Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-10-11 - Orange Coast Pilotr TUESDAY,OCfOBERll,1988 25 ET Newport. drafts toad compromise Council tentatively OKs general plan chan esforconnectingwith tollway By PAUL ARCHIPLEY °' ... .,.., ........ Hoping to sa1isf y the parochial intttCSts of New~rt Beach residents in difTettnt neil}lborhoo<ls. the City Council tentatively •rproved changes in the ci1y's genera plan for major roads running near their Hank Wllllamsgets a hug as he accepts his enter- tainer of the year award at the Country Music As- sociation awards show Monday./A4 California Nearly half a million immi- grants who qualify for U.S. citizenship may fall to earn legal status be- cause there is a shortage of English classes./ Al Index Bulletin Board A3 Busln~s A 7-9 Classified BS-7 Comics A12 Death notices 67 Entertain- ment A10 Opinion 88 People A11 Police log A3 Public Notices 84, 7 Sports 81-4 Weattler A2 homes. A standing room only c rowd over- flowed the council chambers Monday dunng the second public heanng on proposed changes to the general plan that sparked intense debate among vanous homeowners' associations seeking to protect their 1urf. Accused bookie's business closed lnvesti a tors rate it one of the t5iggest in Southern California By BOB VAN EYKEN Ofthel)elly .......... .\ Newport Beach man was arrested at his home and charged with running one of the b1ggcs1 bookmaktnJ oper- ations in Southern California. the Orange County D1stric1 Attorney's office announced Monday. The arrest of Raymond Carl Vin- cent Jr .. 46. on Saturday followed a thrtt-month invcst1gat1on. Deputy D1stnct Attorney Wally Wade said. Acting on information obtained in the invest1gat1on. officers from the Newport Beach Police Department obtained an a rrest warrant for V1n- ccn1 and search warrants for lits home on Sussex Lane and his business. Ehte Embroidery in Santa Ana. The 10vest1&at1on produced evidence suggesting the betting o~r­ auon took 10 as much as $250.000 a week in illegal wagers. Wade ~1d. "It seems 10 ha"c been pnmanl) sporttnJ events. such as football games: Wade said. Wade said he did not know how long the alleged bookmaking oper- ation had been in existence when 1t was raided Saturd:n. He said Vincent was the onl) one arrested and 1lpparently the orUy one t nvolved on 1hc sell ing end of the illegal business. Vi ncent was freed on S500 bail the same day he was arresled. If con- victed on the charge of bookmaking.. (Pleue .ee BOOKIE/ A2) Bren still richest ... on Orange Coast Newport resident 14th wealthiest in U.S., says Forbes By GREG KLERKX °' .... Delly .......... Donald Bren. chairman of The Irvine Co. and a resident of exclusive Linda Isle. 1s the 14th richest man 10 the nation and has increased his fortune by about S600 milhQn over the past year. kcording to Forbes magazine. Three other Orange Coast residents arc also among 1he 400 n chcst men in Amcnca. according to the hst re· leased annually by Forbes Magazine. Bren. the 56-ycar-old majonty stockholder and board chairman of The Irvine Co .. 1s worth S 1.85 b1lhon. second in the statt only to electromcs magnale David Packard. who ranks 13th with an esu mated fortune of S2 billion. Topping lhc hst for the fourth year in a row was feisty retailer Sam Walton. owner of the Arkansas· based Wal-Mart d1scoun1 store chain. He is rcponedly worth S6. 7 billion. down S2 billion from last year follo wing the October 1987 stock market crash. , The rT)arket crash knocked nearly (Pleaee eee BUN/A2) Using a compromise hammered out by representatives of vanous homeowners' associations. the coun- cil a!)proved in a straw vote: •Realignment of Ford Road to the future San Joaquin Hills tollway that would take traffic away from New- port Hills area homes. •Addition of an ind1 rcc1 hnk from Ford Road to San Miguel Dnve to discourage commuters from us1n& San Miguel. •Add111on ofa "fl)over .. exit from notthbound lanes of 1he tollway to westbound MacAnhur Boulevard 10 handle traffic headed for Newport Center. •No extension of San Joaquin Hills R0ad cast of Pelican Hill Road to the proposed tollway without public hearings and add1t1o nal stud- ies on t~e cuy·s major artenals and . intcrsccuo ns. Rcprcscntatn cs from vanous homeowners' assoc1a11ons said the) gent'rally a~ to 1he changes. although some issues remained 1n dispute. 0..,""",.......,.,...... .......... Pouring concrete . C&ltran• work~n UH hea~ coutractlon equlpaent to pour concrete on the Cal•er Drl•e oYercrOMU.. of the 8&n Dteco Freeway ln lrrine. Caltrana la wtdentnc tfie o•e~r.alnc to accommodate a better traffic flow ln the area. H Ross Miller. president of PY· glass Ridge Commumt} Assoc1auon. said members continued to oppose retaming the San Joaquin Hills Road ex ten51on bn tne master plan of roads and highways. even 1f onl) for stud) purposes · ··we think )OU should delete n from the c1rcula11on el~ment once and for an:· Miller said .. we·re alrcad' connected (to tbe 101lv.a') ~ 1a Pelican H 111 Road. O ne connection is su fficient." .\s 1n oast heanngs. res1dt'nts near San Joaquin Hills Road appealed for the saft'ty of children and scmors who m ust cross the road trave!Lng to and from schools. churches. stores and othef act1vi11es. But Councilman Clarence Turner. ~·ho represents resadenu hvln& near MacAn hur and Jamboree. warned he v.ould not ignore their welfare to accommodate those hv1ng along San Joaquin Hills Road. Without the e~tens1on of that road. traffic pro)~ uons for Mac<\nhur and Jamboree (Pleue .ee ltOAD/ A2) Mesa ready to select a site for senior center Ex-Mardan School property favo_rea in architect's study By JONATHAN VOLZKE Oltheo.lly .......... Thr former Mardan School site 1s the best locauon for a long-planned senior c1t1zens center 1n Costa Mesa. an architect who studied five possible locauons told the Cit) Council on Monda~. The councilJS~pected to selt'Ct the center's site dunng a special mccunJ Wcdnesda). in add111on to tak10g up a n operating agreement with the Scflaor C1t1zen Corp. Once built. 1hc cny wtll lease 'he 20.000-squarc-foot. S2.5 m1lhon center to the Senior Ciuzen Corp for SI ·a ~car under terms of tht' agrtt- mt'nt. • The c1t~ 1s ex pected' to give the . corporauon SI 00.000 a year for thrtt vcars to fund operations while the Center auempts to raise an endov.· mt'nt of S5 mtlhon. corporation official Michael uttt'r said. .\n architect fort ht' C'orporat1on has been stud' mg five possible locauons for the faciht' -four in or near Lions Park and the former Mardan School site on \\est 19th treet near Po mona .\' enue Dunng the council stud~ session Monda). Da'e Forman. who pres- e nted the rccommeoda11ons for l us Rancho C ucamonga arch1tcctural fi rm. said the firm rated sues on their access1b1ht). cost and environmentaJ problems. among other cntcna. Each was given a point 'aluc. ' Mardan finished more than eiaht points above the highest Lions Park lcxat1on 'and more than 100 points above the site of the crumblin1 Veterans Hall near L:ions Park. For- man said. "The Mardan School has a much better snuauon bco lURTI is between the residcnual ne1&hborhood and a commercial strip afong 19th Street.'' the study states. ..There is enough area ·for o utdoor activnics such as swimming. gardening (and) badmin- ton:· Nutter said the Scfl1or C1uzm Coro. 1s not rccommendin& a su e. .. We're recommending you chose one of the top three." he loki the counc1l. ··w e were not able to hav~ a consensus of which was tbc bct\Cf. The other top recommendations were in Lions Park. A possible site JUSt south of the Commumty Act1v1ty Center 5COred 402 points.but would take away some of tht' open area at the 18th Street park. Tht' third recommended sne. also at the park. involved the demolition of the Commumt) AcUVlty Center. v.h1ch houses ~outh prosrams. a s"1mming pool and the Histonc Soc1et) Building. Council mem bers a ppeared interested in the thrtt--aCl't' Mardan School site because of.the poss1b1ht} thal scmor housing could .be de· "eloped on a pon1on of the propeny. One mt'mber of the aud1t'nCC at the stud' session. a m~ting where coun· Cll mem bers arc bnefed on upcomtn& issues but cannot make formal de-- CISlons. said the center belon'5 10 Lions Park. .\one Hogan-Shel't'Shefsky also (Pleue .ee SENIOR/ A2) Protest exp~cted over BB project By ROBERT BAUER Ot the Delly "91 IWlf ~clash appears to~ looming over rec-ommt'ndauons b' the Cahfom 1a Coastal Comm1ss1on to chanae park· ing rcquut'ments for flllJOr de.·elop- mt'nts planned 1n dof.rntown Hunt· ington Beach. officials said today. (\ ..................................................... .. T he parling controversy 1s c•· pected to comt' up Wedn~y w~n the Coastal C omm1ss1on. mcctina on Shelter I land in Sari D1eso. 1s scheduled to hear thr cut's proposals 10 amend the local coastal ptan because of changr 1n rcde"clopment plans 1n thr first two blocks Ilona Main trttt • . . Kinderga~en: Taking another look at learning BJ GREG ltLERKX °' ............... Kinde.-.ancn has Ions occupied a nebulous role in the Amcnc.n educauonal system. In most 'tatn. 11 isn't mandatory. K.Jnckraanen teachers att often sptt1ahsts in other crack levels. Many parents e&ea to send thctr childttn 10 private ptetehOol proarams and bypass public k1nckrprten ahotrthcr. But lunckrpntn has been the focus of C"On11dtt- 1blc anenuon amona educaton 1n rttenl Ydrs. Last month. the state Oep1rtmenl of Education ttlnted a ~aal repon ck1a1hna the chanaina rolt or kandnpnen cumculwn 1n public educataon and outlined 1 number of rtt0mmendtd .,.-11. Oraner Coe11 1Chool ofraciah My their k.andntantn proarams att •lso chanairw With tht uma.. Wlult C'lt'b prosram d1ffas. all att rocustna dn 1 nn ••tlupmunat approech. ttttllina lnrn•na and communicat10h skills rather than what one educator called "paper·penc11.workbook" tech- niques. "The ptfttption of the ·super baby' which used to be so popular 11 wrong from an educauona.I s~ndpoent" Mtd Louise G~nmn&. 5Chool 1mpro"'e- ment coordinator for tht ~an Vitw School Dtstnct. "f\'ny Idea of the ·mon-. fastn" t'duca11on • that S«M pettnts promote g~ 11&1nst what ~ know." Tht-tdta oft he .. MA per bib)." which was popular 1n the la~ 1970s and earl) 19805. was that ch11drm should brain tlw'tr academic carters as soon as possablt. After nunny ~ti'\$. lundttpntn proarams ~ tttn as the loSJCtl fi'1t step 1n thas process.; and aadtmaa -as pu hcd hard -somc- tunn 11 tht-"'pmtc of baste ~am1n1 st an That all C'he"l"d a ftw )H'1 -.:> when studies indlC'lltd that kincft'11anMn miah• be wffmna from ....... -l8COlfD/.U) The package. appro'ed prtv1ously b~ comm1 s1oners. has to go bcf~ 1~e state panel once again b«auscetty officials scrapped plans to build a h1gh-nst hotel 1n fa, or of 130 condominium units and a fivc--story theater and office complex. The C'Onstruct1on 1s planned at Main trttt and Pacific Coast Haah- v.a' wht'l't' the fa med G olden Bear nightclub stood for <kades. The C'oa tal Commau.on staff is Tri~ngle Square reAAvelopment b8.ttle brewing rt<'Ommending that at lca1t 15 prr- of that fiaht still smolder amona cent ofthC' parkings~ ~u1red for propen ' ov.neB who sa tt 1s v.ron& a bu11d1na be provided on-11~. The forthec'n > to take their land and sell it rest of the ~could be provided in to another 1nd1' 1dual. an ofT-snc park1na structure. The city By JONATHAN VOLZltE . °' .... ..., ......... The battle o'er a m-.,or downtown Cost.a Mesa tedc"elo pment project 1s hca11oa up as Cit) Council members ponckr "hether to conckmn pn- 'atel) held propen) to mate way for a shopp1na and business compln. In 1 986~ tbt council rtJttled a eroposal b} Mola Development Corp. o( Hununaton Beach to ck- 'elop the Mme area bcautc of o'erwhclm1na pubhc opposauon to the Sl2 mtlltc:>n proJCC1 Mola 1n1hall) •J*nntd to acqu1rc the propM) bounded ~ Harbot' Bouk,ard. 19th Strttt and N~l)On Boule-vard on tts own. but tunw:d toward condemnauon .tten at cwld not bu) tbt MCCMry ..,mt, lt'i the same l'°')i now. Md ttabcn has a 50 perttnt ~uu"tment. Mth "This 1s the mo t underhanded wa}. ihe n-st of tht' parkina bnna provldl:d to Stt'll propem thcrt e\-eft<'Ould be. • ofT·S1te satd Cum Herbcn s. v.ho ov.-ns tv.o M-L·• parttls 1n the rc<k'clopment arn. Cit) Ptannina Dutt1or IMO "\\c'f'(' soina 10 ti') and conv1nC'C the ~dams M•d 100.y tht en)' his a counc1l 1fs not a fin •-a) 10 ao " prob&em with tbt teQUn'fmmt be-- Hcf'btns td near!) all of the C'IU1t it c:ould put •dam~ on pMns bu$lncssmen in the M>alled TnanaJc to rthablh~te commncial buiaduws ~uarc olVVK# tbt ~"CC\, and he has not ~f'lttcd for ckmol1ll0ft °" * ""f .-..--' wtSt sldt of Main Snftl a pttaoon of m0tt t n 6 7 u t~ TM ftqUt~t wouact Oftl)' aiillly Of the art.a ·u 10ttt al'° oPPMC'd to the if tht ~ of~--bU6- rtdt, ek>ommt anp t15 .. nckcl tlilcir ficilitia. Titt C1t) Council and tbt c1t)'s COMa81 CollHnlllioe _... __ ._ mk\dopmfftl llCn<') -nsmtiaJly Pravtn r .... -. ... .ad 111111 ii'SaNI Ille lht-sarnt bodtn -•~ ~ukct IO -u...-conlldtt oan of 1bt 115.~ 7S pnmtt OIMtW _... ,... ... (Pin• -Mft'L&/Aa) . (Pl •z llllVMJ • • • J ... " Al Or9ngl Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, October 11, 1NI • LA. man receives 25 years in Newport bo~ler.room scam _ Time to put sweaters back on ly GREG KLEUX °' .............. A SS.year-old man who opn-ated an clabonte telem•rketina fnud scheme out of Newport Beach was sentenced to 25 years in prison and ordcmS to more than SS million to 1s v1ct1ms. J~I Fisch of Los Angeles allegedly bilked more than 1.600 people out of nearly S9 million over a one-year penod. according to Assistant U.S. Attorney ~n Weidman. He was convicted of mail fraud and con- spiracy to defraud tM Intern.al Rev. cnuc Service. .. J~I Fisch was tM leader of a PK~ of voracious ircat white sharks en· gaged in a fttding f rcnzy over the life savin of hundreds of hard-working mcncans. eiaman said. "They gorged themselves on tbcS8.6 million of these victims' hard-earned savinas in a lust for limousines. yachts and penthouses ... Fisch oj)(rated ''boiler rooms" - so called for their high-pressure sales tactlC1-in El Toro. Newpor} Beach and Los Angela as wtll as 1n Canada. Washmaton and Aoridl. Ootnlina undtr the name First Trading Groue. Fisch sold bo&u ptteious metal futures contracts over thCJClephonc.in.E.1 Toro and pans of Los Angcles County in 1983. lnstcad of investing the money. Fisch and his co-defendants spent 1l for personal gajn, TN._WMtlltt I-I ltt.,til .W~.0.....1t IO Extended Court upholds executions ,1 .. When First Trading Group came under investigation. the o~ration moved to Vancouver. British· Col· umbia. where Fisch operated until 1984 and milked $7.3 million out of more than 1.600 people. Fisch and his company then moved to Bellvue. Wash .. where under the. name Sterling. Peabody and Co. he sold fraudulent oil well panner1hips. Sterling. Ptabody and' Co. also oper- ated a .. branch office" out of Newport Beach. U .S. Temps =~~"' .. Le ~Ctcr 70 0 Or*'OO 3t 30 ~·· 10 •• ""-"• :; ~; Calif. Temps. ,. 50 10 34 13 80 N SI t2 72 82 39 81 52 7$ se W <\SHINGTON (AP) -Three ~copvicted Cali fornia murderers sentenced to death for their crimes lost Supreme Coun appeals today. The justices ruled that Edgar Hen- dncks. Melvin M. Wade and Keith Williams rtteivcd fair trials and proper sentences. Prosecutors said Hendncks com- mitted five murders during what one state coun called a gay-bashing spree in the summer of 1980. He was sentenced to death for the murders in San Francisco or James Panner and Charleston Haynes. Police said Hendricks.' a male prosti- tute. had sex w1tb both men before shooting and robbing them. Wade was convicted of the Apnl I 0. 1981 murder in San Bernardino of his 10-year-old stepdaughter. Joyce. Prosecutors said he beat the child to death dunng a 16-hour period. A jury found him sane despite testimony that he suffered from a multiple personality disorder. Williams was convicted of killing three people on Oct. 8. 1979. Pros- ecutors said he gunned down Miguel a nd Salvador Vargas during a robbery at their Merced home. When authorities again closed in. Fisch moved to the East Coast. where he made another SI million before being arrested in 1986. Five other defendants were con-· victed in this case. Todd Fisch. Joel Fisch's son. received a 20-year sentence. Warren Sharp received I 5 years. Joan Fisch. J~I Fisch's wife. received a probationary sentence as did three other defendants. Each defendant was ordered to make restitutition. 117 ~ PtUIOufg/I 69 SI PortlancfM-~ ~ Pon'-1.0.e M S3 =::re.tr S3 .. Ae<lo 69 ~ R~ooo 84 4f SI LOUIS 61 40 Salt Laloe Otr 6S 40 s... Antonoo 5t •• Seeltle 62 40 Spoil-'° S3 6yr-6370 37 Tampa-St P1rt1>9 40 TOC)ella M H TUCIOll 14 3t TuiA 56 21 WalltnQ10f\.O C :: ~: W- M 15 14 41 70 ·~ 70 36 11 41 71 •• 7$ 4S 76 •S ,, 50 7• 54 re n 80 47 13 59 71 42 ... 63 71 48 70 53 79 43 SI 40 17 74 71 ., Smog Report " 39 70 ., POIU\ant a1anOa1 O lnde>. 11*1 0. 50 OOO<I. 51·100 ...-tte. IOl·IM .,.._ Surf Report LOCATIOM ICZI 9"AN HUnltnglOI\ IMeh I.) t• "'-Jetty, Hewpe>tl 1·3 , .. 40tt1 Stt..i. ~ 1.3 t• nno S11ee1. ~ 1.3 , .. 8e10oa Wedge 2.;J lllr L88wN 8MCll 1 ~ Sen ClefNnl• 2·3 900d Watwtemp es s ... dnaiOn w .. 11Sout11 Tides . TOOAY S.Cono 10W 4 20 P m SeconCI "'Oii 10 2t p "' ...,....,., 03 43 Fnl IOW 3 IS• m I 7 ,... .. "'11'1 ~ 1002•"' s I Second IOw • 65 p m O 3 SeconCI lltOh 11 Oii p "I • 0 BATTLE BREWING OVER PROJECT .•. 71 S3 52 .. 73 31 .. 81 70 50 67 43 10 50 12 73 63 40 '-""""· 200-2"...,,. ~"""· )()() enCI ·-ll&HtOO..t Fttal l'llU'• .. p1-.1 oay • •11••...0 ps; S«:ono Is toOly'tj)IO IOt-1 S... 8-C:l\ IO MllCA'111ut lllltd v-.s~v.-y L88wN a..ci. (toreeul) 50-13 7~150 17 7W7 Sun .... toOay .. 8.22 p rn.. ·-Wednead•V at I S4 • m. MCI Nit et 1.21 pm From Al foot project in a special meeting Wednesday night. the past not to rely on the process. and let the pnvate sector step in." Loa Angale8 Airpon . W-. MIS toeley_ 81 I 31 p m • •-~at I 3t • t'll MdM«IM708 p.m The agency condemned businesses in the past. but Hall said he didn't sleep for two days afterward. Jerry Kline presented the financial terms of bis proposal to the council Monday in a study session. The Mayor Donn Hall said he doubts the newest proposal. which includes a grocery store. six movie theaters. a food coun and rcstaurJnt and.two levels of retail shops. will breeze through the council. .. That one really tore me up," Hall said today. ..:This one 1s a grtat projC(.?t. but.I mi$h~ h.~ve trouble with council holds study sessions · for· ~cn"!'t;?'~~~~r~'k:~~tr;:,i~g!~~~ SECOND LOOK AT KINDERGARTEN •.. Condemnation. which ·may be re· quim:t for 80.000 square feet of the pro peny. requires approval from four of the five council/redevelopment members. Coun~ilman ·oave Wheeler has long spoke aa,amst redevelopment. and Hall saic;J he.too. h9s pledged in . condemnation on 1t. . Hall said the project would link with the nearby Counyards develop- ment and Pacific Sav1n'5 Plaza to form he core of a 200-acre redevelop- ment area. "The whole idea goes back many. many years:· Hall said. ··we need to create a nucleus. then get out of there informal sessions. From Al / Under Kline's proposal he will academic overload. ThtC-implication advance $6.4 million to the re-was thaf kindcrprtcn programs. as development agency for the purchase they were then designed. might be of the pro~ny. The redevelopment doing more hann than good. agcnC\' will repay the loan. with The state-rcpon on kinderganen approximately 11 percent interest. curriculum stressed that kindergarten over a 15-ycar period with sales tax prograltls should 0'llddress the needs generated from the project. of the whole ctiild." The rcpon The redevelopment agency also recommended that a mort hands-on. will pa) an additional S2 million. developmental approach needed to making its total cost. including the be taken in kindergarten classes. ROAD COMPROMISE ••• value of property already owned at For instance. in the Ocean View the sue. S 10 mlll1on. School District in Humington Beach At the end of the froje<:t. the agency math 1s not learned by traditional could lose up to S-million". but city pencil-and-paper means. Instead. stu· officials said that figure included a dents ma)· learn to count to 10 by vet) conservative estimate of gener-jumping up and down 10 times. From Al . show large increases. .. We ha\e families. too:· Turner said. ·-rm gonna t~ m~ darndest to protect them ... Councilman Phil Sansone blasted actl\'1sts who had sent out mailers about the proposed corridor that prompted hundreds of residents to HEARING ••. From Al ment. beach visitors ma> find no place to park because the parking structures would be taken up b> the business people and shoppers. Gen Onega. a planning com- missioner and president of the Hunt- ingotn Beach Tomorrow slow-growth group. said that she welcomes a review of the parking plans. Parking can be a ma1or problem. she said. Onega said businesses should be esst"ntlall} ··self-sustaining. .. She also questioned the logic of putting park- ing structures on valuable downtown land. " five-story. 850-spacc parking structure 1s planned for the second block. on the cast side of Main Street. Other parking structures arc planned on each side of the cit} pier on the beach.side of Pacific Coast Highway. sign peut1ons opposing it. .. It's a good example of what you can do b} using scare tactics ... Sansone said ... It's rull of half truths." He nd1culed arguments that huge traffic loads woold travel from the comdor throu&h their nei&hborhoods en route to 1'Jewpon Center. He suggested people go to any one of the entrances into the center where one could fire a howitzer and not hit 80\'0nC. 0 ·"tfs a bogyman they're shoving down your throat on something that's not there ... he said. SENIOR .•. From Al cnt1c1zed the council's conS1dcrauon of senior housing oh the sue and the pos.s1b1ltt~ the center will be used by non-senior groups. "Is it goin$ to be a semor center or senior housing? Is it going to be a senior center or a community center for weddings? Is it going to be a senior center or a veterans hall?.. Hogan- Shcreshefsky asked ... You should call for a town hall m~t1ng so it can be discussed." Mayor Donn Hall assum:t her that architects plan to meet wub seniors groups and that individuals can address the council at that time. ated sales tax income. Glcnning said. A more precise study on revcn_ues .. Children are more receptive when ~he cm could CKpcct from the project the' 're actively involved.' Glcnntng 1s due Fnda~·· . ·said ... Ifs a. more natural approach But Manlvn Whisenand. ~ho for them. The goal is to prepare them made the. lina!"c1al .P~nt~tion for academia later on ... Monday wuh Kline. said ume-1s of According to the rcpon. when the essence for the Cit). children enter grade school -they "It gets fu~h~r and further from should be able to: fin~n.~1al fc~s1b1hty the longer we • lJM: language for complex com- wau. she ~1d. mumcauon. The projCCt has to clear the busl-• Recognize and use opportunities ncssmcn -and Herberts -first. for learning through language. read- though. . figh h . h ing. social studies. science and the ··we arc go~ng to 1 1 t .~ cn y._ t e llns. state. !~cfeds 1fwc have to. Her~ns • Use problem-solving strategics sa1~. We may not stop ~~em. but and begin to understand mathcmat· we II sure slow them down. ical concepts. BOOKIE ••• Jl'romAl he could receive a maiumum sentence of three years m state prison. Wade said Vincent did not appear to have a pnor amst rccont Vincent could not be reached for comment Monday. An unidentified man who answered the telephone at the Elite Embroidery business number said he did not know any- thing about the alleged bookmaking operation and did not know where Vincent could be reached. • Pia) 1nd1v1dually and with peers. and function as a member ofa group. • Demonstra\,C self<ontrol and self-discipline. • Demonstrate fine and gross motor skills and coordination. Class sizes need to be reduced and f ull-da) programs should be an option for students. the rcpon also .rccom mended. Or. Gwen Gross. principal at El Morro Elementary School in Laguna Beach. said educ-ators arc now con- cen 1ra t1 ng more on fitting kindergarten into the overall educa- tional plan rathcrtl1an trcatingit~san option. "I don't think we're seeing major changes now." said Gl'bss. whose sch.ool wa~ rettntly r~<>Jnizcd as ~nc BREN STILL RICHEST ON COAST .•. of the top elementanes in the nation. "But kinderganen is one of those areas that's been overlooked. What's happening 1s more of a definition of From Al t\\O dozen people off this year's Forbes hst. but the crash apparent!) had no effect on Bren's fortune. His net wonh was estimated at S 1.25 b1ll1on last year. about S600 million less than this }ear's figure. Hr mo,ed up on the list from 30th place last 'car · A newcomer to this year's Top 400 1s Newport Beach real estate investor Gcorie Argyros. 5 I. who ranks 335th on the hst with an estimated wonh of S250 milhon. On the list again 1s Wilham Lyon. 6S. ofNcwpon Beach. whose real estate fonune of $300 011lhon is up about S75 million from last )car. One other O range County resident made the hst. Richard Jerome O'Neill. 65. of San Juan Capistrano. He ranks 3 IOth on the list with an estimated wonh ofS275 mil hon from real estate investments. Also noteworthy were those local residents who did not make the list ~~~~E llily Pillll - MAIN OFFICE AO w.t lltty SI Coete ..._ CA this )'Car. Among those absent we re de,cloper Donald Koll. who ranked ~17th last yctr with an estimated personal fonunc ofS300 million. and developer John Lusk. who ranked J 7Sth last year. The 400 nchcst Amcncans have a total fonune ofS220 billion. enough to cover the federal budget deficit for one ,·car. California residents ac- counted for more than S2S billion of that fonune Because ofh1s good looks. relative youth and Jct-set style. Bren has been compared in the past to Gatsby. the dashing. wealthy protqonist of F. Scott Fiugerald's novel. But where Gatsby was born into poveny. Bren was born into Beverly Hills wealth. the son of movie prodU«r Milton Bren and society· matron Manon Joracnsen. He arcw up 10 Los Angeles and Newport Beach. He 1s divorced and the father of three. One of his children. Steven. owns an 1mpon car dealership 1n Ncwpon Beach. After college and a stint in the Mannes. Bren returned to Newpon Beach 10 the 1950s and launched his own development firm. the Bren Co. In t 962. he helped found and became president of the M1ss1on Viejo Co .. which was later sold to another company. . Bren sold the Bren Co. to Inter- national Paper for $34 milhon in 1969 but bought 1t back in j972 for SI~ millio•:... In 1983.llf'tn·engineercd a daring buvout of Irvine Co. stockholdcr1 on a SS2S million loan. That move gained him about 85 percent of the company's stock. Accord.in& to re· ports. Bren now owns a6out 92 pertent of Irvine Co. stock. The Irvine Co. lays claim to about 68.000 acres of prime real estate in Orantt County. by ffr more than any other siff!e entity. .... adOr_ lo' IMO Colote MeM CA!lnM ~ Na 641 5071 bu-" -10<• .. .. t ·•H t Justcall 642-6086 .........,_,,.,., II yow 00 "°' ...... "°"",,,..,by $ ~ p m ca!I Mtor• r ~ ..... tM3 lfo -tlor ... 141u•l•tt-eOtlO< ... --................... ,,.,_....,.De .... od\lced ---....,,..,,._,°'COPY' ... -What do you hkc about the Daily Pilot? What doa•t you like? Call the number above and your mnsaec will be recorded, trantcnbe.d and clc· livered lO the appropriate editor. The aamc 24-bOur answtrina terVice may be ulCiCI to ruord lenen to the editor on any topic. Coatrlbuton to our Le\tcn column nnast 1nctuck their name and telephone number for \'Cftftqtion. Teti us what's on your mjnd. .. t m tno ~ ~9'1Y Wiii lie ........ ._..., .... ~ ... .... "°' -'°"' ...,~'·"' ---· '9•.i ........ ~--.. ...... en ....... T•l8'1t:IMI ..... :='"--...... ........... what we're do~ng at the kmderganen le\'CI." At El Morro. kmdcrganen class sizes were reduced and bilingual students \\Crc fully intcgra.tcd. another state recommendation. There are also one or two parents in kindergancn classrooms virtually even· day as obser crs. Grosf said. ··Not all districts arc as fonunatc as we are to have parents who are this '"' olved, but we say great," she said. Rebecca Turrentine. educational services coordinator for the Hunt- ington Beach Cuy School District. said developmental education had a bad name for man)' years because people associated developmental wuh remedial approaches. • ·Thars not rcallv the case." $8id Turrentine. whose boss. Super- intendent Diana Peters. served on the state kindergarten task force. "It means meeting children where they arc rather than having them meet the curriculum.·· Developmental educ11tion also al- lows those students who are better than average to advance appropriate- "·Turrentine said. · .. A strong academic program for a pan1cular child might be ap- propnate.'' she said. "But to hold that across the board can be damaging. We If'\ to have a broad scope or op- p0nunit1cs available so that those children who are.more advanced can move ahead while others can work at an easier pace:· The Huntington Beach d istrict also administers the "Structure of the Intellect Framework" test to all kindergancn students before ~they begin classes. The test 1s designed to reveal how individual childrcn pro- cess information and to determine where their academic strengths and weaknesses might lie. ··1t helps us structure the cur- nculum around the students. rather than vice versa." Turrentine said. Another concept beins tested m some distncts is the kmdergancn center. The concept of a central kmdergancn for an entire arca of a school district was first tested in several Eastern states in the late 1970s. The idea was that kindcrpnen. like seventh and ci&hth grades in many d1stncts. shoufd be treated as a separate stage oflcarning both physi- cally and from a curriculum stand- point. · In September. the Newport-Mesa Unified School Oisfnct reopened Eastbluff Elcmcntary School as an all- kindergartcn facility. The scbool was closed ID 1984 because of declining enrollment. EastblutT isn't the first all- k1ndcrgarten fac1hty in the district. last \'Car. Costa Mesa kindcrganen students from Kaiser Elementary School mo,·ed to Woodland Elcmen- tan. which was closed for several Y.cars and leased to o,thcr organiza- tions. . L. The dmcrencc at Eastbluff is that the school dtaws students and teachers from two schools. nearby Andersen and Harbor View clcmen- tarics. ··vou have more flexibility in programming and can meet individ- ual needs of children better." ·said Barbara Rothman. lead teacher at Eastbluff. ·:we can set things up especially for them. like a media center which will have kindergarten· only materials." In California. neither kindergarten or prtscliool attcndan~ is man- datory. although all California public s~hool distric,ts mus t offer lundcrgartcn programs. Approx- imately 78 percent of all S·ycar-olds arc enrolled in k1ndcrganens in California. Currently. California spends $730 million for more than 336.000 kinderganners and $35.5 million in part-day state preschools to support more than 19.000 children. Voter registration The Oukakis Headquarters will be open until 9 p.m. tonight ID Hunt· i ngton Beach to register people to vote rn the Nov. 8 elections. The office 1s located at 302 5th St. Deadline to register to vote is mid- night tonight. ~ The POSH Tuxedo It's not too early to evaluate your formal wear needs. The Holidays are just around the comer and we want to flelp you be prepared. Our collection of tuxedos, fumishif1&' and shoes are at an optimum. 561 1'WWoon Cnatr Dr. Faltioa&Md (714) 64();.8310 ' .. High schoole rs wilT spend a day at Golden West Marina and Westminster hijh school students will "transfer" to Golden West Collcac Wednffd~y and Oct. 19 to act a ~k at life after high school. The students Wlll be m~olved in the California Academic Panncrship Prosnam to help students achieve success in both hi&h school and college. The students, all seniors. participated in a similar pr<>&ram at Cal State Long Beach last year. 1 Golden West,instructors have invited the hi&h schoolers to attend classes in such areas as art, history, English, business. photography, marketing. philosophy. ecology. philosophy and chemistry. Young GOP staglng debate The Orange County. Young Republicans will present a Busl)-Dukakis style debate Wednesday with Bru~ Herschensohn taking the Republican view and John Tunney representing the Democrauc perspective. - The event will be held at 8:30 p.m. in the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa. and the publ ic is invited at a charge of SS. Call Beth Raff at 651-9095 for funhcr information. Democrats view lnltlatlves \. • ·Clarifying the confusions about the fi ve insurance mi11atives on the NQvember ballot will be the focus oft he next mttting oft he Democratic Club of West Orange County Wednesday. Speakers from the League of Women Voters will present non-panisan viewpoints on the prop- ositionsat the 6:45 p.m. session an the Talben Room of the Huntington Be'dch Library. on Talbert Avenue at Golden West Street, Huntington Beach. The meeting is open 10 the public at no charge. and details are available at 960-6220. Women'• club to meet The Women's Aglow Fellowship of Costa Mesa will convene Wednesday at 9: IS a.m. at the Costa Mesa Country Club, 1701 Golf Course Drive. Mary Ann Rothchild of the Daughters of Zion will bt the 1uest speaker along with songwriter and musician Cheryl Somers. The buffet breakfast 1s priced at $6.50. and reservations may be made by calling 551-9118. Math anxlety workshop A three-pan math anxiety workshop will be offered. beginning Wednesday. by Orange Coast College's Re-Entry Center. · .. The free course will be held for the next three Wednesdays from 6 to 8 p.m. Math 1utor Susan Knight will conduct the program and details are available at 432-5162. · Network to convene "People Reading: How to Understand Yourself and Others at Work and Home" will be the topic of guest speaker Annette Bunon at Wednesday's meeting of the WeCan Women's Net\\-Ork. The session will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the Sheraton Hotel. 4545 MacArthur Blvd .. Newpon Beach. The cost 1s S2~ for guests. and information may be obtained by calling 979·!92 I Bergeson to speak State Sen. Marian Bergeson will be th e guest speaker a1 a luncheon to be held Wednesda} b)' 1he Balboa Ba> Republican Women. Federated. Bergeson will re view the accomplishments of the state Legislature at lhe noon session in the Monaco Room of the Airponer Inn. 18700 MacAnhur Blvd .. Irvine. Call 646-6 10 1 for reser- vauons. Wellness semlnar set Nu1ritional counselor Jane Nathan will con- duct a free wellness seminar Wednesday from 6 10 7 p.m. at Whipple's Healthy foods an Newpon Beach. Call 644-7733 for more an formation and reser- vation~. CALEND AR '· Tuesday, Oct. l J • 6:30 p.m. lrvlH City . c.ucu. council chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd. Wednesday, Oct. 12 • 7:30 p.m. f'ou&ala ValJey Plaaalq Com- m i1tloa, counctl chambers. 10200 Staler Ave. ... Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, Octob« 11, 1988 Aa Car pool success claim challenged 8y 801 VAN £Ylt£N Ofllle0-."91 .... Contrar)' to official cla1m5. car-pool lanes on the Costa Mesa ffft'Way have not l>ttn suettUful 1n encourapna motorists to car pool. a citizens' sroup that opposes the spttial lanes cha~ Monday. In a statcment to lhe Oran~ County Transponation Commission. Les Ber- riman. a mcmbtr oflhe sroup Drivers for Htghway Safety. said consultant Sharon Greene and Associates used questionable information in a recent study of car-pool lanes on the Costa Mesa Freeway. • According to commission staffers. the study of 777 reaular freeway users provided evidence that the avcraac number of peopte per vehicle is higher on the Costa Mesa Frttway than on other freeways where there art no car-pool lann. Amona those polkd. S7 perttnt said IM\· 10lntd car pools'in the pMI two years. Of th<>K sh.Inna ndn. 9S ptreent said the) were encou~ to car pool because of the uis1ence of car-pool lanes. Grttne rtponed d\at. while averqt veh1c~ occupanc)' on county freeways was It 13 per vehicle. the fiaurc for Lbc Costa MCS1-cfrccwa y was substanuall)' h1&her - l.2S. But Bcmman told the commission Monday that the countywidc averasc vehicle occupancy cited by Greene was lower ttiao the fiaure obtained tn a much larger survey conducted for the Transpor- tation Corridor Agencies. ··A recently conducted survey with 125.000 rnpondcnu ~ports the ayeragc vehicle occupancy to bt 1.27. not 1.13:" said Bcmman. "Thus. 1f anythana. car pc>ohn& IS &rCltCr on freeways Without I diamond lane." Susan Baxtrr-Manec. a spokrswoman (or the T ranspon.auon Comdor A&cncies.. confirmed that the 1.2.7 avttqt had bttn obtained 1n the agencies' survey. But she said the a&encies' survey may have bttn drfTerrnt from ·the study conducted for 1he Transpon.ation Com- m1ss1on. ··Jn ours we onl) surveyed people on the fr~wa> onramps, which meant that it was heav1l~ wc1ahted toward peosm who live in OranJeCounty." satd Mance. "whereas on the Costa Mesa Frtt"11Y you have a lot of people coming in from u far away as R1vers1de. So I don't really think you can comparr the tv.o." Kia "Monaza~1. a staff analyst for the .,, . Transporiat1on Comm1ss10~. qrttd that Bcmman's C'omparison or fiaurn was ~IOOablf: The comtn1ss\on's study. he saecl in- cluded oountywick veb1dc occupancy fipin obtained b) the Catifonna Orpan- ment of Transportation. "This fiaurt of 1.13 occupa11ts per car is from the on~in& freeway monitorina reports th.al Cahrans has been pubhshin& e,·ery quaner:· he said. "What 1t shows over a penod of a couple of years is lhu. wh~rt~ occupancy has remained constant or ao e down on other freeways, it bas gone u on the SS (ftttwa)·). Frankly I'm moce oomfon.able with these figures than the onh cited by Mr. Bemman. J don't kr'!OW. tnoup: about h(>W the "Transpor- t:.a'non tomdor Agtncies' study was con- docted. and what !,.ht assumptions were." .. ·. . ,~ .. ... . . . .. ··Kraft's l~Wyer . a ·Ssailed Cleanup along the waterfront . _ Atlantic Richfield Corp. 18 ln•olftd In a •u Health Department. tbe AU Qaality M•n"&,emeat cleanup project at tbe elte of a former Arco 1u Dlatrkt ud tlae Recloaat Water Quµty atrol •tatlon at tfae CQm~r of Bun~OD Street ·aa~ Boud, tbe atte will eYeDtaally be put of'tbe city'• Paclflc .Cont Blab.way In =aaa~a Beacli, .8340 mlllloa ndeTelopmeat .ProJect called fie llonitorecl by tile oran,e Coaaty EnYlronmeataJ Waterfront. · . - O¥jlldge J • "' • From s~ff ud wire nports . Thl" J¥d8" presid1n·g over Randy Kraft's scnal ·murder tnal lambasted a defense la~er and the \}.ate appellate cou.ns·,fter ' 1he la~er. SI) mg he was ill. requested a recess Ol the oft~11-delayed case .. Supenor Cour\-Judac Do~ ~c<'.'arttn also. threaten~ Monday to force,.;cou~ appointed anOmc}' James Merwin to · continue w11h the tnal. despite the fact that • the lav.'\cr. who said ht had flu-like symptons. appeared ashen-fa~ and was _ s~atlng profusely. · . The Judge also sugested turning the cross-cummatioo of a wuncss over to Kraft. who 1s charged wtth 16 counu of murder .. · "What.is the problem. Mr. Merwin? Arc · vou pregnant?' McCartin snapped. '~An ·~ attorney with an IQ of 90. which is hipr th.an most attorneys. could cross-ex.amine this •wi1ncss. l co1,1'd cross-cumme this .. wnness.·· . Merwm was questjonms a pr<Keeution Wltness 'Nhen he S&Jdbis Ru-like symptom' ~ d1stracttn' hts conttntration. • . . The" .judge sa•d 'he would allow Kraft to N . o ·K .1 · ~ : :.a ·• 1 fin1shcross-cummationwhcf\-co-counse1 · ewpoft· s p ans 1.ot .meu1ca . -fuf:r.~.q~~~:. :\~·.~~ · · • . -• · •. • kraft. 43. ha:s been allowed to ask some building·desp· .ite·some p·J:otest' ::~~~:·~~i~.il;:ir~~: -• . · eApressed concnn about how lhc tran· · · • · • · • • · scni:>t of the tnal would look on appea,l j f By PAUL ARCHIPLEY meetings..~ 1th . ~s1dents. ~.tar'iootd rt'p-. Opponents at '"l~e mecilllg ~rg.ued the McCarttn forced the defense to cirry on.' 0t1t1eo...,,.....,.,,, resentat1ves.a\ ihe site on \\eckends to area has &f9Wn smce the council last ··Screw tht record." the· J~· ex- ' ti d 1 ffi h Id explain 1ht1 P5QJCCI at ~"1 l)oush and ·'approved the proJect,and pc~ studies we~ claimed. ·-rm sick and tjrtd bf fiddling "' "c-sto~ me aca o ace 01 ing · incurred extra· npense to m1nim1ze dis-· nttded. around with t~e appellate courts on this across 1hc Slrtt\ from Hoag MemonJI rupt1on du.nng the 18-month construc11on . ··we nttd to take a fresh look .at th1s case ·· "" .. ~ · Hospital was ap_provcd Monda) b} tht" • penod.. · . • proJtct.'' said n-s1dent L6ul$<' .Grttlt\ -is Later he said. "l'rfl not gotng· tO·t1ptoc · NewPon Beach C11y Council. · · · (' .i • • k 11 • k · · • tti_1s the kmd of mtens1t} consistent wnh through the tulips wnh 1hc.api)ellatecourts Th 85 ()()(). r b Id" · ons1ruc11on wor ers w1 par on a t.,. h f " N .d '> W on this.·· . .. · e . squarc-1001 u1 mg was pnvattl) kase(f lot and be shuttled JO. the ·~e w1s cs.o nest •. ewpon res1 cots. e appro'ed O\er the conc~rhs of Coun· bualding_sitl" tn orskr to chminate·par.king re~.lh don 1 kno"' • • The Judat n-lented. however. and ad-- c1lmen Phil Sansone and Donald Strauss and traffic problems dunng consiruction. 1h1s _1s a n-al upzonmg ~hel'I ~en-JOUmed the tnal about thrc:t .~o'Clf$.earl~. · as well as several residents "'ho spoke at King said. . dawnzonan4 C\t~v.here-else. said m•- the.ii>ubhc heanna. ·The apphca1J91'.' was the third in seven d~.~t Die~ Nichols. ,-. . 1 • ... _. • Jerry King. • spt"aking-for 1tp'phcant ,·cars for the prOJtel. It was last approved .· The umu~J for this de'>elopment was Newpon Lido Medical Center. said. an in 1985. but the use permll and traffic ~ghJ in I 98S. said res1d~nt Chn~ Hansen. adjacent seven-stof) medical oflice.butld-stud~ lapstd whtn the apphcan1s failed to Not \~~-because '-'est ev.pon has f'oweroatageldtB ·· Huntmgtoa Beacb -· ing 1s 98 JXrcent occupied and more space begin cons1ruct1on. Kang said the project cha,ngcd. is needed 10 meet continued demand. was held up when one of the'panncrs filed King said the appf1cants complete!~ Kang said the applicant held sevc:ral for bankruptcY. redes1gn~d the project after listening to · m1dents concerns an 1985. 1nclud10g Thousands of rcs1denu an 1hc north• -----------~-----------------~ 1~~on0Cun~~und~~1~and~e v.cs~mpan~Hunt1~wn~~wo~up· addiuon of open Spac'C 1n a fog toda). ot onl) was u thick and . c1up 1-opat!io·' San D''°'cfio·F·-reenTay "'n airplane: Caunctl"'Dman Ruth~hn PlumllJ,tr damp oumde. It ~bla.ck.1mil:k®el1la n . LI l l\.;o· J I t'1'4 l.J chasusedopponentsforspeakmgupatthe poweroutage. . 11th hour. Mtkc Mantn. a spokesmaft for the The California H1ghwa) Patrol this month will begin using 1ts fixed -wing a1rcrafi to assist patrol \Chicles 1n a~ prrhendmg speeders m the ~u\h Orange County area. Capt. Steve Malone. commander of the CHP sSan Juan Capistrano office. said the state-funded program will be used ran- domly durina da) ligh1 hours. when 11 will be used at all 11mes w11h two or three marked patrol units. Malone said the ne"' elTon to drop the average speed of traffic on the San Diego frttway complements a federall~ funded program that has been m t'fTC<"t smce Jamar,. The CHP intends 10 adJus1 flight altitudes and tum-around points 10 lessen noise impacts on.resident ·-rm \'Cf) d1sappo1nted the people ~ho Southern California Edison Co .. satd i appcartd tonight didn't appear befo~ the cu·cutt malfunctioned at 6 30 a.m. and that Plannan.1 Comm1ss1on:· Plummer said. .'.?.()()() customeB lost power an the frca · .. ln all fa1mess to 1he applicant. consider-betv.ttn Mcfadden and Warner avc;nucs 1ng the ume and mon~~ the~ '\C "'pc!'ndcd. and Graham Street and t-luntington Har- 1t"s rcall> hard for us 10 den) n:· ~ bour } · · Kina said constructton of the bu1ld1ng. Po~r v.u rcsto~ en 55 minutes t~atl · ~h1ch w11l anclude four floorsofoffictsan~ylf'C8S (\CCpt (or ao industnal SC'ClJOn on an atnum on the fifth Ooor. "'II be-gin a~. ·1n<tustnal Dnve'~tv.rttn McFadden and soon as c1t) permm arc issued i Rc~\Dmc Mesa woman who died Sunday in car crash llad several names fnend of his l"\·turlfnend. sunglasses. r • • • • • Rings and currenn ~onh S l.SOO .\ residen t 1n 1hc I ~ooo block of was taken from a home in the 300 West~ood said someonr entered an block of 16th Platt. The crook found unlocked front ~ indov. and stole a • a v. indo" w11h a broken lock and nna and a stereo made oil ~1th lhc goods ~ht le the .\thief stole t~o·ca~ of8udwe1ser ~oQlan walking near the 1ntcn«uon of Htd.s Can~on and Yale Avcnwe Monda' aftem~n. • • •• .\n ckctnc generalor ·was stolen fr~m a recrea11onal ve-htele parked in the 40 block of Tr1 I Land Way somctfme O\ er the Y.ttktnd. ]BJ .JONATJIAN..VOLBE 0. ....... ,... .... Police today identified a Costa Mesa woman killed in a siqle-Qr ~den a Sunday u Sbcny Qdaer, but the tut was not simple. Police lnvestiptor Floyd W4.Jdron said Od8et bad five or six names. The 29-year-old was also known as Sherry Sprow, Sherry Perea, Sherry Olson and Sherry Gray. She added the middJc name of "Mict>clle" to a Newport Beacll About S 1.000 in cash was sto,cn at Villa Nova mtaurant. 3131 W. Coast Hwy .• after the bookkccpcr set 1wo moMy hep on the offitt noor and went downstairs.for a cup of c:offtt. When she returned five m1n1.1tn later. the money was tone. ••• A husky/shepht'rd mixed breed dot tha• had bttn locked tn the Pl"llC al a homt on the 400 block of V 11ta Roma wu found c:onvulsina and foam•na at the mouth by its owner. The dot spia up a Pl«e of meat that anaJ)lis shOWtd had been laced with stryd\nutc. The owner prtviovsly bad '°'"'~ 1nonymous notn datnltlUftl tht q 's hfc 1f I\ COft- linued 10 tilrt. • • • An obviously into•ttat~ man couple of the names. police said. Officers had no immediate expla· nation for the various names but said Sherry Odaer is the woman ·s correct name. Cader was killed Sunday when her new Nissan Pulsar slammed into a utility pole on Newpon Boulevard near 23rd Street in Costa Mesa. Waldron uid. She was travelina south on New- pon Boulevard when the Pulsar hit lhe traffic liabt just after 9 a.m. The turMd off the a.undry room haht at an apertmftlt buildina in the 4900 block of Nq>euM and stumbled an to a woman who WIS washana her clothes. The v1C1im saa~ and pusMd the man away bef~ nan.nan, out He was la.t lttft S\llltnftl down Seashore Onvc. • • • An ippltTntly dnanlt woman pointed a handpn 11 a couplt ly1na on tht •nd aa Lrtdt Corona Main ~h and tbralflatd ahem before wandt'nna off'. • • • Judlt Brian Cann. t.ht' subject ofa 1&ak JUdlCial 1nvn1J11tion. ~ recT1v1111• tbrnni119 phone call for at ltaSl the lftOIMt WM in the Pitt Ihm ntOlttM. Tiit callti' ..... rnlir· , .. he wa llAi .. 10 C.ncr. said to rttay the '!'" I : "Tdl laim be is a dead man. m1den1 ran soml" errands. r woman was pronounced dead about A 24-,ear-old ~·man ttponed a ~~~': ~uf; .. sazoa~d-~co~~~n K at an hour later at Fountain Valley man whistled 81 her wfule she .... Regtonal Hospital. 1 _.._..,. Bea b ' WaJdron said he was unsure what sunbathed b' her condom1n1mum --.-c caused the acctdent. The boulevard pool. When she looked at him. his .\ Can)On \'J('IA rrs1dcnt com- cuncs shghtl) where the acc1dcn1 pants ~ett at his ~n~ and he v.as plained to poll~ ~onda~ that the occurred. but he said it was too earl) masturbaung. He Oc<f when the home v.as burglanzed. ~•th a los 10 tell whether the curve was. a factor. woman ran tow~r<1 ~m. esttmated at S4 ~·~. in the crash. Mort than S 12.000 an ttrn and -\ cast-iron che t ~ u rt ported Pohce have been unable to locate radio tqu1pment ~as taken from stolen Monda) from the coun}ard of an)' v.1tnesscs and no sk.idmarks v.ett unlocked 1rucks at a Baker Stree1 an apartrnent compk\. on Cypress found 1n the strttt. n autopsy has equipment n-ntal sh!-'P· Dme. not been completed. • • • Bantmcton Beacll -\ larac potted plant "'as damaged od ed hat cQ\a...t.-b,) unknown suspeoct\ Monda) on .\ cust .an repon t • .-• Third Strttt The damaae was csll· of JU' en1les "'-ere d,aina up plants at mated at s 100 the Rambo~ Presc-hool. 662 l Glen. · Coetallee& in order to set u~ •. ~teboard count. IMae Someonutolea stttnna •heel and " man "'"h shau> hair and a • • • Someone stoic 600 shttts of pl\wood from a 'construction s1tc in the 15 300 block of Bartanca Parkway sometime Monda\ • •• .\ bfack t hcYrolet Camaro was stolen from 1ts parlung spot It the' comer of ..\hort Avenue and Von- Karman "-venue Jl'oa.ntalll Valley Somero~ Jumped a block Will dunna closed hours at Machan ursen at 8601 Garfk.ld Ave JOtM- ttme bttwttn Sunday and Mo•y and damqed plants and ~y. ••••• "tool bo,. wonh $420 was JtoRl\ from an opened PnlllC on the 16000 block of Mt. Kirby Strttt over lht' Wttkcnd A 32-)'ear-old woman repontd a man reached throl.l&h the l_q of his short$ and fondled h1mttlf aRcr he told her she was "'Ct') beaut1ru1.·· TM woman )died at the man. who fled . She sa•d she ~uld not howtvcr. 1cknuf) him 1fsht saw him ••n. 1ear stuf\ from a l97Q >~pow VolU-bewbell cap pulled his panu do~n waacn Bua an \tie 9000 block of 1nd masturbllted 1n front ofan lf\ inc K.ahuh. ·----------------------• • • • • • • • J0.)ear-old Otamond Bar man was arTCStcd for al~I> tr)'•ftl to run h1seit"IJr1fncncl'u-arOlf1ht' roed. Nabll Ehas Bandak told oftktn ht JUSt wotcd to talk to tht' woman Wbtn tht 1nadtnt occulftd M Ncw-pon .,._,.ud and Arl1ftl\Oft Dnve. • • • An tmolo)et' al a Hart»or ~ )ftP dmlcf'Ship ICponed ..... '°""bod) '-°"ml IUJllf iato * ..,._ tuk Of his car. wtad will c:os1 about SI .000 to fii;. He SUJPft'U a St' cr1l lockers rcponedly 'a't'tt =~"al~!f.~H~~~..t1.:9! LBcbeckpolntnabe5motorlata . S20 pillf or )Cln5. sio cash and a s l 0 Wlllt't. • •• 1\ man &:k": ps 11 the Mobil saauoa at Wesa ud ~ uid a thld'saolt hat waHn C'Oft ...... SZ wtt19r ht -a oua of his car. • • • nirvn NlGM I :'f~ va• partid at Panfk Coat H~ M dlr ... Md llOk a~ fGmlliF tftl SIOO and _:I pa1r of SllO .. .. . . .r-i Report says foreign agents visited U.S. nuclear labs 2country · musicstan win twice WASHINGTON (AP) -Lax se- curity at Encray Dtpanmcnt nuclear weapons laboratones has allowed 19tn1S from Iran. the Soviet bloc and other countries to p in access to sensitive research facilities. con- attSSional investigators reported today. The visits took place at the national laboratories at Los Alamos and Sandia in New Mexico and at Livermore in California. where scien- tists conduct advanced research on nuclear weapons and the Strateg.ac Dtfense lnitiauve. known as Star Wars. according to the report by the General Accounting Office. The foreign VISltors included spttialists from the Soviet bloc.' Chin.a and nauons believed either to have nuclear weapons or arc sccluna to develop them. includina India. Pakistan. Israel. Brazil and A~n­ tina. Also allowed anto the plants were \\isitors from both Iran and Iraq, the report said. . Officials at the FBI and CIA declined to discuss possible es- pionage 1nvestigauons stemmina from the incidents and it was not clear whether any secrets had been lost. according to the report by the aacncy, the 1nvcsuga11ve arm ofConaress. Formal!) delivering the report to the Senate Governl)'lcntal Operations Committee. the GAO's senior as- sociate dire<:tgor. Keith Fultz. said that his inspectors "could not dc- 'termine 1f scns1t1 ve or classified S tate Departme~t wants to let Marcos plea bargain LOS ANGELES (AP) -The State Dtpartmcnt wants U.S. prosecutors to settle their ongoing fraud probe of Ferdinand Marcos by offering him a plea barpin that would keep him out of jail but cost him millions of dollars. it~ reported today. The Los A•les Times. citing a confidential State Dtpanmcnt cable. also rq>orted that federal officials fear if the dePC>SC<i Philippines prcsjdcnt is indicted in the United States. he might -seek to involve and embar- rass .. U.S. and PhilippinesofficiaJs by making allcgauons of improper or illqal conduct Under the pica agrttmcnt outlined in the cable. Marcos would have to return hundreds of millio ns of dollars in assets he allegedly took from his country's treasu ry before he ned to Hawaii in 1986. However. he would avoid a prison sentence. Sources fam1lta r with the investiga- tion told The Times tha1 U.S. officials arc worried that 1f Marcos 1s indicted he may threaten to reveal politically damaging information about his deal- ings with the federal government to pressure the White House to block prosecution. • • The cable al"so states. without elaborating. that the State Depart- ment is concerned that Marcos may be attempting to destabilize the current government of the Philip- pines. anformauon has been lost" but added that "btcauw of ... wnknesses in OOE's forcian visitor controls. we have linle confidence that ldeaquate protection or ftapons-related infor- mation and tccflnol<>sy is achieved." The Eneray Dtpanment ··scnerally does not folJow its own requirements and obtain bacqround information on forcian visttorsand ass~ from communist and other sensitive coun- tries." the GAQ repon said. As a rtsult. It said, "suspected fortiJn .,ents and individuals from facilities suspected of conductina nuclear weapons activities have ob- tained access to the laboratories without prior DOE knowled~." the rePQn said. v A hospitals•. data doctored WASHINGTON (AP) -The Vet- erans Administration's chief medical officer ordered chanics in a study of monality rates at VA hospitals to avoid "inevitable" criticism of the agency based on the initial findings, accord in& to a publish-ed rcpon today. The Washington Post reported that the initial study had found that 12 percent of the VA facilities had exC'CSSively hi&h death rates. Br using a more riaorous statistical levc in the revised study. that rate was dropped to just 3.5 percent. Dr. John A. Gronvill acknowl- edged in an interview with the Post that he ordered VA officials to come up with I lowcr-pcfttnt.qe out "Of fcar- that the VA could oot withstand criticism that "inevitably'· would result from comparison with mor- t.alit) rates.at private hospitals. The federal Health Care Financi ng Agency had found in a separate study that 2.5 percent ofthc·nauon 's private hospitals had highcr-than~xpectcd monahty rates. · 30 TONS OF PUMPKINS ? A"'ll--~ YES! Mother's grief NASHVILLE. Tcnn.(AP)-Hank William• Jr.. the son of a mt.asic lettnd. and K. T. Oslin, who lat.ancbed 1 carttr at llf 44 and still doa the dlom at home,. *h .won two Country Music Association awards. r Wilhams. whe>1e father, Hank Wil- liams Sr .. sana count!)'. wecpcn lite ··Your Cheatin' Hean • in the early 19SOs. was voted entenainer of the year for the second stra.iaht year, JOinina Barbara Mandttll and ..the aroup Alabama as the only per- formers to have won it more than once. His "Born to ~" won top album in Monday ni t's presen- tations broadcast by C TV. Oslin was voted the yqr's top female vocalist and won best Soni for her po1an1nt "80's Ladies. .. 1"be awards came just two years after she btpn sinaing country m&a1ic pro- fessionally following minor sin&ina roles on Broadway and muina television commercials for items like denture products. Oslin. 46. ended a four-year man by Reba McEntirc by winning the bullet-shaped trophy as the top female vocalist. A Rocheeter, N.T . ~Hee officer trlee to ahleld th.:.dtee of llarUJD Garcia at the .cene of a hoaM fire u ee of Garcia'• two children are .remoftd from the ba lldlna. Randy Travis. whose afbum "Always &. Forever" has sold 3 million copies, won No. I male vocalist for the second straight year at the black-tic ceremonies. AIDS protest shuts down FDA site ROCKVILLE. Md. (AP) -Hundreds of demon- strators angry with the federal government's response to the AlDS cnsis efTtttivcly shut down the Food and Drug- Admm1strat1on's headquancrs today. Authonties had arttsted at least 50 protesters by mia- moming. Demonstration leaden said they~ aim_ing for JOO arrests by early afternoon_ but it appeared thay would not meet their goal. Scores of federal cmplor.ecs were stranded outside the sprawling 17-story building when Montgomery Count,· police stopped letting workers inside at 7:30 a.m. The FDA had planned for its 5.000 employees to amvc early and use a rear cntra~. But a small band of demonstrators broke off from the main body of protesters at the building's main cntranCC"-and blocked the-other three entrances. • Rather than trying to separate demonstrators from employees. police told the workers the buildina was closed. Two-hours later. police officers at intenections near the building approached workers and told them the bu1ld1ng was closed. Many employees. caught off guard when police closed the bui lding. lined up at piy phones nearby to call their co- workers inside and find out what to do. Candidates spar Qve;r fol"eigners' economic threat Ne-wpon Nut'ln'y and Garden <blerr . 1S6 NSJ C~\I hw~ nt>wpor1 be.ch !!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~~~~~==~~~~====::::~~~~~~~~~~;:=:=:=:~==~LJ ByTheAssoclatedPress ' Michael Dukak1s and George Bush Koreans. not arms to the ayatollah." Dukakis said. sparred long·<hstancc today over foreign economic threats. wi th Dukak1s call ing for better training to hold onto JObs now going overseas but Bush saying the Dtmocrat was just trying to scare people into voting for him. Both men were heading today for the West Coast and Thursday night's debate.· with new polls indicating Bush's lead had shrunk to next to nothing. Before leaving. Dukakis also re- newed his counterattack aaainst Bush's repeated charges in connte- tion with Massach4setts.' former pns- oner-furlough program. under which an inma,te failed to return from a weekend furlouah and attacked a Maryland couple several months later. · Bush. however, in remarks prepared for delivery to Seattle Uni- versity Business School students. said Dukakis is .. stoking fean about foreign influence." an apparent refer- ence to Dukakis' recent comments on foreign investment in 1he United States. · , "My opponent needs an issue and he's willing to scare peopl~Jo find it: so like the 'Know Notflina Party' a century before him be'~ turned to fear of foreigners. He's not a Know Nothing -he knows better. But perhaps he's a feel nothing candidate. or maybe. with this later flipflop. he's become a believe nothing candidate." Bush said. "I don't think he really believes it. He ran apinst this so-called econ· omlc nationalism in the primaries." Bush said in remarks released before he left Washinaton. D.C Dukakis. on NBC"s "Today" pro- gram. nokd that i-nmatcs have com- mitted murders while on furtou&h under a California program begun ---1 while President R-~apn-was-govcrnor and after escaping from a Houston halfway house Bush helped st.an. One day carrier. Bush. hammering at his prefcrmS_jQpic......= crime_ - accused -his rival of bei,,_ more concerned abOut the fate of cnminals than their victims and vowed a difTcnmt apt>roKh if elected. .% Annual Yield Current Rate * ON DEPOSITS OF $500 to $99, 999 FOR 180 DAYS % .. IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS REGARDING AMERICAN SAVIN().S ... WE WELCO:ME YOUR CAIL. 1-800-247-7197 Mon.-Sat. 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. .,. -.... _.. --.....__ -- • Fcdcnl rcplal.im requires a sut.&arlial irtercst penalty for mty withdrawal. Annual ~d bMcd m ~y com~~ when • Ukn:ll ii 1cn on deposit for one-year 1enn. Riie, yacld ,..s term aibjecl to d-ae without not1ee. ' ··1 think when you use human tragcdv for political purposes. that's kind of the ultimate cynical act in politics." Dukakis said of Bush's l'«'Cnt remarks and television ,ads. Later. in Medford. Mau .. Dukakis pushed for improved science and technology education and train in& as the way to restore U.S. dominance in manufacturing and . marketing of t high-tech consumer goods. ··1 want us to begin selling cars and computers and compact discs to tkte Germans and the Japanese and the While the viee president courted votes m TrcntQb's Italian-American nei&hborhood. Dukakis traveled lO a community buih <>n the premise chit affordable houlina should be a vail- able to post-World Wadi families. The Democratic nomintt t.ated a visit to a typical family in uvittown, N.Y .. and a spccch at t~ local hi&h school to Introduce his plan that would allow first·time buyers to use up to SI0.000 of their IRAs or pension plans for a down paymmt. ~lgh ·~~u~ to. decide ... rape victim ID case· WASHINGTON (AP)-The Su- preme Coun t'oday ICJ'ttd to dcc1<k wM\hcr states may her publication or broadcast of a rape victim's name that ~en tct from law enforce-~' otricial•. The coun said it will hear an appeal by a Wttkly Aonda ftCWIP'l>er or· dcttd to pay $97.SOO to a rape victim for what the p1pcr said was inadver- tent publication of her name. Lawym for The FlOrida Star, a. newspaper primarity ltrviq the black community ui · Jacksonville. said n will ~ put out of butinns if forttd to S-I the award. : TM SUirobWMd fk rapr VK'tim's narM from a~ J*ltd by the Jacksonville Shmft's DtpenrMnl an its JW'"I room in Ociober 1911. Thr MWSpaptf laid I ttponer tratntt cODlld the Wrift"s rcpon. ind-= ihc v1C11m'1 name. I\ "' publ' e\itt\t~the~ Im I poltCy apiMI ldrntlf'ydl ripe vic:1intl. ~ -.. no flc1ual dilp'81e IMt the ume ... publilMd 1n tnar .. d. an Yiolauoa ol IM 5-'1 owa PGllCY· •• lltt nrwspeper laid. P\abliahon of lhe n1mt violltld I Aorida law that makes it a milde- mcanor to publish or broedcast names or other idcnti(yina infor- mation of .. the victim o( any wiuaal ofrtnte." • The victim of the l 913 assault sued Sbaiff'O.le Canon and the Saar. She was awarded ,2.soo from the lheriff' and S97.SOO from the ~per. lawyert for the Star said a 1986 state appalt court Nlina that 11phtld the award ~omi II scrinofSupmnc 1 Cou,t dttisions. iRCludi• 1 I 97S ~lint that stales may not' outlaw the brol4CUt ofcal):t victims;....._ In &hat cut. tM ¥ktiM't M9t was uted in an opett coun .....,,. in which five rMn pleaded pihy to the lttack. In that 197j rvlina. tbr 5-#Cfl.C Coun sud the Constitutioft•s f"tnt Amtadman don not alloW --to .. impoerlMCtiootfordw,.....dDn of ltUthAll a•fonnaticMI C01tllli11 II in oflkW "°"" ftCOnh opcll lo ,.Mk i~ ~ ... Flaridl .. ti•. I ..... llliMIM a=-dMld-. liill ... ii a --~ .... .. ""''" .. __ j_._ ... .. WOR LD Pope a11alled J>yleader of Irish church STRASBOURG. France CAP) - Popt John Paul II uraed a common political structure for EuroJ)( today durina a sptteh that was interrupted , ·wMn the Rev. Ian Paisley. an lnsh Protestant leader, ~hOutcd "I re- nounce you!" The address to the EuroJ)(an Par- liamen1 -an advisory body to the 12-membcr European .. Economic Community -)Nas the pontiffs main sptteh durina has four-day trip to nonhcastern France. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, October 11, 1988 Aa Algerian people return to work after food cost riots ~LGIERS . .\laena (AP) -The crowd of mo~ than 10.000 1n the Algenan capnal appeared to return to .\lg1ers d1stnct of Bab-el-Oued Wit· normal toda) as thousands of J)(ople nesscs est a mated that 25 to 30 J)(ople went back to work and some shops were killed. Dozens of others ""ere reopened af\cr a week of blood> nots · wounded. some scnousl) over nsing food pnces. One witness said he saw man) President Chadh lkndJed1d. speak-bod1ts. "The soldiers were, p1hn& 1rig to t~ nauon Monda~ night. them into trucks. one body on top of vowed to address economic com-another." he said on cond111on of plaints that caused the noting m anon) m1t). - which an estimated 300 J)(Ople died The government has provided no in batiles with troops. casualt} figures. but reliable repons He also hinted he ma) not run for fro m police. hospitals and other another term. sources 1nd1cate that as man) as 300 Hts address came hours after ha'e died 1n the .,,.eek of unrest. The troops fired machine guns into a go\-tmment declared a state of cmergf'nc' Thursda) and authonz~ troops to lire on demonstrators if necessaf) to dtSJ)(rst them. Monda)"s demonstration was 10 be a peaccf ul protest march orpnized by the Isla mac f undam~ntal1st Move· ment for Algenan ReJ'lewal. which has demanded the government resign· toda). h was not 1mmed1ately clear how the violence began. The amt) remamed 1n control of sens111' e points in the capital of Algiers toda). including the NauonaJ Assembl~. the main newspaJ)(r El Moud1ah1d and cnucal road JUnC· t1ons '\ After a welcome by Lord Plumb, president of the Parliament. the pop( bcpn SJ)(aking but was immediately interrupted by Paisley. standing at the blck of the room. '"I renounce you! I renounce you as the antt-Christ!" shouted . Paisley. a parliamentanan and i he leader of the Irish Protestal\t Otmocrattc Unionist Pany. an.&nl'aloleyden-tbe-1nsirubour,,;.~=.--Political unresfgrips Yugoslavia Other parliamentarians sur- rounded Paisley. threw paJ)(rs at him ltld tore from his hands a crude oran&e banner reading. "John Paul 11. anti..Chnst. .. Plumb called for Paisley to be evicted from the chamber. and parlia- mentarians applauded as he was led away. Paisley later told Journalists: ··1 was hammered. I was beaten about the ears and the body:· • It was the second incident in Parliament this "'eek an which Paisley denounced the pope.- John Paul remained . impassive throughout the ll}terrupuon and quietl y resumed his speech. He was Increase in U.S. payment for Philippine bases OK'd By Tile Assoc:lated Press again interrupted. this ume b) ap-BELGR ..\OE. Yugosla' 1a (..\Pl - plausc. · Thousands of ~orkers e nded stn~es As he has throughout the tnp. the-toda\ 1n the face of heigh tened ponttfTendorsed a common political secu'nt' measures. but other structure for Europe and called on protesters pressed demands for econ- Europe to "resume her role as a om1cand poht1cal changes and forced beaco n in the c1' ih2at1on of the out a regional leader. .. world" b) lighting pollution. preJu· ..\ Communist Part' leader from missal ot officials from the auton- omous pro' ance of KoSO\O. at the center of ethnic unrest. Pan~ leader!. from Serbia met an &lgradt> to drscuss protests fueled b) the ethnil problems and b~ Yugoslavia'!> econ- omic cns\s_ mee11ngot thl.' pohq-mak1ngCentral ( omm11tet' "llh a denunc1a11on of ··au those who ha'e formed 11· real hunters· posse·· against the Serbian OOS'>CS • The kaders of Serbia have been '1t'wt>d b~ man) as backing rallies b) mmorll\ ~erbs who want greater control o'er tht' pro' 1nces dice and secularization:· the Serbian republic demanded dis· Ratom1r V1co. a member of ~rb1a·s ruling Polnburo. opened the • . . Israeli troops disrupt Palestinian funeral BETtf LEMEM. Occupied West Bank ( '\P)- lsraeli soldiers brokt' up a funeral procession for a Palest1n1an t«n-ager todav b> jumping aboard a van ca011ng the bod) and torc1ng 11 to dnve away. ·About 100 Pales11n1an mourners responded b} thro"'ang rocks and firebombs at the soldiers. who fared rubber and metal bullets to disJ)(rse the crowd. Four Israeli soldiers Jumped aboard a red van carr) mg the bod) of Nazem Abu Juda after the Palestinians an the procession began throwing stones. Two ann} Jeeps forced the van. dnven b) a Palest1n1an. to accompan) the soldiers to a location the arm' retused to disclose. A.n arm) si)okesman. "ho 1s not idenulied under regulauons. said the bod) ~as taken to halt a large demonstra11on He said 11 ~ould be returned "at a .ume "ht>n "'t' know 11 would not cause disturbances in Bethlehem ·· Dunng the d1Slurbance. soldiers shot a 19· \Car-old man 1n the side "Ith a plasttc bullet . .\rab ~1tne.,:s said The arm' confirmed one man "as ~ounded . .\t leas1 ft, e i)eople ~ere arrested. . The funeral was for .\bu Juda.' 18. who died earl) toda~ aftt>r being shot an the head with a plastic bullet Sept 28 in a clash with soldiers. alcord1ng.10 residents and officials at the nearb) Dhe1sht> Retuget' Camp ~here tne bo) lived. ·· 'e"s ol the death quad.I) spread mlh.ecamp altt'r Pales11n1ans l eepmg a ~atch otnsrde Abu Juda s rooJTI at Jerusalem 's Mukassad Hospital tdok the bod\ to Dhe1she., srx miles south of Jerusalem. minutes after the )Outh died. Mosque loudspealcrs called on residents to pan1c1pate an funeral sen ices and to pa) tnbute to .the fa{Tl1I) of the ··man)(... · The arm~ responded almost 1mmed1ately b} declanng a curfe" on the camp near Bethlehem. and clos1nt all entrances MAN ILA -U.S. and F1hp1no officials reached a tenta11'e agreemenl for Washingto n to provide compensation of more than S550 million a )car to use its six military bases an the Philippines. sources said toda). The sources. who spoke on cond1t1on of anonymity. told reporters the two sides had nearl) finished rev1ewangan agreement governing the bases. which are the largest U.S gamson an southeast Asia. An accord on new compensauon tt.>rms through 1991 as expected within a week, they said. In Washington. a U.S. official who has kept a close eye on the negotianons denied there was an agreement. The official refused to be 1dentifjed. The United States now pa)sabout S 180 mil hon a year for the bases. The ~urces an Manila. w~o are close to the tal.ks. said negotiators agreed on a basic annual compensation package ofS 550 million to SS80 mtlllon an economic support. military a~1s~nce and commod1t1cs. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ mostly wheat. I Bombs injure sbr ln Sri Lanka capital COLOMBO Sri Lanka -Three borriBs explode-0 in tht' capital and injured at least 'six people today, a day after live people died during a nat1onw1de stnke to protes~the government's peace avenures to Tamil rebels. Authonties believe the bombs were planted by the People's L1bera11on Front. a radical Sinhalese group that called Monday's strike. said A.S. Scnev1ratne. deputy mspcctor-general of pohcc. "Troops and pohce cordoned ofTthe a rea of the blasts and conducted search OJ)(rat1ons." Seneviratne said ... A number of suspects have been taken 1n for quesuonang." Two bombs exploded 1n 1he business center of Colombo. while a third went ofT near a supermarket 1n a suburb of the city. he said. The People's L1bera11on Front sa)s a peace accord aimed at ending the 5-year-old c1v1I war grants too man) conct>ss1ons to the Tamils. who are lighung for an independent homeland 1n the nonhcastcrn province. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. ...,, Yw .... C...s k tl 1122 .... IUt .. CtSTA IUA-S41· l l Sf .,,,,,.,_.,,,..,,,.,,_J.,.,,,,.,,,,,_,,,,,.,,,,,.,~,,,,,.,~,,,.,,tJ.,.,,.,,,,.,/_,.,~,,.,,,,.,,,. r-n " •r n u.un.nJ.J 0 1) "(" •T I •T f' v.1. A.AnJ.nu OLD FASHIONED SALT WATER TAFFY WE MANUFACTURE & SELLOVER 150 FLAVORS INCLUDING • BERRIES • ICE CREAMS• LIOUflJI?{, .. " •FRUITS ~~ NEW FLAVORS • ~ ·• -' EVERY DAY Wt C.1ltSr>p·ntt,. ''"" ~ • Oth\ltt tOJP'l~(ft•tr .,.,.,, • , •• ~· • OtCltrl SALT WATER TAFFY & BEACH CO. ~ : • • i ' . ...,,, ,,. "'· • . . ,. " , . " . bH·JOH PC?ts Unlimited ' ~--~ ---, I ·. . I ~I · . 1835 Newport Btvd. 122.e210 -I · 181 Weetmln•t• Mall 897-8367 I -----------------------~ I . -I '1 •&111 ·oFF ~NY REGULAR PRICE a,.,,_ .. ':'V •• No Time for Lunch? Try Marcello's Lunch Buffet All You Can Eat s41s October'• Buffet Feature• ''Developing the Ne t Generation" MONDAY • Stuffed Peppers & Soaghetlt w Meat Sa:ice TUESDAY • Meatballs & Rotelli w Meat Sauce WEONCSOAY • Beet Ste"' & Spaghetti w Meat ~11ce • THURSDAY • Ribs Catc1atore & R gaton1"' Meat Sauce Grannies For .N~~ies , In~: ,, FRIDAY • laugna & Sausage 17502 Beach Blvd. (at Slater) Huntington Beach 842-5505 ~ ~ @ llORllO IUUTlll IEll'S SHOES $1 ' 99 HUARACHES SLIP·ONS LACE-UPS ~...._ _ ____., MEN'S ~SHIRTS MEI'S ClllY IS PANTS $19\t • SOLIDS a PAINTS ::s1,,~1T Em f S nl lo lllElllTILY FORUM MEN'S SWUTER $1999 ' .. .. , A~neSty ~pplicants protest shortage of English classes LOS .\NGELES (AP) -Nearly half a million 1mmigran1s who qual- ify for U.S. ci11tensh1p may fail to earn lecal stalus ~cause a aubernatorial veto will bnng on a shona&e of English classes. ahens' rig!\ts gt'(?Ups cha~. Gov. ~rge DculcmeJ1an's veto of Senate Bill 9 on Sept. 30 blocked the distribution of federal funds to com- munity agencies prov1d1ng classes in U.S. civics and English as a second languace. said Anna Kamsvaag, an attorney for the Coahuon for Human Immigration R1&hts of Los Ang.eles. About 800.000 am nest) applicants statewide need classroom instruetion to fulfill amnesty requirements. but a recent U.S. lmm1grat1on and Natu· ralizauon Service survey found only 340.000 spaces available. Kamsvaag said. .. We are not asking fo r an) new money to be allocated from the state bud&et." Kamsvaag said at a news confertncc Monday. · Amnesty applicants must ultimate· ly pa~s a test to prove their mastery of EnJ!tsh ~nd CIVICS to be granted c1t1zensh1p. State government offices wert closed Monday for Columbus Day so neither Dcukmejian nor state Super- intendent of Public Instruction Bill Hontg wen-available for comment. In his veto message. Dcukmejian said the cost estimates for the pro- gram wert ''premature and unwar- ranted ... because no official cost data had been compiled. Sen. Art Torres. D-Los Angeles. wrote the bill that would have boosted the re1mbursernc.-n1 ra(e by SI a student to $3.49. ll also would have allowed education agencies to claim up to SI 00 per student 10 cover start· up. outrtach and enrollment costs. "The governor's veto of this bill means that we will be forced to spend scarce state money in order to serve the needs of th~ immiarants." Torres said l n a prepared statement. Torres' bill relied on federal immi· grat1on grants that must be allocated through state age ncies. · Steve Voss. director of the Catholic Charitic-s program. said that under ex1siting reimbursement guidelines hisaroup will be able to serve just SOO amnesty applicants durina 1988·89 instead of ro.ooo students possible under the vetoed Torres bill. Kamsvaag also criticized state schools chief Honig tbr the rcim· burscment program that she said ''places undue hardship" on com- munity grou1?5 providing classes to amnesty applicants. ·Prop. 103 gets free rcebuttal time LOS ~NGELES (AP) -Con- sumer advocate Ralph Nader's Prop- osition 103 campaif"· which has reported debts o more than $600.000. is rtee1vmg f~ TV 11me to rebut insurance industry attacks on the measure. officials said. Campaign coordinator 8111 Zim- merman said Monday that most stations agreeing 10 the free advertise- ments alfowcd the Prop. I 03 cam- paign to submit its own JO.second commercials to be used each time three 10 liH~ commercials opposing the measure appear on the air. One of the commercials that was t('le\ 1sed Monda} shows Nader tell- ing viewers. in pan. ··or the fi ve insurance propos111ons on the ballot. I'm suppon1ng on l~ one. Proposition I 03. the onl> propo!.ll1on guaranteed to roll back e\'er)'bod) 's rates." Several stattons. however. chose other options. KGO-TV in San Francisco filmed a 60-second inter- view . wuh Prop. 103 Chairman Harvey Rosenfield and K~BC-TV in Los Anl(lc-ss is using its own sum- mary of the measure. Campaign officials said that seven stations in the San Francisco Bay area. six in Los Angeles. four in Sacramento. two in San Diego. two in FrtSno. three m Bakersfield. two in th~ Chico-Redding area. one in Salinas-Monterey and one in San ta ~rbara have granted the Nader msurance measure some free respo~ time. .,~ Keith C~ppell of Briqetown, Nova Scotia, di•play• b.i9 633-pound pampldn. Canadian carves out pumpkin-growing win ~ . at Seoul. including the case of Canadian runner Ben Johnson. who was stnpped of his gold medal when officials decided he'd ~used the chemical to beat the field . Killings related to gangs up in LA LOS ANGELES (AP) -Police officials. who reponcd only last mori th that p ng-rclatcd killinas in t~city had fallen. said a wave of such slayings 1 n September sent the overall rate up 12.3 percent for the first nine months of this year. The 21 gana-related homicides recorded by the Police Department in Seplember was an increase of almost 50 perttnt over the same period a ·year ago. authorities said. In addition to those slayings, there wert 10 other homicides durint August and July that were not classified as gang-n-lated until last month. That increased the total number of the gang-related killings in the city dunng the first nine months of this year 10 174. compared to I SS durinc the sa me period last year. ·we don't feel Jood about it," Cmdr. Wilham Booth. a police spokesman. said of the figures. "I'm not happy at all ... He said the Police Depanment would be re-evaluating how 1t deploys patrols in the city's gang-infested South-Central S«tion as a result of the new statistics. However. "tooth pointed out one bright spot in the latest figures, which showed the c11y's overall murder rate declining. SAN FRANCISCO (AP):._ Allega- tions of drug use may plague human spons but not a super-he.ivyweight contest in the plant kingdom. where the world's greatest pumpkin outhefted the competition naturally. its trainer said. iiiiiii~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~·~·~i~~il ·K~ithC~~l.56.~Non&m~. -gfecfull y denied' a joking suuestion Chapel. a schoolteacher when he's not ·growing pumpkins. spoke over a loudspeaker in an international tele- phone call anchored on the steps of San Francisco City Hall. "The total number of homic.ide5 in Los Angeles was down for the year from 625 in 1987 to 548 so far this year:· Booth said. "If that continues. we will have the lowest murder total in a decade." GRAND OPENING · GREAT RATE! GREAT BoNUSES! EMPIRE OF AMERICA COMES ToCOSTA-MEsA Discover the fun and excitement of banking at our newly remodeled Costa Mesa branch .. EXTRAORDINARY CD RATE! Jo1r •Jr d(hratirin JOJ ~I ·h1-. ~nJI rale un J 14.rrunlh l'l 1' Stor 1n JnJ ip..·r '"u" •1..J.i\ _8. 5_0_~ ... _· . _· ____;;8;_;__.16-=--~-<: ..... tJ..,..-'~'.arr Jdl ,1t\J \S' +"''" :r . '"'1· ' ... )'' ,, ... _.,r " .k.-... • • 'I.I ,,,., 1: fl I ''•ftJ r"i1f1 f.t..!t \"' t l '' I .ti itt !'."j""1 .k-rw 'l,il S'°"""- .... l''.. ,...."" ....-Jr!.# .. "''' r• ..,. • r r \ ... •.,t.h• y EXCITI NG BoNUS MERCHANDISE Th~ JJ\·Jnt.s~« .. 11ull·-<l"h\ hdnk1np. "'Costa Mesa 't <lt'r "-.llt• n•"' with •ht 1,rJnJ<1pen1n~nfour~"'h •,ir .J ... J "•Jr.,~ JI II~• !instr~ "lr<tl AnJ l11(tleliratt> "' '( 1111,rm!l t'w·nJ~ mrr, h.inJ1~ "ht'n mu oren a fl\'\\ account J1 •u'l ·~tJ \\,'iJhrJn,h' Tht i.mmar'Krt 1·alue of tht nv.r JrJ1 .... ,, r•l"•rt.iMl l•.tht IRS rlfl Fnrm 1099.i.~ JJdtt111nJI intm'r in lhl.' war th< a,l°IJUOI 1sopened T~r ri..nu' rrtr1hJnJ1~1~ n11t dl'.i1lahle nn IRA depo~11s Thi, I\ J limited 11~ offer flf"' '' J,. " ,-~ >II lHlJlb[ Yr( R 8'J\I' S.i .IHlO. Cosmo Clock-Radio S9 l/Cf4 Seiko Personal Data Book High-Tech Watchts from AdYall<< S!ll,000 - S24 .999 S25.000 - S49.999 sso.ooo ~ndCMr Canon Desk Cakul~lor CE Headphone Radio tund-Htld Blender "ilh Accessoms by Braun '10.uti Hiah-Tech Oven hy San'° AM F'M Radio u¢it b) Trmd CE Sldt.Step tereo Fashion Radio Cas.~tte SONY Watchman Pmonal T\' Phont AnS"Wln~ \la4:hlllf byf>ana.~IC Cordless Phone from S W Bell y COSTA MESA BRANCH HOURS D'J() Bristol Street Costa Mesa, CA 92626 • HI) UI, • 4:00 p 111. 9:00 l.•. -6~ .... SPECIAL SERVICES!" • S~c1al safe deposit • ,Z4-hoor Autormled Tuller box rites for customers MW!inr IATMI m ihblt dunng tht Cnnd Opening 7 da)'S a wttlc for you r Celebration banking conYmienct • Personal banktr • Complete br~ str~'lces • Speail ~m1nars • lnsunnct products •Convenient IOQtion for • Tax-ddmed investments usy access • Home mortgages • MARTLl~E· bankinl! h\' rhone 7 days a '-"eek from Ii a.m - !I p.m at l.3Q0.84l-2443 "'1)1-drifrrtd m\fttmrnll, 1n..,flnct and mutual funds ut ft-.lll'llmtlldeJ and nlltrtd II,. 1ndepmdm1 wl!Mdiines or d1stribu1orund noc bv f.111ptrt Ill \rnrna ftdrrll Sl-'l!W &Ill Thnt produc1t "' ftOI f'SllC·lnSlllN ~lleSlft ~by l:Apuut Amttia ltal1yCM111 COtl! Bwlin~ ~""'n lrt oftrnd h)' F.mpirr ~lllONI !oottunhts.. hlCOl'"°"ltd WINATRIP FoR 2 To HAWAII! Ori Sift Otpos11 Bo' FREE from (m for Ollf \ear Stop h> our newly remodeled Costa Mesa branch anJ enter to"'"' tnp to Hawaii for tv.o. or a safr deposit bo" FREE from ftts for ant )'tat r------~--~~----, 1 HAWAII TRlP /SAFE DEPOSIT t ·I Box DRAWING I I ~v.'ISC Rl'\.ts I I I ..... IMt\'.h.u.: ()( han~~, tnlmc111al M«Nr) • I I 2 Tn mitr romrlttt tht oll1cllll muy l>Unk"' h"14 rnnt )Qlr~ I tddlwanJ f'lwint numl"ltfon a:r ~&·Pitt• or~1n ~ an6dmp I ti off Of "'llllo )16(1 l!r1gol Strtt1 Cotta Mm. CA 'l2lti26 f I l ~ .... 111ntr.ltrGoftmu,..-.-il1kr I V.1nnm mu~ llf )'fllf\ '" cldn I ~ l'rou-cAllnol bt rtdrfmrJ fut~ ft Odcb of .. 1n111n• lll'f ~d Oil !ht nu111her nl tnl~ Jubln1rtrJ I ; ~and ~t {a.lya'dhm(I( ~" n1 AtMtc.a I ;tJmJ ~p&nk llU1l~Ahd111r1 .... ntA#fltlO arr Ml thf1l'ilt I II ~lmtnoftttl~b,OdobtY 14,1*.,.llbutiiiNr111t1ht ~ngtlllOctol!tr 17, I. I 'I n.•" 11t dtl)' 1lw "ff!Clflitllil~r ol tlit 11<1pomt I .. I "- 1 ...... I I l~~~\~~~~~~~~~~~~~- 1 Mt ~ I .. L ,..,..4 I 9nl y., 1tCA -----------------.-.-.-J I that he may have used anabolic steroids on his CD\ry, a ·6331/1 gourd that won the lntemationaJ Pum_pkin Association World ~eigh-Otf on Monday. · "Oh. no!" said Chapel, responding to the steroid allegation. "Other Canadians used 1t all up... • The question referred to the drug scandals that haunted the Olympics His.entry. which won him S2.000. went up against entries including Broughton. England. and Hokkaido. Japan. Env.Jand's 3J 7-pound entry, grown by i{on Butcher. was weighed in a pub. where cnes of encourage- ment echoed around the City Hall Steps from 5.000 miles away. He also noted lhal the overall homicide rate for South-Central Los Angeles also declined. from 321 for the fJrst nine months o! J 987 to 255 (or the same penod this year. a 20 percent decrease. Booth also said the department is considenng revising its criteria for detemun1ng what 1s or 1s not a gang- related slaying. · I . . Reverse-paternity lawsuit seeking t o overturn husband-fa th er statute LOS ANGELES (AP) - A man who claims he fathered a 7-year-old gi rl in a so-called reverse pa1em1t) case ts asking the U.S. Supreme Coun to ovenum a state law that dictates that a ~oman's legal husband 1s the father of her children. '"This case anses out of a societal phenomenon of men assuming the responsibility we've always told them to assume as parents:· attorney Larry Hoff man said. The case was scheduled to be heard toda~ by the high cour\. In a tradiuonal paternity case. a man who denies fathering a child out of wedlock may be forced by the couns to take financial respo11s1b1lit) for the child. "I consider this a double reverse paternity case ... Hoffman said. "We ha,1e not one. but two men coming forward wanung 10 suppon and care fo r this child... ( Hoff man represents a ma med cou- ple. Gerald and Carole Dearing. who are fighting a suit b~ Michael Hirschensofln. Dearing s former lover. Hirschensohn. who sa ys he is the b1olog1cal father of Victona Dcanng. wants v1s1tauon rights and "the opp<?nunlly to Ix involved in the child's hfe." said his attorney. Joel. Aaronson. ".\IL he wants 1s to be able' \o visit wtth the child and Jive the child the warmth and nununns a parent gives a child." Aaronson said. Hirschensohn is challenging a Cali- fornia law that mirrors similar statu- tes 1n other st.ates. It holds that a woman's legal husband. unless he is impotent or sterile, as the father of any child born during the marriage. Aaronson said the law is outdated and unfair. He wants the Supreme Courl to overrule 1t. In Caltfom1a. the concept of hus- band as father was written into the state's laws in 1872. ALL DAI KINDERGARTEN KlllD•RGART•ll THRU 8TH GRAD• ENROCl: NOW IAITllllE .c111sn11 sc .. s Alaskan Bay Shrimp Salad gorllc toost -mixed greens. ba'f' shrimp, cucumt>ers. mushrooms. grottd e99S, bacon bits. tomatoes. onions on request • your choice of our home mode solod dressing 16835 Brooktust St., f Ot11tain Valey SlATtll (714) 963-7831 i CAll Jll nlTIO ... ml 1-t--W-AllH(~J.~i 1101 I tllJPl'Mtllctlllllf tU i ~ llUlctlll , ... 111tu -t-----+--4-- I 11 :30 -3:30 Monday -Saturday ALL CHDICE!i • 93.95 Allt VOUf tood server obout these u>eclol1 Fish & Chips Basket Served with Oelonev•s homemode tarter sauce, green solod or CUP Of our own ctorn choWder~ I Turee,p of Delaney's famous clam chowder and 1/2 sandwich. -112 sandwich of vour choice. -Monhot1on or New England chOwder . Irvine Spectrum: projects honored Four Irvine Co. industrial projects in lrviM Spectrum and eight market- ina suppon materials have received ~ sianifignt honon from the National Association of Industrial and Office Parks in New York City. At the NAIOP Architectural AwardsbenquetonOct. 6. TriPointe, an Irvine/Dincher Venture on Alton Parkway and Irvine Boulevard. and Tcchnolo&Y Plaza. a multi-tenant project on Tcchnol<>sr Ori~ in Irvine Spectrum. received national awards of ment in the indus- trial/multi-tenant category. r Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuelday, Octo~ 1l.1988 A7 Drug company offers answer for cold sores Irvine firm makes natural ointment to fight infection= By ILENE SCHNEIDER 0..,-"9of c .. ., ' •• "' S1~t)·lv.o m1thon people 1n the Lnucd States suffer from cold sores tn 'ar) ing degrefi of seventy. About 25 percent of Herpes simple>. suf- ferers are infected once a )ear. 47 percent_ two to three times per )Car. and the remainder. three or more umes dunng a )ear. sometimes causing other medical problems. In the past the Herpes simplex cold sore was considered to be a passing problem not requinng active clinical t\elp. Recently. ~rchcrs have theonzed that infecuon. b> Herpes simplex cold sores ma) cause com- phca11ons of the central nervous system. a.' erall bod y illness. the poss1bi111y ofa general ~eakenTng of the immune s)stem and even death. Awards of merit went 10 1he lrviM/O'Donnell Venture at Bake and Toledo in the R&D catcgory and to the Irvine/Koll Venture buildings at 31and33 Technology Drive in the industrial park category. In addition to the architectural awards. marketing director Susan Akers Graves of the Irvine Office and Industrial Cos .. received top natio nal NAIOP honors for. marketing sup- pon materials. Irnne/Koll Venture bulldbaC• on Tech- nology Drl't'e ln Ifrine ba't'e recel't'ed an award of merit ln the badaatrtal park category of an NAIOP competldon. .\n ln·1n~ .phannaccut1cal com· pan) thinks 11 has an ans""er . .\ nev. drug. Proba>.. dasmbuted bv T I Pharmaceuucals. has shown clinical act a' II} against cold sores and fe, er blisters. Probax has an acuve 1ngre· d1en1 den,ed from beeswax 1n a petroleum base. The ointment pro\'ldes anubactenal acu' II) 1ha1 helps to prevent secondar) 1nfec11on "Proba>. ts a natural product 1n a clear petroleum base:· according 10 Lou 1hennan. T/l's general man- ager .. If applted at the first sign of an cmtrg1ng sore. PrQbax will often pre' ent the outbreak before ll occurs. "This an11herpet1c drug shonens the lengt.h of the heali ng 11me by at least 50 ~rcent. and no side effects ha"e bt'en reponed " Of ei&ht Irvine Co. entries honored in the 'NAIOP 1988 Literature and Video Awards program. three re- ceived frrst-place honors. including the Irvine Spectrum brochure in the category of "maJor. mixed-use parks:" the lrvine/Newpon Office Capabilities brochure in the category of "major office parks" and project brochures for Tripointe. Second place awards went to brochures for major office centers MacAnhur Coun and Jamboree Center. with honorable mention for videotape and newsletter materials. Designed b~ architect Howard Thompson. Tnpointe is a 152.475- square-foot mixed-use complex being developed in conjunction with Irvine lndustnal Co .. a division of The Irvine Co. responsible for the indus- tnal and technology-oriented compo- nent.s of the Irvine Spectrum. and the Laguna · Beach-based Binche-r or- ganization. TriPointe is the first mixed-use center in Irvine Spectrum. •blending corporate, commercial. res- taurant and retail facilities in an extensively landscaped setting. The project'$ architecture features terraced buildings of white concrete and green tinted glass surrounding a fountain at the entry oft he project at a new m3Jor transponauon j uncture in Irvi ne Spectrum. The development panoersb1p be- tween llC and O'Donnell. Annstrong. Bngham & Panners 1s the Certificat.e of deposit choices proliferating . . . By CHET CURRIER ,,, .............. • NEW YORK -Now that such fo'nner best sellers as stocks and mutual funds have fallen out of favor. financial ijlstituuons are bus) the~ days pushing a hot new idea -cen ificates of deposit. Not JUSt plain vanilla CDs. mind you. though you can cena1 nh still get those stodgy oldtamcrs if you want them. · What we're dealing with now are ns1ng-ra1e CDs. Ooaung-rate CDs. CDs with no set maturity dates, even CDs that effecu vel) let \OU make a lcpl bet on your favorite spons team or the outcome of the November clccuon. All tpis hasn't happened jusf b) chance. The stock market crash last fall and the wade swings 1n interest rates over the past several )ears have brou&ht big changes in the. marketplace where brokers and benkers sell their merchandise. .. I ch~ to think of it as a rcbinh of investor prudence.'' sau Wilham Brennan. a Valley Foric. "Pa .. adviser on tax and investment planning. ··Today's low tax rates and market turmoil have reinstated preservation of pnnct pal as a JUstifiabJe objective for personal planning. .. In this environment. CDs arc a natural choice for financial marketers to seize upon. Thanks to today's high level of real interest rates (as compared with the inflation rate). the)' can offer a reasonable return. with the backing of federal deposif insurance. And thanks to financial deregulation. the once-rigid format of a certificate of deposit has become very Oexible. In general. financial advisers say. that is a plus for savers and investors. But they cauuon tharit takes a lot of care to distinguish the substance from the sizzle in the new generation of CDs. There as no real hann. for instance. in buying a CD whose yield will vary depending on the outcome of the Super Bowl or the election. as long as you have enough financial leeway to play that kind of game with your money. · A tittre no-nonsense calculation may cool your enthusiasm for such a deal. which doesn't really offer much ofa payout or loss. With one "presidential" CD now on the market. the newsletter I 00 Hiahcst Yield calculates. 1fthe candidate of your choice wins wi th 59 ~~nt of the popular vote (the amount President Reapn got in has 1984 landslide). you would receive an extra S 10.13 over the next four years on a S 1.000 deposit. If you opt to shop purely for yield and safety. the choices are bewildennaly large. Newsletters like 100 Highest Yields. m Nonh Palm Beach. Fla .. and lncom( &. Safety. in Fon Lauderdale. Fla.. compile lists of U>p- yielding CD offenngs by banks and savings institutions around the ~m~ • Even with federal deposit insurance. it makes sense thest days to check out the status and prospects of some faraway institution before you mail off a large deposit check. result of an award-winning 24-acre. ~ven-building masterplanned pro- ject designed b) Dell DeRevere. Its archttecture not onl y offers maxi- mum Oex1b1ltt y. but enhances a corporate headquaners identity as well. This project features a Oex-tech mezzanine concept for which the venture has been highly recognized. The venture now c~ceeds more than I ma Ilion square feet of industrial. Oex- tcch.space. The two projects 1n the Irvine/Koll Venture receiving awards were de- sign~ by archnects Leason Pomero} Associates and are located near the Alton Interchange on the Santa Ana Frecwa}. The 31 and 33 Technolog)' Dnve buildings have been pre,•1ousl) honored for reprcsenttng the finest in high, technolog) environments. CRE DIT LINE M-Dex ecutive returning as vice president Patrick R. McGiuls has been appointed ''ce president-business management for McDonnell Douglas Astronaut1csCo.'s Huntington Beach di\ 1s1on. He returns 10 McDonnell Douglas after a )ear as setuor ex- ccu11' e assistant 1 n .rhe Office of Management and Budget. Pnor to this assignment. McGinnis v.as senior director of business manage- men t at the Huntington Beach di\ 1s1on. He has also been director of qualtt~ assurance and managed ac· t1 v111es 1n suppon of U.S. .\rm~ balhs11c m1ss1le defense programs. • • • Pacific S..vU.11 Baall trustees 1n Costa Mesa have named the follov.- ing ind" 1duals to electtve posts wuhan 11s mortgage banking subs1d1an. Pacific Real Estate Mon- gage Cori>. (PREMCOl~ G. Mitcbell Owens, senior vice president. PREM- CO .\ppra1sals: nomas G. Heatll, vice president. PREMCO Wholesale Lending. and Nita Bllnanl. vice president. PREMCO Operattons. Also elected by the board to officer at Paci fi c Savings Bank was Fred Tndi, vice president. internal -audit. • • • Deaa Zi.D1u. manager_ of the_ Cad's Jr. restaurant in South Coast Plaza. has v.on the company's Pl"CSjdent's Award for Operatan& Excellence. The corporate honor ts g.iven to managers who operate restaurants that exceed Carl's Jr.'s standards for product qualm. cleanli ness and guest service. ~ ... Judy Rybicki 1s now marketing director of Opera Pacific. Sbe will be responsible for all aspects o( generat- ing income earned through ticket sales fo r the S4 m1lhon budgeted. Orange Countv-bascd company. She just finished four }cars as marketing manager for The Washington Opera al the John F. Kennedy Center. • -Brand pi oducts' quality rated; quality of services less tangible IJ JORN CUNNIFF ,. ..... ~ NEW YORK -Asked in a survey to name five companies they as- IOciate with quality products. 1.005 Americans most often named Gen- eral Elcctnc" General Motors. Ford. IBM and Scars. Notbina really surprisina in that. or in the 1tCOnd five -AT&T. Sony Chrysler, RCA (a GE subsi61ary) and Proetcr & Gamble -because they wouldn't be so bif unless they were do~~ tomethina n&ht. What it surprisina is that the cblrKteristic most often cited in detenninina product quality is how well tbe name is known. outrank.ins -ortunlntbip1 prico. performance, durability ano style. 'Re tapODJe to a Gallup survey for die American Society for Quahty COMl'DI awsts how difficult It 1$ to ~·die mind of the Amcnc.an oan t er in dahna with manufac-- blllill ~ucts. .. if ii is difficult to measure • •11 IOward tht most tanSJble or ~ llcll. h 11 tttn more so 1n dcahna WilllJlr"flClll. whkh art produced 1n nn.c:abundlncc an the men- -y. How. for example. do you t'fleasurt the quaht)' of an Insurance pohcy when you do not even understand its contents? You know when an auto- mobile runs well: you miaht never kno>R how well your ~licy performs until you have an accident. Cost comparisons arc more dif- ficult too. Some life insurance poli- cies actually pTovide bencr coveraae and higher cash value at a lower price than others. But only 1en1uses or actuaries arc likely to know the dtfTcrcnce. As a rcsult1 the perception of service quality ts more lil"IY to be on the basis of interactlo.n with specific individuals. such as insurance aaents. Price for example. ranked sax th as a service quahty detemunant in the Gallup poll, behind "couneous.. pol- ite treatment," the sattsfactaon of needs. put Cll~ncc. rtt0mmtn· dat1ons and promptMU. Htah on w hst were such cktemu- nants as amlilde and hrip(ulMU or pcnonnel. ffiinclhnns and pmonal atttrntton. far down the hst was •·company narM." a fanor that SttmC'd to pl.a)' a larat rok in rat1na prod~ quality. Unlib the product quaJny su~c). Gallup didn't ra~ u\d1' tdua.l com· panics tn a sun C) on sen ice. Instead. 1t hm1ted responses to pel"C'Cptions of quality 1n .sqmcnts of the service industrv. wuh these results: On a' scale of I to 10. or worst to highest. banks rece1~ed the highest evaluation. wnh a 54 percent ma- JOnt) ranking thClr scn'1CC at 1 or better. h was the onl} one to exceed 50 percent. Ranked second were hotels. at 44 percent. f°&lowC'd b) hospitals. a1r- hnes and insurance ~mpanies (a tie). automobile n:pa1rs and local go,-em- ment. Compared wtth a samllar survey in 1985. banks. hotels. auto repairs and Jocal government sen i~ impro,ed. ln1urance companies. hospitals and 11rhnes fel l. Featurtd on the down hst were atrhnes. which provoked theobscrva- tJOn from the Gallup folu that "since 1985, the one service which ex· pencn~ the arc test d~ tn htah qY1ltt) ratings as the &irhnes.. M 'For tht' au1anes n was t~ equa~alcnt of a downdraft In the 198$ JUr'\e)'. 47 petttnt of thott intervle'Md perceived alrl1nc Qui.ht} asrat1nanolo~rthanan on the 10.. level teak. In 198 . onl 3~ percent med airlind ttw h&&h. .. According to Roben Beck. llC director of development. these build- ings feature a curved facade wnh radius-faceted insulated glass and curved precast concrete radius pan· els. The design utilizes ad ,anced concrete 111tup technolog). Discussing the archnectural and 0 ' era II project success of these de- velopment partnerships betv.c.-en The Irvine Co. and rcgJonal builders and developers .. Beck said ... Our projects have been desaaned 10 be arch1tectual· I) s1gn1ficant and highly Oex1ble fC1r today's and tomorrow's technolog) .. We are constructing mult1-ltfe buildings rather lhan smgle-hfe ones. The archt1ectural designs v.111 allov. these new buildings a d1Hrs1t\ 1n function and are long lastt ng ·and classic rather than trendy ... Fe' er. prolc;mged exposure to sunlight. the female monthl> C>cle and druj·related weakening of the bod~ 's immune system can affect most of the population Who de1.elop Herpes 'Jrus cold sores. A.fter an infe-cuon w11h this ~•rus. an affi1c1ed person·s blood cames the anttbodv or manufactures one to fight the mfectton. Thr~-quaners of examined people lack the ant1bod) factor for a conllnuous. prolonged fight . Wtthout such natural 1mmum- t). the Herpes simple>. '1rus spread~ Recent clinical studies b) Can- adian doctors indicate that Probax shont>ns the healing time with no ad verse reactions. It 1s said to m1n1m1ze 1tch1ng and dtscomfon. Proba:it. a con' en1ent ointment for- mulatton. sta> son the lesion. protect- ing 11 from molSlure. No prescnptton 1s necessar; "The efftt't1veness of Probax doesn't d1min1sh wtth repeated use ... Saherman said. "h 1s htgh l) efTecuve on recurrent lesions as v.ell as on 1n111al ones.'' T /I Pharmaceuticals. a subs1d1ary of Webber Inc .. was founded in 1979. Tht com pan) also markel5 Tl-Screen sunscrttn products Projected 1988 sales are S4 mallton. I• Earn a.year's w~rth · of mterest. -· And travel the world . on Silver_Wings~ Introducing United Airlines Silver \\'mgs Plus'14 l'ra\·el Club. It's free with a 1 year CD from Pacific Sa\ings Bank. Just open our 1 year CD with a minimum deposit of $5.000 in funds new to Pacific Sa\'ulgs Bank and, if you're at least 60 years of age. you're eligible for a free Indi\·idual Lifetime Members hip in L'mted Ai rlines Silver \\"ings Plus Travel Club. If you're not over'60. you may give this membership to a family member or friend who qualifies. As a member of United Airlines Silver Wings Plus Travel Club you'll save with discounts on airfares,• cruises. hotels. resorts, car rental_s-even special tours and exotic cruise package . Open a l year CD today and earn .CURRENT lilGHRATE ffiGHYIELD ' 8.10%/8.43% ONE YEAR CD traYel money for years to come. To open your CD, or to find out how you_ can qualify for this special offer \\ith other Pac1fic term accounts from six months to five years.Just call 1-800-PACIFIC or stop by your nearest Pacific Savings Bank office today And get ready to spread your wmgs for all of your tomorrows. ~ . PAOFIC ~VINGS BANK In our own small way. we make a bic C:litlerence. -FSIJC -------- In th 'osta M sa area call. ( 714) 631--0800; osta Mesa "ou~"ard area t•all: (714) 831-7631 _____ ~ .... ' I ~ 1 I . ' A8 Orange Cout OAILY PILOT I Tuesday, October 11, 1988 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ~000 ... .. ' TUESDAY'S 11 A.M. (PST) PRICES . ' Div. ltl SM• uU Cllt s ~.:t,•. " " '- 01 p ut•-"91 . • . I .. Orange COMt DAILY PILOT /Tunday, Octot>« 11, 1981 A8 W H ~ r NYSE D1u NEW YOltK (A~> Oct. t0 5 11 NYSE LE ADE RS . . Do w JoNES AvERAGES NASDAQ SUMMARY Co Lo QuorEs OTC UP s ,~ DowN s ... NYSE UPs & DowNs 'l •• ' '· J, METALS QuorEs Stock market tumbles TAMPA. Fla. (.\Pl -One of the world's largest bank holding com- panies "':as named in indictments un~aled toda' 1n what prosecutors said ~•s the first case in which an cnllr-r banking inst1tut1on faced charges for mone~·laundcnng. The Lu:<cmbourg-bascd bank hold- ina compan). Bank of C~11 and Comm«tt lntcma11onal . thrtt of its subs1d1anes and nine of 1ts ,officcn ar-r named in the three 1nd1ctmcnts ~ unK"akd here. In all. 1nd1ctmenJs announced here and fi,e other .S. cities name SS defendants. Mission Pl~ '-Sup~ly Co. ,... °' ... """~ ~ Ofl9"" *""'. w. 32107 Allpaz San Juan CaisMstrttno (a.Nnd c.p6strano Ptumt>tng) (1M) •1 •• , (7,_) ... .. • HoUrl: Mon.-Fri. 1:00 .... 4:30 P"' BATH .COLLECTION Featuring International Designs by EUer E~r comm1ssio~ •nt~rnationaly famous dcs1g~rs to cr~at~ bath- rooms for today T~~ bath~ StgnS, like t~ o~ shown~. ar~ now prMltcrlng In our shoW- room. AIO DAILY PILOT/ Tuesday, October 11, 1988 Michael keeps the 'Faith' at Medows . •1 JOYCE BODLOVICH alona with more than 17,000 scream-... ...,....... ina fans who jammed into the Maureen Sin&er. 18, and Mepn an;fcitheatcr for Michael's openina DiBeUa, 20, bad fouaht three hours of pe ~~ess in snna black ~per-to-bumper traffic Friday -niaht to watch British heartthrob pants and suspenders, his staae crt.· Georwe Micb.&el spin his style of trance behind a "Faith" backdrop lelllLK>us m14ic al the Irvine does not lack for sensational Meadows Amp1theatq. theatrics. The two Pierce C.oUqe students And when the fog-shrouded stage &om SbennaJi Oaks had won tickets clean, the 2S-year-old star is bathed &o ., wrrFM · th in a k.alidescope of colors. m~ sumoq s8'o.Itwas · · 1 h cd ·th "I a Iona fix months Appropnatc y e ~ o_pcn, wt .. Jmt· watch him dance," Singer Want Your ~x.'~ Michael ~ .no aushed. problem convtnetng. the shriclcina And watch him dance I did _ crowd be wants their sex. Perhaps iiiiii~-:::::;:::-::::;;;;;-;;;::::::::;;;;;:=:::==i that's because of the flagrant crotcb- 1 grabbina aest~ be makes through- out the sizzlina song. There is no doubt Michael, a former Wham co-leader, is hot prop- erty. His debut solo album, "Faith," bas sold more than 10 million copies. The album showcases four No. I aUfu~·it's not only his co~t~nuous wave of eroiic bumps and grinds that bas pushed him to superstar status. The unshaven man. with the cross-earrina dangling &om one lobe, can li11rom "Monkey," "faith" and .. rm Your Man" to 'Tm Never Goh\& to Dance Again," Michael's soulful voice is equally as intolticating .............. _ .......... .., e lllclaael at Inine lleadoW8.L.. as his moves. And his six-piece band is first rate. Fonner Wham member Deon Estus opens for Michael. But it is not only Michael who entenains. The fans arc also a show. A blend of dressed-up, drcssed~own and hardly dressed females danced and panted throughout the per- fomancc. Tbc male crowd was no different, They shouted, clapped and danced. And, lest we forget, so did the arouping of want-to-be George Michaels. All dressed in quasi- Micbael attire with whisker stubbles dottlng their faces. Sorry, guys -it j ust doesn't work. Bi Band oldies de ight in Mesa The Oranae County Performina Ans Cen1er's Bia Band Series closed out in exuberant style Sunday evc-nina with four musical and funny women becked by a band.leader who foraot his pants. Maraaret Whitina, Helen O'Connell. Kaye Ballard and Kay Scan bro~t their sona-studded abow, .. 4 Girls 4," to a lively Costa Mesa audience. But conductor-pian- ist Frank Ortep apparenOy neglected to order his tuxedo trousers and had to borrow a pair from one of the instrumentalists. The Bia Band version of the "Golden Girls" made fun of that and numerous Other topics, including politics, j ·nc. wei&ht and the bla- band era. O'Connell's oft-stated "If I'd known was Jivina throUfh an era, I I would've paid more anentJon to it" still draws a bia lauah.) ~tarr pve the 4utsiest musical performance, beltm' out such favorites as the ballad 'HaJleluiah (I Know That's So)'"and the oldie 1'You Gotta See Mama" in her trademark lusty, emotion-filled Southern voice. A,ae has not slowed down her power, prowess and potency; in fact, drawing on her many years' performing u- petience llctually strengthened her portion of the show. Ballard's, on the other hand, was . MICHAEL RYDBISKI more a musical comedy act than a comedic m\llical one. More famous u a comedienne, Ballard displayed a strona-lunacd tone in such humorous numbers as "My Son (the Stripper)" and the ironically wistful "When." Between her avalanche of pp «'1 am not faL I retain water. You are look.in& at Lake Erie") and brief musica1 impressions ofludy Holliday, Nancy Rcapn and others, Ballard even manqed to snow off her flute-playina abilities -but not before abe tried to play the flute under her nose, claim- Ul&. "SOrry, l thouaht I was taller." O'Connell appeared the most eas- ily rattled. mumblina under her breath and frownina at the least little unexpected tum. Her voice likewise sounded wcall and unsteady at timp. ahhouah the O'Connell of old came throuah in sue& selections as the poipant "How Do You Keep the Music Playing?.. and the vigorous "When the Sun Comes OuL" · TV ads will target young 'couch pota~oes' Whitina opened the show with some of her classics, sinaina "Black Mqic," "Moon~ight in Vennont" and others with Vlbrant resonance. In musical and conversational terms, she emcracd as most natural and accessible. LIDO CINEMA Newpott-Lldo 873-4350 •AOtHE: JOHN LENNON (A) HS·l:OO·IO·J5 HARBOR TWIN Harbot·WlllOrl &31·3501 CLARA'S HEART (PG13) HS-I 00 10 00 PLATOON LEADER 1 J,~Joo EDWARDS ORIGINAL Cl .. EMA ~•rbof·Acbm1 546-3102 ALIEN hATION (A) IAWS CAMI 'rs.a ls.10 20 CINEMA CENTER H•rbot·Ad•m• 879-4141 ELVIRA MISTRESS OF 'tf THE DARK (P013) 6 30·130· IO.lS tr MEMORIEI OF ME ~PQ1S) 5.4 -H0·10:15 RUNNtNG ON EMPTY * (,013) HS. no.10:00 (R) W. UI C\11'1S ' It FISH CALLED WANDA 1i.. J;OO.t:lS _ ~ ME SA CINEMA Newport· 1111" &46-5'0'25 •tsuns2M .. AllT9MM< HOTIL 'If ('911) I'll DIAO ............ (9') US.lUO 8~15 7 "lf ( IMf 111,U 8111101 M1<A rt,,ur '>4() f"M t .. NEW YORK (AP) -ABC and CBS will broadcast an animated public service announcement in which two children become .. couch poun~s" while watching TV. as a warning to avoid too many hours in front of the set. network spokesmen say. service announcement designed to speak d1rectl\ 10 children. said Jeff Moher. director of the group's com- munications dtv1S1on. telev1s1on viewing ... An NBC spokesman said his network had not yet received the spot for review. I he 30-second cartoon 1s being offered to the three major networks and 400 local stations by the Amen· can Academ} of Ped1atncs. .. It savs be choosy in what you watch. and we thank it's good for ch1 ld.ren to be choosy in what they watch ... said CBS Broadcast Group eitecut1ve Matthew Margo. ABC's director of press relations. Janice Grttemeyer. said the spot's message .. ,s consistent with the position that ABC has long held. that children should be selective in their Over a toe-tapping instrumental backup and a chorus singing .. couch potato.·· the announcement tells chil- dren to .. avoid this dread disease. be chOOS\ in what you watch .... Don't just plop in front of the TV 'cause you·ve got nothing else to do ... h 1s the academy·s first public SWEETHEARTS DANCE (R) 5:45·1:30-10:30 RUNNtHO ON EMPTY (PQ13) 5:30-1:00·10:30 MEMORIES OF MIE (PG13) THI SOIH> 5:45·1.l 5· 10:30 HEA.RTUEAK HOTEL 1PG13) 7.45 COCK'r' AU. (R) 5:A5·9:J5 El VIRA-MISTRESS OF THE DARK (PG13) S:l5-7:15-9:15 DIE HARD (R) MUC£ WI.US S.lS-US·lO.lS TOWN CENTER AUN .. IMG OH EMPTY "ft (PG13) 5:4S.1·15·10·30 PLATOON LEADER tl 6:45·1~:l1ct40 SWEETHEARTS DANCE 'tr s:Jo.J~.t45 A FISH CALLED WANDA * <"U~ ~~~0~~1is IMAGINE: JOHN LENNON ,.r.. (A) >-« S·45·100-lO·IS HUNTlHOTON TWIN ~n141-G311 MEMORIES OF ME -tt (PG13) S 4 S·l ·OO. J 0-00 It also admonishes children to "watch out for overeating:·· CROSSING DELANCEY (PG)AMY•VIHG 6:45·1 •5-10:40 SWEETHEARTS DANCE (A) 5:30· 7-30·!:30 IMAGINE: JOHN LENNON 7:~~15 PUNCHLINE (A) SAll Y FnD l 11.W IWICS &:00·1·30· IUS GOAILLAI IN THE MIST (PQ13) 5:15-100-10'30 VILLAOE CENTER On a.Kh 81Yd ·2 bff>cli • norlh ul Ci•rden Grove f-rw~ 1111-054!7 TOOA T S2 9S UMTl 5 00, .M GORILLAS IN THE MIST 1ft 1J J0.2·¥:.°.1t~·30-IOOO -tf CLARA'S HEART (PQ13) U·4S-l:•S~·OO·&·l5·130·10 lS HEARTBREAK HOTEL CROWN VALLEY CINEMAS Crown V1ll1y Parkw1y 2 Block• North of S 0 frwy . . (PG13) 5: 1s.7:30-10:00 CROSSING DELANCEY "ft (PG) AMY MWIC 7 15·"1S .A. ALIEN NATION "M (R) 7:00·9 00-10:45 PUNCtl.INE(R) 'It Wl Y fllD l Tm !WMS &:OO..l:J0-10:45 GORILLAS IN THE MllT -Ar (PG13) sm.Y wmo \:: 5:1S.l:tl·lt:JO ~ SADOLEBACI( CINEMAS SD Frwy fl Toro Ac 1nd Aochfl1ld ~·~ "-ATOON LIAoat DEAD "INQE"I (R) 1l &:05-10·35 HTRAYED(R)llS S 0 Frwy ·Brl1tol 751_.19' 1 ·30·4:20·1· IS MOON OVER PARADOR 2 20·6 15 10 OS F •M ll'etl l"G tn !t•uclute IOOAY S2 9\ Ulllt \ 00, Ill GORILLAS IM THE MtST (PG13/ l l.JO·Z.00·4:45-.30· 10·00 TRACK21(R) UClUSM ORANGE COUNTT 1l:OO·2:00-4:81-6:00· 1:00· 10:00 IMAGINE: JOHN LENNON , .. ,-11.45-1·4!>-4:00-1s.uo.10:30 OROU .. O ZERO \.._ :013~ 1:00-J. .s-oo. •too ~ SOUTH CO AST PLAZA Bnatol Sunflower ••1 ! I .... I • o • • • " ,. . 'M ~ ·1; , ... ~· •• ~ ''(J .. f r1•1,c11 Mow1e1 CROHIMQ DILANCEY (PG) MIY IVIC US.HS.J-45 l'UMCHLM CR> WU fll.O l Tm IWllS 5:11.l·lt-lt.~ WOOOBAIOG£ Rerr•nr.a P1rkwty f ••I I UIYtr ~~ t OOS'I CINEMA WEST We1lmlntler·Goldenwe1I 1191·3935 GENERAL ADMISSION SJ 50 FAMILY BARGAIN NIGHTS S2 00 TUESIW£01THUAS AT STARRED SCRE(NI AK HOTIL 1f(PG13) 1:00 MIDNIGHT,_ fHIH (A) S:JS.9:45 N ELVIRA ('°13) 900 ~ADDYSHACK ll (P0)1t 'R' 7:00·10:4S J... •MOAIEI OF ME N (PQ1S) 1t Us.1:30·10:30 PlA TOON LEADIR 4'f "tf S:JO,~~·t:lO fOUNTAIN VAllfY 8•DOkhur1t 11Er1r11•· IU9 1SOO A. ILVIRA ('911) Ue ~ CADOYIHACK I ('°) •·•·ltlS N~ '. 'fHHll ,., ,, . ' • fl . ' • • ... 44' Ml•ATSll M 1f ALIEN NATION (A) ll 4S-2:4S~:4S·&,,S·I 4S· 10·4S ..1... MEMORIES OF ME M (PQ13) ll·lO·l·JO.J;J0.5 45-1 00-lO·lS IL VNIA-MtSTMll Of 0 THRDAltK (PQ13) .9 .GO·l:tt-5--00·7-00.9 00·1U5 HEA,.TBRIAK HOTEL HO .MOQMOYIR~ARADOR lf <PO 13) Ho.t:SO ' .A. ALIEN NATION M (R) 7:t0·9:00"· 10:40 ELYIRA-MISTREH OF A. THI DAM (PQ13) \.M &:Jl-l :Jt-11:30 ~ On screen. the boy couch potato pleads ... ~ave me alone. just let me groove wish my tube ... Ortega's orchestra provided oumandina accompaniment in the sonas. includinasomeexcellent solos. The band _pve a fine mcdJey tribute to Duke Ellinaton, ending with the Duke's siaoature tune, "Take the 'A' Train." This medley featured superb extemporization by Onep. revealing a deep feeling for the nuances of EJlinaton•s work. At one point. Or~ tep soothingly strummed the strings of the arand with bis finaemails, a la Aeolian harp. The girl couch potato gazes at the television and says ... Got to have that....Mamma. can I buy that?" whale chowing down on a bowl of snacks. The spot ends w11h a family of couch potatoes turning back into two children and their parents. The view- er hears: .. Don't be a couch potato. Couch potato. Not me! .. Not bad for someone who foriets his pants. __. l'llU.llll Oii _ ......... ~w:·-· ~mt ,., ... _,_lOllNAQo ( .. ,,. ................ ... _ -, ... ___ ~ll- IMAGINE (RI U U l IH 301 '" ~ CROSSING DELANCEY (PG) I IU IU 11 111111 ..., ............ .. ·---°' .... ~ ... '214t , .... -.... , ... , ..,~..-. ..amor• ,.IJI 1•11•1·• ... ••• ....,......,_°'""' A .. CA&&lt ... Ill ,,. ........ , ...... .. I.A----~A) t.-.TAAllA ITNl'fOli '-"'"•ll ...... (Oo_V __ --r ... -....... c.. ... !<GO UOHfl ·-" .. ftt OMl ....._...._ Oii-""""""" --'IUI lt•-S-C.. '---c:.. TWiili'9 c:-... Ww .,, ''" U.ml IU,lJM ··-~"'l.U 1 ........ SoCw.-,...,..._.ACC(ll'TJ.l)~,..c~·I ...... , .... ,, MEMORIES OF ME (PG·131 U 1U4ti 11 I Hl•I • GORILLAS IN THE MIST trG.13) 11 tU lU It J lS It It ...,..._ ...... c-_. ..... ~ 11<)0 2'U 4M ..U US llM ........ ~ ...... --;... ... ••a1111-. ....... ·-·--· ·---· HEARTIREAK HOTEL (PG·131 'lUICOClTAll Ull A FISH CAllED WANDAIAI 'LUS llG ''°' ELVIAA (PG·13) 'lUS lllGl!UllAIU DJll lUl STRUTIY(AI ..., ........ .. ·---°' ....... .. 12:M HI 4:11 .... WI .... \ PEOPLE Ot'lnge COMt DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, Octow 11, 1988 All 'I H 0 R 0 ~ c 0 p f Voluµteers, arts patrons saluted We4Det4ay, Oc&okr It By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES t Man;h 21-Apnl 19): You leam where you •tand in co nnection wuh romanet. career. finances. To }our delight, ground 1s solid, you'll be in pos1t1p'n to make a profitable deal. Taurus. Scorpio figure prominent!). c.ralee (Corlry) RedmODd learntd a good lesson last week at the Junior Wbman of the Year luncheon of Assistance League of Newport Beach, Junior AuAiHary. You have to be prepared for winning. Redmond. nominated by the Fullerton Junior J Assistance Leaaue, was selected from nine nomi- nees to receive the gold medallion from the Newport Beach Group for her outstanding role in volunteerism. .. You prepare yourself to lose. but I'm not sure you can prcs)are yourself to win," ,aid surprised Redmond as she stepped out on stage to have honorary chairwoman State Sen. .Martu Ber1eso. place the medallion around her neck. Redmond, mother of four. has done 18 years of volunteer work, but the focus of her nomination was the last fi ve years in which she cstatr lisbed a system of safekeeping high school drivers and their passengers. Other nominees introduced at the event held in lrvine Hilton were Dr. Catlae r lne Campion, Cltarleoe • Arellano, Katblee11 DIHCO, S111le Geldmu, Ola.De LJcbterman, Mella· cla McCrea. Cbrlstlae St11be and Carol Word. Slaerry · Bilbel1I was chairwoman for the annual event which concluded with a 90-piecc fashion show by Saks Fifth A venue. South Coast Plaza. "We have 400 attending today." commented Bilbeisi. "We usualJy make between S 15.000 a nd $2 0,000 and it wit.I all go to help children from • low-income families who 1ive in the Newport Mesa School District." ·others in the 32-acitve-member auxiliary working on the committee were Nucy LoBae, Kalbryn Kalani, 1Jacla Cotto•, Ka"erine Un, Pbyllis Slaafer, Ca&by Grant, Jeaue Basso, Pai Koet•, Nancy Saadford, Marjie WMte, Peuy Sandberg, Donna Gffr1e and Aux1lial) chair Ussa Callaghan. • • • The annual Newport Salute to the Arts which concluded Saturday after a three-day run ~s a blend of business, city and the ans. The social kickoff of the event to honor donors of the sixth annual salute held in Sculpture Garden of the Newport Harbor An Museum was a blend of delicious taste treats. f About half of the 40 rcstauranu which provided food for salute were at the rc«ption to feed partygoers. ..... "" ........ .., .............. Sandy Blatterman with Mo•- ell Hendrlcbon. Shelli Stewart with Carl Neta.er and Kym Youni. TAURUS (April 20-May 20~ Anenuon centers around rcputat1on;pubhc ap~arances, contracts. mamage. You'll !\ave invitation to travel, you1U a.lso have opponunhy for greater self-c>.press1on. Wntten matenal important. GEMINI (May :? t-June 20)· Go slow. be dJplomauc, realize relauve has pent-up energy that must find outlet. 8e a good listener. but refuse to get mvohed 1n family money d1~pute. You'll receive aift almost amountina to "bnbe .. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Good moon aspect coinC1des with spcculauon. excitement, chanae. sensuality. sex a ppeal. You'll have inside 1nfocmat1on and should score financial coup. Young person plays major role. LEO (Jul) 23-A ug. 2:?): Emphasis on power. authonty. 1ntens1ficd love relationship. You'll be discussing propcny. basic values. ways to negotiate successfully. Attention centers around sccurlt}'. long· range prospects. VIRGO (Aug. 23-ScpL 22): Opportun1t1es expand. recent investment pro\ es successful. yol!r' counsel will be sout}lt by one in posauon to do "favors." Refuse to be t nt umbered by obhptton almost 1mposs1ble to fu1 filf. LIBRA tSept. 23-0ct. 22): Fresh OPPortunlt) exists in connection with pa} ments. collccuons. perso.nal possessions, income. Stress independence. st~le, creat1v1t}. N0te -avoid heavy hfung. Leo. '\.quanus prominent. ~ · SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 )i Moon in ) o ur sign accents personal magnet1sm. t1m1ng. afTa1rsofhean. lntuiuon 1son target. people v.111 want to be near }OU, romance could Oounsh Eitccllent for career. business reputation. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 21-Dec. :?I): Promises made b} rclauve "Ill now be fulfi11ed. Focus on appearance. personaht}. glamor. intrigue. secret meeung. Legal papers require signature. nota~ stamp. Gem1n1 1s in picture CAPR.JCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You·11 "'in fnends. populant) escalates. lonj-<hstancc call relates tq)Oc1al nent. possible 1oumey. Dance to 'our own tune, realize your own wonh. refuse to play "second fiddle." · AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Be read} for change, travel. variety. n1rtatJOn. Emphasis also on career. business. dealings Wllh supenors. Wntten agreement escalates credit ratio'; PISCES (Feb. 19-March -0): Emphasis on SJ?intual values. family relationstups, scnous constderauon J"eg.arding possible relocauon. Taurus relall\C bas facts. figures but does not ha\ e "final an~"Wcrs." IF OCTOBER 1% IS·Y-OUR BIRTHDAY current c-~de highlights social acuvity. populanty, travel, wardro be. scnsiuvny concerning aP.pcarance, v.e1dlt. body image. You have deh$htful sense of humor. are versatile, possess intellectual curiosity. Gemmi. Sagmanus people play important roles in your life. . ' BRIDGE a..r,... ......_.., u. ...,_ By Cll.Alll..a GOREN Marian Bergeson. honoree Corky Redmond Llua Callaghan with cbainroman Sherry ud OMAR SHARIF the ace of spades. Wben dummy came down, it seemed that the con- tract wo uld bjnge on finding-either and Nancy LoBue. .. Bllbetai. • Both vulnerable~ South deals. NORTH . Kim Jorgenson's Paradis Catenn& served up Tango Soup made of pumpkins and squash and spiced with cinnamon; the Cannery was offering fish as ~as the Newport Marriott which decorated Its station w1th ice sculptures. The chocaholics in the cro~d of about 200 were in "white and brown heaven." Savannah Gnll with its ganache torte was next to Haagen Dazs and us cream bonbons adjacent to Sweet Life Bakery's trays of cookies. On another level. the Balboa Dessert Co. pot o ut 1rres1stible cakes including one w1th chocolate over lemon. Sllelli Stewart was cl\a1rwo man for the party and she 1s one of the sei,.en city arts com missioners. Others com· missioners are Sandy Blanermu who chaired the three-day salute: MariJee Stockman, Kym Youg, Pbyli11 Drayton, 'Kate Deluck and the only male member Carl Neisser. "We call this group Carl and his harem." Joked Drayton. "Our purpose 1s to beaut1f~ Ne~­ ~n Beach.'' said Ne1sser. adding ·our maJo r program 1s an in public places. a project stan ed three ~ears ago b> Debbie Poloo1ky :· Dono., be1nt honored included the Cat) of Newport Beach (~1a}or pro- tem.Evclyn Hart "as there): Newpon Center Association (Bridget Lebman represented). Fash ion Island Merchants .\ssoc1at1on !Eileen Boben was there) Fieldstone. (Glenn Parrisb represented),: tht Jr, me Co. represented b~ Peter Ztlglaauser: Pacific Mutual Poundauon \\1th Pa· tricia Kosky auending. Other donors were Rhodes Develo pment. the Koll Co. and the Board of R~ltors '\lso saw Novell Hendrickson, "ho started the salute. and Sandy and Jury Beige!, Barbara Rop~lo ud Ericb Vollmer (dashing otT to the Russian ballet). WEST + K Q 4 -; 1654 :; J 10 6 • K 8 S EA T • A 10 7 S J I( 7 • J 9 6 2 J K Jl •A 4 1 8 7 • Q J 10 7 6 3 0 TH • 1 -A Q J 10 9 2 A Q 9 S 4 • 9 The bidding. outh West 1 : 1 • J Pas Nonh 1 4 - East 2 ... Pa . red king with East. But declarct, Jim Mahaffey of Florida. decided on a dtfferent rack. ln effect, West was endplayed at trick one. He cashed his two black aces, then continued with a club to dummy's king. Had declarer elected to take tv.o finesses, his correct play . to the third trick would have been to lead to the nU'le of trumps . That way, 1f the finesse lost, the eight' of hearts would be an entry 10 the table to hook for the king of diamonds. Whenjustice errs, children suffer Pass Pass O~ning lead: Ace o f • If aJI you nct>d 1s one of t"o Ii· nesses to succeed, you sho uld bring home your contract th ru tame~ out of four. But there arc oth er hnes nearly as good "nich could gii,.e you a tremendous psychohg1cal lift if you were to prevail. Howe' er. declarer opted for an- other Line. He discarded a diamond on the king o f clubs, then took two mqrc diamond pitches on the top spades A club ruff stripped the black suus from the NonhrSduth hands. then declarer cashed the ace o f trumps. Had the king dropped, not onl) "ould t.he the contract have been cold, but declaf'er v.ould have earned crowing rights-over bis-oppo· nent.s. When ha majesty did not appear, dcclater exited with a rrump. \\'hen West "on the trick, he was endplayed and the coruract could be chumcd. Had East wont~ trick. declarer wo uld have had to fall back on the diamond fin'esse for his conrract DEAR ANN LANDERS: The mo~ I read about some of the flaky_ decisions handed down in our courts, the more convinced I become that we must overhauJ the entire system and ~ rid of some of those idiot judges who don't know any more abdut justice than a b~ knows about Sunday. Listen to this: • Al• lutDEIS questions are addressed to m> daugh- ter's liv~-in. Now that you arc in the role usually assumed by a husband. will you plc&K te11 me the following? Since you arc enjoying the pnva-• reaes ofa husband, arc you willing to acx:cpt Ole financiaJ rcsponsib1liucs" m~ daughter should you dae sudden- ly. Most husbands have an insurance policy. What about you? l realize that my daughter is a grown woman. but fathers do nave a tendency to worry about the thinp r have mentione<J.. l would apprcctate the counesy of a rcplsi. ~ORR Y WART IN MASSACHUSETTS. Th1s hand is from the recent Sum- mer North Amencan Champ1on- \hips 1n Salt Lake Cit y. orth- outh reached fo ur hearts after a compellti' e auction, and West led A man in East Dubuque, 111., was I recently reunited with hlS daughters, 9 and ll, who had been living with an uncle and aunt for two years. The , reason they were not living at ho me was because their father was in \)rison for st.ranalina their mother dun~ an Uf.'!ment about Christmas shopping. I say the message is worse than "sad. .. It's outrageous! What do you say, Ann Landers? -DES MOINES READER .. DEAR D.M.: I ct.ecked Mt t.1ae story ud JMr report ll accente. lt'1 worse tba Mtrqeou. 1&'1 des- picable. ne people la IM& teWll llloe.ld be ., la anu U..t tla.la laorntldon ~eel jutlce. lf my daughter showd become unemployed or hospitalized. would you tak~ over complete responsibility for rent, gas. elcctncity. food. clothes, payment of charge accounts and insurance premiums? DEAR WORRY WART: Yoa laave asked Mme valid q11estloa1. Tiiey cleterve tboe1lltfllJ u1wer1. I bope Y• laave sat a copy cllrcctly to yoar claapter't "roomle... u yoa set • reply, will yoa please sllare lt wltlt as! 1 seaest U..t all womu wlUI live· ... tlabak serlouly abotit tile lssffS &Ut yoa laave raised becaaff ID Ge ablaace of a lecat commilmeat, a weaaaa w very little de cu coat • besJdet lter mu't la&egr:Uy. All coo ohea, lk fladt •erttlf •P tlac weU- bowa crttk -wiU.011t a paddle. -lll;trt»Pa~------- l Dad" pleaded guilty to man· slauJhter and was released from prison after serving less then two yean of a four-year sentence. The deceased woman's brother an~ his wife were aiven custody of the girls. Their father, upon being released from prison, sued for custody and won. The grief-stricken a\lnt and uncle said, "One of the hardest thinas we ever had to do was give up those 'children. It sends a mighty sad messaae to society." I laave a .. apkJM &Mt tla.lt ftpt It far from over. l>lea.H bep me posted ll more appean la yov local 11ew1- paper. . • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Since so many couples arc livinl together without the benefit of clergy these days, I would like to share the thoughts of a concerned father. These "WE HAVE A LOt ('OF COMPETITION ••• BUT OUR RIBS DON'Tf" .. ~f_WPOR-,. RIB COMP~~~ Open 7 Nights-Dining & Take-Out 2000 Newport Blvd. (Corner of 20th St,) If she dies. will you pay the funeral expenses? Jf you should meet a woman you like better. would you feel obligated tQ set m y daughter up elsewhere or would you simply tell her that she 1s on her own? Have you made any provisions for Reformed cook bursts into the Nuclear Age 1f someonr had told me fi ,e 'ears ago that I would be running a red.ltghl v.tth a p1ua sttttng bes ide me wrapped in a beach to"el and a sca1 belt -and calltng 1t "dinner" -I'd ha'e said ... , ou'rc craz). I'm a homemalcr Cooking 1s m) hie." Fi ve ~ears ago I felt guth) ''just adding water:· No" I want to bang a tube against the counter and ha\e a Ii ve<oursc meal pop out. l f ll romts with plastic s1h erv.are and a plate that self-destructs. all the better. lam o ne of the "omen of the '80s who have ado pted "1th open arms white plastic foam a~ their dish pattern. O ur car has turned into Meals on Wheels. spaghetti sauce trom a J.ir and hal ed beans from a 1.:an. but I "doctorl'<l" them up to sa' e ra ce I "'as so phon~ I even took the fa t-food ch1d.t>n out lll the bucket. arranged 1t On m' hcst meat platter and SUfTl)UndcJ 11 \\Ith pars le) Women ha'e gone OcH'nd thl second co m 1 ng of the lc-e .\gc "here everything was entombed in h11lc b<ncs co' ered "tth foil The Pla<,t11. Age of eattng out and pa~ in& tor It a month later 1s weanng thin Mo 1 of them art going through the "u kar .\ge. where }OU pope' Cl) thing 1nte>a m1crowai,.e. I'm no& going 10 11 around th1s t ime and be the last man in 'orth ACROSS 1 Pont1lical 6 Bunal chamb4trs 11 Skillful 1' Brtek 15 Nut 16 Recent pref 17 Sea goose 18 Gotham1te 20 Map line • 22 Pan1t1ons 23 Speed 25 Poet 28 Mexican COll'I 29 Honest - 30 Bat<>'*er 32 Heersay 34 Fuel 39 Russian empress 42 Of galax19$ 43 Spews 45 La Seara ottering . •6 Outburst •9 Pnvates 50 Argument S• Unworldly 55 Shameful 56 l eg bOnt! 58 0111Cefs Ol'dettles 60 Water bnnge< 63 -nous 2 3 17 You have to understand. how far I had to come. Remember the mother ---=-------------------=---------~ in the old commercial who sampled lar after J&r of ~a nut butter and said. ·rm fuss\ about what l ft'Cd m ) ch1ldren"1'J knew her pcr..onall) c........ 111-21 c\mcnca to catch the "a\ e or con' e- niencc. rm into dinners that come to me. This week. through the magic of ma1l orderandan 800numb(r I ha\e 640-5800 San Joaquin HINs Road at MacArthur.Blvd. , While those around me cut comers by us1ngp1e filhnsJrom a pad.age and vqetable soup i'tOm a can. I felt compelled lo s~ll I>-<>-~ c-a·l -e 1n front of my children. And tMn I bejan to ca'c 10. l used a CaJun dinner of J&mb&la)a wtngin.g its "ay to m~ door. a biked ham tn route from Geof&,la. and for the 29 w~kcndi a couple of lobsu:rs from &st on 32 I ha,·e to boil water for th<' lobsteri. -but I'm rount1n1 on m> old kills 39 torome back PatclJ up s1Do~agbablt Vou knc.-. •bOec' IMCit(•leU $k11\ could ~13) m\U.K'al tiutrumcn~" . ~ &hit pidw.\ly tf\ ~• "rtd .\ .\t least SI\ JclTtrwn. '101tn. mnoe1111 of .. in10 t~ bOd)'? Our T) lcr. \ 1ohn Coohdlc, _harmonica. Chief ~•QHor lh1ftb t.MfU bt Truman. piano. lAOO.. piano availibk onieday to catc ntCOttnc wi.W..wal tD smotm Who to far • Con~r all th~ undhtlopcd M¥n'1 beeft _..IO quit. islands •&ona • co.sis. Can )OU .....,._.._...__ c"platn •hY 9'7 petttnt of tMm arc 1n Q How man)' pm.tdenn lht South~ · ' 66 Including 67 Way 68 Acclaim 69 Calamity 10 Elected 71 Herb DOWN 1 Dance step 2 Fu.u 3 ACMP member 4 Hum1llate 5 Fabric s -oocse 7 Arena · 8 Farm animal 9 A11empt 10 St.1el'S oelrghl , , Body t04nt 12 Strips 13 Trunk 19 Punisnmen1 2 I NVC d1111st0n 23 DIS)OIM 2• Maltreat 26 Bn11sn gun 27 Hastened 30 Grain 31 RU R star 33 California '°'' 35 Eat 36 Graoetulty 37 NOStfll 5 7 38 Cancel 40 n me ot day 4 1 Emanation « Homa99 '7 Clfeumvent@d 48 Me&h 50 Fodder 51 Spinet 52 Withstand 8 9 10 53 Metal SS Seat 5 7 Height· pref 59 Con•t 61 Truncate 62 ExtingullMd 6' Colllde with 65 Su'""*· Fr 12 13 .... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Tuesday. Oe1ober 11, 1988 .. by 811 Keane COUPIT&R CUL TUR& by Maratta & Merette .. We're supposed to give Barfy a 8-A-T-H." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson ~ i I i "' l i .:::: i i ._.,.;; "Veterinarian payment...dog food bill ... grooming servlce ... Marmadu~e gets more mail than we do!" PEANUTS 1-11 c~ui:K ~ 1 KNEW 'l'OV WERE GETTING A 14At~CUT W~EN I SAW \(QU SITTING Tl..\ERE WEARING TME DROPCLOTl-4 .. GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS D.RABBLE 0-11 ROSE 18 ROSE ... lltP t NcM iUUU t'~t ~ W.~1~ MIU I~,~ ... ·. 10·'' • 1 J I ' Ii DENNIS THE llE1'ACE by Hank Ketcham ~ • 10-11 ©. . f>o • • e i i ! i I'M NAJ<lt(3 SQYET~ING ~ NJY Nali) M ITS EARLY TO TELL WHAT ITS GONNA Bf.' ~ y by Charles M. Schulz W~ATEVER by Jim Davis by Tom K. Ryan rrs ~L..l'''M·U .. IS-.,,,~IALl~iot)f! -m'( 11'A~ll\)! by Kevin Fagan ~T060! BLOOll COUKTY ~-~ . "v • ARLO AND JANIS SHOE JUDGE PARKER LOOK, MISS SPENCER ... RICK HAS A RIGHT 10 00 OUT WITH WHOMEVER HE CHOOSES 1 I HAVE NO HOLD OVER HIM! FUNKY WINKltRBEAN DOONESBURY • , . by Berke Breathed by Jimmy Johnson ~~ M~~l~Frr! .by Jeff MacNelly by Harold Le Doux MEANW~T'S SURE NICE OF YOU TO DROP ME O FF AT RAMEY'S CAFE , RICK' HOW FAR DOWN THE ROAD I$ IT FROM HERE? ..JUST A COUPL.E OF MILES! by Garry Trudeau by Tom Batluk fllU IMllT Q. t/'Q '() .i'\' ' -f) 'C f':ib a_• WHt 'WUI II \:)~ l' Q\J l'i'-'at J:-<f" ;:l U•t ----·-.. <""'. ------ •• _ .. .,.. ...... • .... .._.,. 0. ......... -................ _.,, ... ~ ............. . ;.., IO lcr"' lo.• \ .......... 01 )'Hft" lllt -8-.cf Hllf _,. ,,.,_, Mid .. ,,,.. MN/11 0lflt ~ u le 0 EE R : I ..,,.._ .. 1 rr n . -v-- WEELN I I I I' 1· . I ; l H K J 8 1 · . I r I I _ , l ' -- TUESDAY. OCTOBER 11 , 1988 O'Neil gets maximum out of minimum CdM; Woodbridge get pre-league nocl:s By ROGER CARLSON °' ... °""' ......... They've all undcraone five tests in preparation for league and without funhcr ado. it's that time apin to set the record straight w1th championship predictions. Player of the Weck honor. o ·Neil has aired it out a couple of times this season. both comina in losses when the Monarchs were behind and had to play catch up. So tht Mater Dci offense works best In the Sunset Leaaue: It's too ti&ht to call. e~cept that it's going to come down to a showdown between Fountain Valley's defending league charnp1011s and. with a retu~ to form. Echson's unbeaten Cbargers . ., In the Sea View Lea&ue: Corona dcl Mar was the early-early and prescason favonte. and a S-0 record does nothing to d1spell that notion desp1 Lt the fact the league use If 1s razor close from top to bottom. Monarch general throws for 12 TDs in 60 completions ~ when the running game is intact. ·"Against Oceanside (a 36-34 loss), we were behind 36-7 in the second quancr and we almost caught them ... said Mater Dci Coach Chuck Gallo. In the Pacific Coast Leque: Woodbndgc. a team vel) similar to Cor'ona dcl Mar 10 style and personnel, as.well as a s1m1lar 5-0 record. as a top-heavy fa vonte. with Trabuco Halls offcnng the best competiuon. By lllCRARD DUNN ......... c.,-,,, ...... With htahh cart issues arising and the presidential election approaching. Mater Dci High quarterback Dan O'Neil might consider runninJ for oftkc otopenin& UP. his own business. • If it's anythin& hke his passing. his campaign would be perfect. His business could be called Quality Care Products -like his passes. which tend to fall into the arms of Mater Dci ~ivcrs who arc campaigning toward the end zone. Baseball broadcaster Vin Scully would often use the term. setting the "maximum out of the minimum." O'Neil must have listened to Scully announce Dodacr.gamcs while he was a kid la~ing down in his bedroom. O'Neil, a junior. doesn't throw a lot. because he doesn't need to. But when he docs connect. strtamers come flying out of the st.ands and fireworks usually explode ovechcad. Twenty percent of the time. it's a touchdown pass. A&ainst Huntington Bcac:h last week, O'Neil completed fiv~ passes-three for touchdowns. Mater Dci (2-3) scored 31 points in the second quarter. including O'Neil's three TD pa~ as the· Monarchs pounded the Oilers, 31-14. to-end the non-league season. O'Neil has 60completion,s this year a nd 12 tollchdown passes (six inter- ceptions). · He &ot the maximum out of the . minimum last Friday night as.,..60 percent of his attempts wound up in paydin. cam in& him the Daily Pilot's Player of the Week "Danny threw three touchdown passes 1 o the third q uaner arid fi ve for the game. In some games we're going to throw a lot and in other games we're-going to run. Against Santa Ana (a 17-10 victory for Mater Dei). O'Neil completed six of I I 'passes and • two were for touchdowns. ' '"Against Huntington Beach. he was packing his spots and going deep. Plu~. we executed the game plan." O'Neil tonnected with running back Byron Quiros -on a 12-yard touchdo~n pass in the second quaner against the Oilers to stan a chain reaction that led to the Monarchs' wirt. With only 41 seconds left on the clock in the first half. O'Neil threw another 12-yard TD pass -this time to running back Kcalu Clifford. And with no time left. O'Neil hooked up withwide~iverTony Pena on a 22- yard touchdown pa.ss. . Mike Ammann·s PAT made at 31- zip. Mater Dci. '-Clifford m'de a good move on the inside and turned It up.just getting an for the touchdWwn before halfume." O'Neii said oft e second score of the quarter. "On al three. except for the last one~t ~s a shon fake an<t 80 into • • ~ -. --• °""' ,... ,._ .., the end zone." · Mater Del'• Danpy O'Neil, abown with b~ coach Cha.ck (Pleaee eee MONARCHS /82). Gallo, receh·ed O.Uy Pilot Player of the Week honon .. ~ . '• . ... Only 1n the Sunset was it too close to call. - ..I thin~ }Ou'rc probably n&hL." S&Jd Fountain Valle} Coach Mike Milner. "h ~as 14-13 last year and basically both teams return. I don't Stt how ~OU can pack It. .. But hJht now we're more concerned ab9ut the first league game down the l~e (Thursday apanst Ocean View) In )'ears past. league champions 6ften had a loss.' . Milner's comments .-bout his team's task can ~applied to an). .. It's a fi ve-week march,'" said Mainer. "You have to Sta} health). ha' e some luck and pla)• every single down, every single pla}. It's what league compeuuon is all about. Evcf)one has pla)'ed fi ve. but that's all out the window. • "Your prcscason record coming in may be: 1-4. 3-2. 4-1 .. all that'!i tossed aside. Ev.cryone is()..()." Dally Pilot predictions SUNSET LEAGUE Pos. Tam, rec.rd t Eoison <S--O) I Founla in V~ttev (3·2) 3 · WH1m11u1er ( 1·4) 4. Hunhngton 6eKh (I·•> CMT'll'Mnt Boils oown to Oc1 21 ~woown Blue cttios are In abundance Hooes ride on lniurv staius CIF in reach If offense iells Socmomore holds Playoff hOOeS V1kinos· offense UJSI hasn't come 5 Ocetn View (3·2) 6 ~rina 10-S) ~ TNln,rKW'd I Corona de! Mar I S-0> 2. Tusltn (2·3) "1 ---UniVen1tVt2·31 4 ~U;..-0) 3. ~(1·4) 6. ~ewPOr1 .._rb« (I·•> .._ T..,n. NCWd I. W~idee (S·Ol 2 T rabuCo Hilt\ (4· 1l 3. Laguna Hills (1·4) 4. Co$1a Mots.a (2·2· l I S. Orange ( 1·4) f . L~ona 9Hch (0-4-1) SEA VIEW LEAGUE Cemment Oeten'9 IOUOl'I, offense coming Ancld'I alwan in the hunt Trotans have~ to '#in Unt>ealen, bul still unlested Lowest outioolt in a dealde MVP runner not gelling MIO ~ACltrtC COAST LEAGUE CemmeM 1 ,..o. l In CIF, enougn Mid Mustangs are mMI lmoroved tmoreulve desofte rKOfO Have atMlltles to do better Tabbed muel'I hleMf earlier From e>enthouse to t>esemenl Odds S·• S·4 l S· l 2S· l 2S·I • S0-1 Oddi 3-1 ,., 7·1 10· IS·I 20·1 Odds 3·2 •·1 10-l 15· 1 25·1 30·1 BENNY RICARDO .. coast WOmen :s_ocki}lg it to 'em with style PRO FOOTBAL L Steroid use out of control Superman could leap tall buildings. was faster than a speeding bullet and stronFr than a locomotive. Super- man wore a bia "S" on his chest. and I wondcrnowifthat stood for"Ster- 01ds." Makes you wonder docsn 't it? Maybe be did more than cha nae his clothes in that phone booth. I always wondered why Superman never com- peted in the Olympics. After the Ben Johnson incident, everybody will beasuspect. You watch aareat athletic performance, and you will wonder n~t away: "Is he or 1s he not on steroids?" Golfers. tennis players. hockey playen(I hope not, because they fi&ht enouah as it 1s). pina pong players- they·n all be suspects. Except maybe ~wlen unless they start breaking the pins. Why the big deal about steroids now? Are they J\CW? What do they do? Steroids have bttn around for a . Iona time. While playing Pop Warner foetball in Costa Mesa durina the 60's. our team doctor used to prcscribestcroidsand call them (PleueeeeJtJCARD0/112) . But se\·en -a meshutout streak . like a ll good lhing_si has come to merciful end for foe~ t 20 What's this. The Orange Coast ( ollege "-Omen's so<.'t<trtcaln $ll\ e up goal-twoof1hem in fact, Th1s mus1 ~a mistake. No. no. It's true. .\II good things come to an end - lil<ea consecutive shutout stnng. Orel Hershaser'sdld. Lasl week. OCC's endedat scvengames -that's 14 hal vesor630 minutes for those who arccoun1ing-bu1 the most 1mpon- a9it stn ng remains an tact. The women are 9-0. and with what Coach Barbara Bond calls her best team ever. the Paratesarca good bet to repeat as South Coast Conference champions for the second straight r,ear and gain their fo unh title in the 80s. The~ v.omen are so sting). the~ ·d 6nng an e\Cr so sleghl smile of apprec1a11on to 11gh1en the lanes of Scrooge·s wnnkled old face. El Camano and Bakersfield. OCC's ch1cfcompet111on en the sec this season. each managed a goal ofTthc Pirates an 2-1and6-1 losses respec- t1vel) .. Those pnmanl) responsible for the defense are sophomore sv.ecper BrandecCra1goutofEd1son High. sophomore fullback Kam Doleman of El Toro and freshman-goal~ Carlberg of Rosal) High en Fullenon. "BrandecCraagand Kim Doleman are the twodcfensne plavers thal have bttn the ke) ... Bond said. .. Brandec·sgood 10 not allov.mg an~ bod~ past her\o go one-on-one. .\ndw11h Kem herball-handhng skallsaresogoodand shc'Hoqu1d. .. 1f 1he~ can get past her to Brand~. 1hen the,..are prttl) good pla)ers ·· c:'arlbe~·s pla~ 1ngoal. which · includes ·L sa'esand sc'en shu1outs. has1mpro,edconsmen1l> and enabled Bond to mo' e sophomore lkbb1e Bontrager bad.. to the wing pos111on she pla)ed 1n high school at Edison Bontrager leads the team in goals w 1th seven • ··Mo' tng Debbie Bontrager out o n the lield 1ssomcthang wed1dn't realize would ha'e such an 1mpac1 last )ear." Bond ~1d. ··Ki m Carlberg 1scomangtntoherown he'sgotten more confident and that's 1mpon- an1." Bontrager. who too~ o'er as goal- k~per in 1987 as a last -but JON FERGUSON SPORTS CoLUMNtS r sucresstul -resort. has bttn the kc~ add11100 to an offcnsc whLch es much 1mpro'ed o'er last scason. when the Bucs went 16-1-1 .. She ISJUSt ama'Zing playing left v.1ngon offense this ~Hr.·· Bond said. ~spiff cvef)1h1ng she did last }car. we almost knocked our heads th1n g- 10g of wliatshr could ha' e done las\ }ear. Thc mov ll.Ss1gn1ficantbccause she passn ~LI anc;t can cross the ball.'" Other 1mpon.antcontnbutors tn· cludesophomores Match Nadon (Sill goals. Sill assasts)and Amy VaJinskv (fine passcr) out of Edison. and ircshmen Michelle Forgette (four goals)ofHemetand ~m Dutton (fourgoals)ofM1ss1on Ylero Doleman has ti' e assists from her backfield posJt1on. ··we·vealwaphad prett) good defense before. ·Bond said ... But last Ttar'sscores. v.c m1gh1 have bttn up b.~ o ne, Thi~ year our offensc is belier In fact. our offense es bctttr than ourdefcnSt". but wa th all lhe shutouts we·,c had. et Sttms ironic to sa~ that ... Eleven oft he team's 16 players ha'e scored.1 ncludingCarlbcrg, as the Pirates have outscored lhear opponents 32-2. · (PleueeeeOCC/82) Gibson gives Dodgers what most players can't His clutch hitting, fiery att itude make di erence NEW YO RK (AP)-In the end. the reason 1s Kttk Gibson. Without his bat, Los Anaeles wouldn't have had the offense. Without his fire. the Dodgers wouldn't have had the will. From the time he stonncd out of Holman Stadium before the season's first exhibition pme. throu&h his steal of scrond base j n the ninth inning 'Monday afternoon. Gibson has been the fire that ht up Los Angeles. 4.nd thanks to his passion. the Dodgers arc w1thin one game of the Nat1onal League pennant. - His-12th-inning home TUn earl) Monda~ morning gave the Dodgers a 5-4 v1ctol') O\er the New York Mets. tyms the Nat1onal League pla)offs at two pmes apiece. Hts thrtt-run homer in the fifth inning exactly 13 hours later powered 'the Dodgers past the Mets 7-4and1ntoa 3-2 lcad in the best-of-seven scncs. But now the Dodgers may have to pla~ wuhout their leader. Gibson·s weak left hamstnng went ··pop" on the ninth-inning steal aod he ma} not play en tonight's Game 6. which matches Tim Leary agaans the Mets' David Cone . .. He's one of my fa, onte subJCCts... Los >\ngeles man~r Tomm} Lasorda said.' "You talk about a competitor. he dri\'CS himself to the peal of his ab1ht) C\.C1')' day. I've seen ham when we wan and hegoes O-for-5.and h~sJumping up and down Or when we lose and he's aonen a single. double and a couple of RBI. he's rcall~ down " Gibson batted .290dunng the season wtth 15 homers and 7 3 ru.ns batted 1n. Good numbers. not great But has spint tum«! around a docile clubhouse ' O n· Man-h 3, reliever JCSSt Orosco put C'\e black on the band of Gibson's cap as a ;okC' It "'as the ~tnd of orank pulJed in e"'Cf) ma1or league (Pleue Me DODGERS'/8 2) NL Cbam ol on•b.lp I OOOGER'f"vs. MEn c ~ ..... M!'fift._ >· l> Gamt l -Meli 3, DedeerS 2 Game 1 -Oectee.n 6, Meis 3 Game J -Mets I. OodeH's 4 Game • -~ s. Meis • Game S -D.-.n 1. Meis • Ton1g1'11 -Met_s a1 OodeH's. S I om Wednesoav -Meis at OodeH's, 5 om t•I necnwrv1 All games telev1seo on Cri.nnet 7 ano bf~cast Oil KA8C {7'01 and KNX (1070) ·~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, October 11, 1988 -. Golden West Community college players of the week Joe Napoli SPORTS BREAK Croudip's tragic end troublesoDle to his team.niates From ne Associated Press SAN DIEGO -Da ve Croudip. ·the ~ Atlanta Falcons special teams star who~ •II> sudden death Monday appears to be drug- rclatcd. was remembered by friends and fonner coaches as a man .. everybodr, liked." ··He was ave"" positive person. ·said Los Angeles Rams coach John kobinson. who kn~ Cropd1p when he was with the Rams m 1984 ... We're alt shocked by this ... It"s like he was murdered by this stuff To me. David was \Cry competis.i ve. very strong. very full of hfe. ··1 saw him after the game." Robinson said. referring to Sunday's contest between the Rams and Falcons won by tos Angeles. 33.0 ... We stop~ to visit as were gctung on the bus." Croudip. 29. a reserve comcrback and captain of the Falcons· special teams. was taken to a hospital after suffcnng ~1zures at his suburban Atlanta home. Authonues said a preliminary examination indicated cocaine was in his system. a finding. they said. that strongly suggests the death was drug-related. ·-rm shocked. It surprised me," said Mike Fox. wh o played with Croudip in 1981 and 1982 in San Diego State's defensive secondary ... He went from Wat ls to the NFL The gu) worked ha.rd. He was always an easy going guy:· Fox. who now works for a defcn~ contractor. said he ne"er knc" Croud1p to be involved in drugs. He said the t\\O sta\ed in touch occas1onally. particularly when Croud1p and his famal> returned to their San Diego home dunng the off-season. .. If there were pressures. I d1dn·t know anything about them :· said Fox ... He was a good fnend and he was 'e~ supportn e whe n we were teammates. You remember his la ugh. The gu) had a unique laugh. .. It makes'~ th tfl11::-ft makes you sit there and wonder . Peaolt-)ou kno". that you Spclld ume with and share membnes w11h . It"s kind of;ad 1fit"s true that he died of cocaine. That makes 11 even more tragic. He had a lot going for him:· -~ Quote of the day Howard JollJJsoa, Ne" York Meis shons1op. 101 his first postscason hll in the fifth inning of Game 5 of the Nauonal League Champ1on'lh1p Scncs Monda) off the Dodgers· Tim Belcher an his 23rd career postseason at-bat. bu1 then struck out "Ith a man on and no one out 1n the seventh and struck out to lead off the ninth The Mets' fans 1n Shea Stadium booed: ··1 don'1 gi ve a (bleep) 1f I don·1 gel an)' hits. I can wan a game w11h m~ flo~e. lf1he people boo me. I don't gi ve a (bleep). Cunningham keys Eagles• wln PHILA\DELPHIA -Randall Cun· [!] ningham ihrcw for 369 yards and thrtt 411 • touchdowns as the Philadelphia Eagles beat the New York G1an1s 24-1 3 in 1he NFL Monday night. and barged into the thick of the NFC East D1v1sion race. Cunningham completed 31 of 41 passes as the Eagles. 3-3. moved 1n10 a uc with the Giants and the Washington Redskins. one game behind the surprising Phocnax Cardinals. USC's Owens earns honors s \\ashang1on Slate running back Steve Brom11ard (190 )ards rushing). USC defcns1 vc guard Du Owens (seven tackles. sack. deOected pass) and Orrgon ki ck returner Claris Oldum (99-)ard TD return) were named Pacific· I 0 Conference players of the week Monda~ ... Nevada-Las Vegas tailback To-..my Jackson ( 192 )ards rushing. 32 ~1 vang. three TDs) and Fresno Stale comerback James WUU.m• (five tackles. antcrccptton. blocked punr) have bttn ~lectcd the Bi11. West Conference players of the week. GOLDEN WEST For Rustlers' 31 ·3 I Mission Conftrenct rie w11h EJ Camino. OFFENSE JeeN.,.U The 6-foot-2. 190..pound sophomore quancrblck out of H,untin,ton &ach Hi&h com- pkted 8 of 25 passes for 249 yards and was instrumental in · kadina the Rustlers' rally from a 28-14 halftime dtfacit. DEFENSE MikeC.ver The 6-foor-3. 235-pound sophomore outside linebacker out of Westminster High had four unauisttd tackles. two totalina six yards in losses. and thrtt tackle assists. and contained the sw«p well in the ste0nd half. ,, IN THE BLEACHERS ''Hey, how a~out them Broncos?" Lyle tops Faldo for world title Sc-o1land"s Sandy Lyle sank a 20-foot • puu on·thi: .3Sth ~ole to beat Nick Faldo of England 2 and I and win the World Matchpla~ golf championship Monday a1 Wenrv.onh. England. L)le. beaten in four previous finals. became onl~ the second British winner in the 25- year history of the event when he came up ·wilh a sensauonal finish of four straight birdies. It was frustrauon again for Faldo:who.fin ished runner-up for the eighth time lh1s season .:. OUino~'s plunge into free agcnc~ v.1U end loday when the Kings' power forv.ard officially J oins lhc Houston Rocke1s for RodJl~y McCray an Jim Ptttrsn. Sources clo~ 10 the Rockets confi rmed that Thorpe. the Kings· most valuable pla)er. had rc~hed an agreement wi1h lhe Rockc1s. completing the on-again. off-again trade ... Roy TeuJsoa, an internationally known boxinJ official who was wirh the CahfomiaA1hletic Commission from 19SS-78 and the Nevada Athletic Commission from 1979-84. died <'f heart failure at his Sacramento home Sunda~ night at age 67. Tennason had quadruple by- pass hean scrge11· in 1981. Tennison. a native of Okemah. Okla .. came to Sacramento in 1945 and. excepl for has ~ears as executive ~c~tary of the Nevada A1hle11c Comm1ss1on. remained here. Rangers• Burke stops Devils "Kirk Miller got his first two goals of the , Sun Burke stopped all 41 shots and ~ season 1n a fi,e-goal third pcnod Monday ntght as 1he New Jersey Devils bca1 the host New York Ranger$ S-0. Burke was brilliant throu&ho~ thwartins the Rangers on 11 power plays in handing rhcm their first shu1ou1'in 181 games ... In other NHL action: Jim Peplla•kl scored two sccond-pcried goals as the host Calgary Flames Qmcd their first victory by defea1ang 1he Detroit Red Win~ 5-2 ..• Tomas Joa11oa scored on a screened slapshot from the b!ue line fi ve minutes into the third period. lining the visiting New York Islanders to a 3-'2 victory over the Vancouve'r Canucks. Television, radio TELEYISK>N S o m -BASEBALL: Nalional Luoue Cham· e>1on~h10 Series Game 6 -New York Meis al Ooogen . Chan"*' 7. S om -·'ISt>OYBUILDING: Women's Junlor N1· tional Chamo1onsl'llos from Cl'licaoo 01oe>. ESPN. 6 e>.m -BOXING: Scheduled -Jol'ln Meekins vs. Monamtd Kawova in lO~round iunior·wellerweiohl t>Ou• from Allan1ic Cilv. ESPN 130 o m -VOLLEYBALL: TH m Cvo comoe1ilion from lht Forum (lwo m11c~I. Prime Ticktl. RADIO S o m -BASEBALL: Nallorntl League Cham· 01onsM > Senes Ga~ 6 -New YOf'k Meis al Doooers, ICA8C 1790), KNJ< < 1070). . DODGERS' GIBSON PROVIDES. • • From Bl clubhouse. This time. the JOkc backfired. Gibson put on the cap. noticed a smudac on his forehead. retired to the clubhouse and ciuted the premises. ••&fort pmc time. r act all hy~ up and I don't have a sense of humor. That's obvious," said Gibson. who was hv1d over the episode. "Tm not here for comedy. I did what I had to do to ae• my point across. Basically. I d1dn·t want to be a pan of their comedy act." His mnsagc aot through. ··r aurn we (lc1med) 1ha1 you don't mess around with Kirk Gibson - or else." a teammate said. Gibson had been in a 1-for·l6 slump before the Game 4 homer. but the Mets still ftlt his impect. .. They tttm to rcvolvt around him. even if he doesn't ~t many t111s.." WaJI}' Bickman said. "Thal home run last nllht rallied IMm." Laton:la can't SI.)' ~noulf:> al>ou1 Gibson. whom the OOC11tn si&ncd u a fru •nt lasl winttr (or S4.S m1lhon over three )ctri. ··He's a l(t'at sm111ion player. He's m)' MVP oflhe Nauonal Leaauc and that's not to take anything away from (Oa"}'I) StrawberT)."" Lasorda said, "I behevc the Mos\ Valuable Player should go to lhe guy who's most repons1ble for the success of his team." That was Gibson once again on Monda). \ ' Rick DemP.W)' hn a two-run double off Sect FemlnjJe.t! an tht founh inn1n_a and KOred,on a dou~ b) Alfredo Gnffin. Steve Su and Mackey Hatcher singled to open the fifth and Gibson hntd a fastball midway into tht first deck 1n naht. The homer was hll at I :27 p.m. EDT. 13 hours 10 the minute after his aame·w.inntr. "Ifs the same old s1ory." he said. "Wbtn you sw1!'1 for a home nan. you u~ualh look like a fool. Whm you conctntra1e and try to hit &he ti.II hard somcpil«. a 101 of 1ima IOOd 1hinas happen. It wu 1 pa\ momcnl for rnt. I don·1 know whx &hey haepen. but I'm aJad &hey do. The Mets tntd to mt.lSltr their usual rail)' but fell WI)' shon. Len Dk)'Slra hat a 1hrtt.run homer off Tim Belcher in the bouom of the • 1nn1ns bur the score remained 6-3 unul the eiahth when Dykstra doubkd leadina off. Greg Jefferies followed with an RBI sin11t to chase Bek her. Left-hander Ricky Horton came out of tbf bullpen to stnke ou1 Kcich Hernandez. but pve up a sinak to Strawbtny and lcf\ 1n favor of riaht· h.tndct Brian Holton. Kevin M~eynolds. the first bltttr to(~ tht rueltcvcr. tapped a slow roUer to n that &be Speed)' Mets outfteldtr appeared hkcly to btat out for a hit. But ins\etld of havina t~ besn loackd with one out. &ht Mt'ts tuffcttd a t«Ond out wbtn rook~ Gteta Jeffmn. nann1na \o thud best. WIS htt by &he bounci• bell. The 1nn1na. and the Meu0 .... (hJftCC at YIC'°'1'• ndN What 0ery Carwr ftied ao a.ft. .. ,, WDOM oltbcM ft• Pl8Yi you haw no convol over.-1fttlll lldd. .. , ... ""'"""'.Uni ... CcNlll ud JUJt Jumptd.' Whit the can I do'! It Yt<ISn't I rooktc ll\_IM.lkt. A IUY who has bttn around 10 ynrs would have IC)lten h11 •Uh that blll. . ORANGE COAST For Pirates' 3.S-1 S Miu1on C'onferen~ victory over San Diego CC. • OFFENSE Ja ... McG8ee The S-foot·l I. 200-pound freshman fullback out of Hunt-ington &ach High earned the ball seven times for 93 yards. indud· ing a 45-yard run in Che third guaner which set up the Pirates' fourth touchdown. DEFENSE Bneeel>ahll The S-foot-11. 191-pound nose guard qut of Edison High had 11 tackles. two sacks and prcuurcd the quarterback three times as the Pirates' dcfcn~ limired the Kniahts to a touchdown in each hall. AREA RouNDU P I --------- .. Sea Kings s .weep Warrio~ Sawin leads second-ranked . CdM in non-league volleyball 1 It mav not ha'\ e mattered for the purpose of league , pla\'. but Monday's girls volleyball victory for Corona dcl Ma'r High over Woodbridge should show its wonh come CIF playoff time, "It was really good for us for seeding purposes. becau~ we should win our league. and they should win their league:· said CdM Coach Charlie Brande. "By beating them. there's no question we should be seeded higher:·· Laurie Sawin ( 17 kills). Krista Hanling ( 11 kills) and Lara Carlson ( 10 kills) led the Sea Kings to a three-game • sweep of the Warriors. I 5-1 2. ~ 5-l . I S-8. CdM. ranked second in 5-A. improved to 5-2. while Woodbridge. ranked fifth . suffered its first loss in six ounngs. ··They never ~med to kind of come after us.·· Brande said. "We were on the au.ack the whole time. we·~ staning fo pick it up a little bit. We have four sophomo~ starters that are coming along. We're s~rting to get matunty from them and consequently stan1ng to pla~ better as a team:· CdM girls tennis remains unbeaten Edison managed four points against the Corona dcl Mar girls lenn1s learn Monda). but while that was as many as any learn this seaso n. the Sea Kmgs impFoved to 10-0. CdM freshman Keri Phebus swept again at No. I • singl es b) 1dcnt1cal 6-Q scores. g1 vang her shutouts in 28 of 30 games this season. The other tw9 she lost. 6-1. Knstv Phebus and Robin Bain. playing doubles together (or onl~ the second rime. combmcd for lhrtt "'"s also. whale Counncy S1rauss and lhana Adame p RO F 00 TBA LL ......._ --""'--~-- swept at No. 1 and 3 singles respectively. 0iM faces Saddleback loday. while Edison is Manna . Matlna water polo team •In• Jn OT Marina's Ken Schwaru scored his only goal with 5 seconds remaining in overtime to gi ve lhe Vikings sudden-death victory over Costa Mesa. 11 -10. in openin round play al the Nonh Orange County Water Pol Tournament at Newport Harbor. But the Vikings suffered a l 3-7 loss to Ne~po Harbor. The 32-tcam affair includes eight team groups a Harbor. Sunny Hills. Tustin and El Dorado. Costa Mesa led 10-8 after Shane Kunst scored hi -sixth goal of the aame with 4; l 0 to play in rcaulation. Cli Wagner pulled the Vikes within one wilh J : 14 to play an Jason Cox notched his fourth goal of the game to tic th score with 20 seconds showing. Bo1h teams had three chances to score in th ovename. but neither convened until Schwartz hit th game-winner. Marina's Chad Roberts scored lhrce goals in th Vikings" second game. a 13-7 loss to Ncwpon Harbor The two traded-goals up lo 5-4. but the Sailors scored af\c going a man down w11h 2:2 5 to play to start a run of cigh straight goals into lhc fourth period. · sec ma•ters foe ln men •• •occer, 3- .\lex W1ederrich and James Helmuth scored withi two minutes of the each other and the Sou them Californi College men ·s soccer team never looked back in gaining 3-1 NAIA D1s1nct Ill victory over The Master's Collcg Monda' at C. • The Master s came back to ~make 11 2-1. bu1 Ji Brannan scored to give the Vanguards some insuranc w11h I 5 minutes 10 play. CC moved to .5-8 overall. 3-1 in D1strict Ill games "h1lc The Master"s fell to +9· I. 2-3-1. RObinson: West will go to wire From 'ne Associated Press dunng Sunday's 16-13 loss. had X-rays lAkcn Monday No nbs were broken. .\lread~ looking ahead. John RobinS<?n p~icted that the NFC West would go down (0 the Wirt aaa1n this vear. wnh his Rams fighting I\ out with San Francisco and New Orleans. Coach Bill Walsh said a final determination on h1 status probably w.ouldn 't be made until af\er Wednc day"s practice. The ream had today off. Montana says h 1s confident he can play. ..Obviously ifs shaping up as a three-way race ... the Rams· coach said Monday at his weekly meeting with reponcrs ... Ifs going to come down to which club conunues to improve. avoids inJurit:s and just turns out to be the best survivor. R•lden wltlJoat Long lndeffnJtely .. It's going to be a tough IOwecks. and it'll go down to the final Wttkcnd. J"ll predict ... The Los Angeles Raiders will be without five-time Pro Bowl defensive end Howie Long for an indefinite penod becau~ of a strained calf muscle. the NFL team learned Monday. Grtg Bell. who took over the starting tailback P')Sttion after Charles While was suspended 30 days for another bout with substance abu~ (this time alcohol). pined I SS yards on 21 canies and scored once in the victon· over th~ Falcons. The coach said that White. who's completed his suspension and returned to the roster last week. will "get more playing ume this week." White didn't carry the ball against Atlanta. Lona. 28. injured his right ltg in the second quarter of Sunday's 24-14 loss to the Miami Dolphins. He u~~nt -mqnetic rcson1ncc-imaain1 (MRI) tests Sunday night. which were niptivc. accordina to Raiders coach Mike Shanahan. .. He'll definitely be out this week and we'll have lo ~ow 1t goes later in the week," Shanahan said. ··That kind of tnJUry. you can't tell until he tries to run on it." Montan• questionable for Sunday San Francisco 49crs quanerback Joe Montana has bttn listed as questionable for Sunday's NFC West showdown with the Rams. A number of other Raiders came down with tnJuncs against the Dolphins but arc expected to play apinst the (;h1efs. Although subtraction by injury has been the recumng theme for \he Raiders this year. one addition was ex.peeled today. ··eoJackson will be an tomorrow .. ,.and we anticipate ham pla' ing some. although I don't know how much. this week ... Shanahan said. Montana. who suffered injured ribs when Denver defenSJ\'e end Andre Townsend sacked him in ovcnime RICARDO. • • P'romBl ·;Growing Pills." Somt of the effe·cts were t\omble. Some pla)crs had acne sobaO)"OU could lock lhcmuptnJail but \heir face would still break out. As I look back now. I remember that players who had taken steroids. .or Were usina steroids.. were inju~ a lot more than players not on steroids. The same is true on the pro level. The au~ that were beach pttSSinaoffict bulld1n1s had shon carttrs. The reason is that steroids produce so much s&renath In the muscles of a playet. that h1sjoantscan't handle it. Steroids ha vc bttn known to cause livcrand prostrate cancer in men. It can 1lso cau~ sterility while increas- ina host1hty and ~sion. Haveyouevehned takinaa fresh picceofsteak.Jway from a hul\&fY pir bull?Th1s 1siftc sameasacuina an f rQn t of a football playtr on st«oids. Now. why don't doctors do some utensavettttarchand find out exactly what stero1d1do?ls it because when t~y IJ"e steroids to labor1tory fl'5 thfy tum into sanaana mOUtn With bii muKlcs and tht abdity to beat upa11? You offrra peeceof thene to the fll and ht 11ys.. .. No! I want• sank riP• now.·· 1 .. ICMdlMCillci11na1i lft91s blow IWIJ tht Aaickn IWO Sunclays .,. Tbrunalla1 offenlivt linemn &the ..... Wl'ilNd 27S pouncb. hlld llNICtft ill htltar lobtlaad ... *ickfrioUlll IO hlvt It.lb mNr rtPlltf SI 0. 9.S while ltylftl IO It' around him. Alhou have to do is not f«d lMm bcfottlheprM.and ~ou'vttol your host1lc•Jld qsrnai ve footbell pla)Tr. MONARCHS From Bl The third touchdown. 10 Pena. was the most c~c1ting. ' ··1 just scrambled and saw Tony." o ·Neil said. "'He JUSt grabbed it in desperation. so he made a good catch." The first scoring pass of the quancr. to Quiros. was rhe first score of the game with iO:OS left in the first h1lf. "The firs• one was Just kind of a quick pass to Quiros. ' o ·Netl said. "It was a quick one in tht flat, and he ran in for a touchdown. On this team. you SCI prottt&cd well and (the line) helps a lot. They were blockina unbclicvablX· They've done a l"at job all y~r.' O'Ntil has 1 S6 percent pass1n1 ,.tio (60of107) with 740 yards. "He docs what a quancrti.ck must do bcs1:· Slid Gallo. "And that's make dcc1s1ons very quickly under press.. ure. "He'• poised and ~·s mntettd the PrM plan.. Ht knows the dcfcntei. When he drops bKk. ht sees the 11tua11on and can handle 1t. hople can bt Mnllhinun10 him and M c1n stdl runttion suR'JCicnlly:· So 0°Nftl mua rely Oft his upstairs ckpanmtaL bil pall. bil inllincu. Ttw IOoll it takn ror one '° "'a fOOd quarwrtlltk. • "I don'\ haw the moM powerful arm.'' O'Neil IMI. "I lllw &o my on my brains. 1a J don'1 .)aw mcnlal nron.: r try 10 m1n1m1tt my nn'81 ttTOl'I.. .. Gttd• the maJtimum out of tht m1n1mum •• tunly what the MaJ11t care m>nom)' needs. All it nttds now is for 0 Neal to bt Its quamtbeck. occ ... From Bl Bontrager. Nadon. Vahnskyand Craig al ong with freshmen Kell\• B1efcld and J ullC Clinkenbeard 'form ()('C's Edison connection. from which Bond has drawn on a team wh ich shared theCIF crown with M1ss1on V1CJ010 "86and lost to the D1ablos 1n the '87 semifinals. &he same team which produced Dutton. Nadon and Doleman. first-team all-confen:ncc selections. and Bon· tragcr. a second-teamer. alona with C'ra1~ Valinsky. Kristin Steele and Enn Duffey return from a team whic went 16-1 -1 and IO$t an the confercn post-season tournament mas('h to El C'amino.1losswh1ch won't be forJOttcn. &fore the stason. Bond mention how the Wamon rubbed tht victory an v. 1th their a nuts after tht match aod how 1hesc"·en reuamen wall remember. "We beat them one olhertimc this ~ear(Palomar1oumamen1). towc cxptttcd to pi.>. bc11er1ha1 W! did (IHtJTunda). "Bondsatd. "Wewr luck>toactoutoftbt11snc.EI Camano was shak1na bcauR Ibey .chouaht -c wtrc '° aood (1bt fin1 1imeJ. but Tundayfn11y(ivcsthtm eJ1mmerofhope.l\doftn thdpat al Wh11t the shutout ttrinl may be ~.1hfRa~othcrpl11ntaet a more to bt IMI -IC'Orlftl in ncb hat sbut outactl~al laltontt (ton~Dlftila .... ~ robln). wincG.femlet. win Solll&laltnt Cahfonua ~(inedr upofdw n1ncconfcmltt 1nHn1)1nd win IM "unofr.c11r· t11te playoff'(• four. team dcmonMrauon aournamnU. - A 6-foot· 1.17 5-paund senior wide rtttiver. he cauati1 five pesStS for 68 yards. &ivina him 21 for 244 yarils on the season. '-----------· CHRIS DgUCHAR Corona del llar A 6-foot-3. 230-paund senior hnd,.cker: he had eiaht unassisted and fi ve austcd tackles. and caused a fumbk 1n 21-12 wan. GARY BURROWS E•tancla A 5-foot-8. I 6S-pound junior. he rushed for 98 -yards on 14 carries -a 7.0 averaac in what 1ime and .again crucial situations. DAVID GOLDEN Laguna Beach A 6-foo1-I. 185-pound senior linebacker and re- 1urmng all-leaguer. he had six tackles and fi ve assists. three for negative yardage. RICH SCHONES Costa Mesa A 185-paund stnior ta1lback. he cau&ht nine paSStS for 6 7 yards and rushed for JS yards. 11vmg him I 02 yards total offense. CHAD OLSEN Marina * A s-foot-10. 175-pound senior defensive tackle. he had five isckles and thrtt assiSls. as well as causing an incomplete pass. ------------· ERIC PETTINATO Huntinaton Beach ..\ 6-foot·'t. 175-pound senior quarterback. he completed 21 of 18 passes for. 209 yards and .two touchdowns for the Oiiers. KEVIN ROBERTS Edison A 6-fool. 199-pound senior linebacker. he had 10 tackles and graded out 80 percent in Edison's sec- ond ~hutOUI \'lC"IOr) .• JOHN ARNOLD Ocean View A 1wo-year stancr at quanerba"Ck. he completed 6 of I 7 passes for 86 yerds and a TD. and ran four times in cntical spats. :;; \~ ..\ 175-pound Junior 1n ·• _ his firs.I.. year "'1th the _"' Scahaw~· football pro-:;_ r gram. he averaged 39 )ards • ,. ·/ on 10 pun1s against T ust1n. Galme_;,buster.s . 10 Top Last week's etay1 of 41 yanl1 or more •71-Shad Vicken(lrvine). touchdown pass from Dave Lincoln •65--J1m Roberson (University). touchdown run. ~ ,_ Oran(e County h1fc school •4S-Den!k Mahoney (fountain Valley). field goal. • 53-Mike Ammann (Mater De1). field goal. •st:..-P.A. Emerson (Woodbridge). pass from Fred Schweer. . •49-Chris Borg (Corona del Mar). touchdown run. Last wttk'1 rusialDg leaders I. .)(ealu Clifford (Mater Dci). 21-147: Josh W0Jtk1ew1rz (Estancia). 21-1 13: 3. Jim Roberson (University). 9-104: 4. Frank Vacarro(Manna). 12-101 : S. Gary Burrows tEstancia). 14-98: 6. Scott Seymour (Wood- oridge). 19-83. i» Last wttk'1 pa11lDg teaders I. David Henigan (Fountain Valley). 26-42-1 . 264 yards. I TD: 2 . Eric Pettinato (Huntington Beach ). 21 -38-1. 209 yards. 2 lDs: 3. Greg Angclov1c (Edison). I S-25.0. 206 \ards. 2 TDs: 4. Tim Newberrv (Nc~i>ort Harbor). I 2-J0-2. 160 yards. i TDs; 5. Fred Schweer (Woodbridge). 11 -2 1 ·2. 13.5 yards. 0 TDs: 6. Junior Oliver (Un1vers1t)}. 9-12-0. 118 yards. 2 TDs: 7. Danny O'Neil (Mater De1). 5-9-1 . 97 ya rds. 3 TDs. Last wttk's receivlD1 teaders I. Kednc Powe (Fountain Valley). 9-67: 2. Mike Cook (Fountain Valle\). 7-92: 3. Jeff Dunnapn (Hunllng~on Beach). 7-72; ~·Jim Stanle~ (Ne"'p0rt liarbor} . .5-68; S. Bnan Ryder (Edison). 5-70: 6. Patnck Rcalh (Edison I 5-6 )· 1. Greg tfaac~ (Corona dct Mar). S-29. · · -· FoR THE RE CORD ~ t I ,,. . " NL CHAMrK>NSHIP SERIES Ded9lf'S 1, Mets, 4 LOS ANGILIS ~0 NEW YOllK ..,, Mlrlllll ~a ~ } I I OvkSlra cf J 1 l l HllClltf lb l I I 0 J~hlb 4 0 1 I Siu* lb 2 0 0 0 Hrnnd1 lb • 0 0 0 G~ H S I 1 l Strwtiry rt 4 0 I 0 N,L ST ANOINGS N•'*'-1 Coot•tone• West R•ms New0r1Hf1S S.11 Fr•nc1sc:o Allan!• W L T S I 0 S I 0 4 7 0 1 5 0 Pct. PF PA SJJ 1711 106 1133 uo l 17 647 147 120 '167 112 167 . ·--ootball · Daily Pilot selections 1. Miss. Viejo (5-0) 2. Servite (5-0) 3 . Ediso~ (5-0) 4. Wdbridge (5-0) 5. Ftn. Vallef (3-2) 6. Ls Alm ts ( 4 -0 -1) 7 . Valencia (4-0~ 1) 8 . CdM (5-0) 9 ·. El Toro (3-2) 10. Esperanza (4-1) COLLEGE AP TOP 20 ltt<WCI ~ Pvs I M 1am . F S1 A 0 0 I 11 S 1 l UCL.A I S 0 0 I ~I 1 l !>oul1't•r Ca l S 0 0 I 011 ) ' Notre O•mt S ·O·O 937 S S Fior.ot S•t te S I ·O 117 6 • """' "·'ll ". 6·0 ~ '" 1 1 NtO<Ht.I S I 0 1A1 9 8 Sou1n Caro1.11a 6 0 0 104 I 9 O•ll•"'orna ,. I O 66.J I') 10 OIL•"°"'• S•a• 4 ·O·O S9' ll 11 C•~son 4 I 0 S.. ll l1 A;;Du•n • l·O ~ ll C.f0!'9•• S· 1·0 H1 1' Wvom·"!il o·O·O l1l IS M1(r>9a<' )·10 l9t 16 Wasru'19ton A· 1 ·0 1S1 11 A<ll.el'l\8\ S·O·O 139 • I 5 ,, 17 " 10 Goftllll II 0 \ 0 0 MdtYlcb II 4 0 I 0 Marwt r1 s I 3 I C1r1er c • o I o $hellly ct l l I 0 JOllMOfl SS • I I 0 Chicae>o M1nneso1a Tampa Bav Del roil Green Bay C«ttr~ s 1 0 0 0 0 11 8JJ 130 67 ,, l'\O·I NI ' O· I 141 19 LSU J 1 0 130 0emPS¥C 4 I 11 tkkmn1'> 4 I I 0 0&111\ pt1 I 0 0 0 Fernndl o l 0 0 0 scmcta c 0 0 0 0 LHCIHI 0 0 0 0 Harnll11 ltl • 0 , 0 N\a94ll on I 0 0 0 Gntfifl u 4 0 I I Avullert P 0 0 0 0 ~o •OOO s.ueron 100 0 HortOllo 0 0 0 0 Md>owlo 0 0 0 0 1-tolton p o O o O MauiR1 Pfl ' l O o O T...., 40 1 121 T9'llll 1S 4 t 4 Sare"" ...... La~ -JJI •t-7 .... Yen -.. 111-4 c,.,,,..w1nn1nc1 1t81 -o.n-m E-.JoMsoll \.08-1.cn All9fttl e, Hew York S.. ~ 2, Grlfflll. MetsMI, Dvllstr• )8-Mar~ H«-G~ m. OV!lstr• (II S&-GiOMll (?). .,. 1 1-3 I l ·l " ..... so • 0 0 4 I 0 0 0 0 • 1 I • 2 2 4 .647 121 I• 70 F1or1oa S I O 11 1' 3lJ 100 132 01ner <e<t •·"9 •o•ts A.at11ma 61 Ou-f l9 I 5 .167 85 117 Ort90'1 ll Wun 1>9IOI' St 3' SvracuM 16 I S.. .167 109 12S.. Ptnn .SI 1S 8• 9"•"" Vou!>V lt WH'•'" .;..Mt<fl•9en 17 81 St 9 Tt•as·E P•l<I • Pnoemx N.V. Gi•nls Philadelphia Wash11191on o,,uas Eut 4 2 0 647 160 124 3 3 0 soo 124 142 l 3 0 .soo 152 1111 l J 0 soo 14' 137 2 4 o m toe 12s Amet"iUn Conference Sea Ille Den11er R•ldtn San D1ee>O Kanses City West W L T 4 2 0 3· J 0 2 4 0 2 •4 0 ' 4 1 Ctmral Pct.PF PA .647 I 12 \09 soo 116 17 333 1'1 169 333 74 1?2 .2SO 79 98(\ Cinctnnalt Houston Clevet•nd Pillst>ure>h 6 O• 4 2 0 1 000 171 107 fJ .647 119 131 J J l s 0 soo 12 92 0 167 116 ISi Eut 8uf1•IO 5 \ 0 N.V Jels 3 2 I Miami J J O New E1191a110 2 4 0 lndi•naoolls I s O SuMaV's Sewn •ams JJ, Allan10 o M l•mi 2•. Raldltn 14 Chic.90 24, Oetroil 1 133 111 lOS Sl3 124 97 .soo " ,. .333 ,. , .. .167 " 125 8utfa10 SA, lnGl•naPOll' 2'3 HOU$100' 7. K•nws City ' Green 8•Y •s. New enoi.nc1 J Clncinn•h J6, New YMk Jets 19 Seallle 16, Ctevei.no \0 Mlnnesol• 14. Tam~ 9•v \J W•'11•ntton JS. Doti.s 11 Photnb 31, Pillsbure>'I I• Oeflver 16, s.n Francisco 13 tot) Ne'4!' Of!Mns 73, S.n Dte90 \7 ,_.....,,SC.... ' Pt11~le 14, H9w '(orlt Glents 13 ~, ..... SM Ftlfl(IKO et .-. 1 om ...... •• KlllM\ C1tv, 10 e(TI ClllOMllil• -.1 .... EllOleNS lO' • m 0.\ 11 ClllCWO 10 e m OtffOll al .... Yllf'I G,.,,tt, 10 •"' Grten .. ., 11 IWflN\Ota, IO • m .._!Oft el ,.,.,.,,.., IO • m "'111 flllllle .. Cle----lt 1 m • "'*""• •' w~. It • m Tamoe .. .,. •• 1u-. ... 01•,, IO•"" s.ii 0t00e .. Mlefni, I • IT'I Hew ~el S..l!le, I 11m Alllllf• el °""* l e m ........ ...... l""9lo .. ..... y.,_ ... • • "'" Haw au l Cc>io• aoo 7 So\ilf'>trn M•U•U PC>t I I= rsJ O•l<t •Ort\ ~ Dilf t "l"eS·S COftWUHITY COLLEGE Mlsslefl Confoff"• st.~ . TOfO FIVI (Al Olvt\itm I T-F.,...,1on ll1\ltOtOt P1saoe11a L-8N<n ~encl'IO S.n1ta90 TNIT'I Fu11er1on lt•'<t<S1Cl4t CENTltAL llencno S.n11n o Or .... CM\I SaoclteOK1t, G.-... Wtst NOllTHE•N Pa~ L0119 e .. c11 M l S.n A•HOl'·O E1 C1m.t10 Cerrito' SOUTHlltN San°'"°~ P1iomar S.n o'"° Sou1nwts1er11 Gt9S~I , ..... OIM'lll Wl.T WLT lOO •OO •JOO •OO 300 310 20 1 l ll 1 0 I J 0 I OIVl~N Cant Owr .. W LT WLT JOO •OO JOO 4 00 7 0 I 3 0 I l I 0 l I 0 1 I 0 l I 0 Ill 711 OIVl~N ) 0 0 1 0 I 7 I 0 I 1 l 0 l 0 OIV1$aoN I 1 0 .. 0) 0 0) 0 0 l 0 I". 0 3. l I 0 1 1 ' 3 1 0 1 I l 1 4 • 1 3 0 ' 3 0 I l 0 1 l 0 0. 0 saw•rs ~ ~ W"'t t i P1 1Qtnar 1 JO Or .... C•st 1 • Seti 0..-o ~. 1 S.11 0"'90 CC t i Ml Sal\ Allloon-o. I )0 "'°'""°"'' el Futi«ton. 1 LllN IN<ll CC 11 ••vtn.oe, 1 ,..,~CC el ~" 7 •WKN $enl.et0 t i C..-r•IOl 1 Sou""°"r." t! El C.,,.1110 1 .. j Orange Coas1 DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Octob« 11. 198' 8S CdM re~ains on top of Div.VI I WI ..,_:::'!f!f .. "!_ 1 H .. 1H•-·--~ s1• ) Al•O.e M.•-V-YI f I .. ..... (. ,-.,.., .... Y-1 •• , ,, A 6-(001 ~nior quar- terback. he completed 9 of I 2 panes for I I S > ards and 2 TDs. and wasn't 1nler- cep1ed IO 31-20 \ IClOC) ' ·Woodbridge. ' t..Nt .. '°"'' "-'' ,.. .. t c;_.... --· f•I SI I' c .... .., Wf"'9\ 1-V•wl f I 4S • ,,_ ·-·-·' 1-l 11 -~----------=------· SCOTT SEYMOUR W ooclbrtclge A 6-foot. 19().pound Jun- ior. he rushed for 83 yards on 19 cames. caught four passes for 29 yards and scored a 1ouchdo""n ----------------· RONNIE RAMIREZ ... Sadclleback A 160-pound ~ophomore staning for the inJurcd Pat While. he ran for a 3CJ..\ard touchdown and scored on a 71-~ ard pass pla~ --------~--------------1r TONY DE PALMA W estmlnster .\ S-foot-1 0 lo5-pound Junior. he rusht.>d for 78 '-ards on 14 carnts an his lirst s1an an the backfield for lht Lions Estancia. Edisonhdld ' £-• ·~··· 11-1 •·f 17 IO ~ 0-• -••••I »1 16 0.-• ._ ... _ •. w. ,___, ,., -.,.1 .... ,, ... ""'·-... _ .. , >·1 -....... . ""°""'•"' ... _,. )') --,,.. ... _ "-YI )-] ..... fl l-Y-1, _____ ,, dMllOll VI I C-•-CS..V-1 W 1' 1 "·~. o-• ._, ...... 7) ) Tro.-,, ... ,. •+t .. ; ~. ,...., Fr-evl i •I U ' A·I~ t~lla"I -· • HIGH SCHOOL Clfr-*illWI OIV~I ~ILM-1 II••• .... • .... IOW .. ·~-· ~· • l .,... p.-" ... .. ~ ... a.. ......... .,~­J.y•·--· c If'"'\ ..... ................. "', ) a '"'00 Af"'•' .,.. ... "'', • l•-•~l I 11...=-~.1 r •• _, k • a E '-t'"""-0.-t• C '""' h ~ f l' Pa~ A"9<1 w> It I'-•"' V-• C~I ..,, .. _.,, t..,,-i If~~ 'IV MY t .; ("'11-9 l)eo 'ft• I ) OIVIMoll II t 4.,.,...., V .. w t~I 1 P•-• C.-l C,..~ iW ftl ,_....,1!"9f''• ........ •·1-• ,,,.,..... ) o, ... ,o.c~ t _. Pet4ot I ...... ..._ ... • t••....-ec c.-'•••ef't'f ...... \. ... ., •o "-•••f'Of• ••• ,,,. "~ "•• '°"'" f..o.l· 1 Oot'""•~I S..• C.o-• "' l LO\ AA,,...1ot £~t 4 p.,.~~ w 6•:1'' .... I E.-... u E""''' • £ I oro i.o..1• too•• t Cett ·oti S.f' G•D' • • • • ii.. ..... (ffl'tl>..t• ..... ~ ....... ta,,,._c~c ... 11 OIV1110t1 tY I Lot A 'o\ ~·· l ..., c;.,_., #.· .._ ) 0... LAO llW-.. • "Of""O'W t .. s , .. ,....,.,,,. ··~~ • iN'1Wl\.1 V• • ti,,. 1 _..,. • .,.. va-. "'''• . c.-· ..... _ 'p .... ~-•. .. .....,. ,. p .... W"', .. ,.DI .. I I•-UoM Y••I I .. 11 I .. 1)5 t P,c.t • C.•-c;.o... )·I I 14 It 110 t .,,...._. c...-c;.ove > l·I n I t 'lf If t """' wa ",.• l ) IJ l I '7 00-> L• °""''° 11;.,_ C.•o••' )•1 ,.. .. Le-~ ~Deft! 7-l ' l4 DIVIWCHI VII ; I .. t ~·· _ _. --" > 1 l> z w~ .... , . .,. •• - >·1 1' l """°""-SF Y ' I " ... " •• , >D .... _ .. ,.....,..,,,. -.. -; I tt ) , i6 ,, u ) ...... o.~ s 0 s ' v ' • ~"'"""' Cle< , ........... I "'•'•~0 Sf! Y • \ 1 It • •t'O•' (',,re,_ t+~t"'9f"I • 1 r. • !NI'\' O''•"'' Oc:•'ll\J •· l ., J.1 l• ) , ,, • I IJ 0 'N1' ~.I> .... Oct ... 11 IS 1' wr l·O It ()o_, 'Ir" C1m.'IO lltaJ • • .. \.\Ii,, Oo·\00 ~' .... "' ) 1 ]·] ,, ~· .. ) 1 JJ H 10 4 I tt } 0 QI. IO ., i 0 I II \ 0 .. • s: ) l Q • 0 " • )C ) l l' 0 I • IO 00 ~ 0 " I 0 ., • ' • 51 '0 0 • .. • ,, H •• ; I •• Ol~Y•• I ·--""'* c..... l·t llt ._ A •w.•Of'"• LO\ P•Ol'n S .. t llt I ti-"9'"" ~· •• l·O ti • E ~w._ S.••o ~. S·O IO Mi'"'•(•1• F'Ol''9f• ~O 7• • Po~ 11'--' ~o. Poatff I I 5' I S "°""""' S..i1 <'t IO l1 I •1ao""-~"' '\ t)tt ht (M\11 4 I l l '-W"''•.,, ._, ,., .... ,. • ... 11 t )4"" • o•J1• ~ .. .,., .,, • t 1 O·'""~' •~• ,-:,_,.,.., J t t C..-*'° IPHM C .. \11, l 1·11 Ca11<11'o I.Ill P•a'I\ J ' 0tV11'0t0 or ._ ..... ~ ·~ ... s. l it • ~· ~ ~ro Lg I 0 t7 ) ,..,.. ",, ,.,, "'·•11 O•tnP< • ' ... ' • ... _., '-"''~ .... Or.~ 4 I 11 ~ '\..41• Pa'• y, v.-.. · S•I ~ • • •-ait'C._. ,,.~ AO'\a S 0 $1 t •'91"''t• e ff ¥•·W.• l-1 Sl a °"'•' " c•~· •" °'•"'" l ' , ,.., t {)re#t-Of a..w•~e~ ()Iv~ • I 7• t tO §.rfr a"'9 O.•"'t• , ... , I Q1"'1itf•• AIV°-.iftle t~1· ) I ....,,,., .... ,...,. .,...,., t-l High School football~lOg '. ~ lff9W' tllfM) CO.ONA OEL MAit U·OI (See ....... L...-) 1 Huntonv•on 8eKPI ?l S.n Ciemtnle 52 S.nl .. 90 14 L~ Hilts 21 Cosl• ~ FOUNTAIN ltAU.£Y ().J) ("'""" LN9Ue) n~•· o.. lS E Te><o g 1~ ~"'~"': I~ 10 t.on~•8e6ql POI• 11 013--()Jr;ean V'Vt•' a1 H8 ) 011-Ed W1° lat OCC I -01'-Wn •rn•nsier• (at H8 1 ~N.-Mar .,.. a l Wtstrn1nsler) 11 l l ?• 7 lS OU-Un•vtf'\lh' lal Jrvlnel O?l-£s1anci.· Cal NHI ~~· lal SA &owl) N._Tus1tn' (at OCCI N 11-at NewPOl'I Herl:IO< • Nll>;-H""t "lltOtl 8eKll Cal OCCI HUNTINGTON KH l 1·4> COSTA MESA 11·2· ll l'"KMI< CMst LM9W'l IJ E"anc1a 1? llancllO Alam1tos ~ C.aroen Grove 1 lla1t11a ( SUftMll 1. ...... ) 0 (0'0<\41 ~ ,,.,,,., 1 Pote l1U ~ 10 Nt,.OOf'' Har()Or 7 1 L01'9 8eacn v. ~'°" 14 ~· .. Oet 7 1 1 I• 31 12 Cor0'1a Ml ~r Ol-WOOdC>t•09«• \11 OCCI 020-TrJltloueo H>lls' lat M V 0?1-La9\il\a H tl"' al N'1 Nl-Oranve• lat El MocM"a NIO-al t.avuna e .. c"' 1 o -eo '°". ~1 11 020-Marlf'la' 1a1 wn1m1ns•t'I 021-0c .. n 'll•w' lat W'1tnn\lrl Nl-Wewn.n••er• 1-1 Nlo-F~'lla•" Va•1ev• a• OCC EOl$0N CS·OI I~ 1. .. -1 I e 1 Mooena 21 C•P s1r1no ... ,,,.. 21 Lonll 8HCI' )Of 0." 2J ~ter Oe1 47 SI JOM 80KO 01.-.1 H1fnhn91on 8eec.n• 011-Ftn lt'a "ev• et OCC 071-~ri.,.• tat OCC Ht-Ocean ..,,...,. • it• HB NI0-11 Wttlm•nlfer • ESTANCIA IS·OI IS. y-LN-) 23 Cos•• Mew 21 L•~una 11.rs 11 LOS Am90s lS LI~ 8Hctl IA Or•n~ OIA-Tus•·n· 1a1 Ne,.PO" 011-<dM' !I t ....... _.. 017-Ul'•Yti'Sll'f' Il l Nt•l>O"' 1114-•I NtwPOf'I Ha<tior' Nll-S.ddletlaCk' ~· rvr IAVINf 14· I> • C~ GNU 1. .. -) 1l Ur vtr\•1¥ 0 n y, a Parli. ,. ll l "'"'" U I "'oooor·09t 9 U Foolri 0 014-S.n c.-1e -021-•• Cao str&'IO v.,,.~ • 07S--M •U.otl V t10' -N4-t l 01"4. H s• NII-€ Toro· •• MV LAGUNA BEACH 10·4· II 1 "tc:MIC Cu ll LM911e I I) 14 L~l·nver 10 0 NOPt \I ''' 1 l 0 1nt 01 ~ 1 1 es•anc • • • S.n Cl-It 0!3-La9;;NI H· s· •• "'"! 071-0rll!Oe' -01t-T•I DUCO H s· •' M VJ N4-Wooc!0<1<1ff• "'°'"'e "'10-Cos•a Mna • "c"'4' l09' <>aAMGE COAST ().II ]9 It tO Hot'Clo 14 9 er C1 m1no • 10 11 Mt S.11 4 nlo<>.O' 13 lS San D.eoo CC-U S.1uro1-1t S.• 0 t90 '11\esa· ~t Oct 11-5.o<llcoa<' • nome I JO S.1 Ot• 1'-•• F.,1 ,.ron• 1 IS 7 11 I] 41 n J lS 10 MUINA IO·S) ( SuftMt l..ll9Ue) 0 -£-•111• 0 -St<• •I 10 Foorf'I 0 LO\ Alll'l\tlO\ 01-•• ...,.,, ..... OU-Wttlf"\-Mlef' It! Wr'n\trJ 020-H•n a..c1>' 11 Wfn!olfl oit-eo.ion• car occi N-l=•n Va11tv• 11 Wmi lrl NH>-<X••" II tw• t i H81 MATl.ll 0£1 U·Jl (A.-us L.._1 11 Foun•a"' V,_.. ).I Ote.nUM 11 S.ni. Ana 9 EO•M>n l I H\i<'ll .nQ'OI' &teen 0 1-•1 a~nqp Amat' I) .. 21 ,29 n \ l6 10 11 " SAOOl.E9ACK 11·41 IS.. v .. w LA9W'I l • can~ • s.ni. Ana ] 0omo'!O;.if 1 11 :)eff• 0 Santa Ana Yal~y 0 1~_.,. at SA &oWI) O?t--11 Tlfthn• Oit-<OM• Ca• SA &own N3-Un.ver"tv• (11 S,. 8owll NH-E,••i,c11• l i t OCCI UNl'll'EIUITY ll ·JI I SM ..,... l.Mwll 7 .. .,_ 0 M·UIOtl 11...o Wooot:wo<19e Footr1•• 010-8 Mof>t~v· ISA 9oWI) 011~rnoo fat SA &owl) l ~ana H •llJ O lr<.GM• 11 lrvrne1 010-11 N.--1 IU~bor' 017-Esti ncia" 111 NH) M.:J-~· CSA Bo ... I N ll-T'4Jin' 11· Irvine I Nl-S1 Pa...r a t OCCI NI0-5«'"¥ ft al S.e. ~1 NIEW~T HAltaott I 1·4) IS. 'lf1"> \._..,.I 0 SI"'• Al\I 10 ex .. ~ v- 1 '1;;1'1\lllQIOI\ 8eK" 10 ~ Ht btt 14 Lonv 81.C" '/It M>I' 01)-S.00-.. ' SA 8o"" 010-Utl•\tf<SJIV' . OIOmel 0 1'-t• T.nt ,... N Ei•a'IC 1• t~ N I -<"'one '.jtj ~r • "O""f OCEAN VlfW tl•l l IS-wt LN9W) If ( VD"t\I 0 NtwDOft '16•00< XI S.ft•A •~•Va ttv 14 Wts•t<r 0 T~·- Oll-F•n Yt t Y' ••' H81 011.-.1 Wfl•,.,11'\'f"• O?t-H'" ~K,... e• Wms•• N•-Eo '°"• a• '11" lk'K!'ll NIO-Mar ,.,.. 1t • _.,,, !Mtclll 21 0 10 u 21 W£STMINST£Jl (1·41 ts-.t l.Mew) 9Va~ )0 M .,.,. 17 Es1Mtta11za 1 C.P.~·-....... , • M .SJ<O" \I O l•-Marina• e• w m11r dn~ean ..,,. ... ~ ~!"' V,1-«::f'" ..At Hill N)-a• "'"Ill "il'OI' 8etc,.• NIO-Eo ~· - woooeatoG£ U·•I I ,.aol'c (M U l.INW I O n ~" C t~·re 10 1J <=oo•l'I l 1• U'l • .. S '~ 0 17 fy ... IQ 1• Cl "•O" 0 1•-<•a•• ~· et OCC1 07'-LaD<Jl"t >i•ll\' lal lrYttle 0~•"11t• a t E ~ ,,..,.... ...o ... -eetct-· NIO-"•eb\leo HtltS' a t ,....,_ II lO 10 l? 3 ll •1 I• ' 70 10 IS 1• u )9 • 0 17 1 0 S.I NO¥ ~111e•\oOe • "O~ S.I NO¥ l~I~ Wfll._ GOl.F -SOCCEL c..._ ,,.,. s.1 No11 1,_lt•n<no S.nr •90 • "O"l't l C.Ol.OfN WEST 11·1·11 11 l.°"9 kKll C tv t lo Pu1oena cc se I« Soutnwesier~· 10 J I E Cam•no' JI S.•uroav-11 P•IO""•' • JO Sa• Oct l>-Fut~'O"' "'O<"'t S.t Otl 2'-11 ll11'Cno S.M•ego • s.1 No• S-a1 S.oo eo.c• • . s.r No• 17-0ra·~ C:>as' Co ~· "<>"'f S.t ~ov , ........... \Of CC • ....,,.,, • oeno111 conference ~mt • Clt"Olfl 0 " S>O" ;ll'"'t A~ fAMI\ 1 1 7 u• HS "Cl' fl! All llOfM Oltnf\ 11 Ora"9t <oas1 Coo~ CROSS COliNTR Y Hllf'I KIM* MYS CIF ltAHKINGS ••• 1 c-rllo ~ c.-*' Mar; J Ce ""°" c c • o.,.,. >< , s l no...wno O.u • S.nla -'M 1 S.!'lta A'I Va •Y I V • "'•'" t . ,_...,. ltlltv. 10 E MOOena Httfl sd\Oots '"1s CIF ltANKIHGS •·A 1 P110s llttClel t New~ Ha~. l 111111 PM• 4 Sert ,_..,, S E TO"o 6 Slti•a 41\1 Vt ·..,_ 1. H ......... Cl\; a E MoOtN t Lont ae1cn W•t\Oft• 10 Oat1• H s ).A I -'.eouta 2 So\,th H••l l. W 8 ~. 4 Mo<ro &n ~ YlolCa DI 6 Arr¢"0 c;,1-1 Lom.o<. I E t '!"•!!Oe ' $1 >owoll S M lO -ClnoH • • 0 PttO TOVtl MONEY 1 • .,,.. 'Snee ...-r- 1 '"'°Bee' J !>11\0> L" f ' Btn Crt11sna .. > "'•s S.Ha""M • o.r G•er 1 .,. .. ,, C•<••tc• • • a Ul\n' w111_ ~ 'Oh o F•os• 10 S•tot P11t 11 Pau A1 ~· I 1 M l r ll. MC(~ 'T'Of• U .:O•ff ~rma• u ¥ ,~ Rt-o I) Tom li.•'t lo Jett S•uma f'I 17 Pt ter J•<OO\fn 11 Jt " HtH !9 F•toCO\IOH 10 Pl lf"f Sit,.,e•• 11 8•uCf I,. ,. ,,, 71G•'"11.oc· :l \..e~ty H• M>• 7• Scou HO<" U JOO tM..o<i ••• ""•" 0 ....... 21 0 •"' Pl)f' -~ ?I 8oo , .... 2'\\a•t.tliKtt JO Dave Sarr l l 8 C.1s_. 31 S<o!I \-tro..n" lJ C. NIOfH~ ~ Cra11 ~1ao U lll1rli 8roo'' Jt To"' WllSO"\ 37 N e" P•1<t • "' lEADEltS ~ .. >70i13J '6•• •SI kSl"' \6'3 ~~ \.o. ... ,m .. · ls.AS l~ S)'C O.' SS ' J10 lS l •SC: ·oc µJo 61) ~ .... I.I">: ;'3 , ... : .,. ~ ... "47t ··~ u .,. ~ .. I UM t.:~ OS~~ ~;. •.. U• ... '"'. ' \lZo ..-: \J .... UC-; '\. \?" (·r !.~ ~ .. '~-ct; '~ lt• si• •:I ~!>4~ \l"Gr i:•· ~I ,, •• 4• ii .. JO(\ OIST'lllCT IJI ~ C ..... l, T1'e Mts_.s I T .. Ml•'~ s K.,""9 A~ I GCJll'ie \IYtl 8 ,,.,.,.., f Sota COi._ s.;or llO w~r-rt(;h 1, Helmutll 8 •an.,." I GN • U vff lt1rnaoe J "lei!•,,,.,. 0-0 0..0 SH ...... OAV£Y'1 t.00t£1t 1*-" "-01 -S ooa•\ 111 •"9lff' • tla"TttCuGa. 150 boc11to lt ve IOwta 1 •OC• •OC1 ] ~eltbllt 1" Ql<o DI» .. .ano OIU .... C,r't It .m.1e -CllU 11, Dlut Hren ,. \..•·P•" 'M'90 l Wl'lllt hSll NE'Wl"OlllT l AfllOIHG -2 llOllS 14 ·~~S-P )8~ IMU OOfltO 71, l<ulOll • /lll4l'ldl'f'' tr'MY~ 9AS£9A\..L ~l .... .. NE.., 'l'Qfl "'A"'kEES-Nll"'" ~OI Br_. 'C.O "ltt<I O' .,,,_ ~ -•tlOM , ... ,.....L..... ' • NL-Reouceo ,,,. W M!e<lloOI' OI JI\' ~. t.o\ A~ OoaM \ o·•<~ lron'I '"'" NY• l"OO{aA\.l • MaMNI P:..._..L....,. • OEN~lq 8QONCOS ICl~~c ""'4/11• tor• neoa '" ott n.urto ,.._,,. t.cltv•IW ca." T"°"'n '""" llO oac., ... a!>HINGTON REOS~INS-At'"° to ,.,,.., .. rn c..<ev 1111• lt1' O;Jnl •. HOCKIY • NalMoMI Hedlt'Y '--PITH8UltGl"f PE .. C.UINr~nl l(..,,tn 'S't•t"-' ifi• ..,,... ano Cll• Clllt~I _. 1r~fl 10 M.,,\&..,oll .. Ille .,..,.1.eMI ~ .... ~""" . OUE9EC N04tOIQUE5-ltac.._ Mef'll v ... ,.."• rt9f!1 "'"" wom """'9a ti "-A~•" ~ft Lee9We "'ASl1llNC. TON t A .... TAI.~ lftllllll OtllC• allO Moat M.~t lotwar4b It..,,_. crt •'W 4!'MftCell Hoc:kev LIMUt IOCC.• ........ '19cciwu... !>. AftlSAf, t1i Y COME f$ Men>eO l(ft ,. x,...,..OU\C" ""' af'n~I ..,. ..... ,.._.. ~.(OMA $TA•S-,.... ...... ..-• .,.., ~ IO • t"~ C:OlllrlCt TMOIOIJ ....... ~o=-~=~~---- TMl$TU'.ClOW"' ...... ._.... _.., .... -~ 'llQMIN'$ ~~OJI ~--­~ ---.. ------..,... •• lftM ......... ,.... ......... ............... -. Ii .. ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT I Tuesday. Octow t 1, 1988 ..... ·--....... ...,..,. ................. ~ ..,_., M:TmOUI .. I mM ,.,.,.... UU DIWOI09 ACftOle ol lhl ~....._; .. IN "*-'C ULI um lfATtmNT T.8. ... _.. NOTICI II Hl,.HY rill!l. -_., ..... fl W ••HBJL YOU AM .. OlfAUU QIYIN TO NANCY Y ......... •II ..... M JlllOCSif .... I UHOil'ADllO°'T""'T LYNCH . .._ llllt 11.ftOWR .._ ..... f I W .... Hc*o911'**1henttwl w Ai11t•r·•o11er. HHO °"''° 1111111 UNll.81 .....,... .. 111t1,,...,._ ertr. • •....,......, • purwt '° lectloft , ... 01 '* View Ad . Co.ta MeM. ~ at • tM\llflt(Oft ._ i10er MwliJ'...... ....... 8t"4t , Newport •• ...._., llt.... ~ VOU T.IU(I ACTION TO ~A. Wllalr. C.-= •: n • wy to llMlllW IN CiW Cooe • ...._°'Cello CA e.dl. CA t*8 3100 ~ Awenue, .,_ ...... CA tMIS IOO. '°"'**' V~. CA "'°"IGT YOU,_ P,_Of'· fom1a, ..._.on J11i1t t•,=1111. I #M. _. _.. tome. Section 2'21 of tM Hono In l<lm t224' lollM ,.,. w ... 7tt 102. c-. ...... CA... "'1flur A ...... llOS w t210I EM\'. IT MAY M SOU> AT 'f04//I ~. ~ .............. Cailfcwnle ..._.and Pro-OMetin.. G41rct.n Oto11e .• CA "C" MeMma 81.. HIH'll· l lOfl'ledUonla Corpor• 8allltot 81vt . Newport AM1e¥ Medlctl. Incl .. 0.:.-A "'*.IC MU W YOU ... ec11oft IN OW I A~ROllMA TE MINI• ~ eoctt. Section 53$ 9214 t inoton 9eadl. CA t2t'I atlon. Ca.lllotnl• corl)Ot· teeclt. CA t2'U _,., Clo TIW CorporetkWI NllO AH IXPLANATION .....,..., ~ lo No. 116 ·OI MUM 911) llV• of IM Calitom68 ~Code t<wq Sit 1<1m. 1220 TNt l>UlfMt 11 con-a110t1, 3tOO AlrweY A~. Thie w.... It con· Trwit Company, t20t Of· SCHWARZ AKA cw THl NATUM °' THI t ... lfl IN Cour1 OI c;om.. a.-. .. ,, .. anct tlW Pto'MIOnl of IM Cllrl1tlM Lane, Garden ducted by an ltlCSMduel "•02. Cotta MeH, CA ducted by 1111 ~ 8nQ! llreet, Wllminglon. MILDRED SCHWARZ ~EDINGS AGAINST "'°" ,.._ 04 .._ T~ ~ ...,.. ~. Callfornle Auction Licenllno'Gr<MI. CA t2&4t Tll• re9l1tt1nt com-tHH Tiie re911tr1nt COftl· OelM 1111tl01 CASE NO A146221 YOU. lOU -.OUC.O CON-lalUt JudlC6el OIMttet. C.. *' .._ .. -~ .. -..... Act. U..undw19*' '#111... Ttlle bultneu ti con· rnerw;.d 10 lrenNC' ~ TNJ bullMN II ton· "*"'*' to .,.._. CIUlio Tlll9 butlneu II con-T •• ........_ TACT LAWVER. u"' b I. c 0 u I\~. • I IOI. ....... ~. CA :J:-::C .... by competltM ducted by; C:O-pA(1Nll nea undw ,,,. ltctll'°"9 due* by: • C~l)Of•tlOn ,... under ... ktltiOue duc1ed by • COfl)O'lllOn 0 • • ,_., °" 10/20/.. ., tO 00 llloofMtlut9. Pei·---tHIO on ti. \ltll Mt¥ of Tiie rag111ran1 com· DUtlnMI nerne ot ~ Tiie re9111ran1 com-~ ,_ Ot Mmea Tiie re9111ran1 com· ti.neldMH. et~ A.M. llOMCLOSUAE CON-YOU A,.£ H lltlaY J•111•• c . 8rt1a111. October. 1918. II f.301menced 10 traneact t>u-. lilted abo"9 on NIA rnetlC*I to lranMCt bull· ...... ~ on Nov 14, MenCed lo ttanMCt· ~ conlin9efll credlott, and SUlTANTl, INC. •the~ NOTIFIED: ......... Or ... C4wttty. o·~ PM, IOCated at Pub-Mel under the ltc:1ttio-;1 8onna F W.., neN under tl'te fle1mout 1MI ne.a undtt the fitlil~ pelSOM who ~ be llPllC*lled Truat• """' YOU HAY£ ee.EN 9UED ~· P. ~. ~ llC-Storege t7792 COWM In~ --OI llMlM Tflla atat•n~.wa.fW ...... ·'*"' ~.NmM Arttlur.4 Pewne ~ nan'le Of MIMI oehew lntet..-d In ... and CIU'IUanl 10 Deed of IH COU'n. If~...,, to ~ 0r.,,.. COMI the City of ntnt. County of Nttedabo'<leon nl• llftttltlleCounlyC1at•otOr· lilled aboVe on ~I 31. Tiiie , .. .....,.twee Ned lilledatlO\'lonn/a wll or ntale °' bolh of· Trull. Recorded on ClelMd 1Q11r191 any of die~,_ 9"•.,. 21. Oranoa, S1a1e of c.i.tomia. Hong In l<lm l"'OI County on October '*· ttN wt111 Ille~ a.ti o• Of· Abbey Med1e11. Inc . MILDRED R' SCHWARZ 08127187 • ~t no. clelfN COfltained In Ihle Oc1CIMr •. u . 1• lhe abandoned goocta. ch•I· Tlllt tl•temen1 •U tiled tta& 81omedtronla Corpor· 1t101 ~on ~ 5. Creigtl LaOnafd, --'ttant AK,. MILDRED RUCKER 11.......a Of Oftlc* A9-QllnlOlaint. ~ ""* lallle T300 1-or~propenyo. wttlltlleCountyClefkolOr· ~ auon. Sernte Kempen. tNI Sectetaty ,, COfdllnltleofbOfttlei:t. l)fOt1•UctlOnwft'*'20_. ---------1etltled below In the mat· 1t101 County on Seotemci. PutlllMed Otange co.t Pr.oen1 P...a Tiiie ~I WM filed SCHWARZ AKA corder of Ofenge County, .,,_ it111 Comp&11nC and Ho- 1w1 ol. 21. 1988 Oeily P16ot Ociotier 1 t. 11. Tilil tta._,. ...., !Md ~ Oranoe C<*f wilt! Hie County c.11 of Of· MILDRED A SCHWARZ CallfOfnte, IHCUled by tic. .,. ...,,.. l.tPOfl you _....;.=,.;;---..--.-- l ynn Mallltrt. Sp ,_ 25. N~¥Wnber t; 1NI Wltll the County Cleflc of Of· Deily Piiot Oc10bw 1\, It, "'VI County on~ AKA MILDRED DANIEL A. SALCE.DA ANO YOll .. ..,.ned tN1 If you MmD•CMMMT 89'7-20 bu. blcc... bd. Publlthad Of"'OI Cout T31 ange County on~ 25. ~ t, t... 21, 19U SCHWARZ PATRICIA A. SALCEDA, fall 10 00 IO. a c;aaa ~ Of~ wheelcflr. ml9c:. cm Delly Pllol Seotembef 27. t5, 1911 n11 ,...., A PETITION '-been HUSBAND ANO WWE AS C:' wffflOut you Ind. couwn Of ..... Bt~~11g~=··~5 t>~.'<>1;1ot1er 4. 11. 18, ieaaTm "8JC fl)TlC( PubMhecl Orange~ ~ S::t1erco;r "ailed1Ps..!.l 1n L~l~E-~ ~~~~T ~T1uc~~ ment :.~ °!n= ca':ot.-~:'0::.-= C9tl regatt K 4117G Diiiy Not SeolemOer 20, PUlJC NOTIC( Oc1ot>er 4, 11. 11, 19U """ u,. u,...... TO THI! HIGHEST IMOO£A _....., Yo11 by the Coutt SCHUMACHUhn beMlf Of Henry Siiverman, Sp j RCnnoul..,_H 27,0l;tobW4.,11, 1tM ltaJlr T2t7 CourtofC ... fornill, Cou!'IY FO..CASH.(peyallllattlme wfttlout Mther nodoe. A ERIK A , A IO IE 6$11-llottub P\8.IC NOTICE NAMllTATEMINT T288 '1Cnnou8..,_H of ORANGE r9qU1Stng of .... inlllwfulmoneyoCttll t~t may allo be Q(TZINePQlf\. a I'*'« l<flPP8 Sigma Frat. Sp The IOllOwtnO ~ ... •-IC MftTIH' um ITA~ "8JC flJJIC( lhal LUCILLE M. GIPSON United Stal .. ) at THE entered agMntt ~for any tot ciw.ol..,. A300-1Umb<, pctr, 2 lglllt.I K al10 CIOlng .,.,..,,_. u . ,..-. nu•~ ' The folOwtnt S*90N ate I 411741 be appointed as personal FRONT ENTRANCE TO 04'* Cilllm ~ ttMel r.. NO. A144IOll mltG RCTl'TIOUllU ... tl I IMAGELAND. 3191 Red ecW doino~•: representalive to SUITE 205 (SECOND queatedbythePIMttlff.You OAOERTOIHOWCAUll Alfred Smllll. Sp NAMllTATl.MINT HltlAYenUe.CottaMw.CA RCnnoua•:11•11 REDHILL STATIONERS,, ,~.~ .. adminlalef fie estate of fL.OOR) 17802 IRVINE meyloeemoneyorproperty FO..Ct4ANCIEOFNAMIE A456-lng. dolly. tbl, ~·tr. Tile lotloWtng persona are 92626-34M MAim ITA~NT '7845 ~ <Atda. Sta. TM....__ the dllcede t BLVD .. TUSTIN, CA 92880 Or other rlghtt ~t to SUE ICHUMACHE.A on pctr. "119C, 6 bu doing 1>u11nesa as ' Color Luet COfp (tn• Tiie t«*Owing P9'ION .,. J. INIM, CA 92714 .__._ penona IC• n Ill rlgllt. title Ind interett ~· ~ ot llUKA ,AIOI Stephen Palma. Sp 8201 AfHRAGEOUS. lU'4 corporlled 1n Qelaware). ~ ~ ... Dena A, l<arcllat. t7845 ~ ~ .. : • T11E PE'TrTION conveyed 10 and now lleld If YOU 00 HOT FILE A OITZ£N8EM!A. a "*- • 2 c:abnll, bO. 8 ctlrl. cnb. Culllw Drive. Sutle A. Irvine., 3191 Red Hiii Avenue. eo... FAAME OF MfNO, 24452 Slcypa1k Ctrcl•. SI• J, si.N=~ s~:E~10'~1 requests authoriW 10 by II under laid Deed ot CLAIM • FOR ALIMONY. NI Ned • pacttion In tfllt grndlatlllrctcll. 15 bu. mlMC CA 92714 IM a, 1 . ca 1itorn,1 MWiand• IMS. El Toro, CA !Mna. Cal!fornia 027t4 Btlltol ,,2 Cott Mela lldmintsler lhe estate Trutl 1n the l)foperty lhu· MARITAL PROPERTY, court tor 1111 order _..,. landlord reservaa tlla' Susan A Miller. 22955 926~N • 92630 ' Jeanne I<. Karcher. 17845 • • • • uocter the Independent eted In Mid County. Cell-COUNSEL 'EES OA EX· fAll<A 10 c:Mft119 NII'* rtghl lo bid al Ille sale C•mtMo RIO Ltguna Hills. Thi. bu11nua la con· Tao Ouc Tran. 122 N. Skypark Ctrcle. Ste J , C~ K L tllO S Acrninfsltallon ol Estales fornla. delcflblng ma land PENSES BEFORE THE neme "om EMA ,AIGE P\KdlUea mutl t>t ma681CA92653 ductedby.acorporatton !'Mountain View. Santa Ana. IMM,C•t0tnie92714 --s ... ()f • AO (This aulhority •lows tllartln. FINAL DECREE OF OITZENIEAOEA to ERIKA w+th Qlb onty and l*d lorl TlllS bustntts 11 con-I The reglatr•n• com· Cllifornea 92703 Tllit b\11lne11 ea con-~~ lrMt. "'OI· Ille. .........,.11 LOT 7. TRACT 9350. AS DIVORCE OR ANNULMENT PAIGE CONRAD. al IN 1""9 of purCllUe All ducted t>y an tndrvldual menced to transact ~Ii· Tllla bullneH 1a con-ductedby:hulNndlndwlta • . r-·-·· PER MAP RECORDED IN IS ENTERED YOU Will IT IS HIEMIY ON>EMD purcfleaedgoodsartlOld u Tiie reg1s1r!ln1 com-neu under Ille lte11t10U1lducted by: an indMcNal Tiie re9111ran1 com-Ttllt butlnen 11 con· reptesentauve lo . take BOOK 391, PAGES 35 TO LOSE THE RIGHT TO that 111 penona ln.....S Ir\ 11, and mutt be removed al menceo 10 1ransact butl·1 t>utineu name or names Tiie reglllr•nl com· mancad to transect bull-ducted bV: an~ many aclions Wilhoul 37. INCLUSIVE OF MIS· CL.AIM ""4Y OF THEM. !tie metW 9'or.ald....., thettmeofMll.Sale9Ut>)llCt nets undtf 0'141 ficllUOUI !Isled above on not app11.lmenc.d lo lranaect b\lll-.,... Ul'°9r tile lletltlOU8~'~01:1~n1 , c~r; ob\alnlng cou. rt approval. CELLANEOUS MAPS, IN Vou.,.. ""''*notified betofeWICOW11n9a@art· to poor eanoallallon frn1'tt buSIMIS name or namet cable ,,... under Ille flcttltout ~ NllM or NlftlM 0 r taC Befor• \aklng ceftaln THE OFFICE OF THE lhal undw ,,. OIVofce Code menl No. 3 .. 100 Cf* ...,.,, of Mttlement bet-' listed •bove on Octobef '. c 0 I 0 r L ••• r c 0 r p.. bu*'-name or namet !lated eoove on nta neet un09t Ille ftc:= actions. howeve<. lhe COUNTY RECORD£R Of ~ tMV' ~ tllat !tie C«lt• onwe W.t. Slnt• Landlord and obllgll•CI 11188 Seymour L1ebm•n. Sec-!11t•ed ebo\11 on n/a Dena A. Karcller, JMnne ~name 1°' personal representative Is SAID COUNTY. Cout1 dlttct you and '((1411 Ma.~ on OcloMr party. Deted this 4111 and Susan R Miller retwy Tao Ouc Tran I< Karchet • on n • , '-•Ir,... Ive t' PARCEL 1: • ICIOUte to auand marr11ge 25. tNI. 81 2:00 o'dodl 11111 day of October. 1988 Tiit• Sllltmenl ..... Hied ™• at•t-11 WU flied Th. atatement .... fled Thia atatemenl ... ...., Seon l(eun L9a r .. ..., ... to g no ICe lo LOT 7 of Tract No. 9350. c:ountellng. A .... of pro-P.M .. Ind "*' and ttwe Publtc Storage Man•o•· •""''"the Counly Clerk of Or·, wttn lhe Coun1y Clark ol Or-j with the County Clark ot Of· with Ille County C*1I of Of • .J,,~·~b;:' of~ lntenisled pe<90ns ~-"' 1111 Cly\ ol Irvine ... pet leMioMI !Mf1'11ge counMI-lhOw<**. If MY~ Nve, ment, Inc. Te6tphotie (8181 ange County on Ociot>er 3. I ange County on Sec>tamber ange County on Seotember e,. Counly on September I Cou Y Seol bet ltiey have waived nob°' fN1P recorded 1n boolc 391. or• la avWlabte at the C<lun wtiy Mid petition lor c:Mnga 244-8080. ""9nt lor Land· 1988 113. 1988 2t 1911 t3, 1NI ~988 nty on am consenled IO the iwopoMd pages 35. 36 and 37 of Ml• Adtnlnillrator• Office •I tile o1 name lhould not 6e lord. 1 f-..sl F111t1S1 ' ,_ ,._ • action ) The independent cellMIOUtl Maps. record• ol Co I u m b I • C o 11 n I y granted. Publllhed Orange Coast Publtllled Or•noe Cout PubllSlled Qfanga Cout PJblittled Of"'OI eo..1 Pubhthtd °'"'OI Coeat F111f7' admmlsnhon aulhorlly °'"'OI County. CeltfOl'nla. CourtllOuM In BloofnltMlrg, IT IS FURTHER ordeted Deity Piiot October 4. 11. D811y PllO\ Oclober 11. 1a.1 Daily PtlO\ Sec>tember 20.l Dally PltOt Seotetnbef 27 o.ily Pilc>t Seo•.mW 20, O::bl:.'!:' ~~Def eo:1 wil be g.ranled un'"8 en EXCEPT THEREFROM all P9nnlyhlania. Tiiis lilt will be tllat • copy ot lllla orcter to 1986 j25. NOYemt>ef I 1988 l 27. Oc1ober 4. 11. 1988 Ociobet 4, 11. t8. J.jl8 '27. OciOO« 4, 11. 1911 27 Oci~ 4 11 1911 • lnlefesled pet90n files an Oii. gn. miNl'alt and other made 1¥altable to you upon llftOW cw be publllMcl Ir\ T305 T3151 T.289~ l2tCI T2t2 • • · T2t0 ob'...,..... I lh . lt"liO llydrocarbont., below a reque81. meC>tangeCoeeco.llyPlloC, ,_.,..n o IS pe n 6eptll or soo raet, ""''"°"' If you dealt• to punue a MWIP..,., of fll'*al P\ll.IC NOTICE P\8.IC NOTICE P\B.IC NOTICE flt8.IC NOTICE rtaJC NOTICl rt.a.JC NOTICl and shows o<><>d cause tna riont of 11.1r1~ entry. aa counaellnQ. YoU mutt make e1tcu11t1on. SIU*'*' 1n tNe 1 why the ooutt shoutd not ,....,.._, In tntCNment• ol ~ ~· #lthwl twenty county at iwt once • ..- PUBLIC NOTICE OF THE ANNUAL COST OF WASTEWATER-COLLECTION, TREATMENT AND D1$POSAL SERVICE FOR USERS WITHIN COUNTY SANITATION DISTRICT NO. 5 OF. ORANGE COUNT-f In accordance wi1h the provisions of Section 204(b)(5) of the Clean Water Act of 1977 (Public Law 95-217), County Sanitation Ois1rlct No. 5 of Orange County 1s required to notify all users of Its sewerage system of the rate and portion of the ad valorem taxes paid by its users which are attributable to wastewater treatment services. This District, the Jurlsdlctlonal boundaries of which are presented on the accompanying map, receives a portion of the one-percent ( Wo) basic tax levy collected annually from property owners by the Orange County Tax Collector. This n~ce ls being publlahe<f In conjunction wlth the mailing of the_JQln_t Consolldafed Tax Bill by the Tax Collector ro enable u~s tlf'<fetermlrfe the ~rurrt ~thelrbasfcproperty tiiTevy which Is used to pay for wastewater treatment services provided by this District. This District annually receives approximately 2.93% of the 1% basic tax levy COiiected from the property owners in the District. The revenues generated for the District from the basic tax levy are not suttlclent to pay for all the ongoing operations. maintenance and replacement/rehabilitation costs associated with collecting. treating and disposing of the wastewater generated from the proP.8rtlea within the District. Accordingly, all residential and small non-resldentlal users In the District must also pay a supplemental user fee, Which for cost savings Is collected for the District by the Tax Collector with the annual property _ taxes. The annual supplemental user fees In County Sanitation District No. 5 are presented In the followlng table: ... Slngle-Famlly MuHl·Faml~ Small Commerclal/lnduetrl•ll Residences Auldences Gov.,nment•I u..,. -· $26 40 S l5 85 per unn S 18.9011.000 sq. ft. of building The following example Identifies the combined amount a h.omeowner will pay for the District's services in 1988-89 if he/she owns a home with an assessed value of $100,000: · . Revenue Sourc• Property Tax Supplemental User Fee B•sls for P•yment 2.93•1. x 1% basic tax levy x $100.00 = Annual fee for single-family residence Total annual amount paid 10 District No. S in 1988·89 for wastewater services Ann'J•I Amount Patd to Dlstttct No. 5 $29.30 26.40 $55.70 Large Industrial and commercial users of the sewerage system pay their proportionate share of the cost of wastewater collection, treatment and disposal services based upon the actual volume of wastewater they discharge and the amounts of biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and suspended solids (SS) in their discharge. The following schedule Identifies the rates now In effect tor these large users In fiscal year 1988-89. · Flow BOD 88 ($/mllhon gallons) ($/ 1,000 pounds) ($/ 1, 000 pounds) $125.77 $95.02 $117.27 Revenues collec1ed trom these large users are also used to pay for the ongoing operations, maintenance Jllld reptaoe- ment/rehabllltatlon costs of the District's sewerage system. These Industrial users pay fees ranging from several hundred to more than $173,000 per year for transport. treatment and disposal of their wastewater; through our facilities. If you would like additional Information on the charges you are paying for wastewater collection. treatment and disposal services.~lease call the District's staff at (714) 962-2411, extension S T-he Districfs-administratlve offices are open from 7:30 a m to 5:30 p.m .. Monday through Thursday, and 7:30 a.m. to 4':30 p.m. on Fridays. Published Orange Coast Dally Pilot October 11 , 1988 ~COSTA MESA COUNTY SANITATION t999 IRVINE OR , gtant the aull'lority. r«:9fd ~daya of the ate on tor tour c:oneecuttw WMllt A HEARING on lhe ALSO EXCEPT THERE· I you receive t1119 No-~to IM dey of Mid Mer· peliliotl will be held on FROM ell water rlgllta, tlcl. Thil requeat muat be • ......,.. 3 988 . wtlllOut the rtgnl of aurfac:oe made upon proper motkWI SEP t2 1 ... Nove,.....,r • 1 al 1 .-45 entry u. rllet\llCS In k\ttru· flMd wtttl llll Court. Fllllur• ""'-88 RGllllOM. C... PM ln Dept 3 localed al menttol record. to do ao wfll conatllute • 11'11flur el *9.....,.., 700 Civic Cenl8' OrtVe PARCEL 2; wetller of 'fOIM rlgllt lo r• c... West. Santa Ana. CA EaMrnflmlt 11 tuen ..... queal QOUll.,iinO. Aogera & Hartt9¥. A 1.11W 92701 mentt are p.rtlcularl)' Ml YOU SHOULD ,NOTIFY Cotpc>f811on, 111 (t 9eacfl IF YOU OBJECT TO lonll tn Ille ArtJda antltled YOUR LAWYER AT ONCE BNd.. Ste.. 103. ttuntlngton the gran11ng of the pelitlon "Eu«nent1'' ol tile ()ed.,. IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A e.acn. CA 92147 you stioold either ~; alion of CoYWl.,,tl, Con· LAWYER OR CANNOT AF· PublllhlCI Orange cOaat .....,.--d1ttona Ind Reetrtetionl re-FORD ONE. GO TO OR Deity Piiot September 20, at the hearl!'9 end state corded tn booll t223t, peige TELEPHONE TME Of'FICE 27. OctOber 4, 11, 1tM your obfections Of' file MQ...of Qf!_tc:•t:J!r«d• ol SET FORTH BELOW TO UH wntl8n o6jial00Swilhlhe a.cl County. u tllilJit· FlfftrOO'IWH~Oo ----- court bef0<e the hearing hon lleldtngt tn IUCl'I A(tlele CAN GET LEGAL HELP. Your appearance may ti. antttled 11 tOltows: ··0wnan· SutQUetlaMa Legat Ser· ---------'" pe<son 0( by yoor Righi• and DultM. UtlNJlet vlcea. 3e WMI Main Street. "8JC lllftT1C( and Cable Talev111on". Bloomsburg. Pennlylvant• __ ....,. ........... ~.._---an~ney YOU ARE A "Commumty FK1Mtte1 EaM-1781$ (717) 7844780 a.,_ 0 0 ment"and"PartyW1llt81ld ..._.. '-,..,.._ 1.. ~Of I CRE ITOp or a Fences" .... Anomer t. ............ ......C IALI 1conungent creditbf of lhe The street eOdfeu end) toe WHt 211G 10 .. 1, Of r• IWL • ,deoeased, you musl file 0111et common dellgn•Uon. lerwlc?I, P111=lu11la rftOiJiilRl'f .-1 your claim w11h the court If any. of the real pr~ ,..., (111) FU Notice ii hereby g1,,.,, tllat land mail • copy lo lhe described •bovt ·''I Publlthed OrltlOI Coatt p11r1uan1 .10 Section• personal 'representative purpor1eo 10 be.. 14 Dally Pilot Ses>temw 21, 21701·2'715 of IN Cell-• 1...,. by 1., rt AIMROCK, IRVINE, CA October 4, 1 t. 18, t988 fOfnla 9u11neu and Pro- lappo11 vu .. e oou 92715 T302 feMiOne Coct9 Section 232• wltiln lout months from The underligned Tru•t•I oftNCalilomiaCornmardel the dale of flrsl issuance of dltclaitM any llabiltty ror any I "8.IC NOTIC( eoo., ~ 535 of ttw lellers as provided In rncorrac1neaa 'of tile 11raet 1 California Pen.t Code llnd secbon 9100 of lhe addr ... 111\d otlllr common' ~COUNTY 111e pro\lleione °' IN c.11-,,Calilomia Probate Code. ~•tton. 11 any, ahown IUPINOll COUltT toml• Auehon Llcentl"9 1 The lime fOf filing claims ll«etn CAii NO ... 111 Acl. Ille undWligned will Nil •wll not eKplre pnor 10 roo Wlts,::t~c:'v!!:;n:9;.~' ,LAINTIFF: O"ANGI atpubtlcMieby~ lmonlhs from ~lie dale of ranty.•xPf .. 0timphe<S,r.;.1~=UCONDOMINIUM =~·t':9~~:,cs;ir: the heanng nolioed above. garding ,., ... P<>UMllon. °' OEFINOANT· WILLIAM O'cloe* AM on the pr---vou MAY EXAMINE enwmbrancae. 10 pay Illa WIUIL • • __,.. Mid l)f°'*'Y 11M I lhe file kepi by the court. If rtm81'11~ prlnCipal sum of NOTICI cw b4atl ICOf9d, and wtlld\ .,. you are a person the "°' •l MCUred by Uld lllM8HAL'S SAL.I toeated et Public S•oreee 1• 1ntere51ett-fn -#le ...... Deed of ""1· ..ttll Interest I By virtue of a wrll ltall9CS Hugf9m lfl IM City of IMN. I ou m1 file with the court tlllreon. • prOYlded in aald on Mey 25. 1188 In Ille C<Mity °' Orange. State of y to~ R t to notes, aOv•nce1. ti any. above de119naled Court. Celitomie. IM goodl. dllit· a • eques . Under Ille t•m1 of •he 0..0 upon • "'°9n*'I entered t ... Of petaonel Pf°'*1Y 0.-Spedaf Notice ol lhe l'ilmg of Trust. r .... c:Nrgea and Aprtl 4 1988 In fa\!Of of ICribed below 1n Hie mat· of an 1n11en1ory and ••'*1Mt of Iha Tr1111•wid tudgmenl cr.iditor(•I. or-t•• of: · appraitemenl of estate of Ille lrut11 C(Mted by laid ange Tree Condominium Billupe, D., Sp. E 184 -20 assets Of of any peltlion o DHd 01 Truat. IO·••I Owner• A110CJ11ton •nd b111. 3 ctw9. tbt, mlaC account as prollided In 159·081·97 11 11 poteibla against iudo"*"' det>IOt(•I. Ow"9r ,....,._.. tM "9fll l seelion 12SO ol lh lllat at Ille ume of ..,. Ille Wiiiiam w ..... lllOWlng • to bid tt the ta6a. Pureflalel I California Probate Code ~ ,i;: .. ~::,,::I ~on°'~7=; ::rbern:-::.~~ l Request '°' Special Nollce due ~ Al• Of IN laauance purer.:.. All P\'ICllaaed fonn Is available from lh The benefioiary under Mid 01 said writ. 1 .nave levtad gooda are aotO • le. Ind CIOU<1 clerit Deed of T rut\ lltretofor. Ill• 1.19°" all right lllle and ~ be remcwed at the lime Attorney for P•tltlon.r: ecuted and dellveted 10 11111 rntttMt of Mid judgment of ..... Sale tlllljeCt t9 ptlor REID &. HELLYER =~ o:,.:itt:, ~ dabl0f11) In the pr~ In ~ion fl'I the 9Wllftt of ~ N. ARROWHE mlll\O tor s.i.. aoc1 awrihen :-= ==-~·-: ~~-= · Notlee of Oetautt aod Elec:· lollowt 11111 "" and t 1111 day ol <>1;. SAN BERNAROINO , C tton 10 Sell Tiie undetW-S lne Condominium Ettate tow. , .... Put11c Storega 12412 CIUMCI Mid Nqtlea °' 0.-conslttlng of· Manavemen•. Inc. Tele· Ofange Coasl Dally Piiot tault and Election to Seti to Unll r. u "1t1own on that phone C8 ti) 2-44-8010, Oct. 10, 11, 17. 1988 be recorded In tha county cenlin Condominium Plan Aoent for Owener. ---------1:C:1:C,1he r.., property 11 recorded 1n 8oolc tt784. PublllMct Orange CoMt rtllJC NOTICE DATE 9120/U Ptget 1362. 10 1393. In-= Pilot OctOber 4, 11. "ca FO"ICLOIU"I CON· cluslv9. Official Recotdt of f30I ncTITIOUS •UUIHI IUL UMTI, UIC"'.L •r: ~~ ff"fJ~s ~= NAMI ITATIMINT DANllL W. Ol'Ma-.OO, recorded in Boole 11840 • Tiie lollowlng petton$ we vtel ,..N>INT, 1JMI Ptget tee 10 9911. tndutive: --------- OOitlo bUllneal ... IRV1M IUD. STI -· Offlctal Records of Of"'OI "8JC NOTICE WESTeORT .iAMBERT ~~ CA ,_ (1"4) C.ounty. Ca.Uf.ornla . on 1-----~--~ =~~11r,~ PubUINd Otanga eo..i ~~.:::.:n ~def~,: ·-Airway A,,.,,ue, Cot•• Mesa. Dally Piiot ~tember 27 • Ilona racorOed 1n 800k .=-.:. Cllltornta 92126 October 4• 11· l988 111784, Paget 1394 10 143t. Of .. IONM. AndfeWI Ptrtner1. Inc .. T30l ~. of Oftoal A.-fillOfGlh ._,I CahfornlaCOrPOf•llon, 315t' cords. and In 8oolc 1'714, Notleeltherebrll'M\t.MI NtweyA¥enue, Coal• Mtila,I ·-IC MnJIC[ Ptget 1432 to 1485, In-punuant 10 Section• ICA tH21 ~ "" CMIYe. ot Offlc1al Aecotdt 21701·2'715 of ... Cell- Barry L Hoeven. C/O "*.IC NO.TICI of Mid County. and any fomia .... and Pro. I W•tpOn Propert,.., 3090!' NOTICa CW IAL& amendment• 1nere10. and ~Coda, Section 232• P\lllmen St • SI• A. Cotta Not Is llareby given loeated on Ulal cenaln r• °'Ille Celitornle Commer• !....,, CA 9326 l>Ultu!: IO MCllOM l07l pr~ daecf1bed •Lot 2 Code, SectkWI 531 of t:t11 Kevin M. Gr•tn. Clo AA 3072 I Iha c ·1111 Code ol of Ttec:t 9090. u anown on. C.iifotnle Pen.t Code and I Green Otwetopmenl Com-•·"' 0 1 . Map recorded In llOOlc 388. the r.cwlelone of the C.. piny. 4675 .. acArlllur t~ Sl•I• of CaliRE'°'1Nn;aDEEtheR = 15 and ,, of Mil-lorn. AUCllOn Lleenli:I 1Cou 1 s t soo ...__.... undeuioneo. • · ,.._ r . UI • • ..... -....... INC DSA TOM'S TOW will eneou• Mapa of ..,..,. Act. IN~ ... 18Mcll, CA 92660 .. County. Calttornla. at publie Mie by eompetiflve r1111 bu11neu •• con-Mll 11 pubtte llllCtiOn. " Parcel 2: An undMded ,bi60ing on the ~II day of OUCted by. I 91'*11 Plrt· l()()f E 4ttt St ' Sant Ana.I t/55 lnlareal In anct lo Ill of 01;1o«ter tt.. at tt:OO nerlhlp ,Calll t210l 11 io.oo ""onjllle reel procierty daeer1bad O'dodl AM on ti.~ Tiie rao11trant com·1 Ol;tober ~. 9988 Ille follow· u 'Lot 2 on IN M8') ot lhe wMrl laid l)f°'*'Y 11e1 rnenced 10 tr81'1MCI t>uti-•lnO deact•bad property, to above relerenc.cl Trac.t, beefl tn0f9d. and wNcfl we ,,... unoer tha 1tc1111oll'I ""'' 1 1oeet11er wllft .. tmprOV'e-IOCaled 81 "'* seoreoa DlllfMU name or n.,,_ 1914 Nluan LtcenH menl lheteon 111capling 207$ ~ ~Cl ln ""90 •bo¥1 on May 2. 1911 jN~:r~~:~~ v In " 1ri.re1rom Condominium tne City ot Colta ....., Andrews Partnerp. lnC • S Unit• 1 through 55. incMM. ~ of ~ si... of By· Jofln I< Atldraw1, Sec-•Id Hie 11 tor 111• tocaled 111ereon. Cellbnla. the gooda, dllit· ,..••etV purpote of .. ,191y1ng '*' of Pwoll 3: An 9llClulhe etee or pet90MI PJOl*1Y de- T1111 at11etner11 WM IMeCI::, U::.:r:;'~°':~ w1men1 appunenant to ...-.,-. In IN !Ml· wlUI Illa County C..,. o4 0.· ad~ M:tl Unit fOt !tie ~ and t.,. o#: M9ll County on Sept.mW =:.:'of ;::1 and••· occupeftCy o4 thOle l*tkWll 8'1'1on "'°tMnlOf', Sp. 1), 1tM o.ted "* .-111 dey ot ~ 04 IN Aetlrlctec:I Common OOOt-tno. 9f11 bk*. 9f11 P111m 1-Itel Ar• ,.._,ed In IM Dec-~. ... bil, lbl, eota. ~ 0tanoa Coae• ........ • w111e>n ot Reetrlc:tlona Ind mttna Dllltv Pltof .._....,..,. 20. "•IHHr, lno.. D8A "'°""on !tie COftOomlnlum Olli oao.ar Ip 0009- iT. ~ •• ''· ,... ,..... Te•. ., ...... ""' lot IUC:fl Untl. • ,..,..,.,.. ..... -trvr. T2tt 11'f='..., Orange CoMI AECORO OWHIEAS: WIL· tl'liCrOwaw. l .... S tble. ---------10elty "'°' Oclotier 1t 1 ... LIAM C WESSEL, A hood--. ... PWlJC ll)J1C( • T30I 8IHOl! MAH "°'*1 A. JaNlaorl. lo. COMMONLY ICNOWH AS: OOOl ll\IWfti. "*° b11a, t llr 1--~--""".'"'~--1M OAAHOl ILOAOM. flN. '"'· ~llMI\ ... 8TATllmn !!Ilg MmC( 1~A~12.lftE: .. THll 00'=1.A.w ...... 1*.:. TIW...,..,.. pertont .,. NOTICI Of MU "'°"MY IS HIHO IOLO m1i11 .... I ---. 3 eod CIOit'IG .._.. • Of MlfCIMCIM.I &ue.JtCT TO AIDEM'· ,.._, .,_ 11'\:JSH LEGAL HC· ,..,._ • ..._ __, TIOH. PLE.48£ Mn1t TO f'IIS pg le ....._ e.. MTARIM. llfMCi. 22'72& """""" to MC\IOM 1011 c 0 0 E 0 f v I c' l ~IMtfle. ~. ,, .. . IMlftefe i.... '--• Foreet. and'°72o41MCMICoOaof PfllOCEou-.e SECTIONS l'IWtar ..... *-· .... ..... CaMorniet2'30 ._ St• o4 ~ n. 721.0t0-121 otO. DMf .... L ........._Ip, .-... M ~. H1251111C?e111gMC1,G&WTOW!nQ. lflNIUbfeCloltt119 .... la EJ1t-fftlle-... dlflt. ..... .......,. ~:J-• '~· Inc.. MS W.t tit!\ 8'"'1. ,_. property llllCI It 1111 no c:ae, ......, kit *"9 C:.allle-Cotta Mela. Otlfll9 Coun-..,_...,_OfOOlel'COl't-Mtcl\MI ...,,,..n, It». C... ...,._.,., 28062 ty,CAIH27Wlll•htl>UC>-"'°" -...1e11on. dll•ttol• flJI. ..... dv. ft ltoot. ,_ .....,., ll Toro. 11c auctton. •• MMt 8ddr ... 10 ltt tocatlon ""' be • ,.,...,.., ,.-._ C .. Ol,..tleao M 10 ain Ort T....._, N ,__, frOf'll ,_ ...,.,_., Owlw ,....,._ .._,..... • Titltl .......... ta CM-DCMyOi<>ctoMr, ,_,IN 0MoellPOft,...,_, I0 ............. ~1111 .,_.~•~II '*1· ~~.to•. Proepecuve bidder•,..,..._ ..... _. .. ...., ,..,... 14 toOfS C~ ~ ...., IO a.cclOfta and -W ae .. lllN -I Tfle re911uan' com • t8JIV5 tlOUtOt4 J'Ot 5t0 10 70UM, in. ~. Al ~ IMftCl9d IO ltanMGt tMI-UCen11 tKIOOt2 CMtve, o4 Ille COOi ol CMI ........ llld • la. IN ,_ ..,...., • ftclftiOUI laid .... 11 lot ttte "OCl9CM• lor pr~ ,... .. ,_...II._ ... ---....... OI ,.,_ purpoee Of-~ llen of.....,._... ,_ ........ _., .................... • _.., ..... Oftnt1 tM111 ....... llMJarT ......... lftd ...... ofN ... • , ......... ., .,...M.~.caro.a• and 11or11• c11ar9e1n.___,ott1t1 •ftl ..... , ... ...._ 0.. ......... 1~ •1111 COlll of~ .. 11 .. 111 f ........... T1lil • II '*'' ... lllld ..,.... w .....,_Of N TtCI II Ml .. HY -Otli ---fl wlll .. CounfrC.-flfOr- 1 .... • ..._.•OCT ~&.: t ... ,_...... r~-----~--f-OIO.-~L:cf.fc:.M4111 ~,.=,· ,_, ti1w, .... ...,., .. , • ..a•M.vo•• 5,o-.. . ........, °'.,.. c...•w. -., ....,.,, ..... a... °"" ~ ..... ..,...... 17. ,_,....., Or..-CWll .. a.... ...... °* a...r ...... OctoW -4. t I, 18, t... ~ ,_. Oote09t' t t, tt11 I .. Ill II fliltlC 1111 ~~mll!~ml!~-~!'!"1'!111--l'!"'ml!IJl!Il!lll~--l'!"'lli!l!!!llll'!l~~!!!l!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!~l!!!l!!~~ll!!!!llllll!!lll!lllll•••••••••lllil••illl• .. TM • Ta10 -.dlOft to lie ...,_ ..... I Tltl .. · • Orenge COlst DAILY PILOT /Tuesday. Oc1ober 0 , 1981 • CALL 642-5678 Check out Today's Ctass1ffed Section for DetA1ls ( c==~blNbtxm.5671 I .......... ~ .... ,c........ 2124lni•• 1044 ,l!!f!!!lw~ llHC.... .. llbr 2'22C..talleN 2t24jCMulllu •M'r ... w. ..... MOlmt OllAllCll co. ..,. BY owner H.,bOr View .mtsibE 1BR 181. WOOdbnoge 2SR 2BA up-WEST Newpof128r1850 Avt Nov 1$1 Small nlGe ,__ LWI ,..., . IU4 • MOii ORff1Q1 co. • 1111 Home SonwrMt5 rnodM, geregeNo ~ • ..'!.\(r,· 1 gra«Md condo AIC 'wtd BALBOA 48', Ip I 1500 Studio wtno k1tc;hen .... ~.,... Jog to bMct'I 2.,. 28A CCRarf story 12UU sn, 5BR 3BA. I 95,000. =m ~u.ui1-mo. flkuc>s. Nf' poc;..' penial BAYFRONT Cond. 0 2Br FriQ. ~ro, w/d, gerage, ~-.. u llrep1•0tt. peuo, 1BR 18'. w/dlyel lncld. Fum, THI DAILY PILOT CHECK YOUR AD 546-1330 cs.ys r-$995 AYI now 786-5135 Sl650 15'75 dep 640--0507 •llo t vl•w 1ecun1 L09 c.bell9r09 Spotts Cl.AUIFlfOOHICf HOURS THI Plllt8T DAY ~5554 eves.1~9flds •EASTSIDE Townhomes PENINSULA St•p• to BRAND NEW IPllJmta Ftom • 1950 .• Uttls pd: Club a. .-ember•hlp . r~-:.~:-' , ... 0., -, .... .,,.. ........... BY OWNER Hlgl'lly up-38r 2b•. gar .. yetd. avail Wll•lllll UTITll bMctl. 'r,;:; 2000sf. 28r 18a -lsrge 1011 Sperlii.ilng cLHn, le_r9• 631 .. 107 0t 155-0llS 1 1000/mo. 722-tllO S•lutelfY•OO AM-11 30 AM ................... ., ..... -. are«Md de(ec:h9d 3BR 2 1111. $1 too .• 2BR 1b•, Lg 3BR 2'11BA. family rm, 28' 28e. 1 Huge eundeek $1350tmo1 Geroen 1911. Beeutltultyl luL L::. -... llwinMeCount•~, ,. .... , .. "'"' ,.,., .. ,,... ....... ~ 8A condO on majOr jec:. ger.,yetd, '900. Qarage. yard. New paint.,BALBOA COWi 28', den, Aveil now 846-0645 1anC11c:1ped ground• .,._ _... IOOAM·S OOPM ............. _ ...... _. -rs••nb•lt. SS0.000 JwWne 966-lllO crpt,.$1400 631-6151· frolc • ..,.. dacLl2400 Pool& spa, petioa/d9cb, IUPiR 2& 2L '" a;c:: CMIAOt.•1 .... • •.-. ,.,..., ..,.,,_,,... OCEANFRONT 38' trp6c ·-.... ,,.,. , ... o .......... ,...... 59:-8099or84+6327 3BORM 28A newcarpet I ..... ZAH 12..00 ' ........ garage~c:.tport. lulll-lnll.l*ups.~ow. :!.~"''°" .. ~:.C:-1:! ._, ..... .,.,.«., ........ -,.. ..,.· ,_._f1111 pw1t. dbl ;a,. w/~ lt:pllt ,/t~~R~Condo 28' 2BR 1 ·~BA. close 10, Sorry,noS*• 1795/Mo -S750dep '-v ...... , ... """'" '-· .. ··-·... -on Ptum« St. v lean ~M GUAR '* , · bNCh S9SO/mo 900 Bec:helot MOO 540 Ul4 No pell. w-. ::: :: =~ •·•-.., -'"" .. -._.. SBA 38A 0t 38R 2BA .;-111\£n/mo ,.7·., 9"15 7c;1 • •GATED COMMUNITY* deny-:,... ~7!'J! IO ~t See uin. 6'4-2611 1 Bedroom M70 ,...,.... .. .. ,,. .... ~~:,..;::-;:-:.::;• :;,:"'_c'::, mC>tteer "'"'-• QUW1•• ,,_ · v ..... 57 ... ••-• I -·1· .. .,., 28drm 1'1.ea ST75 I 28R 28A, ~ • on. ,,..... ,....,, ,,. _,,, ·--on ~UC In lov9y 3BR 2BA. family rm. 2 car ~ LINDA ISLE 2 ••OtY &af, On beec:h 2BR 2BA lg 2250 V~d 540-982t ..-ce.,,.., new, no peta '°..,.., ,, ,,. -, f-1tu -'-borhood. Lg gerege, S 1800/mo • BEAUTIFUL 2BA 2BA bollt dock. 110,000 csect. frplc;, lam rm, pvt -------..... / ... I• 1•1 -. • ..... ,. ..,, :;;.::::.":' :.=.:..:-;. !. .. ~ i;·&~~s39s.ooo. c.n 11400 w d•p. cau w/l°: courte V•EW Also • ...,., ........ IM. ;et•. Obi gar S2075tmo Bact1eot seoo •- . . ·~· . ·< l ~·.-~ ~~­-J. ....... ,....... ,.., __ " Liz Of" Chuc:lt Jof'9I L.ur• 631•1266 18. aveit Frple, W9t bet. IUL-•e1_1_. lnCI utd 213-928-1844 1 Bedtoom S6tO .. 3 BA 2•, BA. 2-car gar. ., , ..... --.. ........ -631•12te or 646-5743 • mlc(o, W/O Ntups, 2 car •--71'-67!>-7764 28ort'n 1, ·Ba S800 tenc:«i yd, Frplc;. WI O. -• , .... ._ ... ., .... ··• gar w/11.tra storage. c:en-Lu.-.ury 2BR 2BA ........ ,.,. 24 131 E 18th St 646-6816 IVllUIU Ncup, no S*•: 706 U1le:a ... _._.,.,,_ trel air All malf'it inc• 1 c:ondOonltdo P~ta. ta -.-&C,$995 ~9~ Sorry. no pets 644--0509 Gor8ieous bey view i d rell E1Sts1de IOC:' BaCh HtJGEll REMODELED •· Plell, '.LUii 1 2BR/2'1BA c:onoo w/detl S25 Ol mo Boas1 •1111p '595 Ger. c:able a111 ~-st:Fll!kt .. 2BR, tBA,ger,paho,Gfd 1------~..,...,.,.-,-::,-...,,..,,,.--1 Ac;ross from golf course. extr• Joye• P• •r CJean & cozy 1BR S615 tt pet $720/ IUYllW I-LI LIT !Freeh & c;tean Hgt• ., .. Sen•• Ana Hgts yearty ~8-5&81 I Gmblt w/BBO. lndry rm son AAI ·•E r . ":sa.1!81 mo • Just hlled 4BR, sngl M , home 3BR P ·BA. trplc;, $1050/mo 675-5447 N I N th c d Sorry, No pets 631-8427 11u1m11 .... _sec:~-=--=--=-'-----prol lend~ yard & I 2 <* ;arage Pets o6t ewpor or on o, l Large e1trec:t1ve Apta 1n • um 1 1-1 • .,.,. SPACIOUS anCI CLEAN patio. Beeut1ful decor. Incl grdnr & we1er . 21r/21a • 2BR, 1 'IJ BA. FI P, gar, 3BR 2BA Apl Clownslalfs t>eautttul gerden Mttmg • 18r-18a '595/mo Commpool&tennll.Ask· S 1250/mo Me(llyn1Patk1ng. $1100/mo wld,greet tocatlon S1'50 garage Near 0 CC Pools. gar~ No pet• ==[ ABOlJT C1oM to beeeh, no pet• ing$589.000.Forappt. Coomb1631-1266 7141 650-18?4 496=2152 Sl25 • S600 sec: No 18edroomS&40 •969-9243* SHATZENR.E. 759-12~ I ··~-i~~--l •NPTHGTSloc 48112Ba H1ltll&ll II CllllTllll · W,au luc• WILIE PlllU ' ,, !."--I trplc'. gar .. pa110. newly w COSTA MESA SPECIAL ' --1111 IELIW wn ~ . decor No pets. Avl now I 142.... 1 •New GE Cl/w, SIO¥e. & ··-F bUI pg ecMd condo 11395/mo 720-1565 Avail 10, 3 re1pon, malure M1Crowe11e 11nclud uuts. •497·1744t •IV:,'~'. rlrvln. Hills I ATTRACTIVE bul Smell * 111111 IEW HPLUI i aOUlt• .w/Qd c:tedlt. Non· •New Whtie Csrpet & l~rt ltMla G I I . Unit. 1ult1 1 person Gar-I I smkrs to lher• 48r ec>t. Ofepes · reatdeek orCenlerta n-age Gardener/wet« pd. 3BR 2BA, 2 q1r gar. lrplc SS50/ee Save I. alnt toe •Close to J Fwys n 21th StrMt ing. 1 198.500 ell Greg $475Mo IM ~8-1366Agtl O/W, lraSh. compec;tor, j w/gar 846-605.5/trYM I (405,55,73) and South Wint., rent.. 18', tum micro, 'fl/0 hkups. Yrty Coast Plaza w/2 car gerege. $750/mo •BEAUTIFUL park. rute., $1'50/mo Agt 72-2~8520 ~ -BEAUTIFUL 1BR 18A In •Ler""" Pool&~ ArN Cell 4~28 1Yn .. 1, & ocean vu 3B11 o ~-...... s.cunt ,,.. 2'hBe condo. wld. pool, *BRANO New luaury utet -·-•· Y •lnd1111duehy Con1roueo STUDIO. Steps to beectl . .na.$1150/Mo631·1153 townhome1nguerdgated building. Pool, gerege, EnlryAletmSystems lnc;l utile. Perking. '"Y Sea Island. 2BR • Den. c:able TV. ALL UTILITIES •Cable TV A11atl.able M25/m0 675-2232 CLEAN 2Br 2Be Frplc;,' $2700/mo 720-9.422 PAID. $515/Mo. CALL •New Laundry Fac11thes VIP PAoPERTIES patio. dble ;er w/opt1r. 722-1132 •Co11ereo Perking IU tlllliitt 11711 w/d, pool, 19a. Hr fwy & * H V HOME Im mac; ,. ••• 111••M •Prtvate B11Cony 10 CUTE 2Br twnh .. "' terry. SC Plaza. No pete. s 1250 28'-Oen or 3br, 2ba, up. ------Gardens gereg•. patio, lndry _Rancho San Cltlmenle 5SJ-20M/~ .. ~ gta«Md, gr .. 1~ gardnr 400 Memmac W9Y e c: ....... ft1 Ai--.. ..._e I Metur• tenent• only OPEN HSE SUNDAY 1-5 I .. ~2•2079, .... ~" Incl $2100 760-5064 l BR utJI pd, 1590 .........,_. ""'~',....... .....,, .o.. 67~ 49 Cele Sol. V-lo II ..,. " _... 2BR 1'n8A, $725 •Sorry No Pets _..,. __ .,_Y_ .. _, ____ _ Brand new, lebulouel USTSlll OISfl IESA 3BR 28A DUPLEX 979-1111 ,. ... PIW ..... ..,. ...C am ocean .,... 3BR 3BA IH9wpe>< H9ighl lg w/belcony on Belt>oa Blvd 28$1 89* St. Corner ot 2Br/2 ti>•r'-lno 19ac:e1. Rf{M~~ . -~ ~ . .. . . Rf{M~R . '~ ~ . ". " 1Pw9iiii-.Wo--.ni""'~ 49&-1893. 2131822-2909: 3BR ~'1tBA :.,: .. obi N r : i ~::_2484' a c: k Clllll ll 1• 11& er111ot. c:o.t•.,.... Xtr• 1g pa1io. 112001mo. ==~~~~--DUPLEX 28' 28a+ 2Br 213/~6-2223 l garage qui.; er• Ultre-1 -yrty • Yar~etrio. No pets. S625 l 1•1.._t2.. 650-1'24 bhln 9efn..5c»m 11,i,Ba.~remodeled. Clbc,aa t flll dMn.2s1ory.l13751mol •NEWPORT SHORES• Avl now 213597-4704 ry. P g ttg 0 650 252 0t640-075 1 MES~ VERDE 'lBA 18A I •~1111• '529,000. 875-3286 Cell Rot>en MilN6cen to 4BR/3BA. 2 tg tam1 & hv-VILLA B 1..___ 1 .. _. PETS. From $650/mo to Cl.Ill Tl ILL UPPW' Ouiet cul de sac" F Cl ... _...__ •• . • • . New I UV. pen nvvM . S8SO/mo . sec;uroty . rig, ..... __ • -o.e Bank Fcwecic>Md HC>tMS llST llY II TIWIJ 4-pteaes lo.-equity In c:.tpet/ new peinl Yearly Ocean & Ceteltna vtewl.I DAVID 549·2«7 2BR 1BA. lndry room. s700-2867 Hdory Ind No peta ~S....a55 bey view 2BR 2'ASA ~9-02 17 •• r .-63t-60521d 722-72651• •Clean quiet Mesa veroe we 11 ec:eept Sect 8 •t •trtt * 1--· 303-530-2459 ext. H3 Welk to beach. OcMn & Newpor1 8Mch home. I •~i~~\·'. I $2150/mo. 675-~7 OV9f 2000slf, S 1900/mo. ·~ to lhOC)s & buses 498-l936. YS l-9413 • 'A...-,.Of'n.£ ' . $599999. 1!! Ill .4111112 1 2BR2BA.newCtp1/Clrps, Housing.$615/mo _.. Fng, dishwuiw, stow SIMS""""°"" NITW()AI( family rm. Charlie atal1 r ~ SH Clt••••• Jl711 dshwlhr. p•tlo A\11 1211 2257 & 2272 MAPLE 2BR 28A lrple, encl get· 1 ind. No pets S45 4IS5 COLDWell BAN~C!RO ~~~ lrsri361_279; ;;;~~~ ! E'SIDE 3Br 1•;,8e. den. r• PENINSULA WINTER FtJRff wfeverythtng 2iR• 1825 NO PETS 840-2495,TSL MGMT 842· 1603 1 age. -;1:,;,~·· ,,_, •CLIFF HAVEN 2BR 28A, or 819-259-3879 Eves _!~ --'"f°9'~u cr~t/::s~kit;., *2B:~~~~~;:~~ No nr beecht pool, view. •EASTSIOE tBR• DUPLEX $645/MO Uttl snopsS10 CENTER j new dec:Of. V.-.0 Cl9l-1&•lllM ••EEi Pl I I H ZJOi1 cmar:or a w1t1S~39 51~0-gar N1C41 balcony sgSo S9251mo. No pree>llld lest1Smell t>ut cozy• Lots of Pd Lite & airy clean 1BR TSL MGMT 642·1603 Inga, ow.. no pea. - -• • I g r · · 818-'•S-5377 I naturll wOOd c;arpets. for 1 non·smkg Qu .. 1 pet· WSO/mo A.gt 6'2-2134 1 LOWEST PRICE 2 sty 3Br BALBOA ISLAND Furn. lg Sandi, 613-2749 •2BR 1BA lower Ouplea., drapes & stove $SSS son Refs req'CI 846-8028 NEWPORT HEIGHTS • --~,...--=,,.....---Expt'Cl I.hebe~: fem. rm, 2'~8e. crnr '°'I 2Br apt. Sundeck. 1 ear TOWNHOME 3Br 2'11Be I Garage. Patio. $875 ~rtatatl Cell l or a Cl dr ess . 1BFI. ywd. ger<Mner. n-•EASlBLUFF TwnhM " 11!119lllU $429,900. 891-1702 Agt gal'. super c:ond. Avell f 110 SIOOO · •3BR 2BA IO'#ef duplex. m 938--0552 'iEASTSIOE 2BR IBA pete, gaa/wetet paid Apt. 38R 28A. 2 c:er gs. ~~ now. Winter $1000/Mo. E'~·,g: COno 2BR 2BA I Lg pet!<>· gsrage. $1350 w/gerege. C1owns1a1rs, $595/mo. 650-22~ NoS--.11025/moyr•. 11111,111 SPYIUSI ................... 0 · lalad UM •WTSlll* small y1rd No pets 644-1010.&-5Mon-fn ELEGAN~ contemporary Southport mdl. SBA 1nnlllas1-1• .y~..!.eom ... ~~~~ I OCEANFRONT WINTER eAXAbiNGCipeCod28f LG28' t4~Towonous.-$725/mo. 722-6294 s~~~l,2BR. 38R--wJ.new-eafpet,-lg b9ytront tiofM. 3-4 BR, 4 ',la BA Po o I / 1 Pa . _.." _. •N~y furn 2BR lBA 1or2 AdUlts Wlnler/yrty Gatage. patiO, laundry EASTSIOE Bac;k Bay 1BR c:eble TV Fr'om ~· decil. oce911 vtew, ~ n•w dock, European! 1765.000. 720-17048kr CUI.. 1 IUl.TllllS1·1* U!)Pe' or lower duplex N-pet• 67S.n 08 "{h-Sei room.sa50/mo Stnailt>aekyatd Guwtd Sorry Mo pet 84s-ssn ' do0ntooc.rt,1pertdng ~~,.:.!_,~i!_ ":~ eltl tll 24 2BR 2BA HOUSE I TOWNHOME 3Br 2'hBa. ;~?.!TeP.';~~5'.Z; cs.. (818) 79S-2965 Sun· Tues 2829 ORANGE hkups No pets Aduhs S ~i· les 2Bd __. Yrty. 650-8175 -·• .,..... ""' w•907 Beam c:etltngs brtek frple 1 SlOOO -..... · TSL MGMT 642·1603 pref Cl $535/mo • utils par .. 1ng e an tm ---------~:' l0 '~~;:C~~ PllCEIEllClll family rm. pe110 '.1 E·~·18:''Cono0 2BR 2BA ~;!.;':~.=-t>er~,;: L~~LY ~:h ~~2~~ '•UIEIEW• 845-1631 ett Se>m :;ea s7~AM ':!,111si:..1 A•HIL ... ~· ttwough()Ut. I ~· Vlt~~ 9~~r. ;:saj ~r:~o ;-'' m~~ Yd. tml eompl9x St275 2 car garage. $1600/mo. mtCro '2opets' Futtyiurn° Come see lhe Cl•ttwence. EASTS1DE CM lBR Apt t~ t:'e11ece ry,842-'905 3:.~roow::·Ysd. ,..._.... 1:,e,1 0pen' h<>use By MemH Lynch Reelty .................. VIW IEITILS $1400/mo * 673-8821 c;ompletely remodeled With trple. re151 & all Next to~. Sl175/rno. Own.854--0759 I IULTllllS1·1• BALBOAPENIN 2BR2BA al H Pnianla ~u,~2~!i:~r=· ~~1'moincs'5:°~ 25 mo Wt::st:field TSL MGM~AIVE~-1803 IDITlllAIUI EASTSIOE c;harm1ng 3BA. Puiaaala 2107 INSTANT IN 3BR 2'1BA. Upper dupleL Gar. lrpl. 2'01 Ready lor lnSlant move-EISIOE 2~ New paint BIG CANYON TOWHHM l1'LI llWUDlll I huge yetd 1atge atteehe<I frplc. bedlyerd, dbl gar. sun<lk No pels $1075 -28 ' a on• Only $640 lo $650/mo 0 eoes get ln<Jfy good ....,,_,.. llUll llDl'S dectl $2S9,900. OPEN Newer yearly 2BR 2BA spa, ell atru Pet o6t utol Onr/Bkr 650--0389 at:,·~~=~:= ~be::o;· · $200 OFF MOVE-IN .C:C: S780 ~1910 Sperkhng c:IHn large Lull 28'128a. s>¥1 2 cw .. SAT & SUN. 845-3602 Stt,. te M M ll S 1245/mo 6'6-65• 1 BAYRIOGE CONDO -9 lO W BaJOO: Blvd IU 9IAU APfS. 640-2•2819Y81•nOs Apls Poot & spa Sl'IOp-~:ir:.uPv:.,:::. -·-n-1 FABULOUS 3Br 2•.,Ba Sl 120/mo. Bkt 6'2-3850 LUXURY 2Br 28a condo Gated comm pool & 5'>L $900/fnO-'~ 675-9650 530 w Wilson E SIDE 4-Plex ping & neight>Othood IP&. terna. $1800/mo. __ , .... 5 with y1td E/stde toe ap-llSIU .._.IT Obi gar. Ir pie pool Pvt . t>e tJtul TSL MGMl B S 5 7 5 N pent nnt door No pets 76()..3032 l'<l IMO-ORAMA, charm, ltyfe .• proa 1800 sf S229 0oo PEI ,..,.. $995/Mo tsl & lest 2BR";~~· 2 au "'v:; •NEWLY FURNISHED• 722·9012or6'2-1603 l r-· o peis 28drrrt2S.l800 ttMI tlOm9 hu It ell! The C LI A " .. "' ;,.,~1 , Great toeehon • specious -$300 842-5290 · car P OCEANFRONT 1 BDRMS Sorry No Pets' 548-1665 JM W,.... EAST BLUFF TOWNHSE .,,try flOWI Into en ex-all nd•. gt . ..,.._........, bdrms. Blk from bch gar ege, Sl300/mo Mike Ave1leble Greet toeallon COSTA MESA 2BR 1"'8A frplc. P9li0, ptml¥e living & dining I WILi II TllE PIRI $1500/mo,Cell MichMI LUXURY TWNHSE 721-0607 Must see• Bkr 67S.4606 HI 1U cen&al MIST SEE! Nl-1111 pool. 195(). Me Atnip er•• which soar• 2 W9fl designed nom. ..... 4 1ti:t°:° 66~~~~~~ UJSlll ClfE ATTRACTIVE BACHELOR W/O l'lkups. c;erport No 2BR l'>BA TOWNHOUSE Wrf ~rnent L ~=i~nopen~h11,;_J~ &edrooms. 2.5 b1th1,I 722-10~ 1BR & den, 2'•B• 2-sty On 1t1e boerowa lk·HP pels Sl50l mo 722•62~ ""-carpet. '"°(r, room Dau Ptiat i.w. hencl the! family room with wet bar, e•ec townhome FP. wet lii.1tch. lg beth Quiel & se-$525 • Clep tBR mobile all bit-ms. pett0 000 lo-----ioi.iii.;..._....;_;,; FURNISHED. 2 BR. 2 BA ;;~~.' !:;0 on::rmel pool end not tub. Acrou ~ Verde, 3 B2R. 2 BA. bar. w/d, 2-c;•r gar. gated cure Str"t perking 1111lh t1ome Secure Mllure c:att0n20S7788f/~ LI 111.-U ftlW conoo. OCMri view, pool. • ·~· from quiet nelQhbOrhoodl compl. remoO. car g1r. comm pool & 5'18 on the permit 1550 YRLY 1nc;IO adults No pets 1991 HU IN Frplc;, ;arage. lndry lac J.9C Ola SllOO/mo .._ :=•nc,:aat:rhe au?.:w7; perk, new paint. new ~ fened yd. S 1325/mo bay Welk to S.ll>Oa ISi utlls. N-smk. n-pe1s Newport Blvd. 846-83731 TSL MGMT S.2-1603 $750 • Oep 661~53 122-3~5 or 650-2522 comptet.iyseper•t•froml carpeting, In prune Mesa tu nlstled 38r 2B• 4&.9344 or 751·2329 S22SO/mo. * 640·12t2 673-6372 tM Upltei're bdrm, en 1 Verde erH. J~st tilled etlW~~nfr:,,,t SHIOO/mo.1 NEWPORT HEIGHTS 210 *•Ill CIOM• * Oet .. frHt 20 11A ~ errenoement for a $399,000. SELECT 28r 28a ct0.e t en 'B' E 15th St 3Br 28a 1~. The totl dr•-BH&G 751-5000 S900 81814!::92 · garage lrplc vicatnl. Lovely 2Br. Oen. 2'1tBa. on WIO hkups, gar~. patio. matlc:llly Ov.rtoott~ the I /mo. · s 1200 ]ss.8558 ~~~t,':;5 2 Cfs~'rs· S 1150M0 Yrly 50·2493 1Mng room glvel this t W rt I C 1 IH I.. I I NICE 3Br 2Ba family rm STEPS TO OCEAN & tiom9ep9dlil•xcit.,,,.,,t. r Sii 2u-••lllllt911T Ir" bec:kyerd . new paint' 3BR With S12ec11cular CLEAN BACHELOR 1271,000 * Maiure reliable local ~r• • 11001 _ sec· ocean. cHy \119WS. Gated $650 2BR I 1000 lll-11• NB. coup. eapertenc:e 1n $2000/mo & 2Br 28a • carpel~ t•) 63s-"f:53 community with tennis & Yu rty wlgerage Agt waterfront •late mgmt Nice! Frplc. A;t 873-5354 pool 1yr lse. $3200/Mo. 722-7776 Eve 760-1755 GF~E El .KJNS wttl noutellt your home 2BR Ouplea. new remodel. Nr Nwpl Hgts •BR house CALL 8111 Hill 644-9060 t t If , . (wnile we uve lo.-ours). Frpk: yd lndry blk to 2BA. lg country lii.1tc:t1en. Coldwell Banker .-m.";,o•-.;•.-.-.-._,...,_. 15i Ll )\11 \.\:' Bonded, refs. 751·3510 ooe.i, 304 Iris' ~75 l w/d, 2 ear gar, pool & 5'>• . 28A IBX up.strs. frple. fog, RUI T(lfl~ BEACH Avail now.'* 968.7271 $1850 • uttls S.5-8051 0«:1t. cable TV Rear llnjt EX R 1BR hse eie llWPllTl&lllllPTS over 1 eer gw Wiik to -==----------OUPL . on lovely wtde •TOWNHOlJSE.. 28drm. ear · an. new •WnH BOAT SLIPSt bcftS1120/mo 673-1039 ...... ,I--, strMt JUlt llec>t to send 2'1\Be. Clen. dbl gar. ept. No pell S650 mo llYFIOIT , •-•• I & walk to etores. Re-sund«* pool tennle Incl 9l9C 117'/t E 23rd A\11 408 '1 Acecia 2BR t BA. We II give you lhe down In mOdeted 2 bdrm cottage $1700/~. 67s-°7362 now 21US&-8890 2BR Apt w/BAY VIEW rear 9')1. new carpet, Bay uehglcwelhtnotown-with tile & berber $10751 673 7~2 ..nip. You make the c erpeted flooring. Spatious 1Br c;onoo IOllAllTIC Frple,mteto.d/w,gerage view mo • mthty pymt• & we .,,.,.1 And«IOnW1nOows&mer-upper, w10,.F1P. wellb., 3Br 2B•. trplc open & tovely/A~fo". 51900 c.Lm llllllL eppr•c. You r•c•lve rewed wardrobe doors er. $1050. Mon• egt lutc:n.n IQ yatd Glf· 18orms sterting 11 51025 28drm 18ath. 2 story ec>I 1~ tu benefit• Musi ptus 2 bdrm IPI & 1 bdrm I 4-4060 8-5 M·f I dener \ncl $1375/MO S' r~ New eppYncee. eov.ted fleve CIMrl credit Agt rt R I t D PFAFF •Boat ••PS """'ra• ............ f 2 .... ,.2 957-eoo2 "'-E Wkndi QU911 q re. oo op !FABULOUS New oontem-, Vacant DONAL Sorry no pets. ,..-"""' or ears -.-...,,., v, • sundec:k & utility room. porery. 2BR 3BA condo, 842-9797 Or 631·1266 CALL llO-ftl l Snorecr•t Ln S1050Mo ....... .....-------631·1400.~~ .. ~·,~=~: 1 ~~:' OCMn a 1 ti:'£~("~... can M~k.., 723-09.0 P..Wala 1117 ~ 11(1~1 " Inc. WlhrfrMt......... ~~-11/9 •1at -.UFIMTIWUI ~ RE•L ESTATE IULTlllll1·1• 1speclous 2BR. g1rege. Diiiy Pl e-4Br/2hupe>er REALTORS Adorable 2BR 1BA .tenc:.d yard. patio. Pel e38f/28a IOW9f Duplex. new crpt. blinds. oll. 1750J mo 2015·B S795,000 BRANO NEW DUPLEX BY nice patio. garage. Weltec:e. 54S.5032 associated w/bfoker•. NMd quick S 1025 Agt 675.,.912 ' aat. IC own.,, w /coop•rate Oc••nslde of PCH.I IM. Two 38r/28a. 981'· OLD. E CdM tg c~temp 11300 Nu paint. carpet, ege, frpk:. BM! to beectl. 3BR 2YtBA "°"'4. Mttr drap9S. 3 BR 1~. BA. ll Negotla~witl 9Ul1• w/trp6c 11800 mo.1 bonue rm. garege . .. wry. Joye» Splll9r 54&-5e81 r 213-539-0855. Sat & Sun I M lt&-6268 .. · ... Merrill Lyne~ Realty JAIUllEP• Unique hillside Corona del Mar developm8nt. 3 Bdrm. 4 Bath. 2, 160 sq. ft pnce includes salt water aquarium with 1are ftsh. Ask1nc $505.000. 711- Sell ~ .. p,_,.,.r! Cil Cteellfll4. 641-5671 for Information & surprisingly low cost. ON the beectl. p¥1 rd. d-. ~------..,-­IU)I• ctup19a. 38' 2....a.. l• Cuesta Rec;quel Club Mty equip klldl, w/d, 1800 elf twnhM, end unit. IP9C(.culer vtew. S2000 I 38R 2"'8A. 2 cat gereg9. 673-0421 cw 963-3171 199IYCIncl 11300/mo • ,,,..,,.---,,..-----.,....---.,,.,,,,..1 111. lut & M50 eec: deP SPACIOUS. Sunny 2Br Dys call 847-6041 or 28a '-tur• frplc, lndlyl Eveel'Mlncts 1164-..&988 rm. geteg9, yerd & ~ • petlo. I f300/mo. Avel t 144 ---=--..,--~-....--:ZBr. den large yard now.* M08413 I IPYIUSS llU ..,_,.,... Avail 1011 SPACIOUS 58r 38e 11275/mo ~161 Luauty Home. Avell 11/ 1.I In ... Miii $3500/mo. 631-5116 In untvetlity Perk 3BR 2...aA. corner 1o1 • ...., pelnt & c:Mpetlng & vet· tleel --. 11350/mo CALL AOCHELLE I . ~·, ,.1.~ •• ~.1-JI '. Rf Al • y I C "'~ 1 I I • ' . J On .The Go Dressing W •1drob• bU1lders 4190: A greet value• Thre• piece su1110 mu1 and match M1SM8 Slzea S (8-10), M (12· 14), l (16·18). XL (20-22) netuded In ~ 4101: To top tYttythlng . Ea1y t o s•• and flt 1acke1 has attach•d Kati and dffP dOlmln.....,. M1 .... S4n tS (10•12~ M (1•· 1S)r l ,18 ·~0) and XL (22·24) OUR FAMOUS DIMESJ\-LINE NAME AOOR£SS CITY AMOUNT ENCLOSED UNU ' 2 ), 4 s 6 ) HAS RETURNED! BK~ D)' popul<'' c:•-no !::> "'t"\·Ao·L•nf' w • run Friday. Satur- Oc1)' l"<l \uMi.>\ '" IS OA c 'n, o\l ..... ,.. tht c liUS•f•eO .Aos S·nct tr'M s a Sptt ~ offt• wt navt a Tl'lursoay noon dtadhne ancl as« prtp<lymt-"'• ,,.., ' Mis Trus •S o~n to all pnvate party advt rt st n lo• l"\f'•<l'\ol!n<J1sl' not ovt-r SI SO IP'•Cf' musr ~ llsted or .tell and no aDOrf'v at Otis w ill ~ acctpttd All ads w ill nJ!l F• Oc1y SaturOa)' anc \uncla> fl'lf'rt rs a S·hne minimum at 20C ptr lint-So your low ~6st Dimes· A-~ ad Is orly ... ·• S3 .00. DEADLINE ·"" :h ~:in , .. 1.1.., • t 1~, s • ;'Q•C f'l"')•nt = S) 00 . "''4' 1~ • • • , • ~ :i~ fO"" "9 nt !hi' 0~1!~ P•lot to P'·"" ; l · .J'• t ,.,.. OvP'on t>,. """ Pr '" .. :,.. i.. .. ·, -~ n,c.'\r: i_.. 0.,1~ 'de: P\i:o com ~, .• ·~' • .... "'~·: ' pronvcft' t'•~nts • Eacn It""'"''"' bt P"Ctd tfl tl'lf' ad w•t" no titms ovtr Sl~O MAIL TO . -- PHONE ,., \ • ••• t STATE ZIP OATES TO RUN IHO S.-20 too '642-5618 • 0ninoe Cout DAILY PILOT/ TUMday, Octobet 11, 1888 ' Motor Routes -- available in We1t111inster -· Huntington. Beach Fou~tain Valley NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING Deliver One Day a Week - Must have dependable car and proof of insurance. Call 842-1444 Ask for J.oanne Craney ( . . .. 1 4.80 · ............. .............. ............ If you're 10 or older, a 1ob as a newspaper carrier might be 1ust your size Jr:s d in this coupon or call: 642-4333. utes are available now' Be somebqdy. Be a . Daily Pilot carrier! r~rn7~;;;;~~:~~:~:;, I ing a Daily Pilot carrier. : I Name _ .. • I I Address I I <•tv r·.o I I Phone Stnd To: ne O~ilot -J I 330 w .• ,, St. I Costa lltu , CA 92626 ~-----~-~-~~-~---~ For ..... you can advertise ·r our Garage Sale In the Dally Piiot. There 1s a 4 line minimum and the price ls the same whether you advertise 1 dey or 3 days. It's a great way to turn those hidden treasures into cash. We ~arealso offering a ••••• te •n•r G••••• ..... for St .H . This guide Includes Ideas on how to advertise, how to plan, what items to sell, plus Ideas for a better ""garage sale; alao a garage sate sign, pricing stickers, · lnformetton on city ordtnanoes and Inventory sheet. You can purchase your Garage Sale Kit for $1 .00 when you place your ad at! . . •• =,.,_ -1·00 AM 10 l :iO PM a.tut t ·OO AM -1 UO AM Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday. OCtobet 11. tNe 117 S.pl!zant ISHS....,...t llJIS....,...t ISHla,..,...t 1131&.ez-t suo 1rua1.... .. .. 1 ....... ,, 71Ufau IMl&.•la ....... llMAa•l1m111k .. --.-.. IULllTl11111T. ...111•n Ill.II IAA 1100l won bfw r•. 37 TRAW~~. eft Qbln. tAM ax.GoV11n. if.I. tHO HOncl• CIVIC, c;iNn, Ci6 'ti m . wt, ... ...... ·-p T ,_._ (AM *""' ""Mt I CfWW9 lltM .... WI ~ IOeded,towpedlage.Mc new pejnt SIK .... Nr.lo nw.UtCCIONI .... lrr~.t4=7o"'!ec ':,: A~111a 11t111C:: ~Sa.:..=~,.,....._ap Ot Wlll tJIM $1000/• *end & coftee ....._: fOtMIC>iftNewPol18Mdl $12.200 obo M M 311d 12000 ot>O 536-5421 rw.oe to NA ......,, pMdlllle "8M 1wMQ SS WW tr.in ~De bOftdo.ltrelln :-:J Mlcto~ fl'W• 1 iempe 721-1081 131~ I or M1-3e0ie de)'I. 646-7800 llOOO 1-.Ma ~•·--~?~!'J,;:~ ~~C:-a':.:: ;'.,";;.1;:.:n ~t;~m v !~~":* ~~imattr;L::; :t:art'•ftk. a-kt •• ·~~M:. ~. : iiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiii_..imi~--!M .,..2113 '°' • .... '*'°" c.. '°' Fountain ve1ey "'"l w.iure adult o.n • •S71Hllf -comm1trelnlnQI =., 150• 14 .,,., EHO .aw. S.....of· Gt•w tna 1 "'*·111nt11MO. r = WllM •7-11'4* aurance Office 000d •AS* PtNMnt .,,Won-ml& .... •11 At1 S4 C<MIOdl P\g New mocor .,.,.. Utea. 417-1545 P/IW •• -11. ••al Ullfl phone & tYP'ng lltlle a m • n t H r a I . 4 .n"*"l-1J• NEW OeybeO Wntte I dell w/llllPC* 175-7100 PMtf $3450 ~.'9000 .. ._.. muet. lOnt Co. benefit• New pott/C M 17~ 00 8'.w, w/rnantWM I. --..-....... -ro---..--~---~m fot .-_.. ... ~ ,_., I 4011<. ~ a. PloM •• lllWll trundle ~ 12•51 , ,..., tel ,. ... Incl ........... etrende, Llmlt9d~tojOln --~~Mge>t ~llYP/1 l ... n.1 .. 11u •l40-l733* ...... ,. _______ , ~::=·t'!'::. =:-.=m-:n":: 17141112-74'0 .. =.:.=·,:; ,...... OININGroomt•t>te •l r>atJ,l a iM'"&l:I kOfiiW ilgii1 I .,., .. ......... i.. .... formation cail Jack imm::r ~ ·:::., Co. Mull n.ve good ~·d .:--'~1 terren .. n llYI• II Int rl>lt to new• $ 1 eso ~ w-dl'hon tall • ""* 16.25/Hr. llmlt9d MMinOS FOf In-11--1••--••y 11°' Nwpt 8ctl ~ chine ca1>1net. Medi-plllf'lt Fint wet., cooled. 11• ..... ,.. Ul HtQtl ~ Good c;on.. tlll.ITY •m BETTER HOMES I. I typjng & ftlinv. Start kMP!ng & compui.r ap. EASTBl.UF'F' l>H ulllul ~ air condl~. $1300 IL A~• •• SELECT ~eon to Mtwer e>hOMi typtng ....... light boO*-pr out. ---1 ~ 11000· 760-Hae 64$-900() WM• maroon lnterlOf sl Full tlmt Mon-Fri GARDENS 1-18tw.-M5-1H1 Fltxlbte noura _;-w W•retleluaing • • Lotu•dinlnQ t•btel7504 b / t•r1tt I AM/F M c a ss ette. tU-16M -7am-3:30pm $4150 Hr.I AEAL ESTATE 751-5000 RECEPT /TYPIST for C9ll Cerol, 541 4 111111 I ~•tom blacil lacQ. CN-1122 sunroof. 59,000 miles. Aak tor P.J No~ nee. Ben· Rec:ep/A11t for doctor'1 CM/NS RE Oft ' In lllllfllT ~-MM Chipp. armcMlra 157001 MUST SEE j emi:;iGaii· office. ":..!lr, = telllgent.s*ionao':.'F1e~ TtrlldotutM)ObCS.V•ft• lll1m1ATELY I ::!~:: :=•,.,~:di 1~~1c>~!8~~at:i117:~ I MAZDA ·9•cc!:s;~T 72t Fer9d St .. C.M . =-lty:-'E11~tenc:e TF/TE 83F 1-7370 ~o•y. J::_ ~ a::= (Pll/W ... ) I king. tN. '1P.!!~1fuf1""" & ~~~" Src>llers Ul-MJI I ~~R:ftH RUNS FCEn PRICES AT •541·5525• c.11957-NM H Ive Crown1 ~ CPA 66f Bahr St • -• other mtse 'v-v • XLNT $4550 64&-753e Uf ftl~ t.wantc:urrentlytlupos-i C ............. CA We .,. In need .,. 15-20 T E & 6 en.H -Ila lnlft ULll ~ + itlont evefl lor Hoat..... : 11 ' oate -peop-. to help OU1 our GAME ABL 1 • • • & MBZ 83 380 SL. lutty llneoln-Merc:ury. Mentur, Top Pr~ Melle 2 Coata Mesa nome Im-P*M 8CIC)ty ...... 10arn. 9282f to ltMt wontine In ~ d .. tnbutlon Ol1na cabtMl & matching • lla~,.rtatan s te •l•nw loaded incl Bealer radio. J.,..-' leulu, Honda. non.et & 'd "-&IOI Gd ~ .,. • tun. but fMC pec9d outlet. ~ta must stereo e•b1net Other / r , 1-ownr Mt< ml Cere>fYn,j Volllawegen """"" .,.a. ~ 11t .... nee. oten -3'01 E Coast HIQhway (714)754-t 112 -.. I 1111 · • ......,.. ..,. .. , ,.~_,1 llc-,id ~ ......., pr~I cop. t''' 0 'lllRll. •I wo rk envl rot1ment. bt .......... 10 learn all fufn. & mlSC 642-9211 1t1rcycln BM 835-2100 Eat 206 8 ~ Sy ...... L n..o.. Contact CommlMion + IMda fufn. grow Into office mgr. Lv Corona del Mar MPeCt• Of OUf bu.,neu•H1de-a-1>,ed 6 dr•w•r llllell IO 5-00SEC 10 mi 127171 Linde ColWtl or Jim CALL PATRICK TENORE Ml9 831-&365 Um /Alllllfm ~ CUSComer ..,. enest. oc:c:&SIOMI. over-1111 10111 13 3IOSEC 5ik mi (73371 Pafmel'I at 830-7000 1 1-1 1 _ I.a.Ell 'AtchltectlKal firm requir• vt0e. in~tort c:ontrol atuffecl cnr, ,,,.,._ d99k.1 OF NEWPORT 8EACH I 12 3IOSL $31k (23-44) lfVIM Auto Center __ ...... UIUTlllllT ..,. exp'd Adm111. peraon and lldmnst~etlon. MM-luggage. etc 873-4nl 2HIL 15 190E Viht/gry (02741 PONTIAC Grand Am ~ture petaort ·~ ~~ •• F~ w/1trong Secty/Acctg :g::t~~ ::t LIVING ROOM ~ION! ·--~ IS300SOL34m. (2414) 1988'" Talle over ~- Ugflt ~~ti•. lmmed. Cail 845-1891 l killa. ISM computer 1ty F'nt come Int tltt9dl w//twje a way bed & COi· -1540 JAMBOREE ROAD 78 300CD Cp Wht 413371 ments Fully loeded. 1 · MS-· background in 8CC19-& Call lor eppt. NOW! tee table $580 Olli rm 2800 miles 0peo 7 days • ..-12 3000 82tl m1 . (08921 owner 4000 in-. S300 Roofe<s Want~. 1oumev-1 word Pfooeaing. ~ 97s-1218 table. 1 c:nr. and cNn8 Tek• ~ peyments Extended SeMoe Houf• 81 3000 $10.950 75591 per mont n Leue FUN AF.T.ER SCHOOL WORK- 11 Years & Older Work Evenings & Saturday YOU CAN A VERA GE PER WEEK $7500 OR MORE! PHONR 498-3321 All Transportation Provided By An Adult Supervisor WOU II YOUI OWi HJGHIOUOOD "*'·not roolers. min. 5 negot. Send r..ume 10 cel>lnet 1850 Botti IMsl 111-IHI 7 am -10 pm ~-Fri ..-S e9'-MH ~ 848-9527. ~fl~~~.~~Ll10~~~~~~~~S~d•~~•ndes~n.~---------------------------------­sn.k• & shingle men.~ Center Dr c 850. Nwpt enc:e A little l>tt ol ever;-white l.cquer EM:eflent must nave own transpor-Bc:n, CA 92MO 0t call ttllng Mac:Gr~ Yachts cond 982-7179 •11.3Pm talion. Anay 548-3712 Mon-Fri. 11-2144-1511 16311 P&ecentia, C.M I I . MOVING Gaming Of tn Of· IHTI TIOlllOU um /UllPTillllT trC • .. mel dtntng t•l>te 4 Ollm, I LOCll Pest Control Co. lmmed F/T open.ng for 4 Swivel et1e111. $150. j Needs route teen We lut growing. tliQtl energy x,,iucn All . 721-8231 1re1n. Must have oooc1j construction office. WtlA -• • • MOVl!\14 Pa1t 01 up-1 OMV record. E O.E Call treln, but mull hevel ri&Wairt l1fr11 holstered che1rs slde- Charlte 979-6021 AM. phone, typing, filing & Bottom freezer, Wtltte. 11ln1 bo•rd lh mlrrOf · 583 w I Tiil -a•pfl , computer knowledge. eon<! $145. 646-1929 Hamill:. C.M &41-520& "_. Salery l>ued on •11P·1 FR1GtDAIRE washer & HW 111111 548-1645 Kenmore elec. dryer SSO Moving Sate• Biroh d1n1ng FI T PIT In Fashion Island MGtl Both In QOOd cond tl>le -6 chrs $150 Ethen ' • RETAIL SALES TWFIC •UTUS I 842_93451 °' 842•3935 Allan china cet>tnet 175 I • SHIPPING CLERK Vehtele req'd, no e11p nee. APOf1ed other turn 'I M G--0419 Perm PIT. flex nr.. Idell Kenmore Washer. Ken beds S 10-175 673-2708 u tr• inconi.1645-0474 moreGasDryer~gd eoad! I ftff I-" I lr-SUllSTIESl"P /T w a t e s s I u n e n Netural gu Bao. S75 artless -... Costa Me.se/Newpor t 1 t ~2:~. S*8ry .; ucn. 546-2775 -2 s~:s"=• =~33""' Beach., .. 646-1212 tips. WtlA trein. ~ fuaitut -1114 ___ ;__ ____ , L----------1 PIM 300 Marine Ave. QUEEN ANNE Oi.nofwOfk?Yourenotout a.lbOalaA.&73-3802 Antique d r essers & Thomesv111e style eher· of luck -loolo. tocla"'t.~lor lurn1turt .1150-S4QO ~ OlntnO room, ong L-.ill-~ 'TODAY'S NEWS . In newsracks by 3 p.m. empl()ymenlopoonurullU WllTllSl/WAITll I Perfect COOdltlon. Call $4000 uc;rific. 11775 -=================!Ji~;..;__~---• WI~ to tentlce ••• •tier 5pm 850-6908 Matehing collM table I Waned lunc:ti route Moo-set. IOfmal sole-love Daily Pilat Fri 1-1pm, $501$65 c:alh 8 AANO NEW white wl$h seet (blue/rOMI eteme) deily Lori's K1tenen. 'MCker. glUs '?P 1at>te Brend ,,.. 97.3-0653 "'7" "1 .. 1 • saoo ot>o. 12 ,_.121 f 714) 642-4333 · Home Delivery "' .,...., .. QUEEN Sile custom made I • JOIN OUR .TEAM MANAGING CARRIERS THE DAILY PILOT IS LOOKING FOR TOP QUALITY MGRS WILLING TO WORK HARD. WE OFFER XLNT BASE SALARY PLUS OVER $300 .JN BONUSES EVERY MONTH. GENEROUS GAS ALLOWANCE &·-GPJ;tTY F0R ADVANCEMENT. JOIN OUR TEAM & BE.,ELIGIBLE FOR FULL MEDICAL COVERAGE. CREDIT UNION, 40 1K PLAN. IF YOU 'VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES, CALL ERIC. 642-4321 EXT. 209 OR SEND RESUME TO: DAILY PILOT . 330 W. BAY ST . COSTA M ESA. CA 92626 DRIVER WORK PART-TIME DELIVERING NEWSPAPERS. EARN UP TO $600/MONTH. MUST HAVE RE- LIABLE VEHICLE. INSURANCE. AND OMV PRINTOUT. MON; DAY-FRIDAY 2-5 P.M .. WEEK- ENDS & HOLIDAYS 4-7 A.M. NEWPORT /CORONA DEL MAR & LAGUNA BEAGH ARcA&:- CALL 842-4538 EXT. 205 ASK FOR ROGER STAR KEY CLASSI-FfED 642-567-8- HUNTINGTON BEACH The Daily Pilot has a new way to turn your Hidden Treasures into CASH s 80 with prepayment 4 Lines-7 Days s 10.80 .. ' No charges tn copy or canceltatlon. Private parties only No Commercial. Real Estate. Automotive, Boating or Employment Ads. There 1s no price hmit to what you can advertise. If you need to sell your couch, high chair or any unused merctland1se-call the Daily Pilot Classified staff or use the coupon below Mall to: Daily Plat Dally Pyo~, 330 W \ Bay St .• Co~• Mesa, CA 92626 N~ME ADDRESS CITY l 642-567_8 PHONE __ ~ STATE ZIP AO COPY: 4 line minimum, appropriately 4 words per tin~. AMT. ENCLOSED wc1e one VISA or M.C .. ______ _ Are you a subscrlt>er to the oa;ty Pltot7 c1rc~ one YES / NO •tudlO eouc:h bf CllWf\/l>elOe /gold ton. utle ,,... S160 080 . 640-8930 QUEEN SIZE MA TT RESS & BOX. OUIL TEDI BRAND NEW! I 155 Community News Along the C cast ~~~ I SEARS Porte1>1e d1sh-NllC NOTIC£ P\8.JC NOTICE Ntl.IC NOTICE Nil.IC NOTICE wather. d1n1ng tebl9 & 6 Alleo .,, .,...... 'fO'oK Ofoe>enY On s-a.. 6 w-E•~ cria11s Recllner ene11. ._~::'c:nci MlM.DITH L CAUlllAN. •could De subiect 10 ecqudi· Place to sell alcol'lohc sola&m1sc 642-7t83 Of'DL4TH IA lileMMr of ~llllOMA, uon unOer amtnenl dOmaln 1~egesat1So4E.17tnSt .. 1 SHARP sofa. loveseatl ANO Of' NTITION ILAHGI"'-LaTOMACA I pioceedings Coeta MeM 92627 Ca.I Seo h TO AO••ITE" •CK -bat S.. Mo-The P<OC*tY tubiect to Publilhed Orange tu t eh.air. ottoman IC -EITATI Of' ...... '°"" leftl ...... 11'\e AmenOment II ... ol 11'9 Diiiy Plot Octe>Oer 11, 1 gerdecl NeY9f used KENT llAM A.LLIEN •c....,.,... ""1 . ....,_, OfOC*tY lftC.tucMd wrtl'lln IM1 .... Only $250 Call, 843-9294 C ~ .., ,.... .... ..,. ~ A. bounder1ts of the C11yl I SOFA and Loveseat T.w1t11 · .--Cent• ReOe ... •apmenl Pro- • Loose cusntons. p11tows Pwbltsheel 0ninge eou. = = =~ WILLIAMSON /Scotehgerded Pe1d To altl'IW.1. 1>enet1aants.1o.iy Pilot October 10 11 delcnpttOn 01 iano tiled JOHN "JACK " Wll...- S985/sell S37S 843-9~ aO<I pwaons who mey De 17 1tea ounuant 10 ~tn and S.• LIAMSON beloved I 011'\erw!M intersfed In lhel MT7'3 ,......... 33373 t peges • SOFA brown w1dewale """' OI estete. OI bOtn of r1~ ! Book ~ 12013 husband of J~t J . corduroy 8 good cond KENT BLAINE ALLEN P\llllC NOTICE ol the County ~--in Williamson loving $95 2 Wall units, d.,tt AN AMENDED PETITION the County of Orange f lher f Scott and Olk l1t11Sh w/Orewers & hu been hied by Vlfgin1a A ~Of The AtnmOmeN JS 1*IG a o ~ cabinets s 100 645-5778 AAett ,., 11'141 Suoero Couo, Al'P\JCATIOM Foa P'~ pu<auent 10 1,... BrelrWilbamton. Mr. SOUTHWEST· Lamps ~;t~t~r· ~:· ~-Of' Community AIOeutlc;ptc: Wilhamsond brs ·.!9° sol•·IOYeHat,cnairs 9,nia A Allen ce aoooonteo "C~~ KVEM• L..,, ol tl'le Stlle ol survive Y IS cneise (peactt/green/wht~ u petSOnal repr-lltM -.__ '°'rua IHultn 6 S.lecy ~ pa.ren ts. Mc. and Mrs. StOM/glw or wn1tewash 10 .OmtntSle< 111e es1a1e 01 ~ 1,...~: is ~,... George W1lhamson. Coller'<! tl>ts, din sets. wall the oec.oen1 . To Whom 11 May eonc.rr1 end aYl!Mble for r-.,.. Sef"V\C'eS and mter- umts1 Pine logs pole bOrm THE AMEN OED PU'ITION F1S1'4EA. Oiene M IS apc>ly-the office of tne Ctly Clerll •t nt wiD be private. Ontltg manress/1>11 IC)(llQI ~" tutll<>t•ty 10 Mnl•n-10 1ne o.p.r\men1 ot Al-City Hal anes may De .. am-me Wholesele ptCS 973--0653 1ster the estate un<Set the in-~ BeYerage ContrOI 10 ineo by any inter91led oer-In heu of flowers c1epenoen1 Adm'"1s1ra1aon _, ateotlOlfC De¥Weges at An Enwonmental im-memonal rontr1ub- JlisctUU"•I IOU 01 t,!5 1 11!.:.S ~per•:;;,~ 1~8 Adams A,... =F Costa =t Aepon hH t1-nl twons may be mack> au • Y Mesa CA 92626 with '2 pteviously Ofec>ered IOf tne "Th Hoae H ......... Gas oryer-MaY1eg Almost rec>tH«1talM to lake mll!'y ON SALE 8£EA 4 WINE l)fO,ect and c:ert1lled by the '° e 'If. -r-new Harvest gold S200 ICll()t!S WllhOUI Ol>t8lmng PUBLIC PREMISES llOen• Ctty Counc~ by Aetokihon ta) Cancer Center. TV antenna $20 Low l>Oy eoun approval Bett><e tak· Pu1>115hed Oreoge COll•I NO 7,03 on Octobef 26 Newport Beach. CA. c a1>1ne1 . needs r e· •ngc:ertlln:';o"s~~. Da11yPi1o10c10~ 11·1988 1976end11a11111111>tel0<r• 92663. Pacific View t1n1st11ng S50 962-''79 :~~=to: nottee 10 T312 -1n 11'141 ...,,,. oft>C* Mon rn•rv Dl.rktors. ---.... • Tl'loM deillnng-to lesllly in -J • MOVING Xlnt quahly Ital-interested c>«~s unless fa\'Of OI in opposoltOn 10 tl'lej 644-2700 11n velvet sole. 2-pc MC· they ha .... weiYlllo notice °' rtllllC NOTICE Amendment Wiit be QIYeft en -----~-...... honel w/Queen sleepef consenieo 10 tne Pfoe:>Osed · opoortun11y to do ao el the glassl wd dinette set action I The on<1epenoent NOTICE ~ pu1>1ac '-lnO MOfeoYef. KING waterbed w/sohd eomonistrataon autllOnty ...,u -~ ~ wfltten comments will be pine hutch heltdbd GE 1>e granted unless an HIAMltO CONtdeleCJ et that ume 11 a 1 '"1 .. esteo oe<son toles an ...,,... THI ~ ect on on the wesher . Oryer' re rig ob,ec:tion 10 this oetnion and , ..... :=v•• • .ry or.,.,.,~ • Best otters. 721-1''5 stiows _..... cause Why 1111 ......... , --~ '-mendmenl '' ~ in .,....... AGENCY FOfl c ouri t,_. mey De a """'° POOL TABLE. regulation coun sl'lould not 9renl the c~ tation to r-.sang onty tric- Slle. I · s&ete. •ut wood aul"°'~'lAA tNG on tne OEVEL~WT ANO tuuet r.,,.O al the pul>llC grain. all cond, hie ~A~-. ded oellltOn WI" De THI 'OUN'TAIN hNrlftQ o.tcrll>eO"' tl'NS no- cess S800 obO 650·~~ Octc>bef 27 t988 at VALLEY t•oe or 1n •111tet1 GO•· ,_,on · em COUMCll r~ oet•..,.,.ed to Student 3 D<awer Olk 1'5 P M "'()apt No 3 ().flCE IS HERE&Y N CttyCounal M0"91"CY DesA -upholstered cheir loc4IUICI at/00 CNte -center GIVEN lllal on Tuesoay No-., Ol l)flOI to Ille publac; ,,..,_ , 8 .• 3 6 $ 1 I 5 e>m. West Santi AN CM-_,...bef 1 198& •• 8 00 0 m lftQ 720-1704 Nwpt Bel'\ ·~~~o~T 10 lhl•or as IOOI• tner~ • n IUl"lner '"tonnet10n ~ ,0 l)OUIM the Foun1eon v....,, o-<eo you mey contact tt>e rff It ft granting ()II the oe11t1on you1..__ .. _... lot Community De-Ptant1•ng O.partmenl at ;.;;;,;,..,,....;,~----~ shOulO .,,,_ ~ 11 ,,. ..._-, · 96S-4425 260 -Yerds newiSh quehty nearing Wld state yo.If ot>-•eiopment lll'le "'9'«tCI I (71•1 E Y cerpet, IPC)l1ances ha-iectaons"' hie wr11ten ot1iec-~ Foun,,;:1v::f ~ A~~T fc!: c~~ turH, , ' IF YOU RE -tions With Ille OOUr1 Defore lie Mwlflll 11 the Gity Coun-T '( DE y E LO ,_H NT: MOVE! 720-3721 the ,,..,ing 'lour ac>PMt· ell Chem~rs at 10200 Kettw'rl A. .......... t.c- Adorat>te mu1rpups);es are = ;::::, n oerson"' by Slater AYenUe Fountain VII-retary Wllhng 10 be ed(li)t.ed' YOU MAY EXAMINE tl'le ley <AlilOfOMI to conSIO« Publtthed Or•• ~ M&-5672 hie IPI by ttie court ti you apc>rOY91 ot Amenomtlnt NO Oa;l\o PllOt OctOO.. 11 ~k art a oerson int•eated .,.. 1 10 tl'le City Center ArN FLUFFY KITTENS, 8 wn lhe estate you mey rite won AeOet'liopment Plen 1111e -- 11111 -_-IC_11n_Tl_C£ __ Old. tr .. to good home & 1,,_ cOUf'I 1 ta1m .. Request "A"-'dment I • r~ "" we'll prov1oe shots' '°' SOK•al Nola of the i-. Tl'le Amendment ea.letWSs NOTICE Of' 759-5492 . ong ot en !Ovet\IOty and ap-t~ OMdllM lor the A99"· 4~1CAT10M TO ...... ,.,..-.....----,r-t-ora1sement ot estate ISiets cy • commeooement ot em•· ••LL •LcftMA.I IC Ct 8fa& •rt or of eny pe111t0n or account nent 00fnait1 Ofoc.ec:IS to "'"' "' ~ I ~lF,!t 1147 as oroll'lded in Nellon t250 ~I the C1ry Cent411 ' MvvtAGal of the Clltf~ Pfot>ete ArN ReOeueloc>ment Plan 1°'441 Misc es s S 100 00 Cooe A ~1 fOf Spec.al trom Oecembet 14 1988 to To WllOnl II Mev Cor>cern Chatt• I 10-$25 00 F11tng Notoe:. tOlm 11 avSllat>le trom Oeoembef 16 1996 Since OOlES • 2 ., applying 10 cal> S50 oo. 549-3942 ()f the coun Clel'lt your PfOC*'ly IS IOcated '" the 0eoat1men1 Of AIConollC M 1~5 Peltlioner Vu g1n1a A tl'le Cent• Cent• At .. as BeYerege Coln·~ '0< • 1 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemeiery • Monua')' Cl'l&pel • Cremeto<)' 3500 Pec1loe v,_ Ortve ,......oort Be~ch 6«-roo HARIOR LAWN- -MT. O\.J~ Mot'lulr) • Cemelerv c~emalOI) T625~~ Costa Mew 540-SSS<I NRC£ P OTHERS KLl •ROADWAY '-ilnf'lurery • Cti~ 110 Broac;-..ay Costa Mesa ~2-91SO Ce1rey's Fl•w•n 2983 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa. CA 148-JlJI POODLE PUPPY SALE STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? ~ r....O tTea Cup Toy & Mtn I An c:olorS 12504700 751-3485 ..... . ... MSt oRdXR sRlFER l s6N5 rnOdel 5230 double lley- boWd, OOtd & ry1Mi , ... turea-muctl '"°'·· •In• cones seoo &13.2121 .. a The Legal Department a1 !he Daily Pilot is pleased to an- nounce a new service now avail- able to new businesses We w ill now SEARCH the name tor you at no ea tr a charge and save you lhe time and the trip to the Coort House in Santa Ana Then, of course after the search 1s completed we will Me your l1c1111ous business name s1atement w11n lf'I~ County Cler" publish once a week tor lour weeks as reQuired by lav. and th n Ille your ·proof ol pubh- cotion with the County Clerk P1ease slop bv to tile your r c11t•ous ous1ness statement al 1he Dail~ P110 1 Lega Depart- me,..t '3JO West Bay Costa Mesa Calitorn•a II you can nol !100 t1v please call us at 1i' 14 1 642 4321 Extension J 15 or 3 16 and v.e will make arranoemen1s tor you to handle this procedure by ma11 11 you should have an fur lher questions please call us nd we wilt be more than glad 10 ass1S1 you Good 1uc11. 1n your new business" •' Election '88 Vote 'yes' on Proposi tion 92 California's Commission on Judicial Performance has worn a cl~k of secrecy too long .• Ev~n commission's . members realize that secrecy has a nt,aauve eff~t on the public's perception of how well complaints about JudfeS are handled and suppon reforms proposed in Proposiijon. 92. The commission consists of five judges, two laWyenand two people who are not lawyers. Judges ar:-c ~ppoint~ by the state Supreme Coun. the state Bar Assoc1at1on appoints the lawyers and the governor selects the public's representatives. Commission members serve four-year terms. and there's no limit on how many terms they may se~e. . The commission investigate~ c~~platnts a~ut Judges' misconduct and recommends dtsc1pltnary acuo~. 1f war- ranted. to the Supreme Court. . . About 400complaintsare filed with the commission each year and. on the average, it determines that. five c~mplaints warrant a-nearing. These hearings are held in secret but the repons become public if filed with the Supreme Co.urt. Less serious incidents of misconduct can resull in a secret reprimand of the judge. _ If approv.ed. Proposition 92 would. s~agger the.,terms of the commission members and proh1btt members from serving matt than two terms. It wo.uld al~ .let the j~dges under invesugation request a public heanng, ~rmlt _the commission. with the consent of the judge under investiga- tion. \o issue public reprovals without. p~or rev.icw by the Supreme Court. and allow the comm1ss1on to issue press releases or open to the public hearings that involve moral turpitude, dishonesty or corruption. Proposition 92 offers a first step toward bringing the activJties of the Commission on Judicial Performance into the public light. The measure's opponents argue that tl1e reforms do not go far enough. We agree because the conditions for issuing press releases and opening hearings arc prefaced with the word "may" rather than "will ... But while we asrtt the reforms could go farther. it's important to recognize that reform is often a slow process measured 1n small steps rather than giant strides. · Currently. a Judge under investigation is not permitted to talk about the case. The same rules hold for persons interv1ewd by the commission. which refuses to.discuss past or present ca.ses. This situation onl y fuels public suspicion and is not fair to either the Judges under investigation or the public. There is a need fo r secrecy during in vestigations. but once formal charges arc fi led. the case should be<:omc public record. Cnt1cs of the comm1ss1on contend "too many ignorant and incompetent lawyers are appointed as judges who too often become arrogrant an the security of immunity. The record of the comm1ss1on. onl y 25 out of 7.185 complaints resulted m pubhc punishment in 27 years. speaks for itself - wimp~ -merely a wrist-slapping public entity that is neither useful nor cost-effective snits present fo rm." That ma\ or may not be the case. but the public has no way to Judge because of the cloak of secrecy the commission operates behind. . Proposition 92 1s a step toward reform because it re moves some of the secrecy surrounding judicial investiga- ti ons. It should be approved and pressure for future reforms should be continued. The next step should be to balance the commission's makeup by replacm~ some of the j udges with non-lawyers and replacing the .. may' with "will .. on ~he con<1itlon for issuing press releases or holding public heanngs. Treasure r nominee Gov George DeukmeJ1an has made an excellent choice as his nominee for stale. treasurer. ' Thomas W. Hayes is eminently well-qualified to fill the 'acancy left in 1987 b} the death of Jesse Unruh. He 1s kn owledgeable about the workings of state government and h1ghl} respected b} members of both poliucaJ panics as a professional. He 1s a vast improvement over the governor's fir t nominee. U S. Rep. Daniel Lungren. a political conservauve vd th no state government experience and little. if an}. financial ~wledge or expenenccc. Hayes. 42. ss the state's auditor-general. ... He has directed audJtS of e' e~ seg ment of state government. including the Treasurt·r's Office ... "' We said earlier this) ear that the governor could do much better in his nomination for state treasu rer. He has shown that he can. Ha}es' appointment 1s a responsible one that ever) on<; in California can ha' e confide nce tn. Vls•ll• Times-Delta Future scie ntists Gov. George ··oarth .. Deukmejian zapped a $5 m11l1on bill to fu nd an air-space ce nter m Mountain View. but the gee- whiz project can fly wuhout Danh's money. The seed money tn SBl810 would have been nice said Mountain View Mayor Maryce Frcelcn, but the city can 'work wtth NASA and pnvate developers to create a $30 m1lhon center even sf the state doesn't contribute. The space center would 10clude exhibits of aerospace technologr. a futuristic theater. an experimental ajrcraft park. a teachers resource center and a week.long space camp that would let kids undergo astronaut training and $imulatc space travel. Thr 'eto may not be "a step back into the dark ages." as the b1lh sponsor. Sen. l\n Torres. ~Los Angeles. called it. but 11 was ~honsi.ghted. [!]HA/';(,( COA~ T Daily .Pilat Rosemary CtudlNn Pubhsher ,., .. [dllOf o.r.-, ~(~ Tllla.it ,.... f4ttol ......... Cl(y fdllOf -...c.-. ~ll l•tor ,.. ....... ( ..... £• c...--. .. ,....( ... ...... AMl~IOt ...... """'~ ...... ....... ~...., .. ...... ~ ... ..... Ctnttolllf ~ ........ Minna°""....,. '"".., tile••• °""'°' ... , .... "*""'°'fttJI '. Lf : 11 k :· ------= -- - - -Freeway fuss~n·~ by Beek illogical To the Editor: •· , '4>1ic was miss\ng from Allan Bttk s column in t~ Oct. 3 issue of ti\( Daily Pilot conccmin1 freeways and development. . Concerning the Sin Ja.quin Hills Freewa y Bttk complains that lhc county rcfuSC'S .. to run any traffic studies with the freeway ~nd dc~elop. ment removed." He adds. .. 1f you stop the ftteway, you stop the development, And that mikes thinp so much beuer 1hat they refuse to &ell us how much beucr." • · Everyone I showed Beck's column .i'~~~T 98:4 OF AMtR1CAN5 WO\JLD LIKE< 'THE SHUTILE 1b PUi 1N O~Y>1T... :~n~~/~~e:u~0:d~~f'~~n~~0s:i:~ ------------·---------""-------------------L showing the fr«Way -a'nd develo{>" : . . ment removed. fat Ydtat you get 1s what we have -today·s traffic and .conges1j<ftl. Even my · 10.year-i?ld daughter understood that! Beek in- dicates freeways must be good for dcvclopcn for they i·pul up 48 .. gerccnt .?f the money to build the . OUr politiCianS¢ould learn from the SOViets The Russians not only won the colleagues in voting 10 pulf the plug. most gold medals ht the 01yrhj:ncs. he-rs leaning ·as far away 11s he can bu& they also had to outdo us by from his form« mentor. setting the mtcmational speed rttord I think the Califom1a Antmbl y's in elecuog a pres1l1ent. ..Gang o f Fi ve .. should ask Arma nq I can hear them now. bragging Hammer to get . his buddy. abouuhe supcnonty'of their system Gorbache,;.. togive thema fe~ of go~emmcn1 in handling both on how to successfully '"vat'a te tht' cvetus: chair:· That's parhamentaf),talk for . JACKIE ~· .HEATHER Whi~ our p~idential race drags .. dump Willie Brown." · .. : ••••••••••••• on ad nausciam. didn·t.you marvel at• Before Gromyko left for hi s free lhe dispatcb with which Gorbachrv trip to S(bena. Gorbachev very b«ante chairman of the Pres1d1um of grac1ouslv gave him .. an honorable J>OWtr structure in 30 years. Alexa1.1· the Supreme Soviet. which is the ~ndotT:''Then Gromyko praisc4 the ~ra ~· Bl ryok'o va. "59:-H_owev.er. he constitutional posmon or the Soviet new prcs1deni's refonns and urged d1dn t take.a n)' chances w11h this rash prcSl(knt? pany untt~. . . act, He d1dn'~ give her a vote. I knew it was JUSI a matter of time Talk about deJa vu. this ~as our .811') uko' a s in charge of the gov- before th is would happen. didn't )OU? poh(1cal convcn11ons all over again. emments social devclop!'Jlcnt. r. am Give me a break. How 'Ions would When I "'as ma~or of a se'en-betung that Her lirst assignment is to Mikhail -or Mtkey as he 1s better-membercounc1l. l had toiearn ho" 10 bring D1SI)(} W?rld to Moscow. . known after·;g.lasnost .. -put up with counl tQ four vef') quick!) Ob\ious-Up to this point m lime the Soviet beina a' 9"CT'ctar. ·and a general 1' ."the new president needed 10 • pres1dcnc) ha s been large!) a cer-sccretary at that?" Think of all 'the change a re .... \'Otes on the Supreme emon1al post. Rumor hilS ll that coffee h~ had Co bnn~ in for the boys. So' 1et 1n order to get tile nghl vote in Gorbachcv's neJtt mOH~ "111 be to Silting on Grom}'ko slap must fla,ve the future ~1thout resorting to publ.c change 1r into a srrong .. c)(ecu 11ve been the final strai-. bloodshed. . . presidency~ through some clever Did you Stt 1tfe AP w1rcpho10 Na1uralh the first to go was the parhamentaf) maneuvers. ~ptiontd ••(hangin' of Kremlin . ht>ad of the KGB. formally known as -J:he mongcM O_QeS grumblmg guard"? Let me descnbc the pboto for the-( omm111ec for State Sccunt> against concentrating so mucii power you. The picture was snapped at the Yoi.i 'do rememl)er. don·t vou . that m one person now have been con- h1stonc moment when the Suprcmt Gorbac~C\ came lO po~r rrom 1h1s st1tut1on~I~ si lenced In a'1d4tio n. Soviet members voted to remove · spot, : observers feel the~ moHs "'re made Andrei Gromyko as president. Know1 ni the KGB as he does. I to undermine plois by conservatives Gromyko did not look too happy. lrt can't help but think the last person he to remove 1'11m: fie should be able. fact. he looked like someone who "ould want to suecttd the genial the-y 1h1nk. to move full 'specif ahead foraot to put in his dentures that Reagan ·would be someone who on hi s ··r~forms... As Gorba~hev momina. headed the U.S. t'_9U" alcnt to 1he explains 11. he's1ust trying 10 facilitate I kocw ht was a losc(when I saw the KGB. our CIA. Imagine w11h me the the enhancement of the rC;lle of the Al (aP,9ne stnpcd suit he was wcarmg Russian ' 1s1on of an Amcnca ri James so' 1cts ~nd hi s ·solid tie, All the otber Bond. 007 -Geocge Bush. 002'. The Western world is puzz.led at Supremes had on' dark suits except Next Gorbachev brought in a law wh) this all had to happen so fast. I Gorbachev. who had oil 'his sincere. sch90l buddy to be ht \ assistant as don·1 think we . should look for a warm gray flannel. first deput ~ chairman He rt-i>laccd sinlStcr ex planauon: Now get this. all the Supremes had Pvotr N. Dt-m1chcv .. 70. il former Ob' 1ously. Raisa has been on on power lies! What does1h1s tell you m1n1ster of culture su pposcCll) de· Mike) 's case.Jo get this presi.dcncy about their political intentions? No tested b)' most So 1~t 1nt~llectuals. bus!ness ~ver w.1t~. She undoubtedly more arms &alks with this bunch. Ne, er undcrcsumat.c President can t wa u to tnumph over Nancy The most rcvc'lling aspcc1 of the Gorbachev. He.is so ·mck) ·he e .. en Reagan~ 1th 1-fER pres1dcnt1al china. photo was Gorbache' ·s bod) de~ls w11h the gender gap. He J~rkle Htatlterlu Newport Bead language. He is seated next to &he promoted t.hc first womart to reach r.,ts1dt ol ••d • former m•yor of thl condemned r.an .. As he Joins his the higher ech~lon of the K.rtmhn <'lly. , ~ 6 €-n-t sen 's craek ~b0ut JFK ma:y haunt hinl, nOt Quayle The debate absolutely disposed of the question ... Can Dan Qua)' le speak and thin\ 1n public?" The moat built around him b) the Bush people dunng the past 1wo mon&hs WIS largely respon sible for gi ving oul the impression chat he was a baskrt case of illiteracy. and one or 1wo comments caught from him dunng lhat penod did much to excite suspicion that that was the case. But for 90 minutes he spoke well. trenchantlv. and wnh a mature sense of pnontiis. Oh. he did the irritating things -if he ~minds us ooe more time that he wrote the Joint Trainin,1 Pannership Act. he will succeed in Jiving the impression that he beheves the American peoptc arr incapable of rcmemberins che fourth of July. Obvio"51y some of the rolling 5tntences ht uttered. as with Sen. Lloyd Btntscn. were prepared and mcmonied. So? Charles de Gaulle memorized not only the answcrJ he pvc at press confc~nccs. but re- quired lhc questioners to memorize the ques1ions M .11vc them to ask him. (I knew Charles de (#aullt. Dan. You art not Charle$ de Olulle.) There wcrt two extrt·polihcal points of special 1nte~The first w s the dumbfoundina 11on ut t~h1m. not once bur t ice: W~t woukt you do if you found yourself pmldem!9f 1ht Unittd Statn" Now. 1C>cbt" asktd • question like that 1n publtc is to rrquire that one tthcarx tht apprc>pna\f pectid. ~ needs \0 ao th~ the lMinm abou1 how •nllit it was t"8\ the duty '~ Pfftldtn1 us vanished from the tttnc (tht quesuontr .,.,remct 10 Uy that tht prtSICknt was "1n- C'apK1taled." ratbtt than lllat be died or was kllled -pulny from the WC>ftll'I '9"'1t. -...... litttf mood-tirt: t0 P": "8Y for http from Pro Mt. for OUTWlvn and for our countf') -and then what" The best Dan Qua) le could do was to say that he would call 1n his predc· cessor's Cabinet and ad' 1sers and seek 1he1r counsel. e1t.. etc. WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY It was a 'c~ sill> question. bu t not so s1 llv as to prl'vent Tom Brokaw from asking II )Cl again, demanding exphClt answers. I rather wish Quayle had 1rcatcd the quesuon with the con tempi 11 deserved. He m1gh1 have said. "ff I become president. the firsl of Quttyle-Kcnncdy. Quayle was thing I will do 1s repeal poverty. asked (for the 13th time) about has outlaw war and declare a •. mm1mum quahfk ation\, and he said they wag~ of S25 per hou,r. And no equaled in ttrms of service in tho smiling. House and ~nate. and indeed did That would h~ve &aken care of1h at •morr ·than equal, those of John F. quesuon. all ~gt\J -.except. of Kennedy. BcntS('n replied tha1 he course. you ca n l engage in counter-knew John Kennedy. turned to lactrat1on. or even fondle a httlc Quayle and said ... Jack Kennedy was sarcasm 1n these engagements be· a fnend of mine. and you're no Jack cause to ~o so runs the dangn of Kennedy.·· aivina the 1mpress1on that you laugh· This venture 1n polemical op- ed .in churc-h. Raymond Moley ex: ponunism tells us a lot about Lloyd plained the unex~ctcd upset of Adlai lkn1sen. none of 1t chantable. If an St~venson b) Estes Kefauver in actor were to sa y thll he had spent as M1nncso1a 1n the 1956 pnmary by many years on 1he st.a~ and wnt1ng remark1!1& si mply ... Did )Ou.,~ver cry pla)'s as Shakespeare had done. he to 1cll a1okc 1n Minneapolis. would not be compartna himself to So senator Qu•yle pretty much hakcspcarc. mu!T'blcd the Jame old business once Quayle's si.mplc P-<>'"t was a matter again about tak1na coun~I from the of technical sp«1ficat1ons. And 1f advisers co the fopner president. etc. Bentsen thl1'ks that JFK's quaht1cs He could have said that no one .mew were so outst.andm' at the t1mt he pr«1scly what Theodore Roosevelt won 1he nomination. he should would do. probabl> not e~tn Teddy remind himself thal Kcnntdy was himself. when suddenly he found very ncarl ) beaten by Richard Nixon. himself prts1ckn1. H1rry Truman for whom Bentsen hH always U · d~n't even know the a1om bomb prtsJed contempt. Histed when he became prntdtnt, And there art th<* few. most of us and tht firJt execuuvc orc:kr he p vc sn the closet. who hope that Quayle.11 was 10 ha~e matchbo"~ made pttSldent. wOukl be an 1mprovemen\ labdcd. -Stolen from Prtsidt~~ on Ken11cdy as prn1dcnt. The myth Harry Tnaman at the White House. of Kenned)' as the third constcUauon h woukl have been cnous.tt to say 1nahntthatbqanw1thJuhusCanlar, lMI ht~ ~he pttyn1ws of the wtnt on 10 Napoleon. and fro"' theft Bush ldm1nis1rauon. whK'h 15 •)'he 10 Hyannllport 1~ pop mqaziM was nann1111 fM •ht No. 2 spot. and h1st0f'). But that 1s lht kind of h1stot)' tht-ft froitn tlw qUHt10,11 c:kad tn its lknttrn a~ 10 thnvc on. Not so ....... ,,. '"' m>ubllC'. But the o&htr stunner wu l v1c101.1 Jrlllla• ;, IJwtt.y Jr. ,. • q9111. tum II".'" b Bcnt;tn to 1he qunuon cwlff eeC 1 5 w freeway. , In rcaluy. 11 will be the person buying the home or propcny th4't ~II put up the money. the <;ont~tor win senl'e as the vehicle to pass the mon-ey through to build 1m rtttwars. - The present method o fundina . · frC(way and road construction in- creases the cost of housing for. all of us. 1ncuding our children. Beck st.ates .. Stop the.freeway. you stop de velopment." He points with pride that the Coastal Freeway was stopped. Docs he somehow think development was stopped in Hunt- ington· Beach. Cost.a Mesa and New· port Beach as a result? ,J-ia>be Bttk should spc.nd some ti'mc m Ventura. Santa Barbara ,gr ~ans1de. traveling on bncloaect s"rface streets. while freeway triffic goes by to 01her destinations. leavi ng local residents in relative peace as compared to Ncwpon Beach and Corona del Mar. Beck con&inu" to suggest actions that promote con~stion in Corona dcl Mar and Newport Beach. JIM DE BOOM Newport Beach They can run, but can't hitle To the Ednor: Finally Huntington Beach City Councilman Jack Kell y has been fined $4.000 by the Fair Political Practices Committee ( FPPC). for not rrponing property he owned on his .. Statement of Economic Interest.': Kelly ~an count himself lucky that the FPPC hada "cut and run" poliq-. Otherwise. he would have been cited fo r additional charses. Jack Kelly thought he could get off, with pleading forwctfulnns or i• norance. As in most cases. i&norance is no excuse. I hope that all candidates running for city council will take note. People in Huntington Be.tch want honest rcprcscnta\ion on &he city council. There are a number of c11izens in Hun1in1ton Beach that are .. watchdass" over the aoinfS on at City Hall. We have no hesi&auon 1010 to city hall and investiptc the candidat"' .. Statement of Contribu- tions.·· Th~ documents show who - the candidates arc accepting con· tnbuuons from and 1f these concribu- 1jons arc consistent with their cam- paign litcra1ure. Inconsistencies found will be made public. The~ arc man y other public re- cords that reveal what propeny and holdings arc within the control of the candidate or office holder. Ra~ is the individual that can successfully hide from public view all that he (or she) would like to maintain as secret. Candidates and office holders would be well 1dv1scd 10 remember the words of Abraham Lincoln who once said ... If once you forfeit tM confidence of your fellow citiiens. )'OU can ne ver r~in their TrSJ>«'t and esteem." SALLY GRAHAM Huntin1ton Beach TODAY IN H1s10R~ Today '5 Tuesda_y. Oct. 11. lhe 28Sth day of 1988. TMre att-81 day-J • lift in lhe year. · Today's hishhaht in history: Twenty y'8rsg<>.onCkt. 11.1968. Apollo 7. t~ first manned Apollo mission. was launched with astronauts Wally Sch1na. Donn FuJton Eisele and R. Walter C.an. mnpam on board. Apollo 5(vm orbited the earth t63 timn. splathina down 11 days later. On this date: In 1776. the firJt naval beltlt of Lake Cham~itt was f°"Sht durina ti\( ArMncan Revolution. ArMfic:ao forcct ltd by Oen. 8aledK'l Amokt wffned bcavy kmn.. but rnaftllCd to stall &he 8nush. In I 779. Polish nobleman Cati•ir Pulaski WIS killed whitf lilJltiftl for Ammcan 1~ftdtftft cfwi111 tk Revolut!OftlfY War &.ttlc of Sl:van- nah. Ga. '" 1111. the rma ~m;.pcrwend fm'yboel -Uat .. ,........ -Wiii put in10 ~tlOft by 1nvn1or J• Sltvnt1 bet"Wftn New Yor\ _. Hobolln. NJ. '" ...... S..llOt ....... - borft "' New Vn