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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-12-06 - Orange Coast PilotTUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1988 -BB's smut foes, .. seek rack b&n . -Campa ign lead ers c la impralif eration of pornogr:apby sales near· post office . By ROBERT BARKER OI ... 0.-, Nee a-• Obscenity foC$. deer) 1ng porno- graphy as .. an abom1na11on ofC..oo:· pinned white ribbons on 1hc1r Jacket and dresses as S\ mbols of punt> and pleaded wnh the C11 ~ Counul on Monda~ to get the material olT the streets of Huntington Beach. Colleen McCammon, a nur~ v. ho · organ11ed the drive that mcludes parents and chUrch officials. cold the coµn cil that pornography ha's proliferated 10 the ci ty. .. A year ago. there used to be 1ust one new rack of pornographic ma- terial 1n front of the post office." McC'ammon, 26. said. .. ov. there's may be liable 1f a child is harmed as a result -of the alleged)> obscene ma- terial 1r\ the pe.,..s racks because the racks are located on city s1dev.alks near the post office at Warner A "cnue and Golden West Str~-ct Tom Vincent. pastor of Bche,crs (ommun1t} Church in Huntington EX-a.ch. told council members thatone tabloid newspaper sho"'cd a v.oman lying with an an1ma1 and that the ads for oral and telephone sex "arc the worst I've ever seen. • "The pictures are so explicit that they're repulsive. !i's an abom1nat1on of God. The people all over ihe country are wa111ng 10 see v. hat "'e do tonight." tre !Mltd. Jim 1ha. who had taken h1S seal moments earlier. also claypcd his hand to !>hQv. his !>upport. Taking an op_posing view was a man who 1dent1fied himself as,Capt. Jack Borman but later acknowledged that 11 wasn't his real name. He called bac~crs oflhc antt-pomography drive .. nght-v.1ng 1ealo1s" who, were as- . saulung the rra11on·s frcc<lom of spce1:.h Borman. v.ho said he couldn't re' cal" ho was v.-orktng for because 11 v.ould "blow his cover:· said he's received four death thr~ts from the Chnsuan Y1ghl dunng the courst' of his tnH'St1ga11on into their activities. McCammon later said she wasn't pan of lhe."C'hnsttan right." She said she started the drive as an individual. but has enlisted the help of church groups. Painting the town lmpreulonlat John Ca.by uett Newport Beach·• Lido vwaae ... ttie aubject or the pain tin& he wu working on Monday. hoc~ from lta Ale will be donated to the . . . nine or I 0 at the m:un post office. Orangewood Children•• Foundation. The Anyone old enough to put three or · artwor~. priced at 6 2,800, la aT&llable a t fou r quaners in the machine can get the Scott Kiennedy llarldme Gallery In' Lido 11 •• Vlll-4e· ,, -;;~;s, McCammon su11J7,csted the cny Perhaps 40 or 50 people in the audience broke 1n10 sustained ap- plause when the> "ere asked 1f the) supported an ant1-pornograph) cam- paign. cwlv elected Councilman City officials. who acknowledged a distaste for the tabloid papers, said the) ·11 look into recent stale lcg1s- la11on against pornography and per- haps take other forms of action. Councilman Tom Mays said he (Pleue eee SllUT I A2) "Briver gets life terqi l n HS-officer "s dea~th Newport Beach busi- nessman George Stuart Karl Jr. was fined $60,000 and given three years prob~ion for making il- legal mpaign contribu- tions. 3 MA.AM , IN KEEPING WITH T~E 61VIN6 =-Plr\IT . (1..'lULD '<OU 61\.E. ME A B 4 - 19 shopping days to -~hristmas Index Bulletin Board A3 Business AS-7 Classified 85-7 Comics 88 Crossword 87 Death notices 97 Entertainmenf AS Opinion A9 People A10 Public Notices 87 Sports -B 1-4 Weather A2 Chronic a lcoholic convicted of murder·· in second degree after pead.-on coll ision By BOB VAN EYKEN Ol IM .,.., "'°' l teft Superior C:oun1udge ruled Monday. R1l'hard G. Gonzales. 39. of Lake Forest. was convicted of second-~ A chronic akohol1c who swencd degree murder on Sept. 7 for cau 1ng ro~ traffic and lti'""ll'""ed~a"--_..._ e.rash_Lhal killed Chostophcr Huntington Beach police oiircer in a purney. head-on coll1s1on 18 months ago will Judge Francisco Briseno refused 10 ser c IS years to hfc in onson. a reduce GonLales' con' ict1on to the lesser offense of 'ch1cular man-recognize alcoholism as a disease slaughter and rc1ec1cd appeals for "In preparing for this case. •L lcn1cnn from Gon1alcs' fam1l). became clear to me that we ha' e a The · 'crdict marled Gontales' monster problem. that can take third drunken d riving con' 1cuon and bas1call)' good people and tum them probatton repons mdfcated tha t he into monsters." Freeberg said. "We wao; no1 w1lhng to accept rcspons1-~l knev. that Richard had done v.rong b1ltty for overcoming h1 alcoholism. nd that he deserved a pns0n C\crthelcss. Gon.131cs ' sup-tence. What I v.asa k1ngth.cJudgc porters argued that medical treat-t do "as ~'' e this gU) a linle ment~l-f>A~S.th' ans\loc.Cr. -cempaSSton." • H1 anorne). Llo)d Freeberg. said He said Gonzarcs 1s a com- after the sentcn 1ng that Briseno' passionate. chantable man 'v..110' has ruling represented soc1ct):S rcfuS31 to been cnsla,cd b) alcohol. Because of the po stb1ht) ol a hfe sentence. Gonzales will probabl) be senr to a ma).1mum sccunt~· prison w11h so- C1et)''s hardest cnm1nals, he said. ··.\n) ttme )OU have that life tail on )'Our sentence. you're probably gomg to be sent up north. to Folsom or San Quentin.'' Freeberg said. "1 have great.fc~what's going 10 ha~pc~ to him - But others. pamcularly tho~ who knew purne). said the sentence was aooroonatc (Pleue eee DIUV£ll/ ill Schools re~Ghing out for di:opoutsalongthe coast By GREG KLERKX OI tM 0.., l'tlot lteft and \\Ofl Center (.\\\E ). of v.h1 h :-.tc(iough 1 director. The school district k1cli.cd in an add1t1onal SI 50.000 "'orth ol lotter) monc~ 10 the program Mesa won't get resident's goat;. Barney Jr. stays t C'a thl'rtnc McGough 1s an cdu at1onal hc-ad- huntcr. ... She spends her days combing Huntington. Beach. Fountain Valley and Westminster 1n scar<:h of a Spl>eial breed of student. He or she 1s ofien 1roublcd and d1tlicult lo find. But McGough v.nuld h~c noth nig more thao to hunt down and caplUl"I.' e'er) last one of them. And bring them back to school. "Sometime we feel hke a pn,·at1.· 1.ktcCll\C service." said MeGough. who LS pro1cct mana~cr for the dropout rccov<.'r) program at the Hu ntington Beach Union High ·hool District. Nothing troubles an educator more than a student who won't allow himself to he taught. Students who have behavioral problem but attend school can be counse led and. if nothing else, -;pend their day within a learning en' 1ronm<.•n t Rut thr child who s1mpl~ J oc"S not attend pr nt a challenge that 1s al(l1ost 1mpo 1blc to win. D1stnct oflic1als throughout the talc ha' c ~l·n ex ploring new wa~ 10 keep teen-agers in school :ind to recover those "ho hnvc dropped out. The mo 1 dramatic example of the ncwcomm11mcnt to pre' cnt dropouts was the pas.sage two years ago ofScnntc Rill 65. wtnch ga'c monc} to school districts to de, clop counseling and dropout prevention program). The bill gave $40.000 to the Huntington &ach distm·t for the creation of its Altcrnat1' c Educa11on The res ults ha .. c been dramat1t' La t )Ca r. the · A WEC "recovcr<.•d'' more. than 00 of the district' 1.494 dropouls and placed 268 of those ~tudcnts b~ck in district school . The remainder "ere etther au1..·nding ~chools 1n other d1stncts or had carnl-d an equ1,alcnc~ degree. I he rcco"el') reduced the d1stnl'l°S dropou1 r.11e to 5.5 percent last }Car. do"n from 7 pcrcet1t the previous )Car. "\\'hen )OU get that lo". ~ou l·an't do much better." McGough said. "But v.c'rc II') ing:· McGough claim lhe reason li)r dropping out arc man}. "They tra vel to the tlCat of a d1t1i.·rcn1 drummer.'' Mc<.Jough said. "High school arc big 1n~111u11ons and !.omc students don't like that "Some don't ha"c somcon~ on .in ,t)ngmng bas1 \\ho the} think cares about them." he l·or111n ued "There nel'ds to be someone" ho car1.·s alxlllt lhcm ..l' a total person." tan) dropout e·qx~rtl'nl·c a "m.uor lrt._,, .. 1n lhc fcv. months beforl' d1.'\'.1d1ng 10 ICJH' ~hool _ McGough said .\ death 1n thl' fam1I~. di\ Ml'e and prcgnanq arc among such pos 1blc ir.wma<.. o;hc 'klld . Drugs and alcohol also are problem!>. but ~kGough dov.-n pla ,cd their 1gn1fkan~·c. 1PleaH eee SCHOOLS/ A2 ) By JONATHAN VOLZKE Oln.o.-, ........... . Taking the ''"uc b) the horn . the Cosla Mesa (II} Council dccrdcd Monday that B!lrne) Junior - a 90- pound p)gm) goat kept as a pct in '1ola11on of II) codes-is a good kid after all and· hould bcallov.ed tosta) "ll v.ould tlC uner nonscni.e to li.1cli. him out:· \f;l\or Peter Buffa ~id after the ounc1I \Otcd 4-1 lo allo\lo some bam}ard animals into the cit}· bad,,ard ""h proper permits and no complaint Onl) Councilman Orv A.mburgey s;i1d na) to the propo~I C-11' animal control officers earlier tolJ Barne) Junior's ov. ncr. Angela Raj Kumar. that the goat could not lt'e m the baci.. \Jrd ot' the fom1h ·s ~nta Isabel .\'en~ home . Ollic1als told her .l neighbor com- plained about Barne' and ttlat the goat "'euld ha'c to go One officer suggc tcd that nc1ghhorhood "v.ould smdl hkc old l\fa" n\)nnld'" farm C\CI"\ tune th1.• brecll' turned·· 1f "'"-itock "·' .il11.1\'l.'d a" pclS. But RaJ "umar r11'lulatl'd a pct1- l1on among h1.·r nc1ghho~ and ~: 1gned 1n uppon of-&rne). She ubm1t1cd the pc11t1on to the council and asked that the goat be allowed to sta} 1n the cHy. on e known as Goat Hill "~ Her fam1f\. which includes five children. got· the goat from a fncnd 1v.o "ears ago Bame} Junior was bottle-led and houscbrol en. he takes v.alks v. tth the fam1I) dogs along the L ppcr '-'e~port-S:.). Raj t-..umar pleaded her ca~ before the council Monda\ night. -.\ lot of people are not rcall) 1nform1.•d on animals. We're o ctty oriented .. he sa id, ··when a goat 1s fi1'ed. then.· 1 no mell. .. But the proof is the in the puddmg. RaJ t-..umar-.a1d. bringing Barney into count'tl 1:hambers for the panel to sec. "I "ant B.lmc\ Junior to tX' in front ol \OU 'o 'ou a'rl can tale a look at him Jnd 'mcll him ·· Ra1 Kumartold the u'unl ti "\\hen "'C' first got him. he "as 1hc cutest little 1h1ng, he JUmpc'li JHlund ltl c a l111~ cat Now. he thin 'he..'!. a dog .. Ll'd 10 ti' a hag of popcorn. the 1hm·-foot-h1gh Barne~ Junior didn't St'Cm 100 hritcd about appl'anng (Pleaae .ee GOAT/ A2) Mesa, Hu.ntington Beach elect ~ew m~yOrs · ' A Buffa prevails in close Cos~~ Mesa vote. p raises Hall for polish in g of city image By JONATHAN VOLZKE °' .. 0.-,,... ..... Two-ycarC'osta Mesa O t) Council veteran Peter Buffa took OH~r dut1c as mayor Monday night. cd&ing out former Vice Mayor Orv Amburgey 1n a 3-2 vote. Buffa was nommatcd to the post by Councilwoman Mary Hornbuckle. who was Inter elected 'ice ma)'or. Freshman Councilwoman Sandy Gents also supponcd Buff:a. Amburgey was nonllnatcd b> newly elected Councilman Ed (ilasgow. a former plannan& eom- m1ss1onc:r and rct1rcJ police rapt:un. mburacy 1s a fom1cr pohcc hcuten· IOI. TM new council lx.-gan 11 term w11h a '"-hour meeting 1hat 10(h1tkd 11ems ranging fron1 the 11nplemcnta· t1on of Measure G. a tralTic<ontrol tntl"""c: narro"'IY approved by votc:n 1n June. to granuna a rcpncvC' for Barne) Jlanior. a aoat dull ... allowed a vanancc \O rtmatn a ~t 1n a res1dcnt1al neighborhood. The council enacted a 45-day moratorium against 1ssu10g new building permits to allow cuy staff lime to stud} how to implement the low1row1h measure. The measure calls fordevck>pmcnts 10 remedy an)' traffic impact they might have. but exempts most single rcs1dcn11al pro- JCCts and commercial bu11dinas under I 0.000 5<1uarc fttt. Four lonncr osta Mesa ma)Of'5- Dom Rac1t1. Jack Hammett. .\I Pinkley and Norma Hcnzot·Wagncr -were in the council chambcn u 14-)earcHy leader and rctmna ma) or Donn Hall bcpn the mct11na. only to tum 1t over to Buffa "It's qu11e hard 10 1~1.w whit that would be hke," Buffa said or Hall's tenure "When I moved 10 Costa Mc$8 1n the I 970s~1hc h point •as Fcdco. I would 1cn 1n Los Antck and they .,. 'Ht~. I kno• where C'Mla Mela II. . (Pleue._BUnA/ASJ . . Bannister overcomes Mays to capture leadership post in Huntington Beach By ROBERT BARKER Ot -0.-, Nee ..... \\c-; 8Jnn1'itcr preached tcam\,\orl 3nJ unit\ ~1ondJ) night aftcr he 'aultl'd O\er hc1r-3pparcnt Tom Mays 10 hc-cnmc the ma)Or of Huntington Sea~·h. a po t that frc· QUl'nll)' tnggeN a lot of hca'' brc:uhing e'en thou,gh it's htghl\ rcrcmon1al Ma\S, \\ho v.3 nc't 1n hnc for the job in' h1 role a 'te'C ma)or Junnp. the pat 'car.didn't mai..<'a li'ht of1 t "\\cs ~•II J o a aood JOb. · Ma,$ \atd "'1 ~ mJ1n re n for not go1n1 for It. C\Cn though 1t I m~ tucn. IS h) ha\e a tea m ctlon 1oin11nto 1hcJcar Therr "''ll be lot ol "or~ I on't mind postpnnina nn time as ma) or." 8.ann1!\lcr. 5~. •ho •a elected 1n -I ~l\f>, nu1poUcd M."\'ond·tcm'\ rnun- c1lman Peter (1f\~n Mondav for the 10() spol I' Pro-Jc, clopmcn\ offk1at.. John Enlunc. Don Mac"lh\tcr. Jim S.ha 1nd Ma)\ ~nd Rannl\tl"r \Ot~d for • t!anni'itl'r °'\lov.-grO\\\h ad\\Xatcs (iracc "int.hell and (1recn 'otcd for (1n:cn 1 he ..amc hncup ca t 'otl"\ for Ma) u .. er (1r1..-cn tor' ttc ma) Of 8.ann1 tcr. ~ho 0"' n an 1n~urancc: com(l.1n' 1n Huntington Bcat·h and 1s a graduatt' ol the l ln1vcrs•I}' of Hou ton and a former .\ml) officer. said he v.oold wor~ 10 get the council to ~ori.. a a team and to establish dear,ut pt)hc 1u1dehncs He calltd for con11nu1na efTon to bnna major pro,ccts 10 rompleteon- indud1n1 the maUl\C Wa1crfn>n1 rt10n '"ncl. P.cr'S4dc: v.1 .. and dol.\ntown n'Ck~c:lopmcnt. 8annis1tr ~td he ptam 10 pulh for <.. 11~ C onc1I rMmbcrs 10 hold a 11Ydy sc: s1on Imm 4 to 6 p.m. befoft <'l"lUn<'tl tnC'C'ttnp tO fC' qunllOftl 1n,.,crcd on ~r prOJ«b. He allo Pkdlcd to kttpcl~ mortanp 1oa m1n1mum HC' ~pea~ any divitevntta (Pl•••._ U !!BIMIA91 -9'Mle COMI DAILY fllLOT/ r..--. Decerribit' e. 1811 BANNISTER ELECTED NEW BB MAYOR ••• ,...._Al over &be lktnnish tOr mayor. .. I'm sure ht (Mays) will work very effectively and that I'll auppon him next year for mayor real stron&)y." him and Erskine. who stepped down Monday as mayor. MacAlhsterand Silvi C'ame under ti~ before they had a chance to warm their 1eats. Winds without thew Mays said his loss wu lhc result of lossins the suppon ofa member of the rounal's .. a;ro-developmenf' ma- jority, but wouJdn 't elaborate. Others saiet thett was a fallint out between Sourtts said that Erskine had prclty much promised to \IOte for Mays but rtncacd in a d1spu1c stemmina from tfie last City Council c~tion. Mays and Erskine supported opposfo1 candidates. Meanwhiae. the newly swom-•n DRIVER SENTENCED ••• From Al , ''The sentencing cenainly won't "He was cenainly a friend and a bri~ Chris back or eliminate the valued employee," said McErl,in. suffering and pain that an of us have "He was well thou&ht of by his pttcs felt , but ma ybe it wy l prevent this and his supervisors. I don't ' think from happening to someone else," we'll e\ler put this completely behind said LL ·Ed McErlain. who was us." ~purney's superyisor at the Hunt-A divorced father of tw~. Spurney lnf~On ~ch Police Department. was 40 when he died. He was I think 1. spea~ for .others at the returning from visiting his friend ~epartment in saying I m h~ppy the fdlow_offica .Ar.den.. Fick. on th' Judge ctiosc !hat sentence. nr..\erthan-evening of June 10 1987 when th a ltsscr one ' . ' e · Gonzales" was the fifth drunken f~l occurred. i!riveno1>ec~nvtcr!d<>f murder m -vunui!~ 1:3Jl:rossed lWer . the Orange County. McErlain said he center dtv1der on the San Diego hoped the sentence would send a Freeway near.Sand Cany~n Avenue. message to those who drink and th~n . turned into oncoming traffic, drive. • stnking Spurney's Volkswagen van "Unfonunattly there arc a lot of head on at 70 mph. drunken drivers out there who could Generally. wit-h a sentence of I 5 kill any of us at any time. and I don't years to hfe. a prisoner becomes think one sentencing is going to eligible for parole after half the lower eliminate that problem," he said. "h sentence has been served. That means isn't a fair trade fo r Chris' life. but I Gonzales could be paroled after 71'2 think the sentence w11l help get the years. message across." "If he behaves himself in there. An avid cyclist and triathlete, which I'm sure he will. and ifhe avails Spurney was a popular and respected himself of AA and the other trcat- mem ber of the pohce depanment ment programs that might be~ere. I whose death 1s sttll mourned. expect he'll get out in about eight Mc-Frl~in <:11irl years" Freeberg said .• Resident Chtryle Brownin1 claimed &hat MacAllistcr rett1ved campa.ip donations and SUpPOrl from the '-me campa1an commmec that dehvttcd a la1t-minutt .. hit J>ICft, .. wtuch some believe caused the narro~ defe~t of candidate Geri Ortep. Browning said today she question- ed MacAll1ster's intearity btcau1e of past comments that he didn't know about the Onega .. hit piece." Brownina also criticized Silva for allegedly claiming he voted agai nst ex~sive development. "What dis- turbs me," she said. .. is that he su"pponed almost 100 perceJit density at Meadowlark Airbon." Silva also received campailfl help from the Nerio brothers, owners of the airpon and the Meadowlark Airpon Committee, sh~ said. The l'ierios-are plarmina to-build m<>R-- than 60(). homes and a I s..acrc commerci1I center at the. 6S-acrc airport. which is schedurca to close.- · unsuccessful council candidate Bob Biddle also took swipes at MacAllister and Silva~ Biddle said that both prOJ?OSCd doing away with the recently imposed SS a month trash collection -charge. . . "I only hope that you bnng it up, and that it's not an empty promise, • he said. MacAllister said today that he was supported in the elecuon by grass roots committees. not big money intertsts alone. "Yes. I was supponed by citizens who had te right to vote and to walk. or to spend mooey. The voters cast votes as they wanted.·· he said. GOAT GETS MESA COUNCIL BLESSING •.• From Al U.S. Tempe. .. La ' 54 27 M 02 --------.. ,, 47 • SI 2t 17 21 ,, " •• SI '2 $5 • 47 S1 50 st 42 3S 47 21 13 •'2 47 SS : ~ 40 .,, .. i1 :e ·10 ~ 80 1t 40 33 15 • 16 50 50 30 51 27 • 3S • 27 M 37 .. 40 57 30 5S S4 55 S5 74 '2 .. 33 .. 2t ......... to llecNtlu lllllcl.-. 1-50 IMM.l1tn1•rdl 'V.-Y-·~· 17.50 '"--.... .,._.,. •• -. 50 Loi ...... MlllOrt. .. 130 before the city fathers. A neighbor of Barney's. Jean Shan-owner~ apply to the. city for permits s· • h · 1d r_ d . -1 • t The council was!1't offended by the non. also supported the goat. and ne1ghbors·do·not compl~in. erv1ce e 1 or ere JC aoat. which was given a bath before She reminded the council that even Amburgey, who voted against even • his counci l debut. But. scve~I mem·1he city's newsletter 1s titled "The allowing Ba. rney into the C<?uncil SAN FRANOSCO (AP) -A Eaton was fGund dead just outside . be.rs sa,1d he must eat ltke a pig. oat Hill Gazette," a throwback to cha!TI.bcrs, warned the council the strcetside memorial service was held the doorway of Carl's Jr. restaurant 'Hes t;'!'UCh mor~ rotund than I e days when the town was laced dec1s1of\ left the barn door open for Tuesday for a prominent Ncw~n·. ,.on Market SlRCt 11 S a.m. Saturday, expected. C~unc1lwoman Mary th goat farms. In fact. ~he said future problems. land famil y !'llembcr whose st c • five hours after beins drasged and Horn buck.le said. Barney should hold a pos1uon of '"I suspect we will be inundated with akohohsm. drus abuse, Al dropped there · by a 5CCunty guard :·He is a chubby little gu y." Buffa respect. _ . wtth requests." Amburgey said. "I related complex and homelessness who said he thoufht Eaton was said. "Wedon't have to beall lastic ·ust don't see it as humorous ... .! don't ended when he was ejected from a "drunk as a skunk when he col- W Former ~ayo~ N~rma H~nzo~-because we've become a cfty;· stfan-think ~doptinj a goat as.a mascot is a f~st-food rcs~urant and died on the lapsed. unconscious, ov~r a. bacon agner, w o said s e was in t e non said .. 1 think we should adopt move in the nght direction:· sidewalk outside. chcescburacr. · audience on another matter but 8 1· · E R K d ·h d Coroner's autfionties said. they kcided to speak on behalfofBarney amey un1or as a mascot. very-aJ umar sa1 s e was eltghted . . r. • 1 >ai~ the city shouldn't take itself~ body k!'lows th.~ goat is a symbol of with the d~ision. but never really f~lt ~~~~t;':~6~ d~~:rn!fni';o ::l c;!~~ scnously as to not allow a goat here or determmauon. the co1;1nc1I would break up her fitmil y f d h ,; J ~ E th ere. . The council didn't go that far. but it b~.tilkmg Barney. ~~~.038, ~osc0!~~~ow:fef~~ "We shouldn't be so pnsunc that allowed Barney to stay on Santa I had a posmve mind, they had no needle marks T_he. memorial ·service was or- ganized by the Rev. Thomas Flowers. an Eastern Orthodox monk who runs a soup kitchen at the nearby United Nations Plaza. SMUT ••• Prom Al u f.1 05 3JI wrote Jctters .to distributors, seeking to get them to cover up1he news racks 1oavoid a First Amendment fiaht. but .istributors failed to respond: "I think we may have to look at drafting an ordinance," he said. · While pornograP.hY opponents said Ci(y Attorney G11I Hutton had told them little could be done about the news racks. Hutton said later Mon- day that the Fint Amendment does not include obscene material in its protcdlon. we lose to.uch." she said. "We should Isabel. Under the decision some reason for us i:iPt. to k.eep him," her · 111 have kids around all of the time." ~ivcs!ock can be kept as long as the daughter. Sor0Jin1. 20. said. __ _!~~,----~----~~--~~~-----------~~--~!""--~~-. SCHOOLS TRY to REGAIN nRoPouis .... lllJFF A ELECTED COSTA MESA MAYOR.· •• .r ,,, .. From Al -.. From Al "Cenainly drugs and alcohol are a pan of the problem. but what came first? Alicnauon or drugs? It 's hard to say:· McGough said. Th~ Huntington Beach district does not hold the monopoly on dropouts. A recent study of dropouts in the Newpon-Mesa Unified School District ind1q1ed that 2.9 ~rcent of the s1uden1s 1n the districts six high schools dropped out of school last year. The bulk of the dropouts were from Back Ba}' Continuation High School and Monte Vista Alternative Educauon High School. but there were dropouts at a11 schools. "It co uld be academic skills. or 1t could be alco hol. drugs or an eating disorder. II could be an vt hmg." said quality ... ouc comvi~nv to ¢XC11.l\4nca. inthe mzrchandis:z. WJZ. ~rry it.i~plifozd .. m our ealact,wn-o! ~Ulflllts by chompi.on.. ~ bz..l itzvlz. U>¢M. JCO% cot.ton. ~tehi.rts aod !!>~tpo~ ariz. tl1'l fu)CZeit ovoilll bla. onywhtlnz. tOr j~iaj or Jl.>6t, ~~l~r. hooded. or e.nzWJllZcic ~ ~f.cb. up With. ~laet.ic wo~t. ponts in whit.a.~ nzd or blue. e ~~t; girt id40 . plUttJCZ vi~lt our ~tonz. ~ olld- oppnteuruz.. t,~ d.iffanznciz. tom Jacobson. princi pal of Corona del Mar Hi~h School. Jacobson s school has one of the lowest dropout rates tn Orange Coun - ty. less than one half of I percent. But the extent of programs designed to deal wtth the problem at Corona del Mar indicates that even low-risk schools are taking extensive measures to combat the dropout problem. "Sure. we haven't really had a lot of problems bu1 there arc indications that there are kids who have problems and the potential to drop 04.t." Jacobson said. "These are the kids who need help nght away so that doesn't happen." Corona dol Mar offers peer cou n- seling during each lunch period 1n a se,s1on that 1r:idudes gue~t speakers, special e emses and visual aids. There is also a program designed to help students who have returned from drug or alcohol rehabilitation to ease back into the academic routtne. Jacobson said the school recently received a slooo federal grant to help combat drug and alcohol abuse at school. two major contributors to h1gb dropout rates. A task force of parents. students and teachers will soon meet periodically to review district policies and participate in in- scrv1cc programs designed lo upgrade the system. "J don't think the problem really escapes anyone." Jacobson said. ~ ~ • !>79 ncwport. az.ntcr dr · 71't/'759-79'19 ~~· ~29 ~th lal<c.avv.. 818/~~-9~,,, wutwood village• 1001 'Mt&twood. blvd· 213/208-~27-' mojnplaot/ ~one· 2800 north me in et, • 71'+/ &'!3· 12~ ' there's a Fedco there.' "Some months ago. I was m~ing wuh a consultant who hid been in France. He mentioned to his .COi· leagues there. who had never been in the United States. that he was going to' do some work for Costa Mesa. and they said. 'Oh yes, Costa Mts1. The Performina Ans Center: i. "I attribute.the trtmendou\ good seen here to ponn Hall." 1 After losing his own bid for the may_or's post, Amburgey · accused 8.uffa of wanting to use the scat to ORANGE .... .... COAST .... ,rm1 MAIN OFFICE J30 Wesl a., St Coet• MeM. CA climb to higher office. .. Even though I don't condone or support usina the position of mayor of Costa Mts1 as a stepping stone to t>igher office. as a team player I will work for the betterment of Costa Mesa," he said. Buffa. who tossed his hat into a conaressional race earlier this year but withdrew. is widely mentioned as a possible Republican candidate for state assembly. He did not respond to Ambu~y's comment. Despue the lengthy meeting that greeted them. Glasgow and Genis said they looltcd forward to their four- year terms. Glassow pledp:d to keep his consti-tuents·m mind. "It's a very humbling experience to learn that 12,SOO people you dor(t know voted for you," Gla51ow said. "It makes you stop and thinlt why." Genis, who was elected on a slow- arowth platform, was more direct. "I'm happytobeherc,"shesaid. "I }19pe you aJl arc happy four years rrom now.'' . o:i.::- ...... teed ..._. eddr.-lloa 15e0 eo.t• M9aa. CA t2'26 ~ ... 641·5171. ~ ' -r- .. 2--021 t~ Copyright 1t1J No -SIOl'lee, illl.ISlrllhOt .. ~ ~I~ -Of .o-1---...., 119 ,,.I~ ~ ~---.. 1\wwwof~r-f rT Ja•tcaU 642-6086 .......,...,,.., • )'O'I dO '* ,_ 'Pl"' 1*19' !If Sill'"' C811 "'°'9 7 ...,... -'°"' cotl\' .. b<I ......., Second ci.. poM. PlliCI •• Coel• ....... ~ I luPS 144400) Su0ecttp110,. t1y c.rriw as 2s ""'I partocl. by mlll 17 oo rnonlf>ly l"9 Or .... Coesl 0..., Pilot le ~ by 11'9 MMle ~ Co ol Coel• MeM lllC TIOO .-0... -~ Mo<ldef llWOUllfl Fr14ey A ...... .....,.... Mlllloft .. ~ s.t .. 09\IS -~ Tiie ptlnCjpml ~ ..,., .. local«! ., aaow a.,11 eoruw.. 'dAIH2' VOL 11, NO. M1 What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number above and your mcm,e will be recorded, tramcribed and de- livered to the appropriate editor. Tbc same 24-bour amwerins terVice may be used to reciord leuen 10 tbe edi10f OD an~ topic. ContnlNton to our Lctten column must include their name and telephone number for verification. Tell us what's on your mind. .., I We extend I' to all during this festive time of year and hope the joy this season brinp retlects the start of a year filled with prosperity and bappiaess. .. .... ., -a-My If ,,.... • "°' ,...... '°"' ..,..,,, .... Al~ '°. "' ... )'DOif copy -.. ........ . ~ T1l1p...._ ... °' ... Oollmy --...., ..... 561 Newport Center Drive, Fubion llland, (714) 640-8310 i .1 ' Excur sion t o LA Art Fair planned by Irvine center Karl fined $60,000 for illegal funding BJ PAUL ARClllPLEY °' ............... • .. Perhaps Mr. Karl's-,enerosity u1 causht up with him:· she said "Mr. K.ar1 has to pay mo~ attention to a lot ofth1np, not 1hc least of which 1s his aeneroeity. which took ham to c1rcum,en1 the law.'' The Irvine Fine Arts Center will sponsor an excursion to see displays of contemporary an from all over the world Saturday at the An/LA 88 Fair in the Los Anaelcs Convention Center. Video entrepreneur ~ Stuart Kar1 Jr. was fined S60.000and &ivcn three years probation Monday for violating federal campaign contribu1ion laws. , In a pica barptn a1rttmcnt that spared Karl a pnson term. he pleaded guilty an Auaust to two oft 2counts the go,emmcnt had brouah\ apanst him . An _pllcrics from West Germany, Austria. 'France, Speir., Japan, Israel. Australia. YU&_oslavia and the SOviet Union will be represented. The bus leavcsthesentcr. 14321 Yale Ave .• aU0:30a.m. and will return at 6 p.m. ' • The cost is SI 0 and pre-rqistration is required. Call the Fine AMI Center at SS2-1018 for more information or 660-3881 for reaistration details. 'MeulalJ' concert 11et · Kart. 36. expressed his rqrct to U.S. District Court Judac Aliccmane H. Stotler fo r his pan in the· il&epl aajvitics that funneled S l 8S,OOO to the <lary Hart presidential campaign Jnd other Demo- cratic candidates. The Newport Beach man also apologized for 1he "anauish and embar- rassment this has caused my fam ily and friends .. " "I'm just lookint to put this chapter of my life behind me, • Karl said. He won't l>c puttina it behind him soon. Judge Stotler chose not to impose ~ The Vaoguard Chorale of Southern California recommended t .000 hours of community _...~~-Wf·11-preaen&-Handcl'l~~WICQlric1-.J-.-.n'ce as part of Karl's scntena bC'causr day at l(f a.m. at the Newport-Mesa Christian of his ongoing cooperation with federal Center, 2S99 Newport Blvd .• Costa Mesa. invcstigatots in10 the allCJe<f illqal cam- Sclect portions of tbc oca.torio will be per-)>aign contribution activities of othe . formed. as well as the "Hallalujah Chorus/' The Amons those under investigation are chorale is made up of 60 studenls and is Laguna Beach develoPcr David Stein and accompanied by a chamber orchestra. former Han campaign fi nance director Douglas Rosen. , Back Ba IT field trf n Karl already has spent eXtenol\'e lime ., . r . . working with federal investigators and will The South Coast Audubon Society will meet be expected 10 continue to do so. including ' Saturday at 8 a.m. fo r a field trip to Upper Newpon testifyins in fLJture trials, Stotler said. Bay. Bird wale.her~ expect 10 . ~ bla,ck .s~immers, · She reiec1ett Karl's 9ffer to pay ~ $20.000 canvasbacks. pintails and other "4ntet v1s1tors. . .fi~.· telhni_~he.~9 n.1 ''I'm co~v1,n~d the . Following a sack lunch, the 'grouf wi11~1tplorc-~ ;-genenl~pu.fjlk I · ' lng· tt> th{s ca5e-:Would -: . ~ the new boardwalk at the north end o the bay. The 1 lirid italm<sst la ug able that.the defendant · ' · ~ 1 \ Dlillr,....,.._.., .... .._ public is welcome and further information may be could walk out w11h that fine." Stuart Karl (riCht) lea•ee court With attomeya after beln& fined obtained by calling 498-4407 or 49 1-0107. She said Karl had already established a $60 ooo for campatcn fundlDC vlolad~' . \,,. . "track record'' proving he is capable of · '· , · • v _\ ,,), E tl J n.Jn talk earning large sums of money. • .1~ •1 \. • ·-mo Ona r-A millionaire before he was 30. the Stotler said Karl had file three years of Th~e1~alasteners an the anta '\na Dr. Stephen Verdon will discuss new methods Corona del Mar High School graduate his probation to pay the fine. and told htm counr flat Karl also had proven of erasing emotional pain without psychoanalysis made the bulk of his fortune marketing the coun would consider shonening has h1msel ~generous man wuh past com- Saturday at the Balboa Ba_y Club. 1221 W. Pacific Jane Fonda workout and Playboy tapes. probation 1fthe fine were paid beforehand. mun at) service mother areas. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. ' ' ' Ht admitted l'npging an fraudulent federal campaign contnbuuon practices and unlawfully making a campaiJn con- tri bution 10 a fedt'ral candidate throush others. He faced maximum penalues of $275.000 an lint's and five years of probation for 1hc <?rimes. But S1otler agreed wnh both defcn~ auome) John W Vardaman Jr. and Assistant U S. Att6me)' Nanc} Wieben Stock who said Karl was' a naive panici- pant an \he illepl acuv111es. -Pt"O'PfC \\1ttlmore ~e ie n soph1st1cat1on than tuan Karl took ad,antagr of his grnrros11> and naivCie." Vardaman said. Stock agreed Karl .. was taken up with a ~nsc ofpov.er b) and" 1duals who were more amb1uous and \\anted to obtain office at all cos1s · .• .. Mr. Karl 1sclearl~ at the foundation of a much higher p~ ram ad." Stock sai d. Vardaman. a m(mber of a prestigious Washington 0 .( · lav. firm that rep- resented Karl. said has chent sought neather pollttcal fa, ors nor financial gai n for hts pan1 c1pat1on. .. He was in for the fun of1t:· he said. Karl himself couldn·1 e\plaan to Stotler why he became an\.Ol,ed in the first place. "h's not clear why 1 was doing these things," he said. tock said tut week that other indict- ments are fonhcommg an the case~ with a statute of hm11a11ons deadline ap- proaching an earl) Februal). Thrcc programswillbeofTeredat IOa.m .• l p.m. and 5/...m .• and admission is $25 at the door. Those -• . • ~ • :. • ~i:.c:..e\n' •re requested to bring . pm ow and Police target.obscene callers in Mesa ~- College talk ln HB . Marlene 'Silverman. dirtttor of Hillel Coll~ By JONATHAN VOLZKE ment and charged "''th malo~t a trmg of will address the Simcha chapter of B'nai B'ntff' ou11eo..,,......., sex-laced telephone calls to a Costa Mesa Women Friday at 11 a.m. at Mercury Savi ngs and woman .. Loan on Edi nger Avenue at Beach Boulevard. The numberofobscenc and threatening Avery allegedly made about 30 calls to he and secun\~ agenTs from Pacific Bell her. Con.retro said that posS1b1ht} e"asts. telephone com pan~ traced the calls to the prompung police 10 treat the cases woman·s apanment and alleged!) found senousl}. the~ were made from .\~er) ·s apanment ··v.e·ve ne\tr execncnced it. but we·rc Huntinaton Beach. telephone calls ·rece1 vcd b) Costa Mesa the woman. v.ho hved alone. after an Several Hillel members will talk about campus residents increased dramaucally in recent apartment manager let htm into the Pacific Bell has a secunt~ team that concerned about 11. • <:ordearo said. life at the session. Call Florence Waldman at months, to the point where police may be woman·s home a month ago to deliver a 960-4566 or Ann Feigcs at 969· 7935 for more forced 10 a$s1sn a detective to in vestigate refrigerator. Detective Dan Hogue said. works \\ ath police 10 tracking do" n The sergeant said a maJonty of obscene obscene callers.. telephone calls a~ made b} somebody the information and reservations. the calls fu ll ume. In the calls. he alleged!} painted graphic "We used 10 receive six or eight repons "pictures of fantas~ interludes between the of obscene calls a month-.'' detective Sgt. two. the detectwe said. Th<' '\.\'Oman h'ed Sam Cordeiro said ... Now we get three or alone and was terrorizjed b)' the calls. The v.oman signed a form agreeing to 'tct1m kno"s. An)bod) rece1v1ng such a prosecute before the phone trap, v. h1ch call should closely hsten 10 the voice and traces 1ncom1ng calls. was 1nsututed. for an) background noises that might help Patlent appreclatlon day The Claa k and Miller Chiropractic Group will hold open house Saturday at a special "patient appreciation day" at the clinic offices, 688 Baker St.. Suite 6. Costa Mesa. · The doctors will donate over $20,000 worth.of free services including chiropractic adjustments. new patient examinations and x-ra)'S in exchange for either non-pcrishible food items or a new Christmas toy for underprivileged child~n in the area. Call 540-3883 for details. R a bles cllnl c scheduled A neiJhborhood. low-cost anti-rabies vacci- nation clinic for d<>tS will be held Sa1urday from 2 to 4 p.m. at Lil>cny Park. 13900 Monroe, Westminster. The cost of the vaccination is $3 per dog and licenses will be available at the site of the clinic. Call the Orange County Animal Shelter at 834-6300 for further information. - Tue•day,Dec.6 • 6 p.m. La1ua Beaclt City Coancll, council chambers. 505 Forest Ave. • • 7 p.m. Newport Beacla Parks, Beaclaes ud Recreatloa Comml11loa, council chambers. 3300 Newpon Blvd. • 6 p.m. Hutlactoa Beacla UaJoa Hl1 .. Sclaool Dl1trtct. district board room. I 0251 Yorktown Ave. • J p.m. Oeeu View Sclaool Dt1trlct, district board roon., 16940 B St. • 7 p.m. Hutt.1toa Beacla City (elemeatary) Sclaool District, disrict education center. 20451 Craimer Lane. • 8 p.m. Foutala Valley City Conell, council chambers. 10700 Slater Ave. au1hont1es said . 1denttf) the locauon of the caller. "It takes a lot of man·hour.s to run th.ese A log ofwhe..n the calls were received and fo ur a day." '-authorities-said. Cordeiro said an obscene-call de\ail ma.x Avery also was arrested No'. 24 on the have to be set up in the detective bureau af same charges involving a different v1ct1m the calls continue at 1he accelerated rate. by Orange County Sheriffs Depanment "We want to slow them down." he said. detectives. police said. He had five "That's 'YhY wfrcgoing to slam anyQQS~e 0tclephones-1~ his cramped~ apartment. dov. n." the Cordeiro said ... A lot of 11mes • how long they lasted should also be kept. \\e find out "-hose doing at and tell the he said .. vacum. onlv 10 have her sa\. ·oh. it's onl) A.lthough most obscene callers arc not him. I used to date htm. Just tell ham o dangerous. Cordeiro said police and P.hone stop.'" --c-0mpan} officials sba.uld be i.mrnediateJy catch doing this." detecti ves said. Last Thursday. police arrested David The woman was not 1dent1fied because Ti motht A very. 21. at his Tustin a pan-of the nature of the. cnme. but Hogue said A.hhough the depanment has ne,er had nouticd Often. the v1c11m can s.tmply a casc 10 v. h1ch a suspect terrorized a change hertclephone number toe5cape the vicum o'er the telephone before a nae king harassment. authonues said. Pes.simisln about OC life :declines in annual survey By JONATHAN VOLZKE • Of .... Dellf ..... It.it The majority of Orange County resi- • dents still believe the quality oflife here is declining, but fewer residents liold 1hat pessimistic view than in previous )'cars. according to a UCI telephone survev. Social e_cology professor 'Mark Baldassare and assistant Che ryl Kau directed the a·nnual survey. which was fi rst conducted in 1981 by the UCI Public Policy Research Orpntution's Center for Survey Research. It has a sampling error of pl us or minus 3 percent. The survey, conducted an September. asked 1,000 adults about social. econom1C' and cultural iuucs in a 20-minute qucs- tionaire. "I think the most surprising trend this ~car was that the pcss1m1sm about the future declined over last year ... Baldassare said ... Today. only 38 percent of the residents surveyed believe Orange County will become a worse place to lave. compared with 54 percent last year. . Thiny-five percent sa) th ings arc getting wa)s' motonzed melee, the) ·rl! not seeing better here. and 27 percent fore ee no much amprovcmrnt 1n their annual pa}· change... checks. Baldassare said. , Baldassare attributed the change to an The county's median hou.sehold 1s• altered attitude about what as viewed as the $44.000. up JUSt $2.000 from the previous county's worst problem -.uaffic. )ear. Baldassare said the increase as e'en "While irarrs1>0rtat1on stall as considered "'Ith the intlauon rate. but no" hert nt'at the county's most amponant problem. 11 ~~~;J~. ra1es during the first half of the appears to have final!) leveled out after He said the count) ·5 growth now seems three years of stead} increases." . to be in sen ace-onented fields. rather than Baldassare said. <4 "Even more amponant. 40 percent of the high-tech. high-pa~ ing areas on wh ich h h "' the count) grt'v.. • t 1s group now ave positt'e 1uturc In othcrsur'e'. findano«-percep11ons. compared to 29 percent last -)ear. This indicates that a great deal of •Drug abuse 1s 1he clear leader among pre' aous pessimism may ha'e been based respondents \\hO v.ere asked the count) ·s on traffic problems... top ocaal problem. Fort} .fi, e pel'C'Cnt ·The professor said while people are sull 1denutied substance abuse as the top d b m h I h problem. angere y Ira ac. t e) seem to see a 1g 1 •The median donaoon b' count} at the end of the gndlock. "They sull thank traffic as miserable.·· he ~s1den1s dropped. Tht' amount &•'en b) said ... But the) ·re begtnnana to sec "Ork an a' era~e rrsadcnt pfunged 30 pe rtent. goi ng on. and they read that 10 mean thrrc from S.16-to SI 2 ma) be a better commute in the future ·· •More than 6 -percent of the respon- Wh1le some Orange Count> residents dents said the' v.cre sa ustied v.11h child set possible am pro' ement for the free· care and tound 11 'CIJ com cnu:nt Newly discovered earthquake fault extends to NB LO .\~GELES (A P) -.\ larsc earth- quake ss possible' darcctl) under the heart of the nation's sccond-lafKFSt city. says a study that found t\\O concealed but active faults cut giant S\\aths through the metro- polnan area. · Whtie mapping the Elysian Parle Fault. which was unknown unttJ it caused the deadl) Oct. 1. 1987. Whittier Narrows eanhquakc. u nl\ersat) of Southern Cali· fo rn1a sc1cnt1st also discovered the ~ b)-10-msle Torrance-Wilmington fault stretching from Santa Momca Ba) southrast throu'1? 011 fields 1n Torrance and Los ~ngclcs W1lm1ng1on d1stnct. the Palos \ erdcs Peninsula. Long Beach and ofTsho~ from Nev. pon Beach. The El) Stan Park Fault is about 10 malc-s wade and runs 60 miles from Santa Monaca Ba~ cast through Bc'crly Hills. downtown Los .\ngcles and Montcrc~ Park.. then southeast to the suburbs of Whmier. Fullerton. 'orb3 Linda and Corona, geoph\Sacr t Eg1ll Hauksson said. The Torrance-Wslmington Faull could produce a quail.<' \\Ith a magnnudc ''between 6 6 and 6 8 or so." Hauksson said. Police study videotap~ for -clues to Newport robbery $5 00. The motel manager asked fo r an e:ttra heav) patrol chec)< because of recent burglanes tn the area. • • • A resident 1n the 8400 bloc!I. of Mallndge said JU'enalcs ha'e been steal ing Christmas lights from houses. The culprits ran v. hen he SJ"- them h1d1ng tn the bushes. he said v.crc stolen trorh 1hc pa ri..ing lot of In 1ne Mcado"s ~mphl\heatre some- time Monda~ • • • Computer chips v.onh more than SI0.000 "-Cl'C stolen from ~s1 Re- sea rch. 2--.! \1a.1n t omct1me bctv.cen 3-J pm Thurwa' 26.2-\ 1s1 dd Oro. causing an undetermined amount of damage • • • ~ tereo 'alued at S,00 \\as stolen from a 'chide after the burglar used a scrc\\dra,cr to breal the dmer's side v. and" ing BJ PAUL AllClllPUY °' .. ..., ....... Police bave pb0Jop'lph1 of a Newport Beech robbery suspect that they bope will lad man to \be man wbo neaped witb more than S500,000 in jewelry Sunday. S\Ore cameru videotaped the en- tire boklup when a lone puunan took u estimated U62,400 in jewelry from tbe Neiman-Marcus depait- ment 11e>re in Fashion Island, said N~I'.'. Beech police ·spokesman BobOUJey.· C-tall- Maybe there is something 1n name. A suspected burailr was ar- rt$ted on Pomona A venue. and has name was Kevin Ltt Croat~. • • • A woman from Arbnsas rep<>ncd somebody walked across the hood of her Oodat Daytona. he estimated the damqc at $4.000. • • • Somebod)' pned open a aaraac door on Wc11 19th Street and c~3ped with a stcrto and tclcvt ton worth • S2.l7S. t • • A walk t With )48 WI$ ta kt n from I loC'ktt f'rom an Adams Suttt Mahh Police hope tbe photos and a pen.ill license plate number of the possible geiaway car will lead them to the suspect. Oakley uid \be second throuab founb lelten on tbe ~ven-djpt plate were either INQ or LNQ. It was a new, while Califomia lic:eme plate on • told Mada. Oakley laid. The suspect WU detcribed IS Hispanic, in bis ~ between S feet 6 inches and S feet 9 inches talJ, ~about 170 pounds. He had straiabt brown hair that miaht have club. Foaataln Valley S\erco equipment valued &l $400 was taken from a 198$ Dodie. u.n parked on the 1 IOOO block or Santi Isadora St. on Monday nipt. • • • A movtc M tchcr rtnted two v1ckos from Albertsons at 181 00 lroc*hurst St and then faik:d to return the tapes. won h $83.35. • • • s~•t han-hoodtd man •llh a handaun cntertd .\«ent f lonst at 94.lOWamcr \C Monda> afternoon and dtmandcd caste He Rtd w11h SlOO. • been a wig. was clean shaven. and wore a tan pinstripe leisure suit over lrYlne an open-collared shirt. .. ne suspect made has move at about 4:30 p.m. as lhe only other customer was lcavina tbe depanment and a single clerk stood behind the counter. A second clerk appeared during lhe course of the holdup, promptina the robber 10 pull out a handaun in his waistband that was descnbcd as a .\ teen-age mak called Lal>.c 1de Middle hool honl) before noon Monda' and said a bomb had bet-n planted. m one of the school' bath- rooms. hoot oOicaals ~arC'h~q the bathroom but found no bomb • • • A l6-foo1 Ii hmgboat and 11 1ra1ler Newport Beacb ~'~e"' pon Beach man v. ho left ht bnetcasc in his car" hale he v.ent out dnnktfll rcturnC'd to has 'eh1cle the follov.ing dl) at 1~33 upcnor ~'e and found the bnck·asc ma 1na along "uh about SI. ~40 1n ca h 1ns1dc 11 • • • l nlno\\n uspcct tired ~' eral round of BB gun pellets into \\ m- do" s at lh<! tep 8) . tc Prr hool. possiblebluestcc1 a.utom1tic. Man in elfs cap attempts No one was bun in the robber). -• • • • The walls and Joo" at Hilltop Nurstry 5Chool al 18685 nta. ''ncL L \\ere damaged with a marking pen over the weekend Pape" "ere also bumcd on the s1dc\\alt fhe-dam•ae was ~ta mated at S 100. Butlapna 8eada A at buralar stru<'k at ttie Hu nt- 1n1t9!' Manor o\p.nmcms in the 19000 block of Dcla"a~ 11w1 ~l"-\'t"n I a nl •nd 9 a m \tonJ.i,. The tcahh)' buralar ,11pJX'\i an throush an unlod\·J tront Joor v. h1k the 'icllm ~•s 'lttP•na and )tole a V('R and \Cle\ 1$t0ft "t \alu~'d II - s uicid e at shop ping mall ~ 19-\tllr-<>ld Huntington Beach man v.ilnnt an clfs C"ap plun,N through a sk)hght abo'c thl: uth oasl Plala roo~t v.ath a l1n-hu'I<' tacd 10 ht ntd.. pol11; ·~id. But the shattclTd cdsn of 1h< ple\lglats '~) hgbt cut th<' firl'h , and the man tumbttd tv.o s1on"'' to the round noor of the 0 ta \k\3 mat . Lt -'Ian ~cnt \aid. fhc hopp1011.cntcr ":. do'it'J >'l lhc llntc fh\' man "•" tre.u"-J '''' n\1n,11 1niun( .it" 1.-..t~rn Mt\h1..ll ( cnt~r in \ani.i ~n.i alter th· It 'S pm 1n~1dcnt and 11.cpt 1hcrc lc'lr ~' - chiatnr c' aluJta\'ln "-cnt \.l•d Tohc\Clung m~n ,1p1 1\'tHI\ ~"' n-d the mall ch nlugh ;l \\''''~'door and made-ht~~•) 10 •hi-mot b) v.11} ol • hakh the hcuten3nt ~ud. The man d~ th<' lttThO~ to tht roof v.uh him OnC'C' atCIP the tv.'Cl-\1011 \tructurr, the man-v.c;mnga potntN elfscap -ut'J ne end \'It the "''~ 10 o c;uppon bc:ir1 a J tht.' othl·r to ht\ n\·, II: thl n urn)i('J 1hrl'U h the ,k\. light f\1111 \0 "' • The pl;u:• " ' rmp1' t'\~ rt for ~~u rst' a11,1 cu,toJaal n· ''· "h, found the tniurt'd man , Home seized in Dana Point cocaine raid \ .'50.000 Dana Point home as m the hand~ ol count and federal authontac tod3) after a ovcmbtr raid alleged!\ netted c1g~1. ounces of cocaine ~nd nearl $4i,OOO tn cash. \ssa tant l , \ttomc Carolyn Re\ nold file-J a Cl\ 11 complaint o l'ina that th(' home. which uthontal~ contt'nJ was used to con~cal and -.ell <' •inc. be l•"cn to fedrr31 au1hor111c' for auction lh<'~' ftt'm tM home. tn 'he ~ 000 bk>ek of tatboard • ..-ould be spht amona fcdcral and state author1110 aftd the Ora.,.r Cotint~ hrntT Departmmt undtt ftdrril a\Wt·forfe1turc laWj that allows authontin to impound \t"hidel and htl1ld1ngs thou&hl 11mcred lhfouilh 1lltu1 a\:U\ ;1y. --~ftokb iiaid. nnc of the ownns of dlr honw. Rohe-rt l harln Bum" wat•otm d 1n OI. tc·~·1 after \Mnft"s *'*'"' ..,_ ,cJ a sc-arx:h warranL tte ... ,. lld nn \lite cha~ of. ~ ol eoca1lk: for \lk'. lteyMldl-... .. - U.S. sumlnit OffiCials doubt timing, acceptance of 'gift' WASHI NGTON (AP)-U.S. and Soviet officials arc offcrina different previews of lhis week's mectin& l)ctwccn the superpowers' leaders. with.the Americans trying to dam~n expectations raised by the Soviet promise of a .. Christ mas aift to tile American people and mankind." "We have a president who is leaving office in a few weeks. who is not going to be making any promises that he 1s not here to keep," said White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwa \er. "And we have a new prcsiden\ who will be taking office in a few week s. who is not JOing to be makin commitments when ne aocsn'tnave an administration in power that can Astronauts on Atlantis head home fu lly analyze and make these Juda-ments. .. he said. Fi\1watcrcommented as both sides pcepared for the mcetina of President Reaaan and President-elect Oeorge Bush with Soviet leader Mikhail Gotbachev on Wednesday in New York City. T.he session will be held after Gorbachev addresses the U.N. Gen- eral Assembly. Secretary of State George P. Shul\2 and Soviet Forcisn Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze will meet in the morning at the U.S. mission to the United Nations. Gorbachev. due to ,arrive today from Moscow. is e_!PCCted to make wide-fanging proposals to the Gen- eral Assembly and possibly in his ·President to conduct final . news con(erence Thursday By 1'11e Associated Prus WASHINGTON -President Reagan will hold a prime-time news CAPE CANAVERAL, Aa. (AP)-. conference Th':'rsday, the Whi~e H~usc announced today, in wliat w!n Atlantis' astronauts zoomed toward apparently be his last ~ormal session with reporters .. The news c~nfercnce Will Earth "happy and healthy" today to be he.Id a~ 5 p.m. PST m ~he East ~oom of the Whtte House, sa.ad spokesman end a secret four-day military mission Marlin Fitzwater. "Be nice. It's ~1s last. one," first la~y Nancy Reagan, t~ld during wh ich the)' reportedly reporters as she accepted the o!ftc1al \Yhit~ House Chnstn:ias tree: The se~1on deploycdaradarsatelhtetospyon the w1!I co~e a day after Reagan ~ m~eting in .New York ~llh Soviet President Soviet Union. M1kha1I S. Gorbachev and will hkely be Reagan's last such formal news The shuttle and its five travelers conference_ before he leaves office Jan. 20. were on co urse 10 ignite re-entry d ~th t1 · d l rockets for a fiery hourlong dash 93 charge ... i es to rug carte • tl'frough the atmosphere. Landing was WASHINGTON -The FBI announced today that 93 people tied ro two scheduled for 3: 36 P· m. PST on a dry Colombian drug-cartels have been charged with importing cocaine. heroin and lakebed at Edward s Air Force Base. marijuana into the United States. The people charged in the United States and Because ot the military nature of abroad shipped drugs from South and Central America and other Caribbean the mission. the public wasn't allow-countries and distributed the drugs through a nctwot'k stretching from Miami ed to watch the landing from the base. to New York , Los Angeles and Europe, the FBI said. U.S. attorneys~ offices in More than 400.000 spectators were Miami and Tampa, Fla., assiS1ed in the investigation and most of the 93 were there m October to cheer Discovery's being charged in those two cities. the FBI said. The operation. codenamed Cat- rctum from the fi rst post-Challenger Com, led to the seizure of 11,000 pounds of cocaine, 211,000 pounds of shuttle flight. · · d h · The National Ae ronautics and manJuana an som.& erom. Space Admm1stra1ion and the Air Bomber crashes In Mlchida. n; crew safe Force Monday broke three days of e• silence on the Atlantis mission to give MARQUETTE, Mich. -f<. B-S2 bomber crashed and burst into flames a 24-hour notice of the planned early today on a runway while practicing "touch-and-go" landin'5 at K.l. landing. Sawyer Air Force Base, officials said. All eiaht crew members survived. The "The crew is doing well and is plane,"normally equipped to carry nuclear bombs, crashed about 1:1-S a.m., making preparations for landing," said Lt. Naomi Siegal, a spokeswoman at the Strategic Air Command the agencies said in a brief statement. installation. No weapons were aboard, said a SAC' headquarters spokesman. NEW YORK (AP)-The attorney for a man accused of beating 10 death his illegally adopted daughter has begun trying .to cast doubt on the credibility of the defendant's ex-lover after thtl judge denied an insanity defense. Defense attorney Ira London told Judge Harold Rothwax on Monday that Hedda Nussbaum's testimony last week convinced psychiatrists that Joel· Steinberg was not criminally responsible for killing 6-year-old Lisa Steinberg. Last week, Nussbaum testified in state criminal court that Steinberg had admitted knocking the &irl down because she was staring at him. "We are not abandoning our de- fense that Joel Steinb(rg is not auiltX of depraved indifference homicide. ' London said. He said he wanted his moti~ granted so the jury could consider'l verdict of innocent by reason of insanity. "We are offering our motion as an alternative." London said. Assistant District Attorney Peter Casolaro strongl¥ opposed the .plea change, calling. 11 a "strateaic de; cision" that sho uld not be granted. Rothwax denied the request. at least temporarily. Israel's Peres plans to Uk Labor Par:ty to reconsider By ne A1t0elated Prell JERUSALEM -Foreign Minister Shimon P,res said today he would ask · his left-leanina Labor Party tQ reverse itself and permit talks with the riaht- wing Likud bloo on formina another coalition aovernment. Peres made the announcem~nt after mcctina with President Chaim Herzog. a veteran Labor lawmaker who has urted Labor and Lik~~ to form ajoint,'1ovemmen.t. The two parties have governed in an uneasy coaht1on since 1984. I was v~ry impressed by what the president had to say," Peres said. "I told him I wtll propose to convene the (party's) Central Committee this week. 1 will recommend to the committee to meet the request of the president." U.S. Alr Force coJDmander dle. ln}et cra•h MADRID. Spain -The commander of U.S. Air .Force troops i~ the Mediterranean died when the F-J 6 jet fiahter he was fl y1na crashed dun na a uainina mjssion, the Air Force said today. Maj. Gen. W.S. Harpe was killed in t.he crash Monday near the Torrejon air base outside Madrid. Air Force spo~~an Sgt. Ken !let.h Fidler said. Ha~ wh<? was SI. command~ the 16th U.~Airforcc, which has lS,000 troops stationed at 10 Amencan ba~ · includrng-~oin.Spain. three in Italy, two in Gtt,tee and three in Turkey. . ...... Three killed durlag rlota ln A•erbal)aa MOSCOW -Clashes between feudina ethnic aroups in Azerbaijan left three people dead and six wounded. including three soldiers hurt while trying to halt riots, the Foreign Ministry and official media said today. News accounts fro{Tl the nei&hboring republic of Armenia reported deaths there as well but gave no details. The renewed unrest came despite a Kremlin effort to restore order. The effort included directives 10 party and government leaders tQ stop the violence. THE WORLD~S BIGGEST TOY STORE! AIDS cues level~g off:- in three citi~ ·shop tonight 'til midrlight! Nlnrendl't'SOH'S op 1<on•m'FoRCE .. " .. IP' uFE · All Tyco M\KE out\ ... &. PUNCH· ... · -~1-- Nintendo I. iWV RAO ... · Nintendo , .t 't GOLF ........... II Kon•mou• ... . •• M RADIO CONTROL AERO TURBO HOPPER R"CER ······· IP' Nintendo pRO-~M ...... irltal RAC\HG · · · · · •• -- TOP,.. ...... ti" Ninre~ B\11E ..... . Street or off-tOed 5711 racer wtth 8 tune· tion1, 100' range! Ages 8-Up. (C, ~ M ...... noc lfteM!edl NIE'~o oF ZELDA . LIOne/ GOLD RUSH SPECIAL TRAIN SET Working forward or reverNl Ages 8-up (Two o D.tn.•~ "°' lllCltlCltdl ~~~~ E~C\,~· " .. n.rn •'fO~S .. 11 .. llS-nw,.... • CHULA YISJA W ...,..,.. .._, fOff .. Ucc I I I• L _.., • ISCOMDIDO 1Jt0 A4* ,_. W., le f2 .... ,.....,...,. ce..e, ,.,, •.•an1 • LA MW '7IO °"°"'"'" .... (AcfoM ,....., ...... Oi111 111 .. c.Mtf) • Ill--MY 11 ... W ........... fM ,.., sop I_. I Nllt ID Lfttta, -OCIANS• Hn Y .... w., fAete99 "'"" "-• CM1lll'9 ,...., • """""cnotl •ACM m1....., ~ '°9'8 .......... ., Tiie ... ,,.,..... ... .. OCINaft .... aM ,,.....,, MOWY -MTUIDlY 1:00 All • •11mrt, IUNDlr W All • 11:11 1111 f'.J \ Tyco ~ ZERO GRAVITY CLIFF- HANGERS NITE GLOW H.O. RACE SET Ages 7-up. ~ ....... Cl .....• MAIL-tH MMTE .... "HAL COIT 5411 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Cases of AIDS amon& white p y men has leveled off 1n Loi Anades. San Fr.ancisco and New York City, su1· · aestin& many homosexual. men. have adopted safer sexual practices. n was rc~rted today. •Jt is possible that we may be secina a plateau in cases in p )' men in th~ cities," said [)r. Harold W. Jaffe, chief of the AIDS epidemioloSY branch at the federal Centers for Disease Con· trol in Atlanta. Since early 1987.flhete has been an apparent levelinaoffin the number of new cases bcins reported amona white p y men 1n the three cities, accordina to an analysis of AIDS statistics by the Los Anseles Times. It reported in toda.y's editions that there 1s an AIDS slowdown among white homosexuals in. -the lhttt American metropolitan areas hit earliest and hardest by acquired immune deficiency syndrome. "It would make sense that the first population Jl'OUps t~ platea~ would be P-Y men 1n those cit.Jes which wert hit fint by the human immunodefi- ciency virus (HIV), ... Jaffe •id. However, the number of reported AIDScun 1n intravenousdruauttrs. many of whom are minority sroup memben,andblackandHis.-n1cp y men has continued to increue in the three cities analyzed by the Times. Progna.1•6ood tor recoYery IJ7 Ba.ey LOS ANGELES (AP) -The ~is is JOod for hospitalized K10r Gary Busey, who was rt- spondina to simple allll'lmands and questions after beina tC>let from his motorcycle and landina headfint. without a helmet. OD I curb, Butey, 44, IOftllilM opponent of helmet law proposati. u~nt neurosurtet')' to remove blood clots from his brai• after Sunday'1crasliin Culver City. Hit condition, lilled as critical MOttdly, WIS u~ to lerious but llable, holpilal spokes- man Ron Wile laid today • .. He continues IO lllow Pf'OIJ"'SS. He will react appropriately to a question or I llMemnt." WtlC •id, lddint lhllt thole llent Indicate a lack ofnnda-.. , • .. SlowdoWn will hurt eff arts to· cut deficit WASHINGTON (AP) -Presj-1ha1 Bush would have to deal with a denl-elect OeOl'lle Bush will be formt recnsaon in his ftnt two yean in to deal with a cframatic slowdown in ofracc; 40 pertent forecut that the economic activity next year that will country would be in a downturn b~ make his job of defici1 ~uction even this time next year. tousher. the nation's lop business The outlook if far more pessimistic economists predie\ed Monday. than lhc offecial forecut aapon which The National Association of Busi-the lleqan !dministration is buina ncu Economists said a survey of200 iu finaJl>ucftjel request 10 Conpess. of ill members found 1hem That ..aament is callina for much pessimistic about JrOwth prospects f'uler~, lower intnnt rates and because of a behef that inflationary fallina inflation next year. ~urn will mean hiaher internt If the business cconomisu prove to rites and thus lower consumer de-be more accurate. it will mean Bush mand for cars. houses and other big-will have to come up wittl even ticket items. sharper spendina cuts if he is to keep A--n~overwhclmi ng majority of the 10 has pledae or ~ucina the b~t cconomis1s. 88 perccn1, predicted deficit withoul hiaher taxes. • ____________ .. ___ ...... ____ .. _ __.., ,. -.- ASHMORE MANOS BRVct American Interstate tells of promotion~ Jay Woodworth. senior economist The overwhelmin, majority said a qrttment by the ()rpnization of at Banken TrUSI Co. of New York ~ib&e de(acat-aatu11 peckaee will ~ctroltum E>Lponing Coun1nes. and praacknt of the auociation, said have lo uachade both spendina cuts wtuch Woodworth said-would boost &be bu11neu economists believed and re venaar hakes. someuuna Bush mflauon to S.4 pttcent next year Bush should make ~ucina the has vowed IO avOtd. because of nseng enetJY priefi. def"ecit his No. I prionty. Amona tht arour's forecasts: A credtble. multi-year deficat·tt--The overal uono"'Y· as -hllercst rate$, which have ~n duction olan "would remove one measured by the arou nauonal prod-nsina sharply mcludang a hake in m&JOr tlslt overhanain1 the financial uct, will~ u anenuc 2.2 percent banks' prime lcnd1n1 rate last Wttk. markets. dua1mfna to lend the next year. far below the 3.5 percent will continue upward throuati the dollar lower and interest rates far, far administration forecast. So far in spnng of next )tar. reflccung crtd1t-biahtr ... Woodworth said at a bricfina 1988. the economy has been lfOWJna t1ghteninJ mo~es on the pan of the for reporters. at an annual rate of 3 percent. Federal Reserve to fight 1ntla11on. Many of the economists survcY.t:d -Consumer pncn. which have -Uncmplo)ment, which sho"ed were skeptical of Bush's '.'flexible been rising at a 4.6 percent annual a sizable improvement this year. will freeze" to cut the deficit by simpl y rate this year. wdl climb by ~ percent bc&Jn c~pioa up again an 1989 holdina ovcraU spending p-owth to in 1989. This projection was made because oftM more sfuggish growt ... ~h~~-,,.-----'----------;-t ~~! !>!i!!!l-!!.!C?~ ________ ....... foQJCCCUl.DhcU1'9C#!KX.ODCIL1prod111XJ1W1"'1Cl1Llllion~ce1u.u&;1:1baciK1k"-" ~~!Hrt~ee.eHstit:.-------. er,PTL -. -Mo~bacher Mills are ex.pec.ted · ~deindicted~~ . · . . . . . ' · . . .. _ fraud charged to JOlil Bush.adm1n1strat1on eai~~~~~~~rmc::;J:~Lii.r. defrauded 150.000 contributors and President Rcapn gave 11 :hatsta!us1n the nattonal 1ra<k defieit has nsen 10 used more than S4 m1lhon i n con- h1s administration. record levels. It was S 170 billion last tnbuuons to the TV ministf) to WASHINGTON (AP) -Prest· dent-elect George Bush will name Texas Ollman Robert Mosbachcr as secretary of commerce and Carla Hills. a former housing secretary. as his special trade representative, Bush transition sources said today. "' Bush planned to formally name the .4WO, who will be his top trade officials. later in the day, said the sources. Hills, 54, is the first woman the president-elect has named to a major position. A 18.fYCr, she was former President Ford s secretary of housing and ~rban devclopl\lent and thus. 'continues a trend pf Bustr naming veteran~ of previous Republican.ad- ministrations. "·ear and 1s running at an annual rate suppon extravagant l1'"'esty1-an Th .. two officials will ove .... -the •• ~. '" • .-... ofS 137 billion this )ear. indictment charges. nation's trade pohcy. The office of T~o other Bakker aides also were U.S. Trade Rep~ntat1vc ncaouates In deciding to name Hills to the indicted for alleged ta~ evasion. trade agreements and the secretary of post, Bush was also beginning to Bakker and .Richard Dortch. PTL's commerce enforces them and scek-s to fulfill a promise to name "omen to former senior executive vice prcsi- cxpand markets for U.S. aoods. his adm1nistratton. dent ~ fraudulent means to sell Mosbacher will take over Com-He has also promised "fresh faces:· hfett me partnerships tn the ministry's mcrce from fonner steel eitccut1ve C. bu t she JOtnS the growing number of theme park. a federal grand jury said William Verity, who has held the job Bush appointments that are either Monday after a 15-month probe. fo r on:£c a hear. Reagan appointed h Id ti h R d Bakker. who founded the min1str) · h f c 0 overs rom t e cagan a mm is-1n 197_1 and built 1t into one of the him a r t c deat o ommercc trauon or served in previous Rc-Sccrctary Malcolm Baldrige in a publican administrations. nauon's most popular evangelical horseback riding accident. enterpnscs. and Don"ch arc charged The-sources said Mosbachcc had This incTudcs Reagan's former "'ltb eight co.linU of mail fraud, 15 . Ammcaa latentate But has promoted _two officers and hired a new commercial loan officer. {tarry E. Ad.more was recently named senior vice president and credit officer of the bank's Ncwpon Beach headquirtcrs~l'Mrleee MUM wsa promoted to-vice president and manager of the Orange office. Rebert L Bnee joined the bank as vice ,1>rcsidcnt of commercial lendina. American Interstate, with.$55 milhon in assets, provides comcrcial banking services to small and medium-siud companies in Orange County. Mosbacher, 61. 1sa longtime friend of the vice president's and was -..~,.,ional fmancc-eha1rman ofhrn988 campaign. been promised the job several weeks treasury secretary. James A. Baker counts of wire fraud and O!"e count.of ago but that the FBI background 111. whom Bush has said he will conspinng to commtt .mail and wire cheek on him had taken longer than nominate as secretary of state. and fraud for using the mails and TV. expected because of his vast financial three current Cabinet officials Bush If convicted of all the c~argcs. . --satd could kttp1hC1JJobr.t\uome}-Baktar, ¢. and Doncn. 57. each holdings: -General Richard Thornburgh. could be sentenced to 120 years in Hills will succeed U.S. Trade Educauon Secretary Lauro F pnsonand fined S6 million. • • •• Rusell E. Leatllertty, secretary and general counsel of UaJCARE Fiauctal ~· since 1980, has been elected president by the firm 's directors, effective Jan. I. His father, Ralph W. Leathcrby. who l\as been chairman, president and chief cxecuuvc officer. will continue as chairman and chief executive officer. The son, who lives in Laguna Hills, is a trustee of the KOCE Foundation (Orange County public broadcasting) and a member of the American and California Bar Associations. UniCARE Financial Corp~ is the holding company for Irvine-based UniCAR.E Insurance Co. · • • • Huntington Beach resident Vlvaa Yoas has been named supervisor, management inquiry and marketing support,-in the operational services department at Avco Flauclal Services' intcfnational hcadquaners in Irvine. Avco Financial Services is a multibillion dollar company with more than 1.200 branch offices in Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States. • • • Floadte & A1soclat~ lac., a Seattle. Wash.-based advertising CALANNIO THIE YOUNG and public relations agency serving h1gh-technoloay clients. has ~ned a Newport Beach office to serve companies in the Southern Cahfomia area. It will be headed by Deu A. 'nJe. general manager. a long-tim~ Southern C~lifomia publ ic relations and marketing cnmmunicauons uecuuvc. r • . • • • Although trade representative was not originally a Cabinet-level post. Representative Clayton Ycutter to a ·cavazoS-and Treasury Sccretal) Bakker's wtfe. Tammy. a target of JOb that has become more sensitive as Nicholas Brad}. the 1nvcstfgauon. was not indicted. The Boston Company dOing brisk. business The Boston Company's four Cali· fotnia offices -including Newpon Beach -received $212 million in new assets for management and custody and $240 million in new mortgages and personal loans in the first nine months of 1988. announced Wilham 0 . Gamble. president of Boston Safc·Dcposit a.nd Trust Co. of Cahfomia. "We are very pleased with our growth rate on the West Coast dunng this first year of operating four offices.'' said Gamble. "'We expected many Californians would find our financial products and services very attracUVC\ and our numbers now prove 1t." ' The Boston Company targct.s high nct-wonh 1ndiv1duals as its clients - the top 1 percent of the nation's population. Through it.s subsidiaries Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Co. (Massa- chusetts and Cahforn1a). The Boston Company opened "'personal invest- ment banking"' offices 1n Los Angeles: Newport Beach. San Francisco and Palo Alto 1n the last quarter ~19!7. "The concept of Personal Invest- ment Banking11 thatourclicnucnjoy the convenience of a si• penonal banker."' said Gamble. "That per- sonal banker coordinates a team of specialists to provide investment manaaement. personal loans. mort- PltS-mutual funds.. trust and estate services. • • "That person will be a single source for all banking services - a conve- nience greatly valued by our affi uent clientelc." . The Los Angeles office officially opened its new 4.~square-foot ground floor office on No\. 16 in the California Ptaza bwldmg. at 300 S. Grand -next to the Museum of Contemporary Art. h.wtll occupy an additional 22.000 square feet on upper floors in that building in January 1989. Boston Sa fe Qepo1t and Trust Co. is the nation's 20th largest bank. with $18 billion 1n assets. Firm 's·new rate at·ms to deter pagers' illicit use · CU E PagmJ Corp. has 1ssued...new ra tes aimed to cunail high· volume use of pagers suspected of being -associated with dru& trafficking. The move by Irvine-based CUE, the largest natJon..,.1de paging company. 1s the result of the company's concern ab6ut 11l1ctt use of pagers. · "It as unfonunate." said CUE President Gene Swanz). "bui pagers can get an to the hands of drug traffickers"' 1thout our knowledge. Aod we leg.all) cannot remove the pager JUSt based on our suspmon of its use. ··Legitimate h1dl-volume users of nat1on..,.1de pagmg nrd~ rece1' e more than ~30 messages-a m onth. and ~'en that 1s ver} high So. the ne" rates arc designed to onl) affect 11leg1t1matc apphcat1ons. •• CU E's new rate Slructurc will charge users an add1t1onal SI for every message reccJVed O\'Cr a 25()..per-month hm1 t. wanzy adds tbal pagers used b) public emergency. public health. pubhc safety and medical professionals "ould not be subject to the extra ch.argc. CUE Paiing ColJ). is the first com pan~ 10 offer nat1on~1de ~na sen ice. The company provides service to more than 135 c1t1es with an average of -.000 square miles of coverage in each cu~. CUE's pagin1 system nov,. co,ers more than 90 percent of the populauon of the United States. -C E 1s a member of the olt1a 0\ famil) of com~nies. Finland's largest corporation and one of the "orld's leading producers of color TVs. cellular phones and personal electronics_ Llada CaluaJ• has been named director of marketing for CreatJve Detlp C•saltu ... accord ing to Dana Eaens, principal of the nationalfy acclaimed design firm based in Costa Mesa. Among its most recent honors as a leading intenor merchandiser of model homes, sales offices and commercial projects. arc five 1989 MIRM Silver awards. · Selling business property? Check tax-free exchange • • • Jamn R. Uk:roplaa, president of Pacific Enterprises. has been elected to the board of directors of Newport Beach-based Pacific M•IUI Ufe luuaace Co., cffcClivc Jan. I. according to Harry G. Bubb. chairman and chief executive officer. Pacific Mutual. the flagship of the Pacific Fi~a.ncial <;os:. is the n!ltion's 23rd l~rgc:st insurer. It has nearly $35 btlhon-ofhfc insurance in force and, with us subsidiaries. manages nearly $23 billion in assets. If )OU arc antic1pa1inJ selling a piece of business or investment propeny and replacing tt with other property. consider the benefits of a tax -free eitchange. ... ••• The Irvine office of insurance broker Fred S. J•mea Ir Co. has The talt·frce exchange allows you to dispose of one piece of proecny and acquire another without incumng any current tu hab1hty. On a quali- fied exchange the gain IS deferred until the propen y IS fater disposed of. lf tht newly acquired property is still owned at the time of )Our death. the dcferttd gain ma> ne ver result in any income tax. (Property passing through an estate IS entitled to a announced the addition of Capri O'Neal as assistant vice president. ••• Helsley, Mllkallf & Fesler. one of ,orange County·s largest independent accounting firms. has appotnted NataUe lmrilft of Huntington Beach as staff accountant. ' , .... MUFMll?•Mm ..... DM:UI ~---------:i . Lale ...... 181 1 ------I -•• .... ...._ . •C...• •• I =-·...... '• •o...l• lllPFll I .,..~ ........ ni s , , _________ .......... _, .•. .. La.. L:U. O.M.D. C.A. MnlMIJlUIC _, .. ,_, Of!NatOM: ...... . ........ IL 7 •• .... .... ., ._."'91 CALL NOWI Jm 8TIPO w s .. .,_. . RA1111 Scon "stepped up bestS. ") The amount of your tu sa\'tngs on a tax-free ei1;change "'II be de- termined m pan b)' the amount of profi1 you would reali ze af the property "°ere sofd and an) pass1ble Calamari Abalone, Styl4' .......... ~&boy .... _..,._,__ ........... Of<"P "'our OWi& cm .... . .... -..n.... ... 21 ··= ...... 0, offsetting losses a' ailable on other transactions. To qualif~ as a ta\-frtt "change. cen:un rcgu1 rcmen1s must be met. The Qropen) must be of a "hke~ kind ... For eumple real estate can- not be e'changed for personal prop-ert). In most ca~. ~al e-state can be traded for other real e tate. e'en though their use~ ma~ be different. Ra" land. for C\amplc. can be e\changed ta\-frtt for an office bu11d1ng.. or a farm can be e\thanaed for urban rental proixn' 11 :30·-3:30 Monday • Saturday All CHOICE!i .93.95. AU. "°"' fOOO Mn1er Oboul ll'W'W S~tOIS Fish & Chips Basket The property that 1s c>.chanaed and the propcn) received must be sold fqr • produclJ~e use in a trade or bus1nris or for tn'estmen1. Property to be rece1,cd must be 1dent1fied within 4S daH after \OU transfer )Our propeny. and \OU · m~ust receive the new proecn~ no later than 180 da)'s after )OU \C tran ferrcd \our propen) Ta._e a scnous loo._ at arranging a ta\·free c'cnange 1f )Our transaction wall qualtf,. ~,,.Scott is• cert1fiff ~ ffCOUCUf Wfrt .tfltts la Ne..,.,.. &•d. Tureen of Delaney's bmous clam chowder and 1/2 sandwich. -1 '1 sondwich of voor chOice -Monhotton or New E nglond chowder AS * Or.nge Coat DAIL V PILOT I Tueed8y, Oeceinbet 8, 1811 NYS E CoMPOSI rr TRANSACTIONS -~ ( A Bauer Jaguar XJ6 is not only $15,000* less than a Mercedes 420SEL, it's 7" wider, 2" low_er . and 100% prettier. The best value in luxury is a beautiful exa~ple of dollars and sense. While so~ European manufacturers have wclJ-amed reputations for c.hargins a lot of money for their cars, a e.iucr Jaguar maintains the tradition of living you a lot of car for your money. We invite you to experience the swiftness, surefootednaa, spacious comfort and handcrafted luxury of the Jaguar XJ6. With no price Increase for our 1989 XJ6 models, plus an outstanding selection to choose from, viait us soon. .. *Ba.sai on Tf\aJUj/ac:Nfm 1989 swuesU'JCI retail prias indwdinf dealer prtparation, rransponadon and gru gw.akr ca.x, which applia to the Mercedo-Bent .poSEL; excluding Licrruin1 fea, .nau ca.x and local taus. Aawal retail prica are Sd 17, r1'e ~ and ma, Wlf"J· ~ 1· BAUERJAC\JAR the PllOFESSlONAl. APPROACH 714.-971-2002 2001 SOlJrn MANCHESTER AVENUE • ANAHEIM, CALLFORNlA • 92812 • • TUE8DA Y'S CLOUICI PRICH ... OrMQe Coeat OAJLV PILOT/Tueedey. Decenlb9r 8, 1881 * AT State senators hoping to put new teeth in Prop.103 . SACRAMENTO (AP) -Three Stnate Democrats arc try ma to shore up Propos1t1on 103. the voter-ap- proved. ,..te-cumna measure that has been temporanly stayed by the state Supreme Court. fn a Capitol neW$ conference Monday • .,.Sena,te rnsu~nce commit· tee chairman Alan R9bbins unveiled legislation that l\c said would essen- tially prtvent insurcn from profi11n1 WHAT A~1f X DID W HAT NYSE Dio NEW-YOR~ (AP) Dec: 6 -. AM£X LEADERS NEW YORI<. CAP) -S.IH, ' p.m Tuesdav price end net ch•"9e ~f the 10 mo'' •ctlvt Ame.rlcan Stock E1ecnen11e l$$IJIS, tredlng nation llv al more the~l Name V 1' ~exasAirCP m6, l ~ -ompConM>I • ... + , mdahl s 7, 1 + J • W<t')~ab8 f. i'• HX~sl'rm I~'. 9 1 • 16 Max~m l 7, J l , -• ~~¥r~~ · I 6:1 2~4 + .. lorlmarTel 10, IP <. -~ .. NYSE LEADER S as a rnuh of any anernpts to evac:k Proposition I 03. The bill. SB I 0), threatens heft) financial fines for pullbacks from the markeL Brown, re-elected, appeal•lor pace "What »•II happen 1r the Legs~ lalurt sats !ack and takes no acuon 1s A( RAMENTO (AP) -Willie that a cnsrs will \.Cr) qur ckl> de· Brown hopes his eleclion 10 an velop," the Van Nuys Democrat sard. unprecedented fifth term u A5- "lf what'~ happened whh these com-sembly speaker will brina an end to panics (..-.1thdraw1ng from the Cata-the bitter 1nfiah11n1 in the Lqi5- fom1a market) is allowed to snowball. laturc's lower house. and 1f more compan1ts then stop 'I hOPf the vote that has been cut writing policies. that 1s something we today will settle all the thinp that cannot do and something v.t'rc not should have been settled on the gorng to do." electioneering front." the San Fran. Edward Levy, general manager or cisco Democrat said Monday. the Assoc1atron of Cahforn1a In· But the Assembly Republican suiance Companies t sa rd he was Icade 1ve re!>cl mocrats "anxious to bcgrn work on wa)'s to cut promised to keep trytt;\g to topple the cost of providing insurance." bUl Brown unless he gives up some orthc ') warned tha t 1f Propo$1tion 103 ts speaker's powers to control commit-· upheld by ,.he-high ee1;1rt, 68103-Ltt compositionsand block bilk would be of no help to consumer Brown was re-elected speak.er with "In other states. penalties have not 40 votes. a bare ma,onty of the 78 stoooed companies from leaving a ._sstmbl) members who were sw6m market. but the} ha' e discouraged 1n at the Capitol Monday to began a new companies from coming Jn and ne" legrslatrve session. picking up the business that's left behind:· levy sard. insurance applicants to affiliates with Senate leader David Robeni. a Los higher rates or from ccasin& 10 write Angeles Democrat, said dunng the car insurance polk 1cs. ne-.sconfercnce he was 1ntrodu<'rnga • Stn. Cecil Grttn. a Norwalk bill. SB3, thu "'ould C'reate an office Democrat. said he will introduce a an the sutte Justtce Dcpanment to measure that would give the con· repre$ent consumers w11h insurance sumer advocate's office the power to problems during legal or adm1n1s-an vest1gate and intervene on behalfof trauve proceedings. con umen when insurance com· <\nother Roberti bill. BS. "'ould pan ics arc enpging 1n unfair methods bar 1 nsurcrs from ref em ng auto of com pell lion or dccepti ve practices. _:Uiiillmn~------ NEW YORK l AP) -Tiit lollowlno l•sl-show$ the Ne... Vork Stock Ex-chlo~ s1ocks 1no ""'"'"" that riave ~ne up ·the most ano oown the most sea on oercent of cnange regaroJen o volume f9r Moodav No securlt"s trading below S2 are I nclu de d Ne t a nd oe r -cesa11oe chlnQes are tne cMt.,-ence e>e-twHn ,Jh• orev1ous closing oric:e and Mondav s 2 Pf' Jf}fe NMne L.st ~ Pd. l ~~y~~y, 2f~ 1' 8~ •H NEW Y ORK (AP) r-i-.. • 4 amonCP 2 • 11' l..Jp 6.9 Tuescsav orice a'nd net 7han9e~~f lh: 'l's S vcRrsour 1• • uo u j onSlor I'• 2 UP 9,3 most achve New Vork Stoel! Exchange l 1r.1h!!IC ., UP 6 7 issues. rrading n11ton1Uv 11 mon tl\an .sl AVX CP 1 • 1 UP 6.6 N • -CM. ~~11 1 , 1~ Uo 9 ro V ~sf -IC., Divers Ind • , • Uo 9 ~~)~lb ... 1· 9'.l n:: + 1i. ii H1rcrt8rJ n 9111 ~ UP ., UPjohn • ,7 tt • + , ~~i[.'llCP w t ~~ • tl~ :6 un on ~~ • •9. ..,. + ~ l · K.•'1fvdHm w , ~ UP ·t i"m~!ttiPo :A9J: 1'; -• 1 • 1 ~NL" ,,.~cp l~ '• B~ -6 SFG co ,6~•. Jo.i. I • i • enElct I , ~~ fe W"b"c\,..nd 1 l! ~ 8: :l l'l\tlh8~1t. 1,• • ;9 7 1 ~ 19 Un~~r\d s 1 , .+ UP .1 rn1erco l· . n.i· t l i u~co 1,~7 '8 • 1 " 000 "~ ~ • Uo ·t Y~,~~l'n pf A l:t• : .,~, -'l ~ Contlln o ~ + • Uo o ~{'Ell.or ' . . "~ :+ t• - M 1, • 1 l't -flJll'WM)Awu-------- Dow JoNES AvERAGES Due to transmission problems In New York, today's llstMig will not appear in the Dally Pilot. NASDAQ SUMMARY NEW YORK (APJ -The fonow1no list u Slo.vWest ~ws IM 0;1er • the • Counllf AmTravtr sloc:xs and warrants tl\at have OOnit uo L.af191Y the most •nd oown the mo" t>eMd on ProotvAl'I'* PtfGenl OI ~henge fOr Moncl•V No securit ts trad no oelow S2 or 1000 DOWNS th•res are ncluoed. N.ne LHt , Pd Net and oerc1n1aoe cllanges "' !tie J F101FdffeM 20 --11 ~ difference o.tw"" ttie prevtcxn dOS•nG ~mac ,~ ->... .t orlce ano MondaY'l Jest "' l>IO oroce Aioor~• COl'P --W'S ~,, ~me.I -~ 4 i Rkyr~nd LHJ., + 9'9 Uo,.d. ~~'r Ch ' ~ = ~ 1 l TVX " h 2 + ,., Uo VlclorCrffl • -Jo. lig~n Z,\J l ·'J +, ·,, ug . f == Fds ~ _ : l~ MRI! rQVP s ..., lt UUPD 1 f NevecaGOIO -S.-16 • F P1 3 ! Ct1seF1re '> -') • OSilOn .,, 1 • UP 17. 1 C1rcu1tSvsl ~ -~ Hen~~~to ·~ 11 '> 8: llt~ I H11Mw1v s > -., i .·.· NEW YORK tAPJ -Most active over-VldeoSu1>1tr ~ ·., uo s al oro -•.; ·the·c~nter A sroc~s wpohed t>v Teknowldge ~ 1 Uo 1•.I olumL1bs 3 ~ CharlF.Of '• 1 UP 6 J Na mo MCI Intel APPleC SHGllt SunM1c ~OIU$ 1nlscr MdB s lnt11oh TelcmA L•Mc,•' I : {;IM r A'6rld ~~!. enih1,,. un ~ UD 1' tron lee • -~ . '. l:fi'l:j !~1~ + ri~,~~=~c : f ~ 8~ Ii j ~nv~~iN ' ~· -E f 1•17 • ll~· + ,; US nrgvCo 7 • +: ~ UP I~. 11un•11 le --• _ >. Am 1ct 2 a -r • UP 1 3 l'IConcPI A -•;. I.~ ; ~ ~ MdwstFncl lS + • UC' I ~ S«>JnAmer .. -'"' ! . ~ ~ I·~. 1-;;;;=======:::;:=========:;;;;;;;===~ ' .: ~.). Go LD Qu orEs STMASTI~ AND ALL THE TIIMMINGS METAL S Quons RUFFELL'S UPHILSTEIY llC . .......... °""' ..... l W-llll.. eesTl--141-1151 HOLIDAY LUNCH PARTIES! Hiltaic Landmark On the Bay s 11 so ~:;~ Ti/:i&ro roe •Gia of Cha.mpa.gne • Choice of 4 Entrees • • "'oup or alad • Dessert • Beverage • Rf' enrations Requested 875-5777 Orange Coat I Tuesday, December 6, 1988 ENTE -. Black· coln~dy splendid at ART In its first four offerings-from the likes of Sartre, Pinter. Albee and Ibsen -the Alternrativ. Repertory Theater has won early claim for its quality of productio , but not for its sense of humor. Thus. when ART announced a·show called "The End of the World," audiences were prepared for the grimmest. Toi Titus viewers' attention, setting them up for some heavier twists to come. entrusted to Amy Larson and t-. Greg Atkins bri ngs a whimsical Thom Spadaro, each of whom enacts Ch ('h r h t I three separate characters. Larson evy a~ qua it y to t c cen ra makes a splendid about face from role of the writer who envi5ions reconstructed Russian to o~er own himself as a master sleuth and who ,... warns early on that his narration may "War vames" kid, while S ro is or may not all be accurate. Atkins' excellent as a Strangelovian general wide-eyed everyman approach lends and a bug-eyed rocket scientist. credibility to the story, and he gains Young Steven Chcssen as Atkins' <don). the mood shifts. Kopit sneaks and retains our sym pathies through-son has little to do in the show. but his up on his audi~ncc unawares gives out. ptcsence ad~s an extra dimension to them something to think about while As the wealth) doomsayer who sets Its effect. they're still chuckling. the wheels in motion. Ralph Rich-Since "The End of the World" is a Surprise! Arthur Kop1t's "End of the World" is, for all practical purposes, a comedy. More accurately a black comedy about nuclear war- fare, or the threat of same as the superpowers play the nuclear guess- in pme "who goes first?" ---llhrt;just"whcn y ou begm-ro-settl into the satincal humor of the piece (about an author with a Sam S~dc cocnplex assigned b"y a zilhonairi to come up with a play about Armegcd- The result. under the nchl) 1m-mond is a smoldenng. potentially multi-set play laid out on the smallest aginative direcuon of Joel Couer. 1s dan&crous presence. One of Oranie stage an the county -and r fulf.. an appe izmg mixture or various Coun~s strooger actors to began 1Uand fo 1111at<rNha1 th~-wmt-o:f-·~-------,.....-....;..-~1111 forms ~f theater blended into a with. Richmond is panicularly over-set ddigoer Tom Wilkjns and light- substant1ve package. The pmate eye whelming an the inumacy of the ART ing designer Jamie McAIUster is fc;>r~al (with i\s bOunc) Henf) Man-playhouse. especially imponant. Both make cm1 background music) captures the ~ Suzanne Chapman endows her splendid visual contributions. -::;~p;;;;;;;;;;;::::a;::====================-1 writer's agent with a maternal qualit) This first Orange County pro-that somehow rings a bit off key in the-duction of Kopit's alternately hilari- : .~Kl l'J()[)(l f.[ 'i' Ill -... , ·, II.ti~ 'IMI llMID GUN: 2131511-5651 ,_'*nus Of POUCl 5eUAD (POI 11>40 1tlS 4:40 6'40 1:4S 10:4S WKTIAI IKOllNNG DOU T m"OIMH MUHA! ~ ~o :'!: .:,__ THI HMID GUN: 714/ttHM FIOM '"' nus Of,POUCI SQUAD {Krill 12':!0 11:!0 .,U •·40 l<AS 10!50 oouT sn1101Pu•1C1t swnu TIGU WAISAW 111 1.00 ):00 S:OO MIO .. oo ll :00 s1tuation. Michelle Roberge nicel) ous and disturbing seriocomedy wiU. h d I I f h h • be on the ART stage through Jan. 22 handles t e ua roe 0 t e aut or s -with a two-weekend break over the sexy. ditsy secretary and his homey. Christmas and New Year's holidays. adoring wife. The satirical quality of the play is Performances are Thursdays through .. ------------... , Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sunda~s at 7 p.m. at the theater, 1636 S. Grand 'II Ave .. Santa Ana. Call 836-7929 for __ ticket information. Orea Atkln•. R&lf.h Richmond and Steve Cheuen ln .. Tbe Encf of the World ' at the Alternative Repertory Theater. SCIOOGED 1,.1 ii 11:50 ):OS S•1S 7·SO 10!10 GOUT Sl1UC)IWAU OllHIT S OlMI #ID COMIAH'f cGI 11'JO 1·)CI 4-0S MO 1 lS .. 10 5'1CT1Al •t<OlOIHG DOUT SlUIO •Ill MUttAYI 5QOOG(D (l'G-IJI 11·U ):10 S·1.S 7•0 10«1 OOUT SRnoisTM GUTT1NUIG COCOOH TN( tll\llN {PGI lt•>S S-S1U 1 SS 10,10 UUU mttO'l'Oll O'lOOU lllGH SNITS !PG-Ill 11·4S 1,0 4 0 6·0 I O ICl-SO OOUTSll"OI WCil'WtlllPG 'UWIT NllllGIN frlm ........ Ma_ Sci-fl thriJJS at Coastline GOUT mHO.IOOll 'OSTU TNI ACOISID 111 11:4S J-10 S:U l:OJ 10-JO BP!•f!D•CJitl 213/SIHHt Oll.01 NT Ill 11. .. , 1:4J ...... , "4' .... , 10 4S -lNIO/lU<AJ' l'•Utlft nil LAND N{Oll TIMI {GI 12:)01·10 4•10 •-OO 7·SO .... oour sn1101 llUIT IUHfUIMl(MfUI "llH(I nGUILA SUHllSI 111 11:50 ):10 '''° ll>O 11-00 iippici@ ~ CMRIOUllO ........... U ll l<A(l11$ 1M/179-llM llll 111.UHAf SCIOOG@ {Kr u 1 CIOCODIU DUNCitl H cP01 Tlll'f lM {II THI lo(CUSlO Ill tw.v Mtn mn SAt • WM TIGO WAISAW 111 ACllOH JAClSON (I) fl#A# ~ Mlf lo\T & ~ IOU-PHIWI'~ DAllOTA (PG! I.IS) IJ J 10 1 OS •.oo 10.H CHM.D'S NT 111 12 • .SO 2 •.s '·'° ~lJ ll~ 10.JS TIGH WAISAW 111 ACTION JACKSON c•l Mll GIUOft.11Ull •uUUI T10Ull.A SUHllSI Il l DUDPOOl 111 IOU-PHIWPS DAllOTA {PG) IOlfl IH WT U. rtl lf.t:f.l:hf.@ .... -. ._.a...., llN ntl MAllD GUM: 7Wl7MN2 ftOM flll JIUS Of l'OUCI SQUAD I'°" UJ DIMiNff "'°" 1 Jl nil WIO W<lll '1Ml Col 11 )0 l•)O 4•)0. )Cl ll)O 10-)0 llHlST SAvtS CHllSTl!W IHll ll•)O 1·10 4•10. 00 uuu muo , ... ,.1 1·00 10"00 WT LA. t•l SWU llll I IYl~I UI a SUM 1:nqi.gp1~ =:. lleecll llK THI HAlllD II U fwor CiUH: rl()M fll(• 11•1111.303 nus Of l'OUCI SQUAD {f'O-I)) DIAGHIT IPO-Ill llll 111.UUAT SCIOOGIO IKrUl "' CIOCOOIU DUNDU II {POI wau OllNIY s Ollvtl &HD COIVAHT {GI llG IUSINISS IHll CHllO'S NT 111 lllUTlD ~ Give to Toys for Tots and Enter ~ A SPECIAL HOLIDAY OFFER FROM COPLEY /COLONY CABLEVISION or COSTA MESA Drop otf a toy and take a chance. Your kid could wm a trea.c;ul't' chest of toys worth thousands of dollars. Lots of runner-up prize!. too! Watch USA Kids Club for details. Give a little. You might get a lotl GET INTO THE HOLIDAY SPIRIT. Whether you have cable or not. there's no better lime to place an order. F'or a llmlted time current subscribers can Qet free Installation ofShowllme or lllWlt The Disney Channel and pay only 84.95 a month through the end of February. And new aubscrtbers can j{et free cable Installation plus the special Showtlme or Olsney offer. Pick up the phone a nd call today. Then sit back and really enjoy the holidays. Have a happy and healthy holiday from Copley /Colony Cablevision of Costa Mesa and Toys F'or Tots. PG IJ ·~. A N llUNT Pll:TIJll(ft; • .. -· -""' ...... ~ -:::-::-~-=--. NOW PLAYING MU .......... ,..,. ~Ult COflOll• f ....... ~··· :' ~· "" OOITAIUU (Oa 1 0. .....,, ~·'~ II T0..0 (0,..;+3~ [ ~I~ MllVM SAlf'l'A AHA (t••-1t~-£0.-rA"-"""'~ ~S• S\ • 661 ,,.. LA -AO• ITAlfTOll .... ., t... ........ bt-•4' \I ... Cot.,. ... 7•1Wl 19'-GSJ' U GUHA •UCH #[ST-STEii t~•lll'Ctlo y.._,,,, "°""' bl·~~ .. ._,, f'i~ PU lf1 )HS llllSSIOM YIUO ~ fO.Jtfl Oe-•-. ,,. ""' Oft ANGE v.co•:o Sl~~lfl ,.OU...lAIN \tAll.£'¥' OAA..06 ··-•·'h• "1• ... ., ~t 639 1no •i. ·~ •" 7\Sl "Ul.ll!ATOflil SANT• ANA &Y('. '""' t I 1,C•#~ I t "1'"W ~r'"'· ll'IVIH( fhA'laUr''tf' •, !~ ~.,, ~~~!!~~~ERGEON Futuristic fantasy with an ageless message is ·presented in Coasthne Community College's current pro- duction of Ra y Bradbuf) 's "The Martian Chronicles:· playing for the first time to Orange County au- diences. Well known fo r his creativ& sci-ence-fiction. Bradbury sketches a picture oflife on Mars between 1999 and 2012, refl ecting concern over mankind's past treatme of his' environment and revealing tie warnin_g concerning future r~po · siblity in outer space ventures. Roben Conrad directs a sizable cast in. a commendably entertaining THINKING ITALIAN TONI Try the homemade lasagna. cannelloni marucottl or any of the traditional pastas Also Linguine al Fruto Del Mar • Feltuccine al Pesto• Shells Marcello and many more If ~ou.like "eal •seafood • poultr)' we offer a large selection too Of lOurse we have homemade p1ua SPECI o\L DINNERS FOR ONLY $765 \ 11601 IH1r• Bl•d. (II !)l11tr) Hut.l11f011 IHad (114) 842·J506 "A SIDE-SPLITTING CDIEDY SMASH ... APAmIDUDON'f WANTTO END." M B u '"'hll' 1'1111'1 I ll'l..\ll\I I R L R L A y S ·C ·R ·O ·O ·G ~l\] 1. . . ... --·-"l,[g ---=-· performance with shadings ot in- trigue developed out of carefully structured lighting and sound - orchestrated b. · t~hnical director Ron Schl)er and implemented b) Jason Wright and Kimberly dams. Relying heavily on these tools arc segments dealing with telepathic communicatinn and transport throllgh space and time. Contriblltmg an ominous conti- nuity as narators, Lani Hall. Tom Lavecchia and Ehzabeth Bogey inter- ject editorial com ments at various interludes throughout the piece. Theirs is a striking presentation of n rrative clariJy and impressive cos-tuming by Hall and Steve and Diana S1erling. John Llndeamltb (left) and Lani Hall In "The Martian Cbronlclea." Lavecchia, along with Doug Du- quette and John Lindesmith, serve as Captains Black. Will iam s and Wild.er, respectively -commanders of Mars mission crews. each 1n tum closing. somber moments. Sceouting the surface of the planet in Supporting with strength arc Mag- search of previous night team s gie Riley, Gayle Morton._Bill Hilton presumed lost. Lindesmith also offers and Sieve Sterling. The entire cast a delightful , though bnef. per· demonstrates versatility in iu ability formance as Grandpa in Act I. to _ponray multiple roles carefully David Sabin effecti vely interprets defined and executed. Riley and ~nder. a member of Mission Carol A. Boot arrange choreugrapby. Three's crew who manages to survive while Sterhng 1s vocal director. to meet Mission Four. Ultimately his Ray Bradbury fans are in for an own life 1s placed m jeopardy over evening of fine entenainment with idC?alistic concerns for.the fu_turc well-Coastline's "The Manian Chroni- bemg of Mars and its mhabnants. ctes" on stage at the college's Newpon Another all-too-brief charac--8each-Ccntet Ol-Padfk Vi,ew . enza ion •. caving c_au 1encc want-Drive, Newport Beach, Fridays and mg more~ 1s that of Kimber!y A~an:ts Saturdays at 8 p.m. through Dec. 17. as Genevieve Selsor-comic relief an Calr673-460 I for ticket information. 'Naked Gun' shoots to top in first weekeiJ.d HOLLYWOOD (AP) -"The Naked Gun," a spoof of tclev1S1on police shows. and "Scrooged," a slapstick update of a classic Christmas story, touched the hearts and wallets of the nation's mov- iegoers last weekend. "The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad." which stars Leslie Nielsen as a hardboiled detec11 ve who stumbles on a murder plot, rated first 'place at the box office. earning S9.3 million in its first weekend of release. $6.3 m1lhon was "Tequila Sunrise," a steam) thriller starring Michelle Pfeiffer. Mel Gibson and Kurt Russell. Animated films followed an a close race. "The Land Before Time" was No. 4 With S3.5 million and "Oliver and Co .. " followed with $3. I million. "The Land Before Time," about a baby brontosaurus making a danger- ous journey through a prehistoric land, had the best-ever opening for an animated film three weeks ago. "Scrooged," featuring Bill Murray r----:-------::--------------..:...------' as a modern day Scrooge in the retelling of" A Christmas Carol." was second with $7.5 millidn, accordin_g to figures released Monday by Exhib1· tor Relations Co. "Oliver and Co." recounts Dickens' "Oliver Twist" ta lc, usins the voices of Lily Tomlin. 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Have yous: bk>od pressure checked. • Nonlt of Santa Jut.ti • And keep it In ohect( for hfe. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • I t •. ......... ........ ,, Fer Ad Action Cal a Daiy Plot Al). VIS(I 642-5671 -' English-plus is better than English-only J It is time to put the brakes on the English-only bandwqon. A new idea branded "English-plus .. has a lot '•---11-·-morc to recommend~t. --------- . Concern a~ut this issue arises because thr~ more states .... passed Englash-o~ly ame~dments to their staLe constitu- uon"last month dunng the bag.national election. Tiley joined 13 ~thcr states that had already passed English-only laws of thcarown .... ~hile much of the nation has 'perceived these laws as relatJ.,vely hannl~ m t~e ~st, ... there is a growing sense that theres ~ore to this lcg.1slat1on than Just promoting English. Racist co~ments arc surfacing which make it clear some backers of English-only laws are more worried about keeping · certain ~ent.s of the population down than they-are about -lifting language skills up. ... • f n response to this negative approach taken by English- only.Foups, opponents h~vecoii:it:d the new slogan::Englisn- -plus to demonstrate their commitment to teaching English while prcservirig minority languages. Vf e shoula even go beyon'd that by encouraging more A~encans to lea.m otber languages. especially Japane , Chmese and Spanish, to deal most effectively with the entire Pacific Rim over the next few decades. . We.utcbee (Was•.> World Ethics bill veto Maybe Presiden1 Reagan didn'1 like the nickname of the ethics 1:5iJL.be killed with a pocket ve to. . It ~as informally called the "Never Again Mike Deaver'' bill. talung on the" name of Reagan's former aide and close friend who was convicted of ·illegal influence peddling (lobbying) after he left the White House. Whatever his reason, Reagan refused to sign the bill that would have imposed tougher1 curbs on lobbying by both fo Fmer administration officials and -for 1he first time -impo~d the same restrictions on former members of Congress. · The'"Reagan administration has a dismal record when it comes to conflicts of interest, and this would have been one final opponunity for the president to say: "Enough. It stops here." Instead, he said, "Business as usual." .. Dalutlt (MbUI.) News-Trlbuae Stealth b0mber The once-supersecret Stealth bomber has made its public debut at Palmdale, wowing news photgraphers and Pentagon brass with its sleek, futuristic lines and the promise of a new era in air warfare. But behind the fanfare lies ample reason to doubt whether this imponant asset will become a s1rategic reality anytime soon, considering the future constraints on the Pentagon budiet.. .. A program of this magnitude would be difficult to finance in the best of fiscal times. But. according to estimates by the General Accounting Office, the Defense Depanment's current five-year spending plan will cost $200 billion more than the resources available even if Congress grants a 2 percent increase in defense outlays after adjusting for inflation. In the inevi table search by Congress-for cutbacks in military programs. the 8-2 will be, regrettably.,.an enormous target 7 one th.at will be considerably more visible than its radar cross-section. Yuba-Sutter Appeal-Democrat . Tough decisions for the second time in recent weeks, 1he state Supreme Co1.m has handed down a difficult decision in a case with major implications for the relationship between church and state. For the second time it wisely drew a sharp line between the two realms and avoided a thicket of divisive issues that, once entered would have been almost impossible to escape. In the fi'rst case, it held that neither the Constitution's guarantees of re ligious freedom nor an ambiguous state statute recognizing Christian Science practitioners protects a parent from endangerment .and mansl?ughter . charges _for failing to seek medical attenuon for a .child who 1s fa~lly ill. In the second it held that clergy and other unhcensed · counselors could ~ot be held legally liable for failing to give proper care to those they counsel. The second case arose from the alleged failure of a pastoral counselor to get. RSychia~ric ~elp for a young man who told him he was planmng to kill himself and subsequently . succeed in doing so. The S-2 decision rested largely on statutory, not -constitutional, grounds. Pa.storal counselors. wr~te Justice Malcolm Lucas1 have no legal duty to. take affirmauvc s~eps to prevent suicides such as the law ·~poses on ph~s1c~~ns. phychologists and hospitals. The Legislature. ~c said, has recoanized that access to the clergy for counsehng should be free from state imposed counseling standards." . Sacramat• Bee ORANGE COAST • T•t• E•tOI ...,,... ~~~-~ • ........, Cludlftln Publisher ,_......~--,.,..,.. .. uo • .., .. COM•.._ CA~ WIMI --IO I01 IMO C.I -.c-..... "",.., ~ .. tt £•10f f•C... NtwsC• .......... eic,r...., .... c.- 5'1fti l• ....... , .......... 11111 ... ........ ....... ~ .. Dntlllf ....... ........... ....., ........ ........ s.. ..... ~":.::...., ._... ... c.llllr ...... Qlieillllll ..... _ ..... ..... ...., . - ~\SA~•··· 'tWe \$ A ~ Ctl8$~ .• ,. \S ~ ~ ""'5 ... Gann limit ~n government spending ne.eds repealing SACRAMENTO -Few would adcnowledge it now, but California politicians were falling all over them- selves a decade ago 1.0 embrace a statutory hmit on government spend- ing. . The state's voters had just passed Proposition 13. and politicians who had opposed the Jarvis-Gann prop- erty tax cut wanted to demonstrate that !hey had gotten the message. Thus, then-Gov. Jerry Brown and the Democratic-con1rolled Legislature quickly -and. as later events proved, foolishl y -enacted a state tax cut and JOined in demanding a state spending limit. Paul Gann, part of the Proposition 13 team, and state business leaders were drawing up a spending-hmll initiative, and Democratic poli- ticians were trying to write their own version irt ttTe Legislature. Ultimately. the initiative qualified for the ballot. To. demonstrate his self-described conversion into a "born-again tax cutter," Brown caJled a special election in 1979 to enact ii.. The measure. "hich limited in- creases in spending to population and inflation, and required surpluses to be returned to taxpa)crs. !)ad no impact through most of the ensuing decade. Inflation was high, and the allowable ceiling ran well ahead of revenues. But as inflation slowed in the mid-1980s, rcaJ spend• ng drew closer ta the limit. and last :rear it resulted to a billion-dollar-plus rebate to tax- payers. As the Gann limit evolved from an expedient. {>(>St-Proposition 13 pol111- caf gesture toto a real cei ling on state spending. Democrauc pohucians quietly changed their tune. It was. many argued. foolish to be rebating surpluses when schools and other DAN ~ WALTERS cements into law a level of public spending that may not be adequate, using adjustment facto'rs that bear little rtlauonship to obJectivc reality. Proposition 98 skews the situation even further by granting one catego11 of publ ic spending, education. an cffcc11ve exemption from the limit while l~v1ng the hmll to place for other, equally valid catqones. Pr-0~ public services were so evidentlr m ositton 99 1mphcitl) does the same need. thing for health programs. • ~ But Jerry Brown's Republican sue-1 fie ft intact. the Gann Ii mit and the cessor. George Dcukmej1an, re-two new measures crca1e a ndicu- mained adamant. The Gann limn. he lbusly rigid S)'Stcm of allocating said. was a reasonable curb on the public resources. Other catqories - insatiable appetite for public spend-aid tcr coun11es, highway construc- ing and should be allowed to work for uon, prisons. etc. -wilt either be a few years before being reconsidered. ratcheted down. or thetr advocates lronicalJy, he first CJ.pressed that will be forced in defense to seek voter posatton to response to demands from approval of their own exemptions. the bustoess community -the same And the governor and the Lcgis- folks who had supported Paul Gann's ~re. who should be dealing with initiative in 1979 -that the limit be bhc-pohC) issues raised by Call- altercd to exempt h1ghwa} spending rnia's rapid gro~th and and allow an increase in gasoline 1oeconom1c change, will be re- taxes. . mo\ed even funher from the process · Califomii,. voters punched two They will become even more irrele- significant h·ores in the Gann hm1t vant in the rush to ~hat some call 1h1s }Car by _passing Proposition 98 .. ballot-bo>. budgeting." and 99. The first guarantees schools a The Gann limn was enacted for fixed pon1on of the state's budget and shon-range poliucal reasons. bu1 a requires most of surpluses to be decade later us.essenual 1llog1c 1s now redirected into the schools rather apparent to almost e\Cl")One -even than ta~ rebates. The second raises to Paul Gann. ~ho himself has taJCcs on cigarettes to support health ad.,,ocated some changd 1n the for-and env1ronmentat-.protec11on p~ mula. grams. and exempts that spending It should be abolished. the newl)' from the hm1 t. enacted spendtog formulas should be Those actions now are prompting repealed. and the go,emor and 1he DeukmeJ1an · to reconsider his Legislature should stan dotog their staunch defense of the Gann hm1t. JOb: determining the needs of this And well he might. state. and merging those needs 1n10 The essential problem "1th the the willingness of the state's \ oters Gann lim it is that 1t creates a n~1d and taxpa~ers to finance 1hem. formula and ehmtoatt'.S the ne~1b1ht} that policymakers must have to de.al Do W•lt~rs is • sylldic•tH wnh a rapidly changing soc1et~. It colamai1t. Plaudits_forthe press on Medflies -and Olympians Let's hear it for the "fourth estate." I'm tired of all this media bashing. I promise to stop taking cheap shots myself -for at least one week. anyway. I pulled to almost all of m) tickets and the ,press came through on t\\O flonousoccas1ons this ~st week. and have to sha re them with you. The frrst W3S a press conference at the Orange County Agricultural Comm1ss1oner's headquaners 1n Anaheim. We were cclcbraung Presi- dent Reagan's sigping of HR 5199. This is the bill that puts quaranttoed fruits and vegetable$ into the same category as drugs. explos1.,,t>s. and firearms -non-ma1labk in first- class mail under Title 1716 of the Postal Service Act. V1olauon of the quarantine 1s a cnmtoal offense subject 10 penalties of S 1.000 (as opposed to $50), a Jail tenn of one year. or both. We have been workina on this law for over a )ear and now 1t is on the books. BclieH me ll "asn'teas)' First the ACLU Jum~ us bccavse ofF1rst Amendment nghts, then the po t- master aeneral screamed bee.au.SC he didn't want an)th1n1 to slow the mails. Fine ume to start wof'T)toi' about th1L Theh he obJCCtcd to havina dogs sniff the packages. "I'm not havina dO&S pec1na on m> parcels." were his eu ct ~ords. The b1acst miracle was the b1· IJ!lnisan co-au1horsh1p -Californ ia Con~men "Chip" Pasha)an and Tony Coelho -and thl' rom- promatn that made 1t I\: ~ptablc to almost everyone Then it was up to the pre 1dcnt I cVftt Wiied out SI 00 m ao to a fund- raiSI• lunchton for \ice Prc11dent lush wuh Rc.apn :as the ~a\.:.cr ~h plan was to lobt>> for h1 1an:aturt I took ont' of m} Food and .\anc~laurt cants. drcv. a MeJll)· on the 1':1~l 1nJ wrote, "Pka • ~ n HR l Qq .. JACKIE HEATHER I knew 1f I had the bad lorm to lobby him. anc} v.ould h11. me "11h one of her nuclear looks. That d1dn"t bother me. t"vc been "nuked" before. Luck1l)1 at the last minute l ch1ct..encd out. Can )OU 1magtoe "ha1 the ~rel Service would ha\ e done 1f 1he~ sav. me slipping something to the presi- dent? The good Lord does look out for fools and working girls. · Back to the press conference Tele\ lSlon. radio and the Orange Count) dailies gol out the "ord-no more conlraband frutt loaded "nh Med01es to tirst<lass mail. I know "'e got prettygooJ co' eragc too. I got calls from long lost fncnds askinJ .for the "Quttn of tht> Medfl1es.·· The Stt<>nd grt-at e\enl was la t Monda)' when Ncwpon honottd the Ol)mptc athkl~ ..,ho ettht'r h"ed or trained in Newport Beach. Would )'OU behe\C\\t'Can cl:um ~8 gOf'lt'OUS hunks. both male and female. wanted the female ka}ak medalists -he1la Cono,er. h1rlc) Den -Bathk. Calh> Manno-Geers anJ ath)' Tha'<tcn·T1ppet -to teach that C"hauvamst PIJ. Paul Salata. a k\SOn. \ ou J1d hear about h1, all-male ·• Port\ banqu('t''" W~ had eno• t ·m1k l31cnt to ll\C him an early '"1m. , l o~n~1l mcmbc~ fch almo t hke pr u t ~rent' with thC' 'U" 'C'\S ofthe 1 ... k.a'a~ers and ro~ers who trained at 1he fac1ht) on ;\onh tar beach 8111 \\ h1tford~ugh1 his dream 1.0 the council. d "e put together the leg1sla11on d he raised the mone) to make bis dr m come true . .\nd v.nh su h ... sensat nal results in the first Oh mp1cs er romple11on -tv.o gofd medalists. ka~ac'kers Greg Barton and Norm Bcll1ngham. Other rowing stars are Kun Bausbac~. John Fradleton. Grei \1ontess1. Greg pnnger and Jim Terrell We missed stars hke 1rack and field maf"\ els Florence Gnffith-Jo) ner and Ed"'" ~fose and 'olle}baller tc'e Timmons. Wt> missed a few of our water polo 'itars. too. I parucularl> "anted to mcCI "ater polo tar. Terr~ hl'oeder. or "Mr. Buns"' as the ladies know him He ~a the model for the male Ogurc in the 1984 01> mp1c statue A tall. good-loo~ing blond could ha' e been Schroeder but ht hair wasn't chlonne grttn and he d1dn'1 pus the rta1 t-1cw test. Our other s1h.er medal winners '-'Cre 1he Campbell Clan -Jeff. Jod) and Pc.ter. goahc Craig Wilson. Greg Bo)er. hns Duplan1.~. Mike £,ans. Doug K1mbtll. Cra1a Klass.. Alan Mouchawar and Ke,1n Robertson EH~l'\onc lo'ed 1t ·when Sen Manan"Beracson called upon her son. James to rrttl\e his l't'COlntt1on and hC" ~nt down and planted a liss. "Hc0hatc.'d It when I &a"e him h1~ diploma .. Manin confided Former Ol\mp1cd1.,,er Dr Samm} Lcc. who is the coach and mentor to the 1ncompara~ Grea Loupn11. \,Im med " up best when M said. ··1 e1n·1.-111 to Stt ewpon's team 11 the •. 1 ~2 Olympo 1n larcdona, Solen. ' ,... ... .,. ... Na~ ... ........ _,.,..,.....,.., ... tff1. .. C111s Co1 Politicking continues . ... -------t ·af t.er·the ele ctions WASHINGTON-lt'sasironclad as anv law of nature: Politicians like to campaign. lo the House of Rt'l>- resent.a11 ves. they never stop. So it should come as nQ surprise that. just weeks after our n._uonal eTect1ons. 435 mcmbeh ofCongress are here 1n the nation's capital campaigning for office. ln separate ca ucuses. the two parties have been meeting this week to elect their leadership. On the . Republican side. Bob Michel of llhno1s and Dick Cheney of Wyom- tog were unopposed for minority leader and ·whip. respectively. But there have been con1ested campaigns for severaJ other party leadership posts -including -Officers of the freshman class. 1 These campaigns'are, unmerciful- ly. Just the-same as. those we've endured all year long. There are speeches and slogans. endorsements - and coaliuons. even last-minute mailings to each other's homes and offices. To m\' surprise. I won elcetJon to twct pc)siuons: charrman of the Freshman Caucus. and freshman rcprescn1.ative to the National Re-•1 publican Congressional Committee. M) platform was simple -sttcsSing the same Republican 1S5ues I ham- mered away at in Orange County all : durinf 1988. -, Mc Hancock. a nationally famous tax cuuer lnown affectionately as the· Howard Jao'lS of Mis.soun, won · election as vice chairman of the .· Freshman Cau~us. Steve Schiff, a cnme-fighting DA from New Mexico . v.ho beat Tom Udall. is ~-: ret.ar}/treasurcr .• h didn't take long for our caucus to ge.t dow:n to business. First, we circulated a letter addressed 1.0 Pn:s1- denHlect Bush that bc&Jns: "We. the undemgned freshman members of Congress, suppon )Our pos1uon - and the p051t1on of the 1988 Re- publican platform -to oppose any auempts 10 increase tu.es:· The letter concluded with our pledge .. lo sustain your veto of kg1slauon m the IO I st Congress that attempts to reduce the bu<f8et deficit b) raising taxes on the American people.·· Present!). we are c1rculat1nJ a statemcn1 of the 16 Republican freshmen of the I 0 I st Congress upon J 1m Wn.ght 10 withdraw as a can· d1date for speaker of the House 1n Januaf). The statemen1 obscf'\CS that ours is the first Con~ in the third century of our nation s history-and that it 1s high time we began in earnest to restore respect for this great 1nst1tu· tton. The signers call on our Dcmo- crat1ccolleagues 10 find a speaker who 1s untainted b} the appearance of 1mpropnet~. and of wh om all ofus- Repubhcans and Democrats -can be proud. Pundits in the capital give long odds on tht> remo"al of Jim Wnght . The\ sa' the same th ing about Presideni-dcct Bush's chances of cutung spendtog gro"th and a"o1d- ing a tat. increase. But that's exactly wfi} new blood 1s needed here You can sense the energy that the 36 new Republican and Dcmocrauc mem- bers art> bnng1ng to their JObs. We ma\ \Ct Stt some extraordinary things ·happening in the Congress as a result of our collecuH determination 10 pul a stop to .. business as usual. .. It's an e'citing add1t1on to the alread) head) an11c1pauon of our ~canng-to ne\l Januar) that I'll be part of the Republican leadership. The poht1ding has onl) begun. though Dunng the comtng ""eeks, v.e'll ha'c a fnendl y but fien:c compeuuon for com mlllce as 1an- ments Ctrl• Cn I~ IM C'Ollf'"~•H~l«t for dw 411t ~ D&trkl. - TooAY IN H1 sroR1 Today 1sTucsda). Dec. 6. thc 341st da)' of 1988. There are 25 days left 1n Jhe )e&r Toda.> 's H1ghhght in History: On Ckc 6. 18S.. ~rmy cna1neers completed construcuon ofttw Wub- maton Monument. 36 ~ after the cornerstone was laid. (The monu- ment was dedicated the foUowina February. but wasn't opened to tht pubhc until Oc1ober I 88.) On this date. In 1790. Consms moved from ew York to Ph1ladcl~aa. In 1923. a presedtntial addreu W9I broadcast on radio ftM' tbt firat tinw n Plftldtnt Cal~n Coolidle spoke to a JOlnt ICSltOft ofCOff1e• . In 1957, Ammca s flnt at~mP' 11 puttn'I a 11tetlne an'° orbit blew-. on w lauftC'h s-d at Cape C...¥tnll. Fla. Todln's blnhdays: JUi • I -DI~ lnlbect es 61. Sft. 0. Ndlel. R-Otla.. 11 40. AcW Thoma HUt ii lS. .,. 0 'tltfAw t . ., I .. AlO Or_,. Coast DAILY PILOT/ Tuesday, December 8, 19$8 . A ritzy, Fashionable luncheon By VIDA DEAN Of tM Delly l'llol "•" .. I wonder where Santa 1s. He 1s suppo~ to be here today," com- mented Sandra BeiRel. Well -Jolly old SL Nick was a ··no show" at the Saturday "Christmas at the Ritz" luncheon hosted by the Fashionables. but close to 300 made it and had a great t1m~. For most of the lunch bunch 11 was the first social opportunuty to don their holiday apparel and wish friends a merry season -members lived up to their name in dress and St)'le. In the bright Newport Beach sunlight at the restaurant entrance. the Lamplight carolers welcomed the group with song. and Fashionables chairwoman Mary Lou Hornsby, party chairwoman Beige! and honor- ary chairwoman Judie Argyros wel- comed therg with.hugs. handshakes and hellos. . had their restaurant lookini'very first class with an abundance of greenery and great traditional decorations . This was the second year for the group to be at the Ritz with spouses and friends for a.benefit, and Prager said, "I love tr(!dition. and although you ha ve 10 be in different rooms here. jf you want. we'll make this a tradition ... Hornsby quickly accepted and told people to mark the first Saturday in December on their 1989 calendars. "We should make about $ l 5,000 today." said Beige!. "The proceeds will be for the Chapman College All· Faiths Chapel in th e New Argyros Leaming Center. (George A. was an honorary chairman, too.) !Jeane Doolla) generating exc1tment included MGM transportation for two tet New York valued at $3600 won by Fraacn McDono.111 and a Tesoro spon watch fro m Tiff an} now on the wrist of LJu deKnif, attend- ing with committee member mom Dorl and dad Jaek deKnlf. Other.5 panyina were Seay and Herb S.Utoa, Loil and B •z Aldria, Emma Jue and Tom Riley, Nora Jorgnsea, Virgiala and Paal Bender, Patty Brennaa, Barbara Bowle, Mary DelJ Barko.ras, Nora and Olarley Hester, Pew and Let Cottoa, Peg Bouer, Gloria and Howard Hassett, Myna Safdg, Ginny and K. Smallwood, Mary Aaa and Lon Wells. T v L l~L Complete televtelon 118tlng• In 8undef'• TV Piiot . C\arleee and Han\ Prager also were honorary chairmen and they Guests watched a parade of fashions and fu rs arranged by Blllar Wallerich of Saks Fifth Avenue as they dined on poa'ched salmon, cucumbers vinai&rette. celery root remouJade and.,.A-aspbcrry creme broulee. Opportunity prizes (arranged by Also, Gene and·Jo.Aue Mix (wear- ing a cute little hat shaped like an artist's pallette), Bmy Pero (wearing a very large hat). Jaae Donovan, Dawn Washer, Betty Moss, AU and Wolf Sten, Olia Ellis, Jeaa Tu- dowsky and Wrlee and ROberl Gaue ... elm. Sisterly split su~eeeding Don and Lynn a.en with Pego and Lea Cotton. Edle Valdez and Doolin. Deane DEARANN LANDERS: Recent!) yo u pri r)led·a leuer about two sisters who had not spoken to each other for 20 years. You were so happy when they read something in your column that brought them together. Believe me. Ann. it won't work for .everyone. Take my sister -please. She called me up the day before ~y b1nhday and announced that she ne ver wanJ.ed to see me agam~ She ga ve no particular reason. JUSt said I was ··no good" and had caused her nothmg but grief. I co uldn't believe my ears. I ha ve ne"cr done anything to hun her and there w~s absolutely no JUSttfication for her to land on me hke tha t. I want to tell you that tflese last six months without that temperamental witch 1n m) life have been heavenly. I no longer have to hear what an Esso'B her husband is(he 1s not), and what an an&er he.non ls (he is not), nor do I All• luDEIS shake when the phone nngs for fear that she will be on the other-end. ready 10 np me apart. So, forgi ve me for saying this. dear Ann: Your advice is terrifi c most of the ume. but 11 doesn't always work for everybody. I'll sign this - LIBERATED IN NEW YORK AND HAPPY AS A CLAM. DEAR NEW YORK CLAM: My advice is aot, aor wu ll ever meaat lo be, Ute "one size tlaal fits all" variety. ~lrcamsluces aJler cases j nd yoar case l1 cel1aialy Ml of die onllury. YHr 1l1ler ..... , latasely Mltlle, ud ·~ may well be a bHa fkle wacko. Wllea lt l1)mpos1lble to 1et aloa1 wiO. certaJD lad.lvkluls, yHr bell bel ts to 1et aloaa wl&H9t tltem. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I had a nervous breakdown three years aao -and fed as if I'm going-0ver the cdse- again. I'm sick ofdoctors(also broke) and fceling dcspcratc. Help!-LPM. DEAR LPM: Rec.very, Inc. coald be tlte u1wer. TM1 manelMs or· pllilatJOD llas more tltu l,Ht cMp&en la die VaJte41 Stales ud Cua .. , ud lt's free. aeet tlte ~ boM or coetact tlte •tloul llead- qur1ers at an N. Dearbona St., • C11Jca10, Ill. Htll. (TM Oruge Couty phH .. mber it i4l-JU4). Please write back to say YM followed tltro11h. ( Wednesday, December 7 By SYDNEY OMARR m1pded wtthout being gullible. Money picture subject 10 change, kno"' 11 and realize you will recover recent lo s. · Inside infonnauon practically falls 1n your lap. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Obstacles rcmo .. cd. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You'll meet deadline. rapprochement 1s reached with fam1l.Y !l'cmber or lo .. t:r. relauonship 1ntcns1ties. you'll be complimented on your gueen enjoyed special privilege Focus on travel. payment of debt. gammg of recogn111on determination. dri ve. initiative. Older individual de· Q. Says her:e Queen Elizabeth I was long overdue. Leo. Aquanus will play paramount roles. dares. "You are going to hit financial jackpot." the only British queen "en(itled to TAURUS (April 20-May 20): A$reemen1 reached. SAGJTTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. ],J): You have expose her bosom at court func- nego11a11ons are completed. yo u'll win publtr fa, or as backstage view, you'll get your way. love relationship 1s tions ... Why? result. Emphasis on pannersh1p. Joint efforts. sohd ~ck on track. Imprint style. choose bright colors. refuse A. Her designation as "the virgm financial arrangements. Brother or sister provides to play "second fiddle." lost article will be recovered. queen.. allowed her that curious m1ss1ng link. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Many will comment pri vilege fo r reasons the historical GEMINI (Ma~ '.!I-June 20): Stud} Taurus mcs!Mlge on your enthusiasm. confidence. sex appeal. Spotlight on footnotes don't ex plain. for valuable hint .\ ··b1tnd date" could mean more than fresh start. possibility of "new love." Wish 1s fulfilled. onginally anuc1pated. Focus on versauht). comm\Hl1ca-prospem y could be "Just around the comer." Ohio has more lawyers than Japan. t1on. awareness of body image. Employment em phasized. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20..Feb. 18): Populari t)'. increases, CANCER (June 21-July .:m: Go slow. someone has ;ou'll win friends and inOuence people. family member Does your own true Jove have blue something of 'alue to offer. 1s tryi ng to "catch up." says. ··1 do want to be with )ou! .. Scenario highlights eyes? It s not blue pigment. please Mes.sage becomes cl')stal<lear. md1' 1dual )OU recently achievement. prestige. vind1ca11on. Cancer involved. note. It's lack of brown. helped 1s read) to return favor. Taurus. Scorpio m' otved. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Emphasize versat1lilY. LEO (Jul)' 23-Aug. 22): Scenario highlights writing humor, intellectual curiosity. Long-ra nge prospects come The Old Nonh Regiment of the abihty. subtle hi nts and clues. unique rela11onsh1p. You'll into focus. legal agreement will be "corrected" in your Colonial Militia of Massachusetts got learn more about propeny value. long-range prospects. favor. Long-<hstance call relates to social 1nvitat1on. its start in 1636. Forerunner of the VIRGO I .\ug 23-Sept. 22): You'll ha ve more IF DECEMBER 7 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY current oldest U.S. military service. No. sir. "work mg room." hart tnp could '"'oh c close rcla11ve. qcle emphasizts travel. broadenmgofhonzons. ab1l1t)' to not the Army. or Navy or Marines. H1ghhght d1plomac). serious cons1dcrat1on of sale or reach more people. You arc spiritual. a perfectionist. can The National Guard. purchase involving luxury ttem Lt bra pro"cs loyally. be vour own most severe critic. Pisces. Virgo people play LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22): Define terms. be open-1mi>or1ant roles 10.,our life. Q. What's the most congested GIFT 80XIS 28¢ up 20111 . ....,... ................ ... II VIC1CJt:" '"' ........ "' 171G ................ ,. 8'""71 ......... Nea1 Putntt Hiiis Mill .................. "'""' ... 11 Pac:1ffC .......... .... ,., .... .,.. •.......•• (714' "'''*' OPEN 1 OA YS Lal...., llOM>A'l'·SATU .. OA'I' LothmaM s Five Point Center -....,... Aft. . . . . . . . . ltllt tft.1717 WOOd111ll and Sollth .. _.AM • 5·JO" M ..,.,.... SUNDAY , ......... c..""' . "'" •11• 1 block W.11 of h11191 '' 01 ,, M • &·OO" M n..... .... HM...,,..._._ ......... -.. n , .. ..,. JanH Incl flloor~rll I Parll 0.11 Cfnttr 2'37' ~ ............. 12111 .... 11 Pac:1lie Coast H19li.ray ............. ...... I Dloclc N of llurknll Blvd .... a..._.. 11111w .... .._ ....... . 1 DIO(ll East Of lllllldy ....... , ..................... . .,.... ... Md C«• .~--------~--------=---------~-----------------------. BY THE SEA POOL . SERVICE ~---·······-········-· 1 Termites Are Now Swarming II Bugs Flying Aro~nd Your Home? FLEAS? ANTS? FREE ESTIMATES IAYI Ill With Thfs AD highway intersection in the world? A. California's East Los Anpcles Interchange -at the junction o 1-5. 1-10, U.S. 101 and SR 60. Q. Didn't our word ··mascara" come from the Arabic ·•maskhara" meaning "clown"? A. Our "mask" came from the word, know that m~ch. A Princeton professor has claimed some clams stay sexually actjve for 150 years. loss? A. Not if they don't listen. Wait. too flip. No. not piano players. Other percussionists sometimes do. But a grand piano's most powerfu l sounds run from 70 to 95 decibels, not • enough to do damage. Pharaoh Ramses Ill in 1160 8.C. drafted workers to build his tomb. But 1hey went on strike. You can see how far back the labor movement goes. -Q. How many islands make up Q. Do piano players who always Greenland? bang away loudly ever suffer hearing A. Nobody knows. 8 RIDG f By CHARLU GOREN u4 OMAR SHARIF Neither vulnerable. East deal$. NO"TH •A 1 Q " Q J 10 7 ' 0 J • 10' 1 3 WMT EAST • 9 6' Q 9' 5 J 0 97 5 2 •QI • " 10. 3 t:;') 11 0 A It 6 • •A IC 5 SOUTH • Q J 7 5 Q A 0 x Q. 3 • J 6' l The biddlna: bit SotaUi t o r ... r.i lNT ... Wm r .. ha Nortlll 1 r::; .... Open.ins lead: Two of 0 It is only human to want to bold on to what we have. But once in a while we have to sacriOce a little to pin a lot . Here's an example of what we mean. With 10 much of his 1trenath con- centrated In dJamondt and only a linalfloa heart, South could not take any llClloa ~er Eut •1 opmlna bid. But ..... North llnlCMd • little to allow a bud of al ... opmiq bkl ......... wkb .. ace&- -bean IUlt bJ bla bllandltf .fumP IO two ....,... loatla "* rtPl to ... --Ille ...... to .... West led his fourth-best dia- mond, and it did not take a 1enius in the East seat to work out that he could expect Uttle or nothin1 from his partner. And it wu obvious to one and all that, if declarer were to rake in six heart tricks, he would have little difficulty in fulfillin1 his gan)e contract. There was only one way to shut out the heart suit. DccJarer would have to bold a sinaJeton heart. And since that would almost surely be the sinaleton ace, dummy's entry would have to be removed before the hear1s were freed. East found the surest way to ac- complish that. He shot up with the ace of diamonds and shifted to the kin1 or spades! Declarer had no counter. Ducltin1 the first spade would noc help, since But would 1lmply con- tinue with another spade; and wiD-nina the ace would maroon thole wonderful belna. Bue'• play IUl- rendend a trick In ..,..... but pined four In dM otlMr a.Ill. In tbe trade, bil play ii known u tbe "Merrimac Coup.'' Yea, we know a low dub at trk:lt two by But, followed by a spMe shift from W•, would haw prCMd .. ... .,,.... .... dlel ... ba~.._ ~., ' taaW•~ ......... al ......... ..... .,_ .................. ... lf'fcltit. ~--~ .( • ... ·. ~ • TUESDAY. DECEMBER 6. 1988 .,., ........ -............ Title cbaaen llelllben of CD' foedlaD ftna1lata were ,.=•t . .._. daJ at the loatllL llollaa. pre. conference aDcl .._.._ eoc. tnc1w1•n1 tllw from 8aDtet LeaaU CbaaDl- Fomataln Valle'l~lea 9lew Leaaue claam oa Cena• del -..U-and Coat Leaiue co-ebaa~ Wood-brldle. Each ~ fer a CIP '""C-10-w-n--iP..,rl .. ,dlly atalff. P----....~ taln Valley. Iacl=f (apper left '"::~ Mite llllner. llocll, DeYid Beatpa. ... .... Cook. meeta ~ Aaat at Anabeim Stadlam for tM Dtmlon I crowa. Corolla del llar, lacltadlna (apper ~ht in.et) Co&ela Din Holland. Brett Allen, Jolul ltatonlch. and Bill Raatla. daela defendln& cbamploa Valencia at oran,e · .6lut Collete in DtTlalon VI Dlay. Wooclbrtdae. lnctaata• (lower ln::J Coacb ~ Glbeon, F Schweer. Da- mi.an Hartman and P.A. &m- enon, defenda lta Dlft81oa vm title acaJnat Pacific Cout Leaaae rt.al Trabaoo Hilla at ld..loa VleJo BIO. Freel Rogta of DBC-1tV Sporta wu the Muter of Ceremomee. ·Pay·back time for Saddleback · Roadru nners gain 59-56 victory in double overtim e over Mater Del Harbor tops Mesa By ROGER CARLSON Ofllle DtlllJ,... .... f. By ROGER CARLSON Of tM.,..., .......... Saddleback High's quick and resilient Roadrunners finally shook the monkey from their backs Monday night. they found a ~ay to defeat Mater Dci High's basketball Newpon Harbor H1gh's Sailors record.ed their second straight victory Monday night with a 63·50 triumph over visiting Costa Mesa, and in the proce~s captured the consolation championship of the 12-team Newport-Mesa baskctbait--invita· t1onal. team. , It took' two ovenime sessions to do it. but that's how they play the game when Mater Dci and Saddleback meet h was the third straight time the two have ductl¢ into double ovename before deciding it, and 1t's the firs ;ever victory for the Roadrunners against the power·laden Monarchs. Tht S'ailors, who trailed by counts of 6-2 and 13-8 in the first quaner. as well as 20-1 4 early in the second penod. wtthstOQd some sh:.rp outside shoouns. b) the Mustangs in the earl) going and used their bag_ edge on the boards to pull awa~. With 6·foot-10 Erik Freeman standing es· pccaally tall w1th1n the Costa Mesa defense. and (Pleue eee SAILORS/BS) "We had a debt to pay ... said a Jubilant Saddleback Coach Pat Quinn. "It's all v.e could thank about. those double overtime losses to Mater Dea." Craig Ma rshall. the Mo~t Valuable Pla)er of rhe Newport Mesa Tourament, led the way with 26 points against Mater De1's supreme defense. and it was' his 20-11mcs m the first half as Gary McKnight's Monarchs footer with six seconds left in the first overtime which , edged out to a 31-30 lead, capped b) a defensive saved Saddleback before 1,200 at Newpon Harbor High. performance which would not allow Saddleback a shot in . That was just one of several big moments in what will the last 36 seconds of the second quaner. · probably go down as one of the most memorable games of But Saddleback's Malru Dottin, limited to just three the season in Orange County basketball. , first-half paints, got loose for four buckets in the third The score was tied or the lead changed hands 13 quarter as Saddleback shot out to a 14-5 spun. -. ~ Mock handles all hi$ duties t<? help Barons to final Fountain Valley's a ll-purpose man k eys semifinal win_ By RICHARD DUNN o.llJ Piiot C•"•''*"' Before the ~Onsultation to decide the C IF D1vis1on I finalist. extensive preparation was needed. So Fountain Valley High set up a workshop for a mock interview against Ser"ite. one of its most hated n vals, last Friday night. Afterwards. the hanng committee was impressed and the Barons were employed to face Bishop Amat this week at Anaheim Stadium. One of the guys they can thank 1s Rick Mock. who controlled ·the session to a tee. You won't see his name much an the Saturday meming box scores. but he's everywhere. He returns punts., t>locks kicks. cames the ball a little. catches a pass every now and then and dnvcs opposing offenses nuts from his comerback position. Auinst the Fnars. a team the Barons have faced many times in the past, Mock had a licld day. It was Mack's interception near the p t tine 'With l2 seconds lef\ in the pme that iced the victory for Foun- tain Valley, IQ-. 7, in an emotional CIF Division l semifinal game at the Senta Ana Bowl. Earlier, Mock bloc~ed a Servile field pt attempt in the lhird quaner whicfi would have ttcd the ,.me. .. It would ha ve been a 32 or 33-yard field pl," said Fountain Valley Coech Mike Milner. hit was defi- nitely a chance for Scrv1tc to tie the football pmc." In the S«Ond quarter. JUSl af\er Fountain Valley ta1lbeck Kcdnc Powe Wiii crvshcd by a late hit. Mock ~ him and spnntcd 20 yards on his ftr11 carry. Just call htm the game-saver. In th is case. he's beang called the Daily Pilot's Pla}er of the Week as the Barons ( 11-2) return to Anaheim Stadium for another shot at a CIF title. Mock was in the second grade. and a witness in the stands. when the Barons won the CIF Big Five cham- pionship in 1978 with a 34-14 win over Servite. A -lot has changed since then. According to Milner. Mock has "the 'uncanny ability to antacip•ne what's happenini around him." ln two seasons for the Barons. Mock has blocked eight kicks (punts or field goals). "He's been an cxcep11onal spec131 teams player." said Mainer. "He' itot Player of the Week great athletic ab1hty and he makes things happen. He seems to always be around the ball. He has won our ·Hat oflhe Week' six. times this )Car in 13 games. so he'scome up with a number of good hits. And they arc not the kind you wash away with soap and water." His baggt-st hit against Scr\•itc was the interception. Mock's third of the season. "h was third...and-lona for Scrvite and we were in a zone coveraac." Mock said. "Their quanerback Chris Johnson pitched to (Derck) Brown and on a reverse. Brown handed the ball ofT to a r«c1vcr. The ·reccwer tried a flea-nicker and threw it an no man's land, so I JUSt picked 11 off. It went right to me . "I don't kn ow what (the receiver) saw. When he threw 1\, I thouaht I'd lost a rtetaver on the rovcrqc. bot no one wasaround. I ~cnt IOor l.S yards after that. ~ot tackled and we ran out the clock.' Combined w1lh a 3-for-I 0 performance 1n the second quarter, Mater Dei was reeling for 5-for-19 through the two niid-quaners and Saddleback forged a 10-point lead. The Roadrunners led 44-34 an the th ird period, and it was 48-38 with 6: 18 to go before Mater Del turned to 1ts derense for help. · · With a suffoca,\ing press the Monarchs cut ll to 4&-46 w1th 3: 18 left. but Marshall's three-point.play with 2:35 left put Saddleback up. 51-46. ' David Boyle cut it to 51-48. then UCJ~und Dvlan -Rigdon dropped m ~thrcc-~i nleTOff-.1s;M) KariffiS steal and 1t was knotted at 51 with j..:02 left in regulatton. That was just the stan. Saddlebadc gained possession and raced do"ncoun with nine seconds left. but the Monarchs tied 11 up and gained possession. allowing Rigdon one shot. He maneuvered and "as open. firmg from 15 feet out otrlY to see the ball bou nce ofTthe iron at the buzzer. ... Jn o"en1me. the Monarchs took control qu1ckh on a DCrek Stone bucket. and SaddJeback proceeded to mass five straight from the field "i lh tame running out. Stone added a frtt throw to gave Mater De1 a 54-51 lc;td. and 1n I.he next 30 seconds the Monarchs applied their lethal defense agaur. onl~ to see Marshall hit on off· balanced, hurried.shot from _o feet out to tie 1t \\1th SI\ ..seconds rema1n1ng. In the dcc1s1ve ovenamc. it was Saddleback taking control. breaking a 56-56 score with a Marshall frt"c thro" with 2: 11 left. (Pleueeee PAY/83) Brooks' popularity continues in NBA·. -------- Ever-confident UC I gr aduate· s dedication offers shot at dream Whale ott BrooJ..s rc~1ncd con­ lident ofh1sdrcam w pla' in the ...., B .\ after tinasntng upa uCl'C ~ful senior campaign 3t LCI and an \1 \ P 11n1 1n the um mer pro league at l o) ola· Man mount in 19 ' . 'ou 'iltll had 10 wonder-or pcrhap dout'll - "'hcthcr he ""ould "' l'r m:i~l· 1t to !l NB-\ roster Atterall.e,en 11 he ml.'a~urcd up talent·"-ISC. hi 11c 'l.'emcd 10 be a tough factorio 0' aaimt• If th3t "asn't a problem tam ing ma} nc a bag a kC') a an) to ma~mg 11111 professional ports But BrQOk tuck" 1th 11 pl;l\\'d e' Cl! chance hl' had -1n~ ludang the "erscamp in· " "uh 1hc .\lban) Patroons CB.\ champ1onsh1ptcam and 1he Fre no franch1~ 1h1 U1Jlmcr Joi FERGUSON SP ORTS COLUMNIST in the under-6·foot-5World Basket- ball League -and was invtted back unhe 1\crs' camp again this falL He \\3!13l "a"sa fan favonte at 5- foot· I I ub-t>-'footers an basketball 11a' c a~a) of capturms the imagma· ti on and sentiment off ans. Thal Brook tuck-with Ph1ladel- ph1a 1h1 season is common knowl- edge but he's become a fan fa, onte. For those" ho remem ber ham at UCJ. 1\' not hard to figure out" h). Hc'sa cla 1nd1' 1dual. a hkable personality, and hisJeterm1nat1on 3nd efTon on (Pleue .ee COf.,LSGSS/82) Rams' .wakeup call provides 23-3.Win Everett throws for 2 5 1 yards to beat s leepin g Chicago By EDZlNTEL ....,,_C•1t ... 1 •e I Wake up all ~ou Ran\\ The ~l\on i\ not o'er ct No.not.v.hcn )o~h•\cRcar todo the lttpina for )'Ou ""Our offente was real fired up after K.edric went down.11 ltind ofsparkcd 1 ftllme in us." Mock 1111d. And earlier. af\er Servile "as penalized for a late hit on Powe. knocltina hi m temporarily un- consceous. Mock $tcppcd in and unexpc'C1cdfy filled the rOlc. , ........ 8Alt0"8' ,.,, hate'• Yalley'•.aJcll -:.·:T,,t'f•• ........... ~ ..,_fW aCIP ~I ._., 9"18eiwhe. h v.as hke a shot an the arm tor the a1hnJ. Ont~ bcuer ~ause lh1 d1Jn'l hun a bit TM Rams ca-cht the bid. bed lkars on a bed. bed n11hl and cOISttd to a 1l-3 .-in O\'cr Ckaao Monda) n1aht before a xllout II Anaheem ,ad,um. • I . • . v . -\ r IN THE BLEACHERS Pac-10 Improvement on coUrt coUld be ~-~,-----.n=-===----~~~· grouly ezaggerated Pr.m wtre servlttl The early retumsarc in, and reports of an improvement in Pac-I 0 basketball apparently have been grossly eugcrated. • Last year, Arizona used upsets of Michigan, Syracuse. Iowa and Duke as a sprinaboard to the No. I ranking in December. This .year; the conference as a whole didn't fare well in 'its opening pmcs~ith StrOnJ teams. • Only UCLA, under first-year coach Jim Harrick, made a big im pression by pounding Miami and BYU on the roaet. Otherwise. it has been a slow ~nning. • Washington was beaten at home by Nevada-Reno of the Big Sky. a conference which also gave ... ._""111<'- I COLLEGES ••• ....... theRoorrivaluny. The 76ers. qud 1otapitahze on Brooks' appeal. dal&ribukd a mini- pc»ttr o(the beck-up p0in11-.atd last Wednctday &oall pWCMaS entenna ahe $pectrum -quite a tribdle 10 the i__.of a ~yeroot month into his NBAcaner.fan1undefS-foot-l l were admitted aa a di1COUn1. The ~.entialed ··California Dramina. .. was taken on IM beach at A Yalon, New Jeney-ironically underovercastskies, S3-deartt &emperatureand pie force wind psts. As 1 bmck up 10 former all-star Maurice Cheeks. who has bellied injuries sint'C the pre-season. Brooks hasaverqed 4.0 points, 3. 7 assists. IS minuta.. and perhaps m<>&t impon- antly, only one turnover per pme. Makins the transition from a shootina1uard11 UCI to an NBA eoint guai'd whilcplaying for the . Washington State fits. Cal defeated a good Florida team (which was without 7-2 center Dway ne Schintzfos) in the first round of the Great AJask.a Shootout. but then lost lo Kans~lS ~nd KenJ ucky tea rm. not ncad.¥ _as foriiffilable as ihey were a year ago. ~troons last season. Brooks utilized -=:~iJ~~~~~~f-f--hiiiSsoqu:uicicdttt'nn1tc~ssts-~to bun cfftc ri•C' ~ -"-defender and instant sparkplugofTthe bench m running the offense. That year of experience made the di f- ferencc. . Stanford, picked to bat\l.e Arizona for the Pac-10 .._..__.Miiii ___ ..... _..-, __ _ title. was beaten soundly at Indiana ·and Nonh Carolina. The Tar· Heels were without All-American J.R. Reid, but capitalized on the Cardinal's alarming lack of intensity. A few days later. in the fi rst Tournament of Champions at Charlotte. N.C, Arizona shot 26 percent in the first halfofa 79.72 loss to North Carolina . Big East vs. ACC'? -Commissioners Gene Corrigan of the ACC and Dave Gavitt of the Big East arc planning an eight-game regular-season challenge series between the two leading baskelball conferences. "It would be very interesting to see what the results would be." Georgia Tech coach Bobby Cremins said. "There's a lot of rivalfY between the two leagues, and teams from both4!)Yalways among the best in the nation." . A si milar interesting concept would be matching teams from the Pac-10 and the Bi.1 West. The Pac-10 assum es n's the best in the West from top to bottom. Such a ··tournament"' would prove or disprove it. Quote of the day Daddy B.,oa, spons director of Houston radio station KKHT, on the possibility of Astros pitcher Nolan Ryan si&ning with the Angels as a free agent: .. Nolan Ryan toCalifomia?Out there. they th ink Cy Young 1s a cosmetic surgeon." ~ .. Lqng Bea~h rallies PilSt V.§C~ Freshman Bobby Sear1 scored 16 m points as Long Beach State overcame an ei&ht-poi nt deficit to beat use. 82-81 , Monday night in non-confereocc men's college basketball. Southern Cal led 59-51 with 14:35 left in the game, but the 49ers went on a 12-2 run, capped by Ma rco Fleming's put back. to take the lead for Jood a& 63-61 . Sears scored five points during the run, including a three-point shot ... In other college action: PltiJ Henderson scored 17 points and three tcamma&cs scored in double figures. leading top-ranked Duke to a 90-62 victory over Stetson . . . Gia Rice scored 29 points as the sccolld-ranked Mk higan Wolverines defeated Tampa 98"'65 and improved their record to 6-0 ... Mark GrtffiD'• tip-in with two 5econds left gave No. 16 Tennessee an 84-82 double ovenime victory over V1rgin1a M1htary In stitute ... Cliff R.blasoa scored 27 points. pulled down nine rebounds had five steals and blocked fou r shots to lead 18th-ranked Connecticut to a 93-71 victory over Marist ... Steve McGloahl scored 17 points, mcluding eigh t straight to open the second llalfto lead New Mexico State to a 7()..66 win over New Mexico ... Creighton for.yard Bob Bantad scored 23 points and grabbed a dozen rebounds to lead the Blue;ays to an 84-77 win over San Jose State, which got 20 points from Steve Raaley ... Junior guard Carrick DeHart si:ored a career-high 32 points. including six 3- pomt shots. as the UC Santa Barbara Gauchos blew out the Southern Utah State Thunderbirds 88-55. ... Lffurd Taylor scored 16 points and added I I rebounds to lead California toa 99-73 victory over U.S. lnternat1onal. I Magic earns NBA weei:ly laud \ Magic Johnson. wuh a scoring average m of 29.5, was named NBA Player of the Week for the period ending Dec. 4, the league said Monday. Johnson led Ahe Lakers to a 4-0 record and averaged 10 rebounds a gam~(J uring the wee k. Also considered wete Alex English of Denver, Kell)' Tripucka pf Cha rlotte. Karl Malone and Darrell Griffith of Utah. and Ron Harper and Brad Daugheny ofClc.veland. Also Monday. Chuck Daly of the Detroit Pistons. w11h an 11·3 record that included seven road victories, was named NBA Coach of the Month fo r November. "l...lsten. You go easy on me, I go easy on you and we both get through this game In -one piece. Deal?" Bee-er do~ns LenCll for title Boris Becker, battling from behind '1;J vinually all the way. outdueJed hu LeHI in a thrilling fifth-set tiebreaker M,9.Dday night to win the Masters tenni s cham-• pionship and halt Lendl's bid fo r a fourth straight title. Becker. who had 10.st, two previous Mutm~finals to Lend!, avenged the defeats with a 5-7, 7-6 (7-5), 3-6. 6-2, 7-6 (7-5) victor that lasted four hours, 42 minutes. After Lend! broke to take a 6-5 lead in the final set. Becker broke back to force the the first fifth-set tiebreaker in Masters history. Leading 6-5 in the tiebreaker. Becker climaxed a 37-strokc rally with a backhand that nicked the top of the net and dropped over on the other side out of Lcndl's reach ... Lori McNeil and a......-. Polter raced to strai&ht-scts victories to give the Unitcd'Stales a winning 2--0 lead over SwitzerlJnd and a spot in the second round of the Federation Cup tennis tour· nament. McNeil. from Houston and ranked 13th in the world. defeated 17-year-old SaMrtH J..-et, who· ls @nked I 74th, 6-0, 6-1. She took just 40 minutes. Potter. a left-hander from Woodbury, Conn .. who is ranked 10th in the world, then clinched the best-of-three series with a 6-2, 6-4 win over Eva Krapl in the second singles. Hot Canadiens whip Detroit MONTREAL -Claude Lemieux ~ scored his 14th goal and set ur Brian , Skrudland for the go-ahead goa in the . second period as the surginJ Montreal Canadiens defeated the Detroit Red Wings 7-2 in the only ~HL pme.~onday night. Stanford fires football coach STANFORD -Stanford -University • CoachJack Elwa¥ was fired Monday after •II t heading the Cardinal football program for the past fi ve years. university officials announced. l:.lway compJled-a 25-.29-2 record while at Stanford. He was also head coach at San Jose State for five years and at California State University-Nonhridge for three years. His combined career record is 80-5µ. Television, radio ' TELEVISM>N •:JO p.m. -COLLEGE IASKfflALL: Indiana el Noire Dame, ESPN. ..S:06 p.m. -~o IASKETBALL: 80$ton ., Ct1ica1><>. TBS. , S:JO P.m. -COLLEGE IASKETBALL: wurilng- lon at DePaul, WGN. J 6:30 P.m. -COLLEGE BASKET&ALL: FIOrida et 111inols (repeals al midnight), ESPN. 7:30 P.m. -~o IASKETBALL: lalters at. Clippers, Channel 9. 7:30 p,m. -WOMEN'S IASKETIALL: Pepcierdlne al UCLA, Prime TlcJ(et. 1:30 p.rn. -~O HOCKEY: New York ~a"9ers al Vancouver (delavtdl, WOR. 9 p.m. -RODEO: National flnals from Las Veeas (delavtd), ESPN. 9 P.m. -COLLEGE IASKET&ALL: James ~diM>n el Virginia Tedi (delaYtd), USA. 10 P.m. -GIRU VOLLl&YIALL: Stale cham- plonstllp match from Cat State Fullefton -trvlne vs. Davis (tape), Prime Ticket. RADIO 7:30 P.m. -~o IASKETIALL: Lalters at Cli09ers, KLAC (570), KRTH (130). 7:30 P.m. -~o· HOO<EY: Winnipeg at Kines, KPZE ( 1190). 7:30 o.m . -COLLEGE •ASKETIALL: Pwpoer~ I l. Ke offers the cQmbi nation of shooting. ball-handlint passingand intensity which went a ong way in allowin,a him to break through. His exhibition season assist-lo-turnover ratioof6.4-I dwarfed the NBA average of3-1. . Former Albany Coach Bill Musselman called him "a defensive pest, he's relentless. l know last year 1n the playoffs. the wholeerowdjust picked up when he went in. ·~.He . makes the players around him bet· ter." SixersGoach Jim )..ynam. himself · once a gutsy little college point guard for St. Joseph's, listened to several coll~coachcs tout Brooks, includ- ingN"evada-Las Vegas Coach Jerry Tarkanian. "Tarkanian told me. 'We can't guard him,'" Lynam said. "I ~id. ·rm tallcingabout Brooks; he's 5- foot· I I.' And Tark said. 'I know who you're talkingabout. We can't ftuatd him. He scorejt 44 against us: Actually. it was27 and the Rebels did limit him to I J in Vegas Brooks' senior season, but the recommen- dations served their purpose. -So Brooks' versatility and the Sixers'pursuitofan up-tempo game made the native Californian'sdrcahl to play for his favorite team a reality. And perhaps the timingwasas good as ever. Fi ve years ago, before players like Atlanta's Spud Webb. Charlone's Tyrone Bogues. t leveland's Mark Price or Denver's John Stockton. Brooks might not have received serious consideration. There's no longer quite the stigma attached to a short player in the NBA. It 's almost in vogue and perhaps a consideration asa drawing card. But Brooks ca med his spot. He provided some entertaining mo- ments while at UCI. and it's refrc5h- ing 1osee his determ ination pa)' off. 0 ThcOCCmen'ssoccerleam. which went throu&h a myriad of problems in &?faying its first round Southern California Regio nal playoff game. was finallyehm1 nated by Rancho UCI "91'Gdaet lcott Broob llu becolD• a fu faYOrlte ud a ~ proifact;t.e plaf91' •a back •P polat c-rd for tbe 78en. Santiago, 1-0, last Tuesday. It's firstpmewasdelayed by the lack ofa decision on who would re~nt thoSouthern California Conference. Once that was settled, the Pirates sh<JWed up at East LA, but the officials did not. .. The whole thing was a mess," said Coach Laird Hayes ... We really got the want end of 1t, and we didn't do anything wrong. But I think the wa y this happened has finally gotten the ' attention of the right people.and we'll see a better-run playoffs in the • future." , OCC finishedtheseasonat IS-5-4 andashareoftheOrange Empire Conference title. "To take a team that finished third a year ago and had been beaten by the two worst teams in the conference 'ana put it into a new alignment that included twonewtopteams(Full- ertonand Golden West)-and then 10 finish in a tic for first -made this • a superseason," Hayes said. 0 . -mong tbosesecking the services of standout Oranie Coast College ·linebacker Gari Calhoun arc Clemson and UCLA And USC is among Pac-I 0 schools looking at Pirates offensive lineman Darryl Pessler. 0 The Uni versity of Michigan will practice at Orange Coast's LeBard Stadium the week before the Rose Bowl. 0 Former Newport Harbor Hiah sirls volleyball standout Jenny Evans ca med Pac· I 0 all-f~hman honors as a member of the UCLA women's . volleyball team. Her teammate. Laurie JonesofHun1inston Beach Hi&h. made the.fll-toumament team at tnc Wcndy'sOassicaf\ercoming off the bench to lead the Bruins to their final two regular season wins. 0 Marina High products 8,en Lefran- cois(sopt\omorc), Robert Lona(jun- ior)and Chad Husted (freshman) played key roles as midfieldcrs for the Humboldt State soccer team, which finished 6-5-1 in the Northern Cali- fornia Athletic Conference and - 10-9-1 ovcrall,shuttingout IOoppo- nents. Lefrancois, who missed the final nine games with an'iniury, had three aoalsandtwoassists. The team shifted toadcfcnsivremphasis, but was shut out five times after losing Lcf ra ncois. Husted had a goal and four assists .• an~ Long offered three goals and two assists th 1s season. 0 UCI freshman Lance Butler fin- ished second behindNav,y's Jotin Passant out of 17 competitors in the Boardsailin1 Nationals at the U.S. Nav1IAcademy.Shewas1he onl).' female amona the fleet. which sailed a four-race series on mistral sailboards in windsof8-12 knots. RAMS GET WAKE UP CALL, WHIP BEARS, 23-3 ••• Too Little? Too Much? Don't be misled by diacounta, deala, sales and give-a-w~s. The common law of buaineu aaya it best-it is unwise to pay too much, but it i1 woree to pay too little. If you pay too much, you loee a little money and that i1 all. When you pay too little,-you aometim• loee everythinf .... because the ptOO\fct YOU bought WU incapable Of doing What it wu purchUed to do. You can't pay a little and set a lot. .. nALL ATION 1661 PlacenU. St. Colt.IMeu M6-U38 fOITO-Dll.,.&MU UCllllC lllO ,,_,, DEN'S From Bl • They played like-it on Monday before 1 sellout 6S,S79 and a national television audience. "It surprilCd me, because I didn't think we played that poorly." said Bears COIM:h Mike Ditka. who ob- viously has learned to take things in stride after sufTerina a heart attaclc on Nov. 2. But the fact is. with quarterback Jim Harblulh s'btrtin1 has first ~ feuional pme and with All-Pro defensive met Richard Dent out with a broken ank" the Bean showed but a faint resembilnce to their usual selves. The Rams led from stan to finish, and the Bean never really could put up • dtcient challens. Their vaunted ctefente pve up !64 yards, which wasn't good enouah to make up for a near non-existant offense. "The great thin& about this game is that we saw what we're capable of," said Bell. Said Ellard. "This was by far the . biBJCst win of the season for us. When we re able to mix ir up offensively, we can do a lot of dama1e. We just have to win our last two, that'sall there is to it." This one started ofT well for the Ramsandjust kept on goina that way. They moved the ball to the Chicaao 19 on the pmc's openina series. But the Bears defense aot anary and aot to Bell for a 4-yard loa and then lo E vcrett for losses of8 and I I. Chicaao then drove to the Rams 38, mostly on Hatbluah's runni"" But the Rams aot Tue ball beck when · Doua Reed hit Neal Anderson, fore· ina • fumble th11 was recovered by Cari Ekern at the Chicaao 44. E vtrtll threw I 0 yards 10 Aaron Cox and then 14 to Pete Holohan. That set up a 2S-yard field pJ by Mike Lansford aiv1n11hc Rams 1 .l-0 lead. ' The Rams dtfcnte forced another turnover carty in lM leCOftd quarur when oorncrt.ck Anthony Newmln in~ Hart>e••s .,_ in-tended for Denni1 McKinnon. New- man made 1 superb Dlay on the bill, barely tiPP.int ft with one hand and haulint 1t in with the other. His 21· yard return pvt the Rams the blll at 1be0t~2S. 8ut ..... Ute R.amtcould~only I fleld ... .OUI of i1 -Ibis one 27 yal'.dl -a ~verm·1 pu1on \hint cloWft for Heltry Ellll'd •• IM pl line twenl ~-...... nt _, ftnally put ~-I drive ..., hi IM llcoad ~ movi111~tm tlllir on 46 eo tht -. n.....,.,.... .. .,. ,,_,.,.. c ' ~ field 1oal by Kevin Butler to make at 6-3. Chicqo, loo, sputtered when it came cl<>K as Harbauah was ruled for inaentionally aroundina the ball when rushed hard by Doua Reed and Shawn Miller. The defensive war continued throuah the third quaner. Or was it inept offense? ft was hard 10 tell between the hard hits, dropped puses and badly thrown passes. Late in lht third quarter, the Rams struck liahtnina-fast Everen found Ellard over the middle for• 31-yard touchdown pass 10 make ii f3-3. Ellard put away oornert.ck Mike Richardson on a aood fake to the outside. And then, lichtnina stnKk twice. EJlard look in I lhOf1 pus from Everett in the riaht flat at about the Rams 2S Ind then CUI beck IO bis left throap a small learn. He niced 46 yards to the Chicaao ll On the next play. Bell ran around rilht end to the comer of the end zone where he was pulhed out at the I. Two plays later BeU bolted OYtt IO make it 20-l with 11:51 left in the pme. . .. PAYBACK ••• ....... n.1·1 when the roof caved in for MaterDei. Riedon wnl IO the beach with hi1 · fifth pmoul with I :40 10 10 on u o&n11ve foul down \he butline, and with 30 secondl left, Stone, a moun- '" AJJ-toara&meat -.. v ....... "9Wr Crelt IMnNI, SM~ °""" ROI» JoMlon, El Toro 0vtM Riedon, Metet Del M*u Oottlft, Seddllbeck Rldl 5wenwldl, Treouco Hlll1 Saft c......... Le ~·· tain on defense· apinst Saddlcblck's shooten, fouled out. Jimmy Galben dropped in two free throws at that point to ,et the thru-. ed&e•ndin"the-~ the Monarchs would put the baU up three times, twice from th~·point ranae, but to no avail. .. Rildon led Maier Dei scorin1 with 24 points and KanCh and Stone each had 11. In a fifth place game: La Ch•ta IZ, Ualvenlty It: The Aztecs pulled it out in overtime after Univensty had forced the issue with a bucket in the late going, the n survived La Quinta's last possession with 15 seconds to go. - -La Quinta, however, took the lead • in the ovenime session and had a five-point lead in the fading sqpnds before a thrtt-point shot near the buzzer cut it to two. Baron•' tourney open• The Sportina Goods West Classic at Fountain Valley High opens to- night with a pair offini-round games. includins Edison High•s Chargers in th~ 6 o'clock opener. The Chargers, 0-1 after a loss at Long Bcac~ Poly last week, open with El DOrado, followed by Compton and Capistrano Valley at 7:30. T_..... ., . Or.nge C0Mt DAILY PflOTIT~. 0.1 ..... I. 1tM - Parks keys Vikes in overtim·e win Center scores 24 consolauon brackeL Cllarwr OM 71, ...,_. ..-61: 1---UCl-boudd Jeff Von Lutzow, a 6-n Season Opener , foot-8senaorfo,-Charter0U,lizzled -M t -f ·Vt •f ., lhe nets from ou11ide to ICOft 30 VS. SS On eJo_ points. 1nclud1na two three-poinien. as the Chargers forced the Artists anto Cherokee Parks ored 24 potnts and grabbed nincre undsasManna opened the 1988 season with a 62-S6 overtime wrrr over Mrssron Viejo Monday nilht an the Diablos gym. Mission \'1c1o·s Matt Tanner hit a ...Qis.kel at the founh-quaner buncr to ue the game at 51 . but Parks had a slam dunk and Marc; Newfield had three free throws to lead Marina to an 11-5 advantage in the extra penod. · Francis Carreon added 15 points for the Vikings, while Brant Shelor added fi ve rebounds and Thi Nguyen five assists 20 turnovers to key a third quaner domination en route to the first round Wtn. John Trevino ( 13 P.9ints), O.in an ton (In-and John"'"MCJCcown (I 0) led t...guna Beach (1-1). Shane Bowers scored IS points for Charter Ou-.---~--~-~~--:-, In other first round games, 0.n.a HiUsdefeated Scl'ra. 60-51 and Whit- tier downed. St. John Bosco. 52-46. Brea wears Uni : .. down in semis : -Cameron Parks 24 points. 9 re- bounds. Francis Carreon. IS points, Brant Shelor fhe rebounds: Thi Ngu~cn 5 assists. M1ss1on Viejo fell to 0-2. Sheik} Davis scored 12 points and Denise Gandara added 10. but U.ni- versll) couldn't get by hi&hly-re- ln the Laguna Beach Tournament: ·garded Brea despite a game cfton for Lya1foed I!, Hutt.pHt Bea~ '7: three quaners Monday night. The' Otters raced to a 4j.17llalfi1me With a shm 34-32edgeentering the edge desP.itc first-game jitters. but iounh quarter. Brea took over as the went cold 1n the third penod as TroJans went cold. gaining a 52-37 L}nwood (2-2) took control for the girls basketball victory in the sem1- first round victory. finals of the Irvine World News ~ocy K~tter ~md Jeff Long had 10 Tournament. points apiece m the first half. and . . finished wnh 15 and 14 respectively. ,,Brea will meet W~bri~. a Down 13-2early.the0ilerswcntto 65-S6 w1~er ov~r f4ison, in the; a full<ourt press and rallied rapidly -finaJs tonight, whale Edison and Uni to a 15-15 uc. and were ued at 21 at duel in the third-place game. • quarter's end. . The Trojans took a 13-91ead at the But in the th~rd quarter. Lynwood end of the fint guaner and trailed by outscored Huntington 15-4. and then only two at halftime, despite mwng 39-20 in the fourth as the Oilers -.ere IS turnovers. Then Brea took control 6 P.m.-Et ~edo v\. Edi'°" 7:30 o m.-<omoton vi. C1olttr1no V111ev ...... ¥ 6 p.m.-S.vltt vs. Ml•Moll Vlelo 1~ o.m.-Woodtlrldet vs, FOUlllt lrt V111tv. ............ ~ ....... 8addlem4;k'• Crate llanball (4), tbe New-a reboaad in•lde of Mater Del'• Derek port lleea Toamament llVP, aoee llJCb for I Stone (54) d~ tbe MCODd period. _ in foul trouble. Kaner and Scott in the founh' quanerwhen Uni hit Drake fouled out and threeothers had only I of 14 shots from tbc noor. Uni ~ four by the game's end. Coach· Doug Sorey said he thou&ht Huntington Beach will play Serra Brea·s fulkoun pressure wore nu on Thursday a~ 3 p.m. m the squad down. • BARONS' ALL-PURPOSE MAN. .... FromBl . SAIL0RS. l'rolaBI • • • • , "I went in the game and they gave me the ball on the fint play," said Mock, who officially canied.twicc for 20 yards. ··There was a bis hole up the mjddle and that fired us up. But on the defc"sive series before, I'd broken the face mask on my helmet, so I had to borrow someone else's helmet when Kedric went down. I tried it on and it didn't fit Ptrfectly. but it did the job." · SO after watching the Barons win the C IF title 10 yean ago. a feat Mock will never forget, he's hoping a similar expenence wall exist this Fnday night Prep football players of_ the week JOKE WALCOTT Foantaln Valley A 6-foot, 210-pound senior linebacker. he had four unassisted and six assisted tackles with his sound pass coveQ&C .• JEFF CLARK Corona del Mar A 6-foot. 16S-pound wide receiver. he caught 3 r--....._ _ __, • passes for 57 yards, includ- ang · a game-winning 34- yard touchdown catch. P:A. EMERSON Wooclbrlqe A 6-foot-5, 230-pound defensive end/tight end. he had two sacks, one inter- ception. eight tackles and caught a 9-yard pass. "This year we know what (being in the finals) is all about." Mock.$8.id. "We'rCJUSt going to go out there and get after iL At the bcJinning of the season, in the back of m y mind, I thought 1t'<t be great to get back to the finals. Our goal was 10 win the Sunset League (which Fountain VaUcy did), and so our next goal was to get back to Anaheim Stadium. "Ever si}lce I was a kid, I've watched Fountain Valley games. I remember the· 1978 championshtp game. I was young, but I remember. Fountain Valley wasn't supposed to win it and they did. I've always thought that this team is the same as that team, same kind of attitude -I 0 years later, of course. "We (Fountain Vialley) killed them in a way. I JUSt remember we beat (Servile) pretty good And I remember the excitement of the players and the fans afterwards. I've always wanted that excitement and.this Frida} will be our chance:· • Fonhe season. Mock has 32 solo tackles. 42 assisted tackles ;uid 12 knocked down passes. He tras caused a fumble. recovered a fumble and returned an interception 30 yards for a touchdown (aP.inst Huntington Beach). .. He's played every position in the secondary for us. including right cornerback, left cornerback. strong safet} and free sarety," Milner said ... He's the type of pla)er who's very intense and being successful 1s very important to ham. whether it's in the classroom or on the football' ~~. . I "He reminds me of Mike Newton. who was an All· CIF d~fensive back in 1983 and the defensive Pla}er of the-Year in Orange County that year. Mock has tbe,samc kind of ability and competitiveness as Newton. He's a very physical player." -' Newton reccnlly finished }lis senior season at Stanford, and Milner indicated that Mock cenainly has the ability to play at the Division I level. Leners have been coming in by the bunches. but Mock will have to wait unttl next week to check 'em out. Mock is a dedicated student-athlete. Hisvadc point average (3.6) is evidence. Milner is quick to credit his mother, Diana Mock, ~ Barons' Booster Oub presi- dent. for a lot of his success on the field and in the classroom. "She has raised him by herself,'' said Milner. "She has instilled great values in directing him to be an excellent student and fine football player. A..iotofuedit goes to her, and she's really a great person to be around. Both of his sisters arc on academic scholarships." There shouldn't be any trouble then with Rick Mock's 11ext interview. The mocking begins for Bishop Amat this week. ...., .... ____ .... Coeta Ilea~• J a•tin Yockel battlee for a reboand wttb Newport Harbor•• Scott Gray (32) and Ian Lon& (52). with Scott Gray and Chris Lee paving th~ way with 13 points· apiece, the Sailors moved mto a commanding lead early in the third quarter and were never threatened. "They're the only players we have with varsity expcncncc," said New- port Harbbr Coach Jerry DeBusk.. .. We have a ·little leadership there, hopefully. unul tht'" o\hcrs are com- fort.able at the vanity level. "We're starung a sophomore guard and we only have four seniors on w squad." . Only Ill the early going. with Hieu Ngu>en and Timmy Nguyen takfng turns with three-point ihots to help move Mesa into the 20-14 edae. did the Mustangs appear to have enough· to stay with the b1ger Sailors. But .. 1th Freeman. as well as 6-5 lan Long inside. Harbor owned tf\c boards in both ends of the court to expand ~hei record to 2-1 overall. Mesa. w ch falls to 1-2. sot a 2.J- polJ'lt e on from Tamm) Nauyen, which puts has three-game average for the tournament at 25.0 ~in ts a pme. · He had three from outside the 19- foot-6 range. but he wound up as the onl) Mustang able to score in double figures .. Freeman added 10 pot.Tits to the l.tt-Gray combination. and Paig Pansh. Billy Nguyen and Lona added 8. 1 and 7 respccu"clY for a balanced Harbor attack. Mesa. which' trailed 28-22 at half- time. went cold from the field m the third quan:er. netting JUSt t"'o field goals an 13 attempts. the first coming after 3:38 of frustrauon. the-second (a three-pointer by Tim Ngu'yen) with I: 14 left in l he quaner after Harbor had mo' ed into a 44-25 lead. Raider s move into g oOd positiOn . High schoOl football log But Shanahan says LA must continue to grow to earn title but d1sappoinied "'t' didn't take advantage of op- ponun11ie to put them awa" .. The Raiders arc again pan of a thrtt-wa} ue for first place 1n the ..\FC "c t Mth the Broncos and Seattle Scaha .. ks. all at . 7. , .................. , i3 S.OdllMtll • 10 Ca.oeeA O.L MAA C 11 ·l•U Cf~ (S.. 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Mtrlfll· 20 12 Tr.-uto Hlllt • 21 42 HuntN!on IMcfl• IJ 2' l.-H•• 21 Clf' 140r ..... i> 1' St. l'ranclt 0 • &..--hKft• 0 10 "UOldou~ 0 Clf' "'Slrvll• 1 1 I 9toomll•lon • O.C.,_.I.,_ Amat Cltlt A) IDllOll Ct·l.fl c=........,•·•-f> .,,.... , .. 4 .. , '&.:: J cs.a c..t ......., ,., .. , ,, -v ..... lJ~IY 7 ,. ............. i4 • v .. ,..,_ lS --Dll ' f) T11tlln 7 Cl SI. JofWI lolco 0 7 ....,._ 21 "~ 1Mcf1• • l4 F_,. ll 11 ,...,... vllllY•• 71 17 -(llmlntt 'I> 7 41 MetMI. • oc....., ... v....,· ' 16 OC1M VllW• 0 lJ Mtl.Uln ,, ..... 14 e1-..m1n ... • 7 ·~ ..... i4 \ CAI' ti I Tere• " .. , ........ It I.MUMA MACH 11·"1) HTAllCIA CM•I) (PedlC c.lt ........ l•J.I) :--........ 1-1·0 .. ~ 41 D ._. l) • ...,,. Vtttl 1J "~ ... • JOIM""' l 11 UI :"Cc,. 1 11 .. enc1e )S 1 • ..._ow-. 10 ae I t L--Hiia• 2 II_. ,, J °'811119• JI , -,,,.. l4 t Trl9UCll ._. 1 , .. h.~ ... ' , .......... 17 ......,...,.., . 11 oc-....-• • MAltlMA It· lt·ll (5-et L....,., l ·S·Ol 0 -Euieran11 iJ 0 -Servile 44 io FOOftlill .... 21 0 Lot Altmolos ,, '~ 21 ' Wn•mln•ltf· i• io Huntlneton effCh• 2i o eoison· 41 JO F-t1ln V9f1ev• l6 o Oc.lln v1ew• 1t MAHlllt OSI <6·6.f) F'(.._,. L9"M, 2·2·1) 17 ouni.in Vallrt n )4 °'""'* 3' 17 511'111 AIM io t E,._ :11 2i Hufttllleton IMch 14 t4 II.,_ Amer " 21 ...... MonfeofMrv' 7 41 c"""' " 2S .st. fll'w• lS 24 Sll'vlte• 0 cw ...... Jer-. ' 11 Lovotl JO ....,.., MMICMt CJ·Ml , .. ,,... ~. 1-l·t ) . 0 Sent• ""' ,. io Ot'Mll View 0 1 HufttllltlOn hectl 10 IO LI Haora i4 Ml.lfl99-cll~ ,. It hUl llNICk' " I UftMnltv• 74 17 TOiiin• ' io 11 E"111e11• 0 I~ di! MM• 21 ocau v.w Cl·J.tl , ..... a...-. 1·).f) it.(..-0 0 ~ Htf'tlOf' 10 21 ..... AMV...., 3 l4 Wwllr'll • 0 Tlllftfl 10 , _,.,,.,.... ... ....,. l2 13 ................ 11 • """'~ lll<fl' • ....... .. " M4W'lftl• 0 .......... , .. , . ., . .... ~ .. ,.,, MC .... • 17 La Mtbrl t Pac.fl(a Cl~ . UMVlltSfTY C4·S· ll (S-Vlfw L....,_, 1·2· ll 1 1n11ne 0 Nll•slon Vlt !O 11 VtooclllrldVt 1 FootMI JI 0-H·"' i4 C0t-Ot4 Mar' 24 ,..._, Hart10f• ' Ettanc1a• 11 Sa6clltOKll.. 37 liu•tln' WHTMINSTllt C•·1·01 Cs-et ~ >·2·11 JO EL EGll!'fDO (.\Pl -The Lo ..\ngelcs Raiders ~ won an 1mponant gamt.' and Jumix-d back into a share of 3 first place 1n the ..\F( We \ unda) but Coach ~t 1 ke :; hanahan "'a n'tJump1ng for JO) a da) later. 1: "The thing 1s )OU ha' c 10 grov. each "'eek as a te.im." u hanahan said Monda)."" e look to 1mpro"e each "'eek I'm disappointed in .the Den, er game m that v.c had an ~ opponuml) to put them a"' a), but \\c didn't do that ·· The Raiders held a ~1-0 lead earl) in the lhard quarter unday. but then v.a1choo as Den,cr quane,..bad. John ~~ Elway led his team to 10 straight points. making n a one· i4 point game. • 10 The Raiders failed to male a tirst dov. nan the second 14 half until their la t po sc ion\ "'h~·n tht.') got four "'h1le ,: running out all but ~1\ second of the final ~.~9. 21 "I didn't lool at a football t~am th:n "'as happ 17 afterward •• 'hanahan said. "The) "'ere happ) to v.10. f V11tneil 20 30 Milloltn i S i2 E•Plf'1n1a 14 7 Caot\frano Valftv l1 6 M U len V .. .O 3' 1' Mal'lf\ll. ' II~ vi.-• 13 io ,_ .. .,, ... ....,. ,. ,. Hunt.,...,, 1eec11· It 1 £dttol'I' u Cl, 10 LovOlt JO I 4 The Broncos' 1s1t Seattle ne\t Sunday night while the Raiders are at Buffalo earlier 1n the da . A week later. the ahawks v1s1t the Ra.lders. It the Raiders beat Seattle in the final game. and Den,er docs not wan two games. the Raiden would win the ..\FC West tulc. The} wan an) lie involving teams that arc 8-8 baScd oru supcnor divas1o n record of7-l .. , ou It) not to look at that. to act caught up in 1t." hanahan said ... 1t•s !tke before the Den' er game, we Just said. 'This 1s our biggest game. and let's not worT) about what happens an the final tw<? games.' .. fhat"~ the approach we have to take this week. too . "e hould JUSt wom about our team -umg belier each "eel.... . .. ~ The Raiders came out of the Den' er game with no ignificant nc .. 1nJuncs. hanahan said. .. M Onnge Coeet OAtLY PtLOT/ TuiMday, December e. 1 ... F () ~ I t ~ '. R t l LI fl 1.' --~---~--- NPL NatleMf C_....eMe W"t S.n Frenclsco NewOrlffns ttems Atlenta v·Chlc400 Minnesota Tampe Bav Oat roll Green 8av N.Y. Giants Ptliladell>tlla Wa$hlnoton Phoenix Dallas " W L T 9 s 0 9 s 0 • 6 0 s 9 0 Clfttr_, 11 3 0 10 4 0 4 10 0 4 10 0 2 12 0 East 9 s • 6 7 7 7 7 2 12 0 0 0 0 0 I'd. l'F I' A ."43 323 239 .643 21S 2" .S71 3'7 270 .357 mm .716 2n 17S .4J4 m 1• .216 233 330 .216 191 279 .143 196 292 .643 310 26S .571 333 29S .500 311 3'3 .soo 310 349 .143 23' 3'1 AmericH CIASI .ce -- Seattle Raiden Denver Kans.sCltv S.n Ole9o v-Cinclnnall Houston Cleveland Pitt5bur0h W"t W L T 7 7 0 7 7 0 7 7 0 4 9 l 4 10 0 Central 11 3 9 s 9 s 4 10 East 0 0 0 0 x·Butfalo 11 3 0 lndlanaPOlls a 6 o New E119land I 6 0 N.Y. Jets 6 7 1 Miami s 9 o x-dlnched division lille rdfndled Sllavoff berth"' s.dllY'• seer. ....... 21, DenW< 20 Temoe S.y 10. 8utfal0 S Cle~ 24,' Dales 21 Detroit )Cl, Gr-Bev U ll'ldlanellolls 31, Miami 21 I'd. l'F I' A .soo 2S4 271 .soo 267 219 .soo 292 300 ..321 229" .216 117 30S .716 422 271 .643 360 331 .643 2'5 227 ·* 2t2 Jn .716 211 199 . S71 321 26t .571 230 256 .46' 311 317 .357 257 309 New York Glanll u , Pfloenla 1 ClndMali 27, San °'"° 10 San Francttco 13, Arlenla 3 New England 13, Seallle 1 Wasnineton 20, Ptilladelllhla 19 Minnesota 45, New Orlffns 3 Kamas Cltv ll, New Yor., Jell 34 PlttlOUrllh 37, Hous Ion 34 MeMIY'• Sar-. ll-23, ClllCaocr 3 s.tunlltY'• ~ lndlanar>olls al ,..w York Jers, 9:30 a.rn Ptlllade!Pflla al "'-!hr, 1 P.m Rams 23, Bffn 3 San IW Quaf'ters ClltcallO ~ 0 J 0 0-3 Rams ..1 .~ 3 3 7 10-23 Flr)tQua'1ef' Rams-FG Lansford 25. ..:09 S.C....Ollwtw Rams-FG Lan»ord 27, S:OJ. C~G Burler 39, 14'34. T1Mrd Qua"9r Rams-Ellard 31 PHS from Everttl (Lanslwd kick), 13· 17 F~QvatW Rams-Bell l run (Lanslwd klekl. 3'09 Rams-FG Lansford n. ll~ A_.S,S79 Clll Rams Firsr dOwns 13 n Rusnes-varos 77·114 ll-132 Pantno 99 232 Return Y•rch 31 SO Comp·Arr-1n1 I 1-l0·2 17·31 ·3 Sacked· Yards LOSI 2-9 2·19 Punrs 7·3' 3-37 Fumbln·Lo,1 •I· I 0-0 PenallOH·Yuds 4·31 2·10 Time of l'osK\StOn 2'.2:1 lJ.32 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-<hlcaw . Ander Min 14-41, Haroautlh •·32, Sanoer' s-21. McKinnon 1-12. Sunev I· I Ram,, BeN 21-9'. White 3·10. McGft S-10. E-•rr 2·4 PASSING-<nlcaw. Htrl>aUOll I l·l0-2· lOI Ram,, Evererr l7-31'3·2S1. RECEIVING-<hltaDO, Mu,rer 4·3S, McKln· non 2·36. ThorntOtl 2·19, Ander'°" 2·17, Sano· ers l· l Ral"'s. Ellard 6· 132. Holohan 6-69 McGff I· 16. A Cox 1· 10, Brown 1-10. o.tolftO l·I, D.JOM'on 1·6 MISSED FIELD GOALS-None NFL odds lndoanaootl' l over "New York Jer, <Sarur· oavl "Ptloenl• 1 over Ptill•de!Pllla CSaluroayJ "Rams 1 over Allan1a • BuHalO 6 ove< Raiden •New VOi'• Giant' 9 over Ka nsa' Clrv MinMsora 10 over "GrNn Bev "WHhinoron 11,, over DallH "New Enotand 9 over Tampa Bn "HO\iSlon 2'1) OY411' ClnciMati "Chlcaoo 11 ov« Oe1ro11 •s.n oi.vo 2 over Pirr,ourvh •San Francisco S''> over N-Orleans "Seallle 3 over Denver Cleveland • over "Mlemi (Mondavl ·~res notN le•m COLLEGE 8ewt KMcMe CALIFOtlNIA IOWL (Satunll9y ., ,,,.._, wesrern M1c11i~n (9·2-0) vs. Fresno St (9·2·0). l Pm. !ESPN) INOE~ENOENCE IOWL (Dec 23 II Sllrev-1. La I Sourhern M1sslsslPOI (9-2-0l YS TtxH ·EI Puo <l0-2·01. S Pm (MlzlOu) SUN IOWL (0.C. 24 et E.I ...... TeH•) Alat>trne "·J·O) v' Armv (9·2·01. 10 a m tCBSI ALOt4A IOWL (OK. 2S et .........,) Wasllonoron Sr (1·3-0) v,. HO\iston (9·2-0). 12.30 pm (ABC) BLUE·GaAY ALL·STAtl CLASSIC (OK. 2S at Mw1 .... •••• ML) 9 a.m IABCI LIBERTY IOWL (De<. 21 et ~. T-.) ln<11ana 17·3-11 v,. South CarOllna 11-3-0), S Pm (Revcom) ALL AMl•ICAN IOWL (Dec. " ............... All.) Florlde '6•S-0) v1. Mllnolt (r4• 11. S Pm. CESPHl .... IDOM 90'#\. 10.C. " .. ......-> 1<·1etwn YOMne c•+o> "'-COloredO tl-3-01. 6 e>.m. IMlzlOul NOUOAY llOWL (Dec. • .. ,_ CMlet) Wvomlnl I I I· l·OI vs. Okleflon'la State (9·2-0), S 11.m. (ESPN) NACH llOWL. 10.C. .......... , Iowa 16·3-31 llL Norttl Carolina Stele CM·l), 10 un. ~I GATGa llOWL c.-. 1 M .Mdt ...... PIL) Geortle !1·3-0) "'· Mlchltlan Slate (6-4-1), S 1>.m. IESPN) . · HALL Of' PAMI llOWL. c--. 2 .. r--. ...._, Louisiana Stale Cl -l-01 vs. Syracuse lf-2•01. 10 a.m. CNBCI CITIIUS ee>WL (JM. 2 •• on.Me, ..... I Clemson lf-2-0) n . Oklahoma Cf·2·0), 10-.30 ._,,,_ IA8Cl COTTON llOWL (Jell. ' .. Dellu) Ark•nMS (10-1•01 ..... UCLA (f-2-0), 10:30 a.m. IC9SI TBA HULA BOWL (Jal\ 14 et HenlMlll l p,m. (NBC) AP Tep 2ID ·~ "" ~ I. Notre Dama 14') l l•O-O -10SS 1 2. Miami, Fla. (1) 1~-0 '94 2 3. Wnt Vlrtlnla (31 II tsO 3 ~ Florida Stele l 1 too 4 : -s._ Southern C.I 10 139 S 6. NtOreSlle fl-1-0 17S 6 1 Auburn 10-1·0 767 1 I ArkanMs 10-1·0 647 t 9. UCLA 9·2·0 643 I 10. OklallOma 9-2-0 567 10 11. MlcNoan 1·2-l S34 11 12. OklellOma srete 9·2·0 476 12 13. CltmM>n t-2·0 426 13 l<l. Houston 9-2·0 340 14 IS. Wyoming l l-1·0 24S IS 16. LSO~ 1-J-o ns 16 17. SyracUM f-2~ ltS 11 11. WaSlllnolon State 1·3·0 174 17 19. Georola 1-3·0 122 19 20. Alabama 1-3-0 I II 20 Other receiving votes. Colorado "· Mlchltan Slate 16. Southern MIUIHIPC>I 14, Texas·EI Puo 12, Army I, Arizona S, Hawaii 4. Frnno Slate 3. COMMUNITY COLLEGE · Souttllllnd .... ... 5dlMI. C.lllo-llec. i-ts.. LW 1. a..r,fld, WWn SI So. (11) 11·0-0 119 2 2. FUiierton. Minion Ctn. (1) 10-1•0 IOS 1 3. El Camino, Miu lon No. ,_ 1-1 '7 • ._ Glendale, Wntern SI. No. 10-2·0 11 s S. Ml. San Antonio, Mluloo No. 1·3·0 70 10 6. Rancho Sant., Mlulon Cen.. 7·3-1 S3 nr 1. MoorNrll, Wstrn Sr. No. 9-2-0 41 3 I. Lon, hKtl, Mls&lon No 6·3-1 l4 I 9. s.dilleoecit. Mission can. 1+0 2' ' 10. Southwntern, M!ulon SO. 7·4·0 23 "' Otners. Antetoe>e Vallev 18-2-1), 6; San ~na•dino Vallty Cl·l), 4; Santa Monie• (6·S>. 3; Golden Wnl IS-4-1), 1; PH•0·~~1s-s1. 1 Hlltl KMet CtF l'INALS (Frtde'!', 7:30) OIVISK>N I 8ish09 Amal (11-21 VL F~ v...,, 111•2) ar Anal>etm Sladlum OtVISIOH V Cenvon SPrlnos ( 12· ll vs. San Bernardino ( 11-21 al San Bernardino Hlvn DtVISIOH V1 Valene.. ( 12-0-ll "' c-dM Mar (11-0-21 11 Of'anoe Coasr ColleM DIVtsK>N WI WMdblld!le (12-11 vs Tret>uco Hiiis ll1·21 al Min ion Vieio HIQll (Satwdey, 7:l01 OIVISK>N II AntelOPe va11ev (11·2> V'-Ce nvon, Canvon CO\inlry (11·2) ar Anl~ Vetlty High, OIVIMON Ill Paramount <12· 1) vs Los Aiamllos (12·0· ll at Orange Cou r COlleOt OIVtSK>N IV Los Alto' (12-1) vs El Rancno I 11·21 ar Ml San Antonio Collelle. OtVISK>N Y1I Sanla Maro• (12·1) YS. sen Marino (11-0-1) al San Marino Hlofl DIVISION IX TenachaPI I 11·2) vs. Carl>interla (11·2) ar Sanre Barbara Cllv Cotieot. Mntwl (et .... Yertll ~ ,.... &orb Bedler (Wftl c;.rmany) def. Ivan L.nOI tcrechO&lewaklal, S-7, 7-6, 3·6, 6-2, 7-6 Federatlell Cup <•• MllMurM, ......... , Pint It_. U11t1M Stlltft 1. SWllHNM 0 Slnties-l.Ol'I McNeil (U.S.) def. S.nclrlne Jaquet, 6·0, 6-1, Barbare Poller (U.S.) def. Eva KraPI. 6·2. 6-4. Other n,tlons advanclnt: Wnt Germany, ~sla, Austria. ~In. 11•1'!'0 , Auslralle. Denver Utah O.llas Houston San Antonio Miami c..... ,,... nST . UC Sanle l!leftlwa •· S. Ullfl SS Cailfofnla "· U..S. tnlernetloMI 73 E. New Meitlco '4, Lul*odl Cllrktlan 1' ·ldetlO 13, Nllbruke .. Lone IMcn St. 12, SoutNrn Cel 11 N. 1n1nots 73. ldello St. " ,..w Me11lco SI. 70, New MHlco " IOUTMWaST Cent. ArUnsas ... Art-Pine 9lufl ,, HoullOll 9', NW 1,.oulilellll 11 'Lamef' 76, TulM •&s Tnt1 Christian 75, ""°"'-SI. S1 TellM Teet! SI, Sen Dle9o St. 0 TnH-SM Anfefllo '3, TrtnltY, Teit. S3 u. of 111e ouru "· PNIMder 5mlttl Sf W. Texas St. 17, Delltl ._..., 11 MIDW•ST· Air Force Sf, ValNraiso 56 Akron 11, Mlcldle T-. '5 Alme 11s, c--•· Mlm. 11 AUllln .... ., 12, Merquell• n Cent. MIChlNn 9', Wrleht St. 17 Cent. Ml$IOUl'I 77. Avlle S3 Chieffo SI. 12, Sr. Tl!Otne•. Fla'. 64 Coe 7', lowe W9'1vn-TI Cre191\lon M, SM Joie St. n E vaMvlMe "· W"--Green a.y '° Gract4and IO, Wiilem P9lwl 7S -<3 ot) llllnol1 Wntvn 91, lndianaPON• IO Inell-SI. ll, 8utter 61 lowa SI. 13, a.vtor 73 ~ 91, Ternoa 65 ".# MlchlNn Tedi IO, Norttllend 67 MIMOUrHtole "· W.StmlMter, Mo. n NebraSka-om.i. 63, Mo. Wfttern 51 SE MIHOUl'I r7. Christian Brothers 74 SIU·EOW.,-dsvllle "· Attl-Tec.11 JI St X.evlet 67, lncl·Pur.-lnlll*. " T--Tectl 51, Mo.·KenMI CllV SS Vllerbo 7s, Lu!Mr 61 W. Kentudlv •, S. l•lnols 73 Whffton 73. Concordia, 11. 72 Wltmlnglon, Otllo f7, Otllo Oornlnlcen " Wl~ 52, E. lllnob 44 SOUTH cen1"rv n , Hwdln-Slnlmons •S Davldton 90, Eckerd IO Dulle 90, Sletson '2 Furmen "· Landlr 56 Hendlf'IOll St. M, SE Louisiana " Miami, Fie.•· ~Coollmen n More!IMd St. 90, Jeitas-Arllneton '9 N.C,-Ashevl .. '4, w. Cerollna '1 (2 ol) s. Carolina SI. 1', E. Kentucky 4S SOUlh Cero11M 57. Mervtenc1 SI SOulh FIOtlde '1, Fie. lnter"nallonal '2 T-M, VMI 12 • .lOT Towson St 11, Llberlv 67 I AST Boston u. 11, 9owlll9 Green " Budlnetl 12, L VCOf'nlne SS c .. llfomla. PL 72, Devis a. Hdns 71 Concord M, W. Vlrtlllla St. 7l, Conneclleul '3, Marls! 71 Falrmonl SI. 13, Aldenon•Broeddul 12 G.-Mountain '4, S. Vermont 64 Harverd '19. Brandel\ S4 Holy Crou 105, As..,,,..lon M Le Sele 11. 'St . ..ICIMPfl's S1 LtMovne "· 8roekPOl'I St. 1' Lowell •• St. AMelm M ~sVllle 75, Bowle SI. 72 New HemPsNre Coll. 106, Qulnnlf>lac 13 Nlaoera 71, N.C.-Wllmlneton '3 Norltlweltern 75, Rutten '9 Oswe90 St. "· SI. Uwrenc:e 7' PNlll. PMl'IMCY IO, Hevwford St ~-. Yorti, PL 73 sn.Mrd 11S, West L.,.,.., M ~ ltodl "· KNke 56 SI. Frencl1, NY 7•, MorN11 SI. .. Wesl Vlrelnla n . Mount St. N\ar'!''I, Md. '° wi-t1nt Jesuit 12. Selem, w. v.. n Worcester St. 74, SE MusectluMll' 71 COLUG• ~N Al' T111 2ID I. Ouke(47) 2. Mlc'119en (9) 1 Svracuw I I) 4. Geor"'°'4'n ( 11 S. low• (1) .. OkWtorne- 7. llllnols I. Nor"' CarOlina 9,Ne.,,.0.-LasV ... , 10.Arlzone I 1. MIUOU!'I 12. CO-tie Tech 13. FIQrlda Stete 14.0tlloStale IS. Loul\vlle l6.T-. ... 17. Villenova -11. Connecticut 19. N. Car~ Slate 20.s.ton HJ ..... "'~ 4·0 12'6 1 5·0 1214 2 7·1 1131 4 1-0 107S 3 •·O "° ' t·I Ml 5 3-0 f17 • 7 f-1 15' 10 2-1 711 ' 2-1 "' " S-2 5" I 3~ SIS 12 3-0 S71 14 3-1 ... 1S M JOI 13 3·0 21S 20 3-1 251 " 2-0 l07 2-1 Mil 16 s-o '° HIGH SCHOOL 90YS Sad~11b1dl ff, Matw Del M C......,MeMT-1 --Del , ••• ' dt ....... .. .... Bovie 2014 Simon 2054 QulM 1 o o 2 MerstiaM 9 6 2 2' Rltdon 6 9 S 24 Agnew 4 0 3 10 Andres 1 001 Simon 20S4 Stone s l s 11 Gellert • 1 2 3 4 Karlch 3 S 3 11 "'-• l 0 I 2 ~yl002 Demou 0020 8oVd 000 0 Gr-o 0 0 0 Nole.n o O O O 23911~ Totats It IS 14 56 Tolats -Sarww.._.. Maler Del II 13 S lS 3 t-56 SaOd!ebactl 20 10 14 7 3 S-59 Thr•·r>olnl voals: Mater Del -ttllldon 3. SaOOletlKk -AllMW 2, MarSllaN 2. Mat1n1 62, Mul9n V .... M , .......... , ~ MllMMI Vlelt Perils earner on Newfleld Shelol' Nguyen F.Carreon FlctlcH Tola!& .. ft ..... 10 4 4 24 I 2 l 4 0 3 1 > 3 2 s • 2 2 2 ' 1 0 1 IS 0 2 1 ? .. ft ... E-Kramer-S ~ S I Tanner S 2 3 \3 Amaye S 7 4 17 L.Cambra 1 0 0 1 Butchko 6 2 2 14 23 lS 17 •2 Totals 20 U 14 S6 SareltY~ • Marina 14 14 16 7 n-.2 Min ion Vleio lS 12 10 14 S-S6 Thr .. ·POint ooels: 111\arina-F. Carreon 1. Newpert Hartter 63, C.ta Mesa 50 1.._...MeMT__,_.I CHl9 MeM Ne""'1 Hertler Vu T.NeuYen cuu Chanl H.N9Uven Omave Joctie41 Pot1er Leetiv H.,-dlno Total\ .. ft ... -.. ft ... 2 0 3 4 L" 6 I • IJ 7 6 o 23 Freemen s o 3 10 2411 o.ew 1033 2 I 4 S Gray ' 1 I 13 2016 H9uyen 3117 0010 Pwlsh 4 011 1012 Lono 3 117 0 0 0 0 Ale•k 1 0 1 2 o· o o o 0 2 0 2 16 13 11 50 Tolal1 2t • s '3_ SC..llY~ Coste Mew ' IS 7 9 17-50 ,..WllOl'I Hartlor 12 16 II 17......., TIV-llOinl 9NI\. Cotta MeM -T . ...,,_, 3, H. H9uY9n 2. Newllort Harllor -DelknA 1. NA 0.11tWN .. Miii .. c...... ..... L T9'SclUI c•u...-1 .. ..,,_. ll_F._._ n+,.•~" O..Slllrev La o.11119 n. UllMrlllY • ClllewNft Melli T---1 U.U• ... La ca.-. ....... .. ..... 211SLilldl SS11' ' 3 2 21 Snyder ' 1 1 16 1 I 4 "lS Jolwllon 1 0 3 2 43•11 Ho 49217 2 I 2 1 C....... 11 • 4Jt S 2 1 IS Han 0 0 I 0 2014 Julian OOJO O 2 O 2 Koltw 1 0 3 2 JI 13 lS 10 Totals 21 lf 17 12 Sare'" ...... Un~•llv 21 lS 21 15 t-tO Le Qulnle II 21 11 IS I...., Thr•·llOint 9MIS: Uni,,.,.\llY -G4eSMn 3, Dieter 2. Le Quint• -Campbel 3, Snveler >. Unck 1. Tldlnlceb: None. CMrtlr 0.. 16. LAllllM ~ 51 CU.-T---1 a.w om u.i-leedl ....... . ....... 81toere J 1 2 I TreviM' 5 2 I 13 lower\ s s 1 lS Mct<-n 4 l s 10 Vn Ltiw 10 I 2 )Cl Qullley I 2 3 S Wtllte 2 l 1 s Stefford l l 2 7 Crawford o o 3 o 8lenton 4 3 4 ll W1110n 6 3 2 1S c-m 0 0 2 0 Gear.. 1 0 2 2 BuKhbeum 1 2 2 4 Delton 0 1 2 1 Sclwnlt 0 I 0 1 Delolrevn o o 7 o WMrllt O o I O TotM 17 It 17 16 Tote!\ II 13 19 Sl Sare'"___.. c11er1er Oak " 1t n 1._,, Leeuna 9Mch 9·" I 16-51 Thr-llOinl ooell: Cllal1er o.k-Von Lull- 2, 81IOCI'• 1; ~ ~Trevino 1, Mc.K9GWD-1----T ecfWllc:all; Le9UM hecft llefldl. Lvnweed 12. H ......... ~ 61 (U..-T___.I ll•A .. M leedl L ...... ....... .. ..... Tllotnllson Ketter Lono .Drake KliewSkl Luces Puenli Stew er I ttlce Tostado LaGr.- Herrltan Total\ 1 0 3 2 Kllllum lS 9 l U 6 2 4 15 lM 4 0 2 • 7 O 3 14 ·Hewklm 2 0 1 4 31S7~ 3027 2 11S $lntleton 123 4 1446Levv 20 1 4 3017~ 0111 o 2"'2 2 Mev• 1 3 J S 0 3 o< 3 IKKn!ofll I 0 I 2 0232Moton 0101 1002 L• 1002 J o o 2 uvne I o o 2 2SIS 26 '7 Tote!\ 31 16 11 12 SC... " Quartwl Hun1ine1on 8Mc:h 21 tt 4 20-67 LYnWOOd 21 16 lS »-G Tllr~ 90M: Hun•iftlllon a..ctt-Ketter I, Paunlf 1; Lv~Klllum 3. lrtw 1. Ttdlnlcals: None. HIGH SCHOOL G•LS .,.. 52, UllMrllty J1 (....._T __ , ... , .,.. .,.. ..... ....... .. ..... ' 0 3 12 De¥1t s 2 J 12 7 2 I 16 .JollMon 4 .0 3 I 2 2 4 6 ~· 3 4 l 10 S 2 3 14 s.to I I 1 3 2034 s.. 203 4 Ho 00 1 0 Total\ 22 6 14 52 Tot... IS 7 12 37 5afw '" Quartwl 8rH t IS 10 ~ Unlverilt'!' 13 9 10 ~7 Ttne-POirtl toeh: Br..-McOenlel 1. Tec:hnlca": Gunn. " Dttrott Sl.Loutt Toronto Mlnnelota Chlceeo ... mu•1111 C.JftJl=ll ~LT Pll ... A " •• 011J 11 11'. •••110 16 t J H11tl11 11 13 J 'l1 -tl lOt•HtSn .....,.. ...... 1• t • II 111 105 101041AMM nu 1 n ""' ' 13 • 12 11 101 ' 11 • " ,.. 1)4 _.,,SC.. MonlrMI 7, Dltrolt I \ T....,..,...._ WIMlllft el Diet. 7:JS PIT!. auftelo •I Her1tofll. d •.m. .......... •t ~. ~ Ill.I'll. ~ at Plmllurlfl, t:JS 11-.m. ......... New Yn .......... HSP-"1. MlllMlof• at 51. LAull, ~s •. m. QulMC at c.llWY, 6:U ..,,._ New Yorll ltanlef1 et V~. 7:J5 •.m. w ..... ,..._ WellllnetOn et New JwWY 4;j5 11.m. Montr... •t MlnMMf•. i':3i run. QueDoc at IEdmolltOll, 6:J5 11.m. 74· .. ·7Nf·12·n-G ltiCkO..... 15-.. ·•1!-ll·I~ TM1'9rftleek. ,... ,,_ 7t·11-7t-7t-Cl7 11-1s-•n-11-n-a Gt9'T ..... 11-11-11-n-1 .. ,....... o.w. .......... ,...,·7>71-1>·,...... n.......,-1 .. 11-Jt-GI o..w.-71 .... ,,.,...,,.7'-GI Leo.-.,_ n-11-1 .. 11-n-,...... n+Jt-n+~ Clwte .... ,...,,..,...,...1>-GI ,..,,.,, ..,.., ..... n-,.....,..... ,....,.,,.7, ... ~ NT .... ~7'Ml-11-7'--GI DIMYMl!Mlc ,,.,,.,..., .. ,..1)--G ., ... "".,.. ,,..., ..... 11.Jt-n-ae -..~ n -n-11-•n-11-Gf ---·-· n-n-11+n-1>-G1 JIMMetw •·n-1t-1t-,...... °"""-7•·71 ...... l•H•1>-GI .. ,......,. n-11+11-,.-71-41 ..... ,..,. .. n-.. -t1·7l-7Mt-C .. WWICMI 74·7>·•,,..J>-Ot ' l' .... T .... C.... ,,..,~ H-,.,...,_,.,,...... ---,._...n·7Hl-1t-4ft ~o... 11-71-11-7•+7.-ot ............... H-11-n .... 1•·1>-41 lltcaC,_ ,........,,.,.11-Gf ·-·l-~-11-11-1......a DllltY Wtl9Drf n-11-11-,..._,._., no. ......... n-.t-7t-71-71·,...... Cato.. n-11:g::n-n-Gt o.Wll9'111t n-11-11-11-,.......... J.A..Ltwlt 7H1·11*1>-,,..... lttlll""-1 N-t1•11-71·7t-,._.. ..,.,., '-*" ,,.. ,,_,......., ---71·11-D+11-7t-GI 0-.....Jedl-7>·7 .. 11·•7•·71-411 ........... n-.t-7t-7t-11-,...... 0-.....~ 7>-H-,....,.. ...... r....,w. n-n-n., • • at 0.-V~ 11-11-n-•n-1...-O......lrW ,.. , •• 7)-JHl-Jlt-OI .,,...., 71-Jt-11-7>11-»-449 ......... 72·7 ........ 7 .......... ... _ 7•·7>,.....71·,..... &;""O.:,.-n.....n-11-n-,._... LM ..... 7t-Jlt-,.'1·17-,,_..l ....,_. n -tt-71-•71·71-Gt TMYGr..._ 72· .. ·7>~11-Gt ~-71-71·71·7$-...... MUll!llr 71-71-Jl-71-Jl-r.::I lllY"9rol 7>·71·1'-tl·•,,_.. "911'U.. Jl•Jt-7>-,.71-7>-0l JellC. 1'1·1H0-7>-11·,._.. lllC*.OllMll ,.,....11-,.. _I Jecllf(ey .... ,...,,.,.,,_,..... --Jlt-71+N-7t-7>-0I S...Melllllw ,,.,..,.....,..,,....... "**'* ,....,...,...,....., .............. 11-71+Jlt-1t-~ .., Dtllloe ... ,,.....,,.7)-,._.., °"'""°' •11-n-n-n-,....... -.c--. ,......=~ ....,.._,.,. 77.,...,...,...n-e ,.,....,_ 7'-1'1·71-tl·Jt-7.....01 ....... 7t-tl·7 .. 71·71-,,._. ....... ,.17. "'",..._.,., Kar1 Kii!-.. •7Ht-H-7l ....... ....... 7t-7>-7't-t1·71·7.....01 ...... L--... 1> 71· Jl-H•7l· ,,._. ...,..,,,..,., ,... ,,..,..,._... ...... ~ 7>·'1·71-71·Jlt-7~ ttlck,,__ •n-n-J1t-n-1>-e11 ......... 71·7>11-71+,._.. .... L--.r ,....,...,..,........ _..._ 71·71-'1·7>-71·7>-417 S.....Hw! n-n·•Jt-n-,.-cn Geryll-Jt.n-n -7>-Jt-,._. ~Dll n., .. ,.....,...._ "-"·--tt-7>·""71-71•7........, JIM~ 11-7'-71·7t-7 .. ~I SlellUlltY 74•17·71+7M...._ ._. ...... 7'1-71-11·1>• ...... UffY Sllwelr• 11•·,...7)-11-7"5417 l.MmT9119t-n-11-11+11..-01 .... ......._ ~n-n-Jt-,...., Mlfll""-' n-11-n-n-~,,...... .. ,,..,,_ n-•1s-n-•,,__ CltA """""" 72·11·'1·11-,..1-01 ..Gtefl 7 7>,,.. rt-11-CD c-. .... ,...,.., ... ,.. ....... Cubs send Palmeiro .to Rangers in nitJ.e-player deal Cleveland re-si ns pitcher Black: Schmidt. Hurst c lose to decisions From ne Associated Prest They do things in a big way in Texas. even baseball deals. In a nine-player trade, Texas acqui~ swcct- swinjing outfielder Rafael Palmeiro and left-handers Jamie Moyer and Drew Hall from the Chicago Cubs for left-handers Mitch Williams, Paul K.ilgus and Steve Wilson along with infielder Curtis Wilkerson and two minor league players to be named later. . Palmciro the National Leaauc's second lcad1na batter in I 9sS. fills the Rana.en' need for a consistent hitter and Williams gives the Cubs the stopper they wanted. "We were looking for an offensive pta1er. and we fccJ like we a<>t our cake and can eat it, too.· Texas acneral maflllCr Tom Grieve sajd. The Rangen were afraid they miaht h•ve to pan with either stanen Jose Guzman or Edwin Correa. Pahneiro. 24, hit .307 with eiabt ho"'"' .. and 53 runs belted in. Grieve said Palmeiro would play first.baK and the outfield. Palmeiro, alona with first baseman Pete O'Brien arrd outfieder Ruben Sierra also can share time as the deaipaled bitter. Last season, Texas desipat.cd hittet41 bit under .200. Williams,24, was~7with 18•vesanda4.63eamcd run avefllt. He pitched in 67 pmes. . "We ...Uy •nled to help our bullpen, and evay~y in bMeball knows Mitdt Wllliamt hit one of the belt anns in bettbell," Cubs eeneral rnanaetr Jim Freyu.id. Tbe nine playen wett the molt involved in a deal liece 19'0 wbe.n T tut lftd Seattle made an 11.,P.,er • I trade. Earlier Monday:"the Rangcrs traded outfielder Bob Brower to the New York Yankees for infielder Bobby Meacham. In other player transactions Monday, Detroit lllreed to terms on a one-year contract with free qent infielder Al Pedrique. Pcdrique played shortstop for Pitllbuqh and batted .180 in SO prnes. Oeveland ~siped free aaent left-bander Bud Black to a one-year contract with a renewable option hued on the number of appearances he makes-next leUOft. BIKk was 4-4 with one save and a 5.00 ERA in 33 pma. Freeaaent Mike Schmidt, whowascloletol'H1anina with Philadelphia on Sunday, continued to ltudy lan1uaa.e of the contract. Left-hander Bruce Hunt., also was close to decidina whether to re-sip with Bolton or lave for San Qieeo. "There's a~ pollibility of a decision in the nnt couple of days; uid Nick Lampros, Hu,.·1 .,enL .. It's more than just the money." The New York Yanktts were talk.ins to Miannou but denied it involved outfielder Dive Winfield. On the bulinea of '-teball, CommitlioMr Peter Ueberrolh made his final SWe of the Oarne lddrm and said bcueball was in sound ftnanciaJ COIMlkiola and mak.ina prOlftll in minority hirinl.. Minorities were bind IO fil l6 percent of aU new bucbell jobs in the 1811 11 months, Kt'Ol'dfftl to the the commiuioner'1 annual ~· •·1t•1j1111 a •ani ... Ueberroc.h said. Uebmodl, w1to lava oft'IClt neat Mardi, .-- complaint• &Mt the minori~rina w only in clerical positions. but admitled 8ft lliU ... ....,. 1mprovemaat is needed. .. r,. ,.. __ ., !lidlHIDDoii..-ftllnted '" • 11c1r or mt.oriti hirinsin....,.. r-tencral inaftlllf •nd ~ ~---. Ucbcfrodl said. .. We mmt malrCJrtWllM hi dM OM• rnaupr politionl. C'urreDllJ, lllltimore .. "-* a. "''°" 11 ll9e only black .... ,..,, in lbe ......._ \ • with the Philadelphia Phillies. Rader, who lince beina fired u manaeer of the Texas Raftltn coeched two leUOftS and scouted i>r another wiab the Chicalo While Sox. said Mclemore, tbe club's replar second baeman, would undeflo eaplontory su,.ery on hi• rialtt elbow later this week. The Aneeft ftnished founb in the West this year with a 7S-17 recoid, 29 pmes bthind'the Oakland Athlctics.. '"Our fint l1ep it to &rY to IOliclify our piichi• staff." llid Rader. "Al at •nd• now, we allo Deed a badtup caleher. If we luck out. we rMy -tbe pitdtina and caldU111 wllile we're bin (at tbe meetitm>. .. We allo need to find out about Mcl.emcft. But thoee would be euflicieat improvemeatt to -us on our way. "'We med a. more hone in our rotadon. IDd bodt Hunt and Ryan arc tbat." llid Rader ... ., we don't tet either, I'd be di•ppointed but"°' delpetaee. Delperaee is too ltr'Oftl a wont ... J>ocWerw,... ,,....., la Bl0 te•• ,,_ '1..o1 ~ DDdlln: in u .._.,.to Ill tbe void left by Steve Ju. ..WoaMODdbtollleNew Yort Melt aboat Mqlliri• llCODCI baeman Wally llcbnan. llckmu. 1 IWin..llitter, hit .JOJ ._ --ia 99 PllM!lllrlMW... Su. wllo .... I 6-~t lftlrtbe Dodllll won die Wortdllrill. ..... al4Milklll, ...,_._. witll die Ntw Ycllt v-... NM. 21 TM DodlllllllD• ia•1111t bl e...-wd t111 ....... , ..... -....... Jlllald .. ,..... . . Joe MclhatDi. ........... ,.. ....... fl ... .._ .... Ill_, .... Daa.11 llaw wllll * ............ .,.._,..1 lw.'ht ti:•• llill•M111-.1a.._...,...._ •••• 1111.M ... .............. • CALL 642-5878 UllT, lllRT • PllCID 11en Prime ~belt location. riwr rock hie. aDd IUIUine type decor. 2BR. l8A. H.8. twnhhm. A ahowplac9 at .. ,900. . 71MIOO Sii Y• p,.,,,.;1 e.1111111••· Ml-1671 tor Information & aurpr:lllngly low coat .. 8«-9080 OPEN HOUSE 1:00 To 4:00 1124 lilt Ill• .. Sl,lll,• MARCIA BENTS ... Easy Embroidery ( Or.ngeCOMI DAILY PtLOTIT__._. Dea1r•t.1• The Daily Pilot has a new way to turn your Hidden Treasures into CASH $ 1 Ol!~epay~nt 4 ~Llnes 7 Days s 10.80 . No ~In alflY fllf Ql*C P Ho a. '1fv• J*t~ Ot'fly No Comnwt da ~ estatt. Automotive, lo.ting Of E~1M11t Am TMl'e Is no pnc. llmlt to what you an ~IM rt you nHd to wt yoJ coueft. ,.. cNlr 04' ~ UflUSed mertNnO!w-c• ltw O.ity P'tlOt C1.nslfted sulff or '.Ill! dW ~-.... DllllJ""°"JJOW .... IL.C-...... CA"6M ~ "'° 642-5678 NAME~~~~~-------~------=--ADDIESS __ --'..._ __ _ CITY STATE ZIP ---------- AD COl'Y. 4 Nnr minimum. aippropnMefy 4 words per MM. AMT. ENCLOSED .. • Ot'9n09 CoMt UAIL V PILOT I T&*dey, OeoeMbet I, , ... Motor Routes . . avai!able in Westminster Huntington Beach Fountain V~llay· NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING DeHver One Day""a.Week - Must have dependable car and proof of insurance. Call 842-~1444 Ask for Joanne Craney f714J. 642-4JJJ HonieDllftwMy OTOllOUTll MEIL Y PAY•IT TODAY'S. NEWS TODAY In newsrad cs. by 3 p.m. ... . 0r8nge COMt DAILY Ptl.OT/T.,..._, 0.1;.,.. .. ., r=~~~~J~()~l)~~'!"!IY~'~S~l!llm~-.iillir'"lie;_':i._~·~u~t~,1'.~~ .... ~,~,-11-w~1~1~ ... ~~-----~----....... --...,..~~~~~~~~~;;~;.;;:;:.....=,-~ CROSSWO I I> m-1..-i!iiP IMW W 1W. M.000 It 30080. vw1_.._..._.,.., I ILll•...r 17 20 2• 31 •1 15 PUZZLE •_ .. :_ I ..: ......................... ---· ....... CIOft• ,.. -'». ' ..... o.tt. _... ..... ~ •&• awzuu. aulo•atlc, •""•· dlllon • ......-,_.,., er••"· · 1110001to. Y1i. ~,..· ......_ L.a.o =-~fNllln:r"....., ~oo. 1n-uu euuoof. 1u.uo. P•P·••t 211 (7U) ,.._r,::'71>•.W 10 11 t2 t3 -. ,..., 7..... S.-1412 __ _ ... lldldll .. ,.,._ Morcodoe hn1 1H1 VW ·71 VAN. ...... • Mull -.......... .._ aoolO AMO compteto Automelk:, aunroot, orto- 0111--. """°• fOOd .,.,lrtWJ, low mltol. 1Nt w , .,._ oond . la 1111 '•rd. 1111 MuetM8 oondtlloft. 1fee1 tM.rl ""121-4150 IMOO . .._.102 llfter e CHEVY ·ii UMff . GrMda. w..-. toob -..... 0. I 11100. (#IHNAM) MorcedM hnl 1H 5 end 111° I.... """""' *· very good ., .. t. .... tlrH. ·--,.., .. 1111.0I per •1~°' ... CMl3 l0080.1Mded, •c1hn1 ftr'iiW ocnct, 11,oC»o ml. lOml 1ll0.0017M1M I 9 ..... ..... ....... IMW •• a1• • .... • condition. ....,.,. blue. ,_... ... point ... t per ~. 1 owner. ifOiiD -"* GT ..... •a o. CerallM 11oor ~ AlptM 127 ..... 722-7115 ....:r. inw1or·""",.:; l250Cr. llMHO/Home U'bo, ~ I• 1111 IH IDIO ....O,llWm-...•· More.doe Boni 1171 l8000080~11 <213>7'1-·1441/WOftl IOMlmr~lir *** 0r9 ~ ·• or •• COlont ocnd. Ml'9t ... 3000, dlill!n. red, acet-mw 'It llSlml OWNt1 Greg ns-11 2 ... Ufll ... end -113,000 ...... ".. lent moctl•nlcally, -nraTTl'M "' I ........ •Llllllll'l1 .. ~ 9kc1 L_.. 110,500111·1521 CNIM control, AM/FM.~ v.-c:yllnder Alltomettc ' ex:= ••-=~ ........ of u.codee1w1M1300 =~=; PoWW~.c:wette: ... ..-..... IFM: L11Bllll'9 111/'14 IBll &~ ~. ~~It"':;n':~ 15975 . rfo~u~~ WMol•. AIC. (=~-=-~·.~.:: ::::. ordlr ~ .• or ... 132.000.137-7344 .... ,. mlllY111111 21..... now~a ...... ._._.. ... WI goe M0tced" Bonz 1977, •1·1111 M\,1111 .. •11 ==~' toob tho !arty ..,d l.oeM 3000, 8';por deen. 1 v w Rabt>lt conYeftlble ... ,, __ 111e1o.eom,..HouMof CRE'''IER owner. s1.5oo. Bu• 19a2. 51 ooom11 .. • --..wm ..... Tml ... IMporte & bo ..... v 131-5511 Ron. EYH ptwcoel "· bledc top: ~ Automatk:, • cyflndor, 111111• IBll 'Ill -__ .. 7.0-1335 excellent cond ition. Automatic, • cytlndor, redlale, power atMf· Ml 1 ...-. _. ... .ii @7-307• power door lodt, r8dlela, lngl btakoa, c .... u.. 1•1 ••• Our IO month lwln9 '11 alll ll'f" CNlee power ~ A/C. U1re now. pt-643) • --pro WWft 1a a._wlnner, TUA80, 75,000 mle w -A.Ill Ir 111111 .. PoWW. Ink-. ~: SUM =-bO '=-~ llft-1111 • S~Ooo~2::;rM:Ui ""I. IitlA/C~~lll.Wi~P..!~~~J~~!!~~~--~~~~~~~~ 111/114 IBll C:.':~ 8'6-7830 Rlltm -~ ..... GOvv.NMENT SEIZE> ...... '=:a::::J .. --.. NUii Automatic, cnim. cwt. -•--IG •1 • VEl-+tCLE8 LOW AS -14 3181 HtOJolded,1"""'387 4 c:yllnder power br8k• to, A/C, tltt. All power. I ...a1 .... -. I 1 0 0 . 8 M W S , !ILIT_. ..... 'B!!----·•ri 73S. il/lO. ~llMJSIO cuHtto. Sunroof: (28VG371)1 15,"5--. CADtLLAC8. -cHeVVI. 88 73S!,111loJo• 642434 (*-.._ l6,ll5 111ft ""'I ........ ~.. ~~ vt ~. FORDS, MEllCEDU, 'tO"'=~~cec: Sales -5er'flce -_&_,'••·---Ml.... U-.. · redlale. PoWOf 1teor-PO,.SCHE8, PLUI _. Parta ~ --Automatic, • c...ilnder. lnalbNlt-. AM/FM, AJC, TAUCKS AND VANa. .,!!'_ ~·~o.mpa!! 131•3~111'.'lll ---_,.l _ _. ,, tll(1'.fl•)l2.311 AMAZ.tNG REC09'DED ._ "' ,.,......, , 1 & .,. ,._ · r -·-redlall, cru6M, PoWOf 11 ,.-_._ MESSAGE AEVEALI Mio. Ml-1111 Automatic, ,,,__ .. ._. eteorlng/tnkea AM/FM •• •--0ET'"'L8 7 ... -1500 .. t M II 0 ,...._ AJC, tit. (~11>' se.995 ' ...... "" · 1.u-1-11 111/114 I IBll nU 0 8 r. Nlawl Sentra 1915• 2 I~ AIC. Low m1i... EXT 106 Santa Ana d o _... 5 •P•Md < TYX) 12•895 1111•...... -..a1 iiiiii. iiiiii'iiiiiiiiiiiii 4 WW ldw/'ir. Ed 0 r , r.... S3 . IUltllTITI .._. lll91ftl•-.r 55 Fwy. at Inger AM/FM caaaett•. eoo M" ·-· ~ .......... ~~~" OPEN 1 DAYS 11Pac115> 758-0l73 ·-ea.a1 -1iii JEEP Wrangler Service Hra. Mon-Fri. PORSCHE 1977 924.1-----------'--_.;.--'-----• Autom.tlc, ' oyllfldor, Lor9do, I c:yllnder. AC. 7.:00 am to 9:00 pm SU.Woof, !'" time. "'"· Can't seem to get to all those redlala, powor-at~- PS. PB, !::r equipped, mechanlcelly perfect, repair jobs around the 'house? Let ~AM/FM, · ro11 bar hard top. nHd• paint. 11000. the class·fi d · d' to ( :!°')!7;•·-lledl c1oar1 10K 115-2211 • 1 1e ?&rvtce tree ry ... ,_, Hi>nd• Prelude 1989, Hiii• '1111• I-I help you find reliable help. !!'!!1 1 •utom•tle, arr.power • 1:1~ 5----4 m.n--~oortng & moonfoof • r · ,....... 1------------,..,.-------------------------'-----+------1 ·--------I apeMOf AM/FM caaMt-ual, radtala, AM/FM. New mft'lt... te, ll•.•OO. Michael paint, new. llr•. robulh FANTASTIC SPECIAL TO Move 'em Oat! Automaek:, V4 cytlnder, M4 1ee3 engine. Wiil t8ke tract.4n. power ...... lng/bralc• (2217) 13415 AM/FM. Wont-truc:lc wttri ... u I .. 'la .... ,. tool bole. Hurry! Won't 5-apood manual, redta61, •1-1111 .... llt""' prtca. power ....mg, power·-------- -··· fW Ink-. c:awtta, AJC. Tlllfl W 11-1 •1 .. ,. Vety low mllea, lltto new. 5 ap..cj manual, pOW9( --+-----1~--+---t -~-------i (2211)17195 . brtlk•. AM/FM, CUMt· Ldtw, ••••"' t•. AJ~1tt. tfurry f()f th11 Cinda IMS :9~.. ~~·:,OW:~: 1iti PXckXRB •1.-ii <22M> M.M5 I~' BOATS MOTORCYCLES CONVERTIBLE ••11 fW Fonneratiowcar.s 12.ooo. .._,.1,.lf _ •1-1111 , .. ____ _.. ___ ..... ____ .... 144-7211 Alltomatlc, CNlee, PoWW --------- 1917 MBZ 220SE COUPE. r.~~ t!t:;. ::':; mlTI 'll 1'llE. ) 8Mutlful car. OrlglMi ao-whoela. Many ox1ra11 .. ,_ ..... p.,..., ..... 1•11 ,._.... n11 1 ... 11 ... , c..rttn t':o':.'8' :tm~ ~~ <2293> sT.U5 4 cytlnder, 5 ap-.d mM· --. .._.-.,.. -5'5-4119 .... ,. :::i~'::l':rM~~: Spcwl..,•1C .. ~ao-....... "::w_e~s~~-1971 JENSEN. prl1tlne •1-1111 (11·517)M.•t5 ., .. ~ JnOOftng ~·-~more...... .._ ~ ... ~~ ':!"::""· _ •••• ,.---11 bl 112 50 ,_ -..v plot dopttt ... , ... v.-. • ..,, coodttto11. 71.000 Oftgl~ ..... U IP/I - ave • • • 1 • o. ...:order. ,,.. LOren C, deal w/lklppor. 175-7100 mllae, grMt c:oflector • 5 ap-.d manual, CMMCta. mnLB ~,,.. 13' 5" doluJo =. '-:::-" cllwt-= llil .... tilt rn'•t•~ .... -::::· c~~ =lng.'=.~il~ Ml-IU1 Reach 30,000 ·to 85.000 households and over 212.SOQ wti.1ar. 12450. Mao 1eaa m1e ;...,.. :".-1n 1A1 31' DEkkEW v:wt. 8 ;:.,1:.=r ~ (2R95783> 13.et5 nr W um W 30HP ~ outboard Newport, poaetblo ltwt-............. automlc • malco 'em. MO.OOO new, .aYmlJI AM/FM, cuaetta. Mult 11eoo; SulUkl 2HP, $275. aboerd, "'*ldnt evaM--power, nood9 paint and ,___., __ ·--. ,._.. R...... Ml.... ... ahowcar. Immaculate readers in the Daily Pilot and Huntington Beach/Fountain Valley Independent. . . 175-4eM .... "Aoela Aovco of the vornWI, c::uaNona. MUlt """' u .. -·-...., ""' In f1Yf1fY ,...,.ct. Wiii take ClADiC 1M7 GLASPAR Soa" 121,500. Aaao home aoll l7100. 1734122 ard, PP, 723-1472. Aleo .. ,.. • •-lredo In. (2292) $3,475 DEL.MAR. ll' , 0 More & car tor ..... Ne. Cell home l boat lcw ..... NB ...---. ••II"' '·•tip 018. MUeT SEE Alc:twd, PP, 723-1•72. ll'•H•--MEAC£0ES '17 300SEL ~A=:c= •1--ll '2900 . .U 1111 WICll)lft. NewOOt\ Sltp SS500 beloW bl'9 bOOk.. to. Alt!. - ' ;-Now ~-:. 11900. 751-715"4 MUST SELL SAT/SUN Tr'ade-lft. ~~VOLVO 1M4122SStetlon 7 99 for 10 words. 4 days or 1];t.9 for' 10 words. 7 days Extra words 50(. Call-Now! F*iNGIOAT27'8AJA. 0/81-.c.,.:..;.,ing,:n ft. c:.talna '71, F.G. 15500 •lmo1t MINT dollarpaidl(2257)1e.985 Wagon. Excellent run ="~-=· = UOOO. '32-7111 ttoopT.5tlpH<>n48. 0 /8, COND • .:s2-7Me ••HfW nlng condition, hu "'9t ,... ,..,... ..., bait..,., ~~~ = Tabomado meat, Pop l •1-llll but gr•t wortt e11rl seoo. 1 Private party ads only. No Commerclal ads .. _~- ...., equipped for the tpO, Excel Cond. MIOO. ~73-M22 . .. ,10ua liahorman.O p.p.(71•>17s-a130 ---~ Mercodee 1973 2ao • ._ vw BUG a1 ~it usoo. Widow, ...,.. .... BEST TM!ng ,_.,..lone lor Fill oumgutertwnna Excellent condition. door leden, '*'· good 12V. new Interior and OFFER. a.2-1732 or XmM porede. 12117 to ltlopplng trip through cl...,_ $5000. 714-53&-e251 or condition, mOYfng must bra!! ... ctean and 11cong. taCM201 12123.175-1115~ tied. 213-e02·1719 ... l.S2915obol7J...3.415, S1IOO/C>bo845-1273 llilyPillt 0.urt'*d Adven.ltlt.>9 642-5678 MUC rl>TIC( NllC M>TICE PlllllC NOTICE .....: purpoaea-Of a portllon of Elm .,..IDll COURT """9lorl noted and a cat-92821 K .._ ...._. ..,_ n' I Mee Ooeneeoff/Ogancrotf, Lot Mw. c.M. 92821 Tlle reglatrenl colft~ 1111.&•ll Strwt,IOUlt\ofCWWWA¥-OPTHl8TATIOP laterelllgemantltralntothe The eu.-neme uMd 14WDM8 ........ .._. ........ •b--7318 1.U Patel, 150 Town mano«1 10 ........ ...,._ YACATIOll OP .,.., and,.,.,.. II,_. ~ rtgf'tt ...... / by Mid t1WISf9IOl"a at uld (CfTActOM AIDICW.) ..... ..._ • •....... NAME: Jim Cav1llon/ c.n1w Dnw, ._ 1f10, -under !fie -..oue •• I ff~ by INde to 8ldl mapa or COWITY OP Ptelnttftt..,.. the.vlctlrM locatlon la: Artl1try In 1 NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: 1111111 •1-I I• • ...... C.valler. Lot •A·-0229 ,eo.ta Mw. c.llf. 92821 ~ MIN or ,...,. AllGllTIOllOP .... tor pertlQMn •to ' GRAW Ofa~cotllalol'lwllll8 Crystal,TapeweyMertietlng,(,,vtao1ACUMdo)R08ERT ... a• 1~11•.::.~ NAME Ce rolyn Hen-,, Pu9t19eben Patel, 150 ..._,eo..onNou~1. -~ .., PfOPlllll' ~ EOWAAO GUARJAROO. on aepera .. motOf'cydel on A..W. HNtt and Cremti... SALIZ. ATLAS CHRYSLER ...... -,_. n..a.y, LOI •Aot21 Town c.n-°""9, """ 1 ... --.unGll SECTION •. TN-City CHUCK LUCAS.) Plelntlffa. July27.1 ... atorneerWaet Mertiettng Auoclat•. PLYMOUTH, ELMER GAL· ..... de •111f11 • • NAME. LAIS. Mc:Cell, Inc., 1910. eo.ta Mw, Calf. 1.U ....... -..., Coundl dote hereby ftx Qe-· ¥9. Bllboa and 42nd Streat. Thet Mid hlllll ,,.,,.,., It LI N s AND D 0 Es 1 MM ......... .,.... ..... lot •A.Ono 92929 . Thie ........ -fllld A ....untall OP THI oember 11, 1 .... at theholw JANET O. LEWIS. LISA City of Newport BMc:ll, Intended to be contum-THROUGH 50. INCLUSIVE 1::.. .. dlfectefte tefe.. Thl9 Mia wlll be com-M.N. Patel, 150 Town """'._County a.ti Of Or· Cft'Y COii.a& OP THI Of 7:00 p.m. or • eoon LEWIS,) Defendent9 County of On1nge, Stale of maled at the office of: MAIL VO\.) ATRE BEING ~ED 1). ..._ _ P911tlw bidding on the 17th Center ~. 9uhe t910. af101 County on Nouenbe CITY -....,...TOii thereaftal .. tM mat'9r"""' CASE NO. 522587 C9llfomla. Thl9 aoc:ldent-SERV, INC.. Irvine. Call· BY PLAIN IFF: (A Ud.... .... c.. ,_, - ' Oeoamber. tMI. II 10 00 Cotta Mw. c.M. ta21 7, 1 .. lmACll GP MmnlCall TO be llHrd In Council STATEMENT OF proltlmatefy ceueed when fomle on or titer December d9mandendo) MARIE BOS· The ll8me end addreaa Of e.m. on PtWniW wlltr9 Mid Aalle PeMI. l50 Town ,.,_ YACAft -... t1T Chamber• In Ill• Civic: DAMAGES defendant, UM l4'Wlt. en-23. 1918. L E y • n d a E 0 R G E Ille court la: (El nombni y P'~ tutored and ~ c.m.r °""9, 9uhe 1110. Publwll8d OrWlge Co.I PO• PV9LIC 8TRl•T Center. • the time and T 0 : DEF EN 0 ANTS, tt'Ulted I "9f1lc'9 owned by Thl9 bulk lransfer 19 tub-STANOVICH dl'9Ccion d9 la c:or1e •): SU.-II ioc.ted •t Mon1sMovtng & Coele Mw. Cellf. t2t2t Olilly Plot ~ 15. 22. ,...,_,_A POllTIOll ptaoa '°' haartno .. pereona JANET a. LEWIS, LISA her mottler, ~Int Jenet ject to Cellfomla Uniform v .. ....,.. CALINDAR PERIOR ~RT Of CALI-Storega, Inc: .• 154f1 Elec-Tiill bu9lneel I• con-21, December I, 1 .. GP .. ~ Wint lots Hiid In or objedlng to LEWIS: 0 . Lewtl wN> -In Haw811 Commereta1 Code Section DAYa ..._ tlll9 -• FOANIA. COUNTY OF ~-Ironic Lan.. Huntington duded by 1 ~ 1*1· T_.. GP C"lil• A,_. the propoled vac:aHon. Plalnttffl' d8fl'llgel.,. • at the time of the ac:cldenl, 11oe. . .. ..,.... "' ,_ .. Na • ANGE. 700 CMc: C.ntet Beac:ll. CA 92M9. In the City nartNo 11'8 C., CoUld ol tM wflldt time 11 not llel•tt.\ folow9: to UM'1 boyfriend, Scott The name end eddrw of tJjcuuMI• .......... II ~ Waet. Poat Offtoa Bolt of Huntington Beac:ll, Coun-Tl'te reglltrant c:om· PaJC mT'ICl atr ~ ........, leedl Maar1 (15) days tnJm the SPECIAL DAMAGES OF Joeepll ~ Juerllz. wtllle the pereon with whom tMI-'-138, Santa Ana. Callfom.la ty of 0r9not, Sta1e of Cell-menced 10 tr911MC1 buw1-1--------- doea --~•'°" ~ottNI~. PLAINTIFF EDWARD atlameltlnglomekeeu-turn, c:lelmlm .. ('beNedl9Jeaon A..._w,.._Qll _. 92702-0e38 tom& Mr John Plec:tllle.-under the llc:tltous ._ 1oue: SECTION 5. The Clty OUARJAAOO~ tumed lnfl'ont ofl)lalntlftl.l.abecfy. 17911 Fltdl Av-... .,.._.~,._"119-1 Thename,ackt,.._,and ~.Ucantenumber ~ neme "' Nmm PIC:Jll'IOU9•H•• MCTION 1. A putMlc: aartt 11 dlNcted to ~. a 1. Meclcel ~ to W9I In vlolatlon ol 2 tl01(a) enue . Ir vine, Callfornla ...._ "11111 II ""'81 lie telephone number of plain-A 17C>e, wtl eonduc:t .... on~ ebOll9 on ~ber 1, ..,... 8TA,_,. . ..,.... _ tlllld IMlb't tM OOflr Of tNa r.oM1on to 1te dMe: eve. "9Ndetumlngleft. I.._ 92714 end the lat tJwt tor Iii,....-..... ._... It fCMI lfff'1 attomey, 11' plelntlff pr9mllel. S.... 19 IOld wltfl 1.. Tiie ,.,._.... ........ ....... Coml'flula" on puOllMd In a waaldy ,_. (a) AnaNllft Rahib. In-Ing lo ,etld and -8"aeted ftllr'G c:1e11ne by any c:redltor =-t tlle o.wt '°ti-,_ Wltllou1 111 attorney. It: I~ llrnll and -The lend-l .U p..., doing~• .llltr tt, '911, at wttldl time paper, publleh•d a.nd .....,.. 11.373.40 •the~ kif vlolatlon of 11'1.il be o.c.nw 22, 1 ... -. • ca d.hcoon "I el flit-lotd ,__ t"9 rtgttt to bid Thie ltaterMnl wee llled SAN8 •llLDINGa 1112 It -J 1 11•wd. pur...m cltcutMod In Huntlntton (b) Todd L P8910ff. M.D. 12500(8) eve, U111ice11Md wNc:fl 11 the ~ ctey • ,.. de ,... Na ,_ mero dt • l•lefono d.•I 11 t"9 ..... ~ '"'* tM County a.ti of Qr, NI~---C.-...... 10 Qo.,.,,.,,..,.t ~ awt1 '°'at..;.. two euc:.-'2.315.00 drt¥ar. P*ltttta IU9talned before the c:on.aummetlon m,11n11 .,. -.. r-_, llbogedO de! demendanle. o tie peld w1tt1 c:111t1 and peld County on No~ Cell ..... ._ ._ proPOtad ~ .-. swtor to the (c:)s.llSeNtcewS140.00 ~ "11urtea and were cSeM epec:lfled ebo\le. .._ .. -. 9fld ,_de! demlndenl• qu. no for at IM time of~ , NI ICC El•"'PI.._ • ....._. WICllllOfl b pubic ..,... ttmelllt'**'fofttlepublc: (cl)OerMed1c81155.00 caueOd to undergo ex-Oeted:Oec..2, 1111 ...-. _, 9fld u,nc. abogldo, •): LAW IAI PurChWd goodw .. • ,..,. l*tMIWllllp by .,. c ....__ ol an I I ,.,t l'leeMQ. -(•)""'*1HerbotRedto-..,.,. aumlnatlon lndl'6-....... Ul9edr .......... ..., ..., lie ................ OFFIC ES OF J OH N IOld ....... and must tie PubWled Ofarge CoeM CNp;nan.;...,.. ....,.,· ._,a portllon o1 Elm....... SECTION t. TM Director JSla.SO Ing but not llmlted lo, treat· Tr•.-M ·~ ....... ...... lnNll lM RAPILLO T777 Center "'"' r9fnO¥ICI II)' 3:00 P.M on the D1i11Y Piiot ~ 15. 22, ZIG Altrwwf. A-, ~ _,.. fll ~ A_.., Of fl\IOllc Wotb 11 dlr-=-cl Memor1el ~ "*"· x • tllerlpy and 10 Pobbhed Oraf'OI Coeat _.. enue. Sult• 203 Huntington dey ot the Nie This .... 19 21. o.c.no. 1. 1911 ...... Cell 11121 ••wwd10W..,.~to~~-·• • -. . , _..._....,,._.,&tech C•lllornl• 121• ~to~~tlon T-355 a.te...,.__,Clo .. pier\. eel noC1cM Of V9C81k1r1 con-Sub TOIM M .472.70 , Janet G. L4'Wlt. Is 1988 ..... I IF ... Y• _, =-t 1Pllone· 71'11AS-<U49 In the _,t of ..m.1•1t • 2'112 ~A-C-ae::TION 2. Punuant to ~ aklrlt the ..... Eatlmated C:Olt lor ...... owner of the negll-. T375 ..... -......., ,.... DATE.· (Fectlaj JUN 11 ~ Mofr1I ~ & Mw. Cell t2l2t DMlllMt t , P9rt Ii~ 2 "*" propoeed to be .._,_ ettwoecople knee turvery drNwl Wfllc:le. wtlo ...,. • ,.. • ,... llMWft tN7 I St0tega. lne., and obtlgated ....C llOTIC[ Thie ~ 11 cort- fll .. C •Willa and ed ol a pottton Of Elm'Stroee, 113 . .00.00 lier cet keys In the lg· • ~ iMf ... tft 0Wy L ~. Cl8ftl. ~ dUc'9d by: )Oll'll ~ n·,ec:o~~ ::::.c:::=o: .::=:tn:.:·~..,,,.:e:.=== MlJCM)llC( ::: ........ -;::: .,,,~~~ ~~-=2~ Pie~-:.. .. ~r~:'~c.::.: Ciuflll a( .. atr o1 Hunt· dele Of the lleMng. TM~ 112,IOO.OO Ing lier er accaae to K._ .. ,._..Mell). Dally Pilot December I. 13. December 8, 13 t9(UI MAim 8TA~ nem under the flctttoua ....... 11181111 --........ lie poaeed not Sub TOIM 121.000.00 "9Nde In IPlte of the lac:t fl'ICTI110U8 ...... • D...-...... -20, 27. 1918 T-370 The ~ ~ -~ nema or ..... .... .. ....... IO ..... more ttwl IOO .. .... GEMEAAl DAMAGES Of' ... tied bean 11rie11y um 8TAW ...... .... ........ .... T378 OOlrla ~... --ill>olle on Oc:tober " bpulllo ...... ~an 1M at .... ttwea noacea ltlAINTIFF EDWARD blted from ullng Ille Thefo41ow4ng pti'90n9-..... _... .._ _ ,._. SINGOD 150 Town 1 ... · ' _ _.., ...... WU' a pcr90n ol 1M11 be pol!Md. TM noctc9a CIUAA.IAROO: . dolnQ bu9inea1 at: 6 • DIAi CALDDANOS MlJC rl)T1C( c.ntw ~. Suite 11110. 1Mn c. ~ o.rww ........ acultlofCWllW _.. ..... thedlly,hour,and 1150,000.00 DATED: No119mber 17, THE SHOE OOCT~. 440 itara ~ren11tat 1111a , ....C rl)llC( Coeta Mw, Cell!. 92121 Partner ' Aw. mcww ~ ptaoa Of haartno. and IMll Plalrltftf Ouarjardo eue-1918 E. 17111 Sll'Mt. Coet9 Mw. lllf •" ...ufta • .,... ,.,._IC MO~ I I U Pitel, 150 Town Thim ...._,.,t -!led fll .... -h-"" .a ,..,_to the fldoPt'on of tN1 tmned !fie followlu'll ~ DAVID eoROI. Attorney Celtt. 92927 ........ _.. wte. MOTICe O' K~ Cer!ter Orlw. Suite 1910, w1tt1 Ult County a.ti d Or· .... fl ...... tl2 of Lot • f91C1U1ton Of luilenllon. and a. ... ..,._,.,...,,ow In-~!!!!..'· 2300 Eaat L Heung~Sttlks..._!~·.l~ ~ • .... ~ flUMJC SAL.I Of fl'tennoUt .,.... 1 1 eo.e. Meaa, Calif 9212t .,. County on Nousilbe ............ nor1ti I 1M11 deacftbe .. llUFltllt 1WY oeMoat ..... ....,,. 205, Anaheim, em ...... ..__..,.,.,, 1 ........_ ·--• ~~TY MAm 8TAW C M Patel 850 Town 7. 1111 1191fl ...... 112 ol Lot 5 or ... lndudl a mep or b. Mule moecukllo•m•r-l2IOI Ctllf. 90 15 ,e111111111; • 11111u11a Notice i9 herby glWn that Tiie foloWlng ~are c.m.r Orf\19 ' Suite 1910, • ~ fll ... I fl Trecl « 11 plan 1MW1rtt the locattof'I Of toua lil)Ury ttlor8clc..... ~ Orange Coaet Mee Sun &lh, 12e38 E. .... a ................ the undei 191«1 wlll It pub-doing~•· eo.ta Mw, Callf 12121 ~ OrW1ge ca.. ,..,.... "' ... 11..,... .. ....,_., '°' pullflC c. Mule~ Piiot December I. 13, Lemming Street, Lakewood, ..... ,, .... IH fer· lie 841c:t10n pursuant to l<ATELLA PAR l'NEA-, Thia busll\891 19 ~On· DlillY Piiot Noo. ..... 15.1.1, • fll lllDll& 1111• ........... P'l'poealpropoead to laUa1i19WY!ufnbWeplnewtlh • 7. 1918 Cellf. 90715 Maltda-et let e le t Ctlapter tO. OMwiotl I corn-SHIP. 650 Town C.nter duc:ted by' 1 general 1*1· 21. l:>eoember t 1111 "--* fll Of8n1a Ccuney, be _...... Of a pcr90n ol multiple c:ontu11ona, T374 Thl9 ~~Im c:.?!: + pl 11 .. _......,. rnenclng wtth Sec:tlon 21700 1<>rM." sun. 1110. C:O..a nertHp ' • T.at? C.. ;1111. l!lift llreal. •aalou• and brUllint IO duc:ted by:,_,.. and...,. 45W ....... ....._ M of IN Bu.-and PT'o---------------------------.. lllo dlr....,, ~ ltAlleD AND ADOPTE> ........ rib9. ..a.£ ll)l1C( The re9 l1trant C:Olft· -. feea1or11 Code or Section ... .._a peu...,.•tt by tfla aty Counc1 of W. d.,,..... Of !fie dlltal manctcl to t1'W1Md ~ • ..aM • ,._.... w 1teeof1MCMCodeof lN ----·and,......,,.,., Qlyftl............ ........... ....... MOncaTO MM under the nc:tltOU9 11111 ................. St.ate~the lollow- --,..... ..... IO llM. IO a ,....... ......._ .._. alglllftCMt ln=ttle CMDnORI CW bulllneaa name Of ,,.,,_ ....., •-. f .. ~ Ing mlect11e11eo~11 l\OUM-•llli• ......... ... .......... 11at., ol No-...... c a•111 .. ol IUU( WD ....., abolle on NIA ... -................. '"*' and oehonal proptr1y -..,.... ,....,_ and _....., -. .. 11111 anldl. .. e (.._, 1111~ Heunt SNk Ml f otr.. ..... .. H to-.wit Identified by name ,_...,.......,......,, ... llm9,MTOR, lll'RllUll 8ftllllhclur&. U.C.C.) Tllll 11....,._,t waa fled '9111111 • .......... andltoregeunltnumber _.,_. ........... ATTllT: co•••• ......... CIR ........ Nll'loa ll ~"-'to theCountya..ofOr-................ --.1 NAM IE T 0"' ... $TARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? ............ llrUCtUr09 "'· WCKWAY, cm~ ,,.. .. to .. rlgfll lmM c'*91tora of Ill• within Inge County on NowUl'lbe I --------...... ..-. ._ ... .,.... ... ITATa CW CAlJIONllAJ _.. ....... ._..... -. NrMd 11•...,0!1•1 ltlat 1 I, 1918 ........ --..,_ ~ COUNTYOPOMNGl>CITY ,......,. .... ....._ .,_...,....... 11 lbout to be "'"" I fl'ACIFtC VIEW ...... b ,_..., ...... OP HUNTINGTON II.ACM) 9"CIAl DAMMld OF rMda on pereonel property k Publllhed Orwnge Coeat •MOflttAL PARK -,,1111 .._. HUFeftl 18 PLAINTifflCHUCtHUCAS: ._ ..... dalcnbed. DlillYPtlot~ 15.22. ••YI ,. f' l 4'9• ~ll'N'"I at , ... 04~~ P1tol 4 Dle.tU"d 10 .t<' "Ol.ll'Ce • .,.. v>cf' 'IC!"' hl•f 80'-10 ,,..,. INS-~tff ,.,.IM' 1top bt I(> Ir .. VO\lf t•ChltOuS l>uS>l\4Pil lllf'mef'I II --.... __.. ... .....___ :rt. December t. 1.. -Cemetery • MOl1uar, ~e:.-.:--...::: ~:::--.==.:. ...:. ..._.. -.Pl -to •"7 ~ ';; ;;;,;; ' T-363 WoJJAJI V. BAYS,' C?\lpel • Cntm11t0f'f ~ Of ,..,...., CllrCleftt4J .. ae,fllH!lfte. (• ~ fWlab. In-...... Oil .,... Art ... ry 111 ...... away 0.-· 3500 Pec:•llC View Onve -.. ........... ~ .,.. ..... ....,.ollulo ...,..11,141..0 ~c..tNeMerti.nng, PWLJCllJTIC( • w '· .... la New· ~=" ....._ .....,.,._,. C1i1rt fll M ~ COUM11 fll (lat Todd L. ,_.,, M.O. ... T~arketlng. ""~Mr BaJt =-~-==:·.::-=...::, 1=..,....11'1.00=-ff~ ... c.::i:: PICTrnc:=IUlll8 .. Wtl ... itJ Mi .... .-., --. ,..... ,.,,...fll .. C.,Oll!IMI ~~...._ ...... -'· ..,...n•w wife Mar1•erlte; ...... wuoa ... .,_. fl .. Cir fll ._ ..... , m.• T"8 ~ In Cellfomla The flollOwlilO poraonaare •••lltWI 8. It er ..... ••••• ............. ...,.,;..... .......... ..... of-oNef~Offlcldolulg~-~ u.-La ... ................ fll ........ nnHllR -171 or .............. °"'°' AA COPE. CENTER ...,_, l"'l'W'T• ., ........ 119 ...... ,...... ....... .., .... , ...... ,...00 ftl11io1Mendedlnnlf9rot ll: SOUTH COAST. 2710 ... Rnhr1-Ber, ..., .. , •• ...,,..,... ,...,_,,,..., ...... a lall11tatod ooa1 for ...,..lllloWe H.nor St•. 30t. Cotta ...,,.,'::,-Bey -. ., lar .. ••24•• fl II .. t 1*1 I .... IUf9l"t Al ............. MIMI ...... 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"°" 1r,. 1 • .,. •... o 11>4' 1r1~ 10 l"f' C"'-•l HovM 1n Sa!'la A!'t1 ,,.,.. t'!I "TOU'I' 1lle1 ""' .... artJI s CO<TIP't'IN -... ,11 '·~ '/OV• tocl l>OU$ O\.IS<MSS nRmt ~IAlf'menl ••1111'1 tl'I• Coulll\' Clerk P\.lbl SI\ Of'l(I' I wH\ IC>< IOU• ~~' ' •f'Qu•rltO o; 1a .. 111'1<1 II' ,., t.i. ¥C>U• 1)1001 OI l)ublt• "'"°" ..,,11'1 lllt' Countv CIM> lllt O.<ty '""°' l~al ~· ~1 30 W~I ~I Cotta Mtn Cel•loin.. 11 "°"' can "QI ~100 by l)leltl' ea• us 411 I 1 1') 6'2 f321 Ealt!rttaon J ,~ or ) 16 '"" ~ ""'" rnat!-1rr.1n~~1s '°' "°"' 10 1'1.,.0!9 ll'l•t O<<X:~ure Cy ma~ II you sl'IOUkl !lave "'" lvrtn.. Que lions Olene call u1 1n<1 .. "''" oe mo•• 1111n ~.o to us111 \'OU oOd tuck 111 you• nf'"" bU''""SS" \ . .• 0r-. Coaat DAILY PILOT/ Tuetday. December e. 1988 • "Could you tie a hOle in the end of my rope like the cowboys have?" • llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson "You were in your best form. Marmaduke. I never heard you give a better GRRRRRR." PEANUTS I HEAR '<OUR· CHRISTMAS PL ~ w~ CAtKELED GARFIELD uON, THERE:5 A W MP IN THE TABLE.C.LOTH. f'LATfE.N IT OOT WITH THIS f'RE.NCM f>REAP TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE " i I i I ~,., L"'~~ TF.'/iN6 TO l>iSf~ovE i\-\E \\\£0'-'t "'H\~T A WAICHEl> POT N~Vltt &o\lS. 'Df\'f 2 . • [.:, DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ARLO AND JANIS SOWMEN OOf ~ eAU., SAAWN Awe> l I ) . ~ L FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE ~ "l JH0061.4T WE ~ OUT~ CEREAL I Bl.IT • 1~EN 1 FOUND~ POPCORN ! " . by Charles M. Schulz Ml.f BEST SCENE WAS U)~ERE JOSEPl-I DRIVES ~15 FAMILY TO E6'f'PT IN A '56 Tl4UNDERBIRD .. by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan t 6Uf.~ "MAT ltlN5N'T Wf. ee.!>T ~ ---TO PUT IT. _=-==::. by Pat Brady FUNKY WINKERBEAN' CIMDQ ... WE. CAw·r Ero.15E QQ.) FROM 5000k SIMPIJ,> BECA~ CKJoR. HAI R DIDWI ~. i..D()fC:. G(X)O .' ~ DOONESBURY ' . by Garry Trudeau HAVE A t .. .. . by Tom Batluk W~8'\ l SAW rNJ HAIR I rf MADE ME /U.. ! T_,_ IO '°""' .... 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