HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-01-01 - Orange Coast Pilot'
FRIDAY, JANUARY l, 1988 25 CE TS
·uspec~ in H;B Diu_.der arr~sted
f.lunttn on man maintains innocence
in kllltng of Orange Coast College coed
26. ··r just know I don't have anything
to do with ii. I've told them (the
police) the truth an l ey jusl don't
believe it. They d'on't have anytbin&
on me. If they had anythin& on me
they would have arrested me a long
time aio." Fia said.
BJ DIXIE REDFEARN ........... _ . .
Hu(ltinaion 8eac.b policfarrestcda
26-year-old man ThuncWf on suspi-
cion of mu•rin1 an Ora.nee Coast Co&Jeac student last May. but the
suspect uys he is innocent and has
~ wronaJy accused of the crime.
Ex-Newport Harbor High
standout lineman Dave
Cadigan and USC face
Michigan State In Rose
Bowl today ./81
Oklahoma, Miami to de-
cide college football na-
tional charryplonshlp/81
Coast
Coast psychol0glst says.
New Year's resolutions to
end bad habits are good
for people./ A3
ln·a telephone intetview from the
Huntini«>n Beach Ci,ly Jaji, Denny
Denver Fiq sai~ he was.shocked
when police ba,.ed into his bedroom
at his mothcr•s house in San
Bernardino County at 6:30 a.m.
Thursday and arrested him in con-
nection with tbe death of Jami Vitteli.
Viueli's body was found in tttr
blood-splattered apartrhen\ on May
28 when neighbors saw bloody foot-
prints outside the door. police said. At
the t ime of.the killing. Huntinaton
Beach Police Lt. Ed McErlain said
IUda deffrlea, pnmldeat of-tM Soatb Laaana 'Cl~c
~latlon aad llayor Dan Keaney abow off new aign
Vi nci~ was seen having iln argument
outside Perq's bar on Main Street the
night before her body was founJ;i. She
had been stabbed to death wuh a ··~ting instrument:· McErlain said.
McErlain would not speculate «h
any connectio n between Figg and
Vittcli. bowever. Figg said he had
known her for seven )cars.
"I sawherma)bee1ght months ago.
and sbc told me where she hvcd. but
she asked me not to tell anybody. She
was weird. M\ fncnd said he was
af ra1d 1n ~lccp In the same house with
.
her. The night u (the killing) sup-
posedly happened, l seen her at the
bar, but I was at the other end of the
ba.r.
..(The next day) I was at the beach
drinkjn& beer at the Grttn B~mto
and I saw a lot of undercover
detectives and heard she'd been killed
and I went b) her house and there v.as
yellow tape around 11 and CHI)·
thing. .. Fisg said.
McErlain s.ald Fiag'.s arrest was lhc
result of a six-month tn\CSt1gauon.
but he would not dasclo~ what led
police to Figg. .. 0 .ously ~c have
some 1nformauon we don't feel we
should release ... He also declined to
SB) v.hether a weapon has been
found
Figg. hov.evcr. has his own theor}
about v.h\ he was arTCStcd.
He said.he was k1ddingaround ~•th
friends.. sa) ang that someone he kncv.
had committed the kill.Log. Nov..
according 10 Fagg. police ba'c ar-
r~tcd him '° that he •ill-ldl them
\l,nat he l nov.s about 1L -e ut I don't
.. (Pleaee .ee SUSPECT I A2)
Cal trans
to Study
carpool
lane size
Mesa freeway said
to narrow to 9 feet
iri road work zone
By JONATHAN VOUKE ... ...,......._
The Orange Count) office of the
st.ale Dcpanment of Transponauon
v.111 in' es ligate aJlegauons that lanes
an a construction zone on the Cost.a
Mesa Frcewa) arc more than foot
smaller than they -a~ ~UpPE>se t~ be.
lhe fount) Caltrans director said
Thu™1a}
The f~wa) 1s lhe centerpiece of a
...,,.....,...., ... ....._.. Sl9 mtlhon prOJect to widen the
poeted ai eoath end ofnewly ~a.eel portion of La&1m& thoroughfare bctv.cen Dyer Road and
Beach, formerlJ. Soatb 1 .-.... · the Sant.a .\n.a Frtt~)-.said .K.cith. --.-McKean.' Orange Count) Ultrans
Callfomta
Appeals court refuses to lftt injunction on abortion
conaent law./ M
South Laguna annexation off~cial dartttor. \\'hile under construction,
C?oncrete bamers ha' c been set up on
the outside lane to protttt workers
from traffic. ,
McKean said the remaining four
lanes -thrtt grncraJ OCX\Jpanc) and
o~ car-pool lane --.ere restripcd to
make each I 0 fC"Ct ,.,dt. 2 feet less
tMo tbc standard I 2-foot lane. The
prOJtct is scbeduJcd for com plrtion io
I 989. but McKean said he was unsure
1fthe narrow lanes wlll remain for the
full penod
lndez
Advice and Games
aunetln Board
BullneM
Claasl~
A9
A3
A7,8
85-8
A10 Comics
Entertamment
Opinion ·
PaparazzJ
Public notices
Sports
Weather
Datebook
A6
Oatebook· a..
81 ...
A2
Psychics
·predict
a year to
r.emember
·a, LANCE IGNON ...............
r=-=-=-~~Witb anolbcL-.ncw c:ac. ~
astroloecn, seen and psythin made •
their s>redictions 'for the· next 12
month1, most of them lllfttinJ that
an unusual alipment of the planets
Will make 1981 a year to remember.
Los Aneeies will sWfu ID 8.0
earthquake. Political scandal will find
•. promincaa <>ranee Courity polj-
tlCIQ.
VOlm will approve a local tlow-
arowdt iDiciaaive and &be c:ouaty win act &be W8J IO IUicW clma ....
laWL R.r-et ¥9iue1 Win CODciaue to
.... ill Onullt CouatJ, ••• rWb ia
Su Oemeftte. ~ -may lake a dive in C>CMr .,.,. ~ dte
cou~ _ _, .Oraael C... a-
dm11 raay feel aa -.r to 1iMt
t.piritml ~-(Mal, .,..... will havca~~tob9y luxury cm. clllPhe IM lld M ...
prm ••Ille w or ...... rile. .. . ,,..
from
Unve,iltng of stgn at new city limits puts
an end to battle over controversial plan
BJ LANCE IGNON ........... -
The population of Laauna Beach
jumped by some 5,200 residents on
Thursday as the city formally annex-
ed South La&una
Officials rrom both commun1t1es
ptbered by the side of South Coast
Hi&hway an the momfo& chill to
commcm'orate the joining of the two
communiti by u.nveilina the city
limits·~ t it.s ~ spot.
The large wood~n sign once stood
at N)es Place but was replanted at the
new city hm1ts. the boundary be-
tween the private communities of
Emerald Ridge and Three Arch.Bay.
"It's an official recogn ition of what
people have felt for a long time." said
. Mayor Dan Kenney about the an-
1nexation, which became officiaJ at
midnight Dec. 31. "A lotofthecttdit
for the transfer has t? ao to the city
staff. from (City Manaacr) Ken Frank
on down."
Kenney and the prcstdcnt of the
Sduth Lquna Civic AssociatJon,
Rich kfTrirs. shoot hands an front of
the s1sn as camcra1,,ehcked and traffic
streamed b).
"It's a 'Cf) hiJ>P> cooous1on:· JefTn~ said.
But for residents who opposed the
annexauon the event was no cause for
celebrauon.
In July. o pponents argued that the
annexauon issue should ha' e been
been put to a com mun1tv vote. '\last·
minute efTon v.as organized to gather
enough signatures to fore. an'election
on the issue.
But the efTon fell shon of its coal.
. ' .
gh ing the Laguna Beach C uy Council
authorit' to \Ole Ln the anneutaon.
•·likh it ·d.id unanimouSly on Jul) 23 -when it .comes to something hke
this it should not be decided b)
an)one but the propcn) o"ners."
said Susan Russell. who led the dn'e
~inst annexauon. "It's JUSt un-
fonunate that people v.eren't allowed
to eAcrc1sc their options... .
Suppori for the anne.ll3t1on was
backed up b) a South Laguna Ca' ic
.\ssoc1auon suf''e} an ~ h1ch 9 3
percent of the respondents said the)
\l.Ould rather S« their community ~ome pan of Laguna Beach than
Laguna eiagµcl. v.hach also had
(Pleue eee LAGUNA/ A2)
Cnt1cs said the reduced lanes pose a
danger to motonsts on the frttwa)
because the lateral space bctv.cen
automobiles as reduced.
Joe Catron. fou nder o f Dnvcrs for
H1ghwa) Safet). said he and another
member of the Costa Mesa-based
group photographic.all~ measured the
outs1de lanes o( the frttwa)' and
found that It drops to JUSt 9 feet Wide
(Plea.eeeeeCAL~SLA2)
The heat will·still
be on Irvine in '88
In·anc cit~ officuls agitt that 1 Q 7
was a rough year. but a look into the
crystal ball sho"s that 1ssu~ ~111 stall
be hot in 1988
.\ &)antt at the Cit~ Council's
quarterly draft agenda 1nd1catts that
the City Council wall deal wath some
wci&ht)' items an the not 100 disant
future. Sehedukd for rcne~ 1n Janu-
ary alone arc the following; .
-A general plan amendment
sohdifyina the cit> 's open space
elements.. which coold be the chmu
. of ycan of often-bitter negouat1on
with The Irv•~ Co.
-A discuss.ion of ln·me's ne'\t
move rcprdina the rcmamana Down·
coast/lrvine Coast land. which tM
cat) of Newport Beach rcccnll~ an-
dudcd 1n its sphere of influence.
lr'\-1 nc has Ip• exprcsscd an interest
an gain in& a piece of rout.al pro pen) .
and tbe Dovmcoast propcn~ as the
last available land.
GREG
KLERll
Second of two parts
-A general plan amendment to
include Manne Corps .\1r Statton El
.l"oro in In 1nc·s sphere of influence. a
mo"c intended to ll''e the Clt) more
k'eflF an future negouat1ons over a
second commel"C'lll 1.1rpon 1n Oral\&C
(Plee8e 11ee lllVIPfE/ A2)
•
,
• RUKKEN DRIVING ON THE INCREASE... . . .
bat not lw:lled i11 ftdl new baleb of inellperienced offiom. Whi~ ... In our little city, r ve seen a "••ill fudial ii a prol*m. of Hesaidthenumberofalcobol·related dcfini~ impKi from ourdl'orts.." ..... but DlliJj laid tbe mecm accidmtsu bound to increase from Janet Caler, ~t of~ Ot:
.-..101Mcadoler loot at their role year to year. 1nte County cfiapter o ~othen ill IM elllwcemeat system. "Tbe question l have is bow much Apinst Drunk Drivina. aid she feels
r: ·1 bow it teta to be old bat, bul it of the increue we re seeina is because enforcement on the street level bu (_. cxpotUrc) ii tbe only thi1111 tbe county's population is iaaeu-been succ:asful and that the real llill mMel c:beckpoinu wort." aid ins," said.Lennert. "In any accident. problem lies within the~ system. Slllilr-~ aaned to wane last if a penon is. under the influence, "I think tbe enforcement is there. Jll!, Md lbea we bad that iltjuaction we're JOin& 10 arrest them. But there and I think what isn't tbctt is support
tllid wae olrfor about a year. We've are a lot more (motorists) out there from the · courts," aid Caler. "We W~icity lately, but I think now.". need judaes who treat drunk drivi1111
IMI' becaUlt it's a reinstatement of Lennert also noted that, in Irvine, as the crime that it is." .sM law." tt.c number of drunken drivina Cater said an~nknH1rivina
• Daily was rcfenina to a l'?JCent sta~ accidents -those accidents where a orpnizations like MADD are alto = Court rulina statina that driver was lcDlly intoa:icated constantly outs~nt by the multi-
. · cbeckpoinu are not an decreased by If ~t this year. 'million dollar alcohol industry.
1Dfiinlemcnt oo motorists' F"mt '"To me, that sutistic is the most .. We just can't CQID~witb them
• ~t nots. SOutbern Cali-valid one, .. beaid. money·wite."saidC... ""nednmk
lwDla law enforcement qencies Lapna Beach and Seal Bc:ach are drivina me ,,.. ii DOI out dlerc 11
Wied cbeckpoint,s lut fall when the the only citiet settina up sobriety much u the ~to driat."
• Dittrict Court of ApPC:al ruled checkpoints over t.hC holiday week-Themeaaeeto ·nkisalsosinkina
'tMnl illepl. but checkpoints are in end. Lt. Jim Wbile said police have in with the malt potentially volatile
'me apin followina the stale court's not determined ~ or where the drunken drivina aroup. males J S.28
decisiOn. checkpoint will be set up, but be said years old.
lrriDe police set up checkpoints on it would be sometime before Sunday. • "Thoe people think they•re invin-·Dec. 22Md23andarcstillevaluatina Whi1e-afted that law enforcement cible. Up(ortuna~ly. =of them die....., laid Lt. Bob Lennert. officialueem to be .. boklina the line" think it isn't cool to ov~ the
..... Irvine's dnankelMlrivi.na llltistics in the war apinst drunken drivers. keys to somebody die," said Caler.
reOect the u~ trend: Tbe number He said the incrcasina population and "Theyare deftni~ly the hardest poup
111 dnanken drivina arrests decreased a pater nvmt>. of youths reachlna to reach. and I don't think there's .~ lO pnunt in 1987, while the lcpldrivioa•hlvemidetbebattle been a poup yet able to effectively pumber of alcobol .. related accidents to\laber. reach them.
*'eatcd by S9 Pm:ent. --Some oeoDle are frustrated ~ .. Some of these_ peop)c_don 't.Jeam-~ Lmacrt attributed the decrease in cauw-theY t!uu the dl'orts we've lintil they'~ been throuah it. That's
--arratl to personnel chanp:s and a made haven't paid oft"enoqb.." said what's so trqjc."
.CAL TRANS TO STUDY CARPOOL LANE •••
"9mA1
in~areu. Ju-~linckrodt, an electical easineer and a member of the
comminer arouP. conducted the
meuuRments with Catron by
iaountina .. 7-foot wide board be-
.icatb the bumper of his wife's car.
.:While his wife drove the car in the ~~lane, he and Catron followed.
.pkiqphotopaphjalona the 2.S mile
construction zone.
, , After developina the pictures and
u.ina Pb<>topammetry -a process 'Uied by mapmakers and survcyon-
the paar found the latte narrowed to 9
.feet wide several times ·and was just 8 feet. 11 inches on the southbound side
near l>yef-Road.
Oraqc County Transit District rscs are 8 feet, 8 i'hebcs wide. while
P,tomobiles avm11t about S Yi feet
Wide. Sta~ law f'Cllllates the width of
trucks usiD1 the fieeways to 8 feet. 6
~lboritiea said.
· ~· Fedc:nl Hilbway Admini5'ration . on;c-. i11 S.C..mmto said the 10-foot lanes were approved, but voiced
concern about the alleptions that the
lanes narrowed to 9 feet.
"ll'.s decided. OD a case-by-<asc
basis, but ~lly we don'' allow 9-
foot lanes use that's too.narrow,"
said Lee Onstott. the hlabway admin·
istration's. area enaineer for Los An&eles County. The qcncy's 0ran&e
Co\lnty officials were unavailable for
comment;
Onstott said bis office has not
received any letters or communica-
. ti on about the lanes other thin media
calls. but may investigate the situ-
ation when the proper officials return
from holiday vacations.
The agency usually does not check
on local projects once the wor1c is
approved. he said.
"We don't go out there with a tape
measure and measure the lanes ...
Onstott said. ..But we can . make
inspections on the project if it's
ne<:CCSary •" I I •
But McKean sai<i his agency will
correct any pro~ms -if Catron·s
allegationsprove true -as soon as
PoSSiblc.
"I tokl mydcputytofindout about
it," McKean said. ... know we have JO
feet out there. It may just ~a case of
the striper ~ina oft" a few inches here
or there. The coRCTek wall miaht
have gotten pushed over."
Mallinckrodt said McKean·s ca:-
plaination wasl>lausible.
"I woukln't be surprised ifthat's-il
It's 10 feet a lot of the way,""but there
arc a f cw spots where it gets pretty
narrow."
Mallinckrodt and Catron said the
only safe way out of the problem was
to close the car-pool tanc on the
freeway until all of the lanes arc
reopened. That move. they contend.
woukl allow for laJICr lanes all the
way across and allet iate any potential
hazards.
McKean, however, disputed that
there is a hazard and said traffic
moves well in the coot.ruction zone
because the narrow lanes force motor-
ists to pay more attention lo their
driving. ,.
IRVINE WILL STILL BE ON HOT SEAT •••
Al
ounty. ·
; "I tbinlt 1988 will be a ~votal year
the city oflrvine, .. said Assistant
ity Manqcr Paul·Brady ... I think it's
· na to be a very important year. The
---tm1111~ s.,.ite issue is toina to be very
• troversial. Anytune you want
ore open space. people arc going to
c6ncemcd,"
Officials frora t.hc city and The
inc Co. have been meeting for '1norc than a year to work out a s~m
rof"excbanp:s" of land in Irvine. City
,officials are allowina The Irvine Co.
;to shift development ri&hts from
:certain properties the city would like
:to desianate as open si-ce. Com-
:pensation to The Irvine Co .. and
iwhich lands development rigbt.s
'sboukl ~ transferred to, have con-
litituted the built of the discussions.
Other issues also have potential for
controversy and debate. The Irvine
Business Complea: debacle. which
.resulted in the overplanning of five
' miUion ~uarc feet and underbillin&
of SS million in fees at the center, wifl
also loom large on the city's agenda,
althouah the worst is apparently over,
;said Brady,
.. Among the first itemsofbus.incss in
-the new year will be the search for a
'director of co'tlmunity developmtnt
~replace Larry Hogle. who resigned
last wtelt in the wake o( the IBC
;,lisaster, HOl)e's resiption takes e ft"cct Jan. 19. and City Manaaer
·William Woollen Jr. said he would :'like to hire Kogle's replacement "as
Jloon u possible." ~ The al)' will also beJin implemen-
tation of a multi-point stratqy to
combat the possible commercial ulC
of Marine Corps Afr Station El Toro,
..:The stratqy, aP.PC:Ovcd by the City
'llCounciJ in Apnl, includes a 1Cftef8I · Plu ammdment to plac:ei the be1e .. widlift lrvifte't sphere of influence
tMd • "low..profile" public relations
program to educate the public about
the detriments of uling the base as a
eommercial airpon.
An outsMk consult.ant for the
propam could be selected as earl,Y as January. and the public relations
campaign coukl begin this spring.
said Eve Somjen, senior planner.
Also loominaahcad are City Coun-
cil elections., which will be held in
June rather than in conjunction with
president~! elections in November.
Scats occupied by Sally Anne Miller
and David Baker -currently the
cou'ncil minority -and Ray
Catalano arc all up for re-election.
Miller has indicated she will seek re-
election. while Balter said be is likely
to make. that decision over the
holidays. Catalano is on vacation and
·could not be reached for comment.
In place for 1988 elections is a new
measure allowina the direct election
of the mayor. Mayor tarry Agran has
said be will •It a fifth term as mayor,
ahhou&h he runs no risk of losing his
council seat because it dOC$ not upirc
until 1989. Agran was on vacation
until after the holidays and could not
be reached for comment
The new mayor and council should
be conducting business in a new city
hall by November as well. The mult1-
million~ollar facility being built off
Alton AYcnuc is schr.dulcd for com-
plction·in November.
Items scheduled for council review
in February and March include the
following:
• A general plan amendment for
the extension of Laguna Canyon
Road between Alton A venue and
Barrana Parkway.
• Ordinan~s regulating massage
parlors and cscon services.
• Extension of the Irvine Recycles
prO&flm to all residential units in the
city.
• Final approval of a master plan
rcaulating the city's equestrian trail
system. ,
Although in 1987 Irvine showed
the first budget deficit in its 16-ycar
history. a loss of S2.4 million, Brady
docs not predict a similar situation
for the 1988-89 fiscal year.
SUSPECT ARRESTED ••.
From Al
know anythlna,.and that s the truth. I
always ~I t.hc truth," he said.
F"ap·s mother, Delora. ·said her
son as a .. Romeo" with lots of airts
chasina him. and that has cautcd
problems for him in the put. He was
ana1cd on suspicion of ... ult and
battcrx last June. she said. ~Y
because of a airtfriend's jealotuy ..
ThOIC ctwss were dismillcd 1n
court, Mrs. F'aa said.
'"They know they don't have any.
thins on Denny -they just arTCStcd
him so he would tell them who did it.
but Denny doesn't know who did it."
Mrs. Fi• said.
F• is beina bckl in the Hunt·
ington Beact1 City Jail in lieu of
$2SO,OOO bail. •
He was stayina at his mother's
hous.: in the San Bernardino COOnty
comm11nity of Bloominaton !t the
time of his arrest. but maintams an
apartment on Califqmia Slreet. in.
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LAGUNA ANNEXATION OFFICIAL •••
'FromAl
planned to annex the seaside com-
munity.
The questionnaire was sent to
J,641 residents. forty-three percent
responded.
.. I'm absolutely conviribel that an
overwhelminJ number of people arc
pleased with at." said Frank. the city
manager.
DesRik the relatively _smooth
transfer from ·County to City control,
of rank said numcrous·administrative
glitches remain to be ironed out, , ,
For instance. dialing the emergency
number 911 in South La&una will still
put residents in touclr with the
Sheriff's Dcpanment rather than
local police. Frank said the problem
should be remedied in a few days.
Meanwhile. the Sheriff's Dcpanment
flips a switch and the emergency caJI
is transferred to the Laguna Police
Dcpanment.
Then there's the fire station in
South Lajuna.
The cuy mafotaioed that South
Laauna residents bad already paid for
the station throuab their property
tues. Therefore, the county should
have pven the facility. to the city
without cbarlc. .
The county disap'eed and the city
finally consented to pay SI Sl,000 for
the buildina: Althoulb the payment
won't be due until July I, 1989, the
-citY. will=tlke t9011e11MNt of &hc-
bu1ldi1111&.)'eareartieron July 1.1918,
Frank saict
The city postponed the payment
date so it could spend more money
from its 198S.89 budgerto upgrade
Aliso Park, Frank said.
Russell said the city du~ South
Laguna residents into thinking the
4Jre station ~ould cost nothing to
trans'"$he also claimed that money
to pay for the fitt station would have
to be diverted from a fund earmarked
for park improvements.
But Frank said the fire station will
be paid for out orthe general fund .
As for approa:ima~iy SJ00,000 in
South Laguna's part service fund, alJ
ofit will-~ spent on the renovation of
South Lafuna·s Aliso Pitt. .
The city will kick . in anotha
SS00.000 for the park plan from put.
in-lieu fees and federal arant money.
The net result. Frank said.. will be a
park of hiaher q"'1ity in a shorter
lcn&th of time than ifthe count had
do ne the project. -
Russell also worried that the
chanac will result in poorer ·police
protection, especially since the Cali·
fornia Hi&hway Patrol will no loftlrl'
service the area.
But with four new Laguna patrol
officen (The city also plans to hire a
fit\'h) and an invcstiptor -hired
spccafically because of the anneu.
uon. Frank said South Laauna will be
well-protected. -
.. The levd of police protection they
will have is probably double com-
pared to county control," Frank said.
. .
PSYCmcs PREDICT YEAR TO REMEMBER.
From At
-Micki Dahne. But somt of those who fail to reach
• God will talk to Michael Jackson this plane of greater spiritual aware-
while the pop star is sleeping in his . ncss will find themselves buyina
pressurized oxy$Cn chamber. The lua:ury can. Des Jardins-said.
encounter will inspire Jackson to This wiU be brou&ht about by
....write a best-selling reliaious album. Jupiter, the planet of transportation.
-Micki Dahnc. entering the constellation of Taurus.
While these predictions make eye-which represents lua:ury, she said.
grabbing headlines. Newport Beach· She also ~icted that an Oranae
based astrol<>ser James Baker cau, • (]ounty politician will suffer a politi-
tlone<f readers not to mark the events cal sc:andaJ.
on their calendar. "I feel it's with campeian contribu-
"Thcy're going for shock value and tions.. .. said Des Jard.ins. director of
to sell newspapers." he said. the Southern Calif omia Astrol<>sical
8 a k e r a g r e e d w i t h Network.
astrologer/psychic Laura Rose Des 1t was Des Jard.ins who predicted
Jard ins of San Clemente and the IRS computer breakdown, stricter
astrologer Sheila Belanger of Dana water quality laW1 and a rise in real
Point that an unusual aliJnment of estate values, especially in San
the planets in May will tnacr some Oemente where she lives.
cataclysmic events as well as bolstu She also said the stock market will
existing trends. take another dive in ~Y Fd>nw'y,
The alianment of Saturn and but those who ~Y the ri~t stocks
Uranus in front of the constellation aft.er t~ crash will. make a pile of loot
Capricorn and a full .moon .linina ug wbcr 1rre~und~ 10 May. ,
with P1uto in May will caute an 8. -[)ies.JaAl1M ~1d she pmbcted ,tut
canhquake in Los Angeles area. Des year that President Ronald Reqan
Jardincs pred..ic.ted. • wou d come out of the lran;-Contra
The canhquake and subsequent
planetary alianmcnts will cause many
people to eschew 'their need for
material wealth, she said. Most of it
will be destroyc_d in the earthquake.
scan unscathed, something she
said proved to be true.
Belanger. who is alt0 a humcr-
oloaist. said mountina traffic conaes-
tion will drive v<*n to aJ>P.l>VC a
pending slow-powth initiative in
T'hroullt ........................ ...
become .... ~ ... luxury ....... --.
TCJdllY, llellwood-::.r.--• w, 1111•• to eny lntertor from to lllra Modern.
No OU. Mltdow ooua .. patuiitM • .... ..
.wtth ... beUr end .,... ......... .....
wtth .. .,...... ..... of ..,.... ,..... .....
blodt out ,... Ind oald. mmJ uillil .. -. w9
exPMd lntlrlorl ................. ~
--~ ............. D"'9ra Ina 1111 ....
home'• Vllue.
With lllllwood ........ 5. ~ Lows ...... of 1%, 2~ 1"1\. Ind • ........................
.......... ofoalar'I•~ ... -.. ..
JOU....,. ....... cllllgn ··~ ...... ... ............
Serving C9lltOmla liriCi 1953
~
POR l'RD Dl'IMATB
Call tM oftlee wr.t ~
..
June. .. It goes back to the issue of
personal po~r ... she said, .. became
when we're struck on the f'reeqy for
three hours we feel we've lost our
power." ""' · ·
All thret astroloaen qrccd that
1988 will be a time for increued
.spiritual· and moral aWU'CfteSS. It will
be tousber to tell a lie in l.c)SI.
Bak.er said this cbanaie has already
manifested itselfin the Pall from grace
of Jim and Tammy Bakker.
"The stuff you're seeina with the
Christian (tdevaftlClist) ministm ...
it's all part of this intqrity thin&. ..
Balter said. "The whole emphasis is
sc>ina to come beck to the individual
acceptina responsibility for what's
going on... ,
All three also predicted the plum·
metfoa value of the dollar will lead the
U nited States to return lo the IOkl
standard or some other ~table
monetary system. ·
Be it earthquakes or rumblinp in t~e stock market, spiritual enliah~n
IMllt for-all or just Mieheel JKklon,
1988 promises to be a year of cbanae.
And if not?
"If it doesn't happen it doesn•t
happm," Des Jal'dins said. "But it's
fun to read." •
•
course in stocks.
bonds. finance set
for Laguna Htgh
Financial analyst Louis J. 2.atnik will conduct
·aa ~on coune in stoctl. bonds and mu1ual
fundl bellinnif'I Wednesday at 7 p.m. in Room 74 of t..aauna lbch Hi&h School, 62SParlc Avet, Laauna
Beach.
The coune will include the 1988 outlook for the
stock market, how cKchaft&H operate, bow lO utilize
penincnt sources of infonnation, inflation and hoW
to offset it, investina for income and a.pptlation,
financial plannina and estate buildina.
The course is sponsomi by the ld~h education
department of the Laaun1 Beach Unified School
l?i~trict and carries a SJO chaise, fro'!' which senior.
cnazens arc cxempL Call the department at 497-7725
or Zitnik at 494-8038 for further information.
Winter cla .. ea 8Chedaled ·
Winter quarter clascs will begin Monday at
United States International University's Orange
County center in Irvine. USIU offers classes leading
to master's and doctoral dcarecs.
Oaucs a.re scheduled during evenings and
weekends. Call Dr. Dec Aker. center coordinator. at
833-26S I , for more information.
DJabetea semi1111r set
A four-w~k course for people with diabetes will
be offered. bcainnin& Wednesday, at Humana
Hospital in Huntington Beach and will continue
Wednesdays cbrou&h Jan. 27 from 7 to 9 p.m.
The counc, desianed to help diabetics under-
stand and live with tfieir condition. will be held in
the hospital's lower level classrooms. There is a
reaistralion ftt of S 15 and more information is
available at 843-5047.
Garden club to meet
Adrienne For<l, a member of the Orange County
Herb Society, will speak on "The Romance of
Herbs" at the Jan. 8 mcetinJ of the L:aP.na Beach
Garden Oub at 9 a.m. an the Neighborhood
Consreptfonal Church, 340St. Ann's Drive.
Visitors arc Welcome and there will be a $2.SO
donation. Call Helen Salemo at 494-6460 for.
additional information. ·
AlrlbJe chief to speak
Robert L. Crandail, president of American
Aiflinn, will address the annual general mc!"~r~
ship luncheon of the Orange County A Vlatao·n
Council at the Airporter Inn in lrVine Jan. 8.
CnndaU. whose.company l'«C_D\l)' a:.cquired the.
Orange County-based AirCal, will Spell on .. What's
Ahead for Air Transponation. •·Tickets are S 18 and
must be reserved by calling 541-6039.
Teat seminar ln Irv1ne
National University's Orange County campus
will present a frtt seminar entitled "GMA T Test
Preparation" Jan. 9 from 9 a.m. to l p.m. at 8
Executive Circle, Irvine.
The workshop, to be conducted by consultant
Elizabeth Stebbins. will review skills, strategies and
practice methOds to effectively handle the various
sections of the test. Call the universiry's Dcpanment
of Continuina Education al 250-5292 for more
information:
Britain tour scheduled
The l.quna An Museum will conduct an an
tour of Britain May ~22 and is inviting those
interested to si~ up.
The tour wall haghli&ht art uperie'\ces unique to
En&land and will encompass contcwmporary art as wefl as historical si&hts and collections. Cont.act
Suzanne Paulson at 852-0250 fQr additional' infor-
mation.
Frlday .. Jan.1
No mtttinas scheduled
·Monday. Jan. 4
• 6:30 p.m., c.ta M ... City C.-CU, coucil
chambers. 77 Fair Drive.
• 6:30p.m .. C...Me.Ph ..... Cem•t•1._
1e.Q 1111 ... ,City Hall. 77 Fair Drive.
lmP~ovtDg iife ·a good resOl11-tion ~:
--.:;...__----..)
Psychologtst advocates ustng subconscious
tn cleanstngand purgt~ negative influences
away ICtiooa on IOmC outside f~. .. , hdp lacb peOi* to shift 'hat tbe
victim COftlCiouual and become w
mu1er of their own lite." .
Sbe said that ecttiftl in toucb with your
subcomcious mind is not alwayi an cuy
proctt&. Often it can take several tra.inina
seuioos but 1G1Detima it can happen after
just ah.
""Eatu11 can allo be a way tA ....._> down fcdinp. Tbey wou&d, wi*~~,
numb tlildt fedJGP and the ...._ Ftlir •
duldren who are abuted. eati1111 ID8Y • • ;
way or prolllCtioa. Kekins IO a bitler'and Ill Sometimes... . ., roorra P. DONNEil ..............
People lovt to stan at the"bqinnina.
Accordina to Maya Bailey, a Newport
Btach clinical psycholoaist, that's why
people will always try to change bad habits
and make improvements on their life after
the New Y car.
Bailey has been a practicin& psycholosist
for more than 10 years and has offices in
both Newpon and Latuna Beach.
She believes in PSYCboloaical cleansina
and puf'Jin& oneself of negative innuences
aod is adamant aboutJhc,.importanoe of
the subconscious mind in improving life
and in eliminating these neptive in-
nuences. V"
"Most people don't know what's aoina
on in the subconscious mind and many
people aren't even aware ofit." she said.
.. Think about our whQlc mind as an
iceberg and our conscious mind is like the
tip. the pan that's visible above the
surface. The subconscious mind is the
remaining 90 percent that is hidden
underwater."
According to Bailey. the subconscious
mind is much like a computer.
"It's a computer that we program when
we are very young. We do it ourselves. We
-program our subconscious mind to help us
survive."
Bailey believes that thest _program~
follow us throughout our lives. even into
adulthood, when they arc no longer
effective.
Bailey has a program for defining the
problems that plaaue us as a result of
nqative subconscious influence.
"First you must accept responsibility for
creatina your problems throuab medi-
tation. You ask your subconscious mind to
tell you what it's tryina to do for yo~" she
said.
Accordina to Bai&ey. most subconscious
inftuenccs arc positively motivated. Many
of its methods worked once in ml.kin& )'OU
feel aoocs. orkeepina you out oflrOuble, or
perhaps pinin& appro~I.
AllO, many of the influences arc a result
of barriers formed for protec1ions, Bailey
said, that could even block your sUcceis.
Bailey noted that most people have a
"victim consciousness." That is, t.hey &re
unab1c 10 acccpl responsibility for their
own lives. They feel helpless and blame
··you tr)' lO convene with your sub-
eontciouJ mind and eet in louch with the
child in you. .. Bailey believes t~ is a
child in all or us. and oft.m that dlild is
what inOuences our actions as adults.
Because, she says. that child is so
impressionable. As a child, our survival
depends entirely on someone else caring
for us. We Yt'lnt them to love us so that we
will feel safe and survive. said Bailey.
overeat lO U:·ibemldva ·IOc* I •
a.nothcr R>rm of' proteetion ... • ~
Accord.iq to Bailey,~ could be lliiJ..,
numbtt of~ wb)t.t.bc whr0'1*:.,.,_
mind reacts neptively on the adult wortc1:•
"lfapersonJfOwsupiaahoulebold~r
wa$ neurolk or dysfunctiooal. • "
many of us have. &hey'~ aoinl to t
themselves ... many or us v.ew up in)
situations where our emotional Deeds wett4 not met." • J
Bailey's final stqe of subooalcioUs!
awarcncu involves a conversation with•
the .. inner child... •
.. That -means Wkina to the dli"1. in••)
loving compassionate way and exi>Wm6-:
that the propams are no loneer ~
''t'ldak aboat..., •llale m.lDd ..--at\d-also that you~ takin& care oiYOUl'ld( aa lceber6 aad oar coa.c1oa9 now. hhelpstoreal .. aethatyoua.rcastrollli
mbad ,. like tlle tip, tlle ,,.n and capable adulL '. ,
dlat'• "-Ible abon tlle Rrface. She i>chcves that peopk .arc ~mini. fte Abcoa«Joaa mJad u tlle . more aware oflhe subcoRscious m!nd and
rem«faf'W 90 pen:eat tllat ,. this m~y have ~ 1.ot Lo do watb the
·ldddera aiidenrater •• · popul.ant) of ~u~hminal tapes, and ~ . • • cxpeoencc tra1n1na propams. , ~Psyc!1ologist Maya Bailey .. Also, because we're fortunate10 DOl'
· slt'Ugling now with waranddept9icM ~
J any other basic issues ofsurvival. We Ii~'
in a very affluent· and prosperous sociciy
and we have the luxury of lookin& inwar.d'
and becoming aware of ourselves. .. site'
said. I
She supests that visualizing t.he child ·then they'll say nothing is workini and get Bailey said that it's essential lO get at tb1q
a.nd sending yourself men~ly back to ~he the idea that maybe tbey'rc cruttng their root of every problem. and she has so~
time when the programmana was Lak!n& own problems and could u~ professio~nit~ advice for successful New Year's
place could be a key to understand mg belp. Most of us arc resu~t to ~ · · \cluuons. ,
m!~~ defenses. . . fessional help and want to do everything First love and acknowledge you.ndffQI\
Aft.er understa~d1~g the reasons .. bnng on our o~. but w~en the pr:oblcm creates wanting Lo make the cbanle. Don't ~
yourself fo~r<i m tlf!'e once •m and enouJ.h l?IU~ we will seek guidance... yourself UJ? for what you've done in tho
ask yourself af you still need this earty • Bailey said that man.Y over-caters will past. It's important that old prosram~
defense strategy." she said. · come to her and that of'ucating can stem about $elf wOrth get looked at and eiet
People ~th many di.ff'ercnt types of. from scve.ral diff~nt ~ reprogi:ammed so that we say 'I am worthy:
problems Wlll come to Bailey. usually after According JO Badey. children who arc to receive the abundance of the universe
exhaustina all other avenues. · shown approval for a "clean plate" u~ and lam wonhy ofhavingall that I want lb;
"Most people try everything else first. eatin& as a search for attention. she said. my li~: ·• ·,
Drugofficia): Mexican pipeline
channels Colombian cocaine
Ex-first lady ~;~
'doing well' .
RANCHO MIRAGE (AP) -Betfy.
Ford was rcponed doing well Thundb
af\er unantic1pated surgcry~hat followed'"'.i
hcar1 operation last month. and She Wi$
expected to remain hospitalized for aboUt
two more days. ,
,LOS ANGELES (AP). -Colombian
cocaine canels have teamed up with
Mexico's seven major drug families: a
pannership now· channeling the inter-
national flow of cocaine mto Southern
California. federal authorities say.
"The Colombians are suffering suchl
significant losses an Florida that it has
become more desirable to come up
throuih the Southwest. even though the
route 1s thousands of miles longCT and far
more costly." U.S. Attorney Robert C.
Bonner said this week.
The cartels smuggle their cocaine into
the country throuAh Muico·s traditional
heroin and manJuana drug shipment
routes. known as the .. Mexican pipeline:·
said Roger G uevara. Los Angeles spokes-
man for the Drug Enforttment AJm.inis-
tration.
"There's no doubt they are beating w to
death. and the situation as just expected to
increase in 1988.'' G uevara added ... They
have struck up a hell of an alliance."
An estimated 30 percent to 40 percent of
all the cocaine cnterin1 the United St.ates
now comes through Mexico. S3id DEA.
spokesman La\Jrence Gallina. "That com-
pares to a minimal amount only a couple
of years ago. whco virtually all of it was
moving through Florida.'. he said.
. The shift has resulted in recor<f selzures
of the druJ in the Los Angeles area this
year. Cocaine seizures by fedentl qcnts m
Los Angeles arc up 400 percent for the
year. while seizures of the drug along the
California-Mexico border arc up 700
percent. federal aaents said. •
The 30.000 pounds of cocaine ~IZed in
the county this year by locaJ and federal
law enforttment qencics is nearly SO
times the amount of the drug confiscated
just five years qo.
"Not more than five years ago. there
were very limited coke seizures on the
West Coast. The shift bcaan in the last four
years.. after we started a full coun press on
• the Colombians in Florida." said John E.
Hensley. assistant rqional commissioner
for th~Cu"Stoms Service. ·
..In some cases the Mexicans buy
cocaine directly from the Colombians. but
more often the'y arc paid protection to
move it through their territory:· Hensley
said. "In most cases, the Mexicans store tt
and auarantec the safety while the Col-
ombians actually move it through Meuco
and into the Unned States."
Los Angeles is not the final stoR,ifor the
drug shipments. Bonner said.
"I can tell you'from discussions r ve had
with U.S. attome)'"S in Chieago. Detroit
and even New York City that the cocaine
coming from Mex~ _to Los Anscks is
showina up increaiiri)I) in those ciucs."
Bonner said.
The new panncnhip is seen as a
principa1 ruson behind the torture~
murdcrt•fDEA Agent Enrique Camarena.
who aUeacdly was killed by Mexican drug
boss Ratae.I Caro Quintero in Guadala}l1'a
in 1985.
The wife of form" President Gerald
Ford entered Eismhower Medical Ccn~
on Tuesday when she felt weak ~
dinner. -··,
The weakness was ac:c::ompanied tiy
blCC'ding from sutures from ~ quadnapl(
bypass surgery last mooth. Fire~
ment otTIClals said.
.,She ls back in the cardiac ~ wait (it
Eisenhower Medical CentCT') and is doi-. well... Ford spokesman Bob Balftfl saaJ
Thursday. •
Barrett provided no del8ils of ._
su rgct')' except Lo say !bat it was -u> oorrect
a minor wound problem" and that lier
rcrovery from last month's heart oper-
J tion "is continwna unialernlpted... .
For<f visited his 69-year~ wife...in tbe
hospital for about '40 minutes Thund8Y.
Barrett said.
Huntington senior .citizen, 88,·
wilis city's oldest employee title
At 88, Murray Ross is the oldest
employee of the Clty of Huntington Beach
by far.
.. He wins the title hands down. ..
Personnel ManagcT Don Lewis said this
week. "And he's doina an outstandingjob.
The city is trying to get more senior
workers. They're educated. trained and
have t.bc skills.."
Ros.s has been a pcm1anent 20..bour-a-
weck employee sU,ce OcL 17.
He works in \he Police Department,
tilina bicycle registration cards.. cbeckin&
towed car fines. filing mug sbou and
shreddina unusable materials for the
records bureau and the traffic division.
Born in Chicaao in 1899, Ross is tbe
second of four children. Three a.re still
livina. Their mother lived until she was 95 .
.. M y sister says that W'C must ba\'c been
born with two seu of tencs." Rou said.
"The second set kicks into action when we
JUCh three-score and 10 (70)."
Ross' first job at qe 19 was to supply cootina and dinina utensils to so Liberty
ships during"World War I.
He wmt on to ~rk 44 ~ in the
entertainment industry, workina for Para-
mount Pictures. RKO and other studios.
' He also man.qcd the Franklin and Park
theaters in Hisbland Park. When tele-
vision cut into ,movie attendlna:. he
boulbt a ~ busi.ocss and proi:ssionul . that be and his
wiie, Mimi. publisbcd. .
He C'¥'CtltUal1y moved to Hu.ntlftl'OD Badl. be said, in order lO ICC more of 1 ton
who skipped scbopl at Hi1b11nd Put to ID
~his official retirement at aac 70.
Ross went to work as a KCW'ity auard for
10 years.
·. He's been a volunteer witb the Neilb-borbOod Watch. Council on Alina and the LLL-__.-...;_K-
Ccntral Libnry. ll111ftT ...
Huntington man arrested
over attack with stun gun
A CIT burglary ~rted in the 800
block of Park Avenue at 4:54 p.m.
Wcdntsday resulted in an SSS loss..
Coetall.a
A 28-ycar--old man~ arTCSted at
2;5 I p.m. Wednesdayafterindc'ttnLJy
uposiftl himself in the 100 block of
East 19th StrecL
Kiss the Oub shot fivt rounds into
the buiklinc ju.st after mi~nl&ht
Wednesday. The car was dacribed as
a black Volkswa,en Rabbit con-
veniblc. and the paslC'nfCf' as an
Asian man with loftl black hair and
dart clolbina. • • • •
More than S 1.100 worth of steno
equipment and acccs10ries wert
stolen Sundal' or Mondaf when •
bur&lar broie an to a car ptrted in tbe
3400blockof Avenucofthe Ans. 'Jlle
thid' took a -compact dix ~•a
camera. c:om.pect discs and I ditc Cllf
from the t 918 Honda Acconl. '
ll ..
• • • Someone smubcd 1 drive-throuah
window Sunday momiftllt Weldon's
restaurant. went inside and stoic beer.
a microwave oven and a computer.
The km to the CAablisbmcnt at 2SO
Bristol&. was estimated to be Sl.400. • • • The sie••r in a car drivina past
llarbaee killed in
crub Identified
Ret~rded man missing
18 hours found in FV : . .
•
-
---.....---·-
·•
The Intelligent Choice1
•••
i
ear
ircuit
•• _L . I
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.Tom·orrOw
..
From9
I
. .
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-A sta.te
appeals court f'Cfused Thursday to
aftOw imntediate mfo1cement of a
law that would require an unmanied
woman under 18 to ,ct consent from
a parent or a judac to have an·
abortion.
said docton and family oluniDI ' An)' doc!« who oevfor!ned an arou.. hid a ~nable chuce of abortaon Without lbe required ~
soceeectln& tn tbeir claim that IM law proval ~bepalfty,,flCrfme. ~
vi.led ~nt teen..,.· riaht to state estimated ~t ~.000 111ta
privacy. under 18 tot at>c?ruons an 198S, the
He issued a preliminary injunction latest f11Ures available.
The 2-1 decision of the 1st District
Coun of Appeal ended any chance
that the law would take effect Friday.
as ori&inally scheduled.
barrifll enforoement of the law until The suit contends the law would
its constitutionality is resolved in a . intrude on a minor·s riaht. to .,,-ivacy,
trial. That could tau a yfar or lonaer. u~ the .state ~ons~tubon, to
un&ess a hiahtt court intervenes. decade whether to 11ve birth. Grou ..
The law, AP2274 by Aucmblyman challenaina the law contend the. state
Robert Frazee. R-Carlsbed, would CoMtitutioD has stronp pn~
n:quirean-unmarried minor tolet the proleetions than I.be U.S. Constatu-
wnttcn consent of one parent for an lion, under which some·. parental
abortion. As an ahemata\'e, she could consent laws mother states have been
try to persuade ajud9e in a confidcn-upheld.
Attorney General John Van de
Kamp, who is defendina the law in
coun, will take no further lepl action
until ant week, said spokesman Fred
Reaister. Van de Kam_p could appeal
to ihe state Supreme Coun.
Enforcement of the law was
blocked this Monday by Superior
Court Judie Morton Colvin. wHo
tial bearing that sfac was mature The suit says the requirements cW
enough to make the decision on her par:ental or judicial approval would
own, or that an abortion was in her intimidate some tcen-qcri from
best intereSL I l(ttin& abortions they wanted ·
' Puffers get pushy oyer
airline ban· on smoking
$5 m illion suit
filed' over c rash·
of PSAjetliQer
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Where flight. .
there wu smoke there were .fiery l>olice and the FBI were called in
tempers, as puffing passengers and three or four passengers were
enraged at a smoking ban on a taken into custody when the Lock-
commercialjetliner lit.up anyway and heed L-1011 ·plane lan'ded at Los
shoved att.endan.ts who asked them to Angeles International Airport
stop, officials saad Thursday.. Wednesday night. said airport police
'f!'crc were reports of hassang and Sgt. Wanda Alford.· They were qucs-
boomg aboard the crowded Trans tioned and ·rcl~scd she said.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A SS
millfon lawsuit hes been filed on
behalf of the wife and two dauahten
ofa Los Al\gelcs businessman amona
43 ~ople killed in the <;rash of a
Pacific Southwest Airlines jetliner
Dec. 13. .
The suit. filed ThuQda)t-in l..os
Angeles Superior Court, ac:tuses the
airline of negligence in the operation
of the plane and in aJlowinga man to
board lh•plane with a handcun. said
attomer Sanford Astor.
World Airlines jumbo jet flying from · Boston to Los Angeles Wednesday A spokcsJnan for. ~he Los ~ngeles
niaht. and the pilot radioed for police Department of. Aarpons said the
to meet the plane. One flight attend-~attc~ ~turned ove~ t<? the FBI for
ant made a citizen's ar.est during the , !nvcsugauo.n because 1t involved .an fracas. an~erstate fl!ght. ~I spo~CSJ!lln Jam
The disturbance came little more Nielson said an. anvcsuaa.tton had
than a day before a tough new begun . of whether a a:ame was
California no-smoking law JOCS into ~mmatted at?oard the aircraft
effect bannina cigarettes. Clprs and interference with crew members.
Officials have.said the crash near
the Central California community of
C,ayucos ~pparently was caused by
passenger David Burke. a fired USAir
employee, who smualed a gun
aboard to get even wiiJi bis former ,
supervisor. who was on the plane. pipes on all flights which ta~ off or At o ne point. as many as 11
land in the state. But the law wasn't passengers were involved in .the
the reason for the smoking ban on the fracas, Blattner said.
USAir is the parent company of PSA~ •.
-Americans' charity mis~ion goes astray
By fte Associated Preti
S-ANTA 'BARBARA -Scve~ mencans on a
Christmas charity mission to distribute baseball cquip--
ment and toys to poor children in Guatemala apparently
have run afoul of local authorities. an associate wd
Thursday. Members of t~ c · which ~caJJs itself .. Baseball A · .. esday that their gifts
n con 1scatcd and they were havtng Croilblc
leaving the cowntl), Santa Barbara attorney Brent
Schlottman said. The group. four adults and three
children. apparently is free to meve about inside the
country, said Schlottman and Donna Sherman. a State
Department spokeswoman in Washington. The U.S.
Embassy -i n {l"'atemala was looking into tbt cpe. bpt'
hadn't been able to get an1ouch w11h-tbe Amcric;ans or JO
-get &n) information from the Guatemalan government.
Sherman sajd.
Qualre r attles upper desert
YUCCA VALLEY -A mild earthquake rumbled
through Southern California's desert Thursday. but there
were no immediate rcpons of damage or inJurics. The
I :34 p.m. quake measured 4.1 on the Richter scale and
was centered 4 miles nonh-northeast of Yucca Valley or
25 miles north-northeast of Palm Sprinp. said Robert
EARLY
SHOPPERS
GET THE
BEST
SELECTION
Finn, spokesman for the California Institute of Tcch-
notogylll Pasadena. ~~1 felt rum~ng-mr.t:hen
explosion: or ...boom..Jike a vertical drop," ~ -newsman
Mike Mason at radio station KSES in Yucci Valley.
"Some listeners called up and said they felt It coming on
the same way. Apparently, some of the listeners felt more
than we d id here:' Mason said the temblor spurred more
than 14 calls from listeners. and ··one said the windows on
the west sidt' of the house started shaking .first. then the
windows on the cast side."
~Man saves toddler from fall
CARLSBAD -A surc~anded San M~ man
caught a 4-)cat-Old boy as be fell l,5-feet towai:d a concrete
floor in a shoppina mall. saving the child's lift. authorities
said. "I fOt underneath him, just like you get under a
football,' said Ernest Eckhardt, whosequkkaction broke
the fall of Juan Carreno after the child's sweat.er became
tangled in an escalator at Pl~ Camino Real shopping
center. Carlsbad firefighters said If Eckhardt, 63. had not
been there lo catch Juan. the child could have been killed
in the hcad~first fall to the concrete floor. Eckhardt
downplayed his Wednesday niaht heroics. "Anybody
would have done that rather than see that little kid hit the
concrete," he said Thursday.
OUR
·BIGGEST
SALE OF
THE .·
YEAR!
----~---
' ••
.
I 1
. . ..
• A:IDS risk :v:arieS fi:omcclse t o case ,aeanrcher c1a1msosone ~.--. . ~ tlilnDlng oat around world
CHICAOO -~ ~ with . Eleven wivn r'tf'."AIMd rrtt of the Or. Harold W. Jaffe of the CDC in a ~rote. • ., ~~~ lOO .._ !ttaMul ~.._le havena had xx wath .c&ephonc interview. "We railed In l983. one year after me first By'l'k.\aedald Pnu
• in--. -~. while :oae ~r hulbaAds more lban 200 uma 1btw questions. but ~ couldn't ~•zed cate of acquired irlimunc • . woman~ d!e ~IO a lilllle snaccdlcnwn~c1poeedtoAJOS. ans~rthcm. Wcjustdon'tknow.00 dcfaaency aytldrome. scxaaat lfaM. WASHINGTON-ThecanhsproccctJveozooell~hasbeaU::zt
encounta. 1ndacat1na. the f'requmcy taeattbai said. But one woman Howver, the ~archers added. miM1on of the disease t-om male ao outarounchhc world, not just over the South Pok, accordin& to a new•
of hctero1t1ua! rela.taons dots not contrilcted the virus after a sinale) .. No cases of AIDS have~ been female was first reported in the ofsatelUtc data that was promplly disowned~ the IOVCf"IDmt lillCftCY
alwayi deltmaane nlk, ~ ...a ei&petiftttt with her ttridlett rcponechn whidrlheontyrisldac:tor 1Jntted Stales. Subsequent t.ases spQnsomi * ~udy; Writing. in the lat.est edition of the widdy resDeCWllf
U)'. husband. was hving in the same house a a documented the transfer from female Science mapzine. released Thursday, Kenneth P. Bowman, a profnlar ~
The.study for the natfonal Cerners 1bete~~ indicate thalt~ risk of person with AIDS." to male. 11mosphcric sciences at the University of ll~nois. said the uMx~i 1d
for Disea.sc Control looked at 80 ... transm1U1on 11 not samply a Tbc researchers found that con-Still less than 2 rccnt of AIDS dcplcuon appears to have returned the ozone thickness tO"about where It WM
AIDS paUCnll :-2S womeh and.SS function of the number of sexual domswercrarely usedbythesubjccts. cases stem from itl'feroscxual rela-at the bcginninf of the 1960s. He said the depiction could be'thc rault a/,
men -.and their spouses. contacts with an infected person;· the who had been unaware of the ptcs-tions. natural fluctuations. because the ozone layer was thickening throuahout me ,
.Twc> of the men married to women researchers wrote in Friday's Journal ence of AIDS. The rtlsearchcrs studied people 1970s. He estimated thatthe depiction av'eraged I percenunnually ffom 19~ f
wuh AIDS contnctcd t~e vi~s o_r the American Medical Associa-"The dcmo~s!ra~ion that heter-who develo~ AIDS after trans-lhrb~g~l986.That.cstimatewasd!sputedby Robcrt tf~dso~.anat~
th.rou&h sexual contact wt th their lion. . . · oscitual transm1ss1on c:an occur fusions of tainted blood because the physJC1Sl at the National Aeronautics and Space Adm1ms~raho1?· fiiudson said
wives, the study found, and 10 of the .. Some may be more 1n(edaous emphasizes 1he need for heter-date of exposure was known. Re· the real dcchn~ probably was about half of Bowman s estimate bcc:aute I
5S ~men whose husbands had AIDS than oth~rs or some strains·may not osu~u~ls to take precautions u · with a searchers were then able to track Bowman's data came from an unrehable instrument. i
wcnnnrccted. be easily transmjned," said co-author partner who may be infected.-they sexual contact.' • {
NO link between holidays, inass murder$
4 NEW YORK (AP) -Wintertime
and the Christmas holiday may
lriger depression in susccptjble
people. but there is no cvidcn~ they
contribute to viblent episodes such as
the mass killings rcponed this week. a
resean:her says.
.. What you have to have there is a
deep-seated raac or anscr within -
quite often cous;>led with 1 history of
that person himself having been
abused in some way," said Dr. Martin
Keller, a psychiatrist at Massachu·
setts General Hospital in Boston.
Keller, the hospital's director of
outpatient research in psych1atcy.
noted that depTCSSion in its many
forms is the most common psy-
chiatric disorder. but that a mass
murder "is a one-in-I 0 million case."
People who commit mass murders
or murder-suicides "usually suffer
from an extraordinary lack-Ofimpulsc
control and an inability to See
solutions to personal problems that
go beyond ones that arc cataclysmic."
In Russellville. Ark., R. Gene
Simmons Sr. was formally cha'lcd
Wednesday with two counts of capital
murder and four counts of attempted
murder following the killing of 14
people over several days' time, begin-
nina Ott. 23. In Algonl, Iowa. {our
adults and three ctlildren were shot to
death in an apparent lltlurdcr-sui~ide
Wednesday afternoon. •
In New Hampshire. a man walll a
history o{ dru&-..char:acs _killed three
men and critically wounded two
others in the towns of Nashua and
Londonderry. Rafael Rodriguez shot
at a policeman tryin' to arrest hjm as
a suspect in the killings, and was
himself killed by the officer. police
said.
C<Jn wintertime or holiday de-
pression lead to such episodes? .. lf I
had lO guess o n a multiple choi.ac
quiz. I'd 53) )CS." Keller said. He
emphasized. howcver. that he knew
of no evidence on lhe subject.
Some People who commil mass
murders ma} be depressed. Keller
said. and some may not be. "There
are also peo°ple who arc JUSt bad.'' he
sa1.d.
Depression that occurs around
holidays is nol recognized as a
specific form 'of depression.
Cat protein can halt allergic reaction
• •
BAtTIMO RE -lnJcctions of protein extract from cal5, combined with i
modifk ations in a home. can sufle the alltrgk wheeling and sneczinc many•
people suffer when a feline 1s near. a researcher says. Research on mOl"C"than 20 ·,
people severclj allerg1c to cats found between two-fold and four-fold increues
in toleran~ after treatment with lhc extract. said Dr. Thomas Van Metre. who •
was tn charge of the research at the -\llergy Center of Johns Hopkins Hospital I . '
A TllcT to lower Jong-distance rates today I
WASHI NGTON -Amencan Tel~hone &. Telegraph Co. will lower its t
ratef> for interstate long~istance calls by 3.5 pcrceru today. and fc.deral •
regulators said the) are loo lung at AT & rs costs to determine whether funhcr I
reducuons arc warranted. The average AT&T residentiaJ customer wtfo pays
about S9 per month for out-of-state pho ne calls will save about 21 cents or 2.4 l
percent. the company said Thursday. Daytime rates will drop 6.4 percent. 1
evening rates will fall 1.9 perccnl ahd late-night and weekend rates wiU bel
trimmed by 0.6 percent. . . ~ r
WoRlu GIANT 2 DAY NEW YEAR'S KICK-OFF > l
Mediator
threatens
to quit in
Nicaragua
CATARINA. Nicaraaua (A Pl -
Cardinal Miauel Obando y Bravo
said Thursday he will quit trying to
mediate an end to the 6-ycar-<>ld war
1f-the Sandinis~ ~vemmcn&-con._
tinucs to oppose his meeting with
Contra rebel leaders.
The Roman Catholic archbishop of
..Managua said that at the request of
the Contras he asked Guatemala's
aovemment Wednesday to allow him
to meet in that country with leaders of
the rebel umbrella orpnization
known as the Nicaraguan Resistance.
Obando y Bravo indicated the
leftist Sandinista government nas
been lrying to foil such a mcctina with
the Contras. .
.. It is clear that if one of the panics
involved says that as a result ofsuch a
mcctina it would lose oonndcnce in
., the mediator, then ipso facto we will
end such a mediation," Obando y
BrJvo told The Associated Press.
The cardinal said the Sandjnistas
had not directly interfered. but had
told him at the beginning of bis
· mediation effon s that "there would
be.a loss of confidence" in him if he
met with th( Contras in Central
America.
,
MOSCOW (AP)-The Kremlin is
obscrvina a cease-fire tbjs week in its
war on drunkennns, floodina stores
with rare stocks of '(odb. copac and
champqne and drawina lona lines of
buyers oa &be eve of'. lhe nat:K. HH' rl----'-
bignt holjday.
The New Year's relu.ation in
Soviet Communist Party ~neral
Secretary Mikhail Gorbechev's 2'h-
year-<>ld anti~rinkina drive a~
t• be a concession to the centunes-old
Russian tradition of holiday revelry.
It also follows a wave of letten and . 5i commentaries critical of the · wliu forced on. thote wbo want
t y an occasional bottle of wine or cham~ for a special celebration,
like New Year's Eve .
.. What a niahtma~! .. said a Mos-
cow teacher about 30 yean old who
on Wcdnetday niaht wu in 1 line or
JOO people trailina out or a store on
SmolcnSky Boulevard ... This is the
first time I've waited in one or tbcle
lines. ..
· Commanl•m•boot
PblJllplne candidate
' . STANDARll
.
Hurry in because :
you ,ve only got 2 days,,
to take advantage oJ :
the best decorp.tor ;
values in town! :
NDS® ·-
... .
1 •
·PAINT 8c HOME DECORATING GEN.TE
-·
..
' •• . . ~
l
r
'""' ____ ...,. ..... -.......... .. ,.... ~
ri91 -----• ,.__. ..... .. ___ _,
i
It's 198·8and
· something __
must be ddne
~methina must be done.
The editorialist's watchwords seem especially ap-
propriate as we set poised on the brink of a new year. This
mominf's dawn brouaht the promises an<t the problems that
come with another 366 dayj -1988 being a leap year.
We have mole hills and mountains to scale. Past
tomorro)V lies the unexpected.
We can only hope that our triumphs sustain us through
our setbacks, that o ur difflculties are not overwhelming, that
our faith is unshaken, our spirit unbroken.
, Let us cope and conquer.
If luck was with us, a look back at 1987 should reveal
more positives than debits on.life's lcd&Cr.
Progress need not be ~onumenta1. Afterall, watershed
achievements don't occur daily. But we should have recorded
some arowth, some accomplishment-however small.
Whether the contribution is acquiring an education,
increasing your company's productivity or improving your
family's welfare, the goal should be to build upon what has
been achieved. Nunure.
It is not enough to simply settle for the status quo. The
challenge is to set our si&hts on slightly higher goals. Move
forward or fall funher behind.
We as individuals, as employees. as citizens of a
community and as a country must be driven to improve on
our lot. Our hunger must be whetted, our motivation focused.
We suffer greatly from contentment and complacency.
Damn the generalizations, full speed ahead.
We have proven to ourselves on oh so many occasions
that our potential is virtually boundless. Our capacity for
greatness knows ~nly the limits we scs..-in~place.
Let us dare to dream the big dream. Attempt the diflicult.
Succeed against the odds. • .
And all the while, let us not lose our compassion, our
tolerance and our concern for what is right and wrong.
Holding on to a sense of humor might be helpful. as well.
With all that said, allow us to offer a woefully incomplete
list of goals -big and small -that we might take aim at in
1988.
Something must be. done: ..---
• About solving the traffic crisis. .
• About managing growth without stifling individual
freedoms.
• About caring for the homeless or helping the homeless
to care for themselYes.
• About the cursed AcQllired Immune Deficiency
Syndrome. ·
• About the impending water shonage.
• About the erosion of ethics.
• About TV commercials.
• About an a:irpon solution for Orange County.
• About growing intolerance among people pressed
closer and closer together. ,
• About the shOl"tqe of good child care. .
• About.Yuppies.
• About the high cost of movie tickets. .
•About the neglect of public education in California.
•About getting more California Lonery winners.
• About freeing the hostages.
• About educatio~I apathy among students and their
,parents.
• About the Jack of qualified presidential candidates.
• About the lack ofleadership on all levels.
• About network television.
• About the Angels.
• About the Dodgers. .
• About technolog)cal gizrnos. Microwaves. VCRs.
celluar phones. What next?
• Abo-ut long Jines at the bank. ·
• About the lack of parking spaees -everywhere.
• About the Rams.
• About the Raiders.
• About newsprint that comes off on your hands and
furniture. ~ ..
• About editors who write "Something must be done"
editorials.
Have a happy, healthy and productive new year.
Farm bailout
Congress has completed action on a bill that would bail
out the federal government's sagging Farm Credit Syst~m
with $4 billion in new money. '
Many banks in the system. which lend exclusively to
fanners. have been on the verge of collapse the last f~w years
• because of a depression in the natic;>n's fann economy.
The JYStem has lo~t almost $5 billion in bad loans to
fanners sa.n~e 1985. and m net worth has dropped to just more than SI b1lhon.
The new legishltion. if signed by the president. will enable
the system to recover most of its losses by selling S4 billion
worth of 15-yehr bonds to the public over the next five years.
'· . It i.s c_stimated the plan will cost the taxpayers about S 1
bdhon m interest payment on the bonds. That cost is minor
compared with what the collapse of the fann lending system
would cost the nation. · "
Keeping an uninterrupted supply of food nowina from
the fann to the kitchen is still l'he most important industry. in
the society. The fann credit bailout plan should be finally
approved and put into effect as early as possible.
.. nte 7'e..eaeu, NntnHe, Ta11.
•
.. t
r
.. Halt'• wrealiwtand much ofhl••tre111lfbJam•#lpliJ t&taet UJllt .
he 19 •real Amer.lean on the edge. ·' M • •
IJUST
. C~N'T .. HQlP
tJ\YSElf f
Growth :w111 be the· tap
story of.1988 ••• again
When the Daily Pilot first asked me
to write this weekly column for the
editorial page in early l 985, nearly three years ago, ·the subject the
newspaper asked to be covered was
"Orange County growth issues."
And Orange County's gtowth is-sues are many and varied. ranging
from traffic and land use through
housing and warer to social ana
ethnic change.
It is interesting to note that the
request was not to cover "Orange ..
County growth problems." but rather
"Orange County growth'.issucs." We
realized at the time that while growth
caused problems-forsome;irbrought
opportunities to others. So the con-
cerns that inevitably spring from
growth were labeled as issues.
Moreover. this coJumn was orig-
inally titled "In Perspective." The
concept was. and is. to place th~
issues into perspective. To pick them
up, examine them from e..-ery angle,
to hold them pear and hold them far,
and to consider all sides of an issue.
Noissueisclcancut, black or white. A
knee-jerk reaction is too easy.
We plan to continue this eu.dlin-
ation of growth issues durina 1988.
What will the major issues-be? Many
-of the major issues will continue.
somt' will fall ~ the wayside, and most interestin y. many more will
pop up that we id not e .. en consider
before.
Certainly the QuaJity of Life In-
itiative' will loom.big on ttie horizon.
and will no doubt be the major growth
issue of J 988. The issue has already
been the subject of anicles in national
news media, including a front page
article in the New York Times.
' COMMENTARY . - --·~ -. .......------
. .
And traffic has long been identified · -------------
as Orange County's sin&Je biggest
issue. ahhou&h I have frequcatJy felt that this is a poor issue for tile county
to select as its first choice, in that it is
the first choice of virt ually every
urban county and virtually every city
in the nation .
MARTIN
BROWER During 1988, traffic issues will
most likely concentrate on potcnriat-
casing of the current situation -a sales tax increase for roads. toll roads, ·Water is a real issue. but one that is road improvements. road phasing har~ to get Orange County residents
and transportation management pro-. exc~ted about as long as they ca~ open
grams. their .t.aJ>S and water flows' out.
Land use issues have always F~rtunately fot . the county. Super-plagued changing areu. For ycars;--vc1sor-HamcuW1eder kecp$on top of
people in lhe Los Angeles area this issue.
objected to the spouoninaofpsoline Social and ethl\ic chanse will
service stations on every comer. continue. and, we will continue to When the gasoline business changed comrncnt on a wide range of subjects.
and stations wel\t out of business. the from such changes in lifestyle as
Los Angeles residents objected to the buxing a new car in Orange County to
stations being replaced by mini-child care. malls. One thing is certain -there will
Here in Oranac County we have never be an end to growth issues in
larger questions ofland use. and small Orange County. Not even if growth
ones as well. The Price Oub in could suddenly be stopped. Because
Fountain Valley. Redevelopment in then we would have growth issues in
Huntington Beach. The ~trom reverse -shrinkage. Noiicc that 'Of
Home Ranch development an Costa the issues just discussed, economic M~ The Irvine Co. ·s completion of ~bilitY has not ~n included. That
Ncwpon Center in Newport Beach. !S only one new issue -and an
The Irvine Business Complex in !mponant one -that would be
Irvine. Laguna Canyon RoacL.in _.Ullroduccd on the.waY. down.
l.aJuna Beach. Incorporation in the Growth docs bnna issues. many of unincorporated pans of the county. which arc not popular. But as one.of
Housing of tho~ who want to ~.he worl<t;'s great lea~krs o~cc;. said,
move into affordable homes seems to Gro~h 1s lh.e O!llY SIJ!l of hfe. And hav~ dimmed as an issue, but could pf all issues, hfe itself 1s the one mo.st
.increase lflin if the Quality of Ufe important.
Initiative is passed. But housing of M.,.,,.Brower,.lllJllJnlM•n·
those without homes has arisen as a letter "Muthl B,..wer'• ~
relatively new concern. c .. iy Re,,.rt.
Thetopstoiiesof 1987
the alternative list
• By ROGER TATARtAN
The approach of New Year's Day
siinals the season for world news
•ncics to publish their lists of the
b1gcst news events of the previous 12
months.
Some will be events that aroused
relief and hope, as in the the U.S.-
Sovict missile treaty. or shock and
dismay. as with the stock market
crash, or horror. as in the mass
murder on a PSA plane over San Luis
Obispo. Rarely do these annual lists
recall events that evoked enjoyment
or bemusement or righteous indigna-
tion.
To fill these various-voids, I offer
today the fitst edition of my short list
of fascinatina though non-cosmic
news items of 1987.
A aood place to bqin is with the
news story of the Australian school
teacher who too"k a deduction for
brain depreciation on a personal
income w return. The courts held
that any brain fertik enou&h to come
up with an idea like that was clearly
undiminished. Deduction dis·
allowed.
· In upstate New York, a celebration
was held in October to commemorate
the 1 lSth anniversary of Edward
Strawemcyer. Who. you may ask. was
Edward Straaemeytt? Remember
Anllur Win(ield. who wrote the
Rover Boy boob so popular~itt in
1his cmlurY? Or Victor Appleton.
who wrote tom SW1f\? Or Laura I.ft
Hope. who WrolC the Bobbeey Twins?
Or Carolyn Kft~ o_f _ lhif Nancy cmw aOria? Or "' . ...-enc% Y °""" who·wrocc the Motor Boys? Wtll. all
Mre pen names o( one pcrtOn,
iiamdy f.dt111rd Straw~yer. He
didn't .nuaUy write every tine
bimlllf. attontins to * Maturity NcWs Srrii«. Tht .., and plots
~ all his bYt he Ofkn com-
•'91ioncd othtt-oieOole IO Anh OWi
the detail. He died, riCh, in 1930. -.ed
61.
In Iowa, where politics ct>me early eyes may. Gwynne Giles, a Canadian
and polls abound, the most unusual pharmacoloaist. says alcohol vapors
poll has to be the one conducted that escape via the eyeballs are a
personally by John Schad, wtio owns much surer test than breath of bodily
Radio Station KEMB in ·Em-aJcohollevcl. One trouble with breath
metsburg. To conduct it, he goes analyzers is that if you ·arc tested
down to the local sewer plant -and immediately after havina a sinate
The New York Times, no leas. tells us drink, the fumes can rqister high
what then happens: even thou&h thcr alcohol may have
"His listeners flush their K>ilcts to hardly started to enter the blood
signal their political pleasure, and Mr. strea.m. 1.n a letter to the British
Schad then measures the water level med1caJ JOumal, The Lancet. Mr.
which drops about an inch for evcri Giles says )'te has invented an
135' votes cast. and the lowest · analyzer that can be placed over the
candidate wins. eye of a driver and in IS seconds .. • . return a verdict more accurate than a :rherc s alway~ so~e 1nadvc!"et?t b~th measurement.
voting. of ~ourse, satd the stations llustice, if not blind. may still need pr<>sram director, Colleen M. De-cWses
veine, "'But it's a pretty aood in-Cha.rt .J r__. .. _ . • dicator'." . one r~rs obtained a
It is known not surprisinaly as the divorce from her husband, John, a
Ccs$ Poll. ' · former official of the Securities and
ExchanF Commission, chaflina.
among other thinp, that he beat ber.
When her own story, entitled '"Shat·
tered Dreams" was purchued by a
teadina publisher, ex-husband John sued for a lbart of tJw proceeds,
arauina that the book could not have
been written without him. A le>wtt
coun ruled that Mr. fedden ia
entitled to 2S percent. Mn. Fedders
has appealed.
It now being aJmott 1988, a study
by the Federal Office of TechnolocY
Assessment confirms that the worst
f~rs of Gcoraie Orwell's J 984 have already been surpaeed. Computen
can now be propammed to measure
the dililtncc and efficiency of the
propk who u1e the terminals. This
cl«tronic snoopina can tell the boss
how ofteft and how lorw you were
away fiom your keyboud, how many
cetepbone calls you made and ror how
Iona. and the prccitc number o(times
you hit a W'°"8 key and Md tO n1b it
out. DifC'O~ Mapzinc, wtridt re-
poru all of this. q~ COlll"ftllMA
Don Edwanb of California a •yi• we 1eem to. be wen on Iha .. , ao 1 surval~ tOcicty. It was Con-
P'fSllMli Edwarcb. med for * federal ·audy. Our only ... ii .....
Radio Sblct now come upwitl9 a low-
cost. Star WUMype penoMI dlhet
s)acm that can dtrow com.,._. olt
the Sttnl
I
..... h..... ,. • IWflntl
=·~.,,,....
T ' H "I I I • ) I I I ' . I I : l, .
T.,il~.a I ..... ,
ofl911.Tbmnl6Sdlyi11Aialhl
year.
Todlly"t Hillttisht 1n H~
On :Ian. I. 116), "11idm1
Abraltam Lincoln = tM Enwaici .. cioe Pracl1• 4lldaf\.
ina chit slaws i• retiel .--Wiii
frtt. ...... lal7JS..,_.~ .......
C11nH[ I... • •' \ r r ., . j
H clrt:The
• 1 American
onedge /
· NEW YORK-Seven years qo in
Washinaton. a bunch of us. three
reporters, a palitician. an actor and
two of our wives, betan talkjna about
an old movie caliar-Sullivan's
Travels." 1 was working on a~
then. traveling across the country
intervicwina people, and t.be xtor
said it reminded him oft.be fiJm. He described "Sullivan's Travels,"
which was made in J ~2: Joel
McCrea played a famous .din:ctor of
comedies who tried to rise above the unsatisfying tinsel of Hollywood by
going across America cij11uised as a
bum. The idea was that no onewould
Imo~ him; he would learn about .. the
people," and then tell their story -
make a great film, not a comedy,
about the a.reat issues of life and
death, wealth and poverty.
"Wow!" said the politician, aenu-
inely impressed. "What a way to run
for president. No money .. No staff.
Just travel from town to town talking
to the people. bccomina like one of
them. Foract the television and the press. Don't even tCll fficl1\ where
you're aoina next. Let them find you
where they can; talking to people 1n a
drugstore in a smaJI town. Then ,ct in
a car and move on. h could capture
the imagination of the whole coun· try:·
The enthusiastic politician, you've
probably aucssed, "'&S Gary Hart. I thought that night that the senator
from Colorado was a little crazy. But
then. so is runnina for president, no
matter how you do it.
Earlier this month. there he was qn
the main street of Concord, N.H .• saying:-~·1 don't have 1nr-:'18tional
headquarters or staff. I don t have anr,
money ... Let's let the people decide.•
Life imitates art.
I found myself moved by Hart's
craziness this time. l do not share the
acid anaer and scorn that I hear
coming not from other politicians but
also rrom ot er rcpo rs an com-
mentators. What is everybody so mad
about? Did Han -not show crrou&h
loyllty to that great institution. the
Democratic Pany? Give me a break;
party loyalty is (or communists and
Republicans.
What's bothering as. pols and press. is that we killed the crazy s.o.b.
and he doesn't have the sense to fall
down. Who does he think he is?
Richard Nixon?
"The Ghost of Christmas Past,'' to
use the words Bruce Babbitt repeated
before every visibte microphone -is
that Hart? Perhaps. But as admirable
and sane a-fellow as Babbitt seems to
be, ldon'tthink thcrcaremanyplacn
in the United Statcs·whcre he could
defeat Gary Hart. I may have it wrong
-and I think Hart II would not be a
strona Democratic candidate in the
fall of 1988 -but I think too many
people arc writing off the sclf-
regcncrated Mr. Kart too soon. much
too soon.
Kart's weakness (and much of his
strenath) eomcs from the fact that tic
4 a rcaJ American on the ed,c. He is
like the rest of us, only more so. That's
why he fnlkes so many of us uneasy.
Americans are, after all, self<:reated.
We are the people who came from
everywhere 1n the world and made
ourselves into something new. and
now we roam our own country searching for our old and new selves.
Gary Hart was not the firstAmcrican
to change his name, or to falce his
resume, or to make a fool of himself
and then try to bluff his way out of it .
"Sullivan's Travels .. [written and
directed by Preston Sturacs) is con-
sidered an American classic, too.
Sullivan tries to learn about "the
people" four times -an American
"Candide." He finally fiaurn some of it out on his last trip -the_hard v.:ay. He stumbles into the wrong place and
acts muued that last time. losing his
memqry and identjfy. and thtn
endina up in a chain png. .
It sets a little corny. but, watch.int hi~ fellow convicts lauah at a Mickey Mouse movie, Sullivan also teams
that what he don. make peopk_!f uah. is worthwhile. He lote1 in~~
and finds himself. ••1t isn"t much," he
says at the end. "But it's better than
nothina -in this cockeyed caravan .....
. I don't knoy.' if Gary Han has found
h1mtdf, or wdl ever find happiness or.
votes. He has certainly been mUllN
thoU&h: he. too. -as stupid and arropn~ and in the wrona olacr at the
wron& t1mt. But he MS better than
most -he made peOple think -in
tht cockeyed caravan ~ oolitM:s.
l, for OCle\ ... 9'ill willina to D11en ao
what he has to My. I am .. m
fascinated by Han's traYds. .
...
-..
CA' ends list of most adanlrdcoil;lpanl
yar 110. and UJ. 01iborftc Inc., lbe
clolhina m.m. 'finished fifth, down
from lliCoad I ,eaf IF·
Nt11 wert MinDelOCI Mmiftl A
Manulacturint Co., the ICieneiftc wt
fhocolrapbic equi~t ~y bued-in St. PIW. MinO::p
Morris Compamn Inc., tile IOblcco,
food and. bevcntt COIDPMY hued
New Yock: Ind J.P. Morpn A Co.,
the New York-bued commercial
banker.
}
Tied far Ainl.h p&ale were new, Oct. 19 laock Cl'Mla, bu& Far1Une ai4
comm to the Top 10: RJR Nabisco I.ht final 10 ~nt lhoMd n0 eft"ects
Inc .• the tot.cco and (ooda company from the nwufs collapet.
hued in Winu~m. N.C.. and Thow surveyed were &lked to ti&e
WU.Man Sllotts.loc .• a madn hued the 10 lariat compenies in their own
in Benaonville. Art. industries on eipa by attrib<n5.
lnaanational Busineu M~hines inchadina q\&&lity o( ma~ment,
Corp.. I.ht computtt ajana from quahty of products or letVaces. in-
Armonk. N.Y .. which ranked as the novat1venns. k>na·term invcstmenl
m05t admired company in each of the value. financial soundness. com-
first fourfonunc sunieys, slipped out munity and environ1Mntal rnponsi-
ofthc Top 10 listing forthe firsuime, bilit)'. u1it of corporate uscts -and
falling to l~nd place from the seventh ability to anract and keep talented
SPot last year. • . people.
p The least admired company oflhe R.atinpwereonascaJcofzeroto 10
The second least admired comt I r
was Amencan Motors Cotp .• belldia
Southfield, Mich. h wu www.,
acquired by rival automakereb;,slllr
Corp.
1umble in the rankings was • 306 in the survey was Financial Corp. with 1 O bcin,1 the bcsl mad. and
of America. based in Irvine. and included 33 mduslrics with assisn· 11~ ~pcratodr 1of theF~tiohasn's largest sav-. men~ being made accordin& to the
1np an oan. ..,.A taken heavy business that contributed the most to
loan-loss provisions in recc._, ycan. a company's 1986 sales.
The rankings are based on 3.480 Merck ranked first according to
The company taking I.ht s
the Ch1~0-bascd parent o( Um
Airlines. ft fell to 290th place, hll9
l 88th a year ago.
... -...... .
p replies to a survey of more than &.000 each of the eight attributes but one -OTC UPs & DowN ~· ?'.~ top ~~utives, ou1side directors and communny anc:t. environmental re-1.1 finaf1c1al analysts. Ninety percent of sPonsibiliay in which Johnson &
6:.J the returns were in hand before tlle Johnson. a pharmaccuticaJ and.medi· NEW YORK tAP>• -Tl'llt folowline Ill
' ,~w\ the Over • the • CoUMer 6'. I • 1 OCk• end warrant• that .,_,,. :..= • ~ --l"Hl'?ll'W~l'i ~~~lf~~ ;_,_: H difference between Ille orevlous ..._.. tf ~=: ~ ~ ~=:,.'".' ~ Jt ~ \J·~·J~ cwlce end Thurs<taQ.si.st 0< t>ld Pf"ice,
OIA 11 11"> K-V 16 17' • 111~. _ 3 CIMlirCPB 2 • \a Up CrOITr , • ., l4loo KIOofG ' , •• ,.... vuH -s~ s~ . 7 Prac\l'IRHC 2 \o Up
8!f..,.,, l~ r: = ' t:: r-ltollM\11' , • fVX Bdcst 3' • 1 J..IP 6'. ---= ~.~ ~~ t=.' I~~ 'h. ·-' ;;~ ~": ~ ~~~ t·'2 1:: H: o.n!MO I'· 1:a. LealCn I 11·16 II~ • ,. erFnc:I 3 \o UP
.,, Jr,n ~ 1.n.w. av. ""' •s~ I efaCp 2 + Y> UP ,;"' '> Ollerd • 0\. O~ 12 ·• 9 &.le~ ' 1 + 1 Up ,c,,, .... LhCie ' """ '~ {4~ • .,, 10 Fr.neno~nv 3'• + ~ UP
Giii ,.... Lotln ' lO''> .... ~· ., ~ lj tex ' :t ~ UP
._. .. ,.. . .
~~• l?t ~1~ MCI ,_ '"' ' ~. 1 M . Adv s 2'• ~ UP Iron , I -=~ nl'> ,,_ , 1 ha 7 + 1 v, UP 'S.1 'Ai I IS· 16 l '• 11:-0., 211., 1'-laonl I 6• + 1 UP ,jlo' I '• 1 \I, ... ~·1 I '"'• >5,. ~..... 15 ourlerOi\p 3~ + \ii Up
8 1• W'\ M:iiti ,., ~ •-·• 16 Vtra~ wt 2'., + in Up uJ I ·" ' l-" N\e,UJI 7-16 IS-:12 IS• n·., E 11 lnvenwsr 2' 1 + 'IJ Up 1:::,.,, b. .r-~ L 1)1' i:. ti ~~~ '° ,r: t V' H: IE I J"., ~ ~"" ~ ~... lS-tilJs" 20 S.hlenAK 27•16 +lS-32 Up Jh _._ ~ s, ' 1•~ ~ 21 E'ntr•. s • + 1 · UP
j •I~ Micx1trn ~ -·aff814" S • + 1 UP
1w?n t ~~ =.: ~"' ~ ~ " n A_POldOala '1 + ~ UP ~lf'1 I ~-· ~ 1e F: J~ CAM Data 2 + ~ UP :1 F odl _ ~ :.; 1 11 " 'IB HalwvOro '1 + ~ UP . 1 F~ o~. ""'°'"', 1, ._.. vncor lr" DOWNS
FoteslO I '• llY, ~ 15"• I~ .,_, 1 IH .. "-Name l..Hf °'!. ~ i:m ~~ ~ i1; 1; 1: !£1 Ii·'~ l ~ t. ~ ~ -IP 1· ~~~~ fl: f. I~ i' ~ ~ l ~-=~:~i~ ;i~~ ~ !~•
2"' 1~ u.....,. ff"' ft~ 10 MecftCT tsr M -~ l • ~ -'§~ ~= t ~.~ t? u ~~ ~" ~·-= ~ l': 1' • Veil.JI ik..., iJ 13 SCOR US C0<0 I -1' • 1
•''» ~= , u ~F~re'2., 3' • -'"> 1 . ~ .. ~t: -6 7 -1 l ~ lJ'l ur ncl I • -11• I etec:raH 2 11 -~ 1 • = It fi' :n.. : ~ 11 AdtKlnc •1• -~ I · .,.. • Wbl 19 NovePt\ wtll 3 _., -V.J 1
'°""I 1 .., ~ 113·1' "t" i tHllhCre J~ -· •h I \ . ..._. 't ll-14 ~~ If" w! sAmmea s Jll. -Vi • ,..,_. ~ tt'• x)(iii«.-c"' .!,! .. tl2 ogroue Inc S~ -\Ir \1 PbSMC I I .... " 1cor ,_ "-~lonEI 4 1h \1. Purlt9 I I '-YIOwF , ~ 1f'1t erberonA 2 1/• ll.1 ~ ·~ ,t..., i~' ?t~ zi S i.xisCP 2 -''• 11.1
·Wickes Biggest furniture event of the year with
10% to 70% off everything. Even if ou remot I
consider d buying ~ture, now · th t:ll11 to
do it. With ~like this this is
one sa1 ou don t want to~.
r
......
-.
Stock market slips again
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock markd
posted some spotty losses Thunday. closina out 1987 on a cautious note i n the face of renewed
weakness in the dollar.
As the business day bcpn in New York.
traders were confronted with the news oh drop in
the dollar to new lows in currency martccu around
the world.
Analysts said there also seemed to be a last·
minute round of selling by individuals for tu
purposes, and by money manqers readying their
ponfolios for yearend reports to clients.
Sllch scllin• was offset earlier in the month by
bargain-hunting tradm hoping to profit from a
market rally m January.
Lately, however, man~ analysts have ques-
t ioncd the chances for a rebound of any substantial
size in the neJtt few weeks.-•
The Dow Jones av~~ of 30 industrials :...:;Jit-B~~ slipped t1 :1.7 l01":93S:J T,CfoiinjoutW87 with a
net pin of 42.88 points. ol"'2.26 pcn:enL
WH AT AM EX Orn W H~T NYSE D:o
NEW YORK (AP) Oec. l1 , .......
Adv•nced I OecllMd ¥::F. =lows' l1
AMD LE~DE RS NYSE LEADERS
~~
-'• _.,.,..
+ ... -1
GoLo OuoTEs ~11 -"
META LS Q uon~
• +
·~.'-71
. ~(March 21-April 19): Planuubject tocbante. relabves could seem-----------'"'-
to a.,pear from n~
where. Focus on
me11a1es , calls. . SYDIEY. dates. usianmcnts.
vilill, short trips.
Popularity in-OUll creases. you become
more aware of ap-••••••••••••• J)e:llaftCC.
' TAURUS (~pril 20-May 20): Requests arc fulfilled.
you are on more solid financial-emotional pound as
result. Superior says, "You did the job your way. and it
worked ... Check dciails. bring source material up to date.
GEMINI (May 21 -June. 20): Unorthodox rcla-ti~nship blossoms. You'll know where you stand. cycle '
hash. changes arc made which favor your aspirations.
Gain inc~icated through reading. writing. Virgo plays
oul$tandinarole. ·
-CANCER (June 21-July 22): Domestic adjustment
featured, someone behind scenes lets cat out of bag.
Means SCQ'Ct is revealed. clandestine arrangement loses
i1sedge. Gain cooperation offamily member. Taurus fills
bill.
LEO (July 2}-Aug. 22): Wish .. comes true" in
unusual manner. What begins as deception is trans-
formed into,actuality. Play waiting game. don't jump at
fint offer. y OU could be asked to ap~r before lhe media.
Pisces involvCd. ·
VIBGO (A\lg. 23-Sept. 22): Focus on responsibility.
pressure. deadline, challenges. Emphasis also on physical
attraction. lonJ·term commitment. Experience pays,
references venfy claims. Cancer. Capricorn figure
prominently.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis continues on
communication, ability to reach more people. chance to
.,ab for brasl rin._ All stops are ou~ sky is the limit. you
no lonaer need wait for sianab. Aries ptays dominant role.
SCOllPIO (Oct. 23--Nov. 21 ): Streu independmce.
mativity, darin_1. coura,e. pioneerina spirit.· Focus on
new chances , for advancement. basic employment.
relationship walh those who rely upon your Jud&ment.
consideration.
1.AGIT'l'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Follow throuah on hunch. lrust individuaJ who helped in pasL Rise above
petty annoyances, impnnt yo1Jr own style. learn by
sharina knowledge. Cancer, Clpricorq, Aquarius people
play top roles. . .
CAPRICORN (Dec. i 2-Jan. 19): Diversify, display
humor, look beyond lhe immedaa\e, open lines of
communication. You'll be invited to attend prcstig.iQus
social affair. Check wardrobe. realize importance of
"bodyimaae."
AQVAIUVS (Jan. 2().Feb. 18): Be willing to revise.
review, rebuild and to ignite spark of love. You'll be
.. contacted" by one who does care but is basically shy.
Message · will become increasingly clear. Scorpio is m
picture.
· Plsca (Feb. 19-March 20):' Reject the superficial.
discern motives. read and write. communicaJe your own.
ideas. concepu. Focus on family. -security. property
values, lons-ranae prospects. 'Answer: It is more than
mere flirtation.
.IF JANUARY t .JS YOUR BIRTBDA Y you are
sensitive, emotional. psychic. have gourmet appetite and
~ssible digestive problem. Your molher had more
influence than did father. You have succ:css in dealing
with public. especially women. Capricorn. cancer people
play important roles in your life. You arc· caP.able of
. overcoming odds. you revel in challenge because of
confidence in your own capabilities. Future prospects:
partnenhip, business of your own, change of marital
status. June will be memorable for you in'l 988.
Make it a really new year
DEAR READERS: Everybody gets
today off but me. So do you mind if I
patch t~lher some lin~ from past columns~ Thank you. I appreciate the pass. . ~ •• l1111us • Happeee-eec New Year! Does the
newsprint seem muddy? Having
troutJle-focusing this morning? Docs
the cat walking across the carpet
sound as if he is wearing combat
boots? Docs your mouth taste like the work? As proof do you rattle off the
bottom of a bird ca.gc? names offriends who have tried every
Sorry about your headache. Do diet under ihe sun and they arc still
your eyes feel as if they arc full of fat? Physician1 tell us that yo-yoins is
sand? lf so. crawl back into lhe sack bad for the heart. The or\ly sensible
and meet"me-herr.n-this sarnr phrcr-wa an ecp 1 o 1s to
tomorrow. c~ your eating habiu. This is
For those of you who are still called behavior modification.
reading, I have some suggestions' that l learned several yean aao that ·my
miaht make this year a better one than Waterloo was going to the refrigerator
last. First. jf you arc a smoker. quit. AFTER dinner. I'd sit down at the
You'll feel better. look better. smell 'typewriter after a good meal (with
better, save some money and add_ dessert) and in half an hour I was back
years to your life. Your family will be in the kitchen looking for a Sliver of
thrilled and people won't move away that great chocolate pie. Of course. a
from you..anymorc at cock11il panics. sliver was never enough. In 20
business meetings., in restaurants and minutes I was back for another sliver.
airports.. only this time it was more like a
Have you been wanting to lose 20 wedge. -•
pounds, or 30 or 40? Make this the Half an hQur later, I made a return
year it happens. Only you are rcspon-visit to the kitchen and discovered
sible for what goes into your mouth. some almonds. I remembered that
Have you decided lhat diets don't nuts are nutritious. rich in protein. So·
I took a handful. One helpina of
almonds "is never enough. so. of
course, in 10 minutes I went back for
more~ all the while tellinJ myself I
needed the protein. After dinner I put
away almost as'la'ny calories ai I did at
the table.
I knew I was unable to keep that up
forever so I decided about·five yean
ago that the kitchen was enemy
territory after dinner. and I l'l}USt
consider itjustasdangerousas.a mine
field. Accepting t~t sirrgle notion·
changed my behavfor and has kept . OL..)'.CalS-Also
helpful is 4S minutes of exercise every
morning. No excuses are acceptable.
Boring? Of course. but the radio and
TV help.
I can't say enough about exercise.
It's good for the heart. the blood
pttSSure. digestion. complexion and
1kin tone. And exercise generates
energy. .
bfake a few resolutions about the wty you are"going to treal-the people
aiPund you in 198.8: Strange how we
ui:at those who are n~t and
dearest the worst. We are courteous to
strangen. casual.friends and bosses.
but we tend to be rude. short-
1empercd and inconsiderate to those
we love best. --------------....----1-0-f_f_E_L_L_'.-$-----. · Take a vow tharall gossip will stop
with you. Carrying talcs can cause a
~t deal ofpam. Don't be a party to
.
Bat Fectory Prices .... tat ...
FEE B1111A1ES
• (213~831~1568:•
UPHOLSTERY Ille at. Words can be weapons.
• When you feel troubled and over-
-. Yw .... ""'1111'11 whelmed and don't know what to do. ttU-llll.. cena---.1111 ask the Lord to show you the way. I do --------------i it often and He has never failed me. WOVV' Jn YE-l\R~ No one who has faith in God is ever
afone. .
Jan. l is the perfect time to wipe the
slate clean and start fresh. Let's make
1his the healthiest. hippies~ most
productive yeu"of our lives. This is
my agenda. Will you join me?
B RIDGE
WIST EAST
• 7 · • 111I54 Q l75 Q '96ll
0 & Q I I 5 3 2 0 11
•A Q •Jt5
SOUTH .,
Q & Q 11.
0 A 7 64 ... ,, l
Tbe bid4fln1:
8elldl Wtll NOida
... 1 0 Diii
20 3 0 ' 4 ¢ -...
;
HoW Snoopy got to be a beagle
~noopydidn't swt out-att beagle.
Charles Schulz turned him into a
be3gle so Lucy could say. "You stupid
beagle.'' Sounded better than you-
stupid-anything-<lse.
-------"""""""""""'!"!"'~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!_..,o~fa"'*'ll agr-groups fot thciontcSt1ime»r
Haven't seen one poll lhat covcrat
all. But coun1lcss polls have covered
the pan.s. Summ~ in memory. they
suacs\ the disunction probably
belongs to Katharine Hepburn. Q. What'sa .. .gelasin .. ?
A. The dimple th.at shows up in
your check when you smile.
Jµst out is a band-held. banery-
operated lihrasonic device that scares
off d~. It sends out a squeal pitched
too high for peopl~ to hear. But
pooches hear it. and hate it. Let it rip
whenever the growly mutt gets wilhin
15 feet. Repcm is most such dogs will
light out. Please note the word
.. most."
Your bean doesn't work quite the
way your whole body works. Your
body rests about a lhird of your life. In
sleep. Your hean rests aborit a sixth of
your life. Between beats. But your
whole body doesn't take any special
rest while your heart is still. Anu your
hean ~ocsn 't take any special _rest
while your body is still.
Can you di$pute the claim that
most of the great --revolutionary
advances in scienct wm made by
men under age 35? Newton. Einstein.
LM.
Bon .
Hippocrates. Copernicus. Harvey, so
on. ·
Q. What U.S. town has lhe most
.restaurants? ,
A. Offhand can only tell you which
has the most per capita -FL
Lauderdale. Ra.. with 2.800. Will
che-ck further.
Client asks if any American during
the last 50 years could be described as
.. the woman most admired by women
1 Untidyone
5 ~ctty
9 NBA 9COf'9
14 H ....... clty
15 s.,..,,,
16 Mib
17 O.Wous
18 HeertM
20 Quchtttte
22 Go beclc
55 Vote coum.r
57 Alitr9et
58~
.WU
59 Prefer eo If ewr
61 P91flllll
. 82 RmlMd
&3~
DOWN
23 Ewtier then 1 Pwteke of
24 Sign 2 Meat di.ti
25 CeYe -: ~ 3 Fruit
Q. How. many bee stinp would it
take to kill the averqe man'?~
A. About 500. rcponed)y. But don'"\
buy that one as aospCL Lot of people.
·are m~re vulnerabae lhM-tbai-
suggcsts. ·
Most~fetTed sorts of sandwiches
naitonwidc now. in order, lft ~
poncd to be: I. Ham. 2. a.ron-
lettucc-tomato. 3. Corned beef. 4.
Pastrami. 5. Salami. 6. Bolopa. A
surv~} of commercial sandwich
sellers.. that. Cbccse as well as peanut
butter and jelly still rank way 'up there
in the ratings of lhe homemade.
... the dog 4 Portend -~~C~H~Al~li~S~-4~.;._*---?~~1wPist~~ii"'""-~~J.~1nsutt,..t--~---i
7 T1tte Go1Eli i! ~ student a ~ you
an openina bid, be could eujly have
expressed bis p.me ambitions with a
natural jump to two hearts. Tbc
au.ction really went off the rails
when North cue-bid fout dia-
monds. Why abould be want his
35 AellltNe 9 Aptltudel
38 ar.. old 10 Genus of
37 Bring ebout plents
38 OrMment 11 Trend --31 WnJng: pr9'. 12 A09d of old
40 Out ol -13 ~·. home 41 T• 1t Conwneud•tlon
42 ~ 21 Tumult
43 ~ 25 S.-d hem 44 ...., 2t Rult'9d
partner to name a suit wbm he is 45 Boot-eNped 21 Anlmel
really not inttrated in any contract a.net -29 P\9Y•lcalor
other than speda7 Surely a jump to , -~ $c c .. 8:. .. ~"";.mw11ecic 30 •• -CllPP''
four speda would bave described s 1 llltta•tt ~ ~ ,..
bis band quile ~uatdy. 53 FWilty one 33 Very poor
Hoff9r
50 HMdOOllS
51 Bright 9lgn
52 Stak•
53~
54 SIUmp doWn
~ v..ement
6 Q .... ,.
7 • 'OM , '.._
... ... ... " Not surprilinstJ. South envisqed bia tbinp. aad jumped to t.be heart
slam. Too lllle North ctcpded to
sbotr .. ...... South .. knew.. 14
tbat if puu. did not have beans, .
7 8 10 11 12 13 ...
Opeaiq leld: Kina of 0
A new ,.r Ml dawned. IO It's
dme for U1 to wilb tbal 1911 will be
a,.. fd of IOOd bridle for all our
•fm. No.-..bowbedtbinp
..... ba\19 _.la 1917. JW can
....... dllt ........ you did eaald be • bed • ftll befell a peir
• tbe World T-Qa,..._.ip
... Oceober. .
It a. blclllml fM .... blt to .............. .., ...
2 3
be b8d to ba" a bllct two-su.iter, 1-,-7-4--+--+-:--
IO be ~ trotted ~ bis set'-. oDd IUil at cM ..,._~! West ""'20..,,..· -+--+--+~
,.... cm firm arouad wtdl bis double •
IDd two cnuapUicts came bis ... , 23 ..., ...
Al t.M om. table iD the match
the COlllnCl wu a ..-e four splda •
a ~ complr.•ed by tbe mt
.-. Dlcllnl" .. dM diamond
...... Cllllaid tine ~ IDd tbe
6
•
t1a1 ... -prllal. Wt lb Molda'I ............... .... ........ ,..., ... ...... .. ol lliiiil,. .......... that tbe
.... ol IM lmrt -... his belt ................ , 0.,
..-~·· melllid ol two• ••* D 11'?1 • M M -a ........................ ...... a PM.He .... .. .................. __. ___ , .......... .........
TD
PAlllLY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"This is a very loopy year."
Smoked hams
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson ,
"Wake up! It's almost time for
the Rose parade!''
fEANUTS
WEU. DO '<OV HAVE
~JN PLAN5 FOR
TME NEW '<EAA ?
GARFIELD
TUM.BLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
ROSE IS ROSE
'l'I"• .._1.,, ... er;;, ...
\.. ''J 4.. l I I I l I, 1 \ I I•
.:. l '1 ( ' , ' t <.1' ' \ , , ,,,,t,,,1 11,.,tr
._t i t Ll 1,._t. l,_,(t 1 1
\I I It l It// l It \' I 1 ,,,, ~·•,,1•1,,\.'1
t. 11/t l II f '''It ' 1'1' 1
OH, NO! WMAT MAPPENE.P
TO MY TOE.S ?!
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
.
~ ..
QAMIN AND PATCHES
THEY CALLED
OFJ: T~E
PARA~
!ODAY
SHOE
I DRUNK DR IVER S WILL
BE RESPONSIB LE FOR MOR E THAN HALF THE
l-:llGHWAY DEATHS
THIS WEEKEND,
ABBEY!
AND TWICE THAT
NUMBER WILL BE
INJURED, SOME
MAIMED FOR LIFE!
THERRsrRBJC.~
CF A a.AoDE eAR100> ~ I PROOOCED A SlAR'n.JNG
J EFR:Cf ON ~ AUDIENC.E !
1------------4 '
DOONESBURY
r
1
I
I ~ •
by Gar,.Y Trudeau
·~·: ... :4r ~ :: ..... ,_._ ....... _ ...
by Addison
by Ly,o.(I John·ston •
~··· rt $__GQlliG
lo 8E. A Gf':eRf '/f:AR~
~~-
.by Jeff MacNelly
by Tom Batluk
One_. ........... _ ._. ....... ~
IMCee~ ...... --... ""°""" ··-... "OM ..... ~ IO ...._ my - -_, ..
,.
j ..
.
. DenV'er'• Elw•r named NFL'• Moet Veluebl• Pl•J•.,, AP. -
D•ww h•Mi• Hat of :141 pa.J.er• ellglble for arbltr•tk>n. 111.;
,
Cadigan: 'King of theDecleaters'
Ex-Sano tan outhas
been·a force on USC line .
• \onncr Newport Harbor Hi&h standout
Dave Cadigan hopes to live up to his title of
"King of the DeCleatcrs" when the USC
Trojans facc"Michigan State today in the Rose
Bowl.
.. In the brutal, constant struule for, control
of the tine of scrimmqc, aencrall)' acknowl-
edged as the baule that wins and loses games.
the Trojans award one "dcclcater"' to an
ofTCn$ivc lineman who bowls over his de-
fensi ve foe. •
"Ac has given new mcanin& to the tenn
dcckater.-Trojans Coach l..arTy Smith said of
Cadigan. "He's a guy who likes to put his man
on the ground, on his back and showin& his
cleats.
"He's very. very strona and able to
Michiga.n State
tries tlO reverse
Rose Bowl trend
But USC seeking.
to continue Pac-I 0
dominance today
three points.
USC is on a five-pmc winnina
streak in the Rose Bowl, with the
most recent triumph a 20-17 victory
over Ohio St.ate in t 985.
The Trojans' strinJ is P._lrt of a tnnd
that has seen the faafic-10 cham-
pions dominate the Big Ten cham-
PASADENA (AP) -The Mich-pions in Pasadena in recent years.
i&an State Spanans try to buck trend The annual visitors from the Mid-
and tradition today when they meet west haven't won a Ros:c Bowl since
the USC Trojans. tn the 14th Rose 1981. and lb.at 23-6 victory by
Bowl, the oauon's oldest bowl game. Michjgan over Washington is the Bi&
The ci&hth-ranked Spartans, their · Ten'sonlywinoverthela.st t3pmes.
8-2-1 rqular-season record including _ Not surprising is the fact that
an opcnina 27-13 victory over USC Michigan State Coach Gcof'tc Pcrles
will be making their founh New has do9.'nplayed tradition. and that Y~'s Day appearance in Pasaden~.-Laqy Smith. in bis first year as t~c
their first tn 11..)'.Cl[SJhc_~ roJans' coae-h, has emphasrzed his .
be televised on Channel 4 beginning school's past glories.
at 2 ~·clock. . "Our tradition and bistOI)' are a bi& .,
. The l':'o. 16 Trojans. 8-3, ha~~ an part of why we're here," said Smith. 1mp~s1vc Rose Bowl trad11Jo!\-whose debut with the Trojans was •
Their 2• appearan~ are the ~ost ~n , spoiled by the loss to the Spartans on t~c p mc. and they ve lost JUSt six Labor Day.
times. . ..These young people expected to
Led by vcn.aulc . quarterback be fi~ting for the Pac-10 cham-Rodncy Peete, the Trojans hope to · · R Bo b. uild on that tradition when they face P10n. 11> and ose wl. They want-
the Spartans. who feature tailbac ed ~O: a~ an cx~ra page to lb.at
Lorenzo White and a formidable tradtuon.
defense. ~ Perles, in hi~ fifth year as the
Ahbou&h thty were beaten by . Spanans coach. ts more intcres~ed in
Michip n State in East LansillJ, the the p~nt. . . ...
combine athktic ababty Wlth that stnqth. ••
Cadipn, an AU-American offcns.vc tackle
for the Trojans. averqtd l3.7 decleatcn per'
pmc this season. with a staaerina total of 28
against Boston Collqe, his fa-ther's alma mater .
Smith said he couldn't recall ever review-
ing a pme film in which an offensive lineman
so dominated an opponent.
··BasicaUy what I'm doina is fin1sh1ng my
block,·· the 6-S. 283-pound Cadigan said. ·'f. get
a auy join& and I finish it. l continue to the
whistle.''-
Althouah Cadigan earned All-American
honors and" helped USC win the Pacific-10
Conference and llosc Bowl benh. he said 1t was
"av~ touah sea.son" for another reason.
Hts mother, Barbara. died o n Aug. 11 after
a long fight with cancer, six <}ays before fall
football ~ctiec bepn. Although Smith told
him to take as much tjmc as he needed. Cadigan
reponed the.day after his mother's funeral.
"I didn't necessarily dedicate my season to
her, but I wanted to play in my mom's
rcmcmbran~. in a way she 'wanted me to
conduct myself and'thc drdms we had set." he
said.
"I play the way she koo~lcan and'lhc ~ay
J know I can." .
At the season's start. tbc h"6fillh said his
goal was to double the 50 dcclcatcrs he had in
1986. ~
He more than reached bis goal. but said.
"I'm not out for vengeance. I'm JUSt out thc:rc to
do what my mother: would want me to do. play
at I 00 per~nt."
Cad1gan's father. Patric.le, played defensive
tackle at Boston College. but had no mixed
feelings when the Trojans beat his alma mater.
23-17, this season -
"He's really pro me. He just wants me to do
well." Dave said.
Despite h1s-siz~. Cadigan has been trmed at
4.68 $CCOnds for 40 yards and consistently near
4.7. mJtking him O'ne of the fastest offensive
hncmen in the countrv.
With a grade average oO.O in communtca-
t1ons. Cadigan considers himsdf a fast &eamet:
He needed to be when trying t6 absorb tbe-
ofTcnsi vc system installed by Smith. in his fi~
,car as coach of the Trojans.
..They just lh~w so much at you-tbat you ·
needed ttme to ,absorb all the new infOI'.:.
mauon." Cadigan said. "There are littlf::
problems when y9u are in one system four years-·
and all of a sudd'cn you're smacked down with
the totall) different philosophy. But I think 1-:
dtd all nght. ··
In the season opener. Michigan Statcl>eat
USC. 27-13. so tbe Rose Bowl will serve as a.
rcmal&h. '
"fn one wa~ I was dissatisfied with that
(opening) game ... be said. ''In another way, no.
Yes, in the fact we lost: no. bc:Cause I thoUlh&
that with new coaches and youngplayers.»i1ed.id
fau1 y well. We d id beat ourselves. You cannot
tum the ball over six umes inside the 10-yard
hne and -.i.1n a football game. .
"I definitely think 1t's a great opponunity
being able to pla) them ag;tin."
Trojans losers just twice in their last He said Pac-10 dominauon 1s not
26 rea~ and postseasoo games my problem. Wc'rc'not aoin& to act
apinst Bi& Ten teams. arc favored-by (Pleue eee ROSE BOWL/82) A IJOa,Ddakeeper appllee .tbe ftnlahtna toacbee on tlae roee Tlaanday iD anddpadon of today•• 7•tll Jtoee Bowl .....
eml»lem at tbe mldfteld nrlpe of tbe Roee Bowl In Puadena matdaJn& USC .,.m..t Bl& 10 claampfoa lllcllJpD State. ·
Title showdown nothing. new for Okla_hOma, Miami
Sooners face Hurricanes for
No. 1 in Orange Bowl tonight
,.,.. ne ASMdalff Presa
MIAMI -Oklahoma and M1am1 arc not novices
when it comes to a shooto~t between No. I and No. 2. but
toru&ht's national championship battle in the Orange
Bowl.could be the bi~st one yet.
season. Last month, they· were No. 2 and beat No. 1
Nebraska, 17-7, to win the Bia Ei&ht crown.
After dcfcatina Oklahoma for the second year in a
-row in 1986 and vaoltina over the Soontrs to the No. 1
ran.kin&. Miami lost the national championship Fiesta
Bbwl pmc to No. 2 Penn State. 14-10.
"I don't know if it's old hat," Johnson said. "But this
is the best one I've ever been in because I didn't like the
one I was in last year."
These "Games of the Century" seem to be coming
alona at an alarming clip. Rarely do they li ve up to
expectations and this one may be no diffettnt. rcprdless
prove when the Orangcmen tangle with No. 6 Auburn
today in the 54th Sugar Bowl (Channel 7 at 12:30).
.. We arc anxious to prove to Auburn and the nation
we arc the best team in the country," All-American
quancrback Don McPherson said. "We arc not in-
um1dated. We arc not nervous."
S) racusc carries an l 1-0 rttord and a 12-tame
-.i. mruna streak into the battle wnh tht ~utbcastcrn
Conference champions.
Auburn, 9-1-1 , 1s a slight favonte that will draw a
sellout crowd of75.000 in the Louisiana Supcrdome.
opponunlt)' for the national title. but the Tigcn could
climb in the polls and finish third or fourth.
•· 1 don't sec any reason why we won ·1 be as aood as we
can ~ ... and ccnainly we'll have to~ to play as aood a
team as Syracuse ... Dye said. ··The) 're a footbalf team
without a weakness. -
Seminole., Hrulcen eye lfo. 2 ftnf•IJ
.
'l
I I
"I've never been involved in a bowl game between
No. I and No. 2," Coach Ba.rry Switzer of tOIH'lln~ed
Oklahoma said Thursday at a Joint news conference with
Miami's Jimmy Johnson durin& which_tbt)' rcitcrated
most of the same things they have been sayina all week.
of the pri~e at stake. , -
"When two &ood defensive teams play cac)l other -
and I find this out every year when Oklahoma plays
Nebraska -the defenses dominate the ballgames and
keep the score dose." Switzer said.
Despite its perfect record. Syracuse is pvcn little
hopcofSttunng the t 987 national championshjp because
the only other teams with 11-0 records go bead-to-head
when No. 1 Oklahoma meets No. 2 Miami 10 the Orange
W .
TEMPE. .\nz. -Aonda State and Nebraska. two
teams st)m1ed in the1rb1d fora benh 10 college football•a
nattonal cbamp1onsh1p pme. have set their sights on a
No. 2 fi nish m toda) 's Fiesta Bowl.
The third-ranked Scm1oolcs a d fifth-ranked Com-
huskers each~e 10-1 rccords1nto e IO:~~mc.whicb
~~UA!l-U~1UCIQ..Cl)-l...AllD.IIJCLil--:.f--~-=--:--.:-~~-::-~--~t
A sundma-room-onl) cro at 70.49t~seat Sun "I've been involved in No. I vs. No. 2 durinJ the
!9ular season. but this one obviously has the most glitter.
Its old hat for him." '
To niaht's showdown (Channel 4 at 5) is the 23rd
time No. l has played No. 2 in the 52-ycar hist~ry oftbe
Associated Press poll. It's the fourth sud~ game in the last
two years and the third for both Oklahoma and second-
ranked Miamr.
· Switzer's Soonen were No. I when they dropped a
28-16 decisipn to No. 2 Miami durina the 1986 rqular
Both teams have bad dominatjn& offenses all season.
Oklahoma led the nation in scorin& (43.5 points a game).
total offense (499. 7 yards) and rushing (428.8). Miami
was fifth in scorin& (35.6).
Syraca.e trle. for UJJbeate.a .e..on
.~ NEW ORLEANS-Fourth-rankC'd Syracuse. one of
only thiu unbeaten teams in the nation. has a point to
Syracuse Coach Dick MacPherson has downplayed
the battle for the national title.
"All we have to do is get to t 2-0 and cvcrything's
gonna be beautiful," Mac Pherson said .. "lf we don't get to
12-0. we've JlOt to keep our mouths shut and go home.
And we arcn t there yet, so it's best to keep your mouth
shut aJ>out it."
Devit Stadium also wtll watch the fifth mccttng of the
schools under what arc expected to b( ideal weather
conditions. sunny skies and 6Ckicgrtt tcmperatW'CS.
"lfwc were to beat Nebraska.~~·~ probably asaood
as anyone in the country," said Aonda State Coach
Bobby Bowc:ten. "We ~on't look at this ~ a ~tional
championship game. however. That won t be tn my
prepmc speech. We're playi ng tor No. 2. ut first we have Auburn Coach Pat Dye says Aubwn also has
somethina at stake. He says there may not be an (Pl--eee &/BS)
Hodson, Davis team
to lead LSU, 3 -13 ·~
JAC'K.SONV;H..bE, fla. (AP) -
South Carolina's blitz•na defense
backfired Thursday -sainst seventh-
rankcd Lou1siana State, ~htch beat
the Ga~ ~13. 1n the Gator
Bowl.
LSU quartttt.ck Tom Hodson
eluded the South Carolina nash and
threw three touchdown passes to Wldc
receivcrWcndcftDavis. who was able
to act open aptnst the C4mccocks'
one-on-one cove,.. "You either li"YC by the blitz or dje
by the blitt. •• fint-year LSU COIC'h
Mike Arc.her said. "They dted by the
blitz."
Sou\ll Carolina COKh Joe Mor-
complete the LS
Hodson's first t
Davu came i n
the pmc as the
HOUSTON (AP) -Bret Stafford
threw three touchdown passes, in-
cludina first-quarter bombs of 77 and
60 yards 10 Tony Jones. in leading
Texas to a 32-27 victory over 19th-
ranked Pittsburgh ill the Bluebonnet
Bowl Thuradny nisht
·Jones' touchdown catches helped
him set a Bluebonnet record for
receiving yards and p ve the Long-
horns a 14-7 lead only 21h minutes
into the 29th game in the AstrodQme.
alOft& wuh a Jl-yud held pl by
Wayne Clemenll. 11ve lhe Lone-
homs a 17-7 halftime ae.d.
Tex.as added a 49-yard fie&d pl by
' Clements and founh.quarter touch-
downs on Stafford's 14-yllld pa11 to
Gabriel Johnson and a 24-yanf run by
Eric Metcalf. .
The Panthers also had some spec-
tacular plays. A 4-ya(\1 soorina run by
Heyward was set up by a 4S-yard
kickoff return by Billy Owens and a
45-yard halfback ~ from BiU
Osborn to Reaie Williams.
'
COLUMBUS. OlliO JAi? -..,., ...... -....... n.ndlJ .. OIUo _... 21• ... --. -°'.f;I'. 1"'1!11: .... ~ ~.~'1:-.
1'119 Maponaat ...... ··-our llaft' bae 'IDd "' • .._ recnaithtl. We recop•ae dill • prow.ly are behind ill recndU.., llUl
we're -.. to cau:b up ln 1 buny." coope;ma. .. llecruiu.. is the name of tbe
pme, You WID with lalen\.. eo: • taid. .. We will IWt rilbt
primarily Obio _players and .._ ID
wbereverelle we need to ID-Wt"I aet
Jones needed onl)' three catches to
eclipse the rctt1vin1 record of 163
yards set by James lngtam of Baylor
m 196l and tie<! by Gerald McNeil of
Baylorin l~U.Jones"othercatch-wa
a 36-yarder with 8:05 left in the first
Pittsburgh fttshman Larry Wanke
came off the bench to throw three
touchdown passes, the fim of his
college career. He threw 40 yards to
Hosea Htsrd in the third quarter and
43 yards to Michael Stewart and IS
yard s to Osborn in the fourth quarter.
The last touchdown came with but
nine seconds left. and Texas re-~oveted the--ensuing-onside-ticrand
ran out the clock.
tbe 25 bat ltudcnt4lhleta we C8D IO
compete in tbe Bil Ten~"
Cooper W8I introduced II die Mal .
8ucbyel cmdl one day aftll' M Ollec::Md Arilou SIMI.. to • .,..._..._
quarter. •
Jones fi nished with 242 yards on
eiaht catches. His 77-yard· catch on
. the first play Qf the game.alsp was a
Bluebonnet Bowl record.
Stafford hit 20 of 34 passes for 368
yards, breaking the record of 303
yards set by Purdue's Mark Hermann
ID 1979. ,...
Wanke completed ei&ht of 20
passes for 172 yards a nd had three
intercepted.
After Wanke's second to11chdown
pass, the Panthers recovered an
onsides kick to retain possession. But
three plays later, Texas' Gres Eaglin
intercepted a Wanke pass wtth 6:25
left in the game.
Wanke was intercepted again with
2: 12 to go by Texas' Paul Behrman.
viciory over Air FO(a ill die
dom Bowl and I 7-4-J .._ rtmftL
His record in three yan at Arizona
State WIS 2S-9-2.
eoOper SO, replaces Earle Bruce.
who was fared on Nov. 16, five days
before the Buckeyes ended tbelr
season with a M-1 record by beatinf
Michipn.
Altho~ Cooper left a ~ con-
ference wtth a list oflS players be said
. be planned to contact immedialety,
-~__; _______ .._ his five-year contract does no( take
Pittsb.urgh's Craig .. lronhead"
Heyward gol 136 yards in 30 carries,
his 12th consecuti ve 100-yard per-
formance, but his running couldn't
overcome the Longhorns' ajc attack. .
The surpn s1ng Texas passing show.
Metcalf wfs held to six yards
rushing at the half but he broke loose
in the second half and finished with
95 yards in 18 carries.
Pittabar&ll'• Crall 0Iroalaead' Heyward
bunta tllroaaJi the line for 4 -yard toacb-
• effect until Monday, when the Obio down nm ID ftnt quarter bef~ belnc ' State Board of Trustees formally
•topped by Taa. defender John Baa· votes to approve it ..
SPO RTS BREAK
·Broncos.-Elway
named NFL Most
Va~uable Play~r
From Tk Associated Preu
NEW YORK -John Elway of the Eil
Denver Broncos. who carried the injury-•II•
decimated Denver Broncos to lhe best
record in the AFC. was named the NFL's
Most Valuable Player by The Associaled Press on
Thursday,
lway was o ne of oniy three players to receive votes
·for the award, beating out w1de receiver Jerry Rice of
San Francisco. who was named the AP's offensive
player. and 49ers quarterback Joe
M.o ntana.
Elway was beaten out by
Montana fo r the first-team quar-
terback spot.on the AP's All-Pro
team.
.. It's very flattering.-Elway
said 1n Denver. -Bu\ witnout the
team behind you. you don't have
a chance to wm an award like this.
quarterback tends to get more
credit than he deserves some-
times."
0£84 votes cas1 -b) three broadcasters and sports
writers from each NFL c11y -Elway received 36 vot~
to 30 to r Rice. Monta na got 18 votes.
Elway ca m ed 1he Broncos.to a I 0-4-1 record this
season, good enough for the home-field advantage
throughout the playoffs. even after losing to mjul"\ such
stars as running backs Gerald Willhi1e and-.Steve
Sewell. safetv Dennis Smith. wide receiver Steve
Watsan and center Billy Bryan. Also, fi ve defensive
players from the team that wenno the Super Bowl last
season retired .
Elway entered the league as the first choice in the
1983 draft, but got ofTto a shak} start, thrown in as the
·savior of the Den\ er franchise.
. St1ll, in his last fo ur years. the Broncos have been
44-1 7-1 w11h him as the starter.
.. It makes me feel hke l'\-e come \ long wa) in fi ve
)Cars," Eh'a) said. "As a rookie. I hit rock botto m.
When ) ou Stan do""n·and-out and then come back to
this le\ltl. It.mal es all the hard work seem wonhwhile.
That makes this a""ard seem even more special:·
"Smee he's been here he's played an awful lot of
good games:· Coach Dao Reeves said after the San
Diego game ... But I don't know that he's been as
consistent as he's been an these past three."
. .
M•N~~:!:!-s:;<:~.:.~:.der Late goalgives Flames win
lakers continues to lead Wcslern Con-~ ... · . f~~~t f~~y~rt~~ 1f~~h~ll~~t~n~~~ ~~= ~ s ·uter tallies With ~itlt at lea5t one point in 18 Di.visio!' ~ment and mto a tie for
Star Game stra1&h!·ga!11es· Yzen:nan broke the-third with idle To~nto. i:i.e Black-
Johns0n has received 269 569 votes tabulated thus eight SeCOildS }eft Red Win~ record ~t m 1965 by Alex hawks ~ l~t their pre~ three far. · Oclvecch1 0. Dunng the st~k. &a!"CS, 1ncludm1 a 6-'4 .tkici11on to
. Other leading vote-getters were Darrell Gnffith. to beat Flyers 5-4 · ¥-~ennan ~as 14 g~ls.and 24 assists Minnesota W.._edtlcsda~ nipL .
U tah guard· Akeem OlaJuwon Houston center: and ' fo r 38.ofhis 6 1 points. Sav~ also had. an 1111st, helpena
· • 1' E 1· h d c 1 · · N "-• d Mason improve his career record to Denver s A ex ng is an a ~1~ au. iorwar s. ,Raqen I, Nordi4eet 1: James 7-0-1 qainsl the Nonh Start. Muon,
From Tiie Assodateli Press Patrick scored two goals in a four-coal a na1iveoflntemational Falls, Minn., Nelson becomes Warriors GM burst in the second period as New and a former Minnesota-Duluth star. · A power-play JOll by Calgary y ped 34 h the a1-..L1.-1.
OAKLAND -Don Nelson formally m
became general manager of the Golden
State Warriors on Thursday. a day after the
Warriors and Milwaukee Bucks reached an
agrecmenl which freed Nelson to take on the job with
the NBA team.
.. 1 have been doi nJ more of the basketball
operation than I had onginally anticipated when I
arrive,' and I am very happy that I can now J>e open
about my d1:1ues.." Nel90n ?id in a statement released
by the Wamo rs.
Nelson resigned as coach of the Bucks after last
season and joined the Warriors as a part owner and
executive vice president. His contract with Milwaukee
included a s1ipulation prohibiting him fro m bein.1
involved m coaching or player personnel work with
another NBA club until after the 1989-90 season 1f he
left the Bucks.
On Wednesday. the Wamors agreed to g'ive the
Bucks a 1988 second-round d raft choice as compensa·
u on for Nelson and to rclea$e him from the stipulation.
Nelson also will retain his vice president title. The
Warriors' pnma!) o~ner 1s Jim Fitzgerald, a former
Bucks owner.
Strike considered top story
NEW YORK -The 24-day N FL Ill
pla)ers' strike. which caused what many
·considered a lackluster and meaningless
season. is the overwhelming choice as The
Associated Press Story of the Year for 1987. .
The stnke received 282 points in voting by AP
member sports editors. Dennis Conner's America's
C up victor)' was next with 191 points.
Bo Jackson's s1detnp into professional football
after alread) beginning a ma.Jor-league baseball carttr
was third wi th 174 points, and Sugar Ray Leonard's
upset victory over Marvelous Marvin Hagler for the
World Boxing Council middleweight tille was fourth
"'uh 169 _points.
defenseman Gary Suter with only ork beat Quebec at Madison Square stop s ots as 0111u1111w .. s
eight seconds left in the third period, Garden. gained only their fifth road victory.
his second of the game. gave 1he The game marked Michel Bndul,SMrell:Rejeanl.emelin
Flames a 5-4 victory over the Phila-Bergero n's first against his former recorded his second shutout of the
delphia A yers Thursday nigh& in the team since leaving Quebec after last seasonoverBuffaloasvisitinaBoston
NHL. season to coach in New York. dumped the Sabres.
On the wi nning eoal. Suter moved For the Rangers and goaltender Lemelin, who riladc 17 saves. also
in from the blue hne and blasted a Jahn Vanbiesbrouck. it extended was in aoal when 1bc Bruins beat the'
waist-high shot by. goalie Mark their currenl unbeaten streak to four Sabres. 9-0, in Boston on Dec. 22.
Laforest from about 20 feet. games -l-0-1. The loss broke a The Bruins jumped to a 2-0 first-
An Olympic Saddledome sellout three-game winning streak for the period lead on &oa.is by Geoff
crowd of 1_9.626 saw Calgary m<We Nordiques. Courtnall and Cam Neely.
back into Tirst place in the Smythe TheNordiques hadtakena 1-0lead Co rtnall got his 21st of the teaSOn
Division. one point a head of the idle on a first-period goal by Mike fa&les on a power play at 3:35, cappina a
Edmonton Oilers. before the Rangers scored four-times -three-way passina play with Neely
PhHaddphia. meanwhile, was left in the second period l od two in the and Ken Linscman as.he picked the
in a· first-place tie with the New York third 10 put the game away. far side on Sabres pltender Tom
lslcfnders in the Patnck Division. Barrasso.
Other scorers for 1he Flames, who BlackUwu 4, Ne.U Stan 1: Denis Midway throush the period. Neely
are 17-4-2 in their last 23 games. were Savard scored twiC'C and Bob Mason ga ve 1he Bruinrrtwo-pl cushion
Joe Nieuwendyk.. Joe Mullen and maintained his unbeaten goaltending with his 19th oflhe year as he took a
Mike Bullard. re~ordagainst Minnesota.as Chicago pass from Linseman 11 the Buffalo
For the Ayers. Pelle Eklund scored defeated the North Stars. blue line, cut in on the left side. and
twice and Rick Tocchet and Scott The triumph lifted Chicago pastthe ba1 Bamsso with anothershotto the
Melian by had one apiece. North Stars out of the Norris far side.
, Flames goalie Mike Vernon made
31 saves. while Laforest wound up
with 20.
The Ayers had lied the game at 4-4
with two goals earlier in the third
period .
ROSEBOWL •••
From Bl
involved with how many ) ears it's
been since the Big Ten bas won or
Elsewhere in the N HL: lost."
Rd Whigs 7, BIHi t : Bob Probert "We're f<?ing to be our own team,
scored three goals and Steve Yzerman do everything we can to prepare
added o ne goal and three assists to ourselves for one game. Our attitude
run his poant-sconng streak to a club-is this is a new year, this isa new team.
record 18 games as Detroit beat St. We haven't been out here for 22
-bouis at home. years," Perles said.,,
The Red Wings, 17-16-4. com-That 1966 Rose Bowl pme also
ipn twice, 31-27 durina the rqular
season and 2._14 in 1983.
Smith said both his .ieam tnd me
Spartans are much different than they
were when they met earlier.
"I WIS discouraaed (with that loss)
because of the football we played,"
Smith said. "Goins into the first
pmc, our players and ooec:bes didn't
really know each Oll)er. I think as a
team, we've 11>ttcn to know each
other and mature.·
"I think it's rare that you s1art and
end with the same team." Quote of the day
Clluck Daly, coach of the Detroit Pistons,
after Dal'T)l Dav.kins. acquired from the Utah
Jazz. sho""cd up at a ponderous 290 pounds. 25.
ove r his normal pla)'1ng we1gh1: "Obviously. he
hasn·t done much running al all where ver he's
been. O n LO\etron (the planet Dawkins caJls
home), the~ must u~ cars or bicycles or
Al Campanis' remarks the blacks -1acked the
ne-cess1t1es" to manage maJor league baseball teams was
fifth with 163 points. and Paul Molitor's 39-game
hilling streak was sixth with SO points.
The rest of the Top 10 were: Minnesota's seven-
game \ 1ctory over St Louis in the fi rst indoor World
Scnes. Earle Bruce's firing by Ohio ·s tate, Ben
Jo hnson's setting a record in the 100.meter dash and
Mike Tyson's unificatiOJl of the heavyweight boxing
pleted a sweep of a home-and-home was a rematch of a rqular-season
series and stretched their Norris contest. Michigan Sta~ beat UCLA,
Division lead to three points over the l l-3, in the regular 9eat0n, but the
Blues. I S-17-5. • Bruins upscl the Spartans in the Rpsc
Yzerma n. who entered the game Bowl.
tied for foun h in the league scoring In the other three Rote Bowls that
race. sci up Proben's first goal at 9:54 were rcmatc~ of ~lar~n
o f the fi rst period and scored his 28th games, Iowa State beat n State
of the season 1:27 later as the Red twice, first ·14-13 then JS-9 in the
Wings capitalized on a five-minute 1957 Rose Bowl; Ohio State beat
hiJh·stickina penalty to St. Louis' UCLA, 41-10, in lhc 197S ~
Gano Cavallini to score two power-sca50n but lost.23-10, tothe8ru1nsin
play goals and take a 3-0 lead. Pasadena, and UCLA topped Mich-
The Span.ans' White pined I l I
yards and scored twice apinst the
Trojans, but he said that has no bearina on wba1 miabt happen in the. ·
Rose Bowl.
•something else " , ·
Moa selected Coach of Year ·
NEW O RLE.\ 'IS -For the second EE
li me in fo ur ~ca<.ons. Jim \fora 1s Coach of c II•
the Year in a professional football league,
but he sull can't <.'\plain how he docs it.
In onl) hLS ~cond ~ason .as an N FL head coach.
Mora. 5~ gu 1dl:d the t'-ev. Orleans Saints to their first
winning ~a!>on. a 12-3 record second only to San
Francisco's 13-~ and a first berth in the playoffs.
In balloting announced Thursday by The As.-
soc1ated Press. ~fora received 76 of 84 votes. Three
spons repomrs 1n each o nhe NFL citks made up the
sdecuon panel San Francisco's Bill Walsh finashtd
second wtth four \ otes.
No. 2 Kentucky rallies to Win ._
R-ex Cbapmu scored 13 of Kentucky's m
final 16 points as the sttond-ntnked
Wildcats ralhed to beat Vanderbilt. 81 ·74, ,
in the outheastem Conference opener for
both teams Thursday mg.ht. It was 1he 400\h career
victor) for KentuCk) Coach Eldie s.u ... He was
pRt.ented a plaquuflerthtgamcby Rettj:....,,sonof
tqiendary Kcntuc~y Coach A•..,. Sunon
coached at rttJhton and Arkansas before com1na IO
Ken1udy in 19 S Vanderbilt. 7-2. opened a 6S-'6 ad
with 8:01 f'(maming an lhc pme on 8any 11•1~1
11•tb thrtt-po1n1er. Bui Kcntuck). a.-0. tcOf'Cld 11
llt'al&ht po1n~ lnaieted b)' auard ~ Difllllf'I
m»ound basket at 7:19. Davcndcr and Chapmaa IMcr
ICOftld on consccuti \IC stnls on 1 nbounds pams IO'*' Kcntuc:kf up 67"'6S W1t)a •:26 10 to and a stunned
VaadatMh f\C\~r fUO\icrtd , •• Jn a womc11·111mc.
Dll9 .,._. KOttd 28 P91nts and ~ riPI
ldou ... IO ad UCLA lO an 82-71 victory over Noftll C.,..,..na at tM W~ Center ftadtelll l1•1r h8d
I J ~ and Jaime llnn added 12 fof lhr Bniim;
... r8i1111t thrir ""'°"9 10 0.-S
title. ·
Last year. the first that the AP named a Story of the
Year. Drugs was the winner. spotlighted by the drug-,
related deaths of Len Bias and Don Rogers.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
9 a.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Cttrus
Bov.1-Penn State vs. Clemson, from Orlando,
A a .. Channel 7. -
10:30 a.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL:
Cotton Bowl -Notre Dame vs. J ens A&M.
from Dallas, Channel 2. ·
I 0:30 a.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL:
fiesta Bowl -Florida State vs. Nebraska. from
Tempe, Ariz .. Chaancl 4.
I £30 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBAIL:
Sugar Bowl -Syracuse vs. Auburn. from New
Orleans. Channel 7.
2 p.m. -COLLEGE FOOl'BALL: Rose
Bowt -Michapn State Vl. use. from Pa.udrna.
Chan~4. 5 p.m. -OOLLEGE FOOTBALL: Orange
Bowl -Oklahoma vs. Miami, from Miami, Ai..
Cbannel4. •
S p.m. -AUT<> RACING: Palm Spnnp
Vintaae Grand Prix ~-= ESPN.
10:.lO a.m. -0011,mg POOrBAU.:
Cotton Bowl -Notre DllRie ¥t.. Te .. AAM.
from Dallas. KNX ( 1070).
IO:lO a.m. -QJllMS l'OOl'aALL:
Fata Bowl -Aonda Salt ¥t.. ~ ha Tan~ Anz.. KMPC (710). . ll:JO p.m. -COl.ot&GB l'OOl'aALL: ~ -Syncua vs. AulNm. froaa New
2 p.~~g:l.o. POOnALL: Ito.
Bo-I ...... Mtehtpg$eMC \'S. USC.~ Pltadn-. KMPC(710). ,
S p.m. -COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Ofa!tlt •
ao-1-0tlahocN vs. Miami. &om Miami. FIL.
KMPCC710).
-rm 1akina the ~pproaeh that we
never played apinst USC." uid the
Spartans senior, the .ChOOi's all-time
teadina rusher.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL BOWL ROUNDUP •••
hola81
to beat Nebraska."
The Seminoles suffered tt.cir only loss. 26-25. to
Miami on OcL 3 when they missed a t~nt
conversion pass with •2 seconds remairti"I-Nebraska's
hopes for its third na1ional title since 1920 faded with a
17-7 loss 10 Oklahoma in the Bia Eijht Confttcnce
championship game Nov. 2 l.
DALLAS -Nolre Dame makes its fifth Cotton
Bowl appearance today With hopes of saJv'lial a
promisinf season dcstrvyed by Miami.
The 2th-ranked f"tlbti111._ Irish, 8-3. and-l ltlHalCd
Tex.as A&M. 9-2, meet fOr the lint time detpite their Iona
foocball traditions. Noire Dame has played football I 00
years and Teus AAM 93.
Only 1 poaible Top Ten finish is on die line in the
$2nd Cotaon Bowl Ousic(Cbannd 2 at IO:JO). Howewr. Notre Dame wuts IO make up for a U-0
crutbiswby Miami in thcftaal11meof'the.....,_,..,
-we •ve aometbi~ to~ to ounefva•Well • tw tat Of' lht country; lrilll Cmdl 1-Hllll lliill
-Miilai •11Pld UI lib I y.,.s ... AAM ii c ... "' ol -.11w ~du ... " . · F«dll lbinl 1irne ia faw d::; tbt Heilmaa wiancr will 1· s I 1 laii Wtncs ia IM oaoa lowL nis Wiie. it•1 • ......,...11ao. T• ...._ wt.o .... ~ Dool (ooeW at
Dllllll WciOdn>w Wi. _..et liitll.
NCAA refuses appeals
of two Mlaml players
• MIAMI (AP) -~ NCAA on nundly
mu.S to 0---iu previous nalilla buri11 two
Miami bMW = from die MiioMI c:Mm-:r.:::~= :=..a.IMw.,.nllal
Tiie I~ E.uc:ulive Coauainee.
m«ti111Via1 cmflrace ml._. .._ wociaaion'•
..... inn• M'sriM, Ku.. r.lulld die appnlt
of Ii---Oeoqje Mira Jr. Ud oa..ive laCkle
John O'Neil. Wio were IUIJHcr.I lftlr ftunki11
NCAA clnil ... aa Dec. 11. .
AtlOf'DeYI lw Mira ... O'Meil were'ati111 a
pcrmanatl .... 1.· ..... ia Didi Cimail Coin
to allow,...,.,.., ....... -.
4 • "
..
..
,.
..
. .
MaA
W81Tm1N CONPU•NC:. ~~
Ulllrt w L ~ .. 10 ' .1 .. .....,... ,11 IO .630 n\ --~· lS 13 '.536 ' 10 lS AGO t Y) ~ I ,, m u ~S1111 4 10 .1'7 15
o.llat Mlftttt DMtlell \I 17 I ... °"'"" . " 11 .5'3 2 .... ton • 14 It .Sll Jiit Sefl Antonio 13 11 .510 4 Utell " 14 JOO ·4v, s.c.r1men10 1 21 .250 ll'h
aASTllJlN CON,aRaNCa
loston Allnek DM1itt1
11 ' ,65' ~,. 12 13 AO 4"'1 NtwVon 9 II .333 lllt Watlllntton I 17 .320 I VJ NtwJ1n1v s 21 .1'2 12
Oltl'olt Clllhl OM.-
II ' .750 '12 Atl9llt1 2( 7 .741 Mllw.ukff lS 10 MO 4 Cll!Qeo 15 12 • .556 5 lnd!Ma 13 13 JOO . 61,\• c~ 12 lS .4U I • ,.,_....,. SC...
No MIMS Khedultd
TlllllM'sci-
°"""II New YOftl, 4:30 P.m.
Denver et W•Vl,!Jlon. 5 11.m.
'"'-1!.atlolllt II !land, i P.m.
. Sltw91'('s ~
PMellht 11 C1t11et1nd, 10 1.m.
Houston 11 W1Jlll119ton, ~ p.m. Din,,., 11 Detroit, 4:30 P.m.
New Jtoev et p1icego, 5'.lO P.m.
lndlaM I t MltwtullM, 6 P.ITI.
Dells 11 Sin Antonio, 6:30 P.m.
Ut•ll 11 Slcrtmento, 7:30 P.m .
Ptlllldelc>nl1 It SH llll, 7:30 D.m.
Boston et GOiden St1t1, I o.m.
C ..... scores
wan
Mo. ·l(ensu C!111 70, U.S. lntern11~1 61'
llOCKllS
K1nsu SI 11, Ute ll St. 6' ·
SOUTHWHT Ttus·EI PHO ... SW TllllS SI " SOUTH
Ktntuctt11 11, V1n0trbllt 74
TOUllNAMSNT ,, .... ,
ClwnlnMe 8tW YW'a Fordlllm 57, OWlmlntclt .. (flntl -~ ISiand ... Mlllflltt•n IO (INrdl WIDMHOAY'S LATS SCOllH
TOUllNAMSNn
OIMllM• New YW'a "'"' ..... , Cllamlnedl 67, ManMtt1n 56
Fordhlm st. llhocll lsllnd 53 ==1 . Nortll C.1rot1ne St. 13, Aflzone St. 71 lllrsll
C*"'"UftltV C.-... men
DaSPlT TOURNAMENT
......... Latrkerl
GOICllll Wnl, !CM~ Snow 93 tttilrdl
c ..... wemen
'HOM·COH,aRaNCa
UC LA !~. Norlll Ca roline 11
NHL
c~•u COM,IRINC•
~OM.-
w <L. T '""' GF GA
C..learll 23 11 4 so "' 1.0
E dl'Nllllon n 12 l " Ito 132
Wl""'"9 " 17 l lS 13' 139
Venc»uwr 11 21 5 ,, 110 13'
°"' 11 24
Narm OMllell
4 ,, 141 115·
Dlt1oil 17 " 4 ll 146 125
SI. Louis IS 17 5 35 12' 131
Clllc.ffo IS 21 1 n 13' 1'1
Toronto 1' 19 4 31 135 143
Mlllnesol• 13 21 5 31 121 160
WAL•S C'Offfl9REMCIE
... lriclr DllltMell Iii' 124 NY llfetlden lf 14 3 41
~It lt IS s 41 17' Ill
N9w Jerwv " 16 • .0 121 134
Plttsburtll 16 14 7 ,. 10 144
WHll~ 16 17 5 37 m lit
NYll1"9tfl 14 It s 33 ,. 146
Adllms OIWlllt
Mofltrtal 22 ' ' S3 141 111
Bolton n I• 4 .. ISi 132
Quebec 16 17 1 34 12' 133
Hartford 14 " ' 34 Ill 110
l\iftllo 13 11 7 33 117 150
'Tilun49V'I Sc-
Boston 2, Buffalo 0
Detroit 7, SI. Louh 2
Ntw Yorii R111Mn 6, Quet>K I
c.i.trv S. PttilldelDt1i1 •
Chlcaeo 4, Minnnol1 1
MPL""911Klladl
CM-PIT> ~su::~ MIMtsot• at New OtttaM (CllaMll 2 at t:JO
111\.)
APC ... CeN Seatttt al ..,.'Oft (OlafM •ti I a.m.l
SATua~Y. , .... t •
AK.......,,_..
S..ttlll or lndllMllOlls at ~. t:>O a.m. MK DMlllllat ,_...
Mlnnnol• or Wttnlntton •t-'Slln F ranc:llco, 1 P.m. .
SUNDAY, JAN. 'f
MPC DMllallll ~ New OrlMM Ot WtlHftetolt at Clllcaeo, .. JO
a.m. 1 APC DMlllMI "9Wlll ..._,on cir llldlatlaoolls at Dlfllllr, 1 p.m.
sutl!OAY, JAN. 17
AKCMINI Ml
Ollllslontl P\avoft Wlnlllfl,-TaA
. Mn Cllem.. '* OMslonel Pltvofl Wlnnw1, Ta.A
SUNDAY, JAN. Jl ,.. ....
AFC champion -n. NFC dla'nolon 11 S.11
Olteo. 3 p.m.
Oddi
N~L:
•New Orltens I o-MIMnOll
s.11111 2"» over • Houslon •-deft01n ~team
-COU.llG• 90WU
...... Cllrva ..... T .. Y
CltmlOn 1 oll9r Penn Stitt
............. TM9Y
Florida Sttlt 31/'J Olltr N*a-'ta C........._T...,
Noire Dame SY! over 'T11111 Af.M S..., ..... T...,
Aut>urn 2 o-SvracuM
....... TatllY
USC 3 o._., Midllean' Statl
C...... ..... T ... Y
Oltlll'IOml 2'h Olllr MJatn1 Hal .. ,._ Clu1lc. ........
Altt>tma I o-Mldllean ~ ..... setwdaY
T1Mnst1 6'h over lndlaN ~rwn ...,.,...,, •-llMla & ...,_ .._
COLLEGE ....... ~
1"7-Arlt-Slate tt, Mlc:fllean IS • l~CLA 4S, Iowa 21
191~SC 20, Otllo-Sfttl 17
1....-UCLA 45, llllnolS t
191:>-YCLA 24. Nlldllean 14
lt11-W1a111no1on 21, low• o
1911-MldllNn 23, WtaNntton ' 19'0--USC 17, Olllo Slllt 16
,l,~SC 17, Nllc:lllOtn 10
19,.....Wa"'lnoton 27. ~n 10
1tn-t1sc 14. Mld!Jean ' 1'74'-UCLA ,23, Olllo Stilt 10
197s-!uSC 11, Olllo State 17
1'74-<>lllo Sltll 41, USC 21
lfTroUSC 41. Olllo Statl 17
l'*-'Sltftfotd 13, NllcNean 12
197\-Stlllford 27, Ofllo Slit• l1
l~SC 10, MldllMn 3
1'6~1o Sl1tl 27. USC 16
!......USC 1'. Ind'-3
1'67-Purdue 14, USC 13
1"6-UCLA 14, MlchlNn Slate 11
1'65--MldlfNn 34, Oreoon Stale 7
l,.._..lnol1 17, Wa"'ineton 7
)ff.l-VSC •2. Wisconsin 37
l'6l-Mlnnnot1 21, UCL.A 3
1'6l-W1SllintJlon 17, Mlnnttot1 7
·1,....W1Jhlnolon 44, Wllconsln I lt~ow• 31, Callforni. 12 '
ltst-Otllo Stale 10, Oreoon 7
1'51-fowe 3S. Oreoon s1111 It
195'-MlclllN n St111 17, UCLA U
195s--<lfllo Stilt 20. USC 7
lts.t-Mlc11191'1 S1111 21. UCLA 20
1953-USC 7, WlM:Onsln o ·
1'52-!Minols .0, Sl1nford 7
lfsl-MfclllNn 14. California 6 1'~ Sl1t1 17, C~llfornl1 14
19~hwtsltrn 20, C.llfornlt 14
1t~i91n "· use o 19'7-IMlnoil 45, UCLA 14
1f4'-AJll>l!Tlll 34, USC U
1945'-USC 25. TIMllMI 0
lt.......-USC 2'. W1alllneton 0
lfo-<itorOlt 9, UCLA 0
\t42-0rl9on St1t1 20, Dulle 16
ltO-Stanford 11, ~. ll
lHO-\ISC U, Ten~ 0
lflt-USC 7, Dulle 3
~llfornlt ll. A1-bama 0
1937-PIUM>ur'Oll 21. w1st11neton o
1'36-SlanforCS 7, Soultlef'n MefllOCSIJI 0
1'3S-Alll>lme 29. Sl1nford 13
l '3f--Columt>i1 7, Stanford 0
1933-USC 35. Pitllburgll 0
1932-t.ISC 11, Tu11111 12
1931-A~ 24. W1S11lnolon St1te 0
1'31>-USC 47, PillsburOll 14
1'1t--G4«94t Ttdl I, California 1
1m-s11nford 7, Pltlsbur9" 6
1'27-Sllnford 7, Allblma 1
1n..-A1t01me to. Wasnlntrton lt
1'2s-Holrt O•rnt 27. Stanford 10
1'24-Wntllnolon 1•. Navv U
1'2>-USC 1•. ~ Slate l
ltn--Clllfornll 0, WUlllnglon £ Jeffeoon O
1'21-<alitornla 21, ONo Sl1ta 0
lt»-H1rvard 7, Oreoon 6
.. '
8L"•IONMH 19WL T.U1 n, ,. ............ fl
lqrwlW~
Ttllal M S 3 12-l2
Plttltluftn 7 0 7 \)-21
Tax-Jonn n PIH from Sla.tlord (Cltfnants kick)
Pft-+itvwtrd 4 run <Van Horn klckl
Tilt-~'° Piii from Stefford IClamenl\
lllclll
Tex-FG Clemanh 33
Pit-Heard .0 PIH from W1n1t1 <Van Horn
klek)
Tta-f'G ClamentS 4t •
Tex-.Joftnson u NS$ from Stafford (HU l1Jltd) - -,.
Tex-Metcalf 24 run (run faied)
Pil-Sl-•rl 0 HIS from W9""1 (Van Horn
kldtl
Plt-<>soorn lS PIH from Wanll• (HU lclltd) Atttndlnc-23,211. ' ~ • TaAMSTATISTICS
Sid c .. ••1
IOUTMa• .. CA~MA
GtM Mille -PICMd llOWdar, »-• Inell NW 6 llf1', Mt 9iM¥ -Pac:kld PD..,., 12·30 NW, ) '"''· Mt. .. -Packld NWdlr, 12·30 .... ' """ Mt ~----Pldtad POwdlr. 12·3' blw, l l!Hs.
a t °""" v-.. -Padlacs -•· 22·2' DIM, full -tllon
Slrl s.ile-PadtlCI PDWdar, full -Ilion. S.Wattt (ttnth ~)-Pldtad POWdlf, 12·3' bew, 3 llfls
IMw P-t -PICkld POwdtr. 24·3' l>IW. SMw s-.11 -Peellld POWdtr, 24·42 tlaM, 10 llftl.
SMw VllllltY -PIClled POWdar. 24·· best, ll llfll
SlllUlA·NIVAOA llllltGa
LI•-... -No naw. s fo:>I DIM. ~
llfoorntcr, PICkld POWdlr, ona c111ir t nd two S4#"llCI IHIL •
..... -No new, 4•6 foot DIM, mtdlint
11roomtd, POwdtr •net Pldtad POwde<, nine
chllrJ, dn: lllrH t!'lt irs. 11111111. 0-W ~ RINICtl -No r-1.
First dowm ::OH ";': Satll Ser-.. -No "9W, 4•S foot. tlatl,
Rulllft·111rds 34· 116 40-117 POwOtr and DICkld POwdlr • 11\rff Clllln . Pesslno ~ ..,,.. ~ .._. -No naw, 5·7loot btlM, POwdtr
-"~ I nd PICkld POWCllr, DOOCSOll and -Chalrl. ltt•urn V1rds 13 6 , TIMI o--No new. 2¥1 1001 Daw.
Como-Atl·lnl 20--34-1 14·3'·3 ,machine PICklel POWOlr. ~taclft, IWO cri.,frs
Punts •·44 1·33 and one 1un1ce 1111 Fumblts•LOJI 6-3 0-0 tMf1ll S PttntJtlff-Y•rdl S-SS 6•53 tar -No new, 2·4 foot DIM, mac:tllna
Tlmaof Posseulon 2l:32 31:21 ll'oomed, ~ POwdlr. DCHIOOlt •nd 1111111
... DfVIOUAL STATISTICS c:tielrs. •
llUSHI NG-T11t1t: Mllctlf, ll·tS; Norris. ...... MaMlfwl -No -· •·7 !pot l>Ha.
1·.0; Jones, 2-lor·mlnus l, Stalford. 6·for·mlnus z;:cn,;: ,~';.t~;, D~ltld POw -. 11 ctllln
14.. Plttsb\ll'Ofl· Htvwa rll, JO·l3'; lllddlclt, l·l; HemewMCI -No new, )·4'1> foot blM. frftll
Walker, l·O; W1nk1. 4·for·mlnus I; Oldttrson, encl Dtd<ICI POwder, lour clltln and five S4#"1act 2·for·mlflus 12. llfls.
PASSING-Tu11: Sl1fford. 10-3'· l. 361. Pit· s.tw V .... (t,211 ft.) -No new, 4·S tool
tJOurOll: Olclltrson, S·ll ·O, 5'; Wantr1, ... 3. IMIM. macllina lll'OOl'nlCI, Pldtld POwOtr. 1»11•·
in : Osborn. l·l·O. '5. des. ablt a r, "°"°°'' •nd IS dltln . RECE IVING-Ttus: Junft, 1·242; Meletlf. 54Nl!f Vlltv (6,M ft.1-No new, 1''2·1 foot
4·S1; JOflnson, 3·l2; 811111, 2·11; Cllrlt. 2·11, OIM, maclllnt 11rooined. Pacltlel POWder, t illnt Norrll, 1· 14. Pltlll>urllll: WIAlami. 4·7'; Olborn, Clllln and t-IUt'flct tHll.
3·33; Tultn, 2·•7. Riddick, 1·n ; s1-ar1, 1·43; Hte11Wt¥ v...., -No new . .2'11·6 toot oaw.
H11rd, l·.0, H111ward, 1·9. machine oroomld, oackld oowdtr, tram, 16
COLLEGE BOWL UNEUI'
~ .... COie. 12 at ,.,_,
E111trn Mlclll111n JO, San JoM Slate 27
lnd1•1Rd .. Ca ....
COie. 1t et Sllr• -'> WHlllnolon 24, Tulane 12
Al·Amerlc:M.eewt
CDK. 22 et llrmlnltl-1 Vlrolnla 22. IYU 1'
INue·Grn Al·St.r O.Uk
CDK. 2S tt M IPllW ¥1
Grav 12. Slut 10 •
5"" ....
(Ole. 2S et E ..... )
_/llhorN Sl•le 35, Wnl Vli'Dlnlt l3
.... a.wt
(Ole. 2S •• .........,,
UCLA 10, Florida 16
Ubertv ....
I DK. J9 It MernlNs)
Gtor111t 10. Arkt nsH 17
Hlldaveewt
IOK. • 1t Sift Dleeal IOWI 10, Wvomlno 19
FrMdem a.wt
(Dec. • at ........,,
Arl1on. St111 33. Air Force 21
Gatw a.wt
(OK. 31 .. Jlldl~)
LSU lO. Soulll Caroline 13
8luebennet ....
<Dae.' JI at Htin•I
T fl<H 32. PillJOurllll Tl ·
Fleridl Citrvl a.wt ·
(Taday at Ot1Mda)
Penn Stete ll·l ) vs, C.temson l,_?I, (Clllnntl
1 •I 9 •.m.)
Cetlllft a.wt
(T .. y at DllllS)
Notre O•m« (l·l ) n . TtaH AA.M C9·2l,
IClllnntl 1 11 10.30 1 m.)
Flnt. a.wt
tT .. y at T.,,..I
Ne«>r•~· (10-1) "'· FIOf'ICSa Sta te (10-1). <Clll"nel ,__., 10-.lO a.m.I
Sueer a.wt
IT .. 11 at New onatMI
Svracuw (11-0) "' Auburn (9-1·11. IClltnntl
1 II 12:30 D m.I .........
IT .. Ylth ...... )
c111lr1 Ind '"'" IUrflC .. Ufl. Al llldlll ~No oew, 6·1 lnclles1rllficl1t, 21>
fool DIM, maclllne 11room.cs. Dtettlel POwde<.
""' Cllllrs. Mt ..... -No new, 2'1)·•Va fool bHt .
madllne oroome<I, PICl<td POWdlr. 110m1 c»lll·
dis, tour dltlrs.
lme Swllfllft -No reoort
Sltrra Ski Randi -No new, 4 foot best, meclllnt oroomac1, oadtld POWdtr. nine Cllllrs..
ICJniweM -No naw, H foot bas., PO•dlr Ind Pldlld POWOlr. ll'llCJIJne Slf'oomld. 10
Clllln and -Mlrface IHI. ~ Mt., R-. -No naw, 6· 7 fool base.
•ncl Mdtld POwdtr, 11ven Cfllfrs. ~ ~ -No ntw. l·S tool M. OOWder end PICltlO POWdtr, some c»lllldft,
wven d\tirs 1no lhrff surface IHts.
-...W l'au -No naw. 2112·3 fool Dlw.
maclllna oroomto. oacltld POWCll<, lour clltlrs end two surtea llfl1
~ Mawllalll -No -· s..., fool -Dlw. Ndlad POWdlr, two llO"CSOlls. 2S d\llrs
Incl two Mirt.ce ~"' .NM-.... -No ntW. • foot baw.
oadtld powOlf', llvt clltlrs.
Sierra s.nwNt -No new. l/f001 Dist. DKt.ICI
POWOtr. fivt Chlin 11'0 two wrfKI llfls.
Ml. Sllasaa -No.,,..... •·e loot IMIM. mKlllnc
vrOCWNd, lwo c.111.irs 1no ona surftct llft, day;
one d\lir and Ont lUfllCI llfl, nlilht
COLOtlADO
ArNMal ..... -Y> new, .0 Otolfot, POWdtr,
Pld<ld POWder.
.__ ........,. -Ootn. no rft>Ort
~.......,. -2 new. 36 deolll, oowoar,
PICked DOWdtr
......... -1 ntW, 2S Geofh, OOWCSI<',
oadttd POWdlr.
S.-U -1, ,,..., lO OIDlll, POWCSI<',
PldtlO POWCSI<'.
..._ CTMtr -T new. 3S deellll. DKlltd
POWCSI<'
• arjcli~ -I > MW, 32 OIDlll, POWder oacltfo DOWCSI<' Ski .,....,_ -<>otn, no r.-i
C....,....._ - T new. JO dlDlh oowoer.
0ratlg9 Coat DAILY PILOT/Frid9y, J..nuaty 1, 1• -
. .
.
MISL
....,,. DMIMll ..
Sall Olatlo LUtn
T_.,..
~Cllv
SI. l.oub ~lta
W L 12 s f'd. Ga
.106
' 7 10 •
7 ' • 10
' 12 h•tenl DM.-10 1
I 7
I I
t ' • 10
Cltveltnd
Chieffo
llltimor•
Mlnnnol•
0.llH ,
TlWrMaY'• ~
Noo•mn~ T ....... 19-
81l1imore a l Mlnnts0la. ~ P.:m
~"''~ Laun 11 T-. 7:3S p.m. Kansai City 1t Wlclllla, 12:lS p.m.
Clllc:aoo. II CllYtllncl, S:OS P.m.
8altimora ., t>a .. s. sas p.m.
SI. Louil a l San Olt9o. 7:35 P.m .
SIMlllY'• Genies SI Louis et Lass.' 6:0S p.m.
Mlnnnoll ., Clelltland, 3:35 P.m .
...
TIM'laY'•~
aMaaALL
~L-.ue
.5'.l 2llt
.556 21')
.431 411>
.l7S S\li .m ,.,., ..
.5l3 I .500 l'I>
.•71 2
.... 2\.-'2
MINNESOTA TWINS-AorHO to terms wllll
Juan lltranoutr. Dllelllr. °" 1 two-,,_ contract
for I 1.115 mlllon
. aASl<•TaALL -...... .................
GOLDEN St.Te' WARRIORs-Hamad Don
N.+son Sllf'll'll """'"'· MILWAUKEE I UCKS-Announcacl Illa! ,.,.... r~ I llCOncl round draft c:ftolce in lM
from 1111 GOICSln Stall W1rrlor1 11 ~•Ion
for rtlNslno ~ l ucks COICfl Don Nttton from 1 "no compett" dluM In fib c:on1rae1.
·SAN ANTONIO SPUllS-Actlvallel Jon
Sund¥0td, 11ua.ro HOCKEY ...,..... Hadltv Laalllle
NEW JERSEY OEVll.S-AUlonad GorCSle
Maril. csefan..,.,.n. 10 UtiCI « rile ~
Hoclt.., Lt111ue.
NEW YORK ISLANOERS-Ass'9nacl lrlKI
OalQerno ano O«tll Kino. forwtr$, 10 Sorlno-
fl.id of 1111' Amet'lcln t10dritv Lffoul.
NEW YORK RANGERS-Trldad Milli Doti·
nett¥. ltfl .;,,;119, and • 1d111·rouncs Pleil In Ille 1M
tntrv dr1fuo Buffalo for Pa.UI CYt'. ltfl wino. Incl 1 11)111-r~ CllOic.t In ,,.
PITTSI UllGH PENGUINS.--.acalltcl riGllt
"'ino WI" Paltment from Muskegon of 1111
ll'lltrnetlonal Hoct>.ev Lel9UI . COLLEGE ,..
FLORIOA-Announcad 1111 resl9111tlon of
Z.vtfl Ver•llan. oefemlvt cooroJnator, .no O•n COUOfltl" In<! Ty Smilh, defen$iye ISYsltnl
Coacne\ Fired Mlk• He<me<'d1nvtr wlda·rt-
C~ COld'I
NORTH CAROLINA-Nameo J I""
C1v_., wiOe receiven COICtl "'° Ln HFrin
oursiOt lintba<ller1 coecn
OHIO STATE-Nemec Jann c_. llllCI tootoa• COICfl
ST FRANCIS, P1 -AMOUt>CIO tblt Eric Hammond, center ,,., i.11 ,.,. 1>1skt1tllll tH m
tor Dtnona! rt•~
Bignloiiey
f or e ubs'
Dawson?· ...
Chicago slugger
among 148 eligible··
for arbitrati_on
NEW YORK (AP) - h 's payback
time for Al')drc Dawson .
Last year. the Chi~o Cubs made·
Dawson swallow his pnde. This year, ·
Dawson will make the Cubs chew on
their checkbook -Dinner with '.
Andre so to speak.
Dawson is among thr 148 playi;rs
rligible to file for salary atbitration
beginning Tuesday. Stars who could '·
seek big salary increases throuah·
arbitration are American Lca&11e
MVP George Bell. World Series MVP
Frank Viola. Bret Saberhagen. Kirby
Puckrtt. Eric Davis. Orel Hershi$er
and Willie McG~. · ·
Others eh8Jble include Mike Bod·
d icker, '"011 Can" Bovd . Joe Caner.·
Ted Higuera. Alvin Davis, Howard
Johnson. Kevin McReynolds. Phil
Brad k). Lance Parrish and Vince
Coleman .
Dawson. who took a SI m illion
paycut last season to switch from
Montreal to Chicago, probably will
ask for a salary in excess ofS2 million
if he win~ up in arbitration. acoord·
ing to his agent. Dick Moss.
Last year. Moss handed then-Cubs
~neral manager Dallas Green a
blank co~tract and Green filled in
SS00,000. Dawson earned another S200.000 in bonuses.
After hitting 49 home runs. driving
in 137 runs and becoming the first
player from a last-place club to win
MVP, DaW10n expects his salary to
increase to near the top.~ . ·
··1 think this would be a vear thar
the) should offer Andre ·a ·blank.
contract." Moss said this week. .
Chicago refuies to consider a
m.uJtiycar contract. according to
Moss. who helped develop the arbi-
tration process when he was counsel
to the .. ~~jor. League ~scball Players
Assoc1auon in the early 1970s.
An~· player with three or more years
of major league service w.ho is not a
free agent may file for arbitration.
Moss has argued morc arbitration
cases than anyone else.
~Ifs a process designed to produce
settlements."' Moss said.
Of 446 players who filed rn the last
four seasons. 362 settled their cases.
Of the 84 decided bv arbitrators. 3S
were won by players and 49 by
owners. ·
Ov.ners have won a majority ofthc
cases m each of the last five years and
kad 122-IO I since arbitrauon bcga!l:
10 1974. ~
V t ncoYV« 2. Wlnnlpeo I
T•Y's Game
Pltrit>Urllfl 11 Wastilnvton. lo:JS 1.m. ~Y's Genies
191t-Grfft Likes 17, MMe lllancl 0
1'1 .... Mlrt llland It, Ct/TIP L_I, 7
ltl7-<>rl90ll 14, Pemsvlvanlt o · l'16-W1alllnoton Slt te 14, 8rown 0
1901-Mictlloen '9, Stanford 0
·M1c111111n Sl1le 11·2·11 vs. USC ll·ll. <Cllln·
ne! 4 I I 2 P.ITI.)
~ .... 1.6401 BEACH BLVD., HUNTINGTON BUCH
MofttrMI 11 ~. 7.:3S P.IT\. QulOlc 11 loston. 10:15 1.m CT ....... It Miami)
Edmonton t i WHll!nolon. 10'.35 1 m. GATOR BOWL Oltl1110m1 (11-01 vs. M1wn1 (10-0), <Clltntiel •
11 S Pm I PlllsburOll fl New York ISllndl,.. 4:05 Pm
...,.. WWY •• Heriford, 4;35 P.m ~It 11 V1ncouvtr, S.-OS P.tn
LSU JO, s.utti c.r9'lnl ll
SClnllY~ .
)talefFameeewt
(Setwtlay It T.,,_) luffllo 11 Toronto, S.ti o.m . South CarOlina ) l 0 7-13
1 >-• Hoes son
.
New Yortl •1111111'1 II M!MftOl1, 5:3S o.m. LSU 14 6
c.IMfY et SI. Louis. 5:35 D.ITI. LSIJ-01111' 39 PIH frO('I Mlcfll1111n 17·4) vs. Alal>lmt (7·41. IClllnnet 4
It 10 . m.) (8 rowl)Cfvk1 kick)
LSU-Onis 12 Piii trom HOCSson
(l rowncsv111 ltlclll
SC-FG MK!tlt 44 ~ ....
tSu-FO" l rownov1>.e 11 ISIM'4llY at Alallllii)
. lool~t 11·3) n . Tenneuat (1·2·1l. IClll.-1
11 ., 11 •-"') SC-FG MIO It 3'
LSIJ-FG l rowncsvtte le>
LSU-0111ll 1' Piii from Hodson JeOMBewt < erOWftCl'tttt II lcio. I
SC-Graen 10 run (MM:lttv lllcio.I
LSIJ-FG l rownc!Vkl 23
Atlendanc:-'2.119
(JM. 10 It Y•""9ma, ,,_I
EHJ vs. Wftt
HAM ST A TISTlCS • IEast•WHt Slw1M 0.Hk
(Ja 11 at SM P--f'llMlltll1
Etlt vs. Wftl
IC UU
21 17
D ·2S 3'-122 .. 224 ' ,., 21 ... , .. ~ ...
2·41 ,. •
s.... ....
(Jiii. %J ., M*le)
Nof'tn .... Souttl
Sports on T Vf or weekend.
TSUVISION
9 a.m. -BOXING: From 1979: Supr Ray Leonard
vs. WiJfrcd Benitez wclt~l lille fiaht, ESPN.
10 a.m. -'COLLEGE FooTBALl.: Hall of Fame
Bowl -Michipn v1. Alabama, Channel •.
10 a.m. -COLLEGE POOTBW.: Pach Bowl -
Indiana vs. Tennessee, Owlnel 11.
10:30 a.m. -PllO llOCKEY: Edmonton at
Wuhinaton. ESPN.
11 :30 a.m. -COLLEGE BAl&.B'i BAU.; Florida at
PittsbwJh, Channel 2.
1 p.m . -COLLBGB 8Al&B1"8AU.: North Caro-
lina at UCLA, Channel 4.
1 :30 p.m. -BOXING: Michael Nunn vs. Kevin
Watts in 12-round middleweiaht bout, from Reseda, Channell ..
3 p.m. -PftO BOWLING: -ARC Alameda Open
(tapCtd), Cbanael 7
4 ,P-tn. -COLLBOB BAl&.ICftALL: K.cntucky at
~~~.:._ WIDS WOllLD • IPOSll: Harlan
OlobetrOCten: f~ sbtiJll CtaDed~ CbuDd 7.
S:lO p.m. -PllO llOC&BY: New Yott lt.uem at
Minnaola. WOR. 6 m. -oouaog 1"'8& I SALL: Notre Dune at
La ESPN. , p.m. -PllO w:sn: Moetre9.1 ac Kinp.
Primc TIC'bt. SelecTV. . lp.m.-CXJllMS~ Gecqetqwnat
Milftd; USA. I p.m. -... uaNG: s.811 Anita .tplays.
0.811'6.
l:JO t:· -cou •• Ml&S"IUIL: Antona., NewMa,,l!.WM. ....
I p.a -Olll "8 Ul&&ftALL: NoirU ~ . \
•
lina at UCLA. KMPC (710).
7 p.m. -COLLBOB BAKETBAIJ.: Connecticut at
Peppcnline. KWNK (670).
7:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL:-Cal State
Fullerton at Lona Beach State. KPZE ( 1190). KMNY
(1600). .
7:30 p .m. -PllO B~Y: Montreal at Kinas,
KLAC(570).
9:•S p.m . -P•O SOVCEI\: Lazers at Tacoma
(delayed), KMNY (1600). ..
TELEVISION
9:30 a.m . PRO P'OOTBALL: NFC wild card
playoff -Minnaota at New Orleans. Cl\allnel 2.
I p.m. -PBO POOTBALL: AFC wild card playoft'
-Seattle at Houstoe. Cbannet ...
S p.m. -PllO L\aBT'8ALL: Laken at Ponland.
Cbannel9,
5 p.lh. -80DNG: Oiu&anc:o Rolli VL 0.. T1*w in 12-road WIC supa--wehel .a.ht title
bout; Doeal! 0Jrry VI. lMpc Aquino lD a 12-f'OUDd IUl)Cr• wehcrweieb• bout, hm Genoa. Italy. ESPN.
6 p.m. -"'° IOQ:sa· St. Loais It Unn. PrinR Tictet. .
I p.•. -.... ~s.at, Mi• ..... ,.. a.a.I"' IADM
9;l0 L& -no fOOIUU.: NFC Wild csd ,
plQoft"-Mi 1• • Nlwo.t.M:ltMX ( lOlO). u ' p.a _,.~AFC. wild ... ...,. -Scettk. Houn,.,g:,ur.t 4 p.m. -,_ • Oippen at A1llMI.
UTH(9J0). -s p.m. -PllO ~ ........... ""*•d . Kl.AC (S70);
(JUST SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY.)
ALLCAIS.W
PIEVIOUSLY LWID CARS
, IS. "' Ml/Al (342225)
Vi, AIU ll Ttll
(3726291
•
r.
•
•113 ns
1tlll m
....
•115 1\6.
"' 1\4
• 1)1 ll6 n• 116
"' 114
116
~cordero
I,
ilisted ~I , . ' ·stable---
ARCADIA (A~-Jockey Anael Corttero, Jr., i urcd in a spill
Wed~ at nt.a Anita, was -
·'1'ansfl from the intensive care
unit to a private room at Arcadia
Methodist Hospital Thursday and
reported to be in .. S\able .. condition.
''He's alen and restina · com-
fortably," a Sant.a Anita spokesman
-said.
·· ''No announc:::ement has been made
as to when he'll be released from the
hospital or return to riding. It's a day-
: to-day thins. He was taken off bis
'mounts today ... .. .
, Cordero, 45, was injured when •
Fomnthcroad.. bis mount in the
$49,SOO Pasadena Tournament of 'Roses Association Purse, fell ap-~hjna the finaJ turn, throwing the
Jockey 10 the track.
· Cordero was taken by ambulance
to the track's first aid center before
being transported to Arcadia
Mctliodist Hospital for precautionary
X-rays. which showed no fractures.
An examination reveaJed some soft
tissue injury to the upper shoulder
area and Cordero remained hospital-
ized for observation.
Forkinthcroad was uninjured.
Cordero, 4S, is thoroughbred rac-
inJ's second leading career money
w10ncr with more than S 121 million
in purse eaminp.
' Cordero's mounts won the two -races before the spilJ oocurred
--II ..... '--et.-1 I> ,. lllCti GrllllUI _..,, ~
........ •1Wt•I) I " ......... ~ . ., ...
TtmO .... ' ~ ~ ID.llL ' ....., .... a.imi..-............ l DIMI Hiii (....._) l1'
t Luday T,_ (..,_,.I) , •• ,_...COftdll....., iis
4......,H,Mlw(~ llS 5 ~,,,..., ,.........,, llS
·, ea1u11 M11c1e cc.a-t m
7Do•l9Mh~C161d1J ll7 I Le Tedie (~ l 15
tSlllWS.UCSIMltl m 10 OUt Ot Ful (....._) I It
H ~ FUMI C"--> 115 12 Too lAY9f cDellfioiwwl HS ........
13 Fotertn ltldle (Gfvdlr·I) 11110
14 CM--elo (V...,.lutile) llS
PCMMTM •AC•. 6 "'"°'*-Purw: tl6.000. M9lcllna. 3 .,.. old$. area 111 callfomla.
Cllllmlne llf'Q: m.-.121.000.
l "-Kine (Orteea21 Ill
2 sumn-Time FIV\ (Mele) I 1'
I C=flr"-(-..ckl Ill • Ille •oai (a.nderHI cm S I k 11 (.._WY) HI
' ,.,,,,,, •• Tll'M ($Ob) l ll 1 A•wcl For A._,, ($...,_.) 1 ti • Caned .,._. (~-2) 111
f Sol Calcw COrtlll 1t1ll
lO Oiemond Fortune CPatlOftl 11' 1l Prime llllo (Grvdw·21 1111l
12 Tel!V Up (Slblle) 11'
SU•Amm
~"...,.,n , .......... 1 .......... ,
NIST UoCa. "-....._ E ..... ,..._,,, ... .,_ lAI
._ S..... PM C .... I IA UI
B•etlt Al'llllW.IC>r-..> 11M T1Me-1:54
Alie r~ Fii =--...... To StueY, Y....,...., TClfNftY ,.,_.. ·-·,.,... Cllldl, $1r stlw. W.IM Cell. lwl 8uD. ScrekNO: ,.. IUt4 Die. ~ ..... r,..
T~. Mellr.tftere,
l9COlm llACa. ' fUl'lonln. TWlce Tiiied 11111111) ,.,....,,.£ .... (~)
T .... kaleftt (Fll'Mlldal)
Tlfrw: 1:12 l/S.
Aleo r-= _. Er°*', .. SO F ..... Gelent GocNna. S4 ........ ~ Time. Come
1t1a.-. Tlld9. SernlM6I Qyeeft. ScretcNlt ~ ~. ¥erle ....... SUmnwr Allela, Emw ... ._,,,,, Nontlertl
E•, Mwtoft IC.rt. ZMnlN zi...r. U DALY DOU9La <HU Mid WAO..
S1 DAILY DOU9L• ~TIOte (l·iil
Mid 17.20.
ntmD llACL Olll mla. PIMM lttmft (....._.)
Greo Muske 1$1..-l 5mert Gw CCu tenon)
Tir'nt: l:lf "s.
Los Alamitos harriess entries
AIM r111: PM\, MllNttan Kiiie. Haw-"tlr,
~. ltev. taNde, H«d To MIU.
CoociaccMo. S1 UtACT A (I· I) Hid STJ2.IO.
fOUltTH llAC .. 1 1"6 """-Lot'1 Curlosnv (~) UO 6A 4.00
SIEVIEWTM UC£.
S3,lCIO. , ...,.,._aves.m
2 Ftvtno Stallion
3MT ~IM
' Prmte llleservt' S a·ltillldtnl
TOOCI
SIMlfl
SNrren
Meier
Pertuw
Offrenco
l(uebler
Hvmen
I mlle. Putw: ".100.
Peel. I
.JohMcwl
Wlllam$
Berllel
°"'1lnc:o
I(~
Pierce
Sllerren wtllle
Ill lcflmelftd
mile. Puvw:
6 Tllnlrator
7 a-Wet Ski& SlWY .,.,.,._
e-C Miller-o.ned lflll'Y.
•IGtfTN·lt.ACL Trot. 1 mlla. P\.ne: •.!00. lnvilal~.
l ~ °""' 2 1-e.r-. GNndY
3 -.Cronk'le oie-ner
• Eastrldee Siar Olfrenco
5 Put On Hold mellr
• B Cor Flash Flsco
7 Montern Judee ~ -s o..om.r--tralned entr;. ,
..n'M lt.ACL P9ce. I mllL PurM: M,a.
TmMTM RACE. Pllce. l mite. PurM: SUOO.
Clalmlnt iwtce: 15,000.
I Premier CuvH 2 WlncorP
l HHttlen
• Flamec:rest S Steroid Slllllon
6 Slick Swill;
1 Pevoff '"-''
Kuebler
Klu
Offrenco Perller
Ceultll
llloo.rt• Ll9htfllll
Co Adi lllladll JUO 12.00
No SIONlne (S..-l YO
Time: l:A7.
Aho rain; Proto Alwen, E11Clfto, ~ ~. v ... , Eric, GUIWMlll, Oro Puro.
lmeneel!lllOI', CNI. 8-urf!ont, 4'.'1 Metlmet.
Scr•t<'Nd:. ltemowect, ......,. er~. Jet
51111119, Sol C1ior.
""" •~c1. • fuf'lones. Loec:I The WffOI\ (Mftl)
ldffl Quelftv (Petton)
Netlw lllHtlty 18teck)
Time: 1: 11 21 s.
19.20 uo S.00 s.oo ua
l.20
,AlfiO re11: s..-o, And Juslkle, Wnl eov.
Herrlson'1 TUl''ll, lt!Mr Of F!Mh, Olthonoflllle Guest, GTowlef' $endUe, _...., N\afk, Ca r.
Scretefled: Our Grev Fo•. Pelntlne Sun .
U IEXACTA (S-4) Nici U7LOO.
SIXTH •ACE. 6 fur1onft. Volle (Gryder) ,
Wilson Dlak"es peace with
Ditka·, returns to· practice.
Sadie 8. Fast (Oeiallouulv•>
..,,.. 8eeu'Y (Cul-)
Time: 1:11 l/S. •
.tibO "-'I: Saxolelne, Alomei en.. Tres Grllflde. Gall's T.... .Momeftl tn ,._,MlM,
Fe¥OrlbtY. 8.'s Of a.tier.
MYIENTH •ACL 6\ll 1ut1on1rL $'1'"'•" E•iwn1 (OIM'I) 10... 4..20 UO
LAKE FOREST, UL (AP) -Otis
Wilson returned to practlcc Thursday
with the Cllicago Bean after making
peace with Coach Mike Ditka, who
said the dispute over Wilson's playing
time was a misunderstanding.
Dilka said he and Bears President
Michael McCaskey bad talked with
Wilson. "There was nothing to smooth
out." the coach told rcponcrs.
"Evcrything's worked out.
.. A lot of these things arc mis-
understandings more than anything
else. Sometimes we don't take the
time to communicate. I take the
blame for those things," Ditka said.
"'It's just a misunderstanding. It's
in the family."
Wilson got into an argument
Wednesday with Ditka after he was
told his starting linebacker spot
would be taken by Ron Rivera in the
Bears' first NFL playoff game Jan. I 0.
Stung by the news. Wilson declared
that if the Bears didn't want him. he.
would look elsewhere. Later. he
missed practict and Bears spokesmen
said he had skjppcd without per-
mission.
Wilson denied that Thursday. say-
ing he was told to leave. He refused to
elaborate.
"I'm going to say what I got to say.
and that'll be the end of it." Wilson
told reporters.
··Numberone.ldid not go AWOL .
. . I was doing what I was told. ·
"Number two, I talked to Coach
· Ditka this morning, and it's merely a
case of two misundcrscandinitS.
"Now. the point is, I'm back out
there working. and whatever role they
have for me. that's what I'm going to
do."
Ditka dcscnbcd his meeting
Wednesday with Wilson as a con-
versation that got out of control.
Ditka indicated he still plans to go
with the lineup he used list Sunday m
the Bears· 6-3 victory over the
Raiders. That would mean Rivera
will stan in Wilson's spot.
8undlt Of Iron (Veleftl..-.) UO UO
CM>llln 'Vl90'S (Ste¥9Ml UO
Time. t: JS 41 S.
Also ren: T....-Cen¥On, On TN Cer11e1.
Ofotova. One GulMe. ScretChed: Mazllier. lndl¥iduelt1t, ltuflen.
TtmPr-0, PNfOilM, Kint ~. Sowrv.
U IEXACTA (4·1) H id '16.00.
EIGHTH •AC•. 6 fur1onft.
Fl'llnll JUiie IOllvlfft) 1' 00 lUO UO PIM Tre;e Lent (Steweni) U0 1.20
L• L'Arllenl (l>eWlcMAWIYI) 3.10
Time: MO llS.
AIM> ren: Joey The Trio, La Slerr•. Felrtv
_Old, Lui.ant, 8y t..and I v SN, Slll'l's Heroine.
Scrald'll<t. Clllck ~ Two, DlllM'I at'lde,
Pre111<streu, Irish Lord'1 Ml1l.
U DAU.Y Tlt~IE lt+ll Hid sJll,..._,..
NtMTH ltACE. One mile.
·Thal Dve lt>Nhou"ev•l
Her Roni GrK• (CIStltlOll)
Mlssadoon (H1wle'I)
Tim41: I :.eel,
, .. ., l uo l.40
2UG UO uo
AISo ren: Ftvine H'911er, 8"Mr's W•le•,
Promillne Not~. Profit lllelld, Oewn Of Hooe,
Winel"ll Mluv .
U EXACTA (2·71 Hid Sl,OOUI.
U P'IQ( SIX (t-S•l ·•-1-2) N ici "2,574.10 10
IWO winnlnO lidllts Cff¥e llOrWs); paid ..... to
• •lnnine lldlet1 Clout llOnft). Sl P'tClt NtNIE ll·ll+t-H.•.-1·2) Mid
ISSl.00 lo filtll •lnnin9 llcMh (ftw llOrWsl,
paid 139 ... to Ill •IMlnt lldtltl (fout'flOl'MSI
Tot11 a rrvover POOl 11•.•"
Atl~nce 26.720.
Mutuel llandle: S5.S2SM2..
NI.IC NOTICE Ml.JC NOTICE
1. DEVELOPMENT AE· MOTICa Of'
VIEW DR-87 ·69 FO R PMPMATtOM OF
GERALD SY GOLOB. •GATfVIE
AUTHORIZED "GENT FOR DSCl.AAATtOM
CHEE TAT LEE TO ADO The WW. R.nch Wat• FOUR MARKET RATE District (IRWD) is preparing
UNITS AND FOUR DENSITY a Negatl¥e Oeclafa1ion for
BONUS UNITS TO AN EX· lhe projeGt(s) described !STING TWELVE UNIT below. A "Orefl" Negallve
APAfHMENT PROJECT ~atton Is on file at..Ule LOC ATED A T 2 U3 Dletrlc:t offloe, 18802 Bar·
THROUGH 2185 MAPLE dMl'I Awenue. lrvioe, CA.
AVENUE IN AN R2 ZONE. and Is available tor public
•
F lying t!ulia
scores upset
ARCADIA -Ayina Julia made a
big run· in the stretch to overtake
favored Piqe Tree i..ne and post a
vjctory by a head in the S82,600 Las
Aorcs Handicap al Sant.a Anita
Thursday before a crowd of22,007.
Ridden by Frank Otivares. the 4-
ycar-old dauahJeroff!yi .. !:Hter~
the six furlonp on a aood track 10
1: 10 1/\undcr 113 ~nds and paid
S 79 .00. 18.80 and $1.00.
Pinc Tree lane, with Gary Stevens
up and bunk~ with hiah weiaht of
122 pounds., was on the ~earfyand was Just nipped at tbewtre, finilhina•
nedi ahead of Le L'Attml
Pinc Trtt Lane paid $4.20 and
$3.20 as the 6-5 favorite, and ·Le
L'Ar&cnt returned $3.80 to show.
< .
'.
•
.... ¥.# CNIQl .,.,.,,, OI ~CIMCI MOUllll ...... =::~ .... Tlle~'e?.c-
...... ClllllllFM-F C• :..;.. -· -.:· _ ................. -..... --....... ..... ::"' .= =:: :.....--= ...... ,.. OI~ ernr. •"•l IS t•u • Ml"""11 -...... .,.,no.~,_.~ ... -,_ -"· .. ---"'·--·-··----·-----··-~--CM!ol "'9--,...,~··-~ ""-.... _ .,,., -~ .. ).--..--~--*--...... -""' _..,. . ___ .... __
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, ·*· ... ..-. ~·a
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-(
0r8nge Comt DAILY PILOTIFtlcMy, Jenuliry 1, ,._
RmlDS •• Cit
$~00 PER WEEK
(To Start)
With Potential '
to-$1000 PER WEIK
URGE INSURED
VEHICLE REQUtRED
lo,. of Opportonlty
to Grow With U•I
CAI' .... IUllS
(7t•J891.IM9
·.
I r-t I
I • .
~A~P~
MEW YEAR
Beet wi8hes .... ~.and~
peit'O'l8 New Year.
.FLUOR CORP
The Miller Crew
Bob, Jim, Jo, Al, Tracy, Julia ,
Fumiko, Carol, John, Carlos, Tom
and Angelique. ·
mill 1111• CAllAS PllllCTS
1779 Whfttkw Ave., Costa Mesa
(714) 831-2931
GREETil\GS
We're tvming up-good widtes for th9 •
holidoysl S.0.0...' 1 belt to our good friends
Ofld cllttOIMn from all of "' ot
Bay Auto Repair
Gary & 2033 Newport Blvd.
the Crew at Co1'a Mesa 631-1061
(714)
673-3663
1988
JllCASA
JlmcuaReeta11n11t
296 E. 17th St., Co.ta Ma.a
M5-76H
FROM
EVERYO E
AT
CIRCLE K
FOOD
STORES
...
DRIVE SAFELY!
A .R,WILLIAM~~,'-y
..
• :~
I •
Grca1 wt"het-for a ..-onder· l ") .. •
fal ~ew Year frot11 all of"" ~-•.
Ill all of~·"·
.
' ::bri ve Sa/1i/'I f .
62
HAPPY
IEWYUll
LES JR.
t AND
· FROM THE STAFF OF: .
NEWPORT TIRE CDTER
BRAKES, WHEEL ALIGNMENTS
WHEEL BAL.ANCIN\1
3000 W. COAST HWY-.....,.
CORONA DEL MAR ~
•
Ring in the New Year
with Best Wiahes to all of our wonderful
friends and patrJ?ns. Have a great 1988!
Gary, Sherry, John,
Larry, Karla & 'Butch
HARBOR AREA · ·
APPLIANCE.
240 Lolan Ave~ Uo'it D 0
CostaMeea • 549
1llZflPI
Creat widlel t ... a -4nfvl New 'lltar free
all ol 1111 IO all ol ,...
DRIVE-SAFELY
l)Eva.OPMENT
. ..wllOIT llACH
91~ 'J/1#1
"'~it-61 -
1",,,.
'/kw 1't-'
UTILlll PlllRIR --400 Main St., BalbOa
(714) 873-5245
· · · 'J'kw 'ZJeae
7~ dill o.e '7eiutl.s
"Ott/ & ?Jew,,
MAURY STAUFFER
SEA LION REAL TY
._ 173-5354
S7S2 I. Coeet ...,.
C.....Delllljr
Hoping the New Ye1111 brings the
best to you and yours.
De Anza .Bayside VIiiage ........................ ,,.,_.,..
JOO E. Comt Hwy .. Nn>port 9uch
(714) 673-1331
Wlslalag
Everyone A -
H~J>pv Aad
lfmir•-*"'-llm!••,_~ .... i.J ,,.,_ ... ,.......w
1·· ..
,....~, 111.pf
Durkee Pipe A Supply
l 8'71 Plaeenti' Unit B
Co•ta Me•a 646-7180
• I..
-~""" ... . 1988
S~ON'S
GREETINGS!
Frem All ol U• at ...
CONMH .
:HfVl1 -:'lE"
.! • .. --
FroM al of ua at
TURNER a ASSOCIATES
1• 11. Coa1t HWJ.
U.U-•••ch .414-1171
CUSTOMER SERVICE REP
2 positions available in our customer
service dept.
Must have pleasant phone per-
sonality; typing a plus. Learn valuable
.office skills. and earn $4.50 to start :
Hours .are Mon.-Fri. 8 A.M. -5 P.M.
and 11:30 A.M. -7 P.M.
Call 642-4321 ext. 201 to schedule an
appointment. Ask for Guy or Patt.
If you're 10 or otdei, a job as a newspaper
carrier might be just your size. Just send in
this coupon or caJI: 642-4333. Routes are
available now!
It 11•1•1'J, It I
laly Pitt carrter1
0 to! f'd Nke to find out-;;~-;;;-~,I
Ing• Daity Pilot carrier.
·Name I I Addr_. :
I Phone aw;: • lip I
, .... ,« ~~":. ~ =-.J
I • ._ C.... .... ca 12121 '----· -------
... --~ ~ ........ ..
lt4K .... llO .
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
The Daily Pilot has a new way to turn
your Hidden Treasures into CASH s 80
with
prepayment
. .
~ lines-7 Days s10.so
NAME _______________ ~---~------
ADDRESS--'-~---''-'.--'--:-"-'~-'-----'~---~~_._~---=-------..-:...;.~'--"........__~
crrv _______ ~_._..-. ......... _...._.._~
AD ~OPY: 4 Une "**"'-". approprlarefy 4 words per lne. . .. .
-•
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. PILOT. . ENTEIITAINMENT GUIDE .D\llX . . \OL.4/NO~l
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-,
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By tOBERl HYNDMAN
Of the ~ Pilot Stoff
I amue1 Johnson, whom yr» E9sh
lit teacher cfiscussed ~you
. were doy-~eonmg °' cutfrlQ
doss, observed that: .. Every state of society
is as kixurious as it con be. Men always toke
the best they con get."
Fm from being on 18th centwy l!ritish
yuppie, Johnson nevertheless was bown tor
h.s wel-honed appreootion ol those things
without equql Of parolel, his instinct to
pooue The Best. .
It's the tomia ~that pushes you to
select Bed's over Budweiser, cotton CJliler
nybt and Super Unleoded over knocks and
p.ngs.
Along the Orange COOS1 in 19 87, the
Bev 11 Eniertoinment took oo various forms,
tu<Jngedhere fOf the category-~·
three lists. When teviewi19he entries, keep
in ntlnd the WOfds of Shakespeare, who
noted: "They soy the best men ore molded
out of kds and, tor the l'llOst, becON RIUCfl
... .... better tor being 0 little bod.,,
That daoctet izdian is not nited to
-. as it cer1ainl>t app&es to several of this
.,... I People, Placai and Things. •'
,
• ~
t .
Records that <:Nd be the bond's bf eolt -
lhrool1tobn. But even if it 1S111t, rod"io's loss
wl be ow contiued gain as long as
Hamon' s Wiing to roise the roof at o bar
nee.you.
Gady-Gnnly, lelt, and Hetry Hostqp
~ Mocmbo, o sensual Costa Mesa ·
cU ody open on Fridays .
BEST PIOMOTH WITH HEART AS
WELL AS BRANS: Jilft Poher. In the wale ol
so 111CJ1V di> doues, this 23 -year-old
Fanoin Voley resadent has helped keep the
CCM1ty rod scene's loft heartbeof ~
ablg by boobtg shows at "Jotwi' S, on .
Anahen pool hal Then, to proeote
hmew~bands~he(png needy
Ormge Coulty farM.es ~the todays.
,.. • .....,o~benefit
concert •was o success by fM1Y reliWcn ---IESTBAllE~ lie> Zr/A.~-.
doesR'tcba..,~e,z~...., .
..._,__0rmgeCoan1y's..r¥isiJle
..._ _ PEOPlf/'9 7J
• •
BEST iEASON TO CHANGE YOUR
Ml D ABOUT ORANGE COU TY
IGHT LIFE: Mocombo. No comest. Mi<l
theMextcon restaurants, sushi bas and
discos lmed with GerlTIOO imports whidi poss
fOf nightspots m Orange County, this
fnda~-°"Y nightclub m Costa Meso s
eosify lhe ·ppest ond most enpyoble
fearunngo srogosbcxvd ol visual Olld ~fol
de ~. lmpresOflO G<xdy Grundy ~eeps
things boppfng 0100Q w , splashy videos
go-.go daOCers, perforrnonce art sts ord
SOf!le prvr~· nJleS to ~ide rj. de and c~•oe
to. BESTiOO~iWlTHA VIEW· epture's
locier. EloOnsterisen' s cozy rest01Kan+ oo
the ~00 Beach P"W!i has been the
destination of chotce '°' ttrongs of vtSrtOfs
looking'°' o war,,, ~ekcne, o cold beer
~~besl-sunsef Vi&W
dong the coast.
• BEST ART COUECTION DJSGUISED
AS AN INOUSTRlAl PARK': The ~er in
Wundennon Musetrn. The museum, wtuch
l~ se,e ~AaS/Poge 7
• •
BEST HAllOWEE COSTUME. Mor <ie
(Qfpsdress greens. Ol"ie-mamo hit hard ond
iust 111 time foe Holoween as counrless TV
wa chers krled 0 rhe North for. tdeos 00
how 10 co~er up. Army~ stores
p<ovdeo tile'" 111ory hoery· me ha cut and
he OflrtJde vi.ere up 10 yoo.
That's pop ltrlp(ess<TIO {)rl O:ri WI r·
Jern./er Warnes and OC s & Medey
wnose I ~e Hod The TJMe of f...4y I 1e ~as
\o. I
BEST EXA\APLE Of COl\FLiSO 0 ER
.ABE EF T TheCo•ooys'~lno.onsono
Mice or l eo---0ro Pe' er oeoe·-Tne
Poohc Arf>r' ·r:eotre concer' ieo'IJ( "'9 •
W t-.eison hod Of gar zers te..o "9 w •
FBI agents who 'A'ete angered rhcr ooyone
.,_,°'*1 watt lo rOtSe "10ney k>r o COO\ ded
e.~.~:te-Ot'e
~hon.: Woo the 1-ed tS Leonora Pe 1e1 z
BEST JOKE: Emo~· at.Thelmpr<>" ..
Otsoppotnsed that his chiJchx>d Pf O)'efS
oshig fOf o new~ were going
lP\eose see THINGS/Page 71
.1
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Calendar
.JAN ~BBB
SMTWT~S
~ ed~~ cwp•izarioe. .. Ppa ta .A&1'S bold a moetbly P":'P. ~v~ a popam ohoaal mccti.111 at 7 p.m. a1 o.e ~
actJVlUCS. ~ and ~ Center. Bowen MUIC9lll. N. ~.P.5 for siJ'IJc permts and dleir Main SL. Sula Au. Meetiap aft It
f&lnilics. . : dd the firsl Tuesday ~e.ta ...a.
WllEELOF ~Sincles Pmracation by std' memben wl
over 4S, meet for dinner at 7 p.m. at artisu &om the mUICatll Cost is S4
' RilOOTs In Anaheim..For rnervations for dub members and s6 tor pests.
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
11 18 19 ~o 21 22 23
24/,, 25 26 27 28 29 30
and information. calt894-6S21. QD 9n-t900. -
PllDIE OF LIFE SINGLES meet TANG 0 01SC0 AN D -for 4inncuttbc firesidc.lnn. I )9S0 BAUJtOOM' DANCE0.1JB-Meets Spri~ Wcstnii.-er at 7 p.m. cvay Tuesday at 7:30 ia Coroaa dd
For .I.reservations and information. Mar. S 19 month fees. Lean the latest
caJI aJ6.87 44. danca follo..,ed by a dance or odlef'
activities each ~ For men intor-
matioo caU 494-0S93.
Prlday
Stmda'f
"NO NAME" a.tJa SiJllla Daner
at Sampan. 420 S. Brooldaunt ia
Anaheim. 4 to.10 p.m. DJ clanci~ 4
to 6 p.m_ Jam sasion with liYe
musicians 6 to 10 p.m. O.ncinc.
• singing and fun. Cost 1s S... For more ~ _ i nfonnation. all 521-1691.
QA.SgC FRIENDS meet at 1 · p.m. WHEEL OF FIUENDSlllP SlnaJcs
at the Sc\·cnlh Aoor. Home Savings over 45 mttt for brunch at l I :lOa.m.
Bank Bldg. 2.1161 El Toro Rd. EJ at Avilas El Ranchito. era. For
Toro. to watch Rose Bowl. No host reservations and information. call
bar. For rcsavauons and infor-894-6521. ·
ma'tion. call S44-?259. PllDIE OF LIFE SINGLES meet
· • for brunch at Ritt1o·s. 2)82 W.
Sata.rday Lincoln Ave. ~nahcim at noon. For
NON-SMOKING SINGLES of reservations and infomauon,· a ll
(N S.S 836-8744 ... Ammc:a.. · A ) meets every FLDlT Sunday programs bcKln at
01hcrSaturda) at local OranJCCoun-6:45 p.m. in the Seachff 9 illagc t~ hotels and nightclubs. Orientatio n Shopping Center. 2205 Main Street. 8~.lJ9J2:· meeting 6 10 9 p.m. SS. Suite 20. Huntington Beach. Call
PARENTS WITHOUT PART-840-0)07 for more information.
NERS Hunung{on Beach Chapter FOCUS 31, a group of singles ages
595 hosts a free on entalio n for si ngle ~39. meet at I 1.30a.m .at the South
parents at 7·30 p.m. followed b) 3 Coast Communil) Church. 5120
house pan) at 8:30 p.m .. Call chapltr Bonita Can} on Dr .. l~ine 854-7600.
.phon~ 898-79 5 for meet mg location da and add1uonaJ memtxrsh1p mfor-llon :Y
mauon. THE MEETING. CONNECTION
Membership m Parents Without Volle) ball ightcver) other Monda'
Panners IS open to di\ orced. scpar-at \\'estnunsfer Part. Westminster. at
atcd. 6 p.m. Ages 21-45. _dm1ss1on 1s SI
wido~-ed or never mamcd paren ts of 894-1 n1.
Ji, mg children Custod) of t.bc chil-
dren _Ttladay
IS not a factor. A non-profi L non-BOWERS MUSEUM
llAll"l1N AND TONI'S SWING
DANCE aA18 rDttU at the Kin&·s
Table in the WcstminSIC:r L.ana..60 I
Wcsamimler Ave. in Westminsler
besi•nina at 8:10. s.t.SO tor lessons.
no dws tor dancia&. ~3S II.
TUESDAY NIGllT SINGLES
Specially priced sPIOc1ti dinners
and danci111 witb tbC ~redd.ir Fen.do
Group I p.m. to 12:30 a.m. at
F1ottft« Beane ·s Ivy HOUie R.cs-
warant.. 3'4 f«CSl A vc. in Llpna
&c.cb.. 494-9491 .
Wed.DHllaJ
WllEELOF FIUENDSIOP, sinsJcs
o~cr 45. naect for dinner at 6:30 p.m.
at the Loose.C'.aboosc in Anaheim.
C'.all 894-6521 for reservations and
information. ,
NEWPORT BEACH SAILING
SINGLES a club for non-smoking
single sailors with or without a boat.
age 21 and older. Mttts toailht at the
Huntington Beach Inn. PaaTic Coast
H1gh .-a)•tn Hunl!ngJnn Bcach6·3lho
10 p.m. Ma~un& b(gins with drinks
and hors d·ocu,TCS 1n tbt bar.
follov.ed b) a mccung and fdivitics
at i p.m. SoctaJ hOUT follows the
mecu na. Cost IS SS. Call 673-lO 18 for
r«onkd info about club actJvities.. PRIME OF UFE •SINGLD meet
for dmocr at the S1n·er Bullet Saloon.
3321 South SL. Lon& 8C8Cb a& 7-p.m.
for rcscruuons. c:afl 8J6..174'.
-------------------------. B A C B E L 0 a A N D
•
BACBELORETTES SQUA&B
DANCING Square dancina few full and .
• ...
•
f7900 Jamboree Blvd., INne.
161-3111.
--------· CAPE LIDO. 2900 ~pon Blvd. ~ ~,:.1~;t'~ N' r
tW CALDWELL Wed..tay
........ s.twda)' •die Copa de Oro Mai•~ 6ll Antoe (o«lriltol)
in Coeea Mesa. 7 IO I l p.m.. WedJles..
day ~ Friday .. a JUL to mid-
-· Setwday. Call 662-2672 or IS4-246S. · allllnBY Pmi.11'1. . isl.
Tbe Ritz Remurw.~~
Center Drive in Newport Beach. Tuad9y11woasb Saturdlly. 7:l0p.m.
until naidaiDL 72G-1 IOO. JUDI LOalm jazz vocalist. niabt-
ly Tuaday dlrousb S.tarday at 'the
Yinr. dllc ~atop the
Nuwport Bradt Marriott H<*t aod Ta.is OW. 900 Newport Caner
Dr .• Newport BeadL 9 p.m.. IO 1:30 .... ~
IMJ9191~Mooday t1uouP Saturday in the lobby t.r.
lrviet Hilton and Towtn. 17900
Jamboree Blvd. in Irvine. from, s
aan=a.163-3111 ..... .,,., jazz piaoita
8ppmn n-:,=l tllRMlll.t Saawd9y ha 9 p.m. . I LDL a\ llllt lobby
bu of dllc lrvi.me Hihoe ud T owas.
tlnouih Saturclly hftt 9 p.m.. IO I :JO
Lin. ~ ...,... 6 ro. jazz
pianist ud • acc::ompaailne9t at canne1o·1:a p.m. Fri. tlnouP Sun.
lS2Q E. Cont H.,,_.y, Con>m dd
Mar. 67S-1922. ""1'.BB IWINGar Play jazz oft.bc
)()I ud 40s. now appeanfll .at Ille
Driftwood Cocbail louftllC. 21462
hrific Cont tJishway:-ll'"untiQllOn
Bcadt oa Friday and S.twday &om
7:J0 10 11 :JO p.m. Sl6-66 IS. ..... ,
NEW o-••• .. JAZZ a.uB of
Southeni Calibaia ftatura the first
Su.nday jazz ICS1ioa of the New Year
wbic:'h IS opCD to Ille public from l :)()
10 6:lO p.m._al die HUDril!llOG Be8ch
Inn. 21112 Plicifte Cont Rifhway in
HuntinsMM 8adL Admimon is S4
or by membership Kale. For mott
infonnalioa. call (213)39~70.
MICW•a JOaDAN · · musician
7-11 • p.m.. al Tbe ~. ··-dub/loMs alOP Ille Ne •pol1 ... Mamou -.._.. t8d Taanis Club
Raon. 900 Ne...., Ceater Dr.
-rHE CHAMPION LAIJGl-OlTl'-LOUD
COllfJJY OF 1987!" ..., ....... __ ._.
~YFUNNY!"
.
TRAINSAND
~...., ..JIOTS THE .
HO-HO-HO Mac IN THE
HOLIDAYS!'
• ~~111M1wu s 111.--.
" ... HILARIOUSJACiS IN
THE LAIKil!' .......... ,_.
Ncwpon Beach. 640-4000. -..__._1 ~ LIDO 2900 Newport Blvd. ·-.NcwDort Bta:h. Li(k>All S&lrs featur-M.AalL YN sn.NCEa jazz pianist ·iftl Waynt Wayne from 3:30 • ..a 9.m. 1n the lobby bu al t.bc Irvine Hilton
lnlttlCC'lion feaumftl Dmile Vallin 9 and Towcn. I 7900Jambortt Blvd. in
p.m.-l:lOa.m. Irvine. Tuesday and Wednesday
. -mE IWINGEILI .. are t.c:t by from 9 p.m.. IO I a.m.163-3111.
popular demaad at t.bc ,Driftwood CAFE LIDO 2900 Newport Blvd.
Cocktail Lou.nee. 2146-2 Pacific Cont ln1ft1Celion wuh Alo Taylor and
Hiahway. HuntiQ&tOO Beach. Okfies Waynt Waynr tonight 9 p.m. IO 1:30
~t IOOdics from t.bc )()I and 40s a.m.
ony Sunda) afternoon from 2 unUl JORN llENDEllSOH"S'
6 p.m. Sl6-66 l S or SJ6. I 42 I. . WIND" with Lcigb Downuppcar the
second and fourth Tuesdays at lloDd•J Mcadowlar\ Cou.nuy· O u.b. 16782
--Graham Sl. Huntington Beach..
AU•OIU JAZZ E~ery Monday ni&bt &om 7 to 9:30 p.m. bturi .. the <>ranee Coe.st CoUeee Bi.a Band under the dim:tion o1 Dr. Chutn
Rutbcrf'onl. 69S Town Cana Drh"C..
Costa Mna. Reservations m:-
ommended. Call 432-0284.
Wedlle1day
CAFE UDO 2900 cwpon Bl' d.
presents the New Yort Jazz Conntt-
uon tonight 9 p..m. to I :lO a..m..
eveni,.ai t.bc Coedt Hou.sc. JJl.S7
Camino Capistrano. San Juan
Capistrano. CalJ 496-19)() fOr tict.d
yJcs and dinner reservations. .
&EUSENS Pl.ANK80VSE Tom McKmDc rctw1lS fOr an inddirutt
~Dl. Bis bud to~t pop
bus. 9 p.m.. IO MO a.m. Tuetday
tbrougb Saturday: Rue.hens
P!ankbousc is located at tht comer ol
Warner .and Spn.Qldilc an Hwu-
1ngaon Beach. .
VILU NOVA S&an ~ pcyforms ·Slandards and show ua.nes
Thursday throup Saturday at thr
VIII.a ova. open 5 p.m. to 1 a..i'IL
3131 Wm Coast·H'Chway. Newport
Beach. 642-7880.
~ lllO&ENO at the paano bar
6 to I 0 p.m. Monday dllroucb
Wcdnada~. 7 to 11 p.m. Fnday and
Saturda~ and 10 a..m. to 2 p.m.
Sundays at tht Hohd.a) lnJl. 8nsaoi /
.\\C. in C'OSla Mesa.. )
CANNEllY aESTAVB.ANT JOIO
llOUZY llOUGE CAP'E 7:30 to I 0
:JO p.m.. Jaz:z vocabs& Jil C1artt and
guitarist Marcel l..onpdl 3110 New-
port Blvd. Newport Beach. 673:-3440.
E! A e
, Lafa)ctle A .. "C... ~ Beach. b-
tu~ -The Ka~ Michaels Band. -
top 40 aod rock Friday and Sahlrday
C\CUlngs and Su.Ilda~· a.fternooa..
aoaarro IWNDINELLA Con-
1e1nporary JAZZ and vocak tonight th~ Tbw'Sday aa 8 aa Carmdo·s.
3S20 qsa Coat Hilhway. Cot'OM dd
Mar. 67S-1922.
CA.FE UDO. 2900. Newport Blvd.
Jeri L)-nne Qua.net. 9 p.m..-l :lO a..m.
Friday
67>Sn7. •
COUllTllOUSE llEST Alfa.ANT
prcsir11ts Cbuct Bat t..saa ·s aa.ic
Rod ·n· Roll Show 1·Tb&anday throu&h Saturda). 8:30 p.in..• Tbc
"One of the Better Orchestras active in Southern California"
8:1;-
SA't, JAN. 9th_
CON<DT PIOGIAM FEAlUIES TIE IU'll.AI
RODRIGO ··
''CONBER'ID
·' DE
Calib Dia Ans r..-:i..
/ '•
;
(.
' , .
• I
..... .
~is lac:md w llloct oil btMals..t.y..S......., • l:lO me ss hcwaJ. waa cm ~ p.a. ~sm•4"-2'16.
Blvd.ieta.eH..._Calrc. 121.-121. &DI -u+w a Ca: M Old. um. TD a.ca ms Nc•ID't 2110 E. a.,. A1'C. .. ~
Blwl.iaCostaMaa. p +·•liPts. just east oL lk Newport Faccway.
minon and a ~.dace locW. Nol-ken~ pCllMIDS09 kiEybwtd.
shins or dlons. Tdds .-e SS foul ••apltoer aed "WO ---tolo OD
shows. Doon ..-at I " -C.U T.esdmy ud Wed. U. llomi 8ddl
---· ....-vocalsud -. ........ 833-1160. . .~~~r-111£ BOP presenU the c:oolaa ~ Tbun. ,,..~ SaL ~ ~ ~, -H~·" Hour in lOWll S-7 p.m. JOfDSlhc&n*PC'YCl'Y~-Sat.
tomgbt., and SaturdanOuce with OD dnulls. 9 p.m. to l:lO a.m. Tars.
fdix Lanc(SJcov~ );Sunday, through SaL Sua. from I p~m. to I w Hop is available or privale a.m.
parues and banquets {c.all Christi llOB BU&NS _ &ESTAUU.NT
SihcrberJ at 964-S90l). and Moa LOVNGE'1 Fasfiic?n .ISl&nd. _New-
• Too~ ROSSJni, A Tribule to Nril pon lk.acb.. Joe lrtticri and Fricads.
Diamond at 8 p.m. Admission is $3. Tuesday l.broteh Sat~y at I p.m.
I
I
-Rock Around t.ht Ooct. .. a bis&ory 644-2010. · • •
of rode and roll feawrilJll Jason ------Chase. Tues. at 8 p.m.{H-cover .Satmday _
~).;Wed. 1"be Cool Jerb,, .. lh-e a.&. IING IOllisht at the COKb
I 0-ptCOC band; Lip Sync contests House. 331 S7 C.amino Capistruo.
Thurs. 1an• Brootbuna. Fountain San Jaau ~.Cal 496-8930 v allcv. 963-2366. f« tidt1 sales and d.inDer raer-TllE CBOWN BOUIE,32802 -'-ations..
South Paa.fie Coasa ffilbway, South ·--Lacum . Frank Rm and Trio s..day _
performToesda)lb.roQdlS.turda__I._,2. VD.LA NOVA Richard fuoo"s
pm. to l:JO a.m. lllilt Adepii IS piano st)iinp Saaday throucb
E D D I E M U R P Hy. I S ...
. ~ .. HILHUOUS" ~ ...... ,.._,,_,_
'! .. BRIWANT ... DAZZ• •NG" . °"""°"'""'--~--.
u•c•••OR•D UNCUT •••••t1pT1•LY -.
OW-
T H • ~ 0 N C • • T .. -0
171• ~-11' -_..._ ---~ __.
-----
~--.. .. . ' -. .... .
•
heeday
1'llE DIPROV presents three
SKtc-splittinc acu each ru&bt
T uesda) through Sunday. r .
Opening
this week ...
t 91-I 81;.Jal
4211 s. ...... st Alllllfllll
QJ4 ........ a,.
J-.TlllnDy ...... 1 .
2101 [. c.. (56 fwy). s.tJ Au
DJS-.
0.. f'nllS
M 1*1 s-
2FOR 1
Buy one of Reidi"s Frogen-Y-az:urt. -reoenre the w:old of equm or ._., vakJe.
FREE -
GOOD AT THESE 2 STORE$
.On TM P9nlrJ I +
2727 Newport Blvd.
175-495
6" tome peace ad"'*'-adubs who
~ ~ 10 spmd tomt ldOnir:) IO
send tbcir bds ao u amusement
pmt.. Hnunm.
BEST YU PPli HANGOUT: T1lr Im~.~ Ge bmlcb .. loob
............ UlltellbC. dan DCW com-
edy dub m masacr-tilanaed lrvmt
Kr''a •P tbt bcsl laQlbs outsidr of
yoar <ra"D otlicc.. A saeady ttram of
~ c:omedaans • tbit ..
llichtl} and maU it nc:arty imposs:ibk
D04 to have a l'>Od ume. . ~
BEST'REASON FOR MOMMAS
TOlETntElR BABIESGROW P
TO BE COWBOYS: The Craz)
Hone. The Academ) of Coualr)
MUSIC called n -Oub of tbt Year'"
~nth pld reasoa.. Top acts and top
5CfYICX. And sull crU) after all tbest
)Qn.
Dllr Plall 0 1 D .. I fttdmr. .... .,, 1. -T
---
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ACritic
.
'Eddie Murphy Raw': Lockers _of laughs
MW' d.,_
Pllllll J 11# el I rr rdller
Me ...... -.S -
Murphy shocks, am1rses, takes no ch&_Oces
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BEST ETHNICALLY-
TAllGETED DOUR£ Bill.: Scm-
blaos oil IO die £.ctw.d5 lwt.w
Twill in a.a Mesa. wtUic:t. ftatured
die iBepJ alic:a spoo(-Bona la Eal
LA. -and -u ..... -b le"-erai Wccb . T~RT REYNOLDS
AWAll.D FOR LONGEST STa..ING
OF BOX Of'flCE CWN1CEltS BY
·,i,·~ SER\'E 8EAL BU TTER
ON OUR HOT POPCORN'.'' ---- -
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I
OC·plciybookfor 1988 has a too.-fcimiliar look
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ConllottJtal Cwsm(' ti · ·~-_ri,·1.6 lDC'C 196 -QJll JKU"l~ ,,.--
South Coast Plazai Cost.a ~esa (7 I 4) 540-3840
\l,-.rT'£.R
SE:R\ID
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S/695
. -• • • • •
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~R~WOUSb
R E S T A U R A N T
Don't Let The Party End ...
Ring In Tt* New Year a t
The Wareflc>us~
• ~ 10.00 a.m. -3:00 p.m .
• Dinntt ~~ B~lnrnng 5:00 p.m .
•Big Sc~ T.V. • Ent~rta•nment
.... ,,., ...... s, ..... St30" .. ~
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BUllBABA
CUISJSE OF JSDJA
J>Mhap, t~ most esaung tle'I"
rhtaUraN tn Hunlmgtoo ~ach.
BL'KHARA. brinp to )'OU the
~ uid at-.p!wre of India .
~fust uf lhl' foud at BUKHARA is
prepared w a Tandoor (day ~nl
fresh i~ emu uniq~ taslft
and dastanctl\e aromas fix Neh
diah. Yuu1l find the food iuthen-
uc and rusunably prittd. And,
the atmosphere 50 warm and in ·
tamale that it feleis lib boml'.
O~n 7 dayi; a week. Lundi served
11 10· 2 JO p.m. with lunchgpttiats
l~nn1ng at $2..99 ();oner wrved
.} IO p.m.· 10-.JO p.m. Friday & S.t·
urda~ upen 'UI I l p.m. Rese,r,
'd lturl.'> and ~ uut orden -1~ ""
c-vmr Com"t'111eot.ly localed ecrou
frum the HuntiJl(lAIO Cmur toff
the 4().; f rtr) al &ach to ~r I
~19-4 Ed1~er A\e. lil41842 -31il
CAFELJDO
Cale Lado is Newport Cannl'f')'
\·111age·s only supper dub. It's
laaud on Balboe Penimula.. Cale
Lido is -11 known fOJ iu frnh
5eafood Sl'lec:tioN and coo um·
porary .cuwlnl'. pttpared by Chef
fnanc:a. T'br warm. intimau and
rozy ambunce of dusty row and burcw>dY decor aeau a perfttt
atloolphen IM your dimng n · ·
·puia>ee. Cale Lldo o abo thl'
r«lpieot of the Prntigiou.
Southern CAiifornia Restaurant
Wriurs· Stiver A•ard c.ua1 at·
u re Dinner ciifhtly until IJUd.
nachL Ll\"e JAZ% mgbtly Call
6'5-2968 for rl'5l'rvat.ions.
fHE CANNl:llY
Thrs bistorit wat.afront landmark
tn Newport's Cannery V~ fl'JI·
tuns fresh iocal wafood a.nctEut.
em bttC. Conmuatly rood Rr·
vlc:ir. open fM Lunch. Dinner. Sun
Bnmcb ud Champaciw Hartxw
Cru11eS. Entm.ainmftlt niptly
and Sun. aft.ernoom. EnJOY the
IC>UJ!IP food p.llery-.upttb clam
cliowcfer! 3"010 LaFayette t/~sm.
.
GINO'S ON THE HILL
..\ hn~"' a Custa ~ lesoa land 11131r It
•here r~nd and memuries 1.Dttl.
G1o'v· i>n.t an lwian R~urant.,
but a re5taurant heme run by a
I k.cal I I wlian. E~ thoQgh the)
~f\'l' many I Lalian items. they at.o
ufler a ~ vtnet) ot OLbtt it.elm
vn their ~nu.. Known for
~ Hune.t fuud and friendly wr·
v1ct':· GirK.i's l~tci:re 1 V1lried
menu with emphasis on quality
and r.--ble pnas.. Coe~
hour "''llh interesting notions at
4;30 p m. and live entertai:runHl
Moo. lhru S.L from 8::30 p.m.
Saturday ~ Sunday bfakfast
from 9 a.m. Loe.a~ at 438 K. l ith
Strttt. Custa Mesa. Call 650-1?50
fur resen·atlQ05. dittctiom or
•Ntln'l'r.
GRASD DINNER TREATER.
lmp~i\'e dminc and pro-
f~tunal prudU<'Uons an sure to
plt'L~ each time you -.isiL The
ea.ua.ndinal)· buffet atTen n.si
baruo of bttf. ,laud ham with a
( ru 11 !>aUC"t". G l'Ulgui chicken with
1-*3r~ and itlau and the Mahi
\IJht b ~ned tn a peaant YIK'l'
-Trt·colur feu unim and cream is a
real fl\unte EnJO) dinDl'r and a
pla) toni~ht' Grand Dinner
Tht>•lt'r located Wlthm tht' Grand
Hvtl'I m Anaht'im a1 I HoU!Wa)
Call ;;2.1.10.
HARLEQUIN
DINNER THEATER
E-.·ff) n.t5tomu can be n~ to
bl' lreattd hkt' a ~lebrity. The
thntrr ulfen. KT\lmptious meals
••»1lh top productions in an elef:ant
al~,16pht'tt. ~ .aumptuous
buffe11 includH ~t ti.ran of
bttl. duclit'n and fish di5hes.
J)btt.. ~ veget.a!Ms. and sin-
ful deswru.. The S.t. and Sun.
bnuicb includes a variety o( ecg
dishe5. The CeJebrity Terrau as
available Cur pm·ate dininc. The
indh'lduaJly decoraud privau
bakuoy ruoms .,,.·erlook the 4.5().
sea1~-slt.ape(J ~o room.
The Harlequin it located at ·3503
~I CASA
T11eu food is lih a trip w Mniro'
H pitalit} t:(ti band m hand
... nb tht'11 mot~ -Mi c-ts Su
(' asa. -Qf ID) boow tS ~ house.
E..tabl~ ~•na 1972, it·s no
..ecret frieQ(h enju) dirunr here.
Opni dltlly frvm l l LIB. few
1..unth:' DinMr and Cocktaik.
Ente.ruinmeot Wed.·&m. nipu
~ Tn tlw Burru Room. 296 K fiih
St~ c...,1.a Mesa. 645·7626
NEWPORT LANDL!l\G
RESTAURAST
Thl' ~ landinc Ratauran1
pt'rfl'rtl) otuaud on the bejf ront
ad,a«nl ~ t& Ba.lboe f'un Zone
host WIJlt 8 finest local -Coocf al
• eU as a must prestigious b:.tion.
Fine fuud and i mo.t e.uitinc
lWnge. c~ )"et casual join.us
(JK lunch dmMr Sunday bnmcb oi
perNip. appt'UUn. and coclitaah
from the oyste.r bar. The bfatb.
taki11g -.il';i.· as ac«ntechrit:h-enttt-
Latnmrnt Tuttda)··Salurd•>·
tug:hligbud b> Stttl Orum .llOUDCk
· · vl lhe Can bbl' an. vo Sunday aft.u ·
nuun.. (rum :4. 7 p.m. The N-Porl
Land1~ • .a definite lucal fa\'Orilt'.
OJ>t'n "; da) Rber~·attOM pleaw
ull t7U I 0.~2T.3 \011l'l pukjng
t'\tfll_!P.
THE NEWPORT OYSTER
BAR AND GRILL ·
Bnrht and airy with a coiorfuJ
suside Victorian lla.ir, Thl' New.
pon Oyster Bar and Crill ia casual
se.alood dininc at ita best. Ru
Chandler. who abo owns The Rn:
Rftt.aurant.. has au led a fun spot
to sip an A~bor Steam btt.!. ~
spicy shrimp and enjoy nquis1wl)·
pttpSred fish: It·, home of the
world's best lil'l(Uini dams. ~
aJJ day from l l:JO Ll!l. to l(>.30
p.m.. to J l p.m. oo F~ and
S.t.urday nigh&a. M..C •• Visa. A.E..
. DinuL l«:11A'd acr:oa.hmn.. .the..
Newport Pier. 2100 Wat Ocean·
frOll"' Newport Beach. OJS.9977. . .
.
PARJlSIDE R.EST AUllANT
Relive yescaday el dw Parbick
Res&aurant.. formerly 1"he (aque. .
defichtinc lucal diners for OWT 1 i
)-.n. Pirbide's fain includes
mab. prime rib ud fresh ...
food. Sunwt Oinnn Spedala ·an
1e.rved at only 17 ~ ~i p.111. D.aly
Lunch Specials atan at oaly ~.
~ in a quW\, int.lmaw at· ~. t.htoy mab for a pet(ect
lunch 1Dftti.nc with an im.-unt..
dimt., or a reJa.nnc af't.ernoon
breeJt with • special ~.
Sports n ci&anent in our ~
two •tellite dishes and a larp
1crtto T . Y. Rama A: Raiden
Ga.ma an ~~r bleda.ed out. 1"he
Partwde m.ends &.heir invitation
lO ~ fM thftr ldiiit.y:.t.n.
QUft needt.. Groups ol up to 00
pt'ftOQL Mab your holiday perty
raervatiom early. Coawoiently
locaud in FOW1&ain Valley at
16525 8rookhunt in Mile Squatt
Plua. FM rewrvationa « IDOf'l'
information call m•> n~ms.
BUMPLESTIL81UNS
One ul the ~t k~t Menta o( s--pun is tlw fwd al this popl.I·
lar rucht club,. lf you ~ pelt.a •.
tbJS is lhe platt! Only the~
~it'n&.s an UMd in our •bonM-
madt'f "sauotS and acJi' disb is
prepared in the hpt and healthy
tradLtion uf California cuisine.
Th-u»icauit -cba)ltt>cJ.rcf" menu
.-tii<b dwJctt daily .uo-rou to
ch..-purticin we. to fit )"OW
•Wt't•ll' {and )'VW .-.lift). Offer·
tnp inciude such fa~• S.,.· dirui. 0ams a LiacuUii _.. .Scampc Alfredo ........ _ al
WI u--n crea~ like Mttican
Luacna Szttb•an Scallol" Swurcrru ~ ...t -eta
mutt. Cums*w ..,...u.r --and don·, _. our fftllt home-
made brNd! c-Ntty Jo avoid
the late n.jpl crunch or stick
aruund and dantt lO ... of lbt
t-l enul'\aiomnn 1.11 town! ()pm
I I :30 a.m. lO 10:00 p.a. -tdays;
11:00 p..m.. ~.114 Mcfad·
dtt1 Platt NewpOil Beech fat the
:o.;-i-t Pieri. 6i3-502S.
r
SAJLLOn ,
Sail Lon Bar • Grill fe.L1tret
~ ritw diru111 with lM
Hnphasi5 on frnh -food. O)"'lltt
bu. IA-e mtn\Ainment n:1ghtly 10
the bu area. ()pm for dinnt:r
oiplly from 5 "p.m. Weetf.nd
houn from 1 <k30 a.m. Fabubaf'
Sunday Brunch. Locaud at ~
P.c.H. m lacwaa 8-c:tl --
TALE OF THE WHALE
Experie~ a ll~ beck Udo tiaM I
tu • place wi)e.tt )'UU CllG dine al
your V'l'"J\ ~-En.joy Uw ro·
ma~ uf \ild Nl'W])Urt with a pM·
uramic bay -.iew. E&cite )-OU:f ......
WOSft with their wnsational -·
fuud and tradau.-1 frrorit.ift.
Bruklast ; a.m.. Mon.· Fri.. Lundi ·
JJ.4 Mnn .. fri~ Dinner 4-11
Mun,.·Sat. Set. and Sun. Bnmdt t
; ·4, Q.)"Slft Bai .Fri. Sal. ~ s-. '"'!'!
Banqutl facihlia up to 500 400
Main St. .. Balbcia. 673-4633. . ..
Gl_ll_E I D.i IHA.1\1 I ·1 :1~11\! sT A*B IA1· IFIAN 1-S
-
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BauJ•vL au a·'""'" 11 -11e11MF •-~ .... lU5 m1 ...._C......_661.-P.a.f7• -S2M-P.OO 4-7 • . t: . •
~!'~8fd~ Se.food 112..llMJt.JS ........ lll.7$..tlU:S .... • • "ts .. • • ;.
~81!.~Jff>US-Z ~ •.a.sauo a..•• tWllll,. ~' * • * ·• .
c.ona. ....... •.50-tt1.Jl5 ....... 1$.15 .,...... * ..... _ __,.,..._c-..._-.m• • 1#. J!Yl!.......,.,, ...... m-4114 ........ ,,.. ... '"-1$..50 '-•·~~ • I•
L~~--..... ..,-~ llaliM f.-$46) fr.tGt$ ~ U.••
~tl~.ci.. .... w-x. At..-.... 1.t:.= ~7 • * I: ......... •roinbu -
!.:J'~~l!"'.,!\!,AA\ ~RILL 5v=' ...... ~ $4.ts.ll•ti .,'C,,, "!.,.. . I• r.ar~,~~!!'.!...1"-~ ~ IZJIS M ii$ 129$ .. ., •• 'A\-f4 Z$ 5 * ,.
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