HomeMy WebLinkAbout1990-08-27 - Orange Coast Pilot-
Tennessee
gl.ttotle
with Burrs
Are you
today's
winner?
Pleme See P-ee A6
...... c..,.. ......
THE ORANGE COAST 2 5CENTS
GOOD
MORNING I
It's Monday, AUJ. 27, 1990,
and here's what's happenina:
ORANGE COAST WEAm ER:
Early momina clouds clearina
to sunshine.
T•1'1 ..... /lew: '1!-M
Yesterday's h~/low: 71-64
Tomorrow's hiah/low: 71-63
SPORTS:
H-HOU• HOTUN•
TO TH• •OITOll
642-6086 C••••"" • "tN ... ,,...JU,_....,
INSIDE m E NEWSROOM:
Funny thinp floatina out of
our nation's capital~ not
uncommon ... To Wit:
A Washinaton-based aroup
known u the Council for Inter-
American Security bas
launched the "Predict the Fall
of Fidel Contest" ... Entrants
arc asked to auess the exact
date Fidel Castro will )oin the
List offaUen commumst dic-
tators and be overthrown by
tbc people of Cuba ... To enter.
coot.estantl can dial
1-900-988--2800, ext. 300 (the
call will cost SJ for the first
minute1 S 1. 9S for each ad-
ditioD&J minute) ... Predictions
can also be mai(ed to the coun-
cil at 122 C St. N.W .. Suite 710,
Wuhlnaton, D.C. 20001 ... All
entries must be received by
Sept. 30.
Grand Prize is an all-ex-
penses JMijd trip to a Castro-
free Cuba ... Second priz~ is a
trip to Washinaton for a VIP
briefma on Cuba's transition to
democracy ... Third prize is a
case of Cuban coffee or rum.
\IVIATHD ANO
OCIAN CCNDITIONS ..._ ........ ......
Air ~ Oood with I
PSI lncMaol'°.
.... I #1111 .. Chet :e-:='T.2 c .. c; ................... o1
61 .. ...
-....... Oood ..... ol IUd ........ ....
boeita. IC9lpi9 ... -roc:k&b•NPCA4
••-111M W•to ....................
~1 IO to IS ac.wfib ~-indleaftll'..
DOODI IDd ~ W•
,IO IOUtla.-... 3 k
INDEX
Sri•
Buslneu
Classlfted
Comics Crossword
Enc~nment
Horoscope
Opinion
ftoNce Log
Society
~tings
Weather
BS
AS
84-6
88
IS
A6
85
A9
Al
AB
8 1-l
A6
AtO
TODArs THOUGHT
''TM only cour• th«
flYtt.n Is tlw kind thllt
tJ'U you from OM mo-
mMt to tM MKt ."
Mignon McUughlln
,,
MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1990
SHOWDOWN IN THE DESERT
5 5 Americans escape
Kuwait, others held
ly THOMAS VI AGNllt
& , ... ~ ......
U.N. and Iraqi officials will meet this week in
what would be the U.N.'s first efTon to mediate the
Persian Gulf crisis. Sunday's announcement came
a day after the world body voted to allow the use
of force to back sanctions on Iraq.
Jo that Persian Gulf nation, authorities allowed
about SS Americans to travel to Turkey after their
earlier evacuation from the .U.S. Embassy in oc-
cupied Kuwait. But Iraqi officials kept other U.S.
citu.ens u bostaaes to deter any American attack.
Bush-bashing In Baghdad
Daily Pilot columnists Rowland
Evans and Robert Novak say Bush-bashina is the {!lost popular puttime on
the streets of Baghdad. Please see Page
A9.
. ...., .... _... ......... ...._ The freed Amcrican1, the Wives and children
of U.S. diplomats, left Bqhdad by car and had
reponcdl>i reached the Turkey border. However,
_ ABC News reponed Sunday ni&ht that they were
stopped on the Iraqi side of the border, and it said
U.S.-officials in Turkey were hopeful the refugees
would cross today.
lo Wasrunaton, St.ate Department officials con·
firmed that as of 4 p.m. PDT. the aroup sttll had
not crossed into Turkey. The oflicaals sa1d their
ell&Ct whereabouts and carcumst.an~s was un-
known.·
The women were forced to leave their hus-
bands behind because Iraq says the envoys have
lost their diplomatic immunity and will be detained
f~•te lff GULF /hck ..... ,
G,..a. Ova.tt·9ref Peftt •nd D•lw• Allen, die _.n•1• -"
•nlstant ,...,..._, r•••cttve~ of Newport CJtedl ea......,
t•J H•bor atvd., co.u MeN, ti• yellow rlllllan1 wountl
storefront bushes. nte dlspa.J honors thole detained In
•nd sent to the Mlddle ••st In the Pe,..,.n Gulf crisis.
Murder shocks resort residents
If you've ·seen one truck ...
c; ._,,..._... .............
Bonnie Hood broilght
hope and suspicion to
mountain community
ly llttS YOKOf
O.,...NM IUff ........
CAMP NELSON -Rouahly 100
citizens -nearly aJI the permanent
residents of this rustic mountaan
community -squeezed anto the 18
pews of the local chapel Sunday 1n
honor of Newpon Beach resident
Bonnie Hood.
Hood, who was shot 10 death a
week aao at the lodae she owned and
operated here, was remembered
warmly as an 1ntelh1ent and
energetic woman by those who at-
tended the scrv1~ at the wood-
paneled ump Nelson Communit)
Chapel.
But other lonJllme residents of
lhas communny an the Sequoia Na-
uonal Forest later dcscnbcd Hood,
46, a.s someone who alienated the
cummunaty Wlth her plans for Camp
Nelson Lodae. which she took over
three yean aao.
Manuel told Tula~ County
Shenffs detectives the sboouna was
an auempted robbery by a stoclcy,
mustachioed man watb curly blond.
collar-lenath hair.
A man matchana that descripuon
had been seen dnnk!na at local ban
about two weeks before the shoot-anas. But locals said many stranaers
come throuah the mountain area
and that the man may have been
arbatranly s1nsJed out as suspiC1ous.
Detectives wd the suspect took
no money from the caban and left no
weapon.
Sunday. local f'C'Sldent Jay Bayless
eul<>&Jzcd Hood as "a very an-
telhaent, sweet penon who dad not
deserve 10 have her hfc ended this
WA)"
Hood d1V1ded her ume between
her home in Newport Beach, where
her husband of 20 ycan and tccn.qie
son and daua,hter hved, and Camp
Nelson Lodae -rouahly 200 miles
away
....... Gr•nt finds this dllpa.J •
, .. ,.., -.... KCOlllpanlel 8111 0.Wldl
.. dHt ,CallfornY Trudr J..,.boree .. the
Or•nt1• CountJ Ptlfrpound1 In Cose.
Mna on Suft«YJ. Crowds •~H nk•
weattler, CUdOlll truclrl, five rock band I
•nd • Mia C.llforna. Trudr J..,.bor••
contest -th• event.
Hood, a mother of two. was found
dead of a sansJe aunshot wound 1n
her head 1n her two-room cabin Aug.
19 Lodac caretaker Rudy Manuel.
35. was also an the cabin but
• survived a aunshot wound 1n the
head. He manaaed to call for help at
3:20 a.m.
Fnends said Hood bad VlSlted
Camp Nelson as a child and loved
the area, which 1s 5,000 feet above
sea level, where the rushing of the
trout-laden Tulc Raver ts the only
Ferguson
spoil Ing
for fight
Wants to condemn
Assembly bill on
WWII internments
ly TONY DODlltO
0-..,... ..... .._
NEWPORT BEACH -Gil
Ferauson is prina up for a blttle
with his fellow Auembly members
Gii Per..,-n
Tuetday over a resolution be has
pr-opoted on the internment of
110,000 Japancse--Americans dunna
World War II.
The raolution chastises the As-
,...__ '" IAl"TU/a.ck l'egeJ
,,. ..... '" HOOD /a.dl ,..._.,
It's year of the hard hat
at Irvine Valley College
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is rllt first tn a senes
of a.rtJda on commumty coll~ a/on, t~ Or.~
Coast
ly AMANDA V/JtAY
0-..,_ • .....,.......,
IRVINE -Don't be fooled by the orange
arovcs. And don't be misled by the surTOundina Oat
qncultural lands or temporary bu1ld1np that 11ve
lrviM Valley Colleac its bucolic ch&rKttr.
The youthful campus 1s finally entcrina the baa
leaaues -startana wath a compct1uve sports pro-
vam and non-stop construction this fall -and
Jeav1n1 humble bqannings behind
But such ts the norm The first class at Costa
Mesa's Oranae Coast Collqc 1n 1948 was held in
m1ht.ary barracks, and the first arad"Q clua at
Golden West Colleac tn HunU!'J'On walked
throua.h stark cement shells of 1ncompleted build·
anp an 1967.
Today Ora111t Coast Colleec bouts an enrol-
f"9 ... '"COUIGa/a.dr '•f
Police want infrared gear on choppers
Newport council ponders S/55,395 request
equipmtnt wdl boost their abahty to
ICC b9d IU)'1 from t.bc air while
makina their 1urvaUance &as of>
viou1 to su~ and Seu intruStve
to rnicknts.
"I( we IO anto an ara like Corona
dd Mar or tome of our punbelt
a.rat ... in 1ttuations like that. (in·
hrtd capabilit)') is MUy dliecuvc,"
Kid Pohce Lt. Tim Newman. He
added the equ1r.ment 11 also useful
an nllht petrol a~ of beaches and
ltteetl with &ow hahtJf\I.
He Clted a 11tuation several
months aao when two 1 l·yor-old
boys ran away from home and
poltcc had to enhst the atd of
another Clty's helicopier to find
them late OM n\lht.
The Potice l:>epenment has
already budeetcd S60,000 to equip
one heliC09ter with the fl.JR (For-
ward Lookint _lnfrated) systtm and
anolhtt S 14,000 to .dd • 1tronttr
teareb.haht called Nl&httun to the
olhtt helicopter
One of the aty's two hchcoptcrs 11
OllUI• COAIT DAILY PILOT
A.a Monday, Auouet 27, 1990 SECOND FRONT PAGE
Orange Coast People
Kay Evans
SOS plans hit snag; ne""
opening date in October
A senior word processor who Lives in Huntington Beach and has
worked for the city of Fountajn Valle) lor the past 15 yeaf'I.
GO WEST--------
Evans moved tp Santa Monica from Colorado in 1958. Shonl~
after moving 10 tile Cahfo m1a, she got a job with McDonnell Douatu and-worked 1herc m t~ pho1~ lab f()r I ~ years before.
transferring 10 Huntington Beach 1n I Q7 I
FRIENDS FOR LIFE-----
She started working with the city of Fountain Valley 15 years
ago after the city opened up a new v.urd processing center .. The one
1fC8t thing about work1n~ here IS lh31 ('\el') bod\ I\ fam1J~ -the
camaradcnc 1s JUSt great.· E'an<. c;.a1d "Thl· 0e'1 tm·nd.-. 1".c l'"C'r
made in m) entire life I made here '
CHANGES--------
"I've seen a lot of change\ u'er the \Cars " .-.aid bane; v.h u ha.;
witnessed the bloom ot 1he w mputcr age tirn-hand -\nd 'lhl' ha\
enjoyed the change~
COMPUTER FRIENDLY---
") love it," she said ··1 JU'>I lmc v.orkin~ \.\tlh lOmputerc, · 'ihc
1s a member of thl' Ora ngC' < na~t IBM P( t ~er\ ( rroup. wh1lh 'hl'
said 1s compn~J of "ord1nar\ people " li ke hcr\elf dnd C\ \'n dt)l IOI\
DOGGONE SMART-----
When she's not hanging the kc) board of her v.ord procc<.'lor at
City Hall. Evans nnup1e!t her ume '\.\llh \everal 11ut<.1dC' 1ntere.-.1s "I
love poodles," she \did .\nd ac, a mem0er of the Huh Poodle < luh
of Orange Count\ she hac, \h<>"-n the dogs in cumpr11u ons "The~ 'n·
smart, the\ 're a "er. bnght dog ~omt't1 mes the> 're '>marter than I
am."
-Compiled by Tony Dodno
liy IOa VAN IYKIN
~ ................
COST A MESA -When Share
Our Selves, the city's la.rant private
poverty relief apncy, cloted its
doon on June I, 1t1 directon hoped
to be open apin within a month or
two.
The summer has draued on
without SOS, however, andlhc char-
ity's officials now say they don't
ex~t to be open ap.in until the
middle of October. at the earliest.
Forced from its former location at
the Rea Community Center on
Hamilton Street. SOS now owns a
buildma at 1550 Superior Ave. But
getting plans approved and im-
provements made at the empty
warehouse have proven a for-
midable task for the 20-ycar-old
chanty.
"There were lots of problems wtth
the bu1ld1ng. and when we first
Robbers target
Role-x watches
.:.::i.. -
LOS A~GELES -Rolcx watches
and similar expensive timepieces
have been targeted in a rash of
robbenes that have taken lives and
made other victims thank twice
about wearing status symbols wonh
thousands of dollars.
Nursery owner Donald McKmscy
hung on 10 his Sl 0.000 watch dunng
a robbery this month but was shot to
death b} gunmen who posed as
customcr'i.
Sam Sabbah was meeting his wife
and a painter in his new Beverly
Hills home last June when an in-
truder shot him and took his R<>lex.
A Rolex watch can range in pnce
from more than S900 10 more than
S20.000. It 's not the watch the rob-
bers want. bu1 rather the mone y 1t
commands.
The West Los Angeles police
d1\ ISIOn al one dealt with 49 Rolex
robberies from September to July
Tiu. area 1s not unique. Beverly Hill s
has been a"erag1ns one a month.
aC'cord1ng to police Lt. Roben
Cunis
Police say no one ind1 v1dual or
group 1s responsible There have
been arrests but watch robbcnes
continue
Sometimes the v1ct1ms were fol -
lo\.\ed home from a shopping mall
or other public place where an ex-
pt'ns1 vc watch on a wnst could be
spoiled
-By Ttt A110C~led Prt11
ALL SALONS CELEBRATE OUR GRAND OPENING ...
NOW OPEN in COSTA MESA • (714) 668 -0640
Lose ~6 25 lbs. now
through Se em erl
LET GLORIA MARSHALL
DESIGN A WEIGHT LOSS
PROGRAM FOR YOU
a d0ft(.r0 llS ITIP' I r i ' ' 1•1 ' II d
your fOOO c '10 1r p5 .,,11111Q 11 tl'• rn
and lifes1y1t• lf•111ur '11 ', l" ,
Marshall c, P.1tclut.,1vr-< J ,, • T 1111 •
meal rP.plil< 1>nipn 1 rt• 11 ~ r JO f
expens1vP prP P<H k.tq•• l '' Irr /Prt 111011-.
EXCLUSIVE EXERCISE EQUIPMENT
desrgnec1 to -.olv1• "' ''"'' t (IW•' prr1hlPrT1<;
acceleratP wP1q~1 lllC.'l 1•1r:l <;p<>Prl yrn1 on
yo ur way to n tJe a1Jt1lut n1>w f1qurf'l
CARING. PROFESSIONAL COUNSELORS
who mon11or your proQri ·~s hf'.I P you 1dent1fy
and correcl problems .ind QM ' you thP
support and encouragPmPnt 10 rP.rich your
weight loss goal
ALL IN THE COMFORT ANO CONVENIENCE
OF YOUR NEARBY GLORIA MARSHALL SALON.
1n IU'>I 16 wef•k'
1~ C.10<111 Ma1~h11ll
w~y'
Gloria Marshall
f IC.,UH ( ~ALON<;
"/·.:xrlum •t• W1•1J!h/ /,,oss for W11mt•n On/\'"
flt1"" ~~••v II A m 111 II l-0 p "' <.Ah1101v <! ' rn 111 1 p m MA1n1 1 rr1111 r '"" •• r f'l•1'•1
Glor1a Marshttll convemontly serves the following c1t1es
lOI A"81lH AllU
BCLlflowtR 111 11Ii ~1~1?
C£AAHOS rll 11 81'.S fiOftll
COVINA 1111~1 'll!J OTOT
HAC1£NOA llEIGHtS 18111) 913 ?1?1
LMIWOOO 1m1ll418JI
ROWI A,..l H( ILlt I ,
#atNHI
WT'll COVINA
tlllJ 9111'11~
18181 rm Oll08
f818J ~I'> OftM
OMllOl CoutfTl
ANAH(IM
MAHGf
SANTA ANA
<,(Al Bf A("tt
Wfl\IMINSHR
IOUTif UY
11141 '117 '1?9?
11141 '1)1 'i.i6J
'11141 Ml 'i:>t~
11141 ft'll ~Xi
lONG •AOt 12131 6J4 1133 llU{ NA PARK
(7141 9J1 S?93
1213) 1&4 1 PAIOS \lfROrS (1131 311 4943
OWAlK 121Jl IM 11170 Mm Htll.S 1a111 01nan
. ~-
COSTA WSA
tt\JffflHGT OH ICACH
(714) &ell 0840
1714) •• 0011 AHlONOO MACH (713) ~1 ~
IOAAAHCI 12131 370.3431
submitted our plans, the plan check·
en really threw the book at us." said
Jean FortMth, director of SOS ... Our
arcbiiecu have finished makin& the
corrections and ~·re ready to tu~
mit them apin. But we're lookina at
the end of October before we can
open ~n. Maybe the middle, if
everythana aoes riaht."
John Von. Szelesld, a Newpon
Beach architect who volunlc!ered his
services to SOS, said he's ho~fuJ
the plans will be approved qwckly.
"Our work is finished; we're just
wa.itina for some technical infor-
mation on the plumbina." he said.
"They told us the final plan check
could be done in about two weeks.
So I think they may be able to aet
started on the work in a couple of
weeks or so. Once it gets started. it's
not that difficult a job and it should
go pretty quickly."
The closin& of SOS came about as
a result of pressure from west Costa
Mesa residents worried about the
daily innu.x of hundreds of people,
most of them very poor and some of
them homelna.
Residents complained of trespass.-
in&. loiterina. public urination and
other problems.
City Council memben heard the
residents complaints and voted 13
month• aao not to renew the char·
ity's lease at city~ntrolled Rea
Center. The lease ellpired in January
and after fiahtina eviction for sev-
eral months, SOS officials aareed to
vacate by June I.
The closure sent shock waves
throu&h Oranae County's charity
network. SOS had been scrvina
about 6,000 clients a month and
fisurcs compiled by the aaency in-
dicated that, on the average, each
person served at the cmcraency food
pantry represented a family of three
or four people, bringina the anual
tow of people 1erved to more than
20,000 a month.
Repraentativn of some charities,
such u the Epi100pel Service Al·
liance and flSH, an interfaith food
and financial a.id 11tncy, reported
immediate increuet in requests for
service.
One small Costa Mesa charity that
bas ablorbed some of the demand
for services is the Good Samaritan
Mission at South Coast Christian
Church.
"The numben have aone up,"
Pastor Bob Ewina said. "I know
there have been days in the past two
weeks when they've had over 300
people. So far, I think the donations
have been keepina up. But I have a
feelina that Wlth the economy in a
downturn, our demand is aoina to
10 up rqardless of when SOS opens
up apin. In any case, it's sure 4oina
to be nice to have them back.•
Alert Newport Beach lifeguard
saves swimmef f-r-em dr-ewAiA§
ly HOUY J. WAGNER
NEWPORT BEACH -An alert
lifeguard averted a tragedy Sunday
afternoon when he pulled a man
who had Jumped off the 28th Street
Je~ty from the ocean floor. lifeguards
said.
Veteran lifeguard Jeff Norseen
was in the water warning other
swimmers of danger at 4:26 p.m.
when he saw Rosando Macias. 20. of
Orange. and two of his fncnds jump
from the jetty into the water, life-
guard Da ve Wenger said.
As Norsecn watched. two young
men camr up from under the water
but Macias did not appear. Wcngt'r
said.
Norscen left the other swimmers
with another, lifeguard and swam to
where Macias had gone under.
"When he aot there. the two that
were up were frantic and pointing to
where he'd gone down," Wenger
said.
Norscen found Macias un-
conscious at the bottom of the ocean
in about four feet of water. Wenger
said.
"He pulled him up on his bouy on
his back and opened an airway. He
resuscitated him with several
breaths." Wenger said. adding
Macias then coughed and bepn la-
bored breathing.
Af\er starting Maci as' breathing.
Norscen brought him to shore where
paramedics were able to help.
"ft was a prett y long swim to the
~ch . There was about 150 yards
between him and help," Wenger
said. "By the tJmc he got into waist·
deep water. he was carrying him like
a football. It was pretty dramatic."
When Norseen reached the beach.
Macias' breathing was "cxt~mel y
labored," Wenger said.
"Apparently whe n he jumped an
he swallowed water. stru&&lcd and
went down. He had inhaled quite a
bat of water." Wenger said.
Paramedics stabilized Macias and
took him to Hoag Memonal Hospi-
tal , where he was reported in satis-
factory condition Sunday night.
Hospital spokeswoman Mancttc
Benade sai d Macias was conscious
and alert Sunday evening.
"If the guard (Norseen) had not
been an the water and so close. we'd
probably have had a dead body."
Wenger said. "He had a real go-for-
ll attitude."
Ex-KGB agent to teach at OCC
COSTA MESA -Former Soviet
diplomat and KGB agent Vlad1m1r
Sakharov 1s teaching two non<rcdit
intemat1onal relations courses at Or-
ange Coast College stan1ng this fall
Sakharov, one of the Untted
States' leading experts on Soviet
policy obJect1vcs and intelligence
gathenng. wa.s one of the West's first
analysts to predict Mikhail
Gorbachev's ri~ to power.
Sakharov holds a doctorate degr~
in international relations from USC
and is author of th e autobiography.
"High Treason."
He will be teaching "USSR: Get 10
Know Your Business Partner'" a
course which will look into Soviet
culture and the possible successes or
News of the weird
pitfalls of doing busmcss there.
Offered by OCC's Community
Service Office. the class is sc heduled
Saturday. Sept. 29. from 9 a.m. to
noon. Regi stration fee 1s $25.
Sakharov also wtll be teaching a
second class. "Russia: Quiet Dc!pair
or Radical Action -A J ourney Into
the Unknown," in which be will
examine possible solutions to
Russia's current apathy and anar-
chy.
The second class 1s scheduled for
Fnday, Nov. 9. from 7-10 p.m.
Reaistration is S5 in advance and $6
11 the door.
For more information. call
432-5880.
-By Qt DaJJy PUol VIHIMlr Satrh•rov
Couple gets higl1 for wedding vows
MOUNT EVANS. Colo -It was
90 dcgrccs on the plains, but Sherry
Barsoll1 and Jim Reale.a went to the
top of 14,264-foot Mount Evans for
a windy, chilly and breathtaking
wedding ceremony.
After saying their "I do's" Fnday,
the Arvada. Colo .. couple and an
impromptu wedding pany climbed
onto 18-spccd mountain bikes and
bicycled 28 miles. a drop of 6.724
feet down the wmdang, twisting.
narrow asphalt road 10 Idaho
Springs.
Along the way. the newl yweds
stopped at Echo Lake Lodge, at
10,600 feet, for a wedding lunch
hi&hlightcd by the traditional cutting
o( the nupt1al cake.
"We on11nally thought of aetting
mamcd in Kansas City. which was
our ongmal hometown. but we both
love the outdoors and knew about
this bicycle tour.'' Shtrry said. "It
sounded hk.c an exciting way to get
married."
Sherry's fncnd, Joni Lund. runs
bicycle tours off Mount Evans and
arranged the combination wedding
and tour.
"At fint. we really didn't think
she was senous." Lund said. "But
soon we realized she was. So we
contacted two couples from Massa-
chusetts who were already booked
on the Mount Evans tour and asked
1f they would mind."
One of the visitors. Susan Gauley
of Duxbury, Mass., stood next 10 the
bnde dunng the ceremony and said
ORANGE COAST 1 How to reach us at
D •1 p•iat the Dally Pilot II r I . Clrculatlon
VOL M, NO. 231 1 Oiarioe eouniy
Editor'• Hotline 642-6086 Advertising
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•-~ l'Olll --"'O _..ce _., 1>e weer to -o ._,.,, 10 l"9 edilot Otl etty 1qJIC eo..4ttMott lo ou<
l.it .... ~ -tndu0e ,,,.., _,,. _, ,.....,,_. Editorial
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• pou oo "°' ,...,,. "°"' l>ollOer by e • "' u a IM!Of• •O a 1'I end _.. 911' I IO ,0.. by ,_ Out C.,.._
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she got so earned away with the
scnument "that I thought I was
go1n1 10 cry."
With temperatures 1n the 30s. 1ct'
on pools of water and a brisk wind
blowing at the summit. the cyclists
donned red two-piece wtnd brcakcr
suits for the tnp down.
The Lunds tied a bouquet to the
handleba rs of the married woman's
bicycle and threaded color crepe
paper streamers through the front
wheel spokes of the newlyweds'
bicycles.
LookHlf on w11h varymg degrees
of cu riosity were a fores t ranger.
several toun sts. and a few mountain
goats on a nearby slope.
-By Th AIHCUtff Pn11
Prospectors
Club ponders
all-male rule
RENO. Nev. -Amid 11ow1na
pressurt. Reno's pnvate, all-male
Prospec1or's Club 1s cons1denna a
move to admit wo men.
In a recent letter. the club's board
of directors asked mcmben whether
they want 10 allow women to J01n
"We have fell pressure from some
women attorneys and CPA• who
thank we're up there cuttlna all sorts
of business deals," said James H.
Keller. club prcs.1dcnt. ''That doesn't
happen."
The o4S..year.(,1d club cumntJy
meets at the Reno Hilton. While the
club is primanly a place for lunch.
there's an annual Christmas p ther·
ina and other events throup the
yc1r.
In June, club memben adopted
bylaW1 that prohibtt the ditcu ion
of business on ~mises. The
chanae was desiped to show the
club is a social club ind not an or11nmtJon that mutt aJlow mem·
benlup to tht ,encral pubhc -•1 n. ....... ,,,,_
Crowding prisons
with messy boaters
New federal law would frighten
sailors if it weren't so ridiculous
If you're nailed for
aoeedina and p t run throuah
the judicial mau, it's aoina to
cost you, what, a hundred
bucu? Maybe $200 if you
were really humpina-
Fair's fair. You tested the
system and Iott. But what
would you think if a new law
required you to put a 4-inch-Fred
by·9·inch sian summarizina
the specdin1 laws on the M artin
dashboard of your car. You •••••••••••• could live with that, riaht.
Ah, but what if the poss.-
ible penalties, just for not havina that placard. were maybe 500 times
those for specdina?
That's what boatina people are facina these days, thanks to a
new federal law which went into business July 31 .
The rap for violatina this new law includes civil penalties of up
to $25,000, a fine of up to $50,000 and a stretch of up to five years
in a federal penitentiary.
Saddam Hussein would act less. Ivan Boesky got a lot less. Most
of ~c pirates who bankrupted their savinp and loans will get
nothtnJ.
What kind of crime do you have to commit to get slamm ed with
up to $75,000 in fines and penaJtics and five years in the pen? Try
not havina a placard on proper trash-disposal procedures on a boat
that's more than 26 feet Iona.
The intent of all this is unquestionably correct: to help keep the
seas and oceans clean and free from trash. The placard law is
l'Cquired unde.c ieans_of tbc Marpol {Jltfmational Treaty to Prevent
Pollution from Ships, to which the U.S. Is a signatory.
Hey, no problem. Until fedcraJ bureaucrats JOI into 1t and
concocted a set of penalties so severe they're lauahablc. The fine for
throwina stuff from a boat into the water is in the couplc-hundred-
bucks area. The penalties for not having a sign about throwina stuff
overboard arc ri&ht up there with dope smugling.
It acts dumber. Boats of 40 feet or more arc also required to
have a written plan for waste management. and a person designated
to carry out the plan.
Other than noting that it has to deal with how trash is collected.
stored and disposed of. there arc no auidclines about how to wnte
such a plan.
Steve Askew, whose boat Sea Scamp is 42 feet long. saw this
as a fine opponunity to take a sharp Jab at the excesses of
bureaucracy. With tongue only panially in check. he headed into
unchaned waters. Herc are some excerpts from the Askew Manne
Waste Management Plan:
The skipper shall designate a member of the crew to be the
Wasre Mana,emenr offlcer. This person shall ar all times wear a hat
desiplatin,1 his position and will be rhe absolute authonty m regard
to collect1on, stoflle and disposal of trash at sea.
(Steve had a proper "Waste Management Offi cer" hat made up
at the Oranae County Fair. "Having that hat on board might save
me tho usands of dollars in fines some day," Steve said. "Perhaps
even a prison sentence.")
All trash. includifll but ~lted to, bttr cans. wh1ske> and
wine bottles, c1prette butts and other trash n«essary to efl)oyment
of the cruise will be deposired in srrategically located ... cont.tiners
Other nor so neceS$1.1)' trash. such as food. paper cups and plates
... shall also be deposited in these containers.
As the Coast Guard has established a per diem quota system
for trash. 1t will be necessary to collect each day's trash. weigh 1t, r.a, ir and srore It for possible msp«r1on .. Please do nor m1JC one
day's rruh wirh anorher. This wrll screw up our record keeping and
make 1r difficult to prove rhar ~ •~ collecting enough trash per
person per day.
Thank you for your coo~rar1on m adhenng to this common-
senst' approach ro seamanship.
Obviously. the odds of somebody out fishing or '81hng or
cruising to Catalana being sent to prison for not having the waste-
manaaemcnt placard on board arc fa.irly slim.
Chief Mike Condra at 11th Coast Guard Distnct headquarters
in Lona Beach says. "The Coast Guard response wtll probably be
tem penltc, since our goal is to educate."
On the othe< ~he also says the Coas1;es wdl off" no grm
period for complyi ng th the new law. The prudent boatperson will
probably cruise o to the nearest manne store and invest S7
or so in a screw-o -type sisn. Prudent but thrifty boatpeople will
cont.act the Center for Manne Conservation. 312 Sutter St.. Suite
606. San Francisco 94108. They have free decals.
Since the government is shutting down the Club Fed m1n1mum-
S«unty lockup in Lompoc, garbage-sign felo ns from Southern
California will most likely serve their ume at Boro n. a desert hellhole
out near nowhere.
I know a JUY who did ttme there. He says the scorpion races
were the h1&hli&ht of the week ~t the sign.
Fred Martf.'1 col•m. ru1 M011day1, WN111~1day1 ud Frlday1.
SACRAMENTO -A ttcket purchased-in
Sunnyvale had all srl numbers to win Saturday
ni&ht j California "Lotto 6-SJ" lottery game for an
S 11 . ~ulh?n J~ckpot, lottery ,pffi cials said Sunday. 'ni• winnma numbers picked Saturday night
for the ·twicc-weekJy pme we're: t , U, U, H, O ,
••. and the bonus nu~ber, 11~
The Topper cities c11oscn wuc: Redwood City,
Woo41aH HlU1 and Wntmla1ter. Seven players
aot all three. winnma $2.S,000 each.
Six tickets had five "Lotto 6-53" numbers plus the bonus to win
$106,146 each. T he tickets were bought in Daly Ctty, Kclst"yv1 lle.
Toll House, Sacramento, Lona Beach and San Diego. The tickets
divided a $636.881 pool.
There were 185 tickets with five of six numbers. splitting a pnze
pool of $636,881 for mdiv1dual pnzcs of $3,442.
In the four of six catqory. 9,538 tickets arc wonh S60. sharing
. a pool ofS578,982. There were 165.515 tickets with three ofs1x for
SS each.
Resident remembers
sights on old Lido
• la Newport Beac:ll: Gladys Crou&}lan Brown
remembers before Lido Villaac was built, fisher-
men used to spread their nets there for mendina.
and artists would set up their easels on the city
dock at the end of the channel to paint the fish•na
bolu and the canneries.
90aly la Oru1e Couty: Bruce Sumner came
to Orante County in I 9S4, ran for office as both
a Republican and a Democrat and served 11 a
siate auemblyman and a supenor court judac.
• la Lapaa HUia: The Pectcn Reef. a
limestone ridee offonil deposits runnina throuah
the old Moulton Ranch property to Lake Fornt,
conn 20 IQ~ mi&es. The Moulton family
mined the depolit for a soil additive and sold 11
throuah the Marine Shell Fertih1cr Compeny. Pecten (or tcallop)
lhells the lite of dinner plates pve the formation iu name It was
built by thiftina anclcnt thcmlinn of a Iona vanished sea which was
increased and decreased, moved and removed by volcamc actJon
and slippina land platn and frankly, you ahould be alad you wcTCn't
here then.
You dott'r bavt 10 be 1n old fOUJI ro conrnburt 10 Dtd You
IC.now. Send your llmorlcal f.a1 to Did You Know, O..U. C..at DallJ ,.._. . P.O. 8o11 I 160. Costa Mesa. 91616.
~·, .... --
OlllANGI COAIT DAil Y No.OT
Monday, August 27. 1990 A.1
Orange Coast Weekend
. WhetherJ·us~ kickina beck ~r play·
ana arou n , 11 was an ervoyable
weekend on the Oranp Coast this
weekend. In fact, David A. Cor·
nelsen had a wbeel good time Sun-
day.
Disabled athlete Comelaen bepn
his crou=:oountry wheelchair journey
to New York City's Battery Park
from the Oranac County Fair-
arounds on Sunday. The Huntinaton
Beach resident1 who expects to com-
plete the trip in 21 days, is raisin&
money for the American Paralysis
AHOClltion.
Thia was also a weekend for star-
ina at trucks, live rock bends and
bikini-dad women at the California
Truck Jamboree, which was also
held at the fairarounds on Sunday.
OM!y -,,_. "'7 0-lef H--.
Mindy lteanlll, 10, of ,ount•ln V•ll•y. h•n91 out In Lions
ll'•rll In Con. Meu.
D•vld A . Corneh e n
be .. n hit cro11·coun try
wh••lchalr j ourney from
th• Orane• County '•Ir·
9round1.
Observant scouts prevent forest fire
ly ROIERT IARKER
HUNTINGTON BEACH -.\hout ~o
young Infantry faplorer Post Bo) \l out\ c.ame
under fire at war game exercises 1n the \an
Bernardino mountains.
It was a firt' in the stump of an old tree on
the edge of the fo rest. not fro m encm~ n nc ..
And the yo ung men acqu111cd them sch c<>
well 1n a rcal·hfe cmergenq. according to com-
manding offi cer and veteran police officer C11I
Cocrper
.. I think they prc,ented a maJOr forest fire ...
Coerper iwud Fnda) "An offin al "'tth the L .
Fo restr) Service 1n Big Bear ..aid 11 could ha\-e
been devastating.
.. TheY. were hterall) stamping flames "'1th
their feet. · Cocrper said. "'The wind was blo"' ing
1n the direction of the forest ··
The 20 )Oung men, 14 to 21 I 'car\ ol .tgr
were campc.-d in the Holcomh Valle' in the Rig
Bur area about l l .i ~ p m .\ug. 111 v. hen int' 11!
them spottrd thr fire in the tree trunl
Da' 1d R1tc h1e I ". and .\nd\ Padilla hnth 111
tlunttngton Beach. v.crc fi~t lln the \rrnr j nd
tnrd to beat down tlamr-; h' thro""tn8 dirt un tht"
tree with \hO' els
But that d1d n t v.orl \(l R1t\ h1e ~nt PJd1ll.l
back to the camp for hrlp
( oerpcr dasht'd lo the ~enc and ~u1rted the
flames With a fire n1tngu1\hCr hut II 11td n1•
good. he said
W ith his )OU ng ~harge\ taling o'er 1n\ lud
1ng his 15-)ear-old son \f1charl. C ocrper drmc
to Fawnsl 1n to \Ummvn help from pro fr\\1nndl
firefi&hters
But the 'oung men had sho ' eled a nng
around the trC"e and \'o ntatncd the flame\ hrl1irC'
firefighters a~ed
"I tllllU(l.ht 11 "'J' J \ .:1l11ciblt t'\f'('r l 'll\
\aid Rll\ htt' ,1 w n1 '' .11 Hunt1n11 "" R<''' t ·II~·
\..hnul It t.tu~t.t I' t"lt' fOf" ',11 •l • l•,1
"'or\. ··
fhe m1h 141r. "'lrd Inf.ml'' I 'Pl •r• I'•· ~1•UI \r•IUfl V.lth 11~, tl ~ht ,IJ,, 11lint Vl,~f"'I
Ylu te~ .tnd plr1hor.1 •I · 't'' ,,., 11111 n '
"'a~ ti1rmr d •nrrr \Car' .s.11 •
• 11 "''" 1111 1111.i I I , ,.:C" •\, ' , l !"
1n,uh l'd 111 \ht ~umn 11n '' 1 ii .:l"' i 11
gang'> ( '"''P\r ""'I . II \l•U 'II.JO\ I • JOll1 .1 jo,.I "
m' g.dng a nJ I .,.,, h ' '. ka t' , .. ll
( 1'<'rptr '-lid hl .i t 1 It ,1 1h1 I f' •Ii
\lart('d nth' l'• •r .r ~ ,,.,, d t n •l(h1rl1 •
\ln ~e It hJJ .111p,11t·nt' ,., l1 • ' • 1 tiq•
'" 11a I \ he I If l' 11.11111 nl' l r • ...
It an\lh1n~ l .... ·rpc.·i ,.i ,1 ""'
1l1t1 1r.ilt1u\h 111 til(!il1n~ •ht• •11
tnur 'h11\<'I' 1n 1hn1 ·.11-1
Doctor leaves new practice to serve in military
T USTIN -Dr. Edward H
Bcstard had been thinking of qu11-
ttna the Navy reserves but was 100
busy opening his orthopedic surgery
practice to act around 10 ti
Then Iraq invaded Kuwait. and
about a month after he started his
practtce Bcstard got a morning
phone call that awakened him and
has wife. Tanya, from a deep sleep.
summonina him to acuve dut)
Bcstard became o ne of man~
medical reservists called up s1nL<~ the
Aua. 2 inva sion b) Iraqi leadtr
Saddam Hussein's troop\
While f1lhna out fo rrm at the
Navy Resef'C Centtr 1n Tu\lln on
Saturday. Bcstard said ht v.a\ not
completely surpnscd
In the Nav) ht ~p«1ah1<'d 10
chemical and dl'scrt warfare and
~me skJllful at treating hones
fractured by bullt'ts
"They took one look at m' ~ord.
I aueu , a nd 11 didn't ta ~c th<.'m li•n11
to find me:· he ..aid
Bcsta.rd had h<-11un h1' prit1111 r lh<'
same week of thr '"' a\111n
"H<' (H ussc1n 1 and I "'C'r<' .. 1.irt1n1t
o ur own bu<.1ne'' tngrthrr ·· Ill·
JOked
Bcstard sa)s hr 1\ "'1lh ng h1 'C'nr
his countr) bu1 1., "''med al·•nut lhr
efTC'Ct hn absl'n1 t .... 111 ha'<' c1n h"
new praCltCC
"It won't ~ \<) homhlt · hC' Y •J
1Bu1 1 I .1m il'''"" ~· .1 101 11
monc'
H1\ .urrrnl d"l @.r.rn~·n: ,., tht .. ,
m11n1h' -.c: n 11., .1 J 1r Pr n11lth1n
1n <~cd n' de H111 it n()t'" '' 111 }l(" \C'nt 11 \ju,11 \r 11•11< • .. :; bre.1 ,
11ut
'" t \h11ultl ~ l'I 'h1·rr Jnd r r .... 1
the 'talrm.llt' 'lC' ,, ,\ Rn• " • 1
11' all l""' Im 1lt"1tn111·h l("IOit ,
gl"t •u: ·
Man dressed in yellow robs bank
SEAL BEACH -A man
tn h11 60s robbed a First Inter-
state Bank in the Leisure
World Shoppina Center Fn-
day momina. escap1na with
an undilcloscd amount of
cuh police said.
the man. weanna a yel-
low canvas hat w1lh a brim. a
yello w Jacket, sunaJasses and
haht-colorcd pents walked
into the benk at 1 l916 Seal
Beach Blvd. shonly before
11 :4S a.m., said Seal Beach
Pohce S,t. Ros.a Smith
The man told a teller that he had a sun and
uked the teller (or aJI her money at her stauon
She comphed and the robber walked o ut the door
W'I th the cash.
Allboytl\ the man said he had a aun. no
weapon wu uted or 1etn, mtth Qtd
Pohce searched the surroundma ret1remcnt
community for the robbtr. but dtd not find him
Anyone with 1n(ormat1on about the blnk
beist should caJI the Seal Buch Police Depan-
ment at 21J....431·2S41.
Co.ta M tu
A ourw wuh S60 1n 11 was taktn fnlM 1 btckPKk
..
1n the libru -, 11 Oranar Coa•t < ollrar 0
Con11n.icuon m1tcn1I\ 'alut"d at SI 7 'Ii ... r rr
stolrn from 1 sitt 11 6<Xl .\nton Rl~d l°'('tWttn ~ Cl m
Tunda) and ., 1 m WtdnMJ11
Fountain Vallf'y
Vandall pl~ 1 pl1s11c prha&t' 11n on 11 pu111na
pftn at Da"td L 8akC'r Count~ Cil,ff l ourw and hi lhr
wa.att ptptr inside, dlmq1na tht' pumna arttn 1 hr
\'lndals 11'° lll>Ptd 0' rr othtr trash \I"' at thr ,ouN
and took letters from 1 "8' 11 tht' t'ntnin~ •·
4.1\er 1 traffic stop at Edtn•cr "' rnuC" •nd f U\ h\I
Uttt polt« 1rrnttd a 28-~ar-old ft,un111n \.•II<''
man on ,u,p1oon of po\X'\\IOn of mt'th1nirh<'t1m1nr
(Of sak The man had '2. ~Q I (l\h 1n hi\ pt1\\t"\\mn
rd1na In OQh(e rrpons
Huntin~ton lka~h
A woman 1n the •m block of Kona C>rnr "'h"
11 ~t. '81d another woman rt~lntdh 1um~ on her be k •tu~ sht was tryina to <'t>ll~ t \Om<' mon"
that •n o*f'd hcf
0 Somf'ont \IOlt a camptr sh<'ll 'alut"d 11 Sfl ~o 1n thr
6)()0 block nf Pqa) Circlt
0
A ~l'ltor from hrKI rtponcd thal '°mcone took
SI. I 00 ftom htr moMy belt at Spon' C'l\altt. I fl2•i
~ech Bl"d 1 ht woman rtPoncdly "' H)'1na on
II"'\' inf'
\omronr \1ulr a I\< 'l<'TC'll httlll 11 I Q8 7 blur
"11\\An I"" ~ur tru1 ~ u
T hr alurn1num ••n l't'qd1n1 malh1nr 11 \or ,
•uptrniar.,rl ••n f\amn, a lo\>8\ brolrn '"'" and S 1 \
w11nh ''' '1\1\h('~ • ,'!\\ 11.t"IT tllrtn r
4 ..,.11man rrr-1rtf'<l 1h111 1 m11n "'•lli.td 101e1 h('t
acienmrnt ~ c-.lnr\da\ v.h1lr htr door w1s Opt'n 1 lolc
man v.h1• trn v.hrn thr woman \tlltd. was dt nhed
I\ v.h11r 1n hi\ ''" ... uh lonJ t\11r and a ~•rd
l..a~na lk1u•h
1 hf' pohtT lt'I to'I\ una' 11llblr
•tJIMCOMTDMY PLOT
M Moud9, AMp!t 27, 1"0
Vlluhlngton Cal/Ing
Baby boomlet children
starting school this fall
WASHINGTON -America's claurooms will
bave ahnott half a million more students this faU,
a result of the beby boomlet that bepn in 1977.
Neatly 60 million students will be aoin, to clulel, up '400,000 from 1989. Amona them: 3.6
milUoo collqe students. a record hi&b that includes
aubltantial oumbcn of older ~pfe. Hilb tcbool enrollment Wlll be ofT slijhtly. but
that's only temporary; the numbers will increase
next ya.r u the fint of the baby boomlet children
racb ninth aradc. Elementary enrollment.
tinderlarten thtouah eiahth arade, 1s up by a hefty S00,000 aincc last l'all to 33.8 million.
No ~or curriculum chaoses arc expected.
althoup parental choice will act a test in Mil·
waukce, where 400 poor children arc to attend
private 1ehool1 at public expense.
Riabt now it looks like most teachers will be
on the iob when tchool starts, but that could
cbanae. Three small districts in lllinois and one in Utah arc already on strike, and strikes arc possible
in Michipn and Pennsylvania. Detroit will know
by Labor Day.
Note: The averqe salary for public school
teachers will rise to $33,000 this year. up 6 percent
from 1989-90.
Punish lraqls In U.S. = threats against U.S. citizens 10 Kuwait
and dad prompt a call for retribution against
Iraqis hvin& in the United States.
Freshman Rep. John Duncan, R-Tcnn .• urges
the Bush administration to deport the 2,600 Iraqis,
more than half of them students. who have entered
the United States since the first of the year unless
Americans held hostage by Ira~ arc freed.
So far. no reaction from ttic White House.
A black NSF nominee
Chances arc better than even that a black
physicist will be named to replac.c retinng Erich
Bloch as head of the Nattonal Science Foundation.
The Bush administration has narrowed down
its search to three talented prospects. and two of
them arc black. They are physicists Walter Massey.
of the University of Chicago. and Homer Neal. of
the University of Michigan. A thir<f candidate 1s
Neal Lane of Rice University.
Choosing a black would speak to the concerns
of many in the science and education communities
that a lack of role models makes it d ifficult to
attract minorities to the hard sc1cnc.cs.
lraq-U .S. business ties
Until 1t mvaded Kuwait on Aug 2. Iraq was
the 10th largest fo reign customer for U.S food
products. accounting for SI billion of the S37.2
billion in food exports.
What did Baghdad buy'! Wheat. nee and feed
ara10s. U.S. nee growers were particularl y depen-
dent on Iraq's markets.
Get out of Mlddle East
Sen. Terry Sanford's lone-wolf call for rcduc-
oon in U.S. forces 1n the Persian Gulf 1s seen as
evidence that he meant 1t when he told North
Carolina voters he would only serve one su-year
term. Sanford, a Democrat, will be 7S in t Y92,
when hit tenn i1 up. If be runs apio, he can count
on a stiff' re~lection fi&ht in the aenerally hawkish
state, where ev~n mila criticism of the U.S. war
efTon is not likely to be well rucivcd.
FHA lnsur•nce wamlngs
EJcct.ion-minded lawmaken caution the Bush
administration apinst shorina up the saaina FHA
insurance fund on the becks of low-and midd1e-
income home buyers.
Housina Secretary Jack Kemp wants to ~uire
hiaher payments from borrowen. includina h~er
closjna oosts up front and periodic • risk
asseasments" for loans with down payments of less
than 10 percent. The Senate went alona, but the
House voted for a plan that would not pile upfront
costs on would-be home buyers.
Look for the final version to be closer to the
House bill.
FHA's S2.6 billion net worth is down from S8
billion a decade ago due to nsing home loan
defaults.
Anti-drunk effort pays off
Eight-year anti-drunk drivin& campaign pays
off. Traffic safety administrator Jerry Curry rcpons
onl y 17 percent of teens involved in fatal crashes
last year had t>ccn drinking. Approximately 28
percent of teens involved in fatal accidents in 1982
were legally drunk.
Curry says decrease in drunken driving and
increasing use of scat belts arc biggest reasons fo r
drop in traffic fatalities, which totaled 45, I 34
between June 1988, and May 1989. That was a 4.1
percent drop from the 47,055 deaths recorded in
the previous 12 months.
Winning war on poverty
The normally glum World Bank secs reason for
moderate opt1m1sm about diminishing poveny by
the end of the century.
A new bank repon predicts East Asia (Japan.
Korea. Taiwan. China) "could sec the v1nual
crad1cat1 on of poveny as we know 1t" and South
Asia could see "subsunt1al progress.. 1f India
continues to develop.
Lower povcny rates are likely 1n the Mideast
and Nonh Africa; Latin Amcnca also should do
better 1f 1t resolves its debt problems, the report
said.
Big trouble spot: sub-Saharan Afnca. which the
bank says could see 85 million more poor people
by 2000.
Polttlcal tempers flare
Tempers flare 10 the bitter New Hampshire
Senate pnmary contest between Nashua Mayor
James Donchcss and former Sen. John Ourk10.
Donchcss explains his lack: of Y1etnam-t'ra
military service as a medical deferment due to
cholesterol. Durkin. shoo1-from-thc-h1p Navy vet-
eran. retorts "They didn't even know what
cholesterol could do to you back then ··
WaalllD1ton CallLD1 11 a weekly baekgrouder
prtpared by tbe Waabtn1ton DC staff of U1e Scripps
Howard Newt ~rvl('t for tbt Oraogt Coasl Dally
Pilot.
Bug Busters are tired of
living in mosquito Mecca
WlLLISTON, N.D -Children
don't play outside here in the sum-
mer, and they 10 to school armed
Nearly eve~onc 1s enlisted tn the
battJe against Public Enemy No I
-mosquitoes.
Williston, located at the con·
fl uence of the M1ssoun and Yellow-
stone rivers. 1s a kind of mosqu110
mecca. The nvers create an ideal
breeding ground for hundred\ of
thousands of the 10sccts.
"'They're bad." says 23-year-<>ld
Kellee Cox. who moved to the area
fro m FarJO last spring. "I can"t
believe 1t. I've got a m1lhon mos·
Quito bites.
"I went into my back yard and got
'!warmed with them," she says. re-
vealing dozens o f irritated red bites
on her arms. "They just swarmed
over me and attacked me hke killer
bees."
It isn't a new problem; explorers
Lewis and Clark complained about
the buas durin& their brief v1s1ts to
the rivers' oonfluencc in 1805 and
1806. A historian called a mosquito
attack of 1947 the worst on record.
Some say the mosquitoes cnJOY
the the predominantly NorwegJan
blood of the town's 13.CXX> re'i1dent'i
Others have proposed ge111ng nd of
the bugs hy building a huhhle over
the town or setttng up huge (anr. to
blow them away
For years several agencies, includ-
ing the 1mprcss1ve·sound1ng Vector
Control D1stnct board, labored un-
\Uccessfully to put down the in~ct
upns1ng. "'Too many people were
running the 'iame program:· 53Y'>
Bill Cole, chairman of th.,e vector
board "Th1ng'i weren't getting
done"
But a new idea emerged from a
healed c11y mee11ng last summer at
whi ch residents were challenged to
come up with their own ideas for
mosquito control
Two housewives Joined a ped1a-
tnc1an. two teachers and the owner
of a day-care center to form the Bug
Busters -a volunteer group that
studied ways to control the pests
while protecting the enviro nment
They en listed the local h111)l
school, a woodworking club and tfic
Army Corps of En'1necrs to make
about two dozen mini -houses along
the nvcr. each designed to attract
bats and sparrows -natural mo,.
qu1to predators
"We"re not 1mponina bats or any-
1h10g like 1hat." said Bug Buster
Jackie . tenehJem "'The bats are
already here We're JUSl hoping
1hc) 'II move out of town and move
into the houses along the n ver."
Before the Bug Bu'itcrs. the spray-
10g of newl y discovered larvae had
to be approved by several agenc1c\,
taking up to a week. Now the dc-
c1s1ons are 1n local hands and ex-
terminauon can stan w11h1n 10
minutes
In Apnl. voters approved an an-
nual fee of $1 2 per household to
help bolster mosquito control.
Despite a rough week or two. this
summer gcneraTl y was better than
last. But children s11ll stay mostly
indoors and when they they go to
school, they take cans of bug re-
pellent with their pencils and
notebook~.
Residents try to make the best of
the bug s11uat1on, which they re-
cognize 1s an unwinnable war
"It's a numbers game we're play-
101." C olc said ··w e JU~t want to get
11 down to where 1t'<; hvablc"
-By Tltr AHoclatH Prr.,
THE DAILY PILOT'S
ULTIMATE FOOT BALL SECTION
Will be appearing ThursdHy Sept. 6t h
To ove r I 00,000 Headers
INCLUDES: • Extensive CoveragC' of nil I ,o«lll S<'hool~
• Schedules of Local CHml':-;
• Coverage of Colle~e (;nm Pi-.
• Raider~ & H.am~
Support Your Local Team and Cheer
Them on witlt a border ed message
Goooooo TEAM!
CIF ALL THE WAY
GOOD LUCK
FROM EVERYONE AT JOHN DOE' HOP
ACTUAL Mf~ AGF. .~17.E
DEADLINE FOR YO R MES 'AGE IS AUGUST 30
So call your CL888ified Representative Today!
fJ42 -5 678
Avalon residents to get
first taste of the Pacific
lly .MM MA Yllt
MlOlild'W ......... ..,,,...
AV ALON -Residents of Avalon
on Catalina bland are about to ~et
their fint real taste of the Pacific
Ocean.
Weary from drouaht and making
room for a Jarse condominium pro-
ject, the idyllic refuse in December
will become the latest city to fulfill
Aristotle's dream of drinking from
the sea.
"The community rccoanizes this
as a ~ant step forward in reducing
the impacts of drou&}lt," said
Southern Cahfornia Edison's Keith
Lefever. "When we cut water, we
cut tounsm, and that's the biaaest
business on the island."
AvaJon's $4 million dcsahnat1on
plant will use the latest technology
to squecz the sea's infinite supply
of sea tcr. demonstrating that
cc.on 1cs is beginning to work in
fav of desalting.
nd on California's mainland.
ere massive engjnecring projects
ave failed to q uench society's in-
credible thirst, desalting is coming of
age.
Santa Barbara wants to satisfy
one-third of i1s water demands by
1993 with a new desalination plan
that's in the works.
Marin County Municipal Water
District 1s experimenting with for-
tifying its supply by tapping San
Francisco Bay.
Even the giant MctroPQhtan
Water D1stnct of Southern C'ah-
forn1a -the victor 1n California's
legendary water wars -has a de·
sa!tnat1on pilot project 10 its quest to
meet a daily demand of nearly 3
billion gallons.
"Two things arc happen10g," said
Bnan Smith. the California Depart-
ment of Water Resources' desalina-
tion expen . "One. the tcchnologJcs
art improving. But almost mort
importantly, the ava1lab1hty of con-
ventional water supplies 1s decreas-
ing. and the cost of those supphes -
when they are available -1~ going
up."
In the case of California. the be~t
dam sites have been developed -
leaving sites sut:h as Auburn. where
big dams must be built to capture
rclat1 vcly little water
Trad1t1onal water projects alr,o
carry enormous environmental pme
tags. Because laws now require pro-
Je<:ls to compensate for tha1 damage.
the cost 1s literally passed on to
consumers
As the cost of water from new
dams ancrcascs. desalting plants that
once were proh1b1t1vel) e;1t pens1vc
become viable alternatives.
"When dcsahnat1on starts to hap-
pen 1n ( ahfom1a. which 1n com-
pan~on to man) states has tremen-
dous ability to u~ rainfall and <;now-
fall . then you know 11 1s becom1n$ a
very acteptcd technology:· Smith
said
So what ont·e was exclu~1ve to tiny
Canbbean islands. cru1St' ships, and
nch and nations such as Kuwai t and
Saudi Arabia, 1s now being citplored
by Main Street. Amenca.
With more than 97 percent of the
world'!> water contained 1n oceans.
the potential 1s of enormous propor-
tion.
Juhus Caesar used a !>Olar ~t•ll to
supply his occupying soldier\ 1n
Egypt Anc1 more than a century a1to.
sa.ilon -whose vor,aaes shrunk the
planet -have distilled seawater to
make it p0table.
In the 1960s and early '70., the
U.S. Dcpanment of Interior funded
eiuensive research in desalination. It
had an Office of Saline Water and ~nsored a "Water for Peace" con-
ference.
When the federal money dried up1 so did much of the reaearch ana
much of the prosrns. uid Jack
JOfltOSCn, executive director of the
National Water Supply Improve-
ment Association.
Private industry was slow to arab
the baton, JorJenscn said, and only
now is the momentum returnin&-
There's nothing mysterious about
the process. The basic water cycle
diagrammed in grade school science
books shows how Mother Nature
accomplishes the task:
Water evaporates from the ocean
surface. The water is volatile but the
salt is not, so as the water becomes
vapor the salt stays behind. That
vapor collects 10to clouds and con·
Desalting
finally
becoming
alternative
densrsi'nto rain and snow. Runoff 1s
collected by streams. and deposited
mto lakes and percolates tnto
aquifers.
The most common dcsahna11on
technology docs the same thing -
llttlt more than a tea kettle 10 hasten
the process by creating steam.
To save energy, a more soph1st1-
cated dist11lauon processes 10Jects
heated water 1010 a vacuum. In the
vacuum. some of the water flashes
into steam at temperatures far below
the fu ll 212 degrees Fahrenheit re-
q ui red to boil watrr in normal at·
mosphcric pressure. The process is
then repeated several times with the
remaining bnnc.
D1stillat1on 1s heavily used 10
places such as the Middle East.
where energy 1~ 1n greater supply
than fresh water. Or in geograph1-
call) or poht1cally isolated place~
such as Ke)' West. Fla . or the U.
Naval base on Guantanamo. Cuba
Metropolitan Water District's
pilot plant will be situated next to
one of the 13 power plants along the
south coast. and 1s expected to gen-
erate 5 million gallons of f"'sh water
a da) at a cost of four ttmes what the
d1stnct no" pays for 1mponed
water
Sc1cnt1sts also have citpenmcnted
with free11ng water and with sending
electncal charges through saline
water to separate the water from
chssolved 1mpunt1es
However. the process bearing the
most promise 1s called revcrsc o'-
mos1s. wh1<.·h uscs polymer filten 10
separate the salt and other contami-
nants. from the water. said David
Furukawa. with Separation Consult-
ant Inc. of an Diego
The membrane!> arc nearly 1m-
perv1ous. Only when the water be-
hind tbc filten is under put press-
ure docs anytblq s-ss throuah, and
then only the pure water molecules.
But like distillation, the Pf'OClell
has ~uircd ·a lot of enef'IY ·to
presaunzc the water to between 600
and 8SO pounds per square inch.
Only over the laat 1everal yean,
have scientists developed filter1 that
require less preuure to make the
1epuation.
Reverse 01mosis also is promisina
be<:.tuse the membranes can filter
out specific contaminants, such u
orpn1c material that when dit-
infccted with chlorine may become
a human carcinoaen.
The process also is provina an
affordable way to clean up brackiab
around water that is less salty than
the sea. It takes far less pressure -
and thus less enerJy -to purify
brackish water than seawater.
The process is increasinaJy beina
used in Florida, where much of the
around water is brackish. In OrafllC
County. water treated by reverse
osmosis is beina injected into the unde~ound to keep seawater from
invading the freshwater aquifer.
No matter what process is used,
desalination allows water enJineen
to avoid what has become their
gre.atest challenge -environmental
opposition, either in the form of
stnnaent laws or public opinion.
Trad1t1onal water projects have
flooded valleys. and either turned
rivers Into canals-or drained away
much of the flow -all at tremen-
dous cost to wildlife.
"The one kicker is that desalina-
tion 1s. of course, energy intensive,''
Smith said. "And in the en-
vironment.al balancing game, you
have to realize it is going to take a
considerable amount of kilowatts."
Any real breakthrough for de-
salination may hinge on new
technologies that generate cheap,
abundant and clean electricity, such
as fusion.
In the meantime, other re-
searchers arc trying to capitalize on
the wave action w1th10 the sea to
power reverse osmosis pumps. or
tapping the wide temperature
change between the surface and bot-
tom of ocean water to operate a
d1st11lat1on plant.
In the case of the Metropolitan
Water D1stnct. assistant chief enai-
ncer Gary Snyder said desaJination
has the potential to satjsfy a sianifi-
cant pon1on of Southern Cali-
fornia's exploding demand.
"The p0ss1b1lity exists, " Snyder
said. "whether 1t will be realized or
not. I don't know:·
And m the case of Catalina -
where a lack of freshwater is credited
for preserving the island's quaint-
ness -the plant will satisfy the new
330-untt condom10 ium project. and
crack the door to development.
For now, Edison's Lefever said
JUSI I 0 new projects will be allowed,
all of them homes or small hotels.
But the dcsahing plant can be easily
expanded. And that makes Avalon.
and any other small coastal town
using freshwater shortages to limit
growth, vulnerable to Southern Cali-
fornia-style expansion.
"H 1storically," Le Fever said,
"elected officials have been able to
hide beh10d the availabihty of water
and not had to make the tou&h
dcc1s1ons that they will have to
make 10 the fu ture."
Hayden's name hurts Big Green
LOS ANGELES -Assemblyman
Tom Hayden's ad,ocacy of Prop-
O'i111on 128 has helped and hindered
the s<K'alled Big Green 101t1at1YC, a
newspaper poll fou nd
Voters who had a ncgall\C image
of Hayden were spilt on 1he1r 1m-
press1on of Propos111on 128 But
when they heard of Hayden·., in-
volvement. they turned more than
2· I against Big Green.
Overall 1mpress1on of Hayde n was
heavily negative at 5·3. The 44th
D1stnct Dcmocral represent\ We~t
Los Angeles and anta Monica
The poll, published unday. 'lhow
cd voters who had a pos111vc
outlook on Hayden already hacked
Propos1 t1on 128 and on hearing of
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
WWe Y• ...., C..en ..,,!
1122 UHM llfl. CHTI IKSA-S41 I lff
I _,,,,, r't'• N \I• •rt
~ "'·•'' "'"' .,, .,.,,. (1tf #IV,,}\ t#ll'I
the former anti-war rad1cars connec-
tion. !>upportcd the measure h)' a 3-1
margin
People who held no image of
Hayden supponed the propos111on
4-3.
The poll 1ntcrv1cwcd 1.586 rcg.is-
lcred voters statewide by telephone
for a six-day ~trctch ending Aug. 22.
Margin of error 1s plus o r minus
three percenlJlgc points.
The survey showed voters were
split nearly even on the Nov. 6
ballot measure. The p0ll found 44
ixrcent of voters 10 favor of Prop-
os1tton 128 and 42 percent against.
with 14 percent undecided
l he broad proposal will. amona
other th1n1.5. attempt 10 save old-
growth redwood forests. tax 011 com-
panies for potential 011 spills, and
reduce gases Lhat contnbutc to
global warming and erosion of the
ozone.
1 Scr..ntno T9n0nts-·on ounco 11 prl'vOrtlK>n
2 Uq land lO do'( Noket Oto Mon~ent Tool-
vnu \NII IOCl'l\10 6 hoo I of\CllOtcJ I On()l'll NOllC p
l0tms IOQ91l'l0r with on o~plOnoh<>n o f wnon 10
u\4t ond haw 10 "'"'o eoch WOl1h tr.. c0tt ol tr..
s.m#nar~I
by
Christopher R. Savage
Attorney at low
l lordofd .. IPC>f\~t and ltlghtt-uod lononl
l?OiPOf\SIOlllllOl oncJ ~IS
• Wh9n to go to C ourf and How to Wln-on<J wrin11 to s•ov nomn DnCJ r ut vou tow-s -$. Avoklna tM 10 Won• "9tolt In Oeolng with T9nQnft
6. UMnQ Pfote1tlonal "~~to Mcuimia
'f OUt lneome
7 How to COntfol Ma11•11GnC• Co.ft.
of
Savage, Wltde a Co , ltd
no 00 " potd 1n odvonc•
$26 00 OI lt'I• dOOf
°*' &ef\rdey, .... '· "'°
1te .. rvot1or• R~4Mt
(714) •7~·9006
f1m9 9.00 A M to Noon
loco11on llOO Dov• ~Ir• ... 2nd 'loaf
.. Olton. "'110
N9wpott leoc:h, CA 92660
-_-_ .... ---~· -_-. --~---=--==
OllAW COMT DAILY PILOT ORANGE CUAST BUS Moncllly, Auol* 'Z7. ,_ M A.
'nslde ~/1Ju$1nea
emps fill many Tiny fllm company has big plans
business needs
What are the akills tbat are necaa.-
lf'Y to succeed in business today?
Enthusium, commitment, de·
termination ud cooperation come
to mind immediately, u does the
williqnaa to refine dne's lkills and
learn new ones. c.ertainly1 these
qualitia fonn a pmcri~on for loaf-term IUCCCll an one I canlef,
but are they really necessary -do
they have any impKt - in relation
to temporary employees?
Can one truly be successful in this
fut·P9Ced environment workina as a
"temp .. ? In other words, is there a
permanent place in our culture for
tomcone wbo, for whatever reason,
would choose less than fuU-time
permanent employment?
The answer is a resoundi~ yes!
Particularly in today's divene busi-
ness world -to the Iona-term suo-
cas of institutions, corporations 11
well u larae and small companies.
Temporaries offer employen a
number of attractive options, in-
cludina flexibility! added seasonal
llrentth, the abi ity to test new
products, ventures and market ex-
pansion without too arcat a capital
risk; and arcater latitude witb per-
manent employee benefits in such
areas u vacation, personal and ma-
ternity leave. AU these options ben-
efit the employ,er and the busi.neu.
and AR the main reason that the
temporary industry is boomina with
personnel from an enormous variety
of bacqrounds and at all skill levels.
At the bean. there really is a pro
and con to the temporary indusuy.
These two 11pecu spell success an
any transaction between temporary
employee and employer. The pro is
professional and the con is con-
fidence.
Vicki
Heston
.. -,j ' '
. -'~· .... ;. '
lf tbae pll AR buJinesa related. the akil11 and experiencet pined wilt
enhance their resumes u well u find
them a place in the temporary work
place.
V~ Bet,_, • memhl' .t lte Or-
.... C.UI o.JlT PUel a.ft •I aalP,., Ah&en, ,. ,,...,_, •I
VISI Bn,_ Pe,.._., S.nka i.e.,. ina..
OCNI' .,..Mn .t ... 0.Uy PU.I
a.ft el •""'-'• Url#n •tt: &'wl c .• ,. ......... 'C:f. ,.,,,..,
el l!Cranl .,.,,,, • c..: ~ .. , Owl· ..... m, ,...., utl .,,..... en,,_.. • c..; AIM ,.,..,. .. , ftft ,,. ... ~.. ...,.._ ,,,..., ..
B•lf.M N..,,.,.. a..d; r.. G,.._,
6trlcl ~,,...,.. • C..; ~nw,.,~
I.MPG h91 ltlvwld • C..; I• LIM. h• ... ,.,.,_, £lat Murel • c..; llU,_ 6 . Nql«, HeNll~e
ftft ,,....,_, utl ,..J•al .,....er
,., G,... • EIJJ•; .,. Nicola.,
,re•1'eal '1• .. cl•l Slr•leflH o,_,, ~ SIUHI, Stai. Tana
i. .. r••ce, C••,. MeH; G•ry
JrHc•m•e, parlaer Ieaaelt
IA~•IMI • C..; u4 G,_,.,. Zlper, ,,..,._, G,_,.,. %1.-r • ..h·
Nelalft.
Cine-Source
says show
must goon
UNIVERSAL CITY -Wbeft
veteran director Peter
Boad'novic:b bad U'OUble Jettina bit 1equel to 1'&e Lat Picture
Show" into ~uction tbnqb I ~ atudio be went to the
IOW'Ce. Cine-Soutce, tbat ia.
Tbc ti.n~1 lit&»known company arraneed 1.DC financi.na for ..,. ex·
uvilJc," which ii due for releale
in September, •wrina Cybill
Shepherd and Jeff Brid8el. mem-
ben of the oriainal 1911 cut.
Ip ldd.itinn to fame, 11ucca1ful film could..-brina Cine-Source I
amall fonune. ne firm will ,et
2S.S perce.nt of the pou of .. Tex-uvillc. ''
And if it flops. Ci.no-Source bu
carefully spread the S2.4 million
riak between foreip and domestic
investon and cable and home
video companies who've bouaht
the ri&bts to the 1mall-tereen
abowinp.
Cine-Source 1taned rollina in
July 1988. Its creators, Robert
Whitmore and Henry Wein1tein1 then mefltd it with Starwooo
Ventures tn a stock swap. The
company stock now sells for 38
cents a abare, sivina it a market
value.-of abou& Sl;-24 mittio .
Whitmore, a 42-year-old at·
tomey who once ran his own
music manqement firm, and
Whitmore ao way beck. In the late
l 970s they formed ~ eroduction
company called Slcyfield Pro-
ductions that made movies for
television.
Weinstein's portfolio includes
jobs at Cannon Pictures, MGM.
20th Century Fox. He and Whit-
•obert Whltlwore, left, pr•lld!_~
Cln•Source ~-Henry ..eln1teln,
~r lft....., Uftlver*J <My-of..-
flces.
more were executive producen for
the l 985 film. "Runaway Train,"
which was nominated for thrtt
Academy Awards.
In 1988 they 101ned forces again
to make Cine-Source, Whitmore
as president. WCJnste1n as chair-
man.
Small production companies
a.re in a prccanous position. After
shellina out considerable sums to
create a film, most don't have the
funds to wait for the box office
receipts to reimburse them.
Royalties from fore•an theaters or
video companies may take four
years to reach the producen.
But Cine-Source 1s expected to
survive. Whitmore has kept the
staff of seven an fightint tnm.
They arc currently working on
four other films, ancludina a re-
make of the 1959 Oscar·winnin&
film, "Black Orpheus."
Moreover, Wlutmorc says the
finn 1s not out for blockbusten.
"We have no 11lus1ons of aran ·
deur," Whitmore says.
But be thinks "TeusviUe" may
prove that he and his partner were
naht on the money. -•1 lk A....a.W Ptta Fint the profeu~onal. The tem-
porary employee 1s a true pro-
fessional, and in most positions will ,---:========================================================-=================iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil be treated as such. The temporary
has the p rofessional skills to perform
the duties required in the workplac.c.
and has chosen to work as a "free
qent" contracted through an agen-
cy. The nature of this service is
purely professional and is supplied
in a professional manner.
It 1s of course, equally important
for temporary employees to under-
stand their professional status, and
to perform at their highest level. The
temporary enters work s1tuat1ons
with unique advantages: the em-
ployer has contracted with the aaen-
cy to fill a specific need and 1t is the
aaency's respons1b1hty to match the
best temparary employee Wlth the
employers request. Therefore. the
temp is quite literally the employer's
dream come true! Moreover. since
the temporary employee works
directly fo r the agency, rather than
the emplor.er, the temporary has a
arcater ability to chanae work en-
vironments 1f they find that the
chemistry of one situation 1s less
than ideal.
There's a con to this business as
well. and that is confidence. For
success within the industry. having
an 1mqc of confidence is para-
mount. It is not necessary to be the
best SCCTCtary, receptionist or the
most experienced word processor. It
lS merely necessary to know what
one's skills arc and to present them
honestly, to both the aaency and the
employer.
When one can accurately assess
their skills. 1t 1s easier to present
oneself Wlth confidence. knoWln&
what 1s required and having the
ability to provide that service
thorou&hly. It 1s the aaency's rc-
sponsi6ility to make placements fo r
the temporary emplolcc, and to
ensure a match-up o skills with
requirements of the job request.
When that is done. mutual sausfac-
tion is assured and everyone ben-
efits: the employer is jJ"'lteful that
h.i1 or her needs arc fulfilled wittf
excellence. and the temporary em-
ployee pins the benefits from this as
well u the experience.
Quite often temporary ass1•n·
ments aive the temp an opponun1ty
to move into new areas and allow
them to funher refine or expand
their skills. This is a most effective
method of skills traioina, truly "on-
the·job" trainina un~erwritten ~Y
the employer. The wtsc temp wtll
use every opponunity available fo r
advancement, and skill enhanc.c-
ment is of\en the first step.
<>pponuniues abound for pro-
fewonal advancement. and aoana
up the corporate lad<kr throuah per-
manent, full-time employement 11
really only one of the methods.
Today, throuah skillful, cooperative
usoc11tion1 between temporary em-
plo¥ment aaencies and pr01fCUive
bus1neuct. 1in&)e perents. students,
mature men and women 11 well 11
many othen. ~ able to enter the
work force on their own terms wbile
pinina a variety of professional ex·
periences. h allows the temp to
make a competitive income and llill
have the freedom to punue penonal
pk.
r
YOUR CO
HOMEAJD
PRo}Ecrs
l/u.vn,...<;ro' Your11 S111-1 n·R
Hu:-;n:'K: . ..-roN B ~An 1
CAROU K>..~l>f
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M Monday, Auguet 27, 1990 ENTERfAI -
The new Golden Bear
delights some old fans
9yGBG KUllKX .._ ........... .
lmmened in the colorful festiv-
ities Saturday ftitht at the new Gold-
en Bear, you'd never aueu that the
reborn club was all scaffolds and danaUna wira only hours before
openiaa.
0 You wouldn't have believed thia
pl.ace • few hours aao," said an
obviously tired but pleased John
McTieman, chairman and CEO of
Peppers, Inc., which financed the
rebirth of the tcaendary club. 0 This
place was a mess. We were sitting at
lunch today thinkina we'd have to
cancel the openina. r can't believe 1t
happened."
Despite McTicrnan's concerns.
there certainly weren't any com-
plaints from the approximately
1.000 people who showed up Satur-
day to celebrate the reopening of a
Southern California lcaend. The
crowd included VIP guests from the
music industry, City of Huntington
Beach and alumni artists of the old
Golden Bear, which was closed an
1986 and later demolished as parrof
downtown development plans an
Huntington Stach. Members of The
Gap Band as well as singer Michael
McDonald were seen among the
revelei:s.
Located at its onginal site acros!>
from the Huntington Beach Pier. the
new club as offic1all) known as Pep-
pers Golden Bear. The name reflecis
both the club's financial hnk wnh
the popular restaurant chain and its
combination of a 280-scat Peppers
res taura nt and 500-seat con-
cen /dance venue Dunng maJor
concert nights. dinner packages "'Ill
be offered featunng preferred main
floor sca11ng 1n the club
According to ()aturda) ·~ opening
party patro ns. the ne~ club should
be around for a long 11 me
"Exc111ng. "'onderful .. 11· reall)
fabulous," said Evelina Knmsen. a
rcprescn1a11ve of Beach~ood He-
cords. one of man) mu~1( 1ndu<t1n
Books
N•ncy •nd D•n C.ll•han
rcprcscnt.at1vcs auending the festiv-
ities. "The Bear has such a great
reputation, and this is a real ex-
tension of that legacy. I'm sure it'll
draw some name artists. as well as
break 1n some new ones."
In the true spint of the Golden
Bear. which helped introduce the
world to J1m1 Hendnx and The
Doors. the opening celebnu1on fea-
tured several up and coming artists
such as The Jane Fontana Band,
Jilme~.Ue-Stanlc.y and Chnsti.nc in
the Attic. Internatio nally-known
world beat an1sts The Boncdaddys
were the <'' l\ning's featured a1trac-
t1on
"This place 1s really something."
said partygoer Chene Gregg of
Laguna Beach "It's contemporary,
but 11 sull holds onto the old spint."
Jn addition 10 musical enteruun-
ment. guests "ere also treated to a
full open bar and gourmet Norteno-
style Mexican food 1n an elaborate
served buffet Black-lie attire was
the standard, but that d1dn 't stop
revelers of all ages from "orlung up
a sweat on the dance Ooor
"It's a beau11tul dub." said Laune
Bru~ser. a ~e~ ) ork nJll'e and
fonner nia,htclub manager in town
for the opening: "There's an im-
pression that California clubs aren't
as hip as New York clubs, but I
think places like this could change
50mc minds."
Costa Mesa resident Rose Burke
was o ne of several parlYJOCl"S who
felt that the new Gofden Bear could
outshine the old club.
.. It has '8 really modem ambience
that should be a big hit," Burke said.
"Evmone here is very professional,
veryTrienOl y. The acousmrare-grea
and the seating is great. I think it's
belier than the old Golden Bear."
Golden Bear vice-president Ken
Moon sajd the club will present live
acts on an almost nightly basis, but
will reserve Fridays and Saturdays
for dancing.
The line up for the first week of
the Golden Bear's return features A
Flock of Seagulls tonight, The
Bonedaddys on Wednesday the The
Ronnie Montrose Band on Thurs-
day. Upcoming concens include the
Paladins. The Tubes and Bob James.
This fall. Peppers Golden Bear will
produce a benefit concert W1th
proceeds going to the H untington
Beach Pier Restoration Fund.
A timely look at the Arab world through Western eyes
ly DAVID BARTON
M<Claot~ N~w• MNl<:o
Few area'\ ol the world conlnund 1hc \.\ nll·rn
mind as deepl} as the .\rah ~orld and. a\ recent l'\Cnt'
have h1ghl1ghted. fe~ arc ai. rnntl'nllous I ht' ~a\l
region that enwmpa<t~.-. "'onh \fma 1hc \rah1.an
perflnsula and the Middle 1-.asl 1\ lht· "orld'' t'nt'rg\
breadbaskel. whence hcadllnr~ of d1<,..1-;1cr and hrutal11'
rcgularl} n cochet onto thc-puhlil <,!age
Bur despite lhe frequcnq ol 1he hcadl1nn lhl'
Arab world often scem'i like a dosc·d '\Hlt·m. a languagt·
we don't spealo.. The sh1ft1ng lo}alt1t'\ and licne
passions don't make o ur kind of '\en"t'
( hnstopher D1d.c\. M1ddk t ast l11m.'\p<imknt
for Newsweek and thc \.\ al>hingtun Po'>l over a four
year penod 1n the late '80s. hac;, made-\Omt' <;ense of
th1~ land ot ancie nt nvalnes and modem anachronisms
1n his ne~ book. "Expats Tra,els 1n Arabia From
Tnpoh to Teheran." a def\ and engagingly wnncn
C'<amanauon of the region
Dicke), whose previous book was "With the
( ontras." has told his story as a senes of v1gnette'i
w nnectcd 10 a 'aguel) novehs11c form Moving from
1\o lated e'ents such as the U.S bombing of L1h)a
through the remin1s<:ences of elderly Brits to chats w11h
~a11ressc~ in Te'<·Me' theme bars in the gulf 0 11 fields.
hr graduall} '>els the stage for the book's central drama.
the Persian (Julf '"tanker war" between Iran and' Iraq.
He fi nishes "'Ith a localized view of the tragic l ' ()
downing of an Iranian commuter Oaght 10 1988.
What make~ the book so compelling 1s Dickey's
dcc:1s1on to tell the ston es of the reg10n through the eyes
of expatriates. the Westerners and other non-Arabs
Movie I/stings
New.,ort Beach
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DAILY PILOT K-OCEAN
UDO CINIMA Ntwpo•t 111110 01 Ntwl>O" VIII.
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call the Orange Coast Daily Pilot at 642·4321 .
Costa Mesa
IOWA-1 CIHI MA CINTI• 1'0• Ho•Oor
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who have come to reap the reJion's wealth o r report
on those who are doing so. Given that thousands of
these "expats" are potential hostages in the current
drama. their stories arc all the more fascinating.
ahst1c" -Western -writing style.
Dickey's own writing style is a clean. reporter1y
one that doesn't mass the exquisite poetry an the ancient
beauties and modem ironies of his subject. His various
expats serve the book much as a protagonist serves a
novel, giving the reader an emotional entry point. By
1elhng these stones of individuals. Dickey not onty
helps 1llummate recent news reports but also plumbs
the regio n's history and spirit. and offers hints of its
future.
They include the stones of a F1hpano sailor
seno usly wounded in a missile attack on the 011 tanker
he 1s helping to man; of the lush life (complete with an
against-the-odds descn golf course) laved by oil ex-
ecutives. intelligence operatives and Journalists in tht"
Un11ed Arab Emirates: and of two young Amencans
trying to re~stabhsh the endangered white oryx (a kind
of antelope) 1n the daunting expanses of the Jiddat al-
Haras1s, a vast desert plateau 1n central Oman. Dickey
also looks at the stories of internal "expa1nates ... such
as Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfouz, who won the
1988 Nobel Pnze for literature and laves under a death
threat by Islamic fundamentalists who revile his "re-
The result 1s not a definitive look at the Arab
world, but 11 1s an emotionally penetrating and
marvelously accessible look al a reg.ion of which
Americans cannot afford to be ignorant.
"~pau: Travels in Arabia From Tnpo/J to
Teheran." by Chnsropher Dickey. Published b> Atlan-
tic Monthly Press: 216 pages: S/8.95.
SOUTH COAST PUUA l ttttot/Sunllowrt S4& 1 I It
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TV List ings
7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11 :00 11:30 • WllHI of Jtoptrdyt o MlfO' Old (In Ooctof. ~ O.tignlng l~o Feet Whtl Connie ..... U.S. Open F~o St8'tol a Ooctof 8'own WOIMtl tRJ (In StereoJ :J ........
D E~ Hlf'd Copy Colby 5'low Guys Nt11 Mlwie: "I Know My F'nt HIN 11 SteW9ft" 11989 0!1~1 ...... leltof TllNllflt llln Sltieol o Door llPari 2 of 2) Cindy PiCl(en John Asllton tin Ste<eol o Cart0n IRI • .... CM of Thit Mo¥lt • •' 1 "Old~ .. (1979 lltamal Talia Shore Nl'n O T111 Jim ano Tut
HallWMf WOl1d .JoM Befusni RICtlir Joroan Ille Ktd
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11?11 l'M MeaezlN Ent. T onlallt MalotOed Doctor IMurplly I . IDHian. w Will Connie CtlunG ...... U.S. 0.:
D Love Chllll lfll. ..... ...... ...... Cwol lumltt :°',:;:" CoMedlon lflCI ,,.,.
[ii NFl FooCllll Cont o Soecl4ll E. Cunent Ullr Movie: "Ptrry MHon: The CaM of !tit Notoriovt IMI" ..... 1 ....... 0 • Crtlll lfl ... Cun9llt A •111 21 ~Street (In Sttreol O Alen Kdon Green Eyes Nm Rocky lflCI I Low Ulcy
MlclMtt llRJ (In SttreoJ C Frilndl • Youna FllllS • c-, Show Hight CM Mcwlt: ••• "Salelll'• Lot'" (1979. Hoflor)(Part 1 ol 2) ...... Arltftio H11 (Rt (In SWIOj
In Steteot a 0.v.O Soul James Mason uru Kl(WCll • MecHllll Wld WOl1d of Nllloftll AucMloft lodlty AIMnMt Return 10 lilt Al'lltricall Mellln: Sln•oro ~ llllelWI; lM "'° ~Cont'd MilNlt i-.-W. Jl<ll Sta o MMr« Theater s Secrtt T mes ot Truman ~ • n.11 of INldl Edllofl COiby Show Ouye Nert Movie: "I KllOW My Arat HIN It Stewft" (1989. Orama) ..... leltof fortuM O In SWeol a Door Part 2 of 21 Cnd'f Poen John MhlOll fin Sllreol o C...IRI • "91e1111Lord PYM IN Lord Ctllltlt SUn6ly .... VIII ,Jotin .... ~ 1 ..... • ~"""'*" AIMrkM MIMlrs: Santoro WOl1d of .. Moy9fl L..lwrlnce ... Sflow lutinett "Pt. ,_....,,,
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Complete TV llstlngs In Sunday•1 TV Update ..
• 0 GE COAST llEAI:tll OAAHGe COUT DALY PLOT
Mondey, A~ 27, 1990 A7
Studies back chelation therapy
Cbelation therapy ha.a been
around a Iona time and may be
just what the doctor ordered to tarety dean out your aneries.
EDTA. a chemical aaent than binds to and inerea.tet the excre-
tion of mineral such 11 calcium:
leld, and mema~ tw been u1ea for yean for treatana heavy metal
poiaoniq. It wu noted back in
tbc 19509 that patients who ~
'1dved lntravenout infusions of EDT A to remove e•cessive metals
&om their 1yiiem hquently re-
poned improvements in memory.
vision, 1en1e of smell, sense of
Wte, and even noted clearer
tbink.ina.
More specifically, those who
suffered with either anajna or
1evere lea pain from arteries
blocked with cholesterol noted
rapid improvement which could
not be explained by the removal
of the excessive metal.
These findinp were reported in
Or. Julla
Whltake
the scientific literature in the
I 9SOs and in 1964, Alfred Soffer
M.D., associated professor in
medicine at Nonhwestem Uni-
venity Medical School wrote io
his book. "Chelation TbeTap • "
that patienu sufferina with lea
pain from atherosclerosis seem~
to improve dramatically fonn re-
peated treatments with EDT A, es-
pecially those with diabetes.
Since that time thousands of
physicians have safely treated
millions of patients wtth an u.-
aoondina record of safety and ef-
fectiveness. Recently the FDA
petitioned the state health aaen· cies nationwide for reports on
adverse effects of properly admin-
i1tered chelation thcarpy. As of
1989, no repons had been re-
ceived. Since 1987, the FDA has
been conductina double blind,
placebo controned studies of
chelation therapy in several U .S.
Anny hospitals for the treatment
of lea pain from atherosclerosis.
When these studies were set up.
safety of this therapy was not an
issue.
In a smaller study recently re-
poncd form Brazil a aroup of 20
patients with severe lea pain were
J&ndomly dtv1ded to receive
either infusions of EDT A or a
placebo. The study was to last for
20 treatments, but after 10, tho~
that had received the EDTA were
able to walk twice as far without
pain as the placebo aroup. The
placebo aroup was 1hen aiven the
EDTA and experienced a similar
improvement.
Numerous other reports suuest
that heart pa1ien1s with chest pain
would improve as well. In fact. the
number of patients who l\ave rc-
cei.v~ chelation therapy for heart
pa.an 11 about equal to the number
who have received the much more
publicized bypass operation. In
addition chelation therapy seems
to be pass1na control trials that
measure benefit. while bypass sur-
gcry has failed the only two con·
trolled 1naJs conducted 1n this
country.
Cons1denng the danger and ex-
pense of 1hc sufJJcal proc.cdures
that arc so frequently used for
a1hcrosclerot1c diseases. logic
would dictate tha1 chclauon ther·
apy should be used first, with
surgery utilized only as a last
re son
'Super-antidotes' against poisons seen
8y KILLY '· ICISSIL
... 1 ... ,,,_ "'-
ST ATE COLLEGE, Pa. -Sc1cn-
--..tas"""u wflo successfUTly bonOea metal
ions to an antibody say it's the first
siep toward creatina super-antidotes
that could neutralize chemical
weapons. drug overdoses and most
poisons.
The metal ions act as catalysts
lbat can convert poisons to harmless
substances inside the human body,
u id Stephen J. Bcnkov1c. a
chemistry[rofessor at Penn Stale.
"It c-0ul be used as a delollifyi ng
•nt for people who have taken a drUJ overdose and can be used
11&1nst environmental pollutants,"
Benkovic said in an interview.
When the U.S. military learned of
the early laboratory success, it asked
for a briefina about applications in
chemical warfare. he said.
The "metalloantibod1cs" can be
made by ahering the amino acid
.equcncc of protein 10 make it usicr
to bind with a metal. said Sheila A.
Iverson. workma on lhc prOJCCt at
the Research lns11tute of Scnpps
Oinic at La Jolla, Cahf.
Ant1bod1cs oc.cur naturally in the
body and are integral components of
the human immune system. They
attack invading bactcna and viruses.
Using metal ions could broaden
their range to combat stro~ toxins
the humJn body cannot fi 1.
Through different modi 1c.a11ons.
anudotes could one da> be de-
veloped for an) poison. making
metalloantibod1cs a logical defense
apinst chemical warfare, said David
Lenz, an Army pharmacol<>11st at
the Aberdeen Proving Ground 1n
Maryland-. ---'·-··--
"It can be used not so much to
demoralize the enemy. but to reduce
the threat of him uStng chemical
weapons at all." Lenz said. "They
won't use them 1f they're not going
to work."
Development of ant1bod1es for
humans 1s years away. but recent
laboratory successes arc promising.
he said.
"By having a metal ion embedded
in the protein. 1t can now catalyze
many diverse chemical reacttons,"
said Bcnkovic, whose work with
Richard Lerner of the Research In-
stitute was published in the Aug. 10
issue of Science magazine.
metalloantibody could De de-
veloped to treat cocaine overdo~~.
Bcnkovic said.
"The antibody can convert
poisons by acting as a catalyst." he
said. "It changes the first toxin ll
secs. lhen keeps on going unlll
there's no toJlin left. The ant1bod}
can be engineered to bind toxins or
chemically change 1hcm."
With zinc or copper attached, 1he
new antibody could be inJccted into
a person even before exposure.
Chem1caJ poisons rendered harmless
would he excreted.
,In research conducted between
Apnl and June, Bcnkov1c and
Lerner expenmen1ed on genetTC' ma-
tcnal exposed to Ouorescein. which
em11s a known amount of energy
Af\er altcnng the gene11c ma-
lcnars an11bod1es w11 h a copper ion
Ibey expo\Cd the new product to
fluoresce1n Encrg) changes 1n the
ong1nal foreign substance took
place
"When metal bind'I to Ouorcsccin
11 should change lhc energy le' c1:·
Iverson "11d. so researchers knew
the metal ion had been successful!)
added 10 the an11body
State reminder on immunizations
Stale Heahh Director Kenneth W.
Kizer 1s reminding parents 10 have
their children properly 1mmun1zed
before they bcJin school.
"lmmunizauons are 1mporun1
every year. but the recent measles
cp1dt'm1c 1n C'al1fo rn1a 's
preschoolers underscores how csscn-
t1aJ lhcy arc 1n prcvcnung school
outbreaks." Kizer said. "If a c hild
bas not received all required 1m-
munuations, he or ~he will no1 be
admitted to school."
Al lhc lime of their child's enrol-
lment m school. parents will be
asked 10 pre~nl an 1mmunizat1on
record from their doctor or chn1c
stating 1hc date the child received
each of 1he required 1mmunizauons.
Most children cntcnng lunderganen
need to have received five DTP
(dipthena. tetanus and penuss1s or
whooping cough). four polio and
one MMR (measles, mumps and
Rubella) 1mmun1zat1on The fifth
DTP and founh poho 1mmun11_a-
u ons arc often called school entr)
booster shots because children get
them at the time they enter school
"lmmunizauons arc also needed
for enrolled children. 1wo months of
age or older. 1n child care: centers ...
Ku.er Yid "Dcpend1n1 on lhc
child's aac. 4 DTP, 3 polio and 1hc
MMR 1mmun11..a11on 1s strong!) rec-
ommended at th1~ 11me. too Part'nts
can obtain more 1nfonnauon on the
requirements for )Ou ngcr children
b) calling their local child care
center~." Kizer \aid
Man) local health dcpanments
ha\ c \Chcduled drop-in. back-to-
school cl1n1cs tn lht' fall Parents arc
adv1!>Cd to call their local health
dcpanmen1 for clinic dates and lo-
cauons
.. Remember... Kuer added. "all
pu,bhc and pnvatc schools through·
out (. altforn1a "111 hr enforcing 1hc
same 1mmun11at1on requirement\
1h1s fall •·
New tactics in the
battle of the bulge
Tb.e other ni.abt at El Torito GnJI,
I tried to order my usual -a
chicken tostada wtthout beans,
cheete, sour cream or 1uacamole.
With lou of salsa on the side.
"I've aot a better suuestion," said
the waittess (wbo must also be a
reaular dieter). ''Order the chicken
\aCO salad. Its biger, you &Cl lou
more vcp:tables and it Wtes better,
even Without all lhC aood Stuff."
usten 1n on any lettuce-for-lunch
convcrsauons and you're likely to
bur -and not JUst from the
wanrcss -about some new way to
make something hke bonelcis. sun-
less chicken breasts taste better or
about some restaurant which has
managed to do so.
For ex.ample, one of :ny favonte
gu1lt-frc~ meals these days 1s the
vegetarian. c hccselcss pizza at the
California Pizza Kitchen.
Cheese less pizza -you· ve got to
be lttdding. Non-dieters would
cnnge at such a notion.
But for the ever-growing number
of "convcns" to the dieter's wa)' of
life. the qucsl for the best possible.
· healthy, tnm, body bcauuful has
taken preadence over the search for
1he best tasting anything. Good
enough and non-fa11cning 1s better
At the gym one day, I learned
aboul a new fast-food "calonc
bargain" at 1hc Jack-1n-ths,;.Boll
checsc-broccolt potatoes
O K. what's the catch? I asked
M> 1nfonncr smiled
"Remember the movie. 'Five: Eas)
Pieces''> A plain baked potato and
steamed broccoli 1s not on lhe co m·
putcr You have 10 order a broccolt-
chcesc potato and tell the clerk to
hold the butler and 1he cheese ..
McDonalds makes 1t easy to diet
They serve a ch1d c:cn salad and have
a d1e1 dressing to top 1t off. Even the
Diet Center and Weight Watchers
orpn1zat1ons would approve
Carl's Jr has a good low-calone
chicken salad. too. but what's even
better (according to m) dieter's
survey) 1s 1he1r barbecued chicken
sandwich -300 caloncs and ap-
proved b) the Amcncan Hean As·
wc1auon.
Cathay Newport (Newpon·\ nev.-
cs1 Chinese restaurant) 1s on the
dieters' "A " hst nght from m \tan
Included on their menu are low-fat
Pnt1lttn-approvcd sclecu on!> \.\on-
dcriul
When tt comes to ice-cream taste·
ahkcs. C\Cfl d1c1er has his or her
fa vonte ~on-fat )ogun 1!. rcad1l)
available But ha\e \'OU heard about gl\C" .
C11!>C 1s served in some stores
which serve frozen )Ogun It tastes
con\ 1nc1ng.lx enough 1cc<reamlt kc
TM
Dr. Linda
A lg azi
and bas only 8 calones per ounce
(almost a "free" food.) You can find
ll at Mucho Munchies on Paafic
Coast Highway and a1 America's
Cup on 11th Street. Encouraae your
other favonte yoaurt stores to carry
i1 too.
And JUSI in case you haven't dis-
covered 1t. Baslun-Robb1ns bas a
new creamy, caramel ice ~m bar
which is covered with chocolate (or
something that tastes like chocolate).
It's fabulous and only 150 calones.
That may sound like a lot of caloncs
to a dieter, but may be JUSI the
answer when you arc finall y
chicken-breasted oul and "need" a
treat
I "needed" a treat the other da),
and as luck would have 1t, I JUSl
happened to be passing a Baskin·
Robbins siore.
I asked for one "Inc" caramel ice
cream bar and I was handed two
bars by the Jovial bo)' behind the
counter
I looked at the young . man
qutU1cally
"We're having a special." he c.x-
pl11ned "f or o nl y nine cents Clltra.
you get two ··
Praise the markeung genius who
dreamt 1h1s up -300 caloncs for
onl}' pennie!> more than the pncc of
150'
Who could pass up such a deal"
Besides. I reasoned". I could give one
away
Fat chance' I offe red the ice cream
to a child whose mother ad-
monished her ne\Cr to take treats
from a stranger
I scarfed down one bar. and was
JUSI beglnning to lose my rcsol"c
concerning the other. when someone
who looked ltkc a strt"ct pen.on
walked b)
"I've got a gift for ~ou ·· 1 said
"No thanks·· hc said ·-rm a
dicier··
But this 1s a dieter's treat. I heard
m)~lfargu1na v.1th the scrufl)-look-
in, fellow came to my senses Oh-so-reluc-
tantly. I thre" th.at dchc1ous l\alf-
mehcd bar into the nearest trash
can You should ha\ t" been there
Patients, physicians partners in maintaining your
9y Dr. SHrRYL LM. LONG
The key to getting the most
out of your doctor's v1S1t hes in
being able to establish a panncr-
ship Wlth your phys1c1an. Your
physician's role 1s to be your
advisor. Doctors have a lot o f
111fonnatio n that can make your
life and your health better.
Physfc1ans can only prac tice
&ood medicine -and. you can
only get well -if you and your
physician have developed a good
partnership. You need to under-
stand what your illness is. and
w h at the {>Ian 1s to fet you well.
In medical schoo . physicians
are taught that your history of
bow you feel, when the illness
staned, etc.. Wlll make the
diagnosis 90 ~rcent of the tame.
M odem medicine has made im-
pressive scientific advances 1n
the detection Of illness and dis-ease. H owever. no detection
method is mon: valuable than
the symptoms and 'tlte-h~tory .of
your tlhfess that you 11ve \{>your
phys1c1an.
Your history 1s the key to your
docto r's d1agnos1s. An accurate
account o f your symptoms can
(This column deals ~1th com-
mon medical topics. and qucs-
11ons are ans\4.-ered b} medical
and dental spcC1al1S1s in the ap-
propnate field of expertise.
Please forward questions to the
Medical Plaz.a Association of
Newport Center. c/o the Health
Education Foundation. 360 San
M1sucl, Suite 206, Newport
Beach. CA 92660).
make the differcn~ between effi-
cient and effective trctment or a
prolonged eum1nat1o n and
many lab or x-ray testings that
can be unnecessarily costly and
uncomfortable.
Before you call to make an
appointment. stop for a moment
and think about why )-OU want to
see the doctor. Do you reall>-
have several different problems">
Try to be reaso nable in under-
standing that an appointment 1s
usually only ltme enough to
thoroughl>-discuss one maJOr
problem or maybe two sample
ones.
Also. o ne of those problems
you may think 1s simple ma~
tum o ut to be something tha1
your phys1c1an knows could be
mo re senous and may deserw
panicular attentio n . Thus. C\'C n
though you· d lake to get evt'r) -
th1g taken care o f at o ne v1\1t,
you'll only end up cheating your-
self out of a tho ro ugh evaluation.
or m1ss1ngon something that 1~
1mponant, 1f you try to squet"te
in mon: than one problem at a
VISlt.
Family history 1s important
Cen.arn illnesses one o f \'our
family members ma) ha' e c·ould
put )<>U at a higher risk tor that
same dlnec;s or for related ill·
nesses Take the time to contact
relall\es an ""nle do"'n "hat \OU
arc: told. Of course. m ost 1mp0n-
antl). 1s )Our 1mmed1ate fam11\
)Our parents. and siblings Loo~
pan1cularl) for an)' famtl)-h1<i-
tor) of hean disease'. high blood
pressure. cam<"r. stroke. arthn11c..
diabetes. al c oholism or
turben .. ulos1s
Talking aobut o urselve' 1c.
often hard and somet1mt''i t'H'n
embarrasc;ing At pat1en1c;, "'c
sharr this wtth our doctor-. tha1
we d on't ev<.'n tell o ur fam1I' or
o ur closest fnc:nds. omc:t1me!it.
we havrn't even s.a1d tt out loud
to ourselves
Man) of us fail to tell our
doctors what 1s reall) bothenng
us because we are emharras..cd
10 d1scusss 11 o r "'e are air.ml uf
v.-hat the d<x-tor might ..a' ) our
ph)s1c1an 1s a htghl\ 1ra1nr<I pro·
ks 1onal "'ho~ code o f rth1 l·'i
You may have to retain your retainers
9y Dr. LIS 0 . ST AltNIS .......... ~ ....
T he question today is n o t
"will I need to wear rct.ainen?"
B ut, "how Iona will I need to
wear n:taincrs?" The answer to
that juat may be "fon:ver."
Traditionally, n:tainers were
worn for two years and then
padually discontinued. How-
ever. in a larat percentqe of
paticnu the dqrec and c"tent of
t ooth movement (called
replapse) which occured af\cr
di1COntinuin1 retainer wear, wu
unacceptable. Many peticnts
treated aa tee~ are now
beiaa ueated apan. as adults,
due to relapse.
Tbe <tearee and utcnt of tooth
movement. after onhodontic
treatment and limited retention.
vana conlidtrably from patient
to patient Which patient will
experience relap1e and to what
u 1ent iA unPftelictabte. There-
fon:, in recent years the or-
thodontist has increased the time
requested for retainer wear. The
correct time for each patient is
impossible to predict.
The bria}\t side of this dilem-
ma lies in improved n:tainen: a
result of advanced tcchnolotY·
For instance the lower n:tainer
ma}' simply be a small wtre bent
to fit the 1ns1dc surfaces of the
lower incisors and bonded to the
cuspids.
lt is fi"ed in place, it is not
ivs1ble. it is easy to keep clean.
the peticnt can't lote or break it,
and It can be left on for an
indefinite penod of time. The
upper retainer can be made of
thin clear plastic-like material
which has no wires and 11 hardly
visible. Niabt wear only is
usually ptescribed.
With th11 combmation of
upper and lower retainers,
prolonaed wear by the P1tJcnt is
no t d 1mcuJt. Wearina them in-
dcfinuely 1s a small pncc to pay
for assunna that your teeth will
stay as you want them
When asked how long re-
BYmEYEAR
MAYB
tamers should b( worn. a
Justifiable an~wcr might he.
"H o w lonJ do you wan1 to kc-ep
them strataht?'
requires thal :vour medical h1s-
ton n:mains confidential To fi-
nalh be able to share )Our con-
cern \•.ith someo ne is. 1n itself.
sometimes healing.
Your ph) s1c1an 1s the o ne per-
son )OU can trust If )OU aren't
ure wu can. ask d1re-<:th 1f this
can be held 1n confidence Then
)OU ve let the ph~s1c1an ~no..-.
hov. 1mponant this 1s to you
If you have questions or prob-
lems )OU know )OU are go ing to
be embarras~d or feel foolish
taU.mg about. practice them
ahead of ume That's nght Actu-
all) sa) them o ut loud to )Our-
self. se"eral times It makes 11 a
lot easier once ,ou'\'e said the.·
words
Your s ingle s ource
for cornprehe 11:~ive
nie dic al serv ices.
The M<.•dwal Pla7.J A. soc1atmn lo<'<HE>d m "' lu
F ashion I ·land in Nt•wport Bl':lch. provides the rno ... t
comprehens1vr group of phys1rta ns . dt"ntal ~P<'<'IJI
ists a nd outpauent medical serv1C'()S 1n Southt'rn
California In one con venie nt locatio n'
Nearly 200 h<'a lth care professionals are ava1l.•hk
to mttt your ind1v1dual hralth rar r needs Phv-:
1C'lans a n·d dentists a r r availablt• 1n <'arh of tht•
fo llowing sp<>c1J llle~
...... ,.,., ...... .
756-9000
• •
I
0
ii
e
ti
d
0
' c p
I
J
I
'
ORANQmCOAaTDALV'9LOT ORANGE co~A ·~T socm~ Al Monday, Augult 27, 1990 ~ r :I: I
Debut X male models
revealed during party
8y C~ DIE JONl!'S
Diii!>' .... CorH ...... ot
Wbo says good uunas always
come in small packages? Not the
Huntinaton Harbour Cancer
Leuue.
Wednesday cvenin&. at the
bayside home of Bobbitt and Bill
Next Day Coverage
The Main Event
CaHe: MADD: Mothers
Ap.inst Drunk Driving Or-
anae County Chapter
Orpallen: Julie Newell and
Sherry Metcalf
Locatloa: MainPlace/Santa
Ana
Douttoa; $35 per person
Attire: Summer casual
Attenduce: 200
Mena: Gourmet food tasting,
cbocolllte fantasy desserts
Elltertalament: Silent and live
auction
VJ.P's: Jeanne Cooper, star of
"The Young and the Restless"
and honorary chairwoman
Sen. Marian Bergeson Party beu: It's MADD's ten
year anniversary'
OveReard: O.C'. dnving fatal-
ities arc down 26.4% the past
two years.
...
\
Williams, members were oc-
termined to prove that auction
treasures come in a variety of sizes.
"Treasures" is the theme for the
leque's 10th anniversary gala and
orpnizers want to go for it big.
hopina to reach their l ()..year one·
million-dollar goal in support of the
Orange County Cancer Society.
Explained chairwoman Sue
Madison who came up with the idea,
"Life is a treasure. The theme is just
a loaical extension of that."
After couples were treated to an
alfresco buffet they were introduced
to the fearless five chosen as the
male models for thjs year's edition
of Debut X to be held October 13 at
the Disneyland Hotel. The males
selected for their contributions to
the league were Ted Allen. Chuck
Bobic, Ted Cohen. Jim Connors and
Dale Skcrik.
The canny quintet of buccaneers
chosen to model seemed undaunted
by their upcoming walk down the
gang-way (oops, run-way!). When
asked why he qualified Connors
explained, "Six-foot-two eyes of
blue." He further suggested it would
be interesting if he could wea r a
bikini. All the more germane since
the amazing Fashion Island fashion
director, Kitty Leslie, is keeping
everything under wraps until the
actual event.
When questioned as to whether he
)
miabt purchue the mystcry outfit•
he would model, Boble pondered.
"Maybe, .. he said. ''If I can aet them
for 20 cents on the dollar." Who aot
him into this? "The lady in black,"
he attested pointina to his wife
Marilyn.
There arc perks for these fortune
huntina models. Publicity Chairman
Ellen Goodwin announoed that they
would be treated to a day of beauty
complete with a facial, manicure
and hair-do. Present leque presi·
dent and former model Phil Lupton
quipped. "Most of them need 1t!"
Auction chairwoman Marilyn
Bobic sported a bit of the auction
booty as she showed the aroup a fox
jacket from Jindo. Other items in
her treasure chest included trips,
trea.surcs in themselves, to exotic
venues on the sea like Cabo San
Lucas and Puerto Vallarta; over the
sea to Hawaii and the Virain
Islands; and even under the sea in
the Atlantis submarine.
Donors of S 1,000 or more will
receive complimentary tickets to the
event and be treated to a brunch at
the awesome Crean Estate. Tickets
to the event itself arc $125 per
person.
And what of the proverbial small
package? Each lady in attendance
will be given the opportunity to win
a pear shaped 1.07 carat diamond.
Small packages aren't so bad either!
............ _ ......
Models •r• Chudc aohle, Ted Allen, Jim Connors, D•I• Sll•rllr •nd Ted Cohen.
J•J Connors, event ch•lrwom•n Su• M8dl1on, Dl•n• Pl•m-
lno •nd Sul8n Tom•••Ho.
~ ~-~~~ ... !S..~~~
M•rll1n 8ohle,
ch81rwom•n
•uctlon
Karon •nd Merrlll Walstad •nd Ellen Goodwin. publicity Phll Lupton, league president. •nd Jiii Lupton.
chalrwom•n.
8obbltt wma.rn1, S.lly l'enton •nd
chairwomen.
Wel11. past
People In the News
Ronstadt explains \Noes of pop music
Llnda Ronstadt blames arena cor1tt'r1\ and radm
programmers for the '"awfur· \tatt• of P<'P mum
''What reall) ru111cd pop mus1t 1s the arch1tec1ure
that it's presented in ," Ronstadt told The Pittsburgh
Press 1n Sunda>'s ed1t1on!> "'An) place that's bigger than
11 ,000 1., JU'it not a su11ahlc: en' 1ronmcnt for mu'itc ··
Descnh1ng tht· 'iound 1n surh plau•., a\ .. .,~imm)
and boom) ... shl' o;a1d. "I hatt• pla)ing in them . and I
will never be 1n iln aud1rnce at one of them ··
Of the currl'nt music seem·. the s1nger·'\ongwnter
said. '"lt"s awful .. ' >nc reason '"tht.' corpnralt' approach
to radio programming ··
'"If you're a mus1uan and \OU tome frnrn Mcmph1.,
or Nashville or New Orleans, areas that have o;ome of
th e nchest musical hentage an 1he tountr> )OU ha~c to
go to Los Angeles 1n order to do 11," Ronstadt said
Twenty-five vears ago. regional ~ounds like
Mem phis rhythm-and-blues and Molll'-"n tound na·
t1onal niches. according to Ronstadt
Ronstadt's ne)(l pop album prnhahh wall include
some New Orleans tunes h' Allan Touualnt or Irma
Tbomaa, she said Her most· rctcnt alhum •~ ··c " L1k('
a Ra instorm. Ho""I l 1kl' the Wind ·: ·
Singer upstages natfonar anthem
Pop singer-songwntcr Sloead O'Connor has sung her
last note at the Garden ~tate .\ns (enter 1n Holmdel.
N.J
O'Connor kn own for the hit single "Sothing
Compares ~ L... and her extremely shon haircut.
threatened Fnday t0 ""alk out on a 9.000-mcmber
audience 1f thr .\mencan national anthem was played
at her concen. ()"(•1Jnnor is lnsh
Backstage stall relented out of tear tha1 a las1-
minute cancellation would cause a commotion, said
Deula 1J1101lla, a o;pokesman for the Ne"' Jcrse}
Highway Authont~ which operates the center She gave
no reason for the request, lngogl1a said an aturda)'s
ed1t1ons of Thl' Star-Ledger of Newark.
But Georae Zllocd1l, the authonty's acting ex-
l'cut1vl' director, ga ve his reasons for banning O'Connor
from appearing at the concert hall.
"No performer who does not agree to have the
nattonal anthem played will be allowed to perform."
Z1locch1 said.
Efforts to reach O'Connor's spokeswoman. Elalnt
Schock of Pelham, N. Y .. were not 1mmed1ately success-
ful Sunday. There was no telephone hst1ng under
Schock's name there.
Olymplan pushes gun leglslatlon
Former Olympic women's marathon champion
Joan Benoit Samael1on is supporting a campaign in
Mame aimed at keeping guns locked away from kids.
"Having young children around the house. I see
them getting into everything." said Samuelson. "ft
drives It home that guns need to be stored properly and
beyond the reach of kids.··
A proposed referendum would ask whether adults
should be held responsible 1f children under 16 gain
unsupervised access to firearms. Such a law would
require that guns be stored in locked boJtes or protected
by tngger locks. Maximum penalties would be S 1.000
in fines and a year in ~ail.
Portland Pohce Chief Mlclaael Chitwood began the
campaign after the Maine Legislature rejected a bill to
keep suns OUI of the hands of children. He Cited the fatal
shooungs of eight children within a year and a half.
The gun-safety campaign 1s seeking 50.000 signa-
tures on pet1uons to put the question on the November
1991 ballot. So far, about 10,000 signatures have been
collected. said Chitwood.
The Sportsman's Alliance of Maine 1s opposing the
measure and says that gun-safet y programs are more
effecttve than laws in protecting people .
-By fje A11ocl•IH Pre11
59 and Holdlng
Aging bodies sub-divided
into many medical tracts
Think of the human body as a
very expensive real estate tract -
more costly than downtown Man-
hattan or Tokyo. Because this
small parcel of land is measured
in inches rather than feet (except
the bowels), the body has been
sutH:11v1ded many times.
Each section belongs to a dif-
ferent real estate specialist. Their
professional title frequently ends
1n ologJst -which 1s Greek for
expensive. Specialists bear little
resemblance to the old fashioned
family practitioner whose territory
included the entire human
anatomy -before land prices
soared.
The number of oloaists 1.,t takes
to manage a small parcel of land,
mostly water and only as big as a
beach towel, 1s mind bogling.
Every area north and south, and
east and west of the bellybutton is
covered by a different authority.
Each speaks a separate language
and has multiple diplomas hang-
ina on the wall.
Call 1t medical ethics. but a
kneccap-ologist would never infr-
inae on the domain of a bellybut-
ton-0loaist. By the same token, a
thumb-ologist with an exclusive
practice in thumbs, would send a
Nancy
Mcintyre
patient with a broken index finger
to a second digit man. Even the
~t and ten brain are divided, so
it s best to know what side you
think on before choosing a
cranium specialist.
Anatomical monopolies, like
the eye-ear-nose-and-throat. were
broken up about the same time as
the anti-trust action against
AT&T. Any day now the
p strointestinal tract, the last large
remaininf block C1f bodily real
estate. wi I be sutH:iivided. It's the
kind of. property that could sup-
port a dozen or more oloaists.
Deina located in the hiah-rent
business center of the body where
all the action is, it's far more
profitable than the feet. which are
out in the boonies. The
gastrointestinal tract has a subway
system or underground railroad 1f
you wilJ, that enhances its value to
specialists since it needs constant
servicing.
After fifty, when our real estate
starts depreciating, it's not un-
common to acquire two or three
oloaists a year. I have spec1ahsts
for parts of my anatomy I never
knew existed -like my tail bone.
I've always blithely assumed that
my ancestors lost theirs millions
of years ago. But my tail bone
authonty tells me that mine
doesn't comform to the evolution-
ary norm. It sticks out instead of
in. My tail isn't long enough to
waa. but it's uncomfortable when
I have to sit for any length of time
-which puts me out on a hmb.
What I need 1s a paleontologist.
Oh for the days before sut>-
division when yo u didn't have to
10 to an expert for every ache and
pain. I yearn for the one-stop
doctor who listened to your chest,
peered down Jour throat. checked
your eyes. an tested your reflexes
-with only one medical degree.
NUH:T Mdatyre I• • re•ldeot of
Lapa Nlpel.
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Column reassures well-meaning parent
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E41r.r'• HN: Au LluHlen I• o•
tr•c•d•. Th lollorrl.a6 I• Me of lier
latr0rlN col••••·
DEAR ANN LANDERS: In 1976
r.ou printed a beautiful response to
'Meant Well Parents" -parents
who had "worked hard to achieve
th~ American dream. loved their
k1ds, and tried to ai ve them the best
world ever," yet who were sufferina
from guilt over their "maladjusted.
disoriented" children.
Ann, J can't tell you how many
times 1 have been comforted by your
kind, reassuring words. Just the
other day, ancr an emotional: aujJt.
laden talk with my own malaajusted
child, I turned to my treasured copy
for solace. You can 1mllfne my 111ef
af\er ditcoverina that my copy had
been left in the pocket of my shin.
which had just been thrown into the
wash. All that is left are bits and
pieces.
Piate, Aftn, run another co~y u soon as possible. I depend on 1t for
rcasaurance and strcnath.
-Another Parent Who Meant Well
Deer 11 .. t Well: Te ,_ 8M die ............. ,.,.. ..... .,. ............ " ....... ,..
Mft .._,. .. ,_, o111Mr-. I •1 ............. ,.........v ..
.......... ,..~wtdldle .....
Ann
Landers '-----"-
et ltaM -lM~. elay '"" ... wen.. Ne .. bewt wlay tome dl.Nne ,,,. .. , .. .,_ e'8mpl•a la
..... .. ,....... WM ,,. ... t4
,,..elM• Uttle emeu..J MUtd-••t. w'6k e&Mr kWa -len~l wu ......... ,., aU'lan4, wttl au
... ee-aW M•utapt -tan "' ......... t ..................
T lta•• eeme .. MIMve • die r:faeterdlatltu.._....,. ... , ..................... " "• ....,.,..,..,. ... ,. .... ...
lf die ..,. ... ,,, ... la fnlile, It
~ ..................... . ,....eu....,.1e.C........,..._
... an .... MtltWI.,..., CM ..............................
::::~-:. •.:.11-:e=r : =
... .,...,. "' ... lln .........
.. Uer cu mae ateel acr.1.
AM let •• •t enra.. peraoul :u.Wty. I am aid •f ~I ,. "••H dletr r.n.ta for ............. ., uv... .., ...... au •rta er ,_.leepl eu _. •
llAlleH1a1Ma..-1 .... 18Mcom·
f!!ltl" w.w.1 ... ..W.C. of *'11 ;r••••--" all _,.... me -u4 JM '-' deeelJ, JM wtU '" It, .... p.,. ....... .,. ............ .
dten an .,.. ...... eaten whit ....... ,.rHMeJ,...., ... waldq
........ ,.., ....... ilalt ... ~
,,.., ... ._.. ~ dten an
..... llle9Jtl tu.Jet. leU·•elf .,.... ... ,. ......... 1 .. -...
tlt•J are frH: Alultellea
AMeJ...,, G ... len .u.,_...,
"T~ IK. TIM Utt ......... . ........ v ........... . •w tUe tan .... ,. .......... .
• ~l. ,,.. ,.,. ............ -•1 .., kWI II • dlid ,.. -eet .. wtdl ......... ..,.. .... ,.,,... ..... = ........... ... ... tl•llNeMcrMtel ............ tJo:--··· ... ......... , .................. .................
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My •thcr and I have ditreftnt ideal
about boy-sirt ~lltionsbipe.
I
I believe 1t 1s perfectly OK for a r·r1 to call up a guy and ask him out.
believe this is very flattering and
makes him feel good about himKlf.
My father thinks differently. What
do you think?
-Wonderina In New York
Dear Woe4erta1: nere'1 H"1DI wnq wlQi a atrl ca11Ja1 a py &Mte
.. ,.. It nn Mata •taJlaa ltome.
Next Day Coverage
E .. •t: Hawaiian paradise
be&h
Leeadea! Harbor Club Ca•w. Fun
()rpalaen: Joan and Dick
St.evens and club aovernon
with Melinda Dixon
AntMluc:e: 7S
M•c Routed pia. srilled
swordfish, wild ri~ and other
island soeci&Jtiet lta..,....•t: Manu Alohl
bend and Aurora Napua IY!wa
and dancen
~ T~ah Neubo
doina the hula °""'9N: .. The mutic. the
ldt end the bftae mm me
want to ID beck to Hawaii."
•
ORANGE COAST llllJ Pilat
An Independent Newspaper
Publ1,h1Ml bv Pogo G1oup Publ1\h1ng, Inc
Ro.,_,, IE. ,age , pres1don1 & chief &Aecuttve ollocer
Wllliom S. Lobdell, 9(11101 & vice pre\•Oent
Steve Mafble, rnonog1n9 ednor
Sta n Wyman, n1gh1 edito r
Don J:enley, l'ld•tOnol page editor
R09er lloom, lfl<!tute\ Pd•t<><
R09er Corl .. n, 'IX>"' •'<l • 1
Carol Humphfeyt, '"' ,,, , ,, t 10•
Elliot Stein, Jr., 1. J·'" 11
Gerald w. Adcox, Jr., 1• ""l n ,, •JQf•I
Waltef Burrough•. 1901-1989. I •' I flQ l ~t o\t ....
Editor/al
Groups like
MADD still have
lots of work to do
M ADD members arc justifiably enjoying the sweet
taste of victory this week. It makes little difference
that Mothers Against Drunk Drivers does not
deserve all the credit for the dramatic decreases in drunken
driver deaths and arrests last week. They're getting the
credit because MADD has been the standard bearer in the
war against drunken drivers for a decade. The organization
has earned all the praise it's getting.
The reason for the rcjo1c1ng is a Nauonal Highway
Traffic Safety Administration report that proves what
MADD has been preaching for 10 years.
That message is: The terrible toll caused by drunken
drivers can be reduced with tougher laws that are enforced
and a constant campai_gn to increase public awareness about
the senseless pain, suffering and deaths caused by drunken
drivers.
During the seven-years covered by the report, the
number of drunken driving arrests increased from I m11lio n
to 1.8 million. At the same time. deaths of drunken dnvers
decreased from 13.1 I 0 to I 0.103.
The figures arc proof that the efforts of groups hkc
MADD arc having an effect. But it's only a beginning.
Alcohol-related traffic wrecks are still a leading cause
o f deaths of teen-agers. The price tag, in medical costs and
property damage, is millions upon millions of dollars every
year.
MADD members know this too well. Their organ1 za-
t1on was born out of the pain. suffenng and senseless loss
caused by drunken dnvers. They won't rest on the laurels
too long. But a brief respite is warranted.
h's lime to take a few minutes to say thanks for a JOb
well done. Thanks not only to MADD but to the others who
make daily contributions to the war against drunken
drivers. Others like the Cost.a Mese Police Department.
which has one of the most effective a ntt-drunken dnver
programs in Orange County.
Let's also not forget about the school programs a nd
teen groups which fight a constant uphill battle against the
peer pressures that too often make victim s out of youths
who will do anything to be wlth the '"in crowd.''
Yes. the NHTS report 1s good news. But there's still
muc h to be done.
When Wfiting to the orang• Coo•t Doily Pilot ..
I.>" Orange Coa\I Doily P1lo1.. • 11•• "''"'~~ ,n ''" .. 1 .,..
't"'l)(jf.-t ./~,. f • I , • , ... , , ' • ·1 • • IJ J ' • rt1f1tp / JOU n 1r h A,,.,,
t,. ~·\I ' 1~ ~ l ' • • •' '' '°" t 15. l/'lt f P (' 'P j )I
j \ • ,,.. )\ Commvntfy Commentory Guest Commenlory _,, Ed1tonol
Response
h • ,,, ' • .., 1•• ••"•, •'' S t • \~1.d~\ ~ ~t•, t-•t1f tQ I t•~
I)' j ' J ( ( • ,, •• ,, J' l'
Qt , l t \\ • t I 1 •• ' w ••• • P\''' ,, J I t ,,.b ., l1\ • f' 1 t ,, fl
o•J\ • \ • '' • Orange Coou Doily Pilot
t l'i ~ J\'t' ..,.,, t t t,. i',.. ,,, '
/tr '•· " JI, '' t, t t 1 t rn \\ .,. \ t ..,. t t~ A '" •'\J '' •t ft•n ,
f'TllJ\f h t• '• q r• 1 Jf J I Jt "1 .,._ '1•t \ l t ,,.,,\ H f '•• Pti I P t,n t ,_, f '
'"""'' \Ir , 1 t ,. 1 1 ,, .. ~\ .. 1 • "•· Oronge Coast Doily Pilot, 1 Jl.
W H11v S• ( \! 1 •,1,.,n ( A Ill ,1., A"•" t n I Pih''\ tr ,~,,. f I• ,,
l/V r '••" "" ti I • • \' '1 ' qr" ' )I' j ' '' 'I ,. i 1 I , P •' It 7 I 4 6 4 '7 '1 l / I
f ·' 3 S7
Doonesbury
U)()I{ Mll\l I
KMJW '1t\'., 0
/lkfM!O.F
CY ){U' /'IHJF'7
+1[JtlT &lT
\a( 8 0
l ('/r'J'T
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Wf-0 '" r J Jr
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~
By G~rry Tru<1f'dll
.'.. •f. ~ :• ~11~rs hlST
.i.u "l,N1..• 'Hf '•'X f
•xrwf P tA 1Ffi'
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11ulif. 'r' <. -t .. ~,
.'4.'V,?fAI 8tXP>.t ...
OAlW COAST DALY MOT
MoncMy, A'9'11 l71 1llO M
Letters
Biker stereotyping unwarranted
To the Editor.
I was disappointed and outraged
that your paper would print such a
bias. insulting. s1creotype opinion as
M r. Pete Deilter's on Harle)
Davidson motorcycles and their
owners. (Aug 15. 1990. Opinion
page, "Please don't growl at Hell'\
Angels -Harley owners assemble
for 50th annual rally).
You arc welcomed to pnnt this
reader's op1n1on. as a rebuttlc and
clanficat1on for you as well as ) our
readers.
Herc arc a few things that should
be pnnted.
I Not all Harley owners arc Heirs
Anaels. and do not appreciate the
stereotyp1 ng.
2. Harleys arc the bes1-buil1 on the
road. and are made 1n the.-l l')A,
(The only motorcycle buill in the
lJSA.)
J Not all Harle) owners or 1hcir
"old ladies" are fa1. hairy and ugJ)
4 Harley owner'i got 1heir at-
titudes. beC.lu~ of people like Pete
Dcx1er and )Our paper'\ op1n1on
5 These peo ple <i> h esier
Stallone. Gal) Buse). ( It n 1 F a~l
wood, the Late Steve McQueen and
the late Eh 1s Presle) (Ju'it to men·
tao n a fe~> o~n and nde Harle\\
Are )Ou 1mpl)1ng. "the) ha'<' (at
ha11;. ugl) "old lad1es'I'· Or arr
Hell"~ 4.ngel'i 100.,
6 Calilomia Highway Patrol nde
Harleys (Hell's Angels also")
7 Harley owners can be anyone.
gray haired. little lad1C1 in their 60's
(Channel 7 ABC Home Show)
I behe'e e'er,one should think
about "Oon't Judge a book b) the
cover ·· and read 11 first' Mr Deit·
ter's opinion based on superficial
generalities. narrow-mindedne\s,
Judgemental and one-sided 1s a
fool's opinion
Thank )OU for your patience and
pnnung th" leuer \hould you decide
10
MR~ SAMANTHA OEC K
H untmgton Beach
Will Gill Net group do airports?
To the Editor
What a breath of fresh air'
In these days of shouts acro<.is the
streets. epathet·tradang matches and
obstructionism to mah a point. we
welcome the pos1t1ve thanking of tht'
Gill Net Watch Comm1ttc.-e.
What was to have been another
problem -disposal of the old
Huntington Beach pier -has been
turned 1n10 an opponunit)' b} these
lnsld~ R~port
forward-looking lol~s
We believe 1t worth m<'nt1oning
t.ha1 th<' Giii Net Watch C omm1tt<'c.-
and the c it) of Huntington Hcach
have dcmon~trated that mor<' good
1s ach1e,ed by looking for <.lP-
ponun1t1es than by looking for prob-
lem\, t han11ng ··ain·1 11 av.fol'" and
"1Nho'\ 10 blame''"
Nol o nl) d~s the (1111 \,ct "a1t h
( omm1tcc·s propo~I mak<' <.t·n~
the manner 1n "'hllh the people who
compnse the comm11ee -and their
thinkmg process -makes stupen·
dous sense 10 us'
We wonde1. would the beach en·
croachment nap be beuer resolved
through the applica11on of the tal·
en1s of the Gill "Jet Watch ( omm1t·
lt'e.,
r>o 1hey do airports''
LAWRENCE W PfTTETT
"'Jewport Beach
Bush-bashing a big.topic
on the .streets of Baghdad
BAGHDAD -Baghdad's back "
up. its target George Bush
"Bush is a bad man. a cov.bo} in
has heart," said the propnctor of an
open-stall shop amid the pan·
demonium of the ancient '\rah \Ouk
(market). "We love 4\menca "<'
hate Bush ..
Adnan Jenav1. owner of the shop.
bore an uncann) rescmblanc<" to
President Saddam Hussein Just as
he. hts four brothcn and cousins
and millions of other Iraq!\ arc
swarthy. black-mustached look·
ahkes of the Iraqi strongman. \O d o
they sttm 10 share his hatr for 1hr
Amenan prcs1den1.
U.N. sanctions. no" bolstrred
with the new Secunt) Council rcsol·
ut1on authonzina enforcement b)
mtht.ary power. 1s choking imports
But the Jenavis talk tough ··We "ill
cat the fruit of plane tree~:· l\dnan
told us.
Westerners, showana patience and
1ood temper 1n their temble dang<'r
hen:. awake each mom1na in clam·
my fear wondenna what their \!tu·
at.Jon may be 1n the next 24 hours.
The chief Amenan diplomat. J~
Wilson. shepherds his flock of somr
800-odd k.nown Americans hke a
villqc pnttl. At 4:30 Sunday mom·
1na. lie was helpin& SS wives and
childttn of U.S. diplomats from
Kuwajt load themselve and their
few n:ma1n1na po11CU1ons on trans-
pon for the Iona haul on the d~rt
to Jordan. He shows the stufT of
hero11m. Nine Amencan diplomats
remain here with b1m, alona wtth
some SO U. officials from the
embauy an Kuwait (now run b a
akekton staff of 10)
Adnaft Jenav1 dOtt not concern
tum telf with the Amcncans' fear of
impend1na doom (1uffioent to have
ca"9ed some U S. reponcn to de·
dine visas to come h~). Hts sent•·
men u aprina from a diff'm-nt
aourcr. ttitntrMnt and fury a1
Ocors Bulh. ... Yle are not Pina ma... the
Rowland
Evans
propnctor of an ad101n1ng stall told
us .. ddam 1s not oneaa \\ e
tea h Bush aood mannrn "
In the forlorn cafctena ol thr
super-deluxe heraton Hotel sup-
plies arT runn1na low The onh
o\mencans here are a five-man cont·
1naen1 from CNN Then: arc Bnt1sh
and Swiss ctlltcM. man) F1hp1no
k.Jtchen workers and waaten and a
spnnkhna of other non-Iraqis
A sad-fact'd Filipino who wants
out told us. "Wr wtll ht' the last
pnont) Maybt' two mo nths. ma)'he
two years "
But even hen: wherT lr11q1s have
prospered from nch ._mcncan
auests, the mood amona tho~ who
obey Sad<bm Husicin as an,er at
Georac Bush "He will kill 1.000 of
us ... whispered an Iraq a watter "We
do not cry Wt wtll kill 10 of vou
You will cry "
Whtte flour 11 runn1na out in the
heraton So arc SWttlS. fruit JUICe\,
mcais. some ~n vqttabl" and
carrots Pnces ~rocketina upward The lepl CAChl rate for the 11'1QI
dtnar has rcach S3 30 -a rcvenal
of the dollar's true value of thrtt dina~. With ns1na tnOatton a bottle
of m1ddhn1 French wine. Lona·
champs ~. that 11 onad at 44
d1nal'\. cosu S l 4.S 20 We l)ll1d
Satui ntaht. a powtr \honqe
cut off h ts and 11r cond1uon1na at
4 a.m. owcr was mtortd at S JO
1..m .• but tt wH a foreta"c of what
" to come as U N ,,.n t1ons s»Mh
Rob~n
Novak
lllJll\.1
Will the piano Wltt tt&htenina
tround Iraq's neck compel Saddam
Hussein to Cl) "uncle"" What
shards of ev1dcn~ there are suaest
the answer ml\ be -"no ..
"Sanctions.'' ·said an official in the
1nformat1on ministry. "wtll start bit·
ma. but lhe)' will bile )OU before
us ...
Just emef"llnl from 1u nine-year
war with Iran. I~ may find the
answer to the sanctions weapon in
the will of its peo ple. however llat\t
the piano wtre An Amene.tn rc-
poner walk.ma the strcc1s and no11na
around aovemment departments
can act o nly the barcst facts. not
nearly enou&h (or '°lid conclusions
But top W estem diplo mats s.a
that in confront1na Geot)t Bu h,
Saddam Hus~1n has "total poht1cal
control'· -as of today And the
monument to lraq1 soldiers on
Moust1n~a Square suaetl' a
to uahness that matches "rtCl
rhctonc It sho'WJ an Iraqi 10ld1er
W\th hl'i arms tied 10 two Iranian
JCCP5 dn"1n1 awa) from each othef
The soldier as nPP'd 1n two
"If Iraq will never foract thts," the
de npuve lef'nd SI)'\. "tt wtll sue·
ettd 1n fac1na even .,attr daf\llCT ..
That s~u a fonmadc Prntdcnt
Bush must not aanore as he punues
h1' htah purpc>K ........... -',....., Nnet .,. ,,.,., •••••. oc .... , c.r...... ,_ ... or-. o..t
~ Pl#c.
Dan
Watters
Too many
loopholes
in sales tax
SACRAMENTO -Millions ol
times each day, as c.,hfomians buy
clothes, can and countless other
items, they are payina their wes.
The Ca.lJfomta sales tax. fint tin.
posed in 1933, 1s easily the state's
most universally apt>lied levy. Even
the denizens of Skid Row p1y u
they exchanac their quanen and
dimes for bottles of cheap wine.
All of those pennies add ue,. Each
one is worth more than SJ billion a
year to st.ate and local governments,
and the tot.al take is ocarly S20
b1ll1on per year, equal to the state's
income t.ax. But with property and
income taxes limited by law. the
sales tax seems dcsttned to bear an
ever-srcatcr burden of financu~
government in Cahfomt1..
When. for instance, Califomta
Go' George DcukmCJlln and 1M
state ~stature wanted a qwck
source or revenue to pay for earth-
quake relief last year, they turned to
the sales w an the form of a Quarter-
cent temporary surcharge.
The relauvcly wide pubhc accep-
tance of the sales Wl, as well as
Cahfom1a·s hmats on property and
income tailes. contnbute to the up-
ward pressure
Not too many years ago, the com-
bined sute-local sales w was 6
cents per each SI of sales in all but
a few areas of Cahfom1a. But with
the post·Proposiuon 13 ~eeic on
revenues. the sales tax n to
climb in the mad-I 980s. Loca voters
were a!tked to approve a scnes of
sales-tax boosts to pay for transpor·
talion projects. Jails and other local
programs Seventttn of Caltfom1a'\
58 counties now impose some form
of surcharge W ith the eanhquake
le'». the sales ta>. bas reached 7 2 5
percent 1n some urban counties
Some of those loca.I sales.-tax
le' ies were rejected b) votcn, but
the overall trend has bttn upward
Pending legJslauon would expand to
all counties the n &ht to raise sal~
t.axe!t, wuh voter approval. for gen-
eral government purposes.. H1thn10.
onl)' a few small counties had tlat
n&ht.
There's another facet to the sales..
tax p icture It has become so 1mpon·
ant 10 cit)' and county governments
as a pos1-Propos1uon 13 revenue
source that ma1or development dr-
c1s1o ns now are ofkn made on the
basis of captunng m ore taxabk
sales. a process that carries the
quaint title "fiscahzataon of land
use " It makes for some veT) bad
land-use planning dcc1Stons.
The expansion of sales tax n1e~ an
the face of cold IOJ.IC and classic
t.a:c.auon theory. neither of whu.h
ha' e much impact o n pohuc.al dt>·
c1s1on-malung
LosJally, 1f statr and local go' -
emments ~anted to raise more
mone) 11 wo uld make more sense tu
use thr income ta>. o r e'en propen'
t.aA. bec~usc those arc deducttble on
federal mcome:ta, !"(turns. 1Nh1lc
sales uues no longer are deducttbk
EHi) SI raised in '8les taxes co~t~
the taxpayer SI. but a dollar of
income o r propen) tax ma) cost a
t) p1cal ta.\ payer Just 7 S cents be·
cauM" of deduct1h1ltl)
Sales taxes. moreo' er. art rt'"
arcss1ve That IS, they hll all econ·
o m 1c clH~\ equal!) in terms of rate.
and the lower· and middle-income
clas~\ hardrr, becauM' more of their
incomes arr spent on goods, rather
than t'lt-1ng invested
Sales-tu exemption~ for \Ul h
nec.ess1ues as food and dru&..\ an·
supposed 10 case that social 1nequ1
l)' but the.-) arc onl) panialh \Ut
ccssful
Lobbyists for spec1al-1ntere'it
aroups. 1n the meantime. have prc,,-
urcd the Cahfom1a state Lea>slature
10 enact dozens of other sptt1fi"
sales-tax ei1cmpuons One eumple
an 1nd1v1duaJ who bu)'l an aircraft
for his personal use PIY' a ultt tu
on that purchase. but 11r11nes'
purchase of 1ethnen is ta"~xempt. a
loophole spec1fkatly sou&ht man)
ye~n aao b) au·craft manufacture"
nosin& several of thCK s.leS.-tal
loophol~s was iniually l)llt1 of the
l)llc'kqe aimed at endma this year·,
Cahfom1a state buc:tact cns1s, but
they were left open at the behest of
affected 1ndustnn.
Even poltt1c1ans who cry about
lack of aovcmmcnt revenue are re-
sponsible for punchan& loopholes tn
t he ,.les-tu system. Jobn
Vasconcellos.. the l.ll-lovtt\I clwr·
man of Lhe Cahfo mta state As-
sembly Ways and Means Commit·
tee, earned a measure 10me )U1" aso to exempt computer software
PfOl"lmS from mott iues. a bfak
that now CIOl1S the state UUl\U)
more than SSO nulJioa 1 year.
I(, I ndced, the l&kt tu lJ UM&m•
"" lft evcr..,.eater ~ o( fiaanc.. •nt 90vemment iD Calilonua. the
flnt atep ~ be to ""'"' ud =.. d.i.rniM~ IDOl1 of &bole
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72 71 72 7
M a 14
AIR
QUAUTY
0
OCEAN REPORT
BOATIG
TODAY'S SUN
Sunrise ........ 6:22 a.m.
Sunset.. ...... 7:24 p.m.
MF AND11DEr
LOCA,_ -MAN ~...... 1·2 poot ......,, ..... 1·2 poot
len a.-. 1·2 poot .... ...._ ~
1'0Do\Y f'lrM low 1;3() Lm. 2.1
~a ~IOw 3:31 Lm. 2.1 11:00 p.m. 1 5
'-"' lllgll 2: 11 p.m. 4 1 TUHDAY One Nell ... " QpecMd .. 3:42 of 4. 7
FISllNG
GM calclllS ti MM ..._ lllCMrtl. llONtl.
_... ... -,.. .... rtPOft9d
TODAY'S MOON
Moonrise..... 1 :24 p.m.
Moonset.. .... 11 : 17 p.m.
() 0 ()
l st Otr.
Aug 28
Full Moon
Sept 4
last Otr
Sept 11
New Moon
Sept 18
FRONTS:
• • • • • • • COLD WARM STA~RY
"'-u• f!1 ® (Q ~ ~ cu 0 rn g (I c:)
HtGI LOW SHOWERS RAIN T.STORMS FLURRIES. SNOW ICE SUNNY PT CU:JUOY Ct.OUOY
TRAVELER'S REPORT
STATE NATIONAL
..... ........ """'II SJ.• l'01 ......... '"' II S J& l'Ol . .... 1• M ..... n • ... "u ..,,u. • .. ...... • • ==· 1• 71 ........ U Sl ::::.-... ...... Ill " • • .... •• • n ......... .. n ..... • • ...... 11 • .... • • .... • • .,._ • II =-n • ..... " n ---t1 ,. ... • • ltl • llllll!Clt • • ~-= tl • ...... c, ti n w.. • 11 .... Ill 71 • 1' ... .. " er •• ...... • 11 L-.. .. • b II =-,. . la.a • n • S1 t1 11 :i.J .... • 71 INTERNATIONAL M'' n • .... .. a • b i• n ..... n • •• .... t1 • =--11 .. .... D. ..... .. ... n • .... • • ....... • .. • • ~c 11 • .... 1• .. , __ .... ..,..11 ..... ....... t1 .. ......,., • n .. .... " n .. _.., ... 1' • --.... .. ... City • ... ....... n .. -
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1S SI ..... 1'I • ....... • 1S .,.., 11 u " ,. ...... . ,. ..... ,. • S1 ,.,. • 1t
"Tide source: Astronomical Data Services, Colorado Springs, Colo.
HOOD
From Al
noise heard throuJh the 20.~ycar·
old sequo1as.
Camp Nelson resident and fnend
Donna Lewis wd Hood grew up 1n
the San Fernando Valley and gradu-
ated from San Jose St.ate University.
While in college, she was a member
of Delta Gamma sorority and
worked summers as a tour guide at
Disneyland, Lewis said.
Later Hood worked as a steward-
ess for Pan Amerie.tn Airlines. She
was fluent in Japanese and Spanish
and received an award for partici-
pating in 110 volunteer fli&hls to
and from Vietnam. according to
Lewis.
A typbo1d·paratypho1d shot left
her paralyzed, but she spenl years
leamina to walk again.
Prior to her purchase of Camp
Nelson Lodge, Hood also worked
several years in res1dentJal reloca-
tion.
When she and her husband, Jim,
bou&bt tbe 43 acres at Camp Nelson.
the lodae had been closed for ntne
yean. ihe grounds include the 70
year-old rock and wood lodge with a
l.at'IC dinina room. bar and coffee
$hop, a nearly century-old stor't.
l several cabins, a JO-room motel,
1wimmin1 pool, stables and I ~
year-old IJ>PIC trees.
Local fnends said the lodge was a
buae underta.k.ina for Hood but that
the resort she planned was slowly
lhapina up. Pea and Don Dorcy, who publish
the monthly newsletter, the Upper
GULF
''°"'Al
.. bol\lltS.
Uaited Nations chief Javier Pert'Z
de Cuellar will meet Thursday in
JOl'du with Iraqi Foreign Minister
Tariq Aziz "to enaqe in a full ndM• of views on the crisis," the
NCJ~-eeneral's spokeswoman. N8dJa ounes, said Sunday.
It would be the fint formal U.N.
.attempt to mediate the cnsis. which betaD when Iraqi President Saddam Jfu.ei.D tent his troops into Kuwait
Aus. 2 and annexed the country e.fta' a diapute over land and oil.
Tbe act.fon led to a trade embarao
'CH9.PPER
·'"""' lf.1 Newport Beach hat two helicop-
·1er1 that pairol rqularlyJ but. neither '1a eqw~ with an inrraRO scope.
lahred tenton monitor heat rather
tbaa lilbt. aJlowina the viewer to see
'a penoa or anim&I wit.bout liaht.
&be imaees of warm objects a.re
,1111.a.iacea. it •so .UO-. oblerven to
idellcl a car tbat bu been recentJy 'Jllll'Ud by de1«tina hat ft-om en--~ ucf tire ~on.
That would allow police hel~ .._ opemon to tee people in the
-4mt wit.bout the help of I spotJilbt.
wbicb relident1 often tee u "' in·
lnllioa Otl their privecy.
~11·11 ,.. boaut b our ability to ma en•." Ncwmu II.id. Cou.at membln ~ 111p-
1Qft.ive or the new equipment
111E BACK PAGE
Tule News, said the lodge seemed
su~ssful.
Hood brought vanous musicians
to entertain at the lodge and 1m·
poned Southern California chefs to
produce gourmet dishes for weekend
chAmpagne brunches, the Dorcys
said.
The fancy food and the fact that
she recruited her guests from
Southern California might have
bothered some of the locals, but
everyone liked the bubbly and
friendly Hood, the Doreys said.
"She was running a business and
she was bound to step on some
toes," said Don Dorcy. "She
drummed up her business from
Southern California because there
aren't enough locals up here to su~
pon 1ha1 lodge and make it a profit-
able business."
"But I never saw any s1&n she
wasn't included," said Peg Dorcy,
who noted Hood was a director o n
the local water board and a member
of the chamber of commerc.c and the
Women's Cl ub.
"She showed up everywhere."
The Dorcys said the communtty
was I ~percent behind Hood's
plans because she was "ccolOl)'-
minded" and wanted to preserve
open space.
But several locals, who declined to
be 1dent1fied. painted a different
picture.
They said Hood alienated locals
by declining the su~rt and as-
sistance the community initially of-
fered her, closing the popular bar at
odd, early hours and restricting ac-
cess to the land.
Things got really volaule around
against Iraq and a huse troop
deployment to protect neiahborina
Saudi Arabia.
Aziz said in Baabdad on Sunday
that he planned to meet with Perc-z
de Cuellar this week. but he did not
elaborate. He declined to say
whether Iraq was ~pared to com·
promise on KuwaJt's statu1.
"We arc open to ltsten to suqes-
tions:· Aziz said 1n an intemew
with CNN .
National teeurity adviser Brent
Scowcroft said Sunday in Washina-
ton that the Bu1b administration
"would have no problem•· with a
mediation effort by Pe~ de Cuellar.
purchase, scheduled for a vote at the
council's mcetina at 7 p.m. tonlaht.
"They're much better than the
scarchliahts for niaht patrol~ .. ta.id
Counclfman Phil SMti>nc, •ho sua-~ted the in(raRd equipment.
'They don't So advertilina to the
thieves that they"re beina watched.
We should have done tbjs a Iona time ....
.. Since t.bere bu been some
era ti ve financint. J plan to auppon
it,·· said Councilwoman Evelyn
Han.
"I think it'a probebly I aood idea." Councilman Don StraUll
said.
""The bdicoptm are controvenial
in eneru. but ii we're Piii IO have
&bem t.bi1 would enlaance tbeir abili·
ty IO catdl the people they're after,"
Mid CouDCilwoman Jeu Wan. -rhia ii a vaJ..able IOOt ..
July 4 when Hood wanted to clw'Je
locals for use of her lod&e arounds
for the annual mountain festival.
Hood hosted her own fair at her
lodac but many locals boycotted and
held their own festival in early
Au.ust at Pierpoint Springs, Hood's
critics said.
The critics said Camp Nelson Lod&e was mismanaged. with staff
rapiaJy dwindlina because of poor
pay, some of the open space over-
grown with weeds and some of the
buildinas in disrepair.
These locals contradicted what
others had said and contended the
lodae didn"t bring in enouah
Southern California visiton to re·
main successful.
They also questioned Hood's hir-
ina of Manuel, an American Indian
from a nearby reservation who was
convicted of stcalina a bone and of
assault.
Still, even her critics admitted to
spcndina a lot of money at the Camp
Nelson bar, which Hood renamed
the "Grizzly."
And her supporters brushed aside
the criticisms, saying locals can be
quick to judac any business person
with different ideas.
"When you have a larse invest-
ment, you hAve to try many thin_.
to sec what will work." said Lewis,
whose late husband developed the
Pierpoint Springs LodJt about a
mile down the mounta1n.
Some locals said they actually
moved to Camp Nelson per-
manently after Hood beaan UPIJ"ld-
ina the lod&e. They were hat>J>Y there
would be a neiahborbood twtaout.
"She was so happy and she had
put plans for the store, to sell
Jewelry and expand the merchan-
dise," said Gordon Adams, a 72-
year-old Wbo works at the Camp
Nelson llOfe.
"I wa1 .-ta.Llcina to her the
afternoon tieb:e (she was shot) and
everythinl WU IO aood-It WU a
terrible abock. ..
BATTLE
trrom A.1
tcmbly for puaina a meuurc laat
year that Fersuson, R·Newpon
Beach, Mid WJCt schools to use
textbooks that portray the In·
temment u a violation of human
riahts rather than a military nec:eu-
ity.
"I t'1 the fint ti.me in America that
a buncb of politiclam it tell!!»f
tcachen how to aach biatory,
Fersusoa said Sunday. 1'bat'a noc
our job. You ftliabt do tbat in
Ocnnany. Japan or Ruuia but noc
America."
Oppaeenta or feflUIOD'• raoa.
ution MY tt.ey could bave killed it in
the ~bly Rules C-ommittee 11111
TbW'ld9y ... t Allemblyman Pbil
l1e11bcq. D&crunenao, Mid it ...
better . to daouoce &be ware
before die fUll A.anbty.
.. Wbm )'OU bave aa Qalllple of
deli--aod iD•tioaaJ 1'ilDCrY
aod --you ba¥e • ~ ctoauDm• iiaat rou tDOw .ua be
priaeed .. all tbe Jaale doallDID1I ..
the Dal 50 ,..,.. 10ll OGel to tM
Dain&.._. 1CM1 •y, ~ tlll ..... ~ ... IO .. h,' li8llllq
,.....,. llid die 1919 ,....,..
COLLEGE
''°"'"' lment of about 25,000, and Golden
West, 16.000.
The Irvine Valley Collcae campus
bu existed sinoe I 979, but for iu
fi.nt six ycan acted as Saddleback
Collqe Nonh. Since then, about
half of iu buildings hAve been tem-
porary, but more recently the college
hat donned the cloak of per·
manency.
In the five yean since the Irvine
e&mJ;>US became an independent en-
tity m the Saddleback Community
College District, it has received ac-
creditation and created a master
plan. Officials hope 11 many as
25,000 students will attend the I~
acre campus annually by 2010. more
than triple the amount enrolled last
year. In the next five ycan alone,
admjnistraton expect to pour more
than $42 million into renovating lhe
school.
Collqe admini1trators arc jolcina·
Iv ca.llina the comina school year the
·'year of the hard hat."
Const.ruction of a SS. 7 milHon
student center, a $4 million J)'tll-
n.uium, accompanr.Ina shower and
locker rooms. a ch1ld<are center, a
pa.rkina lot, playina fields and the
remodelina of exrstina library and
classrooms -all a.re scheduled for
completion by fall I 992.
"This will probably be the biggesl
siqle year in terms of the number of
major construction projectJ that we
have ever had and quite possibly
will ever have in the future," said
Bob Loeffler, vice president of busi-
ness services. CoUeee officials plan lo increase
the Ubr&ry'1 stock of books by one--
third to about 30,000, double the number of study spaces to 100, and
then move into a new expandable
library buildina in the followina two
yan that wiil 1Pin increue the
book llOCk to 7S,000 or more and
be is tllti111 aim at, ACR37, sponsor-
ed by A11emblywoman Jackie
Speier. 0-Sout.bSa.n Francisco, is
revilionilt biatory. fCflUIOn, who
ta.id be learned of the molution
after beiQS alcned by memben of
the Survivon or Peart Harbor, spolc.e
apin1t it at that time.
"We thouJd not rewrite hiatory,"
F to&d the °'--Ceut Pllel on Sunday. ••'/le lhould
the fiicu and tell the truth,
WU1I ud all." Punlllermon. to t.e8Ch atudentl
that dlle iatcmmenJ of Japaneee.
Amerieam blld no military jUttift.
cat.ion ud to ay that the pri~
CU* b tbe i.ntemmeat WU niciaJ Pl= wrons. Fapson said. •a retOlution disputes
U..t --"°" becaute wanime poli'·
des Mn allO dincted at people of
Ewopeudelclat. AhllcMllli DO OM or European de-
aal ftl inW'Ded in cam.Pt, I=-: ~8'1d out tMt 50,000 J ad ClermaDI ..,. lmmedi-
..., dlpartld .. tM lllft oldw ...
A8d ..... -.. y tblt dlleft ................ la I.be
........... dlleJ=ia ilct. M laid I lf20 .. ,, lld
peopleof~deKntto ...... = .... tblt ,....... llC> ....... nldtt.
..
'
'!' ., ., . l!'1 •1 • . ..
•.
~
""' I·
) ,, '
lv
~~ ,
-f\ -.?"" -
..., "911 ,.._.,. ,._ --
lrvln• VelleJ Coll .. e'I UMpUI II .. 111"9 lhepe.
double the number of seats.
"We're also startina the design process this year of a theater build-
Ull and a lafJC classroom facility for
the humanities proaram." said locf-
Oer.
Desipis for a warehouse and
maintenance facility and a la.rae
swimmina pool have been sub-
mitted to the st.ate, he said.
Loeffler said the collcae's am-
bitious future plans were based on
patterns of arowth both at the col-
lqe and in the surroundina area.
Althou&h he said Irvine Valley Col-
• wiO continue to be known for its
h•ah-tcch prosram1, it could soon be
known for more sportina achieve-
menu.
This fall, the college also is start·
in& an intercollqjatc athletics pro-
aram, offerina men's soccer,
women's softball and both men's
and women's tennis. In the next
three lo four ycan, women's soccer,
and men's and women's cross-coun-
try, basketball, volleyball and swim-
mina will be added.
CoUcae officials do not expect to
start a football pr<>IJ'ilm because
state fundina has dried up for
stadiums.
The college is already known for
specialty coul"ICI in hospitality man-
qement, international trade. early
childhood eduation and vanous
hiah-technoloSY trades.
At for the military justification,
Fersuson's resolution reads: "The
people of California and the desia-
nated war zone areal had sood
reuon to fear an invasion attempt
after the turpritc attack on Peart
Harbor u Japanete submarines
cruised off our cout, bernp
be.1loon1 flew over our harbor area1
and put parts of the ione existed
under blackout conditJons."
Ferpson said he wu 1 Marine in
CalifOmia durina the 19409 and
.. people were ICUed half to death
bec:aute they thoutht they were aoilll to &e invaded by the Japaaeee ••
He Mid it la not ICC'W'ate to Ute
tbe term .. concentntion camp" to
dacribe the intmunent faciliues., as
they are reftned to in Spc1e(1 raol·
utiocL .. A coeceatratioD camp ia wbere
you Mel' ooliticaJ pritonen before kilf '1wm or torture them," r.:...::. aid. "I don"t know of any
AmericaD wbo bllieva we bad con·
ceaaaaioG. campa. •
°"WMdler .. Wire ~t Of not
CUD0t be dedllell DOW, be IUd. ... ,., Mrd &o 10 met ud judle."
1ut Mk:Mel lwablro, pitiidlat of
lbe Slcralneeto .... of tbc
J1P1D 111 AIDlricM Otlw i...-.
ddlipwd. "TlM kt te dwy wen
New vocational prosrams sched·
uled include laser-electro optics and
robotics.
"They're both typica.l of the kind
of vocational prosrams that we will
provide in the future," Loeffler said,
addina that Irvine Valley Collete is
one of only eiaht communjty col-
lcacs in the nation to serve u a
t.ra.inina center for IBM, which for-
med a pattnenhip with the college
for both a printed circuitry and a
computer intqrated manufactu.rina
prosram.
"They arc providina major su~
port in the way of equipment, soft-
ware, technical support and person-
nel support,.. he said.
A less alamou rous but
pstronomically important chanae at
the collqc will be the addition of a
cafeteria. Students now must sati1fy
their hunaer at a caterina truck.
The cafeteria will be par1 of the
two-story, 37,~square--foot stu-
dent center. in which an admissions
and rcaistration area, financial aid. a
career center, and a health and well-
ness center will also be housed.
"They're all scattered around the
campus now. All of the student
service facilities riaht now arc sort of
tucked into classrooms and wher·
ever you can find them," said John
Andrews. vice president of student
services. "We're really cramped." ,....,,..r. ""-P C..t c.n.p
camps with barbed wire and military
police on auard," be said.
"The fact i1 that the internment wu the P.fOduct of bytteri&, racism
and a failure of P.C?liUca.l leadenhiP.
rat.her than military nec:asity, '
lwahiro said.
Speier called Fersuson'1 mol·
ution "an aft'tont to every ethnic
minority a.nd the cultural divenity
that makes this atale so 1trona." ··n.e ultimate quest.ion raised by
the Ferpson molution is would
tbis same thins that happened in
World War II blppen apin? I be-
lieve that as a people we mutt say
the answer is no ... I am very
1tronaJy oppoeed to ACRlll, .. said
Allemblyman Cbrit Chandler. R-
Yube Caty.
"I ba ve no desire to create or
caUJe any public enmity t~
J1paoae-Americu1 whom I rapect
ud admire." F~ wrote &n a presa rdeue explai.ni111 bia raol.-
ution .
'"To tbc CODtrary, AC'Jtlll la U
au.tmpl &o avoid t.M kind of reection
tbc public may hive ii aod when
they become anre that ... .... ..
lluart baa .-lfted euct.ly hoW a
Plft of our Allllric:u bhl«y wW be
taUlllL .. ...,,.., ........... ,..
•• IJI., *9,...,..
1 " '
l1llyPllat '
ROGER CARLSON
Sports Editor
CLASSIFIED/14
COMICS/88
MONDAY. AUGUST 27, 1990 m
Tenne-see ~a~py to tie one on, 3 1-3 1
ly JON PIRGUSON
"'~II''*'
ANAHEIM -Tennelsee
Coach Johnny Majors said be con-,~ side~ aoina for the two-~int con-rr~
version on several occasions Sun-lil fl~ '
day. l . :ti ~
But he never did, and as a \ ~ I result the Volunteers ran out of ~i, -V x,1'J
time and settJed for a 31 -31 tie with ~ · f
Colorado before 33,4S8 at the in-~ · ~Y
augural Disneyland Pipkin Cassie, '-"""' "~/
the colleae football season opener at ~'\/~
Anaheim Stadium.
Colorado, which entered with the No. SAP Top
2S ranking, led for much of the aame behind the play
Mike Pritchard, who moved from wide receiver to
tailback while Eric Bienemy served a onc-pme
suspension for disciplinary reasons. Pritchard ran 20
times for 217 yards and touchdowns of SS and 78
·yards.
But Teanaeee quanetbld Andy Kelly com-
pleted r7 or 25 fbwth.qawter p111e1 for 23S yards
and three toUCHdown1 to rally the ei6btb·raoked
Volunieen from defidll of 24-10 and lT-17.
.. It looted lib we bad~ victory 1 couple of times." Colorado Colcb Bill McCartney taid. .. but we
couldn't keep them from answerina our two touch·
dQWQ advanaaae." · Wbtle Kelly bad dropped back to pess on 27 of
28 precedina plays, he cauabt Colorado off balance
when he volunteered tailback Chuck Webb for the
spotJiaht on tec0od..and-p.I with time fading. Webb
sprinted relatively untouched up the middle 4 yards
on a draw play wtth 2:2S n:mainina to pull Tennessee
within one, 31 -30.
"I was pleased with the way we came back, but
I didn't want to come back to tie," Kelly said. "It
doesn't feel aood to tie, but you can always say it was
not a loss. lf th~ wu any briaht spot, we didn't
lose."
But Majors sent place-kicker Greg Burke out for
the cx.tra point and then: woWd be no fake. Burke
split the uoriahu to evea the aeon:.
"I had oonaidercd rina for two a lot the whole
pme," M~on said. .. bid mixed reviews, and I
made that decision. I felt we were doi.na better at that
point, and if we eet the ball bac~ we have a aood
chance to aet b9ck up the field. I th1nk I made a &ood
decision and I'd do it ip.in."
placina the ball on Colol"ldo's 49 with 24 tee0nda left.
Webb ran apin for 8 yards, aenina out of boundt
with 18 seconds left, then Kelly thn:w two incomple.
tion1, the tee0nd with .even tee0oda remainina
Kelly wasn't happy to tettJe for a tie, but said,
"That's his decision. We aot the ti.ii b9ck at the end
and it turned out to be a wise choice."
Webb, wboee ineffectiveness in the tint half
forced Tennessee to look for the pus more i.n t.be
second half, rambled for 46 yards on the final drive,
includina 26 on the final play of the pme, a fourth-
and-two play which foundnim headina out ofboundt
at the I S Wlth no time n:mainina-
"h was almost a diudvan·;· Kelly said. ''He's
such a aood runner, be'1 breakina tackles and keept
101oa. I tried to tell him in the huddle to aet the fim
down and~ out of bounds. Everythina was aoillJ so
fast, I don t know if he heard me. He's a co~petltor.
He saw the end zone in his eyes. He saw dayliJht, and
he's aoina to run for it. ..
McCartney added, "I can uodcntand their
rationale. I wd when they aot the ball beck, if they
score, they'll fO for two. We bad our defense ready
for the two-point convmion. But the-way things were
aoina for them, I can understand they were counting
on aettin& the ball back and fOioC for it"
The decision looked like 1t mi&bt pay off when
Tennessee repined the ball at its 2j with 30 seconds
n:mainini. Webb ran for 13 yards on the first play
and Colorado was nauecS for .12 men o n the field.
Webb finished with a surprisina 131 yards on 27
carries. Surpri1ina because the Colorado defensive
line bandied him well in the first half when be earned
, ....... SH TIE/82J
0.-, ..... .--~ ..._ ......
It was a tantalizing
start to the 1990
college campaign
ANAHEIM -Wow. It was sup-
posed to be JUSt an appcuzer -but
what a start to the 1990 football
campaign!
And yes, it was the start -Ten-
neuec and Colorado 10 their down-
to-the-wirc 31 -31 standoff at
Anaheim Stadium 1n the inauguraJ
Disneyland P1gslon O ass1c Sunda)
afternoon.
I know, I know. you've already
been d1aestjng some forms of foot-
ball via the National Football
Leque's exh1b1t1on schedule, a clev-
erly disguised version of dressed-up
scnmmaces.
The NFL does a aood Job of
camouflaaina its scrimmages so that
it may keep a strai.aht face as 1t
aouan the public (or $30 tickets to
scrimmqcs. billed as "prcseason
pmes."
Sunday's Duel an the Sun at
Anaheim Stadium was no scnm-
maae -and what you saw was what
you JOt -a 31-31 lle which -was
lqit1mately deserved by both
squads. Neither n:aJly deserved to
lose, and cons1denna first-pme mis-
takes, neither really deserved VlC·
tory, either.
Colorado appeared to have the
better and stronacr personnel, and
certainly had the upper hand in tht
fourth quarter when Lhe Buffaloes
suraed to leads of 24-1 0 and 31 -17
Roger
Carlson
1n1 to keep from a.avu11 up the home
run, only to gi ve up sanale. after
smale. after single and finally the
RBl
The Buffaloes' secondary showed
what most teams with wishbone
offenses show. not a lot of pass
defense
Tennessee's final touchdown
march was pretty much a duplt-
cauon of its first. sbon-passina Colo-
rado into near-subm1u100 and set·
tin& itself up on the 5-yard hne wi th
second down.
The Vols had three shots for the
score. but instead of try101 another
pass they went to a draw and pass.
confused Colorado could do not.lung
to stop 1t
So now 1t came. It was 31-30 with
2:25 left
Tennesaee running back Chuck Webb tries to elude the grasp of Colorado•• Garry Howe and Chad •rown.
lfut somelhtnJ funny happened on
the way to the victory party. Facc.-d
with a gct-goma or 10-home situ-
ation. the Voluntccn bepn aoing to
the intermediate pass., agam and
apan. as Colorado played back. tr)·
What do you do? Go for two'>
Two thLnp must have crossed
TennesStt Coach Johnny Majon '
mind. First. after actuOJ off the floor
from what appeared to be certain
defeat, what a colla~ to a season 1t
could be to ao for It and mass.
, ......... CARl.SON/12t
Pritchard more than makes up for absence of Bieniemy
ly RICHARD DUNN
l).ify ,_ ~ w-
ANAHEIM -Mike Pritchard wasn't about to
let this opportunity act away.
Eric Bieniemy, Colorado's star tailback and
Hcisman Trophy candidate, was serving a one-11me
suspension because of an altercation at his parents'
home in July.
Pritchard. once a halfback and recruited as a
tailback for Colorado's wishbone offense. is now a
senior wide receiver in the Buffaloes' I-bone forma-
tion. He catches most of quarterback Oarian
Hapn's passes, Jivina Colorado -one aame away
from winmna the national titJe a year aao -a
balanced d imension.
Sunday's inauaural Disneyland Pipkin O assic
became a one-time showcase for Pritchardi who will
return to full-time pus-catcbina and cave the
winaback position to Bieniemy.
"One of the n:asons why we didn't throw the
ball better today is becaute we didn't have Pritchard
out thtn: (at wide receiver)," Colorado Coach Bill
McCartney said. "With Bieniemy in there. we can
feature Pritchard catchina the ball more."
With touchdown nin1of78 and SS yards -the
former comina from Haaan's !~yard pitch in the
fourth quarter to ,;ve Colorado a 31-17 lead -the
Buffaloes didn't need much throwina.
Eventually, Tenneuee quarterback Andy Kelly
Hartley
impressive
again, 2-1
..., ,.._ ,.._ ~ ._,. .........
LOS ANGELES -Mike Hartley
is quickly becoming an important
pan of the Los Angeles Dodgers.
HartJey, a con-
verted reliever
makina his third
start of the l}J~· season, stoppc.-d
the New York
Mets fo r the sec-
ond time in two
weeks and led Los Angeles to a 2-1
victory Sunday at Dodger Stadium.
Hartley (5-1) allowed three h11s an
six-plus innings, struck out five and
walked two.
,..._ ... lff OOOGlllS/8Jt
INSIDE
• CMauHt wtnl Wortd
s.tet of Goff by 12 /llJ.
........... M'L .....
.... In pNMlllOft/aJ.
•An11W'Gr8he ...... ............ _/U.
.,_..I• Oalty Piiot's
SPOKrSIJNB
1-900-446-7171
' '1(1 .. l ~A"ll\Ull l'lllr\
lA T1 llllf "'"""'"'I '4\ 241ti" I" ,..._
High-stepper
ldl1on
Htgh•1 ....
Schus-
erldl la ne
heM
brouaht his troops back to tie the pme, 3 1-31,
before 33,458 fans at Anaheim Stadium as nobody
came out a winner. That is, unless you include
Pritchard, the MVP of the pme for fift1Hankcd
Colorado (Q.-0.1 ).
"That's tbc way our offensive bne is. We play
smash football and make bi& holes.••
It was the tint time the Tennesaee defense
allowed a runner to 10 over 200 yards since
Alabama's Bobby Humphrey did it on Oct 18,
1988. "Pritchard will ao t.ck to wide receiver now
and he'll play then: the rest of the season,'' wd
McCanney, who was disappointed with the out·
come. "(Bienjemy) will aiet a lot of the carries -
he"s one of the arcat becks in the country."
lb.ink Pritcba.rd wanta to stay in McCanney'1
beck.fie&d? Think apin ... I like wide reoeiver better,''
be said.
O n 20 carries. Pritchant filled in with a m~
217 yards and two toucbdowna.. "Our offensive line
deserves all the crtdi'7" Pritchant said. "When you
have holes like that, it's easy to nin the ball. And
with Darian Hapn, nobody makes pitches like that.
Pri1Cbard ICOl"Cd his SS-yarder fora 17-10 lead
4: 11 anto the thild qu.aner. fie went up the middle
on a traJ> play and outran Voluntcen comert.ck
Aoyd Miley to the comer of the end zone. "It was
a nac:e play up the middle," he said.
,,.. ... lff Nl'TCHAltO/a2t
1 Hell Week' dead?
Not in water polo
The time-honort'd trad1t1on of
"Hell Week" may no longl'r appl) 10
football, whert the once.--I l\..da,
penod of prt-pad two-a-da) work-
outs has been pared to thrtt days of
m inimal antenS1ty But there rt'-
maans o ne fall spon Lhat ~ets Its
athletes' stomachs chumana as tart)
as late July.
Water polo, which requires a
arcater level of fitness than football.
has m11ntaaned its hellish prcscason
practice rqimen.
While 10me Oranae Coa~t aroi
coaches have de-emphasized tht
aruehna cond111onana pind and
opted for more slolls-onented prac-
tJcc formats. the m-.,onty of the
local to11che1 still advocate "no
pain. no pin."
Fount.am Valley Htfh assistant
coach Ray Bray. entenna his 22nd
~ W1th the Barons (several as
C011ch) and his 2'7th year
C01Ch1na the sport, sa1d his team's
workout1 vary httJc from thotc he
au1dcd decades aao .
"We 1llll fttl tnat condiuon1na as
an important part of our sport, and
two-a-dar,s arc a tJme to set players
an shape,· Bra)' 111d. "I don t feel
the workouu arc trcmendo uslr
p-ueh1'1-but theY, art chalte"'11\I
and the ptayen hlcc to c.all 1t Hell
Week."
Sataruc or taentlfK? H~'s the
daily dosaec You decide.
"Our monuna workouts art from
6-8 a.m. and they involve about
J,000.S,000 yards oflwimm1na. a
half hour of am>btca and calitthm·
ucs, and a half hour of ~t
trlJDll\I." Bf'ly oplained. ~
they'll co~ back for two more
f'Rt r~
Barry
Faulkner
hours ID the af\emoon tO 10 over
tC(hnaque, pme s1tuat1ons and van ·
ous skill development.··
Estaneta's John C.arpcntcr, enter·
1na has 12tfi)'canuhe helm of the Eaalcs. said his workouu have ck--
chned in 10tens1t)' over the yun.
But he admitted, has philosophy 11 10
thC' m1nontr,.
"I don't hkc to make the first
week overbeanna." Carpenter 111d.
"I hlte to build up sl~t·" Corona dcl Mar C John
Va.rps, who rt'ma1ns active as a
player on the.-U.S. national team,
sades Wlth C'arpent.er on t.be i11uc.
"11\avc my own views oo con-
dJt1on1na and 1 never tboulbt it
should be somcth1na uted to bmat
the playmdown " Varp11aid ... Al
a playcrJ. l don't hke wtMn the lboc:k
factor 01 beery initial workouu does
to the body. I hkc to concen1t1te oe
water polo."
0
Ocean VtCW: ii still widMNt
a vanity watc.r coecb. ud coneequently thout 1 ._ M-.
Pftlt.9' lime. AIMltic Director 11m H 1 nit --====,..
11
• •
I •
it . • II
d
0
..
J
OIUJI II COAIT DALY PLOT
-.... ~27,1990
T-ennessee's Kelly
saves beSt for last
ANAHEIM -Two d istinctly dif· f~t quarterbacks proved equally
efl'ectivc at what they do best on
Swwlay at the season-openina Dis-
neyland Pip.kln Classic.
Tennessee's junior quarterback
Andy Kelly demonstrated why he
may well become one of the premier
pu1en in the nation thJS season .
Colorado's junior quarterback
Darian Hapn, who cmclJed a year
qo as one of the best opuon quar-
terbecks in the country in leading
Colorado to an 11 -1 record, befud-
dled the Volunteers' defense in the
tint half and paved the way for
explosive Mike Pritchard, who was
makina a cameo appearance at wing
back.
While Tennessee runnina back
Chuck Webb was the focal point of
the Volunteers' offense. Kelly did
his best impersonation of Rock).
answcnna the bell for the final
round undaunted, saving his best for
last in a brilliant passing display
despite three quancrs offrustrataon.
In the final 91h minutes as Ten-
nessee rallied for 21 points and a
31-31 tic with Colorado, Kelly com·
pleted 17 of25 passes for 235 yards
and two touchdowns, beginning the
session with passes of22 of the first
24 plays.
His overall numbers. 33 of 55 for
368 yards, would ha'e been better 1f
not for several dropped passes.
When Colorado hemmed Webb in
for 44 yards on 13 fir'it-half camcs.
Tennessee emphasized the passing
game more in the second half
"This young man showed a IOI of
the right stuff today," said Ten-
nessee Coach Johnny MaJors. who
called K(lly's fourth quaner "ex.t·el·
lent.
"He had some taming difficult}
and threw off balance a few tames
which put us an the hofe early. but
I think he was temfic. A person
could have lost confidence. We had
three big dropped passes 1n the third
and founh quaners. He couldn't
have c:ome back without so~ guts
and confidence."
Hqan was less impressive on the
sur&Qe. As brilliant as he was on the
ground. Hapo was equally inept in
the air. His ~ssina performance was
bands down the wont of his career.
completing 5 of 19 passes with three
interceptions. He not only threw
intcrccpt.aons into coverage; there
weren't any fncndly jersics close to
the ball.
But one can't discount his overall
effect on the outcome of Sun~y·s
pmc. While 17 camcs for 79 yards •
1s not earth-shattcnna. he operated
the Buffaloes' I-bone offense master-
fully.
It may have been the one-game
wonder Pritchard who put up the
biaacst numbers, but it was Hagan
who set ham up. Pntchard, moved
from wide receiver to wrng back
during the one-game suspension of
starter Eric Baenem). ran 20 tames
for 217 yards and two touchdowns.
In the first half, Tennessee's de-
fensive front four hned up cloSt'
together against Colorado's of-
fensive lane. Hagan ran the option to
perfection and as linebackers and
comerbacks ke)cd on the pitchout
man. Hagan 'consistently turned the
ball upfield and there was little
suppon on the inside. Hagan's ex.·
pertisc led to an 1mprcss1vc dmc, a
I 9·play, 97-)arder that used 9:33 off
the clock.
Tennessee emerged for the second
half with its defensive linemen
ut1hzang wider splits and the Volun·
leers demonstrated solid contain-
ment on the outside. But with the
inside linebackers and linemen leav-
ing a large gap in tht" middle 1n an
cfTon to ha ndle Hagan's rollouts.
Pntchard glided through a gaping
hole in the m1ddlt' for a 55·yllrd
touchdo""n
Later, Hagan drew the whole Ten·
ncsscc defense to him at the
hash marks before p1tchan' about 15-
yards s1dcwa)s to a streaking
Last week I mentioned the Mercedes-Benz
Gelandenwagen. or G-wagen. as a potential add1t1on to the
upscale sport1ut1llty market now dominated by the British
Range Rover
The current G-wagen. a n extremely rugged but very
utihtarian looking device. has been given more power and
luxury appointments for the Europeans. but now 1t seems
certain that Mercedes-Benz won't export the G·wagen to our
shores until 1995
The German company 1s waiting until the G-wagen is
completely redesigned and modernized before exporting the
expensive four-wheel-drive to the United States If you 1us1
have to have a Merc edes-Benz 1eep. you're going to have to
wait a while
Word on G M s ultra-futur1st1c looking Impact electric
car 1s that production will began as soon as 1993 for use in
Cahfornaa fleets The first year produc tion will see 1ust 2 ,000
cars (tiny by Detroit standards)
If a ll goes well with the battery·powered car. output
cou ld rise to 100 000 units annually To calm consumer fears
of expensive battery replacement. General Motors 1s said to
be including replacement b.at!er~es as part of the warranty
The Ford Motor Company has decided to s weeten the
deal on its recently introduced 1991 Ford Escort and
Mercury Tracer compacts
Until Sept 3 the totally redesigned small cars wall be
available with 4 8 annual percentage rate loans ranging fr om
12 to 48 m onths If you want to trim your payment down even
more, f ord is offering 10 9 annual percentage rate loans with
49 to 60-month contracts as well
If you find French cars appealing, and ha11e considered
purchasing one. now could well be the best 11me Peuge ot
is bringing in tts entire line of 1991 sedans and wagons at
1989 prices
In many cases, the cars have even more equipment than
their comparable ·a9 models. and yet the price has stayed
the same For instance in 1989, the 405-S sedan sold for
$17, 700, and for 1991 the car now comes with leather
Interior and anti-lock brakes (both very expensive options)
and yet the p rice has not risen.
The same holds true for the 405-DL and the 405-Mi 16
and 505 wagon All have retained their 1989 prices and some
models also have more features.
What's In a name? When It comes to automotive names.
the well-known and long-ltved ones have a value all their
own.
If you hear the name Corvette, Lincoln Continental or
Oldsmobile 98, you know exactly what kind o f car to expect
And there as a reason for th is. The names that-have the
strongest images have also been around tor the longest
time. In the United S tates . the oldest nameplates In continu-
ous use ar the most easily recognizable.
Top honors for longevity goes to C hrysler New Yorker,
which has been use d continuously since 1938, next comes
Oldsmobile 98 since 1941. A third-piece tie for o ldest
nameplate goes to Oldsmobile 88 and Cadillac OeVllle, both
started In 1949.
Fifth place also Is a tie between Chevrolet Corvette and
Cadlllac Eldorado from 1953, and the Ford Thunderbird first
took Its name In 1955. The Lincoln Continental nameplate
hat been used since 1956, and the Pontiac Bonneville has
been around since 1958. Last on t he llst of oldest nameplate
In continuous use Is the Buick LeSabre. which began In 1959.
• • •
After several years of disappointing sales In the United
S tates, Porsche 11 making a comeback. Bolstered by the
euecess of the redesigned 911 C arrera 2 and 91 Carrera 4.
Porsche Is now going to Increase the appeal o f Its 944 llne
by o ffering the car with a raclng·derlved Tlptronlc automatic
transmission.
Available In the 91 1 Carrera 2 currently, the Tlptronlc
allows either fully automatic operation or clutc hless manual
ahlftlng. thl1 Innovative 1ransml11lon wlll become avallabte In
the 944 convertlble and coupe for 1992, and should make
the car a mor• au It able for wtder range of drlvera.
Jon
Ferguson
l'ritcbatd who bad jult one man to
beat on the sidelines en route to a
78-yard touchdown run in the fourth
quarter.
Afterward, Tennessee defensive
standout Darryl Hardy summed it
up, respondina to a question about
Pntchard, "l aueu our dcfenae was
more womcd about Darian H~n.
He made thm15 work out there.·
0
The ever-predictable second-
auessina of seemingly gutless
coaching was ever-present after Sun-
~y·s tie.
Johnny Majors declined to go for
the two-point conversion with 2:2S
remaining.Perhaps as questionable,
althou&h a little less so, Colorado
Coach B ill McCanney played it safe
with on fourth-and-8 at bis own 45
with the game tied and 39 seconds
left
With two highly-ranked teams
playing each other to open the
season, 11 wasn't so surprisina.
Either had too much to lose from
defeat, while both now remain un-
beaten with only a light blemish
against another major opponent
Blame the system, not the
coaches. for promoting wimpy de·
c1s1ons. r
Sull, both played not to lose.
Ma1ors said he was waiting for the
opponun1t y his team eventually re-
ceived in the final minute, although
that easily could have never arrived
with onl y o ne timeout remaining.
McCartney. who said he still felt his
team had a good shot while punting
with 39 seconds remaining. fac.ed
much higher stakes but still didn't
pla) to wan.
Don't tell me that's not the name
of the game at this level. There's
little s)mpathy 1n this comer.
Joo Ferr-NII '' u Orup Co.•t D•lly Pilot Sport• Writer.
CARLSON
From 111
coming up a loser after the big effon.
Secondly, if you go for two and 11 •
misses, Colorado's only thoughts arc
to simply hold on to the ball and run
too much time off the clock.
But 1fyou go for the uc and
indeed tie 11. you've forced Colorado
to do something crazy. like maybe
put the ball an the air. which the
Buffaloes had already proven they
could not do. Maybe ifthert is less
than 60 seconds left ll calls for
another way of think.mg.
So MaJo~ went for the tic, and a:.
11 turned o ut, that's how 11 turned
out. f or a neutral observer, it could
not have finished better.
As for a Play of the Game -well,
tht're were a lot of touchdowns, but
Tennessee's third-and-plenty p1clcup
for a first down when down by two
touchdowns in the founh quancr
certatnl) made It clear it had an
offe nse to be dealt with.
Quancrback Andy Kelly hooked
up with Alvan Harper fo r the 13-
yard pickup and it ignited a quick
TD march So many times this is the
sequence -it's that gritty now-or·
forget 11 third down play that gets
lost 1n the big picture. but w11hou1 11.
you might vcr)' well have been able
to forget It
Maybe that's what caused Colo-
rado to back off so much down the
stretch
Ro1er C•r/100 J1 Ille Oraa1e Coa1t
D•J/y Pilot'• Sport1 Edllor.
TIE
From 81
I 3 11mcs fm 44 )ards. Fifty of his
) ard\ earn(' in the final 21/1 minutes.
"I cred11 the play of our defensive
interior with the fact Webb didn't
get away," Mc( anney said. "He
found a lot of ya rds hard to c()mc br .
l credit thl'tr secondary and their
scheme for keeping us from throw-
ing better. "
Colorado quarterback Danan
Hagan threw three mterc:cpttons an
the first half, one leading to a 3-yard
TD run by Wtbb. another to a 47-
yard field goal b> Burke. Pntchard
fumbled thrct' times. but only one
was lost and Colorado's David
G ibbs blocked an cnsuina 41 -yard
field aoal attempt by Burke.
But when the Buffaloes weren't
tumina the ball over, Hapn ran the
l·bone offense efficiently. Fullback
George Hemingway capped a 19-
play, 97·yard, 91h-minutc touch·
down dn vc w1th a I-yard run to tic
the game at 7
0
"°SICIN CLASSK
c.1erMe Jl, T ........ JI
SC...11r¥~
COIOfaCIO 0 10 1 It-JI
T-.Mt 1 J 0 '1-JI
T-Weoe> ) '"" l8urkt klel\I COlo-Hemmlnewe y I rlJfl (Ht!'-kl(J.I CDIO-FO Her-n
Tenn-FO lurllt •7 C~llctiefd " run (HtrNf II.la)
Coio-McCloueflen SS O\lftf retur11 (Ht'"' lllc:l\I
T--+4etMf' 1• t11M1 from I(..., (lunlt lll(ll)
C~ltdlerd 1' run (H4<-IUdll h oft P'ldl-1' Mn from I(..., t~
kldll
T•11 ,..._ •run 11"'1lt llldll
Al~J>,,.,
nAM n • nsna
J •
PRITCHARD "'°"' ., Pritdwd. wbo fumbled on Col<>-
rado'1 ftnt play of the ~me. ICOred
oo hil 78-yard run witb 7: 11 left.. ttaean. io ttouble irWde.. pitched to
Priicbatd. by blm1elf oa I.be ri&bt
tideline.
()ruee Bowl undefeated -Cftln'·
cainine national cbampionlh.ip ideal
and cUoina I ICDUtiOnal, )'et hilh·
ly-ftK>ifonal lalOD becaue of the
ll'llicdeltb ofSaJ Auncte. lhe Buffs'
quanctbeck.
.. Duiu is Mt. Maaic." Pritchard
said. ''You always want lO 11ay with
Dvian on the patch. He juat turned
and I saw it. I think be threw it more
than he pitched it becau1e it bad
aome velocity on it. When I cau,bt
the ball, 1 wanled to make su~ I
wasn't out of boundl. I jUlt saw the
defender and switched pn."
Tbey ao.t lO Notre ~ 21-6
for I.be naLiOMI tille, bul Priic:baid
-I ptetellOD AU.Bia Ejp1 choice
by I.be T7te SoortiJw News -be-lieves Colorado can-battle for the
Bieniemy became a cheerleader
on the sidelines. encouraaing
Pri\Cbard and addina a few pointers.
tille ·n in 1990 • .. w'f ~ lootif\J forward to Stan-
ford (on Sept. 6)." be aaid ... This
wuo't a loa and it wun't 1 win.
And I don't really want to d~U on
1&ati1tic1 becau1e I'm more happy to
win the pme. That's all we want to
do here.
"Eric's a pat coach on tbe side-
lines," Pritchard said. "He's the
kind of guy who wants to be on the
sidelines to help with our
enthusiasm. Eric's one of the
vcatest running backs in the coun-
try. I just stepped in today. but he's
coming back and that's my job (to
fill in)."
Pritchard, now, can also look for-
ward to reoeivioa the ball rather
than runnina with it. For a day, at
least. he made the mOfl out of it.
FAULKNER 0
lt appears the only breaks ot>.
tained by the Gubemiclc brothcn of
fountain Valley Hilb require
crutches.
From 81
The fumbles in the first half -it
was tied (I 0-10) at the intermission
-stuck in Pritchard's mind as
much as the 217 yards and two long
scorina runs.
field a team and has placed no
deadline on findina a coach.
"Obviously we don't want to Jet
into a situation where we're callma
prospective opponents a we-ck before
a scheduled pmc to tell them we
can't play, but we don't want to
Rocky G ubemick. a junior retum-i~ letterman for football coach
Mike Milner, was expected to open
the season as a startina comcrblclc.
He was also slated to see sizable
playina time at receiver bcfo~ a
broken ankle put those plans on
bold until m id-September.
"I don't thmk l played that great."
said Pritchard, who fumbled three
times, losina one. "In the first half I
made some mistakes and pve (Ten-
nessee) great field position. I don't
have any excuses or reasons (for
fumblina), it's just part of the game.
limit our possibilities of findina a
coach by scttina a deadline,"
Mcncally said. Rocky's brother Rico, a 1989
Fount.am Valley .,-aduate, almost
lost his entire senior rqular season
due to tom ankle lipmenu and a
broken fibula sustained in a li ving
room wrcs\ling accident. "You try and put it behind you,
and that's what we did. We came out
more relaxed in the second half. I
can't say it was jitters, I just didn't
secure the ball well enough. On the
kickoff (when I fumbled), I lost it in
the sun, then on the punt (when I
fumbled). I misjudged it and it bit
my shoulder pad."
The Scabawks, who normally
schedule little or no pre-lcaaue
pm«, are slated to o_pcn Sunset
Lequc competition Sept. 19 against
Fountain VaJlcy. Rico, however, returned an time
to play a key role m the the Barons'
1988 Cl F playoff run, which ended
an a Division I championship.
0
Edison Hiah's J.R. Scbustcrick of-
fered a "back to the future" pose at
the football team's recent photo ~y.
Schustcrick, cxpcc:ted to be the
featured ball earner in the Chargers'
runnina pme, r.leaded to have his
picture taken E roy "Crazy Lqs"
Hirsch style -front knee bent, hips
turned, trail leg straisht and straight
arm prominently displar,ed.
Now there's some senous rehabih-
u on motivation.
0
Amons the Manna Hi&h football
linemen 1s one Ingmar Northcott.
Barring Leif Ericsson, could there be
a more fitting name for a Viking'?
Pritchard. bc&inning this season m
28th place on the all-time Colorado
receiving yards list (508). led the
Buffaloes with 12 receptions a year
ago when the squad entered the Nostalgia lives 1n the 90s. Barry FHlber 11 •a Oru6e
C..1t o.Jly Pilot Sport. Wrltu.
Sports break
Exhibition season
can be time for
losers to shine
The NFL exh1bit1on season can ----
provide a lot of solace for perennial o
losers.
Unless they remember what hap-
pened to Dallas last season -I· IS after a 3-1
prcseason.
San Diego and Atlanta won Saturday night.
improving to 3-0. equalling the mark of the Detroit
Lions, who beat Kansas City. JS-21. Friday. The only
other unbeaten team is the New York G11nts, but
they're used to it. Not only arc they usually winners
dunna the regular season. but their exh1b1tJon mark
under Bill Parcells 1s 27-6.
The Falcons, 3· I 3 a year 910. have now equalled
their regular-season win total of 1989.
"We know tt's only the prcscason but It feels
aood to be 3-0," said Atlanta quarterback C'hn s
M11lcr, who completed 18 of 24 passes for 209 _yards.
mcluding a 54-yard touchdown pass to George
Thomas, an the Falcons' 17·14 victory over the G reen
Bay Packers. Steve Broussard. Atlanta's No. I draft
choice. ran 71 yards for a touchdown. G reen Bay is
1-2.
"We dad a lot of things wrong. we made a lot of
errors, but you've got to win on the road and we dad
that," Atlanta Coach Jerry Glanville said.
Olazabal breezes by 12
It was no contest; a rout all the way. .:}
The last linaenna doubt that Jose.
Mana Olazabal would win t::c World
Series of Golf in Akron. Ohio was dis-----
pcllcd when he started with consecutive birdies an
Sunday's final round. The 24-ycar-old S~niard won
by 12 shots. the l111cs1 victory margm an I S ycan on
the Amencan pro tour.
In other JOlf Sun~y:
•Long-hitting left-hander Phil Mickelson, 20,
added the U.S. Amateur title to his two NCAA
champ1onsh1ps. bcattng Manny Zcrman, 5 and 4, an
a grueling 36-hole final in Denver.
• Peter Persons, in his first full year on the PGA
Tour, scored his first victory. taking the $600,000
Chattanooga (Tenn.) Classic by two strokes over
Richard Zokol.
• Georac Archer took the lead on the eighth hole
of the final round and went on to beat Bruce
Crampton by two strokes m the Northwest Classic
scnion tournament in Seattle.
• Beth Daniel shot 4-under-par 68 to win the
Northpte LPGA Classic an Brookl yn Park, Mann. by
six strokes. the third victory in the last fou r tour-
naments for the LPGA's leading money winner this
season.
TELEVISION, RADIO
BllOSTERHOUS' TURN·ONS
*U.S. Open tennis, USA. 8 a .m .. 4 pm.
*NFL E~s·CofU. C~ 7. 5 p .m
I
J
IJ
'J •.
IN THE BLEACHERS
--"-'
.... ..
. ~
''"
. ,.
Vikings win on late kick
MINNEAPOLIS -Jim Galler)
atoned for missing a 2S-yard field goal 0
with 5: 14 left by hitting a 24-yardcr with
one $C'COnd to ao Sun~y as the Minne· ----
sot.a Vikings posted a 22·2 I cxhib111on ''ICtory over
the Ho uston Oilers.
The Vikings (2· I) won despite generally poor
quarterbacking by Rich Gannon. makins his first
career start. and Wade Wilson. Third·stnnger Scan
Salisbury rallied Minnesota from a 21·I2 fourth·
quarter deficit ap1nst mostly Houston reserves
Wamn Moon. wh ose practice ume was reduced
this wc-clc because of a "tired arm," woke up Hous·
ton's offense by accounting for 14 second-quarter
points as the Oilers (0-3) overcame an early 12-0
deficit.
Unser triumphs In Denver
Al Unser Jr. drove to his 1h1rd ----
straight victory Sunday, winning another ~ ~
strateg.ic battle with teammate Bobby ~
Rahal m the inaugural Denver Grand ----
Prix.
Unser. adding to his CART·PPG lndy<ar scnes
point lead. handled ttre 90-degrtt heat, the th1(1 air of
the mile-high city and the demanding 1.9-mil~. I ~
tum d owntown street circuit to beat Danny Sulif\.an
by 28 seconds.
In other sports news Sun~y:
• Brazil's Ayrton Senna won the Ekla1an G rand
Prix for the third consecutive time, beatma world
champion Alain Prost of France and cxtcnd1na his
Formula One standings lead. Senna. drivina a
Mclaren-Hon~. led all the way, driving cautiously
over the 44 laps. He finished 3 550 seconds ahead of
Prost. in a Ferrari. Senna's teammate, Gerhard Beraer
of Austria, was third, 28.462 seconds back, after a
touah battle with Ale sandro Nannini of Italy 1n a
Benetton· Ford.
•Slew Of Pearls toolc the lead wath a mtcen1h
of a mile to 10 and pulled away after that m winnina
the S 165,400 Del Mar Oaks by I¥• lengths over
Adorable Emilie before a crowd of 23.374. Slew Of
Pearls, ridden br Co~y Black and carryina 117
pounda, covered V. mile on Del Mar's turf coune in
1:49 4-S and p11d $1 9, $7.40 and $4.60.
•Ivan Lendt overcame stlflillf heat. frustf"lcion
and a determined opponent, dcfcatina Aaron Kticks-
tein, 6--4, 6-7 (4-7). 6-3, to capture the WCT Tour-
nament ofChamptons in New Yortc for a fourth time.
With the victory, Lendl ps into the U.S. ()pen,
which bealns its two-week run today. seeldnt hjs
fourth d tlC on the hard couns at Aushlna Mcedow.
•Steffi Oraf broke Jennifer Capriati ln the ninth
pmc of the third tet and 1trugled lO a 6-J, S-7, 6--4
victory in the Pathmark Clauic exhibition tenni1
event an Mahwah, N.J. in their final wannus-for the
U.S. Open.
-
QUOTE OF THE DAY
._,...._olliwPlf~Pirala: .. MJ
pl it IO ID bdo tbc Hall of Fame. My$
IO pul my llcbet ud ftl)' •1iltics tD I
..... DO odllt ..._ ud I08 can ever "
DODGERS ,,_,, Sch«lul~
sreat out c.bere. I kind of Hire it bener
lO 10 OD the founb day tom time IO time. but with WI pitdlina ltd, the
opponunity donn't ariae that
often." .. At I.be beliftnina or I.be ~
WM bosiiQI j&aa& to be a m ·
reliever and coatrlbuee any way I CU... Hanley aid.
ATUT
Moft:ldll
ONHQl Tut: et ........ 4:35 •TM• NOL• w.d; ., ....... 4!JS
,J
~ I
Hubie 8roob pve the Dodsr1
I.be lead in I.be first with an RBI liit-
and·Nn 1hl8ie.
.. But now l'm awtina and pi&ch·
in& in ~ ....-n. It'• real fun for me
to De pitctiu'I in a pennant race. It's fun."
Al..,,._ on KA8C redlo (7'0) Loi A.neela made it l-0 in I.be
tbjrd when Joee Oonzalez CtOUed
the l>late on the front end or a
double steal with Mike Sbat'penon.
• On TV, Ch. 11; ac Soor11Ctlennel.
Tbe ~ remained 6'h sames
behind Nauonal ~ue West-lead-U. Cincinnati, wbac:h beat Pit-~ 6-2, earlier Sunday. The Meta si.ycd three pme1 back
of tbe Pirates 1n the Nt.: Ea11.
Hartley beat the Meta, 2-J, on Aua, 14 in tbe aecond pme of a
doUblcheader. He bu woo five con-
aecutJve decisions since lotina to San Diqo on June 15.
ap.in1t us in New York," Meta
outf~lder Ol.rryl Strawben-y said.
"He pi&cbcd well early m the
ballpme today, and then he bad a
little control problem, but be'•
throwina the ball well and movina it
around a little bit."
Viola said the Mell were beain· runa lO feel time praawe.
.. We're not aoina to ao anywhere
~yina Uke we are," Viola laid.
'We've had IO many opponullities
to close the pp and we haven't done it. There's about 30 pmn left, but
the lonaer you wait, the harder it's
1oina to be."
"I thoUf,ht he wu much better
Hartley has allowed two runs and
aeven hill in 18 inninc.s as a a1arter
since replacina lbe injured Tim
Belcher an the rotation. a oooe.a ..oTal -The eeme w .. IN DMMn' lttfl -run decltlon In the IMt i.
o.n ...o "*' nlnlfl on IN to-eetM '*""'lllCI .............. ,..., °' '*"' ... ""
MCOfld tor the Oodeett INt MetOI\. Tiie Olhet
WM lw l.-. Ner'1il Oft Aus. II In Atleftte on • '°'*' 1tee1 wilfl '-1111 ...-••• TM Mm
-IN -Ml'lel, 7-S, W1M1nt IN llnt flw ..,,...._ Tilev N¥9 not toll e -..-. Melftll Ille Oodeert Wnc9 1tlS ••• LM NIMiM
It M¥en Mtnn over •• tor IN ftrtl time el
IMIOn • . ............ •91 5 tor 2S In
''I know I can pitch in 1hjs
lequc," Hartley said. "I've settled
down, I'm aettina used to lhe billers,
I'm not as nervous and the team is
playina well behind me."
New York loaded the bases in the
sevcnlh when Dave Mapdan
walked. Greg Jefferies sinaJed off
Hartley and Strawberry sinaled off
rookie Dave Walsh.
LOI AllNM ""' veer Am T...-. " "" l>ltl NW to reloln ll'lt Melt 9fler •vtne fof
MOttw ~ IMel'9 CIW. Tiie °"*" .,.. T-....... RwttY--. bY ...... ,_..
,., ....... ~ Dew .---. Ca.t Kevin McRcynolds sinaJed in a
run off Tim Crews but Crews came
back and struck out Tom O'Mallcy
and pinch-hiller Mackey Sasser to
retire the side.
...... &M -.... Til9I , ................ "' .-a-and ... L --.r.
Jay Hoy.-ell finished the combined
six-hitter by actting three outs for
13th save. Orange Coast Daily Piiot
Dod~rs Play~r of Day Frank Viola ( 16-9) pitched on
three days' rest for the seco nd time
this season and allowed seven hits in
seven inninp . He remained tied for
the NL lead in victories with Doug
Drabek of Pittsbuflh.
Miiie Harttey, who stopped
the Mets for the second tJme In
two wHks, •ffowlng thrff hits
and two walks In llx-pkls ln-
Miiie Hartl•J "I think that stat is overrated,"
Viola said of his rest time. "I felt
"'"91.
Davis' hot bat
carries Reds
past Pirates
A hot-hitting Eric Davis made the d ifference for the
Cincinnati Reds against Pittsburgh.
Davis and Joe Oliver hit two-run doubks and Rick
Mahler won his second straiJht start
since m ovma into the rotation, g1v-
ina the Cincinnati Reds a 6-2 victory l)ipK !ff'
over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sun-All;~
day at Th~ Rivers Stadium. '"'~ '•
"Davis 1s hke Darryl Straw-~ ·~ ,l.
bc.rryd. ,"JfPiratcs Manaaer J im u yland ~ . ( .hZ
SI.I " you run mto 'uys' hke that
when they've &Ot It going, they can
destroy you. (Davis) may be the most gifted player in
the lcquc."
Mariano Duncan added a solo homer as the Reds
won thctr third straight since losing the o~ner of the
four-pme series.
Mahler (6-5) allowed six hm m two runs 1n 61(1
inoinas and Rob Dibble pitched 21/1 innings for his
ninth save. stnkmg out fo ur.
''I've always been a streaky pitcher, 1t seems hkc
my whole career I'll run off five or six wins in a row."
Mahler said. "I feel real good nght now"
Rookie Randy Tomlin ( 1-2) failed to pitch into a
least the seventh inning for the first time in five maJor-
lcaaue starts. He p vc up seven hits and four runs 1n
four inninp.
• ~llln •. Glut1 I: At Candlestic k Park. Vo n
Hayes and John Kruk hit ho me runs and roolue Jason
Gnmslcy won his first pme of the season.
Hayes put Philadelphia ahead in the third anning
when he hit a three-run homer off John Burkett ( 11-5)
Kruk made 1t 5-0 in the si1tt h with a two-run homer o ff
Francisco O li veras, his fo urth homer of the season.
Grimsley ( 1-0), making his fourth start of the
season and seventh maJor lea.uc start overall, held San
Francisco to six hits an seven annmgs as he won for the
second tjme m fi ve maJOr-leaguc decisions.
• Eqoa '· Padrea t : Larry Walker hit a thret"-run
homer m the e1a,h1h as the Expos rallied.at Montreal
Junior Noboa and Tim Rames o~ned the e1&hth
Wltb consecutive s1n&les for MontreaJ. which was neld
to five hits ove r the l'irst seven innings by Bruce Hu"t
(8-9).
Tim Wallach fhed o ut and Andres Galarrap struck
out before Walker hit Hurst's first pitch over the nght-
ficld fence for his I 5th homer.
Steve Frey (6-2) got the victory with two innings
of two-hit relief.
• Bravn '· C.bs J: In Atlanta. Greg Olson doubled
home the winning run 1n the ninth inning and John
Smolu pitched a six-hitter as the Braves sent Chicago
Taiwan takes
crown, 9-0
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa.
-Taiwan won its 14th
Little Leaauc World Series
in I 7 appearances as Sun
Chao-Cha struck out 16 an
a 9~ victory Sunday over
Ship~nsbura, Pa.
In the first raan-dcla)'tld
title pmc of the Lillie
Lcaauc champ1o nsh1p,
Sun struck out the first
eiaht batten .
The champ1onshap was
held o n a Sunday for the
fint time an the tour-
nament's 44-year history
after two quarterfinal
pmcs were postpOncd two
days by rain.
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~hlladelphla'1 Von Hayes dives head ftnt
Into 1econd base whll• avoldln9 the r.9 of
Glantl' second baseman ltobbJ Thompson.
to its fourth loss in fi ve pmc.
With Atlanta trailing 3-2. Ron Gant htt a lcadoff
ho111e run off Bill Long. Gant's 24th home run of the
season.
Pinch-hitter Francisco C~brera sing.led with one out
off Mitch Williams (l-7) and Olson bloo~d a double
to ri&ht with two outs.
Smolu ( 11 -9) pitched his sixth complete pme.
stnklna out cia,ht. He blew a 2-1 lead in the ninth when
he p vc up a two-out, two-run double to Shawon
Dunston.
• .A.lro1 C, C.Nlluh ?: Dann~ Darwin won his
ninth conSttut1ve dcc1s1on to tic Dwight Gooden of the
New York Mets for the longest winning streak 1n the
NL this year. and Bill Doran scored the go-ah ead run
on a double steal 1n the Astrodomc.
Darwin (I 0-1) has not lost since June 2 at San
Francisco. He p vc up eight hits. struck out six and
walked three 1n his third complete pmc of the season.
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OMW COA8T DAILY Ill.OT
--· ~ 17, 1llO -
New
Harris pitches third straight
shutout for Boston over Jays
The stratqy for Greg Hams was simple Sunday.
Watch what Dana Kiecker and Roger Clemens did and
try to duplicate 1t.
Hams did even better. pitching
two-hit ball for H1 mn1ng.s as the
Boston Red So-< pitched their third
stni&ht shutou1 for the flnt time in /'"' 28 years. beating Toronto, 1-0. at the ...
Sky Dome and ancrcasmg their largest · •
lead of the season an the Amencan
Lequc East to four games.
"The way those two guys pitched
I knew 1t was going to be hard to match them ... Hams
said. "But I knew from the start tha t I had good stuff.
In the first 1nn1ng I was throwmg strikes and cvcf)th1ng
was feeling great. ..
The second-place Blue Jays won the o~ner of the
four-game scnes, but Klecker and Jeff Gray blanked
them Fnday and Clemens pitched a five-tuner Saturda)
for Boston's fint 1-0 road v1ctof) since 1984. The thret'
strala,ht shutouts were the first for the Red Sox since
August 1962. when Bill Monbouquette. Gene Conic'
and Ike Dclock did 1t
Toronto went hitless tn its last 27 at-bats "'1th
runners 1n sconng pos1t1on. extending its scoreless
strtak to 27 1nn1ngs. The Blue Jays lost for the s1'.\th
time in seven p mes, and do not play Boston again unul
the final week of the season. a three-game set at Fenwa}'
Park.
"When you first go out there. you don't think
Y.ou're going to need a shutout to win." Harns said
'But I guess the best thing to do 1s to keep pun1ng zcro'l
on the board because sooner or later this team is going
to score "
Jody Reed's two-out single m the e ighth inning off
Todd Stottlcmyre drove in Tom Brunansk) with the
only run. Brunansky drew a leadoff walk, ad' anrt'd 10
second on a wild pitch with one out and sc.ored JU\t
ahead of left field Glcnallen Hill'~ throw
Hams ( 11 -5) gave up two hm in 7:,, 1nning.s. He
struck out a season-high eight, "ailed onc and ret1rrd
15 consccuttvc batten 1n the m1ddk mnmgs Cira~ went
11'1 inmngs for his sixth u ve. mcludmg t\\O m the
sen cs.
Stottlcmyrc ( 11 -14) gavt' up lour hit' m t'1gh1
annma.s
• n,en 7, At~eUcs 3: Jo n) Ph1lh~ and Lou
Whitaker each hit two-run homt'rs at Tiger tad1um as
Detroit ended Bob Welch's fi H -pme "'tnmng '>trcak
Welch (21-5). the top v.inner in tht' maJOf"i, ga 'e
up six runs on seven hits m 4: 1 1nn1ngs. He lost for the
first time since Jul) ~8
The Tigers roughed up an Oakland ace for the
second straight p mc. having routed Da'e Stewart and
the Athletics, 14-4. Saturda) Welch and Stewan eal h
aot three-run leads an the top of tht' first mnmg. ~ut
could not hold them
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• R.yal1 I, MarlHrs Z: Bo Jackson returned from
the disabled hst with a 450-foot home run o n bis first
pitch, and later doubled and sm&Jed for Kansas City at
Royals Stadium.
Jackson hit his 20th home run of the season 1n the
second mnina. p vma him four home runs m four
consecutive at-bats. He hit three straight homers at
Yankee Stadium on July 17. but hurt his shoulder later
in the pme and was put on the disabled list the next
day.
• l.Mlaa• I , Orloln 3: In Baltimore, Brook
Jacoby's two-run sm&lc a ppcd a four-run fifth mmng
and Cleveland feasted on Onoles' pitching for a second
StraJ&ht day.
Cleveland had 12 hats, g1v1 na them 30 tuts and I 9
runs 1n two days ap1nst Balumorc. By taklnJ two of
thrtt from the Onolcs., the Indians moved Wlthin a half-
pmc of third-place Baltimo re an the Amcncan Lea&~
East. The Onolcs, who have lost eight of 11. fell seven
pmcs under SOO for the fint time san~ July 13
• Vukee. •. Brewen J: Steve Sax. batllng ninth
because of a season-long slump. sing.led home the
winning run wtlh two outs m the 11th inning at Yankct
Stadium.
Barfield drew a lcadoff wal.k from Dan Plcsac ( l-6)
and Rick Cerone sa.cnficed. Jim Leynu was walked 1ntcnt1onall~ and both runncn advanced on an infield
out before Sax s1n&lcd
•Rusen l, twtu t : Bobby Witt won his 10th
consecutive dec1s1o n with a four-hitter and Pete In·
cav1&)1a hu a sacrifice fly in the ninth mnmg. leading
Texas to the win 1n Arhnaton.
Witt (I J.8) struck out six and wallkcd lhret' an hi\
fourth shulout of the season. His wrnning streak 1s ucd
for the lonaest 1n the m"Jors this season wtth Bob Welch
and Mike Bodd1cker.
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Grahe beats Chicago for first major-league win, 4-1 AT 8AT
Mon Tll!H (tlofM) 7:15 /
11y ..... RT G. M<CANN , a,,..__
CHICAGO -Now that he has
bis flnt ~or-lcque victory, Joe
Grahe knoW1 what he must do to
win 10me more: Throw strikes.
"When you ttt ahead of the hit·
ten a lhtlc more. you can.JO to your
fastball and to a hUle off the plate
on each aide," Grahe said af\er
hclpi~ the C'allfomia Aneels ~at
tbc CbtCllO White SoA, 4-1, Sunday
at Comiskey Patil.
"When y0u're conai.ndy pitdlina
on 2-0 and )-1 you eot to su• il, and
t.bat'1 when you're eoina to II' burned. .. be •id. .
G rahe ( 1-1) p ve up one run and
si11. hiu in acven mninp. He struck
out two and walked two.
Lance Pamsh broke a seventh·
mnina ue with his 20th home run of
the KUOn.
He 1ent G~ H1bbard'1 fint p11ch
of the aeventh into I.be upper deck 1n
left fiekt. Dante 81Chettc hit a two-run homer. hi1 14th, in the ninth
ap.imt Donn Pall.
The ~la and White Sol wound
up 1plinina thrir blf11JM llria.
lhut ..W&~'• attempt'° te1 doeer to in tbe Alnerican ,...... Wnt pennant net
liyan Harvey ~• I ~ lnninp f'or
has 18th save Hibbard {I G-8) allow-
ed three runs and ciaht hits 1n R1.1
inninp.
Orahe was abk to pitch out or
aevera.I t..Pt apots, indudina ont 1n
the 1uth 1nnlna when he hit Sammy Sou to k>ed the bun with cwo out.
Sou didn't like 11 and hc.ided
to"'11.1 tbc mound. 0r-. Coast Dally PUot MtlM ,.,.., of Day
.... ...... who CDIKtect
.... .., ....... vtctory.
.......... n.n ..... •hlbln ..............
"I don't rt•lh know what I()(
1hrouah a hitter' mind when that
happena. but I walked towarch him
to show that I didn't 1ntcn11o nalh
do that." Gr1hC' said
Grahe ctea~J that Jim b) IC'tt1n1
Ron K.arkovtct 10 hit a .,.oundC'r to
shortstop.
"We salva.-J tht IC'nes and the
r09d \np,.. nae ls ManaaeT Doua
RadcT sa&d
Wb&te So\ \'1anaaer Jeff Torbora
attributed ht\ te.am's inability 10
ICOre to JOOd p1,lhtf\J b> rahc ··we c,amr out 1mok1na. but
mnsed up a hunt and lef\ a couple
o( rmn on bra'IC." l orbol'I td "The
kid ptt(hed a aood pme .,a1Mt u1 ••
Cal1fom 1a ICOrcd 1n tht first 1n-
n1ni on doub~ by Devon White
and 0.ve Winfield. The Anacls put
two runncn on beie Wltb no outs m
&ht second. bul Bichctte was pecked
ofT sc<'o nd base by catc her
K..arkov1et and Johnny Ray hit into
a doublt play.
Tht Whitt Sox ~er lone run
in tht ICICOnd on ff .-.Qlles ~
Dan PatQua. Frank Thomas and
S.mmy Sosa
Grahe JO& out of tbe Jim by
atttina KMkovice lQ pop out on an
autmP'ed bunt, and Scoct Flctchtt
to hit into a doubk play. a
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OllUt• OOAIT DM.V PLOT
.. .. •. Ai9* 27, 1980
MAJORS
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For the record
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1.Mgeteeroom&i.undry ftfWATliACHILOR. ~ petlo, get, 911 l47almo .,11 ...... Btuoa147.oM4. erw.
room. o1oae to Mope i 1 block . from bHoh J:· 141171-1172,.....,. (w/11 MO l~. LAST fllrlv. lander ._ ~ to 114-JIO.OU1
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• ..... $1900/mo. F'!M. non.,,.,..,.. ... ,ULL MMoe omce In 'V\.l-TIMl. uvt-IH IMH:IOpm 1190/tv No
' 40I E. OCEANFRONT dullve Newpoft lwltl Newpoft C...tor FMHon Prof WCN111ng ~ _., '* ' lfMI.
Lllg9 1:...:"a patio, 142-4805. Mctye._5 homo. ap., pnvalo BA lllend. ~Ing I YC rn 2920 mature non-emkrl z:~.:·....,.~ =:".7M2t2J64t":e: WIHTEA RENTAL. kMly S550+utl.831·5MI onfyllloev......_. JI-•• ~-=.::...~~ t-..n 10.i. Tue.Wed or
E'SIDE large 29" 1'MIA.. ~ 28A 2BA with oceon NJ.!tepe& ~ °'f."!!! FIM. 111 m.!!!'?170..,.. ~.*"~ nelghborhd. lrg view ~'Hu.1:!.~ ~I Beaut end ..,,.., oar~ Aero.. Rob • ....,/mo+ _,..,.. "'°'*8Uon & homo. 2 chlldtW\ under 2. • ,,..,, · petlo.'lndry.:'bt.~: from beech. 5038 ~~~133 7:n..191 Otftoe ~ tor rent (114)152 ~M~~=-lllllllPll
No S*I-IMO. M04407 iiiC: m month to month. Skyttt•. eation. & ,..,. to· ..._ e mom1nge per we. on lo-
• a ...... •m Nico N8 28A Ap1, 2 bll1 to bMutlful .,... WlflOu• Lost & FO&N 292S Poto 321 N ...:._.... cation for eo... Mele .,.._ ._, bct'tl l)nf\lm, MIF needed ea. from 1250. Call ' ' .__..' SM: Station P/R up
Avellebl• lm!Mdl•t•IJ. IOCMlll 2706 lmmedt '400-1445/mo. ee1-11oe or 240-5144 :=,, ~!'9~Newport roQd: Send ;.... tcY.
e31-40M aft• t2 noon AVAIL 1/1 Laguno 8eect'I '42-t2IO or 722~118 A.E. EJtoc. au.to offlCM ' . P.O. BOX 11923, eo...
MeM Verde 28A upper, 2 P¥1 rrNlM In fem t1m: Nil bll to bct't. 38A dUple)( •viii. Soc/Roc9pt ..,. f (lll) ADS ...... /Lt .. -' Mele. CA tne27.
quiet cul-CS.-eac, encl ~ pm. Older woftl· wtth w/d. Good lor oc vie" Incl. Newly ro-WMllday rnorntngl, ,.... ..... ._. P/T
g1rege. 1815 + MC. Ing woman°' retired cpo 1tudent. '400/mo, 1333 modeled. l.atoet omc. IDE fR£E •Pon• I b I• Adu It _.&&r511
498-1939 Of 751-9413 Pfef. MOO/mo Ind utll. dop '45-"51lft11em e q u Ip . C 1 11 J 111 M proferrld, Fount.in v-. Entry level
MOVE IN SPECIAL ~ Off 11t/1Mt, 1250 IOCUrlty, N/emlcr lhr CdM lt1o & 7141752-5 111 9 to 5. c..a•, lay, r ... OllCOe, Ml-971t 752·7M7
ltt month rent. Rotnocl'I refel011CM. Call for 0¥9 bflto upetrt untt, 28R Mon thru Fri. a Mii for Linda. lmBld
18R 1BA, gated pettclnQ. llPPI. 4'4-e789 1~BA. get, lndry, MOO Small offlcoe from 1350. Ml-1171 Aomen ECO Inc: need1
No peta ploMo. '42·51A AVAIL 911. Laguno 8wtl. mo + uth. JHI &40-2500 ~ ...... E. 17th St. E~ SSlO cerpentor for forming. ,Ill-./-a• Pvt rm In lam hm, houM -.. Bcft eeort A t 28R t• M .... Alk for 8111 * aw• w * Call 71444-1111 -prlv. Older working ··-r r P • '46-98e3. ,._ - -ftlWlll women pref. S.00/mo 28A, tuH gym, lg pool, ;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;IFOUND DOBERMAN bll/ MM>0-164-2255 Ext 124 --1 ITTlllllT
28R. 2BA & patio. No pe11 Incl ulll. 11ttlut, 1250... ~-::··~tc~,=~· Commtrclll ftroptrty brn. vie. PCH et N9wpor1 ~~ =enta c:~ --ftl'lm
From Sl5()/mo. 21&1 P•-curtly, ret.roncee. Call '525 + ~ ~tii.. '42-72e0 2778 Ben/Hunt. 8c:ti t>ordor. Cullomor &!vtce l2tK Selery & comm. All bon-Clflc Ave. Seo Mgr @ l0t eve IPC)I, 494-e789 Hit by car. 8•2-9142 8AM-8PM 1 o.ye114 F.. eiftt1. Appty 2580 New-
8-10t. 155--0M& Beeutltul L1oun1 &ch ._.Tl WllTll ,.. llTll. IPoU wtth Jotin. port ltvd .. Coot& Mela.
-.. -.. a-ocoentronth<>me Fu118A Femllo to.,_. 2 bdrm NEWPORT 8EACH FOUND Fem• Dog by ..... nu,. 1-···-~·-· •-•-"--" & pvt lndlCPd p811o pvt 1·~ ba houM w/couple. S /E corn« W•tclllf Or & W11d & Gerflold. ~1ty PIT In et0t• In your .,...1 1• WHITm .... IAll" entry 1700/mo. 722-1114 MUii IMle pet1. Smoker lf'llnt Ave. High v191blllty color wtwhlto taco i 2-3 d•Y9 wMllOl"dl. Car -llf .... Jiil lllU Aft . Ott. $385 per month plu1 traffic. 1290 aq. It. Eawa. FIM Collar. fri.nd-'**MIY· M.00/hr. Call Steff needed to WOftl wttti
Top --. pettc-llh ..,. C!:i1oLA:~oom w ~· dop. 548-74&.4 .... 111 & well mannered. Call Nadine 714-541~711. or Dev. Dia. children &
ting. BMutltulty mlln-pello Prlveto 15~ A~lli Shet9 28R 18A houM 2~ Eleonote ~ ldultl In O'OUP homo Mt·
* 'osition1 available for Mff .,,,otivatecl
individuals to OfMrate solidtin9
crews for the Orange Coast Daily
Pilot.
tf You :
* Have An insured van, wagon or
large car. * Enioy working part-time in the eve-
nings, earning full-time $$$ * Have the ability to motivate
Then we hove o tob for you. No experience nec~.sory.
Full training ovoiloble.
For fu,er infor~~~~ schedule o n interview·
(714) 642-4333, Ext. 209
M-F 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM
By CHARLES GOREN
w ith OMAR SHARIF
and TANN AH HIRSCH
ration for anyont 1o1ihO b1d\ three no
trump
Q.•-Bo1h 'ulnerablc. a\ Souch you
hold· talnld 28R Sl15 Up & 911. evon1ng9121-e54e rldoc. w/prlv. Wtlrancoi WllTEI FOUND Orey lhort hair 213-596-5209 ~ ;:0 "':"~·
18R 1725.,.l'J>5 · Studio HS H SSR petl0,patl(lng,S525/mo. •llTllTS..-• fem ... CAT w/blue col· •11111.1* Ooodbenoftt1.'34-lOJS Q.l-A\ .o u1h \uln~rJtik \llll
w/c:arport -· Imo. · · ~ houM. utll Inc 850-2827 111 Huntington 9Mctl Id · · c~":-00~.eA~e~~ ~8~1.w1<>°·c!:;"L~~~ Share ~8R 3BA .Twnhm A,:::n~~1°&":~~ . a.42-1151 • L~~k!!~.e= ........ Lenn ~AKQIOJ •• ,,... t Q +t>.QIO
• t.C)J92 •AK • ..\93 +A62
I hi.' h1ddin~ h.i' No~c:edcd.
garege. w/d hook-up 'M.1111 & dop 536-00U CM. Pvt 8A w/lhow« Nowpof1 WM. Cell Suaan FOUND· Kitten. edOfable weer & llngorte. M4 11400 ~=FT/PT. ftex Thr hiddin~ ha' p11i,cedcd
SHS No pell C1ll Prtv , ... h Pool, )K. FP, W/D, OIW, 873-JOee leave meeaege. fem t1oet11rl~wtth while .. •. dleeouni.. ' ch t:a~ ... lh \\ VELMA room .,., Newport utll Inc. S.50. MS.-8081 tac. ' pewa off Warn« ~ ~ In penon. or OU t~C
(11.\&.&&_2.a.al 8Mch Townh<>me. s.p... SHR ,_.. nic. lg 8actc :i lnduslNI 2788 In Fountain 'va11ey. Cell *llOIPTlllllT Cryelal Court. So. eo.t I + Ph-.. I • Pa"' ,._--•ret• entrance . No ·-1 963-0917 FI T M d F Id Plaza. 557-40245. I09 2 + Pa'i.\ ? kt I c h o n . 0 u I e I twnhm w/melo. S.CUre, 1,800 SQ FT 2 letge Front ' .on l y· r ay' liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"iiimuNii• VERV Jar,!!. 18R 18A, nont1moker. 1425/mo pV1 matr bdrm1, lrplc, 2· OfflcH. drive-In rHr FOUND M d all 8.30-5.30. Benefit•. lllfitd "8&1'11 \\ hal do you hid no" o ~~I. k:;a'~·.;or· lnCI utll. 5-48..0723 ctr get. StralghC Fem door. 58t/1q It o r rid/brown ::!y ':ea' 't:i~~b :..4i::~ Alk IOf PIT for lmOll bullnMI. A .-,,artner ahllO\I \UICI\ ha .. J ,.,
aml ~ ~t ~2:se:/ Sherp H.8 38R t 'ASA ~~.~·n".° ~!: h:~·-~J· S1 .0001mo. t777 Whit· wrly tall. ,,;ayt>o Splu M 1' · Hunt. Bc:ti. Mi-0197 card \Ult on 1111, aul11011. "• 11 "1111'1
•.a,1 'outh \\"f 'onh
I • Ubl 4 • P•"'
\\ hdl dlllvn d1 • \<lU IJ..,c 1
A.-1 or 11111 1,1'1"''· 1hrrl' arr 100
rn.111~ l11wr' Jnd ,,ur 'u11 "n·r Ion~
l'011uph 111 \t:111urf.' tour \pade\ \\ c
""''"Ill ,,·111(' lor 1hc 1.erlJ1n phi•
'"'H~ h' JPuhlm~ ltlur hc.irt' WEST8AV APT condo. Ill amenlllM. Incl a.42~275 p~1 ~ ~~1 540-9352. Pom. Vie W"tmln1ter MU&id llLP ldl..e mmh tn mJl..e 'IJlll 1.h 1,l'
S200 OFF MOVE-?N11 ut111. 1375/mo. N/amkr SO. Coat Metro. M/F non Alie/23rd C.M. '45-8923 lllPPll French bakery/doll, panner of ~our inlc:re\I l'' 11rn1p11111
Sorry. No Pot• plMMMt,..2e3 amkr ltlr lrg hM wlfrple FOUND Sm111 white * I* PT/FT, Ill lhltt1 eveD-111 four duh, Q .5 "' '-rnith. ,ulnciarll'. \uu
1 Bedroom 1740 gar .. qulol arM. l&R • Sunny. vcty ot Monrovia Small lducatlonel m«111 eble. M~! Of' ~ huld
28drm 1•1.ea $340 Hotefs/Motefs 2718 $400/mo+ dop. 435-1809 & VIC10f'la, 873-2223 ::f.111Y In Cotti M... In porlOO •1 C •t St Bon Q.2-Uoth 'ulnerahle. •" -.0111h \•!11
151E.2111 St 546-2408 IU LAii-FOUND While femate de y' brflo:~ por!°:1 Fprl: :::9'Y· 149 ~~de hold. + ()6 • M.)'JS t J IOl +J8J
... :-..::..-:------;;15 Wkly rentals ;~~viii. Rentals\lflnttd 2726 S1moyed In Sout h plnn/warehouae ldealfOf' .Newport-.... •AKQJ%4 •K t ~Ht.12 .... The h1dd11111hJ'11101.ccdcd .._._,, .., L1g na C 11 & t D .. ., <' ~ouch \\ t"'>I 'orth t.11,C
1 Bedroom $(195 $147.00 Wk & up. 2274 WlmD "u . • . . roll•ble co1i.oo 1tudont. 11m11 The h1dding h,,, Pflll.l'tlkll I • PM" I • l •
28drm 1'/•Ba 1820 Nwpc Blvd, CM~6-7«5 Business 4 • 1450 Mull hive C"A. driver'• FOf' hot• lhuttlo. N9wpor1 \\ t'>I 'onh •.11,1 'ou1h ..
181E111h SI M2..()85e •llTllTS..-• Oeponunl!t! 2904 L~~~h :iu ":rt ·~ ~fJ~7~~-~~=· BHCh Commo rc111 I • Pt"' I 'I ~ \.\ h<1l ,1~11n1 dn \1\U l.skc"
Hunt ........... 2640 Roommates \lf1nttd Artl1t went• to rent~ I ALL CASH s Sprl"9dlle & Ed~ on ~~~~ tr;:~~~~7;,1T \\ h:s1 Jll111n dn \Ou IJkc' "· ll.1d I J\I "''' t.:111cn·J lht J ll• ·-_,, 2724 ~Ute &,..~lohl In Clll u1 tor vondlnQ'• 109 8119.897_.9 .. REWARO A .-Oouhk' V.c hJH ""''"ll n
lmmoculeto 3 8R. 2 BA. ·~,....... • llM . ....,1 SuNtl money maker Ceft Seth, 41~ ~ f} h
tu•n. "'u """uld h,1\1; h~n 1111\.'t'd w
t>1c.J \n' hid h' \<lU no"' ""lluld ''HI"' '''1111· add11mnal fl'.11u1<' of
'1101 h.rnc.J ''"'c Hlu hJ' ~ .t drJd
w/d hk•"' d/w di ........... , New luxury condo, pY1 873-lOeelNvemoeuge 1.eoo-741_."1 ""' ""' ~1111~ 'C Q.• .... er}tmc 10 P3" 1n 1 C't' ,JUdHHl' . .i111J
n 1 c e t 'r P 1 ~ ""("';'e Br/Ba. garage. pool, IP•. LOST dog Hunt Bc:ti area, Pnm• v\M ~..,CM' L-~ ~ ..., 1he re~uh m one n1• trump douhlcJ
lo/ d mlero. wld. S850/mo. SALL CASHI Low C>Yef· 819 reward. SHky terrier (or ~rhafl' t\tll 1eJ1111hlel.ll "'II he ~t yar . Vdery IC)Ocial. PIMM Iv mag 6«-7115 COfNMtdll head Clll UI tor vend· mix. 963-7289 I Ot-... .,.. .....,. "' ..,. nlca~anl Th .. .Jlt"rnJll\" H r goo echool R.E 5*/Rtnt Ing'• top money maker '°"' •t0,..led ~ i... " • • • • I' J 1. uc n11nim11111 •rt·1111w hi.I .mJ no p.ir
$965/mo. 1 1,500 dep. 3 8R Cotta MMe TwnhM. • '"~h. 1 •""1~1 ~~~1 LOST male cat. vicinity of '-t0 'o-"' '°"' •N>'--"' hid nf I"(' Ix.in'
2 3-5
... , -vvv-.. --~ C I & S 11,ul.ir I ll t.ll f'd llllCI ·, •Ult. nd"
1 92·2214 H 11 ave rythlngl Ill t Andrewt l '< SOOt mo N-amkr . lusJMU/Ottlct Rent "ATTN· GOVERNMENT gr-vtblacl{ tiger w/whlte 0 R 0 PE N I Ntwpol't•actt 2669 M &-4-0t 4 Lv meaaaoe 2769 JOBS • YOUR AREAi undorllde. i nt'Wefl 10 11 I 11 I I Q . .l-Bo1h,11lnt"r.1hk J'"11u1h,,111 :==-=====::; s 11.e40 • set.485 c a11 TWMNr. eai1 541-2989 . .. . . . hold:
Q.tt-l 4'1 \\ c'1 'ulnerablr.
Sou1h \OU hold
3 8R E'l6de C.M M11r 8R wnta..-f 1 .. 111 t~2·&3&-tll5 ex R398 1eavo meo-oe o • AKQJ964 • 11 + A 10.n + ~ • .'II.I a-w/'11. BA. Full houM prtv. O I J .,,,._.,. Nopela $400/molncutll NEWPORT BEACH ATTN Poatel Job91 Start LOST· ~ARD. Choe· RA S V The ti1dd111~ ha\ pro,t.•edl'd • ..,. .. , IUPI• "46-5"1 Crnr W•tetllt /lf'llne Ave s 11 41/hrl Appllc1Uon olate Lab. 3 yrs. no collar. I I r r \\ .... , l\orth ...... ...o urh
EXCLUSIVE 8EACH .... Cond Info call t-eo2-e38-tll5 vicinity of HB. Chlldren'• . . --I I • p I ' r Ohl COMMUNITY 8AL8 0A PEN INSUL A ...,. Air ltlonlng •• M-398. e.10p 1 dy. dog. 9e9..0107 o •'" .,
28R 2BA w/beeutlful b• 28R IBA on oc.entront, Complete Jenlt0r1al ' I C A R 0 H ~· 2 + Pa"' vi.wt Mlcfo d/w II( Y OCMn view S.90/mo ""Mullc Oepl'MllC>n proof yourMll. LOST: Small black I :; Tne iootb311 1eam makes Wl\al do ~ou bid no"• • · • 875-9218 ""Eleve1or S28.000 5.,..,1eeM11let w/some grey on lac. ,, I j j sir a nl As l(>ked ltie com· pMlco & g&r1Q9. EnJoy our ""FUii vtew 8aleonlol Fr1nchlH . 1¥111 for M ... terrier/poodle mix. • men~a1or But ne addeo A .-At rtr\I II m1gh1 '<'Cm t h,11 1 IH•
Pl"V1 beeeh 1186<>: All 9luftl condo. 8R. lhr BA. ""FAX&C<>c>ySoNtoo $25.000 euh, llrm Incl 8twnlrvlne&20th."S.n· 1neor s~ areahttte · natural hid Ill ma!..<' l"tiulJ 0( h1u1 • '"tt's'~fr:t" Incl
1 1490
kllch prtva, w/d, pool, ..-Ample Plrillng 13 Aecoun11 bringing dlt" &<12-9124 I A R K B E E I . j,padr\ H1•"'e'cr. \OU h.nt· onh
..... ..: lltn* ~=r =~~ ::: 141-1111 f:.: ,!3g~c:,'iZ,~~ LOST white & blectt M/cat . I' j I' J G ~:-;~:-.:'9..,:~:~i. 0~ lninc lr11.i.., in h.ind. Jnll "t' 1.nuld
SOARv:;l6PETS. Oya,Cathy756..0500/11t llllHJll/P d e nla only. S o r -name8ogoy.w/rldt9g& · '°"-~'1·-"""'No1'below makca l'f'n,1n~'"F •~i,<'lha1partncr llU.1 ..... 11 fpm & #llndl 720..0.83 1817 W•tcllrt. NB vlcaM11ter. PO Box collar, long heir vie • '"NI NINMtfO U!TllS r r r r I' r r I m1ghl ha\(' gooc.J r nou(lh hCdll\ It'
Cdt.t 2 8R. 2 8A Duplex Agt 541·5032 1774, Newport S..ch. Hunt.Ha~~;o~EWARD IN out S9\,!Atf! _ _ _ _ • _ _ . :stop 1hc o rpuncm' t r11m running
~2=8=R~1~B~A~.~1~houM~~~trom~ ~~· C:,,9:· 1~::,,':,,~: 1111/P 111M/M CA 92813 6 't:~:~;:.1, llllU S io I I I I [ I I I f1\l' Irick,, '"I ha'( no olhrr 111, i..
• AQS • ~7 t AQ176J
The btddinJ ha\ proc<'ctkd
+Ql
Souch \\~c 'ot1h t'..bt I • 2 •• J + 4 •
• -prc1·111 pl" t'
"hJI Jdll•tt do• \\Ill 1,11...:'
~·-'"II hj\l' ·'\Cl\ j?OOd hand .
hut Oil .il'J I •Ill •llUl\I.' 'Piii ''dl'
~ould b~· i.11ld 1,,. J ~r,md \l..Hn. w J
'mall 'ldm 11u'°'h1 ~c Im' t1111h Pan
1w1 ·, 1hrt·~· .. luh' , re<•lt'\I ,, 11ame
I (II~'" \I' •• fl.I" "' \ "" 111 \\\ "(lU Id
hl' tnr.in~ I hJI ·, <•Ur ,h'"~e, lea'
'"to? 1hr dt'l.·1\100 10 parlnrr Mind. Furn Of unturn. drug• 1550 87~908 4001 81roh •A. N8 lnwstmtnt Ptr'SONb l<X>2 1 lfor )OU ~ .... "C h,l\c '1
\OC:S I..\ ddllll
W/O, aundocil. 1195/mo Agt S.1-5032 n.---. 2908 ,--------------------------.
ywty. * 873-e250 N9wpor1 ShOrel 3 eR. 2 "7C'==l *''''" nn•• o3')1()()t:f::> T 0 DAV 'S BA. 1 blk to beech. Gar-NEW OFFICE-AW• 220 ENJOV 14-15% reeum on From Europe. 35 Y'9 axp ·•tU 0 e die <;a ua141.. peooe 9u •na .01e1uaw * ,_ 1711• ~ Comm pool, ape. Ill w/eornef wlndowa on Truet Deida s 10,000 10 Tanyi holpt on 111 maC· 1uo:> cl\ll pe-.ol sv 1"f>ie,1s sa~ew we~1 1 .ci1001 ~.l
.,....... /mo + utll • 00p. E11t 17th St. Co111 $1,000.000 ClllOoNeon ten. 1 FREE QUESTION 03WC>OtJ:) 19~1199 uJO:>V-~ 'B<JIJOd I CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Frig, d~. atove Avall lmmld '42-5&01 Meea. '4~ Auoc. 491-4835 HOWi 8Y PHONE. * a.42-4321 I '1·• AUUN'f MnWtDt
Incl No pell Ma.-4155
.... " .. * 38R 28A lower unn Git· m· W/O hk-up. D/W, S 295/mo
500e =tune TSL M t.llT
832·2232 Of 722-9012
.... " .. * CIMn 38R 28A, x:iaee· frpfc, d/w, I 14 Ol mo
Daya U7-U90 or
EYOO/Wkndl 549-3710 * OCEANFRONT SP«1ecul11 vtewt 3/4 8R
wMllly now: Winter R•t•
lt8'11ng 9/15 973-7877
•Winter 38R ocnfrt
I 1800/mo. W ~t 3BR
2BA Apt• rty 112 5/rno. Nwpt hr1 hmo I 1500/mo. a.tr '42-3e50
lllllUllAm
ONTH! BAY
2 BOAM, 2'A8A ..... 12, 100
2 BDAM, 2BA .... 11.350
No petl Deity t-5
541-t501
elTIPITI .. • 18A 18A UC>9frt In trtpu
1725. No pet• 723-5074
llllDY
IDT~l10. 11 II
HeaMANYY..-ty
28drm I 31drm1 Avail
•Good~!
•Good Condttlonol
llLLllWI
~1ii(11Aon
cenol. near N .. port
............... No ,.... ,,,..., i=no·
.-&Jmo.17
laoluotvo i1un1 ""· T.,_.,........., L#l9 3M.
I~ .... pa9*. 11 1IOO per mo.
L.M .... •1 AMlfOe w., ..... l4N •••nnm v...,:-~· er.r,,,, oi .. ~,ma-
Ooelftfr°"t CleM ''" =. cet,_.1, drpe, ~""°"· 9llOhrio -M4$
By SYDNEY OMARR
Mond•J, AU9· J7
AJtllS fMarch 2 I ·Aprll I 9J You'll
awakt to rtMtcl. "This Is 901ng 10 bt
a Monday In which t achlt vf! my
goatl" Focus on unlvtrulity.
crutlvlly. brtaklng frtt t1om vt ry
ntgallvt ptrson or situation
Anothtr Arlts lnvolvtd
TAUllUS fAprll 2(}.May 20J Con·
tacts madt ltss than two wf!f!lu ago
will provt 1nstrurMntal In obtaining
fundlno Muns yoo'll gtt tht
mont y. promotion. production
Crtdtl rating 1s guaranttf!d Cancrr.
Capricorn ptnons play rottt
G•MINI jMay 2 I ·Jurw 20J Gtvt
full uprtnlon 10 lnlf!lltctual curiosi-
ty Spotlight on ~gal affairs, con·
lra<U and .JOrttrMnlS. poulbtt part·
rwrshlp. marital st<1tus Vt ry busy
but y<XJ 'U hand~ C~rl9fS w ith
~
CANC81t fJurw 21 ·Jufy 22J W ork
~thods revltwed. l<t y dttalls havt
~tn Sltpptno through of latt w ork·
1no behind clostd cl<>ors may be
nttesury at lust ttmpor<1rlfy
Health report encour~1no Taurus.
Scorpio perions 1n picture
a.ao fJuty 2J·Auo 121 Eumtrw
v¥1ous po1s1bllltles. M'lllyit char.c·
t.,, t xpress fttllnos In writing
Young ptr~dtc!Mes. "I Want StC·
oncl chanct and this ti~ I'll llsrenr ·
~. Virgo. s.g1uartus person
play r~s
VINO (Aug 2l·Stpt 221
Oomtstk l~s oomlNtt Spot*9ht
on hof'N. ~111 ~u. se<url~y
~ durability You'• recttw gift
l'l'om 'amity ~mbfr WhO nold1 you
'",,..,, Htttm Taurus. Llbf.a penoru
,..wnted
portt r< Separatt fac 1u.11I data from By PATRIC WALKER
rnert rumor. Virgo involved Mond•J• AU9• J7
SCOltl'IO fOct 2 J-Nov 21 J AlttlS fMarch 2 I ·Apr II 201 "
Emphasis on powtr. <1utho111y. f1nat payment or stttltmtnt simply
money. stronQ lovt rtlat1onsh1p Ptt· has to bt agrttd -thtrtfort. you
1onal posstulons worth mort tha n might just as wtlt stop btatlng about
might be 1mag1ned Rt lust to givt up tht bUsh Howtvt r. tht rt Is no law
s~th1no or valut tor mert wh1s-that ~ys you havt to turn tht otht r
ptrtd prom1st Capricorn lnvolvtd chttk w htf'I dtallng with in1tnse1y
I ptrse>M or tmot1ona1 matttrs
TAURUS jl\prtl 2 I -May 211 On
IAGrTTARIUS fNov 22·Dt c I no accoont allow partners or clost
2 I J Rtach btyond prtvlous hmo-assoclatts to 1nflJ11a1t yoo to such .-.
tatlons Cyclt 1s such that you gtt point t.Jht you art prtpart d 10 g1vt
wtlat yoo w.11nt. that you win big way ovtr riomf! domf!StlC or prop-
ltomanct sp<1rktd. t•C•ttmtnt rt · t rty issuts Facts or 1ntormat1on cur-
vtved Emphas11t tndtptndenct rtn11y btrno prtsenlf!d m.Jy wen bt
cre.11t1vny. cooragt lo rtsight doctored to covtr up othtr s mii·
CAl'lttCOltN fOt c 22·Jan l ~J
What had bttn caust for ft.Jr wflt be
IOUtd asidt You II hitVf! be rwf1t ot
gruttr fight, sh1dowi will ~ juit
that, lacking substanct Movt ahud
wich knowif'dgt 1h<1t you art going
In right dlrt cuon
AOUAJtlUS fJ1n 20-Ftb I BJ
Focus on .Jlbfllly to tttiKh, persultdt .
to win frltnds and more 1niponan1
.itlts Y01J'lt rlst abovr diiputrs 1n-
v0Mno ti~. mo~y You'll be asktd
to define ra1r play C•ncrr, .11not~r
A~rlan In plcturt
l'tlOI fFr b 19·Mart h 101 Su·
pertor II 1niprf'ued by your ptr·
10N111ry. vetutlllty. humor Focus ()(I
travel oppor1unlt1rs, acctler1ttd
social activity Spotllgf'lt ()(I pro-
duction. promotion. un~ acn1eveo-
rntnt Gemini involved
tllkt s or misdtmt.11nors
G•MtNI fMay 22-Junt 211 lovt d
ones or offspring art ~1tt capllt>lt ot
taking cart or thtmsttvt s Thererort
do WNt SUIU YOY btst tor a changt
and . .Jlb<>Vt iJll, use yoor ht lghttntd
Insight .11nd oourva11on to further
your ptnon.l and prottuion.111 aims
or amt>ltroru
CANC•R IJunt 22 July 2JJ 0 11·
flcult pl.Jnttary aspecu can only
bring out the isuut s that Othe>rs art dt~rattly trying 10· ~Id d iscuss·
Ing Howtvt r. wtlllt y learn or
dlSCOVtf Complf'ttly OUl or the blut
sh<>Uld fnabie you to dapt or .Jlttr
arr~mtnu 10 u ftQUMd your own
tong-term sKurlty
LSO f.Juty 24-Auo 2 lj A dltrlcult
.at.pt<t to Venus In l.fO Is bOund to
bring to the surfact ..., the hurt and
angrr you ~ tried so hard to
conceal MlCI supprtSJ H~vt1 at
lust you know tor cer.tt1n t ha t a
~ uphH Val or alttrltlon In lhe
worlllng ~tttrn of your llft has to
tPf pl.Kt bcfOtt lonQ
V'fHO fAUO 24-~ lJJ fhfl're
Is an air of mysttry and conf\Jston
IC>olA CllfH r °' proftulonai IT\llttrS
at the motntnt ~ It wtll talct! rl the
rt•IOWl'ifd cantWlfU 10 fathom OUt
wNlt Is rffl)' go#'9 on luc. one w-, Of another. your wrrent routine
Is IHlef)t to ll'ltt tnd .a rww formula
wtl bf p..tC Into operation
Lt••A fSepr 24-0ct 7 11
CNlenoing plw~ aspec\s owr
the past few WHtts Hem to h.fV't
n\ldt you nervous and tpprtneru1ve
ac>out lnteNely penof'a l 1nd
nnanclal luue1 Bui. In rtalfl)'. thl\ ts
a time 10 rtgaln your conr1dt ncr and
to rNlkt .11 clean swetp 1n prtp.11rt1on
for .vi ucltlng cyclt ahtad
ICORl'tO fOet H ·Nov 221
Now you mtist slow down. rtla11 llnd
tkt proftulon~ hold-upi 1n your
Strick Evtrylhlng wlH t vt ntu.Jllly tit
Into place 11 1s Stmply that t mpk>yt rs
and ptople 1n post11ons of pow~r
rtquirt mort tu~ 10 rt<Kh 1~1r tmal
conctus1oni M\d dt Cts•ons,
IAClrTTAlttUS fNov 2 )·Dt c
21 I oon·1 complain th.lit t~ lf!mpo
of your life Nl btcomt 100 fast llnd
~ad ror ume to co#rct your
thoughu The eked 1i done and.
Whether f<1cing dr.JllT\lllC devt le>p-
menu 1n 1 par1ntrsh1p or lit work.
you muu tollow 1~ path yOll ri.11vt
alrf'Clay chOsen lor yourstlf
CAJllRICO•N fOt< 22-Jan 201
A financial or bus1rwu matttr snms
to be a rfll./O' bone of conttntl()(I at
the moment and no doubt you ~t
.a IOt to compl.Jtn about H<>Wh'tr.
unless yoo art prrpartd tor " com-
~tt bruk 01 stpar <1t1on. 11 WOUid
ACROSS
I Set OI ruies
S SIMlong shop
10 lmillled
"M•inte1n
IS Ft'f"tlhlt'lf
tn<;>tedltlfll
var
16 Moa9f
17 Alkxll•
18 Many llmet
19 Cn.ci..
20 EanHH 111an
pref
21 In 111$ •
Wf\()19
22 Purifies
24 Wetet bOdff'S
26 Mai>
27 Wall
29 Reo11no
rflY1hmocaJI)
3 1 lnd1en money
34 l eQ per1
35 Alber1a
rft()IKC9
36 StumblM
37 Emb•r1' on 38 Peruvien
39 Cone.II '° Gotoe 4 1Pr~
42 o.-ieo
44 Escla1nt11on
45 Shtr:>ott\Q bo-
46 Aromatic -0
50 Oul·ll'd-OUI
52 Tar<ty
2 3
be wistr \Imply to keep y<XJr dis· 14 tance or dlSIMl<t y<XJrielf for a
while
AQUAlttUI IJ1n 2 1 ·Ftb I 9) A 17
rather rrtcky planetary stt-up de-
notes a ptrtoO of enforct d ch.tngts 20
both at home and ar work but. 1n
this 1nst1nct. change Ckflnlttty 24
mt~J gro wth 1nd the wltllngntu to
txt up to na"h rtalltles can Of'iy
lffd 10 grtalf'r Uf~r&unotng With
IOvtd ones. partners ~ ~rs
PtlCa fF~ 20-March 20I There
re~ Is no po1n1 1n comlnuing an
¥9Uf"tnl or fuf'CI -f'Ve-n rt you 36
htl'Ve bftn Shon-C~ Of Ck· M>trattly mlslnfomwd AbOw all. 1•3.,..,9,...--4--+--
~tr. \/Mus at odds with "'110
~ be ttachlng you to prtn 42 sound l'lealth and yout gMtral Wl'f.
c.inv M>Ove .. tfJe
• YOUll •llTHDAY II ON
MONDAY• You ~-to """"
blief\ ~ Of ptnlllMd '°' tak-
ing.I Jtand over "'°'* as ~ as ~•Hf °' prot.n10N11 lwues How-54 twr .a s ,,,. wttb and months go
Dy. you wfl bf orly too Nippy thM r>a orw pnau °' cycle nas come to a
••
53 CuHent uni! .,. on
tnlllOSlllt 10
SS Bame
57 M•lo.• vncie.r ~German,,_...
59 Jockey
60 Olhet
61 Eaploli
62 Makes OUI
63 Co1oten11
DOWN
1 Tent groups
'J ObHfVal>le
3 l OVll\Q on.
• Woolly anoma1 s Snobb•lh
6 RaoHS
7 M• Harbach
ti S1oclt.h04m
COin
!ii l ean1"0
10 Slit• 11 9,_,
12 Eu • 01
13 Ob11rvc1a
21 ~, .. •o n G•no"no 25 8IQ....,..
26 T al1tmal' 28 P~li
29 Refined
30 C"41et111•
31 Clann.1
6 7
CIOM and INt you 111t ntNI frtt CO l~-t--t-.+__.
h:>rgt nfW t motlONI tits or attxh-11
menu
37 B<elH
38 0aY9flP<'fl '
iOCallOI\
•O Family OIOUP
4 I St. 1n OQet'll"O
•3 Hat1"0Vfl0
u Moo11ent
46 Wes• Pom1.,
47 Ouef\eN OI
WtndtJOt s
II 9
nc-i.namfl
•ti [n1twtaon
49 Be191an to.n
!>00....~
S 1 Cl>ffl sound
52 o.c. o•me
~ Ma1oon
S 7 R1vflf l>Ollom
11 t2 13
I
I
•
r-·, _,
·=i&iE5iiiiiE5m-~:r.= .... nntm• To?!".;I!~ ............ ·-......... ~~~n .'I".:. ! =*9nlw&Nlt w.!'!-'°i,':t:.e°:..: , ..... _. .. ~ :-..r::r-·--,__ UoMlill INllll. ~ ........ v ... ~~ ..... ... "I ............ Wll --· LunoNon•O.-.... • ......... M ....,_of ~ _.., I.OW'°" I Ill Gelt a../leo'Y tr9lft. """-14?.otW. 1"Plf ii'i10 M HOUfi ~ c.Mlr. a.II -,_ lftOll.dno C8fto 81m M1111 ' t ' 1~ •. •n•••t•m ~~T=cir:: a......,... ... , .. ,~ 601! '""· '° .. 0 wry ... =r:::.r.:-.-= ......... _J!!ll! :=at,:. ......... ~~~~ VOLllTEERS ._........,.,...· ........ ~=~-:~,;;.con-loliWOft& .... wdecl. 2111 ... -...0.M. =cm
polltlon. flBIDI ,.. .. ••n• M DICK*·.....,.._. ....... ..~ euoo 090. to .... =-:.= =:::-..= !~i1i-...f.iiiir~1~ .. ~~·;,...;•;•;• ·~c~ ... ~. PU&• P It • -... • ..__. ....... .-.. Good........_ WeakdllW'I .-. ot a1..ao1 ewe l40-t tU ----on ...._... ..-.--..
Headed torbU: Ooeta .,W.•12 Noon Mon-Frt ~ htP wtl ...,.aln .. -;;; PIP PRINTING ~ 1114 II' ...,_ YCIM c; ._ -" d.;:: .... ltl
MwtardHlarlfllp a.It ....... l500perweek PE,NNYIAVUl
0 tno 211-ll. 171t11t.C.M. ...,..,., .... '°"11111• ~v.aeng1ne,'.,. dable ...... ~ °" t .,. ·-jt()N) 1• Tw Li
.. 1 · .,Paid TNlnlna The Huntlntton ... ch ... ----.... ,._.__ •....._... 8'2-0ll1 ce.ir, ottomen, new OOft-._ .._ -... 1 S !..'"':"~ C • •-i, top aoo.aa2 11. .,'Uneo.ta....._oftloe ~CllNcle!Qqk· .-----cMton. Oek tttm UM -..... ..._.. • ":'r. lot 11,uuu. ontact Auto p/a air 9'trte> WlllOfl. M ~
Jlml-/Ul.a 1nG for deCbted ~ PHOTOG~ Pll lllWlll •-714-1414411 :·~:~•t::,r:•fle~~~ Hank ~t at Delly lldie aMnl L0w,,..: :::..1on~Allllnt
SmallulWtyhotet,.....,.. 1HM••• ~r::.r-::-.=:• 216 .,_ ILAOK LACQUER U1.000.17W403. "°'·11 2~21
(a42W) .......... ~~ houtt.S~rNn.tmp.Xlnt ttonll poeltiona. If you·,. PllTlllr-........ bedroom elt. 4 P**. , .. 7 iijiN;, lownder, w.!!"awa at 1eu Superior.
WOfklng condltlofte ·1·-=~====-·1 CClf'IW'flllle.aod.,...., ............ ~arowlflllO.C.pelftt lkaMW.ll00080.Con-IStlP trller lklll¥ton In -·----_83_t.030C)...,....___,..,,.,,...,,..---benellt9. Clll Kathleen. •W 16 II IA to IWTI a mlllk_.. lillll ,_ ....._._ mtg. (eNloa -..._..,.. tett Kttut 14t,.4l 12 ,. c o M . a I ; ? o o . Arlllqa;ll. 2121 Harbor llvd. C.M. ,ORO 1M1 Tw rt=lnnOnTheley~ In the medical fleld. we \•-n-) ~· Ptbg, ...C., & Coneemporwy wtltte\ Mh: d710-031t, e780-0301. QllllCI 9045 111-n. 4 dr, power wtndowe,
T . llD need you nowt a ptue. hlely OM 3 pc cof tbl ... 12715; cru&ee control. SIS,IOO • .. ... • .... hrtnl ..... $to-• 2/hr DOE. .... * 5 pc bdtm teJS· rat· ,. IAYLINtA Trophy. 1N8 PONTIAC Chteft~. OIO -..2"1
lllf TD•Elll P'-Clll Paige et II ...... ..... ... apond: H.R. Meneoer. i.n w/~ 1 pc dtft... 23 toot, twin 126 HP out· VI, 2-door hlrdtop. ilifACEOH 1171 ..._. · '
E1tabllthtd Newport 11 _. ... 2•2121 ..,!• .. ~ Ill .. ....._.... 714-546-7101 *42&: pllowbeOk IOl9+ board , cutty c abin, 11,000 mllee. Au1omaUo. E•cellent condition, FORD 'IS FALCON ~ General COnltac· "ff CroM autttotlaed .-.. mmi-··· ... iov.aeat MOO; 4, hardtop, ..,. Power ••••rlno end 110,750. 7141487·1094. FUTUAA. 2 door euto-
tor. Typtno IO wpm, provldtr 1001e1no for ...... ,11M11l1•1 ~ttlbo• eptlna 127 ranty, trahr, meny ... br8"•. Qrlolnel pelnt.,.. matlc, new pek\t, tlrel. ~~ _!! ~:; oer11fled lnetruetor for MODEL WANTED Mint cond t7""4153 trM. Uke new. 123,000. etored Interior. ta.000. MEAOEOES 19IO 300ed brak•. Tranttnlltle»n U· ~ wtll-r,., $2HOO bU1c flt1t aid and C.P.R. 126/HR ~ ... mJ,_ . 883-0278 4CM-OH1 Turbo Oleeel, Ivory, Im· CIMltnt $2750. ta-5741 ,.,..beneftte ieo-also . training. Cell,,.,,. Stahl No u.p. nee. 18 YI'• +. •Outet9ndlna 'o I ~p~o ~p .~~i~: 1 ~:= !!:.~ome. 28' Caltf. 1"8 FG, twin 1"5 FORD FALCON ~'!nil. ~t= FOAO ... THUHOERBIAO
·... ' et (714) 5441 1143. (714) 722·7265 .i::~lno 110+lhr. Cell Mr. ;;;;. bled!. llke new. ,... ""::...C:.. mint, I cyctlndet, ell °58:,nal. Xlnt ri';;" a I c :-' U , o o o . Ban, Fully ioec*I. muet
11mAL IH•••ReWa.,. wlttlthepubllc Kenlgen, 54M042. 3 Mauw counter etooll, 17,000. 4 1. oondlt~~3 080. 41M-2&80. ~f~~.J.8 ·900 080,
•llTHAIPIY llVllTlllTlll •lntereetlnphotoOfaphy oontemporary. 250-478' BUY MERCEDES 1983 3000 --=,..,,,..,,..,,...,..,..,·,..,...,..~~~
au.ltty portr81t photo etu-Trec::.r1 neeHd locally to To pe.ce "tak..out•" ll"I O<chltdren amlll•n MOVING mutt ... Sofa, CADILLAC '1HO treeh engine and '"°'.. FOAD 'II MUSTANG
dlo 11 took Ing for proceee FHA rnortvege merchant account .. Muet •Potentlalto ecivance lovwt & ottoman + 30,000 mll•. four door, excellent condition: CONVERTIBLE
ta1ee/produc:t1on pereon. retundl. Exc:ettent eelwy. have own ttanaport•tlon. Into management Must ~· Eecwow Co. .imoet new corner •t exc condition, one owner s12 ooo Deya M2·5441· 6 •PMd, red, 1tere9
Prev1ou11tudlo ••Phelp-cai1 1.eoo1~. ;:: only, ~e:..:r1.nc1-~213or28e11 o:....~7t1on.74 : your ti rat ~~r 110.500. ~-14•2 EYei 130.,.25 • :~~t~ 2~ .. 1 er.'~~:
tul, but not nee. Tuee-S•t ... 114-111-1111 W• on. paid training, and . -or_... through class1f1ed CHEVY 57 BEL-AIR MERCEDES 1983 300 87~220
9-5·30. ~ Bwh. UUL lllllTUY Aak for Ellzabeth complete benefit• (Full Aeeteurant °""" Anne Che!TyWOod: SEDAN. Orl~nel con-Turbo dleeel, anthrec:lte iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
-----M01fn.3~1.~~W~~ln~ P&llM llU Time Only) th•t lnc:Nde ...... 1111 Elegant 11 pc former din Sli loats 7014 dltlon, tow ml • run1 grey wt~ Interior. 1 oc 11....,..... • .,lU ,,..,.., medlcelldenter. profit Hiring Ho11JH01te11, rm aulte, orig MK. NC. Ot•t. RARE B UTY. owner, nonl amkr. car ,_ mt•.'11
GOVERNMENT JOBS pre1tl9tou1 lew flrma. Part· Time. 2-3 d•ya per lharlng. For Immediate Coo•c Flu hr•. APOIY In 12•50; t>eeut. 3 pc cof tbl 2t' LaQuna. 1913, Royal 11500 or tr8de 540-IOM phone, all option•. ••eel· Auto, 281 Eng. CMe. Elctr•
Earn $35.C>00-$90,000/yr Exp. tn Eat•t• Plan· weett. Wlfl tr.in. Apply conelderetlon, -.>PIY In peraon l-11am Of 2~5j)m; Mt '275; loYely C*MI· Btu. Interior & c:own. FORD 1988 Felrlene lent running, Immaculate cteanl (2GUJ0 t7)
Skllled/unlkllled. M-Set. nlng/Probete prefer'9d PENNYSAVER. t&eO penon Tuel. only .01E.17th, Coate Meta. bactt IOfe+loYeeeat. uc VHF, Autohelm 1000, Vlntege, e..1 ofter, deya lnllde & ou1, S15.000 ....
801 /26'4· 1889 ext. G-75 but wlll tr.m right peraon. Placentia, Coat• Meta. 10-2:00 and 3-8:00 et the Alk tor Troy. S700; exquleltely <*ved propane BBQ, 4 ...... 1-eoo/9"·2848 ext. 215, ftrm. 71414 ·5951 and .. • ...... , ......
Send reeume and refer· pa..w.ll PCA Conference Rm, La rice poet bdrm $1550: On lh«• power, refrlg«· -7141759-3013. after •9'4· 1107. ••II trt .... •tFU PllOlllll eric:ee to Jay Swigart. • _.,5 Quinta MotOf' Inn, 151. matt/box aprlng• 13501 •tor. muc:h '"°'•· muet SPM ...---a.I...., ....
E•rn up to S8000 p« mo. P.O. Box 7880, Newport Exp. In cuetom work. Muet South Cout Dr., Costa 11111. IMt• All toP of 1he tine, mint Mil. Balboa lllp poulble. . MERCED S 198• 380M ......
Cell(71•)847-7128 8Mch.C~tzteo-e.M1 .. ~12~.-p"3-007t Meea. FUhlonconecloue,IPOf11 cond.PP973-0653 $18,000 OBO. Im· FORO 'MMUSTANG Mu1t Mii, price $2'4,500, minded lndlvldual macutete. 873-7783. 289 engine. •utomellc. Ed Garcia 2•1·3100. l1....a .. 11
l•EllEYHll
10•1
RllllllllEW
llPllYEI
LIWEIUTEI
needed to manege Nw-95% r•tored. 873-0138 ~~~~~~~~~ port Ski Co with a Miiie. TWO Contour Lounge 1983 CAT ALINA 22' MERCEDES 1984 500MC = l=or more Information. Chelra with Ttiermontc 7.5HP, roller furling, ftlCed FORD 1930 Model A flewtua, black with JEEP 1987 Cherok•. red.
pl .. H cell Vickie et Heat 6 Vlver•tlon S800 6 k .. t. many extru. Tu do<, 90% condition, palomino leather, 17,000 81t, 1tereo, eutometlc.
831·3280. 11000. * 5-i8-3758 $3,800. By owner. 17,850. deya 815-107'4 In extru. $38,900. 111,250. Cell Rob.
71•-M5-2KS eve 89'4·42e9. 955-2800 w. 759-0&85 h. 4H·2323 evening• .
• na11 •a1 •• White Iron trundle bed & 25' Brl8tol Ster Sall, full MERCEDES 198• 3000 5se-oe95 deya
--beddlno.Goodcondltlon. keel llooP. llMP8 •. • Aulos!mpOl!!d 9100 Turbo. b .. utlful con· LINCOLN '71 Continental F~~,·=~ :~':..~·0~~· 1250. Ml-2338. Hiii, 9hp outboard, ACURA 1tet V8L Legend dltlon, 0<to1net owner. all 480 engine. Run• good.
• • · aome work. Offer. •DR fully loaded ••cat-records, blue 113,000. 1 1250. SEE. 8'42·0687
Tiie & Mlll'bte Concept• ... YUi. ...... ..... 489·9• 19. lent condition, • 30,000 --720--0210 LINCOLN '82 Continental
Shower-1-Counter1-Pat101 · T•ught by UCI Muelc Mature, energetic, reapon-MlsctlantoUs 6015 Cal 25 1979 vwy c:tean mllH. extended war-MERCEDES 1984 190E Luxurlou1 Melen lmpec·
fl F .. "' Refa Lie Big & sml Jobs-Wont guer. tnatr./Academy Award alble p«ton IOI' Laguna • • I~ r anty, I 18,500. day Mii $10 800 ' di..1t••
20yrs.rs.'G-r,:.. 85"'.-"'95·8 . CALL Bruce 847--0780 Nomi"-. Gutter-Bal l · 8wh Retell SI F II 2 AIRPLANE TICKETS. with many cru ex· 591·2120 eve 873-6879. Mutt . . cable. full power, ._ .. "" .-.. .. • ,_ O<e. u Or Count 10 SMt· tru. $7500. 8'45-3 17 or • Lo I m II a g •. 1 u n roof. 1n1trument1, teether tn-
RELIABLE Houeecleanlng ARllA II Plano Keya. Theory Com· °'PT. '494-3002. tle~8. $1~ fOf' both 281·9038 nlgh11. Im& '11 llTllll mlat/green 5-i9-7528 terlOf. driven lela than
by the day. Loc•I arN. Handyman. landaceplng, position. All i.v.I•. In (',..;price). Call 8'4•·7'491 Fbglt Sabot, eompa.te. 5 tp, CM8 .• tllt, CfUIM , el-MERCEDES 3 0 0 CD 8,000 m::,: yMt. ~'c::
E•cellent Referencet. painting. We do tt 111. Laguna Beech. 4~640 •SALES* ready to Nit with p8ddle loy1. EXTRA CLEANll TURBO 1985, chem· b4MOW $'4 987 ~~· Cell
CALL Yolenda 631-5967 639--08.63 Athletic/Mgr/Train... * ULEH * end dolly, $350 080. (008249) pagne with patomlno ;;;n9220 · ·
BATHROOM.KITCHEN EUROPEAN CRAFTSMAN 11Yntf ..... Leul $375-$'475/wk.lfyoullk• llTWlllll 875-8915. • ll<lla.I leathef. lmm1cul•le & • I ENTRY 23 YRS EXP Home Repelr-Pelntlng· OuelltY iJii\cled sports & money, -may SPllTIWIU 2925 Hlll'bor Blvd. C.M completely loeded. 78K MerCOry 1978 Comet
1....,....:;...., I la.a •tlO Tiie ' More R .. /Comm. C R h d SI have a position f()( you <AAAA /Ski Boats 111·2111 mll•. Mull Mii. S 19,500. Excelt.nt Condition. Auto-..-• c •LL STAFIN 581-7681 u1tomer1. le er nor C II M K i,.. • Below wtie>-.ie prlce8, ~ Wiii conaldef rMtoneble metlC. A/C, $1,295 OBO. " · (Lie. tn1. Refa)M5-3209 •6.1·,.,.9!2'·ven. many color•. ,..,._, & 7016 ·--------1 ~ --------.. ........,~ .,~ offer. 76()..3888 531-7381 ~ lr•Yllle lt•t lttllr IPUITlll I WILLPAPll . lllft 10 chooee from. 2 19&e Kewuekl 550 Jet -------$2 44 per day No Job Too Sm•11 REMOVAL p I d Thurldey, August 30th, Skla with trailer. cultom 91111111 '14 Snowed under ""''" stutt? • Breakfut, lunch and (71•)545-3723 . romp en * UUS * Frld8Y 31at, S•turday, "•'nt.manyextru ,excel-•-nwa ... rnars ALL you pey for anecks Large yard RM1oneble. 6'42·5937 September 111. 11·8. 755 j;;t condition ........,.,.. ._ -D•o yourself out w•1" 8 c•an•
4 tines. 30 day minimum LOii ol hugs and play HlllY AllY . -··t 111 pu---w .. t 17th, Sutt• B. Co•t• d.-1 $5300 caiiBu'tCh Auto. pi t , air. CfUIM. p/w. lied ad In t1'e •6'46-908•• ---·-T .. -.. _ .. , 0 C alrporl M ... 71'4 6'45 0997 ' · A ffW flAWlfl Of p/I. •Hoya. Low mllet. Im· O OS 1970 Cuti ... Su--Elec -Ptumb·P•lnttng·Lt $12/Hr +MATERIALS ,,. ......, uon · · • •. evening• 71•12•2·1538. M f'llEOW•D AUTOS m.culete. (tH0321'4l L SERVICE QUALITY Home Daycare carpentry. etc 631-4043 !References 675-•006 11 hiring for Interoffice CONSEW SEWING MA· ;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;=I 111 Ill preme, 2-door, loeded.
I promotion But1"4tll to CHINE h 1 • ••mm (BI02I} OOlA III • •1•t• aale. t owner. FVIHB area Xlnt reta. No FOR THINGS HUSBAND CUT • ROLL p•1NTING . ' up o itery type, 0-/Dodcs/Stor-
pool 0 Sps Non amkr ~ " busln"' contacts only. ne•r new, S895 Call _,... -r · 15 • J25t (2C9M111 m.~ _a....,81 a-• S 2 • 5 O Ex c e 11 • n t
DIRECTORY CALL~ue~8_2711 . CAN'TOAWON'TOO hnt!Ext Lie.Bonded Free Excellent work et· 71,.~30•3030 7022 ·15-US (lCIPWl SIU!~ ""ITTarb':~.d.C M _7_7_5_-68_40 ____ _ · Satisfaction Guar est. All wOf'k guar•nleecl. mosphere. $7-St5.00/hr.1_.,...--=-=-=--=---=---,. Reta Avallabt~ 6'42·9274 Uc.#5103'48. •98-7020 All leads aupplled. Tr•ln· MOVING: GE refrlg. 2 door **BO~T DOCK** • l5-IJ!i ('11l11l mm 111·2111 ""'111 UAll
For more lnfOf'matlon I Ing provided Call 1/1, loe & water In door, Up to 50 allp In lenoth. • 1t•SZ5 (115610) sn.m ~~~~~~~~ 1111
CALL TOOAYll o'rOUT WINDOW WASH FREECAESLTL MREEAFSIRSRTA,TES llWIP&1m111et./td. 660·7255 for appoint· whlle$350. 1950'ameple Po-, water, etc Nrl!'Uiy ·•omlWD(1'8Wll SlltM = Thorough prep reaa rat.. ment dlnlnn Mt. tr"tle table, laland on P9flln 873· t9'43 836·8171 MERCEDES 1985 300TD Auto, PIS, air, Ult, crulM. Isl FOR· LOIS I Refs Reis Reliable, est. No Job Too Big or Small. Jim 7S•·l<IWl·75,._5•9• · ··• WAGON. Whit• leethef. pl w. pit. 1mmecut1te. " 20yra e•p Pina 645-9866 Ron 722·8"'"'6 ___ Chairs & hutch s7oo. An· •U. lfa11 -1KAA •UTO Maal g• (739308) .our I -------.,.. RAINBOW Clrcle Malnt,•·s-E_L_L_B-Rl_T_A_N_N_IC-A-fr_o_m tlque beds & wicker '45' SUP 1~=.-·eo· ._" "" n. aunroof Excellent
Service Directory I HOME MAINTENANCE Painting. Int.Ext. House & leeds & counter locallona trunk Misc. 5'48·8822 SLIP S950/mo. 760•5070 IAITA AIA AUTO MAU S 18,950. 759·7035 17111
Repr...,,tellve * .llPUISf * AND REPAIR Apt Ouat job. Free est. & earn $330 per sale Walnut bunk beds & tact---.-------llW ..... t f .... WIY (66J NISSAN '90 300ZX -11&1111. ..U 142 .. 4121 lllSHLUllll lell Hff 111-1222 St. llc#569897 631-1758 (gross) C all Bi a Ir der, gd cond. 1200/obO. P~~eS:!.~~0~~~~~~1. It ffllllf', IHtl All .Gold, auto. toya, 3600 2925 H8fbor Blvd, C.M Ed J10 Very reliable. In Orange vHOME REPAIR VESCO PAllTlll 1·800·628·9128. EJec meetallcer (Blerch•) Cell for Info. Pat, mlles, S26,500 583-1559 fll-HM
° County for 12 years! VWITH SKILL AND CARE SECURITY OFFICERS $250/obo. 6'4S·9208 873·2810 --------·I-PANTERA 1972 ~~~~~~~~~ --------•I Mellculous. nardworklngl Exceptlon11 Ousllty Work & W•llp•perlng. Ouallty 1ft 11•.a Brtnht Red, good con--•, .. llTIOE C.11 Aiko 733-8811 Refs. Call Tom 675-6226 work. •683895. 969·63'49 c~• 6017 DOCK-15', front lie on -• ,._ l IOIODJ UIES ~-· chennel In N.BI Must be P/wlndOW8, c .. 1. crulN , dltton, $35. 00, 1ppt IMLI 1111
he Cellf Publtc Utllltfes - - ----u BUY 7 LL I NSTALL •WANTED·AMERICAN low 4M'lougn for bridge, wtleel1.(2MMH235) I only 724• 1156 V8. auto. power 1teerlng
Commtlllon. REQUIRES *THE HOUSEWIVES* Etec & Plumbing Ftxturn. 1 SURPRISES INOIAN ITEMS. Cuh IOI' 1250/mo. 875·6806 11111 PORSCHE 1972 911T. R• and brek•. air. em/fm
that all uled. houMhold Quality with a Personal Ce41ing Fans. Dlapouls HANGING/STRIPPING BUketl. Pottery. Ruga, -. __ ..,. __ •-1.1 f 4 stored, llke new Call me. (2NWE138) g~s movers. print their Toucn Serving NBtCM/ Walt. 5'48-6'49'4 Llc•560875 VISA·MC etc. Gary 71•12•8· 7917 FREE BOAT SLIP 35· with •-• -n tr $12,000._6'42·2923 l1Uff p u c Cat T number. HB/etc. Re11 5'6·2287 673_ 1512 • Payehecit problem•? Hydro Holst & malnt. for 1111 llfhr lh•.,
limo·s & ohauffeur's print HUNTINGTON HSKPG • Bounc.d from poll .N'w-'-/Fun/ An lltlle UM of t>oat for exp httl.... Sasb 1973 Rocket 98 Jl•I• I ..
their T.C P. number In 111 SAVE lO"I. with ad We ~S & S WALLPAPERING topoat? ... ft, 6025 Captain. 8'42-9108 ll'""42-111I coupe, great condition. UIHLl mlllY
•dvertlsen'lents If you , clean to YOUR needs Custom lnstellatton. •Unexpected charges? wa-.11, •---et S 1100. 1 W5•8-7479. 2826 H.,bor Blvd .. C.M
have a quettlon about Bond-"'/ln• .. 969•3188 Removal. Interior Paint. a ....... lllTITI -•5•• -- -•---the legallty ol a mover. ""-""-_ _ Freeett Jlm540·6587 WOl'klortheoompanythat _, .. .,5 SLIP. Prlv•t• allp SUBARU 1985GL ...--
limo or ch•uffeur. Call: JAPANESE Cleaning SVC IMMEDIA TESERv1ce-I• up front and cares 'mLIY preferred. 723-43,. BMW 1987 32511. Loaded. 4x• Wagon. 5 apd. elc .. 1 :~~~~~~~~
Public UtlltlH Com · Complete Home & Small ANYTHING TO DUMP ~E0~8•111'naht~d10~·~.g~ogod4::i~:O about you. L atge 1ete ct1o n of excellent condition, aunroof. atereo, •lloy
mlaalon 71'4·558·'415t Buslneu Reliable Hard· CLEAN UP • CONCRETE "' E diamonds vin tage Mb< TrlnlpOttldon wtilte/red leather Muatl whit , csr cover, bike wor111ng Call 545-0679 •TREES John 650·1628 Service. ADVICE TO TH Full-time and part·tlme wetcMI Incl. Rolex •nd • H it. Sl 9•9oo O BO rack . $3.200 OBO ..... '11-'11,HI
L IA
AH Mil< .. & Modela.
Couneous Serv 558-05 15
302 1 ·B Harbor Bl. C M
WE HAUL AWAY
APPLIANCES
Fr .. olchMge
M5-5191
CRAZY. 833·71 72 positions sveliable Poa-Patek We buy, M ii. trade 85l·982'4 838-9702 I Moonroof, ltereo. 111t.
RELIABLE Houaeclesn DUMP RUNS · JU~ tllons avellable through· and repair , Wiiiiam C!"f!!1/Traltrs ~14 BMW 3201 1980, air.I TOYOTA '83 SUPRA crulM , air. pwr win-
Experience References Furniture. trash, tree out Oranne County. Herold Jeweler• 3118 1980 DODGE Br"'""'hem --·-"t c 1 ""'K 1 " d ti t d o wa/door lock• Very Good Prices Llttle brenches. appllancea. nt I JCI. patch pluter ng, • · ~ c-• •· 1 >"uper c ean. uv m .. 1p • e11ce en Engllah LUPE 5'43-7652 Call Mike 7 dy1 641-1391 euatom texturing. quellty Many In Southern Orange N-port Blvd •t 32nd. Mini RV. 350 engine. roof One owner $'4500. condition 15700 OBO (2FPJ070)
--work Problems-No Prob-County 111 .. HI and duti air. klnglln 875-7272 733-0330 ,, ..... I ...
INllTI IYIU 'JWdu\ilflj:§lii.M 1em11 #32686• 55•·783 t we otter· lllY 1 IWllll llH ~i.:~~v '~~,~~~i ...... lll'MrJ
Regutat HouHclu ntng H0DfiEJll1M 11mprove El'IPUSTE•lll •Vec:atlon1&1r1lnlng 18 rubles. 21 dl•mond overa ll cond ition. lft'lll111 TIYITA•ll.U'll HH....,"'4 Svc Shempoo c•rpeta, Int/Ext Painting large & " * Health ..._ _ _.Its c k ti I S 13 500 71'4 .,.,. &e81 White •uto ( 1LKJ717) A t t A••• al pi t ........ fl00f1-wlndow1631·8511 Small Job•. Fr.. est Reatuccoa. Petch". .,.,.,,.., chlpt. oc ta r no , . ..,...... . ,.. u o. • ereo ...... r. ,
5 T <>-aJ 1 1.,,_1 Brend newt $160 .79 WINNABAGO 29· 911f IUD , (2FOG498) •-11M
...................
REMl>DELINEW C'ONST
Punctuality & Rell1ble.
Neat & Pron Service.
Ou•llty ref's. Outllandlng
worl\manahlp Lie/Bond
Fully Insured 646-0298
CALL Stephen. 960·39'5 e•turea, .._,, ra. nt""' SECURln (71•> 581-9398 Iv mag. tllll I ..... --------Free "t. 983-3'418 CHIEFTAN $13,000. .... ... I ~~~~~~~~~ •'1• •STlllTlll ••O engine, •9K ml. Mlcfo-1500 Auto Mall Dr. S.A n11•1n ...... '"' I: TILE.CARPET-MARBLE lllUU, llC, Office Furniture wave. 2 root alre, ltland •••1111 ..aa .---. ...... -------
Llc'd/Bonded. 85-i-1772 & Ef"P'"!"! 6047 bed. etc. 751·3215 --, ... __ '""''' rtaJC NOTtcE
\14Mlll) LIQUIDATION Dukl, STORAGE. Coate Meta. l~Q~I __ --.._.__._ __
Cl •> llM1H =~~~~~ ;:!: .::.b:~: =~r~!~~ ~C:0~9~ = ·~~!b5eEo. 49K m1. c~~£
ltlhtH llnt & Sun. 2043 WMtcllff Or., cov«ed. Ce I 8'42-5858 19toO OBO. 540--037'4 Volvo 1994 OL In the Matter of the Pe11-
Experlence nece1Hry. NB. No. 303. 831-0538. Fully equlJ>ped. excellent lion to Change the Name of
prefer non11mkr. FIT. MotorcydtS/ tlit\IS lft 'II Hit condition. new Urea. SHAUB;..!~~?~~LAINE
W•rtrHf 0..etus 5•8·9328. Pets I Atftlls 6049 ScoOltn av 5 tpMd. (2CBM•77) I u n root. I 8 . 9 7 5 . ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
• • I Deck•. belconl"~-ilalra. • TREES • TtHIMr AK C .. b t • 'w h It• t979 GL1000 GOLDWING 112 Ill 873-8888 FOR CHANGE OF NAME •NEW CONSTRUCTION Quatltywork 722•8769 ' Preschool 10 Co·tHch. SHELTIES2F,1M8Wka. Cycle,fulldr .. a.12.200 --~-... VW1969Bug PETITIONER SHAUB.
• Unique & unuauel work roppe<l rnmr•v" C,lf'1tnllP UCI campua & trvlne. 12 1 250·1300 780-8877. OBO. 6'41-2307 -·-Good b8Ck 10 ac~ car, SANORA ELAINE hat"*'•
•Alteratlona•Comm/Res ~nu 1aw"'~c.11111o.1r 7'> t .~.· 76 unit• ECE minimum. Ex· 873-2805 1500 Auto Mell Dr. SA run• 6 looks good, petition tor an order to
23yrs •r ... uc. 961-356'4 ~ ima'tl1r4ffl•a IY1. ce1r.n1 .. ,ary & benefit•. * lllllT * 4 Wheel Drtv~/JffPS 11a.a111 1 1.900. oeo 8'484'09. ~~~JS°r~~~~~
preseots DOG TROTTERS Monthly matnt Cleen·UP : PT/FT. 854-8030. 9030 VW t979 Bug Convertible. BEACH.
Trained athletlc1 to walk Stump removal •9 •. 3778 OFFICES etc. to MANAG PUPPY SILE HONDA 198• p el de -Red/white, mint con· It II n.r.oy ordered thet or trot your dog •98-0775 Oepen<18bfe.&. ret.fen<:M, CHEVROLET BLAZER r u dltl $7 500 873·'4'48'4 all peraona lnter•led In thl1 •CLEAN· UPS. TREES, 875-eG2• *Tlll.UHTIM* AU ..... a-• 1987, • x •. Ian, new •II e11tre1. mega. very on · · matter apl)e9t bef0<e this
I • STUMPS·PALMS~HAUL-"'"-tires, babied. 18, 100. clean. 18.100. 751-71,.. VW 1985 Jett• GLI coun In o.p.rtment No 3A
The R8dleeon O.C. airport • ULI. 5•1-'4193 HONDA 1986 Accord LX 6tpd, p/1, e./c, aunroof, of the C>t8n99 County Su·
It hiring tor lnteroMc. OVER 20 BREEDS Ood 1987 Re Che Excelt.nl have company g r ea t c o n d I t I o n . perlOr Court et the edor-
promotlon. Butlneea to tNSTOCK 4 .. reoci 8 ~K 1roer car need 10 Mii 18800 irey/bl1ck Interior. at1own 11>ove on SEPTEM·
bUalneea cont8Ct1 only. AH pupptee guaranteed x · · v · m · •x-· saoo OBO. 75&-9038. BER 11. 1tt0 at 2:00 o'clodl
Excellent work •t· PETLAND PAVILION cellent condition, proa-545-1150 p.m .. end 1hen end there
moaphere. 17·115.00/hr. OPEN 7 DAYS pector pkg · full treller HONDA '83 PRELUDE Autos Domtllk 9)(X) lhOWceuM,lfanytheyheve,
All lead• aupplled. Tr81n· 18374 8Mch Blvd 'I\ ml. 8. P •c k a g • · g • r n •I A/C. Moonroof, $ spMd. wtiy the petltlOn for c:Nnga
Ing provided Cell 405 fwy ne11t to T.,get red/Ivory. $10,950. 35mpg 13900 8'44·9208 1978 \fW RABBIT. Good of name lhOuld not be
880-7265 for •ppolnt· Betw•r;Edl!.'r! & Hell.' 8'40.1568 HONDA '87 ~c:c:ord LX condition. Beet ofter. Call Ot:'~~hef ordered that•
ment * 141-IZll * JEEP 1988 Wr•ngter, '4dr, 5tpd. '47K mtlee, 0<lg-Dave •97•50•7 copy of 11111 order to lhOw
Se.here edition. 11,000 lnet owner, 18.300. BUICK 1983 L.S•bre ciauM be publllhed In Of. ---------iiiiiiiiii•iiiiiii1 TELEMKETING/SALES 1111 llTTlll, l •t miles, excellen1 con-2131592·•256. '4-door All electrle, ~ enge Coeat Delly ~ 1 FIT & PIT ev8ll Cell for Vertety of c:olor•. FREE to dltlon. S 10,600 OBO. Cell lhlnyl 13500. newapaper of general
lnter'ilew M·F 9.5 The good hOl'M. '497_.511 .,,., 5, •92·7M5. 751·1552 Cifculetlon publlshed In this
H El T 7•• • ·179 _. Plll.8111 'II county. at leMt onoe • _. oP. oro vv•v ,ree to good hOl'M, 8 Wk f-...&.· 90 3 ) * 8'lldl 1H2 Electra for fOUf coneecuttve _., 1.1.1111."" 0 Id. n." A I .. k. n ·--35 Loededl( 1CM IA 9 P•ll. &t•t• Wagon. 82K ~lor to the dey Of the .....,.
113 """ hou y Melmute hall Golden Re-CHEVY '!M PICK-UP ~ lffH ml. 12.875. Newporter II .
.... per r. our trlellef pupplee. ,,..... REBUILT 1111111. AMA M t ,. . 5 48 • ea 2 3 . f£: AUG , '"°
ArN. No Exp Neceaeary cat! 4994800. . WITH CAMPER 12295. 2925 Harbor BtVd. C.M S.l-2017. 'Ami A. 'ACICllAN,
(219)131-343'4 ext. t30 SEE. 6oe2.QH7 lll-·1• JUDGmc--°'THI ~ CedlM8C 1985 COY vvn•
t~ Wlntld 1 • I • L•... mn IWll 1• 8:tn.=. 5~~~8=~ ,...':-~:t =.,,~r: '""'!!!!!'l"'!~mll!!~ ... siijsli3it5I -E 1•R ....... ..... n.... 4WO 4 3 II Tah HYUNDAI 1817 OLS 97$-2631. AM, CA 92701 M~!D NUAS!. Ll'l!-·IN ':M .. ~ ~· '(M ~ f:.~·. full ~ ~ 33K. 5-epd. rune-look• H · ~ OfMQe Coaet
Of OUT Prlvllte duty. :::7 Hiie"" y~ ,. IA ... ") c e I I en t • I 3 . 5 5 0 . CADILLAC 1876 EldOredo Delt't Piiot Auouet I . 13, 20.
L , " ,,.~ 131-3027. Conv. IOw mile l>Muty. 27, 1tt0 OCel r eferenc el b1ectc ....... llofdet • ..:=11 S..t ofter over S5500. m076
380-7131 1e. INlle, llbendooed In • -eao.1 150. ---~ dlMrt motet. Stoned by _..., .. ~,.• =-~----people, conMquenUy 1600 ~o Mtl Dr, I.A. ..... ..., -"'ADILLAC ·12 f9bulft ~
blind In one•· Stllllov-111-1171 ~27r,)• IOw mhe. tn•. tren1mt111on, ine~r~~=:~ 11• C.:-:n:.-:1~~ 60t0 ~I Cell IS4-0llO Dodge 1"4, Hon • ftll .. fl 11111111 hH AOILLAC '11 Eldor . .liiiiiii ••lllf
9nt1. vtctoNn ,_ 2. Old Fem 1c1en1-~.~.,:::.~ _...:':.....,. ~~. 1.'i~1o ~~~: ..:=L~
:=1.1e-ven1ty, ~net ICel ~ btit oeta. tt'.m or CtluCll et 11...a .. 11 ••• ""---~ • M0ttuaty
ICllh t.::'a:::.r !::; = := =~ MAZDA 1113 l2000 .... 'll 3~~='ctrve
Chelta. 17IO:.s to~home8?S..0.. l•,OOO Otlf. mllH, JA UA 1•H )CJ , lrwtsrzn 1.2 II ~lwll
L bUreau, 1140 • lfTIOIOed •• ':!P~l.-!1750 tray/Vay. ehnroom 31K, itMi....._.., aer· H.I •• ,., Laguna ....... l*' &<>.~. oondttlon,...., ...... , ....... ,,..,_-.a14 tll••·--·
• 1UYiiCI ri'IMI • MN 1"7 vw 6W &> a"'*' oaya MJ-&441;
I J .. • * '"°' to tHOI * ltlcllup. Ntw lnoln• I',_ 11044ll f *Jewelry to HoA11'10td1" . .-0. 780-0240 * Hit th• new1pelnt ....... LV ...... •1s-an l.ltht ori~ lhowrOOM ~J!t!a:'ltfffr before rou hit ~es 601 I •• = Jl! ~-YW OlAlllC = I=. J40:.3 "'' ... ·
FOA A JOe ww. DOH11 the pevement •nMlll... ortb: ..-.1 mud!,..., ~°'~-,7~ AGuAh tiW ;ue~ ~ O.C. for 11 ,_,.. Ult ,.., .....,... ootor, IAT'llUN. ~ Or-. ,__ _ •'°a.<>. WNtWtan, "*"' ~ Uc. T-118.Mt • coneull cllaai.n.911111 1190.c.14........, A~.ore11...._1 •t1__ pttoM,ISIK . ...,.t•7t. =======~ 1.;i;,.,,:;;,;;,,;;;.;,;;,;..;,;..:;.;;,;;...;;;;;;.;;;.;..;.;;,.; ______ .... __ ...;..;.......;...;.;,_ __ .....1...;;..;.;.;.;;.;.;..;..;.;.;.,;.~~--• ~
~ llD1ll MUC llmCl Nu mncl ...S llDllCE MUC llJ1ICl ft&IC llJ1lCl Ml.JC ..,l1Cl --~· DM.J ..Oncl8'Wnnor. ~--·-·· N:ltl ... I HI llllDJlrwMJllAll M:flltOue•-·-·· ..CIHIOWl•'llA• .,_ .... Coulltya.tofOr· MoncMy, ~ n ...• TOAIJMNrnTEA The•a1a8!!'-' .... 8TAW ... n.,....,, ... 8TAl-P .... 8TAW MONmOf :~°"~ ;7, -..Cmlll -..-.c ... DTATIOF! ~ .... ..............:......,. .. The ........ ~.,. n.~,.,_.,.. TM._.........,..,. TM~l*IOll9.,. .._. ...
ua& 1 --"'"--• dolna,.,._• .,......_._ dollw"""'*'• .... ~. Ofll UILM. ,._,, M WW• I Ill ca--. LA,__.___,, W:. lctlDUIGNa,tJ'aA l<JMV NICI( AUTO DI--_l•lAOUATIC ROCK WROLI l"I P"OD· DfYIAS"llD IN• JUQS9Jh""9t8 ~ ar.,._COMI .Mii.n•+ 11 8P COU THl"HA lka lAURA 8RIOtfT ~ •,....,.lttw. ~ TAM.CO ..... WleOft Ali&. t, ICAP 18 t 11) O . ¥1 , UCTI, 101 W CeMr1t Awe., VIAONMINTAL INDUI· ~ tio ... Ctlltllilffe ~ Piiot ~? 27. lep. n. ....... --..,. ~ CAIENO.A1A10I .......... ~.. eo.a ...... c.w.t181'1 INTIAPRllll, 300 ....... ,OI, .... Cellf. TNU. 17100~ Aw.. .............. ,~ .....,a, \0, n., .... 1 ............. • -CONal..W.
To .. ~Peine.Ao .......... ~... ~ Ntdc ... w. COMll ........_ ......... aa1 ntne.c.lf.t2714 AGt ll & , c.-21100.. 11 CMll .. COUMllUHO _,.INC. bltnelciMM. ~ Cellf t:ataNews>otte.ctt. Mlofl ,.,._ 1. cC.e ..._ port..-.c.11t.tate0 ..,_ JetletM. '°' w. eero1 D. Mct<eown, w eeii.>. uie ""*'•*' • Cl.NT!"-m Do.-It., • •1,..
Q0111iog•M cndbe Md Tl.6. ... ~.___ Celt. ttt27 W~M,WOOCIMrd.• CenttW A~i..-~ •t06. vi.te Del c.nori. Al'tfJil/fllft. ... • Pl*'° .-on. on PmJC llJTIC( .,.. n *""*' ....._ ,.._,.. -who ',,_ --11 COii• TNI IMleiMM 11 con--l .COMllHllflWeVllt ...... .,_e.t.uw1 Celll.tH01 ...,..,,,. 11, 1tl0, .. c.1f ~ • Ull ~·be In~ in ductedbr.entndMcluet duc1ellby.en~ '*1.._..~c.llf.NMO Thie~ .. con· "'* buelneee 19 OOt1--tO:OO AM, 20tt ......_ P1Cnnoue•·1n.. T.,.,,,..,....LG.a.W .. MMQI !}' wll ot ....... or WI ~reg1ttrenl(1) COi\'\• The ree!Wenl(•) CIOfl'I-llllrie P. WOoctHd, '°° duCted by. en~ duc'9d l)y; en~ A..,., C.. ...... CA .._ ftATW 114'1 Med!Wfll'WI Of.. IP wt Nl"WPOAT ... : LAURA '-· IAOMT ..a ,..... .~ tr-.ct ~ mencecl to lrlll'IMCt ...... I. CoeM HldM9Y IH • ...,._ TN reg6etrant(•) ciom-TN ,..._tr.m(e) OOftl.-,.,.,_. prop.rty, Inducing The'°'""",_... .,. HwlllnG'Oft hech. Celtf. P\.ASTIC8,, INC.
LAURA IRtGHT --\tie flc1mout neee Wider \tie Flctteloul po11 e.citi~ Cllfll. t2teO mMOed to tr...ct ..,.._ mencect to tteneect ~ fufnttvre. dott11n9, toot. OOW'I ~ • HMO IP aeeo cu. NO DI
A PETITIOH t. *'1 =•••. "'"'el•) llete4 l11e1n .. • name(1) lleted Thl9 ~ It con-w UftOlr W-flCt*oul w UftOlr IN ~ tltd/or ottlet hOUMflOld INDUITNAl ANO ~ Thie 114.aMMM 11 con-JAIJllllO 111tcf t>~ BARBARA~ ~~· 1"° .tK>Yeon:N/A MMdby.~INWll9 "*""' neme(1) llated ~ neme(•) Hated ...,,. .. cw.dl)ytMfolcMlne pAOl IHOUITAIU 21ao duotlldby.enlndMdum IPHllMKAl•UIUY LEGACY In 1-. 8uoeriof TNI .,...:.,._ AnUIOnyNldl TN regletrenl(I) COfn• llll0¥9 on:~t.1te0 ~on:N/A ~ O Pomona It. II, ·eo.1a TM reglltrtlM(t ) COftl· IP HOO CA,U.01 Court of CalNomiA. C'ountv -~-·-1• ... ftled Thie ...,_,, ... flied mMOed 10 lrenteCI ...... Jenet JeNrM Cerot o. ~ 8 p I 0 1 • .. A RI ...... Cellf NU7 menced •o .,.,... «Ml-CAITl1.M al ORANGE ., wtttl ttle County Ctertc of Of. with 1he Collnty Ctertc of Of· ,_. ""°" tN FlcWoue Thie .....,,.,. -tied TNa ......,..,.. _. tllad Ft.ANAHDEZ Menull C Gome&. 21ao ,_. Wider 1he ~ W HW......, ....... THE . PETITION = County on Augult 10, 11ige County on AUQUet 10, au11neea name(1) lllted wt01 tt1e County~ of Of. wllfl IN County a.ti of Of~ SP 90lt OE81A!E C. POl\'ION si. II, eoe1a .,._ Name(a) llltad 0-,__. ._ ""-"
Ill .,.. BARBARA 1990 ~on:~ 1. 1990 .,. County on,...,.. 10, .,. County on~ 10. TANNEA sus·N ...... c.111. t2127 ebo¥e on NIA '° ........... ~ ~ LEGACY be Publ ~-,.. W"°"1 ... WOOdwd IMO 1tl0 IP cue .. v. Thie butlneM " COft· Terri P • ....,..,, ................ Ollld\~ -i..141d • ~Iii """"""' ltheet~ Coett Publlthad OfW199 CoeM Thie ..-...i1 WM Ned ~ ,__ DARWIN duc14ld by. .,.. ~ n. .... ,"*" wea t1ec1 end ,_ far .. ,._ ... OI tp,_eMn\altYe '° __, Pilot 20, 27, Delly Pllot ~ 20, 27, wtth the County Clertl of Or· ~ °'Wl99 C0Mt Publtlttlad °'W'09 Coett IP C3S4 DENIE FIE· TM regl1trent(1) CCHl'I· wtltl \tie County Olertl of Or· purct.ee. AJI pun:NMd ~* fie ...... °' See>temt>er 3, 1 • 1990 September 3, 10. 1990 .,. County on AUCll* ao, Dally Pllot AUQUet 20. 27. Delly Piiot Auguet 20. 27. Dl..11' mMOed to tranMCt bull-.,. County on ~ 25, fOOda.,...., "• 1a:· end lhe dee9denl M· 102 M.ot7 t990 Seplemw 3. ff>. 1MO S.,lernber 3, 10. 1tl0 °"'* ~ IN ttoM ,_ Wider "" ~loul ltlO ""* ... ,.,.,,., .......
THE • PETrTION ,__ M-090 ~ lo b6d '1 the ..... Pun:NiMe l11t1M.. neme(1) ll•te4 ,.._ OI ...._ .... eubtece 10 ,,_
requ .. 111 ht dtoedlnra •-JC W\TM"t "8JC llOllCE ~A °'":9:1 C:: .. _.,. MftTIC( __ .,. MfttMr ::':C,m:::-:'V'M~~ ~on.~ 11. IMO P~ OfMQe ~ '9!1Ctl1t1n _,die.,.,.. of
WILL Ind codlctll, If any, .. _ "'"~ 1ernber 3 1o"fr leeO ,._"" ,.._ ""'~ pvrchaM All c>11rcJIMad Matllllll C. Qoinm OeilV Pllot Auguit I . 13, ao, ........,. .,....._ °"'* be edmtted '° pte>bale 'ICTIT10Ue ....... • . I IOld .. .. .. end Tlllt ICMMlent ... flied 27. 1990 end t'Hg..,.. ..,.ey, o.ect
The will Md 11ny oodcia 'ICTmOUI IU-81 ..... ITA,_..,-M-115 '9CTITIOU9 MWM ACTmOUI IUWM gooOI -emollad • • with the County Clettt of Or· M..oe& .. 2TlfH~tr of ,..._ end
are avalllab69 '°' ..... ITATl-.aT Tllefoetowlng l*IOM -..,... ITAW ..,... ITAW ~a. '410;.t~= =County on AUCll* 17, 3nldeyof.., ...... 1tl0.
examnation In N • Up( ~::=::-on· .,, d°!? E~R~ES 24331 Nl.IC llOTIC( ~ = ~.,. d::::::: ~ .,. c:anoellatlon In the _. °' 1 ,...1 =IC .,,:·er:.:~
trffH•ecourt. PETITION fl(AVELSPOR.T, 21211 Mulrlend• Blvd ... Sult• Aennoua..-u CAOSSWINOSELECTRIC CALIBRE MEDIC AL.::,~~= PubWlecl OBnge CoMt "8.JC ll01lC£ 2u-ioeo:Aeent'°'°"'*· ..-. a .. ua , Newport 8Hell '-243, El T0to. c.tlf. 92e30 NM9 ft A~ INC .. t421 N90IM!Df .Hllnt· 19000 MICArthur Blvd., ~ ~· Delly Piiot A~ 27. Sep-a-,_ Publllhecl Orenga CoeM
:=:er 9'i;.-"1 w: Cellf. 92858 ' Ar no Emrich, 24331 The following 1*ton1 are lnQton BMctl. Celll. 9-264& Suite 400. lrvlM, Cl lll ~ 27t~ ~~= tember 3. tO. 17, 1990 NOTICI 0# :=t., Pllot ;er-27. aep.
un<»< the I~-:-,,, ror~2~:,~r.n~~ ~~~J'eid:°':'C!.f. 9~• ~~=. 216 E. ~~ E1ectr1e inc:· 92~:..n, P. Langley, 2387 Pudb~ s1~aoe wan~ M-no ~ 3· 1 MlH ~~~!!..-,~ ewti, Cati!. 92858 Th1i buelneH 11 con-11th St. Sult• 48, Coate Ttlll bulln ... I• con· Cflatllanl St . El C•lon. Cellf ment. Inc T~,,.,_<,!!!> •-ti' MftTIM' Pwen .W11 I
.-... 1 ,,_ --~ .. , -Thia butlMH 11 eon· duct.CS by: 111 Individual Meee. Calif. 92827 dllctad by: 1 CC>fPO'•tlOn 92020 2......aoeo. Agent"''..,.,...._ ,.._ ""'-. Pinuent to tM Callfotnll "8..IC ..,llC(
.ilo• ... ~ ~~ dllClad by:• CO<P<>f•llOll The reglttrtnt(•I com· LIM Lynn M119111r, 275 E. TM regletranl(•I com-Thi• bullnMt 11 con-D Pu~A °'enci;7 ~ a~ Sed·Sel'vtoe StOfltQll Fac:lllty ---------reprewi .,,,.. -Tiie r1glttrant(•I com· menc.d to 1ranuct bull-11th St. SI.ill• 48, Coet• menced to tranwt bull· ducted by tn Individual atty :er'' · .....,.. MOTIC:a ~ Act (8 & p Code 21700 111 ACTITIOUe ..,.,-...
many . ectonl wiehout menQM1 to trantaet buAI· ne.. unci.t Ille Actltloul Meaa. Cellf 92927 MM under the FlctltlOue The regltlr•nt(tl eom· ternbw 3, 1 .....C: IM.I MQ.). the undel•gnad w111 tum aTAW
obtaining . court ~II. ,.... und« the Fk:llll<>ul But lnen name(•) lltted Thie butlneH 11 con-Bu•lneH n1me(1) lltted menced to tr1nN01 bull-Ml24 ~ NMOMA.L ... at pvbl'c auction, on The~~ -
Before Wllng oeNlin very Bualnen ni me(a) llalld abow on: Aug1111 a. 1990 ducted by· 111 Individual above on: AUQllll 7. 1990 ,.... und« Ille Flctttk>ll• ~ ,00_, 1 Septemti. t 1, 1990, 81 1·00 dolnG bullflW •:
importanl actions. above on Augull 1~. 1990 Arno Emrich The regl1tr•nl(1) com· Jarn411 Salum ButlntH n•me(1) ll11ed PUfll*lt to Ille Calllornla PM. 1725 Pomona A--. KA°'rlE SAILS & CANVAS
howevef, the ~Iii Fr.oe<lcit LaW11'1et Prlel-TNt 1taternenl wu Iliad ~ lo tranuc:1 bull· Tlllt ttaternent wu 111.ci •bow on July 1990 "8JC flOTIC( Self•Servlol St0t1g1 FICl!lty Coeta MeM, CA per'IONI REPAIR. t1 llleGon Bey, representallv• will be <*It · with the Collnty Clerk of Of. MM under Ille Flct1110u1 with the Collnly Cietk 01 Of-Wllltam P Ltng'-'t Ac1 (B 1 p Code 21700 _. ptopeny. lncllldlng tumtture. ~ e-:.ti, Celt. HMo required to ONe notice IO Tiii• 11atement wu flied Inge Collnty on Aug111t 10, ButlnaH name(t) ll11ad Inga Collnty on Aug111t 10. Tnla llltetnenl WU flied 'ICTTnOUI IUWM teq.). the undlr•gned wi• ctottllng, IOOll Md/Of otMr IUltfwyn &leenne Crow.
1n1e<esl8d pereona un6e9s wttll 1,,. County Clerk 01 Or· 1990 above on. Aug1111 I, 1990 1990 with 111e Colln1y Clerk or Of. M.-ITATl....-T Mii ,1 publle auction, on hOuMflold lt«nt 91~ by 81 8tecon Bey, ~
they have walWd nob Of atlQe COl.lnty on 4uguat 3 ,__ u.. L. Mueller ,....._ 1nge COi.iniy Qn Aug11•t tO, The lollowlng ~· .,. S.Otamt>.r 1 t . 1990. 11 IM~'*'°"" 8aectt. Cell! 92t90
consented '° the proposed 1990 . Publlthad Ortnge Coat Thlt atatemenl ... llled P11bllthad Or•nge Coat 1990 dOl:1l bu.,_ ... 11 00 AM. 2065 Ptaoentlt SP 9018 LISA M LEWIS Thia blltlneet II con-acllon) The independent ,_.I Dally PllOI Augutt 20. 27. with Ille COi.iniy Clefk or Of. Delly Piiot AUQIJll 20, 21., 1'4181• A LAS CRUISES. 20e2 A--Colt• M-. CA SPC0$9 BRYAN 0 8UCI( dllc1ad by. an lnctNldllel
admtntllr&tion authority Publlthed OrlllQe Cout S.Otamt>e< 3. 10. 1990 1nge Collnty on Augutt 2, September 3, 10, 1990
1
Publlltled Or1nge Cout S-Cove L.Ane. Colt• Mela. l*IOr\AI prOC*'fY Including SP F285 STEVEN E The r~latt1nt(•I com-
w1I be gtanl8d Wllne M 9ally Pilot Auguet f3, 20. 27. M--091 1990 M--092 Dally Piiot AUQUll 20· 27• Calif 92827 furniture. c101h1no. 10011 KELSEY menoad 10 treneect blltl-
Wll8f9918d P8f'90n files an Septemt>e< 3 f990 Nll1ll Septamt>et 3. lO, 1990 Jecll Averbeck. 2082 S-and/or other hou .. hold SP G323E ANDREW MM wno.r the Flctttloul
objecllon lo the petillon · M-0112 "8.IC NOTICE Publlthed Ortnge Coat P\8.JC NOTICE M-<>N Coc·~r .. 2~7· Coltt Mela, 1tern11tor.CSbytMIOllOwinglNESSELROO 8111IMH n1me(1) 111t9d and shoWS oood an.. Dally Piiot Auguet 13, 20, 27, -• v' per.on. Owner r...-the right aoo... on Augllet l3. 1te0
why the oourl' thou6d not • 'ICTIT10UI IUllNlll Sec>taml>et 3, 1990 'ICTITtOUI au ... aa ' PUBLIC NOTICE Thi• bualn... 11 con· s p Ao u w 1 L LI AM to bid •tlhe ..,. PutctlMea Kaclltyn s . Crow
grant the au.,ori1y. flt&.tC NOTICE NAME ITATl•NT M-017 NA• ITATl•NT ducted by '" •ndtvldual BlLSBOROUOH JR. muat be made wtin caan only Thll e1a1emem -ftlad A HEARING on "9 The following r>enont 1r1 The lo110w1ng perlOfll tre FICTITIOUS aullNISI The reglttr•nl(il com. SP 8005 WENDY ANN and peld for tt the time of wttt1 the Collnty ciar-of OI'·
?Jlllion will be hetd on flCTITtOUl IUllNIH dOlng bullMM .. : rta.JC NOTICE doing t>ull""8 u · NA.• ITATl•NT menced 10 trtnuct bu• VAUGHN P11rchlM All purcnaNd .,. Collnty °" ~ 17 septembef &, 1980 al 1.45 NA• STATl•NT THE APOLLO INSTITUTE AG C A USTRAL I AN The lollOwlng perlOflt 1re ,_ unoet Ille FICtttloul. Sp O IO 7 p AT RICK goodt are told "u Is, ' and tMO .
P.M. in 04tpt. 3A localed al The fol!Owing pettont ,11 OF ANCIENT THERAPY, flCTITIOUI 9U ... S8 GLASS CO , 175 W 17th St dOlng bullii.1 u Bu1lneH N•me(el llltad CALIOUETTE muet be r""°"'9d at the time ,_,.
700 ClvlC ~ OriYe dOlng t>ullneu u . 31147 Birch SI., N9wport NA• aTATIMINT Unit A. Coit• Meu, Calll ADVANCED CONSTRUC· above on. NIA SP E051 EOW4RO TAY· of ..... Sale 111.1bjeet to prtor Publlahad Ol'enee CoeM
West. Sana Ana. CA WORLD JUNGLE. 217 •O Beaen. Calll. 92880 The IOllowlng '*'°"'tr• 92827 TION TECHNOLOGY. 1133 N. Jacll Averbeck LOR canclllallon In ,.,. event of [)ejty PllOt Augllet 27. Sec>-
92701. CyprHt Orlv1. L•guna Slllri.y Mn HenderlOr\, dOlng t>ullnMt u . Howard WUlley. 1959 Or-Elm, Of1nge, Calif 92e&e Tl'llt ttttement wu lllad SP EOSJ FOUR PAK M«le!Mnl t>ec...,, Owl'9f tember 3. 10. l7, 1990
IF YOU OBJECT TO Bffch. Cam 92851 21182 Btntt. Huntington CLUB SHIKI. 1191 Baker atige Ave.. Cott• Me11.I Robert A Hanoooll. 2853 with Ille Collnty Cl«k 01 Of. VIDEO and obltg.at.CS party 0.1.CS M-113
the granting ot the pelllion. Jonn Fitzgerald Denny, Beaoh. Caln. 92846 St . Sull• 10-A. Co111 M .... Calif 92827 Elden. Cott• M .... C•lll ·~ County 00 July 25. SP EOll4 FOUR-PAK tl'lll 27111 day of Augut1 and . you !tlould eppeer et tie 2 17 • o Cypre1t OrlVI. Tiii• butln111 It con· C1111 928211 Thi• butln1u It con· 921127 1 VIDEO 3rd di)' of Sep1emt>e< 1990 "8JC llOTIC(
heatl'l,0 and sla,le )'.CUI Lagunt BMc:h C•lll 92651 dllCl.CS by· •n Individual K-W•t Corp., C•ll· duct.CS by· tn Individual Rot>«t M Marino. 2853 f....U SP EOM LUIS A PER· Publlc Storaoe M•n1ge-,
ob)8Cli0ns Ot ftle wntten f hlt butlneu It con-The reg11tr1nt(1I com-lfornta, 13 B•roneu. L1Qun1 Tne reolaur•n•l•I com· Elden. Co111 M .... C•Jlt Puolltn.O Of1nge Cout EYRA ment. Inc Telepf\One (81111 ACTTT'IOUS .-u
obteCllOns With the OOUf1 dllCled by an indMdull rnenc:ed lo trtnuc:t l>uti-,NIQuel. Calif 92877 menced lo trantael bull-92627 Di lly Piiot AUQUll 6 l3. 20 SP E161 CHARLES R 2~. Agent for Owner um ITATWmlff
be'°'9 lhe hearing Ywr Tfle rlQIStr1nt(1) com· MN under the FICtlllout '"'' bu1lne11 11 con· MM under the Fictitious Tllll bualneu 11 cor1-27 · 1990 SEYMOUR Publtlhed ~ CoMt The. following l*'IOnl -appeanance mey ·be In menced 10 lrtntaet t>utl· But ln111 name( a) ll1ted ducted by a corpor11100 Bu11nen n1me(al !lated dllCted t>y a limlt.O. P•rtner-M-0831 SP E 168 MONICA PERRY Deity Pllol Aug1111 27 ~ OOiflQ blltlneal .. -
person or byyour att,.,.,_, -unde< lhe Flctlllout abOveon NIA Tiie regletrtnt(tl com· 1bove oo NIA ish1p SP E284 E RNEST ternt>et 3.1990 wrNNIE'S CLEAN ING
IF YOU AAE-~A 8utlneu nime(•I !lated Slllrt.y Hen<lerton ~ to tr•n .. cl bull· Howard Withey The 190111r1nll•I com.
1
SAUCEDO M 122 SERVICE, 285 71 Nor·
CREDITOR °' a tbove on Auguat 2. 1990 Thi• llltetnent wu Iii.cf ,_. und., the Flclllloua Thia ttllernet\I was 111.cs I menee<I to 1re.ntte1 bull· PtatC N()TIC[ , SP L007 SONORA L manoale •39H 8 Toro oonllngenl cnKllOt 01 lhe JOhn F Denny with Ille COi.iniy Clerk of Of. 8utlnen n•met•I !lated wtth lhe County Cletk ot Or-I,,... unoer the Flcllllout GONGWER Calif 92030 deoe&Sed yw rruet fife Thi• 11i1ement wu flied ·~ COi.iniy on Augu11 21, ab<>ve on NIA •nge Counuy on Auguat 10. 8ullneat N1me(sl ll1ted ,ICTITIOUl IU ... U I Owner r-the rignt Pl8JC NOTICE Ms\' ~Duddy, 2t67l yout cialtTI #ttl the QOU(ll WHll the County Cl.,k of Or· 1 Heidi A Kim 1990 . •bove on July 27 1990 .... STATl•NT 1'0 bid It tne .... PIHcn-Normanoale •3911 . .El Toro. end mail • IY>l\y 10 lhe 1nge County on Augutt 3 '417111 Thi• ttatament wu filed '..as Robert A H1ncoc11. I The lollowlng pertont .,. m1111 t>e med• with caah ooty 1 70IM Calll 92830 ......,. 1990 ' Publllhed Or1nge Cout lwttll the County Clerk or Of. Put>Utned Ore.nge Cou t Th11 slltement wu Ill.CS I doing bull-u llld peld tor 11 the ume of MOTICI °" · Tl'llt blleln•• 11 con-~=:C, ~::n= f_..1 Diiiy Piiot Augu1t 27. Sep. tnge County on Augull 3. 0111y Piiot AUQull 20. 27 with the Courity Clerk ol Of. F & F CONSTRUCTION purc,,He AH purchHe<I ~ 1AL1 duel.CS ti'/' 1r1 ltldlvtdual :.,In lour months lrom Publlthed Ormnge Cou l lembet 3. 10, 11. 1990 1990 Septemt>e< 3. 10. 1990 llr\Q9 Covnty on July 27 .jCOMPANY. 101~ 4damalooooa are eotd ·11 ... ·Ind ~ ~ The regl1tr•nt(•I com
the da'9 of tw.t leluance o1' Dally Pilot Augull 13. 20. 27, M· 118 fel64a M-100 1990 I Ave Huntington Be1ch mu11 beremo...O11 the time ~ •llllOI t tnenCed to tranuc1 bual-lettetl .........-.. 1septamt>et 3. 1990 Pvbllthed Orll\Q9 Cout f-....0 C1lll 92846 lot tile Sile Wbjec:t to prior Purtuant to the Catltornla ,_ under Ille Ac1KIOul '°" ~1 oo-·o;-..: M·0711 PUBLIC NOTICE Dally Piiot Augull 13. 20, 27, P\&IC NOTICE Publltl'led Orange Coa1t Francl• Kc Foo, 9441 canc.llatloo In the _, of s.tt-SeNlc;.e Storage FIOlllty I 8u•ln1t• r11rne(•I llll•d ~I& Probil Coda ' Sectaml>ef 3, 11190 •• "•"' 011Jy Piiot Auguat 6. 13. 20.IG1te111..a Or . Huntington Mtt'-1t bet~ Owner Act (B & p Code 21700 It l bove on J'*t 1. 1990
.. 'ICTIT10US IUllNISS "'""""' 'ICTrTtOUS IUat•lt 27. ·1990 BMch, C1111 92648 11\d obllgat.CS Parly OetlO ~I the undeo'ligned will Mary J-Duddy
The lme lot f~I P\&JC NOTICE NAMI ITAT'f•NT NA• aun•NT M-0811 1 Thll bullnen II con· llt\ll 27th d•y of Aug..iet 11\d ...... publlG INCtlOn on Tl'\11 ltatemenl •• l1lad
wll ~ ~XfW• "-~ Tf\e lollowtng perlOOI 1re PU8l.IC NOTICE The IOllOwing perlOOs ire Ouctld by tn lndlvl<lu•I 3rd day of Septamt>et. 1990 Septam«>er 11, 1t00. II 2 15 wttl'l lhe Collnty Clef'k of°'
mon I rom ·-·-v 'ICTITIOUI IUltHlH OOlng 1>u11,,... u · doing bullneea u l P\8..IC NOTIC[ The regl1tt1nt(t l tom· PuDllc Stot10• Mani~ PM. 2075 ,.._pon BIVd , mnga County on 4ugu11 2\ da• nouoed ~-NAMI ITAn•NT 0-STICKS. 1007 w llllh ftCTITIOUl IUllNIH MICHAEL'S GALLERIES lmenoed to tr1t11:K1 bull· rnent, Inc TeleohOne (11 1111 eo. .. M ... CA perlOflal 1990
YOU MAY EXAMINE The IOllowlng pettont 1re St . Co111 Min. Ct llf NAm tTATlmNT INC , 11152 McG1w. Irvine. flCTITlOUI IU ... al ,.... under tne Flct111ou1 j2.._eoeo. Agent for 0wneir CM'~y. lnctudlnQ lvrnlture. ,_,,.,.
11'18 file kept by IN COUr1 lf ldOlng bullneu u 92827 The loltowtng petlC>nl arm Calif 92714 NAMI ITAn•NT Bu1ln111 n1me(1) lllled Publltnad Orange Coett 'Clotning. tOOll 11\dlOt Oll'ler Pub1191'\ad Of11109 Coeet yoo are a per90n CATe'l MARKETING, 694 McCoy Surtboard.;Greg dotno butlMM ... MlehMI'• Glllerlea Inc . The lollowtng l)er$Ol\I .,.,.bow on. NIA Dally PllOI AUQUl1 27. Sec>-l'louMhOld Item• ttorlO by Oalty Piiot Auguil 27, Sep.
ml8f891ed In lhe estate. W 29 SlrN I. Cotti M ... , PaulGtl, 2437 Camino Cotto AGGRESSIONS SPORTS. C1ll lornl1 Corp 1852 doing bull-u Franc:11 Foo lamber 3, 1990 the lollowlng P«'IOn9 temt>et 3, 10. 17. 1990
you may hie Wilt! ttle oour1 Cllll 92827 Rio. Sin Clementi. Callf 517 W•lnut, Hunt1noton McG•w lrvlne. Calif 92714 THE S25 TOW SERVICE. Thlt tlltement waa flied M121 SP •B001 THERES4 M·111
a lomlal Reo.iest tor
1
c.r1o1 Mor11e1, 1519 So 92672 BMc;ll, C111t 928411 Thlt bualneu •• con· 83 12 Sent• ""' Canyoo Rd
Speoal Noll08 ol lhe 611ng Towner. Ct llt 92707 Thie bullneu It con· Al•n Mlc,,HI 81umaa, ductld by_ a.OOl'porlllon •,291. 4n•h4Mm 111111. Callf PUBLIC NOTICE I P~LIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE , PUBLIC NOTICE of an invenlOry and I Thll butlneu 11 con· ducted by •n lndMdual 517 W•lnut. Huntington The reglttttnl(tl com· 19211-07 1 I
eppraisal of estate asaets duct.CS by an tndMdual The reglatrant(•I com-8Mc:h. Call! 92643 rnenG4ld to lt1ntaet bull· Sandy Ka"*. 8312 Santi NOTICE OF GENERAi MUNICIPAL ELECTION/
0t of 8/'IY pelltion or I Tl'le r1911tr1nt(e) com· metlCe<I to trltltael bull-Thi• but lneu It con· -under tf'le Flctttlout I An1 C1riyon Rd 11291. .,
eooount as provtded in ,rnence<I to tranttGt bUll· neat under the FIC11Uoua ducted by et1 Individual 8 ut lneu n•me(tl ll1t1d An1helm t11tta, Call! 92807 CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH
sec:llOn 1250 of tie 11e9a undet the F'lctlt10U1 Bu11ne11 n1me(1) lltted Th• regl11r1nt(•I com· 1bo11e on continuing b11l1 r,,,, bualnna I• con-
Calltomia Prob318 Code A But lnHa n1me(1) 11111d •bove on July 1, 1990 menced to trtnuct bull· Michael Ibey OllCted by •n lndlvldual
Aequ9111 lor Soecial Nohoe l1b0ve on Mtrch 24 1990 Oreg P1utch • neu under the Flctttlout Tfllt 1t1tement wu Ill.CS The regl1trant(11 com·
form 19 avallab6e from tie , CarlOt Mor1i.t Tlllt 1111emen1 wu Iii.cf Bu1lnH1 name(•) ll tted wtlh the COi.iniy Cletk ol Of. menced lo tr•ntaet bull· I
OOUf'I ci8f1( Thi• 111tement w11 llled wiUll lhe County Clerk ot Of. •bOw on Aprll 1985 ange County on Augu1t 10. neu under the Ftc1111ou1
Anorney f0r Petit!°"*: with the County Clerk 01 Of· •noe Collnty on Augu11 17. Alan MleflHI BaulMI 1990 But lneu N1me(•I ll1ted :
NOTICE IS HEREBY G IVEN that a General M unicipal Election w tfl be held 1n the
City o f Huntington Beach consolidated w ith the General Election on Tuesday.
N ovember 6, 1990, for the follow ing OH1cers and Measures. Brien Uppold 1nge Covnty on 4vgutt 2. 1990 T1111 1t1tement wu flied f..:IA •bove oo M1y 24. 1990 I JIG E. 1 'Ttn SL 1900 ,_11 with the COi.iniy Clerk of Or· Pvblllhed Ot1nge Co1111 San0y K•mei
lulte 111 f41U10 Puolllhed Ortnge Coal1 atige Collnty on August 3, Otity P1101 Augutt 20 11 Thll t1•1ement wu flied OFFICERS Coelll MeN , CA 92627 PubllahlO Qfenge Coul Dally Piiot Augu11 27. ~ 1990 S.Otemt>er 3, 10, 1990 With the County Clel'1t or Or-
Oranoe Coa.sl Daily P1lol Deity Pilot Augu1t 13. 20. 27. temt>er 3. 10. 17. 1990 I ,.....,., M·095 ~~ County oo Jury 25
Aug 20. 21 , 27, 1990 Sectembe< 3. 1990 M· 114 PubUlhed Or1nge Coat ---------M-076
1
Dally Pilot Augu'1 t3. 20. 27 C NO CE '~ P~llC NOTICE P\BJC NOTICE Sepleml>ef 3. 1990 •• "..,..1 P\8.1 Tl Pu1>1t11\IO Orange Cou t
------------------'"'"""" FICTtTlOUS .U ... 11 Di lly Piiot Auouat 8 13 20 ,
P\8.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUS.... .. ...... •T· ........ NT 27 1990 YOU ARE IN OHAULI NT .. _ ,.,,.._,..
u N 0 ER 4 0 E E 0 0 F NAiii ITA n• P\Bl.JC NOTICE The followlng perwn1 .,.
TRUSl 0 4 TEO 3131189 flCTtTIOUt IUIMtt The lolloWlng perlOOt 11• dOlng butlneu H ---------
UNLESS You , Al(E 4C· NA• STATIMINT dotng bull""'.. ,ecnnoua IU.,..H o u 4 o L 'e R' N ' "s. !'\a.IC NOTICE ftON TO PROTECT YOUR I The lollowlng pet.One"' FOX CLEANING SER· NAMI ITATl•NT SOCIAlES. 308 Vlsll ---------
PROPERTY IT MAY BE 1dolng bull""' u VICE, 2345 Newport 8tvd The lolloWlng persont 1re Suerti, Newport Beach, FICTITIOUt IUltNlll
SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE COAST GATE. 304 38th •80. Co111 MH•. Ct llt ldOlrlQ bullneea.. Call! 92e&O NAMI ITATIMINT
IF YOU NEED AN UPL4 · St~ ~port Beach. Celll 92827 N(WPORT TOPSIDE. 428 M111r1JIO Qyeglletlnl, 306 The lollowtng perlOnt are
N4 TION Of THE NATURE 926&3 Shawn V•11n11n1 Fo11. Harl>Or ,.. Or . Newport Vit ti Su•n •. Newpo rt Ootng bul lnest .. OF HIE PROCEEOINC Andrew JoH pll Hen·12J.45 l\lewP<>fl Blvd •flO. Beach. Calif 92e&O Beach Ci lll 92680 SPEEDY COURIER SER-AGAtNS T VOU YOU neSMy. 304 38111 St . N....,• Cott• M ... Callf 1128.27 Stev1 I Simon, 428 Thia· butlneu II con-VICE. 9•6 1 Neol1n1 Or ,
SHOULD CONT AC f • port a..ch. C1lll 112883 I Thi• butlneH •• con-Hllbor Ill °'. Newport ducild by .,, lndMdull Huntington Belch C•lll I
For four (4) Members o f the City C ouncil t Full term o f 4 years J
For a City Attorney -(Full term o f 4 yearsl
If no o ne or only one person is n o m inated fo r a n elec tive o f11c e . appointment to
the elective office may be made a s prescribed b y Sec tion 22843 S or 22844
EJect1ons Code of the State of Califo rnia
MEASURE C TITLE: A CHARTER AMENDMENT T O REST R ICT THE SALE.
LEASE. EXCHANGE AND DEVELO PMENT O F CITY -O WNED O R OPERATED
PARK ANO BEACH LANDS
LAWYER Thia bulln111 It con·•d11e1.CS by an lndtvldual 8Mcll, Calif 92660 Thi r1gli trinll•I com-92646
NOTICE Of duel.CS by •n lndlvl<lu•I I fhe regl1tr1nt(1) com· Of'ew S•too. t A1htrN n'lef1Ced to trtnttet butl· Tam long P,,1n. 4208 MEASURE C SUMMARY:
TRUSTEE'S 54lf ' The 119111t1nl(1I com· menoec:t 10 trtnMci bull-Lane. Irvine. Calif 92714 ,,.., unoer the Flc11ilou• S1m1burry Common S1n11
NO 1 t8460 ~nc:! 1;~";~11~; ,_B 1 under,,1~..,.F11c::~~: d·~~ bbuai,n~:1 Pc~~-1 Buair191• name<•> 11•1•d "'n,•,;,;•'~u:~:~:. 11 con T h is proposed ballot measure w o u ld a m e n d s e c tion 612 o f the City Charter to < 111 •,..111,•1111•" 1 7 1 11m u1 n111 ., .,..,...., Y •-"-· above on August 11. 1990 · 11 1111111 II M "' 1111· 111o.1111 8 utlnen n•me(t} lll tl d •bove on Augu1t I 1990 M'tl'llp M1urlllo Ouag11e<1n1 dueled by i n lndMdual Impose a restnct10n On the d 1SPOS1t1on and USe Of par k and beach lan(1S Of the
''""·"" .. 111 1,..111 lo.JI iJh•I ,.1 1bove on not ~t Sh1wn V Fo11 The regl1trant(1) com-Thia llllemefli ..., .. llleo The r901ttr•nt(1I com· C
1 1111 w 1 1 ""''' '" llu• j Andrew Hennee.NY Thi• 1l•lement wu lllad merlOld to 111nteet bull· wilh Ille County Clerk of Or· menceo to trantaet bull· lty
1 ''• ,, 1 ''·"'''" ( .,.,,,1-y 111 Thi• 1111amen1 wit llled wllh the COi.iniy Clerk of Of. ,_. und., the f lclltl0\.19 ange County 00 Augui t 10 nest unde< the Flcutl01.11
111,.,.11, !:>11\h• 111 (.,tklorn"' I with the COi.iniy Clefk ol Of· 1nge County on Augu1t 17, Buatnen n•me(a) 1111ed l 1990 ' Bualneu N1me(1) tl1t1d
Ctlltorni• Reconvey•nc• ange COi.iniy on Augu1t 10. 1990 abo11e on NIA , .. ,a above on July 30 1990
Comp•rty 1 C1tt lorn11 1 t900 ,_.. Stew Simon Publlthed Or1nge Cou 1 Tim long J)hi n
COfpor•Uon '" ilul~ •'I' ,.,., Publltl'lad Orange Coal1 Thi• itatemenl •II llled Delly P11o1 4...gutl 20 27 Thlt •lttement wa1 flied
pomi.,.1 Tru si.,,,. u,.11.., 1r.,.1 Publllhed Ottnge Coall Ot lly Piiot Avgutl 27. Sep. with Ille Collnty Clerk of Or· S.Otamber 3 lO 1990 wnll lhe County Clerk of Of·
, 1,11""' t>t~-1 111 t ru\t 1,. 10•lty Pilot AUQull 20 27. tambet 3. 10. 17, 1990 tnge County on August 3, · M-Ot9 1
1
nge COi.iniy on July 26.
ht 1111~1 111 H11 1111111 (..h.;rlu~ 6-plembtt< 3. 10 1990 ' M· 112 1990 990 11111~,, 1111 u""'''"""I n1.111 M· lOt ,._ "8.IC NOTIC£ ,..,4
'" ""''"" "" 11111uil 0•1 P\ltUC NOTICE Publllhed Orange Cout 1 Pvbllari.ci Ot1nge Coeaq
4 ) lllJ .n 1r"1111ni.1nt N11 Diiiy Piiot 4ugutt 13. 20. 27, ,tCTfTIOUS IU .... SI Diiiy Piiot Augull 6. 13. 20.
Im t 111.'bO Ill U.1ot. t>~ Plate NOTICE ftCTITIOUI au..... Sec>•amber 3. 1990 NAiii ITATl•NT 27 1990
ut 111111 1,11 n .. 1w11~ "' ()t NA• ITATS•NT M-0114 The 1011ow1ng peraon1 are M-087
11111111 (,1~111ly Slilh• ••• (,di! ftCTITIOUI au..... The lollOwlng perlOl"I• tr• dolno t>utlneta u
'"""'' Ulkh!f "'" llV*t'I ... NA* ITAT'f•NT dOlng bullMMU "8.IC NOTIC£ 1(£VIN MC FADDEN . !'\a.IC NOTICE ,,,.,. ll1ur1•111 11w11311io•I '"" The tollowlng per10n1 ar• BL UES I( Y El EC · 16S4S Computer L•"•·
i.oll ,11 1.iul~• """ 1u1 '" 11>0 doing bll...,... u . TRONICS. 1000 Ptrk New-'ICTITtOUI IU ... SI I Huntington 8e1ch C•lll ,ICTITIOUI IMl ... 11 111u1111,1 t1+11'h 1 l1w "tM• "' PARK PUBLICATIONS, por1 -410. Newport Beach. NA• ITATIMINT 92849 NA .. ITATlllllWT
• h" • "' '"'" ril;e,.I I"'''""' 441 e 19lh SI . Coet• M .... Calif 92e&O The following'*'°"' ara Amerlce n Opportunity TM foltOWlng ~· 11.e
IH1v11111,. 111 1t11• '""" 111 "'"' Calif 92827 ThorNll K. Srutoa. 1000 dolnQ bullnMt u Publltl'let. inc Callf0<nta. dotng bullneet u 111 18.,lul 1111~1t1y ol Utt! U1111 Andrew p Smith. 441 E. P1rk Newport ,4 f0. New· L11'E·GUAR0 , 287 1 1SS4S Compullr l 1n1. FASHIONS BY HIOUI
1.1 s1.111 ' ol l\mt•1K.i '"'" t9tll St .. Coatt ........ C•lll por1 e.actt. Calif 92880 W1Ver1y Or . Newport Hun11ng1on Beach Calll 4253 M1rtlngt1e W1y, Unit
'"'' w1111111111 1.:111)'0~~ •N •ITI 92827 Thie bu11ne11 It con-8Mc:h. Calif 92883 92649 C. Newpo.1 Beilcf\, Calll I "'"~'d\lll ltlli• .. , .. IJONW& L'*'9 D Smllll, 441 e. ductedby·1nlndlvld11al Nanci K NICOii, 2871 Tiit• butlne11 •• con· 92&e0 I
'"'" "' •·•~ un11>r11111.u~ 1111 19th SI., Cott• M .... Celll The regltlr•nt(t ) com· W1verly Or . N1wport duct.CS by 1 oorpor1t1on H11i.001 AQh•l•nl1r1 t
riuht t111t• mwl "'"'""' r1<1• 92827 ~ to tranMCt ~ Beach. Calif 92883 The regl1tr1nt(t l com· CtrrOll Avenue. lrvlne, Calif
.. .,1(1 l'Y11 '" ,..,.h f•u~•lll• •0 Thie bui ln .. • 11 con· neu under the Flotlllou• Tnlt butlneH It con· ~ to t,.n.-ct bull• 927 14
.in1I tu ""' 1111111 .. 1011 '"' dvctad bv. nutband 11\d Wife Bu1ln1tt n1me(1) ll1ted dllCted by 1n ln<llVICl\lal nMt u~ ttwt ~lcilllou• Tllt1 bu11,,.., 11 eon-
"' 110 .. 1 1ir11111•rty ~'""''"" 111 Thtl reglllt1nl(1) com-1bove on AIJQll•I 15. 1990 The reg11tt1nt(t) com· Bu•ln••• Neme(•I ll1ted dllCtad by •n lndlvldllal Iii•· 1111"u'""t County a111I m.ncacs 10 tt1nMCt 1>11• TllOmaa I( SWtg.a menoed 10 traotae1 t>ull· 1t>ow on July 5. t990 llle r90111t1nt(•l com Srn111 to .,,, Loi J ul t ••MI ,,... IH'ldet the Flctlllou• Tlllt ltaternenl ... filed ,_ under the Fk:llllou• J.,_ W f'lanegan menced to tranMCt bull
41191 111 1111• l.•ry ol Nf> .. 1•111 Butlnau ntme(•I lltl•d with the Co\lnty Clerk of Or· Butlnen n•met•I ll•tad Tl'llt 1111emen1 wu llled ,_. under the F'ICtltlOU• 6o•1t\ll ,., 1•·• Mo11 J:\('(l)rll •bow on NIA enge County on Augutt 21. •bow on Aug111t 3, 1990 with the COi.iniy Clefll OI Of· BuelneH N•Ma(I) ll•••d
lift lrl tlocJll 1114 Pitvv /(I AndrliW p Smith . 1990 NlnCl K Nleoll enge Collnty 00 July '~· • •bO,,. on July 2S. 1990 U"wll.-nt'C>o.I~ U111\!I 111 tllU n111 •tttemenl w .. lti.d Nl'71IO Tllll 11atemeint WM Iliad 1990 Hlllt004 AQhallnlan
Ulf11<ll ut lh11 Courtly R., With the County Clefk of Or• P11blllhad Ofange CoMt with Ille Collnty CleA of Of· ,_..... Tlll1 1t1t-I wu filed
l.'1ttlol1 •II MIKI County /\ P _,.County on AUQIJ•I 10. o.iry Piiot Augu1t 27, Sep-tnge Collnty on Augutl 3, PuOllthad Orange Couu wtlll Ille CollnlY Ctetk of Of·
Nti 4Jb IOI JO 1900 temt>et 3, 10, 17, 1900 1900 o.lty Piiot Augu1t 8. 13. 20.11nga
1
County on July 27
f/"1 1111"1 "muu11I ul tho ,.,. M-111 ,........ 27, 1990 1990
1J101i.i~I j!rtN 111111 bll~111 11 tn Pllblllhad Ormnga CoMt Publ"'* Qfenge Coatl M.-Oe4 ~
., ,.,~, 11'"1tlClfl IUQt•lh.tr '"1h Delly PllOI Auguti 20. 27. P\llJC M)TIC( o.lty Piiot AUQlltl 13. 20, 27, Publllllecl Of1nge Cout 1•11~trt.1hly 111hlh.!lh"I i usls .._tember 3. t~. t990 ~lembet 3, 1990 --ti' MftT'M"C Dally PllOt Augutt 8. 13. 20 11xpunw s.ri.I Ml•nnttti 111 -M~ a,t-()81 ,.._,.. "'"""-127 1990
.hU 1illl41 ur 111.i ""'""' 111.1i.1t ~A=-ACTITIOUI autMU M-Oel ..Alton (II lh1a Notlcu llllU TMf~penoN .,.. "8JC llOTICl ..... ITATl•NT _________ ,
UJ 1 Jl6 t>J --ti' Mftnl'r d~bullnell ... 4i tollow4ng l*90fl• are P\8..JC NOTIC( Cuullfllly .1.1lud (A,)11MJf$ ~ ""'~ c s· ...... D WISl SE~ ............... .._.. ~................. • _________ ,
t "11.M "' lAl!hl1t11I <':ti."u -....;~~----------1 .,_...., ~ • • • -· --l"'V"Olu 10 iti.• Tru~lu\I or AenTMMM .,._II VIClS. 140et Yorba St. MAim ITA'n....-T E HOME IMPROVE· ACT1110Ua ........
h•1.ltJo1r "'" lit.• upl1tl'llll 111 NAiii ITAT'lmWT S111te 223, Tuetln, Callf. Tiie I~ 1*90n1 ere MENT GUIDE. W PC t1 . NA• ITATlmMT
'•iato41 '""""'"'' pro""' The folOwtnQ ~ -t2tl0 Ooll'CI ~ 11. Newl>Of1 Bwl'I. Celll 92113 TM~ '*"9111.,.
1111.w•llh• ... •Mlfl 1A •11111W1.-i Ooll'CI llutlnaM ... T~ H*Nlra. 1001 ClttATIVI I USIN!SS AlchMd Hayt, 2221 1. .. doltlQ butlMl9 ..
Frnm mlo1tno11lll'.W1 .. 11.11 J. CHAAL.ll COMPANY, W S...,.... 1307, &ante SOLUTIONS. 3'34191~ St . Palmll ,H, Cet~. Callt J J MURPHY REAL U 11 o; frus11.• OOOlfl• 1o1t.11J111 IM Senta llebel #A, Coete Ana, Cell! 92707 Ste 150. NewpOf1 8-oh. t100t tAf ! ANO INVt$TMfJNTS,
1iu1 Ill' wtutn Truslw 1NIA~~ MeM. Callt. '2127 L~Andrten. 1&tt1W.. Calll tH«> Alfl'adO Sangulnettt, 300 14211 YortMu &tt9et, M e
f10 ;111t1-'flllltM c• •e!llll1 John ~ Cody, 118 .....,. It. # 104. Tuettn. Cellf Y_,. p . .,._ 127·A LIM W PC H , Newl>Of1 BMct\. 100. l U1tln, Cellt IH80
ty lhll JllWI 4!dclh1UCUI) •• lent• IMbet •A. Coe,. t2tl0 Ln . Cotti M .... Cell! Callf tltM J Jetry Mlltpfly, Jt . 23
oti111, W1T•n11.J11 dl.lst0na11un w.e. Celt. 12121 T'* lt>\le6nee1 11 con-12427 TNa bl.l•lrte1• 11 con. Tr9')e11I, IMne. Cal!f 92714
01 ""' ..uwu Uirk.lil111d prov "'* tlllatn... •• con· duc:tad llY a ..,..... pert• Ttlle bl.latMM •• con-d\lcted by • oen-W part· Thi• bu••""• 11 ~on·
0<1y 11 907 r..,., Pl ~" dU0'9d t1y.1t1 lndMch.loli nwtNp duetad by .,, lndMdWll ,_.,. ~ed WWI lndN'ldUel
wt 0......11 c:A 9266J The ,....ltanl{e) c:om• . Tfle reete1rant(1t OOfft-TM reigtttrant(1} cotn• Ttle ,...iatrantl•I tom• f"f1e 1eg111rentt•I COM·
s.t PflJl,llWl'f II ""'"" ,.,..., to tr~ bl*-~ 10 lr9nMCt ...... mencad 10 fflinMCI ~ mMOed to tr~ 0\1111-,,,,.....,., 10 t19nMC1 ~
1111\.1 lfll IN! IJUlflOW ul IM~· Nee uno.t the Flctftlolle W llMlt the '1ct~ ,,_ llnder tM PlctltlOul ,,_ uncMr IM flclftloul nllM undet tN ""llt!Ou9
l!10 1ne 11tJll\Ull(ll'1t k"Vtt-' ~ .. ,,.., nllfte(t ) "''" 1.-11n... neme(•) ll•t.O au.an"• n•me(•) Piled .,....,... Neme<•I 1t1ted aw.a1,,... N•.m-C•I ""'° IN Miii.i Dood of 1111.11 1n ~on: A~ t, tHO eooll'I on Hlft, .00... on·~ 1. ltlel ....,.. on ~ '• \MO aoo. on JUl'9 I, t900
cf1111tnu lwt ..,_, O!CflUll ...,. Cody '-tnN Andf'len Y-. ~ M.-o .......,. J fY ~ Jf
of ttw l 11r. I anti of~ Thl9 9b1te1Mn1 ... Ned TNt ~ ... ftlad lltll 1'211 1••~ -ftlad 1'llit .. ..,._,. -Iliad T'ftla tltt~l wM fll9C c.t•torN• ~· _... tN County 0.11 of <>r· w!WI 1t1e County°"" of Of· •IN QollMr an of Or· .-i u. County CIW\ of Ot· -1t11 uie ColttltY C*'1I of Ol'-
e1tee Companr ea u11l -., Couftty on AUOI* 10, -.
1
COuniy Oft,.,..,.. 11, .,.. ~ °" ~ S. .,.., Count'r on .MY 10. eft(la1 CIVllY Ot1 ~ it. Tmtl•• S41/MIN Koily EA tllO 1llO ttlO tllO 1MO «lllille\/CAPtw.-IWll ~5! ... .... .._ ...... ,._
Corll111 A .. 11 Norll\f~. CA ~~ Qoelt l"UUtt• Or..-0.-Ill t od ar._ 0.... ~ °""08 Coett ~bllttled O!'ange Cout
t UU lltll 11&•1'616, 011f No4 10.11.DllrNM~~ ... ---..1'.llU7, Ollrflllo4~1. ll,'° ~PltctA.wgr.a1t 13 20 CWad a•l/tlO ............ , 1tt0 ....... .o. n . ,..., ._.., ... a.,_ 11, ltlO 21 ,"°
lf10. 1.27 ... -..... ._ --Y.1• llM7t a.Mitt t.t-oel1
..
Any sale. leas e or other d1sposit1on o t part< o r beac h la n d s w o u ld oe s ub1ect to
the prior affirmative vote of a ma1ority of the members o f the C ity C ounc il and o f
the electors voting thereon a t an election m a ndated by the measure S u c h
approval 1s also required prior to construc tion o f an~road. golf c o u rse. driVing
range. building larger than 3.000 sq /ft. in floo r are~ 0-<'of any s t r ucture cost ing
more than $ 100.000 00 w 1th1n any C it y -o w ned o r o~' rated park or beach
Existing leases. franchise and con c essio n agreements and renewals ot s u c h
agreements on parks or beach lands which are being perfo rmed on J anuary 1.
1989. w ould be exempt from approval requirements
MEASURE C •
Should the City of H unt ington Beach City C har-
ter be amended to require that n o City park o r YES
bea~h may be sold. teased. exchanged or trans-
ferred or improved w ith a golf course. driving
range. road. bulldlng over 3.000 square feet in
floor area. nor struc ture costing more than
$100.000 without the attlrmat lve votes o f at least
a ma1orlty of the t6 tal membership o f its Ctty NO
Council and o f the electors voting on such
proposition at a gen eral or special election?
MEASURED TITLE: A C HARTER AMENDMENT TO RES TRICT THE S ALE OF
C ITY-OWNED PARK AND BEACH LANDS
MEASURE D SUMMARY:
This proposed alternative ballo t measure w ould amend sect ion 612 of the City
Charter to Impose a restriction on the sale of park and beach lands o f the City .
Any sale of park or beach lands w o uld be subject t o the prior affirmative vote
of a majorit y of the members o f the City Council and o f the electors voting
thereon at an election mandated by the measure.
MEASURI D
Should the City o r Huntington Beac h Charte< be
amended to require that no Cit y park or beach
YES
may be sold w it hout the affirmative votes ot at
least a majorlty of the total members h ip o f Its
NO City Council and of the e lectors voting on su~
sale? I
Th6 pons wm be open between the hours ot 1-00 a.m and 8:00 p.m.
CONNIE BROCKWAY
CITY CLERK
Oat d August 13, 1990
uat 17~ 23, 27. 1990 Publls.hed Orang Coaat Dally PUot Ai
~----~-----~ •
'
ORAJIGa COAST DAILY PILOT
88 Monday, Augu1t 27, 1990
by Bii Keane
'A sliding board is just a step-
ladder with an off ramp "
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
... • .I' •••
Tre (..Omm ind was sit not do vour
~ers10 •1 t~I a 1\n1rltnq C1€'rv1sn 1
NANCY
COME -AND ~
GET :Ji!'
ARLO AM> J AMS
OVERBOARD
... · ... ·:. h'·.
._•,tr r" .,'
FRED B ASSET
(
,., ! '
. ,
'(' ., .
1, ,'I' '-'I ,,, ~
I, .. f
N•~E '~C' APPl:lC'V!:$
Kathcnne couldn't believe it.
Corky Mites, the man she knew
murdered water board com-
missioner David Heosco, stood at
her reporter's desk in the Newpon
Beach Weekly offices. Would be
murder her? She told herself she
watched too many episodes of Lou
Grant.
"Can I help you Mr. M1Jcs?" She
somehow mana&ed to make her
voice sound conlident and cheery.
"I was wonderinf if you'd go fo r
a walk with me,· he said in a
smooth baritone. "I have something
to tell you, and I do my best talking
walking in the ocean air."
He smiled the toothy grin that put
him on the cover of Tiger Beat,
what?, 25 years ago. Despite his
seedy reputation, Katherine had to
admit to herself that he still had a
cenain sex appeal. He was dressed in
the unifonn of off-hours Newport:
short-sleeve polo shirt, khaki shorts
and T opsiders.
"Why not?" she finally said. She
might pick up some useful infor-
mation.
They walked tn silence to the
GARFIELD
PEANUTS
smells: the fish from the Doryman'a
fish market. the odor from the bank
of restrooms and the salt air from
the Pacific.
At lifcauard headquarters on the
pier, Corky Miles finally started to
_ speak. Katherine pulled a reporter's
notebook and pencil from her purse.
"This is off the record," Miles
said. "h 's strictly personal."
"
liliaiiii What was going on? "I've watched you," he continued1 "at the various commission ano
council meetings we both attended
Newport Pier area, past the Penin-
sula's ,wildest bars. Katherine re-
membered what a Newport cop told
her one night during a battle in the
Peninsula's War Zone.
"If you wanted to wipe out most
of Newport's crime, drop a bomb on
the bars near the pier," he counsel-
ed, only half in jest. "That's where
our drunks get fueled up for crime"
At the base of the Newport Pier.
KBtherine took in the competing
and I've read your stories. I'm taken
by you, Katherine, and was wonder-
ing whether I could get to know you
better."
If he was acting, Katherine
thought, he's doing a great job. Sin-
cere, tender and caring. She walked
to the pier's railings and looked
down the Orange Coast. The night
was clear. and she could sec the
brightly ht city of Laguna Beach
spilling down from the foothills to
the sea.
What is my next move, she asked
herself.
To be con11nued ...
CERTAINLY A 01&
OC.(AS ION AROUNP
THIS HOUSE
by Charles M. Schulz
--.:: MA1L M~\ DtO 1 T
AGA lt-. ~E KEEPS LEAVING
US LETTERS ADDRESSED TO
•'BROWNIE C~ARLES '
: IOLD H Vi """~1K-"
-1MES TµERE-NOJ~E
~ERE BY TH~""" N~ ~E I
-~OSE ~E--ERS WERE FOR
ME . T~A ... S v .. h·u~-PEGGY
JEAN CALLS ME l'M
·'BROWNIE C~ARLES · --.. --\
t;;?-~ -/j a..\ J ~~{''/ ~
r '
by Jerry Scott ROSE IS ROSE
I RY-To -
EAT -If/!
by Jimmy Johnson FUNKY WINKERBEAN
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by Chip Dunham FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
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by Alex Graham DRABBLE
S><• ... 1.. l T"""E •T e.AOo. ANC'
SEE 1F T~EY L1.. C~•NuE IT ? Wc:.OLD 'iCAJ UKl Et!Hf.k
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by Maratta & Maratta
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(foll. Yl\\l.\\t'> v~t>ER 2o M1NVT£'>)
DENNIS
THE MENACE
I
by Hank Ketchum
'DoES RAIN MA'r-.E. '!'OUR N'DM GROUCH'\
LI KE 11 QCIES MINE.'?•
by Pat Brady
41~
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by Tom Batiuk
.
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by Lynn Johnston
1 l ', l• l I 'FILM j(,Nk;ttl
Wt l Nl ~\I" f'\1.ALL'/
l11 , + tJ.)tN[' " ' -
• 5 \E!'< r l C'::'"' T Ti.;•N"
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Good "' • I
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by Harold Le Doux SHOE
TME:N PERHAPS A MY OC'E.'> HAVE
A FANTASY 1"~1END WMO
APPFARS lN THE MIOC-ll l
O F THE NIC,H f AND l EA.VF S HER 01rrs •
by Jeff MacNelly
~ ™ANK~ 'Tb N6W 14.E CA~ JAGK VP TUE PRICE 1&:/.4~~'( ~tJO At"t'A~~ AT -rne. PIJMP IN A ~~
IN COMMl.H.lt""ilON ... .-ic.w..,. OF MINU~