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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-11-10 - Orange Coast PilotCE NEIGHB<R«>OD RX1S TH URSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1988 25 CE TS GOP's FuentCs,.urged·tO res·i n State party chairman assails placing ~ecurtty guards at OC polling places By GREG llER&X °' ... ..., .......... The chairman of the California • Republican Party said.today that th~ Oranae County Republican Party should consider askin& chairman Tom Fuentes for bis rcsipation following a controversial poU-watch- ingprogram in heavily Launoareasof Garden Greve and Santa Ana. Fuentcs,'oneofthe most influential and visible Republican leaders in the county, has admitted to approvihf a program to place hired ''sccunty guards" outside selected pollin1 places. The auards reportedly carried siffls in botfi Spanish and English sauna that voters must be citizens to cast bellotf.' Republican officials said the guards ~ posted in the hotly conteSted 72nd Assembly District because the party had been warned ~ but bad no proof -of a plan . in which ill~· aliens would be bused lo the p(>lhng places. State Republican chairman Bob ' Naylor came down bard Qn Fuentes today and the ~m. sayin1 the slate party had noth1na to do with the poll-watchin& prottam. Ahhouah he has no authority to remove ruentes from his post. Naylor said "if someone in my chain of command went out and did that, I would certainly consider removing them." Latino leaders, Democrats and even some Republicans likened the presence of uniformed security guards to Nazi-hke tacucs. and Wednesday it was announced the FBI would invcstipte the 1nc1dent. "We have opened up an mvcstap- uon to look into aUegauons of election law violations 10 that mat-' ter," l.os ,o\ngelcs FBI spokesman Jam Neilson. said. He declined tq com- ment further. · Naylor called the poll•watchmg program '•ill-adv ised and outrageous.. and said the "totall> ObJttt1onable procram was devised and fuoded entirely by the Oranse Count)' Republican Central Commit- tee. 1. as ~tatc Republican chairman. have ~dopted a polfoy specifically bamng an) CRP (Califon\il Re. publican Party) poll-watcbina pro- gram that might 1nt1midate vo~" Fuentes was not available for comment earl~ today. Officials at party headquarters u'I Garden Grove. Wrstm1nster and Cypress declined comment. (Pleue eee J'UEJllTU/ A2 Going fishing • CM city officials try to.get theirgoat HB election was 'bought,.' council .membe charg George Bush will bewleld- lng a telephone as wefl as a fishing pole during his Florida vacation./ A4 Coast Two trucks Involved on a crash on the San Diego Freeway this morning brought commuter traffic to a standstill./ A3 California Insurance companies swiftly answered a con- sumer revolt against sky- rocketing rates by an-, nounclng they would stop writing policies./ AS By JONATHAN VOLll..E OthOllllr ........ They're trying to take the goat out of Goat HiU. A long time ago. before it was Costa Mesa. and when Newport Beach was still a new port, hundreds of goats were kept on the mesa above the ocean. It was Goat Hill. Now though. one family claims city officials are trying to bully their billy. Angela Raj Kumar said herfamily was told to get rid of Barney Junior, a 3-foot tall, 80-pound miniature pigmt goat, because their Santa Isabel A venue home was not zoned for livestock. But Raj Kumar· contends Barney Junior isn't livestock. he·s just a pct. As a matter of fact. the goat thinks it's a dog. she said. He·s even allowed in the house. "He does everything with the dogs, .. Raj Kumar said. "We even take him for walks on the Back Bay without a leash. He plays just hke a dog. We give him baths JUSt like a d .. °tut as far as city codes arc concerned. Barney's identity cnm docsn•t matter. Barney Junior 1s a goat .. And soats don't belong on the hill, according to Robert O'Brien. city animal control officer. "A goat is a goat A pi&nt't1isjust a (PleaH eee lmSA/ A2) ...., .... ,......., ............... AJaeela Raj Kamar wttb pet 1oet Barney J anlor. Winchell claims Ortega campaign victim of hit mail By ROBERT BARKER °' .. ....,,... .... Huntington Beach City Coun· cilwoman Grace Winchell char)Cd today that business conglomerates spent vast amounts of money and used sophisticated campaign tech- niques .. to buy.. the Clly Council election in Huntington Beach. Winchell, a member of the slow- growth minority on the City Council, claimed that the big businesses used their ~urccs to deliver a ··t\1t piece" the day before the election to wreck the cand!dacy of Gen Onep, who finished in fourth place narrowly out oftne money. Winchell also churned that busi- ness companies -includmg the Huntin&ton Beach Co .. the Robcn Mayor Corp. of Newport Beach. the local Chamber of Commertt and Board of Realtors -worked cl05Cly wtth the Huntington Beach Po hce Officers Association to secure v1ctory for council candidates Don MacAllister and Jim Silva, MaCallister, a former mayor who "Ckcd out 1l victory-o"er the con- trolled-growth candidate Ortega for the third spot on the rouncsl. denied the allegauons tOday. . . - Although acknowledgina help from the bussncsscommunitr,, MacAJ.lister said that businesses .. will never buy,. has vote and that he·n make decisions on issues in the best interest of residents. "Nobody can buy my vote for a few thou.sand dollars. Business bas as much n~t to ftt:edom of expression as do rcsadents oft.he city," be said. Repteseotativcsoft.hcHuntigton Beach Co., which poured at feut S l 00.000 into a campaign to defeat antiarowth Measure J as well as g.iving money to other political action committees, could not be reached for comment. Winchell, a strong suppotter of Ortcp. whom she appointed to the Plannin& Commission two ycan aao. appeared to be scathing in her criunsm of heavy spendina by busi- nesses. ''Ifs a repeat of 1986, another bought election:"' she said. "The bi& interest monicck:ompenies arc not content to kt the people of Hunt- ington Beach rally see the truth about their candidates and make a d«tson on a basas of the stands the candidates take and the couca u of the people and those candidates. . .. But., ratb~. they run a sophisti- cated campa1~ With vast a.mounts of mon~. Namefy, they do a series of surveys to detemt1nc what fcars--and concerns the electorate ,really has. (Pleue .ee CAllP AIG11/ A2) I ndex Fate of Home RS:nch land uncertain Bulletin Board AS Business A6-7 Classlfled 85-7 Comics A12 Entertainment A 10 Opinion 84 People A11 Pollce Log A3 Public Notices 87-8 Sports 81-3 Weather A2 By JONATHAN VOLZKE OtlMOllllr ......... • Hit by the stunning defeat of two proposals for their Home Ranch p~cct. C.J. Segerstrom cl Sons officials said today they arc unsure of the fate of the 94-acre parcel in north Costa Mesa. "We haven •t addressed it." said Malcom Ross. Segerstrom·s director of planning and design. 'Tm sure we will soon. but-right now we're all hitting the mountains of work that we pushed aside during the election ... Seacrstrom intended to build 12 and 20-story towers on the propcny. to house IBM. a 400-room hotel. a health club, child-care center and commercial and retail space. The property 1s bounded by Harbor Boulevard. Sunflower Avenue and the San Diego Freeway . But that prOJttl. after surviving a court battle. was put on the ballot by a c1ti2ens' group, the Costa MC"Sa Residents for Responsible Growth. Scgerstrom legally challenged the rcicrcndum. but to no avail. When the developer submmed a scaled-down version of Home Ranch that retained the towers but killed the llealth club and I 0.000 square feet of retail space. it also was forced to Lhe ballot. Scgerstrom mounted a tremendous campaign to convince voters to approve the projects, spending more than $191.000. The cmzens' group put up a fight. but raised JUSt $25.000 to oppose the Home Ranch pro1ects and support a gro1o1. th-control measure and thrtt Catv Council candid2tes. · Voters send a message of moderation By PAUL ARCHIPLEY °' .. ., ......... 0 Political analysts who arc trying to fathom meaning in a seemingly mixed-message from the voters may be doing a lot of head scratching this week. Like a chameleon that hides its true nature behind colorful camouflqe, voters seemed to be sending conflicting si1D1IS in their choice$ on candidateS and issues alike. But (rom the national scene to the local level, the dectorate's messages miaht not be so confusing after all. They chose Vice P1-uident Gco!JC Bush to lead the • nation into the 1990s. The messqe? They agccd with his ~ument that. the country should stay the course Kl by President Reapn. . for most, life improved under Reagan. Peace and prosperit_y prevailed. Voters feared a return to the bad old days of Jimmy Caner under a President Michael Dukakis. But voten alto chose to keep Democrats in control of Coftll'Cll. In fact. they stren&thened the Democrats• hand in both houtn. What then is the mcssage? Voters don't trust either party to bave too much control. They want each to have a piece of the pie. Power tempered. A similar messge was senl in local elections thro~ut the Oranme Coast. So-called "pro-srowth" candidates were elected rijht alonpi<k their ''slow-powth" opponents. And slow..,-owth measures were approved in some communities, re~ 1n OlherL In Newpon-..Ch, M~ Jobn Cc>'X and Councilwoman Rutbelyn Plumlnll' woa ~lection. a sipal thal voters liked the job the incumbents were don\&. At the same tame, s1ow-gro~th ad' ocate Jean Wan "as ch~n 10 JOln them. suggesting 1hc communal\ wants someone on the council to sound the alarm· against development decisions that residents deem harmful to their interests. S1m1lar signals were sent an Co~ta \tcsa and Huntington Beach. IX'elopment advocates Don \tac.\lhstcr and Jam S1l"a were gn en the nod alo1'gs1de slo1o1. -gro" sher Peter G rttn an Huntington Beach. In Costa Mesa. slow-gro"th proponent Sandy Genis was asked to serve alo"Pi<k moderate Mar' Hornbuckle and &ro"th proponent Ed Glasco". The mes~ 1s balance The nallOl' wants neither a conStt\ at ave pttS1dcnt nor a liberal Congn.-ss to pull at too far to the nght or left ll prefers a stead). moderate course. The same m~ was broadcast here. The approval ofa slov...growth 1nihatl\ e in Costa Mca, as well as rejCdion of two proposals for CJ Scaerstrom It Sons' 94-acre Home Ranch. tells tlle council that rcssdentS want the bn~cs htt on big development projects -de pate 1 sclcctsnJ a muted date of candidate Re1ect1on ofa similar measure 1n Huntington Beach and a traffic mana,emcnt 1n1t1at1'e an ewport Beach doesn't mean voters want rampant development. onl> that tMy approve of growth q,ana&ement efToT1s alrtad) under wa> 1n <Pleue .. vor&p/ A2) ntee ballots polls. Alto in Co ta Mtsa. Mary Horb•ckle c<taed out John Humphft'Y. a suppontt and c. ""'°' of w slow arc>wih meawre. b a•• on lllt Ctty C'ounal b)i 21 l ...... ~":•='••t.111m~,11~.:.= =·was ' "l would k>\'e to 1tt a tu~ of coune. and af the early .-. .... art &DJ andialnon, lhm' 11 ,_ b ~":;be.-S. _ ''Jllc>' ~ beavaty for Men ft O. But it's not ftlMOftlble to 111 •• ..... ... '°"" ''° ... Ill ., ... ltliacelea Md MlrV .... '° ... ... ··-· ..... ., Despite being outspent 4-1 , the t'1t1zcns' group won. Mcasurt H. the bagger development. was defeated 63 pcrttnt to 36 percent., and Measure I went down 60 percent to 39 pcrocnL .. There was an awful amount of money spent, and usualJy money can buy votes. but the pcc>1>lc realll' didn't want thsr ... project,.. res1denu· sp0keswoman Diane Goldbcracr (Pleue ._ BOJO/A2) Genis to juggle her time with Mesa, NB . CAMPAIGN WRBCKBD BYBIT MAIL ••• ._Al 1)ly fted I IOft .......,. Of die elidonte. in 1Cn\I o( iMUel ud oadidlta. They find wbat the e~ aora1e can tolerlte and what It can't. .. For eumple. they knew that cont.rolled v<>wth was a ~t concern and that the ~rvation of wetlands and reduction of crime is a cou&ant aubwtleft conocm. •• Winchell said that thinp we~ used in the c:ampaian literature to addreis fean that were expressed in surveys. She said the literature for MacAllister and Silva was tailo~ to addtas those fean, even though the can- didates at other times voted or spoke -----inst~ i.ssucs..tbty now all~ ly favor. .. They are stated in half-truths so they can't be challenged," she said. "What we need is a SOP.histicated electorate that can identJfy who is putting out the literature and who those committees are. "When they get a hi1 piece that's barely in line with leaalilty; they should understand it's a flit J>iC:CC and that it's exaggcnted with hafftru\hs." WinchelJ said that the alleged "hit piece" agajnst Ortcp that was put oUl by the Southern California Caucus. which has links to tha Huntington Beach Co., "crucified" Ortega for voting for redevelopment -an activity that the candidates and Huntington Beach Co. rcJlly .sup- ~io crucified Ortep. Winchell said, for not votina for downtown redevelopment ~ alletcdly mak.iQ& the imelte1oon that Orup wu soft on cnme and druss that people say exist becau~ the arcJ has deteriorated. Winchell said that Ortep's no vo1e1 on the Plannina Commission reflected that she was in favor of sensible arowth and food plannina, not that she was ap1nst redevelop- menL. · · Winchell also took the Huntinaton Beach Police Officers Association to tasL=--------------··we have a fine Police Depart· ment, the finest around," she said . "But the POA is not the Police Department The POA supports the candidates identified as winners as those endorsed by monied can- didates. The reason they do this. they want winnen. "They aho want somebody who will guarantee to t.Hem ' that their issues will be voted in. When they want a raise or more police, they'll act them. They want to remove those issues from fair negotiation, which is where it belongs. They don't want analysis. lhey want to feel the)'. have control of a couple of councll can- didates." MacAllister, who served a two-year Police standoff ends peacefully A short standoff in Irvine ended peacefully today with the arTC$ts of two teen agers suspected of car theft, police said. Lt. Al Muir said officen chased a 19-year-old man and a~ounger teen in an allegedly stolen car to Walnut A venue. The 19-year-old man was arrested when the pair tried to flee on foot. but the youth barricaded himself in a house in the 4400 block. Muir said there was no indication the youth Wis armed, but otticcrs surrounded the home and a special weapons team was called in. After setting off a diversionary blast in the back yard of the home, the officers used a device to blow the locks off the front door and entered the house. No shots were fired and the teen was taken into custody at 10:35 a.m. A woman in the home when police entered was not taken into custody. Grace Wlnchell hiatus after being on the City Council for two years, said he is sorry to see ., that opponents have resorted to what h6 called "sour grapes." Jn his 81h years in office he's voted consistently on issues, he said. He said that over 350 dGnQrs have contributed to his campaign and that he's knocked on about 2S pcteent of the homes of the 99,000 registered voters i'n Huntington Beach and has the community's pulse. MacAllister said be had support in the past from the Huntinaton Beach Co. and that he has voted •inst them and voted for them. .. No one ever asked me tci vote on the project." he said .... alwa~ voted to do what I think bcsl It s small- minded to think that they can buJ my vote for a few thousand dollars. U.S. T~mps. ..... , .. IO !13 Calif. Temp1. Eztendecl ....-. 10 .. .. L9 NNon..w ., a :ti'°"·~-._. ... ,..:-=w ....... ---:::.=.~ 61 45 ......_ ~......, .... ~ ... 16 M 12 42 ·-~ :...-:• a3 M Owlllle 47 » ...,. ...... ,. Ill .. _..,.,.. CIOMlll _ C:..-...., llld flllOll.. • 57 ONndo ., ., ......... 10 11 clllr. :c =:r. 72 IO T1 Ind ...... Cily ·= • ,, ••• !Jilli 67 lie fMNU ., 14 ._._,_ .. ,~ • .. = ..__ '° 1'0. °'*"""' ,,_. 1t " toll. ···~ 72 112 ==t .... .:.. IS 4r ...._ .. 14 ..... 46 JI 56 31 • ==-I • .. ~ 57 40 ....... ore. IO 41 lell"- .. 80 Surf Report ...... .,. 42 Pio ••lclt 17 : s.u.°'*"° • .. 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FUENTES URGED TO QUIT GOP POST ••• l'l'OlllAl ABSENTEES MAY CHANGE RESULTS ••• Meanwhile, Republican Cun ·Orange County Democratic Party, PrinaJe was ie.d.ina Democrat Chris-said the presence of poll guards tian F. .. llick',.Thierbech by 671 probably had an effect on the out· votes in the 72nd District nw:e. The come of the race. well done," he said. ··Now, frankly, I thin le he ouaht to resign." Hanna said that any suspected votc.s-ddina scheme shoukf have been reported to the Oran,e County District Attomey•s office. But he said he doubts any such scheme existed. From Al none so unless there is a fairly la~. numbCT. it's not likely that there s going to be any change in the outcome.·· · Another race within the realm of possible change is Newport Beach's slow-growth measure. Voten at the city's polling places turned down a growth control measure that would have tightened the existing traffic management ordi- naocc by a margin of just under 2,300 votes. Fountain Valley also has a close race that could be affected by the results of absentee voting. Jim Petrik.in defeated John Collins by 200 votes for the second open City Council seat. County officials said today that they could not tell yet which races mi.alu be affected by the absentee ballots. "We're still in the process of identifying ballots and verifying sig- natures," said Don Tanney, county Registrar of Voters ... We should know on Monday where the spread is and we hope to have them all counted by Tuesday afternoon." All the ballots will be counted by hand. outcome of the race is still in doubt .. They're sending a clear messaac to because of absentee ballou that have Hispanics that they're second-class not been counted~ citizens," Hanna said. "This is some- Carlos Rodrisuez, chief consultant thing that would occur in the 1950s in totheRepublicancandidate,saidthat the Deep South. We didn't think it withou·t the presence of the auards the could occur in 1988 in California." outcome may have been different Hanna openly called for Fuentes' than the apparent GOP win. resignation. "I'm not at all sure we would have "Tom Fuentes has done a great job won," he said. for his party until Tuesday. I was John Hanna, chairman of the ready to congratulate him on a job Oranae County Rqjstrar of Voters DonaldTanney IS also condOctiDJ an investiption, and will tum bis find- inp over to the Oranae County District Attorney's Office. · "At this point in time I feel it's best handled by an independent law enforcement agency," Tanney said. GENIS READY TO DIVIDE HER TIME ••• Proa Al VOTERS SEND MODERATE MESSAGE ••• From Al those c1t1es. Jn fact. some councilmembers saddled with "pro-growth" labels could arsue with some.justification that the~ are the true "slow- growtbers 'while their opponents are actually "no-srowthers. The Newport Beach City Council just completed a two-year effort to update its aeneral plan, seeking throughout the process to hear and address the concerns of residents and businesspeople alike. The vote on Tuesday could be a signal that residents felt the council listened. ~ Proponents of growth control measures that lost will argue their positions were distorted with the help of expensive campa1gns fu nded by developers. · But voters aren't easily fooled. no matter how much money is poured into a campaign. Ask the insurance companies. And voten don't like being treated like fools, either, which could be one of the biggest m~es they sent"lhis year -and one which history shows will likely be ignored in future elections. The low level of this year's cam- paigns, from George Bush to Newport 2000, was roundly condemned by all. Political pros say neptive cam- paigns will continue because they work. But if Dukakis was beat because Bush was able to pin the dreaded liberal label on· him. how come voters increased the Demo- crats' hold on the House and Senate? If Newport 20U>'s hit mail did in Ralph Rodheim, how come it didn't brinadown John Cox? Voters arc disgusted. Despite the gracious concession made by Dukakis, and calls by both him and Bush to unify behind the new admin- istration, feelings will not easily be mended in Congress. Bush's honey- . moon may be over the day he takes office. Similar tactics used against win- ners in local races wpn't quickly be forgotten. either. It's hard to make a fresh start when the air has been so thoroughly fouled. lhere WIS a JCnUine conflict of interest question, Genis might be a•ipedtootberprojects in Newport, City Manll!Cr Robert Wynn said. 0r .. Genas said. she will voluntaril,Y. abstain from votina in Costa Mesa 1f she sees a conflict. Newpon officials are taking the approach that the issues can be managed, Wynn said. "I know of no other city employee in another Orange County city who's also on a city council. so we're pioneering here," Wynn said. But Genis had the right to run for office just like any other citizen. he sajd, Adjustments will have to be made just as they are for any elected official who also holds down a full- time job. Gems said she was tired of being time to take care of Costa Mesa business, he said. Likewise. a policy will be worked out on her use of the telephone at City Hall to discuss Costa Mesa business while on Newport Beach time, Wynn said. Genis said she will ask people calling her in Newport Beach to call her at home, or will return their calls on her lunch hour and breaks. Cox said Genis will be hard pressed to meet her council obligations. Calling the time demands "tough and awkward," Cox said he often meets with city officials and consti- tuents mornings. lunchtime and evC.. ninp. "There are hardly enouah hours in the day," Jlc said. For Genis, the time demands could be even more diflkuh becaute city planned arc rqularly asked to ac- company council members or attend after-hour meetings on their own, Cox said. · Genis is ready to try. As a slow. growth candidate who will sit on a council that leans toward pro-de- velopment positions, she knows there arc battles ahead. "I can hold my own, but I plan on conducting myself as a lady at all times," she said. HOME RANCH LAND ••• From Al MESA TRYING TO GET THEIR GOAT .•. asked repeatedly about possible con· flicu of mtercst when other council said. members escaped similar scrutiny. The citizens said the project didn't campaian, while our opponents based their ~tive campeian on seriously 0.wed mformation and misleadina statements. From Al smaller goat." O'Brien said ... ff you let livestock animals in the neigh- borhoods, it would smell like old MacDonald's farm everxume the breeze turned toward you. • O'Brien said a neighbor com- plained about Raj Kumar's unusual pet in Seftember. The family was notified o the violation and told to send Barney packing. The officer said the city wanted to give the family ample time to find Barney Junior a new home so no deadl~ne was se1 to act rid of the aoat. In the meantime, he said, the city hasn't received any more complaints. Raj Kumar. meanwhile. appealed Barney Junior's case to the City Council. She collected 2S signatures from residents who live near her home and say they don't mind Barney Junior as a neighbor. .. A lot.oftbem said 'Oh. youhave a goat? I didn't even know,'" Raj Kumar said. "And we've had him almost three years." The petition was given to the City Council this week, but no date was set for consideration of the gruff issue. The family was given the goat by another Costa Mesa family when they were told they were in violation of city codes. Raj Kumar said Barney Junior "has a personality that just LattQ ticket worth $15 million SACRAMENTO (AP) -Some lucky California lotto J>la~ owns a ticket worth over SI S.4 mlllion. State lottery officials said this momina that one player corrcctely ~ all sill numbers in the'inid- week .. Lotto M9" pme to win the SI S,43S,386 jackpot. The winner's identity was still unknown and a tonery spokeswoman wouldn•t immediately release the name oftbe city wber'e the ticket was ORANGE 114111111 .... COAST --·r... lllA•Of'PICI -W. 9a1 .. , C-. ..... CA purchased. The winning numbers picked Wcdnesdaynigbtarc:9. I0, 17,22,40. 44, and the bonus number, 26. Eight people Jueued five numbcn plus the bonus to win $278,412 each. Another 309 playen hit five numbers to each win Sl. 713. A total of I 8, 973 tickets are worth SS4 a piece. Three numbers are worth an automatic SS for each of the 374.37S winners. Forinstance, she suaested, council bet~ns on Harbor Boulevard, that moved nght into our family... memben-with devefopmcnt indw-. bi~ity commercial devel~ Raj Kumar said Barney Junior, try-related jobs should be questi!>ned menu in Costa Mesa should remam who runs around the back yard with a about any possible conflict each time on Bristol St.reel few chickens and a couple of dogs, is a a project comes before the council. .. We ~ly didn'.t hammer on the quiet aoat. and doesn't even smell Of greater concern to Newport traffic," Ooldber&er said. .. Our s~s bad. officials is the amount of time Genis said. •No to the ff and I rise,' the biJb &-eats alfaffirby-thrba:I • but -will have to spend as a politician. ri •• _ there's a 2S-pound bag of goat feed as .. We can't just say you can 10 to But Ross said the citiuns bam- "llighu of propc;rty owners and faimeu was the ~issue and this wu conveniently fot0tten by those who actively oppolCd us.•• Ross said Seemtrom officials orobebly would take a loot at what led to their defeat. a s~ial treat, Raj Kumar said. Costa Mesa any time they need you." mered on everythina. • He's cheaper to feed than the Wynn said. But Genis will be allowed "It was a difficult campaian," Ross "rm sure it will be analyzed .dogs," she said. "Plus. he helps me to use compensatory and vacation said. ··we ran a positive and factual throuah a post-mortem," be said. keepthelawndown.lnever have to ,--~------------------------------------------------------------------~--------~ mow." Raj Kumar said losing Barney Junior would be like losing one of her own kids. "He's just like one of us," Raj Kumar said. "He even knows when you're talkina about him and his feelings act hurt. "We're trying desperately to keep him." Correction An article in Wednesday's Daily Pilot incom:ctedly reported that Mesa Action spent $6,3 l 0 on behalf of Measure G, the slow~ in- itiative. Costa Mesa Residents for Responsible Growth Political Action Committee dirccied the campeial! for Measure 0 , not Mesa Action. The Daily Pilot ~the error. Mill..,_. IOI! IMO, Ooela ...... CA t262t ~ edl. 14a•M71, ...,..._ & edlton.i ...... , Justcall 642-6086 ~ '* -----~---edllotlll .-,-., ............... ,_., "'9Y lie .. OduOed ......... ,.. .. ,,,,11f1'~- • ..... -~· ,.._ .. _ ....... ,_ ..,.,, ......... ...... ....... ,_...,,_ ......... Cll 1 11 ' .. Arlee Rfl!Jee, aacer, :yadltcJalJ co-fomJder Arlee Hisbee of Cotta Mesa. 1 . professional dancer~ taUlh• danClna for nearly so ycan., died Saturday 11 the • of 73. No memoNJ ter"Vic.u will be held. The family bu requested that memoriaJ donations be made to the Orln,e County American Cancer A&SOCiation. H~wasbomOec.8, 1914,inSahl.akeCity, but lived in Costa Mesa aioce 19SS. . H~bee and her busbend Melvin are founders of the Baliaa Corinthian Yacht Oub. Sbc supported the · annual Fish fry, the ~ County Fair and many other community acuvaucs. · . · She ii survived b.Y.. her husband Melvin J. Hiabee ancf sister lCatJ\enne Yanaveco fI::U:ewooo. Service. today for FV atlJlete tilled bJ Ha wall Services for Brent Martin ·a 22-ycar~ld University of Hawaii-Hilo forwa;a. were scheduled fot noon today . in Honolulu, according to the Honolulu Advel11ser. The youna man's parents Marilyn and Charles. wbo arc clivorted, arrived in Hawaii on Tuesday. Police said the crash occurred at about 4:30 p.m. Sunday when the Suzuki Samurai in which Martin was a ~nger went out of c.ontrol, struck a guard rail and nip]>¢ 2S feet into the lower end of Laupahocboe G ulch. Five other people were injured in t6e crash', including three teammates, but all but one have been released from the hospital. Martin was apparently sitting in the front passenger seat of the Samurai and m~'y have been thrown from the vehicle. He suffered multiple fractures, head inJurics and internal injuries and died on an operating table at Hilo Hospital about five hours afier the wreck. Martin never regained consciousness. • The group was apparently headed from a beach resort to the Vulcans' intrasquad scrimmage on campus. The scrimmage was later canceled. Mart.in, a 6-foot-7, 205-pound forward, had just begun his second season at the university. He transferred in May 1987 from Rancho Santiago Community College, where he averaged 13.5 points and 6.8 rebounds a game. He was an All-Sunset Lea&ue and All-Orange County players at Fountain Valley High School. It was not known if Martin's body would be buried in Hawaii or returned to California. , Chiropractor John Evers Dr. John P. Evers Sr., a chiropractor and 25- ycar resident of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach, died suddenly Tuesday at the age of 71. Evers was born June 29, 191 7, in Scranton, Pa., and was a graduate of Palmer College in Davenport, Iowa. At the time of his death, Evers was semi-retired from his chiropractic practice he shared with his son. He was a Shriner, a member of the American Chiropractic Association and longtime member of the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club. An avid dog lover. Evers owned five d~, He is survjvcd by his wife Genevieve Lcchowski Evers; son Dr. John P. Evers Jr. of Newport Beach; daughter Helen Evers of Costa Mesa; sister Anne Hcthcrson of Scranton. Pa.: two grandsons and one stcp-granddauJ}ltcr. Memorial services will be pnvate. The family has asked donations be made to the Animal Assistance League of Orange County or to ~he scholarship fund at the Orange Coast College Foundation. YoutbleaderLauralrwbJ . Memorial services were held Tuesday for Laura Wolcott Irwin, a longtime Corona del Mar resident. who died Nov. 5 of complications following a sudden heart attack. She was 8 1. The family has asked that donations be made to the National Kidney Foundation of Southern California. -. lrwi~ was born in Schenectady, N~Y .. and attended Elmira Collcsc in Elmira, N.Y. She married Emmett MacDonald Irwin just before moving to California in 1927. They moved to Corona del Mar in 1964. Tbrouahout her life, she was active in the Campfire Girls and Girl Scout programs. She served for many years as ·a volunteer leader for the Girl Scouts and later worked in the Scouts' district office. She also served as a volunteer at Arcad ia Methodist Hospital. Irwin is survived by her sister Grace Wolcott Waddell ofSchcncctady, son William Wolcott Irwin of La Habra, daughter Charlotte Irwin Huntley of l.afaycuc._ Calif.._ ci&ht grandchildren an<L~ght put-grandchildren. Nuon alde John Mltcbell WASHINGTON (AP) -John Newton Mitchell, the puff formerattomey general who went to prison for conspirina to cover up the Watergate 1eandal in his friend Richard Nixon's White House. ii dead at 7S after collapsina on a Wasbinglon street. • Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/ThUfldey, Ncwembef 10, 1 ... • AS More surgery for shooting vi·c~m IJ IOI VAN EBEN .. He was back an the hospital today for °' .. ...,........ suraery to dose up the colostoml and remove one of the shotgun pellets, • said A 26-year-old man mistakenly shot his lawyer. ChnJ Kcet\I.. ··~ att stall Sept. 4 by Newport Beach police is in fair morepclleuinthere,buthc's,,ingtohave condition today after retumina to Foun-to 10 back for more surgery.' tain Valley ftesional Hospital for SUJJCfY, Bryant was on the beach near Balboa his attorney saad Wednesday. Pier with his wife shortly before 3 a.m. Hospital spokeswoman Sheila Holliday when they were approached b)' Ncwpon confumed that .sun~ Bryant had re-Beach Police Officer Derck Duncan. turned for suJFi'y to his colon, damaaed The officer hadjusl. received a report of by the pc>lioe sbot,Un blast, and' for an armed man on the beach and a.,,,.rent- removal of a shotaun pellet. ly mistook B'ryant's portable radio for a BfYant, an immisrant from the .West gun. ~uru.cy .of Liberia. wn .sltot.and.. _AccordinaJo police.accounts, Duncan critically injured when an officer apparent-ordered Bryant to '"freeze." Bryant ap- ly mistook his portable radio for a sawed-parently spun around, lcadinJ Duncan to off shotaun. believe he was about to ftrc hlS weapon. The blast severed arteries in Bryant's left Bryant's family disputes the police ann and penetrated internal organs, fore-account. Bryant said in an interview Oct. ina the rcmovaJ of part of his stomach and 23 that he did not remember being told to colon. f~e:He did say, however, that be turned Crash slows traffic on 405Freeway By GREG KLERKX Of .... Dellp .... ,,.., Two trucks tangled o n the southbound San Diego Freeway in Fountain Valky earl y today. resulting in an hours-long logjam that backed up traffic all the way to Seal Beach, accordmg to repons. The accident occurred at 5:40 a.m. just south of Euclid Avenue. according to Leshe Hill. spokeswoman for the Cali- fornia Highway Patrol. Although the cause of the accident is not yet known, Hill said a flatbed trailer carrying 40,000 pounds of sod apparently overturned and a concrete pumper truck jackknifed trying to avoid the avalanche of soil and ~ss. Two pickups and another vehicle w~re also involved. but only two m- juncs resulted, both minor. One dnvcrwas taken to Fountain Valley Regional Medical Center for treatment. The names of the truck drivers and the injury victims were not available this morning. Hill said. te>M.rd Duncan out of cu11osi1y aft.er heanna someone shout Pol~ later fouod a 14-ycar-old boy with a paint pellet gun, the type used for simulated combat games. The pellet aun apparently was the onpn of the report of an Ant\~ man on the beach. The Shooting 1s being mvcstigatcd by_ the ~nJC COu(lty District Attorney's office, which 1s not expected to release a report until culy next month. Bryant remained m ciiucal condition for several days following the shoou ng and iniliaJ repeqs indicated he-might 109t his- arm. His cond111on improved after surgery and he was releascct from the hospital Sept. 20. Bryant had iust completed trairung as a shunlc bus dnvcr 111hen' he was shot and did not ha'e health insurance. -. 4The wreck reduced traffic to a one-lane trickle for ~vcral hours while firefighters. police and CHP officers labored to remove the overturned trucks and the sod. All lanes were reopened by 9:30 a.m. Bulldozerpuahe.aodandotherdebrlaofftheSanDle&ol"reeway. Reason for freeway ~hooti~g death may never be learned By JONATHAN VOLZl.E Of .. Dellp,......., The invcstigauon into an elecllon-night death from a self-inflicted gunshot wound is continuing. but police satd today the reason behind the strange Costa Mesa Freeway shooting may never surface. Louie Guillen, 45, of Redlands shot himself while bein1 chased by Cosa Mesa and Newport Beach police, Costa Mesa Sat. Sam Corderio said. Corderio said an autopsy performed Wednesday yielded no clues as to whether Guillen shot himself intentionally as be entered the northbound Costa Mesa Freeway just ahead of rush-hour traffic. ToxicoloCY tests will take several weeks to Sberlff can't bar attomeyfromjall A judge rejected a request from Orange County Sheriff Brad Gates to bar an American Civil Liberties Union attorney from inspecting the Orange Count) Jail. Gates said last week that he would bar Balboa Island attorney Richard Herman from the jail aficr U.S. D1stnct Jud$e William Gray ordered improvements in the padded cells and granted the ACLU permanent access to the Ja il de1cnnmc whether he .. was under the influence of drugs or alcohol. authonues said. "Ifs st1U a mystcn'. We ma) never know:· the sergeant said. Authorities began cha mg Gu11lcn·s red Honda when an off-duty Santa o\na pohce officer reported seeing Guillen brandish a rifle on Newpon Boulevard near Hospital Road. Newpon Beach Pohce said the} suspect Guillen fLred one shot from his 30-30 nfle at the Bouzy Rouge Cafe on 3 1st Street. but they don·t know who or wha& he was tiring at. April Hester. 21. of Huntington Beach said they saw a nfle pointed from the Honda on Newpon Boulevard and then follo"'ed the car. It continued on !'ewpon Boulevard to the frce"'a) "'•th se'eral police cars rn pursull. she saJd. The car started to the left o(the frtt"':l' as 1fto get on the San Diego Free"' a~ .. then vt'Cred across the shoulder to the Costa Mesa Frtt"'a'. Hester said. It rolled to a slow stop in. the median b(t .... ecn the freeways. she said. Corderio said Guillen shot h1mselfc,en as thecarconunued forward. but there "'as no way 10 tell if the shot himself 1nteouonall). The bullet passed through his chest and exited h.is back b(fol'C' lodgmg m the car's "'indow post Guillen died later that night at Fountain Valle) Regional Hospital Airport graffiti worries police LO o\NGELES (AP) -o\ marked increase in gang graffiu at Los Angeles International Airport has Cit) officials womcd that gang acu' at) could spill into airport fac1h11es. The head of the Police bcpanment's airport detail and the chief of the a1rpon·s own police force agreed Wednesda' to deter gang intrusions b) v1gorousl) enforc· ing anti-graffiti ordinances and other la"'s ... ··w e are definllel> concerned: said L.\X Pohce Chief Gilbert A Sando-.al ·· .\nd "'e art going to do all we can to male surt the s1tuauon docsn "t escalate b~ b(mg pro ac11.,,c ... Much of the graffiti. "'h1ch gang mcm· b(rs scra"' I on bwldings and signs to marl their turf. ts appeanng m terminal restrooms and parking areas. but some has bttn found 1n secunt~ areas otT ltmns ll' the oubhc Keena sa.id followina the ibootinl that tbc family-which includes Bryant's wife, Marlmt. and four children -would face financlal d1fficulucs. He Slld Wednesday that 1he family was in scnous financial straits, despite a f!Ust fund that was set isp to rc«1ve donations from well wishers. ..The fund as down to less than S l,SOO. and with six people fOOd bijls aJo~ arc about $300 a week," he said.~~That•s not counting rent and other cxpen.ts. •· Keena, a Mu.sion V~10 ci coun- C11man. said he intends to file suit agamst the cat) of Newport Beach, possibly as early as next week. ;\ claim filed with the cit1 was ~jcctcd b} the Cn) ( ounc1l Oct. 11 . In that claim. Keena asked for "in excess-ors I miUion." The next step wit be a complaint filed in Supenor Coun . Keena said. -. Holiday on Friday for some By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of ... Olllt,.. ~ ettrans Da)> "''" be obstrved Fnda\ "llh schools. banks. man) public offices and some businesses closed for the ho hda' In add1t1on. several e-vents are planned locally to commemorate war veterans While some cit)' and county offices will close their doors Fnda)'. emerg- ency "orkers -including police and fire departments -will remain on the jOb. There "'111 be no mall dehven Couns and pubhc librancs "'111 b( closed . .\nd the Dall> Pilot will be open for busine s and deh.,,cred as usual Trash collcc11on m the etues of Costa Mesa. Huntington Beach. Fountain Valley. In me and Laguna &ach will be performed as usuaJ Fnda...--wtilte ~ roll~ ion "1 postp0ned one da) m ewpon &ach Formerl) ~rmasuct Day. No' 11. Veterans Da' marks the annncrsar) of the armistice that ended World \\ar I an 191 The federal lcglJf. hollda~ "'as obstf\ed on the fourth 1onda~ 1n October dunng the mid-I ll70s. but rc"ened to ="'ov 11 1n I Q7 Forme·r ¢ounty developer cleared in kickback case Someone entered a residence m the 7800 block of Gkncoe and stole a S350 stereo. JACun• Beach Jewelry valued at S4,600 was reported stolen \\. edne~a) from a home on Del Mar .\venue. In a separate theft t\pt"'nters wert ~ ported stolen Wednesday from a business office on Laguna Can)on Road The Hlue of the loss has )Ct to be determined aher reaching into the car and ~111ng \\ l'dn~'ld.a) off an alarm Damage to the top \o\a\ esumated at St .500 Irvine More than 150 gold Amencan Eagle Cl'ins "'onh SI " .500 v.erc stolen from a home in the I 0 blocl of Mauchh som('tame Tuesday. Coeta Mea .\ man who checked into the La Quinta motel on Souah loast Dn't' apparenth l hecled out with the r0\1m'\tele,1sion TheT\ andacablc txl\ '' Nlh a total of S350, were tom fr,,m tht1r locled mounung bracket A once-prominent Orange County real estate developer has been ac- quitted of cba.rJes he took S 1.5 million in kickt.c:ks in land deals involvina Beverly Hills Savinp &. Loan Allociation. Jama D. Stout, who once beaded bia own real estate investment and ~ent firm in Irvine, was ~innocent Tuaday by I U.S. Dlauict Cout1 jury thtt had de- Wlaated n than I day. Stout, wbo now lives in Florida. wu indicted in June on clwles he coUec&ed aecret commiaaion1 fk>m a nanta1a van., SomeoneputS20.~wonhofpsin a car at the Mobil Gas Station at I 702S Brookhunt St. Tuesday mom· ins and anempled to .. , the bell wath two di&rcftt Crtdit cards, both which Md overdrawn hold onten pllCled on tltm. He 8cd without peyina t.tw bill iD a 1977 Chevy with an <Maon licentt plate. • • • A man left his check boot on· a couMCr at tbc Sporu Club, at 906S Wamer Ave. Monday motn1"1 and _... he returned. it was milline. • • • • Someone broke the f'rolit window oftheGokkn Bottlcat 11101 Edineer real estate brokerage to which he bad channeled purdlases financed by the S&.L from 1982 to 1984. Stout'scompeny was 1 partner with Bcver1y Hills Savtngs & Loan in the purchase of do2ens of apartment buildinp worth more than S4SO milHon. Prosecutors caUed the secret com- missions k.ickbecks, while the defense ll'Jtled that they were lcaitimate fees that 'Beverly Hills Savinas A Loan did not need to know about. .. There was no eviden<:e to support the kickback alleptions. •• said de- fcnsc attorne) Randall J. Turk. .. The evidence was that these were lawful and appropriate finders· f~.·· The 1nd1ctment of Stout was part of major nationwide ·effort by authont1es to deter alleged criminal fraud 1n the banking industry. of- ficials said. ssistant U.S. Attorney Anita Dy- mant said the Sto ut verdict will not affect the high priority placed on blnlina bank fraud. "'This was an unusual case with a.n unusual set of facts," she said. Ave. causina $200 dlmqe Tunday theDcSlmone8akcry,68SOEd~"8Cr nipt but nothina was reported stolen. Ave. and reportedly stoic S 11,000 in machinery. lhuatlqtoll 8eacb A woqian told oftitnS that she was raoed after t-o men kidnapped her Wednesday in ftont of Carpenter's Hall on Atlanta A~nue. She aid sht couldn't remcmbu any details and believed that abt may have been ~ ... Thieves enlitted tht Cal Scimce buikti• ,ill ane 15000 block of Muufiic:t&are Lane and stole a Sl..000 cocnputer. • • • C\&4Mitl broke I dCl9d bolt lock II '-I • • • A ~n who was a Mranecr to them reponcdly trlld to fortt her*'> into their apartment after 10 p.m. Wcdnada_y. relldcnts 1n the 1200 block of Cabfonua Street satd. The 'AIOCDU, who wu carl)1at a beer a.ad dmilid in a tan tmd roew, said she WU look•• fOr her hatmon.t<:I. • • • A woman •id \Mt 10meont stoat her Wiiiet wWf lnetldi~~ I It ~ It~...., c 19060 Brookhunt 5'. • • • • • • Pohct officers re ponded to rcporu Wedncsda}. of a motorist mastur- bat1na whale dn'-lnl on the Laauna Can)On frttwa) The man. about 30 yea!"$ old. wa reponedl) wanna a hght-b1ue shin and was dnving 1 red spons car He was last seen north· bound on the 405 Fl"tt"'a)', Newport Beach A 9mm Km1-auto mauc hanctaun valued at $950 was stolen from a boat docktd 1n a shp al 2101 W. Coast H1a)1v.a) ••• An eltttnc t) ptwnter. phone answcn"' machine and O\Mr oft"1tt ~u1pment "alued at $81 S were stokn from the KLM Royal Dutch A1roffi« at •SOO Campus Dnvt • • • A wedd1n1 t.nd "•lued at $4,000 and ocher JC~lr) were llokn f~ an 1.-rtmtnt at 1800 16th St by 1 bul)lar vrho oricd ~n a kx\cd shdint a)u door. Toial lols ..,.-as csumattd at SS.9SO. • • • Sulaicu doC'Ut I hok in tbc IC)po/ I 1911 VW Cabriolet weft te8ftd. off . . .. Someone pu nched the lock of a olkswagen Fox on Seton Road Tuesda' and stoic the stereo. . . .. .\ man in a 'an topocd' to IJ"e 1 "-Oman his phont' number Wtdnt · da) alkmoon and then e\poscd h1m~lf to her. prompt mg the "-Oman to flet' The incident took place on &rranca Parl .... ay near a con truc- uon site. • • • .\n S 11.000 check was $tot& fl"()m a business in the 14 00 bl9-ck,,..of Dahlquist Road bct.,.,ttn J-7 lf.m. • • • T" 1 ~ ulpturcs.. one ofan otter and ht•r rmp and the other of a ,,_,'Cllru "'('ft' 'h'lt'n trom the 1\laturc Com· pan' 1n \t,uth l oast Plaza Tht~ "Aert \alued at ~ I "~I • • • An l ~H·ar--0ld man dcll\enna psohnc to a Harbor Boulevard tauon rcpon<'d h<' was ~ot in the stomach with a pellet gun He v.as not ~nousl inJurtd m the attack, ~h1ch he thouaht came fmm a cout>le .. of punk·rock t}pcs .. he sa"' lc.a\1na the park1 n1 lot. Marine's lake death probed Pohtt still do not know \\hat lulled al>)car-oldMannt 'AhOttbod)'was found Ooat1n& an the South Like of Woodbn. TuetClay n .... t. . Poll('t tdenufic.d the VKtam as Michatl John frifCtk of lltiftOito. ~ was tauoned at tht EJ Toro ManM COf"P' Air Station. lrv uK' lL I Muat said.: • ,.\n anon)'mou~oM call shonl) befOft ~ p. m. led K'C to 1 portlOft ol * lat 11ear AYnut Wlaeft olRttn tocaled tht body h'cleit111 about lO fttt off~ore 1n \bm fen of ~•ttr. A preliminary 1n~ieauor. 1ho"Cd no 111ns of foul play. ··~rt wt'rt no bulatt woudl or siab -ounds thinp hk.t that. .. Mmr laid. Coroncr'i OffK&als said tM _.,. ana they stall havt not dOer•ililll lllit caU1t of doth and ~ COMln ' 1 · their in~ il't.c W ~ ScNilll I.Mii ti I ..:S liHll .... ::.s If "1 ...... .... .... Bush starts vacation, · mulls Cabinet choices WASHINGTON (AP) -George Del Ray, Fla .• and added, "I just want awesome .... Therc'1ueriouanauba1 Bush ~nsa lo.na-awai.led rest at the to rclu and set on the telephone." takes over riabt this minuse ... end ofa ~aorouscamp&l&n todaY.i but Oil the tirsl day after his prniden-Busb told the leVCl'll lhoeund th_e ~1dent-elect says he wd be • tial victory over Democrat Michael pcop.lc who pthered IO peet hift\ ~· Wlel_dina a tclcp.hone. as we:ll •s a Dukakis. Bush bepn the day with an airplane banpr at Andrcwl Air fi~na pole dun.na b11 Aonda va-Episcopalian church services, and Force Base ··1. have a ICDle of ~tion ~ ~ co~s1den the makeup of later said, "That is probably the first bloomina. I have a .ente of IPfina. .... bis admm1stratio.n. • moment when I reahzed the enormity wonderful new era, rich with poui.. Aft.er anno~nctJ!g Wedne~ay that of it all." 1 bility and full of hope." he wµJ appoint his camp&JJn man-The president-elect received ~n-He also said he had received I acer, former Treasury Secretary tulatory tnessaaes from Soviet warm messlll! from ~v and James A. Bak~r Ill, as .has secrct;ary of 8: ral Secretary Mikhail S. had sent a messqe beet IO that "we state, the vice . president said he ene d h Id I d k th" bila•-1 re•..: intends to divulge "within a couple of Gorbachev an ot er wor ea ers, can eep is new ...... -~ks" the other members of his 1'~dh.2°1tfroe mby botetlhephsydn:S t~f ~ tionship moving ahead ... cabinet. w1s. ~u He sa1d he does not p&an to jwnp in In. Houston, where he spent elec-pohUCJI fence. too early to succeed Reaaan, whom be tion night, Bush told a news con-, Bus~ also was welcomed home to called "one of the great heioes of the ference he was choosing -a.Jeer, his Wuh1ngton ~Y thou.sands of sup-modefl)era." campaign chairman and longtime porters and his running. mate. _Sen. ··President .Reagan is still. the friend, to succeed Secretary of State Dan Quayle, who ~e pred1~ed wt!! be president of the United-States and I George P. Shultz. , "one of the great vice presidents. will not be using the transition to try The president-elect also appojnted Quayle and Bush, Joined by their to make or unduly influence de· his chief of staff. Craig Fuller, and wives, traveled to the Whjte House to cisions that arc properly the presi- cam_paign pollster and strategist Rob-meet with President Reagan who paid dent's," Bush said. ert Teeter lo head a transit.ion team. tribute to Bush, saying. "to those who In the aftermath of a campaign that 'Bush said he would name his sometimes flatter me with talk of a · saw Conartss-bashing as a regular cabinet "fairly soon, but certainly not Reagan revolution, today, my hope is pan of the Bush stump speech, the before I come back from Florida" this: You ain't seen nothin' yet." president-elect said be' wants to put Monday. "I'll be thinkinsabout it. I'll At his Houston news oonferencc, the beat of the campaign be~ind him be trying to sort that out. Probably Bush said his reaction to his victory and mend fences with the Demo- have a series of announcements was "somewhere between total exhil-cratic-controlled Conaress. within a couple of weeks." aration and ~nition that the ··1 don't want us to talk at each Bush plans to do some fishing in challenge ahead 1s going to be other. I want to talk to each other," he Abortion fund ban 'step back' By ne A11oclated Pre11 Planned Parenthood officials hoped an anti-abonion ballot measure approved in Arkansas would not affect availabihy of some con- traceptives. and pro-choice actjvists vowed to fight bans on state abortion funding in Michigan and Colorado. M1ch1gan health officials reluctant· ty prepared Wednesday to implement a ban on tax-funded abortions for poor women that received approval from voters the day before. '"1 think ifs a step backward for public policy in this state to deny health care access for one group of people, the very poor.·· said C. Palnck Babock, director of the Michigan Department of Social Services. Anti-abortion forces spent S2.3 million to persuade voters to retain a I 987 law ending state payments for abonions except when the mother's hfe 1s in danger. The pro-choice side was outspent by 3-1. The ban won by 57-43 percent. Bush.may cQnsider 'revenue enhancers ' \ WASHINGTON (AP) -Just after winnina a 40-statc election victory on a vow of no new taxes, GcorJC Bush is &iving some appcaran~~ offlexibility on that stand. at least on the topic of"rev~nue enhancers. At his first press conference as president~ Wednesday, Bush was asked whether bis oft-repeated opposition IO tu increases was meant to cover only a l>oost in personal income tu ntes. While personal income taxes provide the bulk of the government's revenues, large sums of money are also raised by a variety of other tucs from 1U9line levies to wes on ciprcttes and alcohol and from fees charged for government services. Politicians who don't like to talk about raising tuessometimefsay they would accept "revenue enhancers:· Whale Bush was dancrngaround the ··r· word Wednesday, talk of higher uues filled the air in Washington: . •Senate Republican leader Bob Dole suaested stripping away the tax deductions businesses now enjoy when they use borrowed money 1n corporate buyouts. Dole said the huge corporate takeovers do not benefit the economy. •Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker told a conference sponsored by the American Stock Exchange that it will be politically impossible to balance the budget without tax increases. Volcker said he believed income tax rates could remain unchanaed but he sugcsted boostina the gasoline tax by 60 cents a gallon over the next four years and hikinL taxes on alcohol and tobacco. •The National Economic Commission, the high-level advisory panel created by Congress to come up with solutions to the deficit problem. 1nnounced a day·lona hearing next Wendesday. ee- FHP's Senior Plan would like to preserve your health this fl u season, with a free flu vaccination. Simply visit our upcoming flu clinic. Which happens to be free. The end result can be lifesaving, as you might guess . Besides that, it will give you a chance to discover how the FHP Senior Plan can provide better health care at no added cost, if you have Medicare Part A and Part B. (Special programs are likewise available if you .have Part B only.) There's no ob ligation whatsoever, except to make an appointment So plan to attend now. .. , . November 5, 1988 • 9:00 a.m to I :00 p.m.. FHP Anaheim Senior Center 1200 N. Mignolia Avenue, Anaheim R.cservations required, call 714/995-1 ... Novemba 5, 1988 • 9:00 a.m. to 1 :00 p.m. FHP Laguna Hills Senior Cenca- 22932 Akadt Drive, L1gw\I Hills Racrvatioas R-quftd, call 7141581-5931 November 12, 1988 • 9:00 a.m. to 1 :00 p.m. FHP Hunr:qton Bach Smior Center 19066 Magnolia AYCl.IAIC, Huntington Beach Rt~rvations required, ~ 7W968-J706 .. . #I ;? I Tlae •-cana, Bubee and Qaaylee •et tofetber at the 1rhlte Boue after the election. sajd. British Prime Minister Margaret Fahd and from Sen. Sam N unn, the The vice president said he had Thatcher, West German Chancellor Democratic chairman of the Serrate received congratulatory calls from Helmut Kohl, Saudi Arabia's King Armed Services Committee. Democratstighten their hold on state legislatures By ne Ataodated Prest Democrats hailed their prospects for winning the redistricting battles that will follow the 1990 census as legislative election results showed they maintained control over two- thirds of the nation's state Houses and Senates..' Although Republicans said they believed they had won 16 to -30 state l~slative scats from Democrats. fisurcs available Wednesday in- dicated the GOP suffered a net Joss of control in one ~slative chambers and fell from a tic an a second. Control of the l~slatures is critical to the national polttic.al scene because state lawmakers will redraw con- gressional boundaries in 1991 to account for the population shifts rcponcd in the 1990 census. Skillful redrawing of the district lines can allow a party to win more seats in Congress by protecting its own turf while dividing and conqucr- inf. stron&Jlolds of the other pany. ·This 1s a temble blow to the Republicans in terms of their at- Texas ,picked for $4 billion atoin smasher WASHINGTON (AP) -Energy Secretary John Hemngton an- nounced the selection of Texas today as the site for the eagerly sought $.4.4 billion super colJider atom smasher -if the glint research installation is ever built. Seven states bad vied for the project because of the economic benefits tied to the construction of the collid~ SJ.mile underground rina of 10,uuu magnets capable of whjJ>: ping proton beams together with 20 times the force of the world's most powerful existing particle accelerator. Herrinaton s~ud the Texas site - some 16,000 farm acres in Ellis County south of Dallas -was "superior" to the others. The decision, he said, was based in part on site geology, rqional re· sources and environmental criteria. "The Texas proposal clearly re- ceived the highest overall technical evaluation ratjnp of any proposal and exhibited no sisnificant overall weaknesses," Hmincton said. The six other contenders were Illinois, Arizona1 ColorMSo, Mich-~n. North uro ina and Tennessee. They were chosen from a field of 2S biddina 1tates by an independent panel. Offteials of some of the losina stain. tao.ever, linked Texas' selec- tion to Tuesday's elec1ion of Georae Bush. who lives in Texas, a preii· dent. tempts to take over the legislatures to e"ert poliucal control over redistrict- ing," said Timothy Dickson, ex- ecutive director of the Democratic State Legislative Leaders Associa- tion. The Democrats' hand is likely to get stronger in 1990 if they win more stale scats that year, which the party that loses the While House usually does an off-year elections. That spells trouble for the Republicans. "We would obv1ouslr, have lilted to pick up some more. · said Molly Gaylord, a field director for the Republican National Committee. She said she hoped for a strong showing in 1990. Democrats made a net gain of contr<'I of one state Senate a~d Republicans had a net loss of control of one stale House, accordirlJ to figum compiled by The Associated Press and the National Confettnce of State legislatures. · Democrats lost 10 chambers in 1980 and seven chambers in 1984. although they won back some of them in the off-year elections of 1982 and 1986. The elections left Democrats in control of 32 state Senates and 36 statt Houses, while Reput>licans con- trolled 16 Senates and 12 Houses. In some other state bodies, power was evenly split. Nebraska h~s a non- partisan, one-house legislature. The struggle for control of leps- laturcs centered on New Mcxaco, Indiana, Washington state. Oregon, Vermont, and Montana. Democrats took a 26-16 edae to regain control of the New Mexico Senate, where a balance of 21 Re- publicans and 21 Democrats since 1984 had led to a shifting series of coalitions. In Indiana, home state of Vice President-elect Dan Quayle, Oemo- cnts picked up two seats in the Houte to draw even with Republicans, 50-50. Democrats also picked up at least three seats in the Republican- controlled Senate. Republicans appeared to take con- trol of the Vermont House. Krlstallnaebt obeened Al,_. Wwlia, ....__ Daalllola &D4 Claloe 8ermaa (froin left) of tM R••e• J.alor ~ kllool la New Yotlt u.1at cudl•fortlle..arclaW... y~tcwwms .... ~Dae ~ .... ~ of &rWe•buicllt. tM ::f. of ~ Olaeia. 1'ul .-m tl'Mperw laltiated two ta o1 ..... &Mt tlle J ... ofOeriu.ay Ud Aaatrla OD OY. 8 ud 10, 1 • '"The l>epertment of EnersY made a decitioa .... baed on politics rather than on merit 1nd 1.he 900d of the Amcric:an w yer," uia Sen. Alan DiJIOft. O.UI. ~ do not believe that the timi1t1 of this decisioa and its Bomber crash brings probe iwo~mi!)' to the dec1ion it 1 coin· ~~ Rieak. o.Mich .. •id of coatly new B-lB ilicraft the dec:itioa .. bas I Stl_t)l'll smell Of ~ White Home politics. That Wiit ovr W ASHJNOTON (AP) -The Air ~concemallaJons. ... Weandtbe force it lnepcctina Ill or its 8-IB Oltier fiw finalist states IOI I mt bombers for electriQl. hyehulic and dml" f'ueJ line problems follow\111 lhc crub lut Sen. Lloyd Benum. 0. Teus o( one of the COl1Jy new plaoes in and lhc unsucceill\al Democratic vice Teus. prelidendal candida~ •. ~ IOday•• Tbe in~ were prompted by HM41Hl9nent IMde dtit • WOJ•t;: Tuetdly'• c:rub duri111 1 routine !!i.t'=~~.:~llW * CiT:'!:'f'~.~': SeMle PiMDCe C..nriaee IO do lbaenicjec:ledldelyaftcr~tbe .. ewndlil&illtDJ,.._.IO~tec ftanailll aimaft 1way hm IMinet (dill) ....... for WKtioa arc w11m·rt lf,'ld Wal Of ,\llleee. !IJ 41BU.om1'1111. .. .l•....,,10 -. ..-...:.a.. ... u. Ul=-<1 d bi1Wlild111adiil ....... it ... " nmlllOll .,.., __ .,..,a Ray 1111~5-·-llOW tbatthr~IMi•i111l-lll.IDla~ Pl•••u•viroe ... tal. bomi!at drtilJed IO .. •o .. nt.1 GI •m • .... -eadiial bl lhc carTJl,. _Olll n.-llrilDli ~ ...... , ~· w Tew 1hc. tbc~ U'"°"9 would blp•otded tterrt..-...... iu eelKtloa untittheampecUOlll ._ampklell fh., in Ju.ty. Col ... Akn Jemea. win1 ~ Orenge Cout DAILY PtLOT /Thut'10ey, NcMmber 10, 1tel All Insurance firms file legal protests $115 million deal will brlni more water to the SOuthlana SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -More than four dozen insurance companies swiftly answaed a consumer revolt q&1nst 1kyrocket1na liability in- surance rates by 1nnouncin1 they would llop writina such p0lic1es. an industry spokesman said. As well, at least six insurance companies iocludina Aetna Lafe cl CasUalty and Fireman's Fund In-surance Cos. said Wednesday they have withdrawn or intend to Wilhdnw from the auto insurance business 1n California as a result of Plllllt of Ralph Nader-backed Prop. otition 103. · .. We're findina euctly what we feared and that is that there's no marketplace left as a result of the ~''"ft of Prop0sition I 03," said n tewart, executive director of tbe Pasadena-base~ American A~nts~ Alliance, a @member association ·of· independent insurance brolc~rs and agents.· 700 firms writm& property<asualty business in California," said state Insurance Comm1ssioner Roun1 Gillespie. She added that a ha1f-doten or so companies withdrawing "will not kill the marlctt." Insurance lawyer5 were camped. out at the doors of the state Supreme Court offices in San Franasco at dawn Wednesday, where they flied J nurry of legal challcnaes to the initiative. Addin& to the confusion. a Los Anaeles Superior Court judge ruled late Wednesday afternoon that two local surety bond companies were temp0rarily ellempt from rollin1 back rates, opening the door for other challenges, "lt'schaos for the companies, .. said Stewart, who added that.at least 47 companies stopped tmtina new Poli- cies Wednesday because of the in- surance reform b1Ws passage. ,. ... , ...... 87 'ne An~la&d Prea LOSANGELES-SouthemC.tJ1fom1acities wouklart morcwateTunckr aS ti S m1lhondeal 1ent.at1velystruck~twttn the Metrop0ht.an WatttDistnct and the state's b1gest impt1on district. The projec1 would provide an eJttra 100.000acre-fect ofwatcra_year, cnouah \O supply thecit\csof Lon& Beach i.nd Santa.Ana. waterd!,Strictoffic&alssajd. An acre-foot 1scn0Qah waier1ocovet.an acfe of land one!! foot ~p. The water would come from the lmpena1 Va'.k'r, where at as now JOin& to waste through seepage,• leaks and ineffacient -d1stnbuuon 1n a ~year-Old delivery system in the sprawling rural Imperial Irrigation Dmnct, officials said. The Imperial district, located JU St north of the MeXJcan border, needs new reservoirs, rcltned canals and addatJonal gates and valves 10 capture ~ water. which comes from the federal Boulder Canyon Project on the Colorado River. Overcro•dl'W blamed for }all rlotlag Under Prop0s1tion 103, insurers would have to lower almost all insurance rates, including auto. home and business coverage, by an immedi- ate 20 percent after cutting back to N6vember 1987 rates. Jt aJso requires an additional 20 percent cut in auto rates for good drivers. The measure also would put control over future rate increases in the hands of an elected insurance commissioner, strictl y limit use of territorial rating to set auto insurance premiums and subject the industry to state antitrust and unfair busi ness practice laws. "We foresaw 103 being a disaster, but we simply didn't ~ct the message over to the public,' said Stewart. "The insurance agencies arc in total disarray." Voters narrowly adopted the in· itiative Tuesday, rojectlng _ .ihe in- surance industry's record $60 million A.8Rmbly Speaker Wlllle Brown la all •mllee at bearlq tile newa tbe Democrat. 1abae4 tbree mon eeata lD tbe A.-mbly. Tbe new tally liYea Brown and fellow Democrata a 45-SS majority and apparently ... Gl'e8 him he will be able to keep hie apea)ler' • poet. EL CAJON -Racial tensions betwttn black· and Hispanic inmates crammed together inio an overcrowded cellblock sparked a )ail riot that l!'JUred 15 prisoners. 'authorities said. ·Thrtt inmatct inJurcd durina ~ednesday's brawl at the El Caj~n Dcten11on Faciht)' remain hospitalized in senouscond1t1on.San DiqoCountyshentrsSgt. L12 Foster said, ronowinsthc Jail's lhird such racial incident In five months. "The racially motivated disturbance involving Mexican and black 1nmates-rap1dly escalated to a full scale not inv'olvmg 140 out of 175 inmates (in a cellblock) .... des1gned to house 24," Foster said. "Inmates used weapons that included dismantled b\fnk bed parts. food trays. mop and broom handles and pieces pf melted plastic with sharpened edges. ind thcry brole several wmdows... one of the guards was inside the seventh-Ooor cellblock when the fight broke out. said Foster. The exact cause remains under invesugauon. State Department of Insurance officials cautioned consumers not to panic about whether they will be able to renew their policies or obtain new ones . .. It's premature to say what is going to happen because there are 650 or campaign 10 ~ss its own reform Association Inter-Insurance Bureau. inuiatives, which all failed. w~ich insures about a million people. Stewart said companies that have said Wednesday it will continue to stopped issuinj new pol ices. eitccpt offer insurance to new customers for assigned nsk plans required by during the peri~ of "uncertainty" state law, include Tramsamerica In-about the prop0st1on. surance Group. the Travelers Cos.. But CSAA aJso asked the State Allstate, Hartford Insurance Group, Department of Insurance to "resolve 20th Century and Safeco Insurance the connict" between the rate roll- Co. of Am~'!ca.. . back imp0sed by Prop0sition 103 and Cahf<?rn1,a s 1nsuran~ market is., thea.ssociation's "obligati on to main- thc nations largest. with about 14 tain its financial stability." per~nt of all U.S. insurance premiums P.aid. CSAA sp0kesman Tom Rohner The Californ ia State Automobile added that CSAA bureau "momcn7 I Storm dismantles oil tanker; 27 crewm~n miSsilig in Atlantic LONDON (AP) -A Li berian 011 tanker •broke in half in stormy weather in the north Atlantic today, burst into names and sank. spreading fire over the ocean and leaving the 27 crewmen missing. coast guard of- ficials said. .;.,. Odyssey but was unable 1oie1 closer than a mile to the stncken vessel because of the fire. authorities said. The Passat. which monitors weather on the ocean. told rescue officials 11 found no sign of the crew and was searching the area. Lloyd's Shipping lntelhgence Unit said. '"It doesn't sound very good at all." said a spokesman for the Bnttsh coast guard in Falmouth. England. "The Soviet vessel has lost radio contact with the tanker ... England. . 1 hc official in Falmouth. who spoke on condition of anonymit) 1n keeping with British custom, quoted pilots of aircraft flyinJ above the tanker as saying the surface of the sea was on r.rc. apparently from leaking 011. Polembros Shippin& Ltd. of Lon-don. operators o the Odyssey. said half1he crew "as Greek. including the captain and all the officers. and the other half was Honduran. tari ly" wouJd seek a court ruling on aspects of the in1uauvc. fireman's Fund Insurance Cos., which has 78,()()() ~ personal auto Policies and 138,000 homeowners policies in California, said it will advise agents and auto policyholders that it plans to withdraw from the California personal car insurance market. The company was the first to announce it and six other insurers had sued in the state Supreme Court challcnJJng the constitutionality of Prop0s1t1on 103. Record 625-pound tuna caught off LA LOS ANGELES -A record 625-pound Pacific blue fin tuna was eauaht off Southern California dunng the most amazing tuna fish fest that local fisherman say they have ever seen. And that's not just another fish story. B1ologist.s don't know exactly what's going on. but very big and very old blue fin a"' 1n the waters near Santa Rosa Island. I 00 miles west of Los Anaeaes. Usina 2.400-foot nets, fishermen have landed 187 giant tuna 1n the last si1 days. each 6 to 8 feet long and weighing from 300 pounds to the 625 pounder ~ Tuesday by crew o:rnnbers on the 92-foot purse seiner Pioneer. The previous record blue fin tuna landed an the Pacific weighed 531 pounds and was cauaht in 1984. '"I've been fashingaJI mylifeupanddown the PacificcoastfromAJask.a to South America and have never seen or beard of fish this a ," said Tony "Mama" Vidovich, a San Pedro fi.sherman. IT'S A DOUBLE PLAY DIPIRE.<F AMERICA CO~ TO COSfAMtSA · A Canadian military aircraft flew over the scene about nine hours after the tanker se nt a distress signal. and 1t rc~rted spotting an empty life raft. said a spokesman for the Bnush coast guard in Falmouth. The plane's crew said sections of the 65.700-ton Odyssey had sunk and that the oil on \he ocean surface had burned itself ou1. said the spokesman. Earlier. the Soviet ship Passat rushed from 26 miles away to help the Capt. Pat Phelan of the Canadian Rescue ~oordmauon Center in Hah- fait. Nova Scotia. said the tanker was about 700 miles east-nonheast of Newfoundland. Bnush officials sa)d 1t was about l .200 miles "'est of "We haven't heard ahy ne"s al all about them ... said a spokeswoman. . commenung on cond111on she "'as not 1den11fied. She wd lhe tan ker is owned b) Diamond Port Sh1pp1ng Corp. of Monrovia. L1bcr,a. 'IllE LA IlODGERS WIN mE WllDSE!m ' Ctiina quake toll at 1,000 BEIJING (AP) -A Chinese seis- mologist estimated today that more than l.000 people were killed in the canhquake that struck a heavily forested and remote mountain region of southwestern China last weekend. Rescue workers. meanwhile. were rep0rtcd still trying to reach isolated areas that may have been badly hi\ by China's worst eanhquake m 12 years. Chen Yong. deputy director of the State Seismological Bureau, provided the official X inhua News Agency with ~death esumate. The agency also quoted him as saying more than 80 percent of the houses in the stncken area near China's border with Burma had collapsed. Chen said most of the houses in the region. inhabited mainly by ethnic minonty groups. were made of bam- boo and wood. Earlier, the Civil Affairs Ministry said 938 people were killed in Sun- day's temblor. which measured 7.6 on the Richter scale. Xinhua said 699 bodies had been recovered in the Lancana area of southern Yunnan province. at the epicenter. State-run Beijing Radio reported 1.986 people 1nJured. But the extent of the disaster remained unclear because of the remoteness of the rq1on. Fired Polish shipyard workers can keep jobs WARSAW (AP) -Shipyard saad all workers re{>Oning for work workers who staged a one-day strike today wt.re allowed into the yard. in Gdansk can ltecp their jobs for Hundreds of mostlyyoung workers now. the yard's management an-· atthc Repair and W 1sla yards went on nounced today. State-run media re-strike Tuesday without the backing of poned earlier that the strikers had Sohdanty leader Lech Walesa. The been fired. . workers were demanding that the In a statement, mana,gcment of the government scrap us plan to . begin Repair Shipyard said dismissals were shuttmg down the Lenin Shipyard unnecessary since strikers heeded an next month. appeal Wednesday to leave the ship. They ended the strikes Wednesday yard. after repeated appeals from Walesa It said managemen• will consider and a threat of d1sm1ssals. the guilt of stnke )eadcrs later and In September. Walesa persuaded take "appropriate,. discipl ina ry de-strikers to end Polal)d's wont tabor cisions. · unrest in seven years in exchange for a The state-run news agen~ PAP government promise to hold talks on announced Wednesday n1 t the ending the count ·s economic and director of the shipyard had ired the political crisis an~ reinstating Soh- instigators of the strike at the 4,500-darity. worker yard. But the talks have been repeatedly "In view of the imprecise com-delayed. wuh each sadc refusing munique concerning the Gdansk cond1t1ons set by the other. One Repair Shipyard on Polish radio and Solidanty demand 1s that a~.ut 100 TV. we would hkc to inform that at coal miners tired for stnkmg in the appeal of the manager .... a small August be rehired. group of strikers left the enterprise The Wasla and R~pair ship)'ard and thus there was no need to submit workers "ent on stnke on a da} disci plinary dismissals immedi· WaJesa had said he might call a ately," the statement said. nation"1de strike alert over the The management statement, read government's announced 1ntent1on b}'_lrenettsz Gradowski. editor of the to close the I 0.000-worker Lenin official shipyard newspapcT, Ostrow, Shipyard 10 Gdansk on Dec. I. Arab boy, 3, slain; 13 Palestinians-shot By TM A.noclatecl Press JERUSALEM -The 12th month of the Palestinian uprisina in the occupied territories bepn with the fatal shootina by Israeli soldiers of a 3-ycar-old Arab boy. Elte'Wbere in the occupied lands Wednesday. 13 Palestinians, most of them teenlJCrs, we~ shot and wounded by troops. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's 10-member innerCabinet debated PLO p~ns to dc:darean indtpenden\ Palestinian state at the mcetin&of tbc 90vCtlli11111.~ 'Pa.lea tine National C9uncil set to begin Satui'day in ria. Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Cbief of Staff . Gen. Dan Shomron warned that any v~ coi.ncidint w!tb the mcetiftl_ will be mashed. .. We a.re ,ruina rady, deployina fOf'CCS and issuins ordecs, to ensure one dear thins: anempcs to violate public order and create mass riou ... will~ folwfully Ct\lshcd from the vay bqionina," Rabin said oa IJnel army radio. -;:-V.S._.,,.ekl"l~ltaiJ rebels WASHINGTON -The Afshan rebels have the a~l mdonement of the R~n adminiJtration 1n tkir latelt drive -.inti Soviet lfOOPI and 90vemmcnt fDn:a. ~ or 5'atc Oecqe ~,_, Slautu. said after l'e¥iewirt1 the ilt.eioft Wcdliam, With a top '*I laldn': ··we~ it eye toqe' ... Thtre-erc no U.S.. calls for _..t .. hrhlnuddia labbui held lleck-M>-blck .,.,..,. With Prnicknt Rapn and Sllultl. White Houte tpC1ltu•• Martin Fiawaw laid.._ win coaunuc to ilrcM*~ forabe Mu~nlOllln the Sovid lJniott ii pn;;id1111suppon fOr the Kabul...._ And w would not intervene to direct their activ1t1es be)ond that." About S0.000 Soviet troops remain in Afghanistan. They arc due to leave by Feb. IS. But last Fnday, c1t1n& rebel attacks, lhc Soviets announced a suspension. In the meantime, lhc Soviets brought in new missiles and fighter planes. and used the weap0ns against the ~bels. who arc armed by the United States. TyplJooa deaths r each J 34 MANILA -The death 1011 from Typhoon kip soared to 134 WcdMSday. bnnJing to nnrly 600 the numbcrofptOpk klUed in th~c storms that p0undcd the PtuhJ)91nes in the P9St two weeks. The toU 1nclll<kd J9 deaths reponed Wednesday and government otlkaals said tens of thousands of people remained homeless. Authontics aid they ei1pected 1he toll to nse u communkations are mtotcd to stnckcn arus. ~ aovemment -.1htt tttV wn~ •P to • tropecal storm Wednaday as 1t mo'ed farthtt into the Sou\b h1naSeatoward Vietnam. A v.cathttbullct1nsaid tht s1orm·1 top winds had weakened to 69 mph. The pcmmcnt"• Office of Civtl OcfenK 11.ct \he 1ataa dca\bs ~were from lhc island off ables. which-.. 1n the ,.lll ofSllipas it hammtted 1hcccntral Ptuhppntes Monday and Tuctd9) ~m hcaV} ratns and winds"\' to 110 Mph. Na Oerria; • c1vll ~ntt spollamaa, laid a falalicy rcpor'l Nmved vie mtlnary tiilio from Tabauctid QOl ~ Mw ... J9 died. The~ Slid ell roeds Oft Ille --160 ........ o( Mu• weft i .......... <Art18 ldded.: • .. ' I Celebrate a great team and a g)"eat victory with a great rate-and great bonuses from Empire of America! I 8.75~·~· 8.39~ .. 9-MONTII CD SPECIAL EXTRAORDINARY CD RATE! 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Choose Your ~rcbaJMllse Cosmo Clod.·Rbdio Seiko Pc~nal Data Book . ~gh-Tech Wall:hes from Advance Canon l~s~ C~culator GE Headphone Racho HanJ·Hcld Bl~nder v.1th Accessories b)' Braun To3,.(ll H~Ttch n by Sanyo AM/FM Radio Llght by Trend CE ide-Ster tereo ~hion Radio Cassette SO:\\' W;it\':hm.in P~rsonaJ TV Phone-An..~..,.ng Machi~ b)t f'anMonic Cordless Phone from N. W. ~II ·10 um thr lltlnwil ~ ~ l'"l'k:~ and in~~ remain «M'I ~ • fwl ¥N1" a !ht--'*·~ ~I toc~.111'1.,_~ S IJlti'T'at is~~~~~ ~"iullriy~ . COSTA MESA BRANCH HOURS llllan ....... Tira ..... 9:00a..m. 4;00p.m.----,._..--~-'=, F.,..., 9:00 a.m.-6.00 p.m.. • " Orenge CoMt DA•LY PflOT/ Thuradey, Novemb« 10, 1988 Two Navsur sate(,lites built by RedlweU laterutleaal'• satellite aod ~cc electronics division in Seal Beach have achieved 10 years of contiouou!\ on-ort>it performance. These Navsw satellites which provide highty precise positionina signals to aircraft. ships, {ound vehicles. mititary troops an other satellites have a ~u1remcnt or on- orbit performance hfe of four years. Navstu 3 and 4 were launched in November 1978 and January 1979, respectively, and they have per- formed two-aod~a-half times longer than the ~uirement. Rockwell built a total Qf t,O Navstar development satell1tes between ·1974 and 1985. Richard Derr, p~ident ofS&SED, said: .. These development satellites met or exceeded every requirement established by our Air Force cus- tomers. Their long life is truly remarkable and has enabled the Air Force to continue to use Navstar's precision navigation and 'PQSitioning capabilities during the past two years while the nation has been without a launch capability." Launching of the new production satellites is planned to begin around the first o the year. These new satellites will supplement those now in space and eventually will replace them. The newer satellites arc re- quired to have six years of on-orbit performance instead of four, and several improvements have been made also. • • • Ford Aerospace ud CommuJca- tiou Corp. an Newport Beach has .. I I won a $9,98.S,OOO contract from the wo~. • . U.S. Navy to supply optic stabilizers , . Auor Oani~l Inc. lf the ....... and controllers for use in F-18 • 1~ con~1ruct1on and tec:bn~ tc:r· aircraft vaces un•t of Auor Corp., an inlet· · . • • • national tnpneerina ud COUU\IC-11 yeatues ·~ ":'CWl>Ort Beach has lion company with inwttmenll in provided S2 m1.lhon an the cum!"t coal and lead. round of financ1na of IC Senson m • • • . Milpiw. c.mmeree~ an N~ IC Sensors, a developer and manu-Beach announced caminp far die facturcr of silicon motion, pressure third q_uarter and the ni~ mombi and chemical sensors for the indus--ended Sept. 30, 1988. Net JQCIOIDC for trial, automotive, avionics, con-the ~ine _monl;hs wu Sl,719,000 sumer, medical and computer per-resuluni.. in pnmary eatDlnll per iobCral markets will utt the venture sharcof$1.23andSl.l~fullydilu11ed. (undi~n1 lO stratcgicaJly expend both Tbis represents an ·•naeMe ol IS its uct line and marlcetit\I effbrt. percent over the $1,147,QOO and 17 · i Ventures is an operatina wiit of oents primary earninp per ~ 3i Corp. 3i Corp. js a subsidiary of Ji rcpc>rted at Sel)l. 30, 1917. Group pie, whjeh is the largest private The companfs common stock was source of venture capital for busi-recently listed on the N~DAO ncsses worldwide. Ji has two operat-National Market System. This will ing units in the United States. 3i provide investon continous trans.. Ventures invests in start .. upand early action data of the exchanges and the stqe companies. 3i Capital invests in vi1orous competition among mul- comeanies seelcing cap1tal for growth, tiple market maken. acquisition, share repurchase or • • • leveraacd buyout. WNCHoa1&qTuCreditFudLP. • • • ma~ sell S7.5 million in units of Flaor Doiel, a unit of Fluor Corp., limited partnership interest to raise has been awarded a contract by money to invest in low-cost housing Montvale, NJ.-bascd Federal Paper that will receive tax credits. Board Company Inc. The value of the According to a filing with the contract was not disclosed. Securities and Exchange Com- The r.utp and paper group of Fluor mission. the Newport Beach firm has Daniel s Industrial Sector will fCSistered to sell up to 3_&00 units provide construction services for the worth as much as $2,Sw apiece. Phase U expansion and mod-WNC Resources Inc .• whose _princi- emiz.ation of a paper mill located in pal shareholder is Wilfred N. Cooper, Augusta, Ga. The project includes a as the general partner of the WNC woodyard expansion, two large paJ?Cr partnership. mactune rebuilds and major boiler • • • ' " NYSE UP s & DowNs OTC UPs & DowNs • Olot. ~· '*t LH I C... I D . +"' 1J Orange Co.et DAILY PIL.OT/Thurtday, NoWfnbet 10. 1111 * A7 THURSDAY'S CLOSING PRICES Market drop continues NEW YORK (AP) -Stoclc )!rices were mostly lo~r today as the market drifted up and down in dull tradina marked by sJim volume and lack offocus. In addition, concerns about 1M dollar and interat rates coououed to l>lalue the martet. ' WHAT AM£X DID W H~T NYSE 0 10 , AMEX LE~DERS NYSE LE~u~~:. 11 Dow JoNES A~ER~GES MELHS QuoHs NASDAQ S uMM~R r Produ~er price index stabalizes in October WASHI NGTON (AP) -Whole- sale pnc-cs remained O.t in October af\erscven straight monthly •naates as the cost offood fell for the first tune since February. the &O\'emmenl said today. Anal1-sts said the stability an the Labor Dcpanment's Producer Price lndex for the first ume in eilbt months signifies a tapenna off ofihe cffttu of \he summer cirouaht. ~ldl had sent food pnccs up 3.5 pcteeftt since Ma). Wholcsalt food pnccs.. kd by 1artt declines for fruits, veactables. baktty products. pasta. beef and cook1ns oils. fell 0.1 ~t las.t month Thet was thar fir1t dee.line Since Fcbnaar)'. lhe Labor Oepartm~nt sa..d. • Food pnccs had Kyrodtttd l .l J)e!ttnt 1n ~ptembef. Seasonally adjusacd mcTIY prices r01t by OJ pnttnt last month afta ~·~ by ).) ptl'tnl ID Scplember. f'otlo.-i na Wili dc:cl1ee1 ovtr .i.t summer. natural ps ra1JCSJwnped 4,6 ptre'Cllt lu1 month Mdc ...--... · Prl<ft bdd s.eadr -1Mifne . ..._ Oilc=IO. ~L pnca ... IDOdi -- tMD fbodMd~ ·=-0 s " lilM month, Au~ • plialK'C .. ...., ct.iklmt'• ........ piccs lll Prim "* ... "4m II °!I m IM1,.$ doth1.... ~ 1111 .... r ... suture, coin.~tica, •lelo•ilk be' era~ and prcscnpt1on drugs. Bdorc scuonal adJustmcnlS. the Labor Drpanment's index for &OOds one step shon of the ~tail level rose 0.6 ptrce nt to 109.3. mcani"' that a hYP9thct1cal sclttllon of gooas cost-ina SI 00 at tbc wholesale level in 1982 -ould ha"e cost S 109.30 last month. That same marltctbesket of aood woukS have cost S 10 .60 10 Scptem· btt and SI 07. 70 a )car llO .. A.a CE DAILY PILOT/ Thuraday, November 10, 1988 Kan BoucHEI OCC offers help for·speech disorder~ : Na·tio:aal meetin-g calls NB delegate Looks as if there was more than one big election this year. At least, that's probably whatS..dy Wri&llt of Newport Beach thinks. Wright was a voting delegate to the Planned Parenthood Feder- ation of America's 6Sth annual meeting Oct. 13-16 in St. Louis, Mo. Nearly one out of every 10 Am~­ cans has a speech or lanauaae dis- order. It's a problem that affects men Americans than vinµally .,,Y other disability. An~ i.r·s not a tespecter of age, sex or pos1uo11. . .. Those of us without speech dtt- orders take for ~nted our a~lity ~o communicate wath ot~ said Ok>ria Jenson-; Oran,c <;:~t Col-tcae's new speech speciahst wbo opentes the college's Spe«b and Lanauqe Center. .. People wbo have speech or lanauaae disorders often feel isolated and hopeless. Think how l'rusuatina it would be >o have a thought lhll can't be verbally communicated to another human being. The frus- tration is immense.'~ Jenson, a l ~enscd spe~h pathologist, joined OCCs f~culty in August. A native of Jacksonville, Fla., she graduated from Pensacola Junior College and holds bachelor's and master's degrees in speech and languaae pathology from Aorida State University. While a college student, the outgo- ing Jenson took speech and drama councs, and appeared in several summer stock prod~tions. But she developed a love-for working with people suffering from speech prob- lems. . Wright is president of the Board of Directors of Planned Parenthood/Orange and San Bernardinocounties. The group provides fami l.Y plannin~ medi- cal and educattonal services to more than 20,000 men and women in the two counties. The conference was attended by more than 1.200 volunteers and staff, representing the 180 Planned Parenthood affiliates throughout the United States, as well as by leaders in politics, law. medjcine, education and the media. Gloria Jen90n (center). director of occ•a Speech and LangaaCe Center. worb witb •tadenta ln amall pape. Prior to joining OCCs staff, Jenson was a speech instructor at Troy State University in Alabama. She came· to California in 1983, working in private (Pleue Me BBLP/ A9) ··The theme of this year's conference, 'Gateway to a New Era,' reflects the federation'son- going commitment to meeti ng the family planning needs o r women an d men throughout the world." Wright said. • • • Anyone seen Jennifer Carlson of Newport Beach? Last we heard Carl son was joininga1,>proximately 350 outstanding high school juniors and seniors from across the country at the 'Fall 1988 National Young Leaders Conference.· Carlson has been selected as a · Congressional Scholar based on demonstrated academic achiev~ ment, leadership and citizenship. The theme of the conference is "The Leaders of Tom morrow Meetine the Leaders ofT oday ... Throughout their six-day meet, the Congressional Scholars met with key leaders and newsmakers from the three branches of gov- ernment, the media, and the diplomatic corps. The Conference is sponsored by the Congressional Youth Leadership Council, a non-profit, non-partisan educational or- ganization. Robots enliven parties By KATY BOUCHER What stands 4 feet 9 inch~ tall and weighs 170 pounds? Give up? The answer is "J>roBot" the robot. ProBot isa creation by Joe McCord of Newport Beach who owns Robots R Us. a company that features robots for entertaining at parties, trade shows, seminars. or any function requesting a robot for rent by the hour. -"It all started when I opened a one· man advertising agency." McCord said. "One of my clients was a private school that taught elcctronics~micro­ processing, prin_\ed circuit boards and robotics. The president of the school wanted a telev1S1on commercial Wlth a robot in it. I had never seen a robot in my life. "After a little research. I found one that had been made by an elderlr, retired en~neer named John Lyke, · he sajd. 'It was pnmitive but 1t worked. We made the commercial and that's when I fell in love with robots." Disabled invited to stop, feel the roses. By KATY BOUCHER °' .. .,..,,... ..... Wade Roberts of Sherman Gardens in Corona del Mar wants people to do more than take time to smell the flowers. He wants visitors to touch and feel the plants and flowers, especially blind or d isabled.people. "Our 'Garden of Discovery' is designed especially for the blind and disabled," he said. "Everything has been placed at wheelchair height It's a toucil and smell garden that contains plants that have textu1c. "For ins:ance, there is a plant called Pineapple Sage," ' he added. "You can touch it, rub it between your fingers and it actually smells like fresh pineapple. We have coconut Jeramums thali.smell like coconut. There's also peppenn1nt. rose and lemon you can put in iced-tea. And there's a plant called, 'Lambs Ears.' It's the softest plant in the world. I guarantee if you felt it, you'd believe my statement." Ro berts said the touch and smell garden idea was conctived by Shirley Kerins in 1984. He said K.erins trains the docents who conduct tours. Funding came from the Harry G. Stctle Foundation. . . . "It's just 'orgcous," he said "It has an 1sland-hke atmosphere. It s about 40 feet long and I 0 feet wide. A farge arbor -or open beams stretch across the top. Everything as in containers." ~oberts also explained the late Arnold Haskell, founder of Shennan Gardens. wanted anyone with a disability to have access to the gardens. "Even though he didn't see it (the garden) in his lifetime, Arnold was always concerned," h~ said. "Before it was even a requiremnt, he put in restrooms accommodating wheelchairs." .,.., ........ .,t..~ Sae Brown and l'f ancy Glaluaalll thanlr Larry Seal for hla wbeelclaalr donation. period of tame. "Last week we had someone call and say they we~ bringing their mother for lunch," he said. "They asked if we had a wheelchair." , Sherman Gardens is maintained by a small staff and large group of volunteers. The gardens offer man y different progtams, classes, lectures and tours. Carlson had the opportunity to meet important figures such as senators Alu Cranston u d Pete Wilson, u d Rep. Robert Badllam. McCord said he became good friends with the robot's creator and agreed to help him work one in shows. Pretty soon he became a whiz at operating these remote-control mcch- (Pleue .ee U NT A L/ A9) And it doesn't matter if you're disabled or just plain tired because the prdcns has just obtained a state-of-the- art wheelchair for patron's use from SeaJ's Health Care Equipment in Costa Mesa. Roberts said this wheelchair Joe "McCord and hla crea-· can be useful to elderly people who may be there for tion. ProBot tbe robot. awhile and don't want to stand on their feet for a long Roberts said a lot of people don't know what's behind the-wall that surrounds the gardens, so he urges them to come down to sec. touch and smell the flowers. · Founded in 1985 by co-chai r- men Barbara Harris and Ricbard Ro11i, the council's goal is to provide a unique hands-on ex· perience an c1v1c education. More than 250 members of the United States Congress compnsc the Council's Honorary Con- ~sional Board of Advisers join- ing in the commitment to educa- tional excellence. • • • Attenuon all senior citizens! The year may be winding down, but the Newport-Mesa YMCA's Older Adult Program is going strong. Under the direction of Gladys Eseastea of Balboa. the program has many events planned. Pleue Me SENIORS/ A9) B uLLf.TIN B oARD -. .,..,,... .... .,...., ...... Robert Moline •Int• ln tbe Newporter '• Cellar. Singin' for love in a cellar By KATY BOUCHER Of_...,,.._ He writes the songs that make the whole world sing -and no, it's not Barry Manilow. His name is Robert Moline. And when he's not wnttnJ or Qroducing music for the Walt Disney Corp. or the. Oranae. Co~nty Centen- nial cclebrauon, he sings in the Cellar. "I smg and perfonn three m&hts a week in the Wine Cellar at the Newporter Rcson ;· he said. "I per- form mostly love ballads. It's a beauuful ... and complete experience. -vou arc served a seven-course set menu. ICs.a world.class well-propor- tioned meal. It's more-than just cat1n1 out. The room is lovely and the evening is always a memorable ex- perience. It's sort of a throw-back to the Old World because it's romance. music and dinner. The room holds about 30 people, and once they've been there -they usually come back to celebrate a special occasion.·· Moline, 49, has been performing for more than 25 years. He's a single parent of two and divides his time between Sherman Oaks and Newport Beach. ffe sings and plays the guitar. He's perfonned famous jiies and commercials such as one or C&.1l Sugar. and entertained-in tas-Vcps;. Besides entertaining at the New· porter Resort, he works as a consult- ant for Walt Disney. 'Tvejust completed production of a song that will be featured in a new attraction at Disney World, sponsor· ed by Delta Airlines." he said ... It's called, 'Dream Ai&ht' about the history of aviation. f did my record- ing in Newport Beach -where I do au my recording at J.E.l . Recording Studio. I write and produce -they (Pl eaM Me CELLAR/A9) c;asino night in Irvine planned for Easter Seals benefit The Easter Seal Soc1cry of Orange Counrywrttbntrt winner when Century 21 International Headquarte~ throws the fund-raising dice with Casino Night '88 at 1ht Registry Hotel 1n Irvine Friday from 8 p.m. to I a.m The event will feature a 'SOs theme with a disCJocke}'. costume contest. door pn zes. snacks and dancmg. Students of the H1ah Hopes Head Injury Reh1bilitat1on Center of Orange County will be guests of Century 21 at the fund-raiser. All proceeds from the event Wlll go to Easter Seals. Tickets may be obtained by calling Bonni Christopher or Carol Nick at 553-2100. Veterans Day breakfast slated Ho1ltayboutlque11rirnne Irvine's Westpark Village One wilt hold its ninth annual holiday boutique this weekend in the village clubhouse, 37~4 Hamilton St. Hours for the sale are Friday from 4 to 9 p.m., Saturday from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Call 786-2948 for additional info"'?,ation. Artlst due honors In Ne"POrt Lasuna Beach anist Abby Vauahn will be honored for her contribution to Judaic art at a special Shabbat service Friday at Temple Shir Ha-Ma'alot in Newport Beach where she is an artist in residence. The Newport Harbor Post 291 of the American The temple will display a colelction of watercolors !:eJ!on will hold its first annual Veterans Day breakfast and oils painted by VaU&fln durina her two trips to Israel. fnday atthe post headquarters, 21S l5th Street. Newpon The showina will beain 11 8 p.m. at the temple. 2 1()()..A Beach. . Mar Vista Newpon Beach. The menu includes scrambled cps. bacon and/or • ' sau~. hash brown potatots. biscu1u and aravy and coffee for S3, with bloody Marys optional for SI .50. The School luad·r-1•bJI IJJlht breakfast iucheduled from 7 to 10:301.m., Wlth a fish fry __ T ""'* Div School attiYity ClffttcT will be planned from6 to 9 p.m. transformed into the ~MOOK Ski Chllet" Friday for the arlUI,., .. tlfffcon PDTD nl·-· e-·-... school'• annual fund-raisins event. ~, ~·, wr r --.,.~~ Over 200 11ttnt and live auction items -.11 be Tbc Huntinston 8cacb chapcer of Plrents Wilbout aV1Jlabk1t tbe &lOp.m. eventat thescbool, J.4.43 Pacific .Pat\nen has announced its tcbedule of actividcs for View Drive. Corvna del Mar. Call Cindy Christeton at November. beainnana Fridly ~th a dance from 9 p.m. to 640-2~1 for dcuill. I a.m. at the Holiday Inn. 7667 Center Ave., Huntinston ~ .... evm11 include a ~ny Nov. 19 and a G8tdea CJJall ,,,. .. WOl'.t.llOJ' .-ral m.llnA Nov. 21. 111 by ae orialtation A C'lrizw1 w°"*»D will be Mid F,,_, ~ tt.t fornewmembin. Call a9g.7 7Jformcw.iftlormation. ......... ._. Oli*B -Oub at 11tt Ne~ 1• . Conpqational Church hall, 3'40 St. ~ prtvrm-wdnonum of the South Coast M"edicaf Center, 31872 s. Lquna. Coast Highway, lquna Beach. Helen Pelletier and Melt• Gnvcs will demonstrate The program will begin with refreshments. followed the makina of succulent wmths. Visitors are wek:omc by the lcdure from 1 to 2 p.m. Admission is free and and the donation is SJ. Call 494-6460 for additional reservations may be obtained by callin1499-7202. information. P•perwork. ••l•tance offered Voluoteers from tbe American Association of Uoivmity Women will be available to PfQvide ~per­ work assistance Friday from 2 to 4 p.m. at Great American first Savinp In Laauna H ills. The free service is offered for Medicare, supplemen- tal health insurance, bank statements, brokers• state• menu. telephone bills and other paperwork problems. CaJI Jeanette Lambert at 9$ I· 7260 for fbrther infor· mation.' Alcoholic •upport work•hop A .day-Iona workshop for aduJt children of alcoholics will be held Saturday by the Center for Creative AJtemativcs at the Rea Community Center, 661 Hamilton St.. Room 600, Costa Mesa. The prosram will nan from IO a.rn. to 3:30 p.m. with a break for lunch. The cost is $20, and details are available I t 642-0)77. School reaaloa .chedaled arp a.~ ~--· Tbt Huntil\llOn Part ffiab Scbool cia.. ot winier p.,; 6m•,. to .. .,.~ uauce . 1968. summer 1968 and winter 1969 will hold their 20- Tbe Jrvine-Ne!fPOll and South Coat chap&en of ~ rnnion S.turdly at~ Red~ Inn in Co1&1 ~ hma&I Wilhoua PulMn will oambiDI ao aao. a •"'-"'___fall (.2 13) 721 ·7200 for lddit1onal 1nfonnatl0ll. dance fridaL:u A E' Touch Restaurant. 2425' EJ T~~nce is~ to dae publ;c with live music bY f;oYe reJ.flGD•IJfp MmfNlr.., ~k ~~ &Om I . p.m. IO midailbt and an • A semiaartbr womee no feel -.ctt in their::; onetataUoa fOr .,...UYC ...... ben at 7:1~. Call love ~la~ Of far thole wlao ~ -.l626for....ti.-..UC..,_t PWPorllaedanoe. ~ ,.eia•"'illl Will be Mid Sill *> • .,, __ ....., ,.,,,.,.........., Di.AllllL ....... lrr_...... 1-....s Piill Ml J 11t" ,...., M IJ::JO -... ill ... Pl'omonlllrJ Paillt OWtiboute. 200 ,.,,.. .. , .... w-,,,.~=. • _,.,. _. ....,-..... ~ . wileoed .. IMh.e ......... IOIO l l:JDa.& J46i.110llw ............ .. • FtiDdln& Special-Olympics . M C ... •ber of Commerce Preeldent Arlene Schafer loob oa, ea.ta ..... DI.rector of Lelaare Semcea Keltb Van Bolt r.••eata a $2,500 cbeck to Bac1l Koehler. director of the al.nlew l>eYelopmental Center. Tbe city raUed the mon91 for tile center'• Special OIJ1Dplca atbletee darlne an annaal aoU toarnament. Nat year the eTent will be aponMred by file dty'• Chamber of Commerce. HELP.FOR DISORDERS ... PromA8 I . practice as a speech patho ogJst. "Private therapy can be ralhcr ~xpc;nsive," Jenson adm1ls. "This OCC p~m allows students to receive professional help at a very low cost." The college's Speech and Lang~ Center assists people with such d1s- orden as stunering, voice disorders, articulation djfficult1es and language problems. The center is in Room 241 of the colleae's Literature and Languase Building, and students may enroll in the program at any time during a semester. ""Good communication skills arc esaen'tial for everyone." Jenson said. .. It's almost impossible to be success- ful in today's society without an ability to communicate effectively. That's why this program, and others like it. are so important." Following an initial evaluation. students enroll in a class that meets one hour per week. They receive small l!'OUP instruction. and earn one-balf urut of college credit. .. Our students are grouped by speech disorder,•• Jenson said. "Only two to four people are placed in a group. We also offer a weekly support group for students. They get together to share feef1np and concerns. Thex offer encouragement to one another. Jenson's 1oal is to help students become "effective communicators.··- "I'm 1 people-person and a motivator," she said. "I maintain a close rapport with all of my students. That's extremely important for sue· cess." SENIORS ••• P'romA8 On' Nov. 16, the group will go to Lawrence Welk Theater to sec the musical, "She Loves Mc!" and enjoy a delicious luncheon. The cost is$36 per person and includes bus transportation as well as the tickets and lunch. The traditional Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony kicks off on Dec. 13, and if that doesn't suit _ your fancy, you may want to attend the annual potluck dinner at a private residence in Balboa on Dec. 16. Bring a friend and enjoy the Christmas Boat Parade after- wards. Sound like a plan? Call 642-9990 for more information. • • • Wonder what's haps)cning in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District? Well -first of all, Claire Rya.n- RalfleN of Cali fomia Elementary School was recognized for excel· ) lence in teaching. She was one of 1 SCalifomia teachers out of638 nominees who received a $750 pntfromJohn Hopkins Univer· sityCentcrfortheAdvancemcnt of Academically Talented Youth this past summer. And what about Roberta (.._...)GeUer ? Geller is the first female head custodian at Roy Andersen Elementary in Newport Beach. Jenson said 45 students arc enrol· ledJn the p(_op:aro. She is hoping to boost the total tO' 60 before the fall semester is over. Jenson says many students in the program have voice disorders. They may have nodules on their vocal chords, or have a problem wtth their palate. A few have pitch problems. meaning they speak too high or too low. Others have abused lhetr vocal chords in some way. . "We teach students tht value of ~ood vocal hygiene:· Jenson says. ·They're encouraged to abandon bad habits.·· A substantial number have dys- fluency or stunerng problems. Others have articulation disorders, meaning their language is distorted. They of\en substitute sounds -pronouncing a "'W" in place of a ··R: for instance. Jenson has several students who have experienced head trauma. either through a stroke or car accident. Some have lost motor control and must relearn how to form words. "It's a challenge. and a joy. to work with these students.'' she said. '"Ifs very fulfilling and reward inf ... In order to enroll in OCC s Speech and Language Program. a student must first make an appointment wnh Jenson in order to be evaluated. After determining the nature of the s~h problerp._the student is placed m the pr~. Persons seeking private pro- fessional help pay up to S50 per hour. but the cost of OCC"s pr<>Jram 1s minimal. for more information, call 432-5505. All right Bobbi! Also,"Newport Harbor Hijh's marching band, under the d1rcc- tion ofltea Owen. placed first in the Banning Stagecoach Day Par- ade last month. The band received four trophies and $500. Welavlteyoa co1eadas laformadoa Oii commaity laap- pnlap. We•aat to •r from y011 abotlt •pcomla1 eveab, l.caJ people ud HiPMl'MM aew1 la 1aeraC SeM co tH Dally Plle&. P. 0. Bos 15'0, Costa Mesa tHH. Mark to ~e atteaUOll of ltaty Boac:liler. CELLAR SINGER ••• ...... Aa amnF and aet the musicians. .. , wroteabout halfoflhe music for Epcot Center," he said. "My voice can be heard on •Listen t"! 1he La~; u attraction about arowina food tn the future." . And Moline says he·s kcepint his tcbedule o~ to P¢'onn "Celebrate tbe Spirit.• a sons written est>t;cially b or.nae County's Centenn1al. .. I've been commissioned by Dar- rell Me~. the prnadef!! of t!'C Onftee County CcntennaaL .be •id. "I'm basically keeping myself open to perform my SOfll.. I performed it at the Orange County Fair, and will perform it throuahout the year untal Aus. I, 1989. That's lhe actual I 00 year anniversary.:• Moline says he's teamed a lot tn the music business. "I've put my talent to ,.ork," he said. "I'd like to contnbute 101ne of my talent to make the world 1 better place. I'd hke to pin some imrnonah- ty with my work..:' We •re looking for &ood •porta t. The O.ily Pt lot wants to rcpon the sponina upk)i\S of you aftd .JOUr ndahbors. . AddreU ~~IO NeiPbothood Focus 1n ca~ of • ... DMty P\JOt, P.0 . loi l~ COlll Maa; 92626. • ' 0rengie COlllt DAILY PtLOTIThurlday, NoYernber 10, 1988 CE A8 RENTAL ROBOTS ADD A LIVELY TOUCH ••• ...... .u aoical devices. Hidint behind cur-and be wd, 'Pick your t.p. You'~ tailll.i he threw his voice more than JOl"I to Hawan for an eisJ>!-<laY all· 200 r~t away. e•pensn-peid business tnp: .. He sa.aned -of'k.lnJ side-by-side McCord operated Charhe from the watb Lyke and found hamtelf al places audience as master of ceremonies at liR tbe Lona Beach, Loi Aneeles and Revlon's nauonaJ sales meeUftl. "J AnabcamconventionccnteB-ham· sat 1n the audience Wlth a haddco mini it up, talkJna thfOUlb hidden nucropbone .. McCord md ... When microphones and aettina quite profi. tomeone aiked a quesuon. Chart~ c:ient at making the robot 1C1em would answer -only the voacc wu human. Lyke worked one by the really mine ... aame of Jerry, and ·McCord worked When McCord saw the first pey- 1be other named Charlie. check from. his ucursion be ad· 'Mt'Cord saicfthey would be attrade milted, "J knew then I was in the shows and the robots would literally '*rong business." puU people over to the booth they That's when McCord decided to ao werespomortn -~«·-.--- enterWned. It 1eemed to take oft from there. Somebody spotted Pro8ot aod rectUiaed rum fot I.be moVJe, 'Shoft Ciraut,' wbeft he played a small pert -I robot who is SU'UCk by liabtruna and comes to lite." McCont said that was only the besinniat of Pro8ot's c:arett. "Next Allen Funt foUnd us tn tbe phone book and called me at home,•• he said. "We ftelOllaaed a deal to be on. 'Candkl CarriefJ.' It wu aired on the Playboy chl(lnel. It dealt with a son of'adulf topic that wasju1t a rioL ·And that's not all. Then ~ did a 'l,..ucy' isock in 1986, where he He can be masier of ceremonies at any function. bdp recnut CUllOmerS ai saao.., and entenaia ••d::bou• any funcuon to 11ve it a ell t and fun ~ -for S 125 per hour, Mt'Cord said. ~ Pn:>Bot's uistaACe had proved both fun and profitable, McCord ~ 1WO others that look'"''"' like btm. He said &bey doa't have names -they're just labeled, "T~o and Thret." He said a robot Cs a wtk:ome ch.ante from the same old traditional pmes and auest speakers. .. After r.'ve shows he (Lyke) asked ••1 ttelped designed ProBot and ~t room." me if I felt confident to do a show him on the market." he said ... , went However McCord said ProBot's alone," McCord said. "I told rum yes, to trade shows and conventions "8nd function IS for entenaining. .. He's I btl liil'lt bfnttclly panics," he said. "Children j ust love him. He talks. buas. plays games with the kids. and even gi ves them ndes." 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R01eanne," Roseanne Barr's new blUe--O<>llar oomedy of wedded strife; arabbed second otaoe behind tra· aiti'onal· leader N'BCs "The Cosby . Show" in ttteA.C.-Niclsen C2Jati.n&!._ fot the week ended Nov. 6. lithographers) workshop. The eithibn, which will focus on .Lmion Kistler is retired now and re&UJnal pcintma.king. opens today lives in Laguna Hills. but for more and will continue throuah Jan. 1 S. It than half a century (from 1928-1979) will feature the works orecnjamin c. he reigned as the West Coast's Brown, Carl Oscu Borg. Karl Yens, pn:mier printmaker at his workshop Arthur Millier, Peter Krasnow, m Los Angeles. Mildred Bryant Brookes. Conrad "I introduced lith~phy 10 the Buff, Jean Charlot. Elanor Colburn, By CHERYL WALKER ~ .... c:«r.., .... 111 w c " Ki d I Stephen De Hospodar, Henri De est oast, says st er. "an was K.ruif., Phil Dike Ma rion Hebert, the one who brought the method of stone printing, developed around the 0rpha Klinker. Paul Landacre, Ben tum of the 19th century, to the Pacific Messick., Roi Partridge. Elmer Plum- Coast and developed it here. I was mer and Virginia Woolley. also the first to es~bush a u udio and Bolton.Colburn, LAM registrar and teach artisu these methods... curator of the permanent collection, Over the course of his career more says the pnnts on view will depict a than 700 utisu, by K.istlcr's estimate, vanety o subjects from landscapes to learned the basics of stone printing urban scenes with and wnhout the and the secrets of offset printing presence of man -many in under his tutelage. diminutive sizes -"most of the Now the Laauna Art Museum will pieces are quite small, nothing's over give Southern Californians a chance 30 by 40 inches. to rediscover K.istler's genius in a new "This is one of our revival efforts," eithibit, "Southern California Print-says Colburn, "an opportunity to go making: A Historical Survey," which back and take a look at things to sec will include 40 pre-World War 11 the background that made the West prints from its permanent collection, ~oast a major center of printmaking the majority products of K.istler's m the '60s. (aka the dean of Southern California Concurrent with the pnntmaking -------------ellhibit, LAM will present a second -"Ruth Weisberg: Paintings. Draw- WE'RE Fi<..;:.HTll\G FOR 'IQJr?UFt American Heart &t.a Association ~ ings, Prints 1968"-1988" -the founh and final stop for this important and first major comprehensive showcase of~ wor~-renowncd contemporary painter, pnnt-maker and professor of fine art at' USC. The eithibition will feature 33 ...... •oosu •SA ,OUNTAIN VALlEY •u. -•OA OflAH<lt ••TANTOll Uill -,_. !GwarOO llllllO< i • .., 'lf'Wll fCU< l'x"'< 'L• Mir'°' 5-o. ... "' $29-9036 631 Ml>l ~ 1)07 9'-1' 7•00 639-1170 IUlNA,.AM ll. TOltO GA-N OllO~ *OflAHGE •SANTAANA WHT-Tf.11 llA-llw-S-0 lOWtrCll Wtsa>r"°' ':.-IOW•C.8'>sloi P ...... 1HI W.,lt 1&1"'°"3 !Al !AeO SJO UGI U• ~~l )AO H •• °'"" ., H I )093 *~A lOw_Cor.,,. II 719 "'° *!ltVlltl (.,..,.,.°"""~"'!)A 118" -_ C!!:_,..., ,..,.0~~~ ... ~ ~' l ....... ,.._CD~-- • u 2 Rattle a Hum IP'G·ll) 1 ll J IUllllttll • PUNCH LINE (RI UM l JU ft 14'11 IS • EVERYBODY'S All AMERICAN (RI 11 "l us 15 7 45 It tO DO• AIUCN! THIN GS CHANGE (PG) 1202 •ss111tu. JODI! fOSTIR •THE ACC USED (RI U OS 2 JSS00 1 J\10-ot ALIEN NATION 2:50·7:20 BAT 21 12:50.S:lS.9:45 "'-"'Ct M1t ......... ,._, THEY LIVE IRI l'le1 Co N•1 ,,,. ...... ti 1111 A FISH CALLEO WANDA (RI ,,,,, , .... '" Ill THE ACCUSED (RI 'lUSCO HIT 'RISIOIO (Al u. 2. Rittle & Hum (P'G·tl) "'" .,. ......... "" ALIEN NATION IR I 'lUS 01( MAAO 1111 evocative pieces by this artist-poet of Russian-Jewish heri'8ge. l'MChicqo-bom artist was reared in a socially, potiticall¥, and cul- turally aware family of antellcctuaJs and artists. Her works reflect this past and demonstrate her keen interest in human and individual rights - especially the role of women, Jewish women m particular, in the modem world. Weisberg's art also is concerned with dreams and reality. past and present,. and the impossibility of always being able to distinguish o'he from-the other. • · The cx,hibit will also contajn sam- ples of Weisberg's Jewish-themed works. includina an illustration from her landmark book. "The ShtetJ, a Journey and Memorial," and litho- graphs whose images arc drawn from her study of ancient Jewish religious writings and folklore such as "Awak- ening II" -a depiction of the perfect '" · happiness of an unborn child being touched by an an~I and forced to bcain its strug.le with life. {Accordin'g to Jewish folklore the spot where the angel touches each man is the cleft in the middle of a person's upper lip.) ADCel toacb• a.nbom child in •• AwakenJnC n. •• NBC, wttich retained fint ~· took five top slots. The network s new comedy"Empty Nest" was in the Top 10, but the hia)\ly touted "Dear John," another new entry, dropped out of the top rank and placed 16th. The new drama "Tattingcrs" pluqed to S4th place after placing 16th the week before. -Here arc the primMime television ratings as compiled by the A,C. Nielsen Co. for the week of October 31 -November 6. I "Tiit Cost>v Sho~ ... NBC. 2s.t retl119, 23.4 mlttlon homn 2. "ROMenne," A8C, 24.l, 211 mllflon llOmft. 3. "A Oltft(tfll World," NBC. 22.7, 20.S million llOmH. l "60 Mlnu!tt," CBS, n.1. 20.S mllllon llon'lft. S. "Golden Glrls.'' NBC, 22.4. 20.4 mlllon homH. 6. "Wno's lht eon?.''. ABC. 22.3. 20.1 ll'lllllon nomts 7. "Cllffrs," N8C, 21.I, 19.7 mftllon homtl. I "Murder, Sht wrore," CBS. 21.4, lt.l mlltlon llOmes. . 9. "EmPIV West.'' NBC. 2~ mllllon homes. 10. "Growl1111 P.elns," ABC, 20.1, II. I mllllOll homes. . - 11. "L.A. Lew," NBC, 20.0, 11.0 rntHlon he>f'MI. 12 "Hunltr ·• NBC, IU, 16:9 mtttlon he>f'MS. 13. "H•MI Ol 111e Class," ABC, 17J, 16.0 mlllon home$, 14 "DHr Jonn," NBC. 17.2, IS.S minion hottl8S • IS. "Amtn:• N8C, 16.S, 10 mlMlon hC)rnft. 16. "FeYOl'll• Son, Perl 3.'' -"N8C Movie of Ille W•." lU, IS.3 ll'llltlon llomes. The Lag_una Art Museum, located at 307 OiffDrive in Laguna Beach, is open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. Admission is $2 for adults, SI for students and seniors. For further information about the LAM exhibits. call 494-6531 . ..Harbor Lltht••· deJ>lCU peaceful 8eUlde life. 17 "Internal AH1lrs, Pert 1," -"C8S Sundev • Movie," 16.1, IS I mllliol'I l'IOmet. 11 "D11tes," ces. 1s.1. 10 m1111on homei. Singer Jerry Lee Lewis files for bankruptcy -·-·-A-:a ---·-----W-Ull _, IU·U. .-.. -..--*IT-~--" w~-=:, ... -.... ~ •-ve..c> •w1w 1• -----__ _ .. ,_ ---·~ =-----.,,._ --·------1.-.0.WC-. .a...... --·-·· .. ,~ DIMI -·::.-:: , -..11..:.:::~ ... _ MEMPHIS (AP) -Rock pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis filed a personal bankruptcy petition listing more than $3 million in debts. including $2 million owed to the Internal Revenue Service. court records show. · Lewis filed the petition in U.S. Bankruptcy Court Tuesday. It lists 22 creditors seeking more than $3 .. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. """ ,_ .... CMrs -...i 1122 ...... l lft., ctsTI •SA-541·115' .. 'DlsrANTiliUNDER' GOFS MUCH FARTHER IBAN 'COMING HOME', 'DEER HUNTER' OR ~ALYPSENOW' ... fDlED WITII SPIRIT AND HOPE." -W.. Gulim. MONTlEAl.J()lJl.~AL IC> 15 ... ON FRt S 30 8 00 10 IS -c ..... ~ • .ao-t-..,.o ~ •• r...Q;ii..-,..,..,, J----' Help for the holidays at ~ H~ Center-Irvine. ~o This could be the most important holiday "how to" seminar ~u and }Qur family t'\er attend. Keeping lhe Cheer 111 the Holidays Thursda); November 17 at 7 p.m. Call 760-5656 for. informadon and reservations. No fee. Registration ~ limited. All of lL~ suffer from bolidaye.xc~ in drinking. catinl(and spend· ing. AD of us have tO cope with ad<k'CJ Mre~" and demands. And sometimes with depresQon and loneUnc.."11. Q>me and hear a Hoag ~i2trist and~ share~ and~ advice on keep- ing the holidays CheetfuJ for )OOr \\tlole f.unJh'. Pn>grml modmltd by the medial director of Ttit ~ r.hemkal ~center. H002 Health Center-Irvine ..S70' Blmtna P.ub'll)', ln1ne, CA A wnicl" ~ tk .... million, including hospital fees. The 53-year-old rock pianist and singer has had his ups and downs·with the lRS and t-ealth problems for mor~ than 10 years. Lewis listed his address as being in Nesbit, Miss., which is nearly 10 miles south of Memphis. From lbe Director of ALTERED STATES and lbe crtalor of DRACULA The performer's life is the subject of the movie "Great Balls of· Fu-e" starring Dennis Quaid as Lewis. The movie, which 1s being shot in Memphis, deals with a 11/i-year period of the entertainer's life from late 1956 to late 1958. It does not deal with the lawsuits and health problems of the last few years of his life. Exclusive EngQflement Starts CMnOrrow EDWARDS TOWN CENTER COSIO Meso PRUEH r E 0 IN ) PIOY$ Oo•I• o! 1.00 3 00 11•> 1SI •l&.l OOlll'f STEREO S 00 1 ;00 9 00 10 1$ f!!lfl•lilaii;M leflC-... nJ/lJ1.flll 9"CllM ltCotll!NG IOUYH .. IO U11ATI\Ulll• ,,..,,, n• ,, .. ,,,. ... •JO llttt IANAlnltO IW.LOWDN4~ U:OO MS H8 l..U , .. , t • OOUY SftlltOlllUT ~ .... ._. lll .CCUSID ttl 11:» J!M NO 7:M t IO llOWY Slll'IOIMl!Ml UNI ... , ...... , WlllOUIAQllf 1"1 , . .,.,.. ........ ~ ........ l ...... .._ 114,...,. .. ll'KllM IKOIDING 111unu•11111 """' 121I02H4Mt·41 1:SO IO'U IOl.ll ITatOllWll IU'°" 1'1 IOOO--Ill , ... ,.,. ..... ,.,,. _..., JRtltOtauKA ~ ....... MmOOT'SMt~ Ill n·M J u s u 7,u ,.,, U UY .......uSl.IOlle l'Otl'tl Tll ACMID Ill 11:48 HOS»,._ 1 ... Wlf,..,,...S NIOIUNI N U• .. l •lt S:4S llM 11118 -----"'~· COCDM • IOUY~U. _....., ..... Qll .... .... ,. .. , ......... , each Out onorstrio nNewport . .. The ~m rises to the top," said vent chairman Du Bea.ls of the process undertaken to select the three honorees of the annual Reach Out Awards. held Friday'a\ the Newport 8eKh Marriott. &ea P.-..r, Am Lewll and nu••n ..... " ....... Jr. were chosen by the Newport-Cos1.1 Mesa YMCA and Center for Familr Coun- seling u the aeventb. annua recipi- ents for their .. unending c;Ontribu- tions of ti met talent and treasures to ourcommunaty," explained Beals. naa and .iert 8eal9 .,.... w1t1a one ........ . . . ....................... .._ Roblna, Ami Lew1a ud ._ FowJ-•. More than 270 attendees paid SI 2S each to salute the recipients, partici- pate in the silenr and live auctions, and raise funds for the CFC, a 13- year-old branch of the YMCA which providescounselingservices to famil-ies and troubled teens. Beals was pleased with the turnout. explaJnina that the total was a significant increase over last year. Proceeds were estimated at S3S,OOO. "The mo.ney raised tonight will belp us provide our counsefing ser- vices on a slidina scale," said CFC executive director Sten Pradier. "It also will JO to help our Teen Assistance Proaram, which is our on-cam~s (substance abusc) program. If we didn't have thjs kind offund raiser we would have to nisc our rates or not be able to offer the (same) services to \he community." Also honored was double Olympic aold medalist Gres Barton, who served as bonorarv chairman and presented the Reach Out Awards. Video clips of Banon's 1,000-meter individual and two-man kayak races from the 1988 Olympics were shown. Excitement mounted as ·the crowd cheered the victories and saluted Barton with a standing ovation. "I feel 1 have been successful in the things that I've done, .. said Barton, a Michigan native now livin& in New- port Beach, .. and now I'd like to give back and help other people out.•• (Barton still trains regularly in New- port Harbor, but is employed full time as an engineer with Fluor Daniel.) . Prior to dinner which featured Caesar salad, veal, and bananas foster, past Reach Out Award recipi- ent Evelya Hart lead the pled&e of allegiance and YMCA board member Jon Ckrl1ie.. offered the invoca- tion. The award presentations were stag- gered between the live auction items, Gonloo Bowley handling the bidding for Pri2Cs such as a fligbt in a P-.S2 Woitd War II vintqe fi&hter plane, a chance to co-host the Rick Dees show on KllS radio. and serving as 1rainer for a day with both the Rams and the An,els. Part of the A nae ls packaac included a t>.t and be.II autopaphed by out- fielder Mlb Bnwa, on hand with his wife UMa to help with the bidding. Before the auction. Brown joked, "I should tell them it's Wally Joyner's bat." A different twist to the live auction featured &ltty Leslie'• mini-fashion show with model~ sporting the clothina items included in each live auction JMICUae-from ski jackets to a KUS FM J-shin to Dan Beals in a Marriott bathrobe. Committee members insuring the success of the event included Lori Boep-.AmBraj7,MaryPntMI', Laua Melmiek. David E. W.W. h~ BeruHr, Barbara Caner, Jeri Beals, hdly WU11am1 and Deuls GWwell. .Pressure to produce preposterous DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am me? -PROVIDENCE. R.J. My new love is warm itnd affec- writina this letter from~ hospital. A DEAR PROV: C...Wer die IOVff. tionate. We have a great time nurse bas P,romised to mail it. 1 need Aa7..e wlto w..W eeme &o die together. l have given her a ~1)1 but to know 1f I am justified in being a...,1 Mtpltal dine llilMn after a blrdl u1 recently I postponed the weddmJ. We upset. 1111 Mtmeal wWe Mr kalm belea1. have no problems regarding rcbgion, Three days ago I gave birth to my Sllame • yev ........ Be 1uely no money problems and no trouble founh dauahter. My mother-in-law I • ...,D£IS ..._.. uve &Um yeu .we. Sltow with our grown children. To put it came to see me and the new baby LM ldm Wt celaaa aM let'• Mlle Ille cu frankly, J am ashamed of the'way she within three hours of the binh. She werll ., die pmpdM '° \e more talks. Her English is atrocious and she patted my hand and sajd, "Don't be 1.,,.rt1n el 1" 18 .. e f•hlte. can out<uss any man I've ever met. upsetbecauseitwasn'taboy. Youcan 1 •• d' · • • • I'm well-respected and have been try apin, dear. You know we aTe ra~?rteJ:n J3~ :n~t~We~nobJf'gatl~~~1 . DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a reluctant to take my new companion ndi ... on you to make sure the widower 68 years old. I have met a toniceplacesbecau~ofherlanlfiuagc. ··• 1 cou n't believe it! After all, they .. _..r. I t d ho lov-me as ily name is canied on." wonucnu a ·Y 91 ""' What should I to? -TO EKA. I said, "Look, Mother. I am 38 ~~~~rcfi~~Y the Kennedys or the much as I love her. Now the problem: KAN. _,.old and have had four children M)'. wife was socially prominent. DEAR TOPE&A: TeU "Hr lady z-w Mt husband sat there like a bump d' fied and -11 .......... Our mar J and three m1scani~es in seven years. "'11 1 · ..... ""'~· • wut l1 bodleriag Y"· SH cu at d • d . d on a og. He didn't say a word. Was I riaJe was bettcrthan most butshe was _._,_.1 eleu--w la•--1! II lk :,;~. on t epen on me to 0 any wrong to answer her back and to be cold,, didn't like xx and never mad( ~t::'. ... r.e;-:.a&~ Eaclll• i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihiiiiuiiiirtiiiiiibeciiiiiiiaiiiiuiiiisciiiihiiiieiiidiiiiiiidniiiiiii'tiiisiipeakiiiiiiiiiuiiipiiiifiiioiiir ~m~e~n~ee~liiiiliiii~iiiemmiiiiuc•hiiiioiiiih•miiiiaiiin.iiiiii-..-1 cu be lmllf'OYH wtdi .. me hlterta1--nJ1 rdati-•trip a,.ean to uve LDB!iTER ·oll\ll\IER • 8 Oz. Broiled Lobster tail •1i!•95 7 Days a'weck so may pines for yO., M,e dliq1 work HI. L.M. Bo vo Feed 'em up, then move on FrtMJ, Ne•1•h II 8J SYDNEY OfllAllll A.II AIUD (March 2l-April 19): Emphasis on philosophy. meaninp of war and ~· ability to project yourself into immediate future. Travel plan1 reQUlfe additional Study. TAVllUS (Apnl 2~May 20): Be analytical. realize partner or mate W..U to ''do ,ood" but 11 temporarily mcapable. Meanina will become crystaktciW. GBMINI (May 2l.June 20); Spotli&ht on domestic relationUiip, home, teeurity, income, marital status. You'll be asked to locate JepJ s-pen, birtb • certificate and passport should be' available. Libra f1&W'CS prominently. CANCER (June 2J-July '22): Check diet, keep resolutions coocerninc ~nutrition. lnsision ~planallon of terms. ~of subterfuet could be praent. Prolect self in clinches. Pisces playi outstandins role. ._ _ LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your apparel, ·~~ will oc "noticed. .. Youn• person may comment, ··You•ve aot at an totetber." Relationship inten~fies, scenario h1&hligbts variety, discovery, adventure. sex I~. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Perceive potential. realize neaottations are coming to completion. Emphasis on property. security, ren\oval of fire hazards. , LJBIU,(Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Stress independence! creativity, versatility. Focus also on relatives, visits, trips, fresh stan in new direction. You11 set to heart of matters in·connectio11 WJth romance. Leo represented . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2 L); 'ntuition helps in makina correct "6nanclal ~hoice." Emphasis on money, s-ym(nts~ collections. penonal possntionS'. • • • SA Gm AJUUS (Nov. 21-Dec. 21 ): Mbon in your sian hi.ghliaftts initiative, courage, mdependenoc. orisinality. Judfment. intuitive enable you to be at right pla~ at crucial moment. Communication relates to social affair. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Express willingness to revise. review. possibly to "cllanse location." You gain inside information, you•IJ have chance to be on more solid emotional-financial ground. Scorpio plays rote. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2~Feb. I 8): Be ready for "messqc" from member of opposite sex recently returned fromjourMy. Emphasis on friends.. aspirations, persuasion, elements oftimina, luck. Sagittarius is in picture. PISCES (Feb. l 9-March 20~ Important domestic adjustment fdiured - you'll come to terms in conncct1on with financial dilemma. IF NOVEMBER 11 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY c~rrent cycle emphasizes social activity, popularity, peater awareness of appearance. wardrobe, body imqe. You travel this month, vitality returns. optimism ~laces ennui. Some people. ereviousl_y indifferent, mijht be saying. "I didn't know you bad it in your· CanC'tr, Capricorn, Aquanus people play imp<_>rtant roles m your life. You~ a natural teacher. character analyst, and intuition is honed to razor-sharpness. Both v11lnerable. South deals. NORTH • 7 4 V' Q 3 l 0 l(Q91l • • 5 3 WEST • Q 10. 5 3 Q 10. 4 0 7 6 5 3 •Q EAST .,, Q J9765 ¢A J 10 • 9 7 4 ' SOUTH + A'K 6 l r::;; A IC ¢ 4 • A K J JO 6 2 The bidding: Soatb Wm 1 + Pus 3 + Pass 3 + Pass 4 NT Pass 6 • Paa Nortll l <> 3 ., 4. 5+ Pas Openina lead: Five of + Don'r jump for the obvious line. Some sober reflection might bring a better one to light. North-South bid well to a fair slam. After an anificail and forcing two-dub opening bid and a two- diamond waitina respo~. the rest of the auction was natural. West made a normal open.ins ACROSS lead. Declarer ~on the kin& of spades and led a diamond to the queen and ace. He won, the spade return, cashed the ~of clubs ud tried to ruff a spade in dummy. East overruffed and returned a trump, and declarer wu stranded wida • spade loser. Down two! ... Rather unfortunate, but declarer had mis-timed the hand. After wiJl • nina the openin1 lad be lbould have cubed the tiaa of clubs. Wbcl1 the queen appeared, declarer thou.Id assume it is an honest card and abandon trumps in favor of casbin1 the ace-kins of hearts and remain- ing hiah spade before leadina a dia- mond to the queen. If West bas the ace, declarer will have to rely on a spade ruff for an .., entry to the table. If East has the ace, be is endplayed iD four suits! A red-suit return siYa declarer two discards; a club will be run to dum- my' s eisbt; and a sPlldc prcMdes an entry to the table via a ruff. Whal if west dropped the q1aeCD of trumps Crom Q-9 ana""Eut re- turns a tnllDp after winnina t.be ace of diamonds? lf you finesse, you are ioing down in a cold c0ntract. Against def enders who are that good, we-SUUCSt you CU OU Of the rubber as soon as possible! If you don't, it wiU cost you a torrofmon- ey in the Joni run. How long should a mother ta.kc care of her child? A bird called the sea 1 ScrllP8 parrot has it figured out. She hatches 6 Ast.-lak 8 Oz. Baby beef teriyaki short ribs 82 Seth'• kin S3 Arm bone CM Medical herb $5 AedlcalS .. 14 Oz. Baked potato served with chives, sour cream and butter, accompanied by your choice of our famous clam chowder or salad. ·~ * Ask about our Lunch Specials Mon-Sat s3.95 loc.ttone: Newpott Beach Garden Grove Dana Pomt Anlhetm Laguna Hils Anaheim Hills Rancho Califoma one baby at a time. Eventually. she 10 Scanty Oiesoffto more adventurous activ1t}. 14 Badgef'a kin abandonina the little rascal. But not 15 Adec>t before $he feeds her otTspnng so 18 Breed type heftily that it outweighs her. That's 17 OtMet • - -18 Attend her measure. 19 c..,,·. rivw 20 More hUmld In Britain, ifthere"s no traffic li~t 22 Used logic at the place to cross tJlc street, it's 24 Famed V1k1no called a "zebra crossinf-" If there 1sa 2e NeighS traffic hjht there. its a "pelican 27 Begin crossing, 31 Negatlw 32 Asian.,.. 'Q. Men in what Line of work arc ~ ~~ otf stat1st1cally most likely to get 38 Provoked di vorccd? 39 Backward A. Police. 40 Not• - 41 Blue grass Q. What percentage of all life 42 f>tebe • s,.,....ies that have lived on earth arc 43 Use an epee y-v • 'l 44 Senor now extinct. 45 Lett A. 99 percent. So says an authority 47 Hard IJquor named John ~oble Wilford. 51 Earth !!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!.JL_--------------------'-----. 52Arraogedm ·A special bookstore for the booklover OLD USED AND RARE BOOKS Over 20 ,000 titles to choose from COME.IN AND BROWSE In an old·fashloned bookstore atmosphere • We search and locote bOOlics WOfldwlde • • We opprolse bOOlics • Special Ordering • We buy good bOOlics • Pleasant and attentive service COME TO THE .... BDOKLOV£RS PARADIS£ . KIUUI .......... _ (OfllN 7 OAVS A WH1Q ' . . rows 54 Dullest 58 Sprawl 59 Course 11 ~It 2 14 17 20 3 ee Fu1t1U 67 Lock DOWN 1 Alumnus 2 Polynalen chestnut 3 Partlcle 'MoMied 5 PeKh type 6 MaJom 7 Ski lift 8 Outsideir 9 Held onto 10 Eerie 11 Mr. Greene 12 En1.el 13 Old r..wds 21 Brazllan coffee 23 Fistl 25 Love symbOI 27 &alpe 28 Bov;ne· Sp. 29 EJttent 30 MadedOdle 3' Quot• 35 Lrving-coet Item l6 II ever 37 u... hoe 39 Rafe• metel 5 . . 7 ~Teuton of• tort 42 ln~I 43 LoYelleSI 44 Seek• oil 46 Seal group 47 l<lnd of energy "8 lnYeat~le a 9 49 wa inde>Mnt 50 Or9b S3 Nine: comb. torm SS S..ofotd st Get•• .... 57 ~llgaa eo Gorge 11 12 " I 13 .. All Orange Cout DAILY PILOT I Thurlday, Nowmber 10, 1M8 TD PAMD,Y CIRCUS • by 811 Keane "How do they fit so much water in that little spigot?" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "What happened to that box of jelly doughnuts I brought home?" PEANUTS IT WAS COLD LAST N16HT ... (LL BET AN'<Tl41N6 Ml{ WATER DISH I 5 FROZEN .. GARFIELD COUJICTER CUL TUR.It by Maratta & Maratta .... I I /957 ( j T 0 p Of THE Li NE I I • DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham i ~ t 11.10 ·l ti l •' '; t .._' • ,ft ••• ' '' • ' 'I I I• ' .· ',.·. ·,':·. •, I DC»iT ~ ~ YOJ c~ >JJNA'<S WEAA SuPfERS °""'1' YOU LI Kf TO /(IC/( STUFF'? • by Charles M. Schulz I COULD ~EAR WOODSTOCK DRIVIN6T~E ZAMBONI .. by Jim Davis MOSl l<INP!> OF 5P1'7EA5 ARE. TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE R08&18R08E COMPLETELY MARMLE5~ by Pat Brady "'' •... • Ml5T~ ~-.' BLOOll COUJITY FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE JUDGE PARKER FUNKY \VINKERBEAN OKAQ ,IN AeO(Jf 5 1)( 5ECOOD5 A"61E WI 1..L BE. CDMI~ AROOt-l D fHE CDRNER UP AHEAD •.• by Garry Trudeau P/f/51()6/{T-IUCT IM-PUIG4KJS lc'4S 1111" AVAll.AIJl,8 RJ/t~ ------~t---- ' • J by Lynn Johnst~ by Jeff MacNelly by Harold Le Dowe r by Tom Batluk • '11-10 I KElAI I I t I I 1~~ ... ._ .............. F-... :rz ..... -lleA-....... . ..... . ..,... ___ ...,_ -.... 0 .... ,_ .. . THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1988 Gl 4. inemorabl,.e -.r .ivalry. OCC-Golden West has ha history of classic By JON FERGUSON Ofllle.,.., ......... It was the bcginnina of the onl y cross..district rivalry in community college football. and wbile the finish fllay not have made .Qold(n West happy, it was fitting in a sense of setting th'e tone for what has been a great rivalry from the start. All the elements are there -hard . hittm,a. closely fought. controversial. emouonal, gJorious comebacks and vivid memories. When the first team of Rustlers took the.field for the first time against Orange Coast College on Oct. 8, 1966. it was a school with a great reputation against a first year-program which had already pined a measure of respect by winning its first three games under a 27-year-old head coach named Ra:.- Shackleford. GWC running back Ste\C Cashdollar ran 10 yards for a touch- down with 8:41 left to make 11 14-13. but it was ruled that his two-point conversion run came up short of the goal, sparking the first controvers} It finished 14-13 bcfore·9.700 fans. Shackleford still sa'ys he made 11. Dick Tucker. who coached in the first 20 meetings. said it wasn't close. that Cashdollar bounced into the end zone. OCC assistant Barry Waters. who caught two passes an the game as a wide receiver, said. ..h depend~ v.here..} ou were standing on the field. From our film room. at was clear he didn't get 1n, and on their film s I'm sure the) feel he did. But I would have hated to be the referee making that deCISIOn ... Founeen-)'ear Rustler assistant Pug Pierce. who played safet} in the first two games and had an anter- ception and later a fumble recovery that led to the final score in the first one, calls the. games as a player his most vivid memones. .. , .remember the first game es- peciaJly," Pierce said. "On films., we thought we won anyway. We could not stop them at first. It seemed like I made the first eight t.aekles on a running back comin& through the line. I thought at wasaoin1 to be a long night. Coach Don Rowe made some adjustments, and all of a sudden I didn •t have to make any more tackles. It seemed like I was tackling a 220- pound ru.nniJll t>Kk every time ... That first pme,: ~ac be&inning. was an si&n of pat pmcs to come. In 1967, in a 7-7 tie with Oranae Coast on the Rustlen· J.-yard line and the clock showi~ l :41 and counting. controversy unfoJded again llS the first I disappeared. (Pleue eee RIVALRY /112) ~BigWe~tplayers dot NBA rosters ive p ayers from conference on pro teams for openers Five players from the.PCAA (now the Big West Conference) last year were on therostersofNBA ceamsas the~nopcnedlastfriday: UCl's Wayne Engelstad-Denver Nuggets: Long Beach State's Morion Wilcy- Oallas Mavericks; UC Santa . Barbara's Brian Shaw-Boston Celtics; San Jose State:S Ricky Berry -Sacramento Kings.and Cal State Fullenon's Richard Monon -In- diana Pacers. • WehaveJohavemorcrookiesin the NBA thanan~~erconferencc in thecoun~~Too WestCoast basketball as so weak, huh? All five of these guys arc Californians, not Easterners. 0 I was very disturbed to hear of the resignation of George McQuam at Cal State Fullerton. He is a good coach, motivated his athletes to play hard and was really tough to go against. I have not had a chance to talk to George, but will at the first opeonunity I have. Good luck. George, in whatever your next move is. Before he got the Fullenonjob, hcwasgoingtobe my assistant at UCI. 0 DeaD llartllles leads Oc•• View toat1bt ...... llartna. Tonight's games •Sunset League: Edison (3--1) at Westminster (3--1). B1tt Muww • COLLEGE BASKETBALL I am glad che season as beJ1nning. I was out of town three straigl\t : weekends.eitherdoingclinicsor attending meetings. It 1s nice to know that I do not have to hop on a plane untiJwegoto UNLV onOec.15. Spending time in a1rpons. hotels and traveling. in general, arc very overrated. Being home in Orange County is my favonte avocation. 0 Toda_y is Big West Conference Media Day in LA. where the coaches and media predict how the con- ference teams will finish in March. Pretty tough to do on Nov. IOwith 31/z months to go. Writers always predict (that's easy), but how many of them print theirorcdictionsat the end of the season? Herc are my picks-remember. I picked what teams would be in the Final 4 last year when the NCAA tourney started and none of my selections made it to the end. and I am supposed to be knowledgeable. My predictions fqr the Bag West. in (Pleue eee UCl/B,2) Coeta Yeaa '• Bret Dlebell look.a to take abot a&alnat Weatlalle ctefenden Jeaee .,.., ......... .., ai..... --- Amell ( 19) and Ttm Buber durtDC CIF playoff opener Wed.Deaclay at OCC. NFL showers perfect place for pranks ~ , This is the pan of the column where we take you deep into the inside of an NFL team. How deep? Well. how does the shower sound? Yes we'll take you into theshowerofan NFL. wherevown men try to cleanse their massive bodies. You probably think that because of their massive size an NFL shower area would be different than most showers you have seen. Actually they're not. they're the exact same size as any other locker room shower. Some,uysin the NFLarcsob1g they don tevenget their feet when they shower. Others shower faster than they run the 40. In the shower. the term "total dis!'Cllrd for his body takes on a different meaning." The players that barely get wet in the shower are known as the Cowboys and their technique is known as a "Cowboy Shower." On Saturdays before traveling, there area lot of guX!&uilty of a .. Cowboy Shower. ·They're all trying to act home and chanae clothes. In Detroit. v.e used to have guys plant themselves by the locker room exit to make sure people shower before getting on the airplane. If the pla yercontinuously took Cowboy Showers. then he was caned into the shower w11h has clothes on, or they would get him wet right there by the exit. You also had the play"'rs that took half hour showers and talked with everybody 1n the shower. This is the socializer and 11 was always fun to shower next to one of them. W 1th the noise of all the showers on at the same ume. the socializer would have to leave his shower to talk to other {>layers. Whale he was away from hi s shower. the player next to him would tum the knob to freez ing cold or steaming hot. Freezing cold worked best as the steam from a hot shower would give you away, although some. guys used to walk back to the showers without looking. If you ever want toexpcnencc the full effect of the sensation )'Ou feel walkin& into a cold shower. tomorro~ BENNY RICARDO , •• r &.1 . ~alk into\oursho"'er~11hout ktt1ng 11 v.arm up l f~oucan leap more than 26 feet an the long1ump. the cold v.atcrw1ll have \OU half~a~ there There's also the quiet sho~e('Cr. the one that Just minds his o~ n business while trying to cleanse himself. These guys can be a lot offun too You shower next to them and watch them shampoo their hair. The) 'II take the cheap bab) sham- poo the team bu\S and work up a lather. then the) 'II tum around and face the sho~cr to nnsc ofTthe lather. T 1me for ~ou to go to work on the gu y . .\s the&U) ducks hi s head under the running ~ater. )OU gl!t the shampoo bot~!~ and o;tan pounng 11 on the gu\ s head It's' cry 1mponant to have the shampoo pouritself fllht underneath the running water and not ha ve it hi\ his hand These pla)ersgo home and tell their "wes to bu) this brand of shampoo. The' S"ear it's the most concentratedshampoo the) hJ'e ever used. A ht tie dab would take· about I 0 minute\ to n nse ofT )our hair. an unbehc' able amount of lather. From the sho"'~ r the pla~ers would ht"ad to th~'o"'el arc There. theto~elsare neall' folded and the players go to"orl d"' '"8 themselves off. ln the middle oithe loldcd towel was an ideal place to conceal things. Remember"' hen suck-um was lepl?Dunng this 11me. thecqui~ ment man al"a~ \had plent~ of stick- um around the loder room Ever put CrlZ) glue on \Ourha1r. bod' pans? Youcouldinterttpt footballsw1thout usangan) hand .1he~ "'ould1ust stick tO)OU. • If the pl8'(rsunl\ed all that tt\tn . (Pteueeee PC~L/82) Edison, Marina advance; Barons ousted from CIF Steve Kunst and Corey Delahunt scored four goals apiece as the Costa Mesa High water polo team hekt on for ~ 9:s victory over Westlakc- Wed:nesday at Orana,c Coast Collcgt in the opening round of the CIF J.-A playoffs. In a game that was tight through- out. the Mustangs (21-10) unlocked a S-S thard-quaner deadlock on goals by Kunst and Delahunt and led the rest of the way. Chad Dinenna closed the gap to 7-6 with 12 seconds remaining in the third. but Kunst restored the Mus- tangs' advant• to two with 3:37 left in the game. A goal by Westlalce's Matt Brenner with 21/i minutes cut the lead to 8-7. but Brian Krcutzbmp Wlth I :23 left proved lo be the game- wanner. The Mustan&S. Pacific Coast League champions. next face St. John Bosco on Fnday at a site to be determined. Jn otheu.rca Clf water polo action. E4iMa U , llewi.M lS: Down 8-6 at the half, the Charsers stormed hick to take a two--goat lead after thftt quarters and herd on for the victory at Golden West College. Brent Warde and Brian Stanton notched four goals apiece for Edison ( 17-10). Sophomore Todd McOuna. who scored twice and made a number of steaJs.. also pla}'ed a fine game for Edison. Mariu 1 t , Palm Sfrilil• I: Geoff K~ scored in each of the first three quaners and Bob Haefner tallied twice and played an all-around ~ game as the V1k1ngs advanced to face Lo,ola with the victory at Goldell \\est College. \fanna butlt an 8-2 lead by half- 11me and the reserves were able to ma1nta1n the margin an the second half Goahe ~ev1Jl Dillenbeck was credited wnh 11 saves. t. Jolua S.SCO t , F._W.. Valley I: The '1s111n& Barons were unable lo maintain a two-aoal balfume lead and fell to the Del Rey Lcag~ champion Braves. Bnan Fneden and Trey Best each srorid three umes for the Barons, who finished the season at 14-12. 0 Fnda} 's first round of 4-A compct1- uon finds Corona det Mar hos.uni Canyon at I 0 a.m. on the Newport Hamor campus. v. bile 3: l S starts are scheduled for ewpon Harbor at El Dorado and naverstt)' at Foothill. l"!"vine once again appears to be team to beat in volleybal~ 11 ST AN Gll~CH betterthat he was last yur, and that ._,..c., • 1 sheshouldrccchethoschonors WiththcstanoftheCIF&irls apin. vol~.,&ayoffsalhand.lterc'sa "Shcasa v~talcnttd .. quiet~ 1tarea tchools involvca.-MclCenziC.salG."''Sh< Ts moll rem.iii=' The lrviae V~ett ranked ed p&aytr in the nation and she comes No. I inCIF~AoaswcJlasthutatt. from1srcat vollcybellt.c\aiound. Lua~,,~_Vaqueroecaptured\he Her\l,tcrK1mwtsonthityeu•1 •te DiVllioa lctOWR.and• player · Oly,Anpteteamand htr'Othenister that WU "11dY mponsable W9$ Btv Elaft\a lUft All,.American et the Oden. Univers1&yoftbe Pacific." la 1917 OdCftwuvO..SCIF lrviaeman:hedthroualuhe..-, PlayerGrtbt Year. MVPoflbeSouth ICIUOft undefatcd 1n l-4 ma~and Coat .._..Md Hp~ An-Mckenzie fttls his team isradytbr AIMricu. HtrCOICll. Mlrt the Dlayoffl Mdtcnzie. fttls tNlt sM tt evtn ... Wt pl1 'Cd most of the teams•• .... the pla)'offsalrcady.and weobv1ous-- ly did prett) well,"hc said ... Howc"er we are not loolunapastanyont t¥:ta"'3C. lhcre arc about a balf~n outstandana teams.. 1nd they 111 arc improv101SOwtW1llhavetop&t) our ~t." CoronadclMari5thefOunbattd1n •be S-A pla)·om ~is ranked fifth in theM&~.ThcSea K.u1111fin1thcdatop the Sea VlCW l..eaautWJtha l 2-2 ~ W111i1G.tyOM__,,oadlit..-cl. itcmbesaid t1111Ccneadlt MS11a Y.'C*"I--· -----" aonaa &MpMyofti llUs ,..., n will br lilRBTBAllTO BEAT ••• =••MYbodY· we .. AUD11Wmet11mmkills,. •:z 1121udllllollua-tenicewMd~'"taldMobt. t r • ....._.. "Sbedoll tun fans." n.--=-rtplWative Thes~~ftnishtr &a.lllllS.. :•Newport in tbeSunlet Lapew Poua~n Hut.or. TheWlonllMdwitb a Valley. Tbc~~t ~ 12"" matt &bat wuFOCt mouab for ~ue only Ioli• tMCe, both umes 10 them to be rubd 1tVenth in CIF and Edison. while recionliftta 12-4mltt. 1 Oda in I.be state. Fountain Valley opened the playoffs Fou11enionretumftomlutyear's Wednetdayniptwithaaweepover ~ wtlich captuted the S.A title, Cerritos. . bUt Ill.I in the state cbampioDlhip Oneof the main l'alOftl for the p.meapimtlrvine.Amonathe~are Baron1'1uccet1buben~,play.of All-American sener Sien.na CwaJ Yvette Ybarra, a S-101en1oroutlide wbo ii I.be field ~neral for the Sa~1on. hitter. She is the team ?peajn and~ One of Curci I favorite taraeU lS provided the lcadenbip both pb~· frabman Miureen McLaren. The 6-call}' and ~tally. foot outside bitter is rapidly becom-YbuTa ~~in ~Us. .,.oneofthebestplayenintbe attack.sandd Thiltwo-tuneall- county. • l~plarer ~tbetam Jn tbe4-A Division1 Edison·~ . emot.1onally, acconliftl to Coech pran to be the county s best hope. Laune l.eno. · Tbe Cba,.erure the fourth seed in ;Leno feels that for the Batons to be the ~yo«&~ arecomina off' a succesiful they must pus well. undefeated Sumet Lea&ue campaign. ..If we~ well, then our power Tbe~opeoed Clf wi1h a bi~~ will have no proble~" &be victoryoverParamounton Wednes-said. Tbekeysareourpmanaud day. .. defcnseif~dothosewelhbescorina Overall f.disonbrou&btina 13-2 cbanceswlll comenaturally. ~ oG.-0 in the ~set) llnd eo.ch ··1 amvcry h<?Pe. fu~ about our teem. DaveMobsfeels~stea!ftbas•&ood Weareimprova.na~theachmaacb, shot at the cbampao~p. . and if we keep play1nahard. mar_be "~eareconsta.ntl¥1mprovt~and wecan play Edison in thefiaals. I~ we~ beain.1?1111 to peak, In the Small Schools Divisi~ said Mohs. Earfier1n the year, we Liberty Christian istheclassofthe l<>:tt t)_teclose matches now we are county. Liberty won the Academy winnu11the!ft. There are 10-to-12 I.ague with a 7-1 mark and finished pat teams an the play~ff''1 but no the year 11-4 overall. supcrteam,soeveryuuna1supfor . . . . grabs and I like our chances." This 1s the third straight year that Aimee Achenbach has been the Llbert_yChristian made it to the . --- Edison, Barons collect CIF wins 'The Suuet Lape recorded I ~ of vic1oriel on ~ ~ •illit or the ClF 4-A ~ Wfd~. with Editoa Ud Fountain Valley movi~ oe to Pllday'a leCODd round. Heft s .... ii MDI: s..... .............. Tbe ~led "1s.lllil1..-ue MVP Aimee Ada_.,. ralW tO a IS-0, I s.8, I S-Sd1Ci9'aa over tbf,Piraaes at home .. Ac91r~t down 13 kills and had I for Ed.ilOD. "seeded fourtla ia dll tounwne11L Also con- tributinl -Lellee .... with 10 kills .......... ~ Miville, wbo hid 21.-.. .......... di&s. ,._? tr • ..., .. Cent ..... Tbe Barons f.'t*'>d OK me Dons. I S.l, IS-3, I u tcnior middle bloc:br Amy Brand led the way with 11 killl. ..... =~--=Gib, .... •-::--coaunui ~liwl:. 8:v11 di".:J i?ww• • -ne . ._.... · e&lellladltbrlbe · Or-. ,£moire ConlnDce cbam-~wilhueasy ls.4, IS-9, lS-2 ~~bad I J kiJll and line blocb pd Dunie Doll camlrilNted five kills and four b1oc:b • Oolclea West im~ved IO 16-1 overall Md I().() in coaference •tcbel alftr1A•1 1, Or-. CIMI I: The Pinfa allowejl I 14-10 a.d IO diappear in &be leCDDd _...-.. ud h Pf'OVcid COltly iD the T..,:n' 9-1', 17-1~ 9-1~1~9, IS-2 Oi'llls Em- pire ~vklorf at OCC Jody Fee bad 20 tllll. IS diD Ind five aces, while Tiana Mymadaed 18 kin. for Coat. which dropped IO 4-S in c:oaterence play. · la 1 con. match: uaa.c.11111e,........ 1:S1n1or Krit RoberU tied a tchoOI record wi1h sh aolo blocks u the Anteaters 1>9.ered ~ the visitina Titana. I S-6, I S-41 I S.J l. sparkplua for the~ this year. playoffs. The past two seasons, L1~r- Last year sbewua first team all-ty wasthe second-place sch<><?I and at league sekCtion and second team all-bad to play the No. I seed, so its Cl F. appearances have been brief. .................... ._ ltdUon'• Ahnee Aclaenbach pata a ~e put Kendra can- non of Pa.ramoant d1IJ'inl c11a11en CU' plaJOft opener. Outside bitter Reiko Matsumoto, who hid 10 kills. served the final ll points of the, first pme. Yvette Ybarra also bad 10 kills and Paula Estes played I fine defensive match and served welJ for fountain Valley, now 13-4. Junior 1'.li Wood added fO kills for UCI, wbich improved to 17-IOover- all and .6-9 in the Bia West Con· faence. I I I · 1 Viola easy Winner ·of Cy Young in AL Prem 1'e Associated PTen NEW YORK -Frank Viola, the • Minnesota Twins left-hander who led the major leagues in victories in compiling a 24-7 record, was named winner of the 1988 American Lcaaue Cy Young Award on Wednesday. Viola received 27 ofl possible 28 first-place votes and 138 of a ~ible 140 ~ints fron:i tbe Baseball Writers' Association of Amcnca. Dcnrus &:kersley of the Oakland Athletics fOt the other first-place vote and was second with .S2 pomts. Mark Oubicza of the Kansas City Royals was third with 26 pointsJ.. Dave Stewart of Oakland had 16, Bruce Hurst of the DOSton Red Sox had 12 and teammate Roger Ocmcns, Cy Young winner in 1986 and 1987, had eiahL .. r didn't kl) ow what to exP.CC.t." Viola said from his Orlando, Aa .• home. "I didn t want to worry about it. You don't want to get your ho~s too high so that they get shot down." Viola, 15-2 at the break. was the winning pitcher for the Amcncan League in the All-Star Game. Quote of the day Dallas Gren, Yankees Manager. on bis relationship with Owner Geo~ Steinbrenner: "I rcaJly believe in some disciplines that are really necessary to bring a team together. I -had a slopn in Philadelphia, ·we, not I' and I think tbafs the way it should be done. I think the understanding George and I have is that we're men and we're aoin~ to talk together as men. We ~izc there s going to be difficult times along the lane ... Lakere capture home opener Byrom Scott scored 33 points and m- James Werdly added 26 as the defending NBA champion Los Angeles Lakers open- ed their home schedule with a 12.8-110 - victory Wednesday ni&ht over the Denver Nuaeu, Mq1c , ...... and free agent newcomer OrlaMt W~e each sco~ 18 points. Johnson added 19 assisu as Los Anaeles improved its record to 3-1 ... In other NBA pmes, Lany Nuce scored 27 points and Oevelaod UJCd a strona defensive eff'on to build a 1 S- point halftime and win its home opener, 108-91, over the Qj~n. The Cavaliers' 3-0 start is their best sinc.e they won four sttai&ht to start the 1978-79 season. They also went 8-0 durina the pretca.son ... Kea1 Walter and GeraW w..-each had six points in a 14-4 tbird- quarter SU"IC as New York beat Washington, 117-.110, in Landover. Md .... MldaMI Jenla scored .S2 points, includina 19 in the fourth period, and Chicago ended a 12-pme Boston Garden losina streak with a 110-104 win ... hlall 'ftlmu and o..111 ..._..scored four points each in overtime as Detroit stayed unbeaten after four pmes with a .101-9.S victory onr visitina Atlanta ... Terry C.••~·scored 31 points and RktJ Pieree added 23 as MJWaukec beat Philadelphia. 114-103, towin its replar-season openerat the Bradley Center ... In San Antonio, rookie Wlllle AIMk,.... ~ 29 points and led a third-quarter SUl'JC as the fl:~';°uted Miami, 117-93 ... In Salt Lalce City, Karl ICOJ'ed 3S points and J ... St.cktoa added 23 poi.nu and 14 assists as Utah downed Sacramfnto, IOS-81 ... In Phoenil, FMle Jeb ... scored 37 points as the Suns beat Dallas, 111·103 ... In Seattle. c.rtt ..... ICOred I 0 of his 24 points in the fo urth quarter and spuked Golden State to a 113-108 victory over the SupeiSonics. IN THE BLEACHERS LOOSY GAME, WAOC. YOU ~E. FlAL PATHETIC, MBE.. E.L 5TINKO ... ANY COMMENT? later. in a delicate operation, surgeons were able to remove the microphone, and Floyd eventually regained the ose of his vocal chords. Sabrea win despite jut 12 shots Pierre Tvaeoa scored two goals ~ Wednesday night a~ the Buffalo Sabres . , made the most of a franchise-low 12 shots on 1oal to beat visiting Calgary, 3-2. in the NHL The Sabres' previous team low for shots in a game was 14, set in their first NHL game in 1970 ... Elsewhere in the NHL. Ulf Da~en had a goal and two assists IS the New York Rangers snapped a three-pmc losinJ streak with a 5-3 victory over Philadelphia at Madison Square Garden ... Gleu AJNlenoa scored on a 2-on-l breakaway with 14 seconds to remainina in overtime to gjve Edmonton a 3-2 victory over New Jersey in East Rutherford ... Petr Klima, playina only his second pme after returnina from the manor leaaues. broke a 3-3 tie with 6:S9 muining as visitina Detroit rallied to beat Minnesota. 6-3 ... In Chicaao, Wape Pretle)' scored his fint two goals of the season and Dais Savini had two soals and two assists as the Black.hawks rallied from two goals down to salvage a 6-6 tic with MontrcaJ ... In Vancouver, goalies Peaer SWortiewtcl of Hanford and Steve Wedi of the Canucks came up with solid perfonnances to backstqp their teams to a 1-1 tic. Sidork.icwicz was the busier netmmder, stopping 30 shots, including five in the overtime ~riod, while Weeks, who is first in the NHL in save percentage, blocked 26 shots. Televlalon.._radio TllL•vmott S p.m. -COLUG• ~ALL: Gremblne •I South C.rollne Sta... ESPN. 7~ P.m. -HOCKSY: HWtford •• Klnos. Prime Tldtel. I p.m. -HOllH aAC:mG: H04IVWOOd Park reotavs, Channel 56 (Prlme Tlctlet, 10-.30 o.m.>. 9 p.m. -AUTO llACIHG: NASCAR Phoenix )00 (lepe), ESPN. 9 p,m. -BOXING: USA Mldnloht -GOLi': Flr•l-round P .. V In men•, tournament at Pebble BMdl Uaoe>, ESPN. RADIO 7~ P.m. -HOCKaY: H.nford •• Klnos. KLAC (570). f'llUDAY T•L•VISIOM 1 p.m. -GOLf: Second·round ptev In men's tourn.menl •I ~ a.ct\, ESPN. Yachts reach halfway point to Cabo Cheetah maintains lead as Ugh t winds continue to slow fleet • • j BJ ALMON IA>CLUEY ......... - Leed ytdlu in Lot An,ela Yacht j Oelb't 176-mUe Cabo Sen Lucas via ........ -r-eG111 ...... WMdn1C11._.,_ ; Wfway mUt Wednaday • Jiabt • -~ wioda OOMiaued to slow the ~t 6iet aftlr four dlijl GI 11iJi111. . TM,_., .. CIMINll, ~ pc9ed " Di* 'tnzl;ll' g I ud PMI ......,,.._._.Yidit0.111111 ............................ • ill dll Iii• n'rall 08llwN ll* : (IQ&)-•• ..... J4lllilll • d•ID!OllJ ........ , ..... " ' RIV ALRYHAS FEATURED CLASSICS •.•• From Bl "We were JOina to ruri a couple of plays to see if we could score and then kick a field goal," Tucker said. "I didn't want to end up kicking a field g:1~ aive them a chance to come ••1 remember I looked at the clock and it was a minute, thirty. And as I'm talkina to my assistant about a play, alJ ofa sudden 1 hear people yelling. 'Hey, coach, you're going to run out of time.' We started screaming for a timeout. I talked to several people who were swing straiabt at the clock, and tbev said the minute just came off there. We kicked the field goal with five or 10 seconds. left. We lost the minute, but they lost the opportuni- ~" ' In 1968, Shackleford got what he called his biagest win at the time, one w.hich still ranks hi&h. Golden West quarterback John f naJehan ran for one touchdown and threw for a series record four more, including 68-and 7S-yard strikes to future Stanford and New England Patriots standout Randy Vataha, who still holds the series record with 204 yards receiving in tbatgamc. While Golden West ran off the most dominating session of the series by goina 6-1-1 from 1979 to 1986, w'hich included four wins by a l 2S-6 margin, most of the pmes have been close ones whfoh could have gone either way. The many )tCat games and per- formances include: •OCC's Mike Tamiyasu scored a series record four touchdowns as OCC rallied from a 14-7 deficit for a 30-20 win in 1969. Tucker re- members present Fountain Valley Higb assistant Oeorae Bera'• outstand!Jt& pme at linebacker. •OWCs freshman quanetbKk Bill Cornelius established a series record of 34 7 yards pessina, includin& 20-and JS-yard strikes to Mike Shaughnessy, as the Rustlers rallied from a 14--0 deficit with 4:SO to play for a 21-21 tie in 1971. •In 1973, g~rterback Recd John- son guided OCC to a 27-0 second guarter lead, but owe quarterbllck Dan Accomando, With the aid of reccivcrs,Lany Hirt and Rick Hoo- ver, led the Rustlers to a stunning 28-27 win as Bob Ferraro ran 2 yards for the winning score with I :08 rcmai~if\S. •OCC's Dave White threw for 302 yards as a furious rally failed in a 2>20 defeat in 1974 and then fired touchdoWlls of67, 46 and .S2 yards in a 31-14 domination durina the Pirates' national championship season of I 97S. The '74 pme in- cluded brothers Tony Accomando of OCC and Don Accomando of OWC and Golden West's Paul Fiskness running for I .SO yards and two touchdowns. •In 1977, OCC quartcrt.ck Gary Guisness came off the bench to throw for a 147 yards in a 13-7 victory as a 39-yard_ro. P8S$ from Golden West guatterbeck Bill Holst to Mike ~ Lara on the final play of the game was nullified by a _p;_n_a)ty. •In 1978, OCC quanerback Dave Jcranko, subbing for an injured st.aiter1 rallied the Pirates from a 24-.,.. secono quaner deficit with three TD passes and two TD runs. Dan Dud: dridae ran for I 68 yards. • fn a muddy 1981 game, what Tucker calls a controvcnial spot -.. we tot robbed" -OD fourt.b-ud- incbes at 'tbe OQlden West 39 with 2:21 left and a 14-11 lead cost the Pirates. The Rustlers drove for the winnins score, a short run by Tim Lona with 1:3S rcmaininaafter a Iona pass Kt up the score. •Golden West's Rieb Stahlbeber rushed for series record 202 yards in the mos~ lopsided score in series history, a 44-0 win in the first Thanksgjvina Day showdown in 1982: e 1983, 0CC rallied from I 13-0 deficit Bill Brown's 2-vard run with 4:08 left made it 23-23 and Mike Greene kicked the pl!le-winnina ex Ira point. owe had a SO-yard field goal attempt partjally blocked at the final gun. OCC's Duane Stan shares a series reco~ with nine catches in that game. •In l 98S, owe settled for I 7-7 tie after missinaa 2S-yard field goal with eight seconds left. •In 1986, owe quartctbeck Eric Lawton·ran for two touc:bdownl. and the Rustlen held off an OCC rally after the Pirates scored late and recovmd an -Onside kick in the final 1:31. •In 1987 owe quarterb9ck Bill Marler bit 70 pcn:ent of his pl.SICS for 230 yards and two toocbdo'Mls, includinaa 64-yarderto Willie Taylor for a 2~21 lead with 8:41 left. but 0CC rqa_ined the lead with I 38- yarder from. Keith Jarrett to Junior Taploa with 4:07 left and held off' the Rustlers. Tailblck Bart Recktenwald ran for 93 yards and tied a series record with nine receptions. •Jn 1988, it's anybody's guess. UCI1 BIG WEST BASKETBALL .•• Pro.B this order. UNLV. Utah St.ate, UC from a small college, one from a many people can honestly say that? Santa Barbara, New Mexico State, junior college and one from a hi&h Lona. Beach State, Fresno State, San school. Jose State, Cal State Fullerton and Doesn't seem as ifhigh school and Pacific. Notice that I left us out. JCcoacheshavemuch of a chance, I need more time to evaluate our does it? Passina over JC coaches team. Picking UNLV was easy. The rcaJly mystifies me, as so manuood other spots could be rcaJly tou&h and coaches have comefrom tbeJC there could be a great deal of juggling ranks)..includingJerry Tarkanian, here. Luaeulson1 Denny Crum, Bobby Dye D and Jim Killingsworth. We ate havin&.our annual clinic at D the Bren Center Saturday. The clinic Butch Van Breda KolfT, fonner is for the Ora nae County coaches, Lakers head coach, is still aoina then we play the Czechoslovakian strong at 64 and Is now the bead coach National Team at 7:30 p.m. The at Hofstra. Gary Colson, who was clinic is free and start11t8:30a.m. fired at New Mexicoafterwinnin124 The speakcrure Don Haskins of games last season, is now an assistant Tcus.-EI Paso, Jim HarrickofUCLA. at Cal. Jim Brandenbu~ from San Dieao The athletic director wh~is- State and myself. We arc also living missed Colson was fired hi self out frecticketsforourpme that night aboutamonth later. ltcou n't have to the coaches thatauend the clinic. happened toa nicersuy! Tom Danley athleticdirectorand basketball coach at K.atella Hi&h runs lam the I I th oldest of the Di vision thccliniceachyearand it is always I bead coaches. Tbeoldest is0re1aon well attended. It it the best ofits kind State's Ralph Miller, who at aae 69, is in the Ora nae County area. retirin& at the end of this season. This a is my 3Jrd year in C01China and I am There were 40 Division 1 coach in& still as enthused as I WIS in the cbanaes made prior to the season out beginnina. Maybe a little wi1er, of a total of about 2801ebools. That thouJh. meansthcre wua chaftlC aubout Some year, maybe I will see the fall one in every .even ecbools. season in New £naland and tee what I Who,etsthenewjo&s?Fourtecn havemissedallthete~rs.Seriously, hiredllliawnsfrontothertchools. I wouldnottndewhatldoforany nine named 1 tad coech from other job in the world. another Oivilion hcbool, nine Justtobavethealarm rinain u.e promoeect tbedtpertintcoech 'schief momina, eet up and uy, ••1 am aoina "'"'"'-lix 1ppoin1ed a held coach to work arid I k>ve my job!" How .. add additional inareclienu to thelic prodUCU. Cod liver oil is auppoecd to be aood for the bair, but not too aood for ihe human smell. None ofthele teebniquaare to be tried by an~ u.nJela you are a g-;g;,u~co: .._.,_= ~s: ... viaim topnClicllllil ...,...., .. fUturemwriapra•mloill...,_ -r=._....,._.. ......... .., --~·"·"· src::::r.:Jal. Hope you can make i1 out to the Bren for ourpme Saturday ni&hL Also we have started our basketball luncbeOnsat the Irvine Hilton on Mondays at noon, so I hope to see.you It thote. IS well, League teDJJis titles to CdJI Corona dcl Mar ~ the top honors Wednctday aftemoon at the airts ~.,View LellUC individual tennis tournament at Meta Verde Country Oub. To~teed Keri Phebus dominated her SJnala final match mpimt Uni· venity ftoahman Jannette Fylpu, who wu teedecl third, 6-0, 6-0. In the doubles final, wbich featured a pair of CdM ~~ Krilte;bu• and Robin Bain ted Strauss and Micbdle Mcfarland. 7-, 6-2. All finalists advance to the CIF indivNSual &oUmament which ls due to bclin Nov. 19. wamorsname O'Donogflue baseball coach . Pre-season outlook MUiler-Stach returns to lead Rustlers By JON FERGUSON °' ... ....,,... ..... Golden West CollCF ba sketball coach Jim Greenfield·sa ys this year's squad doesn't have a lot of anything. but -he's hopina a liulc of everything will carry his team a Iona way. The Rustlers' two key players return and Greenfield feels good about a rccruitina class which should make the squad deeper than last year's which finished sixth in the South Coast Confcmecc at 5-9 and 15-16 overall, falling to LA Harbor in the first round of the regionals. It will be Golden West's first season in the seven-team Orange Empire Conference,joining five county rivals and Riverside, the state's pre-season No. l. , Greenfield says the Rustlers .. ha ve cnou&h talent to be in every game." woula look at a finish in the top three as "real aood." but need to find out how the good talent will develop confidence and clu1ch performance. Orange Empire, the Pirates are "much beuer·· at point auard, sport strong shoot Ina, _9!11clt defenders and arc deeper. OCC"s biaest shon - commg is hei&ht with just four players over 6-3, and G1lhs will hkely start three guards. Replacing Miles as the team's chief offensive weapon should be Darcck Crane ( 13. I points, 53 percent shoot- ing). Gill is says he has no doubt Crane is~ Division I caliber player, who has gained matunty, plays harder all the time and should average 20 points. laMont Speed (5.4 points) mo ves from sta rting point guard a year aao to small forward for his offen sive re- bounding ability, while Derck John- son (5.8 points), wbo started much of the year before hming a shootmg sl ump. also returns. Gillis has high hopes that freshmen Marland Love. a . four-year varsity player at Westminster H11th. can step In and play lhe point, wnich was a problem spot a year ago. He said Love "is a great defender" and "1s going to be a really good playe r." 1fhe accepts and adapts to his role at. the point. If he does, Johnson would likely come ofl'the bench. lf he can't, Speed could return to that spot. Newcomers Pa~I Kos. who is being groomed for point guard nex t season. and Scott DeStefano could provide depth as off guards. Freshmen Chip Hanlon ( 14.2 points, 8.2 rebounds at Edison) and Alan Sch lines ( 16 points. I 0 rebounds at Foothill in 1987) look to start up front, with freshme n T)ler Koon and Charles Stevens ( 14 points. 9 re-~unds at El Dorado) battling for ume. Gillis said his physical group of front-hne players will have 10 make up for a lack of Jum ping ab1 ht) with toughness and good rebounding fun- damentals. Rctuminf starters include leading scorer smal forward Markus Muller- Stach, a sophomore forward who averaged 18.0 poinlf per game by shooting 55 percent from lhc Ooor and 89 percent from the line, and point guard Elbert Davis. who aver- aged 15.4 points and 6.3 assists. ~ "People said Markus was too slow. too this and too that, but he played in a league with a lot of quickness and etayed very well," Greenfield said. 'This year, the key is can he adjust to teams that arc going to (key on) him. He compensates for not being super quick by working hard away from the ball." Football players Gan Calhoun. a superior 6-foot-2. 225-pound athlete, and Mark Craig. 6-foot-6. 203. ma) provide rebounding and depth 1n January. And Davis: "He takes the ball and goes strong. His j udgement and passing arc getting better. He's one of the better point guards around as far as doing what we want him to do." Sophomore forward Carl Cham- P.1on, red-sh irt freshmen Steve Moser (knee, '84 Ocean View grad) and AJcxis Kreps and freshman Dan Aoyd will battle for the remaining front-line spots. Sophomore forward Dan Westm oreland (8.3 points, 5. I rebounds. 56 percent shooting) Wlll return to add depth 1f the football ti&ht end doesn't head to a four-)ear scnool for spnng dnlls. Sophomore Doug Rice (6.5 points) and freshman Dave Yamate of Manna should fill the off-guard spot. Other ke y freshman arc 6-7 Kevtn Anderson and 6-4 J.J. Jenkins. Rice and Muller-Stach combined to hit 54 percent of their three-point shots a year ago. * Rntw ,..._Heme (Hltill S<Mel) HI. Wt. Yr. F Ktvln Andtrson (Ftn V•l l 6-7 174 Fr F Can Cllame>lon (Hunt !Meehl 6-S "O So C:. Eltlerl Davli ISantlallOI 6· I lllO So F Dan Flovd IMarlnel 6·1 nt Fr F J.J .ankln1 (Lo& Aml11<>il 6-4 117 Fr G Tarlf Koutrac:h ISvrlel S·ll llO Fr F Altxlt Krtn IVlrvlnlal 6·6 11M Fr F Sin• MoS« <Ocean vi.wl 6·S 196 Fr F Markus Muller-Slac:h (CdMI 6-5 205 So G 0oue ltlct IOcttn View) 6·? 167 So G OIYt Walker IWtstmlMttrl S·ll llO Fr F Dan Wt1tm0f'tland (Loufllene) 6-3 m So F Mike Willa.ms CKtnnedV) 6-S 169 Fr G Dave Yamalt (Marine) 6·3 176 Fr Head Coacfl Jim GrMftflelcl. H ltslant COKfl Brent Felr ttll-19 KMdule Fri., Nov II-Alan Hancoctt lllOmtl 7 JO s.1 .. No¥. l~oumont (at C•Wtsl ), 6«1 Wed .. No¥ 16-at Ee&t Loi Allllflft, 7.30 Sat., No¥. 19-Atumnf (home), 7.JO woes., Nov 23-S.n Dlt90 Mfta (tlomt), 7 30 Fri., Nov 25-f'llier (llOmt), 7 JO Wed.·S.t., Nov 30-Dec: 3-t Ant~ Vati.v T1>1.1rnamtnt, TllA Wed.·Sal., Dec: 1· 10-et GOlcltn West TOl6'*'*11, TBA '> Tllu.·Sat .. DK IS· 17-1 CotlHt of Stcluolu T~l.T8A Wtd.·Frl., Dec:. 21·30-el Collt9t of Dfttrl T~t,T8A W.O., Jan ....... , 1tlverildt0 , 7.JO S.t., Jan. 7--0r•llff Con t Co1119t• 11\ofN), 1:30 Sal., Jan. lot-el Saddltbeck •, 7 30 Wtd .. .Hin. lt-ltenctto S.nt1e90• lllOmt>. 7 30 Set., Jan. ?I-et Fulllrton•, 7:30 Wed .. J•n. 2!-•I Cve>rtU •• 130 Sat., Jan. n--1t1.er11df• (llOmtl. 7.lO Wtd., FtCI. 1-t OranM Coal! C011e9f•. 1 30 Wtd., Fa~~· lllOmtl, 7.lO Sal .. FtCI. 11-1 lllenc:llO Sentlaoo•. 7.JO Wtd., FtCI. ls.-Fultfton• lllomtl, 7.30 Sal., FtCI, 1...-<Ylll'tH• lhomt), 7:30 Sat., Fte> ?S. Wtd , MaT I, Sat., Mar 4-4tetlonels, TIA Tilu.·S.t.. Maf. t-ll-St•tt Chame>lonlhlPS al s.n .. Qera, TBA 0dlneltft Oranet Emciort Cont.rtnet tamft Crane leads y.oathful _o.cc aqaa.d Alf.State selection Dave Miles, the ICCond leectint acom and tap re- bounder in tbt 0raaet Empire Con• fcrm«. ii .,.ac but 9!_aftee Coast Colles ~I coech Tandy G1lhs likes 1'ilT;u:t9 unit whidl ~ns thrtt tet•mi~ auaids Ind a ft-eshman arouP With strona po1t11 tial. After ftnilbint 18-1 ~ 1n ·aa. 1nrlud· ins S-S ind • &ic for thu~ in 1be • * Rostw P"tL Nemt !Hi.ii SCllNll Ht. WI. Yr. G BreO Canlrtll (Tustin) 6· I llO Fr G DarKk Crene tComoton) 6·3 llO So G Scott D.Stel1no (EOllonl 6·3 llO Fr F Chip Henion (Eoisonl 6·S ?OS Fr F Tim M11kt (Fountain Vellev) 6·l 1'S Fr G Dtrfl< Jollnson IFoothitt) 6-3 110 So C:. C0tt11 Ktllv (Edison) S· ll 160 Fr C r.i.r Koon (Ne.,.POrt HerCIOfl 6·6 19S Fr G P•IJI Kos (Cost• Mtsel S· I l 150 Fr G Marlend Lo•t (WHtmtnsttrl 6·2 17S Fr G ?1.-1 McCov ICome>tonl 6·2 160 Fr C Alen Sdllints (Footn1111 6·6 210 Fr G L•Mont Sl>ffCI !Come>ton) 6·J 170 So F Charles Sttvtni !Et Doraoo1 6-S 100 Fr Htad coach Tanov Gillos US•S••"' COKnts Pett Toomev end Htrb Llv!M!V 1911·" Wledu4e Fri. Nov 1 i--.1 Southwtsttrn. 7 30 Fn, Nov lt-at Mt San Antonio COlle9t. 7.30 Mon ·We<I Nov 21·D-at Mt San JK •nto TBA Sat. Nov it-San D~ MtUt 1nome 7 lO Tttv-s.~. JDec-t-)-Mflts Eeton Tournn (l!Omtl. TBA Tn1.1 ·Set Dec 1·10-e t S.." Jost Tour namtnt TBA Mon ·Wt4, Dtc 19·21-e l L A V•t ey Tournamtnt TBA Mon ·Wtd OK 26·7'-et ~n 0•'90 Mt~• Tournemtnt TBA Tut1., J1n 3-f'1Sh1on Inst o1 NY 1nome1 7 JO Sat Jan 7-11 G~ West• 1 JO Wtd. Jan l1-S.ddleback•ft1omel 7 30 S.1 . .Jan 14-a t Rancno S.nt1e90•. I 30 Wtd.. J1n 18-at F11lterton•. 7 JO Wed . Jan 21-<vPrtn'lflOmt), 1 JO Set., Jan. 2S-•I Rivenfde•. 130 WtO . Feb I-GOiden Wt\t•(llOIMI, 7 30 s.1. Fl!b f-al S.ddtet>eck·. n o Wed . Feb 1---RencllO S."thl11<>0 lh0mel 130 S.1, Feb 11-Fulltrton•ll!Omel. 1.30 Set .. Ftt> IS-al Cv0teu•. 7 JO Wl!d , Fto lt-Rlvtrside• ltlomt l. 7 JO Set , Feb. 25. Wt4.. Mllr I S.t . Mir f-Rei!>onels,TBA Thu. ·S.t . Mir 9· 11-Statt Chamolonslltos at Sant• Ciera TBA •cfenotn Oran~ Eme>ort Confertnet vame Stacee Johnaon returna to play In Hunthafton Beach. GWCwomen reload for success Ancr losing the nucleus of a group -four to four-)car schools and four freshmen who did not return - whic.h stood in the state's No. I position for most of the season. have dont what assjstant coach Dave Strick.tin calls reloadini. Over the last two seasons, the Golden West College women's basketball team won two confe"nce titles by going 27-1. made two state semifinal appeitranCC$. went 66-.S overall and won 27 stra1aht pmes during one stretch. Their press-and, run style team went 32-3 and aver· aatd 91. 7 points last season. Head coach Dick Stricklin likes the potential as the le.am makes the sw11ch from the South Coast Con- fettntt"te-thc Orantt Empt1t, ~ be c.1 tcs the other newcomer FuUenon at the team to beat Stnckhn 1s hoptna returners. ~nter Lon Totosz (9.3 potnts, .S 6 rebounds. Sl perttnt shooun&> and 1uard SttJ>: l\anie Swanson (9~3 points. J 0 rt· bo&andl. 56 ~nt lhoouoi>-bOtf\ IC(Oftd all-ronfcrcncc selections 11 rcwn-a. can offer '°me 'tabehty wtute a cait of taltn1td ne .. 'tOmtn fit '"· Sophomore Deanna Cox's de-velopment as starting point guard could be a key. There are s1" strong newcomers: •Dec Dec St1gar. an All-Sun set Lcaaue selection from Marina 1s an outstandina three-point shooter. who is imptovtng at defense an(! could provide help at the point later. · •Donna Gondri ngcr. a first-tea m all-Clf player from la Quinta. who will push. .Totosz for the stan ini center spot. •Gaudette Jackso{I. a fi rst-team North Bay selection from Logan High which ~nt 30-1 and lost to Mom- inp1de in the state semifinals. as a good scorer. rebounder and defender who will start at power forward. •JC.jm Wilson, a high school All- American in Oenver averaged 23 point.s a pmc as a freshman at Southern Cali fornia College in earn-ing NAIA . All-D1s.tnct Bl honors three years ago before raising a family. 1s a 5-1 0 small forward Stncldin hopes can eventually take over at point guard beca use of cxpcncncc. •Staeee John son. an All-North Yosemite League select-ion as a senior who helped Edison to the· state championship as a Junior, and Mickey Hamilton. two years re- moved from Thou~nd Oaks High. could figure more prominently later in rebounding roles. * R9st•r P"& NMlt (Hi.ii S<llMI) Ht. Yr. G DHnllt Co• (Kelfllal S·S So. F Oonnt Gondril!Oe< Il a 0111n1 .. 1 6·? Fr C MkhtlltHam111on 11 .oooo.1u1 6·1 Fr F Cleudtllt Ja<:kM>tl IL011anl S-10 Fr F AlliM>n Jtftkins 1Garoen Grovtl S-10 So F St.a. JoMM>tl tFA1M ~) S-9 Fr G P.u!tllt Nl(flols ICOloraool S-9 Fr F Shanon Pavnt IAlemtclel S· 10 Fr G Off 0.. St!Hr IMarinal S-7 Fr G Sttona!M Swamon tCDsta Mfl•l S-9 So c LOf'I Totou tMlsslOfl v;.io1 6'1 So G Kim Wfhon ICOlor.001 S-10 So Ht ao c~ Doek Str><•M. us,siant coach Dot Strlc:klln 1"8-19 schedUtt Fri., Nov ll-at San 0490 CC. HIO WtO -Sat , Nov 16-19-11 Fullef"ton Tour· namtnt, TBA Tut , Nov n--<omPton ll'M>mel. 1 JO Motl, Nov ?t-Mt San AnlOtllo lt>omtl. 7.JO Tnu ·S.t , Dec 1-3-at ~s. TBA Fri , DK ,_., MoorN rl<. -1·00 Tut , DK. IJ--et Gleftdllle, 7.30 Tllu ·S.I. O.C. IS-17-1 CUtila Toornement TBA Wtd, Dec ?l-11 Gr~smont, 6-00 Wtel ·Fri., OK. 21·»-•t Oe\tft Tournemtnl, TBA Wtel , Jen. 4-Rlveoldf• (llOmtl, 7.30 Fri • Jan 6-et Oranot Con t•, 7:l0 Fri, Jen ll-S.ddleback• (llOmeJ, 1 30 Wed . Jan 11---at RanchO Santle90•. 130 , Fri. Jan ?O-Fulltrton' l~I. 7 JO WtO . J•n. U--CvPf'tU' (/lofM). 7:JO Fri., Jan 27-et River11c1t•. 7.30 Wiid . Ftb 1--0ranOt Coffeoe• lr-omtl 7 JO WtO , Feb I-a I Sedclltt>ack •. 7 :JO Frt . Feb IC>-flancflo S.nt1"°• ltlomtl, I JO WtCI Feb IS-e t Fullerton•, 7:l0 Fri Ft b 17-at Cve>reu•. I JO Tut ·Wed.. Feb 21·2?; Fri ·Set Feb 24·lS-11!19tOMI'-TBA Thu ·Set. Mar 2·-Sl•tt CNlmPOOlll,,.P\ ., LA Vetltv, TBA 'cknotn Ora1111t EmP•rt Cont.rtnct ll6ITlts Tdo of strong returners key Coast women New Orange Coast College women ·s basketball coach Larelle Hendon welco mes three players back from the Pirates· I 98'7-88 squad which went 16-15. fi nished second in the Orange Empire Conference and bowed out an the first round of the Southern Cali- fornia Regionals last season. And the three returners figure to make the Pirates a con- tender against Orange Empire n e~c omers Golden West and Rencloa Fullerton Hen- don said she thinks the team has the quickness to pressure full court and pick up the offensi ve pace compared to past seasons. Whale starting point guard Nancy Lux 1s gone. the Pirates return two of the conference's premier front-line players in shooting forward Gilly Powell (22.9 points. 9.3 rebounds. 52 percent shooting) and post player Kim Ellerman ( 14.8 points. 8.0 rebounds). and point guard Nina Hanson (6.1 points. 3.0 assists). Suzanne Bakos. formerly Suzanne Cowley (5.0 points. 4.1 re.bounds as OCC"s starting center in 1986-87). returns to the double low post. thrtt- wi ng offense, but will be pushed by freshman Mela)ne Green (12 points. I 0 rebounds. .\II-Sun set League at Fountain Valle)). * Roiter ~9'. Heme {Hittt ScMtl) Nt. 'rr. G Danntttt ArnoO.t l~rtnel S·3 Fr c Sur•M• Ballos CCOll• ~I S·ll So F Shtrrv Cr••IOrd I Tustin) 6·0 Fr F Kim E•trmen (Ma•tf Dti) 5·10 So F ~-Grttn (Fountain V ...... ) S• IO Fr G Nine Hen"1\ (WoodbfodOa> S-1 So G Pally Ltutt (L• Qu.ntlf) 5·1 Fr G CerOI Lone ICo•I• Mewl S-7 Fr F Gllv Powtll 1Woodbrld9el S-11 SO F Lia lltllltn!IOuit (Crnctntl Val.) 5·10 Fr G Temare Tllomu (AIH U) 5·l0 Fr C lreN Wr19111 (Ma<IN ) 6·1 Fr HMd coed\ Lart41t HtndOll, •n••tent coed\ Denise Brown tt•A STAlllllllH Wfttlnl C 2 I ta ftlldlk ~ w L. ftd. G• Portland 2 0 1.000 L.alren l 1 .7SO SHllle l 1 750 Golden Sl•lt 2 '1 .667 • "" P~lx 1 2 .333 1112 ca.er. 1 l .2SO 2'- S.Cr•menlo 0 3 .000 2'1'J MidWest OM.- San Antonio 2 1 ... 1 0•"-s 2 2 .soo VJ Uteh 1 1 .soo ,,, Denver 1 2 .3J3 1 Houston 1 2 .J33 I Ml•ml 0 3 .000 2 Eesttrft C.....we AIMk ~ Pffw Jenev 2 1 .667 New Vork 2 2 .soo '"l Ptlil•delohla 2 2 soo • 1 Boston 1 -2 .333 I Cha.rlollt I, 2 .333 I W.sb 11111on 0 l 000 2 . c:.tr.. DMlleR Detroit 4 0 1.000 Cleveland J 0 1.000 Allan I• 3 1 7SO 1 M1lwaukff 2 1 .667 1 J Chiclt90 2 2 .soo 2 Indiana 0 J .000 3 ) -~· lceNI I.Men 121. Denver no Cleveland IOI, a..ri t1 ChlallO I 10, Bollon ICM New V0tk 117, Wethlnelon 110 __... Detroit 101, Allenla fS (Oil MHweukft 11•, ~11 103 s.,, Anlonlo 117, Mi.ml 9J Uttn 10S, Sacr•mtnto II '""°tnl x 111, OallH 103 (.olden Stele Ill, Sffllle lOI T .... aS- Utah et Houston. S:JO P.rn Portland •t Denver, 6.30 Pm f""9Y'I ~ Sff 111• • 1 L.Mten. 7 .30 P m Atlanta at PtllladetllNa. ~ Pm Hou~ton at Miami, .,.JO P.m Ntw Y0tk e t Indiana, •'30 Pm Detroit a t eo.ron, S P.m CllarlOtlt et 'Waslllneton. S Pm New Jt n t v •I Chkffo, S!JO P m San AntonlO at o.a.1, S-.JO P.m GOldtn Stett e t Ptlotnlx, 7.JO Pm Liken 129, NUWl'tS 110 OENVIElt ( 110) -W C-l ·6 M 7 Envti"1 l·n I· I 17, Scl\aVH 10-17 •·6 2• Adltmt 7· IS 2·2 II, Lev..-10-19 l-• n Ravnunen l·l 0.-0 ?, Devl1 •· 12 1-2 9. Turne< 2-• 0-0 '· L-?·S 0-0 •· HllOflts 1-1 H 2, E119ebtad 0-l H 0 Tote/I. •-IOI 12· 17 110 UtClltS ( 111) -Grftft 7-ll ?-2 16 Wortl'IV 11·1' •·S :M, Abdul·.>aooet )·4 \)-0 6 .JoMMNI 7· 12 •·6 II, Scott 1S-tl l-3 ll, TPlomc>son ?·1 S-6 9, M.. c-0-2 0-0 o. WOolrlOM 6·12 6-7 II, CamPbtlt 0-1 0-0 0, McN-t 0-1 C>-0 0, Rlve<s 0-1 0-0 0, Lamp I· I 0-0 ?. Totat1 S2·16 2•·29 121. Sc.a" Ouan.n Denver ?6 ll 21 lt-110 Laliltrs 37 21 l l 32-121 Tl\(M·POlnt 90e11-AO•m• 2 FotJltcl I WATElt ftOLO """ MMtll CJf" l ·A ~UYOl"f"S f f"nt lttllfld) Ctttll MHa t, Wt1 .. llt I Wfttlallt ) I 2 2 ..... Cost' Mfte 3 I 3 2-f 11¥1111a-.e SGOf'lrtg 8rtMtr 2 ll•rl>W 2. Dlnenrle ), WilldN.frsl I Goe··· '8Yft Janno II COii• Mina tcorlno l<rt\111~.imP I ltunl! •• Dtlahunt • Goellt sevts T •YIO( •• $t. """ e..c. .L "~ Y..llllY • FcUMr lllVilleV I S I 1-t St J6M ~ I ) ? 3-f Fovnt•ln Vallev scor•no Fr..oen 3 Bfll > Grent I, Sltvtm I voeht sevn MalH I 11 St Jonn 8oS<O SCON1g Vlkelobo& J, Jofln· t tont I Gascon 2 Dom "'" 2 Avale I Goelit UIVfl ~ 1 IEcheft 14, lttwtaftd IJ Rowianc:t l S I 4-IJ E.41~ ' • 2 s 3-14 Rowiano K«lllll Pow"1 9, Mlnt1 2 WOCIOe'\ I Ltt I C.0."t Ut•U O'Dte 2 Ed>50n K«ltlll Wero. • Stenton 4, NICflOll 7 Mc:Caln 2. McCiunv 2 Goellt .... " llloMv 7 MatN I 2. "*" Stir"-' ~"' SI>'~ 0 , 2 ,_. ,.,..., ,,. •• 2 ?-12 Palm *•llllS KOl'll>O LfOl)tr J lt~n I RaOOv< I ~9 IV 1 Goalie Utvtl ~­macnor 1 Mar ,,. sconno Kt11v l , Co• I, w....., I. R,,,. I Ktnvon I. HMfnlr 2, RC>Oerh '· Sc11wertr 2 Goelie Utvts Dtlltn~k I I • l·A SCOttH ~nie Monla I) Tl'IOUUtnd 0.1o.i l ~" lltrnero1no 16, WOOdOnCl9t • Fontene t. Los .t.1101 6 Nooalt' 14 Oownev I R1••rs10t Polv 10, Mu•r 1 LOVOI• 16, ~OUN h acfl 8 Manne 12, Palm W •nvt • San Cltmtnte I?, Ctrrite11 e Pelos VtrOH \?, Creictnt• Valftif 7 EOiM>tl I•, ltoWlend 13 Costa ~ 9, West'-"• t St John &oKo 9, Fountain ven.v I Indio 16, lttdtands U (Of) CaPlsr.--Van.-. ll , Gi.no.1t I Of" 4-A ~LAYOFl"S f""9Y'• l"lnt lt-.1 LOI A.lemllos 110-12) •• Sunnv H '1 12S-?I /'loilAlll/J OH ) al Tustin 117·10> .......... KMller (16·11) at E1 Doteoo 119·11 Lone 8eacti Pohl It · I II •I v Pl!'1\ 120-SI B-P8'1l 16-171 at Lii W11-llS-21 ~ 11 Footl'I • na-o C'l'~tSt 110-i) at F.-i.10!' ll·t canvon. ~ (ll-•1 a1 ~ C24·l l TENNIS """ lcMel tins SEA VIEW LEAGUE l"*ALS (at #MM ""* Cewilfv CMll Slllllloi l"IMI lte PntllU\ (CdMI Clef Fvls>a• IU> 6-0 6·0 0....11 ... Kr Phttlui·Balft IC<IM) de! Slre.;u· .• ,, . # -_, NHL STAMa•tlS ~Cl F ce Celoarv Edmonton K-V •ncouver WIM1 e>ev ' Smwh DMlm WLT"°" 9 • 3 21 9 s 2 20 9 6 0 11 7 1 l 17 5 5 3 13 N.,.rts DIY1Meft Toronto Dflroit St Louis ChlCffO Minne.cit• I 6 1 17 S6 6 54 lr 5' • s 2 14 41 • 10 • 3 11 70 2 10 2 • J9 WlltM c ...... .ce fl'•tf'ldl OIVlslM NV Rangers 9 5 1 19 Plttsburoh a 7 o 16 Phil•delpnl1 8 8 0 16 New Jen ev 6 7 2 ·u NY lsfander$ 6 7 1 ll West1tt1oton • • 2 10 AcMlns ~ 65 73 6S ..SI 43 '9 so " 52 12 61 i oston Mon tr ell Buffalo H•rlfOfd Ouet>ec ' 3 3 21 • 61 "' 7 7 J 17 66 .,, 1 • 2· 16 '° 76 6 I 1 ll SS 57 6 10 0 12 S6 74 .,.....,., Scef-.1 &utfllio J, C•l98fv 1 NY ltan"'°s S Pflllaoe!Pftle l Edmonton J, New W MY 2 {ot) Montreal •. Cnlc:allO 6 Dtlroll 6, M1nnnote 3 Hartford 1. Vancouver I T....-,~ HerttOf'd a l K-.. 7;JS p.m. Quebec at Wn nlnoton, •.JS 1>.m. Ce~rv et Pnlledfl;)hle, •:JS I> m. T Q4"onto t i Plll.OUrlltl, •:JS 11>{.ny ... • MinneMlta at St. l.0\111, S:lS .~.m ~ YOLLEYULL ~--IMG WUT ~DRMCa VCI dtf Cal Star. Fulllnoft, 1W, IW , IS· II CeinmuNtv C-... WWIWI OltANGI .,..._. C~Ra:tlCa G>olden West .... Sad~1ln c"'. IS-., IS-'9 1S·7 ll1•trllcle oef Or"tnlle c -1. t-lS 17-lj , MS IS-9 IS·t .._ ~ ..,,. CW 4·A '9LA'rCWfrS ........ 1 A'lt ..... s.c.. Ganr def. LOI Alemil0$, 15-0. 15·10, IS-J Ron i c:tet A~. 15'-ll, 16·1•. 15-7 Marttlorouon 6ef LI Jon»n, IS· l. 1 S .. IS-7 Loul1vllle dtf Glen09ie, lS-10. 15-1, 1S· 1' EO<ton oef Pwamount, l}-0, IH , lS-S San Get>rlfl dtf Simi Va•v. IS·•. IS-9, IS·J Senta MOit.ca def Pa~. IS-10, I· ts. \S·S, ls-10 out-lllont Rtt>ounch-Otnvtr 47 ISdlevts 10) Laktfi S7 IGrftn 91 Alltnde~l7.SOS > M<Ferlel'CI (CdM). f·S, .. , Mar..-mount oe! Nolrt Dame, SO, IS·l!, IS·I 1S·U Cav.tlen IOI, CRDOen 91 E~ente def LS Polv. lS-10, lS-S. IS-.. Fountain Vetltv Clef Cerritos. IS-2. IS-J, 15-1 CL.Wf'EltS (tl) -NOf'man 1·20 M 17 Snlltll 7-17 3·• 17, 8enlam1n 2·S 3·6 7, ll WlMlerm ·-· 3·l ti, N111on 2·9 0-t •• ~tllU 1-4 0-0 2, Grant S· I I ?·2 12, Kitt ?·S 0-0 •. WoH l ·S 0-0 6, Oalltv 0·1 1·2 ?. Garrldl •·• 0-0 I, PoPson O·O 1-2 I Totats Jl-t1 15·21 9l ~ . . • • Cllan'lonHt a.I Notr• 0-AQdemv. lS-7. IMS IS-• Tllousano °"' <M'f ~•. lH. IS.f IS·7 !oecond ltOU!lcl ~ 11 Querterfinell Now IS, ~ Nov 17 Fine!\ Nov 19. CLRV~LAND (IOI) -S.ndln l·7 0-0 6. Nance 10• ll 7·1 11 Dtli9hfftv 4· ll S·7 ll, HarDtf' 6• IS 6· 10 II Price 9· I• I· 1 11, J Will,.ms 2·7 2·• 6 'llaten""' l·S M 7, RomM OH 2•2 2, ElllO l ·7 0-1 6. DIJdltv l·S O-• l. Ktvi,,_2 0-0 0, Hut>Oard 0-1 0-t 0 Totals 4l·f0 ?4·.0 "lOI •ASEaAL.L. Cv y_,... AwMd wtifte "4YW Fint s.c... nw.. F fanil VIOia, fllvn 27 I T .... Ill O .. ..._S·A ~YOf'"1 l"lnt It.-T-..... 7:ll Tu11111 at lrWll ll•·O) ~ Ill-JI at th,_ Mot>t~ 111· 11 Redondo 117·21 al U..-.__ Sc-.bV~ ~EClo.'"4'1 Oai. I I• s S2 Ct POer& IS 2:2 29 ~ 9l ~k G\IOoeta KC 6 • 1' Dana ~illj lt-71 •• C.-41111 Mw 112·21 Dot P\leOIM I ll·•l at Mira ~la {lt-t} ~ Del Cl·S) e1 Wt18 1e11 0 2·2) C-1lr-Velle¥ lll·S) st........,...,.._ C!t•Nn<I ?6 ?6 29 17-lOI Devt St-arl. Dell l 7 ,. Tflrtt·oo1nt 90ets-Prlct 2 FoultG Bruce H.nJ 8o1 , 6 12 our-&enaam1n.. Reoouncts~llC>Qers 60 CN«man ·~c·-&os 1 , • 112·41 10}, Clevw nd 65 !Dauen.tv 11 Sol.ti TOf'rana 19·11 al *'• ._,,_.. Att4tndane-1',SIJ SOCCEllt c..... men NOH·CONl"ltt•NCIE UCI 4, USC 0 0eeti M• fi"""9 NEWP<mT LANDING -l bO••. IS eneltr& 66 sano oau 9 eel co t>eu 11 m11<11~ I SCUIPtn ..... Ouarterl!ne" Nov IS Sem ·~ Nov 11 F>nelS No" It flOOTtALL UCI SCOflllll BedOlla I, Malavtr 1, Sllew I C:.ul'dtfM>n I Goalie UtVtl Eltls I DAVEY'S LOCl(llt 1"-"'1 ... di) -• ~'' 7• •"9«<5 199 oon.10 161 cattco t>eu 103 seno oau 161 "'Kktrr 10 s'-05need S Kule>.n J •ll''t t.s~ ltO OIUt Dtf'Cll ... ._.. F ..... '--"'t NFL-~ Doug Smith, H°'410tl Oil· "'' now IK~lt I nd Ma l GMntr Buffalo Biiii. l•ntbaet.tr lo< lO OllY5 IOr subltanc. •buM Hatlllme UCl. 1-G. HoRSE RACING __ ....__ --- HtlVWoecl ft•rlr WID•UOAM •IMA-n .,., .. ,... .. , -' .. ._...., ...,, ••<• • ...._ ......,_ C"41 V•ull l llD •llD llt He!•,,_ llff h -••I UI > 1t A•-Or~! >• r-I llJ sacowo ••<• • ,,,_ Lo C..-d lk u •OO 11 40 t lt --._i 1v-..-1 s• >.o Pe-... .,,._ 1c.,1._,1 SOI TllM ,.,, U OA!l.Y DOVltLI 1 I M.cl L1'UO TH•D •atL I I It ..,._.. • ..__ 11•-U ICIO 1 IO hCI E•Of< 4t ll''Ot Soll! •• •OC I( ' c:i--111............ )10 r.,,,. 14U u l lC.ACYA IS-II ,...., mao "OUllTH •ACI • ,,.,_. U_,,..,,.. fP"<a•I •"JO JIO JIO l la1e &oteai> ,s.-1 \JIO J._.O p,. ...... _,.,. IV_,.,... 6.0 r,..,. 11t• U &XACTA J Ill oa<1 \l"t 60 U OAll. Y ""lf'LI II ~ > "'o t'90 JO l'WTM ltACI • ,..,_. 0..-cT•I tV-1 ...... 1 $.1'9 ,_ s.. _,., '"'' 11-I.-T~ t• '• Jl'I ;ac HO .IC JJC saw"'" u.c:a. • ,.,._ ........ ·~-J10 2.0 ?~ ,.,,, ,.._ !.......... 100 Jl'I ~ ~ 1en.-)oti T-•tt• U l•ACYA tH -U100 n ~ Wt 1 s·>·' s+ -M1"100 to O'llf .,..,,. "'19 '<•t' ' • -.. .., ....... 11• ·-. ,., ... "'°"'""') EIGHTH llAC._ • ' ""'°""' -"'°"' t~•I ·~ aCO ·~ ""'°'' .. tai.ol Z\JO IUO ........ IP!nuvl I T-ll•l U IJCACTA 1·1 ...., 1144 .0 U D,,._ Y lWll'\.1 S I 1 o.<1 Os> JO NIWTH ltACL I t Ii """' - -·--Cl'lnca• •llO 1 10 >.O NH•~ Hewe CO..-un•> t•lO •oo v-. """"-..,,_,_ • 00 l -''" IJ UlllCTA •It I °"o 112' 40 Los AUmitos WU HtlSOAM l!llU\.T1 ....... ,._ ___ .....,.) F•n IUCa.. 19 , .... ~ -1~1 1Uf 1• >• -· Lr Cr-• thl 11' "'"'" , ... , c;.. o.-..-.-1• ,,... t U • U U lACTA , ... -Ult• l«COMIO ••ca. JOO '"'°' » 0-<•-1• 1• 111 &rc.,.....,.'fC: Fwn , .. J tO '-•'_. Lw,'f'I" La<''" 1 • T-OIS .. 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II • ...,,..,. •oeo.•h f••f ---., ...... , ........... •<•••• ''""' __ , TllMTN ltill<L '50 ••'ell ~-Lltlll I"'"'' !U ll t1 10 720 O..w.,t Sir"' Vltull l\JO •OO °"' .. ~. ·-$!....... ) .0 f Hlem 5e<e If' l'(a•I , ..... llO $1 ~ --I I \ ) 1 l j l •I I .0 -MIJ tll lo lll\.lr ... _ <C> .. \ ... .-, 1.0 ._,.,.. •• 0.-. UltO te H •"\4\"9 '"-••~-' JIO u.-_,_ TOia ,,., • ..., "°"' U DAI\. Y T1t~ll !• l t N.cl \101 Jt PtnM ••Cl HO ···r °"< l'•om ,._. ~"' $• IO HO > 1t ._,_ ........ tl-~• •Jt JIO 0-, Cv• -!0-1('H... J W • ..... 01110 tr.,. •oo.11\ Ee&y 1-1 )40 U O ..... ,.,.,., -1-......... •.O Time .11 .. G ......cTA fa•71 -•W.O U IXACTA T a 0.-<I 1-010 SIJlTH •ACI I ...... ..... .Jt ,,._...._ " .. ,. """'--u 111 !loo Secretaries' Special II IXAC~A 1 I -U .0 S.XTM •ACI l ,.,,_ u ,~ .. OM.., ~ ....... .. .. ~ ... .. " _ .. , • • • it J 10 ~-.... .," SO OJ. OFF INITl.t,l FE.£ -,o (In lud1ng \.Orporate Packaeesf • 2 complete weight room FRCE Instruction • O\er 50 aerobics classes each week . "'Ith certified Instructors • Raquetball ~ quash courts/ f Rt e cUnic.s • Licensed m assage staff • 25 Meter heated outdoor pool • Sand volleyba I I/ fRtt clinics • fR~f. Child care · • 6asketball Gym • PWS m any addltlonal amenities Under rf [W management. compkkly rtDCMlkcl • rt.octelecl. .,... ] ·auardsat poUS · cloud-county GOP' s integrity The mess over uniformed guards at Santa Ana polling places oo Election Day is sending out an ominous chill that touches every member of Orange County•s Republican Pan.y. About 20 uniformed guards, hired by the county GOP, were ordered to leave pollin.~ places after the chief"de·puty secretary of state said their presence was an unlawful intimidation of voters. Dcrpocrats. as you mi&ht expect, are doing their best to tum the mcident into a full-blown scandal. But Democrats are not the only ones complaining. There's also a strong Republican chOJ'US protestmg what can only be described as an inexcusable demonstration of poor judgment by county GOP officials. · An investigation has been launched into rcpons that the ~urity guards interfered with and intimidated voters. ~ The votel'S we arc talkina about arc mostly Latinos, and County GOP Chairman Tom Fuentes has confirmed the guards were part of the party•s Election Day security force in the predominantly Latino sections of central and south Santa Ana. Fuentes denies the guards interfered with voters and called the Democrats' complaints an attempt to tum the incident into a media event. It is and should be a media event just as much as it should and is beinJ investigated. That investigation must be thorough and a public disclosure of its results made public as expediently as possible. The focus of this controversy is on the 72nd Assembly District where Republicans and Democrats fought a bitter and expensive pohtical war. Republican Cun PrinsJe narrowly won the AssemblX seat. but his opponent, Chnstian Thierbach, is crying .. foul • over the GOP guards incident and threatens to challenge the election. Republicans say they hired the guards because of warnings there would be "irreguJaritics" on Election Day and feared that illegal aliens had been hired to, or would try to. vote. County Registrar of Voters Don Tanney m et with GOP officials before the election to discuss those concerns. He has been quoted U..$aying there was "not a shred of evidence" to suppon the Republicans' fears. GOP officials say the guards were hired and assigned to watch polliQJ places, but were told not to speak to voters and to stay 100 feet from the polling place assigned to them. The guards were supposed to watch for and repon anything that might appear to be a voting irregularity. · The only thing Orange County residents can \io now is wait to see what the investigators uncover. Agencies participating in the investigation include the U.S. Attorney General's office. the FBI , the Secretary ofState's office and the county Registrar of Voters' office. Undoubtedly, some of the claims of voter intimidation will be proved false or exaggerated. But it will be impossible to escape the conclusion that hired uniformed guards at polling places were intimidating to some voters. That intimidation. however subtle, is unacceptable. County Supervisor Gaddi Vasquez, a Republican, said the incident showed a tremendous la~ in j udgment, and that he 1s extremely disappointed. That la~se in Judgment. the resulting disappointment and the ulumate responsibility belongs squarely on the shoulders of Fuentes. If he did not have control over the situation, he should have. Fuentes has made many outstandin' contributions to Orange County's Republican Pany, but his most important conmbuuon is needed now. Unless there are compelling reasons for the GOP security squads that we have not heard yet, Fuentes should offer or pany officials should demand his resignation. OTHER VOICE S Arson vs. reason Is "arsonist" going to become a synonym for .. no- growther?" Those who desire to limit or eliminate develop- ment are supposed to pursue their goals in public view. in political and governmental arenas. But in the Emerald Lake Hins area, between Redwood City and Woodside, someone apparently unhappy with the -arca 's mini-housing construction boom is seeking to stop development under cover of darkness, in an illegal and teprchensible manner. Since last summer, tire officials repon 10 deliberately set fires have occurred that have damaged partiaJly built houses .... Even the most fervent "no-growther" should not want to ris~ liv.inJ in dcvas~ted surroundings JUSt for the sake of mamta1n1ng some pnvacy. Palo Alto Times Tribue S&L buyout There they were, Jollygasging around on Hawaii•s golden beaches in full view of television cameras and the American public. It was enoup to make a taxpayer scream. Savinp and loan executives jetted over to the tropical isles for some fun in the sun in an extraordinary Jet-them-eat-cake nosethumbina at everyone back here on the mainland who is wrinsin1 hands over the prospects ofSSO billion to $100 billion added 10 the national deficit. compliments of profligate S&Ls .... Healthy thrifts (ifthafs not an oxymoron) complain that the fees they are payin1 to suppon their unhealthy brethren art killina them, and ttley must have taxpayer help. Suddenly that whimna is a lot less penuasivc Sum II-. Preu Dem.ent OAANGE COAST Riii , .... (drtOf .. ,..., AHllt!lllt £4ttof r.a.. """ [IMor ....... OCJC• ......... .. c... ........ ,....,.,..., cw ... haii1111(6t0f .. ..... ~One.., ....... ................. ...... ...... s.. ....... a...':.':!: ... ' ' ThUradeV. NcMmb« 10. 1981 .. Lf '1 I t ' Ii r' 'TfU. ~~,,, ~ NBmother ·· 15~~ Outra~ed _J//JfJ,.P.-----~! '~'tn eglect someday her prince will come -just don't hola Your breath A long time ago in the Land of Nod. there was a real beauty. She had amazing skin. As luck would have it though, she got into some bad apples, ate one and nodded off. This hap~ned quite a bit, of course, as they didn't call it the Land of Nod for nothing. At any rate, the beauty fell into a lovely, snorcless slumber that lasted a long time. This was maybe 1964. Not long after this incident, she was found unconscious on the floor by S.Cven dwarfs. Tricky, Wimpy. Oopey .... the names don't matter. They found Sleeping Beauty, and next to her they found a half~atcn apple and several hundred fruit Oies which, having picked over the apple them~lvcs, were also asleep. The dwarfs liked what they saw and took her home. They laid her on the biggest bed they bad. k.ep,t her cheeks rouged and her lips day-glow red. and watched each Other to make sure nobody tned anything funn y. It wasn 't a grtat place for a btauty to spend the best years of her tife, I guess. but 1t was better for her than. say. if she'd been found asleep somewhere 1n New York. At any . rate, as the weeks and months passed, it occurred to the dwarfs that they ouplt to start thinking about waking Sleeping Beauty up. It didn't seem n&ht to leave her there on the bed: lovely and snorcless forever. On the other hand. the dwarfs all had similar anxieties. Would Slcep- inj Bcautywake up hung over and full of regrets, lock herself into the bathroom for 45 minutes and then make some excuS( to leave? It had hapi;>ened before. and so they resisted waking her as long as they ethically could. The truth was 1t was a long time between ladies who spent the night at the dwarfs' house -particularly ladies as beautiful as Sleeping Beauty -and they did not figure to find ~nothcr one an ytime_soon. PETE DEXTER On the other hand -and here 1s the rub -each of the seven dwarfs secretly believed he was '1ot a dwarf. And each pic,ured himself alone with Sleeping Beauty, who, let us say. would be in a very gratcf ul mood. They thou~t ofher long white fingers playmg with the flaps of their ears. and it drove them crazy. And in the end. that, along with the aforementioned ethical consider- ations. moved them to action. It is well known in the Land of Nod. of course. that any sort of serious metamorphosis is connected to kiss· ing. Fr~. pri]lces, sleeping ~uties -that 1s the way things get changed. And rcahzmg this. the dwarfs - who it is fair to say were beginning to lose touch with reality -each began to think of himself as a sort of secret prince who would administer the healing kiss. They began to speculate -one that he had been kidnapped from the royal ho~hold at an early age. another thal there had been some adminis- trative mixup at the hospital. And soon, predictably enough, there were terrible arguments all over tbe house, and the worst sort of height-related insults. You can only have so many mixups, after all, even at the hospital. Work ·stopped. lies were told. personal histories were distorted. then invented, promises were made that no one intended to keep. It was disgusting. The dwarfs misnt have even quit. except for Sleeping Beauty, resting there unconscious on the bed with 1haL amazina ..skin. ripe for the. pickmg. Nevertheless. the insults being thrown.back and forth were bad for the dwarfs' self-esteem, which had been a problem even before they found Sleeping Beauty, and so one afternoon they met and drew up a set of rules. Under the rules. the dwarfs would get a chance, one at a time, to climb up on the bed with Sleeping Beauty, kiss her day-glow lips, and in that way try to wake her from her sleep. Whocyer did it was a prince. Naturally. everybody wanted to go first. Wouldn't you? , So a new set of rules was inventc J. these to establish the order in which the dwarfs climbed onto the bed. Under the rules. each dwarf was allowed to tell as man y stories as he could make up for as Tong as he could sustain it, and wnen everyone was worn out -the way things work out, it takes exactly four years -the dwarf who had made up the best story got to plant one on Sleepmg Beauty's lips. As I said, that was a long time ago, and the dwarfs have been at it ever since. Tuesday night, in fact. it was Wimpy's tum. He d not only made up the best story, he'd hidden Dopey under the bed. where he couldn't laug!1 at the wrong time. · And so he crawi~ up there - a little self.conscious and not knowing quite what to do with his hands - ·and he kissed her.just off-center. for a long time. Then he'pulled his lips from hers. trembling, and then, as the others watched, Sleeping Beauty stirred -it looked like she stirred -and then resumed her lovely. snoreless slumber. No prince this time. folks, just another dwarf. Petr Duter J1 • 1yadlcatH c.lulal•I. Terror ists could firid w a rm climate in United States WASHINGTON -If inter- nat1(mal terronst organizations de-cided to infiltrate the United States, they would be virtually impossible to spot before they acted on their deadly agendas, according to a secret report compiled by a Defense Department task force last/car. There arc I international terrorist groups, according to the repon, that direct their attacks primarily against American facilities and citizens. These_Jf'OUps have about 1,000 mem- bers. Should they all decide to enter the United States, says the secret report, they could easily merge with the 300 m1lhon people who legally enter the country each year. U.S. authorities would be hard-pressed to find that one bad apple in every 300,000 visitors. Even if a terrorist suspect is identified. he or she must then be followed~ law enforcement officers. How clif'ftCult would that be? The dlleif\ed rcpon 1UgCS11 an eumple: .. How do you track one terrorist ~IM l .6 million daily nders on the New York subway 1ystemr· TbeR would be no need for terrorists to bother brif\lina weapons into at.e countryl thank$ to Amenca's wide open p.1n IWL The task force noeed I.bat arms .. coukf be purchased frotn any of the 2j() 000 we1pons or owr 10,000 u~ves dealers licented in the United States ... Each of1be t.OOO~l tt11oii1tswuld dlotc from a ~ina list of2SO.OOO supplien. The talk force repon conunua: .. Terrorisu COUid cboole front a IVODIY o( 250 Millioa ..... wapoas anCf !00,000 ruct.im IU'I• -not includi~ mihwy n1111cet-in the Untied SCMtt. Ataft lhlrnltive, they could fonnut,te &Mir explosives froth any of a larte number or readily available matenats; Hew suns art and JOSl PH '.>Pf AR being sold in the U.S. at the rate of five million annually.'' And where arc terrorists who enter the United States likely to direct their diabolical cffons? "for maximum f??_litical impact," the rcpon suaests. terrorists could choose a_n_y of the 20,000 domestic or 4S,OOO world-~de daily airline fli&hts." An aherna· tivc could be "any or the vast quantity of utility systems or aovernment facilities located throu&hout the country." OF OSHA AND HUD -The Houte Subcommittee on Employ- ment and Housina. chaired by Rep. Tom LantM, [).Calif., found at least two •ubject• to act the ta"peycrs' blood boilina in the last ta1ion of Conpns. Lantos looked into a wasted junket to MOICOW by the Depanment of Houti .. ancLUrbln Orvetopment, and into lallurt of the OccuP9tional s.rety and Health Adll)iniltrauon to proeeculC employen when their ~daeon&kjob.· Dp'piac evidenct that the Soviets wouldn't 11ve a ruble for the latat in houlina construction technok>IY. HUD Waited SI Million on a trldc show in MOtcOW. The Comrnette ~nnwnt even warned HUD that lhe Sovteta ~n't inleftiUld, but HUD went ahmd with the lhcnf anyway. Money WU divrned rro,n reteat('h and dtvt1opmtnt projttta to pey for the show. The mone_y was weetcd to dtVelop cost~fftt11vc ways to nd houses of lead paint and radon. HUD Secretary Samuel Pierce apparently made it a higher priority to teach Soviets how to ust power paint brushes. Congressional investigators found that HUD violated the federal Anu- Dcficiency Act by wasting •i>- propriated money to promote Ameri- can companies in a commercial trade show. Even the American companies were disappointed with the outcome. One company shipped ·a mobile home to Moscow and then had to &i vc it away when a buyer could not be found. The subcommittee investipting OSHA concentrated on the problem of deadly workin& c(lnditions includ- ing toxic chemiCaJs and danaerous equipment. Since OSHA was created in 1970 to oversee worker safety, the agency has referred only SO c;ascs of employee deaths to lhe Ju1ucc De- panment for criminal prosecution. Lantos says OSHA"s record is so bad that a n~i,cnt business owner responsible for an employ~·· ~cath stands a better chance of winnina a state lottery than JC?in1 to jail. Pan of the proOtem is the law - count cannot lend a rnanqer to Jt11 simply for ncalaeence that results in an injury. There must be a cleath. But even when death occurs. the subcom- mittee found that OSHA was reluc- tant to prna cfwles. Some 11atn are takina up the slack1 usint their Polkle powers to ~na criminal "'8ftllm to j1il. But the additional 11.ilC involvement has a down lide. OSHA is less likely to tel in&o the IC1 if a state is alrady inve&ipCjftl a cue. Laafos' tubcommittee rec· ommenckd that OSHA Ute iU federal mandate to aive Jtatea the ~n lisht for more in' cstiatmn Jed .u.,,.. -... ..., an.,. llri11M ~ti frtr To the Editor: I am writinJ in tesp<>nse to ~ur story on the Costa Meta bll>Y litter who was arrested on charses offelooy child ntalect. • I am the mother of a little airl who was under Stephanie Youna·• care. I am both infunat~ and enra,ed that thfs woman, to whom I paid weekly lO . care for my child futr time, would ablndon these children so 1he could .. ,o to the bank." On Monday momint J receiYed a call from Stephanie tellina me the police were at her house and to come and pick up my child immediately. I uked what was aoina on and she wouldn"t 11y. I am a sin&le mother and found the only penon I could trust to cart for my dauJhter, who lives in La Habra. 1 live in Newport an~ am commut· in& to La Habra daily until I can find • new child care. : I am not the only person at my : work affected by this travesty. One of • my co-workers 1lso had her child in this home with Stephanie and today will mark her founh day absent from wotk while searchigg for trustworthy cllild care. Both I and my co-worker have paid in advance for child care we will not receive. Even more astonishin1 to me was when I received a phone call from Stephanie once she was out on bail asking if I would brin& my dauJhter back for child care to her. My story can be verified by other parents who were also approached in tne same manner. This woman acted as if she were the victim, the persecuted. Please, let us not for:set tac children who have learned adults cannot be trusted to protect them. I praise the Costa Mesa police force for actina so quickly and sensitively to-this entire ordeal. LINDA COSGROVE Newport Beach Poverty Act needs &uppqrt To the Editor: It is time to speak out on the Global Poveny Reduction Act (GPRA). This bipartisan bill will require the next president to establish a plan for U.S. development assistance that wiJI con-_ tribute m~surably to eliminate the - worst aspects of absolute poveny by the year 2000, Reps. Levine, (0-Cal.) and Miller, (R-Mmn.) HR 4277. The corrcs~nding Senate bill, S2454, estabhshes social measure- ments rather than gross national product as the lcey to successful foreign aid. Specifically GPRA aims for: I. An under S mortality rate of 70 by the year 2000. 2. A female literacy rate of 80 percent by the year 2000. 3. An absolute povenf rate of .not more than 20 percent o a country's population living below absolute poveny. Although GPRA is a bi-partisan bill. only Gov. Dukalcis has endorsed it, Vice President Bush has not. This year's presidential campaiJD has been criticized for not discussina Issues and yet tfiis is an Issue or ctear difference between the candidates. This indicates, not only bow serious which presidential candidate is in working with the Conaress but also which candidate is committed to ending hu_nacr and homelessness by the year 2000. PA TRICIA M. Mt'CABE Huntinaton Beach . TO DAY IN HISTORY Today is Thursday, Nov. 10, the 31 Sth day of 1988. There arc SI days left in the year. Today's HiahJiaht in History: On Nbv. 10, 1171, joumahst and explorer Henry M. Stanley found m1ssin1 Scottish missionary David Livingstone in central Africa. Stanley delivered his now-famous att-etil'.'j.: "Dr. Livinptone, I ~umcr' To which Llvin_ptone replied: "Yes, and I feel thankful that I am here to welcome you." On this d1te: In l •83, Manin Luther, the lader of the ProtntatU Reformation, was born In Eilleben, Oerinany. In 177S, the U.S. Marinn were ~ired under authority of the Continental Coft8ftS.I. In 1919, tbe American LePon held its ftnt national convention, in MinneaDOlis. In 1921, Hirohito wu enthroned u the Emperor of Ja.,.n. In I 9S I. direa~ial COU~IO-C:OUt teleohone terV1ce \>Ctln u Mayor M. Leslie Dennlna of~ NJ., called hit coanterpM iD Allmoda. Calif. Jn 19"4, thl lwoJima Memorial- deJ*ti• a ~of .nicemen ru11111 Ote A ._ -wu dediclitDd In Altilll•. Va; Binhdiys: Aaor Roy SdMider ii S3. Lyridlt Tim llicc it ... Acln9- ducer ARD Rei ... ii 39. lilleer Ooana Farac> i• 39. Actrt11 Madame Phlllip1 • 29. Tbqupt rot lodar. ... , ... - doao't jaalUl'Y. ~-..-. ... does?" -Ro6M Moen, Americlln JlUhlll I .ffi\ 111 ( 1 SSS 11'>8 ' It fti A11nta ... Prw . , --~-~----=-~---=~~ ~ -~---- CALL 842-5678 COLDWC?U. BAN~eRU associated ... • • ~ '• t· • ,', I,,.,,,' .>.I --- . fih~nill LyuLh Realty R~RE FIND. BIG HOME So. hwy CdM, 2700 sJ. •BR. l 8A with 2 BR .. 2 BA rental unit, ' car p r. Comer lot. $759,000 ind wonh ft: 759-6600 • • Check out Today·s Class1f1ed Section for Details Big Oeel< Vrlse S2250Mo . 3336 Via uoo 875-9289 Wkly rwit.,. now avail YOUNG Prof. 8lllbOll Pen. 11•7.00 wk & up 2274 1 l'tM from bdl, ~ vu. 111 M Tll IAY Nwpt BIVd. CM &48-7«5 MIF n~r. $5 Incl Secure bldg, nr Lido Plaza y utll Nu crptlpntldrps. $735/mo Mgr 875-9289 acatlta ....... Yr1y 921-11'1 974-0eCM 2'1U ... !I! 2'1ti llWPllT ... .,,. PXCD Springs time itl.,.., •WtTH BOAT SLIPS• nu kltcnen, 11eepa ' Space avah imm:a f& rec>- EXCLUSIVE BEACH Nov 18-25. 1100 per rMtlOnel vehide, b09t OI COMMUNITY nlgl'tt Debra, 5'a..398, It*• cw In Beck Bey Has t>eautlful lBA 18A on I WM. CM 752~7500 Bob tl'te BAY• t100 sq tt lutah tt Skau C..--.& Washer/Ofyer l't<>O«·up, 1- l lreplaee, microwave 2'124 l.L lall~t · DIW. gat-oe • ~joy our ••FEMALE to tMre SBR hJs~ &t • • f· ,.. r j • t ::> l l r l I • I I 1 / I I M 0rMgll Cout DAILY PIL.Ol / Thut9day, Novwnb« 10, 1988 WMJt<R . :~ ' . . . FOlN>ADS ARE FREE Cal: HIRE through classifi~d 142-1171 llJLYPIUT 330 Waet Bay St. eo.ta Mela. CA CLA§§ll'IE• ABt'EllTl §INQ SALES We att ADDING to our ulel 1tafr. H yoa cen ly~ at leaM 4S wpm 1111d haYe Pftl lelc:c:1m•niution kills -.,~cu olf n, Y" a We .. a.ry + eotnm. loft AND • ~ pl8tt .. "-'· ,.,,,..... ,,.,,,.._. Anlldle. o.,......,..._r.a ... :.. __ p ._,, -~ ... ~._V a ... Na-4821 . ASSISTMT SIJERVISCI lotor Routes avelleble In Wllflll11ttr .............. ....... ,.., NO COLLECTING~-­ NO SO LICITING w 142-1444 hrt-1"-,......,. ...... ............. , ....... ~ it ..-.on. JoM wa7n• Tennie Club, , 1 14 btwn 12-S • .. 4 llOO ... • MARIJlfS R8 PARK -llrvlnc and Dover at Newport Beach Library) Holiday -decor Items-and -gtrts. &lttt Jewelry. custom woodwork. children's toys and Turnllure. baskets. wreaths. dolls. bears. all hand· made. all unique! PLltA81t COlllt AND BIWfG A PllJEl'fl>f THIS EVENT 18 f'Ultl ' ..... -.·~.• Wt 11 iiiiLNC (1K&MltMMI ...... ea.- ~ .,.,. ., .. _...._.....mll..8lll-......llll.lllL---~~~ m~ •...... ~ ... ,~ .......... ..., ... ...-·•· .... ... ,..,.,, '1!111'° .:IA: ... I ::rll .. ~ ... -~-.... ,. •••rllllll1et .. o.uMret a."'."'......., et .. • a ~ M WH • 1'N ,......, ....... ""~~~ -· •-"""" te,.. Or11t1e. Oallfernla, wet .. L.91AW,.. • 9'&I ,_... ...-I AW ,,....i ee-..-..,._ 0 , em Ill A --rt'I. '911. 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Ofl .... , .. t, -. ........ 911P1°""9 eetid '** of Ille '"'' of "'lnet•r: and JefftH TACT A LAWYla. lddllllll ol tM lntll\ded ACTION TO f'lllOTECT ..... _ .. Of ... ~ ... ., OctOClet 20. 1912. ~ Piiot Oc.-. •• 17, l!IO a.M. TN f .. Hllllt W .... M•11111••ienfl)•n ~loftheCountyof Moc&w--v of ~Ofl ll90TIC9CW tr.-.ron-SCOTSMAN YOUfl ~TY IT MAY lt& ... Oll we: Vert ln-lnc>1 0wpotyt Ortve. ~ Nou_,MI a,'°· tlll ,..,.,..,. Mif'I ~: ....-.... ~IO Ortng•. Calttornle, IMcfl ~ tAU Tlllle OUTLET INC tNI • IOU) AT A PU8l.IC 0.-.. PfOdUCta, Inc . T30 100, lr\llM, Celd 12715 n..ole HlrNlt M. wteder. O.· Ceunf~ from t111enc:ln9 ~ tftl ....,, of a CSEAL) J!.All L STATELY T.8. lllO. 1191 NNport lll¥d 'eo.1a' ..._, IALI "YOO ~£0 Not fX, W... t1ttl etreat. P 0 Box Oon..o S Orn, Tt\19t .. "'9ft; Doft "' .... : .... PfCClld• tor~ ~-wlV*I~ ~CWtcoflN9-d NOTICI 18 HERHY C.totNm2e PLA .. ATION 0, TH£ ''°°· Coeta Meu. CA,oftf!e O 11\dS Gnlnt~1--.. ---... -~---­"'*'-'· ..... ~ IMdewlltl,.._to~ ly ,acllltlee Oi9trlct No. oflupelll!llOl1 ~!N,,lleCOtl~. Thename(e)end~ NAtUlltE Of' THE ttat-tlOO eeb1t Tf\111 dNid Mey 5.1-....0,._o.;;;;;-.,;;•""--'-.-"4-- ltMIOn Md hpeMeot "°""oweiNIM to tM ..-11-SC of !tie County qi Or· ~ Ot.,,,._ COMt ~-30, , ... , at 1 t.00 ll6dtele Of Iha lnMl\deel ~H.OfNOI AGAINST The WNC•I end butineae t 1N 7, 2201 Dupont OflW, PICTmOUe M II •M . y...,__. ....... Aoac• t•m. Annuel apeclal 11\ga (All'IO"O lantl Oe11Y P\IOt "°"*"Mr 10. o'clodl AM, of Mid dey, WI tren•f.,-.(e) ., •. OAAO YOU. YOO etQA.O CON-..,_ Of the jnlandacl 1Sut1e ,00, lrvlne, C.111 MAim eTACT T ..... p: .. t4tda ......... 111111 ll'ISil for~ Mer,.,...) .... ln1rodue4id. ,... \ IN .,. -.... for con-KHACHATOV~AN. "'1S •. TACT A LAWYI... • ,,.,...,.,...,, .,. Wri11tllt 92716 The ·.;;:;. .. .,. ... ta and t.-p. lrl Col.fltt lu~ A .. .withacloptlOf\~fof Th1t• !Suc11ng T.ru•IH'• S.ia.. Pica. 1K.IMta°"'9,call• OnNGWrllW17,1 ... It Fr .. ,tnc.H$RlverlldeAv· Wm. Blair Arm•lrong. doing=-~ to "'8 ......,.., 90dMlon of Oelifomle Lit!-Ncwel'ilber I. 1 .... Otdl-"""'*' tf-. ofllc:.a ot REAL lorntat2704. tO-OOa.m tNlAWOfflciMof -.... WMtpon, CT oea&0 T(Vt'• of the B Wld C ~ TRAYel UIMCfS CNtd Md Ad;' I 11 ~ .-on Coofdlntltoll ~ Nnee Ho $T4t, en Otdl> ftaJC llJf1Cl ESTATE HCUAITIE.S SER-Ttlat tn. ptop.1y pertl• VOGT & MaNICK .. tt4J/ly That the ~Ol*'Y pert\. Atmltrong ~ TNIM an Hol1tl 9roedi.9I' .... ~ eoerd..,.. rnecte. ... IC!Pf0¥.cl. Aooeotanol ~ Of the loatd Of lllCE. IOcated at 1aoo Monti nant ._...0 le o..ct~ 11'1 111111clnled ~ for the nent her.to It deac:ritleO "1 cs.s.dAugua123, ,N3,2201 IOO ._.Ma.c.lf~'210t Cert•ln Conl'"nclallon1 of ~ 1fom Mr. & ..,._ ._,..,.. of the County of 8'W I M etc>Mway, ~ 100 . .n tM 1111*11 M : Tire a Aufo-A W H 0 LI H C 0 N • Olt*til ... llltllt""1911y .. Dupont -o.tv.. 9Ufte 100. ~ A11M. ~ AYr • 9ftd Ptootamellon• were ~ZinblndlnMIMtiOn Otno•. Cellforn11 , ~A=::, Cllyot&entaAM.Countyof motive and 11 ioc:.-. •· DOMINIUM A880C*ATION 0-wtsofVer,lnct.Oll* 1mne.Calif 9~n5 Of TM NU. AlJA. ,.104• ,...., ...,_.... ... wetti tM Cllf ~ tr ... to ~ ~ ttle le"Y Of a Orenoe. Sia. of Celifot"4e. 1t3a Newport ll'ld co.a ..--.. ..,,_.. to Iha Produetl, Inc and le local.cl Terence w Brigham. co.a Mele. callf aeae ............... cwect:AI· ~ •• '*-'9 t1'e ..-..ituwttNn~ Tlie=~-lllCAL ESTATE SECURI~ Mele.CA.92e27 ·• OECLAl'ATiOH M COVf• .. 130 Welt 17111 Street 2201 Dwpont Orfve ~ Kaltt'l llooloW tMO V. lettal ....,.9Y ,~ ~el~ S... 1Y FICllltlee Ol9trlCI NO. dcMng Iii • ftll. I Celfomie C«l)Of· The 8v1ineM name U9ld NNfT8 CONDITION$ ANO eo.t• Mau. CA 9?627 100, IMne, Cel!f 927'15 toN '3 Fulliton Celjt. "°" ... ~ ~ 8Nc" ... IUlhorlHd. -..so of the County of Or· (1)1ULl~ WlLSHtftf ltieln. -tt4J/ly appoint.cl by Mid ,,.....,ore .. ...., A£8T.-icTIONI, (llereln· The Butlnell nerne ~ ~ R. Weatttno. not 92$31 • • trallilft. ~No. 1116 ~tlon to prepera anga I Rancho Sent• \!~.:S~~)I ~= TNIMa ~and purtutlnt toc:lllon 1e 8 COTSMAtil .,._ ,....,.,_, tO • the by .aid trenalerora •• MIC! Dupont ~. Suite 100. Thia bulinete la c:on-_... oH.a PallM tot atudy waluatlng n19tlng Meroarttal. ... ln.fr.odlamd ..... t ..._ 0.,.., 0rtwe' IO .,. pow. of ... GOn· TIRE OUTLET. INC "CC&"'•"), recofdM 111 ioeatlOfl .. Very 11\gadtt>lt !Nine. Clllf 92715 ducted ..... ~ ,..IMNl•t or MOOdy ...., and,:;:~"""' a\ wttn 9dopUon ICMduled tor ..., ._.......... • • lerrtd 111 tt'ltrl cer1a1n Deed or That Mid ...-. ,,_. 11 eoaa 1 tm. Peoee "'· .i PrOducU inc Jotln L v-no 1 0u--,. ltt911t: Contrect hr*-~ Park •• Nowrnber a. 1Me. Tom Newport Beedl, c ..... t2tlO T'Nlt ••ec;uted by .s.rry Intended 10 .,. c:oMUl'n• aeq ~. OMctal .. That Nod bulk .,.,,.,., II poi,I om.. s;;;&' 100, !Mne, ~ '~t~·~ c.::.: w11t1tti.C1tyotMIMlon~ IPP!'cwed· A reque11 r1taty ~cSh1ne, terauntlng 1· Magnlo.lnc:., Olla.,.., JerdtMendSataK,Jerdlne, matedettn.ofbof crrv eotdi6· of Ot'Mge County, ltltenoact to be c:ontum· Cellf.92715 , «Mr the fk:tttoue tor toed me1n11nenGe; account '°' toad lmpr-~. ldYIMd "° one ;3~!.~ 8~":.i Sen H\Alllend and w ... , .. c:om-NATIONAL BANK, •too c.tl90mla, • .,,,....t to the mated at the ottie. of v.,-y o. Kiri! o.w. 220' eu.. ""' un nw Of ,_,_ ~It No. 2 10 ~ mentt financed by the IMM llad lelkM to thlm about '·-··--'" munlty Pfppeny, recorded MIC Arthur 8lvd •325 ~ ptop.1y IM9tlng In lnc:tedlble Producta. Inc.. ponl ~.Solt• 100. 1n11ne, :::r."tiow on~ 1. ment No. ttoM w11t1 the Coaat A11111me11t Dlltricl ''*' bid regarding an AJr· Thlt b"-'~1• con· J-.y tf, 1te2. In the ot· N9wl>Of1 a..cn. Callfoma ,.,.,.. of GERALD s 73Q W•t 17th St., Cott• c.111. 92715 tMe State ~t of Sodll W9I ac>PfcwM. Allc>lutk>n POtt l>'Ojeet; County Admln-d<ic:1M by. a ...,._etlon b of IN County Racot<* 92te0 on Ix after~ 8ALONOG!. WILL SELL AT Mua.Calrto<lne tt427 on°' • Patrlct M. 'OoMllan, 2201' Joeepf1 A,,._ • SerlltCel to ptcwlde •d· w .. edOPted, epprovlng lt1rallve Office d ·COl'ltact Th• .raol1tt1nt com· of Mid County, u Re-30 ttU PU9lJC AUCTION TO TKE 1fter NoYember 30, 1918 Dupont DriW, SYlt• 16o. Ttlll 1181.,.,,..,. W.. fllad dltlOl'lll~lottt.Aafu.. HOUllnQ 9ftd Community him, Boerf adj()urned it mene.d to trtnMCtflct~ ~eser·• ln•trumant No., The n.im. and adOrell of HIOHHT BIDDER· FOR The neme end addreea of ttvtne, Cell. 92715 wlttl tMCOunty CWtl of Or· gee Twget~ ..-.t~ De'li1lciprnent 8loc:k On1nt t :50a.m lnmemoryofOtga nMa ~ the OUI 12..oo9tfl3, by reuon ol a th• pe,.on wlltt whom CASH~8'tnellmaol_lht person w1111 w"o"? J.R WeQllf. 2201 Ouc>onl ange County on~ Pt..,W. Flnl Alnef\d:Ml1t Polley 0~ fOf UM~ U4liln llet. Flfttl Dtatrlct r-. :::--.oo-!-.. !' 3 :'9:: bteadl Of cMflUll in payment claim• may be fllad ii CITY .... In i.wt\.11 l'llOneY of the lctwns mey be hied 19 8IW T Dr1¥e, Suite 100, 1Mne, Caltt 3 1998 to~ wlltl ... w. Fundl, y .. xv. UM Pwmit dent. on-7 • • performance of the obit-NATIONA L BANK, 4100 l.'""9d81aMa)eflheOUllfde Bryant President, V.,-y In-92115 . ~ ~ tncorpofatM, for No, UP M-05P and Neoa'M (SEAL) LINDA D R08-Mtnln FeMt•. 8ef*" aatlone aacured !Mreby. In-Mac ArtlM 8lvd ~ !font en'tflllCe of the bwtd· c:red1ble Produeta Inc:. 130 Tiiie bWlin-,. con· PWli"'9d ar_,. C09I Mental H..nfl ~Re-Oeciltlllon IS H--Ot 1, to EATS. Clerk of tj"le Boald ol ~tMl<Mnl ~ ~ ::kldlng that breec:h CK c»-8Mc:f't, CA 92MO' M__., Ing, IOc:aMd It 4350 VOf\ Wftl 17111 St, eo.te ..._, duct*' by. e general pen. Diiiy Pilot ~ 10 1T oal v .. 1111-ee· fl'tlyllc• 8ltebW'I a hellped .. IM Supervtaora .....,,...,, ... '*"'· Noctce ot wtllc:tt -8nMs. Elc:fow Officer and l(arl'Mrl All9nUe Newpor1 CA t2e27 and Iha IU1 day nerthip 24 o-nber 1 tW • . ~ ~t with Saddlal>aCk Comm~ OFFICIAL PROCEED· wtttl~County~ob!-~i rec:ordedAugu115,1Me,a the lMt dayfOfMngc:talma 8MCfl ~. aM rignt lorlttlngc;la;msbyanyc:radl-The registrant c:om· ' ' ni-1oo Aoblr1 8. Oot>nn. M.O., kw Hoapltal. wu ac>JW INGS OF THE BOARD OF enoe ty on ._ Aecofder'• Instrument No by any °'"''°' .._,. be No-tftle and Inter• conveyed I'°' lll•N be No><eintllt 29, "*"*' to tranuot bull· ~Heall" and Orvg AlaolUtionwuadopted.v. SUPERVlSORS OF OR· 91·384084, WILL SELL AT1Y9mbef29,1988wNcflialhe to,andnowhefdby lt.uo<ler 1'88 wt11Cfll•ttle~ nen uo«Mr the flclllou• __ .,._ AblM s.Mcee: AQt...,.,t c:eong en UflUMd ..-nent ANGE COUNTY, CALI· PublisMd Orange COMt PUBL-IC AUCTION TO THE t>utl""9 day before tile Mid CC&R'I .., the property day IM:lore tM ~ buMr-. ~ or ,.,.. ..._ _ .. _ _,.. 8hllW f0t the Home-tor a alt• pr9Ylouely ·oo-FORNIA Santa Ana, Call-:tty P= 3ec;'~JO· 27• HIGHEST BIDDER FOR contummatlon data epeci· sltUatM In Mid Co1mly and uon datt ~ ~ lleted at>ove on Jeriuaty 12. -..... -_..-...... _ .... _ ... U-.• --.. -.. --lell tor ....,., MtYlcel fOt cupled by Iha Oen• Hlh f«nia vem · • • CASH, lawfut money of the lled above et• daec:rl!Md u I So ,., u ls known to Mid 1tea .. _ • • • wvv• Human tmmunodaflc:lency Pump Station. Autl!Oflutlon A raguler me.ting of lhe Th-047 United Slll1•. °' • c:ashief's So tat n ls known to Hid Unit 2t. of Lot 4 ol Tree1 mteodt<I TrllMNr• Ulcl In-Oonakl s. Grant. Truat• T~I' "'.,. VINI POlfllw lntr~ to naoc>tl•I• en agreement Boe.rd of Supervieort ot Of. rtaJC ll011CE cNck drawn on •~r l>ank. 1111en«Sed Tr-teree Mid 111. '557. • reoorded In Book tended Tr-'-or 0-.CS the of the o. ancrs Grant Aevo-~ ::-Ofut UMr•;~ment No. with C1llfornla lilep1nlc: 111911 County, C1lllornla, cntdlt union,°' sevings e11d tended Tranater0t UMd the 342. Peon •-&. lnc:lusrve ol lolloWing additional bull· cable Trust dated May 5. ~T HAT PUBLISHING 1 to AtchltecllEnglnHr Comml"Mlon on Alcohol and lllO llttlng ae the GoYer11tng K4llT1 IOan aMOCl•llon dom1G11ad lollowlng addlllonal bull-~ M~. OttlOlf neu nam. end lddl 11111 tN1 • "41fMIMflt N.o. DU-218 [)rug AbuN. Inc .. to prcMde Board of Iha Olatrlc1a Ind FICmlOU9 .,..... WI ltu 1t11a, ell payable at nan n-Ind ltdd-"9c0fchl of Of111119 Coun1y wit1•1111 lhe ttv .. yelt9 19.i Thll at1temen1 wu tiled 27M Harl>Of Blvd •la5. wfit'I Dll•Aune.1ne.-o·~ [)rug AbuN Early Inter· Authorltlae Governed by the Mam STATl..wf .,... time of ..... all rtghl, title wfthlrt the lhrM .,..,. .. ~ put ~edible Product• with tN County c.11 of Or· ~ ~ ~2715 ~el Perk Reeovrc. ¥entlon and O\ltrMCh Ser· Board of ~ -The 1~ pat*>N .,. 11\d lnter .. t held by It, u peat -The ttreet llddrass and ICorpor1t1on. 730 W• 'TUI 9l'09 County on October 'O .._. v..oe e-15213 1MM9'"*1t Plan; Second lllCel '°' Hilpena ... aip-,.., on November 2, 1988, doing bull-•: fruit ... In that rNI Pfoe>ertY Dated·~-4, t911 other c:ornmon oes.gn.,M)l'I SUMI, Coet• ..... CA .._ Colt MeM. Cellf t2'2t • .-ulp:: and Aaeump-proved. Ordln1nc:e No. 9:30. 1.rn. Tht loltowlng C(NTURY FILM. INC .. tltuete In saod County end 0.. Khadletn1M, e. If el'f'/, ot tna rut propeny 92t27 PublllNd Orange Coaac T~ ~· la con· tton"91-•1tNo.~2 3T35, In Ordinlncl of tM memben ti.Ing pr ... nl Pt9w J5erMY 280I W11119 State,cs.c:nbadas tolowa ~Tra11• .. rM deec:flb•d above 11r O.ted-~9. t"8 Daly Plot Octotlet 20. 27, duaeO by:MindMdil .... w11f1 P:~llM and Boe.rd of~ of the Harriett M. Wieder, Chlif· lit\. Saot&...Ana-.J:alif lot 2 of Tract 6261. in the Pubffttled ,Pange Coast ~Q...be 11 Gala-wnMlte ,.,... .Jae. -November 3, \0, 1... The regletrant c:om· 'Wiitiffi ~ COunty ot Orange. Cell· man: Gadd! H. Vuquu; Don 92705 . • of Coat• ....... County Olll'Y Pllol ~bar 10, 9'1buah. lnl1ne. Ctlllom• ......... a-. ..... Th-037 meno9d t t ~ ~ ... tot N.-. Gall Randi; fornla, 111tlloflztno the l9vy of R. Rott!; and ThOrnaa F c.n Fllm Inc:. New JerMy of Ot111119. State ol Call-'998 TM undtr•lgneo dlS· '*'-CT -. 9r. Oat* 0 r "91-W•I No. AO 2113-"" • ~ tax within Com-Afle¥. ~ Stanton Oomet1t1C, · 12S-.cn B.uer lornle. u I* map recOfded Th 106 dalrN any habllity tor aow A. ....., • k .._. ,,..... ftBJC llJ1IC( ""' ""°"' the ftcltt-IM i.. f'lfm of Siemon. munlty Ftdlt ... Olett1Ct No • ..-abearll. Aelolutlon No Drive, Oalltand. New JetWo/ tn boo« 287, P-oas 13 end lncorrectnaa ot ttle street ~......_.._. n.-. ,..~ ---•·-•••M ::=;-ebollenar: ~ Linan and Marth for 0.. 81-6 of Iha Ciounty of Or· 88-,484 WU adopted, ... 07"'34 t•ofMl9cellanec>usM11P1.ln "8JC ll)TIC( addr.-Ind other eommon ..-v.-_, ..,._.,,.. ....._., ,.._,,, ______ _ ....,,,...,t AgrMf'Mn1 .,,,_ ange (Baker Ranch). ... tablltNngfMtolaw.,.,l°'ee-Thia buslnffs It c;on· ttleofflceotlhe CountyR• ~lion. 11 any . .riown Deily Piiot ,._,bar 10, MAmSTATW 1~00neh09 plarriafttatlon: Terll'llnatlon edoptad. Ordinance No. ment llgll\dM fOt ttelnlng et ducted by. • corPOflllon COl'der of Mid County. MOTICI '*""'· 1"8 n. fo11ow1no penons -Thie ~ ... ._, of ....,.,.,.1 raowdlna en-3738, In Ofdlnanc:e of the tM Laaer VIMege FlrMrma Tht reglatrant c:om· The etr .. t addreH or WT1MQ _. Seid .... wtll be m~._ t>ut -Th I 12 doing bulfnW aa; ~the~· Clertl ot Ot· nllUltiOn of Sctlulllr Mini.. Boe.rd of 8upeNltorl of Iha laclllty. Rnofutlon No. mencad to tr1neac:1 bull-other common designation CC-l'21 wtttlOUt c;over1ant CK ww· MOfO 507 Eut Bay Coun NoWlll .,.. 1rtaa and ConaolkMt«S s.,.. County of Of1nge. Call· 88-t•iS and Ordlnanc:e No, nees ul1def the flc:lltou• of the reat P'oe>ertY herein· Notlc:e lsheret>yglwnttlat renty.exptfflorlmplied r• fta)C .,TIC( N••cior19W:l'l.Calif.t2t0l.,. ty on - Jacinto Ptopeftle•: end fofnla.au1llorlzlngl"9'9vyof 3742wereadopled,apcirov· bualMU name or MIMI 1bov1 desc:rt b•d "Malad blda will be recelwd gerdlno tltle, poeMSSIOn °' """'9y Thom9 Sedllar. 3• 1911 ,__ L.-• ..,.,.,., for Soc:lel a ~ tax within Com-11'11 Zone Change No. ZC listed at>ow on October 29. purp~rted 10 be 3095 by V'9 City of Huntington 9l'ICUll'lbr9f\089 to pay 1he KAMa 1933 c...... i..-. ~ Publati9d ~ Coaat CNe11y Control anct 01atrtc:t 87-T of tM County of Of· 111 oppoaltlon IO the In· JoM Gato.. Pr....,.,.,I Cellfomla c;ty Clar1t at City H ... 2000 1he 11et1 MCUr.O by Mid real YAMll Cll _.,Oil Tit«I aiu.iMM le c:on-24. Oaolnlbar 1 1911 SerlltCel AoancY/Progr"" munlty Fadlltlae oi.1r1ct No. M-07P. The following '9<*• 1 '9118 • Cassi• Avenue, Cost•,..... 8"c:ll at the otflcl of IM r9INlrllng pr1ndfHll tlUt'I\ of STAW cw anon. Calf. 92133 Olly Plot~ ,0, 11. An~/Webf• Fl'9llCI .In-ano• (LOI Alleoa) ••• crwecl r.. lot ~ ol Thls statement ...... filed . The unden1gned dis · Mal,, Str"I Huntington ptOc>attY. With int•-1 ther• '*cw AChTllOU9 ducMd t>y: ... lndMdull • • 1 .,,...fOallon Unit. Alaolutlon edo91ed. Ordlnanc;e No. Plennlno CommlMion ac:· wm1 the County C6ar1I of Of· ctekns alt habllity I~ lnY on-a.ch Calllom..., untll the on. IS prcwided In Mid .-n..,.... The regletr1nt com-~ 01 of Int«!\ to bd'lange Real 373?, en Ordinance of the lloneendUf9adthe8oaldlo angeCountyonOctoo.tt correct.-In Mid *''~ houroi 2-oopm onHovwn-CC&R t , ldV~ If any. Ttle fOllOwi!' perM>nt "*"*' to tr....ct bu9I-_.,. _. ~ ._ adof*d. lat· Board OI SupeMaora of the recontlder Iha amount • f11MU llddt .. or other c:ommon bar 11 1 ...... wNdl tilM under the termt of a9'd .,..... .,_,dooed the 111e of neea under the flct1toua ~ ..,,_ ........... 15. , ..... County of 0teng9, Cfll-SNny Meddldt. RCCP Ind Publllhed Or-. COMt dellgrlallon. ,_,,...,.~andpub-CC&R'a, ..... cNt9M end ttlt FICtltlOUI •u•lneH ......,_ narnl or ~1--------------... c9J11t 10t tfl9 ~ of lofnle. autN>r1dng t1'e 1WV of RCRA: Je11lea Dean. ~ Piiot OctObet 20, 27. Said .... wlll be rnede • ....., ~ ___.. ....._ ... -111 ...._ ~of Iha T,._.. end Nam•· M 111 M 0 M'S lllled ab011e on No llNler • HC llHOA • I I an .,_,..,t wttfl ·Burnett· 1 epecial tu wltNn Com-Leeoue ot Women Voters; ~t>er 3. to, 1988 Mttlout weuancy, ~~-or ~ ... ~for ;;;: of the truau created by Mid PAESCHOOV OAY CARE. ,... ' ~ ~W ... Ptoper"tlae '° ••. munlty Fad!Ma D11tr1c:I No. Charlot•• Clerk. o.c Fund Th--04, tmpllad, regerdlng title. pos.. "--"°" Hiii A11mr•11t CC&R'•· 2245 Of.,... eo.t• ....... Jlllf $ec:Hllf ;;;:;;,; ,,..,... -o_... land to lllOw the 11-t of the County of Of. IOt Etwlronl'lllftt.i Oef.,.,w, ..-on. °' tnQlll'lbrancae. Oletrtct watw Maint In the Thi totel emount of the cellf. 9212.t Thia •~ ... :Mad dolrla aa: Of-41on of a toca1 park lcw ange (Sanll Tarealta), ..a VlrgilnlaChaeter,S..&S11119 fta)C 11)11C( to •tlsfY Iha ~ obljo. C of H ....._. 8Mctt unpaid bllancle of the obit-The Actttloul ~ wltfl theCo.lnty Clertl OfOr· THE WAAMIHOTOH publlG we Autllorl"Dtlon to adopted. Ordl11anc:a No. Audubon Soc:l•ty, Allan ;atlonl teeured by Mid 'Z tat"::";.:'. . ~ getlon MC:Vred by the ~op-Nenl9 r9f9rTed 10 ~ -ange County on No~ G,.OUP,. 3090 Pullmar1 n • 9 0 -~ 1 • t • a n 373', an Otdlnance Of tfla CooltW. Pat Bat•. llQUM JC.a. Oeed of lruet, wfttt int.,•I c:atlOl\9 f"CI OllMI• contract .ny 10 be eokl and reeaon-fllad 1n Orange COunty on •. 1tee l1reat. ec.a ...._ Clll At~ .... Board of Supatvllot'I of the ....... Community Counc:tl, eTAW Oil Ind Ofher IUm9 •pt~ ~-. IMo«Mained llbie •!meted coat-. ... Aut"at 2t, 1911 FILE ,_.. ~ .._.__ ,..............-._ rnent to .,,..,_. • l'WllfMd County of Or1nge, Catt. Connie Splnget, t'r11nds ot UAMDOtllDBf CW thartln; p4ut adv"ancM. If on October 2: 1Me et U'9 paMM and ad¥9noaa at Iha N0.1'390389 Publittled °'9'08 Coaat ,_ ~ ~-... f"""°""*'t.I ll'ilCMICt R9-lorllla. autllotlzlng the 19vyof tn. Toccatl Cypr .... GreQe UM OP FICmtOUS eny, theteunder arid lntet•t Department 'of Pu bile 11rn1ot1he lnlltal public:atlon Mlc:hael N Thornton, o.ity Pilot *'-"bet 10. 17, ~ ~ 19 port '°' the N .. r·Term • IC)«lal lax within Com-O.vis. COio de Cua wtlo MIWSI ...._ thereon, artd plus 1 .... W°'ll• 2000 Mtlln Street. of Ille NotiDI ol Sale IS t.4791 Ridgel>oo o. Tuain. 24 ~ 1. 1111 ~ _ ~- (l<aMllall>oug&eM) Jiii pro-~ty Facllftlee Olltr1c:1 Ho. 1t1o .,.preaaac:1 conc:ern for Tiie following person• ctiargae ancteapen..aof the H 11 · 1 a. h C 11 $3 239 u c;.., 92ee0 Th-103 _, acorpcw jeet and IPPfoval of an 87·5A of IN C-ty of Or-protec:tlon of 0111 ind haw lbenOoned Ille UM of fruit" and of the tn.1111 ,;~g on r ac: '1 J ; The Bene(ldaty, FAWN ~ o Thornton, Th• regi1trer1t eom- A m • n d "'• n t t o 1no• CRef\c;ho Senta Syc:amor• Ir~••: Aldan th• Fletltioua Bualn•.H i;:tN led by Mid Deed of non·r•=•b~ .. ot lGLEN COHOOMINIUM AS-14791 AldolbOfo Tust111,( PWlJC llJ11Cl ~ '° ..._. -... Arc:tlltec:1/fnotneef ""' ... M ... O"ft•). ...... Introduced, Kelly: Cindy 0 Ntlt; ~ Na,,,.. Bu LL 0 c I( s frusl The IOfll _... of 125 00 SOCIATION, under .. Id Cellf taao -Uftder ... 9dllOla rnent ~· n wlttl P&D wtttt ldoptlOl'l ld'l9duled few er. Pr91ident of Mod-WILSHIRE. 901 N_P<>f, Mod obligatlonl. al the ltme Eactl bid ehal be made on ICC&R'• l'laretofor• ex«:ut.O Thia bb9nell -con-K.mn ~ NMe or _._ Tech to -.pand Iha ~bel a. INS Ordl-ia-a Aelilenu .Auoc: •C)tar Drive. Newport ot 1n111at P\ll)lleattol\ of this tM PY<>c>OUI Form end In and ~ to the under· Ouc:1ad by lndMOulle (Hua-ACnnGUaMJH•M ...., ~on Odoblr ti. ac;ope WOfll for Ille nance No. 313t, en Ordl-lion; and Marilyn ~Dove. BMct\, Cuf. 92660 NotlQe, le$,, fle,414.48. Iha mann9' prO'<llded In tfllt. Signed I ••11911 ~lion .oand & Wlf9) ~~ , ... ~E. ..__ yg The Flct•tlou• Bu1tneu Oated· Nove11tb9I 7, 1988 . · lot Default and DemanCI tor Thia alatement wu filed I ,,.. ,......,_,. pareona----rtll.IC NOTICE "8.IC tl)TIC£ rtaJC ll>TICE Name,.,.,,_, 10 above-M.AL IHATE •CUM-:".:~ ~=~ .!.": Sale. and a"''"~ Notloe of .nt1 me County Cler1I of Or· d<Mrlg ~ • P.. ~ I ftted In Orange COunty on nH tarttel, • C .. amle c.rtifled °' c:astlief's ~ OeflUll and Election 10 Sell ange County on October 11 FRED llAS-FIAESTONE. TNI etalum1l .-tied NOTICE OF IMPROVEMENT j"M•y 3 , • 1988 FIL E COfPO'....._.r,....,ey: or • bid bond for not .... wu raeordedMay31.1988 1Me · 1739~.streM.Coat• wtmtMco-tyCWtlofOr· N0.F379S32 ......_ ltUU Ill. • ... .., ••• .. Intl rum. n I N 0 Pu~ Orange eo..t Mele. Cellf. J2t2tl .,. Cout>ty on Now!•..,. RESO\.UTION OF INTENTION AND REPORT BuJIOCk'•, lnC . 800 South HUUH ~lc.,.PtHi4ent, :::.anbt~~'!::..!='•~ e&-255'"° by tile under-Oalty Piiot October 20 v Fredrlclo F. 8tas ""-lone, 7, 1MI NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Councll of the CITY OF ~.Callt 90017 tOO. a.t.a Ma. CA a10I r_~o~~t:'s~ Oat.cl Ototier IT. 198& ' ' Th-048 ~~t!,2_.,_. 11 con-,....':.,~...!,=~ • . H0c>9 Stf991. Delawate, Los' ta.._................. ' ... -, tigMcf ~ 3 10 ,,.. • t:M& Felipa, San CMmente. ,.,. HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA, d id. on the l9th day September, 1988, fh1t buSiness wu eon-hhfl'*'' (?M) ..... CeltlCKnt• and ot,_ ._of VOGT & ~SMCK. U. •-.,. Wlftlot ducted by:., tndMduel i4°"'b.c.nt-t, lMe adopt Ila Resolu11on of lntenflon, and on the 24th day of October. 1988, did duc:ted by a c:otpot•tlon Pul>lollled Orange Cont the Sl•t• or Caflfomla ~-Cer,etetleft• USO Yon ~ '''"-. The r•o••tri nt com-Th-105 recetw and rtte a "Report" or the Engineer. and authorize a public hearing to TIU statement •:-,''led_ ~ P1I01 NOYember 10 17 cable thereto, with the ••· K--. Wte • ,.... Of. LIGAL lllOT!Ca ,.,.._, to tl"lnMCI bult- be noticed and Mt for proceedlngS to form a special assessment district .ithl"'9Counlyg: o ~ l . Me Th110 ~lion only of IUC1I van-Ace ... ~. ........ THE cm OF HUNT· MM under tf-. tlc11toue1--------- t(nowfl and designated as ASSESSMENT DISTRICT No. U-1 (RESERVOIR = COunty on ot>er 1•tl0t'I• that mey be requ.r.O ;:r.1~'*"~ =: INGTON BEACH HAS SET ~ nwne or narn-PWlJC llJllC( Hill) {hef'einarter refeo"ed 10 as the "A.ssessmeot..Oi'). ~ °'.,. Cout I "8.IC ll)TIC[ 1::':an~o '= ;:= WJa. ••o.. Al· AH ANNUAL GOAL FOR llled lt>Oll9 on NIA -------------[)atty Ptlot Oc:tot>er 20. 21, ec..a 1 , hefeund« .,. ttlkan IOfMr/A..,.1 ,_ FAWN rtsc:Al YEAR 191&189 OFI F~ 8IW flit:iliiOU9.,..... Tiie "Report", as apptoved. consists or the plans. speelf:catlons. maps. Novembet 3, 10. 1Nll FM:TITIOUS8USINEll ~ wtllefl "-not bWI OLEN CONDOMINIUM t2 ~ FOR THE UTILfZA. ~ ....... -Mad ...... STA1"1 INT <Mscrlpttonaandestimateofthe cost,anddlagtamandassessment.andlOf' Th-049 ru••TATEmHT sup•ru d •d by '"•AHN. 1 ~~~Ot~A~A:T~GE~ :;.~i:~r-~~:-C-- allpartlcularsastotheseproceedlngs,referencie lamadetosald "Repon"as rtaJCll)TIC( The fOllOwirlOpetton•ar•lprovttlons 01 ,,,. Labor 0ei7~::'0c:~0::-27ec:!. E~TERPRtSESIDBE> IN ,....,.. LAG NA &EAC H. prellmlnatlty approved. as well as to the prevloosly mentioned Resolutlon Of dOitlll ~as; Code Prtfet"1c:e to labor vem~ 3 10 1988 • FEOERAL·AID HIGHWAY I P\.lbhhed Orange eo.t ENTERPRISES, 1140 N Intention KCT!e NATIONAL EOUCATtON shell be O•vef' only "' Ille Th0'75 PROJECTS o.lly Pltc.t October 20, 27 CoH I Highway. Laguna . tTAnmJfr Of CENTER. ta•oo Vo11 man"9' prOYlded by,_ THE GOAL ESTABLISH-IM<Mlrnbel 3, 10, 1988 Bw:tl, C.f. 92$5, DESCRIPTION OF IMPROVEMENTS UANOOllJINT OF Karmen AYlllUe, SI.lite 1,00, No bid ehetl bt1 consiOetacl •-.,. WlTIC( MEHT PROCEDURE Will TtMM-4 Herold tL l'uppert. 300 UM OP Aem10US ttvlne. Clllf. 92T15 ~It It made on • fOt1!1 ~ "" BE AVAILABLE FOR PU&-Camd9d Pl-. Lagu11a auelMEU Ma. National Educ ation hirnillled by Ille Clly Of RC~ ~M LIC tNSPf~ FOR A "8JC 9l)T1C( 9aac:fl. Clllf. 92t51 The proposed WOf'kS of Improvement 10 be financed under tl'lese proceeed~ The follOWlng person• c.nt.... lne.. 18'IOO Von Huntington BMctl atld IS ...... eTATamWT PERIOD OF 30 DAYS AT Tllll bu*--i• con· lngs fOf this Assessment District ate Described as the construction and heYol abandoned IN .,. of Karman A--. Sult• 1100, maoe 1n aecordartee ""'" ti. The 1~ sier-_ crrv HALL ft..,., duc19Ct by "' lndMdual lnsta.llatlon of Approxlmatety 14,400 lineal feet of new water distribution th• Flellllou• • Bu1lnt11 Celtl~ CorpOfauon No prcrMIOl\s of :he propoeal doirlll ~ • 0 0 N N 0 BL E o e E ACT111CMM .,.... Th• rag1.1tran1 eom- mU\s and oonnectlons to eJllsllng mains to MrVe and benefit propeftles Name: MICHAEL s MEAT' ~225. llvtne, cak1 97715 requlrement• COAST INLAND COM-UAISOH OFFICER OEPT ..... STATllmlf'T rnenc:ed 11> tr~ bull- loc.ted Within the boundaries of lhs Assessment District FISH. 14450 Culv9r Ct-rte. Thia busln .. s is eon· Eacl'\ t>idder must bt1 PANY tl>'S Celle Oat Carro OF PVellC WORKS. CITY The 1~ P9t'80n9.,.. Ma under the fldrtous Ste. 0, lrW\e, c.111 9271 4 ducted by. a c;otporetion llCented a11d also PT•· •501 'San CMmenla c.lf OF HUNTINGTON BU.CH OOlng ~ • ~ name OI ~ BOUNDAJUES Of A8R8SMENT DISTRICT The ~"'°"' 8"sl119U Tiie r1gl•trant corn· quetlfied .. requtred t>y I.aw 12672 • 2000 MAIN STREE'T HUNT· BAAAA1fCA COURT. ll9t9d aboYe Oii NIA ,..erred to at>o¥1-rnenc:ed to tJ-.nsac1 ~ The City Council of t"9 Wt4brn R Crain l°"8 INGTON IE/oCH CA 17550 Gillette Ave 11ue H•otd H ~ filed In Orange County on ,,... under Ille hclltou.a City ot t4unllngton Beech,... Calle Del Ceno ,50, San COMMENTS ON THIS ln/IM, Cjlf, 927H TNI .. t.,,.,. -..., All propertleS that benefit from the wortts of Improvement shall be Oc:lobef 26, 11187 FILE buslMN ,,.,,,. °' ,,.,.,_ MNM Iha ngnt to r•iect lnY Clement• Cahl 92672. GOAL WILL BE RECEt\/ED Tl'te LUii!. Company • wlfft the County Cler'll of Ot· usested to pay a proportionate sh8'e of the costs and expenses ol tl'le NO 1'359413 tilled above on NIA °' 1111 t>ld• Thlt t>ullneu ,. oe>n· IN THE ABOVE· MEN· C•llfornta Corpofetto11, ange County on No¥wnbtlt Improvements. togethei with ac~ulaltlon expenses. A map or the Assessment H91mut °'*'-Judy Beyersdorf9r. AssL By Iha °'«Mr ~ the Oty duc:ted t>y en tndMduaf TIONEO OFFICE AND ev 17550 Giiiett• Ave nue . 4 tMe District ldentlfled as "PROPOSED BOUNDARIES OF ASSESSMENT DIS-This bull,_. wu con· Sec Council of the City of Hunt· The r•gl11rent com· THE UNITED STATES 0£. Irvine. cald 9271• FUIDWI TRICT NO 88·2 (RESERVOIR HILL)" has beef'! ~proved by the i-.1sJatlve dUcled by an lndMduel Tiii.a etatemen: we.a Iliad ington e..cn. CahlCKnta llMI meooed 10 lranNCt t>u• PARTMENT OF TRANS· RIChefd A. Haw1ho<ne. Pllb!Wlad Otange C0Ut . ._ Thts •tatamant WU filed ..tlh Ille County Clerk ol Ot· 2•~.::r. ol Oc:tObet. 19811 he Ile POAT A TION WASHING.-23232 Perella DrM. Suit• Dllty PlloC Nowmber 10, '7 • body and for all particulars as to the boundaries. teference ls made to said with the Cou11ty Clerk ol Df· 1 anot County on NOWMt>er Jlroclway, City ,,.,: und:.~ °' ~= TON . D c FOR A PERIOD I 100. Leo-a H•tt•. Calrl 2•. Dacembtlt t. 1991 • map on file with the transcript or these proceedings. 8'199 County on Oc:tobet S, 2. 1988 Cterl ..... City of Hutlt· :'.!i,ne:o,.. on N/A OF .5 DAYS FROM THE 92653 Th-104 : ttea . nt'TOG, ..... 8MCtl W1U&M1 R Cfairi DATE OF THIS NOTICE This buSlntU II eon· • COST Of ....OYEMENTS Publahed Otange Co&sl Publlahed °""98 COUl J»ubllthed Ofenge Coast Tf\ll etelemenl -flied Pubbhed Orange CO..t ducted by • oar-al P«1· --.---.,.-.,.-TI-IC( __ _ : : Deity Pilot October 20. 27 Delly Pilot Nowmbar 10. 17. Ollty Pttol Octobtlt 29. No-with the County Cler1l ot Ot-Dally Piiot ~ 3. 10 "9nhil> _.......;~;.;;.;----.---........... - -......_tot.I estimated cost of the wor1ca of improvement fOf' the Assessment Nowmber 3, 10, Ital 24 i'.>eclmber 1, 1Me vember 3, 10 1taa .,,,... County on N<wemt>er 1988 Th• ••g•strant com· • • •• T~5 n..o91 S.Th064 -...-Tll087 rNnC*I to transect Du»- • Dbtr1ct are Mt forth as follows: ·-.,. WlTIC( e 19a& ,,... under 111e f1et1tou• um ITA,....,. • rta.IC llOTIC( "8.IC ll>TIC( I ..--n. "" FW7'&11 PllllC ll>TIC( ~ 11811'18 "' nanl9e The ~ s---Eatlmated C0St Of Construction· $ 1,3 12,000 00 Put> siled Orange Coast 111t9cS a1>ove on December 4 ~ ~ aa: ~ Eatimaled ~t.i Expenses: s 525,000 00 CONIOUOAftD MPOllT OF CONC>rTIOM Detty Pilot ~i:.10. 17. Ku.I 1M f RIA PAOOUCTIOHS. Estimated Total Cost: $1.837,000.00 OF COIAIE'RCIU• 24 December 1 ' Th-099. FlCTinovt .,_.. Riclllard T Detht Sec· et5t w-Aft .. Hunt· s 1 837 000 00 Consoffdated ~or Condition of "Commer-ceBank" ot Newport Beech, ..... STAftMIWT r9llfY ington 9eadt. c.11. f2M7 Balance to Assessment: . • . Or C d "---tic S bsldlarieS at the cl<>Se of business on .. -.,. llllft.,_. The follow!"" par.oM are Thie lt"91nent wa ll!ed Cary Raffety, '7617 *'99 ounty, an .,.,.,..... u ~ ""'-. doono t>usinen.. "'"",._County a.11 of Ot· Locv.t. F°""tain v.itey, September 30. l988. ".... CATALIN,\ ISLE APART .... COunty on Oc:tobtlt ,0 CeM •2roe PROCEIDING8 ANO BONDS """-Ile .. Banlc No. 1211 Oollet Amounte I FICTlflOU9 ~M ~EN~S 11rrut.O '*1Mr'INCI. ,... .... ~~~con· Saki p<oceedlnQa '°' this A.ssessment District shall bie had and taken ThouNneh ,...,.. ITATtW 2914 Soutl'\ R•t• Wey s.n11 ~ Otange eo..t ----~· wrau1nt to lhe "K.funlclpal Improvement Act of 1913" (Division 12 of lhe ••HTS "' I The lotlow'lnig ~ .,.IANI Calif !1270• o.lr ,,_,. Octooar 20, 27, Tit• tetlatrant eom- Streeta and HighW•ys Code of the State or California). Bonds shall be issued Cash-and due from banks ·· · .......................... ···· · .... · · · 29 9·0 5?6 3 oo-ng t>uS1ne111 ae. Fr.a E .. ertmar> Jr 29 t• ~ 3. tO, 1te11_ ,...... :*' ~ -:-"Id: to repfeMnt uripaid asesaments In accordancie with the "Improvement Bond. 1n-...tment securltes (Matk•t ~aJue $9,3'2)....... . . .•... ...... • <; T~E GIFT PEOOLER.1Soutll Rit• Way Sarna Ana, ,.._ .... ~ ,,..,. cs-. - Act of 1915", (Olvitk>n 10 of said Code). FO!towtng the confirmation of the FecMrel funds IOld and MCUfttles J>_Urdlased under 2•011.e ~erguerite Ptrwy. Calil 92704 .....C ll)TIC( ...,., ~on~• •1111mentta.1n•'!!'.~.?~.!,,t'~u(30nl~Y!.wi1 .. ~!!..~1~~papaymenya"''~f~ ~~ ... Tomt*'e11t•~~.~~1~=:=:::::·.:: ..... t3s.2 1e 61.940 M·,s::;v::,·.~.'~~e ~~:°.Mo~• ,.M,,:::! ~ •.-a.a ,~_ .. __ . ••wmen a ....,,, .,.., .... _ ... .,. _._. .. ...,,., ....... "'""""'... .,,. --. ,........, ... 2,4 17 Margueor•t• Ptlw)r .• ~ El Mont• ca.1 91733 -~ =~ _ -..... annull lnat..,,ta, with bonds lsaued to repr..ent the unpaid balance The -.: Alowanoe fOf possible IOen tosw.......... ... ··· 132 802 vie,o ea.1 .,.., Tr.is tlu••n•sa 1e con-NC~ •llMH • ,_ •;:.:.."'::'."c.;;"' of o;: ectu.i lnter•t rete for the bonds ah.it be determlned upon the sale of said loen•. net ................................. ·· ........................ · · u ., This t>uelnaa 11 con-ducted or e l•m•ted l)er1net· .,._STA,_.,, wlttt t"'9 .._ .. , ~-bond "' Senk premltea. F.F. & E etc. (Including None caplt~I ..... ).. ..... ~·....., oucted by an lndMdWI ""P ,..,. ~ per90M .... :T911eoun1y on a. Reel •tate owned other than bank premtMe............................ • .559 1 Th• reglltranl c;orn· The r•t••t••n• com· ~ ~ • ,.,.. PUaLIC HeARtMO Cust~·• tlablHty to this bank on aoo.ptanoes outstanding......... 29 menoad to traMeCt bull-menc:ed to ,,.,,sac:t t>u• C LIFO AN IA C ATV P\ll>lllhad °""91 coaae Other uaeta ~ncludlng None lntangtblet).......................... ................ 1,993 lntn ul1d•r Ille flClrtou• ""9 und., tne llclitoua ~lltn.E~H~ ~27,~• ~~ 10 17 · o CE SSE s 2·38 525 oullMM 11ama Of namea bu.-SS name or n•,,,.. .. --. ,. _ _, ~ • _ · • NOTlCEISHEREBYGIVENTHATMONOAY,THE5THDAY F OE M· TOTALA .......................................................................... • wstadeoo.eon NIA littedat>o.,..onJ\lnel 1Ne TM t.u11t ~ •• ~. ,,._ BER 1918 AT THE HOUR OF 7:00 O'CLOCK P.M. OF SAID DAY. IN THE LIAINLITlll 1 ai vora Frede Her1rnan Jr Cellfomla corporation, Th-l~ REGULAR' MEETING PLACE OF THIS LEGISLATIVE BODY, BEING THE TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC OFFICES ···· · • · · ..... 217 ,202 ~" 11a1.,.,,..,. ..,.. 111eO Thi• st•letnent .. MIO tlHO Qlltiett• Aven11•. COUNCIL CHAMBERS. CITY HALL. IS THE TIME ANO PLACE FlXEO TO T«Nt demand depotit1 ·· · ....................... · ... -.. ... 93, 142 ...,,,h the Coutlty C-. of Ot· wtth the Count) Ctetlr of Of • .,.._ C:..-tan• t-::======:::- COHSIOER AND FINALLY DETERMINE WR ETHER THE PUBLIC INTEREST Tot.a time tind savings depoaill ............................ 124,oeC> enoe County on October t1 ange Count'I Of' Octobet 10 Klnt -"••a c..,.. Com· ANO CONVENtE.NCE REQUIRE THE IMPROVEMENTS, ANO TO CONSIDER TOTAL DEP08'TS IN DOMESTIC AND nlllD ,__.. ~. • •:.!°'' eorpor. ANO DEfeAMINE WHETHER Tt:E OWNERS OF A MAJORITY OF THE AREA FOREIGN OFFICES ............................. ··· ....................... _... 2 t 7 .202 Pub1""9d Otenoe eo.. Publls"9d Otaoge C09I :..as:. .,o:-N • """'T ... "' PAO-RTY IN THE ROPOSEO '"SSESSMENT DISTRICT HAV Federel ~,...,chased and aec:urnlee sold under o..iy Ptlot Oc:tobet 20. 27• De'Y Peot Octot>er 20 21· -... .... !_.___ •• vr ,...... r"' " ,.... In ... ..__le ~....._.. 1 348 "'°119mbar ,, tO. ,... Hoo+il~ 3 10 tW '... -,. con· PROTESTED AGAINST SAID IMPROVEMENTS. OR ANY PORTION THERE· agreements to reptKctl... .....,,_, ........... ~.................... • 1lM>4t Th-038 duCtet ~ ....... part• OF: ANO TO COHSK>ER ANO FINALLY ACT ON THE ENGINEER'S "RE· Morteege lndebtednell {lnCIUdlnO NONE e.ptal ........................... 979 nar'INP POftT'" AND TO HEAR All PROTESTS RELATING TO SAID PROPOSED ~ eucuttd by or for account of 2t P\llJC M»tll:l "8JC ll)TIC( Th• r .. latranl coft'I· PAOCHoeNGs, OR THE OAAOES AT WHICH THE WORK SHALL BE DONE. tNt _. end outstanding ............... -........... • ..................... ... "*'*' to ...._... llult- OR THI IXTINT Of THE ASSESSMENT OtST,.ICT, OR AS TO MAPS ANO Oths ......................................... · ........ ..... ·· .................... · · 1•581 FIC~'l9:ca• PM:~..,...,_... ::...."'*' ,_,.o. or-=.= ~~~~n.<rp~~~~~:R~b~EA~Js~~~T~~t~: TO~~).~~~~~ .. ~~~~-~t~ ................... 221,139 ~a;....: .. ~=.,.~:~: AHO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED MAY FILE A WRITTEN PROTEST AT OR Commltmenta end contlnQenClea • dolno ._..,_ -dOil'I ~. Pr911dant·FlllWIGlt IEFOAE THE TIME SET FOR HEARING REFERRED TO HERE eltA~ •ounY wbCO PMt'Tl"O. '™ CAL~OAN!.\ CAA CAR! Ttlil ~ ... .._, PROCll.DlltOe MQ4.J .. a '°' .. lnfOnMllOn relating to theM ptoc.edlnat. the "-'Ing:=-· end Mt end .. .......,.. • _. t«th.. and contained In .,,.., ta. ~ 0t Cer11ftcatee. attenllon la directed to tr.. J*"°'1 ~t9d beeOw: C0Mm0n --~ ll'ld , CO.. ...... COMf'ANY 2512 t Otllon _..,. the Cowtty Cla1I of Or· No .,_..~a.d 2 .000 CaM t2127 "°9d. ~ Holle CaM angeeouNyonOC.0..12 No: .... °"'9tandlllg . t,84;2 Amount t2.275 7 A ~t·-~: ~we & lUC:ll Ill • ~Or.,.~ TOTAL CONTRt8UTE.0 CAPITAL ....... • •• • ··-·· ... -...... _ ..... ,_ .•. \2.~, ~ 5t01 w.,.,.., A-. "M7, cot oreted, Cal:tornla , ~NIM~ IO. 11. Aee8111ed .......... .,. .......... • ' ' ... --·-··--·-.• ,_ ...... -........... ' t~'38$ Huntonttofl ~ C.... 1$~1 l)lol\ "°9d. Lltfl'N No•M•, to ttla TOTAl SHAMHOLOERS EQUITY................ .. • ...... ·-··-··~ . • m.at , ~ c.t ~ Th-OM TOTAL: UAllllmf:S ANO SHAR£HOLOEAS EOVllY ............. -... 231.525 1"tlll w..,._ .. eott-TMt ~ ii COii· _._... ....... ___ .-,.-.11 .. ST~IV L!TT8'8 Of CMDIT OUC*I ~ • COfP.M.-Oo ..-. ~ • COlllOllllol• fmJC .. TOTALal> • 111Oft...,...,.30, '911 The r9' ••refit co"'• Ttle r9911tra111 COlfl· ·-... • l'ileOOld to tt...Ct .... _.... .. tr.-ct ~ - lJ'9 ..,__, ~ H 001e1r1. Pt.-....nttCEO encl Aotlert• E. 1'1t111 Wftder the ~ ,_ _..., ""' llc:t•t<M ~'Jla•'-r•l•l-I ........... ~.P.JCr<>oifte~NlMdtMw*,Md\ ..... torhtfnMll =-:o:: ~ :-...... rw: :,.....~ ,..,. ........ ,.,... .. 11ofw ... not frlf H -..-: I NM .,.,..,.. ""°wild~ Of the mett9r'a tW ,_ .... ...._ • =.-::::=:.-::i:::..~end-==:..::::~ ='!.:-.::..~ .... ~~u:--:.•!.!. ~ LT~~-11 ~T~ ~..._al...,. NI 11W =•? a en. ..a oorred Witt\.,_~ a.t: flKOr • .,.. .. c-MyClaftl" ...-, -I tTHOROcllol*l1. .,., pCM19Wfl..Cellfome lftfllCauMy°" Q ... ~.,,~ Qlt ..... --: ......... 1:10 C..-H. o.-t ~ Ot .... C.. • I ? 1• ar.,.. C.-1111 HWOllii t ...... . ..... L....... o.l'f ,.._ oc.... • rr . .,.., ,_ 011t*er M. rr. ~Ollit ·w• ThOM 1"°'1 NII .... 10 ,.nt-OIS ... *'*' "~"TMMI .:: :•:.i:.: -,~!!!!!!!!.~~~~~~~~~~-~~~----~~;.:,;.;..~---=-----------------:~-~------~-·--- • •I -Qr"9COMtCWLYPtlOTl ~.~10, 1... j HEVROLET Home of the Serengeti Blazer Call our friendly salesmen for details 579-5100 1-800-228-7240 17071 E. Imperial Hwy. -Yorba Linda. California a •• ,.,, 011r • S1rrio1 I S.1Hli1• THEODORE ROBINS THE~TORE 2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 642-0010 o5ADDLIBACll Sales Leasing Service Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-800-831-3377 714-380-1200 ~/GMCTRucK "THE SMART STOP'' • (714) 540-9840 2850 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA M!SA ... $ SA~~Y.IL~Ba $ SANT A ANA AUTO MALL NEW LOCATION! o . 1500 Auto Mall Dr., 8Mta Ane 135-3171 Newport/SS Frwy. at Edinger .Sales Dept open 7 days SeMce Hours: Mon.-Frl 7am-10pm BUENA PARK •STANTON GARO N GROVE PACIFIC OCEAN • (714) 540-0713 2llO HAMOA ll.YO. • COSTA MESA .. • • SAA Customer Sallslaclion Ex~noe Award Winner 770-7001 23e63 Rockfleld Blvd. Lake Forest, Irvine Auto Cent• ' HUNTINGTON ••ACH ACUAA 0 • OLDSMOBILE • CADILLAC • GMC.TRUCKS m/582 -0800 SAN OIEGO FWY -AVERY EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL • NO HASal.f.8 ·~~:~~ ~..; .. ~ We••• HIGH VOlUME LOW PAOFIT ~ Our Goal Is to Be Number One 548-0220 -0 HOUSE of IMPORTS, In c. Mercedes-Benz 6862 Manc})Catcr Boulevard Buen& Park J.Wai' 213 or 7 1•/ID!:RCEDES,M-F 8a-6p Where 1-5 and l-91mect. Sat. 8a-2p e Garden ~lty &n VOtKSWAGEN@ ~ -IN WESTMINSTER ~ 7600 Westminster Blvd., Westminster (71,)891-9378 (213)430-28'3 • Go~ Gt-0-~c;, Orange Coas t J eep Eagle C.CWr Set4fftlcdM • Sales 0..1 J hfothl • Semee Mt eon · Leutac llM Barbor Blvd. • Coat.a Meaa • Low Price• • No G1mm1clo • Great Selection • Fr1endly People • h cellent $erv1<e 1M3S9"ctllowle •d (714) M2·711l •&EACH UNCOUe ......, ..... ' -SALES -LEASING SERVICE -PARTS I JOYCE BODLOVICI -.---Senior- ' tolead _,,ororJty chapter There's been a lot of talk about presidents these days, and while the national elections have oc- cupied everyone's mind, there is a president right in our midst who deserves recognition. ----'ountain Valleyresidentand U C senior Cindy AralkakJ has been selected president of the university'schapter of Chi Ome~ sorority. Chi Omega is the largest sorori- ty nationwide with nearly 200,000 members. N Thursday, November 10, 1981A8 OCC offers help for speech ,disorders Nearly one out of-every I 0 Ameri· cans has 'a speech or lanauate dis. order. • . It's a problem that affects more Americans than virtually any other disability. And fa's-not-. respecter~( -cc. sex or positton., "Those of us without speech dis. orders take for granted our ability to communicate with others," said Olona Jenson. Orange Coast Col- lege's new speech specialist who operates the cQllegc's Speech and Lan1u• Center. • :'People who have speech or lan1ua,c disorders often feel isolated and ho~less. Think how fruwatina . it would.be to.have a thouaht that can't be verbally communicated to another human being. The frus. tration 1s immense." Jenson, a licensed speech patholog1st, Jo ined OCCs faculty in August. A native of Jacksonville, fla., she graduated from Pensacola Junior College and holds bachelor's and master's degrees in speech and language pathology from Aorida State Umvcrs1t)-. . While a college student. the ouiso- ing Jenson took speech and drama courses. and appea~cf in several summer stock productions. But she developed a love for working with people suffenng from speech prob- lems. Cindy, the daughter ofDavld and Tomiko Arakaki, is ajoumal- ism/English major. She has worked on the college newspaper as a feature and entertainment writer, and isa member of the Public Relations Student Society of America. She has been on the dean's list with a grade point average of3. 5 for several semesters. Gloria J~n (center), dltector of OCC'• Speech and Lan&aaae Center, worb wltla nadenta ln amall poape. Prior to Joining OCC's staff, Jenson was a speech instructor at Troy State University 1n Alabama. She came to (Pl--.. JJSJl/.&8) After graduation next May, Cindy plans to attend Pasadena Arts Center and earn a degree in art. Her soal is to work in the advertising field. • • • E ldo Evenson and Mark Hauoaofthe Huntington Beach Police Department recently com- pleted Golden West College's Criminal Justice Trainini Center's Motorcycle Training Academy. • • • And speaking of G olden West College, a two-part lecture series on ocean sports fishing will be held tonight and next Thursday from 7 to lOp.m. in Humanities 315. Presented by CbarUe Davis, a 40-year veteran fi sherman and jou~alist, the.s'.eries will co.ver locations, equipment, species. boats and methods for deep.water and rock fi shing. Program fee is $36. For additional information and registration, call GWC Com- munity Servives, 891 -3991 . • • • Don't forget the Sundayeve- nin$ performance ofTziganka, an em1gre Russian folk ensemble, at Orange Coast College. The group tours internationally from its London base. The company combines spirited music a.nd colorful cos- tumes with exciting Russian dances. The concert begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Robert Moore Theater. Advanced tickets areS7.50. They m~y be purchaed in OCC ticket office in the college'sStu- dent Center. Tickets will be sold at thedoorforS9. The company is led by virtuoso balalaika player Bibs Ellkel. Fea- tured soloist Fanlna Zonovan is an Odessa-born gypsy singer. The I 0-mem ber ensemble blends a combination of music. dance and comedy. • • • It looks as if Fountain Valley . (PleaeeeeeLIBRARY/A9) B ulLET 1~ B o~Ro Salma Khan and Joe Bel Bruno with logo. Magazine to involve county high schools By JOYCE BODLOVICH OfllleO..., ......... Saima Khan and Joe Bel Bruno may have devised a way to educate teen-agers about current events without them even knowing it. Tb-e lcartung 1001 rrVottr Vo1~. a colorful tabloid magazine. to be written by high school students. It wall include popular sports. entertain- ment and fashion articles -along wtth ttmel) news items. , And who bell~ to undertake the task than Khan. 17. a JOumahsm maJOr at Orange Coast College. and Bel Bruno. 18. a romm unication student at Cal tate Fullerton. "Your YOJCCJ..S..realluom~ to be_ their '01ce:· Khan said. ··we under- stand what students are say ing be- cause we are their.age·· (Please aee TEEN/A9) Disabled invited to stop, feel the roses By'KA TY BOUCHER Of .. ~""'...,, Wade Roberts of Sherman Gardens in Corona del Mar wants people to do more than take time to smell th.e flowers. He wants visitors to touch and feel the plant.s and flowers. especially blind or disabled people. "Our•Garden of Discovery' is designed especially for the blind and disabled," he said. "Everything has been placed at wheelchair height. h's a touch and smell garden that contains plants that ha ve texture. "For instance. there is a plant called Pineapple Sage." he added. "You can touch tt. rub it between your fingers and It actually smells like fresh pineapple. We have coconut geraniums that smell hke coconut. There's also peppermint. rose and lemon ydU can put an iced-tea. And there's a plant called. ·Cambs Ears.· J1's the softest plant m the world. I guarantee 1f you felt 1t. you·d believe my statement.·· Robem said the touch and smell garden idea "'as conceived by Sh1rle) Kenns m t984. He saaditermstrams the docents who conduct tours.. Funding came from the Harry G. Steele Foundauon. ··1t's JUSt ~orgcous:· he said. ··tt has an 1sland-hke atmosphere. It s about 40 feet long and 10 feet wide. A latJe.-~rbor - or. open beams stretch a cross-1.hc..10p. Everything 1s m containers.'' Roberts also ellplaincd the late .\mold Haskell. founder of Sherman Gardens. wanted anyone with a d1sab1htv to have access to the gardens. "Even though ~e didn't stt 1t (the garden) m his lifeume, Arnold was always concerned." he said. "Before it was even a requirement, he put m restrooms accommodattng wheelchairs ... And 1t doesn't matter 1f you're disabled or Just plain tired because th e gardens has Just obtained a state-of-the- an wheelchair for patron's use from Seal's Health Care Equipment m Costa Mesa. Roberts said this wheelchair can be useful to elderly people who may be there for 1.....:;.:...__;;.....:.....;..a;; awhile and don·t want to stand on their fttt for a long penod ofume. .. Last ~eek ~e had someone call and say the) ~ere bnnging their mother for lunch.'' he sa1d ... They asked 1f we had a wheelchair ... Sue Brown and Nancy Gla.nnaW tlaank Larry Seal for hla wheelchair donadon. Mom, pop business recycled Spread out across a dust} table inside tubb) 's ReC)chng C~nter...1n Huntington Beach 1s an incongruous blend of adult magazan<"s and Harle- qwn roJTianCC no' els. Although th<' reading material 1s not an uncom mon sight. tons1denng the tons of paper coll<'ctl'd through Stubbfs each "ed.. thr"e particular books and ma11az1ncs ha'<' another purpose. .. We sell thrm to people and the money goes ICl help the bhnd get sce~e dC>i) · said Ru'iscll .. tu~ by" Gendron The rest of thr products s1orcd 1n the 10.000 squar<"·foot hu1ldang - newspaper~)<-pla,uc. gla<os and aluminum -arc shipped to vanous ~·ompanies for rccychng. ~ndron. an Anaheim res1dent, has been 1n the business sin~ 1976. Hts nickname. however. was earned dunng the 14 }ears he spent with the ell) of ~nahe1m as a gardener. .. The gu)s I worked with Were the (Pleaee see RBCTCLJ1'0/A0) Casino night in Irvine planned for Easter Seals benefit reStf'\ at1ons may ~ obtained b~ calhng 4~ 7202. rhc Easter Seal Society of Orange County will be the winner when Century 21 International Headquarters throws the fund-raisin& dice with Casino Night '88 at the Rca1stry Hotel in Irvine Friday from 8 p.m. to I a.m. The event ~ill feature a 'SOs themewitt\adiscjockey. costume contest, door prizes, snacks and dancing. Students of the H1&h Hopes Head Injury RchibiJitation Center of Oransc County will be auests of Century 21 at the fund-raiser. All proceeds from tM event will go to Easter Seals. Tickets may be obtained by calling Bonni Christopher or Carol Nick at 553-2100. Veteran• Day brealcla•t •lated The Newpe>rt Harbor Post 291 of the American ~on will hold its first annuaJ Veterans Day bttakfast Fnday at the post headquarters, 21 S I Sth Stl'C'Ct, Newport Beach. The menu incllldcs scrambled CJ&S; bacon and/or sau~. hash brown potatoes.. biscuits and vavy and coffee for S3, with bloody Marys optiomal for SI .SO. The brat fast is 1eheduled &Om 7 to I 0:30 a.m .. with a fish fry planned from 6 to 9 p.m. Holld•y boutique in Irvlne Irvine's Westpark Village One will hold its ninth annual holiday boutique this "eckcnd an the v1llag<' clubhouse. 3754 Hamilton t. Hours for the sale are Fnda} from 4 to 9 p.m .. Saturda_y from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Sunday from 9 a.m to 2 p.m. Call 786-2948 for add111onal mformauon. Artl•t due honors ln Newport Lasuna Beach artist Abb) Vaughn will be honored for her contnbution to Judaic an at a special Shabbat service Friday at Temple h1r Ha-Ma'alot in Newpon Beach where she is an artist 1n residence. The temple will display a colclc11on of watercolors and oils painted by Vaupn dunna her two tnps 10 Israel. The show1n1 will be&in at 8 p.m. at the 1cmple. 2100- Mar Vista. Newpon Beach. School land-nl•lng alglJt Tbe Harbor Day School activity center wtll be transformed mto the '"Moose Siu Chalet"' Fnday for tht Khool's an.nual fund .. ra11m1 cHnt Over 200 silent and live auction items wtll be available at tht 6:l0p.m. event at the school. 3-443 Pict rte View Onvc. Corona del Mar .. Call Cindy Chnstaon at ~2401 fordeta1I • ' Helen Pclle11tr and \1elba Graves wtll demonstrate the makmg of succult"nt "rcaths V1s1tors a~ wrl omr and the donation 1s S3 Call 494-6460 for add111onal 1nfonnat1on Paperwork assistance offered Volunteers from ahe >\mcnca.n Assoclauon ol Un1versu~ Women wilt be available to provide P3J>C1'· work assistance Fnda) from 2 to 4 p.m. at Great American First vinp·m Laguna Hills. The free S(rvtct' 1s offered for'MedK:arc. supplemen- tal health insurance. bank statements. brokers' state- ments, telephone balls and other paperwork problems. Call Jeanette Lambert at 95 1-7260 for further infor- mauon. P'IVP'll"oupstoha.tdance The lrv1ne·Newpon and South Coast chapters of- Parcnts Wtthout Panners will tombu~ to host • suwcs da~ Fnda) at pec11l Touch Rcstau~nt.. 24256 El Toro Roed.. La&uoa Hills. ~ dance 11 ~ to-thc-pubtte wtth hve m~ by Sneak Prtv~"' from 8 p.m. to madnitht and an onen1111ion for prospccuve members at 7 15 Call 496-3626 for more 1nformauon about PWP or t~ dantt. Alcoholic support •ork•llop ~ d.a)·long -.orkshop for adult cl11ldrcn of lllcobobcs "111 be held Saturda~ b) the Center for Creative .\hernau"e at the Rea Community Center, 661 Hamilton t .. Room 600. Costa Mesa. The program will run from I 0 a.m. to J:lO p..m. with a brcal for lunch. The cost 1s$20. 1nddeta1l$areavai&M* 3t b4 2-0377 I ' SclJooJ r eunion jclJedaJed The Huntinaaon Park Htgh School clutn of wtntcr 1 ~6S. summer 1968 and w1n1er 1969 v.111hokitheir20- \Car reunion turdayatthc Red won Inn iaCOS&a ~. tall (2 13) 72 1·7200 for add1llonal anforma11on • ... NYSE CoMPO ~ITl TRANSACTIONS -~ ------ ' • .. THUlllDA ~· 11 A.II. (PDT) PRICES Stocks continue decline NEW YORK (AP) -~tock pri~ drifted lower in featureless today with many mvcstors reluctant to make commitments in the face of the markefs uncenain direction. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was down 2.13 points at 2.116.11 at 2 p.m. EST. The bluc-<:hip indicator was up 5.52 points 30 minutes after the opening bell and has floated in a narrow. dittctionless pattern since. Declining issues barely outpaced advancing issues on the New York Stock Exchange. with 682 issues down, 639 up and 556 unchanaed. Volume on the Big Board was !9.50 million shares in light activity as many investors prepared for a three-day Veteran's Day weekend. Analysts said the market remained in a holding pattern with many players reluctant to make commitments in the face of economic uncenainty following the prcside,.ntial election. Jn addition, <lOncems about the dollar and interest rates continued to plague today's market. keeping many investors away. "There arc still-a lot of questions about the Fed t1ghtening. .. and that is keeping a lot ofinstitutional investors on the sidelines:· said Philip Puccio, senior vice president at Dillon, Read~ Co. "The market is very sJciddish, very slow,'' said John Burnett, 5Cnior vice president at Donald~n. Lufkin & Jenrcue. WH AT AMEX Dio W H~T NYSE DID NEW YORK (AP) Nov. 9 1 25 NEW YORI< (APl Nov. 9 ,.i ~"~ w\ ,.,.....,~. Hj ¥~~s 21 ~=~~~s AMEX LE~DERS Go Lo QuoTE s "ME TALS QuorE s NYSE LE~DER S Dow JoNE S AVERAGES NASDAQ SUMMARY 11Ve +I~ -1-T6 Prodllcer price index stabalizes in .October WASHINGTON (AP) -Whole· sale prices ~mained flat in October after seven straiaht monthly incrases as the cost offood fell forthe first time since February, the aovcmmcnt said today., 'd h b'l' . h Ana ysts sa1 t e sta 1 tty 1n t c Labor Dcpanmenl's Producer Price Index for the first time in eiabt months sian1 fies a taperi na off of i'he cfTectsofthcsu_mmerdro\.iaht. which · had tent food prices up 3.S percent since May. Wholtsale food pfi<a. led by l&llC declines for fruiU, Ytl[ttablcs, Nktry prOducUi peua. beef and cookina oils. fell o. r ~· lat month, That was thtir Ont d«lint since February. the Labor ~t sa1d. Food Pfica hed skyrocketed 1.2 ~·-~bcr. ~ ldjmled ~ prica ,.,. ~ O.J fa'CC"' aut moo&b after ~ b; J.l pmnt in SeJ*mbcr. foloWilil Sharp dectines OVtt the ... _.. MluraJ ~ raaajumped 4.6 ~' aut month we.ilt = prieel Wei .... and holne . oil pricn fell I 0. r ~L Wbolnllc prica for ~ OlMr "8n foodaDd ntt11were11nclal..,ct 1111 mooda. Aatomobilc, bome • Dlilnc:e. .. and daildmt'• lppUd Prim f'efl Prictt '* Jur women'• and rMn't cloth1n.. houwhc>kt co,na ... uc alco"olte \ bcverases and prescriP,tion drup. Before seuona_I a<1,1ustments. the Labor Ocp&nment's indell for aoods one step shon of the retail level rose 0.6 percent 10 109.3, mca= that a hy~ical telection of s ~t· inaSIOOat the wholesale level in 1982 would have cost SI 09.30 las1 month. That same martetbatkct of aoods would have COil SIOl.60 in Seincm- ber and S 107.70 a year llO· The seasonal adjustment process is dai~ tQ remove predictable. per- iodic inftuerKU from the calculation of pnce chanp. Analysis said the diftCrtnce bo- tween the KUOC\l.lty 9djusled prica and real ones was pnmaril)' con- nected wit.b me introdUC110n or 1989- modd lutomobilel. . .. lecl•W IUIO iibMel (OD 1981 modlll.l.:"9 .............. in ~'*"' 1~ incnwtaoaober :: t:.... ==·"~; ;:-me· b' ... ~ 1t Uniwenity ift. Allllitl.. .. Allo, prier .-m ....._., ...... • tooe M new w 11t I lel reldr 1 ii dllln;" Sddrlr~on 1919 . ...._-.n an..,. of 7.S petCllM lbo\it *' tM ·-modlh .. ._.. ., • ~her. the UbOt Dlpinalee .. ' , .A.a S OAILY PILOT/~. Nowmber 10, 1988 LEsu£ EAllEST Mission to promote international trade ·Colleg~ Journals Judg~d - wianer.s JoumalismstudentsatSaddl~ • back College arc apparently doing ,omethins rif.!lt. The Mission Viejo C()IJtgc s weekly newspaper, the Lariat, and Saddleback Maga- zine have both been in the li melight recently. The Lariat was one of four college papers to receive a West Region Pacemaker Award from the Associated Collegiate Press, a national organization for college publications. · .. This is a fantastic honor for our journalism program, es- pcctaUy in our first year entering the competition," said J. Mldaael Reed, Lariat adviser and chair of the journalism department. .. The hard work of student editors and staff: Carol Ziellm, instructional assistant; typesetter Linda · Davin ; and the support of the entire campus community made this award possible." Saddleback Magazine was selected as one of 13 outstanding collese publications by the Com- munity College Humanities As- sociation, also a national or- ganization. The 13 winners will compete for the 1989 community college literary magazine award. 81 IJP.Sl.JE EARNEST °' .. ..., ....... I\ trade mission is bein1 orpnized by Business Ambassadors Inc.. an lrvi~ consultina firm, to en-couraae ,ltade between American companies and businesses in Taiwan and Thailand. The trip, sc~lcd for early nm year;--_is '?cfna co-sponsored by six orpnizat1ons that promote inteT- nationaJ trade. Participants will be scheduled to meet with aovemment leaders and private companies in the host countries, "The primary mission 1s to Ezpanatve Ylew promote and sell U.S. goods and scrv1oes, .. said Buck 811Chanan. Busi- ness Ambassadors chairman. "The mission will a.ho serve those who a~ lookina for specific products from abroad and for those who may f>c interested in investina." A s1mil~r tnp to Malaysia. Sin- aawre and JndODCSTI earlier £his year was "hiahly suci:essful, .. according to Buchanan. "There will never be a better tame to be involved in a trade mission to Southeast Asia," said Jane W1epnd. president of Business Ambassadors. who called Taiwan ··an exporter's dream.- .. Last year we heard over and over, 'The Japanese arc here. The Euro- pcaos are here. Where are the Amen· cans?.'" W1cpnd said. "An)'bo4) who IS (IOt trying to sell ID these markets, especially Taiwan. as malt· ing a big mistake.' Last year, the .Taiwanese aovem- mcnt lifted 11s forc.1gn exchange controls and set a .. buy Ame:rican .. policy, according to Buck. Wath a GNP growing at a rate of 8 percent, there JS a significant demand for consumer goods in Taiwan. be said. Thailand. a member of the Assocaa- t1o'n of South East Asian Nauons. 1s also a rapidly developing economic market. acco rding to Buchanan. ·'T~ir economy 1s booming,·· he said. ''They havc·mone} to spend on U.S. goods and services." Bu£han1i:i. who said he !las 3 7 years cx~nencc m mtcma11onal business. said Business liilltassadors opened thrtt }cars ajllli11h the goal of promoung mtcmat1onal trade. .. The Un11cd States has a monu- mental trade deficit at ihc moment and 111s nccessaf) for a business to go out and look for new markets," BU<;hanan sat<l "With our ex- ~. we can assist U .S, firms an locating thc:K markets." Althou,ab pleuurc may be l&Dd- wtched 10 between busann1 durin& the trip, which runs from Jan. 22 '° Feb. 4, Buchanan said be is warni111t participants they should be prqJef'Cd to work hard. "We told them. 'Of COW'le there's a little tame in the schedule fO( rdu- ing. ··Buchanan said. 'Tm not a lllvc driver. But it's pnmarily a wortina trip ... The tour is limited to 4S people and the deadline to sap up is Oec.-1. For reservation$ or further iU>r- mauon, call 8S I '°444 or 8S 1-0SSS. Robots enliven .. parties By liTY BOUCHEJ\ What stands4 feet 9 inches tall and weighs 170 pounds? · Give up'? The answcT 1s ··ProBot" the robot.. ProBot is a creation by Joe McCord of Newport Beach who owns llobou R Us, a company that feawra robots for cntcrtainina at ~ tnde shows. seminars, °' any fUDCtioa requesting a robot for rent by the hour. "It all started when I opened a ooe- man advertising •ncy," McCord said. ··0ne of my clients was a private school that taua1u ~micro­ proccu1na. printed circuit boards and robotJcs. The president oft.he ICbool wanted a telcvisaon commercial with a robot in it. I bad never seen a robot in my life. -After a little raearch, I found one that bad been made by ID ddcrll retired enaineet", named Jobn Lyke. be said. .. h was primitive but it woded. We made lhe c:ommcrcial and that's when I ~ in love with robots. .. According to Saddleback Presi- dent Coutuce Carroll, the award represents an example ofhard work overcoming major obsta- cles. Loolloat Polnt with lta panoramic Ttew of Dana Point Harbor la a popular •top for Soatbern California Ttmtora. McCord said be became aood friends with the robot's creator and a&J"Ced to bclp bim work one in shows. (Pleue -a<mOT/~) "When I first arrived at Saddle- back College, I found that the literary magazine had been a -casualty ofbudget cuts in the post- Propos1tion 13 era," Carroll said. "The faculty, the students and others helped me restore this important publication. Words cannot describe how rewarding it is now to sec the students' and Professor Reed's work recognized as one of the 13 best community college magazi nes in the nation." Officer dedicated to safety ---LB Wlnterfest e%JMU1ds to 1Deet public response • • • And from a nearby campus, a UCI grad student has ~n awarded the first Sequoia Award from two Indian groups for his work in preserving and fostering the culture and heritage of the Cherokee. Darbill Feelillg, a Cherokee and native Oklahoman who now lives in Irvine, has worked on Cherokee language projects for 15 years. He isco-authorofa Cherokee-English dictionary. Feeling received the award from the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians and the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma. • • • The Laguna HillsSenior Center will host an Orange County flu cl inic Saturday from 9 a.m. to I p.m. Free flu shots will be provided to all senior citizens by FHP Inc., a federally qualified health mai ntenance organization. Reservations arc necessary. Call 581-593 l for more infor- mation. • • • Also on Saturday. an Irvine By LESUE EARNEST Of .. D.-,,... .... Almost from kindergarten on. Enc Bianchi wanted to be a policeman. As a child, his idol and inspiration was a huge. gentle motorcycle policeman who used to visit the Bianchi family. Although he now hau wife and two children of his own, Bianchi, who was nam~ 1987 Irvine Police Depart- ment Officer of the Year, said he still remcmbersclcarly how he used to feel when that motorcycle would pull up to the curb. "He'd say, 'How'd you like to JU mp on the motorcycle and I'll take you around the block?.' and your heart would just light up.'' Bianchi said. ''Mine did.'' Thirty years later. Bianchi. who has created an innovative traffic safety program that he teaches in Irvi ne schools, said he bc&an to sec a similar look in the eyes ofrh1ldrcn he talked to in the community. "I could Stt that same kind of glow in their eyes." Bianchi said. "And it was so familiar. so neat. .. In part. Bianchi. 36. has carved a special pla~ for himself an the police force and the community by dcvisina a talking. blinking mo\orcyclc used to educate children about traffic safety. "Motorcycle Mike" has been effec- tive cnouJh to cam its creator the Motorist Awareness Award from the National Motorcycle Safety Foun- An citpandcd WintcrfesL wtuch wiJI mcludc art and food festivals and a rash of sporting c .. ~nu... recently received unanimous approval from tbt Laguna Beach Cil) Counetl. In addt11on to an ans and crafts show. an an contest fOr college students and an 1ntcmat1onal food festival the Wmterfcst wtll feature a _ solf tournament and surfing. b1c .. ch!!.&s ska tt' rding an~ ~1!di~contcsts. vcr the past 24 }cat"S. the intc est has consisted maanlv of an arts and crafts exhibit at the Irvine Bowl. Last )Car. when a body building contest was added. the publ!C responded enthus1as11call>. according to director Patnoa Rowan As a result. orpnizers dcoded to beef up sporting c'enLS this \Car. she said. "We tu.med av.ay O\'Cr I 00 people at the door." Rowan said of the body building contest.·· And that's the reason we decided maybt' v.e.should do this thing af a bigger sports le,cl." The Wtnterfcst. 1o1.h1ch wtll be held Feb. 17~ to rauc money for the Chambt'r of Commerce. v.as also expanded to take advantage of the annux of tounsts o'er Presidents' Day Weekend. However, according to Rowan.. comm unit} '"' olvemcnt ts sttll the important clement . ··Thcrc·s been a communtt) need here in Laguna that hunol been met in .,..inters past.'• Sht' satd .. E,Cr) bod) IS SO excited. rvc got people comanaoutof the v.oodv.ortt. ·· . .\lthough she said volunteer support has been strong. Rowan said she needs more help from the communtt) . .\n)'one who would like to volunteer can call Rov.an at 494-8542 . Press corps reunited Somt' of the kt'~ pla)crs in poh11cal communicattons W }Cars ago gathered recentl) at Laguna·s urf and Sand Hotel. headquarters for the press dunng the "11\on adm1 nis- trat1on. replaced With warm mcmoncs and humorous anecdotes. company called Teach, Educate, Discuss &. Develop Young Inc. (PleueMeS&llDIAR/A9) (Pleue eee OPFICBR/ A9) Erle Bianchi with hi• talldng motorcyle. It was an tH'n1ng of gentle rcm1- n1Sttn~. dunng \'htch most rough edges of the tumu ltuous penod were ··All of us here from the WashiOJ- ton days ha,·c a little bit of a tear 1n our c~c." said Tim Elboume.. an ad' a nee man during the Nixon presi dency. According to Elbournc. the urf and Sand was a "home away (P1eue eee Pa:S88/ A9) \ Casino night in Irvine planned for Easter Seals benefit . The Easter Seal Society ofOranlC County will be the winner when Century 2t lntem1t1onal Headquarters throws the fund-raising dice with Casino Night '88 at the Reaistry Hotcl)n Irvine Friday from 8 p.m. to I a.m. The event will feature a 'SOs theme with a disc jockey. cos•umc contest. door prizes. snacks and dancing. Students of the Hiab Hopes Head Injury Rehibilitation C~ntcr of Oranac County will be guests of Century 21 at the fund-raiser. All proceeds from the event wiU ao to Easter Seals. Tickets may be obtained by callina Bonni Christopher or Carol Nick at SSl-2100. Vetenm• Day brakla•t •lated The Newport HarbOr Post 291 of the American Leaion will hold its fint annual Veterans Day brea.kfast Fri'dly al the poll headquanen. 21 s I Sth SUttt, Newport Balch. The menu 1ndudcs tcrambled eps. t.con Ind/Or sau~. hash brown potatoes, bi1CU1ts •nd 111vy and coffcC fOf Sl.•ilh bloQdy M1ry1 optional for SI.SO. The lwallme it scheduled frOm 7 '° 1 O:JO a.m •• wtth • fish fry planned from 6 to 9 p.m. BrmtU16foa PIVP plam enam Tht HuMi..,_ leettt ~ of ... mall Withoot PlttMn bM aanounced in ICWutr of ectivitin for November ....... illl_ frid9y witla aduc'e,,.,,.. 9 p.M. to I a.m. at the trolklly Inn. 7667 Center Ave .. Hunti"llOft Bc8dl. ~ cYftll include l~Oellt Nov. 19 and I .......... No¥.ll;~ .,,.-....... lat-. .alb11a. Cal a-. 7S for more i ..... tioft. , , Holiday boatlque 'ln Irvine Irvine's Westpark Village One will hold its ninth annual holiday boutique this v.cekcnd in the village clubho~sc. 3754 Hamilton St. Hours for the sale arc Friday from 4 to 9 p.m .. Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. CaJI 786-2948 for additional 1nforroa11on. Ard•t dae honors ln Newport Laauna Bc.ach artist Abb)' Vaughn will be honored for her contnbution to Judaic art at a special habbat service Fnday at Temple Shir Ha-Ma'alot in Newport Bc.ach. where she is an artist m residence. ~ temple will display a colelct1on of "atcn=olors and oils painted by VauaJtn durin& her t1itro tnps to lsrxl. The showina will bcaln at 8 p.m. at the temple. 21~~ Mar Vista. Ncwpon 'fk&(h. 'Scllool lrmd-nlmat '"61Jt Tbe HarbOr Oiy Sd\ool &(l1vtt) ~ntcr wi ll tie transbmed into tk "Moose Ska ('halct'' Fnday for the tchool's annual fund·ra1sa• cvnat. Over 200 silent and hvt auction items litr'ill be 1v11lablc at the 6:30 p.m. e~ent at the school. l<MJ Pac1ric View Ori~. Corona dd Mar Call Cindy C'hnstC10n at 640-2401 for dtta1ts. Laguna. Helen Pelktil'r and \teltia G ra\Cs will dcmon'itra1~ the making of succuknt ~ reaths V1s1tprs a~ wt'I omr and the donanon 1s ~ Call 494-6460 for add111onal information. Paperwork assistance offered Voluntttrs from 1hc .\mcnc-an Assoc1at1on of Uni"crstt)' Womt'n \\tit be a'atlablc to pro\o1dc paper· work asslSlan c Frida\ from 2 to 4 p.m. at Gmit mencan First 53, mgs 1n Laguna Halls The frtt stf'\ ict' 1s ofTcl't'd for ~ed1carc. supplcmen· w health 1n urnncc. ban~ tatcments. brokers' state- ments. telephone balls and other pepef"·ork problems. Call Jeanette Lamtwrt at 951-7260 for fu rthtr 1nfor· mat1on. PlVPgroupstob011tdance The In anc-C'\\port and South C'oa5t chapters of Partnts Without PartncrS "111 "-ombanc to ho51 a s1nalr dince Frida) Jr~f ToUC'h RntaUT&nt. 24:?56 El Toro R09d. u,una Hilts The dantt 1 open to the publk .,tth h\ot tnu 1c b neat PttHtw from p.m. to madnt&ht and an onen'8t1on for . prosptttt\C' mcm~rs at 7: IS Call ~3626 for mott information about PW P or the da~. JUaea11MtoJ1C7 Jectare pJan.aed Dr. Aa.n It Schtnk ''" dttc'\l'-' ''RMumat~ anct Piiia Ma••'""''.. f iiai) at 12 30 pm tn tM ..-orimn Of'•ht SouO' Coe t Medical enttf. I 72 c-Hillt-a). U.Una 8*h. The program will began with refreshments. fOllowed ti' the lcc:tu~ from l Lo 2 p.m. "dm1ssioo is frtt and r~scf'\ auons ma) be obtained b calhna 499-7202. Alc olJoUc •apport worbilaop A day-Iona wol'kshop fonduh thddren of akohoha "111 bt' held Saturda) by the Center for Crauvc .\ltcmau,cs at the R.ca Community Center, 661 Ham1tton t.. Room 600. Costa Mesa. ' The procram .,;u run from IOa.m. to 3:JO p.m. with a b~lc for lunch. The rost 1s S20. and dttads are available at 642-0377 School reanlon KJJedaled_ . The Huntin&te>_n Part Hiah School c"-9 of wimer fQ68. summer 1968 and winter 1969 win hold thetr » r_car ~union Saturday at tht Rtd LIOft '"" i" COlll Mm: Call ( 213) 72 1·7200 ror ~nioa&.11nronuaioL""""""'-- NY S [ CoMPos1 1 E T RANSACT10Ns -• ~ --=--------~ - -- JHURSDA Y'S 11 ~M. (PDT) PRICES Stocks continue decline NEW YORK (~P) -Stock prices drifted lower in featureless today with many investors reluctant to make commitments in the face of the market's uncertain direction. The Dow Jones averaac of 30 industrials was down 2.13 points at 2,116.I lat 2 p.m. EST. The blue-chip indica«or was up S.52 points 30 minutes after the opening bell and has floated in a narrow, dircctionlcss pattern since. Declining issues barely ourpaced advancing issues on the New York Stock Exchanae. with 682 issues down. 639 up and .S.S6 unchanMd. Volume on the Bia Board was 8"9 • .SO million shares in liaht activity as many investors prepared for a three-day Veteran's Day weekend. Analysts said the market remained in a holding pattern with Jnany players reluctant to make commitments in the face of economic uncertainty following the presidential election. ln addition. concerns about the dollar and interest rates continued to plague today's market, keepir>.* many investors away . .. There are still a lot of questions about the Fed tightening. . .and that is keepanaa lot ofinstitutional investors on the sidelines," said Philip Puccio, senior vice president at Dillon, Read & Co. "The market is very skidd1sh, very slow," sajd John.Burnett, senior vice president at Donaldson, Lufkin &t Jenrette. W HAT AM£x Drn AM£X L E~DERS GoLo Quon s METALS Quon s WHAT NYSE DID HEW YORK (AP) Nov. t l 1 NYSE LEADER S Dow JoNE S AvrRAGES : NASDAQ SuMM~R Y 11~ ' . + 1;. +1~ -1-ll PrOducer price index stabalizes in October WASHINGTON (AP) -Whole- s.le pri~s remained flit in October after 1even stniiaht monthly increases as the cost of food fell for the fit1t time sinoc February, the aovemment sajd today. .. Analrsu said the st.ability in the Labor uepanment's Producer Prite lndell for the fint time in eiaht ·months sipjfies a t.apcrins off of the dfectsoftbuummerdro~t, which had tent food prices up 3.S percent aincie May. Wbolaale food prices. led by la,.e declines for mail.I, vq_eta~ baktty PfOdUCUi put.a, bed IPd cookina oils, reu o. l ~' lut month. That wu Lbeir fitlt dedlne linct FcbN&ry, the Labor ~ment 11id. Food pricles Md skyrocketed l. 2 ~at 1n September. ~ adjusted enetJY prices "* by O.l pmitnt lUt month after tamna by l .3 pment in !eJ*mber. FolloWins tbarD declines ov« the aummer, natunl 111ratajwnped4.6 pcrc:eat IMt cnontb wtlilc lilloline Pticea held llmdy aftd home neatina oitl'ica fell 10. r ~t. Wbolnlle ~ fa( ~ o.Mr dllft foodl8d~wen w• 1n11d OlttlL AlllOIDObile. _. IP' .._cMdrlli ........ I pncm n= "* b women·• Ind rntn'I dOlhi-.,; hoUehold uuuthau:, co•·y~aics, alcoboUc bevef'.llCS and prescription drup. Before seasonal adjustments, the labor Deoanment's index for aoods one step Shon of the retail level rose 0.6 percent to 109.3, rneani"' that a hy1>9theticaJ selection of So041 cost- inaS I OO auhe wholna&e &evelin 1982 would have cc&t SI 09.30 lul month. Thlt same marketbeaket of IC)Ods would have COit SIOl.60 in Septem· ber and S 107. 70 a yeer qo. The seasonal 8dju11ment procet1 is ~ to remove prediciabae, per· iodic inftueoc:es from the calculation of price cha.._ Analysts said the difreftnoe be-tween abe lalOnally adj"*'1 pricea and ral ones wu pnmariJy con-nected with 1be introduction of 1989-moctet auaomobdes. .. Becaute nto reb8aa (on 1918 modett) were llMller U........, hl ~'he!t ~ i~in<>ctober Mre lai uaa~a'*'8d. .. llid Daeeld . Mid ol economic a1 ~ SCAie Uai¥e'lity iR duaa. .. Alla, ~ ............... . new ua1.-. re1dl1d .....,.. .. S1icar~Oll ........ Win • ..... ~7.5pwceatlll0ft .... the ·-......... ---., ill ~"''*· tbe Labar Depjrtml, ••