HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-01-04 - Orange Coast PilotI• •
• ESDAY, JANUA RY 4, 19~9 25 r·E T .
iii molest ca e due revie
" r I
an a lbitd puty to ~view the items
~ Bach Police COGfilCaled
from Dr. Francis James Williama.
N~ Beach Pobce. They anald
Wilhams 1n No~embet and lelrCbed
hts c.ameo Shores home and SupcriGr
C..ner indicated that many of I.be
· approUJnaaely 600 teized lapel and
records appear &o ba~ &o iM 10 counts of · filed ..... the ~year-cld pb ••
Acco_rdiQa to I.be State penal code. a soecial muter should be ~anted at
the time a 1a1eb wanut 11 ieaued to
1a1eb the propeny or lawyers. doc·
ton and cletsyinen. Defense attorney Marshall
Schulman and Deputy District At· t~ AJ Silva llt"eed cauin pieces of evidence sboWd be retuned to the drim~ while other itam should be
retained by the proeeculOrS a
evideoot. However, the two sides
could DOt ~ OD the status of
another t.tch of tapes and records
Anomeyscoutd provide no further
infonnatioft becaute of a coun-
imPoled 111. order that prtvents dt9CUSS1on · of the cue ouu1de the
counroom.
Willllms is accUted ofmolestina a
l 2·year-old female petient from
January to May in I 98S. The 'allep-
tions surfa~ when the airt, now
bvu1a in Kentucky, talked with a
counJelor after U}'l"I to CQmmat
SUlClde
A venue mecbc:al ofticc, ~ tbie
vadeotlpn. pbo'°:':f" mediC8t ,.. cords. lddra. -Dtmellt
books aod rou&hly Sl JO.~in caah. • •
Delaney admits
offerini bribe ·
to cltj olftcial
Rntauranteur Francis M. Delaney
~ lllllty this morruna to one count of~lony bribery in connectioa
with a $20,000 bnbe he reporadly
offered a Newpon Beach plannina
commisaiooer last spnoa.
Delaney, 62, of Rancho California. wu 1e11tenccd to perform 200 hours
of c:ommuruty service and pey a
S=S 000 fine, said Newpon Beach · spokesman Lt. Tam Newman.
onh Oranae County MulllcipeJ
Coun Judie Marprct Andenoo also pve Delaney three yean probation.
Delaney was arrested last Man:h on
.u.:eauoas that he offered a $20,000
bribe to Newport Beach Plannina
Commissioner James "Buzz., hnon
in ~chlnle for assastaniee IA te•tioa ~ permjt to uceed l\etabt lamau on a neW restaurant at Lancer's Landana.
The bribe offer wu sectttly recorded
by Penon, who wu workina with
police invest1ptors.
Delaney, owner of the 1eafood
restuarant chain of the same name,
had orisinatly pleaded innocent to the •
bribery~· His ~liminary hear·
illl bepn TUesday. -a7 G,.. I.lerb
·world .
A minister ur~ · moumen of t 103'•
vk:tlmatofor eeeklng
vengeance./ .
lndez
Buletln Board A3
..,...,... 84-5
a-tfted 86-8 Coma · ce
Croeeword . 87
Entertainment A8
Food C1-5 =Body ~~
People A8
Sports 81-3
· .. A...,ecial muaer~been
. ted initiaJI , .. I.be judle said. 8rl'OUI) of W~s· petleots alto a= It the beanfta. ukiftl that v~ of thrir sureeries 6e re-
turned.
from window at Earle Ike Vol•o on Harbor
.,.. ...... bl ea.ta ......
The counselor contacted local
authontaes, who in tum noufied
Polace were spec16c:ally I~ b' evidence thal mi&bt abow Williams
had · molested c6ildml or wu a
pedophile such IS~« vadeol~
nude children or paperwork sbowina
affiliatioa to other pedophiles.
(Pl9Ue .. DOC'l'Qa'8/ )
U.S.,Navypilots
shoot down two
·Libyan fighters
Alleged chemical
weapons plant nof
related to incident
By NORMAN ,BLA<X . u....., ....
WA HINGTON -us NIV)
plan's 1oda} ho1 down t'l'O L1b)an
iei fi&htt" over lht Mcdttemnean
&a aTtcr the Amcncan aircraft wcrt
'"thrutcntd v.h1lt conduct1nJrout1nt
opcrat1ons 101nttmat1onal11rspace."
admanistrauon officials said. . Defense SttreW) fra.nlc Car1ucc1
denied that the tv.o Amencan f -14
and thtir host aarcran earner. 1he U
John f Kennedy. v.ere in the area
with the 1ntent1 on of auackin& a
L1b1an chemical v.upons factor).
.. The 6th Fleet opcn11on had no
connection v.hatsoever ~1th l•b>-a's
ncwl) constructed chemical f1c1li1~.
These operation were conducted O\Cr 600 males northeut .. of the
f'ac1hty " Carlu~1 said al a Pcntqon
nev. ~ bncfin . •
"We now consider 1h1s matter
closed." be said.
The 11r battJe was the tint fiabttna
between the United States andl..ibya since Amencan 1ets bombed Tripoli
an 1986 and came am ad rillOJ tension
bctv.ttn the two coanlne$ over
L1b)'a·sconstructton of the plant.
At 1he State Dcpenment. spokes-
man Charles Redman ilso said ~
was no hnk between the plant and the
warplane 1nd den1. 0 There is
absolu(ely no connccuon to any other
story or concern )'OU may have," he
said "It may be ironic. but the two
th mas att not ~lated." ,.
Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi
called thedownanaofh1sjetunactof
increased " Amencan tclT'Ori$m," aQd
vo'Wtd to .. meet challenae with 1
challcnac," the official Libyan ne..,.s · '
agency JANA said. ·
The Amencan force . "posed no
threat to Libya" and the fllhten ~ opctallna under .. normal peacetuM
rules of ~naasement;· Carlucci said.
refcmna to the 1u1Mhncs on when U strv1cemen can open fire on
(P1---U.&/A•)
HB aC.cused of neglecting homeless
BJ ROBOT BARKER °' .. ...., .........
A ~t accU$Cd. Hununaton
Bead> Caty.Council members Tues-
day of pounna money ioto land-
scapina and house painlln& while
leavina homeless people to suffer and
shiver on city strcetL
Jeanne COU1ns cl&amed that of-
ficials have spent about SI miJhon for
nterior amprovemenu on the slum·
bke apartments ot <..ommooo~ t ar-
cle whale doan& httle for people who
have no roof over their head.
CoUtns satd s~ watched TV
spcc11ls about the homeless. dunng
the holidays and ·round it hean-
breaktna that they arc forced to sleep
in the streets because rent IS so ht&)\.
··we should take care of our ov.n
homelw and hunary first," she sa.ad
OfficWs. who djdn 't respond to
C'olJans' comments dunna the meet-.
ans. said taler that monc) is bt1n1 ~pent on the behalf of the poor "on lhC'
front end" to help peoJ)le before they
rcxh the pomt of btcomina home-
leSs One offic1aJ al$0 saJd that the Ctt>
has to -~ careful about bu11dm1
shcltm beau.SC they could serve u a
maanct that attracts more homeless
people.
Councilwoman Grace Winchell
said toda} that she's unav.arc of .ho~
bad the bomd~ 1tuallon re.all)' 1s an ·
lhC' cit}, but that !Jt<"' "really happy"
that ColltM brou&ht up the topic
Offte°1al"' -.ho deaf mamly with such
ttllllgs u p&\cmcnu and 1uners. need
to be Jatrtd from time to tame on
scns1ttve human need Winchell
wd
Councilman Peter Grctn said the
C1t)' should do its share for 1he
homeless but dlat efforts hould bt
coordinated bttv.ittn the cmo and
the county aovcmment
Deputy City Admirusuato.r Doua
La Belle s~ud that city iaxpayen are
oo.ntnbuu.na about SlS.000 a y:ear to
touth shelters an Los Al&mltos and
Garden Grove that ht"lp local yOUOJ·
sttrs. M<m outlay~ are upecte(1 111
com1na months for the Huntt111too
Beach youth \bdter that recently was
approved by the Planruna Com-
m1 1on. (Pl-..e Me BOIOL&88/A2)
Stories a · out pit bulls lose their bite
Aile ed
molester
return d-
tciC,ounty Orange Coast city o~iclals say stories
of vtclous maullngs ~r~ a rarity today
IJ LauE BAA.NEST ... ...,...... .
Headlines an the se«>nd half of
l9 7 ICTCl.mcd thae waminp
.. 01r1 ~lied from biC)cle. mauled
by pell of'"' bulls."
••Man protcct1n1 own dot 11-
tKbd by stray SMt bull ''
.. Killer SMt bull fn:c.. restn('tcd to pnva• area. ••
But 1n Ma.Kt\ 19 8, Oransc
County's vacaou doSS ordinance
""on approval from county super·
vason and the heldJancs trailed off.
What happened? Did doaownen
everywhttc read the ordanantt and
put their c:aruMS on ~eashf:s'> O.d
rounl~ worken impound lh('
antmals befott they could make
beadJtna? Did the media JUSt Iott
1ntetnt? Or wu at a trumped up
stof') from the stan"
The answtt 10 tbt5c q_u(SllOM
depends larad> on whu s bcina
asked
One official will sa) there ne\'cr
ttall) WI a ptt bull ttrmr .problem
while another will say I\ was a stof')
that's tame had come, and now hu
aone Somt c'peru will strc that
pat bulls ha"e taken a bad np-1hat
they att not wonc than. Vrell, an)
other vtcious animal, and ~rta1nl>
no *Orse.than the motives of their
trainer. •
nd C\'ery Onct in I while.
anothtr tory wtU crop ~P
Carlos GOnzaJcz. 20. of Hunt·
1niton Beach. s.111d he had a near
m1 5 w11h mom and .POP pit bulls
two ni&}lts af\tt < hm1ma v.hen he
heard a pit bull puppy .cttam1n1 an
a ne1ahbor'i )arJ nJ went to
.lft\:Ull le
"l wcnt o"er there and tht mother
v.a p1d.m1 on ont of the: b.tb1c and
11 ..... , sere.am ma really loud," he
Yid. \\-hen Gonult1tncJ1oaet the
motl\erdas to top huruna the pup,
1he maJc doe bolted aner fum .
"The dadd> came out of the
houte1 he came throu£h the doUJc
door; Gonr~lez Yid "I v. him
roman, overand he Y•U com1na full
fOIU. JU t ran:·
Gonoalcz madC' a ha '" rTtrca1 to a ncarb) pickup tru k, d l"(J 10 and
chmbtd to llie top orthc cab
(,onzale1·, motltcrthrc"' a rake 11
the dog and nn into the house-10
~I tht pohC'C, ltr u1d "-hen tht
animal con1rol offlccr am\'cd. inc d~ tumrd on him. (1onzalc1 \aid
"The) v.cre JU\\ hke ttrron11n1 e"ef)bod~. barl1n1 at all of u!i.." he
~~ ~ fitr the n c11emcnt d1C'd do n .
and all part1e<1 e ap(J unhurt.
C.onralu s11J he orobahh
~houldn't ha"e llltten 1n\Ol"cd .
-1 mt'an I wa on thelr propcn~:~
(P1eue eee PIT/A2)
.
Brecht's tropical plants
find ha Ven in Costa Mesa
urne sayscfty c~n't ·
count Measure G ballots Another storm h eads for Coast
"" .... ,..,... .-...., . .
J 809 VAN EYK.£N .............
Cotta Mesa City Auomcy Thomas
. Wood reaffirmed bis position
PLANTS FIND HA VEN •••
~uetday that it is not possible to
IM)WU a ~unt of the controvtt111l
ftic lnitiatJve. Measure G, which
nanowly in November's clcc·
• nents of the traffic and
control measure. led by Costa
eta auomey Drnnis Retoske, filed
uest for a recount on Dec. 9. four
ys before the election results were
ifted by the City Council.
, Under state law requests tor re-~ ~nts must be made within five days
.,-cenification.
:. November's election in Costa
Mesa was consolidated with the
national general election, placina &inaJ authority for ccnification with
the county Re&istrar of Voters, not
the City Council.
Registrar Donald Tanney certified
countywide election rcsuJts on Nov. 22, makmg Rctoskc's request several
weeks too late.
"When the city consolidates w1th
the genera! election, it is the R~strar
of Voters who count the votes, · said
homAl
The coundl asked Brecht to set
toacther a croup of 1nterc ted c1t1uos
to come up with some addlt1onal
ideas..
"We lack thee~pcnisc in thisarca,"
said Mayor Pettr Buffa "What we would'like you to do 1s come up Wlth
some alternatives, and some 1deu as
to how thjs m1aht be funded, which
we would be happy to consider."
Brecht told the council that a
botanical prden would require at
least 23 acres an order to be viable. He
said he ~nv11ioned a publrc garden
that could serve as an educational
Wood. ·"And the time hmtt for
recount requcsu begins tickin& away when the results arc officially
ccnified."
One council member,J)rvillc Am-
burgey, said he still has some doubt
conccmina the demal of the recount
request. ..
AmbufJCy. who opposed Measure
G, has asked another attorney for an
opinion on the matter.
faeali:1y as well as a v151tors' auraction
It could include a lecture hall, a
conservatory and ajlft shop.·
"I spent much oftoday an Drnver
tJUtlDI to people there about their
botanical ~rden," he aid Tuesday.
"It's amn1n1 the revenue 1t aener·
Ile$. Thcyhavcanadmission ftt,and
people can also purchase member-
ships. They have a shop that sells books. posters and other items.
That's also a very aood revenue
generator. And we could do so much
more here with our chmatc than they
can in Denver."
.Hesa1d Tuesday naaht. howe\'cr. he
had not received the opinion. But he
sajd 1fthepriv1teattomeya1J'CC5 with
Woad, he will ask Ora.nae County.:.S
state leaislators to consider chanaing
the law. ~1f he concurs with the eny at·
tomcy, then I feel it's unfonunatc that
the community doesn't have the
same opponunaty in a acnerat ~cc
tion as it docs when the city counu the
\l'OtCS." he said.
..
U.S. Temps. .. Le
~Ql'9 .. JI ~
~ ... 15 OJ I'll~ ASlllllCa II H ,. .Or•
AIMftllCCity .,
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' HOnOMIY a 70
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National Guard drill to force
homeless from 25 armories
l.MVegM ....,... ....,,.._,. ..._.. ......... .... °"""' H.w YOf1101y
Nor1cll,Va ~Coty
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40 u
47 " 57 34 " ti 71 57
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~y
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SIMI .... IOdlll' 81 •.57 p m , t"'9 ~··•1..,.,. .c1-. .... pm
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By 'he Associated Preti
National Guard armories that have
provided emergency shelter for the
homeless durina friJid winter nights
will be closed this weekend for
military training amid predictions of
more wet, cold weather.
HOMELESS CONCERNS •.•. •
Twenty-five armories across Cali· fomia, including ones in Santa Ana
and Fullerton, will be used by
guardsmen for two days of prepared-
ness training. leaving thousands out in the cold unless local governments
scramble to provide altemak -rcfuac.
officials said.
''I think it's a disaster," said Kay
Kncpprath, co-director of the Sacra-
mento-based California Homeless
Coalition. "rm afraid that we will
have more deaths because of ex-
posure if we lton't have alternate
shelter$ available for folks ... The
regular shelters arc full."
The exercises were planned more
than two ycan q o, before Gov.
George Oeukmcjian declared the
armories could be used to house
homeless on niahts when
temperatures dip below 40 or when it
.rains and drops below SO.
When Deukrncjian authorized the
use of the annori~ for the homeless
in December 1987, however, he also
ordered that National Guard rrulitary
trainina take precedence over usjna
the annorics to h.puse the homeless.
,. The exercises also arc required for
the state to receive its $340 million in
federal fundins. said M~. Steve
Mensik. a Nauonal Guard spokes--
man.
Mensik said annories across the
· state housed 3,500 people just last
Monday ni&ht.
"It would be a reasonable assump-tion, in fact quite likely, that those
3,SOO people are not gom• to have a
place to stay," Mensik said. "We arc
Prom A l
La Belk also said the city has spent
about S 120 000 in recent years in
"Project Seif-Sufficiency·~ to assist
sin&le mot.hers with dependent chil-
dren and other poor families with
housin, needs..
He also said the city has on band about $3'12 milHon to $4 million from
redevelopment tu inCTCment funds
for housu11 for low-and moderate-
income families.
A Housina Committee has been
formed to make recommendations to
the City Council on how the money
should be spent. he said.
"We've done quite a bit on the
front end," La Belle said, "tryina to
address the problem before it gets to
be a problem."
quite gci:auanely sorry about that.
What we arc happy about is, the other
28 days we are able to accommodate those people ...
More homeless people used the
California armories for slleller in'
December than durina the entire
winter of 1987-88, Mensik said. At
least 29,000 people stayed in about 2S
armories an December, comj)IJ't'd
with 28,057 people in 16armories last
winter.
The Orange County Homeless
Issues Task Force appealed to
churches. schools and communi_ty
aroups for space to shelter 250 to 300
homeless people should the weather
indeed be cold this weekend. aid
chairman Scott Mather.
The National Weather Service as
prcdktiflj showers over much of the
state be&innina Thursday and lastina
throuan Sunday. Niahttime
M urderconvlctton rejection appealed
By Tlte Anedated Preti
Oranac County prosecutors intend
Jo appeal a judae's decision to lhTow
out a murder conviction apinst a
woman who claimed she suffered
&om asevCTCcascofthe .. baby blues"
when she ran4ver her infant ton with
the family station waaon.
Supenor Court Judge Robert R.
Fitzaerald overturned a sccond-
dcgrcc murder verdict aaainst 24-
year-old Sheryl Lynn Mass1p of
Anaheim last Dec. 23, aequittina her
Qn-&mU.Dds of tcm_porary insanity.
She had faced a pnson tcnn of 16
years to life.
An ci,aht-woman. four-man jury
bad rejected her claim that she was
temporarily insane from postpanwn
psychosis when she k.illed her 6-week-
Ok1, colicky M>n 1¥Uchacl o~I 29.
1987.
Potato posse scoops up spud spill
' Some I S,000 pounds of potatoes
tumbled from a truck into the road at
16th Street and Superior A venue in
Costa Mesa early today, forclna the
formation of a potato posse to clean
bp the spilled spuds.
' The truck was stocked with 100.
pound sacks of potatoes, which rolled .anto the st~ about S Lm .• accordina
,IO early repons.. .,
Police officers, employees of
nearby businesses and day workers
recruited from the nearby city Job
Center hashed out the Job of putt1na
the sacks beck onto the truck.
It took about an hout to clear the
area. LI. Sam Conteiro Mid.
The cause of the tater tumble and
extent of damatc was unavailable.
La BcUc also said that about
$900,000 in federal money hu been spent at Commodore Circle. Neatly
half of at was spent on low-interest
r6iabiliatioo I01J1J that ownen will
r:q>ey, he said. About $230,000 went
for street and alley rcpain and SIS0,000 for landscapina. be said.
DOCTOR'S TAPES TO BE REVIEWED ...
CommodoreCitde; located west of
the Five Points Shoooins Center at Beach Boulevard aiid Main Street.
hulonabeeoidcntifiedasaslum that serves 11 a haven for drug dealcn. La
BcUe said t.bc city's improvement
prosnm has shown marted procrcss
in tbe-arca to recent months.
Police hive said they do not believe
t.bcre is much of a hOmeless problem
in Huntinaton Beach.
temperatures arc expected to be cold
enough to activate \he shelter pro-
gram throughout m~h of the state on
each oft.hose days. Whenever armories close ID Sacra-
mento arraf\ltments arc made to tran~n t}omeless people t~ nearby M~ellanAir Force Base. said Salva-
tiob Army spokesman Dana Byerley.
l'roalAl
However, some of4 WiUiams' pa-
hCllu said the. Videotapes arc dept<>
tions of suracries they underwent.
They aiticized the seuures as not
only an invasion of privacy but also u
a stumblinJ block in t.bcir own
personal LnJut')' lawsuits. Many of
Williams' patJents are acadent vic-
ums referred to him by attorneys.
About 20 patienu appeared in
court T&lesday, defendina Williams'
ehanlcte.r and utsna tha1 their mcd1-
cal records be returned.
Patienu t.ori Miles and Ed Nowak said they teamed throuah nCV..spapcr ,
accounts-not by police notification
-their files had been confiscated.
They subsequently called pohce to try
to get them back, but w~ apparently
told the records were not their
property and they had no nght to
them.
"I Just didn't hke the idea of
someone Just tak.ina them and VICW·
1na them,· said Miles, who descnbcd
herself u "a very happy palJcnt" of
Walhams. "f lhank that's doctor·
patient pnv1ICJC."
TM .-ticnts sajd several other fended W1lham s. scoffin& at en~
mcdicalipcnoftnd-wcrrin the operat-t}le doctor molested youna 11r1s in& room with WiUtams dunni the bc)und closed doors with no nurse
videoiapinp. The patienu wd they present.
were comfc>rted by the.tapina, which "All the times he has checked me,
hel{)I the doctor protect himself he always bad someone clte there an
.,._nst lawsuits. the office (With htm)," wd Males.
.. He takes videota~1 -that who underwent cervical bone fusion
wun't surprilina to me, 'said Charles and disc removal surpnes by w11~
Hoppe. a patient Ii.kc hts dauahtcr Hams. "They(pohcc)don't happen to
Renee. -rbey're usina this like he bad mention the hundreds and hundreds
a movie stud10... of ~llents he's helped."
The continued bold in& of the tapes He comes an on his own ume at
and medical records 11 also putllDJ a . ~l (to check p1uents)1" Hoppe
snag in a number of civil lawsun.1, lktd. "He's more thoroua,h than other
accordin& to the patients.. dOC1ors. He's an outstandma Chm..
Nowak sa>d his insuranoecom1>9ny t1an ~rson."
'111 not tettlc his liuption, which W1Uiams' supporter1 wd the. cax
stems from an acodent I lt'l years aao wall cause .. UTCparable dam•" to
that left him with neck and lower back the doctor's rcpl.ltalion, even tr he is
anjunes without the videotapes and absolved.
mcdica{ records as evideocc. ..Dr. W1lhams u very valuabk
The COlta Mesa resident question· because be is one of the very ~
ed what connection a videotape ofhll neuroturicons who do htipuon.. ..
operation m 1987 would have w.th aid Theodore S. Wentworth. a
the allcaed molest.atton. which re-personal injury lawyer who rq>-
ponedly occurred an 1985. resents about 100 of Walbams' pe-
The pauenu all vehemently de-~1en\s. In addition to housina homeless m
annories an Los Anacles, offictals also
distribute vouchers aood for lodging
at local hotels.
Los Anaeles County already has
provided 17,000 hotel vouchers since
Dec. I, compared with 10,260
vouchers provided between Dec. I,
198 7, and March JI, 1981. wd V erta
Nash1. Los Angeles County homeless
coorwnator.
PIT BULL A TT ACK REPORTS WANE .••
In addition to Los Anacles and
Sacramento. cities that have at least
one armory used rcaularly for sh~her
include those in Santa An~.Fullcrton.
Santa Barbara. El Ca.ion, 1:.1 Squndo.
Vista. Chico, Lona Beach: Concord.
Richmond, San Mateo, Riverside,
Sunnyval~ San Jose. Calexico, Sao
Rafael, Gilroy, Van Nu)'t, Culver
City, Corona, Redding, Petaluma,
Bannina and Ventura.
HEIDRICH •••
Fro m Al
he s~ud ... I hould ha ve never gone
over there. but l JUSI couldn't handle
the scrcamanf-1 JUSt didn't want them
to kill them.'
But in virtually all Clt1es along the
Oranac Coast, officials say such
stories arc rare.
"We. had one dOJ attack earlier 1h1s
'wtek that was attributed to a p11 bull.
but no one could say for sure whether
tt was really a pit bull or not." said
Irvine Animal Servicu Officer Dun-
can Gill. "Quite often attacks arc
aunbuted to pit bulls and that's not
really the cast."
In lquna Beach. animal control
officer Jrsy Linacnfclttt sald pinrulf
attacks~ unusual.
"We had one where a doa bit
-someone an lhC' own~t's home,-
F rom A l L1n1cnfcltcr said. "We have a real
He1dnch reportedly tauaht karate 5tnct leash law and I think that really
in Hunt1naton Beach and was alleaed· contributes to the decline in IDC•·
ly featured in 'Kuna Fu M-aaztne and dents. 1n telcv1S1 on demonstrations. "I think what hai>pcns is. 1f people
Peterson would not say whether any Wtth those types or doas come 1010
of the molestations were related to town with a dot th•t as ofT leash or
Heidricll's karate instruction. unconta1ned and there's an incident
He1dnch also went by several or near incident, we're usually ablr to
pseudon yms. 1ncludina Zane g1ve them a c1tat1on or impound the
Leopard and Sir James Hcidnch. dot r11rty quickly. That usually nips
"That's whit he hkes everybody to the problem an the bud. And thal's nol
call him , Sir James," Peterson said. JUst pit bulls. that's any type of d<>&."
He1dnt h 1s 6 fttt 2 inches tall and In Fountain Valley and Costa wciabs about 200 pounds. Meu, pohce rcpon no recent pit bull
Peterson said H~drich has a his. attacks. In Newport Beach, officer
tory of criminal offenses in Cahfomaa · rca Armstrona Mid he never con·
and 1everal other states. He d«lined 1dci'td the dQla a problem.
to st.I.IC what the violations involved. "If there would have been w>me pit
but did My Heidrich bad served Jail bull problem I would .have heard time. about at, .. Arm1tro"' •id. "No one
has ever 1hoqht It was a rtal problem. h comn and aoei with the ne--..·;
Linernftlaer ~that t~ ~ _... a aC)' pla~ ID pit bull ltoncl in
tbeput.
"The piesa was really rady for it at
lbe ume ud i1 wa1 real newswonhy. ·•
abc •id of the IUf'IC of pit bull stonn
OAANGE .... CO~T --·
..... Ol'fla
ID the past. "We went throuah a thin.a tattoo, whaeh a yctcnnaMan etcbect.n wer~ Dobermans aot bad press. then tfle dot•s ear JU t after his release. German shepherds and then tht p11 till. howe~tt dramahc such II·
bull " taek.s may be. area authont1cs m11n-
Cenaan charaetc:ns11cs of the p11 ta1n a v1c1ous attack by a p11 buil 11
bull, ancludan& the combination of rare Accordana to Jade Edwards,
strona Jaws and clanl)' pen1stena, chief of field strva~ for the Orantc
make an attack by the dot an u c1t1na County Animal M1lcr. the county •
news tory. L1Daenfelter said ~no pu bull prob&em pn se.
"Scause they arc more tenac1ou" .. We don't have a ptt bull problem
when they do 1n1t1att an attack 1t 10 Ora~ County. nor® I ever th1nJi
tends to act the press more involved," we did. EdWenb J11d. Howe"er. of
she said the lO anmws that have bem
Certamly. past stom' of pat bull declared vicious in the county, athud
attacks have 6eca dra.nauc eno~ arc ptl bl.all In second pUcic arc
J.n..t..9U ~n.Oranac County AtUmal -1.ICUJWMt thqJmfJ and Latndor re.
Control at. Kerne Morpn was ~ven ~ third.
attacked b_y a TOO-pound pifbufl that Whale Edwards would not ~>' lut
chewed off her Id\ m1ddlc.finp. ,ear's revisaon of. the CCMinty otdi.. "l shook my hAnd to at' the blood nancc made a daft'efencc 1n the
off and I could !tt the middle of my number of attaeks, 1t did Ji"e animal
fin1er1wirhn11round," Morpnuad. controt otrtoen m0tt lititude. While
"l_ke~ sa_l1n ' ax don't Sft'llOU.l: oahnantt llYC ___ _
f11nt. " · Lines for of{acial Ktioar. drpcncbftt
Prev10usly, the same p0~tnul upon whether aq had inn1tted one.
black dot had mauled a baby an a t-o or thrtt bi~ DtW ordanara stroller and attacked a UnaLCd Parcel allows a vtciou1 1nvestipt1on to Scnke dn -who ~uarcd SS -bcaln after.-sanaJc It.
slitclles for a lq wound. ff an animal II dttmed Vlt'IO il.S
Morpn,owho had thrtt operation OWOCT m~ ~'' be. or: she has
and tttt1ved ps choloStc:al counxl-S l 00,000 1n habiht)' insurance. I( not
1n1 for trauma asioc11tcd with the sufficiently t'O"Crcd, the dot owner temfy_i~I attack. evtntually won a mU$t 1tt ampk 1n1ut1~ or rcbn-
Sl00.000 settlement 1n March 19 I qunh the pct,
for her anJuric At lbe tune &he said For dot 1oYU'I.. the oPCions atT not she •Ould rather have her fillltr blck al--a)"1 usy.
than the money. WMn lkdmann took UltY from
In Auaust 1981, a J.year~ld pit thcanimah~hctonlytoconlrncbitn
tM.lll ICl'nef, named U&ly, was held tn in 1 ClllC IS feet~ 6 fttt LIU and '
puppy pnson aAtt k.JOi• an Eftllllh feet 9"ae. she Mid Amply, .. l'd ntthc'r sbcaJdol 1n a San C1e1Mntc lhCltcr. have him ala~ wath me tJwa dcld Bd'orc lJlly could be rclcaect, owntt heft.··
Kyeli ll«kmann had to Polla AndC'arlolOoua.la. who worried
Sf 0,000 ICCYrity bond to ~ve the aboul -pit buU :e 1tufted bis
cny of liability in cue tbe dot conc:crn to .._. • · t ~ '° tbe
at1Kked .... n.. s-rmts after tetHna llOrJ. Ully Ud '°be eo116ned to an atta "Tbne clop are rntadly " wilh a floor, mlifta and sides. be Oonzala met ot hll pit IMill ._
trampOr1ed ia a~. not be~ out boft. .. , WM O\lt:f IMf't a.M •ilfil•
1n pubhc. be m.aalcd and e.ar • pll)ina wilh IMm ... -
.. l!::T •
......... , CGll•WIMiCA
............... C..MlllM C.AIJ9M ~ .. wa" ~ • ...... iei ... ,.,.,=.· ..... ,.. .. .... --., =::,_,.., •• _,...,...,.._.....,....., .... .......
--• I .... , ............ ...
-----111 .. ..,.,...,._
UCI to celebrate
Ktng' s birthday
0.KUSllOll Of dae .... let bY Marttn Lutber ·.Kina Jr. and -.ys to obW• llaem wtU be &k '°'*of a l}'mP<>tJum.bonorina the lalt leader's bi11hday at
UCI, Jan. 11 ·ll.' '
Pantl di1CUM10ns. lectures and "'rfom\antts !"ill bt featufllll as~ of tht three-day C\'Cnl, whach
1ndudn I tectW"e Wtdnetday n•I by Randall
Robinson, on "'Global Aoohca1aon1 of the Principle$ of M1rtjn t,.uthcf Kina Ji'' llobtnson is a Harvard
Law School lf'lduate, .,ut ABC .. Person of the
Weck" ind elecuuve director of Tran1--Africa, a
black Amc~n lobby for Afnca and the Carribean .
All actaVltin except the Robinson Lecture are
free end open to die public. The lecture wall be 1t the
Bren Events Center at I p.m. and tick.cu will be $7,
$6 and SS. For more anfonnation call Thomas
Parham at 8S~2. '
Youth •helJ.er update
•" video on how youth shelters operate and achieve the1r·aoa11 wall be shown at a mcc:1in1of1he
Dcmocnuc aub of ·West Oranae County at 6 4S
p.m Mondlr at tM Hunttnaton Beach Library
Carole Kanode. pre$dent of the Pf'OJC'C1cd
Hununaton Beach youth shi:lter, w11J discuss the·
needs and purp<>KS of shelter programs and will
repon on the status of the Huntinaton Beach shelter
The hbrary 1s Talben Avenut •nd Golden We t
Street 1n Huntington Beach. More anformat1on ma)
be ob~incd by.calhna 898· 1'882.
Global market examlned
Windows on the World~ How 10 Approach the
Global Marke1place w1ll be da.scussed by Gerald
Glenn:...&roup president of sales and marketaria w11h
Auor uan1clsl at the Amencan Markctan~ Assoc1a· taon 's Jan I 2 uncheon at the Irvine Mamon.
The hotel 1s at 18000 Von Karmen lnd the
event will run from 11 am. to 1:30 pm. Advance
reservations are $20 for members. $22 for non-
members. S 1 S for students Admission 1s $2 S at the
door More mformatton may be obtained by calhn& (818)762~669. .
Dependency studled
Chemical dependency wall be discussed at the
meetana of the Opt1m1st's Club of Irvine at 7 a.m.
Jan. 17 at Hors Hut 1n Irvine.
V1s1tors arc welcome to this mectantwhcrc Dr
Peter Sterman.. of Preferred Health Care td . will be
the guest speaker .
The rntaurant as at 18850 Douglas t and \here
will a charge only for breakfast. More 1nformataon
may be obtained b) calling 830-5369 or 675-1779
BooJc revlew due
A book review on "The Merthant Pnnccs" will
be presented by Rose Marder Kupperman at the luncheon meeting of the S1mcha Chapter of e·ruu
B'nth Women at I I a.m Jan. 12 at the Huntina1on
Landmark in Huntington Beach.
Kuppcrman. an author. radio ho~ host. one·
ume detcct1"e and pilot. "as born 1n Enaland and fes1dcs in Be\ erlv Hills
The restaurant 1s at Magnolia A\Cnue and
Atlanta Street Rescr,auons and funhcr infor-
mauon ma y he obtained by calhna Aorcnle Waldman at 960-4S66 or Paula S1h er .at 960-8161
Russian reform examined
The alftcmational d1mens1ons of Pcre\tro1~a
the So\'tct's pohct ,of restru tunng its soc1e1si. Yrlll be dascuucd by RobCn A)anaan, Ph.O . •I 7 pm Jan
12 at the Ncwpon Bt'al h Public Library
Ayaman. an .econom1C'S professor at Cal tatt'
fullerton. Wiii foctt~ on 1mpllcataon~ for: relar1on., betwten the So\1Ct Union and the mtcd talcs
• Admtn1on 1s fret ind all a~ v.ekome to th1\
e\-ent at the Nc~pon Center Branch 11 S6 ~ n
O cmentc c~t 10th(' Ncwpon Harbor n Mus.cum
for more mforma11on. call Jackie Ht'adl)' at 644-31 70.
WedneMl•T· Jan. 4
• 7 pm. Lapaa Ba.di Plaulq C•mml11 .. n,
counnl chambtts.: SO' foml Ave
TIJunday,Jan.6
o mcctmit scheduled
°'1: cioMt OAtl Y PfLOT /Wedi.._, ~ • ....
as
cte to 4tll term
upetvisors' chairman
I J IOI v AN £YI.EN oa.ce. l)ey should be ,enera11na about ... ....,....... S..00 millaon 1n road <kvclopmcnt fees
Members of the Orl"l't County. Bo.ard O\iet the nt1t 10 years ..
of Supervisors ekct.cd Thomu Rile)' on Transponataon development will bt one
TuC'sday to StTVe as their chairman for of the btlft'l thallenaes fac1n1 the board
1989. ma.rkana his fou11b term as bead or this year, and well into the future. Riley
the county's aovern1na body s~ud.
Riley succeeds S1:1perv1sor Hameu .. Another one as housana." be said.
Wieder, whc,? served an the post dunna "We're a JOb-nch county, and to pro"ide
1988. ho\wna for all of those J>C9Ple i ao1na to be The comina )car will be notable, Riley · very challcnJina."
u1d, becautc a number of projects that Riley 76, 1s the board's oldest member.
have been Jn plann1na for many ~rs will He was hrsuppointed to the board an 1974
bef.n to emcrac into rcaltay. by then-Gov. Ronald R~n.
I'm very opumisuc," he said. ··1 have He won has first elecuon an 1976 and was
peat expectations fe>r the ne~ airport, and re-elected an 1978, 1982 and 1986. Riley
I hope we'll bqin construct1on of the San will ft« re--clcct1on apan an 1990, but has
Joaqwn Halls Transpor11t1on Comdor made no announcement about whether he And the traffic c1n:ulat1on phas1n.1 plans in wall seek a fifth term. His Sth District
the south county sho~ld bcaln falhnJ into includes Newport Beach. Irvine. Lacuna ' . '
Btach and much of the IOuth county.
The po1111on of board ch.a1rma n is
mentrally rotated amon& the fi "'e mcmben. The rocauon was acttlcrated with the
resipauon of Supervisor Bruce Nestande
1n f987 . Riley. who was vice chairman an
1988. last served as chairman of the board
1n 1916
Raley, a rcti~ Marine Corps bripdicr
atneraJ~ was born 1n Hamsonbura. v~ .. a~ attended the V1r11n1a M1htary In·
StllUlC.
He became acquainted with Oranae
County dunng his final m1htary a 1p-
ment aschaefof staff at Camp Pendleton in
nonhSan Otego County in the early 1960s. When he rettred from the Manne Corps
1n 1964, Riley and his wife, Emma, Jane
5Citleji in Newpon Beach. whett the) have lwed since. They have no children
. • t A poUceman walta for a wrecker to remoYe a car
and a pickup that collided on W eet Coaat HJ1hway
o.., .... ,.__,._ ......
after the clrl•er of plckap apWed a aoft drln.k,
•eered acroea the road and am.aahed Into the car ..
Col~liSion
blamedbn
soft drink
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY °' .. Ollllr ,... ....
Two dnvers suffered moderate ill.Junes
Tl.lesd~ when their vehicles collided on
West Coast HlJhway 1n Ncwpon Beach .n8 one of the dn"crs vttrcd across lhe
road. Steven Paul Chumley, 30. of Hunt·
anaton Beach was travelina west when a
soft dnnk fell 1n has Chevy pickup truck.
Newport Pohcc spokesman Bob Oakley
said.
Chumley leaned over to pick up the cup
..a.nd~~Cr\'ed anl-O the haghwa) 's eastbound
lanes., Oakley said
Has trucli. collided walh a M1tsub1sha
sedan bema dnven by Timothy John
Hirota, 26, of Diamond Bar.
The 1mpac! sent H1rota's car anto the neitt eastbound lane whctt it was sick·
swiped by a truck and trailer be1na dnvcn
by Walhc Ed Jones. 38. of Lake Forest.
Oakkysa1d.
Chumlc} suffered a knee injury. cuts and po ibly broke his wnst. Hirota
compla1Md pain an h.is neck and shoulder.
Both ~ert taken to Hoq Memonal
Ho patal follow1na t~ I 2:4S p.m. 1CC1·
dent, Oakley sa•d. JOf\C was not 111Jurcd. · The collmon dad not cause m~or traffic
tic-ups
·Attempt to end HB's trash f~e fails
City-Council rejects
ordinance endtng
$5 -a-month charge
By .ROBERT BARKER
Of .. Olllf ..... 911111
Fre hman < 11\ C ouncalman Jim '\1"a
aot 1rashcJ b) his Huntington lk'alh
council collcaauc~ fucscfa> as he a1m<'d his s1ghrs on a contro' ers1al SS-a-month tra h
ftt ampoS«l on homcoy,,ner.,je I St'ptcm-
ber
1lva. who cJmpa1gncd .iptMI the lel·
on h1 Yt>1l\ 10 'icton 1n the NoHmlxr
clCCllOn said tnll1all\ hc•d ID&rOOUle otn
ordinance 10 uttle the bill In fact. ~11\a's
intention "ere ,printed on the <. 1h
C'o uncal a,genda for the whole world to ~
Meeting sets record for brevi ty
We~ 8;inn1stcr has· b.ccn ma)or ol
Hunt1n3ton Beach for les than a mon.ti
and he·s alread) s.cttang ~ord\·
The one he shattert'd b' ~S m1nut~ Tuesda) mght may stand for11 whde
The b1mon1hl) C ll) Council meet1n1.
v.11h a light asenda and a lad, of hcaH
cmouonal toptcs. ended a1 8 OS p m 6~
m1nu1e-s after Banni tcr banged dov.n his
ga' cl to tan the proettdmp.
Bannister :.mashed a rttord that he
be he' ed wa~ sel b) former Ma) or Bob
Mandie 1n the 19 )(X "hen he· rcponcJI,
ad1oumcd a 7 p m mccuni at 30.
The ncv. ma) or. v.h o stnctl) dhcrc to
the three-minute hm1t for rt' 1dcnt pc3l·
mg dunn th.c me~t1na, ha$ 1n~111utc-d a 5
p m. St'SS1on befort' the actual council
mtttana beams. ..
Cal\ Council mcmbt'~. huddhna ~Ith
staO mcm~ in \oC'S ion •hat arc open 10
the p~bltc. are Upe\:tcd to 1c1 ansv.~r; to ttRrr que t1ons on gcnd.l 1tcrhs. \3''"1
time dunna the regular mccunas
The officials '1nd staff mcmbt'n ha' c a
fi h dinner and a be'' cra.a.c toacther 111 {!
p m and' continue their discus 1on'J un11I the regular mttt1na stam at 7 p m
( 1t) < ounc 11 mttuna ha'e dtont'd on
unul midnight .ind hl-Hlnd in n."Cen1 H'lr\
de\ptte pcnodl\. prom1M.-s 10 brea.lr>
scs ions at 11 p m
. cd Tu~a' n1&ht 1l 1he 5 pm pre-
mtttan hclpcJ "pt'd11e m~tten Ban-
nister ~1J "'t l>u'rc darned nght 1t did ··
-By R'1Mrf Bartu -··~~ta~~~~>~~~,~~=~-----~===~~=========~-~~~ordinance to ~and refuse c:ollec11-0n ftt. · .
When It came \11\a·., time 10 peak up
ho~e,cr. he mcrd~ aslro for a \tud' ~saon w that oflic1al\ could .. <',aluatc''
the truh fee
HC"llo 4\. shot dov. n on that ~ FettoV1' rounnt officual\ "Wd w en
lam f'.ar too man\ cn11cal nc<'ll'I 10 \lrop the tra~ti f('t' ~hi.ch as t'\pt'(tcd lo r.mc
more than S3 m1ll1on a )C•H
lnste d . the\ called for .an au<l11 .and
more st~1et. · ~and cap11al nc\.'d\ In
other "orili ' II lool O\Cr the "hole
topu.. at bud1et 11mt'. a proce .s that
normal!) talc., pl.t~c <''t'f\ \Car 1
1h J s~ud T ue-.da\ thilt he full) C\JX'\:lcJ
ht\ colka.aue lo 'titc: on his motion He 1d , though. that hr lOuldn't Jrt a -.c.·lond
10 ha' mmu'n lrvm h" "' un"dd1ng
countcrpans
11\a said he remains opposed to the
tra h fee and behcH~ that 11 is unfair to the
la<'CDl)Crl "ho were relic"ed of the fee 1n 19-to v.hcn the council •P.provcd a S
~nt U'C on rc1.Kknt • u11ht) b1Us that
raises about SI 0 m1lhon a car.
C ouncalman Tom Ma)'S sa1d. however.
that ot1k1als should take no actton to
rescind the fee until Silva Ai'd Don MacAllt ter. ·who ako was elected tn
ovcmbe-r could act a chantt to analyzt
nttds
Ma) saad tlie cuy faces opend1turc-s of S50 million to put in new water hncs and
nother SI 0 mtlhon for strttt rcpa1n. Other looming e~penses mcludc Oood
control sewer lane$ and pier constructJon
In all. co ts arc e~pccted to total a
Slll&Cnna S200 million an the ncxffhc or
Sl\ )Un, Mays said
MacAlhstcr. quoted an campaiin htcra·
ture u favonng_ dumpina the trash fees. T~\' caJJed for "a full audtt" of needs
and fm "h ma} not be-pNdcnt (to drop
the tees) v.1thou1 study1na the whotr
tinancaal picture." he said.
MacAU• tcr said pre\'IOUs\) that State-
ments in campaian ma1krs cla1min1 he
oppo1icd the fees ~ere made without h1
kno~led&c. and that he didn't ncccssa.nly
agree v.1th them
Man-denies bu-i;ning erosS throuah a rear ~110 uea bet"C't'n ~rd&) and f~sda) l.>emqt" "',.~ estimated at SI 00
apin Tv.ol 1r k I\. \1arkt'tHt"poned
•man arat>N-d \.-anon ol ~art~w
c1gart'tt~ lrom their tore~ and flC'd
The (. U'tll' K '" the IMX> hit.xii. of
Santa. .\na ·hcnue lo\t 1\ carton
carher this ~eei..cnd. "hilt' T ucsda'
n1&ht thrtt "-anon "ere taken from a <. 1rtle ~ 1n the ll 00 blod of Harhor Boulc,ard -\ .,_ ·lcvcn \to~ m the
2b00 blod. ot Harbor ha reponrd
bcana bit '" 1 e in thrtt v.ttks
that had been reported 10.Ju.mi It
\. aetona Beach The bmtwuu:st lftn
at S p m Monda' . .
at black family's residence CoetaMaa
A robber <"ntereJ the Thnn, (,a.,
Utton in the~()()() block of eY.pon
Boulevard about 12 30 a m T~sda'
and 1mula1cd a aun in his nahtJaC'kct
pocket.-ordenna the emplo>tt to
open' the ca h rqJster Aller arabbma
money from the rca• ter t~ u pcct
onkttd t~ emplo)tt to open a safe.
Cl\ll n&ht.s, u ana force and threat of
'
fortt to 1011m1dite the famil) bcc~uK
A WC1tmin ter man accuJC'd o of their ~ ind us1ns Ort 1n the
1e1unsfireto1cross1nfrontofa bf~k . comm1Slion ofa fetony.
family's home had matly foUowed • Juron tistttttd 10 a tape 1n "'hteh
fncnd to ttt •hat was h.appcnina. a illman \old pohcc \M cro v.:~
dtftGK attorney ara~ in coun. built at tus houtc and that. accompa·
Gary Sk1Uma.n. lt4, was 0 a mere ntina the f~nd -ho b\ult the emu,
byig.nidcf" and did not pertic1petc m he catricd the ott can tarT)'tnJ the
lbt aoa bUman&. July 21. ~ flammable hquid uled to li&h1 the
Ocputv Nblac ~Dean • fitt. arcf .kt Tuetday. •·1 J.Ult follo-cd him." he said .... nae tnal WU to con tan~ today. didn t ftt1 that It .. ,"•'"' I JUSI stood Skillman 1 chatled '*lth ~· t.tkanddidn'twanuobepartofi•''
9'MrlCY to Yk*te aftother pcnDft s Both ewoettVtOR and dcfmtc at·
tome~s ha\C said the fnend. v.ho has
not bttn 1dcnhficd cannot be
located lw Tu.C>da). Chn t) Hc1 r
Quarop tcarfull) rt'(Ounted for the
JUI') hov.-he av.ol..c to find the no
bum1na on her front lawn
"I tned not to fed mt1m1datt'd. But
11 affected our family and 1t affected
me. It made uJ feel not "''lnttd." 'he
•1d. Slallman, characd W1th con p1~.
10t1m1dl1Jon and vtolataon of Cl\ 11
""'uof others. facn up 10 21 )ca" tn
pmon 1 f con' acted •
The robbtraot SI IOand ran out of •'1'• bdund the store, but a blue
m1n1·truck wath 11ntcd windows and
o' en11ed '*heel was seen a few
minutes later hcad1na to•ard tht.
C'osLI Mcu F~•» He -.as de· scntxd u •hate. 30 to 32 )can o1d 6
feet. I SO pbunds. with medium
brown ... avy haar and a mall mu •
tachc. ..• .. TM tablct .. crc turned on a bUmto
bandit when a tort clcn decided to
hold h" bic)clt for ransom. A _>ouna
of the ~c1Hc ttnttuomct1mcovtr man ~ntdly enttttd the 7·Ek"en
the Wttkend. market an the 1100 block of P\ecrit1a • • • A l 916 Honda f.spint .... , 1tokn
ftOm Utt I 00 block of T opftl
bt1•11H 9 and 10 pm. TUttda .
A\ cnut, took a chackcn burrito out of
a n:frltrrattd Catt and ran OUt of the
llO'J TM dnt nan•H'I aftn the suspect sponcd a bicy(tt perMd
outt.idc tht store. poeatbly acft ..., \he -... -...., .,, r-· -,,, MllP'C'· •
Soeetilnt betw 11 Salunll.t:;! . Al lht dtr\ took the bk)'dt ...... 1....,, ~-wed luter the '"""'° thitf rrtwited -,aw ("aft• IOMJ Tlllen A~ pc 11i•ty al Nim IO rt1W1\ tht bib. 1'e deft
wida a lier._.-* Sl.'90 ..-ol ~ * bicyc:k .-ould be re1.-
cGJM11stHL IO ltiM .. lte paid for lhe food. Al
A .._.• FO:.• v .. ary Lint) t.,C:::,r polK"t. the ,1ua1mt
• ''"' Lal .\Iii .. ~. ... • •• k I • .._ 1 ....., -....S TM .....,..o man Ml •ruck
...
Lapn&Beac b
n innlttptr at a busmC''l.S a1 the
30000 block of Coa t H1ahv.h ~as
defrauded out of pa)mcnt Tor a room.
ohont' call •nd "d o tapes' alucd at si.. The rcpon v.as tiled Monda • • • ~ bura,la"1 in the I bl l of
lcnnt')rc trttl Mtttd the 1h1ef SS.900 in Jev.elr) and m1 :-tllanrou
Item Tu~a, .. •••• At 6 Tut'~> momma poh«
stan:hi-d un\UCC'(' full)' (or• pelican
~
Hand.acton Beach
8ur&Jars m1 hcd a window at thr
-\bundant Life uembly of God.
I 7S I e~land t., and stole boVo't and am>w valued at SI SO. • • • A Lo A~IC'S t.ui cab dn\iCf
rtQUC'Sted officers to keep the peact" ll
I :! 4 7 a m. toda> af\tr pas~nem, left
his cab Wlthout •na all their bill. • hac"'C'S cnte a rnidcnce 1n the
9700 block of PtuswoOd t>rive
throu&h an un&ocked teat wiftdOW
anJ tolt SI SO 1n buebell cards arid
$1~ in ca h • • • m~ cntettd an unlotllecl p r·
an the 7700 bl k ofTayk>f Dn"'1r
and ~toJc a radao-controUed car
,·alued at $600 and a alfttrOlls ,.1~ at $200.
BB man killed in cruh
..
b Or._ C09M DAILY PtlOTI Wedneeday, JMuety 4, 1889
ttorD.ey says city can't
ecount Meas11re G ballots
y 808 VAN EYKEN ................
... Costa Mesa C ity Attorney Thomas C. Wood reaffirmed his pos111on
Tuesday that 1l is not poss1bk to
tnount a recount of the controversial taffic ini\iattve, Measure G. which l'Oft narrowly in November's clec-
1on.
·Opponents of the traffic and
wth co ntrol measure. led by Costa
esa attorney Dennis Retoske. filed
ucsl for a recount on Dec. 9. four
before the election rt'sults were
ctr'ificd by the City Council.
~ U nder state law. re4uests tor rc-~unts must be made ~11hin fi.,.e da}s
Qf ccnification.
: November's electmo 10 Cos1a
Mesa was consolidated ""1th the
national general elec11on. plactng
tAnaJ au1hont; for ccnificauon with
the count) Registrar of Vott'rs. not
the C11y ( ou nctl
Registrar Donald Tanney cer11ficd
countyw1de elec11on results on No'
22. ma~ing Re1oskt"'s request sewral
weeks 100 late.
"When the c11 ... consolidates wtth
the general elecuon. 111s thc Re~1~1rar
of Voters who count the .,.otes. · !>aid
PLANTS FIND HA VEN •..
From Al
The council asked 81tcht to get
together a group of 1nterestC'd cll1z.ens
10 come up w11h some add1t1onal
ideas.
"We lack the ex peruse in this a rea:·
said Mayor Peter Buffa. "What we
would hke you 10 do 1s com<." up with
some alterna11vcs. and somt" ideas as
to how tht~ might tx-funded, which.
we would tx-happ) to cons1dt"r:·
Breehl to ld the council that a
botanical garden would rt-quu'C at
least 23 acres in order to be '1abk Hc-
sa1d he en' 1s1oned a p ubltc garden
that could serve as an educational
\\ood. ··.t.nd the 11mL· hrmt for
re"ount requests lx'gins 111.:king awa>
when the result~ an: otlic1alh
cemfied .. ·
One council member. On tlk o\m-
burgey. said he still has surlll' d tiubt
concemrng the denial of tht· rt'.cuunt
request.
"-mburgey, who oppo~d Measurt·
G. has asked ano ther attorne\ for an
opinion o n the mailer.
factlt\y as well as a'> 1s1to~· attraction.
It could include a lecture hall. a
conservator) and a 110 shop ·
"I spent much of today in Denver
tallons to people there about their
botanical garden." he said Tuesday.
"It's amazing the revenue 1t gener-
ates. They have an admission fee. and
people can also pun;hase member-
ships They have a !lhop that sells
books. posters and other items
That's also a very good revenue
generator. And we could do so much
more heR" 14 tlh our d 1ma1e 1han they
can in l.Xn'n ··
He said Tuc-sday night. ho"'e"·er. he
had no t rerc1"ed the opinion. But he
said 1fthe pn \'ate a11o rney agrees w1th
Wood. he will ask Orangl" Count) ·s
state legi~la1ors 10 l'ons1dcr changing
thl' law
"If he ulnlurs with the Cit~ at·
1orne)'. then I feel it's unfonunatt" that
the communrty doesn't have the
same opponunity in a general elec-
tion as 1t d<X's when the city counts the
votes ... he said.
National Guard drill to force
homeless from 25 armories
By The AHoclated Pre11
Nati onal Guard armones that have
provided emergency shelter for the
homeless during frig.id winter nights
Wlll be closed this weekend for
military training amid pred1c11ons of
more wet. cold weather.
HOMELESS CONCERNS ...
Twenty-five armones across Cali·
fom1a, including ones in Santa Ana
and Fullen oo, Wlll be used b}
guardsmen for two days of prepared·
ness training.. leaving thousands out
in the cold unless local governments
scramble to provide alternate refuge.
officials said.
"I think n's a disaster ... said Kay
Knepprath. co-director of the Sacra-
mento-based Caltfomta Homeless
Coalttion. 'Tm afraid that we will
have more deaths because of l"X·
posure 1f we don't have alternate
shelters a vailable for folks . The
regular shelters are full.''
The exercises were planned mor<'
than two years ago. before (,o,
George DeukmeJ1an declared the
annones could be used to house
h o m eless o n n1gh1s whe n
temperatures dip belo w 40 or when 11
rains and drops below 50
When DcukmeJian authonzed thr
use of the anno nes for the homeless
1n December 1987. however. he also
ordered that NationaJ Guard military
tra101ng take preceden~ over using
the armones to house the homeless
T he ellerc1ses also arc required for
the state to receive its S340 m1ll1on 1n
federal funding_ said MaJ. Steve
Mensik. a Nauonal Guard spokes-
man.
Mensi k said armones across the
state housed 3.500 people JUSt last
Monday night.
"ll would be a reasonable assump-
tion, in fact qu11e likely. that tho~
3.500 people arc not going 10 have a
place to stay." Mensik said. "W e are
Fro m Al
La Belle also said the city has spent
about S 120.000 in recent years 1n
··rro,J«t Self-Sufficiency" to assist
single mothers w11h dependent ch1I·
dren and other poor fam1hes with
housing needs.
He also said the City has on hand
about S 31fz mtlhon to $4 mil hon from
redevelopment tax increment funds
for housing for lo"""· and modcrate-
incomc families.
A Housing Commmu has been
formed to make re-commendaltons to
the Cll y Council o n how tht' m one>
shook' be spent. he said.
"We've do ne quite a b11 on the
fron t end ... La Belle said. "trying 10
address the problem before 11 gets In
be a problem ..
quite genu1nel} SOrT) about that
What we are happy about 1!>. the other
28 days we arc able to accommodate
those people "
More homeless ~Opie used the
Cahfom1a armoncs for shelter 1n
December than dunng the entire
winter of 1987-88. Mensik said. At
least 29,000 peopk stayed 1n about 2.S
armon~ 1n December. compared
wnh 28.05 7 people 1n 16 armon es last
winter
The Orange ( ounty Homeless
Issues Task Force appealed to
churches. schools and commun1t)'
groups for space to shelter 250 to 300
ho meless peo ple should the weather
indeed be cold this weekend. said
chairman Scott Ma1her.
The National Weather ~rvrce r~
predicting showers over much of lhf
stale beg.inning T hursday and lasting
thro ugh S unda} N1 ghtt1mc
Murder conviction rejection appeal ed
By Tiiie A11od ated PreH
Orange Co unty prosec utors 1ntC'nd
to appeal a judge's dcc1s1on to throw
out a murder conv1cllon against a
woman who claimed she suffered
from a severe case of the "ba by blues"
when she ran over her infant son wHh
the family station wagon
• Supenor Coun Judge Robert R
FiLZgerald overturned a seco nd-
degree murder verdict against 24-
year-old heryl Lynn Mass1p of
Anaheim last Dec. 23. acquttting her
o n grounds of temporary insanity
She had laced a pnson term of 16
years to life.
An eight-woman. four-man JUI)
had rejected her r la1m that she was
temporarily insane fro m postpartum
psychosis when she killed hl"r 6~week
old, colicky son M 1chacl on Apnl .?Q
1987
Potato posse scoops up spud spill
Some 15,000 pounds of potatoes
tumbled from a truck into the road at
16th Street and Supcnor Avenue 1n
Costa Mesa early today. forcing the:
formation of a potato pos.se 10 clean
up the spilled spuds.
· The truck was stocked with 100-
pound sacks o f potatots. which rolled
)fltO the strcetabour 5 a.m , ac.cord1ng
,lo early reports.
Police o flicer<. <'ml)le>~C<'\ of
nearby bustn<'S~s and da) workeN.
recru11cd from the nearby C'lly Job
Center hashed out lhC' JOh of put11na
the '8clu back onto the truck
It took about an hour to clear the
area. Lt. Sam Cordeiro said.
The cause of the tater tumble and
extent o f damage was unavailable.
La Belle also said that about
S900.000 in federal money has been
speot at Commodo~ Circle. Nearly
baJf of ii was spent on low-interest
rchabiliation loans that owners will
repay, be said. About $230,000 went
for street and a.lley repairs and
S 150,000 for landscaping. he said.
Commodore Circle, located west of
the Five Points Shopping Center at
Beach Boulevard and Main Street.
has long been identified asa slum that
serves as a haven for drug dealers. La
Belle said the city's improvement
program has shown marked progress
in the area in recent months.
Police' have said they do not believe
there 1s much of a homeless problem
1n Huntington Beach
temperatures are expected to be cold
enough to act1 vate the shelter pro-
gram throughout much o f the state on
each of those days.
Whenever armones close in Sacra-
mento arrangements are made 10
transpon homeless people to nearb)'
McClellan Air Force Base. \aid Saha-
uon Army spokesman Dana Byerle~
In add111on to housing homeless 1n
armones 1n Los Angeles. officials also
d1stnbute "ouchers good for lodgmg
at local hotels
Los Angeles County already has
provided 17.000 hotel vouchers since
Dec I. compared with 10.260
vouchers provided between Dec. I,
1987, and March 31 . 1988, said Vena
Nash, Los Angeles ( o unty homeless
coordinator
In addll1on to Los Angeles and
Sacramento. c111es that have :n least
one armory used regularly for shelter
include those in Santa Ana, Fullerton.
Santa Barbara. El CaJOn. El Segundo.
Vista. Chico. Long Beach. Concord .
Richmond. San Mateo. R1vers1de,
Sunnyvale , San Jose. Calexico, San
Rafael. Gilroy, Van Nuys. Culver
City, ( orona. Redding. Petaluma.
Banning and Ventura
HEIDRICH ...
From Al
Hc1dnch reported!)' taughl kara1c
10 Hun11ng1on Beach and was alleged-
I} fC'alurcc! 1n Kung Fu Maga11 ne and
1n telc.,.1s1u n d<'monstra11o n'
Pc1cr<ion ""ould not Sa) whtthC'r an'
of 1he molestation~ were rclattd 111
Hc1drtlh., karate instruc11on
Ht1dnch also went b} SC\cral r'cudon) m~. inc luding Zane
..t·opard and Srr James Hc1dnch.
"That's what he lt kes evcrybod) lo
call him. Sir James.'' Peterson said
Hc1d nch 1s 6 lcc:t l inches tall and
weighs about 200 pounds.
Peterson $31d He1dnch has a h1s-
tory of crim1nal offenses in C1hforn1a
and several other stales. He declined
lo state what the violations involved.
but drd s.av t le1dnch had s.crved Jltl
time.
·.DAILY PILOT TO BE MORNING PAPER •••
homAl
mcctina or high school footbell pme
will be an the next m omlna's Pilot.
Churchman said. Rcackn won't Mve
to wait untH the nc•t evenina to learn
wtu.t important events happened 1n
their community.
"And let '1 f1CC 1t, ~ Pilot will shll
:be \here in lbe 11\crnoon for th<*
who prefer to reld it then.·· sht> uid.
The move makei 1evCf'IJ other
1m,,PC!f1.ant improvemcnta possible;
Chief AmOOI them IS improved de·
• AAvery terVice.
Tbe Pilot will be printed and
delivered white tbe c:otnm unity ~ meuJna no more delays in ~ uaffic. TM woneeina
trll IJ Gl18lioD ICCM ill °'1lllee Coon.
'£!mldeitdit&9kfortll8Pll*10 .. ,end OJI u.. n. ......
l Noc will ti .._ ~ • o'cloct. ntJJ....-..0.•=t nntMl ,; AadtM.....,HllOlt•···=ll l.ul ..... 111 Int "• .. ....... 10 _, .... I •
advcrtiJers w1ll sec: even better ~
sulu. the uid.
"The peper will be on the streel
to0ner and in the home lonarcr than it
1s now. That's 1ood for everyone,"
shewd.
"When M stopped pubiishina •
momina (news rack) edit.ion 1n
A~ and went 1tlielly with an
aJ\imoon paper, our momina cu ..
t.omen mlued ua. ~nd they haven't
stopped iellina u1 they mlu ua..
.. We bet~ve tbe move will au.ract
new laden t.o the µ.ily Pik>c and
plelM our many loYaJ CUltOIDtfl who
• tbc Y111ue ln a ml ae•.,.l*that
It c:ommitled '° ~ i• ClCMl'lm&ani· ry."
Qurduma ~ &be ~ ............ ..,tlwNot.
.. AAlr ....... 21=••4Wl1 .... illd .... ,,, rooll a.
..... °"'11,.., .. ·~'-a•e • ..., ... .......,.too•ntllilt.'" .......
,
Anotl:ier storm heads fo~ Coast ..
Juet Wf'9ft Sou1Nr'n c .. oc••• ~It """" ....... 10 .... , ..................
i:ttw:.hat•MdUIMM IAI ..... "rd• .w .... 1erw. edvlMd ~It,._.,.,.. enotr. cold. wet .-m •on
thewey.
Although onfy partly dOUdy .... were for~ fof t~
11 the &e.t cit T ueectay'e storm '9ft the.,.., a neo. OM. 700
off the Southern c•om1a ~ =Odey .... .:r-1ed to errtw by Thureday. 1ne Ne1loMI W ~ .
That atorm th<>\lld bring more doud• .. well ~ • Oh#lOe of
rain. ~ :!:lo!"-cout Thurtday thoufd r.nge from lhe
mkS· to low aft• o~Jowl In the ..0..
Ffom Point Coi\cePtlon to t Mexlc:en B«der -0..,., lnMr
waters, weat to north~t wind• 10 to 15 knott this ewnlng.
W1nd1 ltgtlt and veriab4e tonight. South to IOUth._t wlnda to 15 ••O .. T$ 10
knots Thureday. S... to 3 '"'· s..-west 2 i..1 Pwtty de>vdy -~_....... tonight. Mostly cloudy Thursday with • chance of rain Cold ""•"" SIA.t-•'l -U.S. Temps. Calif. Temps. Extended .. L• PW11y ~ ...... ._.......,WI ~q.,e .e 31 ""°""' • "' ~1 .. lowlot 2•~~•t6e m
f•ocley --'lW-. "":C ..,.,..., ~. ·~ 02 "'"-=rc ,, 20 lOOOJ
Allenta ,, JS Pon Cl<• eo 0 !led""" s. >l CCIII""-*' COOi 11~ n iq ~ 1t1
AINlntoc Coty 42 14 =-Cny 47 )o4 ::::::0 Ctt-,
S1 JO l"9 40o
8onlfT'«• •l 21 41 26 " 37
~ 112 32 Reno 37 ·~ San Ooogo 10 52
'° 1) St~-... 2• ..,ff_ 51 •2
llooton lt 14 Salt lall• ""il 3.$ 20 .... .-S7 ...
8ullOIO 21 ()o4 SMI,,...,, P .. 17 ... ~~ 10 ... o-.... on.S <. 62 (3 S..ttle l>3 ... StO«*IOt• )I ll Surf Report Cl\..-tone.~ C SS 3S Stv:r.:• n 40 ..,.._ 66 2t
C'-G<> 3 1 10 s.o... ... 29 15 ~ S5 4S o.nc..w..u 37 23 s--... J1 91ga-41 17 LOC:Anoet MD~ c......,,., 21 21 Tampo St Pl•OOQ 77 $1 Blt'tllo II 43 -.neton 6Mcl\ 11 pool
()Maa.Ft Wortfl ... '° 1009• •• n c.ian. ,, 4S ,__ Jilllty f'teW00'1 1 -O.y1on 34 20 '~ 73 5$ ewi-Cot, 12 •7 A0\11.,,_ N9w90'1 I pool
o.n-'3 2S ,_ 64 ,, ~ •• 25 22nd Stt-,..._, I poor
°"~ 31 IS WUl\<nglon 0 C 4S JI Long 8Mclo 11 4S uooew.oee 1 ~
OeltOll 24 ot ~ ,. 4S L..,_.._,,, I -Fetrb9nlla 02 ·I• S3 )l $.n()emer\le I 2 CIC*
Gt-Rlipda 28 03 Mew ..... .. Je W•ler'-M
l4onalulM al 70 "'°' 'tblh ... •• S .... dlf«llOt\ Wftt
HOwlon 1• 50 ~ ~ lS .,.,_.... JS 11 Tides ....... 61 •• --. .... -11 35 .....,.,...,,. ... •• .--~-76 45 QIMfto tJ 3t
~ 31 II lU)AY hllftil~ t6 " Smog Report ~Oty •7 2t secono.,.. • 27 p"' ,. ......... st 43
IMVOQell st « ......... ... 39
~ ,. l4 ,.,...... l9fla...ftllrdlno eo )I ,.....,,, .. ..-d ...... ~ 0.60
M-..hecll 82 .. flr.C llOQll • 4t."' t I -~ 17 M ~t-100 moci.r .... 101-1 .. --.,. __
30 1:1 Fnltow 12 23 .... u ..... ,.,.. 73 44 : 200-111 _., _......, lOO
NUnvtllo'I SI 31 s.co..o.,.. 9 OOp tn ,. ..... a..,.,. 73 32 -IObove -dOull Flnll ........ ,.....°'_' eo ~ Secono '-2 21 p"' o• $enla Cf'IOI Ml )8 pr.-.OU. cUy • ~ pel s.cono ..
-YoncC111 40 n SMIA.._ .. 3• 1004ly • 119' lot«M1
Horloll "'• •1 3S Sun 1eo1a 100., et 4 ST p"' . ._ ..... Motca .. SI
Oec~C1tt 57 l4 l~el l ~7 a m ..,.,_..•1 45' l lM9V...,. .. .o• $M1 6-ll\ IO MacN1IM 9M:t 1-'1
~ 39 111 p"' TOITenoe 12 ., ..._~.,, ..... 11 ... 2
()flllnOO u ST Moot>.._ .. I Mp m , •-Thurodey W....000 " SS Ulgu<le a..c:fl 1icwocuti 0
~ 41 2S M 5 12 e m --at2 4ti1H" Y_,,...Vly ,. 20 l.oo ~ Airpofl 11 .. 5
DOCTOR'S TAPES TO BE REVIEWED ...
P'romAl
However, some of Williams' pa-
tients said the videotapes arc d~tc
tions of surgeries they underwent.
They criticized the seizures as not
only an invasion of privacy but also as
a stumblina block in their own
personal inJury lawsuits. Many of
WiUiams' patienl$ arc accident vic-
tims referred to him by attorneys.
About 20 patients appeared 10
court Tuesday, defending Williams'
character and oona that their medt·
cal records be returned.
Patients Lori Miles and Ed Nowak
said they learned through newspaper
accounts-not by poltcc nottficatton
-their files had been confiscated.
They subscQuently called police lo tf)
to get them back. but wen.-apparentl)
told the records were no1 their
propen y and they had no nght 10
I hem
"I Just didn't hke the idea of
someone JUSt taking them and v1cw-
1ng them. ·said Mil es, who descnbcd
hel"S('lf as ··a very happ) patient"· of
W1ll1ams. "I think that's doctor-
pat1cnt pnvtlege."
The petients wd several other
medical personnel were in the operat-
in& room with Williams during the
video&a~ The patienu said they were comforted by the &aping, which
heJ{>S the doctor protect himself
ap.tost lawsuits.
"He takes videotaecs / -th.at
wasn't surprisina to me. · sa 1d Charles
Hoppe, a patient like his daughter
Renee. "They're using 1h1s like he had
a movie studio."
The continued hold1n1 of the tapes
and medic:alrrccords is also putlinJ a
snag in a number of civil lawsuits.
according to the pa11ents.
Nowak said his insurance company
will not settle his litiption, which
stems from an accident I 'h years ago
thal left him wuh neck and lower back
1nJuncs. w1thout the videotapes and
medical records as evidence.
The Costa Mesa resident questton-
ed what connection a videotape ofh1s
operauon in 1987 would have wtth
the alleged molestation. which re-
ponc-dly occurred 1n 1985
The patients all vehemently de-
fended W1lhams.. S<:offina at cha~
the doctor molested youni girls
behind closed doors w11h no nurse
present
.. All the umes he has checked me.
he always had someone else there in
the office (with him)," said M iles.
who underwent cervical bone fusion
and disc rcmovaj suf"JC'nCS by Wil-
liams. "They ( pohcc) don't happen to
mention t~e hundreds and hundreds
of ~t1ents he's helped."
• He comes 1n on his own ume at
niJ.ht (to check patlCots)... Ho ppe
said ... He's more thorough than other
doctors He's an outstanding Chns-
11an ~rson."
Williams· supporters said the case
will cause "irreparable damaae" to
1he doctor's rt'putauon. even 1f he 1s
absolved .
· "Dr. Williams 1s very valuable
because he 1s o ne of the vet) few
neurosuraeons v.h o do h11pt1on,"
said Theodore S. Wentworth. a
personal tnJUI)' lawyer who rep.
rncnts about JOO of W11!1ams' pa-
tients.
PIT BULL ATTACK REPORTS WANE ...
From Al
he said. "I should haq~ never gune
over there. but I JU\t rnuldn'1 handk
1he scream in' I 1u~t d1dn'1 wan I them
\0 kill them ·
But 1n v1rtuall) all l'tllt"li along 1hc
Orange C oa~t. offiuali. sa'.Y \l.ll h
\tones art rare
"We had one dog attatk earlier 1h"
week that wa~ attnbulcd to a pit bull
but no one could !Ml) for surl' whether
11 wa\ reall) a ptl bull o r no1." ~1d
Irvine Animal &rv1ces Officer Dun-
can G ill. "Qu11t ofttn a 1tack\ arc
attnbuled to p11 hull~ and that\ not
real!) the ca~ ··
In Laguna Beach, animal contro l
officer Jo) Lingenfelter said pie bull
a11acks art' unusual
"Wt had one: where a dog bit
someone 1n thc owne r's homt."
Lmgcnfel1er 'i.31d. "We have a real
stnct leash law and I think that reall)
contn butcs to the decline 1n inci-
dent,
"I think wha1 happens 1s, rf people
w11h those types of doas come into
town with a dog that 1s off leash or
unrnnta1ned and there's an incident
or near inc1denl, we're usually able lo
give them a c1ta11on or impound the
dog fairly quickly. That usually nips
1he problem in 1he bud. And that'$ not
JUSl ptl bulls. that's any type of dog ...
In Fountain Valley and Costa
Mesa. poltCC' report no recent p1l bull
attacks. In Newport Beach, officer
G rq Annstron1 said he never con·
s1dered the doSS a problem.
"If there would have been some p1l
bull problem I would have heard
1bou1 1t," Arm1tron1 said. "No one
has ever thouaht It wu a real
problem. II comes and aocs with the
news."
Unaenfehn II.recd that the pttU
was a key player 1n p11 bull stonc-s in
the pHl.
''The press wu n::aur ready for •tat
the time aod at was ru ncwswonhr ."
she utd of tht surae of ph bull stones
i~A~E Illy 111111
MA* OP1'tCI
........... 51 c;091 ........ ~
1n the past "We wen I through a thing
14-ere Do bcrmans go1 bad preu, then
(Jerman ~hepherds and then the ptt
bull "
Cena1n charactcnsllcs of 1hc p11
bull, including the comb1na11on of
strong Jaws and clingy pen.sstenle.
make an attack b) the dog an e~u11ng
ncw!I story. L1ngcnfclter said.
.. Because they arc mon.-1enac1ou\,
""hen \hq do 1n1t1atl' an attack 1t
tends to gel the prr~s more 1nvol'>cd:·
she said.
Cena1 nl). past stonts of pit bull
attacks have been dramau enouah.
In 1986.i. an Orange County Animal
Contro l ~gt Keml' Morgan was
attacked ~Ya I 00-pound pit bull that
chewed off her let\ middle lin1er
"I shook my hand to get the blood
off and I could sec the middle of m y
finaer twirling aro und." Morgan said
"I kept ~y1og to m yself. 'Please don't
faint · ..
Pre viously, the same powerful
black dot hsd maulC'd a baby in a
stroller and attacked a Untied Pared
Service dnver who reQutred SS
sutches for a lea wound
Mo rpn. who had three opera110M
and rece1 ved psycholotJcal counsel·
ina for trauma anociated with the
terrifr,_1!'1 attack. eventu.tlly won a
$300.000 settlement in March 1988
(or her inJuries. At the time 5he said
she would rather have her li•r beck
than the money.
In Au1ust 1987, a 3-yt-ar~ld pit
bull terrier. named U&ly. was hekt an
puppy prison ancr kiOina an EnaJish
sheepdot in a San C1ementc shelter.
Before Ualy could be released. owner
Kyeli Beckmann had to pos&a
Sf 0,000 teeurity bond to relieve t~
ci&y of liability in cue the doc
auacked apin. UstY bad to be confined to an aru
with I floor. cctlioc Ind Mdcs. be
tn~ In 1 cqie. not be taken out
in public. be muu~ and beer a
1at100, wh1lh a vetennanan etched in
the dog's ear JU.St after htS release
'till. however dramatic such at-
tacu ma> be. arta authonues main-
1.ain a "1c1ous attack by a pit bull is
rare According 10 Jack Edward$.
chief of ticld scrv1cn for the O ranaic
County Animal Sheher. the count)
hiu no pit bull problem per se.
"We don't have a pit bull problem
tn Ora~ Co unty. nor do 1 ever think
we di~.t f.dwards u1d. However, of
the .)\) animals that have b«n
declared vicious in Lht county. a thm'
arc pH bulls Jn seeond pla« aft
German sheperds and Labrador re-
tncvers pl1cc third.
While Edwards woukl not say lut
year's revision of the county ord1-
n1ncc made a difTere~ sn tbe
number of anacks. 1\ d id 11ve amma1
control o fficen more latitude. Whik
the prcvtOus ordinana ,.vc 1u1de-
lines for offtcaal action dq>endina
upon whether a das had inflieled one.
1wo Of thrtt bttes. the new 1.>rdina~
allows a v1c1ous de& invttupuon to
bea.ln after a sins.le 6itc. Tf an animal is deemed v1C1ous, 1ls
owner must prove he or sbe has
SI 00.000 1n hab1hty insurance. If not
suffitiently covered, the dot owner
must Fl ample insurance or n::lin-
Q\itsh the pet
for dot lovers, the options are not
11'¥8)'1 C~S)'
When Beckm1nn took Ualy from
the animal Jhcher only to conline bJm
in • ~ IS feet k> .. 6 feet tall •nd S
feet wide. sbc said a.mply. "I'd rathcT
have him alivt with fM du1n ddd .._ .. 11•1;rc.
And C.rlos Gonzalez. who womed
about the pit buU E. .atlfted baa concern to what m' t happen to the
perents 1fter tdliftl Is story.
"Thttc doas are fnen_d_llL' OonuJa laid or hit ptl bu.It PC1p1-bon.. ••1 WU Ova' I~ last nisht
pa.yiq with tt\cm ...
.. 5 ...
.... ~ ... ueo c:-...... <.A•~P' ~ -~ ... ,. -'..,....... Ja.tc.11842-8086 ..... ,. ..... ,... . ,.. .... ,.. ... .,
U8 ,. -.... , .. "' .. .,_.., .. .. ...... .................. ,.. .......... ,_ ...,.,, __ ..,. .................. .......
J
•
UCI to celebrate
King's birthday
0.scuwon or the pis let by Mart.an Luther
K.ana Jr. aod ways to obW• \km wiU be the topic or a sympOlium booorina the la~ leader's binbday at
UCI, Jan. 11-1 l
Panel diJcuuion~ l«twa and performances W111 be featured as part oftbe thtee-dlycvcot. which
includes a lecture Wednnday niaht by Randall
Robinson, on "Global Aoolicauons ofthc Princi~
of Martin lut~ Kina Jr"." Robinson is a Harvard uw School .,.actuate, put ABC "Person of the
Week" and executive director of Trans-Africa. a
black Ameh can lobby for Africa and the Carribean.
All acuv1tjes cxocpt the Robinson Lectu~ arc
f1ec and o" ·n to the public. The leclU~ will be at the
Bren Events Center at 8 p.m. aod tlck.cts will be $7,
SG ano S5. For more mformalion call Thomas 1 Parham at 856-«>42. •
Youth alJelter update
A video on how youth shelters operate and
achieve their 1oats Wlll be shown at a meeting of the
Otmocrat1c O ub of West Oranat Count) at 6:45
pm. Monday at the Hunt1n1ton Beach Library.
Carole Kanode, prcsdcnt of 1he proJ«t~
Huntington Beach youth sheller. will discuss 1hc
needs and purposes of shelter programs and will
repon on lhe status of the Huntingto n &ach shelter
The hbral) is Talben Avenue and Golden West
Street in Hun ungton Beach More 1n forma11on ma)
be obtained b'.t' calling IS98-I 882
Global market e%llmlned
Windows on the World: Ho"' to Approach the
q 1obal Marketplace will be discussed by Gerald
Glt'nn. group prcs1den1 of sales and markeuna wi th
Fluor Daniels, at the Amen can Marketing Assoc1a-
t1on's Jan. 12 luncheon at the Irvine Mamott
The hotel 1s at 18000 Von Karmen and the
cvtn I will run from I I a m. to I: 30 p. m. Ad vancc
reStrvat1ons arc S20 fo r members. $22 for non-
members. S 15 for students. Admission 1s $25 at tht
door Mort 1nforma11on may be obtained b} calling (8 18) 762-466Q
Dependency studled
Chemical dependency will be d iscussed at the
m('('llng of the Optimist's Club of In-inc at 7 am
Jan 17 al Hofs Hut 1n Ir' 1ne
V1s1tors art welcome 10 this meettng where Dr
Pt'tcr Ste rman, of Prcfcrrrd Health Care lid .. "'ill be
t~ guest speaker
The restaurant 1s at 188.50 Doug.l as St and there
will a charge onl} for breakfast. More information ma~ be obtained b) tailing 830-5J6Q o r b 75-1779.
Book review due
A. book re' 1ew on "Tht Merchant Pnnl·es·· will
bC' presented b) Rose Marder Kupperman at the
luncheon mecttng of the 1mcha '~apter ol e·na1
B'nl~ ~omen .at 11 am Jan. 12 at the Huntington
Landmark in Huntington Beach.
Kuppemlan. an author. radio sho"' host onc-
llmt' dt'tcCll\C and pilot. "'as horn 1n England and
rcs1dt'S 1n lk'crh Hills
The rt'staurant 1s at Magnoli a .\\t•nuc anJ
Allan ta Stm:t Rc\er' at1ons and funhcr infor-
mation ma~ tx-obtained b) l.tll1ng Fl orcnlc
"aldman JI %0--l.566 or Pa ula S1hcr at 960-ltl2
Russian reform examined
The intcmalwnal d1mens1ons of Pt.'rc'>tro1 l..J
1he S<n 1e1 ·s policy of rc~tructun ng 11s soc1et~. "'111 bl· d1~·u~sc.-d by Roben '\yan1an. Ph D . at 7 pm Jan
12 at 1hc NcVi pon Beach Pubhc L1brat)·
Ayan1 an. an Cl onom1cs r,rofcssor at Cal StJtr
Fullenon. will focus on imp 1cat1on<. for rela1 1on'
between lhc ~o,1ct l 'n1on and the l 'n1tcd Stat<."\
Admission 1s free and all arc ""l'kl)me to th1'
C\Cnt at 1hc Ne"'port Center Branlh al 856 San
Clemcntt' :"'Jc\t to the Ncwpon Harbor <\n Museum
For more 1r'ormat1on. call Jackie Ht>adh ,11
644-J I 70 ·
Wednesday, Jan. 4
• 7 p m WIH• Bue• Pleanln1 Commluloo.
counril l'ham~" 50~ Fol't"St ~'l"
Thursday, Jan. 5
"-:o meetings scheduled
-
Pou cf Loe
l y 801 VAN EnEN °' ..............
Mem~ of the Oran~ County Board
of Supervisors elected Tho mas Riley on
TUf'Sday to serve as their chairman fer
1989. mark1na his fourth tcm1 as h~ad of
the county's J<>vern101 body.
Riley su<Ueds Superv110r Hamett
Wieder, who served 1n the post durina
1988.
The comina year will be notable, Riley
said, because a number of projects that
have been m plannina for many )'cars will
bcf,n to emerae into reality.
'I'm very opttm1sttc," be said. "I ha ve
gnat expectations for the new a1rpon, and
I hope we'll be&Jn construction of the San
Joaquin Hills Transpon.atton Comdor.
And the traffic c1rculat1on pha.sina plans in
the south count) should be&Jn falhna into
p&ace, 1)cy should be Jtneralln& about
$400 million in road development fees
o~u the neat 10 yc~rs."
Transponat1on drvclopmcnt w'll be one
of the b\llHt challenaes f~na the board
tbis year. aod well into the future, ft iley
said.
"Another one 1s housfoa." he said,
"We're a job-rich county, and 10 provick
housina for all of those people is aoina to be
very challensina."
Riley, 76, is \ht board's oldest member.
He was first appointed to the board in 1974
by then-Gov. Ronald R~.
He won his first election tn 1976 and was ~lected in 1978. 1982 and 1986. Riley
will face ~lection qain in 1990. but has
made no announcement about whether he
will seek a fifth term. His 5th Distnct
mdudes Newport Beach. Irvine. Lquna
leach and much of the south county.
Tht position of board cha1rmd is
ttnerally ro\ltcd amona the five members.
The rocatlon was ac:ttlerated with the
rttiption of Supervisor Bruce Nct\lnde
in 1987. Riley, who was vice chairman in
1981, last served as chairman of the board .
in 1986.
Riley. a retired Marine Corps bripd1er
aeoeral. was born an Hartisonbura. Va.,
and attended the Virginia Military In·
SUtute.
He beca~e acquainted wtth 'Oranae
County dunng his final military ass1an·
ment as chief of staff at Camp Pendleton 1n
nonh San Diego County II) the early 1960s.
Whtn he retired from the Marine Corps
ID 1964, Riley and bis wife. Emma Jane.
settled 1n Newpon Beach. where the) hav~
Lived sincr. Tbcy bave no children
~""' __ ., ____ _
A pollcen.an walta for a wrecker to remoTe a car
and a pickup that colllded on W e.t Coaat Highway
alter the clri'f'er of pickup apllled a eoft clrtnk.
Teered ac roM the road and amaahed into the car.
CollisiOn
blamed on
soft drink
By PAUL AllCHlPLEY
OI N o.lefNM ....
Two drivers suffered moderate injunes Tucsd~ when their vehicles collided oo
West Coast Hiah'Way in Newport ~
after o ne of the dnvcrs veered across the
road.
tcven Paul Cbumley. 30. of Hunt·
in&ton Beach was travclina west when a
soft dnnk fell in his Chevy pickup truek,
tilcwpon Police spokesman Bob Oakley
said.
Chumley leaned O\'Cf to pick up the cup
and swerved into the hiaJ\way's eastbound
lanes. Oakley said.
His truck c0llided with a MitsUbisbi
Sedan bcina driven "1>y Timolhy fohn
Hirota, 26. ofDtamood Bar.
The impact sent Hiro\l's car iftto the
next eutbound lane where it was side-
swiocd by a truek and trailer beina driven
by W1lhc Ed Jones. 38, of lake Forest,
Oakley said.
Chumley suffered a knee injury. cut.s
and pos.sibly br.oke his wrist. H irota
complamed..pa_1n 1n his neck and shoulder.
Both were taken to Hoq Memorial
Hospital followina the I 2:4S p.m. acci·
dent, Oakley Miid. --
Jones was not anJurcd. The collts1on d id not cau~ major traffic
t~u~ ·
Attempt to end HB' s trash fee fails
City Council rejects
ordinance ending
$5-a-month charge
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .... 0.-, ...........
frt>shman ( 1t\ ( uunnlman Jim \1ha
got 1rashed o' h1\ ll untingt nn Bt·ach
rouncil collcagut·s I ul•\<la~ a'I ht· ainwd h1' ~1gh1s on a t•ontro' n<,1al S ~-.t-month trash
kc lnlpl)'>t'd on hlll1\t"(I\.\ 01.'f\ IJ\I '-t>Pl<."111-
bcr
ilva. "ho l Jmra1gm·J Jg.iinst lhl' ll'I.'
on his "'a' to \llln1' in the '-o,c:mt'<:r
elecuon. said uu11alh hc"d introduce:' an
ord1nanettn~u11kthl·b1ll lnlalt ~1ha·.,
intcnt1on'i "'er<." pnnll.'d on lht' ~ 11~
Council :•genda IM tht• "'htilc "urld 10 "4.'C'
-··01r'C('t Cit~ a11ome' to prepare
ordinance to rc,l 1nd rcluSf u'lkll10n f('(' ·•
When 11 \'.amc ...,,h ,1 'time 1n 'peak up
howc,er he mc:'rd' J\l..l"d tor a 'ituJ,
\CSS1on ;o that 111fo·1.1l' ltiuld · naluate'·
the trash k"t'
He "'a) \hot J o11. nun thJI
Fl'llov. Lounl1I 11ni\ 1:11 .. \J1J 1hc ul\
Me eting s e ts record (or brevi ty
Wl''I Bann1\ll'r ha\ bcC'n mawr Of
Hun11 ngt on BC'ach for less than a month
and he's alrt'ad) St'll ing records.
The one he shllllC'rcd b~ ~.5 minutes
I uc~a' night ma} stand for a wt\'ik
The b1 mon 1hl~ Cll> l ouncil mct"Ung.
"1th a light agt'nda and a lark of hca')
emotio na l 1op1cs. rndt'd at 8·05 p m . 65
minutes after Banni~ter bangcd do"n his
ga,cl to stan tht' pron-ed1ngs
Bannister smashed a re~:ord that he
blht'\t'd "'a~ c;.ct t" former M.l)or Bob
.MandK 1n the I 48<h "'hen he rcportC'dh
ad1oumcd a ., p m mC't'11ns at t\ '0
The nc "' ma\ or. who stncth adhere\ to
the thn·e-minuie hmll fo r rcs1dcnt~ '>peak-
ing dunng the meeting. has ins111utc.-d a 5
pm \eSS1on bl'fore the actual lOU nnl
fau·\ tar too man~ Lrtlllal nn·\J' 111 llri:>p
the trash lt'C. 11.h1 l h 1s e\pel·tt:d l\l ra1~
more lhan SJ million a 'car
ln'itead. the\ calkd Im Jn JUJll and
more studies o.f frc., and l'Jp11.1l m'l.:d~ In
nthl'r "'ord\ the\ ·11 loo~ \l\t•r the 11.hnlc
mt'Cling begins
Cit} Council members. huddling with
stafl mt'mbe~ in :r.ess1ons that arc open to
the public. nre e~pet'IW to get ans"'er\ to
their questions on agenda Items. sa' 1ng
time during the regular meeting
The ofli c1als and staff members h:n c a
fish d1nnt'r and d bc'erage together at 6
p m Jnd continue 1heir discussion\ ,.m ul
the rC'gu lar mec.-t1ng s1ans at 7 p.m
C ''' C. ounr1l meetings ha'e droned on until m11.ln1g.ht and bc\ond in f'('(ent \l"3r\
desp11C' penod1l prnm1sc~ 10 tlreal..
St"SS1on\ al 11 p m
~~kc.-d Tuc-sda~ n1gh 1 1f the ) pm prc-
m('('llng helped cApcd1tc ma\lt'rs. Ban-
nister sa1J "You're damed nght 11 did··
-BJ RflMrt Bu•u
top1t al bu dget time. a proccs' that
normalh tal..C'' place t''C" 'car
~1h a "31d T ucsda' 1hat he lulh C\J)I.'\ u'cd
h1\ Lnllt'agues 10 \\lie on h1~ mo11nn tfc
said. though . rhat he couldn't gel a ~·\1md
1<1 h1' motion fn,m h1) '>I\ un' 1dd1ni
counterparts
1lva said he remains oppo!cd to the
trash fee and believes that 11 is unfair to the
ta.\ payers who were relieved o( the ftt 1n
I 910 when the. council &P.Pf'OYCd a S
percent ta\ on rnidents' uuhry bills that
raises about S 10 million a year.
Councdman Tom M•ys s~ud, however,
that ollic1als should take no 1cti6n to
rescind the fee until Silva and Don
MacAlhstcr. who also was elect~ 10
Novt mber. could get a chance to analyzr
nttds
Mays said the cit) face-s t).pendtturcs of
S 0 m1llton '°put in new water hncs and
another SI 0 mil hon for strttt repairs.
Other loomma expenses 1ncluck flood
control. sewer hncs and pier construction.
In all. costs arc expected to total a
stau enna $200 million 1n the nut five or
S1' years. Mays said
MacAlhster. quorcd 10 campaign litcra·
turc a.s fa, onng dumptoa t.bc trash fees.
Tunday called for ··a full audit~ of .ACIClb
and fccs. "It ma)' not be prudent (to drop
1he fees) Wlthout studyin& the whok
fi nanctal picture," he said.
Mac H1stcr Mud previously that s\lt«-
mtnts an campaign mailers cla1m1na ht
oppo~ the ftts wctt made without b.tS ~nowledgc. and that he didn't 1tcctU1rily
agrtt "'Ith them
Man denies burning cross
at black family's residence
through a rur ratio a rea tx·r"C't'n
Saturday and I ut·Wa\ Damage "'"'" t'St1ma1ed at S I UO
CoetaMea
A robbfr cntC'rcd the Thnft) (,a,
·1at1on 1n the ~000 block of Nev. ptirt
Boule vard about I.? 30 a m Tu~a'
and simulated a gun in his n&htJackt't
pocket .. orden na the emptoycc 10
open the ca.sh rqtstcr After arabb1ng
mone y from the rq1stcr. tht ruspect
ordttcd the cmplO)CC to open a safe
apm I v. o l 1rck "-~ar~t'IHCJ.X.lftl~
a man ~abbcd "anon\ of \1arlbo.ro
\"lgArt'llC<. fro m their \lOrl'~ aod Oed
The ( irclc K 1n the I tim hlcx k of
~nta .\na i\\('OUC IOSf SI\ l3nons
earlier this "'cckend. ""h1lc T uc'lda'
night thn'C canons "'err u1l..en from a
t trt'lt' K 1n the .\1 00 bloc~ ol Harbor
lJoule,ard i\ 7-Elcvcn ~tore 1n the
~6(X) bloc~ of Harbor ha) rt'ponf'J
bc1n1 h11t\.\tC'l'1n lhrt"C "C'C"''
that had bttn reported i1Uured at
V1l·1ona Beach-. T'Mbiro was last tcen
at S p.m. Morty
Bant:tactoa'"•e•'Cll
Burabn smashed a window al the ~bundant Life ..\uembly of God,
I 7S I Newland L . and stok bows
and arrows valued at SI SO.
By~ Att.clate4 Prna
A WMtm1nstt'r man accu~ of
tethnt firt to a crou 1n front ofa black
family's ho me had meTCI) follo'M<i a
friend to IC'C what was happcn'lna. a
ckkruc a nomey a raucd 1 n court.
Gary A. Skillman. 24. was "• mere
byllander'· and did not pan1c1pete in
the Cf'OIS bum1na_ July 28. federal
°'put)' Pubhc °'fcn<kr Ocain Stew-
ard said Tuelday. TM tnal was to continue today.
Skillman 11 charted Wlth COC?-JPitaCY to V10late another per10n s
civil nahts, usma fOf'C'C and thrn1 ol
force to mtunidate the famil) b«au\t'
of their ra« and us1n1 fir<' 1n thr
comm1ss1on of a felony
Juron li11med lO a \lpe in which
k1llman told politt the cross was
built at hi1 hou~ and that. accompa-
nyi na the ~nd who built the cross.
be carried the 011 can carrying the
flammable hquid u~ to h&ht the
fi~.
"I ).ult folk>Md him " he Yid "I
d1dn t fttl that It wls riaht-IJUSt stood
beck and didn·t want t9 be pan of 1t,"
. ~th Ot()l«uton and defense at-
... romC\\ ha'c said the fncnd. Y.ho has
not bttn 1den11fied. cannot be
located .\I~ Tut>\da). Chnfl) Heiner
Qum>P tearf ull) rcrouotcd for thr
JUI"' ho~ \he a.,,...okl' to find tht cross
bu rmng on her front lawn.
..I 1ned not to f«l 1num1dated. But
11 affected our fa mily and 1t affected
me It made us feel not wanted." she
said.
ktllman, charaed with consptraC).
1nt1m1dat1on and violation of civil
n&Jlts of othen. faces up to 21 ycan m
pnson 1fconv1cted .
ol tM new c1v1cctnter someume over
the weekend.
• • •• A 1916 Honda &pint was .iokn
from the I 00 block of T oedl
bttweea-9 ind 10 p.m Tunda .
The robber aot S 110 and ran out ol
s1a}\t behind 1he store. but a blue
m1n1-lruck Wlth ttnted windows and
ovcn11cd whttls wa teen a few
mmutn latt'r hcad1na toward the
Costa Meu Frtcway. He was dt'-
scnbcd as ~h1te. 30 to 32 years old. 6
ftcl. I SO pound wtth medium
brown, wavy hair and a small mus-
tache • • • The tablet wert turned on a bum10
bandit when a r.to~ clerk dcadcd to
hold his blcyc~or ransont. A .YOUna man ~ponedly aettd the 7-ESevC'o
market 1 n tbt 21 block off ..an tit
Avenue, took a ducken .,_..mao out of
a r't'fnerra•ed cue-and ran out or the
store. The clerk Nnnh• after the
Suipect JPC)tled I ~ ~
outMdc the 11cm. poa1bly arft by the
~ .
Al I.he ckrt took the bK'Jde n.idt.
the bumlO thd ttt .. mat -)dW
1t him to mum the bike. "Rt dint
replied GI bec:)'dt ~ -mwntd IO IU• .. l9c peid for the bMl. Al
tM dnt mlled pQllt't, ·•be 14111*'
dfttaciJll ed. • • • Thi ~o m1n has •nd
•
Lacuna Beacb
'\n innl..ctpcr at a bu\in~!t at the
30000 block of ( oast H1a,hway was
defrauded out ofpa)mtnt Tor a room.
phone callsand v1dro ta~s 'alucJ at
$244 The report was filed Monda)' • • • • i\ buf"llal') 1n the 1400 block of
Gl~nne) rt Strttt ncttcd tht th ief S5.900 tn 1cwelt) and m1sccllancou'
items. Tucsda~. • • • At 8:S6 Tuesday mom1na polict
searched unsuccnsfully for a Pthcan
• • • A Los A!."ll=Jes &axi cab d.nver
rtquened offi«n to ktq> the~ It
I !·4 7 a.m. today afttt ~ atf\
h1 cab.without J-l'~ Ill their bilt
Thieves entered a raldetKit ia tt.e
Q700 block o< httlWOOd Dnw
throu h an unlocked r-=ar wtlldow
and stoic SI SO 1n butbell ~ 1.IMI
$2S an ca.sh. . .. .
Someone entered an unlocked.,...
lit 1n the 7700 block of Taylor Ori•
and tok a rachC)o('Ofttrolled cs
valued at S600 and a coau..n.
valued at S"OO.
RB 1nan killed in craeb
..
101st Congress
I opens on a note
ofcooperatio;Q
adversary. Prestdtnt R~, for his international successes d ·•e-n-
courqin• the growth and ustcnancc
of polit1al freedom .in countries
throughout the world."
W ASHJNGTON (A P) -Leaderi
of the newly-convened IOlst Con-
lfeSS are speakina kindly of prcsident-
elcct Bush, and they're talkina about
deanins ~P Capitol Hill's imaac of
CQrTUpt1on -especially if they can
&~t a PIY raise, too.
The cercmon~I stan of the new
sdssion Oil Tuesday aushed with
optimism about what could be ac-
complished in the next two years.
with the Consress more firml y in
Democratic control and with a new ~ublican an the White House.
• By working together. we can help
our new president fulfill his beautiful
promise of a kinder. gentler Amen-ca." said Rep. Jam Wnght. [).. Tellas,
upon his rc-clcct1on Tuesday as
Speaker of the House.
On the other side of the Capitol. ~sh. in his role of vice ~president.
administered the oath of office to new
and re-elected senator~. Former Ma-J~_rity leader Robert C. Byrd. D-
VI(. Va .. was elected president pro
tempore of the Senate. as Geori e
Mitchelli 0-Maine. took the floor in
Byrd's o d role.
In a sign of cooperatton. Senate
leaders arc arranging to speed up
work on confirming Bush's appoint-
ments. Heanngs on Secretary of
Slate-designate James A. Baker III arc
scheduled to stan Jan. 17 -three
days before Bush becomes president
and can send 1he nom1na11on to
Congress.
Today. Bush leads a Joint session of
Congress to count the electoral votes
that wall make him president on Jan.
20.
Wnght pledged "the earnest and
unstinting cooperation of the leader-
ship of this House" 1n helping Bush
with his foreign pohcy goals. and the
speaker even thanked his outgoing
The speaker listed the federal
buciiet and trade deficits and a
mynad of social needs as rcquirina
bipartisan cooperation.
And he announced that he and
Republican leader Bob Michel. R-111 .•
will soon appoint a b1panisan panel
to review the House's ethics code.
Wright himselffs at the center of an
ethics storm 1n the C'onvess. The
House ethics committee 1s anvesugat-
ing allegations that Wright misused
"bis office for personal gam. and that
he revealed government secrets.
Four House incumt:ents were de·
feated in the last election after
questions were raised about their
personal or campaign finances. Reps.
Harold Ford, [)..Tenn .. and Robcn
Garcia, O..N .Y .• both re-elected, cur·
rcntly are under indictment on cnm1-
nal charges.
Concurrent with the ethics con·
troversy is a new propoul to give
lawmakers a pay raise of up to 50
percent, and the two issues ha ve
become intertwined.
A presidential advisory board has
recommended increasing pa) for
awmakers from the current $89,.500
to S 135,000, but ll said at the same
time House and Senate members
should be banned from acccp11n1 fees
for their spc«hcs. Cri11cs contend
that allowing members to pocket up
to $2.000 for their speeches -often
to lobbying groups -reinforces The
public's low opinion of Cap11ol Hill
ethics. Reagan is expected to pro po~ soon
a pay raise smaller than the com-
m1ss1on recommended.
C. EYerett Koop
Doctors asked
t o help break
abuse cycle
WASHINGTON (AP) -Phys-
icians who treat women arc being enlisted in a nationwide effon to aid
battered women and help break a
generational cycle that has caught
some American families io a web of
violence.
The American Colleac of Obstetri-
cians and Gynecologists is sending
information to its 28,000 members' to
heighten their awareness of the prob-
lem of domestic violence and better
enable.them to heir.abused women. Su~n Genera C. Everett Koop,
who Joined the aroup for its an-
nouncement of the campajgn Tues.-
c:by, said stopping violence a_pinst
women is a mljor pan of the effort to
end family viorence, a cycle that often
beg:Jns when someone is the victim of
abu~ and then grows up to become
an abuser. ~It's Qbvious that if you're going to
break that chain ... you've got to start
W1th child abuse." Koop said.
Payments for ins_ide information
on Navy s ystems contract alleged
NEW YORK (AP)-Two consult-
ants made penod1c S 1,000 payments
to a Navy official 10 help Hazel11ne
Corp. get 1ns1dc 1nformat1on to
compete for a mult1m1lhon-dollar
Navy contract. coun papers allege
The documen1s -a warrant to
search Hazehane's offices in ureen·
lawn and an affidavit supponing the
warrant rcq·uest -were unscaled
Tuesday an U.S. District Coun.
According to the papers, consultant
Wilham Parkin was hired by Hazel·
tine in 1986 to help the company win
a S 15. 9 mil hon Navy contract. called
U PM-150. to build a battlefield air-
traffic control system
procurement spcctalist with the Naval Air Systems Command. Every
few months the consultants gave
S 1,000 to jJcrlm. the government
documents said.
"Bcrhn apparently played a s1gnifi·
ca nt role 10 the development of the
Parkin split his S 1.000-a-month . UPM-1 50 RFP (request for proposal)
payment from Hazeltine with and provided 1ns1de mformauon to
another consultant. Fred Lackner. Lackner for Hazelune's use,.. the
who contacted Stuan Bcrhn. a Navy papers said.
So Do Ir ANo GET 2 YEARS FoR 1. AND PAY Nont1NG FoR 30 DAYS.
I~ New Years. you promised to make The Rlg aerohb. 'R:>nlr« oo the most advanced machines
Push lo January. Then pUih came to sho\.t>. In existence. A Ye'M of ~ults, inscead of remorse.
~ IL'i j:uluary. Again. Don\ ~ through Doesnt that soond prtllrilsft«7
another )'t'ar of guilty promises. When you can jotn Fadli may vary 20d some restrk.i>ons
the most accomplished health dub In Amcr1Cl and apply ~ by any Holiday Spa today for a rrw
get 2 yem for llle ~or t. Aild Ml ha\' to come .-.. tow.
up with a nlcketror '°days. Q U-•9' .-.. r Cn..a LI" •• ,..,. • C
Try a year of swimming, running, rocqJetball. 111ff. llUL.UM\l Ut7\ 1 ·mALJ M UJB
Rl~A.-.1W~
LOCKERBIE, Scotland (AP) -
Plckcd into a chu~h. cluttered amo~ tombstones or teated in
overflOw halls, relath·es and town~
people ~t and prayed today for the dead of bombed Flipt 103 as a
minister uraed them to tum their
thouaht• away from venaeaft(e.
Lockcrbic. the town where mosLo(
the Pan Am Boeina 747 crashed af\er
beina blown a1>9n by_a bomb, came to
1 standstill for the 40-minute servu:e
for the 2S9 people killed aboatd the
plane and the 11 residents who died
on the around.
Prime M 1nuter Maraaret
ThatchCT, in black coat and hat, and
her husband Denis joined the other
mourners. who packed into
Dryfcsdalc Parish Chu~h. clustered
amona nearby tombstones or sat 1n
crow<fed hallways.
The local people, dianitancs. rela-
tives and Pan Am* staff members
Oowo in by the airline for the se~ice
sana hymns and prayed.
Aftenwatd. the 6l-year-old prime
minister. who vili1Cd the crash lite
the morn•~ after the disasttr. met
privately with the relatives in a
1ehool.
lnvcs1~\0rs have concluded a
bomb blew up the plane. and suspi·
cions have focuted on Mi~ E.utcm
terronsu promptint Thaichcr to
advise the United States . pubhcly
apinst "eye for an eye" ttt.aliation.
The R1pt Rev. James Whyte,
moderator of the Church of Scotland,
echoed that advice.
"Justice, yes. Retaliation, no," he
told the oonarcaation from lhe chu~h's mart>le pulpit
"We may be &empted, indeed ursed
by some. to flex our muscles 1n
response. to show that we arc men:·
Whyte said.
"To show that we arc what? To
show that we arc prepared to let more
young and more innocent die, to let
Troop,withdrawal depends
on Afghanistan cease-fire
By ne A1toelated Prett
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -A senior Soviet diplomat said today that
unless the fiJ}l(mJ stops in Afghanistan, the estimated 50,000 Red Army
soldiers who remain there could stay beyond the Feb. IS withdrawal deadline.
"lf a cease-fire holds and there 1s no fi&ht ing in Afghanistan, then that's a very
&ood situation for Soviet forces to fcave." Deputy Forc1an Mini'1er Yufi
Vorontsov told rcponers as he arrived in Islamabad. Afahan 1nsuracnts
hcadquanercd in Pakistan have refused to accept a cease-fire untJI the current
Moscow-backed aovernmcnt in Kabul steps down.
Anti-black violence •p.read• ln Cbln•
BEU ING -Chinese students in a central city beat a Sn Lankin student,
threw rocki it Africans and put up anti-black posters as rac1al tensions spread
to a founh Chinese city, forc11ners 51id today. The violence occurred Saturday
at the Central Chana Polytcehnical Collqc in Wuhan, 680 miles south of
BciJina.. said a student from Gabon and an American teacher. In lkiJina..
meanwhile, African students boycotted classes 11 the Bcijin& L.anau-acs
lnstitu1e today, one day after Chinese demonstrated apinst an aJle,cd attack
by a black student on a Chinese woman. 0 8rothen. let us unite and fi&ht for
dignity," said a leaflet distributed by Africans at the institute. "Brack is
beaut(' In Wuhan, Chinese students put up posters saying "Black devil, go
home • on the walls of the foreign dormitory at the collcae. I
Turkey's rights record cal~ed appalllng
LONOON -Amnesty lntematronal teday condemned Turkey for Its
"appalhng human ri&hts records.'' saying 1t has received almost daily reports
since Novembero(poliucal pnsoners being tortured. The London-bi~ ri&hts
organization says 1n a report released today that the Turkish 1ovemmen1 has
begun a pubhc relations campaign to improve it.s image abroad. but has 1.11ken
no substantial steps to end the tonunng of political detainees. Amnesty 511d
250.000 poht1cal pnsoners haYe been detained in Turkey this decade. and
"almost all of them were tortured " Thousands wctt impnsoned for non-
violent political or reh11ous act1vitit"S. 60:000wcreconv1ctcd after unf11r tra1ICJ
more than 700 death sentences were imposed and at least 200 pnsoners died m
custodl· many alleged to be the result of torture. the organ1u11on said
..
more ~ *orkus sabot 1n m0tt ~ to find the anlly .Pf'OOt not
of our v1rihty, but ofourinhurilantty.
0 That is what recahation mtans. I
for one. wdl have none of it, and i
hope you will ,not either.••
The simple, dianifitd ~rvlOC was
ttlevalcd hve to the nauon, and to
mourners pthercd in • local cinema.
community hall and church.
Ma_ny Pfeferttd to stand in t'1c
chilly ra1n amona the old pn1tc
tombstones outs16c the cburtll. hud-
dled under umbrellas. dmlCd in
windbreakers and cloth cal)l.
The hahts of the au.stere, .Presby-
terian church shon~ briahtly J,.Dto. the
ptheringaftemoon aJoom.J.. and ~P &razed 1n a field nearby. 1 ne Union Jack ~It ha.lf..staff.
Inside the 91-ycar~ld sandstone
church, a man cradled his wife's bead
as theY.11naa hymn. and a baby slept
on its father's shoulder.
United States
to host rights
con.f erence
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Reaaan hasdCCl&d to accept the
Soviet Union's proposal for hostma
an international con~rence on
human ri&hts an 1991. sources said.
U.S. agreement to panicipate in the confe~n~ siJn1ls American suppon
(or Soviet leader Mikh~il S.
Gorbachcv's internal reforms and
sets the stage for the openina of new
East-West neaotiations on cuttin&
troops and arms 1~ Euro~. .
The human nabts conference and \
the European arms negotiations are
hnked. and Secretary of State Georae
P. Shulu has recommended they
proceed based on Soviet advances in
human riaJ\ts, a U.S. official told The
Associated Press on Tue$day.
President Reagan on vacation in
Califomi1,dcc1ded Tuesday to accept
Shulu's advice. taid another official.
who also spoke on condition he not be
1denufied.
Shultz on Sunday 1s to meet Wlth
Soviet Fore1sn Min1Ster Eduard A.
Shevardnadze 1n Paris, where they
wt II be attend1n1 a conf ere nee of more
than 100 natJons on wa}s lo halt the
proliferation of chemical weapons.
Evidently, Reagan has seen enough
proa;rcn an the Soviet record to close
the confertnce 1n V1cnna and move
on .
..
U.S. JETS DOWN 2 LIBYAN FIGHTERS •••
Prom A l .
forces that are thought hostile.
The commander of the F-14 patrol
made the dcc1s1on to fire at the
Libyan aircraft "an scrr-defense." and
aP,P.&rcntly shot down both planes.
said Carlucci. The four crewmen of
the two planes were being flown to a
U.S. base at Naples, Italy. fordebncf-
Chemic8:1_ weapons in
at least lOcountries
inf: he said. STOCKHOLM. Sweden (AP) -Tbcsc were Fran~ lraQli-Nonh 'At the time of the mcide.m. both At least 10 countnes arc reliably Korea, Syna. the United St.ates, the
the ship and 1tsa1rcraft were conduct-rcpaned to have chemical weapons. Sovlct Uruon. Afgh.an1stan, Iran and
ina tra1n1n1 operations .. between the and several have unleashed them in Vietnam. ·
Greek 11land of Crete and Libya, he recent wars. s~edtJh rcsearc' ers say Sincic. the book's pubhcat1on. the said. "Tbc 11rcraft earner was 127 d u -s ha ..... • ·b f miles nonh of Tobruk. ubya" and But an accurate an cerutan oou.nt ntloi;u talt1 • accu~ ""' >• o the F-l4t"were provadmaoombauir of c.ountnC1 pouscss1n1 chemical bav1n& a weapon1-produdn&
petrol so miles south of the Kennedy. weapons 1s clouded by d1 anfotma· capabdity li~ya denies 1t.
which is some 7o males nonh of the uon and vested intemll. said the Lundin said the U.S. aUcpuon Stockholm lntema11onal Peace Re--about l.Jbya's capablhty wu u re-northeast l.Jbyan coast." he llJd search ln1titute. lJablc u those on which the pn:vious Carlucet said the F-14s descended 38 -'
from 1 S,000 to 4.ooo fttt and at-At one umc or another, coun-count'" nu)( n.a110ns was betcd. tnes were ~poncd to have chemical IPRI said other countries have iempced five aepcrate evasive man-weapons, but lht repons often were been named in leis ~lable reporu; A
euvcn. "They chanaed speeds. unreliable or bard to asaeu. SIPRI pu,,,_,ed 1983 US. 1ntdl~ aJutude and d1rect1on."ne said. d · i I 988 ............ ..:-b d • -· ~ 1 z·:~ "The Libyan 1Jrcraft continued to sa1 1n ll ycatuuua.. wn~ wu ocumcnc e1ked to the &H1ttsb publilbed in Aqust. Bro.dcastina C.Orp. added the names close 1n • hostaJe manner," he said. • "It's bard ao put a Gaun: on ht of Bunm. China, Ell'pt. Etbiop.a.
"Each time, the LJbyan 11rcra1\ SIPRI raarcheT Johan Lundin 111cf luacl. Libya and Taiwan as S>OJ-
SO\laht to put their nose on ouc in an interv1ew today .. A ~-N cioun· 1CS10rs. •
aircraft. They abo acceltrattd. so the tries have declared they have t..Jt year, lr9n and Iraq wtre
hg1t1le intent JtCmt lO be fa,..___1bemte1 weapons. then u they-~10 ha~"tC'JUCf -
clear," he said. intend to have them, and there arc a Combetants 1n Anaola. Moumbtquc
.. A ta bout 14 miles. the U.S. scttion lot ofal~tions ap1nst other coun· and Afi-h•n1111n alto m• un· leader decided that his aircpf\ was in ,._ r .._ .. -al •eo-rdv and he could wait no lon~er. tnes. We ve no m1urma11on o our suwtantlaled •11on1 that they
t -~. own." we~ vacums of chemac:al warfare. One M10-23 was shot down wit • SIPRlju private rctcarch 1n1t1tute Lundin uid. !:~.md:!~· r!" .~d~WI~~ perually funded by thcT Swedish In 1917.Llb)awauccusedo(usina ., to"tm~nl It wu aublished to let.bal pt an Chad and Vactnam was missile 1t s1x miles. he said. monitor the wot1d arms uadc and cr.--ot with poe-i~ Wll1er ~ Afterwards. he said. "two para-· d' ,_,.,... Ca bod-r: s chutes were 1: ... ted and a liibyain developments 1n is1rmament, plan '" m aa a tht I I
IW' mamly thro-" pubhshcd repom. yUrt>ook taMt chnnicaJ weapons tearcb and rncuc helicopter waa later Sf PRI taad" an the 1981 ~ ~ UICd in the Iran-I ...... war. dctec1ed headed (or tht area.•• It WU ..._ U S ,_ ·-OOt dear whether the Libyan NJOU that mpOnSIU'fll; • · lftd other The pttVIOVI ,._,, dMl• of w.rvived. ,.... aovcmmcnt officials .,eakiat Oft tbc chcmieaJ .., were railed llaiMt
The conrro.ntation occurrid about fe<lord lisced njnc countna u havint Ethiopia. Iraq, Iran. tbc , Soviet
noon local ti~ or 2 a.m. PST. chemical weapons or rn~Jftl IO Union, Vtetnam, Ariliola; <lied.
The two M1v·2ls were ..,oned tW acquirclbcm. LlbY91DdN~.StPIU ·~.
radar IWna off' from the Al lwnbiah
airfidd 1n e111nn uwa. ctimb&.111 '° ~ .. '::.Sn:'he~:=:,u~':!
I S.000 ftct. officiaJI mct ..
Ofl\cial1 laid lberc were no 1ndaca-
lJoft1 that the Ubyans ftreid bdOtt thr
two American Jell clowned &Mm. Sen. Sim Nunn, chairmu of thie Sena1e AniMid Services Committee., ... ••Jndlmdonl ~ ..... Liby8
violiled wMI WI call lM nalls Of ~~·~-::.-= 10 A....a.plillet..Tlle "*' ua a • 11• ,.,..it •~ dlfew ta..._ dfta ••••ca"' , .. u.., ... circwm••Ne&. ... ClelitJ }t ... .,.. ........ ... ....... _. ............. 0.0.:.
iald Adas• awl• ittlieW WOIT. t=~ .
l:iViii
I
J
) A human touch
with Alzheimer's
UCI studies how
. massage affects ·
Victims' pehavtor
87VDAllDWA
........ Oad JI f I
\
• 11 ii the fdurth ladiQI cause of
death ia 'adult~ A&c:U111 2.S to 3 million Americans, more than S40
bilhon is spent annualll cari• for the victims of Alzheimet' 1 Dileale, ac ..
cordi.a& lO the AlzhCimer'1 Auocia-
tJOD or<>ranae County. AJ.Deimei's Diaeue can cautt
mental confuiion, memory IOSI,
speech impairment and an overall
decreued 1n1e1Jectual functionina an its vict1r.-,s., Thouah mOll people
atfectedareover6S)'e&t10f1tc, it can
stnke adults in the 40s and SOS as well.
Wtth no cure 11 hind for a daseate
whose course usually runs several
yean. many Alzheamer's pattents are
taken ca.re of 10 nursina homes.
It 11 in thne nursina homes that Dr.
James Diet.ch believes "lack api-
propriate outlets for physical con-
taet."
Otetcb is an usinant adJUnct professor of psycha.atry it UCI and
chief psychaatnc consultant for the
UCJ Medical Center's Health
ANeUment ~m for Senfors.
"Many clinjcians believe that the
sensory deprivation resuluna from
inadequate levels ofsocaal and physi-
cal stimulation may directly con-
tribute to the behavioral problems
uh1b1ted by these patients." Dletch
SIP,
Some of those problems include
apllt!on, wa.ndenna and l.al;k of
appehte.
Oietch "te1tioa this hypothesis 1n
..
a l ~wed study tnvolvj111 lO
Abbc'imer's .. tienu II * HillbaVCft SoecW Cate Unit in Anabeim. Oietcb beticvn that ~be ~ may alleviate behavioural problems IUCb u phy.al violeRce,
wilhdraMI, auicty ud depretlioe.
Fifteea Alzbeimer'• .. lien .. -bei•livn boW'-loal m1us1u tine times weekly, while 15 patients an a control poup receive no m--ae
therapy.
Loraine Bush, a 7 .. year4d
woman from Anaheim, 11 one such
petieftL Receiv1111 a full upper-body ~ from Gloria Wamuller a
eenifaed nunina aui1tant. She
eventually fell as&eep f« a brief' nap
and then reached out to hold bancb ·Yt'1th a Visitor. _
"All _pataenll don't react t.be same way, .. W1esmuUer said ... Mrs. Bush
reacts . well. She lets me do the massqie." ·
The prnsins hands and Iona strok·
1n1 motions are sam1lar to move-
ments uted 1n Swedish rnauaae.
acrordina to Wiesmuller.
Jn order to 1mpan reluauon to the
peue11t, the ~ nune must "be
relued and full of confidence u well.
says Eliubetb SaizLH1llh1 ven·s di·
rector of nunins. .. Neptive feelinp
are transferred to the pet1ent Nunn
do reluina nerateS before aivint • massaae.
Saiz says physical contael lowet1
an•aety levels in the petients. and SI.JI
human touch may reduce the need for
chem1cal restratnts such as anti·
anxiety medications or ant1-depreu-
1nu. The pattenu enJOY the compa·
n1onsh1p as well. he says.
Thou&b the final results of the
study arc not 1n, Dletch as focu11n1 on
whether massaae may be uted to
reduce the ~liJnce on traoquilizina
medications in treatina Alzheimer's
•
............. t... ......
Gloria 1fleemaller ••=.,• Lorene Boccllhll a t tbe
RlllbaYeD Durabaa laome. .
victims, on the patients' aftinty for effectiveness of pumna a massate
pbys1cal therapy, and on the cost proaram in nurs1na homes.
Raw eas can cause
vltamlti deflclency .
IJ UVIN DOYLE
...... C•: Ql!f I
A glassofrawt~ for breakfast may be less healthy than 1 nutntion·
conscious athlete maaht upect, accord1n1 to a professor at UCI ...
"Eat1na raw qp on 1 rqular basis as one of the quickest ways to
produce a defiCtcncy of the vitamin 81ot1n," says Dr. Hamid Said,
IUOClate professor of pstrocnterolOI)' at UCI.
81oun, alto known as Vitamin H. IJ found 1n liver, yea1t. eas yolks
and v.een vqetables. V1tam1n H has not been studied e.-aensivcly, an fact,
a daily recommended allowance has yet to be established But recent
re.earcb concernma Biotin's role an nutntion has shown t'hlt defioent.es
can produce arowth retardation, dermatitus (excessively dry tkin), mental
retardation and even death in severe case accord1n1 to Sa1d.
Said's research with rats showed f.b.at a prote1n an the"' while binds
with 81ot1n and prevents absorption dunna the d11C5t100 process
However, the cook1naprocnsdeact1vates this protein. allowinaadeqiAatc ~bsorpuon.. .
Saad discovered that onlr a certain poruon of the small 1ntestJne was
suited for maJUmum absorptJon of the vnamin. He also discovered that
two ant1-convulsant druas commonly prescribed for ep1lept1cs were found
to block the absorption of Biotin.
Said concluded from his research that some.people are more prone to ..
81otan defic1enc1es.
Sa1d's research has also turned up evidence that absorpuon of Biotm
1s a funct ion of 1 aeneticaJly controlled mechanism. ra1sin1 the pouabllity
of a 81oun defiC1ency being cau5ed by a senetJC defect.
"Mqadosesof81ottn arc very harmful to the body's natural ability to
absorb it. Such supplem~nts result in a 'down-grade' effect, by which the
body's natural ability to absorb 81ohn will be retarded for an
mdeternunate amount of ume," Said reponcd
Dlabetlcs needed for study
lndlVlduaJs W1th d11betesare needed to participate in a national study
to evaluate the ctfecti\ltncss of two types of msuhn treatment
Volunteers who are accepted wall receive cxpen medical treatment
ford1abetc~related conditions from senior phys1c1ans at the University of '
California at San D1eao for up to six years, said Gail Lorenzi. program
director. .
Volunt~rs must be insulin dependent a.nd ha"c had diabetes for less
than five years Part1c1pants will be monitored for five years. frequently by
phone and l>(nod1cally by euminauon at the UC San Diego locauon.
Loreo21 said
Pr9speetave "olunt~rs may call (800) S22-3228.
Senior& whojog find increased Vigor and camaraderie
. .. -......-·~-· .
. -
By EDDIE LOPEZ
~--~
, :There.may be some seniors whQare
S.tasfied to spend their laves 10 a
recliner an front ofa TV tel. cfutch1t11
a remote control. but that's not_good
cnouah for Monroe and Elaine Clark1 Jim and Varainaa Manin and Lee ana
Dorothy Thomas. whose hvcs arc on
fast-forward.
They ar~ swea1-su1tcd proof that
JoSJlnacan be physically and psycho.
l0&1cany ~nefic11TTor some
JOQJnJ ca.nno1. of cot.1rsc, be rec-
ommended for all seniors but 1hc
Clark • Martins and Thomases arc
v1s1bly healthy and happy
Why do they work so hard a1
kecpana fit? Their reasons vary.
Lee Thomas. 66. of Fresno stancd
JoUlnl with has wife Dorothy. 64.
about 10 years aao. He wanted to Jo~
we1&ht and told her tha1 J<>a&tnl would keep her fortv<1r young. But
sh~ docs u. she Yid. to KILC\IC
tension.
Jim Manin of Frc no. 68. has been
JOJIJna with his wife. V1r1m1a, 67. for
15 years. He does 1t to rclu -the
Sh~r pleasure lhat It llVeS ham ht
JC>p to prevent depression and to
build calcium to avoid osttoporom
(bone bnllJencu)
New belJavlors will 'BabyGame'
melt away 20 pounds_ ::•c!~':i~ow
How refreshin11 A brand new >ear, p
a clean slatt. Unlike dop and cats Mil.WAUKE E (AP) -A ntw
who are conttnt to lt\le their h\CS. "*C pmc-how v1dto for low-income
Monr~ Oark. 62. and has wire
Elaioc, 62. hve in Oranae Cove and
have only been JoUJng t<>aether for
five years. Mo~tvtr, they ve 1lYtd
sJuers and back packers Ht J<?P, to
keep fit for other .. leg spons. • She
hkes the Joaina camaradenc
Jim Manin and Monroe Clark
have suffered hean attacks In 1981 .
two yea rs af\er his htan attack.
Martin. his W1fe and a son (Larry) ran
as "bandits" (unoffic1all)) 1n the
Boston Mara~hon -
TM Manans and Thomases arc
retired. Monroe Clark 1s an oranse
farmer and Elaine Cl.ark teaches ac-an
elementary school.
The Clarks ha"e skied tn Eurol>(
and NC9i Zealand. backpacked tht
180-mile Tahoe-to.Yosemite Trail
and the 22(}.male Muir Trail (Yo.
scm 1te Valley to Mount Whitney) and
even ndden motof'C)clts to Alaska
.. We've done 1 lot of things t~Lher all of our hves,·· Elaine Clark
said. "and I suess that's because WC
each really enJOY do1na so many of the
same thmas We'tt not reallyJood a1
JOl&Jna but we hana an there. '
··1t's ccnainly been a "ery health>
way to hve." Monroe Clark said .. It's
important to both of us to stay acu'e
llld healthy ··
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERr llC. .... , ..... ""'" ..... 1t2Z ......... cestA ~SU-115'
Re.olutlon•
cansttek human1wanttom1kcachan1e.so~c JULl•N mothers "'111 try 10 make v1c~n make Ntw Yan rnolutioni ,. w1nncrs b> teach in& -+-t .... ~
Howevtr, most re'°lu1tons are Wit pro':~~ care ror theu newborn,. t 1scar l>j fl'tbtuaryt1 (Jlll£.R rdt tn say W.IUl~au.1111a .l..-U:M:~~;_• by March, usuaJJy bccauie a 'poaf' The 15'-manute video. enutltd l hn,.t~ 1 w 1" f''<p;~ 10 lhc-~-• ~ ot beai o the G .• II <'ni~lly m hi"' h.11hmnm of minors was ·~"'~· n use ''The Baby ame, w1 use a pme-TQ my hot'ror 1 cu~n~t>rf-<1 wh,.1 1111"1 bchavion necnsary to accomplish show for~t to convey 1nformat1on lxll~H'·d lo"",, minor poc.oc h w•~ ..
the aoaJ.s , For 1nstantt1 1hoec that calonn, an~A:t replace fat calorics about infant nutnuon and are Ifs J>O( gut my "'"nc11'r """" ... -roawn" raof\lcto"IOR20pounos .. orto .. ,et w11.bcatbob. ic~ aunedatpcoplc,.hoaretumcdofl"by A~ "tlh tnAn~ al \w....Lbaic. i n&o wpc-s1mj)Jy create ihon-livtd 2. To take a brisk walk lO minutes 1 1nrormation.al ~ntat1ons 'o~td ,,, 'llm m> ,,., 1'1 net lrtn(' m, del · ti L Goa .,........ am" bul I will a• lu<lll\ do It I~· UJM>n , da)" IVC da)t • Wtt~ Is take "We're u •nJ the Jtrltt'I)' that. j( It C'aUK I Wiii bt-u!Mnl mN11oal 1ni•I('
1)111 )UT. do It differently. Ma.kc lime. and you need l'h bouts a week. can be tntcruini!'\lt it wtO be "'Itch· thpnn ''· A11t•n•n c.u~ Im·
The fim lime Jim and Vif'llnta
Min1n went J08'JDI arou.nd thetr block there weren't many people
do1n.1. at. .1bc said, and a Cl.l,Q_P.lJ sheriffs deputy a kcd them wfiit l"lrC)
Yrcre doana runnina in tbc st.rcet so
early 10 the momma.
As the)' built up their endu.rance.
the Mamns increased their workouts
from a couple of umes around the
block to fi ve males and then marathon dutan~ (26-plus miles)
Tbe family has competc<l 1n SS
marathon1. some O\.erscas, and has
won more than 200 medals. plaqun
and ttophJCS
"It's not alJ nJht for C\Cf) ~nior to
Joi." J1171 Marun said "If )ou'rt
QVCrwetght, ).OU're &OU\I 10 have
trouble And 1r )OU stan n.innma nan1
ofT. well. at 60. lhat's nd1culous You
must Sllt1 out b)' walk1ns."
.. be. couldn't run 100 rardi when
sl\e fim stancd," he said.• and it took
her tht better part of i year, lo work
her way up to a mile. be may have
started ountow but sheameorrli.kc.
user ..
. The Thomucs don't fool around
when 1t comes tOJ<>utOJ. They have
competed ~n IOK races and m&ra·
thons, and have have a houseful of
trophies.
"Joasn11s far from routine for us,"
she said. "We find at very relax ma and
it makes for a bluer~. We nin at the same tame but at our own
pccds. But C\Cry tame he ~ me.
he ~ts me on the rear ..
· It's brouaht us closer t<>stther, ••
Ltt Thomes satd. "You can't be
happy af )'ou'rt not healthy. We feel,
byd~ina these th1nas tosrthtt, that~
arc etemal -that 1t will ao on forner." The Maruns haH climbed Mount
Whitney twtct and ha\e ~n a lot of ,..,,,,,,,,.........== iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii tcmtory in.their RV frdoesn't ma11tr
where they stop forthe n1Jht. she said.
the first thma they do the ne~t
morning u to act outandJoa tos« the
countt) 1de.
Let Thomas had shed SS pound
and had worked his wa)' up to runnmJ
thrtt miles • da) before rus -.rife
staned JOl&Jn& with him
. ArnericanllecJrt
AllOCkJtlon
~ FGHTlt'G Fa? o.nl.JfE
LET US CARE FOR YOUR PARENTS
f Our untqut' c·ampu~ ,.t1ln1t pro' ldt""• w1dt ra~o( eentor llV1ng
acrvt~ .
• UTIR.EMENT Our lndt"Pf'Odt"nt ~nl<>ra cnjOy
-Dl'fu~ \\It • Pr\' alt" and ~ml ·pr1vatt" tudloe
Trnn'lportallon to 'lhopp1nl( doctont and rttttatlon
.l4 houro;N11rtt\·and'ltaff
Walk tn "tore'I n--.1.mr3nt"l and tht'altt
•ASSISTED LIVlNG "'hen Ju ta llttl<' ht" Ip can 1TU1k<' all lh<"
d~
\1r<ll .111o n tnc1 bal hln't .. 1,1c1..ntt"
~~.i-.ai~ doc 10.r .. appn101 mcnts and rroalcr----~~• r ---f
prt"'-r rt pt ton.,
~upt-n. l11lon 11111 frlttndh rf'mlndt'MI for J)t"nt0nal
• Ot"f'o 1 ..
N~httlmt· t;Hft-1\ ro11nr1"' m:idr b\ ta fr
• lNTERMEDlA TE CARE F"or t hr moreJragllt"
would bf'nt'lll from hi en'>(' n 11r't( o~atkm and suf)('rvl lon. ·
~ nobUtl ~~eutJObcnhas v~olkm~1shV• 3 To Cll •OPla for •JI snacks. ed. therefore lhc infonnauon Wlll att f'r)' 00 Subhmln&ll I wlltch•n t'
lvo-,I ... -• -.. .,. FofJC{ ca~ Mn.. peanuts. potato •"'ros~" said Denni Dannek, man-m •lllt~ .c-1rnt1fl<" lly IM1~.ic1 • UHABlLITATION AND SIULLSD l'fUR81NO .,.. h ......... fn"-a•Aeat ......._~Eat as -oc ttlylnl( on tht t•bltd "wlll ~esolvai bcha\liOB II . Jtnctl\i c apt UIU -nu a.,.,..... •itr 0 tckv111on services It Marqu~· powt'r •. I wlll c-omft>rt11 bly and •IUlo tvk(' Ol'C'df'd by lhr pc'r<wln N"('()V('rfnf{ from flln(' . l"tef'IVll'\g
.... ~:--.... VIOi' mu•• --orne • many apples u you want, 40 or so if te Un1\lcrs1ty nuattr .ill)' ~t'lc-Omf' !!!lt'ndt'rl1ln( tht-rapv. or rc-qulr1n~ l<>nll·,lt'rm nut"9ln1t cart> ~·--,.. '"" ~' oecc:~, but applet l.tt yoW° tneek. food llnd 804y With my CXC'f'flW .._I'..-• hlbit,1fldeoodhabitsa~11d1ft"icult 4.Toatoaunea.lforbreakfas1five Theuni\cn1t)1s creaunathe"1dc<> J>l"OW8m tnthu ,u ally And m) 1fe1U1W~fnalfHr'tnf~Bff,._Qualftfof to....-11 a.I hlbitt att to break. umn • week. Add epplea, raa .. ns, ll the request of lhe Hunacr Ta k appnt 1 wall bt: "~'to malntaln lervtce ... Cwdf9COMrou.r.wfal •Luw• ht pit an ac:t0mpliihod by habit. bananas, annamon Of other pr· Force of M1IVraukcc's Infant Nutn· tf\lia ·a.talus without mtt'nnltltnt . r-,_,.
.... me IDOft babits }OU poove lO nitba for vlriety. Oatmeal lS low tn uon Projttt ·.;:~" t youl W11nt IC)_,,., II
ICCIOMplW. a ,-1. the pater the fat. hiab in fiber. and wall lteep you The vidtO features• host and three k'nufic-elh thl' 11~t Your tttt HUNTINGTON llUlfTINOTOll
cltuct of makant al For •M&a""· 1f ruftn1na most of the tjme •1thout conte cants affiliated with a comedy wtll bt' lftll('h.11 u )'OU Senior Residence a; Ba•c• eo...i 11 a1 al
you ""' to IOK 20 poundt. make lunch. . troupe~Darmek said. The mock.same 18851 Fl rtda A 18811 FIGdda A
U.ap.bu1ma.UyourNcwYe1t's These are bchlv1on that 1f f°'· show ctsthreenewmothcn1na •111·1.1 ~A!!.·',.M1. 0 ve a..::1:7.•••= f'llOMIOM: lowed will mdt 20 pounds in four or hospttal 101 told they ~ere xattted ..... Huntington Beach
I. To avoid *Mt)' f'oOcb. Fcqn tbe five mondas. ucont tantsandasltedqucstionson C..U lllliil, A .. 1-lftt (714)9'2-T788 {714) 7-a&la
oei.-.on M bav with rcch•c1119 Qoocl luck. cb1ad care. ~============~========================:. ...... .. ··--· Termites Are Now Swarming
lklGI Flylog Around Your Home?
F&1AS? ANTS? ·
FREE ESTIMATES
SAVI Ill
With :rhla
D
•
7'-t*'1r,. ~,.,. s.~,. "~.~ -
~~9:00 ... ~ A.tt-4:'8/).,.......
M Orange co.at OAtLY PILOT/ Wtdnelday, January ... 19"
Welfare system keeps
young mother dependent
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am sure you won•t think this aeuer is import-
ant enouah to P-rint, bu1 1 need to
unburden myself, so here goes:
Seven yearsaao I beQmea national
statistic. Actually, it bappciled the
day I was born into a low-income famil~. 1 pve birth to a son when I
was l 8. The baby's father walked out on me and 1 haven't seen him since.
I had to 10 to a public assistance
agency for help. I hate the fact that I'm
still on welfare, but that's the way it is
and 1 will probably be on welfare
forever the WllY-this lo11sy $)'Stem works. ··
I have tried my darndest to make a
better life for my son and myself, but
it's hopeless. J was a good student and
wanted to go to college, but was told
that I could attend only one particular
collcee in my county and take only
certalll courses such as food service
and home health aid. I said, "No
thanks."
Determined to find a way to pay for
my education and get a degree in
something thal would lead to a good-
paying job, I beaan to look through
college catalogues. I decided to aim
for a career in human services and
help other rrcgnant and disadvan-
taged teens. applied for financial aid
and a loan.
Welfare cut me off and stopped
giving me benefits because they
Tllanday, Ju. S
By Syuey Omarr
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Search continues. but you know in
which direction to go, ~nse of
purpose also is restored. Desire for
perfection exists, spiri~ual qualities
surge to forefront. Travel plans could
be delayed.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Money is on the line, claims arc
made, you face challenge. Check
insurance policies, be aware of last-
minute appointments. Relationship
is stronj but there r~ "outside opposi-
tion." Capricorn plays role.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Sccnalio1llghhghts partnership. pub-
licity, legal documen1s1 marital
status. What previously fatted can be
rectified. you'll "right the ship."
Spotlight on travel. idealism. com-
.munication, romance.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): You
get proverbial "second chance."
Study Gemini messaie for val uable
:tint. Employment picture bnghter
than orig.mally ant1c1pated. CJSre of
pets also commands attention. Leo
ERMA BoMBECK
--=--__...
...
LAID£1S
considered a student loan a form of
income. They said 1 was makina too much money to be on public as-
sistance. So I gave back the loan and
didn't 10 to school.
Then I got a part-time job ($30 a
week) to try to save money for tuition.
Again welfare slashed ·my benefits. I
had been receiving S 100 a month in
food stamps and $8 in cash. They cut
me down to $SO a month in food
stamps and $3.50 in cash. I didn•t
have enough money to feed my son let
alone the two of us.
Since then I have had other
problems with the welfare office, but I
do as I'm told no)" and try not to
make anybody mad at me or they
might cut me off alt~~ther.
Row are people hke me supposed
to better ourselves if we get kicked in
tbe teeth every ti me we take one step
forward? Now J know why so many
young girls on public assistance keep
having more children. The more kids
you bave,Jhe better the chance of
figures prominently.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emotions
dominate, tendency 1s to act first and
analyze later. Member of opposite
sex, apparently "flight y," can actually
be valuable aJly. Creative projecl
l>asses rigid test. You're on the way.
VIRGO (Aug.. 23.$cpt. 22): Exam-
ine various aspects on any deal
relatinJ to home\ property. real estate. An .. air bubble' could be involved.
A void'something "too big. too soon."
Current negotijlt1ons come to abrupt
end.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Curiosi-
ty plays major role -question
previously evaded will be answered.
It may be" necessary fo renovate.
remodel, revise, perhaps 10 relocate.
Relative plans to vistt -in surpnsc
fashion.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Plen-
ty of action. payments and collections
involved, you'll get money previous-
ly withheld. Scenario accents travel.
variety. flirtation, mental $l1mu-
lat1on. Gain indicated throuih wnt-
ten word.
SAGl'M' ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 )'
.
.
surviving the welfare roller eo1ster.
This system perpetuates free·
IOldin&.. Ann. People who want to ae&
off welfare arc penalized and those
who want to stay on are rcwirded. To
eut it bluntlyllhe sy1tcm stinks. -
ON THE 00 E IN ALBANY
' Dear .Aauy: I w..W Mt "8al"ff
wldl a w..-4 Y" laave •rit1ft. 'be
IJl&eal 4Mt t.Meff tlll i.ttiadve u4
reward ladHsa. ,!:lw a. 1ove111-ment waat .. re1 ? • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: J work in
a male-dominated office. Un-
fortunately the men and I must sharr
one bathroom.
The men arc const.antlf lea vi ng the
toilet seat up. One day decided to
writcanoteandleaveiton the back of
the toilet. It read: ''Guys, would you--
please remember to leave ihe toilet
scat down when you arc finished?"
They replied with a note that read.
"Sure! And would you please re-
member to leave the seat up when you are finished."
Ann tell us which 1s proper -to ~~~e~tup~~w~l~llpou ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~j~~~~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~ your reply on the office buJletin .. Iii
board. - D.W. IN SANTA CRUZ, ~~~~~:;:::~~~t:=~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~=::j CALIF. ~
Dur Susa; Tiit toilet aeat w•e•
DOt la ate 1Mtilcl be 19 lb 00111111
potllioa. DoWll. A well-bred 1e.t1~
mes bows dlla u4 Deed Dot be
remlacled.
family member acquiesces to
financial arrangement. Moon in your
sign hlghlighU pcrsonalny, charisma.
sex appeal, Circumstances will tum in
yQur favor. Wear your cot~rs: purple
and pink. .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Attention centers around hospitals.
institutions. charitable prOJ«ls. I nd1·
v1dual'close to you may be tempor-
anly confined. News will be better
than might ha ve bttn anticipated.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 18):
You're a wi nner. Current cycle
emphasizes fulfillment of desires.
outstanding performance. Significant
gains relate to business, career.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). lnd1-
v1dual who rtays important role 1n
your hfe wil assen, "Mission com-
pleted." Focus on commun1cauon,
travel, romance. Ho'nzons expand,
money "flows .. your way.
lF JAN. S IS YOUR BIRTHDAY
you have "wnter's s1&naturc." You
are capable of cxprcss1'!8 ideas,
concepts m d)nam1c, mfonnat1vc
manner. You are f11rtat1ous, crcattvc,
restless. fond of travel.
Complete te .. vl1lon Hating• In Sundtlr'• TV Piiot
l_l.M~--~o vo _ __
Lovers don 't get too many
germ sf rom a lingering kiss
It's not all that easy to catch cold
from loss1ng. In lab tests. mfec1ed
volunteers kissed healthy volunteers
each for 60 to 90 sccqnds. Only 8.
percent of the healthy volunteers
caught colds
H1stonans agree John '°t:)umcy
Adams wa one of our more intellec-
tual presidents They d1sqrec over
why he insisted on wC4lnng nothing
but a bathing cap and goggles when he
swam in the muddy Potomac. He did
that often.
li1dn't early Apicncan Indians be-
lieve that?
A. Doubt 1\. But 1f they d1dn t.
thought Henry Wadswonh Long-
fellow. they should'vc believed it So
1n his pQCtmng. he had No1C:om1s
exphun the fanciful nouon to
Hiawatha.
Q. What's th.11 clan 1n India that
kills all m daughters?
matins.
About 6 percent of the U 5
populauon never, that'~ never.
watehes TV, it's said
'1n sports. girls are better losers than
boys. So conten~s a 1iiet0ng coacl\ Ir
you buy that. what's your theory as to
why' No bag mystery, says me coach
They JUSt don't care as much.
Losing f;l.nd still.looking Hasn't rained on Mar~ 1n three
m1Jhon years.
You know wt)at 1t means when a
dolphin swims upside down: don't
you? It's m love. That's part of the
dolph1n·s courtma ntual
A. The S1kh·s Kun Mar. The name
means "dauahtcr destroye,.,." Sons
many d .. u&hten of lower-rank1na
fam1hes. Curiou ly, Lhcsc ra1scdowf)
money as best they can to marry their
daughters to Kun Mar sons. QUuc an
honor.
Wa~p venom contains a scent. A
pheromone. When other wasps detect
1t, they head toward 1t m great haste
W1th fcToc1ty. 1t•s a summon Like
"Help'" This 1s another reason why
1t'S>not a &ood tdea to squash a wasp.
grea t.takesalotof style
My mother 1s known for her
profound bits of w1sdom that have
gotten me throuJh life. "If ypu don•t
stop cryinf,. I'll give you something to
cry about.' "ff you cut off your finger
with that knife, no one is going to put
it back on for you." "Go to your room
this instant. Don't you dare tum your
back on me while I m talking to you."
But her big message was. "Always
be honest and tell the truth."
I bought that until one day in the
ninth gi:ade when she set me down
and said. "There is a right way and a
wrong way to lose. I know that you and Marjorie Stewart are up for the
ninth grade citizenship award. I'm
not saying you·re goinJ lo lose. but
JUSt suppose you do. How will you
handle ur --rn riD h""e-r ..... n .... o~sc-off he1 face. then-
run to the toilets and lock myself
behind a door," I said.
Mother winced. "You will do
: 8R IDGf
'
By CHARLES GOREN
Hd OMAR SHARIF
Neither vulnerable. East deals.
NORTH
.• AJ,54
Q AQ
0 VoW
•AIRQ43l
WEST !AST
• Vold • K lt 9 7
<::> J lt • 7 ' 3 Q t l
0 IC Q 9 6 l 0 J 10 7
• • 9 5 • J tt 7 6
nothing of the kind. You Wlllsm·11e
and lead the applause, go over to her
and say. 'Conaratulations, MaiJone.
You deserve to win.' ..
After that, I never believed a word
of what my mother said.
Richard M. Nixon was nJbt. "Win-
ning is better than losing." and
sending out con01ct1ng s1111ats
doesn't make losmganycas1er. I have
always contended that Miss Con-
genialities arcn·~ born ... they're
heavily sedated.
In Thailand, the MISS World losers
react quite differently. When Paphassara Chutanupong was
selected lo represent Thailand 1n the
Miss Wortd contest. several or Uie
unchosen beauues marched to lhe
queen's VlCtOry SUlte. ransacked It, aftd.skt~r..geepw..,1A4-"Pl.Qpc..
down the toilet Several years earlier,
the losers reacted by snatchina the
tiara and sash from the wrnneron live
minor two-suiter). North u5ed the
Orand Slam force to f and out
whether his part.nu beld the minlna
two of tbe throe top honors. l!ut's
decision to double wat sheer cupid-
ity. Since North bad apressed inter-
est in a arand slam, it wu
improbable Wt the contract would
10 down more than one trick.
West's kioa of dJamonds wu won
in( the closed hand. 11 1 club wu
ditcarckd from dunuay. Since Eut
could only be doublio1 on trumpt •
SOUTH ... Q 8 l l
Q IC 6 5
O AIS•l
1 declarer crossed to the table with the
ace or hea.rts and led a low apmdC .
east could not alf ord to ri~ with
the kina. ao the queen won. •• The biddina:
liill S..1• W• Nortll
....... 2 Q )Q ._ ,. ,._ Sin ... , .... ... .,.. ...... ...
a.,....._,.._,_ ... .J Openial -.cl: ~ of O •
SI-.. caa bt iolderi at the
..... table. A air .. • word._. ........................
, .................... .. ........... .............. -~ ............... .., ....... poaat.I cwo nlllt .._ _.
DUf'.aL ...... .,J J' ... ..-c.w .... ,, ... to ... ,..1e•an• .. WNortllllllda
Declam took dummy'• three top
cJubt. then ruffed a dub ia Uad. A
diamond ruff wu foUOWed bJ the
queen or ha:rU. ovautm Witb the k.ina ., an •ry for uOd* Ctia-
IDODd ruff. 2-1& WU DOW down &O nodd•a bat lbtee ....,.. •bill
~held &be .... JKl of lnllDpl
-.-dub. o.dar• ...... club. ........... ,.,, .. ....
.., ,,.. ... -of lftlmpl ..
0 , .. _,21•-. ....... ..... ... .. t._~,..-..~r • ..-. ., ............. ~ .. .. ............ ... .............. .:_., .... ... ........... .....
IW .,_, lltcb 6-I Ill llllla
TV. Now, that's honest.
So wtat do r.ou tell your kid about
losing and st1U keep your 1ntcant)'
intact? 1 tell them that losin& hurts
and 11 will for a Iona time. Jt isn't a
moment that 1.n a few years they'll
forict J cao still see that s1x·inch
trophy sitting on Mlll)orie Stewart'
television set with a mood lamp
1Uu11unatin1 the nameplate.
I tell them they have to face up to
the fact that somc1imcs m hfc you're
JUSt not aood enough to be first. You
don•t die from 1t -you just feet like
it I tell them first-place winners have
only one way to go -down. I tell
them they're not failures; they Just flrled n--somethma. Anyonran wrn
and lookarcat. but los1n1and lookina
veat likes I lot of !~ People remember style Jona-...the) v.c..
fof)otlcn who won.
Oh, and another thing about losini.
Don't act too good at 1t.
Satellite surveillance now would
prevent many of the srut military
opcrallons of World War ll. Pearl
Harbor. Battle of Midway. Nonh
Afnca campaign. D-Day invasion It
Normand y. You can't hide an Army·s
'follina stock, anymore Nor a naval
armada.. Nor nceu of landina aan.
Nor even fre1&htcrs1t sea. The wan of
)Our father are utterly out of date.
Q. Did the United talcs ever have
both a left-handed president and lcft-
handcd v1oe president at the same
lime?
A. Once. Gerald Ford and Nelson
Rockefeller. In 197~ 76.
When you pluck an eyebrow. )OU
never tweeze from the top of the
brow's arch. Not every man knows
this
One ra«oon 1n the wdd nttds
about five•cres Lo eke out a hv1n&.
Ask )'Our Spanish..soeakina fnend
to Identify hH toe and" he'll call them
In what was labeled "A 1udy of "fin&en of the foot" Likcw1~ )our
Infidelity " resu~hen coneludcd ltahan-spcak1n1 fncnd And )Our
only one husband in 10 never tnfln. french·spukin1 fncnd. They ha"e
Our Love and War man suspccu the no Lndepcndcnt word for ton. poor
study's name 1s the tipoff f?eople, fellows. .
10clud1n,g su.rveyt.akcrs, ~ wha~
they're sent out to see, no" He think~ Q. How miny of the men over aie
results might have bee~.• bit nobler if go art itJll sexually acttve? ·
It had ~n called A tudy of A 12 out of I 00. Or ao pollit.en ta)'
f1dc1J&y. the ovcr-80 men tell them. Our Lo~e
and War min thinks tbe find10.., Moat years have 3t.S36,000 sec· barmlns Bui 1n recoununa th<Lr
onds Nol 1987, thou&h It had an romantic acuon men ofaJI qies tend
ellltra second. to rely bc.av•ly o~ the aif\ of im-aina·
uon, he ·says. They don•t sud~nly Q. What's the world·s smallest lose the sift at the qt of 80 mammal ai birth? fn~ -ntC11y S&:ynrs bef'ort A. €aft-tell ou, but you won't
Chn tophcr CoJumbus sailed toward remember Nobod)' rcmembcn. It' Q. Why don't playina card mali:cn
America -Koreans tn"ented the the brown antcch1nu!. a b1"<hke pnnt the four suus each in a different
fil'tt-Ntn P•· -mci 1 min p1tl 1 b1
lnc1dcnt.ally. the female may 1ve
Q. Rainbows arc the flowers that three years. t>ut the male lives less
have died and aone to heaven -tlan1ycar.tfedics1mmcd1atclyaf\cr
.
A. They·ve done 50 and such cardi
ha\len·• sold. Not at ah. Why remains
one of the my1tme1 of mart.t'lln
r
'
Union should.
respect.wishes
of state's voters .
Politician and educ-aton are already locked in battle
over how to spend the money Proposition 98 will generate for
Califomia•s public schools. Early sicns hint at will ht a bitter
f!lht. one that could cchpse the message voters sent when they
approved the statewide an1ttattve in November.
Proposition 98 11ves public schools a minimum of 36
percent oft he state General Fund and 4 percent of any monc)
the state collccu but can•t spend because of the Gann
pcndina limil.
The propos1t1on was sold by rai ing voter consciousness
over how California has neglected its public school". During
the campaign much was said about the state's hiJh pup1l-
teacher ratio and how low the state ranks "nationall y an dollars
spent' per pupil. These were the ma1n defaults Proposition 98
was supp<>sed to rcvetse ~at least that's what the measure'
backers said dunng the campaign.
Voters bought the story. Proposh1on 98 was approved,
but now IC11slators a.nd special-interest groups differ on why 11
was approved and how the extra money should be spent.
Business people think the money should be used to
improve students' basic and technological skills. They point
to a national study that says only one out of four high school
graduates can qualify for an entry-level job.
Some people thank pan of the money should be used to
keep students an school. They reason that the new money
should pay for prosrams to reduce dropout rates that run as
hi&h as 2S percent an some schools. "How can we have better
c<fucated children if we can't keep them an school'l'' they ask.
Others believe the entire education system needs an
overhaul to adapt to the state's rapidly changing ethnic
composition and the l\ew demand5 placed on students.
This bonanza of education money also has resulted in an
unusual meeting of the minds between Gov. George Deukmejiatt and Santa Barbara's state Sen. Gary Han. who
JIC frequently on the opposite ends of the political spectrum.
Han and the governor have different ideas on precisely
·how to use the money, but they agree that it should be used to
reduce class sizes. That concord is politically-log1cat"hccause 1t
was one of the main selling points educators used dunng.,thc
campai~. and it's what voters endorsed when they approved
Proposition 98.
But political logic and what the voters endorsed have no t
dulled the desire of the tcacJl crs' unron 10 go after the money
for their own cause. The California Teachers A~soc1at1on
wants most of the new money for salary increases.
So far. reducing the size of classes and pay raises for
teachers are the options attracting most of the attention. and
these objectives will probably be the focus of the fight 1n
-5aaamcnto. It would be unfonunate af the teachers· um on overloo e
1be magnitude of the loss instructors w1ll incur 1f the> win
these new funds for salaries while program to 1mproH
education arc neglected.
No one is arguing that teachers do not descn ch 1ghcr pa).
, but educators must face the reahty that usins the mo ney for
pay increases will not produce the shot m the arm for
educauon that voters envisioned. The teachers· umon is
risking alienating California's voters and losing the vote of
confidence for better public education that was dcrnon!)tratcd
when Proposition 98 was approved.
Op6nloos expreued In this apee. .,. lhoM or
'llewtexpr....Oonthl•PI09at•thoMoftt*rat1thOl and ltla Reade<•' .. comments W-Invited and may M Mnl to The Dal Piiot, P Bo• IMO ••
Off.RAT~? <1'T VE \~S: DAN
WALTERS
Rt:N..\\'( PoL\CE. .. ~"( \\~
I\\\~K~ 1\\E. O\flC~ ~ ~
Foo\e~LL ~E. t\~
!'.>OtNnt\\\.-\0 \o (A) ~\\)\ J YCallfomia
n~edsaction
from its
Legislature
~~L L\rE ...
..
~)I ~
I I
SACRAMENT-'> -Califorrua's
le&Jslators ret~· 10 Sac,.mento
Tuc1da•• for another year-or more ~1~(v, anot.Mr cl&ht months
m1nu vacations -of olliciaJ COlita-
uon
Outwardly. 1t was a joyful conven-
tion, something hke the first day of a new colltge term. Inwardly, however,
the state ~slature 1s a sick inst1tu-
11on, tnefTcct1ve and cornipt, and 1t
will take more than wlf.,cncratcd
puffery and pronouncements of good
... KAREN .fEE~ 1~/\111\E r\OL\VA'<5 ~RE-NO 11~ foR 50~\.f\Y. ..
1n1ent1ons to cure its ills. It w;u take
concrete accomplishment.
The lot of issues demand1ngattcn·
11on 1s a Iona one. Here arc some of
the most prcssms:
A on¢-year political journ·ey·
ends with the oath of office
' I
GROWTH -The state lS add1n1
nearly 700.000 people to its popu-
lation each year, most of them
1mm1pnts. and lherc'san cxpend1n1
anti-growth bKklalh. ·
To 1anorc arowth and its corollary
of soetal cban# 1s to i&nore the es~nce ofC&Jifom111tself.
fhc ICJJ la11ve mandate should be
EJDTOR 'S NOTE -C..cressmu
Qri1 Cox wrote "11 coJ•m• t~ day
before k ... IWONI .... tH U.S.
Repr'"9tatJve . for U.e 401~ Coe·
ireasloul District.
Today, Jan J. 1989. I'll take the
oath ofoffice as a member oft he U.S.
Con.vess. · The ceremony marks. almost ell·
actly, one year \tn(;C,our incumbent
rcprcscnt.ative, Roben E Badham,
announced his mtentton to retire II
will culminate a year of effort by
literally thousands of volunteers 1nd-
contnbutors. It marks the result of a
year of deliberation, and in the end
the considered Judgment, of hun~
dreds of thousands of Orange County
VOlCl'I.
Comma as 1t docs at the outset of
the new ~ear" this mile tone -the
swcanng 1n or a new Congress-1s an
opportunity 10 renect on the d1rttt1on
ourpubhc life 1s taking.. In my case. ll
IS also ll t:me to ren cct On tht Chan&eS that haH occurred in my own life
during the pa t year
The IOI I Congrc will be the first
1n tht third century of our nation·,
history: Among 1ts members arc 32
new races. Exactl y half the nc"
members arc Republicans~ half art'
Democrats. Some. hke me at 36, arc
rclattvcly )'Ouna Others. hkc my
good new f nend and office-mate Mel
Hancoc k from M1ssoun. arc 1n their
<><h.
• All share som<' fundamental be·
m&Jcy of the business ~orld Like " t~ofokt· 10 create better rqional or
many of us 1n On nae Coun ty , I wa even tatcw1dc plannina sysicms, and
committed to the success of Ronald to provide the new public flc1ht1CS
Reapn·s pohc1cs; 1t was my naiural and scrv1cn needed to rchevc
cx~11on that. lake him, I'd rc1um arowth's most adverse 1mpects.
}~~l'i19~hen his tenn expired tn TllANSP08TAT10N -The state
But almost overnight. in the second had a conacsuon problem even before
week of J~nuary 1988. all that It bqan cxpcncnc1na a ~latfon
thansed. ln&cad of lca vina for Cah· boom m th1a decade, &t ll's eettinl
fomaa the fi llow1ng year, I left for wonc fast.. Cahfom1a 1 mediately And instead A&a1n, the p is must be dual:
of lcavma Wash1naton for good tbu Commusion -cbarrman Clartnce ,:>rov1dm& new hi&hways and othef' yur. rm JOlng back. Pendleton and Russian comtdian transit systems wfi1le rcducina non.
Two thinas were responsible Yakov m1mofT all came to Ortnge csscn11al tr1vcl
First, mt e11pcncncc work1n1 for ounty to campa1an for me Eiahtttn A first approach 'o both wo,utd be a Prc51dcnt ~cagan's agenda -tu membe~ of Congre includma harp 1ncrcuc an the .P~hne w .
cuts. DI. aid 10 the Nicaraguan Scnitors-i>1muramm."Offfn'1htttr.·-'i<»--Georsc Ocu.k.mcJWl tl tra~
rcs1stancc, appointment of new Steve ymms and 8111 Armstrona. a between his dcs1re,o dO .somettuna
1udges. • cutting deficit spending. doicn lqJslators from ramcnto, and his 1nara.ined <>PSNS•llon to ~w
budact reform -uiuan1 me that andscorc\ofotherlum1nanc<>ofTcrcd tucs The l.qtslatui:e. sn combina· Convcss 1s the problem In each case. 1he1r cndorsemt nu t1on with ouu1d.t 1n~rests. must
the liberals controlhna the Congrc Al one umc there wen: I~ an· l>f'C'Cnt Ocuk~Ji•n with a united
stood 1n the doorway man attempt'to d1datcs 1n the Republican pnmary. front. demand1na. for the aood oflhe
bar the p(CSldcnt from accomphshing but by the June tlttt1on three of my • state. some bold action.
the obJcct1vcs he'd promised the cornpe11tors -Chuck OeVort. Peer EDUCAT10N -There's an equal•
Amencan pc.op&c. Clearly.....thc ~va· Swan .And Adam....Ktunal -ad .ly pv~..crWs..ui pu.blK. cduc:aaoo.
lent mood in Consress had to chan t 101ncd forces ~uh me nd ancr t~ Gaven the rapidly cMna1na ethnic
Second. the surpn$C ret1~men1 of pnmary aJI of the Rcput>hun,-pulltd ·com po 11ion Of the schools . :al1·
our good congrcssman. Robert t thcr 1n a mar'"tlous d1 play of fom.. is fa11tna to provide &he
Badham. a strona supporter of unity with C\.Cr) one: of the ~·an-t.cchnok>&icall)' fitcrate work fi
Ronald Rt'apn tn 6oth Sacramento d1datCK for C. onsrts cndor1101 thc1r that lht 11 st ttnluC) w11J demand.
and Wash ington. ten a vat.'llncy in party's nom1n« As wtth transportauon. tht bu&1·
President Reapn's most suppor11H On Nov all of this v.ork and ncucommunity1 rcadyforachanJC
Cal1fom1a district ~ dcd1cat1on of so many was rtpa1d • 11 rttOCrtlLCS th•t both quantJtat1ve
Fncnds 1n the Whitt House, 11 1hc with 67 pcrct"nl of the ... 01e The huae and quahtauve rcrorms must be
Rcpubh~an National Cong~n1onal turnout rc-!.ulted 1n the h1Jhe-.t win made 1r the schools art to deal
(omm111cc. in Ora nae County. and 1n n1ng ~otc total 1n the h1stol') of the eflccttvcly with both a r.ap1dly cx-
cramcnto all encoura'ed me to run congressional p d1stnc1. aod hrll)C'J pandinaand rapidly chanama studen1 Dana Rohraba hc.r -m)' good (Jc~ Bush t"arn h1 cn11re \tatC"-•dc population
fne nd. a former Orange ( ount y marginof ",ctoC) right hcrt 1n Onm e Tht lql laturtcould be theculyst
Register ed1tonal wntcr and prcs1· County. · for chanae. foriina agree ments that
ea.ta Meu 92928
he(s. ourl 1s a arcat countC). Our
Const1tut1on, the oldest wntten char·
tcr documcna of any. country tn 1hc
world today. 1s a marvel. And our
Consrcss. creattd 1n tbc very first
...I ·article of that Cons11tut1on. 1s central
denllal spccchwnicr who v.orkcd JUSt The memoncs of balloons an4 cut through traditional enm1t1es
a few door~ down the hall from me 1n b:lnd • prccmt:t walks and )Ud tans, Propos111on 9 • cnacttd by voters 1n the White House -thouaht ~c both 1 uc papers and td1tor1al board No, ember. makc-s that more difficult
should run. for nc1Jhbonn1 scats meetings ma) ~n began 10 d111) -to \tn« 1t plays only to the hon-term
Talnted blood suit
The dcc1s1on of a San Francisco JUf) 10 a"ard damages
from a Bay rca blood bank to a child who 1s close 10 death
from AIDS 1s a rcsuh of contamsnatcd blood "a~ reasoned.
re trained and. in what \Omct1mcs 1s a ranty 1n the pursuit of
jusuce, fair .
A month aflcr he was born an 19 3. Michael Osborn
underwe nt opco-hean ~urgery Ht!. AID was shown to hin.c
come from blood tran fu d dunng ~urgcry . The opcrut1on
occurred two )C<Jr1 before blood bani(. ~ere lc~lly required to
est for the prcscntt"'tn-bk>od-e H~ Vtt'~ttnttbed~ -
The blood bank's vulncrab1ht) stems from the fatt that
although It wa not lcpHy required 10 test blood for Al04'.
1herc v.crc tronaJ> recommended ~rccning procedure:'
blood bank had been ur1cntly u~~ ~gm~!·u~ac": did The --... nk;n-qu~ttOn, ttpponed ~-t n\n~un11~
in the Bay rca, did not b«ausc 11 thought some of the
procedures ~ere directed at detecttng potcnual dis.ea cs
rcsull1n1 from p(Qm• ult)' nd unsafe x pr3,t1cc~.
espec1ally amuna hbmosc,ual ••
nothcr vulncrab1hty is that family mcmbc~ Ir.new of
the n band souaht to reduce them b) rcqucstina 10 make
.. dircae<t donation •· ofblood where family members' blood of
known qualit) v.ould ha'e bttn u~ hclu l\CI) .•
A1toni hinaJ y. lhc blood bank ref used to allow the pra ticc.
althc>uah as a matter of pohcy. n •nd mo t other nks accept
such donations A 1t turned out. bC'causc of a quirk of blood-
typina. l~ practtCC wouJd not h2vc v.;ork~. but 1t the t1n1c
&hat was not kno~n ...
What this case say is that those institution &hat ha' c
~ialrolcto~ymsocictyand.aurnuh.ha"c uch pc:'Ci I
privaktei as h~b1hly immunity. cannot utic t_hcm to " pc
from rcspon 1b1hty. IJU~n&l4 CalJlonJu
to the functioning of our democracy.
These. bchef at heart. formtd the
b:ms for all of our dcc1~1ons 10 run for
( ong.rcss But the dtfTt'rcnccs bc-
1wten us arc nonetheless Jrcat. and
ahcrc arc man y 1n1cnscly ind1v1dual
rcawns that each of us has madt' this
commitment 10 public hfc.
Last New Year's Eve, as I cel-
ebrated oHr dinner with a small
group of fnends 11 the Newport
Landi na re~l.IUrlnt II nc ... er occurred
to me thllJU t I few ~ttks later I'd be
a candidate for Cong1t<>s -or that
one )Cir l:ater I'd actuall) be a
member of Congress
One year -ao. l was an Orange < ount1an 1n the White Hou~. on
loan to our pt'C$1den1. with every
tntcnt~f «turning -to pflva&c
cmpl oym,nt and the rtlattve nor·
Tom Fuente~. Orange C ounl'\ Re· be replaced by more recent n · 1ntcf'C\ts oflh~ educational cstabhsh-
pubhcan chairman. told me 1f l was pcncn«S of actual!\-becomina a mcnt rather thin 10 ahc lonaer-term
going 10 run. I'd better make up m) cong.rcnman. mterrsts o( the lite as a whole. But mmd and act oua to ( ahfom1a fHI. But t<>CUy. a\ I ~~nd on the floor of it's a fiahl worth fight int beau.IC
With plcnt>-of ad" ice but hult the Hou\C tor tht first 11mc u a ~1thout an effccu"c cduca11onal sys.-
time. I entered the race 1hc me da) member from Orange ( ountv all of 11 trm ( ahfom1a'1 economic bubble
.is lnna .. Tv.o Wh11c Uousc .\1dn ~ms . st -of all I'll rt· v.111 burst
Seek <X ( ongrcss1onal ~ats." the member the people v.ho sent me hcrt • Register headlined The die was ca\t the "oluntettJ and rontnbulo" ahc PENDING -Central lo transeor-
Morc than SO candidate forum\ people ""ho d1J all the -.urk. and I'll t.a11on. cdu<"at1on and other spending
follov.cd Do1cns of TV and radio 1h1nk of tht' people I've m<'l dunna 1 ucs is a ~vtsJOn -or better yet
debates and 1n1cr"1c~~ wen th1slonnearofcampa1gnms andtht' R'pcal--OftheGann~1na-l1m1t
crammed into the month\ hcfore the problems and a~p1ratton\ 1hr" ·, e 4hlt is paralyzu'I ·~ staie's budact
June pnm.-iC). Contra leader Mano shart'd with me process.
( alero Judge Ruben Bork. Federal You've pla\td cnorml1u\ tru<>t in ENVO\ONMENT _ Tbe '°~~·
H1ghv.a)' Administrator Ra) me. and I won't~ )Uu '1o~n A~ I waste prot>tcm inn.ins IJ'IYC. the
Bamhan. Encrgv Sccrctan John Ht'r-take the a.th of otl1ct tOO-a~. thiit ~111 increase 1n suburban dc"Vclopmcnt
nn•t.cm. U.. Cd.. 01.a~ ~,-~.m)~rm.mt~:...!'° 1~ {X'optc of arulrommutina \.breatetl.S tQ wonco
om1 tArthurLaOcr.l ' < 1\11I R1ah1c. Cahfom11'salrcadyscnousair-<1 1•
ty problems. local aovtmments arc
Definitions offunPJl won 't -
alw~ys leave you laughing
running out of trasW\llisposal ca·
pa 11)'. •'¥' parks and undeveloped
arta arc fcdlh& the 1mpect of
population vowth. Th -~
wouldna1oc its han s TUii dcafina;,..ilh
an) one of those environmental
I~
WATER -fherc as not enoup water to sat1 f)' all apicuJturaJ. 1ndu1-
tn1L and rts1dcnttal ckmandJ. and
mo<>t ca urn of new waler
already hl'-e bttn expl 1tcd
l "ondN ~h\ "<' use tht •v rd " 'lunny· v.hcn ~t'·rc 1alkin1 abou1
mcth1n that 1 n 'l
for instance ~ M) ''h's funn)
thlt "hen )OU lfC :ahead of schcdul
you t noth1n1 but grttn 1raffic hlftu. and when )Ou'rt runn11!1 late
c"C? \t1f1al 1 red ·· That's not funny.
th ts f nimauna Or ... lt't tunny ,.e nc1oer hear fro'!!
the kid untal the) nttd a favor.
That'• not funn) either -that' sad Or. "It's funny he·d marry a
-.oman wh (a,c would \top a
d()(k, ,,..hen he alwa)' dated th<' bat-
b«ausc I d1dn'1 thmk u -.u ntt"t .,.
ary. Who. over the aic of four .
v.ouldn't know v.hat funnl mean "!
Well. for \taners.. I dtdn t
I chccktd 1n tht MW Random
Hou$C <hcuonary. ~ fint aroup o
dcfin1,1on ~ "amu ina. humor-
ou • htlanou •. This was follov.cd b •
"cunous. i&,.n , peculiar. odd."
Atttt
WELLS
l he l~11,lahlrt has op1Cd out o(thc
water I UC In rtUnt )'a_I'I. lcavtnc ti
10 bch1nd-the-sccnd"'!Jroru of the
OtukmCJlln administration. But tht
administration 1 now at _., •itb
1t'lttf O'-tf tht ctntral 1 of allocl·
t1on. and 1t may bt time for tbe Ltgi\latu~ to &cp beck ina> tM 1 h1\ d1 11on ry ha 2.SOO ~~
and. attord1na to tht-blurb on 'the Jlcket, 1S.OOO new mc-an1nas. That kno,,.dcd&abk
tllplatncd 1t If )OU have to fall 2.SOO • fashionable ··
soph1\1tca1rd or matter.
Pt . )Ou ,.,,11 iakc hbcnin and aack Ifs a clcir-cut ca\!( of 11\'1n1 m
on dcfin1t1on that Jon•t appty. bt<-aute people a~ ao1n to u ~ord
R1abt? 1n their own ••Y to C\pm them·
lN UtlANCE -Y can oJ lnllClJOe
by the l q1slature 1ed so 1 mvtli.o
• I int pl on c.:~mpus •• 1 hlt•s not .,., __________ _.. .... _...__...., __________ _. funny. tf\af \ 1 m)stcl')1
\c>mcumcs -.hen ""' ute thal
\Vron&. .rives. So common u 1\ the T~oofmyothcrd1 t1onann.o&dtr reason 'funn y' ha tho unfunD)
m1lhon-dollar lhOOtout at '"°$ last year. Votcn. fNsnted by
auto-insurance ~m1u1nS ud 1
of q1tlat1 ~c actlOCl, cn.neil ....,.
o 1tt0n 103. wtuch it C!OM'epC.._
f\a-cd and poorty drafted Al dlly
tcramble to takt pol1tical ••• of the sutt's oew Mt .... ,,.!111 R ,_, .. ,..., ...... ...... ,..., ..... .,.Yllr ...... °"..., ---..... ........ , .......
Clill .....
.. ... .......... . ...... .................. .. .... ...................
OilliflM ":.::C ..... ....... ---
f)hraw pn')plt a\k. ··0o )Ou mean
runny 'ha ha: or funny ·pccul.w~ b"s
u iully f unn) •pttuhar: When )ou
rda&c 1 hufnOC'ous upcnencc. 1& isn't ~-n~f) tv c,.,i.111 'hat 1t a funn7. Wh~ do •-e say. ··u't funny &he
alarm 5) tcm dtdn'a to off ~1uk the bU~ wttt rans.c:kina the ~
bof 1 houtt •• Thal tS teal}. IMJll fa any. ttow M8ftf litllft Mvc '11ie &boulht '' .. ~ .... .._",..Md filht ... ....... w wathccf? ,, ......
and ~•lh fewer pqc alto inctudtd. dtfinnions tncludC'd. •
:.·C\lnous, odd, and ,,.J\fC. ·· in 0-C · defintUon of funny. In the 19SI htlle more rncarch re"caleJ that
cdihon of Wcmw-·, Oictional)'. one t'Ommon u~ of 1ht v.onl 'funnf
ddi.oitton t'fad ... A ,ma11 chn•-wtuch raul~ 1n thetc v.cirJ dtfi·
bu1h, narrow row boet.'• I think Wc-h n1boM. data *k to l
a 't:titl would qualify u funn~. AU l aJ11.,-at•t'1cunouuhat I had
Common u,..r 11 ~tablt. I IW"ft' IQOted·"('• ~ btrott lfs ·~·· for all thCX difkttftt defi. odd le.ii.,_.., .. *"'"'"'"' oth(; nJtlOM. Olnionana now ltM WONI IM• h•"'°"*' oan. AM'' 1111,.,.e 1"8t al OM tune -ou&d nevn '91 _. 111111 ., ~ .._ ... dlr WOrd
°"IM p11r1 -e:ouctt pogto. ~ C01•«1Jlotaakaill3,._,wt""1f tJOW; W ;bOQti .-.. b .nasjll. _____ ,_ .......
• ....., ~ w do aa't ........... . .. _ ..... ~ ne WOid .... ., ,... ... nm ..... tMt lt•--•·•na .._. ••,.., af• ••a•~·11f ........ .......... ··o11.-,ora .... ol• ..... -. ca._• ,.._ dict••l'm ......_ •..,, .. ,,,_......._
. -
aleo thould draft -~ llUI II able 9'aitlatt0a dliey .._... ll9ft
t-ftaC1Cldtd:wc IM ..........
..
r.
Al DAILY PILOT/ Wedneedey. January 4, 1989
f ( I I
Brobdingnag ensemble ·stages a freshly fu~ny 'Luv'
~~ .. "T.1' .. I
Tholil pny characters arc beck on
thebriM..aia. For IJlcfli who milled the LP
Repertory Compeny's hilanous_pro-
ductioD Of Murray Schispl's oflbcat
~when It played the Qjf\on
Miller Community ~nter in Tustin ~ IPrins. there is aoocf'Dtws: "Luv"
11 1n bloom once more.
This time around it's a different
NcwYorkbfidee-at theeompany's
new Brobdinpq Dinner Theater.
stiU 1n Tustin -but the three facics haven't chan&td. And bccaus. of the
familiarity ol these actors for one
another, there's a solidJrity about the
cgrrent venion that mi&ht have betn
missing from the carlierefTon.
Particularly impressive are the
rapid-fire uchanaes between Jonathan Motil and N1ncy Boster
early in the second let. Motif -
playina Milt Manville"' who pewns off
hif unwanted wife (DOSter) ohto a
suicidal school chum (W11Uam J.
Durkin) -has honed h is upscale
scava~ character into a devallll·
inaJy funny personqc. Motil's timana
is masterful and h11 delivery con·
aistently on llftel.
Boster cams some chuckles from
the l 980s audience for this 1964
comedy W1th her lines about havina .. the brims of a man but the emotions
of a woman." Her satirical jabs draw
blood on many occasions. principally
durina her scenes with Motil since
they function on 1 similar mental.-
emotional le vel. It's 1 splendid per-formance, steeped with dark comic
insi&hts. ·
Duron as socactfs reject Harry
Bertin, is t~ joker an the deck. He is
effective in his ,.._ woebes<>ne
character. but his penoanance 11 not as tiahtly wound as the others.
Perhaps bccau1e he also funcuons as
producer and desianer of the _..t1n1
and musical effects. his c1rcu1ts are sim~ly overloaded. Pnor to Satur·
days New Year's Eve performance
Durkin also doubled as a waiter wh1fe
his castmates were free to relax anto
their characten.
• . . r-• Fisher: Grand dame-of gastronomy . I --oLEN ELLEN1 . Calif. (AP) -Writing is as im~rtant to her as air. most refined of palates, and the rabbit she remembers. everythina between lanore the wheelcna ir and anhritis. "I am compulsi've •bout it," a<t-stew,steamina.aromatic,ismadejust times -three husbands. mapzinc
Her 80 yean wei~ lightly upon the milled the Michipn-bom author, as tempting with an onion or two, pieces. the books that "never made
mind and wit of M.F.K. Fisher, who wrote such Wty morsels as pepper freshly around, a little bacon me any mone y," the travels 1n
wbOle ~fts to the world offood and "How to Cook a Wolf," "The and a dash of cheap, pure wine." ,.. Eu!OJ>C.
literature are still mounting. Gastronomical Me,". "Consider the A somewhat less literate reponer Of all her mates, sa id Mary
But shed a tear for the grand dame Oyster" and her pun,ent .. Alphabet observed, "It's a shame you don't .&et Frances. "my real husband was
of pstronomy: Mary Frances Ken· for Gourmets." to read your &ood stuff like that." She Jimmy Parrish (Dillwyn Parrish) ...
nedy Fisher 'denies herself the Chafin& amona cushions in her was not impresse<LOthers arc. It was They lived in a stone house sur· pleUure she a,ives her army of little wine-country house, she added. once said of her crisp prose: rounded by a vineyard and garden in
ldmi.renin the 17 books and scores of "But it's like pullina teeth. It's just "She writes about food as others do Vevey, Switzerland.
mapzine pieces that for 50 years set a awful. I can't diCllte to a person so J about love, but rather better .... Fisher She credits her st.an 1n food·wnt1ng
lean and spicy standard few ca n dictate secretly. I do11't make many writes not as a specialist but as a on an episode during proh1b1uon
match. mistakes, you know. It's my news-whole human being. spiky wtth when she was livin& in Wh1tt1er,
"l never read anytbinf I've writ-paper train ins. ... 1 don't ha ve an y prejudices, charming, short-Calif., and her newspaperman father.
ten," she snapped. "l don t care to go errors once I get it down on paper, tempered, 'Well-traveled and cos· Rex Kennedy, was teaching at 1
beck. I never read a word of print thank God." moPolitan .... She is a person, not a nearby college. She was work1na in a
aboutmeorib1.me." In 1937 the world's food writers gourmet masked as a writer. Her PoStcardshoi>.,Oneaf\emoonshehad
She wouldn t argue with going back discovered 1 tou&h new kid on the passfon comes from inside her." a half-day off and decided to io the
to bein&. able to use her hands for block when they eyed this paragraph That was 35 yean ago. Except for public library, where she found an
typins. Fate has ruled that she must leapinJ, from the pages of "Serve It such indi&nities as two hip replace-Elizabethan cookbook on a table.
dictate into a tape recorder. There's Forth, ' Mary Frances~ first book: ments. a corneal implant and the "It smelled so Sood ... the bind1na. I
no question of her not doina tt. "The quails are an artful lure to 1he arthritis, nothina has changed, and st.trted wrillna," she said.
Ncvmhtlttl, the sti"I'~ satire of Sbi1111'1 pre-happte opus nnp cl~arty IO the can of 111 older viewen whale
probably servina as amusina fa~ to
the younaer stt.
Director Timothy P. Thom has
added a few subtle new touc~s to his
ori~nal s1a&1na. but it's by and tarae 1 repnse a bit more Poliihed and po1nt~y humorous than it was the
first tune out.
'·Luv" will 0«upy the LP Reper· tory dinner theater, at 15732-D
Tustin Villatc Way in Tustin throup
The akin •a.me
Feb. }, play1na Tllelda11 throu,ah
S.aurilays at ·a:lO and Sunda~ at ~:JO. c~u u~9611 . •• J.:. · CAU.;80AllD -1 he Sooth Coest
Musical Theater will bold auditions
Jan. l2 for the ch11dmi'1 musical
"Tbe Hobbit" ... direcu>r 0.niel
Trevino will be teekifll performtn of
aJl aett for the fanauy, wbich opmt
Feb. 16 and tryouts wiU be held at the
Irvine uttJe Thtat« 11 University
H ... School, 4774 Cam~ Drive. Irv•~ ... call 640-6306 for more information.
Carol Sdea, left. Playboy n:aaca.dne'• M1M December 1980, ·~ ID tile Pur11a9 ._.e of tJae mapBlae wttJa. lier dil.,.ter S!moae. 18. tile ~utne·• Pebiaary PlaJIB&te.
Tbe ••r;.tne MJ9 llmone la tbe flnt MCOIMf-teneradon Pla,.. of tbe llODtb.
Car stereo warnings fall on deB.f ears
• •11 .... IMT ._.l IClftlAlllHfHlll OlYn
TtOUILLA SU•RISE (R) * l"WllS (PG)
fl:•l:•t-.. J .• 11'.• UlllH••tl•tW
* SCROOGED IPGl
UMl .. t-16JHtH
• lUUf ... LMtl
, THE NAKED GU" (R)
U:•r·••.ll1•t•1••
• COCOON. T)te Rewr11 ••1-IRI
IJ IU >U IU .. 11 U
i ll 34 ~ OflAlllC( .... ., ... , ... o. 11llwtS
"' Cl TV ~"OPP•"t C•"lf'
OLIVER
• COM,A•Y (GI ,.,. ........ "'
TEQUILA SU .. RISE (RI
l'llltUIW ..... flll
Cars that go boom
disturb pol ce and
damage hearing
. LOS ANGELF.S (AP) -Some·
thin& ~transc happenl when Peter
Hofsaess turns up his car stereo.
"It• s kind of difficult to breathe and
swallow," says the 21·yeat-old waiter.
"The entire car starts movina. You
stan rnovina. It's really somethina if
you're not used to tl."
v.JJJ. \AA.,
Of course. Hofsaess doesn't have -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~ your_typicaJ (actory·installed auto stereo. His Plymouth Sapparo as
.... ~ ...... . • • • • • • •
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IOI.IT •mo a ID •n ..... -1111 ......... --·---------, ........... " ..
... ,..-..&_., ._.,... . ...............
booked up with no less than S 12,000
wonh of Sony equipment that's
capable of blastina 143 decibels of
music tbrou&h 24 speakers.
That'slouder than a jet takinaoff or
a jackhammer tcarina up the side-
walk.
The latest expression of auto-
mobile hip isa carstereoso bi11nd so
loud that at can blow out windshields
and bul,c car doon. The boom-
boom-boom of a supersterco bass has become a common souod alona
Popular c:ruisina IPotJ around the country, anct hundreds of competi-
tions called "sound-offs" have been
held. ··we love the1uys with the cars that
'°boom," says a Top~ sons by the
female rap duo L 'Tnmm.
But Pohce, community leaden ana
hearina specialists arc concemed.
They say the stereos drown out
emtflency sirens. a.nac.r nci&hbon and can tum the inner car into mush.
.. h's noitc Pollution," uad Sst.
DennisZineofthe LoaAOFles Pohce
Depanment'a traffic division. "These
cars just drive back and ronh
cruisina. playina their stereos so loud you can heir it a block away."
"h's a nuisance. and it's danaer-ous.," said Randy Bompars, a city
councilman in the su6urb of
Bellflower.
•
"To me these stireo compeuuons
are nothina more than a co" test to see
who can 10 deaf first," 111d Dr..,
Maurice Miller, an audioloSJst at New York Caty's Lenox Hill Hospital.
For superstereo ownen. such lllk ts
harder on the ears than the rock aroup
Van Halen at 124 decibels. To them.
the hiah·PoWered systems arc more
than just a hobby. .
They're an art form , an expte111on of individuality and a statement to
society. ··Who's anybod.1 to tell me what's too loudr' said Hofuess, who has
bttn cited a number of times for noise
vaolations.. "I mean. what m1&ht be
too loud for one person, maaht not be
loud coouah for another person."
In evaJu1tin1 workplace noise. the
federal Occupational Safety and
Health Adm1nistrauon callt for abet.emcnt when the sound level
reaches 90 dectbels. And 140 dtcibett
-approech1n1 the peak Hofsaiess
says his stereo has reached -is
Winter Sale '89
Enjoy super Mvings on all our fine
.. lines during our winter sale.
'
Special savings on our new
executive office and leather gallery.
considered danaerous for everyone.
To put that in perspective, the
sound of 1 )et takina off ranses (rom
125 decibels to 148 decibels. A power
saw is 11 0 dcc1bel.s. Normal con·
venataon 1s 60 to 65 decibels. But
because the decibel scale ancreates
loprithmtcally, hk.e the "Richter
canhqualce scale. a I '43-decabcl 1tereo
as thousands of 1ames louder than a
65--dccibcl conver~t1on.
Miller is concerned about boom
stereos' efftct on the fra&Jlt inner car
·~This 1s danac.rous to the Potnt that
when lhcse people find out what it's
doin.f IO them, it's 1c>1n& to be too
late.. he saad
Frank Schettin1, 22. ofOlltsworth,
Caltf. said be does unders1.1nd what
his Sl0,000 stereo sy,tcm 1s doina to
him. ·
"rm padtally 1oin1dcaf. but I blast
mane as loud as f can evcrywhett I ao." he said. He said he has reached
1 '41 deabcl _.,th has 1,000.watt
Roctford-Fospte S)'Jtem featunn1
21 speakel'1 aJI packed into 1 custom-
ized four-wheef drive Chevrolet pick-
up called 811 Dummy 11.
Schettint, who operates a car cus.-
tomizmJ business., enten as many
compeutjons as he can.
"It's an addicting type of thins. You ,et, ltlce, the fever," be said.
"SotnebOdy saned i i-and now it's
JUSt io•na. It's another Stqe of
compct1t1on for pcol>le who arc not
athlettcally 1nc:hned.
When Schettin1 cranks up his
stetto, the tnusic fills the whale body.
The force of the wind from the rtar·
mounted speakers feel1 as if some·
bodyTs ik\Jna the seat
He called 1t a "dean sound'' and
bkcnc:d &be praaure on the can to
"&01n1 to the bottom of the swim·
min& pool. It huns your cars ma1bi
for 1 minute after you aet out TIM
hanh .hiahs and harsh midt (mid·
ranaes) tend to bun tonatr."
TboU..nd.s of car stereo butrs like
Scbenana enter sound rompeulions.
which have names like "FuU-on Audio Bish," "Sound Quake" and .. Thunder on Wheels."
Be1ides volume, Alpine stereo's
"C.r Aud to Nationals .. stmses 1ud10
quahty1 anstallation, and other
catqones. Alpine SPoftSO~ more
than 300 contesu this 1C&SOn. •ta bt~t )'.ear yeL •
''lt's the crativity they're showina
oft h's a penooal Sllt.emcnt.." 111d Jim Wunderlich, technical com·
munications 1pec11hst for Alpine.
The Texu-bued ··n"'nder on
Wheels" s:oeciahus an volume rom -
petation. nus year's nauonal Wlnncr.
Thomas FitchCf, 221 • of Houston.
blasted his lt.efCO It I :>4. 7 dcc1bcls.
AnJOnc who lives near popular c:rutSin* areas such u Hotlpood dd
the San FcmandO' VaJWknows 11'1
the thump of noisy wool'en. not the
neatness of anstaUatton, that 11 pnted
by car stetto cnthu.111St
··Jt's a arowtns ~m. We call at the boom, boom ' said the LAPD's line. addina "it's a haurd ..
•
etune
.,J up for league with ro~t
Irvine HW.S's Vaiquerot warmeid up
for their Friday evenin& South Coast ~opener with EJ Toro a1 UCl's , .en Events Ctottt with their 14th v~ in IS~ es holt Los
A.lam11a1.t without ~foo&·IO junior RObert . COnlist. proved no match
doWD IM ltftteh in a 73-Sl non-naue decision Tuada nishL ~ Oapitc mnatkable ~na from (our ......., all of whom were in
double fiaura, Irvine Coech Steve
Keilb wun't comoletcty satisfied. · ·
"I don't know if ifs oomina ofT a I
at~mpts (71 .4 ptrctnl) coran(l4)and MakeCookU2)ecored
Bryan Allred scored 21 Po•n&s. an doubk fia1uu for the Barons an a droppi1na 1n I of 13. includina S of 8 so-t0 aeam effort (21 of 50 f« 42 ~UU f&!'F. Sophomoie Jobn percent) frOm lbe field. , -Molle 6 of 7) and his brv1Jter1 Mike Merli added 9 Po•nll and
tournament championship and look· (6 of 8) each ICOted 14 UKJ nine ttbounds to the Barons' cause. ·~ forward to teaaue," •id Keith. Todd Trout (S of 7) sc:ored 10 for Jt was Fountain Valley's final
.. LotAlam1tos'btuuxd1dn'tolay,he Irvine. tuneup befott hostioa Ocan View
was sick. and 1 tbink 1f he had' played John Molle's 13 ttbounds is the Fnday n1&ht 1n a Sunset Leaiuc
we would have bad our hands full." most by any Vaqutro this season. Optncr.
Irvine had tlS hands full for two Elsewhett 1n non-lcque basketball
quarters, nursin1 a 3S.30 halftime Tuesday ni&ht P....W 11. UawenltJ tt: The
Jea4,; bul took control 1n the third r-aua v.ue, M, Dua BW• '1: · Trojlnt, at.ill a troubled and up-and· quarter Wllb a· 17-6 run in the third The Ba th · down quintet with the lack of an od rons posted cir second intact stan1n1 unit, fell victim to a
pen · . s~t 1n two ni&hts with the rash of free throws in the fourth b~::S~1~~ l~~~e =~:~:f~~ decisJon at Dana H1Hs. droppi~a Jhe quaner 11 they dropped to S-8 overall
K h h h-"' r. Oolotuns to 12-S, while 1mprovin1 to on 1a...1·r ov.n coun . e1t , w o watc ~ 1our starten 12 1. '1" .,.,..,.,.h then ·ts 'th 2c bucke•s on 3c • · Pac Ferrell led University with l 7 _....,... c WJ ,, • ,, Tom Wtaver ( 17), Ocmclt Cor· · p0ants. but 'wat~ut 6-8lh Stefan
0.., ........... ., ""...,..
EdiSon, Barons,
Ocean View roll
Mater Del turns it
over in 49-34 loss:
FV suffocates foe
Edison Hagh's a.iris basketball team
swept to.a 49-34 non-lcaaue victory at
Mater Dei Hiah Tuesday niJ)lt as the
Charsers tuned up for their Sunset
Leaaue opener Thursday when they
host Huntanaton Beach.
Krisden Ta,,.bc scored 16 points,
10 in the first quarter, as well as six
ttbounds 1n that Nnz.a. to lead
edison to a 16-6' lead.
Mater De1, 1u1lty of32 tumovers 1n
the pme u at fell to 9-5 overall. was on the wrona end of 12 tumoven 111
tl\e first period.
Debbie Fischer, a 5-foot-6 junior,
added 14 points, and S-5 sei11or
Stephanie Moorman dropped in 12
po1nt.s for EdJSon. which improves to
4-7.
Moorman &nd Fi sher each had six
steals. •
Mater Dea was goana at half-speed
with both stan1n1 auar<ts mtSSana.
Tanabe was Edison's lcadina re-
bounder wtth 11 boards, while
T'amara Mboat and Kelly O'Bnen
each had 9 rebounds for Mater Des.
Martin and O'Bnen scored 12 and ro points, re~ctivety. -for tM
Monarchs. who host Bishop Amat
Thursday night 1n their Angel us
Leaaue opener.
In other 11rls basketball·
was able to hm1t the Couprs to JUSt
one field aoal an each of the final two
quancn to make the pme a rout
The Barons, who take a 9-6 record
into Thursday's leque opener at
home apinst Ocean View, v.erc lcd
by Stacy H1sab's 11 points, while
Kama 81&ler and Yvette Ybarra
added 10" each. Center Danielle
Barlow led in ttboundina for the
Barons with 13.
Oceu View It, Newport Harbor
H: The Seahawks led from stan to
finish 11 Jenny Sullivan-scored I~
points and Heida Hasemann collected
14 rebounds in the v1ct0ry at home
Ocean View. 14-2. took a 2()..1 lead
after one quaner aod eApanded the
maflln to 19 by halftime Newpon
manqcd just two points in the third
qua~r.
Couettc Smith wa.s 6of 1 from tbe
field and added 12 points for Ocean
View. as dad fab1 ola Nunez. Stacy
G1em wa.s the Sailors' tos:rscorer with
a schOQl-record 27 points}. whale Ah
lzumita chipped in with tu.
Uldnrllty U, lrvlae H: The Tro-
Jlns dominated from the stan an the
battJe Of lrvl M sclioofs. taking ltads
of 16-1 after one quaner and 27-5 at
halftime
Shelley Davis he lped U n1vers~t •
10.3. to tts qulCk stan b)' sconn1e1 t
of her pme·h1gh 12 points 1n the int
pcnod. Denise Gandara chipped 1n
with I I point~ five.assists and' seven
rebounds. . . Ml11lo1 Viejo 51, Costa Mesa U :
The Mustanp were burned inside by
6-foot D11b10 forward Knst1n Okura.
who scored 21 points, and v.ere shut
out an the third quarter of the pme at
M1ss1on V1eJO.
Krl8deD Taaabe (30) aoe. ap for two o•er the defenee of
LeeAa• Moeller of Miter Del lD 49·34 Jtdlaon •ictory.
r ... tate Valley $3, Caplstruo
Valley H: The Barons' defense held
the vis1t1nJ Cougars to JUSt 2 of 28
from the field tn the second half to
break open a close pme and breeze to
the victory.
Capo Valley, 12·3. held a 21-2 1
half\1me lead. but Fountam Valley
Trana Nguyen was the leadanJ
scorer for Costa Mesa, now 4-8. wtth
15 points which included• paar of J..
point &oals. while "'1aurecn Moore
added 10 points.
...
Holtz 's national title dream .realized
otre Dame near-unanimous pick over
Miami as No. 1 team f n college football
pttscason poll. beat Auburn. IJ. 7. 1n State, Clem1<>n, Houston, Wyom1na.
the Sugar Bowl and climbed from LSU. S)'l"ICu.se. Washin1ton State,
founh place to th ird w11h 1.073 \.JCOfJJI anti Alabama.
points. Indiana as the onl y newcomer to the
Frem 1'e AtNClated Preu
, Lou Hoh2had the dream-he just
never dreamtd it WO\lld come true.
'Now. Notre Dame 1s No. I. and Holli
1s the coech of a natio nal football
champeon. The lnth, by vinuc of Monday·~
34-21 raet1.180wl triumph over West
V1f'lln&1, came WJttun I~ votes of
be1na a unanimous chorcc as they
won a record t1&hth nattonal cham-
pionship.
M1ch1gan made the b1gest Jump. rank1na.s from the previous poll.
finished second in 1986. from 11th to fourth wtth 926 points *
"Winn1na the national cha m· by bcalln& USC, 22-14. in the Rose PINAL .,, tw 1IO
p1onsh1p was n_cver 1n my thouJhts." Bowl The Too r wentv It.ms In the As •
said Holli.. who became No. I in his West VarJJnia fell from third to IOCltltd Prns' final "" c~ foolt>el
third ~$On, JUSt like previous Notre fifth with 91 7 points. follo~ed b> POil, with lfn t·ol.ee• "°'" II\ oerentMte\,
Dame coaches Frank Leahy, ra UCLA with S6"4 The Bruins beat SHson records •nd ~~~ ~nk.!.."!,
Parsqh1an and Dan Devine. c "--· r" r•• Ark.ansas. 17-3. 1n the otton Bowl -1 Hire ome ISl'J'2l 12+0 "''"' ' .. I've been asked the question did I a record SC't'enth cons«ut1ve bow l 2 Miami (1 1> lH-0 11'1 , 2
ever dream about winn1n1 the na -tnumph-andJumpcdfromnanth to J FlorodtSl•t• lH-0 l013 ' uo~J champ1onsh1p. Yeah. you sixth. ~ ~v n , ... ,_2,.·01
9"1'7
1
3
1
d bo 8 I II :1 WHI 1r91n1t ream a ut 1t ut ne ver f'C"a y U shppcd from fifth to se~enth 6 UCLA 10-M> "" , thou&ht that 1t would happen to me I wtth 803 point and Auburn dropped 1 use 10-2-0 I03 s
Mumaw for the th li'd strat&ht ~(a 1~1pens1on for a skiina tnp w1JI keep
ham out one more pme befott ~
play) the TroJans we,... "tpin without all ttleir horses.·
Add1t1onally, Mumaw's replace·
ment, Jason Hams, was ill and did n~p~~ .
Also an doublt f11utts for Univer-
stty were Erik Glas.sen ( 13) and JC101or
Ohvcr(l I).
MUUW 11 Hutla,._ Bead 57:
The Oilers felf to 6-7 overaJI wath the
loss as the visjung Rams enjoyed a
14-4 ; edge at the free-throw hne,
nemna 14 of 22 attempu. as ooooaed
to Huntington Beach's+of· 7 dfon at
(Pleue Me HOOPS/BS)
Mater Del'• Shella ManJo (12) trtea to tllrow off £cU8o.a ••
Debbie Fl.cber (12). Ftecber .cored 14 for µae Claar&en.
Ra.nkedNa-1 fouhe fin I 1 ~k\
o( the reaular season, the Jnsh on
Tuetday received SS'h fint·r.lacc
votes and l ,191~ of a powble .200
Potnll from 1 nat onWldc pentl of 60
spot1s wntcrs and sooruaitcn.
never thou&ht I would coach a from seventh to e1&hth with 801 I Auburn 10-2-0 IOI 7
naffonaJ tl'lamp1onstnp team it s11ll Amnsas. which had been-No: 8:-fdl t.o.tmo --1~ 1...,._ ........ _ hasn't sunlt 1n on me yet " to 12th 10 Nfl>rHkt H.,_O 7CM
Maam1, the 1981-national cham·
pion whote onl)' lou *-.s 31·30 at Noc~ Otmc 1n Oci~. finished
ICCOIWI .;th l'r'a ftnt..place vot'5 and
1,141"'1 po1nts. followed by Flonda
taic, Madtipn and ~vaoutly un·
defaiied Wat Vaf'lin ... which had
bten No. J.
Miami, a l)..3 winner over Ne·
brab in the Orafiee Bowl, alto
~ Notre Dam~, ,,.,h1ch finiih'd 17th a C1emson downed Oklahoma. 13-6. lJ ~~=Stat• ~g:~:: ~ year aao. was NO. 13 1n the preseason 10 th' Citrus Bowl and leaped from 11 svracu1e 10-2-0 .. ,
AP ~11. The lnsh rcm11ocd there 1n 13th to ninth wtth 708 point '' <>.1tt1omt t·l ·O G
the 1ru tYrO rqular-s~ason polls. then Nebraska, No 6 an the final rqular-l! ~:.;:,ton St••• ~~:: ~
1umocd to o 8 by open1nf with a season poll, replaced Oklahoma in 17 ,._ o.ma • t-l-O 713 19-17 victory O\.eT f.lo . 11 Mich1pn 10th platt with 70.. points. 11 ......... 1 'J.A ''7
Their climb took them to fif\h , then The Second Ten con 1sts of Okla-It L'Stt on ,:,::; n
fourth. 1«ond for two •ttki and homa tate. Atbn~ Syt"IC'UJC. 20 Ind N ·1-1-1 75 finally to No I when top-ranked Oklahoma. Gcoraia. Wuh1naton Othtf rac• .. ~ln9 v.tes· WY'Om'nt st,
UCLA lost to Washinaton late on State, Alabama. Houston. LSU and ~",t':i!:.~' v~ '°;'i:-t~J:1~~
Oct. 29. · Indiana. . • Frnno St 7, MlcNMn SI 7, Armv '· Flonda tate, runner-up to Miami' The final rqular-season Second Te•••·EI Paso J, Hawaii 2, Florlde 1,
last tcatOn and No. I in the 1988 " Ten included Mtcbiaan, OkJaboma • Lou1sv11tt 1.
• 0 I#., ...
Notre Dame bead coach Loa Holts proadlJ 418)ila,. tile
aadoaal coUeee cbamplon tropbJ preeea~ T1ae1day.
....
• ..
Dalla• could boost
ticket Wee With
Allrman signing
DALLAS -One of the biaest 0
mip:atioos of Oklahomans since the dust
boWI days may become a rqular occasion if
Troy Aikman becomes a Dallas Cowboy.
About l 30 people from the UCLA quarterbeck•s
hometown of Henryetta, Okla., showed up to watch the
Bnains' 17·3 victory over Arkansas in the Cotton Bowl
on Monday and some of them said they would make
~ forays to Dallas if the Cowboys tan draft the
bilbl)' retarded pro prospect.
The "Cowboys. who finished with the worst record
in the National Football Lequc, will have the first draft . k. '* .. He's definitely aoina to sell some tickets.·· said
Alan Shaw, a former Henryetta resident .who is a Teus
lnstrumenu enaineer. He said he has become a minor
celebrity at work because he went to hiah school with
Aikman.
"I don't &.now whether a lot of people believe me or
not." be said. "It almost doesn't seem real to me."
The residents of Henryetta had watched the golden
boy play baseball in the eighth grade, tauaht him lessons
in Sunday school~ !Old him clOthing and played football
with him for the Henryetta Hens. ·
.. It's like havin4 a movie star from 7out home
town," said Aikman s high school footbal teammate
Daren Lesley.
The Oklahoma town of about 7,000 located 200
1tiiles nonh of Dallas has named a street after Aikman
and the Chamber of Commerce scheduled a February
banquet in his honor.
"Oh, God, we are very proud," Sue Ann Sellers,
told the Dallas Times Herald. ..They'll probably
rename the town for him. Wejustdon'thave that many
famous people fro·m Henryetta.•• ·
Peo~lc from Henryetta have been basking in
Aikman s fame this year as sponswriiers named him
the best quarterback an the land and a sure No. I pick in
the profcssionil football draft.
"Kids say, 'You know Troy Aikman, can I get your
aut<>lflpb sometime?' To think, be wiU be making a
million dollan this time next year," said Stan Swyden,
a hiah school teamf(latc of Aikman's.
Quote of the day
Ttm McCermJd of the Denver Rockets after
Manutc Bol of Washinston sank a line drive 3-
point shot, the first of his career. "(It was) one of
the most bizarre m_Qments I have witnessed. It
reminded me of the people trying to win a trip or
a car ih a haJftimc eontest."
Noll given Hf etime contract
PITTSBURGH -Chuck Noll was. Eil
· &iven a lifetime contract by the Pinsburgh •II•
Steelers Tuesday, and will remain head
coach.for at least one more season but four
assistant coaches were fired and defensive coordinator
Tonr. OunlY resianed.
'Chuck Noll is our head coach and we have all the
confidenoe in the world in him," said President Dan
Rooney. "He is riaht for the Steclcr, and he is riaht for
PittsburJh."
"Tvc always felt that I'd be here . . . l aJways
thouaht security ii doiDJ the job," said Noll, who conceded that he thought about q_uining after the
Steelers' S-11 season, their worst finish since bis first
ycac as coach in 1969.
NolJ will be workina next season with a revamped
staff after the firing of special teams coach Dennis
Fi..,.id. linebacker coach Jed H~es. guards and
oenten coach HaJ Hunter and conditiCSnina and
trainin& coach Walt Evans.
Dun&Y. who Noll sajd was "not comfortable" with
the coacbma shakeup, resigned "to 10 to a new spot or
have a new opportunity."
Dun1Y, 33. who is black. has be-en mentioned ~s a
candidate to be the NFL's first black bead coach. He has
confirmed recent talks with Bronoos Coach Dan
Reeves about an assistant coaching job in Denver.
.
IN THE BLBACllBRS ·
Green named Stanford coach
ST AN FORD -Dennis Green. a San m
Francisco 49en assistant · eoach, was •II• named head football coach at Stanford
University Tuesday and promptly told
about 20 high school prospects abol.t it in telephone
calls.
Green, 391 became the fourth Di vision I football
coach who is baack.
Named to replace Jack Elway. fired last month
after a 3-6-2 sca~n, Green win remain with the NFC
West champion 49en thro~ the playoffs.
"I think our aoal is to win and to establish success
riJht fromJumpS'"treet." said Green ofhjs new job. "We
know we want to be successful ... we know what we
have to do to get to a bowl pme.
.. , think the potcntiaJ is here to recruit that kind of
talent ..
Green, a two-year starting tailback at Iowa who
played briefly in the Canadian Football Lcaaue,
downplayed race as a f1etor in bis select.ion. The only
other blaCks amona the I 04 Division I football ooeches
are Francis Peay at Northwestern. whert Green
previously was head coach; Wayne Nunnely at Nevada-
Las Yeps and Oevc Bryant at Ohio Univcnity.
.
Braves hire Nlekro as instructor
~-
The Atlanta Braves have hired Ill knuckleblller nil Nlekro1 who holds
almostall of the team's pitch1narccords, as
a rovina minor lcquc mstructort General ·
Manaacr a.bby Cu said Tuesoay. Nickro, 49, will
work with all p itchers in the·eiaht-team farm system,
Cox said ... Fint baseman Nie\ &talky, acquired by
the Boston Red Sox from the CincinnafReds in a mult1-
player deal last month, Tuesday qreed to a one-year
oontracl for SS70.000. Esuky, 28. is. expected to be-
Boston's reaular first baseman this season. He batted
.243 with IS home runs and 62 RBI inlf 2 games for the
Reds and made $460.000 . . . Ri It-bander Fred
Toliver, a contender to be the thir: • fourth or fifth
starter 1n the Minnesota Twins' rotation next seaSDn,
sianed a one-year contract with the dub Tuesday.
Toliver,27,cameoutofthe minorstoao 7-6witb a 4.24
ERA with the Twins last teaSOn.
Magic NBA Player of Week
Malic J......, who averqed 27.3
points. 13.3 assisu and 8.3 rebounds in
three pmcs for the Los Anacles Lakers. was named NBA Player of the Week on • Tuesday. Johnson had 26 poinu, 18 assiru and 10
rebounds in a victory over Philadelphia. It was his
seventh triple-double of the season ... ~ J.,..
of the Chlcqo Buns. with an ave~ of34.3 points and
8.6 rebounds. was named NBA Player of the Month for
De<lCmber. Jordan led the Bulls to a 9-4 record during
the month'"-ahootina 51.6 percent from the field ....
Pittaburah renguins center Marie Laaieu, who te0red Streaking Flyers top lalanders 19 pis and added 24usisu in J4 pmcs, was named Tuesday u the NHL Player of the Month for December
Brio Propp scored tbe 1<>4bcad goal Iii · · · UC Santa Barbara forward Erk McArCMr, who led
iothetccondperiodandlddedtheclincbet , the Gaucbps to three wins and a tournament
in the third as the sufliOJ Philadelphia champion.._~ over the ~t two weeks, bas been Ayers beat the New York lslandc:n in adeC1ed the 1111 West Conference be.skcttilll Player of
UniondaJc, 4-1 , Tuesday nicht. The Ayers, 10-1-0 in the Weck. McArthur, a 6-foot~ 195-pound JUnior
their last 11 pm~ll bebtnd early but scored four from South Pasadena, led the vauchos lo a 77-64
•tniabt times with ~PP oontributina the key &oats . . . =·~M"~ ~i~~ ~ :!'mnamto ~.·-thon~ ~ov ucsr In the only other NHL pme Tuesday: Guy lt.tberta ... ..~ ""' scored two aoats u CaJairy whipped visitina 'QU'ef>ec. Iowa State (88-78) and-belt Arizona State (UIO} ... S-1, for only its second victory in iu lasts.ix pmes. AJ Stanford auard T..W Uclld and &uard-(orward Kane
lltd-h, Jim P.,u.Ai and Jee Nlen-'Jk at so a .. .u o(USC were named Tuaday u the men's and
acored for the flaines, who outsbot the Nordiqucs, women's butctbell Playen oi the Weck in the
42-13. aa..ly Meller had the lo.nc:pJ for Quebec ... In Pacilio-JO Conference. Llchti led the Cardlnal in three
other news: Detroit traded left wins Mlnlt.v Prycer to wins on the roed last week u Stanford beat St Mary's,
Edmonton and ass1sncd center Joe M_,.J to its 65-64• Furman, 88-71. and Vanderbilt, 89-68. Howell
Adirondack affiliate an the American Hockey Lcaaue. scored 24 points in an 8)..81 uptet of lllb•ranked
lheclubsaid Tuesday. Frycer, 29. was traded fora 10th-Teus. She hit four of six J..point shots and had seven
rounddraftpickin the 1989NHLentrydraftaftcrbeina assists and two steals ... Unbeaten MkllMJ N-of
plac:ied on irrevocable wajycrs on Monday. Nonh Hollywood will faoe.._..&alam .. fofltalyon
March 25 al the las Vepa Hilton HOid ln a middlewei&ht -championship bout, i t wp allJIOVnCect Kickoff Classic wants Irish Tuetday. ~unn, 2s. has a 32:-0 record. witb 22
• • ~odtou~ and holds t~ lntemauonal Box1111 Feder·
National champion Notre Dame is the -·~n m~aht tide .. Kallmbey, a 3l-yar-old top choice to play 1n the Kickoff Classic ••• nauvc of~. ii 46;-J..,1wt"!26 kn~outs and_la the
next Auaust and Coach toe B.,u said • World Boiuna AJSOaatiOft middleweiaht champ.on.
T~y the Iris~~ be interested. The Kickoff Classic s aniwally at Oianu Stadium in
East Rutherfo"1.. N ... would like to match Notre Dame
with No. 6 UCLA, but the Bruins have thus far been
unable to panicipetc because of the IChool's academic
calendar ... Tlm M.,,.,J, the bead footblll COKh at
MaiAe the last two aeuons. bas ap'Ced to become bead
ooech at the Univeraity o( Cincinnati, accordioj to
news reporU. The Cina nnati Post and W~TV in ~. Maine, reponed Tuctday that Murphy was ofreRd tbe ~b ••. Jlm a.s ... named Tuesday as
Vi,Pnia Military lnstitu&e's head footblll eoech, •yina the .iob with tbe lonHtnmlina Keydets wtll pote
dalUeneea aimi&11 to thOee be 'l'accd u Anny's olfensive
coordinator •.. Bal M-me. who hu coecbed on the
collele and hiah achool level in Teus. wu named
i>ottJalJ COllCh a1 Iowa Wesleyan on Tuesr.ai~ Ohio State football offensive coordinator ,,... who
wu the bead COKb at Cal Slate Fullcnon &om I 7S IO
1979, wu to interview today for the bead coechina Poliuon a1 Teut-EI Pao. •
H IJ R ) i R ~ L I .. Li
-~ ---=--
=.:"!!S ": '~ fll9cmc ........ • L ftct. •• Laflft 1t 11 . m Phoeftlll 17 11 ~ 1
~ 17 11 1 ....... 15 12 •• llt'\
Golden State 11 14 ... Sit'\
a.wt 10 " .l45 ......
$e(r.,,,....to 1 19 .w 10
Mldw•lt OM-.
HoutlOfl 19 11 .m
OefleJ 17 10 .6'0 .,.,
Dan¥ar 17 12 ... 1~
·~h 17 13 .567 2
Antonio • 20 .216 10 MUI ml 3 25 .107 15 ........ c ...... AIMlc ~
New Ym 1t 10 .655
~la 15 14 .517 • 9olton 13 15 .464 S'h
NawJtrMV 13 17 • OJ 6'h
Wastilnoton I 1t .296 10
C"-'lolle I 20 .116 10~ c.Mrll OM.-
Ctevttand n 5 .115
Detroit 20 • .114 2~
Atlanta 20 ' MO 3
MllWautlM 15 11 .sn '~ Chlcato 1' 12 .511 ,...,
Indiana 5 23 .179 17'h
' T ... Y'I~
S..1111 116, LallWI 106 C:lllceeO 12'. ~ 121 (Of)
New WMV tel•, CNnotle 106
Altenta 123, Detroit ICM c~ llf, lftdlene " ..... YO(k 10t. lotlOll 107 (OI)
Houlton UM, Ulell 102 Sen Antonio 12', o.tv« 105
Sacra!Mftto 1~• "
Porllencl Hf 'r " ... .........
Portlend •I Lallwt, 7;)0 p m.
~ al Mllwault... S:JO p m.
Ptloeftlx al lotlon, 4:30 P.m. New Yont al New JerM\t, ~ P.1'11.
CllW1olte et Walftlneton, dO o.m. Atlante at lfldlalle, f::ll a.m.
Mlelnl 11 G06dlft Slate, 1JJO o.m. ,,.,......, ..,_
Cfllca90 •• ~. f:lO 11.m. "1 l e d I IP till a l left Antoftlo, S:JO P m. G06dlft SI... al Oeltftr, 6:JO P.fl\.
Sacramento al Seetlla, 7 Pft\.
St1Hl'lallkt 11,, Lallan 106
LAKUS -Green .. IS t-12 27. Wortllv 12-1' H 2', ~JMMr >·S H 6, E
JoMMft 4•12 H \J, seott 1-t 2·2 6, Thot'nPsotl
2•S ..... ~ 2 ... 1·2 7, WOOlrldle f..f f ·f 12, C~ H H 0, ~ 0-2 l·I I, IUwn .• .. ,. M 2. "Tot•: ..., 9-J4 116.
MATTU -C... 6-12 M II, NICKrt J-f 12·14 II, Lhltf 4-t 1-1 f , Elh 16-14 .. , '2,
NcNAall M H 6, McOelllel 6-lf 6..f II, Thrten 1-6 M J. L.ucaa J-7 MI, ~
0-1 H 0. Totat&: 4l-t7 •·U 116. Scire 11¥ OMrtwt l..aken 21 1t Jl 27-106 S..llle ,, ,. S3 Jt-116
J-tlOlfll toell--Ellt 4, Gr.n. l..amP, McM11a11 Lucaa. Fouled out--Hone. lte-~' .. (Gr ... 111, SMlftl JI cc... 16). Aul•lt-Ukerl 17 (E . .JCIMM>ll ti, SMUii 23 (McMiiian I) Total foul-our• 2', Seattle 2'. .
Allendancr-14~
14111 121, a..an m
CUPPeH -MaMlnt ,_ l6 •·S 22, Norm.n
11-17 H 17. IC.Ii. 0-0 0-0 0, O.llrt to-1' '3·1' 13, G. Grant 0-1 0-0 O. lttllemln t •lO 4•4 22, NlllOft 1-S H a, W~ ... It 1-2-.10~ W°'6 2·l 1-2 S. Totelt ... 13 21·>6 121 C:...CMM> -PloMn S-14 S-1 15, H. Gr1111
l~ 0-l •· CMtwrlefll 4· 10 >-l 11," Vll\Qfti 4•f 0-0 I, Jardell 1S-)O lH S •I, Conine 4-7 H
12, P11son 4•f H I, Ha19V 1-l 0-0 2, ~
1•14 1-2 It, Seller• 1-1 2·2 4 Totall.. •101 *" 126. SC...., ..... a...n l4 a " , , 10-121
Cllb9o l' " lO 21 Ir 12' J~ tc*t llUUI 2, ~ FOUied
M-"NrlNlll, H G<allf .Mu,_ C•ur. "
(*""*1 lll, ClllcaeO a CJwd91\. "'""' lOl ~ .... l1 (()elry IJ), CNcaee lt (,.._, 12) Total ~ 2'. "*-2'. T~ COnnt, C...... ....., 0.-..,_, "*"° ...... .._ Al~l7 .. 91
(OLLIGI MaN
WNftW 102, CIW'llt c-.. .,.... 76
(_..Cl fl MCll)
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Hofftr1 2 • 0 , ' .,OMOfl 0 0 2 0 IMakan o o > o ltlcllltt > o o ,.
Oevta 115 127 °" 0202 lectl 7 3 • 17 Slmotall t 2 , •
Totall '2 16 2' 102 TolM 11 11 1' 1'
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NtclM SCHOC>L 90YS
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Not"lll 1 I o 2 Genfer1 S 1 I ll ~· O O 1 I Sato 2 1 2 S .... 121• .... 2014
Gettva 2 O 2 f • Cummlllea f I l t 9'Ufldate I I I 2 Slay I I 0 2 •Mc9ti0e 0 0 I 0 Ho 0 0 I I WOllf 302 6
Totll1 1 ' I 1t Totll1 2S J 12 SJ SC....., OMrtwt
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OCW View 64, Ne•"'1 H.,.., •
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YIMllU'iW 1S • s • l2t Ql ..... 14 ,. 1 15 .. 111 ~ ....
Detroit • 11 IS 5 •1 151 ,.
St. Uuls • 14 .. 7 JS m 1C2 T.,.. " n J J1 ,,, 1n
MltlalMOtl 12 • 7 JI 117 ..
Chtceeo to M I 2S 10 •1
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Waelllrwton 20 15 s 41 10 m
NewJtt/JIW1 13 ,, 1 JJ m ...
NY..._.,t 10 2S 2 22 112 117
MOtttr.i • ..... ........
11 10 ' .. WI 127
a.ton ., 15 ' -41 1» 122 .,.,., " 19 • .. 115 151
Herttttd 1S 21 , D lll 1Jt
~ ll " • • 10 , .
Tl Rn .....
P'7!1J l Ille 4, NY ...._ 1
CellttV I. ~ 1..._
...,,..,.. .. lwftalO. di "'""' W.et I eta et NY •-..n, •.JS P.m.
... Lt'* .. °"""· 4:25 •.m. v....,.., et WllWINt. m ...,,,, a...ec .. ~. 6:l5 •.m.
""*'"' --ec-. et Ca41WV. ~ Pm. ·"" NY llleftdlrt .. ...,._ US 1t.m.
.......... ,. .. MIMelol.. J:35 "-"'·
.,~
QalJl &!irder of Dake 1eU. .. lae aoee ap aaatnat defen.e
of WaallJDCtOD'• Maarlce RJa• lD Seattle Tue.day ntcbt.
PR O BASKETBALL -Lake~' rOad woes . .
continue in Seattle
LA drops seventh
consecutive away
~me,~ 16-106
From 'ne A11oclated PrHI
Xavier McDaniel scored six points
in the final four minutes and Dale
EJhs scored 42 points as the Seattle
SuperSon1cs handed the Los ngeles
Lakers their Kventh straight rood
loss. T 16-106
The Lakers' road streak 1s their
second longest s1nct the> moved 10
Los Angeles in 1960. The Lakers lost
eight straight dunna the 1974-7 S
season.
The Sonics never trailed aflcr a 9-0
run m the second penod gave them a
39-32 advantase. Seattle converted
three ~teals into fast-break baskets
durinJ that run.
A.C. Green led the Lakcrs with 27
points,
EIKwherc an the NBA:
BallJ lH, Cllppen lU: Michael
Jordan had 41 points, 11 assists. 10
rebounds and Slit steals, but Chicago
needed seven po1nts 1n overtime from
reserve suard Cra1& Hodics to defeat
theChppen
The win was Chicago's sixth 1n its
last e1Jht contests, while the 0 1ppers·
road record drop~ to 2-1 S.
Jordan put the BuHs ahead to st.a)
wathaslamdunkand Hoda.es h1ta 20-
footcr to ~vt Ch1caao a four-point
lead. The 01ppers could ne"cr pull
even after lhal
CavaUen lit, Pacen H: In Rich-
field, Ohjo, Brad Dlu~en_y scored 29
points and Clneland ~defenK allow·
ed only four fourth-quarter field aoals
as the Cavahers recorded their ninth
stra1&ht victo!r The wmn1nsstrtak 1s
the "tavahera lonsest in a s1n11c
season. They oner won 10 s1ra1&ht
over &wo-Jeason~ Indiana has lo t nine stra1ght.
match1n1 its lon,est slid of the
season, and 1s 0-1 .S on the road
I.lap Ua, Mavertcts H! Jim
Petersen scored IS of ht\ scawn-hi&h
2S points in the third quarter to ~d
Sacramento put Dallas 1n Kini.s
Coach Jerry Re,nokb' first pmc
back after: collal>'ina last "-etk, Re·
)'nold • who fell to the court and was
uoconsceous for 1e-..eral minutes dur·
1na the K.inp' 112·111 over Portland
on Dec 27, wort a mon11or to keep
track of tris hcanbtlL
at. Madison Square Garden. The
Knicks broke a three .. game losing
streak, their longest of the season, and
extended their wanning streak at
home to ro.
Hawb 1u. PlstoH 104: ~oses
Malone scored 28 points. gtabbed 22
rebounds and was the c8talyst in a
3.S-17 third-quarter spun as Athlnta
rolled to the victory at home. Malone
scored 12 points. had six rebounds
and made two steals in the third
quarter as Atlanta broke from a 6S-64
halfume lead to take a 100-81
advan.tagc 1n10 the final quarter
Roclei. 104, Jau 11%: Housaon's
Akccm OISJUWOn scored 26 points
and blocked five shoas 1n leading the
Rockets 10 the victory at hoqie
OlaJuwon got his 13th rebound of the
game at the final buzzer aner a
desperation shot by Utah's John
Stockton, who had 24 assists and .
scored 26 points.
S,.ra IH, N•uet• IH: W1lhc
Ande™>n scored 24pointsand David
Greenwood added a season-high 23
as San Antonio thumped v1s1tmg
Denver. Greg Anderson added 20 for
the Spurs. who snar.~ a four~gamc losing streak overal • and a fhc·gamc
skid apinst the Nugcts.
Neu ltt, Hontet1 lH: Joe Ba~
Carroll and Roy H.tnson scored ~
points each as New Jc~) u~ a
founh-penod spurt to win 1n ( harlot-
te
Trail Blasen lit, Heat H : In
Portland, Clyde Drexler scored 21
points, IQdina a bala.ru::cd au.ad as
the Trail Blazers handed M1am1 1ts
fourth straight defeat. It was
Ponland'se1ahth victory m its last 10
sames.
HOOPS .•.
Prom Bl
n .
Scott OraKe equalltd hrs 9C'lcSOn
hlJ}I with 2S ~ants for Huntington
Beach. but M1lhkan's constant tnps
to the hne 1n the fourth quarter
provtd deosive. The Rams scored
Just rwo field aoats and dropped in
nine free throws in the fourth penc>d
to hold Hunnnaton Beach off. ·
"I tbOughl Yl'e did I Sood JOb
8frens1\ldy· 1nd aot some real &ood hilb ~n\llr shots. .. •id If unt·
inatoo Beach Coech Roy Miller. ··we iuss couldn't put the bill in the hole
from insack."
1.11kb lH, <:tides 117: Patrick
Ewins's 10-foot bank shot snapped a
• UC wtt.h 2S tceonch kfrtn o-..entmc
and kd New York beck from• IS.
' pc>tnt rhint-quancrddicit toa vtctory
The Otlen are 1t Ed•ton Fnda>
ni&ht 10 a Suntet ~ue optncr and
Milltr 11 hopeful 6-fOot-4 Jdf Lona w1U be read~ for Huntiqk>n Beach's
ieCoDd ~pine neat week when 11
hosts Manna. Lona has been lost
since thuecood pmc of tht can~11h
~SPINN •••
C> rn-•1
an ukJc injury. ...
•
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c,._
UNLV overpowers 49e~s .• 97-79
I •
Prem 'he Altodate4 Preti
Andttson Huot made five oon·
teeutive )..pomtcn and. scored 2 1
points as 12th·ranked Nevada·Las
Veaas beat host Lona Beach State,
97-16, Tuesday niaht in a Bta West
Confertnoc pme.
Hunt made four o his 3·pointcrs
dunna a 20-.S Neva s Vegas run
which bt&an madw hrouah the
stcond haTfand boosted the Runmn'
Rebels to an 8J..S8 lqd. Hunt made
his final )..pointer w11h less than a
minute left an the same.
Nevada-Las Vea.as Coach Jerry
Ta.rbn11n improved his ~ecr Big
West record to 100-9 as the Rebels
raised their seison record to 8-3 and
their conference mark to 3--0. Lona
Beach St.ate fell to 3-7 in its con-
ference opener
David Butler added 18 P.Oints for
Ncvada·Las Vea.as whale Greg
Anthony had 14 and Chnt Rossum
12 The Rebels made nine of r7 3-
pomtcrs with Ros,um and Anthony
mak1ng two each
In other Big West games:
New Mulco State U , Cal State
F•ller1• H : W1lhe Joseph scored 20
points and grabbed six rebounds to
lead New Mexico State an ahe con-
ference opener for both teams.
·Johnny Roberson added I ~ points
and six rebounds for the Awes. 8-3.
Jimmy Taylor bad 11 points and five
rebounds for New Mexico State.
Mark Hill Jed Fullerton wtth a
career-high 26 poants. John Sykes had
14 poants and eight rebounds for the
Titans. S·.S Cedric Ceballos. Full-
CASTROL
MOTOR OIL .
• , ... JO
IOW JO
IOW «I 10'# so
HAVOUNI
MOTOlOtl ~~1 19oc, • SAi >O IQIW-4)
::~1:~·.:~:r,·:, ... ,, .... lfAAllOtt•lirtt\ 110ft9f0 ~
en on 's leading scorer and rebounder. was held to 12 points and eight
rtbounds..
Su Jote S&ate ''· Paotflc 11: Steve Haney's 26 points led San Jose State
to the victory 11 home.
The victory was the third in the last
four aames for San Jose. which
evened Its conference mark to I · I and
improved its overall record to S-6.
Pacific 1s 0-1 in the Bta West and 4-.S
overall.
Haney scored l6ofhis poants 1n the
second half, 1ncludma seven straight
in the final 2t!z minutes as San Jose
broke from a 67-63 lead to ice the
pme with an cl&ht-poin~ lead wnh
about one minute rema1nins.
FttlM Stace 7t, UIU Stace n :
Forward JC1'V1s Cole scored 27 points
and grabbed nine rebounds to tcad
Fresno St.ate 1n the conference opener
for both schools Fresno improved tu
6-4 overall and Utah State fell to 2-8
Elsewhere: before the llf'ltSt crowd ever to watd1
o.ke 11, W~ ti: Jol\n a collqe blskctbeJI pme 1n the
Smith scored IS ofhi1 17 points 1n the Brendan Byrne Arena.
second half as top-ranked Duke won The blttk between the two Bea f.aM
its 10th stra11ht. Washmaton faUs to unbeatens drew 19,761, bttakt,...
).. 7 both the rcaular--wason arena mark of . No~CatoUu ltt,P~r..._M: 18,J 16 for the Nonh Catohna·Ken-J.R. Read scored 18 potnt1·~11xth· ~tucky pme on Oec.16, 1981 and lk'
ranked North Carolina won its I 0th pc;>stseason mark of J 9,633 for die
conseculJ ve game and aave C01ch 1988 NCAA East RcsionaJ fiaal
Dean Smith tli~ 650th carttr' win._ between Duke and Temple.
North Carolina, 12· I, ne ver trailed OklMema 111,.,_aa llMiltoa State
and led .S5·3 I at tt.lf\1me. Peppcrdine tt: Tony Martin scored 1 c.arcer·hiah
opened the secon~ half with a 13·2 o40 points as No. 4 Oklahoma reached
run to pulJ within 13, but the Tar the 100-pomt level for the ninth Heels responded with an 11·3 s~urt consecutive pme and led bl between I .S and 28 points · the rest o the game. Ku111 l U, Breh 45: E a,h tcenth-
Kcv1n Madden scored 19 for the ranked Kansas broke a 7~ycar-<Md
Tar Heels and Pete Ch1lcut1 12. record for its larsest vtc:tory mllfJln,
Craig Davis scored 16 paints for as Milt Newton scored 23 points and
Pepperdine. 8-6 and Tom Lewis &ribbed 10 rebounds_
added i.s. The Waves are 0-S apinst Notre Dame H , Pea H : Joe
Atlantic Coast Conference teams. Frcdnck scored 20 points in leadina
Setoa Hall t4, Geerae&owa H : Notre Dame to the vactof) in Phtla· &raJd Grttne hTt a 3·po1n1 shot to delph1a Jamere Jackson. .added 19
1gnue a 19-9 burst late in the second points for the lnsh, S. l, mdud1n1 six
half that earned No. lO Seton Hall to straight free throws in the last two
the ·v1etof} over No. S Georgetown minutes to help hold ofTthc Quakers.
Tuesday's college basketball scOres
*IST ·lltOCKllS e1oi. 7S, Cal 841Ptl" 10 Cllko 51 fl, <H'aoon Tec;ll 17
Outr.• 11. w a'1tlnoton • •
FrHllO SI 7• Uta!\ SI n
H•v.O.-Ull Veoa• '7, L~ 8eacn SI 7•
H-Me•i<:O SI 6S, cs Futterlon
'°
IO
71
Horlll C•rollne 102, ~~lln•
s Utan 109. SI. Fr•nc4. NV SI .
Sell JoM SI ]6, Pec.lflc n
WerM/f P.clflc "· A.IUM Peohc
SOUTHWIST
Hou•lon 8eplt11 IS. Olll•llOme
l•PllSI 6'
Mo<ellted SI 76. TnH·Arllne·
1(1(1 73
OktehOma t t I ~m HOUJIOll SI
" Oktellome Sr 11 Cen1 ConMC11• cut St »
SS
MIOWEST.;-Eva~ .. .._ II AICOf'n St ..
l(a"'Wl llS. lln>wtt ~
Nortllwnlwn IJ N.vv 6CI
S 1-s f7 HE M1SWl4ltl II
SW MtHOUl'I SI 51 IC•'IM• Sl
SOUTH F•fr .. 1911 Oldlfllton n , SI Row
81.1ll9f IS, Au•lln PHY II 66
Cc»olll St 7S, N C•rOllne ... ~ T H¥1ford 62. '"-H•"'"hlre SS
ff HOIY Cro.s "-o.ilmoutfl 12 Fie 1n1..-ne1i0nt1 t01 M4 ·E Ltfllefl 16, AMlrfOht Sl ~t to MIMll1 Fie "· llutMr• f4 (Oil G9or9t MH011•72 Mamt '1 Notrt OllfT!e 60, PeM SS
McHteM SI 71, Ulmer 61 frovldlnce ti, St. JoM'' ff NE LOU1"9IWI II NlenOlll SI 71 ICl!odt IMN\d 61, St. JoMPfl's U
(ol) llotltrt Morris n. ~ " SW LOUIMM 7', 8•Pl1ll Coll n S.IOll Hell H, Geof"9tt0wn ..
Slt lMlll •• Llt>trty '6 SI 8oftev111tlurt 13, ~
WeshtnetOll '°
1J
St FrlNldJ, Pa 13, GeM¥t 51
St Ptttr'S 61, Jad<IOIMll 61 Wnt ~ ... ~.
.. IT GAS UM AHTIHR.11
..... "' -3$) . --... . ...., ....
•
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South coullty leads state in office st8.ffing foreca t
A uthalfofcompantesplan
htnngs in first half of i 989
AJ&bouah 27 percent of CaJif'omia businestn expect
to '8crate d.eitpermanent office staff durina the first half
of J 919, the Statewide IVeflte don not aive a lNt picture of the h.irina p{ans in sped fie arets of California.
Area forecasts vary from a h~ in touth Oranae
County, where 46 percent plan to hire additional om~
llaft' in the fint Six months of 1919, to a low in the San
FrancilOO Peninsula area, where only 7 peroent plan
increatet. .
The statistics are ba~ on interviews with 1,496
business executives in l S areas of the state.
Commissioned by Thomas Temporaries, a tempo~
ary help service with headquarters in Irvine. the survey is
one in a series designed to monitor office employment
activity throupout Ca!iR>mla.
"Thettatiwide averqe in hirina projections th11 year
don not rd'lect the hirina trend• expected in each of the
areu surveyed," said Bonnje Nash, president ofThomu
Temporaries.
.. We've foUowed office h1rir\I trends for ft>ur yean
and never saw a J!Uler diffmnce between the hip and
low ~tions, both in permanent and iemporuy help. 'Diependinaon the location of their bu&ineues tome executiva look toward the new year with pt confidence
and optimism. while othets are cautious and con· eervativt... .
Statewide 64 J)Cl"Cent of those interviewed anticipate
their office stalfwm remain stable( while 8 perctnt plan.1
decrease In 1taff durina the fint ha fort989. Two pcreent
are uncertain about future office needs.
The f11um are cJOle to ~ojettions made durin1 last
year's survey fpr tho first half or 1988.
After south Oranac County, the areatcst increases in
birirw are P!OJected 1n LolAnltlet (.a ~o~ Rivenidt and Senti cwa counties (eadi 38 perceM) Ind Saa DicF ( 3 .s pm'eftt).
In addition 10 the San Ftucieco Paiuula ara. t~
loweai increaa in hirina are anticipeled in fat Bly (I 0.
peR:ea&). Blkerifteld (I J pm:cnt) and Loni Bach and
San Gabriel Valley (18 percent eKh). •
Areu nearest the state averate are north Oranae County (32 percent), Secramento (31 percent). Sin
Bernardino (27 ~rccn•>· S.n Fernando Valley (25 percent) and north San Oiqo County (24 pm=enC),
Compared with 1988 projections, Santa Oara
County is contidera.,,)'. more optimistic than ~ year.
with an additional lo pm:ent more firms ~nnina increua. In both Lot Anaeles and north Oranee County, 14 percent more addltJonal firms plan increasa over last
year.
More conserv~dve a.re both the San.Francisco and
&la_,.--......,., itl IMla, 16...,,.. ._ 'lnr3·eu
aecuti~ Plan to hire llUI ,_, c:ompMd wtdl IML
T~lll wim word pra cnri., skills Will be ia .. ._
demand 1Uaewide. ...... bf It ~of ' lboee ~~While 16 perieat pa.tt to in lddhiouJ
Nelli an dtmaDd will be eccounu111 derb ( 13 pe~t). ttJCeplioni111 with 'YPina ability (I f perc111t) and
receptionjltl wiab twilehboud .tills ( 10 pcJ"CCnt). I
An increue ill lliriftf tempOt'lry oftlce help in the '
next six me>Adal ii DRHecfed by 19 ~t ofbutine.e1 ttatcwide. wbill 6'. perceet an1k'ip1te tbeir .. mporary
needs 1"lJ iemaiJu&lble, l I pen:cnt n~ • decrate in
the uee or temporary office help arid 2 ~t .are
undenain.
Apin, tbe fiaura show no si,niflcant charwe from .
forecasta made a1 tbe bcsinnina o 1988 for the likf six·
montl1 period.
. .
Largest.bank sells Chicag~ i'etall division<
Dat-Ichf Kangyo says
it alms to concentrate
on business banking
CHlCAGO (AP) -The world's
laraest bank Dai-ichi K.angyo Bank
Ltd., said Tuesday it is scllins its
Chica,o retail operations to First
Amencan Bank Corp., a suburban
bank holding company, so it can
focus entirely on business banking.
Terms of the transaction were not
disclosed. The deal includes assets of
S3S million, including about 6,000
check.ins. savinp and other accounts. and a retail loan portfolio ofless than
SS million, the companies said in a
joint statement
I
Dai:Ichi said the Chicaio office
was ill only U.S. branch with retail operations. But Yoshiro Aoki , joint
aeneraJ manaaer of the Ch1C8fo
branch, said a Dai·lchi subsidiary 1n
Los Aqela. the Dai·lchi Koayo
Bank of California, also offers retail
bankil'\.I. Dai-Tchi also operates branches in
Los AnaeJes. ~ew York and Atlanta
and has offices, but' not full branches,
in Houston and San Francisco.
Tokyo-based Dai-lchi, with more
than S37S billion in asset.a worldwide, said it plans to relocate and expand its
downtown Chicqo branch to ac-
comodate the rapid v.owth of its
business bankina act.iv1ties.
First American. bued in Elk Grove
Village, tiasSSOOmillion in asset.sand
18 banking locations in the Chicato area. The firm said it would retain
Dai-lct\i's Chicqo retail staff.
The deal marked a "milestone" for
First American by aivina the com·
eany its first downtown location, said
Chairman·Thomas E. Wells JV.
"It fulfills a critical aoal in our 1trateaY of acographical expansion,"
Wells said.
But for Oai·lchi, w\th assets of
about $3 billion at its Chica10 branch alone, .. this is insignificant, with a
capital 'I,"' said Frederick Wig·
btman, a banking analyst with Duff &
Phelps Inc. in Chicago.
Wi&htman said Japanese banks with 0 .S. branches senerally are more interested in larse-scale commercial
business than in consumer check.ins.
savinp and 'ioans. •
"Retail banking is tied clo!flY to
dcposit-tatherina and with the hiah
savinp rate in Japan, anractina retail
deposits (overseas) is not a bia
concern for Japanese banks," Wia·
htman said. "The deposits are avail·
able in mote than adequate qu1ntitie1
back in Japan." · '
Dai-lch1's Chicqo branch, estab-
lished by the company in 1972 as the
Fint Pacific: Bank of Chicqo and
convened to branch status late in
1981. counu 1mon1 its customers
such well-known Midwatem corpor·
ations as Brunswick Corp.; Ford
Motor Co.; Goodyear Tire & Rubber
Co.; McDonald's Corp.; and Sears,
Roebuck and Co. ·
American Prescription Inc., whoee
founder and preaiden t was named the
1988 Oran# r..ounty Woman En-
uepreneurofthe Year, bas completed
contract neaotiations wiil1 Metro-
politan Life lnsuran~ Co., which
provides medical care for such com· eanies as Rockwtll lntemational and
General Motors. · For Or. Sharon Hom. who founded
the S2.8 mill ion pharmaceutical com·
pany in El Toro in 1984, the
recosnition of winnina the En·
trepreneur of the Year award has
areatJy increased her bu11ness.
"Since the award. American
Prel(ription has concluded n~
tiations wjth Materials Man•ment
Corp. which suppl ia produc:ts JO the
la,.:tt chafo of industrial clinics
throuahout th~ country,·· said Hom.
''These new co ft tracts will J,Cnerate S 1
million 1n revenut for 1989."
Horn estimates Amencan
Prescription's li\'t•yea.r cumulative
projection to be 1:S6 million. She bases this on her company's con·
tmued l>cnetration of both national
and international markets.
Amcncan Ptttcription ts a Federal
Oru1 Administration-li~nsed plant
tl1at peckqes pharmaoeuticals ror
doctors 10 dispense ct;rectly to, pa·
ucnts and 11 also licensed to sup~ly prescnp1ion drup throuah the mail.
The compenr was staned by Hom
IS I way tO fll the lfOWlAa need lO
make health care more convenient
and economical for 1».tien1.1.
"By ~pack.qtd, direct dtt~IUI n&
of medicine, and home delivery of
med.i<:ation, more ptlienu are com-
plytna, with their prescription rea>·
men•,' she said
Hom wu one of 600 nominated to
be Entrepreneur of the Year. She was
eelected at a finalist 11\.cr in-depth
interviews and reeearch were con· ducted by accountants ftoom Arthur
Youna A Cc>.. which co-sponsored the
event witn Ora.nae Coun1y Buii·
nmFir11 and Venture mqaz1ne.
''Th.is 11 ~bly the h1&hest honor
that I have achie'1ed," saia Hom
··1 have betn pcnonally nottd 1n
'Who's Who,' but to have my bus1·
ntsa rec;oanittd is really wonderful.
h 's like tomcbody say1na )Ou have a
beautiful child -you l:noYt it all aJons, it jUJt taka ume for ot~n to
recopizc 1t, too."
announces
acquisition
worth$12M
Oeottt Laboratories Inc. in Laauna Hill• bat acquired Forcon
Tecbnol<>sies Inc., a phannaceuticaJ rescaroh company, in excbanae for
cash and common 11ock or the
company, io a tran.uct.ion valued at
mote than S 12 mil hon.
The acquisition a1reement providn thaHhe principals ofForcon
Technol<>sies may recewe add•tional
future oonsidenuon amountina to a
maximum of 10 million sbatt'I of oommon stock, issuable at the rate of I million shant for each S 10 million
of annual incremental ales in u~
ofS25 million, attributable to Fort:0n
Tecbnol<>sies oroducts: Jonathan 0 . Stems: president of
Oentre Laboratories, 111d, "Forcon brinaa to the company oonNderable
research becqround an tranldermal
time-controlled delivery systems for
drup and other solutions. J)Cf'IOnal
h)'IJene ~ucu. and in the im·
provement of the company's ex is.ting
or eianned productJ. 'Transdennal tlme-oontrolled re·
lease deliveey system& have been cooditionatly approved for dJspens-
ina three drup to dale. however, the
cotn))any believes that wide u• of
this technoloay will be in effm wuhin a few years. This method has ceruin
advantqes over oral .•J>phcati_ons.
which can lead to acadental over·
doSa&e. system ihock and indiaes-tion.
· "Since the in\l'Oduction of this
tecbnolOI)' • few years ~. the
response from the health care indus-
try, the medical profestion a"'1 the
oonsumina pµbl.ic bas been so
enthusiastJc that transdcrmal de~
livery -systems M·.v represent an
cmersina arowth industry." A tranldennal delivery and time-.
controlled release aystem is rltltr·
voir device that adheres to the skfo
bke an adhesive ba~ and con·
tains a fonnula. tolution. drua or nutrient which aenmlly passes
throuah a m~tnbrane or senr1 of
mcm6ranes to the skin at a ume·
controlled release rate ranaina from hout1 or up to several days.
As the substance or compound a~
tbrouah the skin and into the blood· stream, the level of OOf\Qtntradon in
the blood is accurately controlled and ma1nta1ned.
Additionally Fol"COn Technol0Jle$ has developed a feminine hnaene
dou.cht that has been tested . as
viNCidal, *teriadal and funt>cidal.
That advanced P")duct is t~ reruh of
forcon's work with non·toxk, anti· microbial compounds that have been
inoorp0rated lrito time-released pol y·
meric suppositories, hydrophilic sup.
positories and aqueous-hued tolu·
tions for douches.
The compeny plan1 to pracnt the
t«hnoloSY at 1 aymposi\UD on
aynecolCJI)' arid oblietriCI ln me near
future. The cod\puy alto plans to ineo~te this t«hnoloSY inio it !Joe of PROTICflN-beted pmout
hwene products manufKtured by
Jean Pierre Producu, 1 wholly owned
svbsidiary.
<kntrc Laboratories, • public!)' held compeny, iJ enppd in the
mearcb, development., manufac-
·tunft1 and mar\etans or dnap.
cbemtcal rettents, device:i and oon· trols for the med1c81 ind'"try and
nutritional and h)'l>Cne producis.
• ' • • ' •
I :
•
-
WID•8DAY'I CLOl•CI PRICl8
AMEX LEADER S
~~~ --
+ ...
D o~ JoNr s A\ E R~GE s
--- -
I ME TALS QuoTEs
--~ ------
ii NASDAQ S u Y~.1 RY
t ac""9 ...:· 11W N~ . • ~a...
~ + ''-' "• ~ ' -" --""•
NYSE UPs & DowNs
---=-=---=-~ r
.
CALL 642-5878
.... --.....
~-. .. .-
'V
' . . You oen "°"cell the DaJIJ Piiot c....,..... ~on 8aturclar morning trOm l:OO to 11:30 e.m. to plw rour lundilJ end........, eda.
AIMTnAft ......
MOU Ill/CONDOS
o...i.. 1a ..... _.. ...... ..... -,.,
c..,.i.--1011 c-.i-'°" c.--... .,..._, .1•
111-. IOD -v.e., loM ................... 10.0
...................... ICMt
-....... IOM '--lM
'--lOIO '-......, 1oa
""""-· IMS .............. • 1067 ..._.... Iott ... o--1016 --~ 1019 ._,.... . '* .... ,............ , ..
lel""C.--I .. ..... ._ IOll ,_ IOfO
MISC. I .I .
..-.-1100 ~ llU ..... ,c...... Tito
•Tlll'AU
, HOUlll/CONOOI
111$ 1ns
IJU ·-ISU
ISIO
IS7S
UIO ltfO
1.00
lt2S
~. 2102 ..... _ 1106
.............. 11'11 ~-l l ll c-.. -2112 c:..-1114 0..-. . 21M
••-. . . 21n ,_y.-.,, 21Jol
.................. 2140
....................... 2142
-.... . 21"4
'-.... •• 21• .._-.... "'° .._.......... . "" Loiit,_ ... 11" .......~. 21'7 ............. ,, ..
S..0.-.. •. 217' s..-c.,...... . t l11
CLASSIFIED INDEX
642-5878
FROM NORTH ORANQE COUNTY
FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY
COLDWeu
BANl(eRO
associated
k-1 ,,., ........... f' 'l•
~ • .. ' ' • )()..j • , ,.
M0-1220 ....
"'° ,, .. MISC. llNTALI
A'AITMINTI a-.. ..... -. .................... c..--.... c-.... . c:--...... . 0.--...... .. fll-........ .. ,......,,..... ... . ...................... ......... -...... .. .. .. . '-........... . i...-•. '-........... '*-. --.... ~-· s..a.-.. --c...,_ .. ...... . ,....._ ............
~c.-..... .._ ,_
JI ..
t1•
!lfO
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
Mondey ........... 8at.11:30AM
Tue.t.y ........... Mon. 5:30 PM
Wedneeday ..... Tuea. 5:30 PM
ThUl"ldey .......... Wed. 5:30 PM
Frld•y ............. Thut9. 5:30 PM
Saturday ............. Frt. 5:30 PM
Sunday ............ Sat. 11:30 AM
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS
Telephone SeMce
e~M
Selur!My 1:00 AM-11.30 AM
..in.. Counter
Monde)o-f'ridey
1:00 AM-5:00 PM
M2·se71
Snuggle
Pup .,_.
•tot .. ..
"°' .. ,, •11• .. ,. .....
6140
"" ..... .... ••• ..,, .,., " .. •llO
•• 6112
HAS RETURNEDI
·~· by~' Ml'NM 01mu·A·Llnt wi• tun Friday. M lUI·
tJ•Y ~ ~uncuy In Its own ("')SJfl<cttlon tn thf CLtJSlfled Ad)
Slnct lhh I). ~<llf offctt. ~ Nw .. ~so.y noon OHclllle
lf'ld ull ~~mt'f'I( tor .. .as Th.ts 11 op«n to II pnv.ttt p.ttty
.Ovtnl~rs r01 ~rcNndlse noc OVtf s 1 SO IP'lct must ~ 1tu ed
. . .
1n .01 and no .corr.o1.uons wtl bt ~ctpttd Al ech Will tut1 Fr~. S<ttur~ ¥td Sunday Tlwrf' •• • S·llrw ll'linlmurn at 10C •
ptot IHW •• So yOti.11 low C!Olt De!Mt·A-UM ad .. ~ ...
Sl.00.
DEADLINE: Thurtd-ly noon
ftttlC~: S ~•n.11'1•1'!tnum • ) Oayi • 20f ~' ltrw-• S) 00
Al Mil .tft prtp.ll•d by COffltflO tnlO lht D•lly ,.Jot to
~.t<t yOU1 MS or IJff lhf coupon Ot!ow
''"'•" t>•rty l'nf't(l\.tn<JIU' otty Mh No (OfTt< m.r<lal .tdi ptts, llvt'n0<1t, ptO<jvo or pl.mu
• Eacn tr•m must be prf<.O In th« .a witn no lttlM ovt r
SI SO
MAIL TO: DMtel·A•UN
0 .11 1y it110c :uo Wut ~1 Sllt f't. Cost• Ml:'M CA 91616
D.1 ,."", '10Uf' • M~y F11(Uy 8 00 AM to 5 00 'M
,
NAME~--~------~
STAn ____ ZJ~------
AMOUNT INO.OSIO....,.. ............ ...-"--...--.-........ OATIS fO """'----------
UNU \"
--l . "'
J . ~
... -
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'· . I . .. -' . ~ --
---. -. -· _ _.. ........... -
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.. ::r.: : ...... l:;t;ir°L==·~·111-;a:~ =·•.:== ==== ... I 3 I I'·= I ::..-:....-=: to~CIO ..... Mer· =I.,__. ..... -. I .....
llellftl. ... ""'*· ..... -.... -... ..... ...... ... C.14,eo.ta......... • J ----............... . ,...,910 ...... ..... = --LIVI&. IOOICKHPtfll. (7M)fM.1'11 .. nr• =__.. ............... ~=a:=~
----··-,., Glw Oo. In COllla -......... : ..... ..,., : -°""" ~n. c.. Mt. •n•lr • ....... .._...,....,. ,_.... T..,-"""'-,.... 1 ~a ._.....,. ,.... ____
JoMlof:(114)a66-ta7 Cel .. M f.ael3. .... peoptetottn:::;rCof:. llO. 411 MIO Cll.__ .. _ •
faithful lnt9'· • • r , 11 • ..... ......... ,_. "6. 1Wt . ,.. NIW DAY91D WMITI a M litl• fiW9 ;;;I
oM9of Of II wtW> lmloele ---Oti'V Cl..IANIHG •• • • n..-... """· ...._.. curacy •,,_. l5042lt -·-WN: _ ...._. --· ~ your~ '*10fte09 Ill COUNTI". Patt time, 'IT ........ Pfti'd In """*' OPeftlnl, pt~ ofo. ~ >Cine OPPCY for ' -· ......,11111 ...... I nu i 1at. Cit--t.ltM Of need. To you, I e LAOIHIPAAnNOPTI HunUnaton IHCI\, Apt. UaAftt. 16-ttfttua' ,IT, Good enWot.fMnt, atllYanfftMnt . t4.11· Stook Help & truftd .. complete. .., ... , '
,,..,,_ teoourte "°"' the e FOOO llAVf~ l'T , lll-1aol helpful. tlelary oom• Mh arM . Ne Lltht 15/Hr Contact Gery at Temp«ary Stoclc t*P for mt •MCMJU• ...., =
depttl of mt '*" and Day Shifts Onty ... "**"'L all wi....-~ ~ & ~ ~· td com-646-0431 ot appty at JK Hpandlng tradltlonel Q'uliN iiH MATTW 11•... ~ ~beg to Whom God • HOST /HOSTESS .-r APP ~ at TSL • """"° ' P". -2· 1040. om. '°""' COMt Plue, Clothing llOt• In N •. ' 80X. OUtL TIDt .......
Ml gtv.n Mid\ or .. t OeySNfte()nly CdM chiropractic otc 1N E. 11"1 8t. ~A. •llPTll•IT Coate...._ 119/ ... 1/231at,morn1n9 9"AHONIWll111. _........,.. obo.
pow to coma to my U· • AEfAtL Ct.EM PT nMdt chfffful per· Coeta MaM.141· -----i A L I i M A N & ~ hf1. Cont.ct CALL''* ..._.,., * ,.._ oal 7..._1
alllMCI. H9lp me 11\."'1 • COCICTAK.: lllWE" r:T 90Nlllty, .. Ai: 34 WAliCIMT • Tner.e.1"59-7979 OteaMC and urgent S*f.. e NCMTARY hr•I•""· J>• one ..,.,. pe;;e to wort! w/ Wottl In a er-at tftWOft.. AGl,./lntrepreneu~ • ''°" ... ~. l P!omiee TWMft810wpm front Of' .... Cel. 10 ~. oontraotor ..... ,,.,... w. "--an lrfl· ~""':h to~ EARN ~ -
to make your name b~ence .. ... Ontw ....... ._....,.. ....-... °"'*II tot en l f00.000 call Thur $400 $1000/WK .. hEIEWWW ~':'Ta :oi':C::I :::"vok-: cau.e you lo F:.. r~ ~ Ml ~ .:::. and :~=-~ = ::-.. •.::: ~ ..._ ~~:::.:Co.:,, .::.ft~ • . Almotc"!.. revoMnt ·=.:o:~c~~=
;.,.._ .... two~lnf •-hr Heil IEACHWAAICO laloc*· need~ ~you peopte.CeltfM1IO 8Mctl tocatltn~ *IAM 12Moon ~..41:"0::-(11':) onoa. lerll.+CMtor Im-............. "8Q/mo -1 I • Matyt and Ing for• tun energtk: S*· bftght ... groomed and I I I • ftulanat pttOM fMftMf IMD""' No Nia,, at-· lt9eton ,... -.r. <:1111
11ftd "* Md ..-iy OIONa Pu~.onmuat '°"for a Ml tll"N cu.-...,_,'totwn?Tr~ 11 111111&.I Ill &ouaeomar~lk .. ,.,_.lllCM t1ett1 & tlte :l1/Hl{~a/Wtlnc::~ ' t4-3112 149-1117~. ;~. 173-2747 be ptom.d St Jude '°"* Ml'\4ce poeition Weat«tl ...... & taaort Nlf•1ml ,...,... Salaty COfft• lhowtOOM IOOklnQ lor c:omt'I\ r--.. ElECTAtC GUITAR lfll ~t~ ue and all wtM» Computer experience .,... wftt'l a ~ Mon, TuH & Wed, men•ura te with ••· FIT ..... on.ntecf P'O-llSTlm& ..... 11 lrancS new-Hcellent
TNt ~aid Amen hefc>ful Contact Pam OI tftat haa a c,;::; hm·3 tlpm II/Hr parlalioa. boalant '*"' t1111a11atpenon o .nlU.M1·1a.I condition Ot1ly uMd ....
;; ---beankMWnto":.~ Fren714-657 .... 220 :::"'~ lmmedla_te =.A':._~bte. :,=.-ee..::: =l=-==-~ 'I..... =.,~~:.-::,~~i11££ .. MI
.:....; ..,,.. my request 9'M11d. -Ill MWfG , ~*'09 for 1t1oM ti MIOICAl F om Offtoe tact· Lori 145s2214 Eurobath 1•1111•1•191 M1·19t7 ianytVM l'r..:..... .... aMln~eltony;
'"'"ly ,__ 1111 & Up MCP Pwt Ume(t-1). Small Mtg and0wtlnourMarlletlnQ r & Tlletnc 1tnmMall:~ :~.hecoltaa,heatld PRAYERIOtMHOlySplr1t Co.Compytarup h_elp.. Olvl1 lon NO EX · Aacaptlon4at, ~ MaulaAdanltOn "' ••n•••T. POOL TABLE·•· Solid ln~cond.Aa>-:~· .eepe '° ~n. Holy Splrtt 1°" Wl\o ful. Send reaume to OMI. PERtENCENECESSAAV, helpful, buay Newport 8EC~ECTARV Word Pro-Pfl 2-ec>m Mon·Tuet Slate w/acceuorlH. pt~ _,. 112,500, : lat'•~ NS N Coait1 Hy, make rne M. evetythlnv 17832 Sllyperk Cr •!• 0 , all .. ...,... pe6d duflng 8Mcf'I Offtce. &41-3903 IMDllll . ~ • Arcl\ltecturll fvm Tl\ur1 -Fri. OOQd with $800 Call 141-7030 alklf!Q U .500 Ot beet
• UlOuM 9ctl 414-5294 and Who .now me tM INlne, CA 92714 ttalning ..,. ~· I 11 IHL UI Tm requlrH •aperlenced ~ Pi:!u~umt:;: POOL TABLE w/utrM, -.r. l:atl Nd!. 142-4111
. . IU Lm... way IO reach my idMJ•. CAREER OPPORTUNITY I ~. •Wbno bOnl.la e YR Ca Uc. PIT d•Y9· llTDITITE P9rtOn W/ltong Sec M .... 8'2·9142 ' a Bar'°°'" ..... ..., ~ = ; ~ W¥lty ,.,,... now avail You Wllo 9M me tM Hou .. c!Unlnv.""' up 10 P'o0f'91M, tt~atlon 144·7Mt M.O. office word Pfoceaaulg tkllls, dl11on, S350 Of ... , _ _ . • 1147 00 wk & up 227, dtvtne gift to lorgiw and 135K 111 Y99f No .. , furnl.n.d, returl\ fare IOI IBM Computer Back· 1111--L.-..1.1.-CALL 722·M'I xc . o.L.~' Bl\ld CM 14&.7.,.5 fOtget IM wrong thal I• per1enQe ,_,,_;,,. .... 0. guatantMd. For apc>CMnl• MINISTORAGE rot al VU\...._......,._, "'"I ground Mlpl\.tl Salary --.. . ti ~·At new. 91200 or
.--pl • donetorneandVouwtM» ·----i'· rnent catl Don Hawltln1 Clerk. Ne ed Mature """",_..""",......,er.,.v. Nee ~reeumetoO. =· =;II • beet Ofter, Mu•t ... , utlta tatah .,eln allthe lnatlln«*ol f::ie~a~~"o':fat~ M5-2221. H to •PM Capable peraon. Ofc ~(1148each>•-'-;-'1.12eeo M~u•. t10 Newport '8~ · , ILXCRLD llCM011alktor0eo.le. ITU my Ille wtth me. I, In. this necHHry. Call Gall 1"'ough Frtdlly. lkllte ~leJC Hr1. _.. Cent• Or #850, NB mfWlfoR i Frff to oood home, ~ ....
.... 1111111'! ... ~911 ............ , lhoft dialogue WWII to &41-3103 111111 Al .... 92tl0 Ot c.ii Mon-Fri whit•, lrOtffr ... 20 cubic female • montM old kW· -. ebU ifboio thaftll you lor ewryttooo •11H m News Aeporter Equal Oppty E~ 11-2144.1591 ft, very good condltlOf'I, 1ng csoO 4ea-oua '
OdMn tide. "' '* to bch •nd c:onflrm onoa more • CASHIER/CLERK Publlltlfng Co. need• 2 S85. &4s..t908. ..... 1CMoot longbOard
/MO, utN lnc:t off that I never WWII to be AlrPor1 gift ahOp, dee>en. aherp m~tur•d~~= ••• a1::,,_· _,1 l•IT . J...,,/hn/Art 1195 u_~lent con~ pat1tng. n.91nkr, eeparated "om You no wtl train, FIT, PIT. llC>PIY ~ or C 1 -hmltut MH 1111 dltlon' C..15' 1038 , 9().9109 815-1005 matter hoW Of•t m• T~Frl AM, 952 .. tM . dutlee Oood typjet, Wll mld·.U. n -' • Wltfl Ot Without tvPWlO. • k-"--.--.,...-......,,,.....-1 lerlat ~ .. "'9Y be 1 · traJn. Aak for Anita IOfllla dally went• an 89· needed for. W•&•llMI "8Cb man11 \lk S:::: Lflll~lllll f 8 ti I tt lrt want to be with You .net CtSHI~ FfT, 1°' IM1 M&-D30 ,.....,. reporter who •Short•term FootbOard wltt'I r•. marl~•r. &ct. pHr· 1 ~~~~~~~~~
...,. ______ 11_14_1 my:,::;:, In~ :.': Nl~~~m= o1~~~f~E~J~~st ,..: ~·qu~; =~=t=~m quwualtt514M7~ ::;=: t:"' .. ~~. Cilii.. lili ~AtvATe BATH and e:,forVourL.ovetoward Alll forl.Mry, S4t-30t8 mediate oHlrlngl Yo':; =--~ ~~ ~alpoeltlona ~LOOKING F<>f' OUAL.ITY s:~~tlOft UCM671, lemsS30pm ~il'Y!.,:-: .. ~
.. w~~~aM~~;~ ':!.nartd my loY9d on.. ~!c,_. needs day rn •. ~~ •. &~~) and IM ~ to City In Huntington a a.acll, ~~r.~ JBEN5r~RV! HO 'Student dHll. -hiiltut M."L.c.ii.t Fumlt\n, .
blfore10em P«lon1 may pray 11'111 c:ara3dayta-.k,715 F31tfcwFedera1Ult24 Edtt0tStewMar1*t,PO. FountalnVallray&allOr· SECRETARIES nurctyW.~3297 .... ltn•t 1147 Kltc:Mn~MllC. prayer 3 conMCutlve to 3:30 In N B. home HRS Boa t5IO, ~ MeM. WIQ9 County arw e WON> PROC NEW DESIGNER of!-wM• ,_ -Mini Commeu:lal .,....
CU.UY N 8• ADDRESS! d9"f9. After IM thtrd day, eo-1+12 & 3+12 Cellf • t212t. No c:aMa O L. WiAvtA e TYP18T ICQ & 1c>veaaet. M~ -P?Rllllll 1'1MO toott. woocf, mectt. ~ on~ se75 & your .......... be grw1tld $40/day 142-44 t5 HOST /HOSTESS p!MM. TEMPOAAA.1£8 8ect1b ---anlc;al a aonw PCMW er· or un-no matter how ditncult tt ,: P/T, FIT, Inquire at. PIT SECTYIBKPR 714/a.7.oNO ~REE YEAR END ASSIGN 875-f.Ht F -:=;.. Nut9 & bob, ~
644-2107 ** • may be Then prom!M to _...__~ f /T ~·1~N1:' Newport Retired couple/ rental T!MP/PERM POSITIONS l(ar~ Afto1 table 3 ~.0,.. ~ = ~ nela. aM eonacl. ~
....... pubhh tn19 dialogue .. p,.,....,... bfollarup. Btwtl ..,...tar""'• mgmt 2 day/W.. $10/tw •IBlll•ll 14 I chein, buff' ft t io._ ' M1F.~.w2aR,1Vrn '°°" .. your tavor t1at =~~':r! 111 .. lt.,. Non-*'*r.e.ttiO.Penln-NMdld leech ;t COnd a.t .on:: ,,._;•r,:000 c:on.'~ :i:..-:_~,=..,
tlll "400141-M74 bean Ofatltld. MCP tM Mgr, i.45-3878 Tab home l2004250 wk. tula. 813.-1372 Hair Sa!Of\ ~ ..._214t 124-M52 alk for He! ~ taryau. !
F"'4ALE to atlafe 3BR VISA/MASTER .. o.t Vow Musi haYe cal. 722-H5t . • 19
ffl,A, <>c.anfront Tri· Card Today. OuarantMCS HIUTD llU HB•t-HIRE
,,..., on Balboa Penn. or Money b~kl CaH (,.. D'\!.CLEANERS. Wiii HOUSEKEEPERS To ANflt tMlylng Micro.com· C'L Al ~~lT.'lrlt'n AD•TEft,.,'JS' ... &l 6 '4f0/mo875-9311 . tundable)1-...7-7'44Q11 tr-Mon-Fti.1:30-~. cteenComrn'l&Rea.,. Ponent• ••ceaa lnven-~"· i:J/11 r, •~ .aHJI 3BR •• , R2912B8 for app. 24 u II( •tart. 142-MM llabhl & • car • rm•t 1 tory Mi.Ion Vlefo. CALL . #••;::.to,,"'!',~. FIND '3Met5Julle«1Yrn.; Naney7M-i233 _through cl~sslf•ed §ALE§
• HDOlmo neoot. Avail S.~t Lift .. llllllllPll
.... ~5. 876-"39 rn Ail for llnvte man, 9"\811 hM DOING
.,.... Verde n/amkr. no cAiloelAe through classified w/oceanvlew 499,1531 M R We are A to our sales.staff .
.. AM .. Le h(lu9a •• -y8f'd. For 18 mo. old," h.ek.pg.~----------1 --------1 I tor outas
• W/O. pyt pflone, cable, appfO• 30 II( Mo mature -If you can tyrw at least 45 wpm and ha•e .. aao + dep. 540-7955 reap. edult w11h rel• -r -. ~ .=, = eiaMt 1oe. 75W385 We' re looking for peopJ~ who'll great tel~omm~ication skills -We can
..007mo Avall nowt Companlon/HHkpr for mind their own business. ava·ilable in ff ba l AN D ua-1111 Hen eld«ty 1ady. iM-1n. 11c o er you a ary +comm· ion
drlY. ,..9"\k,, ... .,.,,, hm u you·ve alwa~ wanted to own )'OUr business. Westm • ate aliSJllTlllU. 557·9891, 546-2824 stact nos1na Into a career with Ma )'flower 1n r 8 /'!__._~place tO WOrk. '..~~~a.tu.I Ilk• Lift• llllBl&D Trans1L As an owner/operator for tM best· ~ ......,.--.~~~~==-For Couple In Newport known name In movlnc. )'O,.dl make your own Hun11·n· .. on l•ach hH Time. Plirt r,.,e .4 tt.U..Me • • NON SMOKER Befch, Enoliah apeekfng. decisions. plus. OM' ol tM hlchest line haul • I
.. ~. '350+¥-lee-Non-Smolter. HC.•P· ~rcen~ In tM lnduSlry We'll supoly your F • v II Do vo· ...... ,. fa:or -;._ .. Qt, ·:'=9".c:,.,~:: ~~ =· ~,,::; ~;~~~mc~~~~~1fy.a~~na,,[:;n our OUnt11n I IJ. ' --. ~
40 male, rwmkr to through Fri 1·5PM • Beat~ast 2)yearsold p e••r B levlu er~ ... v e••e••
.. • 3BA c M ""' nr &40.()l.4() • Be willing lo inve5t at leHI S1 700 in a •• QCC & UCI. $325/mo + LIVE IN HOUSEKEEPER. If actor, unless )'OU already ov.n one fWllh a
. ..M2S dep. 751· t718 OMnlnv. Ill• cook1nv. minimum down payment. hnanclal •· 1hopplng, drive, may assistance as avallabl~ to qualif~d
keep day Job. 54()...()8()8" a~l)ltcants I
:::I.I. a..t)l!at LIVE·IN HouHkHper. • M--et D 0 T and Mayflower standards
1 f 's./llllii" &t Corona del Mat Home, Start a c.rttr that II So plat~s Call I ~11·7112' ,. ftlt Oood 1)9Y, Enoflal'I not Ask for Dept •9 ~'!!!!'!'~"!'!!'!!!"!"!!!!"!~~I required 7ecMf21 .,....., lal•I NANNY2 HOUSEKEEPER ~: •• FUU SEAVICE Co.ta M--. e days a ~n I Irvine, Npt 8ctl weeet, llv9 In or lf\te out.
S ~ 8VI on Waatclllf 8'2·2731 PM
MM111
•••••••• 1111 .. n -•111•m.Y
ICC No ?9l•
• MAYflDWER .
TRANSIT
$2.66 per day
That't ALL you pey fOI
3 ~ 30 dey minimum
lntN
SERVICE
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
Deliver One Day a Week -·
Must have dependable car
and proof of Insurance .
Call 842-14'44
Ask for Joanne Craney
842-4321
llilJ•
330 WHt Bey St.
CoeteM-,CA
.. TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
I Full 6 au., • .,
10 ftl09Md
14 Gett< lit\ I
'~ erec11 16 8••.zt -
t7 l.1ibnca1eo
18 $.gnol-
20 Otmin.. I ...
21 A.,,.,.•n41
23 SOider
24 "-" llOrM• 26 Sen
21 Cowerdly
30 Uftoc•"•
31 Ger~ n J>tn.1<1•nci 36 Nt•I 10 Ind
37 C1te>pled
38 I' arm tOl.lt\O
39 Sweet ~tutt
42 P•tweh
•• Gnaweel ·~ G.,.. 46 AC1t
•I ChocaQO
a.ltP0'1 ~ Si.s> •••Y !11 8ei..,,
Sl CA'ow tooi'ld
~s.r.,.. bllc•
~ PotiJ"8d
f() """ 61 ~1..-n
P<•' 12 (tite>mti .., Con•·~· 64 , •oiol
9~ R• 11•"41
DOWN
·oweo _,..
'} I c;ltt'nc)I
' 3 Enourwt
4 Glalming
S Coric;ludeo
6 5noooed
1 RICI
8 r Uft"411'
9 £YWY llllfO p••' 10 P.enu1 ·~ t1 Wttto -
toll<'d """'tlty
12 Crt1t1
tl l •Mt' •in
19 P•--
72Sa~•
2S MICJ<~ -2• s'°'* 211C'9ft 2t'"' 2t c !'lat"' 30 Pettol\ 32 M.._..,1
33 CU' ..
3•~ey~
~ IOOOy
' i ' s
~1 lntlru~I •o 1<1•t.nt" QM•
1 1 5alveges
11GuiOes10
~
0 Lut
O G•NI\ 1o>111t .. c.,,
41 111 "
. ~-ffu. •Uie«'Y .,,.., w ....
S1 Coftf.-.d
"\llw1tt't F'f
"UMdtob9 .St~ s 1 II\ tdtle •or
St 0.-or9f
SACRAMENTO (AP) -As· sembly Speak~ Willie Brown says he
is creatins an interim ethics commit-tee to letYe untiJ be c,n push throuab
a permanent committee 10 oversee
leaislators' conduct.
Tbe San frapcii:Domocraa,
•
tapcwc .'*Tua-said-e wi~ llO
n chairmen and no Oana of
Five chairmen of any replar A ..
scmbty committees this aesaion.
The Gang of Five oon1isu of fellow
Democrats who have been chaUena-ina_ Brown's speakership.
On the interim ethics committee,
Brown said it will be chaired by
Assemblyman John Vasconcell<?~r ().
San.JOit, who also heads the ways
and Means Commjntt.
v asconcellos told reponcrs seper·
ately, "This '° me is a major
opponunity for the I.qislatu~ to ft..
establish i-.S tntqn&J Jnd CTtdib1lhy.
Jt' t ~r ••it is ajv~n credi1
ti .
Vasconcellos said ht secs the
committee recommending rules of
behavior for legislators. staff. the
public and reporters, and 1hen dcci-
di~ how those rules would .be
pohced.
Both house$ adjourned Tuesday
t
without transactin& busineu1 but
sc.heduJcd seuaont -for Thul"IOI)' 10
conaider Gov. Georae Deukmtj11n's
nomination of Auditor General
Tbom11 Hayes as state t1Usurer.
Hayes 1s eitpccted to be easily
confirmed by I~ state ~natc, but
could have problems in the A1-
scmbly.
A special Assembly committee on
the nomination held a bearina las1
month but won't v·ote until today.
Hayes isan independent who plans
to rerqjster u a Republican lf
confirmed. The appointment would
&ive hlm a head swi in the 1990
election.
State requlres
Insurance rate
hike reviews
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ratt
inettasesof 10 percent or hi&her must
be 6Ubmitted to the Stilt (or ~VICW while voter-mandated ratc rollbecks
are araued in court, the state in·
surance commi...oner bas ruled.
The state Supreme Court has aareed to hold he.arinas on the 20. percent rate reductions passed by
voters Nov. 8.. Meanwhile~ other
provisions of Prooolilion I u3 were
allowed to ._kc effect last month.
The order, issued by state In·
surance Commissioner · Roxanl
Gillespie, comes in response to fears
that tnsuranec compan1ea mi&ht raise
their rates substantially bcrore the Supreme Court takes action on the
iuue, state otfldals said Tuc*y.
.,.,...ha. ........
SAN FRANCISCO-A lttrified v1ri1m lootina uuo the barlct °'l'ID • ·
can't tell whether it is real or a toy, said 1 feckral coun, which ruled a.,..,.
wath a fake 1un ia atilt an armed robber ... People confronted with Wbat. ~
believe is a deadly weapon cannot be eApecud to maintain a ltiP ~ criti~ j)erccption," raid the 9d9 U.S. Circuit Coun of APPeak on T .
TbC J.:(rdecilion affirmed a I o.;year prison ttntence for Ollben M •
Jimenez. convicted or a $6,44J robbery at • kllflowcr berik in Sou
California in Jane 198 7.
Rare monkey on loan to San Diego Zoo d19 ~
SAN DIEGO -A rare Chi MK 1olden monkey on Joan to the San OJii>
Zoo tw died. and officials say delay• in obt.ainina pem11S110n to pcrfl&
necropty may prevent them from detcnnirun1 111 cause of death. The
monhY ... ._ona three oftlle ~ speciel nich "Wl'C ao.necs •
100 m ADril 1987. The rcmaini111 .. ir. one male and one fetMle. ari .. cblGllY
· aolden daonkeys on display in the United States, said 100 ~
Jouelt. "We believe the monkey died from complications dut 10 lbe ltlltlllfa
ad•anced •.''be said. ··we don't know bow old 5M was. bu~our vcteri.-.
teemed to think she wa• in the I '4-to ts-year-old range." -•
PEACH GLAZED HAM
1 3-pound fully molccd canned ham 114 cup OeKuypcr Pachau Schnapp
Whole doftl 112 mupoon pated oransc rind
JI' cup peach pcatna
Score ham in diamond pattern; mad wuh c.to.a. Place ham in a shallow baking pan. Bake 10 a prdlc-atcd
~ 7) •p. O¥Cn for _., nunuccs. C.ornbanc peach pmicncs. schnapps and orange rind; spoon 1I4 cup of sautt
over ham. BUe l) minutes k>ngcr. Remove from ~ and spoon anochcr 1 I 4 cup uc.c over ham . let stand
1) minutes Stitt and sc:rvc with rmWning sauce. Yield: 8 lO 10 JUVings.
MOM'S SCAUOPED POT:ATOFS
3 tablapooN bUtter or awprinc
112 cup minced onion
.. tablapoot .. flour
2 cupt ~and half
3 rablapoons Oijon«ylc mmard
114 fealPOQC\ ~h
l / 8 teupoon pepper
6 mediwn pomoa, vay thin.Jy sliced
ln 1 medium uccpan. melt butter; sautc onion until tender. Stir in flour. Gradually sttr an half and half un -
til stnocxh. C.OOk. scirring corutandy. unul mi.xtutt boils and thickens Sur in mustard. sah and pcppa. Ar· ranac 1/2 of potatoes in a 2·112 quan baJung dish orcasxro~; pour 1/2 of the ucc over potatoes. Repeal
with rcma.irung potarocs and UC'C C.Ovcr and bake in a preheated 3n •f oven for 4~ minutes. Rcmoff
com Ind continue baking l' minutes or until pocatocs arc tcn<kr Y tcld 8 xrvanc
APPlE LOAF wrm HARD SAUCE
1/2 • ~Of nwpine, dtmcd
I cap ...
1 ~
l·l /2 alp·~ lour
l ·lll I ...........
l 14PlpMNI risM M) •
l /2
112
"' 1-l /4
1/2
""
tCllpOOO nucmq
*"tpoCIO ....
Ir 11pOC1ift pOund do.a cap..,.. tMK't
mp chufJpld .....
I '
a.p DdCuJper ApPk Band Sdu'3lf>PI
" In 1arJe mmcr bowl ~ buna and Alf".~ lislK Md OUff,. lbt io cg. c.omtiine flow . bWnc .oda.
cinnamon, mamq, ilk Ind clafts: pdUilly di co aamed mimft. 8cM in ~ aucc. SUr in walnuu .
..-0 fto I~ 9 I ' I }·inch &oif f*I• ~in I~ }'° -f. ~ fur 1 t.:M.lf Of until I cake tater
iawftltd in ccnm mma out can. c.ooa in pm 10 minum. aano.t flam pan: cool on WU'C nck. Prick cotft
~-d ca1iir ~ llOCJChpd. Sbrty driuJc tdwippe wer callt. Wnq:> tJChtly and iwrt ~t. SeM
Wich Hlid s..tt ..
1
. othing is oozier than wmiiing up · ~Tm front of me fire with friends r~-aftcr a day outdoots. Whether
skiing, skating, or sledding, you 'vc Work-
ed up a good appetite, but cat2inJy
don t t want to spend hows in the kitchen .
Herc is an inviting menu t1w:• s kstivc
and ready for the table-the recipes can
be prq>arcd ahead of time~ you can just
reheat them prior to serving.
Peach Glazed Ham and Mom's Seal-'
loped Potatoes arc delicious to cat and
easY to serve. The ham is topped with a
delectable glaze made from canned
peaches and DeKuyper Peachtree
Schnapps. And to top off the evening tty
a steaming cup of cocoa and pcppcnnint
flavored coffee and a tempting ~.
The Apple loaf with Hard 5aucc is
enhanced by the subtle ~ c:1 Apple
Barrel Schmpps. (The loaf is made the
day before and allowed to soak in the
. schnapps overnight.) Peppermint Mocha
Jaw gas its luscious aroma from ooffcc,
cocoa and peppermint dulapps. .
Good frimds and good. foOd-tbc
pctfcct .recipe foe warming CVCll the cold-
est days of winter. With a little advance .
plmning t very little extra dfott and
mouth:warcring dishes such ~these, you
can provide your guests and yowsclf with
~ an evening that's both satisfying and
~g.
•u.ra... ... o.......
Whether you rout bot dogs on sticks over an
open campfire or on a backyard barbecue pill,
tbey11 taste super with this onion relish. It•• aood
with brats and buraen. t~. ..
ZIPPY ONION RELISH
...
• ~ aealpeoe dried.•~· cruW
'4 teaapMD 1arllc salt
14 tea.,.oa cnued dried red pepper
In a 2--quani saucepan combine oniOJlS and
water. Brina to boiling; reduce heat. Add tomato
sauce, ketchup, sugar, oregano, prlic salt, and red
pepper. Simmer, covered, about 20 minutes or·
until onions arc just tender. Serve hot or chilled
with meats. Store remaining sauce in refrigerator
for up to '2 weeks. Makes 40 one tablcsp<>on
servings.
I
Bob Nelson. who entered his fint
chili competition only a year •· was the winner this year of the
Golden Chili Pepper award at the •
International Chili CookofT in '
Rosamond. f
Every year the American Spice
Trade Association makes th.
-----award to the cookoft' competitor
IRE lllST COUPOll
OFFER· IN TOW111 ·
• DfT AILS IN sron i
WE ACCEPT .COUPONS FiROM OTHER SUPERMARKETS PLOS UNLIMITED DOUBLES ..
Foster Forms
CORNISH GAME HENS .............. LB. I .~9 " .
•STU'S
GUiil_
IO·CT. 1.29
16-0z.
MAMA GINA SPAGHETII. .................. 79
FARMIER 4'0llN BACON
1/2 •AL
OllAIMMIUICI
~~EEJ I 79 CARTON •
. 1-LB. REG.· OR THICK
LIMIT 2 .......
CIRICK SftAK
BEEF . LL 1.69 -Hughfl ~ I 89 PORK SAUSAGE LINKS .............. LB. •
11• K•IS•Y
ltDllUT aUTTa P.~·-CllACK ..
18-0Z. I •9 1K --'::. 16-0Z 79 , JAR .... . •
25-lb. a-+ Flavor A Lo Fro~ol•. 6-01. • l 1pton, • Ct
GRAVY TRAIN DOG FOOD ............ 9.99 YOGURT ............................ . .......... II CHICKEN NOODLE SO(/p ......... ...79
GOLDEN BANANAS
FR1EDA CRIPIS
•w 4.0z. 2. 99
aANANA ClllPI 11C1P1S
AVAt&.A&I ... ITOM
RIPE, SWEET
L
11·
s
$
:J.lb. Bog Chillon Grown • Chllion Gtown S.-.1
GRANNY SMITH APPLES .............. EA .• M FRESH CHERRIES ........................ Le. 1.99 NECTARINES ............................... La .• 99 PEACHES OR PLUMS .............. -. La ·"
I ll·OZ.
BOfTLES
·~-., w •. , ii&: ,.~. -' ·. ...
K•KOMAN
Lift IOY SAUCI
\C).Ol 1.49
Y~lnOYAllA
••IMAIGIA-nA
16-CT. 79 •
••1 M
SUOA'10
·TAM.ITS
c~t0 2.69
O.S..Oz. 2 ... AFRIN NASAL SPRAY . . .. .. . .. . .. ... .... .. .. .. . ... . •
Corio Rossi
3·llTER MTN. CHABLIS ......................... : .......... 2.M 8-0vnc. ~~~~~~~~;;k~·9~: ................................. T ...... 1.s I 750-MI.
PLAIN LABEL SCOTCH ..... , ....... ,. ..................... 4.M PICKLED SCALLIONS .............................................. 2.29\ 2·0z.
IMOOIUM A.O............... . ........................... ~.I. I'
----~ ' . ' '• ..... ' ' . --
. C.-...0... .
AVC>CADO DIP .................. , ............ 1.19
I.JS T• 10.2J.Os. 4 .,.
WC>lFGAfG PUCK PIZZA ........ ······••
whose recipe shows the molt
creative use of spicn. ,
Nelson. who owns a men's
clothin& store, lives in Wasco, near
Bakersfield, where he's involved in
many local communiJy affain. His
cooking staned back in his army._
days and today he continues to do '
must of the cookin& for him1elf and
his wife, Marlene. and their friends.:
The predominant spice in Wasco
Bob Chil i is the blend chili powder,
alona with oni6'ft; cumin, paprika,
garlic powder and the herbs or-
egano, marjoram. thyme and sage.
The recipe is considered only
"mildly hot" bychiliheads, so if you
like your chili with a lot ofzip, add a
·measure of grqund red pepper.
Either around. beef or diced ·lean
beef may be used Serve with or
without beans, rice or over pasta:
WASCO BOB CBW
i tableapoou vegetable ell
! pouclt coarsely ....... or
ft.ely 4iced leu beef ~-
~ Ctlp iutut minced --
"" ~ dilll powder % tOlespMU 1roud camlD
1 tabletf04NI ,., .....
1 teas,... •repao leavet
1 teaspu• prlk powder
IN sea...-1111
'4 tea.,... marjoram leaves
~ sea.,... dlyme leaves '* ...,._ r9bbed aa1e
% C11pt cklckea broda
IN C11J>Mer
1 eaa (I oueea) toaiato aaace
1~tealpoou111ar
14 teatpooD &rood black pepper
In a Dutch oven or large sauccpot
h_t.at _oil_ over mcdhtm heat Add 1h
of the beef; cook and stir just until it
loses its pink color. Transfer to
bowl usin4 a slotted spoon. Repeat
with remarning meat. Return mea t
and accumulated juices to Dutch
oven.
Add onion, chili powder, cumin,
paprika, oregano, garlic, salt, mar-
JOram, thyme, sage, chick_en broth,
beer and tomato sauce; bring to a
boil. Reduce heat and simmer.
panially covered, for 1112 hours,
stirring occasionally. Add sugar
and bl~ck pepper. Serve with' a
dollop Of so ur cream. if desired.
Yield: .to portions (8 cups).
Take peek
at foods of
the future
McClat~y News ~rvlce
Melt fat off your body. Vaponze
fat in food. Motivate your lac-
tobacilli and never cat real butter
again.
No, this is not an excerpt from a
scrcaminf tabloid. This is not a made-up ist of predictions popular
this time of year. From under the
Bia Top at the U.S. Department of
Aariculturc come these sensatfonaJ
claims. all researched. all true.
-Ilic Tolfowinals bast<T upon
rnformation presented in a paper
utlcd .. FOods of the future" by
John Patrick Jordan, Ph.D. of the
USDA's Cooperative State Re-
search-Scrvtt:-c. He was in San
Francisco from has Washinaton
D.C. office fo r a recent
USDA/Food and Drua Adminis-
tration nutrition update earlier this
month .
Based on some of the topics
covered. here arc his obKrvattons
on where food choices are beaded.
Bru wan: Before you tire of ttlc
subject of bran. the taste of bran
(oh, that SOQn?) and the ao•pel of
bran. understand that we arc not yet
finished with bran. We're a<>ina lO
deal with a variety of brans.
It appears that bran of all sons
possesses the power to reduce blood
cholesterol. So. as quickly as oat
bran was accepted as the century's
untastiest but surest fix . for the
normal human urtc to eat egs,
alona come two m0tt 9P(ions.
Biricy bran made into panola
lowers cholesterol as much u oat
briln. Rice trin, if atabiliied so its
ods don't brak doWn. mo looks
like an elilible bnn bOuncl b our
diets. Rice bran alned ii die main
inpdieilt ii Vi• Fi~ crden
anCI Criipy CU..
LoOk at it tlMa way. We alrad1. cat blueoom '9aipa. ann cam can t ta1tewone.
AaWlw ...... L Havi .. clecidfd
that IOO many CO.~ foodl
• ...,.. in P'1lllY tmeii..._ ......... , ......................... . • .-.~as~m•= u•L_;t.•·~i.';.iL ~--· II *' ~~
£!55& .. t: Add ..... .,.. ..
I
Texas Red
Grapefruit
TIJC Best Grape{mit Grown
(F"I/ Box-40· Count-6.99)
F
0
Re I
Large Dancy 6 9 ! ~ .. ~~~~ines , ,. •
\,.., It .,(J """'"
Sunny Delight
C itrus Punch
I J~ "' I "' /Iott/, ,, 1· ... 1r •
115
Fresh 'N Natural 229
?:angc J uicc 9
) .
-~
I
Golden
Delicious Apples
l \trt1 f .1110-n ·.i.Jnngton Grown
<I "'1 C a(( u/ 40 I Ix. 12 49)
13 100 s
-PRODUCE/FLORAL-
Fruit 4 F 100· Rolls O ~ '"'"''., R t,,....., "' tlw I,. ,.,. &•
Yons Large
·AA Eggs
I Dozen Carton
limit 2 Canons Per Family
·e
••· C h armin Tissue 329 ·
'
1 12 Rolls
&JJ..u.~ .
"'"''' f'..J..
Vons
Coffee
RftW/.11 "'.-tw10 l'irrp
I Pcwnd <. '"
189
1
~Multi Video 996 a . fiJ~f~!~~la~cs .
\ ,,
Squeez1t
Fruit Drinks
O ttrr"t C'"fr· °'""""' r .. ..dt 6 EV:ln--I0.10.n.t
159
11/2 Lb. Vons
Enriched Bread
Wht~orWhNI
RONnd Top or Sandu:Kh
---MEAT/SEAFOOD -
U.S.D.A. CHOICE 1.89
~~o~der Clod Ro~~t~
• r1... r "'"'..,,,
Gourmet 59 Pride Soup
1':0:!:c::' •
Star-Kist
Chunk Light Tuna
PiJcJ..rd m n:1 .. ur or 01/
6 S O urtC't' <..1m
-GROCERY/BAKERY-
Kraft Deluxe 2 f300 ~;_~~~~~Dinner ~
l',lrft'U ~'h-I ( · tl • 9 Del \ tonte No '-th Com ~
\......t ( C... .. (., \o .II l~O& • }'-!
I\~ Q ll t14\kt~ Ce1 cal 2 29 1: .... , •
"unkJ'-lt Ftm f-n11L-.. 1-9
s,...-..1 ... .....,.,, '• ( ... , ''•It.rt ~ Mal) Ktt<.hen c.omt.~I Beef Ha.\111 34 W -.RtW1&rf H~1s c ... -c ...
G ~~J~ds~3 ~100
~ Hefty Paoer Phu -1At lnch }59 s. c • .,,,,,.,.
~ Ken·L·Ration Spedj] Cuts 329 w Detl-'-"0-t&. ~ \Veld1'· G~J} .. J Hy 1 47 w JJCW..~/M
.. ~ \'\lei~ \X'atc. h~"' Rr~td ~, 64 9 C~ispY """'·-Iii'"" 6 9·
Rice Cake •
~ .. Vons · -.. iJ
Orange Juice ,,
12 Ounce Can
JM Frozen-Concentrated
·'
Frito Lay
Variety Pack
Stl«1tJV•""""'
1111-t',... r"'"""
1._79
Jerseymaid ~ 2 2.9 ~Jll~_ral Light J
H 'Ii/ ..,..Jc,,. fl,.,..,J c;,.,.._.,
J~rsey.fuaid ~ 89 Cotta e Chee e , .. ,...... °' Loei J •
i6 .. re • ..-
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
Porterhouse or T-Bone
Ekrf-S~.Jts v·r&nT~
l.b2 8 9
--DELI/DAIRY-................
Fleischmann's
Mar arine
-----FROZEN------
\'ons ~pple Jt11 .. n o-trc. ..
Turkt.;' St~ Brcaktlq ,., *' 4" '""-'
.79
lU.'-...1ge 159
Belgian
Chef Waffle 1'5
Ad\'Crti sed rtem Are Good Only Al Vons.
..
rnr a he~rty salad
for change of pace
Aftttcndlns heavy winltt meals, ·Salad t~ms )Cir-round staftdby-
IDltFdllft •&Ids PfO\'ide a rd'rnb· -poultry, kttuce and tomatOb -Illa chanee of .,.ce. Fruits and with summer's favorite fruit '
~bla srrvcd crisp and fresh, arapcs: Coaillined with mut or cheese and A tamaon cream drcss1na. with
*izzled with a tanp drnsina. are added zest from mustard and blu
llalthfW, frnh-tasuna tttats at this cheese. marries the salad flavors
time or any lime of the year. bcauufully.
Here's a wintcr-to-spnna version ~ow car;t sum~cr arapes ~nd
Ofa 1ummer111ad that willaive you their wa~ into winter and spnng
a head stan on the taste ofsummer menus? Con ~eniently, the sea~s
before the first areen &eaves and art reversed m the Sou.th.em Hcm1-fto~budsappear. Country Plauer sphere SO the npe, JUlcy 1f8pcS ----::-:------;~~~--:----------:----~..;....;;;;;...::;;;_.;;;;;;,;;::::.:::;=:;:;:;;;;;::::::::::;:::;:::::=::::===:::======='...;......---::._::_.:...:.:.:.:...:..:.:.:.:..:...:..::.:.:..:.:.:..:..::..=-==._ appcanna 1n aood suppl) 1n mar· kets n&ht now art 1mponcd f'rOm
the sunshiny vineyards of Chile,
which brodlltt! SOIM of tM world'
finest fruit.
. Serve Country Platter Salad as an
cntree for lunch-or dinner. Ifs a
complete meal itself but, but a cup of soup and whQle grain bread or
muffins would be fittina accom-
paniments. Think summer -even if it•s not
-with other menu ideas featurin ·
imponed winter grapes. Add
cluster of 1r3pes to your bacon and
cg brtakfast to perk up a winter
morning. Serve grapes for dcssen.
tossed with honey-flavored yoaurt
Combine grapes with oranacs • .ap-
ples and ofhcr winter fruits and top
wnh shredded coconut for am·
brosial fru1t salads.
No Games ... No Gimmicks ... Everyt>ody Wins Wrth Stater Bros. Low, Low Prices lmponcd wtntergrapcsarcav11I
able from January through May.1'11
the favontc varieties are producrd
in Chile -Perlcttc, Thompson
Cardinal, R1b1cr, Almena and
Emperor -under ideal grow1n1
conditions where the rich soil and'
mild climate contribute to th e
excellent quality of these winte r
grapes.
LFRESH_
Meat Dept. Savings
LB
~~ -, . STATER BROS.
I --·-~ wHJTE OR YELLOW DECORATED
OR EAATHTONE
Paper
Towels ·
1-AOU
PLASTIC SQUEEZE BOTilE
Heinz
Ketchup
Frozen Food Favorites
Meat Franks JOHNMOMfU ,.oz 79e Vegetables :c~=WITH QC~
Sirl.oin I iP Roas~=~~':iARo COUN~s219 Vegetables :-:~,
C~1c~en Brumsttcks ~~ 1•~~ -Greeil-Giant Ril:d'-..,__~.
S1rl o1n lip Steak :::--~ l• 2 . •1• .iooz Sausage· Links ~:r:i"" NSUIVt •OZ gge Strawbernes = 4
G nd Beef P . STATER 8AOS • F . d e h· k ,549 rou atties ·~~~ ,...~ sa ne 1c en llNO.Cl ~
Skinless. Catfish ~: la'1" Chocolate Dip Bars .. :, .:.uor
1239
Compare these Low Prices
R£0 OA CHEESE CHOOSER'S
Frltol.Q
Varl~Pack
•~s~"'"*
Grocery Specials
.o.oi 11 OI
64{)l 99•
.. oz•359
••or 65' . '1'' •llOUa
.u•1 •1
..orl1 OI
,.«89-
6-!t<JI •1•
96-0Z
Garden Fresh Produce
Carlo Rossi Wine ·~~ J4"' '29'
Canadian Dew Whisky . i.lTI! 9'
Crown Russe Vodka •"'4~'7"
Passport Scotch
COUNTRY PLATTER SALAD
Tami• Cream Dres11a1
1 a,c, qu r&1 crisp romalee ud
b•tter lethlce
1 ~ cwps red u d creea Wleul
1rapes
t medl•m, firm-ripe tomatoa
1 ~ c•ps cooked ~ckea or
tu·key strips
4 strips crtsJHOC)ked bacoa 1
, Sllce4 lemoa for ganl11l
Prepare Tarragon Cream Dress1
mg. Cover and chi11 several hou~
to blend flavors. Tear greens into
b1te-s1u p1ects. ri nse grapes (seed
red grapes). and cut tomatoes into
small ~edges Cut chicken or
tu rke) into stri ps and ~con into
large pi eces.
Arran&e greens on platter and top
with grapes. tomato. chicken (or
turkey) and baco n. Garnish w1th
sli ced lemon. Serve with Tarragon
Cream Dressing. Makes 4 servings
Tarrasoa Cream Dres11af: Mix
112 teaspOOn crushed tarragon with I
teaspoon prepared mustard, 'h cup
each ma)onna1~ and da1f) sour
cream. Ble nd I tablespoon
crumbled blue cheese with 2 table·
poons wine vinegar. Combine
with ma)onna1se m1xturt. Makes a
generous I cup.
FUTURE •••
P'romC2
1et a prttty good-lookm g batter
VUamla A: Before )'OU &Cl C>.
cited. tht followinaexpenmcnt ~•\
not performed on ftumans: Vitamin
A was found to reduce mammary
tumon in rats.
QmateNI: Use of this chemical
compound from American
Cynamide i.J cautioned u beinJ in a
truly uperimentaJ ~-But 1n ita ~etoence, fat mice were fat no more
after downina Cimaterol.
Cimatcrol acts as a beta an-
t1Jon1st. This, cond1uon has
noth1na to do watfi-SOny'S opinron
of VHS. but how C1matcrol sumu
!ates the mctabol1c system. Instead
of act1n1 on carbohydrates. it act
on lipids. I Sc1enusts found that when
Cimaterol WIS fed •Iona with
rqular food to obese-prone mice
there was no runhcr wc1aht pin and 1n fact the mice never beam
obnc. In lean mice. C1matcrol ha
no effect. In mace alread) obese. th
fat bcpn to melt away.
Fa• •taper: LoOkmf a little hkc Pamper a shttt or . melt blown'
material is put on the bcmom o
your microv.avc. As your fi cooks. It absorbs fat without inter
fer1n1 with the food's moistu
content. ·
In tests with bacon. S8.9 peiun
of the beron's f•t "1 withdrawn
compettd to only a small amount o
fat conquded in bacon cooked on
SJ9per towel. At this writi ... th
dilper-lookina_: material it · bean
1J9tenWJd bY a ftrm in Tcnnaaec. a....,....._ <Jet to like t
ttlinp. Scint11t1 are cru;y abou
them.
Many countrietatoUnd the woi'kl
rely Oft IMet pota&oel M I clictarv ....... American JCianitu do.i 1t ...amcand whl' sweet pOtaton art
...... berc twtee. ,.,..
How e4Nld we llOI lib sweet
pa1atoa? nty .,-.p ~ _. OM
sweet pot.Ito~ dte ViM&b1n A~.ed•dlY.~•• •1dtup I0'8~1 fil.,O.dW1 Villaaia
C, =:IJO _... OI-.. nu 'rt ---=--:-..~r:-....
. .
..
..
.r ••
Re<lffm your Procter & Gambi.
Si:>ec111 Olympics COUPOns now•
Tt\ese couPOna came •n your
m1ol on tne Put>llahers Clta1111g
House Sweeps11kes f'nvelope
For f'acn of these coupon' you
'~'" '" our sto1e by Sunday
J1nu11y 22 1989 Procter &
Gamble will don1te 10' up 10
'7!() 000 10 netp Sl)t'C•al Otym
pies A1h1e1es
ALCON
SALINE SOLUTION
249
4 38 VALUE
12 0 1 With 12 oz FREE
for sens11tve eyes
•Opt1 ·Ctean II Oa·ly CleanN
12 mt tor MnS•11ve ey
Regular 3 69 • ..... 2.41
SURE ALWAYS PLUS
ANTl-PERSPtRANT MAXI PADS
2~~ . 266
Our Regular '2 99 3 97 Our Regular 3 99
LARGE SIZES 26 l..Ollnl I.Ill typ1 S
2 25 oz Roll-on 6 oz Sp1 ay
3 oz Sohd or Wide Solid
FASTEETH OR
FIXODENT ADHESIVE
211
Our Regular 3 87 ·3 95
DEXATRIM
APPETITE SUPPRESSANT
3~c~· •
Our ReQular 4 59
2 5 oz Fllcodent crearr or 20 count e>.t ra str<:>ngtt.
2 7 oz -3 oz Fasteeth powoer Cc1ps11lf'S or mJ"<1mum
all types strength CaplNs all types
lo.
SCOPE
MOUTHWASH
419
Our Regular 4 99
~o o ,nee rnqurar
01 pepperm1n1
NIVEA
SKIN CARE
1~~
Our RPgul<H '2 99
J • CrPmf' 8 01 Lotion
Jr :;}1<111 011 all typ1·~
,.,
CREST
TOOTHPASTE
1!~
0111 Re9ular 2 39 2 49
l ARGE SIZES
~2 1u11c" tubP. or 6 4 ounce
p11n1µ Jll IVPE.'S
IN '-~ " .
FINESSE
HAIR CARE
1~~
Our Rt'Q ,IJr 7 99 J 19
, , 01 Shampoo or Cono
i 01 H.w Srr;iy or Spritt
8 01 M ousw Olli I ypec;
,, ..
ZEST
DEODORANT BAR
.1~6
Our Regutar 2 37
Tnree~ oun~ bath
s11~ D rs
DIXIE
KITCHEN CUPS 99¢
,,
Our Regular 1 99 ~
100 count 5 o: c lnac11-.
-::
PRINGLE'S
POTATO CHIPS 99¢
Our Regular 1 69
6 $ our"Ct' • 7.~ ounce
all types
NESTLE
CANOY
~R ;100
C•unch 100 Grano Cnunkv
Ra1 inets Alp1rit> White or
0 Henry'
CVS BRANDS
299
BONUS SIZE
100 count with t5 FREE
tabl Is or captels
COMPAAE TO
Adlfll at 7 39
----:.· ...
ASPtRIN
OR NON-ASPIRIN 1ss
A pmn Tab IS, 300 s
Non·Asp1rtn Chtldren·s
T 1blet1 48 s or Infant s
Drops 0 5 ounce
COMPARE TO S.y r Of
Tyenol 1383 83i
NON-ASPtRIN
PAIN RELIEVER
3~~
DRISTAN
DECONGESTANT
2~Z
TWIN PACK Our Regular 3 66·3 9;
2• count Tablets or Two 100 count bolllP.s
e-.tra strength T •bl ts
or C p l II
COMPARE TO
Caplets o s oz Nl's.1,
T nol 111354·1S 1
, 2.49
in.••'"'' eounon SO On ~R -.
... ;~y 199
Our Regular 3 99
150 count, 111 types
Spray.all type
HALLS
69~CH
Our RP-Q UI r 1 09 ea
30 count mentho-tvp1u:.
Cough T1blet1 or
V1tam1n C Drops r
PRELL
HAIRCARE
2,~~
Our R 9111,-,r 0 65
NYOUIL NIGHTTIME
COlD MEDICINE
3!~
Our Regular 3 97 4 29
6 ot reg11l11 or herr..,
or • oz Ct'llldren s
CU TEX
.
Hills Bros. Coffee 1 13 ou'lCt tor 111 cotfff malt.I"••
Ou• Rf'O, tar 2 76
Nestea Tea Mix
Natural temon ,,..,.or
A sug1r mlkf' 10 QulrtS
Our RPgutar 2 99
Welch's Grape
Jelly. 32 ovnce 1a•
Out A~ular I 99
Pennsylvania
Dutchman
Mushrooms
• c .,nee !items & Ptf'CH Our ~IJ\lr ;,, l!a
NAIL ENAMEL
2/2.00
-2.
"N~~ST .00
Our Rcg~1ta1 1 49 ea
, ___ ASM>rt iJ fl de.$
3/100 FOR
•
C9 Or8nge eo.t DAILY PILOT/ Wedn~dey, J9rwy 4, 1W
by Bii Keene COUlft&a CUL TUU by tMratta & W.atta
·1 guess these raisins are .. danced out .•
,. "
v'iKiN0 BLENDER
' f
J
I
' •
by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
"The light was yellow. officer. If It had been
red, my friend here would never have let
me hear the end of It."
PEANUTS
Dear Sweetheart.
I'd do anythinq
for you .
I-'f 89
GARFIELD
TUllBLEWEED8
I'd climb the
highest mountain.
(M ~~IFFQJle'r~OF ~ F.Ml6'1 ~~ ANP IM A~~ °"'~lntrM40 9101£ ~ COMM.JrJnY F,AL.'Se 1l!eTJ.4 !
DRABBLE
by Hank Ketcham
..
by Charles M. Schulz
l 'd doq paddle the
deepest oce~n .
by Jim Davis
HE'S RIGMf. AN
ARTIFIC.tAL COLOR
PIE.P "fO PROVtPE M(
Wl1M THI~ MEAL
by Tom K. Ryan -
ARLO AND JAMS
~~~.
•aPm>L HIU. P'lt>!>lil\JTl~"
.-
FqR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
OK 1)1:. DID rt WE.
e=RC.H WROTt:;
~A ~LlErn:R .. ~
SHOE
JUDGE PARKER
FuNKY
Cl.iP Mof£S !
DOONUBURY
' --
C ... ·:-J
0 •
~rrsflCf! wt:..SQEO'el"\ 8YHAND~
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batluk
r----- --- ----- -- ---- ------ -- -----,
I ~ EnE£ ~&It.JG I I QiiUiltOIW I
I Aet5EJ.Jf ~ (ME lSME) Df~4'f ~ I 11
I 04teooc J
I ( W£L..L-I J..JI<£. CClrVAJG "I) ~) AM> ( J..f IS I J.4€'R) : 1,
I ClllCU 04 ~ °' I l ~ /AAJR) un<E.D M> (~/SHE) lJXMT" :
I CMtl.t. QC CllllU.& OiC I
I "TO (A OOC10R /U. hW.L.) 4.0 IS ~W~ ) : ii ~~ t
: M<Ja-4 ~~,~. ~<,.>, !1
It -f."a;J;;;k_ : 1::.. ________ --CLtP~US"E----=:---------
by Garry Trudeau
--.... 1
•
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1989 25 'E T
in molest case due review·
,
master appointed to determine 1n a thitd l*tY to review the items Ac:corcbnatolhestatepenalcodt,a
Newport 8eacb Polace confucated ll)elCia1 rnaat«lhould bea~inted at from Dr. f rucis James WilliamL -the time a search warrant 11 auued to octor'svt eosareevtdence c.arur indicated that many of the leal'Ch tbe property of lawyera, doc:-
approailnaldy 600 teized capes and ton and clergymen.
·BJIRllYO&OI . ...............
A SuperiorCourtjuqe appointed a
special muter Tue.day 10 help decide
what videolaoes and medical records • coafttcaliiCI &om a Newpon Beach
• DeUfOIW'leOD•s boute and office will
Delaney admits.
offering bribe
to city olflclal
World
be adnuuible u evidence in bis
molestation caar.
Jn appointina Santa Ana attorney
Michael Punetr u the apcciaJ muter
who will review tbe confidential
evideoce, Judlt David Carter over-
Nied a municipal court juclee who earlier denied a defente motion to caJJ I
rec.onh appear to bave no connection Defense attorirey Marshall
to tbe 10 counts of molesw.ion filed Schulman and Deputy District At-
apillll the 64-year-old pb)'sician. t~ Al Sllv.._ weed cer1aln pieces
.. A special master should bave been of evuience shoora be retumed to the
appointed initially,'' tbe jud.ee said. · defeoae1 while other items ahould be A poup of Williama• pallellts also rewneo by the prosecutors as appcired at ~hearina. ukina that evidence. However. the two sides
videocapes of thetr SUJ'ICries be re-QOUJd not ~ on the status of
turned. another t.&c:h of tapes and records.
Washing away holiday season
Ilario Contreru, 1t•en the chance to play
&croote • ..w. on CllrlstlDu decoradoD•
•oat'wt.ndow at Earle Ike Volvo on Harbor
Boulnard lia Coeta Meu. ~
,
Attorneys could provide no further
information because of a court-
1mposed caa_ order: that PftVenu
dtlCllssion of the case outside the
counroom.
Williams 1s accused of molestina a
12-year-old female patient frOm
January to May in 1985 .. The allep-
tions surfaced wh,en the airl, now·
livins id Kentucky\ talked with a counselor after lr)'lns to commit
suicide .
The counselor contacted local authorities. who in turn notified
I
N~ Beach Police. They arreAel
Willwns in November ucf acarcW
h11 Cameo Shorts home and Superiof
A venue medical oflice. leizi111 I.be
videotapes, pbot~p~ medical ,. cords. addteu and 1ppointrne111
books and roulbly S 130,000 in cub.
Police were specifically looki~ for
evidence that mi&ht show Willaams
had · molested c6ildren or wu a pedoph~1 such II pbotosorvideol of ,
nude chi1Gten or paperwork ahowina
affiliation to other pedophiles .
(Pl ...... DOCrOll .. /A2)
~tr .-s. Navypilbts
shoot down two ..
Libyan fight~rs
Alle_ged chemica_!_
weapons plant not
related to incident
"We now consider this matter
dosed." he said.
The air battle was the first fightina
between the Un11ed States and Libya
since Amencan jets bombed Tripoli
in J 916 and came amid risil'J tension
between the two countnes over
By NORMAN BLACK Libya's construction of the plant
_ __,.,..., At the State Department, spokes.
man Charles Redman also said there WASHINGTON -US. Na\')' was no hnk between the planund the
planes today shot down two Libyan warplane 1nc1dcnt. "There is
J_Ct f wuers over tbe Mediterranean absolutely no connCC'lton to any other
Sea al\er the Amencan aircraft ,,_.-ere story or concern you may have," he '"threatened wh1leconductanJ rouune said. '"h may bf 1ron1c, but the two
operations in 1ntematJonal aarsJX\cc," things are not related." ,
administration 'officials said. Lib an leader Moammar Gadhafi Dete11se-Secteia~k-tarlttcet---f~~:..;r.;~~~~~,...:;:~~r-.....;..-1
d ed h h A · F 14 ca t c o an& o SJe an ac o cni t at t c two mencan -s increased .. menc,n terrorism," and andthe1rhosta1rcraOcamer,th~USS vowed to "meet challenge with
John F-. Kennedy. were in the area ·• th ffi I Li b with. the intention of attaduna a challenae. c o .1eta yan news
b h I c-. agency JAN1' satd Li )'In c em1ca v.eapons iactory The Amencan force ~· no ''The 6th Acct operation had no · fi connection whatsoever with Libya's threat to Libya·· and the ters were
nt"wl) constructed chemical facdaty operaung under "normal peacetime
These operations ,,_.ere conducted rules of enpgcment. .. Carluca said.
0,cr 600 males nonheast" of the rcfemna to the gwdchnes on when
factht), .. CarluCCl said at• Pentagon U.S servicemen can open fire on
ncwsbnelina. (PleueeeeU.8./A4) A minister urges
moumeraofFUght 103's
vtctlms to forget seeking
vengeance.JM ·
Index
Bulletln Board A3
HB accused.of neglecting homeless
Bu9'nesa B-4·5
Claulfled B6-8
Comics C6
CrOllWOrd B7
EntertaJnment A8
Food C1·5
Mtnd & Body AS
Opinion A7
People A6
Sports 81-3
By ROBERT BARKER °' .. .,... .........
A resident a used Huntington
Beach City Cou il members Tues-day of p<>uring money into land-
scapina and h se paintJng_ while
leavina home people to suffer and
shiver on city s ts. Jeanne Colli cla1 mcd that of·
ficials have spen about S l ma I hon for
exterior unprovoments on the slum·
I r
hke apartments ot Lommodore Car·
de while doing little for people who
have no roof over their head.
Collins said she watched TV
specials about the homeless durina
the holidays and found it heart·
breakmg that they arc forced to sleep
in the st~ts because rent is so high.
"We should take care of our own
homeless and hungry first," she said
Offit'1aJs. ._who djdn't respond to
Colhns' comments dunng the meet·
ina. said later th.at money 1s being
spent on thebehalfoftbepoor"on the
front end" to help people before they
reach the poant of becoming home-
less.
One official also said that the city
has to be careful about bualdina
shelters because tht'y could serve as a
mqnt't that aitracts more homeless
people.
Councilwoman Gra~ Winchell
said toda)' that she''> unawa~ of how
bad the homeless situation re.ally is in
the catv. but that she's .. really happ) ••
that Colhns brouaht up the top1,.
Offic1.aJs. who deaf "\aml)' with such
things as pavements.and gutters, need
to be Jarred from t1me to tame on
scns1t1ve human needs, Winchell
said
Counetlman Pctt'r Green wd the
Cll) should do its ha~ for the bomel~ but that cff oru should ~
coordinated bet,,_.ccn the cmes and
Stories abput pit bulls lose their bite
Orange Coast city offici als say stories
of vicious maultn s are a r rtty today -=-=---
lyLESUE EARNDT~-
ot IMO-.,.....,..
Headline~ m the second half of
1987 scttamed these wamtn&S
"Girl pulled from ~cycle, mauled
b)' patr of pat bull ••
··Man protecung own dOI at·
tacked by stray pit bull.''
.. Killer pit bull free. rcstnc1cd to
private area." •
But 1n ~arch 1988. Orange County's va ious dogs ordinance
won approv from counfy super-
visors and th headhncs trailed off.
What hap~ed? Old d<>& owners e"erywhcrc the ordananct and
put lhcar ca mes on leasbes? Dtd
county worltcn impound the
animals before they could make
headlines? 0.d the med.ta JUSt lose
internt' Or was it a trumped. up
Daily Pilot will
witch to morning
stor) from the start'>
The an v.er lo lh~ q_uc t1 on..,
depends laraely on who s being
asked. OnC' officral wtll say th~ ne\-cr
re.ally was a pat bull tcmcr problem
whaleanolhcr will~ it was a stof)
that's tame had come, and now ha
gone Some experts wall stress that
pit bull have taken a bad rap-that
they arc not v.orK than, well, an)
other v1et0U5 animal. and ccnaml)
no worK than the motive of their
trainer.
And every once m a whak.
another story w1U crop up .
Carlos Gonzalez. 20. of Hunt·
mgton Beach. said ht' had a near
ma~ with mom and pop pit bulls
two nalb~ aOer Olnsima v.hcn he
heard a pit bull pupp) scrcamma in
a net~ yard and wrnr lo 1nvcst1ptc.
··1 went over there and the mother
wa!> pkk1n1on onc-of1h~babln'11ld
1t "as screaming rcall)' loud, · he ~Id When Gonulez tncd to act the
mother dot to stop hurt ma iM pup.
the male doa bolted after ham.
··The daddy came ou1 of the
hou~ he came tbroua,h the d we door " Gonzalez said. "I saw him
comma O\Cr and he ~s com ms full
fon:e . I JUSt ran ...
(iontakz made a ha I) rttre&l 10
a nt'arb) p1d:up lru I>. dl\ed an .ind
climbed to the top of the cab
Gonzale1's mother threw a rake at
tM ~ tnd nm into tM ~ t~
call the police. he ~1d When the
animal control officer am .. ed. tht' ~ turned on him. Gonzakz ~id.
· The" "'crt JUSt hkc terronzmg
C\Cn-bod' Nirlunaat all of us." he said ·
After the e\citcment died down.
and all pan1C' <'~3~ unhurt. Gonulez aid he probabl)
shouldn't hl\t' aouen m'ohed
'"I mt'an I was on their ~ropcny,"
(Pleue eee PIT I A2)
Brecht's tropical plants
By BOI VAN EYKEN °' ..............
Paul Bttthf 1 tropac:a1 .-.ditc
•on•t be pa"ed o~tr •uh• ffccway.
lht Oita Mct1 Cny Counett on
Tuctday ~"ed a pn>pol&I thlat -.II provide a havm b Brecht•s
~or s.ooor:are •rot*al p11Ms lbf I )laf. -tidt M worb .. I ..._ b tbt atabhsltmettt Ol 1
boclaiml""---"'*" ~ '" die ~ .. ; IUlf~maftlftd~
o( aodc ... wbo .,. ...... orc•HI OardtM OR Harber .. , .... Ml ..... I DUlllW flllil lull=· ...... -.......... --4 ...... ... . ... .,., ...... .. ..... -~
Qin. ... ••••• -r:-•• a:n:: .. llM~s•n•.:... ...... ..,.., ...
the count)' aovt'mment. .
Deputy City Administrator Doua
La Belle wd that et ty \aXJ)l)'Cf1 are
contnbuLtns about SI S,000 a year to
r_outh shelters m Los Alamitos and
Garden Grove that help local yo~
stt'rs. More out.lays ~ expected 1n
com1ns months for the HuntJnaton
Beach )'Outb shelter that reccntlr was
approved by the P\ann1ns Com-
m1 ion. (Pleue eee BOll&LS88/ A.2)
Alleged
molester
~eturned
to county_
J 808 VAN EYl.EN ..............
CON Mtsa City Attorney Thomas
. Wood reaffirmed his position
uesday that it is not pouible to
nt a recount of the controversial
1c initiative, Measure G, which narrowly in' November's dcc-
l°~poneots of the traffic and
wth control mcasure,,1. lcd by Costa
esa attorney Dennis Ketoske, flJed
uest for a recount on Dec. 9, four bri>rc the election ~ults were
fied by the City Counc il.
Under state law requests tor re-
A>witsmust be made within frve days if" certifacation.
November's election in Costa
Mtsa was consolidated with the national 1eoeral election, placing final authority for certification with the coun!y R~strar of Voters. not the City Council.
Registrar Donald Tanney ccnificd countywide election ~Its on Nov.
22, makinJ Retoske's request several
weeks too late.
"When the city consolidates wuh
the general election. it is the Re~strar of Voters who count the votes, said
PLANTS FIND BA VEN •••
Prom A l
The council asked Brecht to act together a group of interested citians to come up with some add1t1onal
ideas.
"We lack the expertise in this area," sa~d Mayor Peter Buffa. "What' we
would like you to do is come up with
some alternatives, and some •deas as
to how this milht be funded, which
we would be happy to consider."
Brecht told the council that a botanical prden would require 11
least 23 acres in order to be viable. He
said he envisioned a public prden
that could serve as an cducauonal
Wood. .. And the time hmit for
recount requests begins tick.in& away
when the rcsulu are officially
cenified." ..
One council member. Orville Am· burgey, said he still has some doubt
concerning the denial of the recount
request.
Ambu~ey, who opposed Measure
G •. h~ l$kcd another,.attomey fol' an
op1n1on on ahe matter.
fac1J1ty as well as a v1s1tors' attraction.
ll could include a lecture hall, a
conscTValory and a Jifl shop.
"I spent much oftoday ,an ~nvtr
talkins to people there about their botanical prden," he said Tut5day.
"h 's amazinl the revenue it acner-atcs. They have an admission fee, and ·
people can also purchase member-.shi_p9. They have a shop that sells
boOks, posters and other items.
That's also a very good revenue
scnerator. And we could do so much
more here with our climate than they
can 1n Denver."
He said Tuesday night, however, he
had not received the opinion. But. he
said if the pnvate attorney airees with
Wood, he will ask Orange County's
state legislators to consider changina
the law. "If he concurs with the city at-torney, then I feel it's unfortunate that
the community doesn't have the
same opportunity in a .scneral elec-
tion as it docs when tbec1tycounts the
votes." he said.
National Guard drill to fOrce
homeless from 25 armories
By ne Associated Ptt11
National Guard annorics that have
provided emergency shelter for the
homeless <furing fripd winter nights
will be closed this weekend for
military training amid predictions of
more wet, cold weather.
HOMELESS CONCERNS •••
Twenty-five annories across CaJj-
fo rnia:. including ones in Santa Ana
md t'ullcrton, will be used by
guardsr:nen for two days of prepared·
ness training, leaving thousands out
in the cold unless local aovernments
scramble to provide alternate refuge.
officials said.
"I think it's a disaster," said Kay
Knepprath, co-director of the Sacra-mento-based California Homeless
Coalition. "I'm afraid that we will
have more deaths because of ex-
posure if we don't have alternate
shelters available for folks ... The regular shelters arc full ."
The exercises were planned more
than two yean a,o, before Gov.
George Dcukmej1an declared the
armones could be used to house
homeless on nilhts when
temperatures dip below 40 or when it
rains and drops below SO.
When Dcukmejian authonzed the
use of the annorics for the homeless
in December 1987, however, he also
ordered that National Guard military
training take precedence over using
the annories to house the homeless.
The eJlercises also arc required for
the state to receive its $340 million in
federal fundinJ, said Maj. Steve Mensik, a NatJonal Guard spokes-
man. Mensik said armories across the
state housed 3,500 people just last
Monday ni&ht.
"It would be a reasonable assump-tion, in fact quite likely. that tl1ose
3,SOO people are not going to have a
place to stay," Mensik said. "We arc
Proa A l
La Belle also said the city has spent
about $120,000 in n:cent years in
"Project Self.Sufficiency" to assist
sinilC mothers with .dependent chil-
dren and other poor families with
housing needs.
He also said the ci!)' bas on hand
about $3'h million to $4 million from redevelopment tu increment funds
for housmg for low-and moderate,_
income families.
A Housing Comminee has been formed to ma.Ice recommendations to
tfte. City Council on ~ow the money
should be spent, he said.
"We've done quite a bit on the
front end," La Belle said. "tryinl to
address the problem before it gets to
be a problem." .
quite genuinely sorry about that.
What we are happy about is, the other
28 days we arc able to accommodate
those 'people."
More homeless people used the
California armories for shelter '" Oeccmbcr than durina the entjrc
winter of 1987-88, Mensik said. At
least 29,000 people stayed in about 2S
armories in Deocmbcr, compared
with 28,0S 7 people in 16 armories last
winter.
The Orange County Homeless
Issues Task Force appealed to
chutthes, schools and communi~y
groups for space to slielter 2SO to 300
homeless people should the weather
indeed be coJd this weekend, said
chairman Scott Mather.
The National Weather Service is
prcd.ictiDJ showers over much of the
stale beainninl Thursday and lasting
tbrougb Sunday. Nilhh1mc
Murder con victlon rejection appealed
By Tile A1soclated Preti
Orange County prosecuton intend
to appeal a judge's d~i.sion to ~hrow out a murder conV1ctlon against a
woman who claimed she suffered
from a severe case of the "baby blues"
when she ran over her infant son with the family station wagon.
Supenor Court Judie Robert._R
Fitzgerald overturned" a sccond-
dcgrcc murder verdict aaainst 24-
year-<>ld Sheryl Lynn Massap of
Anaheim last Dec. 23, acquittina her
on grounds of temporary 1 nsanity.
She bad faced a prison term of 16
years to life.
An eight-woman, fouMnan jury
had rejected her claim that sbe was temporarily insane from postpanum
p'Jchosis.when ~e killed her 6-week-oi , coliclcy son Michael on April 29,
1987.
Potato posse scoops up spud spill
Some I S,000 pounds of potatoes
tumbled from a truck into the road at
16th Street and Superior A venue m
Costa Mesa early today, forcina the formation of a potato posse to clean up the spilled spuds.
The tfuck was stocked with 100.
pound sacks of potatoes. which rolled
into the 1tn:et about S a.m., accordjna
'°early repons.
Police officers, employees of
nearby busineues and day workers
recruited from the nearby city Job
Center bashed out the JOb of puuma
the sacks beck onto the truck.
It took about an !four '° clear the area. Lt. Sem Cordeiro said.
The caUle of the Later tumble and
extent or dam• wat unav11l1ble.
La Belle also said that about
$900,000 in federal money bas been
spent at Commodore Cittle. Nearly
half of it wu spent on low~interest
rebabiliation loans that owners will ~y. be said. About $230,000 went
for street and alley rq>ain and S l S0,000 for landteapina, he said.
Commodore Circle, located west of
the Five Pointa SboDl>iJul Center at Beach Boulevard arid Main Street,
bas Iona been identified u a slum that
terVes u a haven fordNS dealen. La
Belle said the city's improvement
propam bu shown marked propess in the area in n:cent months.
Police have said they do not believe
there is much of a bomeleu problem
in Huntinston Beach.
temperatures arc expected to be cold
enouJh to activate the shelter pro-
gram throuJhout much of the state on
each of those days.
Whenever armories close 1n SaCf'l-mento arrangements arc made to
tran~port homeless people to nearby McClellan Air Force Base, said Salva·
lion Army spokesman Dana Byerlc.Y.
lo addition to housinl homeless in armories in Los Angeles, officials also
distribute vouchers &ood f'Or lodcin& at local hotels.
Los Angeles County already has
provided r7,000hotel vouchersaince
Dec. I, compared with 10,260
vouchers provided between Dec. I, 1987, and March 31, 1988, said VerJ,a
Nasb1• Los Anacles County homeless
COOl'Olnator.
In additiot\ to Los Angeles and
Sacramento, cities that have at least
one armory used regularly for shelter
include those in Sant.a Ana, Fullenon,
Sana.a Barbara. El Cajon. EJ Seaundo,
Visa.a. Chico, Lona Beach, Concord,
Richmond. San Mateo, Rivenidc,
Sunnyvale, San Jose, Calexico, San Rafael, Gilroy, Van Nuys, Culver
City, Corona. Reddin" Petaluma,
Bannioiand Ventura.
HEIDRICH •••
Prom Al
He1dncll reponedly tauaht karate
in H ununaton Beach and was-allcged-ly featured in Kung Fu Magazine and
in television demonstrations. Peterson would not say wh~ther any
of the molestations were related to
Heidrich's karate instruction.
Heidrich also went by several
pseudonyms, including Zane
Leopard and Sir Jimes Heidnch.
"That's what he lakes e"etybody to
call htm, Sir James," Peterson said.
He1dnch as 6 feet 2 inches tall and
weiahs about 200 pounds.
PCtenon said Heidrich has • his.-
tory of cri minal offenses in Cahfomia
and scve,ral other states. He declined
to state what the violations involved{
but dad say Heidrich hid senied .Jll
ume.
:DAILY PILOT TO BE MORNING PAPER •••
..,._A l
meei1111 or hiih ecbool footbtll 11me will be in the M1t momina's P11oi.
Churchman Mid. Readen won't have
to wait until lbc next evenina to learn
•bat imponant evenu happened in
their oommun1ty.
••And 1et•1 face it, the Pilot will ttill
"1e there in the afternoon for those
who prefer to rad it then," lhe said.
The move m.aka aeveral otber i~n1 improwmen&a poaaiblc,
chief ~ lbem ii improved de-~very aemce.
Tbe Pilot will bi priated and
delivered wtaile &he COlll8HIDity ·#Pl. mani• no more delays ill jfteinoam tndlk. TM ...... ........... ...m!'~~c...: ~';--~~£~;-i'ii~::rt: {&ii,...-......... .,,,.~
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oft N 8outhetn CalforNe co.tt WIY ~.,... elCS*ted to arm-. by Thur9dey, the NaUonel w...._ s.w. .-.cf.
That etonn flhOuld btlnO mot• doud9 M ... • • Ct\enCe of
rein Htahl llOrwa the OOMt Thut1day ~ ,_,. from the
m6d-50l to low"'*'*~ lowt In IMO. Ffom Point Conception 10 t Mexan Border -<>wr In.,., •at•• "'9llt to nortttweet wlnde 10 to 15 knot• thlt twning.
Winds ~t Ind INlable tonight. South to eouttMett wind• to 15
knot• Thur*Y. Seu to 3 feet, s ... 1 "'' 2 re.t. Partly~
tonight. Mostly cloudy Thurlday with a chanee of rain. c '" ............
U.S. T emps: Ca lif. Tempe. .. E xtended
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awtolte.NC 5J u ::..-r.: 13 '° ..,MCM .. M
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~ 21 a1 T~IPtlll)O 77 M ~'::... " 43
~Worth 64 '° T~ •41 u " 4S = 34 20 ,_ .,, .SS ~City 72 47
13 15•-lW(IM !II a1 l.enceMr " 2$
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DWotl 24 ot 74 45 ,....,.. 02 ·11 51 »
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S urf Report
DOCTOR'S TAPES TO BE REVIEW~D •••
Prom A l
However, some of Williams' 1>9-
tienu said the videotapes arc depic-
tions of su,.erics they underwent
They criticized the tetZUl'CS U DOt
only an invasion of privacy butalso u
a stumbli"f block in their own oenona.I in.Jury lawsuiu. Many of
Williams• patienta are accident vic-
tims referred to him by attorneys.
About 20 patients appeared in coun Tuesday, dcfendina Williams'
chal'llC1er and ukina that their medi·
cal records be returned.
Patienta Lori Miles and Ed Nowak
said they learned through newspaper
acicounu -not by police notificaoon
-their files had been confiscated.
They subseQuentJy called police to try
to get them back, but were apparentl.Y
told the records were not their propeny and they had no right to
them. "I just didn't hke the idea of
someone Just taktoa them and view· ana them, ' sa1d Males, who descnbcd herself u "a very happy pauent" of
Will iams. "I think that's doctor-
patient priv1lcae."
~-JJ9Uenll said several other medicil penonnel were in the open t-in&. room with Williams during the
videotapi._ The patienu said they were comfoncd by the &.aping, whic.h hel~ the doctor protect himself
ap.mst lawsuiu.
"He a.aka videota~s -that
wun 't surprisina to me, 'said Charles
Hoppe, a patient like bis dau&hter Renee ... TheY'rc ulioa this like he bad
a movie studio."
The continued hold ins of the tapes
and medical RC<>rds is also puttiRJ a snq in a number of civil la-suits.
iecOrdina to the patienu.
Nowak said his insunncecompany
will not settle h11 litiption. which
steins from an ac.cident 1 'h years aao
that ten bimw1th neck and lower beck
injuries, without the videotapes and
medical records as evidence.
The Costa Mesa rn1dent question·
ed what connection a videotape of bas
operation in 1987 would have wsth
the allcacd molestation, which ~
portedly occurred in I 98S.
The patients all vehemently de-
fended Williams. scoffioa at cbarP,S
the doctor molested youna prts
behind closed dooa_ witn'110 nune
present.
.. All the times be bas checked me,
be always bad someone else there in
the office (with him)," said Miles.
who underwent cervical bone f u1ion
and disc removal surseries by Wil·
liams. "They (police) don't happen to
mention the hundredt and· hunc!.Rds of~tients he's helped.'' He comes in on bis own time 11 ni~t (to check patienu)t Hoppe said ... ffe•s more thorouah than other
doctors. He's an outstanding Ctn.
tian~n.··
Williams' supponen Rid the caK
will cause .. ineparable damaat .. to
the doctor's reputation, even if he 1s
absolved. "Or. Williams is very valuable
because he is one of the very few
neurosurseons who do htiption,"
said Theodore S. Wentworth. a
personal inj ury lawytf' who rep-
resents about 100 of Williams' pe-
t1ents.
PIT BULL A TT ACK REPORTS WANE •••
Prom Al
he said. "I should have never gone in the past. "We went through a thin&
over there. but I just couldn't handle were Dobcrmans aot bad prcs.s. then the scream in•-I just didn't want them German shepherds and then the pat to kill them .• ~ bull.··
But in vinually all c1t1es alona the Cena1n charactenst1cs of the pit
Oranic Coast, officials say such bull, anclud1n, the comb1nauon of
stones are rare. strona JIWS and ch nay ptt11stc:nce.
"We had onedoiattack earlier this make an attack by the doaan uc1t1na
'week that was auributed to a pit bull, news stol'). L1n1enfcller said
but no one could say for sure whether "Because they arc mort tenacious,
1t was really a pit bull or not." said when they do 1n1l1ate an atllCk tt
Irvine Animal Services Officer Dun-tends to1t1 the press more involved, ..
can Gill . "Quite onen •ttads arc she said.
attnbuted to pit bulls and that's not Ccruinly, pe l ftoncs of pat bull
really the case." auacks ha ve been dramatic enoua,h
In 1.4una Beach. animal control Jn 19861-~n Oranac County Animal officer Joy Lanaenfcltcr said pit bull Control .,.t. Kerrie Morpn was
attacks are unusual. attacked b.J' a 100.pound pit bull that "We had one where a d<>s bat chewed off her left middle tinier.
someone in the owner's home," "I shook my hand to act the blood
L1nsenfel1cr said. "We have a real ofT and I could sec the middle of my
strict leash law and I 1h1nk that rcall)' finacr twirhnaaround." Morpn said.
conlnbute1 to the dechne 1n 1na-'.'i kc-pt saymrto mysctt-"Ptease don't
dents. • faint.· •• "I thank what happens as. 1f people Prcv1ou ly. the same powerful
with those types of dogs come inro black dog had mauled a baby tn a
town with a dO& that is ofT leash or stroller and attacked a United PaMI unconta1ned and there's an incident Service dnver who required S$
or near incident, we're usually able to stitches for a lea wound. give them a citation or impound the Morpn, who had three opcra11oiu
dog fai~y quickly That usually nips and rtte1vcd psychol~l coun5Cl-
the pr'9t)lem in the bud. And that's not 1ng far trauma assodatcd with the
JUSt pit bullJ, that's any type of doe,•\ tcmfyina attack, eventually won a
In Fountain Valley and Costa $300.000 settlement 1n March 1988 M~ pohce report no recent pit bull for her injuries. At the ume she S&Jd
ata.acks. In Newpon kach, officer she would rather have her finter bl.ck
Orea Anmtrona aaid he ntver con-tun~ money.
sidcred the dost a problem. In AVl\llt f987. 1 3-)'Qr-<*i pet
•·tft.heri would have been 1e>me p1l bull tariet. named U&ly. wu bdd in
bull problem I would have hcfrd puppy pri10n after kinina an ErwJisb
about it." Annstronc aid. "No one tbeeDdo& in a San Clemente lhel1et. bas ever thouahl tt was a real BcloR'U&ly Ct>UJd be rtleued, owner
problem. It coma and aqes with the K~i llKkmana bad '° PGl'A news." SI0,000 aecurity bond 10 relieve tho
Uf'ICnfelter ~ that the ~ oty of liability in c:atc the dos wu a key player 1n pit bull stones in attacl&ed 111in.
the put. Upy blld &o be eottfined IO an atta 0'be ~Ml rnlly reedy f'or it It with a ftoor, Clt'ili .. And ..... be w tame and tt was real newsworthr." ttaftlPO"led i• a e111t.110t be talcn out lhesaidoflhCluf1CofpitbuUsiona in pubhc, be muzzled and bar.
•WllMe.tSt CW. ..... CA .. ............. '* c.te ...... C:A 1111' o.-.. -. w ... r1 .....,. " _.,. ...... ,
~----"°' .................. ... ... ., .... , ..... ,,.. ... _....,
---......, •1'1Mi0114'f ....,...,. -
tattoo, which a vetennanan etched in
the dog's car JUSt after his release.
Sull, howe"er dramatic such at·
tacks may be. area authorities main·
t.aJn a vic1001 attack by a pat bull is
rare Accordina to Jack Ed~ards.
chief of field scrvica for the 0ran&"C
County Animal helter. the county
has no pal bull problem per sc.
"We don't have• p1t bull problem
1nOra~County. oordol ever think we clad.' Ed-ants said. However, of
the 30 animals that have been dtclaftd v.aousin IMcounty.a third are pn bulls. In second place art
German lhcperds and Labrador re-
tnevCB place thud.
While Edwards would not say wt
year's reviSJon of the county ordi-
nance made a d1ff'ere.nce an t.M
numberofattackS.1t did live animal control officers more lautude. White..
the-~vioos ordnu-n<:epvclu1•
hncs for offiaaJ llCtion dcpend11111
upon whethera dot had 1nOicted one.
two or ahrce bit~ new ordinance allows a Yic1ous 1nvest1t1oon to
bQJn after a sin~ 11e.
ff an animal IS d~mtd VtC10US., its
owner mus1 pro"c he or she hn S 100.000 10 habthl) in~uninc:t... lrnot
auffic1enlly covcr""9. the dot owner
must 1Ct ample insurance or tthA·
qu1sb the pet.
For dos lovers. the C>Ption1 are not always cuy.
When Btck.mann &OOk UllY tom the animal lhcher Oely 10 c:oftlfnc IUm
in a~. U feet~ 6 feet tall lad S
ftet rik. iM said 11111~ •.. r4 mhcf
hive ham ahve witb me Iba dald
hcR."
And Carlos Oonu'c:r. Who worried
about 1M pit buU:iS. lhifted bis coecem IO what . Mppee IO the
~u after telli• It~; · -
"Tbete ~ afe , WiHclly ••
OOcmJa aid Of bis pit ... --bon: "I was over theft ._ lliil" plaJina with them ...
-.-...... ............. _.,, .... _. ::::.---
..
UCI to celebrate
King's blr-tnda~ -. . Oiseutaioa ot the pa, Kt by Manin Luther
Kina Jr. and ways IO obtain them wwU be the topc of
'u'}'"'POlium bonori11 the lase lackr's birthday at Cl, Jan.-11-13.
Panel ditalMIOM, lec:tum and pedormance1
w1U be featured 11 part of the lhree4ay event, whach
antludcs a lectwe Wcdnetday n~t by llandatl
Rob1nsqn, on .. G~ ADOlicauonsQ(thc Princ1plcs
of Manin Luther Kine Ji." Robinson is a Harvard law SchOOI paduate, pest ABC "Penon of the
Weck" and eucuuve director of Trans-Africa. a
black AmeriCan lobby for Africa and the Canibean.
All actavatae5 cuept the Robinson L«ture arc
free and open to the public. The lecture will be at the•
Bren Event: Qnter at I {>.m. and tickets wilt be $7
S6 and SS. For more 1nformat1on call TbomaS
Parham at 8S6-4642. '" •
Youth •helter update
A video on ho!' youth shelters-operate aod ach1cv~ their pis wtll be shown at a mcetina of the
Democratic ctub of West Orange County at 6:4S p.m. Monday at the Hunllnaton Beach Library.
Garolt Kanode, presdent of the projected
Huntrnaton lkach youth shelter, will discuss the
needs and purposes of shelter proarams and will
repon on the status of the Hunt1naton Beach shelter. T~ ltbrary as TaJt>en Avenue and Golden West
Street 1n Hunonaton Beach. More 10forma11on may
be obtatned by callina 898-1882.
Gl~bal marJcet e.amlned
G Windows on tt\e World: How ~~proach the
lobaJ Marketplace wiJI be d1scu by Gerald
Glenn, group president of sales and marketing with
Fluor Daniels! at the American Marketing Associa-
tion's Jan. 12 unchcon at the Irvine Mamon.
The hotel 1s at 18000 Von Karmen and the
event will run from 11 a.m. to I :30 p.m. Advance
reservations arc $20 for members, $22 for non-
members, SI S for studtnts. Adm1ss1on is $25 at the
door. More information may be obta10ed by calling (818) 762-4669
Dependency studled
Chemical dependency will be discussed at the
meeting of the Optimist's ctub of Jrvme at 7 a.m.
Jan. I 7 at Hors Hut 10 Irvine.
Visitors are welcome to this mcctin[whcrc Dr. Peter Sterman, of Preferred Health Care td., will be
the guest speaker.
The restaurant is at 18850 Douglas St. and there
will a charae only for breakfast. M'orc information
may be obtatned by calling 830-5369 or 675-1779.
Boole renew due
A book review on "The Merchant Pnnces" will be presented by Rose Mardcr-Ku_pperman lit the
luncheon IJlCCtma of the S1mcha Chapter of B'nai
B'ntb Women at 11 a.m. Jan. 12 at the Huntington
Landmark in Huntinaton Beach.
K upperman, an author. radio sho" host, one-time detective and pilot, was born 1n EnglaDd and
m1dcs in Beverly Hills .
The restaurant 1s at Magnolia A venue and
Atlanta StrceL Reservations and funhcr mfor-
mat1 on may be obtained b) ca.lhng Floren~
Waldman at 960-4566 or Paula S1 Iver at 960-8162.
Runlan reform eiamlned
The intemallonal dunensions of PerestrOJka, the Soviet's pohcy of rcstructunng its society, will be
discussed by Roben Ayanian, Ph.D .. at 7 p.m. Jan.
12 at the Newpon Beach Pubhc Ltbrary.
Ayan11n, an economics professor at Cal State
fullenon, will focus on implications for relations
between the Soviet Union and the United States.
Adm1ss1on is fret and all arc welcome to this
event at the Newpon Center Branch at 856 San
Ocmente Next to the Newport Harbor Art Museum
For more information. call Jackie Headly at
644-31 70.
Wedneaday, Jan. 4
• 7 p m Lapaa Btadl Plaula1 Commluioa,
council chambers, SOS Forest A vc.
Thunday,Jan.6
No mccuna.s scheduled ~----
J ,,
u rvl 'chairman
IJ 8()11 VAN EY&EN ..............
Memberl of the Orantt County Boayd
of SupttVison elected Thomas Riley on
Tuesday \0 SttVe as their chairman foe
1989. markina his fourth term as head of
lhc county's aovem1na body.
Riley sw:ceeds Supervisor Hamett
Wieder, w~ SttVed in the post dunna
1918. Tbe com1q year will be notable, Riley
said, because a number of prOJCCU that
have ~n in plannu'I for many years will
bef,n lO emerae into ruhty. • · · I'm very optimistic," he said ... I have ~t cxpectauons for the new airport, and
I hope we'll bc&in co111truction of the San
Joaquin Halls Tnnsportation Comdor.
And the traffic c1rculatfon pbasina ~ns m
the south county should bc&in faU1na into
~. TI9ey lbould be. 1tnerat1nt about S400 million in roed development fees over the nest 10 yean," · Tran~t1on development ;111 be one of the bigelt challtnaes facina the bolrd I.bis year, and well into the future, Raley
said.
.. Another one is bousina." he said.
..We're a job-rich county, and to provide
hous1na foraJI of those people isaoina to be
very challcfttina."
RileyJ.:76, is the board's oldest member.
He was 11rst appointed to the board in 1974
by then-Gov. Ronakl Rcapn.
He won his first c.lcctaon in 1976 and was
rc..clec1ed in 1978. 1982 and 1986. lliley
will face rc..clcction aaam 1n 1990, but has
made no announcement about whether he
will seek ·a fifth term Hts Sth Distnct
JnclUdes Ne'Nl)On Beach, Irvine, Laauna
leach and much of the south county.
The posiuon of board chairman is
tenerally rotated amona the five memben.
The rotation was accelerated wath the
reti&ftation of Supervisor Bruce Ncstande
in 1'87. Raley, who was vice chairman in 1988, last served as chairman of the board
in 1986.
Riley, a retired Marine Corps bripdiet
,enCT"al, was born in Hamsonbura, Va.,
and attended the VirJJnia Military In·
smute.
He became acquainted with Oranae
County during his final mihtary ass1an·
ment as chief ofstaff'atCamp Pendleton 1n
nonb San Dicao County in the early 1960s.
When he retired (rom the Manne Cotps
an l~. Riley and bis wife, Emma Jane,
settled 1n Newport Beach, where they ha\le
lived since. They have no children.
Collision
blamed on
soft drink
By PAUL ARCRIPLEY
Of .. Dely ........
Two drivers suffered moderate injuries
Tuesda~~cn their vehicles colli<kd on West H'ahway in Newport Beach
af\cr one of the dnvcrs veered across tbe
road. Steven Paul Chu.mlc¥, 30, of Hunt-
an&ton Beach was traveling west when •
soft dnnk felJ in his Chevy pickup lnlCk.
Newport Police spokesman Bob Oakley
said. Chumley leaned over to pick up the cup
and swerved anto the highway's eastbound
lanes. Oakley said. His truck collided with a MitsUbishi
Jedan be1na dnvcn by Timothy John
Hirota. 26, of Otamond Bar. The jmpect sent Hirota's ca.r into the
next eastbound )Jnc where it was side-
swioed by a.truck and trailer beina driven ~ Willie Ed JonCJ, 38, of l,.ake Forest,
Oak.Icy said. Chumley suffered a knee it\jury, cull
and possibly broke bas wrisL Hirota
complatned pain in his neck •od abovkkr.
Both were taken to HOii Memorial
Hospital followina the 12:45 p.m. acci·
dent, Oakley saad. •
A poltceman walta for a wrecker to remoye a car
and a pickup that collided on Weat Cout JllChway
Delly ......... .,._. .....
after tbe drlnr of pickup aplllecl a eoft drt.nk.
Yeered acrote tile road and amaabecl into tbe car.
Jonc1 was not utjurcd. The colhs1on dtd not cause m.;or traft"tc
uc-ups. • ,.
AttempttoendHB's trashfeefails
i y ounci rejects
ordinance ending
-----=~---a -month charge
By ROBERT BARKER
Of""' 0.-, ..........
Freshman Cit) ('ounc1lman Jam Silva
got trashed b)' his Hunt1naton Beach
council colleagues Tuesday as he aimed his
s11hts on a controversial SS-a-month trash
fee imposed on homeowners last Septem-
ber
Silva. v.-ho campaigned aga10s1 the fee
on his way 10 victor) 1n the NoHmber
clcct1on, said 101t1ally he'd 10troducc an
ordinance to scuttle the bill In fact. S1l\'a's
Jntent1ons were pnntcd on the City
Council aaenda for the whole world to sec -"Outtt cit~ attorney to prcpere
ordtnancc to rt$C1nd refuse collect1on fee."
When 1t came 1lva's time to peak up.
however. he merely askt'd for a stud>,
session so that offic11I could "t,aluate ·
1ht trash fee
He was shot do"n on that
Fellow councal official~ sauJ the ctt)
counterparu.
Meeting sets record for brevity
Silva said he remains opposed to the
trash fee ll)d behc-ves that 1t 1s unfair to the
tupa)'C11 who were relieved of the fee 10
1970 when the council IWf'OVcd a S
Wes Bannister' has bttn ma)'or of
Huntington Beach for less than a month
and he's already setting records
The one he shattered by 2S m10utes
Tuesday night may stand fo r a while.
The bimonthly City Council meeting.
wnh a light agenda and a Jack of heavr
emotional topics. ended at 8.0S p.m . 65
minutes after Bannister ban&ed down his
gavel to stan the proccedtng
Banmstcr smashed a record that he
believed was set by former Ma)Or Bob
Mandie 10 the 1980s when he reponedly
ad1~umed a 7 p m meeuni at 8 30
The new ma\Or. who stnctly adhern 10
the three-minute hm11 for resident pea~·
ing dunng 1he mcctma. has 1nstuutcd a S
pm. session before the actual council
mec11ng begins. percent tax on residents' uuhty biUs that
Clly Council members, huddhn& with · r.uscs about SI 0 ma I hon a )e&.r.
staff membtrs 1n sessions that are open to Councilman Tom Mays saati. however,
the public. are expected to ~ct ans"-crs to that officials should take no action to
their questions on aaenda items. ~v10g rescind the fee until Silva and Don
tame dunng the regular meetings. · MacAlhster, who also was elcct«l an
The officials and staff membe" have a November. could ict a chance to analyze
fi h dmner and a bt"eraac together at 6 nttds
p.m. and continue their d1scuss1ons until · the rqular meeting starts at 7 p.m Ma)s said the city faces expenditures of
Cit)' Council meetings have droned on SSO m1lhon to put in new water lines and
until midnight and be)ond in ~nl )tars another S 10 m1lhon for street repairs.
d wod Other loom1Q1 Cllpenscs include flood esp1te pen 1c promises to break control, scwtr lanes and pler COflstruction. sessions 11 11 p m 1 Asked Tuesda) night if the S p.m. pre-In ala., costs arc expected to tot.al a
meeting hel~d cApedne matters. Ban· staacnna S200 m1tl1on 10 the next five or s1 l( yea rs. Mays said mster ~•d. ·· ou·re damed nght 1t did ·· MacAllister, quoted in campaian htera·
-By RoHrt B.l.J'ftr tu.re as fa"onnl dump1na the trash fees..
----------------------------Tuesda} called for ~a full audit" of needs and fees. "It may not be prudtat (to drop
faces far too man) cnucal nteds to drop
the trash fl"C. which 1s expected 10 ra1~
mo~ than SJ million a )ear
Instead, the) called for an audtt and
more stu~ of fee and capital nccch. In
other v.ords. tht') 'II look over the whole
topic at budget time. a pr~ss that
normal!) takes p~cc c'e" \tar
Sth a 1d Tuesda) that he full) C\pcctcd
his collca.gues 10 'ote on his motion He ~Id. though. dlal h<' .rouldn 1 get a ~ond
to hts motion from his s1:\ un)1eld1na
the fees) without study1na the wbote
finanetal picture." he saJ<l MacAlhster said previously that state-
ments an campalJJl madcrs clauruna he oppo~ the fttS were made without bis
knowled&e. and that he didn't n«nSlrily
aartt With them.
Man 4enies burning cross
at black fam~ly's residence
through a rtar patio art:. betv.ccn
1urday and Tuesda) Oamqe "as
e\t1m:sted at S 100
C•taMeaa
A robber entered the Thnfl) Gas
talion in the 2000 block of e"'l>O" Boule ard about 12.30 a.m. Tu~)
and si mulated aaun tn h1 riahtJacl et
pocl et. ordcnn1 the emplO)tt to
open the cash rqi cer. Rer arabb1na
money from the rcaistcr, the u P«\
ordercd lhc empl~)ff to open a safe.
aaam. T~o 01\lc" Mnrkeh reponed
a man arabbcd canons of Marlboro
ctgarcttC$ from their tores and Oed
The Circle K 10 the 1600 block of
Santa Ana A"enuc lo~t '' canon earlier this v.cckend v.h1lc Tuesday
night three canons were taken from a
Cude K 1n thr 3 l 00 block of Harbor
Boulevard .\ 7-ElcHn tore 1n the 2600 block of Harbor ha rcponed
be1n1 bit •~•cc an three Y>c-cks
that had been rcponed 1nJurcd at
V1cton1 Beach. The bird was last seen
at S p m. Monday
Ba.ndJaCtoa Beacla
Bur"llars smashed a Window at the
Abundant Life Assembly of God,
I 7S I Nev.land St. and stole bowi
and arrows valuut at SI SO. • • •
~ IJ TIMI A.nedatM P':ff•
A 'Wntminster man accused of semna nre to a et 1n front ofa black
family's home had merely folio~ a
friend '° * ~t wa ha~n1nt. a
dcftnle attorney araucd in court..
Oery A. Skall~n. 24. was ~a mere ~ .. and did not pertl(apete 1n
tk Croll bumin&_ July 28. federal
Deput' Public lkftnder Dean tew·
ard iaid :f\iaday. Tbc trial wu 10 continue today
Skillman is charted with t'Oa· sc"r8CY 10 viot.te another pmon's
civ1I riahts, usln1 fon:c and threat of
fon=c to inumjdlte the fam1I)' because
of tMir race and us1n1 Or: an the
commiuion ofa felony. Jurors hst.cned to a tape 10 which
Skillman tokl pohcc the crou was
built at his boUte and that. accompa-
nyinc lhe friend who bi.lilt the crou.
he canied the otl can cat'T')IQI th<'
ftammablc hquid used to haht the
fire. ··1 ·use fOllC>Md him ... he said. "I
didn {fed that •l Wit naht I JUll tood
bict ud didn't want to be~ of n "
lodl prwcuton and MC at·
no ..... of fom:d entry. • • • Ailta• A 1if~andna1I p ..,. llOleft from 1 .home on. the
100 • ol 26dl SUeet whtrc a ~ ..... livelwhilc lM hcMaK I ---~LOllwasntt·
..-.. s1.220.
tome)S ha'e said the fncnd. '*ho ha
not been 1denuficd. cannot be
located . Alto Tuesday. Chnst) He1ucr
Qu1rop tearfully recounted for the
JUf'Y how she a~oke to find the cro
bumm1 on Mr front lawn.
"I tncd not to fttl 1nt1m1dltcd. But
1t affttted our fam•I> and 1t atT«ted mt. It made us feel not wanted ... 'he
said. Skillman. cha~ v.1th con piracy 1nttm1dat1on and violation o( c1.,.1i
npls of othcn. facn up to 21 ~ 1n
pntOft tf COD'Ytetfd
ot the new ca vie ccn&cr tomct i me O\ er
the .. ttktnd. • • • 19 6 Honda Espint was stOkn
from tht 100 block of Topcb
bc1wmt 9 and 10 p.m. Tuetda •
The ~r aot I I lO and ran out of i&h• behtnd the tore, but a blue
mint-truck with' tinted windows and O\icrs1~cd wheels wu sttn a few
minutes later hcadana tov.vd the
Costa Mesa Frttwa) He was de-
scnbcd as white, 30 to 32 )Can oJd. 6
fctt, 150 pound • w11h medium
brown, wavy hair and a mall mus-
tache. .. . ..
The tablts Wtft turned on a bumto
bandit when a siorc cltrk decided to
hold his bi<'yclt for ransom. A _)OUl'I&
man rtponcdly entered the 7-Eltvcn
matkc1 tn the 2100 bk>ck of Placentia
A "f'ftUC.. took a checken burrito out of
a refrisraled cue and ran out of the st~. ""TM ~ Nnn111 after the
$Uspcd spoiled a ~ parMd
oullidt the seott. possibly Id\ by the
~ As* deft took the~ inside. iht bwrilO ~ mwMd and ~led
at m ID NSWD \M_biU.lllC dm .... Iii "1cjClt iiQIM .. MIUtMd io-... .... .., .......... Al ... ctn aled ....... Ille F f«t II JJHred. • •• Tiie Martbcwo .. .... ......
Lapn&Beacb
An 10nkttper at a bu mes at the
30000 block of Coast H1&hway was
dcftaudcd out of payment for a room.
phone ca.Us and video tapes "alued at
S244. The report wa' filed Monday • • • A buralarY in the t 400 block of
Gltnneyi-e Street netted the thief
SS. 900. •n Je~elry and m1sttllaneou
items Tut$day. • • • l 8:56 Tuesda)' mom101 poh~
searched unsucces fully for a J>"hcan
A Los An.actcs t.u.1 cab dnvC'f'
requested o(Ylccn to kttp the peace It
12:47 am. toda) after paut••• Id\
his cab Wlthout r11~ an their bill.
Thieves cnteml a ttside9Ct 1n the
9700 block of Pttuwood Onve
throu,h an unlo(ked rem-_...,.
and stok S l SO in bucbell ainta and
S25 ID cash. • • • Someone entered an WlloCked 111·
•an the 7700 block of Taytoi on~
and tole a • rad1o-contr0Ued ar
valued at S600 and a controlir
val..cd at S200.
ilB man killed in cruh
•
101st Congr~ss
opens on a note
of·cooperation
WASHINGTON (AP) -Leaders
of the newly-convened lOlst Con-
p-eu are apeaki"I kindly of pttlidcn t-
elect Bmh, and they're talkina about
cleui°' up Capitol Hill's imaae of
cxxrupUOD -especially if they can
~ I .. )' raite, too.
The Cleftmonial start of the new
ICllioa on Tuesday au$bed wuh optimiun about what could be ac-
com~ in the next two years,
witb the Conaress more firmly in
Democratic control and with a new
Re~blican in the White House.
• 8y worki~ t~tbcr. we can help
our new president fulfill his beautiful
promise of a kin(ler. gentler Ameri-
ca," said Rep. Jim Wriah~ D-Texas, upon his •re-election Tuesday as
Speaker of the House. ·
On the otb.cr side of the Capitol,
Bush, in his~le of vice president,
administered the oath of office to new
and re-elected senators. Former Ma-
JOrilY leader Roben c._Byrd. 0.
W. Va., was elected president pro
tempore of the Senate, as GcofiC
Mitchell, D-Maine, took the floor in
Byrd's Old role.
In a sign of cooperation, Senate
leaders are arranging to speed up
work on confirmlrig Bush's appoint-
ments. Hearings on Secretary of
State-designate James A. Baker 111 arc
scheduled to start Jan. 17 -three
days before Bush becomes president
and can send the nomination to
Congress.
Today, Bush leads a joint session of
Congress to count the electoral votes
that wiU make.him president on Jan.
20.
Wript pled&ed "the earnest and u~stinti~ cooperation of t~adcr
s~ip of this House" in helping Bush
with his foreign policy goals, and the
speaker even thanked his outgoing
adversary. Prts1dent Reqan, for has
international successes and "en·
couf'alinJ the.arowth and sustenance
of politaal freedom in countries
throuahout the world."
The speaker hsted the federal
budget and trade deficits and a
mynad of social needs as requ1rina
bipartisan cooperation.
And he announced that he and
Republican leader Bob Michel, R-111.,
will soon appoint a bipartisan panel
to review the House's ethics code.
Wright himselfisat theccnterof an
ellucs stonn in the Conires~. The
House ethics committee is investigat-
ing allegations that Wright misused
his office for personal gam. and that
he revealed government secrets.
Four House incumbents were de-
feated in the last election after
questions were raised aa,ut their
personal or campaign finances. Reps.
Harold Ford, 0-Tenn .• and Robert
Gacci~ 0-N. Y ., both re-elected. cur·
rcntly arc under indictment on crimi-
nal cbarges. Concurrent with the ethics c9n~
troversy is a new proposal to g'ivc
lawmakers a pay raise of up to SO
percent, and the two issues have
become intertwined. A presidential advisory board has
recommended increasing pay for
awmakers from the current $89,500
to SI 3.S_,000, but it said at the same
time n ouse and Senate members
should be banned from accepting fees
for their speeches. Critics contend
that allowing members to pocket up
to $2,000 for their speeches -often
to lobbying groups -reinforces the
public's low opinion of Capitol Hill.
ethics. R~ is expected to propose soon
a pay raise smaller than the com·
mawon recommended.
-·
Doctors asked
to h-eip break
abuse cycle
WASHINGTON (AP) -Phys-
icians wbo treat women arc bema
enlisted m a nationwide effort to aid
battered women and help break a
aencrational cycle that has caught
some American families in a web of
violence. The American College of Obstetri-
cians and Gynecologj~s is sending
information to its 28,000 members to
heiabten their awareness of the prob-
lem of domestic violence and 6etter
enable them to helf abused women. SuJP,n Genera C. £vercn Koop,
who JOined the sroup for its an-
nouncement of the campaian Tues-
day, "id stopping violence apinst
women is a ~or part of the effon to
end family violence, a cycle that often
begins when someone is the victim of
abuse and then arows up to become
an abuser.
"It's-obvious that if you're going to
break that chain ... you've got to start
with child abuse." Koop said.
Payments for in Side information
~n Navy systems contract alleged
NEW YORK (AP)-Two consult-
ants made penodic S 1,000 payments
to a Navy official to help Hazeltine
Corp. get inside information to
compete fer a multimillion-dollar
Navy contract, court papers allege.
The documents - a warrant to
search Hazeltine's offices in Grcen-
lawn and an affidavit supporting the
warrant request -were unsealed
Tuesday in U.S. Otslrict Court.
Accord1ng to the papers. consultant
wtttiarn Parlun was hfr~~azei.
tine in 1986 to help the company win
a SIS. 9 million Navy contract. called
UPM-1 SO, to build a battlefield air·
traffic control system.
Parkin SJ>ht his SI ;000-a-month
paym'cnt from Hazeltine with
another consultant. Fred Lackner,
who contacted Stuart Berlin, a Navy
grocurement specialist with the
aval Air Systems Command.. Every_
few months the consultants gave
S 1.000 to Bertin. the government documents said. ·
"Bertin apparently played a signifi-
cant role in the development of the
UPM-150 RFP(rcqucst for proposal)
and provided ans1de information to
Lackner for Hazeltine's use," the
papers said.
LOC'KERBIE, Scotland (AP} -
PaCked into a church, clulkrcd
llDOl!I tombatones or teated an
overflOw haUs. relatives and town~
.,eop&e wept and prayed today for the
Clad of bombed Fliaht I 03 as a
minister urted them to tum their tboulhts aW.y from venaeanor.
Lock~. the town where most of
the Pan Am Boe1~47 crashed after beina blown apart a bomb. came to
a standstill for the minute service
for the 2S9 people kil~ aboard the
plane and the 11 residents who di~
on the sround.
Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher, in black coat and hat, and
her husband Denis joined the other
mourners, who .packed into
Dryfcsdale Parish Church, clustered
amona nearby tombstones or sat in
crowded hallways,
The local people, dignitaries, rela-
tives and Pan Am st.afT members
flown in by the airline for the service
sana hymns and prayed. Aftttwatd. the 63-year-old prime
minister. who visited the crash site
the momi111 afttr the disamr, met
pnvatdy Wtth the relatives an a
school.
lnvcstiptors have concluded a
bomb blew up the plane, and suspi-
cions have focused on Maddie Eastern
terrorists, promptana-Thltchtf to
advise the United Slltes publicly
apinst .. eye for an eye" rc11hation.
The Riaht Rev. James Whyte.
moderator of the Church of Scotland,
echoed that advice.
"Justice, yes. Retaliation, no." he
told the conarqation from the
church·s marble pulpit.
"We may be tempted. indeed urse<S
by some, to nu our muscles in response, to show that we arc men,"
Whyte said.
.. To show that we arc what? To
show that we arc prepared to let more
young and more innocent die, to let
Troop Witlidrawal depends
on Af ghanista_n cease-fire
By Tlte AIHClated Pres1
ISLAMABAD. Pakistan - A senior Soviet diplomat said today that
unless the fa.;htinJ stops in Afghanistan, the estimated 50.000 Red Army
soldiers who remain there could stay beyond the Feb. IS withdrawal deadline.
"If a cease-fire holds and there is no fi&hting in Afghanistan1 then that's a very
good situation for Soviet forces to fea ve," Deputy Foreign Minister Yuli
Voroouov told reporters as he arrived in Islamabad. Afghan 1nsuraents
headquartered in Pakistan have refused to accept a cease-fire until the current
Moscow-backed government in Kabul steps down.
Antl-black violence •pread• ln Cblna
BEIJJNG-Chinese students in a central city beat a Sri Lankan student,
threw rocks at Africans and put up anti-black posters as racial tensions spread
toa fourth Chinese city.i..forcagners said today. The violence occurred Saturday
at the Central China rolytechnical College in Wuhan. 680 mites south of
Beijing, said a student from Gabon and an Ammcan teacher. In Beijing.
meanwhile, Afncan students boycotted classes at the Beijina Lanauaacs
Institute today, one day after Chinese demonstrated apinst an aUqed attack
by a black student on a Chfoesc woman. "Brothers. let us unite and fi&ht for
dignity,'' sai~ a leaflet distributed by Africans at the institute. "Bfack as
·t>cautr,." Jn Wuhan, Chinese students put up posters saying "Black devil, go
home ' on the walls of the foreign dornutory at the colleg~.
Turkey's rlgbts record called appalling
· LONOON -Amnesty International today condcm.ned Turkey for its
" lhng human rights records," saying it has received •lmost'da1ly reports
since November of po 111cal prisoners bcmg tort um!. The London-based nghts
organization says in a report released today that the Turkish government has
begun a pubhc rclauons campaign to improve its image abroad, but has taken
no substantial steps to end the tortunng of political dctaanccs. Amnesty said
2501000 political pnsoncn have been detained in Turkey this _decade. and
"almost all of them were tonured.'.' Thousands were imprisoned for non-
violent political orrelagious acuvuies, 60,000were convicted after unfair trails..
more than 700death sentences were imposed and at least 200 prisoners died in
custody. many alleged lO be the result of tonure, the orpnuation said.
lftOft racue WOl'tttl labor 1n mon: ~ to find the pisJy JllfOOf, not
ofour virility. but of our inhumanity.
.. Thlt is what rcuhation means J
for one. will have none of n, and I
hope you wall not either."
The 1imple, d1an1ficd ~rvice was ·
televised hve to the nation, and to
mourners ptbcted an a l~l cinema,
community ball and chUtth.
Many prcfem.d to 1tand in the
cbtlly rain amona the old panatc
tombstones outside the church. hud~
died under umbrellas, dressed an
windbreakers and cloth caps.
The li&}\ts of the austere. Presby-
terian church shone bnahtly jnto the
pthenna afternoon gloom, and sheep &razed in a ficJd nearby. The Unfon
Jack·flew at half-1t.aff.
Inside the 91-year-old sandstone
church, a man cradled has wife's head as they sana a hymn, and a baby slept
on its father's shoulder. ·
United States
to host rights
conference
WASHINGTON (AP) -Prest·
dent Reqan hasdectdcd to accept the
Soviet Union's proposal for hosting
an international conference on
human rights in 1991 , sources said.
U.S. asrccment to participate in the
conference sianals American support
for Soviet leader Mikhail S.
Gorbachev's antemal reforms and
sets the stage for the opening of new
East-West ncaotiauons on cutt1na
troops and arms in Europe.
The human nghts conference and
the European arms neaotiations are
linked. and Secretary of State Gcorac
P. Shultz has recommended they
proceed based on Soviet advances ID
human fiahts, a U.S. official told The
Associated Press on Tuesday.
President Reagan on vacation ID
California, decided Tuesday to accept
Snuhz's advice, said another official,
who also spoke on cond1 ti on he not be
identified. •
Shultz on Sunday is to meet with
-SOviet Forcian Minister EdlCard A.
Shevardnadze 1n Pans. where O{ey
will beattend1naaconfcrcnce of more
than l 00 nations on ways to halt the
prola feration of chemical weapons.
Evidently, Reapn has seen enouah
progrns 1n the Soviet record to cloK
the conference Jn Vienna and move
on
U.S. JETS DOWN 2 LIBYAN FIGHTERS .•.
From Al
forces that arc thought hostile.
The commander of the F-14 patrol
made the decision to fire at the
Libyan aircnft "in self-defense.'' and
apparently shot down both planes.
said Carlucci. The four crewmen of
the two planes were beina flown to a
U.S. base at Naples, Italy, fordebricf-
inf. be said. 'At the tame of the incident. both
the ship and its aircraft were conduct-
ing tra1nina operations" between the
Greek island of Crete and Libya. he
said. "The aircraft carrier was 12 7
miles north of Tobruk. Libya" and
the F-1 4s "were providing combat air
petrol SO miln south ofthe Kennedy.
which is some 70 miles north or the
nonbeast Ll~n coast. .. be said.
Carlucci aid the F-14s dc~nded
from I S,000-to 4,000 feet and at·
tempted five aepcrate evasive man-
euven. "They chanaed speeds,
altitude and direction." he said.
"The Libyan aircraft continued to
close in a hostile manner," he said.
"Each time. the Libyan aircraft
IOUlht to put their note on our aircraft. They also accelerated. so the
hostile intent sttms to be fairly
clear,·· he said.
"Atabout 14miles the U.S. section
leader decided that his aircraft was in ~pard)'. and he could wait no longer.
One M10·23 was shot down with a
Sparrow miss1k. The second M10
was ahot down ~ a Sidewinder
m1ss1le at Sil males.· he said.
Af\rrwards. be said, "two p1ra-
chutcs were liahted and a Libyan arch and racue helicopter was later
detected he9ded for the ua.·• 1t "WIS
not cleat whether the Libyan pelots
survived.
• The (Olll"on11tion occurred about nooo local lime, or 2 Lm. PS1\ ' ne nwo MiQ.llt were spotted by ,.... ~ o«tom lhc Af Bumbah
airllld 1• ~ Libya, climbins to
9 000 feet .s IMn ll«lderatina and ~ill• De f.1-. which were at rs~~ oma.at laid. umaa llid dlere wert no indica-
doal dla1 llle Ubyau ftrcd bdwe &ht
tM Americujea downed tltem.
Sn. Sim ~-~ c:Mirman of the Sell9lt Armed Service Commit•, M,i .. lndiCation1 are tbat Ubyl villlllll _.. we C.U die .,.. Of
t 1 1 meat ... Tbry mueuvered 1Mm.1¥W into I poi!dtioft IO be ablt '° ...... American plalin. The ndel of na I m1a1 plrmit ltlf-dlle .. in dM:.i~" .. u ... -.~ ...
Chemical weapons in
at least 1 O countries
STOCKHOLM. Sweden (AP) -
At least 10 countnes arc rehably
rcponcd to have chemical weapons.
and several have unleashed them an
recent wars. Swedish retearehers say.
But an accurate and certain count
of countries possscssina chemical
weapons is clouded by disinfonna·
tion and vested interests, said the
Stockholm lntcrnauonal Peace Re-
search Institute.
At one tame or another, 31 coun-
tries were reported to have chemical
wea~ns. but the reports often were
unreliable or hard to INCSS, SIPRI
said in its 1988 yearbook. which was
published in Auaust.
..h's bard to put a f11ure on ·~ ..
SIPRJ raearchcr Johan l,,undin aid
in an intervteW today ... Ah coun.
tries have declared they have
cMmical weapons. others say they
intend to have them, and there are a
lot of allcutions f:Pjnst other coun·
tncs. We 6ave no 1nfonnation of our
own."
SIPRI 1ta pnvate resa~h 1nstatute
pettiafly funded by the Swedish
aovenunenl. It was esiabl1shed to
monitor the wor1d ann1 trade and
developments in di11rmamcnt, main)~ lhlOUlh published reports.
SI PIU •icf in tbe I 988 ytarbook
that raponaible U.S. arid other
aovernmnt offiaalt spe.akiftl °"the
fecord lilted nine ~ntna as hlvina
cbemkal weapon1 or inleftclies to AQIUile mnn.
These were Frahcc. l,...q, North
Korea. Syna. the United St.ates. the
Sovtet Union, Afgharustan. Iran and
Vietnam.
Since the book's pubhQt1on. the
United StatcS has accused labya of h1van1 a weapons-produc1n1
capabi(Jty. l.Jbya denies It.
Lundin said the U.S. allcptaon
about Libya'• capeblltty v.-as as re-
liable u th0$C on wluch the prcv1ou1
count of nine nations was based.
SIPRI said other countnes have
been named an less reliable repons A
purponed 1983 U.S. anteUiaence
document leaked to the Bntash
Bl'Oldcast1n1_ Corp. lddcd the names
of Bunna. China. Eavpt, £th1opt1.
lvael, ubya and 111wao as pos..
jC$$C)fS.
Last year. Iran and Iraq ~ ~ncd to have used toicic pxs.
Combat.ants an Anaola. Moumbt<jue
and Afsllanissan also made un-
substant .. ted alqataons that they
were v1ct1ms of chcm1c:al warfare.
Lundin said.
Jn t 917. Libya was llCCUICd ofusina
lctha.I ps in Olad and V tetnam -as chaf'lied *Ith pott0nina wascr sup-
plies an C•mbod.. and the Sf PRI yearbook 11id chcnuc:al weapons were UICd ID the Iran-Iraq war. . 'Tk previous yar, ctwJcs of
dxmic:al war wnc ruttd llliut Ethiopia. Iraq, Iran. .the Soviet Union, Vietftam,. ~ C."Md,
Libya and Nicaf'llll'SIPIU ~.
I dmtJ it .. ....,, ..... Ge
~vocadw lolioa," N..._ o.oL.
iald Av-:-wosr. . • .:. ~ ll:r°'~ ::r :a~~
:.man~
. -
A h u man touch
·with Alzheimer's
Ucl t dies h I 10.wf:ek ltudy inve>avu-a 30 S U OW Alzht1rMf 1 petients at the Hillbaven
maa.cuad,e affiects SoeciaJ Cate Unit •n Anaheim. --& Oietch beheves that thnapeutic
beh DlUlllt may ··alleviate bebavlOUraJ Victi ms. avtor probkins 1uch as physacaJ violeoce, --~----,,..----.,.----• Withdrawal, lnliety and dtprnt.ion.
IJ VEllA llDWA ...,,..cau u ·a
It is &he fourth leadtna cause of
dealb in adults. Alfectlna 2.S to 3
milllOft Ammcaas. more than S40 ~Jli~ft is tpCD_\ ~D!'~)' canna for the
v1Cllms of AlzMi_mer's Dtseast, 1.c-
cont.iM 10 the Alzbrimcr's Assod.a-
tion or~ County.
Alzbei.mer 1 Diteate can cause
mental confuaaon, memory loss,
~mpaument and an overaH
ated antdlectual fu.nctioruna in
1lS vicurns. Thouih most people affected are over6S years of aae. n can
stnke aduJts an the40sand SOsaswcll.
W1tb ao cu.re at hand for a disease
whose counc usually runs .several
·years. many Alzheimer's patients are
taken care of tn nunina homes.
It is in these nunina homes that Dr.
James Dietch believes "lack a~
propriate outlets for physial con-
tact"
t>ietch 1s a.n us11t.ant adJunct
professor of psychiatry at UCI and
chief-psychtatoc consultant for the
UCI Medical Center's Health
Aaessment Profram for SenJors.
.. Many clin.taa.ns belteve that the
sensory depnvation resultina from
inadequate levels of socud 1,nd pby11-
c.al sumulation may directly con-
tribute to the behavioral probltms
exh1b1ted by these patients," D1ctch
says.
Some of those problems include
agitation, wandenna and lack of
a}7Peute. '
· Dietch is tesuna 1h.Js hypothesis m
Fifteen Ahheimtr's patients are
bcinaaiven h0u.r-lonam•m1"1 tbne
tames weekly, •ht.le 15 petients in a
contn>l aroup ~ive no ma.....,
therapy.
Loraine Bush, a 74-year-old
woman from Anaheim, 11 one auch
paucnt Rccavina a fuU upper-body ~ from Gloria WiamuUer, a
ccrufLCd nunina assistant., she
eventually fell asleep for a brief nap
and then racbed out to bold bands
with a vuitor.
.. All _peuenu don't react t.he ume
way," W1esmuUer said. ''Mrt. Bulh
reacts well. She lets me do the
massage.''
The pressing hands and Iona strok·
•na mouons are· similar to move-
ments -used in S~ish m&llllf,
accord1na to W1esmuller.
In order to impart rcla.utioo to the
patient, the .massaae nurse must .. be
relaxed and full of confidence as well,
says Elizabeth Saiz, Hillhaven's di-
rector of nursing. "Neaative feelinas are transferred to the patient Nurses
do relaxing exercises before aivina a
massage.
Saiz says -physical contact lowers
anxiety levels in tbt patients, and 11)'1
human touch may reduce the need for
cbemtc.al ~tl'lfnts such u anti·
anliety medic.at.ions or anu~cp~
ants. The patacnu enJOY the compa-
nionship as well. she says.
Though the fuial results of the
study are not in, Dtetch is focu:;;, on
whether massqie may be . . . to
reduce the -rehaoc:e on tranqu1lizin1
medications in treatJDS Alzhelmcr's
.............. "-.....
Gloria w1 ... a11et ••z-c• Lorene Boccb.ln.I at tbe
11111.ba•tm n....m, bome.
VJCtJms1 on the paoents• affi.nty for cffect.Jveness of pumn.a a ma.siace
phys1c.at therapy, and on the cost proeram in nun1na homes.
..
()qnge Coelt DAILY PILOT /Wedl111 dey. ~ 4, 1.. M
Raw eas can ca11se
Vltaml:adeficlency
8 J U¥IN DOYLE
........ O.n JI •1 I
A atass of raw tP:t for breakfast may be less healthy than a nutrition-
conscaous athlete miaht expect, 1ccordina to a profCS10r at UCI.
.. Eatina raw egs on a rqular basis a1 one of the quickest wa)'t to
produce a deficiency of the vitamin B•ottn," says Dr. Hanud Said.
associate professor of pstroentcrol<>tY at UCI.
Biotin, also known u Vitamin H, is found in liver, yeast, C1$ yolks
and peen vesetables. Vitamin H has not been studied eltensively; an fact,
• daily-recommended allowance has yet to be established. But AIClrttt
research conccnuna Biotin's role in nutnoon has shown that deficiencies
c.an produce growth retardation, dcrmautus (excessively dry skin). men Lil
retardauoo and even death in severe cues. accord1na to Said.
Sa.ad's rtsearch wt th rats showed tbat a protein 1n the eq wbi~)Mnds
with Bioun -and preven\s absorptaon dunna the dllCJtLOn ~·
However. the cookana process deactivates this protein. allowina 9dequate
absorpoon. • ..
Sa.ad discovered that onl~ a certain portion of the smaJl intestjnc was
suated for maximum absorption of the v1t.am1n. He also dascovered that u
rwoanti-<:<>nvulsant drupcommonly prescnbed forepllcptics ~found
to block the absorpnon of Bioun.
Said concluded from his research that som~ple arc more prone to
Biotin defic1enc1es. Said's research has also tu.med up evidence that absorpUoQ of Biotm
1s a fun ct.ton of a genetically controlled mechanism, ramna the pQslibihty
of a· Biotin deficiency bcina caused by a senc11c defect.
"Megadoses ofBiotin arc very harmful to the body's natural ability to 1.bso~ it. Such supplements result m a 'down.grade' effect, by which the
body's natural ability to absorb 81otm will be retarded for an
indeterminate amount of ttme," Said reported.
Dlabetlc• needed I or study
Individuals with diabetes 1.re needed to parttc1pate tn a national study
to evaJuate the effecuveness of two i.ypcs of 1nsuhn tttatment.
Volunteers who arc accc:ptcd will receive expert medjca.l trcatment
for diabetes-related cond1t1ons from senior physic11nsat the U nivcrsjty of
Califom1a at San Otego for up to six years. said Gail Lorenzi, procra.m
di~~~~nteen must be 1~suhn dependent and ha"c bad diabetes for less f~ ·
than five yea.rs. Partiopanu will be monitored for five years. frequently by
phone and penodic.ally by eum1nauon at the UC San Otta<> location,
Lorenza said. 41 Prospectave volunteers may call (800) 522-3228 •
Seniors Who jog find increased vigor and camarad~rie
By EDDlE LOPEZ
~--.....,...
There may be some senio~ who arc
satisfied to spend their· laves in a
recliner tn front of a TV sct . .clutcbmg
a remote control. but that's not_.aood
enough for Monroe and Elaine Clark.
Jim and Virginia Martin and l..t'e and
Dorothy Thomas. whose hves are on
fast-forward.
They are sweat-suited proof that
JOIJlnl c.an be physically and ps)Ch~
l<>&Jcafiy btnelic1al for some.
Joa>nJ cannot. of CO\Jrse. be rec-
ommended for aJI seniors but the
Oarks. Martins and Thomases arc
v1s1bl)' healthy and happy.
Why do they work so hard at
keep1n1 fit? Their reasons 'ary
Lee Thomas. 66. of Fresno started
Jog:.tng with his wife Doroth). 64.
about 20 )ears ago. He wanted to lose
weight and told her that J<>aJOI
would keep her forever )OUng .. But
she does 11. she said. to rchevc
tension.
Jim Marttn of Fresno. 68. has been
JOl&lnl with his wife. Virginia, 67. for
l5 years He does 11 to rclu -the
heer pleasure that 11 g.ives him. She
J~ to prt"cnt depression and to
bu1ld calcium to avoid osteoporosis
(bone bnttlencss)
New behaviors will 'BabyGaDle'
melt away 20-pounds ::•c!.~~~ow
How refrestnoa' A brand new )Car. • ··-p
a dean slate. Unhke dass and calS MILWAUKEE (AP) -A new
who arc content to hvc their h\cs. ~c pme·show video for low-income
hum1n1wanttomakeachanac So~c JUtl•ff mo thers will ti)' to make v1ev.cn make New Year's rc10lut1ons " v.1nners b> teachina them how to
Howner, most rcsoluttons arc properly care for their newborns.
dt"2rded by February and fo~tten WHITAKER researchers say. by MNth, u\u&JI)' because a • foel.. The I S-m1nute video, entitled I was raolved. not because o th.c "The Baby Game.·· will use a pme-
behavton n«tuary to accomplish show format to convey information
the IO&ls For instance, those that caloncs. and JUSt replace fat calont>s about infant nutnuon and care. It's
rcsofve to "lose 20 pounds" or to "act with carbohydrate c.alones. 11med at people who arc turned offb>
into lhape" 11mply create short·h'cd 2. To t.akea bnsk walk 30 manutcsa mformat1onal presentations
delus!on day, five days • week . Goe.ls i.ke "We're usinJ the stratttY that. 1f 11 . Th.it ~r. do tt d1ffcrtnt1). Make tune, and you need 2'h houn a 11«k. can be entcna1n1na, 1t w10 be ,.,'ltch-JOials. bUt resolve !>cha"'1ors Och•"· l . To eat ai>Olel for all a.nacu. ed, thcrt'forc the 1nformat1on v.c1ll act
10B. not ttte>luuons. accomplish FOl'lft candy bars. peanuts. potato aero .. said Dennis Oarmek. man-aor~ ..._ha . ti ch1ps1nd fnlosandeat~. Eatu qero tclev111on servaccsat Marquet· ~. l;Jil;. vlOR 1s tnc y many apples u you wa.nt. 40 or SO 1( te m"ersity. buliMa lltbavtor must become a O«'CSSU')'. but apples arc )'OUI" ~k. habit. and~ habits are., difficult 4. To eat oetmeal for bn:akfut five The Unt'-ers1ty as cruuna the v1cko
to f11Mc as bed habits arc 10 break. tames 1 week. Adcf apples. raa in at the requeit oft~ Hunacr TaS;k But pit arc eccomphlhed ~ habit. bena.nn. cinnamon or other pr-Fortt of Mal'-''IUkee s Infant utn·
&ad lk tMR habits )OU lfOO'-C to nasba for vanet)" Oetmeal as low an uon ProjCC't, ~ ••• 1 JOA!. the puter t~ fat. h1ah in fibltr and will keep you The vtdeo featum a ho land three cMDci ol makiftl 1t . For an ta.ntt. 1f Nnnina mOSl of the umc -1thout rontcsta.nu affihat.ed with a comedy
)OU ..... 10 lolc 20 p0unds, make lunch. troupe. Oarmek•KS. Thcmockpme ••.-a. bu• make )our New Yw'1 TMK arc behaviors that 1f fOI· Show dn>tc.ts th.rtt new mothcn an a ~ lowed -ill melt 20 pounds 1n four or hotpita.l beina tokj they wert tclccted
l. To a.aid r.uy food foract !-he five month'-as contestants and asked qucsuonion otrrmon we have with reduc1n,1 Good IYCk. chdd cart.
Ii---~-------Termites Are Now Swarming
I Bugs Ffylng Around Your ·.Home? •
FLEAS? ANTS?
FREE ESTIMATES
SAVI Ill
With This
AD
,.
Monroe Cl1rk. 62, and ha s wife
Elaine. 62, live 1n Orange Cove and
..have only been JOl&Jna toacther for
fi ve )'Qts. However, the)' arc avid
skiers and backpackers. He J<?P. to
keep fit for other "lea ports.· She
hkcs the JoUJna camaradene.
Jim Martin and Monroe Clark
have suffered heart attacks In 1981.
rwo years after his heart attack.
Ma run, hts wife and a son (Larry) ran
as "bandits" (unoffic1aJly) in the
Boston Marathon
The Martins and Thomases arc
retired. Monroe Clark 1s an oranae
farmer and Elaine Clark teaches at an
elementary school
The Clarks have sk.aed in Europe
and New Zealand. backpacked the
180-male Tahoe·t~Yosem1te Trail
and the 22(}.mile Muir Trail (Yo-
semite Valley to Mount Whit.ne)') and
even ndden motol'C)cles to Alaska
"We've done a lot of things
t<>sc\hcr all of our hvcs." Elaine Oark
said ... and I JUCSS that's because we
each really enJOY do1na so many of the
same things. We're not rcaJly p>Od at
JoUJna but v.e hana 1n there.'
·•tt's certainly been a \.Cry healthy
way to ltve," Monroe Oark said "It's
important to both of us to stay acttH'
and healthy."
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTEIY INC. .......... c.... .... 1m -• ...., cena .sa-MJ.1 ts.
Raolationa
Can Stick
BY Dr. w. B. Reynold.a w~11" v1 .. 111np, • rnC"nd nHr
<.:hn ll'mll' I wa' C"l(po~ to lhC" crudlv of hts bathroom nf mlrrn~
1 omy horror I dl!i<'O~tl"fd what I h.td
brl~ m bl'. mlnnr pnnt"h .... -:. .. "
pol .l{UI m) .,lt'n<kr 11rm' ~nav. m
Alo"ft with man~ of \O\J I h..-~~
vov.td to llm m) v.et 1 and 1onr m)
arms. bUI I will ilC'tualh do It be·
ca.u1e I wlll bl' u tn« mf'd1ul ~l'Mir
HypnO'll • Aul nlc Gukkd Im· end Subltmmai 1.-.11 chttn t
my attltucka llC'lt"nttfl fly ln".tt d o£ ~I 11"1, on lht" fablt'd • -.'IU
po•c.-r. I v.-111 romforh1bh and ilUIO
mat tea.II) ac-h omc-'llc-ndrrt&tn~ foode and ta) with m 4:.-Cf:l"C'IW
pt"OW"am C"Olhu lHUC lly And M\
appncat ,..,II bt ~ ~• 10 m.a1ntatn that 'tatl\l wlthoul lntf'rmtllf'nt •
rvauon
How about you? Want to at ll
ectc.-nuf II) lht.s tlim1 Your fttl
will bt gratt1ul If )VU do
W. I. lt7111I ... D.P.M.
1111 an. Aft. II
c...--..tAMl-1111
The first time Jim and V1rain1a "She couldn't run 100 yards-when
Mutm went JOllin1 around their 1he first staned:' he said. "and it took
block there weren·t many people her the better part of a year to work
dom&_ 11, she sa.ad. and a cunous her way up to a mile. She may have
shenlfsdeputyasked them what they started out slowbutshec.ameon bk.ea
were doana runrun& an the street so tiacr." • -
earl)' 1n the morning. . The-Thomases don't fool around 1
As the) built up their enduranec. when 1t comes to J<>uina. They have 1
the Martins increased their workouts competed &n I OK races and mant·
from a couple of umes around the thons, and bave bave a boutdul or:~
block to five m1lesand then marathon trophies.
distances (26-plus miles) •• Jo11m1 is far from routine for us.-
The fam1l) has competed 1n 55 she said. "!We find ll "Ct')' rclal.qand
marathons, some overseas. and h&J 1t makes for a better marriqc We run N
v.on more than 200 mcdat\, plaques at the same time but al our own
and trophies. spttd But e\ICJ) ti~ he paues rDe.
''It's noc all naht fore"rn senior to he mu me on the rear.··
JOI-" Jim Maron 11id · •1u )Ou'rt' .rrl•s brouaJtt us cloRt t0tcther."
oveNetaht. }ou're aoana 10 have Lee Thomes 111d. "You can't be
t.rouble. And tf )OU stan runn1n1 nl.ht ha pp if you're not beaJtby. We feel.
off. well, at 60, that's nd1culous You by doina these th1np tosetber. that we
must start out b} waU.ina ·• arc etcmaJ -that It will JO on·
The Martms h.a'e climbed Mount _'4_ore_~_·e_r._" _________ _
Whitney tWlce and ha"c seen a lot o(
tcmtory1n their RV ltd~n·tm.attCT
where they stop for the night, he wd.
the fint ttun.a they do the ne"t
momina is to ,ct out and Jot to sec the
countr)s1dc.
Ltt Thomas had shed 5S pounds
and had worked hts way up to runn1na
three miles a day before his Wife
stan.edJ<>UJna with him
We need you.
LET US CARE FOR YOUR PARENTS
Our untquc.-campus ~tt Ing pro"1des a w1dc range of acn.Jor Uvtng
scrvt
• ll&TIREllENT Our tnd~Mnt wnlora en.Joy
• Oriuxr~ , prh·atrand st"ml·prtvate udJos
·Tran portatton to shoppl~. doctor11 and rec.reaUon
· 24 ·hour ~urny and staff
Walk tn tort'' r~taurant'\ a nd tht>atrT
•ASSISTED LJVllltG When Ju"' a tittle.-htlp C"an ma.kc all lht>
dlffett-ncc
· M~l<'dllon and b.alhintl a '"tan<'t
. We arran~<' doctor·" ppolntments and tterdcr
prc~r1pllnn"
• Supt>rvl 1on .rnd ln t'ndh rf"mlndr" for pcraonal
• n"Cf"CJ"
Nt~htttmf' ~lf"l\• round' m.tdr b staff .,
• 11'T£RMBDIA TE CA.ll.E For tht> moTT fragile adult that
would ~nrflt from llrrn"f' nur~ nb~rvaUon and aupcl"\llaton.
• UBABILIT ATION AND SJULL&D NUJtSING
Services n~ bv tht pr,-..on N'<'OVt>r1n from llln . ~vtnc
thrrap . or rTqulr1'V{ '°°I{ u•rm nuMJI~ caTT
··~~~==::.~m:;::.r,:~..t
HUNTINGTON
Senior Restdence
18851 Florida Ave
Hunungton Beach
(714)942-7788
•
7'-9 .... ?a,.,.,. S.t.wt.,. & s 7 • "' ~ -
~~9:00 ... ~ A.111M4:80~
Orenge Coast DAILY PILOT/ Wedneed1y, J1nuery 4. 1989
Welfare s y:stem keeps
young mother dependent
DEAR ANN LANDERS; I am sure
you won't think tb1s letter is impe>rt-
ant enou&h to i>rintt but I need to unburden myscff, so nerc aoes:
Seven yearu go I became a national
statistic. Actually. it happened the
day I was born into a low-income
family. I gave birth to a son when I
was 18. The baby's father walked out
on me and I haven't seen bim since.
I had to go to a public assis'8nce
agency fo r help. I hate the fact that I'm
stall on welfare, but that's the way it is and I will probably be on welfare
forever the way this lousy system
works.
I have tried my darndcst to make a
better life for my son and myself. but
it's hopeless. I was a good student and
wanted to go to college, but was told
that I could attend only one particular
coll~e in my county and take only
cert.am courses such as food service
and home health aid. I said. "No
thanks."
Determined to find a way to pay for
my education and get a-degree in
something that would lead to a good-
paying JOb. I began to look tJuoujh
college catalogues. I decided to aim
for a career in human services and
help other rregnant and disadvan-
taged teens. applied for financial aid
and a loan.
Welfare cut me off and stopped
giving me benefits because they
Tlaanclay. Ju. 5
By Sy'daey Oman
ARI ES (March 21-April 19):
Search continues, but you know in
which direction to go, sense of
purpose also is restored. Desire for
perfection exists, spiritual qualities
surge to forefront. Travel plans could
be delayed.
TAURUS (Apnl 20.May 20):
Money is on the hne, claims arc
made, y9u face challenge.. Check
insurance Policies, be aware of last-
minute appe>intments. Relationship
is strong but there is "outside oppe>s1-
tion." Capricorn plays role.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Scenario highlights partnership, pub-
hClty. legal documents, manta!
status. What prcv19usly failed can be
rectified, you'll "nght the ship."
Spe>tlight on travel. idealism, com·
murtrcation. romance.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): You
get proverbial "second chance."
Study Gemini messase for valuable
hint. Employment picture bnghter
than originally anuc1pated. Care of
pets also commands attention. Leo
ERMA BoMBEC K
~~ -
•• lM1es
considered a studenl loan a form of
income. They said I was making too
much money 10 be on public as·
sistancc. So r gave back the loan and
didn't go to school.
Then I got a part-time 1ob ($30 a
week) to try to save money foqu1t1on.
Again welfare slashed my benefits. I
had been rec:eivin& SI 00 a month m
food stamps and $8 in cash. They cut
me down to SSO a month in food
stamps and $3.SO in cash. I didn't
have enough money to feed my son let
alone the two of us.
Since then I hav~ had other
problems wuh the welfare office. but l
do as I'm told now and try not to
make anybody mad at me or they
mi&ht cut me off altogether.
Aow arc people like me suppe>scd
to better ourselves if"we get kicked in
the teeth every time we take one step
forward? Now I know why so many
young girls on public assistance keep
having more children. The more kids
you have, the ·better the chance of
figures prommentJy.
LEO (Jul y 23-Aug. 22): Emouons
dominate, tendency 1s to act first and
analyze later. Member of opposite
sex, apparently "flighty," can actually
be valuable ally. Creative ptOJCCt
passes rigid test. You're on the way.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Eum-
mc various aspect~ on any deal
relatins t~home, property, real est.ate.
An .. air bubble .. could be rnvOl\icd.
A void somethm' "too big. too soon."
Current negot1at1ons come to abrupt
end.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Curiosi-
ty plays maJor role -question
previously evaded will be answered.
It may be necessary to renovate. remodel, revise, perhaps to relocate.
Relative plans to visit -iA surpnse
fash1on.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Plen-
ty ofaction. payments and collect1ons
involved, you'll get money previous-
ly withheld. Scenano accents travel,
variety. flirtation. mental stimu-
lation. Gain indicated through wm-
ten word.
SAGl'M'ARIUS(Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
surv1vin& the welfare roller C'Oastcr.
This system ptrpetuates free-
loadma.. Ann. People who want to act
off welfare are ptnaliud and those
who want to stay on arc rewarded. To
eut it bluntly. the system stinks -
ON T HE DOLE IN ALBANY
Dear AJMay: I •MW •t .... cree ..... ••nl '" uve wrl&tea. .Tiie 111cem Me91Meed kill MddallYe &H
rewaN lulMu. Aattee Ill a•venl-mnt wa.at .. rn,...? • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I work in
a male-dominated offi ce. Un-
fortunately the men and J must share
one bathroom.
The men are constantly leavin& the
toilet scat up. One day I decided to
wnteanoteand leave it on the back of
the toilet. It read: ''Guys, would you
please remember to leave the toilcJ
scat down when you are finished?"
They replied with a note that read.
"Sure! And would you please re-member to &cave thescat up when you
are finished."
Ann, tell us which is proper -to
leave the seat up or down? I will post
your reply on the office bulletin board. -D.W. IN SANTA CRUZ.
CALIF.
Dear Suta: 'he .. Utt seat wlte•
DOI ID ate 1ltCM(ld be la tt1 llOnDal
pealdH. Dowa. A well-bred 1eat1e-
me1 bows tltJa ud need not be
rftllPcled.
Famil y member acquiesces to
financial arranacment. Moon an your
sign highhghts personality. chansma.
sex appeal. Circumstances will tum 1n
your favor. Wear your colors: purple
and pink. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Attention centers around hospitals.
institutions, charitable projects. lnd1-
v1dual close to you may be tempe>r·
anly confined. News will be better
than m1gh1 have been ant1C'lpated.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 18):
Yot4'rc a wmner. Current cycle
emphasizes fulfi llment of desires.
outstanding performance. Sign 1 fie.ant
gams relate to business. career.
PISCES (Feb. I 9·March 20): lnd1-
v1duaJ who rlays important role In
your hfe w1I assen. ''M1ss1on com-
pleted." Focus on communication.
travel, romance. Horizons eitpand. money "flows" your way.
IF JAN. $ JS YOUR BIRTHDAY
you have ''wntcr's signature." You
arc capable of expressing ideas.
concepts . in dynamic. 1nformat1ve
manner. You arc fl1rtat1ous. creative, rcstJ~. fond of travel.
Losing and still looking
great takes a lot of style .
My mother 1s known for her
profound bits of wisdom that have
gotten me throuJh hfe. "If you don't
stopcryi!'f,.1'11 give you somethina to cry about •"If you cut off your finger
with that knife. no one is going to put
it back on for _you." "Go to your room
this instant. Don't you dare turn your
back on me while I m talking to you."
But her big message was. "Always
be honest and tell the truth."
I bought that until one day in the
ninth g.r:ade when she set me down
and said, "There is a right way and a
wrong way to lose. I know that you
and Marjone Stewart arc up for the
ninth grade c1t1zensh1p award. I'm
not saying you're 101ng to lose, but
just suppe>sc you do. How Wlll you
handle itT'
"I'll rip her nose off her face. lhen
run to the toilets and lock myself
behind a door," J said.
Mother winced. "You will do
nothmg of the kind. You Wlll smile
and lead lhe applause, go over to her
and say, 'Conaratulations) MarJonc
You deserve to win.' "
After that, I never believed a word
of what my mother sajd.
Richard M. Nixon was nJht "Win-
ning is better than losing." and
sending out conflicting signals
doesn't make losmaa.ny easier. I have
always coniended=-that-Miss Con-
scnialities aren't born ... they're
heavily sedated.
In Thailand. the Miss World losers react quite differently. When
Paphassara Chutanupong was
selected to reprcscnl Thailand in the
Miss World contest, several of the
unchosen bcaullcs marched to the
queen's victory u1te, ransacked at,
and stuffed her sccpler and regal cape
down the toilet. Several years earlier.
the losers reacted by snatchina the
tiara and sash from the winner on live
TV. Now. that's honesl.
So what do you tclJ your kids about
losing and still keep your mteanty
intact? I tcU 1hem that 101101 hurt!.
and it will for a Iona time. It 1sn'1 a moment that in a few years they'll
foraet. I can still sec that s1x-1nch
trophy situn& on Marjone Stcwan·s
telev1s1on set with a mood lamp
11lummatin1 the nameplate
I tell ahem they have tQ..Act up to
the fact thal somctimcsl n life you're
JUSl not &ood enouah to be firsl. You
don't die from 1t -you just feel hke
it. l tell them first·placc winners have
only one way to 10 -down. J tell
them they're not failures; they JUSt
failed'i1 somethrna. Anyone can win
and loo1tarea1. butlos1n1and look.Ina
veal takes a 101 _of _ttyje, People
remember style Iona after they ve
f oraotten who won.
Oh;andanolhert.htn&about losina.
Don't act too aood at it.
I
Comptet• televlelon lletlnge In Sunct.y'• TV Piiot
: L.M. Bov o
Lovers.don 'tget too many
g~rms from a lingering kiss
•
It'~ not all that easy to catch cold
from kissing. In lab tests, infected
volunteers kissed healthy volunteers
each for 60 to 90 S«onds. Only 8
percent of the healthy volunteers
caught colds.
H1stonans agree John Quincy
Adams was one of our more 1ntellcc-
tual presidents. They disagree over
\l{hy he insisted on weanna noth1na
but a bath an& cap and aoule when he
swam in the muddy Poto!nac. He did
that <?ftcn.
Hasn't rained on Mars in thrCt'
m1lhon years.
You know what at means when a dolphin 1wtms upside down, don't
you? It's in love. That's pan of the
dolphin's coun1na ri tual.
~tclhte surveillance now would
prevent manl of th<' artll m1htary operations o World War II Pearl
Harbor. Battle of Midway. North
Afnca campa1an. D-Day 1nvas1on at
Normandy. You can't hide an Army's
rolling stock, anymore. Nol' a naval
armada. Nor fleets of landina craft.
Nor even frcaJhtcn at sea. The wars of
your father arc utterly out of date.
0 . Did the United Stales ever have
botll a left-handed president and left·
banded vice president at the same
time? A. Once. Gerald Ford and Nelson
Rock'efeller. In 1975-76.
Jn 1442 -tx.8(tly 50 )cars befo~
Chnstopher Columbus sailed toward
Amwca -Koreans 1n,•ented the
first rain aausc. -
Q. Rainbows arc the nowerl that
have died and aone to hCAvcn -
didn't early Amencan Indians be·
heve that?
. A. Doubt 1t But 1f they didn't,
thought Henry Wadswonh lonj·
fellow. they should've believed M.. So
in his poetmng. he had Nokom1t
explain the fanciful notion to
Hiawatha.
Q What's that clan 1n India lhat
kills all its dauahters?
A. The Sikh's Kun Mar. The name
means "dau&hter destroyers .. Sons
marry dauahters of lower-rank1na
famthe Curiously, these raise doWJ)
money as best they can to many their
daughters to Ku.n Mar sons Quite an
honor
When you pluck an eyebrow, you
never tweeze from the top of the
brow·s arch. Not every man knows
1h1s.
• ·matina.
About 6 percent of the U.S
popul.allon never, that'~ never.
watches TV. 11's said.
In spons.11rls art better losers than
boys. So contends a lifelong coach. If
you buy Jhat, what's your theory as to
why? No b11 mystery. says •he coach. They JUSt don't care as much.
Wa p venom contarns a scent. A
pheromone. When other wasps detect
ll, ther head toward ll in areat haste
With ferocity. It's a .summons. Like
"Help!" This 1s another reason why
it's not a &ood idea to squash a wasp
One raccoon ln the wild needs
about five acres to eke out a hv1na.
Ask your Span1sh-sj)Caltin1 fncnd
to 1denu fy his toes and he11 caJI them "finaers of the foot." L1kcw1sc )'our
ltaban-spcak1na fnend And your
frcnch-spcak1n1 friend. The) have
no rndependent word for toes. poor
fellows.
In what was labeled "A Study of
lnfi<klity," researchcTS concluded
only one husband in I 0 never 1nne .
Our Love and War man suspect the
$1udy's name as the 11poft People,
includ1n1 surveytakm. see what
they're sent out 10 sec. no' He thinks Q How many of the men over a,e
re$uJts m1aht have been a bit nobler if 80 arc still stxuaUy acuve?
at had been calkd "A tudy of A.12outoflOOOrt0pe>llste'rUa)
Fidelity.'' the ovtt-80 men tell them Our Love
and War man thinks the findm~ Most ycan have 3T,Sl6.CXX> ~-hannles.s. But 1n recountina their
onds. Not 1987, thouah It had an romantic action, men of aJJ qies tend
el'11''ll second. 10 rely heavily on the sift of 1m111na-
t.ion. he iays. They don't suddenly Q. WMt's the wol'ld's 'malle't lose the 11n at the act of 80. . mammal at b1rth'>
A. Can lell you. but you v.on'l
remember. Nobody ~ben h's Q Whr don't playina card ma.ken
the brown an1«h1nus, a sh~hke pnnl the four su111 cxb in a different
rodent A vnamfn pill 11 lac--r.---~
Incidentally, the female ml) fjve A They've done so and 1uch cards
thrtt years. but the male lives IHI Mvcn'tsold. Not auh. Why rematns
than a year He dies 1 mmediately a ner one oflhc m )'ttenes or market in~
By CHARLES GOREN minor two-1uiter), North US(d the
and OMAR SH.AR IF Orand Slam Force to find out
BR IDGf Ex-MissAmerica, ';l'yson 'justfriends'
Neither vulnerable. East deals. whether his partner hdd the missina
NORTH two of tM three toP honors. Eaat'1
• A I 6 5 4 decision to double wu sheer cu ptd-
Q A Q ity. Since North had o:preaed inter-
¢ Vold est in a arand slam, it wu + A X O ' J l improbable that the contract would
WP.ST EAST JO down more than one trick.
• Vold • It 10 9 7 West's kin& of diamonds was won
Q J 11 I 7 4 3 Q ' l In the closed hand, .. 1 club wu
<> 8' Q 9 6 l o J It 1 discarded from dummy. Since East
• f s . • 1 11 7 6 could only be doublln1 on lrWDps,
SOUTH declarer crOlled to the table wkh the
• Q t 3 i ace of hearts and led a IOw apmde.
Q " t s East could not afford to rite with
O A l •S 4 3 the kins, 10 tht qum> won .
: • I ~larcr took dummy•• three top
Tbc biddiq: clubs, then rurted a dub in hand. A
,_ 8"dll w..a Nortti diamond rurr wu foUoftd bJ the
... ._ J Q 3 Q queen of hearts, overtakea wkb the
Pw ' • ,_ s NT kiq u aa entry for uocbcr dia·
,_ ' • ,... ... mond ruff. l!ut WU DOW dOWa 10
Diii ,_ hill ,_ noc~ bat tbree lnllllpl, wWle
op ...... lliid: KJna or 0 dununy held tbe w-jld of lnlmpl same. can be aolden al cbc and • dub. O.CS. a.I die cWt. "'ldil table. A careleM word hen f.ut WM fCWOlll IO rsff _. ._.
llld dlerc am help dedarcr dn• ID 8W8J from W. '1lli ol tnillpl Imo ..,._,. that lnllbc enable b1m ro d__,., ta-... ~ N•'dal ._..Ml QMltrect. "'"'----••la-4-.-1.~ -'--'~ Nordl'• ...._ to eue-bkt IW1Mcwdau•1r•,11•1..a•
._,..II Ole con.:t ft7 10 *1w a I) lMI dldll• ..W ..... _.
po.Nrtal I ....... Whim ~ WIW d9I .,_, ~ plQ .,.,_.., ....... _,,_. .... tMiilawa1.-. .. ,....._._.
.... (11e .. WIP1 ..... IOW• .....................
,. 10 .!1moedl w NQidl Wd a two cnmp trtc:b far a aa1 lllc1-.
•
81 TM At~lalff Prett
ATLANTIC' CITY. NJ. -,.er.
.. Mitt Amertea ... , .. c..rtet
insists that she and ~vyweiebl
boxin..& champion Mike Tyson arc
JUSt friends, desoiie repon1 hnk.lna them roman1icaJJy.
"Mike and I are friends. but he'• a
married man," Charles tokt The Pins
of Atlantic C1tr.
"I'm a ran of Miu's. I thlftk be'•• .,at f11tner. I believe Mike i• a ~ tmtJe. very kind penon," abe said rrom ha dttM1na room at Elsi~··
AllanUI <Mino Hotel, whctt she is e t,.. .. Bui when 1t comes to fl'd wife) Robin Otvena' al-
• about him bcins .. ylic'ally
atimivc. well," ncvrr bo* ....:t
10C1 on behind ctoecid doon." • • • COPENHAGEN, Dnman
Dllililla llleYilioli -.,._T~IOVll .... wrc: Deeebt Mn ~ ad com· .., lllill'bd .... IOtla ...,,,., •
... I MIUnliald U.S. dtizen
illloilllill s.wered la llil Dl&ive Md. w..,..... be mil"'n ~ 18 ~.~-..... =•w B·;R:: ..., ......... -
.....
Union should
respect wishes
~-ofs t:ate 's voter s
Politicians and educator-. arc already IQCked in battle
ov~ ho~'!' spcn~ the monc) Prop<>s~tion 98 will generate for
califom.a s P'clbhc schools. Early s1ans hint it will be a bi tter
ftsht. one that could eclipse the mntqt votcrucnt when they
appro\lcd the statewide initiative in ovcmbcr ~
f>topc:>S1uon 98 pvcs publtc schools a minim um of 36
percent of the s«ate Gtncral fund and "4 percent ofany money
the Mate collect but can•t spend because of 1hc Gann
.. spcndina hmit.
Tbt propos1uon was sol.d by ra1,1n_g voter consciousness
over how Cahfomaa has negkcted tts pubhc schools Dunna
tbc campaign much was sar<J about the state•s hiJh puptl-
tcacher ratto and how low the Stale ranks nauonally in dollar
s~nt per pupil. These were the main default$ Propo tt1on 98
was supposed to reverse -at least thaf s what the measure's backers said during the campaign
Voters bought the story. Proposition 98 was approved ,
but now leg1slators and spcc1al-rntercst'gro upsclifTcr on why u
was approved and how the extra money sho uld be spent.
Business people think the money should be used to
improv~ students• baste and technological skills. They point
to a natio nal study that says only one out of four h igh school
paduates can qualify for an entry-level JOb
Some people think part of the money should be used 10
keep students in sc hool. They reason that the new money
should pay for pr<>JrlmS to reduce d ropout rates that run as
hr&h as 25 percent an some schools ... How can we have better
c<fucatcd children 1f we can•t keep them in school?'' they ask.
Others believe the entire education system needs an
overhaul to adapt to the state•s rapidly changi ng ethnic
composition and the new demands placed on students.
Thas bonanza of education money also has resulted tn an
unusual mccttng. of the minds between Gov. George
Dcukmejian and Santa Barbara's state Sen. Gary Hart. who
are frr.quently on the opposite ends of the politic.al spectrum.
Han and the 1ovem or have different ideas on precisely
how to use the money. but they agree that it should be used to
reduce class sizes. That concord is polirically logical because at
was one of the mai n selling points ed ucators used during the
campai~. and it's what voters eqdorscd when they approved
Proposition 98.
But pohucal to~1c and what the voters endorsed have not
dulled the desire of the teachers' union to go after the money
for their own cause .. The California Teachers Association
wants most of the new money for salary increases
So far, reducang the size of classes and pay raises for
teachers are the optaons attracting most of the anen11on. and
th~ obJcctavcs will probabl> be the focus of the fight 1n
Sacramento. •
It would be unfortunate 1fthe teachers' union o"erlooked
the magm1ude of 1hc Joss instructors will in cur 1f the) "'"''"
these new-funds for ulancs while programs to improve
education arc neglected.
• No one 1s arguing that teachers do no1 de\er"c higher pa)'.
but educators must face 1he rcaht)' that usin~ 1he money for
pay increases will not produce the shot in the arm for
cducallon th~l voters cnv1S1oned The teachers' union is
risking ahcnattng Cahforn1a's voters and losing the vote of
confidence for bcner public education th.at was demonstrated
when Propos1uon 98 was .approved.
°'P'otona expr .. Md In this apac. are those of the Dairy Piiot Ottlef
"*"eitPfeeMdOOth~P•at•lhoMoftMlrauthofsandar11sts Readers'
commenta are ln~led and may be Mnt to The Dally Pilot, P 0 Box 15e0
Co.ta Mesa 92828
OTHER VOICES
Tainted blood suit
The dcc1s1on of a \an Franc-1sco JUf) to a" a rd damJ&cs
from a Bay rca blood bank 10 a child wh0-1~ clo~ to death
from IDS as a rc5ult of wntamtnated blood was reasoned ~tnancd and. in "ha1 somcumes is a rant) 1n the pu~u11 of
JUS&ice. fair
month alter he ,..., horn in 1983. 11chacl O~born
underwent open-heart ~urger)' Hie; AIDS was ho"n 10 ha"c
come from blood 1raMfu!ICd during \urgcry. The operation .--1--1AC~Wo )t'ar\ before btoo<l bank "ere legal!) requticd to
test for the presence 1n blood of ·\I~ virus ant1bodtc .
The blood b:lnk's "''lfttffethty ~crru-from...Lhc fuel th t
although u wa\ not legally r~u1rcd to te l blood for I DC). ahcrc -.ere trungl)' recommended screening pr< edurcs
blood bank had been ur1cntl> urged to adopt. tany did. Th~
bank m quc 11on. c;upponcd by the homosc\u;il community
1n the Bay rca did not because ·~ thought me of th~ proccdu~ ~ere dm.·ctcd . at dctcrung potential d1~ ~
rcsultina from prom1\Cutl) and unsafe ~:>. pra~11ces.
CMJCCtally 1mon1 homosuual\
Another vuln •r b1ltty 1s 1hat family members knew of
tbt risks and uaht to reduct them b~ rtquc una. to ma~c ... clirCCcd don uon .. ofbloOd "'here family mcmbc~ blood of
ll90Wft quality ould luvc been used C\Clu P•cl •
AstOnithtnaJ) the blood bank rcfu~d to allow the pra 11cc. illMNlh ts I m3t1Cr of poliq, tt and m l Oth rbank\ I ccpt
,_.donation . t\ 1t turn d out. bccau~ ofa qu1 r~ of blood·
.,...._ 1hc pract•tt w uld n t ha"c worked. but at 1he umc
llllM Wal .not known... .
Whit this ~Y' " 1hat tho~ tnSH\UllOOS that hl\'C a ~I role ao pla~ 1n soc1e1y and. a a re ull, have ~u h pcc1al lriv-.. u hab1l ity immunity. cannot u~ th m to c~apc
,,_. mpon ability. Bilk•nll~*' Callt.nllUI
•
OfERAT<I?? ~ t.li: 1~•
RE~xt'f foL\CE. .. ~'{ \\~
1\\\Ni<~ ~ oO\(~ ~ A.
rocrre~LL ~e. t\~ ~ME.\\\\~ \o to ~\-n\ California
needs action
from its
Legislature
1Ktfl..L L \ rE ...
.. ~. ~)
SACRAMENTO -CaJ1fomaa's
lqi'lators ~tw-ned to Sacramento
Tuesday for another year -or more ·
pm:isery, another e11tu months
minus vacations -of official COCJta·
uon.
... K~RE N fEEL5 llt~11t\t. ~L\DA'(5 ~RE NO 11ME foR 5U~LE1Y. ..
Outward ly, it was a joyful conveo-
uon, somctbina like the fi rst day of a
new collqc term. Inwardly, however,
the slate l..qlslaturc 1s a sJdt institu-
tion. mcffecuve and corrupt. and it
will ti.kc IJIOre than sctr-.enented
puffery and pronouncements of aood
1n1en11ons to cure its ills. h W111 t.aJte ·
concrete accomphihment. The list of issues demanding atten~
t1on 1s a Iona one. Herc arc some of
the mos& pres 1ng:
. A one-year political journey
ends~ with the oath of office
GROWTH -The state "-addina
nearly 700,000 people to its popu-
lation each year, most of them
1m m1aran1s. and there's an cxpandina
anll·growth bAcklasb.
To ignore arowth and its corollary
of sociaJ ch.arwe 1s to tpOre the
essence of Califon:ua 1t.tclf.
EIDTOR'S NOTE -Coegreumu
Ckla C.1 wrete &Ms "1•ma t.k day
kf•rt k wu awora la as tlte U.S.
Rqresntauve fer tM 419' Ceo~
cres1&tul l>t1trlct. Today, Jan J. 1989. I'll take the
oalh of office as 1 member of1hc US.
Conaresi The ceremony marks. almost ex·
actly, one year since our incumben1
reprcscnta11ve, Roben E. Badbam.
announced his intcn11on to retire. It
w11I culminate a )car of effon by
htcrally 1housand~ of volunt.cers and
con1nbutors. h marks lhe rcsurt ofa
year of deliberation; and m lhe end
the considered JUdpnent. of bun·
drcds of thousands of Orange County
voters •.
Coming as 1l docs at the outset of
the new year{ this milestone -the
sweann11no a ncwCongrcss -1~an
opponunll)' 10 reflect on the d1rect1on
our public hfe 1s taking. In my case. 1t
1s also 1 time 10 retlccl on the chang~
that ha\<e occurred 1n m} own hfc
dunna thf pa.s1 )ear
The IOlst Cofl&'CSS will be the first
1n 1hc third century of our nation's
history Among 11s members are 32
new faces Exactly half the new membhs arc Republicans. half are
Democrats Some. hke me al 36. art
relatively young. Others. hk~ m)
good new fnend and office-mate Mel
Hancock from M 1ssoun. arc m their
60s II share some fundamental bc-
hcfs· ours 1s a great country Our
Const11ut1on, lhe oldest wnucn char·
ter document of any country 1n the
world today, 1s a marvel nd our
Congress, created an 1he very first
an1clc of 1ha1Constttut1on.1s central
10 the funct1on1n1 o( our democracy
These. beliefs. at hart. formed 1he
buts for all of our dc:c1S1ons to run for
Congress. But the d1fTercnccs be-
1v.ccn us arc nonelhelcss peat. and
there arc man) intense)) ind1Vldual
reasons 1ha1 each of us has m dr this
commitment to public hfe .
las& New Yea.r's Eve. as I eel·
ebBtcd 01'er dinner wnh .a mall
aroup of fncnds at 1he cwpon
land1na restaurant. tt nc"'er occurred
to me l~t JUSI a few weeks later rd be
a c~ndidat.c for Conll"s.s -or that
one )ear later rd actuall> be a
member of ( onvcs.s-
Ont )car ago. I ,,.a an Orange
Coun11an 1n t'he While House. on
loaA to Out prcsJdenl. wt.th eH~t')'
1ntcn11on of retum101 to pnvatc
employmenl and the rclat.Jve nor-
malcy of the business world . Like
many of us in Oranae County_. I was
committed 10 1hc success of Ronald Reapn's pohc1t5, 11 was m~ natural
expectation &hat, like hi m, I d ~turn
toC~hfom1a when his term expired 1n
January 1989
Bui almost ovcm1&ht. m 1he second
week of hnuary 1988, all ~that
changed. lns1cad of lcavrna fbr ('ah·
fomta the .. followtna year, I lefi for
Cahfom1a 1mmcd11tcly. And instead
of leaving Washington for aood this
)Cat, I'm JOtn& back ,
Two things were rcspon 1blc.
Fant. my experience worlung for
President Rcapn's aienda -tat
'cuts. DI, aid 10 the N1ca~uan
.ccs1stance. appointment of new
fuditt. cutting deficit spending.
budge& reform -tauaht me that Conarcss 1s the pr-oblcm In each case,
lhe liberals controlhna the Con11'Cn
stood in the doorway in an ancmpt 10
bar the prcs1dcn1 from accomphsh•n&
the objttt1vcs he'd promised the
.. mcncan ~olc. Clearly, Ille preva-
lent mood 1n ConlfCSS had to char
Second thf surpntic ~t1remcn1 of
our good cona.rcuman Rober1
Badham. a strona supporter ot
Ro~ld Reagan an both Sacr.a~nto
and Wash1n1ton. ten a vaancy 1n
President Rapn's mos& support1'"c
Cal1fom1a d1s1nc1
Fnends m &he White Hou~. at the
Republican 1110011 Congrrss1onal
Comm11tcc. an Oran&c County. and 1n
cramentoall encouraged me co run
Dana Rohrabachcr -m> good
fnend. a former Orange C ount'
Rcgaster editorial wnicr and prc-.1-
den11al spttt.:hwnter who wor._cd JUSt
a few doors down the hall from me 1n the White HouK -1hought -.c both
should run. for nc1ghhonng ~.lt\
Tom Fuentes. Oransc Count\ l<r·
publican chairman, told me 11 i ~a'
goina 10 run I'd bcttrr ma._t up m"
mind and JC' out to Cahfom1a fast
With plenty o( ad' ice but httk
time. 1 cnlc:rtd the ra r lht' same Ja, a.s Dana. ··r~o Whnc Hou~ .\1d~
k ex: (onarcss1onal ~al .• the
Rei1s1cr hcadlan~d The d~was ('.ut
More than SO candidate torums
followed DolcM ol f\ and radio
debates and inlrP It'""' "'trc crammed mto 1hc month\ hcfof"c lhc
JuM pnmary Contra kadcr Mano
Cakro. Jud R,>brn Bork. f cder:tl
H11'hwa y .\dm1n1stra1or Ra)
Bamb.att. Enfil' ~rt"lar) John Her·
nn,ton. L1 ( ol Oliver "1orth ccon-
om1 1 \nhurLatTer. l \ ( 1v1I R11hts
The lqjslative manda&e ihouJd be
t~ofoJd: to create better rqional or
even statcwuie plan nu'* sys1tms. and
to provtde the new public facilitJeS
and servi«s needed 10 relieve arowt}''s most ad~erte Unl*lS-
TRANSPOllTATtON -The state · had a cooaiesuon problem even before
it bcpn elpcnenc11'& a popuilh01\
boom 1n this decade, but 1t'1 FUi.ac
worse fast.
. Ap1n, the aoaJs must be dual:
Commlss1on chairman Clarence provld1na new hi~ways and other
Pendleton, and Russian comedian tran it systems while rcductna non·
Yakov mimofT all came to Orange e~nual &ra vel. County to campalJI' for me. F 1&hlCCn A first approach lo bo&h w~ukl be a members of Co~ indudin& iharp rncrease 1n the psohM talt
Senators Phil Gramm. Omn Hueh, Gov ~ OeukmcJ1an 1s trapped
Steve Symm and 8111 Arm irons. a between bis des&~ to~ .~tuna
dozen. lq.Jslators from Sacramento. and ht tntratnCd opposiuon to new
and s.coresofothcrlum1nanc offered ta•es The lqislatW"C. in com.bena-
ahear endoncments uon with outs.de interests.. mvst
Al one tune thcrt were 14 can· prexnt DcukmcJ&an with a uruied
d1dalCS m the Repubhcan pnmuy. front. ckmandt.na. f<?' the aood of lbe
but by the Junc.dttt1on three of my state. some bOld IC\ion.
compeuton -Chuck De Vore. Pttr EDUCATION -Tbere's an equal-:
wan and Adam K.cmak -had ly lf'a"C en an publtc education .
JO&ned forces wnh me ;\nd afl~r lhc Gt'~en the ral'idly chan&i• eihnte
pnman. all oft~ Rcpubhan s pulled composition of the IChool~ Cah-
" · ·ther an a maf'clous dt pla} ot fomaa 1s fa11tn1 to provide the Unit). wtlh CVCr) OM t)f thf an· tcchnoj()l,ially frtcrate work force
did.at? for longrcs cndorsma 1hc1r Lb.at the list century will <kmand..
party s nommce. As wilh uansponall<>n. &he bu:s1·
On "'lov . all of this v.ork and n communil rs~yforachang'C.
dcd1caoon of so many wa rtP9td II f'ttOIDIUS that both quantitative with 67 percent oftht vote. The hu aM quahc.ative reforms m'1St be
1umou1 rnuhcd an the h1~s1 win-made 1( the school are to dca.I
n1n1 vote total m tM h1stor) ol the · cfTect1"dY w11h bolh a raptdl}' u-
convns1onal drs1nct, and ~lpC'd pand1ngand rapidly chanamastUcknt
0eorgc Bus.h cam h1 cnurt \I •~•de poputauon. margin of victor) nghl htrc in Ora nae The lqjslaturccould be t~caalyst
C ounly for chan1c. fof'IJnl avcements that The mcmon~ of balloon'I and cul 1hrou&h trad1tional cnm1t.es
bands.. precinct walks and )'~rd "'°" ProposJlJOO 98, enacted b)' voters in 1 'IUC papc'rs and cd11onal ~rd o"'cmbcr. make that more dlfficult
m~ltnts may soon to dim -10 1nce 11 pla}"$ only to the shon·term
be rcplaet"d b) mon· rtccnt c:>.· anttrnts of the educational cstabhih·
pcncn<cs of actualh b«om1na a mcnt rat~ th•n to lhe lonter-ittm
conaressman. interesu of the lUlc as a whole. But
But toda) as I tand on the floor of n's a fi&ht v.onh ft&J'lun1 bccaUJC
1hf Hou~ for th<' fi~t 11me as a "4tlhout an efTccl1\'e educauonal S)'$-
mcmbcr from Orangt < ·ounty. all 0111 tern. t ahfom1a's cconomte bubble ~ms v1v1d . Most of all. I'll ~-v.111 bun.t
member lhc peopk v.ho ~nt me herr .
ihc voluniecrs and con1nbuton tht PENDi G-Ccntralto tran ;pot·
pcop v.-ho dad all the ~or'-: and I'll uuon cdu<'lt1on and other pcnd1na
think of the people t'vc mel dunna issue: " a rcvmon -or better )~
1h1 lonl)rarofcampa1gnin and the ~pc-al -oflhe Gann spc~tr\=
problems and aspmmons thcf ~e thal 1 paral)z1n1 the SUlt s
\ha~ with me. process •
You·vc pbccd cnonnous tru~t in ENVIRONMENT · -The tOJUC·
mt, and I won't let )OU down. As I •a te probkm ~mains aravc. the
take the oath of office toda)'. that v.111 anctta in suburban development
be my own Plcd&c to the people of and commutina threatens to kncn
Or.in e County altfom1a'\ already senou a1r-quah·
................. _.iiiiiiiiiiiiiir ...... iiiiiiiiiiiiilillll ....................................................... --t) pro~km~. localiovemmcnuarc running out of trash-d1sposaJ ca•
Definitions offunnywon 't
always lea ve y ou laughing
pactl). and ptrks and undevdopcd
ams art fttbna the 1mptet of
poputauon Jr'?wth The Leal llturc ~ould havr 1l hand full dafina with
any one of thost environmental
I \U~
WATER -Thcrt IS not enoush
,.. attr to ~ti fy all inculturat 1ndus·
tnal. and rc\fdcnttal demand and
m 1 <'1'1) 'IOUl'C'CS of new wat.cr
alread) hl\C been c\plo1ted
bttau5t I didn't 1h1nk n ~ nccc .,.
IN Who. ov;cr 11\c of four . ~ouldn't kno~ what funn) mr:aM"
Well. for c.artcr:J, I d1dn '1.
I checked 1n the ncv. RanJom
t"tou dactJonary. Th lirs1 aroup of dcfinthons ~re "emu 1na. humor·
ou\, h1~nou .. ThtJ ""~ follo•cd tw .
"cunou ura"&e· pteuhar. Odd .. ·
Thi di -oonary has 2.~ pqc
and, 1ccord1n1 to lhc blurb on the ,ac ct, 7S new mtan1np That
c,pta1nal IL If )OU hl"'f to fill 2,.SOO
)Ou "'1n aakc hben1« and tack
on definition that don't appl .
Kiah&'? V.rona.
l11
WEW
The Lcaislatu~ has 01) cd out of the
•atcr issue 1n rc«nt ~rs.. leavana 1t
to beh1nd-lhc-9C'Cncs cfforu of the
DtukmeJian adm1n1stratio But the
adm1m~lrahoo 1s now al ww with
it.elf overt~ central t of ellocll·
hon, and u may be hme fot 1be
l.qi51awrc '° siq> betk '"'° thit k.no ledpble. sopht'll1c11td or matter.
fashion.able .. INS aANCB -Y can of iMICtlOn
h's a clea r-cu& C'atc o( 1av1na in by lhc Leaisilturc kid to a ~beau1e pco,-•~ J<'fna 10 u ., rd m1lbon-dollat Shooeo¥t .. the ~
1n their o,.n wa) 10 uprcs them· la l ~car. Voten.. fnat.tralecl 11iJ mn.a
lvn . ~ ~mon u 1 •he au«>;tnsu.rancc P"."ft' ........ a _.
rnson funn)' bas tho u"funny o( fcai•ttvt ectKMl. cw:llld ~
defin1tt0ft11Ddudcd OVIN>n 10) ~ \I CINCZJI-' . htOc ntOf'e raca«h re1'c-akd 1h1t flawed aad poorly draftld. Al _,
rommon US11f of the word ·runny' ramble to 11i1U ,ol!1icll 81h1 I
•bids rcHhcd "' u.e. 1rd dcfi· ofthuu.-·, ... •-.'li: ' 1 a
tutaons. cMIDI blkk eo ll06 alto thoUld *"' tM .W fir~~.
Tv.oofm)' utherd1ct1on n .older
and w11 b fewtt ~ al 1ncludcd,
"cunoui. Odd. and atran,c:· 1n '~ dcfimct0n or funn~ In the 19.SS
cd111on of Wcbtecr't Die~. one
dcfin1ttOI\ read. •• Mnal1 chnt~
built. narTOW row boa " I 1h1ftk IUCb a' ..-oukl qu1 hf) 11 ruany. 111caa•ywn'sconouuhlt1 hid
Commoft QMF 11 fC90ftttblc. I ncnr kM*cd 11f lbc .al'd brfore. h'1 '~'· for ad &tot differeM drfi. odd t.het ~ ._ dtfinmons ocher
n1ltOM. DictlOMtlCS _,. Ml wor-. IMa t...or-GML AM 1111.,_.
Ma&wr••would•verlw*" UIM wt~-. 1)11111111 thr wan1 • *· PllD -<'4Nd9 .-. :;.. •reedy flW•-.IJ ,._.m werc
~-~ .........
............... 1w~ ....... , ..... ""9 .............. ~
AAt"I .. .... = ........ lot ,.., -.........
..... ef dlit Hilt.,. I -I ............ fill( ... .
...... ] ,,,. •i.o ... -•
M DAILY PtLOT/ Wedneeday. January 4, 1989
,
Br.obdirtgnag ensein ble Stages afr€shly.funny 'LuV~
r.&.~o.~ 1
. Thole zany characters arc back on
the brids 111in.
For tao.e who missed the LP
Repenory Company's hilarious_J>ro-
ductioo of Murray Scbispl's oflbcat
comedy when it played the Oif\on
Miller Community ~nter in Tustin
~t sprina, there is aood news: .. Luv"
11 an bloom once more.
This time around it's a different
NewYorkbridae-at thecompany's
new Brobdinanaa Dinner Theater,
still in Tustin -but the three faCes
haven't chanted. And because of the
familiarity oT these actors for ooc
another, there's a solidarity about the
current version that miaht have been missing from tbe earlier effon.
Particularly impressive arc the
rapid-fire exchanaes between
Jonathan Motil and Nancy Boster
early in the second act. Motil -
playing Milt Manville, who pawns off
his unwanted wife (Boster) onto a
suicidal school chum (William J.
Durkin) -has honed nis upscale
scavanaer character into a dCvastat-inaJy funny personqe. Motil's timina
is masterful and li1s delivery con-
sistently on t.araet. .
Boster earns some chuckles from
the I 980s audience for this 1964
comedy with her lines about havma
"the brains of a man but the emotions
of a woman." Her satirical jabs draw
blood on many occasions, principally
durina her scenes with Motil since they function on a similar mcntal-
emotional level. It's a splendid per-
fonnancc, steeped with dark comic
insaahts.
Durlon as society's l'CJCCt Harry Berlin, is the joker in the deck . He is
effective in his ragtaa. woet>eaonc
character, but his performance is not
as tightly wound as the others.
Perhaps because he also functions as
producer and designer of the liJhting
and musical effects, his circuits arc
s1mJ>IY overloaded. Prior to Satur-days New Year's Eve pef1brmancc
Durkin also doubled as a waiter while
his castmates were free to rein into
their characters.
N~heltsa. the stinail'\I 11tirc of Shupl's pre-hippte opus nnp clearly
to the ean of its older viewen while
prob9bly 1ervin1 as amusln1 farce to
the younger set.
Director Timothy P. Thom has
added a few subtle new touches to his
ori&inal staaina. but at's by and larae a
repnsc, a btt mo~ polished and
poan~y hu~rous than it was the first time out.
"Luv" will occupy the LP Reper-
tory dinner theater, at I S732-D
Tustin Villqe Way m Tustan tbrouafl
Feb. 1. playina Tuetdays thtoUlh Saturdays 11 8:30 and Sunda)'I at
2:30. Call IJS-9611 . ••• CAUJM>ilD -The South Coast
Musacal Theater will hold audihons
Ju. 12 for the chiHSren'1 musacal
"The Hobbit" ... director Oaftitl
Trevino will be KCkina pcrfonnus of
all qes for the fantasy, -taich opens
Feb. 16 and tryouts wiU be bdd at the Irvine Little Theater at Univenaty
Hafh School, 4774 Campus Orive,
Irvine ... calf 640-6306 for more
infonnation.
Fisher: .. Grand dame of gastrono~y
I GLEN ELLEN Calif. (AP) -
lanore the wheelchair and arthritis.
Her 80 years weigh li&htly upon the
mind ud wit of 1\1.F.K. Fisher,
whose gifts to the world offood and
literature are still mounting.
Writing is as 1mpot'lant to her as air.
"I am compulsive about it," ad-
mitted the Michigan-born author.
who wrote such tasty morsels as .. How to Cook a Wolf." -The
Gastronomical Me," .. Consider the
Oyster" and her pung~nt "Alphabet
for Gourmets."
But shed a tear for the grand dame
of pstronomy: Mary Frances Ken-
nedy Fisher denies herself the
pleasure she gives her anny of
admirers in the I 1 books and scores of
magazine pieces that for 50 years set a
lean and spicy standard few can
Chafing among cushions in her
little wine'°unuy house, she added,
"But it's like punina teeth. It's just
awful. I can't dictate to a person so I
dictate sccre~y. I don't make many
mistakes, you know. h's my n~ws
paper training. ... I don't have any
errors once I get 1t down on paper.
thank God."
match. ••1 never read anythinf I've writ-
ten," she snapped. "l don t care to go
back. I never read a word of print In 19371 the world's food writers
discoverco a tough new kid on the
block when they eyed this paragraph
leapinf, from the pages of "Serve lt
Forth, ' Mary Frances' first book:
about me or bl me."
She wouldn t a,.uc with going back
to being_ able to use her hands for
typing. Fate has ruled that she must
diet.ate into a tape recorder. There's no question of her not doing it. ''The quails arc an artful lure to the
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most refined of palates, and the rabbit
stc't'. s earning. aromatic, is made just'
as temptina with an onion or two,
pePPC'f freshly around, a little bacon
and a daSh of cheap, pure win~." A somewhat less literate rcponcr
observed, ''It's a shame you don't ~t
to read your good stuff like that." She
was not impressed. Others are. It was
once said of her crisp prose:
"She writes about food as others do
about love, but rather better .... Fisher
writes not as a specialist but as a whole human being. spiky w1th
prejudices, charming, shon-
tempered, well•traveled and cos-
mopolitan .... She is a person, not a
gounnet masked as a writer. Her passion comes from inside her."
That was 35 years ago. Except for
such indignities as two hip replace-
ments. a corneal implant and the
arthritis. nothing has changed, and
she remembers everything between
imes ~ three husbands. magazine
pieces, the books that "never made
me any money," the travels in Europe. ~
Of all her mates, said Mary
Frances, "my real husband was
Jimmy Parrish (Dillwyn Pamsh)."
They lived in a stone house sur-
rounded by a vineyard and garden in
Vcvcy, SWltzcrland.
She credits her start in food-writing
on an episode durina prohibition
when she was living in Wh1tt1cr,
Calif., a~ her newspapennan father,
Rex Kennedy, was teach.I~ at a
nearby collcgc.•Shc was working in a
postcard sho1>. One afternoon she had
a half-day off and decided to ao the
public library, where she found an
Elizabethan cookbook on a table.
.. It smelled so good ... theb1nd1ng. I
started writina." she said.
The akin game · .1
Carol Sden, left. Plafboy••'8sble'a M18e December 1980, ·~ la tbe Febnaary ...-.e of tbe ~ubae wtda lier d&a,Jater Simone, 18, tbe m•&•atoe•a FebniaJy Pla~te.
Tbe maiulae eaya Simone I.Ii tbe flnt eecond·•eneradon
Playmale of tbe llontb.
Car stereo wariiings fall On de8f ears
Cars that go boom
disturb police and
damage hearing
"To me these.stereo compet1t1ons
are nothing more than a contest to see
who · can 10 deaf first," said Or.
Maurice Miller, an audiologist at
New York. City's Lenox Hill Hospital
For.superstereoowners, such talk 1s
harder on the ears than the rock v oup
Van Halen at 124 decibels. To them.
the high-powered systems arc more
than just a hobby.
They're an art form, an expression
of and1v1duahty and a statement to
.society.
"Who's anybody 10 rcll me what's
too loud')" said Hof sacss. who ha\
been cited a number of times forno1sc
violations. "J mean. what m1aht be
too loud for one person, miaht not be
loud enou&h for another person."
Jn evaluatina workplace noise. the
federal Occupational Safety and
Health Adm1n1strat1on caJls for
abatement when the sound level
reaches 90dec1bels. And 140 dec1bels
-approachana the peak Hof$1tSS
says has stereo has reached -as
Winter Sale '89
'
Enjoy super savings on all our fine
lines during our winter sale.
Special savings on our new ·
executive office and leather gallery.
~on.rfemer~
$Dterloa
considered danicrou~ for everyone.
To put th_at an pcrspecuve. the
sound of a Jet t.akal'\& off ranics from
125 decibel 10 148 decibel . A po~u
saw 1s 110 decibels. NonnaJ con-
versauon as 60 to 6.S decibels. But
because the decibel scale 1ncreaSC\
lopntbm1cally, ltke the R1chta.
earthquake scale, a 14)..decabel tcrco
as thousands of tames louder than a
65-dccibel conven.atton.
Miller is concerned about boom
stereos' effect on the fragile inner car
"Th as as danacrous to the point thac
when these people find out v.hat 11·,
do•nf to them, it's 101111 to be too
late.' he said. • Frank Schett1n1, 22, of Chatsworth,
Calaf .. said he does understand what
has $20.000 stereo 5yttcm 1s doina to
him.
.. I'm part1allyao1n1deaf, but 1 blast
mine as loud a I can cvcry-.hcre 1
'
o." he said He said he has reached
41 decibels with his 1.000-wau
Rockford·fospte system featunna
l 1 spcaken aJI OKked anto a custom-
tzed four-whccf drive Chevrolet pick-
up called B11 Dummy LL
Schetllnt, who operates a car cus-
tomizinJ business. enters as many
competitions as be can.
"It's an add1ct1ng type of thma.
You get, like, the fe"er," he saad.
"Somebody started 11 and now it's
JUSt 101ng. It's another Sll&t qf
compet1t1on for peofle who arc not
athleucally anchncd. •
When Schett1n1 cranks up bJS
stereo, the music fills the whole body.
The force of the Wlnd from the mar-mounted speakers feels as af some-
body's k1cluna the seat.
He called 1t a "dean sound" and
likened the prc11Ure on the ears to .. aoina to tbe bottom of the swim-
mina pool. It hurts your can ma~be
for a minute af\er you eet out. The
harsh htafls and harsh mads (mid-
ra.nats} tend to hurt lonaer."
Thousands of car stereo buffs hlce
Schetuni enter sound competit1ot1s.
wluch have names hke "Full-on
Audio Bash," "Sound Quake" and
"Thunder on Wheels.··
Besides volume, Alpme stereo's
"Car Audio Na.ionals" .Jtresses audio
qU2hty1 installahon, and other
catcgones. Alpine sponsored more
than 300 contesu this season, 1u
btgest )Cir yet
'!Jt's the crcatavaty they're showina
off. It's a penonal statement.'' wd
Jim Wunderlich_, technical com-
mun1cat1ons specaahst for Alpine.
~ Texas-based "Thunder on
Wheels" spi«taJtzcs an volume com-
pct1tJon. This year'• national w1nner. Thomas Fitcher, 22, or Houston,
blasted bis 1~rco at I 54. 7 dcclbd .
Anyone who bvcs near popular
cru111na. areas such as Hollywood and
the San Fernando Valley knows it's
the thump of nois) •oofcrs, not the neatness 9fumallahon that 1s pnzed
by car stereo enthu11asu
.. Ifs a lfOW11\1 P,f'Oblcm. We call 1t
the boom, boom ' said the 1.APD's Zinc, addina "it's a hazard •·