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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-10-03 - Orange Coast Pilot' MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1988 -. 25 CE T Mesajob cen,ter opens·, praise·d J NS regional commissioner commends city's effort to assist legaTday laborers By BOB VAN EYKEN Placenua ~' enue. Picnic tables "'ert' u°' .. .,..,......... set up ms1de the ga ra,e for wor~ers. Costa Mt>Sa's ne" da' -labor h r n "ho "'ere eApttted to t>eito usma the ' 1 1 g centerTuesda). c~nter. which officials hope "111 help purred by complaints from res1- rtd the Cit) of illegal imm igrants. dents near L1on·s Park a tradmonal opened its doors toda). garnering . pickup point for da' ~orkers. m-pra1~ from the lmmigrauon lfnd burgC) a.sked Cll\ stafflasJ summerto Natlrraltzauon Service. come up \\Ith a method ofseparaung The hinng center was largd) the the legal v.orkers from the illegal ones idea of Cit) Counci lman On 1lle He said today thnt the ne\o\ hmng Amburge). who said he bel ie' ed thl· center "ould sen c that purpOSt'. J',e spoken to have said thcy won·t 10 do" n 10 the park any.more." Another assumption bchmd the center, .\mburgC) said. is that legal workers "'1Jl cease to use pickup points elsewhere 1n the ctty. lea\ 1ng onl) the illegals. who can then be rounded us> b) 1mm1grat1on officials. .. The I NS has agreed to assist us:· he said. Harold Ezell. regional com- m1ss1oner of the INS. toda) praised Costa Mesa forestabhshmg the htrtn& center . Harold Ezell, retlonal commJuloner for the l••tcradon and Katmallution Sernce, hall would replace the par~s and .\~I workers~ ho use the center ""'II street corners that now sen e as ha' e to pro' 1dc proof that the' 'are pickup points fo r da) laborer~. both legal reSJ dents of the United taics . legal and illegal. "This will be a pla~ "here legal- The center 1s located to a fQrmer gas 1zed worke rs can come to SCI a JOb:· .-----"'tat10n.a.t tht;cornerof 17th treet and .\mburge) ~td. ··.\lot of contractors ............ ~&..-.._.. and Coeta Ila~ Do-Ball toar the city'• new job center for day workers. .. The Cit) ts to be commended for establish mg a ctnter that will become kno" n as a place where employers can come and find workers without ha' mg tO" worry about whether they are legal res1<tents:· Ezell said. "This center could "el) well become a model for other c1ues across the (Ple&e:e Me J,08/ A.2) ! .. Coast Thirty years of surfing history came to a close this weekend when surf- board maker Gordie Duane was evicted from his shop In Huntington Beach./A3 Shuttle cheered on triumphantreturll World Syrian foreign minister says one of the Ameri- cans held hostage iri Lebanon will be handed over to the U.S. am- bassador to Syria./ AS Nation The quilt reP.resenting vlcfims of All:>S is now the equivalent Of eight foot- ball fields and this week- end's display on the White House Ellipse is likely to be the last time it Is shown./ A2 Entertainment Newport Beach prepares to expand Its Salute to the Arts this week./ A8 Index Bulletln Board Business Classified Comics Death notices Entertainment Opinion People A3 AS-6 85-7 A10 B.7 A8 A7 A9 A3 By LEE SIEGEL "'SdMoe .,..., EDWARDSAIR FORCE BASE-=- The shuttle Discover) returned to a star-spangled welcome from more than 300:000 people Monday aflcr a post-Challenger shakedown mission that NASA called .. a great ending to 1he new begtoning" of America's manned space program. "Discovery. welcome back.'. Mission Control told commander Fredenck H. Hauck as he guided the ship and to a p1 cturc--perfcct landing after a four-da). 1.6-million mile m1ss1on. The nauonal anthem was playmg as 1 the while ship. witb._ its stubb) Delta-shaped wtog.s, leveled out and rolled to a smooth stop on the center ltne painted on the hard-packed sand of this desert air base. · For 55 minutes aflcr landing. the crew was occupied with flipping s" itches and tum mg off s~ stems while .ground crews mo' ed up gJant vehicles 10.:·safc .. the '\chicle and to remo\e an) re 1dual toA1c gases. The flight was NASA's first s1m.e the Challenger mtsSlon ended trag1- call> on liftoff 3::! month~ earlier It was the 26th flight 1n inc huttle sen es. When the crew emerged. Hauck was waving an o"ers1zed Amcncan flag and the step ra1ltng "as festooned Oellt ............ ~ ..... c-.... ""tth six small flags.. \.1cc Pm 1dent George Bush "'ailed at the foot of the stairs and ""elcomed the astronauts one b) one. pilot Richard 0 . Co"e'. and Mission specialists John M. Lounge. Da\1d C. H1lmcn and George D. Nelson. The astronauts then led the Re· pulpltcan pres1dent1al candidate around the nose of their ship as they performed the tradmonal pilots Yralk· around. With them were NASA admto1strator James C. Fletcher and Adm. Richard Trulv. astronaut-tum- ed-shullk chief. · Bush's Democratic opponent. M 1chael Dukak1s. interrupted a spccch m Hartford 10 let the crowd Imo~' the shuttle had landed safely. .. America 1s beck tn space," ~said. "We arc proud. and we arc thriUed at tts achievements and the courqc of that crew.'' (Pleue Me SIRJTTLB/A4) '• P-upils, parents, .teaeheFs G-ig · to save flowers . Area volunteers pick up the slack after bu~get cuts . • I' By GREG KLERltX Of!Mo.llJ ......... Budget cuts or no budae1 cuts. a iroup of parents. teachers and stu- dents at Te\\ mkle and Cahfom1a elcmentan schools decided the ~eren't going to let their schools' flower bed "11her av.a) So late last "eel. about! of them Sol toge ther and performed a hnlc mamte~ w .cho<H and ended up ha' 1ng a &ood time to booL resulted 1n a. lack of proper groundskceptog at the schools. ~s P3f of a S• million cutback mtt1ated ~rhtT this year, three aroundskec~rs ~ laid ofT. .. h hasn't aotten reaJly bad yet. but the flower beds hl\'C Sttn better day,:· said parent Sharon Baker. wh ose children attend California. ··Someth1na reaJI) needed to be done.·· Baker and other parents aot together with Scou Paul~n. principal at both Cahforn1a and Te Winkle.. and launched a volun&ecr dnve to hdp restore the flower beds and ot¥!' plant hfc on school grounds. The plan "'as to take a fc" hours to replant and \\ccd flov.er bed! and esscnt1alh do for frtt v.-hat t.Jte dtstnct roukf not afford. PoUoe Log Public Notices Sports Weather 84, 7-8 81-4 A2 California Scbooi-.tadeat"Mi-Net ou+ ... 418>-, -w-IMtla•-T~~enb Jtm-Paullmel11 and brother Vlka, 2, work on landaeapla& a.ad Jolln Jtamlrea at TeWlnkte School. Parents and teachers at both schools.. "hach are located v. 1th10 a fev. hundred feet of each other on 1 om1 th e to osta esa. arT upset that d1stnct budset cuts ha'e Thu.s far. the plan h.as worked out better than npccted. BaxtT said. :·we·,e gotten reall) ood re nse nf and.I S actua ) n I 0 (Pleue .. FLOWSaS/ A2) ... Growth .. control group treasurer quits in squabble BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN °' ............... The treasurer of the group support- ina last Junc·s countywide groWlh- control ballot measure has resigned, complaining that the group's at· tomcys kept him and others m the dark concerning legal fees and settle· ment qrccments with developers. Rustcll Burkeu said he could no lonee:r tcrve as treasurer for Citizens for Sensibk Growth and Traffic Control Inc. 1f he was not kept informed of the organ1zauon's bust· nen. ••1 can'wfford to be a director 1n a corporation in which I don·t know what's happening." Burkett said this momina. Ith looked like the attorneys were m1k1naaJI the decisions for us." Burkett said his rcs11nat1on last week may be of Interest to local POlltical insic:krs. but would have little impact on related slow-arowth mnsutts set for November votes in Hvnt1naion Beach. Costa Mesa and San Juan C1pistrano. Newport Beach has 1 t1m1lar but unrelated traffic- ma~mtnt me11sure on its ballot. "Ttiole are Nnn1ns independently by ~ liv1na 1n those com- munnin." he 111d. "All of this. with Citazmt for SeMible Growth. 1 leftover bUsinns ... Masure A. t~ slow-crowth 1n-tuauve Burkett suppontd:~was de- faeed by Oranae County vo1tt on JuM 7. I . Bu rkett said Gregor) Hile. treasurer of the group's RQll ~1cal action commntee. and H11e·s partner. fello"' Laguna Beach laW)er Belinda Blacketer. foiled to keep the organ1u- tion·s board of d1rtttors informed on legal costs and decisions concerning scttltmcnt agreements '""Ith de- veloP.Crs. Hile. however. disputes those ac- cusauons. "Russ Burkett 1s a loo c c~nnon If he's not in total control. he doesn·1 want 10 play the game:· Hile said tht\ momirig. "His rcs1gnat1on "a chcerf ullv accepted ... H 1le said al Id 1scussions concern 1 n& legal costs and settlements \\-ere brought before the board of dtrt'Ctors an~ approved before any formal legal actions were taken. "He (Burkett) had full lcnowlcdgc of all that was toina on:· Hile said. "Wttat he 1s saying now 1s totally false and untr~ ... So far. eiaht of 12 la\\-uits O\.Cr county.approvc-d de\clopments ha\c been ~ttlcd. wath Hilt an<l Blacketer rttovcnna more than sao.ooo '" attorney f~s. -.hich Hile po1n1«1 out is far as than t~ actual \<llWC of those lqal efforts. Hile also chafltd that Burkett fail~ to fo,...ud a6out SI 7.000 more 1n fees ra1!C'd and earmark~ b)' th( corponuon for ~ (Otts, In ad· dmcm. Hile said Burkttt •as la1t in , ........ oaOWTll/U) b. Lackoffuflds, timelimitS . . Libertarian's campaign But, he says winning converts easy ---...,,.-=-----t-a f ter explaining pa rt y' s philosophy By PAUL AllClllPLEY oe .. ...,.._ ... Roeer Bloxham says he doesn't ha'e an) 1roublC' wmnma con' ens. The Liberunan candidate 1n the 40th Con~s1onal D1stnc1 race. not poht1aally active un11I this clecuon. felt the opportuntt) 10 pubhc1ze has pany·s vicV..S ~as ··100 good to pass up ... .. I ha'e )Ct to talk to an)bod) - "'1th one or 1wo e cephons -v. ho said the) "ouldn 't 'otc for me:· Blo\ham ~td The protilem 1i.. there are ·'55 ... ..,., registered 'Ott'~ in the 40th D1 - tnct. and Blo\ham s1mpl) h:i netthC'r the 11me to rtach e'e~ one tndt\ 1dualh nor the monc' 10 prcad ht~ ''C"S \la a mail c:im· pa1gn 8) the 'el) nJturt of L1ben.inan pnnc1ple . 810\ham doc n·t haH' to 4ipcnd so mu~·h umc 1al\.1ng about the 1 ue as C'\pl.ltotn& \\hJI tho"<' pnnc1pk are .\nd n' important to 1he ~e"· port 8<-ach resident 1h11 \.Oters do understand .., don't "'ant an' bod" to' ote tor J me v.ho doe n·t ·under'"itand the Libert.man phtlo ph ' and po • 1t1o n :· he !Mltd II Blo\ham. bO, v.ere to e'plain their ph1lo ph' 1n JUSt tv.o v.ord . th~ \\-Ord lrom "h1ch all L1benanan pnnc1pk arc d~n,ed. he \\OU Id 1mpl~ SI} .. IOdl\ 1dUll nghts •· The C'ahfom1a P3"' 's I q plat· form opens "1th the line ... \\ e. the mC'mbc1"$ of the L1bcnanan Pan). challenae the cult of the omnipotent 1a1e and tktcnd the nghts of the 1ndt' 1dua1:· (Pleue ... Tiii&/ A2) Loose toilet tightens freeway trafftc ly GREG I.LERO ............. 1~0 hours alter th~~ 40 a.m. toc1dC'nt 1t "'' All the Liquid Ptumbtt tn Orange Count) couldn't uncJoa the bra kup caMted dus mom ins •hen a portablt '°'"" ~ offaht beck of a pu:lup trud aftd onto lht "e-~ n Dic9C> f rttWI) an '"'""· ·Trank ..., SMrted for mort than • north ot \1a nhur Boulc,ud that The toilet fell into the (!8th of a cauwd \Om(' mtn r in1uri and some forJ El ('amino dmC'n ~ Pich Con m&Jor Monda> hcadich said Cah-\ u.. S of van:kn Gro\e, Thornhill tom1~ H11h•I\ Patrol Offitc"r Kt1th • 1d Thom hill .\ccord1na to HP rtport~ t~ rtncade comma& ftltofflhc beck of· a peC\up truc:k. ,.tucb con11nucd on With \ 1 1\l1ht\ hampC'rtd b} tarl) mom1n1 f<11-Vu.appattn~) d1dn'utt t~ ~tra) latnnt unul he -.u onl a ft1' ftt' aWll) from 'ht objttt Al <>r.,.. Co.t OAtL V PILOT I ~ay. Oc1ober 3, 1 .. Girl, 9, shotbysniperon schoolgrounds in Florida MASC01TE. Fla. (AP) -A aunman clad, 1n a camouflage outfit shot and wounded a third-grader on an elementary school field this morn- ing, authorities said. , The girl was rcponed in stable condition wtth arm and chest wounds. Poli~ rushed to Mascotte Elemen- tary SChool in this smalJ central Florida community, searching., a heavily wooded area for the man. said police dispatcher Cathy England. "Somebody outside the fe nce of the school shot into the school grounds." said Betty June Cofield, secretary to the Lake County school super-. intendenl. "It was a man in a camoufla_ge outfit" The man had used a rifle, authorities sajd. The girl, identi(ied as 9-year-old Leah Wilbanks of Mascotte. was shot just before 11 a.m. as she took pan in a pbys1cal educa11on class on the school's PE field. said Cofield. No one else was hun in the incident, Cofield sa~. She did not know how many shoi~ were fired. The man appattntl)' had. been hading in the brush before he jumped up and fired. authontaes said. Cas>t. Randy Swails of the county shenffs department saict he had a rifle. but authorities didn't know the exact type or caliber. A helicopter and a small plane were dispatched to ass1s1 1n the search. and a dog team was summoned. The school is nea r a heavily wooded are:i. with orange groves and scver:il lakes nearby. Leah was in stable condition at Orlando Regional Medical Center. said spokeswoman Jean Lowe. "She suffered two gunshot wounds to upper arm and chest. The bulte1s entered and u11ed." said Lo\\e. The child was ~ing evaluated by d()('tors for possible suraery, she said. Af\er the shooting. wo~cd-lookina parents arriv~ the school to take their children home. The school has an enrollment of about 41 S. Jerry Kiefer of station WHOF·AM in Leesburg said Leah was the granddaughter of the station's sales manager. Thomas Chapman. Mascotte, whose road signs proclaim it "The Friendly City ... has a population of 1.100. It was the third school· shooting incident in as many weeks. Last week. two little girls were killed and nine other people wounded at a school in Soulh Carolina. whil~ the previous week. five peoP.le, none of them students. were lulled in a shooting In and near a Chicago elementary school. Leaders Of Libya.and Ch'~d restore diplomatic relations PAR IS (AP) -Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi and Chadian President Hissene Habre. bitter en-emies in a long desen con flict. restored diplomatic relations be- tween their nations Monday and agreed to solve their differences peacefully. A statement issued in both coun- tries· and in Lome. Togo. said Chad and Libya would ··scrupulously re- spect the Sept. 11. 1987 cease-fire" that ended the fighting in nonhem Chad. The agreement. mediated b} Togolese President Gnassingbe Eyadema, comes at a time when the mercunal Gadhafi appears to be showins signs of some moderation, at least w11h regard to his neighbors in Nonh Africa. It also comes a year after Habre's forces. in a seril's ofhghtning ba11lcs. succec<JCOln driving he Libyans out of nonhem Chad after years of occu pation in suppan of Chadian rebels. The statement did not mention the Aouzou Stnp. a 4A.000-square-mile band of terri 1ory across the non hem border of Chad that was seized. by Libya in 1973. The Aouzou is he subject of a disJ>ute going back to pre- W.orld War II day~ before either Chad or Libya became independent In an interview with The As- socia1ed Press -last month. Gadhafi said he was walling to negotiate the status of the Aouzou. TIME, FUNDS LIMIT CAMPAIGNING ••. From Al Libertarians see little difference between Republicans and Demo- crats. arguing that both uphold a system in which ind1v1dual rights are trampled b) go,ernment. Bloxham savs essenualh the same thing about ihe two leading can- didates in· the 401h. GOP nominee Chns Cox and Democrat Lida Lcn - ne~. .. Shake lhc:m up in a bag and 1oss them out. You'll gel pretl~ much the same thing." he said. In both cases. the rnaJor panics uphold a go\t~rnmt'nt that regulates ind1 ndual ll\es and seizes 1he frultS of their labor w11hou1 their consen1. L1benanans. on the J:ather hand. believe the go' crnment should be doing '1rtuall~ nothing c,,ccpt protecting 1ndl\ 1duals -and not from 1hemselves. either. ··The go\ernmcnt has no business in the churches. prn ate cntc:rpnse. educa11on or our prl\ale h'es:· Bloxham said. The mood of the rnizenlV reflects the growing disenchantment w11h governmen1. and L1bertanans look v.1th a touch of smugness at poll- TOILET ... From Al Hien Thi Tran . .:?.:?. of Orange Tran's car spun several tames and hit a To)ola v.agon drnen b~ MJchelle -1.nne Slayman. 36. of Or- ange. No senous in1unes resulted from the accident. although Vu and Tran -were transponed to iustin Memorial Hospital where 1he) were trea1ed for minor inJunes and released. "It was not a good way to stan a Monda)." Thornhill observed tic1ans -especially Republicans an the Reagan era and an increasing number of Democrats-who preach a "less go' ernment" philosoph)'. But as far as L1benClrians are concerned., u·s mostly talk while government con11nues 10 grow. in- truding everywhere 11 looks. · . "I see no reason PI Ot to accept 1hat 1 f something drama\1c isn't done. the cost of government "111 co ntinue 10 ri se. and v.e'll end up with a to1alltanan stale." Bloxham said "It's IOe\llable." - Ine v11able. that is. unless more people disco' er the L1bertanan altematl\ e. If Labcnanans v.ere the pan) in power, go,ernmen1 v.ould do liule except maintam lhe na11onal defe nsc and protect 1he nghts of mdl\'lduals. Government would not interfere with "volontary and contractual rela- 11ons among 1n.dtv1duals."' according to pan) pnnc1ples. La1ssez-fa1re capi- talism would free b\Jsmesses from government regulauons 10 succeed or fail on their own merits. Go' ernmental respons1b1li11es in such areas as conse rva tion. water. encrg). education. lice nsing. bankmg and welfare would be transferred 10 the pm ale sector or eliminated. Since 1axa1Jon 1s confiscation b) government of an ind1v1dual's prop- en~. L1benanans would abolish 1.3\CS. Bloxham admits 1he Libertanan phtlosoph) has a somewhat Pollyan - na veneer. depending as ll does on individual in111a11ve to conserve re- sources. aid the poor. protect con- sumers and ensure competenq and honest\ in the business and 1rade v.orld · And they have trouble defending one of1he1r most controversial stands - the right of the md1v1dual to use drugs. GROWTH CONTROL RIFT •.. From Al Liberta'l"ians don't condone the use of drugs. but they don't believe it's the government's job to tell people hov. to conduct their lives. C\en 1f some· people choose to destro} themsel ves through 1he abuse of drugs. . On the other hand. it's easy 10 point to repeated government failures and cite examples wnere. instead of solving the problem . government as th e problem. As an independent bus1ncssman. Bloxham says he knows onl) too \\ell the headaches of government intcr· ference. A self-employed marine con· sultan1. ,acht broker and 1nven1or. he bcian 'to embrace Li bertarian phllosoph} eve-n-before the part)' came into cx1s1ence. Bloxham admitted 1t 1s a paradox for L1benarians 10 hold office. And if he were to win. he would hkel~ be a lone 'oacc an Congress. No L1benanan has ever '-"On a nauonal election. But he would be a louti voice. ··1 will have a forum from which I could speak. I'll be a whistle-blower and a d1smantler." he said. ·-rm convinced that with the nght kind of publicity, people would flock to L1benarian principles." Bloxham sa vs. too. that his pres- ence would noi sit well with what he calls the busine~-govemment-estab- lishment that has built a coz). mutual!)' beneficial relationship. "I don't underrate what they're capable of ... he said. "They'd prob- ably find a way to get rid of me. "But l"d go down kicking and screaming." FLOWERS ... From Al fun .·· she said. "Several local busi- nesses have reall) come through for us." Sou'hem California wlll be f.W through T'*CS•v wtth 80fM low clouds WWI k'6end fog, fotecalter• Mid. The National WMttw 8eMce ~ed hight .,_.Mn 70 and 7 4 attn. t>Ndles, whh lowt 61to82 Highs of 78to15 wef'e expected In the mountains. with lowt 44 to 52. Along the Orange Cou' there will be fog and low cloUd• late tonight through mld-rne>fnlng Tueaday from the cout Inland through the coutal valleys. otMrwtte lalt tonight and Tuesday. e..ch 1owt tonlaht sa to 12 wtth l'l6gha TuaadeV 10 to 7 4. va11ay 10ws toNght 58 fo eo wtth ~ Tueedey 82 to 82. ~ '° From Point Conception to the Mexican Border -Over Inner water• tight and variable wind• tonight and Tue.day motnlng t>ecomlng wett to southwest 10 to 15 knots Tue.day aftetnoon and Tue.day. S... to 2 feet. Southwest swell 3 feet. Low cloud• night and momlna hour• becoming partty .unny Tuesday afternoon today and fuaaday. ,,.OHtt '° ......IA.A. ....... c... • ., ... ···~ U.S. Temps Calif. Temps. Extended HI L• NwOt'IMnl 711 15 ~~ 17 53 Nw Yotll City 79 &1 Ancl>oteo-53 45 Olllellame 91'1 72 41 :f'.w=: 24 l\oufundW'll •I U "'51 ... end morning low dol.o. -... Allenta 711 117 Omeha .. M --..-:=::Ille COMl.i.....,. Allll\llC 01)1 IO 69 ()rtendo 12 73 Nlf'll let•~,.,.. mol!*'lllOUrs ..,._ IO 11 ~ 7t M Eur•• .. 51 ~ F':9J~ F,_ n 51 ~ 75 63 Phoallla 103 n l.411~ . "' ,. "" ~ HiON 1 7 10 2 ::! Iha ... 115 50 P11t= 71 53 Oelllllnd • tl5 57 bMCllee IOIOIOlntllev~ OM loeton 79 59 POfl .Mlline 71 53 P-AOCllN 87 47 551015 llukelo 10 " POf11and.Ot'e 17 54 Aad llufl et 5-4 CNtlaeton,S C 83 73 =::ro1y 113 ~~ .. 51 Olanolte.NC to tl6 .. 70 ~· Surf Report ~ 111 43 AenO .. 41 .. AactWooC1 onv 13 74 41 AICMlo9ld 15 111 .__,o 72 &t llD IHAN SallnU LOCATIOll ~ .. .. Ill-72 .. Sen DleOO 71 .. =~ • 2-3 ,.., Columtlua.Ohlo 71 47 Sall LAii• Cuy ~ ~ SenFrllndaQo 17 67 2-4 llllr o.IM-fl Wonh 78 55 SanMlonlo SanJoM ., 73 IO 40ll\SlrWI.~ 2-4 fair Oeyton 67 45 s.tue ~ ~ San Lule Obilpo 119 51 nnc1 s1rae1, IMwpOt1 2-" lalr o.n-111 .. Sc*-IO 5-4 lalbOllW~ 2·4 ,.., 39 173 .. Stodllon O.MOlnM 4M S1f-LaQl#MllMdl 1·2 poor ~fOit tlS 44 Tlmc1•St PltlbQ 91 74 High, IOw tor 24 llOut• endHIQ el U' ni a.nce.n-i. 2·3 OOod Oululll 53 ;M' Topella 72 M lartlOW tl6 W94effelnP.15 EI P-83 50 T-" .. e-itnonl 1111 52 S ... Clirectlon.W .. tl&oul-Eri41 13 17 TulM 74 .. leg&Mr 71 N tllylM I03 .. IO Fairbankl 50 33 Wa1Nng10n.O C J ., f'llostllfl 711 42 ~ eete1ona es 11 Gtand RaoiO• 62 42 eui-Oty n 11 .__..., 95 •• Tides Honolulu 90 74 Houston 711 111 Smog Report Long 8Nc:h 77 61 TOOAY L.A Airport 69 12 lndlen8'>041• 71 41 S.eOflCI lllQh 4~pni. 4.12 J1Clt.tor1,Mlu 17 42 Montttey 15 5'4 T\JllOAY ,...,... \03 117 JeC1111on..,... 89 72 Pollutanl llMClerd Inda (pelt 0·50 Flr81 IOw 12 Hein 03 Ju-6e 47 =· 51-100 moo.-= 101-~ un-NNpOfl BMcn 15 63 :!:'a::r'iow 7 35•"' 4 3 OntlltiO 17 5 7 K.,,...Oty 69 42 hful: 200-2" *\' -. 300 1229pm 2.8 Las Vagat 97 65 end ebcl\le ha¥0Clue F1rlt figure II Plllm SptlnQI 101 Ill Second lllgll 5 OS p"' 4 9 PaaadeNI 15 59 L~tle RoClc 11 54 PfaYICIUS esey·1 enWled 1111 s.co..ci 1a 1.oultYllle 75 51 todey'1 1191 lorecae1 San Bemwcl•no to 59 Sun.. .... today at 11.33 p.m.. ,_ San Gebtlel • 113 1 1 M9r'nph1$ 79 55 TUM<lay et 6:41 a ni encl Mii el 1;31 Miami Beacn 115 80 S... 8Nch to MecAnllut lll'ld .... 50-60 Sent• Ane 711 11 p.m. • Mllwe<ikM tl1 42 lrvtna. Slldellallacll lla!Mty ..... ~. 131 .. 70 Tort.,_ 72 eo Moon .... lod•y ., 3•02 p "'·· rlMa ..._SIPeul llO as Lagune 8Mch (IOr-1) ·······J···· 42 WMfwOOCI 67 ff Tueeclay et 1-02 a rn and Mii a1 3·31 ,...,,villa 711 5e Lot Angelee AJtporl. ·-·-• 51-42 Yoeemlte Illy 8' 49 ·p"' AID$ quilt growing too big for further public displays SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -There were 1.920 people represented b) the Names Project quilt when 11 was laid out in Washmgton Oct. 11 . 1987. Almost exacll) a year later. the number is 9.000 an~ growing. Because 1he 9u1lt already covers the equivalent of eight football fields.1his weekend's daspla) on · 1he Whue House Ellipse 1s likel~ to be the last time 11 1s shown in its ~c:nt1ret). said project ~keswoman Sue Baclcn. .. ofonun:11ely. ·th e deaths con- tinue: .so •ve v.11l go on:· said Baelen. at the pro1ect's headquarters 1n San Franc~sco. ··Bitt 1-d<>ubt we Cftn en~r show 11 all at once e'er agam ... Alier th e display on the circular public lawn behind the White House. a search will begin for a pcrmanen1 home. where pallets can be preserved and displayed on a rotaling basis. '"We ha e a great respons1biht) now to take careofthisqu11t for future _ generations." Baelen added. About one-fifth of the approx- 1matelv 42.000 Americans who ha ve died from AIDS since June 1981 are now represented in the quilt. which when laid out will measure 750 feet b) 500 feel. It 1s in1ersperscd with five miles of walk way and 11 miles of trimming. just how many more panels will be added to the 8.800 turned in so far is unknown. Organizers have no plans to stop accepting them . The 8.288 panels on the Ellilpse - most of the 'rest wi ll be displayed elsewhere an.the capital -·come from all 50 states and 12 foreign counincs. Thq were made for infants. brothers. sisters. thret for parents and 1heir children. lovers. fnends. sons. dau~h­ ters, members of ga)· and lesbian choruses and assoned celebn11cs. including Liberace and Rock Hudson. More than just a shocking ponra11 of death b)' epidemic. the 16 tons of three-foot by six-foot pieces of fabri c arc a revelation and 1ribute to the richness of life. "It as not enough to say this 1s foremost a memorial: It is a song. a pra yer: a poem, a protest, -a cry. a laugh. a tear. a hug." said Rav i Anand. who recently turned in a panel bearing a silkscrcened likeness of a friend who died of AIDS this summer. "I think we succeeded in resurrec- ting the man who had tx•en ou r fnend. our lover. our brother." added Anand. who made the panel wi1h friends and fariul ) of the 29-year-old man who died. "We moved ~yonJ his death "1th this ... : Cind} Ruskin. author of "The Quilt Stories From the Names Pro- jeC1." believes the pro1ect's greatest impact is in i1.s ab1hty to convey beauty amidst an epidemic she says-is often madt' worse by government inacuon and pubhc 1nd1fTerence. "The quilt represent s mainly love stones. It JUSt shows a gentle, warm. loving response to something absolutel) hideous and awful." said Ruskin. who1s now working on a film about the project. The quilt project be~n in 1986 after San Francisco pohticnl activist Cleve Jones made the first panel for his best fnend of 14 >cars. who had recently died of AIDS. Following a 20-cit} na11onal tour earlier this year, permanmt work- snops were set up in several ctties where survivors are shown bow to make a panel. Baclen says one of the ··most touching momeots" m the quilt making comes when people turn in their individual panels. "They often at the last minute don't want to pan with them ... she said. JOB CENTER OPENS WITH !!RAISE •.. From Al nation." uni on leaders who say their higher Ez.ell said the Costa Mesa hanng paid workers will be hun by the pool center was the first of 1ls kind that he of unskilled labor that will be avail- kncw of anywhere m the United able at the job center. States. Amburfey. however. dismissed Elell added. however. that the city that criticism. would have to take other measures to "I can't really sec where they're aid in-the enforcement of residency coming fro'hl." he said. •11Jis is the lj\"'S for workers. same service that 1s being provided b> "The city could help us by passing other grou.ps. such as the Employ- ordtnances making it illegal to pick up ment Development Depanment. worker~on street corners." he said. ··This is a hiring center for non-union The costa Mesa Job Ce nter. as 11 is members. I don't see that it's goi ng to now called. has drawn criticism from affect union members at all ... A representati ve of the city of Lagu~a Bca~h was also on hand at todays opening. Police Chief Neil Purcell said Laguna Beach officials were al~o in the process of setting up a day labor pickup center. But he said t~&una Beach center would not screen poten- tial workers for legal residency. "We have to assume that pcoJ?le who are here are here legally." hesa.1d. "It's not within our jurisdiction to ask people for their citizenship or resi- dency papers." pro' 1ding details on other campaign e\pcnses. forcing Hile to file cam - paign spending repons latc 10 the county Registrar of Voters. ··we'dasktheme'ef) wcd..\\h) v.e were so la1e filing and ne'er go1 a straight anS\'l.'r. JUSI e\CUSCS ... Bur~ell said. Lloyd's Nu rsery and Armstrong Nurser) ha ve donated plan1s to the mamtenancc effort. Baker said. C.J. Segerstrom & Sons has offered to give 1he,~un1te~~an1sfromthe~bb)' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ of the Orange Count) Performing Arts Center. The plants arc rotated out of the center on a regular basis. Burtell. who 1s now working on a slow-growth measure in San Juan Capistrano. blames thc dela) on Hile. "As thc corporauon's treasurer. I was;a hll OCf\ OUS. I'm JUSt v.ondcnng hov.. all this looks 10 the public ... The Carl's Jr. resta urant on Adams A"enue pro\1 dcd lemonade to Thursday's maintenance outing and also gaH \Oluntcers discount Lotto ticket worth $11 . 5M coupons. Paulsen was elated by the response Thursday and hopes to stage another maintenance session in the spring. .\'("RAMENTO C .\P) -.\ Kern County lotto pla)CT won the S 11 5 m11l1on wcekt'nd Jackpot by r.•cking the six wmn1n.s numbers. Ca 1fom1a Lottery officials say. The person who bought the ticket sold in LamOfll won 't be identified until he or she contacts lottery offic1als Monday. The machint-p1ck- ed ucket is wonh SI 1.537.029. The numbers picked 1n the twice- weekly ··Lotto 6-49" game were: 6. 8. 14. 25. 32. 41 and the bonus number. 'b~~~~e Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE »OW.st ~SI ~ .... ,.,.CA M911 --11c71 '"° c;,.,..-....,. C• t1&.?$ C.....-.0 .01 4M2-~711 DU-~· A ..i 1'>"~ 141-"»' 26 \Cn ticket<; had fhc numbc~ plus 1he bonusd1g1t to claim $247.320 each. and 301 tickets camed fi'l' numbers to pay $2.963 each . Thert" were I S.966 tickets with four wmn1ng numbers worth $50 each and 290.478 11ckets with three numbers wonh SS each. The sales from Wcdncsda)' n1gh110 Saturda}"s drawing were S 16.2 mil hon. "lt was fabulous."~aulscnsaid. "h looks good and the response was great. The kids were bringing their parents back on Friday and showing th em where they worked." Following the work session. which lasted from 4 to 6 p.m .. many of 1hc volunteers sat down to a picnic dinner. "I've been waiting for this kmd of thing for a long ume." Paulsen said. "It was JUSt a grent display of communal) spirit..·· Delly Piiot ' Detlvery It Querenteed Just call 642-6086 Mono.-. , ,..,., " '°" Cl'J -"-'°"' ~ .,. "'°pin , •• ~ , ec.r~ Ital NO-llOf ... ~lratlOfll 9Cl•l0<1 .. ..,.._ Of 94,..,._., Mfe;n 1111, be rtO<O<luc:MI ......,, ~'*"-of COl>Vf~l11 0-What do you like about lhe Daily Pi.Jot? Wha\ don't you like? Call lhe number above and your mcssaae will be recorded, transcribed ind de- livered to the appropriate editor. p in 8M YO\lr '00!' ... .,. ... ...ci ... llfde;'llld ~ " .,... "° 119' ,...,. 'fO<li c.-,111y 7 e t11(e1Wote 10em ~....,,~.,.. ........,., VOL 11, MO. %T7 The same 2'4-hour antwcnna 1eTV1ce may be used to ~rd letters to the ~1tor on al'ly copic. Contributors to our unen column must include their name and telephone number for vcrifica1ion. Tell us what's on your mind. I ClrcMMtton Tiii,.._... Mott o..,...c-tt -~ ............... Handknit Sweater Corduroy pant and Plaid Shirt from J OSE PH ABB OUD 11 9 Fashion Island • Newpon Beach• (Bulloekl Wilsbitt Win&)• 1S9-1622 -------~--------·-- • • Cha1I1ber plans Business Expo at the Newporter· Tbc Dolphins Division of the Newpon Harbor Ala Chamber or Commerce wtll sponsor "Business £loo '18" at the Newporter Resort Tuesday from S M>8p.m. Appro~imately 70 businesses will be rep- retented at this fourth annual trade fair, which is beld to introduce individuals to.ithe businesses m the area. Chamber members and non-members are invited to exhibit tbeir8roducts or services. Admiuion is SI for guests and free to memben. To reserve a table, pall Barbara Baker at the ctiamber, 644-821 l, while more information on &be event may be obtained by calling Eva Henry at 673-3310. . Stop-maoklrJ6 •orbhop Fresh SJ&n, a smoking cessation piogram. will be offered for four consecutive Tuesdays by tbe .Family Services Department of Irvine and the Oranae County branch of the American Cancer Society. The sessions will be held Tuesday through Oct. 2S from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at Deerfield Community Park, SS Deerwood. The registration fee is $45, a ponion of which wall be donated to the cancer llOciety. Call 660-3920 for details. Library mu•lc program The Newport C.enter branch of the Newport Beach Public Library will present a music apprecia- tion program Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the library, 856 San aemente Drive. Ron Stoffel, music director of Moments Musicaux, will lead the presentation. which is free and open to the public. Call Jackie Headly at 644-3186 for m@re 1oformauon. Video .erles·on art . "Video as An," a three-Pein series on contem- porary video, will begin Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Irvine Fine Arts Center in Heritage Park, 14321 Yale Ave. Anistic videos, both humorous and serious. will be p~sented on consecutive Tuesdays. The admission is S 10 for the series or $4 for each l>f'(>lralTl, and registration will be taken at the door. Call 552-1 018.for further information. Rablett cllnlc announced A neiJ}lborhood, low-cost anti-rabies . vacci- nation clinic for dogs will be held Tuesday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the Orange County Animal Shelter. 561 Citr Drive South, Orange. ..-- • The cost of the vaccination is $3 per dog, and licenses also will be available at the clinic site. Call the shelter at 834-6300 for additional information. Career forum ln lrvlne --,.. Orange Coat DAILY PILOT 1Mond8Y. October 3. 1... • A8 Eviction closes surfboard store By 'n.e Attedated Pr"' Than)' years or surfi na hast OT) came to a close this weekend IS surfboard maker Gordie Duane closed up shop. evicted by a developer who has new plans for the Hununaton Beach locatton. Duane spent 1he last hoµrs in his surfboard shop Saturday doana what he has done best since 1956, puttina the final touches on a custom-made board. "I've just got to act this done," he said while paring a few rou&h edges off the board with his fingernail. "The guy who . ~ ordered this 1s a teal nice Jud A real nice Jud. He's'bttn warnna for s1JC mon1hs," Duane wasc' acted at m1dnap1 Saturday from the shop 011 JJth S1rec1 and Pacific Coast Hiitlwa)'. v.here he made thousands of surfbOards for the past 30 }tarL The woman ,.rom whom he rented the space gave the land to a college, which sold ll toa developer that served him notice last Christmas. Packed an boxes were photos of surf- boards and' bluepnnts of boards that haven't been bush for 30 years. •And there art many surfboards. includ- 1n1 the first Gord1r. a balY·Wood model he made IO has parents' aaraae an L)'nv.ood the suburb where he ~as bom and raised Duane said he sav. has first surfer at 1he Belmont Shore Pier an Lona Beach an 1938 v.hen he was 7 He v.as fasc1na&ed. But he got has first t.aste of surfin& an the earl)' 1950s whale stationed at Pearl Harbor. 4.n old Ponuguesc man too.._ ham on as an appreru1ce. showing ham how to shape the long boards out ofbaJsa and seal lhem with resin. He got out of the service 1n 1955. returned tO Lynwood and started his own Taking the scenic route Danielle Holley, 7 , and Jeulca Koalnakl, 6 , patiently wait for their parents whCHrere vie.win& the aeven Ylntaae race car• featured at Sunday'• 1988 Newport-ne&ch Concoun d'Elegance at UCI'• Aldrich Park. More than 120 antique and · claulc can were 011 dlaplay at the event which benefited A TSC Aueeamenl and Treatment Ser .. ricea Center, ajuvenlle dlTenlon proeram. .. surfboard shop Soon. the surfen and ttw pier drew Duane to Hunt1n1ton Beath. a surfers' haven ~here he set up a new store an 19S6. After work. Duane and has cmplo)ecs would dive into the water before 1oan1 home, he recalled Then one da) in I 9S8. spmebody dropped a c1pre1tcf in bas shop and the volatile materials -resin and wood - burned 11 up He reopened at the shop he had to leave. The surlboards he sold for $ J 00 when the shop opened cost S 1.000 when the store cloStd. Mother ·who left ~ her child arrested From staff and wire reports ' .\J't Orange Count) woman who alleged- ly abandoned her 11 -> ear-old daughter wa s bean~ held an San Diego C'ounty Jail in lieu of$.0.000 bail. authorities said. Karen .\. Ma\', 37. of Anaheim was arrrsted an Torrance and transported Sunda) to the Las Cohnas Women's Detention Center in Santee. said Sgt. Bill Edwards of the San D1egq Police Depan- menL She has been charged wtlh one count of felon) child endangerment. one count of child abandonment and two counts of fa1 lurt to i>rovtde for a l:hrtd.ci Jal t-derlc--at the ante-e J ail said. May was scheduled to appear an San Diego federal court \Oday. Ma) v.as arrested Saturda) evening b} Torrance police as she arri ved at a relatavc's Los Angeles area home to p1ck up her _7-ycar-old son. Floyd. from a cgun- ordered '1s1tat1on wath has father. police said Ma} demed abandoning her aaughter. telling pohce a fnend had taken her to San Diego. said San Diego police detective Dan Dennis. A si Agle mother rn lbC-process of obtaining a d1-vorce. May was .. basically at her wit's end"' when she left ber mute daughter. Tan}a Tegerdan~. in a La Jolla store Sept. 14. Dennis said. he reportedly had been living at the po \'Crt) lc-..el 1n a series of motel rooms since she lef\ her husband an November. he said. The children v.cre 001 allowed to go to school or leave home during-that lll'he, he said -- The Irvine Community Services Department. in cooperation with National nivers1ty. will offer the third class in a career workshop series on job interview skills Tuesda}. from 7:30 to 9 a.m. at lhe universi!)'. The seminar wlTI repeatCcfFn a) rom o 9 .Real local witches applaud as K:ncttt ~ s .-tOSS€s el:lt '-spell' -skit The girl's mother was traced b) San Diego police child ab~ detectives tnrough a up from a former tcacner.-wno rtt'ognized 1he child an tele' 1s1on news a('('ounts an San Diego. ., , p.m. The cost is $1 0 and more information 1s available at 660-3881 lVomen '•career seminar By Tbr Associated Press Local "1t<:hc.:s said the~ arc glad that K,nou·s 8cf'T) Farm dropped a Hano"--ttn skat depacung a gaJlov. s-bound "itch casting spells on cro"'ds because at ga'e them a bad name. near a scaffold and noose and cast a spell on the audience l;>cfore :sppcanng to turn into a do\ e after a tlash of fire"'orks. ol public relauons for the park. .. Pagans arc not de' 11 v.orsh1pe~:· Cuher said ... \\e don't run around the neighborhood in black robes and ~cnfice animals io our bac.._ }ard." Police planned to contact Ma) at her .\nahe1m apartment o'er the "-«kend but her s1ster-an-lav. contacted authonucs and said she ~as planning to leave the state. Dennis said. A workshop focusing on career coices for women will be held Thursda} from 6:3010 I 0 p.m. at Oranse Coast Colleae. Suzanne Hard will conduct the session "3.nd 1he reaistration fee is $25. Call 432-5880 for reservations and additional informa11 on. "lt·s true that people accused of"' Itch· craft "ere h<anged -Cenainl) these thtnJS happened. but the~ Yo<eren't funn\ ... 5a1d Paul Sulitn. a .:!7-\ear-old \\ hm1er chem 1st. watch. and· regional coo1danator of the Pagan Occult Wttchcraft pec1al Interest Group of outhern Cahfom1a. he said "ttches arc people "ho choose to 1AOrsh 1p a number of anC1ent <k1t1es ~ar<.'n Ma\ 's estranged husband. Hasli..ell Ma) of Camp Verde. Anz .. IS Flo, d's faLhe r Karen Ma) dad not 1dentif) "Ifs incidents h.._e thi s that help per- petuate a m} th.'' said Chris C'ulwr. a 32- }ear-old resp1ratof') therapiSt ~nd long- time witch v.hCl says pag?ns re,cre the Eanh and nature. not boiling brc"'s and evil spells. • .\rea "itches sa~ their much-mahgn~d religion 15 nature-.based. honori ng the Eanh. hfc and the C)cles of the moon and sun. Da' 1d Beecher. a Claremont "'nch and 37-)ear-old computer operator. agreed. Tan~a·s father . Monday, Oct. 3 Last year the park'se1ght·da\ Halloween celebration featured the I 0-mlnute skat. in "'tsch an actress portra}1ng a v.1tch stood Knott"s Ben; Farm officials said reccnt- 1} that the~ plan to ehm1na1c all rc.:fcrenccs to w11ches tn ghoulish dramat11at1ons. But the dec1s1on had nothing to do "'1th the "'itches· complaints. .. We wouldn't hang an' witches. "'c hl.l· eH·nbod) ... said tuan Lan,11le. director He said a "' itch 1s not a "cackli ng old hag wuh green sli..an "'ho y,.ants to eat hulc children and put them tn the OHn.'" Driver held in fatal collision • 7 p.m. Huntington Beacb City Council. co1,1nc1I chambers. 2000 Main St. • 6:30 p.m. Costa Mesa City Council. council chambers. 77 Fair Dri ve. Tuesday, Oct. 4 Contaipriient of Sou thland brush fire n ear .\ Fountain Valle~ man died Saturday lrom head inJurtes he suffered after befog strud. b~ an alleged drunken dnver Fnday nag ht Jamte T Kolb1nsk). 35. was pro- nounced dead at Fountain Valle} RcgionaJ Hospital where he was taken after the r..o-car colhs1on at the mterscct.Lon of \.tac .\nhur Boule' ard and Fa1rvie" Strc'Cl tn Santa .\na. • 9:30 a.m. Orange Countr Board of Sa~r­ vlsors, board hearing room. Hal of Adnin1strauon. l 0 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana. RA NCHO CUC.\MO\;G.\ (AP) -A up . ..\'ala said. I 0.665-acrc wildfire m the an Bernardino Winds \\Crc blo"' mg at ~ mph unda} Mpuntams was 80 percent contained and and.the forecast called for 10 mph "tnds fir~ officials had high hopes for full toda). and forced hundreds 01 res1dl.'n1s 10 t1ee their homes. ' • I :30 p.m. Orange Couty Plan.niag Com· -mi11toa, bo:srd meeting rootn:' HaH of Admini~­ tration, 10 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana. contamment toda\. The tire. set b' an arson1)t \\ ednesda' --trn~SJ 1h1ngr· sudden1) ctm~. rrs-on-"frr.is ttttt.-Wn-89-pc'f'C't'nt ront3tmd looli..tng prett} good.'' said C':slifornaa Sunda). Full containment" a) e\pected at Department of Foresm spokesman ~n-6 p.m. toda~ and lull rnntrnl b' ~ a m One ranch home and a shed v.eft' dcstro)ed. Propen~ IO'iSC'i totaled about Sl50.000. "'' 1la said The costs offaghung 1 1t(o--fitt -werc--ntnnated at-ne"arh S1 ~ m1lhon as of unda'. he said Kotbtn k~ was -Ora''ttl ~t \fac.\n hur a t about 11 30 p.m. when has rar collided\\ 1th a ' eh1clc being dnvcn b. Rohen .\ trong, 22. of Santa Ana. • 6:30 p.m. Newport Bcacb Parks, Bcacbes ucl Recrcalln Commissioa, council chambers. 3300 Newpon Bl vd. drewA\'1la. Thursda} . .\'ala said The 11.,ru: of 950 Crews continued 10 bad.fire portions of firefighters "'as being redurcJ heaV)• brush that lir~ ullic1als teared could Flame~ fa nned b\ gu<.t' \anta .\na add fuel to the Oames 1f the "'ands packed "ands closed nearb' f ntcr<.tate I ~ JI t1mc<i Mean\\ hale. three· air tanl ers and about :-:oo U.S. Forest Sen 1ct firdighters <.nulTed a "'1ldfire 1n the .\ngeles 'auonal Forest after 1t cha rred fi, e acre'> sa11.l f orest n ace Dispatcher 1(1m \torg.;in'itl'ln trong. "ho was not an1ured. was am~ted and booked into Orange County Jail on ur.p1c1on ot drun.,,en dn' mg. Publicity ends .~ingleton's . -'new life' inN. California PINOLE (AP) -.\ woman who opened her home and her heart to Larry Sioaleton said rcn<.'wed putr licity has <friven the convicted rap1st- m1imcr from her house and ended the couple's plans to begin life ane" tottther, according to a copyright newsJ)llper story. The woman. spuk1 ng on cond1t1on that her namC'not be revealed. said in Sunday'sedittonsoftheContraCosla Ti~ in Walnut Creek, recent publicity and pressure from the pohce forced Sinaleton to return to Aonda. Police confirmed 1ngleton ten Pinole Sunday. "It's all O\'Cr now. Larry's leaving. Tbey•ve wo.Di" said the middle-aged • woman. who sat on a weathered bend\ near a park stream 'durin& an interVicw. "I woukf have fouaht for ham to stay. but he's leavina to prolcct me." she11id. Sinalcton. 61. was convicted or c.... ..... A woman 1ared off two would-be in1Ndcn earl)' unday momma b) WiddH'f I tO)-JUD when lhe) at-9ml*"d to enter her M1norca Strttl ..... ••• !olMont broke into and ransaekect raping then 15-)ear-old hitchhiker Mary Vincent rn 1978 near Modesto and hacking off her forearms dunng the attack. • Earlier this year. V1Dcent won a S2.S6 million civil Judgment :sgainst Singleton an a Nev:sda coun. ingle- ton testified in the c1v1I case that he 1 unable tO work. has onty $200 ID savings and l't'Cc1ves $600 a month an Social Secunty. The Pi(lole woman Jald Singleton has bet.o shanna her home since he arrived ID lhc San Francisco Bay area last week lo file a deposition. aC't'ord- mg lO the. nc.wspaper. She said thcrtwouldn't ha\e been :s problem if Pinole Police Chief Ted Barnes hadn~t told the Cat) Council Monday that inglclon had returned. Under Cahfomia law. a convicted sex offender must register wuh police within 14 days of h1sam,·al ma cat)' angleton, who scncd eight )ears of a 14-)ear scnten e an suite pnton. 1 home 1n the 1900 block of hurch Street but stole noth1n1 betv.ecn 8 p.m. Sa&urda and noon unda) • • • l\ buralar smashed the v.1ndow o( a Volkswaatn Sc1rucco J)llrked an tht- S70 block of nton bttWttn 10 p.m. Saturda and noon unda\ The maint:stns he as innocent. ''l'\C ~ot no reason to doubt MaT) Vincent.· said the "-Oman. when asked "'hether she behc-..cs S1ngle- ton 's cl aims another man cbmmmed the cnme. he added she beli('\ cs Singleton doesn't remember the cnme \\h1ch took place \\hen Single-- ton was dnnli..ing hea' ii). "He ma~ ha\-e blacked ouL I don't knov.," she 'iald. But even 1fSanglelon as gu1h\ ... ,t "'ouldn't matter one bat. not one bat.'. he said "There IS the other 99 perl'ent of him that 1s good " The tv.o met before mglcton's cnme. when the former merchant mannc owned a horhe an Tara t1,11ls. a town bordenng Pinole. located about 20 males nonhea tor an Fronc1sco he followed 1nglcton's case and renr~ed contact wuh ham after ronow1na has failed attempts to ser\ c out his parole an Contra tosJa. Yle ~.J. ~chicle's tcrco -&s tole~ • • • maalbo.l v.as stokn oil 1t v.-oodcn po$l 1n the tCX)() block or Chutrlt t~ Saturda) ntaht. Sunda\ on susp1 io n lll drt ' mg under the influence of alcl)hol JelTrr) Pa age Racl. 23oflong lkach "'as stopped at 2:1.0 a.m on Se'enth .\'tenue and Coast H1gh"a' r>ar~le Dean Manon. I b. of Fountain Valle) "as stopped at 0' J m on Cliff Dme • • • f1Ytfighte~ r1: ponded t~reporu of smoli..e Saturd.t~ l'\\'nang at an apan- m<.'nt on \ ia t apn The smoke. ho"'-e' er. "as caused onl~ b~ a burning he<.' ot loa t • • • Pohcecatcd Rodnc' J:sck >\nderson II. 11. of Laguna Beach fo r alleged posse ion ot 1llcgal fi rt'v.orli.s >\ndt'™>n "'a c1tC'd hon I~ afirr I 0 p.m unda~ on Brood"a Newport Beach . .\ burglar entered an unloded home on tht 400 hlock ot Ptosp«t 'trttt and stoic a house ~e). lea' ang behind a dollar bill on v.hach 'Aas scra~led. ··r,e 1ot m ) c)e on \Ou. I sen ice v.11h a smile ... ·· . . . ' .\ gul·st''i dot alcnc:d tts master to an ar10n attempt on the ninth lloor of the Four asons Hotel 690 Nev.-pon Center Dr ."' here auttionuc found a pale or nap~1ns bumina In the Uln· v.cll. Thert' v.a~ no dama,c. • • • ..\ burilar tole about S 11 .6( an 1e-.i.clf'), 1oclud1nc nnas and v.atchcs, from a home on the block. of Harbor Island Dmt • • • -\ v.oman retum1n1 to her car an the park:ang pra~ at Lido \111Laac. 3434 Via ('ado. 11w.· a man s.iand1f\l tn the \Pitt nt11.t to htt car mu1urt.una. i she dro't a-a) he JUm~ from \he Ihm! lt\d ,0 the~ Ind f'f1'Qtcd th~rformance Huntington Beach .\t4:5.1a.m toda~ ::i "'omanJog&1ng 1n the '1c1nat' of (.,othard ~trttt and Edinger .\' enue told pohle 'ihe sa"' a man s1and1ng.1ns1~k TJlO Bell Police rt"spond~d. but found \)Oh a 1ichacl Jaclcson poster on the \·ountcr but no suspect • • • PolrCt' responded tu an apanment on \ orkto "' n .\' enuc near Bea h Boule' ard at .:! ..i..i a m toda' "'hen a caller said that her ,nl·1~hhor "'a .. thro"' 1ng thing around • "'o one \\35 at the apanmcnt "hen poll~ am\ed • • • Pohce rc ponded to a fam1l~ d1s- tur-Nnce :u I .:!.14_ .i m toda~ at a re 1dcnet o n Gar11cld .\' enue near 't orkto" n .\' enur Onr of the occu· pants told police that he \\('flt to the apanment to ··get has clothe!I and get out." He told police a ftfl)aJt room- mate \\a ~at1ng him up .... .\house \\:ls ran.sa ~cd on Garficld .\ 'enue near ~ orktov.n on unda) eH:,mng b~ a po able kno~n u P«t ••• T"-o men rrponC'dh s~1pcd a bottle of Jad. Daniel' from a liquor itorc on Islander Lane at 10:34 p.m:• unda) One of the suspttts was dncnbcd IS a male. S fttt S anchn. 1.lS pounds. weanna U \'IS and I Jacket. wttb a red blndaftl on his naht arm. Tbc leCOnd SutSl«t was de- smbed a$ 6ftttl1nchn.. 165 ~ Both JUSC)e(t$ ~ OUIMaMI ... • • • nt\lhbor Oft Wll'Def Aveaut near BceCh Boulevard ~ thM htr ~bor was kidtH.'I dowD tiis ov.-n fricc Sundl' nnma. SM told police he often acted an that manner. \\hen poh~ amved. the suspect was inside has house Fountain Valley .\ gun-w1eld1ng bandit robbed a • top-'\I-Go stort' of an undetermined amount of ca h Saturda) e\en!._fll. ~pt'{"t \\lllked lnlO. tile store., pulled a handgun from beneath has shin and demanded mone) from a clerl The suspect. described as a black man 3bout .:!5 .. ears old. fled on foot · • • • Someone brol(' a rear window o~r the v.eeli..end to gain entT) at a home in tht I "000 bloc.._ of Montezuma Cirdt and stole \\me. bread and lunch meats • • • A car parled at the Fam1l)' Four Theater on Broolhurst 1rcet Satur- da) ntght "'a broli..en into and a poc~el calculator \\&S taken. • • • .\car parktd 1n front of a home Oft the 9700 blod of Manposau\venut had all four tart' punctured Saturday. • • • meon<.' en1crcd an unlocked homr on the I()()()() t>lock. or C'ariton \\Cnue turda) night and stok a TV m1crow1"e and 1)'pew11ltr valUC'd at S 1.000. lnble ~ Jlok 2)1 lbte1S o( pl~9tood m,m. CQlllUWCtioa ... ilt th( I 0 bhd o( Ttdmala&Y Dri~ bc1Y«n 6 p.m. Satuntay .aa I a.a Sunday. • • • AWUfVolbQlln ....... _ 11okft from -JO 1llodl fl TWllll Wt~ nooe _. •k'r>IJtl ---- day. • Soviet shai,te-up gives Gorbachev supreme power . MOSCOW (Af>) -Soviet officials e&P.ped the biggest shakeup in Mak.hall S. Gorbachev·s )'h years in power todar by replacing Politburo member Vttaly I. Vorotnikov as premier of the Russian republic. The Supreme Soviet of the Russian Republic. the largest of the 15 Soviet republics, elected Interior Minister Alexander V. VJasov -an all y of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev - as the new premier. VlaSO\ was named a candidate member of the Politburo during a central committee meeting Friday. The 62-year-old Vorotn1ko.,, was moved to the ceremonial JOb of president of Russia. Vlad1m1r P. Orlov. the 67-year-old president of the republic, retired. Vlasov had been named a can- didate member of the Politburo during a Central Committee meeting Friday. • Tass. the Sonet m·ws agenr). said Gorbachev recommended th e changes. • The latest changes come after Gorbachev led the most dramatic political changes 1n the So\'let leader- ship of his 31/1 years in pov.er. Today's meeting of the Russian Supreme Soviet 1n the Grand Kremlin Palace comes 1.,..0 da}s after the national parliament ekctcd Gorbache v the country's pres1dl'nt to replace 79-)ear-old ..\nd rt1 ..\. Gromyko. Friday Gorbachc' pushed a maJor shakeup through the Communist Pany·s Policy-making Central Com- mittee. He retjred t .... o full and two candidate Politburo members. promoted four other people and streamlined the Central Commiu~·s apparatus. Vorotnikov and Ukrainian Com- munist Party leader Vladimir V. Shcherbitsky are the only two mem· bers of the ruling 12-man party Politburo who v.ere there before Gorbachev took ~wer. One Weste1n diplomat ut Moscow, who spoke 'on condition of.anonym i· ty. said Vorotnikov was considered a "swing" vote on the Politburo. He generally supported Gorbachev·s re· forms. but was .. not real outspoken. cautious, not zealous.·· the diplomat said. Vlasov had worked in Gorbachev·s home area of southertt Russia before becoming interior minister, in charge of the police. in 1986. His replace- ment is to be named by national authonties. · Vorotnikov was first deputy premier -of the Russian republic in 1975-1979, but lost the support of the Kremlin leadership in the~ast years of President Leonid I. Brezhnev and was made ambassado~to Cuba. He was summoned back to Moscow after Brezhnev's death an 1982. and be- came premier of the republic the following year. Gorbachev's election Saturday by the 1.500 deputies of the national Supreme Soviet unified the party and gave him both 'the top government and party jobs -and more power to force through his programs of reform. Gorbachev has advocated a more powerful presidency than the largely ceremonial job held b} Gromyko, who was-elevated to the JOb in July 1985 after serving 28 years as Soviet foreign minister. Estonians protesting colonialist policies TALLIN~. C.S.S.R. IAP) - Members of an Estonian nationalist group accused the Krcmltn on Sun- da~ of sapping their republic's re- sources and demanded that Mosco"' gi ve them greater control o-.er their land and econom} Thousands of supporter.,-checred the speakers at the first congres'> of the fled~ing People's Front. -w e ha"e been reduced to the le\CI of sla\ cs tn a minor." farmer Enno Peets told more than 3.000 delegates. Some speakers obJCCted to .,.. hat they called the Kremlin's "col- oniahst" pohc~. which the) said syphons ofT Estonia's agricultural output and manufactured goods. "These people arc 10 blame for our sufTenng here. the lack of food here." del~te Albert Danielson told the audience at the Town Hall in Tallinn. the picturesque cap11al of this re- public on the Baltic Sea. The two-day conference opened Saturday with an address by Estonia's Communist Part} chief. Vajno Vvalyas. who greeted the group in the name of Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev. Offi cial sanction for the meeting ~as an and1 cat1on of the changing attitudes of authonues. wh o recently ~ould have thrown in jail anyone cspousmg nauonahst ~timents. The issue of ethnic relations 1s key for Gorbachev. who IS beset by unrest among the Soviet Union's more than I 00 ethnic groups. The sttmngs have been particularly troublesome in the Baltic republics ofEstoma. Lithuania and Lat via. and in the southern republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan. Ar1ny patrols region torn apart by ethnic violence HYDERABAD. Pakistan (API - Army !atrols in machine-gun mounte Jeeps and armored-person- nel earners patrolled this c1t\ and Karachi toda}' after ethnic 'l{llence left more than 215 people dead in southern Pahstan. Pakistan President Ghulam lshaq Khan amved here toda) to tour the scene oflast Fnday's blood} shooting spree in Hyderabad "here more tha11 150 people died. ac.:cord1ng to the national oews agenc}. APP More than 50 people died Ml Karachi. Pak man's biggest Cit}. a da~ later In retahatOf') nQllng. The trouble is between MohaJ1rs. immigrants from India. and S1ndh1 separatists who want ind prov1ncl' to be independent of Pakistan Most of the dead in H}derabad on Fnda} ~ere Mohaws Members of the 1mm1grant commun1t} noted 1n Karachi. I 00 miles to tbe southwest. on aturda>. k1lllng most Sindh1s. Violence continued Sunday when at least I 7 pc.-ople .,_,ere killed. T~o people were killed in H)'derabad ma shooung spree when pohce bnefl y hfted a curfew. The two-hour break an "1e curfew was intended to give residents an opp<?rtunit> to buy food. Police qu1ckl} resumed the curfew after the shoo11 ngs. In Karachi. a group of people cla~hed with police Sunday and set about a dozen vehicles ablaze. Eigh t people died before police restored order. government authonues said. Police reported that seven people v.cre ki lled 1n cthn1c-rcl~tcd gun- baule'I in the ne1ghbonng c111es of Tando .\dam and M1rpur Khas. about 150 miles north of Hyderabad. EXTRA! EXTRA! EXTRA! 1988 MARI< VII LSC $ 1 DEl:IVERS~'. . ......._ __ __,~--------"~~~.---------...... .._.. .... LUSE llY UICOLI MEICUIY II STICI DllYE 8WIY. Fii OILY 11 tlon L•••lng M•n•g•r• -Vic M•nzo or Do!' Flecky SHUTTLE ••• Fram A l NASA 11ad more than 380.000 people bad &athtred under briaht blut slues to weJcome the astronauts, the attond-laraest crowd ever for a shut· tie landana. A half-m1lhon were there on July 4. 1982. when President and Mrs. Reaaan arccted Columbia. "lt'sa bcau11fuldaydown thereand lots of folks waitina to see you land," Mission Control told the astronauts as they prepared their return. The main objectives of the mission had been met last Thursday, first with a safe and successful launch, then wi th deployment of a giant SIOO million communications satellite. Afterwards, the workload for ,.buck and his crew was a relatively light one; NASA had scheduled lots of trouble- shooting ttme to ~ncct lhe fact that more than 400 changes had been made to the shuttle after the Challenger accident. It appeared tlfat ' the shuttle had passed its t!sts brilliantly and Hauck commented he had never seen a ship so trouble-free. "GOO(f systems. good performance," was the word from Mi$sion Control. The rocket boosters. blamed for the Challenhger explosion and its loss of seven lives. performed apparently flawlessly on liftoff l~st Th~rsday. AJ though the 149-foot-long rockets were recovered immediately from the Atlantic, their segments had not yet been taken apan for inspection. Hauck and pilot Covey guided the 97-ton, $1.5 billion spaceship to a pcrf~t landing. They had fired their braking rockets an hour before touch- down to start the free-falling glide halfway around the world from 188 miles hi_gh. The fligh \ had a few-minor prob- lems. A cooling system that had given trouble for most of the mission and f had the astronauts sometimes un· comfortably w.arm also failed momentarily during Discovery's plunge to Earth. · On touchdown. Hauck tested new brake and steering systems designed to improve. performance so that shuttles in the future can return to landing at the·la unch site in Florida. That evaluation. too. awaited analysis. Moments after the landing, Rep. Bill Nelson. D-Aa .. rose on the House fl oor to proclaim that "we are back" in the nation's space program. "It has been a psychological lifting of a burden we have ~n carrying for almost three years." said Nelson. who is ehairman of the House Science space subcommittee . The apace abuttle DbcoYery touchee down at ltdwarda Air Force bue ~· morn lq New shuttle at half-way mar~ DOWNEY (AP) -In a corrugated metal complex that re-vecberates witheclwes of aerospace history.,.a team of 1.000 workers is buildi'\§ a replacement for the ill-fated space sftuttle Challenger. • J The new orbiter vehicle is as yet unnamed. It is a collection of titanium forgjngs. machined parts and electronic boxes known at this stage of production only as OV-1 05. Its letter-number designator sounds more fitting fo r a robot an a "Star Wars" film than a spacecraft in a fleet of shuttles bestowed the stately titles of Atlantis. Discovery and Columbia. "It's not our job to give it a name.·· shuttle production chief Seymour Z. kubenstean of Rockwell lnternauonal. the principal shuttle contractor. said cheerfully in a recent interview. "That's the government's JOb." Actually. the repl..acement shuttle's name will be the brainstorm of school children who submit entries in a national compctitfon that opens this fall. After several elimination rounds. the administrat of the National Aeronautics and Space Administratio will select a winner in May 1989. said Bill Green, Rockwell Internati onal spokesman. Onl y one thing is certain about the name .. "It definitely won't be Challenger 2, or anythiog Ii that," Green said. While OV-105 waits for a name, about I subcontractors and 2.000 Rockwell shuttle progra workers are givina the $1 .3 billion orbiter 1ts shape i Downey. a suburb of Los Angeles. and in PalmdaJe, th Mojave Desert city 50 miles north of Los Angeles wher final assembly 1s to tale place. · Already. the space vehicle's wings have saile th rough the Panama Canal from Grummal\,Corp. on Ne York's Long Island on their journey to the MoJave Desc rowdscheer: 'We ~reb~cKon fop' EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE (AP)-Cheers erupted from 425.000 people today who gathered in t!;!!tS, · motornomes ano trucks on tfieaesert fl oor and atop every· NASA building here as the space shuttle completed the first flight since Challenger ex- ploded 32 months ago. "l had goosebumps all over." said Diane Bonds. who traveled 600 miles from Roy. Utah. to watch Discovery touch down. "l have always wanted to see one of these and now I have." "I think we're back on top," said Mike Asfall :who supervises training for Air Force and NASA personnel working on the main shuttle engine at Rockwell lntemational's Rocketdyne pla nt in Canoga Park. "We've shown that we are back on top by the fact that we can come back from such a tragedy." Asfall said. "I have no doubt that the United States will forge ahead in space.·· "Everyone has a Oag"up. It's so patriotic." said John Tibbets. 78. who led an I I-un it brigade of Airstream trailers from fhe San Bernardino Airstreams Club across shimmering desert roads to the public viewing sne Sunday. Air Force spokesman Lt. Col. George Neiss said 109.000 vehicles carried an estimated 410.000 people to the public viewing site byThe ume Discovery landed at 9:37 a.m. PDT At least another 15.000 were in the VIP \ect1on. where Vice President George Bush was to greet the astronauts as they descended from the orbiter. Only one larger crowd had ever gathered to watch a shuttle land: an estimated 500,000 fo r the shuttle L~~L_IFORNIA Ill' LI I I ... Jtl Wayne Taylor la a patriotic pedale r aa he heada for the apace ahdttle touchdown alte at Edwarda Air Force Bue. Columbia on July 4, 1982. when President and Nancy Reagan greeted the astronauts. Screams broke out from the public viewing area on the hard clay eastern shore of Rogers Dry Lake at 9:34a.m .. as two sonic booms reverberated across the Joshua-tree dotted high desert. Then cheers and applause broke out as Discovery appeared in the sky. Crowds also cheered from atop nearby NASA buildings as the Star Spangled Banner began blaring when the orbitct_r completed a fast tum high over the lakebcd and plummeted swiftly to Earth, then coasted to a. SlOP. All day Sunda y. recreational ve hicles. cars and even big rigs streame acmssllea l·riP.Dle<l two-Jam blacktQ and took up positions surrounded b rattlesnake-infested desen . DcsP.tt some concern about the repulcs medics reponed no problems. The camp of silver Airstrea cocoons, decorated with America and California flags, joine thousands of other motor homes o thc.__44-square-mHe lake bed whc.rc lh shuttle was to land . "This is wbat America·s-a11 about,' said Vic Failla. 61. a World War I veteran from La Verne who brough his brother. Tony, to this air base 8 miles north of Los Angeles. License plates on the motor homes trucks and cars represented states a far away as North Dakota an Florida. The crowd was festive but orderly. The consu,nt whir of portable gener ators droned throughout the day an night Campers peered th rou binoculars and telescopes and set out j ugs of tea to brew in the 102-degrec heat. Teen-agers buzzed around on all-terrain vehicles. Vendors hawked tiny flaa.s and other souvenirs. such as "Stealth bomber models and mugs. Alice Brakke, selling $2 flags, and witness- ing her 18th shuttle landing. broad- cast from her booth a tape of the late Kate Smith singing "God Bless America." Other, speakers broadcast news from the Houston Space Center. "It's like a kid aoma to Dis· ncy_land," said Gordon Gilmore, 56. of Fort Worth, Texas. .. All these flags are really something." Middle-class homeless survive Probe urged amid affluence in San Francisco overcruelty SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-One laid-off man lived food stores a;d :hopping malls 1n the more affluent to elephants above a bowlingaJley until he fell ofTand broke his arm. communities of the San Francisco Bay area -places SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _ Another man slept in a dog kennel. and one suddenly poor closer to thctr fonner homes. c· · "' Be Zoo ha 11-...a"' elderly couple hved in their Volkswagen for two years "With rare exception!\ most of the people we see here atizens .or a Uer sea tl;U .or without scek.ing help. have never been homeless before and can't believe it's an invcstiption into the cause of a But these people shatter the stereotype of the happenina to them " said Chris Sutherland-Redder, t\alf-<lozeo f.uncture wounds on the h I h ddl. h d t ';/ head and ICC of an elephant that ome css u mg an t e oorways of urban strttts. hey nccutive director 01 the Shelter Network of San Mateo injured a veterinarian. arc educated1. ~killed or semi-skilled citizens who find County. ..What we're talkma about here ls themselves without a place to Live bccuse of catastrophic Families account for two-thirds of the homeless abuse, .. Sandra Keller. sp0kcs'¥Qman illnm. a lost job. divorce or se~uaJ abuse. people in San Mateo County, including some who are "' w "They have middle-class standards that say, 'We take former homeownen. she told the San Francisco Examiner •Or the aroup. said Sunday." e hive care of ounelvcs.. ···said Mary Lou Laubscher. director of in a story published Sunday. been rcccivina complaints about the the CambnA-Community Center in Concord. "And E~rts 11y a short•• .. of affordable housina has way these elephants arc betna mis· h ....,... • · · -treated for several months." t en when they can t, ifs just really awful." affect nearly every vulnerable aroup in most areas. bu\ Gail Hedbet&, a Ave-year veteran at Many of the MWly homeless. too proud to seek those hardest hit are sinaJe mothers and workina and' the San Francitco Zoo, suffered 1 assistantt. become almost anl/isible, hvina in cars. behind middle-class families. broken pelvat when a JV>-ton Asian Hollywood d t lvers b egin 'long' walkollt LOS ANOELES (AP)-Hollywood dritcrs went on atrike todly after 1 weektnd o( marathon nqo1i111ons with producers failed 10 avert the ~nttnaanmtnt industry's second walkout this yttr, an offic11l 11ad .. Wc'tt eo•na 10 be ouu whik. I'm sure of that," 111d Earl Bush, temtal)'·trraum of Teamsters Loal 399, 1f\er talb broke off ll I :40 a.m • ..,.My want us to strike, they want ua to breU the union 11 fir n rm concerned." Ht liid the union rn8df teV'ft'll concn:saons. but they Wftt aJI rtJected by tht producers. • StnkJn1 T tamsters were Kheduled to~ pickctit\I today at the Santa Monica Paer, where NBC• "Hunt.tr" 11 bcina filmed, ind at the Hollywood offke of tM show's producer. Stephen J. CannclJ. The dnvcn are raponlible for transponana every. th1na from 111rs to equipment and ~and from the lets. said unt0n spoknman Mike SI ad. "Wt'".,cr.tcd to be out for tbree houn or three yt81'I. .. saw aid.. .. ,, JUll dt,eriitsoe dM pw of the prodUttrJ. that's ~II." • elephant called Tinkerbelle attacked hcrSaturdaywhileshcwutreatinaan ablcas 01 the animal's bad. · Zookccpm said Tinkerttelle be· came lftil'Y and did a "handstand" on the woman. Hedbera was in stable condition today. ~ckftrided Tinlcemelk, llY· ina tbe 2l·ye9f-<lidtlepUnt Md b«n bea1e11 routinely by her "'""'°"'' band ten.: Plul Hunter, a~ 1t the zoo for nine ian. aid~ t'he · aba'al on T1nkertlcllt01 had W11 taUlld by IOllleCMW hini"I htr too lmct wida I hooUd inttnunent c:mlled an ankuf': J • Oranoe Coatt DAILY PILOT/Monday. Octow :s. 1911 Al Kennedy may be key on court votes Release of oae A~~~~~.c.i~~J:~.yh~~·t·~· • • • • ofU S hostages ~~:;~:m~.~~.:";.~.~:-::.:~~~~ Religious displays to get review. • • ru~~'fuc~~und~.ri·:t~~~l~h~n~; , • reportedly near term tqinnina today, W ~SH ING TON (AP)-The Supreme Court. today d1spla}ed each year on the front steps of the Cuy.:Count) Many expens say Kennedy, beJin· aareed to decide whether displa)'1 oh Chnstmas n111 v1ty Bu1ld1ng since 1982. , • J nins his fim full term sinC'e becomina scene and• menorah. symbohzana the Jewilh holiday of A tCderal tnalJudae ttfuttd to order 1he d1sman1hng WA. Hl"IGTON (AP) -One of Marlin f itzWater ~1d the Untted a Justice last February, coukl de-Ch.an~u~. s~ould be allowed at two aovemment of the displays last Chnstmas. 8u1 the 3rd U.S. Cirtutt nm~ Amenca~ held ho tage 1n tates had been told b} another termine whether the court's erratic buildu\P. in ~ttlsburah. . . Court of Appeals ruled, by a 2-I vote last March IS. that Lebanon will~ freed later toda\ and fovemment that a hosta3e held b> 20.year drift toward conservatism . The JUSt1ces wd theY. wi!I rc\ltCW 8 ruhn1 that each tM displays unlawfully promote reliaion. handed O\'Cr to the U S ambasiador ran1an s) mpath1zcrs was being re· w111 accelerate dram~tically. display violated the consutuuonally required separation to }na. the Synan fo~1gn m1n 1mr leased 1mm1nentl). Over the next nine months. the of church and S!Jlle. . . . . . ''The only reasonable conclusaon 1s that b} per· said r court has agreed to rut th The Amencan Civil L1bert1es Union and several mitt1ng the creche and tl)e menorah 10 be placed at the fi . F k 1 'htzwater Sflld U.S. government · · e on esc Pittsbur .... residents challenacd the displays in a 1986 buildings the 'city and count)' have tacitly endorsed Tbe oreign minister. arou a· officials "received repom" 1h1s issues. . .,. 1 Ch . d h h ~ d Shara, told a midday news conference ha ,.. h Id .__ '-The death penalty for convicted lawsu!I. . . h d . . h · ns11an1t y and Judaism an ave t erc1ore-acte to at the United Nations ho had .. good morning l t ... ostage. wou ~set murderers' who committed their Smee 1981 , a na11v1ty scene or crcc e ep1ctmg t c advance religion," the appeals court ruled. f th ..\ . 1 frcei and ~1d th,.t the report~ came crimes before reachina age 18. birth of Jesus Christ has been displayed inside ~he m00am The creche is owned by the Holy Name Soc1et~ a ne.~On~'of t~e r~~;.~~~~tiies will from a "third-part} government m -The death penalty for mentally e!'trancc to t~e Allqheny County Counhousc 1or a ut Roman Catholic men's group. The menorah. a nine-· be released wllhm onr hour from the region:· retarded killers. six weeks dunng the Chnstmas season. branched candelabrum. was donated b) Cha bad. a Je,v.1sh nov.. He can be released an)' minute .. At the Sta tr Dcpanment. an official -T~e powerofloc.al aovemments A block away, an l8·fOOt mcnonh has been orgamz.auon. The foreign minister satd rhe who sf>oke on cond1t1on ofanon)n:u· to require that a certain percentage of hostage ·whose namr he said he did I) $31d the \atest report came from the p~blic. works projects be 8".-'Jlrdcd t~ not kn'o'4. ··will be celeased 1n l ~lam1( Jihad through the Synan m1nonty-owned construcuon bus1-use the case 10 reconsider a 1976 Blatkmun, author of th·e high an Oklahoma case yielded 1'10 clear t,.ebanon. where he was kidnapped, govemmrnt. nesscs. decision caUed Runyon vs. McCrarv. court's 1973 decision legaluing ma1onty position. Kenned) did not and the \nan tlV'urit' "orces will . ,d bo Id h' rka · n t lh t ... .,. b t II t k ""A '' He said that was the group holding -Mandatory drug testing for rail-In the 1976dec1sion. the court sa1 a rt1on, to 1s A nsas audience pa 1c1pa e in a c...-u 141 a e bnng him io Damascus'10 hand him four Amencan educators and a"'. road employees involved in serious racially segregated private schools that Kennedy's views on the issue.-pan in deciding s1m1lar cases from 0.,,er to the .\mencan amba!>!oador accidents and for people steking violate federaf civil ri""ts law when as yet unknown -could put the Georgia and M1ssoun 1h1s term .~or N. 'ev.s and CBS ev.• and 10 rele~se 14t 5 hkel~ lo come from those fi .,, d I d k R w s Id rd d k II °'" .. fo ur hostages .\ total of nine Amen· drug-enforcement )obs within the they re use to admit black stu ents. an mar oe \ s. ade ruhng 1n -hou mentally reta e 1 ers Beirut. 1he Voice of Lebanon r.Jtj10 cans are htld hostage m Lebanon. U.S. Customs Service. The ruling let civil nghts groups use Jeopardy if a ne\I< abon1on case wins be executed for their cnmes., The statton reponcd 1ha1 Alann teen ..i9. -The continued. v.itahty of a 1976 that law as a weapon in attacking the court's rev1ev.. court 1s studying the case of a Teus ol' Boston. was being released State The four educators t>theved held Supreme Coun dcc1s1on used to fight other forms of private bias as well. "The next questton 1s. 'Will Roe vs. murderer 1o1. ho has the mental ca-Depanment officials said ihe' could b' Islamic J 1had. all captured Jan. 24, privll;te., or ~On·govcmmental, racial Jwtice Harry A. Blackmun recent· Wade go down the drain'! I think pacity of a 7-}ear-old. not confirm the reP?n. · I ~87. arc: d1scnmmatton. ly told a group of law students in there's a ven d1st1nct possibiltty it AfflrmaUve action tee]l ·s .... ife. \I irgin1a, told Thr teen~ a JOurnahsm professor at The C<?Urt could be deeply divided Arkansas. "I think the outcome of the will -this term."' Blirkmun said. -May local governm,ents require ~ssociared Press 10 a 1elephone Bei rut Un1H•rs1l) College: Jesse on each issue. case will be of some significance as to Four court members -Chief minority pan1c1~t1on in public in ten 1ew that she had tailed .,..1th ihe Turner. a '1stting professor at the "We're not sure where he lines up," the movement of the court during the Justice William H. Rehnquist and works proJects? The Jusuces 1o1.1ll late Department hours earlier school. Robert Pohill. an assistant Thomas Kratterymak.er, dean of the baJance of the 20th century." Justices Byron R. White. Antonin resolve an attem pt by Richmond. "We're JUSt waiting and v.atching bus1 ne'" professor, and Mith1leswar G~orgetown Umvers1t¥ Law School, Marsha Levick. executive director Scalia and Sandra Day O'Connor -Va .. authorities to revive a so-called ltke everybod) else . There's Singh. an Indian citizen holding said of Kennedy. "It will be interest-of the National Organization fo.r have criticized the 1973 decision. set-aside program that required the nothing confirmed }et .. she said rrs1dent alien status 1n the United mg to see whether Kennedy takes the Women's legal arm. said Kennedy's Here. in summary torm: are some prime contractor on an} cit) building President Reagan. asked during a States middle road or oprs for a more votes in the North Carolina case and of the cases the Supreme Court is contract to subcontract at least 30 picture·taking session af he 1hought a Nearl) fou r months after they were ideological route." other pending civil rights disputes are expected to decide this term: percent of the project's value to firms hostage was about to be released. taken captive. Turner said m a An anticipated bellwether for Ken-key. ( Deatla penalty that are at least one-half m1nont) replied: , 1deo1ape released by Islamic Jihad ncdy and the court 1s a Nonh "Anthony Kennedy is absoluttly -Should capital punishment be owned. "It's hard to tell v.11h '4hat 1t11le that teen v.as suffenng from high Carolina case involving charges of someone to watch. He has not been banned for all murderers not yet 18 -May whiles who claim 1he~ are information we ha\e . ..\~ far as we blood pressure. was in "pitiful'' on-the-job racial harassment. The generous in his reading of civil rights when they commme<Lrh.Cir crime? the victims of "reverse d1scnmina-know. no hostages has been released · health and was expected to die al any justices, with Kennedy on the side of laws'' ~sa federal appeals counjudge. The coun came close to deciding the uon" challenge a coun-appro'ed \et. We ha ve no word on that.. moment despite being under a doc- the majority, voted 5-4 last April to she said issue last June but 1t:sdel:tberat1ons in plan. · Earher. prrsrdenrrat SPO~e~man tor's care. I Explosion of pipe bo~b kills boy, hurts 5 children FORT WORTH. Texas !.\Pl-<\ pipe bomb exploded 1n a res1den t1aJ neighborhood Sunda} night. k1lhna an 8-year-old bo} an~ tnJunng five othe~ children. authorities said. "There~s some kids that found a pipe bomb:· said Lt. R C. Swan of the Fon Worth Fire Dcpanment. "One ohhem was lntled \l<l'ien iT wenl o-rr:- Ambulances took thr~ children to Hams Method 1st Hospital and tv.o to John Peter Smnh Hospn.al. Sv.an said. The bomb exploded an fron t of a home 1n a ne1gbborhood of smgle- famtlv-rcsttk~-ncar a h~t mdus- NYSE UPs & DowNs NEW YORK (APJ -The following '''' 5'10ws lhe New Vorlt Sloclt Exctu1119e 11oct1s end warrants 11\al !'lave gone uP '"-most .io oown tn• most oued on percef'lt or change regarolffs of v04ume for FrlOav No sec:urll .s tradJng oe1ow S2 are 1nc1· -~. Net '"° peorcen1a11e cl'lan~s are tl'le dllfer9nce '*'w"n ll"le Previous ctos1ng orlce ancs i::-r1oev's 2 P m Price UPS ' Nemt Last CM Pd. 1 Formnlccaac P 17 + ~):r... UUPP 21.3 2 Svmb Teti s ll + 1 , 9 1 3 ~ancsm~Bnc 1•.._ + l UP 7 2 I aus JJq + • UD 7 1 oretnHn JP• + 2 .. UD 7.1 omlM.111 24~ + 1'-Up 6 0 ontllnto • 7 + • UP 1·9 Nevstr wtA 2:i. + , UP 06 Slie!DvWlll 11 '• + '-Up 6 11 lmoDeleve s 17 s 1 ·.. UP 4 Portee 4f• • UP 4 E~N'dCP 20 + I UP ~ Wlnclleh 2, + • UP I ;LIM 2Sl.. + 1 • UP :lit Proel 4A~ + 2 t UPD S ! i enl 42 + 2 U S 1 Com<SiKO 21 ., + 1 uo 4 1 Fruehauf& lli t .., Uo 4 ~lfrldAE ... • Uo 4 9 oaslemer '• .+ ~ Up • I ~P s 3 ~ + I , uo ' I ICSNMIO w t IP-a + ~ UP 4 HarlandJh 21~ + 1 Uo • • Veritv ii.. ... 1 UP 41 S Zaoeie Co 2>9 + • UP •a DOWNS LUI OM! 9 --if. 3~-l JI -t J. -• 10·. -•• 11 • -.. 17'.; -2 2 • 2. -• 6 , -~ 2 . -• 2. -• 2. -• 23 .. -l • •l· -,. • -2 ,,. -. 2 'l -• k= ~ 7"' -. .a.:= 2l.. - o~E R THE couNaR tnal area on the Cit) ·s south side. The children found 1he devtcc aJongsidea curb. said Capt Ro) Knight of the fire depanmcnt. · Investigators recovered some f!aa· ments of the pipe bomb, but Knight said he didn't kno~ what the device was made of or conwned. ;warr-rnd-no fire occuJ1ed as a result of the 'xplosion. Information on what happened v.assketchy Sunday night because t.he tnJured ct)1tdrs.n >were still being trcatt'd. and t~ we~ in senous condlllon. hospu.al officials said. The name of the dead child was not 1mmed1attl) rc1easect:-- OTC UPs & DowNs ...... j THT Inc J lff'l L IJbe WI Amlloctvn 'ELtt ls VI 1 =11 un ¢~1SltrCP vl1~1 I HOIPll lef Roedmtl WI MetroSev titCom .. W1 ' rx"' ·a QUl I r~wt rll°s!,i~ ·y~~· u~oa11 'ldl~ Htrn.out J llerHtt un ' Vlc1orCrM t Is ":O!~: ~~Un>IVSL Svnotollci Ce in.lies 1 1lrlt1A !~~ t ~"'~~le AllentAm FamllyStk NobleOrlll Frevmlllr ~lnlJlonE• eoc!Ynam rl~otcs eSwtcn wt 1n1emron SMi~DI Pct. Uo "·& 8~ ,~i ~p .6 ug 1 ~: lt1 UP 19,.4 uo lf 8: ~ii·, U.o 1 Uo 1 , 8: m~, UP 1 U1> UD I UP 1 . • UC> 1 , UP l ., UP 12 Pct. 20.0 11.J if! 11 1 l~j H tJ A8 Orange Coa1 DAILY PILOT/ Monday, Oc:1ober 3, 1988 NYSE CoMPos 1a TRANSACTIONS I.. ~-_- I ---=------f--· I MONDAY'S CLOSING PRICES . Stock prices retreat NEW YORK (AP);-Stock prices retreated in light tradina today. starting off the final quarter of 1988 on a wary note. Wall Streeters were generally ~signing them- selves to a sluggish week. ex~ting investors to back away from stocks before the government issues ats ~onthly report Friday on the emplox- mcnt s1tuat1on. Analysts look for the data to show a pickup in payroll employment growth for September after rdatavely modest increases In July and August The Commerce Department reported today that new factory orders rose 3.1 percent in August. WH AT AM £x Drn WHAT NYSE Orn NEW YORK (AP) Oct, 3 ,.,..,_ NEW YORK CAP) Oct. 3 ,.,..,_ ~need l li.-,( m ~ _ necL ---noed ncl'I noed f#i4 o a ,f,sues orat,r,sues 194' New h ohs ~ew rc vns ~6 f ~ New lows " ew ows AMEX L£ADEriS GoLD Qu on.s Due to transmission problems In New York, today's listing wlll not appear In the Dally Pilot. • METAL S Quon s NYSE LE~DtR S Dow JoNES A nR~G ES NASDAQ SUMMARY Radon danger minimal in Southern California LOS ANGELES (A P)-The threat of radon gas exposure in Southern Cahfom1a households is considerably kss than the national average. accord· ing to ttsults of a yurlona study. Radon. a rad1oact1 ve ps that naturally seeps up from so1I. as the ~ond-leadan& cause of luna cancer in the United Slates. "It's a small enough fraction that it shouldn't bea substantial concern for moJt citizens," physicist Anthon1 V. Nero Jr. of the University of Cah- fomia. Lawrence Berkeley Labora· tory. said of the study comm1ss1oncd by the tos Anacres Times and reported in Sunday's editions. The study of 436 households in a five-county rqjon showed that levels of radon were likely to c'ettd limits recommended by the U.S. En- v11onmcntal Prottct1on Aatney an only about 50.000 homes. or 1.2 percent of the tot.al households an the reaion. the newspaptr reponed. The homn anted ~re an Los Anteles and Oranee counties and pens of R1vertldt. Sen Bernardino and Ventura c:ounttn.. Ltst month, the EPA and the U.S. Su,.eon ~1 ofticc 1.ued an unpittedtn1ed na1ioMI health Id· vitory ~~ Vift•lly All ~ owaen en the counuy &o aa. 1Mir • residences tor radon gas. The ftderal agency estima. tes that between S.OOOand 20,000 lung cancer deaths annually arc caused by radon exposure. The National Academy of Sc1enttS pla~ that figure at 13.000. Exposure to 4 picocurics of radon for a year wouJd be comperablc to the risk of luna cancer from 200 to JOO chest X-rays a year. or the risk to a oonsmoJttt ·or smotdna a haJf •·peck of ciprcucs daily for a year. accord· in, lO the EPA. Radon is produtt!d by the natural decay of uranium and as the largeit sinflC soun:e of human exposure to ioruzina radiation in the enViron· menL rt can br drawn imo a house much likt smoke is drawn up a firq>latt chimney. When radon ps decays. it throws ofTatomsofheavyrnc1alscalkdalpha particles or r9doa daulhtcn. wbich attach to smoke and cf~ pan.icles. They cu br inhaled and toaae in the luf!P. wbtte the)' emit cdl-dl..,..ana rad&ation.. The s&alt Dep9nmen1 of Heillh Stnicft plans MUler ICS11Gll in IOUllUllWm Vntara CCMlll= S..aa Maruca Mounlain1. • lt\'crty Hilh. s.nt Of\ I.Os A ' Wllllidr and .. 1-SM . Fms11do Valley, -- He.who·laUghs, lasts and isn't . - less sensitiVe The me~ting pot seems to be boiling over. The racial stew that we have brewed in the United States sometimes 1eaves a bad aftenaste. What should be a rich international mi~ture full of spice and zest is too often a bland or even foul-tasting concoction cooked up with caution and diluted by overreaction. Could it be the recipe for a Harmonious society calls for a little less sensitivity, a pinch m ore tolerance and a dash of humor? .... The latest example in overdone racial sensitivity comes from the city b y the bay. In San Francisco, two Asian-American groups want C ontinental Airlines to can cel an advenising campaign that shows~ samurai w.arrior slashing air fares. -.. It 1s not a particularly good commercial. But neither is it particularly offensive. It doe,n't pretend to leave the impression that all Asian-Americans walk, talk or act like this particula r actor anymore than we are convinced by other ads that wearing d enim pants of a particular brand will en sure popularity. · It is JUSl a commercial using the samurai angle to draw attention to slashed air fares. But that didn't stop the C hinese for Affinnative Action from expressing outrage. -"'We are shocked that such an ad would be used by your company," the group said in a letter to the airline. "Such a deplorable racist acuon is inexcusable (and) would certainly dissuade the Asian community from flying Continental." •'This advertisement displays insensitivi~y. perpetuates negative images and contributes (o a growing sense of apprehension among Asian-Americans brought about by the continuing trade friction between the United States and the countries of the Far East, particula.dy Japan," the Japanese American Citizens League said. ~ ' r_ ~ There's no d oubt the groups are sincere. A~ ~e31rs.ago they persuaded a food company to stop using a geisha in a commercial. But we can't help but wonder whether the gro ups haven't taken this a bit tOQ far. Having different skin doesn't mean o ne should have thin .skin~ This sort of sensitivity takes ludicrous forms. Stanford U niversit y was forced to abandon its nickname. The lodians are now the Cardinal. The Frito Baiidito was ridden out of town amid cries of racism. • And now the samurai rate-cutter may gef the ax. It's silly in a serious way. Whatever be~me of the ability to laugh -at each other -and at ourselves? 1.. ' Mondey, Oatober 3, 1988 Aw1 BEEi A7 It's time to unite tO~top freeway This column deplores the human tendency 10 stab each other m the back when we get m trouble, instead offighung the common enem}. Why waste time wnting about such clearly unproducuve behavior? Because 11 bas happened repeatedly nght here in Newport Beach, and 1s happening now. Several years ago, when the state was threatening to ram a coastal freeway through our community. the Organized crime finding ~!h:~~~t~~~~~~,~~;~~ Instead. each city went to great I • fi h effort to Jive the state good reasons 1 e Ont e. farm to 1•tslik1·ng ~%e~~?t~'.n~~~~0~~hi~~i~~ . the state decided to vtcllm1u. n was . armed with a good supply of local .. . . . support for its position. That is what I WASHINGT9N-Ma.nJuana as a The patches on public land are , mean by stabbing each other in tile h~e ~sh. crop m the Unncd S~~es, surrounded by booby traps and back instead of fighung the common bnnpog 1n more than. S 10 b1lholl a~edauards~hoshoot.at inn~ents. enemy. Fortunately, there was a cac~ year. And •.hat has.n •.escaped the pohcc and patch pirates. The JACK happy ending when the freeway DOl;ICC of orpmzed. cnminaJ gr~ups, pirates raid pot. pat~hes. that others fi&hters attacked the freeway itself which. are 10filt1'3:tmg the business, have grown. A h1gh-yteld_ang.pot plant and succeeded in defeating it. sometimes. ~sorting 10 murder 10 can bring more than S3.000 a .... r•SOI More recently. I have been to protect their mvcstments. ,...~ hearinp on the John Wayne Airport Law enforcement officers who deaJ In 1987, the Forest Sen ice logged problem at which people from th~ with the prc;>blem tell us it is no longer ~ incidents of intimidauon b} pot cast and west sades ofUppcr Newport µtecnterpnsc ofl960sdropoutswho arowers against rangers or Bay took turns gomi to .the mlcro- JUSt wanttogr~wc!loughdope to keep bystande~ 7~ i!lvolved shots being · former gro"'crs ~ho ha' e graduated pho. ne and stabbing cad\.othcr ID the themselves high mto the next ccn-~~ scnous LDJUr)' or the threat of from tilling the soil 10 "e:\ttuU>e..,.. back. Each sidt:-claimed thanhc othc:r tury. · status side didn't really 11avc any noise The Oowcrchildren have long been Josephine Count). Ore.. hen ff problem and should have more overrun by gun-to1jng 1hugs and w:E. "Bill" Amado estimates that ifa -ARST TAXES -The tirst fam-fli&hts routed over it. behind-the scenes "investors" who marijuana grower in his region raises iJy's income went up m 1987 and ns The supervisors JUSt smiled and use hired help to till the fields. a mere 10 plants. his potcnual gross taxes went down. making 1t the luck) took it aJl m. You could sec them Somcumes the hired help are income from these plants could be beneficiary of the ne~ ta'< la~s. The tellina themselves. -well. neither undocumented migrant "'orkers. Ac-anywhere from $36.000 to $72.000. Reagans reponed earnmgs of sick of the bay bas a noise problem. cording to some Qf our pohce sburces. (The 'per-pound street value for $345,000 last ~car and paid taxes of We can aUow more flights and if there are increasing reports that djffercnt types of manJuana vanes. $'86,000. That puts them m the 25 dotsn't much matter where they go:' · d f · and each plant unll ".~eld firom one to cot tax bracket In 19 6. the Episodes Hkc thCSC" make me f~I '1nstca o paymg lhcse illegal aliens. -· ·• .., tha f h d al h th · · th-pounds of manJuan".) The "'•02n's were 1n the -"' percent t 1 '-"'t a an annu uman e pot erowers someumes kill them '"" " --h ·fi · N o--h when the job is done. avcrqe field in Amado's area as 60 bracket and m 1985. the'·"ere mt e ..sacn cc an ewport ~c • our ___ ..__ plants pcr,,atch. which meanS'from 31 pcrcenti>radcrt . .\mong tht" Re-citttm~ would spend a Im of~nergy h~c U.S. F<?rcst Service has~noted $216,000 to $432.000 per field. apns' dcducuons "a SS:.'!5.000 to ~to get someone else appoi~ted ....L ~--------t e mcreasc an organized cnmmal Usually, the organized cnmtnal charities, which ~as about 5.000 less vicum, but would put rather tittle groups -though not the Mafia. eroups have multiple fields. If o ne or thin the previous )ear 8~ L' .S. effon into trying to eliminate the Forest Service agent Frank Packwood two arc discovered. there are others standards. the Reagans ar<.'n 't ·practice of human sacnficc. Mono Lake According to a new report fro m the U.S. Fo~t Service. Mono Lake bas sunk about as low as it can go and still-survive as a healthy ecological system. For that reason, the federal foresters suggest that the city of Los A ngeles may have to reduce by as much as 75 percent the water from Mono that it c urrently diverts into the city's aqueduct The weight o f objective scientific evide nce is inexorably wearing away the city's lo ng-held. obdurate and ~tently silly contention that the Jake would do j ust fine even tf most of its water were diverted to Los An~eles. But that just moves into sharper focus the real issue 1 n t his debate. which is the survival of the lake itself. That's an issue of concern to a ll Californians, because if the city has to gi-ve up a substantial pan of its water supply in Mooo, it will have to make up the difference from somewhere else. At sort;le point. the contesting fore.es in the battle over Mono will have to confront the questio n of whether the lake itself is worth preserving. and if so. how much is it wonh and to whom? S.cr•m~oto Btt Haiti's leadership It says a lot about H a1t1 when there is a coup and the new most powerful man in the country tutns out to be somebody who is under indictment in Florida for running drugs. It says a lot about Haiti when tha t man. Jean-Claude Paul. would rather be ch?Q{ o f the army than pttsident. It also speaks volumes about Haiti's prospects for free 'elections, and about relatio ns between Haiti and Washington . It onlY needs to be added that the new titular leaders. President Prosper Avril, was a true-blue Baby Doc Duvalier man during the bloody latter days o f that'29-year father-son dictatorship. The T on ton Macoutes, the dreaded secret police that preserved the Duvalier regimes. already appear to have been resurrected. There were the requisite protestatio ns after the gunfitt echoed away that the new milttary regime coup would curb the abuses of the oJd one. And maybe in Haiti they've been down so Jong they're anxious to believe that. From any other standpoint, though, this looks less like an improvement than it.does a nashbaclC to a long nightmare. Rlverd de Pre.11-Ell~l'flrlH Cc;mments from readeni welcome , The Dail) Ptlot welcome<; ) our opinions on mallen of pubhe interest. Lcnen and longer article of commentary must ~ s11ned. They should be typed or clearl y written and ~nt to LEITERS to the EDITOR. O.il)' Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. C'A Q26.26. Please 1nclllde your address and telephone number so that we may verify I Ulhonbip. If you prefer to make a "crbal statement. you may caJI our WE'RE USTENINGtelephone number-642-6086.:...and leave a rttorded mcssaac~ PleUe keep these mes.sages bncf. OAANGE COAST .llllf Pillt .. .......,a. .. ,.,.. l•IOI .. , .. , AU0<>1~tttot 1.a... Ntws C•tor ,.... ..... Crl) t"'°' .... c.... s.-ui.... .. ' ,ullbH! ............ Adftltisq DlfttlOI ,.., ... ~...-..°""'°' ~ ........ ..,.._Olk,~r ,.. ... Circ ... Dndol _, .... "*"'°""" has seen the increase during his }Cars that can be harvested. In business. 11·s fabuloush ~eahh\ The Trea un Al this tame. two communiues att of busting pot growers on federal land called diversification. Department rcpons that high-income_ each trying to sa''e nsclf from being in northern California's threc-countv Americans arc pa) 1ng an mcreasmg disrupted b) a maJor off ramp from "Emerald TnangJe. -· The organized crimmaJ groups that share of federal ta>.es The top I the proposed San Joaqtim H1Us On a helicopter night over pnm'-e-linlff-nforccment officers are uncover-percent of "'age earner.. paid :!6 frttWa). Instead of joirung forces pot..-mwing forests; Pack~ ood e\· ina are increasing tn size. a· reOttt1on percent of all federal mcomt' Ul \e an , and coopcrao ng an thjs effort. the} arc .. -of the lucrative nature of this bus1-1986. In 1981. that group paid I fi~ong each other ~use each as plained that mcrcasinglr. the people ness. The biggest group found 10 date percent of all taAcs. afraid that 1f1he other \uccceds. then being arrested m the plots are merely was stumbled upon" hen its 355-acrc its own off ramp will ca~ more arunt laborers work.ing for "brokers" farm in New York Malls. Mtnn .. was MINI-EDITOR I ~L -~1anh n ttaffic. or "investors" who never dirt,_. their Q I h h b d o · Look r tk h I ed raided last year . .\ total of 48 tons of uay e says er us an an "In es 10 s, eac ramp e 1mmat, hands. marijuana was recovered. worth to read Plato's Repul>lt c' e~ )ear .. is a victor}-Build on 1t_and go on to If th~ workers are U.S. ciuzens. more than S:!40 million In-We can onl) speculate "h1ch pages the next victor). Don't tear down the instead of illegal aliens who can be vcstiptors fo und another farm the aredog-cared-certa1nl) not the one victories that have been woo, or ~ disposed of, the} can make aroup had 1n Nebraska. ~here an where women are declared 1nfcnor to you'll never get anywhere. But most go money. Some collect as much as additional 34 tons ~orth more than men, n.or Plato'sJustificauon ofl~ mg of all, stop wast mg lime on details. 60 percent of the profits after sale of S 170 million were seized . ..\dd1t1onal for the good of the state Judging b~ Fl&ht the real encmv: The freeway. the marijuana -others as Little as 5 evidence suggested that the ~me his campaign rhetonc. Qua~ k must Stop buytng into the big he the count) percent. Otherwise, the reports arc aroup also had farms in Kentud.). have stopped o'er the pan about the is feeding us -that the frccw'3) wtll that the "brokers:· who make Missoun and Mame. need for great ph1losophe~ tn poh-reduce traffic through Corona del millions of dollars annuall)' from tics. George Bush might ha' e profited Mar. Look at the way those traffic their patches, hire local people for an There is also significant outside from rcadmg a ltnle Ptato before he figures arc dcnvcct average of$200 per day. inv~stment from amateur cnm1nals. selected Qua' le From Plato's As we aJI Imo"'. a freewa) produces -Investors rangm~from stock brokers Phaedrus: "Qfa.11 the animal\. the txn massive development. If you haYe Across the country. the U.S. Forest toconstrucuon workers are pro\ 1d1ng is the most unmanageable .. · any doubt, JUSt note that the de- Scrvicc figures that about 800.000 arowcrs WJth mone} odand. or both. velopcrs wtll put up 48 percent of the acres of its land is unsafe for public . Some of the mvestors have never J•ct Alldusoa aad Dale \.an Atta money 10 build the freeway. A use because of illegal pot growing. arown manJuana before. others arc an•YDdJc•tn rolumnlsts. massive amount of development of What it really means to clai~ card-carrying Ioralty to ACLU One must conclude that Gov. Micha~! Dukakis will place on has headstone. "George Bush challenged my patriotism." It is au a little odd. ~use Vtce President Gcotge Bush said dunng their debai~ that he had most dcfirutcly not intended to challcDJC Dukakas' patriotism. but rather his judpnent. This got from Duk.akis not the statement. "rm glad to hear you say that, George ... No. he wanted to be insulted. He satd: ··1 hope this is the first and last time I have to say this. Of course.Nte vice president is questioning m~ patriot-· ism." Who will bet that that is the last time Duk.alus makes that charge? If Bush bad sajd ofOubkls. "You know, Mike 1s a little hmi>wnsted." I think it unlike!) that Oukakis v.ou&d cake an urly opportunity to tell 100 million vte.,.crs. "Mr Bush W challen~ my manhood." If I may say so. at becomes clear that Oulcalas is oleated to be able to handle the ACLU·Pledac of llcaiancc bus10es.s by tnns&atina it into.a charac that Duk.akis' patnot1sm has be-en calltd into Question. And be is hktl) to think tb11 a pohtical advantage to ~ exploittd m the .,.eek to <'Orne Cma11lly at 1ttms to be the subjca most lttnctJvc 10 hbcral t'Olumn1sc So. once-••n tnto the breach. and where to beain '' by a k1n1 the queMJOft~ Why, when he dttlared bimldf a member of the <\,nencan Civil Ubenin Union. dtd Duk.alcas .,.ar,,w1 he ... a "c:ant-carry1na·· memberoftbcACLU?Tobu "cant- • CM fiel" member of aff Of'llDIZ.ltJOn I e N IMt one'a tor.Jty to i• is total. It • to bt ditti ....... •Y• ft'Ofll 19Yi• -1belle'Vt18 IDOlt °'* .... .. of the ACLL' ... or. "I think on the ~ole the ACLL' has done a valwable job." It "'ClS the spec1fic1t} ofDukaku' oath of allegtance 10 the .\CLU that attracted the anenuon of Bush. and. indeed. of others. Now 1f one as a de"otee of the ACLU m the card-ca~ 1na sense. one identifies oneself wtth 1t po 1uons. and these are mdeed numerous and ciontrovers1al. The first thing to ~membetabout the ..\CLL' 1s that on the whole, Its chosen instrument lS not the legislature. but the courts. It 1s throuah the coun.s that 1t lt1'e to operate. Likes to operate 11,1 order to do what? In order 10 fol"\\ard 11c; ..._ ~nd to suppose th3t the ACLU does not ha'e an aa.enda is quite lllnply iporant.. Tbc ACLU. as Bush ch3.11cd. I\ opposed to l&A Cllcmpllon for chu~hcs. lt is oppostd to capital punishment. 1t 1s opposed 10 an} bar to any Amcncan's reading or scc11,g an)'lhina he~ants to vit-~ or see. This nabs up into the question of child pomopaphy. If an .tuncncan adult wanu to bu..J. smut tn\Oh 10J chil- dren, the At;'L LS on has s1dt 8u1 tha'e can~t be mut 1n= duldrm uakss ch1tdrtn are into t.M IC:r"i« of produa na smut. How do~ handle that pl'Obk'm 71 it ale to say that tbc Cltl ~he\C$ that cb1tdm9 should. tf the)' or &hear paarcbans desart, make thcmscha a\f'IUa~ to smut J>('ddlel'\'> -'lmost cenainly the answer 1s oqall\c The qaestlOtl then <'Omh down to patriocilnl and tk oath orall~ancc. oppoed by the ~CLU Duk.alus ".......,.. by •»tftl. .. To the bn• of Ill)' keowtedlt (B\lsh) ha nt"tt WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY SUifCSted that a session of thC' n:nc bqan with the Pltdge of .\llcg1ancc " The easy ans\\er bC'rt 1s that n('llhcr do sessions of Congress begin "1th r'CC'1tattons of the alphatx·t ur the multiplication tables. Schools arc where one 1s supposed lo learn certain d1sc1phnr . amon~ lhem ctvic and (\Omc bC'lae' el re- laaious dnc1pltncs .\ card<am mg member of the l\CLL 1s ~11sficd 10 rdy on a 1943 up~me Court d«lsion (West \ u1m1a 1a1t-Board of Education \'> 83rnettel hotl) disputed w11h1n the court itself and WtMII flouted (a an llhnoas) on · tet.hrucal arouruts ne\'cr challenged an the courts. uch a "fl' the te,achrl"\ required to Scad 1hc1r tudcnl!t tn the oat~ or can 1he> mcrtl\ f'laU " ~ h1le tbc oeth 1s rccned? We arc bad: to the <'Oun Is tt unpeuiouc to deplO) one· p0ht1cal bfe around the propo\1t1on that the way to ee1 the lql\la11on \ u desart a~ thf'OUlh coun a•1on~ That the .,.a~ 10 h~nar abortion 1s , .. the court lf petnolism were ckfi ntd as •dhtttn<'t' to the OOM"tuuonal propo 1hon that all lellslataon ts 10 b( Jone-b) C~ then thcan$\\CrtUCarcfuJ. 4U&1died )'ft. • = 1'. a.ctJe.r Jr. f • ,,...,.. Cliail~rt 'L course generates a mass1 ve amount of traffic; enough to fill up the eight-lane freeway that made the de' elopment pouible. The count)' anticipates and !\as planned for this growth. and has a complete set of traffic prOJCChons showing "'here the traffic 1s going to flow The count) doesn't want us to sec how good thutgs would be 1f the frccwa) and development ~ere not allowed. So the) refuse to run an) traffic studies wtth the frce"a' and the development both rcm'oved When we ask for one, what the) give us instead as a stud' ID "'hich the\ leave 1n all the development. but take out tbe frecwil)' which ma~cs the development possible. · The take all th<' traffic from the development and put 1t on c·ust1ng StrcttS. Naturall.. 11 makes them con- aested. But wtthout tht-frttway. that development can't tak~ place. If }OU stop tbc frcewa)'. )OU ·stop the development. And that males thU\p so much bener that tht' ~ru~ 10 tell us how much ~tter Wh) doesn't our ctt~ counC11 haH 50me tr\le 1ud1es made" We have a computcnzcd traffic model of our own. wt don·1 have to play the <'Ouftt} 's aamc Y..nerc are the people Yoho ._eep s.a)'lna that the trafflC problem is a rqional problem and wt can't do anyuunt about 1t'I Hcrc-1 ~melbtQS ~can do about 1t: top the fttcwa). L.pna i a1rady oppotcd to ' ll"Yanc wanu to oppose 1l, bui i tetli"I no suppoT1 from cwpon Beach. If we would ~ \bt frttway. then so •-ould ln-tne, W1tti lbc thnir cilia conl&in1na its IM>C'1Jt. em temunui all opt)oKd. tht-frteway -ouk2che. In d'Yln&. 1t would take with it the maQ1vc clevclopmeat end its musa w loed on air qualit}'. waler supply, ~ dispoUt, ind rOlld l)ltnft. TM• would apart m all a lot Olmimy. .AUan ... II I 1'lnrpon .... l'tsidrnl I -r ,. M DAILY PILOT/ Moncs.y, Oc1ober 3, 1988 NeWportsalutes the arts this week By CHERYL WALKER .,.., ..... C.11411 •1 I For five years. the Newpon Beach City Ans Commission. local busi- nesses, community organizations and city benefactors have sponsored and Qroduced a one-day celebration of OranJe County's best visual, per· forming, and cul inary ans called "Newpon Salute To the Ans" to benefit the city's Art en Public Places Pr<>11'3m. This year the commission and its private sector partners will continue this tradition but, in Orange County's CentenniaJ year. better it in a bold new way, says Ans Commissioner and Salute Chairman Sandy Blat-tcrman. .. We got tired of doing aJI that work and havtng the Salute over in one day. We got to th.inking, we go to all that trouble anyway, why not make it three days instead of one? -and that's exactly what they did. Seasons Hotel, Bob Burns.. the Five cro·wns. and The Ritz (just to name a few) will cost participants a modest fare: SI per scrip. $10 for a book of lo: SaJutc goers. however, can lop an additional 20 percent ofTthc purchase price of a scrip book (pay only $8 fora SI 0 book) if they buy their scrips in advance, today through Thursday, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Fashion Island's AJrium Coun Information Booth or at the Newport Peach City Hall (3300 Newpon Blvd .• Newpon Beach). This year's salute. says Blanennan, wilJ also be easier to enjoy. In past years participants had to wear track -shoes to vist all the performina arts venues. This year. with the exception of special events at the Newport Beach Public Library and Newpon Harbor Art Museum JJ..'[l San Clemente Drive (856 and 8~spec­ tively). all the Salute's action will take place at Fashion Island in th ree main areas -the Bullock's Wilshire wing, the Broadway/Neiman-Marcus Plaza and Atrium Coun . Barracks humor ·in 'BiloXi Blues' Jy BONNIE FEVERGEON ....,..., een.11 rn tlAI I Neil Simon's .. Biloxi Blues," cur- rently in productio.n on the qo!den West Collcae mam stage. uuects coarse, adult humor into the ei:no- tion-tadcn atmosphere of a warttmc barracks during basic training. Set in 'isolation expressed by the sterility of a simplistic, but effectively used. wooden bunkhouse -com- plete with cold, khaki decor - a drama unfolds with confrontations over ethnic differen~. sexual desires and impending tragedies of battle. Underlying personal themes of !n.adc-quacy and fear enhance a spint of humanness inherent in Simon's work. ·Off to a sluggish start, with train noise muffling opening lines, the •••m!~J _piece develops into a character study rera Ill. Proverbial underdog ~f thfe aroup, Carrera 's charac!er b1.t~er Y labors againsta tide of ant1·Se~1t1sm, suffers with an almost unbelievably poor physique and s1;1ccumbs to ~riods of pitiful depttss10.n -all t,he while providing his audience wtt.h some of the most delightful comedic moments of the piece. . Gino EnaJand and ~an Vane interpret boisterous bullies,. Roy Selridge and Jospeh Wykowski. Not without their own tender moments. this twosome's primary motivatjo~ ~pea"' to be based on ~lf ..,att· fication. England and Vine offer intensity ll!ced with abu!ldant vul· prity pausmg for only bnef seconds of introspection and empathy. The sixth xnnual Newpon Salute to the Arts will take place Oct. 6-8 at Fashion Island, Newport Beach. and selected sites adjacent to it and offer three days of music, dance. drama, an and historical exhibits. children's entertainment, plus added surprises and the best news is admission is 'fhe Salute stans Thursday night. Oct. 6 at 5 p.m. with an ime~ational food festival in the Broad- way/Neiman Marcus Plaza and Bull· ock's Wilshire ,wing, where Salute goers can savor seafood. miniature hamburgers and fries. Me xican favorites, baked goods, Haagen Dazs ice cream and more. -rocustng on individual recruits as Ballet FoJklorlco part of Newport Salate to the Arta. seen and intetpreted through the eyes of narrato~ . Pv~. Eug~ne Morris Opera Pacifi~ Dance Center. and Jerome, aspmngJournal1st. The resident muscle in command, Sat.Mervin J . Toomey, is t:ffcctivcl.Y rendered by Stephen F. Silva. ThlS character's primacy intent is to de· velop enough· hat~ to en~ure surviva l in battle: Wnh only manor glitches in the flow of his lines. Silva projects a powerful·image who CO"'!CS with just enough flaws to make him believable. "Selections from the Permanent Col· Jection: California Art Since 1945" and "New California Artists No. 14: SC'R's Youth 1 heater. · Under the direction of Charles absolutely f rce. • Only fobd and wine samplings from more than 30 local gourmet restaurants and caterers such as Paradise Cafe. Catering by Heming- way's. El Torito Grill. the Four Between bites visitors can enjoy the antics of strolling mimes. watch the artistry of the Ballet Pacifica. listen to the voi~ of the Orange County Mister Chorale, and tap their toes to the rhythms of Brass Company. OCC Tim Ebner." (Museum admission is free.) Saturday is "Youth Day at the Island" (premiering al thc--S8lute ttris year sars Blatterman) -nearly 10 hou;s o theater and music events. At Robinson's, the Orange County Mitchell, "Gene" and his com· Philharmonic Society will hold ··Mu-patriots take on identitie~. eac h with sical Encounters" (whre younf music his own uniq ueness. facing the same lovers can query profcssiona anists common denominator -life in the · d · I ) here and now. about music an mus1ca careers. • David Powell. as Eugene. provides from noon to 3 p.m. At 3:3o p.m. The a cohesiveness uniting fragments of Newport Art Museum will be the In strol!J supportive roles are Jc.ff Game, David Johnson. Debbie Caceres-Gef1er, Ann Fomarola al')d Lisa Norro. . Panicularly effective set desifn 1s by Chuck Davis. Critical play ofhghts is achieved by Bill A. Liotta. Show needs guys, dolls A special casting call for oon- Equity singers, dancers and actors wilt be held Wednesday at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse for roles m the theater's upcoming production of"Guys and Dolls." Director Lynn PhiUip Seibel will hold auditions from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Harlequin. 3503 S. Harbor Blvd .. Santa Ana ... Guys and Dolls" opens Nov. 2 and will run through Jan. 22. Call 979-7550 for add111onal infor- mation. .· LIDO CINEMA Newport-lido 873-&JSO A FISH CALLEO WANDA (R) JAii( UI CtMTIS 5·4S..l-00-10.00 HARBOR TWIN Harbof·Wll1on 831·3S01 HEARTINt£AK HOTEL (PG13) ' 00.1:00· l 0'00 EDWARDS ORIGllOL CINEMA H•rbor-Adam 1 W6-3102 DEAD "INQERS (R) 1:00-1~15· 10:20 CINEMA CENTER Harbor·Adam1 9~141 ELV"'A Mt9TRE8S OF THE DARK (PG13) UO·UO·lO~ AUNNtNG ON EMPTY (P013) S:l~7:l0·10.00 MOON OVE" PARAOOR (PG1J) t-00 MARAtEO T THE M09 R 6'00·10-00 9tO (PG11) 7:00·t :l5 MESA CINEMA "'••port 191"- !l.46 5C15 ' CMIHMDtRU:tO·lO·IS UCINH'rO DRIVE (PG1a)l'JO • Big Band, Norm Major's Dixieland. and the Don Miller Big Band. Friday the Newpon Beach Public Library will host a special children's program at 10 a.m. presented by the Puppetell Players. locale of the Repercussion Group's personaJities and experiences into a Youth Concen . meaningful and entertaining whole. On Sunday (a lagniappe Salute day) Powell's interpretation is vibrant and the Newpon Beach Public Libraf) sensitive. offering_ a....rich blend of I be h I be 4 Th • insight. humor and compassion. wil t e Pace to at p.m. at S· Contrasting to Eugene's optimism when Ellie Choate will close the and zest fo r life's events, is a superbly Salute with a program of haunung gloom! intellectual. Arnold Er,tein, melodies p)Jl_ycd on her harp. ...-.: · d b F k ea From toaay-thT<ffilh·-'ffurrsitay .wet1 c aractenze y ran . r- selected Fashion Island stores• will showcase lhe an works of the winners Strictly adult comedy for mature eudienccs, 'Biloxi Blues" offers a well played and entertaining balance of drama and humor. The show concludes its two-week run Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. foA tickets and information, call 895-8378. Starting at noon. the day's focus will shift to Fashjon Island where the Broadway/Neiman-Marcus Plaza will be jumping to the sounds oft 950s and 60s rock music until 2 p.m. The day's festlvities start at 11 :30 a.m. in two venues -the Broad- way/Neiman-Marcus Plaza and the Newpon Beach Pubhc Library. AJ the Plaza. J i,td)' Sofer wj II put ori a puppet show while close by the Bower Museum's mobile unit will present an exhibit of Orange Count~y's historical photos and offer youngsters op- ponunities to make-art. A tthe library. storyteller Paul Tracey will hold children spellbound with his enchant- ing tales. At noon. Judy Garret and her children's mime troup will saunter around Fashion Island while j udging begins in the Bullod 'sWilsh1re wing for the first-ever Salute Student An Competition for grades K-12. in the Salute's annual Juried an S T k, · 1 t i i exhibit of Orange County anists. First ' tar re p~ 0 a r ng A complete list of events, times and exhibits is available before the Salute at the information booth in Fashion Island's Atrium Coun or at the Newpon Beach City Hall. At 6 p.m .. the Bryan-Allison Duo will entertain music lovers in Atrium Coun . When their set concludes at 8 p.m.. the Newport Harbor An Musuem will present the Southwest Chamber Music Society and invite visitors to the openil')g night recep- tion for its new concurrent exhibits- The wing ·also will be the site of . balloo~ paiming_ classes arul formances by the Ballet Montmane. For futher information about New- pon Salute to the Arts. call the Newport Beach Ci ty .Hall at 644-301 7. RU-...0 ON EMPTY (P013) S:Jo.&:00-10:30 AIL R) 1:15 -*'GHT RUN (R) ~'45-10:15 ILVIRA--STRHS OF THE DAM (PG13) 5:1~7:1~t;l5 A fl1SH CALLEO WANDA <"> JMl(Ul cums $:4S-&. .. 10:15 KANSA8 (R) 7:45 YOUNG GUNS (R) 5:45-10:00 DEAD RINGIRS (R) 7·-lO WOODBAIOljf 81rr•nc1 P1r~• •· ~ ••' of Culver 5~ · :it"' UNIVERSITY Acron lrom the •. n1ver11ty ol C111f !IS4-a811 WHO FRAMED ROGER RABIHT(PG) 5:l0·7:l0·9:30 BETRA YEO (R) a·oo LOVE AT STAKE (R) 6:15·10:20 ~DTOTHEMOB (R)l:45C~ TO AMIMCA R l :l0·10:40 RUNNING ON EMPTY (P013) 5:45·1:1S..10:30 A FISH CALLEO WANDA (R) JAii( LU CtMTIS ';l~·J0.10 lO DEAD RINGERS (R) 71I0-9:30 HUNTINGTON TWIN lkech·Maln Ml-Glll RUNNtNO °"EMPTY (PG13) 7;00.9 30 HEAATaREAK HOTEL (PQ13) \,.. 6:00-1:00· 10.00 ~ CINEMA WEST Wntrntn1ler Gold1nwt1f 891-393~ GlNUIAL ADMISSION "3.50 FAMILY BARGAIN NIGHTS S2 00 TUES/WED/THURS AT SUIUUO SCl!lf.NI Ji. UC... TODRIVE ·"M '"::.:11:11 'It ~ tu I,-Jllj -Al~ •A,. f l q ' • r ~ • I ,. ' l i1 .. f' j i~ '~,()(J '3" CROSSING DELANCEY (PG) 6:30·1· 30-10:30 GORILLAS IN THE MIST (PG13) S:lS·l:OO·lO.lO SWEETHEARTS DANCE (R) S.J0.7:10·9:30 MOON OWR PAAADOR (P01J) N5 MILL DUNtAll (II) 1:45-10:41 VILLAGE CENTER 01"1 S.Kl'I Blwd '} blocll1 north of G•rden Grc••• Frwy ~91-0~ 7 TOOA S2 ttE.ARJllREAK HOTEL (PG1J) 12.oo.21>0-4:00-':00·l1IO·lO:OO SPELLBINDER (R) 1·00 4"50·1'4S NIGHTllAM ELM ST. =4 (R) J:M4~·10:40 DEAD RINOE"S (R) 12 15·2·30-4:45·7:00·9:30 MOO .. OVER PAAAOOR (PG13) lt:J0.4')0.l'JOMILL DURHAM (R) 2.30.6.J0·10:30 BIG (PG13) 12:U-4:JO-t15 LICENSE TO DRIVE (PQ1J) 2.45-6:30·10:15 ELVIRA MtSTRE•t OF THE DARK (PG13) 1. \.. l.00·3.00·5.00·70l·t:00-1U5 ~ ISSIOH Vlf JO TWIN S1nOl99t'l~r., •, • P,.1 •' ~ kr ••"'" SJO 'i~ ltil C,C,j(o~ \/If _in !l.4AI i . "r., at ( , • 1 111 .. r ~ • r ~ • ,-, 11>4 ..... CROWN VALLEY CINEMAS Crown V11tey Perkw•y 2 Blod1 North of SD Frw, \.. , .. ~-J ro?1Sl '30 MOON OVER PARAOQR ' (P013) ':Go.&:15·10:15 CROSSING DELANCEY (PG) 6:1S.l:l0-10:)(1 DEAD RINGERS (R) HO. 7 ;4 rl-1 O:GO OORtLLAS tN THE MIST (P013) 5:1S.HO·l0·35 SAODLEBACK CINEMAS <; n ~·•y f1 Tor!:' A1 1nd Rocklleld )A,. ')M() DEAD RINGERS (A) T:to.9:lt HEARTBREAK HOTEL (P013) &:OS-1'00·10.00 ILYMA--STMH OF THI DAM (P01J) l:Jt.Ul·l0:20 Fl TORO CINEMAS '-0 Fr"'y ft Tore i:.r1 "" , 9')0() . ~ Jf you're . a Trekkie, circle this Wednesday on your calendar. That's when "The Cage." the originaJ two-hour pilot for .Lhe ··star Trek" television series. will be tele-cast for the first time at 8 p.m. on KCOP, Channel I~. "The Caae" starring Jeffrey Hunt· er as com~ander of the starship Enterprise, was filmed in 1964 as the pilot for creator Gene Roddenberry's proposed new series, but network executives rej,ected it as "too cerebral." RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC • ... ,_ .... c...s len! It??--IOI., afTI IUA-541-UW Volunteer. ftAmertcan Heart v Association RUNNING ON EMPTY (R) Ult JM 5 111 lt If II • CROSSING DELANCEY l'Gl I UJ 1Ult1ltll0 ,.,..~ ... " ........ ON IMnl ,..,,I tl:Je UI t:» 7..S teill _,.._ DUD llHOIU tit lhlt );U '"' .,, ...... coanM111 ., ......... COCtCTAll tt1 MMlllD T'O fM MOl 411 1!4U:4t t:lt iii;;;;;;.;11121~ .... -" .. '1-' COMfNO TO ==~:J ••'"#§ ·---~= 1Mllt1 ... ,. ....., ......... ( ..... ELVIRA (PG· Ul Pl US HOUSf ltllll A FISH CAI.LED WANDA CR) PlllS •1c IPCI A FISH CALLID WA•A (R > .IMll. m aans KAN8A8 (R) I 00 ...,....YID(R) , ........ A rtSM CALUD WANDA 111 t>M llU J • 1•11 I ... ------.... TMIR MIN AND A UIY""' S lQ. N0-9:45 MO°" OVER PMAOOR (PG11)120 WILLOW f POt t•lt2t f ------ ... ~ '· r Ai;, ' • .... ' • I'• I\ ' t.l ... IU'111• ...... (11)1:• LOW AT ITAICa Cll)l61ta <. • ' '<I -. * r • 11!1'0~"-........... WMl.,..,119 ~ •IUKl9t• ........ ~ .......... -="---------........ NH•• Ole..,,., c-ut ... '°°'. -· ... 1111•n ,•••-• ---· and Oolla:rs recruited as shipm_ates for the Pilgrim • Every year thotuands flock to the batbon to witness l}le arnval of the Tall Ships. Each year hundreds of volunteer hours are spent m~io­wnina Dana Point Harbor's own Tall Ship, the Pilgrim. And eve I) year some S,000-plus young people ex- perience history in a hands-on classroom siluatron on bOar<f 1hat ship. . But the Pilgrim, and 11s parent orpnization, the Orange County Marine Institute (OCMI). has never had a fund-raising suppon gu ild - until now. 8laerrle LaTerOnl, Stan Cum-• mm,. and Patty Voaan. Wednesday SO select women were asked to join the Sand Dollar G uild. The newly formed group will primar- ily suppon the Pilgnm Trust. a founct.tton organized to secure the fnstitute's purchase of the "Pilgrim and help maintain the classic tall ship. ''This is eoing to be a wonderful group," said founding president Patty Voeu (as a scuba diver, she's long been invofved as a volunteer for the Jnstitute). "A lot of high spirited women who are read¥ to get in- volved." Women in anendance enJoyed sipping champagne and wandenng around the decks of the Pilgnm. Lunch featured a light buffet of chicken/vegetable pasta salad. fresh fruit, and breads catered by member Barbara Palu. Clady Coa1ta.atiD, founding mem- ber and membership co-chair. sport- 1 ng a stylish plumed hat for which she received numerous compliments said, ·•1 just felt thjs was going to be a hat day." And indeed she was correct. The sun reflected brightly ofT 1he water$ of Dana Point Harbor. so sunglasses and wide brim hats were in order, The founding council of about 15 were distinguished not only by the sand dollars drawn on their nametagf, but by the silver pendants around their necks. Explained Vogan. "The first 50 members arc going to be Chaner Members, and they arc going to receive these pendants -it's a sand dollar with a whale on i1 -and 1hey arc all numbered. The only people 1n the world who will have 1h1s wonder- ful necldace will be members of 1he Sand Dollars." (Those Joining after the first 50 can purchase pendants. but they won't be numbered.) In addition to membership infor- . mation potential Sand Dollars heard a brief hJStory of the Pilgrim II. (It's not the actual ship ma~e famous by Richard Henry Dana in his book "Two Years Before The Mast." The oriainal ship burned and sank some- where off the Carolina coast during us days as a trading snip. "T he real value for this ship is to the youth of this area .... the ship, and t.he era it repr6ents, is the binh of Oranae County, This is where 11 bepn, and it's important that we ~ember that," said Stu Cam- •• executive director of the Manne Institute. In the crowd -and 101ning as a chaner member -was a part of that history -Amanda Swan, a direct descendent of Richard Henry Dana. "I'm a third or founh cousin." she said, admitting, li ke mps1 of us. she wasn't sure how 10 figure ou1 1he connection. The first major pro1ec1 for the Sand Dollar Guild is next year's "Bon Voyage Pany" for the TalJc,Ships Festival. Said Vogan, "We're j ust · finished -the Tall Ships just came home -but we've been_.asked if we would take cnarge of 1he Bon Voyage Pany next year." According to mem,bership co- chairmen Coa1ta.atin and Eve Kush, the guild is open to anyone w1th a desire to help the ship or 1he institute. Annual dues are S50. Those interested can contact the OCMI, 496-2274, or Vogan. 499-7.202. Additional founding members of the Sand Dollar Guild include Giui Y ... 1. Aue Scbeidn , Wuda M.attkssalt. Teresa Leto, Helea W.,.._r, Wiima Bloom, Barbar a O'Hara. S.u.aae Peterson, DH S.wer, Cat•y Wiison, Barbar• Weber , Caady Hess and Olona -La11lter. t She's had it with -ousyliar DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 ended a relationship with a man I had been seeing for four years. When I began to date my current heanthrob, Mr. K .. three moq_ths aao, 1 wrote and asked you what to do about making sure he didn't have a sexuall) transmi11ed disease. Of course, I was thinking of AIDS. You said it was mandatol) 1hat 1 have a frank talk with him and ins1s1 that he be tested. I took your advice. but he swore that he had been only with bis wife (from whom he 1s now divorced) and his former sccresary who was a virgin at age 31 and afraid of~x. He sounded hke a safe be1. Three weeks ago 1 discovered that I had a raging case of crab hce. The doctor p vc me some dusting powder that worked like magic. bu1 I a m disausted with Mr. K. He accused me ofgjving the lice to HIM! In this morning's New York Times I read an article that said a great many men lie in order to get a woman to go to bed with \Jlem. They lie no1 only about how much they care. but about A11 LAllDEIS how many others the) have slept with and how many women the) arc seeing on the side. I am dumpmg this rat and opting fo celibacy. Ann. I hope ~ou "'II pn my letter and urge )Our "omen read rs to do the same. -N..\ME- L IN MANHATTAK D NAMELESS: Sorry you became volved with a liar (wltb lice yet!), t *re are altenatlve1 to cell cy. mile condoms do not la111tt 100 percent protection, bey will drastically reduce tbe cha.aces for lafectloa. Tbere is no 1ub1tlt11te, , L.M. Bovo Mwever, for an honorable, trutbfal male in a totally monogamous rela- tloa1llp. • • • DEAR ANN LA NDERS: I read an • item in the Salt Lake Trt>une about a 13-ycar-old girl who suffered senous bums when she was hlt b) a bolt of li&htning that came through the telephone. The liibtning struck a tree ne'\t 10 the house, entered the underground telephone lines and tra\eled nght through the phone. A while back there "as qutte an a.cgument in your column about 1h1s. You had warned readers not 10 talk on the phone during an electrical storm and several readers said you were crazy. Isn't it nice 10 bC proven right? -S.L.R. DEAR S.L.R.: You bet> T-banks for Ute flas• -if yoa11 excuse lbe pun. Orenge Coast DAILY PILOT/M<>f'dav. Octoow 3, 1918 -.,) ltTe Kub, Sandy Teitsworth a nd Terry Piper . Sand Dollar foanden Candy Hae. Cindy Conatantin and Anne Schnelder. · Amanda Swann and Teresa Leto . HOROSCOPE 'hetday, October 4 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): You'll ~e more, f~I rt)Ort, yo'-l'll be more alive and a1en and )ou·u say. "Frecdem-atlasL .. Emphasis on change. travel. vanety.· sensuality, sex appeal. Gemini. Virgo. Sagmanus l)eople play rol~. ·+ T4'URUS (Apnl 20-Ma} 20): Spdtltght on property. possible sale or purchase. You'll conclude negotiations. family memtxr pla)s instrumental role. GEMINI (Ma) 21-June ~0): Forcrs arc scat1et"Cd.-play waiting game. Means realize th:u confusion exists. )our position will be stronger w11h1n few days. Tenns.. mcanin,JS require clarification. Pisces could domLnate. CANCER (June :!I-Jul~ :!:!>: Spotbght on mone~. payments. collections. ab1ht~ 10 locate anicles that had been lost, missing or stolen LEO (Jul) 23-Aug. :!.:?> Moon rn ~our sign aettnts individ114lit). personaltt~ and )our "true colors·· -gold. yellow. orange. Make personal appearances. uttltze showmanship. know that romance 1s "just around comer." Anes in-.oh·ed. VIRGO(Aug. 23-Sept :!.:?):You learn secret invohes clandestine meeung. arrangement. L1gh1 1s sh~ on area previously censored. Dream. properl~ interpreted. could prove propheuc. Stress independence. ongmallly. UBRA (Sept 23--0ct. 2 2.>: You 'LI wm at games ot chance, popularit) s0ars upwards. you'll gain valuable allies. Focus on format. p~tation. SCORPlO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Opponu-nity exists to reacJl more people. to lra\'el. 10 express vie~ before the media. Career gets boost. spotlight' o n business. rela- tjonsh1p with "powerful people." SAG ITT ARIUS (No'. :!:!-Dec. :! I): Good lunar aspect comcides w1t~1,>ubhshing. travel. spccu~tion, sensuality. Ideals are high. and search could begin for "soul mate." Check license requirements. CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19): You'll disco,•er motives of one who 1s obsequious. lk anal)'tical. read and wnte put across \Our O\\n \le\\s. Financial prospects bnghier 1han ong1nall) anuc1pa1ed. Virgo prondnef?L AQUARIUS (Jan. 10-Feb. I ): Lunar e mpbasu on close rclauonsh1ps, pubhc11~. ad' en.sing. SJ>C'('l.al appear- ances, marital status. Domesuc adJUSlmc.ntcouJd include lifestyle. pure ha~ or sale of Lu \U~ ttem, an obJect. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 201 You'll .almost be shouttng. "I kne" the ans"<'r:· peal up. tx direct. st.ate your need and let o'thers kno" \OU are knowledgeable. IF OCTOBER 4 l YO I\ BIRTHDAY cu1Tent cycle might cause you to asl ... ls th1 de1a 'u"" You separate from trad1uon.JuSt a~ \Ou poss1bl) v.cre separated from one or both parent~ at ·rela1" <'I) earl~ age. Yo1.(ll tx on more sohd ground. ~ou can caf\ c \Our own dcsuny. c.... to AldeM for al ,_ v11rt llocw!nc nttd1 ()Ny tpttilllh un iene yow pertecUy Adilltery her crime in France lCROSS 1 Body parts 5 flsh 9--Hemng 57 Latitude 58 Olva's solo 59 Modest 60.. PulJn money 61 Schtsm Q. Can a husband in France be sentenced to pnson for aduhcl)·? A. No, but a wife can. A husband ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;;::;;::;;;;;~ there can only be imprisoned for such if he's k~ping a mistress to the dc.triment of the family income. ~ AUTO FACTS ,...... ....... FllLE•ll•Y Ont important aspect that a new car bllYtr 'l'llUSl devote some attention to IS tllt choice of transmissions For many, tllis choice is a forecone conclusion. They lltoNbcllly choose an automatic Iran$ lllSliol\ for its convenience Others prefer lo "'" their dnv1111 cholCts thrust upon lllMI With a manual tr1nsm1SS10n Beside offtnflc more excitement to dnvuie. a ...i transmlSSIOn also unprovd fuel ICOllOlftJ. In ltflet'll 1 tour-speed manual trwsion wiU yield 6 5 more milts per pion ttlan a tllree-speed automat1C This stltJsbc assumes, of course. that the _,, transnnSSIOll 1s driven properly, llOt wastetuny. On the other hand, cars~ ..,.... W1ttl an 1utomabc transmission can lllo afford improved fuel economy by . Wrtut of an overdrive aear. It can. 1n tact. add 9 percent more miles per aanon. tlwttly y11ld1111 economy with conn· .-ct. . N JCMl'rt Interested 1n &eltlnt the best ,_.. 1as mtltact. be sure to keep ,.. ..-tuned up. Tiie EPA has shown lllll SS Wtt Is ttlt most elflcient dm1ria .... tDt ps conservation. for e~pert -*' °" vw 111c1 w , v1$1l c&r. 2090 ......_ WI pr* ourselves on ketPln& ., • tlll newest tedwlolo&Y We do .. , ... ffM tunt-ups to llllfOI' over 8-6 for your conwtn1tnu by AM. (6'6-6910 ) US.e • . --~""rob thrH m.-S ._ _. p11ot1ot1,s 1f llS«I rtlhtfl .,., ... aly "Men hate those 10 whom the~ have to lie." said Victor Hugo. Owls are stupid. They can·1 be trained. That's what I said. Wntes a lady: "What's tratnability got to do with it? I've trajned my husband. ·eut he can't train me. Does that mean r m stupid and he's smart?" · Twe nty-five U.S. cities -so far r- have resurrected 1he once-banished streetcars. BRIDGE Q . l -As South, vulnerable, you hold: • KS743 \' 915 JJ + K lCM The bidding has procttded: North East oulh . W"I I : Pus l • Pass l .-. Pus " · What do you bid now? A.-Pcn-tner's ·reverse bid is, in the modern style, fo rcing to at least thrtt of bis oQJinal suit. If you want 10 show a minimum, you do so by bidding two no trump. However, re~idding •a five-card major suit takes preference. Bid two spades. Q .2-As South, vulnerable, you hold: t AQ5 ~ 7 0 AJ~ + Ak9143 The biddina has proceeded: Soutll Wat Nonlt Eut I • PUI I • Put f Whal do you bid now? A.-An awkward hand. Thrtt clubs oventrases the club suit and could result in your losina a spade game or dam, but you are a spade short for a jump to thrte spades. Tht solution U. in a tcmporiiina reverae bid of two diamonds. Now you tee why it Is important to rebid two JPada on ,. Three o ut of four boxers stan to show some brain damage after .:?5 fights. So says an optometrist "ho doesn't explain where he g01 his information. Maybe he's a former boxer wuh a lot of fights. One tn evel) 14 banana eaters won't eat that banana unless the yellow skin is motlled wi\h brown Why do n't you save 33 percent of your paycheck? The average Korean worker does that. 0 . When did cities stan to sprawl out? When cars became popular? A. No. sir.·Earlier. When streetcars came in. Los Angeles had the biggest streetcar network in ;the world once. I the first problem. Q.3-Neither vulnerable. as South you hold: • AKQ 1076 -AK5 0 AQ +IJ The bidding has proceeded: West Nortll East Soutll 1 v Pass l v ? What do you bid now? A.-We won't fault you if you elected to bid four spades (thrtt spades would qualify you for our Chicken-of-the-Year award) . However, we prefer 1hret no trump. We can conmuct a IOI of hands that offer little play for four spades but tthcre nine n1cks at no trump roll in. Q .4-As South, vulnerable, you hold: • U7J Q QJI 9'1 +QJ7 Panner opens tM biddina with one no trump. What do you rnpond? A.-That d~on your ranac. If you p1-y l'-17 Point no tnunps. our c~ would be 10 pus-with your flat hand and IOft values, the odds are apimt same ~ tr pannrr t1 muhnwn. But 1( JOU play 16-11 no tnafftpl. invite ..-c witb two no tNllll). That's" hat spread the ctl). Father of a "ell-lno"n pohttco recently said. "~) son 1s maling me famous!" Merel) an e\'.press1on of pride. that. ns don't make fathers famous. If the' did. 'ou and I'd ~no~ something about .\ugustine \\ash- ington. Pettr Jcffer;on or Jo 1ah Frankhn? One thing the poh11c1an Hiram Jo hnson said ma) lle more memorable than the poh11cian H 1ram Johnson: "The fif'\t casual!). 01 "ar 1s truth." Another 1h1ng lh:u males the ruling dynast~ of Japan unique t!I 11 has no name. Q.5-A South. 'ulnerable, you hold: •Q92 KQJ109 A 762 •6 The bidding har. proceeded: South West :\orth Ease I -Pas 2 Pus ? Whal do )'OU btd nO'A ? A.-You ha'e an e\celknt hcan suit he~ded by 100 honors. but for- get about it! It would be a cnme to supprc s uch good four-card sup- port for partner' suit. even thouah i1 is a minor. Rat e to thrtt diamonds. Q .6-Bolh vulnerable, as South you hold: • 107 • KJ4 Ak H4l +Qt The biddina has ~: SMtll Wnt Of111 t:.t 1 PUI 1 P• ? What do you bid now? A.-Wl'lile we raiK partner's ma· jor-suit l'a1>0ft~ freely with aoOd thrtt-card 1upport, we avoid doina so it we have a rusoaable akena- tive. Hett. we ~ a flnt lh- card 1u1t. albeit a minor. so we 11t no reNOn not· 10 rebid two diamoads. 14 Empty 15 Sorcerers 16 Mealdish 17 Correc1 18 -of Marci"I 19 Wash out 20 Edge 21 Peak 22 Llamas' range 23 Boards 25 Cc>Nec1'on 27 &ls.tees 28 carry on 29 Hiatus 32 POWfM' source 35 Decline 37 Shen 38 Coll. usns 3~F .. ther part 4'1 c.nters 42 Drain ·· 43 8om 44 Multitude 45 OulH 46 NOYellsl James - 47 Spreed 51 -up· rear 54 Vlhys sa-v..-..pieca 2 3 14 17 20 23 62 Wine City 63 Rumor 64 Asian oxen 65 Otrectlon DOWN 1 Flexible 2 Relevan1 3 VertlCal 4 Visit S LMf'S 6 Pluto 7 Par1ods 8 Contuses 9 Bombarded 10 Impression 11 Outer coat 12 Recas 13 Ball props 21 Stuff 24 Ac,1ve 26 Tpnusn VIPs ~8 Bus'*1 ~Chew 30 Skin problem 31 L~ 32 Calf pan 33 Arla 34 This Sp 35 Ca.me! 6 36 Occasion 50 Forgive 38 OIKl'large 41 -Ann 51 ~ts ~ 42 Vast arMS 52 Scold 45 Rum.a 53 Penetrating 46 Oan<Mr SS Scope 47 Creec> 48 Arab Of Turtt 59 HendM 49 RewT1t• ctumS4ty 7 8 10 11 • 12 13 . :' Orange CoMt OAIL Y PILOT I Monday, October 3, 1988 by 811 Keane COU1'TER CULTURE .. I don't like donkeys or elephants. Is there a political party with a dog?" , . I I WHAT'S YOUR fAVOF.iTt .., · TV SHOW'~ ffil@1 • J D ' J I ' ·~ 10 -l " . .. 60 M1NUTfS ~ D . .. by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE IDNACE ..... ~..,..:._ 10-3 by.Hank f .. Anything special you want, Marmaduke? I feel like I have a direct lin~ tonight." ' WHY CANT WE EVER HAVE A SA'TU~Y ON A MoNOAY !' PEANUTS 1 HAVE PLANS FOR IMPROV ING T~E ~PPEA"-ANCE !~~lf~i ./:·.'"J..~-"----~-~> _ _.. ~~ --- GARFIELD I t.105T CAN'T Cif.T AllOilVATfD 10PA£.', UARl="IELP TUMBLEWEEDS T~E FIRST THIN6 I PLAN TO DO 15 MOVE THIS ROCK FROM 1-lERE OVER TO THERE .. cg------,.-. ..... -~ _. '" J SO 'bJ FUJN~V MAil1 A5 A Kl~. 1HA11? IN -rne ~S"f ... FoRc;-e1 AtJOU"f 'b.>R FAIL-LJF{~.-- ii!l!~ .. -,. ~ ·~ DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE by ..tlm Davis by Tom K. Ryan '(otJ 4?0R~ l(r\JOW HON 10+W~A~ by Kevin Fagan ~~~r ™f.~~T llMf.~ -.. ·' by Pat Brady " ARLO AND JAKIS I SltW •a AIU6M. GOUA-Ai'f• CGOK 'M <*> 1v. FOR BETTER 'OR FOR WORSE" JUDGE PARKER ~EN MARIGENE PHONES CAL ANO TELLS HIMTO MEET HER EARLIER AT RAMEY'S CAFE, HE AGREES TO BE THERE AT SEVEN ·' -. FUNKY WINKERBEAN I J ' r;;) j! ~d I l r~~-_ _..-...~ by Jimmy Johnson oeo~•~ e.trrn by Jeff M~cNelly .. by Harold Le Dot.ix by Tom Batluk ! ~~~..-Qlll.1 I ~ ii 10-3 8 '--------------------~~--_..;,.~ '---"-'------_..;.:::..;;,;;_ __ _=. ____ --=. ______ _ DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau . ; --~f .. MONDAY. OCTOBER 3, 1988 Lomax rips Rams ·defense· apart, 4 ~ -27 ey suffer first -. ~--0' loss as Phoenix - QB has 342 yar~s ., ByEDZINTEL 0.-, ..... c.. ,. ........ ". The Rams crash ed back \Jo}"'Tealll> unda\ as those curious Phoeo1>. Card1riaJs.behind thei r hard-to-figure 'quarterback eil Loma>.. ran 1hrough them hke Floren e Griffith-Jo) ner 1n the LOO meters for a 41-:!, "'in at .\naheim Stadium Before 49.830 fans -heenog madl) one second. b0o1ng Joudl) the n~xt -Lomax had one oT those da' s v.hen he throws With lhe authont\ OI Dan Manno or Jo.tm Elv.a) bo1h of 'A-horn he has be"1 compared to. Loma~ completed '.!b of 43 pas)t's for 342 \ards and t\.\O touchdo" ns a<. he picked apart the Rams !>Ccondan at\\ill . .. .:NFL scores. Cardinal• 41. llama 27 Ben&al• 45, Raiden 21 Beaia 24, Bllle 3 Pata 21, Colta 17 Chief• 17, Jeta 17 49en 20, Ltom 13 ~le. 32, Oilers 23 · Baca 27, Packen 24 Giana 24, 'SkJm 23 Browne 2:1 •• Steelers 9 - Dolphlne 24, VlkinC• 7 Broncoe 12, Char&en 0 Seahawb 31. Falcone 20 Tontcbt'• Game (Channel 7.tat 6) Cowboy• at Salnm ~ LomaJ "'orks himself into fenz) v.hen i>ressured. That m1~1 e;\pla1n v.h' the Cardinals are 3-. while the Rains are 4-1. 0.-, .......... "' '** ._.. Rod Saddler of Phoenlz puta beat on Rama• quarterback Jim Everett to force a fumble •.bich the C4fdlnala' .cored on. .. Lomax did the things toda~ ihat he does best.'' said Rams eornerbad. Jem Gra\. ··He's able to thro"' underneath and t~en hlt tht' brg-pla~s We weren't able to stop 11 ·· There arc. of couf$e. times "'hen But the Rams. one of the league's top sack teall\S eotenng the game. got (Pleaee aee RAllS/83) ~'H~ii~:lf.!fij~@m;~·---------------------------r,-.,--~-------------___::.._ _______________________________________________ ~ Edison-;CdM. Estancia· build on perfect records ar ers felt win a ainst Mater Dei proved something By ROGER CARLSON Of .... Delly .......... T~e Big Game became Ed1son'1, Game last week wuh th~ C'ha(gers enhancing their rel>utauon as part of the 1-2 package m Sunset League fQOtball. Nothi ng appears to ha' c changed from last week's 6-7 ranking in th e CIF Dms1on I poll ""1th Edison i'oo. 6 and Fou ntaip Valley No. 7. nor 1n th e Daily Pilot's Orange Count~ rank- iogs. which find Edison No. 3 and Fountain Valle) o. 5. Both continue to "' 1n 1mpress1vely. Here's how Sunset League coaches viewed last week's fourth offive non- lcague rounds: Edison's Dave While, whose team t"S 4-0w1th a 21-9 win over-Mater ~~ "We fell we dominated and pla)ed t\\O good halves. That's something we·,e been a little erratic v.11h. We knew 11 was a b1ggamc. we·,e known about Mater De1 for the last six months. al:rout how big and ex- perieDced the: v.ere, and felt v.e "'ere underdogs. .. We felt "'e had '>Orne things to prove and the I.Id!> ream .e,ecuted. We took "'hat the~ gaH' us. hitting the quick one when the) ru'>h~d and audtblllllng whl.'n 1hc) dropped off. -·How Sea View League teams.fared ... TNm, rKMd Corona del Mar (4-0l Estancia 14·01 NewPOrl HarbOr (1·3> Saddlfback ( 1-Jl Tuslln ( 1·3) Universily ( 1-3) Lut wfftl def Laguna Hills, 14· 11 def Laguna Beach 35· 7 IOSI to La Habra,"•· 10 def Serra, 21-12 def El Thro, 17· 14 def. Foothill, 7-6 This wfftc's fM Costa Mesa tat NH) J Orange (al NH) al LB Wilson SA Vellev (SA Bowll Ocean View (Mme> Oana Hlllslat Irvine) Nivtlt Fri Thur Fri Fri. Fro. Fri "I wa ver) surpnsed that the) d1dn ·1 run the op11on. I though t we got 10 him (quarterback Dann) O'Neil) prett) good and the kads came out and were ready to adJUSt. "Their defense held Santa Ana to 4 yards rushing and \\e got :?00." Mater CX1 rc~1ver Tom. ·Pena caught I:? passes for 154 >ards and a TD. g.i ving him 32 recep11ons for 41 7 \ards ahd five TD on the season. · "I"' 1sh we v.ould have shut him out of the end zone. but he's a great rcc~1\'er:· said Wh11e. ··But we suf- fened when the) got the big pla\ The Char~e7 remai n inJus:-iree. Fountain Valley's Mike Milner. whose Barons arc J. I after a :? I· 7 "in O\Cr El Modena: "We "'ere sa tisfied with the wa' "'c pla,ed. but '"'e v.ould ha'e hl ed to ha,"<: pla)ed a ltnlc better in the tirsi half "El Modena surprised us in 1ha1 their starting quanerback "'as no1 suited up. which probabl) changed some of thei r plans. But no. 11 didn't change our plans. The gu} that came in wa prett) much the same t) pc-of scrambling roll-out gu)." M1lnersa1d his 1mmcdiat~nccrn (Pleaee eee SUl'fSET /B3) Koreans bid.sad· farewell to XXIVth Olyriip_ic Games Bad moments aside. Seoul hosted truly -,.__ --internationa l event SEOUL. South Korea (A P) -To the doleful toll of the Em1lle Bell. South Korea badea mag.nificeotl} !>.ad farewell to the XXIVth Olympiad Sunday night. The sadder thing 1s that neither the warm sorrow nor the glory of this paning,W,as. altogether shared. Legend has it that the bell. a national treasure. has th e most mel- ancholy tone of any 1n the world, echoing the ancient wail of a Korean daughter separated from her mother. Kor~ns take parungs especially hard. But for the world. tht mo51 pitiable thing separated fo Seoul was not the host nation and its auests. but a few ind1viduals from the best 1n themselves. Canada's Ben Johnson lost himself in steroids.· ~king a cheater's edge. Bulgaria's entire weightlifting 1eanf -- 0 SEOUL/1988 le t in shame, fo r the same n•ason . T o Amencan swimmers got to keep their gold medals but disgraced East, West join fore es ~EOUL South Korea (AP)-An Ol)tnp1cs that produced one uf the btgest druJ busts 1n sport ha \Or) endt'd Sunda) with an East· \\l'<;I qrcement against dopina. As the Games ended with a near-rccQrd 10 athletes testrng pos1me for druJs. the United tates and the So\'let l lnion announced 1b:u 1ho) would,JOtn force "to \\-Ork toward th' eltm ina11on <>f the use or drugs in spon. "ll is essential thut larae national Olympic comm 111ce~ "or~ closch t~etl\rrtoerad1cate the druj problem." said Robcn Helmick. prcs1cfcn'1 of the U.S. Olympic Committee · His Soviet counterpan. spons minister Marat Gramov. btd ··a VICIOUS Ctrcle" of dru& USC ~urroundC'(i sports '"Thert IS I la k or confidence that thrtatens the "hole 01) mp1c mo\ement." A statement said the 1v.o Olympic C'omm11ted would wort on ··a JOtnt 1n1t1at1vc ... toward the eltm1oat1on of the use of drugs 1n spons " · It said the af/\-'Cmcnt would u\C the: c:\cha"I( of tc ttr\I team . lab re ults and 1cchn1cal data: ant1-<Sru1 education prosrams: and uniform penal11es to reach its aoal. It also .said the tv..-o count ne would " uppon an4 encourqc comprchensi\e )Car-round te ttn dunna tnunina and rompe1111on:• Such randl.)m tesuna h:is bt n proposed prcv1ou\I), but 1n the n1ted ~lite and other countncs 11 has c:ncountcttd kpl problem spcdicall)' cha11ts of v1olau na pn va()' la~. ' 1hemsch rs and their tram "' ccl- cbra11ng \\1th another drui of choice. alcohol. and turning into pelt~ thle\C .\n -\mencan boxing coach couldn't read a bus schedule. pnnted tn plain l:.ngh!>h. and cost a gOod ktd from the slums ot Detroit the chance to honor his murdered brother v.11h Oh mp1c gold. -South Korean h<.)\ing coach attacked a rt'feree and dell\ errJ the lo"'cst possible blo"' to his na11on's pnde and hosp1taht) The hst of bo~tng debacles. from oulrnguous officiating to ugl) cro.,...ds. &<X'S on and on. all too typical of the sfl{\l"t's lcgac~. .\n .\mencan spnnt rtla) team Ile" .000 miles to mishandle us baton IO(I meters short of the finish. .\n md1\ldual pnntcr deh"el't'd lus onl~ finishing kid. 10 a Korean·s ta\lcab ~kmtx'rs of an NBC teleHs1on un11 "'llh later apologies, tned to wall. around"" 1th the \.\Ords .. We're Bad:· on their backs. as 1f Koreans \.\<ere supposed to understand that~.\mcn­ can <.trt~et colloqu,ahsm. The -\mcr1can basketball team clime 10 pla) defenk and found 1t couldn't hoot. massive S\\immmg team produced JUSt two individual gold medalists. and watched the Ea 1 Germans win 18 e'ents. O'era.11. the l 'n11cd tates. for the first time e''er. finished third tn 1he medal rount i\h. but these th1np happen. Like Korea's plum wine. the sour comes with the sv.ect. the) in with the yan And the Games of Seoul did 'ha\c their \.\CCt moments. Soanna mo- ments, a wondrou as the clo ma ctrcmon) tt~lf. "'hen Hodon and Cob1. the masrots of Seoul and Barcelona '9.2. floated arm.and-arm 1n&o a CT) Stal ntaht lhcTc was GrtJ lou&an1s. on lhc v~ of def tat, has head ontt blood- ied tn a s1cken1na C'rash on the board summon1n1 pure rcsohc on his final dive 1n a alonous Ol)mp1c carttr. to rttatt 'l champion. And l 'If Tim· merman. the East German shot- puttcr. who mustertd the m1aht for Ont last tokkn hca' c Or tbt youthful Janet E"ans. a CatifonM mall rat aad Junk-food addtet. wbote bhthe spint and Trio of Sea View squadSwin first, .can breathe easiyr By ROGER CARLSON OllMO..,NotlWI Tv.o Sea V1ev.· League football coaches remain unbeaten 1hrough four non-league games. but 11 ma ) be pretl) safe to assume three others arc brealhlng a lot cast.er ioda). , L'n1,ers1to.. Saddlebacl. and Tusun reco rded their first '1ctones of the )ear. and two of the '>1c11ms (L'n1"cr- s11-. defeated Foothill and Tus11n shocked El Toro) entered "-Ith h1gh- cahbl.'r reputations. Herc's hov. Orange Coas1 area prep coaches in the Sea \'1ev. '1C \\Cd 1t Estancia 's John Liebeagood. "hose Eagks arc 4-0: "It's a good feeling. y..e'"e had so m<.' rough ~ear The I.ids are pla~ ing real "ell. 1he coaching staff 1s enJo~ mg 1t~clf and "'e're getting phone calls "'e·,e ne,er got before.·· . In the aftermath of Es tanc1a's 35-., '1e1oi: 0' er Laguna, Beach. the latter's coach. ).~man Olne). "'as quoted as sa' ing. "II v..aSJUS\a mauer of breaks . : I thought the) iust got 1hree easi. touchdov..ns on us.· • "I read his comments:· said L1ebengood. "I thought v.e were .a good football team.and did a good JO b. We blocked "'ell and C\eCuted. Our problem "'as that "-C tumt-d the ball o'er fi , e ttmcs and fumbled 11 a"'a) 1n their end zone once. anq threw an tntercepuon ··e .. en when the' scored "'e kt our second team continue to pla) ·· Estancta cn'4 wtth a ~ -quar- tetbacl 10Jun1or JcfTDesa11dro'mld 11 paid off handsqmel). "He doesn't ha'e all the passing package in >Ct.·· said L1ebengood. ··But I th ought he passed v.ell and scrambled ''ell \.\ e hl-e his mech- an1cs. He's performing to what 11 takes to move the team.·· Uaiverslty Coacb Mark C.n- nlngbam. after a ha1r-rais1og finish in a 7-6 v1ctol"). the TroJans· first of the season "The defense real!~ did a JOb holding them to six points. That was the l.e\ ··A.rid rd ha' e 10 sa} this (the las1- m1nute 'tctoi:) 1s a ke) for us. 'We pla~ed two real close games uainst good teams 1n Irvine and Wood-bnd~e. games v.e fould ha"e won and didn l. I . ··"lo"' this one The kids realized something ts happening and we can get 11 going." Had the Trojans failed to produce a miracle fin ish. ··r Y..ould have bee'n (Plea.e eee SEA VIEW /83) How Sunset League teams fared TNm, r.cord ea.son 14·0> Fountain Val~Y 3· 1 Hunt Beach ( 1 • J Manna 10-41 Ocean View (3· 1 Westminsrer (1·31 ,.,~ Last weet Ttlis ..-•s IM ..._.., oef Mater 0~ 21·9 SI Jhn BoKO Ull HBI f:ri oef El Modena 21·7 LB Po4v (Vet~ St•d ) Fri i0st to LB W11son 16·7 Mat11tr Oei COCCI F=r '°"IO Los Ala m·IOS 29·0 at Milhk.an F ri oef Western. 14·0 at Tustin Fri IOSI 10 CaPO ya ... v 12-7 M ission V~ro (h<>me) F r• ln one of the ~t momenta. the U .s. men's TOlleyb&ll-p~en Karch Kiraly (left), Laf!ina Beach'• Scott Fortane (middle) and Erle Sato celebrate •old. a"'kward strole propellro her past all the mo t 1.·q•r ~' an ni;'mp1c The' rctlec-t thcm 1t c~me a no the nutn11on-.con IOUS method-\ 1rtualh lrct' lll f\\"hlllal txlHOll 'iurpn<,('. rtall\, that the Game or dnlled East Germans in slJ}\t. Onh Cutia v.a\ nm)t'd"' '\nd ·Juan ~oul h;id moments darker than • Or the qing champions.. mara--'ntonio amaran~·h. the augur,t chl<'I C'ham~1I ~t4d1um when the Aame thoncr Rosa Mota of Ponupl. of the Oh mp1l mo\ 1.•mcnt ould ~,, wa<. C\t1ngu1 hed That 1s the v.a > of spnnter Evel)n .-'shford of the Unn-ma stadium 1illl.'J "'"h bch.i,cd faM the v.orld ed States. "'ho shov.ed t~ youngsters and c\ubcr.in1 athlC'tc,. th;it th~ .\mt'ncan . and not a fcv. others. that detennmat1on countsabo\e aac. "ere .. the ~st oand mo t U<'C'~~stul :im' ed he~ v.'\th the pccter of Thert "'ere the 11~ters-10-l111.•. Flor-~mes in our ht ton .. terron m lurk1na 1n their minds. As en« Gnffith Jo)'ncr and Jackie That s;uJ M Oh mp1c ha' e C:\tr mea'iurtd b' that fear. the Games Joync:r-Kerscc, v.'ho dt t.anttd their deh,c!TJ en11rtl\ on thc:1r promise were a \pcC't.acular uccns ~th fiekn m rontra1ls of JOY and. •1th .\nd the :?4th (,a·m~ v.erc no e\ctp-~orea, and all the nations who fcm1n1ncgract. ct hcd a nev. ~port1na uon. <''Cn a.. ·oul' motto ... Har-pourtd unprecedented cooperalloa d1menston to the mtan1n of sl llual , mom anJ r r\)frc " v.a repeated tt\lo 1uarantec1na the saftty of their cquaht) , ... sokmnl\:ittham1l ~tad1um1~da' athletes and •ucsts. accomplt~ Thal h t ~on and on. too. It IS a aao It I '1mpo 1blc "~·mplc wa\.(' of that m1 ion wnh a sienertll)' unob- lontttone, 1n fact. than the a«OU•t of the Ol)mpt na •tlh its fhc tru 1vceffortthatmayne\'erbctruly !'<>ul'ss1n forall the hOmdJudaana. 1ntcrlocl 1ng nnas. cannot erase the mcuured orapprtti11Cd. drua re\elat1of\s. and sadl)' common pohtt al and cultural d1ffcttnct of What mcncans did not tount d1~pla}'t of nattonaJ111n. rac11m. cul· l~ ~orld mouo cannot end upon "' the ha\IOC: that could be tu,.1 1ntokrlntt and an u.onmmt enm1t,. cure luptdaty, \Cmpcr ar-C'ttlttd; not b) wnoritel or radical of other man1fnt1t1on of human rop~ . tudcnts. ht WW. IMir ow. •• • ptntnea • Sport1n1 ront"ts. after all. Mtthcr n 1\1\'Uy. l1'iry ID' o« 09 dllc Wf'Cllll One hundt'td Si(t) naoons c-amc, ma te n r ('OntJ"Ot soaal ,-.tun_,. ~"'--'""--(11111• -••.MAr•J t .. . I ., m ___ Ofange Coaat DAILY PILOT I Monday, Octob« 3, 1988 I Chiefs rally to tie Jet& FV product Harry catches TD with 1 seconds remaining From Tile A11oclated Press . Steve DcBerg capped a s12zling founh..quaner rally wnh an 8-yard toucl1down pass to former Fountain Valley High standout Emile Harry with 51 seconds left in regulation to lifi the Kansas City Chiefs to a tie with the New York Jets. 17-17. in East Rutherford. N.J. Harry's catch chr:naxed l!,n 80:yard. 13-play drive. Harry had four receptions for 59 yards on the drive and DeBerg was 9-for-13 for 175 yards in leading the fourth- quarter surge. In other NFL games: Bean !4, Bills 3: Jim McMahon completed 20 of27 i>aSSCS for 260 yards and two touchdowns. and Dennis Gentry raced 58 yards-the longest run of his career - on a reverse for another score as host Chicago handed the Bills their first loss. BufTaloquarterback'.J1m Kelh completed20of37 for 274 yards b1u was sacked six umes for losses of 56 yards. The Bills. who lost 24 yards on an anempted sweep. were held to a !let of zero yards rushing. The} attempted only two running plays m the second half. Gluts U, Redskins U: Odessa Turner cau$ht eight passes for 103 yards and a touchdown*n visiting New York held off a late rally by Washing n. 2-3. which m1ssro a chance to take th e lead when r ie kicker Ctrip Lohmiller missed a 36-yard field goal au pt with 2:54 left. · Buccaneers 27, Packers %4: Donald lgwebuike's 44. y~~d field goal with 12 seconds left gave Tampa Ba~· a .. victory over Green Bay for the second time this sea.son. The Packers, who led 24-17 with less than two minutes to ptay. dropped to 0-5 to remain the only winless team in the NFL. . . Eagles 3%, Ollecs %3: Randall Cunningham corn· pleted 24 of 38 pas.SCf>for 28~yards'and two touchdowns and ran 33 yards for another .score to rallr. Philadelphia from a 16-point first-quarter defrcit while the Eagles' ~ defense held Houston's usually explosive offense to 206 yards. .. . Browns U, Steelers 9: Cle veland turned three or Pittsburgh's fi ve second-half turnovers into two Mart Bahr fiefd goals and rookie Brian Washington's 75-}ard interception return for a touchdown as the Browns rode a .big-play defense to victory. . • Pattiots tl, Colts 17: Doug Flut1e came off the bench to spark' a 14-point founh quan er. incl uding.a 13-vard run "Ith 23 st'COnds to J11a) to lead host New England. 'SeaJtawks. 31, Falcons !O: Rook ie Kellv Stouffer engrneered four touchdown drives in his first ·N FL stan and John L. Williams scored three touchdowns on shon runs for v1s1ting Seattle. Broncos 1 !, Cbargers o: Rich KarJjs locked fou r field goals in a gamewhich turned on the play of Broncos· .· Esiason lowers bo()111 en Raiders . LOS ANGELES (AP) -Boomer Esiason picked apan a revamped Los Angeles secondar') Sunday. passing for 332 yards and thrtt touchdowns as the Cincinnati Bengals. the NFL's only unbeaten team. rolled to a 45-21 victory over the Raiders. Esiason completed I 0 straight passes at o ne stage and finished with 21 completions in 28 attempts while playing a little more than three quarters. He wasn't intercepted or sacked as the ~ngals, who won only four games last season. raised their record to 5-0. The' Raiders. meanw\ile. fell to 2-3 as quarterback Jay Schroeder. starting his second game for Los Angcles since being acquired in a trade from Washington four weeks ago. was intercepted four times. The game was scoreless until Jim Breech kicked a '28-)ard field goal with six secends remaining in the first quarter to give Cincinnati a 3-0 lead. • Thanks mainly to Esiason. the Bengals. who entered the game as slight underdogs, scored touchdowns on each of their three possessions in the second quaner to take a 24-I advantage at halftime. • first.-thc left-handed Esiason. who leads the NFL in passing. threw a 14-yard scoring pass to Rodney Holman to cap a 34-yard. three-play drive afier Tim Krumrie recovered a fumble by Marcus Allen. Next, rookie Ickey Woods tallied on a 3-yard run to climax an 86-yard, eight-play march. After the Raiders made it 17-7 on a 65-yard touchdown pass from Schroeder to rookie Tim Brown. the Bengals .went 13 yards in 10 plays. scoring on a 9-yard pass from Esiason to Tim McGee with 21 seconds left before halftime. • special teams. which snuffed a" first-tialf field goal trv blocked a Ralf Mojsiejcnko punt late in the third quane~ .and forced a fumble by San Diego punt returner Lionel James. Oers !Q. Lions 13: Jeff) Rice scored the 48th touchdown oT his 49-game NFL career with an 11-)ard run on a reverse and John Taylor got San Francisco's onl ) other TD on a 77-)ard punt return. · DolPlllns !4, Vlkillgs 7: Dan Marino passed for t"o first-half.touchdowns and Miam1"'s defense intercepted Minnesota's Tommy Kramer four times. The defeat dropped the Vikings. 3-2. out of a first-place ue with · Chicago 1n the NFC Central. · , Phillies name L~yva ~!~u~ ... PHI L..\DELPHI..\ (.\Pl -The Philadelphia Ph1ll1es scheduled a ne"s conference this afternoon to name Nick Le'' a. the St. Louis • ( ardinals' th1rd:base coach. as club's third manager in thn:e ~ears. The ..\ssoc1a1ed Press has learned. Le'' a. 35 succeeds Lee Eha. "'ho "as tired ·p1 23 Eha had replaced Joho-.fels~e 1n June I% 7 The appointmt'nt of Le~' a "'as another major mo' c in general man- ager Lee Thomas· l'ITon 10 rebuild a club that unda' finished tht' season last in the National League East" 11h a 65-96 record. 351: games behind the champion ~e"' York Mets. Le)'a managed s1A )Cars in the Cardinals· minor-league s~stem before h1~ promotion in 1984 to the parent club He served t\\O )ears as first-base coach and became 1h1rd- base coach in I Q86. Thomas -who also came to the Ph1ll1es from t. Lou is after a success- ful tenure as personnel d1rec1or-has ·,said during his search for a nc"' manager that he liked LC) va 's ag- gressiveness. He said he _liked that Leyva 1s ··not afraid to step on an) toes." foot. hterall.). when .S. athletes broke ranks at the opcnin,s cer- emonie~. The decorum-consc1ous K:orcans were no.t" amused at i.ecing the greatest e' cnt in 1heir na•ional h1stol) being turned into a Cali(orn1a "I "ant a gambling t}pe of man· beach panr. agcr:· Thomas has said. That wa~ follo"'ed very shonl) b) a Leyva. who has managed for th e senes of ugl) episodes at the boAing last three years in the Pueno Rica n _, enue. "'hf re the~auonai pride of "inter league. was a 24th-round both countries took senseless turns. selec11on in the maJOr leagues' June Some Americans couldn't under· I 975 draft of amateur talent. He stand why Koreans. 100. made such a pla~ed three seasons in the Cardinals' federal case of the )outhful rowdiness S)Stcm before becoming a mUlor-of the two U.S. swimmers. who tore a league manager. plaster lion's heaa~ff a hottl wall and Less than two weeks after Thomas took It 10 a hooch palace. succeeded the fired Wood} Wood- ward as '1~ president and personnel director. Elia in Jul) waf gi ven a onc- vear eAtens1o n through 1989. On Sunda\. Thomas continued wi th his overhaul of the club by informing pitching coach C'la'udc Osteen that he would not be rehired next season. Westerners t alled 11 a mere prank. But theft is no prank in Korea. which is v1nually fret of that crime. And stealing something just for laughs. to the Koreans. is particularly reprehen- sible. Perisi keys UC! past Titans Politics and athletics have often clashed at the Olympics. But Korea and the Unned States were supwsed lo be the best of friends. At times. 1l didn't seem that way. The Korean press played up the rift as if the Americans were trying to ruin the proudest moment of a little brother grown of age. a sense of betra}al within the family. UCT s Mike Pens1 scored his sec- ond goal "1th 17 34 remaining in the second half aturda~ for"' hat pro' ed to be the game winner in a 5-.2 '1ctol) over Cal Stale Fullenon unda,_ L'CI 1mpro"ed 10 1-1 in the Big West Conference. 3-6 ,.crall Darren Bedolla-. J Pcne and J 1mm~ Mala ver added one goal apiece for th e .\n1caters. Goaltender Dammon Ellis turned a"'a) seven shots b> the T 1tan'I The Titans. paced b~ goals foom con Pearson and Ste' e George. evened its record at 1-1. 4-6-1 o' era II In "'omcn·s soccer: UCI %, Chapman 0: Janell Rogers and Laura Goodale scored first-half goals to lead the .\nteaters past the Panthers in a non-conference match at PCI Rogers scored 1•01into1he game off Ingrid E'ans assist. while Goodale scored at .26:35 off Lc!>hc sn,dcr's ass1sl. Goa he Janice Taft -.topped I 0 shots 10 notch her st'cond shutout for liCI. "h1ch 1mpro,ed to J.Q-1. Chapman fell to 4-4-3 ~ookies St~iptease Telegrams Tasteful fun' for all occasions il'5 OFF TELEGRAM 120 OFF BACHELOR(ETIE) SHOWS • But the family survives. Lost in the headlines were the thousands of kindnesses mutually shared. The Korean hosts provided Amencans and all their guests with first-class accommodation and assistance to the end. Rooms were cleaned spotless. the buses were on time. food was fast and plentiful. the-t:>hones worked. prices were reasonable and often cheap. and nearly all that M'n ice came with a smile. • &"aAmer1can Heart ~ ~Association Louganis' golden farewell effort earns top honor From Tiie Associated Press ' SEOUL.South Korea-Thecomfon· • ing words and family ties of an old coach hclpeCt Gre_1,.Lougan1s survive the Olympic pressure cooker with a golden farewell performance. Louganis officially ended his career as the winningest diver in the Games· bjstory Sunday aflcr being named the top American athlete in Seoul. He said tie would tum his attention to acting. "I have to start with small roles," the 28-year-old winner of four Olympic gold medals said. "As a diver rm older and upenenced, but as an actor I'm vet) young. .. This award is a great way to end mydivingcareer. J have decided that this was my last competition." Seoul was the third Olympic stop for Louganis and his fourth time on the U.S. Olympic team. He won a si lver medal off the 10-meter platform in 1976 in Montreal, was picked for the boycott squad in 1980, then won both platform and J..meter springboard golds at the LosAngelesGamesandduplicated that feat in Seoul. That m~e him the first man to win l:>oth diving golds at two Ol)'mpics, and only the second diver in history to do it. American Pan.y McCormack \fOn both women's titles in 1952 and '56. Add the silver from Montreal and Louganis tied K.Jaus Dibiasi of Italy for the most divin& medals. Execrience. cenainly. But that didn't prevent Lougams from getting a case of stage fright as he prepared for Seoul. . "for the past fo ur years, after winnin~ at Los Angeld . I was really diving for the fun of it.' he said. "But going into the Olympics was a pressure cooker. I gave myself a lot of obstacles. But I didn't get over them by myself. I had a lot of help." Aid and comfort came primarily from two sources -Ron O'Brien. the U.S. diving team coach and Louganis' personal tutor. and Dr. Sammy Lee. who coached the American in Montreal. ~ "Ron and I have been through~o much. it's unbelievable." Louganis said. "And Dr. Samm} Lee helped me. too. Whenever I was down. it seemed. I wt>uld get a letter from him s.a) ing. ·Hang in there."' -Quote of the day Tony Casillas, Atlanta Falcons nose tackle and a former teammate of Seattle Scahawks' hQcbacker Bnao Boswonh at the Univers1t) of Okl~homa. on "hat he said to Bosworth during Sunday's NFL game in Atlanta: "I basically 1010· him he should "go ahead and go Hollywood and not worry about playin@..fo~1ball beeausc I think he's going to make more mone) there. His • footba ll., his type of t.alent. has not reall y gelled as far as being the aominant player. so l told him he should go ahead and go into ihe mo,'ies." ~aiders deny stadium deal off LOS ANGELE -..\ Los ..\ngcles Ci] Raiders official un da} denied a published c II• rcpon that the NFL team·~proposed move to suburban IJ'Windale 1s. m 1eopard}. • "That's pure hogwash: said senior executive John' Herrera of 1he repon 1n unda} 's ed111ons of the Los Angeles Tu~1es. "We'' e got a year's wonh of "ark done on this project and ~·re continuing to move ahead with 1t." The new per reponed that the Raiders stated 1n a new coun ling that their legal obliga11ons in the agn:emcnt signed last }Car to move to Irwindale have "lapsed." The oocument was filed in the lawsuit against the · Raiders by the Los Anjeles C.oliseum. The Los Angeles Supen6r Coun filing by Raiders law.,,er Richard Haas. dated Sept. 29. said that because Irwindale provided neither the promised building sites nor lhe S 11 5 million loan as required by the Aug. 20. 1987. preliminary agreement. no binding contract has been signed. "An) obligations of the Raiders lapsed shortly after" the prchmmary agreement. th e filing said. Green arrested for third time NEW YOR K -Boxer Mitch Green = was arrested earl) Sunda)' and cha~ed ' with dm ing \\htle 1mpa1red. his third arrest m 11 days. after Housing Authont\ police said the~ fo und him ma car that had crashed into a parked \Chicle 1n Queens. The bo'<cr was charged with dnv1ng while 1mpa1rcd and dn' mg wnftout a license. according to Housing Police gt. Thomas Grippo. His license has been suspended 54 limes. At 1.2:40 a.m .. two Housing Authority pohce officers came upon Green in a Lincoln Continental that had crashed into an unoccllpied. parked car at Guy R. Bre\\er Boulevard and 11 llh Avenue. said Capt. Moc Leon of the housing police. The accident caused no injuries and only minor damage. Leon said. Gr~cn was alone m the Lincoln and did not ':fSISt arrest. • , IN THE BLEACBBRS "Aaaah!! We're too late!!" Frost wins playoff over Tway South African David Frost, a nine"' !I time runner-u in four years on the PGA Tour, earned ~is first victory Sunday by , knocking in a five-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole to capture the $400,000 Southern Open in Columbus, Ga. Frost, caught Bob Tway with a six-foot birdie putt on the final hofe of ~ulation play. then won the tournament when he birdied and Tway two-putted from l 0 feet. The victory was the firs't in three career playoffs for Frost. ltorh players-shot final- round 67s to pass third·round leader Dave Barr and ended regulation play at I 0-under-par 280 ... Kaa.y Baker GudaplDo, whose only previous victory on the LPGA Tour was the Open. had six biFdies apinst a single bo&ey to win the 54-hole San Jose Oassic with a score ol 207. Caoy MarlDo, who was tied with Guadagnino at _the start of play. settled for a 6& for 208. Mi11le McGeorge and Jillie lllkster, tied for the 36-holc lead at 138. couldo 't keep pace on Sunday. The 27-year- old Guadagnino got to 7-under after five holes. but temporarily surrendered her advantage after a bogey on the par-3. 154-yard sixth hole. and then used two birdies to lead alone at 9-under ... Bob Claarles shot a 3-under- par 69 to pass up Bert Yancty, Geor1e Lauln1 and Loa Graham for the title bf the rain:.shortened Seniors r Challenge at the Horseshoe Bend Country Club in Roswell. Ga. · , Chang wins first tournament $,ixteen-year-old Michael Chang of • Placentia def~ated Johan Kriek, 6-2. 6-3 in . the finals of the Transamerica Open Tennis Championships in San Francisco Sunday. The unseeded C'h.ang. ~ho woJLS.59.500 for his week's work. used a crafiy change of pace from the baseline to conquer the 64th ranked Kriek. of Naples. Fla. Chang ranks 36th. Chang is not the youngest to ever win a Grand Prix 11tle. That was Aaron Krtcbteln, the top- sccdcd player here who was upset in the first round . Chang said hts goals for the rest ,of the year arc to "improve my game and not ~OIT) about money." To date he has camect S 1..60.000., 1_-Paul MacCleaa scored three goals. and Steve. Yzermu added another to lead the Detroit Red Wings 10 a 5-4 victory over the Los .\ngeles Kings 1n an NHL exhibition game. Yurman. whose &_Oal m th e third penod provod to be the game- winning shot. also had two assists. Tim Tookey scored twice forthe Kings. bringing the team within one goal of th e Red Wings. Wayne Gretzky set up two of his team's four goals. The Red Wings finished the i)reseason at 2-7-1. wh ile Kings' final record was 2-5-2 , .. Do.1PoleD dominaJed the final race of the Superbike season. but second-place Bubba Sbobert, who appeared to cruise through the 24-lap race around the 2.5-mile track. claimed the 1988 season title at Sears Point Inter- national Raceway in Sonoma ... .Steady rain forced NASCA R officials td postpone the h50.000 Holly Farms 400 stock car 'race at North Wilkesboro (N.C.) Speedway until today. Stram returns after surgery NEW ORLEANS -Three weeks Eil af\er undergoing. open heart surgery to •II• replace a defecti ve heart valve. Hank tram. 65. will re turn to the announcers' · booth Monday night. . ··Actually n's less than three weeks. it'll be tt rec "'eeks on Tuesday." Stram said Saturday. ·· Aner the opera~1on. I SC1 a goal of doing this game." ~ 1' Television, radio TELEVISION 6 P.m. -NFL FOOTBALL: Dalles at New Orlean$, Channel 7. '-p.m. -AUTO RACING: Formu11 One Grand Pr~ of Spain (tai>e). ESPN. 7:30 P m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: USC at Arizona (tai>e), Prime Ticket. RADk> 6 P.m. -NFL FOOTBALL: Dalles 11 New Orleans, KNX (1070). OLDSNOBILE/GMC TRUCKS 2860 Hertlot Blvd. • Calta Mm f714 &to.••o J, .. Orange Cout DAILY PtlOT/Monclay, Octobet 3. 1811 - Final climb sets Juarei apartf rom pack Norwalk cyclist wins 150-mile en~urancera«.JUSt_dccidtchoenteron !Thunday. Whik the standard event where )OU c.n't cha• wheels. The hes climbed peab 1n tbt RocJun as hiah as 12.000 feet miin strateg) 1s bemi able io patt urself. In a normal de ert to sea endurance event du'"!,~&mlJOrtoad races. thchap,de5ert temperaturcsand C\ent. )'OU ract Oat out. This penic~r ""·you have 10 .... ,... .............. c:-.... Ba.n~on Beach'• Cbrla hller doea a wheelie acroea the flnlab line. IJ JON PERGlJSON 4-°'.,..,,......., When the lead pack came mto vie"" JUSI before pid1na his bike into the Sant.a Ana Mountains. Tinker Juarez hoped he could use his experience in off.road chmbs to catch the frontrunners. His hopes became reality. By the time he got to Modjcska Peak' cast o(EI Toro Sunday, the lead was hi s for1ooden route to capturing the Coors American Onginal 150 desert to the sea ultra- endurance mountain bike race from' Palm Springs Tu New~rt Beact\. .. 1 The chmb was 12 miles. and ITnCW"everyone felt pretty burned o ut at that point. so I thought I could catch them," said Juaru. a 27-ycar-old veteran ~ho finished second in the NORBA (National OIT-Road Biking Association) National Series and sixth in the World Championships at Mammoth. Juarez. of Norwalk. overcame a broken geiircable in the. early stages and rode the course through the San Ja~into and Santa, Ana mount.am ranges in 7 hours. 25 mmutes. 30 seco!"Cls. well ahead ofsecond-plact finisher Tom Broznowsk1 (7:39:40). a 29-year-old pro road racer from Seattle. "Two of the guys that 1 had ridden bike races with before I knew could do well on the halls." Juarez said. ··1 caught the leader near the top. I had JUSI "'anted 10 finish. 1 felt the top 10 would be good. but the "'in was a big surprise." Broznowski, who was racmg his first off-road ultra- rou.,.1cm1n-nottomtnt1on uarn-caugh1upw1th mon11oralotofth1nas mechanical food. the " ham about three male! from the top of ModJcsJca Peak Schmidt a 33-)ea~~ld de 1 1 ' N wea ad'.:a~ ... "I k h I b h I • .., . k • n IS In ewpon, UC'U, new in t e c 1m in1 t at v.asn t as strong as t 5 11ld of hke nd1na a bike up Telegraph Hill. except n somtoft.~e riders.!' I had toao out hard at the start( an keepsgoina?nandon. h's a really fun race 1fyou'rcrcady Jacmtol ... he said. I was seeing stars and felt dizz) (near for 1t. but 1L s nothina )OU want to JUSt ao out and do. A the top). couple ofume5 l got the dulls. I fetl like J was on the verge B> the ume Juarez reached the final check point at of heat exhausuon at Sanuago Peak (near ModJeska)." the mountain's base near El Toro. he had built nearl) a IO- m1nute lead. T op 20 But 1t wasn't so dear.cul earlier 10 the race. After ~ 1\nker Juarez (Norwalk). 7.25.30. drafting wnh the lead pack of five th rough 35 miles of -·Tom Broznowsk1 (Seattle). 7:39.40. road r~c;mg. Juarez' bike suffered a broken gear cable after 3· Russ Worley <Santa Barbara), 7:45.10. the San Jacinto ch mb and was forced to stay in his hard 4· Mark Frist CLaCrossc. Wise.). 7:50.5Q. gear to the next check point. He borrowed• spare cable 5· Paul Thomasbcr$ (Davis), 7:57.38. from another lead rider. but lost three minutes fixing 1t 6· Mike Farr <Hunllngton Beach). 8:04.57. and kept has knobby mountain urcs mounted. 7· Ken Foraker <Goleta). 8: 12.25. 8 Hugo Schmidt Ill (Corona del Mar). 8:43 .45. When he resumed. he rode with a pack of three 9 Dean Bradle> (Corona del Mar). 8:44.20. instead of the. draf11ng wnh Mike Farr of HuntiOjtOn 10. Mark Manlev (unknown), 8:48.19. Beach. who eventuall) finished sixth. and another ndcr, I I. Tim Lewis (~nta Barbara). 8:50.57. "I wanted to make up the ground beau~ of the hill 12. Richard Knight (Costa Mesa ). 8:54.52. (t"dnung up).';.Juarcz said ... , rode knobb> ures through 13'. Mark 81\b~ <Long Beach). 8:59.34. 35 miles before the (final ) mountain. v.hich cao'se \GU to 14. Paul Rah.mes (Los ..\n~eles). g 59.35. lose· about tv.o to three miles per hour 1n speed." · 15. Terr) Hughes ( anta 'sabell 8:59 36. Ot~er d1v151on v.1nners v.cre: Martha Kenned). 16. Manha Renned~ I Petaluma). 9:'04.40 <first in womens open. Terr) Hughes. 'eterans: and Peter women s open) I Pense~ers. a Race Across Amenca 'eteran. Ln the. 17 Mike Colabella{Sherman Oaks). 9 2.2.43. master's. 18 1ephanie. Monensen !Sani.a 831'bara). 9:.23.50 Other top area finishers in 1he field of 72 included: (second 1n v.omen s open 1 (oronadelMar'sH~goSchm1d11Jl .e1ghth:CdM'sDcan 19. Peter Penr.e:-ers 1Fallbroot..). 9·24.29 !first in Bradle>. ninth: and Costa Mesa's Richard Knight. I 2th. masters. o' er--t5) .. h's an amazing C\tnt," Bradle) said. "l've ridden a 20 James Harlo~ I( ohon1. 9:.25.44 (St'cond 1n l?t of mountain bike e' cnts. but Lh1s was a dcpanure from veterans) SUNSET COACHES. From Bl is working out a proper form ula for substituting in order to get certain invtdiduals off the field for breathers. He was happy with his defense and singled out Rick Mock. the secondary in. general. Eli Del Gallo and Brent Hickman. The Barons. who meet a very st.rong Long Beach Poly team Friday night, came ou1 of the El Modena • • Execution keYs Warriors' city champi_onshiP- SEA VIEW COACHES ... From Br · talkmg about the ineOecm-eness of our offense ." said Cunningham. "We were down deep in the first half and fumbled 11 away. It was a sputtering tvpc ,of thing. Three different umes f1mm} Roberson v.as. either one person or a half-step from going 60 to 80 'ards for a touchdo" n AJ I ~ e need 1s 1he half-break.'' "8Afle inJUr)·free. ~eaJI View's Guy Carrouo, fol- lowing a third victory. the first time the Seahawks have been 3-1 since 1980, as well as a second shutout this season: .. '!'e're happy wnh our offense. W~ing up less tha.Jl four po1n1s a game. "And our secondar:y has been ~laying real well. Offensively. at times .we look good. and at other times we're our own worst enemy. We had a 100 and some yards 1n penalties. and you Just can't do that be be successful week-in and week-out .. Tbe Sea hawks came out injurv.free and expect 10 get free safety 'Breit Reed back. as well as running back Quincy Bennett from the MIA list. Huntington Beacb's George Pascoe, whose Oilers are nov. 1-3 from what appears to be the direct result of an carl>·&amc inJUf) to Doug Cunningham: .. One gu) gets hun on a team which ~ isn't real deep. and then 'I-OU ha'e to scram bit lO cover up." S3°ld Pascoe. Cunninaharn had four catches for 38 yards, caught a 12-)'ard TD pass and had four unassisted and t~o assis1td tacklts before cx111ng with a puJled muscle with two minutes let\ an the first quaner. .. Then we had to put our quar- terback. Enc Pettinato. at safety to covCf,.and we don't have Eric on the sidel\nes to talk to him while we're on defense. We even had' to use Enc as the punter for Cu nningham." said Pascoe. .. You havethestan1ngquancrback on the field the whole game and he gets exhausted. We had to scramble an some other areas. too.·· Martu Coacb Cbrls Ramsey, whose team 1s 0-4: ··w e played much better O\ erall. but we l'JSI had a real bad spell for about five minutes in the second quaner. Otherwise we did some good Rlck Mock things and we had a couple of ~uys (linebacker David Mcleod and ught end Eqc Crocker) healthy. .. We played a really good football team 1n Los Alamitos." A bright spot in the loss "as the pla} of sophomore ltnebacker Frank Marv1tL acci>rd1Jlg_ 10 Ramse}. "We moved the ball decervly at times. but we still have a couple of 1n1uries on that side of the ball. Still. I felt h ke we made some progress. "We JUSI took another step fun her before league. League 1s .a "hole nr~ season:· Westminster Co-coacb Stan CJark. after the Lions fell to Capistrano Valley. 12-7: "We were "ery proud of th e kids. With all the staners we had out. the kids rose to the occasion. and we were just a whisker from being nght there wtth them. "I couldn't believe that we lost Robbie Robinson on the opening kickoff. He's had 1wo downs of football all season:· Robinson went down w11h a It.nee injury on the first snap of the Lions' openerw11h Valencia. and in1ured the same knee on his first kickoff return against Capo Valle). He'll see an onhoped1c spec1ahs1 toda) :. but Clark said.·· 1 t doesn't look good. RAMSFALL,41-27 •.• From Bl to LomaXJUSt IWICC for rosses totaling J.T. Sm11h -who had burned 10 yards. Johnny Johnson -for 29 }ards and Meanhwile. the Rams .. self de-then threw 33 yards to Roy Green - structtCl on offense" as quanerback who had burned Leroy Irvin -for a Jim Everett put 1t, fumbhng four touchdown to 11e 1t. times. Moments later. Lomax was at 1t That negated a good performance again, taking the Cardinals from their by Everett (25 of 33 for 300 yards and own 20tothe Rams' 26 before senhng a tou(:hdo.wn).and practicallx gave the for a 43-yard field goal from Al Ori "OK to bomb us" cen1ficate to Greco, making it 10-7 with 3:40 left in Lomax. the first quarter. Lomax completed "It was clear that we got the hell seven of his first nine passes to seven kicked out of u~." said Rams coach different receivers. John Robinson. "We didn't bring the The Rams' only defense was their will to win into this game. I expect now vaunted pass rush. Despite the there to be games when we don't have absence of NFL sack leader Gaf) it, but when you don't tackle and Je1er (out indefin itely with a sprained block. then somcthing's wrong." left knee). the Rams pressured Lomax Now, suddenly. Phoenix is think-when necnsary. Linebacker Mike inf. of itself as a real NFL town. Wilcher forced the field goal b> 'I'm glad we won today because in sacking Lomax for 'I 5-yard loss and St. Louis the attitude was such that we tJlen hurrying him to undcnhrow has probabl> would have given the Rams receiver. the pmc 1f there was an opportuni-Everett. who came into the game as ty," said runmna back Stump the NFL's lead1n1 passer with a 104 Mitchell. . rating. showed that he is approaching Last week. the Cardinals surpnscd the class of Lomax. driving the Rams Washington, J0..2 I, for their first to the Phoenix 9. victery in Phoenix. Now. they have But the usually consistent Mike won b•I on the road. Lansford missed wide left on a 26- The Rams. on the other hand. lost yard field goal attempt and it rc- their first game of the season Sunday, mained I 0-7. and wcrcn't making much out of the Moments later. Mickey utton got loss. a hand on Grea Home's punt which .. Whatever we did. it wasn't traveled 16 yards u a result. Everett enou~." sa1d receiver Henry Ellard. went ri&ht away to rookie recei ver .. We ve aot to kce., 1oin1 and not let Aaron Cox who made 1 brilliant catch up because it's a Iona ~son." · ovcrtwo dcfcndcra at the Phoenix 17. The Rams sc:ortd on the .-mc's Everett connected with Ellard at tint posseuion.1oin147 yards in fivt' the S and Bell slanted over the naht olays. Robert Delp1no ran beck the side to make tt 14-10. kickoff 38 Y11rdt to s)ve Evereu tood However, Lomu waan't anywhere Reid pos111on to st.an the pme. near be1n& finished. He drove the Ht aot additional help, thou&)\. A Cardinals 9" yards 1n 11 plays 1n JU t ~" interference call on lhe ovettY(om1nutes. throW1na~yardsto Cltdinals' Rolland Mitchell covtnng Jay Novacek to ma.kc 1t 17-1• at the t.ilht tnd Pete Holohan pvt the half. Rims the bill at the Phoen1 K 9 Bell On \he dnve. Loma• completed ran S yards off the left stde to make \l Stven of nine penn for U yards. ~ 7.0. . leavina the Ramt' ~ '° With pme-t1me temperature a v.onder. "what 11?'' PhoeniK·rike 8l ~ and mtna. What afwe wtrtn't htft? Would n Lomu had no trou"blcwamuna up, matterapJnst Lomu'? On the <;'1rd1nals' first drive. he hit Then the unth1nkablt hi~ ' waoabrtdge~coach Ver) tough." Coroaa del Mar's Dave Holland, "hose unbeaten team escaped an upset-bug agamst Laguna Hills: .. We \\ere Oat and the\ were .,.,ell-dnlled to take a"a> the things v.e were doing. eels Irvine was Irvine Coacb Terry Henjgu, "hose t3uad fell to 3-1 WJth the loss 10 tau her than score ~~~~W>. 11h1nk that thtJ "ere a fine football team. and the} cs· pec1all> impressed me w11h defenSl\e pursuit. The difference was thanhe\- executed their game plan be11er than we did ours. We also mjlde more mmakes than hem: not necessanh fumbles. but lacked the execu11on and missed block1n~ assignments. ··<\nd that quanetback (Mike Helm) 1s rcaJI} good. Their coach. Steve Bresnahan. he has done a good JOb "1th that gu}. He was nght on target. By KEVIN BALL Deir,... C-111 ,.,..,, Going into Friday's matchupofthe unbeaten. Woodbridge Coach Rick Gibson was apprehensive about the pro.spects of playing cross-t~w~ rival ~rvine, entering the game with 1dent·. 1cal 3·0 marks. As fate would prove. the Warriors wa lked aw.ay 27-7 victors and im- proved to 4-0 with one game standing between 1nem and league pla). Irvine fell to 4-1. Meanwhile. Costa Mesa outpla>ed ~lella but could manage onl) a tie. The Mu stanJS are 2-1 ·I . Mater Dc1. ranked second in the county after the beginning of the season. fell to 1-3 with a 21-9 loS£ \j) founh-ranked Edison while Laguna Beach suffered another loss. this 11me 10 Estancia 35-7 to fall 10 0-3-1 on the season. Here are the coaches comments on last "eek·s games; Woodbridge Coacb Rick Gibson:·· 1 think tllal 1t JUSl boiled down 10 the fact that our lods executed and Fred Schweer had another great game. He was I for 5 for maybe 1 }ards. but came pltve and finished strong . .\fter the game he said he didn't even think about his slow Stan and that 1~ exactl} what we want him to do. He needs 10 remain confident to be successfol. ·· Schweer completed 15 of24 passes for 217 yards and one touchdo" n. The semor quanerback also ran ~ yards for a touchdown in the 1h1rd quaner. ··we 1;>la)ed belier than they did. I don ·l think that you can't sa) that v.e "'ere 20 points better. but that 1s the margin we won by. I said a "eek ago that wh~ver controlled the ball was going 10 do well. Wt ran the baJI faarl\ well and chewea up The clock. · .. To be honest. f think that they art a 'er) good team. This 1s a great prescasoo game for us. beating ao undefeated team like Irvi ne. but our first real test comes in two "eeks against Costa Mesa m the league opener. .. The Irvine game means nothing 1n league. We have to prove oursel,es against the other .teams in out' league 1f "e plan on going anywhere when the season 1s over. .. As we: get further into the seaso'n W1lh league approaching. n seems that more than anything else. the Pacific Coast league is going to be Moody wins Laser class By ALMON LOCIUBEY Deir ............... Fall \.\Cather didn't k~p Southland sailors shores1de Saturda> and Sun· day as I 0 classes of sa1rors tu med out for Ncwpon Harbor Yachi Club's F?ll Gold up regatta. sailed on courses inside the ba> and the occ:in Results of thr ra~es: lft"°9 0 HMS l.ASER-1 D•v•d MoOdY hlboll VC t Al'TICltf M«row. HvnMOIOO HUllOtf vc l Deml.,-i Cr•\o, S.11 0•"4> vc. '· ererr .O.vls, sovc, S·Ben een,.m1n NHVC , SAIOT 4-1 Cr•io !Hnllty Ni-4YC 2 Erlll Colllns. NHYC, 3 Jory Tw"I NHYC ' Fr•MO Vwo.. Soulhwesr~11 vc S ll1ro1~ Vatos $WVC SAIOT 1-1 p.n l lmOP!l NHYC. 2 Cnr1uv Zimoeldl, NHVC 3 11 1 Wan:! a.n .. Cortnttwin Ye;, ( II.ti .. W.,.cMo-SWYC SAtoT Cl-I t. we Colltfls NHYC t lhan Miiin, ICYC. l C•Mv HoNn. NHYC ' Mtr ~Cft. Nt4YC SA80T Cl-1 AOem WHl'h«1V ICYC ? ....,., ,,.,,., •01 vc i SoaOr•'\a w 11 acvc SA80T C>-1 ~I M;lltfl ecvc. 2 Pa t•ICll ....._ HHYC, > Tudltt Can'IOMI NHVC ~Cll .... SANTANA ,..._, '"'"-•• JI"\ l seou MY!ldl, ,..,... vc. 2 ""'"' $"-! C..1M1111•..:. l.Oll9 9Mol .,, .... LOI-I Ir• ttlindl UCI $eitflt AMI\ ......... ._,.., Mllf .._..., N+1YC ~--' ~. INn o-.i.r. l\'C, I ..... 0... ..... Nt4YC, 1 DewMurldr, .... ......._, ... vc ..... -· ...,.,.......,NHYC "I don't think that the) are a supenor team than us. but they were last Fnday. I don't think that It was· one of the bc1ter games for either Woodbridge or us. But the> did come out with a win. though . "We didn't rush the ball r~al well against them. Their defense·s purs.ull always seemed 10 be 1n the nght place at the nght ume for them. and our offensive line JUSt couldn't handle them.·· Mater Del Coacb Clluck Gallo, on his team's 21 ·9 loss to Edison "I 1hmt.. after pla)1ng 1hrc."C tough games ~e probabl) came 1n a little Oat. "-eiust v.eren·1 rnentall) read~ 10 pla .. on Fnda' The' didn't ha .. e tbeir game faces 00 at al} SometamCS \OU can come out of that but not against a good team hke Edison. one that 1s read\ to pla~ "~d1son 1s a good football team. pan1cularl) 1hc1r quanerback (Greg> ..\ngelov1c and 1Gus) :vf1randa. their runn1ngback."' Behind earl\. the Monarch ~ere forced to abandon 1he1r game plan of running a controlled ground offense. and took to the air Quancrback Dan O'Neil thre~ for ~49 }ards while recel\er Ton' Pena pulled do\.\n ll passes ior I 1 )ards. "Tom 1s fine rece1,cr and has beaten e\Cl"'bo<h ~e ha\C: pla~ed against He had a good n1~h1 against a good deftnder We d1dn t intend to pla\ catchup but "anted to keep the balf on 1he ground and con1rol It. Unfonunatle}. \.\e got behind earl) and had to thro" the ball It 1s not a ound "a~ to pla} at all "We are 1otall} lacl1ng an con~ s1stenc} E'en though v.e are stopping a team. our m1stat..es are letting the other team ..core \\ e need the "I told our kids all ~eel 11 could be that kind of game. "Although we pla)ed a poor game ofTensivel). we did pla) welf de- fensi vet): · "The defense got us the ball and were able to score. We escaped ... Newport Harbor Coacb Jeff Brillkley, fo~'°" Ill&. another ncar- m1ss as the Sailors fell to I· J· "It was very,s1m1lar to the Hunl- ington Beach loss. a matter of se'en points nov. in the Last \\\.O ball games · "The kids \.\Cre pu111ng out. but v.e're JUSl not doing things offens1,c-h :· . · Harbor's passing game has netted JUSt a .t3 percent complruon ratio in "hat 1s<:ons1derC"d basicall' a control offense. • \.la~ang matters "orse has been the tact.. of running punch despite the presence of .\ll-CIF running bacl Tomm} Wa lker. \\'.'!Iker has nc11ed 16:! :,.ards on o2 c-ames m faur games -an al erage of 2.6 > ards per cart) and 40 }ards per game .. The difference 1s up front.·· said cons1stenC} to beat the big teams ltke the-on~s we have fa ced . ··Edison outpla)ed us and l1ct..ed our tails. :":o"' the pressure 1s on us to get our act together in time for our league opener against Bishop .\mat (m two ~eeks1:· Costa Mua Coacb Tom Baldwla. on the Mus tangs· .. ·., lie with l\..atella· "We pla}ed a 'er) good football team and pla}ed 'er) \.\ell 11 "as an 1mponant game because 0 ' er the ne:itt three v.eek!. "e pla} team that are a combined 11 ·I combined That 1s tough comcpe1111on '!The runrunwmus re.all) gelhOi. together '\aturall}. ~ou atv.-a~ n~d to 1mpro' e -"Chad a hule problem "'11h our 011ch out -but things arl' Jlm Robenon Bnnkley ... Tommy 1s 8JVing tbe good effon. We're a block away. and 1f we ever put things together we·regoing lo pr&nt some problems for people." SadcUeback's Jerry Wine, who is in the wan column for the first time this "ear .. I v.~s plca5ed our k1ds-wctttl't in11m1dated. Serra ran a gap-c1ghtand blitzed on almost e'ery play. so ~ had 10 block v.ell up the middle. Kendnck lles'had a good game. his Sttond 10 a ro ..... and as our lme gets better .,.,~·re going to have a better team ·I ''ThanHull .. there w~ no more inJune .'' . T"o.wa> stanang tackle Miguel OC'hoa. wllo has been --OU\ v.1th an ankle sprain smct the ~ond pla\ of the season. 1s expected to stan against Santa .\na Valley Fnda) night. beginning 10 fall together wnh league JUSt around the corner. ··Tumo' ers art one of tht' prob- lems w11h the wishbone. but we are eltm1nating them little by httle each ~eek. (The Mustangs fumbled onl) tv.1ce against Katclla). The important thangJo note 1s 1h*"d1dn't SC't thcm up offens1,el} witn turnovers m their own temlof). bul roughed ~e baJI deep 1n thetr temtof) to blow a couple of our own sconn'-opportunities:· ~ BeacJa CoacJa L7mu Olaey, v.hose -'.n1sts remain WJnJcss after suffenng a 35-loss to Estancia _ "It was JUSl rmancr of'.brcalcs. On their first (offens1,el play. the) ran a simple d1 .. e pla) and got a 70-)ard touchdov.n. How Orange Coast Area. teams f ared "I thought that we played prctt) C\ en and e'en got into what I thought -.A.as sconng pos1uon an the first half. but a penah) moved us back 20 or 30 Te1m. record Cosla Me~a 1· I· I Laguna Beacn 0·3· I) Woodbridge 4·01 lr'l1M (J l Maler De I I J I LHf Weft Ilea l(a1e11a, 7-7 IO\I lo E slancia 3S· 7 def. Irvine, 27 • 7 IOSI to WOOdt>rldge, 27·7 IOsl to EdlM>n. 21·9 n.rs wMlt'' toe CdM 111 NHI al San C emenre Canvoo \I I 1rv"14!I Foo1n~1 (home I Hin Beitel'\ (1 1 OCC I "'-' Fri Fri Thur Sal Fri )ards. , "I thought that they got three eas) touchdowns on us ... We arc muCh better than this. l thank that we beat ourseh,.es \\-1th turnovers and penal- ties. We arc capablt of much more than this." ~y ,A ·Pro essio . M · In Seal Beach lntroducmg the Coultrup Professional • 218 sq ft of pro(essJOnW BuJdtng. the only ~ A buJdmg l1l mediuJ office SpKC Se~ Boch to com~ prolesslOJ'\cll and • Otrtctly xross from Lcisu~ World medK.al .:ifk.e .ind near numerous hospitals ~e • ::>tSur11.tl\~ 3·story .udmecrun.1 des.tgJt unmedl<ltel\ • :; parlung SJ*~ pet I (XX) sq ~~em cc-ft of s~ .$0~ spaces co"'c~ ~~World and the • L\lsh Lmdscap1ng with entnfll.e San Oqo F~ (405) vm:h Seal waterfall ~h Boule\~ fronaige • Su1e·of·the·art ~ting .arid w .. A ' condmomng • Clase to restau~nts banks and ~lAJ 1 1 Seal Bc~h Blvd .. at Beverly Manor and tht S.in °"80 F~y . Expected comp&etjon: Demnbtt 19&&. FOf W-"8 tnfoonauon. conQC't Joe V~rps or l>.lul Brunsell it Grubb i Elbs C~rtw srom.. (213) 538~ •• [ , l'INAL MAJOll LlAGUIE STANDINGS ~RICAN LEAGUE Oakland Mlnne10t1 Kan5uCl~v .... Chicago Texu Sea Ille Boston Detroit MllwaukH Toronto New York Cleveland Balllmo<e Wttt DMsleft W L 104 SI 91 71 84 77 7S 87 71 90 70 91 68 93 Eut DIVl51on 89 73 II H 87 7S 87 7S 85 76 78 84 54 107 rct. .642 .562 .522 .~ .•41 .435 .•22 .549 ,543 .537 .S37 .528 .'81 .33S 13 191/J 29 • 3Z'fl 3311'J 3S1h 1 2 2 311'2 11 J41.I) SundlV'I ~· Mlnnetote 3 ANlll 2 Ctevetend 6. Bolton 5 Detroit 4, N1w YOl'lt J l 11 1nn1noil T «onto 9, BelllmOl't l ClllcffO 5, Kenllt Cllv 1 Otki.nd 4. Mllweukff o Tt111H 7, SHllll 2 > NATIONAL LEAGUE est DIVIMcln W L Pd. GB 94 67 .Sl4 c 87 7• .5.CO 7 Sa ego 83 78 .S16 11 Sa n Francisco 83 79 .S12 l1 11'J Houston 82 80 .506 1211'J Atlanta 54 106 .338 391,, Eut Division New York 100 60 .625 Pittsburgh IS 7S .SJ\ lS Montreal 11 81 .soo 20 Chicago 77 as .47S 24· St. Louis 76 86 .469 2S Phlladelphla 65 96 .404 35'"' Sundllv's Sc:w .. Sen FrenctM:o I, OOd9tn o MontrHI 3, PlltladllPlll• I Ntw York 7, SI. Louis s Clnclnnelt I, Atla nte O Chicago I, Plttst>urell 4 Sen Oil90 S, Houston I NATIONAL LEAGUE Giants 1, Oodten 0 SAN l"ltANCISCO LOS ANGRSS Rilt1~ Aldrtlt cf Ci.nt It> Mtllld'l ID Milcl'ltlt H MldndOrf Brtnlv c Mehlinc Gerner Ol1 CHIVH r1 MWlm\lo Urit>e u Prezcnc 20 OROl>lsn o lbrllbl lltr ll bl 3000 S.a2o 3010 3000 Shri>rln~ 1000 2000 ..._" 3000 2000 Ol"osc:oo 0000 4 o o o MHtcllr on I o o o 7 I 0 0 SlulJOS 11> 4 0 0 0 1000 Stleit>vcf 3020 2 0 I 0 JGon1t1 cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 MI011m r1 l 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 Sc:k>K11 c J 0 0 0 4 0 l I Rtvtt c: 0 0 0 0 l O O o Hamlin lt> 2 o o o O 0 0 0 Griffin u 2 O O O l 0 O 0 Woodsn JD I O O 0 LHrvo I 0 0 0 O.venc on 1 O O O RMrtlm o O O O O APtne o 0 0 0 0 Horton o o O o O CGwynn If 1 0 O O Tetlll lO I 4 I Tetllt 2' 0 3 0 ~art IW IMlnel Sin Frencltco 010 000 000-1 Lot Anee!el 000 000 000-0 Game W1nnon9 RBI -MWllllam1 Cl ). E-WOO<lson OP-Los Antaltt I LOB- San Frencl\CO 4 LO\ AnQele• l 2B-Sl'letl>v' MW1111ems SB-Urooe tl•I IP Sen Frenchco ORot>"on w, 10·S 9 Ln A,_.. LH rv L 17 11 RMrtone1 APtne Horton Of'OKO UmoirH -Mome Harvey Of\C) Bon.n. Tnoro. K101er T-231 A--44 055 H R ER 88 SO ) 0 0 ., 2 3 I I 3 3 0 0 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .0 D F•rsl Quici... Sec· AMl!•ICAN LaAGUlf Tw!M J, Aftelil5 t CAU:f'OttNtA MlttM•SOTA 0WM90tl R1vlb OWMt Ci Hn«ctr. Pn Br-nH JOVMf lb McLmrDr C0111i1 rt Howtlllo 8lclltll•" EPOerdOl'I 8001\9 c Scl'IOrildu T ..... •trll-. 119rll.i 3000 Gi.ddtnM •OlO 4 I I 0 811WI rf 4 0 t 0 l 0 2 l Oevldtn r1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Puckett cf 4 I 1 0 0 0 0 0 Hrl>llt 11> 4 0 I 0 4 O 2 o Lerkln dh 4 O I 1 0000 Ll\;dnerC 3000 • 0 0 0 Lml>fdl 211 t 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 Ntwmn lo ) I I 0 l 0 0 0 G•llnt u l I I 2 I 0 I 0 4 ' , 0 2 0 0 0 ll 2 I 2 Tetll1 kw• bv lftlllllt\ ll l 1 l Clllfenlll 001 001 000-2 ~ 120 000 0011...:, G1me WinniJIQ RBI -Ltrkln ( 11) OP-MinntM>ll 2 LOB-Cellfornle 6, Mlnnt· wta S. 28-Larkfn , Ntwmen, Busl'I, Rev HR-Geene ( 14) SB-Gladden (21). IP H • aR 18 SO NFL Nlflenli Contwenc. Rim' San Francisco New Orlea1u A flan ta Chicog~ Mlnnesola Tampa Bay De troll Green Bay West W L 4 1 4 1 3 1 \ 4 Ctntrll 4 l 3 e 2 3 1 4 0 s E11t T rct. PF PA 0 .IOO 145 106 o .eoo 129 104 0 .750 97 71 0 .200 112 ,,.. 0 0 0. 0 0 .800 106 60 .600 107 71 .400 17 111 .200 78 93 . .000 64 122 N.Y G lant5 3 2 0 ,600 111 111 Cllffwtlll Fre~ L.11· 13 ~ RSmilllW,l ·O Sc:h41iedr RHtdonS.42 • l 2 0 0 • .Phoenlll 3 2 0 .600 \29 110 rc>alll\ 2 2 o soo 7• 70 6 6 12·3 I IM 2 2 0 0 I I 0 ~ Phil11delP'1ia 2 3 0 ,400 128 105 o W11,n1no1on 2 3 o .•OO 111 120 W~Sml1tt UmPifes-HOme. MOl'rlMN1, Fir", Second, Pe,.,rno T'11rd, • Vouno T-2'<11 A-lS 952 PGA Southern Ooen (et CelllmlMn, GL) Oavoo Frost·•. sn.ooo 70·61·65·'7-270 Bot> Tw..,., UJ,200 71·'6·6'·61-270 Dan Fo"man 170,100 67·66·49·69-271 George Arcner, s20,eoo 70·66·70-65--271 Cave Barr, '20.900 72·61·61·7~271 Mike Hult>erl, s 14,400 61·66·69·7~272 Lenee Ten Brck, s l2,0SO' 61·65·49·71-273 Mike.Donald, sl2,0SO 67·70·71·75-273 Jell Sluman, s 12,0SO 63·47·7•·49-213 Corey Pevln, s 12 ,OSO 69· 70•66•61-273 Lerrv Mize s9,'200 70·67·61·69-27• Oavlel Peoples, s?.200 49·61· 71·66-274 Russ Cocl'lran, s9,'200 61·4"-61·7~27• Leonard Tl'lomosn, '4,400 49·63·71·72-275 Cl'ltos Perrv, $6,400 61·73·61·67-215 Tim Simoson. 16,400 70-72·'7·6'r-27S Lerrv Rinker, 56,400 61·70·'9·69-27S Maril LYt , '4,.00 11·71·6S·61-27S Harrv Tavlor, 16,400 • 69'4'·61·6.,_27S Jim Booros, 56,400 72·61·61·69-27S LPGA Sin Jose Olnlc (II Sen Jnel Kllllv Guade11n1no MS 000 c11117 Merino S27,7SO Rosie Jont1 '11,000 Mi~~ McG.orlle s 11.000 Bell'I Oen.et S12,7SO Miult Blr'ltollo s 10,SOO Kell'lrvn Y0\>119 '7 SOO LvnnAdlms s7,SOO KtlllV Posttew111 ,1,soo JJJll lnltster s7 ,SOO Jo1'0M Carner S4,IS2 Patil R1110 M,IS2 Krl1 Mon11111en 54,151 S.tsv K109 M.02 Mvra BIKllWelOer S4,IS2 Jan SltOl'lenson U ,IS2 Amv Alcoll U ,702 Colleen Welker Sl,702 Rol>ln Hood Sl,702 MIOCV Looel Sl,702 69· 11·67-207 70-70·61-708 73·69· 61-210 69·69·71-210 73·70-61-211 61·71-73-212 69·7S·69-213 11·71-71-213 69·73·11-213 69-69 75--213 71-74·69-21' 72·13·69-21• 12·71·71-21• 73·69·72-21• 71·69·7-2f4 71·69·7•-214 69·7S·71-21S 70·13·71-215 71·70·74-215 69·n·7-21S Senion toum1ment (II R .. w .. , G1.) Bot> Cl'lerlts, U S,000 Har<>liJ Henning '21,lll Dick Hen<trictt.son s2Ull Bert Y enaev, s21.1Jl LOU Gral'lem. s 11,167 Doug S.noers. \ 11,167 Geor11e Lanning s 11.167 Dean Shftll, II.Ill Garv Plaver. u .... Of'v1Ue Moody, 16,SOO OeveHin '4 SOO Jim King S6,j00 C11arles Coodv S6 SOO ' Wall Z.rnC>rt\IU S4 S00 Jeck FteCI< S6 SOO 70·69-139 72·68-1•0 1>1·72-140 61·72-l•O 47~61-141 69·71-141 41·7)-141 71·11-142 71-71-142 7•·69-143 12·11-1'3 71·72-14J 71·72-1'3 10·1)-143 74·69-1'3 AmeriCln Confef'lftee Seall•e Denver Reldtn Sen D1t00 Kini••• Coty. Wftt l 2 • 2 3 2 3 2 l I 3 0 0 0 0 I .600 ,. 99 ..00 100 7• •• 127 145 ' . ..00 S7 99 .JOO 13 91 C1nc1nnah Cltvt•ano Housfllft P11111>urgn ClllWll 5 0 .3 2 l 2 0 l 000 13S U 0 600 72 :6 o 600 m m I 4 0 ?00 102 121 Butteto N,Y Jtls Miami New Engleno lnd11neoohs EHt • I 0 3 I I 2 l 0 2 3 0 1 4 0 Sun4tv'• Scar .. Pl'loen11r, •1, Rems 21 Cinonna11 •S. R11den 71 C11ice110 2•. Buffalo 3 Cleveland 23, P111s1>ur911 9 Tamoa Bay 27, Green Bev 2• Pllll•dtlollle 3?, Hous1on 23 ,IOQ 11 12 100 105 41 '°° 1• I? 400 75 103 200 16 91 New Enotano 21. tndleneoolls 11 New York GIMIS 24, Weshln91on iJ Seellle 31 , A11an1e 20 New York Jets 11, KenSlls Citv 11 Denver 12. Sen Diego 0 San Fr 1nc1sco 20, Detroit ll Miami ?4. Minnesota 1 Tenltflt's Glmt Delles er New Ortean• (Channel 1 •• 41 Sulldlv's Game• R.ams al Atlanta. 10 e.m CrucellO el Detroit, 10 a.m tndlenallOli• at Buffalo, 10 a.m. K1n'81 C:itv at Houston, 10 • m New England vs. Green Bev II Mllweul'.n, 10 1.m. New York ).els at Clnclnneti, 10 e.m, Seallle 1J Clevetend, 10 e.m. T•moa Bev 11 M1nne1011. 10 • m. Wul'linQton at OellH , 10 • m Pi111our1111 11 Pl'loe"'•· 1 o.m. Denver et San Fr1nclKO, 1 Pm. M1em1 et Lo\ AnQell• Reioen, I pm New Orleans 11 Sen Diego, I Pm MeMIV's Game New York Gl1111s al Plllltoe!Otlla (Cllennet 81 6) I CardiMIS 41, Rims 27 Sc«• bv OU1rten Pnoenox Rem• First .Quarter 10 14 3 14-41 '7 1 4 7-27 Rams-Ben S ,..vn (l.anslord klel<} ? 19 Pnx-R Grun 33 PUS from Lomu (Del Greco kick), US Pnx-FG Ott Greco '3, 11 S6 Second Quarter Ram1-Be11 • run (Lenstoro kick), 12 la Pnx-No11ecek 8 Pau trom Lomu (dtl Greco kickl, 101. Pn1-Saoo1er 16 return ol Evere11 tumore (Oe1 Greco 1t1c11,J, 14:SS. Tlllrd °"8r$tr Pna-FG Oei Greco SI SIS. Rams-0 Jolln$0n 9 oeu from Everett (klcl'. 1811eOI 1411 F'"'r1tl Ovarter Pnx-Ferretl 1 run lOtl Greco i.1cl'.I e 44 Pn•-M1lcl'lt1t 35 ru., (Otl Greco krCkl, 8 54 Ram\-Bt" I run 1L1n1toro 1t,ockJ. 11 lS A-.49,IJO -l{iltfilii !ttijtJI :tMi:fiii Angels f-nish with 12 losses From Tbe Associated Press Greg Gagne hu a tv.crrun homer and Jeff Reardon eamea hts 42nd S3\e as Minnesota handed Caltforn1a llS club-record 12th straight defeat. 3-2. TheAngelsended up 75-87. The Twins. who won eight of their last 12 games. finished at 9 1·7 1. Minnesota was 85· 77 last season when 11 "on the World Scnes .. In other notes of interest on the final da~ of the season: Don Robinson three-hit the Dodgers. retiring the last 17 batters for his first win over L .\ si nce September 1982. He lowered his earned·run a' erage 10 a carecr-lov. 2.45. bettenng his 3.02 mark with Pmsburgh tn 1984. Wiii Clark, "ho struck out twice. became the first Giant since WilUe McCovey in 1968 and 1969 to lead the Nauonal League in RBI ... Former Dodgers pitcher Bob Welch allowed six h1ts in eight innings for his carecr-htllh 17th n cto11. as Oakland defeated M1l"aukee and finished at JQ.4.58. the maJor league's best record in 1988 and the highest v1cton total for the f ranch1se since the 1931 Philadelphia Athleucs "on I 07 \.\ elch v.on 16 games "" tth the Dodger'$ 10 1982 The .\'s finished v.1th a Ba} Area attendance record of 2.287.335 -an increase of 608.414 over-1987 ... Cle' eland's Tom Candiotti sent the Red Sox to their s1xih loss. 6-5. m their final seven games by winning a carcer- h1gh \C'enth straight decision ... T oronto handed the Baltimore its 61 i.t road loss of 1he season. an <\mencan League record. .\ crowd of 34.046 pushed seai.on attendance at [ \h1b1tton Stadium 10 1.595.175. sccond- largec;t 1n Toron10 h1c;1on Andres Galarraga h11 his . l91h home run as Mom real beat the Ph1lhes. who finished last fort he first time since 197 3,'fhe Phillies· 65-96 record was their poorest since rm. when. they were 59-97. Galarraga finished wtth league-leading totals of 184 hits. 79 extra-base hits and 329 total bases ... Darryl Strawberry homered twice and reached the 100 RBI mark as the Nauonal Leaaue East champion New York Mets won their IOOth game. 7-5 over St. Louis. Ron OarliDg earned his career-high 17th victory. The Mets set a team rc"·ord v.11h their 56th victory at home. incl.JJding the last 11 1n a row for another club mark. The crowd of 42.099 brought the season attendance to 3.047. 724. a team record . Keith Brown scattered fi ve hits over seven innings for his second major-league victory as Cincinnati beat Atlanta. 1-0. the Braves' league-leading 17th shutout of the season. Atlanta closed the year at 54-106. the most losses in the National League since Montreal went 55-107 m 1976 and the most losses for the 8Taves since 1935. v.hen the) "ere 38-115 ... Dunis RasmHlell scattered n1ne hmas ·an D1cgowonfortheninthtimein IOgames. 5-1 O'er Hous1on. to Finish third in th~ ~ational League \\est. !>an.D1c10 was 83· 78. the fourth.-w1nnmg season 1n the Padres· 20:year history. Houston. 78·76 on Sept. 14. lost 13of1ts final 17 games ... Andre Dawson hit his198th career homer 1n the C'hica,go Cubs' 8-4 wm over P11tsburgh. but 1hc Pirates finislied 85-75. Pittsburghs' best record tnce 1979 when thev won the pennant. Andy Van Slyke and Bobby Bonilla each drove in their I OOth run of the ~a<oon. Ml.IC NoTICE PUBUC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE ~tCTITtOUI ~H witll Ille County Clerk ol Or· filed In Orange County on Kao74 Poolelvilte. Md. 20837 MA• ITATl•NT ange County on September No¥emb« t6. 1987 FILE ITATl•NT ()ff Tlllt bu1lnn1 11 c:on· Tiie lottowtng perlOlll are 26. 1988 NO.F361523 --~()ff oueted by 1 general part· doing bUtlnen u fWSZ21 Suanne Mc:Abte. 821 B UH cw '1CTIT10Ua nerthlp POWER SKATE SOURCE Publilhed Or111ge CouJ W BlilbOI Blvd . Balboa. IU ... 88 MAim Tile reglttrent com· A835 Whltller Aw Unit F2. Dilly Piiot October 3, 10, 17. C•lt. 92961 Tiie 1011~ peceon1 1NnC*1 to trentael bull- / Cotll Mesa C1lif 92627 2• t988 P1trrcla Pe<aon1. 821 B w h•ve ll>IOd Ille UM of MM under Ille fic:llllOUI WHlffm ... S1m11n M-734 Belboa Bfvcl . Belboe, Calif the FlclillOUI ButtnHI ~ name or nem. 3233 Hawkwood Rold •-JC _,.TICE 921&1 N1me CALIFORNIA OOM· titted 1bOYe on September Diamond Bit, Ctllll 91765 I"~ nu Tllll t>utinnt wu con-MEF!CE CENTER AT ON-1. 1M8 Naji• S•mHn, 3233 .~ .. --ducted by 00'1)ar1'*9 TARlO, 17550 ~ ,.... l(.u.tM Mdntunt H1wtcwood Road, OtlmOn<I .,,.,_, ..... Thia tte1emen1 waa filed lflVl, lrvlne. Celt!. 92714 TNt 11e~t wea flted Bar. Caltf 91765 AaAMJ!D!'!!!' °' With the County C..k of Or-Tiie Fictllloul ""'""' wlttl IM County Cleffl of Or· Thll bullnetl la con-UM°'~ .. ···~ lflOe Counly on Septemoer Nlml referred to abolle.,.. 111ge County on September ducted 1>y 11u1oenc1 and wife .,... MAim 27, 1tu hied 1n Oranoe County on 21 1tee Tiie reglatrant com· The:=~ person a PublilMcl Or111ge Cout February 22 1Ne ~ILE ' ,..._ menced to tranMCt buli-haW. the UM of Delly Pilot Oc10C>er 3, to, 17. NO F373078 • Put>lilMd Or111ge Coeet ,,... under the flctltloua tne Flc11tlous Bualneu 2•. 1tu The Lulk ComoMY e Deity Piiot Octobet 3 10 17 t>uM-a name or namea Name:DREAM CAUISES . M-725 C11tlorn11 j:orporeflon. 24, 1... • • ' 1111ed ab<MI on September 15M MC)fl(OV\a. N9wport 11550 Olllelle Avenue, M-121 I 1Ne Beech, Celt. t2M3 Irvine Catll 92714 · ,..,. s.mun The Rct1t1ou1 Butines• rtBJC NOTIC[ s11aw & Talbot A•· P\8.IC NOTJC( Ttr{a ttetement •• flied Heme ,.._.,_, to lbOYe wu IOQl1t-. 11 1 c.Mafnle e«· with IM County Clertl of Of· flled In Oranoe County on 1(41171 ~•lion 13o3 AllOCado Av• PICTmOUe ........ erige County on Saptemt>et Oc1obef 13, 1916 FILE aTATl•NT CW 9"Ue, &itte 220. CeMomla. MAim 8TA,._NT 27 1M8 NO.F322817 AaANDOt•INT Of' Newport 9Mctl c.11f 92te0 TM lolOw'lrlg per1on11re ' ,... . Donna L. Plllllp1 & UM <W '1CTJTIOUI Tt'ltl ~ .. con-dOlnQ bu1iMM ... Pubhtled Orenge Coat ThomM 0. Ptlitlp1. 2888 9UA9M NAMI ducted by agenerel per1Mr· YOUR VIDEO PAO· Delly Piiot Oc1obef 3, 10, 17, Bayshore Of. C· 1•, ~ The foll:'.::f peraon1 1t11p OUCTIONS. 2250 VMgUll'd 24, t988 BMctl, C.itf. 92913 new •bend the UM of Thie at~ .. llled Wst •0137, Cotta Mele, M·723 Thlt buM'lell w• con· th• FiCtltloua Bu11ne11 wl1t'I the County Clerta of Of• c.iif. 92128 __ MUC ___ NO_T_ICE ___ dUC1n: :r.~ .:cs= ~w,:L~ER u P~Rl<~N~ ;e~~ty on hptembef n~~~: _......;. __ ;;.;.;;.~.-.;;.----.ith U... County~ of Or· ANTSIAESTOAATIQN EN. • PublilMd Ofenge ,eo-CoeU1 MIU. Cellf. 12129 Ka.t anoe County on Septemt>et OINEERS, 575 Anton 8llld , o.ilY Piiot Octobet , 11 11 Cieri! John Sewt1on, ,tC~.,_ .. 27, 1M8 3fdFloof,CoeteMIM,Callf 25 1... ' ' '2290V~Wst•0137, llAm ITAftMINT P\lblllMd Of_,. Coeet 92Ut ' · Jtl.738 COete .._. Cellt t2'2t The ~ per.ant ete Delly Piiot October 3. 10, 17, The Fletlttoue 8uelneM · -Thie buelneea le con.- dolnG ~ ee: 2•. 1• "' N8fM ref9rred to ebOYe WM PWlJC llOTa CluCted DJ. l'luMMd end.-T~. 17550Gl"9tt.Av. M-729 llled In Oreno-County on The r .. lltrent COlft• .,.,._ frvtfte, c.itf 12714 ~rll 11, 1 tU FIL I PICnnaul ~ menoeC1 to treneect ..... The Lu/Ao~·~?~ . Ml.JC l)ncl c:i•::... •. Inc., 2121 ,.:::=: ,.._...,. :.. "'*',.,:-or~ enue . 92714 ITA'P T Of HudeOn Aw. MICHaen. M'I ......... •· ......, 8lloll9 on lep•s._ 11 '°'1· .a·•ar If Of K*Mloo, ._..,.. 4D1 I0&.8TICE AllOCeATD. t ,_ ... ducted by· 1 corpor•IC)n U. Oii fllChJIOUI n. ...._ ... ~ llO ......,., Ct Or •420. " ,,.,..,.,. YOUl'I ••• ._,. • .,raot-" The reelltr•l'lt com· • llDF --M'9dll¥1C011*9'loll ......,._.,c.lf NllO TNI ....._.. w lleCI mencec1 10 Ir~ IMI-T,_ .. =... P9n0"1 TNI ... --.. tied IC S . 1lw Gardon McM-..... CcMlly 0.. d Or· ,.... ~ ... ktttlou9 ....................... -.... C....,a.ti0f0r·twft. .. llNr.S ·~ .... ~ .. ---~ nema or ,,... lfte ''°''..... lu..,.._ 1"111 co..e, M ..,,, 1• r ~ 9dt. Celf ~1 zo. ,_ ...... ebo\111 on ~ 1, ,._:TOftTUGA ~T M. ,_ V...... ..... 1208 _ . . ,_ ,. ~· ~ .... ~ 0..,.. c.... ........ .....,., ...,_, "'"',.. °' .... c.. NdlerO T Dllll. tee.-.... 19, ,Qllif .... Dllr,_~4. H, 11, c.lf,. .. 1 ~ .... I $11 , .. II, ree.ry n. .._ H. ,_ 1eM Deweon OOtdOn, ~I, 10. 17, ,_ ,,. .......,.. .. Mid ...... ....,_to...,.... , M-1JI tHOO 811 .. rtend Alf • . ..-1 .. TNUMOAY TIMI ITATllTtCI ~·-" tr'l oown• >O 2' I.Mt• •• WllilmtNllr, 3 IS, lrflllll al SM Clltfttnlf, 3.15: N9wewt .._,..,et Cerr,... •"""•· verctt »· 117 n -as T °"'llell*ll. Pen..,_ Jn HI ltetUfn Yardt M 0 Com1>·AtHnl tt·..,·1 2S·ll·O Sac:llCHI· Yardt lost f. lO 3·J2 Punll l-1' l ·l' Fumtllft·Lotl ?·O 4·3 Ptfl•lhes-Yardt 12· 123 4·!5 Time of Poneulon 3Hll 25 S1 INOtVIOUAl STATISTICS RVSHING-Pi-nla, Ftl'rtll 1'·91, M1ICl'lri ll·IO, Jorden 3·11, Loma• 2-Cmlnu• 11 Remt, 8111 11·11, McGft Z·l , G Grtell H , Evtrell 1· (m•llU$ 1, PA$SING-Pl'IOtn1•, Lomlll 1t·•l-1-342. Retl"ll1 Ellertll U ·lJ·O·:JOO, .IU:CEIVING-Pnotnlx, Novectk 9·92, R.GrHn S·tO, J.T.!omlll'I 4•71, Mltcllell l ·ll, Ftrrtll 2·21, Jorde n 2·f, Aw1t1 1·27, Jontt 1-11, WOOllllV l ·l Ramt, Ell1td 6-96, Cox 4·74, HOiohan 4·SS, Bell 4•74) YOUllll 2-27, O.JollnsOll 2·15. G Grte11 7·10, Mc:OH Hm1nvs 1). MISSED FIELD GOALS-Rim•. Lansford 25. WAHR ~LO Ctleee r1tlDAY UCI a t C1illornl1, 1 11.m SATUltDAY UCI 11 StenlOf'd, 11 1 m CemmunltV , ..... .._..,, 4S, AllderS 21 TODAY ClftclMI• 3 21 14 7-U UC S.nle B1t1>1re N 11 OCC, llOOft, UC 1t11c1ars o 1 o 14-n Slttte Btrl>tfl at GOIOlll w111, 3 o.rn C•OH COUNTllY c..... "*' .......... "lrstOV.rtef' TUISDAY I THUllSOAY Chrisl Co11191 trvlnt al Tiie Matr.t'I COi· Cin-FG lrHCll :it, 14•5' Cv11t1u •• Dl"lllOt Coal!, l.lS Stc911410Vel"9r WIDNISDAY lellt, 3.JO. SATIMDAY Cl~olmall 14 OIU from Esl•\Ol'I (Breecl'I Golden WHI •• Orenet Coal!. 3 IS l"C:kl. 1 13 " ,_IDAY C1n-Woods l run IBrHCfl kiell), 1:11 -..__~~ Cout 11 Sin Diello Me'8, 3 IS, LA-T.Brown 6S ous ~rom ScnrOIOlr (Bel'lr Gotdeo Wttl •I Ml San Anlonlo, 3 30. 1'.lCkl, 9.2S Hltti scMel UCI 11 Cal Siii• NorlllrldM tnvttallolllll, S<Mlltrn California Collfft " tlole tnvnetlollel (f 1.m ), Fresno Pecllk 11 Crvli l ColteM lrvlne II ~.m Con-McGH ' OIU lrorn Eslu on (Breech TU•SOAY 1'.lck). .. ,,, Lone BHCll Polv "' Edholl l•I Gotdtf'I Hitt\ """' beVs Md *" THUllSDAY Clrt-Jennlnet ~!,°i::c11 klclll, 2.12 West), 6 om. LovOla "' Miter Del 111 Cln-S Wilton 1 run (Brteel'I kick), 12:07 Slddlel>eck Hllltll. 4.30, Et Oofedo al Newoort ,.~-""··-Hert>or, l o.m. ..,.,,,,.......,,...., WEDMalAY C111-Hllterv IS oen lrorn Esleson (8reecll Corona de1 Mir el Unlversilv, 3 IS. Tutlln k.Ckl 1.37 al E stelnca, 3 IS, NtwPOrl Hert>or II Seddlt· E11encl1 1J IJnlvtnlly, l , SaddleOeck et NtWllO(I HerbOf. J; C0tone dtl ,,,.., at 1'utlln, l, Huntlnoton B .. C11 vs, Founleln V•v 11 H9 Central Park, 3. Mil~ Otl vs. 911MO Mont· tomefY 11 TllOrnlon Perk, s.30, C4'1a MIN t i Trtboco HIM•, l:lS, Marine al OCHll View, 3. SATURDAY LA-Scllr~ S run (Behr kick), 1116 beck. 3:1S, Oc11n view vs. Fountetn Veller (II LA-Ftr111nc111 2• oeu from SCl'lroedlr Golden Wnt), 7 om .• Hunline1on encl'I "' (Behr klCkl. 14 59 Edison (I I GOiden Wt1ll. I om), WHlmlntltr A-42.S9• vs. M1rl111 (et GOiden Wttll. 6 o.m ; Wood· Cin LA brl~ ., Coll• MtM, l lS. Leoun• BtlCh IC F lnl downs 39•1!~ 19_ 2096 L1Quna Hlllt, 3. IS Huntln9ton Bt1cll·Fount•ln VelllV Ctnlrll Perk 1nv1te11on11 IFounta1n Vetter, Hunllnoton Btecl'I, Maltr o.i, Coile Mtia, OcMn View, Newoort Hert>or. Merine, Huntlneton aue111, I e.m. Ru1n.es • verds ..... P1u1n11 332 309 Return Vtrds 61 ea Como·AIHnl 21·21·0 17·44·• Sicked· Yards Loll O·O 2·'5 Punt• 4·30 3·40 Fumt>lts·Lost 1·1 l·I Ptnelllts·Yerds 6·SO 4·3S Time of Ponenlon 3S:04 24.S6 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Clncl11na ll, Woods 12·41. S Wilson 16·47, Jennings 7·2t. Brooks 3·21. Scl'IO,,.,I 1·7, E•l•son 1·6. Los AllQlles, Allen II·~. S Smill'I •·29, Sc.hrolder •· 14. PASSING-Cincinnati, E•l1son 21·2t·0-332. LO\ Ang ... s, Sc:nroedtr 17·44·4·32_4. SOCCIE• C.... men NON·GONrHaNca ' UCI S, C.. S .. tt ,......, 2 UCf •corino. Perlst 7, 8eclofl• 1. P-1, Mellvtr 1, Goellt '81191 EMl1 7 VOLLEYBALL c ..... wemen TODAY Haw11i 11 UCI, 7:30"',,-m:-TUESDAY RECEIVING-clnclnnall, E Brown 4·1S, McGH •·63, 8rook1 4•49, Jtnnlnos l·S7, s Wllson 2·33, Colllnswortll 2· 1'. HIU•rv H s. HOimen 1· I•. L.o• AnQlll•, Allen S·32, Fernendlt 4·104, G1u11 4·102, T.Brown 2·67, CSF scorlno· Pearson 1, Gtor9t 1 Go111e SIVU. NltltkOvtfl 4, Cl'lr•• ColltQI Irvine 11 Westmont, 7.lC, Soull'lern C1lllornl1 Colle9t II A1u11 Peclllc, 1.30 ll'ltlDAV Parker 1-12, S.stnlll\ H . MISSED' FIELD GOAL.S-Hone. Helfllrnt 1 ·I c ..... wemen NOM·COMl"UaMCll UCI 2. °""""" 0 Chapman IJOlllt •eva. COOllll I 5 Sen Jos.e Stete 11 UCI, 7.30, Christ Colltl>e lrv1nt 11 St Merv's, 7:30, SO\lll'ltrn Celllornle Co11191 e t Fresno Tournamenl SATUltDAV • UCI ICOl'il\O Rogers I. Gooo•lt Univtrsllv of Pec1llc er UCI, 7:30, Southern C1hforn11 Colltoe at Fresno T01.l(nerntnl """ Tell 10 Helltlmt. UCI, 2·0. Cemmunitv C ..... Wemtft WEDNESDAY c..... "*' TUESDAY Or•"91 Coe•• 11 Fulterton. 7, CvlM'IU 11 GOiden w .. 1. 7 FRIDAY TENNIS Hitt\ scMol .irts TUISDA Y Cel Beotht at Cllrill Colllile Irvine, J, Southern Calllofn11C~11 Frt1no·Pacltoc, l l"•tDAY VCI II Sen Joli Stitt, 7 30 SATURDAY Of'enoe Coesi 11 San Oleoo Mell, 7, Golden West a1 Colleile of SIQuo~ Tournament SATURDAY GOiden West II Collelle ol 61Quol11 Tour· Southern CellfOl'nle Colll9t 11 C11 BePllst, 3 SUNDAY nemen1 • Hunlln111on Beecl'I 11 Edl•on, 3, Marine al Westmlntter, l; OcHn View at Fountain V111ev. 3, Unlvtrtltv at Corona det Mar, 3, E11ancle al Saddlloeck, 3. TUSlln at Newoori Harbot. l, Dane Hills at Irvine, 3 IS, Ro•arv at Meler Oto, l IS. WEDNESDAY Laguna Hiii• el Coste Mue, 3. Woodt>rld9e al Oran9e, 3; Le11une Beech al Trat>uco Hiiis. ), Roll1n9 Hiiis II Corona dtl Mer, 2.30, Newoorl Haror 11 Beverlv Holl,. l · THURSDAY Fresno Slit• 11 UCI, 7 om Communltv col999 men Tu•so•'f Cuvama et Gqldln Wesl, l FRIDAY Golden West at EH i Los Anotlts Colleoe 3 o.rn Cole9e women WEDNESDAY °"" ... ttsltlM Merine 11 HuntonQfon Beach. l , Ocean View at Westmln•ttr. l . Fountain V•llt v er Edlton, l , Corone cMI /f11! al Newoort Hert>or. 3, Tu111n at Esi111de, l , M1u ion Vleio at Irvine, 3 IS. Meltr O•I .. SI Joieons l IS. FltlDAY Cal Slelf Sen Bernardino 11 UCI, • om SUNDAY UCI et United !oletH lnrernellonel Un1vertllv 11 e.m Communitv cole9e women TUESDAY Ol"a nge Coesi II Et Cimino l Golden Wtsl 11 Oxnard, 3 DA.VEY'S lOCKl!lt CNtwMrt ... di) -4 DOllS, 259 enQltrl 600 bonito. I vtllowle•I. 12 rocl'. flsl'I, 93 Cllico !)all. 112 sand blu. '75 maclteret, 26 sculoin, 6 wl'lllt llsll, 37 toenitl'I lac.II. 10 \llHPsl\ee~ I wl'llla '" oeu. a.S blue oercll, S mallo shirk, 29 Dlut lllerk Cos11 Mese er Orange. l, Woooor1<19e at LeQUn.11 lffcll, l SATURDAY Merer Oe1 al ~ri. Ktooel Tournament FRIDAY BekentoelO •• Of'en111 Coe\! l . Patomer el Goro.n We\I l NEW'°"T lANDtNG -4 boll\. 91 enele" 125 HM DaU, 123 whlll fish, 200 bonlla. 127 calico bus. 7SO maellertl, so scutoln, 1 sl'lffO\l'lted. 73 soeni\11 leek• * ~ 4, YanllH5 J NaWVotlK .. ,_. .. lltl.tfcMU ow..-od Ml"91l'lb JCllfk" Si<ll>MI rl l"NIP\Oll AtutYOJll " ...... , MMorrl1 H TOl ... n 11> I , 1 0 I 0,, I 0 0 I l 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 $000 $Oto I 0 0 0 sooo I 1 J 0 DllTltOIT l re>'I•• Jo """""• c1 U\11ar u L-rt l(nlOl>I lb ............ --· Sil>«I04111H DE.,.,. clll MMl"C l'ftllHC w!W~10 Jt JI J T-• k-.. ....... .., ..... 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IW ........ .. ...... s 0 J 0 JOOO ) I I 0 J 0 I 0 '0 I I I 0 I 0 4 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 '9 0 0 0 0 0 t 1 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 >e 11 I Oilc.9.. .. •1 ltl-l KtMllCll\I -!Ill •-I c;.,..,. w-.ne ttll -L-111 E-S..lt91 OP-ll•nM> C•tv J \.09- Cl>CltO 6 K•MU Cll• 10 1•-1.nM. S.tat M•-P••-1201 ll-TlluNNIJ> CSI SF-Me!Vl<wt ~ H ••• M '° °"'-H ...... W.)·1 S I 1 J S McCtfllW S.I 1 0 0 I 1 K6Me>Cll'r Sell<-1. l•·I• 7 t • • J s GteltOll 7 1 I I 1 0 S......,.._ D '<'*' IO I 0.1191 In l'1e Ifft U,,..;ttt-Home, CM>n• F•nt, .... *-. lerM1t; Tl)otd KOK. T-111 A-ltUI ~ 6, Aed S.x S .onoN cuveu.ND SOwtnH lerrell 211 p.,,,.,, '" OWE.,,.•ri llomlnert lll<t Oft l n1no< le lur'J<I o.om.ric C91onet Qulnranlll' "°""'olb tl\11'~'" T ...... .. ,..... .., .... f.000 Frencndll 10 00 J I 1 1 .Jf!Uen• 1 I 1 0 1 000 ........... , 4 110 1000 DC!erllrl )1 11 JOOO -....1b 4 0 It I 7 1 f MllH 1 1 t f • I I 1 ltWlllM11! 1 I I 0 10 10 .i.too .. io J02J 1 0 0 O EW1!1Mlll II 0 0 ? 0 I 0 •w .. 1~ 111 4 0 I I 0 0 00"1.v-l• i 0 ... l 0 0 I Ca<I.,. Oii I 0 0 0 JllO J8tllu 0000 >O<O."<I l 0 I I l4 S I S Tt!M M • II t S--.lrt ....... ---•• lt l-l c:--lit .. _. 0-WWli11t1 ll•t -JecoM UI E-OCltr~ LOI-lotion J. C.,,_ s 19-AlenlOft, II•.., tr.-. Jae.....,, lurao ltWe~ ,.._ ..... ldt-'tlee lUI SF-c>clel'll lt-o • • M ••• N IO , 2 ' • l I I 0 t I ) 0 J I t I l • ' • 0 • t t I • 0 Astrosnre Hal Lanier HOUSTON (AP) -Hal Lanier was fi~ &.!. man· a.ger of the Houston· Astros Sunday in the ninth innina of the Astros pme apinst the San Oiqo Padres, the club announced. Lanicr's entire coachsna staff were also d1s!'"isStd. Lanier. 46. third base coach Denis Menke! bull· pen coach Mark Hi I and h11t1n1 instructor Gene Chncs w11l not rc\um next sason. Lanier """ named _.. qcr Nov. S, 191== "'' the ... • belt f\lftltilll lltKt ht learned a I IJdrd ~ coach aadrr Wh ttey Httze11 •D St. lAMUJ. OfanQe Cout DAILY PILOT/MoincUly, OCtobef 3,•1• I CALL 642-5678 .. Check out Today's Class1f1ed Section for Details n55~i!c;= t.lta... llMllew,.n lt1c• 1111 1 111~11 haia11l1 C..ta lllM MHjC..u •eu Hl41Dw P-'at • 1111 lt!f!d.... ... LUXURY 28r 28a condo. BAYRJOGE CONDO 1117 -Dbl gar, tr pie, pool Gated comm pool & spa E'SIDE small 1 Br Couage, LI , .... NW 1"5/Mo '111 & IHI Pvt patio beaulllul Vl9W NEWPORT Island, 18A mleelillJlll frplc.enelpatlO NoPelll Frplc, gatage. lndry lie • 9J-lfll TMI DALY PLOT 01.A...,llO°'flCE HOUl\S r...-hNlc. M·f •1Hi ..... 1-..... +$300. 642-5290 28R 2BA'. 2 cat PV1. wtth enceon ... ow.-J,~~'!'°d $5«1()/mo---S6IO MC Mp $800 ~ dep 11&1·3953 •WlTHIOAT SLIPS• Fum hie. frpl, ~~ ut. gar age. $1300/mo. Mike ~1f~ft~-187 E 2111 645-72~ .... .. llYFlllT patto gar 97S.3039 721-oec>T _.,. S k~llll!,lllTI 1 e LARGE 3BA 2BA upper .... ,.. ... --._..-._I I 00 AM·5 30 PM Slh•IClllY a 00 AM 11 30 AM ~eounr .. M F 11>0 AM·5 00 PM ,,_ D• " ..._, \t' t'fl tOt ... if~" •""9 IK(.,,titt ........ .._., t<U .. -.lf't ''"-"' • •u..,, ...... ·~ .. ""-" . . . -car gar. g ••y••-11v1 ..... trHt 11111& P•.,r .. .'!'9 .... ~. ~ .. •rgy 1garo•· NearVa'--OCClac. 128R 2BA. 9arege • one 2BR Apt w/BAY VIEW Lg delwc• 48R 28A upatr1 tam rm, trplc. No '*'· --G .....,, ....... _.,;full 04<1-C -· S875 spece. riear new. no pats Frptc. mlc:fo. dlw, gwage ctuptu. Oec;k, get, each Gerdener lnct 11200/mo 18R l den, 2Ba 2·sty exec W/d hkups, ~··patio. land1caped ground•. mo No pal• 545-7983 1111/ .. Ml 1111 I l lowt; PV1 bCh $1900 DCA«M.Ma Ot&O.. ... l ,..~ 11 >t 4¥ ""'""' ,.,~ , ... ,,. ..... • .._. .. \ .... .. • .,.. <fllt<e, 'oV' .• '·h • ...,., .,,.,., ~ ..... ~..., wn TfWO•, ~ .... ,_.,~ ..... ..,.,...,.,,., .... ., .. ,,,.,.,. .... ceiltnge. MW kltc:Mn. A~ + ulltit .... 636-2725 IOWnhOme. FP, wel bar, Sl l 85Mo. rly 850-2493 Pool & apa, patio.Jctect<1. ' •~LSO• nual IM. S1800/mo. Refs w/d, 2-ear ger. gated YALY Cherming BAYFRT gwage Of <*Port· SENIORS COndo Seourlly 1Bdrma 11ertiflg et S102S req'd. (111)346-9538, Of' UI Cue.t• Racquet Club. comm. pool & spa on the 2BA 28A, $1800/mo utll S<>fsryv. noE .. r"L ... LOC"'TI~ .... llf'M CloN 10 lhoP-•Boet Slipl Elttra• ....... ~ ... 'WH 1o» ,.,_ '" ~ ,. "'' ,, ~lll'M 1'i'lrif"*.., ""~" ,...~ .. ,.~ ..... ~ .... , .. ., ... -~ t<•w ,, ec .. .,..,.. ""' eN-., • ., ,,.,... , .. .,..., ....... ..., .... ,.., (714)975--HOI HIOO lff twntfM, end unit bay. Walk to Balbot 111. pd, Pvt bCh ~ID, pr11g, '* >E ""' " ~ ' r.Wo & 1ran1pona11on I ·Sorry. no pat• .l.llnll 38A 2'nBA. 21cw garage, S2400fmo. * 240-1752 n/emkr pref'd. 97S.3ol! 1 Bedroom 1670 at l view SllOO/Mo UU. l ..... 11 ---••••• IP• IYC Incl. 1300/mo ~ u-:-2Bdrm 1' \Ba $775 [)963..S64 7 or E5311-7 423 =.,,.-...----...,,--- 28R 2BA HOUSE 1et. IU1 l $150 MC dee> ••• lllf•** llU IMI 12250 Vanguard S40-M2tl OCEAN VlEW Cflarmlng .... _.. ..,. ..... » .... .,, ceWttgs. brictl trplc. Dys call 847-I0'1 or Lovely 2Br, den, 2'hBa. on 2eR tBX over garage -------Letau ltec~ · I 3Br. paneled walls. ear· .............. _ ... ...,_ family . rm . patio. E~knd•M-4-6988 a<MfcourM.2cargarage. Clean quiet Avalleble Bec.helOr $580 M 18X oceanSkie of age, steps 10 beachl --........ ..._ -~'" ,,..,.... ,.,.. ... ·-11275/Mo Call NATALIE RUS.TIC 2 .. __.room Houte F4Cf'i/ $1895 759-0079 N-1• ••75/mo -~ 11 Bedroom MIS PCH. view.·....,.. laundry S 1 3 0 0 • Yr / l •a I e •• ' "' .... -• .. ' -S41-65419 or 751t-e&OO , -F ...,...& na-· . • "~ .,.. .---2Bdrm 1' •Ba S8001 S750 N .,....,.., k •7"' "'""',,. 7Cl'L2tl74 ;::-__:. !!';,:-:-, ~· • .,. .... Merrill lyftc:h ~ty ~oe ront .-Yd 3BR with Spectaculer call 840-5633 t • 181 E lll1h St 642..oese .. opes non-am r v ~-. '<""" ., _______ _;.__,No Pet1 -Ullls Pd ocean. city vlewl. Gated 497-6362 STEPS TO BEACH LIGHT l airy Liltle Ill $750 Mo•dep 631-4147 comrnurnty with tennis & I Olllft.fTI UllllL 1v11• 11u 18R duPleA ff Pie gar no 2Br/$1000, 3Br/S 1200 UPC* duplex. 38R 2Y.BA SENIORS condo ~rity pool 1yr lte S3200/Mo ,2Br 1'1\Ba, 2 story ap1 U+:--t:fi:-A-.11 I ~ pat1 n/smkr t person Refr1g./gar incl d Agt untumwlnler. $1500/mo. IMtures CloM. IO shop-CALL Biii Hill 644-9060 Neweppllanoes CO'<IWedl ---=---=---1 tlJGE!! preld ,.,, reqd '850 722~n6/0 760-1755/E Agent. 673-4082 pl i transportation Coldwell Banker rrkln~ for 2 cars I mo 494~245 ah 6pm S1ep9 to beach 2Br/ 1Ba .... illlliliiliiiiiiiWl ll•IUI... P:& l Yift. SllOO/Mo WEST Newpor1 2Br $850 1050/ 7~3~ Mlci<ey llUMm LAGUNA tg Saa Vu Studio F/P $975 3Br/2Ba $1 t2S . ·j ........ •• ·---------BAYFRONT Condo 2Br •n.. ..... beautiful garden MfWlg .. Near beaUlllUI beech 642 9336. •-l-a-la Ila. 09e3-se.47 or E5311-7423 BALeOA •Br, fp S 1500 Large ettr.ctlve Apls tn 'I ~· n llLllE Oeluite turn Decks-trees Yearly New decc>f. ~ l l• .... R111.e• ... &-EX..o.N"'ffi_o .. Nf_..., Watktobeach!New luxury S1650 2BA 11,BA, close 10 Pools.garage1 Nopets L.lm 1·1·1•AP1'1 S650 --.---...--·-__,,~- 38' 2'ABa. lalmlshed. Ilk• ::s~~51~~~~·:.',; PENINSULA Steps to t>eech, S9501mo 900 1 1 Bedroom~ I = ABOlJT ulll•nc 499 -'t2 4 Stat HSt ••trt new, fentHtlc vlewl +cMpoltt geo.3384 beaeh Appro• 2000s! Sea t..ne. 644-2611 111 &YllAll ~It IC 91 2'M Monthly or HHon. · I 2Br 2BL $1850 0 be 2BR 2B COSTA MES~ I ........ 3BR2BX Furnlihed 2 car AAXeXRtAUR Omage i er /I, ,' ---. S2750/mo. 4409 Sea-•• I I 4 BALBOA Coves 2Br. den. .!'....k ac, "1c I A. lg M2-lllO I ...... patkl""' s1--10 ............ Condo Pool. Jacu••1, shore. OPEN SAT/SUN trplc. ape, dock. S2400 ........ • rp • am rm. pvt •.eon•• ... .,... ..,....,. ..... 12~ 54.._2484 wtldyt 2Br. den luge yard, OCEANFRONT 3Br trplc gete. dbl ger $2075/mo •H•U&I a . ,....15 .... Wlnter-9 mo111hs a 1tenn1s, gym. tee geted · amenities. Avail 1011 patio Lovely 52400 • incl viii. 213-928-184' -~ II.. •NewGEdtw,Slove.& I $1000/mo 675-2232Bkr j Nopets.S625 854-6221 ce,... ••• ••• 2122 $1275/mo. 840-6181 BAYF1*>NT Oondo 2Br. 714·675·7764 ~R~91r1;,~~~y M~owave 2 ILICIS Tl IUOI isc. • .... 28r. iea. front hou ... 51<4 IUllml den, dock tor 80' boet. SllTI If llllWIY 2BR 1'1t8A: S725 •~WlllleCirpet& 2BR 2BA. 1 gara6espace 8= Z1* Me.rigold. o-rage, trplc. lBd. new paint, ate. ten-Yearly $.4750 Charming 1BR. encl ger 979~1911 •~o 3 F Yrly l900 Agt7S1·5235 1,-....,....,• ... --..-""""'"'-"" C~~0 .10 r~r· ~~'. nl1. pool. $125 MM181 l:!~td!~~ s~o~:J 58'· $825/mo. Agl 759·8389 OUAJ1 m I ·; (405.55,731= South *211111100* Fg~.Xftn~~'f\n= ~1000/mo. '76-2055 Of' UIOll SU Wtl Wlhrfre.t ... I IH. "ti tu $150 Ulundry lac1ht , .f:'t :'c:'a Dectl ArM Frig, d1shwalher, stove prtv Included Call 645-1166 anytime SPECTACULAR vl'EW IUl Tiii H 1· HOO ldrN1 Eastside loc;i LCti 2250 Canyon 495-902 ~nd~dually Controllecl Ind No pall 5'5-<4855 5411-7513 Aller 6pm 28R 1BA. lrpfc. g•raoe. p ·~~OLF 2~ou~s~ HARBOR VIEW. Spacious $595 Gar. cable •VI. CUSI Tl All try Alarm Systems •CLIFF HAVEN 2BR 2BA. t.IN FURNISHED• > _.. w/d, stove. fridge. 11175 entheralMC..u...!a. f""'-' 2 5Br 3Ba lam rm fOf'm.•1 Clean l cozy 18A $815 2BR 1BA. lndry room. • TV Available new deCOf vauhed ceiJ.. Costa Mesa home. 714 Orchid. Oi*I Sat l ca ... 1; 500 din 2 F/P neut • tOnft Gm bit w/BBO. lndry rm close to shops & buses-New Laundry Fa.otlltlft ings garage, no peta. 1 Kitchen prMleQel. Sun 12-5 Of' can 549~2525 c~2.i:~:~ 854-2'7o · plantation • shuuers. lg Sorry. No pets 831-M27 We'll accept Sect 8 •Covef.ed Penttng s 1050/mo Ag1 642413• •S350Mo 645-2435• l~!!!!!!!!~~~~~!!!!!!!!!Jl12BR 1BA House. blt-ln•.1wESTPAAKNEWHOME ! end P•llo. 3 car gar .. ,1BRupstain.,cableTVhk-HouSlng5f3J!~molE ·~~~Balconyto •EASTBLUFF Twnhse SMALL room. pV1 home .•w·,·· lndry & l'lAr, ••251mo. No I Near IChools/ft• ... /pooV up. refs .... d No ...... 22 • E .. ~.. Apt 3BR 2BA 2 car nar Kit....._ lnd·ry ~~ Y'""'d C ti I• llU petl. Avt 1'11. 708'11 38r 2~Ba. cul~AC 2 Nwpl CentVi'beach $575/rn0:J52 VIC~ TSL MGMT 642-1603 :~an,.:;::n._,pere Nope11 $1025/moyr'fM ea;l;'c:ie CO$la,. M;_, a.Jllt1teF1111lt trnl f II NarciuusAve 675-2854 car~age.$1750/MO. EaayaccesatwysS2800 1 645-8161 EASTSIOE 2BR l BA ry ets 644-1010 8-5Moo-Frt nearbu9eSPret.1'9tlr• !~~r:::l!1~4Br;~2'~~JBa. lam rm. used 2BR 2BA-NICE; Fir~. •C I Haven 261-9879• Ownr/ag1 "4.97~ 1BA upslalr$ Pa110. new w/garage, oownstairs 2881 ~~~'*of ACROSS ~QM BEACH Of' stUdent. 631-4094 .brick, l tile thruout. ALSO 38R 2BA ocean-WOODBRIDGE CONDO. lJll llUll/llCI crpll & drpa Stove. frig 1mall yard No pelS BnS1ot, eoSta Mesa 2BA 1BA • storage, lower 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lttte ...-model. front $2000/mo. Walk to 2BR 2BA. lrplc, patio. dbl 6BR FURN. Wlnle< rental. $550/mo. Adu Ila l(o S7~5/mo, 722-6294 l t•/•-12u 0 up tu C a q> or I SO COAST METRO • A_,.Wnc $527,000 759-3973 bMetl!Agt 673-5354 attached garage $.42.,....,mo l Valen pets.979-'410ByappL ira•----• ,. ---S9001mo ••~791 Room & bath In 2 st-'-' IUM...,NCW.Nr'IWOM 6 $1250/mo 759-11389 Agl "" · ynne • _.,_ ,_ ES e "'7 MSW •IB·PIM • 28R Duplex. new remodel. . I llne Props 673-9333 1 BR Up$trs. pool. cable TV Gar. dlw. pauo No pall M A v ROE 2BR 1 BA. ICllSS n• .... home l.ndry & lltehn COLDWC!U BANl(eR~ LOWEST PRICE 2 lly 38' Frplc, yd. lndry,·blk to J8U IC f UDO ISLE & gas pd S575 No pall $150 •MC 6'5-<4319 ~ ~:; ~ko. sac 3BR 2BA loWer Unit Gw-~~M~/COl- fam, rm. 2'h8a, cmr lot ocean,304 Iris, $1275. HIM /J ..If 48R 2'1tBA. FRIDA. large Relsreq'<f 147 F'°"* EASTSIDECM 18"RApt.' 49S:19311 751.9':ls ege W/O hkue> .Yard CXLi..~r:ie,..megmo $429,900. 891-1702 Agl Avail rtow~ * ~7271 I W Ir.,.. pall0.45'1ol.Sl1oSl.LM -Call NOW 645-8181 ·-With lrplc refrlg . & all ' NeX110 park $1175/mo ~~~~~~~=~ CMti leu 1024 •OCEAN VIEW LSE-CdM 3Bdrm. 2Ba S2750 673-7767 Avt now *•Ill& Pllll* * ut11. Included. s625 mo P1:!ME 2~aJ: t,~"'": 4409 RIVER 1. Expect t}~ ~: $3500/mo. 4BR 2'1\9A S 1800 par mon111 NWPT Tenec:e 3Br 2'1\Ba. IA smell. quiet complex to mo. 650-5894 Rv9:'tor-ege s958 ~o TSL MGMT 6'2· 1603 lettbfl9ilJI ftll -• -··· ··-PllOl IElllDt House. 3-car ~g•, Agent Selma 497-174' gar. carport. patio. refrtg. 1BR & 2BR 2BA "Ilk• H•---H 548-9797 CHARMING 28r 2blk• to Ill Lm 11111. ....,. ...., -...... Mesa Verde 4Br, 2Ba. remod. Bkr 6'0· H /J d! stove. wl d. pool & spa. new" w/p1110 & balcony. u..•----. bch Fridge. w/d, pauo. Wkly ,.,tale now twal ... l.. frplc. $214,900. 3253 •TOWNHOUSE 2Bd I .... • ar S1250fmo 818-359~ fireplace. pool, spa, laun-2Br 1Ba. yard $89,5/mo SHARP& CLEAN 1 & 2BA. e>rkf'\Q $955/Mo N-smkg $147'00 -l up 2214 • BAEATHTAKi~·fG view• Iowa~~~ By 2"'B~ den, dbl :::: 3Bdrm. 2B• <fry. pvt g•r•ge. NO 122-1177 . ~~:~nr;~~,~· CALL Mldcey '32·1831 Nwpt Btvd, CM 848-7«5 at• the Mltlng tor thl• sundeck. pool. tennis $1800 par month Oceanfront 4Br 3Ba, grllatj PETS. From .. S650l mo to IW 211, WAii Sor No 1 645--5577 Many lb choose from. 1. 2 4BR quaHty b\1111 TUdor laat .IC, lOtl $1800/mo. 673-7362 •·e.t lellla •tl· 1l~ view. turn trpJc w/d~ s95ot mo security 120 E. 20th SI. $775/Mo I ry, pet ' & 3 bedrooms GrMI lo-tat I 1 ti IU home located on one • I .. • • • • OAVIO 549-2447 • c .... 5Att.._ TlrlR ·--·LI n·· oned t I E\Qj lo m1 1er/1ea JASMINE Creek 3BR •NORTH LAGUNA guest 5311-5769 Of' 673-1 . ALL Now .... 1-1 ... ·--·.. • call.on Starll.ng aJ.l -.. llCI'• ~ eques ran. condo, F/P. encl gar, furnished. S2750 · houM. 1Br 1ea. garage. *Wl'llll* •EASTSIDE 2Br l'iBa w/r'tflW cpts ss75imo 117~ •s•t•RX.WldiiiRT--n-.•:a'""",..-11fP, .......... g1led, pool, spa, ctbhae. FABULOUS New eonlem-ocean view S850. Curt VERSAILLES 1Br. tBa LG 2Br 1' rBA Townhouse. •CORNER DUPLEX • [)fps, bltins. l~d patlO NB 28' Slec>S 10 t>ch, parkt pref'd 38r 38a, GI~. GOV'T homes from $1 .00 S112.500. 647·1910 porary. 2BA 3BA condo. 721-5225/W 497-7457/H Penthouse_ Secuuty Gar•. patio. laundry Ju.at r~ 2Bd, 18a, 26~~~o ~ .~:5~~35 ing. Lg. lront peoo. utkl peol. ~pa $600/mo You repair. Also delln-Panoramic v1ews oc:an' I i . 71 pool, gym. etc. $825/mo. room. S850fmo with g~age. new catpet, a na Incl. no pe11, unfurn -oepoeit. M().-3314 quent tax property l BEAU; :CBR 2i•BA.k/ h hatbO+". $3500 Ill 18 ltJt I Sandi. 673-27'9 "2929 ORANGE 1 paint. mln1 bhnds. w/d •TOWNHOUSE• $1175/Mo 723-1292 JBA 2BA condO In CdM forecloauru. FEE r~ld~ ,;a~I ~:calit;n:l W ... rfrHf ... S lu, 12eR H\sX condo fOf' lse VILLA Balboa penthouM. ,TSL MGMT 642-1603 hk-up. N-pats. S795mo 2BRl1'1BA trpl pa110. NEWPORT HEIGHTS frl>lc, patio, 2 car gat.: 54M7« Mr. Joh!'900 $267,500. Call Rachaef IULTllS 111· HIO w/garage. AIC. indOOf Ooean l CauaJ1na Vl9WS. *Ull HW * 250-8002 or llS0-519' carPort. 1940 Wallace Tnplex-2 mast• suit•, welk to bMdl. $435/mo 1111 ... ,l-IT1 Giiien Agl. 846--0093 lndry. CJean l neet{ Avtl ovet 2000$/1. S.1900/mo. Come ,.. ltle ddfwenc:. I,._-·· .... '" st2.5LMa.. 5'3-~a each w/IUI bath. Beamed ufll klCl -• 759.-'r&Oe • •-' •Cute 2BR 1BA Duplex. 1mm.a1 $800Jmo 26108 831-8052/d 722-7265/e 1 · -• ._ r~ cell trplc pv1 dedl ..., • W• 11 g!V9 you the down In FAMILY ... I I newcrpl garsge lrple lg VI• ParL Call Sally Anne complete Y remOdeled Just rernocMled 2Br. 1Ba · • -COM Mother & daughter exchg IOI' a 1hare of own-Baaulll 1 4 bedroom 31 pvt paltO. ~·of Agt 559•94001786-7485 ·1 ~rtants S..ut1lul 2BR apta Pool. garao• new carpel ""2st:Fll!ld $1025 N-pat1 759-91i'. Wiil "" cozy 38r 1~ erlhlp. You make the bath u llreplace ta;.,ly PCH $1025 Agl 675--4912 L I Ila i..... rec room. laundry room pa1n1, mint blends, no .._ OCEANFRONT YRLY 1BA ttouM $550f mo Linda mthly pymlS l _. anare • • t~lt IC• -Ready IOf' 1n1tant move-pets 194 Monte Vista ood r.:ept MOCllfied 640-5129JD 673-3005/E • rec Vou receive room. btg beckyard & ION tile t>eaell. pvt rd. de-I la.. 2&-1n1 Only S640 lo S650/mo $795 mo 250-8002 or F•LY &PllT .. 11 w 1,,,..,,..--------1~ IP benefits Must covered patio. ~5.000. luxe duplex, 3Br 2'1tBe, * LUSIVE GUARD* IM --$200 OFF MOVE·IN 650-519' Sparkling clean large kitcn ·smk! .. ..'9°°1 3mo FEM Prof. 28-31 to "*- heve clMn etedll. ~I SELECT BH&G 751-5000 fultY equip ktlch. wld. •GATED COMMUNITY• WllTtl lmll IU .U IPTS Apts F,millel weilcome fnd All ulll ....v-382 •2BR 28A. ooeel\ ""'-"" 957-eoo2 Dys. EV. WIC • ·~~· lteck HQ ~~~f ~l~ BEAm~Lurzr 2BA 2::~7ri;. ~;~'/Mog~:~~ 5~~ M~~'t • Sharp .~~an 2Br ~~OOd ~ ~:.~,: :i~~A.~~rf-~7~ '!:Ji 6~t1 Mlfll1 IUll 3BA2\\ea remodeled SPACIOUS Sunny 2Br w/golf courte VIEW ~l'°l •ble now. 673-•999 722_9012 or 642,,1603 Washer dryer hkup pvt door Sorry, no pets p+ex No pec1 $575 inaud-LOVEL y 2BR. 28,A ,,.._.. 1111111111 llUI I UY condo nr pool Ofl grnbeft 2Ba 1 .. ,u;ff lrpk: lndry 1BA avail. Frplc. Mt bar. 8181888-505215059 SOl'ry No Pets• sundec:k, anc:I gar 2Bdrm 1\18a S785 tng electtidty 647-2622 pon a.acti Female~ 'I\ mt from beach, 4215 • micro. W/D hkups, 2 car $740/mo. 546-9950 28d1m 2Ba $800 • ok Pool W/O Y11W11D Pa1rlce Rd. S218,000 By rm. gar~. yard & PV1 gar w/xtr• llOfage, ceo-CHARMING Cape COCI 2Br HI 111 CITIUI HI w. Wit.Sii YUiii.LU S:so ~2536 Karen POSSIBLV thebellvleWln Qwner/Agl,831-3731 patio. S~~~~· Avail tral elr. All malnt Incl. 1or2Adults.Wlnlltf/yrly W/O hkups ca!J>0{1 No llSfSl(I COSTA MESA Full secunly 1Br •ctub ________ _ VIiia Balboel Thi• BY H bor V' now.* -SOf'ry. no pe11. 844-0509 N+pata. ISTS-n08 Th-Sat pets. S850imo. 722-62i4 2BR 2BA. lrptc:, encl gar-t•l JU• houte pool walk to NB 2BA2BA.OONnV!e'W. penthOUM unit hu two owner ar teW (818) 795-2965 Sun-Tues age. all buill·lna. near • • • beach . no Pe I• HarbOf' V-. penthouM. roomy bedroom suite• Home Somerset model, C"tl .... 2124 1Br,1Ba .lrptc,n·smkrano $525 -dep 1BR mobtle • anops,$750/mo l ~dlO stereo r .... io-r.... S775/leeae TRW tum Pool.lac.sauna.wt MCh with prlvlle betn' 5BR 3BA. $595.000. 436Atwnhouse N:WP<>rt pell. $795 -+ulila. lerge lBr Yearly North home Secure Mature, 810CENTER ctaSS1fled'sg0t9reahounos AVAILABLE NOWI room 24hr o-ted MC . and bak:ony. Upgraded 548-1330 days H 11 .,.. t ic patio ~security 434 Allso. I Baylron1. deck. lrplc, un-adults No pall 1991 TSL ~GMT 642-1603 l0t vou 644-7211 Agent I gar $850/mo, 722-93'S ~~~&111~1~ 6'4~5'e~Men~ ~g n•-'32~2 .0gte•E' ~1~8~~1 ~m~&om~rm N~~64~S3n 11~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~ -... v ... -.. $1300/mo 675-3457 1 window coverings. There LIDO ISLE-Ch1rmlng $9 /mo. 647-7540 * 2BR/21h BA c:ondo wi den. ------ Is• akYflghl. fireplace l 3bdrm.den.Lovelypatlo. Aero.a from golf course. 111•11 Pnaanla UCllLHS400 OUR f'.'AMOUS lnelde laundry. Why not CALL Carolyn Rosa al Santa Ana Hgts. yeerly 2117 Relngerator. ut1111ie1 pd " call now 10 ... this maQ-1173-7677 Or 759+6600 mealiBJIU $1050/mo. &75-54411 -No pall • 640-0751 nlflc9nt view unit, todey? Merrill Lynch Realty 2eR, garage. newtY a;co;_ BACHELOR unil. Slove & $350.000 21r /Ila 'ated. steps to b•ylt>Mci\ 111·1100 LIDO ISLE-light & airy TIWllUR Parking. $1100/mo 910 W. Balboe Blvd. refng, utlls paid Great 5Bdrm contemporary. .__,._ Ftt INt 1•800 52,...655 $900/mo Yfly. 67s.9650 tor 1 person $390/mo CF~f. H KJN~ DHlgned b~Rtcnard ..,_. I I 650-<4751 1 ' · ·,' . ' N4Mllra. Best II Areplace. vaul1ed ceilings. 21r/21a 1-S975/MO. YEARLY* &!!!: l. l '\11 ''' CALL Carolyn OU et dbl o-r, lndry hkup. pool Parke 511001'"° I 3Br l8a. near Jetty BEAUTIFUL 2BR IBA In _ lrml Rl~LTOll~· 973·71177 Or 759-64500 l spa. S<>fry. no pats. jl,.., 550-1824 2133 Mlramer. Balboa Ou19I eomple11. Security , Mwrln Lynch RMlty 2Bdrm 2~Ba S1070 FI P nkle kltc 675-5030 bulldtn¥v Pool gerege. liJiil LJad IHI NEWPORT DUPLEX 666 W l&lh St 642""905 •4-PLD* •N~LY FURNISHED* :~, dra~ i:no:i~· SPACIOUS newer unit• OCEAN VIEW. Lg twnhae NEAR HOAG HOSP OCEANFRONT 1 BDRMS *All UTILITIES PAID• mm llAllTI with e.xcellent Income. 2 mtlr BR. 2.58a. 2 car 2Brl1 '~8a. gat. 2-•g In-I Available. Great location. $725/Mo CALL 722· 1832 IBR 3BA w/18R 18A Apt steps 10 ocunf1ont 0-r. trplc. apa. new paint. aide Id~ $800 NLY Mu11 ... 1Bkr675-<4606 25 BRAND new 3Br 2',Ba 3 car oarage, 'It blocic to beaehea. Eech haa 3 cpl $l350froo. IJ68..2717 G~~l ~ 1FS99~-3 1~ 3BR 2Ba yrly unlurn ...., ~ $730.000 By Owner. bdrms. 2 baths & trptc. * t• -•••n* ,... "g . v -& · G ," apts A11acneci o.,. gar • 975--146& 531 _1400 S420 000 •-•BRANO at.. rplc, steps lo $1050/Mo ·sec M~o ···· • Refrlg. yard. $675. No New luxury beech, nMt everything. pvt patios w d hllup1. ..... .._... -\\.·\I I Kl KO' 1 pats. 642-3765 8'0--0751 lownhome '"guard gated I vaulted ceilings. new gar-door opnrs 2110 Pealuala 1107 llO\tl .... hoc. •EASTSIOE 1BR 1BA. ss2 .. 1oo'~moand 722~~4~22o.n.,, carpets. no pets. Thunn $1 CM Agl RE EST•tE $1350/mo. 833-8830 askt 650-5116 Open oaoly r .... • _...., ...,.. *H v HOME 1rom1c , or Alice, .-9-57 I E 12-7 or w_..enos 11 • ., - ---o AL " lar.,.., WID hkup 1 f "" 90 • •4 /2Ba ,....,._ dult. No pats $650lmo 2B d ....... o 3br 2b• --- • 3 .. ·/28a ~ • REALTORS Scotti 548-2301 r~ ""' r · ·up--,,,_ grmed. great toe gardnr S796,000 lftta ltr Ille 1411 ATTRACTIVE but Small Incl. $2100 760-5084 ' •• .. -~·· nit. IUlta 1 parson. Gir-•H.V HOMES lmmac _.,_. 11g41. Gardener/water pd. IN BIG CA OH 547sMo lae 54a.13e6Agl 5Br 3Ba. nr elem. achool. 1 Over 13,000 1/f. $850,0QO. B"'CK e•y_r.•STSIOE No pets! leate 8-9Lmoa. ass ociated CALL 675·5177 2BR lBA" 1.,,.. Nftt 12150 mo 68M~a * palnt1car!r'Ms1mo •NEWPORT SHORES• • ,, ~J ' , '. . n r:--::. • **DUPLEX*'* !l il&k8 top S:ach •&1•1111• 11& deck• 11295 ~Br fea, ~ill 1111 II SELL Avail nowl 646-0645 3Br 2Ba. 2nd lloor, II. 21 duplea, 29r 2.Ba. P'U• 2Br Yar.d, '9frtg. No pals. S675 tip, new carpet, 4 houMS 1"'8&. newty remodeled. 1hrou,Rh classified &40-0751 f 10 bell. S995 ~5434 • __ 162t __ ,ooo __ e_7_W2_M __ ~--------tNICE c:tMn t8 rMt""lllt •NEWPORT SHORES• ~ yard. Avlil 10/ 1: 4BR/38A. 2 tg llmily & llV· M7S+.c 117'11 E. 23rd I 1011 rm. on ttle canal Ne* 'tl~/831-8229 carpal/'*"' paint Yearly . .. -. · ·~ Merrill Lynch Realty LIJI Niii Wiii Cory cNptelt In Olde CdM. One bdrm. one beth owners• cottage plus OM bdrm In. oome unit. CIOM 10 ahOJ>•, cafes and beecfl. Only $3M,OOO. 711-1111 let U1 ""'. Y 11 Sell Y.. p,.,_.,1 a. ........ '41-5671 for Information & surprisingly low cost. Cl $2150/mo 675-54411 EAH 28' 1Ba duplex,1--------- S725. Gar. ~ .. yard, no 111-4112 ~ !::.c ~~ PENINSULA WINTER -l!iiiiiii.Uiiil -*FURNISHED• LUii •2BR 1BA upper dplll No HEIGHTS AREA 38A gar Nice balcony S950 1~BA. •Ingle family. •2BR 18A IOwer duplex trplc. lndry l'*up, 2 car Gatage Patio 1875 Qrlt, 11300/mo, Marilyn •3BR 2BA lower duplex Coombe 131-12M lg patio, garage $1350 OCEANFRONT WINTER *Nicely lutn 2BR tBA ~ or lower du!>* w/gerage. t 1075/mo FSIDE 38r 1~ den.,. *Huve •IA 21A. very de-l'l\Odel, nu orpt/drp•lldte. "-'•• turf! tower duplex. mlrrOtecl .. drotael fp, 2-Famly rm. wet bar. tndry, car gar. l 131Dl mo. 2ar gar-$1800/mo Send!. en.214• llW ILS fowii10Mt S8f 1...aa. RffM~- . . !'~Cc!.:>°tM 29A '•IA,......L10~A....,HNl~-N-2..,.eii2ii'A Yd, tml 00f'llPl9tl. 1 1271 ~ ~ ...... °r,01~' • ,, ,..... .... ... ""' °"',., acMmt M&191U1·1• Mltltll•81 fOWti+&tl 3ir W u..; IML ... .,., ,._., fp. pelto. I 1000 ~. _, Mii C*. A• E'la COftdo 2M 2M. -. ......... ,. Yd, ..,. w•l&L ltm W&ls_.111 .... 111 .. _ ... .. idflNf ........... ...-----------------... :.~-~ ,,-. ........... , ..--., .J. • ·i ... D1ily Pilat Step Out In Style 0 , e ~ s 1 n g special 4034: From conference table to dinner table. this two- p 1 e c e dress makes a career out of looking sensational. csay or night. Putl- OYM lop& elestlc waist skirt Misses Si.zes 12 l020. 4021 : Double drape interest adds drama to this S4MsonleSS style You'll be dressed 10 Im· ptealn&leeve-less. 1hor1 or three·quarler ....._..Misses Slne8to 18. OfffA OOOOT.-u ~JI _. a l'l l'\.UI eta"" POii 1M:M MITffll OM)W-..-m- NAME ADDRESS CITY AMOUNT INCLOSEO U""H 1 l . J 4 s. • 1. HAS RETURNED! -81'~' 0) po1JU11'• a~M<'l-.O O.~s· ~·l•~ ti run-Fnd")' Sattff· -: ... •"<l S""°'~' "' • ''"'"" ,usol c .~r on 'l tnt C iau1f td i\c:ts S"'>C t' trus s • ~c"' of'ft• wt: navt a Tt'lursO•)' noon Madh~ a"C otlsi. p•t'pavmt'nl lor a ads This 1s o~n to all pr·vate party adv~•t·s~rs tor ~rct'l•nd•s~ not ov~r S 1 SO fpnct must be fisted n .~di .-nc:t r"O ,lbbr~v•lll!OflS w•• ~ .KCt pttO i\11 itds will run Fr•C.h \,,,., o.-~ and ~unda)' Tht'rt •Sa S·•·~ minimum at 20C p~r I n• So yoor k>w COS1 Dtmes-A-Une ltd lronly .. S3 .00. DEADLINE ' / ll •\ n~,~n PRICE ,,. '" • ""'"" • ~<I •~' • .'0< pt-• "t' = S .! 00 • " ..... " ... , 1 • i1 :;., m.n9 nto 1n,. O-t11~ P1/01 to p ~ ,. ,c " ' n• • ..,,. c:;iovpon Dl"IC'w f'• .. Hf' r; .. :., rlt' •" l \t otlly .. o, No com- ,,,.,c ~ "a , ~. • .. · ~ orot1u<t' o• p1.1nrs Ei'Cti tf"m mu'! tit" i'"Ct'd r'I tht' ad with no 1ttms ovtr • H'>O MAIL TO rv PHONE ~TATE ZIP OATES TO RUN UOOM"' SltO 642-5678 . ,, -~ C0Mt OAtLY PILOT I Monday, Octob« 3, 1881 ....... •• ..... • • .. • • • t "'~~!r ...... , ~~~-~...:11::11:: 1111 • 1 ... lallet•• ... t ... WI !i*ret R . !E":~-!:-= .. -....... ,.,_.:.-:r.1 ':.:.C'..~-:""'111 IDTILfllll ·~-~-· .Co inirw..,~11·~·· NI~~""'· .... ,., ..... -· ............. .._ ..... llf--. ............. __ ...... .. ... , ... Conlld ... -.. -.. -~=-= ...... ~-r."ill"-:::~~~.,..._.:..:...._, rm,pool,18Q,A/C,pt0-IChedula. WW trein penyWlllpelnlonwk:*er Frontofloe.•lltt1111a1ttcl. ~,.,.... NM90U...1tCorpof· .... in ptoclMltlOn ........ pey. Cell Mon·Fr1 1..-Jiiiiifilj;~-, Ml, to ft g; l'IOIM In Im~ ~. :.J:· ... + c:om-.,.._.,"wneeenclf9b. ctieetlut. good office peo111y tF *one~':: ~~ ... •104.Newport .....,...,.,_ ..... oo . ..,._5pn11UA-1541 I I IMLmlY ....._.. -1 bll 90 Mutt ... 10 betlevi. • ~ be rwet a rlca Mu9t hev• good llkllll, compellttve ..-y .,,.,_ 1. eoleetlone. _,, _. ..-. Wll tNln 112· 1._ F'* tllne. ..,,.,leftOed, -.... *"O udl !net <>Pertt-765Ffwy,offon pertelf ...... N9'f offtce CCIC)Ylkll. PIMMc.it FIT Incl Set Contect ~ ,,_. c1en4e1 e•· @!!II/-mullllnCM ........ MMIT*""'Y. ll0-2083 41'1 &net. 521 ... TUltln ~tton Herbot 8IYd AM 2504410 Cwol 131·5'14 .,_ ..... 4 de9' .,_ m•••• r.cofd -U Ing. 111-1171 NnrPt~•,..twntwn AY9. 714-138-MIO ,~~m~ ITTllTlll Clefai ... 'el1ernate a.tut· ....., P/ ... ~ '°'..,..· ..._ 2Wi".:':",;,:"'.:;s ...... PIUMllJ STmllTSI DllfLRILNITlll _..,., ..... ,,,, :::.::::.~ ::.r.'Alt~~= PIT ~- 131·5737or 14s.'.t553 ••• 1 .... '" ......... LPll. 8pof1tmlndedlndlviduen ~:~:re"~ •ITlllT F/T ~m~.'!'good llUIBTUm M~ .:~ltU Hwpt Bc:h n/amkr 25--35 .. Window tinting/Auto pat1 time WOfil, $7/Hr ual. C= tklll& ,.. pey. Apply in perton. No .. p req'd. "you 8'e lllllllftlll! ptof ,.,, ttw tg 28R 29A d e@((ENf QP9lY 1W9M GIW Butineu. lmtMdl· plue. Call MS-5760 quired. WC>fd ptC>Celeing llU .. EIT 1980 Newport &Nd. C.M. rett.a. I. .ager to lelrn, Do ~ lwlve Wong con- condo w/vlew. Frplc, atallon beauty ·••Ion. ate ooentna. FUii time. •HOST/HOSTESS helpful·wlll treln. Good ·--....... llT cMt Center GI .. In E nec:tlont I. lnfluenCe with IUllE llln· pool, l650 790-8208 Moneymak• In NB ptln' WlllnO to lraln a long PM Stllftt commun~lon alllltt 1 usw.nH-• Toro for Interview CEO. I malor ~It NWPT SHORES home ciplee onty 11s-1216 -t•m ~ted perton. Full time poa111ona avail-muat. IU<lhf. For 8Pf)t. T::! =..::t :CS~ ~:-::' Cen~ c:. 1714)540·7NO could be worth e f " lllL f PILIT "'---...... ~f·Lllll BH = = .~L~.: ---· CALL ..... ,. ....... , ··--·-· .,. ..... ·......::::. • ....; ~ _,_ .. .,._ ... 645-58()8..HofM -GLASS & WINDOW TINT-0.'1 ltttMrMf Ollfml M~I experience bualneu llltltls. A job w/1 Ill IHlllT MenaglfMftt Part-lime Aulltant Dtt-~13~2&4-Wk ·--Ull* ING 741 W. 17th St. #D 213 t W•tellff, N.B. Fut & accurate typial lo ~lul. but wlll train. future for the emlbitloY9 Full lime/Part time. rent Of lllllEIEIT lflet AdYlt« needed 8et· PROF M/F N·amtt 2Br 2Ba No apprlilal eoet·No up Costa Mesa, CA 82827: Of UOl lfFIOE enter data on computer. a ... aalary $375/wk .. c.-rMf·oriented. Great commlaalon. Ma-4074 TUllEE urday, SundeY end Hot· 8* to bdl Nwpl Shor• front eott·5·7 Day fund· Cell Robert 950-039,3 Wiii train. Offlc:e nr air· GAS + BONUS PLAN. salary potential, Call ldays 3AM to f1AM. Muat ftpl, '**' 1475+-..: Ing. Jeekle, 831-7,37 /lllPllllll port. 250-1150 HRS: 11AM-tPM Mon-(714)&40-Me7 HIRING! Governement be 18 or OWi, valid drlY· eso'..o4o2'~· .. 2 .._ For Opthalmologlat Fri. )obi-your arN. s21•~••11 er'a lieente. current In· _. -e4M7 Penr.n Fund hll un· ACCOUNTING 95t·t978 .STllOTlll Call Roger Starkey, FAST growing m1111nger S15,000·M8.000. .... surance, QOOd driving r• ROOM In dbl mobW. home ~ 9:.,,"':;: s>tol>lem SMrt> pereon needed for .Rain. Gutt• tnetallatlons. 842-<4321 x205. e.11AM MrVa leek• driveratOr (802) 838-1815 #391 WED cord. S7.00 per t'loul', gaa on the bay, fully tum. all BK 0 k Ma. L ~72 !'.!>! ~· openl 1 ng !fl busy •BARTENDER Exp'd ~ 864--«89 dally for appointment. O.C. & L.A. COUtlty. Fun or --....... mileage. Call Roger llMnltlel, kite prtv. N· · · r. •• ·-.,,,...,. o major travel •HOST/HOSTESS parttlme.Needyourown ..,.95_ StwkeyT~tt'INFri-amkrl450/mo. 8'73·5100 *WIDOW HAS SSS ~. Muat heve •COCKTAIL WAITRESS ClllJD 11&.P n /PT .... .._, economy ear. Insurance Tuee ttwu Frt. Mutt have Oleling wllh all~· of day, 842-<4321Ext205. SHAREN B bh t'IOfM for TDsl s 1 0,000lup No exp. In A/P, A/A, & gen'I Days only. 1660 Dove Days. S5hr. Rubrno'a -· ~ end OIL. 588-1030 own ear. M /IV 850-4t19 our lmport company. PART TIME GENERAL 1 · · mo end ., /no pen Call Den-accountl~eepon. Xlnl St •B Newport Beech /Joe a Place 786-9 t69 ..aulllS 8 .... and marketing, ad-%.:, =:'":1;".;i .....; ,._ 673-731 a =''"; .. ,...:.::::'",! cin 10.-1. 752-2536 · CHllEI llD W. lar If, FINANCIAL ASST. re•• •om• &2 oo . =:'°::w -:;:., ':;; ~:~!..M~..:;:' aft9r SUnday noon ~n,! .1: ztJI lelanda In Tt)e &In. PO USllll/CLHI Must have good driving O.tfl ltsa, 01 To co. preaidenl. Pay· S250/wk. days. Mull Individual. Call Susan S$ +Bonut. Call Bfend• Shr 38R 28A bayfront t'lm ftl'D'llnb TE'&H"ror BOX 1388. NB ~2t63 Gift Shop o.c Airport. ()e... record. neat eppearante & aJ:MM. systecna, budget, lwlve cw· 722·M59 975-1215 1....,..53_M_1_1_a ----- on Bal .... $800 mo. + Trull Deed al Prlv••• II SERVICES pendablelfleidble Bettle be punctual. Medical lllYll/F-no. etc. F 111. p. e. d . • PLANT CARE INTERIOR utile call 714--87~7403 party will pey escrow & I Before 1:30pm852-9186 benefits. NB. 760-t145 Mull be clean, reliable. energetic aelf-11arter. LANfNCSCEJAPE MAINTEN· Malntein plant• on route. or 21~92&-M53 JIM appralaal fMs. 240-3553 IESSEllEI over 21 Engliah·apMk· Old. estab. auto leue co. HANDYMAN •lllAl &llllTAIT Good OMV record • ... a:t: •. ... z7u -cu1•11.1 SALES •1111 •• Mil Ing, up to $8/hr + ben· Salary open. Resume to: 30-35 lln per week. Main· Front office. Full-Time 631-6340 -U .. R Help wanted in •II Oepl,S. Immediate Opening st eflls. Bring OMV to: Lori'• P.O. Box 4220. Costa teln 4 Coron• del Mii Mon-Fri. Medical olfloe. li'i'T'i'iiiiiiriiii.-;iti""-; iA&JSE OR XPT. on Aueunatata ~trv:t~ 1 ~~~~u:,• ~:,; Wiii train. Must be avail· Seasonal & career op-Kitchen, 97t-0747 Mesa. 92628. Attn: Joan. ~ru... No equip-Lake For .. t (El Toro) P /T llaPTil•IT :;:-a:.,'· ... ,.,.: tlil • ..... HZS .... ~. """ ....... ol ==FT~:.:. ~%~l~~t tz>;i..!~ 111¥111 FLllW. IESlllU -, .. ".:::'a...""'="• (7l4)7'C>-1'50 ':' .'::'."'~ ~ = 40a. M.ct by'mi ~pell F60Nb'2 kittens approx 2 ::,~~!ft~~·~ul~-~1~11~:!: benefit•. Apply in person 1·518-t59·3S35xP311 8-5. M·F. Appty et Muter FAST paoed high volume experl~~~etJ, 1 S~lery •WL LI typktg. Calt 754-t822 Nemk xRef9 875-3529 Teri weelta. 1 Tioer strip & 'I Fri (9am Spm)· p rt ti Tll NmlY SUCI Blueprint 2~ Flachef ahop. Muat know all grs"-33 · aya. Highland Footcare seek· PIT Wll-llU -==:::t I b 11 ck. 6 4 4 . 4 6 8 7. Sat & .Mon • e!c~l:i 12 t2 s. COAST HWY. Cruise Ships now hlrlngl all Costa ~. 540.4174 ' phaMS ot n0<al dellgnl. 11-Evea-~nd· Ing exp'd fron11back Of· . .. ... -~· 844-4687 · LAGUNA BEACH positions. Both aklll edt Standard to high styler -flee pereonnet. Ch-.ng-For aml rnedle co. Dutlee LI. 111~1!' ~~eflte. Apply and unskilled. For lnlor· lllYDS/llLIVllY Good starting salary for LIUL SlllnllY Ing Full-Time. Start lnct llllpplng, errandt, , DAI y·p O mation Call (615) Needed lmmedl work 5.7 right person. CALL Irvine offi<:e h .. lmmed Imm.di Great benefits. phonea&Cltanlng.Good luiatll/ t Lat L IL T • 292·6900 Ext H-571 hr day Mon-Fri. S5.06 hr. 7141540-5326 Mon-Fri r.r:,1ng forClv Lil. Secty. Call Sherrl{714)650-1147 handwrlting & attn to de- l?lt FIXNl ADS 33~• ~z.!'· CUSSIFIED HUVDY Hn11 ~;:r ,::. •• c: FIOIT IESI ~.'i',::-:r• c=11.::: 1111UL-N111nr "" .:...::.·~~"" wanun .... ·RE FREE llYERTISll~ Immediate openings for Mesa area. UM pvt Ye-Clerk. Exp'd pref'd. PT to salary & benefit•. CALL N~t Bch ofc. Full· Time. ' Comer VIEW ~It• I n UVEllTISlll I g Thursdslay only. Musi be hlcle w/telmburae. OMV start. Wiii train auitab.. 1714)553·1808 Back office w/aome In· =~,~~Al~=~- FULL SERVICE Cal a r d CdM Relail Co. start· I fespon ble. aeeking a print-out reqd. Call perton. CALL 642-0977 eurance billing & tight counting? Auto repeif? W•tcflff & lrvtne, Npt Bch : Ing In-house agency. Nds The orange coast Dally gOOdlif wdage. Mual have Sharon. 220-0224 FlllT IESI .GUUS LEUL SEOIETAIY front office. 631-4099 Adv9f11H In ci.Nlfled Sign IPllC9 aYI on Wee1cllff entrepreneurial type Pilot has an Immediate Ca · lrlvers license, Friendly & cuual gen pr1c Mi-1111 142-Hll w/retated exp & sec:ty opening for telephone gOOd OMV, proof of re-•HIYEI• . FT/PT. Apply en person. firm In HB. 2 yra CA '-gal skills. S18K ... v. + bens. sales at our front counter. I quired Insurance. We Need Drivers NOW. l"ravet Lodge, 1951 New· exp nee. aal depends on DRIVER •Prth ... iul au.* l~~~~~~~~~~La~ur'.!een~4~9~4-~1~1~42;.__ PrlOf aaleS experience lfP'Y Mon-Fri. 8am-3pm. Earn according to pto-POf'1 Blvd .• Costa Mesa exp. Call quick, we hate • •~ ...... --. Ii helpful Muat litce people! ..:621 S. Dalmler. Santa ductlon. Avg exii·d driver the aar ... t 847·8041 •-Witt FOUND LOP-EARED l/ICLHI and be organized Anaorcal1Joe261-9573. earnsS100fday.Useown FlllTIFFllllll ,. 81' JI•. 1 ·RABBIT. small, white, Some computer exp ri.tp-45wpm 1yping Cali SMALL Pecka e deli econo car. t8yrs or over. For Plullc Surgeon. New· LfTllAntl Um WORK PART-TIME DELIVERING NEWSPAPERS. EARN UP TO $600/MONTH, MUST HAVE RE-1425/mo w/1 yr...... ~ Wl19on & National, ful but not req·d Call Pat, Peggy Blevins for inler· Mon-Fri 12~·~pm ~ CALL 714/547·5332 port, nr Hoag. l.rnmed. Lafcuna Beach. F. Pvt entry & ~perking. .M. 846-2854 Pacific View Memorial view appolnt,;;en I have ear. . S4 . 7Sho"ur ENTHUSIASTIC and 7~..8Q06 or 760-6163 F charge. PllFam/Crl =-°&~'=~: PtrMalla Park. W-2700 71~-432 1ext.301 -..mileage. 631-04t6 motivated Person Friday, IUUAL IFFtll ;!~ ~~~·cm~:.::, IABLE VEHICLE. INSURANCE, AND OMV PRINTOUT. MON- DAY-FRIDAY 2-5 P.M., WEEK- ENDS & HOLIDAYS. 4.7 A.M. NEWPORT /CORONA DEL MAR & LAGUNA BEACH AREAS. lrnmed poea. 8'2·934 7 lOIZ FIT for chiropractic In-Good typing, salary com-train. Heavy trantlCl'lblng, aurance dept Lt typing. mensurate w/ex.p. John; fut-paced but casual of· ~~nt~m ~tl hrs 8·5. Lisa, 631·5664 751.a910 after 6pm floe. ToS15/hr. 497.4433 ~;.,,:;;;. :M~ Motor Routes , .. ., ••• .,, •• sH FritHn available In 722-9432 Costa M ... Ollie• •P•C•· Rat all· Storege. 440 E. 17th St. back bldg. 400 all ~ 75¢ 111. Ind utlls. 493-5460 PlePe Contact I Patty. 540-7796 SMALL OFFICES 1 Does Anyone Know FROM $375/MO • Where She ls??? ... Full MfVlee. 17th St. Costa I Please Call Me M .... 646-9663 TH SHOE ST&Ttll I ' Representing over 325 Earl t .L I ~I~ ~c!r~I ~ ueatit.:', JUii k~ C::.~ you1eas~~~ eAitbcX~E-Need r&-nabl•. attentive care· •-trcial Prt~rtJ giver for 2'"' yr old boy in · '11,.71 our Corona del Mar home "' 3 dya/wk. Oec er. i AEfXIL SPACE* rands/eves. Own car. Approic 1200 sit. xlnl loc Eno-~ing non·smkr near Newporl C11y Hall Refs. gOOd pay. 644-8839 Agt 673-5354 DAILY PILOT Classified Pages Turn unwanted items into money today! Call M2·5678 $2.66 per day Thafa ALL you PllY for 3 Hna, 30 day minimum In lhe SERVICE Your ~Directory Reprnenta11ve LIVE-out needed to watch 7mo baby g1rl Mon-Fri in NB Engitsh speaJong. itte housekping. Approx-hrs 7 30-5:30+. 863~273 WOODBRIDGE: wanted xlnt babysl11er. cook. & I driver w/car for bor. 7. girt (lo. 5. Mon·Fr1 2:20.6.SOpm. • Rela. Call 857~614 Curn!rJ lltctrical 142-4121 td. 310 l-Pft!I...,...,.._.._ ·---.--- Westminster Huntington Beach · . Fountain V~lley NO COLLECTING N·o SOLICITING D'eliver One Day ·a Week - Must have dependable car and proof of insurance. Call 842-1444 Ask for Joanne Craney I • CALL 842-4538 EXT. 205 ASK FOR ROG~R STARKEY FKi5STKVS!~KiS11 !.. UMMER fUN i . t C.P.S. t . • • ! A~!~!~n !~~! i t Do you have spare trme? • : Would you like to win an : t Educational Trip to • 1 • SACRAMENTO and a : :. College Scholarship? t : Would you like to earn up to • : • $100 a week or more? t : TRANSPORTATION Art> SlftRvtStoN : t PROV1DED BY TRAIE> ADtl T t • • • t If you qualify, you can start • : earning money -NOW! : t and continue t i through the summer J i (714) 498-3321 ! ......... ~·······~~· .TURN UNNEEDED MERCHANDISE TO .80 .............. ............... ........... . For M.80 you can advertise your GarJage Sale In the Daily Piiot. There Is a 4 llne minimum and 1he price Is the same whether you advertise 1 day or 3 days. It's a great way to turn those. hidden treasures Into cash. We are also offering a a.w. te 8etter •••••• ..... for 11.M. This guide Includes Ideas on how to advertise, how to plan. What Items to aeH, plus Ideas for a better garage sate: 81so a garage sale .-gn, pricing stickers Information on city ordinance. and Inventory stteet. ' You can purchaM your Garage Sale Kit for $1 .00 when you piece your ad at: · Clasamed Advertising 6~2-5678 ~~Mllf-a.-Mltot'•'1M S. NOMA-11.•AM • I Orange Coest DAILY PILOT/Monday, Octob9t 3, 1111 ' ' ' •• '"' 1a...,._, 113111. , 1sa 1a7 , , .. -• t 11-r--16-~ MNITIL II •• REC ~· • -,.. -........ .... ........ • •• ..-. •• u 1,1111 ,.,. ENTRY ~~.'°:~D~~ • lsALes PERSON NEEDED ~ /llll nNT x Atta u t a r •••• r wxmtot aon rn clOft,7T.tl.IOlwtotteln tor HMYy Phone.'~ ~~6 STAT IONEIH poettiOneveilM*l lwlng& ,_. & KCUr•le to enter 11t/m1rr0f, p.inung• .a,..-hOfM Cun~ In Mil 13 3IO SL. ~ ._. t'P Mjl (. co.et wpm, fillng, comput•r l ~~f. CdM Flt, 5 ~d a _..,.... deta Oft computer Will ,,.,,.., 4x 10 It director 1 kennel 'tm•I• 1 1ryr loedlO lnCll ..,..., r9CIO .... CdM. tn.2930 • IC p • d II • I p I u I d11ion.~ VllOtlUng c::; In per.on ~ trllln. '"" °"'°'"' Wrport ,..,.. 142-4t 10 81111'en Call ....... , Meroury motor pertect ~~ 1o.~ M.11..aTlftULll ~beMtit1 720-0684 cti.nt.t. ~~. 0unee. 1131 Beck Bey 250-l150 NEW Daybed WNte I DACHSHUND~ Al<C. condltionr7M299 WM•, meroott lnt•lof 5 PEUGEOT .15 STI. blec*, o..-0.-CTY • 1 Top IEDIPTlllllT 873-4782 Of .. Newport e.ctl. CA WllTllll/WUTll Bf.... 11t/mattt--:2 ~ L7'::· 3 ~"1·:s!... bfed( tpeed, • ~. IMtn. lmenot, ...... "odi., .... honest Ad • .. El/IElllTllY 11•m Wle« to ~ .-tab-trundle Coml*t• 4 up -'"'°""l'liiNP""!.-!~~l AM' FM c .. u" • . '*""' c:ondttlon, saoo. aper US'D' I "9ftlllng office loolOng .... ...,. lunch rout• Mon-•a.40-l733* IAME E Kl ENS 11 . ' eunrool. 58,000 m .... -PYt petty 164·2412 ~I i.11 A E or an t•perlenc:«t Re-S.ing frttndty, llelpfUI, M8'Ufe, r.-.. l*.oM Fri 6-1pm, 150/MS C6lh D1n1ng rm Mt, oM •19 .tea. 191 9ho1, pur*9d, tttne IMf• In ellc:ftenge 157001 MUST SEE TOYOTA •13 CfiESSiDA. w op ,.roducer All :;r>1~~~ ~It :t1tf energetic person 10 g:'~' f: ~t d•llY Lorl't Kllctien, ctirs I ~ Ilona. no paipet9 1 100-s12s. tor tAiOln Newpon 8Mdl •--t• L•ttwr interlot. uwOOf INOtlUt'NeMd.Elll,..,,,._ 1..,.. $&25 1 •7~~-111-handl•. c_lerlfl ng 1 ........ INft• No 979-0747 c:l'lendel• w/6 ll9fltt 3' ~71torl46-1965 --.,...-13:::>3~.!__t......,~=..;.---• ---• L"'• -.. .,...,... 080 ~ hi lncon'9 potential "'W per nuur Catt retpon11b1llllH Whll• ·-"' drawer Cl'lelt 2 bf ... -PMn •Tl ... ·--~ Oftty Med 8PPfY Tim GUMman, 642-4321., uplriog to fUll time com-~:o:CS~0vetu1o lamps. NB 75t-1540 -.Ym KTUI. ,.111 llMll ~~~~~~~~1 145-2277/W 722-1550/H '°' T · a::-LIM llOIPTilllST ~1~ r':'~ u ~. .e1corne No eicperiene. Lu;;ti 1111 MOVING t>NUt 1g din.no. s=.:..2r:'~'ng 12ft-251t i '" F~glw & Le. ..... iii IM M 8u1yRee1E11111otolnNpt •Pl'lone/receptlon work needeO-we'll train YoU XNTidOt Wfilte wTcker 3 lea'teS, e cmut. CNna Pontoontio.ta Stancl.,d BOY ddV'ut m xna Bch Mtt<1 Oec>end1ble computer dita entry and Good llll'tlng pey. Other furn .. 3 chelrs, el'lal1e a solid matiog. wood ~ MOVING, mutt letve tam-or Cuetom bult to apec1 '• " Surplus llenlc.lel fr"om person 10 h1ndle phones, cuatomer contact to Orange County locat10n1 eouet'I Pine dry alnk. flntlh 11200 Muc:l'I "'°''· fly pet M neu1 Lab mix. 2-on OUf pontoona. 1 p1ec1 1100 Fords, Chevy•. typing, ftling & minor ., begin with IUCSlng to also avalleble 675-8669 Call tor appt 631-2921 yrs. llC, lt!Ot• FREE to Epoxy, Foam Filled, RFG. eon.u ... etc , In YoUr rands. 91m-5:30pm Call sales of maJOr appllanees AFI SECURITY, INC. NEW• Be&l.ltif I 44.. I . good home Ms-M24 Pontoon & [)eel( From 1rea. '°' Info <*! (.,2) Usa, 721-1200 with high potential In-714/596-7474 • Oak S-curve rolltop destc di t b1e•\001t g us "'POMERANIAN PUPS 4ttp eleetric: to 2a20()hp CREV (ER 642-1051 ext3854 ~'1'11• ~ .. ,,.,,,,, ....... ~ ..... • Restaurants come. E1tabllshed lnde-SENIOR LOAN HSO. BookCIH·CUP· S:~ti! v.d.o c=.· Pure-bre9, BEAUTIFUL & VU outboards. Wiii bulld •COCKTAIL. WAITS pendent 1pptlance atore PROCESSOR ~rd w/gl ... d~ & Ca"on AE1· 722-1153 loving IJwti .. M& F-&M>ts Coach Hou• Of Piny 'II ... OUll .. IT! ---. Limited opportunity to Join • BUSERS with new, Clean, woritlng Needed tor growtng mort-A= o:kn~,~~$..50 ~j ' $250-1280 Call Mt-7510 Bo~.11 to Y~~-dc••lgn I SAYE Ill netiOMI. ,_,•fate mar-•BACK WAITERS environment In Scxitl'I· gage Co. In CM. Excellent 11"94 ... I lrHI . . "" at>ong ..,._t o ketlng ayetem with un-•LINE COOKS west Santi Ana. Hrs pay & oppt'y for eaper'd very gd eondl 759-1877 2 maftr.S..., trundle. new POODLES R PEOPLE CALL 946-9318 A FEW lll8Pl.H If llmle.d ..,,,.,.. For In-FIT or PIT. 2007 s. coast I Tues.Set 11am-7pm. c.i1 petaon. Call 946-2236 ROCKOLA. 5c SJot Mel\, 5285 cmp11e M0-8733 P(Toodlt 0Pup•+ 12~-:J~ LiJ Lala ftf4 '" ,.., ...... formetlon. Cl ll Jack Hwy Lag. Bctl 497-6568 800 .... 21-3325 ask lor ·-·· •R•v-· 19,15 Ed1ton Oise Pl1yer, QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS H:i. ,:.:.o °!51-348~· I 13 in. ~•lld wo.d Ull Ayen at SELECT tnasL Debbie. --~ -50 1 Pepsi Mch, Candy & & BOX OUIL TEDI O cat, ~ J7!>t Al lo.oN N'IJAC. BETTEAHOMES& .. UUSPllSll Cue l#Ofkertvot. coord Clg Mc:ha. Moose Head, BAAND.NEWIS155 •aaic&lla1tr .. nt1 grNtlhapeS1125tOBO IH3xu.1uac1eO Zl!*"m GARDENS Exp'd & depend1bl4! IOf SEUnllY·llS IF• for non profit H.D Meal sm Rolltop dsk 85()..9897 Can 846-4293 it-I Make us an offet. call for 16 l?Sn Swd IG«ltO l~4I~ REAL ESTATE 751-5000 1weeter boutique In Nwpt Part t W/P fect/O g Program Cotta...._., .. A ~· ~ll · ~ Oetallt. Kathy anY11me 11 m niio..._. n~l~ -Beach n tPT Potitlon• Sk.ll •me $ Ne EJCp. wlelderly pref'd. f llactl SAIL otf Into tl'lt sun111 1 owner--Lo Uliu! 142-'0lC IUL man evall now S11 & comm. T~ RFs~:. J.~~·2c2 . Some~· •KP· helpful Xb IRXC iideasJde eez-1 Lido 1C tallboll, ••CIP-~ Elk Hlft Atto' ..... .---..r--.--...----II m,, »Cid >adfO ~I Tnd of CSoing all the work C1ll Karen 1~ 645-8503 I ag 220-0224 Sharon M relrlg. Copperton•. Ilona! condition, custom Suopl'lorie. Sacr1f1c11 Sates Se<v•cto ~f:':':;' Mon·Frl 12-5 touppt • Sim PIT Piii STlff llHIOllT I ;~';'g-~~ ~;.'3~j ~Y ~~~3:.XJ~11ss1soo 1 • FOfdetailt722-1153 Plar31s&.3Le1a1s1 1ng .' ~ 90% eommlalon •SALES* Looking tor bright Pl''°" 1·3 yrs exp w/CPA Firm PauM flal MOORING • tor Independent ~1• Drug & gift counter saies 1 fOf small office. Flex l'lrs. OC 1rea 476-9411 Elettric 1,_.,. ICt laffal lS l!St ~Balbot ~ST~ 1500 Auto Mell Dr J.W.l.ewlt873-615 I personlF/T,dP/TSMuSlbe approx,201'1ra/Wk.Gen-, lryerl111UO-HH cAIRX CABINET 1275 kXWXlcoN5olePIXN6 w~~~~~~'IM"' San ta Ana •-tll•IT PIT e11per ence tore In eral office •KP. 55T word EARN Tea cart S 125 Prof mat -. ~ Newport Beach ca11 M-F.1 processing eap pr9t but IEIWl wnlter cuttM s 125 Huge rare Wl benc:h. t>eaulllul eon-w Tll 55 Fwy at ~inger F6' ,.... &tat• office. I 9·5 Mr. Welts. 760-0111 will train. 955--0905 $400 $1000/WK Good eond11ton $75 Call ant"'u• mortar a ,_.tie d•tion S 1200 Dys/Eve UP TO 18' MAX 9'H 1 llYS L nco1 u ,,.., •c-... Afternoon&. Phonet fight I • OW 7~ · . .., ,.....-720-1704 Nwpt Bct1 1 n·1 .. «cu.,, -""'· typing. Pete 751_5000 N '1·8759 Ive msg $300 Cl'lampleve urn , S80/mo. 650-81C5 S~rvice Hrs Mon-Fri I Jagulf, Isuzu, Honda W.l •• TIO.lls I A• 1 MS1~J81S 1*6AM-12Noon VITA MIX BLENDER ~~~JArN;l~~5_7:7E8AL ,Slttff,EltclHllJCI 'ac. rua,.rtltita ;ooamio 10pm 8 A Volk~ty~ *No NIQhts/Wknds I Model 3600 "3 years 1 MIO ( J>P~oli.t 1 °"J.act •S1tHA •comm/training Guarantee" $200. Like NEWPORT BEACH TEN-1g INCH ZENITH COi()( TV ~ •t~ 11/ ... &-P.,,l 1 t 8t30-or7000•m Ttw Or c t o ·1y W -Aae9•-•••••tt11 new!646-1473 NIS CLUB transterab .. , ••• ,. llll Sf ,. ameri i -:i: o•• I I ork in the ever-expanding r-··---membership $400 • no rtmOlf. c~ r .. dy ....... er '"W lrvlne Auto Cent• =~le o:'!:n r~ :s~ Newspaper Promotion field. lfyou SllTll.I. 112·1HO ,Faraitare 6014 transfer tee. 721-5752 ' ~~~g~~m •only s200 111111111 BM. ·a1 Mere Couoar s12,750 sl•t our Oi1tr1ct Manager• If I -I IAllll UIYI TYPEWRITER portable Fully equipped V-8 Less 3 dayt during the week, are se -mot vated and like working 141-1011trt•·1112 BROYHILL double or Hermes $3S Antique 111• ilea I 21DIL than 15k miles. Trans.- weetlend• and l'lolldays. with teenagers, this may be the I queen bed 5 drawer drop teal table s 125 I ferable Mtg Warranty <>P- Applk:ant must have re-1 t it • b TOW llllVEll I chest. nlghrY stand $325 Lawnmower Tru-cut 21'; lfaH ltac 6141 OF NEWPORT BEACH tional Received Co. ear- llable car with valid CA oppor un y you ve een waiting for. Eicper'd preferred. Bring Good cond. E'Blulf I 31'1p Brlgga/StrattonlTn.indle sea wfmattress-I 28,000 mlles ••0-1... Ml1ST sellll 842-7090 driver• llcenM. proof of $400 PER WEEK OMV printout. 850-0869 1 640-9382 metal front catcher $150.1 .. $CS. YAMAHA Spec 1 Take ov1er :2a~I ts lSAO JAMBOREE ROAD OLDS 83 Ciera Brough1m lnturance and OMV 1 I 141-QIO.. 1650, otfM. _400 Oak St. l 1·• • Open 7 da)'S 1 wee!< tull pwr, wire wl'll, tilt wl'll, print-out. St1rtlng p1y 111 (To Start) , •••••••• .. ••••••••~• I P1ea1eca111Trs1 •94-6977 1fracL1 35 Extenesees Service Hours ptusn Int clean. S3~ $7.00 per hour plus gas 1 t Newspaper t WUTElt• 7 • m -10 pm Mon~Fn 646-C380 a!~. to apply at· With Potential t t ,into on 16' Donzi inboard M4lfc'1and•>eooPOf1uM1es F-250 1983. new ures. 1 . • 1 speed bOat w1tl'l/W1l™>ut I tn class1lled • hke 1>•1n;or>g All, PIB, PIS. AM dual If vou• re look Ing for al car " t $1 OOOPERWEEK t SPREAD •1 motorandOftournament everygaragesa~1n1own10 tanks.CINl'IS6,300 ~ve 1 , Illy Pilat 0 ' t t 8*(1 bott Harl evenings your l•V1ng room 962~279. classlflecf has news for you. • •• 722-3512 r-· --------==========----------------...... Insured Van. Wagon. or t THE " t /F Ar · Large Sedan Is Required t t twt ry 111 '~-.5 HI Wtst laJ 11. -• ~:..,9=ft!!t~' 1 CALL MR. StEVENS •• • NEWS •• •1c0~?o*1~esJA~~e~sRs Or call Erle II 6-42--4321 (213) 4n•3163 WATCH, 14~d,$3000 m . 205 91111!' _____________ _. : Work in the ever expanding News-t FIRM 720-I .. ----------------------· t oaper Promotion ~eld! If rou >~re t ..,_ • self-motivated and hke working With • OIL PAINTIHGS-LITHOSI M~AGEMENT JOIN OUR TEAM • teenagers. this may be the ap-• METAL SCULPTURES t portunity you've been waiting for. t lali, 16'tl, Strp. . " . ....... ..... ..,, t This is a GUARAN!EED INCOME of t lbrtlalM, Y• L.,.., t $400 per week to st art with poten-i 11141 lfntt. t tial earnings of up to $1000 per ca111or appt. 631-2214 t week. • • SHOP EARLYI F . - 'TODAY'S --~ NEWS • TODAY In newsracks by 3 p.m. MANAGING CARRIERS. THE DAILY PILOT IS LOOKING FOR TOP QUALITY MGRS WILLING TO WORK HARO. WE OFFER XLNT BASE SALARY · PLUS OVER $300 IN BONUSES EVERY MONTH, GENEROUS GAS ALLOWANCE & OPPTY FOR ADVANCEMENT. JOIN OUR TEAM & BE.ELIGIBLE FOR FULL MEDICAL COVERAGE. CREDIT UNION. 401K PLAN. IF YOU'VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES, CALL ERIC. 642-4321 EXT. 209 OR SEND RESUME TO: DAILY PILOT. 330 W. BAY ST .. COST.A MESA. CA 92626 • An tnsured van wagon pick-t Buy your wife• mink coat _;;;-l~" i upt shOlls are a MUST. ~ ~ -i ::~~=~i50 , ' • :=..----------,--.-,.~,~, , 1 •1111 : F e nformat·on t cempers andeottav-s·•H (714) 642-4333 ·~· Or mor I I • the things 11111 make.sum- mer 1un-cen be 1oune1 '" Home Delivery : Call Mr. James : ;·s~•.ed : c213) 411-2a10 . : fI~~H2 ~··················~ g ..-Ml.IC fl>TICE Nil.IC .f«lTICE P\8.IC NOTtC£ Nil.IC l«>TICE ·MltC NOTICE Pla.IC NOTICE Piil.iC J«>TICE .. \ t CQmmunity News Along the Coast "8.JC NOTICE --------------Scll<I tht( .. 10 0 ll()C54j f '°''' 8 ll~ ~ OCOfl ''""" Otpl 0 112 O» t cal.tloq "3 ~ P O &o• 2JIJ ~P cturino 700 w 1>tlwcr. g Vt Nil'IS C-' 91408 "°ti "<11tr.tlt PfOtf'CI\) l'ACIFU: VIEW IAMORIAL PARK C-1•' • M(ltl\I_,. Cf\~ • Crema•Of)' 3500 PK I ..,._ I> 1"4> !ffwl)Ot I Beach 6A• 2~00 • MA~LAWN· MT.ouvi · • M0'1Ul f) • l;;e~lef''I Crern.tt<>"r 16ll G•slilr ,\ve Cott•~ S•~S54 .. ·. -~ w.. •s ma nu mta P!M PP f9JC 11na ,...,. nu !11!1 ,.. 11m11 ... '!! ...... • DI,.._ "41 al...... ..... • . .._ .,._ .. lfl N.tmlUl-U llMld..,. °" ..,......., LWL...... .... ..... Countra.tlofOf• ..... c-.er .. , u ,..... of~ Cowley, IM&A 1119 -----leolloft 1'11. Ulll ITATWT 1. ,_ NOTICI II Hl,.HY . Tiie r .. 11tre11t COM· ... C-.ntr Oii ...,....._ ~-~ .. C .. o..... • et ..... Tlele 2. The ........ ....,.... .._.. M. Oii GN1N l*T T .. llOIJCI __. ID .,__. ._.. 11, tMI -,_ TM ~ ..,.. .. I ~-.. Code. ArllP• dc*l9 ...,_ • TNI ......,.. ... Med DEPARTMENT 0,. THI W "'* .. lctltOul W ~ ·eo.e .._end oetw OOMMOft -' } ~tOHd OIMl·OI or IOWINANDCOMPAHV. wMt!INCounlya.rtlOfOr· CtTY Of C08TA MllA ..._ NfM OI ,.... ........ OrWIOt COMI "*""9d~'l. tO 11 11111•a1, I~. d.. -CW-'1-llleOll •.t 2M2 W. C... Hwv .......... COuMy on..., ........ WtU.HOlDAPUeUCAUC-........ Oii -11, ~Octobs~.10.17, r.-= ' ' ' .... Pfot)efty cMtcnbMI Te.· .. Olloe of .... end Mino-por1 leed\, Celf. lffe3 20. 1MI TION Of UNCLAIMIO -...... 24. M-7S& • ...,. I elMM, tor wfllcti IN .....,. ~ ......._ tl06-t4"' 0.. Euucfty llowen, ' ..CYCLES AHO PINONAl Ndwd T. Oeltll. _. To--..l~C.OW.. ..._, INk• no •9111W r -..,_ ._ 100 Seer• 3320 ~. Cenlbed. Pub11NO Orenge COMI PROf'!ATY OH SATUA· ~ W9IT LNm, IC./9mft '*"" or wreMy. le. S1 ~ ...,...: Ce1fom6e iM14, by c.tit. 12001 ~ P110t ~ 21, DAY, OCT I. tt11 AT tO:OO Tilll •••alllfll Tl'llll•nt•I -.. .... 9MOr __ !!!!:!§.!!!S--1-_:.::;::~~-"'"' ................. Gotdellglow. Irvine, Cell· -1:00 , "' of btd openlftg Thie ~ II con· oetober 3. to. 17, 1NI AM AT THE COSTA MUA wllft ... County a.ta... . .... 08'&111MM -Of -,.ltoMltc torn& ........... -............... Smeli dlUc:ledby:enlndMdllel .. M.-0 POLICE OEPAfmoteN'T ....... ~on-.... lllCTmDUl•H•U ...crmaue..-r ... •• eo.ol IO ... • The pwpot1ed owr. of Seelad llldl .. Ille ,.. ...,_.. ptefefeMe on Th• re9 l1lr•"t com· fAIA DAIVE. COSTA MESA. 21. tMI ,_ um ITAW _.. ITA-cohallc ....... • 17'10 aeldr ... propertyettM ..... Clllwedel .. 0..,...ICof 1N1 prOjea, l*ider l'llUlt tNnQed 10 trenwt bull-PtaJC llJTIC( CA .,,.....__.. ,._ COMt Thetllllowllle...,....,. 'Ole .............. ~. fCUllaln V,._, Of IN A I rnt lien wee: ,.,_. end lllllGledcM. OJ. 1igr1 STO, It 1 form (Smell w urtder the lietlt!Oul D. MOWa.11. etmfJ fW ..........,_ ..,.enge dolrll ~a ~ baflW • l2'70l wllft "47" °" IAll UNIVERSITY SPECIAL ~ Coeet Dletrict, 11Sa1 ...... Pr.-.nce 81\d ~ neme or namee K.-n f1CKJC9. w.a. ....,, ..... ~ Piiot OCtober.,, 10, 17, AOTllTATI. 1161 Aden-WAU<P !'AMINO CON- Gf.NEML PUellC EATIHG PROGRAM TRUST. &t ~Lane,~ c.ntlc:adon ~I Mel llNd ..,.._. on Sepiembef PICTITIOUt Ml1118:N ,..._., .,..._ 2•. 1911 7..., te Me 307, HW!tington SUl TANTS/INOINHAS, PlACE&DUP**-Wied~ 2, 1971 E, leed\,(114)14-1Ml,upto MIMllwtltllMd. 13, 1111 UlmlTA~ Putlllltled Orenge CoelC M· ... leldl,Cellf.'"4t.,---..,. IHC., 671 An10rt llwd.,.Jrd PutlllNd OJ-.. C... WRIGHT TAUSltE 2:00 PM°" T~. Octo-..... _, 111.ul • a11t Oler'9 Eustecfty aow., TM folloWlr'I S*'IOn8 are oelly Piiot OCtober 3. 1181 Jecll lrt)y, 208'8 -· Aoor CoMa ...... Calf, Delly Plot~ 3, 1NI Seid .... wtll be ,,..... ber •. tMI. et wtllctt ..,_ ter Ila '911 tnd •ll1r1 ,,.. Ttlia etetement ... llled dOlna bullMel ea. M7' t PtaJC NOTICE ln., ~on BMdl. c:.tif, tM ' M740 -"t1out wwrenty, upreu or end ptece !My will be INb-.,_ .-ih 1M County CWll of Or· Ml!NlfH BEACH ANO , 12.MI CWA Walk•, lne., Mk*- ---------11mp1ec1, reoerdlne lttte, sia. -openacl end reed for Your ettentlcfl II celed to erige County on S9PllfTlbef SWIM CLU8 175a0 Gllllt1• fUlJC NOTICE ._,. JoNt WllUWOl'k. 1403 S. IQef\, 2121 HUdeOll Avenue. "8.IC llJT1C( aeealOn, or enc:umbrMoel, ~ 1M WOtft • fot. Ill• "Nondlacrlmll\etlon 20. 1181 Ave., lmne, c.ilit.12714 _._ ~~IT ... !!!!!.U Loara. Anaheim. Callt. ICAderMloo .... 4toOI to119Yltleeurnofpeetdue · · Cleule"•foflhor'9ferred ~ Th• Luak Compeny, P1Cnnou9-•I -.. ,_, 12802 Thia bUelMM la con· ..... ..!.."!!!'........ Homeownef '1 1111111Mnt9, urnllh •II lebor end to'**"· wfllCtl 11 ~ Publllhed Orange Cout Clalfornla. 17&50 GHlelt• um ITAW The tollow6no penone .,. Thia 1>u1lneel I• eon· dueled by:• COfPOt9110n -·-_.. -rwoiiebly eetlmeted coeta. equipment wy to:,.._, to .. noneumpt State con-Deity Pilot ..Beptembef 211, Avenue. frYIN, Cellt. 12714 The tollOWtng '*"°"' •• doing bueil1W-. ducted by: en~ Th• regletre nt com-YOU AM IN OIFAULT ..... ~.end,,,..,_ locele/~ (Gr*9e) llruc:tloncontrect.Mcl~ oetober3, 10.11, 1118 Thia butlnna la con-doing~..: MENIFEE CALIFORNIA, Tll• reolatrenl com· menc:ied to trenuct bulJ-UHDEA A NOTICI OF DE· due 9t die time of 1t16a notice Wlli11P tend et """""91onlcontrecta,,end to 1M "Sten-M·Nt ducted by: e corporation HlJNTEA YACHT SER· 17550 Glll•t!f. Avenue, mencect 10 trenteet buei· ,,_. undlr 114 llctlllOUa lLIEIHOl8N ..... .! .. ~~.!.,~MR~N1T ln1Nlln0Unlof l 1.134.00 .• , ... leect! end lolMlderd Celltornl• Non· Th.• r•olatrant com-VICES.2"38W.Cout~ .• k'vlne.Ceflf.~t2 14 ,......, ,.. under tM fk:ll1loUI ~ neme OI,.... U..IEUr.--• DATED: Slptei;lber 21. CNN a.... ...... Orenge dlecrlmlnetlon Construction "8JC NOTICE rnenced to trenwt bUll-NewportBMctl,Cellf. Tiie l191 ...... bualMel name CK Mmel llit9dliboWeOffN/A 1"'· UNl.ESI YOU TAKE Itel -County,Cell(omle.1e¥11wlttl1eontrec18pecltlc:allone"Mt neaa under 111e flclltlout Jenel K. Huf)W. 1149 fomle, 17550 te A~ .... edebO'weonAc>ril4, 1118 HowenfO.Undef'l.C.E.0. ACTION TO PROTECT ~co--. IN t*e ., .. and mein· '°"" Mreln. (Aeter' to Gen-ACTITIOUl--U bullNM neme or narnee Lulleby, Anehe1m, Celll Wtne, Callr.12714 Jed&..wby Ttlia alelement ... Ned YOUR l'ROPE~TY. IT MAY TY AaaOCIATIOll, •Y: l8irling • kif ~ ("~>.,.. Condlllone, OPA 413, NAll9I aTA~NT 111ted ebo~ on Auguat. 928CM Thia bualn.t 11 con· Thl9 llMe!Mftt wea filed wttt11M County ewtc of Of· BE IOU> AT A PU8lJC IM*M.o ..... A LAW .... of ... bWtl. Section 00700}. TM tolkMnO peraont .,. 1181 Tbll bualneu ,, con-ducted by: a COfPO'•liofl wlltl lld County Clerit °'Or· County on Se4Mmbel SALE. "YOUNEEOAN EX· CO•PO•ATIOll, 11111 Pmp1c1M IMddert meyl DIPAIUlllNT Of doltla bullneea.-. Aldlerd T. Oelhl, Sec:· ducted by: en'lndlviduel The re9 l1tren1 com· erioe CountY Off Secltember ~Ill PLANATION OF THE LAKI CIWTI• IMHYI, euMlne Md ot>leln bid PAMIANDlllCMAT10N, K£LlY CONSTRUCTION fetety I Th• regl11rant com-mencecs lo lrtnNCI buel-20, 1... . • • ....,, NATURE 0 F THE euna 111, LAKE POMaT, fonM. apedflcetloN, and ~IL Aeeft1e. .,.,_.., COMPANY, *45 FMfleld. Thia ltetement .,.. filed mencecs to trenlllci bull-neat undlr IM lietltloua ,_.. Publietled er.,. eoeat P"OCHDING AGAINIT C~ -(7M) pleN by cmllirlG It or "'8illng Pu~ Orange Coeat Cofone 6el M81, c.111 92MO with I.lie County CWtt of Or· Mel under IM flct1tlou1 bullMle neme CK ~ Putlllahed Orange Cout Deify Piiot oetober 3, 10, 17, YOU. YOU SHOULD CON-~ • ,...... kl IN°"'°' of IM Deify Piiot Sec>tember 28. Jon Ketty Jenllln•. 46'5 Inge County on Sec>tlfTibef ~ neme CK MIMI ll8ted •bow on Augult. Delly Piiot September 26. 24 1118 TACTOn ~E2~ -. PubllMd Omge Coeat DIP.,..11 ot ~Pertll and oetpbet 3, 1181 Falrfleld, Corona de! ~.,. 26, 1181 listed ebove on Seplemt* 1INNI e~ October 3, 10, 17, 1181 ' M-731 ......_ '"• •-· et Detty Plol ~ 3, 10, 17, .... ....,.,, 0renae Coeat w191 c:.tif. f2eeO F111ZM 14, 1988 Rlc:Nrd T. Deitll, .....-M--696 10:00 A.M • IN Meir! &.-1..a · Dllertct 11331 En1erpt1M Thia bualn ... 11 con-Publlatled er.,. Cout Jenet Hunter retary Pt8JC NOTICE trence: Ol-0 COUNTY M742 lM'9. HunUngton 8-dl, Ce flta.IC NOTICE ducted by: en lndMdual Delly Piiot oetober 3, 10. 11, Thia 1tatement -. flied Thia llaMmerlt wu flied ·-W' NOTICE -.....:.=~-------COURTHOUSE. eom. of 12141 The reglatrant com· 2• 1988 with the County Clerlt of Or· with CM County Clenl of Or· ~ lllCTITIOU9 .._ .. Syc:ernore end a.nt. Ana No bid wll be coneldered PICTTT10U9 IU ... 11 menc:.d to trenaec:t bull-• M-780 ange County on Septembef erige County on $eptlfTlbef IC.-rl NAiii ITA~ ~ ~ ~~ "8.tC NOTICE ~ ff II,,..... on a 11en-..,._ •rATW•NT neea under the tlctltlou• 27, 1181 21. 1181 FICTITIOU9 ..,..... TM 1<*UWint peraona.,. n .,_._.,,, "' ._..... Ane. derd bid form fur~ by Tiie 1041owing-peraons.,. bulinMI neme or names ~ fmlll NAMI ITATDmNT dolnQ ~ •: g::,: Orenge. S.... of -~~ .. U-•U IN Oepen"*" of Perk1 doing bulloela.aa ~ MM>w on September PlB..JC NOTICE Publllhed Or~ CoMI Publllhed Orenge Coul TlwJoloWinO ~.,. TtfE SOURCE CON· under IN pow.-,..,..,.._ andRecr9elion.~mede LA"ZY LAGOON 1593 S';"lttll D tyPllofOctOber'~f<J,-,7, Oll'f PlloCOCtc>bWi, 10, 17, dolnQbualn•UI: -lllilOAEALH-of .... IPU"IUWltlO IMlenM ..,... ITA,._-y In ecc:ordenc. ~!'_.f!e "In-BekerSt.,Co1t1 Me&.. Cem. J. Kely Jenkin• FICTmOUI ....... 2•. 19118 2•. 1988 CALIFORNIA COM· TATESEAACH. 2201 Pec:tnc of tftoM car1aln eo-.m. TM folloWlrlg,.....,. llruc:tlonl to Bldder1 '. 9282e . This atetemenl w11 filed ..,.._ ITATDmln M·719 M-731 MEACE CENTER AT ON·t Ave. 8'9. 2-C, Coe1a Mela. Coodltione. encl Reetl'lc:t'ons doing~•· The epperent low bidder Jame• Stidham, 1593 wiltLllle County Clerk of Or· lh• fo41owlng '*'°"'are TARIO 17550 Giiiett• Av· Calif. 921127 recorded on July 3, 1111 • MA. BUCKS LIQUOR. Will be requlfed to e.xec:ute • BMer St., Colla M .... Callf. ange. County on September doing bullneaa .. : PtllUC NOTICf "8.IC NOTICE ii-vine Celll. 9271' . I Semoel L. Ferguton, 2201 8°'* MIO, Pegee 1st In-2989 Felrvlew Rc>ed. Coela conlrac:tufll egFMm«'lt In 92628 20. 1988 H I R E 0 H A N 0 S ~ Luak' Comptny Cell· Peclflc Ave., Ste. 2-C. Coete c:tuelve, °' Offtc:el Aeoorda of Mele. Celll. t2t2e the form of • "Stendlrd Majken Youngquist, 9562 ,.,.. G RA p H I C S · 2 O 7 2 2 • KG171 ec.-. tornle 1755<> Giiiette Al/· Mele, Clllf. 92827 0rMoe Courley, Clillomla. J I m Su II • 8 e 5 0 Agrw..,..t ·Form 2" which Bleke Aw Garden Grove Publllhed Orenge Coast Goahawk . Huntington flCTITIOUI 8\1 ... 11 FICTIT10UI ........ '1rv1 C Ill 12114 Thia bu1lne11 II con-Rollaid 0. Roup, el-Cor· MHdowbrook, Ger den 1tM11f be binding upon the Cellf " ' Dally Pilot September 26. Be.ch, Cellf. 92848 NA• ITATEMINT ..,.._ aTATUllNT en1ue. Fine. a C · tlon 1 ducted by: en lndMduel e:;•Uon, .. trullM fOf UNI-Grol/9, Calif. 92&44 Stele of Celffornfe only upon Leilani Caldwell 9562 October 3, 10, 17, 1968 Kathleen LoulM Mengel1, The following l*IOlll.,. The following peraon1 are cemer I na~5sO~~lette The re9l1trent com-s~ViJ.OM.:~ ~ M!~~~w:~:o. kSuhGa~:= 8'>Pf0Ylld by thel Stete. I Bleile Al/9 .. Garden' Grol/e, M·689 = GcO:.-~~~nllngton dob'l ~f~ ~ C 0 M. d°b'lt~l~DcLPHIA A~~ rrVtne, Calif. 9271' menced lo trenNC1 lbult· • " ,......, ,...,.'.u llqtl requ rementl or Celll. • · "' tlOtl Oonekl w. Shaw, Trustee neu under Ille fief tlou• under ltlel Ann menf Lien Grow ....... ·-contrecta. exceeding $5.000 Thi• bualneu 15 con· . PllltC NOTICE Thi• bu1lne11 11 con-MERCE CENTER: 17550 STEAKS & tiOAGIES, 1 1 of Ille OONld w Shaw l>Ulineea neme or nemea recorded Februery 3. 11ta Thi• bullneea. la con· .,. ateted In the General dueled by· 4 general part· dueled by: en lndlvlduel Gilletle Avenue. Irvine, Calif. GotdenWMt StrMt, Hunl· Rel/oc:able LA.A.... T · 1 /dlt lilted •bolJe on SepllfTlber a1 l n11rumen t No. ductedby:co-pertner. CondltJoM DPA ~Sec:· · FICTITIOUllUllNEIS Th• reglatrent com-92714 lngtonBeaoch,Cellt.92647 .... "' rus u 181 U-050927, of IN Offldel Th• regl1trent com-tton oo100: · ~~ reglatrant com-N~ ITATWMINT menced to trenNCt bull· The Luak Company, • Jull• M. Yu. 13110 1 ~1 S-, ~ 1~ 1~ 1• Jemue1 l Ferguson purauent 10 Sec:tJon 13417 of MM under the-flctltloua prcwtalonl pt Section 1110 under the llcl 11 doing business as: bulinesi name or namet 17550 Gilletle AWJ .• Irvine. Cellf. 90701 • 1 · with tlle Cou ty Clertc of Or· Aec:ordaofaeldCounty,81\dlmenced to trenaect bull-In ecc:orance with tlle to tren..ct busl· TMfolloWingpersonsat• nen under the ficlitlou1 Callfornla corporation.Alderton Lene, Cerritos, ~Beech ~If 92eeci Thll atatement ... flied IMCMI CodeofttleSt•t•of bUtineu nerne Of namea 1n3 end 1773.1 of ,,,. :-slineal name or n:..:: WILLIAM DILL' ASSOC, listed above on Octobef 1, Calif. 9271• Ryan Jin Yu. 13801 d~:,bbu•1~,:~:.,,c;:: ange Countynon September Calttomle. Will SELL AT llsledeboveon N/A Lebof Code, Ille °'9Wt· lilted above on September '16'5 SuperiOr Al/9., Costa 1988 lnterFinariceCorporetlon, Alderton Lane. Cerrito•. lhl Y:• 20 1181 P.UBLIC AUCTION TO THE I Yong Suk &ltl "*" ,,_ aecet1ained thet 11 1188 Mesa. Calif. 92627' Kathleen L. Mangelt California, 17550 Giiiett• Celil. 90701 P • ,_.. tttGHE~T BIDDER FOA Thia atatement _. Ned IN tenerll PfeY91ling ret• j.,,,.. Stldhem Wllllam M. 0 111, 1724 This atatement wu llled Avenue. lrvme. Celif. 9271' Thia bu1lne11 II con· ~ r~gl~~~t ci::: Pw•tJPDJ Orenge Coea1 CASH. peyeble at til'M of with tlle County Clenl ofP,· of .,.... In tlle county In Thia atetemenl was filed Tr1adewlnds. Newport with the County Clenl of Or-Donald W. Shaw, Trust . ducted by: co-pertner1 ~ ~he fietltlOiJt o.Hy M"ot Sept.,,.,., 21 .... In leWful•rnooey of the ange County on September wfllCtl lfte work i.to be done with the County Clerk of Or-Beech, Cellf. 92660 1nge County on September of the Donald w. S~ Th• reg111ran1 com· ne: u .,,_ OCtober 3 10 17 1981 • Unl\ed S1eta 1111 r~~ 28. 1988 be • lilted by 1M 0epen • .,. County on September Thi• bu1mea1 is con· 27, 1988 ~Living Trust u/d/t mencect to trenaec:t buSI· bu _..neaa ~ or._.: 13 • • • M·et3 81\d lnter•t In the I ,.... ment of lnduatrlel Rellltlona. 27 181 ducted by: an 1nd1vlduol '"*' July 5. 11183, 160 Newpot1 nen under lld flctltloua Nat.., • on "/ • 1....,..----....,...._.;.;.;...;;.;;.;;. deecnbed Pfot:*'tY lituateo . Publilhed Orenge C09et A~ofttiieliltlngllonflle · 1 ,__ Th• registrant com·1 Published Orenge Cout Center Orlve. Suite 250. bulinels i\&me or nel'MI 1988 uyourcempert>Mn- ln Mid County end Stlt4t' Delly Piiot OCtober 3, 10, 17, et tM ..,,_. ~ •bo~ Publllhed Orange Coast menced to transac1 IMISl·,Oalty P1IOI October 3, 10. 17. Newpor1 Beach, Cllof. 92660 listed ebOW on N/A Rlctlerd T. o.lhl. Sec:-Ing more driveway than lol 10I of Tract tl23e u 1 24,"1181 p, ........ will be grent.d o.lly Pilot October 3, 10, 17, nest under the llct111ous 24. 1988 nu1 business 11 con· Julie M. Yu retery 1 .,._,. cael ~~?Sett lt with a ltlCMn by "'4llP on lite 8oolt ..,..727 to bidder orooenv 800foved 2•. 1181 M-720 I butlnell neme or names • M-7111 ducted by;• limited pertner· Thia .....,..,.,,1 wu flied Ttill atetemen wu ,..... aui-.. ad -SB CHEVROLET . Home of the Serengeti Blazer G:tf M•fiil Call our friendly salesmen for details 5 79·5100 1-800-228· 7240 17071 E Imperial Hwy.·Yorba Ltnda Cah fornia 00111,•rt Our O S1rrit:1 I Selection THEOQW ROBINS THEe!P)STORE 2060 Hartior Blvd., Costa Mesa 842-0010 o SADDLEBACll Sales ·Leasing Service Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-soo-&31-33n 71"-380-1200 CONNELL CHEVROLET G 2828 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa GMCTRUCK 2850 HARBOR BL VO. COSTA MESA G> IM SLEMONS IMPORTS Metcedea-Benz 1"1 a.. ••. .... ,.ri leech AC URA 1001 Guel ••. ............... Salet • L...ino ServiOe • Partt t '$ SA~~Y.IL~~G .$ 0 NEW LOCATION! SANTA ANA AUTO MALL 1500 Auto Mell Dr., Sllnta Ana 835-3171 Newport/SS Frwy. at Edinger .Sales Oepl open 7 days Setvtce.Hours: Mon -Fn 7am-10pm ------· BUENA PARK STANTON PACIFIC OCEAN • 11 . • ·.' . --"'F·;;. ' ' ' ... ' . -. .. ' ... ·-::,.. "ORAHGI COUNTY'S QUIET LEADER OF THE IMPORTS" • (714) 540-0713 • otJ.E l'I f 'fl'\E u~-"I s~, 5,..tJ. . 5ut SAA Customer Sat1slact10n Exeenence Ay.iard Winner 770-7001 23663 Rockhetd Blvd Lake f orest. Irv.me. Auto C.entet HUNTINGTON EACH ACURA NOPRE PONTIAC er..,, e...,,:, t'Jttl.I & .tMIM' .Aw.awe.-,. SEE MOTOR TRENDS CAR Of THE YEAR MllllllWIX .. 'SERVICE DEPT. OPEN MONDAY UNTIL 9.00 P.M. 171•JMM611 IHCh ltlfd & C*dfn Graw 'W'f www-. • OLDSMOBILE • CADILLAC • GMC TRUCKS m/582-0800 SAN DIEGO FWY ·AVERY EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL •NO HASSLES • • NO OVERPRICING fiii~ ·~ .... We ere e HIGH VOLUME LOW PROFIT OoNi..enop Our Goal Is to Be Number One .liWtiU•iii•..154•6-.. 0•...,,,...,_..,.,........,.Ma ............. .,..,_.,,.,.. 0 HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc. Mercedes-B enz 6862 Manchester Boulevard Buena Park \~ '-llBVICE 213 or 714/MERCEDES M ·t-· 7n 6p M·F 8a-6p Where 1·5 and 1-9 lmcel. Sat. 8a-2p J Garden City · &n. VOLKSWAGEN@ ~ IN .. WESTMINSTER ~ 7600 Westminster Blvd., Westminster • (714)891-9378 (213)430-2843 8 Go~ Orange Coast G~~c:,/ ·Jeep Eagle w ~ C•tHtt>,r S.Usfactlo• • Salts } 0v # 1 Prlprlty • Service ' 54l-I023 • Le"uht«i 2&24 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Meaa • low Pricu • No G 1mm1clu • Greot Selecllon • ~rrendly People • E .cellent Serv1~e IW5 leoch ~'-ird ~ton leoch (714) 142-7711 •eEACH LINCOt.N MERCURY. •RKUR SALES -LEASI NG SERVICE -PARTS (71 4)848-7739 16800 Beach Bl•d. (71 4) 556-1008 Huntin9ton S..cb, CA 92647 o . Ill ' IJ -.,: II ~ 1 HONDA DEALER 11' ORANGE CO. Salt"<i • Sc:-rvlC't" • Part9 Lta Ing All Mak~s 963-1959 TUESDAY, OCfOBER 4, 1988 25 CENTS Millionaire~-w ayne kip.-attac.ked Ro er Luby, Duke's aughterassaulted 'uporrarrival at: his gated Newport home BJ PAUL ARCHIPLEY °' .............. Two thup assaulted a Newport Beach milhonaire and his compa- nion, thedauahterof PilarWayneand her late husband John Wayne, in a bizarre attack Monday. ~ - NEWSLINE Roger William Luby, 52, and Aissa Maria Wayne, 32. had just driven into Luby's garage at his gated home at 2321 22nd St. when they were attacked at about 11 :30 a.m. Luby, a mortgaec financier and formerly an Amencan Express ex- ecutive. was pistol-whipped and bis head was beaten against the pave-Luby. ment by one assailant. The att;tcker • Luby told police he thought the gun also tried to cut the Achilles' tendon was a toy and started to laugh. on Luby's ri&ht foot. The suspect struck Luby on the Wayne's Jiead also -was pounded head with the gun and ordered him to apinst the pavement. get out of the car and on the ground. According tQ Newp6rt Beach He then bound Luby's wristS and Police. the assailants followed the ank1cs with • plasuc "Oc:xcuffs." victims into Luby's garage after the grabbed his hair and repeatedly electronic security gate opened. With siruck his head against the ground. guns drawn, they approached the • Finally, the.assailant tried to cuJ couple on each side of Luby's car. Luby's right Achilles' tendon. but One assailant pointed his gun and failed to cut through tt. said Sgt. Mike asked the victim 1f he was Roger Jackson. .,, - .. The assatlant then ~ent to Wa)ne, tied her wnsts and ankles and struck her head against the ground while the second suspect looked on. The assailants. both descnbed as white men in their mid-to late 30s. then drove off m a late model mi Chevrolet S-1 0 pickup truck. The vit:ums were not robbed. Lllby and Wayne were found b) Luby's houseboy, wh0i.cut them loose and called police. They were treated at Hoag MemonaJ Hospital and released~ "Obviously. somebody htrcd tbesc guys," Jack.son said. "The~ went in. did their thing and ,101 out. • • , Luby as an avid tennis player1 whfch may be why the attacker trieo to cut his Achilles· tendon. Jack.son said Lub> appeared to bt the main targrt of the attack. he said. altho~ · the mouve re mains unknown. "The way the att~k"'went down. it looks hke .she (W~yne) was m the wrong place at the Wrong lJme. • {Pleaee eee MILt-IOJllA.lllE/ A2) f -• Expanct·ect sos : facilities OK'd Dumping of sewage intObaf probed . by -CM Cpuncil t Freed hostage Mlthlleshwar Singh says he Is sorry that three American colleagues ab- ducted with him are still held In Lebanon./ AS Index Bulletin Board Buslne&S Ctassifled Comics Death notices Entertainment In the Service Opinion People By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of .. 0.-, ... ...,. Criminal charges are expected to be filed against owners of the Reuben E. Lee restaurant for operating a plumb- ing ~stem that allegedly dumped overflow raw sewage into Newport Harbor. Newport Beach police in- vestigators say the sewage may have been dumpe(t at least three to six times a year. whenever the res- taurant's plumbing system malfunc- tioned, over the 24 years the Reuben E. Lee has been in Newport Beach. The dumping went unnoticed until an anonymous caller, who identified himself as a former restaurant em- ployee. notified Newi><:>rt ~.ch pohce last July, prompting an m- vesti,gation by police and state wa1er- quahty officials. Old Yeller PoUce Log Pubttc Notices Sports Weather ·Weddings A3 A9-12 88-10 87 84 BS A6 A8 86 A3 B4, 10 B1-4 A2 A6 "No one ever dreamt that a system like this even existed that would dufnp raw sewage rigl\t into the bay:· said Greg Armstrong.. the Newport Beach Police Department's en- vironmental coordinator. "The sys- tem was flawed to begin wnh." Armstrong said today he 1s com- pleting the police investigation and prepanng a report to the Orange County D1stnct Attome) 's office. {Pleue eee REUBE!f/il) A ~J9U1ld wuehque ID Old Town lntne, oace aecl to •tore llma bNJn•, la &l•en a facelift by J . Ray Conatraction Co. Part of a iu.er renontion project. the 22,ooo-.qa&re- foot balldJDt wlll eTe:Dtaally houe a re.tau.rant and retail •tol'e8. The wuehoa8e la on the eoutheut comer of Bart Road and Sand Canyon A •enae. Mesa hiring hall of-f to Slo~ start Only four immigrant laborers get work as city's job center begins operatio1!.__ By BOB VAN EYXEN OflMQlllY ......... The gray floors and walls at the new Costa Mesa Job Center were little ji1fferent from the sky outside. That may be why many of the llpproximately 20 immi~t workers there chose to stand outside instead of inside. Another reason may be that they are used to standing outside wamng for work. "I was m the park waiting for ajob and the police came and asked us if we wanted to come to this employement office," said Francisco Ayala Rios. an agncuhural worker recently arrived 1n OranJ,e County from central Cali- fornia. · I said I did. so they brought me here to see this place ... Today was the first da)' of oper- auon for the new city office where legal residents can go and sign up for day labor jobs with local empto>.ers. Delfino 0UY9J'U 1eta employment from Werner BartmaDD at tbe new Coeta lleu Job Center. TOD The brainchild of City Councilman Orville Ambui;1cy. the new center as intended to eliminate the unofficial day labor pickup points in parks* and .. ·_ Tea.Ciier Wiih AIDS grateflll for nof)nalcy of classes, life IJ GREG llERKX .............. Vincent Chalk has had enough of the limeli&ht for one lifetime. Months after a landmark court • decision allowtd him to continue tadliQS even thouth he has AIDS. Chalk 11 still doina just that - eeaililll! He still pt to work at VenedO Middle Sdiool and U niver· licy Hilb School in Irvine, when: he ii employed by tlw Ora• C~nty Dep9rtmeat Of Educauon as a eeec:Mr of the heari .. impan'C'd. More than two ysn after beina dilpoled with AIDS, Chalk, 43, •YI be is still healthy and baOPier ) dal• be's been in 1 Iona tirM. He is {-llM:IU~ ftaU lime tliis year, u UH 11 IO lail ~ sbedutc .. tut year whtle embrorlcd in a controveny that had repcrcussiont throu&hout the nation. He and his employer were not always on such good terms. After retumina in April 1987 from six weeks leave of abltncc. Chalk found himsclf1-.ned to a desk job. The rea50n: Chalk's leave oflbKncc was for treatment of pneumonia. which docton concluded was tbe result of acqun'C'd immune deficiency syn· dromc. The distnct hed da1COVC!11d Chalk's aft1iction and wu coo-cerncd he milbt transmit the dit- eate to has stueknu. This school year, the hoopla is aone. For Vincent Chalk, lift has more °' Ins returned to normal. .. It WU IO much eelier ~ beet IO leKbill IMI ,_. ... lllll year." Oalk said this v.·cck. " o media, AO court problems. That's the "a~ I wish at would have been all along.' 1 Unfortunatel_y, thin15 were not that easy for Chalk. whQSC AIDS odyssey bqan in Fcbnaar)' 1986 when he came down W'lth pncu· monaa and mon•nuclcosas. He told doctors he had felt nan down for a year before that. but blamed his slua11st\ncss on allcrlla. A ~r later. Chalk wnt to the hospital 11&an 'filth pacumorua. Th~ 11~1 docton told laila he bad ronU'IC1CICI AIDS. b wtaa dam IS no known c:v~. nty .ud 9'I bad tbrer ycan to hve. "Al leasi I knew what I was d•ti• widt.. after btn• tek '° ...... ·-AID9/A2) stree1comers 1n the city. One place in pamcular. Lions Park. had sparked complaints from nearb residents v.ho accused v.orkers con- gregating there of ro~d) behavior. and oiunnaung and defe<"allng m the park. The ne v. 1ob center. a con" erted gas station on Placentia Avenue. 1s only for"' or!l.ers wt th legal residency 1 n the United ta1es. Those ~11.ang Jobs must sign up at the front drsk. produce proof oflegal res1denn and rece1"e a.number. The) are then gl\ en JObs. as available, accord an~ to the order in "'hich the)' 8rfl\Cd "Toda' v.e're JUSt tl')mg to fam - 1hanze people v.ath the p~dures." said Chel""I Fnedhng. Costa M~·s 1nte!JO' ernmental relauons officer "We re g1' 1ngout brochures to.e,el')- one . .\h) emplo)ers who come b~. v..e JUS t grttt them a(ld ask them hov. man' v.or ers the) need and "'hat kmd'ot s"'1lb .. '\s C\pe(te-d. things went slowly on the first da\. Bv 8:45 a.m .. about 20 (Pleaee eee HIRIMG/ A2) .. Charity's backers seek further study. of Rea Center u se But pohce. who often· sweep the school at night to roust bvemi&ht sleepers. say cnme 1s not a problem in tht area. Those who support SOS apparently outnumber those who condemn it. ··The people have already spoken," Councilwoman Mary Hornbuckle By JONATHAN VOLZKE said, waving a fistful ofletters sent by or ... o.r........ -supporters of the expansion and the '\n expansion of the Share Our SOS program. The I 8-year-old char- Sclves comm unit) center. wtuch ny. a non-profit sroupfundcd by state some residents fear will draw more and federal grants, donations and the transients mto the , neighborhood cit y. prov1<ks food and medical· surroundmg the Hamilton Street · 9Crv1ccs to the poor. mostly Latinos. chanty. was apJ>rovcd unanimous!) Hornbuckle said she received Monday~ the City Council. about 18~ letters -:-half from Costa Althou the council chambers Mesa residents -m suppon of SOS. • were fill with a standmg-room-onl) and about 30 opposed. . · c-rowd -with many people wcanng T~e ex~s1on would pro~ a ~ hearts with the leucn -sos-· __ 30().:squan=-foot ln:der for add1ttonal the council strayed from normal pre-natal care. said can Fort.th, procedure and approved the ex-w~? ~ns SOS. • . pansion before hstenang to the pubhc. This small enlargement wil~ ~w .. ihe 1$Sue here really isn't the us to sec seven to 10 ~~onal expansion it's Rea Center as a · pregnant women each week. For- v.-hole," Ma) or-Donn Hall ~d. bath sau1. "Rtght now, women. must Man) human scrvicxs orpmzauons wait three to four wcc~s for their first share the former elementary 5Cbool appointment -a CfUCli.l factQr ~n with SO . all helping the poor and the many of th~ m~lhcr:s h!ve waited needy · far too long to begin wtth. The center has drawn the ire of But several people •. who spioR nearby residents who coinplajn ustrs dunng after the-counot vote. say of the ~nter unnate m public. harass the) 've wa1tcd too lon1 for the children and make the streets unsafe. (Pleue aee fl/08} A2) Immt.cranta adll aathe:r at Llop• Park. _l Friend& shocked by youth's death By GREG ltLl!:llKX °' .. ._., ......... It v.a hard not 10 hl e l\hke Rus1cl To hear fnendsand relau' c tell it. Mike had 1t all He v.-a &ood-lool1na. mtelh,ent, athlelJc. witt) and kind, an cx·star voile' ~I pla er for Estan- cu1 Htgh hoof. a tlH 1n the Church of Jesus C"hnst of Lattcr-da~ Saint~ popular With '1rtually e' Cr) one. "You either lnc--ham or heard lood thin about him " said fnend John 1ray. a 5(n1or at Estaoc1a RUttd.:. I • graduated from Estancia in June Toda).~ )OUf\& man who "rull) had C\le~1h1na" has ~ft thott who lo"ed ham •ith onl)' rMtnonn. Rus1ck ...... killed at 9'17 p.m. Frida) on a darkened street in n Marcos. Hewasw<d.intau nkt for OnntNie~ Anetls Fktt Valet ~lCC. •tuch Md cont~ to proVidc "alct ICT'\'ttt Aw a I 00. --••rv bm1ne11 pan). \'1sta hcnffs spokesman Sit. Ken Crossman said Rusick apparently darted aero North Twin Oaks \iallc) Road to retncve a car from a din parlung lot. He was. bit by a nonhbound 1984 Mercury dnven by Mana Johnson, 28, of Bonsall. Johnson apparently slammed on her brakes to avoid h1thnt Rm.ck. but there wa ool e"°""' tame. The car truck the ouna man. The 1mptet tossed RUltd into tbe v.in<bhteld, O\ltt lhe car ud bllcik onto the road. C'rotUnan Mid. Ht .. taken to Palomar HC>lplal Willa maSSlYC bead inj~ncs. tMlt died_,.. hours later "I JUSl don•t k.oow • .._ M didn't see her (JohMOa) • ri 1J) 1 be was in a huny to Ill die f:S,• cro..man Mid; .. ,,., i• ........ ttu~ ,._ ....... ... IC'cideM_.._ .. ~LQ .. .. • Ol ... Caiet1 DAILY PILOT/ Monday, October I. 1MI w mnct !WJC mig · w •m !WJC mm NUC 11J1a ,.., pl( w mnc1 MUC IDl1Cl nas .. Ill ,...._ l4-31 OI ........ .... .. M ................ WI ~ 111C'l'lllDU9 WU lilted abCM on .......... L9UL...... ..... Wiii iN C0uney Ctlftl OI Or• --~ Gllfll flOP, ,..,,. OI °'*"' ~. ••• * a. OOl ....... leoUon ..... ..... ITA1WT '· ,... NOTICI II Hl .. HY Tll• r•o••tr•llt COM• ..... COuMr on ......,.... !'.."' ~ ... ••11 ..... c.Mol'ftie • .. -.. Tiiie 2, C.-otn1e The ....... 9*90M .. W-.,,. M. Diil 1 GIVEN TMilT THI '°'-IOI ....... '° tr....a bull-17, 1• -rn The """*'9d ..,.. .... , Adflllftilll811.,. Code. Aft IP-do6111 .... 11; · TNI .......,..,. ... Ned DEPARTMENT 0, THE W ..... IN llcttttoul , W .. .... Met OltW OOMfftOfl llleTO ~i:_ov~ct OSMl-08 or BOWIN AND COMPANY. with the County Qerk of Of· CITY Of C08TA ~~!.A ......_ NIM Of.._.~1• ~A...~~ 1COMl0 11 ~OO::rt '° 1 , d'111a llltion. If ~ • ., IN W OUl9-11 ""* be on Ill It 2642 w. ewe ~ .. New· enoe County on 8-tembet W1LL HOLO A PU8llC-· lll'9CI ~ on -7 .... ~......,. .,.., • • • 2,.. l ' • ...___.. rMl proe>erlY O..Crlbeell IN oMoe of 8"'ell encl Min-port leedl, Celt. 82te3 20, 1111 TION OF UNCLAIMID ttll 24, 1tll .. 1•5 2 .. , -Y..1ll --= for _,.., the Uftdlr• cwtty ""'"-· 1IOI· 14tfl Oier'9 El.IMedly Bowen, ,.._ llCVCLU AHO NRIONA&. NdWd T, o.ihl. Sec· ,... • • ToWllOMl~eonc.m: mek• nor~ .... Rtl11•1 St,_, Suite tOO, Secra-3320 McK!n69y, c.teHd. PublleMd Orengt eo.t P-.OP£ATY ON 8.ATU"· ~ .__~T LA*8 • ..C./Gert Of werrenty, le: ,, fl I .... --IMlllO, c.llbnla t6814, bV Celif. 82008 Delly Piiot ~ 21. DAV. OCT.I. tMIAT 10:00 Thie~ -llled1 --~!:!!Ll!l!!!!i!.--1·-..;.:.~:;::~ ..... -nnr•• .. ~to--Goldenglow, Irvine, c.11· ........... &:00 p.m. ot bid ~ Tiiie buliMu It con· Oc:1ober3, 10, 17.1NI AM AT THE COSTA MESA wfttltNCountyClel'ICOfOr·1.~ l>ef*tlMl'lt Of • A~c fotnle.. I .... ....... ctete:" llicldlr Wentt "Smell duCted by: en lndlvlduel M..elO POLICE DEPA"TMINT, M ... COUlltY on ~ PIC'mlOU9 Mlll•U M:nnaul -· .......... ConetG to ... • The pwponed "'* ot; S...-bldt .. be,. au.in.." pref.,Mee on Th• regl1trent com· FAIRDAIVE.COSTAMEBA. at; 1... -...... ITA~ _.lfAW CCINllc ..._ ..... et 11110 Mid relil property It the time celved et IN Depertmlflt of tNe protect. bidder muat menced to trenMC1 llYll· Pm1JC llJT1C( CA. r-TM follOWlng pereone .,. TM tollMtl'I ,._. .. Btooethurlt, ~ v-.; of tt. Aarsurnent u.n w: Pwt11 encl "9cleedon, Or· 11gn STO. 811 form (Smell neee under the flctltloua D. IMOWOIM. CW OP Publlttled OJ.nge COMt dolr'G buelflW ee: dOllla ....,_ • n70I will "4r' ON SAU UNIVERSITY SPECIAL ... COMt DIWtc:t. 1m1 ..... Preference Ind bYttnw Mme Ot nam. ~ POUCI. .............. Delly Piiot Octe>W 3. 10, 11, AOTI STATS. IM6 Allen· WALKll' ltAllUNG COH-GE.N!AAL.!~IC EATING PROGRAM TRUST. bteb-~L.ene.HuntlngtOn Certtftcetlon Requeet) end 11ttect abCM on September Aennou9 .... U ..._.,........_ 2 .. , 1911 M 1...., ta Suite 307. Huntington SUlTANTSllNGINHAI. PlACE&vu.-llclNe lllfled ~ 2 1t1t E. leech,(1141146-1511."PtO eubfnltwttflbld, 13;1911 ' MAmlTA~ P\iblllhed Orenee Coeat • H a.cti.Cellf.... INC. 11& AnlOft IMI .• 3td PublilNd ~ COM! WAIGHT TAUSTE~ 2:00 PM on Tueedav, ~ ...... 01 R1,ttl •ttlftt 01w Euat.chy Bower\ TM to11c1w1r1f S*90fll we Delly Piiot Octotler 3, 1911 JO lrt»y, 20911 8Mllftltl AocW CoMe ...... cellf. Delly Pilot OctoMt'3, 1tl8 Seid S11i1e wlll be INde bet 4, ltll, et~ time tw M1dlu,...11trn ,.._ Tillt ttetement -flied dOina bullnW •: M141 "8.IC NOTICE Ln.,Hunttnoton Beedl.Cellf. t282i M140 wttflout~.UP'910f Ind P-. they will be pub-.,_ • WithtMCountyClerkc>fOf· MENIFEE BEACH ANO 92141 CWA w••· inc .• Mldt-_ _,... ____ .,.--~---lmplled, reget'dlng t...,, poa.. lldy opened Ind reed for YOIK ettentlon It celled to ange County on September SWIM CLUB. 11&50 G*ett• PlllJC NOTICE 11-. John Weuwotk. 1403 S. iaen. 2121 HudlOn Averu. _ __...._.----..-N0;,;;.;.1-.=--Mellon. 0t ~~. ~the work •fol-tll• "Nondl1crlmlnatton 20. 1911 · Aw .. Irvine, Celif. 92714 ---•• PJE!mou91TA~U Loera, An1helm. Call!. Kaleinaoo, MklN8M .tlOOI topeylNllMnofpeatdue • ci.." ... {onhcwr.,_recl '1IMl1 The Lu1k Company, AC1lTIOUI---82802 TIMI~ 11 oon-~ tM.a Homeowner'• 11n11menta, ur'"81'1 ell tabor end to herein,_,.., II ~ebl9 Publltned Orange Cout Clellornlt. 17&50 Gillette MAm aTAW TM folloWtftg ~ ... Thia bU1ln... 11 con-ductecUiy. • oorporedllfl rwonebly eetlmated coeta, equlpmentnec:un:ry to: Ae-fto .. noMXefftPt State con-Delly Piiot Sept...a>w 26. Avenue, Irvine. Celif. 827t4 The following P«IOnl are dolna ~ • ducted by: en lltdMduel Th• regletrent com· YOU AAE IN DEFAULT ..... dwQea, .,..S lnter9lt locete/~ (Gr_.) ttruc:t1on contractl encl 1Ub-Octot>et 3, tO, 17. 1988 Tt'tlt bU1lne11 11 con-dOina ~ •: Ml!NlfEE CALIFORNIA, Tiie reglttranl com· n*'* to trenuct bull-UNOEA A NOTICE OF DE· dueettheflmeol U111 no4tce built-up Mnd et Huntlngtonlcontr9Cta, Ind to tM "Sten· M-688 ducted by: a CO,l>Ofatlon HUNTER YACHT SER· 17550 Giiiette Avenue. mencec1 to tntnaeet bull· neat under the flttttloul ~~~Jo~~~N{ lnttleamountofSU34.00. Stet• 8Mcft and 801 .. jdard Calllornla Non· Tiie registrant com-VICES.2"3tW.CoutHwy .. lrvlM.c.llf.82714 ,. ...... ,,... undec the llctllloua ~MIN 01·,..... ' • ~TEO: September 28. Ct11ce Stete 8Mctl, Ofengf dllCtltntnatlon Conttructlon PmlJC NOTICE mencec1 to trenuct bull· Newport Beech, Celff. TM Lus Comc>enY. ,,_,.. bUtlnelt neme 0t namee lllted 8tlOVe on NIA 1tl8. UNLESS YOU TAKE 1988 Countv.~le\lelwlUl!ContrectSpedflc:atlont"MC . 'MIS undef IN flclllloul ,,.,,.. K. Hunter. 18411 ~ 17550 Glltette Ave., llaledebo'ile~onAprtt4, 1NI HawerdD.Underl.C.E.0. ¢OURCTIO~~R~A~T~CT UMl'llWTY CO ..... the bile trWI end main-lorth IMweln. (rw-to GM-PIC"'10U8 MMMU buslneat name Of neme1 Lullaby, Anaheim, Calif. lnltne, Ca6tf. 92114 Jeck Irby Tt'tla ttelement w 111ec1 8E SOU> AT A• PU8t~ TY A880CIATIOM, •Y: teir,lng a for peroent (4%) ll'el CondittOna, OPR 483, MAm ITATaMBfl Mated above on Augult, 92804 . Thie bUaln ... It to!;on· Tillt tt...,.,.,.t wee fifed with the~ty a.ti of Or· RONALD D. ROUP, A LAW grede of the bW:tl. !Secilon 00700). The lolk>Wing peraont •re t988 Thll bu11n... It con· dUCled by:• COfl>Oflt wtth .,_County Olerlt of Or· lf'99 eour,ty on September rL';f,;,~TVIOUONNElO'}ANTEXHE. CO•PO•ATIOtf, 11111 Prolpectiw bidders rney DIPARTIUNT OF dolno bulloeaaM: Richard T. Oelt'tl, Sec· ducted by: en lndlvldual· The reglatra.!1~ c~~-enge County on September 2e 1988 · " LAIC• CIMftR DtttYI, eumlne end obtain bid 'AMIANDMCMATION. KELLY COHST~UCTION retary The reglttrent com-menc:ed to tren_, _.. 20, ttM ~' • ,_,. NAT U A E 0 F THE ...,_ 110, I.Ml POM8T, fonnl. apeclbtlonl, end tt11wy R. ....._Director COMPANY, 4&45 Fairfield, This atatement was filed menced to tranNCt bull· nea under the flctlllout ,__ Publlthecl Or COMt ~~OC~EDl=~AINIT CAU'WA -(114) '*"'by calllng at 0t l'Mlllng Publiened Orange Cout C0tona del Mer, Calif. 92660 wtlfl the County Clerk of Or-neu undef the flctlttou1 but1neM ntme Of' nemes ., Publittled Orenge Cout Delly Piiot Oct~T 10 ·11 TACT OU WY CON-at..aMI , a rwquett to the offtCe of the Diiiy Piiot September 28, Jon Kally Jenlllnt, 4645 ange COl,lnty on Septembef' butlnett neme Cir namee lilted • ebov• on Augu~t. Ollty Piiot Sept4MY!ber 26. 24'. 1988 • • • ' On OctA ~ E2A4 • ....., t Pubtllhed Ornge Coeet ~t of Pertt1 end October 3 1088 Fail'fteld, Corona del Mar. 26 1988 lttted above on September 1986 Octobef' 3, 10, 11, 1988 • • · M-J3e -• ·-· 1 Deity PMot October 3110, 17, "9cleellon, 0renoe Coat ' w19t Caltl. 92660 · . FmzM 14, 1988 Rlehefd T. n.lt'tl. Sec· • • M-696 -----~~-10:00 ~M et the Melf't En-188& Olltrlot. 18331 £nterpr!M This bualneu Is coil-Publi.ned Ofange Cout Janet Huntet retary • PdlJC NOTICE Ctrou•nceT: O LD ~~TY M142 Lene, HUnttngton 8Mctl, Ca PlalC NOTICE ducted by: an lndMdual Dally Pilot October 3, 10. 17, Thia 1tatement wu flied T,W• t1a1*Mnt wu flied ••II' 11111\T•"c ~HOUSE. .,.~ of • 82&48 The registrant com-24 1988 with the County Ci«k of Or· with the County Cterll of Or· ..--"" ~ , F1CTITIOU8 .-a Btv.t~ 81111 encl ....... Ana No bid will be c;on9Jdered PICTITIOUI 8UaMll menced lo transact bus!· ' M-730 ang. COunty on September ange County on September IC41171 MAm ITATBllNT In .,;. ~~ ~ Cellfomle "8.IC NOTICE llOIMl It II made on a 1ten-...._ ITATSMENT neat under the flctlllous 21, 1968 28, 1988 F1CTIT10Ua llUelNlal TM folloWtng ,,.,_,. .,e ""'7 enta AN. cterd bid fonn lumllhed ~ . The following peraons ere buslnell name or na!Ms ,_ Fama ~l'fAlRJIN'Y-~ l:MlllMU aa· __ ..county-oM>ranoe,-st• -· IC4m7 1M Department ol Pari<1 dolnQ busfneA u : Hated abo¥e on September • PlBLIC NOTICE Publlltled Orange Cout Publlltled Orange .Cout The lollowlng aont are rife SOURCE C - CallforNa, under the PoW9I° PICTmOUI .,._.. encl RecrMtlon. and 19 made LA'ZV LAGOON, t593 13, 1988 Daily Pilot October 3, 10, 17, Deity Pilot October 3, 10, 17, doing t>u.inea: STRUCTION AND REAL ES· of .... ~ttotheterma MAim ITAl'lmNT In ecc:Ofdanc9 with tf!e "In-Bekll' St., Cotta Mesa. Calif. J. Kelly Jenkins FICTIT10Ul llU8llllll 24, 1988 24, 1968 CAl.IFORNIA •COM · TATE SEARCH. 220t Pacific of ttloee Cll'1eln Covenents. -TM~.~.,. lkUdlooLlo Bl«i'd«I:' 628-Thi• llatemenl was filed NA• ITAft•NT --M-719 M-731 ME.cl -c&NTU-AT ON~ A119-Ste..2;:C.._Col_ta Coodlttona; encl Aeafrlctiona i:IOlnci~ •· The apparent low bfdd41i J•mes Stldtuim. 1593 tll tlii COUnty Cliili ofOr-ll'ltt1ottowtng penons~re ....... ... TARIO 17550. Glilette Av· Calif. 92$27 • , recotded on Jufy 3. 19" • MA. BUCK S LIQUOR, will be required to execute a Ba6c• St .. Coste Mesa, Calif. ange County on September doing t>u.ineu as: PlalC NOTICE ruaull NOTICE enue INtne Call!. 927 t4 ,. Samu.I L. Fer~. 2201 Boott NSO. Peaet 1~ in-2tlt Fe!Mew Aoed, ea.ta contr.:tufel agreement In 82e2e 20 1968 H I R E 0 H A N 0 s Tne L tk. G,orn c II-Pacific ~ St• 2·C Cotti <*'tlve.ofomc.JRecohltof ~Celif.9262e the f0tm of• "Stenclard Majllen Ycitingqulst 9562 ' ,.,.. GRAPHICS, 2o 7 22 • 1Cao71 ~ I I ~7550 a':tet~e :v·!Mese Callt:°92e27 ' Orenoe County, ~ J I m S uh • a e.5 o A(ll••n•nt -Form 2" which Blake Ave Garden Grove Publilhed Orange Coast Goshawll . Huntirrg1on F1CTITIOUa 9\18 .. 11 F1CTITIOUI .,...., orn a,lrvi Calif 927t4 Thia bu11ne11 la con· Roneld O. Roup,• LMr COt-MHdowbrook, Gtrden theft be binding upon the Celll '' '!Dally Piiot September 26. Beach. Call!. 92646 NA• ITATE•NT ...._ ITATaMINT en1~· Fine. ~ 11 I ducted by· en lndlvlduel • poratlon, at lruet• for t)NI· Grove, Cellf, 921-M State of Cellfomla only upon Leilani Caldwell 9562 October 3, 10, t7, 1988 l(athieen LOUIN Mangela, The following peraons are The following persons are C nlller I ne~550 G~I ':fe The renlstrant com· VERSITV COMMUNfTY AS-Vong Suk Suh, H50 'T!'el b the State B'•" G ' G M-689 20722 GotheWlc, Huntington doing bYslnesa u : doing bUlir'9ll u : a Of!! a, 1 e • __ ....,.. ...... ,J SOCIATION the Uen~ Meadowbrook Garden d y I t. f ._e Ave.. arden rove, Beach Calif 92646 CALIFORNIA COM · DELL'S PHILADELPHIA Avenue, lrvln«.Calll. 92714 menced to tr••-• ..,.... • • • requ remen s or Calif, • ' · 606 Donald W. S'haw TrustM neu under the flctllloua • undef that A11111me11t u.n Grove, c.llf. 821-M contrectt, exceeding $5,000 This businese Is con-PlBlJC NOTICE This bualn•st Is con-MERCE CENTER,. 17550 STEAKS & HOAGIES. 1 1 1 the ooNttd W Sh buSlnett neme Of nemea .recorded Fetiruery 3, 1988 Thia bulineN It eon· .,.. stated In the General ducted by· a general part· ducted by: an lndivlduel Gillette Avenue. Irvine, Call!. Goldenwett SlrMt, Hunt· ~ ble Livi T · t 1~~ lilted above on September •• ln1trumant No . ducted by: C01>9rt,,.,.. Condltlont, OPR 483, Sec-nershlp · • FICTITIOUS IU ... SS The registrant com-92714 lnglon Beech, Calll. 92647 Ju"'T 1983 ~~r':: u...,.,. 1 1988 • 88-450927, ol the ~ The regl,.rent com· lion 00700 Th r 1 r n m NAME STATDIENT menced to transect busl· The Lusk Compan~. a Julie M. Yu. t3601 •7 • • ew,..,.. · F Recorcla of Mid County, and menced to lrenMCt bull· In ~dance with the menc!cs ~JI :r'~sict c~51: The following persons are ness under the flctltloua California corporatl~n. Alderton Lene. Cerritos, ~ =;, ~ul~e 9f:O ~~'!'':'.~en:aU::. ftled• putWUllllt to Section 1387 or neat under the flctlllout pnw1a1ont of Section t770 nder the 11 1111 doing t>u.iness as: busln.U name or names 17550 Giiiette Ave .. Irvine. Calif. 90701 • ........ .,..... • • a · 1 he C Clerlt f Or tlleCMICodeofthe Stateof butineSS name Of NIIMI 1773 encl 1773.t of tt'9 =~ neme or cnei:: WILLIAM DILL & ASSOC. listed above on October 1, Calll.92714 ,Ryan Jin Vu, t 3601 d.T~~busl~•~1~1s rtcon: :;;.~~n~ Sept!n.,.; c.llfornla. WILL SELL AT lltted above on NIA Labor Code the Depart-lilted above on September 1645 SuperlOf Ave., Costa 1988 Inter Finance Corporation. Alderton Lane. Cerritos. ,.,'f 'f'. 1 m pa .,., 20 t988 ~ PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE Vong ~ Suh ment hu Ucertemed that 19 1988 Mesa, Calif. 92627 Kathleen L. Mangels Callfornla. 17550 Giiiette Calll. 90701 P • • ,__ HIGHEST BIDDER FOR llllt 1tetem.nt -filed the generel prevailing ra1.. jemea Stidham Wllll•m M. 0111, 1724 This stalement was llled Avenue. Irvine, Calif. 92714 This business Is con-~ r~gl~trent t c~~: Publllhed Orange Cout CASH, payM>le at time ol with the County C1ert! of#X· of wages In the county In This ltatement was filed Tradewlnds, Newport with the County Clerk of Or· Donald W. Shaw. TrvstM ducted by: co-partners d 0 r:~ 11116 aity Piiot September 2e ..,. In lewful money of the ange County on September which the work Is to be done with the County Cieri! 1 0 • Beach. Calif. 92660 ange County on September of the Donald w. Shaw The registrant com: ""!' un er t c us Oct bel' 3 to 17 19'8 • United Stat ... all right, title, 28. 1968 . be u lllted by the Depart-a~ County on Sept.:!nt>!r This business Is con-27, '988 Revocable Living Trust u/dlt menced to tranaac:t bUSI· bu11ness name orM nam;: o • • • M-893 and IJ'ltet•t In the following f1llm menti>f Industrial Relations. 27 t988 dueled by: an lndlvlduol F1tml July 5. 1983, 160 Newport neu under the fictitious fisted •bO'!e on •Y •i.,.,.,,.,..-------.,,....~~=-detc:fibed propetty tltuated Publl.ned Orange eoa.t A copvoflhllllstlnglsonflle , ,.,_ The registrant com· Publiwhec:t Orange Cou1 Center Drive. Suite 250, bulfness name or names 1968 atyourcemperl>e«l ... In Mid County end State: I Daily Pilot October 3, 10, 11, et the eddreas lltted above, ~bllshed Orange Coast menced to tranaac:t busl· Daily Pilot October 3. 10, 17, Newpon Beach, Calll. 92660 lisled above on N/Ap Richard T. Delhi, Sec· Ing mo~e driveway 1han ', • Lot t08 of Trect 6236 u 124. 1988 P•••ice will be granted Daily Pilot October 3, 10. t7. 1 ness under the fictitious '24, t968 •. This business is con· Julle M. Yu retary campsites? 54111 It with a shown by map on .Ille Boolr M-127 tobidder!>f'ooerlv eooroved 24, 1988 M-720 busineu name or names • , M-7t6 ductedby:a llmlledpartner· Tt'tls 11atement wu tiled Thi. atetement waa filed classified a~. . »BCHEVROLET Home of th,e -Serengeti Blazet fitlf i;',f fil Call our friendly salesmen for details , 579-5100 1-800-228-7240 1707 1 E Imperial Hwy. -Yorba Linda. Calfforni~. t:omparl Our . G S1rric1 I Selection THEQ~ ROBINS THE-e;p) STORE 2060 Harb.or Blvd., Costa Mesa 642-0010 o SADDLEBACll ,r r' Service Pans Safes Leasing & IRVINE AUTO CENTER, 1-800-831-3377 714-380-1200 ~I ~~.C:TRUCK "111~ SMART~TOP " • (714) 540-9640 2850 HARBOR BLVD. COST A MESA G) JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS AC~A 1001 a.I ... ............. Selel • Leeelng ~.,,.,,. ' COR IER ot<AE ' • • OLDSMOBILE -~ . , ol(rsl-~ -• CADILLAC !~,s~~!1~~~-~ • . ._. f ,-._.f. uR'-' • suiu • -sAkeustomednmstaet1dn ·~-----.,.......-• GMC TRUCKS SANT A ANA' AUTO. ,..ALL. ~ 1500 Auto Mall Dr.; Sant• Ana 835-3171 ·~ewport/5_:; Frwy. at Edinger ,Sales Dept open 7 days Serv~ Hours: Mon.:Fr1 7am· tOpm BUE.NA RARK ... STA('n~N ' PACIFIC OCEAN • .. -I ~4'4 '1t'ua "ORANGE OOUN1YS QUIET LEADER OF THE IMPORTS .. •. (7:14) 540-0713 suz Kr .; Ex~elleflCe Awlrd Winner . · 77.0-7001 ·: .· .... ' · 23663 Rockheiei Blvd .Lake For~t. Irvine Auto Center. MUNTINGTON •&ACH ' .. ACURA. SAUi -LElllll ~ . . IEIYICE -PllU 11111 ..... 1114. 1 Ill • llW .1111..,_ .. _.,II 12141 (11•) Ml .... • &. 1.1./582-0800 S~ DIEGO FWY ·AVERY EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL 0 ·110USE of IMPORTS, Inc. . . ·r Mercedes-Benz 6862 Mru1chcstcr Boulevard 'Efuena Park \J:.' . . '--') SUVJCE 213 or 714/MERCEDES . M -F 7a-6p · M·F 8a·6p Where I-5 and 1·91meet. Sat. 8a·2p . . ~arden City- &£\ VOLKSWAGEN@ 'W IN .WESTMINSTER~ · 7600 Westminster Blvd:. Westcninster, (714-)891-93!8 (21:3)430-2843 8 . OJ.~t· Orange Coitst " ...,./ y"'°~:::i . .Jeep Eagle . -~· • et.toat(r siwtc~~. Sales "' ~ . Ow ~I 'rlodly • Service 549-8023· ' Le·asing 2&24 BarJ>or:-Blvd. • Costa Me•a ' " ... . . ~CAMPBELL E NISSAN/1-UJT~ fEA(l-1 • low Price. • N o G1mm1cln · • Greot Sel~ct1on • Frie. ndly People • E ll(ellent Service . ' 18835 &eoch 9oule¥Ord .. (114) 142-'1711 H~leocl.' . .. 213) ff'l·l~ · •. c •BEACH . "i.\~. ·. : . S,Ai.ES -:-Lf_: '-~ING · •. . SERVICE -~iRTS (714) 8"8-7739 16800 Beach BlYd. (71 4) 556·1008 Huntinqton Beach, CA 92647 • Ill ~ I• l II ~l HONDA DEALER IN ORAJllGS CO • Salt" • ~rvlct" • Parts l..<'aal~ All'Mak H 963-1969