor1t $6.30/Hr . Benelltl. *a.Tl~. ,... ...._...,....... 541-2328 or "6-787• Two 2.yr '*'·Fem, !dent· dep 548-7484 ~oat Poeelbte MCtl [;:a,= ~u:= pertenca. you .. be aue-Book• on Tape, Inc:. Call The nation• lwget1 d .. Ne9da-Oir.' & Rettr bactl-1 TWO Contour Lounge teal gofgeOU9 bit c:att • .-all WUITll ..-.1y. 300% BY PHONE.* 142-4321 oeatfultf....i..&.w. '-~• ~OYlde "'IAM-12 Noon Mon-Fri u.. at 54&-5525 trlbutl tor ol lkrM Rpubtll-ground. Nloe environ· Chain with Thermonic 59eYed. dac:law .• ahota F-~pr-"--r_.., .,.,.,.. + return on lnYMlment. --... -· .... ltie "''300-S500 per ..-c:a onl ••• 1 ou • ment Good t>enellta Heat & Vlvetetlon MOO & Must go 1..-FREE $ "'1"5-. mon_l ... h u-tlllt'-. Call Tim 1-800-842-4411 rigflt opportunity. You "'Pa6d Tralnl.ng PUT·Tm Ill.I SupervllOf Must be or· AlexlS 1to5. 4M-9650 I $1000 .• 54&-3751 I lolling home e73-eose ,_ ~=~-='="'=,...,..,.,,..,...~1Scftools & provide ltie embltlon & "'fun Coeta u... office To Mt up/take down on genlZed. able to super· 0 Large llvlng room. Waah1 "ATTN: GOVERNMENT the enthuelelm. Salary + TuHd1y1 for Klw1nl1 vi .. drlvetl thruout 0 .C., er & dryer (In houM ). Call JOBS • YOUR AREAi INlruaton 30 I 2 c:omm6talont. $7-S15/hr. Lundleon 1t Cotta M... So Bay .,... & hive HHID(.il: 631-8959. $17,&40 • "9.445. Cell St. JoecNm Elwnenlary PIT, FIT. 880-7255 lH HI 1111 Community c.nter Cell trucil or van Full-time Share 3BR 38A Twnhm 1-ec>2-131-e815 ex R3N Sdlool (K-8) le now ~ GOVERNMENT JOBS Charlel Markel~ 1521 salaried po11tlon. Full CM. Pvt BA w/~. ATTN: Poatal ~I Start ceptlng applc:etlone fof Earn '35.900"$90,000/yr PUT TIIE ~OI company t>enellta. Apply By CHARLES GOREN major uits that should be protected POOi. JM:, FP, W/O, 0 /W, s t t .• 1lhrl Appllc:allon regl1trallon. For ad-P a r 11 llTl1111P11m 1 2 Stlllled/unakllled. M..Sat. W k 1 1 oil tln1buP91't1tonCAdv2!noed25 0 ~t1•· w ith OMAR SHARIF from an opening lead through, so viii Inc, $450. 845-9081 Info c:all 1-802-138-8&15 dltlonal Information, • • · • IOt/214-18e9 ext. F-75 or or me or com-r ng 0 • " ",, and T ANNAH HIRSCH we endorse declarer's choice of re- ••. M-398. le,tOp 7 dyt pteaae c:all541-1783 Daye/Weak. Some exp ptn .... $15/Hr.845-1654 wayAve .. CostaMesa bid With a good five-card suit Shr 3br, 2'~ba, C.M. Lg. 2 =----,------nee:. Nl-tll1 u I I noor Fem 25+ n-amkr, Dec>r-'<>f1 ptoof yourMtt. ....,111!._.1 Uft li .. 11D Pllma&. &llllTAIT uOl l "u nerable 'iou1h dcah 1eaded by 1wo top honors. Nonh's no pell $313/mo..-•~ utll S28,000 s.Mc:eMuter .... ir.&r~ IE£D Highly motivated, detail-SAUi PlllH P/T 'ORTH raise to game wu clear-cut. 722·0270 Franc:hlH. evall for PT for wvtce 1tellon. oriented. own trantpor· Womsns specialty shop • C> l Declarer allowed West's lead of .2 .. 000 -~.. n 1-.... M·-1 ...... aw,_,.__ _ _. I TUCIEI!! tat I 0 n . I u II· t Im. Fa1hlon ltl1nd N.B. Eves. • Sh 3BA townh..._.. trptc "• .__,, rm. '"" .,.. "'"' ............ -....... n 1 5 2 the qu"en of clubs to hold the first r .,...... · 13 Account• bringing payroll. Send rMUme to: 542·2200 Exp. prefd 6«-9888 ~ In Cost• M .... $375/mo over $30,000/YNI. 0.-P.O. BOX 11923. Coeta R9CI Cro•• euthorlzed PIE Miik t A K 10 9 S trick. When West continued the suit ullla. Ca ll Eric + 6 3 2 d E f II 831-1421 tall• to qu.Ufled ~ MMe. CA 92627. provider looking !or • *••LES* an ast o owed, declarer could dent1 only, Ser-Ernelg'.t'IMnt 5530 c.rtlfled lnttruetOf lor Teac:heri/Au lttant .. \\ .. A..,I EA!\T almost da1m the contract. The sec· SO Cout Metro. M/F non vlceMHter. PO Box IAiPiiiid ti-* ftrtt aid end C.P R Teach«1. FIT P/T Com, Athletlc/Mgr/Tralnu. + A 1 6 t Q J • J d 1 smkr ah lrg hM w/frplc 1774 Newport e.ach Roman ECO Inc need• training. Ca&t Jemie Stahl pelltlve Nlarlee/benefttt $375,$475/""'. II y04J Ilk• " on mco. was won with the king, gar . qu~t arM. 1BA ' CA 92863 · ~·~~ c:erpenter for forming. at (714) 546-8943. ECEunltareqd. 96'-7741 apon1 & money. we may • K J 8 4 • 10 9 6 and five diamonds were cashed, de· $400/mo..-dep. 435-1909 Well Mtabllahed buelneea full time Ac:-c:o,.untln! Ce1 714-843-111 t P/T TELLEI haveCaa11 ~r tKk>n.,..!,O: ... YOtJ • 3 l t 8 7 6 -' darer d1~1.2rdmg lWO spades and a • ... ''V-· • OJ JO 9 + 8 7 heart from hand A club to the ace WOODBRIDGE. Jeffrey .. opportunity on Balboa Clartc krwolt11dr--In I ., .... na -lllHL aw Potltlon• 1vall, Well• 545-80'2 ... ot TH and another club threv. West on ~7:; l~B~B~ raA = ~Agt~;3~~ lor ~=~"= 8Wf-,.£~~wltfl ~~~~:,.=:' ~OforB.r.,~~gj~~ SELL BRITANNICA lrorn • K In 5 4 kad with nothing but major cards Pool. IP•. tennla c:ourts eud"lnO ..... report• Dew 011 c:hlldren 1 5 Oyt/Wtl. 912,31ee M1g le•d• & COYnt• IOcltlOnl • A Q J remamm& W hether West chose to In uen. $500/mo lnc:l utll ._AO"+"Vtr" end -e1 account._ ....... .;. · ...-.-.. • 0 J lead a spade or a hcan t cd ssoo d•P· Avail 9/t. ---.'-}" duti.:.-Good t>enet'it: -·•111 ~· ........ Mt-.....___.._... QUIUn I & earn S330 per .... • 1 present 957,2917, FAX 851-5910 Oppot!un'X 2908 and wonting eondhlonl. '!]· AJI ltilft1 evalleble. L~Out (g rou ) Call Bla ir I + A I>. 5 .4 dcc:lerer with the ninth tnck. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;IENJOY 14-15% retum on Apply In per1on, ~11~/~~~ Eng!WltPMklng,orSpan CllTIOL 1,80()..628-9128 :hi'. hidden11 This line shouldn't be tncd 1f Rentals Wlnttd 2726 Tnm Deed• a 10.000 to 9am-4:30pm, Mon-Fri. OK. muat drtve and have SEClnlllY South "at 'Orth .. .a.JI \\ e~t tarted 'kllh five clubs, since F ,_..._...pl .. _, $1,000.000. Call Denlaon 11111/,... 1111'1 m'f.al'T , .... .,ic.. Sel. be(WMfl Paint flnl,...""' comnany I + Pa'6 I + Pus declarer has d1 rficuh) m discardin& urn--. ac:ieon .... boe Ateoc. 49t--4&35 NOWI •••• $1~$350per..-Call •~'V _.. For small Hunt. 8Mc:l'I of. 2 ~T p 3 "WT p d Sept. 1 to 4. Trade Lake • mTmAITl,a 9-5 84 1 1134 · nH dt uperlenced flee Goodlenguagelkillt • as~ an might I~ thrtt club tncks as Tahoe 5 BR hou.. any a.I:::: T 1 __ 291 4 17042 Gltl9tt• Ave •SEAVERS • • · hand.-ori lndMduaJ for euenlial Non-smolllng Pus Pus v.ell u a t ri k in each maJOr, or week 71'1855-9918. ~ Ow.' IMne •HOST/HOSTESS •tPMPlllH• In-pr~ and llnal In-otfloe 960·54&9 Opening lead. ()uedl M + more If East shows up v.i tb a sm- •WIOOW HAS W 4 TOii 714-250-0331 Apply In perton. 2131 Earn ue> to HOOO per mo. epecilont. Cell 560-t590 I When )OU nttd onl) one of 1v.o gleton dub. declarer wins the sec· wamD 1 10.000 up. No cred""' W•lcllff Dt!Ye. N.B. Call (71') 147-7128 TIOl IPUY 110 STYLIST finesses. )OU are a 3 to 1 fa\'Onte to ond club, ovenakcs the quttn of * UTllT _._ ~-~~· ~l5Den1aonNOWI ' ' E•p & talented •tyliit land your con1rac1 But 11 ·~still ~t diamo nds with dumm>•'s king and ••-Jiii -.. ._.._ 17352 Murpny. lrvlne needed, gr .. t location. · Artist want1 to rent l4)ece CREW MANAGER NB Salon 6'5-5&l9. 1er to be able to da1m your (Ontra(t leads a spade to the tang If that that It Ill• I. brloht In without having 10 rely o n a fi nes'e lo~s to 1he ace, when de-darer re· Newport area. Call Su1en Ji\",( f) ~ "" Normally ) ou do not suppre ' a gain~ the lead he ovenakes the jack 873·308e leave meuaga. I BE Y• OWN 10•• '=:~:~;~' $@°\lQU L"~ -<.b C<rS• eu1 four-card·majm in favor of Jump· or diamonds. cashes out the dia· R.E. Salt/Rent Lolt&FOWMI 2'25 o •oo .. o•g• ..... , c• .... er, South had pos111on\ in both finesse for the ninth rnck. c~ ~ "-~, t1 .. o. POW>ll iiling to '"'0 no trump. HCTe, howev· mond suit and then Ines the heart '"d .... ,om .. ~;~·~~S * ~I~~~;T\:!:::;;?t;~i~7,~ rr~-~r~.~~~:.j ,f\ CROSS1~8:J'~UZZLE NEWPORT BEACH Crnr W•tc:lllf /Irvine A.,. .,.. Air Conditioning veomp1e1e Janl1orltl v Mutlc: VE!evator "'Fun view Baleonlel .,.. FAX I Copy S«Y1Ce .,.. Ample Parking .. , .. ,11 HllHl21/f 11111 w .. tclltt. NB Ag! 541-6032 1111/P 11Ml/M •OOt Birch /IA, NB Agl 5• 1·5032 uy .. m1.nm1 ----Full Svc:., phonee, mall FIJI, c:ont. rm .. Mc:reterlal view offloe. furn/unfurn 75i-3400 Colta MMe office avall Gr04Jnd noor. 297 tq tt lmmed avell. $330/mo. 111 MO. FAEEll 71 ..... M-7957 or 8 t&-818-9056 EXEC Offtce Sult• nMf JW Airport, 4770 Von Karman Ave , NB FAX. recept, c:opler, c:onl rm. khc:tl. fr .. parking • c:of· '-1•1\y bldg, tum. mo- to-mo et $350/mo Con- lac1 Al Quinlan, 833--9650 • FtUI) ADS ARE FREE Cal: If You*: i 1 H E D T P I Have An insured van, wagon or . Ii I E I _ large car. I H A R o 8 I On a very rainy oay my * Enioy working part-time in the eve· I I I r r lnend moaned This day 1$11 I . _ . _ _ . wonn a"V'"'"9 ·well 'I rep1..a ning1, earning full-time $$$ .. .,, s notdl"CJ ves1.-oav ano l I T E R X E V I tomorro... ' I I I, 1· I o -... ... . . . , <>-ed . . . . . . .. , •.•• ~ ... , • ..,.d, I M2 ... 1. * Have the ability to motivate Found Fem Bo•tlf on 8115. 11\elnlty ol Orange & 1"h St. HB. 9fJQ...8294. Then we hove a job for you. No experience necessary Full lroini~ ovoiloble. '"'~· l ·~ '-'--C' ~ l t:•i.ow Iii. .. ·. " v•!~' ~ .... · ..... ~ For fvrttier information or to schedule an interview: ly SYONIY OMAft ,..,. .~II)'. Aue-J' _... jM«tll 11·1'\pt• 191 "«t•u• ·~ dllll!OINff """ " ~ ~ ~ Me-f"IC jllf<n ·~· •<-~. ~ .... ~ ,...,.,, fftOlf , __ --·"•*"' Qood -,...... 10 ......,,.,...,. TAU9Ut tJljl<• »M'Y 1CU IUW llllN<U ,.,...,,... ~. OHtNIC)f. !()ti. MJ ...... hCf\lflff o/ ldltlll "-JC ........ ~­In (OMKtlCWI wtlfl 0.-. woo ~ y~ ,.,_ .,.,, ·•snow IN tlW Wwyl'' -(May l l·JvtW 1Q ,OCUI on pte»" .,,,,. ~. ,,,,...., ·--.....,, ~· lflCIMcto Ult, 11MK.illllly LlllM OolMlll( -.nt1Mf'lt ..... f\nd. ln(:IUdf' ..,.,... l\ilMUf't. an ~' IO i-~ ~· J'Ol' ~ .ao c.v,1~ ltl •~on~ llMy ~ -.-........ -..... ~ ,onn,....,.~...,-·...__.. 1Y IO --,....., IOll Mil,_. Of "°""' C_.tf c~ ,.._,., ,..., ,._, .. it~ IOI_,,.__ M <• 4 4t'9 on~ _,,.. 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CO 1tl/14,., tt\.tt tt'W" ~"""1 '' l'W"H('tf°\M \ .. !\fMf"'" cw Pf'OIPu"""' •f'COQ"ll""' you ,..,., ,,.,, ~ b.1Nt '"' t~t.., d"f"•""" ~ff~ M11"'0 ot IO<"'~· CAN(9a 1>..lf¥ U i41y I It l •ll r.q 0-' \ • O"C'M:f U t¥ \ \~ f'•\t" r(llf .,,,..,,.,,,,. Ol.,f\ -·,,,.•!Qt' ... ,_,.. ~· • .,_ -.... "°"' ~ <:" P''"'""' ......,,..,, .......... ....,., .,. -.... .., qiw "°" "°'" •~ cuuoq -11\t -"""'""'le> Dt""9 -(_.,Pf'-'~"' <""94,. "'VO" Of\> to 11 ,_ LIO I~ l• A<Jt 1'1 ~ Ii - .,.., l'V ·-d --.. "'"-' -,,,_,. ... ,_ -l>'l" J'O" """"" ,.... • r0ttt---"1 fl'"' ..,.,...,. -"'•"""I' ,,,. ... -• .,.,.. .,.,.. -bo _. --10 t-t 1rv ..,.,...,..,, ~ w '~' N ~,..,.,, 01 ctow • ,_.." • .,..,. ~"' '°" -(-rot• .... .,.,... tiff<"•..._,~.,,_~ ........,_ • ..__Call...,.. • .,.,_ 0111fJ#>f"'11//# ..., ~'" ,_..,.,.......,."""" "'"° l""t ,. \.,. , ,, f ., ... ~ "°'- ,.., -~,,.. ~ -· C'*-'I ,._,..,,. 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Y°'"' l l11f'flt O--r141J"VU,. Ck)~ tt'I lf"lt ~ ~ f'\ t,.. f~ (lti#r f C M r'1t N ptQlfoU~ *'-'0-\ MC)W91'¥#t \Oft'W" -,OU~,,, ... • 'O<>l"'*I Cl" 'f"'f) -,.,.,ttol• "1'1• "'' .,..,,., -· • ,.,. "' ~,., '""">nQ , ""~' i'tf'!•.-ct«''' ""'.tC>t'"O ~,,., C>.o<~·~ IAOln AllttUI .. .,~ } l ~ JI 1 0<Vt r ....,... artwt\ 1Mi .f _...,~~ "' ""'°"'~" AflffOC1'P\ to~you-"N-""oon"'l4<>~1 ,,,,.,,.. O"""'• ""'111 ... ''"'""'' ;')f '~"'""' T ...... ffwr if Jl'Wf tN>tf' ¥1J'.tt • '9°'t C•"'f fO p.trf'V an'"" bt~•t °"''';"'" ,,.~,.,.,, -~ ,,.,."' ,.,..,., ""flY "'ull ~ I "'l'ttKO-l""< } I 1¥' Xll '"* \<JI' "' v~oo Ml•• ,,,,. ,,.,, •• ..,.... ro--,,..,,.. '""' f"f't-• '"'ffl \ ,,,, ,,. .. , "" "' tM" \Iii ~ M'•N1iu\ ""1 """'\.""" ,, 't''"''"" M'C'I t~t '""' \~ P"'~" ,,_.,"""' Mon<oA\ IN -"' "-' (t"'li!"V t 'C.ttf' (Mh \""t """"' .. you~ Mff'Ot ""d -,..., ••t "" ~ O!-f'CI I" IOOPr.•tt AOUA .. 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"""" -cw 10 too" •"'9 .... • ..... ..., ~"' ·~ -_....., _, 11¥ ' """" mnr• ,_,_ .. --'f<V'• ~\10/W W YOUll ..,.518AY ti CMll "'9:IOAY1 " "'"'' t.ol °""• .... ..,.. ·~n -,_, 10 .,.,.,, ,.._,.. -,,.....,.\\........, <WPtP\h f! .. rt'fott llU' "" ti. •to"' _.,._..._ .. f~ OI ,.,...,.., ~"'"°''~-r~;·nlO""'ll• Of\ ~ ~>fl 10 ,...,..,.f '°"' ,,.,,., I,,_ ~ ""° In !'Oil' 'f'f•'"'Y AC"OH 1 Repa11 s 0.SCl'lat ges tO Fwnmn 14 Skrn P'Oblem 15 T1.11ti.1Sh e>ty t6 F1t• Piel 17 PHI an<! pr-• 1!1 \I~ stone 20 Actor Trevor 21 E1c11ma11ons ol 0199vs1 22 ADOatd 23 Repairs 25 Rtng .-~OtCt 26 Sl'lea• 30 Freocn ~·no 31 St<>o<l VP 34 Swee1r.ear1 36 La~ l krn 38 Ov O.ablto 39 Calltorn11n eo 42Conn><1 43 8111 44 Po~ PllrtS 4 S T r aPOf'<I 47 StOC>O- plKe 49 ,_.s AO•MS 50 \lefloc:~ SI E~OY S3 Wtnf1 Cf!ftll"f SS Gr-' 14'11cw S6 C1nnatn0" 61 Pfonoun 52 F004C>'oof 64 cr.eu P40y 55 e>eugn1er o• z-56 t<nac:ks 6 7 Wu tnd•bl.O IO 6a c.,. .. lor 69 BYOQne DOWN I~ SVbl 2 ~ltl!Of' 3 "''"" 4 IM HY1!f1& S Carpentry IOOI 8 ApP9r'd 7 Alber1&n fl II 8 Aecogn11es 9 Sey'"O" tO Gl'IOsli II MMtn9<1l.0 14' E ol OEO tJ Olva s se>«•ally HI for11~ 24 ~·nd .. "' 25 Oes-11 28 ~·etcnes r Evrooean 28 Too b\ISY 29 AcCOtdfOO to ) I Hiio .-fNl l'I 32 AM>n 3J Stuooo JS JOCkS¥ 3; Pt•y 1)¥1 40 UnQt!nllem&nl\' ~ 4 I Cillltlf\ svtt 46 Brc>uon• up •8 1•~1 sneN la~r. SI NYSE un<I ~1 LOCO !; :i \I llO<)< Of 91 ~4 E•M)O s~ "c>un91ter S7 ~ti ~ An11tox1n1 S9 ~s 60 Helper abbt 83 Ptva • . , . . . . . • * II' .-. .......... II J ....... ....:: ..... 4 *· =-.,, 01 ]' H 111 GI.DI "" ~ ... NP *.I.II'* Ir ...._ C..W.. ':=f..~...,71.~ =....., ..._ :.a:.::...: =r..=: II. 1,.-c;:~ :::: :.::ar1 = » . ._ ·== • ~~ tor coe1tai wayw, lnCUlng-. • rtm , .... -. 11• 090, ,OAD 'II 'ALCON ~.1!!!_°"'* uuo. I.cell•"' ...,.'--..=: J,•.,•.1 •1!!.l. ~~~ e=~~ :::::-.: .... ~m .... "''-;.... =.-..:==·~~= -·= -· ... _ •• ., tel---·-····--..... ·----Goodbedlto~Olt, brlll-.T,....,ln 'a"t-. m.nt,, .......... JJI• •ULL "'8~. ..,,.,. O... hM ,.... :t: ,.....,. rufta a 1001c1 good, Ollenltnl0.llM74t LmHLIUZ1111 OW..IOW!OI a:,,.~·=: =:on°"~ ::::: = 11.to0.0901 .. CMCll. flOM>'•n4UNOIMIN> mu••-· Auto, Piii elt, tin, cMM. _....,_ ,C.M. IN STOCK 'encl nwcfl mot9J Drftfn •• WllfY ---··---cm.-vw 1tfilut~...,, ..... L.aiiidwt,._,a ..... ~' · lmmecul•t•. ··- Alt ~guWWitMd uo.ooo complete or cMblt.15.IH ... ORI -.._.171 -·-"-dtwNt•. "*"' oon· .. i1'11.too 'o'::. GT trOUftct •ftec te. > PETl.ANO PAVILION t11,000 ~. ~ for 111,000. COfttact ...._ Mint ~ .. ""* ... 1 dttton.11.toO. tn.-4414 121-Ual C17'tlM) ,.,.. OP£N 7 DAYS = mooring poeelbte HMll KnlQht et OWiy -... w. (2HHM070) vw 1115 6*iOiei . ...... wn&.-6 te3741Md1811td 'Aiml.S. 2-eN1. Ptlot.114"6t2~1 'lllrA .... mMl = MOW'GdoWnuncler,mutt LIHOOl.N 'l2eont!Mnt91 JllCllll• 2tiSH.ibOilhd.C.M. .:2~fr''°l.,~· 21· K1nga CNlw iiOOP. • t lfft111S ·~-.... ,.,_ wt11te. con. Wurioue ...,,, lr"'90-t.mllLI 1111 ,.,._.. IE IPil U,. Coupe, ully loaded • tuftl'oof, {OISSI) * ._.1 ~-* · ts" ,.,end. SW9dlllh 11'-'•111111 1500 Auto M91 Dr. S.A. vertlbte, 54K mllH, ~ ...... -:: Mii HertNw llwd .. C.M. 1~~~~~~~~1 ~ •• tMllft 1951, Mahogany Ul-l1J1 $7,500. Cal M0-1312. tenor, dtMn .... UWt ..... 1: OWf Oek ptut "Vllltw Qlllks 9045 t 000 ---11•1 Syttem" llt>erQlw CW9r• IMW 1N7 321Mt. Loeded, VW Convetttbte Super-• mleee~. priced l~~~~~~~~I ... , ' ...... .,... .... L~~L~t ...... co•t ••terlofl"'New Nh, 1v~ PONT 2 d IAC h~dt • excellent condition, Ml!ACl!D!S 1971 ............ •••ti• 1174, new .,._ book1 muet M l~ A•bullt eno. lxceuent new upholttery LP ... • oor u op. white/red i..trw Muat -IT\Otorltop, *3,IOOIOIO .... n. 14.1•7.11 Cati "~'retoot11nttoncat, Condition! 11200/080 ....,.,. 11111111 ____ .. 60-.59;. painted hull, deek & 11,000 ma• Automatic. Hit. 518,100 • OBO. hctllent con~ltlon , 154 8"6/213-a4 •540 722-1220 clM•lflecHietnewafor vou 552·1102 .. eftlft4t •a• •1 cabin. Volvo Inboard Power ttterlng and 851.tt24 110,750. 714/411 tot4. . ,...... ..... ~ w.5 dleMI $7,000. 45' New-.,, .... Oflglnal p.int,,. • MERCEDES 1913 3000, Autos &mud< 9300 fltanos i organs Ml.IC ll)TIC( MUC ll)TIC[ Beautiful blkk ebony up-port mOO<lnQ w•lt>tt ttored Interior. $5,000. BMW 15 325E freeh engine and more right, Sctlaler & Sona. '7 14-M2--698f . .,..._ • 494..0591 5tpd. LOADED. 49K ml. excellent condition: 1171 VW AA881T. Good PM:nnoue .-M ...cnnoue .,_.. K "711 Sylvia Or . Huntington Purchased In March, 11t5 FORD FALCON $9900 080. 540-0374 s12 OOO Dayt 8'2-&449: condition. a.et off9r. Call MAm ITA,_.-y MAm tTA~ flUaJC NOT1C9 Of' 8Nch. Celtf. tff.41 uMd 2 hOurtl $19001 PP e cycllndtr. •II orglnal. Xlnt E-730-6425 ' Oeve 497•5047 ~=~are ~:::::: ~ .,. ~ :u~o ~~:, bi;.i:~ .. con· ~0-5528 Slps/Docks/SfOtlgt condition. $2500 080. -... Jiii MERCEDES 1984 380M ATTN: GOV'MT SEIZED ACCURATE EQUIPMENT p A O FE S S j ON A L CON tlCTION The regletrant(e) com-7022 645-3893 46K mlltt. ($31177) Mu•t .... price $24 500 VEHICLES rrom $100. REPAIR. 20112 lavva.w. PORCELAIN, 427 E. Hlh 1M71/1W. menoed 10 trlll\MOt butl-,i----------CHEVY •57 BEL·AIA ~11 Ed Garcia 241.,s1oo' ' Forde, Mercedel, Cor· Santa Ana. Oellf. 92101 St., Suite 121, Cotti M.... AND NOT'ICa Of' nett under the Fletltloue •U.AYAI.--., SEDAN. Or~nal con-· Yett•, Cl'leYyt. Surplut D•I• Barnett. 20112 Oellf. t2t27 INTINDSD '~ 8u1lne11 name(•l ll1ted 45' SLIP 1750/mo. 80' dltlon tow ml runa -MERCEDES 1"4 500Mc B u Y tr t Gu Id e . layylew, Santa Ana. Cell!. Ro~rt Pelrano. 190 t flURIUANT TO HeALTM ebo"9 on• $ec>1ember 1, SLIP $950/mo'.'780-5070 gr .. 1' RARE e 'UTY 1500 Auto Mall Dr. S.A. llawleu. bl•ck with 1~2·131-1115 ex A39e t21~.7 Santiago Dr.. Newpor1 AJID tAn'TY COOi! 1990 S&soO de 540..eoe4 l"I "111 palomino 19alher 11000 Trn1 bualneu le con-e..ctt Callf t2S&O •CTION ,,_,. Zane M. Hulen ll&TIUPFMlllT I ortra • •• In extrH s3e 900 ductedby:anlndMd~ Thi .. t>uainffl II con-OnJuly 12, 1990, at 1980 Thia atatemenl WU ftled Powtr bts 7012 $100/mo. Balboa ltland. FORD 1930 Model A 955-2800 w.' 759-o6e6 h.' The reglatrant(I) com· ducted bv; an Individual Wallace, #D, Coate M .... with the County Clerk ot Or· • Call 714-675-5095 Tu dor, 90% condition, rnencecl lo trtn111C1 bull-The regl1trant(1) com-CalNornla. the prcperty ~ ange County on Auguat 10, t5 BOSTON WHALER _ $7,650. dayt 895-1074 DA TSU 8 ME ACED ES 3 0 0 C D neaa under the Flclllloua met1Cec1 to tranNCI bull· ICribed u; 1990 1984, 70 HP, very well DOCK-15', front lie on eve 894-4269. Hatch~ac~9 ~-s2~~:dx TURBO 1985, cham-lutine11 name(•I ll1ted neu under the Flctltlou• ....,.oou.a. , ... equipped Good con-channel In N.BI Mu11 be FORD •66 MUSTANG radio ali S t 995• pagne with palomino abol/9 on: NIA Bualneu neme(•l llated CUMllNCY PubMlhed Ora1199 Cout dlllon Runs good. low enough for bridge • · • tealher Immaculate & o.1a Barnett at>oYe on· NIA wu Miz9d pursuant to Deity PllOt Augual 21. 28, 15200 OBO. Call to see. $250/mo. 675·6606 , 289 engine, automatic, 673-5021 compteiety lo•ded. 78K Thie at•tement waa flied Robert Pelrano H ... tth and Safety Code See-September 4, 11, 1990 640-1132 95"/e restored. 673-0138 HONDA 1988 Accord LX mllea. Muat NII. S 19,500. wfth the Countv Clerk of Or· Thts atatemerit wu flied tlon 11471/ 11488 bV the T· 13'4 15' HOBIE Power Skltt, Free Dock Space for use Autos 1---ed 9100 E11cellent, h•ve company Wiii contlder rMaonable = Countv on Augull 14, with t~n~C':k ~!,o;: Coata M ... Police Depart-"8.IC ll)TlCE 40HP Yahama. center or 17 Ft. Whale< Balboa .. ....., • car need to sell $8,800. offer 780-3866 Cadtllec: 19e5 COV ,...... = v ug ~,; P'°'*1V wu Nll.ed1--..;...;;=-..;..;.;.-.-.;;..._ consOle, canvas cove<. Island 752-2881° 11000 WI 545-1150· ..... ... Beige, io.ded, mint con-Publllhed Orange COM! f4llA7 with relf)tet to alleged YIOI-flCTmOUa IMl ... U bait tank Flsti, ski or FRO T. T --TUI lftl LUii HONDA '83 PRELUDE •-JI wa--~711,Lon2:.!5,950. 557-62M. Daltv Pllo1 AugUlt 21, 28, Publlahed Orange Coell allon ot Seellona 11351 ot NAME ITATIMINT sightsee. S3.900 Excel-N IE. 28 '1 max, A/C Moonroot 5 speed ._ -•· v..1. September 4, 11, t990 Daltv Piiot August 14 21 28 the Health and Sat.ty Code The followlng i>e'ton• are lent condition 673-3600 $Newpor t Ch annel. ~ekwtll PllY1ti>°1 $1~ tg 35,:,,pg $3900.'644-9206. Auto. pi t , air, crulM, ptw. CADILLAC 1975 Eldorado T-138 September 4, 1990 . , , You .,. h«eby notllled th1t OOIUngNITbuEDalneuPAOuFES. SIONAL -_ _ 175/mo 111 & last mo's • e over s ease o p/I alloys Low mllea Im-c 1 11 be T-113 the Dlltrlct Auorney ot Or- 1970 MARLIN Mercury rent. 714:548-9878 tranefer • Must sell Im-HONDA '87 Accord LX maculate."(1H03214). :vt ~w me S ~u~. MlJC ll)TIC( ---------lange County hH lnltleted MORTGAGE, 2172 Dupont C r u I s e r , I n -medlatelyl Beautiful 4dr 5spd 47K mites orig-Ill Ill 9 0 er over 5 · fltlllJC r.>TICE proceeding• to tOl'felt the Dr · Suite 4. lrvlne, Calif board/outboard, 17 feet, Mbc Tr1nU\IV91fJon wttlte convert1bi.. 1989 tnat o~ner . S8'.3oO • 650-1150· KlllT7 above-deacrlbecl propertv 92715 120 HP. manv extras • ._..' BMW. showroom model, 213/592-4256. OIAITAL a.A CADILLAC 1983 Sedan de ftCTTTIOUl IMl ... al ftCTTTIOUI ., ... ,. pursuant 10 Health end Sal• Aon1ld Dean Shrout· S 1,500 OBO 645-5405 car phone, 5 speed · with 2925 Harbor BIVd, C.M. VIiie, 66,000 mllea, one NAm ITATIMIM'T NAM! ITATa•MT ty Code Section 11488.4 2S332 Barent1, LIQUna Hiiia, C~n/Trlkn 0014 every extra Imaginable 111-JIOO careful owner. $4.200. The following WIOtl• ire The fOllowlng persona are You «• lnllructed thet If Calif 92653 1:~3 K~g1F;ne1T~a"t3C:r. "2 vt~Fn.. 1978 23' ALJO, manv new $8557 5I m 0n11'1 ca I I ..u nn• SI... 846-5504 dolGngAbullENT""'EAPUAIS: ES, 21,,. ~'& buLF~=Gu,: 108 22nd f~tudeSlr• ro•fto,cohl•nt .. ptro'heP•frorty·. 21~-~o,.;,~fiO:~: extras, one ow ner ~679 --Loadedl(l0431Al iei vv ,:.r1u•ft1toHNlthand"&f• Calif 92630 radar. video depth $4, 095 642_8592 ACURA 1989 V6L Legend lffll NISSAN •90 300ZX CADILLAC '79 Eldorado. Y1cht Mischief, Newport St.. Newport BMch. Calif ,,_ -· ..., sounde<. pilot. TV. ice-_ 40R. fully loaded. ellcel· -a• Gold, auto. toye, 3600 Diesel. Sharp. 61K. BN<:h, CA 928&0 92663 ty Cod• Section t1488.5, Thia bualn•H la coo- maker, microwave, buil1-STORAGE. Colla Mesa. lent condition, JO,OOO -TAl&OIU mites, $26•500. 583_1559 Load•d $2350 OBO. GOl'don E. AeeN. 2106 WIH1am l aln Pet1tm1, l918 voumuatllleavertfledclalm ducted by· a oener11 part- tn vacuum Bimin i Secured parking for RV & mites, extended war-2925 Harb()( Blvd, C.M 644·6689 r~~~. CM~a~2h!~ Newport ~-~~hOcea, ,._,1n1 ~r2~~:, Newport atatlng vcur lnterNI In the neflhlp I di ti D 111 2IOO _., "• vvv ..-. ..,.. • .,..... property. You mull file Ihle The reglstr101(1) com-=~~~~reWin~Pals a~~~ boat stor~e $60-$95 ranty S 19 000 day • a..1JO '11 Thia buslneu 11 con-Thia bualoess la con-claim In the Superior Court menc.d to tranl8C1 bull· duced 10 $ 94 .OOO covered. Ca I 642•5858 591-2 i20. ev~ 673-5679 PUlllTI 'II Ir~ l'I'-dueled by: an lndMdulll dueled by an tndlvldual of the County of Orange n.ess ull<Hr the Fic11ttou1 llAll YIYAlll ..,..... The reglttrant com-The reglstr1nt(1) com-within thlr1V (30) d•VI ol the Bualnua Name(I) llated 714-772-2501 davs. Motorcydes/ IOIU'lllmlU HYUNDAI 1987 GLS V-6.lowmlles.aJCtracleanl 39K. mmacul•te, gar-mencecl to traosact bust-menced to tr1nsac1 bual-flrat put>llcatlon ol this No-above on Julv28. 1990 714-722-7772 weekends, Scooten OOIS 5 IP. cau., tllt. crulM, al-33K, S-spd, runs-looks ex-(2964791 aged, $11,800. 628-5314 n .. s under the fictitious neu under the Flclllloua tlce. unle11 you receive Ronald Dean Shrout ~;:s~ t; g 5 Le ave 1979 GLlOOO GOLOWING (100oy8a.2~9E1XTRA CLEANll ~;11_~;; • $ 3 · 5 5 0 · ,1 .. Ill" CHEVY '81 CAMARO RS bulln ... name or namea Bualneu n1me(s) llated 1c1ua1 notice wt~h:~:~::*1ty ~1::=•0111~ g ... ., Beautllul 5 speed pow.r llated above on July 30. 1990 above on August 6. 1990 1985 BAYLINEA 25' Cycle. lull dress $2,200 Ol&STAlACIU J AGUAR 1986 XJS, OllYlfl... eve<ylht' lo · lie Gordon E AeeM w1n11m Lain Pemt111 1---------= County on July 27, S1eeps Six 350 engine I OBO 646-2307 2925 Harbor Blvd CM gray/gray, showroom 1500 Auto Mall Or, S A $7800 5~7 96~0 m age Th11 atatemenl wu hied Tt1l1 atetement wu tiled rtlll.IC *>TICE , ...... 2 10 nours Complete gal: 11 IOO ' condition. special wheels. IJI J 1l1 --with the County Cieri\ 01 Or· wttl'I the Couniy Clerk 01 Or· TIT10U Publtlhed Ora~ c;o..1 ley Hot water shower 14 Wht'tl Ortvt'/ Jeeps l•J $21,000 Days 662-5449, • lmn '11 ange County 1~ J~~ ~~ Countv on August 7· F~AME .:.~=· Dall)-PllOI August 7. 14, 2t. Shore power VHF Depth 9030 Eves 730-5425 II n ... Published Orin • COISI F415711 The followlng persons are 28, 1990 finder $22,000 CHEVROLET BLAZER A1,.11111TA·1-JAGUAR 1986XJ6 -POASCHE1972911T.Ae-V-8. auto, pl •. air, tllt, Da1lyPllotAugu11~. 14,21, Publlahed Or1nge Cout oolngbu1lne11u T-092 (619) 868-3218 (h d t 11 d) ..,, Light gre showroom stored, !Ike new Call me. cruise p/w p/I. Low low 28, 1990 Delly Piiot August 1.c. 21. 28 DIAMOND RESIDENTIAL 1987 Bayhner Bowrlder t'.~!: ~a~l:d 11;6 5";; s~~roo~ A~/FM ·~fer'! qualltv. Ls 000 mlles. ! 12•000· 642"2923 -mllesl 'c909S73) ' TI I I September 4 · 1990 T • 1 t9 ~f~;A~~~~er~;~~:~:.~· P\alC NOTICE 85tip trailer sk• Pvlon in 5"48-4193 , cass. good condition, $19,900 g44-8643 Saab 1973 Rocket 98 111,111 Ml.IC *>TICE Sulla 573 M11110n 111eio: FICmlOUa IMl ... H CD M S 5 7 0 O 0 black, 78.317 mlles, JAGUAR 1989XJS Cpe coupe, great condition. MAITALAlllA Pta.JC *>TICE c1111 92692 NA• ITAnmNT d760-036I.e76-0·0301 4 4 '13; 119~7 60Ra~ ~gr $3.450 Call 640-9304 or White/tan mint condition S 1100, 714/548-7479 2925 Harbor Blvd C,M P:ICTITIOUI au ... 11 Todd Allen Redington, d The IOllowlng per10t11 are 28' C 111 1968 FG x c' v · m' ex-640-0855 s' ' -11 ' NA• aTAftMENT ftCmlOUI autMll 21 622 Mer{l\lertte P1tkw1y otng bullness H a twin celleot cond1t1on, pros--phone, 33K. 644-2479. SUBARU 1985 GL 1·2IOO The tonowlng persona are NAME ITATIMeNT Suite 573, Minton Vte)O: BEARY VINE. 2778 Long· ias sleeps 4 mini pector pkg . 1u11 trailer 4x4 Wagon. 5 spd, ale. Oolng 1>u.anesa 11 Tiie IOllowing persona.,. Calll. 92692 wooct Ct . Co111 M118, C1llf I 7 .000 498·404 1 P a c k a 9 e g a r n et ID 'H 1111 1'&11111'·1 '11 sunroof, stereo. alloy SCOTT GARMON COM· dOlng bu1lness as Thia bu11n1u II con-92626 r ed i vory $1 t 500 I 4-dr. whlte/natur(6162) whls. car cover. bike PANY 2849 Europ1 Dr B E L D H 0 M E dueled by an lndlVldull Linda Grace Pittman. S.JIBoats 7014 640·1568 PllCllTISELLI Llke new!(063091 I rack, $3.200 O BO ..,..,Al'H Co1ta0M .... Callf 92826 ·FURNISHINGS. 17627 Tiie reg11tr1nt(s) com-2778 Longwood Ct Coata 121,111 836·9702 Leather Interior, llke new Scott ErlC Garmdn, 2849 Beach Blvd Huntington menced to lranaect 1>u11-M .... Callf 92826 1983 CATALINA 22 JEEP 1988 Wrangler. STllUll llTlll STEILlll llTlll TOYOTA 1983 Cellca. Low mites, artl<: white. Europa Dr , Co111 Me11, Beach, Celll 92647 neu undef Ille F1ct111ou1 Jo Renee Jonea 2778 7 SHP roller furling. 11xed Sahara ed1t1on 11.000 LTI~ h•rort llaoll LTl.~l••crt llHll Sunroof, 5-speed. full 18734421 Calif. 92626 Clarence J Beld, 142 Lex· Business nime(ll llsteo ~:ywood Ct . Co111 M .. a. keel , maoy e•tras miles excellent con-154 Jam oree, NB 111 AAA Thia bualnen 11 coo· lngton. Costa Mesa, Calll 1boveon Augutt 1. 1990 •T11h 92628 $3 600 Bv owner dnion S105000BO Call 154 Jam ree,NB power. mint condition. ,._ ductedby;anlndivldu11 92828 Todd Redington • It 1>u11ne11 11 con- 714-645-2963 alle1 5 492-7865 140·1~ 140..... Second owner. mainten-1'1111M I Ill The reg111r1n1(1I com-Tiiie bu11nen 11 coo-Thia 1111em.n1 w11 llled d~1ed by co-partner• .!5 Bristol St11r Sa lull ance records S.C.700 UlllLI mMY menoed to tranaact bull· ducted bV an lndlvldul l with the Countv Clefk ot Or-he registrant(•) com- kee sloop. sleeps 4 4 Trucks 9035 OBO 557•2289 neu under trie Flct1Uou1 The reg11tran1(1) com-1oge County on August 8. menced 10 trenl8C1 bUM- .&ZIA '11 ••• 'TRIUMPH '79 Con~rtlble 2628 Harbor Blvd .. C M Business N1me(1) llated menoed to tr1n1Kt buSI· 1990 neu u~ Iha Ftctltloua liil IS 9tip outboard CHEVY 54 PICK-UP ••• • ., .... NH above on July 3, 1990 ness under the F1e11110u1 ,..._ Bualnus name(•) llated some worlo. Ol ler REBUILT 10'11111 l&TOllACI TR7 Runs excellent Scott Garmon Busln111 Name(ll t1111d Pubhlhed Orang. Cout •t>Ov•on JufV 31• 1990 489·9419 WITH CAMPER $2295 Black/Natur. "Flawless' Auto, pi s air stereo s35oo OBO 644-737 t Thia 1t1tement w11 Iliad 1bove on February 1 1990 D1•ly Pilot August 14. 21. 28, Lind• G. Pittman Cal 25 1q79 verv cleao SEE 642·0567 163401 Extra clean• Low miles Volvo 1984 GL --FORD '88 MUSTANG with Ille County Cte1lo. ol Or-Clerence Beld ' September"· 1990 Thia atatement wu filed w11t many c:ru1s1ng e•· 110,llO (342335) Fully equipped, exoellent CONVERTIBLE •"9• Couoty on July 31 Tn11 11119"*11 waa filed T • 118 with the County Clerk of Or- 1r11s $7500 645·3517 or Vans 9040 STEIUllMITllll 11111 condl11on new tires. 5 1peed. rad. stereo t990 • wtththeCountyC1eri.010r 1 ~~County on Augull 3 · 261-9038 nights L T1 1 ...,.rt llioll CIAITAl ACllll sun r o o I S 6 , 9 7 5 cassette, a u1ae contrOI. f 4181S7 ·~ County on Jul~ 30 f'talC r.lTICE ,......., LA EA fully equipped ex· Restorea Walk through I.a" VOLVO .8• GL-W .. GON 673-4220 2:1 Y990 1 o ugutt 14• 2I. , .... ,. ICTITtoUl IMlllNIU Dail)-Piiot Avgust14 21 28 S 66 vw CLASSIC BUS I 1540Jamboree,NB 2925 Hart>or Blvd.C M 673-8886 etc 32K $8 400 DPlub~~ Or1;,e Coast 19 P: Published Orange Coast c.eilen1 condll1on $750 Runs strong $7250 OBO -·1•4• 111-2100 .. " ___ ___ "· t Published Orange Coal! NA• ITAftMeNT September 4 1990 · · Call 645-8388 548-59l7 '•--------1.._ ________ E11cellent cond ition Overstocked w11h"ulP A T-098 0111v Piiot Augutl ?. 14, 21, The lollowtng petsons i re · T.115 -• 542-2946 days only call 10 c1ass1r1eo w111 ne1p 28, 1990 domg bu1lne11 u lr-----------------------11·-···············---------------llllDIJC MnfJCE T·097 SWANSON 4 SWANSON, 1111-JC MnfJC[ rUUL nu l2458 Santa An• Ave Co111 __ r_UUL __ nu ___ _ flCTITIOUI •u ... 11 P\8.IC *>TICE M .... Calif 92627 flCTITIOUI au ... u NAMe ITATa•MT , ___ _..;;...;;.........;.....;..;;...__ Chariel Robert Swensoo. NAiil ITATa•MT 1 ~ I I I I WE WILL Daily Pilat ELL OUR AR Huntington Beach I Fountain Valley INDEPENDENT ORANGE COAST WEEKLY GUARANTEE! We will sell your car. If after 3 weeks your car isn't sold, we will run your ad for free! NO STRINGS ATIACHED. Just call us to renew your ad. Run l 0 words for 3 weeks at $18.50, 55¢ each add1t1onal word. Must be prepaid. A word constitutes an ythmg that has a space between rt For 1nd1vtduals only NAME-------------PHONE _____________ _ ADDRESS CITY-------------- STATE ZIP----CHECK#---AMOUNT ENCL. --- EXPIRATION DATE ----MASTERCARONJSA# -----------~ MESSAGE: I I j ' I I U CEN'D EAat AODl11u1"1Al. I I 1 I I I I 1 I -I MAIL T~ OAJLY PILO't Ut WUT IAY S1"R£n COSTA MESA, CA t'HM ATTN: NO SnJNr~ AlTAOfto I L-•---------~-----.J -------------------------------------. I The IOllowlng per10na ere flCmlOUI aullNEll 2458 S1nta Ana Ave , Co111 Tiie IOllow1ng peraona are dOlng t>ullnMI 11 NA• ITATUittNT M .... Calif 92827 dOlog bu1lneu 11 BAYSIOE MARKETING. TllelOllowtngpersoo1 1re Cl audi a L 1g11c 1 (1)NEWPOAT PARTY 1 2, 10 1611'1 St 0 · 11 I, New· doing bullneu .. Swanson, 2458 Santa Ana PLANNING (b)NEWPORT port Beactl, Calif 92663 PARKER ENVIAOMEN· Ave . Costa Meaa. C1ill PARTY PLANNING UN· Melvin Wayne AOberllOtl, TAL SAFETY PRODUCTS, 92627 LIMITED. 177-A Rlveralde 1 12110 16th St Q.11 t N--3704 Seunore Dr N-POr1 Thia 1>u11neu II con-Ave Newl>Ol'l BeKl'I. Calif pOl'1 Beactl. Cllll 92663 BMch C1l1I 92663 dueled by hu1band and w1t1 92663 This bullneu 11 con· Atchard Lee Pari.er, 370.C The regt1t11nt(1) com-Brl•n M1r11n Weever. ducted t>y 10 lndllltduel SHanore Dr . Newport menced to 1ranS1Ct bull· 2066 See Cove Ln Co81a The reg11tr1nt(1) com· Beech. C1111 92663 llMI uoder ll'le F1c1111ous M .... C1111 92827 menced to tranuct bust-Thia business IS coo-Buatnus n1me(1) 1111eo Tt111 businen 11 con- neu under the FICtltlous dueled by 1n 1odlvidu1I 1bove on August 2. 1990 ducted by an lndlYldu1I Bu11neu 01me(al ll1t1d The reg11tr1nt(sl com-Charles R Swanaon The reglstr1nl(l l com- above on Augull 7 1990 mene.d to 1r1nsac1 bull· This statem.nt was flied menoed to tran..c1 bull· Melvin W1vne Robertson neu uoder 1tie F1c1111ous W11h the County Clerk 01 Or· neu under Ille Fictitious Thia 1t11ement wu flied 8u11neu Name(s) 11s11dllfl9tl Countv on Augu91 14. Bu11neu name(a) listed with the County Clerk ol Or-1bove on Jury 25. 1990 1990 1bove on Auguat 3 1990 ange County on August tO, AICl'lard L Parkef P:-.75 Brl10 WeaVflf 1990 Tn11 1111emen1 waa filed Published Or1oge Co111 Thia stllement was llled '4112$4 wtth the County Clerk ol Or-Dally Pilot Augull 2 t. 28, with lhe County Clerk 01 Or- Publllhed Orange Cou1 •noe County on Jutv 27 S~tember 4 11 1990 •noe County on Augu11 3. Daltv Pilot August 21, 28, 1990 T-139 1990 September 4, 11. t990 f......S ,_.11 T-133 Publtalled Or•;,-Cout "8.IC *lTlCE Published O.ange CO..t 1---------Delly Pilot August t4, 2 I P:ICTITIOUI IMll#elll Dally P1101 August 14 21, 26, P\8.IC *>TICE 28, 1990 T-089 NAME ITATIMeM'T September 4, 1990 T-118 "CTITIOUI aultHEll The lollowtng persons are ----------~ 1111m1IC MnTJCE dotng bu11ne11 aa l"tll.IC *>TICE NA• ITATIMIM'T rUUL nu PLK SERVICES. 2285 _____ ...;...;.;;,,,;;;....._ The following peraona Ill FICTITIOUI .UatNlll 1Aoe1>uck SI El Toro C1llf flCTITIOUI au ... 11 dC::u~~~~:; S PaclllC NA• ITAftMENT 92630 NA• ITATW•MT eo.,.1 Hwy 'Laguna Beech The followlog ~· ere But Phuong Ven 2285 The IOllowtng !*'ION are Calll 92651 · dOlng bualnen u · Aoebu<:k St . El Toro. Calif dOl"9 bus1n4u a1 D w 11 S CO NSU MER W ISE 92630 SADC. 17201 Kampen. 3 l9~r11 Te~~: Av umm;y. COUPON COMPANY, 1918 Thia bualneu 11 con-Huntington Beecl'I. C1lll Laguna Calif 9267: · 0· M1rl\1 St Orange C111f ducted l>Y an 1ndlvtdu11 92847 fhll 't>ulln•ll 11 con-92668 The regl1tr1nt(sl com-Kevin WllM>n, t2120 E ducted by· en indMdual TlmOthy Carl Helmatre, ~ to tranaact . bull· Florence, Sant• Fe SPflng1, The registrant( a) com-1001 W Stevena • 307. ne.s under Ille FICtltloua Calll 90e70 menced 10 trenaacl b\al· Senta An1. Calif 92707 Bu11neu name(s) 11111d Vlcior Suna)d1. 5291 LIY· ,,... under the Flctltloua Lynda Jo Andrian, 15891 •bov• on August 14, 1990 .,pool, Yort>e Linda. Clllf 8u1lneu name(•) llated Wllllema St. '104, Tuttln. &ii Phuong Ven 9268e above on April t 1989 Calif 92&80 Thia atatemerit wu llled Thia bu11ne11 I• con- Dora S~mmey · fhl• t>ualne11 11 con· with the County Clefk of Or-dueled by a geMral part- Thie atatement wu flied dueltd by co-pattnen 81199 Countv on August 14, nerahlp with the County c_. of o.-Th• regl1trant(1) com-1990 The regt11rant(1) com-Cou 1 A 1 10 mencecl to tranNCt bull· ,_.. menced 10 tren11e1 bull· = n Y on ugua • ,,... under the Fletlttoua Pul>liahed Or1nge Cout nea1 under the F1C11ttou1 ,_1 8u1lne11 name(•! llited Delly Pilot Augufl 21, 28 Bualneu name(•) illl•d Publllhed Orenge Coal above on. NIA September 4, 11, 1990 abOYe on AUQull 1. 1990 Daltv Piiot Auguat 2 l 28 Lynde Andrian T-138 VlctOf SuhaJd1 hc>tember 4 1 t 1990' ' Thia atatement ...a filed Thie atatement wa1 !tied · ' T-132 with the County Clerk 01 Or• P\alC *>TICE with the County Cletll ol Of. ---------= County on Augu1t 3. ftCmtOUI IMI-•• ~= Cou111y on Augutt 7, rt8JC ll)TICE ,..... HAMS ITAT'tmM'T Nllnt ftCTTTIOUI Ml ... H Pul>llelled Orange Coast dJ:: = ~ are Pul>ltlhed Ofa.nge Cout MAim ITATWMIM'T Deify Pilot August 14, 21 , 28, STEPHENS & l<AAV, 5000 ~~~:,A~~4. 21. 21, The fOllowlng pel'tonl 1re s.c>tember 4• 1990 T 117 Birch StrMI. Suite 410, T • 122 doing bualnMI H • Newport BMch. Calif 92ee<> --------~ IMl>ACT G P GROUP, •-.,. llftfM'r Lon T St~a, 1 pro-Plll_JC ll)TJCE G.neret Part"9'1Np, 1 t770 ,._nu -. r.tional c;«por1tton, Call-__ .;.;;.;m;;.;;..;.;.;;;.;.:.;;;:;...._ W11M1 Ave • Suite 116, fomla. 5000 Birch Stretl rtennoue .,... •• Founteln vaa.v. Callf 92708 ~A=· Sult• 410, Newport BMc:tl: NA• ITATWmWT E A Grennan, t821 t .. Calif 92MO the tollowlng pereona ere Whittler Blvd . Whittler. dJ he ~ P9f'9001 •r• Thi• bu•ln111 11 con. doing bullnMI u · Calif. 90e03 ~ ""' 81 dUC1ed by a corpor1tlon N.ATUAALL Y NEW POAT J.C. Moor.. 1170 W11'* port ~ IOUTIK, 34 t=· The reglatrant(•) com-It: 1046 Newport Center Dr AVtl Ste 111, Fountain v.,_ Cellt t*3 Newpor1 • meric.d to tranMCt bull-•2. ~ BMcfl Catllf. aey, c.tlf 92708 ,_ under the Actltloua 92MO ' D..-.ffl K. ,...,IOf\. t241 .::f'· t~ ~hen. 411 lu1lneH narn«•l llaled JoMph A. Stertord 1Me ~ W. lelboe llvd . ~ Ml tr n • 11 • HOno HI abCrol9 on Auguet t, 1990 Marguerite, eo,.on1 d9t Mar, leedl, Catllf t2Mt ~., ...... 11158 L~·•• Lon T Stac>Mna. Preal-Cellf t2M5 0ten l(lenlaft, 3300 lfvlne vr-·-'111• I ..,_.. dent ,X»f II Alan 8307 N A\19 Ste. 190, ~rt AVtl, #2, LCWIQ BMcll, Clllf Tl'llt ata.tfl'ltnt .,.. flled Marin• PIClflca 0L I Callf. heon, Calif. t29IO IOI04 with the County Clerk Of Of. I0803 · . ' ' Thll but!Mt• 11 con• ~ :;_.,,... 1~ ciono anoe County on AU0U9t 10. TN• b1111n"• •• con- ducted by a oeneret pa11. __ • ~ 1*1· '"° oueted by a e-nerai pen. ,..,. ........... ,_~ The '90ietrant(l l com· m!:.ct'~'•:ranl(t) = Pu.,..,_, Orlll09 Coeet The reoi•trant(1) CCHft.e menoecl to tr...ct bull--,,_ unct! ~let'--Daly Piiot Auguet 21, 2•. "*"*' 10 trantect ~ neea under tM '1ctl11out .. _ ~ 4, 11, IMO neat under IN flletltloue lueln••• namt(tl lllltd '~"' narn«:> ~•d T·laC> lu1tnau name(•) ll•ted above on: NIA avv .... °" Auguet •· 1..v atlo¥9 on· NI A J.C MOOtt Luono T'twn :r. ~ M)TJC[ ~-A. Stafford T'NI ... ,..,...,, -Ned Tflll -~~ .... ~ Tiile.....,.,,.,,, ... tied ....... •County c.ti cf O.· Wfttl the..,..... .. , Qenc of...,.,. fllCTmOUe--.. .mi"" County c.tl of Or = County on ~ 7, = Count't on AUIUl4 1 • ~= •• = County on ~ i. ...,.. ....,.. doWIO ....... ~ °'tt:. Coe1t ~ °':"f: C0Mt AOUA·"'° li'OOl HA· ~ 0ranea "-:: !?ei1r Plot~ t , at. 21. = "':, ~·1':.c, 4• It, H , VU. Ml2 .,.... °' · HUM· C>tllY Not~ f4, 1 t, 11. hp...._ 4, 1 "" • T "'9tOfl 9tecifl. Cllf tM47 hp""'"' 4 1MO _ •ti _·tlO hntM1d19111 ~1n!, ' T•lM • The Legal Oepertment at the Dally Pilot 11 piMMO to an· nounce a new MfVIQe now avail· 1t»e to new busl,,..... W• wtn now SEARCH the nam9 fOf you at no extra charpe. and M"9 you the time and the trip to the Cour1 HouM In Sant• Ana Then. of courM. an., the ... ,ch is ~ed we wtll flle your ftctltlOUI bullnnt name atatement wtth the County C..,_. pubfllh once a W.-fOf four WMka a requtred by law and tt*i m. your proof of pubfl· cation wtth the County Cl9fk Please stop by to hie your r1c:11t1ous business statement at the Da1ty P1to1 Legat Depart- ment. 330 west Say Costa MeH Cahtorn11 tr you can not stop by. pleaM call us at (7 14) 6•2·•321. Extension 3 15 or 316 and we w11t make arrangements for you to handle this procedure by ma1t If you should have any further QuMtlons. pleate call us and we wm be mOfe than glad to Hiist you GOOd IUClt In your new buslneul1 - e I ; . • TD PAMQ.'I' by BU Keane PBAR1JT8 by Chartee M. Schulz COUNl&a C1Jl,TUllS by Maratta & Maratta cmcua "Are you gettin' the whole Sears Tower in the picture, Daddy?" llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson · I'm sorry. My foot got a httle heavy on that last curve .. NANCY ARLO AND JANIS 1 DO>J'f FtE.t. l ll<E. A L€.T'5 IAKE HOME PIZZA TO~IGHT... A ~IG €>ACK OF SOfi?G~~ OVERBOARD l'l.l. lf.u. VDU I GAPfAIN - 1l\£AAPV I'S REAU-'t' tt~l.PIN& ME GH IN 1ML~ wrrn M~ rfHINGS . .. . \ DRABBLE JUDGE PARUR 1'Mf1N01N& our \\bW IMPO~\ANI \I IS lo 1At.K - 10 GM\MUNICAIE. GO HOME ANO TRY TO SL.EEP, BLAINE ' I WANT YOU BACK HER E AT EIGHT IN THE M O RNING BECAUSE I 'LL NEED TO ASK YOU OUESTtON S B EFORE we M EET WITH LIEUTENANT LUCAS 'TOM O RROW .-..FTERNOON I ~ERE'S SOMETMIN6 VOll COULD ORDER FOR ME ... HO. JOST A 8UHC~ OF CMRISTMAS CATALOGS •.. '"'~ COMPLETE Li~E or J\t)· PEST 'PES i 6NS stri~ GARFIELD by Jim Davia HE~E/ TA~f. MY C'INNER! c,l()l.)'LL NO,JON, I POH'l" Wi\NT YOU ENC:> OP €>TEALI N(T l'f ANYWAY I TO C':ttVE ME YOOR FOOP • /\ FRED BASSET by Alex Graham DSJU08 TDllBNACE by Hank Ketchum T"" Barril"\g~or\ · Smyths certciinly 1ivt irt luxw~. , ' .. SHOE ------.... ~fZ~!A,'(. !'f? ~ATf; IO %E. M~E. UN~ES I I~ -rn£ MIOPt.E EA~I I =, J I I !J --. - H 1· 1 Bvr: 1~ 1r cciMe~ ro rnAT W~IN "™E OIL. Bll/N~~ ... by Jeff MacNeUy ~ I •·'11 by Jerry Scott ROSE IS ROSE ! -mou6µf ~OU ~"\ OOINU ~N6 l.V'4TI L 1~1; N=lt~ON IM TALKll-l6 Aro.IT DE.C\OI N6 '¥!AAT 10 ~EAR 1 by Jimmy Johnson OOT U~fll, I l<OOW €XACTLY WHAT RUt£'2> fHEY'R( BRtAKl >JG I FUNKY WINKERBSAl'f COACH I BEl~IHE A'TM&.f1JC. 00 l.;\'.)l) EVER FIND DIRECToR ~ WEt..l A51ME ~lF ~ING 1"0 HEAD R:XJTSAU •. COACJ-4 lAJEAR 1WO HA'f& A"T HERE Al <AJE.SiVIEW f.41~ J fHE 5AME 1iME ~ HAS 10 BE VER'.> HEC17C. 1----1 r----- FOR C.)()(J .' f by Chip Dunham FOR BETTER OR POR WORSE TAAT'S c,~fAT, SEAHAWK -~CW LON 6 YOU Bff N 60JIJ6 1 ~f_ Y -;~~ \Alf ~ IT? by Kevin Fagan by Harold Le Doux THE ORANGE COA8T SERIAL From her five ycan OD tbe police beat at the Ncwpon Be8cb Weekl y, Katherine Bell had leeD a lot of dc.d bodies. Still , she bad never aottcn uled to the silbl As she stood on the Canaery'1 pier and looked al the dad man noatina in the water, her entire body quietl y trembled, and abe buttoned her jacket, tholollb abe knew the balmy Auiuat nilht air wasn't causina her shiven. She especiany hated drowninp, and Newpon Beach flanked by water, had a lot of them. The beach, the bey, swimmina pools and hot tubt. She wondered if abe'd rather be a reporter in Death Valley. She prayed that the body, which WU fioatJna face down, hadn't bttn in the water Iona. She'd know m a minute u the corona·a tam had finally deviled I met.bod usi• some rop11 and SU'IPI to puU the man's COii* up on the pier. Sbe &lanced up at tbe second Roor oT the Cannery res1.1urant. where the blt"s laf'llt windows pve petrou 1 pictwaque view of Ncwpon Hart., the yKl\tt aod miUion~oUar homes. Katherine bet the crowd, now dnwn four detp to the windows by the com- motion on the pier, didn't barpin for a view o( a deed man. But bcre it came. Katherine turned away (or a moment u the four memben of the coroner' I t.eld'l landed the body on the pier like a bia pme flab. '°'Bat'11 ..,.,"said tbe skin- ny one wiLb a laicbr. Sbe clcilpilld oon>ad• DlloM bwnor. 5be flMDy bad "\entlf t0 look It tbe body. Tbc ftnt lhil'I lbe aocicld "'dalt die mu waa wwi111 a dart tMi •• 119it. • Dew ............... tO ...................... tO-• by Tom Batluk --_,. .. --_, , . -- by Sheral LaBeau look at the face, but her feet remained frozen I 0 yards from the body. Meanwhile, the chief coroner and bomocide detectives studied the body. "Not 1 bruite or tcrape on this f.lY.'" aaid a surprised detecti ve. Heck, bi1 8roob Brothen' shoes are 1Ull on. Maybe he bad a few too many maninia and slipped off bi1 boat or dock. I don't see any lian• of foul Play ... " "'Katherine finally found enouah COUflle to take a few steps towards~ body. •• ... the IUY ~bly couldn't 1wim," he conunued. At S yardl, abe recopiz.ed the &.ce of ~ ~ man, and abe knew she bad I aood story. " ... I'd aay it loob like an ~­ dent - " " -then I t.IUnk . you. 'd be ~" intmupted Katherine. Suddinly, cveryooe on the dock Uamed to li11al. "That'• David Henson, tbc Wiler board com- m1uioaer. He's an ea-Olym__,Pic 1w1mmer and a trialhletc. Thll Wiii DO accident•• To be conrinued tomorrow ... • • f