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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1990-08-07 - Orange Coast PilotTHE ORANGE COAST 25CENTS \. GOOD MORNING I h's Tuesday, Aug. 7, 1990, and here's what's happenina: OR.ANGE COAST WEATHER: Mostly sunny, chance of late thundentorms. TMaJ't .ap/a.w: 7•-M Yesterday's h~flow: 7(}.66 Tomorrow's h1ah/low: 76-65 Z+-HOU• HOTUN• TO TH• llOITOll 642-6086 INSIDE THE NEWSROOM: Those attorneys, you gotta love 'cm ... We received a letter the other day from a lawyer in Hawaii who said he was in town recently and saw our July 21 story about a man who had his left arm severed by a ski boat's propeller. "At the outset, let me advise you that l am not solicitin' busfoeu. I do not need it,' wrote James K.rueacr. whose office is in Wailuku on the island of Maui ... He went on to say that be wants to get in touch with the injured man ... "I would love to speak with him and share my involvement in propeller guard litigation," K.ru~r wrote. We vc beard of ambulance chasers ... But jct ski chasers? lo ail fairness to Mr. Ktueacr. he did say that he has become personally interested in "aquatic litiaaoon" beQuse be swuns the channels between the islands and has seen the absolute evil that jct skis c.an do ... In fact, he said this was the first time in his life he'd written to a newspaper about mattcn such as this ... "If 1t were not for the fact that we have beeh so intimate!)' in- volved ... in this type of horror. 1 would not have done so." WIAn.RAND OCIAN CONDITIONS ......... .u,., ........ Air tMYIJ. Unhealthful with a PSI forecast of I 00. ...... eeMlllw: Beachel an reooninl poor ~ didoal-wida f-3 b>t wava did a water tempetat'1re of : .. ~ Oood catcbe1 of Mad blill. bonita and dondo repotted. ...... 11•••1· Vari- able wiDdt I IO 1 • knoll but local IUllS to 30 knoll near tfiundeutorm 1 tbroup 1oni1Jn. Swell IOUtbWCll l feet. PanJy cloudy with ieolated thua-dlnaor'IDI mainly in the ... afternoon and nisbt. INDEX Bridge 85 Business A4 Clasffled 84-6 Cro~d 85 Enterumrnmr A6 Horoscope 85 AM Landers AS Optnlon A8 PoNce Log Al Put>tk notices 87...a Socfety AS Sports 91 .. 3 TV Nstlngs A6 Wuthet. M TODAY'S THOUGHT ·~ purpo~ "' ~ dom II to Cl'Nt~ It ftX TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1990 FundAmerica ·fireS ·new executive Judge extends order freezing firm's assets about 100,000 membcn nationwide. Edwards was UT'CSlCd last monda and chal'led in Aorida witb rwuaiDI an illepf lottery. Prosecuson there aUeac Edwards. tbrouah Fund- America, bilked Aorida residents out of about S8.2 million throulb a pyramid scheme. IRVlNE-Oaimina he made too many waves, the newly appointed head of troubled f undAmcrica lnc., which prosecutors call an illcpJ pyramid scheme, said Monday he was fired after only a week on the job. Howard Ruff, named chief ex- ecutive of the privately held Irvine company last Tuesday was sacked after a secret meeting Sunday niaht of shareholders, he said in a state- ment. Frederick H. Kranz, who was rep. resentina FundAmerica before a fed· eral jud&e in San Francisco on Mon- day, confirmed that Ruff bad been fired. He said he d id not know the reason. RufT also said FundAmcrica would seek bankruptcy protection. But Kranz, who conceded the firm was originally JOin& to seek bankruptcy protection today, said an 11 lh hour decision was made to work with the federal court to restructure FundAmcrica. Ruff said he anaered shareholders bccawe be accused bis ~r. company founder Robert T. Ed· wards, of actting SS.4 million in salary and fees last year and wirin& millions of dollan overseas before bis arrest on fraud charges. ~1 believe I was sacked because l wu honest, .. he said. The statement continued: "I wu sacked because I reveaJed true but damqing infor- mation about Bob Edwards.·· FundAmenca sells memberships in cxchan,e for rebates on consumer aoods and services. Sales associates tan eam bonuses for selling more memberships. The company has Edwards, free on S l million bail, denies the char&es. Kranz said no Fund.Ameri~ membcnbips would be sold until the company's problems are ~ solved and it is restructured. At Monday's hearina in U.S. ~ ·~-IM'1ftD/a.dcft ... f Coast congressmen: Kill Hussein Workers rescued Ditch almost becomes grave for two men By EMILY ADAMS ~,._ kalfll/- CORONA DEL MAR -Two construction workers nearly saw the deep pit they were working in become an early srave Monday momina after an unsul>poncd din wall caved in, buryina the pair up to their necks. Tom Row, 35, and Anthony Vidana. 42. were la_ying sewer hne alonp1de East Coast Hiah· way just before 9:40 a.m. when a poroon of the dirt wall collapsed, sendina a tidal wave of earth down the trench to where the men were working. Three of their fellow crew members Jumped into the ap- proximately 3()..foot deep ditch and furiously dua into the earth with hands and shovels. When firefighters arrived moments later, the men had been un· covered to their hips. Vidana, a Riverside resident, suffered a broken lq. but was released from Hoag Memorial Hospital by midaftemoon. Row was treated and released to his Costa Mesa home Monday af\cr· noon. He complained of lea pains but X-rays revca.led no fractures, said Pam Bolen, spokeswoman for Hoq.. Vidana and Row were prcpar- 1n1 to lay sewer line in a part of the ditch where sheer dirt walls were supported by a steel box. Further down the trench, crew memben were acttinJ ready to lower in another 3-s1doo metal box support when the wall crumbled, sending tons of dirt and rocks flyina down the trench. "I've been doing this work for 22 yean and I've seen thinp like this happen before, but you never really act over it," said crew foreman John Boos, as he watch- ed J>&tlmedics check over Vidana and Row. ..., .... ,....., ...... ...._ AnttlonJ Vidana 11 ttfted to the top of th• dlt:clt bf reKue worll•n. Visibly shaken by the ava- lanche and quick rescue, most memben of the seven or eiaht· member crew peced the pit's edec. swina into the hole where their co-workers nearly suf- focated. "We were aoina to shore up those walls today;• said Al Walker, one of the men who helped di& Vidana and Row out with his hands. "I've never seen anythina like this happen before. I just can't believe it.•• The new tewcr hnc, be1n& 1n· stalled by the W.H. Eben Corp .. will eventually service a aotf coune complex planned for The Irvine Co:s Newpon Coast de-- velopment. W.H. Ebert Corp. WU COO· tn1cted for the projm by Oranae County Sanitation District um bet The cave-10 alto cut phone cables. resultina in a phone tcr· vice outqe to about 2S,000 t.aauna 8acb n:sidenu and the poDcc department iMre, ofTacia.ls said. ··we couldn't dial out of the station for a while1 •• said Laauna Bach Police S.t. Lance l&hmael. He added the police station wu not all'ected until about 3 p.m. ••Apparently wt.ell Ibey (reed ................. -............. ,__As ..... _,VI .. -. the tw0 wonen and reteued the sborint \Mt ... ... the ..U. Of the U'eGdl &om caviJll ill, it ~ out about 1,000 ,_ or r.atc aeu catM on eitber eed of th trench." Paclell "' -• orrot/ledl r ... 'Unleash U.S. 's wrath on ecQnomic, military targets' 8y TONY DOOERO .,..,, ,._ ..... ·- COST A MESA -)( local con· aressmen have their way, citizens of the Iraqi capital of Bqhdad have aood reason to prepare for an American attack. Iraq's attack on the 011-nch coun- try of Kuwait and the capture Mon· Middle East tensions escalate; u .N. orders embargo against Iraq Please lff Page A.9 day of American citizens there should result in U.S. military action, the conaressmcn said. Rep. O.na RohrabKher, R-Hunt- 1naton Beach. said whjlc the U.S. should take steps to prevent harm- ina innocent citizens in Iraq, Prcs1· dent Saddam Huuein 1s fair pme. "We should find out where Mr. Hussein sleeps and then level that entire block." Robrabacbcr said. "Rather than just kill a lot of Iraqis, we should just make sure be·s dead." .. There are many economic talJCU that we could take out without tak· ina the life of a sin~ Iraqi citizen, .. Rohrabacher said. 'If America 1s to be a leader ID the post C.old War. we have aot to act boldly and ID· tclhacntly in this cnsis." Rep. Robert Doman. R-Gardcn Grove, called Hussein the "Thief of Baahdad," tuma the title from a old movie. He said Huuc1n's attack on Kuwait was "utter thievery." "He swallowed the country to steal money. to get at th~ banks and to act at the 011," he said. And he said the tak.ina of 28 American citizens will JUSt add fuel to the fire. "That will probably brina a mih· tary wrath on himself," Doman said. Rep. Chnstoper Cox, R-Newport Beach. said the Iraqi attack on ,..._ ... '" COAST /F"MJe A9 DA won't file felony charges against inan in 120-mph chase 8y ""5 YOkOf ~ .............. NEWPORT BEACH -Althouah pohce here requested harsher cbarp be filed. a man suspected of uuultina a ~. sidcsw;ptnt a car and lead1Q& ofticen on a 120- mpb chate to the Mexican border last month remains free on m1sde· mca.nor chaf'ICS. The Dtatnct Attorney's office re- jeclecl Newpon Beach pohcc ~t«· ~ ttves' rcq_ucst that Satvatorre Madonna. 3'&, of HuntJ"lton lelcb, be cbarlcd Wlth ftlony evadina police charaes. Instead, the prottCUton filed five chaJ'ICS OS nmdtmeuor bit and ND. cvadina-annt. uuuh and baoery and reckless dnv1ns apiftst Madon- na. uwe submitted • rectuest. '°' fel- ony evldina." Nt'W'DCC\ 9-c.b Police ....._. .. CHAIS/a.a ...... Chunk of pier collapses . , . . t•1.· ·. . ... ,,..~.~~~ ,, .. .,~ •' . - •. .. • • ' I. ' ~ .. ' • • 4"•• \ .. ~-.. 1-••"".-•I .... .t--~ ... ' I ._;,, ............ _... __ ~---~------------~-~--. .J. • .. lylC)9't/NlnuN .............. COSTA MDA -It wuo't a ~ Ubly to .,. city f\and. lQI. but the poup of about JO Qrueie Counly an:iltl wbo stood up at Monday'1 City Council meeuna made their point anyway: '"Our purpose i1 to mua people tosether to set the meuqe across \Ut we won't accept censorship," said Randy Pesqueira. a Costa Mesa performance arust and leader of the protest apjnst last month's City Council action restricting arts grants. Tbe CCNDC:il"I Jilly 17 l'llOhlrioa Dl'Obibited the '* of city aria pull tor pc>aitical lobbyiQ&. or for oblcme or abusive malerlal. Tbe council's action came at 1 time when the i11ues. of centonhip and community standarda were beina debated 1t the national level with the controveny over fundina for the National Endowment for the Arts. Many artists have said they fear 1 risina ude of censorship in the U.S. Monday's protestors who drew lauahter when they hcid likeneues of Mayor Peter Buffa in front of lbeir faces duri111 \heir .couaciJ IP-pearuce, laid afterwards that tbey couideted the iuue no lauahin& matter. .,... "I'm bere laraely out of ~fear." Fullerton ll1ilt lW1 Hayner said. ··As 1 serious anill for the put '' )'tell, it really teara me when people in power make decisions bued on a lack of undentandina of what art is, and what 1rti1t1 arc. "People have a tUte notion that artists arc irrapon&ible people who feel that aocicty owes them a livi.na. The people who pthcred here today are v ery responsible people who care about our hedam ol eapr111l-." Council ...... 4iMieh11d ... pro&et&Orl' 11Alemeata. wbicb lm- jlilied tbt tbe Nl&ric&iw ......_ wu adopted folJowi119 I dedaiOa tiiebind cloted doors. ... can't believe lie (Pelcauein) wu 11 the ume m~" lufta Slid. "Yes, we Ud a doiled -'oe 10 diacu11 lililltion. but · cuJtunl UIS ara.nts were not eva dieaamed." Council~ Sandy Oenia llid the restrict1on1 on ci1y uu pa.Dia have nolhina to do with oenaOnbip or First Amecdment riabta. "All it does is realllrm that You can't do anythina illepl, .. she uid. Man claims his father helped kill Kennedy ly CHARLES RICHARDS ~,,_..,_ DALLAS -Adding yet another theory to the bulging file on the assassination of John F. Kennedy, an unemployed Texas salesman on ~onday claimed his father was one of three ' people who killed the president. Ricky Don White contends his father joined the Dallas police department in Septem~r 1963 )to carry out the assassination. He said his father, •Roscoe White, was one of three CIA operatives t who fired the shots. J Tbe CIA issued an unusually strong rebuttal po White's claims. • "These allegations -that this was done on !CIA orders, that this guy worked for us and that CIA had any role in the assassination of Presi- dent Kennedy -are ludicrous." CIA spokesman ~Mark Mansfield said in Washington. ' Roscoe White never worked for the CIA. >Mansfield said. "Normall). we never confirm nor f deny employment, but these allegations are so I ou~cous that we felt it necessary and ap- propnate to respond," he said. The FBI said in a brief statement that it had received the same information in 1988 but "determined that this information is not credi- ble." The Warren Commission concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone, fired the shots that killed Kennedy and wounded John Connally. then the Texas governor, on Nov. 22, 1963 in Dallas. Despite the commission's find ings, con- spiracy theories have abounded since the as- sassination. Ricky White said at a news conference that his father also killed Dallas police offi cer J. D. Tippit about an hour af\er the assassination. Tippit's killing has been blamed on Oswald. White said his father served 1n the Marines with Oswald, who he said also was pan or the conspiracy but fired no shots. Roscoe White died in 1971 from bums suffered in a fire. Ricky White, 29, is a former oil equipment saJesman from Midland. He made his claims during a news conference at the JFK Assassina- tion f nformation Center, a privately run group that researches various assassination theories. White acknowledged he has tried to sell a book or movie on his theory. White said he drew hi s conclusions from what he read in his father's diary and from his parents' discussion with a minister. White said he got the diary af\er his father's death and never showed it to anyone. He said the diary disap~ared af\er he talked fO fhe FBI about his theory in 1988. White sajd his father referred to himself in the diary by a CIA code name of "Mandarin" and to two other CIA operatives -"Lebanon·· and ''Saul." White claimed his father was on a grassy knoll in front of the presidential caravan and fired two shots that struck Kennedy, accord- ing to the diary. jReport says lives of thousands Thunderstorms hit Southland !of inf ants could be saved yearly ! WASHINGTON -The lives of New York Times earned an account and an estimated 100,000 disabling 10,000 babies could be saved each in its Monda} editions. conditions in the newborn," the re-~car and another 100,000 could be Another cop) was obtained on pon said. ~pared a lifetime of disability if the Tuesday by The Associated Press. Some '40.000 infants die annually ,United States applies the medical "We arc anxious to see a final in the United States and another iskill it alread} has. a draft report 10 report out of the president, followed 400,000 arc handicapped by mental Uhe president says. b) leadership,.. said former Sen. retardation or physical problems, That would represent a 25 percent La\\ ton Chiles. chairman of the Na-the report said. {reduction in infant deaths and dis-11onal Commission to Prevent 1 n-Slightly fewer than 4 million 1abilities. fant Monaht). 1n a statement on babies arc born in the United States : Some pregnant "'omen don·t get Tuesda}. every )'ear. !needed medical care for themsehes Chiles said an add1tonal annual In 1987 the U.S. infant mortality and their unborn children because expend11ure of )500 m1lhon. or rate was 10.1 deaths per 1,000 live they can't alTord 11. can't get to "onl~ one-tenth of I percent of the births. a rate bettered b> 21 other ,where 1t 1s or can't fill out the forms total spending annuall~ on personal industrial countnes and tY.1ce the Ito get the go\emment to pa~ thei r health care in the L' ~ :· lOuld put rate 1n Japan and Scandinavia. For bills. the report said. recommendations of the report into blad..s the rate "'as 17.9 deaths and "For some women "'ho ne<.'d as-efTcrt for Y>h11es 11 "'as 8.6 deaths. : s1stance and quallf> for 1t. the com-Sixt) percent of the babies "ho ThoS( rates havt been declining, i plex1ty of th e Medicaid quahf> 1ng die before their first b1rthda)'\ but the report noted that the rate of I process ~~self ... comt1tutes a .. bamer "'c1ghed ks'> than 5 5 pound~ at dt•chnc for blacks has slowed. And to _care. the report says. Apph-birth. the re port said the fetal death rate for blacks went , cations can ~ length> (the> a' eragc Another common charactenst1l 1s up 2. 7 percent in 1987. the fi rst 1 14 _pages) and require m.?re 'enfi· the) come from poor families. Other incrca\C since the 1960s. LOS ANGELES -A spectacular series of lightni ng storms lit up Southern California on Monday night, knocking out power, spar .. ·"'L......a- fires and dousing drought-struc residents with bncf, hard showers. For a second day, tropical moisture built up thunderheads in the mountains and descns which by ni~t had rolled over urban areas with a bhstcnng light show and ear- splitting cracks of thunder. Alona the popular parking stretch of Mulholland Dn-.e. the curious ventured out 10 \\atch the continous lightning stnkes. The unsettled weather was ex- pected to continue through Wednes- day. There were no repons of iniunes. The National Weather Service re- corded 40 lightning stnkes in a half- hour in northern Los Angeles Coun- ty and the mountains of Kern Coun- . ty, lead forecaster Bob Grebe said. SHE IS--------- The reigning Miss America Starlet. The Newport Beach 3-ycar- old captured the honor last Au,aust and will be surrendering the title of "the most beautiful httle girl in America" to her successor this month. A NATURAL BEAUTY---- Bnltany's mother. Shirlcan. said the judges of the national beaut) pageant based their selection of the }'Oungster on her "overall natural beauty and her personaht)." THE RIGHT REASONS---- While man} of the llttle girls seemed forced into the pageant b)'. their mother~. Brittan} 's mother said her daughter believed that "1f she win~ great. 1f not. that's OK :· THE FUTURE-------• cauon than a tax return. contnbuting reasons include ma· . I Copies of the draft report b) the temal alcohol and drug abuse. poor White House spokeswoma~ Ahxe White House Task on Infant Mor-diet. and smoking. Glen said the ~tudy began tn J~ly tality have been leaked by those who "By applying the knov. ledgc 11 1989 and there is no due date for lls 1 complain that the Bush adm1n1s-alread} has this country can prevent completion. Lightning bolts touched off two small brush fires in the mountains north of Granada Hills, authorities said. The fires burned about an acre each. A power surge from the lightning knocked out computers for a few minutes at the Associated Press building in downtown Los Angeles. Elsewhere downtown, an enormous many-pronged bolt ht up the sky over the towering First Interstate hiah-rise, prompting shrieks of de- light from late-01gh1 strollers who then were bneOy cfoused by a heavy shower. Brittany earned a S 1.000 savings bond, a $2,000 college scholarship and attracted the attention of a Hollywood talent agent. i tration has shelved the stud}. The an additional 10.000 infant deaths -By ,.e A11ocl1ted Ptt11 I I i WF OFFERS DESIGN CENTER PRICES DIRECT TO THE PUBLIC! Thunderstorms also were reported in Burbank. near Pomona and Riv- erside, Santa Monica and at El Toro Marine Air S1a11nn. -By Ille A,.oclated Pre,. A STAR IS BORN----- People used to come up to Sh1rlean Escobar and tell her she should gel Bnttany into show business. So far, Bnttany has done one commercial and was scheduled to do a final aud1t1on for another when she came down with something every child must contend wi1h -chicken pox. ·~ Compiled by Tim H•1lle1. EDITOR ·s NOTE: If you know someone who should be featured m "Orange Coasr People" c,al/ the Daily Pilot's City Desk ar 642-4321. or leave a message on the Editor's Horlme -642-6086. N~ws of the weird Podiatry student too involved in studies By CHUCK SHEPHERD In June, Little Rock. Ark .. police charged Michael Wyatt. 29, with assault af\er he pushed a woman to the ground. took off her shoes and socks, and began sucking her toes. Several other victims 1dcn111ied him as a "podiatry student" who had met them at a shoe store and. said a police de1ecl1ve later. "next thing you kno"'. he'd have a toe in his mouth.'' Police suspected Wyatt even ~fore the arrest because he had been arrested on similar charges several years ago but was released when he agreed to seek therapy. -0 The Georgia Bureau of lnvcstiga· t1on accused Emory U niversity stu- dent Sabrina Collins. 19, of making up racist threats against herself in May after they discovered various similarities in her handwnting and that of the threatening notes, includ· ing the propcns1t} to misspell "you're" as "your.'' 0 A Macon County, N.C.. man, showing off in front of friends in May, grabbed a rattlesnake out of the back of a truck. began kissins it on the body and head and slapping his hand with the snake's open mouth. When his hand began bleed- ing. he threw the snake back in the truck and drove off in his own truck. Pohce alened the local hospital to be ready. ORANGE COAST Telephone numbers Clrculatlon Ofang• County Legune Niguel Howard L Schramm Vice President Advertising & Ma.ttwting Daily Pilat VOL.M. NO. 211 Edlfor'a HoUlne 642-6086 Advert laing Claultied Otlplay Edltor1al ,.... Sport• tffwa, aporta fax 642-4333 495-6800 642·5678 642""'321 s.to-122' 642-.4330 6'6--4170 Mk:hNI Showell Vice President Circulation Pr.mod Sheh - Vee. Prulden1 COntro111r- O.vld Holett vie. PrHident Production . ' WFD offers Design Center-prices -direct to the public -on the finest lines from the best Design Center Showrooms. You 'll find Platt, Royal Custom. Dana Cr eath, Custom Craft and many, many more. all m one convenient Jocahon. Work with your own decorator or one of our talented designers and buy direct at lo w design er w holesale prices. WFD is the one stop source for all your ho me fur- nishings needs. Y041l oommeoll lbout Che Diiiy Pilot or news lip1 will be r900fded Mf 8'wn ~ ID Eda Wlli9ln Lobdtl. The..,,,. :M.houf en...mg MMcle ~ bl ueed ID reccwd .... ID .. editor ~ Mf topo. COndlulDn ID our Lenlrt ODMNt muat lndudt t.rr ,.,,. ........ ,...,,. ,_,,,.., '°' W9rificllion, "* .. YfM ~ ,,..,,.,.., .. wnt ,.,, ~ Mlln ottac. 8u1iMll office eu.ineufu 6'2""'321 831 ·5902 WIN*" S. LobdeU Vice Pr*lident and Editor J • -: • IN-HOUSE PROFESSIONAL DELIVERY • INSTALLATION AVAILABLE • LOW DESIGNER PRICES • FINEST FU RNITURE LINES • CONVENIENT HOURS (INCLUDING WEEKENDS) Sine• 1952 WFD -HOME FURNISHINGS 8c INTERIORS 18030 Euclid. Fountain Valley (714) 540-2275 (Euclid Exit off the 405 fwy.) ,fi!, wm • .... "*" O.lly Piiot dellvery ...,.. ... , If '°". not .... .,.,. ,... .., • a ..... Cll ...... noon.., ,.w co.., wll •......., Ctl ........ 10 • m .., -• "' II " you 111J noon. Our Ci m •• S.W.. C... 142..Q33, II open fram I a m ID '6 p.m. ••hdllrs. unll'*"on 1111tlre,,., muaJatyou wW'I '°"' drcule-. Ntdl To make • correction It ii f'9 OrMgl Coltc Dally Piac'1 ~ ID ~ oarr9Ct al tnor1 of .,.....,._, To ""°" 1n .,,_ • ~.CllM2~1 lndaekflllff'9ClllJ ... CMt't~ ~MllMget U..Tenney p,..p,... MeMo« Henry Knight p,...Room~ ' for the ~lrlt of Socrates P/11/osopMr's spirit ~vld~nt among Orange, Coast psyches Socn• tbll ,_., tivecl l,400 ~ llO in ......... i- lat to &he~ Colet. He WU tbc philolopher ol Alhena who utaend thal datardly liae, "The uneumined lilt i• noc wonb livlnt... That quote lw been bualina people for cen- turies. .. Recently, the ~onina Jim aptnt ofSocraln bas lhak- ina ue paycbes Ilona the Or-Wood •• Cout. Sunday,. at Community ••••iiiiiiiiiiiiii Church in Corona del Mar. the bulleti~ posed th.is q~ti~n: .. Picture life as a 24-hour day; now determine what time 1t 1 tn your lifer' Then the bulletin followed up with: "How much time bas already aone by?" "How much time do you have len?" and "How do you feel about the present time in your ltfe7" If Socntes were personally ask.ins these questions. he wouldn't allow readina on without anJwerina-SO let's take a break and answer up. 0 Funher e'o(idence the spirit of Socrate~ has visited the Oranac Coast is a little book sittina by the cash resister at Rizzoli's in South Coast Plaza. Ifs a do-it-yourself tuide to cxaminina a life. Amona 21 7 others, "The Book of Quesuons" by Greg Stock poses these zinaers: "What is the peatest accomplishment of your life?" "Do you hope to accom plish anythina arcater7" and "for a person you loved. would you move to a distant country knowing there's little chance of sceina family and friends apin?" Old Soc wouldn't let you off merely answerina those pesky devils. H(d press on. Herc's a toughie. especially for Orange Coast workachohcs: "Would you rather be successful professionally. with a tolenible private life; or have an extremely happy private hfe and only a tolerable. even unintpiri~ professional lifet· Now Soc wouldn't settle for, 'I want both to be excitina.." He'd zero in with, "How arc they now?" or "If you talk ofa happy private life, do your priorities suppon this bcliefr' and "Do you feel professional success leads to personal happiness?" As Plato soon di1eovercd, Socntes was impossible to jive. He kept bearina in; that was his method. So savc-)'OUnclf the embarrassment, answer these questions now. We'll call time out. 0 Final proof the &host of Socrates stalks the Orange Coast is Or. Alfred Painter of Mesa Verde. He's the fo rmer professor of Comparative Philosophy at Orange Coast CollCJC who's been labeled "Socrates Reincarnated." Yesterday, Al Painter held coun at Dicdrich's coffee patio on 17th Streerin Costa Mesa. " 'Why am I doina what I'm doinar is the critical question in uamining one's life," softly stated Al Painter. To that inquiry, he explained, there are three basic responses: "For survival: for personal satisfaction and ... 'to kttp up with the Joneses.' " Unfortunately, accordma to the 25-year resident of 1he Orange Coast, 100 many local residents fall into the later category. "And we do it unknowingly," he added. "by not constantly 'examining' our lives.'' Or. Paanter feels the biuest trap for an individual to measure success by their things rather than their contributions to society. Somewhat surprisingly, the former Coast College professor feels Socrates would r.1ve aood grades to Don Bren and Hcnt) Scgcrstrom in the examanatton of their lives. "By and large they arc contnbutang to society. rather than JUSt taking." said the contented 7b-)car-old who looks like a model an a Bank of Amenca ad touting early retirement. "Socrates urged people to judge their own hves.'' s:i1d the man known as Socrates Reincarnated. "by getting them to question whether their behcfs we~ imposed b)' others or came f rrcl) from withm?" Af\cr complet1na that process. both Socrates and <\I Pamtcr believe all people have unique belief$ and experiences 1ha1 ran make a cof ribut1on. "'The trick 1s to find where you fil an to soc1et>. then live t,"' said the Oranae Coas1lhilosophcr. hen Al Painter conclude . "If Socrates were al Dc1dnch's toda he'd ask everyone in this patio. 'Who arc you and what 1s your contribution?' And he wouldn't leave without an ans"'cr." Will the spirit of Socrates continue 10 stalk the Orange Coast? Jim Wood'• col•m• "'JI' s .. d•y1 .. d T•~•d•Y•· Police seek public's help NEWPORT BEACH -Police de- tectives seek the public's help in 1denufym1 the neatly v oomc:d. armed suspect wh o robbtd a Jewelry store last week af\er binding the two shop owners. Police have released a composite drawina of the possible suspect, who is descnbcd as a male white, about 40 years old, 6 feet tall. 200 ~unds. muscular and well-tanned. Wlth blue eyes. black and aray hair and neatly trimmed mustache and beard. He wore a araY sport coat. dark blue slacks and a white shirt. Herc an the winning plarinJ card numbers picked Monday niaht for the Cahfornia Lottery's daily "Dccco" aamc: 'V Hearts: 8. •Clubs: 6. 01 Diamonds: Jack. •Spades: 7. Players who correctly auessed all four cards will win SS,000. Newport's first local delivered in 1884 • la Newpert Buck The first "local" was Albert Duane, born in 188-4 in Newport Landin&. His pa~nts.. real Newpon pioneers. had 12 children includina Ramona DuaneJ. born in 1888, ho b«ame a charter member ot the Ntwpon Beach Historical Society and was an acfriiittd and beloved member of the community. • la C.&a Meta: In June, 1930, Willard Mellon was awarded the contract for buildin1 the nrst school offitt for Newpon Harbor Hiah Schoo&. planned to be<lome lhe care\aker·s hoUJt af\tr conllrucUon of the 1ehool wu compldcd. ... ~ 1 11•: frank OaDrieft WM called the Santa Claus anist _..._ he did tool! lite that jolly old elf. WMn his cat died. the locaJ ~per pw it a full column obitUlf)'. It never hurts to be nu to Sl. Niel. . .. a----.... ne NeWtand HOUK "* ptdco ... crated by Ute H•ntiftll08 lelcb Ki110rica1 Society u11ns old rota and other P'-nta reprarn..Uve of local ltonic'Uhure at the tum of the cenhll). «M1P l»I YOlt «.-.~wilt ill'IWI Ofltitforital rnlmlf. ' Sittd yow IW to l»I Yow ~. OH •• C.. ...., ...., l'.0 . b IJIO. C.... A*-.,,_. ' 411 1111 ., Aw .... } m be on crime spr Wounded officer-cecov.ecing i _ San Diego hospital-~-~ ., ... YMM• ............... lur ... lbot. YMrrOedo laid. A8 wWent .....,.,.._ apen 0-mu came mound '° coUet1 .ueta Md ..,, aid be dida't have police Lt. Jdf (:opc mt ......... made YP of officen uaieM ta, ~i cbololis\I lO belp out ia ._ 4!:) HUNTINGTON BEACH -ho ........... wliM» lllot ID oft'-cluty HuatiDllOll lllCll police ofllcer d~ las I bOlel robbet i could be OD I montb·loat crime .,,., robbiaa tevenl SU ~ bo1e1t in the ptOCell. ~~ llid Monday. witb tbe HuaUftllOD lllda ....,_ meet'• .... divhlOD. ..,, ... VICationiJll wilh bit ftancee and two dllllbten when he walked into the Haml*>ft Inn ·off Kiabway lO lite Saturday. OM. ~ &be buJee from lerr's pillol, t ia his bldt poc:Ut. tbe robber laid he •w I wallet in Barr•a pocUt, Yblrrondo said. t..s fiUCle and • I'• ~ maiMd at his side Monday, but dil""• "°' wish to comment Oil tbe iaci- Police otticer Robert Ray Ban remains in fair coadidoo in in- lenlive care at Sharp Memorial Hot- pilal in San Dieeo, ~ lhoepn WOUDdl to his riabt tbiP and left dbo~ foUowina the Saturday niaJtt shootana. He was only in the lobby for ~ts bef~ two masked men bunc into the hotel and shouted at evtty0ne to ~t on the pound. Sev- eral people were in the lobby. but Barr wu tbe only one injured Ybar- rondo said. ' WiUl a tplit teeond to react, Barr tailed bim1tlf to his knees. &rabbed bis pn and fir1'd one sbot, Ybarron- do said. Tbe shot milled iu t;arJiet and one robber shot bKk. ~ituna 8ltr ia the tbiP, Barr fell and the auaman fired lp.inJ. hittina the policeman in the len dbow with tbolaun pellets, Ybarrondo said. deaL ..,; In tbe same eeneraJ vidaity, .....-.: bave been at least two or __. similar botrl robberies in tbe ~ few weeks -before Saturday ~ Sunday niaht•' heilu, ~ said. Tbe men te~ to prey on modera hotels near fiieway off-ramps. V.- rondo said. Bur, armed witb a pistol. WU shot after he attempted to stop the robbery. San Dieeo police Lt. Paul Ybarrondo said. While one man jumped the counter to empty the inn's cash repster, and the other robber looked away, Barr slipped his wallet out of his back pocket and toued it under a nearby couch. Barr's wallet con- tained his policeman's bidet. which could've put him in danaer had the thieves seen it, Ybarrondo said. Both men fled aft.er the shooti~ r\UUUJ\I put the car where Barr I faancee and dauabter were waitina, Yberrondo said. 1'hey bad beard the shots. but didn't see the lhootina.. Wjtncstes from the weekend tolt beriet dctcribed the two '"':~ black men wcarina dark · and 10me type of hood or t.ndMt ooverina their faces. Ybarroeda said. One man is about 6-feet-1 .. iadl and the other is about S-feet-1 ().. inches tall. The two men eteaped and may be responsible for stJc~ up a Quality Inn on Sunday · t, just tbrtt miles away from t hotel where Saturday ni&ht. thru members of the Huntinaton Beach police Trauma Support Unit drove to San Dteao to help Barr and his family. Winners ..., .... ,.._ The ............ .,.. ht .... Ora,._ Coat D~ Piiot. -K-oCEAN ''Ludry Ucense Bumper Stidcef'' contest ate levetty Glauber. ~ of lalboa. and Rober lurnh•m of Newport Beach. Gaido tries to obtain seat through courts 8y KAREN AUGE Lunding and !)tephen loonu rep- resented In inc on other matters concerning the same disputed ord1-IR VINE -Saying she 1s "putting nancc. the) cannot represent Ga1do. m)' faith in \M JUd1c1al system .'' A hcanng on Gaado's smt 1s City Council hopeful Mary Ann scheduled for Aug. 31 . Gaado said Monday that she will not Ga1do finished third in the June campaign for a disputed council post Caty Council race. As the third-place 1f a special clecuon is held in No-finisher. she could ha Ye assumed the vcmber. scat vacated when Sally Anne The former chairwoma'°n of Sheridan was elected mayor. How- lrvane's Planning Commission said ever. cit) la~ permits residents to she hopes to wan a court suit aimed pet1t1on for a special election to fill at forcing the current council to scat that scat. her in the now-vacant council ~Jt:----Residents ha ve submitted enough But 1f the court battle is lost. s1anaturts and the City Council has Gaido said she will not panici pa1e set an election for Nov. 6. However. an a November election. "I gave 1t Gaido's attorneys contend that the my all (in June's election). I put in petitions contained errors 1n the my own money. and used my va-s1'"atures and should be voided. cation time. Now I'm puttina my Ga1do ~ad she 1s no\ read) to trust in the courts." waac another campai&n if the sun as A hearina is scheduled Aug. 16 in unsucnssful. "Campajin1ng 1s naor- Oranat County Superior Court to ous and exhaustin1-" she satd. determine whether Gaido's at-The deadline for candidates to tomeys can represent her. The city submit nomanattnJ papers to run an contends that because Franklin a November elecuon as Aug. 10. City employee accused of gro'Ning marijuana on Irvine Co. property ly KAREN AUGE 0.-, "-"""" - IRVI E -A city strttt ma101enance work" resigned Monday aOe r he was ca1.1aht allegedly transportma manJuana an a cit) truck and attcmptjna to replant the 1llepl Wttd on Irvine Co. property. John M. Balch. 35, of lmnc. was arrested early Sunday on susp1c1on of culuvauna mariJuana after an Irvine Co. deputy spotted him allqcdly arryina "a vecn leafy object in a bucket." acoordina to Irvine police reports. Police theonze that Balch. who had worked on the city's stRC• crew for more than a year, had moved the plants from another location and was auemptan1 to re-plant them when he was arrested. said Sat. Phil Povey · Balch is accused of tryina to cultivate the plants alonpide a crttkbtd on Irvine Co. property near Jeffrey Road between Irvine Center Drive and Barranca Parkway. lnvcstiptors beheve Balch moved the five or six plants from an orancc arove near the Oranaetrce ~rhood where he lives. said City Manqcr Paul Brady Jr Balch may have used a city truck because.' has dnver's license had bttn suspended rc«ntly. Brady said. Terms of the suspension allowed Balch to dnve to and from work and for work·rtlatcd purpost'' ' i . ' ' Gunmen rob theater employees HUNT -.------.. INGTON BEACH - A s-ir of aunmen suspected of kid- nappi na a theater manaaer and ticket taker and steaJina S900 in receipts they were about to de- po&it remained at la.rte Tuesday. Tbe Edwards Ci nema em -._ _ __._ ployets were forced into the backseat of their own car by the suspects just before midntabt befo~ they had a chance to deposit the money at the Sanwa Bank branch at 6881 Warner Ave., said Hunt1n1ton Beach Police Lt. Jeff Cope, who detcribed tl)e incident "While OM of (the suspects) dnv· es. the othtt takes the cash ttetipu and their wallets,'' Cope said. The victim• were "ordettd to lay on the floor'' while t~ robbtts. armed wilh a 9mm handaun. ente:nd the northbound lanes or the San D!eeo (40~) freeway at Golden Wat Street, wfacre the theater cm· plo~ were Ill free, Copt said. dMe dro~ away 1n • be\ac. 1917 o,ota Camry, licmtt number 2ECNIM, Mllicl. u.a.un ia &M 1nddeat wctt the9W ~ynaoed Meaky. ~ ol 5911 ad fAllar Toll. II, olHun..._. Cope aid. .. ~wen.....,._ Olhn W. obviously beiae ptetty ~ ... Cope-'l. ......, 00' 1*tr9 .... c.. .... 0 C101hcs, 1nclud1n' a Turkish leather JKkCI. were $10len rom a home 1n the 300 block of Bay Strttl between 4 p.m Friday and 2 a.m. Saturday. ·O l<Jlchen uems and clo1hn with a lotal value of $200 were stolen from a prqr stor..,c locker between S p.m. Saturda)' and 9-1 S a m unday 0 Someone took beer from •he cooler at thc Cirdc K Markel, 19 13 Pomona Ave .. and ran out without pey1na. The thcf\ occun-ed at 1.20 a.m Sa111rday. Fountain Valley A waiter 11 Coco'' Rettaurant. 16291 Broollhun1 I • ~ti s1ruck 1n the head by an assailant s~1f\lln1 a metal touter rack. a BuraJ&n en1ered 1hrouah an open pr- 11' door 1n the 16930 block of Hctma and stoic a c.ha1n ,..., val~ at SI 10 a A woman ahoc>Pnc at 1be Ponce Club. I 7900 N~hope St.. came out of the store to find a 4-ilt(h 1Cr11lch an htt car 0 -Thiev~ fl'l\Cftd the '*"-yMd of a rcs1den« 1n \hf I I 800 of Ina and siolc a tool boll and a btcyrlc worth $320. Huntiqtoa Be.eh The ow.er ot a 19'9 Niuan Stntra 1n the 1300 ~ ot Slattt rtDOftcd 10 "°'ice that vandUI ehot bulkt ~ into '"' Cit. a ~••lllhed•tthewi~of OtalUC Sb1et aftd Surf. 19092 leecb •Yd. ......... of( wttll ~ uddodltt ... I 0 In lk 1'100 tllocll o( Ambttteef Cude • a tnldnt 11po11ed that • l"O'IP. ot rnte Weft CNt °" ................. aad ......... I nine Three men in a red Toyota pickup used rocks. bottln and recychnJ bins to wink dcstrucuon in Woodbrid&e late Sunday and early Monday The same vandals are bel~ved rnpon- sibk for four separate 1nC"1dcn11 which occurred betWttn midnl&ht and I a.m. In the fint 1nd dcnt. 1 rock sailed throuah a window al a rtstdtn<'t' on Fremont. about 12: IS a m. Monday, damaaina 1 k.itchen wtndow 5Crttn La\er, a rock went throuah a window at a home on West Tren1on. Soon aft«· ward. a oty recylina er.~ was uJed to break a \<Cl\lck W1ndoW I few blocks ·~)'. The dcsl.NCtive sprtt 1ppartn1ly en<kd ~II the vandals tos~ a boule thl"C>Ulh the rar wtndow of a l~IS Dc>dlt pwktd ak>nl Lnm Strttl The~ ~icle was dncnbed only as a red Toyota P'(lup truck 0 A mailbox on Ea11 Yale Loop ...as blown up by llnlrnown ~ans latt un- day n•t. 0 Tbc rear la«n1e plate was stolen from ~ l.911 To)o&a Cam')' while 11 wu perked in the 18000 block of Culver Dtwe Sunday. 0 A woman t'Oft\p&a1ned that a tan man 1n an oldcrernockl Cl\evrolet 81&1er. which had a l®d muttkr. pulled her hair. 0 A window wu ab04 out 1n the bend room of Sima Vas\a Middle hoot. on 2 Libert)'. a A man WU reponcd bra.ndlshtn( I knife outside Mickey's Sports Tavern. S 70 Coast Hl&hway. Newport Beach Pohce hctt are ask1na. "Where's the ~,.,.. A"'4-foot-t.aJl 9-fcct-lona fibttalaSI ~ was stolen from outside the Elks ~. 34S6 Via Opono. early Sa1urday morn- 1na. -The man repon1na the Ion tokt ~ he was S\IYll'I at the lodct to wateb equipment. 1ncl~1na the cow. that ft-as left outs.Ide. He fttl ulcc'p around ) IJft. aod '*hen he awoke II 6 a.m .. the wtu11e COW •llh a brown bead WU fOM. The man to6d police the cow WU IOU'I 10 bt' used. 1n tome un'P'Cificd way: st an upcomu-a f\and-ra1tcr. 0 . Someone bombankd thftle can and a houJC 1n the 1400 bloc.k al Man'1cn On"e with ewp. bedly ctamesana }M paint on one car 0 The owner ofChriattl'• 9ou1ique, 3141 Via Udo. we& tftf°onMd by a ~ that a mu wa1 ma.11 .. dothn (tom Ge front of 1tw ttore. The OWftft' natltcd to lhe fronl of tbc store but by dw'ft llle man, and five PHI tuitJ.. wen ~ 0 A tnaft wh.ta a deep. tRlf voice Clllld the ShmlOft Newpon, ·~' MK-4,,.., !I~~.~.::''=== ukcd _..., -..... 1lllkilll ....... limply 11111 nul ......... • a ""'____. ____ ..... '"'°a Hm11.-...... M .... -...... ~u • dlt lOO .._.. ti V61 ()Illa. o..~ ......... ,_ .. ,..,...., fted • -' I ......, llt t-11•~ ____ ................ ~ ... ........ _ .. >1rlh •• . •• •• : Adtlantage .Life ~ contraet-s with drugstore chain ltylftMLOM .................. LAOUNA HIUS • Ridin& the wave of the nalion'• uti-amotina fever, Advan119e Life 1\-oductt liped 1 conlrlet with tbe nation •11arpt druptore cbai.n for distribubOD of die Ci&Amll aop- amotina aya1e1n. o Riio-Aid Drua Stora, bued in ffarriabws. Pa., llfeed to carry AdvulllC Ufe'a Ci&Anat productt in iu 2.400 l10res localed thro\llbout the Eal1em United States. Tbe apeement parantees · CiaArrat cbeckout stand s>laomlent at all retail outlets. The .ettlement of a lawsu.it Jut month between AdvanlllC Life and QaArrest muufacturer More Direct Health Productt Inc., · oba.ted in Carlsbed. peved the way for the distribution ..,.eemeot. · aocordin& to Charles Sleicbter, president and CEO of Lquna HUI ... i hued Advantqe Ufe. Mott Direct sued Advantqe Life in 1989, clwaina the company with bnlechina a distribution qreement. Advantqc counter-sued in December, claimina SSO million in dam~. The settlement aives Advantqc Life the ri&ht to distribute CJ&Anest products in per- petuity, replacina what had been a six-year distribution qreemenl In excbanae1 Mott Direct was aiven the right 10 purcbue 400,000 shares of .i.avantaa.e Life stock at a fixed pncc. Also. More Direct"s president and CEO John Bancroft will be nominated for Advan• Life"s board of directors at the annual shareholders' meetina tn September. . Advantqc Life is the ea;clusive distributor of CiJAr!'Clt and -:_ claima 10 have an 80 percent share of the smokin& cessation buaineu :. with distribution in mott than 30,000 retail outlets throuahout the .·cowitry. :· AdvantafC Life also created its own product -Smoker's Choioc • - a JUm intended 10 quench the cravina of smokers who :: increuanaly find them.elves in non-smoking environments. .- TODAY'S--· DAILY PILOT K-OCEAN LUCKY LICENSE PHOTO WINNER :: LICENSE # HMS ABV .. · DEADLINE: 12:00 Noon Tomorrow (Satutday and Sunday wlnn•r1 hav• until noon th• following Monday to claim tMif priz•I) WINNERS RECEIVE $25 PLUS A $25 BONUS IF A CURRENT SUBSCRIBER. PAID BY PAGE GROUP PUBLISHING N!! ... ~ 1. Adhere luckv llcenH Bumper Sticker on rear butYtper of vehicle •• clbte to th• llcente Jt::: at poHlble. Be 1ure · bufN* it dun, • the bumper r wll not ti.y on a dlny eurf11ee. 2. Read ttt. Piiot and ll•ffn to K-OCEAN dally. The winning licente plate numbert Will be publilhed in the Pilot each day. 1 Win,,., mult claim prize by de~llne tteted in the ed. 4. ~=~~~~~:.:.·c:~= No da#na •• honored on ~ or SvndllY or holidap. 5. EmpJor ... of ~~ ~Moe K-Ocean, their ~ -.. not I , "°' 8 number 11~ ltwMtnocbe • .,..., m-Y~~(~ .. na=-"b~~~ t • ..~ a;r-to """'* I 1. l!!!'L,.....,o.&$r=r= ~-:.= ;;:;. iT'ld. putSllP•. .. ' Penlan Gulf trl Is hits VII II Street . 'I t t '\ I \ IC \ I I ' OTf l PS \\D DO"\S ...... ..... .... ..... ..,,., dowa.25511PMd2SS~ ~~:L-=~ umeoedlllaarol .. ljsa.N ltlU mm. to • ~ 240.40 milloe ........... ~oltbe_~ IDd comlllNd to 292.36 lldlHoD ........ -Pridat. ..... Wiii tbe t 990 IUlla. a.. n .... y'• vohame of 253.09 mmiolt ..,... wu tbe leCODd ~ tolal .,, tbe )'Mr. Nationwide, coolOlidated vohame in NYSE-lilted lllUel, i= trades in thole ltoCka OD ea;cl'lnr' ud in the over--tbe- coun&er ma.mt. tocaJed 273.26 million abam. Market watcben bad expecied atockl to encowucr ~ ll>il'l-Woniea about the ecoaonuc impeci of Iraq's occupetioo of Kuwait had cautee! invesaon to bail out of atocb in a bia way earlier in Tokyo, Lon- don and ellewbete. On tbe Tokyo Stock e..cl'I.,.., the \.\SD.\Q SI '9'9.\R\ BacMlor Of Science In Bualnesa Admlnlatratlon llaater of Business Admlnlatratlon (MBA) 17 Convenient locations in Orange County, including Irvine. Santa Ana , El Toro and Founta.in Valley Designed for wori<lng adults Combine prec:tlcal eppficatlon wllh a firm academic foundation. Attend ellCh ctata once a week for 1 o ..... CounMling and '9gi8tratlon at the due lite. The UnHetdy of la Verne is 80Cledlted bytheWntem AalOdatlon of Schooll & Colleges. ltYINE nu..,, Augutt '· 5:30 pm ....... .,Inn 11M1 VOft ec.m.n FOUNTAIN VALLEY Man:My. A•.,et 13, 1:30 pm UL V Or•• County Centtr 17400 ......... . &Mien, ....... •u1c1ng. lrd. IAMTAAHA nu..,, Auguet 11, 1:00 pm .................... 1121 HMal T.,.,.. AA degree not *"'Ired for _ 8ac:helo(1 Program For Further lnfonMtlon: ... tc.ndell ••11 4•• 114'124 ••• -------------------------------~-~~-' ,. ..... _... ............... : ' ~"Lav... M.. .... -... I , .. 1'*" a . La Ywnl, CA 11790 I ...... ______________________________________ ~ ' : .... _______________________________________ _ :OllW, .... ~-..,.~~----------- ' 'Tiii. ""'* .... _____________ _ ' t•!•~•-~•:r. ____________________________________ a . N~ lloct A~ ol m .......... dalld .. 21.599.53 ..... don 916.JJ~ .. 11 penma. OD ....._ ti• "dms11d llO aUDiOD ......... la lOlldoll ... fl•ndel ncr1 'leld •1•.., I~ iDda tlll 64.4' paid. or 2.9 ]JllCIDt, ID l.220.l. NYSE ~·me• IUdwd Tcw-remano ..,.._ tbe ulioa"• bilPt ltoc::t --~well witb the~ waw ol lelliJle. .. . .; ......... di ~ to culbioa market decliDea were ~ by em1y ICdvlty ha ltOeka and stoc::t iDda ftatwa lie laid tbe mechaniama WOlbd wit.bout 1 bitcb tt II \ I '\ \ 'I< U I D uo" JO'I' \\IK\f.t' H II \ I \ ll I ' It I It NEw YORK (~ A&.9, 6 ,,::w YORK (AP) Aw. 6 a i ,. 1 1 \ '11-:' l .t-: \Dl·:Hs GOl,D PHl('t :s llt:l 'Al,S PHt(·t-:s '\\'St: ("OllPOSl'l't·: 'l'H \ '\S \(''1'10'\S l'•lrtd Fldlr• A FdNM• ,n l'ttUY .It =~ 2 "'""" ) FIWdlt IM F1111E11 ... """"' .JO FllPrt 2M Fiuor .l• ,, C•l'Ol•C~ mcheerr•cl Nine bWldred .._. '"Thia ia by ., 1be ~ tunout ever. It'• becluee of our bonone ~~Je:.::= County Anti-Deftt'Nltioll Lelpe or B'nai B'rida. . Al I devoted IUppOl'ler Of Jewilb C.rof charitable ~·-tiom, tbe ao. HUim~ )'ear-old PUeY, llMndi• with wife ,.. •• '"i- Don>thy tecaved 1be ADL Com-··········-m= ~Award at ill lllDull A 8n&ncb at tbe Irvine Mar- riott Hotel OD Sunday. He lbared l'YI the podiUm with .. LA Law" stan Give younelt a lift! Tbe FOUD- Micbael Tucker and Jill Eikenberry da1ion fOr F9dal Plude Surpy will redpieata of AOL'1 1990 Tordl of 1ban tbe latat ldYUCll at i11 Mb Liberty Award. • annul! aympnlium at tbe Hyatt Between the loll and 1Crambled Newponer A111-9-11. More tbaD '° Clll course the husband/wife team J)ftlelltations will cover break- (marricd 17 yean) ~oualy siped ~ in fKial ICUlpeins. fAlcial autoaraphs for fani They have just ~plaD~ oculoplutic IUIJl'll'Y and returned to the .. LA Law" let. akin lllDI reverll1 treatmentl. Says "Durina our three month hiatus FFPS president, Oeoqe Braman, we filmed a TV n>mantic comedy "C.oametic •urterY bu become t~ether called 'Archie'• Wife.' J almost 11 commonplace and ~ think it's our best project yet" oepced 11 a trip 10 * dentist." ... boasted Tucker, addina that be and The lilt of tboee donatina to the Eikenberry visit <>ranee County construction COltl of the 750 teat often to help raise fundl for cancer Irvine &relay Theatre tebeduled for resean:b. dedication on Sept. lO bepl pow- "l've admired the work of AOL ina. Add W. James Edwards Sr., ever sinoe I was a little airl. It's chairman of Edwards Theaten. Ed- extraordinary to be honored by wards' pft of $100,000 reflectl his them," confided Eikenberry, a lanky lonatime involvement in the enter- beauty with flawless skin and doe tainmeot businela. "I know fint eyes, .elegantly attired in an ivory band bow critical the performi~ chemise. arts are toward a community'• quali- Tbe work of AOL ii to fi&ht ty oflife," Edwards laid. Here! Here! bif.otry, racism and anti-Semitism. 'The real difficulty is to get people to speak out when they see some- thina wrong. Problems are created by bullies and bullies retreat at the first sipi of resistanoe," explained western states director Harvey Schechter before the formal awards ]>TOIJ'lm. il_lbe 1Ulc-of-all human relations organizations is to make people take a stand.•• Those ta.king a stand included brunch chairwomen Sonia Adelman and Mary Rubin, Supervisor Har- riett Wieder with Irv, Jack and Shirley Goldberg, John and Meryl Fainbarg, Supervisor Tom Riley with Emma Jane State Seo. Marian Bergeson, Jiti Shane, Fran Lcibennan, Pat and Marv Weiss, Elizabeth Gale, Ralph and Bea Shapiro, Howard and Carol Rose- nberg and Ken and Alyoe Brodoff. Jedi Nldlolton Today ii the day you can buy your tickets to the Oranae County Per- formina Arts Center Guild's fub.ion · extravqanza on Seot. 18. Ticket prices ranae from $10" to S7S and are available at the oenter box office or Tickemwter ... Hunpy;-presiden Oeo•ae Bmb with Barbara decided at the spur of' the moment to pop into one of the booths at Hastin&'• Grill in the Anaheim Hilton and Towen where they stayed recently for the Nixon Library shindia. We're told BUib ordered filet o1 lamb with lobster medallions and his wife chose aqel hair puta served with scallops, shrimp, aoat cheese and lllJU'llUl. Both ate dessert. After, they chat1ed with the startled dinen and posed for pictures in the kitchen with chefs and cooks. llue McClanellM I Promise to care for aging mom a mistake · DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was blow. W. *9 ~Mc•••.._..,, •' moved by the letter from a Lona After a minute my husband •rs. *9 ..a ,.., la, '"Cm'l ,.. tMe a • bland woman who considers herself .. April fool!" (It was June.) .. Do you JIM? 1ftial'1 .._ ..... •• ,_, ~· bound by a tona..,o promise not to want to know who REALLY Wlilln'• ,.. -el ......,.. put her mother in a nursina home. called'r' At tlaat point I was too lick Tiie ._. ll1l1H1 ••' 1 ,_. ~ Now tbat the mother is 83, and her to care. . ' ' r' .......,... II .. tMe ·i mind ii aone, the dauahter writes :fibat kind ofa penon would pull •1' I._ ..,. ..-..,. aw b lr that tbe promise .. has ruined my Ann such a joke on bis wife? This ii not --. .... _. ~ 1l•n1t. tnla ,_... life." -tbe first time be bas done tbit IOl'1 ... _. • ,_. • .., el Mt -., It ii selfish to demand such a Lande s of thin& to me. And when I become -t 1 •• 1 Y• -cMc* promise and it is a mistake to agree. r &Dlf'Y, 6e IUlb. sometimes for weeb -• IMtr. '11111 .. ...-.._ ,. The only pn>mise that should be •••••••••••• at a time, and refuses to speak to me. ' ~..( t_~ is that you will always do your I know be will never cbans but ~ ~="care~f~~~~e~dt':; DEARANNLANDERS:Hereis -J;~rpur~· iN ~ ~;:;,.~~~i comultina a doctor, the cleraY and one I don't think I have ever read in YORK Beu 1160, Alea 92626. ;< other knowledpble sources. your column. I hope you and your DltAll BJGB 111..00K PllEll------------->. If the promise bas already been readers will tell me what you think ua&: Y• an_.,.... ti• ..e.de, RUffE-LL'S .., made, there is no moral law that of this situation. for obvious ••• .,.... ... '111111· ,..,.. wM ,.U • •••w.·•ma'-•,.. requires a person to keep that prom-reasons, I can't be objective. *9 .... el ..,.... ... , ,.. ... UPHOl.STEIY INC. ·~ IW'ii# ,., ft'fi#• • ile and pursue a course of action While dressina for my son's com-~ eajeJ ... .-. el,... ... , r J k N · h I may tbat will create hardship and cause meaoement exerciles, the phone eemel,,... ...... ,..... ... ,.,,..=~-:.~::-~ .... 11 .. ac IC 0 Son raentment. rans. My husband IDIWef'cd. talked •a ... -.... Mr e1 .. 1 e. rm 74. Six yean aao I wrote a a few minutes and came into tbe .-----------4--------- c on s I• ,.fer work 1·n TV ~w:~Y;;!~-:.cs.~=i~~~ :w~=~~·=~i= tJ to place me ma 'ood nunana home be said, "You don't have to bother should my condiuon ever warrant it aett.ina ready. John failed the exam." . . . .. N' h 1 .d. She bas that letter as a guide and a After this statement. there was a 60-RADNOR, Pa. -Jack Nicholson says TV interviews destroy an actor's credibility1 but he wouldn't mind actina on tne tube. NicbollOn gives intervie'Rs to the print media only. "You can say anytbins in the printed word and both sides admit that it's open to interpretationJ." he said in the Aua. 11 issue 01 TV Guide. Nicholson said of TV interviews: "There is no way you can set.people to. believe you on screen 1f they know who you really are tbn>u&h television." The actor's latest movie, "The Two Jakes," a sequel to "Chinatown ," opens Friday. He said he would have liked work- ina on the CBS miniseries "Lone- some Dove" and miaht want to. turn to television for a lona<herilhed pn>jcct about Napoleon. . "Maybe I made a mittatc not ~0ID& ~elev.1s1on, ic o ~n sai . token of my love. -AL VIN V. second pause while be studied my Now 1t mi&bt tempt me. SIZER. New Haven Reaister face for a reaction. Columnist My bands stat1ed to shake and LAS VEGAS -Rue ~~nahan DEAA AL: a.a•Ufal. Tlauka fer a tean bep.n to stream down my ~d ~y ~ cnucued the leller ... , wW •ia.relJ reUeve a sreat cheeks. r was completely shattered. JUdJe ?n a tnal <?ver a mo~ey ..., ...,.. frem ~ IMtnl• ef The feelinp of despair and ~ tm.ner s defamatt~n complaant ....,... pill. v .. ·ve perferme4 a poinunent were overwbelmina-I felt apmst an ammal riahts a.roup. peater MnAee &May *8 1• will so ud for our son wbo bad Worked The two spoke to reporters Satur-"" a.w so bard -and now thi1 cruabill l?airr:!;:~~ci~ r::;:u-.:;-~;· ;.r~*:U;--;;r:t:-:s•=1==5===,========z~ Berosini. 1---------~--~-------------+ N~~~ o~·~~m <:,~ Thru Aug. 31 . radio's .. American Top 40" and ~ t.rea Pqay McCay, all animal riabta activis(lt laid Leavitt bad taken con- tributions from the Stardust Hotel, where 8erosini performs. The hotel is not involved in the trial between Berosini and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. -·~ n. A•rdllN l'lw PAINTING SERVICE s.i Pl(ntlng Mrvtce aavea time, men Md 11QOr11Vatlon. A Mme you CM trust forqu.llty Md Mrvlce. Have the job done rtght by Seara euthortzed pmntera. 6 WAY BEAUTY & PROTECTION •Sen FINEST PAlNT -------"" for IMtlno beluty • ProftMloMI IPPfUtlon • Strqtft of a.. dlpendlblNty Uclf ........ H'Mf--1 cont'9Ct0rl .QullttywOfllll =htw9prtoel . .......-........ c.11 ........ 31 ................. blil• rock crowd htherhythm ··-·~for~ ••lie faDI at tbe Pacific =...,are Saaulday niabt wben .... neWC)()IMll. MCBride A the ._ ffilbway IOI, and the ...m attnction, Tenaeeeee'• mother IDd ... team. tbe Juddl capo tiva1ed anydlina but a subdued au~ dieace. 8y tbe time the two openina .... bid finished their tell. the crowd bellowed their devotion u l6-year-old daupter, Wynonna Judd stood bedecked in a whiU> ftineed pantsuit. and WU joined by her 44-~-old mother, Naomi. in ber ullll full-skirted 19SO rendition of a white lace party dreu. But when Wynonna takes the •taee1 • with lead auiw sluna over lhowoer and sinaa lead with her aona-writina-harmonizina mother. there is no doubt this duo is one hot item. The end result is that of exudation and combination of the late Janis Joplin, Emmylou Harris and ~nnie Raiit sound. And it's clear -ifs Wynonna who is the star -with her one-<>f· a-kind raspy, sultry voice. The twosome commenced their one-hour performance beginnina with their 1986 title track bit, "Roclrin' with the Rhythm of the Rain." "Let Mc Tell You About Love," and "One Man Woman." Then the two launched into their their soon-to-be-released single from their next album,"Born to Be Blue," an upbeat harmony in which Wynonna and Naomi seemed to be sharin& an inside secret as they sang to eac6 other, casting a wink or two at the the audience. As Wynonna stood and sang. Naomi pranced around the stage, unitinJ with her daughter when it was llme for her one or two line harmonies. Once and a while Naomi would shake a couple of bands from the crowd, and make small talk. But it's "Mommy" who writes these tunes, and she made that be known as she pulled a man from his seat. asked him to stand. and told the audience she had written the next song about a second chance Movie I/stings Newport Beach aMaOA ONCMA 7CI' E .-..... ""o 61S lS70 Hew Te ..... ~w• te a N._,e ....,_ 0 ....... TlrH 1 9 SOWAM>I NCW9"CMl'T CIN•MA JOO "'rwi>O•I Cf'ntf'I Df•Vf' 1>44-07!>0 I ...... ll'G· I )j 11 H I )() 6 8 )() 10 '>O l ~-" ·--· i•I II •S l JO SI~ 8 ID)() J At-... Ola jPC.j I J l IS 4 JO 1 'I~ SOWABI llUUllD CIN•MA f~1n.on lllM10 Nrw pOr1 ,_ .. 6~11 1 8 1 0teMllH1 111/ 1140, •lO, 9)() 1 Newy ..... flll 11 •S JIS 6 8JO IOSO .:SO.,.ef~jPC.IJllt <S 11S S 7JO 4 ~_!!-:~ IC.J 11 JO. I IS J. 4 <S 6 JO ~~111 8 15 IOIS a 1 $:~ II fl"G I )J I I 4 S 1 4 I S 6 JO 6 TIM ,,..,__ f PG1 11 I 5 1 JO 4 •S 1 • IS 7 ~ CNN IHI U . 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Aa the duct and their five-piece bud performed, it ... dear theY, ~ a tiabt-knit ~ even tf motber ua da&llbter 10 spend 24 boun on a bus totethcr for montbl al a time. ~ &om keatucky, but DOW raidina in Tenneuce, this mother and dauabter team have establilhed quite a name for them· lelvcs, u well as an enonnou1 fol- io~ They have been documented with three Grammy bonon and five awards each &om· the Country Muaic Aleociation and the Academy of Country music, u well u numer- ous awards abroad. The J udd1 have bad 11 number one 1inaJes in fewer than five ~ of recordina, and three of their albums have sold more than a million copies each. Almost like a child's fairytale, the Judds were blue-collar, country folk wbo loved to dabble in sinaina and composina at home. But it seemed o~t -after releasina the ainale 'Had a Dream" in 1983 - that this ordjnary family was launched into a spiralina success. It mi&bt be that Country music seems to be increasina in popularity, judaina by the eclectic crowd who hooted, hollered and sana alona. Peo ple from every nationality donned everything from Stetsons. bonnets and boots, to leather, lace and Hawaiian shin s. But Naomi who is also a re$is· tcred nurse, said she is still certified. no matter how popular she and her dauahter are now. "'tammy Wynette is a licensed cosmetologist," Naomi said. "And she always told me to keep ccnificd. 'because this 1s a fickle business, honey." But as long as the two keep com- posing and entertaining. the duo's future appears only to be on the upward swing Costa Mesa eDWAllOI CINeMA CUfTe• HOI H.trDOr ""o /~ vrro.. c ""'"' '1•·• 1•1 I ~ ..... fCil 11 IS 115 •IS 6 )() .,_ Trecy JPC.1 8 IS. I 0 JO 1 ~-CNN ll"GI 11 JO. 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I IJ 11 I I \ 4 4 S I 9 I\ J TIM ,,....._ fPG! 11 •S I IS \ •S II 10 IS ...... ll'G-141 11 1 )() s 1 lO 10 s,.__. __ ,.,111s J s •s "'° 11 6 Newy ..... 1•)11JO )IS &IS 8 •S 10\0 woo••••••• <•N•MAI e .... ,..,~ P.,kWlfY/C~r °'"'~ SS 1-0&SS I Alod ..,., .... ll"G·l l l II)() t •S 4 6 IS a JO, IOJO 1 .... "9NI I Ill! 17 1 lO S 1 IO 10 ) ..... 1' ... !GI 11 IS 1 IS 4 IS & IS II IS 10 ......... ~fl'Gf 11 1 . "8 10 S ~ ..... l<il II JO llS 11\ SIS I ~~l"I~ t0 4S L.pna Beach -~ IOUTM COAST LA4IUNA 416 S COHt Hter!Wll)' •'7· 1111 f.AtwfliAlfll'UIUI l"Q-1)1114S. J IS S4S I, IO'IJ • 1 ........ • flt> 11 4S 1 4 JO 1 ' JO -S-JI'-._ ... ·---=-'..:"""""' =-= lir-&-..... ·~­·~=-&:ii111......... ·--·-.. =,......, == ··-···· ·=--°"" ... ' ·riii=---E:---· =t:-· ,. A Rebel ·with applause Ir .,,.. J. PIVIWON ....... ~, ...... ,. . Fans ol the 19509 .-n of •lenainment will ajpred91e Couiline Community~·· current productioe of Jamet Fuller's .. Rebel Withouc A Caute" -perhaP1 belt ,. membered from James Dean's film portra)'al of a ftuttrated teen st.rualina under the weiab• of inadequate perentina and nearly unbearable peer preuure. Ao eUIFflted view of the terrible teens of this penicularly explosive decade lacks realism for those of us familiar with the actual peroentqcs of black leather jack.ets and chains versus lbe innocence of pony tails in a preponderance of petticoats. However, it does capture a fam- iliar flavor; and, reminiscina - even tbrouah euuemion -~ be highly entertainina and tbou,ht provoki"4-By virtue of pomtedly simple stqJna, director Robert Michael Conrad places a powerful focus on the vibrant personalities de· veloping as the work unfolds. Zest for life and the romance of youth are laced with torment. fear and lonelincss all too fam· iliar to the emersing adult of any aeneration. Kyle Smith looks and sounds as if he has just stepped from the pages of a 1955 hiah school yearbook as Jim Stark, bo).' most likely to end up in jad. His ruged, yet boyish, good looks merely complement a realistic portrayal of an inherently honor· able young man prone to an unusual measure of trouble. Stark's commendable strenath of character and loyalty arc re- flected in his relationship with Plato:. nickname for John Crawtord, sort of a cross be- tween a modern day "nerd" and a severely disturbed cbjld. Denis Heames is outstanding in bis interpretation, aiving his role a tremendous amount of sensitivi- ty and poignant energy. Smith and Hcames manage to create extremely unique individuals while forming a dynamic bond that richly enhances the effect of the play upon their audience. Lna Chiu, as Judy Brown, represents budd.ina young love in Jim's life; while James Rice and Lani Hall are appropriately frustrating as his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stark. Rice represents a well-meaninJ, list-making wimp and Hall as the proverbial salt an an open wound. Bacqround tunes of an era aone by, but far from forgotten, serve to set a familiar ambiance recreating images of malt shops, school dances and a society en- dwina arowina pains now fam· iliar even to those who were not there to see it. A strona support cast beifbtens the forcefulness of the enure work in what is sure to be an entertainina evi:ning. Coastline Community College will present performances of "Rebel Without A Cause" on Aus. 10, 11 , 17 and 18 at 8 p.m, in the Corona del Mar Hiah School theater. For tickets and information, call 7S 1-9740. 1 Cheers' Grammer , pleads no contest to cocaine charge ,., ............. . LOS ANGELES -"Cheers" tek- vision star Kelsey Grammer pleaded no contest Monday to a felony co- caine possession charge and a judge immediately ordered him placed under,'"bouse arrt1t" for 90 days. Under the arrangement, an elec- tronic surveillance device allows authorities to monitor his where- abouts. He will be permitted to continue his role as the pompous osychiatrist Frasier Crane on r.Cbeers." Superior Court Judge James M . Coleman also placed Grammer on three years' probation. fined him $500 and ordered him to perform 300 houn of community service. He was also ordered to enroll in a drug abuse treatment program. "It sccmtd fair," Grammer said after he was sentenced, adding he was pleased wllh the electronic "house arrest" arrangement. '"I'll be allowed to work." Grammer pleaded no contest to felony possession of coc.aine. If con- victed, the 3S·year-old actor could have been sentenced to three years in prison. said Deputy District At· tomey Terese M. Hutchison. -cheers°• actor K .... 7 Gr ...... er II Mobbed by the pr e11 es he enters Superior Court In Los Angeles Mondey. The so-ailed electronic leash de· vice attaches to Grammer·s wrist or ankle and an electronic signal is TV Listings • D • • • • • • • 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 Jtopantyt O Retcue 911 (R)lln Stereo)·; ~ • • "Out on !ht Edge'" (1989 O!ama) Roek Sdvooet "41 a lebenton Mir K Ptac. In Stereo lettoflAM COMICttoll C• Al ctlOfl C4'f'Nlll A•air '9o. Cour1 wtlo't Iota? Wondtf Y. AOM1111M Coad! '°" OllN CwNM A•• ~ ........... Cauldtt" (1971 Weslt!n) RaQuel lflOw Weldl, Robeft In St11eo P.O.V.Q 11:00 11:30 ...... Slnpay ...... T Olllghl Sflow In Stt1eo r .. , Thy T11I Faltlers Boss s W1ft ol l!lt BnOe ...... Niglltline 0 monitored by a base unit. If GramV.. mer leaves home. he must check in first with his probation officer. .. He can leave the house. He will be able to go to work." Hutchisos ~d ~ Asked if the actor. nominated for a television Emmy award last wee~ would be able to attend the awards presentations on Sept. 16 in Pasadena, tht prosecutor sajd, ··H~ has to check with his probat109 officer first." ln June. Grammer served a » day jail sentence for a drunken driv- ina conviction. Police stopped Grammer's car olio: April 14. 1988, for expired license tqs. A routine check showed aq arrest warrant had been issued fot• Grammer after he misJCd a coun- appearancc on a drunken driving conviction that year. While ridina an the police patrol car, a packet of cocaine fell from Grammer's pocket. officers said. The no contest plea Monday in- volved that incident. He was ordered to jail in June b) Municipal Coun Commissioner Pa· tricia Schwartz because he failed to attend a coun-ordered alcohol rt· habilitation program 1lnd failed to serve I 0 days on a state road crtw -B1•..t.#CMte4~ Racers red llght 'Days of Thunder' i • I ----by Bil Keane comma CUL TUa& by M••tt• & Matetta PSAllU ,. "Could I have another balloon? This one's got a flat." by Brad Anderson "I don't think that suit will tool the dog catcher." NANCY ARLO AND JANIS l . ' I ' 'l'tJllBLEWEEDS ,.--·-• I JI L Ii RABBLE I R08Bl8R08B -Mil fbASTE~ SA'Y:>: c:::::> 'THE SE.CRH.JOEY, IS TO KlCN YOU'RE ~eooy \t4ffi()U'T .Wl,WMS' 'O.IRE SCWUOOY .• by Jimmy Johnson 1 Wl~M YOU'D llU. Mt. UFORE 'Tt>u ru1~' by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady PE66'f iAM 15 GOHE. LlHU5 ! 5NE 601' MAO!S6a SAO 1 OtON'T TMT MEl PUDBA88BT PINNEil. FREI'. / WMA1'5 'TNAT 60T TO DO ~rT? tT's All I COUU>TMINK OF TO Slit .. by Jim Davis by Alex Graham SHOE by Jeff MacNetly JUDGE PARKER FUNKY WUfKERBEAN FRED FAI RGOOD ! eoc.>, ~ ME ... l«E. 1.,()() ..iAS II BEEN A ~ 1lME .1 511 l.l. A -n;AOfER ~ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batluk ... "' ., "' ._ .. h• ..... ~.t. the I main and ( uvat.c dienc t.~ crow t~ frioa her· hen of a lh s-sbO\J sona lhel' item exuc late and A wbc a-ki T one will .. R< Rai Lo\ 1 tbe1 the an w., sha tO I at I Na un wa haJ WO tht - 8' °' .. Co ll pc • c 8 L 0 , OMll• OOMT DALY I'll.OT M T\J111t1r ... 9d7,W OIANGE COAST IElli9t Se.in, Jr., choorrnon O..oW W. Adcox, Jr., genefol monoger Wolt• luno\19h., 1901-1919, founding pvblosher Editorial County should delay half-cent sales tax vote T he Orange County Board of Supervisors is sched- uled to vote today on whether to put Measure M, the proposed ~alf-cent saJes tax for county transpor- tation, on the ballot m November. . . . We urge them to delay a vote on t~1s v1~! issue. To place it on the ballot now may be elecuon su1c1de for t~e worthwhile measure, which, if passed, woul~ .be an essential step in solving Orange County's traffic cns1s. . In recent weeks, we've expressed concern about pulling the measure on the ballot so soon after voters def~ted a nearly identical measure last Novef!lber, even. with the backing of business leaders and environmentalists and a war chest of nearly $3 million. . . Now, state and world events make the propos1t1on even more risky. · · b The new statewide gas tax increased f8SOh~c pnces . y five cents a gallon. And now, with Iraq invading Kuwait, gasoline prices have conti~ued to skyrocket. Orange Coast drivers may soon be paying more than _$2 pe.r gallon fo r their gasoline, and -as ta~payers -will be m no mood to pa ) a half-cent sales tax increase no matter how worthy the cause. We don't think this vital transportation issue can .stand another setback. With $3.1 billion at sfake. which 1s the amount of money the measure would raise over 20 years. the supervisors would be wise to not gamble away .the lOUnt; ·s transportation future on a ballot measure. which. JUdgmg from the mood of the electorate. is now a longshot. Today In history Today is TucsdaY. Aug. 7, the 2 I 9th da) of 1990. ·There arc 146 days left an 1hc year. Toda) 's Highlight in History: . On Aug. 7. I 782. George Washing- ton created the Order of the Purple Heart. a decor.won to recognize ment m enlisted men and non- comm1ss1oned officers. On this date: In 1789. the l l.S. War Depart- ment \\<as established by Congress. In I :?. the famous feud between the Hatfields of West Virginia and the Mc( O)S of Kentuck)' broke out. (8 ) the ume the feud ended, about I 00 mc-n . women and children had been killed or wounded.) In 19 12. the Progressive Party nominated Theodore Roose' ch for presadt'nt In 1927. the Peace Bndge ~tween the United Stales and Canada was dedicated dunng ceremonies attend- ed by the Pnnce of Wales and Vice President Charle Dawes. In t 934, the U. Court of Apr.cals upheld a lower court ruhng stnkang down the government's attempt to ban the controversial James Joyce novel. "U lyssc\." In 1942, U.S. force<> landed at Guadalcanal in the Pacific during World War II . In 1947. the bal..a wood raft Kon- T1k1. which had t amed a sax·man Doonesbury OKAY, 'THIS IS TJ-€1-8.J aH:,fFT{(Y{ MY~· AJ.UPrfa .. //eAP't~ ./ crew 4.300 miles across the Pacific Ocean. crashed into a reef in a Polynesian archipelago. In 1959. the United States launched Explorer 6, which sent back a picture of the earth. In 1964, Congress passed the Gulf of Tonk.in resolution, gjvint Presi- dent Johnson broad powers in deal- in& with rcponed North Vietnamese attacks on U.S. forces. In 1970, 20 years ago. an attempt by black militant Jamc_s C?av!d McClain to escape from his tnal 1n Mann County, Calif.. ended 1n a pohcc shootout that claimed the lives of McClain, two of three cohorts, and Judge Harold J. Daley. one of several people taken hos~e. In 1974, French stuntman Philip- pe Petit walked a ti&htrope strung bctw«n the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City. In 1976, scientists in Pasadena. Calif., announced that the Viking I spacecraft had found the strongest indications to date of possible life on Mars. In 1987, the presidents of five Central American nations, meeting in Guatemala City, sianed a regional peace a&J'CCment based on a proposal submitted by Oscar Arias of Costa Rica. -By ~ A11ocl•tH Ptt11 By Garry Trudeau L~tt~rs ::7 Free speech quashed in Irvine To the Editor: Without public notice or council discussion Irvine's Mayor Sally Anne Sheridan has unilaterally d~­ cided to limit the amount of time that members of the community may take lo address the Council and to specify that no individual may criticize an employee of the city, including members of the council. at a public meetina of the City Council. Irvine's love affair with free speech has come to an abrupt end as the .. orange curtain.. restraint of public discussion is in! Only time will tell how long Irvine's residents will tolerate Mayor Sheridan's as- saults on free and open debate in their City Hall. Mayor Sheridan's dec1~1ons to abridae freedo m of speech in Irvine ironically came only days af\er Jus- tice William Brennan stepped down from the U.S. Supreme Court. A viailant defender of the First Amendment, Justice Brennan view- ed free and open public del?ate ~ the cornerstone of a demQCfllJC society. Irvine's mayor would be wcll- advised by the city's attorney to review Brennan's opinion in the landmark case of New York Times v. Sullivan (1964) where he stated: "Debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust and widcopen. and ... it may will include vehement, caustic and sometimes unpleasantly sha!J> attacks on aovemment and public officials." In pursuit of feilfled civility. Mayor Shcrida_n's action challenges the connection which free speech makes possible ~tween elected officials and consti- Yuppies shouldn't resent senior citizens' privileges To the Editor: Several days ago, you ran an article on the editorial page. which was written by your Sacramento correspondent. He was writing about a new law aiving a discount to senior citi~ns when they use state camptng vounds. The writer felt, or left the impression, that the seniors were actlina too many privileges and that the "Baby Boomcrs" were suffering deprivations -when they needed special help in raising their young ones. As a senior citizen, I shall prob- ably never use the camping dis- count. I prefer the comforts of home. But for those of us in our 70s and 80s, I feel any privileges we mi&ht gel arc justly deserved. Most of us hvcd through a penod of need and deprivation during the Depression. We had no money to travel. for movies or any cultural events. Many of us remember physical and mentaJ problems of WW I as well as WW II when food. coffee. butter and sugar were rationed. Also. gasoline and tires. We had no choice. Now with an income from the . ule of property. annuities and Social Security we arc able to enjoy a fe w of the plc.asures our country offe rs us. My plea to the Yuppies is wait your tum to enjoy what we didn't have at your age. Invest your money and rtt1re to ~ envied by your children! MALISSA MCMANUS Newport Beach Canyon toll road \Nould help save Laguna Canyon To the Editor: In Haht of decision by the Laguna Beach City Council lo fund a vote for a bond issue for acquisition of Laauna Canyon, I think it possible to begin acquiri ng funds sooner. Laguna Beach could take over Canyon Road from the state °'pen- ment of Transportation. Why not take the lead from our astute and far-think.ina county supcrvison and cn:ate a toll road here? Instead of payina a toll which bas as its top pnority the despoilina of a natural wilderness, as in San Joequin Hills/Corridor, this toll would pro1eet the environment. It would be the first of its kind, fundina the praervation of scenic open space for all. Of coune, 10me money would be ulCd to maintain the road and some consideration should~ aivcn to the commuter as to tolls paid. It has always been the avowed aim of all who want to save the canyon that this l5 not a stan~ taken by Laguna Beach to (>reserve open space around the city for selfish reasons. The walk which brouaht thousands to express their concern is livina proof that there is much more at stake here. We are wilhnf. to "put our money where it counts.· Now let those who ertjoy the canyon beauty as they come for a ~ach day aive us a little help. I would certainly not expect the road to raise tolls in perpetuity. Once th'e pl is achieved 1t must become as it has been. free for all. A plus mi&ht be that UPS would find an alternate route. MARY LOU RIPLEY Laauna Beach When Wrttint te tfM ao-.. c...t W, Pllet ... The Orange Coost Daly '9tlot encOUfoget COfttspondetlce from our reoders. We requelt i.tt.rs be kept to oppl"01t1mot.ty 300 words. My corretp()ndence signific:ontty longer lhon 300 wOfds wil be printed of our discretion at o ~ Ca•1Mttt011y, Guest ContfMllt011y or fdltoriof ......... COfMIUfl•ty comntentcw ... ore ,~ for •swe:s ~'"*" t0 cit ... ond towns '*>nQ the Orange Coost. Gvnt cC>f'IWMntor ... moy peno.n to ony pubtlc iswe. EditorlOI retpenMs ewe reter'Yed tor rebunda to edtt0tiol pos1110fts ot the Oronoe eo... Daily Hot. letters considtfed to be I~ 0t !fl bod toste w.a not be P''"'ed. W riteo ore IHT11ted 10 four~ a month. All corretpoodenc:e must be signed ond inclu<N the writer's oddr.-1 ond t~ nuftlbet IOt vetiflCatlOn putpoMS, letters ~ be oddftlMd to the Or.,. COOlf ~ ,.., 330 W 9oy St., Costo M.-o, CA, 92626. Attention1 L-.1 to the Edttor. Wr'lf•• w1m questions ore urged 10 coll tht Doily '"°' at 11141 u,. •321, Eat 352. JUents in a reprctentative republic, namely· political accountability. Not only does Mayor ~~·s action limit how much pubbc input the council can receive from resi- dents, but it is also intended to chill criticism of the council and its mem- bers by those residents who would dare to take their responsibilities 11 citizens ia a representative republic seriously. Free and o~n det.te about pub~c issues. espcctally at the I~ level, 1s the hallmark of Amenca s demo- cratic tradition. That tradition is now seriously threatened in lryine. makin& a mockery of candidate Sheridan's commitment to "open communications" at City Hall. MARK P. PETRACCA Irvine It's nice to see a writer willing to stick his neck out To the Editor: This is a letter of appreciation. The other day I was readina through your sports section. I came across an article about Junior Division Surfina in professional ranks by Lloyd Tice. As a writer, he went out on a limb to expose the truth. Truth that many larae surf companies would like to avoid. I am sure your youna writer is already takina flack for this. I )USt wish au wnten had this klno of initiative. I do not know much about surfina at the professional level, but as a sport it should remain honest an<Nair. Great job! STEVE NEWMAN Irvine All Newport should share pollution and noise of jet flights To the Editor: I read with extreme interest in the O.Uy Pilot of the pat hardships being endured by some Corona del Mar residents from a few com- mercial jets suPP<>Sedly "driftina off their assianed -niaht paths." I a'!' delighted that apparently a few resi- dents of another area of Newport Beach arc atttina a small taste of what we on Balbol Island arc sub- jected to all day, ~very day. . The aross unfairness of routin& 100 pertent of John Wayne's jct aircraft directly over the ~nter of Balboa Island docs not need com- mcnl The obvious and fair way to spread the milel')' is to simply rotate fliabts over three or four takeoff' vecton thus subjectina other areas of Newport Beach to I third or I fourth of t.be noite and pollution from tbetc aircraft. JOHN P. CUNNINGHAM BaJboe Island Personal agendas motivated limited terms proposal S&L mess should be r- investigated WASHINGTON -WbCD QdaDI &ice a pl'Objem iswe wi msy way out, their instincts c:rmte an Wit to inveltipte. Or llllt to demand an inVCldption. 1111t way they arc ldvoc:ati1111 ~ if it isn't a IOlution. ~:~~~i~ money Conpas docsn t want ~! ::r;:~1s :duna::: bi~~n dec:Uions made a decade lllO: ~-• iaa due in a conarcuional eteeti year. So cam~ina incumben are beina forced into an un~ politioni and that puts a prem1':1'1 on votes that seem to do IOme~ about it. I Somethina 1.ike .investiptiaa. ~ aupportina lqitlauon to 1mpoee stiff teGle'Deel on people convicted 'f •vinaa and loen crimes. with life terms for kinaPins -laws ~l ~ apply only to future wronedoial. Al with punishments, so with pay· menu. The put is not subject IO reform, and the costs -estimated u biab as SSOO billion -streich on for years. The administration bu alerted Coaareu that it will need more money, probably about $100 billion, to pay for the savinas and loan t.ilout durina the bu<f&et year that beains Oct f. That is particularly uncomfortable timina. five weeks before congressional elections, so it may be handled with a stoppp appropriation until early 1991 . That prospcct produced a cborts of CODlfCUJOnal complaints about blank check spcndina. To which Robert R. Glauber, the trca.sury of- ficial dcalina with the S&l crisis, replied that the blank check was written Iona ago, when deposit in- 1uran~ was boosted to SI 00,000 •n account . That was ~one by act of Co~ss in 1980, dunna the Carter adminis- tration. Then, and in another measure enacted in J 982 and sisned by Ronald Reagan, the rules were cbanaed to let savings and loans make investments far more specu- lative than the home mottaaae1 that had been their business. With more insurance on deposits. and less regulation of a savinas and loan industry that already was bavina problems. the meter started runnin& up the costs the wpayers face now. When insured institutions fold. dcpositon have to be paid. "We don't reaUy have a choice.~· said L. William Seidman, the man in charge of the bailout But what can't be changed can be invcstipted. So t.be National Governors' As- sociation adopted a resolution urg- ina an investiption of "this un- precedented disaster" by an 10de- pendcnt commission. A measure seek.ins a commission investiption has been proposed in the Senate. The House approved creation of a million-dollar bipartisan commission to in- vestipte the S&L mess, as pan of a bill to speed prosecution and stiffen punishments for S&l crimes. There were only four votes against it. •The administration d idn't like the idea, with a White House spokesman sayina there was no need for a new burcaucraoc entity to invcstipte. But af\cr the ovcr- wbelm1na House vote, the adminis- tration decided it would not oppo~ an invcstiption. That makes a commission 10- vesti~tion a virtual certainty, satis -na the political urse to be teen oina somethina about the S&L mess before election time. A skeptical senator says the find- inp of an invcstiptin1 commission arc predictable and he wondcn about its value to the tupaycn, but he'll vote for it anyhow. But Sen. Bob Keney, 0-Neb .. SI.id that is le 1 imponant "than knowina what is to•na on today, riaht now," in a bailout he contends is bein1 mi .. ~·. lnveaupuons. some by com· millions. some by Conaresa, can and have teJVed vital pwpoea. Tbe Warren Commi..ton did so after the IAUlination o( John F. =:Mui: .. ~ n::':'~ 1 IODe paamu murdmd the pres;. dlat in 1963. The Seutc W1~1e commjt1te clilcovtred the aiatelK'e of the Wbi1I ..... --· lbM .... the c.. 'Iii• aicMld M. NW. and .ad..aety led Mm 10 rajp the Pi I rfp Cf ia 1974. . AIW 1111 <>ene1111r dhn1e1 of ·-......... Coilunillioe COD---...... , .... adlel•• ............... ,. ............ ....U.. ia1 .... w la Co. ..... .....& ... ••ft?? I •tn 11 =tr11r•.t.. .. ..., ' ., All QUAlJ1Y p P.nt, , ... ............. . ... . ..... ....., ............ == ........ ....... Plf1'7 Cltdr ............ .. .. ..., Klttlflf ... , ............. ... ~., ~"" .... 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"" '*'-of 111111 bm. boMI .. • ····~ TODAY'S SUN TODAY'S MOON Sunrise ........ 6:08 a.m. Moonrise ..... 8:28 p.m. Sunset. ....... 7:46 p.m. Moonset.. .... 7:12 a.m. 0 () Full ~n Last'Otr. New Moon Aug.6 Aug. 13 Aug.20 FRONTS: • • • • • • • CCl.D WNW STA 7JICW4RY ,,,_ ~ ® © ~ ~ [.\] 0 w ~ (I ~ HIOH LOW ~ lfAM T..STOllMS FWRRIES SNOW ICE $UIMY PT CLOUOY CLOUOY TRAVELER'S REPORT STATE NATIONAL .... ..... ..__"'~·· '°' ·--·-11 \J• '°1 ........ 1J M =::r.i .. 1' _,.. 1' II .., .. u 74 .. ........... ti n ,, 47 ....... llt 71 ....... " ti ........ t1 " '--.. .. .... ••• .... 11 S1 ..... t 7 SI .,._ n 11 ........ i• n ...... M M ... Cly 7' M , __ • 1' .... 11 M .... n 11 la .... 1• 11 -• 11 .... i• a .... Cly .. n 1111111.a .. • .....,c a n c.... n 11 .... .. n ~ " " ... • ti ,_ in n ...... • 1' llMld 14 17 . ' ... a n La .... • 1' ==-1• ti ..... n 7' .... ltl .. ti " ........ 17 ,. INTERNATIONAL. ..... llt • ...... t i S1 •• ·o.... " • ~ .... 1' • ... 1• .. ..... .. 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Q , .. ,.., • t7 ....... IU M s. ..... n 11 ,.,. ti " ~ IS II ....... • n .....,. 1J B , .... " 11 " a ........ • 71 ..... 11 M ..,_ n • •Tide tource: Astronomical Data Services, Colorado Springs. Colo. :Tensions in Middle East near breaking point • U.N. orders worldwide ·embargo against Iraq Mlddle East crisis at a glance Jly The Auodat~ f'rHS The U.N. Security Counetl on ·Monday ordered a worldwide cm· barao on trade Wlth Iraq to punish the Arab oil and military power for its invasion of Kuwait. A defiant Iraqi leadership vowed to resist the economic and m1ht.ary pressure beina manhaled by the United St.ates. The Iraqi people "cannot be fri~tcned," Iraq's army commander iS&Jd. The Security Council vote, 13-0, came on a U.S.-sponsorcd resolution and represented the first such total trade and arms boycott by the Unit- ed Nations in 23 years. Two mem- bers of the I S-n.at1on council. C uba and Y emcn. abstai ned. If successfully enforced. the sanc- tions could cripple the heavily oil- dcpendcot Iraqi economy. In Wash- inJton, President Bush declared, "These sanctions will be enforced - whatever it takes." Britain's v1sitin1 Prime Minister Ma.rprct Thatcher said after mect- jna with Bush that the West would }lave to consider a naval blockade of the Penian Gulf if the U.N. sanc- tions proved ineffective. , The vote in New York came on 'FUEL I ''°"' A 1 1 man for Delta. "We're watchina the situation to see how much the prices 'wiU increase." ' OuRochcr said althouah ARCO is one najor supplier of jct fuel for the company. Delta has tcveral sup- 1plien and bas not felt the crunch as much u some other carricn. "Apparently there was still some fuel that was not any more ex- pensive available," he uid. "lt hasn't bit us with any m-_jor in-c:reues yel •• ' Continent.al bas instituted no added clw)e but hu instructed its aecnts not to sell tick.cu for U.S. air travel with stops in Iraq. Addition- ally, no vehicles under Iraqi f"Clisuy 1 will be allowed to enter the United States. an aaent uid. RepreKn&atives of 1everal other airlines 11y they are conaiderint in- creua but no deci1ion1 have yet been made. the fifth day of a cnsas prec1p1ta1ed by the Iraqi anny·s blnzkneg takeov<r of ncl&hbonng Kuwaa. In occupied l<uwaat. meanwhile. Iraqi troops rounded up some Americans. Bntons and o ther fo rciancrs Monday, but they ap- peared to be in no danger. Bnt1sh officials said. Tension remained h1&h alona the Saudi Arabia-Kuwait border. Saudi Arabian forces were rcpon ed mov- ina nonhward mto areas close by Iraqi units in Kuwait. Diplomats in the Persian G ulf -in reports o ther· wise unconfirmed -said U.S. rapid deployment units had been di~ patched to the MiddJe East. In other developments: ·•Io J1ddah, Saudi Arabia, U.S. Defense -Secrttary Dick Cheney con- ferred with Saudi leaden about how to defend the oil kinadom apinst any attack by Iraq. The White House said it was discussina "m1h- t.ary possibilities .. with Gulf st.ates to stop Iraqi qarcssion. •The U.S. aircraft earners Inde- pendence near the Penian Gulf and Eisenhower in the Mediterranean Sea moved within range to launch warplanes to the aulf and as far as Iraqi taraets, Pcntqon souroes said. Amona those poised to follow sutt arc AmericaWcst and Alaska. Spokesmen at those carrien said Monday c.ch airline had felt the bite at the JCt fuel pumps. "Whether that translates to a pri~ bike to consumcn remains to be accn," said Orea Witter. manaaer of corporate communications for Alaska Airlines. ()peratina costs. profit marains and market competition a.re all con- siderations in the equation. be added. "Riabt now we°'rc Wldecidcd as to what we a.re aoina to do. It'• too early to tell," be uid. .. You can"t automatically put in 1 IW'Cbarae and expect it lO solve all your l)l'Obfems. •• Aluka'1 two fuel 1upplicn, Chevron and ARCO, Mve each raiaed pritU 6 cenu • a pllon since Friday and more, waller 1ncttues are CXJ*1cd later in the week, Wit- ter uid. He ldded the AJuka board is • Major stock markets worldwide plummeted apm, worried that an 011 crisis-<puld touch _off a rcccs.sion. 0 11 pnccs rose more than 10 percent Monday. Many motorists in the United States and elsewhere were pay1na sharply higher prices for gasoline. Iraqi tanks and mfantf)I poured into Kuwait on Thursday after President Saddam Hussein com- plained that the Kuwaitis" violation of OPEC production quotas had driven down world crude prices. lowcrina Iraqi 011 revenues. Saddam also accused Kuwait of stealing oil from a border oilfield both countnes claim. Together. Iraqi and Kuwa1t1 output equals 9 percent of world daily oil production. The United St.ates led the world· wide condemnation of the invasion as a threat lO international order. and mobilized world governments to cut off oil and other business w11h Iraq. Bush sa)'1 Iraq's "nak~ ag- vcssion ... will not stand." and White House spokesman Marian Fitzwater said Monday that . "the defense of Saudi Arabia is of para- mount concern.·· But Iraq defied the diplomatic. watchin1 the satuation in Iraq and should make a .decision on a rate hike or surcharac within one to three weeks. "Naturally aU kinds of oil prod-ucu arc 101na up," said Mark ln- ciona. a media representative for AmericaWcst. lnciona said he bad expected a dcciSton on a surcharge at AmericaWcst by Monday afternoon but had no word of an in~ at 5 p.m . Monday. "We're considerina 1t flf)lt no~. but there's been no dcos1on on whether we would match that (Nonhwat) surcharae or have our own," he UJd. He declined to state the size of fuel price increases the company has seen since the Iraqi invuion of Kuwait. Amona other airlines with ter- minals at John Wayne Airport. none have increased fares or added •urcbartcs in response to the Iraqi invasion. The othen indude TWA, USAit and Uni&ed. ~ ·· Army puts 82nd Airborne on alert economic and military pressure. In &ahdad, President Saddam summo ned the U.S. c harge d"a'ffairts, Joseph Wilson. and .. warned ap1nst any act that m1aht cndan~r the rtgJon·s peace and ~­ cunty, · the offic1al Iraqi news agen- cy rcponed. Iraqi army commander Sudi Mehdi Saleh was quoted by the Al - Iraq newspaper as saying Americans "should unders tand that tho people Df the great leader Saddam Hussein cannot be fri&htcned." Members of Saddam·s ruling Buth Pany said preparations were under way to evacuate all of Ba&h- dad"s 4 m1lhon people m case of U.S. air attack. They also said the pany distributed weapons to tens of thousands of people throu&}lout Iraq. St.a te radio sa1d Saddam had or- dered fonnauon of 11 new Iraqi anny d1v1s1ons, adding 100.<XX> troops to has 1-malllon-man m1htary force. the strongest an the Arab world. Ira.qt officials continued to d1s- m1ss sugcstaons Iraq has any mten- uon to stnkc apinst Saudi Arabia. But the vastJy outnumbered Saudi military was ta.lung no chances. COAST From A1 Kuwait as proof pos1uve that Amm- ca cannot d rop its auard. "I think the taracr lesson as the world remains a danaerous place:· Cox said. "Even if the Soviet Union doesn't P<>St the <Saneerous threat as 1t did in the past, people hkc Sad- dam Hussein do." Herc at-a~nce arc some of the developments Monda) an the Iraq-Kuwait dispute. •In New York. members of Lhc U.N. ~unt> Counc!l voled for a mandatory ~orldwide economu.: embarJo against Iraq. the ru1t such total U.N. boycott an 23 )cars · •Iraq curtatlcd its 011 through Turkish pipelines .. banded ou1 weapons to c1v1.hans and declared its people -cannot be fnghtened .. by U.S. economic and m1htary threats. •In J1ddah. Saudi Arabia, Defense Secrttary Dick Cheney and other U.S. military leaders conferred with Saudi leaders about how to defend the 011 ktnJdom a~inst any attack by Iraq. •Tension remained high alona the Saudi Arabia-Kuwait border. Saudi o\rab1an forces were rcponed movang nonhward into areas near the Iraqi units in Kuwait Diplomats an the Persian Gulf -in rcpons otherwtsc unconfinn~ -said the U.S. Rapid Deployment Force had been dispatched to the Maddie East. • In the Arabian Sea. a 13-shap U.S. Nary battle group. I~ by the aircraft earner USS Independence. took up station outside the mouth of the Persian Gulf. within stnlang distance of Gulf flashpoints. Pent.aaon sources said. • Ma).or stock markets worldwide plummeted apm. womed that an oil cns1s could touch off a recession. Otl pnccs rose more than JO percent. Man) motonsts an the United tatcs and cl~bere were paying sharpl) h1&}1er pnccs for gasoline Otl cxccuuves 1n the northeastern Saudi aty of Kha1j1. an 01l-load1ng port near the Kuwait border. said Saudi around reinforcements were movina into the area The Iraqi invasion force had set up a check· point JUSt a half-mill" from the For example. t.e s~ud that the 8-2 Stealth Bomhcr and the trateaic Defense ln1t1a11"e, which have been ta.rsets of recent congressional budaet cuts. arc sllll \ nal to ·\mer - ca's defense "The 8-2 as a ve" etlcd1H: weapon apiost someone hkc ~d­ dam Hussetn,'' Co• u1d. Cox warned.. bowevt'r aga1n~1 launch1n1 an all out attack on lhe -lly TH AHodarft/ Pia• border near Khafj1. In add1t1on, Saudi military air- craft wert sl&hlcd land1na and t.abng off at airfields on the fringes of Riyadh. tbe Saudi capital. said local residents reached by telcpbooc -lty ~ AINCMld Prn1 people of Iraq. "It should be the objective of the aovernment to ~vent the unnec- CC$sary loss of hfc." he said .. The ob1cct1ve would be to take out m1ll- tal) and economic taraets •· ( Oll agreed that Hullean needs to be ehm1natcd. .. President Bush is do1na a superb JOb of quanerbacluna the world"' response to this agrcss1on. ·· LSAT & Law School Information Semi n:ar Sunday, August 12, 1990 • 9:00 atn -12:30 pm Irvine Western St.tte UniveTSity Coll~e of L.lw will host an information !K'm1nar in your aru.. Cc:!t your questions answen.>d regarding. • Law School Rt."qwrements-• PlKement when• how to apply • ho&arshlJ>' • Fi~l A sistance • The Law hool Ad mi ion Tat • Irvine Campus (l..SA TI Aqoestioft ~ ~ psiod will lol'°• lheaarunat. To tq.tSW. call 7141731·1000 \ind ark ror wi Adlni ions Countelor. S.t:il\a ii limitod n raervattons ... on• One~ fint lr'ed t.ia. ~ ~ ~ bet of' 8 J .... Ibo• IOGf ther itea exu late and A wbc a-k.i 1 ooc wit .. R1 Rai Lo• 1 the the an w, stU to at ' Na un WI ha W( th• th kr se th Of .. I .. °' ., Co " • po • c a L " a1so ~ to draw up plaaa re1eue or ANCconnected pritonen and for_~tina am_, to t0me o the 20,000 Souih AfticaD nila who want to return home. • The joint statement a1so said the aovemmeot would continue to ~ view 1eeurity leaislation under which 1COres of Mile ICtivilts, in-cl~ a member of t.bc National Executive Committee, have been de- tained by police durina the put few weeks. Police have said they arc in- vestiptina an aUeaed plot by Com- murust members of the ANC to revolt and seize power if neao- tiations fail . AJthouab the ANCs auerrilla wins. Spear of the Natjon, bas made no major attacks in the past year, ANC officials have ac- knowlcd&ed that guerrillas con- tinued to infiltrate the country, Illegal alien policy won't go to voters ly I08 VAN EYKEN 09lly ,._ St.fr Witt« COSTA MESA -A move by City Councilman Orv Amburgey to force an advisory referendum on a controversial policy barring aid to illegal aliens falled Monday when the council deadlocked 2-2. The council last summer enacted the poliq withholding cit) funds from charitable organizations that serve illegal aliens. federal Housing and Urban Development Secretary Jack Kemp struck down the pohcy earlier this year, saying 1t would violate his aaency's policies. Amburgey has continued to press for the policy. however. supponed by City Councilman Ed Glasgow. .. This is designed to validate the input from ci ti1cns of Costa Mesa," Glasgow said of the proposed referendum. Mayor Peter Buffa, who suppaned the original 1>9licy then withdrew his backing afier Kemps action. said Mon8ay that he believed an advisory vote would be useless. "We would be asking for an answer we already know." Buffa said. "The issue has not been 'Gee. I wonder 1f the c1111cns of Costa Mesa want this.' The issue 1s that we have s1mpl) not found a legal or workable way to do it." Buffa was Joined in opposing a call for an adv1sol) votl' b) Councilwoman Sandy Genis. A cruise and dinner In the Balboa Beach Company '46 Ford Woodie! And a dinner for two! Plus ten $25. oo gift certificates will be awarded! Final defendant in Camarena case guilty LOS ANGELES -The last of four defendants tried for pantc1- pating in the murder of U.S. drug asent Enrique Camarena was con- victed in the mistaken-identity slay- ing of two American tourists. Monday's U.S. District Coun rul- ing agai nst Javier Vasquez Velasco concludes the jury's work on a case that has strained U.S. relations with Mexico. All four defendants were con- victed, but U.S. Attorney General Dick Thornburgh called 11 a gnm victory. "We can take no pleasure in the final outcome of this trial. due to the grisly events outlined by the evidence presented." Thornburgh said in a statement. .. However, there is justice in the fact that man) of those responsible for the brutal kid· napping. torture and murder of DEA Special Agent Enrique "Kiki" Camarena ha"c now been held ac- countable for their dreadful acts." Vasquez. 38. portrayed as a drug lord's bod)guard. was convicted of two counts of violent crimes 1n aid of racketeering 1n the 1985 murder~ of John Walker and Alberto Radclat I I I L_ in a G~ara restaurant. Prosecutors sajd the pair were mistaken for drua aaents after they wandered into a party for drua traf-fic~rs. . I ' Vasquez showed no emotion as the verdicts were read. Sentcncins was set for Oct. 29. He faces a maximum penalty of life in prison. Vasquez was not charged in the Camarena killing and his lawyer fought to ha ve his trial separated from that of the other defendants. But the judge ruled the two cases were sufficiently related to try them together. Camarena and his pilot. Alfredo Zavala Avelar. were abducted. tor- tured and killed in I 985 at a ranch outside Guadalajara. Prosecutors said the slayings were revenge for Drug Enforcement Ad· ministration raids on marijuana and cocaine plantations that cost the drug barons SS b1lhon in profits. T"o of the defendants were charged with slaying Camarena. They were found guilty of kidnap- ping. but acquitted of his murder. By Tbe Associated Pre11 -- we have one sale a year ... so GET IN HERE!!! • ,S: tum to nlDll up ...._ .. II y ..uoa CJmalr Lala .._ ....... ~-f.&:~" .... ~ •s ... •61~ M....,.... "lllaz 08 lail OWD NC II bMe, ICCOnlinl to \11::~ ~ :!::r..r.== __, ~ law _.....,....,..wbo dri~ , OM la '"wlllftal Gt WUIOG dilreprd for ly • die~ &be u1e1y ot penom or property" to ~""and r:A::O ~ t.e cbaqiDd with the Wlber a.my CRMld the eM Dillat ol ~::-Iba~ W not MY 7. comidend in this cue, mainly t. · •• OD1 Loi ~ Polee caue the punu.it stemmed ftom a ~t wbo Hwt Oii the Oruet minor ~ and above matdL .. Cailt llll'!'Hld di...,. that .,._. .. It'd &e dift"ereat if tbe JUY WU .-on didn't Ill tbe bUllw Nnnina &om a felony cnme like cUril, wbicb te llMI bu been ..,. robberY or kidnappina." Pier Mid. ..ruuy .... to"' CODvic:tioDI In .. No one WU seriously iatjurcd. limilar cues Ja LOI ADlelel Count)'. either Newport. ._. police SUll*I wJbere a110 miabt have been tbe .....,_na 11 IM ... ~ knolbd iuue of identification. whether be .oe a Villa Point relident s door OD WU the driver (wbo led of6cen OD tbe nilbt of July 1 1ben nbbcd tbe the chue )" relideDt arouDd . ~ throat and But ~ ~Police Stt. K.eitb ~ u.mn~~y. Bucd oo Jack.Ion, an Cout raideat, dac raadent •. detcriptlon of tbe aa-said the year-old elony CV8CtiDa law ~ and h11 car1 an ofticer later can. be applied to any cue in which tried to stop a wtute To~o~ Sul!ft the speed po1e1 a daDICf' to the ~Jamboree ROid and Uruvenaty public and need not involve iatjuries Drive. . or extreme speeds. Tbe Toyota driver pul~ over Jackson. who bas filed the felony ~ but took off' ap1n. ~fter ctwac in two cues that both n>- dtiVUll Wotllb levera1 red Jiabts, suited in convictions, said one of bJs tbe car sped onto the so~th~und successful cues even involved a Sm Dieao . F~y. ~Did pursuit that lasted only I 'h miles. another~ a.n Miaion VaeJO 7 but .. It has to do with speed combined cauted no uyuria -and conunued with traffic conditions and bow OD at~ tUI u~ !20 mph. much of a risk is this penon causina The driver: Joi& authorities wbeD by promptina the clwe," said Jack- be went b~uta ~ the border son. "It's a put law. Before we bad 1>9trol ptes.1nto Meu:o at 100 mph. to have IOmcone set bun to file The follo~na afternoon. the same felony evadina." T~yota, with Madonna at tbe w~eel, Jackson said he was appelled Or-tn~ to .cross the border back anto anae County prosecuton didn't use Califom11 _but wu stopped _by the same tactic in the Madonna ca.e. ~rder officials who had a descnp-"Sure, the initial case sou.nd1 like a t1on of the ca.r. . misdemeanor battery, but because of ~ado!lna ~as detarncd ?Y the the chase and speeds blowina red C~fom1a Highway Patr·C?I 1i:i San lights, it made a aood felony evadina Di~o ~ut rclea~ after beang iss~ed case. The chase even crossed the a c1tat1on for misdemeanor evading county line .. police. "We didn't have strong · enough evidence at the time to FIRED fromA1 trict Coun in San Francisco, Judge Marilyn Hall Patel extended a tem- porary restraining order freezing fundAmerica's assets but removed a provision that would have let the troubled marketing company pay commissions owed to salespeople. The hearina had been requested by attorneys for plaintiffs in a class- -- - I I l I I .....J action lawsuit to change a temporary restrainina order into a permanent injunction freezing the company's assets. But at\er the announcement that the company planned to file for bankruptcy, attorneys from both sides met behind closed doors to try to come to terms. Lefi in the extension of the tem- porary order was an earlier provision allowina First lntentate Bank to keep about S 17 million in reserve. That money is to reimburse credit card customers who request refunds on fundAmerica member- ships they purchased, attorneys sajd, But an earlier provision that would have allowed commissions to be paid to salespeople was removed by Patel. In another twist in the Fun- dAmerica saga, Kranz said he would ask to be removed from the case because of an "irretrievable conflict" since Ruff retained Kranz to rep- resent FundAmerica. Kranz asked Patel for an ex- tension of the temporary order "to find out what my client wants to do and to obtain other counsel." Elizabeth Cabrascr. lttomey for the plaintiffs in the class action suit, asked Patel to enjoin FundAmerica from filing for bankruptcy, but Patel said she believed she lacked the authonty to do so. -By fte A11oclated Prn1 PIER From At "It's like the lip of a pool," he said. The tower is located at what is called the ·•zero-T" near what is now the middle of the pier. he explained. "That's the whole reason we closed it," Mayor Tom Mays said. City Councilman Wes Bannister. who said he originally had mer- vations about closing the pier after storms thrashed it in January 1987, said he was glad the city had opted for closure. Bannister credited a city-hired consultant with sayinJ at the time "a Mack truck could dnve on the pier and nothing would happen. but one person could walk on it and the whole thing could come down." No one is yet sure how or why the 20-foot section came down Monday. Lindo said the incident is not likely to affect lifctuards' use of the tower on the pier. DITCH From At spokeswoman Linda Bonniklen said. "They're wortina lite demons out there tonight,~· Bonnikaen 'said~ addina the cable i1 Pac:BeU trunxina cable that connecu Oen- eral Telephone with the larmtr Pac:Bell network, aUowiaa OtE customen to call outside of thrir area. Servi« WU expected to be completely restored by 2 a.m. today, she ujd, • While the problem occuned ln a PacBell lef'Vic:e .,.., PlcBell cus&omcn were not alkted, Bonniklcn said. Pbone CUllOIDen wttb ........ 494, 497 and 499 could ctill ... Dbona wttb tbolc ............... but coukl not dial or ,....,. calli hm UywMretlll,;'<JTa ...-..= mu Larry Coa . UL ::..~a:s-~r.: • Rick , ... Don't be fooled, It's NFL's joke f'reseason games, don't even belong on sports pages There 11 no wone lhow on earth than an exhibition football pme. Tba1'1 why the National Football Leaaue bas taken this awful non- event on the road and acrou the seas in recent years. You don't really think the Raiden play in Great Britain and the Vikinp play in Japan and the Rams play in Germany because (a) they can set more work done overseas, or (b) ifs a vacation-reward trip for the playen and families, do you? Hanlly. The NFL remaiM consis- tent. It always aoes for the money and it baa already ripped off Ameri- can football fans to the point (season ticket-holden must also purchase home exhibition pme seats) of no return. Therefore, the NFL has aone inter- national because the people over there still don't know the difference between aood and bad football. I mean, they watch soccer. In truth, the quality of NFL play has aotten pretty bad lately durin' the regular seasons, too -but let s stick today with the exhibition prob- lem. The pmes are necessary. Coaches do have to look at personnel and learn how to work their headsets and frinae players do need an arena in which to S'Dlt their stuff, if only for a few weeks. It is my contention, however. that nobody should keep score and that ocnainly nobody should pay money to watch these pmes. Also. they should be banned from television. So if you are a pro football fan. I offer these suaestions for the up- comina 1990 season: • Watch no more exhibition. a.k.a. pre-season games. Do not re!id about any games or look at scores in the newspaper. By all means do not listen to anything a TV sponscaster says about any game (or anything. fo r that matter). 8 Do not take sides in any salary negotiation issues. It will dnve you aoo-aoo. The agents are lying. man· aaement is lying. and the player is listcnina to (a) his buddies wtth whom he plays foosball. (b) his ir.irl f P'leaM lff TALLEY /B2J TUESDAY, AUOlMT 7. 1110 ealmer-! Morgan sllp and sllde Into Hall of Fame 8yMIDONAGHY ,......_..., COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. -Jim Palmer anCt Joe Matp0 toot a Jlisbtly di&rtnt route to buebUJ immortality on Monday. The induction ceremonies are usually held oullide. allowint t.be Hall o( Fa.mm to bak in the aun and tbe sJory. But two stra.iabt days of heavy rain fortied a chan8e in tbe prop"am. Palmer and ~GtlU made their induction ~bes from tbe IUie of t.be O>opentown biab ecbool auditoriwn, with Ted Williams. Bob Feller, Stan Musial and Willie SWtell lit . with them. The annual Hall of Fame e~~tion pme. scheduled between Baltimore and Montreal. wu cancelled. It was just another crisis to deal with for Commiuioner Fay Vincent, who has already bandied an earthql&ake durina tbe Wotld Series, a lockout, an All-Star pme rain delay and OeoTF Steinbren- ner. ''I m sorry a lot of peo~ who came to share this moment with me didn't sec it," Palmer wd ... This is a celebration of what the pme is all about." Seatina in the auditorium was limited to invited iuests and media members. Just in case someone didn't know where to ao. the superintendent of schools was on hand to direct traffic. Another aroup watched on a bia-screen TV wheeled into the carpeted cafeteria. The lunch tables were moved out of the way and seats were borrowed from classrooms. Most of the fans, however, stood ouuide in the rain and listened Lo the ceremonies on loudspeakers that are usually used to annouooe the end of recess. As the HaU of Famen and other baseball big shots arrived in their limos. they passed the school bus depot and county hiabway hcadquancrs. Jllll p .... ., lleftl. Joe Mor .. n took their spots In the llne .. n Cooperstown Monday. ffl'le ... ,.. fAME/Uf Bean balls coming the other way Shotgun can leave its mark on unsuspecting pitchers I saw the repla y of Seattle Mariners pitcher Bill Swift. I cringed. It brought back memories -scary o nes you try and forget. The ones that make you consider not pitching anymore. Players refer to it as a "shotgun ... the most feared pan of baseball - for a pitcher. It's like a bad dream. only it's real You try and isnore it, but it won"t go away. You think it's buried in the back of your mind. then you sec highlights of Sunday's Minnesota· Seattle game and suddenly you can't set it out of you~ head. It seeps back into your conscious. I felt sorry for Swift. who ma) never be the same again. Maybe he will. All of the sudden, when I w1t- ncsscd Gary Gaetti's line drive ripped back to the mound. the ball careening off Swift's forehead. I could remember several episodes of the dreaded shotgun. Not just a ca- reer-threatening play, but life-threat· eningplay. Why? h's a freak play, nobody ever expects it ... doesn't happen a lot. H itters have more time to react to a pitch coming at them than pitchers do when it's reversed. The ball jumps off the bat toward the pitcher like a cannon. It comes back quicker than 80-90 miles per hour. the average speed of a fastball. Experts say the ball comes back - an avcra'gc line drive -around 120 mph. A batter stand mg m the box, for example. can almost anticipate a close, inside pitch. Pitchers have no chance. Their body is off balance from the delivery. the'irglove- from the thrust of their motion -1s slightly loosened from their hand. Their minds are somewhere else. as opposed to a hitter. who in the back of their mind are always considering the thoujht of getting beaned. Gaetu hit a pea off Swift's fore- head Sunday in Seattle, with the ball ricocheting several yards away into foul territory. In fact, it took one bounce and landed in the stands. A fan caught it. It's the worst clip I've seen all season long. The question came -'Had I. as a pitcher at Santa Ana High, Orange. Coast College. La Verne College and in the low minors. ever expenenccd anything like it.' My heart sunk. I could recall many times when a ball had been hit back to me on the mound. We're taJkinga rcaJ blast. not an easy grounder or pop-up; but hnr dnvcs W!th 1 full head 01 stram. You have absolutely no control over what's happening. The amount ofumr It takes your brain to rcaliu the hitter made contact. the ball is on top of you. Sometimes. quick reactions allow you to make the play ... sometimes you have no time to react. Some- times, you get drilled in the knee or the ankle or the thigh. Some pitchers never return. Another question: "Can someone die from it?" Ccrtainl)'.. Imagine what it would be like 1f a 120-mph line drive smashed into your nose? OK. OK, stop imagimng. it isn"t a pleasant thought. but It could hap- pen. Dizzy Dean, a Hall of Farner, had his toe broken by a line drive in the 193 7 AJJ-Sw Game, which proved to be the turning point in his career as M returned too soon afttr the injury. By favorina bis bad foot. Dtan de-• veloped a sore arm and was never the same. Wilbur Wood. the famous knuckleballer. had knee suraery once following a line dnvc back to the mound. It shredded his kneecap. Before Rollie Finaers became the NFL's guided tour continues with Rams in Berlin Like tourists on a whirlwind holiday, the NFL keeps jetting around the worl~. Last ~~ it was London and Tokyo. This week. Its Montreal and West Berlin. The Kansas City Chiefs and Rams began practicing in Berlin's Olympic Stadium on Mon- day and the New England Pat!"O~ and J>i.t· tsburah Steelers for Thursday mght s game in Montreal's Olympic Stadium. The Thursday .-me won't just be a chance for New Enaland to Judac new players. New head coach Rod "'Rust will have to Judge himself and • . . . ~· .. . . ·~· .. ... ~ ... his assistants. . .. Exhibition pmcs "arc invaluable for any coachina staff. Rust said Monday. "They're even more valuable when there's a new Jroup of people workina toaether (to sec) how we COf!dUct ourselves 1n the press box and sidelines and how we communicate." Some coaches have play hsts and fo~low them no matter what. Others make considerable chanaes dcpcn~ing on the now of the pme. Rust said his philosophy is somewhere m between. "You can't be a slave to tht' script and you can"t be indifferent to plannina." he said. •The Los Anaclcs Raiders. meanwhile. returned to camp Monday nl&ht. tryina to ad.Just their body clocks quickly before faCtng the Super lk>wl "hampion San Fran{'1sro 4'kn in exhibition Saturda) niaht. Coach Art Shell was I httle ~orried about the adjustment or a team weary from a half day Oight from London where tht'y lost an exhibition opener. Richard Dunn finest stopper in the p.me durina the 1970s. his Jaw was shattered by a line drive -he had it wired b9clc totether and was able to recover. It's friahtcruna. Some don't re- cover. I remember pla~ in Arizona tn 1981 , it was commuruty colleee tour- nament in Tempe's DiabloSlldium. We were playina Collcec of Southern Idaho and itspitcbcrwassbovinat.he bats up our noses for ciabt inniQp. We were losin .. badly. It was tbt ninth innina -this auy's ready l6 finish a complete pme victory- ffl'leaM ... DUNN/8Jf T~nnls Junior Classic gets under way NEWPORT BEACH -More than 400 participants are takina place in the inauauraJ Balboa Bay Oub Junior Tcnn1s Classic runnina throQ&b SUnday al the Balboa Rac- quet Oub. First round s1ngles were held yes- terday in boys and cirls sina)es and doubles. The finals are Sunday . The event is sanctioned by the United States Tennis Association. and is open to boys and Jirl1 qca 12-18. Several top-ten ranked playcn • C0111plet• first-round , ........ , •.. in their aac aroups arc com{>Ctina. accordi~ to tournament director Karen Nixon. All proceeds 10 to a prosram de- siJned at introducina economically disadvantaacd youw to the pme of tennis.. The money will be used pri- marily in scttina up sites in the cou.n- ty for children that can't afford let.sons or cquipmenL In addition. promisina playen wiU have the opportunity to earn 1ebolar- ships and attend tmnis camps at the Bay Oub. •--. Incl...,. Fountain Velley1 Duvel Love frllfttl peell thrOu"' 8erlln Well. ~ always a concern about bouncina back. cspcaally coJlfl.!'I f~m as far as we did and ~tung back on a plane ~n Fnday (for Sin Franci1CO)," Shell said. 'But we'll bounoc back. • "The pl of this event is lO tel kids off of the s~ll and off ~ and ,cttina them involved in aporu. N~on said. ., .. """',,,,.,. E • Ol•nu• Ride Leach ~ ffw '60 d•/12. • Ulren llgn S.... ftertclnl to ........ ,... pact/12. •"'-Ultle Le•.,•n ............. , ...... ,u. ~ l·toCMa-7171 IC'Olll AND~ LAft~llllWIM_,.. 'Tar:kanian's loss (O'Bannon) is Bruins' gain LOS ANOELES -The UCLA buketball PfOIJ'lm picked up ill acc- ond outstanclina pro1pect in a thru- day period Monday 1When forward Ed o•&annon of Anaia Hiah an- nounced he will attend the ICbool lhit .... Quant 5-on Tll"ef of Santa aata Hieb la Oxnard announctd S.uarday dau-8-111 play i>f thd lnliDL 8otb playen had taid in t.be iprins that they'd atttnd Nevlda-La1 v.., but ncitber lilned ltnen o( iDteal witb &be Ruaaln' Rdih he-c:aUM o( ., th ... ol NCAA aac- tiom. A.Del ll*ir feln were ..ai.mld llit __. ,... um.v. *' d1fl ~ ............ Wll ... &om ...... Ullllpeddoli wt year for alleged rccruitma violations of l l years aao. So both decided to auend other 1eboola. By not ..,nina the lettcrl or intent, the paa~ uaured them1tlvcs of the opt.ion of leavina without losina a year of clitjbilifl If the NCAA an- nounced penalllet before IChool IWted. ne 6-foot..a o·BaMon led Anaia to a 29-l record, I.be OF Ous 4-A title and the California State Division II championtbip. He avcr- lllld 24.6 ~ .... 9.7 rebounds. l .• -... and 2.3 ncalt wtllle playiftl an a..,.. ol oat): ll minutes per PIM· AaaJ..._1 o-..._ •¥el'llied 29 potatl .... 14 ...... per ..... .. w. are very acieed to have a pla)1ef of'M'a talents ct.ooee UCl.A, .. Bruins Coach Jim Harrick said. "He is outstandjna all-around basketbaJI player and a hard worker. "He will Cft\ainly malrc a con- tribution to ou.r prapam. especially with his ablUtia around tbc baskeL We arc happy that E.d bas decided to become a Bruia.. .. The 6-S Tarver a~ Jl.6 Points, 9.2 rebounds a.nd 4.0 blocked lbots u a ltftior at Suta Oara. Ht ftnilbed hi1 rour.,_,. vanity c:arcn' with 2,445 poin1a, a l.S.().polnt aver· .. ........ .._.IO enroll at UCLA Dal ftlOllG." 0--"0" ..W ia a ............. "' .. ~ IChool ~ Wape Meri-. .. After eooo Iidlri111 al ol ........ ... and ditculJi ... the ..... . . " clelM1' with my f•mily, l feel that UCLA is the best place for me to continue my athletic and academic career. .. 1 hope that 1 can COfttribute in 10me small way to I.be peat UCLA buketball tradition. And I am loot· ina forward to p&ayint in \be Loi Atleda .... After tbt NCAA decision involv- ift& UNLV waa aneounced. O'Bannon tcDOnedlY w1oaed hit cboiea to UCLA Md U9C Milt Tarver ~ ..oald m ID UCLA and Al'iloM S... .. hlooka liM UQA .... hln • llaill OM qmtil) .,. ia Qil. ... -.., ........ -....... UNl v ~ Jcity ,...... ... - I U Ai for L ach stagg r the -Giants~bopes . -MOIL It. WILION 1.-c:b left the OiMta. wbo an at ..__ H°'*°8, ud returned 10 Saa Fru- SAN f1lANOSCO -Su Fran-cilco OD Monday. a., Giata outfielder Ric* ladl Oiata ..-..., ....a -.. ..,.- wu IUIPlnded for 60 days by lla1pb Nellon laid 1.-cb bad biiln .,....,... commillioolr Fay Vmcent \Clled al spriaa uainiDa ud duriae oa Moaday bec:aute of a potitive the IC:UOD. drua letl. .. Tbe test be failed WU dwial tbe u.ch. 33, di•ppeued twice from weekend series winat Cincinnau .. bis teams dwin& tbe lut four on July 26-29, Ne&oe laid. .uoos. He bad been ordered to Lcacb wu releated by tbe Teus undeqo dNa c:oumeliq after mari-~ lul November, spent IPrina juana was found in bis botel room traimna u a non-roster player with last year. the Atlanta Braves and tbe Giants, .. I am truly IOrT)' this bas bap-and was ai&ned by the Gianll on peDe<l," Leach said in a statement openina day. Lach bu played in 18 releated by the Giants. "I know I pmes. • bave disaa>PC>inted my family, my .... m srateful to (leneral mamaer) teammates and the Giants." Al Rosen and (manaaer) Roeer C1aia Leach ii bettina .293 in 174 at-bats for takina a chance on me when a lot this season with two home runs and of teams wouldn't, .. Leach said in the 16 RBI . statement. "I'm IOJTY for lettina "This is a real shock. He's dcvas-them down, and I hope I can act this tated. The club is in shock. too," behind me and act back into Giants manqcr Roaer Crai~ said. baseball." "He's done so much for us. He s been Leach is lbc ftnt player suspended a real leader. We're aoing to have to by the baseball commissioner for pick up from here." drug-related reasons since last Sept. Leach's suspension was an-22, when St Louis Cardinals out- nounced by the Giants, a move that fielder Leon Durham was suspended caught the commissioner's office by for 60 days. surprise. Rich Levin, Vincent's While a member of the Toronto spokesman, then confirmed that Blue Jays, Leach disappeared in Seat- Leach had.been suspended. tic from Aug. 25 to Aug. 27, 1987, The M8J~r _League .~ball Play-after havin& an argument with his ers Assoc1atJon sa_1d It would wife Angie. challenge the suspension and force a . . hearing before arbitrator George _When Leach s1gned with the Nicolau. Giants, be •greed to undergo ~rug "We arc aoing to grieve," Eugene tests about every t~ru day~. Giants Orza. the union's associate general spokesman Matt Fischer said. counsel. said in New York. From Tit~ ,b10C'lated Ptt11 Sports break Lakers sign Perkins to multi-year pact, ·;n S3-million range INGLEWOOD -Sam Perkins signed with the Los Angeles Lakers be-• ~ cause be wants to finish his NBA career ' ... on top. The Lakers hope he"ll help them stay there. "It just came down to what I wanted. and I wanted to go where I'm best suited." Perkrns said Monday at a ne'-"S conference announcing his s1gn1ng with the Lakers. No terms were announced. but ifs believed Perkins will earn as much as $3 million per season. The Lakers said only that Perkins signed a mult1-)'ear contract. Perkins. 29. played six seasons for the Da Ila!> Mavencks. who selected him with the fourth overall pick in the 1984 draft after he starred at North Carolina. where he played __ _,·with Lakers star James Worthy. ,.erldns A 6-foot-91'1. 257-pounder. Perk.ms averaged 15.9 points and 1.5 rebounds m 76 games for the Maven cks last season. For his career. Perk.ans has averaged 14.4 points and 8.0 rebounds while shooting 47.7 percent from the field and 81 .4 percent from the fo ul hne. "This is probably mv last contract, in a sense." Perkins said. "so I thought I would get the most ou1 of basketball by being with an organization that has a winni!'J trad1t1on and on a level where the} can be compctJtJve. "I didn't want to start aJI over with another team that was bu1ld1ng for another four or five years. because I'll be old and gray by then m the N BA sense." The aging process already has hit the Lakers. who won their mnth straight Pacific Division title and led the N BA with 63 regular-season wins but were dumped m the second round of the playoffs b) a younger Phoenix team. USC-Notre Dame sold out LOS ANGELES -Individual ti ckets ---- for the Nov. 24 game between Notre ~ Dame and USC at the Los Angeles Col-~ 1seum have all been sold, 1t was an----- nounced Monday. The only tickets remaining for the game are thOSt' which are part of USC's ~on t1cke1 package. <\ limited number of season ticktts are still available for $ I 02, tbe school said. This is the earliest selloul of the Notre Dame- USC game in Los Angeles. The previous record wa~ the 1988 game at the Coliseum which sold out m late October. When that game was played. Notre Dame was the top-ranked team m the country while U < was ranked second. The Notre Dame-USC senes dates back to 1926 and is regarded as one of the nation's top rivalries. *Dodgers-Reds. Channtl I I, 4:30 p .m. *Red Sox-Angels. SportsChanMI 7:30 p .m. f N THE BLEACHER S I a ... _ - .. ~'·· "Galluzo, you foot! Do you want to lpse a hand?!!" Eric falls his physical ANDERSON . Ind. -Eric ---- Dickerson. ready to report 10 training ~ camp after a lengthy feud with the In-'l::Y d1anapolis Colts. failed a ph)sical Mon----- day because of an inJUr) to his lefl hamstring. 1he NFL team said. The injury "is a strained left hamstnns. "'h1ch Dicke rson sus1ained on his own dunng training." the team said in a brief statement released late Monday. No details were provided b) the club, which said 1t would have no further commen1 on the matter. Dickerson. lh$ NFL"s single-season rushing leader. has been a holdout since Jul) 26. accumulating S 1,500 a da)' m fines. The Colts had threatened to place him on the reserved-left squad list. which effecti vely would have suspended him without pa) for the I ~90 season w1thou1 nulhf) mg the year remain mg on has contract. The absence followed months of demands for a trade, threats of retirement and crit1c1sm of team- . mates and management. That '-"as supposed to end Monday. when Dickerson was scheduled to report following a physical. In other NFL news Monda)" •The Tampa Ba y Buccaneers' on-again. off- agam, on-a~in effort 10 acquire disgruntled quar- terback C'hns Chandler from the Indianapolis Coils ended successfull)' when he agreed to terms of a renegotiated contracl. Due process sought LAS VEGAS -Nevada convcssmen have m- lroduced a bill that would require the NC AA to provide college players and coaches due process. saying the agency now has the power to declare them "guilty until proven innocent." The bill. dubbed the "Coach and Athlete's Bill of R•&.hts." is the outarowth of a July 20 edict from the NCAA barrina UNLV from post season play next season. The ban would prohibit the Runnin' Rebels from defcndina their national basketball cham- pionship. ln other spons news Monday: • In Sacramento, Rowdy Welch, 131 . from Sac- ramento extended bis record to 12-1 with a seventh round knockout over Fili Montoya. 130, from Mex- icali, Mexico. The endin& came at 2 minutes, 59 seconds into the round. • At Del Mar, Pctalia. ridden by Kent De- 10rmeaux, strove from sixth to ovenake the leader at the furlona marker and win the $46.000 turf feature race b~ a lenath. •In Seattle, two Bulprian women besketbell players left the team after the Goodwill Games and remain in Seattle where they are con1iderin1 seekina a1ylwn. an INS spokeswoman •id. ,.,_ ,., ~"" Pnt. Area roundup Irvine Mustangs go for title PACIFIC GROVE -lrvme's Mustangs All- Stars, a group of 9-1 Q..ycar-old Lmle League stand- outs. go for the Mustang World Series champ1onsh1p toni&.ht. and after three straight v1ctones. 11'11 take a dou61c-dose of defeats to stop them. Coach Lonnie Bradbury's Irvine nine enter the finals after disposing of Morgan Hills. 11 -0: San Jose Pacific. I 5-5: and Torrance. 2-1. The key was Sunday's 2-1 victory over Torrance. which found Irvine down 1-0 going into the bottom of the sixth and final ininng. Matt Van Courten drew a walk and advanred on Michael Bradbury's single. then both came home "'11h a one-out double by Garrett Atkins. Irvi ne has lit 11 up since the out et -as e' 1dence by the overwhelming victones in 1he tirs1 1wo games. In the opener against Morgan Hills. lhc game was called after JUSt four innings because of the merq rule. Atkins (three innings) and Jona1han Pearl (one inning) turned I 2 stra1&.ht ballers awa) m a first-<'ver perfect game m the Mustang World encs. Among lrvine·s leading hitters were Enc Palmer (4 for 4 with 2 doulbes and 2 RBI). Bradbury (2 for 4 with a tnplc and 4 RBI: Atkins (3 for 4) and Ryan Forehan-Kell) and Stephen Muholland. each wi1h a pair of RBI. In the 15-5 rout of San Jose Pacific. Bradbury was the winning pitcher and was backed b} Atkins (3 for 3 with 2 doubles and tnpk). Tony Gatoff (2 for 3 with a 2-run homer); Forehan-Kelh (2 for 3 "1th a double and 2 RBI; and himself (} for 4 with a double and 4 RBI). Fountain Valley wins Pony CYPRESS -Fountain Valle) ·s youth baseball stars captured the Pon} d1v1s1on at Oak Knoll Park. defeating La Mesa 1n the western states finals. I 0-4. Coached by Cliff Ritter, Mark Clutter and Terry Handien. the Fountain Valley 13-year-olds swept to a 6-0 record m tournament play. This 1s as far as the 13-year-olds go -there 1s no World Scncs C'VCnt for them. thus the tournament serves as a state championship. although there were six other western states reprcsen1ed 1n the tourney. The 10-4 111le victory was paced by the pitching of Chns Ponchak and Kent Montgomery. and they were backed up b} a n1ne-hi1 attack. led chiefly byk Kent Montgomery. Dene Yamag,isawa and Craig Ritter. Ocean View travels HUNTINGTON BEACH -Ocean View Pony League·s Colt team will travel to Wednesday's Colt World Series in Lafayette. Ind. for a first-round game against the Caribbean section champion. Ocean View advanced to the tournament by winning the Pacific Regionals on Sunday. The team defeated host Santa Clara, 12-4. in eight innings in the UCI names Smith as its soccer coach JR VINE -Ray Smith. former assistant men's coach at Chapman College. has been named 10 replace Keith Comfort as head women·s soccer coach at UCI. Comfort. who was recent!) named head coach. resigned after only one da) on the job. He cited 1hc area's high cost of living as his ma1or reason for resigning. Sm1th. 25. served one year as an assistant at Chapman. Prior to that, he was men's assistant coach at B1ola Uni versity from 1986-88. Whale at Biola. the Eagles wcrt con- ference champions. National Chnstaan College Athletic Assoc1at1on National Tournament run- ners-up and an NAIA NauonaJ Tournament participant. The 1988 graduate of Biota started his coaching career as head of the Esperanza boys program from 1986-87. In 1987. Smith coached the Aztecs to a second-place finish m CIF. He was named the Empire League's Coach of the Y car for his efforts. In 198 7. Smith moved to Katella High. where he once again gamed Empire League Coach of the Year honors in 1988 and 1989. His 1988 team was league champion. "We look forward to Ray taking over as head coach and gettin~ the program gom$-" Tom Ford, director of 1ntercollegiate athletics said. "He has been successful 1n all previous coaching endeavors and has a good knowledge of the game." Besides high school and college coaching. Smith has also been a staff coach for the Olympic Development pro$ram and served as head coach for an international tounng team. Smith received his master's degree from U.S. International University an education 1n 1989 and Wlll continue teaching Enghsb and coaching bo)s soccer at K.atella. By tb~ D•lly Pilot championship game. Ocean View scored aJI eight runs in the eight, with the big blows coming from Mike Edwardson and David Knuff. Edwardson blasted a 1hree-run home run. while Knuff nailed a solo shot. Bill Spear also contnbuted to 1hc win. going 3 for on the da>- Santa Clara nearly won 11 m regulation m the bottom of the seventh with two ou1. but Ocean View riJtlt fielder Ryan Belitz threw out the potential winning run at the plate to force extra inning.s The Colt World Series 1s for players ages 15-16. Ocean View's first-round con1est begins at 4 p.m. By IM D•llY Pilot TALLEY From81 friend who would rather be h vmg m Texas, anyhow. Tl),at may take careful plannjng and some self-control on your part, inasmuch as the real I 990 NFL season doesn't begin until Sunday. ScpL 9. That means you have four Unser gains some solace in son's win •Once the regular season amves. bet on the pmcs. h's the only thing that can possibly keep them anterest- ina. You don't have to bet a lot- maybe S5 with your barber or SI million with your other self -but I warn you: without the point spreads. many NFLpmcs will put you to sleep. Indeed, it is amazina how sanc- timonious NFL officials continut to act as if &amblinaon pmes is evil. The truth is that without point spreads, TV ratinp on the NFL would plummet and you wouldn't have to worry about aa1ary holdouu. There would be much amaJJer salaries. Why cite ltaJ tuned when the Rams are beau .. aome tom which can't bold onto the be.II,)(). 7, late in the third quaner? On any siven Sun- day, the f~uaner guntion 1Cr011 Americl 11, simply. Will they ••me.,_.., In tbe meulime. you mu1t 1n-•1e )OUJ.l llllhm ullibition ..-..... nderno~tions. **8d eftf be-.nd Upoft. more weekends to isnorc the NFL I know it may be difficult but believe me, if you succeed you will eventually be thankful. EAhibition pmcs are m1skading. They tell you nothina. They aJlow you to root for runnina becb from Arkansas who will not make the final cut. They make you wonder who will pla,Y quarterback or who wilJ make tramina camp or who will make touchdowns which don't matter. And1 please, do not delude yourself into thmklna you arc "1nalyz1n1" the chances of your favorite NFL team. It doesn't work. Teams who stink in Auaust often play well in September. Teams which 10 4-0 may end up , 1oin14-and-whatcver by Christmas. There is no safe way to watch exhibition footbell pmes and they Wlll not ao away. SO be salt. Pr01eet yourwlffrom footb&U pmca Muc:b do not counL It wilJ make you a better pmon. 8y STEVE HERMAN N~wrtt., INDIA NAPOLJS -The worst in- juries in Al Unser's rac101 career v.-erc eased by bis son's victory in the Marlboro SOO, a race the elder Unser bad to watch from the hospital. The 51-ycar-old Unser, a (our-time Indianapolis SOO winner but now a pan-timer on the Indy-car circuit, suffered a broken thiah and col· larbonc and three cracked ribs in a crash durin1rract1cc at the Michitan lntemationa pcedway on Thura- day. He was nown to lftdi.anapolls. where he underwent su'ICf'Y at Methodist Hospital. the customary home .. way·from~home for il\iurtd Indy driven. He is eitpected to be rclcated by thtt week.end. Unte:r watched from 1 wb«ld\atr u Al Untt.r Jr. won Sundlfs "'" and told bi• father -and a natiouJ Wvllioa 1adtmc:e --nit was Ix youz dad. 1 wish you MR heft." "u made me •cry. happy." dM cider Unter, atall 1n pein, aid Mc. .S.y. "It meaat 1lot10 me when hi laid lhAt on TV. •• -. ---,-.. -. ·--- MAJOIS ......... ........ .. n OMllOlt W L 61 .. • • w S2 .. . .. " .. " IAST DIVIUOM ., a " .. H ~ JI U SI JI ,. ,. ......... ~ Pd. --1)7 ,.. •a ... .. I • • I• IJ" ,...., I" t 11 IJ , . ..., "'"*"-' It-•. ""'"-'-· 1-) ,_. __ ............ , """""" 4. Sen ,~,_ I II. Leult S. -Yerll I °""'-~ T_.,.,._ ~ (......,_ t-f) el Clllc:IMell , ........... us ...... TRANSACTIONS IAJaU.LL Sell °"" , ...... , .• -"'°"" ,.., •I AllMla COie ....... , -CWY l•t), 2, 1 IO a.II\. MM9Y ... din -· COMMISSIONEJ"S OF,.CE ~ •Id< ~. Saft Fr...c1ico Gi.nlt oull-, lot .. den aflor lie,..,.., _ .......... -~ NEW YOllK YANllEEs-AcllYelecl Mike P'f' IM (De.-. 1·21 et New Yerll (Vitia IS-JI. OJ a JI'\. --ISMllll t-11 et ....,.,,.,, lSnlllrt S-JI, UJ •IT\. ..... ...,,,._ .... , .. -,..,......._..,, IOtttNor,,,.,, • 1 PeYM SMwor1 l -t.Catt.v-4.PNA11-II ~ lhw .. .Wv 6 JI et Clllc-(~ H I. HS am. Sall,,_,...,_ ..... l ) ., -- .... ll'lwtu9el •-fl. 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UU.J.Q JO Oewlct FrO\t J A""'•A-tl 'c;o...,, • .,.._l( 11 Tommw Armour n C~•h<t. 11 c.llco t>eu. • ..-t>en. llt meclllf.,, 6 -"'· .. --· ,. ..... , ......... 1 -"° -••Wf'o.T u.-. -f _,,, 115 ....... L 1 .,_ t>en, t ...,,_, II) 1 EmllleS...c,..1 I T-•M.nle< t lt ..SG ..... t IO l'eteS-H II JlmCourler 1l Mlk•DoMld 1• ,,..,, ""'"'""' lS NICI>. Pr IG• 1' l llly lh• l row• 11 .... c .... .,.. .. -''•· UI --· • ••-lell, 0 --· n u 11eo ..... 1 •'•"' •CIUl4, 1 11 A""'efC-ow IJ,Mlcl\NIC,,_ 1' S••••-1t le• &A•er·F"'<ll t8W1on, I ,...... _, " -· ,..,, ..... JO Lor..,•-" FAME From BJ "This was not a typical Cooperstown day," Mayor Harold Hollis said. "We did the best we could." But not everybody was impressed or sympathetic. "Grcctin•s to the ma}'or. who should think about aettmg a canopy," said By Saam. who was inducled into the broadcasters wing. Then it was time for Morgan. Palmer. Saam and sportswnter Jerome HollLman to tell their stones. For that. the location really didn't matter at all. Holtzman, recipient of the J.G. Spink award, spoke of a daughter who died in February. It was a daughter he brought to seven or eight baseball games a yea r and taught how DUNN ''°"''' and Ed Farrell, our t1rst baseman at Oranae Coast College, cru shed one back to the mound. I have no idea who the pitcher was. but it npped part ofh1s car off - blood was squt.rtang everywhere and they carried him ofTthe field on a stretcher. Never knew what happened to the pitcher afterward. Really, I d1dn 't want to know. People were stunned. It as. however. a part of baseball. Three times in my amateur career, I went lhrou&h the unwanted task of reccivina a ball back to the mound faster than I'd thrown it without the benefit of stoppina it with my &Jove. Never happened in the minor leaaucs, and never did I get whacked in the head-like Swift or Fi naers- but a couple of times I was on the shelf because a liner pummeled by thiah. Twice, in fact, I got hit square on the thi~. Another time I aot hit on the in11de part of my left knee ... auns I was lucky. Y cs, brina out the violins. Deep black and blue markfop followed. Walked with a hmp followina the bashinp. Actually. if you survived, players wouJdjoke about it. "What did you fool him (the hitter) with?," they'd say. lauahina. • to keep score. "She knew she was d ying and said. 'I won't be in Cooix-rstown '-'Ith you.' She's in my thoughts today." Hoh.zman said. Palmer traced his succe~ to the day he was born. "I was adopled at birth." Palmer said. "You wonder about the spm · tual pan of )OU. How docs this happen that )OU have parents that want }'OU. that love )OU and "ere alwa}'s there for you." For the 5-foot· 7 Morgan. 11 \\as a lifetime struggle of overcoming his size by using his determination. "I was very lucky to be able to pla) baseball," Morgan said. "I grew up in Oakland. A lot of great playe rs grew up there -Frank Robinson. Vada Pinson, Will ie Stargell. "But they had one thing 1n com· mon -they were all over six feet." he said. "The scou ts didn't want to .... .., '1U, • '1111W "''·"' -.>61 ... .Jt'1 ...... " u11,m UIJ.Jn ...... MIUlJ MSi.MO ~"' Utl.1t6 Utt.In un1w USt.>Oi us. tSt t.Jll.ltJ u1 .... U11 '" U:IO IH UIJ.1'-UO. JtO UOl.lm 11'5.5'1 •1'1.t<IO Utt,611 ,,.,, ... U10.16J wt11, .. ,~. lrom Ille 11·de• .i.-hi ~Merk ui.. elta. ... c-.. ...... -... ,......~ ........ "- " LOUIS CAJOINA~ ar.• ""'"'· "'",_. on Ille IS·oev di..-••• Mo•ecl JoM -.i ..... ~ ............ IJ·dev c11.-tu 10 Ille 11·CleY ••• • .-Tim si.•. ..io.r. ,,_ L_ ... of ,,,. .._,.,..,IC.,, A,_leflon UMCST9ALL _ .. __ ._._ LOS ANGELES LAllEU-~ Sam ""''""· ,_.,d lo • """"-contrecl l'OOTML.L --"-'--CLEVELAND IJOWNS-~ llel"' kth<, ........ SAN Otl!GO CHA•C.EltS-5-Sam S.... -M•• tie<' -v_. .. G-. .... ,, We••.0 O .. lcl Arel*. -1"'1leel>. ...., T.., Jec\--1 .. De<k COL UM UCl-H-llew Smittl ..,_., -· cer coec11 UCLA-AMO<#'Ced ttlat 0.,rlfl Del"8v, -·· .... -, .... ..., ,,...,, ,,.. l>etllef· Ctiel tMrn eNt ••" tr•~•er to Oru.e look at a aux who was 5-foot-5 and 140 pounds.· Morgan and Palmer were each elected to the Hall of Fame in their first )Car of eligibility after careers noted fo r winning numbers on win- ning teams. Palmer finished his career with a record of 268-152 and a 2.86 earned run a'erage. He pla}'ed on World Scn~s champions in 1966. '70 and '83. "Am I as good as a lot of pitchers here? Probabl) not," Palmer ~1d. "But I would have voted for myself." Morgan won consecutive MVP 11- tles in 1975 and '76. leading the Cinc1nnat1 Reds to the World Scnes championship each }'car. He had a lt fc11mc ave rage of .271 with 268 homers and 1.133 RBI. "Mays, Musial and Morgan 1n the same breath," Morgan said, 'Tm not sure I'll ever get used to that." , ~ absbrb 4-1 lo HOUITON -m o.lkt-.......... CGmPlllJ ...... . ...... ,..... .... .,.. Ml• twofta ........ _ ..... 11De'1 lftlt ~ whi lid diQHtll ............ Oieatll" .... belaiM idle Ciacinmti iD tbC Ne-tioul ....... w-. • ......_ IM. -··u 1-1: In Plailedelpllie, bndy Tomlin came wilhia OM OUI of a lbutoul in bil ............. debut. lobby BoailJa bid a c:ueer-hitb five hi" ud Berry Bonds drove an Ove nans u lbe Pitllbwlb Pira1e1 hammered the Pb.illldefpbia Phillies 10-1 in the opener. • eu...a. I, M... 1: In St Louis. Joe t.fqrane tcattered five hi" over 71>'> inninp and Jose Oquendo b.11 a t~rvn double. •R1BCtrt • ........ ,. I: In Arlinaton, Charlie Hou&h out-r~ Dave Stieb and die Tcus n trapped two runnen in the innin& to boki off Toronto. • a.1t1t 5, Wldae S.s •: In Kan- sas City, Gerald Perry's double and two crron by catcher Carlton Fisk keyed a five-run third innina as the Kansas City Royals beat Cbicqo. snappina a five-pmc winnina streak by the White Sox. •Brewers I, Twia1 I: In Min- neapolis, Ro n Robi nson broke Mil- waukee's eight-pme losing streak by pitchina his first major-league shutout, lcadina the Brewers over the Minnesota Twins. • Yauees Z, r.dlaa1 I: In New York, rookie Kevin Maas bro.kc a six1h-innin1 tic with his 11th home run in 92 major league at-bats and Roberto Kell y also homered as the New York Yankees beat the Oeveland Indians. Fnm ~ AHocl•ld Pm. 0 er.wen 6, TwlM 0 -.wAUllaa ...... s 1 1 • ' 0) I 't t I S I l t OOOt s 1 1 0 • 0 1 0 O I O 0 • I 1 1 ) I I 1 0 0 0 0 -HOTA CUYWl.AtlO ..WYOlllt _..,,. ~( _...... OParVdl\ EOlei 1'> Y-cf 0...11 ~-" -~ 0..1 .... "' ··---· s.i.,, .. 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SOewl1 w S-1 llli\S11f'n¥f 110 1 ot;:_ 1 1 I 0 ""--W 1 11 11 J 1 111-tS II 1 J 0 r>a-aor-• IJrNHrn-Mom. Pa•mo FW\f koU S«Oftd ••Uh• f~,o C.erc1• T-)01 •-1f AJI Ferr -•.,.,.,vs 16 W-SD1• • T-1'9 ,._._, All PROCEEDS GO TO THE ~1.\h.I · \ \\"1~11 H>l ':".l>.\I H>'' OF ORANGE COUNTY TO PROVIDE .)(]'( AND CHERISHED MEMORIES TO CHILOAEN WITH LIFE THREATENING OR TERMINAL ILLNESSES ~ --- 0 0 0 1 Ld mt ... J.1t 11 J 0 0 I t '41->flOerift I Ow ... -t-T-1'1 A-JI 1>0 0 • 1 ....... 0 • 1 c---· ... ...-...... llWO••L J • t~ • > 0 0 • 0 ) I THE IRVINE COMPANY .. --·~ .... lllJ _Pillt __ ® e ll'l•:CIUvO I DOWNEY SAVINGS IRVINE SHELL SERVICE Sii lun/Wo• & 106! lvn $11.00 lll(tvOft $1\trl lttifH ,,.....,.!t eno entr• "' or1re <1<••1"9' lk l(tOS ltUN JA 00 Grand Manhall Col1fom10 Angels Holl of Forner •••YUICll DATE Sunday, Augusl 12 1990·8 00 AM ( lk 9 15 AM ) LOCATION Starts and finishes at Northwood Community ... Partt. located at Bryan Ave and Yale Ave In 1rv1ne COURSES ) . 1 0 0 • I 1 Like any sponina accident. mental touahness is the key to retumina. If you keep thinkin11bout, you're done. You're unable to focusand concentrate on your Job. Word of advice: Block it out, foraet about it and move on ... of coune, ualY flashbecb pop up now and then, especially aner seclna what ha~ pened 10 Swift the other day. I m tumJna the channel ne"' time. at- aumina there'• time to react 10k Run • 5k Run /Walk • lk Kids Fun Run Starting and finishing 1t the park the courses ta.ke you along nat. beeutltulty tree lined lrvtne atreeta throughout the vtllege of Northwood. Also. put scenic orange groY99 and straw- berry fields of the Irvine Aanch. Arrowf'IMd water stations mld-courM. Time C8Med 1t each mile mark IUdMrl 11-I• • 0.1/¥ Pl,.I ,,.,,, ,,,,,., .... C9laul .,,,..,. •Nf7,...,.. OfFlCIAL ENTRY FOAM AHO LIA81LITY WAMA FOR TH£ VILLAGE Of NORTHWOOD tOll AUN• 5ec MIN/WALK • Ill KIDS FUN RVN t OKAY TO OOPYt CMteaOlll ,...°" .... _ O •IMI -...--..,_... D•,_, .. o•..., __ .., O llllOa-.., -!Ml a..-.,._ ... -,._ ...... I~ 0 0 ... * M-!1 0 0 9-c:AWP10 te-.ft 0 0 .._ ___ l'-al 0 0 := 0 0 ...... -0 0 -"' .... ..... D 0 0.-.• ... 0 0 .... O•• 0 ......,_...,_ .... a -. •· D ,,.,.. ... ......... ~----------------~----------~--~-~--------------llll·--------~ ~ ·---·---~ .. ---...... ______ .,.... _,, _____ --..... ..--·...--·-·-··-·$ ........ ....., ________ _ . _, ____ _.,. .. _. ·-·:::s::--·-!::.:!..-·----:: .. c::.::=i:r=-o.-.. -::=. ~-:...-.::: ........ '=~~= --\ ... -·-=--·-~"--------..., __ _ ., __ _ --------------------------------------~Olltt_.. __________ _ ' PRIZE DONOR& Irvine Sheff Servtoe..... . ..... Gu pow•ed Corvette Go-Cw1 American Sport• Centera......... . ........ Two 1-Y.., MembeiltMpe Sunrl• Aviation.. ....... . ....... Aerob41tlc Plane Aide HIMr HeNeopter1. tnc... . • ln1ro. I lallcopter LWon Runnera High. . .. .... . Gm c.tlftcate/8'*'8 The Mo6e Hole. Laigune N9* ........ <Mft c.-.111 8ec:k Bey Aunnera.. •.. ············· ........ OMt c.1MloM• IMM !ye car. ........... Wlnner'a Choa/9'11 = Wied Alwr'I WaMr ~....... . • ....... Gueae ClllfofM Angell....... '"'"'""'" ... "~~ ....... T1c*9lll °"'~· . ..... .. .. " .. '"'"'"'"" ..... Gueae ,._ ~ """-··· ............................. Qlt Olt.-CJlll Jcllly Aog9r ... .. . ........................ -'*"-9 tor Two Mo9 ..... Bey Cannara .................... Oll••• .. Two Vie,...., . .. . .. ......................... Olt•••tar Two AJ1)• "'-,., ~ ............................ '*·--"' Two ~~ ............................ ,., .... .. ....,_Counl9r .... f l.OOem-$ OOpm ··.· n ..... ' £:) . . ... • • :.. . . ·~ • ' l' \ ....... , • ,~·· L• 1002 COLD Well BANl(eRO Yl., 10~ .... 3bf S 179K Buena Park 3br S208K Costa M ... 3t>r S 179K Garden Grove 4bf $204K Hunt. Bch 3bf $169,990 S1n11 Ana And we have others!! Prlncipala only. ··.· ...... -.. . - ......... . ' ... DISTRESS SALE ..... 1 .... 1111 .... SUMMER JOBS T' Y 1he closs1f1cds. What's 1unk 10 you •S o trct>sure to someone lse f or only $12.40 you got 4 ltnes for 7 doys. Coll today. 642-5678 • EAAN liii A DAYt work At Nome. Call 1-eoo •• 1111 bt ne '" ... Elm up to iiii.ii a --.-.rnbllng .. product9 II home. A.IMD• ,. corded m 1 a ,.._.. detalla. c an today 7'4/4u.aa Dapc. 100. FEMALE Jour nallet/ oencer =tor ..._ rounded to INN home ...... ~ be non-tmoker, rMpon- elbll, .,......,2841, .... .............. PfT for ... lcno.n ~. NB. Exp, , .. .,enc ... t>ondable, hlQh com- rNellon. 17Mf73. Red Croa authorized provider looklng for certified lnetructor for betic flr9t aid Md C.P.R. tr116ning. C.. Jen'6e Stahl at (7 14) 541 •43. •••••••••nW ... d U¥e In-Out Enolttl epeaklng. or Span. Ok. muM drM Md ha\11 rlfer9ncea. let. bMwean $1504350 pet .... c.. 9--5.141-1138. UPTO •100 PER MONTH * IO COWCTIM * Early morning motor routes available. Must have dependable transportation and liability insurance CALL 642-4333 EMIC. ....... ........... ~ n.lt•Jd•Mld (40) .... ~,. the Olly Plot 'f• the .............. Be • part of the .... tun. bt ·.=:of tldt· Mc pr.. •• tllil •· and tam EXTU ...., ,. ....... ... Apply now! WITH OllAR IHAAI' & TANNAH HIRICH ~1-T,.._ Meck~ lftC So.It~ I • J NT Wac , .. , .. rmase. west perM"t'fted with dubl, but when declarer pve up a second heart trick, the clef~$ needed trickl fut. West ound the way to aa them by shiftina to the ltina and anoche:r diamond. The ddmdcn banked three diamond triclt.s to 10 with the two hearts-down one. Declarer was in too much of a hurry. A careful inspection of the combined assets would have un- earthed a ninth trick in a way that would almost guarantee the c-00- tract. Declarer should have aone af- ter diamonds for his ninth trick! To do that, declarer will probably need all the entries to the table he can must~. so the openina '4=ad should be won in hand and the ten of diamonds nm to East's jack. 1f the cards att distributed as abcne. the defenders are helpless. Suppose East shifts to a heart (best). Declarer mes with the kma, CTOS9CS to dum- my with the J&ek or clubs and leads a high diamond. West wins ~ kina. but he cannot conlin~ hearts into South's tenaee. lo due, courx. de- clater wi11 return to dummy with a club to force out the defense's re-- m.ainina diamond winner, and the k.ina or spades serves as the entry to cash the aood diamonds. Declarer romps home with 10 easy triclt.s. ~ power of the diamond spoccards is so overwhclmin, that there are only a few improbable diJtribudoas where this line won't deliver lite contract. M9dlcel Aeceptlonllt L~ for bright, ly SYDNIY OMARR 1y ,Anne \IVAUCER 'heMAJ, A •. 7 TMIMJ, Aq. 7 ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Events race toward you. This AIUES (Marth 21 -Apri) 20): Since Pluto ID the strona and Tuesday marks a ume when you break free from restrictions. somewhat wi1Jful sifn of Scorpio is now adverxly aspccted by the inhibitions. You act paid with money as contrasted to mere Sun. your inlenwty 1s goina to be put to the test. But the recent runar TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE pet'90r'I, good with people and numberl. Exp. helpful for Dermatologlu. HB 11•184&-0no. IHI. l''DllU ltlmn .Vortt .. holM. Ful °' Pwt-Tlme. Medlcel ,. cord ~t trw experience r•qulred. (Ope, H & P't, Cons, DIS, Sum.) 752-2129 VOCllmERS compliments. Love relationship grows strona. eclipse should have ,;ven you definite points and indications of bow . . loved ones will behave and react. TAURUS (ApnJ 2~~ay 20): Lona-raDlc prospects c-0mc into TAURUS (April 21-May 21): Even tboK who once thou&)lt you c.lca,r focus. Lunar pc;>!tUC?n a~nts charm. crcau.v1ty, clements of were destined to make your mark now carry on lite crazed beings umma and luck. Y~u U win friends and influentt important people. about your family duties and financial responsibilities. Therefore. Romance plays ma1or role. perhaps it would be advisable to delay a major career chance for a GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20): Streu independence, make contacts while loQFC. wilh those who can prove inOuentiaJ in Jellm& you started in GBMJNI (May 22-June 21 ): No one can really predict what the busincu. career. Romance mingles with idealism -you may not be comina weeks hold in store for you because the lunar eclipse 1s still in love at first but persist. stirrin& up trouble and ill-will. However, one thina appcan to be crystal clear -a particular relationship bas to be handled wtth le.id CANCER (June 21-July 22): Excellent lunar aspect coincides aJoves., otherwise a break or wparatfon could leave you the poorer. with future prospecu, l&Jl4uage, distance. education. Fa!!'!ly ~-CANCER (June 22-July 23): You have a reputation for beina tionship fraimented but wdl hold. Former teacher says. I m wtth timid and frequently tongue-tied. Now; howevu, you can say what you all the way!" Aquarian involved. you please as a prelude to doin& -tor prot.by the tint umc in fllEll])f months -exactly as you please as far as one penicular JOint LEO (July 23-AUJ. 22): S«nario features gcnero1:ily, popularity, financial arranacment. business or property matter is concerned. The l-4'tft::C a..ch disoovery in connection with where Ille mone).' is. LepJ ramifica-LEO (July 24-Aua. 23): It is natural to strive for 1 better way ~Md= lions become evidc~t. What you arc bwed wtll be paid but time of life but at the moment you appear to be usina a sledachammer 10 ~ 1n vertout lftldl.. factor must be cotWdered. to crack a nut Therefore, try to relu, unwind and be kinder to ::_ ~~. If~ VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept 22): Focus on . domestic Mtiustment. yourself. loved ones. ~ friends and collapes like you for poal'UUI-.~ sat h f b E ..... ....,, al what you arc and not for whit rou ofter or promi.e to provide. aiQ01-.1""11""littecltt.1ad -.. ::; music harmony, e or pure asc o an o jcct. m., .. asts so on VIRGO (Aug. 24-Scpl 23): To tbote who love you you are a toi.memnec..,.. publich¥, imaac. lepJ affairs, marital status. Gain indicated if you --, lo\ri"• and protective ~n. but you tend to a--r cold. ~---~ fleld. " play wauina pme. -•rn• -~.. ---.---·-,_ ,_. touab and unapproachable to cenain business ueociatcs or col-"'-cal,....._. UBR.A (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Be ready for quick chanaies. dissuiaes. leaauet. However. the time bas come to drop your discuiscs and 11 .4 l.4I 2121 prctenac, tendency to confuse fact and fiction .. Scenario involves dcfemes. A totally unforcteCD career cbaqe or upheaval wtlJ brina • -•-• pets, ~nde!'~·. e~ployment. health factor which should not be you enormous benefits. .I... iportd. Oem1n1 ts in picture. UBRA (Sep(. 2..act. 23): Say to youndf -.. Every day and -•-in every way I am acttina btttn and better." Abo train )-ounelf to FIT Mon-"'17~'°9m •pm. ICORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Individual who claJms you cheated react to every 1it1.a1tion or c-ircwnstance in a totally positive and ::·'°'"' · l en•flu. will be in for a rude awakcnina. Emphasis on intensity, 1eatiment, constrUctive manner. By punins principles bdore populantr you 1 9121• • '°' u. romance, Kl appeal. Y ouna pcnon plays key role, ICtVCS u will make your mark and lO loftltt be ~ by finanaal or NIT Im., inspiration. TaW'UI involved.. maaerial beftefits. .._. a ,.,.., 1 "'*' e FIT ICOAPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22); Rtmanbcr that ao one can rock or ~IT pereon '°"*'!me &AGmAJUVS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): Aphorism look befoft you t.be boet or Qftdennine your ClOGfideftce if you quietly walk away """ "" ll•.ntn 111 Earn lap abould be taken serio~. Foundation of \::~ relationthip from uytbias \IOU fttl to be diMlltefW or interior. ID dais inSUD«. 41K llr'll ,..,. 147-aMI ... -...: M . . J .....__ I d ... ,:.. ...-!--' ~...a• .... ' pl f ... _. ..... -amn needs NJU11"1 Up. ea.llJJ\I ~me crysta < . Ac::cent Utlu.ii; you &re DOC ugQI CVUIVC or wwanuy uwt tam y lwaR 0 OuKI~ r991....,. ,oods. automobile. property. petty plo~ oeuY jealousia aad imrnaNrity. 1 PwbllUolt 2 3 ,. 17 11 SolM ,.......,., 12 Come ""'° 13F~ .. ,......,. IUfftx 16 lllnS tood •°"* 11a..- oo.... 1~ 2 V.Cment 3~ • GeofMtnc.I IOld s Dence .. I PW!ty, once 7 MllPbc>c* I An~ 9 8lue Otono. •. g 10 Kind of nut 11~1 12 8rllln ~ 13 Gem IQWl'9 21 Aequnrnentt 23 Etctow '** 25 Scotdl ,._ ~I .. _ -CHI" 30 y .-nerl Qty 31 Aoom 10 "'"9 32~"'9 - 33 Tak• tn IMifl )4 tt.a.n P99I 35 Alllkan .r::.._, s ....,_.,.,... ..,,. &Aom laltJI (Nov. 23-Dec. 21): You know wlllat It~· and. 20 :I· f'WIMI a.,.:-=: CA.PIUOORN. <IXoc. 22.Jan. 19): You'll have mo~ raponsibility, what ia &nOft important, tbAt you have kept your pen ofdat lmpin t..-+--+--+--+--1~ ,.,_,.~.:L: relationlhip _intensdia. sbon trip may be necessary. You·u ~ •.Yinl. ud kept to &be letter of the law. So tab a i&aDd ud re6-llO be A.e. CO.. ...._ ''Tbil is dcjl vu!.. Means much of the past •W'ICI to ~nt. prellUriad or manipulated. Above all, coatinue to ~ that )'OU ' Memories QOUJd haunt. are ~tion pbnicallY. (Dec.. 2l.Ju: 20): Tbe lu.nar cdipee ht Aqulriaa ~~t!'.!:L'~A. . ACIVAJUUI (Jan. 20-feb. 18): Project ini,tia&ed approximately l1ill tends IO make you feel you arc dcstillld f« the poor....._ alto 011,..,1• ltope tw••· mnc moeabt llD could now ~· Stma uruv~ appeal, reAatt iDdi.Ded to im19iae Ill kinda ohlilb..,.,...... or....,_ wbta. •10+n.. Cll Mr. to be limited by one wbo ~ imlsination. faith. financial coup iD kt. cvea eilOrced *-coatd .. be to '°"" .... ..._ ~HI eou. eJevata monk. Aria involved. AqlJAalUI (Ju. 21 -Feti. 19): ou..n· clemandl or~ ::J .,,_, to be ldlteUOMble or ~ Howt•a, M'W1ftl ...-cl procrlltiDated over boda .,.,,....... wt ~t 11i09ll -..nen b wdat eow, ycMa limply-cu.ot-ilame doee ..oai.te1 for ................ ,._(M.lC).MllQ20~S0m.i:la80W ... I tla.,_.. allilily ~ time n.a wt lislrhanl to M JOU CM ... :ce-s •die pi'Dlllll~~~~ ................. ... crron o1 · _. die.., rWJ:3 ~ ._.. .._ • IRIWY•TOD& :11119-.... IJIJ 1111Clli bY ... ia ~-,.,..tii1.hdmJ ........... ,.. ....... ii a price IO ... 9Jlitl lw ~la ............ ---becG•• bwt 1 ,._....._ dlia ... I• n 's ,_lat ,.._.,.~~•.i..i.4~ IUD ... IO • jolM MTV I 1 '9 ..... lliil W ... _..,.....it ca•stn .. ) •••h•l ! 37 CwCUl•••tee tO ~tun 42 Upt>rald 43 -l<lflO Cole 45~ 41 -wftfl IUPCIO'*' .. Pnno9fJ 50 "Commorl s...·· euthOf S1Mall• ..... S2 pi.,.~ 53 FNlt dr1Nl.a S4 AINng gellf S6 -bee SI~ •o IO~Nllt tO 11 t2 13 $2.44 per day Thet'• All yOY pey f()( 4 .,,_, 30 dey minimum In the SERVICE DIRECTORY For more lnfomletlon CALL TOOAVll Ill Fii Liii Vow SeMc9 Olr.ct()f'J Aepl-1lelMI MJ-G21 bt.110 BreekfHt. lunch and eneck•. Large yetd. LOU of huga and play. ~&-9084• ----=--~ t !"' l -...,, '• . REMODELING YOUR HOME? Call ZAZA Construction v 18 Years Experl~nce v Flnanclnlg Available v FREE Consulatlon v Excellent References 20% Olacount on Blueprints Norm Zaza. Builder 814-9484 ---~---=-P,11nt111q , .... ,..,.. NT /EXT. SPECIALIST Excellent refa. M2·3118 INBOW Circle Melnt. Pelntlng. Int.Ext HOUM & Apt. Ouel. job. Free •t. St. Ud 5e9897 636-1758 YllMPllmll & Wlllpeperlng. Oua14ty . I NH95. MQ.-8349 WE WILL Daily Pilat ELL INi6EPaEN°DEN~ ORANGE COAST UR WEEKLY AR ~::~~~~r 3 weeks your car isn't sold, we will run your ad for free! NO STRINGS ATTACHED. Just call us to renew your ad. Run 1 O words for 3 weeks at $18.50, 55¢ each additional word. Must be prepaid. A word constitutes anything that has a space between it . For individuals only NAME--------------PHONE~------------- ADDRESS CllY -------------- STATE---------ZIP----CHECK 1---AMOUNT ENCL--- MASTEllC"RDNISAt EXPIRATION DATE ----- MESSAGE: ......... ' .. •:•&UA ............................ 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 MAaTODA11.YP1Lot•WDTMwarmifC01TA ... ~CA--A1TNtNOtn1,.,..AnMJ11D 1 L-•---------------------------------•------------------~ 11111 '*'ft."lti'J':1&11•ma11 • em ,. .:;·:·:r .. '--. ......... =!i..&:: =~ ·-·=-7 " -· .. -- --... ___ .. , ... .,.. •• .,,.....,.._ .. '........... ' 11•-•'rP111t•._.._.., •r111 " IJ1cnv ..._,... · ....... ...._ COAlf ....., ...,.. COAIT ........... -...._ =· Ult M11111 _.. f'Nlll -~a~ COIHIUMtTY COU.I.. OMMUMITV COL&.IGI -· ............ c. --.c. -. -·· .,~ ••FlCT ........ a ,... ,,.., ..... ,.. ... Ml ...... "'--.. D •• , ........ •D ...... ..... CMll.,., .. ,,°'" ................ ~~~~. .,.. , .. "'r.'i ............ , .-.. •. cw ~~= 1:c.= llN ~., .... ~ .... • .. ---1.111~·-· ""'"tu••• ...... c..._.v._,,IOS .................................. __ .. •.m 9:.0:... ... ,,... ~c..... ..... .,..,...._.Of. .... ""*"' °'" Notrlnu...._11 ....,,_, ' ). ................... -................... UGO ow._ ,...._ • ..._.,, ....., :. 11,.. le_._,.. TNI Mlnw le ~ 1oe a1 ~ a1 ~ a1 D11.c1or a1 ~ Tredlnleooownl....,,...:·""'""'"""''"'""'"'""""''""'"'""""'"•"·"-.0. ...... cell -T"9 r1J:::lr ..... 1¥;8ftll ..... llf ..... e.ar ...... C.... ......,_, OOllt ·--,..., .. ..._ IOld Ind eecU;itjM'~....................................... .0. n..' ~ II ~ _... to .,.,... = ...=..,.._reM(I) OOM-~ c.._.. ·DlilMcll. c..._. o.n.t. NOTICI II ... 9'HY i;;;=~~=~ •11•1 illto._..,,_........,Offtca undW _ ...., .,: ~....-'*'" _..,IN 1111111•1ue .._..:, ".:~ 1110MIMIAW.C0.1a10M9Ml.....,Colla ~.:C &,QIN, Toeal( ...... UftMlmeeti......-.. ........................................ s.eeo...... ...11'*1 ........ , .......... 1 ........... , ............. CA.... CAatal ........... c:.wi. L.Ae'AMoweftOeforPalll•io.n .. .._....). ..................... 53,305 Tiiie ,.._,em(•l """"lllwlon:~tt.o ...,_.,. .Mya ttlO ,.,ojfft Identification ''oJect ldantlflcallon ~ • .. HUM-lii•iJil ' rwt io....................... 705 ...... to ., .... bul6o ~A.~ -...... ..... -:.,....' Nelfte OCC 9'•nOUll 0CC ~ W.., 8e9dl ~ ~ l.Olnl. ............................................ .... W Yftdlt IN Aot11ou1 TNI ""'"* .. w tied -· _.._. "-'tOOfftl Mllllc, ~ iorl ·~ Pf! II -C.., llf* premllll, F.F. & I . etc. (includ.,;;·a:o:.-·;:~· ............................. ..52.IOO l\lllNM Neme(I) llllM _....._County Cterll of Or· Tilil .. 1t1m.1t Wll Ned !flt & AdMIMkNl1, Md 1tll•to OM •2·U ltd Mllfl ..... HMM· • ..., ...... owned othet then '** pr.,,._...._.,., ..... ).................... 4M aoowe on. NIA .,.. County on Ntt 21 """'11'9 Oowlty Clll'll of Or· Co11nHlln9 . lll1en11011 I 151t ~ e.itt, c..._ .,. 1n~111nunooneold•*hubeldl-......, .................................... t,312 KelteOllNll 1AO • Z County on -Ml n ...... 1 t-..o oao-.e. ,.._,.._.,,on,.. Ot· .,:"""'" .. .,,.tit--.. .-odlted cornpeillee --and TNI 11111~11 ._ Ned ,__ lid l111t Of Olfectof of ~ ....._ .. ,.....,.. (;ull0mlr'1~to1Ne'i)Mk""""""'""''" ........... :........................... ...o-wlWl-.C...,.,aattcofOr· ~~COM( ~Or ': l'teoe,_..,.onflll·Ot· 1c111t111 Plennino. 1111 ::=,..,.::::: ~· -=~.:.TJr"t..~.~.~"1'.'.'.~~.'.~~:::::::,. .• to = -.. :.: l':.'l=:" -. 14, ... :'I=:" ~"T. ...... =..:.:::·=~ =·..:~ = :=.: =-~ ~¥ii ... aUll't . "UAiiiUTiill"""'""'""""'"""""' ......... 87.471 '9UMINd 0r.,. Coe9t T..c>N T.ote Coll••• 0111'~ A t2t2t. ,.,....., ,lelllly OATl/TIME ~ond1y, :=---:=~=. TOTALOEP081T8fNOOME8TICOFFICES OlllW'911ot.lufyS1,Aufu911 11_.,._ Adernl AYI., Cotta Meea, 141432•'107 ~20.tAO,?OOPM --*'" ill I• Tot* dlrNnd depOeha .................... 83,835 14. t 1 1AO ' ' ,._,., nu•IK "8.lC N0TIC( CA tatff, Triller Fecllhy NOTICE 11 Hl9'UY '1tUCATt<>H ~ ilfthdA -ti Tot* Ume Ind uvtnoe ~, ................................... 17,645 ' • T-474 ..cnnoue WM 0'14)432.·f10? IVtN that the •bov•· ~i~ Am1ndm111t Ho ,.~ TOTALO€P081TllNF0REIONO:FiC .. S ....................... 45,t90 umeTAW ~~A~M 01~~~1~~1 18 HEREBY ScN>olDlltrlctofOr· Ho.~1¥9 0.CIWMlon ..... •0~11'°= TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC ANOE ........................................... ...0-The folowll'l9 pet'tCIM.. The tollowlnQ pereone.,. named~ ~:re:: 1r19 byc::~:nla :: ~T City of Hunl· adi16 kkr ~J F.:.,OtARf.. ~~~·enc;·-.:;·jjjM""""""'""''"" ........................ 83,835 ...C~AT.:.::r ~~.:VtNG. 82t ~~~. 1165 ::-byC::~iw==== .o~.:· .. ==-i '"t'OC..'T:::. ~ =~ti 91 IG'-'*' .. to repurchue ' IOfd under TM J«tnlflr Ln. •C, Coe11 l.1mp1on · •I. Gerd•n «nlnt loetd. hereinafter ,.....,. up to tM ~ ZOHE' NA IOI* Ad. (Tilla_ Other Kebttttlee for borrO'W9d ~om.tic omc................................ -<>-dolnQ = ~ .,, ~ ~-= IHJln.. °'~ 'r4 1 ""''*'to 11°"0&STRICT," · "' tt\efl ttie ~ ~~~~~T~ :"-..:-• ... ~ng note blllence of U.S. T; • .., MSAll SALO. 4'3 W. niter Ln. •C. ec*e Miu, 1565 LMnpeon "":':a::; wlll r.:.tve up lo, but not ime, Miiied bids ~ the S..Ctl Ofdln1nc1 Cocte ~'*-· ..... Mono. lndebtednMI (lncludlnQ s tZ........................................ ...(). Bey Streec. Coet• ...... Cellf. t2t2t °'°"· CA t2f.41 =· ":" .. ~": ~.;lled lfd of • contf9Ct lor tfle s.ction t n, . P9rmm-i OCU1 .. • A~t9neee ueou1ed by °' fOf accou capl f ~)............................ -0-c-. 92t27 TIMI buliftffl 11 c:on· TNI butlneee 11 c:on· _.,d ol • eontrlC1 ~ tfle lidl ~ ~ r in '9.nCM. Wiii. end ~ 1:1 - Ihle benk end outttand'-nl 0 John w. Flldle. "*' w. dueled by: en lndMOual duc1ed by en lftdMdual IOOYI protect tn."" p6llCI ldentifted~ (a.I>. end 'l by r~ ~'' -' Ottier llabllltlee ................... ::.~····· .. ···•··········. .................................. .().. ~ :¥e';;· Coete ....... TM reglatrant(I) c:o1n>-Tt\1 reglafrenl c:om· . l6de tf\111 be r1C91Ved In lhall be OC**' Md regul&tlon.9 P«llkllng to ~. .. i TOTAL LI ABILITIES(excludlng··· .. ~(jj ....................................... · 318 Tt\011 bull 1 • menc.t 10 trenw:1 bu»-mencld to trenMC1 bull· lhe Pl-Identified &t>ov9. bllcty rMd aloud 11 the lltdQl'=t1W11Nntlyard ::=---• Wll '9 J and debentur .. ) .............. IU n•ted notet dueled by .,.n:;iw:,..c:on :;:,,.':"'N.~e(:i~:~~ ~ llftdlf the flctlllOul end Will be °'**'· end a t>ova·etll•d 11m1 Md:: ~t ~--= 11...,='°~ !.: J Sut>ordlnaced not .. and cset>eni~;············ .......................................... 83,951 TM reglatrMl(•l c:om· lbo¥e on: July 25, 1990 M9ted ,.,;.-°'M "7 pvblic:ly ,_., aloud 11 the "*' 111 land u.-.._ '* ~ ..._ • :.I IHAMHO(............ ....................................... -0-menced 10 trMMCt bull-Teri L Yuen t990 Oft IY . 1bov1-11111d time a nd T~a wlil be 1StO00 c»-hldgM over Ill! (6) ._. : oariMnltd ID .. }' J=U! 41 Preferred 1tock DE9'1 EQUITY ,,... under 11'11 Rc11fl0ul Ttlle 1t1letn1nt w• l1*S Doug Weet place poll1 equ1ted for MCfl .-ot hlllQl'il c:oulO ~ IOCll'*' encl .:loft,} Tlle ii .. I --Ill ~ No. lh•r• outtt•ndlng ·0-Bualllftt N1me(1) lleted with the County Clerk of Of. Thlt atatemenl w .. flied ~.:::.:;: ~ ~ ~ ~ ~t~ •0::;1111t• II con.11111111 wlt?l t°""'O end •••M811w1 ......,. ~ Common ttock Amount -0-·~ °W ~· 1990 = County on July 27. wtlh the County Ctwk of Or· bid documentt to guarani .. dltlOn within '"' daye ::; *'°..,.. ~tlOM ~ '9 ......, := : No . .n ..... •uthorlzed 2.000.000 Tt\11 atatamant li*S 1 .. County on June 25, ''*' rltUfn In good con.-IN bid °'*1inCI d•I• £ H v I R 0 N M E H T A L = d cw: • :.I No. theres outtt•ndlno 1,228.923 Amount 1,53<4 Wilt\ the County c.::'ot Of· Publllhed Or ,~ Publltl'led 1990 , .. ,.,. dlllOn wttl'iln ten dlyl etter £~ l>ldW thaii ~ • ~i1~S: ~;:t'i:: :: ;;;;:... .... I Surplus..................................... ...... ... 2 .636 ~~ County on July 24, Daily Piiot Augu:T. 14, 21. Dally Piiot ru~4~~~ t~ °:!:i :: .. be 1 :;.:;.::a~~d10 ~::.nt~:.f~ f0.2B .tiy h ODUl'f' :..:-:: ' TOTAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL.. ........ : ... ::::::.::.::-.......... <4 HO ,.,._ 28· l990 Auouat7. T•.1990 11cenud contractor end Prol-ont Code and ON FILE A cop)' of the gr~t~. f Aef81ned .. rnlng1................. ......... . ........... ·· ·· ........ · ( 6 • SO Publllhed Or-Coff1 T -096 T<>e3 purtuanl 10 the Bual,,_. be lieenMd In ,,,_ following Pl'1 .. ~Cll C~~~ flle2000tn .,."°'1 .. ..._ ~ ~ f Aeserv9 for contingencies and oth~~ c'ii"1i~1 -~8'"" ................................. ) Delly Piiot JUI 31A t 7 11111-"' end ProfeMIOnl coo. end ateuifketlon• .... y _ ... I..,....... ~ 23 1iio~--· ' TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY p serves........................ .(). 14 21 1990 Y ' ugua • "8.IC NOTICE ,._NOTICE be llcenMO In Ille fOllO'#~ C-3•. P1e>e11ne Mein StrMI, Huntington P.alll. In~' aA • 1 TOTAL LIABILITIES "'NP SH'"REH·o"·L··o·E .. R···· .. ••·•••·••••••·•• ...................... 3 .520 • • T........ cleulfic.tlon• C·le Plumbl:l Seac:h, C1llforn1192644, fOf 700' • ,._ • " " s EQUITY 67 471 ...,.... ,ICTITtOU• .,..... FICTIT10Ua ....... C·"· P·· bl B o' •• Bu lnlPeetlon by the pub4ic: A ...__ ........................... ' ..,._ ITATIMatfT N,._ aTATl•NT B, Gen;:;' :lc,tng Con· rw:ior -.. ldlng Con· 0091 ot the ttlff repon wtll w-. S.W• Afla. CA : The undersigned, David T. Bl•nkentiorn, President CEO and Suaan G "8JC NOTICE Th• following pertont are The following pereon1 ere uec:1or Eldl t>ld mutt c:onlorm ~ eva1111>1e to 11'11-ted lll270t. • Howe Sr V /P CFO of the abov• na-"""' b k · doing business as· doing bulineel u £.ch bid must conform end ~ r----'"'~ to t...., parh11 11 City Hell or trie IF YOU O&IECT TO . • ....... an • each d eclares, for hlmMlf alone FICTITIOUI .,..... LASTING IMPRESSIONS DAVE INDUSTRIES. 3005 •A" ...., r-*"-to ,...., '~tr~t d~..:::·,·. • .. Mein City llbratY (7111 .. atW'lllna oC .. -. and not lor the other. I have pereonal knOWtedge of the matters COfltalned In ,.,... ITATl•WT F"lll w o ..... .,.., .....,._.. • .. ~· ---·-· Tai I?__...... this report and I believe th•t each atat--t In sa'1d re""" Is true Each oft .. -BY PAMELA. 352 HIMI Of . mor1 •y • 1 1, Co.ta c:ontrect docu"*'" ~ ~ 111111 eubmlt bin Avenue! pt10f to tl'ie ...-~ "'ned f "''"""' .,.,.. ,.., The followlnO P9flON II'• COtOtlt def Mer, Call1 92925 Meea. Calif. 92629 EJ1Ct1 bidder"''" 1Ubml1 on the i0tm !ll<n""'9d whh mtl'llng -... ..... ,..,, • und«••v • or hlmMlf alon. 8nd not for the oth«. oer11fles und9' penalty of doing ~ u Plmll• C Com1nettl. 352 D•Yld B ~en. 3005 on ,.,. form lurn41Md wrtn ,,,. contract doeumanta. • All INTERESTED PER.-ot .. ...-.. ' perjury th•t lhe f0tegolng la true and correct TRENDS •. 755 w 111t1 HeH I Of . Coton• de! Mer. FlllmOf• Wey • 101, Cost• the contrec:1 ~11. 1 hll 01 '"' P'GPOMO aubcon· SONS er• ll'lvtted 10 9"end ..,. .. C11MMt ~ Executed on J uly 26. 1990, •t Newpor1 Beach. California 20. Coate Meu. Calif ca11t 92625 M ... Calif 92629 1111 of 1,,. propoeeo eubcon.-1rectora Oft this 0toieci .. MMS hMrtng end ~ ,. ,_.. Y-.-• O•vld T. Blankanhorn 92627 T1111 buliMss 11 c:on-Thia bullnffl la con· 1r.ct0tt on ll'lll P'Otee1 11 reQUVed by 1,,. Subletttng opinlone or 1Ubm11 ~ 9'1Pl.,.IOt INIJ M lft l Susan G. Howe SutM K L1F1ve. 75S W dueled by-en 1ndMdual duc1eel by an ln<tMdull required by Ille Sut>latllng end Subcontrec:1.lng Fair fOf Of IQlln8t 1he ICIPfic:lltlon P9!!0" °' W vout~. 18111 2D. Cot11 M .... caHt The reg111renl(I) com· Thi regitlrtnl(I) com· end Sut>contr•cUng FeJr PrlC1QI Ac:'1 Goiter'n.ment II OV1trned ~ 11 lllera c:ooW' /11¥1. A p bllltled 0 8 C D-' 92627 rnenced to lrensac1 bull-rMnCed 10 1rlMIC1 butt· Pr1C11Cft Act Govwnrnent Code s.c:tion 4100 et lllCI ere .,,y tunher Qulllionaa. '11 a -_u_=~=-'=nge=::-ou--tr.,.....;.1y_P_1_1o_t_A_ug...:.u_s_t_7...:._'...:990.:...:r-------_:t:_:1:0::::3~ This bu1ln•11 11 c:on· ,_. under lhe Fictmou• ness une1., iii. Flct1tiou1 eoo. S.CtlOtl 4 ,00 11 seq Eac:tl bidder """' submit IMM9I ell' Mtc:ilall Gregory, OOf:ngent ~ of ,. t due1ed by en 1ndtvldual Bu11ne11 N1me(1) utted Bu11n•11 Ntme(t) ll tlf'd EICh bidder"""" tubmt #Ith Wll btd e eeortified Of Land U.. Tectwlloan. It dltwlild, ~ ,,... .. "8.JC NOTICE P\B..IC NOTICE P\BLIC NOTICE The reglllrt nt(I) com· above on Seotemblr 1H9 •bove on July 15. 1990 Wllh Net! btd e <:«tilled Of CMl'llet 1 dlec:ll PIY•t>le 10 ~527t 'f04ll dlllTI Will .. CllMlft _____ ...;...;;..;..;...;;.;;;.. __ menc.d lo lrtnucl bu... Pemet• c ComtnlUI Deve B Kie.nan caal'li.r. chedl payable 10 '"'DISTRICT Ol I btd bond ~ ...... ., ......... 9fMI ,,.. • Ollflt .... ~~:A~.J· et>ove on July 15, 1990 NOTICE Of' neu und., 11'11 FIC11llOU1 Th11 1111_,1 w .. lated Tl'ilt 1t1lemenl wu f"-<S tne DISTRIC"f or 1 btd bond 1n lhe f0tm M1 tOl'lh In tne "'i: -..Cll Cltr Cteft ...... ,.,._...,,. Marye Olac:oumelot TMlaTIFa aAL.I 8 u11M11 Neme(tl 11111d With the County CkWk ol Of. wtlh Iha County 0-k of Or· 1n lhe f0tm Ml tonh in Ille eontraet doc:umenll .,, 1111 ublltf\ed OrMOe Coeet ~ ~ .. GOUl1 • TM fOlloWing per1on1.,. Thia •llllfNlll 111u flied 11111 1•bove on NIA 1"99 County on July 27 lt'9I County Oft July 24. c:ontrecl documen11 .,, .,, emount not less th.,, 1~~ of Dally PllOt Auguet 1 1990 ~ tout '"°""' t..n doing bu.llMll u wtlh 11'18 County Ci.ti!. of Or-On Auguat 14, 1990 11 SuMn K L1fl11e 1990 l990 amount not less then ,~,_ ot the maa1mum 1moun1 of Ol<I T • 102 IW C-. of ... ~ af C A L I F 0 R N I A 11nge County on July 10 11 00 1 m Flral AmerlCen Tl'lll lletemenl wu filed F.....U '~ 1he muimum emoun1 of btd u • gueren1" 11111 1rie bid· leaers • .DftllWfdad M CAROUSEL. 690 W 19th. 1990 · Tule tnturenc. Compeny. 1 with the County Clerk ot Of· Published Orange Cout PubllShed Or~ Co111 u • gueren1 .. 11111 the bid-der will enter into th• P\8.JC NOTICE MCton t10b of ,_ Colle M..., Calif 926211 ,,.... Cehlorn11 eoroort tlOl'I 11 1"99 County on July 24 Diiiy P110t August 7. 14 21. Diiiy Pilot July 31 Augyl1 7, der wlll enter into the prOQ09ed c:onlrK1 1f 1ne ~ Proe..t Codi. • Klndll Lynn Scott. •540 PubltanecJ Orange Cout Tru1te1, or Succ:euor 1990 28, 1990 14· 2I. l990 pr~ con1'11C1 ol 111e same tt 1w110ed 10 tudl '1C11TIOUI Ml-M ,._ time lot 911 CillMw Sen At'llonlo. Yorba Linde, Delly P1lo1 Jul) 11. 24 31 Trull .. or Subltllute d P4'4a02 T-091 T.()71 NIM 11 -•rOed 10 such bldcMI tnll'le-loffeJlure NA•ITAT'lmWT wt1 not••....._ tout Ctllf t2Me Auoull 7 1990 . . . Tri ... 1 ... 0111111 oert•ln Deed Publllhed Orange COH1 bldOef In ,,.._, of llllUll 10 .,..,., 11'110 Mid c:ontrlC1 The tollowlng P«IOftl .,. ~~ .. ~ • Thll bualneu II con· T-035 of Trust IHCUled by Billy Delly Pilot July 31 Augull 7. rta.JC NOTICE l'UBllC NOTICE 10 .,..,., 1n10 Mid con1'K1 MICll NC\P'lty wm ~ tor: doing bullnea • _ .. ,..._ ~ ' ducted by Ill lndlVldutl 1----------GENE COBB end recorded 14, 21, 1990 IUCl'i MOur11y will M for: lalted VICKY LEES ANTIQUES YOU MAY EXAMINE ' Th• reg11111n1(1) com· P\BLIC NOTICE January 2. 1990 u 1n11rv-T ·OM 'ICTmoua •U-H 'ICTITIOUa IU.,..H letled The DISTRICT r~ & F'INE ARTS. 1686 Tus tin lie lie Mp(~,_ court. If I mtne9d IO lrtnMCI bull· rMnt No 9().()00282 ot 01· N.-aTATl•NT NAMI aTATW•NT The DISTRICT r-.... the rlQhl 10 re,ec1 any or au A ... •A. Coate M ... CIUI you we 8 ~ ' ,,... und., 111• FIC11tlOUI Kl1790 llClll AecOfdl Of Or~ "8.IC NOTICE Thi fOllOwlng persona ere Tl'le following PlftOtll •r• 111• riohl to rep.cl Illy or •II btdS OI 10 WllY• •ny Ir· m27 inler..-d In .. ...... I BuslneH Name(•) llated 'ICTITIOU9 1U9*11a County. Celllornle , end doing business es dOlng bus1neu 11 bids or to waive any 11· regularlt-or anfOfmllllMll Vlctly L Gu11etr•. 337 E. you rr-f tit-"" 1119 OiiiM* ' ebOYe on· .My 10. 1t90 NAm ITATW•NT pursuant to thll certain No-FICTITIOU9 M11Maa UNITED PROFESSIONAL KRAPHTY. 34.00 Alie ol reguterl1-or 1nforme1111 .. In eny bl<lt or 1n ll>e bidding 16th Pl C:0.11 M .... C•lf a lorm.I ~ bl' ~~:~, wll lii.c:t dOIT~hebuf~~ .. ~tonstte IQ of Oefeul1 ll'ler~cs.t1 TNA•aTATIMINT MORTGAGE. 2172 Dupont ~2A .. rt1 Coate M.se Celal 1n 1nybld1 or1n 1hellidd1n9 PurlUMltlo1he~OIM'ont 92!!!._ .. n.. Soecill ~_!tie !llnQ i -·-recoroecl April 17, 1990 u l tie IOlloWlng Plftonl ere Dr Suite 4. lrv1ne. Calif ""' v Purtu•nl to the prOYlslons of SectlOn 1n3 ot the l.JltlOf ,,,._ "' uvllerrtll 337 E of 811 ..,,_,twy ri • with the County Clerk of Or· N w DEAL 2220 ~ Instrument No 90-200349, doing bullnlll u 927 lS JarMt Drummond. 23072 ot ~tion 1773 Ol thl L•bOf Code ol the S111e of Cal•· 16th P1 . C:0.11 M .... Celt! lliPfl'llilal of ~ -• •• County on Juty 111. Piece. Colle Miii CA ot Offac111 Record• of M•d TH£ ELECTRIC GAZET. Ronald DHn Shrout lJvKa. El Toro C41111 92630 Code of lhe S111e ot Ceil· fornia Ille DISTRICT 1111 ~ 92627 OI of lny petciorl Of t 1 92627 County. wall under end TE 1661 Superior Ave 2S332 B11er111 Laguna Hiiis Westside Opportunlllel lorn11 lhe DISTRICT has ot>-tllined lrom the OWeciOI o! Thie butin... II Con· .::count ali ~ In ,...,... PS Siu• Inc Cahlornie pursuant to Mid Deed ol Su111 C Cos11 M ... Cllll Calif 92653 Celtl COfP tain«I from the O.rec:1or ol tl'll Dee>arlment ot 1ndut1riel Oueted t>y llutb4and end wit. 9ecton 1250 o4 tie ' Publllhed Oriange Coa11 corporellon 2220 Meyer Trull Mll at oubltc aucuon 92627 Tl\om11 E.1.,, Cow1r1 111 Thia bu11nen 11 con· 1ne Oeo1r1men1 ol 1ndus1na1 Ret11aon1 tne oenet•I preW-The reQll1rant(1) com· calilomla ~Code. A Dally Piiot July 24, 31 Plt c• Coale Mesa CA IOI c:AeClt Orewn by I 11111 or GllV W11lun1. 127 Agate. 2180S s ..... 1 Grau Et Toro dUC:lec> by I ~11 1>1'1· Reletaont 1ne o-neral !>< ....... It'll rate of C>ef diem "'llelft ~ 10 lrenMC1 ~ ~lot-~ Nc*ce Augutt 7 I• 1990 92627 l~al credit ulllOl'I or • Balt>oe lallllld Celof 92862 Clht 92630 nersnap 1ng rel• of pet d..m w~ l1'CI lhe generel l>flVli'•l\9 ,_. under Irle F~1to0Ut lorm • .... ~ Crom ~ T-050 Th11 bu11nen 11 con· c:l>eek drawn by • 1t111 Of Thia bu1lne11 11 eon· Th11 ous1ne11 ,, con-Th• r99111renlltl com· •n<I 111e ~·· prevt1""9 r11e 1or hOl:01y end oYenime Bulln•sa N1me(11 llated ooun derto.. ----------dueteo by 1 c:orporeuon 1eoer11 llV•"9• end ioen ... ,ducted by an lf\ClrvtOull duc1eo by a gene.el Pa.rt· menc:ed 10 1rensac1 buSI-r111 tor llOlidey end oven•rne work "' the ioc;.1111 1n -'llc.h 1bow on NIA Anom.w for,...__; rtaJC NOTICE Th• r1g11tren1 com-SOC1111on. or MYlngs bent. Tne r99111ren1(1) com-nerata1p nns und., 11'11 Foc111t0ut w0<k 1n 111e locll•IY .,, ,..,11ic:t1 th;s work ., 10be1)9'1orm«I Vdly L Gutterrez At.rt A. Dofft ---~..;;..~.;.;..;..;;;.. __ ~ 10 1r1nsac1 but•· spec:1lled 1n MC110n S 102 of rn.,..c;.cl 10 1r1nsac1 bull-Tne reg111r1nt(SI com-Business Name( t i 111194 1111a work 1s 10 be perf0<mec:I IOI MCh c:tafl or 1~ ot Thea 1t11emen1 waa filed 1710 W. MMaAa. ... idl .......... .., , ~·au-•• Mal und., ,,.. tic1111ou1 the Fln1nc:111 COd• end ,,.... uno.r the Flcilllous ~ 10 transact bu"-above on July 19 1990 tor teen craft or type ol WC)rll., nMded 10 eaeucM wnh the County Clerk of Of Blvd. I NAMI ITATl•NT bullneM name or names aulllO<tzedtoOObulin.as in Bu11ne11 Ntme(tl lllled nen un<la• tlle Fac111ioua JamaOfunvnono wor1uw nMdeo 10 ea~e tt1econ1r.c1 T11eMra1ner1.,. County CM' July t t w .. 202 • The IOl!owlng per.ona are lilled above on 4/ lS/90 tllta 9111•. 11 ,,,. main .,,. •t>ove Ol'I July 23. 1990 Bu••""' Nemec•> hated Tn11 1111.,,,.,,1 WIS toled 11'11 Con1r11Ct Ti-,., .. .,. on hie'""" DISTRICT ott009 1"° fl.O. 9oJI 4542:1 doing bullnea u P S Stlx inc Paul trance 10 F11s1 Americ.tl Gery Wllktnt above on July 26 1990 wtlh the County ci-11. ot Or· on tile •I the DISTRICT of'llce localed 11 1370 Aoentt ,,.... ,..,_ ~Anaelee, CA-., • IMPORT AUTO TECH Sc:hmllt Pre11oen1 Title lnsurenc. Company TM 11119IMl'll was l11eO Ronel<I Dean Shrout 1"99 County on July 24 IOCll9011 1370 Aoema Ave Coale M... CA 9262t Publlll'ieel Or1119 Co.1 iae'eolstt>llt,.. 2100 Harbor Blvd . Coat• Th•• .... .,,,.,,, ..... l•led IOc:•leel II 114 E.111 F•l1h .With lhe County Cterll of O.· Tlltl 1111emen1 WIS 111«1 1990 Coll• Mesa CA 9211211. ~ Fa.hh•S Planning Delly PllOI July 24 31. Jliy 1. Au9· 1. 7.19'0 M .... Caltf 92627 with lhe County Cler1' ol Or-Str .. 1 1n lhe Clly ot S•n11 enge County Oil July 17. w11n the County C!e<k ol Of. f4Mm Pn~I F11t1hff Plll'ln•ng Trllter Copies may be 00-August 1 14 lt0o Mlhdl N1g1>1bl • 2 11nge County on Mey 14, An• Celt1orn11 atl thl1 rlQlll, 1990 enge County on July 27 Pub41Sf'ed Orange Coesl Traoi.r C~ may be ot>-'"'*'on request A c:opy of f..()48 Gi.nhurlt, Irvine Celli 1990 ,....,.. utle and int""' c:on~ f...a7 1990 Delly P1101 July 31 Augull 1 I~ on req~t A eooy ot lnete re111 tnlll be ~led I--..;..;=;.;..;.;;;.;.;.;;;:. __ 92'T14 Publl.ned Orange eo..1 to ano now Mid by ot uncs.t Publ•lhed Orange Cout P:tMISI 14 21 1990 111He rllff tnell M l>Ol1ec:I 11 11\e )Ob Ille rtaJC NOTIC[ Tn11 bu11ntu 11 con· Diiiy P11o1June8 15 22 29 Mid Deed ol Trull an the Delly Piiot July 24 31 Pvbl•lhed Otenge Co111 T ·077 11 the tob 11•• 11 lhall be mtl'dlt°'Y ul>O'I duc:t.c2 by en lndlVldUel 1990 pr0941rty Situated 1n Mid AuguSI 7. 14 1990 Delly Ptlo1 August ., 14 2, 11 sn111 M mandl1ory uoon Ille CONTRACTOR 10 WflOm ,tCTYTIOUa ....... The 'OlloMin9 Plf'IOll9 .. I The reg11111nt(1) com· Ame noe d Puo11c111on County end Stele described T ·052 28 1990 f'\8.IC NOTICE Ille CONTRACT~ 10 wllOm lhe con1rK1 11 -Oed Md llllfAMI STAT'lmwT °°"lll ~ •· manced to lrenHct bull· Augull 7. 1990 u T-092 1,.. con1racl as awarded end upon 1ny tubcontrec:tor The f<*Owlng ~ er• LEAOiHG £DOE TOOi.i. ' neat und., Ille F1ct111ou1 Ttff Loi 8 of Traci No 9504, 11 "8.IC NOTICE P:ICTTTIOUI 9USINlll upon eny sut>con1r1ctor undl< tVCll CONTRACTOR. doln9 bull.,... U 700 UdO Pwti Of #40. ,..._ : 8u1ln111 N1me(1) llated ltlown Oil 1 Map rec:ordeel 1n PUBl.IC NOTICE NA• I Utt•NT uncs.r su~n CONTRACT~. 10 .,.., not ~ 111111 the ,.;a EASY BED MOVERS. c:to l)Of1 leedl. Cellf. t1e10 : 1bo11e on July 1, 1990 "8.IC NOTICE Book 412. Paget 1 tllroUOh 5 'ICTITlOU• ., .... , Tl'le IOllO""'ng persons.,, 10 o•y no1 i... then lhe said 11>«lfied rites to all wortrera Hll'lry J Vuque2. 2905 Fred•rlcit l•r~ Mehdi N19hlbi lnelutlVI of MltOllll MOUI N,... aTATIMINT FICmtOU• ..,..... dO•fl9 buSlneM .. aoeclli.c:t lllff lo ... workAl'I emplOyecl by'"'"' In Irle Ill· ~~ Of Coe11 ....... 700 Udo,.,. Dr ....... Thll lllltmenl ..... Ill.CS ,ICTITIOU• ....... Maps, record• ol Orange The IOllowlng Plftonl .,. N,... aTATl•NT ANTHO NY·s WELDING emptoyed by them Ill,,.. ••• tcufion ol 11'1e c:on1reict Ceill 92t27 por1 e..cn. c...t taeo with Ille County Clerk ot Or-NA• ITATIMINT County, C1llforn11 doing butlneet 11, The IOllOwlng '*tons ere 2ll05 Redtends 0. Colle ecutlOfl 01 the contrac1 No btdO. m8'; wl1"°'-Henry J VMQUU. ~ J-. "9wle. TOO Udo 11nge 1 . County Oil July 17. The following pertons ere EJleec>llng therefrom ell PRESTIGE ROOFING CSOtng bul•OISI as M .... Cehf 921127 No bidcs.t may Wllh<lrtw eny bid tor a per•OO ol 11Jty ~edllnot Of Cotta MeM Patll 01 •40, New1>0f1 '"° dOlng bull-.. Oi i, QH. m1n1r1l1 end COMPANY, 3090 Pu"men B E l D H 0 M E M1Cl'IH I Anthony VU · any b+<l for • period of .. ,ty (llOJ dl)'I alltt 1111 dl11 M1 C•M 12827 BMc:fl. c:a.i t2MO ,__, CREATIVE IMPOF'ITS & hydroc:erbon tub1t1 nc:11 A ..... C0tt1 Mesa Cellt FUR.NISHINGS 17827 quez 2605 Reoleods Of . (801 dlyt after tne dlle M1 '°'Ille OC>er\lnQ Of t>tOs John A Vuqu«z, 4571 Thll bu.ti,_. II COfloo PubllsNd Orange Coul EXPORTS. 25162 C11er1lnd1 belOw 1 !Mp1h of 500 teat 928211 a.Kii Blvd H'untlnglon C0tll Mesa Celll 92627 lor IN opening of bids A oaymen1 bond encl • ~lllaloe Kelllllt ICeu• ~ dUCted by ~ Diiiy P001 July 24 31. Of •J t4S. Mlu!On v .. io. from Ille surtace of • por110n JoM Poult• 9832 Kingt Seac:h Cel•I 92647 This buttneu is con· A payment bond and • pet101mance bond ane11 be H 7S2 The reg t1r9"1(1) eom- Augu11 7. 14 199<> Celll 9269 t ol Mid 1eno. but WllN>ul 11'11 Ceoyon. Hun1~1on e.ICh Clerm J Betel 142 Lex· dUC190 by en 1ndMduet pet1ormence oono 111111 be requ.red prlOt 10 taew1aon Tiii oueineu 11 con· menceCI lO tratlllCl bual- T-OS3 Mlc:tlMI F McCool Jr. right of aurtec. entry, 11 r• Calif 92$44 lnglon Cost• M... Calif Tl'!• r9gtttr1nl(1l com· reouired prior 10 ••eeution of 1rie c:on1rect Md th .. M OuC1ed by • genetll Pllr1-nell under IN Flethiou. ----------251112 Cherllndl Of •J145, Mr"9d 1n deldl recorO.O Thie bulinlll II con· 92e2t ~ 10 transect bu• OI lhl con1rtc1 end~ De tn 1he IOlm te1 IOl'll'i 11"1 IN l'IWlhiP ButHllM Nlme(I) lleted ruBl.IC NOTIC[ Mis.ion Vllto. Cellf 92691 March 23. 1971 In 8ook dueled by .., indMdual Thlt buainess ,, con-,_. under ,,,. Fac11hou• 1n 1rie lonn M1 1or111 m 111e c:ontrecl dOc:u"*'tl The regi1111n111l com-•l>OW on NIA __ ;....;;.;;.::.:.=.....:~.:.:..:.=..--Thi• bu11na11 II c:on· 9579. P11Qft 194. tH Ind The reg111rt nl(ll com· ducted by en lndlVldual Buttneu Nemefsl 11sted c:on11K1 doc:umerlll ~· 10 $ecllOl'I 4590 rnenced 10 UlllUC1 bull-FreOer'ldl ko.o.M 'IC~ .ut .. aa ducted by 1111 1n<11Ylduel 19t ol Official ~d• menced 1o trMNCl buM-TM regittrent(•I com· above on •uoutl 1 1990 Pv<tuen~ 10 ~1IOl'I 4590 of~ Govw,,_1 Code ol neee under the Foct11tout Thlt etetetnent wee tied · NA• ITATl•NT The reg111r1nlf1J com -The llrMf adOreu Of MU unOlf lhe '1cfltlOUI menc:IO lo trenlkt busr-M!CllMI A 'Vt$Quel ol Ille Govern"*'' Code of the S1•t• OI Celoforl'lol Irle BUl lMll Neme(•I lllted Wllll ""County c.. Of Of· Tiie 1041ow1ng pettont ere~ 10 1rensac1 buW-other c:oinmon cM119n1llOn 8u11n .. 1 Nam.Ca) lltted MN under the Fochuous Thtt 1111emen1 was hi.ti lhl S111e of Cel1l°'n1~ 11le co111r1et w111 eon1e1n l~Otl Augut1 1 1990 = ~ on J4l/y 21 •• dOll'IQ butlnest u MN und., Ille FlcilllOut o l U ld prope rty 11 ·~on >Jty 18 1990 Bu•l~ll Nemettl l1tled w•1h Ille ~tv Cler• or Of· contrecl will cont .. n l>'oYl"ons ci-rm1111ng 1hl Herw)I J Vuquu 1 • O AANOE COUNT Y Bu11n•11 N1me(1) llaled purp o11e d to be 11 .John Poulter ebe>lle on ~uary l 1990 9"99 County on July 24 0toY111on1 ci-rm11t1ng the '"cce uful b •dde r 10 fh<.a autemenl ., .. ''*' ~ NETWORKING 22701 l • •bo,.. on .My 1, 1990 Llndti.rg, llVIM CA 92714 Ttl4a atet--.t WM lltlcl Clarenee Seid t990 aucc111lul bidde r 10 11Jb5htu1e tec:urit-tor"'" Wllfl Ille County Clerk of Or· ~ °'"""' Ca.t Jtrll. MltllOl'I VlelO Calif MlckHI F McCool Jr S•id tale will M m.O. with Irle County Cler1l of Or· ThlS ltll*1'191ll wH hied ,4MJ11 1Ubth1u1e l«lllf•I-for any ~ w1tlllle60 by Ille 0..-= Count) on >.lty 24 Deily Plot Augu911, 14. 21,' t2692 Tt111 atetemel'll wu nled WllllOul c:ovenel'll or .,.,. 1"99 County on Juty l7. Wllh the County Ci.rk of Or· Pvb1111'11d Orange Coatl monies Wltllrield tr; the Ct.-tract 10 et\Sutl pertormenc. 1 28 1 990 C u m1ne M Fiorello ~h the County Clefll of Or· r•nty express or lmpli.c:t. 11 ttto .,. County on July 30 D111y P110I July 31 AUQU11 7 trlci to _. perform~ unOer the contract ,_,,1 T..QM 22701 L• Jere•. Mlu1on County on July 10. to lltle, po-..on or ..,. ,_,, 1990 14 21 1990 unoer 11'11 con1rec1 o...r,.. a..'41 Publ4'leCI Orenoe Coe111---------- Vle1<>. Calif 92692 I cuml>fancet to Mllety Iha PublllMd Or11nge Cout , ... 11 T .072 0.•""""' ...,.. 9Y elAtftM' ,.,.,..,._, ~ty Pitot Jlit.., 31 Augus1 7 "8.JC NOTICl Thia bu11n111 11 con· ,...., unpeld belence ~ on fhe Dally Pllol July 24 31 Publ~ 0rll'IQ9 Coast 9Y al A11rec1 '· 'eniendea. '9\,0, Cfl•~, c ... 1 4 21 1"° ducted by en 1ndMdu•I Publlll'leO Orange Coast no1e or notes NCUfld by Auoue• 1. 14, 1tto · Dally Pal01 AUQ\l•I 7 14 21 rl8LIC NOTICE "".O. ChM1cell1r. c ... , ~ C..... Dte-T-099 ~ The reglttrenl(I) c:om· ally PllOI July 11, 24. 31, Mid Deed of Tru1t, to wtt T.O~ 28 l990 C~ C ..... Ott· trtd PtCTITIOUe lllll•tt meneld lo trenaec:t bull-Augull 7 1990 ST22,72428,p1U1 tne l01low-· T-097 flCTITIOUallUatNIH trtct Pvb4411Md Or_,. Coat1 "8JC NOTIC[ MAISITA~ ,,... unoer the Flc:lilloul T-031 Ing estlmllec> c:oall. Ill• 11-W'llftJIC( MA•HATWMINT PublllMd Ofenge Coast Oa11y P110IJu1y31 AUQut1 7 ncTmOUaltUIMH ~~ .. pet'lonl.,.I l u1fne11 Name(•) llated !*'Ml end ldvenc:et 11 the '"'-·"" nu "8.IC NOTICE Tl'll IOllowlng pertons ere Diiiy P1101 July 31 AUQUll 7 1990 ~ .. -·-•bovl on. July 1. 1t90 "8.IC NOTICE llme ol the 1n1t111 publlcatlOn FICTITIOU9 ""8Mlaa doing butln .. 11 199() T ..()84 NA• IT ATl•lfT V A l E N T I N [ Carmine M Florella of 11111 Nolle• of Sal• MAim ITAft....,. ·-PARA TECHNOLOOtES T-083 r,... IOl\OWlng C*tonl .,.. PROPERTIES. 120 Newport Thia 11a1ement wu ntacS PICTITIOU9 ..,....... '2.329 30. The............... rtemtOUa MlatNlll 3273 lndlen• AYe Cotll P\aJC NOTICE doong buSIMM u c.nter Of . Ste 110 • ....,. wit.II lhe County Cletk ol Or-NAm ITATW•NT NOTICI TO ol i;;,;e; ~ .,, MA• aTAT._NT M1t1. Cellt 92826 rtalC NOTICE PACE DA TA SERVICES. por1 Beecf'I. CA titeO enge County on July 10, The IOllOwlng pertonl .,. "'~"TY 0..... T':t wooo IN'TERIORS The lollowlng pertOl'IS .,. Arthur Saltzman 3273 In-l'lCTITIOU9 .,....... 17otS Sen Rlc•rdo Sl l y n n . .... I'."' In. 1990 doing buliMM II YOU ARE IN DEFAULT 0277 C . doing bullMU u d1111a. Co•t• Mesa Call! 'ICTIT10U9 _,..... N.,_ aTATl•NT Fountain II~ Cllot 92708 PrOCMWt•. Inc: CA C0f1)0f· ,... I 0£SION PAINTING & UNDER A DEED OF TRUST. Olorec>o Ln . Coe1• Ac:aint1 With An AC()ll'll 9211211 . .... HAn...., The folloWlno l)lt'tont .,. Barb•fl l PICA IWnnel. l tlOft t20 ~ Oen• PublllMCI Orange Cotti WAUCOVERING. 146 E DATED DECEMl!IER 21. ~·Cell! 92826 311 F0t•t ,,.....,.~ Suite Allee SllUrnen 3273 In. Tl'll loflowln9 perlO"lt 91e ~ ~'*' 11 HO$S S•n ,_Icardo St • 01 . Ste 110, ,.._p0tt Diiiy PllOl Juty t1. 24. 31, 11111S1 .eo.11 ~.C•Hf 1989 UNLESS YOU TAKE Colot~l~ ~~.·.?!!! 103. Leoun• Seac:h CA d•en• Coal• MMe Cellt OOl!9bull..,...SPR .. I NG ·s .. ~~T~~ .. u!_ ~~.2..S Founta.nVelltry,c;.l•t 12 7 ot l!leectt.CAt2teO Augull 7 tt90 t2t27 ACTION TO PROTECT Calif 92628 • -· 92851 921126 .llE ,. • ....,.w., •. e "" .,.,.11 ._.. Donel<! L Rennet 17066 Tn.t bl.Iii~ It CO!\-. T-033 G*Y J Slpoee 146 E YOUR PROPERTY IT MAY TMNW Inc: C1111orn11 T SOC:tATES, 325 Oternond Cell! ~~7 Sen ~Cl<> St• FounUlll'I ~by" I COl"PO'ltlon 181tl SI . Colt• M .... c.tlf. 8E SOLD AT A. PUBLIC Tt\11 bullnHI II Con· corpor•I'°" 2315 Medill duc1": ~u~l~c,,:; .Ava lalt>041 111 C•lll Ernee1 C1r1111eu tl7S v.a.y Calif 927ot Tiie r1glttr1 nt com· "8.IC NOTICE 92627 SALE IF YOU NEED AN ex. dueled by 111 ~ Roed. Tut1tn CA 92680 The , ietrent(e) com 11te2 Monrovi• •SA Cot11 ..._, T1111 bua•n... 1 • con-mer"1eCI to tr...-ct llult- Thl• bualnen II c:on· P L/It.NATION OF THE ~r~1'1""'(•) com· Thie butlnHI II con· menc«S ~ lrentael ~ ~I YYOnnlOunn l2S ~.!2827 Cllletedl)y nu.abtndlll"ldwlfe nell unotr the llcttllOUI Ptennoua .,...... dllC1ed by en lndMdUel NAT u RE 0 F T HE o r.-..ct t>uti-~by • corPOt•llon MN uno... IN r1e1111ou1 OletnonO Aw l!llilbol '" , ...., bu11M1t 11 con· Tl'll reg11trant(1) com-buell'lll '*"' or '*"" NAm ITATl•lfT The reglltren1(1) com· PROCEEDING AGAINST :::n.':'9' .. i':l(eFlctlt) II i:: The r•gl1tr1nt com· Bualn•u Nime(t) lllled ~I 92:,l ~::'by an ~.. menc:e<I lo trtnaac:'I ~ .O IOO\leon NIY20• 1AO The loltowlng pertonl ., 1 menc:ed 10 traneact ~ YOU, YOU SHOUlD CO,..,_ I to trantae1 ~-•t>ow on >Jty 23 1990 1111 llMll 11 con· reg111r1111t(1l com -unoer lhe FtetillOUI Lynn• v a 1•n11" • doinQ bullnlM.. ,,... uodlt the Rc11Uou• TACT A LAWYER ~on Jvto/ 2. 1tto uncMt the tlctltlOul Arthur Serttmen d\ICted by Ill tndN!dulll menc:.o lo lf1111MC1 bUllO Bua•n ... Heme(•) llt 1ed ~ Inc . ~ lynM VElOC:ITY OF CHANGE lutlnMt N11M(1) llated ""8T .-..CAN TTT\.8 ~lmoltly D Woocl n-or namll TNI 1111ement II h4ecl The reg111r1nt(1) com· """ uno. the ActtllOUt lbo'<ll Oft not )'et Vllenltne. Pl El U 11 1783 l(emroocj Pltc9 Cotta tt>ow on .My 7. tt90 ~I CO.ANY, 1 wfttl ~·~·~!~ ~ ~ aboW on Mey 29 wtlh The County~ Of Or· rnenc.s 10 lrtnlllC1 bulO-IY9•,,._t Neme(t) hllld a-1 ti.a L P90e ~ Tl'tila ...,,..,,, -flld ...... c.llt t2t26 Gery J Slpoee c ...... ~··· .... .._ ...._ .. , ..,._ ...... ..,.-AO County on 27 -unoer IN Rct11IOUe ~on Juty 3 ttl() hie llllemeflt .... Ned wtttl the County ()w1I of Or-8"'" Norrll KIM• 1783 Tt\11 ltlternenl ... flied ...... ,M ................ = ,.<)Ullty on .My fl . TAM(V, Inc: 81tnea De= ;.;, lvtlllffl N•me(•I lilted £meet Carttllerl With ltle Couftty CllB of Of· anva County on -». 1<1nwooo ,.Itel Co1t1 w1111 tlll County Cllftl of Or· ._..AM. c ....... .,., ,_.,. Aoctl&. Serrt11r1 ,... ~..!" Mt. 1990 Tllll ·~·.!.~' -'"*' = County on .Juty 24, 19'0 .._ Mii& Cllll t282t 111108 County Ot1 .My 10 (114) -..nl IJlt. IUil Thie 11•l"'*'l wM hied Pu~ 0r-. Coeet --• Y 0unn with the ......,.,ty Cieri\ OI Or· ~ ~ C.... Ttl.. bullneu II COtl· lltO . OATtO' M 11. 1tt0 ~ ~-o;4 ~ tile County Cllfk of Of· Oeily Piiot AUOUll 7 14, 21 wtttln..,.,.11~~~~ ~ ~ = County on My t7 Pvblllll*S °' ~ Diiiy Nol ,...... ' '4, .. , 0Uc1ed by 1111 ln<tMduel ,__., PublitNd 0rllll08 CoMI A 7 1tto • • ~ty on Nt1 17, 21 tttO ...,....ty ..-.. .., ...,.. .. ...,.,,... 21, 1990 The regl1tr1n1(1) com• .-Ut>llehed Ofenge Co.1 OeMy Piiot July 24, 31, ugult • 14, I f.ot1 . 1990~ • T~ ~ County on .My tO Pub1111MO ,.... ~ ~~f''f'te0.Jvty 31 AUCJU*1 71-------....;. .... ..; .. ~---•1 l1'llnOld 10 trentKt bull-Delly Piiot >Jty 11. 24, 31. AUOUtt 1. 1tto ~ Or11191 CoMt 1"° ..,.11nge ~ 11111 under 11'11 Flc01loul Auouet 7. tttO TO&t Deify Piiot Jufy 24. 31. __ .,. ..,,._ ,_Delly Pilot JlJtJ 24 31 T-ot71--;.;~=;;.;IC~llJ;;..T.;.;;a;;;;;:. __ lullnMI Heme(•) lltllO T.o3t MJC mT1Cl AUOI* 1. 14. ttOo ... _ IWllW. .-UOllllllG °'11191 Coeet Auguet 7 14 1tt0 --"" - above on: Janu .... 1. fttO "9l..IC llOTICl TOt1 -----.. ~-~1 • M 17 24 31 T-MI ..--nu11K •-. -• r-•··---._ ,flO '9CtlliOUl9Jll llM ~ ::=:.,.., _ ~ Ml.IC NOTICl PM:TmOUI .,.... um 1uw rmuc NOTICl ~ ITAW T-430 "8JC NOTICE 'ICTI1'10Ue .,.... um na1W ..,._ ITA.,._MT TM fo1oiMnt _....,.. .... lolowlnf .-.on•.,. =TA,_., The..,,.......,.... n wtttl tfle Coilnty Clerk Of Of· fltOnnoul ...... The followll'I S*wonl -~........... ..CMIOUI ...... dow'O bullt*l M ~ NOTICl ITAlWMT °' T'l'4t ~ -~ .. .,,.. County on July 10, MAmlTAW dolnQbuaMWll: MAMITitfG 2000 QM 11Mm'1AW DIN [QU4PMf:NT M... •••a1•11MT°' doing ... A)I 91ACM ... IMO The lotOwlint P8"IOftl -91'Al"lll'MCH UHi.TO t. COl9t Hwy a..: 200. T'l'4t fof1ooMnO .. TAL I DAY fRAHS~T. .._,, U. °' 1'9C1'1TIOU9 llACH IAOt<t"'8. tlOO AL1'Y• I) 01MAH 1.1W19 & ,._.. ~-24701 ~-c!W~ ttt4' Ccnnldll...,·•c.M tlal *""""""111ntea~ 1545AUQUlll.n .&.n11Ane HClthOU.IUllllM WMNAm Jtamll Alll'lr Cr ~atn AltOaATD ,_ ...., .. ~ f)f.,..e COM! A ... ICAN 8'HOY I) Toro, CeM '"'° . ~ J ~ no M"KIA INVl"OMfN· ttt•. Calft. 92'707 um l'TAW TM tol!CIWfnO pel'tonl V"'9y, Cellf t210I den ...... ........., ..... ...._, "°' M t1. 24, ,,, "'4NTINO C~NnM. 4t.. ~ c. '°""· 24701 ...,..., ..... C«one dll..., TAI. a.vcTY PAOOUCTI o.M A o.Aew. 1148 The~~ -l\tl¥I ..,..ld0nld.1he 1119 ~ Gary l M}illea, MOO ~.,. A\llUll 7. ttlO T.o34 • e.111°"":2.,s:r' .. 101. ~C:. ::_ •114• 11 C4' -CO. 11190 111 • =:~PIOt:~ ~ ~n\~; a.M• AM Htt . ~'i:':-~. 2108 ~':n.'1e~1t:u~~~1~:~ ~= r.;: J'70e "01Jntetl ..::~:.::, & ,:_ WWIM __.._WlllOn Cf~. ...,,.,.W.lrllon. 11441 ,.._ ... 103 INtM. 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The Legal Oepar1 ment at the 011ty Piiot Is pleased to an- nounce a new service now avail- able to new bustneues. We wUI now SEARCH the name fOf you at no extra charge. and tave you the time and the trip to the Court HouM In Senta Ana. Then. of courM. after the 1earch Is com~ed we wtll fife your flc.tltloua t>uslnet1 name 1tatement wtth the County Ci.rte. pubtllh once a week fOf tour WMtcs 11 required by law end tMn tile your proof of publi- cat ion wtth the County Ci.rte. Please atop by to file your fictitious businen statement at the Dally Pilot Legal Depart- ment. 330 Wett Bay. Costa Mesa. CallfOfnla. If you can not stop by. please call us at (7 14) 8-42-4321, Ext9"1ton 315 or 316 and we will m.-e arrangement• for you to handle thlt proc.cSure by mall. If you lhOuld ha~ any further questions. pteaM call ut and we wUI M more than glad to aaalst you. Good luck In your MW bus!MUll T-487 GENERAL PL.AH AMBRDllBllT RO. 89-3/ZOlfB CHANGE RO . 89-5/ ERVIIOIUCERTAL IMPACT REPORT 1'0. 90-1 (To amend the General Plan land use designation and zoning at 5142 and 5200 Warner Avenue to allow for Mediu•~High Density Reaidenti•l Development) • NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Huntington Beech City Council will hold a public hearing in the Council Chamber at the Huntington Beach Civic Center, 2000 Main Street, Huntington Beach, California, on the date and at the time indicated below to receive and consider the statements of all per•ona who wish to be heard relative to the application described below. DATE/TIME : Monday, Augu•t 20, 1990, 7 :00 PM APPLICATION NUMBER: General Plan Amendment No. 89-3/ Zone Change No . 89-5/ APPLICANT: LOCATION : z.Qm;: REQUEST: Environmental Impact Report No. 90-1 David Czaja 5142 and 5200 Warner Ave .(aouth aide of Warner, eaat and west of Leslie Lane) See attached map. OP (Office Professional )and (Q)C4 (Qualified-Hi9hway Commercial prohibiting med ical office uses) To amend the Land Use Element Qf the General Plan redesi9natin9 the subject property from General Comm«trci1l to Med i um-High Density Residential en _. ...... _., and rezone from OP (Off ice Professional) and (Q)C4 (Qualified Highway Commercial, prohibiting medical office uses) to RJ -PD (Medium-Hi9h Densi ty Residential with a Planned Development suffix). Thia request was reviewed by the Planning Commiss i on on July 17, 1990. ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: Covered by Environmental Impact Report No . 90-1 . COASTAL STATUS : N/A ON FILE : A copy of the proposed request i1 on tile in the Community Development Department, 2000 Main Street, Huntington Beach , Californi a 92648, for inspection by public . the ALL INTERESTED PERSONS are i nvi ted to attend ••id heiring and express opinions or submi t evidence for or aq1inat t he application as out lined above. All applications , exhi b i ts, and descri pti ons of this proposal are on file wi th the Off i ce of the Ci ty Clerk, 2000 Main Steet, Huntington Beach, Cal i f orni a, for i nspection by the publ ic. Huntington Beach City Counc il Conni e Br ockway Ci ty Clerk / ~ VICINITY MAP