HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-01-06 - Orange Coast Pilot( ,
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* WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1988 25 CE. 'T
LB ·reJ.ect~ ·'1!'ider canyon road
Council hOpeS f tS 5-Q VOte Will persuade safel) by mcreasmg traffic and the provaJ. ~ and rep~ntcd a s1g.n1ficant Ma)Ot Pro-Tern Robert Gcnuy speed hmal. However. Kosm sk.J saad that even compromise. Frank saad At one point. local arust Michael coastal panel to veto plan by Caltrans The councal's dcas1on c:ames no af the comm1SSion approves ~ But &.he counaJ tt)ttt:Cd the pl.a.n 10 U\er) bum into th~ COUD<'tl
official \\Ct&bt with Cahn.ns. which widcruna plan. CaJtrans officials will November after residents once aptn ch.ambers and set down a pamUOJ or
By LANCE IGNON .............
Sentiments apinst widenina
L.aiuna Canyon Road reached '
fevered pitch Tuesday niaht as the
City Council sided with residenu to
keq> the scenic road at two lanes
while 1nstallina a variety of safety
George Bush tells rtval
Bob Dole: 'Get off my
back.'/AI
Callfomia
Coastal Commlssion
sues Reagan adminis-
tration In offshore oil dis-
pute./ AA
Sports
mt.a.Sures. .
The five-member counetl unani-
mously turned its back on a state
Department of Transponation flan
to widen a three-mite stretch o the
road to four lanes af\cr 2'11 hours of
testimony from 37 people. Most of
the ~ople who tntified complained
that wideruna the road would reduce
Laguna
se~king
to gain
acreage
By LANCE IGNON °' ..............
Less than one week after the city of
Lquna Beach formally annexed
South Laguna. the City Council
inuiated proced urcs to pin control of
~vcraJ unincorporated pockets of
land slated for development by The
lrv1ne Co.
The counol also voted to ask the
county's Local Agency Formauon
Commission to extend the city•s
sphcrt of influena over~ southern
portion of the Irvine Coast. which
now falls in Newport Beach's sphere
of influence.
The formation commiss1on over-
sc:cs annexations and cha~ LD
spbcrcs of anflucooc. wbJcb reprncnt
areas assumed to one da )' fall under
the formal Junsdtct1on ofa paru~
cit~.
Caty ~ Ken Frank said
Tucsda> rught the sphere of anflucnce
chance and the annexation are loeical
becautc Laguna Beach 1~ 10 the best
snuation to provide services to the
areas.
On the Irvine Coast. the city
already .pro''ldes poua: protcdion to
' a trailer park aod El Moro School is
pan of the ~ Beach Unified School District. una officials want
to control thecoas inc from their city
umit.s to Crystal Cove State Puk-
Basketball great Pete
Maravich, ¢.re-member,_, JB1
lndez
Advice and Games
Births
C7
A7
A3
More importantly. ttowcvcr. a.n-
ncx.ation would 11ve ~ aty more
control over proposed developments
by The Irvine Co on five pat'C'Cls of
land.
The lrvane Co. propcrues total 6 7
acres and arc located 1n north L.aiuna
and alona Laauna Canyon Road.
Development plans include both
commcra.a.I and rcsidcnual.
When asked if the city nu&bt tr) to
cha~ The Jry1nc Co. 's d~elopmcnt
plans. Ma)or Dan Kenney said:
"I wouldn't rule that out. Ot>VlOus-
-(Ple..ee ... LAOORA/ A2)
plans to submit 1t.s latest widenina suit be open to compromise. wtticb turned out 1n dro'es to protest the the road as ll no\\ looks and promised
plan for Califoma Coastal Com-might include leaving the road at two "'1dcnang. to paint another picture after the
mission approval next month. lanes. Tunda) rught. residents com-~1denin1-
Counol members ho~ theiractton "We don't want to make a dccasaon plained that the ~•demn& would -1 think thu IS go1ni ·lO be the
will persuade the commission to veto that the city can't hve with," he said. destro) the beaut~ of the can)on. begmningofthe end of ourcommuru-
the Olltrans plan. but both City "We've never rammed a proJ«t disrupt wtldllfc comdors and m-t}:· ~said.
ManagtT Ken Frank and Ron down an)onc's.throat." CTCa5C air polluuon. Caltrans bas looi a.ssencd that
Kosinski. scn1orenvaronmcntal pJan.-The agency's latest design was the -1 don't stt for the IJfc of me ho..., \\1dening the road to four lanes
ncr for Caltrans. said the plan wtll product of several months of neg~ wtdenmg that road 1s going to sc~c bet~ttn El Toro Road and Canyon
probabl) \lolD the commiss1on•s ap-ttat1on between nt) staff and the the people of La1una Beach." said (Plea9e eee CA1'T01'/A2)
Milestone
AU-day ahowen dlcln•t dampen enthuiaam Tueeday ••
VIPs joined tn the .. toppln& oat .. ceremony at Irvine Medical
Center wbeJ'e the flnaJ ateel beam wu hoisted into place for
the $90-milllon boepltal. llarla Callahan ahlelda a guest u
be aJcna the beam.
HB police sh8:re
$225,000 cost
of clerical error
rongf ul arrest -
was compoUnded
by local mistake
8 )' RO.BE.llT BARKER °' .............
.\Mann Count' bus1ncsi01an v..bo \lo~ wroogl~ arrested and dcaincd
after a Mclcrical error-b~ an 1ncxpen-
enced poh~ rec..ords clerk m Hunt-
ington Beach \\111 be-paid S225.000tn
damages.
The Hun ungton Beach Cll} Coun-
ctl agreed to pa) the man S75.000 as
did Orange Count) and the Ba) .t.rea
police dcparuncnt th.al actuall) ar-
rested lhr b1.1sinessman. accocdmg to
offioals.
Fred Manin Simons ...,-as arrested
b' _about eight polttt officen 1n .\pn l
ot 1986 as be returned to bis home ID
Grttnbne an Mann Count} after an
e'crung out ...,,th his ...,1fe
But 1nsk.ad of bC'tng the suspect
who \\"3S ...,-anted for susp1oon of
attempted murckr 10 Hunun&10n
Beach. the arrcscttt .-"as an upsundang
cittttn \\hO owned sc"cral clot111ng
stores an the San Franasco area.
officials said.
The SUSJX'C1 and the businessman
shared the same first and la.st names
and middle 1n1t1als.. Huoungton
Beach ~put) Cu) 4 nomn. Bill ~msbar) said Tucsda' Ooh their
middle names ...,ere d ifferent ·
Fred M1ch.acl Simons.. age un-
known. was wantt'd b} local polKe on
susp1oon of attempted murder and
aggra,·ated assault after a fam 1 ~ fight
1n December 1983 . .\m~ ~d.
.\ .... arrant \!las 1s.s~ at the umc for
S1moo$· a.rrest out of Y. est Orange
Count~ Municipal Coun
.\msbar) saad the suspc-c-t apparent-
!\ rtmained at large .and that an
Orange Count~ deput~ s.hmff found
the name v.·hcn going ..1hrough
outstanding \loarrants somcumc later.
The dcput) apparently ran Simons'
name through the Department of
Motor \ ch1cl~ computer and amc
up v.11t-an address ID G~brac.
~msban said
The deput) contacted an employee
in the Hunungton Beach Pollet
~panmer.t records office ""'ho sent a
message b' tclel)~ to atttmpt to ~ the warrant to Mann County;
.\msban said -
The tinch he .. saad. was th.at I.be
0\1\ &a'e onh m1ddJc rn1uals. not
middle names • -
~nd \\h«i officers from the T•'ln C1t1~ PohC'C OCpanmcnt dtsttnded
on Fred \fanin Simons at ht:S home m
Gr~nbrae ID 198"'. th~ got the
\\TOD& man. ~m~bar) sa1d.
''The admin'6trator
and the Clty Coandl
are apaet trith the
clerical error that
eo.ets$75,000. Wllo
•oaldn •t be?'•
-City Administrator Pa uJ Cook
1mons -the ousioessman -was
~tt'd ID front of has \lo1fc and taken
to the pohC'C suuon v. here he was
d~u.1ned for about thrtt ho~ unnJ
officen f(:\und o ut through finler-
pnnts that he Yrasn·t the ngh~ man.
.\msban ~1d
Pohci ~ere un~blc to shed an~ h&ht
on the sutus of Simons -the
SUSpc"Ct
Oranet Count' and the T\\1n C1ucs
also each pa1d S .. 5.CXX> as their shatt
oi the ~ttlcm~l . .\.msbar) said
("11, ~d mm1strator Paul Cook
~-ailed the S"'S. settkment "an
(Pleuie eee BB POLICE,' A2)
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Death notices
Entertainmen1
Food
87-8
85-6
C8
84
C6
Builders fight back on growth issue ..
Mind & Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Polloe tog
Public notices
Sports
Weather
C1-S
A9-10
A 12
A11
A3
84
B1 ...
A2
BJ JONATBAN VOLBE ..............
Four OranlC Coun~ bwJdin& io-
dustry lf'OUps have joined man effort
to educate members within their
professions that sJowina the resion·s
boomioi irowth wiJJ not improve
traffic and mialu cost them their jobs.
"A lot ofpcol)lelookat us like we're
pan or the problem -and people in
our 1ndusuy believe that .. S&Jd John
E.rshne, CAccutJve director of the
Oranse Count) chapter of the Bu1ld-ina loduslt) As.soctauon and ma)or
ofHununaton Beach.
.. But we're not the problem. we're
pan of the sotuuon. ..
Enkine. speak.ina Tucsda) at •
dinner mttuna of the BlA. said ~1s
sroup bas banded with the Com·
mercw Industrial Drvelopment .\s-
socutJon. the Home Bwldcn Cou1X1l
and the Sales and Ma.rkctma Counol
to la uncb the educa uon.al cam pa1&J\.
which will bepn mtcmall) •1th a
scnes of post.en.
-Tba.s prosram will reach 110.000 ~pie who make then bvina ID
1ndusU')." Enklne said. ··There 1s a
lack of mformation amona them
Intersections clearer than new law •
Mo torts ts can be ticketed for blocking
traffic -ut interpretation co ctlng ·
Actual!~. S&}S Flovd Garren of the
Automobtle Oub ot Southern Cali-
fornia. both an correct.
Garrett. maDaFr of I.he Member
LepJ Sen'lces Depanmcnt of the
MA. says one Stt'lion of the code
states 1 driver shall not enter an
intttscctsoo unless then is clear spaoc
on theotbcr5'dc. Soit donn•t matter
what cok>r the sipal is when the car
tnacrs the anten«tton.
Anotbcr sectJon sa ~ a dn vcr ma.kins a itft tum can't en tcr the
intcncaion on a ydlo• t.abt UJlksJ
be is asswed of compldlna the tum
udcleanns the tntcn«tioo. For that
to be 1 citabk 1nfracuoo. a traffic
o.ftica would ba\-e to .,t.iqs lt. -rm ahad ,,., IOiftl to be chflkuh
&om u cab~meat poent of~ ...
Gumt aid. "h·s Pftl to be Ver)
confus1na to motonsu. to offic:trs and
to the courts until it sict.s soned out ..
Consider this scenano: "motonst
enters an tnten«tion 10 make a·left
tum. The direction m •-hach he 1s
tum1 na as unobstructed.
Hov.-c,-er . ..,bile be ,..'&Its for on-
comina traflktodear. a skTI o~n&ht· nmuna '--dlidcs fill up the ~ lht Stsnal cha.QlltS and be has nov. httt to
JO..Cilb(~a~
··1 'bcrt. att aoma to bt some
1.DDO«nl folks trruna cauaht .. Gar-
ren warned.
ln Los ~kl. w~ a cit)
ordinance desiaMd to bolslt'f the
St.alt law also ~l lDlO effect. I lB ffic
task force u monitonq kt> inttr-l«liom throu@out tbc at}
BUt 10CM traffic control Offlcrn att
worried .a.o.at ~nt. ~
.about the traffi problem ..
Mam people bellc\C that ad-
d1uon.al constructJon leads to ad-
dioon.al traffic ...,oes. but that nmpty
isn'l the case, Ent.inc said
He sa.1d bu1ldcn ha'c entered
b1nd1ng llJ'UltltnlS \lo,th Clt) and
count) offic:i&ls to pro,,dc S235
million in 1mpr0Hmcnts to
southcastcrii Ora.nee Count) ilonc.
Focu s o ~ THE N E~s
..
OtMr &&Tttments will bdp fund
c~pansaon!> to 4Jton. Golden l..atem.
Bake and ~1oulton parkways.
The postus depict 10dusU')
-. ort.en and coolllO phrases sudl as
"Tb~~ c:an'l mo~-e without you. -
.. You 're bctn& framed.· and -GoocS
gu' s wear b.ardba ts.. -. 'rbc posters. whtcb lhc council
(Pt--eee lltJ1LD&119/A2)
Buildings
for space
station
approved
....
Pope 'sAustrlan trip critlclzed
• VATICAN CITY (AP) -Tbe • •c r 111 tUI pope )olul Paul
0 will visit AUllria i.a Jue ud meet
fora ...S time witb Pl . dat Kurt
W"'thcim ... lbanllY criticized by Jcwm a.den i.a'tbe.Ullited SWa. n. Jw ll-27 lrip. aonouaced by
Vatica lladio on Tuadly, wifJ
i.Ddudc lilopl ln Vienna, Salzbura and
lambnd. It will be the ponti~s
lllCODd visit to lbt country and his
ICCOOd mediaa wilb Waldheim, wbo wu elected in 1916.
The pontiff 6nt visited ~ustria as
pope in September 1983. Walheim,
wbo bas been accused of complicity
in Nazi war crimes durina World War P. met the pope in Rome last June.
That incident anaered Jewish leaden,
and Jtwisb aroups Tuesday de-
nounced the plans for a second
mcetina between the pope and
Waldheim.
Tiie meeU.ns "will fwtbcr eerve to
oolitically ud morally lccitimiie kun Waldbcim at a time when he
mnaiu lbUDDed by vinually aU
Wntan ~ .. tbie Loi ~
hued Simon Wietmthal Cater foe
Holocaust Studies said in 1 presmed
statement.
Sern.!our Reid\, president o( the
B'nai B'ritb International in New
York. said be could 1ee only one
111e(uJ result of the ~
'' l( the pope were to take a
confession from Mr. Waldheim, and
if that act pve Austria's president the
moral courqe to do what he sbou1d
have done years aao: publicly admit
his Nazi ~t and withdraw from
public life"' • he said.
Waldheun., the former U.N. sec-
ret.ary-sencraJ bas denied aUcptions
from the World Jewish Co~ and
Western news publications that be
WU involved in WW crima ~ eervial watb tbt Oennu army in tbe
Ralhna duri .. Workt Wu II.
Morris B. Abram, chainnaG of the
Conference of Presideau of~
American Jewish Oruairatiou io
New yon.. • lliDd Ifie pope Ule tbe visit .... an oppomullty 10 pw public
expression lQ bis views on tbe
Holocaust and its dreadfW and con-
tinuiq lelaons on aU mankind." .
A six-member commission of mili-
tary hiatorianJ in Vienna is in-
veatiptina Waldheim's wartime
put
On Tuetday, the commission
chairman., Rudolf Kun, said the
panel had found some new material
and would meet with Waldheim
before""Presentina its l'epOrt to the
aovcmment Feb. 2. Kun refused to
discuss the new material or to
comment about the report.
CANYON ROAD WIDENING OPPOSED •••
Prom Al
Acres Dnve and rcdesiarung the road
at the Bia Bend curve would improve
safety.
Tbe city's latest recommendation
for road safety improvements in-
clude:
• Installing a concrete divider at
Bif Bend to prevent head-on col-
lisions.
• Placing a stop light at Canyon
Acres Drive.
• Relocating utility poles in the Big
Bend area that have been h.it by
vehicles.
• Installing an earth berm at Bag
Bend to prevent vehicles from run-
ning into hard surfaces.
• Increasing the degree of bankmg
at Big Bend.
• Improving drainqie along the
shoulder of the road at Bia Bend to
prevent water from nowina onto the
road.
• Placing flashing caution lights
and signs at each end of the Big Bend
curve.
• Placing signs at El Toro Road
and near the entrance to the village
that would notify motorists of the
number of accidents and deaths on
the road, traffic volume and road
conditions.
• Increasing the width of the
shoulcrs along the length of the road.
Councilwoman Martha Collision
also suggested examining the possi-
bahty of usma pubhc transportauon
to shuttle tourists into the city during
the busy summer season.
The council's decision was a re-
versal of its traditional endorsement
that the road should be widened
although it bas never approved a
specific C.altrans design.
It is also one more indication of the
growing anti-development sentiment
in the community.
"I thank It's time to say we're not
going to accommodate developers,''
said Councilman Neil · Fitrpatrick.
"We may lost, but we must put up a
fight ... "
Has comments wert drowned out
b) applause.
LAGUNA SEEKING MORE COUNTY.LAND •••
Prom Al
ly if they wett in the etty of Laguna
Beach .... we would taJcc a really close
look at what we would aftow , .. just
like anywhere else."
The Irvine Co. properucs do not
include the proposed Laguna Lautt!
project alona La&una Canyon Road
north of El Toro Road.
Tbe proJ>Osed annexation and
sphere of inllucncc change came as a
surprise to Irvine Co. officials. who
said they would have to talk with city
officials befott making any decisions.
Howe ver . Ir vine Co.
spokeswoman Carol Hoffman said
the company docs not plan to tum
over an> of its propeny to local
JUnsdictaons until development as
completed.
This as 10 part because the Clt) of
Laugna Beach has traditionaJly had
tougher development standards than
the county, Kenney said.
But The lrvme Co. may have no
choi~ in the matter or annexation.
Kenney said.
Although the company's parcels
att spread out across several miles.
the) would be part of one annexation
request that includes existing residen-
tial areas along Laguna Canyon Road
known as Castle Rock and Sun
Valle). Residents in these com-
muniues could out vote the de-
veloper and approve the annexation.
Kenney said.
Furtbermott, the formation com-
mission has expressed a willingness in
the past to rid the county pf small
unincorporated propenjes.
'Tm prttty confident that they'll
(the formation commission) see fit to
suppon at," Kenney said.
SPACE STATION BUILDINGS APPROVED .•.
hOmAl
pends on financial dcc1s1ons by
corporate officials in SL Louis. The
decision apparently hinges on
whether Congress approves full fund-
ing for the S 1.9 bilhon space stauon.
Residents from neaghbonng West-
minster as well as Huntiniton Beach
complained that that complex wouJd
tic up traffic on north and south
routes to the plant.
Residents cla.Jmed Sprin&dale and
Edwards streets and Bolsa Chica and
Rancho A venues probably wi.11 be the
most likely candidates ~or vidlock.
Douglas officials plCCllCd to spend
up to S35.000 to widen and improve
inte~ions in Wcstrmnstcr and
upgrade freeway ramps to case traffic
flow. The company also would take
steps to upgndc road cood1t1ons in
Huntington Beach, officials said.
··1 think at•s an excellent prOJcct.. •·
Planning Commissioner Tom
Livengood said today. "The cit) and
the compan) arc very sensiti\•e to
con~ms of the residents. We've put
in 44 conditions designed to make at
work properl) both for Wcsun1ns\cr
and Huntington Beach:·
Livengood said consultants show-
ed that the Douglas project. as well as
plans for 600 new homes on the
grounds of Meadowlark Airport and
about S.000 homes (>lanned in the
Bolsa Chica. would increase traffic
volun\c in the-area from 2 to 1
p(rccnt.
Comm1ss1oner Vic uipz1g said the
company also has a&TCed to study
plans for splitting shafts to case traffic
loads.
When the company won competi-
uon for the space station in Dcc:cm-
ber. officials said they planned to
increase their work foroe from 7 .600
to about 9.250.
BB POLICE SHARE $250,000 BLAME •..
From Al
expensa\'C clencal error" on the pan
of an inexperienced clerk.
"The admanisltiltor and the Cat)
Council art upset with the clencal
error that costs S7s.ooo:· he said.
"Who wouldn't be., ..
Cook sa.id the cleric. who rtponedl)
has been d1sophned. should have
found out the suspect's middle name
before putti nJ the warrant into effect.
He also said that the clerk should
not have taken the acuon on her own
authont). but should have consulted
a supervisor.
Police Chief Ball Payne said toda>
he opposed the settle~ent and didn't
knov. wh) Huntmgton Beach v.as
"throv.-n an." Pa) nc said the agenq
makrng the actual arrest has the
respons1b11t) ofcnsunng that the) get
the n ght person.
Pa~ne· said fie is .. red up as a
policeman and a taxpayer" about
settle men ts.
''They (the cases) should go to the
court and j ury. Large settlements
when there 1s no harm or the harm as
mitigated are asinine:·
Sources in Huntington Beach said
the city probably paid about S200.000
an legal fees in connection with the
case.
Last month. the Cll> of Hunungton
Beach paid S300.000 to five men to
settle a S:!5 m1ll1on lawsuit over the
use of police stun guns
Cook and other officials said the
settlement "'asn 't an adm1ss1on of
wrongdoing. The lawsuit would bave
cost at least SJ00.000 to fight. Cook
said. adding that "d1~t1on was a
bener pan of valor."
lJse of the stun guns has been
suspended until extensive research
can be completed on their effects.
Cook noted.
TRAFFIC LAW RAISES QUESTIONS ••.
homAl
swap meets at the Orange Lount)
Fairgrounds.
He doesn't expect the section
specifying turns on yellow signals wall
pose a problem. either
"If we're keying on a problem area
the officers will be thert:· Kent said.
.. I don't sec that as being too difficult.
.. I think the intent as to tarsct
violators who do at on purpose.··
Most ettacs already had posted key
in1enections wamani against block-
ina the flow or traffic. an.)"!3y. and
were c1t1ng violators for infractions
found in other scctJons of the vehicle
code.
"We have oted people 1n the past
for impcd1na the flow of traffic." Kent
said.
Huntinaton Beach pohce have
\ =E Iii~ Pillt
MAIN OfflCE
usco the same tactic. said Sgt. Bruce
Kelly.
"The city has 1dcnt1fied those
intersections that art congested and
J>OSted them... Kelly said. "So it
doesn't matter af the signal as red.
)'ellow or green.··
But the new law could eut the
kibosh on that. Garrett suge1ted .
"l beard at least one officer say 1f
somebody violated the law when the
intcrSection was posted. the driver
would be cited for ~ movinc viol-
ation." Garrett said.
But the new an ta-gridlock law could
preclude that strategy. Garrett said.
Ironically, altho.ugh the new law
was m~t to aid the flow of traf1k. n
comes under the parkina section of
the vehicle code.
In <tther words. violators will set a
parking ticket.
.. Thert·~ a lot of pohtics that ~nt
into that law:· Kelly said. "It was
really watered down ...
Los Angeles police rtportedly
wanted at that way so that parking
enforcement officers who arc not full-
fled&cd pohce officers could issue
tickets.
Some lobbytsts in Sacramento
want~ it that way so that motorists
wouldn't bavc a moving violation
counted apanst them in the ~n
ment of Motor Vehicle's "ncaJ.ilrnt
operator point count"
One thin& as clear even if the
anters«llons aren't. PoliC'C are aoina
to issue tickets. But whether or not
this will help unclog intersections
remains to be seen.
D~~
le Ouarem.ed
Just call 642-6086
... ~l, . ,., """' ............ ~ ,,
~ or CMoetote 7lll!O '""''°' •
V..'bat do )OU b.kc 1bou1 the Dail) ~k>t'? What
doa't ~ou Ii.kc., C'.all the number abo"e and )our
~ -.1U be rccotded. trantrnbcd and de·
b\itred 10 the appropnate edttor. •
The seme l'-hour aM~ftl ltOt« ma) bt
uted to record lettns to tM td1t« on asa) toptc
Contnbuton to our ~nen ~umn mutt include
their name and tekphone number for "ertfteataon.
TtU u •hat's on )pur ll'l•nd.
""""""'
High clouds, but mostly suD,Q.y
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Atigetafl
Grand Aec>lda
Honolulu
Houeton
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~ ~City
Laa Vega
LJnla Aoc:lt
Loullrllle
~
0 4 ,,
Radon gas multiplies smoker's
chances of cancer, study reveals
WASHINGTON (AP) -If you
smoke. radon d0esn'tjust add to your
chances oflungcanccr-it multiplies
them. accordina to a scientific report
to the government.
BUl 1f you get rid of indoor radon,
your lung cancer nsk will stan going
down.
This conclusion reported Tuesday
by a committ~ of the National
RescaKh Council. an aff'tliate of the
National Academy of Sciences. is
"good news,·· according to Richard
Guimond, bead of the radon program
at the Environmental Protection
Agency.
-It means if you fix up your house
} ou can lower your nsks from radon,··
Guimond said.
Radon. a gas formed an the radio-
active deca)' of uranium. is one alpha-
emitter. but its alpha pan.ides are not
belie\•ed vecy imponant in human
exposure. In.stead. progeny elements,
notably polonium, are believed to
lodge in the tuna. irradiating the
tissues with alpha particles for years.
Risk does not always decline when
exposure to a carcinogen ends. but a
smoker who quits faces a rjsk oflung
cancer that declines wilh time. Ac-
cordina to some studies, l O years of
abstinence reduces the chance to what
it would have been if smoking had
never started.
The radon risk declines si milarly
after exposutt ends.. but the comm1t-
tet said it cannot now be established
whether the cancer risk also eventu-
ally returns to the background value
and bow lo~ that may take.
A.l\d It siid the lu114 cancer risk to
smokers associated wath exposure to
clements that form from radon "as
substantially F,C&ttr than the risk to
non~mokers. ' •
The committee estimated a 40-
ycar-old male non-smoker never
exposed to radon in cxess or normal
background levels has a I. I percent
chance of getting lung cancer. A
smoker has a I 2. 3 percent chance. the
commmcc said.
Laving from bLrth to age 40 an a
home containing eight ttmcs th~ EPA
action level for radon, and the.n
reducing radon exposure to back-
ground, raises the lung c.ancer risk for
the non-smoker to 3.3 percent. but for
the smoker to 31 percent. accord1ng
to the mathematical model tbt oom-
mattec adopted.
For women. the comparable fiaurcs
arc: the non~smokc:r's lung cancer risk
without radon. 0.6 perttnt; with
radon. 1.8 percent the smoker's risk
without radon. 5.8 percent; with
radon. 16.4 percent.
BUILDERS FIGHT BACK ON GROWTH ...
From Al
officials hope will be pasted 10
hundreds of company lunchrooms..
also include facts that arc intended to
show the employees that traffic -not
construction -is the problem that
needs to be addressed in Oranae
County.
Erskine said more than SO percent
of the homes built in Oranac County
art sold to cxistina residents and that
a count) housing demand actually
causes mott traffic because em-plo~ces arc forced to commute to
work from outlymg areas.
Althou&h the BIA is not politically
active, Erskine said he expects that
once the employees of member
companies become more aware of the
causes of transportation tieups. they
will vote down sJow-.rowth in-
itia,tivcs that could. if passed, lea"
ihem without a job.
But Enkinesaideven if the current
initiative drive fails to q_ualify for the
June ballot. the campallll will con-
tinue for at least five years. The
program as an off shoot of the 1986
Building Pride program. wtuch abo
was designed to bol.sta pndc b)·
educatina industry emplo)tt"S about
the indostry's contribullons to the
community.
Erskine introduced the prosram
JUSt befott Dav1d F. Seiders. the chief
economist for the National Assoca-
taon of Home Bullckn, told the
members that he expected a ~lron&
demand for new homes nauonalty 1n
1988.
RAPE SUSPECT'S FINGERPRINTS ••.
From Al
A Fountain Valley woman told
authori11cs she was raped twice by the
knifc-waeldang assailant. who allcaed-
1\ told her "Hi. remember me f'iom
last year:· when he broke into her
home a second tame. Koski said.
Gary Pohlson, Dasenbrock's at-
torney, did not present a defense
during the preliminary hcarina.
Thomas Rayl. a civilian fingerprint
expen with the Fountain· Valley
police, testified before Municipal
Coun Judge Wilham Mock that he
found at least 12 points ofsim1lanty
berween the prints found at crime
scenes and Dascnbrock's finger and
palm prints. His conclusions ~ confirm~ fr a second expert., Rayl
said.
.. No two finterprints have been
found alike in the world, and finaer·
prints do not change in a lifetime,"
Rayl said in response to Pohlson's
queries.
Huntinaton Beach police Officer
Stephen Balloch. who allqedly
Through the centun., ftne wood ..,.... twwe
beCome lynon ~with luxury Md good ......
Todtiy, Hettwood Shutt.,. gtw an wy .. lgence
to any interior from COlonMlj to Ultra Modem.
No other~ covering performa ... turdon
wfth IUCh bemlty and .... ShulWs .. ......
wtth an inftnh9 wrteey of .._ Nduce gllf9.
bk>ck out he9t and COid, mmca.1m .,.. .,._ and
expand lntenora with Clelrt, ....,. ..... tJnllce
other wtrtdow lteetmente, lhutterl Iner•••• '°"' home'• YlllUe.
With ._..wood ~I you m11Y dtOOM '"°""' widthl of 1"', 2'A, '~~Md·~
We .-ct the._. wooda .V.lllble and ofliW I
.... lllletion of cdor'I or .... and W .....
YoU .a.ct the beet ..... for ~ ....,.. and
llklng .. doors.
Serving California since 1953
FOR FREE F.SMMATE
Call the offace neu.t ~ •
match~ Dascnbrock's pnnts to those
f<?und an e1~t cnme vactams in that
c1ty, also said he ~as posiuvc in his
identifications.
Koski said he was ple,a~ with the
case he presented dunng the
preliminary hcarina. even tbou$h one
of c;>ascnbrock's alleged rape victims
dectded not to press Chaf1C$.
The prosecutor said the woman
decided apinst prcmng charge$ for "personal ~ns .••
-
Orianoe Coest DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January 6, 1983 * A3
Classes to stop
smoking slated in
Irvine, ~ewport
Blood shortage may halt sUrg~ries
Fresh Start. dC1C.T1bed by &he American Cancer
Soc1ely as a .. no--no nsenlt quil smoking program:·
will be offered in both Irvine and Newport Beach
beginning Monday.
The Newport classes will be held Mondays and
Thursdays from 1 to9 p.m. through Jan. 2S at Hoag
Memorial Hospital. while the Irvine program is
scheduled Mondays a nd Wednesdays from 7:30 to
9:30 p.m. at the Women·s Health Center. 4870
Barranca Parkway.
Smokers w1sh1ng to kick the habit may call the
Education Depanment of the Cancer Society at
7 51-0441 for more details . ......_
WAC veterans to meet
The Queen City Chapter No. 57ofthe Women·s
Army Corps Veterans A~iation will hold its
regular monthly meettnJ Saturday at I p.m. 1n the·
communit) room of Fidelity Savings and Loan.
13820 Seal Beach Blvd. in the Leisure World
Shopping Center. Seal Beach.
An) "Oman w6to has served or 1s cumntly
ser' ing in the .\rmy is welcome to attend. Call Jean
Earnshaw at (113) 597-2560 for addiuonal infor-
mation.
Meet your officials
The Paul Revere Legislative Committee of the
Fountain Valle) Chamber of Commerce will hold a
legjslauve l'CC'ept1on Friday from 1 to 9 p.m. at the
Carmel Reurement Village. I 7077 San Mateo.
Fountain Vatlc\.
The event· \I.Ill provide an o pportun1l) for
voters to meet their elected cit~. count~. stage and
fedctal officials. Refreshmen~ and chamber music
"ill be pro' 1ded. ~
Tlny Tots prog~
The Costa Mesa Department of Lc1surt>
· Sen ICl'!> will hold an oncntation meetmg Monday
for the upcoming session of its Tin~ Tots Program. a
da1h actt' II\ time for children from 21 : 10 5 vears.
·The e'cn1 1s sched uled for 9:30 a .m . at 'Heller
Park. ~5 7 E. 16th St. Further informauon may be
obtained b} calling 645-8551.
., CABO Kl DIX
... PA'll-A.8ClllPLEY ...............
Tbe Amaican led CTO$s declared an
emef'lleDCY Tuesday, wamina that Oranae
County blood supplies have dropped to
daqef'Oualy low levels and that local
hospital may be forced 10 cancel some
1uf'ltrie$.
The declarallon came on the heels of an
annual appeal by Red Cross chapters for
donon to ~lemlh supplies that drop tow
after each Christmas holiday. No sooner
had Red Cross officials issued their appeal
than s~pplies dwindled penlously low.
Hospiws are running as low .as 40
percent of desired levels of blood supplies.
said spokeswoman Sylvia Fanton.
Fanton said elective surgeries arc
usuaTiy up in Ja nuary. and if supplies don't
return to normal in the near future,
hospitals could be forced to cancel those
suratries to conit1'Ve blood for emergeucy
C&JC:S, '
.. Normal.I y. in Jan ua.ry elecu ve surgenes
increase because people put them off
during the holida)'l," said Fanton ... But
unless d onations increase, tberc'6 a chance
elective surgeries will have to ti( post·
poned."
Blood banks arc particularly short on
AB ~tive and both types of 0 blood.
wbicb 1s currently at less that\ I 0 percent of
the normal supply, she said. .
.. We bave caUed Group 0 blood
emersency for Orange and Los Angeles
count:ics. Blood mventory has conunued
to decline despite a small increase in
do nations:· sajd Fanton.
Currently the supplies 1n hospital banks
an sufficient for emergency n~ and
ct1UJ.n planned operat ions. she said.
Red Cross officials are not surpnscd at
the blood shoruae. which 1s an aM4&1
occurnnce dunng the holiday season
However, the unusual!) cold and wet
weather lhts season has kept even more
donors awax. she said.
"As is typical dunng the holidays wwtn
people get bus). blood donations have
been very tow the last few weeks." sa1d
FantoQ.
"Nonnally, about 15 percent of tho~
who make appointments don't sbo.,,· up.
but in December. 35 percent v.ho signed
up didn't show. ,
.. If we could get an addtt1onal 300
donors per day for next I 0 days we could
get the level back to normal.'" she said.
The present emergency was caused b} a
drop or 3, 100 U01l5 of Group 0 blood
donauons over past few .,.,eeks.
A commuruty dnve was planned today ·
at the Irvine ~bytenan •Chllrob at S
Meadowbrook. Don.a.lions wiU be ac-
cepted until 7:30 p.m. Penna nent cent.en
at 16882 Gothard St. in Hunungtoo Beach
and 600 N. Parkcenter Dnve io Sant.a Ana
are open si.A days a week.
In addttion. the Sant.a Ana Red Cross
Center will open on Sunday from 3 a.m. to
12:45 p.m. Fanton 5a1d Red Cross o fficials
are also tr)1ng to mcreasc mobil~ drives a t
companie$ and churches.
People 17 yea.rs and older who weigh at
least 110 pounds and are in good peral
health are ehg>ble to donate blood every S6
days. said Fanton. Appointments for
blc:>OQ donauons at any sue may be made
b~ catting 83S-538 I. extension 4SO.
Cooklng'class in NB Feeding time · '
A group of ~Ucana found the flahlng fine in the flood control channel near the Sana Ana _River and Victoria Street ln Costa Mesa.
A senes of cookmg courses will be offered
beginning Monda) by the Newport Beach Parks.
Beaches and Rccrcauon Department.
The one-<iay workshops covt"r a wide vanet~ of
cuisines and tastes. 1ncludmg Chinese. Spanish and
hahan. Call the department at 644-3151 for details. Wieder takes county gavel; Riley moves up
Tech writlngatGWC
.\ ccruficate program in technical communica-
uon "'111 be offered at Golden West College" hen 1he
spring semester begins Monda) The pr~ram 1~
designed for peopk er'rlployed 1n or maJOnng in a
'anet} of field . -including business. teehnical.
medical. !>C1cnt1fic. eng.sneenng. human sen 1~ and
police sciences.
The full program pro' ides informa11on and
skills necessaf) for entry-level employment. and
ind1 \'1dual courses mav be tak.en b\ those interested
in gaining o r u·pgrad1rlg skills 1n a pamcular area.
Call 895-8134 for rcgJstrat1on information.
Floral program set
By BOB VAN EYK.EN °' .............
It was a succession 6rd.atned by tra·
dition. a low-budget coronation Wlthout
the fanfare.
Supervisor Hamett Wieder moved one
place to the left and became, by acclama-_
tion. chairman of the Orange County
Board of Supervison Tuesday. She suc-
ceed Roger Staoton, who bad served in the
ceremonial post for just over a year.
Wieder, 67. bas already served one stint
as chairman. in 1984.
She had been vice cbaimwl an 198 7 and
the board's tradition is that the vace
chairman accedes to leadership at the
rompletion of the s1nm1 cha.innan's one-
vcar term.
· The prearranged nature of the sue·
cession dtd not prevent board members
from go ing through the formal nom1na11on
and election process. however.
Outgomg board chairman Stanton took
the lead in nomtn~ting Wieder.
In making hts nomination. Stanton
praised Wieder for her "boundless
energy.-
'"1 don·t~ven try to keepupwlth her:· he
said.
Hearing no opposition, Stanton
proclaimed Wieder the new chairman.
without wailing for a second to the
nomt0atio n.
He then recognu.ed Supervuor Thomas
· R1k). "ho "'ent on the record-seconding
W1eders nom1nauon.
··supervisor Wieder bas cxlub11ed
cream tt~ and leadership m all matters ...
Rtle\ said.
Wieder. 1n her fim official act as
chairman. asked for nominations for ,,cc
chairman.
Supcrvuor Gaddi \'asquez.. the board's
}Oungest member. then nominated tts
oldest member. the 75-~car-old Rile). for
the po!>l.
Don Roth seconded the nommat1on,
"'h1ch was affinn~d "'1thout opposition.
A former ma, or of Hunungton Beach.
Wieder was eleeted to the board in 19 8.
defeaung mcumbent Larn Schmidt and
former supen 1sor Da' e Balter
Wieder calJed ber ~lection to the
chaumansh1p "a tremendous honor.-
She 1s scheduJed 10 gl\'C a specc:h next
Tuesda' ckwling her pnonucs for the
commi )eaf.
Wieder could spend pan of her teTm as
board ch.amnan campaigning for another
office. ho\.\e\er.
When Rep Dan Lund~n. R-LOng
Beach. v.-"U nominated b' Go,·. Geo~
I:Xuk:meJWl for the post of st.ate treasurer.
Wieder. a Republican. indicated she was
interested 1 n running for the congressional
~I 1f ll \\CT"e to become VacaDL
W1cdcT's a.ssisiaoL Rod Speer. wd the
supcn·isor hasn't dtJCJded whether 10 run.
The Orange County Floral i\rts Guild will
present a Oo"'er-arranging progra m by Alice Hinch.
a nat1onall) accred1tt'd Oower show Judge. Monda~.
The program 1s scheduled for I 0 a.m. in the
Women's Club ofSanta i\na. 601 N. Si~th St.. and 1s
open to an)one 1ntcrC'sted. w11 h uckets pnced at S4.
Call 544-1 61 7 for more 1nformat1on.
Bargaining hinted over Lungren
. By JENNIFER UBR "-...... .._..,_ "I don't think we know whether or not
Mr. Lungren will be confirmed." Brown
said.
Democrats agreed to the SI I btlhon ta'
rebate that ~uk.me1tan wanted. wh1Jc tht'
governor acgutesed in pro,,dtng urban
schools Ii' 1th S8 7 mtlhon he had previous!~
oppoSt'd.
ad\ocate of the return of catcgoncal
programs that I It.no"' ... Brown quipped.
Roberti at a separate Capitol news
conference. said talk of ba.rp.lmng ovn-
Longren "'as premature no~
Wednesday, Jan. 6
SACRAMENTO -Ass.embly Speaker
Willie Brown hinted Tuesday that Demo-
crats might be willing to bargain with Gov.
George Dcukmejian over bis appointment
of Qanjcl Lunarcn as state treasurer.
Approval of Lungren might be traded
for the Republi~n sovem or·s a~mg to
Democratic pnon ues such as increased
school. AlDS or transponauon funding.
Brown . D-San Francisco, said.
He said five or six of the 43 Democrats
have satd the} have problems With
Lunsr-cn. but Brown said he and others are
waiung for hearings next week b} a special
19-member committee named to consider
the nom1nat1on.
..He sa" the"' 1~om oi re-spond1ng to us
and v.e sa"' the ' alue of paruc1~tmg m the
rebate process." the speaker said ... rm sure
that 1f ~1r Lungren show·s a similar need.
there v.111beabasts 011 v.htch rube able to
con\ tn(e our I I:Xmcx.Tallcf' membership
to let the go' ernor have his wa~ on this one
1f the go' emor 1s "'11bng to do some good
public pohC) stuff in the fields of t'ducat1on
or AID ..
But he noted that Lun~n. tf he
beco mes treasurer. ··1s a potential go,·-
emor" and thus his co nfirmauon ts veT)
important to DeukmeJtan and to Re-
publicans. • 6.30 p.m Costa Mna Traffic Commission,
council chambers. 77 Fair Dnve.
. • 7 p.m. Lagwu Beula ()pea Spa« Com-
minloa. counetl chambers. 505 Forest A'e.
• 7 p.m. ~gua BHcll Dog lssaes Stody
Commltttt, police department libraf)·
Thursday,Jan.7
• 6:30 p.m .. Lapu &eac• Board of Adjust-
meat and Desip S..nl of Review, council
chambers. 505 Forat Ave.
The Senate•s top Democrat. Prntdent
Pro Tern David Robcni, said senators
have not d iscussed using Lungren as a
dickenng chip. but said any.bargain would
have to be a good one because of the
1mponancc of the treasurer's office.
At a ~pitol news conference, the
speaker was careful to take no position on
Lunpcn. a Republican con.grcssman from Lona Beach, or~o predict Lungren· s fate in
lhe Assembly.
The state constttuuon gJves both the
Senate and Asscmbl~ po~r lo confirm a
governors appointment 10 fill a \'acant
const1tu11onai.officc. I:XukmeJian sclC'Cted
Lungren to replace Dcmocm J~
L' nruh. "'ho died last August of cancer.
Bro"n was asked tf Lungren mtght be
used 10 get l:Xukmejian to agrtt to a S3.3
b1lhop transpof1:ation package that I:Xmo-
crats are proposing.
Bro"'n said he ""ould not know unul the
heanng.s "hether. Lungren would need
help to get appro' ed b) the Asscmbl~. But
he recalled the negotiations last fall when
Later. Bro"' n was asked about the
chances of his ~1nnang appro' al of
e~1end1ng se' eral "c:atcgonail'· cducauon
programs due to expart this ~"ear. such as
those for the gifted or dtsad' antaged
I:XukmeJian has tv.1cc vet~ Bro"'n bills
to e"<tend the progntms.
··~tr Lungren ma) be the ~1ggest
"lf.,.,e an-going to bargain. 11 would have
to be a prctt~ good barg.arn before that
~c\'.>mes our cons1derat1on for c:reaung a
pcrsonalit~ in our state. a media state such
as C ah iom 1a. "'ho can be in a posJtton to
dominate the future for r'(IAn) years to
come:· Roberu. 0-Los .\.ngelcs.. said.
..\ssembl~ ~faJOOt) Leader Tom Han-
nigan. chiunnan of the Spcclal A.sscmbly
committee. said Lungren and other people
suppomng ham will testt~ a.s well as
groups and 1nd1vidual opposing htm. The
heanngs a~ scheduled for ne.xt week
Wisely ~oved to Folsom
to serve life pds_oaterm
IJ JONATBAN VOUU: ..............
Convicted tiller Willie Ray Wisely,
sentenced last month to life ta prilOn
after a six·yeat lcp.I benJe. WU
transfered Tuesday to Fobom State
Prison near Sacramento, 90COl'dina to
bis wife.
Wi1ely. JS. reponedly was tent to
the muimum·security prison
without beina allowed to tee or speak co his wife. Gail Harri.natoa. Tbt
former Huntinaton Beech residmt
was initially sent co Odno lnstitule
for Men f~ his Dec. 28
1mtmcie to lift in puon without the
poaibility of pltOle.
Tbc tentc~uded Wildy's KVm·~r · in the OnftF
COUDI)' Jail. &om deft Ille med .• ocnonal c.om~ter ud countY--DUd law deft -hd wife -IO lauDcia U
11nr_ of lawsuits and 1cpl motions in Hamnaton said she was denied
an etron to ovenum his 1982 convic-access to sec her husband because she
tion for kill.int Robert Bray, 61 . of faocscbar&es of smu.qlina d~ into
Huntincton Beach. the Qranse County Jall. Wisely s onl)
Bny su.ff'ocated when the cab ofh.is · visitor durina bis Wttk-long stay at
tnetOr-trailer ria crushed bim u .he ChinowuHarrington'ssuter. Eileen..
worked beneath iL Protecuton COO-28.
tended Wixly riaed the truck to &JI •'Tbett was no humor an t.bert at
became be &ml Bray would ham all," Eileen said of bn visit ~ith
him ift for aUeeed ~ '*· Addition-witety. '"Ke was just bummed out
ally. Witely stood lO inherit a home becaute tbe coadiuons v.-ere so bed.·· :!tU:::t ~,000 should his mocha' HarriDICOD said $be ttClCi ved three
· Y • .-.1 h!--11· let1en &om Witcly while he wa.s at Watdy, wbo rep1c1m ..... UIUQI m Chino.in which besaidglassskyligbu
bis trial, ultimately pined control of wae ~ out above tus o~man
the home. but ~ the Ind fdl -11 • bi cold ba:autr of' a desip defect a.Del tbat be ~ QPOlln& m to extreme
was dtewbere ·When the deetb OC> tempentuta and rain.
curred. •• All they .. Ye him weft two hOC°'Se"
~ said Wddy plus an bait blukas and 10me clot.hes that
•ppeal of bis cooviction and don'l flt IWD.. .. Haninaton said. tm~ but the nece.ary motioas .. Tbey C'VCD toe*. the Rebok.s I l*'C
MVC yet IO be fiJecl. U b CJilriltam."'
Newport Beach
~ Jew~lry box valued at St>. 510 "'a~
stolen from a home on Seaward Lane
the victim told police Tuesda~
Someone apparent.ly had entered the
home v ia an unlocked front door . .. .
..\Nikon Teletouch camera. 'alut'd
at S.:!l2. v.-as ~poned stolen from a
Ba) side Cove home betWttn Sept ~.5
and Oct. l . said the VJC11m. "'ho
suspected that one of th.rtt hou~
guest~ ma) have stolen the camera. • • • The owne r of a 1973 Dodge
Challenaer told po.lie% Tuesda} that
someone had tned to stcaJ the car
while it was parked over the hohda~s
oo Supcnor Avenue. Someon~ ~
ponedl~ had tampcrtd "1th the
lgllttion. ·
held "'Jthout batl
Coetallea
.\ man expo~d h1m:.clt a t ahout
p m Tuesda) an the ~IX 1 bloc~ of
Walla« A'-enue . ...
..\ guest at the Ha'Penm Inn on
Harbor Boule\ ard got into an argu-
ment .,.,,th the motel manag~r at
abouL 12:45 p.m . Tucsda)' V.'hen the
guest bepn to lc:a,·c. he told poltc.=.
the manaier allegedly t h'"'"' a cha tr at
hts back.. • • •
Someone Slok a SJ.SOC fur coat
Dec. 30 from a car parted at South
Coast Plaza. The An&Mlm Hills
\\Omll wbo o--ncd the coat ck-
scnbcd it as white f<>A. tlutt-qu.arter
length. v.ilh full pelts on bolh arms..
The ~r also took thrtt punn
\'alUed ll s I so. • • • -" S100 Dwnond &cl; mcn·s
mountain bt.te •"a5 Sto.~ Monday
rugbl or Tuesday m omtna from a Can tbc 1100 bfoc.t of VtCtOOl
• • • .\customer at Denn~·~ I 05 E. I ":'th
St .. took: a pie from a d1spla)' case
unda'. thrt'la. 1t at a fnend and left
"'1:tiout pa)'lng_
lnt.ne
The kitchen Wlndow "'"&S the pomt
of ent~ for a burglar who stoic S 1.824
1n cash and JCWClT)• from a borne an
the 40 block ofS~wbawt berwttn .s p.m. and midnight Tuesday. Jew-
eln v.·as a.lso stolen from a homt m
the JO block of Sparrowhawt earlier
that d.3)
• • • hop tools v.·orth S l.JOO were
stolen from a business in the 14700
block of Sand Canyon A \"Ul\W some-
ttmt Saturda) • • • Someone smashed 10 the window
oh 1986 Volts-.'a&Cn CTI Ud lloR
its t~reowbile ihe ''tbtdcwasparted
U\ tht 1 IOOO bl«'k of Von K.anna
\'t'ftUt between 8 a. m.. and 4 p..m.
T uesday.
Fishing boat runs aground .
'
..
Coastalpanel sues<OVer oil drilling Fertllity~sus~ted . in female birth defects
MN nANCISCO ~t=--Q.!r ~. JKk LICovey, IPC*nman for tbe ...... ' ' llllioa fll · • Q6:e ol C.... Zoae Mee I NDI iJa. tbe U.S. _. ..... Ollillr* ea.al Com•i'Pklll sued Commerce ~coalelided tbe bud9et law
die..,_.. a •ID 11op it tom liUiaa S407,000 in did DOC prevent bis of&ce tom pllci111 c:ooaitions
ildlirlllmd IDa locleen1111oltbe IWC'I nplatioa of Oil its f\anda.
..... ~ail~ .. , JolYa Vu de Kamp, wbo lftbe CoaW Q>mmjujon rejects tbe federal conditions and loeea its lawsuit, tbe "ultimate lllld ~ µ . Dillrict ~ aait Tuesday on tbe remedy" would be for tbe federal tovenunen1 to ~··!"">" • bebal( ll;id tbe federal aov~t strip the state commiuioD of its authority over
-11 "YIDI to accom~ throuab ~ucra~ operations in federal coastal waten. J,.aeovey said. ~ wbat tbe oil industry coukln t. do tn BuJ ~t would be at least two years in the future,
cowt lt wants to end local. CC?Dtrol by tyln& the undci a new administration he said. bandl of tbe Cou1a1 Commmaon... · •
la tbe suit. the commiuion also accused the Tl)c Coastal Commiuion, which had frozen
federal ~t of iporina a provision of the birina and cut ti.ck inspections -three
recent budeet law that required release of ... months ofl~~ted federal f'undina, acceded to the
tbe California .,ency's mo~. . . f~ condiuons last month under pro~L Its
.. This is just one more di~fuJ chapter a.n swt Tuesday seeks use of the money without
the Iona sap of Reapn administration attacks oo restrictions. and also seeks coun orders burina the
tbe California coast." Van de Kamp said in a federal aovernment from orderina cbanaes in the
statement state's coastal manqcment plan.
The California rommiwicM\ product of a 1972
voter initiative and 1976 .,..bola. repla• land
use aJooa the state's coudine and is autboriJed by
fedaaJ law to restrict oil drilli,. ud Giber
activitits outside the federal three.mile limit that affect t6e coastline .
Tbe lawsuit, wh.idl follows a Rria of
Commerce Department reports critic:Wna the
state commission, centers on the commission's
approach to oil and ps development projects.
For more than a sSecade, the commiuion has
examined projects individually and told com-
panies what kinds of safquards were needed to
control air and water pollution, under aenerat
commission policies. .
The commission says its approach is required
by state law, was approved by the federal
government as part of the California coastal plan in
J977, and survived a 1978 lawsuit by oil
companies.
Trial opens in exectition slaying of 5 hikers
SAN DIEGO (AP) -David J. CarJ)Cnter
stalked five Marin hikers in 1980 and murdered
them U1 execution fashion after molesting the
-women, prosecutors told jurors during 'opening
statements.
But defense attorneys argued Tuesday that
Carpenter was far away from the grisly scene and
questioned the credibility of the prosecution's
witnesses.
Carpenter, 57, of San Francisco already is on
San Quentin's death row for the related murders of
two women near Santa Cruz.
The sole survivor of parlc violence blamed on
Jbe'so-alled .. trailside killer" wasexpeaed to take
the stand today.
Steven Haenle. whose girlfriend. Ellen
Hansen, died in a later assault in Henry Cowell
State Park near Santa Cruz, will be the first wit~
said John Posey, an assistant deputy district
attorney from Marin County.
HaertJe survived a serious gunshot wound. He
identified Carpenter as his attacker when
CarJ)Cnter appeared in a lineup shonJy after bis
May IS, 1981 arrest, Posey said.
Defense attorney Steven Berlin, a Marin
County public defender, told the jury Tuesday the'
makeup of that lineup was unfair.
CarpCnter W8.$ convicted of the Santa Cruz
crimes in 1984 by a Los Angeles County Superior
Coun jury. The jurors are not being told of the
conviction.
Tuesday Posey spelled out in chilling dei.il
the final hours of the five Marin victims: C~thia
Moreland, 18, of Cotati; her boyfriend. Richard
Stowen, 19. Petaluma; Anne Aldenon, 26. San
Rafael; Diane O'Connell, 22. San J osc; and Shauna
May, 25, Idaho.
"The five Marin victims were all executed.
Each one of them was shot in the back of the head.
The same murder weap<>n was used on each and
every one of these victtms." Posey said.
Berlin did not dispute the killinp were the
work of one man using the same weapon, but he
said prosecutors we~ mistaken in chargina
C,arpenter.
''Mr. Carpenter is not the 'trailside killer,"'
Berlin said "During each of these crimes. Mr.
Carpente .... was doing something else ."
-BJ fteA11ull ... Prw
LOS ANGELES -A study in~ ftmaJe 1ex. ~ were'tak.en from
•boned human fetuses and tranaplanted into moutt ~ ~ ~
who use a common fertility df1ll may bear dawahten wath reproductive binh
defects. But the company that manufactures Clomid said tbe *"'F.5 of~ dnaa used in the study apperently were far biaha' than &bole taken by infertile
women. Am~ dauahten of women who took Oomid siDClC it hit~ markel
ii? 1967, "u fai as we know there is no increase in fCU:J ~fol:mabQOI o~~Y
kind over those to be expected in the normal populataon, said Or. ~
Newport. who monitors Oomid stuities for Merrell Dow Pbarmace~lJ?ll.
Even the study's chief authorr biolotist Gerald Cunha, said'T~y n ~·t
known if the defects found in tne Oomid-treated transplanted vquw. utmne
and fallopian tube tissue would occur in dauahters of women who took the
druc. ,.
Leglalat1on may ea11e county adoption
SACRAMENTO -A chronically ill 4-ycar-old Yorbe Linda airl may
finally be _ad~ptcd by the couple that has cared for her since infAncy ~r
proposed lqislation that would allow th~ couple to continue to draw medical
aid. Sen,. Edward Royce, R-Santa Ana, introduced lqislation Monday in
response to tlle needs a( Brianna Bird and her foster parents, Tim and Lesly
Bird, who have cared for the girl since she was five months old. Brianna sufren
from a number of illnesses stemmina from premature birth. As Ion& u she
remains in foster care, the state and Oranac County pack up the $23,()()().a-
month medical care, but if she is adopted the money disappean. Ro~·s bill
would enslire the amount paid to maintain foster children with special needs
would be continued by the Adoption Assistance Program if the child was
adopted. .
Deputy's shooting tled to drug trafficking
LOS ANGELES -Authorities were still searchina today for an allqed
gang member wanted for questioning in the shootina of a Riverside Countx
sheriffs deputy in what expens called an example of the "inane violence
accompanying drug trafficking. While attacks by street pnp on law
enforeement officers are rare, Deputy Joseph Cleary, 24, apparently was a
victim of cscalatiflf violence among ganas that have moved into Riverside
County, officials wd. Cleary was shot Sunday night after he stopped a car that
matched the description in an earlier repon of a car used by several mm who
appeared to be sclhng drugs. The bullets hit Cleary below his protective vest
H!s condition Tuesday was totally stable and improved.
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L
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday January 6, 1988 1f AS-
,
Tear gas, rubber bullets
used ag~iDst Gaza rioters
JERUSALEM (AP) -Israels
troops fired tear ps and rubber ~ullets today to break up demon-
~trations 1n the West Bank and Gaza
Strip, and a soldier shot and wounded
a Palestinian whoauacked ham with a
knife. the military said.
Israel reject. U.N. challenge to deportation
Torturing
of children
reported
LQ'°I;[)()' C.\P) -The human
nghts group .._mncsty lnternauonal
said thousands of children worldv.1de
ha"e betn 1mpnsoned and in man}
cases tonured and killed. and u
singkd out South ~fnca as an area of
panicular conn :rn
Reduction of U.S. •
forces in Persian
Gulf not approved '.
One soldier was sh&htly wounded
iri the knife attack, according to the
rcpon.
The shoouna ID the West Bank cit)
of Tulkarem occurred a day after
Israeli soldiers shot and killed a 25-
year-old Palesun1an man and
wounded seven olhen ID the Gan
Strip town of Kpan Yun1s.
Four people, 1Dclud1n1 a 20-)car-
old injured b) _rubber bullets, sollfht
treatment at U.N. chn1cs after being
1Djured in demonstrations at lhrtt
refugee camps ID Gaza. said U.N.
spokeswoman Chnstine Daba&h.
Israeli troops have shot and killed
at lcut 24 Palestinians since Dec. 8,
when the v.orst disturbances in Is-
rael's 20-ycar occupation of the Gaza
Strip and West Bank broke o ut
An army . official descnbcd the
wounds o f the Palestinian shot toda> as "moderate."
In the West Bank town of Qal-
qiliya. soldiers fired tear gas and
rubber bullets to disperse P.alesunian
protesters. The army clamped
curfews on st'"eral c1t1cs and refugee
camps.
The renewed violence dealt a blov.
to Israeli effons to restore calm and
defuse internat1onal cnt1casm of 1u
UNITED NATIONS(AP)-Israel rejected a Sccunt) Council rcsoluuon
chaUen&ina its plan to deport Palcstiman activists, and critmzcd the United
States for supponing the measure ... I definitel} regard (the U.S. vote) as a
s.cnous kind of deviation from lht framework of our relations" nh the United
States.·· forctan Minmer Shimon Peres said toda) ID Jerusalem. The United
States. one oflsracl's closest allies and 1ts staunchest defender at the Unned
Nauons.. joined the other 14 counC11 members Tuesda) m endorsing the
resolution apinst the depon.at1ons in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Stnp.
LJglJterseateaces offered forconfesslons
NABLUS. Occupied West Bank (AP) -A m1htan JUdge presiding O\Cr
the tnals of accused Arab notcn repeated!) told defendants he "'ould rc"'ard
quick confcssioM with lighter sentences. Defense lav.-'yers said such
e1hortations arc S) mptomauc of an unJust legal S)stem Sttking to rush through
hundreds of cases piled up following mus arrests 1n the occupied West Bani
and Gaza Stnp. Army offictals denied allcganons of summaf) JUStlCC .. Ifs not
unUSU1l for a Judge to teU a defendant that a confession would be a factor in the·
amount of punishment imposed.·· said .<\mos Gu1ora. a m1htaf) prosecutor ID
Ramallab. -lfs not a threat that he wtll get a harsher sentence. God fo.rb1d:·
handling of the unrest.
The army imposed curfev.-s on
pans ofQaJq1li)a and the West Bank
refugee camp of Salata Curfe.,.,.s
imposed Tuesday remained in effect
in Khan Yunas and the Tulltarem
refugee camp.
Soldiers d1s~r~d demonstrators
v. ho burned tires and threw stones in
Gaza Ctt' and the-town of Rafah in
the Gaza Stnp. Israel arm} radio wd
There v.ere no rtporu of tnJunes.
Protests v.ere also reponed in the
West Banl cm of Ramallah and the
nearb) refugee camps of ~man.
Kaland1a and Jelazzouo.
The Haaretz da1 l} quoted un1den·
ufied m1htar) officials as sa}1ng the
renev.-ed protests "Were sparked b)
deponat1on orders issued Sunda}
against nine Palestinian acu' 1sts
accused of inctt1ng unresL .
M1htal") re"·1e.v. commmccs heard
appeals from some oft he deponccs It
"'as not 1mmed1atch clear 1f all of
them filed appeals ·
The repon v.as published Tuesd.1)
1n the organizatton's Janual") new~
ktter It \aid human na,h1s monitor-
ing groups esumated 1hat 11.000
ch1ldrt:n v.ere dcuuned in South ~fnca from 19&..i to 1986.
Thr independent. London-based
group rcc1p1ent of the 1977 Nobel
Peace Pnze \aid some of the children
held in <;outh ~fnca v.ert as )Oung as
7 and 1ha1 man' had bttn assaulted
and 1onured ·
South ~Incas go,ernment said in
~pnl 19 .., that I ..i~..i children 1Jnder
the age o( I o.i.erc-being held
~mnt"St\ International ~1d South ~fncan p0hce had tonurcd sorm of
1hc children "'llh elet tnc shocks.
··\fost "'ere assaulted in detention.
Some "'ae bea1cn "'hipped and
l..1d .. ed for !te' t•ral hours ... Man'
emerged from detention profound!;
injured ph~'>•~Jll~ and ps~cholog.i
call~."· the n:por ..aid
It cited I~ wunmes "'here "'the
most ba~1c ng}m·· of children v.ere
'1olated ~mnest) lnternauonal
spol esman Sean Sul~ \aid. hov.evcr.
that the actual number of countncs
1n,ohed rnuld be much higher
~cau!>e onl~ dtXumented repons
"'ere COM1dercd
' MANAMA. Bahram t .\P) -De-
fense Secret.al) Frank Carlucci said
toda> he has not appro,ed a reponed
plan to reduce L' S. na' al forces 1n the
Persian Gulf. but he refused to rule
out cuts in the future
Carlucci. v. ho am' ed in Bahrain
this morning. talked "'llh reponers
before lea" ing Ku1Na1t v. hose leaders
conferred toda) "'uh a ran ling So' 1et
official
On am'al in Bahrain the second
stop on his gulf tour Carlucci "'as met
b' the cro"'n pnnce Sheik Hamad
bin Isa ~l-Khal1fa. v.ho 1s also the
defense minister
Tucsda~ sources ID v. ash1ngton
said the Reagan adm1n1strat1on 1s
cons1dcnng reducing the force of 3 '\
L' .S. sh1ps stauoncd in the gulf region
the sctne of a se' en-, ear-old war bct~ccn Iran and Iraq ·
The :-.:a,~ has I ships 1ns1de the
Persian Guli se'en 1n the Gulf of
Oman or nonhern .\rab1an Sea. and
another eigh t nt>arb' 1n the Indian
Ocean The ships ;n the gulf are
escomng 11 reflagged Kuv.a111
tankers
The sour~. "'ho spoke on con-
dJllon of.anon~ m11~ s.a1d the hehcop-
tercamerOlinav.a and the battleship
lov.a "'Ould be the first to be rccafted
Asked about the repon Carlucci
said ··1 think ~ou're rcfcmng toa leal
as o pposed to an •~:t
nouncemenL. .. NothlDg is oflici.ar
unul the Secrctaf) of Defense signs it~
I have not signed any ship move-
ments at this point."
He added. ··'Y.le of course tr)' W:
k~p the le\ cl of our acuvit) to art
absolute m1n1mum. consistent with
the nature of the threat. so I don'\
mean to signal th.at there might not be
some mo' emenl •·
In Kuv.a1t. Karen Bcutcnts. dcput)
chief of ttle lntcrnauonaJ Rclatto~
Bureau of the So' 1el Commurust
Pam ·s Central Comm in~. handed a'
mesS.age from So' 1et leader M1kblll
Gorbache' to the emir. Sheik Jaber
~1-~hmed ~1-Sabah.
~f1er that m~ung. be discussed
efTons to end the Iran-Iraq war Wlth
Kuv.ait's pnme minister and foreign
minister
The contents of Gorbachev·s
m~sage "'as not disclosed_
Carlucci 1s scheduled to Sta) at lean
l"'O da's in Bahrain. where the U.S ...
'a,, leases adm1nistrau"e and dock-
ing (acihttes. He 1s also scheduled to
'1s1t Saudi .\rab1a. ,
The L go\ernment rtttnU) said
11 "'ould sell up to 7J) Sungcr anu-
a1rcraft m1ss1lcs to Bahrain. an island
na11on located m1dwa~ along the gulf
~alanes often raided b~ lraR and
Iraq
.
THURSDAY THRU SUNDAY
TAKE AN ADD·ITIONAL
'
HERE, JUST A SAMPLING OF THE GREAT SAVINGS YOU 'LL FIND
I Take an additional 25% off the ticketed price of already reduced sportswear for Misses, More Woman and Petites.
Ticketed price 9.99 to 239.99 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .....
I Take an additional 25% off the ticketed price of already reduced dresses for Misses, More Woman and Petites.
Ticketed price 29.99 to 99.99 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....
I Take an additional 25% off the ticketed price of already reduced leather, v111.yt and fabric handbags
Ticketed price 6.99 to 99.99 . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
I Take an additional 25% off the ticketed price of afready reduced Women1s, Junior and Men's Shoes and Boots.
Ticketed price 19.99 to 99.99 ......................................... .
I Take an additional 25% off the ticketed price of already reduced sweaters for men, young men and boys.
Ticketed price 4.99 to 49.99 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7.49to17UI
22.49 to 7UI
5.24 to 7UI
...14Jlto 7UI
174 to 37.•
I Take an additional 25% off the ticketed price of already reduced men's dress shirts.
Ticketed price 12.99 to 19.99 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .................................. to 14.11
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THE BROADWAY ..
II SOUfHfaN I A
, -~ .. -~-... . . ·~.
...-
•
Killer cold wave
anves homeless
to shelters; 11 die
By 'fte Asl0Ciate4 Presa
A killer cold wave plowed the big
chill from the Midwest to tht East
today, driving thousands of homeless
people in from the cold. while a new
storm promised more snow from the
Rock:i~ to the Plains.
An emergency was declared in the
nation's capital, enabling Washing-
ton's hqmeless residents to spend the
night inside City Hall. In Chicago,
li,ctivists briefly took over two empty
public housing apartments.
Shelters were filled there and in
Montgomerv, Ala., Baltimore.
aeveland, benver, Detroit, Des
Moines, Indianapolis. Louisville,
Ky .• Milwaukee, Minneapolis, New
York City and Philadelphia.
N .J ., 9 dearecs.
Other low temperatures early today
included minus 23 degrees in
Bismarck, N.D.. 13 below zero in
Minneapolis-St. Paul, minus 9 in
Chicqo, 8 below zero 10 Des Moines,
Iowa, minus I in Indianapolis. and
zero an Cincinnati and Pittsburgh.
On Tuesday, Warroad, Minn., and
Huron, S.D., had lows of minus 28
degrees, the lowest official
temperature in the contiauous 48
stat~. the National Weather Service
~id.
• •
Oilspill's
problems
approach
Ohio towns
•1 ne Aueda&M Pna
Thousands of Pittlburgh-area mi-
dents lined up at water wW and
braced for another day of IPOftlC
beths, TVdinnenanddinyclo~~
towns in Ohio and Wcat Vtrprua
prepared today for the million-pl.Ion
oil slick beaded their way.
In Pennsylvania alone, the oil spill
on the Mononphela River bas left
I S,000 ~pie without tap water
resulted 10 1,000 layoffs and canceled
classes for 20,000 students.
"This momina. I showered. shaved
and washed in two cups of water. I've
never done that before," Willia'.m
Banks, 57, said Tuesday ni&bt while
waiting to fill a tub and buc.~ets from
a tank set up at a Robinson Township
fire hall. . 'Tm 50 years old and have never
asked anybody for anything, any type
of help or support,· said Thomas
Evans, who with his wife. June. dined
in a Montgomery. Ala., shelter Tu~
day night on chill and macaroni. fried
catfish, butter beans. com, Brussels
sprouts and coffee.
Below-zero readings Tuesday
ranged from Minnesota and tne
Dakotas across Nebraska, Iowa and
parts of Illinois, Indiana and Ohio.
Valentine, Neb .. re.ached 23 belo\\.
South Bend. Ind., had a record minus
9 degrees and Battle Creek, Mich ..
had a record low of8 below.
Today's high in Chi~o was ex-
pected to reach a "balmy • I 0 to 20
degrees following Tuesday's high of
minus 2 degrees.
With the city's 2,SOO beds in 38
shelters filled to capacity, activists for
homeless seized and barricaded two
public housing aparunents Tuesday.
After the de•uge on the islands
Joe Abreu paddlea from b1a home on
Monday In the Matbeutern Oeha commanl-
ty of Watmanalo. The property wu Oooded
(ollowin& bea.y ralna In Bawall on New
Year'• EYe and New Year'• Day. State
offtclala eetimate dam•ce at $29 mllllon.
Realdenta labored-under •anny UJea Tuea-
day to remon water and mad from bomea.
~You don't realize what you have
until it's gone and you miss it." said
Jack Carney, 47, assistant chief for the
Forest Grove Volunteer Fi.re Depart-
ment.
The crisis began Saturday ni&ht
when an Ashland 011 Co. diesel fuel
tank collapsed 27 milC$ upstream
from Pittsburgh.
.. But now we're out of a home and
all the suppon we ~et is through the
Faith Rescue M1ss1on and we sure
appreciate.it."
At least 11 deaths have been
blamed on the weather since Satur-
day.
The burgeoning Southwestern sys-
tem prompted warnings for more
r
an a foot of snow by Thursday in
klahoma. up to a foot of snow in
tah and 8-to 10 tnches in ~rizona.
Snow advisories v.ere posted for
uch of Nevada. Colorado and
J!ler elevations of New MeXJco.
th snow and freezing rain extend-
g across sections of Kansas and
exas.
Record low temperatures for the
tewereset toda) in BeckJey. W.Va ..
here 1t was 2 degrees: New York
it)'. where it was 12; and Newark,
"We can't let these vacant apart-
ments sit while people are dying on
the s.areet from the cold," said protest
leader Otis Thomas. but Chicago
Housing Authority security ~uards
evicted the demonstrators without
incident.
In Washington, where a homeless
man apparenlt} died of exposure last
weekend, thc_Cll} declared an emerg-
ency and opened the ground floor of
city hall to the homeless Tuesday
night.
In Boston. with overnight wind
chills forecast to minus 35 d~s.
officials put a second van 1Dto ~rv1ce
to take homeless people to shelter,
expecting to fill the city's nearly 1.000
emergency beds.
Nation seeks new
postmaster general
WASHINGTON (AP) -Help
Wanted. Mana$e il)dependent agency
with SJO billion budget, 78S,OOO
workers. Long hours. Good pay.
The nation is looking for a new
postmaster general, the fourth in as
man} }Cars. Postmaster General
Preston R. Tisch, 61 , will leave office
to return to private business som~
time "in the spring." he announced
Tuesday. .
As the nation's 68th postmaster
general. Tisch took over the troubled
agenc} ID August 1986 following a
purchasing 9Candal .
ollar surges after report targeting yen
NEW YORK (AP) -The dollar surged in hectic
ding toda} after a Japanese news report that the United
tales. Japan and West German} have secrctl} agreed to a
rget range for the Japanese yen.
The dollar soared to I 31. 20 yen m London after
losing in Tokyo, before the news was released. at 127 .13
· • ten. up from Tuesday's close of 124.80 yen. The dollar fOSC to 1.6653 West German marks from 1.6275 Tuesday.
Toda) 's chmb came one day after the dollar
·stered its largest one-day advances ever amid
tervention b} the central banks of several natio1n..
eluding the Federal Reserve.
. 1
The Japan BroadcasunJ Corp. rcponed today that
the three nations had agreed to keep the dollar botwccn
140 yen and the upperhaJf of the 120-yen level. The report
also said the major members of the Group of Seven
industnalized nauons each C$tablished a SS billion fund
for ll)tervention to coordinate their support for the dollar
in major markets around the world.
The Fed. Bank of Japan, West German Bundcsbank
and the central banks of Italy and Switzerland intervtned
tn a concerted fashion for the second day in a row on
Tucsda.{;.~~ers said. There was no sign of concencd
central interVentioo today.
Do It OW At "i:f7 Rates. to 'how ,·ou how to use it. So come b\· an\' And Pay othing for 3() Days. Holiday Sp-J coday for :i frtt guest totir. .
.W don't wnnv if the holiday cleaned
'
''lt.1 '.ltJ 'fltJ \\t'R'. ~ ing moo 1t .tll. ~ou out Betall'!e ~l)u can ill get)~-r.u
'" 1mm11~. running. rd.Cquetball. aerobi And ~l>U won't h.3\"t: to ~up with a
• ' gt: ll lfl\ our duff .ind get in he~. Be-ni kel for .. ?(hby~ Ocx.·sr1t that sound i.Jll°<~(.\l"( .m:nnhe<xll~ thm~ ptlingup. flrom~ing? •
Our f.A.thtk.' m.t, \~~·hut m gc~l. Thb offer i:o a\'3ilable :n panicipating
"'-'R ulklng l.Jtn.' dt·, "<:p.tr.ue men~ and cluhs. Jnd some restrictions appl)·
" Jffil,., .. \!\ln Till ulum.u~ in htgh dll· ~~Holiday ~ u~th Qub for ~ acne~ c ~ocm :mJ trJ1l'k"d 1n'fructro . ~ • "!'-~-• ~
.
\bpllllu.. I Ni:tl ~>. ol lini:uln
I btblX Bl\ 'd. t8ctund Thn~ Qrultl
IMR-·NN. r:'IM Bc1cb 81\-d
f>kv. \ .lt "JO~ 1 ~".J\
'~-N t1'T .NJn \\~
Hospital stays stable
<but costs jump 1 ~%
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Pa-
tients spent nearly the same amount
of time in hospitals last year as in
1986, but the cost per day Jumped an
average 16 percent nauonwidc. ac-
cording to a survey of 1.863 hospitals.
The average daily cost of hospital-
ization ranged from $353 in Danville.
Va .. to St .487 in San Jose, according
to the survey.
The states with hosP.itals.charging
the highest average daily charge were
Nevada, Sl.204: California. Sl,109:
Hawaii, $906; Omon. $853. The
average daily charge ror the Districrof
Columbia was $924.
The states with hospitals with the
lowest average daily charge were
Rhode Island. with an average of
S42S: Delaware. $474: New Je~y.
$476; New York and Nonh Carolina.
both $512. .
The survey, released Tuesday by
Nashville-based Equ1cor. found that
the jump in rates was due largely to a
20 percent nse in hospital charges for
scrvi~ other than room and board.
· The study found the average cost of
1n overall stay ID the hospital in-
creased b)' 19 percent. The larger
increase for the cost of an overall stay
above the increase oTthe cost per day
was attributed largely to a 2 percent
increase in the average length of stay
in the hospital.
"While the stabilization of hospital
lengths of stay ts very good news. a 19
percent increase in the overall cost of
that stay is disturbing. espcciaJly in
light of a general econ0J111c inflation
rate of less than S percent." said
William T. Hjorth. Equicor presi-
dent.
The study was conducted for the
I 5th year by Equicor. a joint venture
of Hospital Corporation· of America
and the Equitable Group and Health
Insurance Co. that sells benefit pack-
ages to employers.
The amounts charged for all types
of rooms. excluding genatric. psy-
chiatric and hu~ry wards. ~ere
averaged for each hospital.
. The Amencan Hospital Assoc1a-
t1on of Washington. D.C.. said
Equicor should have studied the
actual amounts hospitals collect.
rather than what the) charge, because
there 1s a big difference between the
figures.
About 3.5 million pllons of the oil
gushed out. and an estimated l
millio.n aaJlons flowed over a dike
into the MononpbelL
Ashland Chairman John Hall ac-
knowledged Tuesday the tank was
built without written permits and did
-not undergo standard teats. But he
said there was as yet no proof those
failures caused the accident.
Hall said the company will pay for
cleanup and some related costs. The
work is expected to cost millions..
"I want to apologize to the ;>e<>ple
of Pittsburgh area for the inconve-
nience they have suffered as the result
of this incident," he said.
The hardships were sprcadina
downstream. East Liverpool, Ohio.
closed its Ohio River intakes Tuesday
but reopened them this mornina
when tells ~caled no diesel fuel in
the intakes.
The oil was crossing the New
Cumberland Lock and Dam SS miles
downstream of Pittsburgh. this morn-
ing. Jeanne Ison. a spokeswoman for
the Ohio River Sani1-tfon Com-
mission in Cincinnati. The oil was
expected to reach Wheeling. W.VL.
87 miles downstream from Pit-
tsburgh. early Thursday morning.
later than previously expected.
Crews in WheelinJ riaed two
pipelines across the Ohio -lliver to
keep water flowing to 42,000 resi-
dents.
80% of Americans eat silacks
NEW YORK (AP)-Four out offive Amencans get 65. 30 percent said they nevC'r eat betWttn meals.
the munchies between meals. with those in the 18-29 ~e Despite their proclivity for between-meals eaung. the
group more likely to grab a fattening snack than their 18-29 group said they were aware of different factors 1n
elders. a New York Times poll reported today. thear diet. Thiny-ninc percent said there were careful
According to the poll. 17 percent of Americans say about salt; 30 percent were wary of sugar and sweets; 26
they don't snack at all. But among the mt. afternoons are percent avoided fats.
the most popular time to savor some sweets or bmllc out The poll of t .870 adults also indicated:
a bla of chips. -54 percent of Americans do not exercise reiularly.
Broken down by ages. onl} 7 percent of those age -54 percent feel their wci&ht is about nght.
t 8-29 said they never snacked. Among the rest. 53 ~pe=rcc~n,.,.t ___ -~3~8-pc~~nt do not drink coffee.
made ice cream orcan(ly thei'r No. I choice: chips, pretzels -30 percent did not have a salad or vegetable with
and popcorn were cited by an additional 24 percent. dinner last night: 64 ~nt skipped dcssen.
In the J()-44 group, 14 percent never snacked; among -22 percent picked fruits or vegetables as their
those 45-64. 21 percent never snacked: and of those over favorite snack food.
SEMI ANNUAL SALE!
.....-------SAMPLE SAVINGS -------
Suits
Sportcoats
-:-Trousers
~Shirts
Reeularty SALE
.$310 to S775 from S98
S130 to SS35 from S59
S58 to St 58 from S19
S33 to S105 from S16
Sport Shirts
Sweaters
Shoes
Nec:kwear
Regularty
S35 to S98
S48 to S425
S95 to S675
S15 to SSS
SALE
from S IS
from $17
from S69
from S8
....
SAN a.DIENTE
G£NEAAL llOSPIT AL
Decem•• Pamela and Ned Home. San
C lemente. iirl
December 14
Cathleen and Steven P1lkin1ton.
Laguna Niauel. boy
Dettmber1'
Empcratrcs and Rosaho Diaz.
Dana Point. iirl
DecemberH
Maria and Johnnie Vina. San
Clemente, boy
l>e«mber 21
Eva loglett and Clayton Moore.
San Clemente. boy
. December U
Shalimar Richards and Gary Moss.
Laguna Niauel. boy
DettmberU
Nancy and Jay Losak. San
Clemente. airl
DecemberU
Charlotte and Antonio Smith, San
Clemente. girl
Patricia and Robert Mars. Laguna
Beach.boy
FOUNT A1N VALLEY -
REGIONAL H~PITAL
Dettmbtt 1•
Glen and Patricia Ketcham. Hunt·
1ngton Beach. girl
Brandon and Betha Brown. 'Hunt·
ington Beach. girl
Chnsuan Brantle) .and Maunnc
Zillman. Costa Mesa. bo}
Henry Lee and Ming-J1uan Wang.
Fountain Valley. boy
Roger and Dawn Cox. Costa Mesa.
girt
December 17
Br ian and P en nel ope
Theofanos.Hunttngton Beach. boy
Ricardo and Manha Vargas. Hunt-
inaton Beach. bo)
Fernando Garcia and Dana Reyna.
Irvine. bo)
Dece_..,11
Vincent Perez and OeAnn Gish.
Hunttnaton Beach. boy
Jose and Manana Sant.a Cruz.
Costa Mesa. &irl
Denise N1etlaus. Cost.a Mesa. boy
KenMth and Suzanne HanStn.
La&una Niaucl. iirl f.tt and Melanie Leasure. Hunt-
inaton Beach. bo>
David and Janet Brock. Cost.a
Mesa. boy
George and Ar1ene Smcngan.
Huntington Beach. boy
Dettmber It
DonaJd and Yolinda Ene1m. Hunt-
ington Beach. girl
DecaMerH
Satkis and Kathl~n Kalan-
tanadeh. Hunt1n11on Beach. boy
9Deeelllkrll
Michael and Vivian Pagani. Foun-
tain Valle}. girl
BradJc)· and Ten Cunas. Laguna ·
Hills. Jirl •
December!!
Stcpheq Murrillo and Deborah
Wells. Fountain Valley. girl
Russell Famuliner and Tereasa
Stout. Costa Mesa. boy
DettmberU
John Van Ngu)en and Tha Thi
Ngu}cn. Fountain Valley. boy
December!$
Michael and Martha Foster. Foun-
tain Valle). bo)
Ronald and Dawn So~lman.
Fountain Valle). bo)
l>ttemberH
Jeffrey Pagenkopp and Patricia
Mesa. Huntington Beach. boy
Steven and Maril) n Lucia. Costa
Mesa. boy
December !7 Reu~n '\lvaru and Cathenn
Dauzdson. Costa Mesa. bo)
DttemberU
James and Tracie Todd. Costa
Mesa. bo>
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, January 6, 19"88 A 7
_Radiation incident still spreads'f ear ~
81 ~lJSANA HAYWARD • 11 ,,,,_....,
GOIANIA. Brazil -On Sept. 13. 17-)ear-old
Robeno Santos Al\ es. snvef\&in& for Jun~. fqu1'd a
JOO.pound lead capsule in an abandoned bu1ld1na..
He and a friend. Vagner Mota. earned 1t to Al vt1'
back )ard and smashed 1t open with slcd&cham-
mcrs.
Inside the capsule was a gJowana. blue powder.
h looked like Cami val glitter. h gave off a golden
sparkle an daylight and a brilliant blue at night.
"You would have never thought something so
beautiful could~ so dangerous. so evil. E'eryone·
who sav. 11 h_, to touch it." ,said Mana Vadia
Mota. 59.
Her 6-)ear-old granddaughter. lt1dc Neves
Ferreira. touched u and she is dead. as-arc thrtt
others v.ho had contact with the powder
It v.asccs1um 137. a rad1oct1ve substance u~d
in cancer treatment. The buildin& an v.h1ch
Ro~no Santos Ah es found it was an abandoned
radiolog) cl1n1c.
From fnend'\\to neighbor. fathe.r to son.
husband to wife. the cesium spread in tin) du~t)
panicles. It contaminated people. furniture. dogs
and cats, and changed the life of Goiania. a cit~ of
900.000 people 1n central Brazil.
Mrs. Mota had 18 family mcm~rs con-
taminated. including three sons and a daughter.
The powder contaminated 249 people 1n all.
Of those. I::! I v.erc hospitalized. One had h 1s
forearm amputcd: 29 others arc still an treatment
It v.as ttfe v.orsr knov.n radition accident since the
mcltdov. n of the Chcrnob) I nuclear reactor an the
So\ 1et Unio n an 1986.
Thc 1nc1dent has spread fear and panic not
onh in Go1an1a. 130 miles southwest of the federal
capital. Brasilia. but to other pans of Brazil as well.
It began w11h le1de Nevas Ferreira's funeral
Oct ::!5 Demonstrators threw rocks and stone
cro·s~s at Lcwe·s lead casket as the' shouted. ··we
don·t v.ant to be contaminated." ·
.\ stone cross v.as still im~dded rccentl) an
mud a foot av.a) from her grave. h had bttn pulled
from someone else's $raHand throv.nat her casket
to protest her bunal in the city's Park Cemetcr).
-"'~ Roberto Santoa Ahe., l 7, one the
IC& vengen who found the ceshun 137,
alts ln the window of his isolated
hoepltal room ln BraeWa. Brazil.
le1de's death. her '1olent funeral and loneh
gra' e are JU St pan of 11
People from Go1an1a are being 1sulated .i nd
lohunned d~v.hcre 1n Brazil
··The d1scnm1na1ion 1s subtle·· ..aid !.Ol1al
v.ort..er Fanza ~anhas. ··There 1s thl' C..01an1a
person .,.. ho can ·t get a hotel room. the child throv. n
out of school. the landlord v.ho v.on·t rent
"It's v.hat the C hnsuans did w r.h lepers ·
Toda~. Goia nia still lights the: traged' <i
rngma. mu h of 11 magn11ied b~ 1gnoranu:
.. Radiation 1s '"' 1s1ble hke a ghost and tho~
v.ho suffered from It ha'e deep emotional scars
.
the fear of the unknown.·· said Go' Hennque
Santillo of Go1as state. of v.h1ch Go1an1a is the
l<tp1tal .. \\ e .. v.rre unprepared There v.as n~
orpniz.auon r
The four '1cums arc buncd 10 unmarked
gra' es their caskets encrusted 1n tv.o feet of
concrete because their bodies will emit rad1at1onP
for :!00) ears
Plasuc roses sat atop the otherwise bare gra' es
Go' Sanullo said Brazilians soon ~ould
forget the rad1a11on disaster ... because that's the:&
v.a ~ our culture 1s ··
But Col Nehto Barbosa. the head of cavil
defc.:nsc for Go1as and an arm' career officer for ::!7 ~ears. su ll feels a deep hun ·
·-rm prepared for v. ar e'en re' oluuons." he
~1d .. ,,~God. I t..n ov. v.ar tacucs. But somethm&.
ht..\.' this v.as a surpnsc I couldn't sec 1t I d idn't
t..no" v.hat I v.as up against T hat's the v.ors\
v.c.:apon in a v.ar the unknov.n ..
It "-IS Le1de's aunt Mana Gabnela Ferreira.
nov. buned ne>.t to her niece. v.ho went to
authont1cs. reponedh on Scpt.18. ~use she had
become susp1c1ous o( the glo wing substance.
\\hat those 17 grams contaminated has since
filkd 1.000 5~-gallon drums of rad1oact1' e v.aste
including soil. lOncrete furniture clothes and
dead animals
Brazil\ nev.spapr.·rs called the Goiania an 1-
d\.'nt "Go1anab\ I · a reference to Chernob' I
.\uthunttes maintained that dcscnp11on spread
l'' en more panic throughout the countn
1ent1sts here ~' Chernob' I and Goiania
lJnno t be c.o mpared bel ausc Chernob,rs leak
sprl·ad a nuclear clo ud throughout EuroPe. v.hile
lt'!.1um 1~ solid m<ittl'r and the area 11 CQntaminated
v.as much )maller
The four doctors v. ho ov. ned the abandoned
cl1n1c ha'e been l harged v.1th causing bod1l~ harm
and av.an tnal
\\hen n 's all oH·r the go,emment e1<..pects to
ha\t' spenl S65 m1ll1on on cteanup. trousmg.
ml"d1cine and clothes for ' 1ct1ms
Ro~no Santos .\hes and Vagner Mota. v.ho
brot..e open_the es1um capsuk that Scptem~rda~
ha' e sun 1' l"d after rC<"e1' ing hospital treatment.
BACK TO -BASIC-S· SALE!
ARROW DOVER
AND BRIGADE
SOLID DRESS
SHIRTS,
12.99 TO 17.99
Reg . 22.00 to 25.00.
Follow a trad1t1on of
comfort and quality
with an Arrow dress
shirt. Save on the
Arrow Dover full-cut
button down oxford in
a vanj?ty of classic solid
shades. Cotton '
polyester. short or long
sleeve styles. Reg.
22.00 to 25.00. 15~11 to
17.11. 0r the Arrow
Bngade long sleeve fit·
ted broadcloth dress
shirt, orig . 23.00. 12.M.
Add a pure silk necktie
from ow collection of
colorful prints by Neil
Martin, reg. 16.00,
11.20. Men's
Furnishings, 7 218 225.
$tO TODAY »1 tGlllO\l
OUR ENTIRE
STOCK OF
BROADCLOTH
CEllTURA
PAJAllU,
BOFF
Exclusively ours:
long sJeeve. long leg
pajamas in traditional
solids and patterns,
from Centura. Conon
polyester, sizes S to
XL. Reg . 18.00.
U...Men's
Furnishings, 164.
. ~
CAMELHAIR AND .
LAMBSWOOL ·
BLEND BWERS,
119.9AND 1•Jt
Elegant looks to
take you from office to
evening Save on Neil
Marun s classic blazers
1n lOO<lb camelhair and
lambswool blends. reg
165.00 and 250.00,
119.91 to 1 .....
respectively · Men's
Clothing. 48.
A. natural ctlOtce: soft and
comfortable hoStery an long-wear·
1ng wool nylon Choose from dress
sty'8$ an anAUe_L mtd~c.H and over-the-
calf lengths Reg. 5.00 to 6.00. 111 to ..a. Men s Fumistungs, 281 .
...
'
J
DOie campaign in Iowa
« •
wants win, allow$ loss
8y Ml&E .GLOVER . ,, ..........
• CEDAR RAPIDS. Iowa -Bob
Dole is walking a tightrope these da) s
when he talks about Iowa's crucial
first-test caucuses,
On the one hand. the Kansas
senator talks about how a win there
oould propel ham to the head of the
GOP pres1dent1al pack. On the other.
pe's been stressing that his cand1daq
could sun 1\e a setback in Iowa.
.. lf)ou tool a pohucal map of the
Untted States. 40 percent of that
would be Iowa. 40 percent would be
Ne" Hampshire and 20 percent
would be the rest of the countr)."
Dole sa}s. "That's ho" 1mponant
this state 1s."
The state's Feb. 8 precinct caucuses
will mark the first lime that Dole and
Vice President George Bush collide
head-on. Dole trails in poll!I
else" here in the nation. but 1s in 'a
neck-and-neck race in Iowa.
"This 1s the first faccofT," said
spokeswoman Kalle Boyle. "Ir's a
horse race on both sides of the aisle."
"lf someone gets a hot ha.nd in
Iowa. in other words wins, m\
pollstertells me that's wonh I 0 point~
in even state 10 the nauon." Dole
said. ··1twecould do well in Iowa. win
in lo"a. "e could make up that
shonfa ll pretty quick. Obviously. I
understand the importance of this
state to Bob Dole's chances."
But Dole hastens to add that a
defeat in the precinct caucuses would
not be the beginning of the end of his
presidenual bid.
"If I lose lo"a. n's not fatal," Dole
said. "I'm a ~a11onal cand idate.
\\'e'\I: got more than a one-state
strate&}."
The campaign schedule. though.
po1n1s to lo"a as the first headrtO-
head confrontation. Bush has been
tangled 1n a complex dispute v.nh
con sen atl\ es in M 1ch1gan. v. h1ch
prcks ns con' entton delegates av.eek
before lo"a's caucuses. and Dole
sl ipped O'er that ~tate to tight his
first baule closer to home
"\\'e dec1d<.'d earl) on "e didn't
understand M1ch1gan .'' Dole said.
"We saved about a half a m11l1on
bucks in the process."
But that mo' e has led to tall that
Dok has put all of his eggs 10 one
baslet -lo"a -and a loss could
stan him dov. n the road to losing.
Bush aides sa\ the\ 've raised more mone~ and built stronger organiza-
tion!) in other ponions of the count11
and ins1~1 the\ could withstand a loss
in lov.a. ·
"It might v.ell be all O\Cr b) uper
Tuesda~ .. ''hen a cl uster of southern
states holus d~uons. Dole said ... It
might well be all over after Iowa foe
some:·
.. Whoever wins Iowa will be
propelled into New Hampshire"
which holds the nation's first primary
electon eight days after Iowa's
caucuses. Bo) le said.
Campaigning in Iowa. Dole is
emphasizing his Washington ex--
penencc -and Midwestern roots.
Again and again. he draws a conll'ast
bctv.ccn his own background and
Bush"s ~lthy upbringing.
.. Ninety-nine percent of the people
10 this audience attended public
schools ... Dole told rail} crowds on a
rl·cent campaign s~in$. "Ninety-nine
percent of the people in this audience
ha' e been "orking and saving for the
future "
He urges 'oters to look at the
candidates and ask which one they
can 1dcn11f} with.
"Were the~ one of us. o r d id they
li\l' in a different world?"' he asks.
"You ought to be saying 'Which one
oft hem 1s one of us?" .. •
-\nd Dole likes to suggest that for
him. lov.a 1s not just a political
pro' ing ground to be forgotten o nce
thl' caucuses arc past.
.. ) ou won't be so~ 1f you vote for
Bob Dole. I lno"' how to get back to
lo"' a after I'm elected," he says.
u~
U.S. Sen. Bob Dole. R -Kanau. and hi• wife. Ellzabeth.
reapond to the crowd at a rally for hJm in Dea Molnea.
Hart's
creditors
can'ttap
'BB funds
WASHINGTON (AP) -Gary
Han 's 1984 creditors cannot have the
Federal Elecuon Commission attach
the matching funds for his 1988
presidential campaign to pay off the
old debts. the agency said.
Two creditors. Xerox Corp. and
Semper-Moser Associates, who ~ast
~eek obtained coun orders against
the FEC Sttking money Han owes
them. got replies from FEC legal
counsel Lawrence Noble saying the
commission has no authority to
d1 \Crt funds to anyone except pres1-
dent1al candidates.
Thus. the federal funds due Han
could not be sent tQ crtditors to
sausf, a coun order.
The letters to the creditors' at-
torne} s on Monday also said that
because the government is immune
from being sued under its .. soverc!gn
1mmunit)." a coun o rder involving
federal funds could not be enforced.
· Funhermorc. Noble wrote. Hart's
1984 campaign, called Americans
With Hart. lf\C .. IS lcgaJly dis_tiJlct
from his 1988 campaign which rc-
ccntl) "'as certified b y the FEC to
rccei\e federal matching funds.
Bush repulses Dole; Simon sejl.ys tax rich
Last "'eek. a U.S. magistrate in
Dcn,er used that reasoning to rule
that Han's 1984 and 1988 campaigns
arc lcgalh d1s1rnctcnt1ties that arc not
responsible for each other's deSts.
Han. the former Democratic sena-
tor from Colorado. has been dogged
b~ crednors seclong some SI. I
million he still o"es from his unsuc-
cessful 1984 While House bid. Xerox ~)She O\\es the ~mpany SI0.480:
and Semper-Moser. a Culver Cit)
ad\crt1s1ng agenc). sa)s 11 1s o~ed
SI 72.920 .
Hart calls on all presidential candidates ----to define theirJeder a l budget proposals
By WILLIAM'M. WELCH
,, I lhl • ..._.,_
Vice President George Bush told
chief Republican nval Bob Dole .. ,o
geJ off m> back" on Tuesday. while
Democrat Gan Han called on all the
pres1dent1al candidates to spell out
their o"' n federal budget proposals.
I know you were please with the
beautiful gifts oJ 1ewelry that you
received this Chrlstmas. so 1ust
a few words about maintaining
the sparkle--the care and p reser-
vation of your fine 1ewelry.
Fine gemstones are. for the
most part. hard and tougti. How-
ever. care must be taken to pre-
vent damage and retain their
beauty
.\no ther Democratic candidate.
llhno1s en. Paul 1mon. suggested a
surta\ on the rich 1fneeded to tnm the
federal debt as he took the first step
tov.ard spelling out he would finance
his much-m1'!1tgned spendrng
proposals.
Bu sh launched v.hat he called a
m1<;s1le <;hot across Dole's bo". telling
Member of Amer!Clll1 Gem SocMlty
"ccred1ted Gem Lat>Oral()()'
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
17th AT IRVINE
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 642-3310
n:ponl·rs 1n ~ ashington that the
public blames Congress for the huge
fl'deral dl·liCll -amtthat Congress 1s
"here Doh.•. the Senate Republican
leadl'r. has spent most ofh1s career.
"I'm not sure that being in Con-
gre s all ~our hfc 1s a part of the
ans"er I thin!. 11 ma~ be part of the
problem... Bush said . "I was 10
Congress: I respect it ... But I've done
other things w11h m} life."
The vice president was answering a
quesuon about Dole's claim that he
ha~ been a leader in Congress "'hale
It's what we use in our ultra-sonic
cleaner in the store. If you can let
them soak m that solution for a
half hour or so. 1t will be easy to
dislodge any grease or soap
build-up with a soft brush. Just
rinse well and they will be sparkl-
ing c lean.
Pearl, coral. turquorse and
opal, for instance. are amoung
the more fragile gemstones and
need extra care. Pearls should be
w1pe.d with a soft cloth atter each
wearing to protect them from
b ody oils and acids. They should
be kept away from perfumes and
hair sprays. Pearls s hould be ·
restrung yearly to prevent the
string from breaking.
Coran and turquoise s hould. be
protected fro m soap and grease
or o ther s ubstances that will d is-
color them. Opals should be
protected from heat because
they may become brittle and
crack
As a fmal precaution to prevent
loss. the settings and fmdings of
your fine jewelry should be
checked regularly tor security.
Diamond. for example. is the
hardest gemstone. so It d oes not
scratch easily. However. it can be
chipped or cracked if dealt a hard
knock. Diamond will scratch
d iamond as well as softer
gemstones. so pieces of gem-set
jewelry should be kept separately
in a fined box. Anyone who knows
anything about the value of
gemstones will get ·'the terrible
shudders" when they see actors
on film or TV, dump out a handful
of gems from a pouch where the
gems have supposedly been
bouncing around together. Even
the bad guys ought to know that
they are reducing the value or
their loot by treating it that way!
Diamonds and transparent col-
·~-.:J:le are happy to d o this for you
anytime at no charge.
o red stones s hould be per-~
1odically cleaned with a detergent rn" R L Es H 11" RR
solution--we suggest a cup of • 9------------
warm water. a teaspoon o r de-~..w
tergent (not soap ) and a tea-
spoon of household ammonia.
32 PORTRAIT PN::MMJE:
2-lxfOa, J.5•7a. .......
Plua, 12 Af.4cxn'M
~ Poltl• (JK!e)
Fine jewelry Is meant to give a
lifetime of enjoyment with proper
care and protection. If you have
any questions about the care of a
particular Item, please feel tree to
drop by the store and ask us.
a. 32 po111.. ancMlng 12 M.occa.on ~ Pornill IO )QI can ma penlONI
por1r'llilla tor .. ooc-.• 6v"'~ ~ ctlOice al 80 m1•1g1e OIMI tor bdmrs, ~ 8f1d mar& TheN'I no llPPOlll M• ll,,.; FF IF ry.
111191 w .... .,,_ alllr 11 .a 2 so .... Oil...., ..........
• WedneecMy. J8nUlry Ith thrU Sunday. Janu.y 10
~ 10AM -2 PMend~PM -7 PU
~--~~ tOAM ·SPM
Colt• Meea • Huntington hKh • Sen etem.nte • W•tm nater
~c:m~"11;
-
Bush has not nemscd real authOnt\
as 'ace president or in pre' 1ous
appointed 1obs and a bnef stint as a
Jiousc member Bush insisted he
meant no '1olat1on of the GO P's
.. I I th Commandment"' -to speak
no 111 of a fcllo" Republican -then
said
"How man) of them ha\C built a
business? Ho" many o f them have
met a pa~ roll? ... How man) know
foreign policy from being there.
talking to these leaders. not in a photo
op" 1th a group going O\erthere from
Congrl:''>S •
.. o tell h1.m to get ofT m~ bad ....
Bush said.
1mon. responding to cn11cs who
sa~ he hasn"t spelled out ho" he
"'ould pa) for his promises of
domestic spending. s~ud hl' v.ould
loo~ first at an income ta\ surlharge
on the "ealth1cst lil\pa~ers
In C:.X-s ~to1nes. lo"a. Simon said
he bche\ cd a broad-ba!.ed ta>. in-
crease probabh "'ouldn't be needed
but that he "a'> proposing the
surcharge as "a last reson ..
"But I "'ill protl'Ct the interests of
"ork1ng ~menrans." 1mon said "If
nccessan. I v.111 as~ the wealthiest of
.\menca.ns. v. ho ha' c benefited grcat-
1> O\'er the past St.'' en )Cars to assume
a greater burden "
The surcharge "ould appl) to
ind1' 1dual ta\Pa>ers with S I00.000
or more in income. and would kick in
at $193.000 fora famil> of four Each
I percent of that surta\ v.ould
generate S2 b1ll1on. he said.
Jesse Jackwn bt.·eame the last o f the
13 maJor pan' prcs1den11al can-
didates to quallt~ for federal cam-
paign monc) -and became nearl)
ihe least. 1n the \11e of his first L
Treasuf) checl
The Federal Elccuon Comm1ss1on
cen1ficd Jacl son 's campaign to re-
cc1,·c S~:!7A~~ in federal matching
funds. Onh thl' 1n1t1al SI00.000
CCrtlfil·d for ·Han. "'ho re-entered the
race last month. 1s smaller
The other candidates recc" ed their
first checl s on Monda}.
_ Campaigning in "'e" Hampshire.
Han said he plans to release in the
nc\t fe" da~ s his plan for reducing the
federal buoget deficit to "clo~ to zero
b\ the 'ear ·93 or ·94,:· He called on
the other cand1dtates to do likewise.
.. What 1s the first JOb a, president is
going to ha' c to do when he or she
"alks into office:-·· Hart said.
"Prepare a budget. So let's not wan
until "'e elect a president to see what
that person"s-budget i~ go1nt to look
hke ··
~t lcast se,en oftht' 13 candidates
"ere campaigning in Ne" Hamp.
shin:." hcrt' the Feb i 6 pnma~ 1s the
na11 on ·s first and one "cc'-after
lo\\a·s caucuses.
One \\ho\\asn't. Tennes~ Dcmo-
cra11c Sen. .\lbert Gore Jr . cam-
paigned 1n Te~as where he v.as
endorsed b} 2-state legislators. along
"'1th the state House speaker Gibson
D "Gib" Lev.is. •
~mong the other Democrats. Mis-
souri Rep. Richard Gephardt stopped
in Wateno" n. ~ass .. and called for
e\panded hcahh•carc co' erage by
rl'quinng empJO>Cl'l to offer health
benefits. b> e\pandin~ Medicaid
programs. and b} pro' 1ding CO\ erage
to unemplo~ed "orkers.
Gephardt "ent toa branch office,of
the same health maintenance or-
gan1za11on used b~ Massachuscm
Go'. Michael Dulak1s. the Dcmo-
rra11c front-runner 1n Ne" Hamp-
~hire polls. to make his remarls.
~mong Repuhhcans. New York
Rl·p. Jack Kemp said he "'Ill remain a
!>upporter of a conscrvat1\e GOP
roah11on that hopes to upSt't Bush 10
M1ch1gan·s GOP caucus~ this
month. Kemp supponers and backers
of former tele\ls1on e\ angelist Pat
Robenson ha' e J01ned forces in that
state 10 an cfTon to block the 'ice
president from winning at the count)
and state con\ent1ons later this
month.
"We "ant to keep the coahuon
intact. We ha"e to make surt that
Bush 1s not &l'·en a part)-cnginccrcd
'1ctof) in Michigan:· Kemp said in
Monroe. Mich.
Han rccc1 \ ed SI 00.000 10 federal
matching mo01es this "'eek as the
Treasuf) released the first batch of
checks to 1988 presidential can-
didates "'hom the FEC has declared
efr$ible for federal makflTng money.
~t 1ssue 10 the creditors' court cases 1s .
"hether the the} can seize that mone)'
and Han's other 1988 campaign
funds to sa11sf} the 1984 debts.
"The commission 1s not indebted
to. nor docs 11 possess an) assets
"h1ch belong to .\mericans W1th
Han. Inc .. " oblc's letter said. "On
Dec. :?8. 1987.. the commission
cen1fied to the sccrttaf) of· the
Treasur) that Senator Han "'as
eltg1blc to rccel\ e SI 00.000 1n federal
match in$ funds for his 1988 pres1den-
t1al nomination campaign. Ho"'e,·er.
his pnnc1pal campaign commmee for
the 1988 campaign 1s Fnends of Gar)
Han. not Amencans With Han:·
The letters '4ere the first ind1cat1on
of the FEC-s v1e"s on using funds
from one pres1den11al campaign to
pa) off debts from another.
Before he dropped out of the race
last Ma} 10 the wake of disclosures
about his rcla11onsh1p \\Ith M1am1
model Donna Rice. Hart had sought
perm1ss1on to use his 1988 funds to
sat1sf) the i 98.i drbts.
He w1thdre" the request after the
commission den1t'd him matching
funds on the grounds he was no longer
an act1\ e candidate. He subsequent!'
"on the matching funds after he re·-
entcred the race Dec 15.
.\ttorne~s for ero~ and Scmper-
Moscr did not 1mmed1ateh return
calls Tuesda) as to "'hat their next
mo' e "'ould be
The FEC 1s charged "llh admin1s.-
tenng the prcs1den11al matching-fund
program and "'•th cert1f~ins "'hether
candidates ha'e met chg1b1ht~ stan-
dards b) raising at least SS.000 10 each
of:?O states.
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Mounting, Flat File, Hot Wax,
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Togl Retlill Y•lue _____ 505.00
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.
Mental abuse-:
Scars for life ~
B1NANCYANNECAMERON
Dllf .... C•r IJ fr I
The recent case of a Florida woman
characd with mentally abusms her
daughter, who committed suicide.
has brought the long overlooked probl~m of mental abuse to nauonal
attention.
While not as obvious as the
outward signs of physical abuse -
bru1~ ar\d broken bones -mental
abuse can b(1ust as harmful toach1ld.
psychologists say.
U nlike bruises which heal ma wttk
or so. mental scars last a lifetime.
Mental abuse can retard lea mm& and
cause mental illness. It can cause
chil~~n to develop drug and alcohol
add1cuons and self destructive
tcn<kncies. expens say. Often. the
mental!) abused child beconies an
aggressive adult. turning the cy~le of
violence onto the next generation of
childre'n.
Mental abuse takes many forms.
Constant defamatory remarks like ··
You stupid little ... " and "Why can·t
)OU bes.man like Joe)·· are examples.
Ncglecung a child and withholding
love and afTecuon arc also forms of
mental abuse. Parents that h11 each
other in front of a child arc also
inflicting mental abuse on the child.
Mental abuse 1s probabl) more
pre\alent than ph)s1cal abuse. but it's
harder to do something about. sa)s
Jim Mead. founder of For K.1ds Sake.
For K.Jds Sake 1s a l3-yca1-old Brea
organization that fights agarnst child
abuse.
Cahfom1a law requires that pro-
fessionals. repon mental abuse. but
Mead sa) s tile lack. of a "1deh
accepted defin1t1on makes ti hard 10
proS«ut •.
Mead's definition 1s an) repeated
mental anguish to a child b) an adult
that 1.nflicts mental trauma on that
child. The key word 1s "repeated."
Mead ~ys. because e' cry parent has
at one umeoranother said something
to a child that they regret.
Law enforcement officials also
complain of the difficulties in pros-
ecuting mental abuse cases.
The lack of physical evidence
makes them hard to recognize and
hard to prove in coun. said Detective
Paul Cappucci Iii of the Costa Mesa
Police Depanment. Because pcdplc
arc seldom able to witness mental
ab.use. the) of\en don't suspect any-
thing is wrong. Cappuccilh said.
The emotional scars borne b>
mentall) abused children can b(
ht aled w11h therapy, says Patricia
POos. a licenccd marriasc and family
counselor in rca. lfut 1f not treated
the) can last a lifetime. Many adults
"'ho come in for therapy were
mentally abused as children. she said.
Despite the prevalence of mental
abuse and other forms of child abuse.
counselors say most abusive parents
can be helped with treatment anc.1
intervention programs.
They are not evil people. said
Millie Carota. a counselor at the
Child or Parental Emergency Services
1n Santa Ana. but people going
throJJgh bad times themselves or lack
parenting skills. Often they j ust don't
kno" v. here to df'll,\' the line b(t"ecn
d15eipline anchbusc. she said.
Child or Parental EmergenC) Ser·
'ices 1s the onl) \Oluntecr shelter 1n
the count~ "'here parents can lea' e
their children under 5 for up 10 a
month until things calm down at
ho me
Mead suggests requmng high
school students take a parent educa-·
tton class to help break the chain of
'1olence.
"If )OU could rcall) do something
about child abuse. get 11 early. prevent
11 from happening -now -then
ma} be v.e couJd stop wife abuse. drug
add1cuon. etc .. not all of it. but )ou'd
cena1nl) have a dramatic efT~t on
1t." he said .
. Storing your owD
blood !Or later use
By LES HONIG
Ollr .... C..: 0 ••
As the concern over A I OS con·
ttnues to grow. some Orange Coun·
t1ans are resoning to unique measures
to ensure the safct) of the blood used
1n their planned and emergent)
surgencs.
"Ever Since the scare ~n. there
has been a nsmg interest 1n auto-
logous (or selO donations. as well as in
the ust of d11'C(;ted donors (family
memb(rs or friends)." expla1f's
~rlene Bauer. administrauve d1rec·
tor of the laboratory at Newpon
Beach's Hoag Hospiual.
"I think people are becoming aware
of the fact that there's nothing b(tter
than )Our own blood. and 1f you're
going to ha\e a transfusion. there's
less danger of a reaction or the
produr t1on of antibodies."
. Hoag. hke several other local
med1caJ centers. still pnmanly uses
the traditional randoml)-Oonated
supplies of the Red Cross. But
paniall) as a result of the AIDS cns1s.
Hoag has created a separate small
donor center for those wishing to use
the1rown blood for their own pending
surge!).
·:Although we still accept dona·
uons from the general public." Bauer
sa) s. "o'er half of the units taken at
our center in recent months have
been auto lo gous or d1rectlv·
donated.·· With a shelfhfe of up to 42
days. this self-donated blood can b(
stored and used for a numb(r of
planned operations at the hospital.
The concept of donating one's own
blood as a hedge apinst AIDS hu
been gaining populanty steadily 1n
(Pleue He SltLP' /A 10)
·~ ~L&Jj~ SHOES
%
to
FF
all shoes from our regular stock
EVINS • STUART WEITZMAN
NOW
82 9 ~0 99.~5·
V aluea from 135.00 to 158.00
not all styles in every size
~ HOW AID FOX • CARDONE 6 BAKE&
IANGONI • AllALPI
~ 479 'L.7l 9 15
' s V aluee from 80.00 to 119.00 . • ~ .
Also a fine selection of
CASUALS
IANGONI • AllAlll • llASllATI
34'~7495
V aluee from 64.00 to 129.00
FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT BEACH ..
'
•
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January 6. 1988 A9
A void osteoporosis ·
through exercise
JULIAN
WHITAKER
For yean. the dairy 1odustn has
hounded us into increased consump-
tion of dail) products as a source of
calcium to a' 01d osteqporos1s. or the
"cak.ening of the bones with age
When informed phys1c1ans tf) to
dissuade their patten ts from consum·
1ng so man~ da11) products. a ma1or
reason for fatal hean attacks. the
concern about reducing the calcium
m the diet 1s always a stumbling teoporos1s m this country. '
First. 1he process of ostcoporosi$
has 'el) l111le to do-v.lth the amount
(Pleue .ee EXERCISE/AlO}
• ..
block. .
Here are some things ) ou should
kno" about the e 1dem1c of os-
JO YEARS EXPERIENCE
~· ACUPUNCTURE t!e•tete
Acupuncture for PMS
Prementrual Syndrome ·
The most common symptoms are food cravings. heavineSS'.
tiredness. mood swing$. water retention, breast tenderness.
backache. 1oin aches. flu colds. crying spells. and dimness.
Acupunctur~ works for PMS by stimulating the body's ability
to maintain the correct hormone balance
Acupuncture works for many conditions suffered by women.
Dysemenorrhea. amenorrhea and endometnos1s are all
treatable with acupuncture
'
Our needles are sterile .
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GOU C~EN CHENG CA., O.M.D.
• I
\"\e !ieJi? perform small ._ .. ~ a At Coastal Communities Hospital, m·~~ the~~~~as
=area are discovering. that's whit
a full -service community hospital is
all about Coastal Communities. Health
care born of commibnenl
. .
• l •
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..
J
Takingthemysteryoutofhavingarelationshlp
-Rdalionship.. is an ~ wh~h she oudinn l.k prediciabk.
word. And then some. Everybody unders&andlble NIH that two talks about havirtf oae. wantin& one. people ID thtoulh as they become •
or t~ problems involved in main-cou~. Author Sills takes the myttery
tainina one. Men. es~Jly, aet ti~ out ofw "road between meetinaand
hearing ··reiauonsh1p" stories. And mamqc:·
nobody -men or women -even The relationship stqt, she says.
knows exactly what the word means. begins with "pursuit." which is filled
Accordin.a to psycholo_gist Judith with terrible ambivalence'.
Sills, you are officially 1n a "rtla-Pursuit is f9llowed by "conquer,"
tionship" when you and your current "devour" and "retreat." At the
love partner can assume you will be !lightest wane in passion. you qucs--
togethcr on some regular basis. uon -for the first tame -do I want
It doesn't necessarily mean forever. him/her or do I want out? "Pursu.it"
but a "relationship" does imply ends when you both decide to stick
taking each other for granted. You around l~ng cn_o~gh to find out more.
can count on spending some regular · A rclauonsh1p 1s the s~ge that most
time in his/her company -whether of us sa~ we are ~ek!ng when we
that means every weekend or every begin a courtship. It is. 1n fact. a very
night. nice point at which to be. Si.II!. says as
Salls has wnttcn a fine book, "A you enter the ··relat1onsh1p stage,
Fine Romance" (Tarcher. 1987) m "} ou have worked your wa) into
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somethin& imporunt without having
to face the anxiety of something
permanent." .
That sounds pretty nict -kind of
like an emotional sabbatical.
Actually. she says. the "rela-
tionship" stage is divided into three
overlapping phases. Plateau. nego-
tiation and comm itment. Not all of
them are as much fun.
The plateau 1s that fantasy without
consequence 11 ~-
But you ttt c~. If your ••reta.
tionship" pows and )'OU move aJona
toward bttomina nwri• pannas,
you may bqjn to recopize that
you're not exactly alike after all. The
pnftt1ion fant1sy disa~ars. Can
you live with these diffcttnces'? You
wonder. (This is a second-stqt
question1n1 ~ on more teality
than when you questioned before.)
He's a momma person and you
hate it. and he railly likes to watch too
much foo\ball. Annoyins. but more
fundamentally, his style offi&hting is
abominable to you. he's financially
irresponsible and you're not sure -
really sure -he wants children.
Doe-s this mean your ··rela-
tionship" is dead? No way. says Sills.
She offers a rule of thumb most
psychoqins woutd IPee with: .. Jf
you have not been anpy with your
panner. you have not been intimate.
There is no intimacy, .. she ·~ "without &DICf ...
Neaouau na throuah that anacr
implies risk and a lot of hard work.
Blasting open one iuue usuaUy Inds
to others · callina for all kinds of
problem--solvina tests. ..
Is it worth it'? You wonder.
The negotiation' Stage of a "rell·
tio nship" is the pan that's not so
much fun. You work out together the
kind of couple you arc going to be -
and if you arc goina to be a couple at
alt.
Sills outlines j ust how sclf~is
closure can be risky at this point.
•You risk destroyin& the illusion
that this relationship as perfect.
Exprnsana .... punctum the myth
that you ind your honey have found
perfection. I •You risk prnentana yourself as
demanding. difficult. depende.nt,
jHlous or some ot~ unattl'lctave
but human side of you.
•You nsk rockinatheboaL Maybe
your partner w111 decide it's more
trouble than it's worth.
You decide finally that if your
relationship can't tolerate a little
anaer you don't have a relationship
anyway. .
Better to go for 1t and find out now.
Dr. Alto.I u • m•,.,.,..eu4 fa11Jll1 ~r•l'l•t Ill C.,... ._, Mar. Ae web11JayHT~.U~flfld
a ~. ~ eedou • 1tam,,etl, uU:a'4ttaff e.¥~. Wrlk ,..
LJ.a4a A.4•d, n .D., c/o o.Jly pa.1,
P.O. Bu I Sll, Colla Mna, llUI.
SELF-DONATIONS OF BLOOD INCREASING .•.
homA9
recent montl)s. Stausucs made avail· 111 patients "ho are afraid that they
able by the American Red Cross will be too weak before a later surgery
reveal that while the number of units to donate their blood then. so they
ofautologous blood drawn in Orange prefcMo.-ha"e it donc..ca.rlicr."
County 1s suit small (about 1.6 Also respondang to the demand for
percent of the total supplrcollccted in self-donated blood is Dr. Gilben
the first six months ofth1s past }'ear). Goodman. who practi~ internal
this figure represents a tripling of the medicine at the Newpart Medical
amount obtained an 1984. · Center. In February. he and a number
.. Wc'\e been accepting autologous of other doctors at the Fashion Island
blood for the past six years ... says complex p)an to stan their own frozen
S) l\ia Fanton. public relations blood storage -service.
specialist ' for the blood services .. Our company is for people who
d1' 1s1on of the Orange County don't have a known surgical need." he
'\mencan Red Cross chapter in Santa explains ... but who want LO provide
Ana ... We believe that it's a good for a lime "hen they might face an
1h1ng pro' 1dcd the patient has consul-emergenc) hke a bleed mg ulcer or
tcd "1th his doctor and he rec· chest paans and might not have time
om mends 1t." to donate blood. Herc It would
Currcntl). self-donations arc bcing alread) be processed and stored for
handled local!} at the Hunt1ngt-0n up to se' en }ears and available quite
Beach and Santa Ana offices. qu1ekl~:·
One e\tens1on of autologous The rapid a' a1lab1ht} of such
donaung 1s the concept of blood-frozen rescn es. "h1ch typ1call) can
freez1n&. rccentl) introduced t1) the cost S200 per pmt annuall} for
Hema-Care Corporauon of Sherman processing and storage. 1s questioned
Jan. I. all blood banks an the state arc
required to accept directed donors
provided that the physician involved
finds their blood to be .both com-
patible and medically safe.
"There arc some who say that
directed donations arc dangerous."
argues Jose Ocanz. director of the
blood program at UCJ's Medical
Center in Orange. "Let's say you're a
closet homosexual and your neighbor
asks )OU to donate blood for bim.
You ma} feel uncomfortable about
refusing and therefore he about your
se>.ual preferenc~.
.. The bottom line. however. is that
the screening credibility of all but a
close relative 1s probably about the
same as that done by the Red Cross."
The Red Cross' reaction is similar.
Wl:l1le the organization now accepts
direct donations at all local ctntcrs. It
contends that the safety of such
.donations 1s no greater_ than using the
donations of random local residents.
"More than anything. however."
concludes Sylvia Fanton. "wt feel
that these kinds of measures arc often
not needed."
Pomung to the effectiveness .of the
tcsl which detects the presence of the
AIDS virus as well as to the Red
Cross· exhaustive .prcscrccning of
donors. Fanton claims the chance of
receiving contaminated blood is only
about one in 100.000.
So wh) do more and more people
opt for autologous and direct dona-
tio ns? Sherwood Cox, a lab tech-
nician at Doctor's Hosr ital. provides
one possible clue: ·• am. finding
no-wada) s that people who don't even
need blood are staning to do~tc it. It
is certain I) an added expense. and not
a small o ne. but I guess it's Just that
mcruscd peace o f mind that makes it ~onh all the added cost and inconve-
nience ...
Oalo..s and no" being planned b) a b} the Red Cross· Syh 1a Fanton ... We
ne" com pan). Hema-Safe of New-don·1 consider freezing to be par11cu-
pon Beach Hema-Care. "h1ch has larl) effecu'e because 1f }Ou're an a
been rcce1' ing self-donations in its car acr1dent. for example. and are
EXERCISE, NOT CALCIUM .••
FromA 9
mobile fac1llt) at Doctors Hospital of bleeding se'erel). there's no guaran-ofcalcium in our diet. A recent stud}
SanLa Ana and at Santa Ana Hosp11al tee that )ou'll be able togaan access to at the Ma\O Clinic divided the M~1cal Center for some time. now the blood that \OU''e donated ahead partic1pan\s· ·into three groups:
plans to include 1n its sen·1ccs the ·oft1mc · "omen with less than 500 milligrams
long-term storage of blood via the .. Of\{'.n there's JUSt not enough of calcium in their diet, those with
freezmg process.. leewa~ to locate the blood. ha' e 11 500 to I .500 mi. and those consum-
.\ccording to Dr. T om Asher. defrosted. processed and then de· 1ng more than 1.500 mg. per day.
director of the organization ... Tbese livered to the place where )OU need They were followed for several years.
are usuall} concerned people who n ." It "as fou nd that the amount of
think t.he) might need blood some-O ne wa' to avoid some of the calcium 1n the diet had no bcanng
11me down the road and won't ha'e d1flicult1es.1nherent in freezing blood "hatsoc,er on the degree of os-
bod> stores 1n the bony structur:cs
compared to the amount in the diet. If
~ ou take 1n 1.500 mg. of calcium but
c'cre1e 1.545 mg. 1n the unne. you are
in-the process of losing calcium from
the bone.
enough ume to donate it before their ma) he in another AIDS'.1nsp1red teoporos1s. ~!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~o~pc~r~a~t1~o~n;_. T~he~r~e~a:re~al~so~c~h~ro~n:_::ic~a:'..ll'.!}_'.t~"c'.:.'.h_::n.:_:1~q~uc:_::_:t.:_:he~d_::1 r~ec'.:.'.t:_:d~o~n~a~u~o'.:'.n_:.\~s~o'.'._f_. Second I). \l;e are 0 ' erlook ing one -= oft-he most powerful tools at prci.ent-
It has long been known chat the
worst thing you can do for your bones
1s sta} in bed. With prolonged bed
rest. the body hterall) begins to dump
calcium out of the body so fast that
there 1s an ancreased incidence of
k1dne~ stpnes. When astronauts
spend Ion& periods of umc m .space.
the bones ""eaken because of the lack
of gra' 11auonal stress..
.DESlGNER FU R.NlTURE
,;
•
•
DecortJtor c'i>ervlces
IN SOUTH COAST. 18030 Euclid. Fountal n Valley. ~2275
IN NORTH COUNTY • 1988 N. Tustin ·. Orange. 137-3170
01987, WF0 Photography tJv Mlt(I EastmWI
ang osteoporosis. and that 1s exercise .
Rarel~ are pauents told to stan a
regular "alking program as a method
of strengthening the bon} structure
Yet physical exercise has been known
to strengthen 1he bones.
With we1ght·beanng excmse. the
bone responds to the st~s b)
depositing more calcium anto the
shaft. Runners have been found to
ha\C :?O percent more calcium in the
long bones of the legs and arms than
non-runners. The dommant ann of
professional tennis players shows 35
percent greater bone thickness than
the non-dominant arm.
Act1v1ty dramatic-ally affects the
calcium balance Qfthe body. Calcium
balance is the amount of calcium the
t ft American Heart V Association
WE'RE FIGHTll'G Fa?
'OJRUFE
Closer to home. post menopausal
"omen "ho "ere eJ1.erc1sang one hour
three times per "eek had a posui,·e
calcium balance of 42 mg. per da)
compared to a negative cakrnm
balance of 43 mg. per da) an a non-
e:itercising group.
Exercise has a far greater effect
upon calcium balance 1han does
eating calc1um-nch foods. It is not
ho"" much calcium )OU cat that
counts. It 1s ho" much vour bodv
deposits into the bones. "' ·
If you want to a\oid the ravages of
osteoporosis. !>tan a walking program
now.
There is an old adage that sa)s.
"We come into this world throu~h
the pelvis and leave 1t through the hip
(a broken one. 1hat 1s) ..
J•liu ftllllter, M.D .• •ri,.or of
"Rever1l•1 Hean D/seue" ud "Re--
ver1la1 Dia~te1" (WV1ter Boob), 11
dlrtttor of ne ftiider Well•es•
l~111tlt•te la Newport Bucb.
cnu1sr lnTO S/l VITI GS
SAVE 20 %-50 %
AND MORE
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Elt a ......... tow-Clhclt1 •rd dllt. Md ..... ,._,, blood Piii II ft undlr
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•
•
•
' PAPARA //i
---
Black-ex_ed peas
for NB partygoers
Old South dish
becomes tradition
a t the Aune home·
ByVIDADBAN ..............
restaurant ... said Aue a ...... with
husband Belt. tuxedoed for the black-
tie dinner dance.
Others headed for the Ritz were
Ellea and Belt · WUcH and the
ne.Hre Reltlillues.
Former Newport Beach resident
Polly Jolulstee came from her home
in San Francisco for the gct-totethcr.
"I'm really enjoyin4 livingJhcrc. but I
wouldn't miss this.· she said. For many Newport Beach resi-
dents, the holidays wouldn't be
complete without a stop at Banara
Ame's home.
Guests were m unching on caviar and, crackers and sipping cham~;ne ,..._---------------~
(or whatever) while commenting on
the attractive home's decor. Moose.
elk. antelope. bison and big horn
sheep don't roam but they were
mounted on the walls and all nb-
boncd fo r the hoh(i:a.ys.
They set their "black-eyed pea fix"
for good luck dunng the next year.
'Tm not a Southerner. but I boil up
the peas and throw 1n some tomatoes
and onions. "said Aune. a Montana
native, talking about the Old South
tradition. "One man told me he
didn't trust the peas anymore. He ate
them last year and then lost so much
money in the stock market." laughed
the hostess.
Another male guest loading has
plate at the buffet said one of his
stock's dropped from $40toS1 2. But
without the peas at could have gone to
S 10. he philosophized.
About I 00 frie nds dcoppcd in
during the evening. and then man)
were off to other celebrations.
··That's Erroi Flynn's love ~at
)ou'rc seated on." commented
Nuette nompsoa. "It used to be an
has dressing room. Barbara bought tt
and re-upholstered it.".
Others there included Tom and
Emma Jue Riley, Marla and Gardi
Bergeson, Doll and Auemarlc Ballla
and Harriette Witmer, wearing a
bcau11ful gold and silver brocaded
Chinese court suit. Also there were
daughter Terry Hues with fiancc
Bob CaJlalau, Carl and Pat Ncl11er,
Hal and Kitty Le.Uc and Mickey and
Pbil Rowe.
··w e arc going on to the R112
brothers' dinner tonight at the Ratz
''I've been having this part) for
about 17 years now ... always the same
menu ... the rurke). the beef and the
peas." .\unc said. Barbara Aune •tin the pea..
•
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Reg SIO 'Sffl SJve ~on an a-."'-1rtmem ol evening and
tailored 1cwelrv. plu., natural tone -.td~ Select11.1n will '.tr' an
Fa.<.h1on Jewclrv. 161131 23'7
$8.04-$30.82
AL L SILK SCARVES
Reg Sl2-S46 Luxunous squares and o~l ngs in pnms and
solids. pa tel and brights. From all our best n.irnes. Fashion
AJ:.ce nc . 10
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V INYL HA OBAG -
o ng so QO S:!-l OQ From c ape7.h.'. ;\ntl'n .I' .J P.1·~.1: : I •
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Sclccuon will vary in Handb.tp 1-N
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ETRA LIZARD EMBO ED LEAT HER BA
rag SJ9 99 The houJder bag "tth an out 1dc pocket m bl.tck
bone. whnc or n.iw round m Handb.i~ 186 l 800 ... .,.., ~QlO
•
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, January&. 1988 * Alli.
----. ...
...... ·-...
Bob and AnneBadham
I
i
' ' I
• .-~~-"---~-:-::::::--::::===========--~-~----, '
$1.30-$9:60
..\LL H ..\ '\t Hl) I tR\ -~~~ s: ~~ s:: ""' '-' r-"'' \ .• c:"'t "t.. .:l"uc..'~·"'n "'I ~.::trJ Shee:'
' Kl: t: ... • ·' ~ ... '~:':,,r· ! .l· I.'' ''' 1 ...... ,1,,ncr Fn:.ng Preti\ .md
~,··l f:J~l-.. ~J l l"' ,J-. ·.l!~U.l""' n :..cg f-a~10n:-~Jo
$16-$21.60
I OTO ER LIPPER.
Reg. S20·S.27 Fu'St tun~e\'er s.inn on the l.unoos quahty 20d
comt. rt of I :lloner l""lur c1.,llecu1.1n mclud baste: and fancy
. '' les Leg F.i:Jl1on .. .u .a.le end., J.inuary 19
I
1 • I
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Badham· leaves
\
us contenders .
aµd pretenders
Lame duck congressmen arc something like auto
accident victims. They draw a crowd.
News that Rep. Roben Badham, R-Newpon Beach.
would not seek re-election to Congress brought immediate ·
reaction.
Missing were compliments, plaudits and testimonials for
the departing congressman, though we suspect 12 years m
Wa!hington and 27 years of public service are worth a pat or
two on the back. Perhaps they wilJ come later in Badham 's last
year on the Hill. •
What there was plenty of was jockeying, manipulating
and political positionang.
The contenders and the pretenders alike, aided and
abetted by~h news media1 were eager to establish themselves
as the heir nt.
No fe ¢r than eight hats were tossed into the ring within
24 hours. At that rate, every registered Republican on the
Orange Coast couJd be a candidate by March l. Everyone
from a Tustin card shop owner to a congressional liaison who
would have to pack his carpet bag and move to Mission Viejo
to run is_ claim mg to be a candidate.
Those with no chance at the Republican nomination in
the 40th CongrcssipnaJ District didn't waste time identifying
themselves as front-runners anyway. Those without creden-
tials were quick to declare themselves among the favorites.
It seems an accepted political ploy of the times that
would-be eandidates who suffer from a lal"k of credibility
ensure that necessary commodity by simply declanng 1t
exists. It is a quirk of the times that allows a person to elevate
himself above the pack with the simple declaration. ·-rm the
person to beat." Of course. it did work for Napoleon, except he
had an armv behind him.
Those hopefuls who themselves recognize the fallac} of
twisting Rene Descartes' philosophy of .. I think. therefore I
am" to .. I think lam, therefore it is so·· nevertheless achieve
candidate status with claims of money.
For example. Nathan Rosenberg whose only claim to the
seat is be lost to Bad.ham in 1986 in a landslide. seeks to
establish his stake in the race by announcing fie has raised
$200,000 and has received pledges for another SI 50,000.
If a checkbook was all it took. Rockefeller would have
been president and Don Bren's kid could sit in Congress until
the da} Reagan goes gra}.
But it does require more. Earning a position of public
trust requires more than wishes and a war chest.
The requirements are many and it will be up to the
district's voters. aided and abetted by the same media who
help make the candidates, to unmask the pretenders.
Perhaps even the retiring congressman himself can scan
the crowd and help us separate the well-intentioned
candtdates from the curiosity-seekers and the buzzards who
have gathered around him.
Airport security
Some flight crew members grumbled as the) passed
through airpon metaJ detectors and emptied pocJ..ets of kevs
and change alongside pre-hohda) travelers. ... ·
The tightened security does not go near!) far enough.
Based on unannounced checks b) the government. some
a1rpons failed ume and again to pre\ent access to places and
ramp areas b) unauthorized persons ...
lfanythmg. there needs to be more monitonngofpersons
entering these supposed!) secure areas. If a flight 1s
occasionalh dcla\ed for a few mmutes. so what? That's a
small pnce ·to pa)· for safety.
Macoa fGa.J Telegrapb aad /\'ews.
Wa ll S treet
Jt's been more than t'-"O months since the stock market
crash . Financial analysts and poh11cians are still tr: 1ng 10 son
out "hat happened.
Last m onth. Wall Street's image suffered another blo":
the sentencing of crooked stock speculato r Ivan Boesk'
Boesk} was sentenced to three )'ears 10 jail for consp1rac'
IO an tnSider trading scandal In which he made rnill1onc; of
dollars in illegal dealings.
Boesk) will not go to prison unul \1arch. Then. he
probabl) will serve a li ttle over a )Car and return to his
millions.
Everyday cnmmals who steal pocket change often sene
more time than that .... A sentence of IOyearswith at least frye-
years actuall) spent in pri son. would ha\ e been more
appropriate in Boesky"s case.
Sioux Falls (S.D.J Argus uader
Pilot welcomes comments
The D.111~ Pilot "elcomes )'OUr op1n1ons on matters of pubhc
mten:st.
Letters and longer an1cln of commentary must be signed. They
should be t)J>('d or ckarly wriuen and sent to LETTERS to the
EDITOR. Da1h Pilot. P.O. Box I 560. Costa ~sa. CA 92626.
Pleast 1ncludt ~our address and telephone number so that we may
venf) authorship.
If you prefer 10 ma~C' a verbal statement. you may call o ur WE.RE
LISTENING 1elcphone number -642-6086 -and leave a rttOrded
mcssa1e. Please keep these mes.sages bn~(.
o.r..., Uty (.idDt
,. Olillll
Hlw\( .....
-Cills ...
Sllor ts ["'°' ~c.-..
~-Dirttllr
c.t ...
AO•tfl1~1llt'.-
O::eo '='tor Cllr ,.,, ..
Circlllmcm ~«I.Of
~~ Ofke...., ..
..
.. Individuals whoa re so considerate and timid that they dry their hands
by waving them In thealrratherthan use your n ice guest towels, will
cut Jn fron t of you on the freeway. maklngomcenegestures."
Despite denials, Bush
implicated in lf,rmsdeal
WASHINGTON -At theda"n of reponed that former Cl.\ official
this elect1on 'ear. Vice President Felt\ RodnguC'z was scheduled to
George Bush ieads all contenders. bncf the' ice president .. on the status
Republicans and ~mocrats. in the..· of1he "ar 1n El Sal\ adQr and resuppl~
pres1den11al polls. But his suppon 1$ for the contras." The memo indicated
lu~cwarm and could tum cold over-that "pn,ate'' mone). including
night. profits from the Iranian arms sales.
His b1gges1 scare. assoc1atcs sa~. "'ould be used to resuppl~ the "as the Iran-Contra horror. But up contras. Bush acknowledges meeting
until no"'. he has succeeded in "1th Rodnguez but denies discussing
d1saswc1ating himself from the scan· the Contra suppl\ efTons wtth him
dal He s1mpl~ denied an) 1nvohe-Jul~ 19. 1986 -Bush met in
mcnt He "as a"'are of the Iran Jerusalem "Ith Am1ram N1r. an
in111at1\e and had expressed .. reser· Israeli specialist o n terronsm. Bush
'auons.. .. he said. But he had not been "'as accompanied b) his chief of staff.
pm > to the details He spoke as if he. Craig Fuller. "ho summanzC'd the
had been The Lntle Man Who Wasn't meeting in a 17-paragraph memo.
There "('N1r) described tht' details of the
Y~t tast June. we reponed tht' efTons from last }Car 1hrough the
e'1stence of internal memos that current penod to gain the release of
1mpltca1ed Bush in the scandal. The L' S. hostages." wro te Fuller. The
memos had ~n suppressed. "e memo indicated that an arms deal
rcponcd. b} friends trying to protect "as discussed.
Bush. o" some of the memos have AUJUSt 8.-1986 -Bush ·s national
tuml.'d up. secunt} adviser. Donald Gregg. met
There's not a v.ord in the record "1th Rodnguez. Gregg's memo on the
1nd1cating that Bush uttered an) meeting indicates that Bush·s offict
"'ammg or m1sg1,1ng about the Iran "'as aware of the Iran Contra de.tails.
1n1uatl\'e. The memos. 1n facL imply .. .\ s"ap of "eapons for S was
C'(aCtJ) thC'opposite. Herc·s what they arranged togetaid forthccontras." he
re' eal: wrote.
Feb. I. 1986 -Adm. John Despite this paper trail. Bush
Po1nde,lcr. then President Reagan's continues to deny he was aware that
national Stturity ady1ser, wrote that Iranian arms money would be
Bush not only knew about the Iran d1\ened to thC' contras.
1n111at1,e but strongly supponcd it. A
Poi nde' ter memo suggested that both
Reagan and Bush favored the ar-
rangement with Iran. which turned
into an arms-for-hostages deal
Po1ndc>.1er dedared: "President and
VP arc solid in taking Ute po-sition
1hat we have to try."
April J0.._1986 -r\ bnefing memo
INFANT VICTIMS -Bener
screening of blood donors 1s reducing
the number of infants who get AIDS
'1a blood transfusions. but there 1s
shm ho pe for the ns1ng number of
ba~c.s who pick up the disease
di rectly from their mothers. accord-
ing to a confidential CIA repon
JACK
AIDEISOI
and DAL£ VAN A TT A
"arning agenq cmplo~ees about 1he
risks of the d1sea~
. -\ ccnain number of ~oung AIDS
'1ct1ms are hemophiliacs Other chil-
dren ha"e rccc1,ed blood trans-
fusions for d1ffcrtnt med1e11l r~sons
and have contracted .\IDS through
contaminated blood That group 1s
decreasinJaS the Red Cross and other
organ1zat1ons do a better job of
catching infected blood from donors.
Stopping the transm1ss1on of AIDS
frbm mother to baby 1s not as eas'
"Not all children born to AIDS-
in fcc tcd mothers de' elop the disease.
but those that do die quickly." sa~ s
the Cl~. The repon notes three casts
where "omen who conceived a bab}
"llh infected sperm ~hd not pass the
disease to the babies
.\bout 90 percent of infc-cted preg-
nant v.omen will gi ve the AIDS virus
to their bab1~~ In one case. according
to the Cl.\. a bab)' got AIDS after
birth "hen its mother required a
blood transfusion after dehvel) and
the donor blood earned the A.IDS
'in.ts. The bab) presumabl} was
infected 1hrough the mother's breast
milk
J•cll Alld~rsoa aod D•I~ Vu Alta
ar~ syadic•tH colamoists.
'60 Minutes' huffs, puffs,
chokes -on tobacco story
On "60 Minutes" last Sunday. a
segment was devoted to the
preponderance of heaV)"4eight legal
power defending the tobacco com-
panies. up against the little old lady
left "1th only a fragment ofher lung.
who v.as suing the tobacco companies
for a few m1lh<1Yr dollars\ .. ike
Wallace Yras the hosL ana (with
charactcnstte-andor) he-flashed bade
to the old days when cigarette
-smoking was thought to be cntfrdy
harmless. He ga'•e the viewers a
fragment of a paid ad featuring
Ronald Reagan. pushing some
c1prctte or another. and a second
quick flash of Mike Wallace. 1n the
bad old days .. mel't'handis1ng Philip
Morris ciprcttes.
The plantro axiom of the "60
Minutes" segment was very plain.
What it said was: You can't beat the
ciprcne companies' lepl drcad-
,nouahts with small-time lawyers.
Mom>~er. the hcAvy lcpl people.
earnina SlOO per hour. are harassing
the plaintiffs. asking them whether
thc) had any record of ille&Jtimate
children. venereal discasn. dub fttt
-an)th1ng to per\uade the judge or
jury that the lung can~r was not
ncccssanl) the n:sult of heavy smok-
ina.
TYro rcm1nisccncn in point:
-In the m1d-'SCA. Mike Wallace
launched a network mterroptory.
and his vel) first guest was Miss1s-
sipp1 Sen. James Eastland. Wallatt's
reputauon as a drqon-tlaycr was
lcacndary. and much of 1he world
tunC'd 1n 10 s.ee what. if an)'1f11ni. ~ould be left of Sen. Eastland at the
end of the half-hour.
The ,-icwina world -.-u &AOnasbcd
Wallace bdtavcd like Dinah Shore.
and Sen. Eastland wandbeaed his
wa) 1hrouah thccntire pmocfW.thout
so much u a •bilker's oppos111on
from thf pat 1nterroptor. It was a
while bttrlbat I asked Wal~ how 11
hon He 1old me: "Do you know what
that s.o.b. said to me like 20 seconds
before we went on the air'? He said to
me. •Mike? If yo'all asks me an)
question I don' think (luitc fair. I'm
gonna"' -Wallace went through the
motion of reaching into his pocket as
Eastland t\ad done. pulling out a
package" of c1prettes. · "offer you one
of these Phrtip-Mornnipre~r.and
I'm gonna say. Mike: Hen:. hep
yo'sclfto aniggeTcigarene .....
In those days. any identification of
a brand name as a product assoc-iatC'd
wtth blacks would have meant.
roughly speaking. the end of tht
commercial affair. Ciprette smoking
wasn't 11 ~ucst1on of health. but of
caste. Ph1hp Moms wantro to be an
image cigarette. The SOCJal emphasis
these days 1s on the hann cigarettes do
to the ignorant classes.
A second reminisccntt. Two
m.onths ~o. a scholar died io New
Haven. Conri .. a arntlcman of ~
mopohtan trainina and superior in-
tell1ience. He read S.nsknt as rudily
as English. and ~knew nactly what
1t meant when. opcnina one of his
(three pcr day) cigarette packages he
re1d the wamina that tobl«o is in the
opinion of the suraeon acneral dan~rou.s to your health
Mike Wallace 1clls us now on TV
lhat more people dte every )'eat Crom
hav1n1 smoked c~11m1cs than from
drunken drivina. whoop1na cou&h.
hiccups and lis1e01n1 to Ocmocrauc
orators. Thost of us who are not equi~ to make independent tacn-
t1fic Jud&ments ba\e only our tenses
to '° by. and the ans~ to the
qUH11on, "Arc Clprcnes harmful and
• 1n man)' euct ckadl)"'' i plainh' )ft
to thr modcratcl)' alcn penon. ne"cr
mind the Rcnaiuance scholar.
WILLIAM F.
8ucKLEY
the tine. -rhaHoba~ isn't mffriy 1t
pleasurable sensual distraction. hke
the kind of thing Ronald Rcapn and
M 1 kc Walla<'e used to push. It 1s not to
be confused with pickles. or chilies
Jalapenos. It is. rather. in a class with
manJuana and cocaine: A drua con-
sumed with a hiah indden~ of
mortal consequence.
This docs not automalically alter
the ltpl picture. The lady on "60
Minutes," so arrantly indianant with
the tobacco companies. wasnota~cd
b)' Mike Wallace the question: "How
much pleasure did you take from
smoking durin& the 37 years )OU acknowlcd~ hav1n1 smoked?"
It 1sn·t that such a question is too
highbrow to ask a humbteex-smokcr.
If 1t had been asked.of the Rena1s-
sanccsc.bolar_ he'd have an1wcred; ··1
took huat pleasure from smokms."
Whether bt'd ha"e said. on his
dt'~lbtxd. that he was alad to have
taken up the blbtt 1n cart) life. one
an't say. B"t that. after all. is an
unfair q~uon his hkc ask1n1 Mata
Han. when she was becked up apinst
the wall before the finna squad.
whttht-rshe wasalad to have adopted
~pionaec.u a P"Qft»aon.
l wlib loMcco were to dcvdot> a
Dutch t'lm daSt-ut. and fack from the
kmdl) putwn of the tanh. But lO
blame its suowaJ on ulhvan le
C'rom..,,cll & Cravath It Oabbs It
Ed•'lrd Bennett W1lhams 1s a
ph11otoph1Cal 1"am
AJfNWSU.S
Col•••W
·is it a
sin to
be nice?
•
"Whatever happened to courtesy?"
RO'l asked me ~ht other day.
I thought about 11 fo r a few seconds..
I hadn't C\en heard tht word lately
except on TV ... "This program is
brou~ht to you through the courtesy
of....' Personall). f don't think
coun ts) has anything to do with the
sponsoring of a program: shrewdness
might be a more accurate word.
J'toz 1s from the South where even
today most people. )Oung and old ,
still sa} "Yes Ma'am a[ld No
Ma'am." and boys and men stand up
when a lad) comes into the room.
She has li ved in Cahfomia long
enough not to eApect this treatment
from e~e-ryone: she ""as talking about
good manners in genC'ral.
Thank )OU. You're welcome. Par-
don me. Please. Ma) I help you?. I'm
sort) -"'e sull hear th~ ex-
pressions from a number of people.
bu1 most of them mumbled in a
perf unctol) manner.
(',e been bumped. shoved. and
pushed b) people who mutter. -Par·
don me." 1n a 1one that can be
translated ... "Out of the way. ad1ot."
More than once I'' t told ttie person
behind me 1n a checkout hne to go
ahead of me 1fhe (it's usually a male)
has j ust a few Items Rarely do I get a
thank-~ ou -usuall' )USt a grunt.
Roz wasn·t speaking just of in-
sincere mouth1ngs. She 1s distressed
becaust" rudeness and 1ncons1dera·
uon are common nov.. and genuine
concern and helpfulness are o n the
"ane Is it because "Care all in a rush to
get v.here v.e'rc going and do what we
have to do? We're not onl~ not taking
time to smell the flo"crs along the
v.a~. ""e don't take tht' 11me to point
them out to someone "ho wants to
smell them.
Age. strange!~ enough. 1s not a
reliable indicator of rude.ness. Sure.
then: are a lot of 1mpol11c young
people. and "'c presu me it's because
the~ ha' en ·t been taught proper
manners. But there are also a lot of
1mpoh1e people of an age when
manners werC' taught both at home
and at school. What's their excuse.,
Often r, e e:\penenced considerate
and helpful treatment b> teenagers
It's not becau\e I'' e reached the age
"'here I ha' e to be helJ>('d across tht
s1ree1. or need someone to cam
pack.a.JCS for me. lt'sa genuine gesture
of polueness and cons1derat1on. and
it's appreciated
Behc' e 11 or not. r, e e'en had' el)
)OUngdm ers let me ea~ into a hneof
traffic in front of them. And I've been
refused the same fa, orb) dO\ers old
enough to be m~ parents
I'm not going 10 get into manners
on the f~v.a> There 1s a man$e
chcm1caJ reac11ori that takes over in
some otheN-1se normal people when
the~ get behind ihe wheel This has
been observed b\ m1lhons of dnvers.
I nd1' 1duals "'ho arc so considerate
and t1m1d that the' dn their hands b'
"'a' mg 1hem 1n th~ air rathC'r than u~
)OUr nice guest (0\loCIS. will cut '"
front of you on the frec~;a~. making
obscene gestures
Roz and I related some of the
expencnces. good and bad. we've had
involving counes> and she ended the
conversa11on wtth. "Some11mes sin 1s
easier to bear than bad manners.··
She's nght. Going o"er the hst of
the SC' en sins-anger. co' etousncss.
env). gluttony. lust. pndc and sloth
-I found several of them tha<°
"ouldn't be as ofTens1ve to me as
certain acts of bcha"1or.
Please. no letters. I'm not advocat-
ing sin. but some contemptuous
behavior motl\ ates me to indulge tn
one ofthost sins -anger
C..lrrm.ai1t Au WeU1 ll¥a ill
L.paN'6ftJ.
TOD AY IN HISTORY
Today is Wroncsda). Jan. 6. the
sixth da) of 1988. There arc 360 days ten m the )Car.
Today's Highlight in Hmory:
Ten years aao: President Jimm)
Caner returned to Washin&ton. end-
ina a l6.000-milc. nine-<lay journey,
sayina he was more ccnain than ever
that communist nations .. want to
avoid war and have peace as m'Uch as
~'C do ...
Five ycan aao: President Rcqan
signro a bill boosttn& tM psoJane tax
by a nickel to nine cents per pl Ion. to
raise mone~ for road repair and other
transp0rtauon needs.
One )tar aao: Tht U.S. Senate
\'Otro 88-4 to establish an I I-member
panel to hold pubhc hearinp uno the
Iran-Contra affair.
Toda) 's Birthda) ·Comedian Joe)
Adams IS 77. C11"CS$ Loretta Y OUn& IS
JS. ctor<omedian Danny Thomas
is 74. Pollster Lou Harris is 61.
Blue1nm m usiClan Earl SM.las is 64.
Former automaker John -i.. [)c..
Loran 1s6l St.nlCr )lv11S)n)S 1sS4.
Actrns Bonnie Frartkltn is ..... Golfer
NanC) l~t 1s 31 Thouaha for T odi . "ll i' the
t,..cd)' of the 9tOrld lhal no OM
knows y,hat he donn•t how -and
the Im a man knows. the m0tt sutt
he as 1hl1 he noW'5 ~ef)1h1na. .. -
Jo tt Cary. Briti h author ••••••••••••••••••••••••r ... ~as that he had lain down with the
Now. ~c can Stt from the way in
wtuch ''60 M1nutH.. trcattd thc
C'tlltette qudteon uactly what the
an11 -n1C'Ollnc tratqy is. It 1i 10
pcrJuade somfOnc. somewhere alona
....... I'.--~ •• 1jfltlktllel
Nletul.ll. Th Aa«'Mt.ftl rra.
.. •
~·
* ..., Plllt WEDNESDAY JANUARY 6 1988 I : J
Kings tie,. remain unbeaten over past tour NHL starts. 82.
Harbor, Edison, Huntington Beach girls win In basketball. 83 . •
Just no end
to challenge
of karate life
Costa Mesa· s Rice
h'as found h e· s-
really on his own
By RICHARD DUNN
O.., .... C.1 ¢1 .f I
His temperament tov.ard school
was 01Tens1 \C so he learned sclf-
defen~
Steve Race. v. ho v.-ould ha' e been a
Rhodes scholar had he absorbed high
school Ille he d ad karate. has had his
share of k1cl s on the mat. But also his
share of chopp~ s11uauons.
Manaal an s. '>'h1ch has become has
first lo ' e "as a challenge for R.1ce
when he first staned out. Now he 1s
the main challenge.
.. The more I got involved an It. the
more I cnJO)ed 11:· Rice said of has
earl} ~ears m karate 41 was hk'e a
~ponge ··
Race. a third degree black belt v.-ho"s
the top 1..om ~t1tor for Bob White s
Karate: School 1n -Costa Mesa. has
been soaking up the nation's best
\\hen tm \\est Coast .\11-Star team
fo ught against an East Coast team.of
all-stars. he defeated Bath Blanks. the
nation's '-o I fi ghter. from the
.\tlanuc team last September an ~ew
) orl C It~ ·s \i1ad1so n Square Garden.
been a black belt for 1i'e 'ears
.. I staned karate because I al'>'a\.S
'>'anted to t~ and go do u:· said Race.
v.ho v.as ranked lftth 1n the nauon in
1986 but v.as i.tnrankej last \Car "E'e~th1ng JUSt l ind of clac ked for
me an larate This 1s v. hat I realh
'>'ant to do Before this I'd ne .. e'r
n~all} taken an) thing as far as I could
I thinl I can go a long '>'a~ v.1th this
") '>'3nt 10 tra\CI l'>'h1ch IS what ll
tales 10 be ra nked> The big thing for
me no.,.. 1s to t~ a nd get sponsors for
that Once in a v. h1le I can afford Co go
some'>'here This \ear I '>'on't be
ranked becauSt-( didn't get the
tra,ehng figh11n~ 1n like I'd hoped.
I'm ti) mg to find a sponsor ..
When R1te v.as 15 he staned
'>'o rk1ng at a boat 'ard He wasn·1
interested 1n t11gh SC'hool. so he
graduated earl~ and began to earn his
O'>' n monc~ so he tOuld do the things
he wanted
Leaming kar•ttc: v.a~ on the top of
the hst
He decided 10 tortc:ll his ti n.al hours
of high school -he: graduated from
Estancia 1n I q~4 -and t~ his leg an
l.arate
··t d1dn·1 hke !>(hoot too much:·
..aid Rice ··t got along O K. but n was
1ust bonng High '>Chool '>'as a bab~
s1111ng session It '>'as qune "as~ and I
'>'anted to st.an mal.ang mone) .\t
that ume. I v.as mone~-hung.r) I
'>'anted to team ~rate but I d idn't o..,~,..._ '°f ... kllwwh
Steve Rice dellvera a booking heel kick to_ the bag. To be ranl..ed. hov.e' er. you need to
tra,el and be sponsored Race has (Plea.e aee RJCE/B2) Bruce Leamer (left) abeorbe a roa.ndhou.e kick by Rice.
PCAA: It could be the best balanc~d league in U.S.
-.
The PC AA might not be the best
confere.nce an the country. but It ma)
be the best balanced of any. Paci fie
and Fresno State are good teams and
could finish at the bouom. By the
....,a). so could about Sl't other teams.
including UCl.
Ltfs look at some of the games
pla)ed last Saturda> Sta nford defeats
~ttle Pacific. 83-78 ano,enime.
lJNC-.\shev1lle tops Cal. 58-53. That
does not help the Pac-IOor We-st
Coast basketball
Notre Dame 68. laSalle 59 LaSalle
lost to Penn. That ....,as Penn·s onl)
.,.. an this sc.ason. Digger (Phelps) pla)s
about IOtou&hgamesever') year and
has about 18hecan usually win.
Result-NC AA In\ l!C
'.'lonh Carolina beats L'C L .\.hut
not nearh as bad as Cal did You
figure th1sgamtou1-I can't
'.'lo. I .\nzona loses to Ne"
~1ex1co. There goes West Coast
basketball again The V1talesand ~cGu1resand all the o ther eastern
and m1d.,..es1em "honks" v.111 hop on
It
It Just goes to pro'e hov. balanced
co llege basketball 1s . .\lsochalk up
another o ne for the ho me coun team
(tough to beat :--.:e" Mexico 1n the
.. Pu'"before P .OOOcraz1es> \\hat
else 1s there to do an .\lbuquC"rqueon a
Saturda~ night,.
~~~~~~~~~--------
BILL
MuWcAN
Lool bacl atJohn \\ ooden·s I 0
'-C .\.\champ1onsh1psm I~ ~ears at
l C-L.\andcons1der'>'henthatv.11l
hJppen again ~ot m }Our hfe11me
and \urel\ not m mine It 1s the
gn~at~st streal an the man' 'ears of
spon s "hen \OU consider hov. man'
D1' 1s1on I college basletball tcams
there are The number stand~ close to
300
0
E' enonC' atv.a's asks me" ho I
thanl '>'.1ll v.1n bet~cen so-and-so I
ha' e a~at ansv.erfor that question
If! kne.,.. who .,..ould "''"·I "ouldqu11
coaching and h .. ~an Las\' eg.as and
hang out at all the spom books 1n
to'>' n I '>'ould ha' ea S500.000 house
and dm e a Ro lls The onl~ other gu~ s
who at .... a,sl.no>A '>'h1ch teamsv.111
v.1n arc th·e spon s" n ters v. ho &l ' e
~ouall theans.,..ers .\fTER the game
0
It 1s en10' able 10 be a coach and
ha' c almost e' e~one thinl )OU are
sman The onl\ trouble 1s \OU ha' e 10 pla~ games and peopleJ 1seo,er \OU
are not~ sma n It is a greatjob in the
ofT-St.'ason Coaches male their mis·
tales in the public e) e \1ost o t ) ou
ma~e JUSt as man~ or more but not
man' other peQPld.no" O h v.ell 11
1ss1-11l eas1erthan '>'or\;m g I gu~s
~ .....
.\I \rtcGuire and John \\ ooden
mal e much more mone' now since' the'~ left coaching \1cGu1re o n
tele' 1s1on and speal1ng engagements
lataboutS ()II{ a.:rad..1and'-'ooden
doingcommuc1als \fa~ Ix that as not
a bad v.a~ to go .\s for Dick\ it.ale he
could nnt coach and sull ma~C's more
mone' B1lh Pack.eris. b\ far. the ~t
ol thC' T\ ariah m becau~ he does his
humeworl doon't make rash.stau--
ment sand realh s~d1es the game
\\ C' ha'e threee~-pla,ers in the
'B ..\ but ooh ~n \1cb<>nald 1s v.1th
th<' same team 1 GoldC"n St.ate) he
stan<'d the ear .... uh Johnn' Rogen
wen 1 from Sacramento to ci~ eland
and Bobb' Thornton from:--;"" York
IC Phi adelph1a Tod Murph') bas
IOtn<'d on Brooks with ~ban) 10
the: C Bo\ Brooks 1s pla}1nggrcatand
st.aning f •r them and Murph) v.111
star. a) soon a!I he has been there
av. h11C' and 2cts in shape. Watch :!-Our
(Plea.e eee MULL1GA.l'f/B2)
Eagles rally past
Mustangs, 56-40
He went out doing
·what he did best
Curtis . Ruj)Saleacl
Estancia; Lions.
Seahawks rip foes
Make Cunis and C'hns Rupsa each sco~ 16 points to lead EstanC1a High
to a 56-40 wan o'er cross-town n val
Costa Mesa Tuesda) night in a bo)s
basketball non-league game at Estan·
c1a.
Costa Mesa (J..9) ;umped to a 6-0
tead but Estanc1a (t0-5)crawled back
and took the lead for good at I 0-8 at
the end of the first quaner. In the
second period. Cunis scored 11
points as the Eagles extended their
advantage to 24-17 at the half.
The Ea.gles. who outsco~ Costa
Mesa 19-11 in the founh quaner.
connected on 12 of 19 free throws.
while the Mustangs went to the hne
only four tunes and made three.
Paul Kos led Costa Mesa with I 0
points.
Elsewhere 1n non-league play:
El Toro IS, F ... &ala Valley 7': The
Chargers.. led by Bret Johnson's 29
points. held a 40-32 halftime lead and
the Barons were ne~r able to recover
as El To ro wo n on Its home Ooor.
scored 14 points each for Fo untain
Valle~. v.h1ch shot 35 percent 1:!9-
of-82 1 from the fl oor and 63 percent
(I 4-of-22) from the free throw hne.
Wea,er dished olTa team-high eight
assists and Borgqu1s1 handed out fi, e
El T-uro out.scomi the Barons.
24-IQ. an the second quaner
The Barons had JUSI eight tum-
0' ers v. hile the Chargers had 16. but
El Toro was 23-of-33 (69 perccnt)
from the hne. Huke added nine
rebounds for Fountain Valle) . .,..h1ch
staned the season 8-0 before losing to
Capistrano Valle).
The Barons bcjm Sunset League
acuon Friday against Ocean View at
home.
Oceu View 80, Long Bead 1 Poly
40: The fact that ttR Seahawks could
reverse a 72-71 loss to the Jackrabbits
in non-league pla~ was not surpnsing.
but m putting Long Beach Pol) awa)
~n its home-counhy 40 poin111s one
of the most lopsided los~ in Poly
h1stOf).
The victor) b) the Scahawks (5-6)
broke a Pol> home winning streak of
31 games..
All hands shared in the victor') with
the play of ~~es Tim Pelonts (six
reounds) and John Moore (five
points. as w-cll as absorbina three
charges) standing out for Ocean View.
The Scahawks, led by the sconng of
Greg Evans (20). Todd Nonnan (13)
and Cnus Rice ( 11 ). connected on S4 ~rccnt of'their shots from the field
(J9-of-72), while hm1Un& Pol)' TO Just
25 percent from the field. ,,.._.......
M a.ra\·ich. -10. die
---while playing pickup
game of ba ket ball n
By KEN PETERS
P.\S.\DE" .\ -··p stol Pete·
~tara' 1ch. the shagg) ·ha1red llopp' -
sod.ed sensauon who pos~'sed an
almc1s1 m\St1cal sl 1ll v.11h a N.sl e1-
ball lea\ es an and ehble mpnnt l)n ·1s
spon
··\\hen I go 10 theSt', -~l g_J'Til"'
and I St"e thc.-se halfllmC' ,h,,w, "h<'re
the 11.h get Jow n on their hcl 1e\ and
Jnhblc the Nil or spin ltil· ru. on
their linger that's lhe P"t l ''lll'n
F 11z.,1mmons '>'h, , 1J,h,·J
\lara\lch v.11h thl .\t.:lntJ l!J"k'
said
"He lea' es this µme: v.11h J 1."~.h'
\h,c;t pla~er. don·t ·
\Iara' 11.:h. v.ho rel't'nth n•,Jlkd
that he: e'en slept\\ 1th a h.i' dt°'J I J'
a '1..1u ng ter collapsed and J 11·J
Tu('WJ.~ v.t111C' pla,ang 1"1 a p1,kur_
p mC' at First tllurcll of the 'aian·nc
H1.. "a"
"He'll be remembt'rt'd a "3'' Nr·
lll ularl' v. hen v.c: ~· 'me ll'u''''-
ham:d (1J w nh drooping ~x ._, \l.'.l!lJ-
ing on some scm1-darlened u'un l'r
an a ~ ard after e' e~ o ne el~ ha' ~l,Ol'
home HC''ll ~ shoot1ni a N\let and
w.:-"'"remember ~1e ·· s.a1J D1k
Bro"'n. current coach at Lliu !>1:ina
late L n1\C~1\\ v.hl"f'C \1Jr3, 1,h
bel..·ame rollC"ge 0b.lc;l<'tb311's al ·l•ml'
5'onng leadc-r
Fountain Valley auard Jim Borg-
quist scored 20 points .. including two
three-point aoals. and 6-5 center
Kevin Ande~n (nine points) pulled
down 11 rebounds. b\Jt It wasn't
enough as the Barons lost for only the
second time an 12 games.
Tom Weavtr and Tim Huke. both
of whom had a thrtt-point goal.
It was a season biJh for Evans, who
entered with a scon na averqe of 7.2
(Pleue eee PR&PS/84)
Pete lla.raricb. one of the aame'• all-time are.am. dJed from
a heart attack Tuesday after playtnc ~ a pickup aame.
.. The d.a) he v.a oom. ht) dad rut a
baU in lus hand and be pla~N "1th
th.11 b3sletb311 (\ e~ di\. hC' grcv. ur
w 1th 1t." recalled Fttzs1mmon~ no"
Phocn1\ uns director of pl:Her
personnel.
Recalling Pistol l?ete, the Pied Piper of Sollfh basketball
I J AUm:N WILSON ,, ..........
NEW O RLEAN -obody e'er put
football fans into basketball stands tht wa)
.. Pistol Pete .. Mar'lnch did. making con,eru
to ..,hat had bttn a nq)ected spon in the South
.,llh h11 ball-handhna m111c and prolific
1+---sconna.
Ma,_, 1ch. 40. collapsed dunna a peckup
pmc v. tth f nends in Pasadena on TUt!dly and
wu pronounced dead lc\J than an hour ]atrr. ~ caute of death. fir1t ~poned to be a l\e.an
attack. "' undctcmuned. .. "He "'il 1hc Pied J>;ptr. said lll
: Mt<'~ary. former head ch at Lou1~
Slate nt\crJtt) and an ISSIJ\llH •hen
Mara,1ch .,..as pla)1na.
"The au) was eltttncal v. 1th the baslet-
ball. What he couldn't do 1"1th n ~dn•t bttn
1n~nled )Ct h ope~ a ncv. era in the
ba.s._ctba.11 ~orld Bob CouS) dnbbkd behind
his bad. and all of that. but Pete picked up
•here Cous)' left ofT."
8&KC1betl we hatnl reprdcd -.hen
Mara' 1ch cnrollfd at LSL' tn ~966 that he
pla)ed hi\ collcasate home pm 1n tht S.
seat llOCUltu~ Ckpanrntnt artna Gamn "-ttt
scheduled earl) orlattto '' oid ronftteuna v.11h
st<d tho and rodtos
The I S.000.~t l.SU mbl) enter
opened 1n IC> I, the season aOer Mara~t<'h
finl.Jhcd. It' \Ill referred to •~ ~TM H001t,
That Pete Built·· "I don"t than~ the .\~mbh C'tnter would
Freshmen were 1nehg1blt-for 'ars1l' h3' e bttn completed v.'htn 1t "'as. if P!te. had 1."0m~t111on v.hen 1ara' teh taned. and the not made a bastetba.ll fan out of (then·
cramped .. c.., .... Palace .. arena v.ould fill for 10' cmor) John McKe11hnl.-said Bud John-f~hm.in games iamn' Mara' sch. th~ son Johnson was pons informahon dutttor
'empt' again v.hen th.t '"'lrlll) took the roun. · at LSL' dunng the \lara' •ch )CU'S and later
He led the nation 1n 5ronn& throuah each sef\ cd a:s pubhc rdatJon!. dirtt'lor •1th tht Jau
of ha three 'arsal} season tow1ni .l.66 v. ~n \lara \ lth w-a ~ttma 8 rtterd 1n
point TMt still l&nds a one of 16 C ·~ Orleal'\
rtt0rd he b Id ~lud1na the sana~ n "~k~C'lthcn penonall) mo'C'd tht
m:ar\ of U 1 he r'C'd tn ~19 . h1 tcntot ~mbh Center proj«1 Ull on the l.qjilaturc' ~r He v.a~ All-.mcnca an thrtt of h•s pciorii la:st. Pl'tc tum~ on thl' \.C'fnOt of the ~"It l . ~~--~tc-and~abaslClbell fanoutofham.. ot the fint tame. n •a harder to art a .. If 1t hado't bttn f; r ~tc, Dalt Bro"'n
11d.t t to an ketbell mt than 1t • to (currtnt h) ~°"kt ha'e had to • r\ h1
art o~ to a foot Nil pmc. (Pleue eee llAlt.A V1CR/8S)
• )
Iht' tall that he: died pla~ang ·tnr
g..srH' h( ll•' l'd ~o much that's r n ,
.\l"l ronK '>'ere \Iara' 1ch·s final
w rd' J' r1.·, .>untcJ b' Gan b d1ck..
Jr "'lrp!J,.r -·tiC'halr-.coun pme.
\IJ'J' , .... "kl u I ha,en't pla~ed
i...., ii-, r 1h1. pas~ ~ear. an an '8.\
k~l nJ' µrne I need tl-do this more
'll·r l'Tl 'l";ilh t&:hng good: ··
l J' 'l"\: lkJ
\\.ifJ' 1,h :urned 10 '>'all av.ay
J l'lJ 1mml·J .ll( ' tdl lCI the floor.-
L •d1d .. w d Hl ost .:onsc1ousness
j J l'lll r•, t "l' I' c him "'ere fu tile ...
H1. J 1l·u JI >J ;.i a m PST. accord-
int, ll' Ul \ 1, Ph<"rson of the St Luke
\hJ1,a1 \ uitl.'r hi.' said the cause of
J-.Jth had not tx~n determined.
~fr "'d" in ( ahiom1a to appC"ar
T., ..Ja, J ttcrnl'On on a C'hnst1an
rJ,!I\' ~hl'" Dr James Dobson·s
"FtXU\ On f am1h ..
Sutton back
with Dodgers
a t ag e of 42
LO .\'GEL f .\P) -Don
~u·wn a Ji\1..game "inner "'ho spent
thl' tirst 15 'ears ofh1s 'major-le.ague
1.arl'C'r pi tching for the Los ~ngcks
[)(_)Jg<'~ returned to the Nauonal
League dub Tuesda~
·· .\i. long ac; I go out and do my Job
and Jon l C"mbarrass m)sclf. I'll keep
pill hing_" the 4~-:!-car-otd utton said
alll.'r 11 "'3S announ~ that he had
1gnc-d a one-\e3r contract with the
[)(_)dgc"
· uuon returns afkr an abs.tn<'C of
sc' en St'asons He became a free a,cnt
~hen the .\n.gels did not te-Sllfl b1m
aflerh1s contract c\p1mi at the end o(
the IQ ~ ~ason
· Hr pointed out that the Oodlen
"o n the \\orld $('.nes in 1965. when
he v. as 1 n the m 1 nor le .. ucs. and •in
in I q I. the scason after he left for
Ho uston
.. I', c ~ta lot of aoaJs 10 mL:ireer
and r, e achte\.ed most of t -
" m S.000 mo.mp.. 3,000
itnkrou~ But m~ aoal as a 21-yar.
old rool 1e 1 n OodlCno•-n was to wtta
a \\ orid r, c ncvcriJttn abk '°
do thal and I surc•'Ouki hke todoit-
utton • th ~ Oocllcn .._
the-' los\ the Wot1d Stncs in 1966.
• 4 ·7 and .:. • althoup ~ dida'\
pl.a\ v.Mn lhe' S-c:pl b)• lM On IC\1n '66
unon said 11 -.·u "bnd Of ~nr
' t ~ m1W'd the '65 and ·a I wOftd
(Pl--eee SUTTON/Ill)
'
BUTTON •••
~;~~ .. 'ps. lddin& "I hope lO be ~someth1na about it this ti~ ...
He was al10 with the Milwaukee
'ltewers whtn they lost to St. Louis in llit '82 5mH.
Tht naht-hander's career record is
.. 32l-2SO. He was 11-11 with a 4.70 EJlA in 34 st.ans with the Angels last
I )'tAf •
Milwaukee clips
lowly LA, 98-82
Bullets snap 5-game
skid: Jordan (3 1) puts
Bulls up in 93-77 win
spurt 1n the final I :42 that included
fi, e points b) Craig Hodges. r: S~ttonwonh1s300thgame on June Los .\ngeles shot only 30 percent in
the first h;ilf. missing 32 of 46 field
goal attempts.
11, 19861 when the Angels beat Texas
S-l at Anaheim Stadium.
.. We are extremely happy to have
Don Sutton return to the Dodgers'
OfPni.z.ation." said Fred Claire. the
tram's executive vi~ president.
.. Don has been a quality pitcher
Elsewhere in the N BA Tuesday:
Bullets 101, Nets 97: In Landover.
From Tiie Associated Press
throughout his career. We know he
will make an outstanding contribu-
tion to the Dodgers in 1988."
Sutton first signed with Los An-
selcs in 1%5. In his rookie season of
1966 he was 12-12 with a 2. 99 ERA
'4 and 209 strikeouts.
Terry Cummings scored 20 points
and the Mil\.\aukee Bucks held off a
late rally Tuesday night to beat the
Los Angeles Clippers 98-82. in M1l-
waul ee.
Jack Sikma added 16 points and
Paul Presse) 15 for Milwaukee. which
snapped a t""o-game losing streal...
Md .. Bernard King scored I 5 ofhis 27
points 10 the fourth quarter and
Mo~ Malone scored 26 points as
Washington snapped a fi,e-game
losing sin"ak by defeating the New
krse\1 Netl> in Wes U nscld's debut as
the B'ullcts' head coach.
Siins 100, Knicks 9S: In New York.
Walter Da \IS scored St'' en of his :?:?
points 1n the final 3:38 of tbe game.
including the go-ahead basket \.\llh
I: 17 left. leading the Phoen1~ Suns
?'er the Ne" York Kn1cks.
~ Sutton, who played in four All-Star
pmcs, remained with the Dodgers
through the 1980 season.
Mike Woodso n had 19 points.
Mtl'hael Cage had 18 and Quinlin
Daile> 17 for the Clippers. who
suffered their sc' en th straight loss. He signed with the Houston Astros
as a free agent 1n 1980. was traded to
Milwaukee in 1982. to Oakland in
~.. l 984 and to the Angers in 1985: He re-
l 5"igned with th~ Angels as a free agent
later that year.
Sidne) Moncriefs 3-point Jumper
wtth 6:37Jeft10 the third quanerga\e
the Bucks their biggest lead at 24
points. one they matched again at
74·50 with ~8 seconds left in the
period. But then the Clippers went to
"o r!.. behind 11 points from Daile) in
a ~0-~ run that cut Milwaukee's lead
to .,6-70 "'uh 7::? I left.
Bulls 93, Pacers 77: In Chicago. the
Bulls. kd b' Michael Jordan's 31
points and a· stifung defenSt'. turned
bad . the poor-shooting Indiana.
Pacers for their second consecuti ve
'1ctor) after losin&. fi, e straight'.
"In 1980 when I left it was because
tbcy thought m~· value was a lot less
than I thought 1t was.." Sutton said.
"In the meantime we have all agreed
that it was a business dec1s1on then
and I would do nothing d ifferent if it
happened all over toda). I don't
i'egret leaving but r m happ) to ~
back.~·
The Buci...s stopped the spurt "1th
se,cn straight points. including a
three-point pla) b> ikma. Mon-
cnef s basket "'•th 4·55 to go made tt
83-70
Hawks 81, Pistons 71 : In .\tlanta.
CliffLc\lngston had 15 points and 14
rdlQund'> and .\tlanta held the
Pistons to their lo""est scoring total in
IA·tro11\ _\ 1 -~l·ar h1stol').
Suuon. a crs1dent of Laguna Hills.
l · is the Dodgers· all-time leader with
230 victories. 175 losses. 534 games.
Pace .Mannion scored eight points
for the Bucks in the final four
minutes. Cummings had nine in the
final q uarter.
Warriors 1%9, Spurs 119: In Oak-
land. Tan Teagle came o ff the bench
to !>Core 2~ points to help the G o lden
S1atc \\ arr10~ post onh their fifth 'ino~ of the season "11h a tnumph
0 ' a the an .\n1on10 purs
• J.
"i
b
~
J
··.
...
' .
· 517 starts. 3. 728 innings pitched. 52
shutouts. 2.652 strikeo uts and 3.200
hits.
Sutton is 11th on the all-ume list in
'1ctories. fifth with 3.530 strikeouts.
Mil"aukee took a ..$6-31 halftime
lead b) outscoring the Clippers 26-1 4
in the serond quarter. The Bucl..s
closed the sluggish first.half wtth a 9-2
Blaiers 126, Sonics 114: In
Ponland. f l'm Pone r scored a
r:m·er-h1gh JI -points leading the
Portland T rail Blazer.; to a 'u:ton
0' er the . eaulc Super nics. ·
S PORTS BREAK
Big 10 basketball
coaches snubbed
~
by Bobby Knight
From fte Associated Prt"ss
For the second lime m as many )Cars. m
Indiana coach Bob Knight \.\as con-
spicuous b} his failure to pamcipate in a
telephone news conference b~ Big Ten
basketball coaches Tuesda}.
"I think Bob bas his own thoughts on the media ..
May~ it's j ust inronvenient for him." said Mic higan
St.ate Coach Jud Heathcdle. "Ma~ be he sees no purpose
in it. I don't know."
No one was availab1e in the Indiana sport<;
• 1nformauon offi ce to explain
Knight's failure to panscipate
with the nine othe r coaches.
Bill Fneder o f M1ch1gan was
traveling Tuesda) but a ten·
minute mtcrv1c"' he d id earlier
was pla}ed dunng the ne"'s
conference.
Mark Rudner. di rector of th<.'
Big Ten's sporu m format1on
bureau. said panic1pauon was
volunt.ar).
~t Rudner said he ""as informed
b) the sports information department at Indiana last
week that Knight would not take pan.
Last year. afterbemgchasused for fa1hng to appear
for the conference's pre-season ne"'s conference.
Knight made this season's meeting in ~o,cm ber
From there. matters progr~~ q uiet I) unul 'o'
21 . when pulled his team off the floor 1n the middle of an
exh1b1t1o n game against a touring So' 1'et team
That incident came after Knight "'a" &l' en h1~
third tec hnical foul and "as foll o"'ed qu1ckl) b' a
public apolog)
Quote of the day ...
Willie WUsoa, center fielder for the Kansas
Cll) Royals. as he contemplated his last '1s1t of
the season to the Mctrodo me "'here the
Minnesota Twins have compiled the hest ho me
record 1n baseball: "Damn. I hate that place. The
worst pan is those long steps up to the clubhouse.
It seems like forever. espec1alh "'he n 'ou loSt'
The) 've got )OU mumbling to ~·ourself. 's""eanng
all the wa~ to the locl...er room ~fan. I hate that
feeling.~
Toney, 76ers continue at odds m PHI L.\DELPHI .\ -Ph'i ladelph1a
gu-afd-ndrcv... T°'nc~. apparenu~
suspended indefinttel) forlea' 1ng the team
on the West Coast last "'ed... sa' s hr was
given perm1ss1on to go ho me b) Coach Matt Goukas
.. T here's apparentl) a cred1b1ht) problem wm<.'-
where:· Bob \\ nght Tone) 's attorne). said a hl'r
aeneral manager John ~ash announced the act1vn late
Monda'r.
"I haven't been able to na1l 1t down." Wnght -;aid
fromh1s officeTuesda) in Lafa}ette. La .after speal...ing
to Nash. ".\ndrev. 1s \e~ upset . I JUSt don't l...nov.
what 1he) 're doing."
Legislative dart for Irwindale
SAC R.\M ENTO -Assembl> [i] S~ker Pro Tern Mike Roos 1s renewing p c Cl•
bid to ha'c the Legislature adopt n~ la"'s
to prevcnl Irwindale from using bond
financing to build a new stadium for the Los .\ngclc\
Raiders of the National Football League.
As the Le&Jslature returned to ""orl Monda\. th<.'
Los Anatles Ormocrat lned to maneuver one of the
bills throu&h the .\~scmbl) Rules Committee~ st could
be assigned to another panel qu1ckl).
But the mo"c was blocked by ..\sscmbl~ man Otc1'.
Mount.JO), R-Art'ad1a. one o f the comm1tt~e members
Mo un'JO). whose dmnct includes ll"\lo'tnd3lc. \.\IS able
to postpone '-Ollng on the leg.is13t1on unttl Thursda).
San DeVils tab Marmie coach
'
Arizona signs GWC players
Two Golden Wt>st Coll~c football pla~ers ha"" signed letters of intent w.1th
the L:n1,ers1t} of .\nzo na
Offensive tackles Ro~rt Flor) and
Glenn Parl...er both recciith commllled to Anzona.
according to Wildcat Coach Dick Tomt'~. Both are e~prt'ted to be enrolled laterilus month and read) for
spnng pracllcl'.
Mean"' h1le. Arizona tate announced the signings
oft\.\O Cemtos College defe nst ' e backs-Ed<iK Stoles
and La"'rence H ubie)
Unhappy McGwire to transfer
10 \\ .\CI T) - Dan ~kG"m'. "ho [!]
J rurix·d fr1irn tking lo"a·s staning quar-c II t
tab.id .. 1n the -.ea~un opencrto :"<o. 3 b) tht>
l'nd of th\·~ l.'ar S.i1d T uesda) h<.· dido 't get a
fair \ha~e .it h.>"'a and plans to transfer to an Diego
t.:s te
"\'er) unhapp) \er) unhapp).) ou can undrrlinc
th;u .. \l<.G"'1rl.' ..aid b) 1ckphone from h1~ home 10
Clarl'mont in Soulht>rn Cahfom1a. v.hen askd "h' he
''J!> k•a, ing lo"'a.
··The' built me up to be real big and the) didn't
g1H' me a ~ha nCt'." ~kGw1rr said.
\kG"'1re a 6-. 218·pound sophomor~. started
t''ll gam\'\ tor lo"a this season while embroiled in a
thfl'C·\\a) battle "1th sophomore Tom Po holsk) and
Junior Chucl Hanheb.
Another setback for San Diego
'\EV. ) O RK -The Cu~· of an ~ D1l·go ha' t-ccn denied perm1ssjon to
1ntCf\l'Ol' IO the l'OUrt fight O\Cr vrhere.
"'hl'n and ho" t he next .\menca's Cup
\a<.ht race "'Ill be held.
· Thl· 1..1uthern California city had asked to become
a pan) l\1 the <\Ult so it could appeal a ruling that
dtrt'ttl'd thl' ">an Du~-go Yacht Club to accept an unusuaJ
l halll'ngt. h) a 'e"" Zealand group. the Mercuf) Ba)
BoJ ting < luh
"c" ) ur~ Supreme . Court Justice Carmen
(. 1pJr1< I..." ho ,ssucd the ongmal ruling last November.
'k!1d T ut·'>da) that she wouldn't let San Diego intervene
bet au st 11 had no legal interest in the sun. especially
'>in<\ th\.' '"'o 'acht clubs appear to haH accepted her
Jl·1.. "111n
Aussie skippers up in arms
-.,.\ '\ DI f:.GO -.\ contract bet"'ccn
\o -D1l·go .. ~1pfk·r Dennis Co nner and the
\\: .. tan .\ustrahan Tounsm Comm1ss1on
"m.il..1ng ''a' cs in Australia. where sailors
;irt· lun•ju<; at being shut out of the next Amenca's Cup
rq_!J tt;i
\\ t.'Stcrn .\ustrahan state poht1cal leaders sa~ the)
ar1.. rt' 1e" 1ng the pact between Conner and the
lnmnm'!o n 1n light of recent tacks b) the San Diego
) Jl ht ( luh
· · .\ que~ ~ been r:au.cd abou.t lhe .con1ta.Cl based
11n l nnnl'r's a~soc1auon with the San D1l'go Yacht Club
1n ll t:ht of thl' 'acht club's attitude about challengel"S'for
tht' n1.. \t ( up round.'' ~1d Ron Barf). spol...esman for
\\ r\t1..·rn \u~tralian Premier Brian Burl..e
Cardinals still trying for Clark
4> T L<H 'I · -General Manager Dal •
\la' \'Ill 'wi) s ht• "'ants 10 Lalk 10 Jack Clark
before d1..·u dmg ""hether to relinquish the
\1 Louis < ardinals slugger -possibl) to
the Lo~ \ngclc Dodgers.
''I'll tall... "1th him:· said Maxvill 1n res~nsc 10 3
report on \1ondav that Clark will not re-sign. "l'rt talk
"nh Jacl . and 1f he tells me point ~lank that 1t~ true-•.
I don "t !..no"' "hat "'e can do to sweeten the pot."
~fa'' 111 said the Cardinals. v.ho "on the Na11onal
League pennant last ~ason despite an ankle inJUry that
s1dchned Clnrk the final 25 games. have offered the 3:?-
)l'ar-old pla)er a tv.o-year contract pa)ing him a S 1.5
m1lhon annual ba~ salar;.
Television, radio
TELEVISION ,,.
..i pm. -COLLEGE IASlBTBALL: Pitt II
Gcorgcto"n. ES P.
4 30 p. m. -PRO B~ETBALL. Ne"
York at Boston. WOR.
6 p m. -COLLEGE BAS&ETBALL· Brad·
le) at North C"arohn.t-Charlo1t(. ESP .
7 Op m. _, PRO-~~: Dalla at
Lal.c~ Pnmc 1kke1. ~lccTV.
• llADIO
6·. p.m, -PRO IAl&.ETBML: hpptn
at Cl 'el1nd (dclaytd~ KRTH (930).'.
7 )() p,m -PRO IAl&ETBAU: Dallas a1
bten KL.\C{,10)
Pistol Pete's No. 1 love
Pete Maravich, who died Tuesday of a heart attack, bug•
Jay Himmel and Derek Major after they aucceufully com-
pleted a ball handling drill at a recent buketb&ll cllnlc.
RiCE • • • From Bl
ha' e the mone' to do It I had to do ll
m) self. so I sa \ed up mone> to do 11.
.. As soon as I did. thats when I
started l..arate."
.\ Kenp<Hl ) le fighter. Rice. 26. ran
his own ~arate studio in Laguna Hills
for o 'er SC' en > ears. but he was.more-
or-kss forced to gi ve it up when his
partner go t mamed and his lease ran
out a \car later
That's when the trouble began
Folks "ere turr1cd off b' the idea
The Saddlebacl... \'alle' locals "eren·1
interested 1n Rice's studio
"..\ lot of people fro"'ned on 11."
said R1ce .-a Costa Mesa resident.
"That was a real low point for me
When I "'ent through that penod. it
""as reall) difficult. I had to sw11ch
occupallonr. after seven ~ears.
"It tool.. a"h1le to get bacl on m'
fret. I started figh11ng ag:un in
tournament!. and l started to get back
on track. But to be financ1alh stable I
had to "ork I~ to I ~ hours i da' as a d~"'all taper. a 1ob a former student
of m1ne ga'e to me.
··tt v.-as an interesting thing to go
from running m) own karate school
and being the total boss to ~1ng all
the wa) back o n the bottom of the
totem pole."
Rice. who competes mdt' 1dually as
well as on White's team. teaches
youngsters now and promotes the
sport. He·s back into the swing of
things. so to speak.
"It feels good to get bacl... into
\\-Orking out again:· he said. ··1 hke
teaching again. I tr)' to get the kids to
feel 11 out, Stt what karate's all about.
Everybody gets such a false idea of
what you sec on television and in the
movies."
R ice 1s prepanng for a tournament
in Palm Spnngs on Jan. 16. First-
place pnze money is S 1.000.
"This tournam~t bnngs out the
best fighters in the nation." Rice said.
"It's a rated tournament. Bob White
1s my instructor now. I fight under his
logo.
"Karate tournaments are a lot of
fun. the fighting 1s really exciting and
it's an excellent spectator spon. It
goes really fast.
"The spon has be.en in kind of a n
infant stage for a long time and it'll
sta} that wa) until something 1s done
about it."
Steve Rice
Wh11e's team 100!... first place 10 an
.\-rated tournament -meaning the
top lighters in the count I') an; there -
10 Las Vegas on Dec 5-6. Rice fights
lut. like the ancho r o f a 4 X 4 rela)
team 10 track.
I ndl\ 1duall}. Rice finished third in
the Vegas tournc). which is run b)
Howard Hansen of the WKA (World
Karate .\ssoc1at1on ).
The big tournament. Rice sa) s. 1s in
Lo ng ~ach in August ... That's the
real big one 10 the "orld." he said.
··1t'o; an open 1nternat1onal tour-
nament run b' Ed Parker. the founder
of Ken po It's.the 27th ~ear he has had
the to urnament ..
t.\L~n blacl ~It teams on are
stage there \\'hue's team was second
last \ear. ··f sull have a long way to go with
11." Rice said. "I wanted to do 11 for
me I don't care ""'hat anybody thinks.
(', e ne'er had an) encouragement to
do ll I'' e v.anted to do it on m) own
-I don't look for an) pats on the
baci... "hen I do well. It's how you feel
about ll and yourself. not how
someone sees )OU. It's good when
someone recognizes a good job.
ho"'e,·er You get rewards from that."
:"lo"' sf R.Jce can Just find a sponsor
"'ho won ·1 tal...e offense.
, PRo HocKu
Kings
salvage
4-4 tie
Capitals collect. 3-1 :
North Star s. NY I sles
battle to 3-3 standoff
From ne Atsoclate4 Press
Jimmy Car$0n·s second·period
goal ga"e the Los Anaelcs Kings a 4-4
NHL tie with P1usburgh Tuesday,
despite three goals by the Penguins'
Mano Lcm1c~un the Pittsburgh ice.
Carson deO ted 1n Jtm Fox' shot
from the nght int for his 24th goal
at 8:57 of the cond period.
Paul Gua)' ga the Kings a 3-3 ue
at 2:58 of the second ptn<>Q when he
fired a slapshot from the top of the
right circle past Gilles Meloche for his
first goal.
Lemieux completed his 10th career
hat tncl.. and third this season al 5: 15
of the second penod. "hipping Doug
Bod$er's pass o'er the shoulder of
goalie Glenn Heal)'. Lemieux. who
has 35 goals. has I 0 in his laJt 11
games.
Chns Dahlquist scored for Pu-
tsburgh 14 $CCOnds after the game
started and Lem1eu~ scored his first
on 3-f>OV..Cf'..pla) at .l: 11
Bernie ll\1cholls and Mike Allison
scon:d for Los i\ngcles to make 11 2·:!
before Lem1euA put Pittsburgh ahead
at 19 I 7 of thr first penod.
The Penguins are ""1.nless. 0.2-3. 1n
the last fi' e games. The Kin gs are
unbeaten. 3.-0-1. 1n four
Else" here in the NH L Tuesda):
Capitals 3, Flyers l: In Ph1ladel-
ph1a. Da'e Chnsuan and Mike
Gartner ~ored fi rst-penod goals as
the \\ ash1ngto n ( ap11als defeated the
Philadelphia Fl)crc;. e\tend1ng their
unbeaten !>trca\. 10 fi,e games.
Entenng the game. Ph1ladelph1a
goaltender Ron Hn tall had a career
record of 6-0-1 against the Capitals
Washington goalie Cli n1 \1alarchuk
made ~3 S<i'l''
( hnsuan opened the sconng b~
firing th<.' pud.. fro m ~O feet p.t\t
Hc,tall'~ glo'e hand J ~O 1010 the
ga me Just mon· than li q~ minutes
later (Janner drc"' Hc\lall o ut of the
n~t <,l..ated around him and scored
North Stars 3, lsland~rs 3: In
l 'n1ondale. :'-. Y . Pat LaFonta1ne
scor<.'d JI the 1 2 .~Q marl of the third
pcnod t0 g1' <.' thl' 'e" Yori... Islanders
a uc with the \1innesota "onh Stars
LIFlinta1ne's 2"'th goal of the
!><.'ason. coming olT a cross-ice pass
from Dale Henn. marked the third
straight home game that the Islanders
cente r has brought his team baci...
from a deficit
MULLIGAN. • • From Bl
TV lisungs for ES Pl". "'h1ch camesa
?game almost;' Cf) w~k.
It amazes me that out students. the
cities oflrv1nc. Newport Beach.
Costa Mesa and o thers m the v1c1nit'
do not support us. Our team 1s ·
eAc111ng. pla}s hard and 1s fun to
watch. and yet."' here are the people.,
As Cal State F ullcnon football coach
Gene Murph) said before a game. "I
knew the fans would not come. so I
havequ1t \.\Orr)ingabout 1t .. Ktnd of
sad that people ha' e so man) other
things to do and cannot support local
college athletic programs These arc
the same people who will pa) S35 for
a Laker u ck.et and lc:a' eat the end o f
the third quarter.
0
We are at Cal State Fullerton
Thursda} nightand at L'NL V Satur-•
da) night. This1sgoingto ~an
entertaining league race. so Sta\'
tuned. We "'ill~ back 1n the Bren
CenterThursda).Jan 14.against
Utah State. which 1s 2-01n the
conference.
No.7SyracuseroUspastBC
Air Force, Santa Clara romp;
Four ejected in USIU setback
lead nta Clar;tl to a '1ctof) o'er Lo)ola \.1d
S3nta Clara scon.-d the firs\ nine point\ ot thl· game
and kd 49-:?8 at halftime Santa Clara also \COreJ the final
10 pomts of the fi rst half.The Broncos led b) a-. man) as
J4 pomh in the second half. From TM Aueclated Press
Ro ny Se1kal) and Derrick Coleman scored 19 points
each and Steve Thompson added 15 Tuesday night a
SC'cnth-ranked S}racusc rode two first half spurts to an
80-61 Big East victory over host Boston College.
Su Diego II, Teu1-Arlia1toa H : In an D1t10
Mart)' Munn scored :! I points and grabbed eight
rebounds to lead the nivers11y of San Diego O\ er T e\a\-
Mhngton.
Ef"rem Leonard added 17 points for the Torcros . .,.,ho
made-30 of therr 51 field aoal auempts and v.ere t O of 1 ~
from 3-potnt raJtgc 1n w1nn1ng the!r fourth straight game
The Orange ca.J»&ali.zcd o n a big height advantaac 1n
bu1ld1ng a 40. I halftime lead. then cruised to their ninth
consecutive victory despite being outscol"t'd 26-6 1n the
final six minutes.
yracusc. 11 -2. gotoff slowl) in its Big Elstdcbut. but
came all\e after Boston College took us onl)• le3d. 7-6.
"'"h the gameJUSt OHr four m1rutes old Basketball scores
iii.a l}. a 6-10 senior. regained the lead for )'racu~
""'''ha dunk. tnggenng a 14-2 charge in1erruP1ed only b) C..-
a p;urof frt>e lhro"s a-Mii H~To.., .. 19 flcr the Ea&l~ closed to 2)..17. racusc. dom1 -u v..,,,. "· Sllldrl'IM• 1• noon& the 1ns1de, ~Cnl On a 17-0 PfC\', tkal)' had 1~ The Mlt.tltr' SS CIM ._.,., J.J
points and Coleman four 1n the dec1~1ve c harac v.h1ch :=.~~!'9t~t'::;:~~64
a,a'e thcOrangta 40-17 advanttae BC' broke the run ~tlh ~'"-°'° PKlfoc 1•. CN"•\tlell
a free throw JU t before halfi1mc Her~• 5 w..,_.. •
Elsc•hc~ in rollqe bl ._c,ball Tuesda • Hew Pee-If< n ._.. .. Heyw•rll St N A~·Felt·
Air Force St, U.S. latttMIMul U: At 1hc .\1r fore~ ..,... •5 itOC•u•s
Academ) 1n olorado. Mike Hammond. who WIS CJ«'tcd Aw force" us1u "
lite: 1n th(' pm(' •Ions with thrtt other pla)'etl. \C'oml 22 Cot• n. :,:::,1 pointS 1n kad1na .\1r Fortt O\Cr L.S. ln1cma11onaJ. ~ '(1. ~ u
W11h JUS\ O\Cf n1n.c mmutes kfi to pla)'. Hammond LOfll lt>leftd u n ~"'·
and Air Fuf\.'e 1eammatc Mike t.ock-oocrao• into a fiahl HJ ~9'1 n. ~.,.. "
\1\-llh l I \ Mau Judd and Ruu Heide. IJ four "ere MMNCl!luWt" "· .....,_ si s1
thr -n 001 of&~ Jim NclrlNn'-'I" ,...,..._,,
Judd prepped at Costa MC\a tf1ah and pcn1-t-~-o---.== 1; ~~ •
)Ca~ It range OUt S!recuM •.:;:i C-.. 61
Sul.8ClaraH,Lo)tla5t:ln nta(t.1ra.«-ntrr0an ••·aw~n MIM.v~
\\c1 ~and gu:ird <>wi ooiah ch orcod I points to St "
~ St 1. Murr-ey SI 1G foll
SOUTtMUT Moel_,.,.,, $1 n W Te ... $1 ...
...
It
Oklelwlml St. n, T lltM rs
""" MMll ..,, , ....... , "'
El Tete IJ, ,.~._ v-.v 7•
OCMol VllW tt 1..1 ~ •
$eftte Alie V..,,., 6'. UN.-S•ly
E1tandll 96, Cale Mete ..
Wntm.n.tltf ,. '""""• » Wl'llttln ~. I...,.,, ~lleiil ,.
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fMOI\ "· ...., OJj 11 ...,....,... 9ttcll • c--. -.......,, Olrtttiell ll, .........
-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. January 8. 198a .. 83
f oR THl Rlcowo
~ > .
NIA
WIZSTeRN CONFIUUl:NCE
WH"'*'tter 7'. CYllHU St , ........... ,
c~ ~.." .... I 1 ' • , s • 11
.... .. . .._ord I 2 l l9 Lovt
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HFC CH~io..SHIP s ........ J.tn. 11 0"',. ~~· oiavoff ,. f"'!ti#'' •e•
SU1"£R llOWL
Suncs.v. Jan. ll
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From H.,r.tft'\ •-Ract & s-1\ a-
&OXING
(t i Ut' ..,_\)
SUPElt l•C.~"""E•C.,..TS -A-Ml•
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WRESTLIN.G
H•9'1 school
El Medlf'9 }I, Menna l l
100-Pa•• E VI o.c T•r ••
10?~11.ne VI ... or O• •or<t 1
11•-W~ tma"\.., \t 4'1t0" O\ '"'-.. '..J "'vf''
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SOCCD H• KMet Wt'S C1"' aANK.lMGS •·A
!) ,. s
11 n • HOf'rl\ 0 1Vi"9n
ISO '" 11' 1'7 C hick paces Oilers
17 6 s )9 Df"O'
S• 1.0 \
TO"~' c• c•o-
l6 II s )7
i.20 s ll
IS 12 l 37
I) 77 e 17
ISO 12'1 131 llO
1 .. ·~ .. , ,.,
134 ...
WALES CONl'EltENCE
N '(I\ •~ot'"\
P~ 110f' "" •
,. • IT'ICil Oiot1Mel'i
W L T Ph GF GA ~ • • 44 I~ •?t
Orange Coast area tt'ams fared ""di Tu<"Mia~ night 1n non-league g1rl9
basl..etball actwn ~s :'\<'" pon Harbor
Hunungton Bea,h and Fd1sun all
won
'/\-•\" "'.;' r
P,f• Jf'"'\f\o'
P •1\b '1r
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7 1 PP ) ll\ .l."ilf~' "<C"O \ 11 Fo• 3 i.
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1' 11 "-• f\-.t. ~o· 1.A nooll "'11 I 01
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S.C-Perleel
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Z SI 1 P "U>"'"' "' ~t...., ..... • lS 800Mr c..,,." ~t•,.O''~ S 15 I ::c\ 4•Qtn Ca~'°" 14 Fo •
l-'f"'O" I 57 Pf"•' u -hr-\ LA --' 11 \. ..... f uA F>' "l>'D "9 9 J l l'iernnioncl
L A "00"' ng I !>4 &o .. •o..e F>.1 "OOl<·no
19 •S
TlWO l".neci
No"P ""'• • n -ll•u"'ll•r•',,., L ,t. l toeo•·
·11 • 1• Out,..,"« LA "or ''<~·~ 1 l OI ,.. er Pt ,.. G"' ,, c-. ng t 1 ~
Ovt n ..,_NO"<I Pt!\41 I f\-NO"P
S'lo•\ D" ooe-LO\ ""oe<on 11 •->· >-1•
P•l'\Di;fO" 10 10· 1 I 7-ll
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C.oa ts-LO\ A~ ~ '°U ll>o•\ 1'<
P-'~?" MtlOC"f 1•·10
A-1• l ..
Rtftr-8oo M•e•\ L "flMen--Ro--A,\
\<I\! nt lb; SceD•,,.,lO
GOLF
L•9UN &.ach <;ett A SSOC: .. hOn
MOHTHL Y TOUllNAMENT
l •t c..""" ~ •M'd> c;c1 A F"'1'
'lw• " Q 'C "'~ 11 t 4-.I Z '• C>~•t
CU4f a· l)-• C.tc"';lf l'o ........ 'l-'
'tt6CI' ·'"" ''•~t I S • .. , S J _. ~·o•t
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1 c •• ~ .... ,, lo '5'-'' 1 ~""° .... , .. ..,,.
q1 'l-14 > • t • •·~ Oeoot~"P ""~
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Plf'f't"\."U'I 11.t ,.._..:JS J J.,f' • ._ .... ,,...C::_.....
106 ~11
OHo Sff "~ OAVE Y'S LOCKE• -l ooe•s 21 •"9 f '\
:><: 1 c• <<' oau 2l w~o ::>eu
-, 't'f 11 \.CuC"" l ~~'~•c :"" :> ... .-
OP•:·
TUftdav's tr~cfion'
BASEaALL .......... ~
OOOGEA$-Si91'1ed Oofl S<;tton D·•c....-·~ •
O"P·•N ' CO<llrK I
CINCINNATI RE 0$-S~ Ao--ltoe"<•t
o.,,tf ~ to a m•""Ot'·-.9\A CC"lt..-ac• .... ...,
Na\l'v ... o! '"' A-tC•" 4UOCo•' Of' •"Id n-w,,ect "'"' to 1r•.n·ne camo ., a l"tOf'·""O\'.., o•..., ST LOUIS CAlt01NALrS11"<1G O•""' CO•
Oil~ IO e _ • ., .... COt'ltKI
~L.effUI
80!.TO... AEO sox-~ °""" \ l.•'"'O
e><ICf\ef' IO e -·"ff' COl'ltOC' KANSAS C1l'V ROV•L!o-Agr..C 'C ,.,_,
... '" n..o ~ o..lf..-Cl"' • -•ff'
COft'"Kl
MINNESOTA TWINS~S 9"t'O S. 8 .. •e
c••~ •"Cl Hff S.rt._ °''~ •o _ ..... , CQfltrect~ A~ ,... ..... ..._. of 80()
w ' --·l ,...,.._ of 0r .. .-of ""'
Soul"9m L-N-Je""4t LO•t """"•'
f\'\llfteoer of ~ .._.._,L__.
i"e"pon Chm11an m<"an"h1k
rolled to an e-as' '1etor. o'er Ut·
ling1A.-ell Chm11ari and u1hern Cali·
fom1a Collegt: lou i1d' antagl' of a
pla~<'r shonagt: 1u ddeat J-a \ ern<' 1n
a college gam,·
Here·!> a capsuk 1ook
Newport Harbor 4S. Silla Ana 43:
Jen n ~ S1uc ker hit th1: tront t:nd ot a
o ne·and·unc ""1:h thn:t' ~ .. onds re·
maining and frnn R .an '>ealed the
non-league "' n .... 1tl J rt:bound of tht"
!tecond free thr< "' Stace~ (11l'm 1n! '-e" pon Harbor
('-31 "Ith 1 S po.r'.'> .i.nd li\l' assists
Stucker added 1; pAint'> R~an pulled
do" n 11 n:bo.und') and C hantel
Deford .... urt:J n1ni: points and had
fi,e steab fhl'. ailor'> bro~c.-a 22-22
halfttml· g.ir-1l· "' 1ut~onng \anta
.\na I -, .n th1: ih rd quanrr
Ha.ntiogtou B~acll ~8. Cyprttt 46:
Tami Ch11.k pouri:d 1n ~5 point\ and
grabbed i:1gh1 •t:bound~ and ·telanie
Pempcr fe1gh1 pu1n:s1 pullC'd do"n
e1g.ht boards a'ld handC'd out 11
assists J~ thi: r>1lers 1t1-; v.on at
H untington Ekach
her-i Rm 'iad St'\en rebounds
forthehiler-> ........ had 3 .111-' lead at
halftime then 'l.: d C~pres~ to onl~ '"0 points m thi: 1h1rd quaneT before
pulhng av..a ~
Hunungton Bea,h ·\l.h1 .. h o pens
unS(:t League a' tton Thursda' at
MARAVICH. • •
-magK 1n tfll· ( "'\ Palale
"E~l·ntxxh has hr:.ud 1he 'i.l•m<'\
aboul h.11.1. harJ he ""urled Pl'rll'l 110~
hie, bal'·handling. gewng Jl\k' '><-'31' a1
thl m,,, 11.'\ ln~ J nbbhng thl' bJll
thr,iugh d double leJlure ,fomg linger
\p1n, in l)(:d · fohn-,on '-lid \1'
t;nonh: 1" him t'l\:1ng ta\...en tor dn\1.''
10 1h,· (.lr and dnbh mg the hall 1.,u1 ol
lhl' \\ IOJ•'" ..
\\Jra' 1,h "'a'> .. oJ .. hld ti' h"
1ath1.•r Pr1:<.' .\' Pete mJ,terl·...i •m·
d n II Pre'>\ "", u 1d dt'J te .rnoth1.•r h
1.hallcng,· h ""· J hn •n \aid
~far:J\,d~ tle~n hi\ l•J.H'3f \.8.\
"'3rea '' th 1h1. .\i.Jnta Ha"l ' n
,..,-\\C:O'\ :h1.JJ:J•'lJl"'3dCl"-J
v..hcn th1. ne" ''Jrh.h1'>1. ...... , fc•rmc.'\1
then ·im.,hcd h" l3rl"t'r "'Ith the
Bm1Qfl C ell1"' .1::, • hdp1ng that team
to thi: pla,01T<. in 1~.., He rct1rl"d
abrupt!' dunng. 1hc ilrec,ea~'n 1n
I" I
T he first Ja11 g.ime 1n lhl' Lou1\1·
ana 'lurcrd•'m1.· drn1t ,n 1.•r ~ti uJn
fam. Jn 'B.\ rl'll•rJ 1hc Jau ""l'uld ~urpas<. b~ J " ~ T~· 1ir<.1 r1.•u1rd
1. rt,\\d had ll• hra' 1. -ta·et\ 1ll'll~1.·d ti'
1orn·nt1.1 a ll·dJ' rJ1n' .inJ \Iara' 1<.h
gol w th1. '-tJJ um ,,nl' "' th the hl·tr
vf Jepul' 'h1..r.'1 ' ··1 rl·mcmtx·· h rn hc.•,t J\ J gr1.'Jt
ball handkr n.•1 J' J '"'r1:r · John·
~on '31J ··Th.:'"'': m1.• \OU <,31.1. him
that "a' 1tie thin~ thJ! ~rarated him
fwm nlh, • ha,l..1.·'hJ ;"IJ\1.'f"o Othl"r\
1.1.'ulJ .. ~ '• t th1. u'"'r ,h, 1 hut"lhl'
'>'J\ hl' t\d"'J 1.·d :"<. "J
.\t .\:lanta \t_. .1\ ,h 1 'ii. the
HJ" ' "·' lhl' r J •l, ...inJ mad1: the
-\II--tJr 'l''te· ,fr,~:: ;-i!J\lng "llh
ffil'nonud1.'< "'Jn.! fkl 'pal"
Th.:"" 1.l.c .. ,,.,.. ;hl' Ja11 ha,1n~
\l.l\l.'n t\\l liP>t·· un• J•Jll ,h,11.1.'\
tJdl·d m ,.,-., .•ht'r .\' J'lla lcll 1nl\'
th' ,dlarJnd \larJ ,.., n·aJl' -\I ·Prl'
(,H the 1irs1 ot 1"0 "'-J'•'n'
In Io-..,. ht• \Hl, i-l•.! hi\ i..ncc l'n 3
rull·stndc. klt·hJnd1..·~ tx·h1nd·1he·
t-a, l tx·t"een·thl··kl!\ J\\l\t ll' team-
matl' .\aron Jame' hair" a' dt•""n the
,L1un The Jan tum~kJ u1 of
d'ntent1on "llh him out t'1 thl• ltncup
In 1q~9. the Jazz mtnl·J tCI \all
RUFFfLL'S
UPHOLST~RY INC. ... , ..... ~--~
IUl -llft etsn M:SA-SO I IS6
llOISE HAWIC$-N...-.O JIM 'rOUll9\IW~
......... ~ PrOITlO'IG ~ F <..,._." IO
11.K\lloYe w1Ce ""'"'°'"'' •l'CI BUM" I'~ IO ..-ca v~ ., -..,.,.,....,.,,. e"CI oromo-
llOll •
~ aAJK&TaALL
1 Wfll Torr~ tS.vl 1. ...,, Dell c ........ 1,1 •oval l~rl'l'Oftl411 • Pe.105 Vtl'Ott
llttvl S. Santt ~· (OcMnl t. Simi V....,, 1 TOl'rt nc:e 18nl I O.m.en Ck~). t.
cs••ai.....-A~
AL8AHY PA TltOON.S-si.roea '°'""91' UCI oi.v« Tod ~v ......... ~Ill' lttlMMO
Cltnton Sn\.tll torwetr'll
_,.. Cs.Mt): 10 V P•" l(tl'ltur'f) , .. '°°TaAl.t ....... ,. ..... L....-
NEW YOIUC JETS -$ 9"4!d ~ ~I Jffl
CJ-,rl\W91 a T\111 rfl-' IO I ~.c-1
t\llml!M et llOOOO CIW'1t ... a t ·1 --~ ..._. ... I.ct.It t e ~le tfJ ~ E l o<O 16 1• IS ?I-Cl
TM" ...... to.I\ Foun•• II V•lltv -~·
Q<I ,, 1 ~ ..... I H • 1 El Toro -• JohnMM'I ~· .._"'°' 12 10 11 ~ Senta ~ 11 10 10 H-G
1 • ......., ....-. c• V'991 1+\I a. a....O. l* "'"9) f ·t·t> l C9'11Y'-' (0eMr1-
Vel9n> "''· ' "'""'9 e.dl Cfl!Ml9c CeMtl •·1·1.1 s L.~ ...... 1 eono _.,.., "
c-.. kl low•
G&••AL
J ~ ... ,. 1
Tt<l'rlCI\ I( ~ l ETI'
C>cffn View eo, L.,.. ... di ,.. 40
, ............ >
OUM v..-UM IMdl ~ "".... .. ...... F tON'I ...,...,..
E•a'"l
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MOef'9 E•n,1
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• I I I> W• IM I I I 0 1 •1• ...-Mfl 1 ott .s •• 11 1(-4' •• l • .. , ......... ,,,,
I ) 1 ~ Tl'IOflO!'! f t I •
) • • • 'W """" 1 • f • 0 I 0 1 Wa • I 1 t
' • ' s ~(;Mil ' • s ' • • • •
T • 111919n-t
flfl ' Sr.>!lfl
T•art JI 16 t II Total\
~ .. Oltertln " J) ti ,,_. 11,.,..... 0c .. v "' l. ..... a<'!,...
f~ 9111\I
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1
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1
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EllMft 61. __. Oii S1 , ......... ,
--Oti . " ... Ce&elleft J 0 t •
MlltTti ' • , • ,.~ o•s• Mal' ,,,,
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.... ...... ' .. , , 1 • Jl s , .J 1
I S S II
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1 • • t
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kilP9 .... 0.-W.. IJ IO 'It
IJ It •
..... ~ '°'.,..., ,.,.,. , Orwlee ·~ C-.tl ,.,., t w~ IV... al •·>'2 t u
Seltt CS-. Ftl IO Lt ........ l~I ... , ' ........ .-a.a.....os .. .
1 ~ "' '""'~ c-o .... , t ....,.. ...... , 1+1.; l CaM"'-v ..... ·~ c::...-1 1-l &. .... , ...... , J..J.tr s. w.t Tenefte'9 l .. •l l'-4·4. '-Oliflt ..._I~
Cwn 1~?-tt 1 ._.....,,. IOC--l t-1 '
liM"9 C.. 10.C-I t-••t. t Tcirrtl'a C-.V>
•• t .. c.---, ... ""9) .......
-l"A ' S.... Ger90Dla IC\!rolt ... 1 11~\; t ~
t"9dltl •> I; 1 Nc8lla lP'tdlt.t n+1 ~ MW I/ ,....,,. ... , H•l; ~ ,..,......
Cl'....,..1 t •l•l • ~-~ CE_..1 H M ,1 ....... Dll 4,._J,._..,,. U.--
._ tllll9CllliC CtMll ..,.. t ,....,... 0..• (Meo,,,.!1111 > M ,,. ._ ,~ 1·>l
INS.T'IT'UTE FOa INTI-NATIONAL
SflOltT......_ T' ,,..,..,,., '-'' .-.c· -ecM..P "°"'USIOHAL. GOVEIU ASSOCIA· TION ...,... ,_,, F'~ ..,.._-' _,.i.
""' ~ tor ... ~· ,_ 8'111 .,..__., Oii ~· r ... ,.,_.,..!ft N. ""•1 .... c.erv s........ • ....., .. """'...,. .... Alf w.I ,....,.. ............
MIDC1lff ............ ~
!CW YOltk ·~•S-S. ~ ~ ~ ... c.rMe .. -.....,...,,...., "'°'"L..,..
I \\ eslmmsler shol 5:! percent (26 of
501 fro m the field a nd played a tou&h
man·to-man defense in the second
half
Edison 1%, Mater Dei ~1: After a
3().30 deadlock at halftime. Edison
charged out to a 60-42 lc:ad befott
holding on 10 the final minutes.
to..nsden Tanabe scored 2 l point!>
and grabbed 16 rebounds and Wend} ~ndstedt aJso scored 21 and pulled
do"' n I 0 boards as the Chargers ( 124 )
o ut'ICored tht: M o narchs. 32-27, in the
X'lOnd half Stefanie Moonnan
S4.ored 12 points and dished off SI\
3'>'>1'>tS for Ed1Sdn. which opens
unset pla' Thursda) at Manna.
\1ater IA>1 shot n percent l 17 of
2:1 trum the lret: thro" line
Sewport Christin 37, LeffiDpeU
Cbristiao 18: Ka11man Malek scored
I' points .ind Beck) Berkebile added
1<1 points and 1 b rebounds as the
C onlju1:ror') 1 ~31 "on an Academ)
Lc.-agu1: ~mr at 'e"pon Chnsuan
Beth Dahlin scored 10 points an,Q
<. 'nth1a ( urren had eight rebound!>
Im the< onqueror!>
In l ollege action.
SoCal College 6', La Verne ~7:
P.iula Hale °"ored 2~ points and had
2H rt'bound as the Vanguardi 18-31
"On a non-<:onference game at La
\ ane
The Leos· ..\udre' Perlons. "ho
\,(Ored 20 po1n\s ~ent do~n "llh a n
anlk 1nJU~ ""Ith -' :!-left in the
g;i me lea' ing La \ erne "1th onl)
four pla~ers
.\ll<'r a ~l~I t1e ~Ith 12:11 left m
tht: ~cond half. CC rolled off eight
\tra1ght points to pull awa). La \'erne
pulled "lthtn ~ (Sr-46)-wtth 6:4-
kft but 1.'."0uld ne'er com<' clo~r -
esp.:-1.1alh after be mg shon a pla~er.
l.l 1. l ll\ \Iara' 1eh moH·d wtth
1~ m l~'r .l ~-a~n . then on 10 the
l. t:l!1,' .md into retirement.
\\ c had our ups and do" ns. but J
I• •t nwa• up<. than do"' ns ··said ButC'l'
'.in Brt·da..,,L1lfl Jazz coach unul the
•'"'nl·r<o firl'd him ""h1k th~ team "as
•••n11.·nd1nf tor a pla~otT tlenh \a n
Br.:da ..,,oltT 1) no" at Lafa,etie
'I ,1u ,ould sit and talk io Pete and
h J tel' 'ou "hat he thought. anJ
"'ll'n .... h1k \OU told him "hat \OU
thought \\hen \OU finished. 'ou·d
'l'il'-h1.·J an unde~tandtng. • ·
Pl·opk th<•ught he "as hard to
handk but he "asn·t ·•
\1.1•.1\ ,h 1.hangC'd his image tn "-r-'hJ' ng, offh1s goatee. c hangrng
h" tt'•"'' numtx-r and d1scardtng the
11 •N' :i.. ' that had be-en tm
1raJ1. n ar._ )lnl.'."e lOllege He alw "eot
thrPugh J t\•ugh off·~a!>On condttton·
inf pn>gram and opponents saned
t.lll..ing ab<,u1 his tough dt'fen~. in
Jdd1t1<ll" tn h1~ 'tl"onng and passtng.··
·:-\n,thin~ Petee,er d 1d hed1d=tt
1.l'mpk1i:h ·· 'Jn Brt"dal\.olff saui
·It'' 1hr .,.J, he "t·nt about things
\\ hi:n h1. tx·,amc a 'c-getanan. It ~
,,•mpkt1. · ·
\an Brt"Ja.,_1.,llT ).lid \tara' 1ch w'S's
,.m 01 the t-e'' ball·handlers e'er.~
not lhC' t-e"' ··'-oOod' does that stuff 'l1tx~h 1.oljld dl' 11.~· he said. ··~~
t>.'<.1' '' "lll1ng 10 put in the "on..
l"\Cn 11 th\'.'\ hJ\C the ~lent to do IL ..
iSj)Oit• =
&Boat ~ s:.· t'~a:,~..:~
Fishing & Hunting Halls.
See Tabasco Sauce Boat
Sony Video 8 Arcade
New Camping Hall
Water Bikes & Skis
Adm1ss1on $5. Children $2
Senior Citizens $2.50 weekda~~~
ir.~ lon \\'ePl<.days llam Sal& 51.ir
Cow Palace
Jan ·17
SaataAaita ·PREPS • • • McMahon vows to
'do whatever I ~an' •
raclag entries .,..._.Y"$ IWTa•S (._ 11 '1_.,, ... • It' M ....... , 9 ... .,. Srnc*e jVeien.ruella) Phi ... ~ ...... 10 Bird Dancer (IJanderHI
PMT -.Ce. • ""** Pune· 'lJ,000, AM ..... F-& l'NIW •• ., .. , ~ ~ ~ Ci.i.mll\9 p('l(t 11 F enra,lic ltutlall l CHl-1 1 IS lll.9t-. 12 Aak.ooVil (Sib*) l1S
I Ai!Clt ...._ tVMM.luelal ll• 13 ~· So..-r• (Grvw ·tl x1•
1 ,.,.._ <~u.e .... ) l1' l• Fe•t o.ilverv (Sltv--tl llS
'~·,Gal <Grvoer-11 xllO SlXTH RACE. 7 lvrlCM'>Q$. P-· ,lt,000.
•Wit Wev Siie Go (8anclefu ·ll • xllO Mlltden,, J vu r Olds Clefml119 0<lce. i SllllMI ISo"'-l 116 sS0,000-45,000 116
Ill • Wlshfull Flt(ltC'f (Or-Ill ) x l1l 1 Bert.el ISolbl
1 Nfffl IPedtota) llS 2 Na!lve Lltle<lv (C>elallouuave-11
• FtMd'Y <C.••noni 117 3 GtlllleQOnt (Gtvoer·1)
•
9 ~ Femme (Metal llS • Can't Catch ftonl <S•~en1) • ll l
"' 111 ..... It~ (81adr.) 116 S Movvln AIOll9 (Siblli.I xiii
xiii
Ill
ll ~ And 8uccM>Mf ISJblllel 1 IS 6 c,,.,,, Jov l&enowH l
l'l a.i-Fancv (Sl\ermenl xlll 7 l<n1V11ls HonoYr IS~manl
• AM Elel* I Sfllo's Loo !Pt«oial
tJ illlfe Ml" LeadK (HaWlevl 116 9 F1M Hol!a9e ISlevensl lit
l lt
116 ,, ~e The Prine.HS (PalltnOfl) 1 IS 10 Combe• P1lol (()tltff)
I> Tl'11ndira (Orte1>1) 116 11 ~mersltl (Hawlevl
"' l6 . ..,, JCllltr (8a"Otr•\-2) • 110 12 Trnwl1taoue ICHlanonl
17 ~ Mv Wey (Grydef'·2) •110 AKe E ...... •CCMM> RACE. 6 fur1ol!9\ Punt· s 16 000 13 HNOwtllO (Gryeler· ll a 113
,,,,_,.,. flllift. S veer OIO\. Breo in c at.t«nia 14 Sol Cale><. IOrhzl alll O.l*line Pf'O ( m,000-21,000. I S Fun I\ F.rs1 ce1ac1<1 110
1 °"' Finl TantOIJI (Valentuelal 117 16 Counter Plan IOt lallOunnt-21 111 2 Cl'!idl.lee's Choice (6a~asl a 11? 17 Arllshc AC! cvetHouez) lit
3 Al's Ultle Ladv (v~uouezl 117 II Gentleman's HON>r !Valenzuela) llt
• ~ Alu" (Stevens-1) 117 SEVENTH RACE. 6 tur1on9s Purse sJS.000
S ...,a111 En Bae (Hawlevl llS • veer ol<ls & uo Clatmlno ociee· $61,SOO-SS,OOO
6 _,Ion l(_ay (Grvo.r-2> 11112 I Sue>e•I> Momeni !Soll\) 'l} 7 Ceftar's Firs! (Pedroza! llS 2 Muell Fine Gold CGrvOe•l a I I t St.nslar (CH !anon) 117 3 Suoer S.ven c Vaienzuelal 111
9 "'"8wav Rllefna IFernanoez> 117 • Bri9111 Ano R111111 CHawlevl 116 10 AwftOme Auor-ev tSlblllel 117 S S11en1 tm1>act 1oeianounavel 116 ll MMia Braga CBtack) 117 6 A,,.,,,., 1s1evenu 116
12 Y.n!IM MlliHtv (Solll ·2l llS 1 J R JOM\Ol'l ISl1>1lle) )16
AIM ElleilN EIGHTH R,ACE. AbOut 6 '> turlonll\ Turi
13 Hitle~-Gail (StevetiS-1) 117 Purse u 0,000. AllOwa'1Ce. tmies & martl '
l• Cor. s kwe (Grvder-1) •112 veers 010 & uo
IS Nnanoa Jean CSol1'-l l 117 1 Oo,.n Again tSnoemaktr) I U
11S 16 o.t.ware M~110en csr .... ensl 111 2 Hant"vir cveinourz) 17 Gerrie World (Coml>ef) ~ 117 ) Annoconnor 181ac11.1 "' 11 ~ Bearer !Meza) 117 , v ev1 a •Banderall •109
l1flRO ltACE. 6 furlon11s Purse Sl' 000 3 S lhal'• Fa'IC>' (Hawlev)
vear ol<t\ Claimino ottce S2S.000·22.SOO 6 Laz·s Jo" IStevrntl
llS
llS
llS
llS
117
1 Mesler Bo1.1iee !Castanon) I 16 • 7 Oar•ng Ooone t Valentueta· l)
2 ~uellv Trv1t CGrvOetl xllJ S To The Dancer Ot1ah0un.avel
3 RJJief OI Mttll I Valentuelal 116 9 Arl•l>•a Laav 1Torol
4 8arbarlan'\ Own <Ot1~al 116 10 a·Serve N' Vo11ev [Gro11t r·ll '(109
S L et's Cell II Roni ISok'I 111 II Sea Dara •Mua· ll "' llS 6 Qu1 Of Fuu (Meza) Ill 12 lo Qun Mitls
1 lflfantrv H Hour IStevens l 116 AIMt E~ t ~lta IBlack l 11• I) R1vtrtow..-1Valenz.;ela·21
!'OURTH RACE. I mite Purse $18,000 14 Black Soo•11t tMea11
llS
115
IU MalOen 11n,.s 3 •••r oicn c 1aim •n11 o<"ice IS Ouadr aoa !Patton! tAO,boo·JS,000 16 a·L.UI Siano [Gr•der·2) 1<_109
'l Tant.1 Secret IHawlevl llS a·800in9er & M 1ll10ul el'lfr"
2 Tocnioe tVeln'l\>etl lli NINTW lt:AC£ I I 16 miles. Pune \lt.000 4
l ~av II Smootn (Olivares llS vo r olels & ..io ClC11•m•no e><lce '16,000· 13 000
' Orlven Ladv (McHargueJ 117 I NumDll1ns <Vatfllzuela) 116 S l,;uek Oust (PattOf\I 117 7 B•ut1'\ An•• <Peoro1a·21 116
6 ~noled T1me (Valen1uetal I )1 J V1n~arone iCu l•nOl'I) 116
7 Sol~ Emo<tss <Bal"Mrin-2) ""O 'Q.,.,,., 1Meia·7t ITS
t Tern'' Fhg111 fGrvoe<I •110 S Lvol'laro C111mes 18anoeru·l ) t.110
Q Huo A Lot fStevensl 117 6 Trav•t tSel\Cnez.l t.108
10 Ear~ Laov Jav Sol1\I llS '7 T bOne's Te•t lGrvoer) t.110
Aiu Elieible S Retatlvt P1tc,, Blaeltl ,,i 1 S
1 ~nt In Paractlse IBlac•l 117 9 Prtc-l'IC• (Sttvtfl'1 llS
11 Hello Cutie I Bende•H· I ' .110 10 Ral.O'lal Aooro.cll CSolr\) 116
FIFTH RACE. I mite P,;rse-S2'2.000 4 vter II T•us T Oan.,s C()rt~al 116
0445 Clalmino or.ct '31 000-29,000 12 Pates1t11 '0 °MCHar9uel 116
I .p T Hustler ISohil I IS AIMI Elfelble 1 BOIO Bar oafn IStevtn\·21 117 ll Ernoe<aaor Al NOt'te l Ve4Houezl
3 »vor Faire O•lallouuavt l 113 Ii Gum F'1tt1 Oelallouuave)
116
116
116 • Ftv1n11 Sorav fGrvOet-lt •110 t~ V•oeo K·CI Pedroze·l )
S Headline News IOHvarn l llS 16 Gra11 p,.,,. 'Banoeras·2) • ll 1
116
116 o E •O'•C Ea11•• Hawtev 1 117 11 Ge"u·ne J~n Me~a-1
1 ~Cat~" 1s_.... ... ~• •ts 18 Gae1•c 1t~ ""' •Hawiev l
! Vt"Sit>Q (BlaC.. HS -~-oenot~ IDDf'tftllCY lOCktv
Los Alamitos
racing entries
TONIGHT'S ENTRIES
(Flfttl al ll·lllelrt umeu -11ne1
Flnt PMt 7:30
FIRST RACE. Pace l mile Purse '1.lOO
' Racv !>1acv 0 MaOtano
1 Rowov Rt "va!NI ~ueoltr
l Bµsvtown Treml>lav
• s...-er1 C.olOll ~'" <Tl~'" Echtio,. Orsorner
0 MoA•t Mo GrrQCrv
• Scot1•sn Len Buti.r
SECONO RACE. T•o• I mile Pvr \t S2.IOO
: a m1n11 ll"tCr '8 000-s lO 000
CCYker
"" -:orrra SP•" 1
l "'IMIO'I Nt'lttl~
'Basil DHl'I
; Eteganr Sruo
6 Caollve 1 F'arnes First
Pa•'< t r
Onome•
F S<O 9'erren
8ay1eu
Wilke
Slffln
TH!aD RACE. Pact I "11te Pur\f
Ciret• Tht Na90f\\
S2 300
M~
81c~f0<0 • o'VOOC11ario Lao
't M agna E acei,t>u ..
' .Jl'C'e Wall
) Im A Reoet CC>t"'e'
6 Et B•onco
' !)ull,t Rova
9 'lamatn !>tnrv ''
• Racv lhio..-
FOURTH RACE Pace I m le
I 1\1\•nd Your MaM f r\
; ~utlt"9 A•our>c
:i Del•Cate Yuu
• Baml><s C. • S Pel!le S ran
6 Hi H~'"
1 a-Mn Jee•~
8 Bri11hl Sia·
' !>tar La•"•
AIM Elleibk
10 a·Warm l"uzzv
a·P Kau1fmann·owneo enlrv
"•''" Slier re<>
Ruiz
MacOO<Joat1
Scl\arlt)w
OeM>me• Be•11eron
Pu'l• ,, 800
G•fi!O<V
It.in Slfftll
Matt·
SMrre" MaOlllnG
IC. a\Jftma"" HI Ptrez
FIFTH RACE. Pace I mile Purse '2.eoo
Hoc>•tl9 To Be L...c• • Trtm!>lav
V..cl>e•ll s Pr oe Marcsaresco
l Mo..,~an1s P• •04!
• 6 v1\t lri A~·c_a
S F' u' P\.•~u"
6 Sov•~rn SQffC
7 Dts•oner Pt•t
8 M 0 M1Cllet
SJXTH RACE. Pact I mile
1 Roe'• Amill~
7 Pa's Gooo Fette
l O....c~ B•raa
• "'"'~ 0 "'"" S Rova• 1rv1tat.or>
b LCK.a Caroonar
1 ~"O\ty 8 l"fW
S Califor"•il ('"''"'' 9 Aouton
Kueoler
Sutlef
Ba111en
Difranco
L1Qlltlllll
Steetll
Pur~ '7.lOO
0 '8r••,.·Moran
Folev
Pie<ce Sherren
IC"'°"'
SEVENTH It.ACE. Pace 1 mite Purse
Sl 900 Cta •mor19 or>ce SSOOO
1 Prtrrl•t" Cuvtt
1 Lo•C L•••'v 3 Coc,v\ Oni.. 8'>v
l Wada Hv S T ar<>uest
6 Hn•nen
1 N •'ICG'D a H " Cao•'
9 ~ amecr u •
EIGHTH RACE-Pace 1 mile
1 F' •·no Sta•"°""
7 Pr•va•t Res..-ve
3 8oooe J1M C.
4 ~and~ 5 eei.1 o-,..,, t
6 V r Ptrl!l ·n\
7 fO/r Ro'"'&"
9 Tf'lf'\'ra wor
NIH'fW RACE. Pac•
C'a ".,"''i or ce '6,ZSO
l Pe··~.;\ Pavt•~
2 (11•m • T·m~
l Goio.n Paten
4 LJCl<Y Lt v1IY
S M il\ V 1e"<Jve<
6 Br01~ Pet
1 L S"aran
KutOler
A-son Bu!lf:r
Maoiano
o ·erien·Mor•
Par1t,e<
1(1\'-
0 1franco
Bav1t1.s
Purse '3 300
Perl< tr
Sherren
0·9,,.-,.Mora"
Otwn
Tooo
Kue~
Svm'
Bavleu
OHOmtr
8vtlef
Bffnat
Ma Olano
rremotav
Can1nl
Sherren
Los Alamitos
harness results
TUESOAY'S ltESUL T'S
(FWl1fl 9f •·Nttit ~· IMdnel
FIRST RACE. Trot 1 m1t•
l(o-stv Mcet\\f!'l .. V (M "II'"
Lt ~ni. Catch IAl'acoo.;oa
""~!\ante ISlfftM
Tlme 212'
IU O lbO U O
1 00 S60 • '°
$2 EXACT A 1~· 1 oa•O \ 1'1SSO
SECOND RACE. Pact 1 ...,,,, Re\~rv Be•e• 1 Andrsn t 00 180 260
'00 500
210
Cee S Eve IPierce1
R L vnn Mar"t CPorr•nt l nme UlS2
U EXACTA <S·7' oa o '79 SO
T ... 0 RACE . Trol I "">«
Hav To .Jl>eed tCtlfl)
un1tV I(""' IPtrrvl
Idle Ruin ITrtmt>-a•)
Time 2111 3
1100 600 JOO
S40 l .O HO
$2 E_XACTA 1 ~3' oaia SS3 IO
~O\MTH RACE Pace 1 mi~
Sl•m AflO H-ISlftlh l 1140 S tO HO
1 00 H O uo Ito"""" R-101t I P'eorce) T Ilk A I (utillfl' I
Time 2'111
U EXACT.\ (1·11 NIO1'020
l'IFTH llACfi. Pa« ~ ,.,, ..
Slllffet1 Solr .1 I B nr 1
Gaffforn•a AhHl <Kueoi.-~v 8 1ut N (Pe•lle-
T;t<M 2~
SuatCNO' ~
14 10 SOO HO
HO 1.60 )60
U CJlACTA t6-31 H id '5100
tJ DAJLY T'lt•l..E l S+6l Hid J1te40
llJtTH lltACI:. Tro-1 mitt I~ c;..,.~ lf°'1l(OI
,,_ Eowl IKUIO* I
llO UO HC
UO SOil'
,, 1 0..1<:• Loottf; M aier S bO
~ ..... 2093
A•l <->Hen• S-.oer O·u '"" 0 ~aooea••"9
Tr.(i.. !ti, A. W M49f'la HbW"
x·~·cl>t<I Cron.c ..
U EXACT A <7·41 O••O \48 00
\EVENTH RACE. Peet t ..., ,.
8 I-' Sre'•"" a Pa•"er I 40 4 40 ) 60
8 H C1>et•l1; w , k1rw~ ) 40 2 40
W•nleflt t Ltv•r 4 40
T me 2073
At\O Wtftl (atflO'n•a L•Ov Ft1<C1a Ann
Metil L11!'f L°'' T•. e Nori()<' Fe""O us ON I
Watcfl Tiie 8v•O·«
Scr atcneo Siar ••nt
'1 EXACTA O·S) oa·d '2l 10
EIGHTH RACE. Pace l m.-.
lla•O.• V.ctor fKutOlt• 7 60 '60 3-lO '°"'"•" 11taiit1'"'•"" 111 360 360 Ml•t>.v Bar KIO A I AnOf•W" s '°
Time ?017
AIW Wtn• Marcl'l Star 11 W•lllOut A Tract
P1nf L•~· A•' Hen•\ LPOKV
!><'rate~ None
'2 EXACT.\ Cl·ll oe•O I ll 20
NINTH ltACIE. Tr~! 1 mile
Foresee Sano &o• f AnGrsnl SOO 300 260
Mr Conten.t (P..,ct 1 u o UO
Gff'O\ Bauote CO.Ill l.tO T.,.... ?OU
Atso Went 11\lrtOUJl'\9 !>tar Suoer ~l<fft,.•
C.flacl'\en
kr•ICNcS Po c., ... LOV lit ~-muoe
U EXACTA (~·II N IO t!UO u DAU. y T'lt•lE I l·l-S or ' or ."' ·~IQ "''° Allet>Oanee l.t'6.
Mutual Hltldle wa.m
Eclipse award to Alysheba
LAKE U C • N Y ( 1» -
AJ)'Shcl>ca. ~mntt of th~ K(ntudt)
•Dfrb and Pn-ak~. Tuttda> ~u
nemcd W&OM'r of l~ fd1pSt A~'ard
n t~ c1'1ampt0n 3-)nr-old.colt for
1987
Ftrdrnand. ~in~r ot hit last tour
)tltU. 1nc'lud1oa a n0$C "K'tory over
\f)1b~bl 1n the Brttden· Cup
\t~ \liai named the &hPK
o\•";lrd rnamp-!on <Hdtf hors.c. tht
Tborouahbrrd'.Racana .t\ sociaeions
1nnounctd
notMT' 8n:cdtr1' up v.-1nner.
~ 1 , ..
Thcatr1C3l, ~as selected a1 the du1m-
p1o n mak turf horse.
Other Breeden· Cup W1ftMn \'Otcd
Echpsc champions~ Miesquc. top
female turf timner. Ephomc. cbam-
p1on 2-)car-old fill). and SlahuiJta.
cop 3--)car-old fillv.
In addiuon. EiliPK Awards ~"'
to o-nh i<kr.t09otdttftllyornwT:
fort)__ intr. leadi"' 2-)al'..old cah:
and Groov). top ~pt1nttt.
The Horse of lht Var wdl tie
announced Jan. 27. ,_ith Fmtanand
ronstd n:d the o. I rntendtt.
Fram81
perpme.
OCean View outseOted PolY in the
last thM quarters. S9'-t 7.
WettmlM&er Tt, CJlntl M: Chris
Tower continued todominateoppos.
jna teams. pourina in 36 poinl5 twhilc
connectin& on 14 of 1 S from the tine
to lead the host LionJ.
The 6-10, 200.pound ~nior center
SCQred 12 of Westminster's 22 p0int1
in the fourth quarter. and tossed in 20
second-half ~ints. T owcr has now
scored al least j() points in five games,
helping the lions to an 8-.6 record that
includes three forfeit losses .
Westminster led only 22-17 at the
end of the first period and 40-32 at the
half but extended its lcad to 54-41
after three quarters. The Lions made
28 of 33 frtt throws while Cypress
sank only nine.
Eric Kuw added 13 points and
Mark Austin 11 for Westminster.
Suta Au Valley H, University••:
The Trojans held a 3 1-24 lead with
.-five minutes left in the first half. but
' the Falcons took advantage of eight
second-quarter turnovers br Univer-
sity to take a 39-32 halftime advan-
tage f()r the win at Santa Ana Valley.
Dave Warren, whose three-point
goal with a minute left in the game cut
University's· deficit to three. scored
19 points while Steve Stolzoff and
Ben Saltzman added 13 point} each
Jta 8erftUM one haD8
PCMUltalD \ralle, OceaD Vmr
for the Trojans (s.-6). who play at
Foothill to n'ight.
Stephen Mumaw. a ~8 junior,
blocked five shots and SCQred six
points for University. Warren
gra~bcd eight rebounds and Stolzoff
pulled down six while David, Dieter
(eight points) dished out seven assists
for Uni.
Santa Ana Valley went on a 15-J
run to end.the first half.
. "1:hey were pressing u.s and we
d1dn t handle 11 very well," said
U niversity Coach Steve Scoggin.
"And 11 was_just a matter of us n01
being vcl) efficient. Santa Ani Valley
played really well. They played good
defense."
In an Academy league game:
Wb1taey -t. Liberty Ckri.Uu St:
The Minutemen hung close for three
quaners before falling to the defend-
i!'g league ch.amps at Libeny Chris..
uan.
Rustlers open at Compton
While the Golden West College red-shirt freshman guard Elbert
men's basketball team is off to its best Davis. while Narvel Wilson.
start in four years, the South Coast Anthony Howard. Carl Champion.
Conference season will provide a Doug Mc Kusker and Doug West-
strong test for the young squad. moreland see the majority ofremain-
The Rustlers ( 10.6) open con-1ng pla) ing time.
ference play on the road with games at Compton College tonight (7:30) and Season-ending injuries to freshmen
Cerritos College Saturday. Golden forwards Steve Moser and Mike
West lost to the Tanars in tour-Pavm have hun.' but others have
mrment action earlier this season. come to the forefront. Compton. as 85-71 . well as Pasadena and El Camino. are
Leading the way has been Markus SCC teams ranked m the top I 0 in the
Muller-Stach. but he and his team-state.
mates-have had trouble with quicker Meanw~1le. the Golden West
teams. according to Golden West women's team will open defense of its
Coach Jim G reenfield. -South Coast Confcttncc cham-
Ot,her ke} contnbutors have been pionsh1p tonight (7:30) against Com·
sophomore forward Jim Stewan and pton at home. Golden West is 16-1.
P\8.IC NOTICE P\8.IC NOTICE P\8.IC NOTICE
Plilled hamstring
keeps Bears' QB
in a state of limbo r
SOUTH o£No. Ind. (AP) -Chic~go quanerback Jim McMahon
said Tuesday he may not be 100
percent healthy when the Bears m~t
the Washington Redskins in the NFL
playoffs. but he vowed to ··~o what-
ever I can" to help the Bears win.
"I've tried to do less befort and it
hasn't really worked," McMahon
said. after the Bears' first indoor
practice at Notre Dame. "I get on the
field. and niy instinct takes over."
The 28-year-otd Bearsquanert>ack.
who has won28 of his last 29 starts. is
recovering from a pulled hamstring in
_his right leg. He suffered the injuf)
Dec. 6 at Minnesota and rrussed the
last three regular-season games.
For Sunday's playoff game. he said:
'Tm going 10 do whatever I can. I'm
going to try to avoid running and
ho pefully the linemen will do their
jobs and I won't have to run."
Bears coaches and players agree
that McMahon. who ed the Bears to
the 1985 Super Bowl title. brings
confidence to the offense. He was
sidelined last season \l.i th a shoulder
injuf) "'hen the Bears lost to the
Redskins 17· I 3 in the playoffs.
Bears offensive coordinaior Ed
Hughes compared McMahon to the
famous Gen. George S. Patton lead-
ing his troops -e\en with an injury.
"I e:\pect Jim 10 be as healthy as he
was tn the Super Bo"' I." Hughes said.
··He came into that game with an
inJui: and played a heck of a game ...
McMahon said that 1985 m1ury
"as similar to his hamstring pull. but
t~~ latest injury goes all the way down
his kg. He ran sparingly Tuesda).
.. I did all the drills ... he said. "I did
the running at the end. I didn't run 'cr: fast but I was just tf)'I ng to get a
httk bit of wind back.
"I don·1 kno" ho" much that's
going 10 help out in that cold ne"t
\l.l'Ck but I'm JUSt 1r:1ng to get in as
ood of a sha as I .can without
P\8.IC NOTICE
ruonina as hard as I can." he Aid.
McMahon said he ftlt preuy aood
after Tuesday's indoor pr1eticc -a
welcome cha• from ouldoors
around Ctticaio. where the wind-chill
factor was around 40 below zero.
"Washington acts pretty cold. too.
so I'm sure they're (Redskans) used to
playing 1n the cold weather,"
Mc Mahon said. Bur the players know
the) can't make mistakes. he addCd.
"If it's 40 below and the wind's
blowing. you're not JOIO& to throw
(the ball) too much,' he said. "But
when you do throw it. you'd better
throw 1t right.
"Any little thing can backfire on
you -in this kind of weather.
especial!)."
Mc Mahon said he had no worries
about coming bilck after a four-week
la, off · .. Layoffs arc things you like to wnte
about:· he told reporters. "It's not a
big deal. I've played the game for a
long time.
··At this level..! think_ the game is 90
percent mental. he said. ··tf you can
get o'er that. )OUr body should do
what it's been doing for years. You
just ha'c to get 1n the right frame of
mind and it'll happen."
McMaho n is aware that people
C"'-pect him to make a difference in the
pla~off game this year. Last season. man~ blamed the loss o n quanerback
Doug. Flut1e. now with the Nt:w
England Patriots. • "l''e seen a lot of quotes from a lot
of people. and f suppose diere's going
to be a 101 ~f rressure put on me. but
it'; nothing con1pared to the pressure
I put on m~seir:· McMahon said.
Mc Mahon said he thinks there are
some holes in the Redskins defense.
"The) pla) a lot of man-to-man
defense." he said. "We expect (cor-
ncrback ) Darrel G~n to go wher-
ever Wi-lhe <Gault) goes. That's the
wa~ the~ pla) ... thr) put Darrel on
the fastest receiver. At least we know
"'herr hr's at. and we can concentrate
on the other people.
McMahon said the team may pla)
harder for him than for bis backups
because pla)ers ha"e more con-
fidence 10 him.
K37357 NEFISHI PS 1·200, DOE A 1987 tn0 fllc1al Reco<ds of te><~ Monte. Catlf0tnta 91733 Nor1t1 ~ leringa
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS SOLE PROPRIETORSHIPS Orange County Caltt0<n1a The Homeo•ners As· Te19Pttone: (818) 302-6971 Me "" c ........ oMcee to
NAME STATEMENT 1-200 and DOES 1-200 In· tn accordance Wtll'l a Oeciat·i soci•tion unoer said ()eclar-DATE (Fecha) JUL 27 .. ~-Cefttw l>f'tv•.
The tollowtng per$0ns are CluStve auon ot Covenants. Con· auon l'leretofore e•ecvtec 1987 •• c..t. Meea. c ....
dOlng bl.Illness u YOU ARE BEING SUED drtlons & Restrictions re· and delivered 10 Ille under-M. HA&JN. c...-. 1ty ._,. .._.... *""'bef
AL TON ASSOCIATES' BY PLAINTIFF_ (A Ud le esta corded in Official Records of Slgoed • written Oeclat~hon Katttr Stine, Oepllt)' .. ttl7.
3090 Pullman Street. Sune oemandando) DANIEL L. Orange County, Caltl0<111a, of Detautt and Demand IOI' Published Oranoe Coast Published Orange Coast
.A..Costa.Mes&....C..s2_6_26 MILLER~ lnd1v1dually and In the propeny Stluated In Sale, and a written NoltGe ol Oally.P110t January 6 13. 20. Dally Pilot January t 2 3 •
James P Warm1ngt<>f' j dOlng buS>ness as Mrn.£Rlsaid ~ty-·1tnd S..te -oet.ott and Elec1l0n to S«I 27 lft8 e 1 8 9 10 11 17 13·
T•1.1stee of The James p DISTRIBUTING. and MILL·1scr•bed as. 10 be rec<>fded 1n Ille C«ihty . W919 ,, 1s. 18 i7 ,·gu· . .
Warmington Family Trust ER DISTRlBUTING Lot 1. Parcel 939-29-011. Wl'lefe tl'le real prooef1y de-' ' . ' -,-WIUUt
Ell U/DIT did 3113178 I You l\atte 30 CALENDAR as per Map recorded in MtS· scribed tie<e1n is localed
Pa1er C Kreme<. 1-rustee DAYS attar l hle 1ummone oeollalleOUs Maps records oc Trustee con<lucllng sale PtllJC NOTICE
ol The Pet9f C Kremer and le Mned on you to ftle a said county Lany Rothman. Altorney a1 --.;...;..=..;:;...~..;....;;..;:;... __ ,
Bonnie S. Kremer 1979 typewrltlen rHponae al Record Owner LILLIAN Lew. 1' 140 Bech Blvd • NOTICE Of
Trusl dated 4'110179. 1 C1vtG,ll'lla court. SPEIDEL Suite 106, Westminster . lf'ECIA.I.. ME£TlNQ GAF-FEY
Plaza, Suite 290 NewPOrt A lett., Of,,,_.. call wlll The Sireet Adores.s and Calltorn1a 92683 ( 7 1 •I Of THE •mERS JOHN JOSEPH GAF
BMcti. Calif 92660 not protect you; your type-other common designation. 895-3308 Of "ACIFIC -
Douglas C. Neft. 2201 DI.I· wrltteft reeponM mu.I be·'' any. ol Ille ieal ptopeny DATED December t6 SAY1MGS ltANK. FEY• age 77, puM!d
Pont Onve. S1.11le tOO. 1rw 1e In proper ..... form If you de sett bed a bove 1 s 1987 NohcelS ,...,.by given tnat January 3, 1988 in
Calli 92715 _ went the c0url lo heet your purported to be 1872 av: LAMY ROTHMAN, a Spec.ial MMttng of tile New·nnrt beach CA
Timothy P Hogan 30901-· Monrovia. Costa Mesa Cal•· AttCWMJ at Law Members of Pactllc Saving$ r-• ·
Pullm.,, Slreel Su•lt A If you do not ffle your lonua · Publtshed Orange Coasl 8artk ("8ank"lwillbel'leklel Born December 18 .
Costa Mesa. Callt 92626 reaponN on time, you mey Said sale win t>e maoe. but 01111y P1101 Oecembet 23 JO. tfle olflce of tl'le Bank at 1910. Jersey Cit y,
This business is con-loee the c.ae, and your witl'lOut covenen1 Of war· 1987, January 6. 198a 1901 Newport Boui.va.ro. New Jersey Mr Gaf-
ducted by-e general part· ...... moner and pr09-ranty. express Of 1mphed. re-w Costa Mesa. CaJ1fornia. on f h .....;__ .
ne<sll1p erty m.ey be taaen without gardlng title. possessK>n 0< the 19111 day of January. ey as ~· a res.i-
Tlmolhy P Hogan tur1haf wamtng from 1he enc1.1mbranoes. to pay lor P\8.IC NOTICE 1988atlhehoYrof830a.m. dent of Newport
Th1S statement was ttled court. oeflnquent m~ln1enance on Mid day. The t>u11ness 10 Beach since 1924. He
""''" the Counly Clerk of Or-Tilwe •• othw legal re-assessments, costs and at· SC.WONS be taken up et the Mid -...... .... a life tiJne ca
l
ange County on December qul,_ta. You may want 1orney s tees co w1l (CITACION JUOK:IAL) Sc>eclal meeting Shall be. ......& ... ' . -
23. 1987 -to eall an au_, rtghl $2 .327 34' w11t1 1nteres 1 NOTICE TO DEFENDANT 1. Considering and voting reer of devouon to
F3IS4t2 -•r-" rou do not known ll'leteon. as proVICled 1n said tAvtso a AC:UsadOI MICHAEL. upon awova1 ol a resol-sailing ln the early
P1.1bltSlled O<enge Coa.st an attorney rou mey c.11 en Oeclarahon advances ti 1oEORGE DEMMERLE also utlon to amend lhe An!Cle:s 1930s h e sailed to
Daily P1101 Deoember 30 attorney refenel MrVlce 0t any. unoer the 1enns or said kn011Wn as MICHAEL G . of Incorporation ol ttle Bank """' .
1
1987. January 6 13 20 •legal aid omce (119ted In Declarauon lees, ctlargfl DEMMERLE. an 1ndl"1d1.1al, by adding tne to1fow1ng 4 arnU and went on
1988 the phone boot). and expenses of said Al· an0 DOES 1 through 10. In-paragrapf\s 10 said Art-Ides the yacht Stranger to
w .9 13 c-No. 515251 torney clustve Artlcle vu. T1'le lleblllty 01 Alaska and the Ga-----------I Ttie name and address of The Homeowne1s A s· YOU ARE BEING SUED the Trualees ot tile savings 10.....,006 on the E:xpo-fltlllJC *>TICE ine COl.lrt is fEI nombre y SOCiallon unde< said Oeclar-BY PLAINTIFF fA Ud le esta blink for monetary damages . r-e _
__ ..---.;;_..;..;_.;;.;~-1direcc1on oe ta corte es1: Su-auon hefetofore ex8Cl.lted deman<Jando) SOUiHERN Ill.ii be etlmlnated to the sition to bnng ~mmals tcsra . PERIOR COURT OF CALI-and delivered to Ille under-C A LIFORNIA EDISON fvll•t extent permlss.ible to the zoo's Ill the
FICTITIOUS MletNESS FORNIA FOR THE COUNTY signed a wntien Oeciarauon COMPANY. a oorpo<ation under Callfomta law United St.ates He
NAME STAnMEHT OF OR~NGE 700 CIVIC of Detault anO DemanO tor You l\aYe 30 CALENDAR Arttete VIII. The MV'lngs bri . TN fotlowtng c:>et'SOOS are Cenler Drive west Santa Sale, and a written No11oe ol DAYS aftw ttll9 --bank is au1hor1zeo to spent ef umes ftsh-
doitlg bl.lslneu as Ana Ca111orn1a · DeffiUll and Elec:llon to Sell c. MfftCI °" rou to m. a prOVlde inoemntflcauon or Ing comrqerc1ally .
ACCOUNTINGALTERNA· Trie name address and IOberecorded tnttleCounty typewtftten r~N at agent1(as defln4ld 1n~ton w orki ng~. in the
TIVES. 1869 Newporl 1atepl'lone number or plain· wtlcwe lne ,.., properly de· tNaoowt 317 oltheClilitomlaGeneral .._ _ _.""'..A. ~.......1. .
Boulevard. Sune 111 Co$la t111's anorney or pla1nt1!1 ICftbed hefein tS localed A tettM'cw ,,,_..cell wtll Coi'poration Lawl 10< bfucl'l ~u, ......... ...,~g:mg
Mesa, Calif 92627 w11riou1 an auomey. 1s 1E1 Trvstea conducttng safe-not ptOtect you;,_ type-of duty to the Corporation in the Newpo.rt Bay
Tile Aocounllng Assis-nombfe, la 01reccion y el nu-Larry Rothman, Attorney at w""9ft rHpa--i be and rt• ~s ltw~ and as a boatman for
tanta NelWO<I\, Inc . Call-mero de lelefono del Law, 1'1•0 8ech Blvd .• lft ..,..._ ..... '°"""you ~ P'OYislonl 0< tl'lrOIJQll \he Newport Harbor
forn•a. t869 Newpori at>ogaoooetdef'llandanle.o Suite 106, Westminster, WMtltleoowtto._.,yow ~tswlth tfleagenl&, y--"
BouleVard. Suite 11 1 Cosia deC oemandanre que no Caltfornla 92683 (7 1')-. Of both, in excess ot the In· "!"--.it Oub. He was
Mesa. Calif 92627 Hence •bogado M l WIL· 895-3308 M you do not ... ,_ d«nnlf'leatlorl otl'letW•M per· en1is1ed in the United
This business 15 con-LIAM E WINDHAM. Al· DATED Oec.embe1 16.j11111•-on..,_, you_, mltted by S.Ctlon 317 of.tlle1 States Coast Guard tn
ducted by-a corporttonl tomey al Law, GRAND TER-1987 1oM IM -,. end fOll/lf Calitomta G«lefal Cor&>or-W Id W ll d om Dam Pre$denl RACE LAW CENTER 22737 8Y: LAMY ROTHMAN, ...... "'_, Md .,,... atlOn Law. ~bjact to ll'lel or. ar an was
Thlt stat9ment was 111eo Barlon Road :4. Grand Tet-Attomey at L..w ,_,, _, be tall• wmtout limits on tueflea.cess lndem-atauoned at Port
w1tt1 the County Clefk of Or ' a c e . C A 9 2 3 2 4 Published O<ange Coast IWtMf ...... from ltle ntficallon set lonh .'"Section Hu.eneme. Mr. Gal-
an-County on December 714/825-9682 Da11y P1tot December 23. 30 -1 204 of the Callfomta G-.al , ,,_ ·
t6'.1987 DATE (Fectl•I FEB 19 1987, Jarwaiy 6, 198a "*'-.,. °"* ..... ,.. Corporation law Ley ... ppl~t times
, ....,,11 1987 W907 vow-r •Mt 2.Noothetmaners. we re skippering PubC~ Orange Coast Gary L Granvth, Ci.nt, to -• ~ ,..._. Dattd thia 30th day of 0... yachts. He delighted
DAiiy P1tot December 30. lty Chrletlne FMl!eftbw9, Ptlll.IC NOTIC£ _.,. M JOU do Mt kMWft cemt>er. 1987. •I Co11a in superb maint.en-
1987. January 6. 13 20 OeflutJ ManorMf,JOU!NJc.IM Meta, c.ittornia. ance and all the
1988 Pubhlhed Oranoe Coast NOTICE Of eHOfMf ,...,., .. ~Of DOWOTMY IC. f'OTT£A.
W-91S Dally Pilot Oecembef 23, 30, TRUSTEE'S SALE .......... offtoe {itet.d"' c.,.... hcretary, ... protocol of old time
_________ ,1987,January6. 13. 1988 NOllCE IS HEREBY ... ..._ ... ,. cfftcs..tftp.... yachting He retired •-IC NOTICE ... W912 GIVEN that on Friday. Janu ~-de -le en-Publ!Shed Oranne Coasl ln l""'o hil ski ___ n_~,_...; __ ...;..;;...,._.1-_________ ary22, 1988at tO·OOam .. a; ,____.,eeta ctt~ton tu-Dairy Ptlot Janu~;-6. 13. f h w h eln adpper
ACTITIOUS aUSINESS nun1 tr NOTICE Ille Law otta t. Larry ueted teen."" p&uo 1988 O t e yat: t v er. N""9f STATDIENT r-wx.t'-Rolttmao. localed at 14 ,,0 de IO DtAS CAUMDAJUOS W920 Mr . Gaff ey is
The fOllowlng persons are NOTICE Of Beach Blvd Suue t06, pan pre .. fttar una aurvived by his loving
doing bl.lslnas as A1tS111p & DISIOlUTIOM Of Weslmtnster • CaUlornta, ,....._ .. _,... a -rtllJC NOTICE wife Dorothy R Gaf-
Batloon DHtgn, Hlgller "ARTNERSHIP Latty FIOll'lman on behalf ol .... • .... cone. ' ·
Power, Unlimited, 1240 Publlcnotleel$hetfbylPUTAIN PARK HOME-Unacertao""'8~ ICl7Sl7 fey o f Newport
Loegan ST 1t E. Coate Mesa given ttial Audfey M Kayle>< OW_N ERS ASSOCIATION ........ "° .. -.-e NOTICE Of Beach, son J. Pat Gaf-
CA 92626 1aod Paule._ Kaylor and Ken-WILL SELL AT PUBLIC ............... au ,. ... --.. -'"'UCATION fOA fey and 2 grand-
Geo<ge A Stokes t8S67 neth L Kayler 11we1ofore AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST • .......... tteM... ~.. .a-h R b Santal'omasa.Founta1nVal·tdOlngbuamess~nderttteflc-BIDDER . FOR C A~H . llMpllr C.fl lea fer• ~Of u.ug ten u y and a.y. CA 92708 l •llous ltrm name and style of CASHIER S CHECK OR "'a II dad• e l •I a I u ALCONOUC &nera1d Gaffey all of
This bualness ts con-Beacon Investments. at CERTlFiEDCHECK(pay.ote •1111•11 al wted....,. mvDA• UCEMM Hesperia, CA. Fu-
doc:ted by' an indMdual 2033 l W1n<1 Caw. \.ane. Coty 81 1tme of ~~ In lawtun)I ~.18 08f1e __... .., ..... "P H,......,Ol""~S INC .. neral eervices will be Geo<ge A Stokes of Huohngton Beeel'l. Coun-mon9Y of IM ..,..,1ed Stat -""" .,.~ •• ,,_1~ Tl\le statement wu tiled ty of Orange. Slate of Call-all rlgtlt. tile 8'1d 1n1eres1 81 ualN -,,--. • ~ !<> the o.p.riment u~.u Saturday Janu-
wlth the County Clerk of Or· fOfnia. did on tl'le 29th day of ~ted by • NotlCe of De-fl•• nta • ......_,.... of Alcoholic &ewrege Con-ary 9, 1988. 1:00 P .M .•
9"lge County on Oecamt>er Oacemt>et. 1947, by molu.t 18'.lll and ~Ion lo Mil .. ceeo, r le~ trol 10 sell alc:ohollc at Pien:e 8t'Oa Bell
"'. 1997 , ~--i. dts•-"·• t...... __ , ... Pursuent. to dec:laration of • -. • .._. ~-91 130 E. 17th l D-~ • • , ... p;;;Sl'l•P ;;d 1.:,~ Covenenla. COf'ldluons & f •trH -;:-.-;. d• ..., SttMt, Costa Meu 92627 ~way Mortuary
Publi9tle0 Orange Coast .,_ relatiom as partners AeetrlctlOt\S. wtllc:h notice • ..,... ... wtth ••48" ~ G.net1ll Chapel with priv.te
Deily Pilot December 16 23 therein -rec«dad on June 29 . .._..,.,,.,..de le.,.._ (Pull. Prem->~ lniennent at Harbor
30 .Januwy 'I. 1988 • • QATEo AT Costa MeA, l987 in Ofnc:lal ~ds of ......_ •• ,.. 'rM• PubbNd Or~ Coeat L. M
W901Cellforn1e '"''29th day of Orange Counfy. Californte. .-.... .-_._ o.l!yPllotJenuary8,1Ma awn emorial ---------Oecamber.1987 -11·ucc0tdanoe•tn,•o.dat· .._._..._.. wt2t Putt. Pierce Sn.. ._.., .. IC.,tor •fiOn °' c:o-witt. ~ ....... Bell Broadway
Put,l111'1ed. Orange Coest dltlons & ~rlc:tlons r .. ._ • • '' I • , ,.... ..a.JC MJTIH' u-•• -. ni--"'""" p J .... ., corded in Offtcitl AeCiotd9 ()If e -......... ,... I ll'W. ,_ ,_. 3 • ..,..~_.., ••I Olli ......... , tlot enuarv 8• , • ..., OrttiOe County c.tom1a. • •'•ti fr • • Costa Mesa. 642-9150
(CITACIOll "IDK:aAL.) W•922 In !he pr-' wtualed ......._ .. -:r: --~-.. -;======~ NOTICETOOEF'ENOANT Coun....-., ...,,_ .. _,,,__ •
(TIMEVISION. INC • SCS •-.,. MftTll'C wd ty end State ... .. .,_..,._ ..._ tTA~ 1---.---=.-..;....;""~....;;.' ""'-;;..... __ ,.cr1bed u ... The LEASING. OENUNZK) A AS-j _._. _, \..ot 29, Of Trll01 7$67 • ~........ ~~-~are
SOOIATES: THE. MUSIC ....,, .... ...,.. --OALLEAY~ JOSE.PH OF.-""'9TWFt tALI per M19 recotded In Mia. The'*'-er'6 lddf-..lt ot 01 IRS A LMANACS
NUNZIO, INOllJIOUALL't' NOTICE' IS HEREBY ~ ..... .,. recordt of "'9 OOW't is; CEI nombre r 7C>a·• ~ •• , .. ,. .. .-..... OEu.a""""O $ -......... ,, °'le c<w1e •) C........._ ,. __ .....,,,. . --· .....,._1 .&A ~GIVEHthatonFnuy,Jenu-Aecotd 0--Wll.l.IAMMUNICl .. Al. COUAT. _.._ . .,._.... 80CfATUl, ANO' A8 .-,22, tMa• tOOOa.111 ... a 80WMAN . AOl ~Iona a AGEHT. 9£AVAHT OR EM-,,_ L.aw o"ice ot 1.¥ry 1'M SttMt AOdrW aouT'H OAANOi COUN1Y ~ CDl'pcdan '
Pl.OYEE Of tel LEASING. AothfMn. 10Ceted at 1040 ... .._ A-lnCI JUO OIST • COUNTY Of TNI ~ la con-
f ..... --.. ..-.. r L'OJI>. --.. .. 81 d ... ,.. .,.,_ -·"·-· ~ 0AAHG£.$'TA1'l0FCALI-~ .... eCOf~r9tt"'t -"'""~ '""'• .. vvno -" V • ....,,,. lvv. If -of tne reel _ _..,~A. ae>t43 Cr Y• .,., ..,. ~T10N. n.t Mu&1c w .. 1mtn1ter ca11rorn1a. 0 ;9·c·,•b•d •t>o"'v.._.e 1•1 own ~ w 11 a.:.. G A I. I. t " y • A s A l.llNY Aottlmen on beNif "' ----0 • ~ ,,.,_..,., l.aouna ...... tWlery IUlllOIAAY 0' TIM6-COA.\l &AV HOMf-__ ._to be 10Nt I>-~JM11 ~ ....,,_,. -Med
"'8ION. INC .• wtl.L~M r low Hf.A'-Assoc1AT10N ::-" ~ ,ount..,. v-. The MMe edchll. n """,. eoun., ca.ti o1 0r. ~.HOM£ADA\.1.£S ~Will SELL AT PUBLIC 8-w .. .,.---~"""''*Of~-el'f9 County Oft~-LEDi.RiA. P ADAMa eecnAUCTl()f(TO TttEHIGHUT wlWIOul t:itMM1'4,~ • .t1orney, °'" p6alnttrf 11.1W7 'lidf1tf..,.,MCl~•ot• llODlA F-OA CASH. ~~Oti!'llOW ::::::.· • {£1 'IMn ...... dlreebs. ~!CASHIER $ CHECI( OA 0-' tn11t POUHI ~. o d t i.fo y el ri ~ Or-.. C4*t ......._egencatn01«em-lc!ATlfl£DCH(_CKr~ • ao ,.;," :_.c:,,_::,,, ... 0 o.iw 111oe 0.1 ,...., *''
....,,_ o( Tia« VISION, .. time Of ..._ In ~ .. _.,_ ......_ ........... ~... tMl, ~ I , U. 20, llNC_, f/ltld/Of Ttt£ MUSIC money Of tne united Sl•t•I _ ... q~l "'••nt•nao ~• Qll9 l'IO ,_
OAl.L IAY STEVEN 11 ~t. tie tnd 1M9rW1 111111 :•1Q. ~end al• ·~·A MI f W·•1•
ICHWARTZ.. ltldlVtCIUlflj Ct.-.cl by' • NotlOe °' 0.-torn•~ • '"'· to •It 0 u NA"°o St&t<J .. !Y'£"AY ~ • "'° .. ~ omc.. Cl~ec· '*'" l'ld ~'°" to ... u .on 00 •1111 tnl9fet " ... :9 " ,.,. ... . .... .,~ .... ,,. ,.._, •• --"=.:."'::!':'..!'. .. ~= . .:;"..o~~ ...;:-:::.•·=· lnCllOI of SCS Co..-n.nta, ~1tiona a WfOf under ll'le..;,... fll ' .. IAMAM C &OAfM ......, ... --... *4 l.Wlf'D CORPOA· ,_.,~IOIW, ....... llOtlC9 o.dwe11t::W•· ...._ A -,,IO· ............... .,_..
ATIOfd •·200. DOE PART-... recotOedon&.o'9ml* -.. ""':";'..;.... "' A--_i"M ej~--~~~,~~·~t~'~~==~~~;~~~='!!.~
~ " l ~
'
Orenge Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, January S, 1988
0 0 0
--4 lines 7 days -Private party OOIY Ho ~al
FROM NORTH ORANGE
FROM SOUTH ORANGE
540-1220
496-6800
• , o 80 Esttte. Comtne'Clal, Auto-
• -motive. Boa11ng. °' Help Wanted
•
You can now call the Delly Piiot Cleaalfled Dept. on Saturday morning from 8:00to11:30 e.m. to place your Sundey and Monday eda.
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
HOUSES/CONDOS
0.-.. ·~ .......... 100.
..... ,__ IOl11
~..... 1011 C..-"-'-IOU c--107•
0...-10!2• fl!.,. lQU ._v.-., 1CQ4
.-......_. 10.0
.--.-100
-10.. '--IOtl '--'°'° '-......, ion ~f-IOlS -.:..v-10'1 ,___ 10..
S-°'"'-" I 111•
S-.a.-c--1C171
---11*) ............. 1°'4 ..... ,__ 1Qlt
-l-10. I-IOfO
MISC RE --... _ ...... ,,__,...
'
RENTALS
HOUSES CONDOS
O-• ....__ --'---'-"-'-'----(I T .... ._v....., ,..__ .-.....---._ ..... .__ ._ ...... wii..•--v.,. -----s..c:-__ , __
CLASS·IFIED INDEX
642-5678
FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY
FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY
SELL throu~h classified
540-1220
•1100
neo
11 ... ,, .. MISC RENTALS ANNOUNCEMENTS -·---·-aOU OPEN HOUSE
DIRECTORY 11 ..
1190
~·-0..--·°'--....... tCleO
APA~TMENl S a-.. ..... -.. --c.--..... c--e.1-
'--0...-lJT ... ,_y...., ----,....__ -.__
1t0'1
1.0.
1.01
2611 ,.,,
161•
1•1• 2.n
~
1..0
'°"' , ....
._ --v--._,.-. ...... .,. ..
~,...._ ----EMPLOYMENT
t-0-..-. )011 t-..-• l)JQ , __ ..,_ 1»S
MERCHANDISE
'-""" 0.... ~ 1'11 -f-· -
GARA GE SA LES
c-.. ------C--•-c--·--,-.._..... ~..., _ ...... --.._ .. ._ .... --._._
••to • °' •'Cl7 ••n ~•?• • 11
• )o
• o.; .. , ... ... . " . )}
----~ TRANSPORTATION
BO.A TC.
c--.. 701
·-1011
-101• ....... ~ 70••
~ l"Oll
S..-.f-~ 107t
so.. :..., --l'02l
N'l5(
•-IOIO c~ N r, ..... , IOU --5<-IOll
~'-....... l----v-~S..0.--
, ...
)6JO ,.,, ,.,,
;~
BUSI NESS &
FINANCIAL
..__ .010 ._.... ao·
·-.01' ""-"• ao •
-"---........ ---0 67
• 4'9
• IC! . •:
.AviOMCl .E .. __ 9010
---~ 9011 •""9t W..-.cl t(OO ...._ ... _
-.OU 1616 ,.,. --ow---C-..l l-60•• --w-C-.O•I •-c.---Ua 16'0 , ... -~ '"" ,. • ... iJC'l1 SERVICE
DIRECTORY --~ _, __ ,, -·-,.,.... 1"6 ,.
2690
.. -w-.._,.i-_ ... _
....._JO•
DEADLINES
PUBLICATION OEAOt:tNE
Monday ..... ·-········ . Sat. 11:30 AM Tuesday ................. Mon. 5:30 PM
Wednesday ............ Tues. 5:30 PM
Thursday .................. Wed. 5:30 PM
Friday .................... Thurs. 5:30 PM
Saturday.............. . .. Fri. 5:30 PM
Sunday................. Sat. 11:30 A._.
_..., ..... ... .on
~-oQIO M«-.. 600
Oh« ,_, l f---7
THE DAILY PILOT
CLASSIEIED 0£F1CE-HOURS
TelepllOne ~
Mono91-Fncs1y
8 00 A.M ·5 30 P M
S1turOay 8 00 AM· t 1 30 A M
8\ISWl4le$ Counter
Monday·F rlday
8 00 A.M ·.5-00 P M
842-5878
CHECK YOUA AO THE FIRST DAY
n.-eaity P!tot ~~Of-efflCleney and .a:uracy
However. oceuionalty errors do occur P1eue
llS'len when your ad 1s read baci( and Checit yoyr
ad dally Report erron tmmed1ately to ~2-5678
The Dally Pilot eecepts no llablhty le>< any err0< "'
an advertiMment fOI wtlloh 1t may be responsible
axe41C)t f0< the c:o.t of the spaoe ac1ually occup.ed
by the """' Credit can only be allowed IOf' the first
Insertion
,
·-~ -9030 '...0.. tell ·--,._a-, ~ -~
-·-90'0 ..... ~ •\QO
._.,,... 0...... f')QQ
DIRECTORIES
--Cw-or) OM, >-.c-
c.a.-~·~ 4...•o"-~ ._&c...T-~
:ic--~a.,.' s-my
--$ul'ICley """ -not ~ ->O .,.,. _ __,
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2BR i8l •viii! now In 4 •ITIPI 11.-* ptall '725 On. mod, .. Yrty 38r 28&. tn*: Xln1 blt:ins nr Ht~ Ctr SD hwy c:ond1 s, 175 173-2507
7631VO!Qa ~ ......... ,u, 2BR 28R. t~ arldoaed
011• ·--& dryer
28' 28&_ Mr Nwpl o-r.JW
pool & sc>a $64.5/mo. $895 No pats 64().. ,~
S650 daoOSll ~2•S4 VERSAILLES Full ..:. 29f.
3 tllks to ~· :<'Br. no 2S. cornw unn w/mn
pets vsy QUle4 S750 ~ ...,._. r.-a ~lea
U SO mo. n-pets_ ~ ., .... 1. NO FEE. 644-12· t
1550/mo 4 bllls 10 bCt'I WALi( TO BEACH &
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IWlllEIS
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Wanted '°' Tontle ....... ·= I '"., c ~ wOf'tl btlnCft. ....,.. 9eectl, ,.._... &m ena c:-" naw no wtlt ,rtftdl bdrm
IHH•••a ==-... "*:':.-::' ~ E=-~9!': ... ftftl Y• I · 1• Own C9' LM-oue. _._, Wcwtl Imm to 7em. 1 dlife ~ & c:eblM'e. Spc: All.,,.,_., .s~. ~ The Or.,. Coul Delly + T..f, el SM. 2 bO¥& "' ... k ~ MQlollll lofa, Ike new rMbC • a Int ~. Muat Piiot le MloolUng tor toe> IHO"-'. N9175-3800 ,.....,.,. modern l!Rftt ti* I 2 .... (~) ~~ :::r'~ Wllflll ct.pendabl• car and dWl.PNCtYftor.i'*'9m ......
youth and adult carrr.r.~ 12.30 AM·tAM M t PfOOf of -..o IMUrMOe aofa tllde-e -bed . I MlVUV f
ROBINS We· ott. .,, uc:iellenl -~sh. Xlnt ~-c .. ua now. llMIOI IM4-00l4
~ llMtlilal la ··= bue ..a.ty plUt over eflte In P«90n at PlllllAlflLDI mlllllal ~~!!!!;!!iiiiiii1~:.:.;11;;~ ... "l"'ll"P.',.... .. 1~~~~~~~~~~f~~::i11~~~-~-1•ioilliiiiiiiiftil~'!'!'!'l ... PP!l'll'lf'•IJ $300.00 In bOnUM9 •valf.· VIII• Del • 32200 FIT, $4/Hr. Laouna Hlls. Standard<b*I. YCMJ tlaUI ~ ~ l :xaaruon:: NEW. REPAIRS. SERVICE HAULING, CLEAN UPS. ~G INTEAtORS, Ible every_!'!°"~· Del Obispo, San Juan GatY 0t Rletl 7&6--3764 1100 C.. 54&·ee8'
...... dOOt•. ~. No }Obi too llNlll. RMI. QUALITY WORK, FREE HANGING/STRIPPING erous gas """ ............ • Cap •M-&802 ··---------
FORD
, ,·, ,. A II!!.<. lM ~ l" ~ •
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$2.56 per day
That's ALL you pay fOf
3 hnet, 30 day minimum
In the
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CALL TOOAYll
ISi FOi LOiS
Your
Sen/lea Oirec:tory
RepresenlatMt
••2·•32 1tit.310
.... 11111••• .. Wal Uc'd Freeftt 831 2345 EST MIKE 722 7858 VISA-MC &73-1S12 lowancet and the op-PHONE ANSWERING all Bleck L.aequercOftbleet+ _____ _.,.._m -· • -. "I•"' · · • · -portunlty fOf advanc:.• Hou u k ••PI n g E • • thl1'a. s.coaa1 Alanna. On Bdrm. WNte L.acQu« ... J! 1 c .... t~Cwlllt F111nt WE gait ahd hang together ment. peri.no.ct preferred. 2488 N9wport Blvd .. C.M piaf group qn bdrm. Btk a _
P.. Strtp.-lnst•ll. advice to the Should you ;oin our team .... , ma Co beMflta. M2~~oo lrthr IOfu IVIMt. er ... A 'CURA BRICK/C NCRETE wont. ..rs AedWOOd ~ & crazy. XJnt refs 133-7172 \)f District Miii~. you tH1 so. CoHt Hwy, w/gl ... din aet w/ctirs. ~
Prof. ,...lable, res. rets. Cuatom Gat.. Ouallty p)--Ll wOI be ehglble fOf: L8QUn• BMch 49<4-9717 PlllS IPIUTtl aofabed 9ray w/mauve
FREE eat 641-3283 IAN Const.IR41p&lr. 9&4·9080 High SchOOI & COiiege. ... 81 •Full Medical Coverege AB DICK min exper req'd, plllowa. All xlnt, I mo o4d lllT &OIU Y&UI
Driveways. petlOS, petn., Fu...M 549•5345 H ltr II• 1• 1HO "Dental Plan WIRl OITIHRS ·FIT good WOfklng con-'350-S750I t73..ol53 Just bring ue 'I04Jf IOweat
etc, No job too smaJl. ;o .o.1.:.V1n A Al!WOOO* wdscl,laf HEATING.PLUMBING (EIJbiblllty alter 90dayt) d ltlon!:. .. ~ ... ~ ... loc. BUTCHER BLOCK din.tie t>onaflde Aoura deal and "'-M·.... 53~ "'"'"" ~ ""''" I w. ·cr9dlt Union T ...... o c t 0 ·1y *-·11 ....... t .. nvU. ,..,.ey, .,....,...,,. Enjoy the wfnter tlollday by -w.cart EXPERT Servkle & Repair • 4o 1 K Plen ,.. ':'1:o.: oa 81 w/4 ctlalrt , antique din _. .,... ·"·
T ~c!~~r=: c~'i ~~ .,n;.ecr::'y,.";'~ TIEis ~~~:~s,tl:~~~ .. so ~f~tibl:~r":11Y:u~~· got ~~~~ = f: :. P~~T?~~-table 7/~:-:s~2s•chal" .111 aw'MN;;~~lu
bond Hlgn.tt qual low f\Jll cords, to ..... S140. Top9edl remow. CIHnup NEW REPAIRS SERVICE what it takes. call Beth at 3 sd;ur d!{ thean:s Start $5 hr. M-F. 9-2:30 Obi bed/hdbrd SSO. 1001 QUAIL ST • NB
prices. (714) 962-7093 * 364-47:M * nu lawn/sprinklr751-3476 No l~bs too small Reas 642-4321 ••t 205 Of wee:.:,ds ~ holidays'. Sam, 642·6262 N.B Uierwave tt»e S20. gold 112-2112 llACIU
C .. il. Cart .,... FIREWOOD GREEN LIFE by ERIC LIC'd Free est 631-2345 send re~me to Ai>Plte:anl musl flave ,. P/T •IYllS COUdl $65, all very clean
EucalyS>tus. Of~. Ou. Creauon-lnstallatlon ---'. -11able car with valid CA 2809 N9wl)Ort BIVd Cati ~8-!Me 1 $ L~O<I!!' ~l~1C-~~ A=-:c;7:: 6:..:: D~~~:~-;~n: 1752~;:~ t~~.c·REAOINGS $20 Daily Nit ~n'Z:r:~:n-:~:~~~ Call 67S-13S5 Er~To~.E ,:!~,; rL~~~~ .
p. mtlled. $85 ~d s 160 Julta~ & Yolanda o•rden-Finances? Relat1onsn1p? prlnt-<>ul Starting pay .. , /T f /T WAITllU/n bedroom furniture. hk•
...
ltaaiaJ nice cord,delVJim63W561 lng/nouseciean642-3921 Health?Rula,8S9-1010 UOW.l1Jlt. S700 per hour plu$ gas ltflauslntwMt new 964-9718 wnlllftL-.. ~~~u,!'°J1flUet Houaec:liininQ/6ff1ces 10 ~ DUSTY'S Land1C&P9flawn l111ia1 C.stl ..... CA 12121 al~ to apply at &Ol E BalbOa 81. Bafboe QUEEN mattress HI m • n f&am
Com.mission REQUIRES yrs exp. Renable. bonded H Mii'Old. ' Main Serv Wkly/monlh/ STOP LEAK St I Attal ..... ·~·· UAL man Beautyrest. unused. $1111 Tn ....... ........ that alt u:ted household he . tns'd Jenny 548--0621 ~-._ .. 1~repal ..... ~trynt. 1 ttme Free est 241-1640 , , •••••yun In wrapper. satin quilted ...... -, ._ ...... .... ,.,..,.._, -........ Apphcanta must nave r• -. -• ~yr war 722-9167 .. -· ,. •-goods movers prmt their HOLIDAY SPECIAL drywall etc. ary 64S-5277 LAWN SERVICE Wk guar lmmed service lteble ~ar proof or m-Dally ..... Full or Part-Time. Potlt!Ye I mr na-" If P U C Cal T numMf, If yOIJ hate dirt call me! • Mow & Edge twice mo * 722 7537 11t OMV rw91 ttll de I ht typj"& $5 QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS ~· llmo's & chautteur sprint •unda. 750-8303• *HUSBAND FOR A DAY 18· 24 548-6989 -surance prlnt-oul abaseu _. ~la~ 'ana & BOX .. OUIL TEO .. Pl(-tftO lft't
TCP all Ooor/windowlr----R~ I _.a I' 1 ..... ,. and valid Caltlorn1a Or1v· .,... ..,. their numb4lr 1n --........ ..-••Yi•t ea-e 1a1 ,.. 1 1181 ers Lioense 760-5000 BRANO NEW! $1SS adver11sements 11 you Prof Hsclng. FREE est. 7 paJr/Repl'ment 962-9915 · A 110 Wm •-St. . Call 846-4293
t b dys wk 10 yrs a;11p r-ef •• lMIYIH* QuAllT.Y Con.S1ruct1on EARN EXTR'" money _, I ~ijJ.h. ••)""-··~~..._. •1"" have a ques ion a out Lie Ins' •42.50s3 . . AMERICAN HANDYMAN •• ,.. cm. ..... CA 12121 •... SOFA ·-~-1 ..... Ir __ .. ~ l X ,.., v_,, ·" '" tna ._..ah"' of a mover " CLEAN & EXPERT Comm 1· Resid I. Let our work1nn "ON CALL · 8 to • ~ • "'· "'"'-· "'' .,.., ""' " · · Doors Windows Fences eitp save you MONEY' 16 nrs Per week All shifts between 9am & Spm M-F £ ottoman Never used. '4 1llo Al -l'Wlf.B hmo or chauffeur. Call Coa1tracti1a e>ryw°a11. Plumbl~. Bath~ Over2Syearsexpenenoe Uc Free est 631 -2345 available Wen~ .. ew. Or call Beth at 642-4321 -:.-'.--$295 Earlntones. (714)
Pu:ic ~t~~~~:-4 ~;1m· I lailiia1 room Remod'I. Carpentry lie T • 116,428 130· )3S3 """' ,.. aitt 20s ll01n/•ir1, lfflOI 261-9502 (7'141 680-0210 ~Slit Al ~ >ism
mi on 1 And Yes Jes!J$ 1s Lord ••ABC MOVING•• Tile penenced '111& 86 J~ s~ ~ !*&, •i •llMl llllTlllS* Free esL 894-5481 Quick & Careful T138046 •S48-S49311t llSIRJllCE CLEAi Small Costa Mes.1 CPA llilcelluMal OIS
Oedteated 10 superior FENCE-S-OATES Tree trim LO RATES 552·0410 Entrys, kllchen. pallos. llCS/IDT H B Agency PIT. phones. firm. non smkr. 646-4330 '* A ln411an items 86 6.1>.. .. •1 ~~ i~u
L w AIN 0 qullhty & per'SOOal ser\'lee. Dump runs. C.M /N.B Pai•tia baths Cust/Commerctal TIPESITTER Ille type exp re'd. ncrm•••n P/T wantedll rugs. bUlo.AlL II rn. At ,..,.,,~
Orywall·Patchong· Teittura PIYIE CllSTllCTlll area. Jlm Whyte. 642-7206 IJ . CUSTOM TILE & BRICK Must type 70 wpm and 56 SO/hr 842'2S23 For stun care uleofi In alto oriental rugs
L1c=288597 631 -9295 Finance/Fund control avail •HANDYMAN• RICHAR5' SINOR offers: Tub encl $425 Spec1allze nave excellent grammar JlllTOll/LITt llAllT C4M. S6/hr 675-4 t90 *(714) 673-1467•
• --. -Lie 331 l83 996-7870 • 18 yrs qual local lobs In Exotic Design's 1 Syrs and spelhng skills s oc Com need FREEZER S9S Large of
a11a e11 StrYJCtl Deon BtgC&aJ~t~s~~&)ar • Touch-ups. complete exp, refs. Pat 943:9044 ~sible , 1::'t,Mduals r• llECfPnMIST flc:e desk S 100. chair $45-* UM I N• 1obor consulta11ons PROOFRUIER FI T po111ton. Garr1Rap1dlygrowing~Co Lgsturdywork table S9S
Printing 1 Price IOt EXPERT INSTALLATIONS HOME REPAIR. Carpen-llC 280644 645-7608 Wi••·· c 1e .. in1 Jan1torlal & Comm In the Illness 1ncrus1ry 893-3" 12 ()( 646-4924
Every1h1ng S79 969·8108 Lic•477446, bonOed. Call try, plumbing, renlal MATOIAN PAINTING Holidays. Schedule Now• Must be detailed Oriented C~-~Out llAes.;,J.Sl 25tHr "1needd1111sd .. aal wellw/baors1cg~ ROWING SCULL Great for price Paul 5'6-8860 pr()(>erty Refs 826-7245 Quality R Specialty Balboa's Original Window and have excellenl -.,.,.,_1 s .,.,.,,, n pe<.-w .,....,.._ 1 Si le tax~~d=~ Electri cal QUALITY W ORK & llc=288597 831-9295 WUhlngService650-6201 pellJngslulls son 10AM-4PM M·F. ~=:.'!ii=•= ~C1:9ict1..':PIO(lr°:~
722-8302 891-3889 , ....... n1-· REASONABLE RA TESI I MICHAEL cox PAINTING WllHW CLWll.. PASTE-UP ARTIST Niguel Shofes Commun An opc>ty to increaie your •Int cones 1595 675-02~
• "" '•" v 1 ""' CARL, 756-0395 ~ 10 H· -MA TE RIALS •• ty Assoc. 3365' N1QU91 I blllt 1•1aet1 Oualltywork.rreeest. Ball Reiere~ 67s-4006 Av~agil3Br S40 Avl7dys Deta1lorientedwith1good Snores Or L aguna area 0 res.pons• Y TICKET lrom 0 C to
:425513 968-7401 I a HARTY & CO ~ 1·3797 sense for oe51gn end ex-Niguel 493--0122 Entry leYel positlOO Non-Portland OR roundtnp
C.STO. C'.l.ETS T -P--• W R ol smoking environment 118188 return 1110188
Sales -Service
Parts -Leasing
REVJE
BMW
835-3171 DE.'.DELECTllC L HAUUN RV aioting .. allpaper &-Classifieds& rea1plac»to perience on high v ume JOIN OUR HAPPY CREW! 660-1205Tammy S200 642-4l03
*BY Hect0t• Garage & Yard Clnups movat 20 yrs exp Clean . .Over1JN ou~home buSI-production Bridal & Tux shop Sates----'--------
1-800-553-9665 License Contr 64S-3656 Jon 645-8192 1prompt raas 642·5937 ,_. Y Management potential RECEPTIOllST •-J-.... --Jr-y /F_a_n-/lrt___ 1500 Auto Mall Dr.
Apply '" person FIT or PIT 722-9044 tune oeed_ed lrnmedl-6015 Santa Ana
leat1h •• n21·2'•' AHIHCtatatl 2920 Ea I ... 5530 lllrl'J!ltat 5531 la1!ty!1at 5538 I 2I041 c.,. Ir; LIT •• , ately at Law Offices In 41'11v T _.. iu $1700 55 Frwy at Edinger
· PSYCHIC READiNGS In El t CURI II $It = 1 LICHI lic11I PIT no exp re"'u•red , Nawpon Beach Hours ory u-on., · OPEi 7 IAYS N--B-p-ro_f_n-/s_m_k_r _sn_r_sh'!'-8!-P Toro& M1ss1on Vie10. San * FUii JOB.* am11101 Needed by Huntington ., C1ll (l 14) 112-1441 ... 12;30 to s 30. Mon thr\.1 lar~e CIOISOnne horse
2Bdrm 2Ba. 2 car gar. Clemente. ADVICE IN Are you acfventur01Js and HOUSEWIVES Beach City Sen~ d1s-1 H t 205 fer i1f1 N~~~O~~~,~~ JET SKI Fri Salary llar1 S5.50 hr S2 00 Call 640-86U Service Hrs Mon-Fro
wtd, l!lnl 1oc1 $47S/mo ALL MATTERS 472--0808 need money? Are you trici to work 4 o Hrs/Dy Call 642-8870 833-8486 Mary lli1111 .. rials 0 7 30 am to 10 pm
John M. 631-1266 ..... I r .. 2925 bright well groomed and, IE •••E " 3PI 10 mo position starling I EDICITIOlll SALES ReSlaurant Jastnoekc*'anadt'c....,.dOf-n ~s·. SterlinrJJ OCEAN VIEW sp'I . " eager to team? Travel assoon asposstble Must FIT PIT pcs1t1ons IUJmlllCE IAJICISl'I ..,.,, ....,ru
sundeck. bar frplc. ma1or cities ano resort E 1,_ t t 1
1
be able to type SOwpm & For 1nterv1ew 673-1443 FIT at Yacht Manna: llEST•t••-bin dl·~ounts, .....,,1~
S areas tn a comnany xce "'" opportun1 y or • nAR 1 • ""' -· ·• ,......, S3SOmo -securit-y fOlJNI) AD wi .. Housewives Retirees p ass written eitam ------Varied du ties Hrsj PI pt 1 certified AU steel bldgs BM •498-9633• tna1 has a good repu· welcome Duties include S8 12 Hr salary Apply 10 FAOTllll 8am-4pm $6/Hr Mus1 •= a~B Y n person Several saes g design•
P"'OF F 2S-35 to shr 2br ARE FREE talion J P Enterprises 20451 Cra1mer Lana. HS No el(p nee Perm t>en· nave rals 642-1626 Calli •Host~~ us available Call Steve Irwin " nas several 1mmed1ate •C•1l1•er Stnic1 964-8888 Oeaolme lor ehts. Santa Ana area Ms Ancr-s 9am-12 .. ~ 7 9) 6""'23 .. ,,.
1ba tiouse pool. iac I openings tor those 18 •Cre4it0ffct app1y1ng·1888 Call 893·S011 •unecooll/Sau1 .. Man ' o C 1 ~"" OFNEWPORTBEACM
Nwpt Hg ts. $4 75 > u111 --------1 and over 1n our marketing I• l ift 'J. Echo Job Agenc; I IWIHS 3050 Br51s4t0o-OI 47S2t C M Ptt l I Aaiaah t SAVE IOIEY S48-S396 or 673-2507 FOUND Dog. female. d 1v1s1on NO EX· wr1,,1a1 Dellvery 6531 Westminster Ave
Prof n-smkr NB crest tan/black pan Shepard PERIENCE NECESSARY Apply '" person Westminster THRIFTY OIL CO Restaurants CHINESE Snar P• pups Our lowoverflea<I
condo pool tensi1s,.gar-' vcty Huntington Central All expenses paid during ~ FEDERAL ST A TE & CIVil. HOSTESS/CASHIER cnamp bnes, m/I. 1-n paued on to you'
age $415mo 64S·SS33 Park 12129. 847-7838 traonong PLUS immediate utt * * * . SERVICE Joos S12.646j we are currently seek1nn1Please apply S3!~d3620ava~.,., w72r,1n2kle1• 1 .. 0-1.a .... *722 7093• income Exciting bonus ~ raRI EXTR• MOl£JI ··• T ~ ..., -"" """"""
PVi ENTRANCE Lg mstr Low coS1 spay/neuter r• turmstled Return rare l"oring' CALL JOB LINE af1ts include medical. va. 3046 Bristol. C M Spertiaf ~ ..,. Open 7 days a wee!<
-__ LOST tll fllll l HT? I program Tra~na11on "" • • to SS 7 891 Year Now S1a11on Managers Ben· LOVE'S llfSTllUl I · ~MS 1S40 JAMBOREE ROAD
Br/Ba gar Fem preld lerral Mon-Sal 9-430 g uaran teed MUST Funoutooor ,_O<~Oehver. 1-518·459-36 11 Eitt ca11onpa10 tra1n1ng ---
1
Ex1enoe<1$erw;e"4ours
S 4 S 0 u t 1 I s 1 n c Id Pat I 0 avail Animal As· ST ART IMMEOlA T El Y ing G T E netghborhOOO F2912BB for mto 24HR and savings plan ll.1.--llW,.rt 5rHt • 7 a m -10 p m Mon-Frt
t 850-1982t sistance League. No Fee For appointment call Don 110 ~ewport Center Or phoneboot..s 1n the Costa ------Exceller•t promouonal With gen prac exp lor
RESORT BEACH conoo Helphne,978PEiS Hawk ins 646 ·3 337 NewponBeach Mesa Ne .... port Beach &IRIEIER opportul)1lles Please phone triage 644-7848 I BEAR ISUZU ·as lmpu!Se p/s.
11.4pm tnru Friday areas Musi be a1 1eas1 18 40thr wt\ must spealt eng· apply .. -SIOO ...... j p/b p/w. P• lock.s. xlnt Fem. n-sml<r pool ten-LOST sml F Do1ue Cocker ATTEITIOI yrs 010 t:ave own ve-hsh & rehable Ehle Gar· SALES s~-.. COIPOUllD cond, am/Im cass. IO mi
n1s bike tra•I guard gate Mix oog 1an1b1k an-s •llECEmlllST* STUDEITS! 111c1e va110 driver s oening Se~ 646-SS88 I 34306 Pacilte Coast Hwy Full or pan time. w/tratn blk S8900 obo 675-9003
$300 963-8891 to Racl'lel on 113 I/IC Mature well groomed prof license auto insurance GENERAL HELP Dana POlnt 11t842-928711t IOW
Garlftl leaf 2740 1 Mesa Veroe 751-2505-N person to work in New-~t~n~::n"~;•tLt~~; Plenty ol immediate 1201 El Camino SALES Wnh extras! S200 ObO
198 00 SINGLE GARAGE 1 'trHHb 3002 r~-r~c::~~~'~ Pan 11me 645·5760 ~=·~~~eya~~;1.ng ~~~~ lO EIPEllHCE San ~lemente p~ ·~r;i: sn'~ ~s~'~ * 532-1111 *
Storage only 731 w 18th THANKS TO SACRED! ava, able oayltghl llours llECESSAIYl I MANICURIST Snare sta·I w
s 1 =4. Costa Mesa Hean or Jesus tor favors SIOl PH YW M~~~~~~!'!'nd EOE WILLI•& TOWll! I ~. ~;t.~ro~ ::!1!~~ MAlai';UCE1MALL 675·5219 or 673·7787 granted National Wholesale Jew· unibody aw..,.., 847•0444 "re you lookinn t0t a skll· tor Noelle
GARAGE anted on! etry Co needs REP 10< ~...... CALL 01'1L y 8am~ 30pm led trade lhal can provide ---------1 Call S42-88S2 appt SKI equipment. boots
B Ibo 11 ~ 1 2 Puu u l Senicu local area No direct &YOllEHSYOI' I you w11111ne cnance 101 IEllCALASSISTllT •SALES.PIT• down rackets. raclls a a s an or car 3-.. sates w1101esala only ' (7 14 l SS 7 ·4698 garage ror 12 montris I "'" 17 13_782_ 188 11 PIT FIT EARN Ex1ra SU paid employment? II Ille PIT all oay Thurs & FrL Non-tun ttoslery. Work chains. etc Like new•
Call Mrs Gill 669-6975 1 ·NEW CREDIT CARO:No Call 24 1· 1640 * * * answer is yes · than you Exp back ottice tor busy from home Earn SSOO-•873-8413•
S 2742 One Refused' Maior AIDE·LIVE IN F pref, QOn-1 ClllPllTEll l"llEIT shoulO apply for lhe OBGYN In NB 645-7870 SSK1mo. 5'9-4821 It S.lts--
toratt Creoot Caros& more Get smkr Assist disabled I I Denny s Restauran t Med" al/Dent J SEAMSTRESS 1:=~~~~~=:~~ _...:;_.::::=::==:=:=-~ 320 sit (40 xS l storage Your Card Today•. Call teacner. PtT. no exp nee Musi Cbe career minoed IEl lvEH HIVEll -Cook School Training IMM~OIATE ~pening tor D p • I ,14.e 'H •EIClll contamer.24thr access,I 1·30S·744-3011 Ewt $300/mo645·2357 ALL548-6449 __ 1 Program in Orange Sailmak1nge11perreqd 181 118 M . C M 1 1 ~ For Florist 1n C M F1T County In JUSI s llWeekS ent~us1ast 1c mature. Top pay Jennu,.., n studio apt 4 Or. loaded w/power ~~7~ s21r ~~~:~ri~1 C-205 24 HRS lPUTIHIT IUl&Hll CASHIER Catl 650·2250 you can learn the art ol exp d ctnllrSlde person In u L L MAN. s~o RE all new. I SOO• sunroof Lic=2CBX0 12
month Jessica 673·07601 E~ll!llHt anager coupte needed I FIT & PI T ror mature re-p••T Ti il PE .... E cooking with the op-qualify ottoce Must be -SAILS 11t67~970 deposlt 493·S474 S9,995 --~ ror 43 units 1n Santa Ana liable person good pay "" vn. ponun1ty to be placed In health orienl9<1 and haYe call evening.a
M i sc. lea tab 2744 tltiCI 3011 Office-maint duties ·comm w irain Apply Needed f0< soecd 181 promo-a~ pos111on X-ray license X'lnl SEClnlllY f /T JOHNSON & SON
Lincoln MHcury
2921 Harbor S lwd
'""artment ••lary I C W It tton Weetcen s only At salary 631· 1421 Small C M otfi.,._ .... tm-Traal~llt'•• Live at Hunt1ng1on Beac:.h BABYSITTER/HSKPR . ..., -.... · ell-ttre I r II Ralphs & Hughes Markets ....., "-fWit an on S•te Travel p ·T 2·6pm Car ~ perienee a must Send re-I 2950 Harbor Blvd C M Irv/NB CM 5'6-3366 There IS NO COST for tne llHLS Fil PlllS mediate open1f1l1 c;all for Pewr ti 711 Z trailer ,n our RV Pane ary & Reis Newpon Ben sume to 188 E 17th St _ __ tra1n1ng program' Bus 11 you are a model & would appt 646-3802
1'95 -elec -dep I a<ee 759--06,6 art 6pm Ste l-A, Costa Mesa CA CASIHEll I SAUS I HITAL lSSISTllT passes and some c:.Md hke to upgrade your ucan••y llAT Ul.UPOSll PlYllltl TM .... ,
Co•t1 Meea ~~
5536-8316 8am-6pm ._HOUSEKEEPER l0t busy 92627 Thurs Fr• Sat & Fronl ottice E;11p prel<l care ••penses provided stalusor -nttobecome -ALl.fSON~ARtNE Toomucilcashdown?
"-aa•r•1'1l professional 5 '1rs ,,.., Sun-2~·28 rus wk Wtll Newpt Ben area 640-0921 Classes stan the week of one&. start tr om top can Mature Secretary, Otfic. 645-60 tS LUM 79 Of newer MBZ -"' .. ..-· tram nghl person N--Jan 18th To learn more (2l .)!l•21& .. A ASSISlant tor Home-ll Sal~leat Oay '" AM M·F must ADVERTISING port lmPOrts Boutique IEITAL CUllSllE • .. -~, Assoc. in NB IM~tac .. t aartttl Compereour lar~Mlect
riava own transp & rats Call 642·9405 Karen ••SJST c•1 L (l 1 •) l•l-t 100 MllflS ·ir·IO Mon -Fn 8-S Salary neg R W Y EoR WEEK O A C lasiaess/ lice ltat 476-1976 --~ • II; Appty 6-1 Of 2-S at 2414 UN A r -•••SE If llNHS 27&9 Telephone CASHIERS P1easan1 busy qua11ty hi! fer Etlt1I, tit 4111 For Fast11on ShOwl In o .c. vista Del Oro. Newi>t een END ~haner Stat•Of-dial MERCEDES _________ Ltve-in Housel\eeper Engl group practice keeps County Malls 760-2649 An 34 Crealock Pttg 213 7 1 637 333
1006 stf/704 stftpvt oles speaking n-smltr wivahd Sales I TllRIFTI Oil CO growing Prefet ROA"s -HIHll tfflCE, FIT SEClnllY /IECEPT. deal w/slotlpe>er 675-7100 5 ~rwy ne:: ~Blvd Prof or medical No CM Ca drfller s lie 640-4577 exp bu1 w1ll1ng to train For Ton111a Flats Res-•nL HSI Clflll Needed f0t growmg lrvlna 'l IMt 7114 a.... p nr 40S at Harbor'Balier or aft 5 968·17~'> tor lhe nghl person taurant. light bkkpg Pl .. sant working con· base Data Processing Co 1 1 in na ark
494.-0802 or 494-~429 L1Y9-ln Houselleeper--wtiO he Delly Ptlot Class1tied We are currently 114rlng Good benefit package -computer data entry. ditlons Good aalary. PIT 30 hr wtl Competitive Htt eol0081X tmmac. YW '10 •• ,
900-sit located on New· loves kids tor busy Irvine AdverttSlng Oeoanment StatiOn Castuers Fun and adv opptys. 640· 1122 a•P pref 494·6588 2S44 Newport Blvd .. hrly wage 813-1n7 ••tensive inventory strong engine runs gr .. t•
por1 Bl NB wla/c & ~~·1~e!': sg~~ ":"~ ~ 1:' .'7't:~~~~ :;:: :: h~~:n~v~~\; IHTlL IYllUIST &EIERAL OFFICE c M . Joe SERVICE STIT101 r~u SN~ sgp Most eselri 51450 Obo 542· 1383
~~~;t·, 1s~~~j~-!~~n 7S2-2727 Eve 854-8S27 person Musi be able to days reviews EKCellenl PIT for busy Newport lite bkkpg lyptng 30• IHI m111011117 Island auendant FIT. PIT (213)-839-2269 vw 77 convert super
100 S4'/ft
Jewelry store for tease
$900 645-864 1
IEWIFFICH
For rent, 17th Stree1
Costa Mesa ~8-4330
C1aaerri1l Pre,erty
2771
C.\NNEAY VILLAGE
Commercial Retail
400 sq ft $675 eoo sq ft s 1250
WATERFRONT HOMES
--spen ano type 45 wpm opportunities tor ad· Beach ott1oe 640-0921 nrtwk Stan immed Ben-Are you over 18 ~old hrly Of comm 1476 So •-• •-j BEEiLE loaded• lo miles.
Mal wom our nm Care tor Pr41.v10Y' newgP9per ex· vancemenl Please apply IEl·T~lL -llECfmlllST etns ava11 •64S-1691 * and have • dependable East BrlstOI a1 Santa Ana ... mce( -.• J•••t1 "'"' cond 968·20H-3' r ch110 630·630 Own Nir>enee preferred ptus -car and auto insurance AveC.M.540-5676Bruc.e Sat,11it1 t 7u20 N.474·2033•3166ctys
trans hte nsettp1ng Salry enefgelic and outgo-~14306 Pac1llc Coast Hwy Xlnt oppty for the N-1 IHElllL OFFICE Stan now and deliver . NEW 5 1 Marine Dai """"' .86 vw BUG Bou••nt In
neg 963-0312 evse Satar~ Plu• com· Dana Point Year Dynamic, pleasant Temporary FIT ror NB tu new5')apers tor 11wt o .c. TIACIEl'I &SSISTllT wf trans & exhaust. S~~ Puerto Vallarta~" •Int
i ~ ••• .'~s" •o~a11~1eP,9vg1egwy 1201,£1 Camino Real group practtce contln~ ott1ce. must be able to Register Newspaper. Kindergarten. 8·30·3:30 f1oe1BO Cnuek 645-1321 cond 88 Arizona llC ;::::========~ 642 4321 ,, San Clemente to grow NeedeJU>'dfr-ont type Salary cormsnsurate 3 30am to 600 am Earn Extended Day Care $4 99S 67S 3063 ARE "YOO'' A snr otc s:,-erson Gd benet1t$1 w el(penence 7S6-8557 SS50 to S650 a wee« or 3p-6p 997.9333 Orange lliJ1/Dlcb/lt1111• . -
STaD1T11 aM\ 1
1 TllE i••LY PILOT CUlfFUS package 640-11 22 GET PAID tor reading m0te• Calf us nowt 7112 VW ·ee Golt LE $8500
MIU\""" Al F/PIT. must be at least 25 D-ESI CLERI booll•' 5100 per tltle at 891-l&Oe TtUIAllETill obo A/C amtfm ens LO<JUNG FCI sao w I yn old. w/ciean OMV Write ACE·2S9F. 161 •GARDEN GROVE PIT Of FIT Guat'd $5 ,.,. ...... ,.. snrf xlnt condl Cell
A l(W CMffR? J ,._
1
,
1
.,. __
1
','c'•.•1Y2121 printout E;11p neat w 111 train Nigh1s. I Llncolmoray N Aurora •WESTMINSTER hourly· bonus Ca11W9d-Mooring •\ lnl.,..t avail (714)553-6232 L1t Msg
--~ " appearance Inquire a1 Sea Lari\ Motel 2274 lllnois 60S.42 •HUNTINGTON BEACH Fri this~ Astl l0t Joht'I $125.000 ~53 a I "-t ' flOI ( 0 £ GOLD l(fY LIMOUSINE NewPOrt Bl C M 646-7445 -----_ Daniels or Phyllis Man-11•" -•ti IC CM If AfC>
Cl€ CK us OtJT I
' ' ' 21S6 Newpor1 BIVd - ---GE1' PAID for rNdlng • lftSllAl•I nos. Dana P1 661-3132 SIDE TIE AVAILABLE or c:.au 722_9999 DRIVERS NEEDED bOOks' s 100 per tttle PIT 3 30p-7:30p. 3-11p, 20-2S Sailboat no JM NABERS
For Fund Raiser Must Write ACE·967a. 16 t S 11p-7a. FIT 7-3·30p Ugt\t SC&ll P• l&ILYS aboard H per 11
know South County Llncolnway N Aur0t• WOfk ioaa. ,_ ~t•f Phone Sales-Fund Rel• •no-.351• c•NI •Ac
Area Casn P&Jd Dally IL 4505'2 S3 bed. very dean & mg-Taps Avt. No~""· Jti T NILL OIUCAIEPI T RL TRS 631· 1400 "
USntH App<o11 504 sf w / 1 S e.tl·
1ng. S111f -elec Incl par-
ntlng Scotti 54&-2301
ld .. trj1J 711
1800 sq It with front Ot-
hc:•. large dri~tn door.
Stoo/mo 1775 WMtMlt
St. Cos1a Mesa 5'0-9352
lariattl fiaHCll}
iHiuu fer hlt IMO
FOR SALE-NEWPORT
BEACti Hlllf St~lo ~
toc.l,,ng-Must Mt!'
Cali(714J675-S363 ......
uititl 2904
HIS IS NOT A
l'ART·T• JOB WC
AM: LOOIUNG f C.
MANAG£M£NT PERSOfKL
ltlrt •O lllt bHCl .,,.. ' . ·~
What s your home~
~. AtteratlOt!s? Ac-
c:ounhng" Auto reoair' AOverttM In oass.fieO
~·d et ACI tennis Club
Mon-Frt 9-1 Of Mon.Fri
4.7 & Weelr.ends Cal!
Anne 79&-5683
p
ClltCUK
fOODSTC.S
WEDNESDAY NIGHTS
FROM 7 -9 PM
at -ow..···,:-;-;·., ._..,I•
For more lnformatk>n call
(714) 474-6109
Call Walt 497-6553 cheerful. pvt facility, bul proa welcome. IC. rUJ,.rtafiea
EARi $1000/WEEI HOLIDAY ILUES good pay, benefits .. near 9am-9pm ISO-I 100 .... s.niiHtl/
BUSTER" Co.ta Mesa Fairgtound Comm Call Wall In , .. .._ -is
.. 549-3061 Laguna 8eec:tl 497-'553 1-;;;-;; .. ;;iiiiiiiiiiii;-;;;1
fa1y,w1rk, lint Ith! Hu tne Ctimtmaa CNnch R I 3 11 h•ft WAITIDl/WllTll 1'
got you down~ain?Wl'iy • • • S I Must.t)awc.tfOfluncftde-l'I 2600 I :llt~~·•nlng WOHYh aboul hav:::ig ~'~ ~ hvery MfVIC.. Eatalt>-WllTEI, co~:'A':'ttd
•Caauaiatmosptwe :'9pr~r~0 ~ LVI P/T :,:'1 '°":'on~~n ·55 CHEVAOl.ET Tf4UCK -------
t1mity end friend• egain For mecsica.tlOna & tNet· ~CASH DA.ILY. FIBREGLASS Ttl T 'M•YSTUI .. Call Jey. 722· 1823
betore noon
1 •
1t111 yNr1 wortc pe11~t1me main1 we11tan.d eo bed L ... 'I llTC•I FRONT END YIMll ITI lfllll
1nour Offlceandshopthla S N.F Apply: .... •111-1111* L~ w/fJl'f'I* equip reer w1tnou1 haV'inO to •11 Ytr~I htn _111-0 __ 1_•_1 _____ 1 _________ 1 Beautiful condition
;':7e ·~1~ ~ 111 o..ter It I.I Wllllll <1•AS73' S&.S95
$8 00 ~ an ~ ]ult by •5'9-MU• ElCP In wrouott1 Iron. Petm ~~•,::; -mPJ--FIT.~ 893-8011 lllJS41f•r.. ~--
l'nO'e intonnetiof\ceil PIW1 time M "'deV· ~ 1531 ~"":'Zve F"<>NT 'lHOEA '°' ·u •••2-43JJ* ~=:I:&.'::~ w...,..-., CHEVfQ.El • .... .__............... •W-Mll*
-...-_..., PART TIME -
**** $7/tl
JOH .... <.O N & \011\j
I '"' I-· 11,11 " . " '
.......... t, ., ••
t I ..... a. --4• '-" t..
' I t
--
Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Wednesday, January 6. 1988 87
•
• Robinson's to spend $105M, open four stores
From Dally Piiot wire ser\'lces
LOS ANGELES -J .W. Robiason
Co. "111 spend SI 05 million to open
four nc" Storts and remodel a fifth 1n
a mo'e &hat appears to la~ 10 rest
spcculauon &hat portio ns o f the,..
m-0ne)-los1ng chain "o uld be sold.
.\s the firm announced the fi,c-
)ear re' 11ah1a11o n program Monda).
plan) to close the Robinson ·s 1n
.\nahe1m Plaza Jan :n \\Cre re' ea led.
h s 76 fu ll-time ell'plo)~s "111 be
offered JObs else"' here in the chain.
officials ~1d
Ne" st0rcs "'111 be built 1n Non h-
ndge. Brea. and '"o undisclosed
locations .\dd111onall). the store 1n
the ~1 1ss1on \•<'JO Mall \\111 he
MU TUAL F UNOS
t'\pandc-d 10 137.000 square feet .
Robert L Meuler. prts1dent and
chief execuuH of Robinson's. said
the 1n' estment plan demonstrates the
com pa n) 's confidence in Southern
Cal1forn1a 's upscale depanment store
marl el.
Robinson was acquired 1n 19 6 b)
Ma~ Department stores. • • • Three )'ears after &he federal Trade
Com m1ss1on began 1n vest1gallng
ad,en 1S1 ng claim b) Great Eartll
lnlernaUonal, 1hc Santa o\na-bascd
food supplement chain agrt'W 10 stop ~} rng a produ" t can trim pounds
during sleep
... Lose \\h1Lc )OU ~nooze' "as 1he1r
ad' cnising p11ch.'' ~1d FTC la" ~er
)
MKhad HOla
T he consent degree formall) an-
nounced Monda' \\3s signed in
October 1r0ta !.aid
The product G HR Formula P.M ..
sold under the name Tn-.\mino Plus
P M al~ could build musck and
help "ounds heal more eas11\. all
during sleep hours. according 10 the
ad campaign that came under FTC
scrulln\ in 19&.i
u reai Earth. "h1ch has 150
franch1..c outlets. including 50 in Los
\ngl.'k'> .rnd Orange coun11es. said 11
~IOPl>\.'d mal1ng the claims soon after
thl· fT( probe began
" • • • '.'ol'"' pon Bcach-ba5.ed Amerl.u n
Health en ices Corp. has announced
•
l
'
•
the· opening ut II\ c ne" magnetic
rc~nancl' 1mag1n1 I \1 RI J mu'h1-mo-
dal11~ d13gnost1c 1magmg center\
bringing 11!. iotal number of <entl'rs 1n
opcrauon 10 e1gh1
ninth t.entt:r 1s c\pcctcd to o pen
neu month tnphng the number of
centers thl'compan~ had tn opcra11on
last }Car Thi.' lompan~ C\pec1s us
center oix·ra11un' to genc:ra1c about
S:!O m1lhon 1n re' c:nu~ 1n 19
The compan} C\platned that 11 has
rCCl'I\ cd all nl'll'S~f\ appro' al., and
ha'> lOmplc1cd 11<. tra'l~cuon "''h
ln1c:rna11onal Imaging Inc a
subs1d1a~ ul Adventist Hu llb )S-
terns. 10 alllUlfl' t"cl moh1lc \1R I
Cl'ntt·rs. a mul11·mudal11' d1agnos11c
ct.•nter and an MRI Ct'nter currenth
undt:r dt•\ clupment ·
TheSI. o perauons arl' on the ca m-
pu~s of the: Harbor-L( l..\ and the
Lu~ .\ngclcs C ount)-l S( medica l
ccntcrr, The agreement totaled S 7
m1ll1on 1n lash. note!'. and the
assumpuon of lea-.e obhgauons The
comp.1n~ plJn\ tu ~omm11 an ad-
d111unal S9 mtlhon to e\pand and
cumpktl' tht. L ..\ ( oun1' operations
..\H~ al'>u ha'> opened an \1RI
~t:nta a1 Puudrc \ ;ille' Ho!'.pllal 1n
Fun C oll1n' C olL. and a muh1-
mudah1~ d1agnus11~ 1mag1ng center
nl'ar < t>mmunll' \lemonal Hosp11al
1n Toms R1,a 'J
Toshiba expands
Irvine prodUction
The rndu<.trtal Elec1ron1ts Bus1-
nl''' "x'< tor ot T 1.•'>h1~a .\mC"nca Inc
't'!ll inaca\(; 11' l ~ manulactunog
and produl twn Jlll rding to Kazuo
l!>h1guro T11.,h1ha ..\m1·r~~a IEB
prc .. tdl'OI
To mttl ~11" 1ng l marl.et
demand., T ~1\h1ha 1' e \p.indtng its
laptop compute• produn1on 1n its
In'""' plant and '"I hi.' increasing
manufoe1unng JI 1t' \1 11..\.hcll D
plJnt "h1l h prvdu~n tont'r for office
lOPll'f'> and othl'r Jupllcaung equ1p-
ml.'nl
Toshiba 1.urrcntl\ conducts final ;is~ml:lh a nd 1e~1 of m tele-
c.ommuri1ca11on equ1prtl('nt includ-
ing sdected l'll't Ironic le~ telephone
instrumt•nts and lhl' Percep11on 11
d1g113I PB\ hu\tnt''>S telephone s~ s-
tem 1n 11<, lnme fo{1h1' In 19 -
Toshiba proce.,St.-d 10 percent of the
Jnnual production of thl'~ products
.. ,, 11h the dl'll'>ton to manufacture
in the l nlll.'d ~ates. "l" ha'e made
NYSE UPs & DowNs
UPS AND DOWNS NEI/, ¥,OIH. AP -T~ to.iow • s•
snows ·~ Ntw Yor S1oc.. E11cna "9l! \lotli.s a nd war•anl\ ,,_., r.a vt QOnt vo
•"'e MOS' anc dOw" '"t "'Os• o.seo OI' pe<"C~t of cr.anot •f9ard t u of voivmt
10.. T~soay No \eeu• 1 H •rao "9 ~w S2 a rt inc ·
-vOt<l Nt• a"O ~·Ct!'l14Qt C~"OU art·~ d fft rt"Ct oerwtt!'I l"t ort.,, ous CIOS no
or1ct a"d T "tsda" s 2 om o• ct
UPS LUI Cll9 1.A + 17 •
• ~·· + 1 ' ... 1 ·~ -1 • 11 ... ) • l\ .... ~ . -,,
•• -4 -'•
Pct. Uo 30 I Uo 21 I
Uo 100 Uo 17 3 Uo l1 2
UD lo ]
uo 11 8 Uo 12? uo 1::
the comm11ml·n1 to procure as man'
ll·~ cofT'ponlnt' and pans IOlall~ as
poss1bk .. lsh12uro said .. In In In<' produ~i1on oit laptops "'111 ha't'
gro" n IO I 1111 unus per month b)
the c:nd ot I ':lb.. and our lt:le-
com municat wn .. rinal as...emhh and
testing v.11l con1 nue··
l<,h1guro 1nd1tJI~ that IEB\'c,
gro"1h tn•tt'rm., ol L production
aE'lua~I~ bcga1n 1n I 'I " "1th tht'
purchaSt'oithe plant 1n luth r>a l ota
and the cons1ruc1ton ot thl' In 1ne
com pie\ B~ the end of I'/, " emplo~ ·
mt'nl at the J50.00ll-s.quare-foot plan1
in Ir' 1ne topped 500
Founded in 1%5. Toshiba .\mt'n-
ca Inc. has become a S2 '\ b1lho n
compan~ and a ma1or mar~t·tt'r and
manufacturer of a v. 1dl' r;ing.e of
bus1nes<, and consuml·r produl ts
Tclc\1)1on ~ts. \ldeo tape f('(Orders
and micro"a'e O\ens arl producl."d
1n Lebanon. Tenn
S • -t Uo II I 1 • ... • Uo 11 I 7~ ..,. , Uo 10 9 S 1 ... S I.Jo 10 9 ?•• ..,. • Uo 100 • • + • uo 10 0 S -+ , Uo 100
13 ; + l • UG 10 0 14 ... t • Uo .. 7 1S 1 ... 119 Uo 9 1
.A • ... 1 Uo 9 7
t"t -• Uo 9 .S 1 • ... "9 Uo 9 4 II~ + 1 Uo 9 • ,.._, ... t uu0o 933 s~. ... 1 '
10 • + •• Uo 9.3 JI + ) 1 Uo 9 J DOWNS . Lu i CM Pct. 1~ = 1~ 8:: lH
Herbert Kawahara
Kawahara
isnewPSE
presiden,t
.\' FR .\SC"J CO -Ht'rbcrt G
l\.J\\dhara an t:\t'lUlt'e v.1th E F
Hu11 on and Co for 30 'ear... ha!> been
nJmcd prc."S1dc:n1 ot th~ Pacific tocl
E \('hange. 11 v.as annouoct>d T uesda~
b' Dr \1aume ".1ann. chairman and
d 111."1 t'\l'\Ull\e offi cn .
l\.a" ahara · ~ appointment ~ill be
ctTectt'e \fonda' He wtll sucettd
Jaml'S Gallaiher. "ho rt'C'entl~
announced tus r~ignauon to pursut
othl'r opponun1t1e!>
.\s president of the e~changt'.
l\.a"ahara "111 automaucalh become
a member of the board of go"emors.
He ~ urrentl~ 1s st°f'\ m@ on the board
as an indust~ repre!>tntall' e and v.~s
'ice l ha1rman 1n I qs;.5
l\.a"ahara JOtned E F. H utton 1n·
I q~ a~ an account e\ecuu' e 1n Los
.\ngl.'lcs In IQ 2. he v.as made an
e'ecutt' e 'ice president and be'Came
the 1up Hu11on e\ecutne in Sou them
( al1fom1a. as "ell as a memberol 1hat
firm·~ board of directors
In IQ -he "as appo1n1ed e\-
1.-CUll\ e 'KC' prc-s1dent. corporate
marli..e11 ng and .,trateg1c planning. for
E F Hunon
·i1o.o -11 6. -~ ~-2
1"• -) . .. -,,.
5. -.. ;~ = ~ •i.-.. 1. -•
b --~ 12"--l . b~• -..
• l -~ ..... -.
12 . -~ i··~ -l • 7: -ls ·~, -'· 11~ -1 ~cµ. --!·-.Joo
-(1}(1iltnlll~---------------
UPS AND DOWNS
NE •'v YORIO. AP T"e le l()W "'0 s·
s"O.-.s '"' Ovt • 'l>f Co ... "'t •
S'O«'.•S at>O ... a•'•"'\ "'a' "a•t 90"t Jo ,.,, "°'O\I a"d 00....," •"t ~\I !>aSt<I 0" ~,,.,., 01 C"a"9t tor r~,.,,
Nt:' stcu' r ts traO•"i,; t>t c w s: o• 1000
s"a•e\ a•t "C"'°"° .... ,. 4"0 ~·Ct•"a~e C "a~weS art "''
0 "'''"'' 0.IWffn '"'e o•rv CJ\ c OS "; or ce ano T \.JtSOav s ~\' or Do Cf ct
Nanw 1 A.'"18 Ontl 1 Mac•oCP. w• ) Scan•or,.....
J CeroeronA 5 Comsroc11.G•o
6 Crraovoe 1 o ...... no a J ,01ca•e 9 EarrhTKI"
UPS t.ut Chj PC'I. 11·\6 -,I vO 737 1 , • I.ID SJ S 1 • -• UD 38 5 '2 • -'• Uo 37 5 l • • • UD 30 0
4 • I UD '29 b
: 1 '~ + 1 e uo 16" 3 ... Uo 26 3
' • • t UD 25 Q
10 ::>tSOl'l"C 6 • -I • 11 .. vn•e•E,.., J • -.
11 "'erftr.,... 3 " l)~llA.,.., ) ...
U Ut'8 ..i•ld"0 ~ . l
15 AnchrNJ ! .c -1~
16 v A""'SOla• 2~ -P Eas1e11. 5 • -111 HaOt<" o• s • -1q No•s•a" 6 ... -'. 10 Gaa11vC~e ' -'• 21 .o.M-CaoA s 61• -I • n W avlCfl o,111 31-~ ~ 13 NovaPl't wraa ~ --1 ;:c Q• S• t .... . .. ' ~S S•a ·stl"tam 2~4 -
DOWNS N anw Lut °'9 • A.fSS tno 11 -l Z '"t<A'""IEQr 01 15 • -l. 3 A.I""( •v o 1 ..... -:"'• J Ar"'( •vJourn 1··· -;
.
),
u o HO ~ ~e.,8 cPr;i ' . -. o-. ISO
uo 15 0 ii "" •Ttc J OH 14 ~ Uo 2$0 ., ~f'O~·--) .; ()"! u6 v~ • so a MS s.s· 2'1. -OU
.JO 2~ 0 q "'HO 0 ,, c -, ... ()"! 13 5
Uo '2' ~ io ~va•p ~.· -i.., ()t' 13 c
Uo 11 8 ac11 !'IO ... s • • -I • CY' in
Uo Bs 12 S..,o,..sc r _s -14 ~ 12 l Uo nl Q c:: d"Ol"<l • -1 Of' 12 uo 13 u Bt•co• 14.e -lit Off 120
Uo 23 1 IS C111oCo•o 3. -: g:: n a
Uo JH 16 L .,,~ t.ruv 30 _, 11.I Uo 1" l"\Tit"f' ~ • -1 • ~ 116 Uo ~H s
Uo 18 csc •no • . ll l
uo n~ 1<1 (oi.,. ..... p .. ·q-; 3 -~ 1 l.1
;'O Y-a·~ttFc• ' . -• Off Ir Pct 21 C'>al'"ttrC•t ~ I : -1 ~ L~ ~ 1l ' n Su..., IHI!" 1. -4
°" 173 w~M·CrO'W• .. -, 'io Off ,r 14 A.,..st•o.,l'X 2~ -. Ott 9 ~ on l c 15 Br ao(1U ..... -1 Off
NYSE Cn~POSIH TRA~S~CTIONS
wmNllDA Y'I CLOSING PRICES
Market extends rally
NEW YORK (AP) -Tife stoc~ market
extended its new year rally Wednesday, postina
some modest pans in relatively moderate activity.
The mar~et's ad van~ over the past three days
has bttn wi<kly attnbuted to encouragement over
a rebound by the dollar in forel&Jl CJlchaoee.
The Dow Jonn average of 30 induslri.als. up
92.67 points 10 the year's first two sessions. added
another 6.30 to close at 2.037.80.
Gamers outpaced dcdipers by a margin of
nearly 3 to 2 on the New York Stock Exchange.
with 93S up, 661 down and 36S unchanJed-Bia Board volu~ totaled I 69. 74 million
shares. against 209.S2 mllhon in the previous
session. ·
The NYSE's composite index rose 0.29 tb
144.83.
WH AT AMEX Om WH AT NYSE Dio
NEW YORK (APl J•n 6 ~-
Aovence<1 Wm 1ff Declined ¥~noeo ~ otet~ New I ~ l New lows 1
AM EX LE AD ERS
GoLo QuorE s
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NEW YORK (AP) J•n 6
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NEW YORK (AP) -MQSI •cllYI! over · -ll~·coont• llOCl1$ \UPC>lled bv NASO urww
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'87 was ~op year
for bank fall tires
"
··~
WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 6 1988
~l
Ann Landers C7
Comic1C8
.Lighter dishes ideal on cOlddayS, too
Chef designs recipes to
complement eating trends·
During th~ blustery days, soups:-stews,
casscrolcsandotherstick-to-thc-ribsdishesgain-
appcal. While hale and hearty fare is often
synonymous with heavy, fatty foods. it doesn't
have to be.
Today's lighter and leaner approach to
cooking is a mo re healthful than in our great-
grandparents' day and, fortunately, it's a lot
faster. too. from lowfat dairy products to lean,
quick-cooking cuts of meat and paultry. from
ennched pasta and pre-cooked rice to stuffing
mixes. frozen vegetables and no-oil salad dressing
mixes, there 1s a bounty of nutritious ingredients
a vailable fo r making hearty yet healthful meals in
a hurry.
Here arc some recipes for quick. nutritious
dishes from ChcfBlake Swihart. A Culinary
Institute of Amen ta-trained chcfand food
consultant, Sw1han worked with the nutrition
services stall of General Foods to develop these
recipes.
"Our meal planning is based o n the
principles of variety. balance 8.f!d moderation."
explains Kathleen McMahon. Ph.D .. R.D ..
manager of nutrition services for General Foods.
"While there is no o ne menu plan that fi ts
everyone's needs, in general, adults can get their
full nutntional compkment frortl 2.000c.aloricsa
day.
~About 55 percent of total calorics should
come fro m carboh)dratcs. about 30percent from
to tal fats (wi th only about I 0 percent from
saturated fats -the ones that arc sohd at room
temperature) and about 15 percent from protein._
ln additio n. it's wise to watch your cholesterol
and sodium int.akeand get plenty of d ietary fiber.
"According to o ur diet survey information.
Americans get about 40 percent or 800 of their
daily calorics in their main ineal. Swihan took
this into account when he developed his recipes."
said McMahon.
Good taste and good looks figure in the chefs
menus as well.
SPAGHETTI
CARBONARA-STYLE
.,._ cap plalD yoprt
•;, cap soar cream
. 1 packqe (I ouces) spapetti
1 pacb1e ( 1 t ouces) froiea delue tiny peas
3 ouces tartey lLam, cat t.&o tlliD strips
'• teaspooa cracked pepper
~ cap1ntedParmesaadaeese
Combine yogun and sour cream in a small
bowl: set aside. Cook pasta as directed o n
package. Place frozen peas in strainer. drain pas\i
directly over peas. T oss pasta and peas -.-.;th
turkey h.am. pepper and yogun sauce. Sprinkle
.,
Keeping resolution easy with tasty fare
"' POS1 .. boliday wciabt-loss resol·
utions oft.en 10 \be way of all ftnb
bc<:ause of 1 rqamen of bland.
same-t.hin1,.in foods. Kcei>ina
palate and appetite happy whik
iolina or mai~tain~ ~t are
impor1ant conJiderlllOM.
Today's kan port o&tsa bealta..
w1th cheese. Makes 4 servings.
Each serving provides about 3 70 cal on es. 21
g p rotein. 53 g carbohydrate. 8 g fa t. 480 mg
sodium and 3 gd1et.ary fiber
FISH FIU.ETS BAKED WITH
ORANGE STUFFING
~ np cttopped scalUou
1 caporu1eJllitt
1 cap c~ckea flavor flexible servtag 1hffta1
mlJ ,
1 &eupooe en led oruge riltcl
i., teaspoe11 cnted frull gi.ager
'OouderorsoldWeta (300ttteada)
Comb1nescalhonsand 1 ?cupoftheorangc
Juice an saucepan Bn ng to boil.co\ er and
simmer 3 minutes Sur in stuffing mix. nnd and
ginger. Co\ e r: remoHfrom heat. Let st.and 5
minutes.
Place 2 fillets an greased bakangd1sh Spoon
1 : cup of the stuffing on each fillet. Cut a sht
length" 1se through middle ofremaimng fillets to
"nhin I inch ofeach end Place on stuffing o n
other fi.Jlets ..
O pen slit and spoon rcmamingsuffing in
center. Pour orange JU Ice over fillets. avoiding
stuffing. ~kc at 350dcgrees for 25 minutes or
unul fish 1seas1l) Oaked wnh a fork Makes 2
sen 1ngs.
Each serving pro' ides about 320calon es. 3~
g protein. 36 g carboh)~ratcs. 5 g fat. 650 mg
sodium and Ogd1etar) fiber
VEG ET ABLE-TOMA TO BAXE
3 mediam &oma&oes, sliced
1 pack.ace tl I outts) froiea broccoli.
caallflower ud carrots. tbawe.t·
"1 cap grate4 ParmHU daeae
'• npdrywkitewtae
..., tuspoM dried basil
... teaspooa croud black pepper
Spra) an 8-mch square baking dish with pure
'cgetablc cookmg spra). Place half the shccd
tomatoes on bottom of d1sl1 Spread vegetable
mixture overto matocs. Spnnkle with haJfofthe
· ~.the white wine. bas.tland pepper.
Topwllh remaming tomatoshcesand
spnnlde -.-.n h rcmamingcheesc. Bak.e at 425
dcgrttS for 15 minutes. or unul ch~ 1s melted
and vegetables an; heated through. Makes 4
SCl'ings.
Each scrvu'g provtdes about I 00 cal on es.. 6 g
protein. I I g carboh)drue.3 gfat.180 mg
sodium and 3 gd1ct.ar) fi bc'r
BROCCOLI WITH
RED PE.PPER SAUCE
1pacb1e1 ltouca) fnusbroccoUspean
1 jar (I eatt:S) route4 sweet~ peppen m
• ,# water. d.railte4
"' cap dtoppN red oaioe
(Pleaee Me LIGBTZ.R/C3J
Book entwines cuisine, romance
By LORI C. NA.KAY AMA
o.lr""'C4wo 0 f I
He's a master of the an of
seduc tion. But unlike o ther
Casano' as. his secret 1s not an
entrancing cologne or a mesmenz-
ang caress. but his succulent Coq a u
Vin. -\nd for the morning after.
hone)-k.issed croissants. steaming
and tender.
Can food hold the promise for a
romantic lr)st? According to ~ew
part Beach resident. pilot. restaura-
teur. chef and author Ben Bennan1.
the two are inextricably hnked,
Food. when artfully prepared and
served. 1s a natural aphrodisiac. he
sa)s. and ro mance transforms an)
meal into a pleasurable expencnce.
It's a ph1losoph> he eipaunds an
his self-published cookbook.
C u1S1ne of Romance (BenFae
Books. Irvine. Sl9.95). Bennani.
who has -.-.on awards for his
culinaf) techniques.1s1mpass1oned
about his theor) that couples today
fa ll out of lo ve because the) fo rg.ct
the most 1mpanant marital aid:
romantic d ining,
.. Son candlelight. wonderful
aromas and delicious food excite au
the senses. A perfect prclud~ to
RAT ING REPOR T
I
Iii. ---
lo,e," he said. "Dining is a time --------------.
"hen couples should relax, fo rget
the da) 's pressures and conccntrale
on each other. What better way to
prcscn e a mamage.,.:
The cookbook contains mo re
than I 00 recipes for fine French
classics. a dcux. of course . .\mong
them. Lobster Salad au Ca"1ar.
Roast Chicken wtth Flaming Cher-
f) Sauce and T rout with Almonds
and Champagne. -\nd 1f )ou·re
-.-.ondenng how )OU can ~ork up an
amorous atlltude sweating over the
stove. Bcnnani insists that every
recipe takes only 15 minutes to
cook. Beware. that doesn't include
prcparauon lime.
Why not stop b) the eourmet
take-out o r call the caterer instead?
Bennani profCSSC"S that dining at
home. close to the boudoir and
insulated from restaurant d1strac-
t1ons. is the ulumate romanuc
setting. Cooking is still very much a
labor of love. be says. and even the
simplest meal prepared b) )OU will
inspire your lo ver.
His book gives sen ,ng ups on
making such stark offennp as
breads and fruit look t.ant.almng.
and even paints Speclfic Sttnanos
for your interludes to fan the fires of
BenBemaaal
your 1mqjnation. His prose 1s spun
like a Chantilly lace pner. e' Cl)
passaic ·wooing. wh1spcn ng and
sighing. like a Harlequin Romance
novel
The result is a wh1ms1cal ap-
proach to fine cuisine, a nd ~ hile
recipes att SJmphfied French class1-
cs. the book ~as unfon unatch
pnnted on a light budget a nd lacks
quaht) photographs that could
ha'e flaunted Bennan1's anistr)
~1th food (he's often comm1ss1oned
for his chocolate sculptures and
edible dccorauons).
Nonetheless. ··cuisine of Ro-
mance." ~•th its loft, intentions. 1s
at the 'el' least a 'revene of the
pursuit o( pas.saon. .\nd reminds
couples to dine together oc-
cas1onall) . and hold all ca.lJs.
Here 1s a rec1~ from hts book.
ARTICB~ FOR LOVERS
Z artidtekes
Z tablespoons oil
I bay leaJ
Z cloves 1arUc, cltopped
Salt ud pepper
1 "1 tablespoou soar cream
l "1 tablespoou mayomaaise
Jllice of "1 lemoa
•rose petals, dtoppe4
Tn m top. stem and leaf up of
art1cho les and cut in half. Wash and
dram In a large J>OL beat enough
-.-.ater to float an1chok~. Add salL
pepper. garlic. ba) leaf and oil.
Bnng to boil
CPleue .ee ROllA.1'C•fC4)
Diet dinners: Salt high, flavor .low
lt's a New Year .ritual .observed plate wnh a domed hd. for gourmet aroma Its sauce with chu_nky
by most e\ier) men can -sh.akmg Oatr. nd. best of all. the~ 're to matoes. oh'C. celery, onion and
ofTthe dyspepuc Slupar 1ndu~ b) guaramttd to be under 300calones. around "eal should ba''e been
mnzaed hohda) feasung. "addling What more could a d1scnm1hat1ng I ........ rtdolenL but instead was dmm.
oveT to the bathroom mirror and dieter "'ant? UWI paanlln&-And wbe~·s tbe chttlCJ
shudderina. Ifs what d1etcn don't want an a Lean Cuisine.. markctedbyStouf·
Back to the reality of denial frozen d ioner that the) 're getting. NUAYlll fer's. ha.s a Oiicken Marsala for
dinina. As thou&h homemade any-Sodium. To mask blandness.. o n)) 190 calories. h has a nice
thana was only a hohday fantasy. frozen dinner manufacturers add chicken breast filct. but the sauce
}OUlllunremorsefully rcachinto the plent) of salt and monosod1um was too salt). Likewite. the~
f.uur for a frozen d~t dinner. &Juwnate (MSG). Thouah diet claims.. we coukt eualy tdl they et.ables -a pleasant medley of
Convenient. complete and versions rontam less than rcaular -.ne "'diet" dishes. sno"'"' peas. snap pc:u,. pearl onion
calone<onSC1ous. Who v.ou_ldn 't ~n entttcs.. a sinaJe Kn'•QI. of Sltm Selects by I.he ~t and carrots -tent u ban otra
fall fora foal-wrapped feast. read) at almost '''Cf)' brand tested bett bad Gourmet puu ou1 a Fl'CDC'h Rcai>t &lass of water. nd spotted by the
the push oh bunon. that needs no bctWtt:n 7SO.l .OOO m1U~ms of Ouc:ten and V~ an Red rady·to<'OOk.ancHene plateS of
caJorie counttna? -sodium. Tbc recommended daal Wu.e Sauce with ool) 270 caloncs. othtt bn.nds. ~ pun.cechrhen we
If Hamct retson could sec them alto'*1nce of sodium as 1.096 m1lb-You rook at and cat u riaht from the had to takt the trouble of pierc:ins
now. Frozen dinners have come a arams.. (TboR with h~on m>nomteal bo n.e contimts the~ poucbcs bdOft macro. Jona way from the rubbery problems aftd MSG ract1ons arc aren't much mcwc ~'""' Far wa\1na ()'OU can bod tbcm.. too), mc:al&o&t: po&aaoaooxorehcdOllto ...-.ct 11&1nll coruumana lhc:K from ~. 1t rannbled a and horrors. ~ .,llllly W to~_....
fod ~ and cheW) peas that ~ rqularty.) • peasant llCW watb DCirl oaions. wasb a plat
M lean protein choice •loft4 with •riifYina wte. PorkJmckrtoin. for
eumple.conta1nsonJy 141 calona
and 4 pams of fat .~ J.ouncc
tcnina. The l~ abio ~ rec:ipHady con~ a quiet
oftn foGnd dllnr way into e'-ery A80lbtt ~~ notic, the carrou. ttlcr) aad \lmklneeet Lan Cu1sinc'V!f'P' wnb w
• Other c:om~IMftt.. 1ndudiQ1 cb dlc1 ctinncn llft'n't as ftavorful as potato wcdFi t01RC1 toeetta. TI1iC •uct (280 ~ Md more
ten. impaied. CH~ Ud .piees aren't \-.iabks weTe rvbbety •IJd tbt ·mmec1 moma*i dlledt lbMI
rout. IMltc.. or P.19DbroiJ is J)C*lble
wtlh this versatile boaea CUL
Smobd TendUloia s.l.t...,.. a
Q1aickly.f'OUled and llDobd port
1Cndcrloin that II ~ '!rith I
'
Now. we 1Dd'111t oo Ouckm . flMDtftl,.lMattheyarcc•pensavefOr chidmconsaMedofbotbwhi~and mott. but only doU of ~ •
Marsala. Sleek Diane and Scallops mAnufillCturcn to;:J..,Wc W1C!d da.tkmcatcllunk wuba.nocc:asiOnil cMelc betwen the..,_.. Of ooo-·' Pro~. Colon lft 'iVldty ·~ the t•-o molt c~ bite of arislk. dies. Heft> ftects ftft ...... I ~~~plump. DOC latlpa and d\ictrn (lns thaa 38 Slim Sclcds ~ ,..,lh meat liked the cbd tnftft wida •mh-
wihed. TheY•tt even ~ oa a pna-nt of' caloria drtiYed from sau« falt'C'd surulaify .\ thin. rC>Omf-~ n tWld i.~ t.n .
reusablt. microwavt1bk dinDCr fat). and mntrar)I to lktvm:eti"I skimp sef"ll\I walh a sltchll -oft" 11 (Pl r 11 -RATmO/Q)
) J ' •
..
•
SOuperldeas forcel,,brating national month
,..
January is National Soup Month, and celebra1ioa it can bt as
easyasheaungaquick bowl of canned soup.
To make it even more special, here area few simple serving
suacstions:
• Add chopped green cbilin 101 can of country vegetable soup
and top with crushed tonillachips foraquickandeasy soupwi1h1
south-of-the-border flavor.
• Add an eight-ounce can of chopped tomatoes and a touch of
oregano to a can of chunky New England clam chowder. The result is
a deligbtfully different chowder.
The following quick and easy recipes for hr.any soups and a side
dish also are excellent ways to celebrate National Soup Month and
satisfy fa mily and friends. Each combines exciting fla vors with great
taste and convenient canned soup.
CHEESY c m CKEN
VEGETABLE SOUP
3 tablespoons batter or margarine
%capssUcedzuccbiai
1 cup 1Uced carrots
Ya c•p sliced celery
~ cup claopped onions
1 lar&e clove garlic, minced
Ya teaspoon dried oreguo leaves, crusbed
1 cu ( 11011DCes) condeased clteddar cltee.se soup
1 cu ( lC~~. onces) condensed cream of potato soup
I soap can milk
l soapcuwater
1 Ya caps claopped cooked cbickeo
Generousdasbbotpeppersauce
In 3-quart saucepan over medium heat. in hot' butter. cook
zucchini. carrots. celery. oni ons and garlic" 1th oregano about I 0
minutes or until tender. stirringoccas1onall).
Add soups. milk and water. sur until well bl ended. Stir an
chicken and hot pepper sauce: heat through. stirring occasionally.
Makes 8 cups or 6 sen-i ngs. Ca ton es per serv1 ng: 263. Sodium per
serving: 872 mg.
, .. • . .. . .,
",t ..
,. __ '
·'
CHUJMAC
.~ ............ .....
1 •-'•• deve1 prtk, mt.ce4
Jt1bhlf•-«*lll....-..
1 em (It~..-..) <1•h•e•Mef W. .. •
Ina (llemcesead) ~aesty ...... IMP/suee
lc_,.wa&er • 1
teu1 ( .... & U~ead) klOeybeau,V.iaed
I c.,. e11lkM .U..w maearM1
I auae.,11u ddervlaepr
Sou cream In 4-quan sauce~n over medium heat, cook beef with garlic
and chili powder unul beefis browned,. stirring to separate meat. Add
remainina ingredients except sour cream. Heat to boiling.
Reduce heal to low. Simmer JO minutes. stirring occasionally.
Serve with sourcream. Makes 11 cups or 8scrvings. Calorics per
serving: 516.Sodium per serving; 1251 mg.
SltJLLET SAUSAGE 'N'
CHEESE POTATO PANCAKE
~ ,._. IMIJ.kpork saasa1e
3 ~Pl peeled ud 1Uce4 potatoes
I 11ket Swl11 cllffle
5ecp
~C9fmlllr
I peecll (1.11 ouces) oaloasoapud reclpemlx
In 10-inch nonstick skillet over medium heat. cook sausage
until browned, stirring to separate the meat. Remove to paper towels
to drain. Pour off all but I tablespoon drippings. In skillet. over low
beat, in hot drippings. stir potatoes. Cover: simmer I 0 minutes. With
spatula, carefully tum potatoes. Cover: cook 8 minutes more or until
golden brown.
Arrange potatoes in an even layer in skillet. Top with sausage
and cheese. In large bowl, beat eggs. milk and soup mix until well
blended:Gradually pour into skillet. Cover. Overmed ium heat.
cook IOminutesoruntileggsare setand potatoes are tender.
Remove from heat. Let stand. covered. 3 minutes. Loosen edge
with spatula:inven onto serving plate. Cut an to wedges~ Makes 6 _
servings. Calories per serving: 278. Sodium per serving: 56 1 mg.
Herb-sauced turkey easy
QUAKER ®
Moist cooking in an herb-rich
bro th. What benerway to prepare a
California-grown turkey breast to
perfection?
Slow cooking in broth keeps the
bird dclicaously tender and juicy
and infu~s It with . a fragrant
bouquet of basil. parsley and
th yme. ·
Here's another neat tnck: cook
the vegetables -new potat-Oes.
pearl onions. baby carrots and
green beans -wi th the simmering
bird. It saves an extra pot to wash
and a separate vegetable dish to
prepare.
Make a sauce for the turkey with
the remaining herb-flavored lef-
tover hqu1d. Just thicken with flour
and enric h with Dijon-style mus-
tard and fream. DrizzJed over ttle
turkey breast slices. the sauce coats
the bird with its own flavor essence.
Simple and elegant. Herb-Sauced
• !' Save $2.90 on these
wholesome Quaker ·products
and start a New Year
of healthy eating.
..
Turkey and V-egetables makes a
wonderfw company meal whe n
you're too busy to cook. The
prese ntation is dazzling -slices of
white meat, a colorful array of
vegetables and pale golden sauce
should be carefully arranged for
visual impact.
HERB-SAUCED TURKEY
AND VEGETABLES
Z ~rt• &vkey or dlJcllee brotb
% ~ pouds Callfonia-grown
tarlley breast
1 Ollioa, cHpped
1 cap fredl bull leaves
11 sprt11 panley
1tt &us..-"yme
........ potatoes, quJUred
1 ,.... pearl ..... peeled
% baaclaes baby carrots,
&rimmed
~ ,.... area bea.111, trimmed
u4 1hiq1 remove4
4 taMe.,.... kt&er
% tablespoou noar
'h e11p eadl DtJoa·l1yle-m.~
udcream
Salt ud pepper to taste
Bring broth to a boil. Add turkey
breast. onion. basil. parsley and
thyme. Reduce heat; cover and
simmer 11 ' to 2 hours. Add
potatoes and pearl onions last 20
minutes. Add baby carrots and
green beans last 10 minutes.
Drain turke> and vegetables;
reserve broth. Remove skin from
turkey. Arrange turkey and veg-
etables on platter; keep warm .
Melt butter in sauce pan: whisk
in fl our. Cook 5 minutes. Add 2
cups of reserved broth. Cook 5
minutes. stirring constantly until
thickened. Reduce heat: add mus-
tard and cream. Season with salt
and pepper. Slice turkey and serve
with vegetables and sauce. Makes 6
servings.
RATING •..
P'rom C l
thicker and spader.
Weight Watchers Candleltte
Chicken Cordon Blcu wnh 330
calorics had a good fla\ior even
though the breading was on the
~> side. Under It, we found the
white breast meat filet wrapped
around a thin slice of Canadian
bacon and Swiss cheese savor,•.
Weight Watchers 1s a master of
deceptive dining.
Candlelue helps )'OU fi ll up on
side dishes. but by the ume the
chi cken heated through. the broc-
coli and carrots "ere overcooked.
The potato chunks were salty. Its
label d1dn·11m Sodium content.
Weight Watchers Lasagna with
meat sauce. also 330 calorics. gave
the most ~enerous servi ng with
plent)' of skim ncotta cheese (others
chose mort cconom1cal. less fatt)
cottage cheese). But since it omitted
the egg that norrnall) binds and
On a scale of 1 to 5 with 5 being
best, tasters rate frozen chicken
diet dinners for taste. appear-
ance. aroma. texture and after-
taste: .
.
Tyson:4,5,3.4.4.
Candlelite: 3+. 4. 4, 3.•3.
Armour: 2 +, 5, 4, 4, 2.
Lean Cuisine: 2, 3, 3, 3. 2.
Budget Gourmet: 1. 1, 2. 1. 1.
Lasagna
Lean curslne: 4, 4, 3. 4, 3.
Weight l/{atchers: 3, 3, 3. 3. 3.
Budget Gourmet: 1. 1,_2. 1. 1.
moistens the cheese. the ri cotta
la)er v.as df) The dark. pepper)
sauce had a meat) aroma. A lmle
extra onion or mushroom for
teuure v.ould.\e made 1t better .
.\rmour Dinner Classics Late
produced a Chicken Medallions an
Marsala Wine Sauce that looks
almost haute cuisine for onl) 270
caloncs. But the chicken med-
allions art pressed. of course. and
the beef and pork-based sauce
tasted a little gummy. Eu noodles
tossed wnh bats of broccoli and
tomato 1n a butter sauce v.erc
trnder. though bland. The herb-
buttered green beans were redeem-
ing. hov.e\er. Well-seasoned. vivid
color and cnsp. Plcn t) of them. too.
T)son's Chicken Marsala at 300
calones seemed the best balanced
fare. Of course since Tyson is
kno" n for its chicken. it certainly
d1dn·1 nsk skimp1n$ here: the
boneless. skinless chicken breast
with rib meat was heart) and
sported charbroiled gnll marks for
looks. The Marsala wine sauce. thin
and v.atef) with onl y a pepper) mp.
didn't do the filct Justice. Ifs
accompanied b)' parslied baby car-
rots cooked al dente and a potato
skin filled v.ttb broccoli tn a ch~
sauce. both wtth good fla vor.
Other brands hlcc Swanson and
Bcnihana also carry chicken and
lasagna cntrttS. but not under a diet
label and thcrcfort. well over 300
calones. But since diet frozen
dinners arc such an increasing))
lucrauve frozen food market. mort
manufacturers will no doubt Join an
the wci&ht wars.
People arc more than willint to
fork over generously for less~than
aenerous portions. Diet dinners
cost between $3-$4, with the excep-
tion of the Budget Gourmet line
which sells for $ 1.95. You can make
a bctter-tastina dish at home for ha1f
the cost.
But tf you're willing to com-
promise quality for coovenicncc.
partake sparingly. Remember to
round out the meal with a srccn
salad and fruit . and offset your
excess sodium intake by drinking
plent) of water. And don't rely on
frozen cntrccs to sec you to slim-
ness: Once r.our old caung habiu
return. so wtll your wcighL
LIGHTER •••
P'TomCl
Dad of rff ltot pener .. ~
1 &ables,... safflower or olive
oll
Pttparc broccoli as du-ccttd on
package. Blend peppers. onion and
pcppcr sauce an food p~r
until smooth. Sloiwly ldd 011 and
conunuc proccssina untal well
btcnded. Serve ov~ brc>ccOti.
Makes 2 scrv1np.
Each sci"\ 1n1 providn about 130
calorics. 5 1 protein. t • &
carboh)dratc. 81 fat. SS m1sod1um
and 6 1 d1ct.&.r)' fiber.
lassy Auto
. dvertised
in the ..., ...
••
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday Januery 6, 1~ C3t
New Orleans favoritejazzed up
Got the midwinter blues. when )OU )earn for w methmggre:u to eat"
Then think 011ucland and Jazz up yourhfe wtth a non-trad1t1onal salad
In ev. Or'leans w~rcgrnt foodsand hot mu 1c compt'te for
attention. a savof) dish of red beans and nee hasal"8'S hit a ote
On an) night )Ou can walk antoSamm)'s 1n the Frenc uanerand
findc\Cf)Onefrom P~rvauon Hall trumpet pla~ersto ngl") tounst~
sing1ngnspra1~. OW)Oucansef"'\eaJazzed-upcoldsal d \ers1onofth1s
Bourbon Street treat at home.
Olluelar}d Salad harmonizes the 1rad111onal duet of re beans and nee
wllhdown-homechunksofswect potato. Cnspstnpsofre onion
marinated tnca)ennepepperand lime Ju ice add that fam us note of 'ev.
Orleansiest. Then 1t'sall blended together v.11h a cool. c am' touch of
buttenn1lkdressmgforag.reat medle) of tastes ·
For authenttc New Orleans fla vor. sene D1\lela d Salad v. nh cooked
cra)fish orshnmpand garnish" 1th fmh hme slices .\dd crust~ chunks of
French bread and taJlglas.scsof1ccd tea a 1..ented v.1th spngsofmant 'o"
\ou're read~ to letthegood umesroll
DOOELANDSALAD
Zc11ps ~-iDcllcubffcoolled sweet potato (% medJaml
Z cups cooked ritt
11 ~-ontt CH red or black be us. draiud
\2 small red ooioo, tllillJy sliced
Z lalespooos lime juice
'• teaspoon salt
'• to •, teaspoon cayeue
1, cup battermilk dressiJag
Combine sv.eet potatoes. nee and bans ~11\ oni ons v.1th llmeJu ice.
salt and ca~enne. let stand 30 minutes .\dd onions to potatoes. Pour
buttermilk dress1ngo\er \ egetabks. Toss to m1\ For6 toenJO~.
THE BEST COUPO
OFFER. IN Tow· !
WE ACCEPT COUPONS FRoM OTHER SUPERMARKDS PLUS UNLIMITED DOUBLES
.......
SLICID la&COll
H 8. PKC.
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P1lgnm s Pnde Sov1hef'n Ch1~en
CHICKEN WINGS LB .59
~"50?~ ·B NELESS CHUCK
1 I 4" VALUE TRIMMED BEEF ROAST
~~~:'l
................
DmUllSHnne11S
FAMtl Y PACK
SO CHICKEN
Form Raised
L&-.89
FRISll CA'nlSH PILI.ITS ..
.LB.
LIMIT 2
PLAllTATION
QUAIL
1 LB
PKC. IA.4.69
................. a.a. 3.98
ASSORTED BATHROOM TISSUE ' . c
LIMIT
3
NIW YOllK
SnAll
4 INCH 1.A LUE 4 69 TllllAMED
BONELESS BEEF LOIN La. •
Gonon \ 7 Oz
FISH STICKS OR FlllfTS lA 1.69
SOUP I ... CMPONOOllUS ~~~A
A9 ·~! 170Z CANS IA9 REG OR DIET
un
CIREAL
OUAJ<Ell 2 39 70 0 Z BOX •
•-;, -PlllMIUM _ -... Clt&CKas ~ 7-~ • N.+.8&0 9 ' LS BOX
-: ASSQIHEO • 7
.69 S1ngl• Roll
BRA._ WNY TOWELS _____ ..., __
lorg.
BELL PEPPERS ....
Quaker 8 Counl Chewy
GRANOLA BARS
• Oz Body Tender 1.87 YARDLEY BAR SOAP . .59
ri -~------------------------------------------------------------.
I A~1~0-LB.-BAG . RUSSETS
.... ~ . .: ~.. U.S. NO •. 1 BAKING
-~~~~)~
EA.
LIMIT 2
Mor1oru 8 Ch
EA .39 PITIED PRUNES 2 lb Bog
FRESH CARROTS EA .79
---C--~•!!•!!•!! .. !!..!•!•~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·!.___.)--
1
t> ln<h Po•
HANGING POT HOS
UI ta ••••••
PASTll4.MI I SH\RAK\KU
TlR\Y AK\ M()lt\
Ol 1.79
HINOICHI
TOFU KARASOV
vOOKA
12.PACK
LUCKY• ...
JUICV 4.19
N.w YOfil~
MUENSTER CHEESE
Tasty
SPAGHITTI SALAD
~~1.49
....
l B 3.•9
LB '·"
Dosh• No Moio l 7S Ch
SHIRAKIKU SOUP BASE
7 .Oz 8tWOd Meal
SHIRAKIKU PANKO
Pf'kiOUS lS-Oz
RtCOn>. CHEESE 1.19
~~~EW NATIONAL PICKLES •. 1.59 .........
~···••MnA ~ 1.19
11-0l.
IOTlU 2.69 ==-*W SPltAY .... ····--·le"
' )
'
I• 7 OZ
ASSORTED .65 ~~·n• ~··" i o;: 2 49 8lU£ (.+.P •
.s•
AS
ChcJbLs ~Iii""°~ 01 tn Ro~•
.PlAfN LABEL 3 UlfR WINE
Gf'Nfl G.ont '6-0l. Com OJ
MIXED VEGElA'BlES .
75()..MI
ANTON CHAROONNA 'V
'·" S~28 Ch
CHICKEN NUGGETS. • ........ a.19 ..........
eF1 AT STAllTS ~,·2· llMJU(FAST
PAMUUI 1. t• •
)
• •
. ..
~upe1·1narkets compete for take-out food dollars
: NEW YORK (AP)-No time to
cook? There's always talceouL
Eiaht out of I 0 households buy
takeout food durina any four.week
period. accordina to a recent
survey. On averaae. buyers
purchase takeout food more than
once a week for a total ofS 16.50 per
week. Their total takeout food
purchases from all outlets come to
nearly $63 billion a year.
Takeout is available at fast-food
and ethnic restaurants. delis and
pizza parlors. And most buyers get
takeout food at competitive outlets.
But supermarkets a.re aJso offer-
IJlg takeout foods. They have salad
tJirs, refrigerated deli entrees.
prepared hot foods and more -markets offer a &realer variety of Who buys takeout? Jutt about salads. I
andudina b91els, soups and fttsh healthful foods." everyone. But those who buy h COO\CS a1 little surprise that
pizza. Supermarket takeout food is takeout the most frequently Stt Cbi.Mse and Mexican are the most
Supermarket takeout saJes total generally Sttn as fresh and hiahcr in themselves as modem. succnsful. popular ethnic takeout foods.
nearly $14.S billion prryear-and quality: nutritious and heahhful, career-oriented, pressured and The study was done by
are expected to arow. Accordina to and a 1ood value for the money. sophisticated. Lieberman Research In( ...... for
the experts. supermarkets may one Restaurant takeout items are re-What arc the reasons for buyin1 Campbell Soup Co. and the~ood
day nval Lhe populari~ of the prdcd as more fun to eat and takeout? Ease and c9nvcnicnce, to Markctina Institute, a non-profit
hamburger. pizza and chicken better-liked by children. begjn with. People also buy takeout association located 10 Washington,
chains. 8u)4lng takeout food is largely an when they're tired. rushed or feel D.C., that conducts research,
"Supermarkets already arc sue-impulse decision. About three-the need for a special treat. education and public affairs for its
cessful contenders for the fast-food fou~hs of those who buy don't What are the most popular l.SOO member food retailers.
business," says Monica Wood, make the decision until just before takeout foods? Prepared ham-wholesalers and their customcn.
manager of marketing research for they buy it. burger and fresh pizza are con-· With takeout come fast-foods
Campbell Soup Co. "We think Hot takeout meals a~ preferred tenders for the title. Other popular and with fast-foods come fast finger
supermarkets could easily pull out over cold. And most takeout meals choices are prepared chicken, deli foods.
ahead of the fast-food chains in are eaten at home, rathertha°"tthe meals and cold cuts, sandwiches, Fast finger foods are single-
) ears to come because super-o ffice. baked or fned fish and prepared servin1t foods that can be eaten on
~
'
No Game~ ... No Gimmicks ... EverybOdy Wins With .. Stater Sros. Low, Low Prices
BEEF BONELESS
Meat Dept. Savings
Pork Steak ~;:
"Ir
.. s1 29 ., ... is129
Spencer Steak .. · "6 .. s2 99 Entree for One ·~~::~s .. .,~, 55«
Tasty Dogs ~w ···· •:::"' age Lean Cuisine : ... ·;~:: ~ • , ·Q •• Hll
5 169 . Smoked Ham :~:·~:;· .. 19 _,ggc Super Pretzel . ·•Ol gge
Rainbow Trout ·.":.; ~$1 99 Apple Juice ,'<(. ·:-01 sgc
SI iced Bacon ··°"····= ·--a ... u s1 49 Nice 'n Light !~;<~1(~~ ~$199
Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials
CHlu..EO 1()()'", PUFlE
· Tropicana
Oraaae Juice
~I3• .. "'
Salad Dressing ~~ .ol sge
Chunk Light Tuna :.':~.~. ·2 ~s1 55
Hormel Chili: .. ·:~, .oz s109
Dry Dog Food :=: ~.s12"
Macaroni & Cheddar=---~35e
Picante Sauce:!,.~~ •.al '149
r.io.~$159 79e Bath Tissue :=rc1
U!-Ol s121 Sour Cream ..... ro. ••o:69e
•H·c .. c.z Stater Bros. Dips ~~= •O: 93• .::~~ Lunch.Pack:· . s1"·
LB
Garden Fresh Produce
Cucumbers l.O<i TO«"~ ,.1sc
Pe a rs ~ ... .c;. S~["T IOI( ~ ~29e
Potatoes s~·AC ~ l.19e
i::&:.y
Av.,.,,,.,. CAMILLE~ CQMPACTA
Dlelleabacbla 4 390 SZ9!POT ~ EA
Miller Lite t4'C5 s449 •l ~Hll
Gallo Wine .. VAAlCflES
onrico Rum .-r(CJl'QO.J:
··-~·$239
Tequila :. ·':
CANADIAN
Black
Velvet
.,~~m
.~,..1 13"
Rice Cakes ~~«..,
Applesauce ~~ .........
RC Cola~Mt~::.~
Shasta Soda ~:c;·· .
Pinto Beans »« 5~ = ., AD n:=v ADVERTISED ITEM
GUARANTEE Pork and Beans ~~,
Tom a to Paste ~·cs
Heinz Ketchup ~IO'TU .
'Ol 7gc
MR 32•
---.. ._ ........ -·--------------~----..... -:==4: ---
"'• '~ to .... Cit' ~ tli!fc..nt "°" °' ICMl1...S fnll'tflltOW I OIAI IC> c:oniMIClnl
~ Ollf ~ wi'rutl CM QI IWI ..,..,,,..
IC*W • l\AIN CHEQC ... DI ~
'POii IO o.;,; lN ..... It ~ ~ M
_. ... ~ ~-~ oeyt
~ ~--------------..... ,
~I • I r-\Ill ,. r-_ .• •• I
• I • i I • • ' ~ r" I ' ( , • , ' I' • .. r I • ,-, ' ' • I • '' I • , (_ t '. ' I '. I . ' r I • ! I r1 ~ : 4 • • • ' ' ' r • • ' • \ I ' ' ' • I ' . I J • • ~ ....... ___ - - ------------------- -__ ... - - f • ' • ~ •• ........ -~
the run. They are quick-to-eat
products that need no utC'Osils and
require a minimum of cleanup.
Ideally, the eApcftS say. these foods
can be eaten with one hand.
Fast finacr foods include one-
ouncc. all-meat chicken patties
served on specially-made buns;
frozen yogurts in three-ounce
squeezable paprr cones. and
CQOkies in s.in&le-servin& packages.
Ottie Ladd. chairman of the
Kentuck)' Fried Chicken National
Cooperative Advertising Program,
says his firm's creation of one--
ounce chicken patti.es was in
response to this consumer trend.
Who buys frozen dinners and
en.trees? A new study by the MRCA
Information Services in Stamford.
Conn .. shows the main growth is
coming from better educated. high-
er-income households with ap-petite~ for single, main-dish
premium en1rees rather than com-
plete dinners.
"True to its name. premium
products found greatest popularity
among upscale buyers.·· says Elame
Howard. contnbutmg editor of the
study.
"Single-serve frozen entree and
dinner purchases in 1986 were
dispropon1onately higher among
upscale. fast-paced urban house-
holds." she said. ··Demographics
shov. households earning S40.000
or more per year purchased almost
30 percenl o f the volume of these
frozen foods."
Entrees. that 1s. single main-<i1sh
it~ms. produced the pnmar)
grov.th an the pre mium product.
accounung for a 63 percent share of
the premium segment. O verall.
frozen entrec sales v..ere up more
than I 0 percent an 1986 from the
prior ~ear. and v.ere purchased b:,
.nearl) 30 percent of U.S. house-
holds. In contrast. sales volume was
Oat for premium frozen dinners
(complete meals) and houset)old
penetration was :! I percent.
The stud) v.as based on a
nauonal~ reprcsentatl\ e sample of
7.500 households in the Uruted
States. · ..
T~ stud) also sho-wed that
frozen entrees and dinner
purchases arc popular an house-
hold s hc.adcd b> coJlegc.. graduat~
and in households located in larger
metropolitan areas.
Ho"ard said ne"' 'arieties of
ethnic. ..\m en can and other
cu1S1nes are sat1sf~ mg gourmet
tastes. Consumers purchased 28
percent more Mexican frozen en·
trees in 1986 than in the previo us
)Car Oncntal frozen entrtt and
dinner sales rose 27 percenl for 1he
same penod.
Expens sa~ one reason for the
gro"1h in populanty of frozen
dinners and entrees is the m1cro-
wa' e oven.
··Given 1oda~ 's increasmgl)
bus). con" en1ence-onent.td hf e-
st~ les. m1crov.a' e a ppeal. including
packaging. cooking direcnons and
ad' en1s1ng. 1s cnucal to t~ grov.1h
of frozen entrees and dinners,"
Howard said.
MCR ~ I nformauon Sen aces
specializes in gathenng. inter-
preting and appl~ mg marken nfor-
mauon for llS consumer-product
'clients. The compan) provid~ a
broad range of product purchase
and usage mfo rmauon for soft
goods. be' erages. food. household
products and health and beaut~
aids.
DIETING ...
From Cl fl
Z teupoooa liloaey z teupooa• DljOD·ltyle mH&ard
"' teupooa coanley croucl black pepper
Mix vinaigrette ingredients
thorough!:, and set aside.
Rub surface of tcnderlom well
with liquid smoke. Roast at 450
degrees for 20 minutes. Let rest 10
minutes.
Meanwhile, arrange lettuce.
watercress and orange slices on
individual plates. Sh~ tenerloin
thinly and arrange over greens.
Drizzle e~ch salad with I to 2
tablespoons dressing. Garnish wt th
shelled. chopped pistachios.
Serves 4; 277 calorics per ser-
ving.
ROMANCE ••• ·
From Cl
Holding artichokes by stem
ends, plunJC into boiling water.
Cook 10 minutes or until fork can
be inserted into base. Drain upside
down. Trim stems even wilh buc.
Combine souc cream,-mayon-
naise, lemon juice and chopped
rose petaJs to create a dipping
$8UCC. When artichokes are cool.
spread leaves and scoop out the
choke. Fill center with dipping
sauce or serve sauce on the ~idc.
Cheeses versatile
BELLEVILLE. .J . (AP)-Bnt·
1sh chccscs •~ HJ'$8lllc.
Bnt1sh cheeSH such as Stilton.
Cheshin:. Ooubk Ctouccster and
White Wem.Jeydale can be served
..au naturtl." as a .ade·chsb or u an
IJ>Ptli1cr. l°hc n."orful tastes of
th~ checsn also makes them
perfect ror a h&h• deUtn, or with
)"Ollf f'i\Onte fnuL •
Top aook ~_with a "Nat of
Whuc Wriisk)dalc. Just •'arm
until lhc ch«K is sh&htly mellfd
ind 1htn ra1.
,
. j
,,
. '
Succulent Cornish pasties
ideal for hearty winter menu
It is time to consider a more processor or blender.
abundant menu. On half or a little less or each
Comish Pasties. pronounced pisuyround,layerpotat~ turnip
"pass-tees," will ccnainly fill the and onion. Sprinkle with parsley.
bill. These succulent savories orig-salt and pepper. Divide bttf and
inatcd in the Cornwall area of pork amona the I 0 rounds.
England, and were always a great Sprinkle with more pepper.
lunchtime fa vonte with miners, Moisten edge of pastry with a
farmers and other outdoor workers. little water: fold top over and ~al
degrtt oven unul hghtl> browned.
about 4.5 minutes. Serve hot or
chilled. Makes 10 individual
pastries.
Variatioas.: 4 largc pasties may be
madc. lncrecut bakmgtimc lOto IS
m1nute-s.
Round steak ma> be substituted
for chuck. Use 4 tablespoons finely
minced suet wuh meat to add navor
and moisture.
Pasties freeze -.ell. Cool on wire
rack before chilling.
...
();angeCout OAllY PILOT/WednMday, ~e. 1988 cs·
A hgh1 Oaky pastry encloses edges with fork. Make a slash 1n top
cubed boneless chuck to which a of pastry to aJlow steam to escape.
meat tendenzer has bttn added. For browner crust. brush lightly
cubed pork chops. sliced potat~ with milk. Bake in preheated 350-
and turnip. and chopped onion and .-------------------------==::==============::::;:;:;:;:;===============::::::==~==~ parsley. Salt and ground pepper
gl\es addiuonal Oavonng. During
the cooking pcnod. juices form
from the vanous tngrcd1en1s thcre-
b) gn rng the past) a.unique Oavor.
It also pre' en ts di) ing out
CORNISH P A.STI~
t 11-ouce packa1es pie cnst
mix
l '4 ponds boDeleu ~tld
steak, c•t in "'·lncll e11bet
Unseasoae.d meat teadertzer
t tlliD pork ~ops, e11t la 14-lacll
CU~I .
t 'I• caps tMaly 11lced potatoes
11 • caps t~y sliced yellow
turnip
'• cap coarsely catopped oaJoe
~. cup coarsely cbopped parsley
Salt
Fresllly gTOancl pepper
Prepare pastry as package .
directs. Form into 4 balls: chill 30
minutes or unul ready to use. Roll
each ball on nourcd surface and cut
into 1 8-inch circles. (A luncheon
sue plate makes a good pattern.)
Past!) should be a httle thicker
than usual. Place each round on
baking sheet. Sa ... e past I)' stops and
roll to make to more rounds.
Whale pastf') 1s chtlhng. sprinkle
beef wtth tendenzer as package
directs. Set aside W1th pork. Veg-
etables may be prepared in food
Sparkling
wine terms
reviewed
McClatclly News Servitt
SACRAM ENTO -If COO·
sumers find -. rne 1num1da11ng.
chances are the~ fi nd sparkling
-. inc doubl}_ so.
l n an effort to demyst1f) the
world of bu bbl). hr re's a pnmer on
sparkling v.ine. culled from Gar)
Heck of Korbel and the wnt1ngs of
oenophile Hugh Johnson.
First of all . "champagne" techna-
call> refers onl)' to the stuff made in
the Champagne region of no11heast
France. The word "cu ... tt" means
the product tS a blend of different
wines. usuall> from chardonnay
and/or p1n0t noir grapes. 1' the grapes were harvested rn
different )ears or in a less-than·
sensational )Car. the bottle ma)' be '
labeled "NV." meantnJ non-vin-
tage. With NV . most wine-makers
arm for cons1strnc) from one year
of producuon to the next.
Vrntagesparkhng wmesare made
fro m grapes grown an a particular
)Car. es~1ally a good )'ear.
In ~ sparkling wines. a small
quantity of non-sparklina red wine
1s added to the white sparkling
wine. Roses frequent I)' have a fruit )
character.
Blanc de blanc {"white from
white" 1n French) is a sparkling
Wlne made stnctly from white
grapes. usually chardonnay.
Blanc de noir ("white from
black" in French) is made from the
dark-skinned prnot noir grape. If
the Juice of the grapes is left in
contact with the skins, the end
product may be slightly pink.
A "cremant" rs a half-pressure.
less-bubbl> sparkling wine fre-
quently served with food.
Swtttness or dryness is de-
termined by additions to the wine
after us second fermentation. To
top off the bottle. the producer will
add sugar. v.ine andor brandy.
The dnest sparkhna wines are
those that get no sugar. They
f~uently are called natural. bnJt
nature. brut integral or some vari-
ation thereof.
The plain brut dcsisnation
means that only a touch of suaar has
been added, and the end product is
still quite dry. Confusingly. "extra dry-usually
m(ans that shghtly more sugar has
been added. and the product will
not be as di) as a brul.
"Sec .. {dry) is slightly sweet. ~ith
more sugar than ~he prev10~
dcsignauons. ·•0tm1~sec· (scm1-
dry) is disunctly sweet, frequently
scn·ed Wlth dessert. "Doux" is
sweeter )Ct.
HowcHr. terms desi'"atina sw~tncss are not always used
consistently.
Fie.ta food prepared
A chef from the Acapulco Rct-
iauranL CosLt Mna. •II ~· a free ck'monurauon of a .Malcan
ficua. at I p.m. Saturday at the
HorM E.Apms. 7227 Edinter Ave .•
Hunt1n11on Beach.
Rnervauons are not necemty.
Fresh
Sweet
Nectarines
naToz:tul
per lb.
USDA Insp.-Golden Premium London
Broil 149· IMC Top IOllDd
.,.,iz,. Scve
149 per lb. I
,.,.. Paatlc
pc lb
Red Snapper
VIDI. ........ ......
Ciak .... no-..... ~ lb. Bnls Round Steak
2.49
1.59
Lean Cuisine Zucchini
Lasagna 149 or ClkQD Oow ....._ .
==·?:~ SaTe .45 I
A-...4 TM , I fl I ·--Tina's Bwritos
.... 'I' •'tt•
Cob Com
4/Sl
.99
...... -........ .......--__ .. ,...-........ -...... --.
Ralphs
~ms 3/SJ :;3 Save .38 ._, ....... ~
l*lb.
Monterey Jack ...... •=94~ (I st , .._,. •P'v
Luncheon Meats
24 OZ.· alphs
2·.89
.8.9
!!!1!te Bread 59
Spl.lt Top or SaDdwtcta
Save .201
You Save $13.50
a...., .. a ....... .... !!'~ ...... ~ ....... ,.. -. ..... o.r.wi......,.. =~.~'*lcrr ....... .., ---. ................ ,.. ... -. u.1s.n.a-..11._._, 1-.
1"k9ll4I not90od .. c .......... .., .................... ,. 0 ,...~.., ... }lie ................ ~ ........,,, .....
..,._..,_.._.._ __ .....,_......_...,..,. .... a-·--.....-·..--· ..... .-..-..... ._..,.,........,..,_.,,__.... ......a--------..-·-··--------~--------------. ·----
l
Fresh
Honeydew
Melons
SwHt Mellow F1aYor
per lb.
Campbell's
Noodle 29 ~~E, Save .10 I ·
Sweet Ripe Whole
!~ennelons · .19
aamun Bath Tissue I 99
Ql:IU~IDW··--Geisha Tuna .59
Fresh LorraineSwiss
Cheese··~ 58 . Low Faltiow saa
SUc:ed '° Orls.r '*lb Save
LOO per lb. I
=-..Sc .. cic••
Fresh Salsa ......... ,. •..
per a,
Jarlsberg Cheese
.99
3.98
,....,eDow
per)I).
Fresh Peaches ,....
per lb
Bing CheIIies
~
1.29
1.99
~ 12 Pack-Meisterlrau
~=~ 2.99
.,,_
1'0-.l 1111.
Korbel Brandy o--Tecate Beer
5.99
3.98
There's No Reason
·To Shop AnJW!lere Else!
• ,
Lagirna offerl:ag acting
worksbops for all ages
No maucr how old )'OU att. 1fyou
want to learn hov. tQ act. the Laauna
Mouiaon Pia) house 1s looking for
you. The playhouse 1s offenng a '¥let)
of classes for all age groups. stananf
Saturday wt th the adult group. age I
and older. under the-· d1recuon of
a""-ard·winning actor Jon S1doh
The adult \\Orbhop will be con-
ducted Saturda) at 11 a.m. for both
beginning and intcnncdaate actors.
Those interested should sign up at
thallime. and the ftt 1s S80 for eight
two--hour ~ons.
Laguna Youth Theater director
Sron Da,·1dson has orpn1zcd elma
classes for the ~ungsters this >Car.
ofTtting training for preschoolers
through 14-}ear-olds.
Oasses for the 11-1 4 age bracket
will mttt Tu~a\S and Thursda~s
from 5 to 6~0 p.m . staning Jan 19
The 7-10 age group "'II meet Satur·
days ftom 10.30 am to I 15 p.m .
btgjnningJan. 23. while pttsdtooters musteal -The 19405 R.ad10 Hour" by
~10 be mstructcd Saturda)s from 9 to Walton Jones ~111 be held Monday at
10:?0 a.m .. also starung Jan. 23. 7 p.m. at the WestminsterCommuni-
Tuitton 1s $7.S and classes ·run for t) ThealCr .••. dircctor Kem Johnson
eight weeks. The pla)•ho~ 1s 1&:a1ed \\-111 cast I 0 men and four women
at 606 Laguna Can)'on Road. Laguna from 20 to 60 }ears of ase. and is
Beach. anf:\ more infonnation is looking for a black female J3ZZ sinicr
available a 1494-0743. 1n her 20s for a spccialny
. · • • ~ numbcr .... audmoncrs should bnng
Pilar ~a5'nc. wido.w of John their o~n music. and more infor-
Wa) ne. ",II appear this .!'1onth on mation 1sa,ailablc at 995-4113.
··spothgtlt on the Aru. a cable · Plastow Programs will hold tryouts
tclc' ISIOn show hosted and produced Fnda\ for 1ts 1988 London tour a IS-b~ Mauri«~Ual'~: , da' j;erfonnancc e"<curs1on ;,.h1ch
The author of J.<;>hf'! Wa~ne M~ "1(1 depan Aug. 3 and 1s auilable to
ufe With the Duke \\.tll discuss her people Is and oldcr .... pnformancc
mamagc and separation from the matenal ~111 be selected from.Amen·
screen legend and his length). and can mus1cals such as .. B)c Bye ulumatel~ unsuccessful fight \\Ith Bardic:· "Drcamg.1rls.." .. A Oloru~
cancer. Line:--·Soph1sttcaled Ladies" among
The sho\\ \\111 au Ja~. 12 and 14 at others .... the rcadmg.s arc set for 7 p.m.
.,·30 p.m. on Qtannel 31nCosta Mesa at the John Plasto" Studio of Music
a-nd also Jan. 13 o n Channel 3 '" and Theater. 2428 N. Grand .\vc ..
'-=c" pon Beach.. • • nta ..\na, and appointments may be-
CAllBOARD -Aud111ons for the made b) calling 54~844.
Three men. a baby and a bundle
&e.e Gattenbera. Tom 8elleck. Ted nan.on (from left) and
friend •tar ln the boa oftlce lllt ••Three Men and a Baby.'·
The morie atayed atop the weekly boa office heap throa&h
the New Year' a weekend, ea.rnJ.nc an addtional S 13 milllon.
Hollywood had a record year ln 1987, with S4.2 bllllon in
sales. .
EDDIE MURPHY IS ...
" ..• HILARIOUS"
'Broadcast News,' 'Moonstruck,' 'Last
1 Einperor' nominated for 15 Golden Globes
•UT-i:•..::a~""""'· Ii SM.:
·~ J.Jll: ;.,,-:v f
~.xt:.
__ ... _.,.._
" ..• BRILUANT ... DAZZI ING" a..cr.... ... 'Ta.:......,. ...
'
THf CONCf RT MOVlf
. "' ~:-~ A• ttllll :. £. -·
NOW PLAYING ·-!o.ri:-~··
...... --&a.tC Jr?"-1.r ;::;..·
~ ,,.._,.,~ ......,,
UlnlMAf~r.a
!<.-~· ...
ITWl'DI
E-~ ............. e-llllS"
llOIWSIEJ! ... w.s;;~
ca:a -si...-Jro"" ~
WOIWSIUI "r."' ""-'•t'11iiA""' ?>· )f\l'l
BEVERLY HILLS. Cahf. (AP) -
" pair of comedies. ..Broadcast
;"l:l'"'> .. and .. Moonstruck:· and a
dramalll ~pie. ··The Last Em~or:·
"erl honored T uesda~ "llh fi vc I 98M
Golden Globe nommat1ons each
from the Holly .. ood Foreign Press
..\ ssoc1a uon
"Broadcast N~s:· set amid the
pres!>urcs of a telc' 1s1on nc\\sroom.
finds \\ 1lham Hun and ..\lben
Brooks v~ mg for the anenuon of
Holl\ Hunter
·· ~toonsuucl .. lein es Cher in the
shado" of a full moon that changes
hl'r la fe as a "1do\\ and mfluenccs her
struules v.1th famal~. fideht~ and the fo1bf~ ofrht' human tiearr.
.. The Last Emperor·· chronicles the
h1ston of Pu Y 1. proclaimed emperor
ofC'h1.na in 1908 "hen he just 3 ~ears
old. He as poy,erlcss at the age of 6.
banished in 192-* and namt'd puppet
rukr of1n,adcd Manchuna m 1931.
The nom1nauons for the 45th
Golden Globe a"ards include·
Mo11on Picture. Drama -··c~
F~edom:· .. Empire of the un:·
-Fatal .\nrac11~n." ··t.a Bamba:·
"The Last Em~or'' and .. Nuts.~
~1o11on Picture. MuSJcal-Comed'
-.. Bab~ Boom:· ··Broadcast Ne\\S.:.
.. D~rt~ Dancmg. ··."Hope and Glo~"
and ··~toonstruck ··
s\ctor. Drama -\1ichacl Douglas.
-·wall Street.-John Lone. ··The Last
Emperor."' Jack ~1cholson. "lron-"e-rd:· "\1cl "l:oltc. ··Wet'ds:· and
Denzel Washington. ··c~ Freedom ··
<\ctress. Drama -Glenn Close
··Fatal -\t1rac11on ·· Fa'e Duna"a'.
·· Barlh-;.. all\ K1r~1a·nd. ·· s\nna:··
Rachei Le' m =·Gab' ..\True Stof'\ ··
and Barbra 1rc1sand. ··11,/uts:· ·
..\ tor. Coml·d,,mus1cal-'-=1colas
Cage. ··~toonmull:· Dann~ De\ 1to.
.. Throv. \tomma Fmm The Train:·
Wilham Hun ... Broadcast 'e"s ··
~===========================~--------------, 1e'l' Manin .. Ro-..innc:· Patric~
"ll~ll' ... Din~ Danung:· and Robin
\\ 1ll1ams. ··Good \1 om1ng Viet-
nam ..\ctr~s. Comcd~-mus1cal -Cher.
"\1 oonstruck:" JennafcrGre~ ... Din~
Dancing:· Holl~ Hunter. ''Broadcast
'-=c"s:· Diane . Keaton ··Bab'
Boom:· and Bette M adler.
··outrageous Fonune.-
Suppoi:tmt -A.CtOr -San Con· n~n ··The L'ntouchablc-s:· Richard Dre~fuss. ··'l\uts:· ~ Ermc, ... Full
\tctal Jaclct:· ~1organ F~an
·· trcet-Sman:" and Rob Lo"e
"Square Dance··
Supporting -\ctrcss -~orma
s\leandro. ..Gah' ..\ True lOf'\ ...
s\nne .\rcher .:Fatal -\ttract1on:·
OJ~ mp1a Dul.al is .. \1oonstrucl ··
-\nnc Ramse' .. Thro" \1omma
From The Tram:· and Venessa
Rt-dv.ne ... Pnd l"p Your Ears ··
Director -Richard -\lien·
borough. "C't) Freedom:· Bernardo
Bcnolucq. -The Last Emperor: ..
John Boorman. "Hope and Glor::·
James L. Brook!>. ··Btoadca.st :'-.c"s ··
and 'dnan L~ ne ... Fatal .\ttract1 on ··
'Nevsky'/
a ·superb
film score
IJ ROBERT BARR
c n ..........
Mriei Prokofic,·: Ale.under
'e \sk) (Tcl~rcJ-The Los ngeks
Ph1/hannon1C'. 1he Los Angeles Mu-
l er Chorale. 4ndre Prt~1n conduct-
mg. Ho//\ '4 ood's Gn"llNI hits (Te/arc) -The CrnC'mna11 pops orc-hesrra.
Ench Kunzel ronduC'11ni.
From the opening sung of' 1ohns
qul\enng o'er a lh~ing .~s.
Pro .. ofie, ·s ·· s\lt">.andcr c'·sk> 1s a
grabber h 1s e\lra,agantJ~ me~
dramauc music \\llh shnckmg cho~s. crutung.q mbals and thun-
dcnng drums. but lhcre are moments
of gttat dchcan as \\Cll •
·· -\k\andcr ~eHk'" was \\nttcn
to accompan) rhe film b~ Sergei
Eisenstein. "ho con~1,cd the talc .,f
a I 3th<entun Russ1an hero "ho
rcptflsed 10' ading Germans as a
morale-booster for a nauon soon to
be atv.ar. Then Stalin s1~ed his non-
aggression pact v.1th Hitler in 1939.
and the film "as \ankcd from
theater$ ·
Prokofie, rrcast the mus1 ' as a
cantata. sucking close!) to the plot of
the film. You ma> remember heanng
some of the music 1n Woo<i} .\llcn·s
.. Lo'c and Death."
The disc also includes the Lleut~
ant K.tJe Suite. composed for Eisens-
tl'ln·s 1933 film .. K11c·s Wedding" 1s
"cll lno" n -or at least the kind of
bnght music v.h1ch. on~ heard.
st\cls in th~ mind
-\ndre Pre' in leads a robust per-forman~ b~ the Los Angeles
Phllh:irmonic Orchestra and the Los
s\ngelcs \faster Chorale The digital
recording 1s remarkable for its clant~
-JUSt the sound one \\OUld e:\pcc1 m
a fi~t~lass theater ·· -\lc\andcr
'e' sk' ·· 1s. arguabh the best music
e'er composed for tllm.
From frozen Lake C'hudsk.o)e to
palm> Tanseho"n 1s but a d1sc·s
Journe>. though the educated ron-
sumcr ma> \\ell be \\al) of .. Holl)-
"oocr s Greatest Hits." It's a title
"onh' of "ce-hours TV hustles
!Order no". and get the miracle steak
ln1,es free') but costan&JUSt as much
as liner. nobler music. He~. do these
people than._ \\C·re stupid.,
BARGAIN DAYS -t:t
TUES. AND WED.
Th as asn·t greJt music but most of 11
1s pop musal ofa high order. "Rock~··
-------------------------------. 1s hopelc s. but the theme from
"Goldlingcr" wunds "agg1shl> fresh
"1thou1 the Sh1rle' Basse' 'ocal.
SeH·rat lUIS ha\C b(.come PoP stan-
dards -Tara·s theme from -Gone
\\1th the \\ind.· Lara·s theme from
"Dr Zh1,ago ··the lo'e theme from
"Romeo &. Juliet."' e'en the theme
from .. Lo' e tof'\ ··
. .
.-
.... . • •
St"•_..,l,
EMPIRE OF THE SUN ('°)
11 •' rua ocu• sn:Jlo l OOUtc
THREE MEN AND A BABY ,,.Q)
,.._, 1UC1 OCU'T SlDIO
.,1u •1••
--""1 BROADCAST NEWS (ft) ,.,.
SANTA ANA
WTOl.CI .. & ............. , ...
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flXI a wt:O Af
SUlllllO SC~l lOI
THROW MOMMA FftOM
THE TRAIN C"QtJI ••tee IHI
EDOfE MURPHY RAW (ft ) , ...
..._,, BATTERIES
NOT INCLUDED ('°) uu•ie•
COSTA MESA
C8SMAC!NTER ...... ,, ~,
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12.00 ~GAIN DAYI
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RAW (tt) , ....
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THE LAST EWEROR
4 LS I » It lt (PQtJ) ...., .... ,
SEPTEM8£911 (lll"GJ
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PLANES, TAAIMS AND
fUll a ftO AT
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WALL STMET (Ill)
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AUTOMOelLES IA> PL ANES. T911AJNS ANO ,.._,ti lt tc AUTOMOBILES (ftl
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...... B p .... .. .. BROADCAST NEWS (ft)
,.. ..... MIC....-H SIS I OO-lt• ,_,__,, ..... ....,.
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12.00 8ARGAIN DAYS
TUI•• no AT
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EDDtE MURPff~ RAW (1111 1•1•s•1•t•
TH9110W MOMMA F9110M
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THREI Mhl •A auY <"°> II ~ t b 1 ~ S ~ t• tt IS
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THREE MEN ANO A 8AaY
S~e•tt lS(~)
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El TORO
THREE MEN ANO
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S• 1• t IS
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Ul 7.U.lta "'*--· OVEMOARO (PG)
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SADDLEBACK PLAZA
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CUffilRY THEATRE a
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But there arc no frtt steak kn1,cs..
and ··Holhv.oocrs Gratcst Hm" 1s
as ansubstanual. and h1ghl~ pnccd. as
theater popcorn
"ONE OF 11IE MOST
Gllll'PING, GIAlllNG,
<JllWNG, ROMANTIC,
MOVWS IN YFARS.?'
ml•-~~ ... ·---. ,.
_,,. ft4LI"'
·~
·-....... ._...
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"S<;REAMINGLY
FUNNY!"
'
..
When TV gets violent,
pare:s;its must pull plug
DEAR AN LANDERS: J heard
somclhtng u.>da' lhat madt m y hair
stand on end. ( hopt ~will deal
wllh 1l tn )O'llr column use il 1s a
symplom of a problem that warrants
deep concern.
Last October. the teacher of a
fourth-grade class asked her students
to v.nte a shon cssa) on v.hat the)
would hkc to do most to etlebrate
Hallo\l.C't"O Eight) ptrctftt of her 9-
ycar-olds t\prnscd the wish to -1u11
somebod}.··
Where do children get such ideas., I
believe It 1s fair tO sa) that tht) get
them from mo' 1es and 'TV.
What arc \l,e going to do about this '°' c of '1okncc among the )Oung., Frankl~. it scares me to death. I am -
CONCERNED I 'C.\LIFORNl4.
DEAR FRIEND: A.t I uve ltee9
Coacened ia ~lcaco for a lo•c time.
It does ao coocl &o scream at tM
movie makers aa4 TV pr-4ttttn.
Appareatty &ktt is a blc ~ for
vieletatt aa4 tk)' are coiac c. cJn * peop1~.ut m~1 wan
Tk rHpoesibillty falls M tk
dloelffn ol pareats. Tltey aqat sel
•• Mrd ud fast pWeUaes &Met •Ul tkir youc cllldrna cu watcL
A ... aouea.se approacl cunt deW9
• aboel 71 puceat of tk prk1e
tUl ~mn ill&o Mr Uvtq rooms.
Euy'! No. Bat It ls a INlttk ta.at
parnats mast will. • • • DE..\R ..\NN L..\NDERS: Pica~.
""hen someone e'.\pressn a point of
v1t\I. that 1s 'astl) different from
}Ours. don't sa~ )OU hopt tha t ptrson
falls into the Black Hole of Calcutt.a.
HoRoscoPE
It ts not possible to fall into the
Black Hok of Calcutt.a because 1t. \$
not a hole. It's a \Cr} small room in a
fon ~here 146 Bnush soldiers were
trapped b) East Indian troops 1n
I 7S6. All but 23 suffocated. The death
room became knov. n as the Black
Hok of Calcutta.
Got 1l . .\nnte'> Ch«n' -Ht..:GO
S . CHl:"'A-BURMA-INDIA VET·
ER..\!'IS .\SS .-\\ Wll.
DEAR BUG.O: n..u fer laaalillg
me op s•ort oe tUl tartey ef H
aasw~r.·I &Mak I llea.nl frem ulf of
lk maa "'° se"e4 ill lk ~ ...
B•nn•-bdla &Hater. (Loll •f F1yta&
Ticers.1 0. ~ Is certaia. "ltft t
goof il's a kaal.
• • • • DE.\R .\NN L4.NDE R~ Mom
died s1>. mo'lths ago. .\ fcv. weeks
after the funeral Dad told us kids that
he and Mom dtdn·t have a Ver) good se~ life •nd that the\ hadn't made
lo' t more than four times tn the past
fiH' )tars. The) v.crc mamed ncarl~
45 'ears so v.c didn't think that was so
1crr1blc.
Three months ago Dad started to
take out some nice women. We "'ere
happ) tt1at he "'as able to tnJO~
himself again. But after six or ~'en
~table dates. he started to so
v.uh real ~oung chicks. about the
same age as his dauRhters. ow he 1s
dating girls 1n their i0s
Dad 1s S'4CCt but 'tr} naive for a
man who 1s 70. We art afraid thtsc
)Oung "'omen arc v.orktng him for
mone)'and gifts He ~nu n v.hco
\l.e tell him that he 1s be~ng taken
ad' antage of If our mother sav. these
v.omcn she ~uld tum over 1n her
gra' c Please tell him. ..\nn. -
A.L.\8.\M .\
DEAR ALABAMA:. YHr dM .W.'t
ask for aay advitt so I ••'t pve Wm
U). My commeats are for yM. By
lllis lime yoar fa&kr kDows ltew )'H
fttl. You've made yoer poi.Ill. M cool
il. h 's da11geroa.s lO &etteraliu bat
cirls iJ1 tlleir !Os wlto woald dale• 71-
)'ear-old duerve lo uve U.elr
motives questioned. I lilope Grampa
wakes ap soon.
• • • . DE.\R ..\S°' L..\:'llDERS: Your
compliment.a~ rcfcren~ to Harvard
L' "" ersll} reminded me oflhat great
line b~ Wilham F Bucfdcy Jr. He
said. 'Td rather entrust the govern-
ment of the t.J nstcd St.atts to the first
400 people listed in the Boston
telephone dJrcctOry than to tlie-fac-
ult' of Harvard Uni.,.ersll).-Ho\!, do ~ou hkc them applC'S., - T J .R
(Cambridge).
DEAR T J.R.: His cemmeat tlees
aot suprise me. Mr. 811etley ts a
Yale mu.
n.,......,.., Ja.uary 1
ARIES(March 21-Apnl 19): You can protest. ··1 want ab1ht) to ~uratel~ anal~zc r haractcr ~tress balance.
beaut). d~1gn. JUSt1ce ..\void mistaking ll1na11on for the
··real thing.·· Means protC'Ct self in emotional chnchcs to be alone'" -but -------------
• Orange Coelt DAILY PILOT/Wedne5day. January 6. 1988 C7
TV Lis TI NGS
Compiete t•riaion llatlnga ln SUndey'e TV Piiot.
actuall) ')Ou might
be surrounded b)
admirers and others
It 1s "Charisma SYDllEY Da)-fOr~ou You'll •
SCORPIO (Ocl 23-!'\o' 21 ): ~nano h1ghltghts
mus1 . Oo"tn. gourmet dining. return of lo'ed o~
Focus on domestic ad1ustmcnt. pro~n~. sclC'Ctl\ 11~.
quaht). You·n be ··sohcned.. b~ one capable of
~uuf)ing surroundinp..
Honk if you enjoy yard wor.k
ha'c arL aud1en~. o
rt I a t 1 o n s h 1 p s MUI
abound. lo'e "'Ill in-••••••••••••• tens1f)
TAURUS ( ~pnl 20-Ma) 20): Stud) Anes message ..\
.. lost lo' c·· "'111 return. )Ou·u gain fresh ptrSptci1ve. )ou·11
be nd of burden and ha'c greater frttdom of thought.
action Business transaction .,..,11 be suC'C'CSsfull) con·
eluded.
GEMINI (Ma) .:! 1-J unclO): Despite tho~ ~ho would
confuse )OU. stand tall and ch~ quality from plethora
of suggestions. You will make frnh start. love wall pla}
d)nam1c role. L...c:-o oativc figures prom1ncntl).
CANCER (J unc 21-J ul> :?1): Puzzle p1tttS come
together. ~ ou pin ovcraJI '1cv. Mo ne> transaction 1s
in\ oh ed. }Ou'll get proptr cm:Sit. Aquanus and another
Cancer v.111 figure promincntl)'. You11 add to spC"C1al
coUcction.
LEO(Jul) 2J.Aug. 22): Olspla) 'eruuht). optn Imes
of commun1ca11on. ~hzc poputanty 1s on 1lpswtng
Judgment. intu1t1on arc on target -take 1n1tiauvc and
knov. )Ou'll O\crc-omc odds. Gemini. Sagntanus pla)
roles. .
VIRGO(..\ug. 23-Scpt. 22): You no longcurc walking
ttghtrope -basic issues att ~ttled. )Ou can now take
grTatcrcontrol of) our o"'n desun~ Message will become
stanlin&l) clear Taurus. Scorpio figure prommcotl).
LmRA (Sept 23-0ct 22): D1~m motives.. u11hzc
SAGfM'ARJUS (Nov_ .!2-Dec_ 21 t EmphaSts on
11lus1on. ~aut). spintuaht~. emphasis also on higher
education. Clanf~ mcanin~ insist on promises tn
wnting. Long d1stan~ call tielps eliminate confusion
Pisces 1s in picture
CAPRICORN ([)c(: 22·Jan. 19) Hard facts nov.
a' a1lable -be rcahst1c. chC"Cl umcs. dates. dcadh~s
You'll reccl\c ansv.cr 10 1nqu1r} tn\Ol'tnl credn. cash.
financial potcnual. CanC't'r nau'c pla)s outstanding role.
AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-F..!b. 18): What Sttmed a .. lost
cause .. ""ill be rt' l\-ed. Contract can be renegottattd.
.. hard f~hngs .. v.111 be softened. Reach beyond pre' 1ous
hm11.auons . .\ncs. L1bra will pb~ s1gn1ficant roles
PISCES fFcb 19-Man:h 20): You sict prO\Crbtal
··sttond chance ·· Ind" lduaJ "ho helped )Oum past •<ts
rebuffed but v.111 no~ return. Don·t ptrmll pock to blocl
progress . ..\sl for help. )Ou'll l"C'C'Cl\C 1t with pleasure
.\quanan tn\Ol,cd
lF JANUARY 7 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY \OU ma' not ~ ~l"rgiuus 10 Or1hodOl sense. but ~OU arc Sp1ntual
Cu~nt C)clt' indicates cxptncn~ bordmng on the
mctaphysrcal. You rcttntl) learned man~ lessons. ha\C
gro"n tn v.a)s that cannot alv.a~s be defined in
matcnaJistK" ~n~ Pisces.. Virgo pt0p~ pla~ 1mpon.ant
roles tn )Our hfe. Befort Januar} 1s finished. sccnano "'111
h1ghh&ht mont) and love. In Ft-bruaf) )ou·11 gain added
prn11gc. Oclober will also be memorable. profitable for
)'OU this ~ear
" Los l\ngclcno ~C't"ps tv.o~~ 1n
his fenced ~ard . ~OtJUSt to sound the
trespassing alarm E'tf)bod~ koov.s
the~·~ louder than watchdoa.s But to
tnm the la" n. too Thl5 fcllo\I, nt' er
mov.s.
Q. Tire mj\..trs long ago put
IOSCC't.JClde tn the rubber \\ll) ...
.\. To fight malana Watcr col·
lected m discarded tires.. aod mos-
quitoes multiplied 1n that v.atcr
Do ~OU btht\C ~ou'll gt't 10\0hed
in a1 kast fi,c lav.su1!.S in 'our hfc" ~e11hcr do I But leg.al scholars no\I,
sa) so much ne"' lcg1sla11on is being
pasS("(! the a\t'.·ragc c1men can t'Jle(°t
that .\ hupuon lo&1am this If"'<'
tool half the legislators and made
Judges out of them \l.Ould 1ha1 help"'
\\hat do~ ou thinl
Q In "h1ch spon are the 1.ham·
p1ons of the htgh~t J ' erage age;"
.\ Billiards
She can't seem to get there from here
On the C\tnang news the other
night. there v.-erc some astounding
figures on 4.mcncans who v.cre in
touch v.nh the v.or1d -th?'y JUst
d1dn·t knov. ""bcrc u was. And~ all
know v. here the blame will go for that.
don·t v.c? To educators who teach
geography.
Well. lea me tell )OU, I am a woman
"'ho has traveled the ltngth and
bttadth of this country and around
the v.orld and I still can't find a
runwa) on the final approach . And
it's not Miss Salt·s fault!
• Back in Emerson School in Da)-
ton. Ohio. that poor thio& grew old ~ittng for me to find Arbnsas on a
pull-down map that covCTCd the
blackboard.
My eves sW"tpt over lhe>K names
ltke a minnwcepcr. "Give me a hlnL
Is 1 t a rou n try or 1 aty?""
NOllTB •• Q Q 1 l
O A.J163 . .. ... ,
£AST
• K.Jll5 4
Q .... ''. 0 ll J
Eiii ~ •.
BllllCI f-~
.
.. 1t•s a st.ate.-she satd paucntJy.
"Is lb.at the one shaped like m)
dad·s hairhnc?"'
•· o. dear. that's Aonda. ·•
"h 1sn·t the state that'ssmallcrthan
the eraser on m) ptnc1I. is it?"
~That's ~!aware. Su down and
rest a bit ..
I stood there so Iona that Anzona
-.cnt from a trmtor} to a state. and I
sttll rouldn't get a hook on ho~ the
W• l• ...
,-i•
N91di
3 0 ...
v.orld was strung together I gradu·
ated from college v.ondcnng "'h>
pt0ple nc,er tool a bus from ~cv.
Yort to London -v.hrn n was ctteaper
than n~ mg
rm not alone E'er) time a "ar
breaks out. ~pit scurT) to their
maps to set "'here 1t 1s Sometimes I
think Grenada and the Falklands
staged tht"St sl 1rm1shcs JUSt to tell
tounsts \I, here the' are Take B1m1na
Ten out of 10 d1dn~t ha\C a clue to
"here It v.as located until It made
bcadhncs So"' \OU can·t e'en book
a hotel room there
The problcro staned "'hen e~
plorers pronounced the canh round
That's confusing. We were doing all
nght as long as v.e ltncv. there v.crc
defined comers Then Chnstophcr
Columbus came along and said the
e~rth kept going. ( ..\nd the) bought
that from a man v. ho said he
d1sco,ert."d India \I.hen he v.as actu-
all) lost and landed in the Bahamas )
It v.as bad enough standing Ille a
tombstone in front of that map "hilt
~ltss Salt finall) got out itt-r pointer
and enlightened me. but th ink of
toda) 's generation. E'en other da~ a
natton v. ill call 1t~I( something
different. Zanzibar turned into Tangan~1ka v.h1ch 1s no"' cal~
Tanzania. The old t;ppcr \.ol\a 1s
no" BuBma Faso and Basutoland 1s
no\!, Lesotho.
It reminds me of an 'Old Mike
N1chols/Ela1nc Ma~ rounne. She said
she went to Ma,iorca for a hohda) He
said. ··\\'here 1s Ma1ora..,.. Stic rt--
plied. -1 don't l nov. We 0~ in ..
E\Cf')OOC laughed I ne'er knt'A
"'h~
CUlllS c ...
Lrt
Bo YD
You·,e heard tht' term -mcuo-
soprano-all 'our hfe ·but "'n'C ~ou
a" Jre tha 1 men() mctth me-ans
.. middle . .., 't ou "ere" .\t ~ha1 con·
s.t'natof) did ~ou stud~ pra~"
Q \\hat "35 the most cffC'Ct1\t one
CROSSWORD PUZZ LE
ACROSS
1 Couni.rtenor s Indentation
10 ~•·ts
14 Hindu ••()tyn-tpus ••
is Dignity
16 London ._
11 e
20 A.._.9Y
21 Coast t*ds
22 Hogbec:*•
23 Pl1cn.
24 C.-dpne
2S Stelate
28 Bondrt
32 Roms\ gar'b
33 Outbw'St
34SncMNW*
35 Al1icta
36 ~91 37 pi.,,..
38 Thel9nd
rt¥w
39 ~of
<*' '° Punull '1 Wll'm wekome '3 l.ocUd ....,
44 Slppery OMa .s Pr.-
'6 Vent
41 p .L """"' 50 8lbt pr.t.
53 Awidlng
SS Medaak*'I
57 EtNclll
sa~~one
59 Bone: pr9
60 ElimlNl1•
61 Intimidates
DOWN
1 LOW o.t)
2 Exact
3 ArtMus Of
balsam
•. -Ta.n s Red sNOe
6 AdVanC:m
7 Alfns
8 eec--of
9 Staliers
10 Keys
11 Oiaernlnatee
12 Pronoun
13 Some sauoaa
11 Ult9nS ,, WrChfUI
23 MS'9C8r
2• Mernbel'~
25~ 26~
27 us redllt
21 Extor1 mon9)
"°"' 21Show~
~
30 ProdamatJOf'I
31~
S3 S'cAllll .....
31 Noon "°"
C<lm cnttonal "'capon of World "Ii\ ar
II
.\ 'az1 German s &S-mm gun
usual!~ get\ that .. redll B~ the
ni 1~ h1stonans. lt "udc,ast.allng
ag.ainst aircraft tanJ..s.. infant!"')
empla.:t"mcl'llS. "hatt\C'f
'I ou no\I, ho-. big a btg ~lmon as
-smallcs1 v. luJcs arc not much
b1gg.er
\\ h.at s the •irst game ~ou learned
top a~~ One authont' suggests t~ o·
"ar .\ s.t'T10~ p me probabl~ ) ou
held onto a to' 1' hilt> some older child
tned to pull 1i 3" a~
. . .,. . ".
e.g
37 Thai
39 Pf'eapitous
'°~ •2 Get no ot 43 Grattng ,
45~
'6 Former1y
Cl'wisti9nla
•7 Amerndl
..
'8 y.,._
~ Tli M8fWlt ...
50 si.rn
S1 AcMer
52 l..lzWda
5'~
S5 aWlca
.
~nm
FAlllLY
CDlCUS
by BU Keane
\
"I'm still sleepin' inside."
by Brad Anderson
"Think of something constructive ...
barking won't make tt go."
PEANUTS
THIS 15 M'< R.EPOfrr
ON THE "TINY TOTS ..
(ONCER-OUR CLASS
WOO TO 'f'ESTEROAY ..
GARFIELD
THE O~C~ESTRA PLA'l'EO
··PETER ~D THE IAIOLF
I KN(W YOLJ'C' UK( C.HINf ~f
FOOP. CSARl='tELP ' eur I'M
SORPRt5fP YOU ATE THE
OC.TOP~
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
R08BJSR08E
INSIDE OUT by Kevin Pope ·-----
---../
"'"°'~ 1ltff£ e.oPt, ~ l*T A ~llf r ~!al ?
Nate tt1e comedian. trying to break ttle ice.
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham .. I 11 I· l
'
• ~E~ 1 GROIJ I.I'~· 6ET F.ANQUS, 'Of LL
~VTA Mf t:> HEAR NC. 'rtJOEL ~"
BLOOll COUKTY
GA.MIN AND PA~BES
WEED '"4ELP
CAS1RYt~ T~1ssn>FF
HOME, LU~? ~vv
I
i
FOP, THIS
t5 GAM1t..J
by Berke Breathed
by Addison
'--~--..;_~------.....:::ti~~~------e ....,_ __ ~--------~------~--------~
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
1 ''1 OJT Rf A 1'1EETiNG,
See_J ~ tQ1E A err uu-ari~N u~1--1 At.a> ~·s IKERE -
~~
)
..
SHOE
PY Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Dowe
SHERLOCK HOlME.5 AND 1HE
by Tom K. Ryan ~E ~FQIN(;
I MJ~l\J WiJc ~ ~C1~AA~
~--PRLJN~ Wlf\I~.
by Pat Brady
DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau
NJ. /ID, JlJST
ID"1llfl) ICM
lQl~WM
,, #16~
,
.....,_,.,..,, ___ ..,_ n.M_m.&. • ......... -.. ..... --.)911 .. --.... ... .. ..... .._I ..... _.., 1""" M .
~ --
_,. .
()\Sf •
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1988
FOOD
25 CE TS
Arrest mix-up ,costly f of ·He
Police clerk issues wa rrant fur wrong
m~n in murder case, ~ity pays 75,000
B y ROBERT BARKER
Of .. o.-.r ........
A Mann Count) businessman '4ho
'-'3S "'rongl~ arrr-sted and detained
due to a .. clencal error·· b) an
ine.\pencn t'd police records clerk in
H untington Beach w11J ~ paid
Nation
George Bush tells rival
Bob Dole: 'Get off my
back.'/A8
California
Coastal Commission
sues Reagan adminis-
tration in offshore oil dis-
pute./ A&
World
Israeli soldiers fire on
Arab rioters while U.S.
joins Security Council
condemnation of de-
portations./ A4
Index
Advice and Games
Births
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Death notices
Entertainment
Food
M ind & Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police log
Public notices
Sports
Weather
C7
A7
A3
87-8
B4-6 ca
B4
C6 c 1-5
A9-10
A12
A 11
A3
B4
81-4
A2
s~~).000 1n dama~
The Huntington Beach C11y Coun-
cil agreed to pa) the man S75.000 as
did Orange Count) and the Ba~ area
pehce depanment 1hat actuall) ar-
rested 1he businessman. according to
officials.
M_esa
taking
aim at
slum
By JENNIFER WEBER
Of-0., .......
The Cost.a Mesa Cat y Council ts
takmga ~t-tough stand o n upgrading
a nt>1ghborhood Councilman Dave -
\\'heeler called a "fe-stenng sore:·
Tht> !>lrt"\Ch o f Shalimar Dnve
be1.,.,cen Placenua and Wallace a'-
eoues is '"the kind of problem. tha11f
1\'s allov.cd to grov.. v.ill sprtad hkt> a
cancer to the rest of the area. -
Whtt"lt"T said
L·nanimoush endorsing a sugge-s-
uon from the Shali mar Dme Task
Force. v. h1ch has studied tht> problem
for "'" months. lht> council plans to
gi>c low-mtt"reSt loans to the t ~
propcn~ ov.ncrs in I.be area so the'
can upgrade their buildings. The wk
force plan indudt"S ··reasonable"
occupanc~ hmllS and on-site manage-
ment in lht 12 buildings along the
dn'e
If one or more ov.ners rdu~ to
cooperate "'11h the city and fall to
romp!~ '41lh st.ate and Cll) building
codes. tht> Cost.a Mt"Sa Rcde,elop-
mcnt .\gen~ could inttf"cne and
make Shalimar a .PrOJect area. That
"'o uld allov. the cat~ to gtt control of
the propcn) throu&h emancnl de>-
mam. and the cit~ could rehabilitate
or raze the bu1ld1ngs. _
.\1 present. Shalimar Dn\ol" 1s the
p1ct urt" of substandard housing.
.\n a' e.rage of se" en people II\ e I.fl
t>ach of the l'-'O-and th.rec-bedroom
apanmt>nts along tb_e dnvc. but as
man} as 16 ha'e ~n known to
cro"'d into o ne un11 . task force
coordinator .\le\ Sh.a~k sa1ct
Rents a \Cragc S6 7 5 to $700 for a
two-bedroom apanment. and S.,5010
S800 for three bedrooms. he said. But
the repts rcponedl) climbed higher
"'hen 5-0me landlords charged b) the
head. cit) offi cials said_
Somt> o v.ners ha''" rented un11s out
b~ the bedroom. ",th several families
(Pleue eee MESA/ A2)
Fred Manin Simons "'as arrested
b) about eight police offacet'$ earl) last
)t"ar as he rc1urned to has home in Gr~nbrae in Mann Count) after an
e'enmg out "'Ith his wife.
But instead of being the suspect
"'ho '>'a~ wantt>d for suspicion of
attfmptt>d rnurder 1n H unungton
Beach. the arrestee"' as an u~nding
c1\1zen 'II. ho ov. ned se"eral clothing
stores 1n lhc: San Francisco area.
officials said
Milestone
The suspect ar.d 1he bustne-ssman
shared lht" samt> llkt ar1u iast names
and middle 1nit1al<, Hunungton
Beach CXpuh C tt' .\nome' 8111
-\nisbar'\ \.aid Tue~a' Onh· their
middle name'.> '11.cH· d1fTt"rent .
i Fred 1~f1chad ~1mons age un-
kno"'n. \ll:O) 1o1.antt:d b~ local police on
susp1c1on of au~mpted murdt>r and
aggra,ated as~ult alter a fam1h fight
1n CXct:mtx'r 14 J .\msbar:. said
.\ "'arrani "'a" 1<,sued at tht" time for
All-day showers didn't dampen enthusiasm Tue8day u
VIPajolned ln the "topping oat" oerem~nr.at l.rvine Medical
Center where the final ateel beam wu ho ted into place for
the $90-miWon hoepltal. Marla Callahan ebJelda a guest ••
be •!Cm the beam
Anti-gridlock law ready for testing
Coast police have doubti' but plan to
fin~motorists blocking intersec~ioris
The dn,ers )'ou·vc wanted to
punch out for rushing into the
anterS«llon on a )Cllov. light and then
blocking . )Our path ~II) rould Fl
slapped no " -'-'tlh finn ranging
bctv.ct"o S50 and S500
Under tht> state's ne" anti-gridlock
lav.. 1nipat1t"nt dnvers who block
mter'S(C11ons after a light turns rt'd
could be o ted.
Unfortuna\el). there's aJread) dis.-
agf('('ment over ho-. effective t~ s1J1.-
da~ old lav. v.111 be. The problems
range from interpreta11on to t>nforce-
ment.
For starters. some Oranie Coas1
la" enforcement offioals anterprel
the nev. Hhtd e code statute lo mean
oift"ndtrs art ltable onh 1f thl"' enter
an anten.ecuon on a ydlow l&&}u and
arc unabk to clear 11.
That means an officer would have
to Stt th~ vaohator an the act. If the
officer as look.mg elj,,Cwherc. then ,
turns to stt a motonst stud. 1n 1hc·
middle of an mtt"rsecuon-on a red
light. 1ht> o ffi cer can ·l "'nlt" the tad.ct
Othe~ sa~ the statute proh1b1ts a
motonst from t>ntm ng 1hc inter-
SCC'l1cm -no mant>r "'hat color tht"
traffic signal -unlcs.s he can dn' t"
through to the other side.
.\rtualh. s.aH Flo'd Garren of the
.\utomobale ciub. bOth are correct
Garrell. mana,gt>r of the ~1emtx-r
Legal Sen acr-s txpanment of the
.\.\.\. sa's o ne s«t10n of the code stat~ a · dn' er shall not t>nlt"r an
antc~tton unless the-re 1s clear space
on the other s1de ~ 11 doesn·l mailer
'!'hat rolor the signal 1s v.hen the car
enters the intcTSCCuon
.\no1her secuon sa' s a dn' a
mal..ing a left tum ran'I enter the
mtcrsectaon on a )ello"' hght unless
he 1s assured of completmg the tum
and clcanng the antt>rsccuon For that
10 be a r 1tableinfract1on. a 1raffir
o fficer ~ould ha\oe to "'atness 11
·Tm afraid ifs going to be difficult
from an enforc-emcnt point oi '1ev. ··
Garren said. -it's going to ~ 'e~
confusing to motonsts.. to office~ and
to the courts unul 1t ~ts soned out ··
Cons1dt>r this 5C't"nano .\ mo1 ons1
enters an antcn.ecuon to make a left
tum The d1~1on an "h1ch ... he 1s
turning 1~ unobstructed. .-.
Ho"'e'er. v.h1le he wam tor on-
coming traffic to clear. a sle"' of nght-
Simons' arrest out or ~est Orange
Count) Mun1C1pal ( uun
.\msba~ said the suspec1 apparent-
" remained at la'"gc: and that an
6rangt> Count ~ deput~ shenff found
tht" name v.hcn going 1hrough
ouutandtng v.arrant'> 5-0mcume latt"r
The deput~ apparent!: ran Simons'
nam~ thro ugh the CXpanment of
\fo1or \ eh1clt"'> .umpult"r and came
up v.11h an addr~" 1'.'l Grt-cnt>rae
.\msbar) said
The deput~ conta.cted an e;mployec
1n the H14n11ngton Beach Po hcc
CXp.tnment r('Cords o!Ji~ v.ho sent
the "'arran1 to \iann Count'. -\msba~ said ·
T,ht> h11rh he saJd.. "as that the
D\f\ ga'e onl~ middk in1t1•k. not
m1ddk namt·s
.\nd 1.1.hen offllers from the T "in
(. :1l·s Polm: Depanmt>nt d~nded
(Ir F•1.:d ~1 anin Sunonsat111snome in
(Pleue eee AJUU!!ST / A.2)
Prints tie rape
suspect to 15-
Victims DA
\·ictim identi fies m an
as a ttacker. sa\·s s h e
feel s sorrv fo r him
By JOSATRA.11\ \'OUXE
Ol .. Olllr ........
Robrn Scott Dascnbrod. -al-
rused of ~9 rape and burg.la~ -related
rharg~ -ldt h1'> lingerpnnts in 1he
homr-s of 15 Orange Coast \ 1C11mi..
rhe prOSC("tltor 1n the case said
Tuesda~ after concludm,g his case ma
prehmina~ beanng for the 23-~ar
old "'arehousc "'orkt>r
Dasc:nbroQ. 1s accust'd of a scnt"S oi
rapes and "burglarit"S 10 Fount.am
\.all~ and Huntington Beach be·
t'll.rt'n October I q 5 and has arrt>st last
.\pnl. If ordered lo ~tand tnal for the
cnm~ and connC1cd ht> could ~
sentenred to more than 2~0 'ean 1n
po.son. said Ocput~ D1stnct .\uome~
Mil t> Ko~lo
Clos ing arguments in the heanng
"'Cf'e expected toda~
The Fountain \ aJle~ man v.41s
a~ted .\ pn I 20 "'hen a pol 1tt officer
and h1scamne aJlt"g('dl~ found Dascn-
broct hiding 1 n some bushes 1n a
f ountain VaJle~ .tpa11ment compk'
•ht"tt an attempted rape occurred
t'40 mg.Ins Pf'C' IOUSI~
. K.e>sk1 said ~tithonu« ha'e
~1t1 ,el~ 1dent1tied fingerpnnts
_ fo und m 1he horn~ of four rape
'1ct1ms and I I burgla~ 'u.-11ms a<,
be-longing 10 C>.nnibrock
E'e"'1ln~ and other e' 1dt>n~
was.presented dun ng tht" prehminar:
·heanngm attcmp1s to lit" Dascnbrod.
to four other rapes and sc'eral other
burgJane-s. fl.osl1 said Koski con·
clude-d his ponion oi tht" heanog.
ust'd 10 determine:-"'hetht"T enough
e' 1dt>nC'C." e\1sts for Da~nbrod. 10
stand tnal. T uesda' "'1th tt"Sllmon'
from fingcrpnnt t"\pens at the Foun-
tain Valle~ and H untington &ach
pohtt depanme~ts -
Fo cus ON THE NEws ·
turning 'etucles fi ll up t.hc Ian~ The
signal chango and he-hu no"' here 10
go Can b( be o ted'>
·· ~ att g.oan.g to be some
m oon-ot folks ~llng caught ·· C.u·
n-tt warned..
In L<» ~ v.herr a rtt~
ord1nantt dcsisncd to bolster the
state lawabo wnlt mtoetTcrt. a traffic
(PleMe -GalDLOCK/ A.2)
E.a rl1cr 1n the proc~1ngs. o ne
"'umar d~·otdie<l Da~nbrocI' as er
atta(lt..cr thcr. loo'led at 1hc defendant
and s.a1d ··1 tt"i."I son: ~him ·•
.\ Fuumain \ allC"\ '-'Oman told
au1hont1e-s she v.as raPec! t~acc b) the
l ntic:-v.1eld1ng ass.a1lant. Y-ho alleged-·
,, tolel her "H1 remember me from
Last 'car -"'hen he brokc into her
hume a ~ood 11me Kosl 1 said
.\ tlomt:\ van Pohlson. "ho IS
r.:pre-sc.-n11nt Da°scnbrocL d id not
prt''-CTt a dt>frn~ dunog tht"
pn-hm1'la~ h?'anng. but q11~oncd
the firgt-rpr nt t~.hninans cl~I~
Thomai. lei~I a"' than fingcrpnnt
c'pen 1.1. nh Fount.am \'allt>~ police.
te-s11f1C'd before \1unic1pal Coun
Ju~V.1ttiam \1oct lharllt>founda1
lt"a~t I ~ .points of s1m1lan1~ bel-.un
the pnnt\ found at cnme scenes and
Dascnbroc~,:s fi ng.t""r and pa1m pnnts
His ronC1us1ons v.~ confirmed b'-a
s.crond c>.pcn. Ra~I s.a.1d . · .. ,o t,,.,o fan~rpnnts ha'l" bttn
found al1l..c 1n lhe ,,.,orld_ and fingtT-
pnnu. J.., 001 .:-han~ in a hfeume M
Ra~ I ~•d 10 r~ponst to Pohlson·s
quent~ · 1 ieel quite confident that
an~ other comj)Ctent latnit pnnt
namincr v.tufd agret v.1th m~ find-
ings -
Hunt1ng100 Bc:ach Polter Officer
Stepht>n Balloch. v.bo aJJcgcdl)
matchC'd Da~nbrocl:spnnaloth~
found an t>1gh1 rnme '1ct1ms an that
Cit\ als.o s.ard he ,.as pos.itne m b1s
1dc.-n 11rica11Qns
fl.osl 1 said he v.as p~ "'1th the
ca~ he prC"SCnted d unni lht"
prt'laminaJ: heanng.. e't"n though o ne
of Das.ent-rock ·s alleged rapc '1ct1ms
de-nded not 10 p~ charges.
That de<"1s1on v.h1ch the pros.-
('( u tor said ""as for -personal
reasons -v.ould alter the number of
.-h;i~ agAmst Da.scnbroc but
othC'rs '-'tn: alk' ltl eh to be added..
··\\.: had JQ d1~rgcs. bu1 that
number 'II.Ill c hange "Ith one ,·1cum
"Jl ·· ~o<l1 s.aad .. h "'111 shift a httle
(PleaK eee PIUlfTS/ A.2)
Shortage
of blood
declared
urgent
8\ GREG KLEllX Ud PAl"L ARCHlPLEY
Of_Olilr .......
The ~m<"ncan Red C'ros.s dcctart'd
an emcrgC'n~ Tue-sda~ when OranlC
C1.,Ul"1' blood supplies d~ u
lo"' ;i, I (I percnu of normal tn\"Cn-
ton The d«larauon c.a~ on tM heels
ol an .annual appeal b} Red Cross
chaptr~ for donors tQ rt'p)enasb
C~ro~er agrees to e~hume
Huntington woman's body
Supervisors drop
financial support
for OC marathon
upplics that d rop l~ 1f\er each
Chnstm•u hohda) "io sooner bad
Rtd C r~ss ClffiC"lals issued t~ir appeal
than 'upph~ d'Y.1ndkd pcnlousJy
le> ..
Hospnals art runmna as lo• as 40
pcrttnt of desart'd k''ds of blood
supplte\. ~1d spojcn-'Omaft S.ylva
Fanion
Fanton said el«tl'"<' SUfF'OC'S tn
usu a II~ up 1 n J am.aar). and tf JU&l!Plia
do n't l'l'tum to normal in ~ ..,.
futurt' h~tals could ht fortat to
c~l thost SW)tnCS lO COftlrJ ft
blood for ~mttfFrq ca~
-Orma11). an Jll\uar') ~
\Uf1"1C'S I~ beautt ~ pml
ttK-m off dunng \~ bobdays.. -M
Fanton M&n unaeu doMtJOOS ia-
C'tt&K. thctt• a cbantt deru\it
w~nes v.111 ha't to ht poApOilled. ..
BJood ban ~ penalatt) ... on AB .,.,,,t and both t)~ of O
' .. tttcb 1' nltftftt)y at li:il 0... !!rrttnl of tM normal-~~
O M"~ ba"-c calltd QfOUp 0 blood
CJM'tlCOC)' b On.nit ud Loa Aa-Fks coun\JCL mooa Ut\'C910r) ...
continued •o ~ clellitit • .......
tDCtta5t 1n dOUnom ... iaid FaMOa.
.. CWTt1\ll lht ~ m ...,,._,
bu art wff"aatol few nM• I t)
~ and ttn.&'9 ....... ~ "' .. _._., .. ,
•
upervisor Wiede~ sricceeds
Stanton as board chairman
BJ _,. YAN £VIEN ..............
It •-as a sua:nsion ordained b) t:1 of• uadmon. a kJnd of lo-.. act coronatton ""ithout tht fan. ~-
Supnvasor Hamttt Wtedtr moved •
one place to the left and bt'amt. by
a«1ama11on. chauman of the county
Board of Supe-rvisors Tu~). suc-
Cttdmg R~ Stanton. who had
Stncd 1n tht' largel) ccrcmoniaJ post
for j ust O\tr a )tar.
W1cdtr. 67. has aJrcad) sen t'd Ont
stint as chairman. m 1984.
Sht' had been '1cc-cha1nnan 10
19 7 and ~ board's trad111on 1s that
tht '1cc-<ha1rman accedes to lea<kT-
sh1p at tht complt'uon of the sstung
chamnan's ont--)tar ttrm
The prtarran&.t'd na1urt of tht'
SUCCC"SS1on did not prt\Cnl board
mcm~rs from going through the
formal nommauon and clteuon pro-crs.s. ho'lol.C\tr.
Outgoing board chairman Stanton
took the lead m nommaung W1t'dt'r
In making his nom1nat1on. Stanton
praLSed W1t'der for hcr ··t>oundlcss
cn~rg) ··
.. I don't ~cn ti') 10 kt't'p up v.uh
her." he said.
Heanng no o ppos1uon. tanton
procla1mt'd \\ 1t'dcr tht' ne-.-. chair-
man. -.-.nhoul "a1ung for a second to
Barrtett Wieder
1hc nom1nauon.
He 1hcn recogmzcd upen 1sor
Thomas Rile'. ""ho \\tnt on the
record steond1ng W1cdt'r·s nom1-·
natton.
··supct'Vlsor W1t'der has e\h1bned
c-reati' 11~ and leadership 1n all mat· ters:· Rile" said.
\\ 1eder: m her first official act a\
\_
chairman. askt'd for nom1nauons for
v1cc<ha1nnan.
SupttVasor Gaddi Vasquez. the
board·s )OUl\ICSl rwntbet. then
nommatt'd its oldesf"membtr. 7S-
year-old Rile). for the post.
Don Roth seconded lht nom1-
na11on. which was affirmt'd without
opposi 11on by the rt"St of the board.
" former ma)or of Huntmgton
lkach. Wieder was el«tcd to the
board 1n 19 8. dt'fcati ng incum~nt
Lan) Schmidt and formt'r supen·1sor
Da\C 8akt'r.
Wtt'der. called her sclecuon to the
cha1rmansh 1p .. a treme ndous
honor ··
She is scht'dult'd 10 gl' t' sptteh neu Tuesda~ detailing her pnon11es for
the coming ~ear
Wieder could spcnd part of her
term as board chairman campaigning
for another offiC'C. ho-.-.e,cr
When Rep. Dan Lundgren. R-Long
Beach. -.-.as nomtnatt'd b' Gov.
Georgt' ~ukme11an for the· post of
stale treasurer. W1t'der. a Republican.
md1catt'd she ""as interested in run-
ning for the congrc-ss1onal scat 1f II
~ere to bt'Come 'acant.
W1eder"s assistant. Rod Speer. said
the supen 1sor had not )Cl made a
final decision on -.-. he1her to run.
..l!'s still in the \\Orks.:· he said.
·· he's lool mg closcl~ at tt:·
Americans eatingfewereggs
\\ ~Hl~GTO...: (.\Pl -\1an'
health<0nsc1ous .\mcncans art sk1P.
pin_g, ~ for brcaliast. a trend an
.\gncuhure Otpanment e\pcn sa~s
has scrambled the linanc1al outlool
for poulll') produl"'t'~
Oldt'r .\ml'.'ncans in the SO-plus age
group are tht' greatesl consumers of
t'W· sa~s economist Jack Ross The~
-.-.ere brought up b' parcnts "ho often
atc eggs for breakfast
But ~ounger people the bab~·
boomcrs. consumt' f~er eggs. prob-
abl~ as a matter of preference. Ross
said Therrforc ~ consumpuon 1s
C\peCtl'd to decllnt' 1n the future. as.it
has been doing on a pcr cap11a basis
for some H·al"\
·· .\mencans are re-duc1ng their con·
sumpuon of eggs pulling do~ n ~ pnas.·· Ro~~ said ·· .\ rt'C'en1 repon
b~ a go' ernmenHponsortd panel of
health spcoahsts f't'C'ommends that
doctors monllor their adult pa11en1s·
c ho"slC«>l le~I and i)R'SCnbc C'OfTC'C' •
II' e diets for nsk cas.es. -
Ross continut'd: ··1f doctors het'd
this report. there 1s no doubt 11 ~111
hun dt'mand for h1gh<holes1erol
foods conlnbuung further to tht'
long-run decline 1n cg consump-
tion ·· ·
The L .S. per capita consumpuon
of eus ~as around ~51 eggs la~t ~c:-ar
and could dip to ~.i6 eggs. on the
a \\:rage in I 9&b SmC'C 1915. ~hen
Ille a"~ v.as ~.,~ pe< capita egg
(l)n~umplion has been at the lo~est
lcH+• since l SD.\ began k~ping
rclord~ 1n 1909
&tore 1hat. the lo" mark was 27
eggs per pe™>n in 1935 dunng the
Depression Egg consumption
climbed 10 ~()()eggs in 1945. the final
'ear of \\orld \\ar II. Tht' rate has
been belo" 300 annualh since the
t'arh l'f'Os · ·
Ross saJd ~ holes.alc egg pnCC'S 1h1s
~ear ma~ a'erage 59C'Cnts to 65ccnts
a dozen for Grade .\ large eggs an
canons on the :...;~ Yort Cn~
marl.ct compared ~nh an esttmatt'd
6: cents last ~ear
"Production costs hkeh "111 ~ a
little h1ght'r than 19 ~·s 6i<ents-per-
do'zcn a'eragt':· ht' said "Hence. the
outlool. for thl.'. industn 1s not
bnght .. ·
Ross noted that tht' egg 1ndust~
can e \pand output fa1rl) qu1ckh
~hen pnces go up. ProduC'Cf'S Opef"\I·
ing bclo"" tapacn~ c-an increaSt'
produ lion rap1dl~ bv kt't'ping older
hens longer through (orced molung..
SUPPORT FOR MARA THON DROPPED •••
From Al
Inc plans for a count~ marathon
pos'>1bl~ as !oO<Jn as Oect'mber are suit
in the "orks
··v. ere: m the process of producing
a mar.ithon. ~ said Scou Johnson. a
repreSt'ntatt\ t' of Race PaC'C. a spons
productton compan~ affiliated \\Ith
pun!> D1rcet1 ons Inc. Johnson de-
dincd to re' cal fun her dt'ta1ls on
marathon plans
Scan~good said pons D1rec11ons
Inc represc11ta11,es ha'e discussed
running a race 1n con1unctton "tth
the count' 's centennial celtbrat1on.
scheduled. to take plare in 19,88-89
.\lthough members ot 1he Orange
Count' Centennial (omm1ss1on
could not be rcached for comment.
Sca11ergood said comm1sst0ners
ll l.<"d the propt>Sfll as long as 11 dad not
in' uh e .10~ publK funds.
The 1'1~) marathon organized b~
pons D1recuons ~as conSldered
··quilt" successful.'' said Scattt>rgood.
and ptans W't'TC made for a 1986 C\ cnt.
Th~ plans snaged "hen The In tnt'
Co.. ~ trrch had rnmributt'd morc
than half of the approx1ma1tl)
S 160.000 needed to run the 1985
maralhon. dechned to sponsor the
e' enl for a S('('Ond 'ear bt'Cause of
financial comm1tmt'nls to other com-
mun11~ sen ice pro1ec1s
V. hen alternate funding did not_
matenallze for a 1986 marathon. the
count\ 's contract v.1th Spons Direc-
uon!> ·"as e \tended through 198,
\\ hen last ~ear" s e' cnt fell through.
1he count\ decided no1 to rec-
o mmend anotht'r e~tt'ns1on
Scattergood said rost 1s onl) one of
the problems 1nvol,cd v.·1th
launc-hing an Orange· Count. mara-
thon. -sure. thefrc 'Cr) e~pensi\e to
run." he said. nottng that t~ mini·
mum cost of holding a major mMa-
1hon 1s more than S250.000. "Un-
fonuna1el). wc·rc sandwiC'hcd be-
tween Los ~ngeles and San Diego_
~h1ch ha'e ma1or marathons.. The
fc-ehng r,c gotten 1s that there arc
more than enou&h marathons.··
Scattergood also said most major
marathon runners onl) panicipate in
a handful of e\Cnts each year. and
ne"" mara1hons oflen don't fit into
their schedules So<allt'd ~peoples·
marathons .. ~ h1ch rtl) on pnmanl)
amateur runners. don·t usuall) at-
tract corporate sponsorship. he said.
GRIDLOCK LAW READY FOR TESTING .••
From A l
tasJ.. force 1s mun11onng l.c' inter·
st'\. lions throughout tne c11~
But som{' 1ralli1. control officers art'
"omcd aboul e-nlorcement Garrell
s.a1d
"The' ·re concemt'd that 1f the'
take th~· 11me tc g"e-a 11cke1 10 a
\lola1or v.h1lc lhl'' ·re doing that no
one v.1 11 be controlling traffic-:· he
said.
"lt'sJUSI not the solution that 11 "as
thou-gt\1 to bl: ..
Ne,enhdes' Orange ( oast poltce
S<l\ thC'' "'tll mal e u~ of 11
Huntington B:each poltce ha' t'
used the same tactic said gt Bruce
Kell}
-The en~ has identttied thoSt"
tnlt'rs.ect1ons that art' congestcd and
~tcd them:· Kclf\ said .. So 11
dOC'Sn't mailer 1f lht signal 1s red.
~cllo"" or grct'n ··
But the n~ la-.-. could put the
l.1bosh on that. Garrett suggested.
-1 heard a1 least one officcr sa) 1f
somebo<h \ 1ola1ed the lav. ""hen the
1n1ersec11on -.-.as pos1ed lht' dn,cr
~ould be cttcd for a mo' mg Y1ol-
a11on ... Garrett said
But the ne~ an11-gndlock lav. could
preclude 1hat stra1eg~ Garrett said
One thmg 1s clear even 1f the
1nter!o<'Ct1ons aren't. Pohcc arc gomg
10 1~suc ttc!..ets Bu t \\hether or not
that ~111 help unclog m1t'1'St'Ct1ons
remains to be ~n
PRINTS .•.
From Al
b11. bct-ausc ~l"ll rnme ac ross other
charges··
Pohlson also ~1d he "as content
v. tth the prcxl.'edtng.. adding that he
accomplt.shed his goals He never
pl"C1Cfl15 a dcft'nSt' dunng the
prehm1na~ heanng bct-au~ so lmlc
e' 1dence 1s required to order a
defendant bound O\t'r He added a
Sunshine expected to return=----=-
U.S. Temps ...,.._......,.,,._,....., ... _ ... ., » Calif. Temps Extended .. Le ....... p ... ,,,, 30 ,..,,,H 'f ,. » .._ Z3 ..
hnlr CllOuOr ..., ~ -~ ~ .. II ~Qr ,. J1 == ""°""" h ... '-tr .. -..... 24 .. ~= •1 ., _.....,.. ..,,..,...s.a.--, ....,.. .. "° ._...,. tl .. ZS ):1 ..,_ .. JI 7S ...... !0$' ......,,. ,. \S ......... 17 OI ......._ 50 ., =-· .. ·11 ~ lO t• --l$ )I • n ........ 2• 12 ...... u ...
~ .01 -~ ........... • ,, CaMll'9 S7 51 --» ,.. II I •O' 45 S1 ewt...Clry II 50 Surf Forecast ...... 20 " ...... -Oi2 • '2 &nlka S7 •S ........ .. 05 ........ ..__ -oa• ·M ~ 51 50
~YI 17 t1 ----2' 12 ~ SJ .,
llEACHAM> ... ...... c;..., Q Qt ..... cir-S2 J2 LOf'll ._,., 51 SI u.~Oty 2 12 ~S C .., ,, ._YorllClry 1t 13 U»~ S" SI ~~~ 2 12 ~WYe " » ..... .._.. 1) .OS ~ SJ .. 2 12 ~H C • a Oll--.Clry 21 tt ..__ • ,,
s..,_.~ 1 12 0-,.... t2 OI a.... °' J2 Moll 111l c .. •• s.... Oirtld--IO -Oilc8eO ., ·'1 ~ 12 » ..__,. S7 •• 0.0. lor ~ LJrlle cit-oe CIMwwWlll 12 J2 .... , ... ,, 13 ......... 42 »
~ 07 00 ..._. 51 51 ,_ SS .. c:ou-.sc 45 J2 ::=to.. OI 01 .....,.,... 9M<:lo 12 50
~ONo 12 » JI ~ p-~ 57 .,
Conc:oro H" 11 11 l"roold9la 20 , ... ,,.__ &ot 50
~·w-., » :...tr-,.. 32 ....... 50 4l
~°" IO » oe .11 ,...,......,, •• •2 Tides a..-.. 0 1 ,... ,. )0 ,_,_c.., 51 ..
o..-02 -OI ~ 30 l2 "'-'° • JO
OllrOll OI ~ SIL.-t.S » S--o 51 .. TOOAY
~ -OI ·2• ... lareClry )0 2' =-°""'° » Jill Fir-. -333-. ... 2S
B"-51 J2 a.~ • S2 51 50 ~ . .., .... S 7
~ '7 J2 ........... " 13 11 s..~ 11 iO ._ sew,..,. .04
F-• 4J ·11 a.-. .... 01 43 S-0.00 51 Sot s-Ol'd"'9" 110p"1 )1
F1tOO -OI ·20 ..... ~ .. 32 S..1'-S7 ..
~ .... ., )1 == ... J2 s-.-.. .. ,. .. ,..,...,.,
OI -OS -OI .a S-"'-M 51 """~ . ,, .... u
Qr.-F-Cit ·I? ---21 1• s.ni...._.. S1 .. :::;r_ lO t~ ..... S•
~O NC >O J1 ~ ,. Cit S.C.CNr u ... S3$Dlll -4'
IWdota n " T ..... ,.,,.. 13 .. s---., 90 ...... 05 _,. T_.. ,, 05 s-. ...... Si5 St o._ ..... ,~1 .. ,.,., --· -n to T-61 .. ~ u .. • 510"' -.. » TUlml 1t 11 '-., .. n ·--•l l l D"" Md-
INSilll ¥CI H JZ W••-a.DC 21 17 .,_"" C2 ,. _._ •• se .....
MESA T AKING.AIMAT SLUM AREA ...
From~l
ihanng a unit. according to Donald
Lamm. dt'' elopmen1 sen ices d1l't'C·
tor Rents for a single bedroom could
range from s~oo to s~ a month.
"'.\II \OU ha'c to do 1s look at the
trash recepi.aclcs and the nurn~r of
cars and \OU kno" what's happcn·
mg. .. Larhm said.
Besides o' ercro-.-.d1ng. (ll) officials
said problcmnnclude poor plumbing
v.11h watt'r leaking from sccond-stol')
to first-stOI') apartment~. inadequate
""1nng.. structural defic1t'nc-1es m
floors and ~alls. holes 1n "'Ills big
enough for rats to chmb through and
infestauon b) 1nSttts
-it's JUSt a general. real poor
condmon." Cu' C'ounc1lman On 1lle
.\mburgt) s.a1d .. Toda). the) ·re
hardh hHablc. most of them ...
To"ciatc officials ha'e had tbt'1r
hands lied because st.ate and cit)
bu11dtng codes do not hm11 lht'
numbtr of tenants in ao apanment. a
cond1t1on ""h1c-h 1s the chief problem
on Shah mar. officials said.
··w e can treat tht' S) mptoms. but
-.-.e c-an't go after the direct cause:·
Lamm said.
If the> get a complain\ ftom
tenants. code mspeclo~ can go into
the bu1ldmg.s. But officials said tht'~
get fe" calls from res1dcnts. ~ho arc
afraid oft'' 1et1on or rent mcrcases
C11~ emplo)Ct'S v.111 ~ mecttng
-.-.uh the propen) O\\ners O\t'r the
neu 30 10 .is da's to rc,1e-.-. tht' lo~
mternt loan pro&,ram -.-.1th them The
Cit) ~all kno" "sbonl) thcrcafkr ..
-.-. hether the O'L'Cr 1s "1l11ng to
rehab1htate his bu1ldmg.. Cl1~ Man-
ager .\llan Roedt'r said .\ fo rmal
umet.able has not been t'stabhshed.
ho'o'e\t'r
If landlord.s don·t cooperatt "1th
the c1l). etlht'r pa~ing for 1mpro,e-
mcnts from their own pockets or
taking the Cll) ·s carrot of 3-to-5
per'C'Cnt interest loans. Cost.a Meu
~ 111 USt' the s11cl. ht' said
Ek~1des th<· 1hreaJ of condcmna-
uon. the e ll' could hire spec1aJ
attomc:H and 'code t'nforccment em·
-plo} 1.-es. to pro se<'u te la ndo"" ncrs who
'1ola1e cll) and state housing codes.
Costa \1esa also could hmll tu
dcprl'C1at1on credits thc.o"'ners get.
If 1enan1s ne'C'd help lo pa~ for
innl·ased rents or to relocate ontt tht'
1mpro' emt'nls are made. tht' o l)
could ~ubs1d11e them under the plan.
ThC' tasl force v.as formt'd in July.
dra~ing on the CH) 's fire pohC't' and
de' clupment St'I" iC't's depanments.
tht' Rede' t'lopmeJH .\~nC). lht count~ Depanment of Health Ser-
' 1ees and the count~ Communll)
De'elopment Council If this pro-
gram ~orls. ounc1I members said
the) could use 11 to upgrade other
area!> of 1hc ell~
ARREST MIX-UP COSTLY FOR HB ...
P'romAl
Grtt11brae m 1987. tht') got the
\\Tong man. Amsba') said.
Simons -the businessman -was
arrestt'd 1n front ofh1s wife and taken
to the pohC'C stauon where he was
detained for about thrtt hou~ unul
office~ found out through finger-
pnn1s that ht' v.asn't the na,ht man.
.\msban said. •
Poltci ""ere unabk 10 shed an) ha.ht
Tuesda\ o n the status of Sime ns -
the susPeci.
Orange Count) and the T wtn C111es
also each paid S7S..OOO as 1he1r shart
of the St'ttlement. "msbar) said
Cm .\dmmmralor PauJ Cook
called tht' S75.000 seulement ··an
""
c~pcns1,c clencal error" on the p;1n
of an 1ncxpcnenccd clerk
"The adm1ntstra1or and the Cit'
Council arc upset "tth 1he clencal
erro r that costs s~s.ooo:· he said
.. Wflo ~ouldn't t>eT'
Cook said tht'clerk. "ho rcpont'dl~
has been d1SC1phncd. should ha\'t'
found out thc suspecl's m1ddlt' name
beforc pun1ng the \\arrant into effect
He also said that the clerk should
not ha' t' taken lhe acuon on her o v. n
authont). but should ba'e consulted
a supenisor
Sources in Hunungton Beach said
the cit~ probabl~ paid about S:?00.000
1n legal In') 1n w nnC'Ctlon ~llh the
C3SC
Onl~ last month. the c1l} of
Hun11ng1on Beach paid S300.000 to
fi, c men to settle a S:?5 m1lhon
la"\Ull o'cr the u~ of pohct' stun
guns
Cook and other officials said the
scnlcmcnt ~a\n·1 an adm1ss1on of
~rongdo1ng The la~sutt v.ould have
co~t at lea\t s '\00.000 to fighL Cook
s.a1d adding that "d1!l<"rction "as a
belier pan of' alor ··
~sc uf the $IUD guns has been
SU'opcndcd unlll CXlt'nSI\ e ~rch
can be completed on tht'ir t'fTecu..
Cool noted
BLOOD SUPPLY EMERGENCY DECLARED ...
a1ions. she said.
Red Cross officials arc not sur-
pnsed at the blood shonagc. v.hich 1s
a n annual occurrence dunng the
hohda' season Hov--evtr. the un-
usuall\ cold and v.et wt'ather this
season 'has kepi ('\en more donors
av.a). she said
.. As 1s t)pical dunng 1hc hohda~s
v. hen people get bus>. blood do na-
uons ha' c been 'en lo~ the last ft\\
"tth. ·· satd Fanion.
.. ormall}. about 15 pcrttnt of
thoSt' ""ho make appointments don't
sho-.-. up. but in Decem~r. 35 pe~nt
v.ho signed up d1dn·t show.''
"If ~c could get an addmonal 300
dono~ per da~ for not 10 da)s v.c
could get the le,·el back 10 normal ••
.\ rommunll\ dn'e 1s plannt'd
from 1:45 to 7JO p.m. today at the
In inc Prcsb)tenan Chruch at S
Mcado" brook. Permanent centers at
16882 Gothard St 1n Huntington
Beach and,600 . Parkcen1tr Dm e an
Santa "'na arc open six days av.eek
In addition. the Santa .\na Red
( ros'> (enter ~ 111 opcn on unda)
from a m to I ~AS p m Fanton said
Rl.'d Cross offin als arc also tf) mg to
1ncrt'asc mobile dn'c-s a1 companies
and chun:hcs.
Persons 17 H~a~ and older ""ho
-.-.eigh at least ilO p<>unds and art' in
good gcn"ral health are eltgible to
donate blood C\CI"\ 56 da's.. said
Fanton .\ppo1n1m.cn1s for blood
donauonsat an) s1lc ma> be madt' ~
calling 35-5381. fat 450.
· gt ~Ian Kent of the Cost.a Mesa
Pol1le Depanmcnt s.a1d traffic of-
ficNs 1herc "111 appl~ the nt'v. law at
spco al C' t•nts such as concerts or
s"ap meets at 1he Orangt' Count~
Fairgro unds
Ht' doesn ·1 t'\pe'Cl the scet1on
speof) mg tu ms on }CllO\lo s11~ls v.111
pose a problem. t'llhcr
Ironic-all~ although the ne"" la-.-.
v.as meant 10 a id the no-.-. of traffic. 11
comt-s under the parking ~ion of
the 'l'.'h1cle code
ln other "ords.. '1olatoa ,. ill gel a
p;1rJ..1ng llckt'I
~k~scdunng1ht'h~n~""o~dup ~=========================================~ his hand on has planned tnal dcfmsc.
.. Jf-.-.t''re !..~mg on a problem area
the officers "'II be there ·· ~ent said
"I don ·l Stt that as being 100 d1ITK"ult
"I thin!.. the intent 1s 10 target
'1olator~ ho do 11 o n purposr ··
\lost cities alread) had postt'd kc)
mtcrsccllons "'ammg apmsi blocl-
1ng th<' tlo-.-. of traffic. an~wa~ and
~ere c111ng '1ola10~ for mfracuons
found 1n other S«t1ons oftht' 'eh1cl~
code
"We ha'e cued people in the past
for 1m~1ng th<' no" of traffic .•. Kt'nt
said
'There'!> a lot of poltucs 1hat \\t'flt
into tha1 lav. ·· ~clh said --11 'IUS
rcaJh ~atcred dov. n :.
Los .\ng.eks police reportedl~
"anted 11 tha1 v.a~ so 1ha1 partang
enforcemt'nt officcrs ~ho art not full-
Oaiged poJicc office.rs could wue
ucl.~ts.
Somc lobb)1sts m Sacramento
"antC'd 11 that "'a' so that motonlls
v.ouldn·l ha'e a · mo ,11ng '"lOlallon
rountC'd ag.a1ns& t~m m the ~
mcnt of ~1otor Vch1cle's ~nes11aent
operator point roun1 -
Wt Pi L ,·~~ ~:
CORONER ••.
Fro.Al
ht' dtsclosed v.hat he knew of the
alkled conspiraC)
&ar.id; sou&ht to Olock the sons·
request for nlnurutton last week.
A )lft& the autops) ~ un~
and ,.ould ckosttrate bis wife's re-
maJ n He afso said ~ would not
appeaJ the ~dae's ruhna because he
could no1 afford tM lcpl tx.pcnse.
•
°:::':'
le0HFMtlld
Just call '6424KJ86
•
7:· .. 4 ~ ·1
~·-· .·.-.A , ... -i -"" ... ~ . ·~
Through the~ fine wood.....,..~
become ~ ymoue with luJCury Ind good taste.
Todly. t•WOOd ~.,.. ~ 1t1111n09 -
to e1ry interior frOm Colonllll to Uttra Modem.
No OCMr wllMlow ~ pel1orme tta function
Wtth ad\ ~ Ind gr8C9. ShutWI tllW lght
. whh ... lnflnfte vertMy of .... reduce .....
blodt out ..... Ind cotd, rnmdmm .... view Ind
elCpelld lntlrlorl wtth dMn. ...,. .,.... Until•
otMr' window .,...." ...... """' .. Iner 1111 your
home'• Vlllue.
Mii ... wood Shutter'• ~ nwy d.ooee ~ .... of 1%, ~. 3'4, Ind 4~
we 1111et .,.. .._. woodl _..,'bje Ind °"" a
..... llllC'liOn of cdor9 Of ... Ind .... hllP
~ .... tN I>.-~ tor 'I04ll wllldowe Ind
11d1n9gllllldo0r&.
Serving CaJffornia since 1953 •
I