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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-11-08 - Orange Coast PilotTUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1988 25 CENTS . Channel cut ·from.wetlands· • Ian· Coalition to seek compromise on future development of Bolsa Chica wetlands BJ ROBERT BARKER °' .. ...,,... .... Huntington Beach City Council memben vo~ Monday to quit foofina .around af)d to remove an intensely opposed navigable channel from plans for the development of the Bolsa Chica wetlands. . "It's obvious that the citizens along the shoreline arc concerned about the out to the sea," Councilwoman Orace Winchell said. "Why go t)ack to 1970 (with the navigable channel entrenched in the plans). we've been there before. The plan has been studied to death." In the end Monday night, pro- 1 development Councilman Tom Ma~s voted with the environmental faction of Winchell, Peter Grccn aod Ruth Finley to remove the channel from a lisJ of possible alternatives to be studied by the re<:entJy formed 69lsa Chica Planning Coalition. . The coalition,' to be coiyiprised of city, county and state officials as wC!ll as env1ronmcptahsts and· land- owners, will seek a conscnsus="for er compromise. Mayor John Erskine held out Monday to keep all options open, including the channel that would let boaters sail out to the Pacific Ocean. Erskine said Lhft the State Lands Commission, owncn of the 300-acrt Bolsa Chica, had wanted to keep the channel as one of several altematjvcs. Signal Landmark Co. of f rvine 1s planning to build S, 700 homes and a t1600-shp marina in the area. Plans a so·ca11 for ~rvation of91S acres of wetlands 1n the lowlands adjacent to Pacific Coast Hi&hway between Warner Avenue and Golden West Street. Councilmen Jack Kdly and. Wes Bannister went along with Erskine. But not Mays. "h's time to quit r.layin1 sames.. .. Mays said today. 'We (the City Counctl) have voled twice &o exclude the na v1gable channel. "The peo~le are feel ap.inst 1t and studies shows 1blfr' CbCach) erosion. We need 10 do something to benefit rcsi<knts and to protoct property nghts. "The port authority of Lona Beach and Los Anatles ls very seriows about bu ying the wctlaod,' he said. "It could solve a humonaous problem for us. We don't want them to lose interest while we play games." Erskine said previously that he ii the channel and Orantt •uperv~· · w· , ift H id ...... ume for ~e cban 11 .. the ·City Administrator Paul Coolc.. who advocated the plannfog coali- Pl~ eee CllAJlfJllSL/ A2) Conflic~ cliarged as ef>uncilman OKs ~on ? s proje G,t By JONATHAN VOLZU: Otho., ........ Aconflict-O!inltfUlcharge was leveled against Councllman Orv Ambursey by a resident Monday after the Coast Mesa couoalman voted in favor of his own son's plans for an apartment complex. "I thouS)lt it was an incredible -------------con01ct of interest How 1s he •>1ng io sa)"no to his own son?'' resideet Steve Hook sa.id after the vote. Hook and other residents of the Oak Garden Part Vil• townhouse compln. adjacent LO Ron Am· burgey's property at Wilson Street and Harbor Boulevard. ~ die antici~ted plan LO build 8l*1IDltD1S. MeasareC glvesMes. __ $9.SmUllon •1 JMA'DW'f ....... ............. Sugar Ray Leonard holds one boxing championship belt whlle wearing another after becoming the first fighter to ·win two tltles In one nlght./83 Residents argued the •i*il s ti will destroy the-value ot r,ktr ....,,...,._.....,.._.._ $1 70,000 homes. A 1987 decision by Costa Mesa voters to spend budget surpluses on struts.. parkways and sidewalks re- sulted 1n S9.8 million for the repairs, accordin& to a one-~ review pres- ented Monday by Caty Manaacr AJlan Roeder. World Israel's Supreme Court criticizes the army for its prison conditions and for Imprisoning 1,500 people without trial.I AS Index Bulletln Board Business Classified ComJcs Death notices Entertainment Opinion People Police Log Public Notices Sports Weather A3 A7-8 86-8 A 11 88 A9 A6 A10 A3 85, 8 81-5 A2 A line had alt~dy formed when the poll opened o n Balboa Boal~d In 1'ewport Beac b . m;i~~~~~·~ts ~~k0~J.n~. ~~1~ V e b • k ag:ortmcnt complex is Jotally, oters turning out at r1s . a. H~~lyaf:~~~.~I~~~~~ rela- t t1onsh1p between Orv Amburgey and P. ace along Orange Coast :p~r~~~~rgrJr arc~::c~1t~e:0 ·t:::. burgey to vote on htS son s proJcct. · ··An ethical person would have voluntccrcd to abstain:· Hook said after the necessary zone cbanacs for By BOB VAN EYKEN Of Hie o.11J PW tt811f There was an atmosphere of almost giddy fnendliness thlS morning at 2027 Highland Dnve in Newport Beach. Things were the same at 2921 Royal Palm Drive in Costa Mesa. as they undoubt~dly were at countless other neighborhood polling places throughout the Oran_gc Coast. An open garage wnh an American flag hung outside signaled to voters 1 n the Highland Dnvc area that this was the pface to vote, and the four precinct working manning the station were clearly proud that so many of their neighbors wcrt turning out. "In this particular precinct the}' come out no matter what's o.n 1he ballot." said Bart Hake. inspector at the polling platt. "The people here are mostly well educated and the} ·re interested in what's going on around them. we·ve had 45 so far: that's abou1 one a minute." Turnouts arc generally high in this precinct. said Adelle Mancll, whose garage was the site of the electoral act1 v1ty. ··we've lived here for 30 years and we've been do1nf. this for a long ume." she said. ·we always have · over 70 percent. and sometimes 1t"s been as high as 90 percent." _ Voters using the polhng station said they were interested in nat1onal as well as state and IOQI issues and candidates. ''I'd say national and local are ~ually important this lime." said Btlhc Aamson. a area resident. ··1 feel it's 1mponant I've ne'er missed voung man elecuon ·· One voter said. howe' er. that local and state issues were fortmost in her mind. "'I'd say the traffic 1n1t1at1' c. and the A>IDS and water measures:· said Julie Bissell. (Plea.e .ee VOTERS/ A2) the pro,ect passed 4-1 and 4-2 Councilman David Whetltt voted against both mouons and Coun- cilwoman Mary Hornbuckle opposed increasing density in the neigh- borhood. But Ron .\mburgc}. Orv Am- burgey and other council members defended the vote. ·• .\t some point 1n ume. )'OU can find reasons for all members of the council not to vote because of some sort of conflict.·· Orv Amburgey said. "There is no conflict of interest." Mayor Donn Hall and Councilman (Plea.e .ee COUJllCll./ A2) The statewide Gann spcodina lim1L passed tn 1979. dcaud that oues must cap spending based on populauon and 10Jlation rates. A &0vcrnment collecting more than the Gann 1rutiauve permits has LO ask voters whether 1t can keep the funds or retura the money to aupaycn.. lflocaJ voten bad re,ected the plan, residents would have rcc:cived about S66 in tax rebates each. officials said. Costa Mesa's Measure C was the first 1nmauvc in the county to waive the Gann hm1t and permit a city to keep t~ excess tax dollars. The measure was approved by a 2-1 marg.in. Roeder said Monday that city officials decided that 50 percent of the money should be spent on street (Plea• eee llEASlJlllt/ A.2) Night of Nazi terror left broken glass, broken lives By BOB VAN EYKEN Of ... 0.., "'-' ..... It was a night of broken glass and pillars of smoke. From some 1t was a nil.ht of death. shops. homes and synagogues that were destroyed. Historians refer to that night 50 years ago as a turning point. the bcgtnning of 1he final and ugliest phase of the Holocaust cond1t1ons for German Jews. gangs of Nazi storm troopers and Hitler }Outh were JOtncd b> mobs of citizens in what became an orgy of desecration and arson. who hves in Irvine "We had tv.o main synagogues there. the Anger and the Storsch. each holding about 1.000 to 2.000 people. The Anger was m a square by 11sclf and a few blocks awa~ was Gestapo headquarters. The mob set fire to this beauuful synagogue that at one time had the largest dome ihe Nazis called it Kmtallnacht. .. crystal ni&ht." for the shards of broken glass and crystal from Jewish On the night of Nov. 9-10. 1938. after fi ve years of steadily worsening "I was at the ume at a boarding school in Brcslau." said Isidor Nussenbaum. a Holocaust su~·"·or Pint--sized FV c landidates · takecampaigns seriously Pe asus School students play politics and voice some very definite opinions By GREG llERKX so. Right now, youna Jere\y -only °' .. ..,,....... six years old -will aJadly settle for It was Monday afternoon, the being elected class president of the candidate's last chance to make an PCf.tsus School in Fountain Valley. im~ioned plea before voters. He • I wouldn't raise taxes," Jeremy said 1n an exclusive post•spced'I di not take the opponunity in stride. inferview. "I'd aive all people good "ladies and acntlemen. I am for · d I Id I clean air, clean water, clean food and ~~i~n':~nt. an wou stop po - drua-frec minds," the candidate said, Jeremy won't know the results of standina bolt upri&ht so as not to h l ·11 ~-b · • Nflle the clean lines of his navy blue t ee ccuon unu atert\Ney, ut •t sa suit, which fitted rnrfectly over a safe bet to say he's a shoo-1n bec&U$C . h" h' red . he's runnina unonnnvtt. cnsp w ne s in an tie. But that doesn~mcu the students A red. white and blue hat capped 11 Pcpsus.. a private kinderpnen the enscmblc.. . thro'-'lh third arade 1c:hoot for aif\ed One haf!d m the ~udiencc slowly students, are politically apathetic or wav~ a uny ~mencan flq as the ianorant. Actually, they may know ~ndadat~ oon.u.n~ to speak, fi&ht· more about the pat Amcncan •"f. fW has pol!&ical late. -polit1cal machine than many adults I am ••nst n~tear. ~eons. aoina to the polls today. nuc~ war and oil dnlhna. he For the put month, l_>etuus stu· cont1n~ ~ws furrowed ~th con-dents have been cnpaed in a study of centrauon., If you elect me. I II do the the political process. ancludina best I can.' analysis of the pttSidcnhal can- H1s sptteh concluded. the crowd d1dates and the issues f1eina them burst into chcerint and clapptna. and the country. ready and ~ to elect their man The class wrote liners on the issues Jemlny White for praicknt. 10 Ckorae Bush and Michael Jemn_y White b'preaident? Oftht Oukakat, rtte1Vtft1 ~ea from both United Sla1a'? candjdalft Well. maybe in abi>Ut 40 yean or .. ne ICUdeAU uvc· VCfY ddloitc op1n1ons about things and they really want to know what's going on.'' said Gail Wickenberg. assistant director of the school. "It's such a part of hfe around this umc of year and the} want to understand it:· Teacher Elaine Sarkin said her students are "extremely awatt .. of th~ world around them and are particu- larly sensitive about environmental issues "They were devastated about the f?li&ht of those whales,·· Sarkin said. 'They aren't too keen on taxes and more com plicated tbina.s. but th~ are very bnaht kids and they're hypersensitive to injustices io the world," The climu of their month-Iona study is today's election. where they will vote for snsidcntial candidate of their choa« utl elect a new class presadcnt. The studcnu held a m1n1· rally Monday afternoon tod11CU11 the issues and ~nerally rtv thcmsclvn up for today s bta cvtnt. Dttked out 1n newspepcr hau beanna the 1tuckn1's name and the name of their favon1c candidate. the students mart.hcd around the room to 119triooc themes. dllNSled i11UCS and Mlted why ·lhty M'tt v°'ina fof cilhef IUtlt Oii OUM.it.. (!111• -NOASUa/dJ ~ . in Gennam.·· The Storich. he said. was built next to apartment buildings inhabited b) Gentiles as well as Jews. and therefore was not burned ·· they went ms1de and destro\cd e' en1hing. ··he said. "The~ p1ckrd up the t orah scrolls. which art sacred. tore them up and threw 1hcm out on the strec1.·· T cmfied when thev saw what was happening. Jewish families fled and bamcadcd themselves in ..._. homes. "The stonn troopen broke mto the (Pleue .ee HOLOCAUST I A2) .. OrtlnOI ~ ~LV PILOT/ Tu.day, Nowwnbe( a. 1918 . HOLOCAUST START MARKED BY JEWS ••• ...... , houles. draaed ~ple out and humiliated ffiem,' hC said. ..The crowds spit on the people and beat them." The pretext was an incident in Paris two days before. in which a Jewish youth, enrapd by bis parents' de- portation to Pollnd1 walked into the Oennan embassy, snot and mortally wounded a minor official. Nazi party officials saw the op- portunity they had been looking for to escalate the war apins the Jews. Word went out to local party chiefs throughout the Reich that there was to be a reprisal. According to official records, 36 people were killed during the night of terror, but private accounts place the number who were either killed or committed suicide as high as 1,000. More than 1,100 main synagogues were either destroyed or desecrated, as well as countless small synagogues ~ located in private homes or other buildings. But the lfUe significance of Kristallnacht, according to Nussen· baum, was what . it signaled for Germany's_ Jews and for the world. "The Kristallnacht was lhe,start," he said. "Hitler already had his concentration camJ>S, b'1t before that they were mostly for political pris- o ners. After the Kristallnacht, it was the first time great numbers of people were taken to the camps simply because they were Jews." · Anne Ous, a Jewish educator at Chabad of Irvine Jewish Center, said Jews saw Kristallnacht as a breaking point, a point at which life finally became untenable for Jews in Nazi occupied Europe. u.._.,.... "I would liken it somewhat to the killing of the students at Kent State during the Vietnam War:• she said. .. That was really the incident that finally made the Vietnam War unac- . ceptable to large numbers of people in America. By the same token. Kristallnacht was the final signal for Jews." A Berlin •hopkeeper •uney• the da••ae to wlndo .. of bla •tore after Nm tba&• went on a ra.m,..e a&aln•t Je .. on the ~btofNoT. 9 , 19S8. Up until the niaht of terror, Jewish famihes .could orten buy their rc-la- uves' release when they were arrested. "But after Knstallnacht, the Nazis didn't even bother ransoming Jews Boyhood pals reunited by Holocaust pr_ogram any more." she said. "They JUSt sent NEW XORK (AP) -As Roben them straight to the ovtns. It was Kah~ hsten~ to a Hol~ust truly the begjnning of the Holocaust." _survivor tell his story on telev1S1on, Mel Mermelstein, a Holocaust h~. suacrenly had a flash of recog- surv1vor who lives in Newpon Beach. rut1~n. The man on the screen, he said he remembers feeling the ripples reah~ed, w~s a boyhood chum he from Kristallnacht in his home town hadn t seen m 50 years. in neighboring Czechoslovakia. Ernest Michel's face wasn't fam- "lt was very frightening to me," he iliar, Kahn said, but the name rang a said. "I was 11 years old. I heard bell. And when Michel told the "CBS about what was happening from my Morning News" interviewer MQnda y elders. When you are a child. what can he had grown up in Mannheim, you do? I looked to my elders for Germany. "it all came back." Kahn reassurance. Then a year and a half said. later, my father was taken away to a forced-labor batalhon. He came home after six months. but then he was taken away again. So J saw that even my ciders could not save themselves." Mermelstein spent a year in the concentration camps of Auschwitz and Birkenau. He survived. but his father. mother. two sisters and brother did not. A frequent public speaker on the Holocaust. Mermclstem agreed with others that Kristallnacht was a pivotal event 1n the onset of the Nazi terror. Michel. executive vice president of the United Jewish Appeal Federation of New York. was appearing on the program to discuss the 50th an- niversary of Kristallnacht. the night when Nazis went on a rampage against Jews in Germany. As Kahn watched from his home ID Dayton. Ohio. he said he realized that Michel was a boyhood friend who had aueodcd the same synagogue in Mannheim. The two hadn't seen each other at least smce autumn 1938. Kahn fled Germany with his parents in early I 939; Michel stayed and spent the war in labor and concentration camps. where almost all his family died. Up until then. no such coordinated, latge-scale violence had been directed against th'c Jews. As such. he said. it was a test of how the world would react. And. unfonunately, ~hen the "My Joung friends. most of them retired Air Force civilian employee, said in a telephone interview from Dayton ... So I was delidlled to find out that here, in New "'Y"Orlc, was-a former boyhood friend." The two, who were IS in 1938 and are 65 today, spoke by telephone Monday eventn.J, quickly catch mg up on the intervenmg years. "'It's real -we really know each other!" Michel exulted. "We traded stamps, we played soccer together .... It's one of those incredible stories!" ''The excitement is not based on really having_been close and longtime friends," Kahn said. '"The excitement is that there is"SOmeone left whom I associated with. It has a tremendous meaning." Michel said the two boys had dated two sisters, who now live in Aorida. Those ·were the only surviving boyhood friends Michel was aware of; Kahn didn't 1"Calize the sisters were alive but knew of two other friends now living in the United States. ··we're going to get together as soon as we can work it out," said Michel. 'Tm sure he wouldn't recognize me," said Kahn. "I have white hair and I notice-he has white hair, and we've put on a few pounds here and there.' world saw. 1t did nothing. It may. perishe as far as l know," Kahn, a Mermelstein said. have been too late ---------------------------by that ttme. "I think it OUfht not to be forgotten for 1h1s reason,' he said. "Every great injustice that besets the world begins small. But when you sec an injustice and you let it go by. it becomes like wildfire. the time to stop what happened in the Knstallnacht was long before 11 happened." And people in the United States should nol smugly believe that the events of half a century ago could not be repeated here. ..l "lfwe don't take the opponunity to learn from this experience, I wouldn't gjve two cents for society's chances,'' he said. Mermelstein said he would be speaking this week at special pro- grams on Kristallnacht in Reno and Las Vegas. Observances of the anniversary of Knstallnacht will be mostly low-key. according to a spokeswoman for the Tustin-based Jewish Federation of Orange County. . Many area s~agogues, including Temple Bat Ya m and Temple Shir Ha-Ma 'Alot in ewport Beach will be leaving their li&hts on all night in n:membrance of tFle pogrom. "And we'll be doing something in the school today," sajd Rabbi Bernard King, ofShfr Ha-Ma 'Alot. "There's no major commemoration. It's more an attempt to educate ourselves about what happened." MEASURE C FUNDS MESA REPAIRS ••• From.Al • Sunny skies for Coast election The eunetn ha gone ~t• In rneny p&8Cll thlt etec16on •· leeWta more U\an • tew voter9 In •fog, bUt on the Orenoe eo.t. ~Dey ... greeted un4Mr eunny ..... A..-h6gh-.,,...,,. eystem"9expected to bUld OY9t the •• tonlOht end Wedneeday, gMng way to tunny lklee Wedneeday afternoon. tn. National W•ther Servlct Mid. Mona the Orenge CoMt It will be pertly cloudy tonight and WedneecMy morning. Moetly amny end • Nttle warm« Wedneeday afternoon. BNc:h Iowa tonlQht moatly In the 50I with hlah• WedneldaY mid-to upper eo...v~ Iowa tonlaht upper 409 to mid-508 wtth ~ W~•Y mid to upper 7~. From Point Cono9ptlon to the Mexlcatl Border -Over Inner wat.,. aoutheftv wtnd• let8 than a knou tonight Wedneaday morning t>ecomrr10 weet taeouthwelt 12 to 16 knott Wedneeday aftetnoon and e"9ning with 3-foot eeu. Swell west 4 feet Partly doudy tonight and Wednetday. ~J\. -, ,~ .. ·- .....--~ ......... COid War"' .111••11err U.S. Temps. .. l• -Or-. 79 17 Calif. Temps. ~que 71 .. ,._Yotti Qty 57 43 Extended ~ 33 H Ot>.WIOIM City 71 43 :r.-· pr~ kif~ endtft9 Allenta 17 50 OmelM 51 27 A*"'IC Cfty SI 30 ONI*> 74 51 .. '"' todey ...._. S5 33 ~ 45 37 Wertlleld 73 45 =lghanl et 51 Phoelllll .. 17 ELnlla 5t 50 41 33 Pit~ 41 S4 ,,~ .. .. ao.ton 51 41 p .M#ne 51 35 =d Clly 15 .. ..,.. 42 39 P«li.nd,(>re 52 • 12 47 a..rtleton.8 c .. 53 :::::r. . .. 35 Sact-10 17 .. cn.to!M.N C 1$ 37 .. 38 ...,_ eo 45 CNcego 47 S4 Aldvnond 12 S5 8eA Diloo ... St Clrlc:iMell 54 « St Louil .. 31 8eA Frenclaco 12 51 a...lllnd 43 39 s... Lek• City 53 43 ....... .. .. SenMtonlo .. 11 llOC:lllton 15 •• ·Surf Report . Cotumllue,Olllo .. 37 DlllM-Ft WO<lh .. 47 SMltl• 62 •:s High. IOw tor 24 holn endff>CI at:! "'· Oeyton .. 39 Spoil-43 30 ller9tow 50 o.n.... 5e 28 Sy.-"4 31 o..~ M 31 T -.p11-S1 Pv.t)g 78 52 Dltrolt 45 39 Topelta .. 27 Dululll 35 23 T-87 eo EJP.o 81 ~ TuMI 72 ,. Erle 44 39 WMfllnOIOtl,O.C 57 3t , . .,.,.. 15 05 Wichlla &t 33 ~" .. 45 O<end Rllpidl •2 31 Honolulu .. 71 Houlton IO et Smog Report lftdianapOlla 52 42 Jec:lteon,MIU. 711 15 Jacbonllllle 71 41 Polulent 1tand.wd Inda ~~ 0.50 ~ 40 33 K-Clly 62 31 c : 51·100 rnoclatata; 10 -189 ~ LAIVagu IO 13 llM; 2()0.2" vwy unllMl!llfut; 300 Llltle Rodt 73 .. end above ,,.,..douL '"-...... L~ 11 50 ro~ def• attained pal. SeCond .. =-BMdl 75 54 Oday'• pal l«ecMI. • 71 17 SM1 8Mch IO MacAt1llur BNd .... SCM2 ....... 45 35 INIM, Sac1c11a11ac:1c V.iley ............ 42-58 ~PllUI 41 S4 L.-BMdl lro..c.t)....... .. ....... 42 NllltMll .. 57 Loe~ ...... .,. ............ SCMS .._,,,_, .. .., ~ 8lyltlll C.lllllM ~Cl!y ~ Lono llNdl L.A. Alf Pof1 Ntwpor1 a.ch Onlario Paaedena "-Ilda San lernatdlno SanOabtlel Sant•¥' Santa Barber• Santa Cruz Santa Mana IMla Monica TllMeVllfey T-~ Y_....Vlr .. 70 45 81 S4 70 M .. 57 .. eo • eo .. 39 .. 81 15 St 13 51 ... 51 17 52 .. 53 .. 57 .. 5t 14 51 .. 57 .. .. 17 •II 1$ IO 55 24 .. M 86 5t 11 11 Tides TODAY Second tow 2:M p.m. 0 I Second hlgll 1;52 p.m. 4.0 ..... ... Flrlt IOW 1:50 """ 2.0 ::'3ic-l :OU.m-1.1 ..,_ 3:11 p.m. 0.3 9-ld fllOll l".34 p.111. 3.8 &Ml .... loelay .. •:53 _p.m. .. ,.... ~~1.,,,, ......... at 4;"52 P·"'-.._ ...... 4:10p.m.,tt1MW--. Cler .. 1;32 Liii. encl .......... .. p.m. VOTERS SETTING A BRISK PACE ••. Jl'romAl . Bissell had t~o small non-voters in Jhe booth with her. "I want to set a good example for my children -and show=1trem how to vote." she said. Conrad Chavez, another resident of the New{>Ort Beach precinct, said he was pan1cularly concerned about one local issue. "Measure K. the traffic initiative," he said. Voter turnout was lighter at the fire station on the corner of Adams A venue and Royal Palm Drive in Costa Mesa. a precinct official said. "We have 400 registered voters. but not many of them have been out yet today." said inspector Marcelle Grimes. By 8:25 a.m .. 2 I of the precinct's registered voters had turned out, accoridng to official records. One -voter who did tum out suggested a reason for the relatively light turnout. "They're all important, but I wish we had a better choice for president," said Costa Mesa resident John Wills. .. And it's the same with all those insurance things:· Two other voters. Katherine Chew and Dottie Herman. seemed more enthusiastic about this year's elec- tion. although they . were reticent about which issues they felt were most important. . "We're frien'1s. so we don't tell each other who we're voting for," said Gi rl's body kep t in attic for 2 years DETROIT (AP) -A man told police he used a trophy to beat a 15- ycar-old to death almost two years ago and hid her body in his grand· mother's attic, authonties said. "Has conscience was bothering him," Lt. Joan Ghougoian of the police homicide section said Mon- day. The 26-year-old man, whose name was not released pendin_g an arraign· ment today, says,acquaantance Mar- quesa J-Ohnson was slam 1n January 1987 after they argued. according to police. · Her body remained in the attic crawl space until Sunday, when the man walked into the Fifth Precinct and surrendered. officials said. The girl's decomposed body was removed from the attic. Dental records were used to identify John- son, who had been on a missiAg persons list. COUNCIL CONFLICT ••• From Al · Herman. Down the street at another garage polling plac-e the turnout was heavier, "We've had two brief minutes when there hasn't been anyone, but otherwise ifs been steady," said Violet Millar, one of the neighbors minding the polls. "It's usually very good at this precinct. Another poll worker, Marie White- gon said 63 of the precinct's 585 registered voters had turned out in the first hour and a half. One voter said he wasn't letting a negative impression of this year's presidential candidates prevent him from exercising his right. "I think it's a r·nviledge; I haven't missed a nationa election since I was 21," said Larry Robinson, of Costa Mesa. "I have to say that this year I had less interest in the presidential race than an¥ election I can re- member." Local issues were what most con- cerned Sharon Schrum, another morning voter. "This election ifs measures H and 11 the development initiatives. that I m most interested in," she said. "But I always vote. I'm concerned about this country." Polls opened at 7 a.m. and arc scheduled to close at 8 p.m. Officials at the office of the Regis- trar of Voters in Santa Ana say they expect to have preliminary results by 8:30 p.m. and a final tally, excluding absentee ballots, by 3 or 4 a.m. Wednesday . CHANNEL ••• Prom Al Peter Buffa sided with Amburgey, but Costa Mesa resident. taon, said be is hopeful the group can Councilman Dave Wheeler claimed '"I didn'tsign away any of my rights bring about a compromise that will there was a conflict. when he was elected to the council," preserve wetlands while also giving Wheeler, who has frequently Ron Amburgey said. "It didn't Si~al a chance to make money. Cook glcd · h h. ·1 lie change the way he usually votes on said he hopes that lhett -will be tan wit is counci co cagues, thin~ like this." H~ment in the lo~ smoulderino later left the council meeting -his -..-"o last-shouting .. Sue me. Mr. Mayor" T e Garden Oak residents said debate "if not in our Ii etime, at least over a different issue. they were disappointed in Am-in the lifetimes of our eldest chil-burgey's action, and planned to dren." But Ron Amburgey said he has just continued to fight the project when a The City Council chose Erskine as much right for his projects to go specific proposal goes before the and Green to be its representatives on maintenance, 30 percent for parkway maintenance and 20 percent for new sidewalks. Parkways are the strips of land between the street and the sidewalk. rcslfrfaci OJ. In addillon to the Measure C funds, initi&ll)'. S2. I annually, the City Council also pledged to spend an additional SI . 9 million, Roeder said. In fact, the council spent an ad- ditionaJ $2.8 million, the eity man. before a full council as any other council. the Bolsa Chica study poup. 84 streets, 69 sidewa lies and r;::====::;::::==========::::;:::::::::;:=:;:==:;:;:;;;:::=======:::;:::;::::;:==:;::;:; thousands of square feet of sidewalks, 1 ' according to aneight-minute videota~ prepared by Carol Jacobs, the city s production specialist. The city initially identified 4,400 damaped sidewalks and about 35,000 feet o curbs and gutters that needed repair. More than 100 streets also wcrcsaid to be in need of a;atcbing or aaersaid. ,. In the past year, the city and MeasureCfund1ngpa.id forrtpainon The city worked with the Newport· Mesa Unafied School District on the sidcwaJk ~ first concentrating on the "Safi Route to School Plan ... PEGASUS PUPILS PLAY POLITICS ••• From Al Althoue both the "Democrats" of Bush. "He would make aood and the Republicans" stated their decisions." platforms eloquently, if the national eteeJ,ioa were hued on the sen ti menu of Peauus students. Bush would win in a ludsHde. "I think he would be a aood man for president," Elizabeth Renner, a fint· grader from Huntinaton Beach, said ~'::A~E Illy Piii MAIN Ol"PICE ...... ..., ... c:-........ CA I .. He's responsible,'' said Previn Warren, also a first..,-.der from Huntinaton Beach. There were some Dukakis sup- porters in the crowd, includina the future President White. "I really think he would clean up the environment and act drup out of Amerial and get clean water and c~ air," Jeremy said. with definite ~tial flounsh. Second-ander Chad Jacklon had a simpler reason for votina for Dukakis. ..He's a nice auy," Chad said. °::1.::1 Mii ..._ tOll IMO, C:O.ta ....._CA nt2t ~ ade, M2-M71, ~ I edll0tlal ......,., Ju.tcaU 842-8088 .. -...... ............ ,..., • ,._, do ...... ,_,___~ .... .,._ ....... , ........ ,..., .. . ~..a----. ............ ..... ., ... ....._. ,_., i...., IM,...,..,... ~.,..,,..,., ... , •• , •llf~-- ~::--1a :.c.. ...... a-.... "'" ., _,..., .,. -.............. , ~ fte ~ c.-.. ...,. ............ ., .. ....... ........ Ce .. c.... .......... TWo ..... -~ .................... ,..,. r!!.... ...... -.-............... ... ~.::.~=~· ...... . VOL 11, N0.111 ...... an dllrn TIT JI IRI From ~ Cot tage ID Donegal Individually handloomed and crafted in Ireland of the finest cotton yam s, a sweater so comfortable it must be worn to appreciate. Our own design in eighteen distinct color combinations and patterns. (llGllH) Gentlemen's C otbina S6 l Newport Center Or. Fubion llland (714)640-IJIO Growtngjob fields to be spotlighted at OCC career fair A career fair uploring 25 of Southern Cali- fornia's fastest·lfOW1nl occupations will be con-ducted Wednesday from 4 to 8 p.m. in the cafeteria of Ora nae Coast College in Costa Mesa. Each orthe 25 career fields will be represented by a display booth staffed by _industry representa- tives and recruhers and by OCC faculty members.· Nine 45-minute career workshops also are slated. There is no charae for ttle event and furt her information may be obtained by calling 432-5614. Indian awareneu event A children's pr~am entitled "Native Ameri- can Celebration: Signs and Symbols" will be eresented Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. at the San Juan Capistrano Library's children's room. The event is designed tq enable youngsters to become aware of Indian contributions to America. Admission is free. Saln session In Irvlne Sales consultant Ray Jutkins will offer his presentation on winning at marketing and sales at Wednesday's meeting of the Direct Marketing Association of Orange County. The dinner meeting is scheduled for 7 p .m. at the Irvine Marriott Hotel. The cost is S20 for association members and $27 for guests. Call 380-9100 for reservatio ns and membership infor- mation. Investing forum at OCC "Investing Under the Tax Reform Act of 1986" is the title of a workshop to be offered Wednesday from 7 to 9:30 p.m. !?)' Orange Coast College's Community ServJce OIDc -J.J. "Jack" Dalps. president of two California corporations, will discuss the effCct of new tax laws on all investments. The fee is $20 and further information is available at 432-5880. Women's health session • Orange Coel1 DAILY PILOTITueedey. ~I, 1W &I Greenpeace in NB to oppose drilllng By KATY BOUCHER Of_..., ........ Greenpcace's 38-foot ketch, Vcp, $ailed into Newport Harbor early Monday. attract1n1 a aroup of environmental ac- tivists who took the opportunity to condemn plans for offshore oil drilling. Kelly Quirke, a member of Greenpeace. stood 1n Tront of the vessel and told the gatherin& of Grccn~ce·s opposition to Lease sale 95, the Department of the Interior's Jive.year plan for offshore oil drilling between San Luis Obispo and the Mexican border. "Lease Sale 95" ... threatens Newport Bay, OranJC County Coast ... the entire Sou them Calif9mia coast, south of Big Sur down to the Mexican border, with offshore oil developmel\t," Quirke said. Public hearings for the drilling projeet will be conducted in February. Several of the hearings will be held in Orange Cou nty. "What we need to do is to get the word out to people in Oranie County -the people who arc concerned about the coast -that the oil companits · and the Department of Interior are very, very, powerful and are used to getting what they want. "Unless people get organized, informed and educated, and start working with each other so we can have a turnout and get our voices heard at those hearings ... you're going to S« a lot of rigs off of Southern California -a lot more than you sec now," Quirke warned. Offshore oil drilling will have impacts on air quality, water quality and the I · economy of Orange County, he said. It will affect marine mammals and could result an toxic discharges, ultimately hurtling fish· ing industry, he said. Quirke said the movement to stop the LagunaBeachCouncUmanBobGentry,lnfrontof off snore drillin has two steps. First, there Greenpeace•• ketch, Veca. told reporten the Department of Interior .. ,. there ta a 75 percent chi.nee of an oU aptll In the nezt 30 year.. would have to a national energy policy. Secondly, California could adopt an 1969." he said ... That's what got us all "ocean sanctuary." This proposal could be ~Jened to this issue. In 1969, 7 5.000 barrels in the form of legislation that would of crude oozed rnto the ocean off of Santa prohibit offshore dnlling. Barbara ... Laguna Beach City Councilman Bob think we, in Orange Count), want to risk our bays our wetlands. our beaches. man~ life a'l{I natural beaut) tcflhat kind of danger," Cftntry said. env1ronmentahsts than George Bush. { A workshop d~ifned to improve the health Qf women of all ages wi11 ~resented Wednesday from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at Norihwood Community Park. 4531 Bryan Ave. in Irvine. Gentry. who attended the conference. also "The Department of Interior predicts an eJtpresscd his concerns about the dnlhng · the next 30 years. a 75 percent chance of plan. spills of l .000 barrels or more ill occur "Santa Barbara had a major oil spill in where new dnlhng 1s going on ... I don't Gentry also took the opportunity to puU rn a plu_1 for pres1denual candidate Michael Dukak1s, saying the Democrat was more sympat~ to the concern of .. This election has a tremendous bcari!"f on the future of the Catiforrua coast Quirke said ... Americans can reject coastal explo1tat1on and demand an energy policy that em ploys sustainable. renewable, effi- cient energy measures to ensure future cnerg) sccunty ... J Wendy Mason, director of the Saddleback Hospital and Health Center's Hean lnstitute, will conduct the session. Admission is S7. and more information may be obtained by contacting David Anderson at 660-3920. Blood drive In Newport The Red Cross bloodmobile will be at Newport Harbor Lutheran Church. 798 Dover Drive. Newport Beach. Thursday afternoon. Donations may be made from 2:45 to 7:30 p.m. Cill 548-3631 or 546-5976 for reservations. Elecdon analysis slated An analysis of today's general election will be presented Thursday at a meeting of the Republican Associateds of Orange County at the Red Lion Inn. 3050 Bnstol St .. Costa Mesa. State Sen. 8111 Campbell. political consultant Eileen Padberg and political reporter Jeff Perlman will offer their opinions at the 5:30 p.m. session. Admission will be SI 0 for members and S 15 for non- members and those paying at the door. Call 770-0647 for reserat1ons. HB~rad fillcfsnew heights to fall from By ROBERT BARKER OftM0.-,""41teft ! , Scott Vander Molen keeps things Jump- ing. He's1umped out of airplanes. helicop- ters and hot air balloons. Huntington reV-ives _. parking structure By ROBERT BARKER OtlMO.-, ......... A fi ve-level parking structure that some feel could lock a decades-long stall an the redevelopml"nt of downtown Huntington Beach is back on track folio" mg a 4-3 ·vote b) the City Council late Monda} . Previous a-pproval b) the Planning Comm1ss1on of the.structure was appealed by CounCllwoman Ruth Finlc~ onP'ounds that at didn't fit into the archnectural scheme of things and ""ould "''pc out the Oark Hotel and other old buildings and apartments. Skip Villerot, owner of Heidi's Frogen Yozun. said that merchants wouldn't sur\ivc the winter without a new parking facalit). V11lerot compared downto~ architec- ture to "urban blight or early skid row." However. tts1dent Bob Baddie u.rged the Cat) CounCll ;·not to tear up our past'"for rcdc,elopmcnt t.hat. he said. ought cause businesses to so bankrupt over future rent hikes and limited rounsl seasons. "I wouldn·t want to make one buck (at 1he t''\~nsc) of lowenng downtown charm: Baddie. a Cit~ Council candidate, said. Senlors' programs offered In October. he and 14 other Southern California sky divers pushed through the Jungles and nvers of South Amcnca to ma~e has most memorable Jump of all. Scott Vander Molen Vander Molen. 30. reportedly became The City Council O'errode F1nle~ 's appeal Monday. but stipulated that des1g.n of the structure. 10 include more than 00 parking spaces. must go to a cit) re' 1e" commmcc before construction can began Fm le' Peter Green and G!"att Winchell \Oted io O\emde the Planning Com- m1ss1on 's approval of the parlang struc- ture. Mayor John Erskme, Tom Mays. Jack Kelly and Wes Bannister voted approval of the structure. which also will include 32.07 3 square feet of retail. restaurant and office space facing along Main street. and Ohve and Walnut avenues. Programs for senior c1t1zens will be offered. starting Thursday, at the new West Newport Center. 833 W. 15th St.. Newport Beach. Chair exercises for arthritis sufferers af'C planned for Thursdays from I 0:30 to 11 :30 a.m. at no fee. while a personal fitness class will be held Thursdays from 8 to 9:30a.m. at a cost ofS2 .50. Ca ll the Oasis Senior Center at 644-3244 for registration information. one of 31 people in the world to jump off se"eral ofh1s companions got stuck in ta ll the top of the 3,)82-foot Angel Falls-the . trees near the landing area. highest rn the world -in the state of In some cases. a guide cli mbed "'1th the Finley claimed the Mediterranean st) le of the faClht)' might clash with the "genen<'" old downtown buildings ··and stick out like a sore thumb." Bolivar in Venezuela. ropes so that the stranded divers could A graduate of Edison High School and rappel down. Vander Molen said. In other son of former Huntington Beach City instances. the ropes hauled up machetes so School Dlstnct Trustee Norma Vander that the 1mpnsoncd d1' ers cut cut loose Molen he guided his chute to a perfect their parachutes. stand-~p landing an postage-stamp sized One of the women who fell through the area between rocks and trees and stumps. trees and broke h~r arm had to be fl own to "Not worried about the Jump, just the ~ hospatal b} helicopter. he said. Another landinJ." he wrote in his Journal on Oct. 3. anJured has foot the nilflt before the Jump ... But 1t should go Vander Molen also as a surfer. a snow But Caty Administrator Paul Cook had warned that a prolonged dela) an the structure would deal "a death blow" \O merchants who might lose two summers' worth of business for construction The structure w11l mclude one subterra- nean and one roofiop level. The muimum height wall be 37 feet. about three stories. However. with architectural features, the fac1ht) will actually be closer to 47 feet. officials said. Tuesday, Nov. 8 good. skie r and a student .~ltder pilot. A~.d whale His most scary moment came during a he calles sk~ dn ing \Cl) exc1t1ng. he also hike from the sky di vers' Jungle camp says its one of the safest spons. e'en 1f one before has JUmp. He was the second in a does hunle at speeds up to 125 mph during single-file line when the leader stumbled lhc free fall pan of the JUmp. Paul Berman. an owner of Happ) 0a)s Y ogun. said Monda~ that concern for the Clark Hotel shouldn t stand in the "a~ of progress. "The businesses can't stand another lcnsth) dela} ... he said. ~h "ould become a ghost town to go along "'•th the dead pier:· The structure wall include 817 parlona spa~. 181 are required for the com- mercial portion of the project and more than 550 arc required for the downtown entenamment center and associated pro- JCCts • 7p.m. Laguna Beula Scttool Board, distnct office, 550 Blumont St.. Laguna Beach. • 6 p.m. Newport·Mesa School Board, Harper Communny Center. 425 E. I 8thStrcct. Costa Mesa. over a nest of angl) black bees. ..It's 'er} safe." he said ... a lo~ saferthan Wednesday, Nov. 9 "There were more than 100 bees on my the _public 1hanl-.s. The m?st I 'e got are body.l yelledforhelpandoneofthegu1des black and blue spots. Im '~!"> safet) used has machete to swat them off." conscious and take precautions He rece ived onl) three or four painful Vander \tolen m;ide about 180 Jum ps sungs, Vandcr Molen said. but didn't bet"een Februar} and October getting require medical attention. read\ for the ~ngel Falls Jump. He has Other than that. everything was great earned a L S Parachute l\ssoc1a11on "It was incredible." he said .. h was the Certificate for ~00 free falls. Death prompts hospital inspections 6 death Qf a 2-v.-ttk-old infant at Ccdan-- Sma1 Me<Jlcal Center • 7 p.m. La1aaa Buell PlaDDinl Comml11loa, council chambers. 505 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach. • 7:30 p.m. Fou talA Valley Plu.DlJl1 Com- ml11loa, council chambers. 10200 Slater Ave .. Fountain Valley best vacation of m) life." He'sJUSt an apphca11on a"a) fro m being He was the only one 1n the ellpcdition to offic1all~ r~ogn1zed as a professional take ropes. They came an handy when exh1b1t1on sl-.~d1\er LOS .\NGELES ( o\P) -Count~ health officials staged surpnsc 1nspecuons at several area hospitals to determine 1f spcc1al12ed surgery was being performed 1 n unhccnscd room). .\o' ur1d1sdosed number of hospitals "ere inspected Monday and more surpnsc 1nspecuons ~~re scheduled today and \\. ed nC'sda). car theft suspect nabbed· 8.fterWild 115mphchase BJ llOBEJ\T HYNDMAN °' • ..., ....... A suspected car thief in a gold Meroede$-Benz led police Monday on a 52-mile chase from Santa Ana to El Toro and back apin at speeds in excess of 115 mph. The suspect, 28-year-old Charles Stephen Beale of Santa Ana, finally wu arrested after runnina from his car and t!fina to hide from police behind a Cu'Cle K market, Beale was arrested on suspicion of auto theft, receivina stolen property and assault with a deadly weapon, laid Santa Ana police spokeswoman Maureen Thomas. Ac:cordina to reports, Santa Ana police aet up surveillance early Mon- lritne A resident on Eldcf'Jlen reported a susptcious lookin1 man knocking at her front door early Monday mom- _, an• .... . .. An cmployte's em>r, at a business on 2 Jenner. caused the alarm 10 be t.ri,.ertif Sunday It l I p.m . • • • A hofM<>wntr on Mont1C"tllo re- poi1eet a man walks his vicious d_,Ot e.dl niot without a lash. The cJot day outside the Embassy Suites Hotel at Dyer Road and Grattd Avenue where a gold 1983 Mercedes-Benz sedan report~ stolen Thursday was seen inlhe p&rlrin& lot When Beale got in the car and lcfi the lot at about 11:30 a.m., two police cars followed, and the pursuit began. Thomas said the suspected car thief led police along surface streets. then to the southbound San Diego Free- way, where Hi&}\way Patrol cars and police helicopters from Hu ntington Beach and Costa Mesa joined the chase. Beale allegedly ram med another car on the freeway in what police believe was a <klibcratc attempt to evade pursuers. The driver of the car attacks other wtlkcn. • • • A female cmplo~ of Bcrptroms store rcportedly .-ve a qus saln shp to her bo)'(ncnd and then he attcmJ)ted to act a cash refund at 4 p.m. Sunda)'. • • • A woman's dnwstnna ~rsc.. ton- taanina between S200 and S400. was stolen from a "'°Doi"I can at a aroccry ~ at· -_,71() Barianca Partway over lbe wetkcnd. • • • was not m1ured. but the plo} led to the assault charge against Beale. Thomas satd. The suspect led police all the wa} to the Lake Forest A venue uat rn El Toro. using all lanes of the frcewa~ and the shoulders. speeding in e cc s of 115 mph, Thomas said. After ex1tmg the frcewa). lkale • 1mmed1ately veered back onto the northbound lanes of the. Santa na freeway and sped back to Sa~ Ana He exited at 17th Street. ditched the car in front of a Circle K Market and tried to bide from police behind 1hc ston:. Beale was arrested there without inCldent about JO minutes ancr the chaSt bqan. A man rttt1ved minor hea..:S en· JU"" earl)' Tuc$da) morning "'h(n somcQnt attacked lum with a baseball bat at 8808 Irvine Ccnttt Dn'e The suspect fled in a tan Monte C'ar1o Chorolct. FoantalD VaJ..ley A COit hantt'f ma) have been the tool uted to ~k 1n10 a 1985 ~ota Cchc:a parted on ttw 17000 b of Su lnano Street. S~ CQW~t The inspecuons Monda) folio" the Oct 'alued at S403 "as taken an lhc earl)' ~tonda-. morning theft. • • •• v. hen an cmplpyee of the Radio hack at 17054 Magnoha Ave. "as momentanl\ dmructed. somrone Oed "1th a $1 ~95 hand-held TV on unda~ afternoon Ha ntington Beach o\ man called Peter allctedl> ha parked his camper at the Old World German '1llage for I 0-count them -10 'cars. a '!'Oman told officers The man ref uses to lel\VC. lhe v.oman said. and e'en put the Old World addre . "'561 Center Dn~c. as a permanent address on has dn-.er's hcenS( OOicers rcponcdly l<Xatcd e1gh1 cam~rs at Old Wortd. but didn't see the one bclonaing to 'Peter • • • Burglars pncd open a bedroom \\-lndo" 1n the 500 block of Dela"arc • trc~ct and stoic a 1ele" 1!tl>n set, ~tereo. camera cqu1pmt'nt, a suurase filled "1th ski clothes. ski boots and an ans"er1ng ma hine. • • • rt\1dcnt reponcd that scvet11 people pthel"M 1ns1d a bumed out home otT an allev at Oh'e "'enue bctt"ccn 1th and tb t~ts and po 1bl) were deahna dn.aas • • • .\ v.oman \ltd he.tr hu band v.a chmu\a pna member$ an the area of Comv...r.i rid Ke-ws1ck v.ho 1llqtdl had their son under their 1ntlutn« anJ v.ett iaununa tht r1m1I • • • • Coetall .. ~ ; ytar-old l\naht1m man rt- PoftN M Pt(kid up a woman at a r Costa Mesa Winchells bccau~ sht' told him the> could "do some pla~ m@. in the park.'' When the) gC>t to Manna \ 1e>w Falls. though, a knife-"e1ld1ng man apparent!) a fnend of 1ht' "oman·s. robbed him t:>fS 5 • • • ~ 61-,car-old transient "as ar· rested for allegedly stealing s~oo "onh of ~•dt"O:pme ca~nes from Sears an South Coast Plaza. The man alleged!) told pohce he was going to SC'll the tape .. to "'hoe, er ~ould bu) 1hem:· so he could bu) heroin Ht>'t. ~n using the drug for mort than 4(l \ea~. ht' said. " Newport Beach .\ ponable telephone. a bracelet and a ,aog -together v.onh an e llmat•Sl.950 -~ere reported s1olen unda) from a Lido Sands Dme home The 1h1cf apparent!) hft.ai a sh<itnL glass door from its tmck to enter 1he residence • • • .\ Clanon stereo valued at S 1.000 '"a~ reponed 'ltolt'n unda)-from a sil,cr 1 Q82 ab QOOT parked at a Campus D!:'\e re taut1nl • • •• o\ ewport Beach doctor dmin& unda} night at the V10a Nova restaurant returned to has car and • found It had been broken into and a medical bag stolen The bag con- 1a1ncd medical tools and supplies. The loss was es11mated at $710. The ~hue IQ ~ 4.ud1 ·ooos had been par~ed b' 'a lets. LagUna Beach Pohcc arrtsted two men earl)' \londa' on susp1c1on of lewd con.- du t ~pprehended at about l 2:4S a m at Brooks Strrct beach were 'tc\.cn Robert Chase. 21. of ~na Point. an~ Dominic._ Corradino. 21. of El Toro • • • \ pov.er ~tretcher '1llued at S400 ~• reponed stolen Monda)' from a 19 5 Ford van par~ed on Bluebird Can)on Road • • • Pohce arrtSled Michael Aqust Russo. 4?. of No" York. on s"spic1on of dnvana under the inOutntt of alcohol. Russo was stopped at 2 a m. Monda at El Toro and U,una an)'C>n road Drug tests ordered at nuke plant 8 nt Astociatt4 Prat · t«unl) aru or the n Oeoh Nudnr ~''"' 5'1\.oe ••mc Wo~en at the San Onofrc nudear ~ubj«l to unannounced drill~ po•tt plant arc nov. ub;«t to Mondi). randOm drua testing ancr drut para~ lJndcr nt• rules;~ 9'o phcmaha -.a found at the ptant. fttl a tet'oed ~ teM • •= rompan) offic'lll q1d. toemmtd"•cdtSmi..a. Ptn~..,_a R0temcad-b1ucd Southern (;ah-t~rd fadcid tat WM req; 1 I,.. _. fom1a Edtton jald that -orkers an dtsma I • I~ Bush, Dukakis cast their votes, wait for results By T1te A11oclated Pre11 George Bush and Michael Dukakis joined millions of other Americans at the polls today at the end of their long presidential camP'ian. Bush said, -1 feel nervous," though pre-election surveys showed him leading. Dukakis predicted a surprise victory. Republican Bush and his wife. Barbara, voted in Houston shortly after sunup. ''Every time I vote here I feel nervous." he told r~rters. "No predictions,· he replied when asked about the outcome. After two days of non-stop cam- paigning, including j>re-dawn stops today in Iowa and ~1chigan, Demo- crat Dukakas returned to Boston. ··1 think tonight we're not only going to surprise a few people, but we're goanf, to be doing the cel- ebrating,.. 'e told supporters who welcomed him at the airport. "I voted for Mike DukaJtis and Lloyd Bentsen and I'm proud of it, .. he said after casting his ballot later. along with wife Kitty, daughters Andrea and Kara and son John. "I come away from all of this even more optimistic about the future of this great country of ours than when I started," a sleepless Dukak1s had told 3.000 supporters who turned out for a 3 a.m. rally 1n sub-freezing weather in Des Moines. Iowa. "Our spirits are bright. the future looks good. We're grateful to all of you," he told several hundred people who stood an the rain in Detroit. Initial reports from around the country were of a hea' y earl} turnout of voters. In.Georgia. North Carolina. Rhode Island and Tennessee. elec- tions officials said early tu;nout was heavier than normal. Bush's rvnning mate, Dan Quayle, made no secret of his. choice after voting in his home town of Hunt· ington, Ind. "Well, we got one sure vote," Quayle said. "Two ... chimed in his wife, Marilyn. who accompanied him. Bentsen, the Democratic vice presidential nominee, was in his home state of Texas although he had iJsed an absentee ballot to cast his vote early. Jn th~ presidential race. the polls offered encouraging news to Bush, with all indicating his lead had stabilized after o;mowing somewhat over the weekend. A CBS News poll said Bush's lead had increased to nine points after narrowing to six during the weekend. A Harris poll that said Dukakis had clo$Cd the gap to four points said that movement halted Monday. A new Gallup poll said Bush had an I I-point lead that was holding steady. The poll, which had reported 20 percent undecided, said that figure had dropped to 5 percent. With pollsters still finding millions of voters claiming 'they hadn't made up their minds, Blish and Dukakis made final-hour appeals for suppon on television Monday night. "I cannot predict all of the challenges America will face an the years ahead," Bush said at the conclusion of a JO.minute telev1s1on commercial broadcast on the three major networks. "I can tell you what rrinciples will guide me, what values hold dear and l can say that I believe .Preeldent Rea&an al•ee a thamb9 up Monday In San Dl~o at hla lut campaign rally u presiden t. I have the experience to be a steady hand guiding our country." He described Dukakis as someone with "no experience in national security affairs ... The Democrauc nominee's 30- minute appeal was on the networks immediately preceding the Bush, broadcast. In his broadcast. Dukakis spoke of famiry. JObs, S(WIOr ~tl~· ens. hunger and ?a(me~ and answere questions on issues that have do ed him. including has record on rime, his military pohcy and has reluctance to respond to the negative attacks. Dukakis also charged anew that the Republicans would try to balance the budget by cutting Social Security, and he· called Bush's proposal to reduce capital gains taxes "a new S40 billion. five-year capital pins tax giveaway for the very rich.' Dixville Notch backs Bush, 84 w8 D IXVILLE NOTCH. N.H. (AP) -Residents of D1xv1lle Notch followed tradition by becoming the first voters of the 1988 pres1dent1al elecuon today and favored Republican George Bush over Democrat Michael Dukak1s by 34-3. The town's 28 registered Republicans. sax Democrat!> and four independents came out in snowy. windy weather to carry on the tradition of casting the nation's first votc'i just after m1dn.1dll. One voter broke with the nominees and wrote in GOP Rep. Jack Kemp of New York. Town oflicaals tallied the -;.e~ults immediately after the last ballot was placed an the box in a room at the Balsams resort. Located in extreme northern New Hampshire. D1xv1 lle Notch incorporated only for the purposes of vottng and has been casting the first ballots since the early 19 70s. More often than not. Dixville Notch has not been a bellwether for the nation. although the town voted 29-1 for Ronald Reagan over Walter Mondale in 1984. Clean needle program for NY addicts draws 2 takers NEW YORK (AP) -Only two conveyor of acquired immune defi- ecople received free needles on the ciency syndrome to heterosexuals. first day of a proaram for drua addicts The program has drawn opposiiion that seeks to stem the spread of AIDS, from the etty's top poll~e official and but an official declared the nation's some black and Hispanic leaders, first aovemment needle aiveaway ~ho say giving out rf¢edles en- ••an enormous success." · courages drug abuse. Dr. Stephen Joseph. the city's "It's genocide, pure and 'Simple," health commissioner, said he antici-said City Councilman Hilton Clark of pated a slow stan for the experiment, Harlem. • '!lhich calls for participation b)' 400 of . But Joseph contended ·the black the city's estimated 200,000 drug community is bearins. the brunt of the addicts. AIDS crisis. ''The laves that can be The experiment is an attempt to saved if this program works are the learn whether aiving intravenous lives Qf black women and babies" dru& users clean needles will limit The two men who rectived needles needle-sharing among addicts. AIDS and syringes Monday had to find can be spread through the u5c of their way to a small unmarked room contaminated needles, and health at the city's Health Dcpanment. oflkials say drug abusers arc a majd'r Other sites had been pl~nned but .-! .. abandoned because of ne1ahboth00d complaints. "I rhink the enormous success of today is that the program aot off the ground at all,:' said Joser.h. "Nobody stopped us from doina i ." The program· is the-first such government-sponsored protram in , the nation, -1though similar ones 'haveoperated1n Europe-. Boston Mayor Rarmond Flynn had backed a proposa similar to the New York program. but it was rejected by the Boston City Council earlier this year. A pilot prosram in Portland, Ore., has been delayed until next month. In Tacoma, Wash., a private individual has been distribut· ins needles with help from the healLh department. · HoDJ.eless won'tgain by election Outer shelf oil i n come taxable, court declares WASH I NGTON (AP) Proposals for more federal aid for America's homeless arc likely to fare poortr next year. no matter,who wins today s presidential election, says a leading activist for the homeless. "It's going to be a long fi&ht," said Mitch Snyder, head of the Center for Creative Non-Violence. "America's politicians haven't shown much con- cern about the homeless." But Snyder was more critical of Vice President Geofge Bush, the Republican candidate. than Demo- cratic candidate Michael Duk.akis. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Su- preme Court ruled unanimously today that states may tax some income from oil and natural gas extracted from the Outer Continental Shelf. The justices upheld an Iowa tax, c hallenged by Shell Oil Co .. that as imposed on that portion of a com· pany's i~come derived from doing business an Iowa. Justice Thurgood Marshall, writing for the court, said the state le vy does not violate a 1953 federal law authorizing exploration and pro- duction of Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas. . "We reiect Shell's argument that Congress intcnded .... to prohibit the inclusion, in a constitutionally per· missible appprtionment formula, of income from Outer Contintental Shelf oil and g.as," Marshall said. He said the law only prohibits a state adjacent to such offshore land from taxing that land directly. Nothing in the law bans a state from imposing a tax such as Iowa's limited to that portion of a company's income derived from selling Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas within that state. · The Outer Continental Shelf is underwater land more than three miles off the shore of any state. The land is owned by the federal govern- ment and leased to private com- panies. "We've already seen whatBush can do during the eight years of the Reagan administration." Snyder said. ··1 think thin~ will be: ~~~s~~~r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I underf>u·~~·r.""---~ - Snyder's comments Monday cam~~1 id kill all hi ~ 3,77 people. w~re arrtsted ,at the ~or a er_c smself_ Capitol, capping a long series o prtt~t~~~~~z~:nsSlgf~-26, and 'sacrificial lamb, t executed 239 people had been arrested before Monday's big demonstration. Most By Tiie Associated Preu -of them had been charged with STARKE Fl · · · · unlawful entry. . a. -A quadruple k1ll~r called ham~lf"a .sacnfic1al lamb" of About 2 000 ople took part in a · t~e le~I system as he. was executed in the electric chair for murdering a m.arch and a ro..minute rally that · hitchhiker 13 years ago an a robbery that netted S 12 and a watch. Jeffrey Joseph preceded Monday's arrests. . Daughtery. 33, ~a~ ~xecute~ Monday for the ~ea th of o~e of four women he was co~va~ted 01 k1lhng dunng a threc~week cnme spree an two states. He was Woman forced to aid hijack gets six months the nations ~ond persos:i .executed. an five days and 103rd since the U.S. Supreme Courts 1976 decision allowing states to resume executions. Florida has put to death 19 peopl.e since it resumed executions in 1979. In a final statement, Daugherty crat1c1zed the legal system and told fellow death row 1nmates to keep their hope ahve. Suspended teacher assalls dress code UNIONDALE. N 'i (AP) -A woman who said her former husband terronzed her into help1n~ him h1Jack a Jetliner to Cuba nearly -0 years ago thanked the judge who senrenced her to six months an Jail. Linda Joyce Gnnage. 39. will ha"e to serve only 32 more days because she was credited with time served at the Metropolitan Correctional Center an New York. After her release she will be on probauon for flve years. "J think you earned 11," U.S D1s1nct Court Judge Jacob Mishler said of her sentence. ··1 hope you prove 1t." Gnnage had been living in the Albany area for about JO years under the name Haz1ine Eytina. w1th her second husband, M ylo Eyttna. and fivech1ldrcn. She was arrested an July after the FBI received an anonymous tap. suflered greatly." she told the judge. "I've been forced to abandon my two children by my first marriage and I've been forced to hve a doubfe life with my husband and five children. 'Tm now an honest. hard-working woman.·· Gnnage. a preschool aide the past five years, pleaded guilty to a charge of interfenng walh the crew of a Miami-bound Eastern Airlines jet from New York. She could have been sentenced to a maximum 20 years in pnson and a SI 0,000 fine for the plea. Charges of air piracy and inter- ference with a flight crew with a deadly weapon, for which she could have been sentenced to life in prison, were dropped. POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.-A blueJean-weanngteachersuspended for not weanng a tac to class says a dress code compromise that bans dungarees "sounds lilcr a sttnkang deal.'' Sup..nntendent Charles Chambers offered the compromise. which would allow math teacher '6ilJ Webb to return Lo work without a tte, Monday. Webb said he has not worn a tie to class in at least IS of his 20 years as an educator. Chambers. who has suspended the 46-year-old teacher th~ce tames th1~ school year for .not wearing a tie, said Webb faces charges of ahsubordanataon and could be d1sm1sscd if he won't agree to the dress code changes. • "Over the last 20 years, I have She admitted helping her first husband. Tyrone Ellington :i\ustin, hij~ck the plane on Jan. 2. 1969, by taking. a 2-year-old boy hostage at gunpoint. -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 lnatea~lpleaforlen~ncy~hu sentencing Monday, Grinage ex- pressed remorse. "I realize I endangered the lives of innocent people and I frightened them," she said. Controller blamed for Chlcag.o near min · CHICAGO -A Japan Air Lines Boeing 747 came• within a mile h<?rizontally of~ Unite~ Airlines 737.shonl}' after both planes took off from 0 Hare International Airport. and federal officials blamed a controller for the tif.it squeeze. The mistake Saturday was the 32nd error by. a controller at 0 H!ire this year, the Federal Aviation Administration said. The planes took off samuhaneously from parallel runways, the FAA said Monday. Because of low cloud cover that diminished visibility. the controller should have staggered the takeoffs. the FAA said. The controller also failed to give one of the planes order to tum in time to maintain adequate separation. ~ '}4fJMite4, at Z'~6 Alaskan Bay Shrimp Salad • gorilc IOOlt · mi.ud greens, boy sllrimp, croutons & bacon bits • '(04X choa of OUf home mode IOlod dresalng ASK ABOUT OUR DINNER SPECIAL S 12. 95 Jenny Is Back at the Oyster Bar! 11:30 -3:30 Monday -Saturday ALL CHOICES 93.95 Jlo$k vour food ser lier ot>out these specials Fish & Chips Baske t Served with Delaney's homemade tarter sauce, green solod or CUP Of our own clam chowder. .. Locadon1: Newpol1 Beach Dena Poir1I ~~- Tureen of Delaney's famous clam chowder. and 1/2 sandwich. -112 sandwich of vour choice -Manhattan or New England chowder The child, his mother and the other 146 people on board were freed unharmed when jetliner landed in Havana. ~~tie &taw~ ~'t4t~21- 619-5245 e...u.,. ~ •• le.'" SRflla ~I--"'•'" • t 0renge CoMt DAJLY PILOTITueedey. ~ 8, 1 ... I r Boy's fear prevents MCMartin testimony Chfnaqaalce Israeli court hits overcrQwded ·==~ie conditions at tent prison camp BEIJING (AP)_ Military rescue JERUSALEM (AP)-Israel's Su-peak of army sweeps durina the montb1 wnhout tnal. LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 7-year· old boy refused to testify in the McMartin preschool sexual abuse trial because he was afraid to face the mother and son cha~ with fl'IOlest- i"I him, accordiflg to court papers. released Monday. · Superior Court Judge William Pour\ders met privatc!Y last week with. the boy, identified only as Michael, whose accusation of child abuse sparked the notorious case five yean ago and ruled there was no way to make him take the witness stand. Defendants Raymond BUckey, 30, and his 61-year-old mother Peggy McMartin Buckey arc charged with 65 counts of child molestation and conspiracy allegedly committed at their now-closed Manhattan Beach school. ing and nodded in the affirmative preme Court cnticazed ti.e umy Palntinian uPf1Sin1 i• the occupied .. Nesauna hedom witbou• the when asked if there were eventsat the teams and doctors worked today to today for ovel'O'Owded conditions 1't West Bankand Gui Stnp. More than approval of a judicial autbority ia. .. .a McMartin preschool he d idn't want reach a remote and mountainous th"' K.etziot tent pn' son and fOf' fail~· n 300 PalC1t1Dia.ns ... d I J lsraehs have dilstic and seriou1 step which tbe la.w I southern l"CJIOn where the govern-" · • ..,... II J here there ial to ta k about. mcnt said Ptina's worst earthquake to expedite judicial review for l, d1ecl in the I I-month uprisina. a ows on fi w . are estettt When pressed Qn the subject~ in 12 years had. killed more than 900 dtta"ine6 jailed there withou1 trial. :rhc arm y had no official reaction and abso ute secunty conc:ems. .. Pounders said the child's "face dark-But the thnie-judlt panel rejected to the decision by the hiah coun. · He said about 28 percent of ened and his body became ri&id and ptople. 1 • • an appeal for release by 14 detaincn, But ·one military official said the administrative detentions have been he stHI didn't want to talk about it." c~·'J :Wfi~Yt~d a:h!heri~~_h1~i~f only five of whom arc still held. army was satisfied with the ruhna for oven urned on appeal, ,net vrted the Defense.. attorney Daniel Devis . 1 ~ C d h r · The coun up~ckt the army's ri&ht upholding the military's riabt to jail arm~ to en1Urc al>S)C!ls are beard asked tbe boy what 1he word "testify" ~~Ynftha:'~e d~th 0:01~r fr~~~ to imptjson .Palesti!'ians from t~ Pa.lcstinian ~etainces inside Israel. witJ?m three ~~· after jailinc to meant to him he said, "Well, it means • k h d occupied tcmtoncs in Israel despite The official. who spoke on con-avoid "cm>rs an JudiJnent and &c1 like it's so scary. Like if they're going days qua. c a reached 939: The Geneva conventions apinst trans-dition of anonymity also said over-whose sianifiance mean violaliaa a to do a lot of things .... like Rafcmond quake registered 7.6· on the Richter ferrina prisoners across borders. • crowding at Kctzoit had been relieved man's freedom withouta reasonable Buckev or Ii' kc hi·..-other cou d be in scale, indicating a temblor of trcmen-· A L 'd 1 SSS · h · A.-. · ed th · ...... .. ~ ~"' dous and dcvastatino strength . n umy spo .. eswoman ~! . . s1nce t c JU~~ v1s1t e camp an u-Sl~ ... court.• . • · . an mates were under adm1n1sttat1ve the summer. Has statement was seen as cnUCdm "It's my impression that Michael . H.owcvcr;. the m1Distry later denied detention in Ketziot, located in tht In a 45-page rulina. Chacf Juit'ice of Defense Minister Yitzbak Rabin. has something that occurred at the !SSuana the ugu~c. apparcr:ttly ~use Nc&ev Desert near the E&Yptian Meir Sbarnpr singled out Israel's who revoked a reaulation requirin&. preschool that he doesn't want to talk 11 • h~ been issued without per-border. sxstcm of administrative detentions. milif:IJY judp to review ca1e1 of about," Pounders told attomcysaf\cr mi~~ion. Other govcn:imtnt 0ffi~ ID This was a decline from about or jailing Palest1Dians suspected of adminutrative detention within 96 ·the meeting. · BeiJing and the affi icted provi~cc. 2 700 detentions without trial at the ant~brach actav1sm for up to six hours. . ' •• In defense testimony Monday, one Yunnan, refused to answer 9uest1ons • • • of five McMartin teachers originally about the quake, effectively imposing charged with child molestation who 8 news blackout. In transcripts released Monday. records show the boy flatly refused to testify several times during the meet- later had charges droftpcd said the Sun Shaochcng of the ministry's h l d 'd f I d · emergency rescue office said he could sc oo was evoi 0 a wrong OIDg. only confirm state-run radio's earlier report that more than 600 people were killed. Manson Family murderess Krenwinkel denied pa·role "The number 1s climbing," he said, adding that he had no new figures. Japan's Hirohito s urvives cri sis . TOKYO (AP) -' Emperor Hirohito's condition worsened today when his brood pressure plummeted and his temperature soared. but later the frail monafch showed a slight improvement, the Imperial House- hold Agency reported. Typhoon Skip kills 19 in- storrn~weary PhilippJnes By Tiie Associated Pre11 FRONTERA -For the seventh time in as many years, Manson Family member Patricia Krenwinkcl, convicted in the Sharon Tate-La Bianca murders. has been refused parole by the State Board of Prison Terms ... This ~of barbaric, violcn\_behavior has no equal," Commissioner Rudolph Caspro said Monday in announcinJ the board's decision. Throughout the two- hour hearina, Krenwinkel, 40. showed little emotion. staring out an adjacent window. The board deliberated 45 minutes before denying parole. Krenwinkcl, who was convicted in seven of the Charles Manson cult slayings, is eligible for parole in another year. The board commended K.renwinkcl for. good prison behavior, but recommended she participate in individual therapy. should it become available at the prison, and urged her to develop a job skill. A recent psychological evaluation found Krenwinkcl was no longer a threat to society. But the board called the report inconclusive and said K.rcnwinkcl required more rehabilitation. The S"te Seismology Bureau said there were 40 aftershocks in . the stricken sub-tropical area. the strong- est measuring 7.2. . The quake was centered in Yun- nan's heavily forested Lancang and Mcnglian counties, about 240 miles southwest of the provincial capital of Kunming and JUSt inside the border with Burma. Many of the casualties arc. believed to be from the Lahu minority, a Tibetan-Burmese hill people who arc mainly subsistence farmers and hunt· crs. They have Lheir own language and arc Buddhm . Yunnan, with a land area nearly as large as Cahfomia. has a population of more than }4 million. Lahusin the province number about 300,000. Lancang's population 1s about 30.000. Hirohno. 87. suffered what ap- peared to be his worst crisis si nce he fell ill Sept. l 9 with internal bleeding. His . temperature. no~ly 95._9 d~. soared to 102.2 ~s this afternoon .. But at 8:30 p.m., it had dr~ppcd to 99. l degrees, the agency 1d. MANILA (AP) -Typhoon Skip roared into the South Ch1Da Sea today after killing at least 19 people and forcing thousands to nee their homes in a nation still reeling from a storm that killed hundreds last month. Skip's c~ntcr passed about 100 miles south of Manila, sparing the capital from the high winds and. flooding that Typhoon Ruby brought two weeks &JO. But officials said Skip triggered tornadoes., landslides and widespread flooding across pan of the country's mrctsect1on known as the "typhoon belt" -the central Visayas islands and the Blcol island. r Peninsula of Luzon The government weather service said that at mid-morning Skip was about I SO miles southwest of Manila. Maximum sustained winds. docked at I 08 mph when Skip hit the islands ~onday,weakenedtodaytoabout93 mph as the storm crossed the Visayas, the weather service said. Repons of~ and casualties from Typhoon Skip were sketchy because of poor communications to the a tTectcd areas. Telephone operators in Manila said aJI lines to Leytc were down. · His blood pressure remained dangerously low, at 76 over 40. In the morning it had been I 20 over 60 but dropped to 68 over 30.t a level that can li~~~~~~~~~~~~~&iiiiiiiiiiii&i!ii~~~~!!!lil cause brain damage 11 not raised. R ' G d Agency spokesman Kcnji Maeda oger S ar eOS said Hirohito rema1Ded conscious "Chr · F J 988'' but had continued to discharge blood. lStmas antasy • --Boys-sl&l n ln Tusthl-bvr1ed-la-W1sconsm BLOOMER. Wis. -Two boys who were killed by their foster father in tw·~~l!ll!l~~~~~l![ll!~·~""•l!!!!!!llll~"lll•llllll•• Rooms-of-dceorat~-fn"~~~~~~~~~--1--~~..:.'I Q1ifomia were une<i ID he city ceme cry a oomcr. w ere ffie1r natural THINKING ITA L IAN TONIGHT mother resides. "Our ways arc not always God's ways." the Rev. Eldon Carlson • -9maments from around the world .. . Roger's-made decorating accents. .. . said Monday durin& the funeral service for the boys. Authorities said William .f. Barr. 11 . and Frank R. Balistcreri.. 8, were slain Oct. 24 by Leon Huffman. 60, who also killed his 86-year-old mother before he shot himself to death at his home in Tustin. Huffman and his wife. Betty, had become legal guardians for the youngsters in 1984. Dial-a-porn company fined $50,000 Try the homemadt.' lasagna cannelloni man1cott1 or any of the tritdlhonal pastas Also Linguine al Fruto Del 11.\ar • Fe1tucc1ne al Pesto • Shells Marcello and many more If >Ou like veal • seafood • poultry we offer a latt e selection. too 0 1 ~ourse 11.e have homemade pizza SPECI .A,L DINNERS FOR ONLY S7 65 I 7SOZ &ad Bhd. (et f,/•trr) Hu~~ • (714, S-#t-5505 ''Enchanted .candlelit Walle" nightly ... NEW 'RT BEACH San Joaquin Hills Road (at McAnhur) ---Hours: 9 am to 9 pm Daily (714) 640-5800 WASHINGTON -Federal regulators say a SS0.000 fine imposed on a California .. dial-a-porn" company should demonstrate to other such operators that they must keep their material inaccessible to minors. Audio Enterprises Inc., of Mill Valley, Calif .• and operator Wendy King agreed to the fine and to stop using interstate telephone lines to transmit obscene messages. It was one of the first dial-a-pom fines imposed-by-thc.-F~CAI Communications Commissio(l ... The $50.000 payment that tllc dial-a-porn operator will have to pay to the government ... shows that there will be a high price attached to failure to obey the law scrupulously in this important area." Gerald Brock. head of the fCC s common earner bureau. said Monday. ·'This sends a signal there arc --..:.-~-------------_..;.--------......&...--------'------------------­ some teeth in the law." FCC officials said Audio Enterprises 1s cfTccuvely out of businC1s.. There was no current li sting for the company in telephone information. To resume operations. King or Audio Enterprises must tone down the messages and use access codes. credit cards or scrambling cqu&prtlent to prevent children under 18 from dialing. Such operations will be monitored by the FCC. according to the agreement. • .. . Too Lit t le? Too Much? Don't be misled by discounts, deals. sales and give· aways. ,, The common law of business sa ys it best -it is unwise to pay too much. but It is worse to pay too little. If you pay too much, you lose a little money and that is all. When you pay too little, you sometimes lose every· thing because the product you bought was incapable of doing what It was purchased to do. You can't pay a little and get a lot. CUH O,. O••"'l••CS • LIClHSf 'IO 1>04n DEN'S 1663 Pfn~ntla St. Costa Mesa 646-4838 •.Initial rate for 5 years • Converts to a 30- year fixed rate at no cost • Purchase or refl to $1,000,000 No Income Quallflera Rate L:oc~• Available 'CALL DAVE LOYST (714) 253-3483 WESTGATE MORTGAGE 11'7U 118cArthur lllYd., lnlne • ii .,.._,CAL.UU'99 OFFERS. •• % • Current Rate* Annual Yield PREM CHECKING • RJNDS FSLIC INSURED FOR SAFETY • FARN A PREMIUM RATE WITH COMPLETE LIQUIDITY · AT ANY TIME •A MINIMUM BALANCE OF ONLY $10,000 AND YOU MAY DEPOSIT AS MUCH AS $99,999. •PREMIUM CHECKING AVAILABLE AT MORE TIIAN 185 LOCATIONS nlROUGHOUf CAUFORNlA . . . •NO PENALTY R)R FARLY \VITHDRAWAL! YOUR FUNDS ARE AVAILABLE WHEN YOU NEED 11'ffiM IF YOU HAVE ANY QUFSrIONS REGARDING AMERICAN SAVINGS WE WELCOME YOUR CAIL. . 1-800-247-7197 • Monday -Frida> 8 a.m. to 5 p.n1 .• aturda) 8 a.n1 . to noon .... •Certain restrictions apply. • nu. ,.~ \t Offered lor a lim.ited tune only and 11 aibject to chanft without notitt.. 1'bP raw tii1I ~ 11 t.ht ba1aNf. di'Opl bfOt $10,000 A.amaiU Jilld beltd on monthly eompnomdant when &tt~ • W\ en difpO.t ror aat-,-r ...,.. • AMERI NSAVI A FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOOIATION r f - lllllyPllat I SPONshould clean house at Newport 2000 Late tonight Newport Beach residents will find out how much of the mud slung during the last week of the Newpoi:t City Council race stuck on Mayor John Cox and counctl candidate Ralph Rbd.heim. · • It is also possible contributors to Newport .2000, the . organization that launctied the mud-slinging campaign, will wake up Wednesday to find its efforts backfired. _ Some observers speculate that the direct-mail hit pieces- will cost the three City Council candidates backed by Newport 2000 some support at the polls. The candidates. Paul Ryckoff. Jean Watt and Geneva ~dock tried to distance themselves from the controversy on Friday by repudiating Newport 2000's ~mpaign tactics and disavowing any connection with the mailers. The campaign took an ugl y turn with the "Feces on the Bay" mailer bui sank even lower last week with a mailer that called Cox a liar and a con man. / Authors of the brochure wrote that Cox lied on financial disclosure statements by listing him~elf as pre~i~ent, chief executive officer and a stockholder m a telev1s1on broad- casting company called POSTV Inc. They claimed the firm was not listed with the secretary of state's office and checks' of the county's Doing Business As file. and other sources showed no record of the firm. The message between the mean-spirted lines was that the company did not exist. Newport 2000's dirty-campaign merchants were wrong. Cox explained, and we confirmed, that POSTV Inc. i~ n<?t listed on local, county or state records because 1t ·IS incorporated in Delaware. · Before the air had cleared. another mailer was on its way to mailboxes in New.P<?rt Beach. · This-time the hit piece was 01recteoat Ralph R'oohe1m , another candidate opposed by Newport 2000. , The mailer claimed Rodheim lied on financial disclosure statements and alleged he was being paid for charitable fund- raising efforts. The mailer asked ifRodheim was being paid for his work as chairman of the Marian Bergeson Aquatic Center, whether some of those funds came from Newport Beach taxpayers and whether he was paid for his fund-raising efforts at UCI and Orange Coast College. Outraged community leaders including State Sen. Marian Bergeson and representativess from the Swim for the Gold Committee for the Marian Bergeson Aquatic Center, the UCI Athletic Foundation and the Orange Coast College Foundation denied the allegations and condemned Newport 2000 for its campaign tactics. There is no other way to describe Newport 2000's direct- mail hit pieces thanpolitics at its dirtiest. That's unfortunate because Newport 2000 has many onorable and concerned NewponBeacl'i ,...~ donors' list. But the damage won't stop at a smudge on Newport 2000's reputation. Newport 2000 is a political offshoot of SPON, an organization rhat has been a thorn in the side of the current and past city councils. SPON has served a useful role in city government as a watchdog agency fo r the environmental and civic concerns of many local residents. But SPON's good reputation is also clouded by the sleazy campaign tactics of Newport 2000. SPON's movers and shakers. which have included both Ryckoff and Watt, have often preached the importance of fairness and accountability in government. We think the same principals should be applied to SPON's political relative. The movers and shakers in SPON who helped bring Newport 2000 into bei_ng should re-examine their priorities and demand a thorough housecleaning. Gun control Sixteen-year-old Jason Ivy will stand trial for shooting his stepsister with a .22-caliber pistol that his father kept under the mattress in his bedroom. Apparently Jason got hopped up on heavy metal music and just decided to act out some of the fantasy that was spinning in his head. A handgun was handy, so he used it .... When will we wake up and realize the horrible mistake in allowing _people to keep these small, easily concealed handguns .... We ought to ban these small handguns and give police full search and seizure powers to confiscate them. Seizing handguns would be infinitely more beneficial to society than seizing mariJuana plants. Where 1s our leadership on this issue? Cdlombla (Mo.) Dally TrJbaae (. Trade restrictions The American consumer won a victory with President Reagan's veto of a bill that would limit textile and shoe imports. Trade restrittions hurt American consumers far more than they help the protected industries because they invite retaliatory countermeasures from other countries. They allow uncompetitive industries to maintain a sheltered existence and force consumers to pay more for the products these industries produce thari if the products had to compete with others from throughout the world. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Rosemary Ctuchman Pubhsher ~ ._., dey ~the .... , .. 330 * Jeif II , Cotta ...... CA Adck ... -•lllll*ldilllOa to 8o• 1&eo. Cotta ...._CAtMM • Palm Bead (Fla.) Pou T•hft l4'tor °"' ,.., Auociate EdllOf ,.a. Nm [drtOI MM .... City (dllOf •c.... 5'ofb £.dltor s.. ..... rtllwtstdrtor. en .... e....£*°f ....... Acl""ISJlll Owector "" ..... ii.1 ... ~~ ,.., ... Classihtd AMtllSlftl ~ ,, ...... COftttoltt Cl')'lll ....... ktlllmllftca .... , ..... Cit~ lllrtctot _,,... ,....... .. ,, Random obsedations on the ins and outs of Campaign '88 • '. Lf r 1 l R ·) ... _._ . -_ --~ --- Euthanasia p olicy at LB shelter questioned To the Editor: This letter is to enlipten those of Su wbo have followed the sap of the una Beach Animal Shelter and its e -meaning, but uninformed, vol- unteerf. . . First of all, rve never beheved that tbings back in 1978 were areat The city" had a contract with lt\'ine to .handfe our animals, doubling the amount of abimals aJ their shelter. Then. lifquards were put in charge of the program, an~ they were totally• ·• unprepared for the JOb. There was no money and we volunteers worked 30 hours a week at the shelter. We al\o work~ at home, on the phone, filled our yards and garqes with dogs and c•ts to save their lives and did politicking at City Hall .to accomplish success at unbelievable odds. Alex Wentzel, who has been so vocal about the issue, wasn't even around in those days, so really ean't relate to them at all. Ms. Milne was around, as a tee n- ager, and has chosen to do a· total aboutface in her beliefs 1tnd stories. I have no problem with the care of the animals at the shelter or the beautiful place that it has become. J do have a problem with theheavyrJte of euthanasia and the vague cnteria used by to administer it. City statistics show that over Democrats overlooked demographic changes in United States, Califl!rnia euthanasia was used to dispose of SOO DAN unclai med dogs in 1987 and 478 on cats in the same time period. The report was from Deputy Chief Jim SACRAME~TO -A few finaJ, Belt states and the breakup of the old WALTER Spreine to Chief Neil Purcell. dated and complete!_ ra~~om, thoughts .. solid South·• have given the Re-Jul l 8. a u e pohucal catr'i1".lf""·11;,..ns...-..... pu""b ..... 1tcans. even wi1h a' les -ne mon ago. calrca ~tne ro that staggered to a close Monday; pcrfecl candidate such as Bush, a base ' an update on euthanasia figures. for • MiChael Dukakis' strategic mis-of presidential electoral votes that . . . . . July. August and September of J 988 calculation abOut the American pol-approaches 200 and makes it nearly rapidly d!vers1fying populau_on such and was told that be would get them itical situation was monumental, impossible for a N'orthem liberal -as education and tran.sponat1on. for me and that it would be the last especially in light of his own oft-.the species most likely to be nomi-But g~rrymandered seats.l~ve few time he would do it. proclaimed managerial competence. natcd -to be elected. of the d~stnc.\s truly compet!t1:ve. And 1 have never received those figures. In declaring. as he did in his The Democrats' problem will the Cahfom1a state Capitol s mte~al l do believe that infotmation such as nomination acceptance speech. that worsen after this election. The 1990 po-.yer struggles. ~ther ~an p~bhc-this should be available to the public the election was about competence census should result in at least a pol.icy.::oncems, d_nve tl:\e ~ntensity of upon request, particularly to a group and not ideology. he was trying to dozen more congressional seats for lei1slattve camp~ugn~ .. which tend to that subsidized the Animal Shelter position himself in the electable the Republican-voting Sun Belt revolve about tnv1a~1~1es. -since 1975. middle. but he conceded the arena of states. and therefore that many more 1!1 -terms of ~bu.cs, as well ~s The reality of the whole sad values to an underdog George Bush. electoral votes for them. policy .. the Cat.1fOf!11a state Leg1s-situation is still and only thequC$tion Bush seized upon that to define • California Democrats have been lature 1s becoming irrelevant t9 ~he of a change in philosophy . on American val ues in his way -as using the Reagan rationalization even nee~s a~d concerns of 28 m1lhon enthanasla and attitude at the Laguna simplistic and imlevant as they may longer than those at the national level. Cahfom1ans.. . . . . Beach Animal Shelter. have been -and CilSt Dukakis in the They are in danger of becomin'-the • T~at leg1slat1ve .d1sc<?nnect1on 1s I wish the program well and have worst possible light. It worked state's minority pC\ny if they don t get the maJorreason Cahf9m1a. voters~re completed my panicipation in it. brilliantly, as Dukakis and his Ken· off the dime, because they face the compelled to choose in this elcct1on GEN McMENOMY nedy School of Government expens same kinds of demographic trends from among dozens o.f ballot Laguna Beach -were paralyzedby-ind~w that arc htt fti.ng.-the-pefly-ftattooal.,.ly ..... -im-e&ttSSttres. several ef wh1eh we~ -~ 10 respond. California's own Sun Belt -cou n-directly competitive with one Bush rc-eneTgized the Republican-ties on the suburban fri nges -is another. conservative Democrat coalition that expanding rapidly and providing The Legislature, not voters. should has given Republicans four of the past armies of new voters to the Re-be making decisions on such matters six presidential elections. In the end. publican Pai:ty. Democrats must as auto-insurance reform. When it the man who pre~ched the politics of move in one of two dire<:tions if they works, the legislative process takes competence was undone by his own are to survive: either to the right, the competing claims and proposals incompetence. . challenging the GOP's increasing and massages them into something • Ronald Reagan has been a con-hold on crime-and tax-<:onscious reasonable and workable. But when venient excuse for the Democrats to white suburbs. or to the left. organiz-the process falters. voters are given avoid facing the crisis in their own ing the millions of potentjaJ voters take-it-or-leave-it measures . party. When Jtcagan disappeared. the among the state's Asian and Hispanic Given the multibtlhon-dollar Democrats said, so would their newcomers by identifying with their financial stakes involved. it's in- problems. hopes for upward mobility. To date, evitable that the campaigns for these Given Bush's relative weaknesses the Democrats have done neither, measures draw tens of millions of as a candidate, it's clear that the and have suffered the consequences. dollars. Democrats' problem isn't Reagan . "''•State legislative ca mpaigns It's a vicious circle that can lead but the fact that the political main- should be a rough referendum on how only .to greater levels of inanity in the stream has moved a few notches-to the Legislature has_ dealt with the poht1cal process. the right in the last quarter-<:entUry. issues of the day, especially those Du WaJtrn 11 • 1yadlc•lff The shift of population to the Sun generated by a fast-growing and coltumd1&. New council sho_uldguard against repeating mistakes . For weeks I have been res1stm& ihe ahead on the bridee. urge to become a dueling columnist. Can you imagine what our~'ty but when you read this ¥OU will have would be like if we didn•t have he probably already voted. What I write upper '.bay bridge? I'll bet you n't now will affect onlr what happens even remember what life was like after the new counci is seated. with our ancient bottleneck. George Santayana said it best. Anothersubtledismantlingjobwas "Those who cannot remember the done on the upper bay itself. When · past are condemned to repeat it." the Rykoff council assumed power JACKIE HEATHER Ten years ago · the thrust of the the upper bay ranked just behind Newport City Council majority Tahoe as the state's pnmary water changed. Paul R,Ykoff' was elected concern. A joint-powers agency was they are fair. Debate in this city must mayor. Flushed with victory, the new in place to study arrd take action. be public. Shadow governments will council hastened to ovenurn many The city' pulled out of the asency not be tolerated. · long-standing city precepts. which had the effect of destroy1na it. 1 hope whoever wins has a clear I was first elected to the council at The state \Valer Board began to get a mandate. There arc too many critical this time. Don Mcinnis and J found flood of letters urging t.hat no money areas that need attention now. ourselves at the short end of the stick. be spent on the Upper Bay. Roads can be improved if we work • You probably don't remember this These letter writen said The Irvine together. If we want a b)'l>Us around aspoignantlyasldo,butthedayuhat Co. was responsible for the bey's the city (Pelican HiU Road) we're followed seemed ·to me to be a condition,anditaloneshould~y for JOingtohavetogiveupsomethingfor panjcularly mcan·spirited. the restoration. , 1t. Because I was not given any lfthecity had succeeded in abrosat-Jntel'1CClions can work more effi- committee assignments, I decided to ing leadenhip in the upper bay , ciently. Instead of spending all our keep watch on the prosrcss1 of the cleanup, we would have a solid mud ene11Y countin1 cars we should bring upper bay bridse. flat there now. si~lization into state-of-the-an op.. M_y sources in thestate Oepanmenl Ask former mayor Doreen eration. Tht cilies around us have of Transportation alerted me to a Manhall and Sen. Marian Beraeson done this. Why have we resisted diswrbins tum of events. • the lengths they had to So to to help modernization so? The del>ertmenl was being bar-&ct the city back on track 1f\cr the We can't relax in our' watchdoa ~ w,i.tll letten from Newport RyltofT regime was no lon&cr in attention to the airport. Now is the Beach, many of them anonymoµs. power. lime to ~umine the operation statins that the city no ton~r needed Did you act a mailer in this election becasue tbe airlines have ch1nled or wanted the upper bay bridle. Oov. · with the headline, "feces on the since lhc airpon aareemcnt was Jerry Brown and his teeretary of Bay?" What a joke. If the RykofT sianetf. ~h new operator needs to be transpohation, Adriaqna Oianturco. council had their way t~e Bia Canyon r e-educated on the proper wekOmed this supl)Oled chanac or aravity·flow sewer line never would prQCedures. The Airport Com .. heart. have been built. Talk about feces on mission needs more power to deal At my own expense, I ~ttoan the . the bay! Ten yean aao thac critical with errant pilots. Caltrans meetinp. I went with my sewer line was seven timci over The coun~ will be awardina "p.tc ~one book add rater with a criMCross desian capecit,y. • positions." This is an imponant time d1.~tory t<? sh~w that no person 1'.'he.mentahtyofthosew.howan~cd to levefHe Mmplianc:ie. We cannot wdhns to IJV~ his or her ~J name to hmn ~wth was to stop 1mprovm1 ~fford complacency at this critical wu tM:tvocallftl abudo~~ con· ~ bridees and ~n in the 1uncture. ., stn1c:tion of the upper ~Y ~· mistaken notion that It would keep Finally. dU$t off the cijy's di1a1ter ~ uie4 ~ aet tbecounc:ll to mnforee oeoole away. plan and drill, drill, drill. th11 pouuon, but I was not JUCCeMful. · :ro whatever powtr ArUcture is We are a di•Slet waitina 'to The bat I could do was keep the VK:'lorious in today's eleiction J have hag>en .. ~on track in tbe 11ai.e·• dovclop-. &has fn!IMIC: Newport v04Cn are Jdi.11,.,,_." •!ff,,,.., a.let ment plan. When I became mayor astute. Tbcj may periodicaJly feel the ,...,., Mtl • t.,..; .. ~ "' ,.., t•o yean later, we moved full-tpeed playen need 10 be lhuflJed. Ho-ever. .~· .. • .Heritage Run a big success To the Editor: The second annual Newport Harbor High School PTA's Harbor Heritage Run held on Oct. IS was again a huge success. I would like to tnank all die many wonderful volun- teers -the parents, students. admin- istrators. faculty, staff, and the com-munity -who helped by contribut- ing energy, enthusiasm, (lnd countless hours of their time. By joining t().Jether we were able to raise nearly $30.000 to help the various academic and booster pro- grams at the school. The spirit that is generated by the supporters of this fund-raiser 1s truly an ex.ample of what cooperation can achieve. It also serves to underscore our community's commitment to excel- lence in education for our children. LINDA BORIS NHHS PTA President Newport Beach ,' Too Av IN H1sTORY Today is Tuesday, Nov. 8, the 31 Jth day of 1988. There arc S3 days left in the year. This is Election Day. Today's Hi&bli&ht in History: On Nov. 8. 1923. Adolf Hitler launched his tint attempt at seizin& power in Germany with a failed coui> in Munich that came to be known H the .. Beer·Hall Putsch." Hitler was imprisoned for high treason. On this date: In 1932, New York Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated in- cumbent Herben Hoover for the presiden_cy of the United States. In I 9SO, during the Korean War, the fintjet·plane battle took plaQe as U.S. Air Force Lieutenant Russell J. Brown shot down a Nonh Korean MiG·IS. In 1960, Massachusetts Senator John F. Kennedy . defeated Vice President Richard M. Nixon in their quest fnr the White House. In 1966, Edward W. Brooke of Massachusens became the first black 10 be elected to the U.S. Senate by popular vote. In l966, former · movie actor Ronald Reapn was elected s<>vemor of California. Jn 1980 the Voyater I apec:e orobe discovered the I Slh moon or Saturn while speedina io a renctuvous wit1a_ the rin~ planet. Birthda_11: Actras Katharine Hep- burn is 79 (some sources ">-' 81). Actms J11ne Hav9( it 72.. Ac:10f'o dfrector One Sib 1167. Sinea: Patti ~ is 61 . CM new1m1n Mor9eY Safer it S1. Actor Alaln Delon i1 SJ. Sinter Bonn~ Raitt is 39. Sa...- IC1or uifOanett is 27. Ill,., ...... ,,,.. ' , M uru~l FuNo s Oreng9 Colilt OAJLY PILOTITueedey, NoWmber 8, 1111 A7 OTC Ur ~ x. DowNs NYSE UPs & DowNs County home NEW YORK. tAPJ -The IOllOWlnt " b ct "'°., ,,.. tMW VOfk S•O<A EllCl\en9e uye .. a on tlocJtt end werrenh INI hew 90l'I uci & g Int t'l'IOSI •l'ld doWn ,,,. rnotl .beMO on r::c~ c~ reoardlfts Of -110l4,lme t I ling =*urYhe\ 1r.01119 11e1ow u .,. llK,.. gu & ee 8 Ntt e"° N'C9nl•IM CM"Off ·=· lhe , d tftet 6tlwtet'I '"-prevlou' P'i<• •l'ld Mon1f~• 2 om -tw -N£W HA VEN. Conn. (AP) - Name i:i,1 CM ~ct Home buycn' 1u1 fcelinp aboua CJ: /;vol I .t 11-, .'lo l property values may be as much a fi ri"' ! t : tlg .9 factor m residential housioa booms a •"le '11111 ~ + ~ 0 : key economic vanables. two ccon~m- ~J1~9v ' j~ ~ 8: . San -ranc1sco. Boston and Mil-''i+"So ~ • Ho waµk~. I~ ~L.1.,,..~g >, ! u: i· While home buyers the ~onQmist1 ~ ~ns~ ', uo surveyed ofTcrtd ec.onom1c reasons lj NC F:·~Te 1~ 1 • Sg · for buying a house at a particular l ~shl110C031 n 11'. '-' Oo :. time. the researchers say they con-MJ',~n"ltK llt i: 8: I .. eluded the people were actually l' aoP~Maf n>. lt Uo rtspondtng to their emotional ~ r~fro'"n 111: ~ ~: . assessmen.ts of propeny values .. UnvN\ed , 4'e , uo .. There 1s no way you can begin to ~~~~:~111 1~ + ; H: · understand this ty~ of s!tuation . DOWNS unle~s iou look at ns behavioral. or 1 v~•m. ur~ '1 -~ ~cti•J psybccho og1casl hec,ol nomics sick." ~id ~ Am~ico wt I • ~ 1i; 1•. Ro rt J 1 er. •n economics , ~'t'J'ti .. ~A Pt t:::: ' 1~_-professor al the YaJe School of ) x:raiiOGo '' -P • ~ Orpnizauon and Managcmcn~ y 'A~c~"c t:::: ~ ' Shiller and.Karl E. Cast of Welle~ ' l'Tooosrio ~· 1 -/ J 1 k) Coll~ tft Massachusetts reached 1 t~'"g~"s5"' 1:~ = 1~ J 7 $ 7 their conclus1ons after questioning I Heir ~ra1111. f -• 1.851 people who purchased homes I~ ~~,.~~~f p 1.~; = l • n last Ma) Jn the four Cities. 14 A.MCA tn1 3lt -• 6 9 ··People stan tallong about the j} ~~::;g~ " ,~ ::: ~ t l' market and their expectations about 1Y Newnai'lhc Sl9 -~ 6 making mone) nse. They go out 11 ~~~~ N : ::: :: t looking to bu ). and this 1_ncrcascs j~ a9lePch 1~ • -1 6 de171and. The) bid up the pnces. and 2 ~:~:eisnp 1:: ::: ; ; g the thing JUSt feeds on itself." Shiller J !(.roger W I 911 -\e o 5ald. WITH ACUPMaauM AND HEM MO•UI r:;-----~-.;--, • loeepowda& 1s10 .... I .:'::.11ee I ~ 195 '°' s 1t11rta> I · eur. ~ I ~135PERV1Srr l :=~ L-----------..1 · Fellfft0f'9••getlc OR. LOUIS LU, O .M .O. C .A. 19071 BEACH, SUfTE C 233e 1 El. TOAO OFf1CE HOURS: ALIO AV AH.:ABLE: leo,t lmoklng, HI I •1Dte11, Alttwtete, lftd lleck/Nedr P• (et~I RO MOH~- Hunttftgloft leec::ll SUfT'E 107 9em-7om CALL NOW1112-7'09 ~... W•endlbyAppt Earn a years worth (_J ' of interest. And travel the world on Silver Wings. Introducing United Airlines Silver Wings Plu~~ Travel Club. Ifs free with a 1 year CD from Pacific Savings Bank. Just open our l year CD with a minimum deposit of $5,000 in funds new to Pacific Sa\ings Bank and, if you're at least 60 years of age, you're eligible for a free Individual Lifetime Membership in United Airlines Silver •ings Plus Travel Cluh If you're not over 60. you may give this membership to a family member or friend who qualifies. CURRENT \ As a member of United Airlines Silver Wings Plus Travel Club you'll HJGHRATE IDGHYIELD. save with discounts on airfares: cruises, hotels, resorts, car rentals-e\'en special tours and exotic cruise packages. Open a 1 year CD today and earn 8.25%/8.59% ONE YEAR CD travel money for years to come. To open your CD, or to find out how you can qualify for this special offer with other Pacific term accounts L/ 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 wings ~ TE:-~ l~ ~ for all of your tomorrows. PAOFIC ~VINGS BANK ln our own small way. wi make a bil dUfetence. Ii fSIX: ---.. _ osta Me a area call: ( 714) 631-o&oo; ourtyard area call~ (714) 631-7631 r I A8 * ~ Coett DAILY PILOT I Tueeday, November 8, 1988 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ·1 I +• .! I I -~: .. ~; ~ • • TUllDAY'8 CLOSING PRICES I • Market gains slight NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices rose shghtly in relatively quiet trading today, as many investon stayed away from the market• aw,aiting the results of the presidential election. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials closed up 2.85 points to 2;127.49. Ad vanc.crs-C)ulpaccd decliners by about 3 to 2 on the New York Stock Exchange. WH AT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE D10 NEW YORK (AP) Nov. 8 T1f 21 NEW YORK <AP) Nov. 8 ~,,~. ~'~ 1 """,~· i Y~Fs New h gtli 23 New IOws AME X LEADE RS GoLo QuorEs METUS QUOTES WASHINGTON (AP) -Drexel Burnham Lambcn Inc., the embat· l1ed Wall Street investment fi"!?t has been nqotiatina with former white House iidc Howard H. Baker Jr. about bccomin' it1 chairman.. The Wuhirwton Post ~rted today. Drexel is the subJCCt of a ma~ivc civil-fraud case and the t.araet of a federal anand jury ptObe. The Pott. citina sources it did not identify, reported that some tcnior Orf.lei executives b<>pcd Baker's amval would _persuade Manhattan U.S. Attorney Rudolph W. Giuliani 11ot to name the firm in an expected raclceteerina indictment Baker, reached late Monda)' niaht at his bomc in Hu.n1Svilk, Tenn .• declined to comment on the repo_~ "I can't &ivc you anythina on lliat llb•, .. said the former TcnneQCC tenator and White House chief of staff. Drcxd .ho dtttined to comment, but it t.ucd a statement acknowl-ect.ina lhlt it bu beat -ortina wilb Weiand hfl Tenna1et law firm .. on maUcrl rdati• to inlilr'Ul ()Of'pOf'lte IOvet'MIM:le. and .e.idt are unrelated '° eitMr die Otleoi1t1 hl~don by tbe U.S. 1ttoraey or ay WMhilll'Oft mataen." "It would be entirety inappeop aaac to ClOllllMtH or ~te oa any • I I NYSE LEADER S 'Dow JoNES A ~lR~GES 1 NASDAQ S uMM~Rr subject which is under review or discussion between Druci, (Baker), and his law firm;• the statement aaid. Baker left the post of White House chief of staff last July and n:joincd bis Knoxville law firm, Baker Wonh~ inaton Crossley Stansberry tl Woolf. Sowcacitcd by the Post noted that Baker in 1987 offered Oiuliani lbe post of chairman of the S«uritin and hch&nae Commission.. a job the ~utor turned do"'n. Drexel's current chairman is Rob- ert E. Lanton, but the firm's day-to-day operations are supcrvited by chief executive Fred Joteah. l In a massive civil suit Bled Sept. 7. the SEC KCu.led Drexel and other dd'tndants of IChcmina with now. imprisoned insider trlder Ivan Boesky to break a litany of1ecurit~ fraud laws. The suit was aallcd last month when the 2nd Circuit Coun of ~ti m New Y~ ..,oect to-cOnsidcr Drexel's requat to dit- qualify lbe lowtr-cioun judle praid--inu=.!t SEC cw. ·~ w.hi1tM U.S. 1noncy•a wbidl Im been bl~ ONMl's raatia•1hi}! with IOaty siace l9e tumed ..... , evicleftce almost twO ~ •· is Widely ex~ to leek iftdictmcau Of die Orm aooa. • ,. ENTERfAIN T DAILY PtLOT/Tueedey, ~-8, 1988 A8 Leontyne Priee: The·elassy diva packs a wallop. ~~~E0~ '2°ZVNSKJ Legenduy diva Leontyne Price triumphantly returned to the Orange County Performing Arts Center Sun- day afternoon. . • In a program devoid of coloratura and melodramatic arias. Price proved in top form by displaying her famously rich, full tone and ex- pressive ranae. She often covered the complete spectrum of emotions in her voice alone, keeping her physical 1estures and motions to a minimum. Each word was accorded impc>nance, every vowel well-rounded. Price's entire $tage persona -her majestic pc>ise. stylized yet tasteful. bows and rCJlll walk -bespc>ke a first-class artist. She was supported throughout by pianist David Garvey, whose elepnt an~ unshowy playi ng m~de him the qumtdsentlal accompanist. Price, who helped open the Arts Center more than two years ago, offered a 19-picce program that barely last~d 90 m1nutes. Her sten- tonan resonance. opulent timbre an4 wide vocal range became obvious an the second selection. the recitative aria "Piangero la Sortc Mia." from Georg Fnedrich Handel's opera "Giulio Cesare." No matter what its quality level. Pnce infused every selection on the Leontyne Price performed Sanday at tbe <>ranae COUJ1- ty Perfornam, Arta "Center. program w1th that .. somethinJ extra .. that raised a lowly ~"' h111>er and made a m1ste(P1~ ev,en more of one. Pctformina a aroup of five second-rate Romantic German lie«r by little-known Austrian composer Joseph Man. Pncc turned the aongs into the ncar<qual of .a Franz Schubert: at tu ms charm ins, cheerful. comae and melancholy. On the other hand, Pnc:e brought renewed greatness to the classic aria .. Pace. Pace, Mao Dio," from Giusep-pe Verdi's "La Forza del Destin<>" ("The Force of Dcsuny"). Opening wlth a marvelously mournful cry, she proceeded to exhibit the aria's range of emotions -from reverence to Fine acting in Saddleback's 'Leaves' By BONNIE J . FEVERGEON o.i1y,...c:.. .......... unfold,s under the capable direction of Lynn Wells. Dreamy allusion and harsh reality play like lijhts and shadows on a wall. losing clear definition as each takes on qualities of the other. Well-orchestrated craziness 1s the essence of Saddleback College's cur- rent production of John Guare's "The House of Blue leaves." four-time Tony award winner and Artie Shaughnessy's struggle for recipient of the Los Angeles and the something better than the lotTifc has New York Drama Circle Awards. the cast for him find s expression through play has established itself as a quality the talents of Stephen Hansen. whose piece of entertainment. characterization provides a strong A story rich in dramatic traaedY. fou~dation and cohesiveness for the and delicately seasoned with comC<fy--eiinrc piece. Jessica Jeffencs oilers spc>ntaneous animation as \\Onderfully hght· headed Bunn y Fhng_us. the emboda· ment of comic rehcf in the midst of despair. The true tragic personaluy of the work, Bananas Shaughnessy. 1s carefully rendered by Kathryn Leyes in a sensiti've performance. Ronnie Shaughnessy and Connna Stroller. well interpreted by Mark James Hebcn and Carne Polham- mer. come to lttc an the second act. Suppc>rt1ng roles are enacted by Linda M. Thompson, Cathryn Lang. Glona Weinberg. Ron Lance, Bnan McCoy and Mark Mylro1e. Lance's contnbutio n is particularly poignant in the closi ng moments. • Offering a fine evening of enter- tainment, "The House of Blue Leaves" will run through Nov . 13 at Saddleback College. For uckets and infonnat1on. call 582-4656. 'Man Who PlayedJesi:Js 'limps all the way ByBONNJEJ.FEVERGEON De9f' ,._. C•••••flllllellue Currently on stage at Finally a Unicom Empc>rium 1s Gerald A. Smith's "The Man Who Played Jesus." A cozy coffeehouse provides at· mosphere for the intimate, informal production of a piece about an actor whose role as Jesus instills delusions of spiritual grandeur. Resurrection of childhood frustrations over an empty relationship with has ministerial father fuel an already ignited passion. The work rests solel) on dialogue that just doesn't spark enough interest to be effcct1v'e. Limping from stan to finish, the performance labors under a deadly combination of weak plot, slow narrati ve and some un· Polished characterizatons. Michael Aquila's rendering of Jess Conley. the actor. 1s a frustrating struggle with lines as well as move- ments, a ch aracterization that JUSt doesn't eyer come into focus. In contrast. Kay Joanne Counne) ·s Kay, Jess' roommate and stage hand. is a believable young woman with natural spc>ntancll) and depth of Callahan offenng some panicularl) emotion that breathe hfe into her spmted moments. Sttnes. Courtney's facial expressions Direction 1s supplied b) Jan and body language arc enhancements Angeleno. wtth Mary Kay Lewis in her well-rehearsed work. attending to stage management. The Arthur Winslow and Marv Benton set is colorful and attractive. . serve as Reverend and S1sier Mary_ Finally A l.J n1corh Emponu!"' Cross. unwuting. enamore s up-provades a unique expencntt""-rrr pc>ners of the ego11st1cal actor's false dramatic cnterta11}ment b) a com-claims m,1tted. hard-working c<tst, crew and · staff. "The Man Who Pla)cd Jesus" A u d 1 c n c e p a r 1 1 c 1 -will run through Dec. 10. wnh Fnday pants/Questioners ,; I and 2 are and Saturday performances at 8:30 Bonnie Homer and Randy Callahan. p.m. For tickets and information. call Both arc welcome contributors 10 969-1794. The theater is located at Scene I l's church service. with 214 Main St. an Huntington Beach. Choral renditions of campaign songs fall Uat Campaign mud-slingmghasalways been with us, but in the prc-rad10/prc- TV da)'.S the an of the smear was primanly confined to the presidential campaign song. Tocommemorateelect1on day. the California Chamber Singers. under Joseph Huszta's direction. devoted a large part of their Sunday evening program at UCI's Fine Arts Concert Hall -to some two dozen campaign songs from 1840 to 191 2. The songs were interspersed wuh campaign slogans. excerpts of news- paper accounts and inaugural ad· dresses by Presidents Lincoln, Gar- field, Teddy Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson. all tied together by useful historical narration. This novel idea has potential but the chotr dtdn 't fully realize 1t. One of the problems was the scarcity of movement. Wearing straw hats wav- ing naas and raisi ng clenched fists in tbc air don't do enough to overcome tbe feeling of inertia resulting from a basically stauonary choir. Static choruses arc fine for Verdi or Brahms. but not for I 9th-century American PoP music. Another problem seemed one of Fogerty wins one SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A Jliry on Monday cleared rock star John Fogert¥ of an accusation that he ~lagianzed one of his own Crcedence Clearwater Revival songs . The suit claimed "Old Man Down the Road," lead sin&lc from Fogerty's comeback "Ccnterlield" solo album in 1985, copied the melody of "Run Throu&h the Jungle," which Fogerty wrote for Creedencc 1n 1970. The suit is one of several legal disputes between Fogerty and Saul Zaentz, principal owner of Fantasy Records. Zaentz has sued Fogerty for libel over two other songs on "Centerfield." one called "Mr. Greed" and the other originally titled "Za.nz ~nt Daru." RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY lllC • ... ,_ .... """..,.. 1m -•• .. cena 111&-Mt-usa MICHAEL RYDlYllSKI preparation. The 24 singers simpl) didn't sing together a lot of the time. Granted. this was not ··senous" an music, but some degree of consisten- cy and clarity is still required. If not for the Qrinted programs containing (most of) the lyrics. a number of the songs would have remained un· intelligible to the audience of 45. And yet, concerts of this sort should be presented more often. if for no other reason than their curious and timely nature. Humorously rendered solos by soprano Nancy Beach, bantone Bruce Bales -accompan>· ing himself on the r._ve-stnnged banjo -and others along with occasional tongue-in-check accompaniment b) the Irvine Brass Ensemble helped spice up the proceedings.. Concerts of this nature -Amen· ----_.. ·---·· ,,., .. ··---.. -·~ --· -- ·---_ ,, --~·u---·--------·=--._,_, __ _ ____ .. ,_ --- -·-----__ ... _ -.-.-.. -..... w •• ---.. -... --..,. ST A.Ol~IM ~ '1~llh~ • .fYHYIODY'I ALL AllllUCAI (R) THl ACCUSED (RI :u:ia.i~~ ,,, ........ ,., .... ,..c. THlll1 CHAHl (Pt) ILYIRA (Pt·UI "-•nmcv.-•UI U·I ........ ".,,, ._....._..,.. ALlH unMCIU " ......... can nature. that 1s -should be more frequent!) scheduled. too. espec1all) wuh this being -\mcncan \1us1c \\eek Yet Orange Count) 1s doing vet) httlc toobser'e 1t. lr\'tne has Jazz at the Marketplace Thursda~ at 4:30 p.m. and at South Coast Communtt) Church Fnday at 8 p.m. (the latter featunng trumpeter Freddie · Hub- BY THE bard), saxophonist Tom Guralnick and p1an1s1 Da' 1d topato pla} Jazz at 3 p.m. Sunda~ at the Nev. pon Harbor <\rt Museum. and the South\\est Chamber ~us1c Soc1et' has sched· uled <\ustnan-o\mencio rompc>scr Ernst Krenek's "Parvula Corona Mus1calts" at 8 pm Saturda) at NHAM. POOL .. SERVICE serving SE A the Orange c.oast Reliahlf\ Friendly Service Doug HaUBwaJd anytime (71. I• 1111 81'1f'A UA loll'" ":.ct Sl9 'Ill ~ IUUIAl'Al'I( -· "'"'" t'>1 •fll •cos~•--• f~HMDC<f•n 631 lSOI f.L T°"O f<I•'"" 5'0c"'CI(• sa• 5480 *"'VM (ft~ IJ<>wno'V 8S4-M11 *L.AMlflADA Px '< s ll lol •ldl 99f 2•00 * MIUIOfl V.JO ~SANT A A.NA fOw-~ ~, ., (OW¥W ., .. ... 0120 S.0·"" •OftAHOI * WUT-.STI" c-~c.--- 63<1 ~~~) • "' 39.U PC!ts Unlimited grief to fear -through her acute sense of controlled tbeatm;s. repertoire. Ho1by's•·The Serpent," about a singing snake, provided Price wuh the ops)ortunny 10 sing a half- speaktl\J conversational tone filled Absolutely. mesmerizing was her hypnotically rhJ.!hm 1c re~ution of the word "solc11'' ("sun") in subtl y increasing urgency 1n Alexandre Georgef "Hym"e au Solc1l." Like- wise outstanding were her swooping register changes in Am~rican com· poser Lee Hoib) 's "Be Not Afear'd" (one of four Ho1b) songs tn all) and her tenderly carrcssing treatment of the beauttfull} affecting aria .. Jo son l'Um1le Ancella" from Francesco C1lca's .. .i\dnana Lccouvreur." with '"hissing" words. · She concluded her recital with two black spirituals that featured an unusual but workable mixture of lieder and Amencao Southern styles. Cunousl)', of Jlcr three encores. "Summertrme," from the Gershwins' -porgy aQd Bess." was the only major d1sappc>IJltment, suffering from slurred enunciation and rhythmic liberties. But the other two arias - from Puccini's "Madama Butterlly" and "Tosca" -packed a wallop. Pnce sho"'ed that humor and v. hems) v.en-not absent from her Prin·ce has come Price opened Illa ftnt ••t.o•eeay '88" concert In Lm An&eles Sunday. - 11.1u•m·"t:P';• llll-,,..c.-- ttl Sl ,... ' --~ IOUl Sl'lllO 111 unu • • '"''" •t«I 1114 »•».,. llM l&TM ""'° llM10W9• 1~ 1 u ue ,.., t'4J .. DOUtm~--~ M•_,. Wl'l'IQl1 • O.Uf ~ t<OOlU J ltl 111- •YAIC NU I 1ra » l »I 11 , ... Oll lll- •t11 K!llllll 1--------------1 1--V -·~ · I I ~ ·--• 111 "'U I ...., .... ..,_. ~------~~ --........ ll_ ... 114 .... ltM ~tt<­UH.6'1UAHDU -...u UM tUUIDHJ I ,. leU ICIUT J'IWIO-UAlOM MGOOOUllll t 141Dl11JtOl•ltll -" tnttOJOAC& ~ .......,_ Ml1'100n au--. 11•1nsu1u1•u Ollt-~­ fll ll(Qlf9 tti 11•>•1•r•••• llOUt ~ioe... ~""" MTLM"' ll•S ,_.J •~S •-.! 11'4.J 1"4J ....... ,,..., MAUOWf814 1Utt>t4Mt·Ml.Jll ... --·~c... ......... WIMM A Cllll 111111 I IS J 11 S tel He ,_,U _,_,,._ UAl(IUU 191 l <OOJ IJJ•t.S , .. ,. , .. , I I , AlO Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Tuesday, November 8, 1988 ·Male moflels make memorable show HB'sAssistanCeLeague's 'Snowflake Fantasy' aided by husband's modeling By VIDA DEAN "I'm a new member of this group °' ... _..,,......., and it was really a lot fun for me to get . acquainted and sec the way the Mc.m.bcJ:Lof Ass1~tane.c..l.caiuc..af -commtner-worked mgettre . c ~untanato.n Bca~h lake ~o get the men started planning this about eight or involved an their prOJCCIS -~ave nine months ago. We really didn't set them learn all the work that goes into an amount as our goal. We wanted to sponsoring a fashion show with close make as much as we could ," said to 400 JUests attending. Naacy Fernandez. ''I didn't want them to just stay Others in the 75-member league home all Saturday anemoon and assisting with the event themed watch football on television." said "Snowflake Fantas)." included Pat VlqWa Colatany, president. at the Raiaey, Sally McGlu, Tabby Brock, four Seasons. She enlisted husband Pew Piecllota, Sylvi• Jou10• and Bew.N as a model, and Jolua Dolores R•lick. F........_ husband of show chair· ARer the soetal hour. th~ group woman Namey Feraude1, and Jeu lunched on hot com chowder. Weener, husband of vice chair· chicken breast with creole mustard woman Juel Woenaer, acted as sauce and a dessert guaranteed to add esa5rts for models along with mem· pounds -a I ().layer brownie cov· ben of the league's men's advisory ered with and surrounded by choc· board CIMlrles Akers, Erik Ludqll11t olate sauce. and WUU.m C.dmore. Veteran fashion show coordinator President Contarsy showed the Florence Smalea presented a very males modeling ropes and put them colorful parade of styles from 10 throuJh their paces on the ramp in the boutiques -dressy daytime styles to momma prior to the 11 a.m. event. fabulous evening wear. (That was aner she had been up until "The money we make today will go l :30 in the morning creating 40 fresh for our philanthropic projects," said flower centerpieces for the tables.) Fernandez. The group provides "The men really enjoyed being in clothing for needy school children the show." said Howard Contarsy and for children at Interval House after the event. "Those models can and support a Speech and Language really change fast and get back out Development Center. there." (That may have been a Guests at the show included Carol mittake to let the men know a woman Wllllam1 and Mary WaJtoa from can get ready in two minutes. or less, Interval House and Mary Rose bub?) Dulek, speech pathologist. t! Janet Woerner, Olive McCulloUCh anti Nancy Fernandez. Arranging adoption through an agency likely the best way child. I am told that most natural mothers who arrange for adoption on their own change their minds as J did. leavi ng hopeful couples shattered. Committee membera Dolorea Hulick and Sylvia Johnson. Virginia Contaray with model huaband Howard. A1111 l.uDEIS cat. She insists on staying and having · supper with us. ERMA BoMBECK Ousting QOll~!ei:s __ wins vote I don't know about you. but Election Day can't come a day too soon for me. I've got a case of Poll Paral ysis that ma y never get· well. )Vedfft4ay, Nenmhr t By SYDNEY OMARR , ARIES (March 21·Apnl 19): New Moon position r:clatcs 10 myste?.• intrigue. ronfidential information concerning money. Family member says! I think I should have some co mi~ to me.·· Coll~ct data. be aware of accountina pr~Au~RUS (April 20.May 20): Protect i_magc •. rcp_ut.ation, ~aluable~. Tf.ke special care in c~nne~1io~ with trans~~at100. sh1pf>1~g. Applies especially to art objects fra.11!e materials. Legal dtt1s1on goes you r wpy. . GEMiNI \~ay 21.Junc 20): Emphasilon rebuild inf p_rogram. s1p,a,tures. • ability to 'decipher and interpret "s~all p~nt." lnves~1gate poss1b1hty of relocating. Loyal co-worker deserves fa1.r hearing o~ sptc1al reque.st. 1 ' CANCER une 21-Jul 22): Discern motives. do some persona .. eiCc'ii"Vewor . ocus on mys ery. intra.sue ~a un ~a bf!n~roun1 person offers encouragement. Short trip invo~cs relative. y1rgo playn~le. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): W~at you ~ave w.aited f~r 1s made avaJla~le. Affects Life style, home surroundings. relations with family members. Po~s1ble sale, purchase of art object, luxury item. household goods part of scenano. VIRGO (A ug. 23-Scpt. 22): Forces tend to be scattered, messa~ and , lugage could be misplaced. Maintain sense of fitness. h.ur:nor. l.Qng-distance call could result in profitable assignment. journey. Gc~1n1 r~presentcd. LIBRA (Sept 23.0Ct. 22): Wha\ appeared lost will ~ recovered. Lo_vc relationship intensifies. B) mcctingd~adhne, rou have l.cg1t1ma1e opportunity to hit financial ja~kpot. Cancer. Capncom figure promme1:nly. . • •• SCORPIO (Oct. 23-~ov .. 21 ): What you felt. ~s a "massed oppor:tun!tY will be r'Cvived. Cycle high, JUdgmcnt and !n1u1t10~ are on ~rg~t. H1ghh&ht personality, assert needs and views. Aries, Libra natives play s1gn~fica.~t rofe;s. SAGITl'ARIVS (Nov. 22-"Dec. 21): Shake off "shackles of past. _Yc;>u II learn secret, you'll have veritable back~tagc. view. Emphasis on _opttm~sm, return of vigor. Fresh start in new d1rec11on featured . Aquanan figures prominently. . . • CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. I?>: C~llect 1nformat1o!l. ~altze you are ~n right track. You'll regain sense of direction. purpose: An important ~oman m your life shows way to increase income. Cancer native figures p.co,minently. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Key is to diversify. to ~~d ritessages., to open lines of communication. YC?u'll be .ex tremely ~ns1t1ve. concerning ~PP,C~r~nce, wardrobe. weight. body image. Sincere~ compliment will overcome mh1b11tons. . . . PISCES (Feb. 19-Marc~ 20): You're on ~oli~ groun~ in con~ec11on with ··money situation." Long-distance communacauon verifies claims. assures return of article that had been lost. missing or stolen. Taurus plays role. By CllARLD GOREN ud OMAR SHARIF North-South liulnerable. deals. NORTH • J 4 CV J654 2 O Q876 • '2 . WEST EAST +9 7 +8 6 West CV K 8 IV A Q 10 9 7 3 o A J 10 9 s " 3 2 • A 7 6 S • Q 10°9 SOUTH + AK Q 10 S 3 1 \) Vold ·o K 4 • K J 4 3 The bidding: West North East l C Pass l CV Pass Pus Pass oulh 4 • Opening lead: King of v Cardinal Morton, chancellor of the Exchequer for Henry VII, had a very simple method for deterrnining how high merchants should be taxed . If they' lived lavishly, they obviously could afford 10 be as- sessed heavily; if they lived frugally, they had to have huge savings and -again could aff9rd a high levy. In bridge, a Morton's Fork Coup pre- sents a defender with a Hobson's Choice. Regardless of which play he chooses, he loses. The bidding on this hand from a world team championship some years ago was straightforward. South needed little from bis partner to make game, so he simply bid it right away. West led the kin of hearts, and dee anr pause to count his "'iriclC.s:- Since both minor-suit aces rated to be with West, the only sure tricks were seven trumps and a diamond. If East held the queen of clubs, a finesse in that suit would yield a ninth trick. A club ruff would have to be the fulfilling trick. However, if declarer crossed to the jack of trumps to take the fi. nesse, West would have only to re· turn a trump when in with the ace of clubs to stop the ruff. The way out of the impasse was simple, yet ele· gant. Declarer ruffed the opening heart lead and led a low diamond. West was impaled on Morton's Fork no matter what he did. If he rose with the ace, declarer would have two diamond tricks and would not need a club ruff. If he duclccd, the diamond queen would be the entry to dummy for the club finesse. After West won the ace of clubs, his shift to trumps would come k>O late. Declarer would win, cash the kin1 of clubs and ruff a club. That meant ten tricks either way. I - DEAR ANN LANDERS: My baby. born in July. was 10 be adopted b) a wonderful couple in Toronto. We had arranged for a private adoption. so I knew her and her husband and they knew me. At the last minute I backed out, lea ving them devastated. I hated to do it. Ann. but after I saw my bab1 I j ust co uldn't give her up. Again. I want to say that I am sorry. and I hope that they will read 1h1s letter and find it in their hearts to forgive me. -TEEN MOTHER IN ONTARIO. Many times we have split two hamburgers or two chicken breasts and two salads to feed four. (The kid cats hke an adult.) I don't want to hurt the mother's feelings. but my hus- band doesn't enjoy her company that much. and he has an active dislike for the kid . Some evenings they are already on our front porch when we get home from work. Every 15 seconds si nce the conven· tions of last summer. pollsters ha ve ACR088 taken the voters' emotional temperatures and translated them into a win or lose col umn. The result: The woman 1s unable 10 have children and she and her husband had been waiting for this bab)' for a long time. They had the nurser)' read) and bought a complete la)ette. When "Lisa" was born. thr ''Oman sa~ her. held her and fed her before I cha nged my mind. Telling her that Lisa was no longer hers was awfull) hard to do. I apolog.azed O\Cr and o'er. but she turned away. making 11 clear that she was not wtlhng to accept my apologies. I hope that she will see 1h1s letter and understand I also want to warn others who are interested tn adoption 10 go through an agency. Profession3ls are ex· perienced and they know how to prepare a mother for the loss of her DEAR TEEN MOTHER: Tbere Is more to be considered llere tllu your love for yoar ~d or tile couple's inability to forgive yoa. I am refer- riDI to Ge welfare of tile baby. Are yoa able to provide IM lovla1 llome ud tuder care tllat Liu coald uve .... w1~ ~ ce.aple! cu yoa aapper1 yoer ckl.ld? Tkse luaea 111toeld uve beea &Jven top COlltlder· atioa, AINI 111 bet yoa dJda't give &Mm mDdt lltMpt. Tlte bl1 lffer, la my oplal•. Cfthl be yoar cJtilcl. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: What do you do about a neighbor who shows up at your house regularly, twice a week. with her spoiled rotten 6-ycar- old?Thechild throwsa tantrum when her mother mentions going home to This has been going on for more than two years and I need to put a stop lo 1t. Can you suggest something? - UPTO HERE IN MISSOURI. DEAR UP TO: Wbat's file matter? No vocal claonl1? I apolo1be for toudin1 like a broke• record, bat 111 say it a1atn. No one cu take advantage of yo• w1tbo11t your per· miHiOD. Tbt oaly way yo• and yoar baabaad eu reclaim your lives 11 by telU.•1 yoar nelg)lbor tut ue may not come .-er anymore nles1 invited. If 1be 1laow1 up after tut, tell Iler, "Sorry, we lltave plus for tonJpt," wklcb Is DO lie. Your "plans" are to eat aloae. Polls have taken their toll on me. It wasn't so bad )ears ago when there were only a couple of pollsters. but no"' it's down 10-some reporter sun C)'tng four wh11c-collar workers in leather loafers as they exit a restroom at a Denny's 1n Los Angeles. When I went on a vacation out of the countr) a cou ple of weeks ago. I thought 11 ~ould be-great 10 get awa)' from polls I nstcad. I had withdrawal symptoms. I woke up at nig}lt wondering how Bush was doing in Texas and "'hat the Kennedy remark dtd for Bentsen. I was disoriented and confused not knowing 1f I was a majorny or a minority. • ~--------------------· 1 Termites Are Now Swarming I asked a stranger. "How do the ~lls go an America?" He said. 'Dukak1s said he doesn't believe in polls ... I nodded. "That means Bush 1s ahead this week. The only time a candidate doesn't believe in polls is I when he's behind 1n them." Does anyone C\.er wonder about I the people the pollsters query? Who I are they? I know a 101 of people. and I 1---------------1 not one of them has ever been polled t -me included. Is this a full-time lob U,L, 1 1 for them? And what will they do after Ii next Tuesday? I J have a theory that most of the T•rmit• pco(>le surve)'cd arc old Nielsen I Bugs Flying Around Your Home? FLEAS? ANTS? I FREE ESTIMATES I SAVI s s s I. With This 1 Scent 6 Steel bums 11 M ... 9!1lmal 14 Knife type 15 Red dye -t6 Grieve 17 Felony 14 Highwayman 20 HOUM81M 22 Perts of pounds 23 Sank a drlYe 25 Society 28 Poems 29 Rested 30 l(lnd of Ill<* 32 Figure of apeech 34 Yearned 39 ProfelMI 42 Balcony 43 Installs new curtains '45 Predator '48 Small aynegogue 49 Tablet 50 Deposited 54 Fisherman 55 Channell 56 S. American range 58 Foot part eo Frameworks 63 Big blows 2 3 4 66 Guido's not• 87 Income: Fr. 88 DeMfve 89 Electric unit 70 Sanctify 11 Tr .. u .. DOWN 1 Rudiment 2 Plnntlcie 3 RepMted 4 Intended 5 WaVflf 6 News bringer 7 Rude 8 Judah king 9 RemO\le 10 Easy job 11 Movement 12 Weight unit 13 Apportions 19 Eatth: pref. 21 Shelter 23 "--Ir Born'' 24 Bandlea<Mr Franki. - 28 Tip giver 27 <>c.11 bird 30 Spawn.d 31 Heron 33 Through 35 Diamond stat. 38 Stationery 37 Pr .. tlge 38 Doings 5 I AD I I I 6 Pest Control, Inc. I families who used to tabulate what 14 they watched on television and Licensed Contractor _..·#PR534 I canceled every show I ever liked. t-1-7-+--+--+-+--- s Th Q C Why should I believe them now? er vmg e range oast I Not only 1s the constant assault of • I/ Since 1974, Wholesale Fumigation PRICES! I percentages making me sack, I'm not SPECIAL DISCOUNT WITH THIS AD I !l:ti~.1s ha v,. a place in a national CALL IHI BISI! 8•8-1377 ! I think the polls have taken away ••••-••••••••••••••••• somethina very precious that ri&ht· 29 full y belongs 10 the American voter •, I fJ1~l l'T-11 I . ... -the riiht to think and to arrive at a \ 32 personaf dec1sion because he feels it's the right th ms to do. nol because he is ~3~9~--t---+---1t--­ unsure of himself and fiaures the majority know$ more than he knows or h1s vote won't count apinst the 43 odds anyway. I want to 10 back to the days when I went to bed without knowina who our president would be until momina. I want to hear at from ham, not Lesley Stahl. I'm not &oin& to take a poll of how many of ~ou would lake to cool 11 on IO this practact But for thote of you who ~with me, the neict time someone 19 sucks a m1ao0honc in your faet as you cut the .,Oils and asks, "How did you vote?" sell ham •fl none ~ his business. It'll make him craty. I 7 PRIVtOUa PUZZLE aOl VED '40 Sword '41 Spengled: her. 44 Bone Mtter1 47 Ca!'Mra parts '48 Vetch 50 Light beam 51 Walk: slang 52 Faultless 53 State: abbr. 55 Life factors 8 9 10 57 European 59 Dictionary, e.g .• 61 Distant: pref. 62 Pronoun &4 Estuary 65 Encto.ure 12 13 by Bii Keane "They're not trying on clothes. They're voting." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson .. "Stop playing with the yuppies; they're not puppies." . PEANUTS GARFIELD WHINE COUJfTS• CULTURE by Maratta & Maratta ~(AN You '-'iN 1"~ Mo~T "OT£S iN 1 .. E EL ECTOftAL. (OLLE6f? ¥ I j I I "- DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ~ 11-a ---~ 5e CAREFUL N'O LOOK OOT FOR CUR/a')/"TY ! ., by Charles M. _Schulz 11·8 by Jim Oavis Oranee Cout DAILY PILOT/Tu.day. Novembet •• 1Ne All ~ . BLOOll COUNTY tsf L l '·10~DAI r ARLO AND JANJS FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE · · JUDGE PARKER MIClfeL,IFtATS~ ~ ITMe ya.> SEE. ~~~I~~°' w~,pg;zrE. ~~~C"! T~I d /'/Eft'l?ll t / " FUNKY WINKERBEAN FUNK£.' I WOULD 4-\'.)0 'fAKE. A lCX)K 4f"fHr5 FOi< ME z. by Lynn Johnston · by Jett MacNelly . by Harold Le Doux t:>y Tom Batiuk ~._.:s~~a~~·'···------Ll.L...let::::X::.J~A~-~=·~·.,~~~~ DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau DRABBLE R08Sl8R08E by Pat Brady fdi. ... • .. #I (Jf}6f. ta/5, ~CANS /4l{f 70 T>E A:U.5 ~y 70 MM"e 1H6 &ISH/Gl#AYl.e ~CFFICIAL f-_ • W lNOERSTAN() THIS IS Jf.J51 A F()RMALITY /~:=-a~- YEAH. YEAH I i f: I All I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT I Tuesday. November 8, 1988 L For1he ~ars Best Selection Scott Remote Control Compact Dlac Player . 5 159 ~ VHS Video Recorder with Direct Acce1i Tuning • automatic on. play, rewind and stop 5177 . • 20-key remote control unit • 15-selection random access programming • 3-way repeat function • digital display • 14-day/6-event programming • • d11ect access remote tuning • 3-beam laser pick-up Sanyo Mlnj-Slze Stereo AM/FM Stereo/Ca1Htt• Player • auto stop mechanism • 3-button easy- access controls STORE .HOURS: ONLY S2'l/MONTH"• • PLL synthesized tuner OHL 'f S2D/MONTW• ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~ Appliances -..1..1 --• --~--j ........ i ·---· .--:.... i_ -_·uuuauiWWI Crown Portable AM/FM SZ270G"Y Dual-Cauette Recorder with PLL Synthealzer s37 T\!fl{ng Yam.ha Electronic KeybCMtrd wllh I PreMI IMINMenl SoW1d1 and •ullMnl...-er 30 Day Return Guarantee ... Circuit City will gladly give v.ou a 1~11 refund. w1th1n 30 days of your purchase. ti you are not sat1slaed lo r any reason We ask that you re turn the merc11and1se tn new cond1t1on with your sales receipt, carton and accessones. Circuit City Low Price Guaran1H ... II. w1thtn 30 days of your purchase at Circuit City. you find the same item for less at any local store, 1nclud1ng ours, we'll refund the dtflerence -plus 10~ of the dtflerence This offer excludes lhe Circuit Ctl)'...OVll~ StQfe. OVER 100 LOCATIONS IN 12 STATES BAKERSFIELD 4230 Calilornia Ave. ' INLAND EMPIRE Rlvuslde 10255 Maonolia Ave. San Bernardino 911 S. "E" Street LOS ANGELES AREA Compton 120 ti. Compton Blvd. Hollywood 4400 Sunset Blvd. La Cteneg1 Btwd. 1839 S. La CierTe"ga Bl. Lakewood 4950 Faculty Montebello 2441 Via campo NOW OPENI ) 13" PORTABLE ·COLOR TU 19" REMOTE TU 25" COLOR TU PACTIL Conh• TelepttoM • one-way P9Qt c:w. .... ca, ..... _ .... --___ , .... • -ttplacMble b11ttrie1 l antenna • laat num* rtctlal Al'TfllMMTI '34*. '69 .................. ._ --- See Our Sates Counselors For ·Details Paudena 39 N. Rosemead Torranc• 18020 Hawthorne Bl. W. loa Angel•• 3 11 5 Sepulveda ORANGE COUNTY Buena Park 200 N. Beach Blvd. Huntington 8Hch 7777 Edinger Ave. Laguna Hilla 23541 Calle De La Louisa Orange 1407 Chapman S1nta Ana 2445 S. Bristol -2 miles north of So Coast Plaza SAN FERNANDO VALLEY Horthrtdge 17037 O~vonshire QNun c111 ..,..._ centent Van Nuys 13630 Victory Bl. Woodland Hiiis 21470 Victory Bl SAN GABRIEL VALLEY Montclair S 150 Plaza Ln. WHt Covin• 339 N Azusa Ave. SANTA BARBARA 3761 State St. OUTLET CENTER 5555 E. Olympic Blvd .• City of Commerce lofM ltetfta lft Wt H Mey Ml lie IW ...... ltt HM OvMI Ceftlef, MON·,AI SATURDAY SUNDAY 11AM-9PM 10AM·7PM 11AM·6PM Prtc.-Effective Tuffder, Ncwember I , 1NI Ontyf · Norwelk 117$1 FlrHtone Blvd. ~ Loa Aneel• 5565 E. Otymplc 8 1., City of Commerce (213) 725-1•00 Or1n1• Counly 8091!. K•t•ll• Ave. "F", Anaheim (71~) 716-1298 DeHvery Avallable 7 Days A Week. Awalfabl• I Daya Jn Bakersfield. ffi .... (.~_~·_ ... _ .. ~ __ ~'(--··V4•1SA•' • II; "All wa11age ttated per channel RMS mto I ohms w•tl'I THO t>etwHn 001 and lllil from a1 low u 20H& 10 20llH1 • 'Wttl'I a C1rcv11 City Ctiar~ Catel Svt>1ect to credit 1pprov1f All TV 1cretr11 mealUfed dtagonelly , c ... ' TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 8, 1988 ..., .............. Tom Walker carrte. Harbor'• offeulTe h~pett Friday. Robb\e Power ta other half of Tua' 1-2 na••nc paacla. " Title .hope~ loom aga~nln Back .aay g.a~e M, Har or switch roles from last year as Sea Kin scan clinch league with win By ROGER CARLSON °' ... .,.., ........ Twelve months ago. Newport Harbor Higtl's Sailors were steaming toward the Sea View League football championship, in command with a 11i.pme leadenterin&thefinal Friday. only to be upset by a defensiv~­ mindcd Corona del Mar eleven. their arch-rivals. in a 6-0 decision. The victory catapulted Corona del Mar from fourth place and going nowhere to the Cl F playoffs as the Sea View League kingpin, and Harbor followed through the back door as the wild-card entry in the 16-tcam eliminations. Friday night -at Newport Harbor, Corona dcl Mar bnngs an unbeaten record into the final round. with a •fJ..pme lead over it's nearest rival. whiTe the Sailors harbor hopes of a playoff berth and a possible league championship if they can • upset the Sea K.tng.s. ~ It's· the 26th renewal of the Back Bay Battle, and title and playoff hopes aside. ifs the bigge'st game of the season for both as the two rivals square off before an anticipated overflow crowd at the 5.000-scat capacity site. "This is a rebinh after being down like we were," said Newport Harbor Coach Je1T Brinkley. "We re~lit the fire when we bounced back against Tustin and now it's a whole new season. "Right now it's hke the playoffs, Lose and you're sone. I'm hoping we can just keep bu1ld1ng on this thing. The kids want to keep it goins, and right now we're excited about J1)aying Corona. Yeah. at as a rivalry." . Oilers find street cat On SuiferLane Cunnin ham gtves Huntington a man for any, every situation • By RICHARD DUNN Dllp ..... C.114 I •a :I His scboolina comes from Huntington Beach. where only a formation called the Surfer could exist. Oddly enough, though, his football instincts ponray a pl.yer from a downtown district rather than someone from the beach. Ooug Cunningham is a ghetto-type player in a surf-rat · PlayeroftheWeek community. running the Oilers' offense hke a gang warlord would run the streets. J-{e's the unofficial captain of the Surfer, an offense which has lifted Huntin~ton Beach Hi&h to a new level althou&h the Oilers ( 1-3, l-8) continue to suffer through one of their worst campaians in years. That's what makes the Surfer formation so unique. It takes the pain out oflosina. "When (quarterback) Eric (Pettinato) got hurt against Edison. we ran the Surfer a little bit in that pme," said Huntinaton Beach Coach George Pascoe. "So when we had to replace Eric. we had to ask ounelves, 'Who's the best street football playerT "We needed a player who could throw the ball to the open guy and be able to run. Doug's the auy who does it the best. He's a street football ~yer. If it's one-on-one or two-on-two, he'll throw the ball ~out of the Surfer). 'Ifs just a formation. We're from Huntinaton Beach and we call it Surfer because we're from the beach and all. We have all sorts of names for our pla}'Si like Rip Tide, Pipeline and Tsunami. lt'sfunforthc.k:ids,and ifs fun for them in practice. tt'sjust fun for them.'• . Patcoe incorporated the Surfer because the Oilers were havina a k>sina !&son and somethina needed a chanae tet make it fun. The Surfer puts all the linemen on one side arid all the receivers and t.ckJ on the other. The quarterbeck has teveral options, all on one side of the spectrum with a wild appetite for the unknown. Cunnin&ham, the street player, loves the freedom. And last week in 1 26.19 loss to Westm1nsle:r In a Suntet taaue pme. Cuui~ probably could've won the Op Pro ~ Chainpeonlbi~ u be. pun\ed for the Oiten., l'flumed punts. caulln and ru for touchdoWnt, completed nine of 16 Plllel for SI yarcls. na.a.t l l times for ~ yards and ca"'lht two paaes for SI more. All out of breath? Take another one. O.nninlham. a 6-3, 180-P<?_.nd jun.ior. allo inaerce'*"9 two puees from 1'is ltf'Ol\I tafet_y ~"°" ap1n1t the Liou to elevate him to this wtiek's Daily PilOt Ptaytr or the WeellDll•u. . ••fie does everythina, I wish l had a play whcft he throws'' (Pl ...... oa. .... ,..) t Overal~ the Sea Kings arc 7-0-2 and on the verge of their first-e ver unbeaten regular season campaign . Harbor. on the other hand. as but 3-6 overall. 2-2 in league play. But a wan would make the Tars 3-2 -the equivalent of what Corona del Mar would fall to w11h a loss-l-1-2 Should that happen. it would also require an Estancia ( 1-2-1) '1ctol) over Saddleback (2-1-1) to gave the overall scope ot 7-1 S. Harbor has run off winning streaks of six and eight in this-scnes. · .. It's been that kmd of season." continued Holland. reflecting on an unbeaten record which 1las seen SC"en • of those games decided by margins of 7, 3. 9. O. 7. 0 and 13 points. Six o~ those games h,ave seen Corona score 14 points or. less. .. The· record as the gJQtest .we've ever had;" admitted Holland." "But every game 1s a gu\-Chcc~. There~. just been no retaxauo.n." . . · • Nevertheless. Holland ·~ i11 agrtt· ment with his rivals -ihis is the Harbor the crown. game. everyone wants' to play. It's enough to give anyone a case of ·''1t's 'l~ second str.ata}.I{ year it's the Jitters, and CdM Coach Dave come down to the tttle being decided Holland admits he's had pfent> bct>NCCA Newpon and Corona del already. Mar. and it's fun to ·roach agams( "I've had butterflies all year long." ham," wd Holland. alluding to said the veteran Holland. who has Bnnkley. . been1nvolvCdinth1sscnes 14umes. ..Hts kids arc clean and'fQ<>i.e From 196 7-75 Holland was 2-7 ... board. and even the film e~cbange 1s an<t has current stnng 1~ 3-2. the la.st n~t. He wants1o beat your butt. but· three successful to make 1\ 5-9 wtth1n ll s the kandof game you look forward. -. to playing. I resi>ect ham for• lot of things he has done at~ewpon." BC>th teams havt lived on defense, but 1t has beeri Corona.de! Mar which has hved best . "l'bey play great deknsc .... noted Bnnkle). "And I'm really impressed with their offensive boc. They're real iood up front. and they have some (PJeue eee BACK BAT /84) . .. : (In us~a1 ·g~qup .. .ShOWs· fine ... for#J . ~-OCC men·s runners .. . feature diverse squ~d ,;~ age-:-hackground~ · The Orange Coast College men's cross country team ma~ not be the · normal conglomeration of people that "'ould compnsc a commµPlt~ college crosscountf) team. put the resultshav~bccnprctl) normal The team went undefeated to "'n the Orange Empire Confef"('ncc dual- meet t1 \\eand1hcn won 11s founh conference meet tttleofthe · Os Fnda)'. The: rTICJl will bid for a return 'tnp to the state meet. whcrt the) · ltn1shed fifth a year qo. at Bakenficld's Hart Park this Fnda} "Our chanccsant really food tn the Southern Cahfom1a meet. ·said first· ,earmen'scoach tua-n Caldcrwood. \..hoalsocoac'hest~ boyslfld g.rls teams at La&una &ach Hiih '""I think -.e oughHobeone of the fa,on\es We're' eryconfidentof.go1ngon to state Our goal has been to go to state and do' cl') "t'll.'' The Pt rates top seven includes Me'<tcan freshman Alfredo Vtaucras. Buckt:)'e freshman Brad Siiier. sophomof"(' Chns Hobson fTOm Costa Mesa H 1$1:1. f rc'Shman Chns Papnc'r of Edison Htgh (out last Fridaywnh tend1na11s 1n hts knee), 45-)car-otd Tom.BumsofCosu Mesa. 2S-ycar- old tnathle-cc Mike Marckll and fmhman Joel Hunt of Mann Cath- olic High in thc Bay JU. "h'sa we1rdcon&)omeiat1on o( types.·· said Calderwood. who added that at 1s mislead an& to note that there are all freshmen on the roster except for three runners. · Viaucrasand •aJer. who runs about twoorthrccdaysa v.ukand bakes the others. did not e'en run 10 bt&h scttool. ' 'V11ucras~thc Plratn'No l man. is 1na peckofsc,en ore•aht runners who 5hould challcnee fOf the Southern Cahfomia 1nchv1dual title. Hcworkscl&ht hoursadayma foundry.1akes()('(' claunand naturtlizat1on acss1onsat nl&ht. and runs fOf the team. tkfint ran compcUuvely on the OCC track team lastlPQna. °"""' hU been a 1reftldi fOrOCC. whicb .-ced three runeen tO R1vu- idc·s fOur in the lop 12 at the confertncemcct. ut tooflJth, 14th. 16th and 17th places to key the \ICtOry. "The further you act. the more the fourth ind fifth men stan1ocount," Calderwood said. "C'hns Parmer should be fourth. and ifhe is healthy it would be Tom Bul't\s, Mike March and Joel t:iont for our fifth spot. "They arc very dcpenda~lc. -r:'hey "on't have bad days but wllJ be tn thick of the pack. Ifs bow!ar ahead of Jhe middle of the pad.they can fintsh that wtll determine where we finish." 0 Thetfefendmg state champion ocrwomen'steam. whlchalso captured the Orange Emp1rcdual- m~t c.ampa1an and conference meet fort hr 1xth tame th1sdec~dc. iu freshmen-laden team wtuch hu run well Thcwomcn'sNo. I runner1s freshman Landa Howard. a 1987 Cosu Mesa Hl&haraduatewhodJd not run 1n the conference meet due to a bed tup. · "She's been aeni na S\f'OnlCf evCT)' week."' 111d women'scoech Gordie Fitttl." hewasaaoodrunnerat Costa Mesa and 1s startina to come on real aood now." Tfie mt ofOCCs top .even arc f'ttshmcn Mtehelc Weaver out of Westminster. fruhmcn Deck Maher of Mater Oet. Chnstaftl Fairbubof' Villa Park and Sucy JICOblon OI , Manna; topbomore Michdc M.._,. a..-.orwcstminster uct frabman Hott,y Westierprd. whoeamed a ...,h by virtue Qf'her l )\~finish at -- the con~ meet'" relief Of HOO#lrd. "I wua httlc wonied at the IWtol the lealOG. •• fitlltl laid. .. When we won abe.-meet. I new-~ ttto.Fts werellllt'k. ., • ..,...._ andhlid _ _.,.....DIN'll-. t.aily,11wy•_,..n I •ilit ""1111111 CCII' I llJ IQ , ,, Orenge Cout DAIL y PILOT I Tu.di)', Nowmber e, 1918 UCifaees exhibition foes BJ JON PEltGUSON oe .. _.. .... ._. The UCl men's basketbell te:am takes the coun with a return to the fast break style in a peir of exhibition pmes this week at the 8rcn Events Center. Coach Bill Mullirn enters his ninth season at UC with a carttr record of 135-97, comina off a 16-14 campaiJfl which included a 86-79 loss to Utah State in the finals of the Pacific Coast .Athletic Association tournament in March. The Anteaters will face Athletes in Action, a team Of ex~Uqe pla~m who last week whil)l>Cd Pcpperchne. toniaht at 7:30 in -the Bren Events Center and host the Czechoslovakian National Team iaturday at 7:30. UC! opens its regular season in the Freedom Bowl Classic Nov. 25-26. The An~ten play OeorJJA St.ate while Tew Chnsti.a:n ~ Maryland meet in the other temifinal. AIA. which is in the midst of a 2S- pmc schedule qainst colleae teams 4urina November undcrtheairection of Coach Ric Nichols, is led by Rod Foster out of UCLA. Zack Jones and Anthony Watson of San Dicao State, and Forrest McKenzie or Loyola Marymount. "AIA is loaded and even though they are playing a demandina sched- ule, they have Sunday of!t so thex could be revitalized by 1 uesday, ' Mulligan said. "It will be a great test for us. We f)eed to see if what we have been practicing will work against some-- body else. The best theing is that af\er these two exhibition games, we have 13 days before the tournament to make adjustments." Retumin& to lad the Anteaters is Sfnior IUlrd ~vin Ao)'d, who WIS ICCOnd on the team last season Wlth a I J.J SCOnl\I avcrase. Mike Labat is the only other retumina staner, a 6- foot-S )Unior swinaman from Ocean View HJ&h who avcrqet 5.3 poinu. He will ~ challenaed by Rob Ooktorczy~ a 6-9 junior who red- shined last season. Key newromcnatt 6-7, 260-pound cneter Ricky Butler, a sophomore from Ocean View High who lfU out last season Ctue to Props.ltion 48, and UCLA transfer Rod Palmer, a junior • point guard who djd not pla)' btsket~ ball last season whjJc attending Com- pton Collc;ge. The other staner will be Jeff Herdmant a sophomore from Mission Viejo High who averaged 4.2 points and 2.2 rebounds in a '"icy reserve role. PRO FOOTBALL -------- • ' NEW YORK (AP) -Tommy LatOnil alr*Y named maupr o the year In the N'ational an,~ by the Bueball Wriien' A110C1ation o America, now has rec:eived the same honor for both leques from The Auociated Press. . ~ was the overwhelmana choice as. the AP Major t.eaaue Manqer of the Year for 1988 in votina announced Monday. The Los Angeles manaaer, who led his team to the World Series cham- pionship, received 971/J points in voting by a nationwide panel of s1>9ns writers and broadcasters. Boston Red Sox Manager Joe Morgan was second with 26'h points, Oakland Manaaer Tony LaRussa was ·third with 2S points, and Detroit TiJers M~r Sparky Anderson was founb \IUh J I points. Colts \rishbone, once insurance, turns to key factor . IN THE BLEACH.ERS Robirison shrllgS· qff def eat From 1'11e Associated Pre11 INDIANAPOUS -The little-used m wishbone formation, typicaJly a college· •II t ploy installed by the Oolts as an insurance pohcy against more injuries to the quai-• terbacks. has become an important part of the Indianapolis offense. So far. it's confused the opposition, given new life to a few benchwarmers. excited t.hc fans and, most importantly, helped the Colts' to their longest winning streak in 11 years. It bc&an at San Diego three weeks ago, with starter Jack Trudeau out for the season with a knee inj ury and backup Chris Chandler ailing on the sideline. Coach Ron Meyer sent Gary Hogeboom onto the field, but instead of a lonesome Eric Dickerson in the backfield. Albert Bentley and George Wonsley also lined up behind the quarterback. The Colts used the wishbone 11 times against the Chargers. pnmanly on third-down and short-yardage situations. and gained 86 yards. four first downs and a 25-yard touchdown pass from Hogeboom to Matt Bouza that seal~ a I 6-0 victory. On Monday night last week. the Coils used the formation I 8 times. accounting for I 08 yards, five first downs4nd three touchdowns in a 55-23 rout of Denver. On Sunday, it was I 0 times for SI yards and another two touchdowns in a 38-l 4 victory over the New York Jets. stretching the Colts' winning streak to four games and evening thetr season record at 5-5 . "To sec the production and to see us grind the clock out and get a touchdown, thats exactly why we fool around wtth it," Meyer said. "It's kind of fun at times. "I don't think there is any question it creates a sense of involvement Qn your football team ." Meyer said. ··1t has really resurrected an outstanding player 1n Gary Hogeboom (who was demoted to third stnng behind Trudeau and Chandler early in the season). Then you've got George Woosley mvo\ved and Albert Bentley involved That 1s a vital necessity to be successful." Quote of t he day Steve Dykstra, Pittsbu~ defenscman. on the New York Rangers· David Shaw slashing at Ptttsburgh center Mano Lemieux: "We play ih<?se guys six more times. He'll get his. Nobody swings his st1dc at Mario Lemieux and walks away." Peete c aptures Pac-10 honors WALNUT CREEK -Southern Cali-Eil forma quanerback Rodney Peete, Wash-c II• 1ngton State safety Chns Moton and Anzona kicker Doug Pfaff were named on Monday as players of the week in the Pacifi(;IO Conference. Peete. a senior from Green Bay. Wis., complet~ 22 of 29 passc for a career-high 305 yards and three touchdowns as USC defeated California, 3S-3. .Morton. a sophomore from Inglewood, was credited with 11 tackles. nine primary . stops and a caused fumble that led to a Washington State touchdown as the Cougars defeated Stanford, 24-21 . He also intercepted a shon pass in the end zone with I :30 left to preserve the victory. . Pfaff was three for four on field goal attempts. !ncluding the game-winner with five seconds remaining in the game. in inclement weather as Arizona defeated Wash mgton, 16-J 3. Hrdin a 's four goals lift Flames Jlrt Hrdlna scored four goals Monday Ei.i1 night. leading the Calgary flames to a 6-3 , victory over Hartford Whalers. Hrdina, a rookie from Czechoslovakia who joined the flames after last February's Winter Olympics, scored one goal in the first pc;riod, two in the second and one in the third. He has I 0 for the season. Joey Mullen added two goals for the flames, who at 8-0-2 arc the only team unbeaten at home this season ... -iMike McPltft scored with 13 seconds left in the third period to lift Jhe Montreal Canadicns into a 3-3 tic with the St. Louis Blues. Golden West Horror highlight fllms Sugar Bowl seeks Notre Dame NEW ORLEANS -A Sugar Bowl [i] matchup between No. I Notre Dame and II• the Southeastern Conference champion is · a good possibihty. says Mickey Holmes, executive director of the bowl. .. 1 find it interesting and amusing that nobody really will take us very seriously as to where we might stand wath Notre Dame." Holmes told the New Orleans Quanerback Club oo Monday. "We feel very good about 1t. • "We make no bones about Notre Dame being.our pnon1y. The people on the West Coast know that. The people m Wes\ Virginia know that. the same in Miami and wllh Flonda State." • The loser of the game between No.2 Sou them Cal. 8-0. and No.6 UCLA. 8-1. has been mentioned as a possible Sugar Bowl team. as fias No.3 Miami. 7-1 : No.4 West V1rgin1a, 9-0. and No.S Florida State, 8-1. Auburn, 8-1 and No.9, is in a three-way tie in the SEC race wath Louisiana State University. 6-2 and No.12. and Georgia, 7-2 and No.17. Each has one conference loss, Auburn's defeat by LSU . Astros name Howe manager Art Howe, who played seven seasons • for Houston. ca me home as manager Monday with a two--year contract and a vow to return the Astros to the playoffs. Howe. 41 . a coach for the past four seasons with the Texas Rangers. replaces Hal Lallier, who was fired at the end of last season. His only managing experience was four years in Pueno Rico ... Jim Lefebvre, a former major leaguer and coach for Oaltland last season, was selected as manager of the Seattle Mariners. Lefebvre, 46. told The Associated Press in a telephone interview Monday night from his home in Tempe, Ariz., that Manners owner Georae Aroros bad convinced him that "the Manners are now commitled to winning.·· Lefebvre becomes the eighth manager in the Mariners' history and the seventfi under Argyros . . . Lany Do•&~ty, a low-key player development expert who hopes to continue Syd ftrlft'1 rebuilding program w1thout the accompanying front..office friction, was named to succeed the Thrift as the Pittsburgh Pirates' 1tcneral manager. Television, radio TELEVISM>N S o.m. -IOOYBUtLDtNG: North American Cl'lamolonU!los from Seeltle (lepe), ESPN. S:OS o.m. -NBA BASKETBALL: ChlQgo el New York, TBS. 6 o.m. -BOXING: Scrteduled -Sombu Kelem~v v$. Dow DeWitt In l'l·round bout from Monie CerlO (deteved). ESPN. 7 o.m. -COLL•Gt SOCCER: S.n Diego State •t UCLA U•pe), Prime Tldtet. 7:30 o.m -N9A BASKET9ALL: La.ken al Golden Sl•le, Chan~! 9. RADIO 6 o.m. -NBA BASKETaALl.J CllOPert at CIWlrlol- le (de1aved), KRTH (930). 7;JO o.m. -NaA 9 ASK•TaALL: l.aken at Golden State, KLAC (570). Since 49ers, Saints also f elL Rams remain atop NFC West- From 'nae A11oclated Pren With all three 'of the NFC West contenders losing Sunday, Coach John Robinson could afford to shrug off the Rams' defeat at Philadelphia. "If you stopped the league today and started the play~ffs, I suess we'd be the division champions." Robinson said. Besides the Rams' loss to the Eagles, New Orleans lost at Washiogton and San Francisco lost at Phoenix. That left the Rams and Saints tied for first at 7-3. San Francisco is 6-4. The Rams beat New Orleans on the road Oct. 30 and play host to the Saints this Sunday at Anaheim Stadium. "We've got every opponunity imaginable." Rob- inson said. "In the whole group. there's no proven j_uggernaut., ... We're kind of like that last race in rhe Breeders' Cup; we're all coming down the stretch. There's no reason why at can't be us." The Rams have played two straight road games, so Robinson gave them Monday off. • "We've got a big charge coming," Robinson said. "These are six huge weeks. boy. and when you're on the road two weeks in a row, a lot of things get set back in your life. You don't go to the cleaners. you don't pay your bills. all those things that happen can become stressful in a way." It WBf noted that linebacker Kevin Greene has had n.o sacks in the last four games after getting I 0 in the first six contests. "He's saving it for the stretch," Robinson said. "He has .sone through health problems (flu). but he was playing at an unbelievable rate there. It's like a gu y hitting .450 and now hitting .290 .... He's playing 'ood football. l don't want to get on him for hitting .290.' Robins<m said he has requested that the NFL review Eagle safety Andre Waters' rolling block of quarterback Jim Everett on a blitz in the founh quarter of Sunday's 30-24 los.s. Waters wasn't ~nalized. The Rams were hit wt th a IS-yard call for roughing the passer when Carl Ekcrn brushed Randall Cun- ningham after a pass. _ "Something clearly needs to be addressed when that hit is not a ~nalty and our player gets called for a IS-yard penalt)' while leaping m the air trying to block a roll-out, sprinung q~arterback," Robinson said. "There's such a difference. Injurles cloud Ra iden• drive to top EL SEGUNDO -Injuries to Pro Bowler players Todd Christensen and Howie Long continued to cloud the immediate future of the Los Angeles Raiders Monday. a day after they moved into a tic for first place in the AFC West. .Coach Mike Shanahan said Monday that tight end C.hnstenscn agravated a month-old iajury to the back of h1~ left knee difring S"unday niaht's 13-3 v1cto.ry over San Diego. "It's the same thing as before, and he's quite sore .. Shanahan said. "h looks like he will be out a couple of weeks. We'll make a decision in the next day or two whether to put him on injured reserve.·• Christensen had been held out of actfon four weeks after suffe~~a what was ori~nally diagnosed as a partial tcaroflheJ01nt capsule. In has retum to action against the Chargers, he cauaht two passes for l 7 yards before a tackler landed on nis knee. ' Long. who haSalso missed four games, rcinjured his tom calf muscle in a workout before the San Diego game. even though he was not even scheduled to dress for the game. "He re-injured thecalfmusdeand I'm not sure about bis status," said Shanahan, who explained that Long has go~e t~f<?ugh a pr~m of j()llin& •nd striding <tnlls while sitting out the 1nJury. . Long had three sacb in the Raiders' first two games and a 73.;yard return of an interoepled pess. Defensive tacl"de Malcolm Taylor, who sat out the San Dicaogamc with a sprained ankle, ttmains a question mark, Shanahan said. Shanahan said the Raiden, who are tied with Denver and Seattle at S-5, are now "in a position where we can compete for the AFC West title ... Wt. tet to C9ntrol out own destiny. You couJdn't ask for a better situatiori than that." Tbe. Ra.~ a~ S-0 in AFC West play, with two 11mes rema1n1na with the Seahlwlts and a pme against Denver at lhe Los Anlelea Coliseum. ******************* Community college players of the week . ' II GOLDENWDT For RultJen' 3l·17 Mission Conference Central Division loss lO Saddltt.ck. OPFENllt • Dw•JM ....... The 6-root, 190-pound ~ wide ret'eiver out of C>Cean View Hip caulbt four ~ for IS yants. iftcluctins 1 20-yard ICMldNlow&. --==~-...... ft• 22 "? • The 6-roo1, 220-cound ~~-;"..!:~~ llictles ad .......... :'° 'llaa llM Rllllltn' •few. r "'I ...... Houaton 'B Drew HUI head• for hard land- ln1 after plcldng up 24 yarcta on a pa.•. Rozler, Hlgh•mltlJ lead Ollen, 24-1 7 HOUSTON -Mike Rozier and Alonzo Highsmith led a rugged ground game with touchdown runs and the Houston defense limited Cleveland to just 44 yards rushing and contammed quarterback Bernie Kosar as the Oilers beat. the Browns 24-17 Monday ~ig.ht. The victory ended five years of winless frustration for the Oilers. who spappcd a seven-game losing streak against the Browns and won their 15th home game in their last 16 non-strike contests. It left the Oilers wt th a l-3 record,agamebehand Cincinnati in the AFC Central. The Browns fell to third H\ the division with a 6-4 record. Houston quartcr&ack Warren Moon. who had lost to 1he Browns seven times, hit Ernest Givins with an eight- }'ard touchdown pass m the third quarter. extending the Oilers' lead to 2 I -3. But the Browns fought back with a 20-yard double reverse by Reggie Langhorne for a touchdown and a 4- yard touchdown pass from Kosar to tight end Ozzie Newsome with 7:26 left in the game. The reception was the 600th of Newsome's NFL ca~er. After Cleveland drew within 21-17, Moon completed a 42-yard pass on third down to Leonard Harris. who caught the ball between defenders Mark Harper and Brian Washington and was tackled at the Browns' 35. That set up Tony Zendejas' 47-yard field goal with 1:44 lef\. 4 9en' collap11e leaves Wal•h e den SANTA CLARA -San Francisco 49crs coach Bill Walsh was still visibly shaken Monday by his team's collapse in blowing a 23-point lead in the final 19 minutes against Phoenix the day before. The 49crs wilted an the 89-dcgrec heat in Tempe, Anz., going without a first down in their final thrtt possessions while giving up 182 yards and I 7 points in the fourth quaner. They also withered under a blistering verbal attack after the game by Walsh. whose angry voice could be heard through the lockerroom walls. The coach had his renowned self-control back Monday at his weekly session with the m~ia. But he acknowledged somberly that the 24-23 loss was hard to take. "I remember Paul Brown telling me one time, 'If you think you've seen everything, you ha ven't,"' he said. "The last thing I ever thought would happen to the 49ers is to have a lead like that and lose it. I thought we did that to other teams, but it happened to us. It's nota very pleasant feeling. believe me.' Walsh said. The 23-0 lead ranks as the 12th largest blown lead in NFL history and the second biggest for the i9crs. In 1977. before Walsh's tenure. they led Minnesota 24-0 and lost 28-27. The 49crs still own the bigest comeback in leacue history for rallying from a JS. 7 deficit against New Orleans under Walsh in 1980 and winning 3S-3S in oven1me. lJraage Coast· ' - Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Tu9eday, N<>Wfnber 8, 1988 - : Irvine earns top seed Jrvi11e High's nationally reknown Vaqileros-drew lhetopseed in theCIF. .S-A &iris volleyball playoffs, which betin Thursday ni&ht after a pair of ' wiTdcardpmes ton1aht which will fill out the 16-team branet: Mark McKenzie's Vaqsgo in with a 14-0 record ahd were the 4-A cham- pions a year ago. Also drawing a seed in the 5-A eliminations is Corona del Mar, the I 987 5-A runner-up. Corona, 12-2 overall, awaits tonight's wild card prne octween T18buco Hills and Dana Hills for 1 first-round foe. Irvine, meanwhile, draws Sea View Lea&uc [CPrcstntative Tustin. Alsb 1n first round play from the Orange Coast area are Newpon Harbor ( 12-4), lhe defending 5-A champion; Woodbridge ( 12-2); La&una Beach; and Mater Dci (8-5). Rarbor hosts Capistrano Valley; Mater Oci is at Woodbridge; and Redondo ( 17-2) is at Laguna Beach. In 4-A competition, Edison is seeded No. 4 and draws Paramount in the first round Wednesday. The Chargers are 13-2 and Sunset League champions. . .. Cerritos is at Fountain Valley (12-14) and Marina (7-7) is at Tor- rance ( 14-0) in other first round games in 4-A play Wednesday. * c;1rts v ..... P91rlnel S,A . (T_.....,a Wiii tin.__., 7:31) A-0.ne HUia (1-7) el Trebuco Hlh (I·•> &--St. Joieoh (1·7) •• Doi Pueblos (12-4) (.,.._...... flint ..... 7:31 ...,,.., Tustin el lnN ( 14·1) ~ CH·l> ••lo Mo111eomerv 112-0 ltedondo (17·2) ., u.-9eedl W1ld Card A wlllill' .i C. (11,1) Wiid Card 8 winner ., Ml<• CCKI• ( lt:O) __. D.e Cl ·S) et Wu•,,_ (12·1) Qpo ... ...., 111-Sl ., ........, ...,....112-4) $0, Tor~ (,_II el SMiie lerOer• (t6-0I ~Nov.IS. SetnlflMls: Nov 17 Flfteb· HOv It •·• (W ...... f"s flint ....... 7:JI ..,,._, LCK AlernllCK (11-6) el COW (14·0) ltovw 112·•> •• Areech Cl2-0> ~ (7·71 et Torrence (14·01 LI Jofdlll (12·4) et M¥1borOUOfl (13· II lwrOUIM CIS·•> er NewOurv Perll (15·11 Gleftdelt (7-7) et Loultvlllt (1·11 SCNKr (l·I) at Loera (IO-•> Peramount (1·71 at ·~ (13-2) Simi VdaV (t-1) et Stil Gebrlal 11•·01 hwt'IV HIMs (13·51 el LI Wiison (11·3> PaMdene (12·3J et sent• MonkAI (11-41 Notre Dema, SO 11·71 et Merymount I 11·31 LI POty 17·71 el ~"*'enze C17-11 CtrrltCK 112·4) el,....._. V.._., (lt-14) Notre Deme Acd (7·41 et Clleml~ 111-SI Alhem«>re 110·•> et Thouwnd Oek• (15-11 Second ltound: Nov. 11. Qventrllnels: Nov. IS s.miflnall:~v. 17. Flnets: Nov. It. Sea Klnge dratr No. 2 water polo Med b] 4 -A Sea View League kingpin Corona del Mar has drawn the No .. 2 seed in the CIF 4-A water polo playoffs, which begin Friday. The Sea Kings. 24-3, will host Canyon of Anaheim, with the winner advancing to meet the winner of the Cyprcs~Fullerton matchup. Ne.wpon Harbor, meanwhile, which was runner-up to Corona del Mar a year ago in the finals, takes a 16-11 record to El Dorado. the winner to m~t the survivor of the Long Bea~h Poly-Villa Park game. Also pining a benh from the Sea View League, in addition to third pla~e T~stin. ~as wild card entry University. Sunset League champion Marina, meanwhile, drew a No. 4 seed in the 3- A eliminations and will duel visiting Palm Springs in Wednesday's first round of the 32-team bracket. Other fir:st round encounters in- volving Orange Coast area tea'ms: Fountain Valley is at St. John Bosco; Roland is at Edison; Westlake is at Pacific Coast League titlist Costa Mesi; Laguna Beach is at Loyola; and WOO<tbridge is at Sin Bernardino. Qlllr ............. ~ ,.,... Edlaon llJcb water polo coach Matt Whitmore wt1l plde the Char&en .,alnat Rowland In ftnt round action. * cnr ••• .... •""-•·• (flrWIY't l'tr'A •euN. l:IS ..,,._) I.°' AlernllCK ( 10-121 at $unny Hlh (25-'ll MiMlkell (IS-•> et Tu1tln (17-101 ...._. NatMr O•·lll el El DorMo 119·41 Lone lffch POiy 11-111 et VIiie Perk 120-Sl lutne Perk 16· 17) el LI Wltson 115·2) ~el FootlllM (11·4) C.•or ... (10-SI ., Fullerton ( 11-11 CllllVOll, Aneflllm < 13·•1 •• c. (24-ll Quarterflnels: Nov. ts. Stmlfl!\111: Nov. If llelmonf Pie"•> Fll\llt· Nov. 23 (lklt'nonl Ple1e, 1:45 PJn,I J-A (W ...... Y's '1nt .... J:IS -..m-1 Gell< II El Toro 11•·1> Thlrid Oeks (t-tl et Sante Mona 110-Ill Wu•"-(12-12) 11 s.n lernvdlno (20-31 LCK AllCK (7·3) el Font~ (lt-31 r~ Downey •• NoNlel (11-0) ltlvtfiidt Poly (13-121 ••Muir 114-71 UfliM -..0 (1·12) el LOYOle 06-SI P•lm SOrlnos 11s-11 •• ~ ns-m San Cll!rMnlt (12-11) et CerrltCK 120-Sl Cre1. ValWt (lS-SI et Pelos Vtfdel llt·Sl CrftOI lt-10) •• ltovel (IS-61 · ltowi.nd (7·31 •• • .._ 11'·'9> w .. tlelle 111·7) ,,. """' Mau l»-11) ., occ • • • , .. V...., ( M-10 11 SI JOM 8osc.o Cll-•> ltedlench 116·7) el lncf'io 112-121 C.PO Y ... 11 (1'•4·1) el ~ (11-12) Second round: Nov l 1 Querlerllneb: Nov 16. Stmlflnels· Nov 19 (1etmon1 Plenl. Flnets; Nov. 23 18elmonl Plata, S-.30 Oft\.) CdltlearneNo. 2 Red ln CIF 4-A glrle teanl• Corona del Mar High's girls tennis team. 19-1 and Sea View League champion, has drawn the No. 2 seed in the CIF tennis playoff\, which begin Thursday. the Sea Kings will meet B ena in the first round, and if successful, will meet the winner of the Beverly Hills- Fountain Valley match in the second round. Also in the 4-A playoffs from the Orange Coast area: Newpon Harbor. Estancia, Marina and Edison. Ncwpon Harbor travels to No. 3 seed Palos Verdes in the opener. Estancia is at Rolling Hills; Edison 1s at Marlborough; and Marina is at Santa Barbara. The top seed is 15-0 Miraleste, the defending CIF champion. * CIF tit1S tennis ,,_1r1n91 4·A CT!WrMIY'I Flnt lt-.d. 2 llJ\'l.J Torrence 114-S) •• Mlrelflte (10.-0) • ._el MerlborOU9h (6-SI Esi.nde CU·•> ar Rollinv Hills (ll·ll Mel'IM el Sant• 8ertwira (I•·•) -. HllttMr It· II) er P110s Verdes I 11·31 Doi PulOlo$ ( 12·6) et Wttllekt (7·61 Bevtrlv Hiiis I 10·1) el ,_,.llt Velrt 8uene llS-SI et C•-dll Mer (1'-ll Qua.rlerllnal•: Nov. IS. Semlllnet•: Nov. 17 Flnels: Nov. 21 IThl Clertmonl Clubl CIF 3·A ITIWt'adeV'• '"' lteuM. 2 -.m. Ce~rlllo I 11·6) et San Merino (18· I 1 VIiie Perk (t·I) ., R~nds (IS· II Th0u11nd Ollkl I 14·31 el G~t. I 12·21 Sen Getlrltl (12-61 el Celebuu 113·21 Minion v lelo I 11·71 • • So. Torrence m-21 So. PelliWll (9·1) et Allllmtlre I 13·21 ltut>ldou11 ( 10-tl el Foolhil 110-6) w11•"-(t-10) el Dene Hilh 114·31 ltldondo 17-SJ el A.llOUI'• <II· II Simi V ... Y (13-Sl et Arcedle I 14· ll ltlven!Ot Poly 116-4) el Le Cenede <f·61 Et Toro 111-ll •• Leeune Hilb I 16·21 Cres. V ... 11 (t·I) el WHt!Ut I IS·SI Mire C0$1e 010-4) el Hert 111·41 Sin GoreoniO 114-Sl •• Cenvon (17·21 Tret>uco Hons Ul·tl et C•PO V111t11 (16·1) S.Cond ltound: Nov 12 Quarttrfil\lls Nov 1 S Stmlflnals Nov 17 Finals Nov 'l2 !Tiit Cier~I CluOI • °'""' .... ,.... .. 0..... R. ~ Cdll • CrUten Walley (2) and Laurie Sawin (3) ha•e helped the _Sea lllnC• l(aln the No. 4 eeed for the 5-A playofla. o.llr ,... ,.._ ...... ._ Cd.M'• Haaan Grantllam will lead the Sea Ktnc• into the 4 · A water polo playoff• as the No. 2-.eeded team. TENN IS Dodgers off er Sax,. Marshall Rustlers earn No. 2 seed for reaional arbitration . o · CdM girls advance without a blemish LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Angeles Dodgers on Monday offered arbitration to right fielder Mike Marshall and S«ond baseman Steve Sax. who became f rec agents when they were unable to reach contract agreem_ents with the World Series champions. Neither the players nor their agent. Jerry Kapstem. could immediately be reached for comment. The players have until Dec. 19 to accept the club's offer. Golden West College's water polo Empire Conference placed five teams team earned the No. 2 seeding in the regional, includmg No. 4 Monday for the upcoming 12-team Saddleback. No. 5 Orange Coast. No. Southern California Regionals and 6 San Diego Mesa, No. 9 PaJomar and will have a bye past Wednesday's first No. 11 Rancho Santiago. round games. * The Rustlers. 22-5 and the third • '°""*"' c.llfenU R"60Mls ~lace team from the South Coast <•t ___, l"leul Conference, will play the winner of W""'"4MV'• ,..,.., ._. u p,m.> Wednesday's match bet':"'ten Ven-: ~ft':":' •• :~ "':i ~;ur~ • .._ cou • •• tura and Mt. San Antonto at 12:30 cemtos p.m. Friday at Belmont Plaza. No 11 R•ndlo Senlleeo •• No ' s.n D•t90 ~ No 10 Ml Sen An1on;o el Ho 7 Ventur• FrldeY'• SKlftd ·--NO I Lono 8ffdl "' Pelomer·CUHI• t-JO ,,,., No • ~ vs Orenoe Coest·LA Pttrct 11 em No 2 GOiden West v'-Ventura-Mr Sen Antont0, 17-JO om- No 3 CitrU\ vs Sen D1evo MHl-~encno SantleQO, 2 om • , ride y'. Slmlflnel• 9 30 a m winner vs 11 • m winner el 6 om 12 30 om winner vs 1 o m w•Mtr 1 1 7 30 om S.tvrdeV's Gemat Cha1"01on11uo 1 JO o m T!lorO 0<1C• 6 om UCLA downs UCI, J 5 -9 WESTWOOD -.\le~1s Rousseau and Scou Leonard scored three goals apiece to lead No. 2 UCLA past No. 6 UCI. 15-9. tn a non-conference col- rege water polo match Monday. T om Wardt". Ton)' Bell and Sk}lar Putman each scored two goals to lead the l\ntt"aters. "ho fell to 14-12 overall. UCL.\ improved to 16-3. Corona del Mar H1gh's girls tennis team ad"anced without a hnch an the first and second rounds of the Sea View League md1' 1dual tournament Mond:i) at Balboa Bav Club. Quanerlinal and semifinal action 1s schl'duled for toda\ at Mesa Verde Count~ Club • I he lop seed in smiles as Corona's i..en Phebus. "h1le the top seed an doubles as the team of Knst)' Phebus and Jennifer Bain fhe finals are "ednesda\ after- noon at ~ . .30. also at the ~esa Verde C ountl") Club Any free agent who accepts his former club's offer to arbitrate will automatically be deemed to be under contract with the club for one year. An arbitrator would choose a 1989 salary from bids submitted by the club and the player. Orange Coast College, which fin- ished second in the Orange Empire Conference behind Saddleback and as seeded fifth , opens Wednesday at 3 p.m. by hosting I.A Pierce at Cemtos College. The Pirates' pool does not meet size specifications for regional .------------------------------------------1 play. Free agents were allowed to stan accepting bids from any team on Saturday. While the South Coast Conference features the top two seeds in Long Beach and Golden West plus IOth- seeded Mt. San Antonio. the Orange DRUG and ALCOHOL Referrals 1-800-322-3363 Monday-Friday 8 :00am-1 O:OOpm The Resource Center ' .. MO ILL IEW 'II .~ElllS • And ti o.nta. lndud6ng tu. IO month doe• d end ...... Allldulil $1112.12. Totm of PllY'Mf•ta 17174.58. Ortw off 11275.17. On~~· (13000/308132) BU.ER STREET Leonard blasts Lalonde LAS VEGAS (AP) _: Sugar Ray Leonard got up from ·a founh-round knockdown to knock out Donny Lafonde in the ninth round and write boxing history Monday night. becom- ing the first fighter to win titles in five weight classes. The sensational victory gave Leonard the World Boxing Council hght heavyweight title held _by LIJonde and 'also the vacant WBC ~per m1ddlewe1aht title. • > After Lalonde went down for the second tame an the ninth round, referee Richard Steele didn't even bother to count. but rushed to Lalonde's aid as Leonard threw his arms high tn tnumph. Lalonde seemed to have Leonard 1n trouble earlier in the ninth when a flurry of punches backed Leonard up. But Leonard fought back and sudden- ly nailed Lalonde with a right hand and followed with a flurry or punches that· put the defending champion down. · Lalonde struggled up at two and took a mandatory 8-count. Then Leonard resumed the attack · and smashed the Canadian to the floor, where he remained for severat sec- onds. He would not have beaten a 10- count. The time was 2:30ofthe ninth. Leonard, 32, went down at I :27 of the founh round from a left-.riaht to the head. with the right being the big punch. Leonard got up at two and took a mandatory kount. LaJonde landed several more head shots but Leonard escaped funber damage. Leonard moved to the anack in the fifth round, w~ be scored with several left jabs and a couple hard nghtS'lo the head. In the sixth round . Leonard continued his assault. with punching left jabs and sevctaJ three- punch combinations to the head. The 28-y~-o Lalonde scored with sev-eral nch late in the round. Leo rd h n Lalonde Wlth a rigttt and the followed with sii punches to the head that had Lalonde holding on 1n '\he seventh. Lalonde fouaht back m the eighth, with four good lefts to the bead that sent Leonard back to the ropes. where Lalonde scored with four more punches. Then came the ninth. and it looked as though Lalonde might have Leonard m scnous trouble. but Leonard called on his champion's hean to tum the ude. 'Tm not onl) fighting and olrl welterwe1gh1. but an old. fat wcl· tcrwc1ght, •· Lalonde said after Leonard weighed in at 165 pounds Monday .morning. Lalonde scaJcd 16 7. one pound under the super m1ddlewc1Jht limit. The light heaV}· weight hmlf 1s 175. Leonard might not have been the dazzling fighter he once was, but ht" stall had determmataon and pride. Lc-onard's previous cham- pionships were the undisputed wt'I· terwe1ght tatle. the World Boxing Assoc1at1onJun1or middJeweipn title and the WBC middleweight title. ~~CM CllTI •U I . C. P9f. MT1 CllTEI --.... 700 1 1 30 ...... TR Lm IUCI TllUCI TIUl'IE 100 a t-30 .. M 0rang9 Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tuesday, November 8, 1988 A 6-foot-2 senior, he ran a kickoffback 92 yards for a TD, rushed for 1 OS yards. scored another TD and intercepted a pass. ----.:..---=-------· WARREN JOHNSON Corona del ·Mar >t 6-foot-1, 170-pound junior comerbeck, he had 3 interceptions..._. deflected two passes, baa ~ix assi~ted and one assisted tackles. ---------------* JEREMIE CHAPIN Eatancla A 5-foot-11, I 65-pound junior linebacker, he was an on 16 tackles for 1he Eulcs' defense in the Sea 'liew League loss. -------------· SEAN MALLETT Laguna~cb A j unior o utside linebackers. he had eight tackles. two tips. recovered a fumble and caused two others, in a 17 -7 loss. • --------------~· DARRYL OLIVER Costa Mf:JI& A 6-foot-2, 22S.pound senior, he had six un- assisted and three assisted tackles. and preuured the passer three umes. :__~~~~~~~~--• DAVID SCHULTZ Marina A th~year starter at quarterback, he completed 8 of 19 passes for 241 yards and two touchdowns cov- ering 86 and 60 yards. LUA POLA Mater Del A n~uard in the Tro- jans' defense, he had five unais•stcd and four as-sisted tatldes in stopping """"""-..i" Saddlebeck's run game. ------------· P.A. BllltRSON Woodbrlqe An AJl-CIF ti&ht end, he switched to tackle last week Ind "8ded out well in the Wamors' 17-7 PCL win over Uguna Beach. -~---~------· JUAN ACUNA Saddle back A 6-fooi. 180-pound jun- ior receiver he caught touchdown passes of 44 ·~'---and 19 yards to rally the Roadrµnners to 28.-18 win . JOHN SLICK Irrine . * Barona climb to No. 4 lnDiv. l Edtsori, M MaterDeia 1 up one note .. o 100 .... , ,. ... 10 M .. •-> ., ••1·1 SI M l6 .., . ... , 17 ,.,. , 11 •·• 100 .. , " l •I II •·• '1 MW l •I .. .. , ., .. , 2' M 7l , ... , . ... llt ... ,. .. , .. ... ,, f I ,. Mii t ·) SI M •l .., n M IJ .... , ... , to 7+1 " M 75 .. , .. 7-2 .. .. , .. .. , J I ..... .. , ' •·• ,., M •·• .. , ,.. ,., ,. . '". >•S Game-b.U.sters TOR 10 High schoolfootball log Last week's plays of 40 yards or more •93-Jason Clarke (Laguna Beach), touchdown run with k1ckoffretum. •92-Tom Walker (Newport Harbor). touchdown run with kickoff return. •86-Stacy KaP.soff(Marina), touchdown run. •80--Kevan Dickey (Huntington Beach). touchdown run. •60-Stacy Kagasoff(Marina). touchdown pass from David Schulu . • S6-Eric Crocker (Marina ). touchdown pass from David Schultz. • 56-Larry Luera (Westm inster). kickoff return. • 52-Ray Vanatta (Westminster). touchdown run with interception. •SO-Derek Mahoney (Fountain Valley). field goal. •45-Pat White (Irvine), touchdown run. •44-Doug Cunningham (Hunungton Beach), touchdown pass from Chns Will. •44-Juan Acuna (Saddleback). touchdown pass from Jeff Blanco. •43-Dubie Ospina (Costa Mesa), touchdown pass from Rich Schones. •40--Josh KJetn (Newport Harbor), field goal. •40--Jtm Slagle (Westminster). interception return. Last week's rushing leaders I Jam Roberson (University). 30-146: Pat White(lrvme). 14-113. 3 Tom Walker (Newport Harbor). 20-106: 4. Kedric Powe (fountain Valle}). 12-105. Last week's pa11ing leaden I. David Henagan (Fountain Valley). 17-28-0. 277 yards. 2 TDs: 2. David Schulu (Manna). 8-19-2. 241 yards. 2 TDs: 3. Fred Schweer (Woodbridge). 17-31-2, 214 yards. 0 TD: 4. Danny O'Neil (Mater Dei). 12-17· I. 175 yards. I TD: 5. Rand} Karhner (Ocean View). 13-34-0. 163 yards. 0 TD: 6. Jeff Blanco (Saddleback). 6-12-0. 127 yards. 2 TDs; 7. Junior Oliver (Uni versity). 6-1 4-1. 1.07 yards. 0 TD. Last week's receiving leaders I. Mike Cook (Fountain VaJley). 7-12 1: 2. Dean Martinez (Ocean View), 6-39: 3. Alex Zaldivar (Woodbridge). 5-77: 4. Scott Seymour (Woodbridge). 5-75: 5. Doug Weaver(Founta1n Valley), 4-82: 6. Randy Martin (Irvi ne). 4-49; 7. Ru ssell Eisenman (Huntington Beach). 4-27; 8. Ryan Nash (Woodbridge). 4-22: 9. Stac} KagasofT (Marina). 3-148. Last week's scoring leaders I. Kednc Powe (Fountain Valley). Mike Yurkovich (Woodbridge). Stacy KagasofT(Manna). Tom Walker (Newport Harbor). Juan Acuna (Saddleback). Doug Cunningham (Huntington Beach). 12 each: 7. Derek Mahoney (fountain Valley). Ji m Roberson (Uni versity). 10 each. Orange County hlJ(fl school Coot ball . Dally Pilot selection• 1. MluJon VJejo (9-0) 2. Ftn. Valley (7-2) 3 . Woodbridge (9-0) 6. Senite (7-2} 6. Loe AlmJt09 (8-0-1} 7 . Valencia (8-0-1) 8. Mater Del (6-4) 9. Santa Ana (6-3} 10. CdM (7-0-2) BACK BAY RIVALRY CONTINUES •.. From Bl weapons. The quarterback (I y Pnce) has done a good JOb for them. He's a good athlete. a starter 1n vo lleyball. and can run the ball ··w e have to devise a game plan that is going to get us in the end zone." How often 1t will be required is a matter of conjecture. but most would probabl) agree 14 points will guaran- tee a tie -someth ing Harbor can not afford. "Really . you don't know what is ~oang to happen.'' sa id Bnnkley. 'These kind of games. I've seen them go tn all different d1rect1ons. Some- times it's low-scoring. sometimes it's wild." Corona del Ma r has held the upper hand the past -three years, knockmg Harbor out of a league crown in '85 [ 5-14 ). out of the playoffs in '86 3-10) and taking the title from the ilors a year ago (6-0). "We've been trying to approach it as we have m the past," said Brinkley. "We try not to do thmgs we're not used to doing. not to get out of sync. JUSt try to go out and play our game. "If we block and tackle and get after peoP.le. we can win the game. But. we can t tum the ball over. I know they have a good secondary." Corona del Mar enters as a thrcc- point favonte. The theory: Harbor's offensi ve strcn.Jth 1s what 1t showed against Estancia, a hard- charging. nose-to-nose assault up the middle. The passing game is ad_equa~e •. at best. It haJ not been a btg stnking force. Corona'sdefensivestrength. mean- while. is right where Harbor's of- fensive strcnath is. up the middle. And there's very little to pick apart in tenns of the CdM secondary. Offensively Corona's pme is simi· lar to Harbor. but the Sea Kings appear to have more firepower on the pound and lbrouah Lbe air. "You can say all that stuff:· said Holland. "but when it comes down ro this pme, it's a surprising pme all around. "I expcet a well-olayed pme, bur I've teen Tom W1fker, an<S they do some thinas to JC' him outside. "f've teen him one-on-one with 1 comer, and I've teen him Nn over some preuy aood comcTbecks. ··You can'tJUSl set your defense to ,.et him comina inside. We have to be 1ble to do 111 lflc thinp. . , .. From what we've seen, Steve Scheck can throw the ball. He had a two-point play against Tustin that was SQ accurate. rt was a must-play. And he does the things that get Walker out in the open. "Their theory is that they arc going to run w1th the pass -they're going to throw some short stuff so Walker can run with the pass. "And Robbie Power complements things. He's been around for a wh ile, a guy everyone knows from this side from Juntor All-Amenca football." On a scaled down basts. the game shapes up as a collision between Harbor's Walker, a 6-foot-2, 190- pounder who '¥S MVP of the league when a1u01or'. ~nd Corona del Mar's John Katovsich, a 6-foot-3, 22S- pound senior. Both run wllh the ball. catch the ball and play defense. Walker punts. returns kickoffs and punts. and 1s the rover in Harbor's secondary -either up on the hne. backed off in a It nebacker area or even playmg deep. Last week he ran for I 06 yards on 20 carries. ran a kickoff back 92 yards for a touchdown and mterupted a pass among other endeavors. KJstovsich, who combines with Chris Dcuchar (6-3, 220) to easily form the best 1-2 linebacker punch in * • * the league. 1s also a force at runnmg back. Both ha ve leveled would-be tacklers on their way to big runs with bru1S1ng bull-like tactics. "h's our guy (Katovsich) against their guy (Walker).'' said Holland. "Both are going to be hit by the other, both are good football players, and both are dedicated to this ,same ... Katovsich has not been mvolved in the offense as much with the abun- dance of running backs available to Holland (Chris Borg. Greg Haack and Brian Lucas). but Brinkley antici- pates seeing more of Katovsich Friday. "They usually use him on short xarda~e play~.. said Br~nkley. 'They re not tancy, but with big physical people up front, theJ come at you and move you around. The Sea Kin~ start 8ol'J and Haack in the backfield. and if the past is an indication, alJ four backs fi1ure in the runninuame which bas carried CdM to eisht strai&ht without a toss in leque over the past two seasons. Harbor, me1nwhilet is work.in& on a le11Ue winning suua: of two. ··~e·re just hap_py to be i~ this pos1l1on, t6 have the opportumty to play for a playoff spot. .. said the Tars· coach. "At least we can control our own destiny." * * * The starting lineups N....,.,, H•,_, c.r... dll -r Ol'l'•NSE OFl'•NS& Pol. Ptliver Ht. wt. Yr. .,.. l'leY., !f,· wt. Yr. TE Ernie Relnnardl 6•3 190 Sr. TE Phil HKktr S• l llO Sr. OT Ian Lono 6·6 275 Jr. RT Mickey Cohtn 6·2 235 Sr. OG Oaln ~"9Nlll 6'-1 225 Sr. RG MorNn Rlnowald s-n llS Sr. c HobY Perk.1 6-1 190 Jr. c Mike Kellv 6-1 205 Jr. OG Mike l•rNI s~ 10 226 Jr. LG Pat Kettv s-10 115 Jr. .OT Joel Pa1tenon 6•0 210 Jr. LT N•IMll Cral9 6-0 20S Sr. SE Jim Stanley 6•1 170 Sr. Wit Jeff CIW'k 6·0 170 Sr. FL arnv ce.iann.i S-1 1• Sr. Wit Warren JoMton 6·1 170 Jr. QB Sieve Sdleck S-11 171 Jr. n Tv Prlc:e 6-1 115 Sr. . F8 Robbie Power S-t 1.0 Sr. Chris lore 6-1 1111 Sr. T8 Tom w ... 6-1 190 Sr. Tl Oree H..U s-• 1.0 Sr. Pl( Jotll Klein w 1• So Pl( Pat C•~n 6·0 175 Sr otll' .. ts• D•P•NS• OU Ryan~ S-11 llO Jr. DE wroll Wltlard 6-1 190 Jr. OT SMn Ellt S-11 176 Sr. OT Jeff a.ower 6-0 190 Jr. NG D~Y Lutwmv S-10 115 Sr OT lllon Aklno S·I 1.0 Jr. OT DUI ~ ,_, 225 Sr. DE Bretl Alefl .. , 20S Sr. OLB J.son lraflmt S-10 1'6 Sr. LI John K•tonldl 6-J 125 Sr. ILB Joel Pat~ 6-0 210 Jr. LI Chri. DeucMr ..l 220 Sr. ILi Wavne Fr..., S--11 190 Jr. Cl Wttton .JoMton 6-1 170 Jr. RC 8oMrv EdWwdl 5.f ISS Sr. Cl Wwren .JoMton 6-1 170 Jr. LC Donnie~ S•t 160 Jr. FS I ll Reuttl 6-1 "° Sr. lltov Tom Wllller 6-2 190 Sr. SS lr.ndon lento ..o 170 Sr. FS Jeff Wll!Jamt 5-1 15' Jr. SS P•t C•..._n ' H 175 Sr. Punt Tom Walller .. , 190 Sr. Punt Tv Pf'lc:e ... llS Sr • (. deMt9t .....,. """' C<>ttONA D•L MAit (7·0·2) (S.. View LNeut, 2·0·21 1 Hunllnolon &tech 23 Sen Clomenle: S2 S.nlleoo FOUNTAIN VALLEY (7·'·0) (54Mwt L-.ue, 4·0·tl n MAie< 0.1 11 o lS El T0<0 31 O 3 Minion V•to 2• e 21 E1 Mode,.. 1 MAltlNA ( .. f.O) SADOl..HACK (J.S· IJ (14MMf L.Mtiue, 1-4·01 ISM Vtew LMeUe, 2·1·11 O -E•P«ente 13 • u Ce rbbed 0 -Servile 4' 6 Senl• AN 10 Foollllf 21 7 Domil'l9Ull O Los Aleml101 2f 21 serre 6 Miiiiken 21 o Setile Ane v ellev 14 Leoune Hill' 21 CO\I• Me:H 14 Unl11ou11v• U E'1lencfe• 11 10 Lono S.Kn POiy 3S '12 32 Ocean view· O t• n Edison• 21 6 Wt1l!l'llh,ler• 16 21 Newoort Herw• 10 Hunllnolon BffCll• 't 7 Tuslln• 0 S.Od .. Deek' 17 Tui11n• Ntl-el NOWPOrl Hert>or• COSTA MESA (4-4-11 (l"eclflc (Nit LHtut, 1·2·01 7 10 We"minslt'' lO o 36 Merl,..• :ro o NIC>-Hunlino1on S.ech (el OCCI 0 Edlaon• 41 0 Corllne\Mf7'\er• 20 Fo1Jnl1ln Vett«v• 36 21 Unl'(lf'11tv• Nlo-<>cffn View• (el H8) Nll-E,1enc1e• (el OCCI MATllt 011 U·4·01 UHNlltSfTY CM ·l) (A.._,. L .. M , 2·1·._ CS. VleW LMtlUI, 1·2·11 13 E st•ncle 23 HTN. BEACH U·1·0l (SIHIMt LHfUI, l·l-0) 0 CO<OM det M1lr 2 Peclflce 1 7 1 16 11 Foun11ln Vil .. .,. n 1 Irvine 34 Oceen'kle l6 O Minion Vi.lo 17 S.nle A,.. 10 12 Woodbrldot 10 NtwPOl'I HerbOr 22 Rencno Al•m•IOI IS 34 Geroe:n Grove: 7 7 Kele:llt 1 7 LOOO Beech Wiison 1• Mater Otl 31 21 10 1' 26 9 EdlM>n 21 7 FoolttlM 31 Hunllnolon 14 31 Dene Hhll 1• 811/\op Arnet• -----a 14 Cot-clel Mer• 6 Edison• 12 Coron• del Mer 21 1 Woodbrldoo• 14 n 81,llOll Montgomery• 7 24 Nowoorl IWrt>or• 42 Creu>I 21 f E'lencle• 21 Mar)M• 6 Ocoe n View• 12 TreC>uCo Hll1" 1t 19 LeouM Hills• 21 •• ~noe· 13 19 Wulm•n"t<" 2S SI. Paul" IS 11 SeddleMck' Nll>-1t Leoune 8Hcn• EDISON (I· t.01 (s-t LM9UO. J.t-0) 1 El MocMM 21 CaPIWeno Vellev ?t Lono Be.en JO<den 21 Mele< Doi 42 SI. JOhn 8oKO 21 Hunllno1on 8e:ect1' 21 Founleln Velie:v• 41 MeriM" 16 Ouen View' N IC>-el WeslmlnJltt • N IC>-Fovnte ln v 111e11• lel OCCI NI0--5-rvllt" (e l SA Bowl) Nil-Tinlin• (I I Irvine) llllVINE (6·l ·OI Nl~T HAlt9°" (J.6-0) (s.utfl c .. ,, LMtue, 2·2·0) (S.. V1eW LMeW. 2·,·0) 0 I~ Unlver,ttv 1 0 5-nle Alie 71 1• ?t Ville P1r1r. IS 10 Oceen View 0 t• 13 Tu,tln 7 7 Hunllnolon 8ffc1'1 10 9 1 WOOOC>rldot '7 10 Le Het>re 14 o t• Foothill 13 1• Lono &oKll WllM>n 71 6 ?7 Sen ciemon1e 7 14 Seddlebec1t• 21 21 0 CePi11r1no v1n.v• 6 I Unlvenllv• 24 O 13 Mluton V1oio• •• 17 Tuslln• 10 0 ?t Oene Hib• t• 17 Ellene .. • 0 Nil-El To.-o• (el MV) NH-Cor-~ ,,,,.,. '"°""' WHTIWNSTllt (4-S.0) =-LMIUt. ,., •• , 9 v le 30 Mllliktn 12 EMltfenie 7 Ceol,lreno Vellev 6 Mlulon Vlolo 16 Merine• 11 OcHn VleW• 10 Fountain ve11ev~ 26 Hunllnoton 1eec11 • Nlo-Edbol'I• lrtomel WOODtMllOGI lt·t-tJ II )0 20 lt ) 14 17 0 ti ,, ., 14 ' 20 ,. • 14 Jt 20 lS 14 12 )9 6 13 20 " ESTANQA C6·t·I) (SM View L.Meue. l·t·ll 13 Co"• Mfte LAGUNA IEACH U ·6·1l OCIAN "'9W 14·5·01 (rec.llJlt CMSt t...we. 2-2·0) (SWIMt LMtue, M •OI (hc:Mk C.lt L.._., 4·0-tl 2'2 5-1\ Caemenll 6 2 I LeOUM HIQ1 1l t• L~ 42 ~ 19 cvor•u o 20 o Hori• V"la 73 o Nowoorl HerbOr 10 n Foo1h1• o 11 LO\ Amt001 7 3 Dane HIM' 3 20 S.nle AM Ve.llov 3 14 Unlve<1llv 12 27 Irvine 7 3S Leoun. 8HCll 7 1 E1lencle SS 14 Wt1lern 0 14 Cenyon 0 I 6 Sen Clemente 10 O T\l\lln 10 13 6 Leoune Hilts• 2 O -Foun111n Ve1tov• 32 14 Co11e MeM• 7 t• Ofenoo ll Tutlln' 1 cor-oet Mer• t• Unlve<1ltv• 14 3 Orange• 2t 13 Wt1lml"'ltf• 11 t 9 Trebuco H11ts• 7 21 HU11llno1on 1 .. c11· 6 21 Leeune Hll1• 6 I~ OfwtM• 0 O Ne:woorl Harbor• Nll-S.Odltt>eck• l•I OCCI 17 1 WoodbfldOt• 17 0 Edison" 16 17 Leoune 8"ch• 7 NIC>-TrebuC:O HIWI• (el lrvlnel NIO-Co,le Meuo' lhe>me) NIC>-Merlne• (el Hin. Beechl OILERS' CUNNINGHAM. • • From Bl and catches tt," Pascoe said. For a guy who literally does it all for Huntington Beach, you'd think Cun- ninsham would have a fa vorite position. Or at least a spot on the Oeld where he's most comfortable. Guess again. "I don't know (what my fa vorite J??S•tion is). I have no idea," be said. 'I just go out there and play." JC •• tMcu JC JC x • co.1e:r·r.c • (dd•-1 JC ][ ][ JC ][ JC • • • • • el •• .. el .... • Sevent y-five percent of tht time. lllJAeck 111vf• 00-1 • Cunningham plays quarterback on offense. The rest of the time he's playing tailback or wide receiver. But mostly ifs quarterback. because the Oilers arc more effective with Cun• ningham at the controls in the Surfer formation. "(The Surfer) gets some real intcrestin' mismatches," Pascoe said. "We ve taken our linemen and put them all on one side of the field, and the other team has to move their linemen with them. Then we put all of our skill plar_ers on one side and sometimes its a mismatch with a defensive back. It just creates a lot of excitement. "When you're not winnin&. you like to have a little fun to keep the interest up. The kids have asood time with it, it creates a lot of mismatches and it gives us a chance aga.inst a lot of good football teams." Cunni~m ran for 1 28-yard touchdown in the second quarter apinst Westminster and cau&ht a 44- ylrd ICOOI\& pe.ss Ut the fourth on I screen play, in which be actually ran 1bout 46 yards. "(Wide receiver) Mark Little was the 'key on that play, .. Cunninaham 11id of his scorin.a run In the first half. ··He made a real Jood play, blocking two people out with one block." Cunnan&ham's hiahwater-rushina mark is 39 yards., totaled •inst Marina in the Oilen• only victory this year. His biasett receivina per· fonnance was •in1t Ocean View when he cauaht four puses for 89 yards. Now the Surfer is here to enhance Cunnin&ham 11 1 quarterblck and &ivc,lhe 1:>ileT11 solid replacement for Petunato. .. ,.d never heard of {the Surfer) until this year;• Cunninaham said. .. Coech Pucoe found ii out of some book he found. Kc told me that. "'It open• up our off'enae. We can run or pallone<: IO beck to our other (.....,) Of It Ind the deXn.IC is confuted, 10 n worts out preuy aood At n"' whtn I IOI in there (It quariert.ck)t I wu a Utt.It ntt\'octs. I threw the t.ll away a couole of times. but it opent thinp up ud ij1 conftucs the defense." So how does Cunnin&ham , a col· kge prospect who clearfy stands out from the rest of his teammates. feel about playing on a team which his won just once in nine gam-.."S? "(Being the top player) doesn't really matter to me," said Clm- ningham. "I just play because I like the game." Cunningham had one interception HtGH SCHOOL SUMM L..we ~ W L T Founleln VelleV 4 O O EdlMlft J I 0 Wftlmimllf' J I 0 Oceen View I 3 0 HuntlMtOn IMctl I 3 0 Merine 0 • 0 ,,.....,.., ...... (f:a) O¥w9ll W L. T 1 2 0 I I 0 • s 0 4 s 0 , 7 0 0 ' 0 Edlton e l Wftlm!Mler HunttnftOn l..cll n. Founteln V..., (fl OCCI Metll\e Y1.. OcMf\ vtew (el Hunllno'-' l..cll) s.. Vie'# LAMUe ~ • W L. T Corone ... MM 2 0 t S1H'IU~ 2 I I ~"-"' 2 2 0 T111t111 1 2 I Etlnle 1 2 I un1-wen1tv 1 2 1 ,.,..,., ca.... o.a> OWWal W L T 1 0 t a s 1 :J 6 0 3 S I ' 1 1 :J S I Corone °" MM •• NewOOfl H9'00f s.d~akc:ll w. E'twle lel OCCI Tutlln VI. Uftfvtrilfv (et lrvlMI hdlc C..at LMtut ~ W L T WOOdllrld9t •• 0 Tr-.co ._. J 1 o l.""'19 ltecfl 2 2 0 Coate MtM 2 t 0 °'""' 1 3 0 ~.... 0 4. O.Wel W L T ' .. 1 1 0 ' ' J . . ' , 1 • I I I n....-....... (7QI) , .... MtM .. ~ leeCfl Trelluce Hiii ft. WI 1• ,_ I .. tr.W.l °'"* ~ UIUM Hiii (llf llMM*1 Vlltl> ..... c.... "*-' L.-• L T 4 •• 2 2 0 2 7 • J 7 • J ' • • • • ' CMrwl W LT f t I • 1 • J t ' s • • I ' I I I I in the first quarter and another in rhe fourth . They were the fint two picks of the year for Cunningham, who had by far his best passing performance, as well. We now know of one street in Huntington Beach that's reseTVed for a Surfer. You'll find it running along the 50-yard line at Sbeue Field, home of the street-au on Surfer Lane. • , NPL STANDINGS tldlMICtfswww "'~ MlMKOlll 0etrol1 GrMnhY TamM Bay N.Y.Gllintto ......,,, Walh!MIOfl ptllladtll>hl• Oallli1 O.nver R•kMn• S..1111 S.n DlffO K•nHS Cltv Clnclnnall Hous1on Cleveland Pllliburoh Buffa to N.Y.Jels lndlenaPQl!s Ml•ml N~ErtDl•nd w ... W L T > I O 1 I O • • • l ' • .,.. .. I 2 0 ., ' 0 2 1-0 2 I 0 2 I 0 E•lt ' ' . • 6 ' 0 • • • s s . 0 2 I O WMf w L T s s 0 ·S ' • s s • 2 • I • ,. I l Central I ' ,, ' ' • • • • 2 ' 0 E•st • I • s • l s ' • s . ' 0 s ' • .IOO 1'2 '123 ·'°°~''" 179 .200 1n-210 .200 1'° 207 .200 175 161 .100 7)9 °1'9 ·'°° 231 219 .600 243 236 .500 2lJ 211 .200 169 Zll Pct PF PA .500 ?01 206 .500 ?CW 119 .500 161 117 .100 119 199 . .150 123 1'6 .IOO 294· 115 .700 239 230 .600 170 15' .200 196 27' .900 212 141 .sso no m .500 20 193 .soo 1&6 203 . 500 176 '209 M9fldlo'1'1 Sew. Hoinron ?•. Clev ... lld 11 klr*IY'I G9mft Ntw Or1N•11 11 lll911'1l. 1 P.m. • ...,,, •I Sin Fr•nclicP. I P,m. Chlc:ffO 11 Wl.,,lllOIOl'I, JO •.m. Clo!Clrw\911 I I l(•{lloll Cllv. 10 •.m. Lndl-P0111 11 GrMn B.1w, 10 .1.m. N ..... E~.11 ..... Yorll JI", 10 • m. Pl'tll9dllU'll. •• Pltt~oh. 10 •.m. ~ Olloo 11 Allenl1, 10 1.m. TMl'IH a. ... .11 Ortrull. 10 I .I'll, Nt# Y~ Gianll ti Pltoeftll, l P.l'n_ ,.........,., It Dfn...r. l P.l'n. Houston .11 s.i1t11e, 1 p.m. Mlnl'>hol• •1 0.1 .. 1, S' P.1'11. MlondlY'1 G.llM l!luff-'O 11 Ml.llT'I(, 6 p,m. COLLEGE AP T•. 20 I. Nplrt O•tn1 c•21 1. Soulnitrn C1I ! IS) J.Ml.1m1, Flt. Cl) 4. Wnl Vll';ln .. fll $..£Jot:I09 St11t .. UCL.A 7.NICW'.1-M<I •. Oltlenom. 9.Auautn 10,Ww~ n. A.111..,,.., 12. L.SU IJ . .Mkfllllln 14. Ollllhorn• St IS.SW«ull , .. ,..,,,_ 11.G-111• II. ot.Lloo.tn. 1'. eQIUl'Ho 20. W1~ton St llte•• "" hi f-0-0 1.160 I 1-0-0 1,1n 1 1-1-0 1.065 l 9-o-o m • 1-1-0 m J •-1-0 "' • •-1·0 "° 7 1·1-0 151 I I· 1-0 71t t 10-0-0 '6S 10 •-o-o m 11 •-2-0 .. , !l •-1-1 .,, u 6-1-0 ll6 IJ 7-1·0 .. ,. 1-2·0 )21 17 1-2-0 :ztl " •-1-0 •s 11 1-2-0 " S·l·O 61 Oll'19r fK.1lvln9 VPfn: HoullO'I '°· Soulh C.,P- llM 17, Arm., 16, &rion.m Young 1•. Wn•ll!'n Mk11ie.n lS, T••tt A&M 11, Soutll«" M/1ll1· 11PP1 I, P!ll~lll'I 1. Arb:-J, Or-s. A.rl10M $1•1• •, IMlnol1 J, Ttll•1·£I P•.a J, M.1w•!I 2, Mkl'llilln Siii• \. COMMUNITY COLLEGE STANDINGS MbUM C~• TOP •rv• 1.U OM'*"l T-• ~l.lllWIOO! ,,_, c:-. OWr.11 W-LT WLT 10 0 1 00 d I 0 1 I 0 \...(11'1!1° 8ffcl'I lit•nchO s.nn•oo Mt S9l'I Anll>nlo 5 1 I S 1 I S I l ' I I 520 610 C•NTRAL o.IVWON Dt\O. c...r. a--.. T-,_.,. s.dttl111Kll i;r.111Ch0 S.ntt-ltlwlf',,_ ~*"' .,._ CN• WL.T WL.T WLT )00 100 100 Joa 610 110 1 I 0 s I I • 1 1 110 •lO SJO 030 ,., l•l 030 ?SO )SO itollTM•litH OIVIMOH El C•mlrla ' " . " Lono 8"ch ' " ' " Ml. Sin Anlonlo "0 "0 .. ..-. " 0 ., 0 Ctrrl'°' "0 "0 SOUTH•RH ... ,,,... ··-'" ' .. SCluthw.s,..n '00 "0 .,,..._, '" "0 Sen gt: "0 "' .... -0" '" '-""*"'' ~ 0.-C.$1 ,, ~ "'"t. 1 Fulltrlun 11 lit l..,.llM, 1 ~ ti lt9Ad'IO Slnlleoa. 1 Ctrrllol •I Mt. S.n An•onlo, \;JO ... ~ •' L.Otlll &Ndl. 1 S.n o""'° M.IMI •1 e• C•l'lllno. 1 GrotsmDnl •I P&lomlr, \;JO SoUl'flwft~n •I S.n Oltoo. t SATIMDAY'S OTN•ll GAMllS WM"'"' S'*tt -~· ~~ •' Gil'nd4'!f'. l:IO Wftl LA .11 hll«tfltld, 1;J0 '" '" . " ... "0 ' .. ... "0 "0 "0 L.A SO\llhwnl 11 S.nt1 1!11rb.lr.1, 1.lO \..A M9t11Gf .11 Vllf'tllr.1. l:lll LA Pltrct •t Vtn1urt. 1:30 Cornol9n t i S.nt1 Monk•, 1.30 ,...,.c......,._ An~ V.1lln 11 Oftlf'I, 1.lO Ml, $ton JKlnlO 11 C111tff9v, 1·l0 C1tru1 •I Etll L.A , 1;>0 Seit llemlrdlna v • ..., •I Vietor V9111w, l:lO ............ ll-* kMll. C~• lt9C. ""' LW 1. Fullll'lon, Mh\IOn C9n. 4121 1-0-0 12' I 2, 811rt1191d, WKl.,.n s1. SO.ti!< 1-0-0 11• t J, MootHf'k , w11rn SI. Na. l·0-0 l(W S ... S.IOdlllCIKll., Mitt.Ion e.n. 7·1·0 7t 6 ... ·~ SllM., M/tMuil ,...,, •·1-l 70 ' ._ El c.mlno • .Wti!on NO. 6·1·1 6' 1 1. Giermlt, W•11.r11 St. Na. -y;1-t1 " l I. Ml. SM A.nlanlcl. Nlhllon Na. •·2·0 •S t •• LJo v.111v. Wtll«n SI. So. 6-l -O 1• 10 10. AA!ttUM Vdtv, FoaN 1·1-1 I t °"""': E•1I L.A !•·21, S; litlvtl'lld9 !1•4). 2; lonfl IMcfl C!lv (4·l·l), I; P•IMl9t'l.I t•·•I. 1; SoulftWtotftrn c•·41, 1. ,. • l.ClllP 8Kll ?.Jon~ l . S.nc:IY L. ... le '· a.n "'"""" .. s. 1(1111 Gf"Mn 6. O•vld FrO\I 1. Curtis Sir.,,,.... I. Mtl'lr. C•ICIYKClll• t. \...91WW W9dklm 10. P•ul Aii~ 11. $1•v• P.11• 12. Toml(llt ll . M.rll Mc:CUl'l"lb9<" I•. Gr.o Norm.n JS, Mllll litl'kl , .. Jttt SkHntoil 11. Ptl.,. JtCOOHn II. J•v liw1 19. l!lrue:t Llellllt 20. P.1vne St-.1rt 11.FrtdCOUPIH 2:1. M91'11. O'Mffrl n. L_.l(ry N91M!n lhScollHodl 2S. Jl>di. Mucld 26. O•n Pohl ?1.MtrllW'-11.C..rvl(i>eh 1'. aoor"'•" JO. Sco!t V.rl>l.lnll ll. 0.1'1 a.rr )2. l!li11 G111.on lJ. c;.11 Morlll" )I. &Oii l.OIW' JS. CO-S.IU«I l6: .V..rll 8r00111 J1, Cr.110 St.1111« ,.. JI. Otvt lh1mrr•-ll1 lf. TomW•I'°" .O. Otn Forlm9n •I. NiF\ Prkt •1. A"nctr•w M.lllft u . .JOnn Mlof\.llttv IM. Donnie H.1mtnond •S. Sltvt Junet ... Don F'ocMy f7. Mot'ril Hl!tllllW 4. Ci.t"t'll(:• Rou '' 81•!~ MCC1lti11., SO. Cor•Y P1witl SI Fllllv lat!ler Sl. litutlttl Wr.nn ---lJ, Dao.lg T 9Wlll S4. Tom Slital'!\.lfttf SS. Curl 8.,rllf?I S4. rim SI"""°" s1. TomPuru ... Y Ed Flori S9. &oooY W•llli ln1 '°· JimClft.,. 61. W11wl'l.I L.•'11 &2. t.1rrv Ml1• r.J. 0.A. 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LGmUPC. l ltl,m L-8-cll Wl!larl. I !to,on • SMAL.I.. SCNOCIL.S :::!·.·.~ 1. M.lvfltkl; 1. C".10WICll, ], t•I•, ,, Mlm-l'TIGlft: S.. LJtiotl1'I Olm"911ri 4.. Ml11lun Prtu, I ::n:~~ Vi .. AO~I P<rtu; •. l.('tllnewlll Cnrl11I•"· ' 1110,,,3 WOUc1C:rn1 Cfll'1'11.ll'I, 10. L.~. 116',Sd 1l•S.:m 11 ...... 116'.571 11"3,t ll 1 lj6,061 l lSS,5" 11S1,l j6 l lSCl,602 11.,,tn •1•,"2 Sl .. ,l(M llt7,l:U 1146,601 1142,1$3 113'.tll 113',Sn l lll.I07 IUl .Jlt 1111.~ 1131.9)7 112',l"O 1117,ISJ 1l1S,471 1121, .. 1 1121,171 J l:I0,029 Jlll,~61 1117,1)2 111•,lSJ 111•,t•4 tl\J,60t 1\11,s.>6 ...... 19' l.11 V•1) L.I GMT "4EA VYWEIGl'lrS 1SUP£1! MIDOL.EiiltE IGHTS-Sue•t RIV L.l'Oll•tO IM.lr ..... 11111 1(0'4 Donn• L.a~ (C•...0.1 .11 2:10 In ninth of IClleduil<I 12 <ound\ IO N in twit~ wee tt""'1" CL.-.rd 11 lt-1 w1tn 2s 11110dloui1: LllClndl II JJ·l .... 11n 2' •noc1<au11). SUPElit LIGHTWEIGNTs.-lt_. M••· w1•rll« (L.11 Vt0t1 ) Oflf. Vlnnlt P•il11111.1 !Pravldtnc:•. lit.I.I In ll·rCIUlld ~ Ofl· ci1lon IP r._r.1in 111,t..Wl!IC 11119 lM.IVWNI'* ll n ·S #ltfl n •nodlctull. P•1IMl1• " 1S·J} SUPER FL.YWEIGtiTJ--(;llWlo ltum9n !AMllCO ) dtl. Sulllr 8tll• lita!.11 !COlumbi•) In, 12-rouno un1nlmau1 dkl1lon tP , ... in 1111 wac Ill~ fltomtn 11 U·•·I ... 1111 JS •nocloaull, lita!.11 II >o-2· l ...... ,, II ~nocllou") R•v L.-arct'I W-'d TtlM Nov. 30, 1979, won th• wee w.i· 1erweiori1 1111• w!lh lSlh-round knockout of• Wiifred Benlter Jn Lei V90••· Nov. 1~. 1990. re11e iMd !Ml WBC wetlerweiol'U 11119 wllh elghlh·round knoOout. of Roberlo Ouren In N•w Orlean1o. JuM 2S. 191\, won WBA junior mlddl9welght title with nlnlh·roul'ld knockoul ot A..,ub Kelulti ln Houlton. Seo!. 16, 1911. won undlsoul9d world -.-.111rweloht lil\e. wllh l'lh·round k~ll.· out Clf Tommv Hurni Jn l.•s V199s. A.prM 6, 1917 , won wee mkkl'ew.iorit 1111e wllh 12·round sotlt Mclslon o.,tr M•rY•IO\ls Mllrvln H&9191" ifl L•I YIN!I. NOY. 7, 1m, won Y•c•nl WBC wa.r mk!019weloh• 111 .. ano wac Llohl hffv\,. w•IQhl !Ille wlt n nlnlh·round knockoul o ... .., Donny L•IOnele ln L•s V~s. Plll.lC ll)JJC[ !'Ill.IC llOTICl . 0...IH~ HlW..oRT \...ANDIMC -l ba.11, I I 9"91«1. 13 uoncl 0111. Jl mKl<lfll. 10 Kl,llO!n, I Olu.I l>lfCll, f c&lkP ti.Ill. MendeV'S ~ 9as••AlL ~L ...... SEAITLE MAlitlN£1tS-N•....a Jim L.9ttti· ~·'~ ..._.._ HOIJSTON ASTlitOS-N•""'fll ill.rt HQWI ~~ ... P!TTSllUlfC.H PflitA.TEs-Nll..-Ur"r\I Oovoh1" etneftl .,...1119'.it" S'9Md JuM (&/19t11>1o!. PUii...,,.,... !O I --... IM conlrKI ,ooTaALL Mltitlltl , ....... ~ PHOENIX CA.lfOINALS-~ M9rll. Tr.1vnow;c1, ott...~'W! -rd·!Kkll. PIM:td Joi &OlloC, ott.tt.ll•• 11....,o·c..,1.r, on llllutld ,.. w~ NOCK•Y .......... """*"~ PtTTSIUlitGH PEP+GUtNS-lit.c.llN o. ... MCL.i..&ln, c..,1.,., •l'IG l(..,ln si.v-• ..n "'""'' from Mu~ltllOll ol tM lnt.rnetloll&l HOn .. L.iftOU41. S.0.1 Joe• C:•IY-, Ctnlef. ~ "Ml1lt l(leftO#l<ll, ""' #Ing. TOlitONTO MAPL.E l.fAFS-r,..,... ltuu c-tntll, cen•tr, ro tN MUlllrMI ,_.,,. llor John Kor!Jic. ""1 w\nll, •l'IO • s.l•ttl-rounod olck In tN "" .,,,...,. dt•tt COL.L.l!GIE ST J()HN$-Nlmlld Ptl• 4""' 11mt11nl ~"" CMCfl, Weather Improves as yachts head out to sea off Mexico • Bringing up the rear in the 36-boat racing fleet wasJohri Scripps' 79-foot_ Miramar. San Dieao Yacht Oub. which had only covered 111 miles in the 40 houn after the Sa1urday noon start. Posnion rcPort.s arc taken at 6 a.m. dailv. De.spilt the .slight improvement in By ALMON LOCKABEY the weather. it was still a slow race cw,,......,...._ with thc-lead yachts avcrqillJ only Class A yachts in l.o5 Angcln 51h knots. There was no weather Yacht Club's Cabo San Lucas race rcpon from the tleet on Monday, but Monday picked up sli&htJy bct1« cond1tidos wcrt expected to improve breezes south of the border aAd as the yachts moved south and fart~ ruoved into Mexican waters -but out to sea. not ve.r)' far. Oass and fleet standings. with Pat Farrah's Santa Cruz-70 Blondie distances from the start: out of Long Beach Yacht Oub IOR -A~t a~. P•t F.,r.,.. L.-. IMal reported a position 233 miles from vc, 213 ~ u-n: 1.,._o ... 11..,., °""9Y, the start after 40 hours of sailing. She u. Ye , m !2'·2>; l a-t9'1, Oki: P•••191un reported. a l 7S-m1le dau"s ru" ':24 ~ Murrt .,, \...°"" 1-11 YC, m (J-l)i 4. I '~ t)rl,ll'T\l)Ht, (>on A'!'Fft, '"-' HWbOr YC, lit hours). compared to 58 during lhe 1•-•i. s. oi~. u ~LA.Ye. m 1s-•1. first 16 hours of the.race. The position IOll·&-1. Wlil•Wflll•. H9I o..,, 1«111 rcv• h•·fi-11·0 IOR·A ond first in the Corlntt'llan YC, 119 11-s1; 2.1t~ • ._. • '" '"' •~ C..mpCMll, l.ono a...:11 YC:, 111 t.2-13); ~. OR nect. . . litODtr'I & Mlc/\MI 1(9M. CYC, 1)5 tJ·lSI; .. Only one mile as1em of Blondie L.IQuicl.$1uo,Wlll.m ... odl.u1t.SltlhlCN;t '+'C, 1tt was Roy Disney's Nelson-Marek 70 J•·:.W11:\~ .. ~~~·~ ... ™~ Pyewacket (Los Angeles Yacht Club), • .C•ol11T-h • vc. m 11-n; t. ai.ot Sll¥w, and 1he . o 1 1 0 htt .110Rbc-Ah. boad Bl" d~ ~-~11'3 u -21, l . '°''· ~ ~. strunf out m1 es 1n on 1c. F>HltF·&-t. 11-Mo. •• er... si. Ha Day's Farr-68 Winterhawk, Fr.ch YC. 1110-JJ; 1. •.,..o."'5~. Bahia Corinthian Yach1 Oub. an t:;~l· ~'iri ... 1;1•1~ 1· c:i-.. O.'#lcl T-. IOR-8 entry was 119 miles from the PHilF-c-1 Mornln(a1.,, ~ °'*"· Start and had moved up into tht Class s1.FYC:. 1n lt-.i.1, t. F'-', lit.,..,•~. eve • fl 15' t1·11. l. Glt-. It.on litb .,, Suultl ..... Ylodll A cet. lit.cln9 CUI; 1sz ll-•l • ~ COLLEGE NAME~, NOTES From Bl ••• shape at the right lime. They really responded to our type of 1ra1n1ng ~·ell (pcak1ngla1e).·· 0 oec physic.al education lflStructor Barbara Wright and her husband Gcorgeeompcted well in the recent lronman Tnathlon in Kona, Hawau .. theprt"mier 1riathlon 1n the ~o.rld which consists of a 2.4-mile ocean swim. I 12-milebikeand'26.2·milt run wi1b-l ,200compctitors. Barbara. 44. fiojshed in I 2hours. 26 minutes, in knocking five minutes ofTher 1987 time despite slipping from sixth to eighth in tht~year­ old agegroup. ~rgc. 46 and a computer teacher at Long Beach Poly High, rcpea1cdas the 4 5-49-ycar-old age group ~hamp in 9 hours, 56 minutes. break1ngh1s o\\·n age-group record set a year earlier by IOminutn. 0 Micky Penaflor.a l'J85gradua1cof Fountain Valley H1g.h. con11nued 10 build on a super Junior season as a place·k1ckerat Northem Anzona lJniversitywithacarttrhigh 19 pointstn a 25-12 v1ctorySaturda} • over Northern Iowa. coached b~ formerOh10State mentor Earl Bnice The performantt helped tum cs1ab- lish a career kick sconng record at N1ti.U tn only h1sjun1orscason. Penaflor hit one extra po1ntand s1A of se\'Cn fie ld 1oal attempts. w11h his longest t~·ocomin& from 46and~1 yards. His only miss was a 54-,arder HistffortseamC'd him the ESt'N Pla\·er of the Game ;i\\·ard. a.S 1.000 schOlarsh1paw1n::led NAU 1n his name. Ptna,flor has 36 field goals in his carttr. thrtt shy of 1he school record He hash1t 16of20 a11empts 1h1s season. including IOOpcrttnt ofh1~ attempts from 40yardsor less. and all 28 of his extra-point attempls for 76 poinls witt), thm: games rem.:i 1n1ng. -0 The OC:Cfootball team's 01Tens1 \ e problems have overshadowed some fine individuals. one of v.·h1ch 1s freshman wide receiver Mark Cracg. He leads the team Wlth 25 receptions for 14, 7 )'ardspcrca1ch.1nclud1n.1s1). ... for 80 }'ards q.a1ns1 Riv€rsick Satur- da~. Craig's talent forcatchina the ball wherever ifs placed was in fine form against the Tigers, and included a couple of re<icptions where he used his 6-6 frame to go hilh. a one-handed grab while fallin' ba<:ltward in the end zone which didn 1 count when he came down out ofbounds, and a swcc112-vard touchdown catch late 1n thcganic which kept the Pirates ahve. O_n an 80-)•ard dn ve. ooe.o(Coasfs best of the season. quancrblck Mike Crowe lofted a 11mingpass tpward the left comer of the end zone ...Jlth Cr:aia isolated on a defcns1 ve back. Crai1 kept his eye on the ball all the way home. lcan1nsbac.k while running forwa rd. and 1t sailed dtrcclly over his helmet into his waiting hands. 0 ~1ater De1 Hilh product Mike Curll us lhrcw a 9-yard 1ouchdown ~ssw1th 2: I 1 rema1ningSa1urdayto hfl UC Santa Barbara over the Un1\·ers1t)·ofSan Diego. I J.-10. Cuniusalso threw an 18-yard TD pass at theend of 1he firs• h'alf that gave UCS8 (>4)a 6-J"lcad ... Orange Coas1Colleg~andEdisom:'H 1gh .. product Kdlla Jarrett.a Junior quar- 1crbac:k who lS beckina upseniorTitm Sulliva11 1h1s season, ta~ otT1hc ~nch 1ooomplcte I Jof22 passes for 111 van» and one 1ouchdo,,.,·n as Cal Poh.San Lu1sObispo(S-J... l)defcatcd Soiithem Utah State 2J..10Sa1urday. MUC llOJJC[ !'Ill.IC llOJJC[ -......... ::z: 0... ~ .... --... ..... - ' •1 M Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Tunday, November 8, 1988 CALL.842-5678 ( ~~~ .. ·~EXCO.w-.. i'!.. I ........ ~ 1111 Cetta.... 2114 ......... ~ llH l!t!rtrt IMc• lltt C.tl.... 1114 C.ta... 1114 _c.a_._._._tN ___ _........., ... ,:::;::::a r._ _. '" ~ -0PEH DAILY 1-5 PM on Lux COndo nr bc:h, 28R, UPP9' 48A 1~BA. 2 cat .... 111 _.. •EASTSJOE Weetalde 28A Apt, pelo, Iii FllOlll90UTM~CO. • llll ~aP£.a~NSA~ 2~tlo. 21.caty11.: frplcdb. Pf'/ 1•Wl111.. °"tn•s·ttlNlllS11111 s>e1motl0.~1~2 EA8T81DiOUPlEX 1IR, nu crptlpalnt, lndty!'!:.2prkngepeca1 W•lllT?-M ... , ... -_, ..-pe • w., ,.up, CH> gar Entoy iw.et11ta6clna vtewa 4-it • 85011 ~· 2BA. ilaA, petlo, ge<, nu 1550/mo 250-8002, ,.._ .,_.t •. atove l etpt. •WITH IOATiUPi• THEOALYPILOT ·c .. CKYCMMAO •YllBT w/opnrl1095521-MOO &aunMtafromthia3BA A,.now.213--597. ... 7 palnt/Ctl'pt/apptnc e, 860-5194• • • 1750/mo.731-&418 EXCLUllWllACH CLASSIPIEDOfflCUiOU~ THI FlfllT DAY •NEW• 2 o.cs. 2~ beth LUXURY 2Br 2Ba condo. '-QBA beauty wl•tur• .. 1825/mo 250-8002 Of •mTAIT•• W/alde: TwnhH Apt. COMMUNfTY T~~..:·F nw o.i.. """'•"i-w -1otoc· condoa,ontyet--::~ Dbl gar, frplc, pool. too numeroua to men-850-5184 LO 28'1~ T 28D/1 112BA. 2 penon• Hal~ 11A 1BA Saturday 800 AM·1130 AM -O«u<OC• ...,_ ... -& OcMnfront 1115/Mo. 1•t & • last tlon. lmnled (IC)Cpy-9C)ea-12. 1/28A +Mn 2 at ownhouM~ onty:nctpMr.155W:-1 lM-IAVI t100 eq. " 8lllinMSCoun1 .. M·i< ., ............ ---F~.2caroar~. lo\lely +13()(). &42-5290 Ible. Chltdren & pets OK. ...-end untt att 2/car gar ·~·net . o·~ .. .....P't 0 • et. M&-9507 1700mo. w .... /Oryel hoOk-up &OO AM-$,OO PM· ,,,... .. ;,, __ • .,..___ tMa & carpet. 831-1400. 12850lmo. Douo H9ftMI w/dhtlu.;..~~all lmmed' ,_ aryroom,.--/mo. ' • •II flreplace, microwave D«AOUNIS ...... •-• ..,.,. _._,.. From $335,000 NEAR PLACENTIA 7~ or 7SO.l5000 $950mo ii't 2093 · *9 ORANGE .... P•t D/W 0-llQe • EnlO¥ l'Uu ic•TIOOI 001>1., .. r .. -."" ,,...,.,....,................. 38R, 2BA twnnm, grt for IW.' MA..V · -,TSL MGMT M2-1eos pvt bwti111es5/mo =: $o• ""..,.,. :::.'"',.."::::"::v'":,= cpl or ellec, $1009/mo KU°',..lla .. / A~ now. llSO + $50 utll. OCEAN VU delulle 2BA *LARGE 1&Aduplelc ntt Unfurnl~~BR, 2BA, •eoet 8etpe Elctre* .._. ::; ~::: .,._ ... .,. ,.., .. --1115~~~~!~~~~=:::: +dep 2'3-258-5479 J 1 "\V/J'-....,'fl' 1u· ·11 1~ ba,.....plc, deck, gw. new carpet l pelnl uNO larcr,d c ,~· '::J : Sotry, no1*9, r""'-· • w.o s10 P .. ;:-'.:;;":4;.: .. "'".:"',.,.c•;::: NEWPORT HEIGHTS \ff\\ '\.t-.: A\ l&MWUllltw.H 2218 E. Pacific apt B. pet1150Q/mo2.4().2299d =• r~!tnop laundry Ul.Ll ...... 11 -:;:;;.. r"':,~ :_:;: ..,...,,.. 28A, 18A, petlo, avati REALTORS ' 28r, 1eaeoo+ slf, laundry '~t:>~~/~:22~~I 496-7308 eve & wtcnd $735/mo '498-1411: HWPT HOTS ~m -· t.• 11.J1..,.,. ••• ..._.. ........... -» """ 11115• $800/mo, no pets, 2BA + den. unfum/tum fec:IHtlea, no peta/Q811Q9. •NEWPORT HEJGHTS• 4~3-7448 18R aueet 9Pt MQ/atv :,:.:·;;:~.:;:: ,:,:: ~:: 842-4011 Condo1 2~BA. 1860 eq ft, .,...,~ ., 100. 87M87§ 1:A upspdtr•.~· :,ble iv Smell 8achetor. Pvt yard, luL ... k iiii yr f... ta, 1 0 Imo ~' .. "',::_:-_ "', ...... .':'.': ~ cottage. 2~4 APoten•· ~HARP 3BA ViO•nt & pool.lennla. S 1875/mo, 4 lal•ta PtalH•la ~ 'd 147 ~ s. new carpet. 1520/mo + !. 213-l28-8066 ··-"".. --.r. .. _ -·· C ......... to town S1S50/mo Aeedyl Pvt yard·& dbl at-mo+ ok 722·7007 --· -C .. rleqNOW. ""'" •1•1 · • depoeit. 54a-3932 , 2BR ~BA Apt, 9flCfOeed l1IPI fl_._ ,._ tac:he<lgat•S1300mo.' _.., .......... v ••• , ;;arage. c•rpets & -- . -~. "" yeerty673-5686** Margle,Agt97M280 ....... .ulJ 29A 1BA, f-car gar • ~25+ dep. 1B~ mobile apea. Bike to beaefll 2BR f'MlA, f:P, xlnt •SBA 1BA, ,' d/w, SHARP E..llde SBA 2BA 38R 2BA. 2 cat 1cf;· frplc. OCEANFRONT 1 BDRMS tenc«t yard, utllltles p~. = ~:.., M~ge~ 775/mo. 848-1184 11075 Yffy 873-2507 v • ~ '• ~.,,... ~-, -~ ctQae to Jetty, mo-mo completely remodeled'. D/W, mlefo, w d hkups, Avalleble. GrMt locllllon. $825/mo +deposit. Avan ~ Blvd. 646-8373 1895. 2133 Miramar. Pet ok 110501mo AvaH trash comp. Yrty $1400 Must ... I Bkr 675-4606 1111s. * ~1-4999 HUNT. Harbour wea. Avall 1'::.!:===ii--~~ !8al/llP •875-5030* now MMI02 · Agt 875-<4606/722•8520 AJJ new 2Br 2Ba, b91Cony, now. Lrg delulCe 1Br OWi\-lfl '4BA 4BA South e.ytront 38R 2BA, treahly painted. Attractive bachelor ******** frplc, w.,1-to-wall, lCtra era unit, frptc d/w, w/d ~~ .. , ' . ... .,,,. .. 't?l ~ . . ~ :s--~'.'.' t. ~ .,.,,-~) ~, > ,, ' < WITH DOCK Partlally SHARP trl·level condo, Upgraded crpt & window W/Hparate kitchen, lrg, encl gar. $800/mo. nk-up. patio, M75/mo + f I " d S3000/ Eut tide, 3BA. 2BA. elr, trMtment Frptc MC sys $575/mo. Incl utli.. Quiet YIUTlll • w nus No pets. * 642--0433 11025 MC. 848-5824 u':v!i14:iow. 722-702~0. nice crpt/palnt, w/d tem, auto ap;lnkler1. n/smoker 873-5580 II Ull Ya. BEAUTIFUL 2BA 18A In = ..... iiii 837-7918 hkUPJ, d/w, 3 car get, no Great locl Grndr Incl SMALL 1Br yrty 8 houses -RENTALS AVAILABLE dogs $1950/mo. 760-5064 from water. S550 In-N UU · a~; ~g:x. r~· ~!'~ a 8Ctl. ieR, OCWI i~.~u-.-...... .--.... -=-----1 Short term & winter A 1111' 1111 --eludes utlJ 1 penon No ' • view, perk!ng, clae to 1•---------$850 to $1400 $1350/mo 845-7678 *hAABOA VIEW HOME gar Avail Mw 875-9229 Rent an Apartment during carpet/palnt.•ALLUTIL-beach & lhOpplnb newly Waterfront Homes, Inc. • 48r 3Ba, f/p, upgraded. . . tile months of November l'l'IES PAID* decorated. 499-148o liiiiNiiii~~!'!'P.!!!'!"I~~ ~Of9 873-6900 ftUll 11111-dbl gar., ,r.rdnr, comm. ~-or December & receive a $725/Mo. CAL.l 722-1832 Winter 2BA + Den 2BA Fam.sized 28D/2BA ~· Pll ·J•ry; yard, -w/gal.YriY$10001mo glftcertlflcateforavaca-1111•••11 -.-...... --~.-.,~~-~-~.~ wllaland c:hatml Frplc: 1 TWnhm, 100/mo. 7-526 eg1 Agt 722-7178 Evening tlon tor 2 at tile FLAM-400Merrlm.c:Way __ ,.. .... .-. ..... .._.-...-. garagesp.oeS1100~o 1700aq.ft.+wltl'latt.2-car .... llYllllT• u-INGO HILTON Jn Laa •tBA $650 •WflM• ----=~==...,..........., Avt 11n. 873-4002 Agt . gar.NelCt to s.c. Plue. ~ -c.w..... .. .. Vegas or the HVATI e2BR: $750 Frig. di.hwaaher, stove •~-------days: 261-9151 28A 2~BACOndow/vtew 4et&k FR. eEXCAIU LAKE TAHOE (Kids are Gu pa1ct 979•1911 Incl. No pet• 545.-4855 lalMa ..,..: 542-&415 Beautlfull 673-9~ Elctra Lrg. furn. 1BD/frpl, tree with p~enttl) ___ ,_, _____ ---------..__. __ ,& ·1-.. A_A ·-·-· 21u •1DT••••ya11 -deck & VI# L.U. avail EASTSIDE 1 Bdrm newly *111/lllllYILY• .. _.,. • •• .,... ... .. -• --•• s1175 3311 Suvtew · CalJ our Leasing Center·for decorated COf'n« unit In 'A block to ocean . 286 2 BX condo ovet-=~ ~HAAG£t2.7~1. 875-87~~998-9122 detail• on how to qualify 4~piex: '575. 1st/last + 123 31th St. 850-0581 .Loft. Family rm, all looking Harbor & Oc.an. erguaon tor your vacation deposit. 543-1665 amenltlea, double gar-Aefrlg. Wet Bar, storeoe. 3BA 2BA DUPLEX w/frplc 2BA 1BA. frpl,deck, refflg. caftlflcate. EASTSIDE BACHELOf' •lllllAl&An• age, bay view. Muet ... 1 $850mo 832-7337 & petio-On Balboa Bl'.ld. spllt garage. Near beach. .._A_ 11M 1ff1 175-<4606 8kr Waiki distance to the For 1 or 2 peopte. No BRAND NEW APART-........ cellJ~s. amall yard, lut .... ll4i -~ .. ngs11001 ... + pet& $1075 673-1039 MENTS WILL BE AVAIL pet ok. $495/mo. Avail 8Mut.2·SBra/c,gar .• w/d ________________ _. ....-----,,....,,..~-~~ • """""" mo · · -now 7S0.8862 nk-up, new carpet, track 7 c.tal...... ilU BR Uke PXRk 2er 2L: MC. Jack 81a.984-Z484 * 2BA 1BA s99s1mo. ABE 1N PHASE 111 FOR 11g11ts ce11 fan 11r Hoeg .......... ,., Salt Ctrtal ••• .. llU ,_.... 2 I ..... MOVE-IN ON DECEM-.. _ .. -.. - H • ••sot s' 10501 -1---------1m SBA 2BX 2 .. ,.,.... ear garage n-Ill •112 * 1BA 1BA.-95/mo. BEA 1ST ANO FIRST -· lllt-rlo5A osp.-0 mo. 548-19179¥e!llfloa ~.-... -.. --,c~ .. --.. ---Ull •.,. mlll1' decks, F/P, lg 'o., l1S95 ctudel g¥denef. Adults, -· Near beach. No smokers MONTH'S RENT MOVES 2BD/2BA, frpl, patio & gar. 4101 Hilaria JASMINE CRK·S.. Buy av a JI n 0 w . l I nd a n.peta. S 1350. 840--0020' PENINSULA VEAAL y or pets. Yearly. 875-3383. . YOU INI S 8 "9 5 m o . TSL MGMT M2-t603 ...... latraJ fM LOWEST PRICE 2 tty 38r 721-0118 Grubb & EHla Alk for Chuck •Cute 1BA 1BA upper CUTE OCEAN VIEW 1BA 250-8002/850-5194 •YEA.Al V-<>c..n front l-iiiiiiiiiiii6ii~iiiiiiii~~"""'il * sEXL BEACH * fam. rm 2~Ba guwd o-te ··---in lt275, 4BA. 2BA. fam rm, dUpleX;_.garage. nice In-Bright, newly decorated, Bachelor. 1, 2 & 3BA APTS E-slde 2BR 1BA. gar, frplc, 2Br 1B•. carport. great .-.!'A L.1£1 mlL avail s~ on lrg lot 3er $429,900. 891-1702 A.gt -·--• -• near d!'frplc. air, nr 405 terlor, -1s1mo. largeaundeci\. Avall now. AVAILABLE IMMEDI-beam cell, $740-$750 + vtew S1085/mo. ... ... ,. rent now 2,~Ba, FI R Toi> quat In/ Sunny 38r & fam rm, frwy. Ready 11/22 •Cute 2BA 18A low,r $825/mo * 840-7584 ATELY... 11t + $500 MC. 2 per-NEWPORT PACIFIC $147.00 wk & up. 227 ou1 0ceen·vu from d9ok OWNEA/AGT Duplu, new 21AB&. frplc, petlo, 2-car 8982 Paula Circle duplelC, there laundry. ""o ._ aons. No pets. 650-1798 Dave MS-sees Nwpt 81Yd, CM 648-7<M ...... · Bee(21315.._1447 · 2Br 2Ba. remodeled 3Br gar. Gated comm with 818-576-057S perking. $800/mo. llYI •..... ..VOJJr employer must be • ~ I • -• I ~·· 2Ba. Good financing tennis, pool & •P•· YIW RmllS 2BR H~BA, ctose to basec:lln!M cltj Of Coifa EASTSIDE large condo.. WALK TO~NIUtOAG 11at t.a at .. a ~.=:=_~_t ,.':_25,000 .... 720-9445 1 :: s11001mo A.gt, 840-.1212 3=~ J:,,.~·L ~ i::: , .. =ctwl=~~.1 900 Mesa·· :::;~· ~:~· :;'~J~i':; ;1~ 1 !A L:-'2~· ;~ COLDWeu BANl(eRO "'911tl •-FABULOUS New contem-Aefrlg. w/d, d/w. 11150, WILi ft l&LllA Ill . 642-9795 or MS-8227 twnhM $925. Pool, spa, , ....... ""'"..,."""'!"""""""P~ -~ •• au.•-.. pol'aty. 28A 3BA condo, S500 MC. 831-6358 1BA & den, t'hBa 2·sty 1BA+ Den. 2BA w/fab ~~nYl.ul-· Rll EASTSIDE Sh & Clean oov. prkg. 1401 Superior ·•' •,.. _, Panoramic: vlewl ocean & exec twnhme In Bayside view, lg deck, trplo, fam _._ atp Ave. 648-6838 UndW oonatructlon SBA l'larbor.S3500 . 3BAtwnhMoneul-de-sac:, Cove Ftplc aundecks rm,dbfgarS1900.213-2500Merrlm.cW 2BA. Washef/Oryer ---------• 48A. owr 3,000 st!. Pool ............... IM. newly redOne, w/d, nr w/d · 2-car ·gar gated 928•184• 714167s..nM l.•l l .••2 ay hJ<up, pvt sundeck, encl ACROSS FA. BEACHll on '.4 acre lot, $349,000 IUL,...··11 Golden W•t & Werner. comm PQOl&spaonbay gar. $740/mo. 546-9950 YEARLY 2Br/1B• duple)(, Expectthebest: Marg1e,Ag191u2ao ?"""!'-• • S99'.0M3-0704 e..6-7329 122soi roo.840-1212Agt C..ta.... llH E's1oe.1BRCottage,frp1c. ~r3°"·'=~ , ... lllmD E'Slde,A-31otw/SFR.257 FREE RENT! New beach-BRANO NEW BEABER •Greate .. tSICl;1oc1 ******* encl patio, 187 E. 211t, --------~~•mrnnr!a'~ ....... 16th Pl, $279,000, Dusty 11-•Ill front condo. 2BR 2'ASA, CARPETING S~ous 2 1 & 2 Bdrm apt1 &tart * •lllA .... * SL $650 + S750 sec. --,_ .. DRAMATIC • 673-28t0 Agt mf&l IPIMJIT frplc, w/d, fUll aec:urlty, story 3Br 298 Newport 1615. Gar, cable avl. A , smalt q l9t le MS-7234 NO PETSI ,1• lff1 light d4icof pl::;h 4 p~= SEA PROPERTIES L TO JENNIFER ENCAANACAO ~view from~ patlO&. Shores $1400/mo yrty. Grnblt w/BBQ, Ind~ rm. Studio~ & 1::ftrpt 411Br, carport, pool.faun, 3BR 2BA Lower Unit. EHtbluff. Snare 38 patios and garden. HARBOR REALTY 964 7560l d, 648 218618 650-8145 Sorry, Nope'-831 8427 backyd, petlo $&85 mo. stv & frig Inc, no pets New e.rpet, gareoe W/D home. <714>721-0400 Spacious 3 bedroom• MT Ul1DI Otfk:e 67~ GREAT AREAllVACANTll "Llka new & very pvt". $575/mo + $350 dep hkup, yMd. Neid to park. 48A on Balboa plus expanded tamlly Thlscozy38A 28Ahome Residence 675-2888 NAMEADOWLAAKGolf lnYUllTSftEWJ me81iBJIU Pool. spa, lndry. tat + av111now642-140t S1100/mo. Point. 1310lmo + utM room.Centrlllalr. lacloaetobott11ct1ools & JASMINE CREEK 3Br3BD/1 314BA. New C •• MC.~OPETS.549-2447 11-R-WfTI 4'09RIVER SeeklngProf.w/rel9. ••• ... ~ping. Hunywlthyour 21h8a, 2 story, CIA·, 24 hr c ~t Sr 1p,.,.!__t Nso Peta& lean Newport .Beach _..Alfm11 *BAY TIMBERS• ,_ ••w TSL MGMT 642·1603 Renee, 875:-7419 ~ & 1?9'nlbfvsht Thia a a c . S 2 4 o o / mo. ~~~tty'"' M8-t371. · townhome, 2BA tv.BA. Beautlfully landscaped, 1BA. frplc, cable, pool, .,_.._!~t_..anml2BA 2BA I •Y&\RLY -SPACIOUS 1 ANAHEIM. Aoommat ..... ,•--1 one won t lut at only 850-1150/0 after 7pm, high celllngs. flreptaiee, quiet, large, clean APfs. patio, ~ar. No nats. 399 ..._._..... • ""' • block from OC*an & bay, male -eterr.cs, to lh .,_.., S 5 c attached garage. Kitchen Pool & spa, patio or deck. ...... 1 BA wlloft 3rd F m "' We'll give you the down In 18 ,000. ell now... 840-1474 SEA Spray condo 28r 2Ba, Is loaded w/upgrides. Prl~ location. W Bay t.1695 650-6357 ,950 No ~ 83·1-a;87 2BA, newly decorated, new 2BR 2BA condo, Jee excttg for a share of own-.. I............ MATURE SINGLE OR gar, aec 3a1e, pool, ten-Owner wlll consider lease t Bedroom $655 •Clean MWa Verde lg . pet only Sl95.. 850-1304 1375+ dep. 220-9145/E :tn:~C: & m;:•:. 111-llM tr 184711 COUPLE WANTEDllll $:0C'rm0. ~:~~:::· oPtlon. CALL GREG 2Bdrm rnea $805 3BR 2BA, dl w. 2 car gar-1111,... I Executive TownhouH Clean reepon. M to ahr 3 epprec You receive 4 blks. to bch. Wood pan-I •14001-mo. ltllY•llllWU age, patlo,_flrepl~ce 2BA 2B.A, gwage._ S750, SBA, 2BA. 2 car gar. dynaaty, fully tum .. W/D 100% to benefit M st ~ IJJ.A.V alled 28D(28A + den. lnlu Ht COSTA MESA $1100 No pets fM0..2495 Pam 546-5880/979-3848 • 0 c EA N v I E w ~-Ind. ~H' uttt haV9 clean cred~t. ~gt KU"~ ··I :;~~o:~ .. 1~:. g()~rli I A ( ...... •••••11en11r MESA VERDE. 2BA 1BA. 818-448-8993 57-e2421W&42-oool/ 957-eoc>2 Dys,Ev,Wknds ~'t"\Vn V"l-Vl' J.U''1 "II 873-1734 On"' persons 2Ba. comm. poo.I, 18A 1BA ndk Quletbldoon E'Stde cozy upper. Quiet c:ul de sac:. FURNISHED, 2 BA, 2 BA M/Ftoatlrapeeloue , . \\ • '\. ......_. 1 1 ~ \. ••• '' , S 1295/mo no pets. • • su • eno gar, :i of • 1695+ 2867 Hlcicory condo oc:Mn view pool w/master bdrm & beth •If MT llm1S RE.ALTOAS ,_ with good rel. need NEWPORT.PACIFIC w/d hkup, dOM lo So wllols o wood. Assigned 498-1936. 751-9483 Jae;. ofx $1100/mo' teaM Avail lmmed l500/mo ENTER this cuetom home apptynt O.V9 &45-3883 Cou1 Plaza, s71oi mo. par~~ lllUndry faclJJ-722-3545 or 850-2522 752-7500 Ted thru double doors Into Retired prof. wanu to buy South of PCH, 2BD 1dA Woodbridge detached 3Br WEST HWP 1BA, 1895 540-0, 17, or 962-9804 tlea. S /Mo. 93&-0552 1111' lllJ M to eflooee from· 2-& NWPi:MESA .;..._room Ip I c Io u a 11 v I n g CM/NB home Pref ftxer. 1-car garage. w/d hOOk-28a c:reiksiae hm lnafde BALBOA 48' fp S1600 1BA Apt. Cerpet,drapee, 1111 lff llYl•ll 3~room1 Great lo-ba1h F/Pf'f/f N/S N/dNge ~~/~Jt"~room arr'. Can trade Npt Crest ups., trpl.11275 loop, nr lake. S1275/mo. BAYFAONT 'condo 2Br stove. Jg fence patio, _...~BJIU 28A 2BA. f/p, new carpet, cation. St.artlng at all ttOu.. P...,. l450 a oe ~ .,~ ~~ ea~g condo 846-8473 786-7322 agent Dl ts.4--2110 E/S5g..7091 11850 clOM to ahopplng, avail ~,.. encl. gw .. all bit-Ins, near $850/mo SJMeo6 utll. 548-87&4 Iv mag area '""" tmu to .,..-5...,.""' .. & tem • 1BALBOACovet2Br den. now 850-7244 shops $&95/mo ____ . -----vale patio and yard. FtUtala ~ con pol'ary Elegant, 3BA, 2'ABA, frplc doct< s23oo • • .... ,.,. 810 CENTER Newly remodeled 2BA 1~0cn=--:=11>ay~-v1ew=---=8df~rm--.-=,:-1 Great for entertaining. Yallty lll4 2:: 1 ~ 2 :ory· fr~. condo. end unit, gar, fam BAYFR~T eoncso 2Br E SIDE 1Br upstalrt. cable s k~ J TSL MGMT 842-1603 1BA, O/W, patio. encl W/D, gym, ·IPA. .Cc. F Cathedral ceilings In llv-n cw,..... arage. g rm laun Woodbridge • • TV hkup, walk In ctoeet. •par ng c ean, luge garaoe No pets Quiet or unfurn Prof lib Ing room and muter ey owner 3BR 28X bMut deck. Oceantlde of PCH. 11250 857-6008 Y~ ~750tor eo bo.et. refs req'd. No pet•. $575 0.den apts. Beautlfulty NEWPORT ACROSS THE nghbrhd $926 875-seoa + aeo Ind utll 122-1110 bedroom. Features 3 remodel like new In/out. 11300 Ag1875-4912 _.,. -352 Vlc:1orla &45-8181 landscaped grounds. STREET, 2BA frptc;, gar-· · bdrms. 2 baths. Only t 2 Great IChoofal 1239,000. Univ.Pk, 3 BA, 2~ BA. 2 LINDA ISLE 2 story 5Br, Pool&spa,patlos/decka, agel825/mo.1665Jrvtne •M'fllllf• PRIVATE BATH an YMrt old. Over 1500 17398 Walnut. Q63...633.4 celta .... 1114 car gar. 1950 sq.ft, pool, boat dock. I t0,000 LARGE 28r 1Ba $&50/mo, oaraoe or carp<>rt. ,2, 720-9422 3BA 21hBA ctoae to shop-bedroom neer ocea 1 q t t RE o u c e o Jae, vb ct. nearby. WltwfrMI..... .... $400 MCUf'lty. AvallM>te Bactletor S600 P4 • a dlnhiQ Su view 1375 +depoatt. tee-051 1347 sOo ....... .... 1111 •2BA 2BA.. fir•. place. $1350/mo 1 yr leaae Nov. llM.Ylll U1 1• Nov. 2. can for apptm. 1 Bedroom $680 111 "'1'lllU a: deck Yri9e 1~50Mo ,before 10am. · lll-llll -Jll.IM ;"/s° ~~PA ~~rage. 1. ,....7220 or 754--n81 • 631-1879 28drm 1'.4Ba $815 2BA w/gar. Carpets. 3336 Via lido 87s,..9289 PROF M/Ftor terge a 5 ~bet $950 NO PETS ;22 ;rri luc• UDO ISLE -4BA. 2\iBA, 2BA 2BA garage new 131E18th St 64~16 drapes, bit-Ins. Fenced nice Newport He4ght CFC~~E El.KJNS ~0a tennl~2= *2BR Duplex ~ 1 ~lo ~r.'~.'';'':; ;~ carpet& drapes, leundry 2Bdrm 2e.-..;,;;;;.--ss85 yar~~~C:·~~~· s.Jll•t11~t..z. houee avell 1211. rr= l l )\II '\:'I.' den5 · 2 c.r2oat15 · Open Suns yard, front un~ug.,·.::. •GA TEP COMMUNITY* S27s0/yrly 873-7767 -• t ~~~'120: f 54.~~. 825 Center St 642-1424 867 Vlc:1orl.a 'H' ,_$720 1735~~ 875-9289 !!215~ __t .~ dep. ~Rl\ll~~ 1-~ 81~ L~w~V~~A ... ~~ ~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~-~~~~-~~·¥~·~-~~~-~ DOCKSIDE RE 722-9730 Bernard St 847 JS40 _,_ Newport Helghtt, S8R, . -BEAUTIFUL 28A 28A 3BA, poqLG.t~_ga • 2-sty, 38A, 2~A. beelJt iHl .. MES""A VERDE SBA, 2 -W/IJ(llt"COOrMVIEW Alto 1"15"($I mO 1 ease, fully remodeled wl wht mstr IUlt•. 2400 alt, 1B~ avail. Frple, wet bar, &45-eM8 Olf 721-0MS Berber erpt, panorvnlc pool spa. great nghbrhdl micro W/O hkups 2 cat -liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9iiiiiiiiiimil ...... Peaianla 1117 view ot ocean & h...t>or a 110o1mo. 549-4498 oar wi xtra •toreoe. cen-Alf llT mYI from llv rm & mstr suite, tr., air. All malnt. Incl. 28R, 2'ABA, HICJhly up. --~-..0 ••Brf2Ba upper •38r/2Ba lower pry baleonlea on both ~ 1-lm 111 Sorry, no peta. 6«-0509 Ql'aded. IMM or IMM :;-1~115,000 by owner 1BA +dining rm & frplc. 2 1900 •If townhome 38A oPtlon 11800 497-9918 1795,000 CM gar, new paint & crpt. 2'ABA tam rm wat bar NWPT Cr811 twnhm 4BA BALBOA ISLAND 1795 Incl gmdr. No petl. vaulted ceillnQs. bltlns: 2~BA. '.4ml to ~.'Poot, associated ABSOLUTELY ct\Wmll'IQ & Adults. Scotti 548-230,1 frptc, form., dining rm ape, tenni., nu crpt/pnt. Z,=~ ~'1 •EASTSIDE Townhomel 11750/mo. 720.7400 Yr IM 11700. 548-0391 "'' l •, ,..+'' r • )" ..., p '' "' h•1(')0.A ,. "'" bdrm home with tormtll 38r 2ba, gar, yd I 110,9. dining & new kitchen •2BA 1ba. J.c, gar;-yd Beeu1lful upgraded lg 2t:SH new roof ptumblng ~ $850. Open Sat/Sun 12-3 2BA. vtew of bay, Futllon trlc. ,,..,·a A.G.~ ... 2038 Fulletton. 968-8880 laland, etc. Security bldg. 2 bdrm apt OYW the •EASTSIDE LG 38R 2 ear perking, boat sllp, double garage. 2'-'BA, 2-sty, gar, frplc, $395,000. 842-1339 or 831-1400 patio. ldry nkup. Smf pet 87M1H Ownr/Agt 1849,000 <*. $1250. 875-4912 Agt ........ llu lfti -'4ATI HI HI"' ... EWPORT HEIGHTS• 2 il&AS TO BEACH HOMI .. twc. Lu-. lg eondo. SBr 2"'8a DUPLEX. 28r 2Ba+ 28r REAL EST AT£ fam rm. fr1)IO. --bar, gar, 1,,.Ba, Newly rwnodeted. • 11200. 722...()939 1529,000, 87s..32M REAL TORS 3BA 1BA. old hoUM, new . • • 4 ·_·;; Merrill Lynch Realty NEWPORT For under S 175.000. 2 BR Twnhm. Woodsie environment near wilder- ness area, clean & spacious 2 story, will sell fast at s J 69,000. 759-6600 let Ut Ilea, YM Sell Y ,., p,.,.,t~l Call C111111W, 642-5671 for information & surprisingly low cost. ,. paint. hUQe yard, edufts, no peta. 438 Hatnllton. *875mo 11t/1Mt 813-7353 BRIGHTON SPRINGS 18A Condo. 8-*lded WOOd• & streame. Ground floor levet. Wlhr/Dtyt stack hook-up,mlefo,frplc,ger W/QpN + carport, Mc .... poof. ape. 1750 + dep. VELMA 5-49-2447 CLEAN 2Br 1Ba duplex, 1725. Ger, em! vwd. no peca. 1154 "A''~. Ofedlt chedt. 54f...34t.4 Cory 18A "°'*• frig & *10"9. Mature pereon ~d. Ho ptita. 1550 • dep &45-6527 ....... Wnwtt»f rm toe on ~ ..,.. tyr•t14SOmo. Mn. AOt 75'9!000 f D1ilyPDat 530: Delight a child or a ~ with this flipPy, floppy, cuddly clown. Yom hair, felt feolure' ore easy lo moke. ~· and""" for clown, about 2..e· cio.t. . 7179: Beainnet-eosy .... ~ <MJT rug is ,,,_ uocti.t oll thi "'tl)j. r1ldions ore~ for . rugs »<36• and :DcSO". 405 U:M rvg yam. 405: Add·O·block en· velope oppl1qua quilt. Finish vivid •unbonnel quilt ot you go. 01ret· hon•, ~rn pieces, dlarta. yardagll included. , Off~OOOOTHRV ~fc.:" N.» "'"' ,,_."" '°" IAQI Ol'OINO TURN UNNEEDED MERCHANDISE TO ·--.. ····-......... , .... . . ....... .. For t•.ao you can advertise your Garage Sale in the Daily Pilot. There is a 4 line minimum and the price Is the same whether you advertise 1 day or 3 days. It's a great way to turn those hidden treasures Into cash. We are also offering a a.w. te •H•r ............ for t 1.M. This guide Includes Ideas on how to advertise, how to plan, what Items to sell, plus ideas for a bett• garage aele; also a garage sale sign. pricing stickers. Information on city ordinances and inventory sheet. You can purchase your Garage Sale Kit for $1.00 when you place your ad at: ..., .... Classified Advertising 6•2-56,8 •. ··=· ·-· ......... . 330 ... 8-St .• eo.ta Mesa , Monday lhf°"Of' F~ 1·00 AM io S:SO PM Saturdey I 00 AM -11:30 ~ ' ' I MOTOR ROUTES AVAIULE II CllTA IBA .... , llACll llllmcTMllACll WEEKLY PAYMENT mlJ• IUUIU 11111,. 1• .I• UT 1• a._.,_ Wfl I ml Cll • Plllf • _._ KlUIB!• . CALL 6~2-4333 between IAM & 7PM Orange Coast Dally Pilot .. , •. * ...... . Homll'OWft .... . Uc.C.-T1_,,.. ....... .. ,.,_ ·uus llPllmt&TIYI The Dally Pttot has Im- mediate openings for telephone .. 1espeople. Mutt type 45 wpm and ti•ve good c:ommunlca· tlot\ lkllt.. Call Peggy 8levtnS 642-432 1 ... INUTll For A0150 Stinger Type. Mutt have Claa II Drlv· .... lie. Call 64&-9093 Ace Equipment Repair IDl8" FIT phonee, typfng, die· teph, Salary comm w/exper, benef. Cell Wendy381~11 Wt hive challqlnc po$1bons open for self·moh••ted people to $11perflse tett\11'8f1 in the ntWSPIPt' c1rculabon promotional fiekl. riiiiiafi~W'ftllm""·I Guanintwd encome ot $400 per week to start FUN AFTER SCHOOL WORK 11 Years & Older Work Evenings & Saturday YOU CAN AVERAGE PER W EEK s7500 OR MOREi PHONE: 498-3321 AU Transportahon P rovided By An Adult Supervlsor WOU 11 YOUI OWi IEJ,BIOUOOD AUTOS .. \ Move CLASSIFIED ADJ'EBTl§IN6 SALES . We are ADDING to our sales staff. If you can type at least 45 wpm and have great teleco~munieation skills -We can off er you a base salary + commission AND a (jtazt place to work. · F•ll Time & f•rl 'l'lme A f'•ll•llle. Do yourself a f a•or -Call us. Peggy B levt.s er~ I• V e••e•• BOATS 10 WORDS ' 642-4321 .Daily Pillt 330 West S.y St. CostaMe•a,CA '4 DAYS OU ti Need to sell anything that rolls, floats or flies? ... We have a Fantastic Special to help you Move 'Em Qut for only $799 Extra words 50~ each. Ade that run 7 days are an additional $4.00. Call for more Information. Because this is a special rate, we request prepayment by check, MasterCard or VISA. ----------------· aJl.IQf __ 499 ____________ __ NAME CITY PHONE CIRCLE ONE MASTERCARD/VISA PRINT AO BELOW ' • & ADDRESS STATE Af\AT}NCLOSEO S ZIP EXP.DATE • . ' • 0r9nge Cou1 OAJLY PILOT/ Tue.day, Novemb« 8, 1988 h1' •••• .. t ..... ....... ••• ••• ..... ....... .. . ~MmAWANTIO UrVlfltlyMed~ C>l8COUHT!O~-I _.., .... ~" eAf'ITY,,. ........ .. .... be .,_ .. IOed & penon to ... ful ...,. of Cl)IO ~ .,._ A"'ometlc, • ayttnetet, .... .,..,., WV IO "'° 5 ... 1NftU11. POWIF -._.own tr•• o UtttQj1. hfotl quelty IUbric:ent• w before the hoild•r•I em 11 • -""* rJ::.: ~ _.,, ft.9" · !MatoMell!Q. ffftanclftt. .-.tne. ~ AJC. AutOfNttc, I ~ndef. Cell~ '75M103. minufw:turtng, ttuc:'llno. t1000 •11Ctr.,...,,.. I' Houeeof tmPona& _,.. ~~°'IM-tilt Sunroof Cu.tom ctulM, '°"' llMt· •Nlf1m• CONtM;tion Mel fenn ofttlOO 552_.... ~Set• 21317 t'4 W .. ll P<lfU&eeaete t1Sl714 w~eeli (1McZH•> lntJtirek ... oe1 .. ue, :!!:.I!~!~ Nf!Wt~AN"Dll.MAV .cuitOfMH In Orenge R .. tored men'1 wrl1t ME..CEOES -~AOEOE.I SS.411 AIC. Ill (1CMllJS2,tl6 MM\.., per mo LNe = -:--oOt~ ~tctlM frOM the '30e & OAOER YOUR ·ee Of ... • .. 1. ""''·--........ .... ...... Coete ....._ light """ P9f90MI Int.,..., wrtt. ~~~~~~r::; ~~een.i end get or.Ml, epprqic 48,000 AutomeUG. poww .._.. ..,... IG •1 p:.~;::-24" t.apn. :!;o:'!.~C::,· WANTE';SpaE<MPment =•·~~~ot::: =r=.~'. ~~.tQ~:,~ ... A/C 1111fl'T11111W -'11•1 [ 'WI ,_WllA'fm Fl. Worttl, Tx 78181 or Ga l'IMter, 2HP j)ump, lmport1 & 8• S•I•. 7 5 • 121 t Oa y1 . 9111TTlllTI ~~. AM/f'M. Aoof Automa~ :_cfll:· .. llll Exp. M Deck MOO wfT-phone(811)332~2™. ~tor, elf awltcMI. 2'3fT1•MEACEOES 711-1'773EYM Nf..... ,,. (TtlTQZ)S2.7t5 ::. power''atMr: n;• Heed 1. wM treln w/mitl. TEXAS REFINERY CORP. control unit. ITS-3852 .... / DRIVING A Mere.cs .. ~ Porache •57 .-.etored ~ .... lMQ lng/b,.k .. , AM/FM, .. I. Elf exp. Good WOttt1ftC1 con-nMdt mature person · Putt NII een.im•••fetyeenM. SUI< Iv mUHQe .,., cuHtt•. A/C, Ult. Autome11c~1 , dltlont. Fait growing now In Orenge County ~ llll Our M mo. p1en ....,, ...._2;82 • -.. -(to.ta)M,IN power ••· •hop. Good benefits ar ... ~d*aoftraln· ~ a 10.5it51 Moy:t AfT Compare Houee of Im· , ••••• ~ u.--.a ~.AJC. 1Mlt) w/~ to grow. Ing, wtlte O.H. Hopkin•. OSEB• plu• • deluxe C\mOM porte .. 213 /71 • ""'a•emtU 4 ~ •• -man-aa.-a1 .... ~e.m,..tpm. 8ox 711, Ft. Worth, T'le. PHOtOEQUIPMENT F(l(dwheeis.•lnttreadelt MERCEDES lowmlle9 u1'tldedW91'· uai, ........ Like newt ........ !rAMAuloCenllr P/lltll 11i11 791~:.___ 1o0o·:~.!~J! 140 tor12oo~a1was1 .... 'lllTllU ~:;~;3;,:s~~~31fao (tH=~RIA c~~~,;.:~.:~ .... , .......... Enif')' ~ orar1 .. 1.. -. .. ~ . t•blee ol rnerch•ndlM ..... u-Automtt\O, • C)'tlnder, • M1.-e or .. t uoo 080 ........ - enfr?-Colt• Meu FCd~TA/:fN:R~o:~· Nov. 12-13. Sat. Ch Os buy your powerdOOfloctc,~~. Tlml'll--ITI 850-3481(}(~180) Automettc,,....,CNIM. AutomeOo. 1 ~. 5•11620 M111co1m • • _.,.. 1 t0;3D.Am·5Jlm: Sun, Ptil'P•r•d MercedH· crul••· power •tHr· J 1Q1fC1 mtinUet .. POP![. nL'llWID... pcMlll" ~. powef' door lode. onile, •••• WOtklng condltk>ns. Ex· 10:30am-3:30pm Or· a.nz.. You wlll get ouf· Tng7br1h1, AMIFM, door toctc, r9d&llle, cruiM. 5 1PMcJ fl'*'Ulll, PoW9f c.dttl8C-.S. IOk, ~ AM,,M, cwMtia. A/C pow ......., ...... ..... :::n.~.;.,n: :~~ .. Cnty Ftlfgrounda, rlghl CHh. Compare c.alMtte, AIC, tllt. &In ~ ·::ti/btU:ee. btMee, AMIN , cutet· IMVlle,M500,146-21 2 tltt. ~. l.ollr miMi CHHtt•. ATO. tllt . .. Tift 3111 · Gatee' Of 5, BldO 14, HouM of Imports & Be roof.PrteedetBlueBook. AM/FM, i.. AIC, te. A/C. &Ir\ roof. Cue-(1uu.>SS,MI (10479)'3.211 UmHed oeiportutlfty to Jo'n ........ Arlln~n Ave. Adm S 1 f •. 2 1 3 I 7 1 4 17,395 . tll1. (10HC775t ae,895 tom wMe1e. (2F8V"3) 1111••-I.I. ...... naUoM1 r_, •at. mat· Outside ..... for collec· donat ). : :. (S3 O:'ld Of MERCEDES 1111•111 llAll •&1M1ll... S4,"5 ---~ la.mt ketlng 9)'9tern wf1tl un-tlon egency Estab co. gd coupon& ......... ng to A~~ Mb to s aa-1111 ---13&1MT•--llmtt.s ..,,,.,._ FOf In· pey reliable car needed .,.. ...,"'.o. -· "'" Ml.... PLV• .. ... 'M aTI formation. Clll Jack CftM 0 L9e Qlbbe 957~82. trede. Into: TlfnA ... a• .... '11111 D mna .. , .. 546-1200 -• ~ POWlf dOor A'1f/ISETTetEASE~TES & •u-PIDlll n ~!. ~:"'i! 5 ~ menual, power Automet~ radlala. ~· Automatic, 4 cylln.der. VWRun·.1o•sysce.llent, 8ood lll•._.., · c ... Mtu AutOffta'f!.'«v... ,.._ lock, r.C.l .. e, ctul ... • "'-"ft ----··· 1teering/bfak•. AM/FM, power •tMJlng/bf.,.... redl•1•. crulM , power .. ' --~ poww ~ GARDENS Mondeya & Saturday• 213/893-&421 ctuette, tllt. Bio AM/FM, CMM«e, AJC. et.-lng/bf8k-. AM/FM. b o d y. I f 100 BO. tteerlnQ/bf-•.AMIFM, ~ A/C, '11t. (3121) RE.Al ESTATE 751·5000 10-5. ~· honest & ..... 11 tlrM/Wheela. low mlleS. T·topt, 8119Y•. (2FEM338) tllt. Sun root (18EH251) 8.'2·1231 ...... .,... AIC. lilt. Wood""•ln $42M • RECEPTIONIST enthualasllc, Oya. -(2V85e32)18.995 Sl,795 13,495 VW 72 bu9, rebuilt ehg. CONVEATIB&.£. ... powiw, lldee.(l420)tt2, u.--.. For lull-iervlce leclal =1~=536-M21 •N•IM. 1•T.rr•1U01 llltmTlllUlf IUIT........ new carb & gen . Pr~1$8860080 I.I..=-la-tll1 =• ::.~~ & · •"*"' .... 111~ w.-1 au.-..,_... a121!5oOo 4t&-2064 a1,. • c1JOJ422, ULll llmTllY _,. TIYnA 'll Ill-· ... TillllJ Full/Part-Tim•. Know IP r-"8.IC M)TIC( PmUC llJt1C[ NI.JC ll)TICE NI.IC M)TIC( rtaJC fl)TIC( Ml.IC ll)T1C( Friendly. p6ealatlt ~ ::PC~~~~~ 5 ......__. m ....... ~,,...,.119 IUWOMI menoed to tl'9flMCl bull-meetinG-Aoea J. 8ulone. OomirWc 0. 8-'11'1 Wundsmln. Chair· ~ r!!'lltrt:.:!:t C_!~· wwited full lime. .,_, ' . ' -~-: ...,_.. -·-· ..._.... · (CtTACtOM AIDICl.U.) nee1 undef tM flctltlout -Bulone. Iii II men~ the lloerd ...---_. phonee Knowledge of •7-11o/Hr. Retume to. (1J33022) $3,395 NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: buekl9la neme Of namM OPIN HUWG YOU ARE BEING SUED Thll ltttemenl ... llled neel under the ftetltlOue Co111 . Mell/Newport ~t1":o 1~':! S~~ 3'x4' DESK, S drtwer. ll&llfflflTI (Avleo • Acuudo) Kathleen lllted above on October20. T .. ~F M01 1TtC~ llay BVPLAINTIFF:(AUd.leasta wlththeCountyClerlc"'Of· ~Mme Of MIMI Beadlere1helpfvl.Appty • • · green metal WOOd grain Ml4111 Renihaw Tru1tea. Tiie 1"8 ., ..... '..:!, Dltou1~1a ~ ..:.Cinn demandandol FIRST engeCountyonOctober13, llated~onnl• In penon, Pennyaever, ULll te>p 135 Very t turdy Charles H. Ranmh-Trust; Hlrson and Kalt:-a .....,,.,.,. r.., ,. '.J; AMERICAN T TLE IN-1"8 0tema ~ 1880 Placentl• Ave .. Sound Trtck• •• Balboa M2·1376 . , .... la::::IJ 100 George T. Murton. Jt.; Sid--OProt.Nlon•IO~d IHll • I ~·1· o•,.~,ed. UEngnomll I· SUAANCE COMPANY, • ,..., ™' ~~~ ... ~ Cotta Meea. . ~ ney Rubin; Cert B. Jedln, in-A corp.. 1.. rt0n . ...-ng I .,.._, .... Callfornla COti>Oratlon Publllhed Qfenge eo.t wtth the....,....,., ..,_,."' ...,.. iii-:====~-1 Fun Zone need• outgoing llllU '11 llTllU dtv1du1lly and dbl K·MOR Pretldent • -to Ill E.lement.,y and Y• ....,_ • CA&.INDAR Dally Piiot October 18, 25. WIG9 County on ~ P9f90n w/Mlee exp. Cell p ... 1 •-•-·• tMt lndustr11S aCo Partnerthlp Thll etaternent wu llled Se cond1ry Educ1t1on DAVI eftlf ...._ .......... Nov9mber 1, 1, tMI 2, 1M8 MllPTll•IT Soott, 714-723-1533 ....... IPILS YOU ARE BEt'NO sueo wlththeCountyClertlofOf· (ESEA}Ae1TltleVllAdvlsory .. Mn9d ... '"...... T330 ,.,.. With or without typing. -n• .. a• my 2 FAEE CATS, ilster1. Autom1t1c, 4 cylinder. BY PLAINTIFF: (A Ud. le •t• ange County on NoWmber Councll. typeWrttteft rHp•RM at PutllWled OrtnQ9 COMt -• (flancee allerglc) crulte, power steer· demandando) FIRST 2. 11188 The councl• wltl meet on tNeoew1. NI.IC ll>11C( o.My Piiot Nowmber 8, 15, e~~ Working out ol your beclawed, IP•yed 3 yr1 lng /brtkel, cassette. AMERICAN TITLE IN· "'""'Wedneaday. Novembef 18. AletW•,..... .... -22. 21. 1M8 T3'3 home?Hawofftee-Need old, very affectlontte. A!C, 1111 . (88013A) SURAN'<F COMPANY, a Publlthed Orange Cout 1M8 ti 7:00 p.m. olfl the=,...~.,....... MOTICSCW •Lono-term btanctl location? WH1 ex· 752·5153/W 78&--0789/H S 12,995 Calllornle corporttlon Deity Piiot November e, t5, ELTA T•tlng Office of IM r11p1w ..... IN ..,....,.. TO •-.,. llft'l'lf'r •Temp.lo Perm ch1nge lrM rent tor I.I. •YWI YOtl f1aft • CALINDAR 22. 29, 1988 Fount•tn Valley School Ole-1111 :: ..... ..,,.. W J" LaAl9 MAL.,., ,._ .w•~ a•t ...... phone/reception. For •HIMALAYAN purebteda ....... e 1 DAYI 11f19r We wine T342 trtct. 172Vt0 O~ ... ~--'nl. W9M wt•haer~ ""**"'°""" IJ[-Severel poaltloM av .. ,.,.. more Into. c:8ll 122-1022 Blue Point, s..J Point. -• le Mfwd ... ,_ • • 1 Fount.in ~· ....,,.,. a. ..... '°"...,...,... -In Huntington 8Hch, CFA ~er. 8 weeks typewrttten rMPOftM et rtllJC ll)T1C£ NomlnlltlontwtNberecelved W J" •Mt Mt,_ CWCONDUCT9IO ITA~CW Founteln Valley & 111 Of. Secr9taly FIT potition 4'n old,~ Meh. 759--3257 BMW '79 320t, exceptional thJe court. 1nd requlrema nte di•· n 1p 1rwe ...... ,_ _, •MT CAM, MMI' QI BIT CW 91'99 County ar... d1y1, typing 80wpm, B' .acK ,. .. ._____. ,.. ... --.p -.1 condition, low mllage, A lettet or,._.. eel.. NOTIC8 cw c:uued. .... ....... aM ,_, ,..tcHOOL AND/Git '* W HCllUOUI 0 L WEAVER Lotus/Word Perf9c:t nee. ~ ..,.m_ .,.._ .. $4800. phone 651-6135 not protect J9'ol; ,_ .,..._ ..uMJC MEAWQ Further lnform11lon 11 ...... __, ...-,,.. CtlL.D CAM,.,..... __. .. llAm TEMPoRARIES SalllY comm. wtth exp. PupplH M/F Both wtttt.ft Nepanee ....e IN NOTICE IS HEREBY tvall1 bl• by c•lllng ~ M '*-...._.. NOTICE IS HEAEBV The~ pertona 714/~7-0550 100'%fREE NB loc. Phone: parent• OFA certified. In pNplf ............ tf '" GIVEN !hit tM Huntington ~t!.~ ()r•nnA Cout ..... ..... ...... .... OIV£N t:tltt on the 111 at of :::-~ltlou• ~.i::: Mrt Fennle 852--0117 Pet. breed a. snow quall· & Waftt ttle-' .. ._._ ,_ 8Mc:fl Ctty Councll wlll hotd 0'""" --· N -.:!.: 4 5 .. -----..... November. 1988, the 8oetd ... ~. . ..,._ s---.. ty. Good prloee. mu.i ·,, -· 1publlel'leatinQ,lnthe~ -1 ......... ovwm.-· · "· ·-----,.. of TNlt .. of tM OOllfl ~· ,.._ .,... • ..._ • .., RECEPTIONIST WHIT ...i. 720-S~EYM " ,_ de not Mt rout ell Ctlllnber •1 the Hunt· 1, 8, 19U ........... Y• Ml!J-' View Sctlool Oletrtct "' the w.ciii. li'Vrne. Callf°'nla MAGIC ISLAND Legt l Support Group. good home 8 rMPOftM on ltrRe. r-1M1 lngton 8eadl CMe Center. Feel .. _. *' ...,_, ,..,._. County of Ortnge, St1te ~ ~~ Flc:tltlous 8ullnMI UnlQue dining & entwtlln Ty p 1 n g , an 1we r 1 n g F~~nt'~. old Ger,,;•n loM tM -· aftd row 2000 Main Street, Hunt· •-.,. llft-...,. • J" • _. ::-" Clllfomla. determined tfllt Heme,.._.,., to aboW ... facility need• qual & phones & other offtce ...... m-r lftd ... lngton BMcrl. CtlttOfnla. on ,.._ ""'~ • ......_,, J" M9f • the loloWlng llnd, bulldlnol. In Oouno reepon per80n to work In duties Monday-Friday She pherd exce llent CRE_VJ ER 9'ty me1 be tall!• wttltout Monday. November 21, •-'":.;.7~ ..-..( ............. ~ and equipment _. not be ~~~~2~ t>uslneu on. M-F. Com-9-5·30 S•llfY depends wtetl11dren~2. llM -fwtMf wamtng from "-t988 11 7:00 PM to ~t !...... -..,_). -'" needed lof mdlool purlJ09ll, ., s "'1...-h Ltd 3 puler know/Ille typing on experlenoe 953-9'51 fOf Moe court. Ofdlnence Noe. 2915 Ind MOTICC cw n. AND D ::::. ~ .. and wilt bl let to the hlgtleet ...:;:: :;._.,,. ~ 92711 875-0900 . POODLE PUPPY SALE 'lls &IE IEllEI .. n::n-:: e ..:r.,:; 29~~ ~';~ of IM City .~g: er~ ............. .::.... ;: ::::'1n':n~:::. ~i~~atlon . um /111111.... Home rtlMd (TM Cup, 'II GLISE Ill" .... -9"0fMJ ,..... ol Huntington Bwtt lll\'lerld-(lee..... ..... .-Ml ....... ~ Md]Of c:Nld cere prognime ' ... --_can. U•TillllT P/T RE -Office. Vatled Toy & Min.) An COIOrl. ...,. tf ,ou do Mt lltROWft Ing the Huntington 8eadl W . a, U.C.C.) de• DIM CAUMDAWC>a tor tfll period~ o.. ouc:ted b1y a oorpcntlof1. Part· Time potltlon evall-taa«s w/empttasls on 0<-, 1250-$700. 751-3465 SAYE $ anattcw-r.r-1111Jc.tl• MunlclpelCodebyr~ng Notice Is hereby g1win by pan ,re1enttr u1 .. Qel'llber 1, 1081 through Thia .....,._,t ... tlled able. Ntgtlta & W.-endt. 'g1nlzed & front office. lttorM1 ~ral ..veoa or Ch•Pl•rt 11.02. 17 04, the undecllgned that • pub-,..,...... ...,... 1 ,..... June 30, 1989. With the County Clerk~ Oc· Appty In person. John C1ll Pete 751-5000 111u1m11.. A F£W EXAMPUS or ...... aid 0-. ( .. Md In 17.08. 17.12. 17.40. 17 44, lie .... of the followtng * .......... _... ICHOOL/ADDRCll: MgeCountyonOctot>er 1~. Wtyne Tennis Club, AKC Pupa. SIP & bite, M/F OUR M ·OMID lllWs tM ,._..Moll). 17.48, and 17.80; and add· ICl'lbed collateral wl" be UM un. o 1111e ....._... Pll'lt View Sc:tlool. 1MM 1M8 1 11 1 4 b t"' n 1 2 . 3 . EARN 760-0946 85 &lxsi aulo,loacled.fWPll9 Doepuea de .,. le en-1no ther9to MW Chapter• held at the bour of 11:30 ....,... ,.. le ..,_.. Tunattll Lane. Huntington Se\lerln TIMe l td.. ~ M'-8900 aa.8 " 87 32~,<:v auto.loacltd.ERYMl t,....en "'' cltado41 Ju-11.02, 17.<M, 11.oe .. 11. 12, o'clock, A.M. on the 1eth 1W•t1utan; tu ,..... .. ewtt. CA 112647 ranee p, ~. Ctli.f $400 $1000/WK .... 1181 dlclll utted tteM ""~ 17 40 17.44, 17.48. 1nd day of November. t988, at -*• ....... ..._... , Ne. of"""* 14 Flnlnclal Oflloer UIPTll•IT p IT • HSI 88 73!!• auto loacled,642434 de 30 DtAI CAUNDANOa 17.eo' to ldoot the UnlfOfm 1800t Sky Patk So .. lr.'lne, cu111ptlr co11 IH for· No. of aq111r• hel: Publllhed Oftnge COMt Busy Coet• M ... eno off. Sales -Service par1 1>r11entar u110 Admlnl1tratlve Code. 1985 County of Orange. State of nultdtd•• 1011101 15,810 Dally Piiot October 11, 25. need• PIT recpt. f()( 5 •&AM·12 Noon VAMAHA Por11ble key-Parts -Leasing ""*"'' .-tta • -edition; the UnlfOf'm Bolldlng CallfOfnll ........................ All pr~ mull be .... Nov9mtler 1. 8, 1"8 llne phone iystern. Sign •NoN~htt/Wknds bolrdw/1tand. 835•3171 ............. _... Code, 11185 ecmlon:theUnf• PHOT O FINISHING! ... le c9fM 9MWM W i*Yed no later than Mon-T32I .........__,_ & a• Ill I al , Model PS20. $175 UN clfta o -l&erftacla fomt HoullnQ Code, t9&5 EQUIPMENT _.. dly, November 14, 1"8. 11 '°' .....,.......,,_ m .. n n •17/H •comm tr n,ng (71')786-6890 ......._ no le otr.cera edition, the unlfomt Code This Mle 11 being held to 119IM M P"Mftta M 2.00p.m.attheeu.in..tOf· ---------~o!~ Hr~• f~~ lllTI •U Ml..fltl 1500 Auto M all Dr. ptMlcclon: au f'MtMIM .. tor th• Ab111men1 ot enfOfClt the rlghtt of U.S. '"'""" • ...._., ....-ftce ~ the OCMll VII'# . PWlJC ll)TIC( per Y -u 112 12•• Santa Ana -nta•maqutnattanequo e>angerou1 Bolldlng1, 1985 Small Buslne11 Admlnlt-,.,..., ...... , .. ,_... 8c:N>OI Oletnct, tee40 "B" _ _..._.... ....... _..._.....__ 10-3 Prefer IXP & ltght -·· • • -CU"'f"' COR IH for• edition, the Unlfonn Mech-trttlonunderteeurlty ......................... Street, Huntington ee.dl. '90'nC8CW typing S650/hr. Laurie ...... 55 Fwy. at Edinger 11111 d1dn legal•• anlcal Code. 11185 Edition; ment with F1aeh COIOf Co .• , •• , ....... ·tie Ill Catlfomlell28"f.81dewllbe ......CeALSCW Latson 414-964t lU.1111 er lU.1HI OPEN 7 DAYS apuptdn •h•.ted .,._,.the Uniform PlumblnQCode. Inc .. 18001 Sky Pwtt Souttl. Pl••••••• • ....,. .._ ~tub,leC1toEducation AU~ IPMl'Blt --11. MllT Service Hrs. Mon-Fri. .,. ta c:cwte _...,... "' 1985 Edition the National Sutt• G, lrvtna, Callfomle on .. .:.C',_. .... --. Code s.ction 31365.e. 1n Hottoell--ghiefttflet ..,,-1!!j"F/1T i~• ..... nds fOf WELDER·Mtlntentnce GMO. El1ctrlc1I Code. 1981 IMe In Sacrtmento. Call-..,_ II 11ut1tt11 11eu of 1 pubtlc meeting of the uridanlQMd ..... 9' ._ '"" .... MICG Yachts. 1631 7-00 am to 10 pm II Ult.ct no,....... ... tu edition. Ind the Unlfonn tornle ........ 9'w4llo ... ...W the Boerd of T~ on pubic~ purWMC to busy Costl MMI equip. I 're s ............. ttompo. ,_. Solar Energy Code. t984 FLASH COLOR co .. INC ........... -........ Mond•y. November 14, Section 11M ~ the CMI ment rental 1t0f• Apc>ty Pteoent •. M petder el -· r • puedefl edltlcn The tqUlc>ment wlll be Ill•' 111 la•• ltl. 81 M -1111 at 2" t 5 p.m. In the Code of the St ... c..ortt 1930 Newport Ave ... ~ DATSUN '83 280 IX 2x2 .,ew ou ..wto> M .,_.. Anordl~OllheCltyol tvllllb69 fOf tnapeetlon on ... e wt 8'111•1, ....... 8oetd Room •t llMMO "8" the followlng INIOllelieoue Oflglnal owner Auto-r otra1 COIH de eu 1-tut1tlngton 8etch emending the morning"' •le {NoY. 18) ...., • •..,..... • ,.._ SlrMI, Huntington 8oadl, == proerty to-wit Ffle9taurloor ~.'1111-Bul Boy .......... 11" IT\lllc Power. ale. Fully ........................ tti. Huntington 8Mctl Mu-from 9:00 A.M 'Iii 11.30 ._.. ....... e. Calffornle 112&lt . Arty ,.. by tenent ,_ " loaded. $7600 760· 1781 ~ POf ,.,_de It coN. nlclptl Code by rte>eaJlng AM. _. efkllM '9 .,... ..... apontibte penion ~ It end 110r110e unit IU'llbar. A.Wt only In person 1f1er 111 u · · · TRI-FIN rnlnlo<flOM rider. lldlttM ..,.. ,. ........ S.Ctlon1 11 20 020 and This notice II given In ae-l::. al derector.. ...... Mid me9t1ng ..,.,. be given TNt ..re • bl by com-4~30PM Hemlngw1y1 Oak refec1ory dining set. UkeMW,31tr1nger,l1rN-HONDA ·n CIVIC ......._ ~.,. •ted •mending · S a ci1on• cordance. *'lhtheprcMllonl ). .,, opportunity to ralae the peetttve b6ddlnQ on._ 15 2441 E. Cout Hwy, COM Tapeatry t0l1, Master neted wood noae & tall Good condition, runs well ....,,....,._..,....... 17 20 080. 17 24.010. ofSec11on9504,SUbdlvlllon C...Ne.ntm blda Oftlit lfW !hi~ day of Nov, 1t11, M 11:00 beOrm 72\-0400 block. $250 $900 OBO •361SWS llamidl ..,_.lte.llMoott-17.211.030, 11 28.010, (3), "' the Uniform Com-The name and addrMt of b4d1 .,. ~ prolltdlng a."'-on t"'9 ~--. Reetaurantt ANTIQUE 10c slot ma-S.-S--0023 ooe • un 8'1 .. do, ,uede 17.28.080. 11.28.090. merclalCodeoflheStmteof the COUf1 le: (El nomt>re y aict1bld1111a11 .. oeed,by1t Mid pr0f*1Y la ltored and a L.I 39 ,,.,.. Ask !Of Brian • ..,_ ............ ,..._ 17 28. 100, 17 .28. 110. Cllllfoml•. dltecc:lon de .. cono .. ,. ..... five (5) percent. the whldl la loceted .. 15$5 MOl'S ...,,,,., 19 Miiis H.,,.. 842•1,44 HONDA 78 CIVIC. 35,000 W9M11 de •ll•t••n 0 a t7 M.020tnd 11.84.180. r• DATED: November t , O!"NGE COUNTY MUNICI· hiCllheat of llJIYwrlnan b4d ,._ ~ INd, In the 0My"' Top, excellent cond , mlles on rebullt. $1800 -oftc:fna de.,-. leoaf latlngtodrtvewayund~rtc· t988 PAL COURT • CENTRAL. celved. co.ti Meta. County or Of• Now hiring '°' fvll time 4 S 1300/obo. 6"· 7581 OBO. Work 760-8035 (na et dlr.ctorlo tele-1ng areu, 8undecllct, moving A. z. IMM, 11D Sadoor 700 CMe Center Drive, Coplet of the t•m1 and -.. Stete "' Cllltomle. •~R~~rtion. uaimt MH Hom640--0103 (1GFD509) toMoo). of building• and under-It., .... ....,.ood, CA W11t.Sant1Ana.CAll7201. oondltlon• of the ..... .,. The landlord ,.._the •HOST/HOSTESS ••Antlq·-/·· .... lte ·°"' .... ,., 11• kl" HONDA '81 Accord, 4. c-No. uase grounding utllltlet. t1tolp .... A.._.. n,,.~ "-A~ The ntme, ad~:...!.'!_d 1ve1l1blemtthedll~~ ~....!...!!... b4d .. tN .... ...., ,.., "'""'"' -d d S eed The name and lddrest of NOTIC! IS Fl>RTHEA u...,_,_, ~-.,,... ..,...., telel)hone number "' ...,_,. 1t the afOfemenl .... -.. _.. ......,..,_ muat be mlOe 2131 Weetdln. N.B love Mii & 2 ehalrs $400 c..ta .... llJ4 7 ~0~0019 ,:i79, "!fiver· the court 11: (El nombre y given thll at leNt one copy 0.:1 Piiot November 8, tiff• attO<My. or plt1nt1n dreet. Minimum rentll for ...., oaett and pe6d lof at the • .., -••••'I &46-7078 12Soo/obo 721 ·8113 ' dlrecelon de la eort• •):of the UnlfOfm Admlnls· 19 wtthOUt an attorney. lat (El etuttoomundllCCOmPWIY-tlrneOfpurc:fllM. Thlt .... 11 :-WA,_ITER/W•A .. IT--RESS 11'1111111 •u • • ORANGE COUNTY SU· trttlve Code, Uniform Build· T345 nom~. le dl'90Clon y el nu-Ing eQUlc>menl and MMool tubleet to pricw caootletlon * * TI P e It r Y IO I 1 • 1111 W& IMl 'IJ &11111 PERIOR COURT. 700 Clllle Ing Code, Uniform Houelng mero de telefono del lhall be I0.45 per ~ In the eYent Of Mtttemel1t e HOST /HOSTESS m1tchlng velvet ch rs, ...., lree ....... 5 ,__,. el tdlal Center Drive W•t. S•nlt Code. Uniform Code for the abogldo del dernlnd..-il•. o foot, per month. ~ llindlord and obi-• BUSPERSON bdrm suite. oak anUque Sat Nov 12 .,,~.. ...,..... menu · r s, .t.na.CAll1201. Abltement ol CMngerous rtaJC ll)TIC( del demandante que no Wrtttenptopoalllto ..... gatedpaoty. • VALET PERSON din rm. & mOf'e 721.()400 · • · ..... .-pm. l)OW9f lleetlng/brtlces, The name, lddrees, and Bulld!!lQ•. Unlf0<m Moct11n-tleneeebOQldO.•>: MldlMI Mid ptoplrty mutt conform A224, $ Ounnlngll1m, Cail 873--7726 LIONS PARK. Und« the AM/FM, eauette, AIC. telel)hone number of pltln· 1c11 COde. UnlfOfm Plumbing ACTITIOUI 8U1Mla W. Btown, ~ Offtoll of J. to tti. terma and condltlont. TllMe, cMln, letnel9. euto Be1wMn 9-t 1AM •MOVING SALE* grandatands. Everything (1FRF37t) $3.995 tiff's attorney. or pl&Mtlff Code, N•llon11 flectrlcal MAMS ITATaMmn Or1nor Alchlar, 4000 Pnor11y In lfCC9PlMCe "' ramps, old trvnll, rJUm ---...,......,...,..-----Pine furniture: kitchen 00-. 1829 Pornoni. •ITmlTll llAOI without 11r1 at10<ney. 11 (El Code and the lM!form ~ The folloW4ng ~ •• MacArthur Blvd ., Well propoMle to leaM Mid boa-. blcyde RETAIL ttble & benchel, pte Ille, ~.&J-aJ1e..... nomt>re, 1a dlrecclon yet nu-Energy Code 1t1 on Ille with doing bue1nee1 a: Tow.. Suite 5500, NewpOf1 ~ wlll be gN9n to A.2311 H Pertclnl. VIQNl'll, S. • P41rt ol the annual chlnacabtMt.75~74 ~--mero d• telefono deltti.OfflceoftheCltyClertl. FAA EAST CONSULT· l!Jffc:tt, CA 92MO (714) propoeall wt"<ltl offw low guitar. stereo, amp. ~:;::~.· rn::.n:=ut~~ *Wlllla 111.. iJ 7111 1111& • &1HU ~:'d~--~~ ::Oon =.i.5d;'o'rn1a~i! =•· 2,:: ~ ~ ts~ !Fechal JUL 20 : ~0;:,C:: and :*:9n.. NCOfd llbume. ;woen center Roger'• llllMllHI •• 61 Gton Wtl&f w/Uli 111&1 uenc:ubogad<>.•) MIC:tlael lnlipec11on by tti. pubic A 92W 1M8 The 00..nlog Board,.. A2 ... M~:::.'*Jox Garoen. 11 now llCCeC>t-1750, Zodltc r1t1 9' 5 tPMd manual. power W. Btown. Law Otflcee of J. copy ol propoeeo Ordinance Btedle)t George Pott•. ~ L IC..._ Cllirtl, _,,..the right to retact llrlY 9P'1nO. ,,..,.._ lflOW all. Ing epptlc:atlon• IOf part-1111181:111111 I w/4hp Johneon 1500 door lock radills POMlf Cr1nor Richte r. 4000 Noa. 2975 a 2978 are on ftlo 2"4S85 Ille Buen& &lert• • ., TttRNM OeMot. .,..._., Of II bldl and to..,.,.,. #1'1 bed nm.. nurn bollel time CMhl9f9 Wiii pey Footboerd wl1h rt llt, 780-9838 9'Mrlng/bratces, AM/FM, M1eArlhur Blvd . Welt In the Olftce of the Ctty Yortll Lind.a, CA 92M8 Publlhed OrMge ~ 1n'egullrttlee. AM7. M Kofu. bteyde. SS.00/hr to tttrt tor queen 1Z 1 1t5. M&-4293 CUMtte, AIC. lllt P. Toww. Suite 5500. Newport Clertl. 2000 Main Street. TNt bu.in.at le con-Delly Piiot October 11. 25. Oiled •I Huntington IUltclle. i.np, nurn boll.a qutlllled lndlvldut ls . , INh 71 Wind low mtles 18 995 a .. ch. CA 92660 {714) Huntington 811ch, C•ll· ducted by: .. lndlVIOUll ~ber t. 8. 1981 8oadl. Clllfomla. Ulla 111 812S. M Sullmln, .,., AJ:>pty In Pel'IOll Fri-NEW Deybed While & ... ...n.-.,._ •••;.. 955-3888. lorn.la. for lntPeCllon I))' the The reglttr1n1 com-n 18 day~ No¥9nber, 1M8. t>eo. ClUt>o. trufttc, nvm Tu 1 ctll Bar bart & .... w/matt,.... & 16A ZODIAC Mtrk Ii _..,_,_ _ DATE· (Facn1) OCT 21 pubic menced to ttanw:t ~ OCIAM YllW ICMOOl. boW ...:~ trundte Comt)iet• $245 Futura. good condition, w.-. 11181 HUNTIHQTON HACH neel under the fictitious PmUC ll)TIC( DllTRICT •OARD 0, 8124. 8 Ofvnee. 8o• •&40-8733* $2750 548-48-48 Gary L Qren¥11te. Cleft!., CrTY COUNCIL, 8y: C..WO butlfle9I neme Of nemat TaUl'Tlla. ~ ~ M. epnng, m•ttrMI, coudl. · .U 'll PIELRI SI ., _,.. YOUftl, DetMitr arookw•1. cur Clerll, lllted atiov. on t0/261118 .._. cMlrs IMll'I Ullfll Liv rm. HldMbed . 2 t>drm INt~IC~t ~~111 Autom1l1C rldlsls crulM ft\lblllhed Orange Coaat ""°"' (114) -...... Btad G. Pott• IC a.I Publtefled Ofenge Cout 8232. D Aovelk. T..,._ 2301 San Joequtn Hiiis Rd Mt•. din rm tbl & c:.ptn's aieerl ib,.ket' Delly Piiot Oetobef 18. 25. PubllSl\ed Ortnoe Cou1 Thie 1111emen1 -flted l'ICTITIOUI 8UIMll Dally Piiot ~ber e. to. c:Nn. plct- Coron• de4 Mar 92825 Chalrt, 9¥9'Yfhlng Maple, RUN AV F A WEEK· =rM cas::te AIC' November t, 8, 1988 O.lly Piiot November 8, with the County Cieri! of Of. MAm ITAftmM'f 'f 12, 1M8 830l1 0 JohntOn. tool &40-5800 MW mec:tllne fM2-I069 END. Chtr1er Stlt•Of· tilt M . 001 .Al,,,._. T317 t986 enge County on October H . The followlng per'°"8 .... T348 Cflelt9, hind tocMI, IMd*le Art :M' Creelock Pkg · oon r ..,,.. T34e 1Me dOln9 bullnell • tooto. euto S*h. Wllgflta, ma uus QUEEN ANNE deal w/sklpper 87S-7t00 Low mlles. (2DXW509) "8.JC ll>TICE ,_ F"8 Sportlme Wetcflee,' PWUC 11)11C( end.,.,..ledder,ll'letaloetbl- Exp'd jewWy taleeperton Thom .. Y111e Sfyte cher· 1 14,888 . "8.JC NOTIC( Publlllled Ofenge CoM1 Muon. Irvine. Cellfornll net wanted Wlntton'• Uk rywood dining room. OflQ Sail INh 4 .-nllTll 11111 K ... , Dally Piiot Nov9mber 1. a. t2118• IC ..n 8311, D JohntOn, Delles. f M . u s.55t5 $4000 taerlflce s 1ns. §al HUNTER ..... --1 ACTITIOUI 8UIMll IOUCITATION 15 22 1"8 Sportlrne W1teflee Inc.. • l'tC1t'l10U9 .,..... tabtll, c:Mlrl, ctl9et num °' llMQ9f, -· Ma1chlng coffee table _.._. ..,.._ ITATl•NT °' NOM*ATIONI · • T332 Cellfornla corpor1tlol'. 3 lllAlll ITATllmNT t>o ... RETAIL SALES Mt, formal 1011.....,ove ~h hc~olc~ NU;~t 1111& 'II PIELI• The l<>llowlng P9flOnl •r• ~ MOTICl Muon, Irvine, Oetlfornl• The.'*"""9 P9f'ION.,. Mii, 8 Duboee. TV. lmmed openingo, pet In· ... 1 (blue/rose/creme). ec OOf ng • · 5 _..._... 1 1 1 doing bullnea u : Partnll lnlerllted 1n Pit· 92711 doing buM!etl • • dr..ang bolrd, end ,..,..., duetry. Mgra/ .... t. mgfl. BRAND NEW. 973-0653 &42-740• ...,_.. :-:"'• • ;:tt~· IOCO. INC., ONE PARK tldpallng In the Founttln "8JC M)TIC( . Thlt bUslneu I• eon· S~M'S M081ll, 21502 box """"' mettNM. n...n FT /PT Retail rnangt exp power I es, • PLAZA. SUITE 580, IRVINE, Vllley Scf1oo1 Oletrlc1'• ap-ducted by: I COl"P0'9tl0n • Br<M*llunt &tr•. Hunt-t>o ... c1otNna • ~ Pet/animal e.re QUEEN SIZE MAnRESS 11,./Dteb/ .. Wu cute1te, A/C su,.. roof, CALIFORNIA 92714 pllcttlon for grant• under .... ,,... The regletrant dom-= letdl. C1llf0tnl1 C1A. l Wttton, Sofa. ·le ,._,.,. ~ & BOX. QUILTED! alloyt, low mllu. Hlr9on Md Kallmeyef. A tti.ElementwyandSecond· (CffACeONADCIM.) menoed to tranuct bull-...,._mdchan.berMOOlll ~~ ~ call BRAND NEW1 $155 (1LPS825)$9,888 Prof ... ional Corpor1tlon, a ary Educttlon Acl for p. ~TteeTODEnNOANT: Mlle under t"9 ftctltloutl 011m1 Lutll. 1151& 1111mboll.a · °' mor C.lt: ~293 .nBlfll llAOI Callfornlt corPOtatlon, One 1 11 Educltlon ttend (A*°• AcMedO) Vlcemo L. ~ neme "' nemee OrOWllnd A\1811Ue, ~. ~ Oranoe C.- 1.aoo-e21.ol$2 •t. 640 • "-Ill Pll'k PWa, Sune 580, IMne, :OU bile meeting ~Id VllltUnor, Mich HI E-. lined aboft on SepMt!IOer, CA IOI04 Orlilv "°' Nc.vM!ber 1. t , ROOFING BAR w/bf ... rail, unique, Balboe ll&lnd nMI F•ry IU .. I Callfornll 92714 ..!:..nber 10 1988 tJ;_ Mat"ow1, Donna . M. 11M • Thll bUllneel le con-t ... ...... .... /~ IOok• like Judges Bench; •873'-1«0* -• .ae ewi Thlt bu11nen 11 con-n1ng •I 1:Mi p.m.' In tM Matllewl. J.... Torr•, _!eO!!!!!!! WMcftel _tne ... ~ t1y: an lndlvlCIWll TaM 2 end lat>lea. 1 con.. · ----d'Uc1ed by: • corporation Boerd Room cf tN F t111n HOW HIAINO. L..cS I nd aolld oetc; taroe dinette 35 SPACE and prH-Fully IO•ded, lncludlng The regl1tren1 COM• Vll!Wy 8chool Dlltrtct °'fr210 men • .Aleo up. sn.k• & Mt butcher b6oc* In tlglous Newport e..cl'I Becker rtdlo. deluxe Otlk St,... Fountt1n'v111ey Comp Roof en Mult dwOme, I c:Mn 721· 1081 IOCatlon wtth tllOWer Cail wMe11. 2 tops. exce!*lt Cantcwni. • • 1"19¥9 own tr8nep & tOOll. Craig, 873-8800 condition. 1 o•ner. Coc>lel of tti. grmm ~ Attdy 5'tt-3112 Wood Twin c a nopy --ea 000 mllee beet otter. BIGB c:enon w111 tJt •valleble lfOtn ~t. M1t1wh. lt ce •• · ,._., 8·30· 5 g BIG Ill.I.I..... ena metehlng nteetand.5 UP TO 1e· M~ ...... em-pm AllLB BEE, Sluden1~pl1or to~ -... drawer ct.a &Wlnd90f teotmo 650-8145 ~•)83&-2100 Ext 2oe ....... a••'I Nevem· ~~ cha ir. Xlnt. cond TRADE ~ In ~ Olyn(RNONOl) W 5, lHI la Cotta • 1250obo. 2Hi.b11Cked B< Beectt we have 2e· -.. ~ '11111 II M.... ...,.. Dec:em· Miii illmlllUI Vel. Chalrt 1 7 5H need~to32'. 12· ~m 5 tPMd manual, rldlala, Mr I, ltH In Salt Loe.I P..e Control Co. 557-4517 c..t Ruben •t 650-9'85 POlll'9f bratc ... AM/FM, LM.e Qty, USO. SM Need• tout• '9d\. We II S ; caaMtte. 8lecic ut. wtth U .. In C..&a u trlfn Ml-1 MY8 good llj111lllall'U I WANTED: rent lllp 10< 32 tun roof SI NI ¥ 8lte IY\eta g::'._~~:M~ a.~::".;:' -=t= ~·F.:!~ ~~· ~fi 1111~--=·f~r ca~::.~ a... S30N 080 + 2 18" Sen-John •t 850-MM --... Mfore &Mt I~ -llm tr•~. beet oner.I wu a prof"tl .. al IMD .. Ill W-27M , M.acer. Sh aM Mr FfT pfT ~ h9W retail BUTCHER btocai dln~tbl • •MN an 1..-en ..p Newpot-t leeotl vet'/ 1190; hvy dutr cro1 el ... Balla Cor· flnectrua atcn. c.w M-' :J":rni::,:r 10., 1a.-1a Yadlt CJ••· .. 5. MrW. 7I001t1 "5 ~padeet .. := ........ rtH ••• aaanm 110: ...... ~1 .,..P,., ....... 0...- ..... ~ ~ tor CEHT'ER CLUB IMl'l'lber_j .... C..cy Palr ... • ....,_,,,, tnOWbOeld 1t11p. 81gnlllc a.nt di•· •U1 •tMr H•· & c::toCNng me11 wo.r oo oouM.. hni•t~ •nlt7 aell•IUH. AWi In C*Mft, 1131 cal for~ l40--0e40 .... ~-.,.., Whittler Awe, Coate ••Ill•• ....... J Mw.11e ,,.a. CNrlW ro• :ood faDlila. ...._ _. ...__.: pelntlnga. 3-tlPd bfk•. ~ • --.,..,.,... portable ... &....,.._ PaM•te '« .,..110 oon•waeton "*"• ~ ~• el , .. ,.._ CA. Ne oo, ""*"" .. .,.,, iOUTHWElt1 L•mP • ••le• Wiii .. ....: .._..,.,,. .... ,~ ' . -..... .._... ~·-.. Nllo~ IOlll+tou1111t.dlen; ·-......., ....... .. ........ .... dll I •on = pwktlgtWt!Wtrt! .. el lllZ&ilt ..... ----..... ,.. Cclfl=°' .,...,....:::: 0-.......... HAMORLAWN- MT.OUVI M0<tu1r; • c.m.tery Cram•lory 1825 Otttor A~ Cott• Metl 540-55!4 STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? The Legel Oepert"*'t at the PIMM atop by to fill your Dally Pilot It pleaMd to an. flctlUoua bu.-,.. atatement at nounce a new eervtce now 1va.11-the Detty Pttot legal °'4*1· able to new bualnet.Mt. ment, 330 w .. t Bay, Colle We wlft now SEARCH the ~. C.Hfomla. If you can not name f0t you 1t no ••tra ctiarge. atop by, ~call ue and Mve you the time and the at (714) M2-4321, Extenlk>n trip to the Court Hou• In Santa 315 Of 316 end we .tll mak' Ana. Ttwn. of coune, 1ttet the arra~t• for you to hand .. ... rch It compleled we ~· flle thl• procedure by mail. your fk:tltfoua buatneaa name If you thoutd have. .ny further 1t1tement wfth the County Clerk. queetlon•, plMM calt u. and we pubUlh once a week f0t four .tft be lf'Of• than glad 10 .-.1 weekt .. ,.qutred by lew end ~· ''*' flee your proof of pubtt-OooO luctc 1n your cation wtth the County Ctlrk. new buakleMll WI ll'ustll ........ ,... ••bdrm 64'2 ~678 ua11 C••• •1 I nfH ...... ..,,.. .. On/alt !Mt»»W/llll.,.,.., -;;, Mii rf 111 C-.. A,.; ....... C11tQ.CMt1 'Ml 111111 ,,.... In.GIA ~~----1.J'!!'!!•!!!!M!!!!:_......__.._._J:~b!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!l!!!!!!!!£:Ji111J1111111!1!~lllllllllllll;.,,.. __ ~_.__~li!'!l'!!""-illl!!!'ml-~--~~liillllliiii!iiiiliil•m!i111111-..--ii.. -,, , ' " ~ •