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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1990-09-05 - Orange Coast PilotOH\,f,I CO\'I City conslderS a I whlle Galdo awa· .... seating on councll 2 untlldebut ultimate football tab · " .. councr1 ~ •IPK'ld on nuscMy./IU SUNNY T H E ORANGE COAST 25CENTS GOOD MORNING! h's Wednesday, Sept. S, 1990, and here's what's hap- penina: ORANGE COAST WEATHER: Early momina clouds, mostly clear. Te4ay'1 Mp/a.w: 77 -t4 Yesterday's hi~/low: 76-62 Tomorrow's htgh/low: • 77-64 SPORTS: ...,_ i..p. BaMkll: .,........ .... '"' ....... a.tz da.e. H-HOU• HOTUN• TOTH••orro• 642-6086 Co•••nts • n,t. ... ,. ... AZ,_...._ INSIDE THE NEWSROOM: We are not 1c>1na to name names, mostly because we can't, but the Onaae Cout Dally PU.t receivca a phone caJI about the bevy of beauties ponrayed in full color on Paac 1 Monday momana. .. Tbe fact that it was from a man really wasn't surprisina at all... But we coukin't aave htm the names and addresses of those pis even if we wanted to ... Ac said be was interested in only one ... Hc told the Dally PUot that one of female hunks look- ed like h1s ex-wife ... "She's sup- poted to be somewhere hke MonWl&," he complained. "We've been tryina to sn-ve her with the divorc:r pepen." he added ... Likc WC said, WC couldn't help b1m even af wc wanted to be of hdp ... However, the ancidcnt abould lay to rest the beliefthat men like to oaJc aood lookina women ... This auy looks at those pictures only to spot his ex-wife and help the courts clear the dockets ... He found out that sometimes you win a few and sometimes you lose a few. INDEX Bridge 86 BuslMSS A4 c~ es-1 ComkS 88 Crossword 86 Death nottces 87 E~ruilnment A7 Hotoscope 86 Ann Landers A6 Poke Log Al PUblk notkes 87 Socle(y AS TV Mstlngs A 7 TODAY-S THOUGHT "ltaclsm Is man ·s gnwst d'Wat to ,,,., - tM nuxlmum ol h«rw1 for • minimum '!' 't9llOtt. •• AtnNm Joshua Hftchef . WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1990 Elam keeps his license ' Judge grants cosmetic surgeon stay, new he-aring lly EMILY ADAMS 0..,,"""' ..__,.., With less than 48 hours to spare, Dr. Michael Elam's medical license was saved Tuesday by a Superior Court jud&e in Sacramento. The Newport Center cosmetic sur- seon accused of insurance fraud, botched tummy tucks and fallifyina medical records could've been fora:ct to ajve up hlS scalpel Thon-- day. But after 1 bearing before Supenor Court Judge Jeffrey Gunther last Friday, Elam's lawyer announced the judge bad a.ranted a stay until the case could be re-heard m Sammen- to. It will probably be six months or more before a new hcarina begins. but a Sacra~ento trial promises to be just as sensational as Elam's Los A•lcs hearina before an adminis- trattve law judae last spring. The cast of witnesses is bound to include a Mrs. California runner-up, "jealous" colleagues and, of course, the 41 ·ycar-old liposuction pioneer himself. Elam, 1 native of New Orleans, bas been as well known for has appearances an the paaes of SOClety sections as medical JOumals. One of the first doctors to use liposuction in this country, Elam's office desk in- cludes a photoeraph of one of his most famous puicots. Ena.raved on the silver frame att the words "Phyllis Diller Loves Michael." Other patients have exhibited less affection for the s~o some say wields a dictatorial influence over his patients. In court, Elam will apm answer tp accusations that he and his part- ner Dr. Frederick Berkowiu issued $3, 700 in false insurance claims. Accordinc to prosecutors, Elam and Berkowitz billed insurance com- panies for hernias when tummy tucks wett performed and claJmed that certain eyelid hfts were necess- ary for better vts1on. The doctors have consistently said thC1r billings are correct. Elam is also accused of gross nqhfCOOC for m1shandhn1 a scar revision after a tummy tuck on a Dana Point woman left a large. unsightly scar with .. dog can" of flesh at either end. And fprmcr Mrs. Cahfom1a con- testant Bonnie Luebke saad Elam pvc her cheek implants and a nose JOb she never wanted. While Elam admits to "oftentimes know1n1 what's best" for his patients. he's wd Luebke qrccd to the extra procedures. She didn't compl11n until she received the bill. Elam said. All aloni. Elam has satd the case stems from professional ,JC&lousy and the compet1t1on between cos- mcuc and plastic suflCOnS . "When you're a httlc outspoken, there's a few too many newspaper aruclcs wnuen about you and you have a populanty base, that leads to outn&ht Jealousy." Elam sa1d. Odien dtsaarcc· and say Elam.,1 troubles stem from his Svenph·hke attitude toward patients Calltna Ela.m a har and a man without remorse. Adm1n1strat1ve Judge Rosalyn M. Chapman said an her statement suucstan1 Elam's f,.._ase '" ELAM/Bade "•I Dr. MldNtel • .._ .. Airport termina.1 opens Series of events planned before travelers use it 11y KAftN AUGE ~,_klllf_ With a flounsh and the pull of a string that dropped a vr-en drape, ht' was unveiled -a polished. scrubbed<lcan bronze John Wayne for the '90s The rcvttahzed Duke made has fint public appearance Tuesday an the n~ home that 1s as shiny and spart.hna u has countenance now 1s After ca&ht )cars bl"IV1Dj the ele· mcnt.s as me taraer-than-lafe ~nunel out.sJdc a CTampcd. outdated ter- minal at the au:pon that bears his name. Wayne's likeness now stands b~ a marbk platform 1ns1dc the · -a1ltnt:cd terminal named for Oranae County Supervisor Thomas Rtley. Unvcahna the cleaned up statue was the first of man) flounsh" on tap for the next tv.o v.cclcs. v.hcn thC' public will be 1ntroducc:d to the nev. "Unlllnal planned for Fnd&). and a tour of the facdt t > . com plett with door-prizes and lave entcnatnment.. Wlll be of- fered Saturday But a aroup of U1V1ted ~s-. ancludtna Wayne's son. Michael, and a horde of local media. aot a sneak prcvtcw of the nearly com- pleted tennanal Tunday. Afat-Dst a backdrop of workmen putunc the finash1na touches on the terma~I. vasa tors strolled the marbl~noorcd statrs. pzcd up at the hiahly touted vaufted oeilinp, eumaned the 11.rport art cxhlbit and tncd out the chlln in the waitina a~s. And for the tour's two hours. the cost OVCl"NDS, the budaet cuts. the lawsuits and mynad problems that have plqued the $310-mtlllon 1m- provemenl project WC1'C-. if not for- aotten. at least pushed to lbc beck- around s .. ervllcw TOlll ..,., 9how1 off tit• reno- vated atatue of John W•rn• whkh 11 In th• ........ ,......,, ............. loMtJ of tit• new TOlll ~ T......., IMllkl· ,,.. ...... John w.,n. Airport. Wbik the first flights v.on't bqin amv1n1 and departing 11 the 337.~squarc-foot lennanal unul Sept. 16, airport officials haH' planned a KnCS of events dcsaaned to show off the new terminal 10 the fly1na public A pnvate blad.-uc sh1nd1g as Tak.tna over the spotll&bt ~ 5uch th1~ as the fOSSJls l"ound 1n the 14-0-malhon-ycar-oki marbk that hl\t'S walls. columns and so~ of the floors. (cost-savana cfforu forced carpcttna to replace much of the marble onainally planned to cover the floors ) rttteaw ... ~/Bade ..... Plan to ban pushcarts fails lly 8C>e VA/4 EYKI N DlllllJ ,_ ..... -- COST A MESA - Caty Council members hert lulled a proposed ordinance that would have banished pushcart food vendors from the city's sidewalks. The vcndon; who tell e"crythtl)I from 1~ cream to hot tamales, are a familiar si&bt 10 many parts of Ora• County. particularly 1n Latino neiabborbooda. But Costa Mesa offictals say the vendors have become a health and safety hazanl and a~ now too numerous to rqulatc property. All food vcndon in the city need city business liccnies and health inspection cerUficates to operate, bul few pushcart vendon oblerve tbele rqulations. development 1erv1ces d.i~tor Don Lamm said. •"Tbe number of putbcart1 tw incteated dramatically and from a staff point of view1 • we have been iMffec:uvc in cnforcina the ui~ rqW.ations." umm 11id. "We feel lbey arc unsanitary and sometbina we cannot effectively rqulate. •· Lamm w,ed the council. on behalf of the cny's code enforce- ment a&alt t0 enact an ordinance bennil\I pushcart vendors. Mayor ~ Buffa and couneitwomeft Sandy Ocnas and Mary Hornbuckle di...,eed witb the ~ bow-ever. Onia, wbo called the _,:;:: iabtJy mast... called for stricter resulatJOn oft.be vmdon ralbtr tflan prohibttion. Hont&uckk ..,ad wttb Ocn1L "'We \Ilk about lest 90vtnHMftt 1ntaftftnce, wtll this tJ more intcffetencc. not lea... sbe uid .. , would prefa ,ome lOUlher nplatio-." BaA ..,...S IMt tlMJ city <Mllb• \o try bctter enfutc:o1ettt ~ buaiaa tM :""*-1 buljw, And be alto criticized the propoecd tncauft, CllJi• it toO v...,e ud btold. Ai wnttm. be Midt it m1Pt ~ to ne•....,., c:anien ud lebookll1ktre:n ""° ride tbcir ~ door to door ltltiftl choc:ol9tl to SUPPoft t.btit IChool ICUviliel. • eo.andlmen Orv Ambw'tlY ud Ed OtMeow IPQke in •vor of ... 1•1 .. CMTS,... ...... Orange Coast city officials worry about possible storm 9y 8C>e VA/4 IYKI N end AMANDA WRAY o._ .............. V1SK>n1 of titanic waves. k.Jlkr udes and tftleoflattenins winds are danana 1n t.bc beads of area offiaals this month. 10 whit wealhtr watch~ en are calltnJ one of t.bc most ominous bwncane tt.UOns 1n Or- &nlC c.out btStOI). Granled. th11 tsn't Aonda. and hurricanes aren't euctly perennials here. The last really bit blow was io 1939. But tf there ever was a Scptemtxr that could muster another arand- daddy storm. this as at. local ob- scrven and e ven a few experts - ancludtna the NauonaJ Weather Ser- vice -a~ S&)'lf\&. And C1ll~ alona the Orantt Coast art tak.Jna the threat scnou.sly Some are already prcpanna for the v.orst While no o ne's pessina out rain- coats yet. the humcaM talk isn't all hot air, accordina to Marie Roehm. a metrorolo1JSt With the NauonaJ \\ cather Servi~ an Los Anaelcs. .. Your'rt talk.JD& about a hundmS year storm h(rc. so u far as actually pttd1cttna that we're ao~ to bave one, I do n't thank we·~ dot!lt that, .. Rochin wd. "But the conditions do look aood for a humcanc 10me-o ,.bctt on the c:oest. lt • s m<>ft poea- 1 blc DOW th.an It has been in I k>DC t1mc. you could say. And 1f i1'1 ~ to happen. St-plembcf't tbe month. fl'te ..... ST'OtlM/ledl ft•t Teen gang member-.nabbed 'In Boys C{ub murder case suspect Sunday tn a commercial area of Wntmanstcr near Huard Avn~ and M..,,oha Street. Tbt suspea's name wa W1lhbckt beanat be is a ju~'ftli~. He as bc'iftl bekt 1n OrantP ount}' Ju veaile Hall on susplCion of munler, Mc£rlaan said. The distnc1 atsorMf a offitf fikd murder dwln. ~ him Tuada), ud he'• IWed'" to have a c.tetenoon b&W-Uiil -llW IOday •• · l1w .._.._ tllOcted mi6efttt in the ne.,tlbomood of \be dQ • J 9699 Education Lant, HU Broot.bWlt Street and YorbDwwi A~w. Womed perenu Mid iilliill ilNiii araa111-. a pmbl:MI to .,.. dlil = =:ce.Mdwww--= 2P::t. Paay Taytoc', a k ,fl • dub'1 board of dir«U 4 .lilli ....... . •y•w11' ..... .... -~ ~ Airiiiilllr Ora~ Coast People Peter Gino Cuomo .... -...... ~-­-.. apa Gino .. CUOfttO, center, with J .. us Gonzalez. left. and ltudy Atvarea. AffcctJoo.ately lmov.n as "Papa (,ino · c unmu 1\ pn:~ntl~ supen 1s1n1 cook for the popular Gina's Pana re\l.lurant'> in '-'c"' port ~h and Laauo.a Bach The lt.alaan-tra1ncd 'hd "'ho u"' ncd restaurants on the East Coa.st and 1n Palm 'iprinia:., "'a .. .tl'-'J a mu' 1e stunt m~ some 50 )'can aio LONG STUNT STINT ------- Cuomo worked as a stunt man tor ~,., ' ·..sr\ '>fll"\.1al111ng 1n -.rcstlrng 1al)t a.nun.th an the Roman &)ad1a1 r'drm He 11"'nc:d ~'era! lions and tiger\ ht used for ha\ \tut.t\ ""h1t h tndudcd doubling for actor Johnn) '-' c1smullcr ··"'e v.ould shoot '>Cen\:') 10. T.b ou!k!nd < )J~' .111d tht'' 'd put u\ in Rumc Ion film1 "I wrC<;tled C\CC)thing frurn crcxod1lc\ 111 11icr' I he reac,on I \topped l\tun1 1o1.orlq v.a., I hroh ('\('r'\ honl· 1n m• ~"h' But I rn proud of "'hat I dad .. HE COOKS ------------ A chef for 51 '~" ( u<>mo ..... ~ tratnC'd in h1\ nJtl\ <' It.ah Hl· ownC'd Papa <11no'\ R~1.aurant bad. ra\I and \C\ c:ral rc\taurant'i 111 Palm Spnn~ for 20 ~car~ until he -.old lhlm " ll"' \la" had. · 1;.., couldn't Lale the heat an~murc · be \aid ol l'alm \pnn~ He then cooked for thl' H un11ng111n ti< Jl h Oii\ l' CJardrn re'ttaurant thrc.-c )ear\ until he lx·l affil' thl' trJ1n1ny 11111~ flir (11na·, P11ui about a )car ago In h1\ 'tparc time < uomo lt'Jl.hn \t'nio1r u\11t n l110.,1ng d J\\l'\ tn Huntington Bc~ch .and \l. c'>tm1n'it1:r .t nJ \J\\ h1 l'n111\\ hl'lr>1ng out sen iors and children tn nt.'"\.'d "'hl·ne' er hl· 1 .rn "If 11 lan ma ._,c people '"1111 I JI J,, 11 GO-GETTER ---------- Born an <i1cil> ( uomo carnt lo the I n tn! \1.111·, ., h1 n he "'·'' around 4 and 1o1.a\ ra1-.cd on thl' I"'' < OIJ\I 1 •• ,1... ht· 11,,., 1n \l.e\tman\ter l.\llh hi\ l.\lfe Th<' cnupk ha\ \I\ •h1hlr• 11 .111 nl l.\hom arc marncd. Doctor\ ha q· ad,1\Cd < uomo "'h" ~'t' h1\ J~1· .t, ·1 .... 111.1-cn 1,11 and 70 ·· to \lo"' d11v.n Oclau'>t ,,1 ..i hcan 1t1nd111••11 < 11 1m11 \31d he unde'"""cnl .a 4u101uple h\pa" th<11 prJlll• ;ill\ rchu1l 1 hi' hean but he ha\n I rul~ •JUI the 1J1·a o l orx·n111~ ,1n11!hll ri:,1.1urJnt ul h" 0 1.\0 "I fee l real grcJI -I do rnort than I e\l·r J d I Hntualh I probabh .... ,11 111.\ n " rc\t.iurani ag.i1n But I 1l•1n ._ I JI• d11 ""11 h11111 the \trc:\\ 1 -Comptlt'd b• /r/J )'okol EDI TOR'S .l\OTE· If you kaoM iomNJD<" wbo )bou/d bt> ft>aturt>d in "Ora111r Co1111 PNplr" c11/I tbr D11ll) Pilot"• Clt_t Drd at lit-an; or lr•vt' • mt'siagt' oa tbr Edltor 'f Hot/Int' -64!-6086 Elderly man reported missing MISSION VlfJO -Shmtrs depul1cs were searching Tut'\da) ¢venina for a <>O·ycar-old L.e1\urC' World man who bttame ICl\t ""hilt' dnving on Alana Parlcwa) nt'ar ·Jeronimo Road. 4-dam~ ""a\ dn' 1ng a 147!1 rc·d U'C'r v.-h11c C ad1llal 1-ldorado .... 11h J per~onal11C'd l1ccn\c plait" ut 'TE04-0t... · \1cndc1 \aid .\darn' ha'i no mrdllal pr"hlem\ but he ha' a pour ntC'mon Ted Adams, who ll vr<; on A\en1da Ma1onca 1n Laguna Hill'>. wa._. rr- portcd missing at about 4 4 5 p rn h' • fnend, said Orangt' ( nunt~ ~hcntrs Lt. Jay Mcnde-1 Adam\ had v1s1lcd the fncnd 1n Ml\~1on V1e10 and was folllow1ng him to L.e1surc World. but Adams took a wrong lurn near Alic~ and Jeronimo "By the tame thr friend tumC'd back, he couldn't locate 1hc m1\\lnf person," Mcndt"1 \31d He ., 5 feet II 1nlhC'> tall I.,._ pvund\ h.i\ gra} h.tir. hro"'n l'H'\ and a dar~ ldn ( ounl)"'ldt' f)olitt alc:rt'.> detailing Ad.am ' dnu1p1mn "'t'rc hroadca\l "'1kndt1 ~id .o\n)one \p<>1t1ng .\dams should tall the \hcriff\ DcpartmC'nl at ()47. "'<1ll() or thr'r local rohcc dc· panment "'By i•t' Dally Piiot -. Near-drowning victim critical • NEWPORT BEACH -A 19- -ycar-old Santa Ana man v.ho ncarly drowned near Ncwpon Pier was clanfJn& to hfc Tuesday in an in· &en11 vc care un11 11 Hoa& Memonal . Hospital. Hospital reccpt1ona1t Don Nash · u1d Enrique Alvarado Manine1 was .. ORANGE COAST lllily Pilat VOL M, NO. 241 ,, 1n cnt1cal lOnd111on T ucsda}" t\C· n1n1 Swimmen spoucd Manine-z Ooat-ina face down 1n the "atcr shortl> before 4 pm Monda) A lifeguard pulled Manine1 lrom the waler. and paramedics worked frantically to rc- v1 ve him before an am,bulance took him to Hoag How to reach us at the Dally Piiot Clrculatlon ()rqeCC>vnlY Advertl1lng Cl...ifled ().pay • 8-42 4333 142·5e71 042·•311 s.o 122• 842 4330 1484170 142~1 131 5002 ~---------·· ·~ ...__ ............. -. ,.. -. .. ........... -. . .. - Newport Center left In the d~rk ., ma.cm lkCllOft __ ....... --.. ~ tbc IDOr'DJJlll, witb abou.t 700 CUl10IDa"I tetlilll power by I 0-a.m.. IC.moedy said. N" aoe nli:Duaes lalcr. tbc ~i~ cmtmon b8d dcaictit), exctpt for r0Q; JCinp -hcific llcal Elute. tbe emctFDCY &dc'pboOe. but no one answered. fiAall1, lbe pushed the puic button and bant ooiles outlidc tbc door. Counuyman saw tome NEWPORT BEACH -About 1,500 peopk 1W1cd l.bnr day aft.er the Labor Dey btt:ak 1n darkDas when • po-.er OU-. tut N"'l)On Ceoact Tuesday monuna. Pacific Mu\ua.l llllUta.DCle. Sbeenoa. Lebman Hunoe IDc. ud the Ria Rc:S1awuL POwtt wa not ratoted to tbolt ~ util about I p.m liab& throutb lbe door. • . A man in the elevator jammed hat foot lD the aact betltuo the doon to act them open. When Countryman attpped out, tfie cJevator wu about Tbt OUUllC bcpD &t about 9:20 a..m. .taco a peer or ~Ad ~lcctnc:al eqwpmeat wlcd UI tbt IOO bloct of Newpon Ctnter Driv~. said Sout.brm Cahfonua Ed.tJoa lp)kcsmaa Jim Ktnocdy SuaD t:ounuymu. a PKi6c Mutual cm- ployu. sud a.be WU lf1d Ul &D devalof" with three other people b a few minutes dwina the OUl:llr ... It WUD 't really what I'd call ICU}. but it wu ot1UU\.ly a ddfemlt way to stan the •c:ck." she a.ad. 12 inches above the floor. . Judy SimplOO. cfa_y ma~r of the Ritz Restaurant.. wu in a different band. She bad a fuU bst of lunch reterVations, but her telephone wu not •'Oftina durina the outqc. She had no. way lO contact the diners W1th rcterVat1on1 unul an cmplo)U riged up a telephone u.sed for confinn- ina a-edlt card numbers. l 8w.'c11np m Lbt ara bounded by San Ckmcnte Dnve, Santa Batbara Drive San Joaqin Ht.I.ls Road and A\oc:ado Aveotc v.~ a.ffccu:d by the outqc . Countryman said she hit the button for hCf floor and the l&lhts ~. When ~ lta,bts came beck on. shc could feel some movc~nt 1n the elevator. "Theo the li&bts went out apin. this time for two or three seconds. We~ m tow darkneu.'. Tbt restaurant hid power restored by I p.~ .. but dry ac:c was broUJbt in to keep food cool rn Newpon Beach Traffic Efl&lnttr R.Jcb,.Ed- monilOn wd th.rtt traffic 'l&MI• on San Joaqwn Halls Road were not worltina dunna the out.age. but POhce reported no acctdcni-'- l>ower wu renored to bus1ntsscs throughout "°'Trew lbop1 in Fuhion b land lost power for about an bour, but did not close, a mall spokeswoman said. When the IJahts came back on. she p1Ck.cd up $200,000 approved for storm drain 11y AMANDA \I/RAY O..., ... tuK ...... FOUNTAIN VALLE't -Tc:r· nblc storms as1dc. dmcf"\ 1n Foun- tain Valle> ~ assured a future of dry tares A~one who plo-.ed through trou s of water along Harbor Bou evard after heav~ rains m1gh1 remember losing their bra._c~ Some suffered s1m1Lar fatn on \l. arner Avenue But tho~ da}'s are o'er Soon, the chapter also will clo!tt' for an area of lhc Cit)' near Euclid and ~la1er a' - enues. La Tcrrau Avenue -.h1l.h ha\ a Ooodmg problem that has bc:c:n 1.on· taouall> sc:t a.side because of s1m1lar problem~ on larger str~I\. as nov. guarani~ a d~ fu ture "If II happens in 1he moman&. than thc kids can't e'en "'alk to school. l1K pare.n~ have to IJVC a&o. went home without an)'. 1uaran- them a nde, .. said city pubhc works tees. only &ood f&Jth . director Wayne Osborne. He wu hopina tbc l.a.rwul Co. Osborne wd the strccl floods would g.ct reimbursed for the cosl of about t.hrtt umcs each year. but w storm dnuns It built 10 an I I I-acre never been aivcn a storm drain area bct,.ttn Talbcn Slrttl and Elias because funds were nol available 1n A venue, ~l of Magnoba Street. Cit)' coffers carmarlcd for that "Tbetr problem nght no-. 1s the) purpose. This )Car. more than don't have an) mone) ... be wd. S200,000 has been allocated lo solve "They don't ha\e enough monc)' for the problem It and they won't have for two or SolVlnfc this problem creates three ycan. ·And, the cuy as under no obhpuon to pa) us out of the another or someone else. howcvC'r. general fund ... Charles Preston. v1~ prcs1dent of Although the city has rcimbu~ the Encino-based Larwm Co .. spoke seven of 16 developers for storm to Cit) council mcmtx:rs Tuesda) to drain prOJ«ls on Fouot.a1n VallC'' plead hlS case, bUI ISO l COUnllng OD acrcqe. the COUnetl has let nine of an) happ) returns th~ rc1mburscmcnl agrttments e'- ~ton. who was hoping for somt pm:. of the uamc funds that came out of"" Osborne said the Cll) in 1979 the Cit) ·s·same storm drain account could have raised 1u S 1.000-an-acrc for a project has c-0mpan) developed storm drain fee to his rccomnlfflded in Founuun Valle) nearl> W )cars S3.~an-acrc fee. but chose instead to raise it lO Sl.7.50. an acre. He said the lower fee was not cnouJh to cover reimbursement contracu, but cbosina the higher fee would have given fountain Valley one of the h1f!!est fees an the county. 'In 1979, S3.900 per a~ was quite a steep cb.ar&e apJnst the developer." he wd. "And, most c1ucs do not have a re1mbuncmcnt agrcemcnL - Osborne said c1t1es by law weren't allowed to ma.kc such aarcemcnts unul the 1960s. consequently, older c1ues like Santa Ana arc still piqued b> Ooodini. .. lflherc had been more acuon (by LaNin). there m1&ht have been the chan~ the counc1f would have paid lhcm back," Osborne wd ... But, I ha'c to pat the city on lhe back. We arc considered as having the best drainage plan in all of Onngc Coun- t) •• Garamendi resigns from Senate SA( RAMENTO Insurance comm1ss1oner candid.ate Juhn (1ar- amcnd1 h.u reslJllt>d hai. \I.ate: '>cndtc \Cal. "'Ith lardull~ t1m1ng w a\ tu help ha~ -.1lc's t.ampa1gn to repl:1l e him and hun the chant<'\ of her n'al Garamcnd1 facn Republican "c\ Bannister, a Huntington 8c<1Lh hu\1- neuman 1n the race for statt· 1n- .,u~ncc commissioner Craramcnd1. 45. a -.calth) ram ht•r w11h six children who has ~'°' ed I fl )Can an the Legislature p\C' no rea'>On for has rcs1gna11on an ht\ offilral letter 10 lhe Lt (,o, l cci Mct.anh), the president of the '>en · ate He said uni\ that "I wish 10 thank m) con\t11uents tor allO't'Jng me the honor of ~r' 1ng them and this state .. The res1gna11 on took etTect Monda~ at I~ 59 pm Tuesda' an a news release. Gar· amend1 Siad ha\ earl) rcs1gna11on would "allo"' thC' nc-. senator suffi- ucnt time to develop and introduce bills . " The~ was no mention, 1n either his offioal rcs1gnat1on leucr or has press rclea~. of has wife's interest in ha~ ~at Her tclc' 1\1on campaign also began TucsJa~ Garamend1. a \l. al nut Grove Democrat, as the front runner in the race for state insurance com- m1"1oner. which this )'car 1~ an elected office Ga.ramend1's wife. Pana. as Sttk1n1 her husband's 5th D1stnct xnatr scat. and her first tele' 1s1on ads in the race began aanng Tucsda) She has not prC'v1ousl) hcld elective of. ficc. She issued a s~lcmcnt saying her husband's announcemtnt "docs not change m) campaign 1n the least." She also said that "mosl of has (her husband0 s) lime will be spent 1n olher pans of California . .&.s such he does not feel nght about contanuan~ to collect a salary as stale senator · 8) makmg bis announ~mtnl Monda> -instead of after No'. 6 -Garamend1 all but forced lhc governor to call a special pnmaf) election to co1nQdC' with the No,·. 6 general clecuon. Tbc governor has .. v1nuall) no other choice" bul lo order thC' special pnmaf) on No'. 6. and the special general dect1on Jan. 8 Under state La-.. the go,cmor musl c.all a \pcc1al general clcctton w1th1n 14 daH. and must select a date o( no lcss than 112 da' s and no more than 119 da~ s from· thr date the 'acanc) occurs. Thal would be Jan 8, '.l. arTCn said -By ~e AuoclalHI Ptn6 Federal judge dismisses payola case LOS ANGELES -.\ tnal touted as the b1gge~t ret.ord1ng 1ndustn pa)ola case 1n three dccadc'> ended abruptl} l.\tlh a federal JUdgC' ruling pro~tulo~ comm11tcd "outrageous go'- c.-rnment m15o<..onducf" b) -.11hhold1ng test1mon~ consp1raq and obstruction of JUStace in San Francisco 1n 1989. "Havmg been cau&ht with a smoking pistol. lhe IO\ernment. wh1cfl denied It had a pistol. lhen dented that lhc pistol smoked:· ldcman said. Records ellccut1\e Ra)mond "nderson. 50 "Everything lhC' Judge said -.as absol utcl) true." said defense attorne\ Don Rt .. The government was w1lhng to ,.,j, at aJI costs and al got its hand caught an thr cooklC' Jar." S D1stnc1 Judge Jame'> ldcman on Tues· da~ d1\m1~sed pa)ola and rad.ctecnng charges against indepe ndent record promoter Joseph ll>JfO. 43, w)tng the government dehberattly w11hhcld from the defcn!tt' <:0n1rad1ctory suHc- mcnts b~ a Ice) -.1tncss Ass1sun1 U.S. Auomcy Wilham l ynch said he believed the JUdgt's dcets1on wu wrong and vowed to appeal. Isgro was being tncd on 57 counts of tu fraud. rackctccnng and other chugcs. Pros- ecutors alleged he made cash and cocaine pay- ments to nd10 sumons in Texas and California in return for playing ~n.ain songs. The Judie said he wai. disturbed at govern- ment pro~lutor-.' insistence last week that they had not 1ntcnt1onall> hid prc\1ous tesumony b> w11ncu f.>cnnts 01 Rirco Thc former Internal Re ,enue ~n u.c agent was t..:On\ll.ltd of tu "The coun orders that a mistrial be declared and that the indictment be dismissed ... Ide man s.a1d. "The coun finds th~ bas been outrqeous government m1JC0nduct in this case.·· The tnal had featured tesumon) about co- cajnc and cash stuffed into album JICkets and audio cassette cases delivered to radio station N~ws of the weird The dccisaon also threw out tht ~ against lsgro's two co-defendants. convicted cocamc dealer Jeffre> Monka. 32. and former Columbia cxecuuvcs County receives grant to probe chlld abuse Getaway car won't start SACRAMENTO -Orange County was one ~-~·.····~"'"···• of three counties in the state to r«c1vc a state grant of S 140.000 to dtvclop a model program for NEWS Investigating cases of child sexual abuse. Allornq for two prison escapees MlAMI -A geta"'•)' car that wouldn't c;ta(t ma) ha'C' helped 11uanh nah two inmate\ ""ho e\- caped lrom the pnson "'here Manuel Noncga 1~ being held. The ousted Panamanian rulcr. under constant watch h) a guard posted outside his spcc1all) built cell at the federal Metro p<>lltan ( orrcc- t1onal Center. wasn't involved PniOn official~ said that about 'l p.m Mo nday. O mar Fernandez. 24, o( M1am1 and (. harles Carew, 28. of Brockton. Mass . ,.ere ~o scaling the two fences that surround the pnson. Shots were fired. but the inmate dodacd the bullets wh1lc dashing for Lht v1s1tor·~ parluna lot outside There. they aot into a spuns car 1ha1 police believe was left several hours earlier by a Jlrlfnend or femandel. "The) JUm~ an the car, the car would not stan:· said Make Stone. usoc1atc warden.• .. They Jumped ou1 and started runnini." He u 1d they bolted 1n10 the Correction The headline ··vouth club founder dies" over the Aua. JO obituary for Kath~ Raul1ton. the foundin& presadcot of the Junior Lcquc ofOranae Coun- ty, was 1ocorrtet The Junior Lcq~ 11 pot a youth club. h 11 a pmltsjou phtlanthropic or1an111uon ,_.hich alto traans members for ~~~ ewe .,..,, Ptlel "lf'CtJ I ttrOr, , woods behind the pnson. Police and pnson authon11es sur- rounded the area and searched with dogs and helicopters. one of them equipped with infrared hghts for night vision. The two were c.apturcd on foot about Lhrce miles from the pnson at about 6:30 a.m Tuesda). prison officials said. -By ,.~ .4,.ocl•IH Pru1 Woman's new car destroyed in garage fire IRVINE -A woman an a Wood- bridte condom1num complu bou&ht a new Nman )()() ZX Mon- day, but the car WU dcsltO)'C!d by fire Tuaday aftttnoon, police said. Jtvane pofioc S&t. Mike Qsden said the fire c.aused HS.000 dam• to a ... ,... and its contents. ioclud1n1 ihc car. The fire did not endanarr an a~oinaOJ p.rqc and the: woman's condominium, chanina only eaves on the buikllnp. fire offic1al1 taid. Firefiahten rvsbcd to \be comok.A at 2212 Green moor at about 12: l S p.m and had the fire under control by 1:30 p.m ., an Orante County Fire Otpenmcnt daspatchc:r 11id. Tbc woman had insured the car. Olden added. lnYf'llillton were 1ull tr)'1ftl to nnct lbe cuct Clute of t.be tire Tuadly; but iaitial ~ ladk:llte ti 1tantd an the ai:-• ~n •kt. General John Van dt Kamp said Tuesday BRIEFS Van de Kamp said the programs. also to be launched in San Francisco and Sacramento coun- t1e~. art dcs1gned to reduce the trauma of repeated l interviews of child victims. The programs arc also intended to beuer screen c.ases for prosecution and avoid the invesuptive mistakes that often kad to acquittal of acc used child molesters. Orangt County. which staned its program at the Orangewood Childrcn·s HOfTlt' in March. 1989, will use the state money to open a S«ond center, said Beth Gould. a sta te Justice Department cnme prevention specialist. .. P arenu upset over reading cllnlc closure IRVINE -The planned closllft of 1 UCl education clinic that has helped more than I 00 people. mostly children, learn to read has some parents upset Tuesday. When Joy fricdbcra heard 1ha1 the UCI Rcadina and Neu- rolinauistic Chnac would close 1n siA months. she said she was "as aricf stncktn as when I teamed my only brolheT had died 1n a plane crash." She credits the clinic for belpana her son Joshua. 9. master the art of readana. somcthina he had been unable to do before. But UCI officials sa)' lht S-year-old chnic. which has more than 130 students, h.as f&Jlcd an ats •oat to lrlin future teachers and spawn rnearch, and is costi.na the uoavcmty $25.000 a yar in expcn1a for a pan-time instructor. Disney exec plellds gultty to tax evasion LOS ANOl?LES -A former Walt Dtsn.ey Co. cxecut.tve Tuetday pleadtd auilty to tu cvuioo cbaqa for tak.in& lens of thousands of doll.an and 1 a<>ld Rolu watch u ldckblcks from fortian IOUVCnir IU.J)Plien. Qeoft'tey 0 . Gleed, 52. of Anabcim, U•viee oraedmt ot pu.rctwina for Oisnqi , ~ pillty 10 lWO COWHI of tu C\iuloft ror not dc:clatl"""oney be received from Kuzo llM A Co. of Japan ud Ku~1 ln1ema1ional Lad. of Hons Kona. proaeauon .wt. The: two compuuea 1uPl)jacd a wick ra,.e of~vair IOOdt fOf Olsoey, includina Mickey Mou.ec can. r1pnne:a and &he ft.kc, aid lntttnaJ Revenue Service Spcca&I ~nt Jlobttt B. Wamn. The two companjes have not bim daaraed. Warren Mid, llddina t.Mt a.be anvClltplioft at coel.ia..U..,.Oleld lailed 10 repcwt abou• 134,000 tn .. )'IMft\S in 1914 and lbout 540.000 m l91S, ...... to proeeaa'°"' _,_,_....,,,,,., ........ _ - -. ~ "'·-.. Some lngenlou , others pecullar Inventors display productions of the Imagination at exhibition You probably didn't set up to the invention ubi- batioo at the Dianeyland Hotel Labor 0.y weekend, so The Fred Column went for you. lnventon are like u~ir­ ina sonrmtcn. television ICriptwriters and people who enter that million-<lollar live· away that Ed McMahon hawks every year. · They never Jive up. The chances of succecd-ina are worse than slim and Fred Martln.. none. But th~rc·s always that one &UY who makes it. Ao old fnend and former partner, Don Kracke, made a million dol~ in one y~ wit~ ~ckie Tickie Stickies. They were those little plulJc flowers an the s11t1es that were plastcm:I on everythfoa from surfboards and Volbwqcns aJong the Orange Coast to combat belmetJ in Vietnam. About I SO inventon rented. ubibit spa~. hoping that some- body from Sc.rs or K-Mart Qr Walmart -any old chain -would drop by, sec their invention' and place an openina order for a thousand doz.en. Just a dozen would be wonderful. If their "Bia Idea" remained undiscovered, the inventors could calJ upon plenty of support people in the other booths. They'd check a tradtm~k, rc~h a market. produoc a video, design packaging -anytluna the inventor needed. There were also some people without a booth who were eager to help. "Listen, you want overseas distribulJon," whispered a guy from whom you wouJd not buy a used car, "you call me next week. I know this guy, see .. .'' There was aJsoJood· sohd frtt advice from the Small Business Administration, an from people like Dick Barnett of Corona del Mar. who was there for SCORE. the Service Corps of Retired Executives. A conservative guess would be that 97.5 percent of the inventions exhibited will never ma.Ice it o nto a retail shelf. But you never know. May~ Howard Hudwood's Med Fly will ~ the board game that finally soan by Monopoly in popularity. Perhaps the Hot Coat Hanger Tsong Lea brouf)lt all the way from Taiwan wtll ~ the Christmas gift in 1991. Or 11 JUSt m1gbt ~ Huana Heng-nan's Ma&ic Labyrinth, a new kind of cube punlc that would dnvt' even Prof. Rubik up a wall. Then there was the Pee Patch Electronic Potty Chair. A real favontc was the Prep-Phone, which ~' for talkmt to unborn babies. There's a sort of plumber's friend-type vinyl ~I on one end, a small cone on the speaking end. and a tube in the middle. Mothers can play music for the child. read stories or tell the unborn to chm out and stop kicking. You could probably leach the kid French. In the whole exhibit. there were two inventions which. m our unqualified opinion. have the potential to make some bucks. One 1s an excrc1K dev1oc caJJed Joy Sue~ which as sort of a giant poao stJck that dot-sn't ao anywhere. At about 20 feet high. ifs tarsetcd pnmanly at the health-dub market. It'll work JUSI fine in your back yard if yo!! can gel )our neiabbors lo go along wtth it. A sllo would be perfect. When wt' stopped by the booth. one young woman had bttn bouncina up and down for about 20 mmutcs. Shawna Cruise was standJna o n the floor. waitinc her tum to demonstrate She said her father invented the Joy Suclt and that the lady bouncing up and do wn on at was K.athlccn Morrow. her mother If theK two ladies v.ere not putllng me on. this thing 1s the fount.am of youth. "It's arcat for people wtth bad backs. necks and kncn:· Kathleen said from her bouncing perch high above the exhibit-room floor. "There's v1nually no impact. you get an aerobic whole-bod}' workout and it's fun.'' It wasn't all that bad watchlDJ K.athlccn Th~ other antnauing invention was Tony Micucci s aJJ-purposc prdcn tool. He "started thanlcina about it 20 years ago,·· madt' has ~nt prototype 12 years ago and bas been trying to market at ever sm~. "I've won awards al mvention shows. even won the Golden Hammer award from Mechanic's Illustrated," T ony said. "But those don't help you act on the mark.et." Sance the first time he e-xhibited his 1nvent1on. Tony's hair has acquired a lot more salt than pepper and be has retired from 3S years of mak.Jna tools and dies for Northrop. When he started. Tony fiaurcd his ingenious tool would retail for about S 12.SO. Now he guesses $35. But he hasn't p vcn up on this Swtss--army knife of prden tools It can be swttched and locked into any of five pos111ons to function a.s a spade. a rake, a hoc. a harrow. a trowel and half a dozen o ther lha~ 'Put a hnJc notch here." he noted. po1nung to an unused edge of the blade. "1nd you aot a bottle opener. "Tum at around hke this, .. he wd. swinging the tJp of the handle. "slip a blade over here. and you got a a.rut harpoon for fishi " ~ed this a lot better than bis mechanized anchovy. '1e4 Mvtla'• c.IUJa rut M ... f', Webnby1 u4 Frld•y•. Hert arc the winning playinJ card numbers picked Tut'Sday n1ght for the Cahfom1a Lottt'r) 's daily "Occco" .-me: 'V Hearts: 2 + Oubs: Quc-cn 0 Diamonds: 9 • Spides: S w ,., ... I • '~. Fairview community couldn't stay afloat CO\SI, • City considers court appeal -• • Gaido still not seated on council 9y KABN AUGI ................. IRVINE -The battle for a City Counci1 eat that Mary Ann Galdo thouaht she won in a courtroom last week will continue at least untiJ Tbunday, when the existina uty Council will be asked to determine tbe future of the dispute. lo a apecial 2 p.m. mectint Thun- day, the council is expected to de. cide whether to continue an appcaJ of a judee's order Friday that Gaido be seated on the council. Jn the meantime, Gaido made a leCOod uDJUOOHafuJ attempt to be sworn in u a membeT of the C'tt}' Council Tuesday morning. Alth~ the fonner city planning commawoner was armed with a court order rcquirin& that she be lated "forthwith," Gaido's request was denied •in by city officials, who arc awaiuna the outcome of an appeal of the decision, said City Manqcr Paul Brady. Gaido fim asked to be sworn in Friday, following the ruling by Su- perior Court Judge Eileen Moore. A frustrated Gaido called the caty's action "really silly at this ~mt. The city lost, let's get on with It." City Attorney John Fellows ap- pealed Fnday'a coun nalina that afternoon. He wu aot ditec1ed by Chy Council memben to do so. Brady said. The four 1eated members of the council could opt to bait that appc.aJ, filed Friday by City Attorney John FelJows, and seat Oaido at Thurs- day'1 mcetina. Brady l&id. The c.ounciJ could decide to proceed with the a~I of Judat Moore's ruhna. and W1th an election to fill the seat, or purJuc a combtna· tioo of those opuons. Brady said. "There is a vanety of thaogs the counctl could do," the city manager said. Mayor SalJy Anne Sbendan was unavailable for comment Tuesday. Ao election for the disputed coun- cil seat bad been set for Nov 6. The city faces a deadline of 5 p.m. Thursday af it wants ballots pnnted with a council scat item included on them. Brady said. If an appeaJ 1s pursued, chances arc slim that the case could be decided before November's clcct1on. Brady said. Because Ga1do would not be a candidate in that elecu on. tbe possibility exists that two people could punue the same disputed scat. Brady acknowledged. "All of this points up the problem with Mcuure 0 . If voters tuppon conunued direct election o( mayors, this coofbaion could continue. It's crazy,.. Brady said. 1 wo.yar-okl Meuu"' 0 ICU ~um for e&ect.ina a mayor and, ar necessary. fi1lina the counciJ seat vacated by that mayor upon e~ tion. Gaido is fiahtina for the seat va- cated by Sheridan when sbt was elected mayor in June. Two yean remam on Sheridan's council term. Without a spcaal eledloo, Galdo, who finished t.hu'd amona council candMiates i.n June· s ballot. is cnti· lled to assume the scat under caly law. A measure that would ~ Measure D will appear on the CJty's ballots 1n November. rcprdless of the outcome of the current dispute. In the meantime, Gaido who ran in June on a slate With fonner Mayor Larry Aaran and former Councthnan Cameron C0911"ove, both pol111cal adversaries of Sheridan, said she didn't Uunk. the current leg.al wranahna would diminish her abibty to work wtth the council's other mem~rs. 'Tm not a person that holds M•ry Ann G81do arudges," Ga1do said. ··1 don't bavo any an1mos1ty toward those people.># Structures get short ride off long pier ) • ~ HUNTINGTON BEACH Three smaJI buildings that survived everythina Mother Nature threw at them for about 60 years were hauled away from the pier earl~ Tuesda) and taken to dry land for safe kecp- ina. move. The bwldmp -Neptune's Lock- er. C~pwn's Galle} and The Tack.Jc Box -were pluc ked off the pier a couple of weeks before demohuon crews bepn??" to t~r down the weakened and unsafe old structure. wd he wants the old buUdmgs to~ put on the new pier. Person argues that mof'C' than SJ million in state and federal arants a.re conuoaent on preserv1na the b1storicaJ OltUJ'C' o( ~ 7S-year-old pier And the best way to do that. Person said. is to put ~ t.hru old bu1ld1ngs back oo the new p1tt. Wllhams said Tuetdats move was "reaJ bon~" and went off without a hitch. Three slow-movmg commencaJ house-moving trucks. wtth t~e 1930s-era art deco buildings traaJ1ng gently behind them, started the four- mile journey to the city's corpor- ation yard at Gothard Strttt at J : 15 a.m. They arrived at about 5:30 a.m . shonJy before the stan of earl> morning, day-after-thc-hohda} heavy traffic. "It looked like there was a whole tram of houses coming down the strttt," said a c11y employee who was on hand to wuness the h1stonc EApcru will study the h1stoncal s1gmficance of the old buildings to dctemunc 1f they should be placed. o r duplicated. on the new 1.800-foot pier due for completion someumc an 1990. "We'll get an cxpen to evaluate the old buildings and give us a rcpon on their h1storicaJ s1gn1fi- cancc," · Ma)or Tom Ma)s said Tuesday. Jerry Person. president of the city's H1stoncal Resources Board. Ocnrus W1lha.ms of the city's pu~ he 1nformat1on office said the old buildings sun 1ved the move mt.act and in good shape. The old pier was closed two yea.rs ago after stonn~neratcd waves made 1t unsafe. W1lhams wd ThoU&h the pier as be)ond saving. l:1ty officials have decided 10 ti) and rel.a.In some highlights of the land- mark. Two bu1ldmg.s measure 13 feet by 44 feet. and the other is 19 feet tw 30 feet. • At the dost of a scbedwed sw1i.o& oontcst nur the pier thi• month, air Oregon company, which was cbotea to build the new pier, will bePo tCl dJsmantlc the old structure. • W1llwns noted that $0me of ~ doomed pier will ~ recycled. "The p1hnp, uutad of bein& buned into a landfill, will ~ made into a f1shma rec(" Williams said. "They'll be put out to aca about five: males from the pier." -P,.. •tall -' DalJr PUN M ... .en'ka ,...,.,.. Missing man phones girlfriend 9Y EMILY ADAMS ~ ,._ kaffW- f 0UNTAJN Vo\LLEY -~man .,..ho d1\- appcarcd af\er leaving for a bnef business tnp 1n a rental car nearly a month ago surfaC'C'd this Wttk j ust as unt'xpcctedl> as he "an1shed Barry Paul Stephens' name and photograph popped up in newspapers last month af\er his airl(nend J'C'portcd ham m1ss1ng.. A d1abct1c Y.ath hean probkms. Stephens w1U said to be an danger without nitroglycerin aod the insulin he needed twice daily. Even more worrying. howc\tr. was the m\S- tenous reaction some people had to tephcn\' vanash101 act. The JS.-ycar-old .,..as clcarl) out of penl th1\ weekend when he called h1s girlfnrnd. Lon N1tkrn, to sa}' ht' Y.as an Aonda and on hi s ""a' home. At Natk.ln's urging. Stephens al u railed Fountain Vaill')' police 1n' csugator 11..e' 1n Thomas. who said he'll be able 10 close the btz.arTC ca~ onl) after ht' sen Stt'phens an person "Bas1call)'. ht' said to mt' on thr phone. 'The~ things happen an bu!linl'\~ soml'times · Then he alluded to his hfc being 1n danal'r before he left." Thomas said. So Stephens ma) ~ on h1!1 ""a' bad .. but questions surTOund1ng has sudden d1~p~r.snce still hnacr For instance, wh)' dad has business partner attempt a ta~coHr of their compan~ less than 24 hours .tftcr Stephens Id\" Wh~ did a nt'Y. I~ hared emplo)'« tell ~1tk.10 he .,..as sure teph<'n'> .,..as dcad'l What rt.all) happened to that rcd 11/90 Pontiac Grand Pnx. he rented') And wh) did he bu)· a 351 ~tagnum tY.O da)s before he left unannounced') After tephcns fa1led to return from a busi- ness tnp to the Los Angeles Aupon area on .\ug. 10. Nation received vague threats from people who were at .... a ys rtfcrcd to. crypuc.all~. a!I "busi- ness anoc1ates." She saw ht'r ne.,.., bo\ fncnd's silent business partner attempt a posihumous ta1'eovcr of their fledgling car transpon business -before a bodv was found So far. nobOd) 's sure what happencd to the SS.000-S6.000 an cash -the C'ompan) pa) roll - Stephens had on ham whl'n ht-left 4,' 1s has no rtto rd of Stephens returning the G rand Pn' e'en tl:\oup he told police he'd done that Wttks aao One source told detecll"C Thomas thai tcp- hcns had disappeared befof'C' In fact <itephens was knov.n for taking impromptu "aca110 M Y.1th other v.omen .,..hen he was mamed Th\1 mas Y.U told. Even 1f Stephens dad take the pa) H'll on vacatJon. that doesn't c~l.aul "'h' ~tepbl'ns business panncr sho v.-cd up with ihat l unous document so sbonJy aft~ Stephens d1sappcan:d. .\mencan Auto Transporttr. owned by Slel)- hen1. was run out of Natkln's home on Oat~ A\enue .\ fledghna enterprise. the compan> hared dn,cn to take cars between dealersluJ* and rental agenC1cs. It wasn't a t>t, business. b\l ll had a chanct' to become lucntivc, Nit.kin said Ralph Olcon must have thouaht IO. Le* than 24 hours after Nitkln reported Stepbcd& m1ss1ni. Olcott showed up with a sbctt of lel4I paper In handwritJna that appean to ~ S&if hens· as wntten an odd statement. It names Olcott as the "finanetal advocatt and silent partner" 10 American Auto Tram- porter The document. referred to as a "ptk- man's aarttmcnt." includes the crrptic mt~ ment "(n cv(nt of either party's lives beiJW terminated. Cbmplt'tt' control or ownership w\lJ automaucall) be tr1nsferrcd to the sul'Vlviq panncr .. Wuh Olcott that da) was another man. a dnHr tcphens and Okon bad hmd two days before tephcns disappeared. Wtlliam Oneil told ~1tk.Jn -and later. Thomas -that Stce- hens "'IS prubabl) dead Th<'n he'd lauab it olf and sa) he was onl) k.Jdding. T.._,o da)s latt'r. Olcott was arTCStcd in froru of the lrall hou~ tephens and N1tbn shared Oil\ susp1c1on of ca~ ma • concealed and loeck!d weapon Convenience store hit by beer bandits FO UNTA IN VALLEY Two men entered a con\'t-- nienoc store at 1647 5 Harbor Blvd., took beer from a d1spla) and fled past the counter. One of the beer bancbts was able to ncape. but the 1t ore's clerk '--_.- blocked the path of the tttond man. who hit the clerk in the faoc with one of the bottles The robber then 11«1 and threw a bottk back at the stort. bruk1na a window. The loss was estimated at Sl.000. 'fWo men llOk beer V3Jucd ll S~S 20 ftom the C"1rtlc K marktt, 2~ Newpon Blvd., C.rl) Monda) Tht thcl\ OC\."\lmd at 4~1' a.m a A tdh1~on tel and unduclottd 01~ tleft\.s Mtt stokn from 1 home 1n tht 2IOO Mock of Ltmon Scrm Monda~ 4 mu aed a womu Uf wtptC1Cd 1n lhc ~. •btcll occumd II about 4·0'7 p.m. Fot111 tain Valley _.. 63-year-old Ohio man Y<U struck •1th a lemon v.h1lc snuna 1n a vard •11h a Fountain Valk)' man at 1~ 18400 block of Santa Yolanda Pohtt found t~ culpnt. v.ho adm111ed to throwina •h~ lem on 0 A man mack an anon)moui c.all to Fountain Valle) RCSJonal Hm patal and said ~ had JIUI plactd a bomb 1n ~ hospital and wanlfd t"tf)bod ou1 Noth1na WU found 0 Someone cntett<I an unlocktd l l f parkcd on the I 1..00 bk>cl. or nowdrop and ntd •1th a ~ftate and ponabk phont The lcm """ csumatcd at S 1.240 0 ~M en~ an unlcxkcd ror 1hd1na •andow of a car parkcd an th( I I JOO blocl Of~ Ind fled v.1th I sullcatr and shoulder liq ~loss WI' CllllNttd II $910 0 ..t.n cider!) v.oman asked officer'\ to h(lp her lock her fronl door in thr 7001 block of Scaspnn1 f>n,t he 111d \ht was 'K'k and <>kl and d1dn t knl'"' "'ho cite 10 aU. for help 0 A rru&n ~na a dark T 'h1n rtponcJ I) pttkcd into • v.1ndC1v. 1n tht ~00 l'\hxk of Utica _..' cnuc lrYiDf" ..t. nnro. rompac1 d1i.. P'a>cr \:IUcttr \apn and IS auns and auoncd ammun1 uon wcrt u olcn from a bousr on Sandal· •ood a A S60 tO<"C'Cr ~t was stolen from a loca11on on \\ nt•IX>d 0 A home on Borde.aw. wu broken into b) lhlt'\CS ""ho pncd open a~ window and took S 124 an cuh. a A palm trtt an 1 wooden box, 1rllucd 11 UOO. •as talten from Akoo Su.rpcal 1natromcnu at 1 S800 Alton Part-.~ b two men "' a •hate ptclcup 0 A l6-1nch red Huft)' men's bike _.... taken from a home on Typtt. 0 A hood Qt1\IJT\Cnt "'U Wtn ftofTI a 1rehack parktd on Rockvlew 0 4, man 45 10 SO yea.rs oJd, with blond hair and a VI> ~ard ~) kft has pants in ~mr bushn near Btnt and ~ strttts and drove off He wu laicr cu-' tor ind«-cnt r~po1urt' 0 _..n ttl• .. 1n •allct conwo1na a \1a"'land dmrr'\ hccnJC. a VlSA card. 1n Ml I card and SS was stolnl from 1 man on \bin Beach 0 8allllt and 1l\ ron1mts.. valued at $4 100 \.crt s1olcn from a room at the T tdn \iNrl ~ :-... Coast H!lbwa I I ORANGE 'COAST .BUS rules for Allergan In patent suit McDonnell announces MD-I I order - LONO IEACH -McDonnell 'lO 'J"' anaou.ncod Monday a large <*Ill' IOr ill new MD-11 tri-jet from ~ lrilb leosina company GPA, wbk:b wi.11-pu.n;::hase tl firm MO.I ls !-$i••i"f: in 1995 and has options to · · 2 othen. ~firm abo announced ycster· ay·that the MD-II, being built a1 the compeny's Lona Beach facility. 11 on track to receive its initial c:eni6cation by the FcdcraJ A viauon Administration this fall, said Louis tr; Harrinaton, vice president and ~ manqer of the MD-11 pre>-aram. Spealciaa at a news conferen1.~· yesterday, Harrint_ton said four air · craft arc in tbe fi.i&bt tcsl progr11m now and a fifth will join it this month. .. We have completed our strue- tura.J testing and we are almos1 fin · ishcd wi1h aerodynamics. ~r­ forman~ and controls evaluati on. engine characterisucs and hydraulic systc0\6 tcsung. ·· Hamng1on said. HC' added that mos! of the ~main­ rng aucntion focuses on avionics and environmental systems control tcs11ng, but that no show-stoppers haYe tx-tn t'ncountcred. .. We e.,~·t MO.I Is to ~n air· lint" ~f\ ice late thlS year. ' Har- nngton said The first fiy e cus1on1ers to receive airplanes will be Ameri- can 4.1rl1nc i.. Delta Air L1ne-s. Fin- na1r. Korean Air and Sv.·1ssa1r. Looking lo 1he futurt, Ha rrington ~1J \ll·Donncll Douglas an11c1pa1es 1he n~·ed fur a wide cabin 1ri-je1 e\·en targl·r ·lhan 1he MD-l l by the rn1d· ! Q9{)s He s.-ud the company 1s d1SC'u1>i.1ng \1 uh airlines an advanced Weekend budget session scheduled White House indicates it might agree to a smaller deficit reduction target airt:raft called the MD-12X. Concurrently, he said. McDonnell Douglas i& developing a business plan that would include substantial panici~tion of risk-sharing panners on lh• project. The M0.12X would be 35 feet (10.67 meters) lonaer than the MO-I I, carry 377 passengers in a thrtt-class confiauration more 1han 8.000 milC's (12,874 km) nonstop . We ICt the MD-12X as a direct competitor to the 747-400 in botll payload and range. bu1 wi.1h superior operating economics. As 1 complemen1 10 lhC' MD· 11 the MDl2X would enable ,._,1cDon- nell Douglas to mCt"t v1 nually e\·ery long range requ1ren1cn1 ""'1tll 11~ tn· jet family, Hamngton said. -From •Ire sen/c-e reports Hughes gets ·s48M. contract from Army FULLERTON -Hu&hes A1rC'raft Co. has been awarded a S48.7 million contract to supply baulefi rld communications equipment to 1he Army. the company announced today. The award from the U.S. Arm) Communications Electronics (~om· mand at fl. Monmouth, N.J .. 1i. 1n addition to a $107 million pro- ducuon contract rece1\C'd earlier 1h1 s year b} the company's Ground Sys· terns Group. The Enllanced Pos111on Locauon Reporting Sys1em, comn1onl} rt'· fcrrt'd 10 as EPLRS. provides secure and Jani-resistant. user-to.user data commun1r at1 ons. idt"nt1ficat1on, position location and na\ 1ga11on s.cr· vices Soldiers can carry .. ~on1par1 EPLRS uscr units on tlle1r back.s. The units al~o can ht mounted in funks or trucks or 1n!i.lalltd 1n lleh· copters or tither aircraft. Hughes 1s a subsid1af) of G ~1 Hughes Elec1ron1cs -By City Ntw1 Servltt UptMLllddB Zobel moves up at Baxter Healthcare Baxter Heallhcare Corpor1t1on of Irvine announ1..'t'd 1he promo- tion of I.a.-,,.. Zebel 10 president of its Edward Leu Invasive Sur-aery Division. Previously the vil"t' prnident of sales and marke1in1. Zobel has been with Baxter Heallhcart for IS years, and she resides in San OC'mentc with her family. D The National Associations of Acoountants announced the elec· tion of 1hc followina individuals to the Orange Coasl Chapter Board of Directors: L111rte Hoyt. Morris Du Brow and Maareeo Pabbruwee of Huntington Beach, Geer1e Bloom, of Laguna Niguel. Douc Ludl•m, of Irvine and Teren CU.fey of Corona del Mar D L.aauoa Beach resident Michelle Addlbcton has bttn promo1ed 10 adven1sing director of Orange County Coastline Magazine .. ..\dd· 1niiton was previously w111\ Laguna/California R1 vu:-ra 14•hrre she spent two years as adYC'rl1s1ng director and Laguna Maga7.1ne as a sales rcprc-sentat11r. D WUcy J . Elarkt and Pblllp L•u have joined the ISDN Busir\('\~ Development Depar1mt'nt of th e Tclecommunica1 1on S}sltms Division of Tosl\1ba ,.\n1er1ca In· formation Systems, Inc in Irvine D Orange Countv Federal ('tt'dn U nion named Giiyle Sto•·e 10 tht" position of v1ce prtstden1 of finance. Stowe will manage !ht' cr«til union's S8 mtlhon budgt"t. D Irvine consulting firm Manage~ lnternauonal ha:. named Toni Harklo1 and Eva Eberle a' a,. D Nr-wpon Beal'h resident Bjorn Lu.odgrea has been appo1n1cJ :i' K•thryn Zobet president of Enccson Businc.iS Communication~ In c i n Anahc1n1. Lund~eo was p~vious­ 'ly the v1~ pres1den1 and grncnl manager for Ence.son 1n Stock· holm, s .... ·cdC'n D Three local bus1nes!'.men llave been elt.'Cled to Lhc Golden Wes1 College Roard of Dutttors: New- por1 Scalh rcs1dcn1 Dou1la1 Fa· blao. pre,1den1 of Huntin.ton Bcach·baM"d Tclepllonc S'>'·1tch Newslttt<'r: Irv ine . resident Mleh1el Yooo1. a pan ner in tl\C' K.Jndl'I and Anderson la w !irm 1n Costa t.1esa: •nd Westminster resident Cbarle1 Tllomas. a pan· ncr of KPMG Peat r-..tar.i.·ick 1n Costa f\1esa . D Hunt1nfton lk·al·h rc~1dt'nt Ed· ward A. oseman v.a <> r lct led to thl' ln:.t1tutl' of ~hH\agemcnt Con· sullants haSt""d 1n N1·,,., ''ork l1t~ l..oM"nt.tn 1~ t urrC'rllh l~EO of the Prti rl'ss1•1na l ~ ... ~,Hir~c Ciroup In(· in Jl untington Beach D Bc11toill IX' clop1nen1 f 01npan)' ol t )rangc ha) .tnnoun(ell 11\r a1>- po1n1n1C'11! o t. Elleeo Plnll:f'rlon to 1hc po'r11on vt ">l1u1hern I .alt· 1om1.J l 1:1u1n1 l oord1na1or 0 l \,ron;.i del .\la1 ft'~1t.lt·nl Jen· nlftr J. Sims ll:.i' lx'cn named a d1rt.tlll 1n the ln:att't' <;('r11ll' depannn·n\ ut <tlt•na L1gner a nd . .\s!iO<.latt·~ 1n Cu!>l.1 ~'le!><! 1y CHRtSTOl"Hl'.R CONNEU negoua11nni. can1l· 10 a tcmporar) hah 1n l·arl) August wnh hnle pro- grl'S!> e1 tdtnl WHAT :\\'SE DID :\\'SE COMPOSITE TRi\:\Si\CTIO:\S ~ .... -- WASHINGTON -Tile Wh 11e House said Tuesday it's still a1m1ng for a SSO billion reduction in nell year's deficit.. but is wiUing to lts1en to proposals for a smaller target Budget nqotiators will rcsun1c their deliberations in private Fnda} at Andrews Air Fortt BaS< in suburban Washington. slaying closeted there until Sunday 1n 1hc- hopc of fof1-ing an agrctment, s:ud White Houst press secretary Marlin Fitzwater. "We still believe that we need 10 gel a S50 billion roduc1Jon 1n the first year and S.500 billio n over fi\'t' )'ears," Fitzwater said. "We still be· lieve that deficit reduction 1s rm· ponant, that it's crucial to main· tainina economic growth." Some lawmakers hav~ suggested the stttp costs of tile bis U.S. fr-uh · tary build-up in the Persian Gulf. .1~ well as the impact of rising 011 pnct·~ on an already sluggish econom~, may fortt them to scale back !ht• aoaJ of uimminJ S50 b11l1on fro1n next year's deficit. "We're willing to talk about 11 and that's what we're going to 1he table lb do," Fitzwater said when asked about the possibility of a lo..-.·t·r ..... 1. The White Houx, he said, \\'111 have a budp::t proposal to put on 1hc table at Andrews and it eApects 1he Democrats to do the same. • Both sides need 10 face "th<' hard decisions," Fitzwater said. ' The Democr.u-led Congress O!X'n· ad Wk.s with tile Wl\11c ~louse in May on reducing tile deficit. but the Bush agrl·td June :::o tha1 "ta\ re,enue 1ncrea!>Cs" .,.,ere neccssaf). Bui l'"'cn after he brokt• his no-nc.,.,. t.a,.es 1Q\lo' and thC' Repubhcans l<'n· t.a\1\CI} pushed for .... ·ard a package uf 1a" 1nl·reases. thl' J>em<X·rats refused to propoM' a ma1cl\1ng pac kagl· of cuts in eno\lentcnl progran1s and other ~JX'lllhng. Bud! "'l'I \lollh h1~ C'ab1nc1 on Tuc!ida), and budget dnl'C'lor K1ch· arJ Darman outhnC'd lhl' sequester !K't'nano lou1n111g 01er tile go1crn· n1enl unle!i.s a hudge1 agreement 1s rcaclled before Oct. I . the sta n of1he 199 t fiscal }l·ar Frdcrat agencies Jrr girding for pos!i.1blc la)uffs. Fniwall"r rencraled 1ha1 Bush v.1ll not sign Jcgisla11on fort"!i.lall1ng a scque~1er or sof\ening tilt• Gramm· Rudman deficit rt'ducuon targrt1o unlc<>s hr and tht• Congrci.s reach an overall spt:nd1ng accord The IA h11c 1-touse and con· gtC'S\10nal dcleg;:iu on... -Jed b} [)arman and HouM" f\-1a)on1y Lcadt•r R1(hard C,rphardt. [).~1 0. -11111 rt',ume 1hrir talks Fnda). SPt'ndrng 1hc cnt1rt' IO.Ct'l.l'nd ar tht' baSI." ttu<ih ""ill lt'J 1 c f-nda\ n1gh1 from .\n<lr l'v.\ lnr h1~ 1oun1ml1 Sunda~ 1n ilt'li.1nk1, I inland. v.'ith Soi ll't Prt'sr- dcn1 ~1 1l.h.t~l S (iorhacht'1 F1t1v.:i1t·1 •.;ud 1f 1hr ..-.·eckt'nd h udge1 n1·go11a11ons ~Ul'CCtd. Bu.\.h ..-.1 H 1nt•r1 ,,.,11h the top leaders of Cungrl''~ 111 "hammer ou1 a final agrc1·n11·n1 ·· l ndC'r thr (1ramm-Rudn1an lav. tht'rt "'-Lil bl· auloma11t' a~·ro<;~·lht .. hoJ1d lUI \ in many fr-drral pf(1granl!> bt'&nn1ng Ck t l unles!o th(· proJrc tt·d d t'fir11 is \64 b1lhon or lov.l'r ---------------1 lhe late"t cst1ma11· fron1 l>.1rn1.in'.'. o!Ticc 1~ that thl· 1~'11 dt'fic1t v.11! be S 169 b11l1on . or S:!1 I I billion 1ftht" t'-Osts of the §3\ 1ng~ and Ivan bailout arc added 1n . H1ghr1 oil RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC . . ......,_o....c.....-.. ,1911 HA•.O. Iii.VO COSTA lilfiA -SCI-I IS& pnces and esc.ala t1ng Pt'ntagon CO\\\ arc /1kel~ 10 produce C\t·n more rt•d '"' Income Opportunities in Oil and Gas Investing Pleele join ua for breakfast at wh ich.we will discu811 bow inve1ton can take advantage of a classic "buy low"/ "..U. ria:ht" strategy despite the recent fluctua:tioru1 in oil pricel. ... We will also be addressing lhc foUowlng issues: • 11111 inflationary rnc:ession coming • Ou&loot for domestic oil and gu production • Where are che in\lcstmcnt opponunities7 0-: n.nc1o,, Sep1<mb<r 13, 1990 n-: 7:IO ...,t:oo a.m. 1'1-: lnlae Monio<I J••krfl •t 405 Frttw•y lr•IM I«••• telli111 will be li1njlied, ~ suucst ,-. '°"-.,,...."*"'•dons now. Plcaoc: RSVP: a.,,, Galindo or Joseph Sanden at •>~I or (714) 476-5137. 1111-Elchl_er .. Hill Richardt •••. .,...,...__._'"*"' ... ' . NEW YOllK (AP) ~oteml)er ' T~'flI Ii• "' "'° ' " \\'SE l'PS A DOW\S :\\'St: LEADERS "11\1 \lll '\ UIU ·\ UJ:\. I J . \ UJ ""' .. 'i. 1 •.•. DOW 10\FS A\IERAGFS OTf lPS A'\D DOW\S NEW YORK (AP! -Fln&! Dow·Jone' H~r,· ~-!"''"'' T ~,·, • ~· ·m:· ,,,1··:wm~n,_~1· "'' 1 ... .1.1 ii " : + • 5111. "'2: 1 t i -. '"'"' '!JD' ' Tr•n . • """ ' ' •S Slk I , !!! ' ORANGE .COAST SOCIE1Y C.UI• COA8T DAILY 11&.0T ~.~5.1llO . Dr. Rock entertains at his own birthday bash It WU Sunday eveoi'\I and people were danci"'9 toe tapptq. awayina. clappnia thcar bands overhead. the bind was playi"' "I Want a Real Man•• at w Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre. It was ptrty time... picnicltina ume and rock concert time. The life . o( the ptrty waa Dr. Howard Fish- bein and he was also the reason for 1he party. The Irvine physician was cel- cbrat1na has 39\b, and it was a real Vida Dean birthday bash ... a dream come true. "I'm hav1.n1 a really aood lime," declared Fishbein se veraJ times trom the staac. It was his five-piece Dr. Rock band (plus song.stress) on ,1aae playina a free concen for about ')0 fncnds. Fishbein 1s o ften at the • 1mph1theatcr bccau~ he 1s the "doc- w.r o n call ,·· and he secs lots of ~rformcrs, but Sunday was his turn t 1 bt o n staac and entertain wnh his l .~tu-year-old group composed of ~111 Blad .. Ben Sc' 1lla. Tim B)ron. l ce Offcnbo""er and Jackie ('urran "I have bcc:n "-Orie.mg on this pan\ for about a )ea; The place was darlc. because of the 'holiday ~nd they (theater management) aareed to let us have the party," said Fishbein's wife Linda Lee dressed in a rock and roll seq"uinncd trimmed black pant set and red boots. Fncnds and family of the birthday boy began amving about 6:30 p.m. and they (all aaes. toddlers and up) came wnh dinner baskets in hand for a Hollywood Bowl-styte-on-the lawn dining. Party Planner Unda Lee '81hbeln tce nter) whh parents Samuel and Daisy Lee. Pboto1 by Jlm Dean I Newsmakers Trump's new book may b e real winner Donald Tramf'' tlclOl. ··~un '' ing ,u 1he Top · ""II h11 th<' top of fhc ~t'"" 'orl Tam<'~ Ot\I \<'lkr lt~t thl\ "'et"Lcnd. lht' I amcc; ~1d Tut'~dm 1 he book rclt'a\cd JU'I 0' l·r ont' "'eel ago. cltmbN thc-chan~ fas1c-r lhan Trump"s l.tst tome. 'The '\n ol the Deal " The buy1na public ap- p.;ircntl) \\3.~ Un'1"'8}~ b~ l'C'Ccnt reports of Trump"c; problem\ hoth mantal and financial Trump an an undcr\tattmcnt rt'· lcd~d b\ his offi1..c. modcc;tl) ac· ccpted th<' nc"'\ "It's a great honor to again hav<' a No I bc\tscllcr Thi\ book h11 1hc No I !>pot e'en sooner than 'The Art of the Deal · I am reall)' ha ppy that pcopk hie<' 11 so much." said Trump What price IUCCHI -But ~nousl)', success as .t pop singer 1 n"t all n's cracked up to be. Jus1 ask P~ Co1Jl.a1. The sinacr, known for ruts hke ··o ne More Na&}lt" and " ussudao."' told an 1nterv1ewtr he's ha\ ana troubk acnina cntacs to accept that he"s 1ot a social conscience. too. ··Maybe I am a pop sinae( but I think l'"C' aot more to offer than that," he to ld the NashVlllc Banner. Collins as toun na for his latest rclcax. "But Senously," which con· taans sonp about ,mfc in South Afnca. Northern Ireland and the Afncan famine. Tbe hat "Another Day in Paradlst"' is about the home~ less. "Tve been accused ot not havina m) heart where the l)'ncs are. which 1s compkle bull." he said. "'The) put me an a little box ... and don"t look past ·one More Na&}lt' or 'Ap anst All Odds.' As soon as you poke your head out of that bo' they close 11 back o n your head," said C olhns Troubled tames and troubled people affect him as much as they do other people and soniwntcn. he said. "When rm dnvina and I pass 60 or I 00 ho meless people on the street, I'm not immune to that. I have to write about them the same as Elvis Costello would want to write about them.·· Collins was in Nashville for a concert Tuesday ntaht. Expecdq -Maybe 1t would have been more appropnate on Labor Day, but "Today" show co- host Debem Norvtlle waited until Tuesday to tell viewers that she's expcctJna a baby in March. Norville, 32. 1s married to h rl Wtlbter1 a Swedish businessman who is 1n the auction business. She became Bryut GqaMI'• co-host on the NBC show an January. Norville didn't say bow Iona she planned to continue workina. or bow much time she miaht take away from the show after her child is born. NBC recently tned to revwe the slump1na "Today" show by addina Concert-lover ll·llN>lltfl·old n. wlttl dad Dwlgttt Devllna His parents Selma and Marvin Fishbein came in from Chica,o; Linda's parents, Samuel and Daisy Lee of Sacramento terminated a cruisina vacation and flew in from Copenhagen; Irwin Luck.a, a fnend since hiah school came from Phila- delphia, and Steve Cook, a room- mate dunoa ~sidency at Long Beach MemonaJ. came from Wis- consin. ~we've known Howard for about e1~t ycan ... this is &Oing to be fun," wd Robert Burns u he and wife Ruth Ann arrived with salads, pate, herb cheese and champagne for fancy dining. One bi& circle of friends really showed a Tot of class with a burnang candle ccnterpacce for lhetT blanket table. This sesturc was by Karen Ktcdel attcndina with husband Bob. Others were Encka and Rick Waidley, Adncnne Means, Laura J ohn McGinnis, Mkh•I• Robertson, Shawn• Kirchoff, Joy and David Spochck, Henry and Jeannie Zimmerman and Joanne and Gunar Sedlcniek . Suzie and Ed Portmann, Dr. Gerry Sanykul (chief of staff at lrvaoe Medical Hospital), Mary Ellen and Michael Hadley, Polly Ackman, John McGmnis, Michele Robertson. Sha,,.,na Banb. Roben Reider, and the bonoree's children Matthew and Samara F1shbe10 were others celebrating under the sky. (The Dr. Rocle band has perf0rmed for People for Irvine Community Health events. for Irvine Harvest fcsuvaJs and for the Juni or G ames of Irvine.) Af\er the con~n there was a small t.ackstaar pany descnbed by Fish- bein as wmd down ume. "Wo~ I loved 1t Performing on that stqe was the most poSttJ ve experience l'"e ever had. I want to do It ap.in. .. a.n111 and Robert Reider are ready to picnic. R1dl and Rrlctra W.ld ley dine al fresco. Robert and Rudi Ann aurn~ Deborah Norvlll• Joe Garapola, Fa1UI Duiel1 and Kath Coartc to the team of Norville. G umbel, Willard Scott ud Gene S..Ut. The network announced Fnday that Gara&JOla wo uld be off for about four "'eeks to have elccu' e suricry for an undisclosed medical problem. Cane ball -A Ne"' York Yan- kees executive tbrew a curveball Tuesday at baseball Commissioner Fay Vt.ceL ~ L ~lamaa. the team·s executive vice president and chief operauna offictr. filed a $22 m1lhon lawsuit that accuses V10ccn1 of try· ana to frame ham and ousted Yankee boss Gewte Stelabreuu. The U.S. D1stnct Court lawsuit was filed aptnst Vincent and Job M. Dewd, the commiuio ocr's apeda1 counsel who du"tcted an in- .-hll Colllna vcsttJAt1on of Ste1nbrcnncr's deal· 1ngs wnh pmbler Howard Spira Kleinman accuaes Vinctnt of framina ham and Steinbrenner on characs they acted 1p1nst the bcst interest of bucbaJl and of covenna up ex· Y ankee-s outfielder Dave Wla· field'• involvement with Spira. A spokesman for Vincent. Rid Ltvla, sa&d be had no 1mmed1ate comment. Steinbrenner apeed to surrender the day-t<>-<lay control of the Y~n­ kees after Vincent determined be hid not acted 10 the best interest of butball by peyana S..0,000 to Spira. The comnussfontt also found that Kleinman had not acted an the bcst interest of buebell for b.is role an the incident. Sptra bas said that Klean- man amftltd a money-market ac- count for fiim at t.be time be was paid last January. war De •'-•C'MIM Prwa. His desire to wed daughter a sure sign of sickness DE.\R .\~"' L .\"'DER~ 1, 1 .ill nght for a father to ha"e sc' v.ath b1~ d.lughtcr 1f both arT \lln.,c:nttn[l adults' I am r and m\ daughter. ··Jean ·· 1\ ~C \h v.1tc pa~<,('(j a""a~ t\\O \cars 3:$0 '\f\er she bcomc 111 Jean assumed all •hr household respons1btl111cs and we became 'C'n dose \\e ll't' hn( 'U\t 1he 1v.o of us and she 1s a wonderful ~ook and hou~krc~r \l. l· ha'e ahr same hlccs and dashlces and art compa11blc-in ever) wa\ Jean 1s prt'tt) and I am suit a ) oung man Rather than mo .. e out ol a home that she lo' cs and lool tor a hus- band (and m l. gr111ng .\ID\). Jean sa)s she "'ants tll W\ Ann wtth mt' \\ e ha'c.-a "'onJcr· fuJ umc togcthrr She hasn't Landers dated in SC\t'ral months bc- ca~ she would prC'kr to be with me more than an' ot the 'oung mt'n \ht' le.nows I lo"e hCT compan) and am no1 interested in amont' t'I'!(' ~1 Can a man lcgalh marn ht\ daughter" Pka"ie d1' not publish m) name as 1h1~ 1' a \Cl"\ contro,enial \ubtt'\:1 and I don"t want to be harassed P ~ the Old Testament ~' am thing ahout this'> -MR '< DEAR MR. X.: Att0rdl.D1 to Jou Bttkllrom. professor el Fam Uy LI•. NorUlwHten l 'alvenlt) LI• ~lllool. It 11 .. , lepJ U)'Wk~ LI tk Ualtecl States for a fatkr ucl dH&later te kMwtacJy marry ea~ otkr acb a mama1e wHld aol be vall4. .. fact. la muy states tlae fatlaer woald be prottt11tf'd for crtmlaal lacal. YM wed aboet 1k Old Ttttamue; ne Book of 1Av1ticu makes It abuclaall)' clur wt It Is 1 ilia to approacla "uy ~t ll aur of .. ha." Alta.HD JM dJU'I 1111 for m)' oplaioa, Mr. X .. I feel c.mpelW .. .. ,, betli yoa ... , .. r dH&lll•er IOaff .. IJ YH are tw• tudwtdaes tllort of a pletalc. Yoer letter it oae of tM sickest 1-.e rea4 la yun. U M wut Jeaa 10 laave a dtttel Ult, pleaM Set a.et late ud flalA a womu ••o 11 Hitablt for marriqe. Wrai1gl_ers skew term for a colorful horse DEA ANN LANDER Here is m) response to the Cb1cqo Tribune Reader who asked 1iou to pnnt an open letter to her fncnds and rtlallvcs wbo arc nagaing h<'r to quit smolc.lna. DEAR SMOKER. You 13> )'OU know all about the hollh hazards o( smobn& and that )OU ""ant your fncnds to stop bullana you to qwL You olteted to make a deal. You promised to keep quiet when you tce tbt tlurd chunk of butter and a dollop of aour cream on )Our ft'icnd's bated potato. or the scoop of tee cream on her ptecit of pecan pac. You fttl 1t 11 • fl.ar tr11de for not beana haruttd about If h'a 1 black and while horK, it's a .. piebald •• If 1t'1 hone that's white plus acme otbct color not blac it"s a 0 1kewba.ld." 8u1 that word was too fancy for wtanakra. So wa such a hone. TMy called 1t 1 "1e1ewbeU." The word ~d to mean any anama11 tncludlJ\I the human, that acemca pretty much out f Lbc ordJ- ury. AA'!_ bandmllkcr of (OWS wdl tell you n Wi:n 1bout l4S 1qutns to Nb a ,.&Ion of milk. Q. What movte 1tar h.cl 1hc m0t1 aud-1a17 A. i.-it. It wu Buckmu111er f ullcr who L.M . Boyd Just bcbe EuOG c:altld itlilf' Elllon. )'OU may mall, It • ....._. \ a coaUy cam~ to find its new aame. rant choice chdn 't make tt Lhroup the computtt run. Turned out to bt an u~tabk 1tt0td 1n Anbtc. Hard to flnd a un1vtnally &PP"'O~ name. Even *Ords such u "bamburatt" and "frencb (fY" have railed obltu~ complaint. rm told. What we've k>nJ ca1lfd "lnsh Stew" ii unknown 1n lrdand. We 1a1k about Napc>kon as \bouP theft weft only ooe. The~ wete W.. We ..ak about Oeooatn II \boulb theft weft only one. 1bctt weft 1evcn. Wt wk about Col- .ambUI u °'°'*' ~ wctt only OM. Then ~ \.bree. Tbeft~I I town auned ~" 1n France. OM calted "U" in Ouna. wedc1' hu one noted on Lbc map as· "A."' A.Del Lhc kavtt .. . no ... \luwP Am &erdam. M ektcrly Utall law pn>hibita any woman theft from wt.eri"I heels lltOft than an iftd\ and 1 half hilt\. amoo~ . Sori'l. dear, your reuoruna 1 bldl> Oa..-ed. What l eat a&cu only In(. Your ICCOO<lbaod amoke could cause cancer or bean trouble for thote wbo have to breathe the air you pollute. I am v1olmlly a.Uersk to tobecco llnOU and you have no filb• to mflic1 >our vice on me. h 's ~ all f'11ht with mt tf '°"' cbooee to kill yourself, bUt t tt&te lo pw "'P bratbint ..,bile you•re doint it. 10 olcete Wtt that sttnkill ~ outsidt. -HEAL THY LUNGS rN"HA YWAAD. CAUF: Dltd BAYWAllD: •• ..-... ti teliden W ,._.,tit-~.._ ~Ml,.. ................ ,... . 0.. .. tM Dar. TM MP t9lt .. ._.. e9N ...... ,.. II ..... ...... ,..**-. . To write to Ann Unden. #ltd Jtdm to bet cto tlte Diti11J ...._ PO. Beu 1560. Costa M 92616 • • OMll• C0MT IMILY flLOT ... .,.........,,, ..., •• b9r I, 1tlO Pl,lbl1sti.d by Page Group P11b11sh1ng, Inc •ob.rt (. , .... pro11den1 & chief execuh•e ofl1cef . ~ Wiliom S. ~. edttOf & ••Ce Pf&stdonr Stove Motltl., monog1"9 ec1tr0< Ston Wyman, n1ghr editor Don Foni.y, ed1rort0l poge ed•IO• R090. Mo.m, feorures ed •01 ..... Corlson, \p()•IS t>d·•O• Corol Humphro'f', soc ,.,.,. t•d ttv Elliot Stein, Jr., choirrno1• Gerald W. Adcox, Jr., gt>neoul l'flO' 09.-• Wolter lurrou9h1, 1901·1919, ki., .J .:; ~ ~u sh.-r Time for Irvine to stop all the political fighting Reccntlf released census figures re,t'al that In 1ne's popu- lauon has d1mbed nearl) 77 J>(rcent in thl' past 10 ~ears Sadl:y. its small-town st}le of poht1C'S hasn't gro"'n along \\llh It. For two years, ctty politicians havt-b<'l'n lod·.l'd in a power strug.le. bickering over who should be on the rounctl. Tht" battles ha\e swept into the courts at times and 'er) nearl~ onto a special elrcuon ballot. Two years ago. 11 was Cameron Cosgro' e who found his pos1t1on on the co uncil challenged. S1gnaturt"s "'ere gathered Attome}S were called. Court dates wert scht"dukd ..\nd. in the long run. Councilman Cosgro\e remained ( ounulman Cosgro,e. In the June elecuon, It was Ma r) A.nn Ga1do's tum. Like Cosgrove. she won her council scat b~ planng third amontt all council candidates. While two candidates "'On !>eat!> outnght. Ga1do won the nght to clai m the scat being 'acated b~ Coun· c1lwoman Sall) Anne Shendan. "'ho "'as elected ma~ol" While Irvine's election code 1s a rnmplicatl'd hi t of "'ork. Ga1do -like Cosgrove -won the seat fair and <,quarc But another peculiar wnnkle in In ine's election code per- mllled -votm to gather s1gnaturt's and challcngl· Cia1do's pm1t1on on 1hc council. A sufficient number of !ltgnaturl's -w ould tnggcr a special election As with Cosgro,e. enough signature<, "'ere gathcnng against Ga1do. And like before. lhe mailer "as qu1d..l) v. h1skcd into coun. . !Ast Fnda}. Supenor Court Judge Ea ken Moore ruled that the petitions against Ga1do were .. , ague" and "misleading .. The Judge ruled that Ga1do should be seated on the counul But 1t 1s probabl) too much 10 hope for that Moore's s1ra1gh1 and simple ruling will be heeded. And that's 100 bad, for In inc has had enough poltucal v.ars It is high time the Cit) 's leaders made' peace and got do"' n to the task o(gu1ding Orange Count~ 's fastest gro"'1ng cit\ into the nc\t millennium. , Sweanng m Ga1do would be a good start Rc,amping the City's con' ol uted and twisted election laws would be another The cit~ n~ds leadership and d1rect1on. not pelt\ pahucal fistfights · Today In history Toda) is Wed nesda~. Sept 5. the 248th da\ of 1990 There arl· 11" days lef\ ·1 n the \ear Today's H1ghlight an H 1sto~ On Sept 5. 1905 thl' Treat~ of Portsmouth ending tht• Russo· Japane..e 'A ar v.a' signed in "\:c" Hamp!>h1rc Prt·\ldent Thl·odore Roose' elt ha' ing ml'd1a1nl thl· set· tlement On th1\ date In lb'lll Rus,1J' Pei n thl' C1reat imposed a ta' on beards In 1774. the first ( ontinental Con- gress assembled in Phi ladelphia. In 1836. Sam Houston was elected president of the Republic of Tnas In 188~. the natton 's first La bor Da) parade v.as held in Nev. York In J951i. "Do<:tor Zhl\ago," a novel b} R ussaan author Bons Pasternal . "'as published in the L'n11ed tate~ for the fim time Bv Tbe Auoclaced Press When Writing to the Orange Coa't Daily Pilot • Orang(' Coou Doily Pilot .,,, ... l• ~ •••·\i • l•'" .. •· 1r )ur f.' ..... ' .. ''• t f• ~P(' , l( t • • ,. .,,, ., j "")f" J•. A l'\y 4 ' I f ,, 9fH " l 1 ..,... i• I\ t f• ' ,. , 'P'1 • "''" Commv,,1ty Commentary Gue\I Commentary v• Ed1tortol • ., ur '' • •. , · ,, •• , ~'~ •• • • •• • 1 , \\ ~s r .~,,,, ,., · , '1t-s ,,' • .... ~ a ' Jf\Qf ( OS' ,. ' ·~ , .. ,.. • )' .,>\ mov f • •t JI"'! 'O c \S ... • ' • • • PS( l'1\P ' ,. •" .,. J t , "Pt'l\,.f'O'~ t t j tor·ol .. \ o:..• tr~ Orange Coast Doily Pilot t. t t • t •. t l I '. '•• .,., I n • l>I' i •rrrod /1• 'Pr\ Qlf " ,• l" \ Qn"d o• •• I • I , \ t •• ' • s J m • •I A .. f'\001 1 .. nc I! l• 'I• ,,.., '• l ll•••H •l•r1 '••Prt'•C>•f' riumbPr for •' • • 0 11on our po•· Lett"'\ \houlo '• • J l·11w• 1 · .,, Orange Coast Dorly Pilot, 330 '· Sov )t ( OSIO •.·~sr. (A Q'il:.tfJ A H•·~· t. ''"'P•\ ,,. ,.,,. ff •o• :. 'P<S w '" JV/>Sl•C· S iJ'I• u•Qr• 1 · J ' •hp [) J , P 1 • JI 7 14 64/ 437 I f .. J.S2 Doonesbury By Garry Trudeau MIKE, J'f) Ul<E )'Q'.J TO J«JRJ< OV {)NIVCR s.tlL Pf7T<OL8JM 'S PRIC£ ·60.JGIMS / IMA613 .. Literacy bill shoUld be signed To the Editor: California Library Literacy Ser- vices Act (AB 3881 Baker) may die on Gove~nor Deukmejian's desk awaiting has signature after recei ving b1part1san approval in the leg.as- lature. The California Library Literacy Sen ice program. aside from being a mouthful to SS} 1s an extremely cost effective method of using volun1eer tutors and public libranes as a calalyst to teach English language literaq (basic skills of reading and wn1ing) and related sen ices to adults and children not enrolled in sc hool The proaram basLcall> work.s as follo ws a public library under the ex1st1ng Literacy Services Act ma) obtain "seed money" from the state. A prerequ1S1te of this is for the hbraf) 10 submit a budget demon- strating that an mcrea~ing per- centage of the proposed operating budget ca n be oblained from the local commun1t) After the: first year and for the next 4 years. after that the ltbrar) must obtain a pro- gre~1\>el) larger proportion of its operating funds from the local com- munity. The "rub" is that the state under the present act automat1call) cuts ofT the ··seed money" after the fifth year -regardless of the success of ll_le program or ~e need in that parucular commuruty. ~or some hbranes, throughout the slate the cut ofT would be disastrous because the need for basic literacy skills could be disproponjonate to the ab1hty of the communit) to provide the operating funds. In Newport Beach. as an example. the City has wisely 11'lvested in the literacy program by prov1dmg fund- i og through the main library. Mama Hendncks is the literacy coordinator work.in& with 130 plus volunteers m teaching literacy skills to adults and youngsters. The base of vo lunteers 1s provided by a nauonal organiza. tion of Literacy Volunteers of Amenca -volunteers who ha ve gone through a tutonal traming pTogram. There needs to be much more public awareness of this literacy problem/opportunity. To quanllf) the problem there arc an estimated 3.100.000 funcllonall> illiterate adults in Californ ia and growing dail> We appear to be 1n a down- ward spiral toda)' as far as educauoo IS concerned With OUr pnoritieS &JI twisted around. Our society can ab- sorb just so many people to Oip hamburgers. sweep aoors or make beds. An adult's ability to function in our society today is critically intertwined with his or her literacy level. Thus literacy is vitally impon· ant, not only to that individual but also 10 the whole of California so- ciety. If you feel that this cost effective (there 1s no add1t1onaJ cost this year) bill 1s worthy of passqe, please call or wnie the Governor's office - (9 16) 445-2841 and voice your opmions.-lf you would like to know more abOut how the Jitcncy pro- gram 1s work.in~in our commumty caJI the Litcrac office of the New. port Beach blic Library - 644-3174. If you would like to Stt how you could help by becoming a tutor. call the Literacy Volunteers of Amcnca -644-3174. FinaJly, lfyou would like to further the lead estab- lished by Barbera Bush and declare war on illiteracy. call the under- signed and we'll put you to work HERRICK HANSON Newport Beach Columnist taken to task over USC To the Editor: I am astounded at the lack of crcd1bilit) of )Our ··sports wnter" Rick Talle). He wrote an article entitled "Foo1ball Factory, LIS.A. -use· that was sooo full of inacc uracies and twisting of the facts. to the point that 11 was almost comical' He obviously has never been an athlete or at all familiar with their h\es or schedules He even aluded to the fact that he got has anformat1on from anothe r wnter instead of venfy1 ng the facts for himself. One telephone call is all 1ha1 at would lake to verify his facts. Obv1ousl)" he does noc read the USC Football Guide published each year. and given to credible spons wnters who WtSh 10 disseminate the truth rather than their biased inaccuracies For the accurate record. USC has more first 1eam Academic .. 11. Amencan than an) school in the Pac 10-this includes Stanford. Cal and UCLA~ USC leads 1he na11on in the number of NC AA post.graduate scholarship rec1p1ents. To achieve a record of top 1n the county, some USC athleces must have graduated when Mr. Talley wasn't looking! MRS. AUDREY GRUNDY Newport Beach California resented for its growth an,d new clout SA CRAME NTO -The scene was the chambers of che California Assembly on the first day of the 1965 legislauve session. A new- comer 10 the st.ate Capitol press corps was about to get a quick demonstration of how the state's political power was distributed re· aionally A roll call of counties was under way. When a county·s name was called. the Assembly member or members representing that county stood up. When Los Anieles County's name was ~Ued. there was a major stir as more than 30 of the 80 members of the lower house rose to their fttt. It was an 1mpress1ve display of clout. What made the scene memorable to the newcomer. however. was the response of many of the members who were seated. They booed. To be sure. there was an element of jesi in the booina. But it wasn't all m fun. There also Wa! an unusually strona undercurrent of ra_I resent· ment in Sacramento aaafost the IOUth It.ale. c.aJjfomia was on the eve of a major shift in power. Lot A•les County{ and Southern c.aJlfomia aencrall y, would IOOn aa.lrf even more mutck becau1e o1 eft'oru in fedetaJ oouns to ovtnum the tra- ditional method of apponionina au in the sta&e Sena&e. At tbe time. Lot Antcln was repraeated by only one 1enator, Nort!lem CalifomiaAs -ae '-t· ina a rear.....,-ct ICtion ~ prevent one-man. onc-vo4e IC&Ddafdl &om 'bei"' ttJicUy ippljed wbeD Saatc elec:Uoa dislrictl were drawn. ~ ctw. would aive the IOUdl ICate as muci dout ia dtle """ ~ a it ~ Md ia dal Aw-Illy. n.e COW1 ._.. ... aot Jt1 ova. but d9c budWrit&M .. oa die wall. Non••ra C1ll forai1'1 over· -·--i9 • • •trhltt ................ ....... ,,,._ ... '° start. When the U.S. Supreme Coun's ruhng was announced later that year. the earthquake even shook the lower house. Althou.&h its distncts were SUPf>OSCd to have reflected California s population patterns. the north state -San Francisco. cs· pecially -still eruoyed a measure of overrtpresentation in the lower house. That, too. would be eliminated by the coun rulina. Reaaonal power was beina shifted. and some personal political careers were doomed as a result No wonder there was a reaction when the Los Anacles delcption rippled its already imprnsivc muscle. Somethina comparable is happcn- ina now, but it's ooc:urrina in Wuh- inaton. not Sacramento. The im· pcndana chanae is not quue as dra· matic as what happened lS yean aao in California. but it's still upscttina the status quo. Popu.lation r11ures rcleued last week by the Census Burau confirm the wont fean o( statn in the Midwes' and the Northeast, and of many 11ttina membcn of Conareu. Power will now from thote relions toward the Sunbelt -and npec:ially toward California. Califom.ia wiJI pin eeven mote ttall ift lbe HOUK of ~nta­ liva for a tolal of '1. lbe ftm ltl&e in hiltoty to beve mOR than ~ 111emben ol COllll a1. ~ifomi.a allo will M,,,_ S4 voe. tbe eat time :=.=.f°'c!.f~1·.=; oec ftAh of the vota needed -to detcrn\ine who will sit ln the While Hovtt. J'bert are IOmt Yuy UAMppy, even btncr. manbcrl of &be HOUM DOW. Tbey terYC OG ........ &om New York. PnnsytVW., Olaio, Michipn_ IUinoiti CO.D«ti· cut. New Jeney, W• Virliaia. Lou-iaiua, K1.a1.cty. W'ICOatla, M's 111• .. Maa' A 1"" .. ---·~Cl···-.... Martin Smith IC&lS, perhaps 19 altoaether. because of popuJation chanaes. New York alone wiU lose three. A sluft of this 11ze will force wrcnchina adjustments in distnct linel. All House members from thOIC slates will be personally af- fected in ways that arc still uncer- tain. (After c.aJifornia. the bit wtnncn arc Aorida, which will pm four mort seats for a totaJ of 23, and Teus, three more for a total of 30.) c.aJifom.i.a's prncnt delqation to COQl1al lppm"CntJy has not been aubjected yet to a publk booina, but memben report very real lip1 of antaeon.lsm amona collcques from othcf swa. Rep. Nancy Pdoli or San Fran- daco. for eumple, faJkd to win a .. , on t.be Hou1e APPt opriadon1 Com.miuet. dc11141e lbe r8ci tbet an proponioft to \be aizc ol its prtltnt Clellladoft. California is under- 1...-tecS on th.it by commhaie. OM rcuoa Peloli IOIC out is the l'OWint anti-califcnia tmtiment llDOftl ocber Hou. CMmben.. ....... wOuld • diredJ ·1 thiu c.libml a. ~ rn...!Uct I doa't want '° VOii b .:r illClft for caliAni&.. .. Noli ... Loe A...-·n... ....... II e llrr • I f = ,,,, .. A&QJ • Dan .W•lters In this case, -30- isn't end SACRAMENTO -This seem1 to be a lime (or personal career miJo. stones. It was 1 s ycan aao this year that I fint came to lhe Capitol. In a few months, it will have been 10 ycan since I bqan writina this columa But in personal terms, the most 1ianificant of those anniversarlea oc· cured Tuesday. It was preciJCly 30 years aao. lM day after Labor Day 1960. that a skinny (yes, it was that Iona aao) 16-yea.r..old kid walked up one fliaht of rickety stairs and beaan work.ina as a $SO.a-week copy 6oy and apprentice reporter on a small daily newsp11per. A lot bas happened in the past 30 years. The 16-year-old kid has bcc-0me a middle~ed man who has written somethina in excess of I 0 miJlion words for newspapers. And while doin& that. I've seen and ell· pcrienccd a tremendous chanJe in both newspa~ and news 1uelf, espcciaUy politics. By happenstance ~ entered this business m the last days of an era that had begun perhaps a cenwry earlier. Newspapers were owned by people in those days. not com- munications conglomerates run by MBAs. That was not an unmixed bless1n1; newspaper owners tended to personalize their products. which sometimes meant tiltins cbverqe to fit their personal, ideologacal or financaaJ biases. Th~ tone of the business has been raised ethically even as it has become somewhat mort bland. The technology was. by current standards. primitive. Reporters wrote their stonei on casHron type- wnters, Underwoods mostly. us1na cul-up scraps of newspnnt wb.ich were pasted together with acrid- smeUang rubber cement as editors scrawled changes with son dark pen· cils. Newspapers were produced on clanking pieces of machinery in what was called "hot metal" by industnal workers. men mostl y, who had served years of apprcnticesb.ip. The "back shop ... as the production side of the newspaper business was caJled. was a cacophonous. if hiably skilled, bedlam. That has been complete!) chanacd by technolog). Anicles. includina this one. are now wnt1en on quiet compu1ers in rooms that resemble msurance offices rather than the paper-strewn flop houses of yean past. Production is equally hiab· tech. Paper copy, metal type and the pnnters who handled them arc aone. It's more effic1en1. more fleiuble and more bloodless. We who wnte the newspaper alJO ha ve changed When I began. most reporters were 111-cducated. mOlt.ly from worlung-class ba~ounda. Man y. hkc myself. had n ected to araduate from high schoo . ColJeac Jrldl.Nltes. much less anduatcs of JOumahsm schools, wcrt rare. Mott had bqun as I did. as flunkies and copy boys. working their way up t.be infonnal ladder. It was bc&Jnnina to change, but the baa chanar didn•t come until after Vietnam ud Waterp1e. which cJeva&ed journal- ism into a quas1-profess1on, dom1· n.ated by college-educated persona -men and women -of middle and even up?(r-mfddle c:Jass t>Kk- arounds. That has altered the expectations a.nd perccptfons of those who Pf'IC· tace the newspaper writina trade. Today's rtponers are more seriou. Liquor consumpuon and ~­ playina have declined about 90 per· cent. But, like memben of other specialized profm1ons. re.J>Ol1.Cn also ~ave become mort insular. There s more reliance on tcchnokJsy -the telephone, the computer -a~d less on penonaJ contact with either sources or subjects of cov- erqe. Newsp11penn1 bas become more ObJect~ve. but it also has ~ come mort impersonal and perbapt Ins connected to the daily liva of th~ who buy our products. At the same tJme, thoee who~ journalists' natural advenarict - espmaJly pohuctans -have be-com~ mort ~~nolC)Sica.lly adeot at lhaptn& their 1maaes or sbjefclina thcar on~n nefarious ac:ti vitiel ha\ rcponoriaJ scrutiny. Campaipa llMI eovemmenu have thcmeelva be- COlM exerci1e1 In technoloty raUMr than pet'1onaJ CODLIC't. And blttb they and we have bten cbaftlld in prol'~Dd -ays bY. the adVllll 1 of le~. even a( we IOmCdmet dc'Ke'L · ..... --~per buainm ... ~ • .-.tbbaft~ cidy bu cba119td aad ft ::O~·~:·:..~-: ol ~ty "'°"' ....... IOdlly ticl ud 1Mt'1 why I locJll ,._.._..., tbe M.at JO Jan. nee ~ .,... ~ .. JCr OD OM•a ~ la die tlld -~ ..... :"' •1 I It e II '! : ...., 1 2 3 ' ,,, .. ····---" Olitle ....... ' IUD St•t <l•••s •tiff--nt ... llW1.,.,...,. °"""'' Otllt1 -~dear Ile "-"' 111 IN '°' 17 14 a DIY: htdty •~-= .. -"°'*· llOltly dur. Southwest ..,. to lS mph. TClalOW: Hicht Ind "'°'ntnC low ciouds c1tar1nc by mld·morn1nc V1nabfe Winds. 71 14 ~ ~ ~ = ~ OCEAN REPORT BOATIG SURF All 11DESt C>;tt -Qlll'S. lcM. ••111111 .... LOCATIOlt tall IMUw ..pl Md lllOl!q flows Wat lo tostlrwnt Hunang!Otl ...,,, 1·2 -.,,,., I~ lllOb .. 111 11001 tea 111 tllt Hewpor1 ...,,, 1-2 -.11.,_ Md htlli"CS Sotlllwtll '"' 3 San ci.m.nt. ·1.2 , ... '"' .... Cllrec1IOl'I Sou"'-! 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"' s.--Q 11 -.. • fl 11 S.Uft • • ,_ Q ,, ENTERTAINMENT ~::g;c:a:1 .................................................................... 111111 .................................................................................................... ._._ ... . r I I ' t I I 1 t ' • ' , I ' ' A flawed 'Othello' By TOM TITUS 0..., ~ SUlfl w- Of all Shakespearean tracrd1cs. "Othello'' rcm:uns the most 1n\Ohing. most nveung and most accessible 10 toda~ ·s audiences Its treatment of Jealousy -the infamous "green-c)cd monster" - as well as racial tension arc v1nually unparalleled 10 thcatncal literature It was this play. a quaner of a century ago, that hell)N propel a flrdgl1ng South Coast Rcpcnory into the forefront of Southern California producing groups. The Grove Shakespeare Fest!\ al has chosen this classic tragrd} to complete 11s summer session under the stars. and 11 proves a m1xrd blessing Overall. director Da" id Herman ha., mounted a strong. substan- tial production. but there arc na~inJ dcfic1enc1cs 10 1ntcrpreta11on which prevent the show from ach1e\ ing its potential Most of these center on the character of Iago, the spurnrd JUntor officer who plot~ \Cno mousl> 10 dcstrO) his suppo~I) belovrd commander There arc few Shakespearean characters as 1ntnns1call) e" ti a's "honest laao .. -a descnpuvc appendage used at least a doun times 1n the scnpt Jaco as wnttcn 1s a dcccp11vc shmeball. maintaining a S)cophant"s pose while eng.anctnnf the downfall of his nvals For the nght actor. 11 1s the pan of a lifetime. At the Grove, Gary Armagnac 1s "ocfully miscast. pla> 1ng this calculatinc schemer Wlth a soft. almost comic persona The aura of seething menace which should emanate from his character never matenahzcs 1n ArmlJOlc's 1nterprctat1on. nor docs his personaJ Justification o f the nunatfon he instigates. Othello himself 1s more fully rcprc~ntrd in the performance of Michael K. Moraan. who con\cys the pnde and po~er of tht: Moonsh general Wlth a solid, splcnd1dl> articulated authont) Onl) 1n his moments of heightened anguish -when required 10 beco me consumed Wlth Jealous rage -d~ Morgan's O thello lack con\ t<'· uon, d1ppmc into almost puppet-like contortions. . The stroncest and most completel> rcaltzrd performance o f the night is rendered by Harry Woolf as the Vencuan senator whose daUJhter, Oe-sdemott&.. ha.s mamrd the black Othello against the old man·s wtshcs. There "h. a superbly fashioned outrqc in Woolf s ponrayaJ which fleshes out his character Susan Doupc, a memorable Juliet of a )tar ago. c1 vcs a ~art­ wrcnching account of Desdemona, Othello's loving. faithful bnde who becomes the track victim of Iago's plotting. Ka> Berlet 1s u<:ellent as Emilia, the wife of la•o "Othello" contains enormous potential -but when 11 misfires. us 31/•-hour running ume can seem C\ en longer Performances continue Thursdays throuah Sundays at B:JO p.m unul Sept. 22 at the Festival Amphitheater. 12852 Main t .. Garden Gro\e, wtth ticket information available at 636-72 13 Movie I/stings IOW~ d...-A HMOOI ....,,~ 11•• '46 JIOl ......... 11tt 11 1 4 • I IS 10 JO '!'tiewport Beach MA90lt ,.... ~ H.trtlot ...., /f ""-s""' 6Jl·HOI , ......_ .. ,., 11 l t •IS I JO 100 , .... _ ....... fPG IJI 11 0 I'° J JO. SJO 7JO t JO ~~~......,,, .. ,.St &4•·SOl\ ~ -.. V--. flll 11 l 4 & IS I JO 100 .,... C9fn9 c p d... \outl\ ( M\1 ~~ "' ., .. I Ttle ........ ,.... II '° 1 IO 4 JO 1 ... at ......... "JC) J~-------fl'l llO J IS • I '° tOtO '" ,,...._t111 1Jt\ •ts 1 •o .... '" "" 11 JO , ' JO • 10 JO '°"'98 ~"""" tnM~ S4' 111 t I ....._,., 11 JO 111). 4 JO,' JO, I JO. 10 0 1--.....,_ lf'O.ltl 12 I\ J IS 4 I\ .... I II IOIS J fte'-...... l'O-'Jl' ts 1 t tOfO IMnM c-...n ~ ~ .. "1Mel "°"'" I ...... C.. ......... "' 11 JO I JQ J 4\ • 111 tOJO l ........ 111111 11 JO.) JO. 1 41 NI.._,... jlll l HSH.,0 ·-• .... l'O-•Jt tJJQ JJO.•IO.••' •••• 100 • ,_, OllAVW C9ffl9 Nll W-,_ "''°"o . 1 _,.._l~LJ I,. IO ,.......... ...1111 ....... 1,,, IOIO ·-~ ""....... ,... ·m· . . . ............. ,.... ... . .. ·'· .... -"II .. , ••••• 'Ole!' for Pacific Symphony's 'Espana' By MIKE RUSSELL 0..., ,_ (••·--" Lucas Richman. assistant conduc- 1or of the Paci tic S) mphon) Or- c hestra. rad1atrd spinl a plent}' and enthusiasm a·mucho at the founh 1990 Summer Scncs concert held at Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre Sat- urda~ evening. And. as an added .. Ole", no one applauded betwttn mo,cments' U nfortunate!). the~ also d1dn·t rcall) CJ\e the PSO or Richman as much apprcc1at1on as lhe) descn ed a1 the end of the concert. either "Espana!" was the concen·s title and 11 would have warmrd Evita's heart to w11ncss the vnaht) of Ric h· man's musical menu There were the usual sm1hng fans who. ~ith their baslceu. p1cn1ckcd on e" Cl') square foot of lawn the Meadows prov1drd As a nice thematic touch. the PSO also offered a s1x·p1ecc manach1 band·that played pnor to the conccn itself It was the first concert at In 1ne Meadows that Richman has con· ductrd in some ume. In fact. he chose his Latin classical music ~ell The program includrd works from a number of composers, inculdtng George Gershw10, an Amencan. Manuel de Falla, a Spaniard. Alber· to G1nastcra. an Argentine. and two Frenchmen Georges Bizet and Mauncc Ra\el It was indeed a Latin classical fiesta with aJI the proper seasoning. But 11 didn't arouse the spint o f the Labor Day weekend crowd as much as one would expect. lncludrd in the crowd was a large number of state, county and city elected officials. And althouih 11 wasn't announcW pubhcally, Carl t. Clair. the Symphony's new arus- llc director and conductor was also .. A90t ~«* """"' lt S•J ~ ii ... '°. I ......_ fll 11 t S l \ 7 I \ •IS II IS • l ltw ..... ...__ tl'GI tl I\ llS 4 IS •Ii I IS lO I \ I nine TM9 ~ CHMllA t i•\ t _,. o-t '5••11 I .. -...._ IK>f I ! S I ' 10 SO )Nt~fl'I II SO t°' t IS .._.._ I tlfl > .. , IOJO ,..._. __ V_fllt 11 H t IS S O I 10 IS 4 ..... I'(; I Jl IJ J JO S 1 )0 10 \91111 -...111 111SJSO~&Jel lt • " -• I Ill , , JO I h • I' I 4S 10 '° •ooe1•1ee1 et•l•AI l•t1 •nu ,,,...,,,., tci.-.... o.rw " 1 <It n I Ttle ....... fP'OI U > 4 ' I 10 , ...... -........ tf"O l lj II JO I IC) , JO. uo 1 JO • tO J ........ .-i I) J0.1 JO t JG 6 JO I JO, 10 JO 4 ... ..,_ lClf I I IO t 90 ......._ O.. l"Cit •H •rs f'll f IP'GlltO 'IS S ......... I'(; I I! I ) S 1 t IOIO Fountain Vallry present to check o ut the acousul ~ and general!) fam1lran1c himself w11h the orchcstsra's summer ' cnuc II should be noted tha1 SI Clair will make his official star-studded debut in m1d-OctobcT One famous guest will be St. Clair's boss al lht' Boston S) mphon). and fncnd. the famous composcr/conductor Jo hn W1ll1ams Opening the concert. Richman and the PSO perfo rmed a Grorge Gershwin ~or k first titled "Rumba:· "nncn in IQJ:! and later retttled ··Cuban 0\ crturc ·· But the PSO and Richman, 1n m } C"ill· ma11on. reccn-ed far less applau\e than the} descr'\-cd Richman and the enscmblc created Gersh" 1n "magic'" with the p1et.·e The second work, "Espana .. a rhapsod) for o rchestra b) Chabna was cancelled. unfortunatt'h. but the loss left more room lor the most exc1t1ng thnll of the C\Cnmg. II was "Night 1n the Gardens of pain." t'I\ Spanish com~r .Manuel de Falla. featunna the bnlhant Br.u1ltan pian· TV Listings 7:00 7:30 1:00 • -.-..o • 1 *"'°"' • ...., 1st. ;-.;elson Frt1re Man} 1n th<' au· d1encc "ere rnll hun&f) after the finale for morC' ol this outstanding solo1)t's "clc1.1m· performance. but de Falla's "ork was perhaps more !tu11cd to on.·hesiral 1nsp1ra11ons than Frcirc's piano solo ~ork The soloist ~as c mouonal. ac· curate and C'\ul1ng. but fr~ had C\er heard o f him before He sounded not unh.._c the Cuban-born Horaoo uu11cmz. -A ho has p<'r- formed ~llh 1hc P'iO t~1ce rn rt"\.ent ~aSOn\ We would d o well lo rn v1tc Freire back again so we might geno kno~ him belier The talented M>lo1 1 provrd that Brazil has much more to ofTer than ugar Loaf and b1kin1· clad bcauucs on the beach a t lp- anema ·-..... rou'>- 1ng rh~ thm'> ol 811et's u11e "10 I from ·Carmen" -another succc~ It was followed b) .\rgent1ne com· po~r .\lbcrto Ci1nastcra's '>Ult<" from the ballet "Estancia .. Ginastcra died onh sc' en years ago He comPO~d -A Orls tha1 ~und much ltke some of ~lra\ insk) '!> .,..o rk.s. bad ~ too bttn born 1 n South .\menca G1nastua. in h1'> he)-ciay. chummed with some of the veatest mus1caans and dancers of our time while work.II\& on a Gug- Jenhe1m Fellowship in the t:.S. and 1n South Amenca The final work of the eveninc was the fam1har ··eo1ero" b} Maunet Ravel This famous work sa• 11s first performance at the Pans Opera in No' ember of 1928 and prcm1erc'd 1n <\menca in November of I 92Q 1n Carnegie Hall. But. fortunateh or unfonamnety; IT wasn t unti • Bo Derck and Dudley Moore were ,sttn lislentng to 11 1n their hotel bedroom 1n the mO\te "10 .. that most 4unen- can~ became fam1har with 11 "1lhough there were a good number of soloists throughout the concert. conductor Richman f11.1lrd 10 ha vc them nand at the finale It wu also unfortunate that onh a fev. fans stood 10 sho~ theLt apprcc1a· lion. as the better-than-average cro~d qu1ckh hcadrd for the u1su 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11 :00 ..... ..... • . f ''· .s . ' .. " 'his is truth, the tNh_ole truth, nothing ••. YtJP,'l'BmlS'I A LOT OI' TllAT GOING A.ROUND -I swear, thendJ, tM& I'm aot ma.kin& this •P: There WU a m•ioa Tuctday of J tbe Alzheimer's As-erry IOdation of Oraop Kobrin Cowsty. olaMina l\a Dec.. ' fun<t-raiiina dinner, a&d ex· ecutive director Kent Bamheiscr told coUeaaues thae•d be a slight delay in the llTIDICments. It seems that the Alzheimer's office in Costa Mes.a has one of those new-fan.ied typewriters with a bu ilt· in memory bank. And, well, you guessed it: The machine lost its memory. 0 ALL THIS GLl'M'ER DOESNT RAVE TO BE GOLD -From Anni Abramson of Laauna Beach comes a newspaper clippina about our seaside senle· ment. wilh the words "Gold Coast .. encirded in crayon. .. Surely. you wordsmiths can come up Wlth something more original than this •Gold Coast' cliche," she scrawls along the margm (in tnk. not crayon.) Well. Anna, I don't know wlUcb wordlmith pmned the artklc in question, but it does seem like the lazy way ouL Whenever •CQold Coast" or ••Calj. fomia Jtjvien .. pop up in print. refenina to our coastal 1plcodof' Jc!::.~11 aafe usumpdoa tbat tbc writtr was on a ti&bt ·ne. ""'Really, we've ~tu be men crative. AccordJna to m¥ ~. the oriainaJ Gold Cout wu tbe former Bnti.sh territo~ in West Africa, o.n the Gulf of Guinea. In 1957, the Bntish OoJd Coast meraed with Toaoland to form lhe independent Afri<:an nation of Ghana, with its own seat in the United Nations and every· lhi~ .. This, obviously, does not invite com~. t mean, wben's the last time you saw ivory belDJ loedod aboard a frejabter in Newpon Harbor? Besidel.. it•1 ill cpl. So, fellow-wordsmitbs, let's ,et creative. Your• supestioos arc invited. If ll will help stimulate your juices. let's kick around lhe foUowina: -Bren Beach. -Coie de Condo. -Playa del Platinum. -MaJl~asia (ah, there. Pacific rim boosters.) -Costa Fonunc. -Disneyland West. Well, tho~ arc just for openers .. This isn't a contest. but your SUJ&eStjons will be evaluated by a panel of deadline wnters. and the winner will ~1vc a prize;. an aJl-eJtpenses-peid bus ndc along either the CallfOmia Riviera or our Gold Cout. wbkhever is las conen1ed. a IBAIONAL NOTa -No Deed 10 check the calendar. If you .UU dOft•t know tbe limo o{~. j'* look ift the windows of pawn lhQPI -now nwna wttb aurfiat II*' and auitan. AOOtber lip: At a It.reel tlir in Dena Point. a popular item WU a amall cbalkboAld adorned with ID aoole. Scnwled on \be slate: .. Three Oood Tbinp ADout Beina a Teacher: June. July and Auauat •• a DRAWING BLOOD PROM D\AQ? -New. papa MMMD M.A. Barnes called from Atheae. 0.., ~ 6at lbe'a qujttina the Banner-HeraJ4/DJib Newt * ~ home to lquna Beeda. lbt eJ\jo~ • wart. lbc uya, but can't cope with ihe u.--~ ~ ~t and m~ Georaia, ahe'a cqltliz:i111 a 1 of Stealth·sized sbeters and ~~ tbem 10 tbe Penian Gulf -for deployment an anu-tank war6re. a WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING ABOUT OTHER PEOPLE-You probably knew these thinas all &Jons. but rve jult learned that: -Sheriff Brad Gates, who also serves as our painless coroner.Lis advising cronies that he'll seek one more tenn (his uftht then turn in his badge. Now SI . he11 retain the cowooy imaae. hefpina wife Deedee with her equesuian center in San Juan Capistrano. -Julie Aadtewa and Blake Edwards, who keep lbeir ~t Maria at the Balboa Bay Oub, a.re eeekina a buya-fof lbe 72-footer. If you have 10 ask \be price, you cu-i afbd dae ftael bill. -Attoraey .. tblete Du Hodel' proposed ••water walk" acrOM the Beriaa Strait. planned for later thiJ mootb., may be poetpOned until aprinatime. Nct0- liationa with Soviet lporU officials tiave become entaQIJed in bureeucratic ~ tape -no pun intended. a UITBN, AT MY AOB l'M ll&ALLY PllOUD OP' ~ TllAT -MUlllD tbetlolal Kelly 0.via of Newp<>n -.m. wbo doubkl u a ~ writeT, called to •Y • eot 10me .. much-needed" lauahs readina about my lboned oratJon at the &chanee Club of Newpon Harbor. AJ)d then lhe laid. .. you really stimulate my eodotDhin." Wow. nw wu a new one on me, bu11 didn't ask wbere her endorpbitl 11 situated. Quit while ahead, I always aay. 0 SPBAUNO OF NON-8Pl!.UJNO ENGAG&. MENTS -Carlos Moreno of Corona del Mar aays he's seek.ina ~en for a new civic orpnization. 1t•s called Paranoids Anonymous. The only problem: He refuses to divut&e when and where they meet. Jury Kobrl.8'6 ~ nu ,,,.,_, .. ,., Mtl s.,,,,.,.,, U.S. forces take control of Iraqi cargo ship By JOCELYN NOVECK ~.0"'-111- The air evacuatJon. resumed Tues- day of Western women and children stranded tn Iraq and Iraqi-occupied KuwaH. and 25 Americans were among the nearly 300 who made it to Jordan. U.S. forces mt>anwhile toolc con- trol of an Iraqi-bound ship ti) ing to defy U.N. trade sanctions. The Na'') said sailors planned to stay on the" ship, which was hauhng a cargo of tea, and escon It to another pon. It was the first publicly ackno~l­ edgcd case of U S forces boarding an Iraqi-flagged "~I stncc a U.N embargo was imposed after Iraq's Aug. 2 invasion of Kuwait A Brit1sb convoy caIT) mg 306 women and children tn seven buSC'5 and one car left Kuwait Tuesday on a bot, aruelina 14-hour drive to ~d -hoping to get back to Bntain from the Iraqi capital. The developments raised hopes for an increased eitodus of West- erners. Two Iraqi Airways Bocang 727s chanered by West German} and the Untted tates flew fore~gners. mostl} women and children. to .\mman on Tuesda) and Western dtploma:s said another Je tliner. chanercd b)' France, "ould lea\C Buhdad for the Jordantan capllal on Wednesday. Canadian Embassy Charge d'Affa1res Dale Carl said Canada chanered sull another jct 10 fl)' Westerners from Kuwait to Baghdad and then on to Ankara. Turkey. on Thursda) One of three chanen:d flights that arrived in Amman on iuesday brought mamly Arab nauonals. The Amencan chaner carried 138 passengers, including 2S Amcncans. 44 French. 36 Bnt1sh nationals. four Australians and two Canadians. Asked what he thought of Bagh· dad, Talcb Subah1 a Davcnpon, Iowa. teen-ager, said, "Better than Kuwait, I tell you that. "Kuwait was a living hell. You go to sletp on bombang and you wake up to 1t .... It 1s like Vietnam. I saw dead people all over. they throw them an the trash." A West German air force plane picked up I SO men. women and children released from Iraq and new on to Frankfun. West Germany. President Bush. his oft-inter- rupted Maine vacation over. met with his Cabinet for a briefing on the Persian Gulf crisis an advanoc of his summit Sunday 10 Finland wilh Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev. The president sent two top aides on v1s1ts to wealthy allies to soltcil donations to cover expenses of the massive m1ht.ary operation tn the" gulf. The White House announced that Bush had decided to ask Congress to forgave Egypt's entire S7 b1lhon mili- tary debt an appreciation for Presi- dent Hosnt Mubarak's role tn stand· mg up to Iraqi agrcss1on. In Israel, Defense Mm1ster Moshe Arens said Tuesday the U nttcd States should compensate Israel for a state of alcn It majnta1ns because of threats of an attack from Iraq. Finance Minister Yitzhak Mod.ti said af America forsivcs Eoi>t's military debt, Israel will demand most of its debt to the Americans also be erased. The pli&bt of tens of thous.ands of Asians who have made it out of Iraq but not home meanwhile ~w more miserable. They were camped in the desert j ust uwde Jordan, fightina over dw1ndlinJ supplies. Jordan's crown prince cntJcized the lack of attention given to lhe Asians and afpeaJed for help. International relic organiz.a. tions joined has pica. On the diplomatk front, ho~ for a resolution of the conflict were focused on the supcrpowen foUow- ina failun: of talks between U.N. Sccretary~neral Javier Perez de Cuellar and Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz.. Soviet Fon:ian Minist.eT Eduard A. Sheva.rdn.adu proposed an int.et· national conference on the Persian Gulf crisis that would also take UP. the Arab-Israeli conflkt and the civil war in Lebanon. Israeli Pnmc MinisteT Ynzhak Shamir reiterated his opposition to discussing the Palestinian issue at an international conference, but he wel· corned the idea coovenina such a forum on the aulf issue. lo 'Caracas, Venezuela, visitina Cuban Foreian Minister Isidoro MaJmicn:a Venezuela said Tuesday that Iraq should withdraw from Kuwait and the sovereignty of the emirate be restored as a first step to resolve the crisis. County holiday_ Painter pulls art from terminal Du, I arr~sts urn NEWPORT BEACH -A painter terminal said Tuesday he Wllhdrtw the patntJn&. milled for :cproduction ll WU rt-' • ~ ~ r who did a canvas of the naked torso the work because a panel reneged on The John Wa ne Ai n Arts J«;ted by John Wayne Airpon Com. and wings of Icarus for a new a1rpon a pro mise to issue a poster based on Commission authorized ~he Jim m1ss1on.er Robert Cashman. By GEORGE McCRORY o.-y -kaft ...,~ .. SANT A ANA -DrunkC'n dm ing arrest~ 0' er the Labor Da) weekend 1n Orange Count~ we're up 34 percent this }ear. largel} due to the lower 08 percent dnnng-~ h1lc-1nto,1catcd ltm11. acl'Ord1ng to the California Htgh"a) Patrol CHP Officer Linda Burrus said TueM1a) that arrest~ 1ncrca~d from 119 last year to I bO this )ear dunng tht' holida) weckt'nd Officers from the an Juan ( ap1strano and Westminster Ctf P offices nearl} doubled their Dl'I arrest\ this )Car. while ~nta i.\na officers made about fi\C less arrests this holtda ) wed.end ~s thn did Labor Da}' 1989. she said The figures for the three JU mdH lion~ 1nCludrd '\6 m the Westminster d1stnct. up from 2ti la!.t Lahor Da~ ~rckend . 45 in 1h1.· San Juan Capistrano district. up from 25. and fil 1n the Santa A.na area. down from 68 Burrus said the increased number nf arrest!> could be a11nbutcd 10 mort tratm-on count) fre-ewaH . but added the lo~cr 08 percent blood alcohol standard for drunkenne~s 1Mt11utcd Jan I 1s another hkel> factor The past level had beC"n 111 percent OPEN From At Tour guides htghhpned features such as the "freezc--Oned,'' oncc-hvc palm trees that adorn the termmal 1ntcnor The process provides green- ery that 1s attractive and looks real. yet requ1rts low maintenance. said one guide. Sharon Esterlcy. "The) "'on't die. they won't out.grow the space. all we have to do 1s keep them d ustcd ... Estcrley said. which arc JUSt under 2.000 feet from end to end -mirror each other. and the dual concessionaires reflect that twin theme. Esterley explatocd. Nearly 8.4 m1lllon passengers art CJtpteted to use the tcrmmaJ's 14 gates each year. That 1s nearly double the number that used John Wayne A1rpon in 1989. Those travelers wiJI find nearly 6,000 parktng spaces to three park- ang structures at the revamped ter- mtnaJ, but they'll have to pay a premium to use them. Parle.mg will cost SI per hour. and up to S 14 per day. Morphcsis paintina for d1splay in a Morphcs1s said. collection to be dedicated Fnday at Officials wit.b the Alrpon Arts the new Thomas F. Riley Terminal . Comm1ss1on then offered to show According to Greek mythol~). the pajntmg at the maugural exhi· Icarus escaped Crete on art1fk 1al biLJon. but 1n~1cated the .poster w1nas made by his father Daedalus would not be pnnted or dastnbuted, But Icarus flew too close to the sun. he said. meltina the wax holding lhc wings to Morphcs1s said he w~ "1thdraw- h1m and fell mto the Aegean Sea. 1ng the artwork to protest After authorizma the paintmg. Morphcs1s said the panel promised to produce the poster commemorat- ina the new an collection. But when the painting was sub- ARREST ~ "censorship and officlal restraints on the ans." Airpon Comnuss1on offioals were unavailable for comment. -By Ctty N~w• !krvltt man. • I-Statewide. lhe HP reponC"d ~.~J-am-srrfOr dming unacr the - influence dunng the penod strttch1ng from 6 pm f-nda) through m1dn1ght Monda)'. In companson. there ~ere 2.4qQ arrest!> last }Car Inside the predominately beige tcrmrnal. travelers will find two McDonald's restaurants. two Lido Lounges and two g.ifl shops hcav1l) stac«d w ith-ltk~~sn of-Orange Count) 's other screen idol. Mickey Mouse In all. n 's 11 packa~"t Riley sard rs worth walling for. "I m sure if John Wayne were here, he'd be proud of all of us," said Riley. In an interview after the sboou~ 8()yI a uoOircctor Cllris Scllnelder said that five or six Asian younptcrs of high school age worlc at the club throuah an Orange County work proanm. One was havmg a binhday and wanted to have a party then:. Traffic accidents over the lhreC'-<.ia\ "'eclend claimed 65 h' cc; 1n California. two more than last )ear 1 hrce-of the-death<i "ere in Orange County. 1ncludang the death of 'O-\car-old Kevin Presll.'' uf Long Beach. who was killed Monda' "he-n a suc;pectcd drunle-n dnvcr rear-ended his car on the" Garden < 1ro' e F-rcc"a' cast of thr Haster Street eJttl. H is fianccc. Julte Dan1cl!t. 21S. of Long Rea{h, suffered head and spinal tll)UnC' in tht· crash. Alben o Ochoa. 25. of Garden (Jro' e "'a!I arrested on ~u<ipic1on of sccond-degrct' murder and dn' mg ~ htle mto\lcated. !iatd Officrr l )le Whttten of the CHP's Westminster office "We hope we have enough ev1dcm.r to 'iupport the second- dcgree murder charge. The guy wao; also dn-. ing "h1le on probation (for a 1988 drunken dnvmg charge) "hcn he rear-ended these poor mnocent people." Wh itten said. "The couple was engaged and their hvcs were ruined forever." Ochoa reportedly drank fi ve 10 ~ven bcer.1 at his s1stC"r-m-law's house m Corona, where he lcf\ hts wife and children to dnve home alone to Garden Grove. "He had his keys taken awa> from him b} his s1s1er-m-law. but the guy got the keys and took off. If that isn't wanton dmqard for human life. I don't know what 1s." Whmcn said On Sunday, Loe Tan Nguyen. 26. and Juan Johan Vo. 26. both of Garden Grove, were kJlled when a pickup dnvcn b> a 'iuspected drunken dnver hit their car on the Santa Ana Freeway near the Jamboree Road exit in lrvanc. The p1clcup dnvcr, Steven Robert Gama. 30. of Los An$clcs. was arrested on susp1c1on of drunken dnvrng. Two women nd1ng in the pickup suffered facial and head in..i.ur1es to the colhs1on. a CHP spokesman said. STORM l'romA1 .. _ ommended steps., includina the stockpihna of emeracncy sut>phei. such as pl~ood and plastic for securing bu1ldings. Ott reponedly based his emerg- ency bulletin, an part. on a statement last month by Davis, Calif .. climatoloaist David Dodac. in which he said the chances arc better than even lhat a m~or storm will hil Southern ~lifomia durina the fint two weeks of September. The breezy disoounc hasn't been l()\t on. other area cities. either. .. 'Fountain Valley Mayor Laurann Cook said: "There are tome prep- arations in the worts. Tbc cit~ has taken that (wamina) seriously. ' Caty offic:Wa became internlcd in the storm watch after the city of Seal Belch called a meetina on the sut>- jec! last week. Fountain Valley diu11cr oreoetednna coordinator ·~~ WiDiam• said HunUnaion reprtKntauves attcftdcd the mectina .. well. sa.. llld ~ ~ became ot IMir aperiacll whb tbe llwrt ........ ol 191)1 .... ~ llltJ all•"" IO dac 8'ld tbr ~ The terminal's 1wo concourses - NASA heads into last leg of shuttle count CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. - NASA headed wtth confidence today tnto lhe final hours of Col- umbia's countdown, which was halted once before by fuel leaks and then by problems with one of four telescopes aboard. Columbia 1s scheduled to blast off with seven astronauts and the Aslro observatory at 10:20 p.m. PDT today. It Wiii be NASA's first shuttle launch tn more than four months - the longest pp between missions since flights resumed followina the 1986 Challenacr disaster. An 1mponant test was to come this afternoon. when NASA was to Williams sajd the c1ues have aarud 10· exchange norm 1nfor- m1t1on as 11 becomes available and work toaether, ~hould the weather warrant any extra effort. Public works du~tor Wayne 0.. borne is proceeding nonnally ln his wet weather preparations. ··we don't haul in 20 tons of sand, should I say, and ~t ready for undblgina." he said. ·eut we do have an emeraen~ plan for Santa Ana River Ooodina. • Newport Beach offiaa11 alto have an eye on the sky, but not becaute of this year's hurricane talk. City Manaeer Bob Wynn said.. "We always kte_S?_ about S,000 11ndbll&I and a oou~ of tndJoech o( land on band,• be said. "Out i:. r concem is with an unusually b · tide, which would affect Balboa J nd pen.ic\&larty, Tbe ..,..,. on the lsland are only about ftve fer\ above the mean 1o'¥ water mart." Tbc cit)' bept two b• p..unpa rad~ ror ecrvioe u. t11e ~• ot lailb ...... oa die Wud, Wynn Mid. 01111J ..,u ol die city, a.GM'cr l .... ~ ........ °' "• .......... is. Ille llict. ·wac or .. ta Am River bc&Jn fuchna the shuttle with a half. million pitons of ltquid oxygen and hquid hydrogen. A hydrogen leak forced NASA to scrub Columbia's first countdown on May 30. The leaky hydrogen lines were later re· placed. "Then: Wiii be a httlc ap- prehension, of course, on all of our paru," provam manaaer Bill Hud- dleston said Tuesday. "But we have all the confidence in the world that we've got this problem resolved." A launch at=t set for the wtek· end was IC1\l after NASA lost coouict with Astro'1 X-ray telescope. -Br ne ~w Pm.I storm channel 11 much lower than any thma m Newpon Beach," he said. "In a low-tide situation. even with a monsoon. we would ha ve much better dmoqt than a.ny area wqt of the cbanocl." In the event that the National Weather Service issues 1 hurricane watch Ncwpon Beach plans to bqin · immediate distribution and 1tack.ina of aandbql in vulnerable areas, be Mid. As far u storm proteetion son,. 1983 was pivotal for the city of Costa Mesa. City ~ Allan Roeder said. Tbc dty wft"ered nwaive Ooodina tbal year due to a .eria of teVete winter ltOmll. And ctty of&cia.lt hope uae aeon• teamed in that 1t0rmy year wiJI eet them ~ just about anytbifte. evee a ma119ve storm a:uch u Dodie and otben a.re pndktine. ••Al an OUtarowth of that Cl• paicftCC ln 19131 we have apc:nl a COUldcnblt amou.nt ol tame and ~ u..-.clilllll our storm dl"l.ina. •• Jt.Oldlt liaJd.. ~Wt'w --lllem to la.I poaae wlwt we daiU ·~can .......... ...._emahma 100.)'CIU "°""· .. "This was such an isolated inci- dent and it had noth1na to do with the Boys O ub. The club didn't at· tract a bad clement." Both the suspect and victim Canh Van Tran. 17, of Ora.nae. had gang affiliatJons. and apparently wercn't memben of the same aana. But the shooting, inside 1hc club, reponedly stemmed from "a pnor and personal dispute," McErlain said. McErlain said the aunman, who apparently heard about the party throuJ)\ word of mouth, rccoanizcd the victim and opened fire. He ap- parcnll)'. didn't track lbe victim to the facility. McE.rtaan said. McErlain wouldn't reveal how of· ficers traced the youna suspect to the Westminster commercial area. Pohce Chief Ron Lowcnberg said previously he was discouraged that none of the victims had come for· ward to help police locate the gun- CARTS ,romA1 the measure, however. Schneider said the club doesn't normally rent out facilities for parties but qreed to in this case because the yountsters worked hard. and 11 was a reward. Taylor. lhe club board member, said colleques felt that renting out the facility for a party ($2S for five hours) was "a bad idea." In a biz.am aftermath. two men 1n a car drove by the club and opened fire on police officers invC"St1gauna the pnor shooting.. Two 20-year-old men. Jose Munoz and Ennque Hernanda. were booked on suspic10n of assault with a deadly weapon o n pohcc officers. McErlain said the aun used an the fatal shoot1na hasn't. been located. "Th11 ia a real problem and a real con«m," Amburiey said. "I le.now at tome events. such as the Lions Oub Fis.h Fry. we are plagued with numerous vendors of vanous kinds." Ambur,ey aod OlatSOw received suppon from Linda Fcffer. a resident wbo addreMed the council dun'!f deliberations. "Ifs a noise pollution problem to me.' she said. "It bothers me. They're diny and they don't have permits. and I hop( you'll do whatever you can to act rid of them." Another resident, Juan Gama, spoke tn defense of pushcart vcndon. "Before rou pus an ord1nan« blnnina what peopk do 10 survive, you lhould tee what you can do to act the companies to obey the law," he Mid. "I penonalJy have a licrt'lK to opera•e bcrc. When you have a problem with compliance, why don'l you ao aft.er the bl& companies, instead of the little auya." A motion by Ambu:rlev to ldo])t the pu1hca11 ban died when three council member& sild they wouJd vote apjnat it. By a 3-2 vote, the council adopted a aubltitutt motion by Omli to direct the city au.omey 10 draft a rqulatory orcbnance requ1'" IOfllO eon of picture identiftcatJon and dilPlayed hQltb inspectJon certi ftcata. "(C.hapman'a) enure l&ltement WU ftfl.. biued -It wat all opiruon. Sbe aid be bu no l'ftlMM 1t, but that's a d1tricult tbi~ to have ~ you don't feet JOG ve done anytbl~ wroas." lmddl IUd. Elam 1 auomey, ~ Turnct, aid he'1 reViewilll UU: hin dll Hllltic8I ..... ti ~., b ill ... will .. Pl!lflri.!I .. cme-1proo111MllfWUI ... ............. ' Sl'Ol<IS CLASSIFIED /85 - -COMICS/• 24 hours to gO for ultimate football tab Stan Wyman Signing season for NFL holdouts It 1s kind of remark.able that all those Nauonal football Le.t&ue players holding out during the tough erescason training camp suddenly find there 1s a way to come to agrccment with their ball clubs with the regular season about to get underway. Around these parts. I am thinking of Kevan Gr~ne of the Rams and Steve Bcuerlem of the Raiders. There were others all around the league. Buflhcsc two-rock out simp- ly ~use because they arc home- town types. Dunna has holdout, Greene made some nasty cracks about the Rams and the club organization. He made it quite clear thal he was unhappy with them and that they o ught to be ashamed of themselves for the way they treat their players. His face was on every TV scrttn an Southern Cahforn1a blasting the Rams. Suddenly 1t was over. The next thing anyone knew, Greene was a signed-up, card-carryina member of the Rams and all was well with the world. What happ(ned? In any set of nqotaauons. there as iive and take. That means Greene did not &et what he wanted and the Rams paid ham more than they wanted to pay him. That's the nature of these kinds of deals. What happened was predictable. There was never any doubt that ap-eemcnt between the Rams and Greene would be reached. It was either that, or the defensive back would be out scekina a new line of work and the Rams would be in the market seekina a new defensive back. Neither happened. What really happened is that Greene missed all but one week of summer trainan., the hardest pan of , ........... WYMAN/M t INSIDE ~ Tiie 19'0 h.... school football 1euon ltM'tl TIIUl'lodaJ night with non-I•...,. action .. •nd th• prelude to ft CCNWn In t111..,...,. .._....with the dettvery of the~ .... Coal D.alf Pllol"'1 ultlMate footb•H Ult -Po_,...,, ..._ lldbon., Weltllllnstw ~ •• In Mtton T'hur..,r.dt•n Ille• lleftl and Marin., John McO• ,_....,., •nd CoroMt del Mar and ar .. n V and Unlvenftr, MllO"I others, 11111• fleld on l'f'NeJ· l'or tit• uftlMate tooll row t•vortte"1 chances on th• prep scene •well•• the•-•· Trojans, arutns., Plratn, ltusden and• of the rest of the Or ante COlllt Ar••· don't min It T'hund•J· Sabatini, Fernandez stagger into semis ly STEVE W ILSTEIN II#,_...,,.., NEW YORK -Gabnela Sabatini danced aloi:i. a tennis tightrope before knocking off a tiny Soviet slugacr, and American teen Mary J~ Fernandez delivered on the promise she showed in her fint U.S. O pen at 14. The shaky victbrics t>Y No. 5 Si6itini and No~ S-Fernandez on Tuesday set up a semifinal match between them, and both wdl gladly take two days off fint to recover from their Jittcn an acttina there. Sabatini. considered from the start of the Open a solid contender to take Steffi Grafs title, found herself in a 2'h hour test of wills with unseeded Leila Mcsk.ha befOrt winning. 7-6 (7-S) 6-4. Sa~ttna, tcetenng o n the cdae of defeat in the fint set. fouaht ofla set point an the 10th pmc after the crowd raJlicd behind her, another in the 12th pme when a lob by Mcsk.hi landed an inch long. and came back from 2-5 down in the tic-breaker. The athletic ArJentinc won the last fi ve points of the tic-breaker as Mcsk.hi's composure finally cracked. Mcsk.ha had been winning poants with deep. hard groundstrokcs and an awcssavc net prne that belied her ,S-foo&..4 heipt and pixi · build. But in the ue~brcaker, she doublc- faulted for the first time at 5-4. then rut a forehand Io na. drilled an easy overhead anto the net and lost the set on a weak backhand that Sabatini volleyed hard mto the ce- ment. That set lasted one hour, 29 minutes -more than a half-hour lon&er than Graf took to beat Jen- nifer upnau in two sets -but ll served only as a prelude to an equally tense second set. A fuJI mooo shone briJbtly over the stadium. and the crowd of about 20,000 screamed and aroaned with every exchange on seemingly endless rarncs. Sabauna. worried about early maues at the net. backed off and played mto Makhi's smnath Wlth Mary Joe l'ernande• .. the eighth seed, Is framed br her radlet •• ah• hltl toreh•nd -~ dura,_. U.S. Open win over ninth-seeded Manuea. M•leeva -l'r .. nler Tuesday. topspan groundstrokes for most of the first set. But after rcahzang she could wtn points wnh low shou that Meskh1 smacked into the net. Sabatim ~pn to change her stratqy. Sabat1n1 broke Mcskha twice to take a 4-2 l~d 10 the second ~t. After the second b~k. at love. Mcskha looked aJumly at the p-ound. as if already bcalen. d1spmted by bad calls and blown opportunities. Y ct she rallied apio. broke Sabatini back twacc and was serving at 5-4 wllh a chance to uc the set Once more, thouah. Sabauni held on and broke Mcsth1 for the final umc on a forehand long by Meskhi. ending the lona«t str11gb1-sct women's match of the tournament Fernandez came back from a bout of sccond~sct wildness and took lalJct practice at the comers and hncs to reach her second G rand Slam semifinals this \'Car Fernandez's b-1. 2-t>. 6-1 v1ctol) over Manuela Malccva-fragni<'rt'. the fourth-round conqu<'ror of Maruna Navraulova. confirmed \hat the I Q..ycar-0ld Flond1an's tnp to the ustrahan final last Januan wu no fluke. · Sutton claimed off waivers by 'Rams ANAHEIM -The Rams placed three playcn on the injured reserve list Tuesday and added some much· needed depth to their leCOnd· ary by claimina comctbeck Mackey Sutton off waivers. . , Recd aot two-pme roster exemp- tions on Monday, but it's probabk that all W1U ~ activated t.tcr an the week. Dodgers blow 7-0 lead "Defensively. thanp arc looklna LOS ANGELES _ The Hous- up." Rams Coach John Rdbinton ton Astros overcame two home said at bas weekly media Juncheon. Nns and Slll RBis an the first awo "Obviously, Kevin Grtcne and anninp b)' KaJ Daniels and Doua Reed make a bia djffertn~ up rallied from a 7-0 ckficu to beat fronL They lake the wc'lht off some tbc Los At\IC&es Dodaen. I 0-8. of out linemen who~ hunina •lMS . Tuesday night at Dodaer (linebeckcr) Gcorat Bethun' who ·il Stadivm. worn down after a Iona camp. Ken Obertfell drove an the "l.oliaa Gray and Alfre4 Jackson · (aroin) In Wuhi"-'on hurt bed. but tyint Nn on a mth·inn1na aroun4 .... _ ... ~ dout and ICOft'd the a<>:&hcad Nn no• -e lMlve IOrM opttons. And we 20 .. a ~ crrol by naht Schedule AT aAT Wed areves (home I 7 lS ~ ON D•CK ~ Sr•"" (home) 7 lS tN TH• HOl.• • . Fri Reen IC (home) 7 JS All ~ on K.A9C redlo (790) • On TV, Ch. 11; sc SoortaC"-nnet Sutton played for the Rams from 1986 lhro\Alh l 988 before joinina' Green Bay u 1 Plan 8 ftee_qcnt 1n 1989. He ended up in Buffalo this ~and was reRued on Monday. --&.J'----t--'-"""A"T'l'r-hlltl'lria; SUttOft "to\lRt1Jt I ~~-Ora wtll be bKk an fou:!..r-1-_..UClllwN-.M .. an 'R!e-Aw•-i..· -"""~vet Al Qmna U-Ol wn..A ._ comcbect Ibo ududed Eric hiillrit ~or 1CijUt v1ctot) with .. By Week 3. we should be a Antbopy's three-nan pnch homer tv.1> o scoreless inn1np. Bnan • Plr.en ,._.... ftnt pace In NL l ast/I}. ._._.. .. ""' oa 0on _.. .... ,14. Dally Plot'• SPOnalN8 1-90CMM>-7171 _... ~ IC'MtUUl.U IW1eT' wbtn the Rams open the ICalOn Sunday in Otten Bay. At the very lees~ he'll p&ay in the Rams' nidttl clewen.c and return puntt. a Geed created by uvuriet 10 cot• oetbeck OuTyl Henley (hip) and rookie wide receiver Tony Lomack (lwnstrint). Heoley. cotDelt.ck J~ Oray <knee> and , ... liaebeCter ~ k.elm (bee) #tDI oe die laiwed raene tist. llookie ~t end" Jim Price (bamltrill) ia n~ to Joln than dlil Weck. c:realifll bar vec.n-• oa \M 47-man T.-r. beahhy football team." and Gica o. • ·...i.. Meyer y1elded Eddte Mum)'s The addition of Stewart and ut-both off' 1~ ~~~.;;;: 2 I st homer 1n the Cllhth and ton Jives the Rams tbe option of Tbe Ooderrs' birth tetbeck 10 Dave Smith worked the nanth for ltanJ"' Anthony Newman at safety . five rm: .-. . ..a-t ..:th '"'-.....:..__ has 22nd save. ..... V1-N--me or at -.. ~~ -· '-........... o.n:....1s 1o..·t a t ....... Nn hom"r an aer&acl '""' .. -..... ""'-uei'a in Atlanta. kC1J( ace-"""" 01 .. ..,... " 1 ck a Ion 1 a ide 8 ob b )' ~plleQe , _ • wa-6u. 11_ the first ll\D1at aod a srand l1am HulQMerY " ~ .._ "'·~ n ··-· an the KCOnd but n Mln't .. w,11 iftab &Mt cleasaon lattt '"' bdilld tbe Reda 1n tM Nat~I tht week." Robiuon said. .. w~·vc lallw Wat. ,...._ ... OOOGlltS/llJ always IUd .bahony hu tM athlelic abiliiy to play oomerblck.'" 4 with two q~1 and bclin to look at a clias~ quanetblcit.'' Patrick Larkin . ' • Speed essential · part of game What's the b1ggest problem facma the 24 m1lhon golfers m th<' United States" • If you said dogleg lefts. you're wrong The biggest problem 1s slow pla) Th<' Amcncan Socttt) of Golf Course Architects rcponed rcccntJ) thal a ncv. golf course W\ll have to be built<'' cry da) unnl the yt"ar 2000 to m~t the demand of the ~ la~st pentetpetory spon. Bccaus.c that's not hkcly to happ(n. slo'I!. pla) 1s threatening the game's o' erv.bclm1ng populant) .\ round of golf on a rcgulauon. I -hole course. should nC\Cr take more than 4' i hours. no matter \lo hat But current!). golfers art fi nd- ing thcmS<"h !'S 1n th<' midst of 5-511> hour marathon on local courses. There a~ a vaneh of reasons for the slov. pla) Tele .. is1on 1s one of lhe ma1or ones ~mateurs S« Curtis Strange stand o'er a pun for mmu\~. or hatching bis pants up and 'l!.1gahng around forever before hatung a dn' <'. bul he). these JUYS art pros There:· s a lot of money on the It ne here S«ondl~, I think people arc JUSt a httk <'mbarrasscd about lctt1"' a foursom<' pla) through Th~ s real· I) no reason to be and it's downfllbt couneous to do~ lnstcad of creat- ing a IO&Jam. 'II.a' 1ng a JTOUP throus}l can be quit<' efTccuve tn spttdans pla) up. The simple solution? C'ouncs should emplo) a marshall and pt.y- ers should hstcn up Marshalls <1n help d11Tet pla) and spot ttoublc- spols and am'e ~l solunons before th<' course looks hk<' the 405 F~ 'II.a) at 5.30 p m If a play<'r 1s confronted by a marshal!. don't s1mply blow htm off 1n lxtWttn S"\IS of your beer. He's lh<'rt for a reason and a hard ume aan mean loS$ of golfina pnvileaes at. that COUl"'SC' 0 l\ku Vmk Country Oub held its Junior Club C'hamp1onsh1ps on Tucsda> and Oms Beck took top honon by ups.cmna nvorite Paul Hmlde. I-up. ·• Some of you may remcm~ that nmiu~, as pan of the Estancia Hijlr team, was named the Sea Va(W la&uc Player of the Year in 1990. Also an arc ~uhs from the Labor Da) EclcctJc Tournament. loterat-. : an&Jy enO\l&h. both net and'"* div111on produml tics fOt t1'e top hon on. • In the net clivisu~nl Don T~ tcmore and Hank A1IW'I botb ahcJt 5' to lharc tbc trophy, 'tt'b1te tn tbe • the ITOfS dlvaSJon. David by. Tom· McGrtevy and Dave Tal\Kbuk .U \ho\ 63 0 . LATI llUU«I ,.._.>a* 1U ... nc lbw ..-. will • fUled "1 S.uo. ud Wee holdouts "'° .... Dl'tf lM Weeteid. u.et.!:11• ~ia Onne, ., Miclalll 5'""" ud dlfemift ... 0... Al tbe lame time., Robinson-U · pna14 di•ppointJMftt tblt q~r· tcrt.ck Mark Hcm'llHn was diimed olf-.i\WI by lnctianaPoli ,... .......... to """" Her· r-. .__.IM)' M¥e °"y two In eddatton 10 dcfi:nse. t'#O other thanp CIOftCttD Robtnton on the c"c or~~~. "TU.i~ ~ may not bt . •heft wt UM.lly aR on ofl't~tc. •• a, n. AuuMW rrw Meadowlart Golf Coune ii pr· · int up for tbt\r sm:10n Chun- pioftsbiop .tliicb be.an 5ept. 17 ... Nft \hf'O\alh 5etlil. "f I • So far, mOR d.D 60 lolfera .. W &::= -Jua Ewmt and • IP'I••• .. u ar•JUt I ' CIF's Thomas admits • his error, reinstates paper's credentials JUVBRSIOE -Stan Thoma~. Qtli. --- fornia Interscholastic federation ~ Southern Section commissioner, laid ~ Tuesday that he had rcvencd his decision ---- and will issue Clf credentials to The Riverside Prcss- Enterprise. "Apparently I hav"'1'9Ct" Thomas said. "I may have overreacted. 1 wa.S more Wrong than riaht. I can't win this one. Nor is it important that I do -it is the kids who arc important. "The bottom line is it's in the best interest of our students to be covered adequately by (The Press-- Enterprise) ... •· Thomas wd he would send the crcdentiaJs today alona with .a letter outlining the CIPs ''position as 1t relates to this issue." . J>rcss...Enterprise sports editor John Garrett said he was pleased with Thomas' decision. Thomas said Last week that he had issued orders to deny the newspaper credentials that w~uld allow reporters and photographers access to sporting events. The action followed a series of anicles in Th<' Press-Enterprise addressing incidents of raca~ slurs on high school playing fields in Southern Cahfom1a. primarily in football , and the CIF's response to then:i. Thomas objected to the newspaper's use of the Pubhc Rccori:fs Act in obtaining information from schools. Before reversing his dt'Cision. Thomas was con- tacted by the offices of Assemblym.an Steve Clute (0- Ravcrside); Tom Jacobson. president ~f the CIF Southern Section's Exe<-utive Committee; State Superintendent of Schools Bill Honig. and State CJF Commissioner Tom Byrnes. "Basacalh at's a Farsi Amendment nght that the press is going '10 cover the news. and football i.s news." Clute said •'J'm glad to S« the) chan~ thear course of action •re so we can get on with the football season Jacobson. pnnc1pal of Corona del Mar Hagh. sa1d Thomas had decided to issue the crt'denuals ~) the time he reached the comm1ss1oner to discuss the matter Tuesda). Jacobson said he had been p~pared to bnng the matter before the ext-cutivc committee Garrell had appealed to Jacobson to ovcmde Thomas· ban Dempsey's appeal denied Los Angeles catcher Rid Dcmpse~ ~ sat out the Dodgers· g.amc against Hous- ton Tuesda) after h1'i appeal of a one-• gamo sus pension anJ S 1.000 finr "as --==- denied by National League president 8111 Whate Dempsey was suspended and fined for an Aug 20 fight agnanst Ph1ladelph1a·.., Len ~kstra He appealed the suspension "'hen 1t "'as announced .<\ug 21 and Whate issued a two-sentence denial Tut"sda' Dcmp..e~ and Len D~ kstra of the Philadelphia Phalhes "'ere e)CCtl'd an the se''-nth annang of the Dodgers· ~-I 'ac-.OI' on .\ug 20 Th e anc1den1 ~gan "hen D~ kstra came to bat an the seventh annang and rnmpla1ned 10 home plate umpire Ron Barn e) about an earlier calkd stnkc Dcmpse) "'ho "'a' rah.hang at the ume. got 1mohcd an the argument and pum hcd D) <,ktra. causing ho th benches anJ bullpen\ to empt\ In other t'lct\C'h.111 ne"" Tucsda' • BaSt"ball "a' dra8lted into the federal couns again when a "'<'"' '\ llril. Yanil.ees exccut1\'e sued Fa\ Vincen t and an u«d thl· rnmm1ss10ner of tf) ing to run him and (1corgl· \t<•1nbrcnner out of the game Leonard L Kleinman C\Cl utl\ e 'ice president and chief operating cxe< Utl\c of the Yankees. made the allegallon in a S~2 m1ll1on la .... sutt against Vincent and John M l>o\.\d the comm1ss1oner's special counsel "ho d1rt"cted an anvest1gat1on of teanbren- ner's dealings "1th gambler Howard Spira. •The '.'ic" York Mets asked wa1,ers on catrhcr BalT) L)ons for the purpo~ of giving him hi'> uncond1tlllnal rc:ka<,c The Mets also calkd up tour pla~cr-. trom T 1de\.\atcr of the I ntt>mat1onal League Ne"' \or~ rnallcd pitchers Jeff lnnas and Jell MusSt'lman and ut1h t ~ pla)er Keh 1n Tone and pu rcha~d the <untrau of infielder-catcher Chns Jelle •The P1mhurgh Pi rate<, recalled pitchers Make York and Doug Bair Jnd purcha~d the contract of catchlr Dann B1lardello from their Class A.A.A. Ruffalo club TELEVIS ION, RA DIO BROSTERHOUS' TURN-ONS * U S Open tennis. USA, 8 a m 4 30 p m * Mets-Pirates. ES PN. 4 30 pm + HE BLEACHE RS ~·IT RlCJ.rr 1H£RE, FRAN~' ~·r ~MRr. OO~Of GOIN& CAFlN(, DRt~)(D U~t. lAAT !! ...,. ~ ~~:J Raiders recall veteran pair EL SEGUNDO -Twenty-four hours af\er the NFL's mandated roster ~ cutdown to 4 7. the Los Angeles Raiders ~ placed two players on inju~ reserve and ~Jed two veteran backups. Returnina to lhe R.aiden after clearing waivers Tuesday were backup quarterback Vince Evans and defensa-#e back Elvis Patterson. To make room for Evans and Patterson. lhe Ralders placed startinJ offensive tackJe Bruce Wilkerson and backup wtde receiver Mike Alexander on 1nJured reserve. Wilkerson and Alexander wtll miss a minimum of four games. Wilkerson suffered a partial tear of the medial collateral ligament in ha$ nght knee during the prescason and as current!) weanng a kn~ brace. l\lcxander. the Raiders' fourth wide receiver in 1989. is bothered by muscle pulls of the hamstnng aod buttocks. Evans. onginally a 1977 draf\ choice of the Chicago Bears. has been a backup quarterback for th e Raiders on occasion dunng each of the last three years. The Raiders were down to one quarterback on thear act a' e roster for 24 hours after the cutdown. Evans. 35. will back up starter Jay Schroeder. Ste' e Beuerlem signed a one-year contract Sunday but has a two-week roster exemption si nce he missed traanmg camp. Patterson. 29. S{>t"nt four years wJth the New York Giants. then Joined the San Diego Chargers an 1987 dunng the pla)ers' stnke. He left the Chargers after the 1989 season and JOtned the Raiders as a Plan B free agent. He will be a backup safety. NFL fines 49ers SSCX>,000 The San Francisco 49ers were fined ---- S500.000 Tuesda) for' 1olatang the NFL's ~ corporate ownership pohcy. but were ~ spared e"en harsher penalties that could ---- ha\C included the loss of draft choices. Commassaoner Paul Taghabue ruled that the · vaolauons occuITTd when 49ers owner Edward Dc- Bartolo Jr. made the four-tame Super BOwl champions a subs1d1a1) of the DcBanolo Corp .. in December 1986. wuhout not1f)1 ng ·Other owners and getting league perm1ss1oh In other sports news Tuesda): • W11l1am A. Blue was ~leased as comm1ss1oner of the LPGA b)' what the women's golf assoc1at1on 1s calling "mutual consent " "The move was made because we felt It was a point an tame where 11 was necessary." said Jud) Dtckanson. president of the LPGA Blue. 49. who sen-ed less than two yt>ars as comm1i.s1oner. could not be reached for rnmmcnt Under has leader\h1p, total purse mone) on the tour increased by about $2 mallton this year. when eight ne"' e"ents were added to the schedule • T ele\.ls1on conflict with another LPG'\ event forced the 1.-an1.~lla11on of ne~t yeaT's J .C Penney's Sk.ans Game. the event's sponsor said Earlier. the LPGA had asked pla)ers not to pan1c1pate 1n the tournament next Ma) because 11 con flicts with the Coming Classic The televised Skans Game had been Kheduled for Ma> 25 and 26. the same weekend as the Coming tournament • E ( "Ed" Schmidt II. the Houston Rockets· 'ice president for finance. was named president of the NBA team Rockets owner Charlie Thomas selected Schmidt on Saturda). but the announC'C ment was not made untal Tue~a> 'K:hm1dt succeeds Ray Patterson. who announced last week he was ret1nng to concen- trate on a J01n1 vcnturt' w11h Thomas to bnng a hockey team to Houston. •The Edmonton Oakrs have signed free-agent center Ken L1nscman to a two-year contract. Lmseman. 32, played with the Oilers for two seasons in the m1d-I 980s before beang traded to the Boston Bruins an a deal that brought Mike Krushelnysk1 to Edmonton Linseman played sax seasons for the Bruins before beina sent to the Philadelphia Flyers late an the 1989-90 NHL season. From rte Auoclatd Ptt-H LARKIN -,'°"' 11 p1ons at the Old Course at Miss1on Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage last week. He~·s the hole-m-one repon for the last week. •Ed Adams of fountain Valley aced the 209-yard No. 14 with a S- wood at at David L Balcer Golf Course. On hand were wi1ncsacs Jeff Wcrmuth and Marie Javier. Aaned up to compete in the event, which Course Manager Jack Henry .. uyt it quite respectable for the first year of cxistancc. Co'11'K maintenance is complete and Meadowlark should be in arcat • ah.ape by the time the tournament ~ ·roa11 around. The course will also .. bole the Hu.ntinaton Harbour cancet U..uc Tournament on Sept lJ atMlL Dana shot 7S-80 over two days to win the division by three shots. To qualify for the tournament, playen had to place first, second or third in any Desert Junior Golf Association event. Also placina weU was Mu Wallick ofNewpon ~.aeh. who took third in lhc boys I I-and-under di vision. a Hcfc's some other upcom1na tour· nament1 around the Onnae Coast Area. SeaC1ifTwiU host its PTo/Am tour- nament bqJnnina today. Loc:aJ club pros will tam up-with thiu SeaC11fT members for competition. NcfipOf't Beach GolfCoune will bold itt Presideftft Cup tournament belinnint_ S.tunSay~ w1ailc Senta Ana COuntry Club will llold ill 5tnion Oaamoioolbap Oct. 20 Md die. Mi.Aed,Memt..IO..-Chain· pkmlllip on Ott. 7. 0 •Phillip Shiu ofWoodJand Hills holed 1he 164-yard No. I S usina a 6- iron at Bia C.nyon . •Jc~ Clin,.n traveled nearly 2,000 miles to ace the 100.yard No 12 at Costa Mcu with a pitch1n1 wcd&c. 0 1npn is a retident of Ub- cral, Kan. On hand were Wltoeues Bob Clinpn1 R.andy Clinpn and Keith Crelehu.a. •Richard McDonaJd of Hunt· in&lon Beach aced the 119--yard No. JJ at Dad Miller OolfCount. Look· ina on were witftCSICS Jerry Actchall and Snyder Lanpton. •And finaJly, Akinori Nabilwt o( Irvine ICed lbe 160-yatd No. I J uaina a 4-'roa 1t Rucho San Joa· quin. Wiuae. wu Keio Maeda. ,.. ... ~ ... 0..-.Clwl ..,,. """'...... fut lllillle ... . ..... ~ ..... ...,.. . . Oms coqnpy P"'.W.W.S Sunset girls: Race will be . f~r third spot 11y PATWtCK LMtCJN .,.. .... c. ........ It'• a two-team race for the Sunset League &iris crosa country title involvina Edison aod Ocean \T'aew and aft.a those two. it'• anyone·s sue" for the third playoff lpOl Two of the bet1et_pree._ runncn in the state square off once lllin at Sbeuey Taylor returns for ber thint year as a vanity numer for the ChllJCn and ber heir appuent, Ouiscie Eaec11t1 begins her sophomore year for the Seahawb. · Both 1e1.m1 coWd be among Orange County's best by the end of the aeuoo and either one ca n ill-afford a lou in leaaue competition. Here's a team-by-team look at the Sunset Lca&uc: • !'4li11& Maybe this will be the year that ShclJey Taylor wiU win a state championship and maybe this will be the year that Edison finishes second in the Sunset Lequc. Sure, the Chargen arc talented, but they're not tough-tested. Their entire season will boil down to Sept. 13 when they face Ocean View an which should be the Sunset decider. But Edison is more than just Taylor. There's also senior Tara Bradbury and Jana Evans and Katje Formosa, a couple of sophomores who look promising. Add to them Junior Brandi Simons, and freshman Carrie Quinn and the Chargers ha ve enough to repeat as Sunset champs. But if any falter, second place is still a Ioele. "I think we have lhe depth. but we need some more quality," Coach Stan Stauble said. "I think we can win at apjn if we live up to our potentiaJ. Either way, it's aoana to be an interesting season .•. • Foutal.D ValJey. The Barons are an the middle of a rebuilding i)rogram and that's not the best position to be in m the Sunset League. "Mar,be two years down the hne we'll have a good program,' Coach Dan Moran said. "lfwe gel some girls back we might be stronger. but at best we'll still be youn1 and 1nexpenenced." The Barons do return their top runner from a year ago an sophomore Chnsta Wemmer along with let- terman Katie Avala. who's a junior. Moran will also count heavily on sophomore Kim Foster who d1dn·t run cross counl1)' last year. but opted for track in tcad. "It would be nacc af I could get all m) girls back," Moran said . "Then maybe we could vie with Hunt - ington for th ird. As far as the rest of the leaeue eoes. Ocean Vit>w and Ed ison should finish 1-2 an e11hcr order. They're the cla~ of the league.·· • Haatlll1toa Beacb: Ma ybe in another )ear. the Oilers could be the top team an the league. but this season. they'll hkely ha ve to settle for third and a pla yoff berth. First-year coach Enc Anderson does ha' e a deep program that's centered around three seniors an Ronda Mack. Ju he Jackie and Genya Day. Two Juniors. Ccc1 ha Moreno and Maho Murai, should crack the staning hneup as well leaving Anderson to pick from sophomore Beck> Cros} and f~shman Holl) Manan for the Nos 6 and 7 spots. "We've got a great group of girls ve1) "•lhng to "ork." Anderson said. "The girls all look promising and next yea r should be espc'Caall) sv.~t. Whiche ver team works the hardest an this league wJll wan 11 " •Marina: Bob Ewing anhents the program from Dack Degan and at appear' that he'll ha\t' an uphill Climb in the Sunset. "It's going to be a good learning year for the girls as well as me." Ewing said ... I think Ocean View and fahson rank higher than anyone else an the league so there shou ld be a good battJe for third .. The team features no returning seniors. but a coupk of runners are beginning to establish themselvc!> as top competitors in the program. The one wath the most potential. according to Ewang. is 1un1or Alem Tscgaye. AJso making moves arc 0..., NM,..._ "r .,.._. ..._ Shelley T•ylor r etur ns for her third year on the adl1on v•rstty cro11 country team. junior Julie Dalton. sophomore Cheryl Kubota and freshman Sarah E"ang. • •Ocean VI~•: ff po tential scored points. the Scahawks could chalk up the league title "tthout every runntng a stnde. But. unfonunatel~. Ocran View as goang to have to pro' e itself on the course Any team with Engesser has poten11al. but add five other returning letterQlen and five promising freshmen and the Scaha .... ks are going to be vef! tough indeed to beat. "I think we have more depth than Edison and that's ~01ng 10 be the ke) for us:· Coach Beth Chilcott said. · II doesn't come down to first and second-place finishers 1n cro~\ country. 11 comes do"'n to 11 and 12 ·· As far as Enges\Cr is concerned. you couldn't ask for a better freshman campaign when she finished second in league behind Taylor. and set a course record for freshman at the Dana Hills lnv1tat1onal. ··1 thanl. helle" fTa,lor) still has lhe edge O\er Chnstae. but 1t '\ going 10· be 1nte~stang to find out," Chilcott said The~other returners are ~n1or Julie Teague. Juni or!> Lana Atchley and Ca~) Gordon and sophomore'> Mehssa Johnson and M 1chelle Ta. I. Oceu. View (9--S) -could be O.C.~s best 2. Edilon ().2) -Taylor says il aJJ 3. Hu.ntinatoa Beach (8-1) -not in same cu •· Mariaa (12·1) -uaduation woes S. Fountain Vafley ff$-I) -rebuHdlna min 6. Westmin1ter (2().}) -plays spoiler at Desi 7. Seftca Ana (S()..l) -a feat to win a meet Behind Saddleback, a tough race for secorid in Sea View ly PA TRICK LARKIN Olllly ,_ c.,.,..,,..,,. In the past. the Sea View Leaaue has been one of the most competitive boys cross country leagues around. Especaall)' when you think about the rivalry between Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor. But the tide has turned and it's Saddleback that will clearly emerge as No. I in 1990 and there's not much that any other team will be able to do about it. "Our goal as a tea m thas year is to make Saddlcback work for at," Corona dcl Mar Coach Bill Sumner said. "h's a five-wa y race for second place." Indeed. 1t appears to be that wa y as Saddleback as the overwhelming choice 10 repeat as league champions accord• na to a consensus of coaches. In fact. the Roadrunne rs may prove to be one of the top programs 1n the state. As for the rest of the league. the weak sister - Estancia -1s aone and Woodbridae -one of the better proarams around 1s.1n. That could mean fourth place for either CdM or Newport Harbor. Tustin. as always. should remain a factor as well and University 1s comana 01\. He~·s a team-by-team look at the Sea View Leque: • c. .... H I Mar. CdM once the (Sea) Kinp of the Sea View Leque cross country teams. ts •~na to reaJize 1t miaht only be second best in a teaaue where its enrollment 11 800 students under the averqe. "I don't think wt can compete with schools those saze anymore,·· Coach Bill Sumner said. "This year it's a<>t to be 99-1 an favor of SaddJeback." But, don't nan cryina for the Sea Kmp j ust yet. Every year Sumner is able to come up with a squad that can compete. This season, Corona will be led by the 1-2 punch of .enlon Mike Marumoto and Jack Hopn, bul after the peir. C4M ptt thin quick. A quanet 11 in line to add depth and lncludca junion Aaron Mclendon and Mike Bradford. senior Keith Mur11 end sophomore ~ Clrmiehael. As to which one wlll emcrae in the (~front, Sumner s.a1d It's too carty to teU. "I can't even ~n to put these 1u~1 in any order." Sumner said. "ThcY re IO close I cant even seperate them. The only lhina we have now i1 • peck and we don't have an ace in the hole." • Ne•f9i I lluMr. The S&ilon' hopes of improv-i"I on thetr third plece ftnilb wt year have been bolaiered by the a.ct that Newport returns &ia of itt top eiahl Nnnen rrom a year llD· The lfOUP lncludle tmion Odr Whitt, JalOn Pyle and Jama Call, junior Steve Newman and sophomoret MIM Deiken ud.Oylan o.,._moa. · ''llilht now, noM of the•• stand out," Tar C.O.Ch Eric Twdt IAld ... But all Ii.I have a chance to be No. I. 1\ere'• aot a peat f'ront nmner. but they all nan well .. I-=~ dilat tdi: tllln laM I ..ailtic cblncll o( ftnilM• wet i• ...... bllai9d SlddJeba. .. llit COMI did dm enwlf ...... U¥e I lbot It &be playofrl. "Ob"aousl y we'd lake to go to CIF and finish a~ high as we can an league." Twe11 said • Saddleb1ek: Last 5eason, the Roadrunncn won the Sea View, finished S«ond in CIF and qualified for the state champ1onsh1p Thas )ear Coach Mel S1ha thinks has team wall even be better Back for Silva are four of h1s top fi,c runners from last year including No. I. 5en1or Eddie Sahnas. No 3. Junior Joe Heredia. No. 4, senior Alben Ochoa and No. 5, senior Ehas Gill. Salva also figures on a quartet of juniors an Rudy Hernandez. i\lbert i\cevezes. Mano Vela and Johnn) Ochoa to provide depth an the title run. "The talent 1s there. the kids arc there. weJUSt have to mainuun some cons1stenC) ... Silva said. "This could bt the best-ever cross count1) team at Saddleback. ·· • Ualvenlly: The Trojans a~ young. but talented, according to Coach Janice Rolfi. but in the ~a View Leque, that may not be good enough for a C'lF berth. Uo1vers1t y wall « led this year bx sophomore Nathan Elston. who Ro)fi says has the ab1hty to be one of the best an the leaaue She'll also count heavily on Juniors David Chaa and Elmer Jayme , a transfer from Lemoore H1ah. as well as sophomo~ Neil Packett. 'Tm very e~cated about thas team. despite our youth," Rolfi said ··t 1h1nk we ha ve the potenual to ha ve a lot of talent and r !tall thank second place as within our reach ... For University to contend, 1t needs two or three n1nncn to emcrae from the pack to fill the S-6-7 holes. if that doesn't happen, the Trojans could end up near the bottom of the pack. • WeMbrt•1e: Last season in the Pacific Coast Leque. the Wamors placed sctond and went on to take 1i1th in CIF, but with 1he top thrce runners araduated. Coach GeoflC Varvas finds hlmtelf in an unfamiliar position. "Tbit is probably the most unsu~ I've ever been about a team," Varvas said ... Some of Our 1uy1 have had a ao<>d summer. but some o\Mrs haven't been runnjnt too much and that concerns rM." What Will help 11 that four starten return from last season's squad. The poup will be led~ a trio of acnion in Dan K.roter. Mau Taylor. Shadley Brooke and j unior David Blum. Also f1&unna into the plans thouJd be 1enior Alu Nobel and sophomore Reed Hayn. "Rt&ht now, everythlf\I is still up in the air," Varvu said. "We're h<>t>ina we don't bttsk our streak of &0iQ1 to t.be ~yoffh. Tb.ii &am needs 'o continwt.IJy make propa.a af 1t bopca to conlCAd and we need aome l\IYI to Step forward and lakt the hutiative." - O.*W COMT DM.Y Pa.OT Wedi ............. ,.. - Clean,ng up environment everyone's job SURFING Aftlr ooedauaDy bdQI remisaded of our WOl'ld":C::Zneratiaa n-vir'oGmenaal ·uon, I wu com- pelled IO ftully wrl&e all 11\icle =.:C,.ow commullity on this I bu.a 101De lotcmtioa facts ~' •viroamenw and ecolotic.at lllUll iD_~ ~&er cditJon of the OEEC (~vet £nvirollmentaJ A Ecolon Committee) Truh Canel, • q•apub&auon provided to ab . ver em ~ deal&ned for inidatioD of':anou1 projects 10 help protect and preserve our environmeat AltbouP I wu alWiyt aware of tnvironmeaaal iuues. I never used to aive tbete thanp too much tbc>uahL For iawanoeJ. l'd ltill bury 11\Y ttuh in the wad uawina some- one would come around to &)kit It up, and if I •w anvone doint IOMC- thina.lf cstan't like 1ucb u Utierin, or wutilla-water), would just to abo1o1t my own businea and not really worry about it It really came to a head wben I noticed bow filthy lhe water in Hu.ntjnatoll and Newpon bat been lately. At any rate, enouah is cnouah, and I can't help but wonder if it's ever aoina to act better. Here are a few simple tips and ideal that can help you make the difference at your home and on your bomebeach. lt't afe to 11y that we all mow bow imponant water is for liviq. ud it's no ICC1'et that we ba ve a wa&er abona,e in California.. Tbe IVCfllC American UJet l~plus aaJ· Iona ofwacer a day and probably about J..-4 cups of that amount is actually oonsumed. If everyone con- .erved just a Utlle bit more in this area. it would help out a lot. Try fillina up your sink with water before brushina your teeth or sbav- iq. and save about JS-SO pllons of water a day. Fix leaky fauceu and toi1et1 immediately, and conserve 10-15 pllont of water a day that wouJdhavebetnwastcd. Atl•nta•1 Jeff 8l•u1er end INlli h••d towerd ttilrd •• Clnclnnetr 1 Chris S.bo •••Its. ... .• Pirates rally to beat Phillies to regain top spot in NL East Bobby Bonilla broke lhe game------.. open with a thn»run homer and drove 1n five runs and Carmelo Manancz vicumtzed his former team Wlth a pme-tying two-run shot as the Pittsbuf'lh Pirates rallied from an early fi ve-run deficit and beat the Phtladclpbta Phalhcs. 11 -7. T uesda) 01abt at Three Rivers Stadium. ------- Barry Bonds also drove 1n two runs as the Pirates scored four tames an both lhe fifth and stitth innings to rally from S--0 and 7-3 defictts and win their third in a row. They also moved back into first place 1n the National Laaue East. onc-haJf pmc ahead of the New York Mets, who lost to St. Louis 1..0. · With the Phillies leading 7-3 in lhe fifth. Jeff King sin&lcd and Andy Van Slyke drew a one-out walk ahead of &nilla's RBI sin&Jc. After Don Carman replaced starter Pat Combs1 Bonds htt a sacrifice fly. Maninez. traded by the Phillies last week for thrtt minor leaguers. followed Wllh has ninth home run and fi rst as a Ptrate to make it 7-7. ~I A.kerfelds (S-2) repla ... 'ed Carman in lhe m th and immediately got an a Jim when p1nc h·h1tter Wall) Bac\man doubled. IGng grounded ouT and} a) "&11 was hit by a patch. Backman scored the go-ahc.ad when $hon stop D1clue Thon couldn't hold first baseman John Kruk's throw on Van Slyke's apparent double-pla) grounder Bonilla followed with has 31st homer. the most b) a Pirate since Jason Thompson hat 31 in 1982 Ball Landrum (S-3) worked two scoreless relief 1nn1ngs for the victory before Bob Patterson ca med has founh sa' e with three scorclC'SS anninp. J>tuladelpbaa's Dale Murphy and Damn Daulton homered off Paottsburah staner Bob Walk • Carilaalt 1, Meta t: At Busch Stadium. Joe Mqrane1 with help from two relievers. beat New York for the tnird time in less than si.x weeks as St Louis ended lhe Mets' scven-pme winning streak. Mqrane, Omar Olivares and Lee Smtth combined on a live-hitter and Terry Pendleton's hat-and-run double an the founh 1nnini. only his S«ond RBI since -\ug. 8. scored Ozzie Smith from first with the onty run. Std Fernandez (9-11) held St Louis to thrtt hats in SCH'n 1nn1ngs but two of them came in the founh Smith s1n1.kd wtth one out for the Cardjnals" first hit. He was oft and runnmg and scored standing up when Pendleton np~ a grounder 1ns1de third base down the left-field ltne •Brant 7, Reds t : In Atlanta. home runs b) Ron Gant and Da\e Justice on consecutive pitches in tM fo unh inning brouJhl Atlanta from behind and Justice added another solo homer in the e1fhth. Tom Glav1ne (7-11) scattered s1x hits over e1Jht innings 1n snapping a fi ve.,Pme losing streak dating back 10 Jul) 17 and extending Atlanta's winning streak 10 fi ve. The Braves trailed 4-2 when Lonnie Smith s1n&Jed wtth one out 1n the founh and Gant followed wttn his 26th ho me run. Justice hat his 21st on the next pitch, chasing Reds starter Danny Jackson (S-3). Justice aJso homered off Randy Myers in the eighth. •Gluts •. Padttt 4: In San Diego, pinch-hatter Bill Bathe hit a ue-brcak.Jng two-run homer off former teammate Atlee Hammaker 1n lhe seventh inning. ltfttn& San Francisco to t~ win. . _ _ llammaker. 4-7 overall and 0-2 or the Padres. was mak.Jng his fi rst appcaranet against the Giants sinet they released him o n Aug. 11 He started the seventh tn relief of And) Benes and ga ve up a lcadofT tnpk to rookc Make BcnJamin before Bathe h11 his third home run of the season • c.M J, EJrpos 1: Ryne Sandberg hit his 3:!nd homer, a lie-breaking two-run shot in lhe n1nlh inning for Chicago at Montreal Maninez ( 10-10) had a one- h1ttcr until Dw1a,h t Smtth"s sixth home run in the eighth IOntr\I lied the SC'Ort Gary Varsho. hitting for Cubs starter Mike B1elcckJ. opened the ninth w11h a chccked-sw10g stn&k tn front of the mound that Man1nez threw past first ror an error. Varsho look S«ond on the play. Doug Dasccnzo sacnficed and Sandberg homered. From ~ A11oct.IH Prn1 NL accepts bids for expansion teams 9y IONALD 8LUM 1977. ,., ....,. w..... Several of the c1t1es held ntws NEW YORK _At least 10 cities conferences to announce 1he1r submitted bids for the National proposals and some hired publtc Laaue's two new exP90sion teams relations firms to lobby on thc1r before Tuesday's deadline. bthalf. Buffalo's bid was dthvercd Eiahteen aroups said they p ve the to the National League's Park AV· NL plans alo"• with s I 00.000 appli-enue offices by its team mascot. ... Buster T. Bason. cation fees, includina three aroups "To a k.Jd from Brooklyn. to say each from Miami and St. Petenbura. be is a pan owner of a baJct:.11 team Fla. Denver, Pboeni1 and Washanau>n would be one kick an the head." said submitted two badl each. Also talk show host Larry k.ing. one of handj"• in proposals were Buffalo, the proposed part ownen of a Buf· ... C falo team. N. Y.; Charlotte:... N. .; Nashville, Vancouver, Bnltsh Columbia, Tenn.; Orlando, r-11 .• and Sacramen-w~icb has a domed stadium, did not to. submit a bid. accordina to Canadian NL JPOkeswoman Katy Feeney Senator Ray Perreault. He said fund- Mid the leque would not confirm int for 1 aroup couJd not be com· which bid• had been 1ubmitled untjl pleted. New Orleans aJso did not later in the week, ao it it possible aubmit a plan, Will Penneauy of the other FOUPI made bids ~hout Superdomc 11id. makina.their intentions public. Several prominent proplc, 1 few Tho new du"' whidl COit S95 fonncr m_,or lcquCT'S and aome million eech,_ will not tqin play m~or co~rations ~ amona until 1991. 1 ne NL will aekict a those idnufled u m_,ority or mtn· abon list of ftnall1t dries by Dec. 31 otity owners of aome aroups.. ad will pick t.be two 11eW dubt by Ken Hamlaon b.xd one l Sept. JO. 1991. It will be tbe flnt . Pttm~ poup and said that for· QllUliotl by dM NL liDCe 1969 ud mer Dodlet'I patc1'er Don Drytda)t IM&. la tbe .__ lllluet aince woWd benisttnaa& maftlltt. Mike DODGERS . • Schm1d1 ~as 1n one of M1am1·5 &roups and Ernie Banks and Doug DcCinccs "'ere part of one Denver bid. Boxer Sugar Ray Leonard. Dcmo- cnuc Nattonal Committee chau- man Ronald H. Brown and actma Republican Nattonal Committee chatrman Charles R. Black wcrc amona Lhe pan owners of a Wash- 1n1ton group headed by dc"elopcr John Akndgc. A nval Wash1n1ton JTOup. headed by developer and lawyer Mark Tn.a.. includes fonner tennis star Arthur Ashe. The Nashvllk aroup has former Teoneuce governor Lamar Alcunc:kr and IUchard Ster- ban of the Oak Radie Boys as pan ownen. The most unusual plan wu sub- mitted by Malcolm l. Olaur presi- dent and chief exccuuve oMm of Fim Allied Corporation. His Pf"OOO&l.I calls for bu dub to play at lcait 19 pmes in each of four cities. l)icttd from a.mona Buffalo, Dtnver. Miami, L Pttombura and Wuhlna-toa. The b\d uswnes ooe of t.boac cilia wtll aict a ttam of it1 own IJld QOC be pen of has plan. Jncrc:ucd awareness by jtJelf on water mattera sud! u not lcttina the abowcr nan lo,.er than YoU need it, or lettiaa your h0tc run all day while ..abina your car or wat.erina the lawn wouJd 11ve literally tons of water. Lately when I ao to the beach J'U apcod S-10 minuies out of my 24- bour day to make wbct"e I live a bet1er placle, by pjck.ina up trub. Jf we don't keep our own beaches clean, surely nobody else will. The 111M aon for trash. l f you catch aomeone latterana on your bclcb let them know that 1t im't appreciattd. Cb.aoca att they didn't even mean to, and wbateVer their initial reection ii they will pick their trub up ud think twice before doifta it next time. Wbco •· catQtrophc like the oil spill happens, write to everyone you can and voice your opinions. Those corporations don't want to lose money and one oftbc best ways to diJcou.ra,se that type of ncalitence ever apio from bapperuna is to let them know th.at that perticuLar com- pany's producu will be boycotted. U oyd Tice doesn't take much dl'ort at all to make a contnbuti~n to your en- vironment aod community. Any type of parucipation oo yoµr pen helps, and you don't have to know . all lhe facts (I know I don't) to make a contnbution. Mott of all. if you see somethana bappenina that i.sn't riabt, stand up for yourself and the mt of your community and let them know you don't appreciate what they're doing.. What I'm eettina at as that u U.yl lb & .. an. C.Ut n.Jly PU.tcenw1H'•' ...._ urtuw celuu ,,,,_.,. eY~'7 w~,. tewart, .A's get better -. of Clerriens in 6-2 victory 0 P"tratft "· ~ 7 -..o...-. ~ ..... . .... w 8'aWI 11 Redl 4 ~•n ATUUfTA ...... 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A~ ............. s.s•-· 10 Ht• E-ltav A-. Ol. "'°'"' Car-S••1t lllW ...,, --KIOMCll II l .. "'-Ila-._ ...-v im.lfl OE ,.,,._ ,..,._ ...,..._, ,, (lftC-11 -,,_ ll k YIOt (llWI .............. -tdooecl) I) ,..,, .. , (!fr """<¥ S.WW, LI Mc.ft•"" S•1t9 O•.. Of'll~v.., c.ntfecta ,..... ,,,, \lft4J K.IOMICt II Htwe>r...... •-r...--OE w~~ v .. t'"""'4l ftlw YMts '"'"'" "" d<"10- I\ Ho..t>IOll ...,..,.. ut,_, LI . HOU1 '°"' o•~· """ ·~ ~·c•oucu i. ·~·IO J-Wlliem1. 09. Fr- $t1lt j 19'fnn \lt'ld''(:tOMCU II o .... , Emmill Smith, lta FtorlOI tlov ''"'' ·-llCI M -·ti ml•ioft ,19n.,... ~,, ti Gt_, ••• ,.,... h<ww11. LI , ,,;. u in H 'h"" YMor1 ,.,.,,.. "" O•"IO~l • It Gr"" e.. Oar•M T-ltl "I> _..,to ,,,,, .. .....,., 11 llS ,_, '° A ..... t. \tiff., __ , ltl w .... DEEP SEA DAVIY'S Loatl• (..._-I -6 -"· 151 ~ It llerrl<lldf 10 ......... t .-Wl<tl. J r«' H"' )1 C.lo<O ...... 111 ._ .... IU ""K'l'll I - -· I -....,,. I mat.o "'-'" 1 llV-.,_.,.,, S .._tooe<' l --IO K ..... NaWl'QltT lANOHfG -S -It t01 ._, ffl Ml\CI lleu, IJ Derre<""" ,, ....,,IO, l -·••A. ltl ,,_..,., 17 roe• fllA .. ~.1-.UC.llcolleu , __ ('I\ VOLLEYBALL "'1''" \•ott l~ff _. l.J Ill ,,_ ti -----------,.. _, __ l 11 ...,,._.,. Erk Gr_., TE LIMr•v n ...,_ ..., s.Ntn oe o- ~I •Ot.i' _ __,,, f"°"11G S2 )4 ~ 1'00 000 ·--.1 'OOTSALL ........ ,_..._ • AMS-<lelmecl N\kto.ey """"' --llKl ol! w•IVW> ~ 0.rrvt -v -w rv Gr•• ~~• ...., I.Mt¥ ,.;...,, ~. 00\ lftlurecl , ...... LOS ANGfLIES ltAIOElt~ -· All••-...... rac:.1--""° -...-..._... leo.!9, "" .......... ,....,,. ·---.,,,~ 1E ...... - tl'OeCtl -! ...... Peller ...... '°'-.,.om ... ""' ATL.'HTA FALCOH~-·-i. TllOtfttoft -llCtl -oll welver1 ••· ~ Slecey ••llrt ...... rao!Vtr '""" 5-wU.I ,,.,., -· .no E_.t ~ ...... ,,..., •a•vor• l'l9CICI ._.. ... """ olleMJ•e IKlllo 0-N T-t •lclo rac~•e< Tim C.0.-... ,... eNI .W.o PY-r~ ~ °" l"lullCI ,.Mt,,. CHICAGO IEAll$-Placld Oo•t• --"" a"" G..... K•llO•UI •IOI r-e<9'"'9f °" "'"""eo 'M¥H llttiit.-0 1 °"' We.odM •"'d Ou•n1"' $m4tfll •tdie ft( .. ..,.,, "°'" ••. .,..., C•HC•H"'"n IENGALrPlec.ld ••wt• ·-· '"" It.. k••-· -...... ~ • ._. l•"" Jef"W"lft •• ,...,,..,. Ot1!<oo.r1C1r ..... llo-E'1<C .... ~· .... ·-~-!(-""""" -,..._ u.c._ ............. ~ -.,..~ ............. --. ... ....,. ----.... ....... ...... ...,_, eM "' MlfW eM _,,,__~ ... ~IN MY l'AClll ......... 0.. ....... 1 WWWlwMC'll,le a-= .:::.c=.o.="=i,:: -· .... ,_._, "9\jl ,~. Nlll'llll9 .... ....,.. ...... -W; .,_.. Y-. _..,, tlleWll iNltil. ~ eNI O<w CWll. .......,, ...., .,_. ~-MM""-· .-ry, ....... ·~ ............... ,..._, llW\ ..... ~-.-tn.a ..... ~. "' ......,... --Gaw .,...,._ ............ ~ ... ..,.fll ... ..OU.TON ~·............. l'atno. ...... ~ ltAMAS ClTY CH«,.,... __ .... --~ ..... ,,._~ 1111 ......... """'"' ............ MaY'& ..... -,, .............. ,...,_,_.w.. laelllt, -T-l!l'lla, --· "' ......,.._ MIAMI OOl. .... IN~ .. y ,_, --. It • ----.a Cle ..... ( ....... ~.~-.... .._..._ MINNlllOTA lfll(I~ Ctlt (Wier, whllt ,..._, .,.. ~ le· ........ -..1c11 ....... ~ ·---,.. .. °"'· Nlllllle Mell, ttWll ..-. ... w IHOLANO l'ATlllO~ ._ , .. , ............. --· ....-, ... Clllil, -· ~ "'-· -,... ~V-...~~L-~ ....... ..w;---· .......... 19Ctt. ..... ....,., -... c-I'll ~ INMC!l•. UIO o.w-. """ -. -O.Yltl Oewlllb. -leOJt • ..._ ~ ~ --.. ...... ~....._.o... C-. ~. -SI"', ......... .,._,.. _. .... ~ HIW YOltlt GIANn-........ 0.WI !Net-. ..-.v "'9cad Moll s-. ~e':.,v;.~~-..... 0...11 .._.,, .... ··-"-'Mr, ---•ecelled C!Vlt OretMI, ..... , ..,., .-Gelv"' ...., 0... ,,.,,,,ay, ~ .... -,.,_,..,, Ml:Nt41. ~ 11eCt< '""" w.._a. Cllolmed ~' .leMtoll, """9cllw, -Doi.a -· ,..... -· oll wel~ l"lececl DMt OenlM, - raol-. l'elrtOI 1..,, ,.......,,. -· Ale• Got-. ~-. 5coll -· .......,,... tK'll -Dwe-_,.,.......,.. _., ........... ,_ HEW Oltt.LANS SA .... ~ ,_ -.clll • ._., -· .. .......... ,_,.._...,, __ ,_ .. . ... •-'-· ~NIX CA•DtN~ - Jee&--._.._, -o.wt ""'"" ....,._ ... __ ,.._.~ ...... ...,_ -0.•,. C-ev, .......,,... _ ... ,.,..,, ... ,_...._ SAN D4EGO (HA•GE•~ .- Pot,._., --1.011, -Jo1w1 l'r111J, _r,_ .... lftlUt'ecl ,_ .. •ecellecl G•etct ·--· -.I• -· from waiver• Clalmocl A•"'911¥ &Nlleft, -""™v• Mctl, off •el-• SEATTLE UAHAWlll-Wel .. d ............... .....,..,, , ................ - (IV~ Mel-., nftllne -·· ._.., .,. t-. llJO, ---· ,....... ltlm· ,,,.. .._..., T-Getde lll9CI llletl· ., •-t T-"""'-· T...V Olleo • ..., -..... wide ·~. -.-o ,,,_.. ......,.... -"**' °""" ""'-~-IU lton -· -.,..,, .... ~ -· .,........,..,_ ltec...,,.. a ,.,., .. -.., Corte• ·-· _ .. _._ COU .. GI Majkowski' s holdout ends 9Y DAW GOl.DeDG ,.,......, .... Don ~kowski. the ~ik Man ~bo qu.anm.cbd Orceo Bay rrom 4-ll to 1().6 lul tealOll with his lut·mioute bcroic:s, ended a lix·week holdout Tuaday and reponcd to the Packen. ~kowski ended hie holdout on a busy day for NFL team• u they continued to ~ust their rosters for Sunday's ICl.IOn open- ers. Dave Duerson, the fonner All-Pro saf'ety cut last week by ancaao. found a new home with t.bc New York Oiants. and Fieeman McNeil returned to the Jett . Emmin Smith, meanwhile, finally aianed with Dallaa, teav~ only one fint·round cboioc, tiaht end Eric Otecn of the Steelm. unai,Ded. And Pro Bowl nose tackle Jerrt Ball, who had been teek.ina to reneaotiat.e his contrect, finally reponcd to the Lions. M~kowslci1 a 10th-round draft cboioc wbo emeracd last year to direct the Packers to four last-minute victories, had been demandina $2.8 million a year. That salary would put him in a class with the leque's top quarterbacb. He later lowered that to SI . 7 million with ioocntives that would brina it over $2 million. No lerms were disclosed, but the Packers and M~kowsk.i's qenu said an qrcemenl will be sianed today. Second-year man Anthony Dilwq bas been tcheduJed to start in Sunday's opener apinst the Rams. The 29.year-old Duerson, a fixture with the outstanding Bears teams of the mid-'80s, signed with the Giants as a replacement for strong safety Adrian White lost for the season with a knee injury. ~ 31-year-old McNeil. nsked on waivers by the Jets Monday, was reclaimed 1n a move typical of the day -many teams claimed back players they bad waived after conformina with the often-confusing in- jt.y'Cd-rescrve rules, an 111 in itself. "Experience in the lcaaue bas taught most people who deal in personnel that there are very few players claimed at the final cut because people have a difficult time cutting d own themselves," Jets' general manag~r Dick Steinbera said m cxplaininJ why he bad waived McNeil, the team's aJl-tJmc leading ground-gainer and a possible starter agamst CIDci nnau Sunday. "It was a caJculated nsk but we figured tbc odds were well in our favor." Duerson, a Pro Bowl safcty from 1985-88. had been negotiating with San Francisco and Kansas Cit) when the Giants called. ll 11...,. .............. C Wa-tofl • "' .... ,., ,.,...,_. Uftdlte:llOwcu \SI/I 0-,.,,._ S..u ~• :.0.,1...,. SOCCER CLIEY£LA,H0 lllOWH~i.,,,_ LOO Lew' •tde rKe ~ C)ff ••• .,.,, 49f"N<I fO ,.,"'' 'llfttf't F•1h WtrlJIU Ol"ftw'l\llft tt.<• Pt«-eo Man H•roef tornef"~ tom Gtb\Of' o.t~""• '~"" ~ L•••« T...,.,,.n •'dlt t tc.•1""9' eri l"fM..l'.O ''"'9fve lltOC:llPOIH STAT£--Ml" ~ hl•lfaftf "'Olt•tt Ccoed't •ftO •• etN tO Ot.eftWY ell-llte.ft• M<C.,. tOIC'tl "It dtdn't take much of a selhng JOb." said Duerson, who was con' 1n~ ID part by another ne"' Giant. former Cowboy E'crson Walls. "This 1s JUSI the right situation for me. It's a great organization and I hke the style of defense they play. It 's the style the Bears had in their glory days ... c.-.or~• • •• """ .., i r9' ..... ,. 1• Ntw 'terti: C-1tiant,. •oortev HAlftOtOf\ 1111 G-t·• ''°"' ~. 11 >S mlll""11 • CN<-eeo "Mir. c., ... ,. 0 9 \ow.•"-'~ C•~"°'f'Ue tfh·t ..... ,, ll S ••1•11 Hon i t ) c ..... men "''"°" ,..,...,. """"' n ~n FrMCI-O.••• Caner. ltl '"""'" Stele llOu!' ... ,. tl 1 mNl""11 AREA SCHEDULE DALLA\ (0Wl()V)-~-Emm•tl Smith ruM"'9 DI<• Pll<ICI MIC-lrvlft •• recelvf" al"'O J-" l~,,..,, Of -lvO -·· °" lrllul'ld '""'VO •etatlod Tlmmv ~"" ,...._ oact. ol\CI Kl" Wllttt ~ ... ICll ... Ir.,... •al1fort "LO•tOA SOUTHIEllH-Hemeo Go<-G1-. ,_,, .,,.,...., ,,.., NOl'l-<:OHFE•IHCI , Detroit AllCl<t Were 01 """""" Noto 0•11•• ""-'• ...., °"'""' Old l'IO• "tin tM W cwtelfteJ fJnt·r~ tMctlt eHet" dfeHint ... ....,, lft .,_. '919 W1P 11e .. 1tto1•coea. HAllTWICK-H-T"" M<Gro• ot· t t1l•ft'f M•• •ftliel COKft lrWoe v.-., 4, CNUI C-..,,_ I Ctour •fff\ MI ml lloru .,.. ..... Ovitt C~ tn.,. llCO'i"O ltie""'"' I -E'lelenO C11r • s..,. .. ,.., Lii H(llll -..,_ -Urll-oltv at E-.> tONA--"'"'• C-an<1Je~1 ... _.,_ .. • C\eMfl t Go.Me MVH ~i.l.c9'M • "'''Otle '"°"" VM f't ,.,"", """°'""°""'' --tal artfl OE HVE Ir I ROHC <>s--"'-<90 T"" U/YMAN From 81 every football pla)er's life and the Rams missed ha'"ing to pay the llUmmer camp supend to the pla}er Regardless of-what anyone sa~!i. the team did get hun hurt. Despite the fact he probably worked out · every day he was out of camp. Greene as probabl> not an the pla' · ing shape he should bc an , nor 1s he aware of changes 1n the dcfen~ He will bc. but that takc'i time The pit)' 1s. the problem could have been and should haH been solved before camp bcgan not after· ward Bcucrlcin's problem. 1s as similar as 1t 1s d1fTcrent Like the Grttnt' case. the quarrel with manageml.'nt was over monc\ And like 1n the Greene case. he fl.'el~ he 1\ being underpaid. Cr~ne 1s a proven star fkucrlelD 1!> s11ll lcarn1ng his trade as an NFL 4uarterback He: does ha' ea 101 to leam Thigpen· refuses to call himself best • reliever 1n game Sy JOE MOOSHIL ,,., ~II/rt( .. CHICAGO -Bobb> Thigpen may have the mnJor league record for saves. but he isn't ~d} 10 be called the best reliever in baseball. "I'm not the best," said Thigpen, who earned his 48th save Tuesday niaht when the Chicaao Sox beat the Kansas City Royals, 6-3. That save came only one day after he scored h1s record-break.ins 47th in a 4-2 victory, also over Kansas C11y. Th1a;pen concedes the honor to Oak.land's Dennis Eckersley. "I've blown seven saves and that over 1n the nint.h after Barry Jones, his personal set-up r't'l1e' er. had worked through the seventh and eighth 1Dnangs lh1gpen retired pinch batter Ke' 1n Se1tzer on a grounder. ga ve up a SID&le to Bria~ ~cRae but got George lJrctt to hit IDto a game- cnding double play. He was then mobbed b)' his teammates. Was 11 his toughest save'> ··11 sttmed hke 1t.'' said Thigpen, who broke the record of 46 set by Dave R1ghett1 of the New York Yankees in 1986 The bottom line 1n his ca'\C 1s that he gave up the st.aner's JOb to m.tkc 11 f~w t"X tra bucic~ ~hat-a .....-...4'--' ~ two," h1gpe11 Th1apen 1s on a pace to fio1~h with 57 -,avrs:--. C"-' tra bu(k\ He was seek.ang about S 7 50.000 a )ear for t\\o or more ~ears The Raider!>, 11 appears. were w1ll1ng to pa> htm a bit under $500.00<) a )Car. B> an) standard used. a half·a- m1ll1on buLk<. a ) ear 1s a lot of salal) -not as muth as other quar- terbacks are genang and not a!> much as he should earn 1fhe blossoms into the kind of quartl.'rback man)' thank he wtll become Raiders' managing par1ner .\I Davis isn 't known as the stingiest man when ll comes to pa)ing hts players. He does ask to be shown before he unloosens the purSt' strings. The point is. Bcuerlean was w1ll1ng to give up the starting JOb to Ja) Schroeder That's too bad . becau~ that's not the wa) to cam the big money quarterbacks arc earning thne days Apm, it was a problem which should have been solved before summer camp began. Neither the Raiders nor Bcuerlein bencfitted from the holdout. Beuerlein is a sccond-stnngcr these days and the Raiders are using a man u quarterback who may or may not be the best man for the Job. Both side got hurt. Football ouaht to come up with aome solutJons that puts everyone into camp at the same time. Teams and players oug.ht to be mandated to ..,ee or p1n by the start of the uainina camp sea.son. Failure to qree should mean the playen sits out the sea.son and the aam lc>tn his services.. He can't be anded. IOld or dealt away. Tbat put should an end to all 1bae ::•ton shennan~. ... ••Or...-' ,,,., ......... ...... ,,, .,,..,.~.,,._..,. Christ College loses In soccer Even •ft•r his record-bre•ldng 47th .. ve. Chicago·• Bobby Thigpen modestly 1ute1 he' 1 not the belt In the game. Th•t honor, he ,.,,, goes to Dennis ecllersley. sa1d. "He's walkc three the last t"o years. To me he 's the best. .. ActuaJly, Eckersley, with 41 saves. bas walked six in the last two seasons. He has only two blown saves but he had sax last year to go aJon• with his 33 saves. Th11pen had 34 saves 10 each of the two previous seasons and each year had n1De blown saves. He 1s not pleased with his seven lost OJ>- portumllcs th1$ season but concedes. 'Tm not perfect, rm not going to make the right pitch every time." He did Monday when he took "I believe he's going to annihilate the record." said Manager JefT Torborg, who was the Yankrcs' bull- pen coach when R1ghctt1 ~I hi\ record Carlton Fisk. "ho has been put- una up a lot of numbcrs himself. also feels Thigpen will add to has record because of the team's 1Dab1h- ty to blo~ out opponents. "It's too bad the team has to piny that brand of baseball," said Fisk. "Ifs not hkc we can go out and get 19 h11s and 15 runs. But we're ahead and that's what counts." Donahue guarantees UCLA will be improved team By JOHN NADEL Ar~ 11/rtt .. Turner, who has an IDJUred toe. LOS ANGELES -He didn't do 1t with the OaJr of a Joe Namath or Pat Rile). but UCLA Tern Donahue issued a guarantee of sorts Tucsda) ··1 don't think there's any question we're gomg to be a better team this year," Donahue said at his first weekly mectin.g with reporters. "Thcrr's no doubt 1n my mind. It seems vcr) unlikely that Donahue's I Sth year will be as bad as has 14th. From 1976-88. his UCLA teams were I 08-38-7 and won an NC AA rttord seven straight bov.I pmes capped by a 17-3 victory over Arkansas ID the 1989 Cotton Bowl. Then came last year's disaster -the Bruins weot 3-7· I. They lost three games by one pomt apiece and another by three points, but there was a 42· 7 manhandJina by Anzona and a 38-20 1rouncin1 by Orcaon, too. A!t C\ 1dcnced b) their prcseason rank1Dg of No. 19, many expect the Bruins to get 1t done. at least to a degree. 1mmed1atcly But their chore will be made more difficult by a sencs of inJunes "I don't want to elaborate much on the 1nJUI) report," Donah.uc said. "Suffice u to 58) I expct·t I expect our football team to be a lot healthier four weeks from today than we arc toda) ' "It's unfortunate and maybe a little bit of bad luck that we've aot some people out," Donahue said. "I th1nlc we'll improve as the season goes on ~cause we'll get some people back and some of the players who need expenencc will &Cl 11." "How much better1 It's hard to say. I think we're more athletic. We're more focused . We're better orpn1zed. It's 1990. it's a new year. we're ofT to a new sc:iason." Donahue Will bqsn has 15th scason as UCLA's head coach Saturday when I.he 19th- ranked Brums entertain 23rd ranked Okla- homa at the Rose Bowl. "It was a djfficult off-season, yes," Donahue said. "We hAve plummeted to a level we arc not accustomed to or we hkc very rrnteh. We are 10101 to get blick to an upper echelon as quickly as possible. I don't have any doubt we will. h miaht be a time span before we do, but we'll act 1t done." At least four key Bruins -wide rccc1ver Scott Miller, linebacker Rocen Keeton. cor- ncrback '\I Jordan and u1b1 end Col'Wln Anthon)' -definttely won't play agamst Oklahoma because of i0Jurie1. Amona other playen who m1aht not go arc tartina tailback Kevin Wilhams, who has a sprained ankle, and startina safety Enc 41, In OkJahoma, the Bruins will be fac1na another powerhou~ of the 1980s comma ofT a sub-par season, alth®ah as Donahue put it "The> were ofT the mark a little bit We ~ off the mark 1 lot." Under first-year head coach Gary G ibbs. the Sooners ~nt 7-4 after goina ~2-6 the previous four seasons. One of those 42 wtns was a 38-3 victory over UCLA in the opener of the 1986 season. Oklahoma anxious for opener, return to national TV ly ~ CAM'llLD ,.,.....,. ....... NORMAN, Okla. -Oklahoma Coach Gary 0 1bbs noted Tuesday that after three weeks of practices - many of those two-a-day drills -he and h.is 23rd-ranked Sooners . can't wait to set the scuon st.aned this ~weekend apinst No. 19 UCLA. The eqtmess is understandable, siven the fact the Soonen went 7--4 last season and finished I.hard in tht 84 £.&ht. Saturday's pmc wtll Jive them a chanoc to tan f mh -and they'll ,et that cha.noc on national lelevilion. ()klttwn; ... tuned ftocn ti~ ~leVISIOft Ille xaton bec:autt of N AA probllian. TMt ooe-tes ban II h.illory now, a1 Oibbt Mid lbe return or tdevi ion can only 1erve to hell? h11 ium ' ~ .come to Oklahoma to play on nationa.J television, .. he 1&1d at bjs flnt media luncheon of the seuon. "Not havi111 tha• opponuni- ty last year 1 think hutt our footblll team. UCLA as comina off' a 3-7·1 aeason thlt saw the Bruins to. lb~ pints by a point and l0te one other ~ ,, field pJ. UCLA bu three fuU· time stantta hick °" o&ttte. aeven on ckfcn.e. ...,.., riCOrd of a year l90 II comDlitlly mialn di• u &i u wl'tat bid" of llOd»D ,.,.. iky·pa... ad IM tilllll of,,.... they MW ...... OMallid. '!'You ao.. ~ to UW. kindl ~ of pmes, lhete kinds of cballenae-s. You want to sbowcatc your talents 11 an individual a.nd u a team. l"heR's no quation this will ~ very po1i11ve throqhout tbe teaJOn." What the vicwen wtll Ke, Gibbs and the playen prom1te, at an Okla· homa team that is commuted to throwina lht ti.II m~. The dayi of &be Soonas n.a.nnina 9S percent of the time, n -.ouJd sctm, arc owr. ••After Satwdiy, a lot O( ~pie .,. toiftl to bt SW'pnaed,' said of'f'en11vc ln~man La.rry Mcdicc. Oibbt said., however, thlt be dOan't have a tct J1umber of petlH he wanu &o dltow Ht Mid Okla· boma limply hopes 10 t.ake ldvu· Ille 0( Whal tbe defenll illo.-. lllilM>ulh he •id, .. We're commheed • H to lb.roWU\I the ball." "At the same time, we've aot to work to our 1trcna1hs." he laid. "We're 1tJll an option footbeJJ team. and i(. ium's aavina us somethil\t in the opcion ..aame1 we've 90t to take advan• of that. ' S1evo Colli~ a sophomore wbo 1taned •i• pmes at quancrblck last aeuon, •ill •tan S.twday for the Soooen. Blcllup Cale Oundy wdl make the trip and will be OM of lilC"eraJ ll\lf f'talunm wbo wilt travel west. Some Of lbe others are tilln tDd Rkky lnady1 taln.cl Earne. WU. liama. deh11ve 1Dd Mlftr .. wn 1ad defenalve bee' Drt• CluillmOa. ~ ril .... ..., panidpd Sll1lrdly," ~ .... ., W1lham1 ts b.ktly to see '*Yina tJme behind 1t.1.n1na tailbllct DeWtn BRftr. That position it tbin due to a hamstnna uuury suffeted by rke t.cwis. wbo tw maued tcvcral dayt of pncta~. Oibbt aakl be don not upea Uw.1 to play apin1t UC1..A. Another awvr who may not play tt offtnah-e &ackJe .. ndcm Hou .. ton. who ha a kftet i'UW')'· Tbat leeva lbe SooDCtl With only Ii• aperieftctd O&as1ve lineman for the trip, attltoaP Oibtll aid ~in rn. ..... '""' Koontz COUid plly et caw il...,. Rancty wan.ce:z~un. -o.r ft Iii ikiiiiifcMI le jUll criilml. .. OMI .... ..,...,., WollM W• I lliwt-ol ... ,.. ___ .. ' 642-5678 .. From North er.,. COUJ1tY From South Oranp c~ ORANGE COAST DAILY PLOT Wedneldey, Sep'9mber 5, 1llO CLASSIJ!IED INDEX 642-5678 m Hur& iNdl 2r40NiWen113 l164 m..... 2622 COiUI iliiii M24 COiii iiiU 2624 ;;;. lead\ 2640 NNport...,. ,. .. 1• 2107 Q Wftftl~ ~. ._.,lftltt:&o,!IA t8A, •fllK>E 28A I S BR 1 ... BA TIWINe. FIR£PLAC:a-'"" FAOM NOftTH OftANGI CO. FROM SOUTH OftANGI CO. 2,ifilm,...,.,.._ .........._..~,wet«-. ••sell... ....__.. ........__ •OWll99• LJm•llll F . ,_ ... I * ·-·-" ....... """'"" ---· ----····· .......... I .............. new c:arpec I~. C)OOI, A II I di I ront prd uivry ac Nt Lido ltloptlti.cti. 2 ~ t btoc:t( to bey I~ t31-tt ~6PM. V9')' 11*1111 s JtR Of.-MW~· palm, refrlg, ..,.. no peta. ~,.... 11• •bl• mm• et• 't· Huntington Harbour. 2 BA. SHOIMO YN.V. YMflY. 2 etory 11375: 27'0 Detl"#WW 'E' .. .1745 locatlOnl ••· irpci, 1g etow. o.,eo•. tndry, g1ounde. 4'31·1371 4'3l-40ll 9"• 12~ $895/mo 841-te&ot LU Adult•. No peita. 31& Undo. 142·7404 111' FUNf HOUR. Ger· ~d wl si-tlo. Ordnt lno. ftple, dectl. U1ti. pd. MESA VEl\OE 2BR UC>I*. Im '"iCUiat s BR 2 BA '* 842-3111 * , 1 h d f -. a • ..,, ~ 13,050/mo, 780-5084 $1025 mo. AYI 1015 qutee cut..ff-1ec en~I m • • • ~: BR,0:~ ~~ y•rd. n1s1mo. c e11 .. ._ 1eo-311e •HI II UHML• gar~. uoo ~ MC ~~~~~·rd~~(; d~c llll•llf IPTI patio. Aweeom.t 19th & 13().9508 Ot 17M704 Ou.rd pted. Ootf COUl'M LAW 2lft. ~I ltudy. -IUL 496-03e"' 751..e.as pauol yarO V9ry apectel OH THE &AV --------------THE DAIL V ltt\,OT OHOU .. H C~ASS,,tfD 'll'Ul'll lCATION Dt:AOllNf (.)Htt.l"i HOUR!i uuno.y F11 ! JO AM. I •lel>"O' .. S.r •1\.4' 1 lltltday M0<1 S 30 PM Oc:nfmt 11.275/mo view, pool I tennl1. Avell now. 3101A In. St., 2 1 & 28R. POOi, ~. MOY£ IN SPEC11'L "'OFF New good IChool No 2 BDRM. 2"'8.A.. ..... 12.100 Winter Rental 173-19-43 288 18A ground floor no Spec6oue 2 BA + cMn. 2 bike f\'om beh. 11400/mo ce0te ~~. NO~ 1'1 month r.nt. R«nod'I oogs $9e5/mo St,500 2 BDRM, 2BA •• ·-· lt,380 ._''"' H l lV'I ~ IOpm W.O~ay f .... S 30 PM !iu•11,._,. Co..t"&r MI 11(\(11111~001>111 I 1¥.0-. Wl'd S 30 PM f •Idly l ll<M• S 30 PM one abo~ enc g•r frpa, MO ays, ltt• & yewty. * 171-2231 W•U.e VMleae tBA IBA pi,<S perking dep 213-592·22 µi No pet1 Oi9y N *lllAIFlllT* 1750. 7141970-2223. ' :3".:-00~~· 1.,o e.::NIOf, ii5C>. ~. Al*tmentt &45-1122 Nopet1p;..... 142-5858 Nice 2BR 111,BA, frple, 541-1501 S.11vod1y Fri S' 30 PM At 19tt\St.28A,28Afum. ' ' rrlCI uttt. 703 JMmlne. 2 WEEK'S FAEE RENT , .. _.,.... gar. grHt dedl, short Frptc, petlo, 980, ...._...,.. 2142 towe< '"'· no peta, 2BR 28A low~· _ · walktot>Mch Ava11sn1s. --------• llT\INC. 11,200/mo Wntr •LIDO ISLE IAYFRONT 17&..IWll. ' ' ., .. ..,,... S450 Cell 960-3521 c111e-!.;iflCAy Fii 5 341 PM CHECK YOUR AD THE "AST DAY '"'' u.i11, •'•t<>t >llMt\ toe 11ll~~Y and accu1ecy •t ,.,.,., o(,.l\1on0Uy 11rr0<~ 04 oc:cu• P .. 11te h•len ",,,., , o .. r itl • •f'Ml bAt ii and cl>fo(;~ yc>u< Ml d•lfy ~·· 1 "' f'•'(~•t '"'m<'d••lf'ty 10 t>'' S6 71 Tr>e o .. 1y PllOt , u•ol• 11ci 11111,.1.1y t0< "' l'frOf 1n an lt(j•tttll~I IOI ""'' h '' ,., •v D.-•~"POO\il>lo o.c.•tll tor lh• tOllt of 1n. 1 " .. "h••"• •• •1#>1<111 tty'"",..,.,. l•l!Klll can ~ty !Ml rental AYI 9117. 673-1943 1 M .. to beh. 28R condo, Cherm4ng fl.lrn. 38R 38A ~~pottnir:::;io· 2BR. 2BA I patJo. No petl ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Sii i F Oen pvt petlo. ger'809. lndty hQme. *5500/mo yrty IM OQMtt vt.w. 18R apt. O< f(om $850/mo 2161 P• Mission \llAIA 2667 1E1T·· • .__ u 1 rn. front. 2BR 2BA, fee, frig. 1150/mo. 8111 Or~ f\lty. 61s-e111 w/119tlo, QUIM, no pe1a. t5!0 + dep. Moblle home. dflc Awa.. S.. Mgt o !'%' ... , ...,. 2B1400/rno yeerty. 38R 213-308-9711 11,000montNy. Cell.Julie No pet• Mature .autt1 8·101. 855-0685 11MIM A Wint• 12200/mo, HY HOfM9 5 BA. a BA. 3 1 14/ ......... 24201312. ,.,..:._. ..-.u. . -•• ,,. IMM724. ger freah paint Welk t ._.., _... · OUNrt E'Mde 2 BR, ,..., BA _, T:"'.~,__,,-_____ INlnt 2144 .._:., IChool c0m o P•CIOUI 28A 1'h8A t991Newport84M373 TwntlM lndry fllcllltlft 1 beth LMng/dlnlng HM MANY Y.-rty QUIET & Ting 28Ra..utlfUl 2 1AcMltlldled 12800/mo844-71~Po0f twntwn..Cloaetob9actl WESTBAYAPARTMENTS fenc.d .yard. no pet•' kitchen with d l th· 2fJOrm&38dttMAVllll • t .;.ft<t fru tn•• ''''' tfll\flt ttOn A •• u11 •unt n')' lJ.tht •1th•H )0 d•r• u tf'Qvo.O w.n t>t · ""' 10 t·u• no• 1om11"<1 m ''"""c.e cnNgn comc>Yt~ ~se Fully m & equip. Lg country kitchen trptc' I lhc>pplng. 1950/mo. S200 Off MO\IE-INI $825/mo. 2448 Elden was.her/range Firepta0e. IOOdel S~d;6'/carportlgerden 2 car get w/OfJf!r. Com~ *191 .. * 900 SM Lane "4·2811 FHturlng pool. ape, 8'2-5325 walk-In closet, patio, :g= =I= 3 . winter 673-1568 pool, grdm. Nr ahope, LOWiy 3BR 2'.tBA hOme . Upper 2 BA. 1 BA newly patlol, encloled Plfklng enclosed gar~ Fr ... SINGLE HOME. 3 BDRM. IChool, t.nnls. lake. Avail fl.lrn/unfl.lrn. 2 Cet ~nted. Frptc, lg oeck. Sorry, No Peta. Tiii II Tll PlAllD wey close HSt mo ClU llWI 2BA. petlo, French d<>On. 4322 Vile. S 1.095/mo. gerage. '3000/mo. AYI Mini bMnd• & new dr11pe1. 1 Bedroom '655 UWl 1111" S300 depoSll Take over •-------- ,, • ur tM u11p ... o 1>11 .. rl(fl I><'< IN'lnlh 11 c011«11on "~ A•ll.I .inr 1ea•\001tD• .. 111tornt1y 1 '"" Hou••• ..... Joi'•• I.• " .. . t t 2 car germ· $1450/mo. 551-2778 971. Agt 175--4912 $1000/mo. 780-2549 28dnn 1V18a 1785 lllllAllJlft leue lor 4 montns 15 .0109 The Terrece C8fdff 2BR L8E/OPT Welk to beach. 28drm 2Ba twnhM S855 Top area. perti-tlU Mt· 581·9398 Charming 1 BR. 1 8A on C 2BA t200 IQ ft PoOf 38r 2Ba bMctl condo. Costa Mtu 2624 825 Center St 842·1•24 ting. Beautlfully main· __ c1na1 , nHr Newport OtOM dtf.. 2122 J•c. Avall ~Id ., Sept'. llUf\deci(, PoOf, 2-car ger. SllO OFF! tllned 2BA $825 Up I I Island No pell. Stre.t South of PCH 2 Story front $1100. 752·2881. • 142-8759, 213 .... 56-1939 •mJ-• *ALA MO'"NA '"PTS * 1BR 1725 Up Newport IHch 2669 parking only. set5fmo. 2BR 1BA, gar, lndry rm, ,. ,. CONDOS • 1BR $775 & -675-6e08 ' . •r-. I \I 1 l-i111· 41 ' ......... houM, 2400 ~II, 4BR +lg Gorgeoua Wutperk TOTALLY remodeled '4BR patio 1775/mo. 1 BDRM & 2BORM. tBA, 2BR t'r'•BA basement •EXCLUSIVE GUARD• ______ ...,...,,.. " bonus rm, 21o'tS8A, nrdWd condo, 2BR 2BA. 2 car 38A w/gar upstairs; lrg Se5 VICTOR. IA D/W, beautiful PoOf ar.. garage. wi d nook-up •<lATEO COMMUN'f~~PT HGTS em.It 28R, --ra, garage. 2400/mo. gar, wl d. frig, patio. deck. 2 bike to buch. TSL MGMT Large rec room & laundry S99S No pets. ON 10th FAIRWAY ideal for 1 penon. "-- 404 Iris 723-0977 S 1175 ~ MC. 553-0918 S2500tmo (7 141845-9342 832·22.32 O< 722-9012 room, cioM to shops & Call \/ELMA Ill CAllH turb, patio, lndry, get. No For L .. M • HARBOR On the,.,.,,, BMutt.-111• ... ••-buses. S585-16751mo (l1•\& .. a_24,tJ OlllTIY CUI petal $650/mo 15Q..1145 \llEWHILLS Spectacular . """.cour... --n"-' ·-LlllTill* S30W.Wilsor1 ,.._-PE llSIU . . . l ~ • ' ... \._1~1 a., -... ' 1 -"t.. J "• • S-.1 ,..... ........ \1 • I I \llew 3 BR 2.-: BA pool ful 2 BR + den, frptc. Lg pier, 6BR 8BA, min 8 L • r g • 2 BR 1 ,_.BA Tl&. M9T VERY lerge 1BR tBA. I f IP&. 121-eQ50 • ' ' SH 1 ~50n1,y u7pg r ... ~ .. •d. mo IM. 548-J25e townhouM. Lndry rm. 722·9012"' 832·2232 remod'I New carpet,.,.,. 2!,3!~. ~B:,:~•:n,','gryicr -• .. y ._.ILi 1. mo. 60-....-PllT patio all bullt Ina s N p ttcal's, oew kite nr Very ·~ ,...,, HUil YllW IYllY II West perk, minutes to B ":"8 OllST $825/.:no. • ony 0 eta. sml pet acupt 642-5858 nkups. central 111 2 car I •n .. •HHl11m .. ~, • 1 • ~ ~ ' . . . ~. New carpet, 511 S..Ward, Newport Almoat new 3 R 21'1 A w/ooun view. 2078 THURIN •Btg, t>eaut quiet E/lide gar w/atra storage All •2 & 3 Bedroom• 28R Ir""" garana St690 ___._.,_;.. 3 BR 2'A BA pool, tennis, spa & w9fk TSL MGMT BBQ, patio, gar. lndry. WESTBAY APTS matntenanc:e •ncJ. Sorl).j •Unfvmlsned • ,...,.., -.-· .,.....,..,..,..,.,, • · to b98Ch. 12 Goodwill Ct le 1 BR Attractive Apts with No pets 644-0009 •CloM to t>eedl 760-8382 2 car garage, w/d, relrlg, 11450/mo yrly 642·3890 832•2232 "'722•9012 ~SN~"· ~~1~4~7 pool/spa BHutlfullyl-iiiiiiiiiiiiii•----•i •Free llst-CALL TOOAYI Ooean view, Ilk• new 1BR. MC. syl1em. lndry chute, 1BR 18A DUPLEX. New pe l1ndscaped setting 1' 2 car garage, $1500/mo gold fixtures. Every ex1r• Newport North largest carpet, kitchen. tile, Vef· Bright, airy Upt)e< 2 BR. 1 SO<ry. No Pets llWPllT IUIJll am YIW IEITIU yrty IN. 248-0787 poulble No children °' plan 2 BR. den, 2 BA. 2 tlc&la, small pet eccepted St'. Ftp new crpt & pnt. 1 Bedroom $750 •Wl'Tl ll&T SUPl1* '"" .....• , SOUTHOFHIGHWAY. pell St .595 l mo car garage Wl d. micro withdepoalt.6'2·5858 own gar/yard $795/mo 28drm l'l•Ba $850 EXCLUSIVE BEACH 111-4112 YEARLY '>BR 1BR, lrplc. 759-7659 St.• 5/mo 759-7659 2BR B -;::;-•sec Bettle 962-9602 151 E 21st S1 548-2<&081 COMMUNITY . • 11,. ~ .... ,. ·V O••ac: IC>•' I"\ ~lH'4 ..,A rip." Mc~ll ~ Ot•..:lo•y ... bootsheives, garage. WOODBRIDGE Spacious Nwpt Hgts 2 BR, 1 BA w It~ ,'/·t ~ ngarj n'~l'' COUNTRY ~OTT AGE ------26R' 2BA w t>eauUful pool: SmaH Vlctorlen be9'::tl sti>- patlo, etc 673-~74 4BR 2''°'BA. lam rm. 517'.., Boise. Mature $695/mo $400 dep. E'slde backbay 2BR with BachelOf $6251 ~· MK:ro d w f11e· dlo, no klteh91\ Avail '>A' ~uN _ frple, oov patio, lake. ten· Adults No pets. Grdnr 97G. • CM & 1 Bedroom S710 place & g111oe Enioy oor tmmed S575/mo l~I Spanish \/Illa. 3BR 2•,;BA. nl1. pool prlll St67Slmo Inc $895/mo. 873-7353 -~1-64~;11ace Ave. =~ f:::=·i:2~ 28drro 1' .aa $840 prvt be.en snoo All. Uttl$ Yrty 557-1818 ..._ _______________ _,. Ip., alrm. utll rm, welk to 640-1327 or 720· 7852 -•• .,._ Imo• 1350 cleaning de· 131 E 18th St 6'16-6818 mamcenanGe mcl t11•••-11r t>ea.crt/Sh<>pplng. St995. -..-nsw 2BR.18A.largeyard Mt --------•ALSO 180rm S1'30 -•- Hou ••• ~ 541-96001640·1147 OfTY UllTI garage. S750/mo. Some posit movet you In t Bedroom $705 j Soaeioua 2 & 3BR • den, N~portBflCh 1069 __ LIQl.NBfach 2148 wwn·-pet10K.546-7228eves. 642-87800<642-7967 280rmt'.Be $820 ....... ra btr•• aomewithOOMn 1Mw9, Jor Sat• ... •UH Ill.I PHI* S,J llnt Yltw •ErNrald Bay, on bffch, ...,... 646-1096 days E'SIOE Bechelor. very 2250 vanguard 540-9626 s .. ~~ALYllOOoti>Eills onB Fairw9Cy of N9wpartCI b • 1100 ..... •-Yltw 3BR 38A, 00..,. view, Lido Park Orlve 1BR 18A nice new carpet paint -• ..ch ountry u . Pg,u~:r ~om~"1~ t?':d: 4BR. dr, Ir. Ir. Vr~I. pool. $4000/mo furn Agt. condo In aecurlty build· •USTlm• Ou~t area. $675 ;ncl utll WISTSlll ~121. ' Gated ~munlty, 2 <* Howts/Condos 211 via Koron 675•110; pnv corner lot. new 499--1678/494-1177 X39 ~~e!16~';:ci~~~·q~e ....... & laundry 631-3646 2 e~:8~~BA ~ ~t°':!: ~ ~ntrlf 1002 •S-tftll "'-* carpeting. remodeled 831-6790 ReMu Rltrs Bright & sunny18R 1BA, E'SIOE large 2BR 1'..,8A •!11111 llH* nkups f'rom $2650/mo ws nsw k I tc hen pnt /Ill e L!gun! Npt 2152 329 Unlvenaty Or Beaut, encl gar, carport. ls your bu"-m<>VlnQIO a * 11111 SllO* No pets IAt Newport A rasrilerdthe Ltl 01 bay 4 action at bay, S 4 . O O 0 I mo d • Y 3BR e•,;eA~se Beft>er •WYllW• S750tmo -dep No pet1 patio, lndry, c:able hk up ,_ IOcatlOn7 Anl"Ol.loce ,,... Frig 01snwut1er stove Centtlf Or & Granllllle Or}. "<a-5 Rnaruil ~~ ~=11~g~1g:~s • ~~c~~~I :~~~~·eve 6'4· 1968 carpet Security g•te •BR, 3BA. pvt commurilty 642·28 t6 No pell. S450 650-3407 mo.... in eiastllle<I incl No pets 545-'3SS Snown by Ape>1 ~ park-like grounds 20"/o --Gllfdener Incl Walk 10 S35001mo 759-1465 COLDWeLL BANl\eRO The Home Seller;.• HmHTlllUOI 1221,100 down/assume n-loan w•• •Tl TIE •H•m park S 1350/mo 249·22<&2 SUYIEW 128 Kings Plaoe aa.a ~ By owoet 6'5-4092 Enjoy Corona del Mar at •BR 2•,;BA, buutlful us ~t In thtS spacious N~ Bfach Z 169 mtn/clty llgnta view and luxurlous 3BR 2'~8A LIDO BAYFRT 5BR •''lBA Gated comm. pool & ten· UYllllEI beauty! lmrM<Slata OC· w /3·bo•t dock • llp din n11, gardnr $2,900. WITH guarded gate & Prl· cupancy poUlble Short terr 2 levels undy 't>cn •&«·2057• '(ate beech Cozy 2 story. or long term ,..,. Chi!-$7500/mo. Agt &7!t-23, 1 Sp41cious •BR _3_'4_BA-.-lg- 3 oorm home wnn deo. dren & pell ok S2550/mo ---bof'us rm patios over· l1m1ly room & spacious ..... UT PVT ClUB 3000 Ii PH neng nlO. land'scape patio Lovety park-like 121-1111 If lll-llOO 3BA 3•,..BA, f/p Club Anoe tennis & pooi 4 BR tamny home "' a grea1 location close to sc.tiools & snooping N- c.11rpe1 r em odel ed 11t1ct1en make 1n11 a ter· 'lhC vaiuet C.all lor ai>Pll setlll'IQ & large cor,,., tot. poolt spa Sweepi ng s24001mo. 6'0-1327 631-1400 S791.000 ~~~A.V hart>or,ocn.Cateun1vu ==:=-:-.:-:7"=::--.. ------lliiitill CONCRETEandBRICK LI alll red ~?!"1PnrlhllnllliM - ~,.,,_. I $3900/mo Agt 675-231 t "YOUR.LIS" ~ YMI Reaonat>te Prices Quatt-tntenor plaster patching oonatructloll a. r• "\It HI H• ''' \f\\ i \ 1._Yj I~ \ 'I I Nwpt Ttlfrac:e 3BR 2 StOtY Fum studio S850 tBR ty Wor1t Fr• Est. WaM textUfes & O~I IPam_ts ~583211 78~·9786 I .. 1"11 ' .... q( Al r <:, • twnhOme. I Cat gar .. ~. s 1000 846-8724 IUOll ••• I ·-Ja-ltlt flnishtl'IQ FrtMt est r_ Rf Al 111n• 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Pool, new cpl. paint. WALK TO BEACH 2BR Tl•-·· llW ..... _, f .. , Ml-1211 1RAtNBOW Circle Malnt C u-. 2 24 S 1200/mo Credit report 2BA • derl w/d 2-car SHANNONSIOE CONST I Painting Int Ext HOUM & Prime N9wport Heights Osta ~ I req'd. Rusty 631-1281 gar. dl w. '1rp1c,' pool. ...... cu.tom Conulle & M• Apt Oual ~b Free est. 144-IOIO IEWPIRT IUOI Fii lllHl1H,OOOI R· ILOI wl ax1111ng strUC· UOl IAY TIRll•I St 150/mo 548--0697 LIWll llTEI sonry. l.lc. 512983 Ouall-lldllflft. LaMM--1 St hc•se9S9 7 ~ 1758 ture S•25.ooo •60 •BR 2•.;eA . balcony. 2 1·~~~l ~':'fia -tyguaranteed.540-7739 UCPeetrteallenl11t Comp1a1• 1n11a111trcini YISCIPllmH T~!~n =~:~f~~: \/~';'.tie~ Senta Ana Ave 548-3807 C4tr garage. end unit, big ·~~f~ .. ~·-~,~f~I ... --~~ ":,:;"::!' ~~~~t'.:'.' ;,;• [ ·-] .......,,la/ W"'"fl • Ro-C--•·8'"" SP""''°'' I & wott-au..., has 1u11 been made a11all· Pilme-Newport Heights yard, cie.n & vacent _: Lite colors, nu cptlpalnt _.. lie ., ti pairs LICJlnsd 994.9714 Plant1rig Ltc "532312 wortt •583&95 ~ able Fresnfy painted In R· 1 LOI wl e•lstlng struC· I Ull llllY! •EXClUSIVE GUARD• $2950/mo IMS.9313 snow..-coun1 .... Patlol Free Eat Pat 6'2•9"5 nevtrl.I colors mirrored ture $425,000 460 •GATED COMMUNITY• ttrs.. Fr• •t Refs Uc; ~ GREEN LIFE by E~IC d')I bar. loads 01 closet Santa Ana Ave 548-3807 llYllU Tl .. I• ON t01n FAIRWAY $2.44 per day 20yrs George 854-4958 Desigri-1nstell-M11n1 deck witn lots ot greenery 3Br 28a ti.ecn oondo. pool/tennis OlllTIY kll That's ALL you pay f()( t>y the day Local ., .. space Tnere ts • n1ee ILSEIOPT Walk 10 bNch 3BR. 2'~BA end unit, Ill UIJll Af""""lb RELIABLE HOUMCleaning 111-1111 to enjoy your summef sun<leck pool, 2-car gar 11111 •11'1 Gtnrrll 2602 4 llnes. 30 day minimum Excellent References T1A1Y EUmlC even11'1QS Bicycle to tne 642·8759. 213-456-1939 2 & 3BR 2BA Apll. frplc. LA MIR.ADA· 3BR 28A In the CALL Yolanda 631 ·5967 flllllf CAl.U :::~ ~~u~~~:~n°~s DOl&LD PFAFF =~::r-:n~;:· :~r;d~ $875 & S82S Oulei QO<~I gate gua1decl • gar w/xtra storage All netghborfld nr tchOOIS community Cvrt ~fYHt-ftltM • m en ~.Werq,IA~ long at tn11 pnce• Gorgeous. nuge biy1ront No P9l• 644--0509 llt·l 100 condo Lg boat allp avt. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• hlbol I I I 1. " s 6 8 g o o De N Ne 1110 WITD '1IWt -••Unct ..... ___ 2_606_1 SERVJCf DIRECTORY I ,! l )f~ , ''J ........ SODERLING 673-9455 E'SIOE 111,8 ltg 3BR 2BA. Enjoy bf'Mthtaklng view t. ~' l\11 \ ' ,,.._, decot, frple, dlw. 1un1eta from this hi \I Jtttt .. • ~ M.A..V I lndry, fncd yd. grdnr. 1pecloua 3BR 2 5BA Furnlahed Wlnttlf Aenlal For more loformatlon 2BR 2BA. llp. get, wld. CALL TOOAYll KU'~ Quiett $1150. 873-3800 Bluff• beauty Comptete- B.lfbol \t~ 1 \1...Yr I~ \ ·11 2&3BR 2'ABA Condo•. 1y remodeled tmmedlate s 10001mo 496-8787 &SI Fii LOIS P~JI 1007 n£ ALTOR<> • E'll<I• Frp4c, lndry hk occupancy poulble __ CT_. __ .______ u~. mleroweves, MC. Chlldrer1 & pet• o.k Short •Cute 3 BR 2 BA 2 car llEDICED 1100,000 subterr perking 11150 & or long term tease garage. R 2 lot GREAT lncredlbleVtews-S.avtew up Galleria, 8'6-4•72 12450/mo POTENTIALll $369,000 4BR 2'~BA l'IO\IM , gated. 1---.-•• --1-1-IW=---... llUIT * 651·0109 '* 1nns.poot,pvtapaS700K ....... * lll-l•erlll-lllO 1022 INVESTOR or NII Cu1tom sooo· Best vleW In Spy· glaH. See under lnllftl· ment Oppty PP 640-14'9 1911YachtReaolute 18 TownnouH apart· Ownr/8111 721.0555 m«'tll. 3 BR, 2.'o\ BA. 2 nil! MA.V .... -Ll-1-liiil.aLTI cat gar, w/d hkupe, PoOI. KU',r .. I BALBOA PENINSULA ~. ~fl50~~·L.:; 1 \I \\l :1,. 'fl I 4i \ ·11 SPECIALIST one now Rf ALTQR<=. • llJ ... 2233 FelMew Roed --·-_ Betw. Wiiton & Avocado •3BR 2•,;BA Newport ~ P«*tsuU 2607 Costa Mtsa 1024 l·Mo-.. -..... -HOIMS------Strfftl. (acroH from Terrace condo, park, •,; BLOCK FROM SANO ______ _....,... -Poat O"lcel night & OQNl'I ~. wld, t8R epertments on "8" •PllOllQIOTlltll For~ 1100 OPEN DAILY TIL 8 PM. St200/mo, 631·1153 St $650/molncludeSutlt- 3 BR angl lam home CION Ardon Mot>tJe•Slde Room For Info. 722-8529 •LIDO ISLE. Furn nome 2 lflel. 673·3152 t~~~:o~;~98 500 Cute Comfy BNcn Home •EASTSIOE 3BR 2BA BR. 2 BA. New kit. pnt, t BR apt, ooeenfront bldg. · Fully lurnlll'led EICtru hM en new lnalde lncd crpt Dbl gar, w/d Wint• ~Olmo incl utll Stovel Y04if Service Directory Aeplwntetlll9 142-4321 bt.110 II $18,500 OWC 54&-0eM yd. 'w/d, big atO<eOe~ &1800/mo 675-0114 r9'rlg Avall lmmed 1007 2 Mstr SultN, 2 car at· $1095 Pet Oii? 842·' ) BR. 2 8A, ref\19 & atov., E Balt>oa Blvd 67~5061••••••--•1----- tached g1reoe. end unit. BEAUT newly remodeted crptlng, window C<MW· IOUl/••y YllWI rrptc. ~IOua patto ere• 38R 2 115 &A IOft ~ tno-. uee of comm PoOf & - • mueh more Aaklng 11,...im flp dt>iger'poo1 tennis COUf1•. '"t b* to 2BR 1BA Sundeck, $185,000 For m<)fe Into no pet• St..00. 4as.294s · bd\. $1495/mo 170-7404 stovel relrlg 1·2 me!ln 673· 1240 Agt S 0 perwn• $990/mo 1no utlt-1---!"!!"'"mll!' ____ Brend New 3 BR, 2 BA BAY H RES. pvt pt• Y'IY IN NI S NIP YIUJll alU TWllll Housa/Condol hou• wllrptc, 1,400 1q guarded comm. 3Br. 2ea Ill i•tz CHOICE LOCATION 3BR ft. Very Nice! 11,350/mo houM Wallt to~ •• 28A, att get. $19-CK Next. Gtnlrll 2102 Agent M2-a89 t I P'Vt BIC. No grouc>a BA_fl.lrn ___ the......,..Bay---• to SC Plue 213/598-7251 111·7~51. 2 nalntlc~pont. )\eird~= EAST StOE 21R H<M* 114 841 1218 "" .... IOLlll-llf WESTNWPT · 1 bdte7S LetgeFront/RMIYwd floo11 $1700 /mo 2 hornet leftl Prime E'llde LIDO tSLE • 1 bd, Mey Conald« S~ Pet 2131315-5500 locetlon Slnote family tuncMdc. 11350 11250/mo 631·7802 ...... 11ULJ ---- deteched 3BR. 2•.;eA. NWP TOWERS . 2 t>d, bay Eeet Side 28R 2~BA •nT ....... . Aat(lng S2tt 000 Brotier ~ St ,450 new cooparetl~• . OPl!:N NWPT NORTH • 2 t>d townhOuM. 2 eer •tt pr, lnctuoee fC)nNI HR HA. ,,.. SAT/8UN 0t call for ep-$1,600 w/d ~up. muet .... potntment, 548-7001 PENINSULA • 2 bd 11216. 631·24IO. 32() E 2111 St, CM. AKA T'Wnhme St.500 ~ .n If ~ Viet• Court 8:2~~E COVE 2 bd New 38R 2~. fem rm suoo_ ................. -.wmut·*' 1..-,,., t~•· Ocnr~ \ (1• ,, •• ,, ~. . . . ~. I . -- U! WM-AMYi WW. LI& II -ml mlllt ii..ilii Wefl At MW. C... ..................... ittlWiiWifNia .......... "' , ......... "'~:~~~ i;:.:1s=:sra~mtlflrl ,. • ·• • • .,..,,.. .... -•M ... • +ua. After .. •n-11'1 ,,. --t:miiiiiiu-----~-"::f.· f1wt J1I llf ·~ I .... .._ .=-... & '1.!12."!!!'tWO lili00i~HONl'tii1 .. ~=~~lffei1to.,w11ii1i': J--------........ --------.._ 41-ftp w d. It. -~~~ ,..... ~ M ew.a.CM.• .. ID .. :"W..:' '' -"' tolMMLe =::-..:·:.::" Delll .-.-1111111 1n -., •-NOW! ~~ 11111 I l&C• =--.:...--:,.~ l''SDS NOW! ..., .._ _.. .... NJlllpor1 ..._ • ID ..._-. n ev ...._ 'r°"' ct .. , M•"·'r1 ..-. ,.. ... 0p-r.r.t..~ '::C ==·.c::.:: .. ·~'!~,'':,,., :.:to~1='.:C't~~'::..'i:iliYi:ii&,ITto_,.tor =-~~~:.= ~~:~ IAT tl•I. H01 W. I ifi C5i1iii .... m n• ._ __. w/COUI*. ....... ~oom;tlatcd. SiactM ~ •, '=· ltlcN11 ~. 171n * 'I ... ,_ Hunt"-"" ..._ ...... -.._ -... "u n • r Y th 1111 t .._,.. •• .,..._ lmc*et IJClC OMoe .,._ nw ... ..._tit .. ~•a It• ••llhope. '°""'8ln v.. tt-•••lt ,IT, 1 "'°"*" Cornmuntty CINo 11 IOOll· Y~ ~ MOM EACH WiuM WAL....., l4I0/1110. N-•mllr. :;r:::..r:..monftlplua ~~ 4'/:. ,~ :CdM·,:::"-"*" na.;~ ...... tty. per .... lWlna. ..... trcgtordedlo .......... WHK·WOMING'MT Un JM w .... --.........,,. LY" 11 ..,. . ~ ~ Fl •"'*' optr. Dal ... mtt4). N•tmkr. -ldltfi, to •• In ..... Medi-r ... -, .,..., ..,.... Aotw tnN TO llActi N..a. ~t • ...._... -" rm, "eh velut U .I++. .... . Mon-Thur em only cal, dWtcel end--. _ .. "°"'·~......... N.l .·IAITILU,, ... 28A, = ~ . ~ -."°"· ..... P8fktne a cof. ',"°"' ... .,,.OJllC1. ___ M>-4 __ n ___ I -..=-If_,.,. ....._ ........._ • ._, -~ home. • ' .... 1·•ty bldg, tum, me> •,.p , {714) '40-1441 ·~---,~ ..... .......... ,_..., ,..._,.. Wlfttet Aifttet i IR · 121-0400 JN 4 m ..,c. '37 & tC).mo ee PIO/mo Con-........ SSJ0111P.,_•..,rc1 .. ...,..,_._,~·time help ~end.,..... GMM tor ITUOIHTI bwM'aM. ,..;., deM. H••e 8400. A~ 10/;, 142..()63.4 lect Al Ouln&eft W-ff10 ~ loin t 1• In . d911. MOIC·Frl. No Gen Ofllce/~ _ to !Mm• rwtr11Ullbf1111t• 11· 11 YIAM OIF AGI •Id, 1~r. .. ·~=lmo. CdiMV.,., .... & rnw ... 2726 . w·wmiVOJ ,tc, .. !lm!ll. •.•. ::.11": ,, .. n, • IHllll •llP ~~"-=' ....... =':, .... our-,.:: bttt. WIPl*rt loftt, 28A .. mt... 110,000 I.IP-No cndtl.,.. FllaM Attendent1 *3lf< --1-lrlght hllh .._ ~ peper1 Ai& mn&. Dpii.. ... lndty. M75 mo. WI& YI mJa • .... ••I • No PlfWtY. Cell Denteol'I Ttc\ .. Aifente mK ...,_, .,... needectlor new eooounte F'um ... IM.. 1 bloc* to Cel ....... ~2500 ,.,, 2be ~ Wllnl*' lo MIOc. ~ HOWi Cuetomer a.vie. S2tK ,IT llft 180 -1• yn+. poettlon, ...... eel Paige.. HEM'I THI DeAl.: bc:h tp 1 oar .. low COM """"'to* 28't rent . .......,.. end..,.,.., f .. llllla.. IAM-ol,...70eytS14Fw 2800gtelt.C.M. J1JI •J12 2121 1. Th9 le not • peper unit i1ot1 uui Inc. 1.A-.tr,ec.w/OOIW. ::n-'~~r:-,:. I-aim Amlllllll_, mflL,_,.,. ~=~'°°~=rl .... • r~. NO d11Wf'•l9 ln- 5.16-1• 4 blbtrom bc:hMIOlmo. tot HOO·l 10~0/mo h~ ... ._... IAM Prtdte O.P. CM/NI .... .,..hid TralNnQ ¥0Md, Winter ~-.. l9A 75e-4211or7I0-2314 511-$311 · 1475/mo wit .~ ..... W tCfl 7 otd Mw Ing FIT help. 641 "'4 .,..,"" Coet• .,_. oMoe -.-2. We PfO¥lde .,.,,..,,. ,...._._ 'it bit eo ..... COM -... -· -... (w/ 11 MO LEASE • LAST • 'I' at our p~•-tailon end ~· -• _.. ,..., _ .. £9" MO FMEll) Prv1 tft-Venle home 2-&pm M-F. mJIL fm1... '°' Aft1dr"19 llMoe. 3. Yov 1\'0Uld bt ~ =·~·;'J; $',-~.::; ~!'stcnve~~ ::'S::~~ ~ ~ =.-1a5:'f~,...;11mllr, F:'=~'~ lH I• •a ~O:~~~d. ~~ ::".::.::,:c,-:.:; •wtmer & Ywty """* Cotw Oii .... 1525/mo ~=t• 2:U'~~ln~c=r '::~ :c. ':2.=r' ~~t!1:'tifrm!: ~llln. Hlrln! 1 :.K-::. bee* --== '*PfUI. UUlllllT 111.P ~ asi!_ ~7;o.e7type7. ··= 4~n GOOO MOHEY •On&offOoMtlfioota lnddl heat ...... tteo-S50fmo 7St-7Mt (714)852 ltlon1. C a ll (313) lllTIL ... ...., .,....,., end MV9 • dWtoe to Property ~""'-trldty, petjo, ger, gee 948-NOO 91'1 A 10i.4 WIWUINI The SheratOft fMwpof1 le OV£RSIA8 J018 Mm dally & ..-iy CMtl 142-.3NO grll, l14/97s..e72 ....... COll't daf FULL Mt'ttce otnc. In Lost & fCU'ld 2925 . Needed ~ Foun-toolllng tor quettty..mfnd. Hlefl ..,..... peld IMna bOn11W plue go on out· det .. lld tnffMO-tor .met Newpot1 Cent•. FMNon lllllEIPll 1a1n v..., *"3o-5834 ed, energetic, frtendty In-.,__,. now t1111ng al Inge end mot9' Aillc. hnt.111 P9t• I.E. S./Rn lllend Aneweflng IYC e mornlnoe per Wit on io. · dlvkfuel• ~ occupet!On.. Wortd wide ======== ,.,,,.._ 23-30 f1t1 4 BR only al90 evaMeble. catton for Coeta MIN •m•• = r t!v::,. twn locat1on1, bonUHI. CALL US TOOAY ltOOllll 2706 C.M. houee. Pvt Bath. No Business/ Otnct Rent 111 lllllllft Rl1D f nl 1111\ ADS Srvc. Stetlon P1yroll . AcQIPtlng appllcauoni wlou1 tippllcanta onty, FOR MORE B It I L II h lit 0t !eel $400/mo utll 2769 640--5470 UUl1ll exp reqd. S.Od reeume For hotel lhuttle, Newpot1 tor ell Polltlone ... 305--147·14'0 24 Hra. INFOAMATIONI Hut u •gun• c Inc 557•2083 Office Spece for rent AR'[ FREE to. P.O BOX 11823, Beach. Commerclel .._..., ... ...,. • PAI•&••• OCMnfront home. FuM IA · 1. Cott• MIN CA 92827 llcenH required FIT ..,..,._.,. _.,. 141-4111 lit. HI & pvt lnd9CPd petlo, pvt OAEAT OCEAN & BAY monthtomonth.Skylll•, , '8/Hr + tJpe 252.0700 e Alataorant S.-.. p T 2 ' entryl700/mo. 722-1114 VIEWS. &.ioer nice N.B. NEWPORT BEACH bMutlt\.14 .,.., varlou1 Cal.• -..uoTII · • ~ wt· lml. ~ de)'t per Wllf4111 condo. Loll of MCUrlty. Crnr W•t ... ltt 11rv1~ A.~ :i:-1 71~m 2~~~:.~ Call -. .. u -•-EARN l300 lo l500 per • CCocktalt !J-YI' week. Wiii trllln. AWY,~~~iiiiiiiii~ u..-.-.1..,..._ 2718 w io . Gym. poo1. ape. "'' .... ... .... • vv or .....,.,......4 NJ Hll ... ,_ ,__., week RNdfna Boob at • mr.r "°'"... P!NNYSAVER. ·1eto .,~ ... iilliiill-...,iioiiii.__.-,.-1 Hoag~-aree.. ,550 vComp1eteJan1torlal • AIDE • Full.Time Call home.Calle1~73•7440 Pteuecompleteenappll· Placentla,eo.taMw. *1""'HllM tu Ull m1'8. Incl utll/cable. N/smk :::~=°' Cornmf'rclir ftroptrtyl Laurie 964•3111 Ext. B249 catton et the front deell trPfT i5410 PER HOUR lneuranc. agency nMt Wlcly rentell now 11'1911. Exec M preit. 722·7110 vFull vi.w Balconlea 2778 before being ICMduled 15 lmmed6ete opeililiga.. 0 .C. t*port. JllT or FIT. S1·'7.00 Wit & up. 2274 N 11 S8R "-2 bdrmt evl vFAX & Copy s.rvtoe FOUND Blectc tong talled COWCTDIS EARN up to $400 weekly for an lntervfew. M-F 5:30-lpm. We trllln. Student• welcome. Nwpt &MS, CM 646-7445 ~.one w/Srott beth Jrd "Ample Panting ... llTll. cat, VC1y e..ch/Warner. uaembllng products It .. ., ..... .,.,. Weetmtnetw 373-211& 833-"50 ~ -" 1011 ..... •111 NEWPOATBr•c Huntington Beach. home, no experience, 4545Mec:Arthur81Vd --........ "" ••-· gar. yd -~ H 714·540~159 Collectore wanted for easy work. F0t more Info.. ..-..us Stepe to bMctl 831·3582 ,..._ •• -S/E corner w .. tclltf Of & _ _ Home Oellv~ account• call 1-5C)4..863-&194 Ext Newpor1 8Mctl 5 cSeyt • WMll ~ Tm/Piii .1111 BUY ..-.tr. Coet• MIN Fuu Irvine A\19 High vlalbillty FOUND KEYS 201 7 ... _ s I Wiii t .. ...m NEED*'*-roommate to MrVU From 300 eq tt to lrettlc: 1290 .,.. ft of Ille Deity llot ~ 1, _,.. a · r n .. lfftmedlete Need For etw tllR ant ._,.,mo l300 N ,.... On Ler1cspur CdM paper As an lndepen. ....... P!NNYSAVEA, 118 e---.iMit/ ....,. · _.., •w Improve· .... 111 Call to Identity .. _, Col'-or . ...,., .....,n Dl .... N __ ,._ Pl tJe Cott Meee ..__ through clusified W..._ Aw, Coet• Meee rnent1 s 90ttt p1u9 free .....,, ,_., 1--Pert-time. · good wegee 8C*I • • C..a ........ to SI 50 Ht !Mll~ZV~rneg. r9"t 646-H&3. .......,__,_, 644-7605 ~of all emounta oo1-•llwm rtexlt>tenoure.~· P/TlllllDml •OetaEntry .. to S10Hr HHIDfil By CHARLES GOftEN w ith OMAR SHARIF and TANN AH HfRSCH Neither vulnerable South deal~ NORTH W EST + A 5 • J 9 7 + IQ I• • Q' 5 • 9 5 + K Q • J EA T • 10 9 7 6 J 2 • 10 • 10 g 7 6 • 2 • J J • 7 l + A J 10 6 SOUTH • J • AKS4Jl • AK 0 • 9. 5 The b1ddin1: So.tit Was Norflt F...u1 I • r.. 1 • Pas J • P.. 5 I PaM 6 • PMI P.. Pu.s Openina lead: Si.11 or • Seema only half your side's a~scts can be a tremendous handicap Th1\ hand IS from a national women'\ learn champtonJhtp some years ago North masht have been content 10 ra1se thr« hearts to game. bu1 \he intended her jump to five heam 10 show a good hand wtth no firs1 • round control to cue-btd. South mismtcrprC'led it as a acncral 1nv11a- tion, promisin& at least one ace. and with a pretty aood hand for 1hc auction she wenl to slam If the bidcUna doa noc cllctt rhap· sociles, the pt.y wu spectacular De· ct.rcr won the first Incle WJlh che ace o r diamonds, cashed the king of ._,_ 2788 FOUND Sl'lelty·CollMI ml1t lecfed WOtll your own Seeltl tetephone H I.. -Oty dMnera No r .A e Accountlng .. to S10 Hr 1•1 .. 800~1i!s""'a•FT~·2•,_-•• F-;;;1 Brown/gold mate Baclc hours. days GrMI part· person. Mu11 have /Pl& Pll•I• · ......,. eS«nt--..to 111 Hr • -ge ront ea Need owner or ood Ume lncOme Cell Stew preYloua ·~ C..I Eatn up 10 MOOG per mo neceeNt'Y 13 t..e72. •Word Proc..to S 13 Hr. Oftle.1, drive-In rHr ~ 548•5703 g Rooer• 11 8-42-4333 Ext Manene. 2e1·23~ Call (714) 8"47·7128 •Oen. ~ .. lo 17.50 Hr door 58Ct1q ft or 20S ()per! PoefUona Avellellte h 11.000/mo 1777 Whit· LOST cet, IQ~ male IDILLDT•llllJ ••l•llllfT&n llllPJ/ITPllT W/We&Mlt9e . cans and crossed to dummy wuh tier, C M day 5-4-0-9352. Tabby on 1120 No tags EHy workl A1Hmbl• Computer Hparlence Buey ..... otfloenewO.C. ..., l~YUle the queen, on which East disc.arded e¥M 646-0881 Lost 81 Crystal Cove OIUIU ITmm product• et home cell helpful ~ .,.. alrpOrt. Eltc*lent t .... PEASONNELSEAVtCf.8 lhc two of spades. Nol wantina East 1300 ICI TFre>nt Office State Pie 723-4003 Worlc for major 011 Com· nowt 1~1-388-3242 Cell Linde Lambert. ~ "*"* & pro-»3\Mac:At1hwlMS120I 1ohave1hn.ilancc1omakeanothcr LergerMrdrlve-JndoOf Loatdog vlcnofN Lag panlH $15/hr P IT ElltH202224 Hra 955--60UI .., ~lnCle ... NewJlorta.:h,CAtateO d1'>Card , and \Ure 1ha1 a 'pade could 178~ Whlttlef St, Coate Gold/white ratrleYe< m11t 7141645· 1854 EXCELLENT PAYI Ov« l.WlllUI :::.'ma11~.P:-(J14) Ill ••• not be '"caked through becau~ the M... 540.9352 Daye. ~s medicine 1250 400 companl .. need Monday.Friday. varied Non·wnotllng office Top -------- al'.e was w11h West, declarer re-8.48-0681 Even1ng1 Reward 49.4-1901 Ollml •LP ~er/dl1trlt>utor1 hours Current tdv~ aalety ' benefit• Call ~------- turned to hand with the kin& of TWO 1375 SF tdl unltl French belcery/dell, now Stay home and 111 ... v1ng 04tr11flcete re· 71 4·833-3910 .......... 1.hamond~ and led the J·ack of Lrg ofc/2AR/o\ltld dr •• FIND PTIFT. •II lhltt• evau-make up to 110000 per quired A$>91Y lnper10r1et --------113.90 per hour. Your . StrMI lr11tna Nr 551n.-. aoi. 645·0447 Of apply day °' more. CAil for fl'le Loi C•b•llero1 ,_ A No r-...._, \padcs Wcsttook1heactandcxncd seooorSlSOO 962.3562 1nperaon1tC'fftSI Bon amazing recorded Sport• VIiiage 17272 Recr:-.'::llm•I ,... ~PIWCllltlly ovel'\:3UllOU\ly With a heart and the Bakery. 149 Rh1er1ld• 1 meuage ~4 hours. day Newtl0P9 Founia1n Val· ..... m•• <219~ .... 130 stage was ~ct. 11°1 • ClHSllleCI rui.-of. SEll.YIC-E Ave. N-port Beech (T14) 490-3450 1ey ' lllTlllTll tl'tvml> We lei! readers ""'•I ,,,._, 2 O~larer won and cashed the iriey nMd to know lo bur t hr OU Rh c ldssef ll'd Mon·Wed....-n 1 Noon to queen of diamo nd\ and two mo re ..m.11rieynMC1 · CREW MANAGER tPM Ellperl9nc:lel'l0tnec, t>Yt helpful J.#Y In per. rounds of trumps, reducing the ~'rr~•' ~11'~ ~,.J _ f)-C. he.•~ aon at Loa C•ballefoa hand to 1h1~ p<H111on •• .. v\¥ l'CIU tv~ q, lj(,r;;J -Spor11 Villege Al"" 6010 Wt:.ST • s • • 10 • 7 2 NORTH ......... ....,.-;;:QAYL~ BE YOUR OWN BOSS ~~~~1 anreaa.•1• '-.... ~ _.. ri.. MIWAtm • w + K Q 8 ._.., '°'"' ._ ,.__ _. --• * Positions available for self-motivated iwteit 1 0°.!ic • = =. 1 ::;. • I R H Y s £ R I individuals to operate soliciting SIYUS wom s 11.000 173-S&St • ~ t:A'iT ' 11 I I I I' crews for the Orange Coast Daily • BUYINO ITEMS• Pil ot. '* 1890s to 1eso. * ••• 10 C> 7 Qi{ [ C K 0 I J •JeweWy to HOUMhotd11t -· If You ~ l'llflng tor M«c:Mn· p.._. Lv M9Q. 813-e223 . r I I : dlN Prlc.,. ' Sal•• ~----------;;;;;;;;. + A I * Hove An insured van, wagon or ~':;;": :~=tt; .Fwr*n..., .. ~--...,;60-..;l.;,4 M>VTH U P ORD F Whllemowtng ourlawn our lorgecar. portunllle• Full tlme••2 E•P•n1lve 7 ' r I r I ":" netOllbOt ~ my worlc avallable at thl1 earthtone 101• with • • husband and said ·Have Y°" * time Apply at plllowback cu1hlon1. • J ever heard rn. saymg AQOOd En ioy working part-time in the eve· 19131 Megno11a s 1. S300 E• 1 Twin~ • -I l""'Qhborissomeone WflO 14115 nings, earning full-time $$$ Huntington 8aac:l'I eofa, light COior. 1175 + 9 1 5 C A G N I T nos grass grow as· as . .. • 675--&efO/Evea 87S.554Q On the las1 1rump West made a .__l;.._.l-'--1•_.;;.J __ I'__.. G ~;::; :· ... :":::, ~ * Have the ability to motivate Ula '"1111 a..v11tv1 eota. ~t. fatal error by d1)Carding rhc ten of •""~''°"'...._No l below Fut Growing co. Excel chair. ottoman. new con-- diamonds ra1her than lhe five o f .. "INI NUM8fff0 1' I' I' I' I' I' I' ,. r I Then we hove a 1ob for you. No e11perience neceuory. Opportunlty. 875--7290 dltlon Oak trim 1295 spades. Th<' king of clubs was ::lll:ll'::::lf;'::::'f:::n=:::;:~·::=:::· ~·=~· ~-=·~=::·=·~=::-~·! Full troini"9 available. 114 • 141 • 3488 ~luffed from the rablc and East, • E~ I I I I I I I I I I I um .. a lllY Contempor:li ..,,,....,,. · .... h d 1 h Id 1(....... AS For fu ........ er 1'nfor-....:--or to • ...L.edule on 1n'-~w • • O·" 3"' ...... tbl -•"'7"'·. conv1nc..u t at cc arer e 1he 111u nn "'''"'"" Kn "''' .... ' s1c1 ............. 1 -,.._...., -· -"" · .. ......., ng computer oak 5 pc bdrm 1875, rat· m1 rnng spade, let go of the ace of s1:1nOASe~ CAU .e1tperlence en outgoing tan w/gt .... s pc din NI d ub\ Now declarer scored all three "MOJ!S liSVJ6 s111 s1e. ~ euoewon 110Q116teu per90na!lty & telephone $425: plltowt>eil* IOfu or her clubs 10 land lht' slam y t!utAH ~· PJll9" J&Aa r'\OA IMBH PIH pue pueQliOlj (714) 642-4333, Ext. 209 demMnor ... a mu9t to loveaMt seoo. Ou..,, Aw~ ;oc14°'9u ;no UM81 mo tlutMOW iflt\W IUpport our memblfW\ip mett/bo1t eprlng 12751 TODAY'S"- CROSSWORD PUZZLE Sl:Jn<J,4 st1 H!)tH 6u~ -pnoJcJ -elfOCJ:J -l.JJfltlS M-F 1 0:00 AM to 5 :00 PM • ~::::~82~~1c for Mint eond 97~53 OuMr\Anne~ ==========----·----------------' ~· 11 ~ tofm«. rm IUlte, orig '81<. MC $2450, beaut. 3 pc oof lbl Ml S27 5: loV9ty cernat- ACltOSS 1 ~1ed II Gotten lllOut to OiugrMmen1 14 Cerried 15 ~name 111 ~atone 17 ~out 19 oon-cour .. untt 20 Laying off 22 Trad11-1nMt """ 23 Dllcont.,_ 24 l~ 25 won unff0tm 28 Sotemn ..ord 2t K•ta, eg 30 LMnQ It uc> 35 HeglltlYe ~.,.. Je°'" 37&~ 31 Clrc:ue If.,. 41 ldeotogy 43~ .. Seff • ...,,., 45 8ronn enc1 tin .. Grip 50 WIVlout lrtterruptlOn 51 Stadium •ttUCt~ SS Wltneaa 57 &ay --se ~race 6t .. _ NOon" 60 Herd~ 61 Opp of 9011 42 SIOua lnd*1 e3 Graoeda gentlemen DOWN 1 In the Midi 2 Group of IUff 3 Malay WMP<>n 4 lurw 5 Cake 0t pie e The enci 7 Sheepllh 8 Sounded out 9 Chemicel ending 10 PUlhing II Oden• net hies 12 MIOt 13 Ellper_,,. 19 Bewltchet 21 Sc:olOl'l r~ 24 Au9trlllan bird• 25 lacMled 2t LOV9d one 27 Clfepe plent 21 8eggar • cry 30 Conelgn 3 1 l"""Ovable 32~ .,,. 33 SWl!llng 34 "W8'1 dotlel' '9 Hontly·tonu 39 Eat111 _, 11 •O Con1arn• • t Navrgatton ~ •2 Beck .,,._ «~ •5 C..lle defen-44 Adfnt...on '7 Oallou lndoet\ 48 .... ,,~,, .... 49 Potter t IOOI 5 1 W9"11f19 llyte 52 Bridge MC110n ~Beginner ... 54 Proc>net M£_,lf..., 8y SYDNEY OMAltlt tlVedneld.•y. Sept. I AJH•I !March 21 ·Aprll 191 Fu• Moon pcsltlon accents possible ll'l- d1scre11on In connection w ith clandtstlne meeting. romance Scenario hlghllghts affec t1on. creammy. rapprochc~nt with OM clos• to you Libra 1s 1n picture TAURUS (Aprtl 20-M•y 201 Full Moon brings to fru1t1on recent ef- forts 10 1nrlutnct key money peoptt You get what you want, bf st~c­ uve Much th~t occurs is kept under wr~s Friendship hkely to become Sf'rt<:XJS rtlat1onsh1p OtlMINt jM.ty 21 ·JutW 20J Sud- cknty you h.rvt •ft•ti who P'A u rings. occupy PoS•ttOns of ~r Emphasis on int~llty. responslblHty. ~uurt of dHdllnt Cancer ,,.tM shOw\ yoo whtrt the money h•s been held CANCSlt IJunt 2 I • JUiy 22)· Co- oper .ttt With Gtmlnl Fufl Moon PoS· 1tlon hfOhllghu tr.avtl, discovery, ~tlon. a191ance featuring ro- m.tnet long-d11t.tnet commun1u.- t1on vtrlflts view's. could Initiate journey Rud. te•rn l>eck IOf a +IOYeMet, MC S700. exQUtlltety ~ ricepoat bdrm 11550, On matt/box lpflnga '3501 All top of the tlne. mint cond pp 973-0853 ........ n.a bulld on rnc.<e lOlid structure Htafth ly 'ATltC \lfALKllt report good We ... , .. .,, ~ I New --· wood f\'tme 1125. 548-3155 appeat to be loS#lQ 1n lite .nci 10 reallu what you are galnln<,J W~A-=re=R""B""E""'o,....""0.-UMn--ab'I-.-. 1 KOtlPIO fOct 2l·Nov 211 Full Moon occupies •rH of chart relating to physlcal upress1on. creativity. seruwllty Don't mlstaki nirtatlon for rut thing Vltgo figures proml· ntntly IACllTTAMUI fNov 12·0 ec 21 I Emphasis on self·lndutoencc. beauty. ~rs. music. romance Family ~mt>tr dectar•s. "You stem 10 be doing what's btstl" CAPlllCORN IDtc 21·Jan I 91 Don't hide. ttMfQe from •motion.ti cocoon Lunar posltlOf' k CMU QUtcll trips, Ideas, commun1<~ w ith rNllvt who recently ullti. "I don't rt-"'/ know youl" Pisces wll help b<catc tl"lt let AOWUllUI jJM 2()..F•b 181 You IOC•te wtwt h.ci been tost. mlutng or stolen 8.Klllhg rKerved ttorn orw In posttlOf'I of authorrty You'• haw more ruponslb#lity. f'und. Ing-IS INde' aval~ Cancer Mtlv• ~s rNjor role through choln<e encounters .anc:1 NC:Ond wave6Ma m•t· Aat•I jMarch 2 I ·April 201 In splrlruafly uplft'lffl9 uperlences tr .... hee1et, 8 mo'1 otd spite of being up to your ears 1n At>ovt Mt. h,..lng the courage al'ld '350. M<Mng. 142.0534 form.fining, Interviews and burPaUC-confldtnct to place emotional HCUf· WHITTCOMB BOMBE racy. no orw can really hold a candle lty .oc>vt mattrlal concerns French t drewer d,...., to yoo The Sun In V1tgo ~II KOWtO fOct 24·Nov 221 A Walnut, Ofmolu h.,d· aspecred by Ur~. Neptune .anc:I contllct ovet finances wll continue ware, $2500. Poealbta 4 Saturn must mun that the tldt of until you flNly reMIH that what you othef ~ 780-e 1te fortune Is abeul to turn In your are fighting tor Of hoping to rKelv• favour. tnabling y<:XJ co ov•rcorrw 1s not wortn •fight . .anc:I also that Allc:t..,.._ 6015 •ny 1nstcurllles or fin.anc:tat Obst•-you hav• M1•.0y be•n affOfdtd pet· ci.s feet opportunities that an prov~ •tma IAll TAUltUI j,A,prll 21 ·May 2 I I you with a new kll'ld of confent· 1990 21 apd Nl•hllcl Although you now ~e to cope m.nt. stcumy .anc:I fulf1~ z.tone Mountllln bit!• with trylfl9 .anc:1 upsettlfl9 cwvtlop-IAOITTAMUI fNov 23·0« hal SNrneno D9ore LX. rMnts rmttd to a partnership or 211 A Fvl Moon In Pisces ll9nfflu brend ,... 1500 1911 clow person.al rtlatiOnShlp. don't undercurrttiu ~ c"*nging en-Biii CannOd•I• greet tallc evertylng at tau value Others counrtrs HO'oWVtr with t.ct lhepe lflOO or boctl for may be so confUwd or even ~• dlplonv<y and a cmllln amount 0 ; °"'Y. ltOOlll "'-1'5" .. ~ -.. .-, •-Balt1«T11 TtwuMer Surf· t .... t.~7 s ... ..,..7 cannot gM the ,,.1r. you '"" tum ~•n t~ boerd almoat,... S200t UJUfMlefS Of guMMltefS you Stele Slt~tlons to Y04if OW" .OVantq -. s..-..... & gotd OtlMINI (May 22·Junt 211 lath p¥tk uUrty If )'OU ~ wry much Seiko lpOr1a t50 wetefl protuslONlly .anc:I fiNnc:fally you stt• preoccupied wfeh tnijor c~s on ttee, l400 Need fMt ~M to bf umng on unch.lned the work front now c:.h/temly emergency waters °' a lltt~ too close to tl"lt CAPlllCCMIN 10.C 22·Jan zot a.. on... 4f4.4335 _ wtnd. ~ w ith yow usual a.mini AlthOugtl It Is now almost etrtaln D charm .anc:I aplonlb you wtl no doubt t.hat you wtl be on the move qultt Neuttcef JUnll, decor "9ma. be .. to Q(lt partntrs or close soon. ttwr• "'" some fin4pclat con-mertne ' :.'*:f equle>, usoc.lat.s to tMIM you out If thfrf' ~Mfom whkh cllnnOt be ~ed t>oet pert•. P ctur". .,,. _.. WOOcMn de•ll I , type. h~ to be .t """'°' mishap. ore rem.In undiscussed In otl"ltt wn• en.2110 CANC9• (June 22·.Juty 231 A words. Just msur...chat promlws of~~~·=~=·~~% ~Cullar ~MY set·up now &ffft'\S J4.4)pOlt or atSJIJt.n<t wtl bf forth· to lndl<att that It may be .OVIMll* conWlg and that no ont c.an hoQO. to ~ or pos~ CM.tin ~.wit* l'OU· •WA AM I AN term pa.ns. Hw, not for .t MC· AOHAMUl jJ41n 21 ·F.., It) A IHDIAH ITtMI. Caal\ for qnd shoUld you lfnlgltW lhM you Mt Full Moon In ,lsces s~s this b ..... ..._ Pottery, "'-· bt•no '°'c" to ,~f90 10Uf own not a tlmt to ~ ..,. °' •o ·~ a;·::· Oeryi:i:11:144:''~22c"'•11•ii_., .wr:s ~ Mtbltlons for the .-e ot othel'J to ~ your tint tnttntfQns p.tnntn' Mfish mot1vn at he.an but one In whkh to t•e a • ....,, I .. YOUlt .-TH• L80 t.JufY 24-Aug 1JI E~ chine• and UM ~ slngtt ran Of DAY• Curr..-cyar ~ .,. t~ ~'haw rttry right to ell sntpptt °' Wotmet.IOn you pos,MU i-==:=i::i:::~~ V..-0 fAuo 2J·s.pt 221 Full '*-' dOlftftUc ....,... tNt the t-... and tatt.tet proml$ts or to pr~ _Just f)OW astutt and Wft· Moon poSitlon CoMc!Ms wfth legll cOUd ~ «1'Ulll a..°'~ aJJUranCn. you •• ~ In prOCKtlW )IC)" CM bf . .,,.,,,, pubic lf'Mge, ~u to dfonet 0t ....,..... ~. You .. cs.ngtr ol W)'ing conMdtrlbfY mort Ne.a f'et) ~MatC'h lOf Now btUll ttom uadhlon Ountions con-dynlmk. ~. ~. Pl)'-"*' ~ ..,.,.,., In ran. you you rtlflt must Mp«att er. ..._ ctrnlng pwuwrsNp. nwtut Aaus cNc.. You ,,,.... WfY _..,, wordl. cGUd aoon ft9'tt Mint IO head--ft-om cnt chllf ~ Ntn "*"" cGUd domlnlle•. ~. ~1u1 <cMct w..tn }oulNllelJ:. ~ Jtrang and ~ ~ both tt'(enc ........,..,atwougtR·eoo. penons ~ rows cnt oHtlW .u. CiMllnt. Virgo. S*10! _, l/ftd • ~ "'°"" a.trfkt "'90tlonl °' ~)'OU tww s.oin-1u1 penotW ,_ ~ __... cntd to fWd to ~ )'OU c.an LW is.pc lJ.Oct 221 M.-.y rolts In YfNI ... 0urN OctiaMr, ~ ~ Z4•s.pt 2JJ If you and~ ••ntw W011111ig Pltttm ......, ... M ._. wll uy. "I rwwr ktWW tNs Mdit ol _,.. Wll M dHf'Y ....,_, ,..._ ,.., .,... to De •IPfriendnO a cl YfN1 .,,. '° • eo add eo .,..,, IJl.tlll your ChtCJt Ants l'NU9· It_. bt Uonlhlp _. Dt on ~ llWll '" ""°' .._ ~ Dt)'Ond ,.,.,_ l/ftd ""9nrMI MCUHity -11 I ' nt<tSJMY to rtvtw. mMw. pe»JH)fy No\ie.....,, ~ Wtl De no ....._, .,..,, cOfWNI torte )'OU to rwact • ilPT. I • YOU9 ......... .... £ - lO remodtf Oppon~ ..... to -IC'• .. Ot ~ .,..,, ...,... do i'IO( •P dW t.Oll OI MYt ,..., )'OU .,_.. tUrt to tt ,...., , .. , ... .... +--4-..... "'-"'4~ ... t-------------------------J bito.n.~td '°'·in~·· ,...,. hi .. .,. ~ .,.. 0"~-..C:::T•"" ....... ,. I , ..... , :: ::,-'~:. :. *t to'= =-.:::.::.:-:=:; (1M •• ,.._ff""'-.. ,.. '10Vf <rNllW .. .., Ind flNnUll ,,.. .. ,..,.. .. ...., --~ ..... •••lrll ••llftc Nt rnourctt to DttW uw "*" .Ifill ,_ ,. ,... -. • 11ie "'"" 1n1 -1,nun 1 ••a aw ts. l4-0a. ,.,, "" ""'°" .. ,... •· ,.....,..,_ --. "'°"""' NI COll9t co ..., ..... ...... a• ..... Win• e-.. .. ... COii "'WNi" -,.. ... 1 ~:mr··· . ~-,, " • Mlle.ft~ -· mtr•W ""· ·::. ,,.,..,,.,, (1_,D -.............. -,:'.;:.. ..... , ...... _ ........ AAM. "'(Itta • .., .... _ 1IOO Meo .... Dr. IA ..... nt ' ,·, J , . . . ·.-. RECYCLE STARTING A NEW BUSllESl?? ' PIMM atop ..,. I• -.,... hctft*'9 ~ --·-,, .. ,,.. OWy ~ L .... o.-t• ,,..,,, :uo .... .., Coata ..._. C8iltornoa II ¥011 can NM l'IOO..,. ---~"' ., •'"'' ... 2 ,.321 (~ 31• or )ft.,_, _ _..,... tff• ...... •tl ..,, fOoj .. ~ nw.,....,,..,.....,. . II ,,.,_. .,...... "904 "" lwrtlW ................ c:llll 111 ... -........ "'-" ... .... C'...=·..:r 'NC~..11'\ J.f I ..i • • .,,. . . ... ...... . . - bY Bii K..ne .. I'm not gift-wrapping them, Jeffy. These are book covers." OAllnBLD TH~ l!t fwtC.E TH£ WEIG-MT f'VE. fVfA LIFT'f.P -..- llARllADUU by Brad Anderson PltAinJTS by Charles M. Schutz • --·-·--Pssr. FRANKLIN~ I NEED '(OU ~AD ALL SUMMER TIRED O~ PLAYING CENTER FIELD ON OUR TEAM. 1-tUH. FRANKLIN? "Hey. cool it! I 1us1 smiled al the lady." Jlf Al'fCY ARLO A1'I> JAIUS OVERBOARD WAAI /\~£'%0 PD1Nb I/OWN 1~E~E, NAIE? TO BORROW A PENCIL AND SOME PAPER ... TO 6U'( nwse Tl-t1N6S ... l.UMV ARE '<OU JUST TMINKIN6 A80UT TMEM NOW ? by Jerry Scott ROSE 18 ROSE by Jimmy Johnson '(()J'li?E WOH~HG M~ 1 MET 7 ~r;~. "TM€ fl~~ .4\AJ.>~R ltJ KIOO Of MAl<t~ If AU .. 'WMICH YOU'VE PAID YOUR Y.()RfMWMft,£, cm~·r If~ ACCOOijf IS ArPk1tCIAfED. -.... by Chip Dunham roa B&TTS• oa FOR WORSE MP THE 6U~ Weti9£R5 WH~ ~E'S uN1~SURA8~~. . .. by Alex Graham DllAllllLS - J.E(oNi\t .. OED av ourur ~~.,vrA'UOS DSNlOS TDIUNACE by Hank Ketchum t l I l ' •THERES MORE TO TENNIS THAN JUST 'lOVE.'"<'KNOW I'' by Tom Batluk by Lynn Johnston by Kevin Fagan by Kevin Ft1gan WW AM I A&.-~-""'9 -~1t>&U91Ml~f" Orf 1Ma ""'1"ALQJ,..11