HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-01-09 - Orange Coast PilotMONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1989 25 E T
Burning bo(ly foUnd on HB beach.
llyROBDTB~ ............
Huntinaton Beach hom1ade detec-
tivescombed 8olsa Chica State Belch
carty today scekina clues in lhe death
of a man whoie cbam:d body was
found late Sunday niaht by a pus1".ll
Investigators believe
both engl"'8 on a brand-
new Boetng 737 failed
befote the plane crashed
In Englan~ kttllng 46
people./ llA
Entertainment
Rachael Worby. the f'!9W
conductor of the Orange
County Philharmonic'•
In-school youth concerta,
get a her energy from her
audience./ At
Ba•lneu
A jet safety study la re-
assuring for frequent
n1ers./A5
Ind es
Bulletin board
Bulin ...
Cluaffied
ComlCI
Crouword
Entertainment
Opfnlon
~egr: notloes
Sport a
W•ther
A3
AS-6
86-8
A10
87
A8
A9
A7
88
81-5
A2
Suspecteil
r eptile
thief in
custody
119trol officer on a lonely service road
on the beach .
Lt. Bill MameUa said todly that
someone poured flammable fluid on
the victsm and burned has· corp5t
beyond ~ition.
But invtsllptors didn't know
.
today wbetbu U\e man was ktl&ed at
the scene or at anolber location and
then dumoed on the road. located on the beach ·side of Pac16c Coast
Hi&bW.y, about one mile west of
Golden West StteeL
Officers said they dad not know if the man was killed by the fire or dJed
by other. means. Pohce 'flt'.Ould not
speculate&$ LO whether tbe fire was an
attempt to obliterate evidence and
1.he man's 1dcnt1ficat1on.
City officials said the service road is
used by oil compeny crews workina in officer wu travelsna on Pacific Coast nearby oil faelds and by police officers Hiahway or the service road at the
and hbuardl. The road isn't in-time.
tended rot use by the teneral pubbc, The body was believed to be that of
officials said. a Latino.
The body was found about 11·1 S Police at the scene were Uaht·
p.rn.. Su.nday two nula north of the lipped and decltoed to dlscuss lhe
Hunu~n Beach Pier on a portion piauer. They were not permitted to
of Bol• Chica State Beach ci-trolled -&JVe out information, they said, and
by city liftauards. directed reponers to the watch com-
A pawni ci-trol officer apparently mander. who referred to a bnef press
saw the bum1na body from has car, statement
thouah it was not clear whether the The body was removed and the
area. wbkh had been cordoned otr wath yellow police tape; WU ~ned
at abOut JOk.m. today. An otficef wa
sttn shovelint dirt onto the i'oed;
pouably covmna the spoc wbeR the
body was found.
Almost adjacent to the accne wu a · ravine that pauers-by wd apparently
serves a a ma.kesluft shelter for
transients.
A coroner's deputy wd idefitifi.
ca lion in such c:aset ,enerally 1s made
throuah the use of denial c~
Irvine's rising sta~ caSts~long shadow.
By LESLIE EARNEST . °' .. .., .........
Sance moving to Irvine five years aao. Charlene Turco found ways to
sive food, feed the hunVY and hou.st
the homelesj. So far, the diminutive
powerhouse has made no attempt to
pan the Red Sea. But maybe that's
because it's not in lrvme.
Turco, who wd she wu a "poht1·
caUy frustrated" hQ~1fe when she
moved from Calabasas to Irvine Wlth
her husband and mfant son 1n 1984.
has since amused resume matcnal
that woiild be hard to fit on one page.
Turco spearheaded a food project
th.at collects unharvested produce
from Irvine farms for distnbution to
hunary families -a surpnsinaJy
successful PTOIJ'lm that has donated
more than 100,000 pounds of vea-
ctablcs to needy people durina the
past two years.
Wh ile still Ju.aglina that prOJcct.
Turco took the reins of an clTon to
transform two dilapidated farm-
houses into cozy shelters for, the
homeless.. By Christmas. a family of
four that m11ht have otherwise been
homeless was hvina 1n one of the
farmhouses. The cffon, had~ as an e~rnpleof a CooperllJVC community
venture. placed Irvine 10 the spotliaht
and anotherswon Turco's forehead.
Hcrach1evemcntscauaht the eye of
the Irvine CitY Council and. last year.
. Turco was appointed to the lrvme
Community Serv1CC1 Commass1on
Eventually, Turco may catch m~
1.han the attenuon of Irvine officials
She could snag a ~t on the counc1t
"I've watched what she's done, and
I'll speculate that she is probably
be1na &roomed bY. Mayor A&ran to be
the next council member for his
side," sa1d Barry Hammond. who ran
apmst Aaran an ·the June elec·
lion. "I'm sure she's aoina to be the
next council candidate. at least look-
ing at 1t from this side of the fence."
Althouah she says she's doina
exactly wllat she wanu at the mo-
ment, Turco admnted the idea or
runrung for City Council hun't
escaped her.
"f mi&ht," she responded briefly at
the firatnint of the question. Later she
elaborated with a statement that
would do any potentjaJ candidate
proud;
"I can say safely that continuina to serve my community is in the future,
whether it's throu&h an appointed or
an elected position.".
It was politics that earned Turco
her introduction to the city and to its mayor. "Human services," said
Turco, are what makes her tick.
Even as a teen, the symptoms were
there. Turco, who crew up JUSt
outside Ch1caao. oriamzed the first human relations cluti in her suburban hl&h school Later she traveled to the
SOvict Union to tackle Russi.an
lanauaee studies at Lenn1narad Uni-versity.
In the late 1970s. when she was 2S rcan old, Tun:o beon workina for a
Connecticut de•efoper who con-
(Pleue eee IRVDR'8/A2)
New drug testing kit stirs controversy
Prom staff altd wire reports .. ~ A new kit teaches parents to test
their children for drua use by ellam1n·
ina their c~. but ant1-dru1 ac11 v1s" warn such tcstma will leave parents
and children on opposite sides of the
arondru~
The Irvine-based non-profit group
Athletes for a trona America. mar-
kets the kit. called '"The Winners
Proiram." It includes a videotape.
audio tapes. wntten matenal and a
medical Oashhght.
Parents arc advised to t>ei1n check-
ing their ch ildren at age 7 and to
c-onunue the 1nspcc11ons ever) few
da}S
•· 1 thank it's a pretty 1nsuh1ng "'a)
to 1rcat a child:· said Karen Saw)cr.
an Irvi ne mother of two who 1s
............... .,.. ........
C..te art • ..._ .19"7 lh.ller Wida a Walt Dlaaey eartooa
oelfr.-lala.U.tl••·
cha1~oman of Orange Cou nty
Parents for Drug·Free Youth.
··1t sounds hkc Nazi parents." said
a 20-)ear-old recovenna cocaine ad-
dict "'ho <itarted using manJuana 1n
srade the The man. who~ fi~t name
1s Dan. askt>d 1hat his last name be
w11hheld
Bui Dave Hannah. president of
Athletes for a trona Amenca. s11d
the \<1dcotapcd Lcs1 1nstruct1ons show
parents ~ow 10 u'iC the test wnhout
ahcnaung their children
It teacht-s parents to check for
redness in the wh11e of the e-.e a 100-
large or too-small pupil the pup1l"s
abtlat" 10 constnct "'hen expo~ to
hght. · the e)t'·~ ab1ht' to track a
mo"1ng object from side to 1dc
without Jumping. and the e"c~· ab1ht)
to converse on an obJcct that as
brouaht close to the fa~.
"If I know I'm JOing to get cau&ht
and I know l'mgo1natopaya penaf1y,
the need to not take drugs 1s e" en
grt'ater," said Hannah. who uses the
test on h1 sons. aces 18 and 21.
Ne,..pon Beach ps)'chol<>s.ist OouaJas Tannu. v.ho ha worked
(P.leue ... KITe/ A2)
Mesa a rt dealer is animated
about cartoons, psych ology·
By JOYCE BOOLOVICH °' .. o.llJ ,_. .....
The bottom hnc for Jerry Muller l\
that all of his hobbies have turned
into mone)·mak1n1 cnterprnt • with
the lone C\CCpl1on of t11s childhood
rock collcct1on
.. People nttd hobbies," Muller. &he
owner of Museum Graphics 1n Costa
Mesa. said. "A penon can be an
ox>sen-brcathina, b11l-pay1na or·
pn1sm who aoc\ to v.ork. 1oc t\omc
and sits in front of the TV The) ha\i('
no pa ion. The 1h1na about collcct-m1 is )OU ran lose )Ounclf t.1\t1rel) in
It.
Mulltr has colltti1ons of Afncan ·
masks. model t1111n ps~chotoey booksand~photMofHoll~ood tars
of the 1930s and ·40s, But it 1s hii
array ofanimauon and comic an that
is pey1na the bill . Muller is one of tht' few ckalt'n in
the .,orld to 5P«tlh1t 1n Himation
and corn1c an. He deals in draw1np •
blckJround • ketch . canoon
comic itnpr. and 1n1m111on C't'ls -
shtcts of dt'ar pla uc ~n 'll>hich
animators· dra~anas arc traced
"About IS )C~rs aso. I decided to
build a btg collcct1on of anama11on an." h<' \a1(t "But in order 10 do that,
with a hmllcd income. I had co sell off
what I didn't ~ant ow Jam more of
a dealer than a collector" B> his own adm1'i11on. Muller ma)
be the la.ratSt animation dealer "'e t
of the M1 SI 1pp1
"I had a ~> )C'<ilcrda\ 1n from
u traha 'ou don·t find mu h
an1mat1on art 1hert:' he said. lauah-
m&-' • Muller. a cw York nall'-'t'. ad he
became enamored v.1&h comic trips
white .,or1df!I for mqamlts on the
East Coast. That intettSt conttnued
v.hcn he mo\ied to C'lltforn11 1n 1962
to ~ as art ednor for Oran e
Count lllustra1ed
.. A 101 of my friencb ~tt car·
toonms." he said: "It was Probibly 27
)Un llO YJhcn I colatct«t my first
one Why? I 1ust like them."
la s1ccomtc trips uch a "PnnC'C
Vahant" and ··fla~ Gordon" are 1n
htgh demand. Muller said. ··1t 1s not
uncommon for a SS.000 pnce 1'& to
be attached "
Conttn9porary stnes such as "Doonesbury" and "Pttnuts" are
also coveted . "A stnp M.e "PCMuts· and
·0oon~bury' would probably 10 for
about $2.000." Muller said ... They
arc hard to act because nc1thtr 1n11t sells them ..
The real moncymikm for Muller
art the old DllnC) eels. The a.nima·
t1on an ~lb for as much as SS0,000.
He said Dtsncy charlctcrs such u
Donald Dud. Mic.key Mouw and
now Wtute continue tO 1pprcaate It
a ral)td rate . .. fn thf ncxt .10 )can )'O\I will tee
museum acqu1nna the .ian1mateoa an. .. he u1d ... h tcem!F.!fr wtdl dollars hze this tS a 1nveM·
mcnt. ~it's fun to I 11. If I ION ~mcth1na and bouaht .. '9ck. °' .. on It for a tcw yea I t#oilldn't lolC a
dime."
whalt Muller's PMlfOft tbt
, ........ ANlllA ..... , ...
41awmake :join li·vlae gay rights~
Laguna Council to consider
futur~ plans for downtown " TM oalll ._._ ........... to dim loulMrft ~
crope .......... -....... tront ""' the "°"" IWtngl
., ...... &AllNDT ..............
A ti...-.Unt blueprint fOr the
future OI dOwntown Laauna Beach
wiU be coatideml by the City Council
1t its lint mcetins of the new year on
Tuetday.
Tbe Downtown Specific Plan. four
yean in the makina. wa11pproved by
the Plannina Commission last month
in a marathon mcetina that spilled
into the momina boun. .
The~. which calls for an l 8-foot beiabt limit on downtown build-
inp and ~Y visitor and employee
paltjna ouuide t~ buriness distnct.
which Nn1 approximately from Cliff
. ..
Drive to upon S1reet and from
Ocun A venue to 3rd Stttet, lw
ipltked some opposition from area
mercbantL
A pt.1blic heari na wtll be held durina TueSdaf• .reaulai council meetlna. which Detin• It 6 p.m.. to allow
residents and merchants a chance to
voice concerns. No final action is
expected to be taken, City "Manaeer
Ken Frank said.
. "I think ifs better to Jive people•
chance Lo ellpress their conettns and
ajve the council a chance to r.?nder
those concerns." Frank said. • We've
spentalotoftimeon thisto lhispoint, and I think the council should spend a
couple mcetinp on it••
As Iona llO as five years. Lquna
Bea.Cb ofticials decided a ~n wa1 ~ to keep commetc11l scakt
an tbe ua &om uppina in favor of ~rlst .. businettet. Cration oft.he
Dian bclan in etmtSt when, in
January 198~. an utacncy ordinantt
was palled br the councjl 10 ettl'te a
Downtown Specific Plan Citizens
Advisory Committtt.
Members of the committee, includ-
ina representat1vt1 from Lacuna
Beach Merchants Aslociation1 the
Chamber of Commerce and V1llaae
Lquna, have spent years developina
Pis and policies for the plan. •
Backen of the proposal have said it
pulls in the reins on •·cookies and T-
sh1ns" businesses.
·-Higher t~es supported to aid homeless
NEW YORk (AP) -Americans aenerall~ that homelessness is wides and worsenin and most are i111tisficd with t~ govern-
ment's response and would be willina
to ~Y more taxes to combat the
problem, a poll has fo und.
A plurahty of the 1,084 adults
surve~ed in the Media · GeneraJ-
A.ssociatcd Press poll primarily fault-
ed. society rather than the homeless
for homelessness.
A plurality also said the federal
government 11 chiefly responsible for
solutions.
The poll exhibited the broad reach of homelessness: Six in I 0 said
homeless people were in their com-
munities, and th~uanen said the
problem ~ communities of all sizes. not) ust big cities. AccordansJy, respondents rated the
problem u extraordinarily severe.
Saxty-eipit percent called it .. very
serious' and 24 percent said "fa1rty
serious." The remainder pve it less
importance.
The national poll, conducted by
telcohonc•mona a random sampfeof adults Npv. 10..20. bad a 3-point
marain of error. It was completed
before winter's cold increased atten-
tion on the homeless.
Still, nearly seven in I 0 respon-
dents said homelessness ·WU &Cltin& worse, a quarter said it was un-
chanaed, and 3 ~nt saw improve-
ment. The remaander bad no opinion.
Views WCTe divided on the re-
sponsibiHty for solutions. Thiny-two
percent said Ok federal aovemment was primarily responsible; 2• percent
said state aovemmcnu, 18 pen:cnt
said local aovemments and 9 percent
said private charities. The rest bad no
answer.
Wherever prime rcs~nsibility liesl
only 27 percent sa.td the federa
aovemment was doina enou&h to prevent peo_ple from ~o~ina home-
less, and SI ~rccnt said It was no1.
The remainini I 5 percent had n~ opinion. I ·
A solid 60 percent said federal
spendina on programs for the home-
less should be increased, and 86
percent of that aroul) said they would
be willina to pay higher taxes for that purpose. That totaled 52 percent
overall, an unusually hi&h level of
acquiescence to hi~er taxes.
On s~fic prosrams, 62 percent said the federal aovemment should
spend m~ on housing for I.he
homeless, and as many favored the
preventive measure of building more
federally subsidized housina for the poor.
IRVINE'S RISING ST AR EYES COUNCIL •••
From Al
v~ vacant apartments in con-
dominiums for low-and moderate-
income families.. After nfovina to the
San Fernando Valley in 1982, Turco
took a position as the fint female
property manqer in a CUiver City
property manaaement f um.
lf it -was culture shock to move
from the Midwest tQ the West Coast;
it was another splash in the face for
Turco when she had a beby, quit wort
and moved to Oranae County. She was, Turco said. "in a non-working
environment for the fint time."
... didn't have a clue what to do:·
she said.
So she joined the Leaaue ofWomcn
Voten. Her introduction to the l~'s buic human needs study was
an ~pencr, she said.
"lbat opened my gies to • lot of
wha.t was millina in Oranae County as far as servina human needs is
concerned," said Turco, who later
became the moderator" for the
league's television program, "The
Working Poor in Oranae County." "My heart and soul hasalways been
and will aJways be with health and
human services," Turco said. "That's
just a natural for me."
Turco also joined the Irvine Junior
Women's Club, a philanthropic or-
ganization that suppons community
effons such as Irvine Temporary
Housing and Share Our Selves in
Costa Mesa.
She has served on the board of
directors of the South Oranae County
Community Services Council, the
!-eaJue of Women Voters and Irvine
Temporary Housjng. Last year she
was voted vaJidictorian of the Lead-
ership Tomorrow Program. And rc-
centJ~ she was named chairwoman of
The l..Onservancy, a viw:roots en-
vironmental orpntz.ataon formed in·
itially to keep the new City Hall from
being built on Quail Hill a rare slice
of pastoral beauty in the neatly
groomed city.
lt's a full schedule and it suits
Turco, who said she was not cut out
for aolf and lunch with Jirlfriends.
Once, two years aao she tried. Her
father-in-law, an avid1olfer, sent her
clubland a ca.se1 and Turco tried on a
different liftstyte.
"I tried 1 stuck with it." said Turco, whose hUsband. James, is an Irvine
businessman. "Then I staned aettina
nervous and I asked myself. 'Why am
I dojna this? rm wastina my time.· ••
"I kept watchina my watch 11yina.
"Man. I've been out here for three
houn.'"
While hittina aolf balls may not be
ber cup of tea, she excels at drivina community servicepojccu, aa:ord-
i!'& LO Peay Mears. a member of The
Gonservancy who became ac-
quainted with Turco durina a politi-
cal~~· 'ft . h b'J' • ~....,..,,ioi;'s 11 as er 1 a lly to
I~ to motivate, to encourage, to
inspire," Mean said. "She isabsolute-
lydedicatcd tocommunaty interests.··
Turc.o's inspiration wu her father,
who died three years aao at the aae of
60.
."It's because of my father that I do
what I do," she said. His job in the
publishina industry was never im-
ponant to her, Turco said. It was his
wort in the community that made an
i~sion.
I never really knew what Dad
did," Turco said. "He was a volun-teer, that's what I remember."
h's a mission Turco hopes to pass
on to her S-year-0ld son, Jonathan.
who Is at her sjde durina many of her
projects.
"My son·s been so lucky:· said
Turco. "He's spent hours an cam-
paign hcadquancn, bours 1n the
fields and hours in the farmho~
He's always been the.re."
Turco became a famthar face an the
local J>OliticaJ socne when she st.a.rtcd
knock.ins on doon and hand1n1 out ftien for A&ran's City Counal cam-
palan I n 1986. By the fime A&ran ran
for mayor last year, Turco was
iotto ticket purchased
in HB lVOrth $293, 000
By Th A1~lale4 Press
A lotto ticket purchased in Hunt-
inaton Beach had five correct numbers in Saturday's .. Lotto (>...49"
pme and as wonh $292.982. lottery
officials s.aid.
Winnen' identities arc unknown
until they clatm their pnzes.
Six tickets split Saturday's $22.8
million prize ~ and the mid·week lotto jackpot W111 stan over apin at
an estimated $6 million.
Tickets told in San Francisco.A San
Lorenzo, Coeli._. Newark. \..Ofn.
pton and Rivenidc bore all si.-
winni~ numben fo earn the holders
S3J09, I 20 each.
1 he numben p1clccd Saturc:hly
ORANGE .......
COAST ~Jr'ml
llUIOP'9Ca
night by lotto machine for the 1w1ce-
wcekly "Lotto (>...49" game \\.ere 19,
22, 24, 32. 35, 37 and the bonu\
number, 31.
Eiaht other playen picked lhe of
lhe six numben plus the bonus number. Those tickets were sold tn
Citrus Hei&hts, San Francisco. R1dac-
crnt, lnakwood. San D1qo. and l\\.O
1n Los Anaelcs.
Owners of 422 uckcts had five
corrcc:t numbers for a pnze of Sl.219
each, while 21 ,896 pleyers had four
numbers for SS6 each.
The $5 pnzc for three conect numbers went to 421,982 players.
Lottery officials said sales fOf'
Saturday 's dr1win1 were
$24.701.116.
volunteer coordi.nator for Aaran's
campejan.
•-She's a dynamo, .. Agran said.
.. Orpnizationally, she's one of I.he
most effective people J know.
Moreover, she's ·extremely well-
liked."
But is she City Council material?
"I would hope that someda}' she
would oonsider runnina for office." AlraD said. "She seems to have
unendina e~ and commitment to
public service. Micha.cl Shea, who ran unsuc-
cessfully for City Council last June
and whose name is still tumbling
around the rumor mill as a repeat
candidate, said he feels certain he and
TUttO would have political dif·
ferences to explore should they some-ctaz meet in the politacal arena.
My 1uess. and this is just a auess,
is that she would be more liberal than
I am," Shea said. ·-rm sure, if that's
the case, we would dasa&ree on a
number of issues."
That's about as harsh as the
comments get when Charlene Turco's
name is mentioned. Unless, of
course, ~n gets st.a.rted on the time
she filled in for him durina a softball
same. "All I can say is 1hat she has to bNsh up on fly balls." the mayor said.
"But other than that, I have no
criticism of her."
KITS ...
homAl
WJth teen drua addicts. said such
testing wall "'destroy some clement or
trust between ch1Jd and parent.
"What kind of parents does this
child ha ve., I have some moms and
dads who act so paranoid that lhc) would test their child two or three
times a da y. ,-;rm that can destroy a
child's self esteem." he said.
Aboul J.SOO kits have been sold at 1
cost of $49.9S each in the past six ·
months. Hannah said. The orpntl.l·
lion makes $5, which is reinvested 1n
the prc.>aram .. and the salesperson
makes S25. he said. · ..
The orpn1zation's national co-
cha1rman 1s USC football coach Larry
Smith. and ats board of aovernon
includes well-known coaches such as
the Los Angeles Rams' John Rob-inson.
Spokesmen for both coaches con-
firmed their involvement 1n 1he
orpn1zat1on, but dec:hncd comment.
The test wat developed whh the
help of Or. Forest Tennant. who as a
drua adv11Cf 10 the Nauonal Footbell
UMuc1 the Lot Anae&es Podlcn and
the Ca1tforni1 Hiahway Patrc>I. ··1 frankly think every Pl.rent in the counvy, every tacher. every COICh, cv~ IOCial worker. every pol~ oflicCr. every min1~1tt should kam
the ftandamenllls of the eyt tnt." T mnant said. ··Rcprdlesi or whether
a bey do the eye test. tbeY ~Id know
that this is how dcup wortc on the
body"
. _ _. e.. t1 c.tle M1M. CA
........... IMO, C.•,..... ~ •2421 ~ .... :t.6'71 --' ed<1-...... Ja•tcaU 842~88 ...... ,..., '"""" .... ..... ,.... ... .,,
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Clid 2 fl
Tr7JJ0 IF II
...,,.. .....,....__.rein. Ion~••• 1 N6d todey.
T~ ......_ .. t.,....IO dip to the mid-30s lo
.. 40t, -c:MIV: w .... '°' .., ........ ·~ tnd citfue, the Netk>Mi WMther 8eMce Mid.
The ltllee ••~to become cloudy llt• Tueedey, and 1 ~ or tlln II f«ecaat In mott ., ... and tnOW In the
mountlln1•bove8,000 feet, the weather Ml'Vice Miid.
Coaat.i ., ... wlll hive high temperatur .. be1ween 58 and 15 T~ with OYefnlght lows of 35 ro 45.
From POlnt eonc:..>tion 10 the Mexlc~ BOfcs.t -Over tnMr
wetere, tight verllble wtndl tonight, ewetl we.t ~ r .. t. Moeuy
cie.r L.ight Vlf'-ble winds TUHdey bec;Ornlng touthwelt to welt
12 to 22 ltnott In lhe •"ernoon with 4 toot seas Swell._.., 3 '"' lncrM11ng etoud1. .
Ov.,. ooter Wit.,.. Point Conception to Sin ci.m.nte Island.
mostly northwest winds 12 to 18 knoll tonighl wnh 3 foot ....
U.S. Temps. .. H .. 2t
... )0
tS IS .. >•
17 73 •S lt n .,
Calif. Temps. Extended
"' La 41 ti 32 Ot 37 10 21 1t
SI 31 ., tO
SI tO '° tO •t II
20 11
.. 3S
-02 ·21
21 " S<I 37
IS tt
SI 20
43 21
11 14 se 23 21 20 18 Ot
32 14
15 ·21 4$ ,,
•• t7 05 .(It
-01 ·25 31 -ot
" 11 2• 18 SI 42
•• 35 •• 71 U t S
0 21
" 37 ao s..
25' 1• 2' 1•
03 ·12
SS U ....
12 02
341 27 ... .,
30 n
25 20
t3 •3 12 73 31 01
(11 3t 51 2t 12 ao
50 tel n 12 44 32 0 37
Smog Report
PollliWll llttilMWd lnelex IPtll) 0·50 oood 61·f00 moo.._.., IOi·IH un-
ri..11'ful. 200-m-v ~Mui. :ioo
encl .00... llU:erdous Fr.t ..... oe pt9't10UI dey"I ~ pel SecOfld le
I009y • I* --$891 8Mdl 10 MecAt1flwr IMS 17_.2
ln4M s........... v....,. 17 .. 1
uei-'-"' lior-1~ 42 LOe..,... ~ --2$-50
-
Surf Report
91111 MAN
12 "" • l·t poor
1·2 poot 1-2 llOOt
f·2 ..-1 ,,_
t-:l ,_
S... dlr9Cllclft W•
Tides
TOOAY
Second IOw ... p ... u
hcoNI lllgll 11 tip ... • :t ,__,
Fi>'tl IOw .. , .... 20 :::3 ... 10 ...... t I
II St p"' •• s--dlow s 22 p ... 01
""'Ml• 1oe1ey·., 601 p111 , ,_
T...uy a1 es1 '"' .wi-. ac s o2 pm .._. _ _.724 p m t-T~
al ' 11 • ,. and ........ ~ ....
LAWMAKERS JOIN GAY RIGHTS FOES~ ••
FromAl
they're not." Ferguson said.
"Tho$e who passed I.he civil nahts
laws didn't have homosexuals 1n
mind." •
f C!JUSOn said he could not offer
ariy finnc1al support to the pellllon
dnve, but would oncourage others to
do so.
But City Councilman Ed Dornan said the ·lawmakers' su pport was
evidence of "the death rattle of the
movement."
Doman said the only oppos1t1on to the ordinance he has encountered
since it passed last summer has come
from "local fanatics."
"They're desperate now. They m1~
judaed the modentes ... he said
The lawmakers who are supportina
the Jrvane Values Coahtion are mak·
ing a ~l stand against progress in
human nghts, Doman said. .. They're like bellowing mastodons
whose feet arc mired in polttical tar,"
b'e said. "Let's see 1f they can't sank
out of si&}lt."
But Scott Peottcr, chairman of the
Irvine Values Coalit ion, said about
30 volunteers have encountered
favorable respon5eS while ~thtrlfJ
signatures for the peuuon. He said many Irvine residents
wercn·t aware that the council had
passed the ordinance. When coahtJon
members explain their aoal, "the
reception has been "cry JOOd." he
said. •
"They have so far collected about
2,000 signatures. Peotter said.
Most of the volunteers ll'C'·from
local churches, although church
leaders have been hesjtant to set
involved, be said.
"What's difficult is they lilce to stay
out of poliucs, but most sec this as a
moral point," Peottcr said.
The enlistment of lawmakers' sup-.
pon was a further step in butldina
thetr coabuon. he wd. •
None of the four who signed the
letter . has provided any financial
support to the group. Peoner said.
Doman sees quake
ANIMATION COLLECTION... damage· in Armenta
From Al By ne Auodatecl Prn1
animated and co mu: an cams him a
hv1ng. his olher panions g1"e him
unend1n1 pleasure
"I've always collected. I am sure
Freud would have ITad an r:cplanauon
for 1t." he said, chuckhng. "I guess I
am a child at hean. or 1h1s " an
obsessive trait 1hat represent' eower
and control. Sttll, 1t sure as fun. ·
Scattered around his gallery arc
photos of beautiful face • a testimon)
10 his fascinauon with beauty
··1 h"e visually," he said "Words
are arbitrary symbols that C'an go up
1 n a poof or ~mokc Words a re a tool I
use to exprt"SS myself But I h'e by visual 1mpre ions and I urround
myself wuh a harmonious 11-
mosphere ·• .. ~foller also encircles himself w11h
shelves :ind shcl,cs of h1erary gems
on topics of art, c:ommunioauon and
psycholoay
··Psychotoay asa wa> offtaunngout
hfc .. a kc> to making sense of the
world." he said
And ps)cholog) has become a
crcattvc outlet for Muller Cu r~ntl>
working on a doctorate. he works H 1
counselina an1cm at Laguna Beach
Co mmunity Cl1nac
··1 find It crcauvc and sa11 fyana to
help people find themsel"e','' he sa1d
"I aueu I am an tclccuc 1n many
wa)s, but 11 IS my feeling no one ha~
cornered the market on trulh ··
Rep Robert Doman 1s on four-day
tnp 10 eart.bquake-n."aatd So¥iet
Armenia.
The Orange Count> Republican
and three other U.S. con&rcssmen
handed out aifts t<><Uy to children
who were injured an the earthquake,
the official Soviet ntws agency Tus
reported
Tbc con~mcn viewed the earth-
quake da.rria~ and will report back to
the House Task Fon::c on Soviet
Armenta.
The group also met wtth the
ctwnnan of the Armcna.an Council of
M101sters. FT. Sark1s1an
SEMI ANNUAL SALE!
Rl!e.Alany
Suits s:ns 00 ro seis oo
Spc)nc~t~ S 16S 00 to SS95 00
TrouSt't"S SSO 00 to SI 75 00
0m$ Shirts +"3 00 «> s 1 20 00
5"ll
from ... 00
ft'ofn~.00
from 119.00
from 111.00
s.:>ott sn1m .Sl5 00 to S83 00 "'-' s 1 s.oo
S-•ters woo'° snsoo tn.111.00 ~ S85 00 to S285 00 '"-157.00
NeekWMr s 1 s oo to • 565 oo "°"' -.oo t cwtr 2.000 ues ~ our tine cumni le~ionl
Filming Afrtcan
wildlife explained
The txcitc~nt and ~ involved in thc filmina of African wildlife wall be dileullcd by
filmmherl Joan and Alan Root on Ju. 11 at the
Manne" Branch of the Newport Beech Public Ubrary. .
Thit fttt pr~m, .. Li&hts, Camera, Action," i'
pen of the hbrary s Wednesday Evenana Film Senes.
The library 11 at 200S Dover Onve. More
mformauon may be obtained by calhna 644-3145.
lalormatJon management
A hands-on opponunity to examine .. Free•
style," Wani's n~t information ma,..ment
product, will be available at a danner mectina of the
Auoctation of Informations Systems Proreuionals
on Tuesday at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel an
Costa Mesa. ·
Jody Kanch, a systems consultant in Wana
Labs OeSlttop Products Supon0Jv1s1on, will tlplam
bow this new product can be run on IBM A rs..
COMPAQS and AT <empauble computers.
:rHe meeuna suns at .S.30 p.m. and the hotel is
located at 666 Anton Blvd More 1nformatioo may
be obtained by calhna G"'en Richardson at 541 -26 11.
Focus on eating di sorders
A free support group, ANAD. for people
concerned with anorexia ntrvosa or bulimia 1s
offered from 6:30 to 8 p m. on Thursdays at the
Capistrano by the Sea Hospital an the Dolphin
House Ltving Room
'The aroup 1s led by Elhn Bressler, M.S.W., and
JanGreaor, M.S.W. Forinformat1on,call Bressler at
496-3414 or Gregory, 497-3075.
Course for plano teachers
A three-unit course, ··Teach ma the Piano," W111
be offered at Gold<"n West Colleae in the spnng
semester.
Stu~ents W111 learn through lectures. d1~
cuss1ons, readings, rescarc~ demonstratJoo and
observed teach1na The course 1s intended for
teachers. or anyone who plays the piano.
• The class will be tauaht by Dr. Allen Giles from 10 am. until I p.m. on Fndays star1inJ Jan. 13
Students unsure 1fthcy meet the prerequ1s.(ts for the
class arc ad ... sed to enroll anyway and attend the
first day or class to review course requirements.
Registration 1s under way. further mformauon
may be obtained b)' calhog 89.S-8306.
College patr ons to meet
Golden West College's new president Judith
Valles wall address the G WC Patrons on Fnday, Jan.
13 at a luncheon in the college's community center.
The volunteer support group will hear how they can help the college president. who was appointed 1n
August, to achieve campus 1oals in the next decade.
The luncheon will be hel~ at 11 :4S and will cost
$6.SO per person Reservations can be made by
calling Cathenne laymakea at 891-3349
I •
Hospital vol unteers sought
Volunteers to assist in \anous areas of hospital
operations including emergenq room transpon.
ISSISlJfl& 1n the recO\tr) room. p3.SSll'\I food tnl)S
and clcncal duucs.. arc bclnJ soufht b_y Fountain
Valley Regional Hospital and, Medical Center
Tobeehg1ble. 'oluntcetsmustbeatleast 15and
available for one four-hQUr shift per week On each
da> of work. lunch and parlona arc free.
Call 979-1211 ext 8133. for funhcr infor-
mation
Monday, Jan. 9
No mtttl•p sdatdaled
Tues day, Jan. l 0
• 7 p m Newport Be.ell Pam, BucMs u4
RecruUoa Commlnl011, council chambers. 3300
Newport Bl vd.
• 7 p m Ll&8' Budll Ulllrled ScMGI Board,
d1stnct office . .S.SO Blumont St
• 7 p m Hutla1toe Badl Ualoa Rip Scltool
Dhtrkt, ~ntnct office. 102-SI Yorktown A e.
• 6 pm. Lquna Beach City Council. council
chambers. 50S forest Ave
0
'· A proceeelon of tnacb aDloeded
more tlaaD 2,300 cable Jania of
CODCnte la C09ta .... OD Satar·
day to form tlae foaadatloa for
the fatare Soatb Cout Senior
'Vlllu OD l'alniew Jload. Tbe job
rep..-..ted tbe ~-coacrete . poar ID tbe etty'• bl8to~. accord· bll to tlae coatractor. 1Jae Ucaald
none OOftred Mme 50.000
• 9q1l&J'e feet at a depth of US
I.Debee. Tbe operatioa wu o•er·
Mell by AIDirlcaD Reinforced Concrete. IDc. of SaDta Ana and
lncladed worken from MAJ
eoutnacdon of Anaheim.
Dally Pilot pbot• by Dan Hankin
.,
MAKING THE GRADE
-~
...
Ortinge COiie DAILY PfLOT /Monday, Januwy t. ,._ Al
..
---·schodls 'security innovator retires
By GREG KLERKX
OflMO.., ..........
h 's not easy looking after the security of
2.S.000 studt'nts, as v.ell as their tcache~
adm1ms1rators. gardeners and bus dn vcrs
Just a~lt Ken Wen
As director of safet) and secuntbfor the
Newport-Mesa Unified School 1stnct.
Wen was mpons1blc for the ""cll·beins of
one of the county's large t and v.<'3lth1est
school d1 tncts for 2.S )-ear·s
The kc) 'll>Ord here 1s "v..a~... As of
Fnday, Wen 1s the former director of
safet) and secunt)
"It's -with swttt sadness chat I lea,e,"
WernaTd "Ymi h1vctwofamiltd il home
fam1I) aod• v..ork fam1I) You n:ellyspend
more time with your "'ork family. and it's
hard to act ustd to them not being
around"
W<"rt said the need for more 11mc "'11h
his "horn<' famil) .. prompted h1 rl't1rc·
mcnt.
Since tali.mg the d1!1tn<t JOh 1n I ~ti 1
Wen. a Pcnns\l\ania nauvc. has 1m·
plemented :l number ot inno,allH pro-
grams. including a J1<;as1cr prcp.artdn~s
guide that has bet'n usW as a model bir
school districts throughout the state and
nataon He also helped de' clop the~ unt\
S)Stems installed 1n d1stn't Sc.hool<i .and a
uccessful ndc-shanng proaram
To 1mpkment the J1 tnct's ~1r-1n!lurcd
"'orkers compensation pr ram \\en
developed a comp~hcns1\e o ' pre' en·
t1on program that ha b«n one ol thc mo 1 cost-cACctt~ program in \he d1\1nct'
history. sa'ing 1he d1\lrtct more than S4
m1lhon O\Cr the pa\t decade
Wen ~1d the plethora ol n~"' rules
regulation and rcstnlt1ons piling up on
54:hool d1stncts throua,hout the statt' v.as
another contnbutina factor tov.ard h1\
rcurement
.. One ofthc problems "'<''re all facing 1~
the m\nad rqula11on that make things
that much mort d1ffic ult," he said
.. People ha'c bttn u~ 10 doing th1n1
certain v.a)'S for .)Cars and 1t'\ hard for
people to change.
In addition to \3fet} ~·unt) and
v.orkt'r's compensauon \\en (I.as also
respon 1ble for the d1stnct\ hazardous
and I0\1C matenals program required b)
C~l-0 H ~. the state Department of
Education and the federal En' iron mental
Prot('( 11on .\gene' \\en we! .bC-hli 1ned .hts. be\t tq
anuc1patc state and federal regulaton
changt"i and prepare the d1'1lnct 3Jl·
propnatcl) For c .. ampk thl'\'.c )t.lr\ agt1
Wert noted sc1cnt11ic and cducaunnal
~1ud1es hnL.1ng somt student medical
problems to formaldeh)'de used 10
prcsel"'c laborator) pec1mens On his
recommend.at1on the d1stnct stopped
usina formahkh)dC The state Dcpan-
m<"nt ot Education banned 1t honl>
aftcrv.ard
For at least a \Car Wt"rt v.111 onl) be ~m1-reurcd and ~111 v.ork as a consultant
10 tht' d1 tnct His replacement Wlll carry
the title of d1rt'<10r of nsli. manaaem<"nt
and "'111 haHadd1t1onal re pon 1b1lmcsof
health and hab1hty insurance
\\-en's v.1fc Mar) •!! I -)<'ar d1stnct
cmplo)tt y,.ho v.orlcs as an adult education
IClhn1c1an 1s retmng this )Car and the l\loO
plan to traH·I
"We're going to bu) a true anotrailer
and take a \car to Stt the entire onh
\mem:an continent .. \\en ~Id "I'm
l{)()l 1n1 fol"\ ard to 11 ..
100 residents routed by
Anaheim apartment fire
• • • Someone k1dr.cd lhr door 1n at a
businc~s an the ~200 blocli. ot
Jt'ronimo Road on unda) morning
and !olOlc tv..o l\ ocv.ntt'rs ' . . The door lod. ot a 19 7 H yund31
F,,cel "'• punch~ out and the terco
stolen 1o1.hilc the' chide Y.1$ parked in
the I %00 block of fire bctv.ttn 7
v.hcn ollicers am\cd to chcd.: on 1hl'
child's v.clfarc
Fountain Valley
meone u~ a tool to rcmo' <'
ca h from a \1deo game at Shali.cy'\
P1uaat 6IO WamerA'e on unda'
n1&ht · • • •
to de tn>) S400 worth of equipment
on a motornclc parli;ed 1n the 1000
blocli. of Cali. treet O\cr the weekend.
Clerk thought
FVrobber's
gunwasfake By TW Astedee.4 Prat
Emben from a construcuon 1te
Olazc a mile awa) touched off an
An&Mim apenment house fire that
foiUd 100 people from their homC1
tarly today. Anon 1nvnt1pton v-tn-till at the
IC'ene late th11 m mina. s1R1n1
tbro• the ashes. The fiK" bqan 1n a bu1khna undtr
coasuucuon, trupt1na 1n names at
tl;lO a.m. today. It took 90 firc-
fiahtm from five Onntt County
at.es mOR than an hour to c•t· .......... ~
A busy 19-month-old child dialed
9 J I whale oeayiftl wuh tht ~
Su•y afteriloOft. lridn'I ~ ~acm
Nlba .. IO MT hofnt an the I «JO blocll
olSMtl Ou Coun. • • • A prowler .. rtp)f1ed ""'"' •• 1 Willdow ol a._., aa tM JOOO blotll otr....a W9111 l<tJO pm fridly. -~ ··i A ...W 1111111 iM hft ol a WlliClc .......... 1000 .... of
Sellllt Cwl Hif :'I oa S...nlly.
·"'¥• a Ir :a MOO .. ...,. t-J&C• u·~.:·u::
tnau1sh. said fire Chief te~c Maahoc· co.
Thc..future ~tc of the threc·itory V11Ja,c Stn1or Citizens Complu V.-ai dntro~ and anon in~otipton .. ere try1na to ckterm1nc the caus.r of
the blaze.
An ember from that b&azc landed
on the roor of che Ca11 Grande
apenmcnt complcx a mite away and
auned si• apenmcnts befon-40
fircl!'<f'S maNIFd to put It out. M lO«"O said.
A t 100 peOpk •ne evacuated
Jlfdy.
•ay on S.turday.
But .. a pa serb) who polled the
blaze before lirtfiahtm am~ed "'as
anJurcd while knocKina on doon and
brt'ak1n1windows1n an effon to alen
letoina 1"C11dents. the chief said
The •Oman. ~ho •"I n•t identified.
cut htr lea and wa$ hMP1taltud
The Red Cr "'" canna for about 20 displaced rcsidtnts ll M14nol11
H1&h School, the spokesman \aJd,
fhe rcs1dcnu had h~ed in "' burned apenrMnlS UJ>'llin and sn
down1i.a1n that were huvtly damaa·
ed by~attt. •
-«k at the ltockWa) Inn. 1400
BrisiOI St., Id\ *1th an une>e1d bill of SJ.40 An invnt ... t.on rcH•11l«t he
had quit h11 job the PR\ 1ou' di)' and
d1tappeattd.
a m and S p m unday
Newport Beach
.\ couple_ on the 100 block of
Corsica Dn"c returned from v1-
cat1on 10 find buralal'\ had stolen an
cst1mat<"d S:? • .SOO in 1cwclry af\cr
pf) ma open the front door. ••• A burglar chmb(d throuah the ~1ndo~ ot 1 home on the 600 block of ~on11 \'llcnuc and took onl)
hngene, panties •nd oenty hose. ..... <--
n anon)mou man calltd 1n
attomey and asked him how he liked
liv1na. and then threatentd ... It m1aht
be a lluk ihort for )OU.. a-tlqtoa ae.c1a
I\ rn1dcnt rtponed that JUvcn1lcs
rock their \katcbolrd into a laun-
dromat at Mam Strccr and ~C9Cta
Avenue ind lolc clothes out of a
dner. • • • nse'cs cntcrro a raidtn« '" tM 1~ block Qf Hununs•on S&rttt dwoulll an un ktd ~ar door and .. a tetc\11,ion ttt. VGll. nd
.. ••• l• • • • ... COftCftM\1 c11uen .. an the aree
.\ motonst tra\chnaon Hrookhurst
trttt near Edinger A\enut" reported
a dmcr 1n a 1987 TO)Ota_po1nted a
"2ndgun at him 4S pm Sund.a). • • • mcone used a blunt in crum<"nt
LA drug seizures
set recor d Jn 'BB
W •>••Kr l..W lftCI lonW• DltW re...-II lct05 P.• s-dll1
·-....... 1111 ....... r~~;;;;;;e=::; .... ....,, lililldoltt ....... 4) _...,, .... -.. 1111.
.\n I .,car-old cleric 11 Radio
hack in Fountain Valley fotled a
robbel'} bttau he beltcvcd tM pn
pointed at him .,..as pla\t1c, pol1tt
said
ccordin& 10 Foun1tin Vdtj · Poh~ t l.alT) Gnswold. a man
walkC'd1nto1heRad10 hack•t 11120
Brookhurst t. at 4• 11 pm. Satunlmy
and pointed a revolver at the clcrt.
He demanded the young man ~Y
the ctJh "'SI IN.
.. l hedcrk lhouaht 1t •11a.iokc..ct
the aun " pl tic ... Gntwold .-..
When the dcrk CJLPftll&'d 1ait
d1sbthd, the lUspttt ti;,.ct h• W
tht head -1th the , .. n. The Ml'91C'
fled the tort' •Mn tht ~ refvRd to open tbr Cllll9 ,._-. .. ~ mn left.....,.., t.1
tMft wttC too ....,. --.... siott, .. OnlWOld.W. . ..,...dlll w ·
tOft but llCIC othn •• Min ...
1't ~ -._,,I• Http11nac. "' Ma IMe 20I. S .. 10 itllL"Ma: llllt •I__, ... I 70 $I tfl ... ................ ~ .. ......... Hr ... , ..... --
I
remeCourt
evlewlaw
lhliitmg abortions
WA$HINGTON (AP)-The Su· the use of taxpeytr money for ~ Coun.. IC'tint in an ape>eal perfonnina or a511stina an abonion. ~ ~ ofits landmark 1973 But it said use ofa public facllity or deCiaaon .._, leplit.ed abortion na· the services of a _public emplo>tt tiollwiclC. &oday ..,eeci to review a cannot br banned ifall such costs arc Millouri law replltioa abortions. mmbuned by a peticnL
Tiie juttices satd they will Sludy a Jn the .apppeal IC'led on today,
federaf 1ppeals court rulina that Missouri Attorney General William
ltNCk doWn key provisions of the L Webstersaidthc8th Circuitcoun's •te law. ruhng "exP1nds (Supreme Court)
Even bef'ore today's action in the precedents 1n favor of abortion on
appeal filed by Missouri officiaJs, the deman~ further contracts the state's
cate Md become the most-watched compelhna intettSt in the life of
.,.nlepound in the continuin& politi· viable, unborn children and d1,.
cal waroverabonion. Justice Depart-regards this court's holdinp that maaa lawyen JISO arc u~ng the lliah abortion is a private matter whkh
court to use the cue as a means of government need in no way
undoina its I 973 ruling, called Roe subsidize:• v
vs. Wade. The I 973 decision "should itself be
But nothina in the brief order reconsidered" if it cannot be squared iuued today sugested that the jus-with the disputed Missoun law,
tices will recon.sider Roe vs. Wade. Webster said.
Tbe court's eventual decision, ex-William Bradford Reynolds, then
pected by JuJy, could resolve the chicfofthcJusticc Dcpanmcnt'sciv1I
Miltouri controversy without signifi· ri&hts division, wrote to Missouri
.. canOy chan~!la tnc 1973 deciSion or officia1Slast summer urging them to
otbef ~t rulinas on abonion. include a challenge of Roe vs. Wade
The 8th U.S. Circuit Court of in the state's appeal.
Appeals last JuJy 13 struck down, "I felt this was the best case on the
amon.s other aspectS of the Missouri horizon to underuke reconsideration
1bon10D law, these five provisions: of Roe," Reynolds told The Wall
• A t.n on usina public hospitals Street Journal in a recent interview.
orotheraovcmment-run facilities for In a brief filed two days aflcr the
abortions not necessary to save a presidential election ast Nov. 8.
woman's life. Justice Department lawyers sup-
• A ban prohibitin& any public ported Missouri 's appeal.
employt.e from perform ing or assist-· That sparked Molly Yard, presi-
ing an abOrtion. dent of the National Organization for
• A ban on usina taxpayer-monex Women, to aetusc the Justice Dcpart-
for "encouraging or counseling ' ment of .. dcclaring war on the women
women to have a6ortions. of this country."
• A requirement that doctors plan-Eleanor Smeal, president of the
ning to abort a fetus believed to be Fund for the Feminist Majonty, said
older than 19 weeks test for weiJht there will be .. no hone~oon on the
. and tuna capacity to determine issue ofabortion" for ident-clect whether the fetus is capable of Bush because of the Justice Dcpart-
survivina outside the womb. mcnt's involvement in the Missoun e A declaration that "the life of case.
each hu_man being begins at conccp-In its 1973 rulinJ., the Supreme
tion. •• Court said women have a constitu·
The appeals court upheld a tional ri&ht of abortion, based on the
provision in the state law that bans right of privacy.
Nadoaal Gaardamen patrol tile •treeta of Allendale on Sanday after a tornado all bat
lneled tbe eoatbern llllnot. town of 800
people OD 8atardaJ ..,lat. .
Residents of 3
states assess
tornado damage
ALLENDALE. Ill. (AP) -Rni·
dents of three slates today JI~ to
recover from tOmadoes tMl de-~a lhird of the buHdillP io this
IOUt"heastttn Jllino1s town aftd in-
juttd more than four doun people.
"It looks like this place has been
bombed.'' Allendale Ma)or Jack
Loeffler 11,d unday.
Twistcn htt the Illinois towns of
Mill Shoals. Albion and Allrndalt on
Saturda}' aftcmoon wrorc mov1n1 into Indiana and touchina down near
Vincennes Lale Saturday. a tornado
cut a two-mile path throU&)I tht
southern Kentucky community or
Franklin .
Fifty ~o&>le were injured 1n llh· nots, and 22 rcm11ned h~tahztd
Sunday. the three pco_plc injured in
lnd11na were released from hospital!
by Sunday; no tnJUncs were rcponcd
in Kentucky. ..
Loeffler said the tornado cut
through a l ()..square-block area of
AllenClale, destrovin& S3 homes and
nine businesses
Tobacco industry ads
say'enoughtsenough '
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
tobacco industry, bidding to stem the
tide ofanti-smoking rules. today took
out newspaper ads around the coun-
try dcclanng "Enough 1s cnou&h" and
touted a survey indic.ating tnree of
four Americans do not suppon smok-
ing bans in workplaces and res~
tau rants.
Reagan.'s budget a last-ditch
attempt at reducing the deficit
A spokeswoman for the Tobacco Institute, Br .. nnan Dawson. noted
some anti-smoking .iroups are
P.ushina for a "smoke-free" soc1et}.
'To achieve their purposes.·· she said.
"anti-smokers are turning to ~nsorshi{>. harassment. punitive
taxes •nd intrusion into personal and
private decision-making. ...
"The majonty of Amencans. ac-
cording to objective polling. do not
support the5c 'anti-smoking efforts "
WASH INGTON (A P) -Presi-
dent Reagan today sent Congress a
S 1.15 trillion farewell budget that
attacked his b1agcst economic failure.
the federal deficit, by offerins up
again some of his cherished ideas
about reducina the size of go vern·
ment.
The president's ninth and final
spendin~ plan -out of balance hke
all of his others -1s largel) an
academic exercise. certain 10 be
overhauled to reflect the pnont1cs of
a Democratic-controlled Congress
and an 1ncom1ng president, George
Bush. afler his 1naugurat1on Jan. 20.
Bush aides said that the prcs1dent-
elcct agreed with the general thrust of the Reagan document. especially tht
absence of any new taxes, but sull
intended to submit his own rcc-
om~cndaJtons after taking office. _
If Reapn'S' ideas were adopted in their entirety, the deficit would fall to
$92. 5 bi I hon in the 1990 fiSCJll year .
the lowest since 1981.
"This bud~t shows that a gradual
ehminat1on of the deficit 1s possible
with~t raising taxes," Reagan said in
his budget message." lt can be done in
a reasonable, responsible way-wtth
d1sc1phnc and fairness. New taxes are
not required "
In his proposals for the fiscal year "
that starts Oct. I, 1989, Reagan
advocated ttrmtnating a total of 82
government proarams, slashina
s~ndtng on farm programs by S9.7
b1lhon and trimmins the growth in
Medicare and Med1cai~. the giant
health proarams, b) about $5 blJhon
The Pentagon's budget, on the other
hand, was awarded a big spending
increase.
While Reagan was pre1Cnt1ng his
budget only 11 days before leav1n1
officc,man yoftts broad o\lthncs ~ere
exwted to be adopttd by Bush.
Experts puzzled over.cause
of latest British air disaster
Horrific
massacres
reported in
be ban on KEGWORTH. England (AP) -
Botb enaines on a brand·ne'k Boeing 737 apparently failed before the plane
crasbcd akma a hiabway, kiUina 46
people. oflk:iala saia today. Avi1tion
cxpen.s said the chances of doublc-
engine .failure were about I 0 million
tobnc. .. So far the evidence. although by
no means conclusi ve, is consistent
with the right engine ha ving stopped
before impact and there arc also signs
of fire in the left engine," Transport
Minister Paul Channon said in an
interview on British Broadcasting
Co~. television.
Olivier Faprd, a spokesman for
the company that makes the CFM-56
engines the jct used, told The As-
sociated Press, "It is eJttrcmcly im-
probable that both motors would
break down in such a short interval.··
"We have very impressive reliabih-
ty statistics," said Fagard, of the
French company SNECMA. which
builds the enaincs in consortium with General Electric Co. '"We don't
'know. It has been established that
there was no fire in second motor. But
we don't know any more than that."
Oflici'als raised the number of
confirmed dead to 46 late today.
Ei&hty people were injured. lnvestigators recovered the flight
recorders from the W'recka&e, and
firefighters pumped foam onto the
crumpled jct to prevent seeping
aviation fuel from catching fire.
The Belfast-bound British Midland
Airways jet carrying I 26 people broke
into three pieces on the edge of
Britain's main north-south hi&hway.
the Ml, in central England on Sunday
ni&ht.
be twin-engine Boeing 737-400
narrowly missed the town of
Kcgworth and plowed into an em-
bankment a few hundred yards shon
of the runway as the pilot strugled 10
make an emergency _landing at East
Midland Airport. I 00 miles nonh of
London.
Ham radio operator Mervyn
Solloway said he heard "not a
shouted message, but a bit of a frantic one to say, ·we've~got problems with
the other engine.' That was the last I heard from the aircraft."
British Midland Airways said sab-
otage was not suspected in the crash.
which came less than three weeks
after a bomb. blew apan Pan Am
flight 103 over the Scottish village of
Lockerbie, k1llina all 259 people on
board and 11 on the &round.
But Prime Minister Marprct
Thatcher. who flew to the scene and
visited survivors at Derby Hospital.
said: "We rule out nothing. we simply
can't. There will be a lot -of .spccu·
lation. but until we have the facts 1t is
unsafe for me 10 speculate.··
Asked about terrorism, Channon
replied: "J don't rule out anything at
this stage but there's certainly no
evidence of it." William Tench. retired head of
Bntain's Air ACCldent Jn vcstipt1on
Board, said the odds against both
en~ines failing on a Boeing 737 were
lO million to one.
"I would look for some 1oadvenent technical mistake such as something
incorrect being done to the cnaines
during turnaround. either in·
advertently or deltberatcly," Tench
said.
British Midland said the jct was
delivered just 12 weeks ago and had
flown less than 500 hours.
. ' Tbe fuel••e of a BrtdU llldlaacl Atnra,.. 737 broke,lnto
tllree plecee wlum It ~ at tlae ~ of BrtdaJI'• ma1a nortla~tla laJClaway lD ceatral B~'l on hnday nltbt.
.
~FAR MELKJt Lebanon (AP) -Synan-backed Shiite Moslem fiahten
rttaptured villages tn south Lc6anon
toda y from pro-lranian nvals.' Poltcc
re~ncd "horrific massacres" and
said at least 80 people were killed in.a
24-hour pcnod.
The Amal • mihua claimed its
fiahters had overrun four of five
viltaacs seized Sunday b) the lranian-
backcd Hezbollah, or Pany of God.
&t reporters who drove into the
bin~ tone near brad's self-deslf·
nated "security zone" on Lebanon s
southern border said Amal had
tttaken onl) three vilJaaes. f 1ertt
fiaht•na raatd around the other two
Pohcc said at least 80 people h~d
bttn killed and 200 wounded since Sunday momtng..
A pohcc spoke man tn Sidon said
many v1cttms h1d been hacked to
death.
Soviets skeptical about chemiGal ·weapons plant claims
"Others had lhcir throats cut and some were headlcu. Many were -mtdteefW1U\l>ulfcts.~~saTd the spokcl-
man. who cannot be named under
stand1n1 rc1ulat1ons. "Hornfic
musacres have bctn committed."
The cas\llllits were Uie tffabnt 24-
hour toll 11nc:c the pov.-er st~e for Leblnon's I m11hon Shiites. the
country's t.raest acct. flartd in April
The lit.est round of blnles btpn Dec
31.
PARJS (AP) -Soviet Foreign
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze said
today that evidence shown him by
Secretary of State Ocorg~ Shultz did
not prove U.S. allegations that Libya
has a plant capable of producina
chemical weapons.
"The American secretary of state
showed me the buildina plan, but that ,
proves nothing." Shevardnadze told
reporters JUSt before lcavmg Paris,
where he was attending an inter·
national conference on chemical
weapons.
Shultz met with Shevardnadze on
Sunday and said he had won a
promise from the Soviets to conduct
their own inquiry into the plant at
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begins JANUARY 9th ·and
endsJANUARY 14th 1989 .
•
Rabta, south ofTripoh. He said at the
time he believed the Soviet s ultimate-
ly would back the U.S.
Libya ha.sdcnied ns plant can make chemical weapons, cla1mina ii is
intended to produce pharma-
ceuticals.
Shevardnadze told rcponers: "I
added that the mon imporunt thina
1s to stab1hze the s1tuat1on after the 11r
incident" durina which Amcncan
fighters shot down two ubyan war· lanes over the Mediterranean last
week.
The five-day conference. which
bcaan Saturday, was called to bolster
flauina talks on a chemical weapons
ban.
On Sunday. the Soviet Union
announced H would start dcstt0y1na
chemical arms atockp1!n this year
U.S oflic11ls said the Soviets were
merely playana "~tch-up" because
the United States has been routinely
destroy1na stockpiles or a11na
chemical arms since the early 19~.
Amal claimed us fiahten recap-
tuttd four of tM vitJUes alona the
main road from Sidon, 15 miles south
of Beirut; to lsratl's IC(Ur\ty zone on
Lcblnon s '°uthem border.
Policelooklnt1forparents DEA corruption blamed
of abandonecf newborn boy on 'ealif ornia dream' ' ~ IJfteA.111ele ... Pne1
SI Ml VALLEY -A newbom boy ltf\ on the doorstep of a home here was
ift sublc condition at a k>QI hospttal 11 police souaht 1nforma1ion about the
chikt'• s-ttfttl. The b9by WM weam-.. T-thin and aiaper Pd WM~ lft
1 towel when found S.turdty by Jobn Carrillo, 15. a1 he answered the door bell
at his family's C'handltt Avenue Condominium. tbt blby. 1bou1 one or JWO
days o&d when found. :e to be n.11 aetm and appemttly -.snot dd1 vtttd
iaa hospital, MJd polace . Neal Rein. Tllc ihfant wnadm111ed 10Sim1 Valley
Adventist Hotpital for rv1tion, where he was in aood rondnion. said
aursana supervuor G&oria Kutchfs. · "'
H@alth crusader poorer,
says consumers richer . O~HA, Neb. (AP) -A mull.. from 1tt cookie and cratbr prod&aCts. mllJN>Mft 11 S2 mllhon poottt, bu1 Kclloil'• vitt ~ftl J«*Pb .
he's coaviGced that Amtrican con· S&ewan comp&atned lal1 NovM\btt
SUIMR are ricbtt as 1he rnult of has lha1 Sokolof 1 adt were arrnpoa51bk one-man quest IO rid food of hi&bly and ·•all'OU tu• rauon, .. but wrok
sa1uratect ~ 0tl1. ·' ham an Oecanber IO announce that · "fl'u aory of IM li1tle 'uy apin t KcJ•'• bad ~ usins troC"cal
the put and !he aian1 as bKk•"I otl1 in 1t.1"'CrKklin'0.1 Brin."
down," aid OrMM businna~n Sttwut said the.'"(~ wai an
Ptul Sokolof, •ho spends aJmos1 all rueonse to ~i"I public sent1men1
his tlrM on his anti-cholCSlef'OI cam. apinst uopjcaJ oats, not Sokolof 1
PIJ_Jn, ads.
The 66-)'eat-old Sokolof poumU2 SokolofL however, uid he was
rrull1on into nauon~M Mwspeper conrldent nll fuU·peat ads warruna or
adverusu111n an effon 10 penudc the ''poisonlft& of America" helped
lhci>Ubh( to atop buyu•foocb hiab in put public preuu~ on the corpor·
YlW'lled fa1 because of tropteal oils, ataom to rnpond Lo consumers'
chidy coconu1 oil and palm 011. concttns.
Sa1urated fats ioettUe blood .. h'sprcnycolncidental that four of
cholesterol levels, which can lead to Lhe majon did 1hat wathLR two
han attacks. -months of my firs1 ad. isn't n'" he
Sokolof tw claimed vtCtory over asked.
four major food prooes#)n -Sokolof, who blames h1&h
Kelloa's, Sunshine Bascuns. Pep. cholesterol for a near-fatal he.art
pendae Farm and Keebler. attaek he suffered 22 )ears aao. said
KceebJcc became the latc5t corpor-he lS--honOR<I to-be referred to b>
ate trophy head 1n So~olors hulth health news writers as "America's
crusade when at announced last No. I cholesterol fi&hter."
Wednesday that all tmpical 011, lard "I think I got that tjlle because"lt as
and beef fat would be removed from vacant. There is no Ralph Nader of
Keebler products. the cholestero1 world," he said.
Keebler President Thomas Garvin His ad campaign taraets foods that
told the Wuhinaton P..ost that the are high in saturatt<I fats, ye1
chanae in hls company's food for-portrayed as healthful throu&h such
mui.s had no connection with label claims as "no cholesierot:•
Sokolofs campaign. He accused "low·'8ll, "-"non-dairy" and .. made
Sokolofohensataonahzinatheissue. with 100 perct'nl veactable
Bnan Dobson, a s90kesman for shortening."
Sunsbthe Bttcuits.mldesamilarcom-"You can say it has no cholesterol.
men\$ when he announced last but if you eat palm 011 and coconut
month that Sunshine would 011, Lhey tum into cholesterol 1ns1de
eliminate palm 011 and palm kernel your body," Sokolof saad.
··AIDOM everyone has known that
fatty meat.I and ... most daary prod· ucu are hilh in cbolnterol and
saturated fat. But they didn't k.now
about coconut oil and palm oil. H~full1-t~ do now.··
Sokolors bisst s1nalt-day citptn-
d1ture was S 140.000 to place full-peee
ads in TM Wall Strttt Journal and
USA Today.
He alto advenised in The New
Yorlc rimes and New York Post, but
some newspe_pen, 1ndudina Tbe
Wubington Post o~ted to the
term "poison" and rtf~ to run tbr
ads.
His initial advenisioa bhu in
Novttnber •naled out Kelloa's
Crackhn' Oat Bran, Sunshine's
Hydrox oooJoes. Pepperid&t. farm's
Goldfish crackers., Keebler'' Oub
tra(kers, Nabisco's Tnscwt crackers.,
Procter & Gamble's Crisco
borttnaoaand 1hrec non-dairy coffee
atamcrs -Coffee Swart from Kraft.
Carnat1on·"'-{.'offccm.at~ 4nd
Borden's Creamora._
"There is sull a long way to ,o.
Nab1tco ha.s-SO products with
coconut or palm 011," Sokolofsaid.
Sokolof declined to discuss bis
wcalih, ucep1 to confirm he 1s a
mult1m1llionaire aod say that the $2
malhon expenditure has not placed
mU(h ofa dent in has net worth.
·He made has fonune an his father's
Omaha~based construction business,
Phillips Manufactunng Co. He
founded the NataonaJ Hean Savers
AsJOC1at1on an 1985. supponang it
lal'JCIY through has own contnbu-
t1ons
His name became synonymous
Wlth the fiaht ap1nst fa11y foods after
he offered free cholesterol tests on
Capitol Hill. Htf promot1onal pack-
ets include endorsement letters
sianed by dozens of congressmen and
senators.
"People who get involved w11h our
,campai~ actually feel hke they have
been misled and dect1vcd by the food
&Jin ts ... he said.
"They can go LO their food pant!)
and find three or four of these
products and lhrow lhem away
You and I can't control "'odd pea~.
but we can control what Wt' ell ..
();inge COMI OAtlV PfLOT/Mondey, ~I, 1918 M
Jet safl ~ ~~·~
is reassuring fl
frequent fliers
BOSTON (AP> -Oerq"lauon has compromised a_ir traffic safet)',
but domestic air travel is stitJ w 11fe
that odds arc a perion could take a
fbaht every day for mote than 29.000
years before beina involved in a fataJ
crash, accordina to a Massachusetts
Institute of Tcchnol<>sY study re-leased Friday.
Tbe 1977·86 fi~res for domestic
non·stop fll&hts wub established car-
riers indicate travelers are at I 0 times
less risk today th.an they wett durina
lbe 1960s. but lbe skies could be safer.
"One can come up with a ..-cry Iona
last of thmas that make one nervous
1boutflyu1g. but lheaood news in that
very ra~ly have these bomble ft'"'es
really come out of the bottle, saad
MIT Professor Arnold Barnett, who
compiled the fatahty statasllcs wuh
Pentaiort anwt Mary K. Hagins.
But Bameu sa1d l&!l aar traffic
control, su~tandard mainttnanct,
undertra1ned coclcp11 crews and ag.ina
equipment were all habahttes as-
sociated wath airline de~ulaoon.
The death risk per flight in the
absence of deregulation would have
been about 35 percent lower than that
actually recorded, according to the
study, whach appears in Manqemeo1
Science's January 1989 issue.
Barnett also said the record amona
the appr0Jt1m11cly 20 earners estab-
lished after the 1978 Airline De·
l"efUlauon Act was relat1vel)' weak.
'The new camers that came about
after deregulation as a aroup dad not
do as well as the morc establtshed
By WILLlAM S. BERGSTROM ,, .............
DETROIT -Boomana yar-cnd car and truck sales at ~neral Moton
Corp and •Jump 10 car salC1 at Ford
Motor Co. contnbutcd to overall
ancruse5 an domesuc sales an 19 8.
the auto companies rcpon
Manufacturers 1a1d lilt Thundt}
Lhat sales of U. ~made cars and h&ht trucks averaaed '4,,77 a da) an lht
Dec. 21-J I pcnod That represents a
20. 7 _percent ancrea~ from the same
late ~m~r-ptnod 1n 19 7
For the )ear. domestt( car and
hght-truck sales rc,achcd 11 . 7 malhon.
averag1n.138.060ada} an 19 8. up 7 S
~ntfrom 1987when 10.9m1llton
wett sold. or an average of JS.408 a
da).
lmPQrted car and hght truck sales
an 1988 slum~ to J., malhon. an
avcraac of 12.087 a <by, compared
wnh 4.1 malhon, or I J,2l9 a da)
Haab cmplo)ment and lov. 1nOa-
t1on Fictpcd kC"Cp boost ovtrall \ales,
said Jcancllt' Gam"ll). auto analyst
with the Bani.. of o\mcnca 1n San
Francisco
··1t's been a good }car to r the
econom} ... Gam"tt} said
Combined domestic and fortllJl
car and light \ruck sales to1alcd 15 4
m1lhon in 1988, up from 14 9 malhon
1n 1987 and approacfiina lhe IS 7
malhon of i9SS. the.second-best Ylo
)Cat C'\.Cr The rttOrd )Cir v.as 19 b.
when 16 J ma I hon \Chicles v.crc sold.
I nduslr) analysts bt'he\C' 19 8 "'111
move into 'ltt'Ond pTa~ after sal~
liautts for hea' > truck!. and med1um-
dut} 1mponed tru ks become avail·
able an st\eral .,,.ttks. said Ra>
W1ndeckcr, a veteran Ford Motor Co
analyst.
In previous )tin. sale o( those
trucks have approached the 300.000
mark. and Wandeclo.cr ~ad that v.hen
the overall ligurrs for 19 are talhed.
sales v.111 have sull)I ~ 1hose an
1985
For the '~' G M said at sold 3 ~
m1lhon cars, an l\e~ of 11. ll a
da>. up 2.1 pcrttnt from J.SS ma I hon,
•n I 1,S81·t-da) a'e~. an 19 7.
11rhnes," Barnett said.
The ~ty oft'he upst.a.n 8-arhnn.,
which make up 5 petUnt of all
domesl1C fl1a,ht$, have OC\'ef had a
passcnaer fitahty. But the· studY
showed the new camcn· death nsk
per fliaht between 1979-86 111tas 12
times that of their C$\lblished
countc11>9fls. ·
The survey, which included Pl~
enaer deaths caused b)' cnmanal or
terronst acts, also found in1er-
nataonal Jet 01&hts have become
statasucally less nsk} amona andu~
tnahzed nations.
About 700 of 3 billion to 4 blllton •
travelers died in domestic an aasbes
between 1979-86, Barnett said. lnter-
nauonally, he estimated 300 died
durina lhe same period in accidents
1nvolv1n1 Western earners. wbtle
J .. 000 were. killed -00-aarla~ from
len-<ievclopcd nations.
"With international fli&hts there 11
a pattern an the numbers." Barnett
said an a telephone interview from
Los Angeles. "If you talk about
Wcstem1zed rCJ1ons. the inter·
nauonal safety records of their lead·
ing flag carriers have been quite aood.
but when you talk about earners an ~
other parts oflhe world ... they have
pretty consistently been about ci&ht
tames more risky per fli&ht."
"People seem mort dervous about
flyina these days-ud I myself have
anx1et1cs, but 11 1s worth notina that
it's four or five umcsassafe to fly now
as at was a decade ago when no one
was worrying at all."~ said.
,...,.._.~._~ ••c
car MlleS tor II ol 1999 ~
.. 19187
CHRYSl.ER
,._... ... dW'fll
JotU.S ...... c.t
.1.m..._
TOYOTA + to.K
-6.~
Ford saad 11 sold 2.2 malhon cars.. or
7.160aday,m 198 .up8.8pcrt'CntOn
a dalaly sales basis from 1987 when at
sold 2 0 m1lhon, or 6.S79 a day.
Chf) ler's 1988 car sales of I. I
malhon. or 3.4SO a day ... ere up 10. I
perttnl from 962.057 or J.133 a day.
an 1981, tbe company said.
G M said at sci a h&ht-truck sales
record for Lhc )tar. dclJ\C1lfll 1.7
m1lhon trucU. an a'efll'C of S.6SI 1
day. for a 12.6 perccn1 1ncrca5C over
1987
Ford sold I S mtlhon truc:b;
a'eraa:ina 4.747 a da), up 4 2 pm:itnt.
and Chrysler reported sales of
QSS.619 lt&ht trucb...a.-d.ally nuaee
of3.102. tor a 14.6 percent •~se.
i\mona Japanese carmakers.
To)Ota sales an~ased in 1988 to
6 I 6.S29 from 583.809 1n 1987
Honda saw 1988 import sales drop
to 393.360 from 421.688 the prniaous
year. but sales of ats U S.-mlde can
ij.lm~ to 375.625 from 316.618 m
198 .
The top-~lhng Euro~n manufac.
turer w s Volkswagen. though its
said of 168,800 cars -.ere down fTom
191,70S the )car before. followed by
Volvo. which saw sales drop to 97, 48
for the ear from IOS.087 an 1987
J
Ml * Orenge COMt DAILY PILOT/ Monday, January 9, 1989
• NYS E CoMPus11 E T R~NSALTIONS
- ----- ----=---==..:o ----~ - -- -.. ..
WH AT AMEX Dio
NEW YORK tAP) Jan f
Aovanced Oechned ¥ncnanged otal l~1ue1 New h1ul'ls New tows l •
AMEX LEADER S
CoLo Qu onJ
WH AT NYSE Orn
P NEW YO~K (AP) Jan. 9 rev. fJrev. ~l a~n~ ~; n nc 11nued iq ¥011~ 1Uut$ New n1un• S New lows 1S
Tri 1917 ,
I NYSE Lf ADtRS
--
-----------------"
i' META LS Quou s
------~
Dow JoNES AvERAGE S
1 NASDAQ S uM M~RY
L_ --~
+ __
+~ -. + \t
OTC UP S & DOWNS
~=-----
WomaB discoversAIDS
Ilotjust.gays' disease
DEAR . ANN LANDERS: I am
wnl,itls becauae IOmtonc has to bnn&
tbit to tbe attention of the g.encnl
public. Who better than you?
I am a heterosexual ~oman,
diva«ed. mid-4()s. white, upper
middle &ss, hvina a modestly fast
lifelcyle not unlike· many or my
friends.
l carefully screen the four or five
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and want nothing to do with drugs or Jems to myself and confidan& 1n a drua usctt or men l thank arc small rncic of friends.
promiscuous or b1.sCxuaJ. Someumcs What can your readers do? They
· I insist on condoms and somct1mC1 I can test anonymously if they 1h1nk
don•L last week I &<>t the news. r there is an outside chance that they
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Stunned? You'd better behevc 11. I, money to funher AIDS research.
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disease. I now know that 1t 1s a disease osexuals who think u can't happen to
that knows no bamers It could them: If 11 happened to me, 1t can
happen to your daughter: your son. happen to anybody. ·
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urae your readers. before they get thank th.s. lettertsa plant, wntten by a
caught like me, to U5C condoms at all gay. male in orderto get suppon. How
-umes. Th~ya~n"t tOOperce11t protee· -1-...nh-tt wer.e. Unfonunatcly for me.-.
t1on. but 90 percent isa lot bc.ncrthan the story l bavc1ust told you 1s 1rue
zero. and I am -HIV POSITIVE IN
· . CHICAGO 1 Behevc m~. Ann, r am taking no DEAR FRIEND: WltJt au yH bve chances of 1nfw1ng anypnc. Now · that I know my days are numbered, .. you m1ad l& wu •oHerfll oJ yo.
I'm trying to cram in all the livahg I to &ake dte time ud troeble to •rite.
can while I am st&U in good condition. P~e llee4 to bow dtat AIDS It not
I am takina better care of myself than • dfsuse tbt taly dn1 uen ud lever have before, eating nourishing llaomosesul11et. Stralpt people can
food and g.emng plenty of rest. sec it, too. Good .••!fl. Ud God blu1. ...
DEAR ANN LANDERS. You'\C
ofttn 11 vtn couraae to people who
have bttn ndaculed and I'm hopina
that you will do the same for us. unless. of course. you thjnk we're
crazy, too.
My hu,band and 1 are an our late
30s with two arown children When
our older son vaduatcd from hi&h
school we reahU<l how empty our
home wis about to become. We
decuScd to try for another child.
L'm ~nanund thrilled. Our Jtjds
think ifs wonckrful. But you would
not believe what our fnends are
saying Just this week I heard. "Ir he
were my husband, Td kill him. "·''If 11 were me, I'd JUm'p off a bridge."
..Why an the world didn't one of )'OU
&Cl fi ited?" . •
People JUSt don'l wanl to believe
that th1sch1ld was planned. While wt
don't feel that we are obligated to ~~plai(I. our dcc1s1on to anyone, v.c
arc unhappy wnh the comments.
Why cap'J pcoplc-::-Just smile and
say, .. Conv-atulattons ">The negauve
comments bun. -REJUVENATED
IN PITTSBURGH
DEAR Prrrs: 1f Do oDe else 1ay1
"C..sr1telatioa1," J'm h)'hll l&. .
lpoff dte clo41. It could be t111t tlae
womea are eaviffs · aad tile mu an
feella1 laferlor. Voa wlU SOOD. db·
cover tbt tlle late dlvldHd often
tun• oat &o be U1e moat rewardlog •
Taetday,Ju. It recognllaon and chance to 1ncrea5t' income.
By Syd.Hy Omarr · .
ARIE$ (March 21-April 19): You'll be more active
~....O.DJOC1al lc~I You'll be fun 10 be
with, many will say, .. Whc~ did you dig up 1ha1
anfonnation:· You'll have success otilr-z1ng · humor.
trivia. .
TAURUS (Apri1 20-May 20): Individual who had
been evasive as now willing to sit down and listen. Have
information at band. be aware of accounting procedure.
SCORPIO ~Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Stress independence.
danng. p1oneenng spint. You'll learn citactl)" where you
stand an romance.
A 1TXRJOS (NOV-. "1T-IJec.7TfVa> attention to hunc~, special feeling. Dcc1S1on involving monty. famal)".
home should be delayed. You require addmonal
information that you receive w1th1n two weeks.
T'J I ",'
~NIC USA
a.I Ht.,. foci
Whltl of
for11111t
PttlM !tit l~
'•
Hellh Bulfntu Ea•·
1111111 Ae 11 Endert
Perry Wason
L.M. Bo vo -__ ___..._ .. _ -
..
•
Orange Couc OAILV PILOT/Monday, Januwyt, 1MI A7
Newt RtdtUr. W«tl CllfTent WKA, ~
AllU Cl11C1nnMl
P\,1$11
Prabe the lertl TIN Olno
Tocl
l~atlnga In 8unctey•1 TV Piiot
Legal affairs can be amicably settled. ~
-GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Allcntion centers
around travel. mouvation. unique experience involv1ng
member of opposite sex. Focus also on reading. writing.
special studies. Long distance communication results in
journey.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Concentrate on
main o~ective. M~ns don't scatter fo rces. Money 1s
i\1volved, there has been missing link that now can be
"discovered." Puzzle Pieces fall an to place.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Cycle conunues high,
you'll break from tradition and a new romance couldbc
on horizon. Emphasis on personal appcaJ. direct
confrontation. Some will say, "You look different. much
beller."
Election c ost Dukakis h is h ead
.CANCER (June 21-July 22): financial settlement
enables you to remodel, repair. make res1dence more
secure. You're on solid ground despite objections of one
who would intimidate you. You win by playing wa1tin1
pme.
LEO (JuJy 23-Aug. 22): J.?cfine terfl'lS, study Cancer
messgc for valuable hint. Attention centers around
bu1ldinl. 'real estate, ability lO f?CTCeive what happens
"backstage." A "mystery woll)an ·could enter your life.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpl. 22):· Essc.ntiats command
attenuon. Focus on safety, sccunty. investments. dcaltn&
with older individual who "knows the ropes." Payments.
past due, will be dispatched -to you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Lunar aspect h1ghhghts
sensuality, romance. completion of search. You get more
ERMA BoMBECK
-------
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): fa.amine mo11ves. take
nothing for granted. Secret 1s involved, refuse to be
cajoled or chastised by obsequious pcr><>n. Means gtl to
point quickly. with firmness. Virgo plays paramount role.
IF JAN. It IS YOUR BIRTHDA V current C)'Clc
reveals you arc due to "win b1J. .. focus on home. mantal
status, income. ability to gain popularit)' with pubhc,
cspcc1aJly women. You'll travel before Januar) 1s
finished. you'll also receive · vote of confidence from
people who make dec1sioos. Leo. Aquanu~ persons play
important roles in yo,µr life. You arc an independent
thanker. a1tract1vc to opposite sex. stubborn and sensual
June will be produc11ve. profitable. memorabJe for.you 1n
1989.
Wax sculptors at Tussaud's an
London made a statue of M1chlltl
Duk.akas. As soon as the returns
settled the clectaon. they cut off has
head and melted down his bod>
That's pol1t1cs.
New tenms ball' arc a whole lot
livelier 1n Denver than an Lo!>
Angeles.
For yo4r soul's sake. you ou&ht to
do tv.o things every day you really
don't want to-do. An old precept. that.
Somerset Maugham mentioned at 1t't
has writings Said l)e adhered to 11
scrupulously 8)" gelling up e"<'r)
morning and going to bed every night.
Young lady, what do )OU do before
you venture out of the household
nest? The female spider oils her legs
Q. What's that "happy" chemical
secreted by the brain when we're f cc h na ROOd.,
A. PEA -known b) those wnh
good mcmor1u as phcn) l-
ethylk.am1ne. Claim 1s there~ a lot of
1t 1n chocolate o doubt that's true
Word come straight from the people
"ho sell chocolate
husband·s argument for l l minutes'
30 scoonds before she -clan&! -
close down her mind. Our Love and
War man isskcpt1cal. No wife nor any
husband listens that long. he con-
tends. Argue longer J.he)· may. But
hstcn? No way.
0 Docs a groundhoa come out of 11s &urtow to go lo the bathroom?
A. No.sar.1tdias 1\sown an-house-at
the far down hall end of1ts tunncl, lhc.n
pcnod1cally seals 1t up and dias al'lothcr
Dr. Jovce Brothers one( s.a1d the If )OU gamed seven pounds o"cr
a\.erage ~Om3n will hsten to her Inc hohda}S.. )'Ou're t\'PIC'al.
That 'got-to--iiave ' holiday gift s·oon forgottenjn closet
I've bttn doing e lot of thinking
about the guy I saw on the national
news JUSt before Chnstmas. He's the
father who traveled ro three differtnt
c1t1cs an pursuit of the current hot
computer game. Nintendo.
As I recall. the man stood 1n lines
for two weeks, drove his body beyond
human capacity and was prepared to
spend half of his salary
He wasdolna this because has-child
needed that toy or hfe wo uld no
lonacr be worth hvang.
I wonder how lon&Jt took..thc child
10 np off the paper. insert the
cartndge in the control deck, play the
game non-stop for I 2·hours and thc'n
banish 1t to the graveyard of To!fS
Past. ·
The> do II, you know.
E .. ery December. there's a to) so
hot parents qu1t thc1r Jobs and de' ote
their lives to finding 11. And ever;
January, that same toy ts harder to
find in the house .than 1t was 1n the
Storts.
Remember Cabbage Patch doll~?
Their appearance unleashed a group
of pit bull mothers who fought and
scratched their wa) into lanes and
slores across this nation. Las!
Chnstmas. grandmothers on pen-
sions paid $1 25 for a Cabbage Patch
doll that when turned upside down
activated a m1croch1p which said. "l
1us1 love standing on my head ..
Where as u today?
cnllcs charge. "The} 're add1cuve~"
Do )'OU have an) idea how man}
years I ha .. e shopped for an add1ct1"<'
1oy? An)thmg. so ·1ong as at woulo
hold the interest of a child for fiH
minutes" I al'-'t\)'S wanted ta find a
doll for m) daughter that she d1dn 't
unwrap. np olT all of its clothes.
punch out the eyes and throw under
the bed. where 11 hl} with fc:"ar on its
face. pm) ang for a garage sale'
One thing 1 ccnaan From the I alwa)s w-antc<l a game that was so
moment these toys hn the stores. m cting my kids would sit up half the
night unable to pull them~h (S away
Instead. '-"•thin t'-'oda}s. I had half of
at an m} sw«-pcr bag.
Psychologms '-"hO thro"' around
phrases hke "a need to create stimuli"
and "pro\ 1dt's mo11vat1on and
challenges" arc g.t' mg kids mort
credit than the> deserve.
There's nothing m}'stenous or
ps)chol<>glc.al about n. Basically, kids
hk.c games th11t destroy an adult's
heanng. The> gra' ltate toward lO)"S
that cost more than your first house
and art 1n shon supply. Anything
v.-11h "chaldproor· pnntcd on 1t 1s a
rtd Oag. s1gnaJ1ng Instant destruction.
The) lust after toys that nM:i speaal
battcnes manufactured only tn com-
munist-bloc countnes. The) want
toys where their feet don't rc.ach the
pedals. or crafts that stain the carpet
pcrmanenth.
rm telhng you. when ~ou can find a
Clean Yo.ur Room Kat lhat costs
$149.95 and then hm1t the kid ·
playing time with 1t onl~ after their
homework 1s done. you rt going to
reverse a trend in this counlr).
8 RIOGF
By CHAR.LES GOREN
ud OMAR HARIF
----.b~jum~t•tw•••uump~That --DJ•lexia prepared CJ'1:1i&e for_stai::dom
abows a balanced hand of 19-20
points and no sianificant suppon Q .1-Both vulnerable. as South you
hold:
•13 Q A1Ul05 "I •AJU5l
Your ri&ht-hand opponent opens
the biddina with one padc. What
act.ion do you take?
A.-AJthouah in terms of point
cou.ot you a.re a bh heavy for a
i ample overcall, two-uited hands
aren't handJed well by a takeout
double. For instance. 1uppose Wat
Ulen boosts the auction to four
1pada1 passed badt to you. Now
you •ould have co sue . at an un-
comfortably hip level. Jt's wiser ro act ia one lutl by overcallin& two
bartJ.
By Tiie Ahoclattd Preas
for partner's suit. NFW YORK -l\ctorTom Cnalse
sa)S his childhood battle w-11h d)s--
Q.4-As South, vulnerable. you le\1a prep.ired him for his e1ght-)e3r dnvt to stardom.
hold: "My dnH and dctcrm1nat1on go
• 031 'V Al 0 Ak.16 • KQI back to difficult tames as a kid." lht'
The biddl.na hu proettded: 26-year-old actor said in an intef"\. 1ew
Sotlti. Wat Nort' F.ut 1n Parade maga11ne "I had to set
I ¢ Pw I • P goals and fortt myself to be di\·
? ctphnc<l. bccau~ r alwa)s felt I h.3d
Whf,t do you bid now? bame~ to o'ercomc."
A.-A jump raise to three spades in Cnuse said his d)'slc.ua. the team·
ab.is CH'luence Is invitational, not ing_ d1SAb1ht.> t~t f!llkei reading --difficult. surfactd an ktndcraancn · forcina. Since you want 10 be in "I was alwa)'S put 1n ~media
p.me even if pvt.net has a dead classes and I felt a5h1med. hle we
minimum 6 points. there is a simple ~ere the dummies." he said
way to to show your powerful hand Has mother. w-ho had tud1ed
lo support-jump to four •Pldesl ' special educauon. rrcoan1~"6 h1\
• Q .l-Natber vulnerable, as South I ~ymptoms and tutored ham ·
you b(>ld; Q.5-Both vulnerable as South you "M) mother .uid. 'Look. )'ou'rt-
.tWM. M ... -... 't • K16l hold: • d)1lc,1c. so )'OU II JU$t have to w-ork 1 •~·· v l't.79•.1 "' •AJ M -... ,..761 ... 01 .. n harder at what others take for grant· The biddiq has procee.ded; , v ~ v !"' ·-ed.' The mouvataon had to come
Netda r... s-c~ Wed Panner opens 1he bidchn.a wnh one from me. t was aoana into my,un1or
I • hM 1 Q hM specie. What do you rapoad? year ofhtsh school and I vo~ed; 'This
J • hM f A.-With only 10 poinll ud no fit, time I v.on't be 1n the rtmcdJal class.'
W-. do you bid now-? , ' you do not bave quite enou1t\ 10 I v.ortcd \'Cry hard 10 bnns m>
A.-5iace pertnet'1 jump rebid reapOnd at llwtwo-kwl. Thtrefott, readina up to l(.Dde lt\CI ~ I could
-.. a band worth totne 18 peiau. . the oeJy bid JOU can mate Is OM no (cc:I that I fit 1n. '
a '* co four dubs, which cDiaht be truntp.
' a 111 LI, ll a dbiiftct undCrbid . Jump
to the ddl 10 conftnn that you
I ........... ~ JUPPOr1 Ind •
• rft'4daMI blild. (If JOU pla1
·-·· .... a jmap IO foar dia-..... tO .,. •• ...,,. dMn ....... .., ... )
1CMI •
.,. ... ....,
111•?11'11.W ....
Q.6--8oth vulnerable, u South JOU
bold:
•AJ Q'5it O'JQ •&O'M3
TM w+tin1 llU pre ceeded:
~ ...... ·-•• Plllli INT ,_
J .... ' WMI _.. do JOU -.1
A.-111 ... llQ ....... -...........................
;:: :PrlJ.-.,_cm .. .._llli _ .... :_..,: ........ ,_-..-=-· _,. ..... c1c:u1: .. ,_ ..... , .•.. ,. ........... .........
"People "All! be hornfied at the
footage on me I thank that for the
good of m) future career I hone th
had no choice" but to go public "'1th
the stor;.
Cohen called Davis a ··wonderful"
woman and d1sm1sscd the cnt1c1sms.
~)'1ng tbe cast spent hours rehearsing
at his home
NEW YORK -he's nsen from
ucccuful model 10 mo' tt quctn. but
Kim Ba1l.11er admits \he has plent)
of fe rs. including h"e audience'
"l reall) am ared to death to set
u and do 1hal kind of stuff.'." said
Basinger. v.ho wont appear rorc
ltve talk show audience~ or be an
Oscar pttsentcr
The stars of"M> tcpmothtrl An
hen" also uys she's stall scared of
the dark.
.. Thel"C' 1\n't a ntght that I don'110
to sleep "''thout lookina under m}
bed," She Slld In the Jan n IS UC Of U map.zinc. ··r can't stand an) doll
an my room or anyth1n1 stannaat me
• I ha"c tcmblc. tcmbtc dream -
c pea all) when l cat lnd1an food."
Seem& hen.elf onscretn. she ,.,d,
can be a bad dream come true.
... have 'o be pu~cddown the aasl~
and into a teat. If, \Cr) uncom·
fonaNc for me -)OU know. v.hen
tht'rc's 111t up the~ or )OUT hps too
u"u ually tarae ~au"' of the lipsttck
)Ou ch00$C," he said "I'm a fallul"C'
at obJCC\1\1\)' -.hen n com'"' to
m)~lf."
ROLLI C:, PRAIRIE. lnd.-Talk
st.ow host Ofra' WlefreJ ha\ bou,ht
a Wttktnd "home 1n nonbwcst D·
d&1na. acrorct1na to local residents
•ho ta)' they have 1ten her out ....
... jop a.round the block. We~
her °"' runnin-." tatd Wilham Haman. .-bo ownt a rntauran1
near IM IMMa'K •
Tiit propaty 1ftduda • C'af'!\llr a.ou. •. ......_ hdi-. s•1mm•"1
TomCnalee
pool and several satclh1e d1 hes It I\
IOC"atcd about 6S miles eas1 of C'h1-cqo.. where Wtnr~> • nahonall)'
syndicated show 1 produced.
ccord1n1_to documents fikd O\
I In the LaPorte County rcrorder's
offict, the house was purchased by
Fir1t Catuen\ Bank of M1ch111n Cit)
ac11nc as U'\1.sttt for an umdtnttfied
pmon. Tbt wlatt was Elmer f .
IA)'dm Jr .. a son orone of the fimcd
Four Honcmen of Notre DI.me
footban tcami 1n the I 920L
A tpOk.cs"'oman for W inf~) rc--
(\l.led to ronfirm tht purchltc •
··TM ~'Oman dC'tcr' C\ omc
e_rtvac)':·_ Hid \Pc.lkC\WOman
Chmllftt :'f ardt0.
Aa.. DAILY PILOT/ Monday, January 9, 1989 EN
Co~ductor brings music to the classroom
8J m:llABL RYDZVNSltl
....... Ocwl 0 ¢1 I
This week between 4,000 and 4,800 children in
Oranee County will act a taste of symphonic music. But
instead ofa m1ddte-qed, humorless man on the podium
-most children' perception of what an orchestral
conductor must look like -they'll view a youn1. friendly woman out there. More importantly. they'll sec their old friend,
Rachael.
The Orana_e County Philharmonic Society's
Womeb's Committees are sponsoring a new series of
youth prosrams for tudents ar four different sites
tbroUlhout the county.
OirectinJ these concerts will be Rachael Worby,
newly appointed conductor of the Orange County
Pbilhanrionic Orchestra's in-school youth concerts.
Worby, 38, puuas much enerJy into the9e youth programs
as she does into rqular evening subscription concerts.
.. This {involvement with youth concerts) arose out of
two thinp, 'Worby explained between programs of a very
busy first week of the year, during which she appeared at
each of the four hiah schools with a .. preview" of her
orchestra concens.
.. A remembrance of things past -as a child growing
I TV
up in New York and betngcxposed to U<>nard Bernstein
and the New York Philharmonic's youth concerts 1n
Cam~ Hall -and my desire to bnna music into youna
peoples lives with the same ust and enthusiasm as it was
brouaht into my hfe. Because ancr havina seen (as an
adult) some of these children's concerts ... they've been nothing lake what I've been expOScd to.~
Worby speaks in a refined yet very animated style-
much the same way she conducts and get$ her youna
charaes involved, atrowing them to touch the instruments
or trr, their hand at conducting. • 'I discovered that a lot of them were intimidated with
orchestras and bcina in a larae hall," she said ... That's why
we have these youth concerts. We introduce them (to
orchestral music) throuah a smaller group in a more
intimate scttina. so that by the time I'm up there with a full
orchestra (a week later), they see and rttOIJlize me and
they know they can relax and ertjo¥ it."
Last week. as a preview to this week's full
Phithannonac Orchestra concerts. Worby went ~o
Esperanza, Woodbndgc. Buena Park and El Toro hiah
scliools with a brass quintet.
Her pr<>fy-am this week, "The Rhythm of Life ...
illustrates how much hfe is governed by rhythm and how
rhythm 1s the driving force in music. As such. her
repertoire 1s fillei(j wi1h such percuuion-driven worb.as .. Hoc Down" from Aaron Copland's ••Roctto" and Oeorte
Gershwin's '"An American 1n Pans.··
Worbycl11medshedraws •• tOOpercent" ofherencray
and enthusiasm from the childn:n the·msclves. "I can feel
tired at the bciinnina. bul within the first couple of
seconds out there, I'm totally revived," she said. "Youna
people have a lot of free.floating encray. and if you have
the enthusiasm for any subject and then come in contact
with those who have the enthusiasm to learn, both ofyou
11ve and rttt1ve all this eneray in equal amounts."
She credits Bernstein as beinp her bigest inspiration. "because of the eclectic nature o hjs life as a mus1c1an."
she said. "To realize that ("West Side Story") was penned
by the same man who conducied the New York
Ph1lhannon1cand pvc as much attention to Brahms as he
would to J8ZZ ... (l knew then) I didn't have to comer
m_ysclf into one world as a musician:· said the blues
aficionado who grew up with the sounds of Joan Baez. tbe
Weavers and Rodgers and Hammerstein .
The third-year music director of both the Wheeling (West Vil'Jlnia) Symphony and the American S)'m-
phony's youth conce1is at Carnegie Hall, Worby is one of
onl y a small handful of active women conductors in this
country.
..
Rachael .Worby &eta her enero from her 1ooni audience. . .
DaviCIFrost to-ilostnew neW.smagazine slJoW
1 NEW YORK (AP) -So how will
joumalist-personahty David Frost
make the new syndicated news-
magazine "Inside Edition" different
from those other shows relegated by
critics to the "trash TV" heap?
"I think the accent will help ... he
chuckled through a cigar-smoke haze.
Indeed, there 1s that chppcd, Bnush
way of making everythsn,a so und ever
so more important than 1t perhaps. in
point of fact. is. as It were.
MOV IES
"In side Edition," a half-hour.
weekl y series, premieres tonight. It is
the first news effort from R~r and
Michael King. the kings of syndi-
catton whose King World distributes
"Wheel of fortune," "Jeopardy" and
"The Oprah Winfrey Show."
King World a(fnounced "lnStde
Edition" shortly after the highly
touted ''USA Toda¥: The Television
Show" premiered in September to uni versally bad reviews and seemed
' bound shortly for syndication obli-
vion. The daily "USA Today: The
Telev1siQn Show" was picked up by stations in a whoppins 95 percent of
the country weeks befo~ its premiere.
prov1ns there was a big market for a
new, synd1cat.cd ncwsmagazine.
The uming of the King World
announcement of "Inside Edition"
was not coincidental. But GTG
Er\tena1nment has not folded the
"USA Today: The Television Show"
tent. The show has been retooled and
renewed for another season in an
attempt to salvage a S40 m1"ion
investment.
Nevertheless, "Inside Edition" has
been picked up 1n 71 percent of the
country. and King World calls 11 "the houest-sclhng m1dscason replace-
ment in the history of synd1cat1on ."
Frost first amved on these TV
shores m the fab '60s as host and co-
creator of the satirical "Ttiat Was Tht-
Week That Was." Frost has retained
his hip. tongue·tn'<'heek 1m•ge from
the days of "TW3." but he made the
serious-inJCrview hall offame in 1977
when he elicited an apology to the
nation for Watergate from former
President Nixon.
Since then, he has conducted one-
on-one interviews with numerous
world leaders. includinJ most recent-
ly Bntain's Pnmc Minister Marga ret
Thatcher.
~
AUTO FACTS Films that are more or less than they appear to be
I IUIE II THE ACTlll
The braking system is one part of
the car that an owner wants to sub1ect
to preventive maintenance. To this
end. 1t 1s best to have the dtsc brakes
overhauled at the 40,000·mile mark.
This includes pad replacement and a
resurfactn& of t11e rotor by turning 11 on
a lathe. Both: procedures will ensure
that the fncbon induced by pad·rotor
contact w1tl be adequate to stop the
front wheels. At the same time. the
auto techruc1an will want to examine
the condition and position of the
. calipers. H they stick alld hold the pads
aaainst the rotor .. braking imbalance
and premature wear may result. If the
rear wheels are served by drum brakes.
they will not wear as fast as the front
discs. They should also be checked tor
wear and possible overhaul.
y JOE BAL TAKE -.c .... , .........
This is one of those hindsight
columns, geared toward moviegoers
with home video systems and
opinionated movie cnucs who keep
changing their minds about movies.
So without further delay. rm going
to "re-read" a few movies and decide
once and for all if the y're apples or
oranges. Herc goes:
The Reagan Era films: What "Dae
Hard,""Pcggy Sue Got Marri ed" and
"Blue Velvet' arc really about.
Few people understand the impact
that the person occupying the Oval
Office has on the movies being made
during his presidency. It isn't an
accident, you know. that film s were
impudent and at their most rebellious
when Nixon was in office. or that Burt
Reynolds reigned at the box offi ce
with his good-old-boy yokel com-
edies when Jimmy Carter was Presi-
dent. When Ronald Reaga n took
over, tastes .changed. Alm ost 1m-
med1ately. everyone ran out to sec
''Chariots of Fire," "Ordinary
People" and "On Golden Pond" -
reserved, genteel movies about pull-
ing yourself .up. d~ing your best and
getting on with things.
Reagan's greatest achievement as a
President was In re·stonnJ America's
1mase as a strong. formidable force
wilhng to fight for tts beliefs -John
Wayne values left over from the '50s.
And as retro standards became in-
creasingly evident, movies became
increasingly schizoid. taking on
subtexts. Case in point: "Die Hard... the
Bruce Wilhs starrer that was last summer's biggest action film. Supcr-
fic1all)'. it's about one man who
rescues hostages from a high-nse
that's been taken over by terronsts -
fore1ln terrorists-and it fairl) dnps with Reagan-era mentahty. The stor)
of one, lone brave American clobber·
ing the Communist menace is
nothing new. This ont-1s essenuaJly
"Rambo" in a high-me. just as "Ahens" was "Rambo" 1n outer
space. These movies aren't about
what they seem to be about~ the)' 're
about proving tMt ~merita 11 b~r and stronger than any other nation.
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What's most interesting about
"Dae Hard" 1s the plot point that sets
it in motion: Willis, the hero who's in
the right place at the right time. 1s
there only because he wants to regain
control of Bonnie Bcdelia, his ren-
egade wife who -having taken lea ve
of her senses -refuses to use his
name professionally. The whole
1--------------~ movie is based on this fact. Finally. RUFFELL'$ after Willis triumphantly saves every-
HINT: A chfck of thf ,,,·s flu1ble br1k1
Jines ""1 I/so 1«omP1n1 an omh1ul
,of thl brMIS.
one and proves himself braver and
U,HOLSnly 111c stronger than the foreigners, only
"' • after all this docs Bcdclia rcalite what ... Yts...., es.. ..., a ircat man he 1s and what an honor It
HU -•• .. CllTI 1111-541-llM would be to bear his name. the way a real American woman should. The
movie ends with Bcdeha going back
to bein1 Mrs. Bruce Wllhs. The Bcdeha character is an '80s woman.. forced back into a 'SOJ
situation: "Know _your place, httle
lady." "P~y Sue Got Married" docs
thesamethsn1 to Kathleen Turner. At
thc.-outsct ~f tMHnovic:-~
-::ii;;iiil!W~~~------;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=========---1 (Turner) 1s a strong. vibrant '80s woman, with a career and famil y -
__.,,,.., ,.. ...
lMtWl ...... MI .... ....,,_
-----~ --· ,,. .. ,,,. .... ....,._.
IWOar II m It WloUT _ ..... --· ... .,. ....... ....,.
-.r:· -=' ·=
---·II _._
~-,, .. Ne .. ,. ....
gro'Wn children -and an estranged
.,
• •ote Hard," atarTln& Brace Willi• and Bonnie Bede Ila, puta
an 'SO. woman lD her '509 place. ·
husband. The movie . ver> thing. "Blue Velvet," a trul) d1sturb-
emblemat1c of the Reagan era at· . ing movie. uses the truth. Jusuce and
11tudes toward women, then thrusts Amencan way of its mall·town
her back into the 'SOs. confusing the settina as a cover-up for sa"'a,ing the
daylights out of her with a patriarchal drua culture that seems to keep society that once had some credence everythtn& going and that subs1d1Lcs
-"father Knows Best. .. Is an)th1ng this squcalty<lean look
funnier in that movie than whtn "Blue Velvet" IS one of those films
Pqay Sue, after having taken a swig 1n which "normal" 1s meant to look
of Scotch -much to her father's deranged h 's no surprise ttiat some
consternation -laughs at him for people have a visccnl a\.crs1on to It
havin1 JUSt bouaht an Edsel? "You Inside Jokes: Unoffic11I remakc-s
were always doing things hke that'" TM mov1n in the followina off·
she exclaims. beat double balls arc s1m1larenouah to "Pcgy Sue Got Married" had to draw companson with their mates.
use a dream sequence Oashback to but t0d1v1dual enouah to pass them-
ciu\C th kind of SOCICL-)-!hat the-~_off as On&IDllS.
Reaaan era represented. It doesn't ., •"Pnck Up Your Ears" and "A
exist. That's the point of "Blue Star Is Bom" (GArland "crs1on)
Velvet," another Reapn-cra movie The first . a Stephen Frcars film on
m which cvemhm1 ls cit"an Tnd the hfc, ~Ind earl) dcalh oT
perfect on the surface (the 'SOs again) ~laywri&ht Joe Onon (pla)ed here by
and ual~ and corrupt underneath (1hc-Gary Oldman) ma)' be based on a '80s). lt s a sham. 1t says. this image true story. but its skeletal plot 1s a
dead-ringer for" A Star ls Bom. ··Both
arc about how stardom can torment
one's love life. particularly 1f one star
is nsing . while the other is waning.
"Pnck .u p Your Ears" 1s a gay love
story. while "A Star Is Born" has
always been something of a gay
allegory.
-•··Pretty in Pink" and "Som~d
of Wonderful."
Two John Hughes productions.
both directed by Hughes protegc
Howard Dcutch. The second 1s a
remake of the first, only wnh genders
Swttchtd
Hughes reportedly ended his fruit·
ful collaboration ""1th Moll> Ring-
wald when she for~ an ending
chanJe on ··Pretty in Pink... She
d1dn t want to end up wtth nerdy Jon
Cryer (as the scnpt onginally called
for), but with hunky Andrcv.
McCarthy, C'\'en thou&h 1t violated
what the movie 1s all a6out .
A )'car or two later. Hushes rewrote
his scnpt, cJast Enc Stoltz an the
Ringwald pan ofa guy attracted to the
wrons person (Lea Thompson). while i~onn.J the one who's right for him
(~aryStuart Masterson). The charac-
ter makes the nght choice this time
around.
•"The M1ssoun Bmtks·· and .. Rancho t>clu•e ...
These two mies represent one of
the great all-time 1ns1dt-Hollywood
lOkes To make 1t brief, m 1975.
United An1m filmed the same Tom
McGuane scnpt twice -once as an
art1 ly tradmonal Wcnem called ""(ht'
M1ssoun Breaks" (us release held up
until '76) and apin as flip contem·
porary Western called "Rancho De-
luxe · Arthur Penn d1rcctcd the first.
Fran.k Perry the second. Both arc
about land batons who hire a bount)
hunter to track down cattle rustlers
McGuane ma4c.m.a.DY.Cha~n-th1
attempt at le1aht of hand. but the
movies arc lhe same and you'll have
fun overlappina thett pJots and tryang
to fiaure out who's pla)'tng whom .
-r' •• CLEANING SERVICE
Dependable • Tboroqh
lteuonable Rate.
General c1wa•aa
or
C•to•
CleUla•
Now
Eitpend1na
To Seoe
You Nttd
WEBKL Y • Bl·llONTBL Y
llONTBL T • SPECIAL OCCA8101'f8
(714) 646-3703
..
State· should·
·develop honOr
system backup
California's nine state-owned ecologicaJ and wildlife
~rvcs and, the people who use them will enjoy a new status
this year. ·
. The s~te 'Dcpanment of Fish and Game plans lo begin
askma pcopfe who visit the reserves to help pick up the tab.
Visitors wall be charged aS2·a-day fee or asked to buy a $10
~nnual pass to observe and photograph wildlife and nature at ns best.
. Off!cials say the program could-raise as much as SS
malhon an 18 months, Ind plan a host of improvements that
will make the fee ~onh paying.
Plan_s for the Up~r Newpon Bay reserve include
assigning three naturalists to work here full time. At'least one-
-naturalist will bet available for lectures and to conduct guided
tours seven days a week.
The naturalists arc also supoosed to develop trails, maps
and signs, establish an on-site rc(ercncc library, develop photo
and specimen collections, organize community outreach
programs and work with local suppon groups.
Gov. George Dcukm~jian proposed the program in his
1988-89 state budget, and It has the suppon of many hunting
and conservation groups. It is a good balance between the
economic realities of more wildlife area visitors but less
money to maintain those areas because much of the tr:ad!llon~I sou.rec of fun~s -hunting and fishing fees -1s
d1m1n1shmg with the popularity of those pursuits.
The program"soiggest question man as t e way the state
plans to collect its fees.. ·
Visit~ts, will ~on the honQr system. They arc supposed
to put thetr money an locked boxes called .. iron rangers" at the
wildlife and ecological areas' entrances.
Cun Taucher. a spokesman for the Dcpanment of Fish
and Game, said state officials believe the honor system will
work because people who use ecological and wildlife areas will
be willing to pay for the privilege.
Only time will tell if that observation is correct, but past
practice shows that honor systems are frequently abused.
Orange Coast residents who ~ularly visit the local
rcserv~ should ':"el~ome the state s effon to improve
ecolog1cal and wildlife areas. It shouldimprove both the
quality and future of the Upper Newpon Bay Ecological
Reserve. At the same ume~ the state would be wise to develop
a backup plan to collect its fees because human nature docs
n~t always honor the honor system and. unfonunatcly. more
vasuors usually means more abuses.
()ptnlona upr-..ct In lhi• epece •• thoM of the Ollily Pitot. Other
vt.wa ftPfe&Md on thlt P-oe.,.. thoM of thW euthor• Md an1su Rndefs'
comment• are lnVlted and may be sent to The o.i1y Plk>t, P o Box 1560. Co.ta M ... 92526
: OTHER VOICES
---------
'African Americans'
It may not catch on. but describing Americans of African
descent as "Afncan Americans" is a ~ood idea.
The new 1erm has been coming into favor among some
black wn1ers and civil rights leaders for several years no w.
Jesse Jackson called attention to the trend -and
endorsed It wholeheanedly -at a recent civil nghts
conference in Chicago. "Every ethnic group in this country
has a reference to some land base. some histoncal cultural
base," he said. "Afrtcan Amencans have hit thnt "°'el of
ma1unty."
More 1mportantl)'. the term "Afncan Amencan" avoids
any reference to skin pigmentation. which ought to be
irrelevant 1n today's Amenca. Far more relevant are the
c ulture and expenence shared b> a people.
In the ca~ of black Amen cans. that expcnencc has been
shaped by centune of oppression, beginning wtth the forcible
abcfucuon and en lavcmcnt of their African ancestors. Blac.ks
hung -0n to-thtir fntan heritage in t e ace of slave!) and
rDC1Sm , creating a nch and distinctive new culture. That
culture can"t be understood without talona anto account tb
Afncan roots
"Afncan Amcncan" reflects those roots. It also reflects a
pndc an being both Afncan ANO Amencan -the.kind of
pndc fell by Greek mcncans. Polish Americans and others
whose ancestors came to America by choice and sufTettd !cs
in the new land. If mo t blacks now choose to call themselves
Afncan American • the rt st of the coun1ry should obhgc them
-and feel honored.
Tiie Mora/JJ1 Ne"• Trlb•ttt, T•com•, WHA.
Military base closings
Man) of the communities near the 86 bases under
recommcnda11on by a aovcmment comm1 s1on for clo urc
will feel the economte pinch 1f tht recommendation arc
approved.
But the nation's cconom) has to be taken into
consideration as ~II. Rllht now. the nation has a larac deficn
to deal wath
Consolidating bucs and closin1 down 1neflic1cnt ba
makes a lot of sense. The recommendations made b the
commission seemed 10 be &ood ones.
This CO\lntry has too many problem arus such as the
homeless, ,JDS and cduauon to be wastin1 tupe)U$.
money nccdlc I> A.la_.,.,. (N.M.J Ddr Nnn
,..
V\~Y
State's political waters boil
with gubernatorial hopefuls
SACRAMENTO-A )ear ago. the conventional wisdom arou nd Sacra-
mento wH that George Dcuk:meJ1an
wanted to bctomc the first three-term
governor since Earl Warren.
psychological blow that would 1m-
,., penl another Senate ic.cJcction cam·
• paign 1n 1994 On the other hand
W1fson has indicated 1n the past that
he prefers the c>.ecum c side of politics to the lcg1slatl\ e And the
aovemorsh1p v.:ould be a better
platfonn for a future run for the
White House than being a nunortt)-
pany senator
The evidence supponang that con-
clusion was fairly hc.a vy-including
prodigious campaign fund-raising cf.
fons on his behalf.
As the year wore on. however.
other, contradictory signals began to
dribble out of the Capitol's executive suite.~ --·
Dcukmej1an. II was said by in-
. umatesk was leaning toward retire-
ment aner two terms. behcvmg that
his quarter-century of pubhc service
was enough •nd hopmg to ama~
some personal wealth that. as an
honest poltt1c1an. he had not
achieved during his time 1n office.
The pre sure on OcukmcJian from
Republican leaders 10 seek a third
term became intense. reaching as far
as Che White House. •
But OcukmcJ1an. in the end. fol·
lowed his personal instincts. and on
Thursday announced his intention to
reure into pnvate hfe.
. It's too early to fully assess ~u
kmcJtan 'sao\cmorsh1p. Hc"s been an
efTcct1ve and consc1ent1ous manager.
but has not addressed the knou1es1
policy issues raised by the dramatic growth and social changt-of lh~
1980s. He also has two )Cars to go.
and says he wants thOS( years to be
productive. as. freed of 1mmcd1a1e
political concerns. he concentrates on maJor policy dec1s1ons.
It's not too early. howe-ver. 10 assess
the political whirlpool crtated by
DcukmeJ1an's announccmcn1
' But it's far from a sure thing.
The almost-eertain Dcmocratac
candidate will be Attorney General
John Van de Kamp. He has poht1cal
hab1ltt1es ranging from his ltberahsm.
a bit to the lcf\ of mainstrtam, to his dull-a -dishwater personality. to go
along with his assets. such as name
1dcnulicat1on and a _poltt1c.al base 1n
vote-tich Southern Cahfom1a.
Van de Kamp, m other words. 1s beatable 1f the Republicans can come
up with an attracti \c. mainstream.
and at last sem1-art1cul11c candidate
who can take ad\ antagc of \ oters·
continuina dnft to the right
Jumpma to the top of the list 1s
newl) re~lectl"d l 1. ~n Pelc
Wilson. a former suit~ legislator and
San Diego ma)or ~ho for )cars )earned to be go"crnor
Even bcfort DcukmeJian's an-nouncement. there v.as a stamng of interest in a Wilson ca nd 1daC) among
Republ ican poobahs Perhaps s11n1ti·
cant!). neither Wilson nor his 31dcs
reJected the poss1b1l11y
Wilson Sllll IS sttll pla)ing II CO}.
He'll probabl) continue to do so until
the sltuatton sorts itself out in the coming "eeks and months. weighing
the pluses and minuses of n king his
no"' -safe Senate sca1 for a lcss-1han-
ccrta1n bid for the go\crnorsh1p
Peter Ucberroth. the bc)ss of the
1984 01) mp1cs and soon-to-retire
comm1ss1oncr of baseball. 1 anothc·r
poss1b1ltty. There 1s actt\e interest
among GOP Icade~ 1n running
Uebcrroth as a Reagan-h~e outsider who would takcdcc1s1vech rge ofthc
state.
Ken Maddy. the GOP leader of the
state Senate and a perennial
gubcmatonal poss1b1ht). sccm1nil>
has takcJl himself out of the runnina
So has Ed Zschau the 1heon Valle)
cxccuuvc and fonncr eon~sman who came close to w1nn1ng a ll
Senate seat in 1986
lntettstingl}. most of the pccu-
lat1on about DcukmcJ1an ucc~o"'
centers on Republican from the
moderate middle fht' nsh1 "-Inf of
the part) hasn't bcc.-n doing "''' 1n rtcent )ears
Bu t the nght will no1 allov. the opponunit) to pas'> 1 tht' moment
the constt\ Jl1' c.-potenual cand1da1c
1s Daryl Gates rcttnng Los .\ngcl<.·~
chacfof poltcc v.;ho would m3ke rnmt'
and drugs ht'i ISSU~ Wh) not? With DcukmcJtan out.
JUSt about anyone can entl·na1n tht<
thought of running
-1\.s one "cteran pol111co pu1 11 Thursda)' ... There"s not a single s1:i1e
legislator who doc'in't "'akc up 1n the
morning. look 1n the mirror and ~-c .i
go\crnor stann& ba\.k"
Obviously -although Deu-
kmCJaan v.-on 't concede the point -11
1mpro"es the Democrats' chances ot
rccaptunng the go"ernorsh1p. be· cause theft' "'on'l be an incumbcn1
He IA-Ould not have to g1\C up 1he Do K'a/l~rs is • s.\.'edic'at~
St-natc to run. but a defeat v.ould be a col•moi t.
I t's possib le to respond tO the
-mar-ketplace and keep-yeu~souJ
There's little difference in robbing a
person of home's equity. home's value
What 1<1 Ne" port lk~ch" To mo'il thcm<teh cs. the) don t 11.nov. ho" to
people. 111' the plan.· the) v.ould like deal "'Ith ..omeonc who 1!> mott\atcd
to II\ c \onwJa~ It hJs boattng. and b) other' alue~
bca.:hc-. and ht-aut~ ol c"er-<"hanging \II m)' c centrtc act1' 111es ma)' not
moods ol lht bJ~ -from gold<'n co t them a tenth ii' mu'h as lhe m al
sunltaht to \Jnt3 .\na "md w "'ho outbid them for a pnmc piece ol
ffi\.~tcnou~ fc'S. 10 quiet rain prope~ \Cl the) don't d1)hkc the
lt 1 v.11h1n ea~v rt'ach of all the n'al The\ g1H him respect nd
cuhural and 1ntcllr«1u..al st1mulat1on ma) be e'en admiration for ha' 1n1 an) one can a<,s1m1latc It ha\ .a beaten them at 1hc1rov.n 13mc-sort
\urplu'I olJob opPonun1t1c It has no of an "'honor .amona lh1r'l' · elTect -
frozen v.-1nters or swehcnng sum-bc'caust' the" understand him Ht
mcrs 1'ia1urah mo t people "'"ould mOll\e are ihe same u their o~n
hke to h\C 1n 'rv.port lk::teh -ti I su p«t that tht" prcscn\."r of tha'i
onl) the) cou'd accumulate cnou&h cla ol pcopk 1\ ta a laric "tent the
monc) to aOord 1t result of our national preoc1.upa11on
To man) re 1dcnts. 1t seem~ that with t"ompet1t1on Mak1na lot of ~hen God made Nev.port each He mone) 1s 1mpl) another form of meant ll to be a place v.hcre people' v.1nning. and v.mnan&" 'l'ohat oount~.
could rell\, li\c. pla) and re<rcate The pre ures that induce high \Chool
themst'hes Hcd1d not mean 1tto be:' a tudent1 to ta~c stero1<h. "''" 11 fcv.
stttl mill or lhc financial capttal ofthc )cars later 1ndutt them to fiaht for
West Cout \\ otk "'"' 10 be me· de' etormcn1 which con e t and thina people commuted to at some dtspo1 a onl~-<'harm1na nc11h· other ptact" Nc•port Beach _.u to be bomood
where )OU did what )OU v.antcd to. Tht' more cllrtmc emong 1hcm
not •hat )Ou had to. ha'c brouJht Nc"'Pc;>rt Bc1t·h the
But 1herc ii • powerful m1nunty honor ofbt1na the Am cap1111I ol the
wh1 h has a totall}' different idea of Y.Orld . me v.:111 obJet·t th11t 1hert au ~hat c"-port '' To them 'few port \ l\t d1fferrnt:c bet~rcn th<' hon<'~t
IXl"h is• soow that la>' golden <'II\ and tht allcaal pursuit of monc~. But
11 '' the platt to make their fii'\t thttt , only a ''"> shaht moral m1ll1on. It as not• place 10 COJO): 1t 1<1 d1fTertn« bft-.~n tho ~ho 11lcp1h
• p&att to bttomt nch. To the\t rob an '""°"~nt of lhc CQUll) an h1
peoplt, tht rntcnon ofct\ 1 dttl ion·. home and t~ who lc:pll)' rob the
maluna "' M>t ··w1u u 1mpron •he 1nnoctnt ot the \llUiC ofh1s home -comm""">""' Rather, ahcma«ion • . Y) b) con,m1n1 his nr11,hb0rhood
"Wall n make '°mconc a buildk'!'' from famal) homes into 'W'lll·to-v.'&U Al lo"8 11 a proJ«t produces condot • -'*" qp. •httt oeOok don't arc In tKh a.c. the objttt1\e 1 to wt.t 11 don'° iM hicahh ol'tk IOC>'C· "'rids ont'1 lttf rtaariUm of 1h<
I alft tuft tt ti drar from lht --.)'I defNlr 10 °"""'· WMn th1 1 the wntt IMt I dclpiw thttt ;topk, and I pl. 11W qun1t0n OI: whether· lhc
......., tMt ..... IMtn beta'* iM1lloilb lft ... or ....... onl I -IMlrCMllf\ly -.W me. I •mt . ~ IUl•.aon. Tiw ,..., q~
........ IMt_cu't ftauftOlll~WI)' ao9 ... F.r! ..... 1_..ICd ~ ...... }Off-1. IDiali'W for? h .. • ~--'° tht' ......... vmeell fMimJ br money dei 1nft • • ...,., m wuhOut
•
AWN
BEEK
sclht\g )our wul to be thl h1@.l l''I or
the nch~t
M> fothcr IAi!t" Jc,eloix·r I 1h1nk
he v.a' I gooJ dCH~lo~r Ill\ JC·
'eloRments made mone~. hut that
"'asju ta b\·produl"t
His interest wa\ not in thl" mune~.
but 1n thf quaht' of the communll\
He had tht .abtht'. w hll h I I.ad, lll
loo .. It a pt«t of land and \CC the
potrnuaJ of Y.hat 11 could be -thl'
lakes. the o~n spares. th(' M"llll'ring
of homn -and tum that puten11al
Ullo rcaht). I am proud of h1'
ubdt\ 1s1ons
This conctntrauon on quaht) did
not make htm \Cr) wulth' he did
not bu1IJ a real c'tatc empire Tho
to v. hom Y..tnncna 1i the onl) thing
that counts ~•II doubtlc '8\ he lo\t
But ~hat Sood i the monc ·" We all
die ~M(ttmc. and ou can't tJlc:c 1t
with ou In m) boo . he won. in \h~
onl)" ~•)' that rcill) count\: lo t
memo!) and appr\'\·11u1on uf th ·
people v.ho h'c in hi\ pfOJCCl Thoit
''a pnzc th.at didn't die v. uh him. but continues <'lr after \'tit. That'\ 1 •
hai>e> tn~ AIJu 11 • '"'Jl'WI ._c-t
rn'~eat.
I Lf' '' ' I I ''" ' b_,.__ ----
NB should get
ou t of burgfar
alarm business
To the Editor:
On DCC' I I. you pubhshcd my
truer conccmma hi-tech problems
with burglar alarm systems an which I
UA$tSted that the city should re view
tts involvement 1n monrtonna pn-
vate burglar alann S)Stcm~ throush
the Ncv.pon Beach Police Dcpan-
mcnt.
That suws"on appears 10 be bolstered by stat1st1cs forwarded to
me by the c11y manager 10 which h~
tatc . "for the last three )cars. the
percentage of false alarms to total ·
alarm received 1s runnmgabout 99.2
percent" He goes on to state that.
"fines collec ted for excessive false
alanns dunng the fiscal year 1986-87
wcrt S6 I, 741 The fines for fiscal year
l"9S7-8 wctt'-$81.160-:!!--
The Finance Dcpanmcnt indicates
that these monies arc 31accd in the
city's general fund an utilized for
Fire Dcpanment. Police Depart-ment, j'.>ublic works. general services
or general administration funcuons.
I ha ve no quarrel with the Police
Department collcctmg a fee when
the> have responded to J bur&lar alarm which proves to be a ra1~ alarm. Nevenhclcss. with false
alarms runnina at 99.2 percent of all
alarms beina monitored at tM New-
pon Beach Pohce Department. 1t
~ould seem that city otf1C1aJs ha ve to
rrv1ew their poStllOn \IS4•\'IS private
burglar alarm installat1ons and afford
some con umer protecuon for the public with rc5pect to the efficiency of
these s)'stems.
Mon1torin& pnvate rts1denttal bur-
glar atarm systems throU&h cstab-h hed hctnscd "command centers"
ma) V.Cr} well be less c-Oltly-to tbc
homeowners and less troublts0me to
the Newport Beach Police Oepan-
ment when one considers the lush
rate offal5e alarms. The collection of the "fines" becomes a ~mcwhat
'questionable practice and could be.
iqarded u nothing more than
another "J>Qrk barrel" project to pick
up fiscal dcfic1enc1CJ an the budgets of
the vanous departments that utilize the~ funds
Tht' cit) of cv. pon Beach and its Pollet OcpartmC'nt should not be
\ubs1d111n1homeowners1n the use of
their buralar alarm s)stems. Ap-
pan:nt.l). la t August. there v.e~ thrtt
fo unded alarms and in the month of
September. s1~ fo unded alarms throushout the cit)' and It 1s poss.ibl)
que ttonable v.hcther '1\) bu~
v.en: cauaht dunng police ttSpO-nsts
to th~ !ottuat1ons.
I sug e I that the 1ty withdraw
from nion11onng m1dent1al burglar
alarm )~ems in order that patrol-
men can attend 10 other duucs and let pnvate cnterpn ~ lup the lad
monitor these calls. filter out the 99.~
percent false alarms and work on the
other 0.8 percent to If) to bnng
cnm1nals to JUSttce and make ourc1t)
a ~fer place 10 "'h1ch tc:> h\le.
01\VIDA.W YOUNG I cwpon Beach
Planned Parenthood
a valuable service
fo the Editor I "a 'ef1 plcaSC'd to read the \\ 1ppcrman~· d1atr1bt' against
Planned Parenthood 1n the Dec U
muc of tht" DaJI> Pilot It reminded
me ho"' mu'h I ap,e_nx1ate P1anncd Parenthood and llS n1g ..quahl)
hC3hh sen ices
In 19 3. I v.-orkcd in San Fran 1 o
~h cmplo)er <JiOilf o er caTth
in\uran\.·e and I wuldn't afford to
bu' It l "ent to Plan~ Parenthood
e'er) 1\ mon1hs lor a pap~mcarand
hre3St cum1nat1on. I paid S l S for
the. ltfe·~' 1ng cancer screcruna sen tttS I till US( the ttthntQ~
Planned Partnthood pcl""IOnnel dcm-on~rateJ to e\am1nc mv bn:a!tlS for
lump · \
The \\ appermans ustd one a.s~t
of Planned Pa~nthood's total bffcr-ing to d1~red1t the orgam1at1on
Through their talttC\ of hM and
e\a crauon tht' \\ 1ppcrman~ them· 'iCl,cs arc-moralh bankrupt ·
Plannt'd Parrnthood 1 a clean.
Yk. "'ell·stalTcd l'rpn1nuon that
C\I t for women and fam 1hes "'"ho
need quaht) medical care.
L. HA\MLI
Ora
T IN H1sroR'
.
A10 Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT I Monday, January 9, 1969
I
by Bii Keane COUlfTBR CUL TURlt by Maratta & Maratta
,
"Kittycat was cold so I zipped her
in here with me."
by Brad Anderson
1
i
·j
I · I
i 8
f l
!' >1 A PEPPE ft ,
kE'S A VUPEtl,
WOVLDN'T Yov Li~( ro BE A PHPU, foo?
-
"What's wrong with them treating you like
a dog?"
tJ) '!::::? ,.,
PEANUTS
SIR. I TMOU6MT WE WERE
601N6 TO TME MOVIES ..
GARFIELD
MAY6E. WATCHIN<S IELE\/l!>ION
WJL.L "TAK£ MY MINP Off
i'HIS PIET
'/
TUllBL&WEEDS
a09&maoes
0
0
11IT1S WASH~"( Af4.1 NcM1S SNIFFIN' M"( a..oTHES.11
'
IN A MINUTE MARCIE .. 11M
WATCl-UM6 DONNA ADAMEK
BOWL .. SME1S MV MERO ..
by Charles M. Schulz
6ESIOE5 IT1S MAAD TO 6ET OUT
OF A 6EAN8A6 W"EN 'f'OU'RE
MOLDIN6 A 60WLIN6 SALL..
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
I'D~
"'G()(X) !>lfAU~ ect.«'2.
. '
ARLO AND JANIS
POR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
~AYEM~ ~~~ SJ FAST?
SHOE
JUDGE PARKER
DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau .
'
by Jimmy Johnson
WMO>ll, AU.~~ ~NA,~~
TOt041U.mSO~
by Lynn Johnston
\FTHE!f'f:. \fJEf'e r \#Je.'D~Y BE.ON~ ~a:a.
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batluk
'=~=' sa:\\4llA-4t~s·::: ---"'°"' k W'f t NUM ---
.... ......... -----=· .... · ......... ,.., .,.._,.. __ _
CIF set to tal<e hard a look on Saturday
at pul out of alritS illhe Coast Classic
We're into leaaue play but the
smoke from the fourth annual Coast
ChnstmasClats1e tsst1U hnaenna
and won't be cleared upforatlcast
anotherweeltasthcCIFSouthem
Section tnes to unravel the facu
concemir11thepulloutofSantaClara
H1ah'sSainuafterthearsecond·
round besUtbl.ll k>ss lo Edison Dec. 29.
Theactronsof vttnan b&skctbaJI
coach Lou Cv1.)lnovich remain one of
theshockenofreccnt ycarund CIF
officialudmat they're 1n a pcrp&eiuna
1ttuat1on.
lfthis~hd not involve someone
"'who is conM<kttd by many as a
virtual lqiend, tt would be veryeuy
Ahhouah the hne put forth 1s that
there were no CIF rules broken, that 1t
issimp(~auerofSanta Oara H1ah
vs. the tChnstmasOas Jc, it's
not qujfe that umple.
Had anyone else in that tour·
nament been auatty of what Cv1·
JUOvich dtd he would have been, at
the least, I •aspect. barred from the CIF playoffs 10 February and placed
on probeuon.
8y pulhnahis team after losinJ.
39-38, Cv_1Janov1ch denied Laauna
Hills of a fifth-place Stm1finalspmc
on Day 3, aod Hununaton Bacn of a
seventh-place tinalspme on Da> 4 of
the tournament.
The dureiard for others and the
v1olauon of ethics 1s an eye-popper.
Cv1,anovach sa1d, 1n essence, .. l
have by boys to protect," as an excuse
fordenyana oth.ers their ri&hts to
compete.
And they ~n&hls. Laguna Halls
and H untanaton Beach paid entry ftts
to play an the tournament and v.ere
1uarantttd fourpmcs, prov1d1n1
they won one oft"heir fi rst three pmes .
.. I've talked to the Santa aara
pnnC1pel,"sa1dCIF AsSOCJateCom-
miss1oncr Dean Crowle) ... and 1t
seems Lou IS becoming ancom-
mun1cado. "But he'~ 1nvest1pt1ng.
We'reaskingfor wnte·u~and we'll
put a package t91etherand take it to
the Execut1ve Comm1t1~.
"The th1n11s we wan I 10 treat every
school and arhlete ngh1. Louisa
h1ghlyv1s1blecoach. butcoache5
can't take things into their own
bands"
Cvuanov1ch, a veteran of3 I )tars
of coachina wtth cnou&h awards and
champ1onsh1ps to till a garage, didn't
hke the offic11t1n... -WeU, oe1tberd1d Edison Coach Jon
Borchert care for 11. but had the last
Sa nta Clara shot fell for a bud.ct to
gi ve Edison a loss. )OU can becerta10
Borchert wbuld not have had to
"protect has bo)ls" with a bailout
The unsportsmanlike flaa on Santa
Clara Sttms Wllhout prc.-cedence and
. All........,. ....
ClDcbmad BeftCala ranntni back Ic.lley Wooda celebrata 21-10 Denial• Ylctory. Wooda ran for 102 yard• and two
&g_pcla_y after ecortnc a toaclldown in !the fourth quarter ln touchdown• on way to Saper Bowl agaJnat San Francl.co.
Near-perfect 49ers unbeatable
Arreast at super·cold Chicago they are.
and a 28-3 victory sends them to Miami
CHICAGO (AP) -Fear of frttz·
ina'> Bear v.cathc~ Not unda). Joe
Montana, Jerry Rice and their San
suffered a heart attack dunng the
season and watched as star afler star
~-cnt down W1th inJunes "h's a great
th1oa ttus team bas done Gave thc!>C
k.a<ltcrcd.J t for takma us so far ··
Gave Montana credit, too
capped by the TD pass to Frank that
made 1t 21-3 "But we rcall ) k.ept our
composure and played hard-nosed
foo1ball."
The wan was the 4Ckrs' SI.\ th in their
last seven games afler a 6-5 stan in
whal has bttn an erratic NFL ~ason
It also broke an eight-same "''""'"i streak by the home team 1n "IFC title
pmes and put San Francisco in
pos111on to JOm the t~lers and the
Raiders as the onl> teams to"' en thl'Ct'
Super Bowls
hmJled the c'ultJllOn to the
scoreboard.
Bears quartC"rtl3ck Jim \tfc\1ahon.
malong his lir~t s1an \!nu: lnJUnng a
knee tv.o month\ .igo, "'as 14 of .:!Q for
121 )3rd$ befor~ ka ~ •nit 1n the fuu nh
quancr for Mile Tomllak.
The 49ers "'ho lost to ( h1cago I Q..9
here 1n the rtgular ~ason. apl)('3rnt
to get an earl) brcal v.hen Tim ~cK)er sinpptJ Neal \ndcr\on or
the b.111 and fl..eena Turner rC<"O\.ert'd
at the Ch1ca10 42. H o~e,er. after a
lh(f('-m1nutf <Sela+. 1n\lanl r~"--
offi c1al Al Sabato ruled that Turner
haJ come back 1n from out-of-hound~
to reco,er and P '"e the ball bad. to
..
.
MONDAY, JANUARY 9. 1989
Roc£1
Cutso•
SP ORTS CoLuMN1s T
thcchallcrat tbecxecuttvcmttllJl&
on Saturday at the CIF office shoula
be interesting.
The only one who saw tt comtllJ. at
least 1 n terms of .a loss for ~n ta Clara.
was Borchert
Borchert sauntered upafierwatch-
1ngSantaClara manage to get past
Cypress H•ah an the first round and happily shouted, .. Hey, they're not
th.at aood! No way, they're no Miter
DctorOccan View."
Borchert then went on to prove u
the followma maht as he fo~t fire
with fire, plac1na all five of bas playen.!
1n the paint to defy Santa aara to bull;· us way throuJh with its powerpmc.
Afterward. Borchert could notMlp •
but stan lauJh.ina when d1scussana the
pme, as he explained how be simply
stacked every bnck 10 lht wall and
Santa Clara refused to shoot over Jl or
aoaround at. instead drivina their
collecu ve heads into 1t. eventuaJJy to
loscatthe lasuccond. • , •
"We packed it so oght l<lon't
believe anyon,e could act through it.
and v.c'rcnot the tYJJC Oftcam you're
(Pleue eee CLASSIC/M)
Bengals pro_ved ·
both si·des of ball
has some stripes
Cinc innati garn ers
Super Bowl berth
off convincing win
. r._
•Key 10 Bengals' win, 8 2
C'IN('INNATI (.\P) -The (en.
etnnat1 Bengals are known for their
flash) offense. The pla)offs have
proven they have a prcuy ~hck
defense to go wnh 11
The defense has put 1n Its two most
1mprcss1vc games en the pla)offs. It
shut down Seattle's runmna p mc In
the d1vmonal pla~off. then throttled
BuffaJo 10 the AFC Champion hap
game on Sunday
The Bengals' 21-10 victory O\ler the
811Js showed the defenSt -ranked
oearthemJddlcofthc FLdunngthc
r~ular sca50n -1s on a roll as 1t
heads to 1hc Super Bo""l ap1nst San
Francisco on Jan 22 . "l thank e\ler)one rated our defen
below the tandards of ' cham· p1onsh1p team." Coach Sam Wyche
said. "But our defrns.c has pla)cd a 11
had to play v.hen the chips tl'Ctt
dO'-"n And toda}' was a defen l"e
win
"Our offense played well. We made
some plays when we had to do 1t. and
-our spcaat tcamS-did a.super job. But
our defense acts the smiley face on the
helmet for this one." ,
The defense was scnsallonal Sun-
day. aided by area• field position from
1tsspcc11I teams. .
The Benpls allowed Buffalo a
season-low 18 t total net yards -4S
ru h1n1 and 136 pass1na. The per-
fo rmance comes one week after
C1nc1nnah hm1ted Seattle lo a
franch1sc·reoord 18 yards rushnta.
The Bills had moved the ball pretty
\lr'Cll on ofTcme.i n &Nov. 27 pme won
by Cincinnau 3S·2 l.Jim Kelly pasted for 26S ya.rds 1n that pme, and the
Benp.ls c~pccted b1m to come out
throwana again Sunday.
Cincinnati's ckfcnsave ptlft to
prfiSutt Kelly and make ham
5Cramblc as much as po$$1blc in an
effon to throw o1T t.ht Bills' um.ioa
pa patterns Kell) was sacked thf'C'C
(Pleue eee B&NGALS/92)
Francisco
team m ates
v.erc Oawrcu.
the Ch1ca10
fk ·•rs w-ere
frozen, and the
49en were the
oncs.h.Qdcd for
the Super BOwJ
1n Florida -sunshine Ptar.1n& 1n 30 mph ~1nds
and w1nd<h1ll factors 20 dearccs
below uro, Montana and Race com·
blned for two touchdowns and Mon-
tana th~ • third to John F1'9nk •~ the 49ers belt the Bears 28-3 for the
NFC champ1onsh1p.
He was true to his v.ord that his
Eel~pcncncc Jn S1m1lar con·
d1tton.s 9C) males cast ai Notre Dame
*Ould stand him v.ell He threw for
199 yards an the first half alone and
fi nished---l-1 of l7 f~ l.&l lards.
<ombtnana wtth Rice-on • 6 .. -yard
touchdown pau 1n the first quarter
anda27-yarder1n the second and also
tl\rowina a ~yarder to tiaht end
Frank 10 the third.
The game bepn l1I 1 l ·<kirec
temperatures and a w1nd<h1ll factor
of minui.-26, leading the scortlx>3rd
to exult ··eearrrrrr Weather" bct~ecn
waTnTnSS totfrc~o~
for s11ns of frostbite.
h~8"n-__. • ..__~
That 1tt up a rematch Jan. 22 in
M1am1 of San Francisco's 2()..2 I u~r Bowl victory over C'1ncinnat1
1n t982. and before the locker rooms
• had even emptied un~y. the 49trs ~ere tnstallcd as 6-po1nt fa \lontH
It was 1he fif'\t road plar<?ff victory
foT the 49ers since 1970. and 11 da~led the notion that the Cah-
fomilns would be numbed 1n the
• lu.nd of weather that hu been JO aood ~ \lac Bcar. rn p&a)offi past
"I'm frcn1na." said 49ers coach
Bell Walsh." fhc)' made a bia Juue of
the ~ther an the Chicaao prcu ...
but I think at may ha~e •orked to our
ldvantllC."
The 49crs had not a s10Jk penahy
-the fmt ttme that'i happtned in
the playoffs since the P1usbursh St«kn 1n the t97S uper Bo-1 -
and only one turnover, The Bean. by
cqnuut, could ~· insidt the 4~ "4G-Jlrd bM only twice. and one Of'thoK
WU after tbe Kore Wll out of tta(h. .. ,, was 1 bitlef IOIS b«eute it could
bt hive bccft 19'0f>'book finish," 11id
ChdlO CC*h Mike Ditu. wtio
"In my mind. 1t may ha~e bttn has
areat~t game under the cond1t1ons."
Walsh said. "With all he had to pro" e.
tt m1tht have been h1sareatcst p mc"
Montana returned the compli-
ment.
.. Bill really prepared us ""ell and
took at upon himself to ma ke urt v.e
prepared . l:"entally u v.ell a
phys1callyJ" he said. "We came into
the pme 1.rcsh."
Race, 1 Miss1ss1 ppi1n. was equall>
at home in the cojll. ~w1n1 hand
like an Eu.1mo an catch1n1 fhe balb
for 133 )lrdS. He had CJUaht only 10
puses for 121 fl.rd and no touch-
downs 1n the 4'9en pla)-ofT loun the
three previous )ears
.. He's one of the best," Mon ta.~
said ... He had a bt• day today and
hopefully ht''ll ltttp 1t up for the MU
few weeb " On h11 first TD atch unda). R1~
kaocd h•p into the air to arab lht
bell: on hts Keond, he rQCMd down
and anbbcd the be.II at his ankl as
San Francitc0 took 1 t ~J half\utie
ltad. "It WAS cold at fint." 111d Ratt .
who also cauaht a 17-yard p1u to kel
tht ..... an~e of the ttto nd hal '
But Montana. Race and the defense
But neither learn could do mulh 1n
(Plea.e see 49ERS/82)
Rice ls proof in pudding
that 49ers had it all going
CHIC' GO (A P) -The iron list
wort' a velvet glove Sunday.
Jcrr) Rice punched a b11 enouah
hole 1n the vaunted Clucaio Beta!'\
dcfenw unday to require maJor
SUflCr). but so smooth I» dtd ·he
optrate that the defen sive doctors
who will act stuck doing the post·
mon cm after San Francisco's 2 ·3
NF Champ1onsb1p nctory will be
arau1n1 for ~ttks where the st1tcM1
should ao
"They SI) his 40 ti me as 4 b
(t«Onds) and n's not that fa t
competed to a lot of other rctttvcn
But "he 1s cxolost\IC," said Cha
comnback Vc-sttt JaclcJOn. one of se~cnl v1ct1m "He knows how to act to the ball. he kno11tts how to
~utc, and he kno~ what to do with
1t once he JCU cootrol." Any autopsy b) the Bears' de-
fensi ve br&1ntru1t miaht $lar1 with
comerblck M1kt R.chardson and
safety Todd Krumm. Both ~ere
pon1nt thud-dtpu bum -not 10
mention rtd ta cc -alter the al"'a)'s-
prec1~ R1~ ran a sideline pauem on
third-and·n1nc lrom h1\ own 39-)ard
hnt earl > en the ~·ond quarter, \pun
to the middle of the field and madl' a
leaping catch at the Bear 35
That v.ould ha'e tx-en eno\lah for
mo t wadeouu But Rice who la t
)Car set standards for "1FL rccc1~ers
that ma) l;ast into the ne~t decades.
"'asn·t nearlv fin1 hcd. C1tch1n1 the
ball in front of a sp1nnina R1chard\On ,
hl' took one tep back toward the
sideline, lcavina Krumm to hua
Richard n 1n fut1hty, and then
an,aJcd back to the middle to k'ampcr
the m t of the 61 ~11\1 untouched. Tho1e who 1d the 26-)car-old
M1u1 1pp1al'\ "-Ouldn't hkc to ct htt
in Ch1cqo's ~ut>-artt1c clime tumcd
out to only pan I naht. But 1h -.ho
predtclcd th.at the •9cn nunc ~ould nde on Rice's ~hm ~houldcr
proved to be prophet~
"The wind v.as ta kan the-ball all
(Pl-... ... aJCS/82)
'
~ ~~~ _.._._ --..-.----
\
• Orenge Cout DAILY PfLOT/ Monday. J~ 9, 1989
StiiJer Bowl XXIII just could really be Super·
Fnm ne A.uedatt4 Pftll
A quickie quiz on the Super Bowl:
What was the highest rated Super Bowl
telecast?
What was the last Super Bowl decided b)' a touchdown or less? ·
\., What was the only Super Bowl played in the
NOrth?
What ~as the only Super Bowl in which the
loser had more ya rds than the winner? A hint: One answer fits all.
no more now than tt seemed 1n the days
Jcadina up to the game.
Neither San Francisco nor Cincinnati wtre
exactly football powers. Until that season. the
49crs hadn't hid a winning scuon 1n five years, the Bcnpls in four, and even though
each posted the best record 1n its conference.
neither was expected to make it te the Super
Bowl.
Only the Los Anteles RaidcrS since then have brouaht the Vince Lombardi Trophy back to
an AFC home.
The same pve rise to Joe Mon\lna as one of
the best quanetbecks in NFL history. stamped
Bill Walsh as one oflhe best coaches ever and
beun the 49cn' climb to Team of the Decade.
Tt also was a damed &ood pmc.
a~&i·:~ in Ult MCOIMI balf. closina to 14on Km Andmon's s;ya,d run
and a 4-Yar_d Aftdcrson·to-0.n ROM pm,
Werschina kicked two more fteld pls•rty 1n
lbe fourtti quarter. from 40 and 23 ,.,._to inctUK the 49tn' ad to 26.14, and the BeniaJs idded oM last score on an Andenon-
to-JfossJ-yardcr Wlth 16 acconds ~ft.
It was the Super Bowl that first matched the
San Francisco 49crs and the Cincinnata
Ben91ls, who also happen to be the teams who
will be matched in Super Bowl XXllI Jan. 22
in Miami:
Stlper Bowl XVI lD Poatlac, Mic~ .. Ju. !4, un.
Somehow. it's not one to stir you r memory.
Neither did Pontiac. a frozen suburb of Detroit, seem to fit the family of Super Bowl
cities. Jn fact. a big attraction was 1 full-size
replica of a landmark from a more familiar
setting: New Orleans' Bourbon Street.
. Nevertheless, the game would be a milepost
in Super Bowl history.
The 49ers' 26-21 victory ended America n
Conference domination that had accounted
for 11 of the 13 previous NFL championship .
It featu~ an epic 1oal-line stand in which
the 49ers stopped the Bcnpls three times from
I yard out. twice with only lO playcn when the
defense sot its 1i1naJs crossed beeausc of noise
in the Silvcrdome.
It saw the Benplsrallyfrom a 20-<>halnime
defi cll, then a Super Bowl record, and actually
outaam the 49ers 356 yards to 275. .
It saw the Bengals get inside the San
Francisco I 0 six times only to come away with
just three touchdowns.
The 49crs built their halftime lead as
Montana. thrtt )'ears out of Notre Dame.
engineered two long touchdown drives. He
ran I yard for the first touchdown, cappina an
I l·play, 68-yard drive, and hh fullback Earl
Cooper with an ll·yard pesa to complete a 12· play. 92-yard dnvc. Fred Werscb1ngadded 22-
The margin was the fourth-C:lostSt in-Super
Bowl history, thcclosnt if you don't~nt the
OaJlas Cowboys, who lost by four point~ twice
to the Pmsburah Steelers and tbtte pcnnts to
the Baltimore Colts. Jn six Super Bowls since, the averqe score
has been 38-12, the closest being Washma-
ton·s 27-17 victory over Miami 1n 1983.
Anderson was a star in defeat, seuma
records at the time for completions with 25
and completion percent.age with 73.S. •
I SPORT S BREAK
Bills unhappy lot
in the aftermath,
season's a ~loss'
Fnm 'he A110dated Pre11
CHEEKTOWAGA, N.Y. -The Buf-Ell falo Bills, sti II smarting from a 2 I -I 0 loss to • II •
the Cincinnati Bengals in lhe AFC Cham-
pionship game, were a sullen lot as they
arrived at Buffalo International Airport Sunday night.
Many Bills hustled past reporters gathered in the
airport terminal, refusing to comment on the game.
Those who did stop took httle consolation from the fact
the team made the playoffs for the first rime in seven
years and was one win away from a Super Bowl
appearance. "You can't say it was a great season," said
linebacker Darryl Taller ... Nothing is g.rca t unless you
get where you're going.•
Bills General Manqer Bill Polian said team
officials were happy to ma~e the playoffs. "but were not
thrilled with the season. because our obJcctive was to
get to the Super Bowl and we didn•t achieve our
objective."
In addition to losing, the Bills were stung by reports of a fight in their locker room after the ~me. "ihere's nothing to it, " Polian said. "It was just
frustration. Guys are shouting and it's over in three
seconds." Safety Mark Kelso said reportc~ overreacted to
the incident "The guys were upset That's all," Kelso said. "It
was over quickly and we're all friends."
"We're just sorry we couldn't bring this one home
for the fans.. ' Kelso said.
More than 200 fans braved ~mph wind gusts and
20-degree temperatures to welcome the team home.
It was ju:t three years aao the Bills had the worst
record in f.rOfC$Sional football at 2-14. last year the
team was -8.
· Quote of the day
"This is the best game I've never seen." -
Te..m McKee, who watched from the upper deck of
Soldier Field as the Chkaao Bears beat the Pb~elphia EaaJes in the fog covered NFC
semdinal pme.
Beavers drop Bruins, 82-69
Eric Knox came off the bench to score m 23 points on Sunday as Orqon Stato ·
handed UCLA its first Pacific I 0 Con-
ferenoc loss of the year, 82-69, here at Gill •
Coliseum. Gary Pay&oa scored 20 points. arabbed
1even rebounds, dished out nine assists and picked up
.even s&eals for the Beavers, now 2-2 in the conference
and 9-3 overall. UCLA fell to 1·3 i.n the conference and
8-3 overall. Knox and Payt0n each hit four of six 3-
point shots for the Beaven. Doa MadAu Jed UCLA
with 2S poi fl ts.. including 19 in the second half, and l 0
rebounds. Darrid Martl8 added 14 points and PMll
RJdaarMem had 13. In the Bia West, frethman Ju&rd
KeMall Y1mpl11• hit a pressure free throw wttb 29
second~ lo JO as Utah St.ate held on to beat New Mexico
State 69-66.
IN THE BLEACHERS
llPi= • 'I f;
·h
I
J
--·
· A flawless, 360-degree clam dunk
Gretzky's goal gives King• tie
WayaeGrettkyscoredw1th 7:16 1efi in ~
the third pcri~ Sunday n_il)lt, ~.ing the ' los An~les Kings a 4-4 tic at Winnipeg..
Gretzky s 30th aoal of the season capped
the Ki.ngs' thrceif:: rally in the third period. Sieve o.cMale, Lee talUe and Job TNelU aot the
Kings' other goals. Tonelli aot his 2 lst goal early in the
third period, pullina Los Angeles within 4-2, and
Robitaille scored on a deflection. Elsewhere in the NHL
Sunday ... Deals SHAN scored a pair of second-period
goals as the Chicaao Blackhawks beat the New York
Islanders 3-2 ... Cam Neely scored two aoals as Jhe
Boston Bruins' defeated Quebec 4-2, handing the
Nordiqucs their fifth conaccutivc loss . . . Gleu
Aadersoa and Mark Messler ended scoring slumps as
the Edmonton Oilers handed the Calgary Aames their
first shutout of the season, 6-0. It was Messier's first goal
in 13 games and Andenon's first in 17.
Television, radio
TEL•V1SM>N
4.:30 p,m. -COLLEGE BAM<l!TBALL: Svracuse
•I Villanov•, ESPN.
6 p.m. -.-.o 8AM<•TIIALL: Cll~n •I Boston
(detaytd), Channel S.
l:lO p,m, -COLLllOll 8 AM<ETBALL: lndiane e l
Purdue, ESPN.
7 p.m. -BOXING: Scheduled--Paul 8•nke v,. Ramiro Adamada In 12-round sUMr·bentamwe'9hl
bout from lhe Forum. Prime Ticket.
7:30 p.m. -COLL•OI! 8 AM<ET8ALL: Notre
Oeme a l Porti.nd WGN.
f P.ITI. -COLLilGll flOOT8ALL: William &. Marv n. Ja.,.nete .. -slars from T'*YQ (~Ytd), ESPN
9:30 P.m. -COLLEGll 8 AM<ET8 ALL: Pacific at
Nevada·Las V"8s Cdelam>. ChanMI 9. 9'.30 p,mi -N O HOCK•Y: C.ntral Rtd Armv
(Sovlel Union) a l 8uffal0 Cdetavtd), Prime Tlc.k•I.
RADtO
6 p.m. -NO 8AM<ET8 ALL: CllPC>ers at Boston
(delavtd), KRTH (930)
Go1r
149ERS MAKE IT LOOK EASY
_1 From Bl u on es eas ~,,._'":.,... friald oondltfons wh~them --:.Mobllna. _With-Jtm ""M"omsscy
jumpina up and down to keep warm blitzina from the left side, flJCied fhe t o 3 -s t fioke durina numerous television time-ball over &he middle. RtQC, w"o aot outs. the inside apinst Vestec Jackton,
Wl•n a t 'T'Q. ~c S&Midenly, on third and 9 at their grabbed the b&IJ offhisanldes 8 yards ~ 1 'l • own )8, the Montana-Rice combina-downfield and easily outraced the
CARLSBAD (AP) -Steve Jones
birdied two of his first four holes and
cruilCd lo a three-stroke victory
s-tnday in the Tournament of Cham-
pigns. the inaaural event on the 1989
POA Tour schedule.
Jones, who never trailed over the
final 18 boles, won the second title of
his career with a final-round 69, three
under par on the La Cost.a Country
Club course, and a 279 total.
The victory was wonh $1 JS 000
from the total purse of S7SO.OOO. It
marked the third consecutive year
that a fint-timequalifier had won this
exclusive event that brinp totether
only the winner of To&ir titles from
the previous I~ months.
Jorles, 30, a ran,y. 6-foot-4, who
qualified for this event with a 1988 triumph in the Pebble Beach National
Pro-Am, faltered only o~.
He tqeyed both the I Stb and 16th
holes anCl saw his lead dwindle to a linale stroke. But be nailed it down
wit'J. a 2S.foot putt for a birdie on the
17th bole.
.. That pretty well turned out the
liabts," said Jay Haas. who tied for
ICCOOd with SOuth African David
frost at 282.
Hus chipped in for birdie on the
lut two holes, rrom 80 feet on the ~-__,..17th and about 3$ on the 18th, for a 61. fl'Oll alto had a 4-11nder·pareft'on
in the sunny, chilly weather.
Auttra.lian ~ Norman wi1h
1 aftot.her 61, was fourth at 283. Chip
leek foUoWed at 71·214. POA champion Jeff' Sluman,
Monit HataiMy and= W*9kin1 tied at 215. Hatllaky 11 up with a
67. Slama llMM 71 aad Wadkins 73.
U.& ()pen ct.•jiion Gunia
llild Nunn Ude·hokler
.}le Ol'lffdl• Wert well ... . ~ w • dolins 71 Md 74.
tion struck for the 49ers. defenders to the end zone.
Findjna Mike Richardson 1n ain&le After Mike Cofer's short kickoff
coverqc on Rice, Montana hit fiis was returned 21 yards to the 46 by
AU-Pro ~ver at the Chicalo 41, Brad Muster, the Bean' finally
where he leaped and cauaht the bell. moved. aoin' 46 yards in nine plays
.. Just before, the play, Joe told me to set up Kevin Butler's 2S:)'.ard fteJd
he'd throw the bell and I should just goal with 3:06 lef\ in the haJf.
go and set it," Rice said. Then San Francisco put the aa~e
After he 101 it, he juked by away by tat.in, the 1teond-halflick·
Richardson and Todd Krumm and off78~ardsin 3 ..i-~s,"appcd byt .. _ raced down the middle untouched to ...-" fK
f:. ve San f ranci1eo a 7--0 nd with third own, S-}'ard D pa_ss to frank.
18 I ft · .._ Montana was five of six for 4S yards e in tu~ quaner. on the dn've, p•ca..:~ a.,.n t .. _ That teemed to be all the 49crs • iu -•K" needed to warm up. Chi~ defente with on tosses to .
After Jdf f uJler intercepted a Rice, Tayloft . Rathman and Rice
McMahon pass at bis own 36, the again before tnc touchdown.
49crs went 64 yards in seven plays. Rathman'• 4-yard run with 6:S3
capped by the 27·yard Montana-Rice left to comP.ft&e the tci>rina came on a
connection that pve the 49en a 14-0 precision·bkc drive that featured a
lead with 7: IS left in the half. 23·yard _pus from Montana to Rottr
The ICOf'C came two plays after Crail-Crail, on whom the ChiQIO
Tom Rathman had but~ 12 yards ckfcntt concentrated, was pined 68
on a draw play on a third and I 0. yards 1n 18 carnes.. •
RICE cqo's 27, Montana stanecl Rice in
• • • motion from the left aide. And u soon rro. 81 as Jack.ton finished Maldowins him
day," RICC said. ''But once h's in the all the WI)' to the npt sick, llice
air, you havetomakeaplayon it. Ina rocketed on a slant O¥er the middle,
situation like this. you know you're l'C9Cbeddown&ohi1Uieeltocaldathe
only toi"I to ,et one shot and there'• low bill Ind left JICboift loo_kiftl at
no way we were toina to allow the nothina more than bis own billoWi•
clements to take tt away from us." titeatb.
In Sin francilco'1 threetuCCC111ve ll'OftkallY,c llicn ._. c:idcta of die
Dla)'Ofl' loiiln. Rice caupt 1 total of day •Y illvc Wound up. OD IM 10 .,._.for ju11 121 yards and no c~ni111,,.... ftoor or the
toucbdownl. oflldaf'I bclOa. Oa 5Uaday1 be broke that skid with Oil 1 ....._. ... 1-1 him Ql6. i==i:.:~~.,:i;: ==p:;r.:-F~~~ g-.:~=•1:1: :.:=. ..... ,ri_....... ·~J to .. rl··= ----·-·
1111 . 111111.MI-..... "" T..-=...-:t.o • Q6. ,. •••• ~·,.. ..... , ....
•
Al't.d ll J'l'I
BaJfalo llllla' Andre a eect (83) la upended
by CtDclnnatt'• Jtrt.c Tllomu (22) after a
pue :::ur10D ID tlalrd qaarte~. Bll1a were e.en ~apen4e4 by aen,ai1, 21-10.
BENGALS WIN CONVINCINGLY, 21-10 .. • .
P'romBl . times for 27 yards in losses Sunday.
and felt pressure frequently.
"The one thing we wanted to do
was keep puttil'\& pressure on him.''
safety David Fulcher 111d. "We
wanted to make them do thinss they
didn't want to do. That's what
happened."
Comerblck Lewis Billups said the
secondary took the game as a personal
challenge.
"We knew the defensive secondary had to play a lot better (than in the
Nov. 27 pme). that they were Joing
to throw a lot more than they dtd the
first time," he uid. "We wanted him
to throw the bell."
The Bills' offense was hm1ted by its
field posmon. The Bills started from
ms1dc their own IS-yard hnc five
times. .
.. Any time you're in that pos1tJoo.
you've aot to set It out (by runn1n&) and try for better J>051tion:· nose
\ICkle Tim Krumne said "We held
and made them punt."
The Benpls' defense tends to play
better at Riverfront Stadjum. feed1ns offthe emotional support. Cinc1nnat1
wa 10-0 at home this suson
Ktumne wd the defense didn't do
anyth1n1 different Sunday than 1t had
in the past.
"We played o~.r basic run defense."
he s.atd. "We JUSt aot after them, and
d1dn•t allow them to act any yards
against us."
"They played defense about the
way WC CAl)eeted them lO play," Kell}
said "There weren't any bi& surpm-cs. but they pla)'ed very well.··
Billups said the defense wanted to
prove tf\Jt It deserves rnpcct as one
of the best 1n the lcquc.
"We didn't have a reputation
That's what we wanted to pin," hr
said. "We wanted to prove to cvcl')-
body that v.e'vc aoi a &ood sccondar)
We've told everybody all yur we
have a good secondar). We had to au out and prove It ...
* Cincinnati's
-fake-punt was
·a play for real
.,... a .... ,, >
NAllOfeAL COMPl9'1NC• CH~SHlP
Sc-. .. ~
s.tl '"al'Cb<t 7 7 7 7-• °""" • , • ·-l lllrll Ollattw
SF-IUct •1 OHi trom Mon•flll (coter lllCk/ II 41
S.C911d Qu.\rtw
SF-ltl<t 27 OHi ''°'" Molli•"• !Corer ~lc:kl, 7.)S
Cr.-FO e u11« n , ti s. TIWfO..,_
SF-Fren11 S oeu from Montana !Coler
kldll. s 21 , _.. °""""" SF~atrvnan • run (Cofer 1c1c111. •m A~lO
s" CN F •ii 00wn1 71 IS
RVIMt·YtrOI )7· llt 7S·91 ~Hslnt ,.. 116
Rtlurn Y arcb 74 I
Comp•Afl-lnl 17·77·0 10-0•1 ~ed·Yaro1 L.011 7·10 H
Putllt •·JS 7·ll
Fumllle$·LOll 1·1 2·1 ~11.es•Yarin H l ·.U Tome ol Po\M\Mon Jl-o.l 2'.51
INOtVIOUAL ST A TISTICS
19AITA ..... S .....,.. Ca f11w.e
hdk~
f ,.L t.Men n 11
Phoenix -..20 11 s..u.. 17 17
Porll.nd ti 13
Golden $tale l2 16 ai.ws 10 n S.cr~•o 7 21 Midwnt DMMtft
I'd. 661 ~· .. S I
516 3
Sil J ,,, 7
Jl3 II
2SO 12'
Denver
Houston
Oali.s
19 17 613
19 12 613
17 12 516 I
Utah S.nAntonlo
Mieml
11 1• s.J l .,
10 21 313 9
3 11 ot7 16
EHtwn C.,.,eftU
New York
Phlla~la
&oston New Jeuev
Washinglon
Cl\arlOlle
Cleve anci Detroit
Atlanta
Mllw•ukN
cruc~
lnd1aM
..... DWl'*'
.: 21 II
16 IS
14 " 13 19
' 21
' 12 C..,.,.. D1visJtn
74 s
21 9
21 11
It II
16 1• • n ~Y'I ktrei 1.Attrt IJt, Sa'! ANOt''O ,.
N-York 134. ~ 100
. T ....... l Garnet
656
516
"' ~
JOO
290
• >
' • II
11 J
121 --
700 3
656 •
611 6
S33 •
251 17
~ti kJtOP 00 p m Ulll'I 11 CPlattOllt , C )I) om
Pnllaeltlpllla II Oa u S 30 o m
Clevtllllld at Stattw 7 om.
""°9Clllr •' Gol<Mn Sr11t, 7 JO o m T""411v'' Gtmtt LM•n 11 5-u amenro, s pm
Otn'<tf 11 Wu111ng1on. c lO om
UltPI •r Miami, 4.lO om
Ctlltavo at Atlanta, 4.JO o m
Sttlllt 11 PortltnO, 7 30 om
Knkl" 134, a~ 100
CL ... t•s -Norm.n 2· 11 l>--1 ' No•I s 11
?·2 I?, &tti.-mln • ' I ) I) 0.1 ..... 11 )I 2·)
26. Grant S• 11 4·S 14 Nraon 7 c O O 4 Sm1111
S-10 S·• IS, WtN .. mJ l t c c 10 G•rrt<i. I· I
0-0 ?, Pooton 0 0 O·O 0 Tota I 41 9S .. 2• 100
NEW YCHll( -Newm41n II-IS 0 I '6, O."'
itv C•ll •·• 12, Ew11>11 10 IJ •·1 7' Jacuon
7· 1• 0-0 U G W"klnJ S-t 3-4 IS Tuc:lltr 0 3
<H> o. Walker 2 7 O O c 5•••<"'llno s 9 I ·2 12 Gr"n l·• 4·6 10 ! w,.._.,,, l ·S I 2 7 &utltf
l·S 0-0 ' Mveu 0 ? 1 2 ? fOflll Sl IOI 11 ·21
134 Sar. .,... 0Uat1Wt
LM.....-2' "• n-1oe New Yen n n » o -1>4
J•Po.111 90.tts~mtft • G Wlltr.tn\ 2,
SlrtCkltnO FOUitO out-Hone llteoovM\-LO• A~ 5' (Wolf t ), New Y0tk 61 10." .. v 17) Au1m-L.o~ MHM 2' (Ga r'rtek SI, New York ll (Mlilson 10>
C ..... ,,,..,., scwes
WIST L0<19 ktcll St 10, sa1' ioM SI. ...
Of"°" SI n , UCLA "
Ula l'I $1 " New Melll(O St " SOUTH t T~ St 13. W. C.rOWll 74
Soultl Alabema 11. W l(tfll\Kto.Y 1•
IAST
St 8onaYefllurt 74 MaUICl'tulltl\ 70
SCHEDULES c..... men
TUUOAY
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Cal 1--''" t i Southefn C IOtlllt C~ 7 lO
THutlSOAY
CqftCOtO • (,.I' IWauk.MI t i Clw1ll COOtM lrvlllt, 1 )Q •
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Ca klrn.1 C~ •I Cal Lut11to11. 7 lO Cl'lf' '' C?i-tOt 1n1111t at Cal laol•" 7 ll
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WaOMESOAY Saoolt0tc1t a t Oraro. Cotti 7 30 -n-TU!t.OA'V Or•~ Coe" 11 Rancho San•·•vo 1 30
GooOtn Wt" at Sa~ 7 lO
H19ti 5CMol boVI
WIONISOAY
St• V1tw LtlOUI -SadOleOack t i E"encte 1 JI), C0tona Ott Mar •• Unlvenlly, 7.JO. Tusttn
•• NtwDOf't Har6or 7 )I)
Sullltl LHVUI -Weslmlntltt ., Octen VttW, 1JO, Marlfla 11 HUlll<tllllGn Bead\. 7 JO
Marina •• Huntinvton &t•Ch. 1 JO
Pa<HIC Cot'! L .. llvt -Lllll.IM lltac11 er
L1111.1na H •• ,, 7 lO. Co\la Mesa II WOOObf1~ 130
South Cot\! LH91.tt -Oen• Hill' ., ''"'"' 7.JO '
A~I L .. llUI -81tl'IOD Montll<)mtf'y el Mater CH 730
FRIDAY
S.. v .. w U avue -8~ &J Tulllll 1 JO New_.! Har~ at Corona o.i Mar 1 JO
SadoltOac:k a l UNVtrlil\I, 7 30
Sunwl La•--Fount•" va;iey •• '1esr tnon\ltr. 1 )I), OcN n v-ar .Hunt"'91on !keen.
7 JO, EO•IOll 11 MarlN, J JO
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SATUaOAY Non-~ -Mater Del II OcNn v .. w. I .,,, .
Ortnoe Co.et DAILY PILOT/MOftdeV, J""*Y t , ,_ -
~TUelOAY
PllllJ ... t4 UCI S 11111 ''""'° P.clfle ti (.!Will C..... ll'Ylfte. 7 11"' T'NUMOAY 1rN NIMter I C..... al (IWP\I C .....
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Anottui LHtut .:.. llto11rv al Mater o. ..
I .JO TH\HlSOA Y •
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7 lO Ed•IOll t i MaflM, 7 lO
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Treouto """ 111 Cost• Mna' 7 A"9tlus LNOut -Mater Ot1 a t St Pt '" 1~ •
UTU.DAY
Non·leffllt -Tus1111 •• W~l(fllt. 1
Ull•Verllh• at EO•Mlll 1 Metttr Del al Lu Vt9H Vlltty, 2 Om
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W•ll'l•no•on •• ~. 4 JS o"' New Yori!. 111ana.r, •• P•l•'*>WOl'I •ls 11 m
MIMtlOlt at Pn.ltotlcH111 •JS 11 m
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, ~ 6 '
HORSE RACING
l•nnc•I. I $1 , Overtlme NOM PtNlttt\-Nont
Slloll on OOll-LDl Anotltl II 7·1 1-77 W.nnl~ 12 16-1· l-3' Powe<·Plav OooorrunH•u -Lol An9t!H 2 ol
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A-15094
Stftlw\ **" M1· •r Bercier 150 000
Dalt Dow1<1n. U0.000 •
llruct Cr•moto11, US,000
Orvil'-Mooor. s?O 000 •
81-y CHO« 117,000
Al Gt•tltf'Dtr, 116 000
Dave Htll ilS,000
Wt ller ltmt>rl'k I 13,SOO Cn1 C111 Rodnoi. I 13.SOO
Larry M.owry, 112.000
ArnolO Patmtr I 10.SOO Don Btts, 110,SOO
L .. Elder 19,000 Harold Htnnln9, 18 000
73.·'1· .. ·7l'-21t '1·n ·1S·•1-n 1 10-10· 71·76-217 1'·75-72·~n -7'-71 ~,,. n -n -n-11-2'1
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PASSING-San FranclKO, Mon••na 17·17-0·M CllJ<.ffO, McHMton ,,_.,,.1-m.
T on'ICJ.lk '· It· 0· SS. RECEIVING-San FranclKo, ltlc.e. S·ll3.
ltttllrnan S·SI, Ttvtor )•S1, Cr1i9 2·l3. Frank
2·20. CPllcaeo. AnderlOll S·JI, T119rn1on 4·S2,
MCIC/nnon J·t•. M«r/1 2·25, Gff\try 7· l.l,
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lf'1--Gf'een 8ay (NFL/ 35. 1(1nuit City IO
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IN._.. Y Jets IAFL> "· a.rumor• J lf7t-tl1111111 C11y (AFLI 2J, MlnnetOta
lf71-9tllitnO't (AFC) 1' O.C.1 ll
lfn-Odu tNFCI 14. Moaml l If~ (AFC) I• W1111in91011 7 lf7~arlll <AFC/ 2•, M<"f\tMlt 7 ltf~ef\ (AFC) 1', M-ta • 1'76-P•llJCW'vtl (AFC/ '1. o.a.J 11
ltn-o.tllancl IAFCI n M.nnftola IC lt~"-U (NFC/ 17 Denver 10
ltn-f>lllMMKtfl CAFCI lS D• ' ll IM-P1ll'8Urtlll (AFC) )I R-It l"l~i.nc! IAFCI 27 ~ 10
ltn-* Frri (NFCl 26, Cinconnall 11
lflJ-WUlW!tron INFC/ 27. M·•nll 17
1914-l.. Raodl<'' (.llFC/ • WH1'11J19ton ' ltt~ FtaJK•KO /NFC) le Mlttnl 16
1"6-Cri.caoo <NFCI '6 Pffw EntlanO 10 1917-N Y G11nt1 INF() )9, Otnllltr 20
l,.._W•""•neton INFCI c2 Denver 10
TNs weetr'' tt'eiut •nts
LOS ANOILIS -11'9 ROCll Cr..-CH I•<
Lallt, CHl•I( Leooon. E111abtll'I Lall• Pvrt·
mio l.allt San Gebrtet lltlvtr' (north tnO ffll
'°''"' alV~ltSIOa Ct llu< L•llt
... ...
............... 1 i~EAD :
THE !
. NEWs1•
wen tn thl ftef ,.......,.., Ptomot-==
" you .. Mlt-mottvMed Md like wortdng wttft •.....-. • .,.. ,.,., bi .... ~
you've .,.._ wllllftg for.
TNI 11 e GUAMHTIEO IN-
COME °' MOO = ..-to ...,....,,.........,..,.
of"' to 11'00 .......
Nt ....... --~·· s**· up~... .
Not when there's DO
Proposition 99 passed. Adding over $600,000,000 in new truces to what California
smokers are already paying.
Does this mean that you have to start smoking something less than a Top 10
brand because taxes have jacked-up the price? Not when there's DORAL. Ifs the ·
only Top 10 brand in America with a low price.
Get Top 10 taste and save money. too. Smoke DORAL.
DORAL. Thetmvest-Priced Top 10 BtaDd.
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : Smoking
Causes Lung Cancer . Heart Disease.
Emphysema. And May Complica11 Pregnancy.
•
WRA LIGHTS m, 1 mg rar. 0 s cno ~ UGHTS lJGHTS MtNTIO. u mg ..r. 0 7"' naw. LIGHTS 11'&.
llGHTS MENTHOi. Ws 12 rng tar". O I "'9 1iCMt. f:\l.l flAWR IXYa M mt ,. • 0 I mg ......
All RMOR MBm4Dl. ruu FlMOR MlNTitOl •• 111111 ..... u " ...... RAl FUWR u ..
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•
.. ~ C... OAALY PtlOT/ MOndey, J8nU81Y 9, 1989
~coring statisties
·for Orang~ Coast
JArea basKetDall
.By ROGER CARLSON ................
· Steve Chappell, a 6-foot-I Junior.
lmoW6 the true meaning of home
court advantage and it shows with his
22.3 scorina average. because this 1s a
case of not only beina the kid on the
block with the ball, he's the kid on the
campus with the JYm.
<>ran.ce coaatArea Top 10
"-""• K9'MI t tit •'19. M I Bahnsen, NPI. Chr. t 211 24.1 JO
2, Cufll,, E•l•ncla 14 334 23 9 34 l. Chappell, Lib. Chr. I 113 22.3 3' .
4 Perk•, Marin• 16 352 22.0 27
5. Norrnen, Oc .. n View 14 299 2U 34
Liberty Chrisuan High's Min ute-
men olay their home games 11 the 'First Bapus1 Church on Pinc St. in
Lons Beach. as well as using the
facility for their daily practices.
That's because Chappcl's dad is the
pastor of I.be church and the small
Huntinaton Beach school is able 10
use the &Ym (it's actually above the
around, on stilts) through the gen-
6. Nguven, Cost• Men 12 256 21.3 JO
7, Rigdon, Maler 0.1 17 321 11.9 32
I. LH, Newp0rt HerbOr 15 261 17.4 3'
9 Allred, Irvine 17 289 17 0 2S
10 Merli. Foun1aln Vallev 13 214 16.4 24
adm11s L1beny Chnsuan Coach Rudy
Sass. "But you can't beat the rental
price."
Ch•ppcl's scorinJ &\.el'llt 1s third
only to Estancia Ha&h's Mike Cunis.
who has fired tn at a 23.9 chp. and to
area leader Jon Bahnsen of Newp6rt
Chnstian Hi1h. which 1s a member of
th e small schools Academy Lcque. as is Liberty Chnstaan.
Bahnscn's top aame 1s 30 points
and he has scored in 20 or more in
seven of his team's nine sames. all
victoric
erosity of church. ·
"It's a long drive each day 10
practice. about an hour each way."
Chappel has been the key figure in
Libeny Christian's game. scoring 1n
the 30s four times with a high of 36 in
paClng the Academy League team 10 a
S·3 overall record in non-learue f'llav
Cunis stands as the area's No. I
scorer in terms of major schools. al'd
second to the. Estancia· guard is
Marina Hish's 6-foot-10 sophomore
Cherokee Parks. who has been scor-
ing at a 22.0 pace.
* C.,.. dll M.r (10·4)
"-YW 9 tp •ve. M Herrington 16 1'3 12.0 19
$pr•ll 14 163 11.6 17
Cwlertnl• 14 134 9.6 20
W•. Johnson 9 91 9.0 24
Fredericks 13 72 5.S 12
PllM 14 57 4.1 10
JKkson 10 3' 3.6 9
Mather 12 42 3.S 7
Flint I 21 2.6 9
Wt. Johnson 6 9 1.5 5
Wells 3 4 1.3 2
Benner 6 S 0.1 2
Coshl MHa (2-10)
"-Y« • tp • .,.. '"' T. Nguve11 12 256 21.3 30
C.sa' • '3 10.I 11 Vu 11-77 6.4 14
Cri.ng I SO 6.3 14
Br•nch 2 7 3.5 5 OletHtll 6 20 l .3 9
LHhY 11 33 3.0 7
Omave 10 14 1.• 4
B•rnt' 6 a 1.3 2
H•rdlng 6 7 1.2 2
Yodtel 7 6 0.9 3
H. Nouvtn I 9 0.9 6
P. Nouvtn 5 4 o.a 2
Burnell 6 4 0.7 2
Eclsen (l·f)
"-Yer 9 tp •ve. M
Martlnnu 17 211 12.1 22
Murphy 17 167 U 17
Thobe 16 120 7.5 15
Lovt!Kv 6 61 6.1 21
A. Baird 17 97 S.7 12
Tyler 16 61 3.1 11
Carey 14 46 l.3 I
Smvser 7 17 2.4 4 Jessie 3 7 2.3 3
8. &.lrd 1 lS 2.1 6
Colclough 14 73 1.6 11
Estlinc&. Cll· 1>
........ • tp 1ve. '"' Curtis 1• 334 23.9 34
Heredl• 14 1'6 14.0 21
Ki.r 14 162 11.6 21
McOanlel 14 lJO 9.3 16
Br•cllev 6 40 6.7 11
Scholfl 16 63 4.S 13 H•u 13 S3 4.1 9
Bunker 6 12 2.0 •
W1tson I 9 1.1 S
Feuntaln V...., (lJ-2)
fll\lyer • tp • .,.. '"' Merli , 13 214 16.4 24
Corcor•n • 1S 111 12.S 2~
T W~•ver lS lll 12.1 24
C* 11 ll 7.4 13
0 . Weaver 11 61 6.2 13
Hellbusch 14 80 5.7 10
* Hogan 15 71 4.7 14
Murdent 15 65 3.0 12
Nguyen 12 34 2.1 1l
Bichel 7 11 2 6 6 S..cv 10 15 1.s 4
Stead I 9 1.1 5
PtillllPS 6 4 0.7 2
Huntln9teft ... di <S·f)
fll\IY9' • tp • .,.. '"' Long 3 59 19.7 ll
Or•ke 12 161 13.4 25
Lucas 13 157 12.1 20
Kaller 12 lJO 10.8 27
Thompson 13 123 9.5 19
Kllewskl 13 '3 7.2 IS
Harrigan S 19 3.1 6
·paz•nll 11 26 2.4 7
Stewert 7 17 2 4 •
La Greek 4 9 2.3 3 Tosl•do 9 19 2.1 7
Rie• 4 7 1.8 3
Irvine (IS-2> "-Y9t • tp 1¥9-he Allred 17 219 17 0 25
J. Molle 17 237 13.9 27
R. Mollt 17 230 ll.S 22 Trout 16 147 9.2 17
Ounmever • 17 73 4.3 9
.9•1ns 17 46 2.7 11 • 'M. Littler 10 24 2.4 11
8ul0ne 16 ~ 2.2 9
0. Lllller 14 24 1.7 s
Maller -5 6 1.2 4
L..ltiUM 9Mdt (6· 7).
.... Ytr ••• .,.. ...
Trevino 13 207 lS.f 34
B .. nton 13 141 1 U 16
St1fford 13 '3 7.2 11
McKeown 12 ll 6.1 15
Buu 6 30 S.O 12 Qule6ev 12 52 4.3 10
Br.uer 6 24 0 1.2
BudlsMl.lm I 16 2.0 4
Schmidt 3 6 2.0 3 •
Swavne 3 s 1.7 4
Cumming' 10 16 U 6
Weenlg 4 • 1.0 2
Lllel1Y CtwbfWI CS·l)
P\lyer • fp 1ve. h9
Chappell I 183 22.3 3'
James 8 119 10 9
Ellett 8 71 9.1 19
O'Conner S 26 5.2 12
Bevikl•n 7 27 3.7 9 Price 7 20 2.9 •
W•de 6 10 1.7 4 ~tt 2 3 1.S 2
~""' (1-1) "-Yer Parks
F. Carreon Tu Nguyen
t9P1ve.M 16 352 22.0 27
15 108 7.1 15
16 106 6.6 13
* Newfield 16 77 U 11 Cameron 16 76 4.8 lS
Th. Nguven • 19 O 9
Schultz 11 35 3.2 I
Sud•kow 3 8 2.7 S
Shelor 12 3 25 10
Ha&elrfg · 10 2S 2.5 7 Ff~ds 16 3S 2 '1 7
~.., Del ( 16-2)
PUiver • IP 1\09. M Rigdon 17 321 11.9 32
Morris 9 122 13.6 21 Bovie 18 209 11.6 23 Karicn 18 169 9,4 16
Stone II 134 7.3 13
Andres IS 66 4 4 19
O'Neil I 35 U 10
Quinn 18 64 3.6 6 lvev 6 1• 2.3 8 Monevpennv 13 24 1.1 S
Bovd 15 26 1.7 6
Slraub S 7 1 • 3 Greene 12 16 1.3 3
Nolan 11 14 13 4
Puenlt 7 9 1.3 4
Roelen 4 S 1.3 2
Bruggeman 4 2 0 5 2
New'*1 Ctuistt.fl (f ·O)
fll\IYtr • tp •V9. '"' Bann,en 9 217 24.1 lO
Evereu 7 107 15.3 26
Cla rk 9 179 14.3 20
O'Brien 7 65 9.3 '10
c.reaga 9 51 5 7 10
Cugno 6 33 3.7 11
Humber 9 «> 4.4 I
Andrews 9 33 3 7 11
Rusen I 19 2.4 7 ·
Visel 9 ll U 5
Curto f 7 0.1 3
New'*1 Hart. (11·4)
fll\IVfW 1 IP_,,.. M
LH 15 261 17.4 3' Grav lS 166 11 1 22
Nguyen lS f9 6.6 12
Long 13 16 6.6 16
Pari$h 14 12 S.t 12
Martinez 13 73 s 6 17
OeBusk 15 62 4,1 11
Freeman 13 '42 3.2 10
Alexlc 5 15 l.0 4
Wlntams 7 14 2.0 6
Atatus 6 I 1.3 2
O<Hn view < 10-s1
PUIYtf' 9 IP 1ve. M
Norman 14 299 21.4 34
Fronn 15 194 12.9 21
Evans IS 161 10.7 11
Marlin lS 17 S.I 1S
Ernsl •lS 11 S.4 10
Td. Pelonls 1s 71 s.2 10
Tm Pelonls 12 56 0 9
Ten Berge
G~hnev
K•rtlner
Phillip$..
Plrrl
* 1 33 4.7 13
12 '3 l.• 10
I 21 2.6 6
6 14 2..3 4
4 9 2.3 4
S.ddlebldl ( 14· 1) ,.._y., e fp av._ "' Marshall lS 227 lS.1 26
Oollin lS 731 10 23
Agnew 12 113 9 • 18
Simon 14 105 7 S 16
Galbert 1 S 110 7 .3 11 Moore 15 14 S.6 15
GO(Tlez I 31 3.9 7
O.Moss 10 17 1.7 6
Horn • 6 1 s •
Wllll•ms 9 13 U 3
U!Wenltv U·'> ,......., t fp av._ he
Ferrell 14 llO 12.f 24
Mumaw 10 127 12.7 31
Glanen 14 121 · 9 I lS
Oliver I• 126 9.0 16
Wolfe 2 13 6.5 7
Elmore 14 19 U 14
Oleler 14 S7 4.1 I
Wllllt mlOn 6 17 2.1 S
German I 20 2.5 7 Harris 9 19 2.1 7
Hebb 3 4 1.3 2
Chase 4 • 1.0 2
Westl"Mnstw Cl· 10)
"-Yer t 9P •V9. M
Oteltl 13 t76 13.S 26 Shew 1l 145 11.1 22
Wilktn' S 33 U 9 MurPhv 12 69 s.t 13
Vu 13 66 S.1 10
He4d lJ 64 0 12
Okura ll 47 l.6 6
OfTrlnldad 3 I 2.7 4
Davison 1 2 2 0 2
~IPO • S 1.3 3 lsl'lll 9 12 1.3 3
Hern.ndez 6 7 l 2 3
Kaw'a$himt 9 6 0 7 2
G•lla9her I S 0 6 2
Roussell I 4 o s 2
Woedbrldlt <l·f)
"-Ytr t ta t"9. h9 COhtn 1 1'3 13.0 27
A'hkenazv 10 tr '·l 20 Corken 11 101 9.2 19
T•Vlor 11 19 I 1 IS
Mclemore 10 SS S.5 12 Shllf)klln 11 SI S.3 11
SchwHr I JS 4.4 12
MurPhY 9 39 4.3 10
NHh 7 9 1.3 3
S.UCGJo 9 11 u 6
Lett•s 2 1 O.S 1
Rev 2 1 o s 1
C~ASSIC •.• American Heart "t. AssociattOii J'romBl ----------------------------1 goillgt01n11midate.'' said Borchert.
COOLlllG SYSTEM FLUSH
'29!!TAX
• INSPECT COOLING SYSTEM
• FLUSH COOLING SYSTEM
• CHECK HOSES AND BEL TS
• RESTORE WITH UP TO 1 GAL. ANTIFREEZE
Pi.ase present coupon 1t tim. of wn te-up One coupon per per90n
per tr•nsaction. Only f()< Mltl4Jbishl vehicles aod Chry91ef'
built/Mitsubishi powered venlclff.
Ollec ..,._ 1.31 •
The officiating was. at best. the
worst of the four years this tour-
nament has run and probably the best
thin.I that will have come from the
Cvijanovich Pullout wall be better
officiatina in the future at the Coast
Christmas Classic.
"Wedo have some concerns that there may have been some people
workina_ tbe tournament who arco 't
as q_ualified to handle t..be oontests." said~= whotllplainechbat n can · 11c1 by us1na t..be Om:we
County Ofracia& Association u a
bate to usip, rather than u inde-
pendent nrrunizer. The~official who did the
EditoD-Sanla Qua pme WU the same who displayed 1ncompt1ent
reuon.ina in levelin1 three technical
fouls on the Dana Hills btncb in t..be Dolphins' pine With Corona dd Mar
the Dilbt bd'ore, oustina a stunned COldi Rich Skelton.
What it showed wu an official
Pi-epba
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SI Laoune leech ~ $1 Irvine 61 COSTA MISA (2-101
( .. KMk CNlt LM9Ue) ., SeddleOKk
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l6 Dane Hlh
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loll 38 Feo. t-Wooelbrldet• (hOmOI
44 FtO. 1C>-el CCKl8 ~sa·
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•t U9EATY CHalST'IAN U ·l>
Jen \t Ne•Mn Harb«' (~~
Jen 20-<orone def Mer• Olofnel
Jen. »-et 'Ul\lvenlt.-•
(AcMMW UeeM)
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76 .Feb >-St Mictl.etts• ChOmel
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S.S 41 EKA!tldodo 34 6S Vume
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Jan. 1>-et Cor~ dll Mer'
Je" 1 ...... 1 E•IA.MI'
Jen 20-Unh•enl~ lllomel
ts Jetl 2~· (home) n Jen 21-1 Tutltfl'
..
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51 Feo 1-<orone def Mar• 1nom.1 5' Fii> J--Estenci.• (hOmeleb 1-.1
st Unlver11ty• 51 Feo ,_., s.ddle08ck •
JO OCEAN VIEW llO·SI '° cs.... L...-) 75 San INtt.06 FOUNTAIN VAi.UY CU·JI Jen ,,........._, cnr • lhomel n Sou1n ...._lfleld
1 S kn Lu" ()1)1'" 14 l°' Alemilot (~ L .. Wtl
" Min ion v .. 1o 11 WOOdtWIOM
S6 Ml\Mon v..io
'1 Convton 11 El TOfO
•1 Sall LUIS OblMIO
6' ~·O"•"'
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5'
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Jen J7-t St Meneret'' •
Jen 20-St. MICllMI'\• (!IOme>
Jan 2.-Cel Lutheran• (~)
Jen 27-Heru ... • lhot'nel H ll Jl-el New-1 Christ.en•
FIO. >-St Mar..,.et 1• lhomel
Fa J-1 $J Nl.IC.llMt'l' • Feo ,_., Cel L11thefen• •
" """"'""* tA.ustr•'·•I 1T CeOistr ano v....,
0 Meler C>tl
6t us Veee• Ve .. l t Cem.no "Ml 6S £u 1 AKenilOll (le l
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dC1e.nmned to place bis own rabbit
earsovertbcaoodoftbepmeand
players and ifnothingelse, hc's livina
prooflhat Cvijanov1ch can recoanize
a lousy refe~.
But observers m11nta1n the Edison-
SantaC1ara matchup 1howcd nothing
in tcrmsofone--sidcd officiatina, That
it was poor1 is l'Ql disputed. But it was
not one--sioed.
play lcss~iveJy, but Borchen
JUSt tofcfihem, ·•aJI we'ttdo1n1rs
tryina 10 protect ourselves.·· .. When coachcs&0crazy about the
offic1atl!'f.-we'll &Jve ahem that. .. said
Crowley. ·But that docsn't11vc them Ole riaht to pull their team, to take the
tournament and thcea.t~wh1ch has
bttn one oft he ti>umey'1 boosters
~He saad he's not com1na ck and I behevc h1111:• said Perry anc.rthe
S,nta Clara contmaent let\ town
What Santa Clara could not ~t away with. however, were the· fore-
arm shivvm" they Hke to unload on
defensive players.u Borehen de-
scribed the maneuver, which as often
termed''phy$1Ca.l ,'' but in reality is
doscrtotbc meantrstyleoftbe NBA.
Tbefact is )'OU don't "shivver"
Edison. Not in football, nor in
buketbell, and ifSanta Oara wants
further JJrOOf, it can check with Lont Beach Poly and that school's relative
latk of success ~inst Edison.
Edi10ndoesn tshivver, oordocs at
tcceptintimjdation.
law 1 nto their own hands."
Santa Qara fans. I'm told, Wllh
Cvijanovich's presence lcndina fuel
to tbe fire, nearly turned the aym into a not scene.
One fan wentanerToumamcnt
Co-Di~torChuck Perry and de·
man"ded to know how much he had
1>9td the official to throw lhe pmc in
Eda son's favor. as if Edison and
Estancia arc someway connected within a scheme to hon all those poor
boys from Oxnard's Santa Clara
Htlh. who manaaed to create Lhrtt
loSKS for themtelvcs 1n a tournament
wh rch they en tercd as the top-ICCded
quintet.
Edison a sistantcoach Ban:yl..ca&h
It seemed t~ ptcpostcrous to
behe"e. Santa Clara's reputation as
w1nners~cmcd too overwhelming
But maybe that rcputauon hH simply
been built onbeaun.1 upon small
schools. because dc~P.llC the1,rcrcden-
ual the Sa1ntsdtdn tshow much
The central schools in this 1s uc arc
Estancia. Santa Oara. Laguna Halls
and Hunttna.ton Beach. alon' with
Edison. which has 1LS 39-38 \ltctory
tainted. a well. But tt aocsa lot deeper tf\an that,
and theCIFSouthem Section 11 very
muchawareofit. It involves every
coach 1n the S«l1on, and 11 aocs far
d~rthanJust ba.skctb&JI. bccau~ 1f
Sweet Lou can do as he pleases. that
so can c"cryonc else.
The offieialsconstantlycame to
Borchcndunnathe11meand told
him his pla)'en were aoina fo have lo
was "erbally accosted by one fan . wlio O
then threatened Borchert Yritha The Bttn E"entsCentcrat UCI will
...letter" apinst LciaJ't. be tbt site of &.be Cl f' 4-A and 4-AA
Probably the thina I'll remember champion hips Marth I.
best about all of this. 1ince 1 only saw Amona the-4.AA aroup,assum1na -----------·coupon----------1 I . .
1 Mike McCartlip 1
Cv1J&novich at the taittnd ofh1 s thcyeamplayofTbcnhs,are Un1vcr-
vietory ovcrC)prns, is the blank $l1y, Tustin, Miu1on V1CJ01nd Ken-
look orCo-Oirector An Petry an the nedyoCLa Palma.
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5550 BMch Blvd Cll•) all·MMI
w_ .. _-_ •• _.,_.,_ •-•-•)-~----'• --·-···Cl .... ____ _ ______ ..
aftermath of the Ed1son..S.nta C1ara Woodbridet 1s an tht 4-A class. '
11mc. ifhe S.AAand S.A fin1Jsw1ll beat
Sa eta .. _ · ... tbtLosAn,.;kS PonsA~naMatth nta ra wastn~ new team in tn~ •in thtt\ltn1~ with the afternoon
toumey.cominafroma lona way with sesson 1nvol~1n1thcfinalsfor J..A. 2·
a 9-0record,11vcn preferential treat· AA and l-A.
ment in tcrmsofaamet1mesforthe fountain Valteyand Huntifte1on enttre tournament. and Sftded Beach s ·h Ed' ...
-..:.n•t 2:7 CyPf'Ct:S alln t~7fiM1~tr~und. Irvine ·~ari~ ~:'ht; ~n W1".'t1ti.,;r_po~n1.11.. Yr iuion V.cwindWtttm1n1Rrue·,_Ai.,tam
V1e.J00t S. 7 Edison 1n the IC.COnd . The J..A. ~bl)' the most petked
round. of any_d1v1S10nt11\(tudn Corona del
The Sa.intu~rtd to bu shoo...1n .... Mar. ~••.aa. Newport Har9or and
for the tmufinals 1pinst either COl&I Mesa. Corona dd Mar or~ Btach LllUu le:Kh it an 2-AA. wetJt
Jordan. but a 1t turned out. Dana Sweet Lou.
Hills was the sutprisins temdlnalist · The am• flmhtte apttac1 around ind the Dolpluns .n1 on to the ~ too.
ftaU. The S-M S-Aaad ).A wiU bt at
Penywntaoferutolft ~· 26-Cal~ ,._.,.Mimi J: IM4-AA
penon dinner for me Su11 Clara ind 4-'A ftMla will lle1&Q9lll1Mn et1~der&MS1n11'1nlpmc CollmMmlll;..SIMM•l-
11 mt Newport bCOlllpuy •• MftilllWllllll•wmifOal1s COllaMlll.~-llOflk Mlldll.
C1alllr!f':'"f. ~ iet Thi T: MklM Track Club •111 bc hoeti• I four-Wttk condll10t11RJ P«Jlf*m for al~ bo~s and 11rh. bqinn1na aoday and m.~~F~l ~ W1natr St>nnter propam •111 focus on
bu.ildlna the s>h>~• cond11JOntnaof 1he athAtan
pnot &O ~" ~h\t' seai<>ns ofspon TIW aahlttn '-'1U lain fonn and 1«hiuque for · spnnt1na. and dnlls for •nnas.ina their spttd.
This 11 not a amp fw spnnttts alone. u thert'
••no ~tmtnt for $peed in 1nye1hletK-C'\<en1
Tim is the on!}-p~wn cond11tonm1 ~ offtrtct 1n Orantt Count). •nd the onl)
oer ror bo>s.11rls. men and "'omen. aiblnc and noft•thlete.
Slrmath Ind flc\lb1ht), IS well as \IS-
uahz.ation. ind i>l>omt'lnc 1ra1n11'1 .... 11 aJso be a pan or the prasram.
The camp is located at Manion Viejo Htah 168.°'° Vtt,o Park 1n Mau.on V1eJ0. The cost 1s
~I.Cd -at hm1tsart' 7 and older. For more
1nfonnat1on coni.ct Vernon Sm1th at 9Sl-7669,
Senion Skin.a Gaaae
J'hrce-da) blld&t"S for the Scn10~ Skins Game
arc now on sarc Bad&« ITC' S70 and 1nctu<k adm1H1on to the Pro-Am. the Saturday front
nine and the Sunda) back nane of l~ ~n1on Siana Game. pan1n1 and an c"cnt sou,enir
prop'lm
Tickeu for the event. wh1rh 1s Jan. 20 can be purchased b} calhna (619) S(>.4.))33 or throuah
M1ss1on Halls Country Club. POA Wett Golf
(lubhouse and La Quinta Hotel Golf Club
The Sctuors kin Came purse wlll be S360.000
and compe11ng ~•II ~ Amo1d Palmer. Gal)
Player. Bally Casper and 1988 ~n1on Skin
k1fllP1n Clu C111 Rodriauez.. The breakdown o( mont') per hole as as
follow Hole\ 1-6 !rt wonh SI 0.000 each. HolM
7-12w111bev.onhS20.000cach Holes l)..t8w1ll
be v.onh SJ0.000 u ch ·
Any hole not v.oa outn&ht 1s camed o"cr 10
the nc" t hole
1707 l E Imperial Hwy· Yorba Linda, Cahfomia
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You too, can get JOU!.
Dealer'shlp ~
Your ad wtll come out three times per
~ek for S80.00 -Color PrHf
QI f714f642-4J2 I .... s.-...... ,.,.
lalt Waa. •-•u• l1rt. S.h Wwr 5pon111W1 Mapi1M's auonaJ
Smunar Strin.. an educational courv oci salt
water fith1~t 11 condllCU'd '" pmnuntnt audnono. of dw 11101t ILIM>Wlk 'a bit
npttU on I spon, brinti ,at.tar Soullwm
Cahfonua edattOlt to the Lona Beach Cll> Colietr•ud1tonum Jan. 28.
The facuh) lftCludn Mar\ Sotan. Ltf\) Krnh. ~ Po'eromo and R>p C'unn1npam
TitC prosram '' a one-da) seminar prcd to
bc&i,nnant. 1naenMd1aac and ad' a need a~n the lint stUIOn ~105 e1 9 a m. and tht final
at4pm
J01n1na the safT are such ~onal an&krs u N!Ck Cumone. Tom Wattts. Ku Mcl'linr. Dirk
Gaumer. Jam Gilmore. Ton) Pena a"<! Ed ~
Manin,
Amona tht 1nfonnat1on 10 be ak'•M<i as where .... htn and how to cfTttll\Cl) fish their
particular locll .,-aters
Each '1udcnt v.111 also rtcc1' c an 88-peit
lt'ittbooli wnucn b) Sos1n ind ~o,.eromo. 111led
Salt V.atcr Fashana.
Advanct fellSH'lhun is tte0mmt'nckd
The fee for the alklay seminar 1s S2S for
further 1nformauon. call ()()S) 76'J-032S.
..
Hot Roel Serlee at San Dlq&o
The U • Ho1 Rod Mo101"1pons (ham·
ptonsb1p ~on rt'tums to ~n D1cio Jack Murphy SIAdtum Satunuy and v.1llfcaturc
Modified 1nd T•o-Whttl Pulhn&. Mud Bos
1Uc1na. thc Battle of the Monster Trucks and
War of the Monster Tanks. Flame Shoo11ng
Funny Can and Yonan. tht' nev. ,e1-pov.crcd
transformani robot ,
Gates open at 6.30 pm. and It mns at 8
Adun<'t' uckct P"'" arc SIS and $12 for
rcscncd i.eais. children 12 and and under $8
Tackeu art available a1 all T1dctmas1er )o-
cauon~.
Fo r funhcr informauon rail (501) 623.:?S44
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• Tht SOuahern C'ahfomia'Slo-f .,,o-PJtlh Soft·
baU AllOCeahun 1s accept•,.. men's C and D
teams for tbt' fif\h annual S..ptr Bowl Softball Slo-Two-~tctl Tournamnn. 10 bt pla)cd 11 Han Pitt 1n Onll\JIC.
Tiw ftt 11 $160 p.~r team *Ith all teams iM&f'U~ It least lhrtt pron. Start1na It 8 I m. ooJan. 21
For further 1nform11ton call (21))166-*6 S
New~ &arbor Lawn Bowline The w~n Harbor La•n Bowhna Club wall hold 1111nnual Meter Std ~n Triples "Fun" Toumamnn Jan. 31.
Mait Banosh. Mary Jahns and Mane Walkt'r,
1987 champions. as ~II as 19 champ1ons
John Ba11er. Luc1lk C\>0pcr and Gail Hodson,
art scheduled to compete.
All bOwls wnhin ont' mdttoftlle "Jack" score
Ind lht' "Jack .. IS pfa~ back 1n llS OOllnlf
pos111on af\t'r each umc 11 ·~mo, ed.
(ompeuuon bqan' at I 0 a m and 1t 1s open to the public. ·
Selllor llOltbaJJ all.na,,.
Cosu MCY senior &o'ltbalf as look1n1 for
players for us slow~p11rh team .
Costa Mesa as pan ofa JO.team lequc no"' in
au 10th aroforpntzed ~n1onofib9ll Pl•)crs
mus1 be aaes .SS or o'er and thc leaaue pla)s under pccaal rules to benefit pla)Crs of those ~· .
The Costa Mesa 1ca.m holds pracuttt on Saturda)'s from 9 to 11 a.m 11 TcWinlde Parl
loc.ted on ArhnJton A\CnUt' across from the Oransc County Faararounds in Costa Mesa For more 1nfonna11on. phont' Pt'fcrS1m1luk 11
9S7·251 S
...
HUNTlNGTot-.1
•EACH ACURA
11111 ..... .-
1 • .,.. ......... .
0
Or-. COMI DAILY P.ILOT /MOftdeV, JMuery I. ,._ •
Valeatllle'•DaY81Mall
The Sou•IWll Cahfilfa&a Slo-T..,Puc.h Soft.
ball MeO<'WiOft ~•Ill mm'1 C alM 0
1nm1 fot the ftfttl aanwN. ValaaUfttY JDey
T ournaiMnt at Hl{l Park in Oraner.
ftt for tam511$160 Funbtt anf'ormat!Otl 11 hlalable by ~11Utt(21)) *'-l6IS
0
8porta rttneee ~m Mt
rormtr Ram Nolan C romwtll wall be the hOll "htn The Spe>ns Rchabihtatton Center pttWnlS
"SpOrts f1tnns 89' ~turda) at thc comet of
Euchd and Romnc)a Dn"e tn Anaht'Lm Frttofrharac toall athlcttund their fam1hcs.
the romptthens1~c fitness 1CttCn1na and 1njur)
ptt\enuon e-.po \\<Ill run from IOa m to 4 pm No ~'attons art rtquarcd but details arc
available lrom the Center by calhn• .SJS~SOO.
FllMtS tcrttnanas and 1nforma11onal booths wall cover topics such as body fat analys.is:
flutbihty: strtnsth 1r1d puJmonary fllftC\IOn
tcsuos; elCctrod)nop'lphy; and po51er eY'llu·
Ill On
Vcrsasum mutcle strcn1th1na. C)'bel strtna•~ tcsllnl .and the M)omallr pain control S)Stem
v.111 be ckmonstratcd and nu1n11on coun~h~
v.1 II be ofTetcd
Vtsators will also be chsiblc for dnwinas for
N1kt rross-ttaan1na tennis shoes, ttnaficatcs
from £1 Pollo Loco and othcr supponana
mtttha.nts
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7 da~ pt-r wr~k .
2:00 a.m.-5.30 a.m.
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I M .. N
S St«ege po~
10 IV ... lling
14 Tlmt.
I~ l(IU 1e v-a.-
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~IOnOI '° Scampered 21 Prot19
22 Not oflen
24 No¥11~-2t Tnek1
27 e.fore
28 ~aloof
3 1 Growllng
l• Pfeeerv91 ....
35 c:teoOI
•l>C>f M Tall•ed
3 7 "'*1UAa
31 o.nu-
3 t 8'1 ot.-..
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•1 et.-n. •2 Higl'l,...,men
... l engttl ""'' •s lief'ofl • ll•ft 46 TWM perlOd
50 Eur~land
52.Qooo 53 Truu
2 3
SA Foot ....
55 TI\ ..
57 Atta tender•
51 Beet st Hll1dll tlOC>6e
eo ·~·· 61 The &POE
62Gennent
63~
DOWM
1 ~
2 Mtnhal
3WMAl'I
• Coop
5 F..-i
6 Sarcawn
1 Utt1m11te • eo.w pr.i
t .......
10 CNl'm
1 1 Mond8Y AM
wWdol'n t2 C1IOir metnbet
13 Ptoeper-1ty
2 1 Hlthet
2301"9
25 LOO,. 2t~
2t TO-.'liun
2t Sword
30 Slaf'tl
31 Teecher
intormet
~ .... e CNW
33 Time °' dey
I 7 I II
., u-tu•
.. ~let\
•• .,,......, • need
50 Sickly
51 8a41NOe
52 Comc>oelliOt\
510..~
57 (
The lndllpendent is pleased to an
nounee a ne" serv"e now available to
new businesses
We will now SEARCH the name tor you
at no extra charae. and save you the
hme •nd the lrrp to the Court House in
Santi Ana . Then, of courst, after the
warch 1s compltted we will file your
hctiltous bu,inus name statement with
the County Clerk, publish once a wttk
for four wtt~s as r~utred by law and
then hi your proof of pubhcatton with
the County Clerk
Please stop by to file your f1cllt1ous
-business statemtnt at Th, lnde~ndent
office at 17969 ~ach Bl~d • Hontinaton
Beach, California If you can not stop
by. pie au '~" uut (714) 842 t 444
and wt will make arraneemenb for you
to handlt this procedurt by mail
If you should hnt any f urthtr qutS·
t1ons. pttase call us and we will be more
tnan &fad to as 1st you Cood luck n
your new bus1Mss"
25
BodyinB
third set
·afire iii oc
Connection sought
to corpse found at
Bolsa Chica Beach
By ROBERT BARKER
oe .. o.-, .... -..
fiuntington Beach delttu\·cs are
loo in& for a conn«t1on betv.ecn the
bod)" of a man found burned bt ond
rteoen1t1on It Bolsa Chica tile
Beach on unday and tv.o other
burned boc:hes found 1n Oranat'
Count) nncc Scptembt'r
another 1o1.-as tound near the Carbon
C•n> on Rca>onaJ Park in north
OranF Counw 1n October.
Lt.EdMcE.rlain "d tOday there u
no 1odlcat1ons at the present time that
the three cases are linked. but added
that d~u"es will chttk out 1m1-.
lanues bctv.ccn them Ywath other
poh c agencies .
The body at Bolsa Chica I.alt
Beach was found by a pal!Olma.n who
had $topped to enforce a ni&hmme
• parkJn& l:ian at the beach. ·
The officer pccrcd O\er thc eqe of
Pacific Coasc H1&b~Y tnd saw the bod)' burmna nc1110 a tcnke road.
8 1U Pttcrson said tOda). ·
' Oelf .......... ., lt..W II"'....,
Fred Bottome .. ,.. hi.a new ~d the •alue of h1a property would be dam&Ced by co•ertnc the San Joaquln-Re.e"olr.
The charred ~ of 1 man was
found 1n Sal ~ch in Stptembtr1nd • (PleueeeeBODY/A.2)
Reservoir co_ver-pl~n· protes.ted Cub Scouts find cocaine
T o Cub outs h1k1ni in the Thebo>' too\ the su1tcaK lo peck •
S, 808 YAN EYK.E.."l
OtllleO.-, .........
<;omt'lh1ng ha-. 10 be dont' about
""ater qual11~ in tht \an Joaquin
R~rtoir but lhl ~etropoh tan Water D1s1nc1 v.on t koov. for
another ~car whether a il;ant co\Cr
,, .. er the 40-acrc lake ""Ill be the
prefened 0011on. an oflic.-1:al told the
Piiot of the Boeing 737
that crashed Sunday 1s
praised for guiding the
crippled aircraft over a
VIiiage as he attempted an
emerg6ncy landing I A•
Coast .
Newport Beach 1s con-
sidering d lsplayin.~ rem· nan~of1Mn1storc China
Hoose./A3
Nation
Admln Stratton rec-
ommends cur.tailing de·
postt Insurance for bank
and savings and loan
accounts./ A5
Index
Bulletln bOard A3
Business A6-7
Claudled 87-8
Comics 86
Crossword 88
Death notices 84
Entenainment A 10
In the Setvtce AS Opfnk>n A9
Peop-85 Pofalog A3
Pubhc; not1ca M
Sport•. 81-4
TV llttlngs 85
Weather A2
Weddtngt A4
Ne .. port Hclr bor Arca {hambcr ol
CommerCt' on !\.tondav
The 1dt'a of a Ooa11ng co,i:r 1\ the.-
bane of Newpon Beach rc-.1dcn1-.
wh~ hom~ O\ t'rlook the rc~n oar
Fred 8ouomc, one resident v.hn
1ddreucd ·Monda) 's mrc11ng ot th<
chambt'r'\ LOCal (10' ernmc:n1 \ub
com millet' \aid he had rccc1 \fJ
cs11matc\ that the.-\alut' of hr\
..
SS00,000 home 1n HJrbor Ru.Jgc
-uulddedmc by tl\ muc-h a,$~(.(X)
,, hi\ \IC"" of lhc." ff\C~ 01r v.ert
dl'StfO)td
"'nd -..h1k only about lO homc.-s
look d1rcctl> out O\cr the rc\tnoir.
the dt"\:line in. "aluc."\ v.ould be felt
throughout the: Ctt) Bouome \a1d ·-rm not pcr~onatl) conccf'n<'d
about the dl'1)rena11on b«au~ I
bou&ht m) homt' tu h'e .,,14.1 d11: in "
be u1d -1 don't v.ant to he.-rl.'1m·
bur;cd But other\ do .\nJ rm Hn
con1.:~rncd aboul the cflc:l"t a d•
pre\scd p<xkl.'I v.oulJ ha'c on rl.'al
t\tatc ~.alue~ thruu&}lou1 the rt\ ' ou
ha'e to look ttl the 1'>\uc of oHrall \alU('
Water D1s1mt olTillals sa\ the)
(Plea.e see COVER/ A2)
Upper t-;ewport Ba)' EcolQ&lCaJ Re· leader Alan\\ Counney -.ho opcn-
scnic found and turned 1n 1 su11casc cd ll to find PO ~ms of cocaine.
conta1nan1 more lllln a pound of ThC" pack of ctJht bo and their
cocaine ~cwpon &ach pohct> re· lc1dcr look the suitca5C and narcotics
poned to polacc.
Ben CourtnC}. 9, and C1scv -Polict said the coc~ine wa ~-
Luchesi 8 disco' crcd tht' bro-. n agtd, lcad1n1 to the con lusion t~
suitcase hidden 1n bushes dunna a su1lC3sc hkch btlonscd 10 a dM h1~c turday. s.a1d pc>ltcc spokC1man dealer. Thc'nreet \lluc oft.he cocaine
Rick Brad.Icy \\.U placed It S34 000
Accus.ed i8.pist says women.are lylilg
. ,,
8 ) 808 V A.""i EYK E~
or._ °"" ""' ....,.
To hear lihomas Panicha, tell rt.
the 32·)car-otd Boston Mt1\.e ,., •
h1&h·Po\\.crcd buvncssman "'ho "
1rrn1s11blc to women and Ii conunu·
ally lured into danJuous lcpl pre·
d1camenu by their ad-.;ance\
"Ht''s 1111ng lo \hov. that he v.;r, a
successful bu'l1nt'uman \\hO\t' com·
pan) v.a\ ioing to do S 190 million 1n
bu .. 1nC'~~ th1\ )~ar:· ·~1d 9' put)
Oi\tnCt ..\ttvroc\ Mar\ 1n ~tern
"We're '""11\8 to ·\hov. 1hat tic u ·d
phon) bu-.1ne\~\ 10 lure Vd.lOlcn into
SllU3llOns in v.h1ch hc t~ld rotfX'
them ··
tnal -.hich 1\ 1:\J)ct:lcO to cm:'.cludt'
today or \\ cdne~a) 1n upcn';>r
Coun in Santa .\M, ha\ lasted ft"t'
""eeks ·
Th<' ;allc d ~nm~ v.h1 h Jn\OIH·
fin· ~p•rate '1 11m\ v.cn: rom·
m11tcd in In inc. l...lguna ~ 1aud and
Fountain \ .illc\ .
Dunna 1hrl"(' dJ)S ot 1011mon: l;i1c
l0t<>I v.cc'-and on \1ond3) Panicha\
1m?mptni tu ponr~~ h1 nauru ~
··tru1kakc\" v.ho h.ad v.1ll1n1h hud
l.bc prru.c:cuHO(l 1" Pan" ha\· tnal
on IV rnun1 .. of r.a~ and 'SC'Wal
assault stts u d1flcrcn1h . hO\\t\cr
Pa nu.: ha\ a Fo untain \'a Ile) hu\I·
nes man and l.osta Ml"l:I ~1(J('nl
v.a<> ;irrc .. 1<."d ncarl\ ii )C3r a~o t 11 ..
•
Wcilkaround
world brought
brothers fame ·
Shooting de~th of
one inspired other
two to finish trek
By KATY 80 lER
Of .... 0-. ,,,... •• .,,
In 1970, r> '1d ~un t came bomC'
from hn Y·IO·S 10h and rtb\C'd nd
chaltcd ~llh ht\ l>il.'lt lrtcnd 0\ tra rl ~
beef\
At the umc. Kun\t hvcd 1n \\a a
Minn .. and lo"('d k1ck1n1 around
ou1land1sh one-of·a-.,1nd 1dc:i' l~t
•ould .be 'omtthma ~ -.pi:cul 1tic ~hole v.orlJ v..oulJ lJ._c.-nolllt
He ,,. nted to bt thr li~1 ;u
K>mcth1n11nd h1sgoel"' &o l:rnJ h1~
namC' 1n tht <Juanno\ Bool or W urld
Rttord
f\crythana he and ht fncnd d1\o
culled had bttn d -"'•th 1hc e~~cpunn of v. llun1 aroul\U the
wotld -httrall) v.-alk1n1 around the
• rid
brothcn, some muk\, a .'.?IXJ.\tar-old
\\ooden v.hccl v.aglm 1tnd a dcd1cottcd
!'\urn-a Jan kt;ool 1eadi(r Hcar=-
ta1ncd his &Oii CAt S. 19N He v.a
offic11tly added ro tht' (Ju1nnc 'Book
ol World Rt\:ord1 4tftc~r bis return
.. ftcr -.e Jooicd an the 1Gu1nnt'~'>I
-4 book and reahzcd 1t had nr~cr bttn
done.-, I $11d, ·Th" 1s •l f h1\ 1\ v.t\41 I
v.ant to do.' .. ~1d Kun\t "l 1mmcJ1·
a tel) called m) older brother. John.
and asktd him "'hat he thou1h1 I le:
\\.a\ 111 for 11
\o I made 'urc he ._nc"' I V.il\
nou\ I p1nneJ hint do\\n 10 a <lite
ol depanure He 5o11d '\\t'll I
a.radu.1tc in Junc, lct'\ lca\c n&hl a lier
that.' Thtlt v. \in J1nual") -v.t• h d
... , month to ri~pare."
The)' d1dn'1 dC\ Ill(' from the rlan
In June, the tv.o h adcJ from M1nnr·
so1a to c>A \ ork v.nha mu.Jc 10 hclo
C'UT') prO\ 1s1on-. \ lht} tra\ckd, the
)oun c~t brotht'T, Pete Kunst, lo\ho
lt"rd an C'Olta 1e . couldn't 't1nJ
not bt1n1 tndudtd and too a l1ttk-
\ auon from his wife and tour
d ulJrcn and h1tchh1k.ed to Pt'nn·
\)Ionia. •ht~ he met his tuothcrs
Pete K\tnst ""alkcJ v.11h them for
~' v.1th him and thtn a cu~ him oJ
anaulung them
"('er) da) I meet sarb"icfi and
nsht v.ho SI~ tl'I«:.) V.1101 to (ha\C
sc,,, .. Pamchu \aid "( nl~ 1n (al ·
fom11 ha\e I had 1h1\ happen ...,t,tf
in In\ olht'r talc ~
The charar f>I \t"\ual anauh
It'\ Clt'd tH ihret: o( tht' \ 1cllm\ art
-.in11l1r 1n nature \incr lh~ '1cum)
;arr nut lno•n tu ea\,h othrr ~lt'm ha'
qut',lwned ho-.. the 1ccusa1ion\
That ""11' 11 Kunst knc• 1nstantl)
this wl\ ont 1d he v.ould purau.c:. ~nd on Jun 20. 1970, Ku q\t, :lO.
ttantd •'llk1n1 a pa1h arourtJ tht canh "llh tht htlo of h1~ 1v.o
thrttda) .bdorcrtturninahomc He ...,,....,..... ~mchi v.; had a prrmon111on 1o1nd
M11d "If an~1h1n1t h•llPCni. to cithrr DaYld Kanat dleplaya lala fa•orlte palr of walkJnc
(Pl ... eee ~Lil/ A2) aboee dartiac u latemew la 1987.
\
t'QUld hut ~n fabricated
But Pan1chas \aid~ on the witness
staod 1onday tha' he had disc~
tht' °'1SJnaJ &«"U5at1on Wllh the ""0
other .,. men · In ont' case. the
l('('U\allons ca mt up in the course of a
gcncnl dr u ion about pcnonal
problems. he s.a1d
.. I told 1'tt f had me fru1tcakt'
v.ho \11d I tn<'d to rape her," Pan1chas
\aid
[Pleue eee ACCUSED/ A2)
Testing
of humps
on roads
·due in NB
By IR YO 01 °' .. ...,,... ....
Ne Reach " rolhn& alona v.11h a plan to msi.IT 'p;ttOllumps on __ _
a tnal basis on ttcach-arca strett
.\t a )tud~ \C'S)ton Mol'\cU). the
(II)' ( ounc1I re" 1cw~ 1 rcqu~t from
tht Traffic "fT11rs Commmcc to tc.-t
the use of 'pttd hums>' 1n slov.mi
do1o1. n traffic 1n thrtt rc,1dcnual ll"tti
-Pt"n1nsula Point. Ct'ntral Balboa
Pcntn ula and Newpon horcs
l he Otth council ob ~t1on raaxd
lO the 1fu \\.a a mild one b)
Council\\<oman Ruthcl)'n Plummer.
v..ho wd. "It seems 10 ~ tht humps
would JU t be hk:e a Band-Ald."
The council 1 sblcd to approH
ensanctnna designs tor the hump) It
tts Jan. 23 meeting. lf the counctl
w1 hts the anal p m could bt'
e'panded 10 mcludt other rn1~nual
nc1&hborhood . 1d Richard Ed-
mon ton. traffic c"11ntcr. 1 he T raffi~ .\1Ta1B Comm1tttt
1.kci<kdtotcst1hceffi tl\en ofthc ~pttd humps, \\<hachut morcandual
1n incline than reed bump-.. bccauw
of tht constant l'Cq~ts from mi·
dtn for relief from can ~1n
1hroua,h their nct&hborhood
Tht numb(r of lhnc rcqutst
increased 1ncr the 8alb0a Pcnm u1a
acc1dtnt on Sc-pt I that k.1lltd
hou •1fc Debbie 'Ktlltlea, Ed·
monston said.
anta Ana RIV.er proj ~t back in budget
Danny Ornclu. a 19-)car-old from
Hununat n Par ha been charp
"'1th murder for altqcdl) Nnnana
down Kille~ u lhc walked Wllh bcf
t ~o )ouna '°"'down an 1Uey bctund t~tr Ocean Boutevatd home. Or·
Mia who wa1 allcwtdly dNnk e.d
IOC"d•"lo facel. &iial oe Fett. I S
O\'trall, 'Pfndtnf by the '-OfP'I
would toul U .2 bilhon dunnt the 12 months Mal'tlf'I nu1 Oct. I. ,do""n
lliltnly from the currmt Sl 26
bintOft
ltt t'Oftttf'UC'11on IPfnd•~ would total Sl.22 bilhon. up I 9 perttftt frOfft S 1.12 bilhon. TM bureeu planned 10 9PtftCI S946
llliilliCMt. dOWft 14 ptf'Ceftt f'roM ' l. l
..... dais ~· 111 COMlnlCUOn =~ -.W bl •R'nn, 1 111\'Cftt ft'Offt ......
thll ytar .... ," lht ma.1on1r of fund to•~ toward the cntra Anzona ~\,the (tattal I.ah PrOjcct Ind
tht Ct'ft\tal aUt) Pro;«t 1n C'al1· fomaa. ~ttal P':UJ«U weft llated for
Oftly m•n1mal 'Ptftd•sw. :~ lnlmar UftikuecttW)' f.lri UdJOC, becaute
.. wt did" I hlvt ~ mone) 10 P'"
t~ on an tftknt t'OnttnlftKMt
ld9tdult {and) we'tt bener olf 10 "°' .... -. ..
CPl•r ... .,._,MJ
lnttalllttOn °' ., ........ not
tohfd lM IPCedi• problem. ud
t'ftfotGeMe•l °" .............. 1m~~l EdlMAllDe llid. Wt _. 1111 {11111 ......... .
dCJei -'° ...... -.-~ -......... ... -··•••llilA.'°11111..... • .................... ......... ...
NflCI MOTHlltl •U. ..-OAOWAY
MOflUftry • Chlll*
t tO lto.dwey Ca.I• M ... ... 2.11&0
.... ,., Pl•••n
2983 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa, CA
Ml-1111
.... ~
in aetdna
your prdeft
to~?
Go to the
m.tfted
ltf'Vice
cllrectory
for all
. ol your
IUdlcaping
needs.
The Independent is pleased to an·
oounce a new serv1ee now available to
new busmesses .
We will now SEARCH the name for you
at no extra charce. and save you the
time and the trip to the Court House in
Santa Ana. Then, of course, after the
search 1s completed we wtll ftte your
f1ct1t1ous busmos name statement with
the County Cler~.,pubhsh once a week
for four weeks u required by law and
then file your proof of pubhcatton with
the County Clerk
Please stop by to file your f1ct1t1ous
business statement" al The Independent
office at 17969 Beach Blvd . Hunttnaton
Beach, Caltfornra If you can not stoP
by, please call usat (714) 842 1444
and we will make 1rraneemenh for you
to handle this procedure by mail
If you should have any further ques
lions. please c1N us arid we will be more
than lfad to assist you. Good luck in
your new business"