HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-11-26 - Orange Coast PilotWEDNESDAY, OVEMBER 26, 1916
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turnout ore ectton unexpectedly high
rrsults, · l 1.390 PtOPk cast ballots
1p1n1t the mt.asure, compared to
8,260 yes votcs.
'Che mtMllC 11 that peoP.le hlte
Newpon ee.tll .. They don t want
Predicled that The Irvine Co. -u1t1mately -wall Jtl us way and
exPtnd Newport Ctntcr 'Wltli ~
d1t1onal office towen, rtat.al.lran&s,
lhops and f'elident11l tracts
wu quackly cballeneed by Gridiock
1n I~ 111Ntutc drive.
OriClkiek pthtred more than 6,000
NIJ\ltUra, more thanenouth to force
ID eleniotl.
BJ ITEVIC MARBLE ..............
Vo1en in Ncwpon Balch soundly
defeated The Irvine Co.'s con·
trovenia.1 plan for expandina New-
pon Cntcr in • apeciaJ election T_Ueiday that ttmr.-·u uM•pectCdly
hiah turnout. ·
Mt.asure A. as the development
project was tdenhfied on the ballot,
lost by 1 lopsided SS percent to •2
Ration
Preeldent Reagan la
under fire fottowtng a
shake-up on the National
Security Council and rev-
4Matlon1 that money from
tranlan arms aalel went
to Contra rebets./ A5
Conaumer prices edge up
1Ughtty .I AS
World
tnqt Jet• make a tong-
dllllt8ri0i 1111utt on an
trent.,, ott termlnat/ M
Callfomli
A Drug Enforcement
Agency chemist Is
sentenced to two y~rs In
prison for stealing con-
fiscated cocaine./ M
Bualneu
Add flnanclat seasoning
to your Thanksgiving cel-
ebration. Have some
money In the 1tock mar-
ket today and Friday./ Al
Sporta
UC Irvine men's basket-
ball team gears for
aeason opener./C1
Bear quarterback Jim
McMahon wlll be out for
the rest of the eeason with
a shoulder lnJury./C1
INDEX
percent mAflln. anbther Wntwood with biah-fi1t
The mcuu~. which was vic..-e<S as ofY'ace buddinas," said Allan Betit,
1 lhowdown between the city's pro-~ of 1hc oppo juon sroup Gnd·
srowth and ak>W-tr<>wth factions. was lock. Jl •!'u~ tn ~l but a handful of the Bttk. who orsaniied .. arauroots
city s S l precincts. ampaian on a relatively slun budael,
A total of 19.669 voters, sli&htlx said the ·expansion would' have
mo.re than •l percenl of the city'.s • "crealed 1 ttaffic niahtmare m the
tt111terc;d • vo~n. cast. ballots. 'The • beach city and would nave spoiled the tum~ut 1s ~ h~t thll decade for 1 caty's resKkntial flavor.
special el~hon 1n Newpon Beach. · But proponen1s of Measure A said
Aecordina to final but unofficial they sec no messa.ae in the vote ind
Election
.notlaSt
word on
growth
ly PAUL ARCBIPLEY
Of ... ....,,.. ....
From the campaign to the election
ni&ht s-nies, Newport Beach's
Measure A pec11I election batlle was
1 claSMC David vs. Goliath fi&ht
The Irvine Co. pulled out all the
stops to sell its Newport 'CenteT
upans10n proposar. It fouod an aJly
1n the newly formed aroup C1ttzens
for a Better Newpon.
OppoMnts operated on 1 shoe·
tnng budaet, bu1 had the P.Owcr of
already established groµps hke Grid·
lock., Newpon 2000 and Stop Pollut-
1".'& Our Newport that enJ<>ycd
c1tyw1<Sc arassroots support. That
suppQrt translated into 1 crushioa
-Olow to The Irvine Co.'1 hoJ)C'.
With few exceptions, proponents
and opponents of the expansion plan
111ued the outcome wouldn't dcUne
the on101n1 .. arowth i ue" debate.
The CA£Ct>tions included David
SJJc>res ofGndlock who said through-
out the campa•gn he uraed residents .
to look beyond the Newport Center
proJCCl and consider the d1recuon
&hey wanted their city to t.ake. .. J>eoi* art atty m1"1ktn 1f.ther.
think th11 is about Newport C,enter, •
Sho~ said at a quiet election niaht
pany in Newport Beach. ''l said f.orael
about the pro4cct and talk about
d1rectton.
.. Do we want 1 commercial com-
munity or 1 rcs1denual community? ..
.. Th11 doesn't ttttle the srowth
issut. The srowth ·~ IS }Ct to be dclmnintd," said Tom Nielltn, a
v1ce<ha1rman of The lrviM Co.
The Irvine Co. SPtnt more than s~.000 on ill campe1an and about
$2.S milhon proceu1na the compleJt ee~namendment for Newpon
Center.
_ The plan was 1Pi>roved on a 5-2
vote by the Caty CounciJ in July but
But b)' the time tbc 1ipataua were
turned 1n, 1t QI IOO late to ~ the
Newpor1 C.aucr plan oa the =· Nov.4bellot.CttyCoundlnwm ,
11 one point. considered ,{jm=
aun by placina the devc t
question on the Nov. • bellot. But 11
the last 'mOmcnt, I.he counal dttided to ull ·Gridlock's bluff to tee if'· i&
cou~ coll«~ enoup lianatum far a
speaal election.
~ ... YOTSU/Aa)
Most arsued that the vote would
not settle the arowth issue, however.
(Pleue eee ELECT101' / A3)
Allan Beek, 1fbo led the cam.-...n ac•ln•t
lleuare A 1n Tuad.ay'• apeC:laI election.
...,,.. ..................
receh·• a npporter•a Ila& at an election
ntcht party after hearlDC die Yote tally.
Irvine OKs county dump expansion
Council approval tied to requirements
fhat odor, toxic problems be corrected
By PHIL SNEJDERMAN °' ... °"" ..........
Irvine City Council mem\)crs
Tuesday aa-ve the county pemuss1on
to expand the Coyote Canyon landfill
into the city but satd they are sun
concerned about odors and toxic scepaac pollution linked to the dump.
City official said their best way to
force the county to ~Ive the dump"s
problems was to allow the expansion
-and attach naad restrictions to 11.
A 2-foot layer of soil WJll be hauled
into the dump to help contaio odors
that have sparked complaints from
Irvine rcs1dents.l.-1 county wa le
manaacment omClal reported at
Tuesday's mecuna. A teries of wells
wall be drilled to remove con-
laminated water that has been seep-
ing away from the landfill, he said.
The assurances came from Frank
Bowerman. director of the county's
waste management propam. When
councn members con 1dercd dcl1y-
in1 a dcc1s1on. eo~ennan warned
that a posponement could force the
county to close the landfill in a matter
of weeks. -The dump currentl y receives about
6.000 tons of wa te daily. Bowerman
said about 40 percent of the county's
waste matenal JOCS to Coyote Ca-
nyon. which 1s;u,t ~uth of Bon~ta
Canyon Dnve.
fapandina the dump into Irvine
r~u1rcd a cond111onal use permit
from the city. ·
Mayor Larry Ag.ran said he felt he
was beina ·•stampeded into approv-
ing this (permit) ..
Agran and Councilman Ed Doman
said they had received numerous calls
from Uni versity Park and TurtJe.
Rock re 1dcnts who cla1med dump
odors arc offensive and 1n some case
cause-a person to be 111.
Doman acknowlcd ed that the Clty
(Pleue eee IRVIJU/ A2)
SPECIAL EL£CTION
Laguna
board
hit with
recall
Trustee tearfully says
her vote to reinstate -cqach was mistake -\ .
BJ LAURA MEll ... ..., .......
usan Mas tearfully recanted her
vote to rc1nst.a1C h1ah school foott.U
coach Cedrick Hardman 11\et" he and
three other Lqun.a Beach school
board members received rccaJl
papen Tut$d.ay maht.
Mas, Jan Vickers. Carl Schwan
and Charlene R.aaatz arc taratted for
recall by Citticns United for ~cspon·
"ble £.ducahon; a IJOUP that ot·
pniz.cd after the boerd allo•cd
Hardman to ruumc coachina u 1
votun&«r last month.
The former 111-pro dcfen11ve md
for the San Frans1co 49cn was
1rrnted in September for pouewon
ofS.S arams of cocaine and entered a
court-approved drua rehabilitation
proaram . More than I SO people P9(ked the
• 1dm1mstrat1on bu1ldina Tuesday '
ni&ht to heir the readioa of the letter olintent to reaJI Vic.ktrs, Rapr.z.
Schwarz and Ma
• The onlr board member not served
with rccal papers was Harry Bithell,
who voted apinst rcinstatin& Hard·
man.
Mas told the &JYUP that he would
chanac her vote 1flhe could. he saijl
her desire to support rchabthtaoon
would have been mo~clear if she had
supported the upenntendent's rec·
ommendat1on to suspend Hardman
1ndefinately and aJlow h.im to reapply
1t the end of the dru& PrOIJ'lm.
Af\er llSlenina to Mas' prepared
statement. the aroup's leaders -
about 20 people -ignored board
members' plea to di~ the matter
and left the mectjng.
The group's orpni1crs had
previously qrccd not to debate the
1 ue with the board. But other people
remained at the mcctina to araue the
ISSUe.
The board members have seven
days to file a rebuttal to the recall with
the Oranie County Rciistrar of
Voters. but they complained tbe
rccall's h t of concerns arc vague
(Pleue eee LAOtmA/ A2)
Advtce and Gamea
Bulletin Board
85
A3 __ _..H -S•t.i~---ve Muslclt Honor Farm expansion
Clutlfled -
Comic•
Entertainment
Mind & Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Public Notices
Sportt
Tetevlaton
WMthet'
CS-7
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A2
By LISA MAHONEY
Of ... ...., ........
Oranac County uperv1sors ap-
proved expansion of the James A.
Musick Honor Farm Tuesday
Board members. without com-
ment, approved a master plan for the
!()().acre farm in El Toro and certified
an Environmental Impact Report on
the upansion plan.
The formar 1aetfon followed a
tormy mcetin& last week when
neighborhood re iden1 'sduaht to
block a near doubltnJ of the honor
farm's inmate ~pulat1on and the
1dd1t1on of hentrs and fire trainma
academics.
Re idents in -SCrrano Park and
Lake Fore t who bouft.l homes near
the honor farm arc opposed to
cnlaraina the minimum-security Jail .
Rut 'uperv1sors added about 800
t>cd\ to the 2()().bed fac11tty during
1985 by erectina ten1s and modular
bu1ld1nas to house an ever-srow1ng
number of inmate .
Penn1nent hou '"I for the Mu 1ck
mmatesand abou1 .SOO future inmate
1s needed to meet county need
through the year 2000. according to
county officials. In 1dd1t1on. the county wants to
consolidate it trainin.J faClhtie for
shentrs deJ>uties and firefiahters.
Tuesday approval incorporate
Harbor Patrol cutback scuttled
Plan to rep aces ert s deputies.with
specta o leers would save little money.
BJ 1..114 MAHONEY ..............
Oria"IC County uperv1sors came
about Tuaday ind ttunled tMir plan
to re~ HarbOr Patrol· dcputit$
w11h ~I officers.
The 1e1iof\ came three monthnfter
the tupervtton decided tha1 the
county could save monc by rtpiac-
1111 the deP,uua Su~1lon bllmfd the county't
..Sm1ni1trauvc staff rot leadnt1 thtm
10 believe reclau1f'y1na Hart.or Pltml officen coutd uve money wnhout
rectudna tetVittt
Genera ob 1pt1on may
i ucd if two-thirds reJistercd
voters agree.
Approval of the bonds would mean
a tu increase for Oran e County
re idents. .
The county would have to ~ise
about S 11 million 1 ycarto pay for the
t1matcd Sl41 m11lionJ11I. •
uperv1so" hope to put the
mca ure on 1hc O\tmbcr 1987 or
June 19 ballot.
· Offices closing; Pilot
-delivery to be earliei:
Gu
1 ......... , .......
re erupts at
•heft hC wu naled and 1dfa1ed,
PQl1tt ~ Kathy Sauth
id.
Ounna cvac»atM>n or about ?'°
p(Opkfrom 1ht1t~polittddaintd
thru youths and hdd thml for
qutStionana. pOlitt Capt. JamtS Butu
said, add1na that ofl'1ca\ weft 1ntth·
•an& for as man) u three otha pcoPk
inside tbe store.
.. Ir"• a five '*>'build~ and lhtrc
ate I ~ of Platts IO hide. he said.
H0wtver, DO oot wu buMS dunnt
the teatth whkb laid nearl) five
houri.
KC"Unt)l pard told J)91kc be
htard lhootins 1nlick ~ stOtt an the '°° bl«t or East Manchnta Bou~"'ani and in tht park1"J lot ju t btfO~ the 1~· was emptied
LAGUNA BOARD WT WITH RECALL ••• P'romAl . . . . I
TI.c aroup lxht'\~ the bOard ha' •l"lucd t~ board has not allO'A'N the On ,Oct. 24 the court agrttd to
railed to t 1 , 1 ncv. hiah !eh<>Ol principal and super. d1 miss ftlOn) ~session c~ 1f
• upport communtt)-<ndOf'SN anttndcnt to run the district Hardman comPktes a si.ll-month
policiaandcocksofbchavaorrq&rd-Jim Toomey. a b1ah school IC· druada,enaon P«>t,ram.
"'' substantt abwt. th 1ucs director who rni&nrd from tfardman 11 scbfdultd to appear an
• dtquatel)i ~nd da tnc1 fund t~ dastnct sax •ee~s qo al\tr he was court Dec. S for a pre-trial htarina on
• . transfc'l'Ted to a th1rd p-ack teach1na amisdnManorrnistinaarrcstc~
Respood ~o.comruwut~ input on p05ition lhis )tar, told the boa.rd .. the' that •-u filed w1tb the dru& arrest. im~rtant ckcm~s commuojt> 1s not eom& to put up The court ~dl also ~term1ne if
• Gl\e Klldemic:. e\~llentt top ·~1th this Hardman's arrest 1n Scptcmlxr con·
pnont} o'er olhrr pros:rams and ··T~dadnotel«t)Outoadminti-stttuted a v1olat1on of probation
act1\1lcs.. . U'tonada)·to-d.a) be is. Theyclttttd sentences he ~•ved for scncral
.. · • • Uphokt 1~ profnStonal repu-)OU to ~e poliq." citations of drivio, Wlth a suspended
t.auoo of the·d1stnct. morale of the . The four board members ft.a,c hcfnse.
communtt) and the student's learn-K\ en davs to ijle their rcbuu.al to the ha~~':. t::, h~~t• ..,u~~a.rstr
ini en' 1ronmen1. . ftt'.all. At\tt the rebuttal period, the So '"9ne cannot ~pond to~m~un1-recall group has lO da)s to submil a County Muoicipal Court Judie Ric -
t) input 1f the community is not draft of its petition to ttic rqistrar of ard D Hamilton wdl also r'tv1~· hctt;· Raptz said after the group's voters H.-rdman's progress in the dtu1
orpnaen ldl the mectins. Once the petJtion is lppro"ed by di"ena~n prop-am on that date .
.. Angr)1 ( tuess I could be con-1he rcglStrar, the croup Au.l20 da)'S
s1dercd anp'y beau~ I have ~ to gather signatures on the four
resented every one of )Ou. Lcl's take petitions for rcca.11. • • '
our hca_ds 01.1t ofth4: sand and not be . The group must pther sagnatures Man With knife
caught m ~c h)st~a that 1sara ping from 20 per~nt of the d1stnct's • L-
thas town, she said. 17.SOO registered \Oters -3.SOO ro1111 grocery Store
Schwarz told the cro>Ad, .. We arc s1gnaturcs -on each pctauon before
hsten1ng to )OU and wc~ome ~our an election can be held A separate '\nife-~ieldina robber held up a
.1npuL You arc n1)' fnends and peut1on wiU be CU'CUlatcd for each l..guna Hills aroccrY store Tuesda), con~utucnts. Let's pull t~thtt and board member. escap1ns with about $200.
see afwe can work these thanas out." A nominations committee is seek-The suspect walked into~ Safe-
Ragatt's husband, ncuroloeist Dr. •1lg four P,C<>plC 10 replace the sctiOol way Market at 2427CtEI Toro Rd. ar S
Bun Rapu, urged the audience to board mim.bcn-ifan election takes p.m.,sa1dOnngcCountyShcnfrsL1.
educate themstl\ts on drug abuse by place. The four people endorsed by Russ Elsner
reading a book wntten b> Dr Joseph the rccall CTQUP will be listcdJUl 1M Hesbowedaknifetoagroccrydcrk
U.S. Temj>e
..................... •Ill T"':'t.
Pursch--; H&rdman'sdoc:tor Pu~h ballots. • . who handed him the cash from the
:~c::~~~~~~ school twice si~e ~m~~t) \I~ ~n .~1~'! "ii~~.as seen dnvingaway from the IRVI.NE OKS. EXPANSION
Schw-an: interrupted Ragatz' bus-Hardman. J7 to resume c::oaclung mar .. et 1n 1 h&ht blue Chevrolet • • •
band an..d told him to sit do .. ,, >A hen untd he completes a court-ordered lmpala, )tar unknown. Elsner said. P'rom A 1 -f
he potnted at Supcnntend~nt Dennis drugprogram. lfHardma.ncomplctes ihe suspect was described as a could only influence dump opcr· methancpsforcon"cnion toenerg).
Sm at ti and said. .. You di<!n ·~ e .. en the program. passes random drua ""hate male an hJs late ~Os, about S feet auons b. permitting the expansion_ The count)°s s l 5 million soil cov-
ha\e the antelltttual cunos1ty to ttsts and u dcarcd of an) pcndma 10 inches_ tall. we. !&Jung 185 j)OUnds under ri&id requirements. But he eragc project. expected 10 bq.in in m
attend those ftctures." ch~tbe board will reinstate him ind porung sandy blon~ -added.. .. r feel 11.e·~ being put in a weeks, ~ould miucc the odor prob-
Min) people in ttie audae~lil ugust. ----No one was 1n1uted Ht" •• box .... J~m real!}' n6t .tonvinmt-thc tem , ht' said.
odors wall stop. lnrine ofTLcials also have cx.p~sed
The penmt was approved unani· concern about the escape ofleaduue
mo sl by the co nal -contamrruued underground water HARBOR PATROL CUTS SCUTTLED... ,;~ula1ory.;nci~salsoappro"e1 !:;1~u~~)ISl~l~l~e;~~o !:.~~
From Al the county will expand the dump supplies.
and \hcrifrs patrol deputies would convince Newpon Beach and Hunt· rcmemlxr only a handful of other · from 65) acres to 8S9, so truat at can be
have to beadded to patrol Dana Point 1ngtoo Beach offiCtal.s to pay a pan of issues wh1ch have created a similar operated for two mo~ )cat'S before at The leachate ""1U be rcmo"'ed '18
Harbor. Parrish said. the Harbor Patrol's costs. uproar. · 1s properly seated. About 120 acres of wells,, Bowerman said If ll mttts
Having a .sinaJe enllt) pro,·1de Pamsh's office 1s also developania "I thank. an our effon.s for cost the expans1on will be wtthan the regional water standards, It will be
Harbor Patrol services would Ix fee schedule for boater SCfVlCCS which sa" mas. we 'ACOt 10 the v.Tong end.·· Irvine city hm1ts. s.pnnkJed to control dust a1 the
more efficient e\en if those SCT\>'ICCS the Harbor Patrol now performs for Riley said. The county leases all of the landfill landfilJ or diluted and used to ampte
fall outside the scope of duties free. Admanastrat~rs should focus on 3,..,-...,. from The lrvme Co. -a golf course proposed at the sate
origin.all) envisioned for the depu-Proposed fen should be ready for cuttmg costs 1n· other pans of . ~· -If 1t does not meet these standards
ues, be said. the board next March. Harbor5.. Beaches and Parks Distnct Bov.erman. the c nty ,_,-astt man-· it will be disposed of in a sewage
Sttll concerned v.ath making the An amtated Supervisor Thomas budget rather than angering !he agcment official. said the increase in system. he said. He said the ""ells to
Harbor Patrol self sufficient. Pamsh R1IC). whose dJstnct mdudcs most of pubhc by t1nkcnn1 with matters of dump odors was probably trigcttd remove leachate should bcgm operat-
satd that count) staff I\ trying to 1he Orange Coast, said he could p\Jbhc safet), he said. b) ~ drillini of w-ells to draw in& by Fcbruaf).
ORANGE ........
COAST --J. rRMI
MAIN OfftCE
2:JO ....... C •~J:.A
a')C. .... Coif• ..... ,,. ~
41 11 » 10
6J 10 40 u
Sl.lftt-\Od81al1Jle.lft. --.. , ,,,,,. .._,_..._. .. u10..,. .,....,
.. 1 ll•J!!
Huntington bank
robbedof$650
.\ robber escaped with $620 l ues-
da} after holding up the Secunty
Pacific Banl an Hununiton Beach
The suspect stood LI\ hne With other
customers 11 the bank at 202 Main St .•
~1d Huntmgton Beach Pohcc Lt.
Jack Rcanholu.
When 11 wash1s tumatabom2p.m.
he v.alkcd up to the teller. hand~ her
a note and said, "Gave me all your
mone) "llo funny business ...
The note said· "Lad y, I want all
)our mone) No funny stuff. I have-a
gun."
.\fter the teller handed him the
mone). he was seen coang east from
1he banl. No vehicle or gun was seen.
Rcinholu said
The suspect 'AM dCSEObcd as a
v.h11e male. about 38 )tars old, S feet
11 inches tall and v.eighing 180
pound
1.:
o.u, Piiot
OeUUrJ I• Gu.ranteed
Cllltei'9CI eG1a. M2-5e11 ....,_ l .o•-. W ~I
c:c-v.~1 im ()~ CoaM ~ ~"Y "I> -mw ~·•·a. eotorill ,....,. 0t •O•.-t•
lf'e"lt ,,...,, ,,,., o. "''"~ ..... ~ ~ oer
.._, ol '°">•'11'!1 ~-
Justcall 642-6086
U Ot, F , ~ ,.0.. 00 -~-,_IMC* c,, !> 30 p"' Cd l>r..it• • '
-,all "t • ~
GAME 11 ·; WE EK 11 I DAY 4
86 83 1 56
31 84 77 ·39
,f/ A YEAH ... Al FlUEIT HERE. f CHECK OUT -OUR LATEST
WIMMERS OM 12.
YOU COULD IE MEln
HERE ARE TODAY'S IUMIERS.
I
•
P.u1es ono how 10 ploy th~ •
go e ore on vour game
cord or, co I ou• OTLINE:
642-4333 , 9-5 , as
lor WI ·GO infor ouon.
/
Second ~ OC*egt peel el Colle "'-c.ior,,. f~ 144 IOO~ 5.aCl'l)IO'l O'r CA<•• iS 2!t per l*oOCI
.,, !Tit S1 00 ~!lly
VOL 71, NO. 330
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Circulation
Telephone•
SHUTTERS SPECIALLY
'
PRICED
Customize your windows
with movable shutters in
colors , sizes & styles to
compliment your decor.
Benefit aocCer
tourneys slated
More t~an 3,000 children ftom ~ 6 to 16 will
helpadminmer a kick to cystic ftbrolis this -eekmd w~n they compete in the annual El Pollo Loco
Socctt Tournament.
E!'t!'Y. fea to the Ammcan Youth Soccer
Orpnauuoo (AYSO).aponleftd cvtM will be
donated to the ~stic Fibros11 Foundation. Sem1-
finats will be conducted Fridal and Saturday from 9
a.m_. to. S p.m. at Stacey Junior Hiah School,
Spnnav.aew Elcl'."lentary School and Sowers Middle ~hool in Huntanaton Beach, Balearic Community C~ter 1n C05ta Mesa and Gisler Elementary School an Fountain Valley. ,
. The finals are schcdukd Sunday at the same
hours at Stacey School. Call 894-7218 for more
information. ·
Toy •le la NeWJ19rt
The As 1st1nce Lcaaue of Newport Beach Will f
hold its annual toy sale Monday from 10 a.m. to 4 I
p.m at its thrift sbop, SOS 32nd St. in Newp0rt.
Prooccds from the sale will 10 to support the
lea,ue's Child Day-Care Center ·and the Children's
Dental Health Center and Orthodontia ~rn.
CIJrlstmu ball Jn-Me.. • A Chnstmas bell will be spoilsottd by the Costa
Mesa Senior C1tucns Tuesday starung at 8 p.m. at
the Neighborhood Community Center, t 84S Parle
Ave., Costa Mesa.
All Seniors (SO or older) arc invited. Admission
is free and refreshments Wilt be served. CaU lbe
center at 64S-1032 for more mformat1on.
CIJaatlty •emlnar .et
"Dr. Tom Grant's New Chas1ity" wilJ meet
Tuesday from 1 to 9:30 p.m. at the Nort1'wood
Community Center m Irvine.
The workshop, sponsored by Irvine Valley
College, will address contemporary issues concern-
ing women and wtll be led by marraae therapist
Arlette Grybow. The fee as S l S and more 1nfoT·
m1t1on as avatlable at SS9-3333.
Holiday program slated
The Harbor Key of the Chjld Guidance Center
ofOrangeCountywiU mettTuesdayat IOa.m. at the
Newport Beach Country O ub for a holiday program
by the Corona dcl Mar High School Madrigal
Singers. The cost of the 10 a.m. luncheon is $9 and
further mformauon may be obtained by callfog
646-3420.
Benent show planned
A benefit hair show for the Childrens Hospilal
of Orange County will be staged Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at Susan Noblefs lmaa,c Awareness SaJon.
191 01 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach. Admission
as $1 0 and reservations may be made by calling
847-7734.
Electronics group meets
The Orange County chapter of the Armed
Forces CommuntcatJons Electromcs Association
will meet Tuesday from 11 a.m. to I p.m. at the Sam
Restaurant, 14982 Red Hill Ave .• Tusun. Ron
Alchley wall speak on .. clcctTonacs under the
Christmas trtt" tnd rcscrvJ tions may be made by
(illhna Wendell Joo t a~ 63 1-2843. ·
Boutique at Oasis
The Oasis Senior Cauzens Cen1cr wJH hold a
Christmas boutique Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
at the center. 800 Marguerite Ave., Corona dcl Mar.
Featured will be toys and crafts made by members of
the Oasis Sculpture and Woodworking Group.
An Invitation:
Wedne.day, Nov. 26
• 7 p.m., Lapa Beac~ Plau•1 CommJ11loa,
City Council Chambcn, SOS Forest Ave.
Pro-Agroupworkedtoge~v t
Catattas fot a lct&cr N~ rwutt Mn MMllWll I bids ""' prea.aaa~..._.....__
expans ion supporte rs fa lls to tu m back Ude
Paiae Slid dw Ya oa A. campeap lllo
tried IO wan voaa ~lh aa lbetntee bellot
campaip. '
lit&ftiWe and ................ fl ..
special etectioa.
BJ ITEVB IUlllLE ...............
The Irvine Co. and a calilms po.up
woited iuelf into an el«tion day rmtzy
Tuesday. uJina precinct walken, tt~·
phone solicitors and last-minute maden to
,et out the vote.
Gridlock. the aroup that fOUlbt apinst
· pusqc of Measure A, took a more laid·
beck approach and 10undty defeated tbe
cffon 10 expand Ncwpon Center.
"We didn't do anylbina." said Paul
RyckofT. a former Ncwpon Beach mayor
an opponent of the contro•~iaJ measure.
VOTERS •••
FroaAl
The Measure A campaifll was ea11ly one
of the most visible lD city bistory, The•
Irvine Co. made a 1 S·minutc video which
was shown on cabte television and at
community forums and spent over
$200,000 with• political consulting lirm.
Pubhc opinion polls conducted for The
Irvine Co. showed that Meas\m !l would
win by a 6(}.40 ma~ accordina to one
consultant who worked on the Yes on A
campa•an·
But the measure won in only three of SI
precincts. ·
"I really think that the council did not
understand its consJatuency," said Bobby
Lovell, t.-ho opposed Measure~. "This
would have resulted m an enormous
(development) increase that would have
really been out of line."
_Like others. Lovell satd she looks
forward to a time of healing and peace in
Newport Beach.
''Lots of us arc old friends," she wd.
refemng to the division in families and
neighborhoods caused by the develop.
mcnt fued.
Mayor John Cox, who voted for the
expansion._ said he was disturbed by the
amount of "inaccuracy" he hit:! beard
about the project.
"ThJS is less dense than anything else
we've ever approved an this city," said
Cox.
Bill Ficker. an architect and chairman of
Citizens for a Better Newport, placed a
congratulatory call to Beck when the final
results came in. But he did not speak
warmly of Gridlock and its tactks.
"We've tned very hard to be accurate
without slandenng." said Ficker. "I'm
disappointed in the othct side. I th1nk they
did some slandering of people."
The Measure A campa•gn ran the
gantlet. Early in the campaign, Gndloclc
was sued by the city and a Superior Coun
JUdgc ordered the group to delete several
references from its campaign statement.
Beck later struck back by getting the city to
briefly yank The Irvine Co. yideo from a
public library. , .
In tbcfinalday~ before the election, bo\h
opponents and proponents accused each
other of stealing or vandaJizmg campa1~
signs. Merchants m Corona del Mar srud
rcs1dcrus threatened to boycott shops that
daspl~yed Yes on A sagos.
In its pitch to win the election, The
Irvine Co. promoted the expansion as the
cure for the area's traffic congestion. The
development firm vowed lo bankroll $40
malhon an road improvements 1f the
measure passed.
The Jrvinc Co. also pledged lo donated
land and aaange financing for a teen
center and to assist an expanding a city
library and the Newport Harbor Art
Museum.
Opponents brushed ofT the traffic im-
provements as a hoax and said the other
amemucs could come about watb or
without Measure A.
Nielsen said he as perplexed by the
momentum behind the opposition.
"I think there seems to be a fcehng that
somehow we can stop and get off. There
arc many who live here and benefit from
all this and yet want it to stop." said
Nielsen.
Nielsen indicated that The Irvine Co.
wall not abandon its expansion plans.
·~The rclatfonship between this com-
pany'and the city is the key to the future,"
he said.
..We had 110 orpaized dron."
But Ttie lrvanc Co. aaoa. wtlb mcmben
of Citittftl fot a lc11er ~ and the
Newpori Harbor A• Ch of Com-merce put kJlethef a ftalkoun pteM
A obone bank, let up Monday, wu used
to call retis&cred voten in Newpon Beach
ind Uf'IC their support for Measure A. On
Tunday, votunleen checked vouna
booths to ckiennane wbo had voted.
.. Wt spent tbt day checkina pollina
places to identify our known ')es• votH.
ThOIC who had not voted, we went to their
houte and remanded them to vote," id
David Paine, a con1uhant worlcina with
In <t Wttb bdore IM el«ti~ New'·
port leKh raidnns were approeched and
nbd to ca1t abteftttt ballots 1n favor of
lht measure. A \'Ottr does not ~ually
have to be out of the diAract on elect.on
day to cast an ablcnttt ballot.
PaaM said abOut 3,000 rcquat1 for
abtentc:t ballott were ~1vcd.
When the absentee votC'I wttt counted
Tunday niaht. 2,070 bellots ~ere for
Propos.ition A and 866 ~re qain t tM
mea ure.
Another ilratqy wu ck\do~ for
Nov. 4, the rqular city election when
nearly 60 percent of tM city's votm went
to the polls, Voluntctrs favonna the
Thew vaablc 11'-0..&W VOii..,.
waa the nw1un0dl 9'9"'1118111 _. ....U cam~. Tbr Irvine Co. epeos ..,.....
of SS00.000 and CillleM lot a leaet' ·•
~ 1peat mOR than S60.000,
Gridlock mutta'cd a ) I $,000 cam.-.
warchclt, money that "5utedfora IMiflf
and OCWJP8P" ads.
Mtm~n of Gridlock took comloft la
the fact that more than ~.000 people._..
petitions oPPQtCd N~ Ceftter~,_
petition drhc ruuJltd in the IPICial
election. ,,
•·Th11 may dov.o 11 t~ moa ivwble
election of all time in Newport Beach,'"
said Paine.
BW Ficker, cbalrma.o o'r Clttaena for a Better
Newport, &1"8 a pep talk to Newport Center
apan9lon npporten darlJal an elecdon nJC)at
... ..................
&•tberln& at tbe Balboa Bay Club. A couat of tlae
:ibeentee ballota lnltia.lly ahowed lleeaa.re A In
tbelead . ' ,-.:.
ELECTION NOT LASTWORDONGROWTH •••
P'romA.l.
"It's a big issue and it's hard for people to
comprehend that," said Bill Ficker. chafr-
man ofCitjzcns for a Better Newport "But
it doesn't solve the growth issue.
"The philosophy of the cit)'. will always
be debated and people wall nghtfully
always look at at," Ficker said atan elCC\1on
rught bash al the BaJboa Bay Oub.
"The good thm& out of this issue as we've
established a counter-balance, a base,"
Ficker said of "Citizens."
"We've had SPON, Gridlock, 2000 -
ncgauve groups that don't do thine. they
stop things. Now there's a balance. '
But proponents of the plan said despite
the massive campaign they waged. they
were forced to try to simplify a complex
ISSUC.
Mayor J ohn Cox, who •J>provcd the
General Plan amendment that ted to ~
petjtaon drive and Tuesday's special
election. said s1mphfying the 1 ues was
d1fficulL
"When we went through the public
hcanngs. all kands of people came forward
and were willing to make contributions ...
Cox said. "and that's the ICJ!slativc "Maybe this can teach The Irvine Co.
process al work 10 a productive way you just can't do a master planned
"This election was a lot touaher," he community," Cox said. "It's JUst too b11
said. "People weren't really informed but for people to wallow. ~ caught up an the cmouon of the "Unfortunately. )OU have to do 1t •
election process." p1eccmcaJ.~
Cox said the campaign turned into pro-Not all think The lrvaoe Co wall gtt
and-con promouons that samphfied the what 11 wants. PauJ R)ckoft former mayor
arguments &Jld prevented a clear under-and founder of Newpon 2000, sa1d The
standinf of Y(hat the project wo uld or Irvine Co. wo uld have to give up its plans.
wouldn t do to traffic. arowth and otheT And he thinks the same people wbo
issues ~urroundang the prOJCCl defeated the measure wall be prepared to
Proponents airccd The Irvine Co. will battle future J>!OJectS.
hlcelygctmostofwhat1twanted1nthelong "We'll fiP.,_t them the same way we
run anyway fought this.' R'yckoff wd. "We're tryana to
"We're prepared to break 1t down and interest ~olc an v.ha\'s. ,91n1 on 10 the b~g at bac~ in pieces," said Tom Ntd!cn, cit)'." · "' • • ,),
a ace president at The Irvine Co. _ Shores agreed Newport Beach wlll
iclsen said he hoped ev~n opponents al~ have res1dcnt.1 to serve as "watcb-
of Measure A would want to sec growth dogs· aga1nst what they consider un-
and improvements m the Fashion Island . reasonable ~O"-th
shoppmg center. -~s R)ckofT m the 70s, (Allen)
Cox apttd most of what was proposed Beck in the Os." bores said. "Maybe it'll
m the expansion prOJCCl could wtn · be bores m the 20s
approval over the next IS years if brought "You can't den> there's a sense of
piecemeal to the Cit} Council. h1stol) here ..
Warning: Exercise is addictive
. J
CHJCAGO (Af>) -Exercise as dcfi-that athletes who started out a rec-"With certain personality types, exercise
n11cl y better for yolH-han...a ca.p,rcue. a dry reauonal exercisers became overly depen-begms as a weight or tress mana$emcnt
manint or a line of cocaine. but a dent upon, or m fact 'addicted' to,' tech01quc. but instead of becoming an
researcher says too much of1t can have the exercise.·· Ms. Chan wrote enhancement of their hfc. or a means to an
same result: addiction. "Even two days away from exercise can end. II becomes an end 10 it.self," she wd.
Connie S. Chan, a clinical psychologist effect addicts psychologically.'' she said. "Instead of It becoming a stress ttduccr, 11
an() amateur athlete;foterv1ev.ed patients '"They Start experienc10g guilt. depression. becomes another Sires . "
at Boston-area sports medicine ch01cs and irritab1hty. moodiness and an~1ct). Addicted athletes. he said. often feel the
reviewed rCSCJlrch on the role of exercise 1 n Longer penods produce maJor S) mptoms need to exercise v1gorou I) five or more
the relcast of pleasure<ausing chemicals of withdrawal. In extreme cases. where tames a week and to cover greater and
in the brain. major ln)Unes keep compulsive athletes greater distances. By doing so, they tend to
The report by Ms. Chan. assistant from their sports for two or three months. become anJured more often than other
professor of human services at Boston they may even tum anorc~1c or buhmlc " athletes and when they arc prevented
U niversity, was published an the 1987 Add1c11on can occur m any strenuous from exercising -usuaJly onl)' b) mJUf)'
Medical and Health Annual. released th.as spon. Ms Chan said an a telephone -they uh1bit signs of p ychological and
week by the Chicag~bascd Encyclo~1a interview Tuesday mght. But 1t is most ph)sicaJ withdrawal.
Britannica Inc. common among those who pan1c1pate in Ms Chan estimated that SO percent to
"The push for more mileage, more aerobic endurance sports: runne~. swim-75 percent of people who exeTC1sc five or
strenuous and more frequent workouts, mers. b1cychsts, triathktes and aerobic more limes a wed. could be considered
and more ume devoted to exercise meant dancers. addict'>
l
.Can cell, farmer Potlatch
CEO, president, dead at 77
Benton R. Canccll. former pre 1-
dcnt and chief cxccutavc officer of
Potlatch Corp., died Nov. 22 in a
Laguna Hills ho pital after a Iona
1llnc .
He was 77.
Educated as a profe 1onal forcsta,
Caoccll headed Potlatch from 1962 to
t 971. continuing as • director until
1979. Born Nov. 11, 1909. in New York,
Canccll received a bachelor's destte
in fore uy 1n 1934 and a master's
dqf'CC' 10 1encc in 1938, both from
the Un1,·ers1t¥ of M1chipn.
While till an collcae he bepn h1
indu try career v.1th positton at the
Amencan Pulp and Paper A socia·
tion and the U mtcd tatcs Pulp
Producers '\ soc1a11on
He served on the War Production
Board m World War II. and as
director ofits Fore t Product~ Bureau
"'as re pon 1ble for forest products
allocauon H.cjoi.n.cd PO\l.t'll Rayer Co Ltd .. ot
Vancou"er, Bri11sh Columbia. after
the v.-ar. and was o pcrtt1ons 'ate
pre ident when he left in I 9SO to JOin
Rhinelander Paper Co. as vice pma-
dcnt.
He wa elected' prcs1den1 of that
company in I 9S4 and when ll m<"rged
with t. Rcgi Paper o: an 19S7,
became an e"tCC'Utl'<' vice ptt 1dcnt of
the laratr com[llln). He wa~ cl~lcd a
dil"Ktor of St Rea•~ 10 1960.
He Joined Potlatch in t:ebruary
Lari Lyerla dead at age 81
Lan Lyerla. • n-sidenl of l;.Quna
Bcach.diOd of natural causes on Nov.
6 at Hollenbeck retirement home 1n
IQ62
Concell SCl"\'cd on the board of
directors of F1r..t Secunty Corp. of
It Lake Cuy; thc Bank ofCalifom1a.
the C1oroit Co.. uthland Paper
Malls of Luflcan Teus. onhwcst
Pulp and Packaaina Co. Ltd. of
lbena. Canada. and G1ddinp and
Lev.a' of "vfad1!.e>n, Was. 1n add1t1on
to t Regas and Potlatch.
He v.as a d1rector of many mdu try
orpnu.ahons and served• prc5idcnt
of the mencan Fore t Jn t1tute.
He also wa • member of the Ba}
.\rca Council of Boy <icouts. and a
national dir"tClor of the Bo) U\ of
\mcnca.
( an,ell' liN wife, Theodora. died
an a 1974 uto ccadcnt He 1
urv1,ed by two dauahters. June
anccll of Menlo Pa.ri. and Jean
(iallaacr of 8rtntwood, four arud·
chaldrtn; and one SJQt snndcfiild.
Ha'I wife. ~anct, tM fonncr Mrs.
H th P. All A of Clamilont. hf ••
lo• n cle . •
he was I yean old. ....... wttlaMld~ ............. -., kla .... killed la ... ~ .......... eooldelilt.
pon mo 11'\I to l una Beach he
•orkcd a retary ·at tht El Toro
U. . 1anne Corm Si • ht rct1reJ
from thatjob when l\c wu 6S.
L)crll" Ji,eJ tn the Hollenbt\:
n-tlrcmcnt ome fi r \'CQ ""pnnr
to her de-Ith w.-a the lut
q)f\'IYIOI member her ram1l~. She
had one 1'ter1nd fhc broth
un1\C'I ham at their home ua U.Una
Hill . The> Weft: maMlcd in 198l
rrangcmcnt wen: handkd !'Y \M
ptun • t)·.1 n'1 a pri~te famsly
vu .,..... a-.rt wnue• .. ,,_. s 1. o1
C..-.... ._ bdmel. T.e •a .. m t ............ ....spu..
l.}-crla mo"cd to Lqun Beach an
1969wathhcnasttr. hcwa anatt1\t
m mbtr in the Lquna t th0d1't
Cbun:h wh he ,.n• 1n the chhu . . .
thenng •as held an bis nw:mot')
O\, 23 Ht famtl .... &Mt
m monal anlhc;formOf'co.mbu-
ttons to ti of Amenc:a
___,, __ ___,_ _____ ------~-------~--------~!1!!!!1!1!11111!!1"!!1"""' ....... ~--.,.--........... -------
Former DEA chemist
1ets 2-year sentence
for stealing cocaine
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -s1mtlar-look1n1 Y.halc Po"der called wom•n who worked as a U . Drua Manato1.
Enforct"mcht Admtniurataon
dtemist for JS years was sentt>nccd to The chaf)tS aaainst her co' ercd
two ycan in pri on Tuctda> for cocaine C\hibits from four casn. stea1in,~incfromexh1b1tsshe was -.hich came to San Francisco m>m
aul)'Zlfll in dfUI c:,.sn. DEA offices m · Ancho~c. Alash.
San Jose. Calif.. ~nvh. and Las
Eathcr Allen, .S6. of Corte Madera. v cps. ls well as a fkt1taous fifth case. had pleackd guilty to charges of t b d u em~ulement and distribution of 3S !~tho':f.ies kid~n ercover aaen '
ounces of cocaine.
She said she was bcrna blackmailed But tbc p~ution 's court papen
under threat of exposing her said Ms. AJJen had admitted tampcr-
bomoscxuahty. But fc<kral pro ing'A-ithdrugsin 14casn, thatsignsof
ecuton, who said one of the alle&ed tampcrina v.erc found in another IS ~kmailcrs was coopcratina with cases. and that 180 c habits had to be
the '-_Ovcrn~nt, contended Ms. re~umined as a result of the case.
Alkn s m<!the was financial aain. Tbe aoverninent did. not SA} bow
.. h is aiflicwt to imaimc a worse :~~lJ.rosccut1ons m1&ht ·be JeGP-
crime or a more fundamental betrayal
that a DEA chemist could commit," Defense laW)en. urged lenienC),
said attorne) Jan Nielsen Little of the sa}ina ~s. AIJcn had givt>n in to
Justice Department's Public lntcgnt) · blackmail at a vulnerable moment
S«-tion an papers filed with U.S under fear of losing her job 1n late
District Judie Thehoo Henderson. 1979 but had cooperated full) with
The maximum sentence for the the government smce her exposure
characs was 25 years in prison. and was .. truly remorseful."
Ms. Allen -.orked from I 97 l unttl early this }car in the DEA ·s Wt"Stcrn Saying there was no ev1dence that
Regional Llboratof1 an San Fran-the defendant had ~,1.vcd any larae
cisco, analyzing dru_g samplc'S ~•zed sums of money for the drugs. defense ft"... 1 lawyers David Ma}cr and Cora
..
..
f/1' Ul.z-plMI ..... I .
Returning to achool
by ~era agcn~ 10 Westem"'States Lancclle said, .. She was not dflvcn by
Prosccuton said she stole cocaine greed •... Esther Allen was the '"'ict1m , bY removing a small amount from ofextonaon. a cynical twasung of her
each exhibit and replacing it wtth a dttpcst and mos: secret of fears."
Ryan Tbomu, &, la canted on tbe anu of b1a fatber, Robin,
u the JCMUIC AID8 Tied.in reta.m• to kiadeJ'l&rteD TaeN&J
after wtnn•n• a coa.rt battle a&a.lut..tbe Atucadero School
Dlatrlct. Ryan was nenoaaat flntbat..djuted qulcklz.~
Ida parenta, ...-ndfatber aad brotben accompanied to
c1ua at S&Dta Roea Elemen~ 8cbool. _ ·
: Soviet bank acounts frozeii over libeljudgment
By tile ~ted Press . , Acting Cat} Attorney William Brewer said Tuesda).
Arms suspect asks to withdraw gullty plea
LOS ANGELES -A court order freezing two Sovtel bank accounts was
served Tuesday·b> attorneys for California businessman Raphael Grqonan,
whp carhcr this year won a $450.000 libel judgment against the Soviet Union.
The order frozcassctsof$456.4 I 3.34-the amountof1heunpreccdented libel
judament plus interest. Jn August. Grcgonao woo has libel case by default. It
was behcved to be the first such Judgment ever handed down against the SoVlet
Union. Gregonan, S6, of Palo Alto operated a rTUlltimillion-dollar medical
• supply business an Moscow for 14 )cars before bein_gousted m November. 1984
and being branded a sPY 10 the Soviet newspaper lzvcs11a. Grqonan sued for
SIO million in damages. ·
SAN DIEGO-One of two nnglcaders in a multtm11ljon-dollar scheme to
smuggle stolen Navy Jet fighter parts to Iran told a federal j udge before has
snitenc1na Tuesda} that fie wants to withdraw his guiJty picas. ~o
Agusttn. one-of three brothen charged in what federal prosecutors say as the
largest theft case an Navy histor;. faced a maximum sentence of 27 )Cars in
prison under bis pica to four felonies. At least SI 0 million an parts for F-14 jets
were stolen and scnuo Iran m ''1olat1on of a 1979 executive order probibatiog
sales of anns to the Persian Gulf nation. The thefts caused 328 F-14 missions
to be scrubbed because of a shortage an spare parts and endangered this • i Salvatlon AnIJ.Y ads allowed on city buses country's military readancss. prosecutors said. ·
t FRESNO -Salvation Anny Signs reading "Sbanng 1.s caring -God bless
you" will be allowed back on municipal buses because they do not violate the
city's public service advertising guidelines, officials said Tuesday. "We didn't
think the reversal of the dec1S1on would happen this Christmas." said James
Ross. director of the Fresno SaJvauon Army. which Frida> was ordered 10
remove 50 of tlS holiday messages from the Fresno Cit) Transit system. "We
appreciate them taking a second look and realizing there's nothing wrong with
these s1g:ns." Complaints from two citizens prompted assistant city attorne)
Robert Gabriele to order the signs removed. He said he behevcd the signs
violated the cit}°s pohC)• on intcnor bus advertisements because they
coot.aJned-a rchg:ious message and a veiled plea for money, both which be said
m1'11t result an buSC'S bcmg turned into a public forum. "After a tborouah
review. I've found there 1s no firm legal bas1s for having these signs removed.''
Poli ce chief reprimanded for ticket flxlag
SAN DIEGO -Police Chief B1U Kolcnder and Assistant Chief Bob
Burg_reen wer-e reprimanded Tuesday for abusing their posuions, a d15C1Rlanary
action considered one step short offinng. City ManaJer John LoclcwoOd' said.
The wntten rcpnmands ended a two-v.cck inveshgataon by Loclcwood's office
into allegauons that thousands of parlcma uckcts and 30 moVtng Cltallons wett
dismissed improperly dunna the past year by Kolendcr's office for fnends.
relatives,joumahsts and prominent c1t1Lens. "h's a wntten reprimand, which
is the next step from tennmat1on," Lockwood said 0 ln my judgment a
terminatioo 1s not warranted."
J/tany ~ cJltany ~/mas clltany '3/irutmas &rany '31iiistmas &rany '3lirislnuu
CHRISTMAS PARTY DECORATION CENTER
fttw
6" 11 .11
ll" 11.IO
14" 11.oa
18" 11.11
Stttw Wrttth
•2.ftS t , ... , .... ,,.. , ............ .
Ollt Wttp ~"' ~
.... Otft '··· T AILE IMllMllH
& IMVITATIOH
._CE1~~ .... R, ...... ,~II2~S~~ ·
-;,\~ I ~II 1, '' ~;,~
l101r1ti111 ••• s.,,11 ••
801 W. 111111, JIST W. OF llllSTOL
COSTA IESI • 171·1170
HAPPY THANKSGIVING
With the holiday fa f approaching we would
like to wi h you the warme t regard for
a joyou holiday eason. Take time
out to remember all that i .-~
important to yo u. Enjoy
a afe and wooderf ul
T hank giving.
Mount Olive Cemete
Harbor Lawn Memorial Parl( '
1125 G .... AYMUe, Coete Mell
(714) 540-5554
_ ___;:__ _ _;;;,. ____ __."=---~--- - --------------------------
Iraqtjetsmake
.l.ong-dtst~~~e rai~
on Irariian target
MA AMA. Bahrain (AP)--: Iraqi
warp1ancs flew their lonJest mas$1on
in more than six years of war T ucsda}.
and rocketed Iran's Larate: Jsland 011
export terminal in the southern
Pcntan Gulf, semna two tankers
ablaze. · .
They attacked Larak. 7SO males
from Iraq's southern air bases. sax
hours aft<"r jets believed to be lranaao
raided a French-operated 011 platform
ofTthe Uruted Arab Emuates. k1lhng
·at least fi, e -.ork.ers. h wa, the first raid on Larak. It 1s
one of two makeshift terminals
established at the aulfs southem end
because of constant Iraqi raids that
11avc disrupted traffic at the m11n ·
Iranian export facdaty · on Khara
'ls.land in the northern Persian Gulf.
A war communique earned by the
offiaal Iraqi News Agency and
monitored in Nicosia, Cyprus. de·
sen bed the raid as "unaqut>." It said
Larak was "turned into an island of
wrtekaJe and fire."
Earher in the da). warplanes that
witnesses said v.ere.: U.S.-made F-4
Phantom& raided the pla&fonn in the
.4bu al·Bak~h oilfield near Iran's
Sassan field about 30 mdri from the
United rab EmiratcJ. •
Iran has Phantom~ an its air force,
bul Iraq has only Soviet and Frtnch
combat planet . Iran's. ttalt•f¥n
media. also monitored an N1cos1a,
made no menu on of the attack.
The United Mab Emirates aov~m
ment which own~ the Abu al-
Bakoosh field identified the attack· ina planes only as "fore•&n ·" It pve
the casualties as five dead: 2-4
wounded and 10 mi sina. .
Jran's official Islamic Republic
News Aaency said the Iranian air
force bombed economic and militaty
taraeu at Qohuk, a city in nonhern
Jraq. innictirt& "substantial casuahie
and lossd." It· claimed Iranian anti-aircraf\
,m1ss1lcs downed two Iraqi warplanes
over northern a.nd >A(Stem Iran, one
1denufied as a Soviet-built Su-22
figh ter-bomber. whose pilot was cap.
tu red:
. . . _.;.
Refugees fro·m Suriname
crowa into Frence Guiana
By tile .Utodate4 Pres• .
ST. LAURENT. French Guiana -Almost 2.000 refuaees from
ne1&hborin1 Suriname are crowding info. th1~Tote French outpost.l seeking
shelter from South Amenca's newest guemlla con fl act. ~me of those n~ang to
French Guiana from the jungles across the MarOWlJn"C Raver cla1m that·
government troops have andi.scnminately_ killed civahans in .Suriname for
presumed support of the rebels. The claims could not be independently ··
verified.. &sides the hundreds oftunnamesc who amved an St. Laurent 1n
recent months in search of food, shelter and medical care, many more ma)'
have fled across the MarowtJne at other points along the nver border •.
Both sides say truce near i n guerrilla war
MANILA. Philippines -Government· anti rebCI. neeouators said
Tuesday they expect to agree on a cease-fire agrcemen! an the l 7-y~-old
Communist insurgency before Prcs:ident Corazon Aquino s weekend deadline.
"I believe t~t we have achieved substanoal progress and we arc ncanna an
agreement," government nCJ.Ot1ator Ramon Mitra said after an ei&ht-hour
meeung in a surburban Manila house .
Gorvacbev warns of militarism
NEW DELHI. India ...: So' ict leader M1khlll S. Gorbachev, on has first
trip to the Third World. on Tuesday warned that "chams of militarism"
threaten man's sllfVlvaJ and caJled for new initiatives to halt the nuclear arms
race. Gorbachev and Pnme Miruster RaJiV Gandhi both blamed the U.S. "Star
Wars" program for obstructing progress toward a nuclear-free world. The
Soviet leader said his lccla.nd summit with President Rcapn revealed ''the
obsuacles and forces" that block nuclear d1sannament. The talb broke down
over Reagan ·s refusaJ to accept the So' 1et demand that the tar Wars pf'O&ram
to develop a spacc-base<J anti-missile defense not involve tests outside the
labon1tor:~" ,
Soviets outspend U.S. on nuclear defen.e ·
WASHINGTON -The Soviet Union has spent much more than the
Uruted States on developing a strategic nuclear defense and 1s laying the
foundation for a rai>tdJy deployable· nationwide anta-balhstic missile system.
the CIA's N<?. 2 offic~J said Tuesday. Robert M. Gates, deputy dirtttor of
central antelhgencc. saad the CIA estimates that' over the past I 0 years the
Soviets have spent nearly SI SO billion on strategic defense. almost IS tames
what the United States has spent. Jn remarks prepared for a fore1Jn polic>
group in San Francisco. Gates said the ~VJets nave used the money to upgrade
and c:itpand the operational balhstic missile defense system installed around
Moscow to the limits allowed by the 1972 Anti-Balhsflc Missile treaty.
Or (Junor C Jackson
... 1111
IEW TllUllT CIRISTill ClllCI
610 W. lath St., Costa Mesa
(T eachi't1 Science of rind) ..,....,2 ... TUii_,. M. lllYIOI
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EXTRA PATIENCE AND nc ......... ,-
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Sida Reg. SALE
Rossignol 808 Quantum 299.00J•l.ll
K2 '77' 310.00_.241.11
Fischer 'RS Vacuum' 340.00..:J~.ll
Fischer 'RC4 Comp.' 285.00_191.ll
Kneissl 'Magic'--235.00_179.ll
Oynastar 'Course SL' 345 00_291.11
Oynastar Omesoft Classic 295.00 --251.11
Olm 'Comp SL'_345.00_30l.ll
Pre ·1100' 265.00_151.ll
Pre ·1200 11· 295 00-211.11
Etan 'Omn11tte' 295 00-231.11
Etan ·975· 240.00_111.ll
Head ·sc· 31 o.00-249.11
Atomic 'FES' 290 00.--251.11
VQlkl 'Aennttger A'_378 00_321.11
Boot•
~ -
~
'TSH'
Mena & Ladles
Heated Ski Boots
Regular 31 5.00
249"
Nordica ·955· Ms & Ls 250 00-209.11
Nordica '720' Ms & Ls 180 00_139.11
Lange 'Tll M' Mens_300.00-24t.ll
Ra1chle 'RE·S' Mens 200 00_141.11
Raichle 'RE·3' Lad1es_180.00_111.11
Salomon ·sx 91 ' Mens 285 00_.239.18
SalomOn SX 81 Ms & ls 250 00 _191.11
Salomon SX 61 Ms & ls 185.00 _139.ll
{}Jnafrt co 10 Ms & ls 200.00 _129.ll
TYROIJA '480 D'
Binding•
White&
Grey
Regular 125.00
Binding•
Tyrolia '490 O' 150.00_109.18 .
Salomon '647'&'647 L' 120.00 _ 79.U
Look 'HP' 145.00_ "·18
Marker 'M·36' 120 00_ 79.U
Po141•
Scott 'Sport' 27 oo_ 11.18
Reflex 'Wortd Cup'_45.00_ 34.U
Sid F••hlona SALE
Pedigree Ladies Ski SuitsJOl.15-141.15
Warm-up Bibs For Ms & Ls _ I0.00
Ladies Stretch Pants 4-way Stretch
Regular 125.00 •·•
Mens Gaiter Pants 4·way Stretch
Regular 130.00 •.II
Meister Ski Sweaters Ms & Ls
Regular 48.00 ____ 39.U
'Hi·Loft'
Parkas
For Men &
Ladles
JunlOI' Slclwear-
Ski Parkas Special Group
Regular 29 95·72.95 _14,g.11.11
Ski Sweaters Special Grou~
Regular 27.00-36.00 15.18
Gaiter Stretch Pants _72 00_ 54.11
White Mountain Down Parkas
Regular 64.95·73.95 _ 31.18
Toddler Snow-Suits 18 mo -2 4 mo T2 • T 4
Regular 35.95·65.00 _ 19.18
Ski Acc•••OIW• Reg. SALE
Hertel Hot waxer_69 95_ 51.18
Toko Alpine wax K1L 15 00_ 12.11
Kwik Ski Vise 45.00_ 39.18 .,....
Sic Ski Rack 79.95_ 54.81
Camp 7 Ski Product•
Nylon Ski Bag 9.95_ 7.11
Cordura Ski Bag 59,95_ 39.11
Nylon Boot Bag 24.95_ 14.11
Cordura Boot Bag __ 49.95_ 21.18
Cordura Fanny PacL 14.95_ 11.18
.,,., .... , SALE
Velour Warm-ups Ms & Ls
Regular 69.95·84.95_31.•54.18
Running Separates Ms & Ls Dolf in, Nike,
Descente Reg. 9.50-21 .00 _UI
French Terry Printed Pullovers Ms & Ls
Regular 20.95 12.11
Ladies Aerobic Separates _M Otn
Wootrlch Ladies Mt. Parkas Sp.Group
Regular 89.95 •·•
Levis Cord Pants For Men
Regular 18.95 1 t•
LeVi & Lee Stretch Jeans For Men
Regular 25.50-27.95 11.•
~ .. ,
K·lwlU ._. .. ,. Ci.,.l ShOe .
Mens ~ l eel•• Regu&ar 54.95 19 II
T•nril• ShH• , Re uiar
OradOra Amica Ud _ 95 -~
EtOOIC (Ml ~ Lad·es 29 9~ J Mroblc Sito.• Reoutar
. -Nke A 0111 loUdes_3695
.. •k•tlUlll ltto..• N kl! Cond tior.et tad _39 95
Ad•~s CeilteM I & Li _6000 N1~e Motivator Meos_39 95
. ~
. · T•nnl• thH• Reguldr
Your 2," D111dora Leader Mens_49 95
A•roblc BhH• Regular
N ' WOf Fo!c.e Hr Mens_54 95 Choice ~ e w fl',~ P!a)tl JJ.~ _ _39 95 (WMe & Bla<kl ·
Nike A.croft: H1 Ladies_ 54 95
(Wh1!P. & Black) · , Running •hH•
Tent•
Jansport 'Yellowstone' Dome
Regular 200.00 ____ 131.U
Jansport 'Lhasa Hotel' Dome
Regular 250.00 179.11
North Face 'Mandarin' 2-Man-111•
'Windy •
Pass 23'
Dome Tent
Regular 210.00
'Windy Pll•• 24' 4 Seasons
ReguJar 260.00 _1 H.88
-'D-3' or '0·5'
Jl9 * Backpacks
Regular 150.00 f29'--.....;...4
Backpack•
Lowe 'Uintah' Internal Frame
Regular 150.00 91.11
camp Trails 'Traveler' Travelpack
Regular 95 00 79.11
camp Trails 'vagabond' Travelpack
Regular 105.00 •·•
Kelty ·vagabond' Travel Pack
Regular 105.00 II.II
Kelty 'Kafadyn' Day Pack 28.95_ 11.11
Duffie Bags From Outdoor Products &
North Face 20 Models To Choose From.
All Sha es & Sizes. 4.ff.15.00
SIHplng Baga & A~•ao""•
camp 7 'Scout' or 'Explorer' Hollofil-2
Regular 100.00-120 00 _69.•79.81
Regalite Foam Pads 21 x 59
Regular 28.00 17.81
Thermarest Deluxe Self Inflating Mattress
Regular 40 50-69 50 _ 36.IH3.ll
34 qt. Poly Cooler
-~,/'""7---:----Regular 28.95
13~!.-
Etomc Quasar 2X Mrns_&4 95
Etornc Sigma MPOS_59 95 N·•e Ar Cont Oller u.o es_ 49 95
Turntec Lad1ts u Jollc1 _ '6 s
Mountain Parkas,
Vests & Jackets
Assorted Styfes From
North Face, Woolrtch,
Sierra Designs &
olumbla
Regular 39 50 -180.oCY· ,,,,,_,,,,
Plu• TheM New llodela .. • Clmp 7 1Gllder' TISlln/Down Mt. Pllbs
• Royal Robbins &
Pltagonia Sportswear
Seteded Styles Regular 180.00 119.11
For Men a l.ada.s
\
Now 1/3 Off! • Camp 7 'Artie' Tnlln/Down Vests Ms I LI
Regular 89.50 54.11
~Scub• ~~pecl•,.I
All Dlvtng_· ,.,....~
Wetsuits
20°/o to
40% Off! Reg. SALE
Conshelf 21 Regulator_199.00 _138.11
catallna Alu 80 Tank w/K-valve
Regular 200.00 99.11
USO Data Consote _250 00 _119.11
Body Glove 3-2 Full Surt 119 95_ 14.11
Select Dive watches~ Off!
Oceanic Dive Boots_ 39 95-:_ 29.18
' Ross
'Mt. St.
Helens' .
Mountain
Bike
Uf9••t S.lectlon Of Hiking
Boot• In So. Cal.
'Hiker' .·
Hiking Boots
5911
Hiking Boot• Reg. SALE
PMS Brown 'Easy W31ker'_64 50 _ 29.11
Camp 7 Grey 'Explorer'_79 50_ 54.81
Camp 7 Grey 'Walker'_89 00_ 64.88
camp 7 'E1ger' 139 oo_ 99.88
T1mber1andHunterGTX'1 39 95 ~119.88
Nike 'Thunderdome _59 95_ 49.11
Adidas Tamarack· 5-9 _60 00 _ 29.18
Danner Super11ght GT'_ 79 95_ 49.11
Climbing Shoe•
La Sport1va 'Ballerinas _39 95 _ 19.88
Five 'TeAn1es' 54 00 _ 47.88
Coleman Reg. SAL'E Regular 325.00 Products .,,.,.
BRUE'
'Eclipse'
Soccerball ,,,,.
17' Scanoe 560.00_364.18
16 'Medalist' canoe 560 oo _3M.II
2 Burner Gas Stove_ 63 95_ 41.11
2 Mantle Gas Lantern _46 95 _ 33.•
'Powerhouse Gas Lantern 57 95 _ 42.U
Personal 16 Poly Cooler 16 50 _ 12.90
Mldalz• Ceramic
Tennis Racket
White or Black
........ ~~~ Regular 110.00
Tennl• AAll
R•clceta ...... · -.,,
P.rlnce 'Precision Graphite' 90 & 11 O
Regular 135.00 IUI
Head !Graphite Master'-200 00_11c.u
Kennex 'Black Ace'_ 175 00_ ••• ,,__,.,.,,,.,,Racquet•
Ektelon 'Excel' 70.00_ 51.U
Ekteton 'CBK 200 .00_151.•
If~ RIH:qtMf
81owoutl
81l1cted Modell
ReQUW 29.95~.oo ,.to 29"
' Mountain Biie•• Reg. SALE
Ross 'Mt Hood'_!439 95_ 315.18
Ross 'Mt Ramier'_554 95_ 491.18
Ross 'Mt W3shmgtoo'_234.95 _ 22C.ll
Fisher 'Montare•• _ 849 00_ 711.11
F1s~c 'Competllioo' _1050.00_ •·•
Redline 'Mo1ave'_395 .00_ 351.11
Touring Biie•• ~
Ross 'Adventurer'_ 142 95 _11118
Torpado NUOYO Spnnt' 479 00 -···
. Regular 32.95
Athletlc• Reg. SALE
Bnne Wind Channel' Soccerball 29 95_ 19.11
Mikasa Vl200 VolleybaR_32 50_ 21.81
NFL 'GamebaU' Football_ 49 95_ 39.81
Kama Bnstle' Dart Board_39 95_ 24.11
Pan Pac1f1c Skateboard _29 95_ 2C.ll
Harvard Muu{Aurt Baskett>an Set 39 95_ 21.•
AH •as-•11 Weter Skis
50"° Off!
All Demo Water Skis , Connelly.
Ep. O'Brien 51.•
Connelly 'SPort SL' Jr. W ter Ski
Regular 110 00 all
S.lllolwda
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LA JOLLA University Town Center (619) 453-5656 SAN DIEGO 840 •a· Stre t (619) 2~9191
HUNTINGTON BEACH.16242 Beach Bl. (714) 848 .. ~ LA MESA Grossmont Center (619) 463.-9381 ESCONDIDO Vin y rd center (619) 746-59S8
NJ Pricel OOod Tiwu Tu.idly Die 2. ~ 8'0ck On Hend Lalt. Ufnllld ~ MO 94Zea On SofM Slit .....,.,., Not Al "9ma A\1eleble At AR loc:tltoi ..
"W"!'---d White House
-~vlse:r managed,
icaragua effort
~-'ntra leaders say
~e--=k,.....n-ew nofhtng of
funds from arms~
WASHINGTON (AP) -... A key
While House adviser, fired for hi~
role in divertma money from Iranian
weapons saks to Nicaraauan Contra
rebels, secretly managed the war
·•ins• Nicaraaua's lefust govern-
ment for two years after Conarc s , .. barred U.S. assistance. according to W.S. aovemment and Contra of-
ficials. •
said: "I am not aoin& beyond the
information that was provided earlier
today, because our inquiry is still
continuing and I wouldn't want to
make any definatc tatemtnt unul
we ha"c more information." •
Nonh did not return a tclc~honc
call placed to his office immediately
after the White House an-
nouncement.
\ Iran deal
sets off
storm in
C9ngress
·-
WASHINGTON (AP)....:.. Tbe,Rt·.
apn · administration's revelattons
about arms to Iran and aid to
N1caraauan rebels touched C?ff a
firestorm of conarnsionaJ ~tte1s111
and demands that a special • ptO!'" ecutor be named to determine 1r
anyone broke the law.
Some lawniake", voicina shock
over .the disclosure by Attorney
General Edwin Meese oftbe trans(en
of funds. and m the wake or .the
de{>artures of Vice Adm. John
Poindexter and Oliver North fi:c>fYl
the National Security Council, said 1t
has become obvious that U.S. fore11n ·Marine Lt. Col. Oliver i.. Nonh,
the National Security Council's depu-
ty dittctor for political-mihtary af-
fain, emeraed as the chief contact
between the U.S. gbvcmmentand the
Contras at President Reapn's direc-
tion after Conarcss cut off CIA aid to
the rebels in 19841 official s said.
North's role as a lcadina. beh1nd-
the-scenes figure with the Contras
dates back to early 1984 when he
drafted a three-page memo that
proposed relying on private Ameri-
cans and th1rd countries, including
Israel, to keep the Contras supplied
dunng the aid cutoff that followed
disclosure of CIA mining of
Nicaragua's harbors. according to
current and former White House
officials.
The officials said the plan was
aprroved orally by Rcaaan and 1hat 1t
Preeldent Reacan. left, •tepe ulde u
AttOrney Geiiei'al &dwtn lleeee prepuw to
talk to repo~ at tbe White Houe
Tueeday after tbeljire.ldent an.noancecl tbe
re.tanatlon of bla national aeearlty adnaer
• r-_ • · APwa ,.,.. poltcy is spanntQI out of control and
and tbe ft.rlilC of a lley aide. lleeee · that neither President Rcaaan nor
addreMed reporten after the Wbtte BoaM anyone else 1s in char&e.
1-.rnecl ap to $30 mlllloa recelftMI from tbe And sull others said the mi&-
HCret Nie of weapou to Iran bad been · nations of Poindexter and Nonh may
tranafered 'to the Contra rebela. have doomed the administration's efforts to arm and equip the Contra
•·He was a cabal of one," said one
administration official. assessing
Nonh's influence over the White
Ho use policy on Nicaragua. The
official, like most others who detailed
North's act1v1ties, insisted on
anonymity. -
Reapn announced Nonh's de-
parture Tuesday after a Just1cc De-
partment inquiry uncovered the di-
version of mtlhons of. tfolla.rs from
U.S. arms sales to Jran, through
lsraeh mtcnnediaries;to Swiss bank
accounts controlled by the Contras.
fcl to Nonh to implement.
Although Nonh met frequently
wi th Contra leaders during the aid
ban, officials said he often relied on
intermediaries to handle discussions
he considered legally nsky. Officials
said three pnmary intermediaries
were retired Air Force MaJ. Gen.
Ri chard Secord, rettred Army M~.
gucnllas.
The strongly negattve reaction was
bipan1san, although som~ R~
publicans did rally to the president s
defense.
S~ultz _stands by Reagan,
·declares he intends to stay "It wasa b1part1san storm; now 1tsa
bipanisan humcane, .. declared Sen.
Carl ~vin, 0-Mich .• who called n a
misspoken wben he said that Iran had "multiple fia'ICo," a v1olatton of law
ceased his support for terrorist ac-and "a scandal."
In Miami, two top Contra leaders
contested assertions by Attorney
General £dwin Meese that they
rccci ved between St 0 million and $30
million from the arms sales.
"We know absolutely nothJng
about the money that has been
referred to today," said Adolfo
Calero, leader of the Nicaraguan
Democratic Force, the largest Contra
army.
Dunng the last year, he said,
Contras received only "a tnckle of
money." Calero said, estimating 1t at
$300,000 to $'500,000 in add1 t1on to
humanitarian aid approved by Con-
vcss. Calero. interviewed on CBS-TV
about monc} received by the CQntras
dunng 1he aid freeze,·· I have alwa)'s
assumed thal 1t comes from pnvate
sources." I know absolutcJy of no
connection between Iran or Israel or
nothing else.··
CBS also reported that White
House offic1als beljevc that some CIA
ot>erat1vcs, although not nccessanly
director W1lliam Casey, knew that
funds were diverted.
Meese, responding to that repon,
Gen. John K. Smalaub and con-WASHINGTON (AP)-Secretary
servauve act1vi t Robert W. Owen. of State George P. Shultz declared
The Associated Press first reported Tuesday that he intends to stay on the
North's role m aiding the Contras last ~ob and pur ue "m every way poss.
year. Jn a letter to Conarcss on Sept. S, 1bl~" President Reagan·~ fore1an pol-
1985, then-national security adviser icy obJect1ves, mcludil'lg a better
Robert C. McFarlancdeclared that no relaoonsh1p with Iran.
one on the NSC staff violated "the "I feel quite privileged to be
lettaror spirit of the law" prohibiting associated with him in this
U.S. offic1als from "directly or 1n-endeavor." hultz-sa1d in an apparent
directly" aidmg the Contras m1h· effort 10 end speculation that he
tanl}. might step down m dlsagrecment
In explainin' North's ouster Tues-with Reagan over the U.S. sale of
day, Meese said U.S. arms sales to arms to Iran.
Iran since January generated between Speaking at a 25th annivcrsal')
SI 0 mtllion and $30 m1ll\on in profits celebi;auon of the U.S. Agency for
and that money was deposited 1n lntcrnauonal Development, Shult1
Swiss bank accounts con trolled by the said, .:!.L support the president fully,
Contras. . . and across the board."
"The president knew nothing Specifically, he cited Reagan's ef-
about it until I reponed 1t to him fort to repair U.S. relations with Iran,
(Monday)." Meese said about the to end the Persian Gulfwat between
transactions. "The onlr person who lr;in and Iraq and "to end the scourge
precisely kne"' about 1h1s was Colonel of terronsm "
North." Shultz said, "All of these obJect1vcs
Nonh also has been linked to the are vel') much a ~rt of our foreign
Contra air supJ>!Y operation based at pohcy The president has set our
El Salvador's llOpango m1 1 ary ~a1~.---~. <Jnd I fully subscnbe to
pon. It came to light Oct 5 when an1 them and suppon him and intend to
arms-laden. American-manned be very much a {>3rt of the effort to
C-123K cargo plane was shot down bnng them to fru1t1on."
over Nicaragua and one surv1vor. Earher. State Department spokes·
Eugene Hasenfus: claimed the oper-man Charles Redman declared that
ation was run by two Cuban-Amen· the pnmary responsibility for U.S
cans who worked for the CIA policy in Iran had shifted from the
S()l ~SA &<~<>MP.
1 :Traditional elot6ing
Final Closing Sale!
**DOORS CLOSE 5:00 p.m. SUNDAY NOV. 30th**
We must liquidate over 1h-mllllon dollars of new fall
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with a fine selection of men· sand ladles sportswear.
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Tustin. CA 92680
Phone: 714/731-7151
STORE HOURS· M-S.. 10-t
Sun 12·5
f Ille fl•tyt MtU ..,it!f tltft
__ __....._. ~. llllNoJI. -~ tl9!t •llfo!
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!Ill ··~ fM Mlt • fOi 1"
Ooll t "''""
l
Nattonal Sccunty Council io the State
Department.
The decision appeared to be a
victory for Shultz, who had made
clear his unhappiness with what he
claimed was the State Ocpanment's
peripheral role in Iran policy and with
the decision to sell arms to that
country.
tiv1t1cs. Senate Democratic leader Robert
"I don't like to ha ve to differ with c. Byrd of We~t V1f'&inia, calJma for
my president, but I believe there is strong action to cure the "poisoned
some evidence of Iranian involve-tree" of U.S. forcian policy, told
ment with terrorists." Whitehead reportcrs:,.,"h was a shocki01 revcl-
said, taking some members Of the atton and It further shows Up the
House Foreign Affairs Committee by chaottc sta1c of our foreign policy.
"The president now intends that
the management and 1mplcmenta·
t1on of 1hat polic> be handled in
normal channels -in shon. that
means under the d1rcct1on of the
secretary and the depanment of
state," Redman s.a1d.
surprise. The president docs not know what is On Tuesday, Redman said Re-h ba f h Wh t agan's and Whttchead's statements t{'1nao~ in 1 e scment 0 .t e 1 c
were not 1rreconcilablc. contending ousc. that he president wa attempting to ·· fhe best thing to do would ~ to
point out that the movement in Iran wash It all out. let people sec and hear.
was away from statc·SRQnsored tcr-and admit that It was a mistake and
He spoke to reportc~ shortly after
ReaJ&nannounccd the resignation of
National Security advi~r John
Pom(iexter and said t)lat a top N C
adviser. Lt. Col. Oliver North, was
being relieved of his duties.
ronsm. ~ pick up from there:· Byr~ sa1d.
a~~h!~st~e tfc~d111~~t t~~~eta~~e~"""t'-i,_t..,.is .... a ~~dda~~:t1:db~~j~l.~g~tt1~~
The spokesman said that Michael
Armacost, the undersecretary of state
for poht1cal affairs and the dc~n
ment's third rank.mg offic1al. will be
responsible for the Iran policy
that there had been some evidence of to say tt 1s a mess and that mess hasn't
decline in Iranian participation in been helped by today's revelations."
terromm." Redman siud. "The depu-Senate Repubhcan leader Bob Dole
ty secretary was pointtnJ out th~t of Kansas. attending a GOP farm
there was some pan1c1pation in conference 1n Des Moines. Iowa, w:is
terrorism cont1nuin asked 1f 1he revelation would do
Redman noted that Shultz had said f unher harm to Reagan
1n a speech in Ch1ca10 that Iran had "It's not 101ng to do any good, but I
attempted to plant terrorists m-a 1hmk he's totally in control," Dole
p1lgnmagc to Mecca this past sum-rcphed. "My own view is that this
mer. may not end the Iranian question. I
Redman also ga ve an add1t1onal
signal of an casing of tensions
between the State Department and
the Whttc House.
On Monday. Deputy Secretary of
tatc John Whitehead took the un·
usual s1ep of telling a congressional
committee that the president had
hultt said nine days aao he secs no think it's still a question of whether or
need for funher arms shipments to not those around the president, who
Iran and Rca,an disclosed the fo llow-worked for him, support him ... 1fyou
ang day that no such deliveries were can't sup'pon the president, you ought
planned. to quit."
MILD DEPRESSIOI?
The Paychopharmaeology Reaearch Institute needs volunteers with
mlld depresak>n. If you feel deprMMd but-'1'e unc:ertain If It Is Mfloua
enough to be consfdered for a study, pleaM call. Our r .... reh staff
wilt perform a tefephone ecreenlng to let you know If your symptom•
are troublesome enough to quallfy for a Visit to one of our cllnlca.
Symptoms of clinical depr....ton Include eome, or ail of the
following:
O Loss of Interest or pleasure In usually rewarding actlvttlea.
0 Feeling depresaed, Nd, blue or hop•I••·
O Changes In appetite, recent lfgnlfk:ant weight loM or weight gain.
o ExceNtve fatigue or fMOng very llowed down, no energy.
O otfflculty getting to sleep or staying Uleep, or Meptng too much.
O Feeling guilty, worth ..... or uMlesl.
O Indecision, poor memory, or poor concentration.
0 lncreNed phystcal problem•.
To qualify, you must be at teaet 18 year• old, expertenoelng
depression for a minimum of one month and be In good genetal
physical condition.
Quallfled volunteers wlll receive a brief physical exam. EKG, labora-
tory t .. ta and weekly vlslts wfth a professk>na.1-ALL ,,.E OF
CHARGE. ..
Coples of ail medical test results wfll be provlded to you or your
doctor, upon your request. Your P'fllclpatlon may teed to tM use of
a safe and 9ffectlve medication for tM treatment of deprMllon.
For more lnf~matlon, or an appointment, pleaM cail:
(714) 752-7910 or (213) 595-0801
(818) 999:2100
Mond9Y ttiru Frldey. a a.m.-5 p.m.
PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY RESEARCH INSTITUTE
COME SEE WHAT
WE'VE BROUGHT HOME
FOR THE HOLIDAYS
;
Hickory Farrrie" "81 t.taVeled the WOf1cl to co11ec1 uniqu. hems ror
our CnMMma.s Gm PliclL.,._. Choote_.Crom over IOO d1tferent gin&.
in • vane'y of sties and pric~. We'll even snip your frt ror .)'OU
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
YEAR ROUND STORE
CtrOUMI Court
5•<MM I
SEARS CHRtSTMAS LOCATION
Uppet Level
().J)'t) Ext '216 ... ~-~
Consumer
prices up
slightly
WA$HINGTON (AP) -Con·
sumer pnccs rose just below 0.2
percent last month as increases for
new cars and auto financing overtook
a fresh dip in energy pnces. the
government reported Tuesday.
The increase m the Labor Depart-
ment's Consumer Price Index fol·
lowed a 0.3 percent rise in September.
Prices have been edging up since
April. the last month in which a
decline was recorded.
Still, over the last 12 rnonth:s;-pncer--
overall have chmbed only I .S p.:rccnt
-a level not seen since the 1960s. By
contrast, the inflation rate for all of
I 98S was 3.8 percent.
Economists predicted that infla-
tion would ttbound to about 4
percent 1n 1987, now that the prcc1p1·
tous drop in 011 prices has ended and a
dccltnina dollar is making imponed
aoods more expensjve.
Wh ile 1nOat1on continued to be a
bright pot in the economy, a separate
Commerce Ocpanment report show-
ed that factory orders for "bi& ticket"
durable aoods fell 6 percent 1n
October, the b1ge t plunge in more
than lwo years.
Branz political
bo .. convicted
In bribery ca•~
NEW HA VF.N, Conn (AP) -Stante7 Friedman, the Democratic bouo the Bron111, was convicted with
three other people Tuesday of tumina
the Parun1 Violations Bureau into a
hotbed of bribery i n New York's ~tt corruptioo ~~Oda! in dC(.
• A)Uf'Y dchbeflted four days t>erore flnchna the defendant• atulty or
l"ICRtecrins and contpi!K)' mvolv-
ina bribery at the atentY from 1979 to 191$
All four 1mmect 11tly ._id 1hey woukt appal .
.. Al r.r • I'm conttrMd, the (II)\&
•• over when ~ dole the bO~ on yout" 11ia Friedman .. I'm not IJVl
up. :ve never qun a fish1 in my life.
Friedman llid It WM too IOOt'I to
11y 1( he would hive IO vt up hi
.... _.-lllend U Attom
ltuddlph Olull111I 111d •as OU.,..,_ lft IMt Pott. f fitdman · 1"4-alle 9l0wtr IO detirmtne 1Ch •
Deftiocntt rH fOr oflkt In l ovenrhtlm naly Oemocratsc· ~of I 2 millron fl
\e)hfled ht covld Ute C'llr. \'.'UllU'ICU with 1 1nlle leitph(me 1
l. '
FORD
Annual
~
Financing
OR
·CASH BACK
Ford Escort. World's best-selling
car ... four years running.t
Your participating Ford Dealer can arrange through Ford
Credrt for quahf1ed retail buyers, special Annua~ percentage
Rate fmanc1ng on new Ford Esro.rts. Or, 1f you chbose, you
may get cash back directly from Ford with the purchase of an
Escort. You may keep the cash or apply it to your transaction.
You must take delivery from dealer stock by January 4,
1987. Limit one per quahfled retail customer. See your dealer
for complete details Dealer Contribution may affect customer
savings. Other special low rates available. Rates increase with
length of term Not available on Red Carpet Leases.
!Based on 82 85 COl*'<iat 'f"al WOI~ Ylea nncl llq)Or1 data
SPECIAL FACTORY CASH
lNCENTIVES TO DEALERS COULD ----~we YOU ·
$60() s1,ooo
ECONOLINE VANS CLUB WAGONS
Special Factory Cash incentives make 1t possible for
participating dealers to.pass on savings of $600 or $1 ,000
depending on model. You must take delivery from dealer stock
by Jan. 4. 1987 (Excludes Cutaway and E-350 models.)
SAVE $1565* ON FORD BRONCO D
WITH A PREFERRED EQUIPMENT PACKAGE.
Buy a Ford Bronco ll XLT 4x4 with manual transmission
and preferred equipment package 930A/602 and save $1565
Package includes:
• Air Conditioning •
• Power WtnOONS Locks
•Tilt Wheel
• All-Season Tires
• Speed Control
• Rear Wiper, Washer, Defroster
• Swing-Away Spare
• And Other Items
·~blmdon~•~-pr IC9 d QilCiol-. ~d'ChaSod l9Jlill atflly
930A 802~10 !he
'
PirticiPatlng Ford Dealers stand behind their customer
paid work. In wrn1ng, with a free Lifetime seMce Guarantee for
as IOng as you own your Ford car or light truck. Ask to see this
~ee when you vis4t your ~tictpatmg Ford Dealer.
I
..
-·
A combination unmatched by any ~
American manufacturer ...
~YEAR UNLIMITED MILEAGE
POVVERTRAIN WARRANTY.
Most JX)Wertrain warranties don't cover you for an unlimited
number of miles. Those that do, don't cover you for a tull 3 years.
Ours does both. It's a combination unmatched by any other
American manufacturer. The warranty covers ma1or JX)Wertram
components on 1987 Ford cars. It's limited and certain
dedtJCtJbles apply. Ask to see this warranty at your Ford Dealer.
SAVE WITH PREFERRED
EQUIPMENT PACKAGES.
FORD TAURUS GL SEDAN • 2 5L Engine
• Air Cond1t1oning
Sa rlQ1 * • Power Windows. Seats ve • I and Locks
• Cassette Premium Sound
When yo~ buy Preferred Equipment Package 204A.
FORD ESCORT GL • Automatic Transaxre
SaveS660* • 1 9L 4-Cyhn<ier Tng1ne
• Power Steering
• AM f M Stereo Radio
Wt.en you buy Pr.terr~ Equipment Package 295A.
iPNollng flootlC vet'tl ~••al
• Speed Control
• Ttlt Wheel
• Rear Defroster
• And Other Items
• Tuited Glas~
• 01g1ta1 Clocl<
• Interval W1p rs
• And Other Items
LAST CHANCE FOR
SALES TAX DEDUCTION.
State Sates Tax paid on new car or truck purchases before
January 1, 1987 may be tax-deduct1b~ on your Federal·
Income tax when you 1tem1ze deductions To wtiat this
' may mean to you. check with your 1'ax Advisor. Amount
deductible depends on the pnce you pay and th sales tax.
SAVE NOW WITH SPECIAL
RED CARPET LEASE HOLIDAY
BONUS TERMS THROUGH
DECEMBER 31, 1986.
If you prefer to lease, a Red Carpet Lease is available to
qualified lessees through Ford. Credit. Spoo~ cash 1ncentives1
from Ford Cre(irt make rt pos51bte for your part1c1p<!!1~ Ford
Dealer to lower your monthly payments or arrangiterms so
you can leas&a select new '87 Ford without paying the first
month's payment and tor security deposit. See your Ford •
Dealer t9r his option and details You must take delivery by
December 31, 1986.
SAVE $1311 *ON FORD RANGER
rWITH A PREFERRED EQUIPMENT
PACKAGE.
Buy a Ford Ranger 4x2 XLT Regular Cab wrth manual
transm1ss1on , 2.3L engine and preferred equipment package
864B and save $1311 Package includes
• AM FM Stereo With Cassette • Tinted Glass
• Power Steering • Rear Step Bumper
• Shd1ng Rear Wind<m • Two-Tone Deluxe
• Swing-A.way-'M1.rrors •And Other Items
• ~ b8Md on ma"u' lute!' s ~led r91atl ~ ol lk>'B lf'l1Pll~ IO the pru
ol opliona pur !WIOilf 'Illy
J
' t
f
'
..
' •
' •
FORD. BEST-BUILT AMERICAN. CARS \
AND TRUCKS .•. SIX YEARS RUNNING.
"Quality 1s Job 1 • In fact, for the past six consecutive years.
Ford quality has led all other Amencan car and truck com-
panies. This 1s based on an average of owner-repc>rted
problems in the hrst three months of service on 86 models.
and 1n a six-month period on 81 -'85 mOdels designed and butlt
in North America.
Have )10tl driven a Ford .•. lately?
'V\.
,
•
Cars oi hot tickets
best baJ.t for execs
·Trading t<es holiday twist
this '°n of tncky nianeuvcnna a.oe
00 in the real world . Ntony of the
anstituuons that dominate the mar•
ketplacc would have no use for at.
since they arc typically.ucmpt frum
CHICAGO (AP)-Ml1d service and hunting lodtn may be tat.ty
a~ cucutavc bait, but the m051 popular perks for top manaaemcnt arc suit ftte car • club .mmtbersh1ps and hot tickets, accordina to a man•mcnt consuhina fum.
Gains over 20 years are good for stocks
·purchased a round Thanksgtvtngttme
A survey by AS. Han~. Jn.c., of 586 busine<sst5 nationwide
revealed T~y thal 90 percent of the companies believe the little -
and ~ot·so-liltk -extras are imponaot in the exC'Cutive marketplace. ~oat 0111n1~t1ons that employ perks. feel they are important in
attnct1na a~d ~ta1n1na top exccuuve talent," said Philip Henderson,
Hansen senior vice presa~nl. "~rks art difficult to iporc, for only IS
pen::cnt 51Y the> are not 1mpottant for status and tax purposes."
The survey by the Deerfield, Ill., firm found that for sheer
populanty, no perk beat having a car provided for specified execuuves.
with 78 perttnt of the companies doina so. Of the busjncsscs that do
provide cars, 91 ptrcent permit personal use of them. The autos also
were the ooly per\ equally popular amon1 small and large concerns.
~xccut1ves who act the cars. though. arc less likely to get some of the hi&b--status trapp1ng.s. Onl y 14 ,percent of the compame offer
chauflCurs, and only 18 percent offer car telephones.
But Henderson said the ~ond figure appears to be growrna.
Another popular perk ts country club membership ~ith 60
percent of the Midwestern companies provid1n4 them. In add1t1on 56
percept oftbe employe~ offer lunchin1and dinina club membership .
The"! there arc the uckets -to theatrical and spon1ng events. tfhe
survey said 56 percent of the companies pay the full cost ofsuch items.
and that fi.gurc nscs to 72 percent where financial institutions such as banks and savings and loans arc concerned.
. Travel is another im_portant perk. but going in style 1s not quite so
1mponant, the survey said.
• Jn the Midwest. only 33 percent of the employers offer first-<:lass r travel to some executives, while 61 percent insist on coach only.
Co'!'pany a1rpla~es also are limited, with only 31 percent of tbc
businesses -mainly the largest -maintaining them.
Then there att the rare perks. Of the companies which responded
4 percent ma1ntained bunting or fishma lodgcs for their executives j
percent paid the. full cost eflivin& quarters and 2 percent offered mi1d
or clea.ning service
NEW YORK (.AP) -Tiie followlno 1111
Jhows the Over -the • Counter •todts and warrants IMI Mv• oone uo ,,,. mos~•~ dowo lhe=t t>ea.d on Hroenl "' noe for T ay No securfl s tredlno w d or 1000 es are Included. ,., and oer1 oentaoe ctlanots .,,,,,.
... 9nCf be ween the orevtovs clos no Df'I~ •net TunCS.v'• laSI or bid orlc:e.
Ch9 Pell I 4 Up . 1~ Up . 1h Uo . ~ Uo • 11'1 UP .
-Uo •
-Uo -Up \."I UP 16:1
By CHET CURIUER
NEW YORK (AP)-Want to add a Little· financial seasoning to yaur
Thanksgiv1na celebration trus >ca()
Then have some money 111 tbe .stock
market on the trad1nad.aysjust bcfo~
and after the holiday. ·
At least that's the sugestion.. of
analysts who rcporJ that, in those Wrdnesday and Friday session's over
the past 20 years. the market has
com piled an unbroken winning
streak. From 1966 to 1984, not~ invest·
ment adviser Ya.le Hirsch in has Stock
Trader's Almanac. the Dow Jones
industrials posted an average gain of
about nine points in pre· and post·
Thanksgiving trading.
Last year, the Dow climbed 18.92
points the ~fay before the holiday, to
what was then a record cl9sing high of
1,475,69..._bcforc settling back 3.S6 on
Friday. Net advance: I S.36 points.
Now. anyone with much invest·
ment cxpcnencc .11).iJht well question
the practical value of this infor·
mation. .
Many small investors find it fruit·
less to try to c.atch any smaU. shon-
term swing in the market. even 1ftbcy
-~OODLIFE
OLD WORLD ROMANCE AFLOAT
Gourmet basktts w/champagnt & rosts.
IRVINE COAST CHARTERS 675-4704
PERSONAL SERVICE
CATERING
J"tW
Gcumet Catem1 Wtth International AaW
Spedalzilf n Busilts1 L111eheons
714/472-4598
To Order Your
Good Life Ad
CALL 642-5678
Ask/or Mtndoro
WEDDINGS AT SEA
PROFESSIONAL PLANNING
Aboard Luxury Yachts. All ~rvlces arranged.
IRVINE COAST CHARTERS 675'"'47~
TANNING
NEWPORT TANNING CENTER, INC.
"Don't fft summer blcomt 1 lldfd mtmory
RtlrtSh your tin 1t Newport 11nm111 Ctn/tr ·
fltST 3 TANS fOI S5.00
•070 Buell, NtWJIO'l Buell
752-0224
PHOTOGRAPHY
TINY llAI
PIOTO STIDIO
Christmas f amdy & Individual Portraits
Sl O Off • S1ttma before Dec. 1
'41 ••s• ••"" CIMtll'• c.. • '~ ~ 1720 ,,. SIMI .. AM., C.M .• e• tzm
LIMOUSINE
ASllEY LIMJUSIE
"Wt ,,,,., ,_ ..... , '""'" .. 1 hour FREE• serivce
M1j0t Credit Cards Act~ltd
730-0137
•c.11s4'tlll
This Space Can Be Your• -
For Information Call Mendora
thouahuuch thin&S cou~d be pred1c· ted, ~U'IC comm1n1otl costs stack·
the odds ap1nst them.
Ceruunly no pnsdent/rofes ional ~oncy manqer woul base any
s1an1ficant 1ovestment dcc1S1on on what looks hke merely a $t&1t1t1cul
quirk •
Still, when any pattern rcpeits itself
so consistently, the question nat·
until)' anses whether there IS some
explanation for at Hu"SCh suggest he
might have one •
lt bas to do with the "wash sale"
rule covenna lo scs m stocks and
other investments th.at c.an be rc-
poned on investor\' income tax
returns.
Suppose you bou&ht n stock a few
monlhs ago that has since declined in
Cho Pel A UP ft,4
'I• UP 4i 'M Up lf: ..., Up 1
2~ u0o lt p • ~ ~~ h
price (despite the market's recent rally. Ihm are many auucs this year
th.at fit that description).
You still like the stock's prospects,
and want to keep owning 1t. But you
also arc hunary for 1986 ·till dcduc·
uons, and could Jtt one if )'ou 50ld the
stock before the dose of trad1n1 on
D« 31
To have it both way,, you can sell
1he shares you own and buy a sJmtlar
amount. But for this to produce a
leaitimate tn·lou, the' rules say the
sale and pun:h.ast must occur at least
31 daynpart.
One way to do this i'I to buy 31 days
before you sell. so that you keep a
pos1taon tn the stock at •II limes and
won't m1 out on any sudden cunup
in it price. That means plannin& the sale for
the last few ses~ions of the year, and
male.in& the purchase in late Novem-
ber -right arourtd Thanksgiving
time.
No one can say JUSt how IJlUCh of
tuauon . But the sc <1100 urround1n1
Thank 11v1ns art typically chara.c·
teriltd b) h&f\H~modenue volume. On Wednesday many investor\ are
easer to ict an early stan on the
holiday In the quiet marketplace that
rc~ults, ll doesn't rcqu1~ too vc•t a stretch of one·s 1mag1nauon to up.
poJC that even a modest .!cc~n1cal
phenomenon hke this m!Jht trp the ~c of supply and demand.
Co1nc1dencc or not. a.nalyst Wil-
ham Lefevre al Adv~t Jnc. pointi.
out. hohday$ lately have been fe$t1vc
occa ions for the mar~ct. The wt two
record ha.&hs recorded b~ the Dow
Jone!! incf ustnal overage came ,ntSl
before July 4 and Just after Labor
Day
__ , ....
-i
s
-
'\
NEW YORK (AP) Nov 2S TU ~·
AMEX LE~DER S
Stocktradingseasaws
NEW YORK(AP,-Stoe · pnces-.~mm:d
Tuesday 1n seesaw trac:hna domanatcd mosll> t))
technical facto analym said.
TndinE imes modtrJlc to ac1hic. but
ovcr'al_l. the omen m=f v. L lbad been a four-d.1¥ raD;-d Jpeted 1 to aim dnftinJ.
From Wednnday . Monda). the Dow
JoMS average of 30 andustn&l toCb had nsen
, 79.~ pcnnts, brcakJn& lhto~ the I 900 banic-r for
the first umc since Sc-pt. 4tb s record t.919.7 1.
W H~i NYSE DtD
NE'N YOltK !AP) Ho¥ 2S
NEW YOltK <AP> -Sein, • Pl!'i Tundey prlot end net d'Wloe of the 10
0 s
trad lno na llonallY ~ • n
W~es ~mu" x:nc.i1n MorJ::!'!Foocts ~: ... 1r;.cp ~'tfl.w'Go AM Intl I , L yr'CflCSYS I
GoLo Quon s
METALS QuoTES
1____ ----: NASDAQ SuMM~R¥
I
------
famo~ label.s ...
•
~_. _________________ --'~-:--~ ....... ~----~:.-..~----...:..~-=:.:=~===;;::;; •• ...._7'.:'"' ____ ~~--------------~~-----.,.----.:.-.~~------------~i--------...-.l:,__ ______ -...,'l~ .._. . ' ~
I
. \
-.
Technics.
CLOSE-OUT
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.. -·----.-..Lim
'
-~u~~ ngt.on Be.ach ~o~an rubs pe~..a
.A 'rolf er• can rid )'OU of those nagging aches and pains
Br IOYCE ICH&AIA IODLOVICB put eventt or f'eeliNI. Tbe uldmate
...,......,, J '1 • result 11 lets strell and leDlion y.'ith
' : J~ B., a h.ilh·powertd advenis-renewed mental and phYtic'I v~r. ane Clttut1ve, 11 a stresaed-out mets. ..The Rolfifll &ecbnique differs
Her bttk 11 stiW. her thoulders are from the chiropnctic ~ure be·
• 10te and a n-aina headache has cautc we work with the fa(ia1 1y1tem
plllUed her for days and ~ chiropractOr deals with the
line 8. feels lousy_ but help is on spine~ and vcrtcberal column. The
the way -he is about to be Rolfcd. fascia1 is a apiderweb-;type network in
Rolfina. accordina to Huntinaton t~e body that has clastin -which
Beach certified Rolfcr Barbara b1nd1 muscl~ to the bones;_ it 11ves
Anderson, 11 a technique for reotder-the mute~. ~t shape and 11.ves. t~ i"I the body to brina its major body _fle1t1bihty or non-fleub1hty,
seaments -head ~houldcrs thoru -she said. · • pelvis ud leas 'toward a' vcrticai · Jhe Rolfina proccs • An<ier~n
.ahFment. said, ~1 developed by the late b10-
, The procedure rebalancts the che.ryust, Or. J~ Rotr. who spent her
fascial network of the body by takina hfct1mc S!~YIDI the human body.
advantqe of 1u tendency to hold the . After ~1v1n1 her ph. Din L9.20, she
shapes induttd by applied force. bec~m~ interested an 1mprov1n1 her
The Rolfcr, 1n a acnes of 10 family s healthy problems and find-
carefully , worked-out sequences ·of ina a way to correct her own spinal
manipulations. 1u1dcs the client's curvature. • . . . movements while the muscles and She was part1culanly mtnaucd m
their supportive wrappinp (fasctal) what caused people to slump and
are slowly stretched. lenathcncd and their muscles to sag. Rolf contended
.,l:: repos1t1oncd. The Rolfer. throuah that the hur11an body wa$ _meant to
rPmsurt. restores normal lcnath and stand vertically; 1rav1ty, she
-.. elasticity 10 the network of deep reasoncd,wasthckey.lfpeoplc could
cq,onect1vc fibers which harness the lc~rn to stand erectJ... 1"1'41ty would
muscles 10 the bones Anderson said rcmforce balance. vnce the body
The results. i ccord1na to returned to its vcn1caJ, upri&ht pos..
Anderson, will help the body develop 1t1~. pain and sttcss wo~ld be
optimal balan~ and coordination for rcheved. She dcs1ancd a technique to
standiria. ~ittma and mov11'11-The reahan bodies and eventually bepn
body acquun a lift or a hahtncss a$ teach ma lhc Rolling procedure to
the head and chest ao up and the other qualified people m the I 9SOs.
trunk lcnathens; tfic pelvis, m "Onai~ally, Dr. Rolf wanted to.call
honzontahz.ina. brinas the abdomen the t~hmquc StructuraJ Integration,
and buttocks in -the knees and feet however, when she tncd 10 resister
track more nearly forward and the the tcchmquc under that name, she
soles of the feet meet the 11ound more was 1old the term was 100 scneral and squarely. that a lot of other body work could ao
<"tnafkd Rolfe" and Rolfina Move-
ment Tcachen ~led throuahout
the world. Tra1n1na proerams a~
cpnducted 1n the United Stattt and
Europe with the main facilities an
Colorado and Weat Germany.
, Andet'lon. who 'pent I 0 )'Cart as a
J>S>Ch1atnc nul'IC, learned the an of
Roffina at the Boulder, Colorado
Jn tnutc. It took around a year to
meet the quahfieauons nttdcd to
•enter the Rolfina prosram , then
almost two years to complete the
train1n1 at the Rolf Institute of
Structural lntep'lt1on in Colorado .
"Several ycan·aao I had a serious
whiplHh," she YJd. "I tried every.
thana includina chiropractic adJust-
ments and physical therapy, muscle
relaxers and accupuncturc One )Car
later. I still had the 'pain. My father
who i a chiropractor and Rolfcr, but
lives 1n another tate, suafCsted I try
Rolfin1-After the 10 sessions, J was
fine -that was more than 10 years
aao."
AndcrM>n said, cticnts cxr:)crictrce
the re ult of Rolfina immediately
durina the first session -the natural
brcathina becomes fuller and deeper
and the chent feels h~tcr and taller.
The second session bn n.as the feet and
ICP, into better supportive contact
with the earth and gives a longer more
flexible ~pmc Later scss1ons lead the
head. neck. spine, pelvis and legs an to
a relaxed and comfortably balanced
relationship with each other. Gravity
then pulls throuah the center of the
body as a plumb hnc. help1n1 to
uppon the body on the earth rather
1han pulhn& the body down
•
..
...
Sometimes the Rolfina pr<>«durc ~ndcr that title too. Thus the name,
bnnas emotions lo awarcnc s cs. Rolfing. comes from 1t~ founder Ida
pec_1ally when pan1cular areas of the Rolf," she said.
boqy arc connected w1th memories of Today. there arc around-500
"The beauty of RolfioS:," she said,
"1s that once the person has gone
throuah lhc 10 sessions. you don't
have to kctp 101n1 forever ... Barbara Andenon, of Hmatmaton Beach, le a certified rolfer.
~ .
Skinnier oD the sand; fatter iill&nd
A few daysa~o. a f ncnd mentioned
that people laving here at the beach
were thinner, in better physical shape,
and Just plain looked better than
those ltvang in the inland com-
munities. That wa~ my 1mprc s1on
also, and recent statistics confirm 1t.
This country is actuna fatter.
except for small pockets of the mo'tc
physieally consciou , at t~ beech and
m soph1sttcated areas ~uch as New-
York. Ch1e110. and San Francisco
Srull) Blotnick, from Forbes Map·
zinc. surveyed 7SO professional men
and ~omen. aac 3 7, in 19 6 and
compared her results with a similar '!!:f from 1976. The women had
fa ..-one ~c11}1m1 an avcraac 138
pounds today compared to 133 an
PAPARAZZI
1976. The men increased from 171 to l-~the-1()..ye~~·M)Q,~
The nat1onat Center for Health
Stat1st1cs found that 1he avcraJe
American was 6 pounds heavier 1n
I 980 than an 1960, and that the
percentage of overweight women
between the ages of 25 and 34 went
fram 16 to 20 percent.
The que uon 1 v. hy'!
There 1$ an overabundance or diet
and health related matenal Jane
Fonda video ~orkouu always top the
chan.s and a "diet book" as always on
the best ~lier list
Actuall) the an wcr is obvious.
Good 1ntcnt1onsand 1nfonnat1on ha
done noth1na to halt over conwm~
t1on of the bulae makers. . .
Aecordsng to the Depanmcnt of
grtcuJt.t.tre,t~ r can is
cauna 5 percent more food now than
I 0 years ago and the increases have
been in the most fattening foods.
Supr consumouon over the last 10 )Car~ rose from 131 to IS l pounds per
person Son dnnks increased from 31
pllons a )Car to 45, and 80 percent of
~Mse ~M-fuil~ variety
with I 56 calorics
Gluttony 1s not the only villain.
Modem li4-. continues to become
more "convenient ·· The garage door
opener. food processor. remote TV
channel changers all conspire to
conserve our cnera> and we do, naht
around the middle
These changes arc having their
effect on the &oods and services of ou·r
SOCICl)
However. do not let these trend$
and stat1st1cs discourage you. Look at
them as I do. They mean nothina to
)OU as you always arc in complete
control
Jvllu Wktulrer, M D .... lt direct.or
of tlae Nation.I Hnrt ud Diabetes
Trea&meat la1tlt•&.e la Hutlagtoa
Beaela. Ple11e address uy q11e1tloH
or comments to atlm c/• tate DaJly
PUot, P.O. Bo.c 1511, Cotta Mesa
ttatl.
The actual party was the stage Sandpipers
and Bullocks -foF baguaa Playhouse benefit benefitHo~g
By CAROL HUMPHREYS
o., .... c.. .. J *' Props mcludcd red, . whtte and .
black balloon$ and lmens stqcd
under 1he tenttd estate tennis coon. The curtain went up and more than "I play tennis here all the time and
200 players took thctt places. for the aJwa)'s wanted to dance on the couns.
first annual auction benefiting the Tonight J can," lauahed Bute
Laau.na Moulton Playhouse. ·~ Loom.ts who hu sat t.n the theater's
The sctn1c set was historic Mo s first ro; every openina n1&ht for the
Point. estate ofCnaJe Nortaalud. "I past 12,cars.
think it's appropnatc this event be Act featured hosted cocktail,,
held here. We're an old home tcad passed hors d'ocuvrcs. a silent auc-
and the Laauna Moulton represents t10.n and plenty of dialoaue.
old Laauna too," uplained the play-ct If allowed the cast of characters
house trustee. to hnc U.P for a hght buffet ... the Iona
"Just OfT Broadway" requested wait and ivcraae (are the only traaedy
black and white.co tumes for pamc1-an the premier production ... Frankly pan~s. Most obhaed! I'm disappointed in the food," com-
Director Muree• LaBoa&.e ona-mcntcd LaBoate.
inatcd the script. "This was the first LyawM41 Wilder starred m Act Ill
time I've been chairman of an auction as he J){Ompted playhouse suporte~s
fund-raiser, but we needed to atncr· to bid on live aucuon items that
ate f unda to expand. to alk>w for mote included two wee.ks 1n the London
variety or .vehicles presented at the Oat of the North lands, a ski trip to
playhouse. Ourcomm1ttcc met week-Innsbruck a week m Cancun and a
ly for the past Si.\ month . The whole weekend act-away a.t the 60-acrc
community has supportt>d us." ldyllwild estate of board president
Ven1 pltalerJ.
The pothaht centered on all-white
clad Ed Ca1Jeat. "Thls is tlle most
wc1al event we have had. We plan to
use the funds to build a new rehearsal
hall which will allow us to introduce a
ncwscnesofcontcmporaryplays. I'm
chairman of the prOJcct. Our next
fund-raiser will be a guest per-
formance by Julie Barris."
lquna Moulton Playhouse 1s a
rqional community theatre ofTcnng
fully-staged production$.. new works.
adult work hops. youth theatre nnd
haah school tnunsng. It 1s the oldest
continuously operating theatre on the
West Coast.
Key roles in the evening's drama
were played by Karyn Robrer, Jody
Jollallon, Barbara Painter, Pat
l(olltlHla, Rick Plom1ren. Gerry
Sc•lly, Dou1 Self, Ira Levhae and
Geor1e Rlcfater.
Paparanl 11 edited by Dally Pilot
Style editor Vida Deu.
By CAROL HUMPHREY
O.,Ne4C.• ' •11
For the finh )tar 1n a row the
Sandpipers and Bullock's South
Coast Plaza have unattd 1n prcscnt1na
a gala fund-raiser ~ncfitin' Hoag
Mem onal Hospital Pre bytcnan.
At this year's event. there were
~vcral fir>ts
The aoat
"'The andp1pers have JUSt made a
fi"c-)car pledge to eontnbutt'
S500.000 to Hoaa's new Cancer
(enter Tonight "'-C hope to raise
SI 00.000 toward that goal," ex-
plained ~resident Janet awyer.
{The)' did )
The part1c1pat1on.
"We're sold out We've never had
so much support," said even' ehafr-
man Karee Wllltaller. "Thanks to our
Diamond C lub members (those pay-
ana $2.SOO per tabk). this 1s our
large'it crowd ever Next \<tar I think
we can gt't 700 here "
The ~tt1 na
"'An fnchantcd f.vcmng." undcr-
wnttcn b\ Bullock'\ showca-.cd their
ncwl)' remodeled upper le-.d homc-
S\Ore "We arc plea~d to once again work
with 1he Sandpiper . We, too. are
·committed to Hoaa's fiaht apin 1
cancer," commented 'it ore managt'r
oeGrallam.
Bullock's enchanted tht' ~nd·
pipers by pro,id1nado1cnH>fthc JOO
silent and h'e auction item\ the Jim
Clarl1tla.n ea Oreate1tra, a Rena1
sancc mu 1cal aroup and the fu1Un
Presbyter1an Tower Bell Qolr.
The black·tir crowd of SOO enJO}ed
ho!\tcd cocktails and a lav1 h hohday
buflet of caviar. crab quc d1llac;,
O>~'ers. smoi..:cd '-llmon. turkry,
C hmtma 100~. prtmc rib and roa t
tom ofporlt.: r he 50..meml'l\:r C\andp1pcr or·
pmrat1on. founded m 197 b
Corin lkt•rl, ha\ r11 d o~cr
$440.000 for Hoa Th ~ork1n1
tow rd the 19 8 compkt1on of th
fir\t free, tan 1in1 C'lnCt'r ctntcr 1n tht
count\', a 0 OOChqu n:•foot f '1hty
hou,1n1 an outpat1cn1 c n ·r t I·
mcnt ccn1er, clinical rr an:h and
rommuntt tdu,at1on rrusram . 1n·
eluded J .. eM f'I•, S.UJ Latrtll,
Ca• .... ,,. Jey Carr , Miry
L•.,rt, lecl7 , catrHk, Leis
Mal..e, Hr RUey nd l'a111.a Yltall •
..., "",..... ...... ••.., Paparau 11 Ml&H It Oa:ll Plt.t
Veruoa 8platalerl aad Coa•I• No~d an entertained bf mJme llarlanae McDonneU. • le Mllor Yiu De "·
, ..
Menopause could be a
hange for the Better'
By CINDY TRANE CHRI TESON
o., ..... c:-,' .....
"Hot OasheL.fat1gue ... fear .. dcprcs 1on• All of lhC\t v.ords ha\e bcttt
used to describe menopause, the "chanae of hfc mMt womt'n dread:·
No wonder. L1ttlc.1f an)thana. good haS C\ICrbccn said about it:'So bcJins
Change For The Better. an educational and cncoura1Jn1 new book about
menopause. Bc\erl> Bush 'im1th combined her wnt1n1 Lalcna and penortal
cxpencncc with Dr Orcnt' V honfeld's medical cxpen15ie to produce this
carefully-thorough and well-wntten book. 'The authors clcarl) meet their aim
of changing the common doomSday annude about m-enopau~by-aptaun~
that menopause I\ not a en 1s. but 1t 1 imply another era oflife that c~n bring
new freedom and new cncl"I).
Why was this book wntten? .. The~ w nothan ~a·~~ maA.c
that did a aood JOb Jcahna Yo1ith mcnopau ;·an wcrcd mrth ... 75 prcent or
(Pleue See llltNOPAU8lt/Pafe 82)
I
..
\ .
O••C...DAllYPILOTIN.-,,J...,.,21 , ...
. .
:
•
Chorol Ourico is a winner -and she 1s still 1n shock
Durico and husband John ore the I 0th week Doily P1loi & TWA Win-Go Contest winners.
'I hove been ploying this gl'me s111ce day one " she said , sm1I ng. "When 11 won. well, I
tt)ought someone was pulling my leg. I mean, I ploy everythirig but I hove flever won a single
thing. Actually rt didn't hit until late that evening."
Dunca said her husband was equally shoded when he heard the good news.
"John was really surprised," she said. "At first he didn't believe me -now he is r.eol
excited."
The Dunces hove lived in Costa Mesa for the lost 45 years. Chorol, a homemaker, and John,
a self-employed maintenance and repair worker, hove four grown children and three
grandchildren. (horol's youngest granddaughter, 20-month.old Louro. accompanied her
lucky grandmother to collect the Win-Go bounty at the Doily Pilot.
"We began toking the Doily Pilot when it was only delivered once a week," she recalled.
Dunc a said the vocation destinohoo could be the South Poc1f 1c or perhaps Holland.
'The South Pacific would be nrce because the climate is so worm," $he said. "But -I hove
a nephew stationed 1n Holland and haven't seen him for a long t1me ... so that might be a good
vocation idea."
According to Dunce, she 1s not a world traveler.
'We usually toke one trip a year," she said. "My sister and brother-in-low v151t us right ofter
Christmas and we go somewhere together. Lost year it was Howo11."
The Dun~os, who will be morned 39 years 1n January, may schedule their voction in
con1unc1ton with their anniversary celeorohon.
'That would be a nice anniversary present," she said.
YOU COULD BE OUR NEXT WINNE R!
laily F1Po!,!JGooowe RZ::~A
CALL OUR HOTLINE FOR
INFORMATION, 714 642-4333.
IJ~S AVAIAMI llOM OIA.NGl C<»ITY TO JAX
VIA GOIOlN STATE AlllNlS.
...,,... ....................
VIII& preeldent •••
BodC90D with Clalre llcNalr •
\
MS volunteer finds herself
on the r.~iVl~gez!.d of b.elp
• # "' •
By CAROL HUMPHREYS CL\ I' ba -·· I' .--nenit1on Some of her awards to""·' m not PP> au.Alt u .•. "' ·i;l:ct"ethc"Wom:snofthcYear."thc
"l'\t been on the bO&rdOf V~
(Voluntttn tn Multtplc Sc&crosis) for
used tobclpinaotben ov. the)! ha"c Athena Award for central county, the lO~mc.·• said Claire lkNa1r. d •"'-Qau~ has spent her hfe bclpin.& MS Golden Chest Award an ux;
ill )ears and thm a )eai aao I •"as
dtaanoscd ashavinaMS. I'd had tt for
)can , and dido•t know it. At'least I
had more time than most w11h MS. (II
usually stnkcs )ouna adults from IS
othetS and her outstandina contnbu· .. Volunteer of the Year" from West·
tions .. ~re bon<>fM at the VIMS cm Medical Center. .
annual fundraiscr •1tb a toast and "Look at this .room. Thls is for
tnbutc ~ by board member BM Cla1rc," said VIMS president s.e G~. This was not the first BMIMD-The Newport Mamou
t1iQe Oairc had rttc1ved pecial ballroom was aglow tn glittenng
balloons wine colored cloths and
mirrored centerpieces of silk nowcrs
(which v.cre offered for sale).
PA CIFICA
COMMCJNllY HOSPITAL
COMMUNITY. HEAL TH FO~CJM
This forum offers~. dnics ana semS\ars on.,_.,, ......
heakhcare Issues. This t.11. these new pn>gRms wil be off.
to ~ pubic at no dwge.
!"-"-____________________________________ ~/
ASK THE DOCTOR
Decem~r 4, 1986 7:00 -9;<!0 PM
THE PROBLEM OF WEIGHT AND
HOW TO CONTROL IT
Ivy Wittmeyer, Ph.D. Pundari C'Ganti, M.D.
Gastro·Enterologist
A round table discussion about nutritional
awareness, and methods of weight loss.
!"\.'-------------------------------------</
Pacifica Community Hospital
would like to wish
the_ comm• mitµ
happy & hejilthy
holiday season.
,_,_ ,_ ,_
,_
l/
Padf'tca Towers 18800 Ddaware St. Hunllngton Buch. CA 92648
Commonly Room (2nd Flo«)
.. For funhff ,nf~ c..-
rl Pi1C1f1ca Commun~ Educ.41110f\ Coord~
Community Hospital (714) 842-061 1, Ext. 22
THREE ~THING!
YOU SHOULD
KNOWABOUT
PAINFUL INGROWN
TOENAIU
· 1 What IS an l.DjrOwn toenallP _
• When a rutU is too wide or too curVcd for the
toe, it can grow inward, digging into the ftnh and cau ·
ing pa.in, Infection and needless suffering.
2 How can I act rld of an tnarown ~1
• Ingrown t~ails can be pcnmmcntly corrected
with a safe and simple proccdutt right in the doctor's
office. Properly tttated, the pr6blcm and the pain should
never bother you again.
3 How can bier Podiatry ANOdata help mc1
• Laser Podiatry A~sociatcs of Of'al'l8C County arc
pccialist at tttadng f()()( problems likr ingrown
tocnaH . laKr Podiatry Associates ute the afcst, most
, moilem technology avaUabk.
I n't it finally time to top the pain? Call roday for 2
free coru ultation.
CO!Ma Naa PodWry Group
1~00 Maim A~c •• uil.t' 203
Cosu Mesa
546-8242
Free Consultation With. Thu Ad
Carol Wtbtterchairtd the black-tic
opuonal pla "La Nwt au Casino"
\hat included a 20..item stlent auction,
co11tincntal and _dessert buffet.
music b) Villa Nova pianist RJdaard
Fauo and the Orange County
Rhythm Machine and a Veps.
inspired e'emng of pmblmg for
pnzes. . "This )Car v.e've added• roulette table We didn't have one last year.
There arc 21 blackjack tables." com-
mented Webster dunng the hosted
cockt.111 reception.
"Many of our members arc from
Huntington Hirbour." ellplaincd
bodd member E~ NlcltolJoa.
Jo ltclly and Webster also from
Huntington Harbour founded · lhe
Orange County chapter of VIMS tn
1980 and all fund s raised go d1rcctl~
to patient services (transportation).
There is no paid staff, no overhead
and no office. All work is volunteer
and 100 percent of all funds go to
patients.
Committee members included
Rita Copp, ltadly CUlt0n, MarsJe
Dorsey, Ellie Dcbffacr, Mary
nompsoa, Beverly Testa, Ju
BaJoff, Mary Lo• Dawsoa and Allee
ZamboaJ.
Paparaul 11 edited by Daily PUot
Style editor VWa De~.
MENOPAUSE
(From Pace Bl)
v.oman ha\C two or more S)'mptom
and )Ct only 25 percent seek medical
bdp. A lot of women are suffcnna
silently, or they don't know that htlp
is available.
"There 1s a tremendous vanauon
1n the way menopause affects d1f-
fe~nl "'omen," commented Smith,
"some have httlc or no symptoms.
wh1k others suffer severely, Women
need to know that difficulties dunna ·
meno-pausc do not mean that they
have a poor attitude or th~ there i
something wrong with them."
"I Wish all women. &f.Cd 35 and up
would start rcadina 1t, ' said Smith ..
She explained that this chanac in life
IS &r&dwal, With symptoms &enerany
be&innang by the 1.1me a woman 1s 35
)Cars old and continu1n1 unttl a?"
pro,umately age 65.
Menopause is medically defined as
the cc sat1on of menstnJation and
most Amcncan women will ell·
periencc this between the c of 45 •
and their early 'SOI.
Smath has the same approach to
menopause that he did over 28 yeaB
ago about childbirth. "The more you
understand what is happen1n1 to you,
the lcs fri"'tenan11t "· Menopause should be viewed as a natural process,
j ust like puberty and childbirth. Each
stage is different and brinas its own
rewards."
Today, n seems that women arc
carefully prepared for childbirth.-but
not the other end of the spectrum,
menopause.
Chan1c For The Better stresses
preparation and presents a detailed
explanation of menopause, anclud1na
thorouah dcscnpt1ons ot emotional
and physical chanaes associated wtth
this staat of hfe. lt clarifies exactly
what happens to a woman's bOdy 100
how to cope with the phy ical
symptoms both durina and af\cr
menopause. It is full of information
that most women find lackina at this
tame ofthcir life and answers the most
common questions about mcnopeute
such as: "Is E!ltroten for you?" "What
about my sex life-,.· "Do 1 rtally need
a ttystcrcctomy?"
The book dCKribes some or the
latest medical information dis-
cQvercd, includina measures to bcsin
tak1na at aac 35 to help ~vent
osteoporosis, cardiov11eulu di1easc,
and brtast cancer. The authOn also
point out the imponant l'Ok a
woman's faith plays in comb9tina
fttlinp of depression, undesirability,
and ftar. -
Smith explained thlt she has been
wntina all her life, beiinnin1 with htr
first an1cle at aac I f. She has been
ftttlancc wnuna for lhc pest 28 yars
and has had numerous anicles ia
m1PZiMS and columns 1n teVeral
MWSpapcrs Smith hat.pubhstwd two
boob with• third to SC rtkated next
1ummn. Somehow she stall find
umc to 1oeu to woman's aroups and
work on her ftm novel
Smith ~--.on1na on Cha"IC
For The letterwnh Dr.'SChocnfcld,a
spccialtst 1n aynccok>ay and
l)'nccolo11c endocrinoloay in
Gain v11Jc, Florida. • ·
J
7'J.
, .
HAPPY TURKEY DA\; MATE!
~_.AFMMOJllT PCME:' -·-.. -~~·.1
,..._ COLO.. Of'
MOlllllY (91) (12 .JO)
(l ·OO) 5'25 f .00 10'2S
70MM I No Pau•s
STMtD •v .. (a)
( h OO) (3 :00) 5 :00
7:0CJ e. t :OO
NOW PLAYING
•-'-•IA __ ,
~ ... ,,. _,,. ·-M:ll m.11n ~ .... °"'"' ·--f--1711 -v.io-IA-.. .,. _,_ ...... ·--.. en DUID .. ...._~,.,..
'TA~ta) SHOWS AT 2:00 (4 .40) 7 ,20 t:S~
C: aocOOM..& DUMCJCJ! (f'O-U) (1 JS) (3 JS) . 5 3S 7 40 .. t 50
•SI-~ ::.,c.. .__,. ---.....
... --917N -...... ...... -··-. ....,,,... .. -
'Chuf\: Norris f'lal!WA\.Qa cPQ)
PIUJ Th• O•lt• Fore• (R )
THC COl..CHl CW MOflEV (a) eaHrly Hiii Coo ,,., I No PU HS
Burt L.ancu ler
TOUGH GUVS IPO) Karate Kid II (~Q) ' .
SOUL MAii CPCM J) Also Jumoln' Jack Ftu h (RI
C•OCOOILE OUNOR'.11: (PO-Ul Cunt Ho (PC·t l)
•lllW
f (Ifft
!tel f'iOO ,
·~II.at ,,.,.,. .
0.. .. IC110 -
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·~-•LAeUllA""4& ·--•tT.wTOll --c... ~ -Ult -~<-... _ --. ..,.. ..,..., ·--··-·=--~•;;:j•to .. 11A"'-. -.. -:-"' --· ---,._ .. .__ .,_ .... •-._.,,. L
• .,........,.,.._ [m~w.a::1",.,..a•o-r""'r1CUi01w"" I
Oreno-COMt DAILY PfLOT IW....,., ...........
THE ~-tab,,~ 5PECTACULARI
MUSIC, MAGIC AND WONDER PP.OM THE DIRECTOR OF
"THE·Ol.AcK STAWON" AND "NEVEi\ CRYWOl.f"
"The Anival of 'An American Tail' is a r~ for Jubilation:·
-Gm S&afit. "nt 'WIJ SM."
-·~,. .....
&IWamC-l'AllW
179-<1141
llllVIMl * LA llllltADA Of'ANCK
ldwwn wao.illllQe Pacl!IC t 0..'Y PIClhc s OltnQI
SSl-065$ 523-1111 Or• .. ·1'1'3-4 9311
' -• t /)
.l. L "' .
~NUTCRACKER ~
TOE M OflO'll Pl<:TLllf..
THQt.4.U COl.IMAN _,MICHAIL IOSIN'.ll..ATI Pn-A HYf'UllON11t1JSffiili LOCO-·-
HUTCIACKU .. ., .. ,.. PAC"1C lllOllTHWUT IAlUT -.-_..., """"'.,,,,,, "·~· . ~ c...._.,..... .. , 1tnn STOWIU. .. _ .., nna lt.YICH TCHAlli:OVlltY
--.., LOM>ON SYMl'liOlfY OtlCHISnl< c_ ... .., Sii C11All.IS MACKDAAS
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Deep 1n the 1ungles of South Amenca
two men bong civ1lizat100 to a native tribe
Noll. after ye.ars of struggle together,
trey find themselves on opposite sides 1n a
dramatic fight for the natives independence.
One will trust in the po.Ner of prayer
One will believe in the might of the sword.
------T II E----
M ISSI O
Sl ifWIW~""llf.,,....
r """Ullt• .... 11..IMC' i1"
EXCLU~VEORANGECOUNTYENGAGEMENT-..!.....----~~-----i
70 MM 6 TRACK DOLBY. STEREO
-EDWARDS NEWPORT CINEMA-
NEWPORT CENTER 644-0760
PLAYS DAI · Y AT 11 :30, 2:00, 4:30, 7~00. 9:30
..
'Pirates 'plunder laug];is
in musical at Harlequin
By JOYCJWcHERER BODLOVICH
........ c., ''••I
The H•rlequm Oinntr Playhouse's
production of Gilbert &. Sullivan's
"The Pirates of Penzance" is rip-
roarina fun from start to fjnash.
Directed and choreognphed b> the mulu-tal~nted Oraia Schaefer, the1 presentation includes .a successful
blend of performers whose supcnor
acuna and s1n1ina skills add un-
beatable panache to the cla kal
musical comedy.
The story beams w1tb Fredcnc.
played by the aif\cd Ted Jost, about to
reach his Iona-waited 21st birthda).
This significant ctlebration mark the
conclusion ofh1s appren1icc)hip with
the infamous Pirate of Pen1ance.
Isolated from the opposite sc~.
Fredenc's only expo urt to women is
throuah bas aray-twrcd nul"5t'maid,
Ruth. Hert the ploi tluckens. with a
mue of complication , when F~edcrk l~ms his . apprenuce tup
with the pirates has not really come to
complet1on -and then he mtcts the
be uteou ¥abet. who~ father the
M1Jor G:ncral: come to odds with
the pirate,. • 1 Sometimes the uncxpecteii can
have dchahtful nppling effects in any
\\ell-directed production. "The
Pirates of Penunct" proved that
theory opening night. The small,
though 'key. role of Ruth was to be
played by veteran actress Mary G1lhs.
However. a last minute cmeracncy
lcfl the role vacant. That is when
director Schaefer, tn drag; stepped
into the role. . Piracy afoot ln Harlequin mulcat. comedy.
"ITM Tllll IY" (PG 13)
10 mm-.t TA.ACK DOLBY 12;30, 3 00. 5 30 t ·OO. 10 30
"THE •W (PG 13)
70 mm·ll TRACK DOLBY 11·30. 2-00. •UO
7 00, t '.30
•WALT Ol$NEY S•
"SONG Of THE SOUTH"
G 5 15. 7 00. 8 50
•STEVEN SPitLB£RG S•
' "AN AMERICAN TAI." (GI 5 45, 7 30, 9 15
14THE WRAtTH" (PG 13)
8 30 uJUMPIH• JACK" IAI
1130. 10 1!5
"PEOOY SUE
GOT MAMIED" (PG 13)
II 00 8 00. 10 00
"STAR TRfJ( rr (PGI • TRACK DOLBY STEREO
12 00 2 30. 5 00
7 30 10 00
"STAR T1WC IV" IPG1 4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO
12 30. 3 00 5 30 e oo. 10 30
11FIREWALKER" 1PG1 STEREO
1 •S • 00 1100 -
8 30 10 30
'ftOOY SUE
GOT .. AARIED" (P012)
1:l0, 3:45, 1:00 1;15, 10:11 .
"COLOR Of MONEY" 1PG1
• TAACK DOLBY STEREO
12 00. 2 15. 4 30 700, I 15
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
839 1 soo
•STEVEN SPEIL8ERG S•
"AN AMERICAN TAIL" IGI 5 30 7 30 9 15
•WALT DISNEY S•
"SONG Of TkE'sOUTH"
(G)6 00 8 00 9 •5
UNIVERSTIY
8 Sol 88 1 1
• T • ..
"PEGGY SUE
GOT MARRIED" 1pr,13,
•O 7 •'> 9 45
"NAME OF
THE ROSE" A1
7 00 9 10
"JUMPIN JACK" HO
8 I'>
"SOMETHING WILD" F.05 10 10 IRI
•CHUCK NORRIS•
"flAEWALKEA" Pf>)
1< 1100 101~ IFRFO
• k J <,f lllfWMAlll•
"COLOR OF MONEY"
'l ' 0 10 l('
•PAUL HOG,N•
"CROCODILE DUNDEE"
1PG 1316 15 8 30 10 15
PAUL HOGAN tS
"CAOCOOK.[ DUNDH"
6 00 8 15 10 10 (PG-131 NO BARGAIN PRICE
•STEVEN SPEILBERQ S•
"AN AMERICAN
TAIL" 101 5 .t5, 7 40. 11 15
t
"IT M TREK fY" !POI 70 mtn.e TRACK DOLBY 12.00. 2 30. 5.00 7·30. 10.00
"ITAR TREK IV" 1Pb1 4 TRACK DOLBY STEAEO 12 30. 3 00. 5·30 8.00. 10 30
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
"MALCOLM" (PG 131 12 45, 2 45, 4'45,
7 oo. 9 15
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
"llO 6 NANCY" lR!
1 15, 3 45. II 15-8 30 10.35
•STEVEN SPEILBERG S•
AN AMERICAN T Al." tG11100. eoo. 940
•WALT DISNEY.S•
"SONG Of THE SOUTH"
5 35. 7 30. 9 15
•C THOMAS HOWELL•
"SOUL MAN" I~ 131 1115, 830 10 25
"SOLAR BAlfES" (PG 131 4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO 5 10. 7 00. 9 00
Vil LAGE CENTER
891 0567
. f ... • • .·.:
•PAUL HOGAN•
"CROCOOll.E DUNDEE"'
IPG· 13) 1 15. 3 30 5 45 8 00. 1000
11SOLARBABIES
IPG· 131 12 30 2 30 •301130 830 1030
•CRUISE/NEWMAN•
''THE COLOR OF
MONEY" (RI 12 15
2 45 5 00 7 30. 9 45
"THE NUTCRACKER" 101
1 00. 3 00. 5 00 7 00 8 45
•C THOMAS HOWELL•
"SOUlMAH" (PG 131
12 4!5. 2 50. 5 00 7 15 9 15
•WALT DISNEY S•
"SONG OF THE SOUTH" (GI 11 45 1 40 3 35 5 30 7 45. 9 30
HUNTINGTON TWIN
848 0388
•C THOMAS HOWEI L•
"SOUL MAN" f PG· 131
6.00 8 00 10 00
"CHILDREN OF A
LESSER GOD" CAI
700 930
EL TORO
581 9500
R To.IC) AT Tw. .._ ....
"STAR TREK IV" cPG1
1 TRACI< DOLBY STEREO
12 30 3 00 5 30
fl 00 1010
"ST AR TREK IV" 1 P01
1 tRACK DOLBY STEneo
)() 8 00 10 30
•t..HUCK NORRIS•
"FIREWALKER" 1PG1
12 1.., '10 • •'·
1 00 9 15
•C. IHOMAS HOWELL•
"SOULMAN" tPO 1J1
12 00 3 15 5 ·~ 7 30 9 •5
•PAUL HOGAN•
"CROCOOtlE DUNDEE" fPGl3112 45 2 40 4 30 1130 8 30 10 15
830
••STANO IY ME" 1R1
8 •5 10 30-.__-=--
"THE WAAIJH" (PO 131
7 '5
11JUWtN' JACK" CA) 5 40 9 3!5 ...
"CHILDREN Of A
LEISER 000" (A)
7:00, t:30
•WAL l OtSNEY S•
.. IONG Of THE sount'
1011:05 9-00 • 45
From the ttmc. the slightly rotund.
aray-wlgged. Schaefer hit the stage.
the laughter dad not stop. Not only
dad he look beli~v~ le as Ruth. but ._..:M..,~~Qoei~~uoaa..:..mi 'he/she' even m ged to hit the PAUL H AN is ranae of notes n d for the collcc-
"CROCODIU DUNDEE" lion of. sonp he '$hared with other
1115.'a 30 10 15(PG·131 members of the cast.
Patt)' T1fTany. Laune Sterhng, Enc:s.
Rose and Kelh Melson. Or. not to
include the group of psnnes/poltce,
who~ dancing and sangmg talents
added the extra pizazz
"The Pirate~ of Pen1ance" wall
continue lo plunder laughter at the
Harlequin. 3503 S Harbor Blvd .. just
north of Costa Mesa, through Feb 8.
Curtain times vary n11htly except
Mondays and ticket information i'
dispensed at 919-SS 11
"THE NUTCRACKER'' 101 "I have no idea where those notes
e oo, a oo. 9 4s came from." he joked with the
audience at the end of the per-
"THE COLOR formance.11
OF MONEY" (R) Yet. Schaefer was onl6 one of the
PAUL NEWMAN string of talents who rouiht up-TOM CRUISE s 15. 1 30. 10.00 roaf!ous laughter from t e ap-
preciative theatregoers. The dashing
pirate king, played by Alex Daniels,
cut quite a figure in has ught-fitung
pirate garb. Has comedic antics and
Cavett, Breslin talk
shows axed by ABC
t----iri'f'~~~~---1 incredible energy ran throughout the
play .... e"en into the curuun call.
NEW YORK (AP) -ABC has
canceled late·nrght tal hows ho ted
b> Dack Cavett and columnist Jimmy
Breshn, who took out a front-paJ,e ad
an the New York Tames to "fire· the
network.
IUO AU KATI fllOM.TitUM
"TOP GUN" IPGI 800
"STANO BY ME" (RI 11, 15. 10 05
HARBOR TWIN
631 3S01
•CHUCK NORRIS•
"FIREWALKER" (PG>
7 00 9•1!5
11SOLAR BABtES" IPG 131
6 00 8 00. 10 00
' TRACK OOLB'f STEREO
PAUL HOGAN IS
ROCOO~E DUNDEE"
tPG 131
6 15 11 )(I 10 10 NO BARGAIN PR1Cr
4 TRACK DOLBY STEREO
"TOP GUN"
7 45 (PGI
"PEGGY SUE"
(PG 1315 45 9 50
.CHUCK NORRIS•
"FIREWALKER" 1PG1 7 30 9 •!5
"SOLAR BABIES" (PG 131
• TRACK DOLBY STEREO
600 8 00 10 00
"TOP GUN" 1PG1 800
"JUMPIN' JACK" 1A1
600 10 05
CALL THEATRE
FOR PROGRAM
INFORMATION
"CHILDREN OF
A LESSER GOD" 1R1
7 00 q !'>
•C.. THOMAS HOWflL •
"SOUL MAN" lf'l, IJI
'>•~ 7 •'> 1000
•WAL f DISNEY S•
MSONG OF THE SOUTH"
tGI 6 00 8 00 q 45
•STE:VEN SPEllBERC. ~·
"AN AMERICAN
TAIL" (0) 5 •5 1 30 9 15
•STEVEN SPEILBfAG S•
"AN AMEllUCAN TAIL"'
tOI 5 45 7 30 9 1~
"PEGGY SUE
GOT MARRIED'' (PO 13)
8001115 1015
I
Ban Williams as par excclleocc in
the strutung. though likable MaJor
General. Another star perfomancc
wa presented by Ann Winkowski,
who played the lovely Mabel -love
partner to Frederic. Her hght operatic
range as sensational, her appearance
charming -and her comedic
portray! delightful.
In his Sunday column 1n the New
York' Daily News. Breslin said he
wouldn't continue "Jimmy Breshn's
People" for ABC after his current
contract for 26 shows runs out.
It would be remiss not to menuon
the Major General's five daughters,
who added constant humor to the
production. pl.a)cd by Janis Uhley.
The Times ad ran Monday. and
later 1n the day. ABC said 1t had
decided Fnday to cancel both shows.
"They had run out of the Daily
News where I am. Then I heard about
11• -111-ITIR -
HBIJ wED •ov 26t~ Copley Cololly Cablewlsloll
NOBOOY eRlf«JS rr HOM£ 1.•,}H~ Pl 549-3500
LAKEWOOD
{.enter
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the thmf m the Time thi mom1n4.
-v.inch thought W3$ halanous. •
Cavett said 1n a telephone 1nterv1e"
Monda) from his home on Lona
l~land
Breslin was funous because ABC
affiliates were not aanng has and
Ca"etfs show at the hour at which
1hc net"ork spatted them -mid-
night. following the news show
"N1gh1hne."
ABC spokesman Vi c Ghadaha s.aid
Brcshn's final show would be.seen on
Jan. 2 and Cavett's on Dec. 30 and
that the network would replace them
with sonic other entertainment pro-
gramming next spnng.
Eastwood:
Film snub
'unfair'
-~ALAN L. ADLER
I\ I t10,,_....., •
AN DIEGO -AC'tor Chnt East-
wood '91d the Defense Otpertmtnt's
withdrawal of iu~P'?!'l fi~.is ntw film js "Scroogc-hke and ~rt
chari11cs slated to benefit from s 111
premieres. Ea \wood. who stars in and
dittttcd "Heartbreak Radac." said in
a phone' 1ntcrv1~w from Ctfn!c!. that
he's bothered because th<' dec1 ion to
withdraw support was based on one
retired Navy officer's impressions
"I JUSt didn't thank that w~s fai!,"
Eastwood said. "So far. no scn.ior
Marine has seen this fUm. There were
a couple of Junior officers at ihe
scrttnina we held a week or so aao "
In the movie. scheduled to open
Dec S n11ionwicJe, • Eutwood
ponrays the profane. hard-drirf\ina
and \:iolent Master Gunnery S,1.
Tom Highway. That character
bothered retired Navy public affairs
officer Robert Simms, who nC$O-
tiatcd several changes an the scnpt
with Eastwood dunng filming.
The decision ... _-pulling support
filtered to the Marine dbrp . ·
"We've advised Manne Cofl>S
commands informally thal support 1n
the form of any kind of promouonal
acuv1t1es as proh1bited." Manne
Corps spo~esman Lt. Col. John
hotwell said That prompted cancellatton of a
premiere to benefit the San D1qo
County Armed Forces YMCA. which
pf'O\'ades ~JC6.~0 up to 15.000
people a month an Ocean ide. ntar
the Camp Pendleton military base A
chanty premiere 1n New York City
benefiting Toys for Tots, 11 Marine
chanty. also was scrapped.
"To go around and pull cha.ritr,
runninas as kind of Scroogc--hke. •
Ea twood said. "This say somethina
absolutely drastic. We've had un·
believable support (from) people who
want this film for their Chnstmas
release," he said.
The actor and Carmel mayor Mud
he never intended for the film to give
a negative impression of the Marine •
I
l Or""9C...~YMOT/Uf9*11•,MI 11•rr• ..
••
H u~u\1_ t1Pf
•
. . ~&: .. .....,. 11 featured. family mcmbtr as "tenous" about PQHtble chantt ot rnadtnce. (March 21·Arnl 19). What Watch Taurus. · Tlllt WO&LD'S .dntAnlT ftlCIU
teemed • hindrance wal be removed' • SCO&PIO (()ct. 23-Nov. 21): Dtlemm1 is molvcd throu&h .. quiet
You'll finish ISSiJntnent. dec111on will ~ meditation." Focus on spirituality, rtahzauon that be1n1alone11 not the tame
reached colfttrn1na busihess partnership SYDIEY u beiP& _lonely. Look bebin<ltecnea, be discreet, realize love i on horizon. or marnqc. Lepl document will be Watch Pisces. .. .
located. Watch for Libra. 0 SAOm.UUUS (Nov. 22·Dcc. 21): Emphasis on 1b1lity to "11~ulate
TAUlllJS (April 20.May 20): New· 1111 fttlinasincntcrtaanina,dynamic manner.Senseofhumor. fitnnscmPha aud.
methods aetjob done. You'll be invited to •••. •••••••••• Money could be madt 1va1lable via unonhodox proced C.anccr. Capncom join unique aroup -C)clc indicates you play roles. ·
should accept. Key ts to find outlets for CAPIUCOllN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): People wtll be intem n your "track
creative capab1httcs. Romance wlll be sparked -could ruuJt an conf\qrauon. record." IX PQ5itive of source miterial, be ure that facts. fiaure in pro~r
. ,GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Emouons dominate l<>sic -romance plays order. '!.ou could be in public spotli&,ht. promotion is due, )Ou'I IF' added
s1..,1ficant role. Intuition is on ta~e'.t tcachin~ methods are hifhliJhtcd. You rccoan1t1on.
pin knowlcdae by' sharina special inrormation. Cancer, Aquam,1s in picture. ~QVARl\JS (Jan. ,20.Feb. 18): Focus on independence, creauv1 , travel.
CANCER (June ..21-July 22): You'll have more .. workina room." That publlshana.rccoanitionofspintual vaJucs. lnd1v1d~lwhotau&htyou J pastis
"closed in" feeing willcviu>oratc Corrcspondcnc.c is hi&hli&hted, Jona-distance apin available 1fyou wiU but make request. Leo, another Aquarian pla roles.
commurucatJon figures prominently. Gemini, Sa11ttarius natives will play PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):-SCnse ofd1rca1on can·be restored. lqnily
outstandana roles. • · dispute, involvinamoney, will beam1c.ablysettJed. Legal matter will nolona,Cr
. LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): A .. chance mccttng" could develop into sonicthina present· problem. You a're on road to victoty. Cancer. Capricorn fiiurc
1mponant. Involves money and love Keep options open, realm• plans arc prominently.
subject to change. Relative , v1sats, short tnps could be involved. Watch IF NOVEMBER n IS YOUR BIRTHDAY-property or financial d1 pute
Capneom · can be settled 1n December. Family quarrel pulkd you intwod1rettton . You'll
VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22).; Be analyucaJ, ut1hze ab1hty to discern know where you stand, holiday spirit wall prevail, there will be Xyrcunion with
character, motives. Sccnano hi&hli&hts acuvtty connected with eommun1ca-loved one. Anes, Libra play tmportant roles in your hfe. You arc dynamic,
t1on, travel, writing. Focus on personal possessions, payments and collcct1ons. creative, many consider you kmd, senerous, aracious. You could have unusual
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Lunar pos111on, numencal cycle ooth ht&hli&ht mark on forehead or face. Key days in Dcccmber: 6th, I Sth, 24th. August will
chann. wisdom, appreciation of an and music:' Domesuc tdjustment as be memorable for yo~ in l 987. · . .
Why chance phoning in tub? Most wish
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I enJOY .-_ . intensive care unit an cntacaJ con-. form ore
talk1n1 on the phone while an the tub. dition.
but my husband .say~ lam &OJ.DJ. to A~ he lly semi-conscious and not edu ca t1•on electrocute myself someday tf I a.. expected to live, I was fervently
should dro~ the phone an the water. I 1111 prayana for a hcahna miracle. h
simply cant beheve the phone com-suddenly hlt me that I had never 1n
pany would instaJI phones by bath-1-•-l(IS my life told my father that I love<i
tubs if this was a p«?SS1bihty. LAI him. I had not huucd him since I was
Please check with your authorities a child. There were so many thing,s he
and aive me the facts. I W111 pull the wanted to teach me th.at I had never
plua 1mmed1atcly if )'Ou say my • • • made an effort to learn. (from aie 17
husband a nght. -SOAKJNG IN DEAR ANN LANDERS: Real to 25, I thou&ht 1 knew more than he
SALEM, ILL men don't cry! Real men don't bug did.)
DEAR SOAKING: Dtcll BIU from other men! ReaJ mendon'tsay"llove I bcaed God foranothcr chan~ to
Most grownups queried by
pollsters say they wished they'd had
more education. Me too. It's cunous.
You can get the equivalent of several
collcae educations by devoting a haJf
..
Neither vulnerable. South dt'al11.
W.£81' ••t Q Qt
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tAQ~
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¢•& • l •••a The bidding:
Soat.Ja Wut Nortil Eut
I Q 2 ¢ •c;> Pue
Pu• Pue
Opening lead: ~·n~ or •
How often have you seen the five
of a suit. win a trick legitimately
when au four players have fol·
lowed suit? We would wager that it
has never happened to you. It did
occur dunng the Sww Team
Champt<>Mhip at the nce-m-WMtc:l
Bndge Olympiad an M1anu Beach.
Purist& might quibble about
West's two diamond overcall at
any vulnerablhty. few would have
anything to say about North's leap
to four hearts.
Declaring was Norma Sorin of
Australia West hat upon a most un·
fortunate moment to make the top-
of·nothlng lead or the nme of
spades Dummy's Jack forced the
king from East, taken by the ace
ClllW
GllD
queen, and dedattT niu-d with a
d1&mon~. Weac. won and found the
club shift, but it was in a lo.ant
cause.
Oeclar r rose with dummy's d ·
and called for the five of spades~
East contributed the three, declar-:
er the four and West. the two! Tht}
miracle had hap~ned. lt wu J
sample matter tor declarer to caah'
the queen or spades, get bade to the
Ubl.e with &-4Wnond-ndf·and ct•
card two club losers on the good'!
spad~. •
llllMit Bdl Corporate CommuJca-you" to other menJ I am ashamc<t to· tell my dad I loved him. I wanted
deet tff0mmeed1 1tayhl1 Oil of tt.e admit th.at all m y hfe I have tned to desperately to hua ham but the taboo ••ler wllea ••hi& a telepltoae, behave 1n such a stcrco1yp1cally was too deeply 1ngra1ned and I
aldtoep lie 1ay1 tlle du1er of masculine manner. couldn't bnng myself to do at.
LM.
Bo YD
At the other table North bld •
mere two hearu oveT Eut'a ln~T.!
ference, and Eut ral8ed diamonda;
The contract wu ~n four heari.
but now West, Caroae Rothlleld, de·
clded the diamond 1Uit wu unlike--
ly t.o yield tricks, so she led a club~
That proved t.o be deadly. Declarer;
ducked, East's ten won and a clu~
return made aure that the defend-;
ers collected 1 ;pade trtck, a dla-;
Two rounds of trump brought mond and two clubs.for a one-tnck
happy new' In l~ shape or the set. :
tlectrontJoa la remote. My father and I always aot along I have a bat of advice for sons of all
Ualike app1Jaace1 aacll 11 laalr well. In recent years I tried to do more ages. If your father is li ving, hug ham
•ryen, dte amout of eltttrlclty on a . things for him and with him. We had and tell him you love him-the next
....,....e lbae 11 too low to create a a truly loving relationship. But the time yo u see him. Jt doesn't matter
eertoa1 laaurd aur water. However, constraints of manliness that he where it 1s or who 1s around. You
8W caatloaed tlaat UHul occ•r· established by verbalizing these might not get another chance. I
races 1acla u a aeatby 11PlaJ.al taboos prevented me from showing didn't. -PRISONER OF "MAN-
1trite or a .. power llDe fallla& oo a any affection for him. LINESS" IN MERIDIAN. MISS. ~OH Wire may and aa elec· On a recent Wednesday, Dad asked DEAR PRISONER: nuta for •
trkal Hr1e 1troq nioap to 1et put has doctor to admit ham to a hospital provocative letter.
pro&ectJve devices hl1ta1Jed by tele-for treatment of a h1&h fever. the la dtll 11e of Rambo fever ud
,..._ compaaJes. origm of which could not be de-maclao madlaelt, It ls &ood to be
It may appear 1lamoroat wllea a termaned. By Fnday he was so wealc remhlded tUt real men cu aad
movie 1&ar 11e1 a pltoae hi a b1bble he could not stand without suppon. 1bo•ld 1laow te.adenes1 aad affec·
INldt, betlUuot a pnde.attlal111 to do. B~Saturday he was moved to the lion. lt'11ll rlptto cry.
hour a day to serious rcadjna, In the
morning. maybe. Or JUSl before bed.
Nothing to 11. Stdl, lack of sufficient
cducat~on makes for real regret. I fret
about 11 somettmes. A lot dunng
.. Jeopardy " Not so much dunng the
Fnday night fights.
The male hon an the wild spends
most of his hfe Clthcr alone or wnh
other male hons. True, each pnde has
one male, and that's dandy whale it
'=~=· S<r:~lllA-4ttrS·:: r.M ~ CIAY L POUM . ._...... ....... "' .... ,..,, ~ _. ~ ........ ._._.....__.
U N H I H E
~-----====-=====:---------:-:----:::::::=======--=---------=========-------=-------========-1 luts.-Bu~muscu~r ....;,..:;;._........_._ · " males want the work for the lone
YO
Daily Pillt ~ TWA
-FINO OUT HOW 'GQOD WE REALLY ARE. ·
'
lllGl1TS AVA AIU llQM OIA"'IGE COIJttJTr TO t.U
YM GOWEN SrATE A/II S
pnde male to keep that JOb any too
Iona. •
Q Jn high school. the key to a bofs
populanty 1s how ~ell he doe an
athleucs. What"s the key for a &Jrl?
A. Belong to the n&ht claque. Or so
say those who've researched the
matter.
. • ''~;;w,®:Wstmm IN I' I' 11 r r r 1 .
6 ~~·~~N=f lfllfl~ I I I I I I I
Q. How long }las Cos1a Rica
survived without sofd1ers?
A . At leasl since 1949 when It
adopted a const1 tut1on that
prohibited a ... standtng army there
Survived, please note, Wlth the high-
est standard of hvang an Central
Amcnca.
TODAY'S .
CROSSWORD PUZZLE ~
Q How'd Brookl)n get 11s name'>
A. The Dutch brought It over. Near
Utrecht m The Netherlands as a small
town called ··oreukelen .. meanmg
"Broken Land ...
--It's no tnck 10 be tolerant of
somebody you don·1 hke. What's
tough 1s to be tolerant of somebody
who doesn't hke )OU. Students of
bcha \ 1or sa) most people can't
handle It. It's what perpetuates prcJU·
dice. they say.
"Poht1c1ans have, generall) speak-
ing, mtcrcsts aside from the mtercsts
of the people. and, to say the least of
the most of them, they arc a long step
removed from honest men." A~
Lmcoln said that.
You could scl~all the chocolate you
could ship to Poland these da)s. a
correspondent says. The government
there rauons It. Eight ounces a month
only and only to children aged 2 to 18
Q Can dogs be insured"
A That they can. AgamstJUSt about
ever) sort of hazard except po1son1ng.
AC"Oll
1 Jett ... -
6 CheeM
10 Raced
14 Small body of
land
15 Dalal -
16 Hoctcey goal
17 Lily
18 WUHll
quaffs
19 Heat
dflllatnbet I
20 Cargo ' movers • 22 Income form'
24 Edenlte
26 Oefl.cts
27 Trudged
3 1 Nourished
32 Old-
womanllh
33 Ta.lie• off
35 Exclamatton
38 Lazily
39 ''As --
that goes"
40 Fervor
4 1 Stag's mat•
42 Tsar
43 Wu SICk
44 Daylight
45 Proxlmlty
-4 7 MakN MC\lr'e
51 Liturgy
52 Pertinent
5Al Retlec:1or
58 Atop
59 Pinnaa
81 All.ck
62 Plum type
83 Degenerate
6" ln~tor
Nikola -
851nci!M
86 C.rd
67 o ... t.
DOWN
1 Early
Brltllhef
2 Danube
feedw
3 -Fitzgerald
4 Accurately
5 un ... ted one
6 Guido's note
7 Artist
Salvador -
8 Modify
8 Dogs
10 Made I TO
11 Road workef
12 Ol1<:harge
13 Basha In
Thnt name Hormel of mcat-pack-ma fame as fam1harcnou&)l. ccruunl) .. ,-~2----r.---ii:--
So why do so few of us pronounce 11
the way the company founder George '-1-4~~-+-....+---+-
A. Hormel pronounced 1t'> to rhyme
with "normal." 17
Clearly Adam an<l E\e got alona ~~1---+--+-+-
well enough. Our Love and War man
1~ hstina rusons why I. Never did
Eve tell dam about the men ~he
could've mamed. 2 Never dtd dam
tell Eve about ht~ San Diego infcc·
tion. J, .. '>You fin1 h 1hc 11 .. 1.
Q . When did Italy rai tht m1n1-
mum mamaic c for girls to 12?
. In I 92. me )ear fi& ncv.-ton
and book matches ~e~ mH"ntcd.
:That httle hurd callcJ tht'
chameleon "on't put up Wlth other
cham Icon on 1 'urf. Al lea t, the
male ~on't. You know what 11 doc to
ward other male ? Pu hup '
Q. re pen u1n dan crou\?
, Painfully~ ky. anyYt'I .1 h y'll 52
stab It )'OU, tf )OU 11\'t them
'°mcth1na to tnke. hall> k ..,sa~-+--t--.--
• Su(' \OU knc" the strttt\ uf ,__.._._ ........... ,...__
lron art· pt\cd 1th a rubber 62 ~
com~un~ r .. M. Bo d II • ,.di •ltd 6$
rol•nul11.
21 US patriotic
org
23 Ouaky tlmM
25 Award
27 Put down
2l Take apert
29 Rae. length
30 Authof C.r1
Van -
34 Jowneyet
35 Trlchry
38 Lode yletda
37 Conjoins
38 Most drOll
40 ShOwy garb
42 a.w.ii.
43 Gr•ttelent
44 Oruntc: llang
41 Obtectiw
47 Goetr. opu•
48 Fruit
49 Woo
50 Stile
53 oc...i bird
55 Slumber
56 Stare
57 Nurture
60 Armament
11 12
'
•
l
.nm
FAIOLY
CIRCUS
· by Bii Keane
"'What date does this milk go bad?"
BLOOll COUNTY
U.S :ACRES
• AREN'T YOO A4jHAMEP . ~"" · OF YOUR FEAR~. WAPE?
"Do you realize that If I had wings, I could
be down In Rio right now fluttering In some
Latin birdbath?"
IT" THE COWARP'' ART~ M.U:· PU:EN&. J'LL
PE MON STRATE
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
~----~ .... ] l
"Oh, stop looklng so worried, the junkman
wanted to ptJt In a bid. just In case ... "
PEANUTS
I
i
GARFIELD
YOO KHOW.GARF1fll7,
YOO f>HOOLP REALLY
't _ 9£ THANKFUL F'OA THE F'OOP YOO EA'T
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
ROSE IS ROSE
80( HAVE WE 60T
BAD NEWS FOR
YOU TON16MT !
• l'f
'
by Hank Ketcham
l\
'HE LICKED MY EHTIRE STNAf' COtLECTION !'
by Charles M. Schulz
WE'RE NOT EVEN 601N6
TO GIVE VOU THE
DET"IL5 AT aEVEN !
~ f.
by Jim Davis
I'M Al50 THANK~UL FOR THE FOO~
!JOU EAT
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
by Pat Brady
ICE CREAM I .I,~
J I
I •
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
JUDGE PARKER
I'U. U:AVE 'WOU HERE
Al.ONE WITH HIM. MRS WAANEP\ I JUST
ANSWER W~ATEVER QUESTIONS HE
ASKS. AS SIMPLY AS POss1eL..E •
FUl'fKY WINKERBEAN
... ,.
..
. '
by Jtmpavls
by Lynn Johnston
M; MOM-HE'S ONLYFl~'S loo~To
(' aeOLDI
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold le Doux
by Tom Batluk
BU-r A ~ RE!.JPE FOR
BAND CAAlcx.> SToFFI~ /
by Garry Trudeau
MM
OllR ~IUOft/ """ ~. /R.. I
' •
!-
UC Int.De buketball coacla 8W llalll&an (left) appean to be poadertac tlae etataa of Illa team tbla eeaeon, wlalcb wtl1 be led 'b1 Scott Brooke (center) a.ad Joe Bacllaaan (rtptJ,;
Players' stamina becomes Mulligan conce11D
Anteaters need to keep pace
on defense to SP'E" fast break
By JON FERGUSON
While acuina the Anteater runnina game aoing wilJ
not be a problem apinst fast-paced offenses like
Nebraska and Bradley in the team's first two games. what
worries Mulhpn 1s the rest of the lineup.
6-S GeOrJCtown transfer Kevin Floyd for the fifth game of
the sea!On which could free Mulhpn to move 6-1 Frank
Woods. a transfer from Seward County Community
College in Kansas, to a power pos1t1on.
ment of Rob Dok.tof'C"l}'k. who still needs to decide how
hard he wanu to play, Mulhpn wd.
'°' ... .,..,,... .....
UC Irvine basketball coach Bill Mulhp.n found out
how well his team could operate 1u wide-operrtiibnana
game apmst the Norwqian nauonaJ t'1lrn last wcck,but
there 1s still a ma1or qucst1o n to be answered.
"If the other team docsn't·want to run. the only way
to force them is with defense," Mulliaan said. • After
Bradley and Nebraska, the other teams are going to slow
down the tempo lfpco"le areaoing to miJk the ball for40
or 42 seconds, 1t makes tt difficult to play the waywe want
to.''
Forward Mark Warren (6-8) holds an advantage in
play1na time over Woods because of his fam1larity with
the system and desire. while Woods has more talent,
Mulhpn said.
Wayne Enaclstad, Mike Doktorc-Lyk hold the center
and power forward slots. with Rob Doktorayk the first
man ofT the bench
"I'm really happy with Rob," MuUtpn said. "Rob
has made great strides. He hai not scratched the surface of
his capabilities But when he hurt his knee 1n practice the
other day, the aym was silent When you get to the point
where he hasan impact on the rut of the playen like th.at,
Rob Doktorttyk has to be a factor. That's how far he's
come He·s &01ng to be a aood pla)'Cr."
Mike Hess (6-1) starts at the malJ forward spot,
while Joe Bucl\anan and Scott Brooks hold the point and
off guard positions. All thrtt are stroni outside shooters.
Add Floyd and the Anteaters wdl ~ nmc d«p
The way to chanac that Wlll be pressure defenses that
force an up-tempo style. Can the "4uad improve Its stamina cnou_&h to
mau1wn intensity on defense as well as offense'! That
factor W111 determine how :ucccssful this year'~ cont-
inatnt will be, accordina to Mullipn.
"If we're 1oin1 to play the way we want to, we'll have
to get ln sha~." Mullipn said. .. Wc'vebccn working out
WC\now they set tired early. but where the intensity lets
up is on defense. They're aettina tind and saying '1f I'm
10101 to'°' I'll 10 on offense and let up on defense.' For us
to be an effective team. ~·11 have to do better there.''
.. What we're try1na to do with the defense is to get
01hcr team to ao." Mullipn said "We'll try th mp lake a
suicide zone and presses which force them to r.ush the
ball. We're pmbhng, but with our size we don t have a
choice." -
What that i7e translates to is two 6-8 players and a
tno of 1uard in the 6-0 range.
.. , worry about being only three deep in the ~t."
Engel\tad howed flashes of bcinJ a strong offensive
pla)er apinst Norway, totallin& 21 points. but he
decreased in effcctivenes as the game wore: on. He al!O
grabbed eiaht rebounds.
"His blgcst problem is he makes a die1s100 and ~ocs.
i nsteao oflook1n& over the defense.ff M'Uthgan sala. 'He
just had succcs early and thouaht he could score a 100.
He's doesn't leave any option after he decides to ao. He
started cominf out when he did that.''
A problem developed over the weekend with the
injury of Buchanan. who sliced his riaht forc-fi.,. in a
cook.ma accident at home and recct\ied .ev~n stttcha.
Bucnanan, a lefi·handcd shoow. 11 lated to s\ar'l tbe
opener Fnday when the Antcatcn host Nebruk.a af\.cr
retucninJ to practice today.
TbeA'l'lteaten' urly sea10n schedule features a fairly
(Pleue ... UC DlVDm/C2) Mulhpn sakl. adding that aid may come in the amval of Mullipn is particularily imprc scd Wlth the develop-
McMahoil faces surgery, outf or yea.r
Martin suspended two games 1...
for tossf ng Bear quarterback
weeks !Orne teammates had questJoned whether he
had been seriously injured or was JUSt loafing.
"I was upset they didn't thank J was hurt. They
should know what a competitor I am," said
McMahon. a scrambling-type quarterback who
has thrown sidearm. even underarm to complete
passes. "Now, they know."
Gene u,,.11 •• •r-ref• ooald take
~re.fer COIJtrol to preYeat Da,rant
1oa1•. C2.
CHICAGO CAP) -Quarterback Jim
McMahon, who led the Ch1caao Bears to the Super
Bowl championship last January. said Tuesday he
wiU be s1dehned for the remainder of the football
season. mcTudina the playoffs.
McMahon said he would undergo
arthroscopic urgcry on his tnJurcd nJht shoulder
Dec. 12 at the offic:t1 of Dr. Frank Jobe, a Los
Anaelcs orthopedic spcciahst.
On Monday, Bears doctors said McMahon
had agravated a rotatorcufftcarond was doubtful
for the remainder of the season
consecutive games. But without McMahon, the
Bears' offense has sputtered. putting more pres ure
on their top-ranked defense
Nobody can say for: sure 1fthe slam McMahon
took from Manin was the blow that has sidelined
the quarterback.
McMahon said unday the slam "d idn't help"
hlS Injury.
"He told me the same thin1 the team docton
said -there's a tear in the rotator cuff -and tt
need to be repaired.." McMahon told reponers
who accompanied him to Los Anaeles for the
exam1nat1on by Jobe.
"Also, I miJht have a tear m another~ of
my shoulder. and that may have to be repaJrcd by
McMahon·~ injury was apparently aJITlvated
when he was slammed to the around by Grttn Bay
nose tackle Charles Martin an Sunday's 12·10
victory over the Packers.
Manin, who was ejected for the pel"50nal foul;
was suspended. Tu~ay for two pmcs ,by
Comm1ss1oner Pete Rozelle But the Packers
announced that Manin would appeal the
suspension.
McMahon. bothered b) the m1ury all season
and makm1 his first tart 1n nearlv a month. had
landed on the lnJUrcd houlderwhen Manin tossed
him to the art1fical turf of Soldier Fldd 1n the
second quarter.
Tomczak. who has started and won four times
this sca!On dunn1 McMahon absences. will tan at
home against the Pittsbursh tc'(lcrs th1~ unday.
but the Bears also will concentnuc on getting
recently aqu1rcd Doug Aut1e read) for acuon.
The Bears. 10-2. arc on the VCflC of wmnina
their third stra1Jht NFC Central D1v1s1on title. suraery." he said. ·
McMahon u 1d he was upset that in recent With McMahon ,tan1na. Chicago l\as won 23 Jlm McMahon
Sun Devils set
-practice. at
Orange Coast
Two colleac (ootball proarams
entenna key Southern Cahfornia
showdowns wtll set up their pre-
pme practice camps at collcae
£1c1ht1es an the Oransc Coast area.
Pac-10 footblll champion An-
zona tate will work out at Ora nae
Coa t Collete in preperallon for
lhe 1987 Rose Bowl pmc Jan. I,
while Notre Dame is practicin1 at
UCI thjs v.cck in preparation for
iu annual showdown with U
Saturday at the Colitcum,
The Wildcau will 'Nork out on
the OCC football field in add1uon
to Usina their weiaht fac1httcs
ftom Dec. 21·31 in prcperauon
for their showdown with 811 Ten
co-champion M1ch1pn.
"We arc ccrtamly very pleased
to have Anf()M State here and arc
confident they will find our
fac1ht1es to the hke of the team's
players and coachn." said Coa t
Athletic Director Oiclt Tucker.
The pla)rn, COl<'het and per·
tonnel w1U be 'tay1na at the South out Plaza Westin Hotel.
Several of the workouts arc
e pecttd to be open to the public.
Noltt Dame 11 ut1h11n1 U
lo1ne fac1lit1cs all week to ~re for 1tt annual n valry
which 1 ~t for 1 12:30 lock.off
Saturday.
Comanaoff a 2 I· I 9dcfcat at the
bind1 of lou1 tan.a tale lJn1vcr· Sit~, Nottt Dame as 11' e1tty one·
pcMnt favorite over the Trojans.
TM"'lnth arc ttaytna 11 the Newpon leach Mamou.
Irvine interests eye Hollywood Park
By TERRY TURRELL
o.lf .... C.ilt•t ... A
A aroup headed by Irvine bu messman R D.
Hubbard has rcpQrtedly made an offer to purchasc
Hollywood Park and lo$ Alamitos race track and
surrounding properties, the Daily Pilot has
learned.
Hollywood Park has neitht'r confirmed nor
denied the offer.
peculation hu persisted over the last month
of a stock takeover or buyout. Hollywood Park
stock, traded over the counter, jumped over three
points to a high of281n amid the rumored bU)OUt.
The pncc at the close ofTucsda)'s trid1na wa 26111
w1tJt no cha nae. •
Neil Pap1ano. lqal representative fi Holly-
wood Park, was quoted three day\ aao say1n1
there was no offer and he could not undrrstand
why there wo'11d be an_ unfncndly takeover of
Hollywood Park.
Marioric L. Everett, chairman of the board
and chief executive officer. has been in control of
Hollywood Park the past 1x years.
Hollywood Park recently purchased l.011
lamitosandcontrolsall home ~ racinaand all hut
one quarter horse meet in Southern California.
Once enJoy1n1 a succeu rate equal to n val
nta Anita, Hollywood Park hu fallen o n hard
umcs .. Thc pubhc attendan~ and mutuel handle of
Holl)'wood Park slightly exceed 50 percent of
Santa nita.
Horsemen's Qua1'cr Horse R cina A~Ja·
t1on lea-.cs Los Alamttos (rom Holl)'~ood Park to
conduct quarter horse meet . The current meet
run 10 week throuJh Dec. 20.
Purchase pnce for Los Alamito'I and c.ur-
roundina l•nd was reportedly SS8 m1lhon. tloll)"
wood Park's&roundi, located m ln lewood. have a
reported value of over $300 million. But a buyout
pncc for the package of Hollywood Park and l o
Alamitos has not been divulged
Sources close to the scene rcpon the Holly-
wood Park Opcraltng Co. officen and d1rcctorc.
will meet today to consider the offer of R D
Hubbard and his a sociatc .
Cckbnt1es abound on the Holl)'wood Park
Board ofDlfcctors includmgactorsJohn Fo~ythe.
Cary C1ra nt and former Ram general man er
Donald Kio tcrman. The rc:mainma board mcm·
bcn arc Robert Hamilton, Warren W1lhamw n
and John cwman.
Office~ include: rthur Kell), v1ct' chairman
of the board, Howard Koch. ~1cc president. Jamc
Kenne), ~rttaf'). and Wilham Pascoe 111.
trta urcr.
Total ~harcc. held by the officerc. and d1rt(;t0~
1'1 rcportcd to bc 3S percent o f the total out tand1ng
puhlic c.harc .
·.
:c·a k ers can't hanclle Wilkins, Hawks, ,t 13-107
P'nat AP •1t,.tde1 the Llkcrs before the Hawks battled
INGLEWOOD -Dominique back and went ahead for aood on a
Wilkins scored 26 poina 1 uc~y rcvc~ la)'up~y ()()('Rivers wuh 7:55
ni&ht. lcadina the Atlanta Hawk\ to a to ao Thal made u 9J.o92 and the
11).107 victory overthc l OS ntele Hawk c~tcndcd theirl(hantqctoas
Llltcri in a battle of the team Wlth many as 10 po~nt be-fore Ktthn1 for
the two best rttordl in the NBA, the \11-po1nt win The "lctOfY by the-Hawk • 10..2, Chff l.cv1npton and Riven 1Jd d snaP{M'C' ~ JUDe-tamO Los 1.9.pwnu.eac.b for the Haw •
"'1nn1n1 ttttalt and wa1 their first F.arv1n .. fa,ic~ Johnson led the
over the Laken, 9·2, It Th Forum t a kers with 22 poinlS. 8)ron ott
since Feb 12, 1978. tlanta had and Grten added 20 and 19 point\,
dropptd nint ttraiaht pme on the rc~pechvcly, for l naelcs.
t.akttl• home court. a. T.hc 1.ake e>ia)'td without their
Atlanta lfd mMt of the • but tc1d1ns rcboundcr. forward Kun
hlCi to come from behind 1n the Rambi , Who uf'ftf'N 1 d1Slorattd
foufth quarter. ond cut rij.h0t ndeA fin,rr in pract1t'C
M1chwl oopcr !C'Ottd the ii~t onday ind 11 UPtttcd :so be
three point oft~ founh period tor hn d for at a'l a Wttk .
..
ha~e n. I'm di ppo1nt J in their.
I ck oflt dc~h1p."
Cllppen ION, J JS-J 08
Armijo,
Bush box
to draw ·
Puente decisions
Segura for state
--~-f eatherweighttitle
8 7 JOSEPH 0 OEVOIR
o.lr .... C.1 ES I I
Just when It looked as tbouah John
Armijo had Milton Bush 1oing under
for the third mnc, Bush fouaht to the
<1urface against the HuntmgtOn Bcactt
lifcauard to force a split draw in their
middle,.ei&ht clash at the Irvine
Mamou Hotel.
While Armijo wa n't pleased with
the dcc1s1on. the throna of 1.000
·. box1na fans howcd their apprecia-
ti on by sho"Aenna ooth fighters With
quarters and waded-up dollar b1Jls
aner the bell rang ending the sixth and
final round'
nnlJO ()..()..I). who &raduated
from Ed1wn High in 1980 •nd works
part-time as a life auard dun_na the
\um mer.· fou&ht his second fa&ht in
the la<st month ince comin1 back
from a motorcycle 11ttidtni which
101urcd his foot. "l hould've knocked him out."
saud Ann110 "I JU'St wasn't rn aood
enough hapc to do 1t. I thouaht r wa
lcadinJ goin1 mto the final round. but
I d1dn t ha"e enou&h Id\."
He almost didn't have enough Jc1\
to fin1 h thc fiJht him If. Earl)' in the
mth round Bu h (242) floored
AmllJO with a pair of trai&ht njht
hand Arm1JO 1ot up and tried to
hana on, and with Bu b too fati&&.ted
10 fini'lh the Job, tal'1cd thr...,f\I
punch~ qa1n. Then the two 16().
poundcr cnt toe-tcrtoc 1n the
center of the nna.
That's when tht' crowd v.cnt ofT
Everyone o the part1\ln Armijo
crowd "'a' on their feet $CT'Clmm1
until the final bell sounded.
"1 hrov.-u1 monc> is the ultimalt:
for a fiahtcr ... Yid Chuck Bodak,
Amt1JO''I man r and traintt at
World f 1 htcrs 10 Oran ... That wu
JU'lt a gttat fi&ht from a spcaatOr'a
~t:an point. Rut I -h JOhn didn•t
ma c man mistakes.. That ;r.
{'Cn , thou h, when aauydoan·\ t
for a lona um He.. ovennMMll
and u~cr ~11'11$ ..
rm1)0 did, that an lhit fifth ro.ftd. ·
when he unloaded 1 home nm rilld
hjnd that nu IO Ndb lht tlii •
., "a felltoihecm lt no IP 1n me .......
Buh nneaedto AnngO~dm.
"It (111n't hu "A~iJIDlliil 9'dll
kn kd "' punch "1 ,.. • ............... .,. ..
I I
't
By llOGEll CARLSON °' .............. tonahun and almOlt Mver a true
tarn concept, an direct contrail to
Ocean View Hi&h ha recorded a
44-8 bl ketblll record the past two
)cars. includana 20 strai&ht in leque
play. but Coech Jim Hams has never
been too ecstatic about any of their
• accomplishments.
Ham5••t11t.
Well, Octan Veew is oo· lon~r
banntd from the pla)'Offs and Harri
hasadolen new races to tit around liu
two mumioft startcn -All-Clf and
thrte•tunc a ·leaaue acanaout Ricky
Butler. and three-year letterman Md
all-kaaue returnee Desi Ha1ely (6-S).
Deina forced to (orfeil 24 victories.
1ncludinaall IOSun1C1 Leaauepmes
1n the 1984-SS SHson. H well a being
banned from the CIF S-A pla)'otf• last
)Car because of CIF sanctions can
take most of your smile IWI).
But the fact lS, Hams has seldom
found sttSOn to really be Ovtf')O)cd
about thing! out ide of that. 1mply
because his team1 did not operate to
his satisfaction. "
Bueler avcrqcd 16. l p0ints a pmc
while securina Sunttt Leu~ Ptaxer
of the Year honors by the 0.aly Pilot
asajunior.and Huelydropped in 8.9
poanu a pme. fiaurn which Ham
says hould be improved on this year
That' enou&h to make anyone
h•PP>. but tt's not the key for Hams.
JlmllanU Simply put. Jherc were too many wh~I too manv individual pcr-
Rather. it's the other dozen, the
nuc~us trom a 24-0 junior va~1ty
Upshaw suggests
officlals should
control flagrancy
From AP dl1patcli1et
NEW . YORK -Gene UJ>Shaw.
executive director of the NFL f>la)ers
Association. satd Tuesday that officials
should takegrcatcreontrol ofpmes to J)T'Cvcntflqrant
fouls.
He cited an 1nc1d<"nt unday in which Oucago Bear
quarterback Jim McMahon was lammed to tt1e ~ul)d
b Grttn Bay'~ Charles Mart an an the Bears 12-I 0
victory. McMahon's ~ nght
shoulder was re-injured and Dr.
Frank Jobe said Tuesday th.at 1he
quarterback wo uld undergo
arthroscopic surgery Dec. 12 and
mass the rest of the season.
"Officials should control the
aame:· Upshaw said ... I bad a
rcpon pnor to 1he pme that
Gl'een Ba y players came on the
field with a hit hst of pla)ers they·
want<'d to get.
Upebaw "Officials should 1mmcd1-
ately call the coaches and say ·we're not going to
tolera1e this. If you don't control n. we're going to
control 11.' I've been an games where referees like Ben
Dreith or Jim Tunney said, 'I'm talung control.' I've
heard 1t."
Martin was ejected from the game and "Fuesday
was suspended for two games without pay by
Comm1ss1on<'r Pet<' Roz<"lle. It was the most severe
penally for an on-the-field apc1den1 that Rozelle has
handed down m hts 26 years as comm1ss1oner.
"All he can do as d1sc1phne a player aner the fact."
lJpshaw said. "Rozelle has suspended players in the
past. H<' might do at again It can be con1r0Ued. Thanas
like that don'tJust·happen on l~ spur ofthe_momcnt
L<>ok at lh<' point m the game when the foul occurred.
There was a buildup. I played an 200-some games. I
knowcveryt1me I ever got an a beef, I didn't walk on the
field and Just do 1t. II was provoked. Something led up
\0 It
"Pla)'ers are not going to con1rol aggressive-ness on
1he field. That's v.hat the officials &et paid for.''
Upshaw.-who pla)ed 16 )'Cars m the NFL as an
QfTens1ve guard, said he thouahl the level olv1olencc
has no1 changed since he. retired.
Quote of the day
Danny Noonu. the Nebraska middle guard
who has a reputation for rowdyness, on why he
wasn't involved an the recent ticket controversy
1nvolv1ng the Cornhuskers: .. I don't have any
fn~nds I can gi ve lh<'m to "
8 A S KE T B~L L
---
• • .
Shu~a algn• new Miami pact
MIAMI (AP) -Miam~ Dolphins EE Coach Don Shula, the second w1nnmgest f t
coach 1n NFL histoQ'. ended months of
pcculauon Tuesday by sianina a new
con1ract with the-Dolphins.
Dolphins owner Joe Robbie announced the s1gn1na
Tu<"sday, grving no specifics on length or terms of the
deal. Shula's current contract expired at the end of this
season, his 17th with the Oolph1ns.
Shula was all smiles Tuesday, a combination of the
end of the contract speculation and the Dolph10s
convJncin' 45-3 victory over the New York Jets
Monday nt&ht.
Becker overcome. McEnroe
A Tl.ANT A -In a match dominated ~
by b1 serves, Dons Bcck.er's return ofl<'rve
finalrr overcame John McEnroe as the two-
time Wimbledon champion took a 6-3, 5-7,
7-S victory In the first round of th e $500.000 AT&T
Tennis Challenee Tuesday night.
Jn an earher first-round match Tuesday, Ivan
Lendl frequently passed M1loslav Mec1r at the net to
defeat his fellow Czechoslovakian 6-4, 6-3.
Pro volleyball league aet
SAN FRANCISCO - A women's
professional volleyball league with six
teams but only one owner will begin play in
February, it was announced Tuesday by
Commissioner Steve Arnold.
Ill
Ma.ior League Volleyball. Inc., will have teams en
San Francisco, Los An~eles. New York, Chicago,
Minnesota and Texas. said Arnold, an attorney who
also was involved in the now-<Jetunct Amencan
Basketball Association. World Football League and
World Hockey AsJOC1ation. ·
Sacramento eyes Division I
ACRAMENTO -With an eye on • the future, Donald Gerth, president of
Cahfom1a State-Un1ven1ty, Sacramento,
unveiled plans Tuesday that would elevate
all CSUS in1ercollegiatc sports except football to NC' AA
Div151on I level by Fall, 1988.
Gerth 's dec1S1on was based on an athletic advisory
board study and was announced at a press conference at cs us.
Genn said th<' move will be made for economic
and academic reasons.
Olanta ban beer vendor sale•
SAN FRANCISCO-Beer will not be • sold by vendors in the Candlestick Park
stands at San Francisco Giants' games next
season, the club announced Tuesday._
"We believe this decision will enable us to create a
beuer family atmosphere tn the stands and will give us
better control of the beer con umption." Giants
President Al Rosen said.
,
am'ha ittoget
• ~uad, chat has Hanis in an up-tempo
frame.
"Our atre~lh won't be 1n namn IX
ind1"1dualt. said Ham1. "h '1 ao1na
to be the 1nta!'19btn. ind they have
the mtan&abld.
What Rams i1 U)ina as that from
9utltr to the last sub on lht bencb. n '1
tticll) a team coocept.
in&Je poll -thrte l\&lrdl and IWO
forwards." said turns. ''It'll vary
dcpcftd1n1 a who~ to the post -
and that'.1 Racky anet Deli, with Todd
Norman (6-4YJ sophomore) and
(".eeoff'Oraves(6-4)baclun1them up"
th~ att the typet that wlll ~ them
the bill."
Oe\pne the upbeat look at Ocean
V1cw. Hams 11id .h.e feels his 1tam 11
ste0nd to Marin4 an Utr Sunset
1...taaue. at lea a on P.P"·
.. Mar1na·1 the team 10 beat, .. said
"They'~ c•c11in1 an4 fun and if
they're caP11blc o( bcattnJ someone,
they'll do 1t," continues Harri1..
"There are some in Oranae Co'-nty
probabl)' biller and more ex-
perie,ct'd, add probiably more tal·
cntcd, but this team 1s really 10mc-
thin1. I'm excited about them.
Drew Sheffield <S·9) and
tOphomorc Make Frohm (S·l I) arc
hit point auanh and at lh.c winp arc Dous Rice (6-2) and Jirlr Anderson
(6-2) on OM 'ide, 11 well as T~d
Pickard (6-1 ) and his Coach Ham''
nephew, Steve Hams (6-2).
Ham . •• Thfy're ~ate~~__!. wath more rttum1n1 lettermen and
st.aners.''
0c.wi vi.. ..._ ut •tr
Dec. 4 ._., Sell l..Uit OOitOO lftvll•llOnll
Wtd. DK l~ll'llleWOOO l'*'"'I
Fri . OK If-ti ••rr• o.c. lMO-•I TourM!Mfll of c~ "I ttally feel we're two deep at
e\lery Spot."
Senion Olia Goodfion (6-2).
Fri. Jf/I ,_,, • In, ~ •
s.1. J•ll ,.....1 ul
WM. Jtll 1-l.Ont tfe<J\ l'Olt tnorn.) Fri , Ja" t-Founlall\ v.-.,• (hOt'lltl
waci~ Jan. ,. 1 Merina• "I can lqitimately say theft arc 12 I
feel confident in pla~ing. And, we will
pla) at ltast I 0 consmenlly wtth a lot
of up.tempo, full-court. de·
fen i"cprcuurc."
Mark Hammond (6-0). Damck
Lucero (S-11) and Paul Vierra (6-0)
round out th<' squad.
Fri , Ja" ,.._..""1111 .. on teec11• (1191MJ
WM~ J•I\. 71-at l!cr<M>ll' Fri, _,.,. n-.1 WftllfliMt••
Hams really has no stanina lineup set in 5tonc, but obviously Buller and
Hazel}' art at center S'-&c.
"Offensively we'U be more of a
\;
"We've had tWO very Sood leams
the last two years. with balanced
scorina." said Harris. "That will con11nue be<autt it' our 5tyle But
Ricky and Dest, their point pro-
ducuon needs to be increased, and
Fri, Ja" .,..., Founta111 va41rt•
S.t. JM.JI-Mii., Del CllOINI, ••m.
WM., Fall ~Illa' ('*"-I Fri. F.O ...._, H'1'\Hfl91on 1..ai•
Wiid • FtO 11-E41•Mltl' lllomt) Fri. FtO 1)-Wnlmintttt• (llOINI
•def!Otet $\ii\ ... LHllA HfM
.. " flOll•le.W. '"° la-.ua ~ ....... 1:39.
,..
~anucb thump Kin&•· 11-5
... FourVancouverplayc:rs-T•yTaatJ ~
, rookie Jlm Sucllak, P•trtll s..tstrem '
and Petri Striko -each scored two 1oals
as the Canucks stqcd their most pro-
ductive offensi ve performance of the season with an
11-S NHL victory Tuesday ni,a.ht over the road-weary
Los An1eles.Kings. Los Angeles aot two aoaJs from both
Lac a.bltallle and Marcel Dleue. The linemates alw
had two as5ists each. Robitaille, a rookie lcf\ wing, now
has 14 'oals in 23 pmes. Sane 0.ClaesH scored the
other Kina goat as Los c\naeles scored three times with
tbemanadvantaF. The 11 plstteda Vancouverteam
tte0rd set in March 1971 apinst theCaJifornia Golden
Seals. It was the first mectina of the season between the
div1s1onal nvals who meet apmst toni&ht in at the
Forum in Los Anaeles ... Elsewhere, All&em Stutay and
Alala Cote scored aoals l :01 aJl911 m the second penod
to hf\ the Quebec Nordiques to a 2-1 victory over the
Montreal Canadiens .•• At Uniondale, N. Y .• Pal
LaFoe&alae scored a goaJ and a isted on two others as
the New York Islanders maintained their home-ice
mastery over the Pittsburgh Penguins, S-1 .
America D look• for backing
NEWPORT, R.I . .:.-The Amcnc. II
syndicate, which has promised to bnn1 the
Amenca's Cup back to tts k>n&llme
Newport home, will ask Gov. Edward D. ~
D1Prete to help at raise S2 mllhon to keep its Australia
operation afloat.
William Packer, general manager oflhe syndjcate,
is scheduled to meet with the 1ovemor Wednesday and
ask him to urge private donations 10 the Amenca II
effort. .
Zip• fight to be Dlvialon I-A
AKRON. Ohio -Gerry Faust, the EE
former Notre Dame football coach who led •II•
the University of Akron toa 7-4 record this
season, 1s anxiously awajuna word from
the NC AA on· whether the Zaps' move to the big~school
Division r-A will be approved.
If not. Faust says he will seek work elsewhere.
"I would be totally shocked" 1f Akron's application
10 move up was rejected by the NCAA's cla5'ification
..commiuee. Faust said -even thouah no ocher school
has made such a move.
· Televlaion, radio
TELEVISION
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers at
Clippers, Channel 9.
7:30 p.m. -HORSE RACING: Hollywood
'Park. Channel 56.
RADIO
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers at
Clippers. KLAC (570), KMPC (710).
7:30 p.m. -BOCkEY: Vancouver at Kings,
KGIL (1260).
1 .
t8.guna Beach
to miss Naess
Artists'liave 2 starters back, --~ bu t rest of team is young --By ROGER CARUON
OftMO.-, .........
There arc two retumma starters and a squad laden
with numbers, but the firsl thma that jumps out •.t you
about Laauna Beach Hi&h's basketball prospcctS 11 the
void len by four-year sllrter Coby Nacss.
TheAn1sts won't have the luxuryof coun11na on 21 :6
points and some dozen rebounds or so a game u they did
a year ago. · It took that much to aet a l l-12 record, after four
stra1~t losjng seasons. lfwe can't control th<' game our way we could be 1n
for a Iona year,'' says Coach Ed Bowen, back for his
second season after s1ttin111 out since 1967.
"We've got some young players who could make U5
OK. And Scon .Herdman and Dusty Grant could be
amona the top nhcorers an the leaaue." ·
The league as the newly-formed Pacific Coast Ltque
-a circuit which bqJns with Woodbndge IS tbe
overwbelminafavont<', but also with five others who each
figure they have as much nght 10 the 2-3 slots IS anyone
else. . . Herdman was an aJl-lea1ue selection as a Junior. The
6-4 senior aveniaed 14.2 pomua game, wilh a high of2A.
Another retumjng starter 1s S-9 auard Doug Lawler.
And, he'll have some help up front with the
availability of 6-4, 220-poundjunaor Pete Schmitt, wh0te
football prowess has been evident this fall. ·
Schmitt was a co-MVP of the sophomore baske1ball
team, alon.g with Grant. a 6-0 guard wuh an u cellent
shootina touch.
The rest of the squad is bas1caJly the nucleus of last
year'sJuniorvarsjty, with 6-1 senior Scott McDonald and
6-S James Jiienry leading the field, along with seniors
Chris Depierro (S-9). JefT Verity (S-10), Shane Hiller
(6-3). Bryce Halben (6-2) and Brad k.a'l) (6-S).
Two sophomores could provide keys to a much
better outlook -6-3 John Mcl<eown and S-11 Scan
Cooper. _
Both arc considered superior athletes with.a &ood
touch, but lack CJ.PCrience. McDonald was the MVP on
the junior varsity team. ~ 9Mc:tl """ ~ DK 1 • S-LAtuM 9Mct1 Townamttll IFlnl r-'CI vi Katella. 7 JO,
Mollday) " DK 10-U -al s.n Cltmtlllt T-namanl
Wtd., Ott 17 -81 ~. P P.1'11
Fri • Oec.. It -Sa11ta Alte Vtlltv (llOl\'le)
DK 2'·l0, .u.n. 2-et Sellt~ T~t
WM, Jt11 1 -Saddl•badl cmm.>
Fri. Jt11. t -Ctnvon lhGmtl Wed~ Jtn 14 -Woodtltldet' lllOmt)
Ffl .. Jell 1' -al Oranea' wao . Ja11 tl -al C01.1t ~·
Fri .. Jtn. t> -Tr.OUCO Hlllt' (homt) Wao , Jtn. 21-l..HUM HMlt' (l'loMt)
Fri., Jan 3t -al Woodbr'°"'.
Wed, Fall 4 -Or•nM' ll!Omal Fri., Fell 6 -C01.lt Mau' (homtl
Wed. Ftll 11 -a.I Tr.OUCO Hll\• Fr1 • F• l>-al L.etune Hllll• •denOtn hcfflc Cot1l I..~ tal'M...
AJA -·!MOUi and ia-"""' lleom a1 7JO. UINt• llOted
UCIRVINE •••
From Cl
strong cas1 In add1uon to Nebraska
of 1hc Big Eight, much weaker 1han a
\ear ago when 11 finished third. UC I
face\ Tulsa and Bradley, a pair of
team., picked lo finished one-two in
lhc ~1s.,oun Vall<'y Conference. and
h1ghl)-r<"gardcd Pepperdmc of the
Wc\t ( oasl Athletic C onferencc Oral
Robert\ figures to be a vai.tly im-
proved ~uad with fi ve double-figure
\Corer\ returning.
Southwest Conference: A wic;leopen scramble
01hcrs include Montana and Bo1~
\tatcofthe 81gSky. while UCI siands
a good chance 10 meet Iowa of the 811
Ten in the 111le game of the Antea1er
Aasketball (lassie 1f1t gets by Eascem
Wash1nfton fi"l. How C I fares againsl 1ha1 hneup
\hould determine whether the Ant· eate~ .,tand a chance of 1mprovm1on
J ~5.CU'tOn m<'dl3 pick Of eighth IO
ln'r PC A .
"Anyone who will go up, and down
wi th us. we can beat.' Mulltaun
prom15e' "We think we do thal as
well a an)'bodY. 1n the world But 1he ball has 10 drop· If we're not ihooung
v.cll. 11 won'1 mauer how v.e run the
break"
OCC advances
to tourney final
Tcu;Texas Tech,
Houston all figure
to b~ stronger
By tbe Associated Press
Texas Tech Coach Gerald Myers
has 1he same philosophy as Denny
Crum. the coach of the na1tonal
champion Louisville Cardinals
Lake Crum. Myers thinks a strong
early schedule can s1rengh1en a team
for a late and successful run during
the March playoff crunch time.
Myers' Red Raiders finjshed stron1
last >car. wionina the Southwest
Conference postselfson tournament.
The Red Raiders then almost upset
h1ahly-rated Georgetown before fall·
IOI by SIX points in a first•rOund game or the NCAA playoffs, and earning
the respect of John Thom pson. .
"I had heard what a good coach
Gerald Mrers 1s and now I can
confirm it, • the Hoyas' coach said.
"Tech has an eJtccllent, well-<:oached
team. We were aJad when lhe pm<'
sec pummels foe
by 70 point spread
Vanguardssportstx
men tn double<ii~ts
In 121-51 vtct_o_ry~-
There ts a &ood rea~n wl!Y the l)'m
at Southern Cahfom1a Colle IS
called ''The Pit.'' Tuesday ni&ht, the
Deacons of Pacific Chri tian t'ollqc
found out why.
The Vanauardi (2-0). openint their
1986·8 7 home ~•son. had Ill players
~ore in double fiaurc, a they buned
the IXacons. 121 -SI, an non<on·
ference action C wat led by Rob
Luca with 21 pom11 whale Walter
Baldy added 20 point and 11
rebounds.
Everythina wcn1 41n Cavor 0( the
Vanauards 1tat11~C'1lly. Baidu
1hootin1 '8 pcrtent, •" oppotfd to J4
for 1hc Deacon' (3-4), they allO
outrcbOunded Pacific Chnsuan
33-11. ided bY five Jon Haar •1ealti
C WH on the rttt1v1n1 end Of 3o
tumo"trs and pvc the bin away only
nine times.
Tb Vanauard tra~cl to Houtlon
turday to 11k.e on Olv1~on l 1ehool
Hou ton Bapust.
C.rl1Uu Hertui1e C.l.te1e IH,
CU111 Cot1e1e Int.. 94: The EaaJcs
trailed the entire pme. never comma
closet than nine. 97-88. in the final
quarter 11 Chnst Colltae Irvin~.
Victo~ownes had 31 points for C'hri t Iese, including, 19 in the
second ha f, while Paul Wear added
2S pointund 16 rebounds. Dan Klatt
had e11ht auim.
·Muatan1• face
alumni tam
Costa Ma. Hi&h·s vanity buket·
ball tnm will blt1feaFOUPofalumni
toni&ht. bc1.1nn1n111 7:30, and flaum
to be uohd underdoaconsidtrina che
competition.
The I 986·87 Mus&anp. wuhout a
pla~tr over tM>. will be ma&ched up 1111n.a tuc:h u ·MuMUtt as Bruce
Chapman, Sieve lacoblcn, Ban Ca,.
rido, Dtftnit Turley. Randy Na)'lor,
Tom RNd. Dennis Mt<iavxk. Tam
lytt and Craia Falrontt, the PfC$-
en1 Cotta Mesa coech.
was over.''
Myers has scheduled K<"ntucky,
AnLona. Clemson, Kansas tat<'.
Wyoming and Southwestern LoulSI·
ana to properly prep his Raiders for
the SWC race.
"We feel like it's important for us to
be playinf the name teams around the
country,' Myers said. "Ken tucky is
one of the class proarams and when
you talk about basketball tradition
you talk about them. It will be a aood
expenencc for our young team to plal.
there, even if we 10 in there and don t
win."
BOXING •••
Fr om Cl
balance and he caught me 101na
backwards."
Armijo was 1oina into the final
round with a slim lead. accordina to
one ofthejudlt's• Chuck HasKtt
"I had ArmtJO ahe.cl on my r:a("d by
a point,'' he said. "I think the others
(jud&t ) probably did too. But he let
that last round tct away from him and
that's what cost him the wan."
ihc Kores read as follows: S9·.S6
for Arm1JO (Jud&e Fnll Werner)
S7-S6 for Bush (Hat.sett) and S7-S~
(judae Larry Rosad1lla).
ArmiJO took the first three rounds
in similar fashion. He would \tart
\lowly and then fini$h with a Oury.
But after Bu h would act his one
minute rc\t between rounds, Armijo
wqp1d ha\e to start all over apin.
"I )U\t didn't tel &<>l..a un11l 1t WI
late an the round," said Armuo .. h
wasn't really 1 plan, it JUSt happened
lhat v.ay."
In tht J 2-round bOut for the vacant
Cahfom11 ,uper fathcn\'Ctjht utlt,
Gtt1 PUente won 1 lpht dcC1 ion O\ltr
Francisco SCIPra
It "'u Stgura fl ().2) whO bandN
Puente (9--1 -4) ha\ onty dcht aa a
profo11onal. to 1t wu doub4y 1wec1
for the El Monte native, whO 11
man.atd b) Dann} "L'.lllle Red" l..optr.
Fouth ID a Mriee .
Myers has three re1uman1 stanen.
including 6-3 auard Scan Gay, who
was named to the All-U.S. Olympic
Festival team m Houston this sum-
mer. Four talented "°5h1rts join the
squad, including 6-10 Wes Low~ and
7-foot Rodney Henderson ..
"I think we will start out slow and
hopefully we will come on strong."
Myen Pad. "TCU wlll have a strona
team and should be the favonte bul I
think the whole league will be capable
of beatin1 one another."
There will be one new coach, Pat
Foster. who succeeds the leacndary
Guy V. Lewis. Lewis retired af\cr a
30-year· Hou5ton catcer of S92 vie· tor1es and Final Four appearances an
J 983 and 1984,
Foster took h11 Lamar Unu1en1ty
teams to two NCAA bids and four
National Jnvatat1on Tournaments
He has a career rteord of 134-49,
ninth hiahe t perttntasc amona the
nation's winninatst acuve coaches.
Hou ton returns st.anen R1ck1e
Winslow. who avcraaed IS points,
and center Gtt1 Anderson. who
averqcd 19pointund 12.6rebounds
per flme. Anderson was the second
leading rebounder in the nation.
"I'm excited about the pou1b1htjes
of thi year's team," F~tcr said. "I
thank th.at the combanauon ohcniors
Like Win Jow and Anderson, as well
a )'Ounasters Like ~ny McGtt,
combined with ncwcomera to this
level of basketball 1uch as Rol1ndo
Ferreira and Jerome. Brtwer, should
make for an ea(1tina chem1\try."
The 7-foot. 240-pound Ftrtt1ra. a
tran\ftr. hat pla)'t'd on the Bra1ihan
National Team.
TCU Coach Jim KJlhnpwortb has
four tt1umin1 s&ancn. 1ncl11chnf
auard Cart Lon, who avCflllld ''· potnts per pmund was named SW
N~omer of thr Year and wa
ICC'Ond an P1aycr0flhc Ycarballouna.
.. We have •hat thoukl be 1 tou,htt
non-conference schedule than last
y~ar. be&inn1na wnh a road game
ap1nst an I.SU team that went to the
Final Four,'' ..KtlhngswoTth said. "I
thank that based on what we dJd last
year and the fact that we only lose one
guy (Orea Gris$.Om) to graduataon, we
ought to be favored to finish around
the top.''
TeusA&M Coach Shelby Metcalf.
who shared the SWC regular-season
title with Texas and TCU last )'.e&r.
agreed the TCU Homed Froas will be
hard to beat.
"I would have TCU as the favorite
hcadina into the season but the enwc
tcaaue will be impro"cd," Metcalf
said. "We should do well."
McNccse late will be the favonte
in the Southland Conference, where
there are two new coaches, Tom
Abatcm1rc:o at Lamar and Jimmy
Gales at North Teus State.
"I've waJted 13 xean tor an
opponun1ty lake thi5, Abatemarto
said. "Coach Foster had a ~t
prott1m 101na at Lamar. I didn't recruit the auys on this ttam but
they're mine now. We're soma to be a
family."
ualei .aid ... The Southland i a
touah ba kctb&ll lca&ue. for ut to
compete 11 a championship level will
take a lot of hard work"
The SOuthland had four tour·
nament team• la t year. Loui iana
Tech finished third in the NIT,
McNeesc St.ate tot to the a«ond
round, and Lamar wu eliminatt'd in
ihe third round. NortheaS& Loui tana
Iott 1n the first round of w N
Mc:Ntcte Coach Glenn Duhon said
he has a potential tournament team
apin,
0 Hopefull), IHt ~r-hen M went
to the NIY. • ~nt wa ttt,''
Duhon 111d •• e feel we ha~ a
tron1 canct•ie fOr All·Ammcan
honon in Jtrome llpt tee. He avir· 'I'd II potntt per pme and cW\t
R'bo\lnch. We11 ha~ to F stron paatd pf.a). Tut•11he key.
WL
MATIOll""-C*IP ... llC8
CfticHO ~·· DetrOlt o,_ .. .,
T91'11M a11
...
W &. T • • 0 1 • 1 ' . . s • 1 ~
10 2 •
' • 0 J 1 • 2 10 • • 2 lO • 1 ....
~,. PA ,., ne m
•H 111 171 ,.. 211 tf>
, .. -211
.bl ?SI 1• .toO 271 21•
m 201 "' .1'7 "' ... 1•1 ... all
HY G•llfltt 10 2 0 9)3 ,.. 174
WMNnetOft 10 2 o m m 211
Dellat 1 S I Jll 2' I 2lO
PtlllechlllM ) t I , :ue 176 m
St Louis ) ' o no 1'3 2n
AMHICAN COMfl•••NCI
ClncllW'lalf
°""'9nd ,, lltburtll
-~IOft
NY-"•~ NewE,..._llO
MiMll
luff• ', lndleneooll•
....
' 3 • . ' . 1 s 0 ' ,• . 2 tO I
C:..• • 4 • • • • >U
O M7 2tS 7'1 • w m 263 o. »>106 ,,.
• •nt"m 212 ... lt 2 ,
' ., 0
• ' 0
3 ' 0 0 12 •
'"* 241 150 J26 200 soo m m 250 1U 273 ooo 1 .. m
TllwMln'•~ Gr-..... et o.tr041 CClle/Wltl 2 •t t .lO • m I
S..11 .. •t O•t CCl\9""'4 4 •t 1 t m I ~~'~ •ems et Ntw YOl'll .i.n CCIWl'IMf t at 10
•.II'\.) ~Pill· t i • ...,. autt.io t i Kensat City Houston ti Clevtlend
New El'llltnd •I Ht• Or!Mfls PflltllUl'Vfl t i Clllc:HO
kl\ Olt9o II ltldf1naP0111
Tel'llH 11'1' •t iwnneot•
WtM11!!91on ti St, Lools
Allenla al Mleml
CIN:•rwttl at oenvw
'l"t Gamt
Htw Yoo. at Ian Frencl-.co tCIWlnnel
7 at• tm.I
c .....
Q> TOf'. ·-· "" ""' l~ttll. Fla IS.Cl l•0-0 1,15' 1 2 Pwnn State W 11-~o I.... 2
l OkJenome I0-1-0 1,056 l
t.Mlc:lliOtn 10-1-0 171 •
S LSU 1·1•0 Nl e lNtere.... f-2·t ll4 s
7.Ale«Nlme '. ,.. 7'3 ' I.Arla-st t 1-1 m 4
'"1UnMJ •·2-t 610 11 10 Ttus M.M 1·2-0 6lS ll
a.
... wast=-"_:=:--•
w " .....
• 1 "' 7 J ta ,.,
76;.slll 1 7 toO l l-'I
.Sl..1H.S , 10 n1 , ............ .,......... o.-.. 7 .s 9tl
Denver 7 5 m Ulell 6 S US ..,
Houlton ' ' -\ S.Cr"'*"o 9 7 617 t Sen AntOlllo S I .ltS 7Yt
IAITlltN COMflllllMCI
p.. 8 . ' .
,_Q...., ......... D
LosAlaml
Falrplex results
....
~~
Tororilo
St Lou11 Detroit
Clllcate
MinMtol•
........ ......
W &. T ...
IJ 7 1 17
ll ' 1 17 lilOOM
• l> , " ' w , ,. ....,..~.
• • • 22 . ' . . llOJll
S 11 S lS
'611t1'
WAL.II COMfi1alMCI
P""1dt ~ ,.,. .... , .. ".
... A
" 6S .. ..
1t ..
" la 1J " 70 .. ... " S7 " 70 ..
7• IO .. 0
lnjur d .
inlos
toKnicks
FremAP4ts,.&des
W.Ala•ffee ~ad ,...."......,. Pl* .... =~~-=-·......, ntli.~~n.:...
""" ......, ..-... <Crw> IJO •• a• ,..~ aACa. ,,_.I Mii. #Me,._..,,_ (L--.,) t• ,. .....,,NII l~ •I ;..-Ml ti Lt ._ y..,_. (Cer•1tl JM "1 ._._ ... (If.let) 3M
TllN .. 11 Ila A"llet tMC«.ntl AllO ller1 Ml A ~. eca l(.....m TifN 'JM ~.Ge NetYr•. " ... ~ ~ ............ -.. w•t~I Nof'9 HMN, Nld!w 0 kew. ~--.Giil. u IXACTA (J.•I teid uu• lcrMdtM leek-L.Mv.
..-...... 1-y .., •2 IXACTA O•t> "i. Ill.JI Otrald Hendtnon scored ueason· ,,,__..1,.-., "' .,_ •• ,. ,. l9COllO ·~ ''" 1 -. hl&h 21 po1nta, eapt oftMm dur1n11 Mill! Mill COldtrlCti.MM ,,. u• • ..,,_.. Jtw 1!'rik111t1 Jt.JI 6A H:
14=2 New York surae down the · '"':'in!C:...T 1~ 1 ... = ... ~':.'~=r> µe "' stretch. as the Kn1c;ks ~featcd visit~ Allio llMJ AMY re Sli;11. Joy If! Tiie r11T1t 1-. J
8"10ft ~
W•Wllntton
New Yark
.... Jtr .....
A....-C DMMM ' • • 661
' $ "1 ' 7 ..,
• POI~ HY ltlOndlr 1
NewJ«MY
2\'t WH111ntton
I• • 2 lO
IJ 1 1 21 12 I I U
10 • 1 22
7 11 • 11
in1Houston.102.93 in an pme thar-: w---. M*Ml"9 E~ MIK AM w.. w..,.,., ~ ,.,,,,.,..,
saw Akttm QllJuwon carried from ~=~~ll ·Mltl s1110 / e~.= c.,.,,..,. •1111Mt ~~ ~ourt with ankle and ltntt n.o uc.1. a y""' u DM.Y ooueLm Cl·•i -. MUI
lftJUnts. .... I(. Ctrtot.tl lUO •• ..... u IXACTA IN ) .... llSUI
The Rockets lra.aled 82·81 when T .. w• Oo tV•llt'llll •• lAO _.: ~.,.,.. DMl.Y DOUaa ,CMI
., n es ..
71 .. n to r • 10 .116 .....,.. 2 II ISt
Ola . . d . -'I' . ~ Aff•W' tPWIMI • 2t
6 11 • lf AclWM~ S HYl~ 61>
., n
c.lrll DMI*'
A11ef>f•
Ollutil
Milw.W.M
11141-0elroH
Cle'l'tlMCI
10 2 m 7 , ,.. 7
' s .., 2 ' 7 ..., ... s ' us • ...,
) '·"' 1 T ...... aW-
At..,,-•t Ill, I.Mien 107
5"1119 Ill, a.-. 10>
...._ Yorll 101, HoutlOtl fl W•~ton m , POt'l1tNI" ~l02 .... ton100 ·
Sen A"!Onlo 117, New WM'I tt
Golden Sltle 111, Ultll 106
5KratM11to tn, '"'-nil 102
T ....... a~ L.lllltn 1 r c::m.era
Portland •I Clellt6911C1
HOUllon el lndl9119
Ntw Yori! •I toslOtl
WHNMIOtl •I Mll•eu!IM
Stct•mtnto •• o.it.• ChlcHO ., Otnver setllle t i Ute!! At19nlt ti PMenll
Hawtra 1 IJ, L.Mws 107
ATLANTA(l13)-Wlllll1111·21,._t 2', Wlllls
l·S >·• '· llolltlS H 2·2 •. Rivers •·7 7·1 lt. WllflNll J-IO t--11, ICOtlClll •·f 0-0 I, WICICJ •• 1' ,.. l>. Lnlnetston S· 7 t· 10 1'. McGee l·t , •••
Tot••• l7·IO 17-44 Ill
LAK._U 0t1) -Gr-6·9 7•1 lt, W~y
6·U 1-l ll, Abdul·Jetltler 6-1• •·• 1', JoMlon
1-lS M 22. Scott 1·1l H 20, C.... 2-12 1-1 S
Mllll!Wwt 1-6 ... 2. lrlekOwlkl ...... 0 T"°"""°" S-1 0-0 IO Totelt tl-91 2.,_2' 107
Sc-. ., Ouertlr'a
A"-nt• 2' 11 n »-11>
LA.Iler• 20 23 .ct 2.-101
Thr .. ·Nonl ~ilklns, McGte, Scott
Fouled--out-Non9 R.tlouncb-A119'11t '3 Cl.rl· illetlOtl IS). Loa A,..... •2 (c;,_. 71 At·
titlt-AllOlll• 1' Clll'IW'\ 6), LOI Ante1n 33
CA.Wul·Jobbe<, John-I) Toltl loU-A119nlt
JI Los A!llMS n. A-17.50S.
12 7 >. 27
11 • • 26
t 6 l JI
' 10 , 21 • n > 11 T_.Y't SC...
V9Kouver 11, KIR9t S 01.!1MC 7. MonlrNI I
New Yori! ~· S, Plll~tll I T .... •OMWI
V•ncouver •• KIR9t hslOtl •I WetllinelOtl lutflllO ti H•rlford
Molllt .... I~
OuebK et New Vor• ll°"811rs
New YOfk ltlenOlft et P1t1tt1ut•ll
TMOtllo •• Delrolf
Hew J9fltY et $1 LOUii Clllctoo et Mlnnnote Wlnnlott tt Ectrnonton ~·Gamt WlnllilltO •I Ctfffrt
c:-drt 11, KINI S
Sat91tY,.......
.. " • 71
6~ ~ ,. .. 7•
~u~n was tnJUrt 1n a c"' 111on Ttmt 1u1. .,.._D •AC•. ,._. 1 w. with New York center 8111 ""'° ltM .,... o ......... Tu, IMffl C91'1M L:oYe cit1erce1
Cartwnaht. OlaJUWO!J arabbcd • Ac=-·~.... t,;:·~~ ·rt~, loose bait and Cartwn&ht fell across u •XACTA 1.->1 Mid ,,. • Tmt 2 ... 1
the Rockets center's staf{ riaht lea. ,oua,... RACI. >to VM• AIM \<lrent Li .,.,..., ll'Oftl8119 Pr--.. ..
Ola,1uwon amona th• I-au· Amerett• ACtlOtl (Hunt)' ,. .. I,. ... G•K• Ill Act-.'""'·
.., 1 '" ... '"• L.My 0 COINllel (Melerl at• 1a.---~'.111·~~VJ!!!i1111'l:'.UL-------"----4.,oi....~ leaderi an sconna. ret>ounchna and ~ PolicY CRu!u 440 ~ouaTM uu. P•n 1 Mlle
blocked shots, Md 34 points. 17 Tll'M. 11.36' WiM GNtft ,..,"' «P!MoJ n• ue 2A
rebounds and four blocks whe~ !he °"~ ~enF;:. ~~ i: ~~twe • ~'°111 •:=: I=! llM ~= anJury occurred with 7:37 remainana kt•tclltd ...,,. Tim. 2•1:!~
1n the same. He was taken to Lenox "'"" RACI. lOO Vatell ""° W.n•~:.c.~ A, l.tllll'I' """"""'
Hill Hospital for X-rays of his naht .~:.:~:CC:':~ uo :: :: 5111=.~:.!, ;-.,.;.uc:;.lAVl1v.
knee and ankle, which revealed no ~.., Sii 1crnter1 ,,. st •XACTA IM I Mid stt"
teari or breaks. Time lSH l'lt"lH It.AC&. Pe<• I Mlle In other r.mes· AIM Ren Ett.oo Go. H«nKtwior". Time· "-"~IM IPltMJ 1120 SM >•
'lien lt, Celtics lot -at Ph1la-';.'~ier~ ,.,...,,, IUPOv 1•-· Henrv ~~J~~1 1• l:
delphia a pair of free throws by Scretelled WlnNclint1 COllet9 EHC\lftn, TI,,,. uu
Klnot
llt llCOU\ltf •
Charles Barkley wath 12 seconds left ~':x<:'JC:· c:~n:.~·.r,~ Ht:. :.:'S.:~;~o.. L0to u 1111:· ·
I 3 ,_ s c~rried PhtladelphJa to a 102-100 SIJCTH llAC•. "° Y•reh S2 •XACTA IMI ooid .....
l'lrlt,,.,.. 2 s .-11 victory over Boston. .... •••.ncl..(W91'cll .... 4IO 2IO ., DAILY TitPLI (6·6·?) Nici Sl•to
1 venc°""-'• Sondltk >. u2. 2 L• Anoeles. The Celtics trailed IP· 75 wnh 10·30 Actm111111"'°' IG•rclel l IO 260 SIXTH ll-'CS· Peet 1 Mi.t
CD ..... -) 7 ... • v T 1 ' Sll11klnt ltlCll COtderlckMftl 2 6t Sbi&st (Siwlfll 1to«>1••11• tJ """ .. • -N· .. ~. an• re~ m the ~me. but then Time not ,. • ...,. '°"'ft'11m te~1 I CPetitl, ~lO ~erctv. LA Crouohfnol. a o . Slo.rlko, Vllfl Cl\Oldlnel. ,.,, Smvt. ven outsco Ph1ladelp ia 14.2 to take AltO lten T"'•T .., Hombr• ••• ~.., Horvevt aro1w c,.....1
JOO Ut ue , .. uo uo
<trloolne>. 11 •· vencouver Mllcll, wv.o tw an 89-88 lead with 6: IO lcf\ ~m"° MMi. It..., " Henrv >oe, -..,,,., T""' 2'03 4
Sl.ltter 1100 menv "*' on 1ce1. IUt • The score then wu tied the times. scnleflecl Hol'9 1to!':. ':'=... :;:,: A DMI. HMinen. "" SK9IMI,.....
• Los AneettS. 1to1>11e11.1e 1• 101oMe. Philadelphia's Roy Hinwn made a ~=~A.~~ ""' ~== :f:~:'t"r.4f: ... ..., ~~~k':.")·~~>~"~J ~-:"":· ~ free throw to make " 1~2-99. With Too Oecll C.t.W/ (. • .. HO ,.. SIVP'T'H UC.I. Pe>« l Miit ~worn 1 t1t1<:11t«>. us 1 v enc:ouver, T91111 one second rcmamma. Bard made the swie Of--.. cer...-1 '" t• C• fortlil• ... ,,... CK...,> llAI 4• .H•
t ILlct.1..-, Sunc111rom1, 11 o C..-l • Vencovt«. first of two free throws ind then A Tldv 0.111e fDTotr'd.MnJ l 1t Stnairt 1toei. tsie.ttll > • i • ~ c~~~::~· :::.::~ ~1 ~r ~o~! dehbcrately slammed the second ofT !::' ,.!.36 Th9 """Trio. c;., re T11t Lltnll•, e..;~ ":;'J ,....,,...._, 3 •
A""'" D*-a 11tot>1•• • w•>. 1111:l coo> the nm but Boston t:ould not take 11111 A arooei. "'°' Tr•• A•so Wtftl J9rlwl ~. o• w -~~:.~~'.., ~<•ri:ri:..~';~. ~ advantage as the buzzer sounded :f~~•l Plid m '° v'1:"~":.'a'c~!."'1 Mlle
AnM1eS lleflell. MNecJ 11v 1too4I•• .. Cloo m.11v Spin 11'1, Net1 H -at San llGHTM ••CL uo 'lf'Ol6'"' • Atld'l't OodMI' 1e1ek1Ni ft) • ,,., t• ••
11 ONo St, t->--O '°6 7
12 Arlt-1-1-0 5" I•
ll.W""'"9ton I ·2· I 561 12
1u u11un1 1·2·0 416 \S
ISUCLA 7o)·I l4' II
1' .. vtor M 0 llS 17 17 So Clllltof111t 7·3·0 I.. IO
1L~11e 7-l 0 IS) 29
suurMnkl llJ, a..en 11.J
~~·S ( MJ) -Mllllwel 7· 14 0-0 1', Wllllt
0-6 2•2 2, 8en1emln S-10 >-• l), Huston 4·10 1·2 t Woodson t·n 1-1 20, Fltlclt )·6 1-1 7, ~ N mof!IUI 2·• 4·6 I. Gordon 6· U M 1•. C...
7· 13 2·2 1', l(tmOfon ... , O•O O Totals 0 ·"
IS-20 10>
men>. 1111. w "•""· LA mlnor·mtJor-..me An.tomo. Alvin Robcnwn ~orfTed 2hcl '°""c;,M1t'rvw.Tio1111 c,Mi~•c'*'..,,' 1~60 •,•oo 32'°eo Helo CllOfeer ISltelfl 1• HD mltcOlldud ''°"°'*"· -Intl. 12·_,., '--'•· d Ed N Son OI NJ Mllf'ft 'Sucurotte) JM Ven. m.not-Hmt mltcondue1 troutNllel. 12l4. points an ealy came o t 1to.r1nt P•u 101ctwlek.-il ''° T.,,.,. us ... t
Temlldnl, v~1111.nertne.e>. 1w Pe111, ven bench to add 19 as San Antonio Timct 11 n AIM Wert! Kimi& J •· sieroi.s SI•'*'·
c1n1tr1erence>. ~-,,.,.. .1.. routed New Jersey. cr!:r ~:V~:!,5ror uLo':· "' e.iv .. ov. " J':"im wti":'.o~.e
12 Ve11<ouWf. S.noiell • (Ptderaon, Mt•• 81llet1 111 , Trail Blaiert H -at Scs2'._•'x~CT~CJ·'l ~-.. ..-... ...,.,... llAC•. Trot 1 Mn. we•I, 3 IM ll Vtncouver, Sundstrom f (Ptllt. .. .. • ,....., --Mt9N M9rlltm C,.8fker)
Mnw .. >. 801 1001 u "•ncouveir, Stnvt s Landover. Md., Moses Malone DAlLY Tll•U 1s-s-21 HiO ""'° xotts Ubr• COit!> ... 420 uo uo >• 1A 1'.N«-111 CM'ollll St I· 2· I '6 20.tow• ,.,., '3
Olllers rec..vinO vortt Cltmton "· loston C041eot 34, F'°'IOll Start :n, Sltn!Mcl 2', Vw1l11l1
Teel! 21, S.11 )OW St•I• 11, Mlnln loe>I '· Horth
C•rollM 7. I YU 7, Ml-I• •. Ftor1d9 l,
FrHnO Sl•I• 2 Ml•ml of Ofllo 2, S.n Dle90 Sl•t•
2, Tn•1 Ttch 2 Notre o-1. ,,.., .... , ....
SllATTLimJ>-C"9mben 11-21 10-12 )2,
Mt0911191 S-17 •·I 1'1 L"tet 6·t 0 0·12, £Ills
1S·20 •·•JS, Youno 1•2 H 2, SCll09flf M 1·2 i , McMl .. n 0-1 H I, Jot1flton 0·0 2·2 2, SltMW'Y
2·• 0-0 •. K Wl"i•ma 2·2 0-0 •· Ptltloa 2·• 0-0 • Tol•ls •S-• 22·32 113 Sare.,~ OlllC*t 17 21 2S ,._,Ol
S..llla lO 22 ll 2'-11>
TllrM-POlllt toti.-woodlon, Gorct6n, Ellls
Fouled out-McOenltl lttOoUnclt-<._, St
CLen'Wlv, .. ,, .. ,, • 11 1s. V•ncouvtt, Skrlko •• scored 32 pomts and Terry Catledge NINTH •A.CL J~ Y•rOl "tMY• H.,,.,., tMMlfll
(luldl«), 11-IM 1' LM Antlflel, Dionne p dded SO h'•t. 20 S W sh' a smoke Tf'l9l 1ll1nt (VuoMI 72IO 6IO UO Time: ?'Of -Cltoblt•llte, . Ltdv•rdl. Wlt 1001 PtMtties-8 a sea n-,.,, a a an.-Tiit A-'''°" tl.Aldlt'l'l no 3 • ""° Went H'9ft Gr.-. '" sriot, Hwd
LCIO'rtrd, LA ChOolllno). St, Wlllt. LA, ctouOle ton blew most of a 15-point lead and Sn.POV MKAl'f 8oY (OIOtnCkMlll '20 ·-·· FOff\'\91 SIWll. Ceo! Cllt1. GorlWW!Camet.
minor (rOUllllno, UMOOl'f""9nllkt conctucl), then rallted lO defeat Portland. Tlmt II OS . GNCIM JuniOf. °'998 "'° Chlo Of J9dt • 1', 8 utclltf, llt n (llOldlnol. I.JI, SenOl.911.. Vt n AllO Rtn ~111 Comoenv, Oe Ooo ltun n 8JtACTA 110-121 Mid SJUO lllOOlllnel. IH7, Tevlor. LA. minor·mlteonduel Klng1 IU, Sllltl 10% -at Sacra· Run. Av•"•· IV!llef' ''""· ICll•n AnO Scretcl\H\ S2 DAILY Tit~ 1$-1-lO) Mid tl,lOUO Ct1'9fl·•1tc11111111'· 1340• PtOttMlfl. 11911 lhlon· mehlO. Mark Olbcrdm& scored six of Scretelltd OouOlt JJ Wlfl. 111111119 5ftv HNTH llACE Pee• 1 Mile 1tlcklnel. 12•. W•"'· LA lrouon&nel. 14~. . fi . S2 •XACTA Cl·71 Nici S".20
"'" TlWf'Mlly -1c.o. 11). S..111• '° CLkt9f IO) At·
·~,,on~ ........ ~ ............ IM•l-74 ven· his 10 ounh~uartcr points ma tw<>-""°'Fir• N CK""'81'1 ..,.., ,._.-....... ... ..,..... . I ft Sa U PtCK SIX C•+S-S·2·1l ll90 no """"*' Hlt'I SOMO IO'o.nor.tl couv..-1-12-1>-» minute stretc • 1 1ng era men to '''" 11oraa1. °'"' ._. m '° 10 •-•lMIM tldl•~ Hillbill't' Df•wl 1l.AICll..,l Pow..-·!Hev Ooooftunlhtt-Los .Aneetel 3 ol past PhOCntll. rnve llOUH). "'° siot• 10 SS wlMIM t1Ckt11 Time 2011
420 Ut 220
HO 280 uo
•o.tro.t '"-ovtr Gr-a.v
•0911u •-SMttle s-.11• ._.,,. 111 .,._ YOfll Jets. no lone
•-....n U I) -PMldl~ ·c~ 7 o"" Houlton
•1(91\Mtt City 7 owr lutfUI
New Enel9n0 .l '> •-.... ,.. Orlfeftl s.n 0490. -'fftd-•nuoll• •M<"""°'• llY, O'ltf TemN ...
WMNnttOll '"" ovtr •St Lo.ill •(~ 11 Ovt< Plll~tfl •Miami n At•~t•, ne ne
• o.n..er 7 I) -ClnciM9tl ,......,
'S911 Frenc1.C. l 'l OWK New YOA ~" -
CO&.LaOI ,.......,
·M.eml. Flt CNo 11 • over Eoll C•rOliM
TUH M.t/i (No IOI 7 O'Wlf' 'Ttn1 ,,,... ...
M9t'Vlancl IOl't OWf 'Vtrvinlo s.twav •i.,su (No S> 26 O'W9f TUleM
•A!Nel'NI (Ho 7) l ovtt Aut>urn INo It!
Notre O•me 1 o•" •use INo m
•Geortle INo Ill t o.,., Georole Ttcll
Otlltr~
'Hout..., a11t -Ille• TennftMt I• 0V8f' 'lltnderbtlt
'Ftorldll Slelt 7 OV« Ftorldl
IYU 2" owr •s.n Ole90 St•tt
•He••ll J\'t o.,., W'l'Oll'llll9
SW!lt9'1'
Aruona. (Ho. Ill Vl .$19llfoc.d •I Jollvo. no
lfM •oenotes llOme !Mm
'""' ...,,.... •• ·-s..tt ...
......
LIGHTWetGHTs-lt9Mf1 Lewlt (Lot An·
ltlft) olld ()Kar Orntlel (It Motltt), Ml(it ••••
lour rOlllldl (Lewi• It now 2 ·2-l, Orntle• It
0-1-11 JUN.0. LIGHTWIEIGHTS.-AllClrtS Meta
CLOI Antelnl l(O'cl l'renclte• Jlm1nt1 Clos
Antelnl. ltlircl round IM9'9 Is now J-0, Jlmlnt1
" l-11 JUNIOll Wl!!L Tl!!RWEIGHTS-lruct
PMnon 11.0I A""tet) cteftoltd Merlo Mlr•ndt
Clot An9tleltl, 11Mnlmout dtc:ltlon, ,_ rounctt
CPffl'ton I• now •·I, Mlrencle rs 2·•>
JUH!Ott MIOOLEWEIGHTS-ltod Sterllt
CH\llllintlOll IMcM cltfMltd cntt JKklOll ($911
OltOO), m.IOflty cttcl1lon. '-rOllnclt CSterllt It
now 6·7, Jlldlaon '' 1-4-11 MIODLIWllOHTS--JoM Armllo (H\1111• ""'°" llffdl) encl Milton l utll IL• H•llr•I. lolil cttcl•lol'I dr•w, ti• rounch CArmlio II now )·0· I,
liltll I• 2·•·21 SUPEl FIATHEllWEIGHTs-Greo Puenle
Cll Molltel ..,._,td FtenCIKo 5"ur•
(CelKMll91. Mllit cttcllioll. 12 rouncts , 1tett
cNmtMW!tlllO ( f"vtftlt It ROW f-1-•• Seoul'• II
10-Jl
c ...... ~~ .... ~
A&.L·O.AMOI .,._I COM,•ll•MCI ) fJW T tlftl
l(ltn llocMw (0re1191 CO.ti), AM J111"'
(OftllM (OHi), Keren Nick .. '°'"* Coett) MlcN4lt llcMrct (Cllr111)1 Kim MM• ICltrut), J~ll IUoml (CllrUI). o.r1 H)ftlnt (llffr•ldtl.
Mellt\9 L-1 llllvtrtldtl SMWTtM\
Cllld't' TllOITlat (Ortntt Coett). G•1I Scllmldl
COr•'*' CMtll. Htldl W•ll C~I\), L.1"
JoMton CCYPl'ttt), Tri~ S.un Clle11<11t kn• tleeOl. MNM k!IUI« Clltndlo S.tnllffOJ,
lol\ilt 1...,.1r1CCltrutl, Jtntllt a.1mon ICltrU\)
• Me&t ._9lue0it llitvw -Kim llocflOw, OrtnM , ... ,
Cotdl ef IM VHr-JIM Hfletlldotf, 0!9f'llf c ... ,
-..
altt...-C~"*' 2• !Hinton fl. s-me 31
1Mc091141 7l Tole! foul...-C•-• 22, Setllle 2•
TtcMkatt-CllHlf's. llieMI .,._ 2. SMttie
S, ll•nc:ouvtr • of f 11our tlOnH) ""° went Scfteoncs.,,..., ~ Trou91it.
Goer.et--LM AnJ181tS Melen*' tit~-• Warrlon 111, Juz IH -At s1 PtCt( NINE 13+•·M ·S+2·•> i..o ne P9ter Fi.a11 Hiii\ c-.... ~Ami Mlliftt<
ci.t.ftM ... -...m M""'· Eliot (US MCond, ll·lll. Nll'el!Mtl 0 kl d E A d ed 11 f h' .,.,..., If. •or 7 llOftn), M'4 t lf7 IO to ftvt c111M 1111rc1, 3~» venc:ouVtr. erOdtur m-m a an • nc O) scor 0 15 w ~ ... 'tr:"en 1111 '*''"'· .. oe1 s1too te St n DAILY DOUel.• 110-sn °'"' s1t• it.11..-nc• 1 t:J6 25 points in the founh quarter as w.n11>111 1f(ji.et1 Cflve ,..,._, • st IXACTA 1$-ll .... \1180 c ......... ....
TUISDAY'S SCOttU .... ., lttf«--otnt• ,,_.. L~ Wl'fnt Golden tatc downed Utah. At1ftlClll'ICt"., n1 ""41111111A H8'IOlt wt.s.•11 Ao....,_ 1., ~""' Hendle sm.sn
ForM"t, l rtdLtt•r-ldl. 1;:::==::::=:=:~::3~~~;:.=::;=;;:::z;:=;-;;=.~~~==:~:::;~;;;;~~::::::::::;;:=::::::::::::'.::::=:::::=:::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:::::::::=,
H•VW•~O St S1. Notre o.me. Cet I 0
Poir'>t LOITlll 70. Gr 111111 C91\'l'Oll 6' . ........
M9retll0n Oil 102. lel St If
MllrelhOn Oil 70. W9"e Foret• 67
010 Dom111~ 1', Yuootlo'W19·1oi.M 76
C,()LLEG• MEN
s.clll Clllee 121, ~KHk a.1t._ Sl ,_ ....... _,
PffMlc ~ ISi) s.cM C-.. (121)
....L. .. ft.... .. ft .....
Otm"iijly"' r O 2 2 HHt 6 0 I 13
Ktlter S I 0 12 Llohlfoot 4 0 I I
li09t 1 0 0 • LUC.•I 10 l 2 11
O.Vriel • 2 S 10 Otell 2 0 I • SloniMr I I 2 3 Conocton l 1 7 I
Lt lk I • 2 20 • Slec»lltfts S 0 2 II
Wynnt • 3 2 11
Olaon 6 • 2 17
l.lllv • I I 20
Tottll 21 t 17 SI
Tllurmen ' O l a
Totel• 50 II 17 171
H•""'"' sec. 63·l0 Ttd1nlc•lt ,._
Ctlrtdlln.Jt.-ttul C.... JOS.1 awtst C ..... lrvtftt N
CHC (1151 CCI 1'41
Foster
Crit"-llrn
Sttffen
Smtlll
Ptek
l uue
..ft .. ,. ....... ,.
I 2 • 22 WHr 12 I • 2S I071 ll T~3271
' 4 2 .17 LofiM. I 2 • S
I 2 S 11 P•ftollt 1 1 I 4
4 S 4 ll Cl9tt ' S J IS
4 2 'l 10 T-ntl 1• 2 • )I
lenson I 0 0 2
Hel 2 0 2 4
Tote1\ )I 22 11 IOS Tott•\ ·le M 17 t•
Helftime Cllr~t .. n Herll9" 51·)1
TKMlall Chr11I Cole9e Irvine lltnell
COMMUNITY COLL.GE MaN
0reftl9 c .. st n, Mt. Saft Jadftte IO
(Ml. 1911 Jtdllte T_,..,)
Or.._ C.1f <n> Mt. Sen J9clnte (IOI ......... .. .......
011111 2 t • 13 ltlchev 10 l 4 2•
Trtv1no 1 0 I 2 ltoO•nlOll S l l 13
McGnron • I o 10 ltt>O 6 l • IS
P .. mbl90t 2 I • S Wtrrtn J 7 I •
Juctcl • I 4 13 erown O o 2 O
LUkH I -0 0 2 JK~bl S I 2 11 Mate 11 0 S :n Wellon 5 I I 11
l(fllv 7 I S IS lt-r 0 0 2 0
Gerclt 0 0 0 0
Tot•ls Jot ll 22 12 Jot•lt >S 11 2• IO
H•llhmt Ortnot C0111t. 42.,7; •eoutttlon
., • ., F1r-s1 ov..-rime 7J·n T~l\lliCtlS Christ Co!M9t lrwlnt bff'lch
COLL•G• WOMaN s.c.al ( ..... n. ...... f.5
(Mll.C~)
sec.. c..... Cl1) ....... ('5)
.. ft ,.. "' .. ft ,.. "' Swlllv911 4 0 I I HeKt • S • 17
l rntl 4 O 1 I Oldtn 2 O 2 • • T«rv 1l l 2 2S ltuut • I 3 ll
Amon • 2 1 1• Verni • • 1 1• HMw o 1 > 1 S-reuo • 0 I I
Wuntell I 0 2 2 Vitoilns I 0 2 ,
HerltHll 2 l O 1 Crou l I S 7
OowdY 21•S Elf.noer • 0 ) 11 Tot_.. 'l.. l6 10 17 12 Tote1• 1' I) 11 6S H•""'"' sec >t·t7 Ttcllnlct•s N~
"""~ ........ ~VleW SI, lelM OreMt •
fl-eurMU COVI • Torres. 1 2l
IOS-H•• llGI • Ferr ... l'06 112-Stan'\t>urv tOVI P Lallre, S.06
lit-Lem 1011) 0 t<•flM. 1 ts
11..-s1t1M'll 10111 o Price, l·ll 1l2-Mlremontt llGI cite Ltwl•, 1·7
131-0•M .. 10111 o Hes•, '0-lS l4s-oullt119 CI GI P Httte, 3 S.
ISA-SrulMI 10111 cite. Gullllf'tr, 10-8
165-TOlly !OVJ JI brQ!l...~4.1
175--ftlos COVI w°" bv forfeit
ltl-M9118f' 10111 o H•rttv, 3 S'I
Hwt-<11rl1ll•n C8G) o Dou•llllrO. I IJ
,,.,.,.~
CetA ...... I ,.,... •euMt ~ '°''' 1«11..-1wn1 Gormenvl clef Jonn McEnroe IU S I. ,., S~7 7·S, lv911 Lendt
IC1tclloalovtklel Otf Mltosiev M«.tr IC1KllO·
"°wt kle), •·•. 6·3
TueMIY'l traMMtlen1
IAl•IALL ......... L...-
CINCINHATI REOS--Announctd IMI Ulu
Porco, vice ort11dtnt for llMnct , wourct retire D9C I N•mta Cllrlt KrebClt. controller, to llMcl
eccountl111 cltNrlmtnt
SAN FltAHClseO-ltHClltd eetttment to
,,.,... • tum In Poc.tel!O. 11191\o, of tllt Pio-
Lt•Out N tmeel DltOO 5"111 o0Clll119 CCHICll of
Poc:••tflO H•mtcl Cot 0..1 rovlM minor IM-
lnttrucror Ametk.MAt~
HASHVIL'LE SOUNOS-Nemtd JKll Linet
1'1181\Htf
IASK•TIAL&. ...__, letll.,._. AtMddlll
IOSTOH CILTICS--Actlnted Scoll Wtd· m.n, lorwtfO from lnlUl'M rnerve. W••V.O
AllClf t T urntr, tu9I' d
PHILAOE!LPHIA 7'ElS.-Slt ntcl Jim
L~'t' Cff'lltt·f«werd
,OOTIALL ............... ......,.
OIHllllt llOHCOS-W•lvtd Olr1t HOf·
/NII, ount« S10Nf Mill.• Hom. ounter. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-W9i\l9CI Act.m
L ln9ntr, cenl9r eo&.L•OI . JOHN CAIU•Ot.L-AMOUllCecl rul9f\9t!Oft of
.,..., OOLLaGa .........,..N Fr911k Am.lo, footlMI• co.ti\ COMMUNf I ' -MAltOU TTl-AMOVll<td 1"9t TonY RMct· 0reftl9 C.lf St, at~ lt tt. lor•trcl, 11H Men •ilOwtcl to rtlOlll '"'
Ol'llllet C•tl Ut) It ~ < ltl 1M1tl'.ttb91 !Nm • .. ft ttf • .. fl flf le MARSHALL-Allnounc.ct llltl Jofln Jell,
lrewlf' .0 0 0 0 ' ROM11'19nd I 0 1 t !~r~.. In lntllil•ble fOf lllt 1''6 .. 1 IMllll•tlMIM
Scllumtker 6 1 2 1> PtulMln • 0 0 I ~t6'1
L.111 I 1 0 ) ~t<tl\ll'r 0 0 1 0 __ ;;;;.....:.-----'-------~
Foi.v I 0 I 1' Pelt ) I I 7
l•rll•ll 1 0 1 7 Ctoutler I 0 I 2
ltlndont J 0 0 ' Htl'ntlt}' 0 0 0 0
(O#lrt 7 0 2 4
$tlf )016 TOl91t ,, 2 I 50 Tot•'• t 1 A lt
Htlhmt Or•Mt c ..... )1'1)
T teflftl(t •t Htllt
~ . . .. ..
AL·,...lf.-r_._
Vot "t tor l"9 "" A~ '-9"111 lttollot
414"" VMr, wltll •wn retetv!N fl¥t llOlfttt * MCl!I llrtt 9*t 'IOlt. llVM Mltllt ,_ MCGM tM .,.. ..,,. .., .,... ......
(tl\M(O, Oelt
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IUtMOrn, fer
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1 110 ' .. 11 2l , " l •
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RUFFELL'S.
UPllOLST£1Y llC. ..,.,.. ......... .... 19U_ ... _. ___ 11M
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I
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·' •
(
llypark handicap lEnY
Tu11£LL
Los Alamitos
racing entries
111
1111)
MY TURaUlllNT atAU 14•1) W16t OP111
• '-' of matCMfl' tu1 '· 100 worluno wtl t f\CI bod to bl QUICll CHllltOtt•& GLADYS 17•21 F .. lllG
tO tUI\ lj ""'°'"' ctrOOt llOICll •nd P1ncn retail!\ n\ount.• '-"•'S SOHG (t •21 Slcond Detl In
,C>UaTH RACI •• F11rtot>11t PurM $11,000 Mt~ t.llltl 2 VNtl Old Cl11mlng Clatl'lllflO
Prk• l2 000-11.000
1 Jllt11>11 CV~ntutlal I)) t 'Jt1t From OIOt"V 1Pa111non1
3 Nalurtl Sitt lllaltl21>
4 Slr1.....WN Port (P!llCaYI
S Al l Pltvmate (l!l•tClo;I
• Maolcal Gal ($tr;entl
1 Mt"'arl IG t>son) •
I Oil /Nr llos .. (PIOrOHI
t FootlOOM Farr•h (Ortevel
10 Or !>oc:ll II To Mt (Meztl
II 0.11 and 8UCUl'fft i~.O~ltl
12 GIOW•l\ll SUll f'BOI\ lit)
AIM ......
Ill 111 111
Ill
111
"' a Ill
111 Ill 111
Ill
"' 13 Fefll ConcOIOr• Cll11ei\1ue4aC211 111 14 Teblt lav IBaieCI I> 111
STillAW81lRR Y ..oltT 13· 11 SPll<I 10 llttlcn
oefort tirlno, ~oz• lo P11\CIY could orove
Oilflr••,O JtLTAaLll t .. JI ~M to .,. 9IJ1C
""' IM rioo.ti.., uc• I Pit rldtr, P Vt, ~ tffOl'I, Al.:'S "lAYMAT• 1•·1) Caoetl!!I
lft 1\41' hi\~-of 0 llV Al Oii lldM,
toO!a Mr~ w'*t ~ e.11 win LON<;• HOT MAGICAL (';.t. "'™ RAC•. 1 Mll9 P\KM '1• 000. j Yttr °* Claimlnt CJalmlnp Pria '1,$0CM7JOO I All te~·, ~IOI (Vtfhrtl • 11•
2 lrlOl\I :rom (Sltvett\I 11,
3 urO.N Co•bOv ($01•1 '" 4 liouM $0teltlf't IG b.olll A tot s llll\trt11t 1<11 10 ... "°"'w~J 11' 6 M1KllltV01.1\ Miii (Vtlef'llUC•tl 116
7 JtvWl'I' (Plnc1v> 11'
• IOIO lrevo (M(HtrOlle) 119
atnGHT"TOM fJ l J OtOPP•n9 fof 1111 fodn
etttt f1(1nt IOUOMf, (1111101 .,. 111norteS at lhll ltve11 MISC:HllVOUS MATT (7•21 Won oa.t
verv Mtllv tor Ill•• 1ta011. lllct dalm •llOuld fair
.... lodtv, 90LO UAVO *2> RUMH·u• '"
OOOd 'lltlorl while 1n need o( '"' rect, \lrOll!I conltftdW. LONGSHOT JAY! ElY.
Sl)l1'H RACI . I Mlle Put .. $1S 000 3 'fttr
old tm~, Clt!mino Cla1m11111 Pr!« 32,000·30.000
I "HIOll To c-... CFerntlldltl lU 2 Arctic lancl' ISt1v111U llS
l "ocht ' Girl CValtflrutiel 11S
4 Et11«n G•tl"llOUI" (~kWI 111
S Crub .D-"Cer CGl*111 a110
• 0-"C· HI H ... uv (McHtl'Oliel I IS
1 Hot \1.111 CPil\Cnl • 115
I SllOw CrQln (PldrOHI 11)
t Fool'I H C .. ttl 111
10 Vllv1t1111 18..cll.I I IS
OANCIE HALL HUSJY tt 21 C11imtcl In .. " 't"' It lroubllel llV-'1cM;I, I~ llPO'ICltlt
nict k"'O ",.ICll In tt\I' .,.. .. event. ARCT1C
LANO cs ,, In con•tnhon lhn>VllllOUI OflW!l\11
c ... r f« 111v win, r.oure1 -to beet v•LV•T••H <•·II ~OCN>•nt from $A0,000
con-panv, off form of \tit but \hOuld bounCt
IMl<ll In thl t l\tat, LONOSHOT H2! SKATE
TOMCMfT'S I lffttfl S CUii el ......... ..,..,._11 ,,..,..,
SaV•NTH lllACa. t M It furf ltuHt '"" .,.. 7lll ~ 000 J vHr tlldl t. uowerd AllOwer<t '"'" lllACI. »O Y•r.. ""'.. '3 toO 1 Hlfl'llH 191111 llt F 1 •-• olcJ ~ Pfkt U.000
2 un Mo111 C$Jblllel '" 1 Flvt Oot Arur1 111ior .. 1 1n l Ull.11'111 P ... wr• CP111(av1 II• , T llflU On Otcl< CFltuwOll ltJ
4 0Yar Tht <X•a~ ($1..,.,,11 I llf l ~CIOC (lAWll) 122
S s11.111 Out ''ont IDtlll\OllUhtl 116 4 Movln Mlttn ICntaWI 112 • ll'r1tmalic CMtiel 116 s Oller S..htf ~.mmv (Pt entonl 1n
7 Juttoneoltlltbovt (Solltl 116 ' WlflPdil't CDIWl<kHnl 1n
I Coa1111ner C HtrntAClltl 116 1 C041ur1 11.KktY I 111
ULTIMATI ""."'""' IS•)) IMIH'OVtcl I ~tt'flCllV PtO\ld lGtrcl•) m runllll' nu 1oeac1 to vain 1tr1111n11 PO•lllon for ' GOOd Dutclltu IMll<ht411 '122
Wtlch, w!ll not DI dented lodaY, I.AST MOTIL. HGONO RAC• 110 Y••dl Puu• ,.j,ooo >-
17·11 "•"' tor t!lh SOHdlllt ,, to ,., .. Nrlv wll YHr•Old.I Clt•lnlllO Prk• U ,000
bCI CIOublt toutn If 1blt to 00 """· ov•• THI I MttlCIOS Olltnvna (VIUOMI 1n
OC•AN (t •21 Hithlv reoerdled imoort 11av1 hllr 2 Countrv lltllTllCIV l't>ie1t11CkW1l ltt wern11>0 Nov 12, worllll!O llYN furlon9• In I 16 f 3 1(1°' Antel l tt (Ftortt) llt
on 1111 turf, moat lmP«ll lllld one out on '"" • NaturaUv Ou" cc1100111 1n turf LONG~HOT: JUSTON!'.OFTHflOYS s Jed 111;µ., lk.l•lNH (Mtolfl ln
llGHTH RACI . 6 Furloncn Punt JlS.000 ' A·O•lldv \11lul\flOll CO•re:.1 1n
F .... l'NfH J ., .. ,. ol4 .. Ul>Wltd AIOwanc• 7 Roell.et Tanner ILtw111 1?2
I $6111'1'1<111 Ull Vil (Sib 1111 113 I '""II Rlthl !Proctor) lfl 1 NtUOlllv M.t.dllTI (Verttrt) llS t HOOi.iii NoolOl'Y IF1«e1l llt 10 Jlt'M'ltfl Jtl IGtrcltl 122
) Miu 0. I' (OtltllO\IUlvtl 1 IS 1.1 A·Miu VICtorv Sii D I Proctor I 119 4 &Old N S11«ltl CStevtft•I 110 " T S C~abt11lv ICo•I 11110 1. ruckltn Pr1llXI IGtrclaJ ' Jlt
• W1lcl\erv (Va 11'1ut1a) 120 TH .. 0 RAC•. 100 Yardt Puttt 12,SOO 1• ~ITCHIRY (7 21 S!'IOuld control '"'' f~ vur·Olcl1 Cll.mtnt Price $J 7CO •
Ir l<IVtnllM POtllloll In \J'lotl ,,...,,favor•'"'' I AJll Cl1*' IMt•ttl 111 ov COM.-ARA91LITY (4•11 HooMCt UP al lhl , \'our °""'" Tltnl C01rc al • 1n
"•" rte•l'O -1'1' lfl«Mlllf In ltll at D1f Mar, l llldulnO On lei 18trdl • llt worll "O watt and ""' lie •lrono cCMlllf\Cllr todav, 4 lll001111 Jet Fla111 (V111eMI "'
90LO N SPI CIAL ll·ll Slllitt wi"'* 11 Del S Mtlllf' lltleldll l<;rHtetl 121
M.ar on ro.d beck. #Of11• Ind!<_.• ti\•• one rffdv 6 Iv• BVI 11111 Babv (Ward> in
to rOI LONGSHOT MISS Oe E 1 A lure GIH .. (Gill) llt • Ti09'1Clt' IEdwtrd•I 1n
NINTH RACI, I Ill Ml'fl turt Put._-t Collellt Euc:ut1v1 (ltC:U v) 121
114.000 Flt ta &. mern 3 VMrt old & u11w1rd 10 Doc ClleVV CG.,C:lt) 112
A110w1nce II A-Orb•t CGarcltl lit
I V1vrt En P•lx (8attl 11' 12 WtrlU (8r00kt) 122
2 Art•U• (CHttnon) 11' 13 Lahon<I• Jon (CrH91rl in
3 Rtvertowtf' ($1tvtn•) Ill 14 SllOl'l•ll CllO!c• IDldlflck1tnl lit
4 •·K•••lino !It.ell.I 113 ,OU.TH aAC .. 350 YarOI Puoe; S3 soo ,.
S PlumPllrt COOverttl 116 vHr·Old\ o.lmlno Prlct st.000
6 Motnlno 01vollon (DelahoulMY•I I" I DIKOS Potkv (LIW l\I ln
The Vanouards (2· I). who will O r a C t .. 0 El C in 9 7 GOidie Hewn IP1nc1v1 lit e nge oa1 -. , am o l : 1 a·Mavbl A Kin <Pellon> alOI 2 Final Point Clt l<llllttl 111
SoCa l~ Orange Coast wom en roll to victories
Ter ry's25 points lead
Vangua rds to 82-65
win over Redla nds
open up play in tht" Missoun Evan~el Pia)' was called midway throuoh the 9 Juli• Writer (TOl'ol 116 3 Sover1ren Smith (Gercltl ln r •tt T J d f o 0 4 LOflV Eetlt CCtreloza) 112 "o cgc ournam ent against o n secon hal when El Camano. whic h 1 Oh•••waanna ISP10em1ktrl m s w1nohl• e m tcr110tr1 112 B~own U naversit> of Arkan~s. got 25 started the game with fi ve players. 11 !~H=~~d<~~~k Entrv
113
6 0o 11 For Ctth <F1tutroa1 m
S.UCTH lllAC&. l7t Yero. flUrM. S) 200 )• " .. , •• t. 1111 Clelmillt .-,1u. u,oae
1 $t<t•llv1 CPttdOtl
2 Hol11l A"• C"'8\ll,lnt) l Cltbl>er l.UC:kY W n llt1•t1>
• ''''"" ,.,.., (SfYWe)
$ ~· AlorllllCIOt'll CC.rNMtl 6 Samt Af\Oll (V1U1>11nl
7 $1r LYM Of(lo. IL....,l•I
I HldOlll lttc1.ie1~ (Gift I
t Putblt Cll'dlr ICi1rc1lll
10 llllvtffalt Okll IOldlrlcAlllll
11 Sun T" s.unnv (Pauhntl
12 ltt4~1tlld<lefnlnd <Caroou>
MIVINTH RAC•. 400 Yard• ,urM
• I It
in
"' in
122 122 tn 122 Ht m
llt 11'.
U,fOO
) vttr·61d1 Cltlmlnt PtlCI I 10,000
I (11¥ Kinda Trtvettt IWtrdl 172
2 lnfamv IOarcltl 112
3 CIOudv SUnt1t l~tll 122
4 Mink Pattn11 Clecl•ev) 112 s Go EHV Nth .... CPillltfll()lll 1n
• HUrlOl'V lunnv CCtfdOHI 1n
1 P1HPO!'ltr (01dlfi<Jut11I 112
l lGHTif RACI . JSO Yard\ PurM 110,000
Ovlfl\ Ol'll H1'1dic:ao F l .,..,., Old
I Hot Wt¥t CGarc.11 121
2 Ttif1nv1 AllOl4 CMilctiedl 117 J Hev ~., Mit\.(Fi9Ultotl 11e
4 lluei11t1 ICrffOll'I 110 S Tlllnlt.1119 lllCh (Cit« a> I If
• Re<on SPllM'I Ct..cktvl l1t 7 :Jtt St1 Onttitn CltrCll m I S•ernt Mefmt•d (Haft) • lit t A Zur• llov1treou11r IDIWltlCMll> 121
10 01111 s Welow fllldlller> 1'3 •
11 lllC'lt.11 C.lltrW (~ldUtnl 116
NINTH •ACIE. 400 Verdi Pun• 11~.-0vtrn Phi H1nd1C111 F 1tt &. mtrtft l YIM Oldl
.. uo I P11111 Tlmt !Gerclll 117 1 Tuello.1 (ltWI\) 122
) G'amt 0oM llaYIOll) 11'
4 I Cllt Hemotni lall'I' U .. a<kl"ll 1,1 s Hav A Mt!Oelv !Garcia) 117
6 £111901 E1P<lll TTnlWli...-----ml
1 Miu MlghlY Marv (FIOUlfot) 120
I Solid Olin Clakl:z::: 111
OV wrestlers win ~ants from Lisa Tell') an a game the) lost a second one due to tnJU~. PL~ITillA 110-11 scratcl\ld from Sun-
1
Sutcliff• lltctt•vl ~ 121
cd It h
fh p h dtV'I 1>t09l'am for lhl• IPOI, nice $POI for UOMI, • luclt.v Cute 8tr (Oldttlekttn) In
a t C Wa\ C 1ratCS, W 0 Improve lO 3-2 GOLDI!! HAWN (4·11 8UtnPed l'ltrd In Ille l"IFTH RACE. 150 Verdi PurM 14,000
Th So h (' I
r The Vanguards "'ere also strong o n and make their home debut tonight at llrtttr1 Pln(ev 1e>sl11t hi• w-on and '" cnarim, FUllCl , vtar1 old 0a1m1no Proc• s11,soo
c ut ern a 11orn1a College 5 p .m against Mt. an Antonio. were r.our .. t>tom.nenttv w.111 ""' field, MOaNING 1 Tawilth tL.ackevJ m
women's baskctrll team took ats act the boards. getting nine rebounds 1 d b .\ F oEvOlTIOH <•·21 Th•rd ovtr ltM• ~ .. •• thl• , Your 111 1Httt1 1n
h
r R di from,. ·WC pr-·luct J u lie "mon. uho ca ) nn1e olcy and Lisa Cl'''"" wilt DI r1Qfll ,,..,. LONGSHOT JUL.IE l St,., E•P< .. , IP11C1nlonl In
Ocean View High'$ wre thna team
o~ned its ~ason with a 51-20 win
over Botsa Grande m the loser~ gym
Tue~ay night. The Seahawk.s used
seven pin on th eir way to victory.
including two b> freshmen -Jeff
Burgess at 98 pounds and Chad
up t ~ 1reewa to e and'i tn v vu ... .. Schumaker with 16 and 13 points wRtTEllt • •• Ours IGttcla1 in
prt"parat1on for taktn& 1t to Missouri also scored 14 poant'i. a nd c11tht from rc~nrc11vcl" while Nancy Lutz I UT aaT WITCHERY '"" 1111ce1 s Anoll on w111e1s ""'"''
1
" Fn-'~ a d c h 82 LS ocr od Doi 1i ... -I ... IC • °""' Ollletfo (ltw11) 1n wa) n ame away Wit an -u \. pr UCl ore<; El mger. who chipped IO 'With a strong dcfcn 1ve I! PLAY DANCE HALL HUSSY 1611'1 7 Ntvtr Ev• Euvllv CFIO\Wot) • 122
v actOF} Tue5da) night. contnbuted 12 Po•nts t"Oort -RaceJ • Sl\inev seoo1n cea1e1.1.e1> m tansbul') at I 12. ----=-----_;..---------------~__:.:..__ _______________________ __:x:.:CllM::.::::' .. .:..:•::orw:.::"':'":::':.:iOC:::.,:.:•:,:v:_ __ ....._ __ 9 SounelsMf~ CC1r001•I 171
•
Can ~hese People to help
decorate yQur home, business
or club for this year's
HARBOR HOME CHRISTMAS LIGHT SHOW
$3,500
. Prize Money
for
Winners· Favome
Charities!
< O'l.1 Ml MC IAI
117 hi~h1on hl.rnd
11\rin ro Hullo..,k\ Wrl\htrt•J
l\cwporr Ht-.t(h <I\ 91(.,(~
NON· PROFIT
.the ~~~
(714)
546-4005
Jim Harmon
Skipper
We 'll Help Put Up
& Take Down, Too
1131 W Coeat Hwy. Newport .. Kh, CA t21e3
NO_tf PROFIT
f1411ur10Q the Meo ol the 1987 futhqhlar1 Calendar
"We're burning to work for you"
Cont.ict Ron L.iM.ir, President
714 I 740-1670
Yacht C lubs B1.1111ne11e1
P....,...• ._.,.,It ti>• t ,,.. c;.....,_,., ._,..,, lvmoon r,.,,41
NON·PROFIT
KEY CLUB
Irvine High School
A32, Walnut • Irvine CA 9?714
(114) 112-•211 , Ext. Cl
lslO-a:ao •••tl•r thr11 ''"'' Craig Elliot~ Advisor
LANDSCAPE LIOHTINO
• l-Voh41t
• lbtitktit ,, I OlmlM
MICHAEL 8. COLLIER
COMMlRCIAl
Professiona1 lighting & Sound
Design & Installation
(71 4) 953-5082
-·
NON·PROFrT
i:RITON
SEA SHIP 1058 •All-GIRL CREW
Janet Kle1nschm1dt. Skipper
(714) 650-0247
1931 W. Coast Hwy• N~ luc:h, CA 9266)
Daily Pilat
$3,500
Prize M oney for
Winners' Favorite Charities!
COSTA MESA
HIGH SCHOOL
Jocelyn Jemca
Chalrnuin
tECOUTllC a PUTl umcu
(714) 5C0·2Sl8
(714) 957-81· ...... -
Afftll1tt of th .A.meriun lttd Cro~l ·~ .
CLUB
(71 4) 760·3320
7 30·4 00 MOncft ·frr~r
Mike
Stewa rt
Skipper
[l~r ®rigi11u l ~
[hrist1nas g,torr
I
I 0-9 Monday-Friday
I o-6 S;iturday 10-S Sunday
"111 Fashion Island. Newport Be.ch
t8ullocks Wilshire WtncJ
NONPllOflT
SEA EOlORE• SH" 711
CAU US • YOUR NEIGHBORS ON THE BAY
1931 W. Coast Hwy, N.w port leo<h, CA 92663
NON·HOflT
. (J()A§'F El
ClleW
OllANGE COASf COllEGE
OARSMEN
Will DO
IT 8ETTEltl
(714) 645-3505
Dave Grant, Coach
2701 Foirv~w Rood t Cotto M..o, CA 92626
M 'l·PftOflT
LATIN CLUB
CORO~A OEI. MAR HICll HOOi.
Micht'I.-('~Ila, Advltor
(714)
780-3321 '"tr 1.000 t ,..,. E•P<'"'"""
7, ..... ,.. ..,,,,
Me•b)'•f'l'I .. )' '4rf'h11H lural f 1t1iwlli1ltmfnl•
1' llel t:utM•rf • N11•,.r t ........ -' 11 ...
Clr!t.1t •ldr, o• tlt ~of.id s
~---
• k • (7U) 642··076
•• "'"''"' Pe9gy Jo oore
/"" -
All •Hitt JIH ~ uaafttlal nra fer l11U1f la 1•11 .. t lplaf Raa•• •lr~tltrf wnt ,.lruOJ t o th ltar~r It•• Orltt•M Lll•t i. w C11 It p t p •
•• •or ao1 profit ,, .. , ar •••II h 4 u • •••II • r•ltr •1 t• Dalli Pllec ••Ir• acopu u llai.llltr fe r 1hlr, :..acu~' 1 ' H H '
•
CALL 642-5878
..
4 Ines,
7 days ...
INTO
9.0
You cM now call the Daltr Piiot CIMetlled Dept. on a.tua•i mornlnl from l:OI to 11:11un.topl1cerow1Unc1., Md.._., ede.
CLASSIFIED. INDEX
842-5878
... 119 .....
,..
.. Ml»
HIP Mii
Mn
lfol•
Mat
I i.n ~ Je,tO
•• MO
i.... ....
id ,.,,
Wt ..., ,....
Wt ,.,.
HIO , ... ,... . ,.. .....
· DeADLMI
PUBUCATION DEADLINE
Mond8y ........... Sat. 11:30 AM
l'ueedey ........... Mon. 6:30 PM
Wedneedey ..... Tuet. 5:30 PM
l'hundey .......... Wed. 6:30 PM
,11dey ............. Thufa. 5:30 PM
a.turday ...... : ...... Fri. 5:30 PM
~ ............ S.t. 11:30 AM
THI DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED OFFlCE HOURS
T ....... S«-Acle
~..,~ 8;00MM~PM
s.turd.y 8;00AM-11:30 AM
~Count• ~-Frldey
8:00 AliU:OO PM ea.an
.........
IP lllaY
~ ... .....,
MtlC.
,._.,,. 9010
~,,,.,,,,_ .,.
~ •n•
AUTOMOnYI
.
ltil latate"rtr Ill• 1tatr1l IM2 •• ..,....1Hc• lMt C..t1try Lets · C..11 •111 2124 1..,.r1 •ack 2119 At1rtant1 C..ta •111 2124 C..ta •111 2'24 Int. 1w• 2141
tC-.. •WNITlllll •UflWIPllllU Crnt1 -1225 ..... TIEii. •NPT CREST CONDO• lfan1J Biz ••EHlllde apacloua IHIWI ..
..... ,, .... """ M~ petf.ct tar;. 3 PXclM VIEW a;;;o;,; 4Br38a,gatao-11000 3:=~~:o~5~/WI LOV£LY2er 18 •. r.tlred ~~: ~· ~ ·~:fi Westfield 2~~A~,~~· Iner• IMZ Thia condo 11 ........._ f« bedroom, 3 ~th condO plOla, IOI 25 A fhru F Rare flnO 2+2+gw '825 • mo couple needed N man-83 -8 55 1614 SChOOi uou;;t 3:000 lhe al le piof'~I w/pool, aqaa. ..eunty Vllta del Mat., ... 1375 C0rt 1Br 188 E...ide $.480 Kathy, Agl 845·2235 808' for 8 unite. malnt. $825/mu 1 1 1306 Wltlnut eo3
eq. ttl Batemen1. kltc:flen, U .=. lnclucM tii.d gate, ale • more. A .. 8_19 439-2924 · OTHERS AVAILABLE. F• •ITIPI TtJAll• ex_p req'd SC&-5704 -•BAY TIMBERS* APU~~lllO• TSL MGMT 142-l
bedroom•! PolenU•ll p::f!. kilc:Mn a ~th, bargain •t 1249.900. lt•'tah TILIUIT ., ....... 1Bdrm 1Ba 1\.111 llllc:hen •SUNSET EACH ActOIS Quiet 1Br, frplC, pool, L*_!!'Panclool Sor PVT SM hM 1bf ba kit, I n..i.. ..... 500 Laro-2 bOrm, 2 bl • · .. ~ • ... pallo, 98' No pet• 399 p.... . o-raoe ry. t>IUn stove, Mng rm 1.34 11et• """' ..... mlfrored waifs .... CIOMt 1209.900 An abaolUle ;;;; ~"--~ EASTSIOE 2BR 1BA. get· u11ta pad. -oo •• from Sandi Deluxe 1... W Bay St $835 850-63S7 no pet• w/lrpl encl gv w/d RI~~ County! John dOOft, celling ~fan The • • 2 bdrm 2 bath ~ _ --" age, carpeta, drapea, TIWllT Ill-IMO fully furn Avail nowt t Bedtoom. 1820 hkup. • lenc.d yd w/pat Oenv« ~Y 8!7·5118 furniture la appropriate & ~$189 90011 PATRICK 1 zlff fenced yard. 780 8384 $825/mo. 532·5892 •BIG 38t 288 UPC*' 1 2Bdrm 1 Bath 1725 1625 quMt 536-0921 E\198 851·8729 •H218 beautiful. S.. It and you "'"7 • __ $400 ocean clON rental l car enc:t garao-No petal 301 Avoc:.do 842·ft50
**
••-** wlnwanltomov.rlghtln. TENORE 831·t2M or Coty trplc wrm• 3bf 2ba E'SIOE cul de sac l'IOtM bungalow bllla lru lalltt1 PHlan I 1034 "O" -Valencl• SUWlll.YILLUE -rr-• $80,500 7eo..8702 S795 tlal kid• ate equlpt 3bf. den, 2'hba, lg yatd oll'lett avail at 539-8191 2117 $800/mo 54S.7983 Furrnaned e.ctlelof. mMJY
Flrat reule ollerlng. JOYCE OABOLT •1tdl del•ll• 539-8191 wllrwt tr .... pa.11o_-. RV Agl I• ;BAY VIEW u fu( i; 2Br l&a 11tru Hftr decof, utile
Premium End Unit twnhm SAUY SHIPLEY Agl lee prtcno. S1500 852-0222. 4 BR temOdeled frenct! lBt b S~ n,;,. '*~ Verde decOf paid S550/mo + tee WIT llT1
in "The Co\19" Elegant' WINTEA LEASE E·tlde nat ap ......... ., 2br door, beamed ceiunn•. lg au:: ... :: 1625 :.:~· dd-~~-~,,.,. ~~ "•r;r' 5-48-0~ •It 5 30pm LIVE WHEAE vov H.AVE apedoua w/2 aull•. f0tm S 50 ... ,,_. ·...-... _, """"' " •Speetac:utar 8')18 dine, view deck a Bayfront3BRlurn 17 "Ida ok baalc ecor tenced yard, 12200/mo 311Edgewater 873-1 S875NQsi-ta840-24 llUTLICATlll *1,2811 &28aeurt•
"wetera edge" patio. Ocnft 3BR u= SlOOO encl1d ptlo 1825 831·29&8. 159-7602 BachelOf mounlaln cabin •M ... Verde d'IUx 2Br S550/mo 1BR 18.A. atl •S~ townhouaee
Ju81 redue41d to $595,000 .. ~ -Panln ocntt VB~:2300 ~91 Agt lee FANTASTIC Condo on the alyHI w/patlo on 34th St. 2Ba, dahwaht ;at kit, bllnt, MW c:atJ*, lndr/ •Ar~ "
fOf pron'f' Nie. Lrg 3 bOrm, 2 'h dba. w/~ New~l~~nd 38R lower E'aide lg 3bf, din rm, lrple. waler w/la.butoua view $$00 lnci utile OuHlt, loctced garage: lndry rm rm nr bUCh: ~ * PrMlte balconle• or
Hutlngt Co. 840-5580 '';;, 19:..':; :C~1:· docil 51700 ' blllna, new paint Walk to Pool S 1695/mo. Oecoralor Nltmlcr 842-3&71 1750 No si-t• tco-2495 ~1 V: 1 1~~603 Gatden QltlOt
•EISIOE TRl-PLEX• • 1'111 ef U.. hie . !!,mat din rm' & ..i bar: Bayfronl Condo 28R+den Mfte Courlyatd '875· furnished 873--0896 8AV Ff~pter. Wnlr tSL M -----WIT llT1
25'4 down. OWC, l230K. 50 OI bay frontage. 144 S 1695/mo or buy fOf '1950 »2·16& 5-t&-1-745 Beaulllul CUSIOm home furn prkg, 2bf $ 1000, 1br •ftlf ILUllS , .aJ.. *3 UgMed ...,,,.. c:ourta
Prlncie>als Only C ~::!~n (:::::i~11:°! 1239,900. Palrlck/Sue Bay:lront SBA, dodt S5000 LUXURV 3br 2ba, Euttlde 38t • Oen. 3Ba. lo1• of $800, Se70, VIiia pd 303 2:89~8:,.!':; 2:,~ 1:: 1br 1ba. 1oc In CM MSl'1tt * 2SW'lmmlng p004S Ron Young, AQt 14&-7348 873--035-4 801 831· 12&el780-8702 w Nwpl 28R lrplc 1900 Townl'lorM, ,.,,, yrs old, high c:etHng.a ovetloo6llng E Ed;ft•ter 871·2™ ~rut 5-48-1128 Rlehatd patk. No si-t•. $495/mo •StrMmt a ~ -~-;;;ttiUiMil CMTownhm3BRlpl1'00 Very de!Wtl $1150/mo pool $2500 Agt 642·2134 Incl P*k rent 472-4455 •Sony, no peta CM-tl-.~ ... ----..,..,11~24:-:-Cllmf n.-Waterlront HOfMil. Inc VIiia R41ntalt BIO 3b 2,~ba frpl ,.., C.rr .... 1Mr• 11a 12tt mftS Y•. ---... -•Fumlahlnga Sll•il .. L'.-·.... 1•1-1• 875-4912 r . • " • On8alboaPenlnau1•$.495 B f----'~ ......,. -H GatfOfHelitlng&Cooking
-
_,. __ ··-•-_,. ll.lll-MT a_,.... -• _ _ quiet toe:. walk to bch and No .-.1 67s.eeoe 1 r, .,,._., ·ca • .,..." $875/mo 28R 18A w/d P..O ~" • 2200 tq hon tingle i.v.1. ta•L.--I , __ -;-21M Sprewtlng 4bf hM !tide Lido VIiiao-I 1400 .,.ar mo ..,... no pet• SS SC&-8791 ~ • • BROKERS WELCOME 48r 21128• Famlly ._ 1.... ,...,, "•r f/wt lnelda den round 964-6922 Wlf ••-••pa• hkue>, 1ncd yda_. ~ loc ~ loaded wlupgr adu. hbotl'IOOd u 2 ia1anes ..-" 7v _. -•.nt• .. * 1eooPomon• WITllTUU.
• • lheM dramatic 2 atory ::, ... HUn~.m=U1lt ~ ~:rag:' equlpt ~9~~19~0~;1•1 .. extru lllOAIYllClllll S~eps~~::'O:: 2Br 1'~88 twnha Nice TSLMGMT '42·1803 IU-l1ll
l'IOmel 8'ar~ 81 S15&.900 landac1ptng. Pool·llt• tcltdl $850 at 539-8191 l.fg 3 bdrm, 2'.4 ba, w/pool g ' &-99045 Of Elaide toe Pool. gar. lfST 111J
----Only 7 lettl Agt 548-1329 yard Newporl SchOOI Agt fee ~TOP LOOKING apa, tennla and aec gate S47351:'a,_~ lndry rm, new crpt. Eat1Mde 2BR t8A Ir IUWIU lflll .1 ••( OWNER/WESTSIDE dlttrict Calllo ... U20t -HOO' 2-atory 2bath Htgfl <*11ngt Mytlghta <21 ) $725/mo ,gar. g ,....,.. PlwaA 2Br 2BahouM 1128500 Cl'luci!JOMl831-;2860t lalMa spacious enough lctda fOfmaldlnrm'&wett>et'. OCEANFRONTrefut'b2Br · 23108antaMa ~atd 1~/pa~~So~~tttlup 15555 Hun1N'lgton = ••ll ... Many upgradM Mu at 84&-5743 Ptai.a1al1 2107 l•M quiet ., .. cell s 1895/mo. Patrick/Sue · 288. Reduced to St 100 TSL MGMT 842· 1803 re;S4~ Ora11ge Ave ~· from ~~ 8eec:tl
.. ,..... ... Mel 64&-8173 SBdrm Winter 11% biOdC to •IJM111* aot 931.12eeneo-a102 mowlnter.S1~'!!Yrly TSL MGMT 842•11!03 .~~?~ weet on Contetnp<>f'~ ba,..ront. _ -· 1 00 Or 3 bedroom 2 ~th tplll --0 ES 8d Agem 752·~v ---Tl 91¥1.. _ --r·· Ooc:tl f« 55 yactlt Un-I.qua liptl l the beach. 11 /mo. level gourmet kitchen DOVER SH R , ' rm --lfiiilT YILUll Mcfadden
eomprom1a1ng Qu•lll'f --VIII• Renlala 875-4912 children otc S77 5 2'~b• caui.1 a1ree1, kid• Ct • I... 2122 S100 lft .... a. ..... cos TA ME s A . s Im 2'44
tl\rMl'lout 38R, 38~ fll9' ~ ~~ Great UndO Street lo-539·6191 Agt lee ~~~~=~mo rtU t pl~~e;:;:.uon room. PREMIER LUXURV H ·:x co;;a Pllt tlo
2FP, ~r .. t View 84Jy ~=-2~. Condo 3 yrs Doll« Stir• 58r •Ba. 4k cation. Small 2Bdrm 188 Dua P•i•t 21 mn Tl .... I 2 Bdrm ..... l&S0-165 COMPLEX ~ ju llg~ted .:rn. the~. trs>iC $1281< '*1371M a/I BttBayw&cltyllte&. upslalra. Best fOf 1 per· lft.llWPTllTS2W Furn 1b0. den, PLUS ALAMOANAAPTS PRESTIGE LOCATION ell '1700 980..3521 NO 144-Hll 5SM284 BY Owner $4S5K/or IM opt '3K/mo ~· $750/mo VIII• Ren-OUtet, apllcioua. 1b0, 1ba Adulta, no-pelt. 517'h vMIWtl $1200. 673-5595 Completely remodeled 5 8LOCl<S TO SC PLAZA PETS! -~~~~~~~~ (213) 496--4379 tale 675-4~2 condo. tu , pool. sauna S Bolaa.1875 87~7353 2 Bd patio carport 2 Like brand new Ck>M 10 = 1--rt ltack l IP W1TI min wlk to Doheny Beactl rm. · • tk' bu ... st10ps a bUC:t1 •CloM lo OC Airport BEACH TRIPLEl'< ::C HARBOR VIEW HOMES Fii-240·7457 aft 5. f /lllff-lllT Y1IWt blocks lo beach, wa to TSL MGMT •7 Mlnut• to Beech a.., ... a..c~ 2i4i
OCEXN FRONTt Sun
decka, lrplcs 2br S1300
1 Br $1200, Bacl'I S800
Studio 1550 839·5189
2 bOrm. 2 batfl I 2 1111,HIT-. VMH Lwal priced Mon1ago, PllPlln _.,, 770-t221 exl 234, 8~5 Front row a pa.clout ~~·Sa~~ rn~3~~AIL 642-1803 Of 722-9012 •Nigl'll l.J91'11ed Sand
bachelor untie. Super Litt• new dealgner 2 bdrm, 4bf 2b•. vacant, GO toe, Tl'le<e'a a be11er way! Call I t I L.-2142 townhome':l 3br 21),ba, Volleyball & Tenni. Crta
yMrty I~. •llP• lo t'h Bath townhome In S269.500ag1840·1529 VlllaRenlala675-49t2 ••· ar-ar lrpl,feln<leya&patto.dbl *IOEllYllW* 1ta••1E•~ •POOl.JICUZZJ,880
Newport oceanfronl, Newpor1He!Oht•witt12et 2 matr bdrma, 1rt:te\11i. t2QPO 'mo. &.12 IM -•CovetedPart<lno
walk 10 1hop1 A•· gerao-. private yard wfth IWPT ICl ltl... CtrHI ••I Jlar 2122 2200 sll. FR, w/d hups, ~11 at~ 760-0808 ' 2:~;.~.' lr1!•· 1 f;~~~eo WE'RE THE BESTI •Cable rv Avaltable
aumable toan S235.000 custom 1pa Special elec· Cull 1 bOrm condo -ne., **§Bdrm. 2L houN. vaulled cells. akyllghta, LARGE ..,1me 3bf 2b• 'f'IY No peta. Rel• req'd FU1 :N~S~~~~~~IL •Rec Room with FlrlS)laoe
831· 1400 Ironic: lighting .t-MORE. Westcfflf Plaza Perfect Verd malnlen1nce & encl gar S 1295 846-3~ 1 ,.. ,. __ If War.a and Bllllarda
PANORAMIC OCEAN
VIEW 8tienelor with bath
& kitchen Incl utll.
~""° 4ff.2185 BALBOA ISLAND Auume loan, LOW tor young couple o-tt1no waler pd Nr shopping I upper duplex unu. '.+ blk -• •Free Vllllpe• •Saunae
Charming Engtlth 3 bdrm DOWN OK. A value at 11aned Why P•Y rent? $1450,mo. 640_5324 · I ff 144 lo bch, lrpl, ~m :11:t 111-2242 •Spatloua tllllng • 10 Acr• of Magnlfioenl
Enolllh couao-•llPI to I 129 900 For detallt cafl F l 28R 28A 2 car Ille, balcony w am v *Huge kltel'len Ground•
NOf1h Bayfront Income PATRICK TENORE 3BR 18A front houM. '.+ ~r-::-Mt Int.; lrpl of CX*ln 11350/mo yfly •811-ln oven• & rangn 1~11 leac~ 2111
14m'. WID Steps to
Mndl Yearly S550/mo ~
HC Avl 12/1 Oya
951·1000 Eves 831-8318
unll wflh 2 bdrma plua 631·12M « 780-8702 Traditional car garao-. 602 Beoonla. ¥130<>1~0 Call etiriaune ev/k~1cn~-~~a36~d'f9 •P•tlo•
Obie garao-. $410.000. Re It DIANA CAPPEL, Agl 640_..950 °' 96-i.1522 •• or y. • !~~gcf.:o" 113R FURN/UNFURN
sgeo.sa90
873·6900 8 Y 831•12~ L It L 41 llWPllT lllllTS •Ptush 1anoacap1ng
631-7370 •11• UYHHT ·1·u IC• charming Sbf 2b• l\04'M, •Xlnl location acroH
-
I.\ \ll HI Ht"1
110'11 ... "" FU: Al E.5T ATE.
JR 1BR FURNISHED
S585
LEASE 12250/mo 28 OEN. 21Xb1. c:uslom, den, beam cemno. frple, 18drm 18a, lndry, from park Crnr "'--"'t F-.. & Bak• * 1•• .... -----' A"-t 722 •"88 lrpl, "•r. pat. deck•. fab country kite. S1500/mo elrlg. ':"r,· carport. All •Sor~. no.-., ···-.,... -, S ·-· ~ " 1 utll• Incl 1100/mo 423 ,,.. IS""", No """ltll Frig, dltl'lwul'ler, atove Acrtttl 112 C • 21 4 ocean/canyon v ew. Avl 11128. Wayne, Agt, ., . 3 5W WILSON v .. , .,... Incl Nope11~855 * .... •IPIUnr "6 l~EL acrea 111.800 nta Ill apac 11400 497-3644 846-8816« 548·2137 Begonia 846·2111 142-1111 (714)557-007S •2••11•• .. nnas e:~~f:.~ ;:;,, ::::: N ~ San Bernardino .3a; 2•,i,ea cooao. End La[HI ...... lill. u •••• ,.rt...,... 18d~,:H~8~0~~: to ---Spac:lou• EU1alde apt1& Frig, dlthwul'ler. llOve
OAEAMHOMESF«Sale MC. 1209,000 759-~ County 1275 down. unll. 2 cas gar. 1ru= oc'lANVtEW26drm 2ba 2Br + den 28• 1>4t1Ch & Fashion lllancl 2Bdrma $585 & Up Sec 1nc1 Nopett S4!-485S
BESTPRICEANOTERMS '2751~·<819>948"1739 ~~r~i rni.1Mo lrpl. S1000/mo, 1 yr IN'. 11225/mo Ag1722-97l0 900Sealane 6«-2811 mie8ti8Jlll d1PS500 Nopeta 2020 ---
831..007 YIEW1 V1fWl APPLE VALLEY 10 acrea llral & luf. Mr. Fuenl• OCEAN ~ONT DUPLEX Fullerton. 831-8427 ·~f AIU•
Roa Meyera-Buyer's ettr Lovety home on bkllf aide "'$17 ,500. 1300 down, 38R 1BA fenced yard, (714) 833--0070 HIJ99 llv rm & frptc. w/frlg 38drm. 281• I l300/mo &Plltmm Sharp l CHlan ledrm. tBr. 188 fuH kit, eheefful
MV9f .. Alpl'la Corp Rllra King• Place. HIJ99 lot. S30<r per month (6 l91 roNS/frult tr .... ~nyon I t hack l&t tum unlurn winter rental Avail 1211/88 Arnie BeautlM. c ... n larO-Gar· crpll. drps, Clahwahf. din,. .,. .. Utlla pd $800 fM
s.rvmgallolOrangeCly By Ow1* 845,...092 948-t739 view. med peta ate · lt!JI' .upp9,.48d, 028• 11500 640-9019 den Apia BeeuUlully w.... ar ... ,..,. No pet• TELEIEIT Ill-....
---$900/mo avall Dec 12th 2~11w, W. Npt, 1 ·L-·3n ... , 2B• $1250 I d aped ground a ""' " 7 C II F d .. , o -..-$785 "-"· ..., IPEOt•,.•ua-•• I an tc saoo1mo 645-55 7 *'--.ID• a r• " e. ay hM to b<:h. perking, 506 E e>e.an Front _., _.._ Poot & spa, patloa/deekt -• --.._ ..u.
Only one block to quiet China Cove, bay &
beaches. Decorated In soft colors. wood
burning fireplace, dramatic 2-story entry. 2
BR, 2 Bath, patio & deck. Only $239,500. 311
Dahlia Pl., Open Sunday PM.
HAVE A HAPPY AND
FULFILLING THANKSQIVINQ
774·7260 Eve 548·5242 mo. yrly. UtH pd, ref'• Owner Call M·F 476-3101 IAJ VlfWS Sorry. no peta. SHARP & CLE.AN 28drm, '2Bdrm, lrptc, patio
2 car gar. 642-7003or1142-6941 Pr'--.. rtte 2bdrm 2ba C C 1 Bedroom $M0 11ae q>ta, drpe, $1295 Adull• 840·1008 _ ......, Sleps toocean ul• OZ'/ 2 Bdrm 1,4 Bath 1145 encl garao-. no peta ---W/alde c M 11000/mo. 2 bOrm, 1 balh newty r• gourmet l(llCh CIOM to 81chelot1 & 1Bdrm 181 E 18th St 642.0858 $870/mo 645-5577 •YEAALV OCEAN VIEW Call Shef'r.. 87~2282 mOdeled wllh new carpet. ocean I 6 5 0 h u r r Y localed In unique apt _ _ 28r 1 Ba duplex Wash· between&~• Mon-Fri p11nt&kllchen 2cargar· 539-6191 Agl f• . complex w/oharmtng at· -------EASTSIOE SHARP & er/Oryet StOOO No pelt
3 BR ~A c«idO!n CM 99e Available Imm.CS 38R OBA. 2 cara. new moapMfe Lndry rm, lg ~~ ..... ,. = CLEAN 2Bt. 'W/d hQOllup Call 844-8760 A"Y'lmel
... i.... S 1200/rno Rae R--• ., aundeelc prvt a•t•"• 1 .....,room '11'N'V" 1 cat encl gatage. NO -2 car gar, nlee .,.._,.t · ...,,_. decor 811( to beh 11325 avallab"•.' . ., RAR FlN"Ot 131 E 181h St 84&-M18 ,...18 S700/mo 548-9950 Ill••-•••-Inter, S1000/mo Call 831-1288 3BR 28A. lg deOk. bay ... ,. ..-_, ~•
Christine 840·•950 or 111ew vrly 11225 $5S0.177Sl mo No pela Bae~------,580 S all l .. • _. Enl<>Y the tuxuryot thlt ••·
904· 1522 OTHERS AVAIL.ABLE 675.04'7 1 Bedroom 1635 • _,,.. cluawe OWfd gal.CS com.-
UOl IAJ IMll CAHiii lllTAL LARGE 3b0rm. 2 bath, 2 Bdrm 1"• Bath S780 It ,.ti. 112-2120 :i"'Zn!:n~,=~~:
ltpl pool '. ~... d. ck ' 0 Id c d M . 22SO Vanguatd 540-9&26 Eatl•lde Cottage 38t 188, wet bet AIC, W/0 flkupa 3~2~~·a1ro0:k.955_5 2 .. -:-. 1 .... , d•-""""x,-bll(--10 11••01erlll .. 11• S1 3501mo. 159-1353 -------WIO hio.up, ~port, fncd 2 cat 08'-0-S1305 "' ... _.... .-• weellende & evenings. 2 Bdrm 2 Balh 1780 yard Perfect for amell 8 peia 844.o50I
BEAUTIFULLY deCOrated beh, pat, gar. refrlg, Ofw, • '" .... -m 398 w Wttaon 831·5583 tlmlly No peta 1715/mo _or_ry.;...._no~-----
twnflm 2 matr tu•les Htremely clean yrty, n; CMll •111 2'24 ENl-'""" 2Br 18•-u-1~1. Avall 1211 722-8294. EASTBLUFF TownhOUM ' ' 1895 5-48-4239 GA TEO VILLAGE COM· ........ ..~ -.... , 38r 28&. 2 cw ,.., 2"~ba, Qar. pOOI. apa, up· MUNIT't' 2-3Bdrm, 2'~Ba. Lar"'"' 2B<irm 1Ba )$1 <:'-". upgraded. lndry , ....., r "rao.t.11150 646-0353 ••••-•• ,,... 1 .... no ..... , ..... 51 w11en10o11-t0fa1UU-tune Nopela.$1025/mo'f'IM • - -- . -· 1600· t800 eq. ,, 01 a-•-ony o ...... looklsiJ......... ... ...... ..... .... It•• 1010 ..... 7037 ........ .._ """'° "6"0 1.t ...... , .. M""I ... 1o«> 111a1o. .. prec11Ct111yno ..... °' ,_. BLUFFS lQ NEW TwnhMI Cuetom home on lalt'wayl PURE LUXURV Gar""'"', ar.. No ,...., + , • v " ,.., -. "" " "tt c.ft ,.. ..,....,.. • 3 -..-~· F-R'"'"'I ..... ,...52 H~'"'"IW°~ t'le olMtol'" ,.. ., .,.,m -,,..,.,,... 281 2'~• gar, yard, •·•tory, 38' SS. • car SPA 111 muter aull• $800 MCUflty &.4&-3818 ........ _...., ..
11100. ·Open Sat a Sun gar Avail Jan. 13500 IN Olntno room, wOOd burn· ST8 OE 2e('T.= t I I -~.;...;... ...., I t •---L: -··
2230 Paci~ ~ ~· 722-8988/~Ne I""' fjfepleee, mtctow•WI 2BR $600 StO'ie. refrlg. EA I ups • ra. ==..,.==':'=-=== ... =;.;""'=:;:;-;:;:·;:;: ... mi ~-:en. private pallot pOOl, lavndry lacil GOOd garage , no p•tt
ELEGANT LIVING only loeation Sofry, no pet•. H25/mo 28$ 18th
t5 mlrnlt•• to Fuhion •23 w Bar 7jJ().IOf3 Pt~ 642 •134 h
Island. 15 mlnul .. to so 1Br 1B•. •••tlef/dryer FIAEPLACE·POOL·PATIO Mak th Move tot
• Co Ptua, jUlt eht. ol hOOlc up, ga<age 303e Easl11de X·IO 1 & 2Br w/tg p k
Newport 81\ld & '°"tr; Of 1Coolldge. N'o s>eta dining rm ~ peta From eW &r wnnrt
San Otego lrMW•Y 2473 Se751mo 432·1187 SSIO/mo 55'·2141 r-
Or•noe Ave 831·5439 °0 tO TH FREE RE T"
By appt only -C.U ..... MIU tilt llDtrt mt9t .. Pm ~
lu Clt.ntt 21H lil!iliiiill~llili cwptrt Bead'• prtaltr au1ry """'-
.,. ..... Vliet.. Ui111M4 U4 ..renitW 1, I, A J CONOO. oc..n ~ ,t.111 1211 SHOO 951·2052 11ie4,... _,.,._ta _. .......... ..ty
Sell Y .. Pr .. lftrl Sia Jua ••• ,,.. ~ C"en • ,..._ ?!•tr•• 1111 WaM .......... t$ ........ C•·ClentW, .. n:p;;;;,.._. ........ au;;; Ht. fa JalDMrtt at .-.. Kua a...
ba, comoi.tety redOnel £.. 7M ~ 900 . 641· 5611 saoo. n peta. 3'375 via ( ) I ....
for· lnformatloA ~~c::MO' -.u ===~•PARK .. I I I a111 .,.., ... , • .., ... ,. ... & surpr s ng y l1111ury ,. H. conao ...... ., 111 NEWPORT
I Ost ]Al~C.~W/~O.~pOOl~,Jt«Wt!!!,~~;;;•;n~~~~:IJ~~~~ OW C • aauna St2S/mo • Ta •W• ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=--L!!lll!~::::===~~=#===:::!!!!!!!!!!!. 631..040SEY .. 7i1-76 -----
...
Heng up th• •tocking• Put up the trM
Look In ctHllfted
for rour hotldey
nMd1.
.. • t
penln1• Now Available
CAR ROUTES
E•rn ~•Ir• C••h
E« Dellv•a Of Thi• P•P!l_r
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
INDEPENDENT
Deliver 1 day a week.
collect ng. no solic ting .
Must have dependable car.
truck or station wagon and
insurance
CAl:l: 842-1444 -
IN U.S.A.
AM> flYllli HMO£•
'TO• =l ::=.
• 'Mrfl
• LIAalNQ
l AA.CESl l{JI
flf wtSJ' T
ODY lllCIDll & cekGI
CA'' l•AY
. .
,, 8-l 2 200( --...
-Mo.q .........
S...AMAllllW
VW 'IO AAHfT, M IOnl
miec:ft corMt • Ill( "" • new ltrea. 11100
6"12.(MO « 6"15-3631
BUICK
DEALER
..
- -------
Lessens worth
·. rerri~.nibering-,
giving t~anks for.
aDl'l'Oll'S NOTE: Al W• tlme every year 1a America,
•• ,., dlllflrell m•• •P •• llHIWI• u4 Pl'6rlm•,
,._,., dJlie • tarkey aa4 lrlmmhl11, ad we all 6lve ..... . ' . .
., Amid the modem traditions of tel~vised footbaU
pmesand Mr. Macy's parade, the origins of the fall feast
·arc f~otten by some. We thougbt·some o(the lessons
our.forefathers learned in endurance and ~rseverance
were worth sharing on the eve Qf Thanksgiving .
. William Bradford was the historian among a small aroue of settlers who arrived at Plymouth aboard the
Mayflower in December 1620. Bradford, who would
later be governor of the colony, tells us in writings .. Of
Plymouth Plantatjon" about hunger and heartbreak,
death and disease.
But Bradford also tells us about faith , hard worlt
and. finally, triumph.
. The story is ours -all of us. The words are his:
In these hard and difficult beginnings they found
some discontents and murmurings arise among some,
and ntutinous speeches and carriages in other. but they
were soon queJICd and overcome by the wisdom,
patience and just and equal carriage of thin$$ by the
governor .(John Carver) and better part, wh1eh clave
faithfully together in the main
But that which was most sad and lamentable was
that in two or three months' time half of their company
died, especially in January and February, being the
depth of winter, and wanting houses and other comforts;
being infected with the scurvy and other diseases which
this Ieng voyage and their inaccommodate condition
had brought upon them. So as there died sometimes two
or three of a day. in the aforesaid lime;-tb:at of one
hundred and odd persons, scarce fifty remained.
And of these in the time of most distress, there were
but six or seven sound persons who to their great
commendations, be it spoken, spared no pains night or
day, but witb abundance of toil and hazard of their own
health fetched them wood, made t)lem fires, dressed
them ·meat, made their beds, washed their loathsome
clothes, clothed and unclothed them. In a word, did all
the homely and necessary offices for them which dainty
and queasy stomachs cannot endure to hear named; and
all this willingly and cheerfully, without any grudging in
the least, showing herein their true love unto their
friends and brethem; a rare example and worthy to be
remembered. ·
~ - -
{And they came to know an Indian who had been to
England and could speak their language.)
... Squanto continued with them and was their
interpreter and was a special instrument sent of God for
their good beyond their expectation. He directed them
how to set their com, where to take fish, and ~o procure
other commoditie~, and was also their pilot to bring
them to unknown places for their profit, and never left
them till he died ...
They began now to gather in the small harvest they
-bad, and to fit up their houses and dwellings against
winter being all recovered in health and strength and
had all things in ~ood plenty. For as some were thus
employed in affairs abroad, others were exercised in
fishing, about cod and bass and other fish, of which
every family had their portion.
All the summer there was no want; and now began
to come in store of fowl, as winter approached, of which
this place did abound when they came first (but
afterward decreased by degrees). And besides waterfowl
there was v.eat store of wild turkeys, of which they took
many, besides venison, etc.
Besides they had about a peck of meal a week to a
person, or now since harvest, Indian corn to that
proportion. Which made many afterward write so
l~ely of their plenty here to their friends in England,
which were-not.ieigned but true reports.
Op1n1ons exprcs5ed in this si>aeCarc those of the Daily Pilot. Other views
expressed on this pase are those of their authon and anists. Reader comment
is Invited. The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92626. Phone
642.-6086.
Tate steps to protect your ~at
To the Editor:
I can't foraet the letter you publish-
ed &om a man whose mean-minded aeilhbot "disposed or· the man's
liufe aitl's cat, and wrote the man an
anonymous letter about the deed.
If you don;t like what a cat does in .,.1y du& son din in your yard. just
tc:attcr a few mothballs; don•t harm
lbe innocent an1m . . And if you want to be kind, on cofd
morninp tap the radiator of the car ..... ecaruna the O_ll Kittens cnwl into the engine to get warm.
n1wnd1 are chopped lO death or llorribly multilated every year
C.u can leam to be happy indoor
ORANGE COAST
Pillt
,
pets. They avoid diseases better, and
run no risk of being run over or
mistreated by sick-mmded people.
Play ball with them each day for
their exercise, or act them a post to
climb and a place to sit and look out
the window.
Also. spaying is important.
Thousands of catnrc killed-cacJfyear-
bccausc of population. If you have
kittens to aive away, ask to sec
drivers' licenses before aivin• away
the cats. People do terrible th1np to
them sometimes. iell the people
you're going to come and sec the cat.
LEE ADAMS
Newport Beach
T.,.T_. .,...,.....,
City Editor .... ~ ,.._.EdltOf
Cf81t .... "*1• Editor
....... c.... ~~Dnc1or
Editor , ....... ,.«..-.
~Ion°""'°' ...._. .... .,,
Act-IWtlllnt Dnc10f
c~~
~ I
''One or the times I aay. 'Ttlank God' Is when other people admit the,y
can't use the metric ayatem either.··
0111 New• i\me(lca Sv~ta, 1•
Tha~kfulfo1r.faith, family,
friends, working firepla~e
Thanksgiving is here again. Every I'm glad we have direct dialinJ.
year I makean effort to think of all the toothpaste in a pump. and electnc things I am th!IfuJ for. The hst is blankets. Perfume, puppies, and j>an-
w . OOt-1-would-kel-sics give me a lift. Measuring c~.
guilty ifl didn't g through this ritual. drip-dry clothes, and thermosta")S
I remind myself I'm thankful for simplify my life. •
my good health. for my family and My husband is thankful fo r electric
friends -no.ne of wnom ·arc 1lungry razo~aroware storer,ll1'i(tlnstinT
or homeless. and for being an Amen-replays. •••••••il••lil• can. I'm thankful for our supermarkets.
A few days a~o. I became aware of If our shopping list includes liglft
how often while talking I use the bulbs, lipstick and lamb chops, we I'm thankful we get interest on our
phrases ... thank Heaven ... thank can buy them all in the same store. We chak1 accounts. for puncture-
God. . . thank Goodness. . . and I can buy exotic foods such as kiwis and pr ti , and seedJess grapes.
began to pay more attention to what I caviar in the same store we buy insect I' th nlcful for disposables-and
was saying. What was I thankin8 spray. fot a regular trash pick-up that
them for? We can buy lottery tickets any dis~ses of my disposables.
The phrases ar~ aP,propriatc. Nu-place, anY.time. , I m gra.teful I have good neighbors,
merous g~ thtngs surround me I often say. "Thank goodness" an elcctnc can opener, and a tele-
constantly that I never included in when· I -open the door and find the phone credit card.
my official Thanks&iving list. newspaper right in front of it instead I'm so thankful for my word
I'm thankful our fireplace draws ofin the rose busbcs. · processor and copier, I feel as thoua.h
properly - once we li ved in a house I'm thankful the efettion is over. -1 should genuflect every time I walk
where the fireplace belched srnolte I'm thankful the-World Scries-i,-by~bem. ·
back at us. -over. I'm crazy about the game, but I One of the times I say, "Thank
I'm thankful for" long telephone don't think I could stand to hear God" 1s when other people admit
cord s, instant coffee and sunblock. another horrible rendition o( the they can't use the metnc system
I'm 1hankful for garbage disposals, national anthem. either.
ball point pens and remote TV I appreciate flipptng a switch and I'm thankful my husband is going
controls. Krazy Glue, paper towels getting ligh~ music, h01 air and cold. to cook the turkey tomorrow.
andmymagnifyingmirrorallhelpme Name it, ir it has moving parts, a ColomJJJ11 Aao Wel/1 1Jve1 I•
cope daHr. -switch will stan it. Lapin Nlpel.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~
Paying ransom for bostages
will only get them kille
WASHINGTON -The frus-The same well-meaning voups
tration and ultimate futility of trying were providing (as they do to this day)
to ransom American hostages with tens of thousands of dollars to keep
arms or money were tragically dem-ntJOliations alive through Anglican
onstratcd last sprin" a few days after mtnister Terry Waite. As a special
the American b0mb1ng raid on Libya. adviser to the archbishop of
A gentle, pro-Arab librarian at the Canterbury, Waite seemed to be close
American UniverositY, in Beirut ~as last Christmastime to getting several
murde.~d when his kidnapec:~. tared of the hostages ouL (He also visited
of wa1ttng fo~ the. $3 m1lhor:' the the United States at least twioc durinr. R~gan ad!11m1strat1on was ~optng to that period, and met with Lt. Co . ~1se for his release, sold him to tb&-Olive~ North, the National Security
Libyans. who wanted revenge for the Council official wbo as it turned out
U.S. air r~id. was overseeing the annshostages
Peter JGlbul"f!, 60, was abducted on negotfations with Iran at the time.)
Dec: 3, I 984. Hi s body was found last Waite•s negotiations for JGlburn
Apnl 17, three da)'.S after the U.S. broke down several times -and
bombina raid .on Libya. Here's what ended abruptly and finally when the
happened dunng ~e 161/2 months of United States bombed Libya last
pnvate hel! that Kilburn endure~: April 14. Kilburn's kidnappers were
An erudite, generous man, satd to a~_Qy sorely frustrated at their
ave nad tfle ~st ~ollccfi~n ofVerfil tn~bmty to sell their hostage for the $3
opera records tn Beirut, Kilburn often million they had demanded.
paid for the education of needy The Libyans had afready offered
students and bought books for them them $1 million for the unfortunate
and the American University library Kilburn two days before the U.S. raid.
out .of hi~ own pocket. He had spent The kidnappers quickly closed the
20 yeawtn Lebanon and had suffered deal and sold their capuve to Libyan
a stroke that left him walking with a aacnts. On April 17 Kilbum's body
cane. "I don't think he could have was found on the roadside near Beirut
harmed a fly," said a onetime assiJo-along with the bodies of two British
tant. . . . hostages. who had also been shot in
Despite has recor~ of kmdncs reprisal for Britain's cooperation in toward the poor and. his sympathy ~or the American raid on Libya.
the A tabs-or possibly becau5e of it? Accordana to our antelliaence
-Kilburn was lodnappcd by a png sources, the Bnt1sh hosiaaes -and
of extonionists, a son of Lebanese prnumably Kdbum -were shot by a
mob. They contacted the U.S. JOV· Libyan army officu, identified only
crnment and demanded $3 million as a M~or Khalifa who had come
for the return of this harmless, sickly from Tnpoh to do the job.
hosiaac. Kilburn, itnerous, warmhearted
Last Dec 27. we reported that fnend of Arabs, was one victim of a
l<Jlbum "was bci"I held by a d1f-traa1c !Utuation that has meek every
ferent aroup than the (pro-Iranian) American in the MiddJt East a
captors of-the other Amencan potential t.arttt for abductton and
hOStafCS." We wtthhckS details while murder by pro-Iranian terroris\J-Or
neaot1ations for K.ilburn's relca5e mercenary thup who hide out in the
continued. Bek.i& Valley of Ubanon under the
Several Ji01e1 wtthin the ncllt few protection or Syria. wetkstheWh11eHowe~dose. 81ll:80ARD ALERT: Com-
to spnftllftl Kilburn from caplivny. munnies across the nauon fece a
fhe National Sec:unty Council pvc cklu,r of aDDhcations for billboard fe!i~us c:on11ckrlt~on to-the ida of ~Its be(ott Con,rns rcconvtna
ra11ar'a .evml m1lhon d01l1r1 ~· 1n January and Wes up rcv11ions of va~ly from Amttkan human1tanan the Hilhway Beautification Act.
and church aroups to meet the .. The billbottd industry is aoina all kidna~· ransom dtmands for: out \o ~ thousands of new
Kilburn and other hos~. billbOards before Co~s takn. up
l
J1c1
AIDEISOI
and JOSf PH SPl AR
the billboard issue again," warned
James McMahon, executive director
of the Coalition for Scenic Beauty.
"Cities need to act now or they arc
going to be inundated by new, giant
billboards.'' Fear of stricter controls is
inspiring the industry's action; they
want to get their billboards up in case
Congress passes tough restrictions.
MONEY MEN: Bankers may not
all fit th~cartoonists' standard depic-
tion of bloated, ciaar-smoking fa teats
wearing silk hats and diamond stick-
pins. but they have a pay advantqe
over those in other financial JObt,
according to a study by Robert Half
International, a big recruiting firm.
Staning 51laries in the major banks
rose an avera.ae of S.8 percent last
year, compared to salancs for-non·
bank financial jobs, which rose only
3.1 percent. Perhaps the mo t surpris.-
1na thina was the salary increa5e for
senior loan officers. whose credit
decisions have led to record losses in
the industry. They went ~P ~ S.8
percent to a ranae of $36,000 to 5'5,000 ..
MINl·EDITORIAL: Good &riefl '
The Pentaaon has now discovered a
new and:fnghtcning area where our
m1ht1ry is hopelessly traJlin' the
Soviets. Behold the Acronym Oap. It
5eems that the armed servtces chanat
acronymic dellpauons rttularty to
confuse enemy aaents {not to men-
tion the rest of the world). But our
alphabet, with it1 measly 26 letters,
can produce only 4S6,976 four·ltttcr
combinations. whale the Russians,
whose all)habtt hat 48 letters, can huuna~ an a bcmomlels rnerve of
four-letter 1CrOnym1: S.308.4 I 6.t to be
Ulct, One IOlutiOft •• lM Ute 01 Iona,
specially crated words. or t>amepb •
We're benina on the Ptnt119n.
Jd .Uill,...-',,.. l'M Aa. .,..,...,,.,.,.b ....
I •
----------------------~----------
PETE
l>ExTER
Case
:needs
closer
look
SACRA MINTO l:acl
Kleinschmidt is out of place.
He is sittinJ in the spectator IC(tion
of the appeals court for the Superior
Coun, chewing his finaers and listen·
ing to a lawyer from the attorney
general's office araue that he should not be allowed to return to duty with
the state police.
The -lawyer from the attorney
general's office says that Kleinschmidt misused his authority.
to stare at state employees. That he
openly stared at their breasts and
their crotches, sometimes for IS
minutes, uninterrupted, while they
conducted auided tours through the
Capitol Building.
He says that wb,jle Kleinschmidt
was never charged with sexual bar·
rassment, the women who had com-
plained felt bis staring was sexual in
nature, not to mention bothersome
and intimidatina. "At the very least,"
he says. "it was extremely bizarre."
He says that we have finally ()()me
to realize that the crime of rape is not
sexu.al in nature. but an expression of
anacr toward women; and that
K.lein.scbmidt's staring should be
considered in that light.
There were ... as far asJ c:anmake out,
seven complaints aaain st
Kleinschmidt for staring. one com-
plaint for sittina down m the state
cafeteria and telling a state employee
an awful story about a mess he'd just
cleaned up in the ladies' room, and
one complaint for puttina his arm
around a state employee as she
walked out of the building. This last is
called seJtual harrassment, and he was
disciplined for it -one day off
without pay -back in early 1984. It
1s used now by the lawyer from the
attorney pneral.'s office as an ara~
ment apanst re.instatement.
Lael KJeinschmidt bites his finaers
and stares across the courtroom. He is
wearinia bn&ht blue suit with a dark blue shin and a briaht de. His hair is
slicked straight bac\, and there is no
question that having the man..1tare at
your breasts and crotch for IS straight
minutes would make you uncom·
fortable. There is also very little
question that he did some of that.
The question~ however, is not
whether the stanng occurred, but if
that is an appropriate reason to fire a
cop with l 21h years on the job.
General Services fired him for that,
presumably on the recommendation
·of his superiors. One of those same
superiors was disciplined this year
with five days off without pay for
paying his secretary for hours she did
not work over an extended period of
months.
An off-duty member of the state
police, who showed up at the appeals
hearing in support of Kleinschmidt,
said, "They got him for pwking. All
riaht, they fire him. They aot (the
other cop)'for stealina from the state, and hegetsfivedaysoff. He isn't even
demoted.
"He (Kleinschmidt) takes the di~
missal to coun. and the Superior
Cou.n sends it back to the state and tells them to rcoonsidcr. By then, he's
already been off two Y.eat'S. There's a
auy who pulled a gun in the locker
room and pointed it at another
officer's head, they dismissed him,
but he aot back on a year later.
"But the state won't take
Kletnsehmidt back. put him some-
where away from tour auides. They
appeal the rulina, it'IJ be six weeks
before these guys (the appellate court)
make their ruling. and then it'll ao
somewhereclse. Thestate'saotplenty
of mon~ K.leinschm!dt's pay1na his
own way. And meantime, look what
it's doina to his family."
. K.leinschmidt's family -his wife
and three children -sit in the 1e1ts
next to him, hstenina to accounts of
their father's behavior. The two
younaest -13 and 11 -don't seem
to follow it all. His wife sits dead still,
lo0lcina spent.
After Kleinschmidt was fired, he
took a job as 1 substitute school but
dnvcr for $700 a month. He drives
tour bu5es now, and earns about half'
as much as he made with the state
police. He has recently filed for
bankruptcy, but he has been told 1t 1s
too late to uve his houte, which il
scheduled for rePote11in in three
wecb.
The llwycr--from the attorney
aencrtrs office 11 makina bis rebuttal
nov. B~asts, crotchei, behavior·un-
becomina an officer ... At the very
least:• he says. "extremely bit.are
behavior."
The youneest child heir1 the word
and chante1 placn with the oldest.
takina the IQt next to her mother,
and looks up with questions she does
not c..-en know how to alt.
The man does not daene tJril.
I •vcr uw him arina at tour JU des. but n couldn't be wonh the
JOOk 1.-lft that kid's faCe. ,..,. _,..., ,, . .,,,,.....,
tMiMlil: . -...
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