HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-01-18 - Orange Coast PilotBody of a n
I carried a
schoolyard where
he kllled 5 StUdents,
wounded 30 others ...
THE WORLD/ A4
~
v THEO RA
:
His love of
machinery
keeps Mesa
man,80,
humming
EIGHBORHOOD F
I
25CE T-
6
WED E DAY .. JA lARY 18" 1989 . .
HBvotes
to curb
smut in
newsracks
By RORRT IARKER
Of .. 09lll¥ ..... ...,,
The Huntinaton Beach City Coun-
cil approved the first ~raft of an
ordtoaooc Tuesday night dcs1P.'ed to
stem the proliferation of sidewalk
DeW$1'1Cks that dispen5c sexually
cxpliat newspapers.
But opponents before and after the
unan1moua vote claimed the ord1·
nance docs not ao far enouah to keep
the allqedly pomOlf'lphic news-
peeers out of the hands of minors.
City Council offiCJals directed City
Attorney Gail Hutton to monitor the
newsracks and to work toward
uabtcnina the orchnancc before 1t
returns to the council for a final vote.
Mike Foell, pestor of the Com-
munity Bible Church in Huntington
Beach. said he was not satisfied and
wtll wotk with cuy offictals for
touaher curbs. F"oell chafstd the e~phc1t news-
pepers contained matenal that was
harmful to minors and should be
banned from vending machines for
that reason. ·
The ordinance 1s S1m1lar to one 1n
Glendale that has successfully pH$Cd
court tests, Hutton said.
The ordinance sets limm on the
number ofnewmacks and establishes
pnonues for their use.
No more than eight ncwsracks can
be located within a spece of 200 feet 1n
any du"CC"t1on. A maximum of 16
newsracks will be allowed m any one
block.
Newspapers that have been ad-
Judtc:aled to be of aeneraJ c1rculauon
10 Orange County will ~ive pn-
onty to use the newsracks. News-
papers are ad1ud1cated by a JUdfe
after pubhshm file a petition in
Supenor Court Llsl.ul& suet\ 1nfor-
mauon as number oT subscnbers, CJrculauon boundanes and days of
pubhc:allon. AdJud1cauon qua11fies
ncwspipcn to carT) pubhc notice
advertisements.
Daily publications that have not
been adjudicated in Oranie County
will have SCC'Ond pnonty fol' the utc of
fl'WaMsee NEWSRACKS/A21
I
I; ,,.., "-...... ., .................
~rank Toaaolfna Jr •• the Newpon Beach eletnenury school
teacher accused of 111olest1n9 four students, sits In cowt.
Teacher's a.·ccusers
admi_t illegal entry
By llttS YOKOI
Of IN~,._ a.ff
Friend' uf & fif'\h-1nuJc 1Jrl ullcKCU· ly molested by a Newport 8each
teacher climbed throup a clasU'oom
window to snatch beck a note the
instructor had intercepted from the
girls about plans to 1et him fired, one
of the girls admitted under qucstton-
ing Tuesday.
The tcsumon_y ~me dunng the QPCn1~ day of the tnal of Frank
Tonohna, Jr .. the Manners Elemen-
tary School teacher acruscd of
molesting four of his students
The note reads. "I'm go1na to teJI
my mom Mr. T molested me and you
guys bcalusc he will get fired Please
Clrcle ~ or no." and then folJows
with. · Turn on back -I qrcc Wlth you. I want him fired.' ..
The rttncval of the note is Ju tone
of the acts the alleacd v1ct1ms enpgcd
1n that prove tfiey art not to be
behcvcd, rozzoltna's attorney. John
Barnett, argued.
"The\> have the run of the school.''
said Bameu, who contends the gJrls
conspired to get their science teacher fired "Nobody will d1sc1phnc them.
Some of thesc little girls have run
amok ··
Dcput) Otstnct Attorney Kelly
MacEachern. hov.ever, said in her
opcnina statement tl\at the four
youna airls and a fifth Wltness v.ere
telhna the truth about charges lhat
Tozzohna. an I 8-year vettran of
tcach1na. touched their chests and
buttocks m a lcv.d manntt dunna
class
Tv.oofthegJrts t~ufied Tuesda\ as
the tnal itot off to a rou&h start.
Judge Russell Bostrom repcatcdJy
rtt.csscd with attorneys to discuss
whether testimony about accusauons
being raised by the defense about
misconduct by the 11rts should be
allowed into evidence
After Barnett questioned one prt
about the acx:usauons Wlthout a jury
present, he sa1d he would not try to
brina into evidence testimony about
the attempt to retrieve the note or
another accusation that the prts had
earhcr fabncated a story about a
physical assault as a Joke.
However, JUrors will hear tcs4·
mony that the Jirl allcac<ll Y. tried 'io
act anolher g.trl to chanae her test~
mony
The tnal for Tonohna, who faces
f PleaM Me TEACHllt/ A21
Judge Carter retires to avoid media Circus
'I never traded my office for
anything,' he tells accusers
9Y STEVE MAR8U
Of .. ~ .... tu#
Embattled Harbor Court Mun1c1-
paJ Ju<fa'e Bnan Caner said Tuesday
there was "no threat, no pressure and
no promises" mvof-Yed m his dcc1s1on
to step down frotn the bench m the
midst of a state mvcsopuon into
allcacd misconduct
Rather, Carter said he Wlshed to cut
shon the stress, strain and expense of
battling alleptions that he fixed
t1clceu for friends. falsified court
documents and developed a fnend-
sh1p with a prostitute
"This 1s a med11 event that v.ould
have been reported with sltt without
a lot of attent1on to accuracy. I'm
afraid," C.arter said Tuesday in his
first full 1oterv1ew since the allcp·
t1ons surfaced last )'Cir.
"I honestly don't know why I've
become such a cause celcbre. I'm Just
a municipal court JUdac. I've been
st.aacTcd by the attention."
Appointed in 1982 by then.Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. and clccaed to a
six-year term an 1986. Carter. 63, sa id
has retirement will be cffcctjvc Feb.
19. He Will draw a 1ud1Clal pension -
reported to be about S 1,000 a month
-when he turns 70.
Carter, who said up untJI now he
had been barred by JUd1cial ethics
from commentina on the investiga-
tion. ducussed the alleptaons Tues·
day.
He denied that he fixed uckels or
did favors for fncnds and 111d it was
untrue that he'd falsified coun docu-
ments to hide the fact he'd handled a
case in which he had a conflict of
f Pteaw lff CARTER/ All
Judicial performance panel
drops its misconduct probe
ly GREG KLERKX
Of -~ ,,_ SUllf
The talc Comm1 ion on Jud1c1aJ
Perfonnancc ha dropped us in-
vcsugauon of Harbor MuntCtPll
Court Judge Bnan Carter in the wake
of Carter's dcc1S1on Monda~ to rcure
Peter Gubbins an tn\'C"Stlptma
attorney for the comm1ss1on, said
Tuesday the comm1ss1on v.ould ter-
minate proettdinas ap1nst Carter
"prov1dma that hr doc no1 scd. or
assume JudiciaJ office ~ clectton
appointment or ass11nmcnf' at an\
ume an the future
Carter v.ho has bttn on 1hc bench
since 1982. was served with charac on Dec-2 I that v.erc to be the subject
of a formal heanng S<lntctamr this
)tar Gubbins wo uld not say hov..
man\ cl\argcs v.erc filed or v..hat the
characs involved, but presumably
the)' dealt wtth 1Jlcpt1on th.at Carter
fixed ud:et , pulled favors for fncnds,
altered court record and assooalcd
with a pro tllute Ctuna emouonal and phystcal
stress from the allqat1ons. Carter
announced Monday th.at he Y..'Ould
reure from the bench efTtctJ"e Feb.
20. H1~ term cw1res 10 1992.
The comm1 100 1n1t1ated Pfl"",.,,OO"""ttd_,-
1 ngs apan t Carter on Oct l •HolJow-
ang a 1nvcst1ption into allqauons
that CartCf" paid for ~ wub a
prostitute 1n 1983-84 and offered to
assist herWllh a pend1na traffic casein
19 4. Caner was also accused of
d1sm1 101 traffic charaes ap1nst a
girlf ncnd of one of Caners 1ood
fncnds. Gubb1n~ satd past commission
f Please lff H€ARING/ Alt
('ft\ EH STOR\. !ISi.A 'DS I' ·1·11t: H.\ \
Bay Island residents cherish neighborhood's privacy
GOODMORNI G
•••
EDITOR·s OTE This IS the
fourrh an1cle in • sn-part ~nes on
rhe prop/e. the h1stof) and tM lo~ of
the 1 lands of C\4-pofT Harbor.
ly , AUL ARCHl,LEY
Of -Oel!y .... ju#
While each of the island of
Newport Harbor cith1b1ts its own
character or charm an one form or
another Ba) Island ma)' dCICn e the onl claim to the term .. unique ..
f or ~tancrs. 11 -.as the onl) 1 land
e\lst1n1 1n Balboa Bay when earl\
settlers am"cd
.\II the others started o~• as salt
marshC11hat -.ere built up b) dreJac-
and-till operation
But Bay Island "' a natural land
mass -albeit a very mall one E"en
ll "''as enlarged to llS present s s ... crt
confi.urat1on wtth \Omc ncarb~
drcd&ina It's also unique 1n that no cars arc
permitted on the 1 land Re 1dent5
and visitors either walk ovrr the
footbridae or boa11n.
Ftnall). all of the resident arc
stockholdtts 1n a non..-profit ~orpor
at1on, the Ba)' I land Club -its le
business beana the O\lont'rsh1p anJ
matntcnancc of the 1 land and a
neaft>yp111fC. OwMrs of the l 1 land home
know lhey•ve tot a httlc shC'C of
heaven and pard tt fervently.
SevtraJ -no uapulina" s.,ns '" ~. beainnina on the pen1n uta
~ic rt()tk~s .•...••.•.••..•.•..•••.. •
s1dc of the tootbndae where Island
A"enue dcadcnds on Balboa Pcn10-
sula Thert's no auard to tum one av.ay.
so hould a trcspas r be so bold as to
ignore the signs and \/Cnturc across
the bnd&c, he would discover a
quaint, id) lite k.Jnd of net&hbQrhOM
on the other side. '
A aiant. 1narled sycamore stands
bes1dC t.atcl) P1lm and tov.enna
eucal)ptu trees. A mcandenna walk-
way c1rcum"ents manicured lawns
and wtll·tcnded flowerbeds
Althoush about a third of the
homeowners now call Bay 1 land
thc1r )'Cir-round ~1dence. many of
the hou~s sull exude a beach cott.aF
charm that ardutcct mchow built
into the vacation homes of ycs1cr-
·ear. Befort the first home went up in
1903, Ba) I \a_nd v.-as the 1te of a 1un
club whcrt portsmen enJO)ed hunt·
ing ducks that migrated 1n from the
north
H1 toncsd1ffcro n v.ho took pan in
the S3SO purchuc of Bay lsland that
car, althoush all aartt that Rufu
nbom v. one of the buycn.
Acrord1na to some h1 tonao RJ.
Waters was a ~rch.aser.
TM Bay I land Oub was 1miried1·
atcl)' incorporated. with all \be "'91
propn1)' btu~ owned b the corpor-
ation. l t was d1 vided an to 2• lotl. Wldl
\ht hom(Ownt't on C8Cb k>t own-.
one 'hare of tock 1n tht corponuo.. ..._. ...... IA'f/"21
Today
Al Orlftl9 C0Mt DAILY PILOT I Wedi..-,, Jenuery 11, 1tal
Neighbors, Rea Center Task Force still at odds
8y IOe VM IYKIN °' ............
Ncilbbon of Costa Mesa'a Rea
Commwaity ~le\' weft left anary
and di•ppoin&ed Tundly at the
conclusion of a aeries of meetiqs
about trub, Vllft.OCY and other social
problems residenu say are caused by
clients of the center's charitable orpnizations.
After five meetinp. the eiaht·
membet' Rea Centtt Task Force
identifaed eiaht najor areas of con-
cern, raqina from perking problems
to lo1terina 6y transients.
Propolcd solutions were listed for
e.ch of the areas. Solutions included
chlnaina OCTD bus stops to reduce the numbet' of bus-ridiQI' clients nlkina throup nciahborboods and more frequent trash pickups in the
center's park:ina Jot and the adjacent
park.
Also 1pnnkJed eeveral times
amoq ihe propoted solutions wu
the •Ulltltion that tht poverty u-
sistanct projtall\S at the centtt at 661
Hamilton St. be moved to a non·
residential area.
One Mesa West mident who
served on the task force said ahe wu
concerned that the OM truly viable
solution, movina the cbanty pro. pa.ma,~ not seujnascrious enoup con&iderauon. ••i feel a little frustrated and very
<ionfused " said wk force member
Barbara Littrell. "I dbn't think we've
looked at the meat of the problem.
which is how all of this impecta the
residents. I see this list as somethif\I
to appease rather than solve the
problem.''
A Costa Mesa City Council mem· ber who sat on the task force
I'~ that the lf(Mg)'I ftul report iDCUde a ltllrmeat ol mt pl'Ot*m. .. Maybe-. problem is we haven'a
eaid liert't a problem, that this com•uaai~r by the pm. ence Of u · 1ttnleted by tbe
~ms at the centtt," Slid Coun·
cilman Orv Ambul'ICY.
His 1&atement dRW immediate fire from uotbcr lalk force membtr,
Jean Fort.th, director of Share Our
Selves. Ora,..e Counay's larlest pri-vate poverty assistance .,ency, which
operates out of the Rea Center.
"I take strona exception to )'_Our use
of the word undesjrab&cs." Fotbath
said. "Someone who may be un· desirable to me may not be un-
desirable to you. I would .-cc with you that the community is affected by Deoolc who use the services 1t Rea
Ce1iter. if you od\it the word un·
desirable.''
Two arriie~ robbery suspects
elude police in BO mph chase
lty 809 VAN EYKEN
Md ft AUL ARCHIPLEY
Ol .. ~ .... kaff
A pair of armed robbery suspects
eluded police Tuesday following an Oranae Coast chase that caused at
least one collision and reached speeds
of 80 mph on frccwar shoulders and
center dividers as wel as local streets.
One suspect was later arTCStcd
while scekina medical treatment at a
local hospital
The pursuit began in Costa Mesa at
about 7 a.m. when officers ap-
proeched two men in a car near the
Denny's restaurant at Gisler A venue
and Harbor Boulevard that had been
robbed just hour$ earlier, said Lt.
Gary Webster of the Police Depart·
ment.
As the officers questioned the men, ~ suddenly took off in a 1984 Dodie, and .. the chase was on ...
Webster said.
The suspects first sped south on the
San Dicao Freeway. then exited and
drove nonh on the freeway where
their car rear-ended a pickup truck,
pushina it into another vehicle. There were no injuries.
The suspects continued up the
freeway, turning nonh on the Costa
TEACHER
FromA1 four counts of misdemeanor child annoyance and molestation. con-
tinues today in Harbor Su~rior
Coun.
In her o~ning statement. the
prosecutor told the Jury Tozzolina 1n October reached up under the loose,
Wlist-lenath shins of two of the girls
when they went up to his desk to ask
for help. ·
"Mr. Tonolina slipped his hands under her shin and fondled her
breast." she said of one of the girls.
.. She WIS shocked."
Both fondling incidents were ob-
served by two separate classmates,
MacEachem said.
Another victim says Tozzolina
massaacd her back regularly while she
workeCI at her desk and once "put his
arm around her neck, put his band
down and rubbed her bottom, ..
MacEachem said.
MacEachern also advised the jury
that testimony will be aiven about a
note passed amonJ the &iris that was
intercepted by Tozzofina. Barnett
points to the note. which referred to
the Jjrls wanuna to get Tozzolina fired, as key evidence the girls were
conspirin& apinst him.
The note was intercepted by
Tozzolina the day afteT the second girl
to testify WIS alle&edl y touched under
her shin but before the girls made their accusations known.
CARTER
From Al interest.
"I've never traded my Judicial
office for anything. not a damn
thing."
Carter confirmed he was ac-
guaintcd with a prostitute named
Della Christine Johnson but added
that they did not have a relationship.
He said his lone mistake was talking
to her by telephone - a call that was
•PP,U'C.ntly ~tty tape-recorded by
police 1nvestiptors.
Accordi,_. to allegations widely
published in the press, Cartet offered
to help Johnson fix a parki~a ticket in
cxchanse for sex. But the Comission
on Judicial Performance. the
ICCt'Ctive lepl arm that investiaates
iudicial m11eonduct. has not con-
firmed th.at nor any of the specific
aUcutions.
"There never waun allqataon that
I did favon for a prostitute. only that I knew a prostitute. They never said I
pve favorable treatment to a PfOlti·
tute." · Accordina to a police source fam· iliar with the allcptions. in-
vesdpton looked into the possibility
of puttina toeethtr a criminal case
Mesa Freeway before eltltang an
Tustin.
The suspects often drove alona the
freeway center dividen or shourders
and reached speeds of80 mph durina
the chase. Webster said.
Policie followed the pair SOU1h on Ncwpon A venue and alona other
surface streets until they lost siaht of
them on the southbound lanes of the Santa Ana freeway at the Lake Forest Drive exit.
Patrol units from Costa Mesa.
Tustin and the California Hiahway
Patrol took pan in tbe JO-minute chase, Webster said. The two men are suspects in a 2
a.m. armed robbery at the Denny's
~taurant.
A man ordered a cup of coff ec, then displa~ a large caliber handgun in
his waistband and told the waitress to
open the cash resister. Webster said.
..She let out a yell and ran from the
area," Webster said. ..The suspect
then leaned over and scooped out
about $200 from the drawer and left."
The chase bqan after police re-
sponded to a caJI about two men sleeping in a car in the 1600 block of
Conander Drive, a residential street
near Denny's.
The girls continued with their molestation stories even af\er
another teacher asked 1f they knew
what "molest" means and warned
them of the seriousness of the charges.
MacEachern saJd.
.. We intend to show the girls arc
tellrn& the truth," MacEachern wd.
"They are not little demons who have
taken the form oflittle airls." Barnett countered that "pnor to
an)'. report of this incident. th~
children h..d a moti ve. The motive was to get rid of Mr. Tozzolina ...
Barnett said one girl's notebook has an entry that reads, "Mr.Tis a bad
teacher. Mr T is boring."
Barnett said character wunesscs
will testify to Tozzolina's truthfulness
and that he "would never be
motivated b)'. an unnatural sexual
interest in children." Other witnesses
will testify that the victims' charac-ten are Mnot good," he said.
The first witness testified
Tozzolina stuck his hand up her shin
while she stood at his desk and moved his hand "up and around" her chest.
Sbe said she felt "uncomfortable and
$Cared" after the incident and re-
turned to her desk.
"I put my worksheet on my desk.
and I asked the aide 1f I could go to the
bathroom, and I went into the
bathroom and cried," she said.
She said another girl followed her
to the bathroom after seeing the
incident. She also said she henelf had
seen Tozzolina do the same thina to
against Caner several years ago but
concluded there was insufficient in-
formation to file characs.
A judicial ~rformance hearing.
however, seeks to determine whether
a judge has misused his powcn, not
whether he has committed a crime.
And on that score, the police source
sugested Caner was hcadina for
trouble.
One of Carter's Harbor Coun
collcasues uid the same thana.
thouatt not because he thou&ht the
evidence qainst Caner was conv1nc-
ins but because he doubted the fairness ofsuch hcarinp.
"It's like a Star Chamber coun
Once you get an there. there's a
mcntahty that you're probably 1u1l-
ty," the judge said.
Thouah his retirement effccuvely
halts the probe and the formaljud1c11I
hearing that had been ordered. Caner
said he did not stnke a deal with anyone.
"At first I wanted to fiaht. I was
aoin& to fight . I was auna-ho to fi&hL
But the mental and physacaJ stress of respondi~a to this w11 takin1 iu toll,"
Caner said.
So was the expense, apparently.
Fiahtlna the allcpuons and peyina
attomeysand invcsta .. tors aotte him
HEARING t1on and wronado•na.
,.,_A 1 Several Har1'or Coun jucteel arc
Marinat have been private, but the beint Probed by the llate com· pe1 .. of Proposition 92 an Novtm· mission.I ~ but only one otbtt judef,
beralloM dac public to be admitted to Cal~rn xbmidt, '*been linlkd out beeri• where .. inOraJ turpitude. for I fonniJ bcari ...
di.,...y or comaplion" are in· O.bbins•id1heeri .. dllih11D01
voh'ld. lac •id. heal eet for Schmidt. Who ii eccu.ed
ll .. pollible that camr·s hearina of reducint a Jlil ....... for con·
would MYe ,._. one of the first vic1ed pro111tute alld ll'O'ftOll'lphic public~ In 1181& history. film ... , PlrMla 0... Weston. She n.e CIDlll•i•i• CDMitts of five Wll recenlly tcntctad to eerw •1 .--.ewo11., .. lftdcwomanben dos in jl1I for her role in tht now. Ol lM ...-, It ii ..,.. wwth inlMnous 19&4 bKlwlor pany aunt
l""'""':'fni:"'-:---=1p1Gallii ccii••!I • .., •• MOO W _. ••II •'-I ....-hftt "'"-· ~ •• r•w li•ll Ill• ,...,arcorrup. pan lllCJa aad Santa Ana.
One of the men matched the
description of the suspect who robbed
Denny's. and they acted incrcasin&ly
nervous as officers questioned them,
Webster said. After police lost sight of the
suspects 1n Lake Forest, a Laguna Hills resident called the county
Shcriff s Ocpanment to rcpon a man
had tried to break into his home on
the 2000 block of Hendon Street,
Sheriff's Department spokesman Lt.
Dick Olson said.
While officers searched the neigh-
borhood, another resident reponed
that a man had knocked on the door
and said he had injured his hand.
The caller's husband pvc the
injured man a ride to Saddlcback
Hospital and Health Center. Olson
said. . David Chris Medina, 28. of El
Monte, was arrested at the hospital.
He was carrying a large amount of
money still in bank wrap~rs -more than what was taken at the restaurant.
The suspectS' car was later found
abandoned in a shopping center at
Pasco de Alicia and Hon Avenue in
Laguna Hills. Olson said.
Inside the car, officers found a
black leather jacket matching one
worn by the Denny's robber.
another victim about a week prior but
said nothing.
Durinf crosHxamination of the first gir • Barnett questioned her
about whether she was involved in
several incidents of misconduct after the allegations surfaced.
She denied that she and another
victim ~tied a classmate and
pretended someone was assaulting
them. She aJso denied three of the
airls tried to remove the trousers of a
youna man at school who-wouldn't
coo~ratc with them.
She further denied she had tned to
get the another alleged victim to chan&c her story. She said she talked
to theairl to check if she had observed
correctly the teacher touchina her.
However, she admitted two friends
of hers conspired to get into the
teacher's classroom to retrieve the
note and one went throuah a window
to do JO: .
··1 told them about the note and
they were upset and wanted to help me,., she said.
Bostrom closed the courtroom
durina testimony by the youna wit·
ness after she broke into tears when
MacEachcm asked her to expl•in the
difference between truth and hes. The judse then called to the 11rls' mother
not to signal answers to her d.aua)lter
after a counroom staff member told
him of her actions.
"I was not motioning; I was telhna
her to smile and cheer up," the
mother said.
throuah the Judicial hearinJ could
have cost as much as SS0,000.
Cal1ef said he intends to rest and
relax and m:uperate. He said his
health has taken a downward tum
and that he faces the ~peel of back
sursery. A former e~neer and a
boatina enlhusiaai, caner 11id he
envisions the day when he can
combine those interests with the law and open a small pradice.
"I'd like evennaally to work three OT
four d.avs a week to keep from tettina bored.'rbe said ... But npt now,
boredom sounds fiM ...
The Judkial probe, ~ !Po parcnllj cut lhon.. abould not taant
bat career. c:.ner •id. .. My f'riendt and family know
better," be laid o( the aUr,pUOM. "t-.f .Y ecqaintanc:n don "t believe them
---.-.. public will foreet all this in Iii mootht.. ..
In llct, Ql1Cr said the whole maaer Im drawn his family ctoter
........ made me a~IC my
Wife. I lleve been IMJ'rild JI )Wt1
ud I ~ wia, more daan ever.
SM lllill m.u dtil ""*•int -Wll.1 tmorepelaC8ble."
Al IW ltit judicial ..-. Carw said
.... ~-II-~ pr:o-
.... 'Md recently iurMd IO
dlu'8rry.
~ftet~~~ ..
aJICmltiva, remaann' on the ~
doeln't tcen1 worth it. Caner wrow
in his formal mitution letttt.
In \be letter, Caner u~ Oov. Oearll DucluncJiall to ftll ll11Judicial
polt II quidly II pc>1111*.
.. But I lave wiOt • dear (Oflt-
cimce. I have ftOl misuled 1ny otlkle.
l'h11'1 dte trvdai;.c.rter aid Tue. ct.y. "Thae 11 tioM aa'a lake
=the•t1st.ctiOnof'MYiaadcMle• job. •
"1 tild my • 1111 rt NII ... 1.,..,
intoU.tlDcid....._"
But UClidltr Mell West iaideat
oblefviail dlC -.etial WU not willina
C.eater .... a.id. "'There ue hw ~ TewiMll Scbool at ailllL
.,... .......... around.~ II nip• F°"'9da aid ·~ .. .w.1 W\da
IO maU ihe ~-
.. YM'ft pa~ Kin cancer
here aad you'.e p 1 loc ol (Olftletia
IO COvef it UP-•id Pit Dolan.
p1eident of the Meta Wes& Home-onen Auocialion. "Drunb art
undesirable. ~ addlCU are un· desirable. ParoleeS are undesirable. P~ who sleep in your yard and
won t retP«t: your t>fOpert y are
undesirable. The solutaon iJ to att
ahele people out of the neilh·
borhood."
thU IMrt were beb-e. ,.... ... fean. .,._. .-s dlC rcan Meta Wesa resident Janae~ wete oftett baled oo ~· O.vidlon wu wiUina to concede the •• • . · there improvcment 11 the Rea Center, but ~we rcsaydltatmtybe .arc
said it made bttJe difT~IK'C 10 her soluuons.toyour~~fMnJ'18!' neiabboftlood. JaYI,~ tblS lS temUK, wu IS &em17•
"'Thinp haven't chanaed for us; 1na. ·
they're still an our net&hborhood," .. forblth said a lar,e ~ion of
she said. Share Our Selves cf~nu are f'amahes
She told of a 7-ycar-old child 10 the wilJi children. And she hauleldfutly
nei,ahborhood who had been followed rcs11aed S'l..,est1ons that Shatt Our ~a homeless ma.n beuina for food. Selves move to 111other pan of the
The c)likt she saiG, was badly city.
Mary Hornbuckle, the other coun-
cil member on the tuk force, said the
problems identified by Dolan and olhen are not unaque to ne&&b·
borboodl around the Rea Center.
fnahtencd by the incident. . "We've already moved 11x times,"
Forbathcountercd. however, that a she said ... And how wou.~ our clients
child can ~ followed in any nc1&h· act to some remote sne.
borhood. The task fortt. whjcb was chaired
"For eJtample, any school at niaht by Dick Power, wdJ repon to the City
is I d.a"lttoUS place," she said ... , Coundl witb rccommendataons nut
would never let my child walk month.
"And we have to rccopize that
there has been improvement at Rea
'Night Stalker' juror dismissed
lttdlar~ 11 .... 1rea ll•ftl; defendant In the .. Night Stalker .. trlal,
sits wtth his attorner, lllc,.ard SallN11, Tuesday when th•
Judtl• dlMlf11ed • eta.di Jwor fw r•••rk1 a bout th• ractal makeup of death row. WMnen e 1 testified th• juro r said h •
would onlJ 9lve • Cauca1a.n the death pena lty b ecause o nlJ
blacks and Hl1panlc1 h ave been recelvl119 It.
BAY thc.11land home to be m an ideal
locauon bcca_ysc she had easy acc~s
From A 1 to her doctof'in Los Angeles va.a the
r old Pacific Electnc Red Cu hne · Each house has bay irontage, and Still, she knew the end was near On all back onto a central park area. According toa short history wntten moving into the island house she said .
by Barbara Stephens Osburn _ a "Ah. It 1ssmall, this place ofours But
one-time Bay Island resident whose what of that? It 1s laric cnouah for t"'o
fi h W II. s h old people to s111n -and wait " at er, 1 tam te~ ens. was gov-On A~nl 8. 1909. she died. and her emor of Cahforn1a JUSt after World War I -Sanborn and Waters built Bay h nd home pa scd 10 her
the first homes there. Another h1~ grandson, fch~ ModJesk1
torian said at was Sanborn and Sam lnhcntancc 1s pracucall) the onl) Tustin. way to set a house on Bay hland
At any rate Waters did build a Turnover is rue.
home there 1n 1903, and bits and M1kcYusk1sofJohnJacobsRcahy.
pieces of it arc sllll pan of the existing whach has Iona handled ho~es 1n the
structure now owned by James peninsula area, said he can t recall a Higson, himself a builder. Bay Island sale bcma processed by the
Perhaps the most famous island board of rcaltors 1n recent Y.Cars.
resident was Madame Helena Mod· Yusk1s suuestcd t~at 1f a ~ome
jcsk.a, the Porish Shakespearean ac-sf'lould 10 up.for sale, It would hkcly
tress who came to OranJf County" be a case ~f · somebody who knows
with her husband ID the 1870s. somebody, with the transaction
Tht couple had financed a farmina bcm& handled by 1 law firm rather
venture near Anaheim that faiJed. th~.n ~hrough trad111onal channels ..
fomng the actress to return to the It s an e~trcmely special •~land.
sta1e where she became an even Yusk1s wd. b1ucr sensation than she had been 1n Because of the ranty of ownership Europe transfers and the unusual corporate
Most Orange Counttans know of setup orthe 1 land pro~ny, pnccurc
the 101-vcar-old ModJeskJa House, difficult to aauac dubbed ·'Forest of "-rden," that the A customer scrv1cc-s represcntat1"c couple built below Saddlcback Peak at CommonwcaJth T1tJe Insurance
ID 1888 was able to unearth a deed transfer m
But fewer know that financial woes 1968. which showed the bu)er p:ud
continued to plaaue ahem . and 1n abo~t S 100.000 for the home
1906 they sold the rural home. It s safe to assume his an vestment
After hv1n1 bnefly in Tustin. they has p11d off hand'°mely
bouaht a small cottqe on Bay Island A fair oompanson toda y m1aht by
from Sam Tustin 1n 1907. They Har'bor I land homes -altnou&h
moved 1n the followana year and they tend to be more lavish and
Madame M~ka bttame the fint 1mprc$s1ve -which stan at around or a Ion& line ilt celebrities who have S2 million and tell rot 11 much as SS
made Newpon Beach their year· mill10~1 Yuski1 said.
round residence.. But me kind of person intemted in
Her fame bein& somewhat vcatcr livina on Bay Island m1aht not fit
than Bly Island's. manr. took lo 1oda__y's 1yp1cal Newport Beach callina the isle "Modjcska Island... profile, he suges~.
Alf'Udy an fadina health, sbt found .. la's one of the few Islands 1n town
NEWSRACKS
l'rcNllAI
the newsrects.
Tht third.""°"'>' wall be acconkd to Weekly .,..blicauon1 that have not
been adjudicated to be of ,mtral
carculltion in Oranee County.
Hutton •id die Ordinance a\.oidi
consututional Drohibition1 3:eu 1nfrinermmt of' First Ame~a npta of ftmlom or praa. lftllrad,
tltC meuure propoees to limit tbe
M'WlrllCkl • reatOlll oC public IUety
for poteft~!..._ ~idelltl and IO
enhala lhe aulCUQ in IM d9'.
Oblenm said the ordi•nce
}m t call 642-6086
Wh11 do )'OU hke about the Deily Pilot? What
dOn'a you l•k~'! Call the number above and J"t
l'Mtlllf will be reconled. tranlCribed and de·
livmd to lht...,.,..,.. ecldot.
new2 .................. ..,.
ulld ao reconl lrum IO die edMr °" a.y '°'*· Contnbuton IO ow Lctw'I cal••• mU1118Chldl
&Mir UIM ad 111eplMIM ...... b ¥Cnf\catioft.
Tell"'••·• oa yow..-.
2 men arreSted
In bank robbery
Two m~n..werc1tTCSted but no cash
was recovered Tuesday followana the
holdup of a bank ID Huntinaton
Beach.
Booked into Huntinaton Beach J••l
on suspicion of armed robbery wett Anthony Pate and Jeffrey Bailey both 30 and of Huntington Beach.
The holdup took plaoe J~t af\er 3
(>.m. at California Federal Bank, 7222
Edinger Ave., SgL Ron Jenkms said.
One of the suspects waJked up LO a
teller, d1splayec;J a hand&un and
demanded cash. Jenkins taid The
amount taken has not been de-
termined. he said.
The man then ran out to a wamne
car being dnvcn by the second
suspect.
The vehicle, a luge buraundy
colored Amencan-made car, was last
seen hcadtngcast on Edinaer. Jenkins
said.
Minutes later. patrol Officer R1ch-
ard McMJllan spotted a car fining the
description of the escape vehicle ind
stopped it at Edinaer and Sher Lane.
The suspects were held at the scene
until two witnesses of the holdup were driven by. They ide~tificd both
the suspects and the car, Jenkins said.
The stolen money was not re-covered, Jcnkms said.
where you find establishment. old
Newpon money," Yuslus said "It's
not your h1gh·po~ executive
types."
Yusk.is said the off-site aaraae. which 1s located across from the Balboa branch library at Bay and
Island avenues, and peninsula traffic
head.aches could further hm1t the
profile of a would-be Bay Island
resident.
Those po v1legcd f cw who h ve there
now ha"e only good th1np to SI)
about their island -1f thcy'lf talk
about It at all.
Higson disagreed that the off· 11e
aara1e was an)' kind of problem He noted that people 1n condominium or
apanment complexes often hve far
from their aara~.
There arc a few who use elcctnc
carts or b1cydcs to srt llround but
Higson says the walk 11 not a problem
for him.
BcsJdes, any di'8dv1ntaac from not
hav1n1 one's ar naht outside the
front CfoOr IS far OUtWC1J,hcd by the
peace and tranqud1ty on Bay Island,
he said.
On Lido ble. for instance. one c.n
hear the constant sound or traffic "H~ that's absent Totally
absent," H1J)On said; MYou hear
birds inst~·· •
"It's unique." aareed Fred
LiOdsley,curTCnt ~nt oftbe Bay Island Club.
Bcvood that, Ltndslcy and m0$l
Bay bland residents would JUJt as
soon no one knew any1h1n1 about
their island. to they're not about to
help 1nqu11nive rtponcn. wwe·ve always liken \he atance
that ~ don'l hke any IOn of
pubhClty," LandsAtjt said ... We hk.c
the pnvacy."
And in that 1ente. Bly bland is not so uniq'1J.~!';~~u. Nut: ...... • ..
. ,,... .. -,_.... ,.., .,..,..., ..... ...... •O•• .... .-:t_,_. .. -..... °"' c .... ....... ........ (-• ---·····~· -......---= .. ,.,Cl .....
Cll a r "_ .... _
·ua a•
·--------~--.....---~----------~------~,------------------~----..---
" Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT /W9dneeday1 Janwry •• 1tll Al
HI I I I I '' HO\ HU
Paraplegic to speak
t0(!1ght at Estancia
lawsuit dropped in exchange for: LB land
A paraplqac v.ho as a member of ancy HR~n s Spea~en Bureau wall speak at Estancia
•&h School at 7·30 f .m. tonaaht Dan Clark wall
brina has moovat1on1 message to the Forum. 2323
Placentia Ave .• Costa Mesa For information. call
S42-2074. •
Lt!arn to managt! strt!ss ·
.. Strtss Manaaemcnt for the Professional" ts the
topic ofa three-hour v.orkshop offered on Thursday b~_ Oraoae Coast C-0llqe's community s.erv1cc
office.
Lecturer Denise E Davis, a licensed mam •.
family and ch ild therapist practicina in Tustin. will
discuss vanous aspects of stress and how-to deal with
ll.
The workshop runs from 6:30 to 9:30 pm. and
costs S 19. Call 432-S880 for more informatton. .
Show dt!talls t!Xp~dlt/ons ·
A slide show detailing ·the activities of •
Ea.nhwatch, a na11onal -.olun tccr envfronmental
orpnazauon. will be presented 11 7:30 p m. on
Ttiursday at Costa Me~ Ad"enture 16. J 870 Harbor
Blvd., Costa Mesa
Eanhwalch promotes rc\earch expcdu1ons that
preserve endangered specie~ and habitats.
Th as event wall provide details on an opp0rtuni·
ty to do sorr.e thing different and wonhwh1le. and
find out what Earthwatch has to offer.
The store 1s at 1870 Harbor Blvd and the show
starts at 7·30 p.m. More information may be
obtained b> calling 650-3301
Rock and mineral show
The 45th annual sho'f' of The Orange { oa-.c
Mineral & Lap1dal') Society wait be held from 10
a.m 10 8 pm S:uur4ay and 10 am. to 6 pm
Sunday Food and a S 100 pnze wall be offered al 1he
e"ent. The show will be at the Plumbers Union Hall.
3904 W First t . Santa .i\na
Add1uonal 1nformat1on ma) be' obtained by
calling Art Compton at (213) 434-8581 or Janet
De)den at 546-4389.
St! x and oldt!r womt!n
.. Sex and the Older Woman" wall be tht' 1op1 c of
a pr~m presented b) the Women's League of
South Orange County at I 0 a m. Saturday at the
ltvane Women's Health Cen ter The center is at 4879
Barranca Parkwa y. In 1ne
For 1nformat1on. call 833-2 111
Ski trip from lrvlnt!
A ski tnp to Mountain High will be offered b~
the Irvine Cormnun1ty Service Department 5 30
a.m to 7 p.m Jan. 21 A $14 fee will include
transportation and supen 1s1on ..\ddauonal money
wall be nttded for hf\ tickets. lunch and dinner
9y tiSl.a IAllNIST .. °'._.,_,...._.
L..aauna Canyon ConseTVancy droppN a
lawsuit ap1ns1 The Irvine Co and the
count)' Tuesday O'ret the Irvine Coas& an
exchanac for the deYeloper offenna
J..aauna Beach another )car to purchase
two pocket.s of land alona Laauna Canyon
Road.
Jn addjtion, &be environment.al voup.
which filed the la'tl>suit chatlef\&lng a
development agreement between the
county and The Irvine Co in May, was
barred from t.1k1na funher legal action
aaaanst 1h1t •arumcnt.
The lrvane Coast propeny co"ered by
the ..,-tt~nt tittends from Laaun• •· nyoo ROid. wtapPina arounct nonh La&una and 1tret.ch1na to Corona dtl Mar.
fo p&l11CUlar, the consen-·ancy WU
conocmtd about c-0mmerc1al ckvclop-
ment on 1ppro~1m11ely seven acttS in the
canyon 1n the Bil Bend area Richard
Hams, past president of the conservanc)',
said Laauna residents will likely reap a
sreater 6cncfit ftom the SClllement lhan 1f
they had gone to court.
"It's a areat victory," Harris said. "We
might have won the case. but winning the case would nol have gotten us those
pockets of land."
As a result of the settlement, the land
w1U be appraised 1n the nclltt 30 days and
l:aguna Beach gets
•
a timely gift: Stately
old clock repaired
By LESLIE fAANEST
OtdW~ ..... ~
The first thing Laguna &ach Coun-
cilman Dan Kenney thought when he saw
three men sv.armana around the city's
most v1S1blc clock Monday morning was
that tJme was repealing 11self.
Recen t news stones had relayed the saga
of hov. the stately umepu:cc. which now
stands on Forest A -.enue near Glenne)'re
Street, had once been snatched off the
streets of Orange b)' Laguna officials
dunng a latc-m&hl raid
The tale al once sill> and b11.arre
unfolded after the clock stopped working
and a search for us careta~er ""as launched
"When I first got here. I thought. ma)'bc
they had come from Orange •• Kenney
said "( said. 'Excuse me What arc you
gu)'S doing'> You aren't stealing this thing
arc you'>"
.i\s It turned out. there was a less
ncfanous reason for the bua of arnv11y
The men. led by Bnce Woodward. owner
of Vantage Time, had am\cd with tools.
scaffolding and a smglc m1ss1on to restore
hfe to the clock's frozen face
Woodward, who had put an a bad wuh
thecaty to repair the clock at one lime. said
he had heard enough about the \o\OCS of
repaanng the clock And after readmg
recent accounts of the saga. Woodv.ard
decided to take matters into his ov.n
hands Two )Car v.11hou1 time "'as long
enough. he said
cussaons of how to clltt for the clock -
including ~stamatcs up to SJ.000 10 repair
the t1mep1ccc and the poss1b1hty of u mg
solar power to keep at runnang -pnuscd
Woodward's 1nat1at1vc
"That's probably lhe neate t thing about
Laguna," Kenney ~1d. "They hear about
somethanJ. that needs to be done nd 1he)
JUSl do ll. •
According 10 Woodv.ard. the dod;,
v.h1ch he es11matcs dates back to the turn
ofthe centul'). had suffered from eitpo ure
to the ~It air and from mechanical v.ear
and tear ~ftcr the repair crew spent most
of Monday mending the clock. \\ood"'ard
wrapped tts face 11) a cardboard ho\ and
attached a bow -ha gift to the cit)
Tuesday morning, Kenne'\ and Wood
ward unwrapped the t1mcp1ece as motor-
ists and passc~~by gawked qu111call>
.. It was all v.onh 11 •• said Woodv.ard
after the cardboard fell ·· 1 JUSt hope 11 "'all
be'appreci:ucd And nov. v.c ha't' thC' ttme
again. don't "'"e'>"
Bui according 10 Kl·nnc\ \\ oodv.ard
spent more than his tune an the effort. he
might also ha\>c lost mone)
the city wilt have a )tar to purchase aht
land.
At the same time. the court order
acknowledaed the .. lcplity and validity"
of the development aareement and the
"completeness and adequacy" of the
environmental 1mpac1 report
Gary Hunt, senior vice pre 1dcnt for
entitlement and legal affairs for The lrv1nc
Co., issued a formal statement after the
agreement was reached ··r suppose we should be ple.tscd and
surpnscd wuh the settlement aarccment •
but franlly, we're neat her." the statement
said. "Whtie the senlement save us and
the county the future cost of hupuon, it
has already required A tremendou legal
expense. further. we fell "Cf)' nfidtna
that the law '4 on our ade and tba1 we
v.ould have ortvaaled ..
h is now up to L.aauna Beach 10 come up
w11h the fund' 10 purchase the ~rty.
The city's open space commission rttently
moved the land 1cqu111t1on hiper on 1u
pnonty llSl Accordana to Hams. ~re
should be sufficient money to make the
purchase before the one.year deadline.
When that happens, res1dtnts can be
assured the two pockets of land will not be
developed. he said
"Once they're bought by Propcnation 70
moner, they can't be developed,'' Hams
satd. • They art open space fo~ver."
Those who v.1sh to attrnd should meet at the
In-inc Youth Scn1ct's (t'nter. 14301 Yale ·h e.
Irvine.
Call 559-0464 for further information
·~ figured the people around here
destne the time.'' '-"ood"'ard \aid ··~ I
decided to go for 1t ··
Kenne). v.ho had sat through d,.,.
Erecting a sign at hi s. business. Wood-
ward had directed hi s cu\tomers to th<'
daylong repair prOJCCt While Kenne)
stood nearb) Mond.t) .i. v.uuld-b( cu.,.
tomer approached Woodward a\~1ng 1f he
had a 1940 Rolcx "'"llllh at ha\ store -.i.
sale worth approx1ma1el) S90U l\ccord1ng
10 Kenne~ Woodward told the t'ager
customer he could probahh lill the bill. but
he "'ould ha\e to "'aat t11l 1he ta'>~ at hand
v.-as complt'te
"I wonder 1f that gu ~ t'\ er came bad:,"
Kenne' wad
.....,.._,,.....,&...-...,_
Councllman Dan Kenney and Bric• Woodward unwrap clock after tt
had been rep.aired, Woodward's gtft to La9una Beadt.
Young proft!sslonal s to mt!t!t
Author Elizabeth Geo~e v.11l speak at the
Hunt1naton Brach ChambcrofCommcn:e's Young
ProfCSSJonal Breakfast on Fnda) at the Hohda> Inn
7667 Center A -.e . Hun11ngton Beach The c-.cnt 1s
$8 prtpaad for chamber members. S9 for members at
the door and S 12 for non-members at the door.
Phony Sears employee faces theft charges
For resen auon call the chamber offi ce at
536-8888
Trav~lt!r to discuss Flnlarrd, USSR
Herl> Williams.a rtlired h1stol') prof~~r from
Long Beach Csty C ollcge and a member of Buena
Vasta Audubon Soc1ct) an Oceanside. v.111 discuss has
tnp to Finland and the So"iet Unaon at 7·30 pm.
Jan. 18 at El Moro Parl For 1nformat1on, call tht·
park at 494~3539
Ex-Sovlt!t prlsont!r to spt!ak
The Freedoms Foundation at Valle\ f orge v.111
present Yun \ ctolhan. a former O\ 1et pnsoner. at
a luncheon 11 11 a m 4iaturd3) al Knott"s ~fr)
Farm's north main d101na room fhe pubh'" 1s ·
invattd lnformataon and re~na11on., m0t\ be ob1a1nrd
by calhna Jacquie 11 q6~·859<t ·
Chlldrt!n's fl/ms at library
Thrtt short films. "C1nnonb.all " "Corduro\ ••
and "( unOu\ (1eorge. will be \hov. n at 2 p in
Saturday 11 the M nner Branch Labral') 1 h<' film\.
which art free and open to 1hc pubhc. last about on<'
hour The hbral) 1s at .200S Do'cr Dmc
For more 1nformat1on. call 644~3 145
(' ·\l.t :'\OAH
1''edn~ da , Jan. 18
I
• 7 pm. IApaa 8cact. Plaulaa Comml11ioo,
council chambc~. 505 rorc l vc.
• 7 p m H11tla(lOI Btl<'~ Plaoalq Com·
alls '-·council chambc , 2000 Matn t
Thursday. Jan . 19
• 7 .30 p m twport Beact. Plauial Com·
mlsaHl9, council chamber~. HOO 'c\o\port Bhd
POl.l(·t : I .Oft
City News SeNICe
.\rraagnmcnt 1'1 scheduled \\ edncsda)
for a man ""ho altcgedl~ ~tole more than
$20,000 whale posing as a Sears emplo)ce
and offenng deal\ on home dec1ron1c'i
equipment.
Roben V1to Vast1 . H. as ~uspcctcd 1n at
least four scam!> -1nclud1ng one at South
Coast Plaza 1n ( osta Mesa -10 which
and1v1duals, uc;uall ) mall-business mcn.
\I.ere &old to dehver cash 1n a scaloo
cn,clope fo r lt'I<' .. 1s1on ~t'i ... 1dcocasS<'ttt'
rttordcrs and .. 1dco rnmcras \\ cstminster
pohce detecu-.e Oa\C tronach \aid
Vasta \o\.Ould then d1..appear \o\tthout
delncnng the produl't'i tronach allegc:"d
Vasta was arrt'sted fnda) night atlcr tv.o
emplo)ccs from the Pro Tire hop an
Tusun met ham at the W"tmanMcr Mall
~Ith S3.000 1n cash an a sc-alC'd c:'n\elotl('
Stronach said
The emplo)ces. Greg Wood and Jue
Small. became susp1c1ous bccau\C of 1hc
cheap pnccs and called pohcc Whalc
undercO\ er otliccrs v.atcht."d \' ast1 ollcred
t9 takc them to a Scars lood1ngd()(l 10 p1cl
up their merchandise. he ~1d
Vasta "'"a arre ted on c;uc;p1uon ofirand
theft. grand then fro m a pc:'rmn rt'i1\ting
arrest and g1-. 1ng fol~ 1nformat1on 10 a
pohce oniler lk was bctnft held :11 thr
Orange C. ount}' Jail 1n heu ol $1110,()()(
baa I
Detecu-.es behe'c vasu "'a'i 1n\11hC'd 1n
at least thr« other such ~am-, ""hale
1ronach said he suspcca \ a\11 1\ rc.-<,pc.1n·
s1bk for c1gh1 10 10 cons throughuu1
Orange (ount) All '°"ohctl 'imall-hus1·
ness men and large mall\ \o\tth ~af\ \tore,,
"'hert Vasta allegtdlv took the mone~ and
ne\cr re1urned. he said
'Ifs the same thing ·· tmnalh said "In
one case. he e'en pointed 10 an emplo\<'<'
tn'i1de the stort and 1old th<'\ ll'l1ni he'd b(
nght out hl ll>ad h" apphanrc'"
On 'o\ ~. \ ac;u l'i bche\rJ io haH
l'alled a mt:n.h.int v.11h an otlrr and \Ct up
Investigators name suspect
in Costa Mesa fatal shooting
By GREG KL!RKX °'.,,. o~,.... St..,
Police iden11fied a 'iU'i!X'(t 1n the
hoouna death of a l ~-)c.·:ir-old man on 11
Co ta Mesa slre<'t on Dc.-c 26 a' the
boyfnend of the '-tl llm'\ C)tranged v.1f<'
fnvest1pton i ucd a v.arrant tor tht
artt t of Roberto To-.ar Ram1rc1 3 of
Co ll Mesa. \apt Robcn food) \aid
Pohcc did not pre\ 1ouc,I> kno"' 1he
1dcnt1t> of the shooter.
Ramirel IS U'J)C(tcd on1t1tna Jeremias
0111 ~lacnJl ofGarden Gro-.eon lhecb-.
aficr Chmtmas 1f\er a bnef cha through
the trccu of v.cit Co ta 1e .
Pollet in1tt•ll~ 1hou&ht the ~hoo11na v.H par~td t)> a traffic dic,pute. bul Mood)
\31d thC) now behctte OdaCTU1 Polled
Ram1re1 dn\tni "''th h1\ e\trangcd "'le
"ho "'a-. not 1dent1tied and tool oil afkr
the pair
.. \\ e "en.• ong1nalh aoing on t\\n
theone' " Mood) ..aad "One J'U\'>1h1lat'
"a" that a trank altcn:a11on lllU\ed 1h<'
!>hooting The other v.a\ that th<''> knc"
each other somcho" "
According to poh(.C repon\ l~lacru1
was dm '"I a -.,m on Harbor 8-0ulc .. atd
near the n Diego frecv.a' when he
spotted Ramirel and hie; e trangt'd v.ik an
• Buick or (he\ rolct Capnle.
W1tnn~ told pohC't' .c he \an. v.hach
also contained thrtt other men. t."has.td
Ram1rcz·c, car from Harbor Boule' ard to
Scenic \enue and then to Cad11l<i
A'enuc. which 11 a dcad~nd street near
the C osu Mcsa-\an~ na bOrder.
Both \c:'htde\C.lm<' to a 'lllP at the cnJ (ll
Cadillac and Dclarru1 alkgcdl~ 1umpcd
out of h1o; \an at the ~mt' time Ram1 rt"t
Jumped out of hi\ l·ar RJm1re1 alkgc.Jh
opened tirt' w11h a large~alt~:r handgun,
hitting Dclacru1 tWtll' in the chc t and
'hattcrt'ng the \an c; wand tucld Ramuu
then got bad: an to thr car and Ocd
Delacm1 v.as pronoun..:cd dC'aJ on
3m\al a1 Founu1n \ alle~ RCjlonal Mcdt-
(11 Center The other thrtt pa4istnsc~ in
the 'an v.ere not anJured. ~
Mood~ \a1d thert 1'> a good chan'-<" that
Ramirez has fled to Me\IC'\l "T h:it'c, ~hat uc;ualh hap~n 1n thest
ca~s. he s.t1d
n\one v.11h 1nforma1wn about
R mirtz's whcrtabc.lut'> or ;about the
'ihOOUn& hould ll lXtt<'tl\e Oan Ho uc
at 75+5:!05
3 mtt'llng at a restaurant near the
\\ e-.tnun~ter \1all. 'tronach said.
I he u~pttt Chen allegedly led lhc
Hcttm. v.ho dch\ertd SS.625 an cash for
him and about sc' en fncnds. to the Scars
loading dock. took the mone) and walked
av. av. he s:11d
1he\1cums. v.ho rented trucks to collect
their cele\ 1s1on~ and recorders. ~~ left
empt' handed at the Scars loading dock
atter the man took lhc mone) and ran.
tronach ~1d
P('()ple "'ho beltc'-e the) v.ere v1c-
11m11C'd an the scams '4erc asked to call
\tronach at q • 131 I "tension 348
Marine charged
in wife's slaying
By GREG KLERKX
Of tN O<llly "'-S&Mf
An El Toro l\.1ann<' has bcc:n charge-d
""'''h th<" murdt'r ol his v.1fe la t spnoi
Gunner) Sat Murra) D. Payne is beans
htld 1n the Manne ( orps bng at Camp
Pendleton pending an '\rt1clc 32 hcanng..
v.hllh 1s scheduled for 8 am Thursda)
n ~nacte 32 hcanna 1s s1m1lar to a grand
JUT) hcanng
Pa)ne " ~uspccted of murdenng ht
v.1fe Ella Mac P•>ne. ""hose bod> was
found Ma' 10 at her home 1n Corona The
a\ al ln,est1pt1,e Sen ice 1s conunu1na
an an\C 11aation anto 1~. Pa)ne·sdcath
ff thert as a basJS for cha~s apin t
Pa)'ne, he could face• tandard co11rt tnal.
a court martial or bol~
Pa) ne 1 attached 10 .... anne Wana
uppon ~uadron J73. 1anne Wn\I
uppon Group 3 . 3rd ._,.annc Au-craft
Wing at (I Toro
Fnuruain Valle
A fraud 1n-.c tiJllOr from \Int)'
Prtti"on M1ll~ork. 10 40 Talbert
,e .• 50mcume O\cr the "'ttkend
when a buljlar broke out a window at
the bus1naa with a rock
• • • A aimper hell valued 11 S )50 wa
aolcn in the 2 700 block of n Carlos
'cnut on unda> n1ah1 or earl
Mondi . The theft occurTCd bftv.rcn
1 pm. uriday and 7:30a.m Monday.
and 10 a.ni. Monda .
~twporl ~arh
wuthbound on f'oa,t H11hv.a~ on occurTtd
Monda-. af\cmoon Polt c "-t'rt un· end.
able to foca1e tht \Chicle.
mct1me o'er the wttk-. . ..
Ntifk Bank, 17910 rg.noha A~c ..
reporUd a customer 1 ted •rid was &iveti tn Ma tetC'u t under sax
difftttnt oam and then charttd
SI 1.Sll. • • • A front ~1ndo• of a bussne at
• • • The offi~ of Benneu A Auoc11t<.
11770 Warnn A YC .• "'°" buraJ.anztd
o\·tt tht Wttkcnd and propen) -.onh
SI. 900 lllen.
11170 Mt. Biid> Cirde Yt"ls masbcit Colla Mesa by 1 thief who stole • SSO tcrt<>
casauc early Monday mom1n1 • • • A ho«Mo•Mr an IM 1 IOOOblotk of
San1a Arabella Stmt ~ 1 conu•uins problem of aomeone
petdu .. CIP 11 htt ..,. .. drivcwa
andtwocan. ••• A 1916 .-n vudt periled '" 1be Tk vtctim tried IO wall away but tht
llOOO bloct of Ward SUftt was IUIPK1 pc;~ lnpPlftl h: m and
strt,..S of ~ valued at S500 da .,...,..... tum ,IDY IM throet ........_ -. ... ~)()p.a. SUadly Se\Wil .,,_-.•u• 1atent11ed Md ......... .....,& ~J-~~JlOMldDma
A 1100 ..:0 :.. .... ..... ~ ZI. Olal Mm.. ... •·
• • • former bo) tnend " uspcclcd of
a trona arm robber) 1n ._hich a
•oman,r,·uanad.cd, -.crblllyabuled
and robbed Of tV.O ICk\ISIOn ICtS 1n
her apanmtnt "' the 100 block of
Walnut A"cnuc turda1. The los
arc "alucd at S300 The robbery
occumd 11 IO:JO a.m. • • • mconc ent~ an unlocked pr. aee 1n tbc 200 bloct of Knoa rttt
and uolc • mo"Mr and fdilrr, wtlh
tOlal Yal"' of $624. TM bwaW)'
0«umd bc1Wttn 5 p m. Snday and
71.m Monda . • • • A d\ikf1 •ftn' tail and a Sk'tto • IN!~-on 100. ~ MICft ftOiil a cm an dlir -700 block of I Ida Sltwt
.,.. h9t bclMI• 9 p,•. 9unilly
mtonc u\Cd two concret<' rO\.h
to 11mash a plate alac,s. front door ol the
Pon Pharmac). 3130 We t Balboa
Bhd . euly MonJay morn1na
othana "llS apparentJ> tolen from
the pharmac). • • • mC<>ne ma> h -.c u!.t'd a pas kc)
to enter a h•llway an trium Coun
and then pntd a chain loc to a
cook1na hool pproiumatcl) S 7.460 wonh of com put.er equipment
and phot p.cn wt>~ taken. • • • The owner or an 1913 Pl)mouch
pporo found the rear ~1ndov.
shatttted while \llSllU'll fncnd in the
2JOO block of1~1M 'cnuc.
.............. h
'A IUiPCCt WU rtpontdl)' bran-
diehi .. a pelltt pn •hdc dm1n1
• • • Cash rte<'1pts were rcpontdl) mi •
ang for a bu'iant\ an the 200 block of
forc$t vtnuc 1onda' l he lo w1
report~ I SI I S QI
l en scaOold1ng planks. wonh U.000. v.erc stolen from a busine an
the 1800 bloc~ o( ~1scr Avenue
betwttn 4 and 5 a.m. Monday.
•••
' '
,
I Orenoe Cout DAILY PILOT/ W~nesday. January ie. 1089 'lllF:
Gunman kills five, himself at school
STOCKTON (AP) A camoun.,ed dnfter with a long
criminal record invaded a schoolyard
at receu on Tuesday and opened fire
with an assault nne, killing five
children and woundins at least 30
others before taking t\1s own life,
police said.
Patrick E. West, 26. who most
recently lived in Lodi, fatally
wounded himself in the head after
firing a hail of bullets as hundreds of
studenu milled around on the cam-
pus of Cleveland Elementary School,
said Deputy Police Chief Lucian
Neely, who provided fhe identity of
theaunman.
Children ran screaming as their
classmates fell .
West, also known as Patnck Purdy,
had an "extensive criminal record,"
said Neely, who added that many of
the crimes were committed in the Los ~les area and included solicitina
for sex and narcotics and weapons
violations.
"At this ~int there arc six dead
and 30 injured," said Bruce
Fernandes, a spokesman for the San
Joaq_uin County Office of Emergency
SerV1ccs. One of the wounded was a
teacher; the rest were students.
Neely said five of the dead were
children and the sixth was West, who shot himself in the head after the
massacre. There was no apparent
motive, he added.
The dead students were identified
as Raphanar Or, 9, a boy; and girls
Ram Chun, 8; ThulTran, 6. Sokhim
An 6, and Ocun im, 8. AJI were
children of refugee fam ilies from
Southeast Asia.
"Before it was over, he killed
himself." Neely said, adding that at
least IS of the wounded were in
critical condition in this city about 80
miles southeast of San Francisco.
Deputy Police Chief Ralph Tribble
said the gunman, in camouflaged
combat fatigues, a flak jacket and ear
pluas, apparently set his I 977 Chev-
rolet station wagon ablaze as a
diversion before entering the campus
at about 11:40 a.m. PST with two
handauns and an AK-47 assault rifle
.. with a full banana clip" and opening
fire.
Neely gave this descripuon of the
sequence of events:
West entered the schoolyard
through a gap in a fence after parking
his car nearby. He opened fire on the
west side of a group of portable
classrooms, then moved to the east
side and continued firing across the
blacktopped yard, towards the main
buildings about 2SO yards away.
About 60 rounds were fired : m
some cases, the bullets went com-
pletely through the mam school
building and came out the other side
ro fall spent on the L-shapcd school's
front lawn, Neely said.
As police cleaned up the camaite. a
Hurt children are aided In a Stockton
elementary schoolyard Tuesday after •
-Las ...... heavily armed gunman In comlNtt f attgues
opened fire, ldlllng five students;
Assault rifles easier to buy than handguns
SACRAMENTO (A P) -By a quirk in California's
gun laws, AK-47 assault nfles similar 10 the weapon
sus~ted in the mass killing Tuesday at a Stockton school
arc easier to buy than a handgun.
To purchase an ordina ry handgun in California, a
buyer must fill out an application and wait 15 days while
that application is checked through the state ~partment
of Justice to certify 1hat the buyer docs not have any felon y
or violent misdemeanorconv1ct1ons or a record of mental
illness or drug abuse. By contrast. the purchaser of an AK-4 7 semi-
automatic weapon not only fills out a less s1nngent form .
but that buyer may walk out the door immediately with a
fully operational AK-47 1f he or she answered "no" to all
the questions on the form.
"The point 1s an AK 1s no nccalable like a
handgun," said spokeman Duane eterson of the state
~panment of Justice. which en pa 1c1pat1ne ma
task force drafting a pro law aimed
spcc1fically at weapons sucti .
"There's no question a i.t. scas1er to get a scm1-
automa11c than a handgun ." Peterson said. ··Semi-
automatic guns can be bought over the counter b)
anybody not having a fefony record, without an ) wa111ng
period. You fill out a form saymg )OU don '1 ha .. e a r«ord
and that form stays at the gun store "
large handgun and the AK-47 were
seen tying on the ground near a pool
of blood. Wnnen on the pistol's
handle was the word "Victory:·
The torched car was registered to
Patnck E. Purdy, who 11 .. ed with an
aunt and uncle last July through
October in Sandy, Ore. Sandy Police
Chief Fred Punzel said West
purchased an AK-47 from the Sandy
Trading Post last Aug. J
"She told me he was a loner and as
a child he was an alcoholic, .. Punzcl
said ofh1s con .. ersauon with the aunt.
Juhe Mi chael.
Meese violated ethical rules,
Justice Department concludes
Appeal lost;
Bundy to die
WA HINGTON (A P )
Theodore Bundy. the scnal tuller
called "a d1abohcal _genius" by one
WASHINGTON (AP)-The Jus-
tice Department concluded Tuesday
that fonncr Attorney General Edwm
Meese Ill violated federal ethics standards five tjmcs in six years and
that his relationship with E. Robert
Wallach "dictated government ac-
tion" in major cases.
Mccse's assistance to scandat-
plasued Wedtech Corp. and his
efforts on behalf of a proposed
Mideast oil pipeline involved "three
instances in which friendship" be-
tween him and Wallach caused
federal actions, said the report by the
department's Office of Professional
Responsibility.
"As a direct result of the prcferen-government employee. JUdJe. facesdeathm Florjda·selcctnc
tial,iJmproperefTonsofMccseand his Independent counsel James chatr next week after losma a u-
stau. the Army" awarded a $32 McKay decided last summer not to prcme Coun appeal Tuesday
mil hon engine-bu1ldan1 contract to proS«ute Meese. althou&h McKay The JUSt1ces, by a 7-2 vote, rejected Wcdtcch in 1982 wh1re Meese was concluded Meese had pro6abty twice arguments that Bundy, 42. was men-
counselor to President Reagan. said violated confl1ct-of-mterest laws in tany incompetent when he stood tnal
the ethics report on Meese. connection with his Bell holdings and in t 980 for the sla ying of a t 2-ycar-old
Meese also violated ethics require-had violated tax laws in connecuon girl m Lake City, Fla.
ments. the rcpon said, by fa1hng to with fa1hng to rcpon the stock sales Within an hour of the ruling,
report a stock sale on his 198S federal McKay's repon "far from vand1-Aonda officials said Bundy would be
tax return and by panicipatina 1n a cates Mr. Meese,.. said the new executed next Tuesday at 7 a.m
Justice Dcpanmentdccision favoring Justice Dcpanmentrepon. "It details Bundy has also received death
the re1iionat Bell telephone com· conduct wh ich should not be toter-sentences for the t 978 k1lhna.s of two
panics m which he held S 14,000 1n atcd of any government employee." Florida State Universit y. sorority
stock at the time. At torn c y Gen c r a I D 1 ck sisters who were stran&lcd JUSt three
If Meese were still attorney etneral. Thombur&h d isal'Ud with one weeks before the Lake tuy murder. "we would recommend (to the ncitt aspect o( the rcpon1 saying that Bundy's case was depicted 1n a
ranking dcpanment official) that the Mccse·s failure to dispose of his telev1s1on m1n1scnes named "The
t \I 11 Ct H 'I \ H H 11 I '
FBI to Investigate Long Beach police
• LOS ANGELES -The FBI opened an 1nvesu111ion Tuesday into the
conduct of a white Lona Beach pohceman sumptitioully filmed as he
appercntly rammed a black man's head 1hrou&h a plait Jiau window.
The Lona Bcacb City Council alsoHkcd tlle Los Ansclesdistnct tuomcy
to invest.aate.
The black man shown be1na rouped up by the Lons Bnch officer on
Saturday was Don Jackson, a police serseant m suburban Hav.-thornc ~n a
leave pend ms the outcome of his race-related ~tre d1sab1h1y lawsuit ~inst
that city. The Loog Beach officer involved has been 1dent1ficd as Mark Dickey.
St ate's redistricting upheld
WASHINGTON-A California rcd1stnc11ngplan that placed Democrat\
in control of the state's conJrcsslonal delegation docs not unlawfully
discriminate apmst Rcpubhcans, the Supreme Cou/\ ruled Tuesday.
By a 6-3 vote, the justices upheld the red1stric11ng plan. Repubhcans had
cha I lensed 1t as an unconsutuuonal form of &err) mandcnns.
O uef Justice William H. Rehnquist and Jusu~s John Paul Stevens and
Anthony M. Kennedy v9Led 10 grant full review to the California d1spu1e. Four
votes arc needed to grant such review.
Lost dog makes h er w ay home ·
PHOENIX -The owner of a I 0-month-old boxer sa) the doa. m1ss1na
sancea Dec. 17 car crash, somehow negotiated 170 miles ofdeStn 10 tum up in
Brawley, last week.
"I couldn't believe it when I saw her," said Anna Teague of Brawley. "My
son had just left our trailer park when he saw a boxer walking toward the
entrance. He opened his door and yelled. 'Kahlua!' The do11umpcd naht into
his truck."
She said her daughter, Susan Teague of Phocn11t, was dnvina from
Brawley to Phoenix when a tire blew out and she rolled the car on Interstate 8
about 80 miles from here.
Miss Teague, who was weanng a scat belt. suffered only SCTatches and
bruises.
Kahlua also survived, and Mtss Te.iguc saw the fnghtencd animal Jump
through the broken windshield and disappear
Rive r si ght see rs injured
NEEDLES - A Colorado River tour boat smashed into a sandbar
Tuesday, tossing passengers from thelfscats and 1nJunng I 4 of the 44 on board.
authorities said. None of the crew or passengers on the 1wo-hour sightseeing tour out of
Laughlin. Nev., appeared to have life-threatening injunes.
'\·\TIO'\ \I, HHIJ:J·s
New v iolence erupts in M iami d istrict
MIAMI -Looungand vandalism spread Tuesday and seven people were
sho1. one fa tall). m the second day of no11n1 sparked by the fatal shoo11ngofan
unarmed black motorcyclist by a while policeman.
Schools were closed. a professional basketball game was canceled. and
some fans were stranded in the arena. Snipers fired at pohce, who cordoned off a 130-block area of the predommantly blac~ Ovenown neighborhood
Trouble erupted agam Tuesday af\cmoon when a white man 1n a luxury
car reportedly fired into a crowd of blacks 1n the area. wounding one person
before dnv1f away. After ni tfall. authonues told law-ab1d1ng c111zens to remain indoors and
began a bloc -by-block sweep
Authon11cs said Overtown.JUSt north of down1own, was largely quiet after
pohce entered W1th1n three hours about 56 people had been arrested. mostly
for looting..
But the violence alread) had spread 10 Libert) C 1ty a separate black
communlt} several miles to the nonh""est where tooung and gunfire
CO)ltmucd Tuesday n1g.h1
Baker wants 'gentler Congress'
WASHINGTON -Sccrctaf} of
State-designate James A Baker 111
deftly s1desteppcd'most direct ques--
tions Tuesday at h1sScnateconfirma-
11on heanng. mcluding quenes about
when the United tates v.ould resume
nuclear arms control talks with the
Soviet Union
But 1n his ansv.ers to questions
from members Qf the Senate Fore11n
Relations Committee, Bait.er made It
clear that the administrauon of.
Prcs1dent-clcct Bush will tarscly
adhere to paths l11d down by Prcs1-
dent Reapn, and v.111 move caut1ous--
ly when 11 does depart from thotC
pahc1es.
In the Middle Eas1. 1n Central
Amenca, 1n South Afnca -all
trouble spo1s the ne"" adm1n1str111on
9.1111 be forced to papple wtth 1n its
early months 1n office -Baker
disclosed ho specific plans for dra-
mauc change
Opcnina the heanna. Baker read
a statement calhns for a new rela-
11onsh1p between Con11ess "Yes.1hts
1s an appeal for a kinder. gcntler
Ja111e1 .... er
Con~ " Baker 11ad, borrowina
from Bush's camp111n-tra1I promise
ofa "kinder. sentleT natio n " Wallach, who collected S 1.3
million from Wedtcch from 1982 to
1986, is awaiting trial in New York on
racketeering and other charges. He is
accused of peddling his Meese con-
president take disciplinary actton," financial interest in the reJional Bell Deliberate StrangCT." th~rerc~~;;~~d:t!iement said no ~~:1!~~~:.~e~~f'!J~~~ :_f~~~~~~~ urJ:e~:y~~~~~~emr:~ t~::0~~:. Eva ngelist Bakker pleads innocent
funher action against Meese 1s war-from intent to violate ethic st.an-1dered a formal appeal anvoJvinaone ranted because he is no lonaer a dards. of his conv1cuons or death sentences CHARLOTTE.NC.-EvangchstJ1m Bakker pleaded 1nnoetn1 Tuc~y ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ to~eralc~~sthathed1vcncdm1ll1on~ofdollanfromhit~Lt~vi~on
audience for personal use.
nection.
1/2 OFF INITIAL FCE
•Home of the Orange County Yoga Center
• 2 complete weight rooms I FREE instruction
• Over 50 aerobics classes each week,
with certified Instructors
• Raquetball l!t squa5h courts/ fRf:E clinic
• Licensed massage staff
• 25 Meter heated outdoor pool
• Sand volleyball I fRff clinics
• FREE Child care
• Basketball Qym
• PLUS many additional amenltle
Under Nf W management,
completely renovated &' ttinOdeled.
:"l Exptrn I /3 I /89
ladl, CA 928fi0 714) 75J-G515 New Club Hours: M·' 5 -.0.m•IOpm, S.t/Sun S.m-7ptn
Bakker quit the PTL m1n1Stt) 1n March I~ 7 af\cr 1dm1tt1na a sexual
encounter with former secretary Jc 1ca Hahn aod pay1n1 her money to keep
QUI et,
MOHl.D HHlt:•·,
Israelis dynamite rioters' homes
JERUSALEM -Soldim today d)'nam1ttct lhr hOtntt of thtte
Palestinians suspected of'iq,iunna thrtt lsrwtis wnh Mona. malt.int• new trt·
toup Policy ap1n1t rock thro-en in the occupied &enuona.
In the occupied West Benk, 1 17-ycar-old Palttunaan wa fatally shot 1n
the 1tomach durina a clash with troop$. and a second tccn-qer dted of a
aunshot wound to the hcan suffered in a cla h Jan. 7. hO\pttal officials and
Arab repons sa1d
Also today. some ~rvc soldiers compl11ncd to Pnme M1n1s1tt Yn.thak
ham tr of their role 1n the vaolcnce. sa~ina they were forttd to beat •n~t
ptoplc and betray lsraeh values in tryina to put dov.n the I }..month Palnt1n11n upnsan,.
Pan Am bomb trac ed to Fran~furt
LOCKERBIE., Scotland -POii« said T~y they have idmufitd tht ~ con .. incr 1n wt.ich 1 bomb-.. planted abolrd Pan Am fliih• IOllftd
Tk"Tima of London •id authorities btheve 1t was lint loeded in frankfUn.
Thejethner blew up over Locktfbie, Scotland on Dec. 21. killina 111259
people aboard and 11 Oft IM~.
NeW Yort-bcMmd f1illM IOJ °"9Jn111ed in that West OCrmaa a!f.
tramferrint ..-neen aft4"'111 a 1 to another plane °" am val at u.doe 1
Hatbrow a1rpon. The Times taid DOtior tllank tht bomb was no m0tt than 1 rtw pounds or
CJC!ChoUovak·madc 'Santa oplosive.
f
Human rights rec ords crit icized
Or8nge COllt DAJLY PILOT/W..._..,, ~ 11 • ._ M
"'''"'"
Sunny, windy days expected; clear, chilly nights due
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OHl'l'l \Hlt:s
Allee Alexanlan, 79,
of Huntington Beach
from ltd Md wtre reports
Ahce A. AJeunaan. 79, of Hunt-
sn1ton Beach died Jan. 13
Alexanian was born an Turkey an
1909. She 1s survived by her son,
James AJeunaan; dauahtcrs, Wilma
Spen&lcr and Rita Sandcloom, sister,
Joseplunc Cholakian, and e1&ht
srandch11drcn.
Services wtre held at Dilday
Brothen Chapel 1n Hununaton
Beach: bunal was at Forc$l Lawn 1n
Glendale.
The family rcqu"ts donations be
made to the Amencan Heart Assoc1a·
uon.
J. Andersen of Laguna
Laauna Hills resident J. Si1urt.
Andersen, a retired vice president of
Pacific Financial Co., died Jan. 9 after
a fall from the Rossmoor Tower II.
He .is survived by his daua.hter,
Marjorie Dolan, of Loomis. Cafif.
Services were held Monday at the
Chapel of McCormick Mortuary an
Laguna Halls
John Wittenberg of FV
John Henry Wattenberg. 81. died
Sunday in Fountain Valley
W1ttcnbcra. )Who was a produeuon
foreman at IR W for 30 ~cars. 1s
survived by has Wlfc. Pauhne Wit·
tenberl; dau&htcr, Diane Fadness of
San Oieao: brothers. Dave Wat -
tenbera and Pete Wattenberg of
Vancouver, Canada. and Henry W1t-
ttnbera of Nelson. Canadah sister.
Kay Witttnberg; two grandc 1ldren:
°"~ ..... 01<.;C 44 ll M#t10fd
SI '1 HfttN
I'\ TH•: st:K' 1c ·t :
Manne Lance Cpl. . Warrea L. MeCallM~. whose wife. Gina, is the
daughter of James and Kim Arnold of
Huntinaton Beach. has been
promoted to his present rank while
serving W1Lh 3rd M~nne Aircraft
Wana, Manne Corps Air Station,
Tu.sun. ••• Navy Fireman Recnnt Cbrtn E.
Glllard. son of Charles R. Gillard of
Hunuogton Beach. has completed
rccnut ua1nip1 at Recruit Tra1nin1
Command, San D1cao. A 1988 aradu·
ate of Westm1nsttr~1&h School. Wcstm1nst~. he JOtnl8 tfle Nav)' 1n
September t 988 ••• Marine Pfc. Mlmel A. WeUmu,
son of Elayne S. M)ersofCosta Mesa.
has comt>leted the School of Infantry
at Manne Corps Base. Camp
Pendleton .. • • • Airman Jama B. JeulDJ•· son of
Lois A. Jennings of Fountain Valley.
has ~duated from Air Force b:u1c
trajnang at Lackland Air Force Basey
Texas. He as a 1987 graduate of
Fountain Valley High School. • • • Navy Airman Recruit MJcuel D.
HEAi .. ESTA T•:
The toloWlng hst of Or~ Co.ut ru l
est•te tt¥1sfers, which 1nc1Udes the~
of the ~r. address .vld the price P••d tot the ptopt>rty. wu compl"d from
county "cords •nd escrow companies by
Homt'o~rs Marketing Services
Comp~ ott1e1..is uy the hst 11'\<ly h<lve
Ml error f<l<tor or 7 percent dunno• yur s
u~ ~uuse o1 spttul01uon bu)'•no Mld
err on
~ kst Is pubhs~d for ttw 1ntorm.1t10NI
uu ot our readers .vld 1s protected by
copyngtll to H~owntrs M•rkttong
Services
Huntl"9ton 8•Kfl
Robert W Pntct'-lrd 6052 Cornttl 01
S260.000
Mr & Mrs ~ s AUOUnt I 5662
O<lWSon Ln. SS2
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50 n '-"'°'' SI •• •• 1) S. l..IMCrty )7 II
44 J1 SM>AIW-,, ,)•
WalMt', son of Lany 0 . Walker of
Hunt1naton Beach, has completed
recruit trainma at Recruit Trainina
Command, San Diea.o. . . ...
Air Force Amnan 1st Oass ltlrk W.
Nel10a, son of Anne Richter of
La&una Niguel, hasamved fordUt) at
Nellis Au Force Base. Nev.
• • • Navy Petty Officer 2nd Oass Kart
D. C.mmlllp, son of Jesse L and
Sylvia A. Cumm1np of Huntangton
Beach, recently deployed to the
Mediterranean aboard the
amph1b1ous assault sb•t> USS Guadalcanal, homeponed an Nor-
folk , Va. A I 97S araduatc of Hunt·
1n1ton Beach H1&h School. he JOaned
the Navy in September 1976.
• • • Manne I st Lt. James J. J11tlce,
son of Mana S. and Charles P. Justice
Jr. of Costa Mesa. recently rcponed
for duty wtth 3rd Manne Aircraft
wms. Camp Pendleton. . ...
Manne Capt. Mlclaael G. Naylor,
whose wife, Susan, 1s the daughter of
Richard A. and Virginia Jenluns of
lrv1ne, recently returned from a six·
M r & Mrs 0~ 0 WICorek, 6462
Ounn Or 521 2.000
Mr & Mrs Alan R Osterhout 63 12
F•flntl.1 C>1 S28S.OOO
Mr & Mrs Al¥! C Hunt, I SSS
Hum1ngton VL248 s 12,<XX'
M•ry J R.tnltm. 1494 I Orind.l Ctr
Sl 95 000
M r & Mrs FrMll<Jtn Sun 6102 Pillt~s
Or S260.000
M r & Mrs 1Cuum1 Eguctu 16 781
Rhc>M ln S2SS 000
Mr & Mrs Allen Redman 7101 S.tone·
WOOd Or SHl.000 Mr & Mn Jerry Y Chen
TroptC<lN Ln S202.000
Mr & Mrs Rtch~rd 8usttltnal'lte 16661
Trudy ln S267,CXX>
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"'"*' YOOAY N"""llOf\ ... ,. Flrsl hlgl\ • \3."' I I ~ F"trt410w 141Plft '0 ~ 5-ldl'llQfl IO 32J"' s 1 ,..,,. 5-<"9 ,...,..., ,~ ,.,, ..... 12 '3."' 2 4 '-~ Fnlhill" 1 02 .... 13 '"'"""
month deployment with Manne Me-
dium Helicopter Squadron-268,
Manne Corps Air Station, Tusun,
embarked aboard the amphibious
assault ship USS New. Ortean~. home·
ported 1n San Dicao • • • Navy Fireman LHrie L. ValeaUao,
dau&htcr of Wilham M. Brown of lrv lnC!! recently dcplo}ed on a west·
cm t'ac1fic cruise whale serving
aboard the dcstro)'er tender USS
Acadia. homeponcd 1n San Dieso
She JOtned the Navy an August 1985 • • • Navy Scaman Recruit Patrick G.
Porter, son of Robert and Man P
Poncr of Hunun1ton Beach. has
completed recruit traan1n1 at Recnut
Training Command. San Diego <\
1986 graduate of Founuun Vallr)
High School. Fountaan Valle). he
Joined the Navy in September 1988 ••• Spec DHlel R. Glean has been
decorated -with the Arm y Achieve-
ment Medal in West Germany The
Achievement Medal 1s awarded 10
soldiers for mentonous sen-ice, acts
of courage or other accomplishment)
He is an observauon and scout
11 47 MONTS .. 11
____ ............
u 17 •• J1 c... ·-0• ... --"" .. ..
7) ..
SJ 4 1 ~Co1y S• •• \II~~ 15 SI
S• 1' lbvetllClr ,. Jt ,_lf:\ll)o 4S 11
u JO Sat<-H 1t ,.. 4S s..... .. )l urlreporl. 1' ., S....l«JNI-74 ,.
7S •• Sari~ tl )I
71 41 \1 JO s.n °"90 ,. )1 W..f'l-rlCO .0 0 LOCATION llZllMAN
IO so Wn)OH S4 41 ....,.~._,, '~ -se )I S.UAN 11 ., 2 .,.,
u ~ S.Uktwf• •• )I ::s-..'=' 2 ...
'5 •• WntlCNI • JS 21ftll air.. Hewpor1 2 poor
SI 41 s.n LA.el OMpo ,, •4 a.o.weooe 2 poor
74 ~ ~,._,., .. 1• H ;:-a.::: 1·2 ,_ ,. .. ~Monie• . , n 1·2 , ..
78 .. Sux non SS JI Yw9'• lenlP $$
t i 11 ,_\1-.Y •• "' , ... Clr9C1IOn w..c ., )4 T0tfMl(r 11 •• ...,.,_,
NOW OPEN
MEDICAL GROUP
Men Quilty Medical Care Aild Low Cost Are lmportut. ..
•Family Practice • Elective urgery • Minor Emergency •
Wo rk lnjurie$ •Physicals • laceration & Broken&nea •
Complete X-Ray & Lab Diagnosi • Pediatrica
FREE HIB IMMUNIZATIONS
-will be glven-
J an ua ry 27th thru Feburary 4th, 1989
Monday through Friday 8:00am-8:00pm
Saturday 8:00am-6:00pm
No appointment neccesary
TLC MEDICAL GROUP urges parents with children
2·5 yrs old to take advantage of this opportunity
Albertson's Center
10188 Adami Ave .• Huntington Beach 968-3266
heltcoptcr repairman with the 56th ~--------------------------
A' 1at1on Co Glenn 1s the son of Gal)
A Glenn of Huntington Beach • • • Airman I st Class Sllerrte E. Horn
has graduated from the U.S Air Fo~
aircargospccu1h tcou~at hcppard
Air Force Base. Te~as. Hom 1s the
daughter of Larry J Hom of Costa
Mesa She 1s a 1988 &raduatc of
Corona del Mar High School
l>o vour-.eU a faH>r F1l~ your t.1-xc.·~ nO\\ .ind fi)e a -ruratt:'I\'
II )OU n~c·d help doing }'Our ta>.t-~. '-all or\ hit vour local IRS off act>
Make y_gur taxes less taxing.
Do them today.
and one areat vandson
He was a res 1den t of F o u n tai n riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Valle~. Visitation will be I to 2:45 p.m.
today 11 Dilday BrothenMonuary.
I 7911 Beach Blvd.. Hunttnaton
Beach. A aravcs1de service wlll follow
at the GoOd Shepherd Cemetery at 3
p.m
Actor Trey Wiison
Trey Walson, a character actor v.ho
appeated on st.qe and scrttn an recent h1u from ''Ra1S1n1Arizon.a·· to .. Bull Dumam, .. d&Cd an New York of
a ctttbtal hc"morrlla&t at aac 40.
Wilson also aopcared an • <\ Sokher's Story," .rF-X " and "The:
HOUtC on Carroll Street. .. Tv.o other
films -"Welcome Home" and
"Mw Fittcrac~tt" -have not )Ct
been rtleascd, alona with the ~ust·
completed .. Great Batts of fire.· the
Jerry Lee Lewis story
Father of Sen. Bentsen
Uoyd M. Btntten Sr .• an early
dcvek>per of Tc~u· Lower Rio
Grande Valley whote ton, Sen Uo)d
Btnuen. was tht Democnuc v1,c·
orestdcntial candidate last )Ur. was
killed Tunday an a traffic accident an
soulhcm Tu.as He was 9S Btnum htld nutty S0,000 acm of
farms and au ra BC bes sea ttered 0 " Cf'.•
South Tuas empire ht tarted' in
1920
When you need NU~SING HELP
But not akllled NURStNG ••..
Our privet• lntermedlete cere
may be Juat the an1wer
You won 't find wheelchairs,
hospital gowns, loud noises,
or Impersonal service.
You wlll find senior adults,
living together and receiving nursing services planned to
meet their Individual nHds.
Our Intermediate Care Wing otters ah<>r1 recovery stays u well u
long term care
• 24-hOurtanMnurM ~and UllSI~
• Lowty rOOl'N with eer~t. home furnlthlngt and privet• bath• • BatNno. dreulng and Ml.medbtlon Mf'Vloe
• Dining Jn our lovely dining room, apeclat diet. and en tr" Mfeetton
• 1neont1nenc:y rehlbllitetlon program • lnaul•n menagement.tralnlng P1o0ram
• Cardlec rec~ P'OQf&m • Therapy program•. poNlble cove1age under Med IC ere Par-t B
• ~t• care. min mum ot 5 d•YI
T etephone Laura Lux, Admluk>n COOfdlnator, to ... 11 our apeclal
Intermediate Cw• Wing can till your epeclal Med
CO. Dl•COV.lt OtM U.CIAL 1'1.ACE
111tiUtM 1e1C11 c..•..t llTtmllATt CUE WllC
18811 ~orld• Avenue. Huntington 8MCh (714) 547 ... 3515
JAIUAIY CWIAICE SALE
IOW 11 PIOGIESS
8
Bro'
Robe•. Gown
Hoisery and Loungewtar
20 10 75 t OFF
•••~•n P1ua 11t1a • im. (7••> ea..11n •••rr nn a..• .., 1w All · w,.
l
DolrANnGET2YEARsB Rl ANDPAYNOTHI GFoR30DAf-s.
La.'t , -v.·' ·Jr~ \ ~ prumt~°'t to nukt.' Tht.' U1~
P1 L'1l in Jamlal') Tht>n pu.'h came to sh<l\
\ow 11s J.mUJt)' Af;lin Dunt ~'> throu~
.uX>tht·r ~ >:U' of gt.ult}' promc \\i hen you t"!Ul ~ 1n
lfX! m , .w.l.·omrxl\hl'Cl hetlth duh In Amt and
).ft l ) '4U"S fi )( lhc pl'Xl' or l AOO not h:n , to l'Ull~
up with anll ~ fi)f'. ldl)'
1))·11 )-etrof 1mnung. runnulg. raop:tOOll
•
aen.>b~ Tuni~ nn the m •'1 ath·mCl1<1 machine.
tn ('XlS4'1lC A> ·ar or l"bllh~.1n..,teat.l of l\'m~
l ~n\ th.Lt '<"llmd pn l 11~1
l~1h ~ nu' ''31'\ and ~»nc ~ioos ai'M . ~ ~ an~ llohdJ) !'iJ)l t<ada for ;i free
pesttou.
• r. lhID\v ~ HEALrn Cu 113
f; \ l~Mt
\
W.ctneeday, January 18, me NEIGHBO
Grandma's junk may really be valuable a-ntiques
IY JOYCE IOOLOVICH or..~ ..... --
Carefully check the dusty rchcs in
the atllc, shoved inside a cluttered
closet or swept away under the bed.
What you consider junk may add
up to ~ig bucks, says Dianne Harm.an,
Hunungton Beach antique appraiser
and radio talk show host.
"Silver is the single most valuble
item found in a home," she said.
"And usually in a home the most
undervalued objects arc cci:amics.
That can be funky little plant holders
-an)'lhina by Rookwood or George
Ohr. Too many times people JCt
cau&.ht up in the beauty of something
and may overlook something ugly
that is valuable."
Othercollectibl~s with a hefty price
is the original 1959 Barbie Doll worth
about S 1,200 and art deco from 1925
to 1935. · ·
"An deco is very hot " she sa1d .
.. That would be things ffke bronzes,
leaping pzellcs and long cigarette
holders.'
And because of the trend 10
extinguish all cigarettes. Harman said
anything tobacce>-rclated, such as
matches and h&.hters, may be a
valuable collecuble of the future.
"My personal best for the future 1s
Native American Indian decorative
ans," she said. "Much of our art has
been based in England. France and
Germany. The only true (American)
decorative arts arc American quilts
and duck decoys, both very valuable.
The rest of the art we have adapted
from other countries." Harman said Indian baskets and
blankets are dwindJing because the
arts are not being taught to the'
younger generation.
The well-worked woodwork of the
19th and early 20th centuries, known
as the Ans and Crafts period. is also
worth collecting.
Hannan has been frequenting es-
tate and prqe sales most of her life .
.. I've always loved the hunt
pursuant to findina the treasure," she
said. "It is hke an addiction. I must
have known )ears ago antiques were
my fone, espcc:1ally when I majored
in 18th century English literture at
UCLA," she said.
Harman's home is a testimony to
her love of vintage collectibles. The
spacious two-story home is tastefully d~orated with valuab~ antiques
reflecting an ambiance of days by
gone.
Hannan staned her appraisal busi-
ness six years ago after she hired an
appraiser to look through her gra!"ld·
Qarents large rambling home' in
Denver.
"Theappraiscrcameand I thought.
·1 could do that.· " she said.
Harman is an antique appraiser, certified by the International Society
of Appraisers. She lectures on the
subject for vanous comm.unity col-
leges.
She recently brought her expertise
to a radio call-in show ... Let's Talk
Antiques." on KPZE 1190 AM. The
show airs 3-4 p.m. Saturday and
features guests who are knowledge-
able on a range of collectibles topics.
"We will discuss what's hot and
-what's not, tips on collecting, fakes
and frauds and antique in vestments,"
she said. ··The show will encourage
the listeners'to panicipate by calhn§
in and asking questions oft he guests.·
One of Harman's handy hints 1s to
know your collecuble by v1s1t1ng
museums. Another suggestion 1s be
cautious when hinng an appra1ser lo
look through )'Our entire inventory.
"I would be very leary 1f any
appraiser says he can appraise every-
thing," she said. ··Just like medicine,
this too is specialized. The value of
things can change overnight." Antique a ppr a Iser Dianne Harman says cigarette llghters and ashtrays may someday become valuable curios.
0.., Net~~ '-'/<e ....._,.
Love of machines keeps him humming
By JOYCE BODLOVICH
of ttw 0..,, ""°' II,,,,
Thomas Spaulding doesn't quibble about his
age.
''I'm 81, but I won't be that unul thc 28th of
this month," the longtime Costa Mesan said. ··1
don't quibble about a few days."
Spaulding was raised m the small Indiana
town of Peru. For SO )cars he worked as a 1ool-and-
d1e machinist. an occupauon that fed his need 10
create Wlth metal.
, "I find 11 fascinating what ~ou can do Wl lh a
piece of metal," he said. "Wor~ing as a machinist
in a factory, I was always making something but
nothing 1 could keep."
Thal was un111 he became intrigued with
steam engin es.
"When 1 was about 25.1 staned making model
steam engines," he said. "I have made' a total ofs1x
I have given all of them away 10 family and friends
except for two.
those. But the only way I could get 1t "as to make 11 myself. ..
So Wlth an instruc11on book hl' constructC"d his
first scale steam eng1ne.
And inside his tidy home. which he shares
with his wife. Spaulding stands proudly over his
latest creauon. one that he sa)s took five )Cars 10
construct and 1s a colkctor's Item 'alued at
$10,000.
··This onl' 1s the best because it 1s mort
com plicated, .. he said ... You would be surpnsed
how long 11 takes 10 build one' llttle piece ..
The 75-pound cordless 'ah c stC"am engine 1s
patterned after a type of engine used 1n a saw mill
.. ln llS da) the steam engine' was used 1n place
of electnc1ty or gasoline ... he said .. M) model 1s
not complete. It 1s su pposed to have a pump used
wllh a boiler. I use mine with compressed air. 11 1s
only a hobby."
When Spaulding re vs up the ena1nc. not a
neighbor 1n the quiet commun1t) 1s d1s1urbeq b)
the sound.
.. That 1s the advantage of steam.·· hr said ·· 11
iust makes a quite hissing noise ..
was cheaper to operate and lawful," he said "l
made a motorbike form) son v.hen he was a tten·
ager from 'bike frame. I guess I have made so
many things they are too numerous to menuon."
Spaulding has converted pan of his im-
maculate garage 1010 a machine shop complete
with all the tools needed for his hobby. He has also
built a photo lab 10 pursue' his fascination with
photography.
"( have been taking pictures as long as I've
been thinking. .. he said. "I take a little' bll of
e\eryth1n1. but mostl) scenic. I've' probabl> ~n
to every end of the United St.ates. but in this da>
and a,ge I guess that 1s not considered much
traveling ...
Spaulding moved over to a h\lng room llble
in search of some old snapshots
"I ha\e a great stack of photos. but am not
really sure what I have an) more:· he !.lid.
Spaulding then walked outside 10 his machine
shop where Mex1ain music played softl) over a
radio Reflecuna on hi s almost 81 years. Spauld1na
said he v.ould do th1nas d11Tercntly g.sven another
chance'
Thomas Spaulding wtth his latest steam engine
.. , don't really know how r got 1ntl'restcd I
have always gone to the library -I still do -and
one da)' I saw a picture and diagram of a steam
eng1ne.
"I th ought I would sure like to have one of
pauld1ng sa)s whene,er he needs something.
his first th ought 1s ... Can I make ll m)sclf ..
.. 1 made a metal air gun 35 )Uruio because ll
..Ma1nl) I ~ould change m) attitude toward
~Opie," he \aid .. It wasn't aJways \Cry Sood ..
Life began at 60 for 1 Uncle George'
By KA TY BOUCHER or-o.-yNoc SUllf
George W1lhamson. better known
as ··uncle George." has made many
fnends in his hfet1me-all 86 years of
it.
Williamson is the official greeter of
the Newport Harbor Costa Mesa
Board of Realtors and former om-
budsman. and when he isn't charm-
ing people Wlth his gift-of-gab, you
can find him leading "God Bless
America·· at every board meeting.
Williamson was selected Realtor of
the Year in 1961 , served as board president m 1963 and appointed
sergeant of arms m 1974. He has
never missed a meeung 1n 25 years. he
said.
One of the most challengingjobs he
has held, he said. was ombudsman,
offered to him by his best friend and
the executive director. Glenn Manin,
father of comedian Steve Martin.
"Glenn told me he got so darn
manr questions and complaints he
didn t have any tjme to take care of
I' Jiit: Sl'Ol'l.IGHI
everything and asked 1f I would be
w1lhng 10 handle n." he said. "I did 11 for I 3 years ...
As ombudsman, Willamson of-
fered help to people with complaints
or problems concerning real estate
matters.
To make people feel at ease,
Williamson insisted they call him
"Uncle George."
.. I used to be c.allcd Smwberry
because of my red hair and ruddy
complexion." he said. ··As you can
see, I had to change that name to
Uncle George. You sec it's important
to me to be remembered ...
He was raised in Hollywood. where
his father was a prominent builder
and was yell leader for Hollywood
Hi'h School from 1917 to 1921.
• Hollywood was quite a town:· he
said. "I remember places and things
not too many people know about."
"Take the Ambassador Hotel they
just closed," he said. "You know who
they forgot to mention who enter-
tained there every Friday night and
got his stan? None other than Bina
Crosb) ..
As Wilhamson reminisced. he smiled and said, .. , bet you didn't
know about the torchlight pre>-
cess1ons the Republicans and Demo-
crats had."
In the 1908 pres1dent1al race
betwcem Wilham Taft and W11l1am
Jennings Brya n. both parties cam-
paiancd by walking through the
streets with kerosene lamps. "I re-
member going with my parents to
watch the Democrats:· he said.
"Someone kept yclhna. 'Hurray for
Wilham Jennings Bryan.'
"There'sa name I bet not too many
people would remember." he said.
He met his wife, DeVere. in 1932
and finaJly left Hollywood for New-
port Beach in 1956.
A walk through his home reflected
vibrant-colored oil paintfogs and
unusual pieces of art. He beamed as
he pointed to the pictures and said
everyone of them had been painted by
his wife.
Willamson said m his lifetime he
had done many thinp. One thina
sucks in his mind. however.
"There's a book called ·Life Bc&ins
at 40; " he said. "Well. as far as l 'm
concerned, mine beaan at 60, because
when I was 60, I became president of
the board and had a successful real
estate business."
He held up a plaque that was gi ven
to him by the board and s~ud. "This is
something I'm cspcc:1ally proud of."
The plaque names Williamson
.. Honorary Sergeant at Arms for Life
of the Cahfom1a Assoc1at1on of
Realton."
The one thing Williamson said
cannot be replaced 1s the many
fnends he met throuahout his hfe.
"I love people. and at 86. I have
quite a few," he said. "I espcc:ially
look forward to every morning when
Glenn v1s1ts and we have coffee together."
Althouah his respons1b1hties have
been reduced. he never plans 10 a.i vc
up his favorite position at the board
-grcetinaeveryonc with a smile and
lcadm& the song "God Bless Amen-
ta ...
CdM football team honored by Newport City Council
It's official. The City ofNewpon
Beach bas presented a special recoa-
nition award to the I HI eo,... del
Mar fftp Sc~ool football team for
outstanding and mentonous ac-
complishment.
The team went undefeated and
bccamecbampionsoftheSea View
Lequea ndwmnersoftheCalifornia
Interscholastic Federation, Section
VI Championship.
Newport Beach Mayor Don
Strauss presented the award. • • • And there were more commenda-
ttons from the city.
MelYillC.K.etmw1llberet1nngasa
buyerafterservina 18 years with the
city.
Koehn hasdistinaui!hcd himself
and h11dcpanment by ltis commit-
mentanddcc:hcatation to the city,
accordina to hiscollequn. Throuah
meticulous ~remnt procedures,
he has provided 1nv1Juable aMistance
to city proJ«ts and auured &ht city of
rece1 vma the mott for money spent.
Born 1n Oshkosh, Wis., Koehn "now
resides 1n Garden Grove W1lh his
Wlfe, Caroh'ne. They have two daugh-
ters. Sandy and Carol; and four
grandchildren; David, Tracy.
Nathan, and Christa. • • • MayorStraussdidn't forgetSteUa
CbvM, either.
Chavos is owner of Newpon
CenterOnhoped1c. the oldest medi-
cal and surgical supply company ifl ~nae County that is seared to
pauents-001,ust todoctors.
Thecompanyo1?Cned in 1967,
several months before Fashion lsJand
opened
The company was founded by her
late husband, James Chavesi who
was a charter member of the Newport
Center Merchants Association as the
repraentativeofthc mcdtcal plaza.
When hcdiedin 1977,hiswife,a
biochemist, took over manqemetu
of the busmeM wnh her two tons, Frank and Tony.
Stella ChaVOSellpandfld the busi•
nasand recently bad a special
cemnonywheren ~ted a wheelchllrand waW111aidt to the
baud o( direct0n of the Ouit Senior
Citizens Center in Corona-dcl Mar.
For herdcdacauon and contnbu-
llons to tbecommuntty. Strausspve
herspcc:11I rccoan1t1on . • • • And the Newpon Beach Nautical
Museum has announced the new
president of the museum board.
J.E.T. (Ne41) R•tter. a resident of
Newport Beach since 1941 , will hold
the posnion. Ruttcr~u.tcd from Pnnceton
1n 19St:and from USC Law School an l 9SS. nc was appointed to the
Munc1pal Coun by thcn-Oov. Rc-
ljln in 196hnd to the Oranae
CountySupttiorCoun in 1970. He
retired in 1984.
He and his wdc, Kit, raidtnts of Lido'*· have four children.
Rutter hat plaM to ckvdoD and
expand the muteum d&arins t";is
tenure.
The Nautical Mu1eum, now tn its
fifth ~r. hasa ~t dttplaro'
nautical itemsOf1oc:aJ and lfneta
interest. • • • ConpatuJatiom '° ...... ,.. ........................
•
The United Way of Ora nae Coun·
ty's Health Care Task Force pres-
ented a 1988 Leadership award to
Bergeson for her work to ad vancc and
promote strona health service tn·
it1at1ves in Oran~ County. ••• And word'sjust in from Lciunaton, Va. thata.MaMkMIJeDni,a
frtthman at W11h1n1ton and Lee
Un1vershy. haseamcd dcn's list
status for the recen tl y completed fall
term.
Dean's hstst.atusat Wash~n ton and Lee reptttentu term 1v~of11teastl.O on1 3l9Clle.
SbC1athUayShtcrofMr.1nd Mn. wke Dru o(Ntwpon Bac:h.
• • • Conaratulatiou to Ill••
M""'ito(HunUn&ton leech who IS
PlfticiDlti_nJ in thilnttmalional
Youtll forUiMlmlMdi..._~ eu ... ~. !MleftJan. 13 for a tia mondl visit &o~nd.
AUIUiliL
Kelln iHJ•iorM Edhon Hilla
SdtooL ••••••olMr. llld Mn. MicMel!'llMll!l~'*l•li.1. nev.-11tu.111111111 ...
tten-qc uchanae provam foundtd
in 1951. Theorpn1zauon'semphasis
11 to ellpand knowJCdae and under·
standinaamonatheyouth of the
world.
Aaert S.1111 of Costa Mesa ha
been named to the fall honor roll at
Western Washinaton Univc:n1ty in
Bclhnaham. And"DIMIM W~ of Huntanaton
Beach WU telected lO ltUd)' abroed
throuah the USC Semcllef in Pans
pnwam. Ofbbic, dteda..-erof Judy
ancfRonald Wooct.111 ~nm ~or. Debbie will liw Witll a lamaty
in the IOUlh of'frua_.will take
cla-.atSort»on.eMdlM Um~sity of Paris. Threeof'tMdlllel wiU
be ta~t i1 Frencb uclOlltdMI in ~~ac1*michonorlis C'llft IDDOf'Mr.aldMn.. Alln Pe111Wolfontlia v.ue,.
Clnil1...-MWmi111aellld
lMUei .. lllJill~VLHe -··--'°* .............. -
ncwmembenfor 1919. T_. ~ofC.J.5efmtrom A
Sons, 1samona the rnanbtn,
Tht Huntinston 8cac:h Communi-
ty ~rvte:H Dtjlenment ••=fits manyvolunltCr'S. Diii,. wu
menuoncd for IQnt-IJmc 1nv vo-
mcnt in the Fun in the SUn day camp
for disabled youth. and the F~y
Nile Funtimcduoel torda..,_.
tecna and younaachaha. Other volun-
teen who coatributed '° tbe IUCftll oftMdaMa.AI~ ;.: ~=~·· ;;:; .... a.-.as.r.a.1 t ... ...... ..., .. 'lllil ...... Mld
ftt09daiy •• Ecliloa C...ity
CeMer.
OU.volaleerl•~-=--~ ........
d'rttld .._ .....
°'8nge Coeet OAJL 't PILOT~. ~ •• .. A'P
Homebuyers' e_nthusiasm cools; Southwest remains solid
Coo'" Calibnia marUtt and .... Plicilc Nonbwea powda wdl
...... ~ lnCMUJ'C o( beluce
-a•h11 laolne IUe maruts in dlie -W-repcwu Cokh~eu Banker,
dll couauy'1 larMit ftill«rvice ~•I
-&nn, wim more than 2,050
other I.teat att ID. boldi ... peUcm, •YI Tom Oriflia, 1tnior vJCe prai.
dent. Wesaem Sector, Coldwll
Banker RnidentiaJ Real Estate Ser-vices.
.. We •ll tcir '-hhy derftaad and ·~ for IOOd. ~ properUet 1n California. OnJy now
lhtj m on the martet for a more
normal period of ti~. unlike the fmln or tbe lut si1 months,,. says
Griffin. E.ar1Ja'thit year. properties 1n
Soutbcm Cahfornia would sell in a
matter or days. Now it is a matter of
weeks, an early indication of a
M<>wdown in the nwtetplace.
~oftkel. I-marbts of C.Jifomia are
lliJI llol but Cooli"-off a bit, the Pldftc NonhMSt will contin~ the lolid powtb of the last two years, and
.. Reasonable interest rates and
stable economic coodauons should
keep ~· on an even coune for this year; adds Gnffin. He antic1petes a
healthy tint quarter for 1919 follow-ina solid actavity at the end of last
year, <>ranee County, Los Antcles and
H 1 '' "t:ss '\ 01·t:s
FileNet ships record number
of i_mage-processing s.Ystems
Costa Mcq's FUeNet Corp., t~ technoloay pioneer
who leads the market an installed 1m• and data
proc:a11n1systems.announced Tuesday that 1n the founh
quner ended Dec. 31 it shipped a record number of its ~scale opucaJ d1sk-b;ascd systems to major organ1za-"°"'· worldwide an the insurance, tnansponat1on, com-
mwucauons, benkana. financial services aovemment
technical pubhshina and aeneral 1ndustnal sectors. '
. ,Twenty-three new systems were shipped, as well as
stantficant add-ons to installed systems, accordina to Ted
Smith, president.
"Our fourth:quarter results mark two s1~1ficant
milestones of achievement for F1leNet. ·• Smith said.
.. first. wt increased our installed system base to 189
=tron1 and. ICCOnd. we achieved record revenue levels
FileNct contjnucs to set the standard of excellence in
intqrated 1maae and data proceu1na. soorina new
successes 1n taract industries an the U.S. and abroad."
faleNet systems replace paper Wlth d1giuzed docu·
ment-imqes that are recorded on optical disks and
automatacally routed Wlth data a.nd text to workstauons
Lbrouahout an orpn1ut1on. • • • Cal Kovens has boosted his stake to the equivalent of
17 percent of Americaa Heal.. Sentca Corp. by
accepu111 n&hts to vote about 1.4 million common shares
as collatiraffor a loan to Hadera Institute Hadera Inc.
Accordina to a fihna with the Securities and Excha_~ Comm1ss1on. Hadera agreed to transrer
400t000 shares to Kovens by Thursday as collateral for a
ban1t loan co-s1aned by Kovens. The shares were also
transferred to cover Kovens' expenditures related to a
planned spin-off of an American Health subsidjary, and
to m1rket101 a new product.
In addition, Hadera agreed to transfer sole ndm to
vote l million shares for as long as any part of the Toan 1s
ouutandint and joint vouna poweT w11h Hadera until full
payment o remaining debts. Amounts for the loan and
other debts were not specified an the filina.
Tbt aarcement will also facilitate the spin-off of the
subsjdiary, Neuromed1cal Tcchnoloejes Inc., or initiate a
nahts offerina aranuna the holden of Ncuromed1caJ
shares ri~ts buy add1t1o nal shares The span-off may be
accomplished by d1stnbuun1 Amencan Health's com-
mon shares to Amencan's shareholders.
Kovens, president of Kovens Inc .. now controls I 4
million common shares of the Newport Beach-ba~
operator of medical laboratones and outpauent 1ma11na
centers.
In a related SEC filana. NnromHJcaJ Tecll8oa.&lfl
lac., the Amencan Health subsidiary that may be spun off.
has fCllSlel'ed 2 I million new sharH of common s tock
from lime to time, 1.9 m1lhon to be issued upon the
exercise of exastana purchase riahts.
The McLean, Virsania·bucd health c.are company
expects t9 raise S 1.9 million an capital through the new
offerinp,.to be used for research and development or the
company's new tcchnoloties. ·
Neuromedacal provides services and technoloay to
smoken and people with strHS disorders, chemical
dependency and chronic pain.
Amencan Health hi.stet the close ofbus1n~on Jan.
31 as the record date for the distribution to its
st0ckholders of the common stock of NTl an connection
with its span-off an which Amencan Health stockholders
will be entitled to one share of NTI common stock for
each five shares of Amencan Health common stock held.
•••
Dlceoa Eleetroalet lac. has reported financial results
for the first quaner ended Dec. 31, 1988.
Net sales decreased to $30,667,000 compared with
$3 3,981 ,000 last year. Net income decreased to S2 3 7 .000.
or 8 cents per share, as compared with $3,094,000, or 50
cents per share. These financial results for the quaner
were unacceptable.
The rrvane company's order rate continues to be
slowma down and lead times for production orders
averaae four to fi ve weeks. Weak demand 1n the computer
and telecommunica11on 1ndustnes has created significant
excess capacity an the circuit board industry and
continuing price erosion.
Some of the process problems that have caused
d1fficulttes for the company dunng the past months have
been solved. The company 1s still hav1n1 1nterm111ent
process control problems at some of its plants that
management eApects to resolve.
The DRAM shonaac appears to have been reduced
by offshore suppliers. however, It has moved some board
busmess offshore an ordtr to obtam the c hips 1n the form
of to~I board assembly
D1ceon 1s one of the country•s leading manufacturers
of both compleJt-and h1ah-tcchnol<>a) mult1la)cr c1rcuu
boards and backpanels
S&n Franc11CO led the country in median of S 190.000, had the sttond
19PfeCl&tlOft rates for the aecond and h~t apprccaauon rate. Nut came
third quartcn of 1911, llCCOl'dina to San Francisco, which had a 21.S
the National Auociation of Realtori. percent increase to $213, 700.
They also ranked an the top six in Gnffin projec1s an 18-percent an-
home prices for both penods. nualized apP.rec11tion rate in
forthe third quarter, a 32.1 ptrctnt Southern California for the fourth
nsc on an annuahzed b&111 kept quarter and double di11t increases
Ora.nae Count y at the top of the throuahout the state for most of 1989.
apprec1auon hst, with a median pnct By contrast, Pacific Nonhwest
of $226,000. Los Antcles, where markets arc· not spectacular, but
pnces anettastd 23 7 percent to a • continue to perform well./ The
strenath of the &Mina and
Weyerhauser compesues. the pc)ltl of
Seattle and Tacoma. aad Lbc thrivina
computer software industry combine
to create a vibrant local economy.
Unhke the national petten'I ofactlVI·
t)', home aales there did not ta~ off
after the summer rush, says Gnftin
"Accelerauna demand has
depleted av11lablc hous1na to its
lowest pc1nt an a decade"' says
Onffin.
Irvine exec saluted
by Advertising Age
C.rolyn Johnson
Carolyn Johnson of Ntwport
Beach has been named among·• 1 OOof
the Best and 8nahte1t Women· 1n
Advcrusina" by Advcnmn1 Ase
mapz1ne.
It selected the I 00 honoree based
on the impact each woman had made
on ner company and on the advcrt1s-1na field 1n general
Johnson. senior vice prcs1·
dent/creative director. has been with
AC&R/CCL in Irvine for nearly 18
years, $taning as a copywriter and
beina promoted to creative director
in 1976
"Carolyn has been an 1mPort.ant
catalyst an our growth as a m~or West
Coast age ncy which, as Cochrane
Chase, Livingston & Co .. e>.J?:lnded
from 11 emelo)ees and St 3 mil hon in
balhnisin 1971 to 140cmployttsand
$60 m1lhon an b1lhn~ with us merger
last year mto AC&R/CCL" said
Lynn L1 v1 ngston. president of
AC&R/CCL.
.. he 1s a strona supPoner of the
compan) and behe"cs in maanta1nin1
a reputation for crtauvit). supenor
service and rcsults-onented cam-
pa1ans,"
John'°n believes a primary
challenge 1s explonna new around in
the industry
"While there 1s always some fear
about the unknown," she said, "there
is also enormous sausfacuon when
the concept works."
Her list ofhallonal creative awards
includes Adven1s1ng Age's 100 Best
Commercials. Cho, BeldinJ and Best ..
tn the West awards. The One Show,
Chica10 and Atlan\a international
film festivals. International Film &
TV Festival of New York and Who's
Who 1n American Wo men.
Johnson bas been responsible for
the success of numerous accounts in
her tenure Wlth the agency 1ncludina
Carl's Jr. rcstau,.nts. Ale.at Audio and
Video. Puelh Tire Corp. and Sofina
Cosmetics.
AC&R/CCL as one of the la~t
full-scrv1ce aacnc1es 1n the West Wlth
offices 1n Los Anselcs, Irvine and San
D1cao as well as affiliated o ffiCC$ in
New York and Miami.
Pacific Bel1 tells new organi~ation
Pacific Bell mo1.-ed two new vice prts1dents 10 Orange
County this month as the company introduces a new
statewide o rpn1zat1on des1aned to improve sen ice lo its
10 m1lhon Cahfom1a customers.
The new orpn1z.at1on wall be called Customer
Services. It combines the Operations department with the
residence and small business seamen ts of the Markcung
department.
"Customer Services reaffirm~ our commitment to
total quality service and will make 11 cas.1er for cu\tomcrs
Jo do business with us," said Reed Royalty, PaClfic Bell
area v1~ president for Orance Count) and the Inland
Empire.
Many Kaplan is headana the new Customer Scrv1cn
orpnazataon as excc.uuvc 'ace president and wall be l~tcd an San Francisco
ue Swenson Wllldu"CCt tbedepartment's actlvtties tn
Oranac. Riverside, San Bernardino and San Dieso
counues as vice president. Gary Cucoo will serve as
Customer Scrv10C$ ~neral manaaer. Both Swenson and
Cucc10 arc based in Ora.nae Count).
Pacific Bell has also ttahgned its Mark.ettng
depanment to focus more clearly on those markets and
products which expcncnce the arcatcst oompetittvc
pre ures John R Seymour wtll sef"e as vtce ptC$tdtnt·
bu 1ness market for Ora.nae. R1vemde and San
Bernardino counttes He 1s -.iso based in Oranac County
Ro)'alt)' said the new orpnazatton 1s a l0&1cal step for
the company
..The antqrallon of saks and service v.111 allow us to
mttt our customer sc" ice aoats whale continu1na to
1mprovt fin1nc1aJ performance," he said.
.~-----------------------------------~
Business inventories
up0.4%inNovember
WASH ING TON (AP) -Busmess
inventories rose 0.4 peroe nt an No-
vember and sales rose at the same
PICC, the aovernment said Tuesday in
a rrpon that analysts 111d bodes well
fOr the nation's economy in the new
year.
The Commerce Dcpanment said
inventories held on shelves and
beck.loU rose to a seasonally adJustcd
$7S3.6 billion an November. while
Illes JeKhed SS03 8 billion
~ matchtnJ 0.4 percent pins
kcpe the rauo of 1nventones to ules at
L50, meanina tt would take I S
rnonth1 to exhaust 1nventones at the
Nov""~ sales pece. W1'm not accompanied by 1ncreas·
ias ialn, nsana 1nventones can 111naJ economic -akneu beaux they
may kad manufiilcturen to order
production cuts and layoms while
I.bey tell off reserve aoods But JOhn H•ns of the WEFA
Otoup an Bala CynW)d, Pa , said the
new ~ 1nd1cates that "at least
from the an ventones point of view.
we thank the economy 1s tn pretty
'
ood sbape for continued growth 10
989."
"Oftentimes. before a recession.
inventories tend to build up," he 511d
"There's no evidence of any kind of
eJtcesses an inventone:s in the econ·
omy."
The November ancreuc in 1nven-
tones follov.'Cd a minuscule nse
dunng October and a 0 9 percent
Jump an September. It was the 23rd
straaaht month an which anventoncs
had nsen. but sales acncrall) have
kept pace
"It looks like anventonesclosed out
the year on 1 very lean note. which
should be a pos111ve 111n an terms of
powth 1n the first half of this year."
sa1d Michael Evans, a forecaster 1n
Washinaton. "Peo plt remained
somewhat skeptical about the
durab1hty of the recovery They kept
their anvcntones rather lean."
Stores quick to hike
credit cards' interest
reimpose the 18 percent h m1t
A spokesman for arter Ha.,,.ky
Hale. the Los Antcl«-based partnt of
Emponum Capwell, said 1n 19 7 that
compeny lost S42.S million on cmi1t
cards "~ux of the pp between
finance charat income and d11"C'Ct
operatina cxpentcs. 1nclud1na bad
debt. coll«t1on fen. postaat. tele·
phone: (haracs. data prottS 1n1 C t\.
credit promotion and_J)9)TOll
emc Hote.. staff attOrnc) for
Conwmcrs Union, said r'f&a1ltrs will
expmcncc hu&e profi from the
h~ 1ntern1 rat
'h 's hard for me to bthcn that
with the prime rate at a httk over I 0
pcttent, retailers art not mak1na a
substantial proflt ..• :· ~ said.
HOii£ estimates contumcn will pey
an additional SIOI milhon 1n credit
c~eechyar.
Shani'° says the u.creatc 11 paltl),
ll)'i"I at amounts to lcll than 15 ttnt'
a month on lk aVft'llle ~tail C'ftd11
card~ofSlOO. ~=adckd llw tlW hiehtr rates m.M ,, lai likety·tM& ma.ten wtll ,... pnca ..... .., b to.et ift
C:nidk CW'd ~-·Al ·W1111 ...... , ......... tM
c:.119 C ZlDmlft tM .. ~ iMC.-.cmd~........... . c..-cm* r.-~ •• _pll"Cllat tr0M I MO to I MO. Md ,_.,. for all o(
1911. F I I 10 19 7 '
••farwily raitied to 19.l pm:nL
LIMITED OFFER
60% 25%
Annual Yield* Current Rate
6 MONTI-I CD TERM
\V ,hen )llll s .. we the American W W.1,, you'r\! ~ •ttin :r ont.> of
th be~r race' av< il.ihlc, and y, ur
Ceruf1carc of Dc('<l,tt '' Fedcr,llly
m ureJ up to 1 tOOO.
ln ddm n ro mti\tmum stl ty,
Ameri ,,n .wan • '' Ct mmtrrcd to
delt" rmg a lev I }f per _on .. ll
.... cr\'1ce th.u', ""l' nld fa;.,h1oned
'-llme ~~lrle rhink at', hr.1nd nC\\
V1,1t '°'' AmcnLdn .... ~l\·tng~
br ...ln h '-l h. m. ur ~1.\n,1g •r tlil
look1n~ fon..,,1rd to greettng ~ou
pe~ona ll\. r, for your LOn \'eO ..
1cn c, c.111 1 ( ) 247-7197
dunng bu,tnc . h u~.
AMERICAN SAVINGS
Banking The AmenCan Wl>1
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Otenge Coat OAll.V PILOT/ WedMlday. January 11, 1989
Swimsuit ISsues prove big wlnter_, __ i//ers for spans m gs
llwSKl'WOU.SN9altG "jl..._ ...
NEW YORK -A year aao. Sport maaazjne swore
olhwimluit i•ues. and pve ats rndcrs a pon calencar
iftlleed.
.. 'here are no sexy pactures there (just some
remarkable ~ns photos), but you don't have to bide it tom ~r kid either,'' the mqazine's editor said in a
me .. , to Nederl in the January-February 1988 issue. But that WU lut year.
SDort'1 latest iaaue recently bat the stands Wllh a datlc-baired model on the cover, appropriately dressed for wbat tbe heldline called at.a .. Hot Swimsuit Issue."
The mqazine's eecutives note that new owners -
and a new editor-have taken over since the last policy prono~SMnt on swimsuiu. Petersen Publishing Co.,
bued m Los Anaelcs, bouabt the mapzine last summer.
And t.be new owners say they arc sivina the
predominantly-male spons maaazinc aud.Jcncc what it
wants, u demonstrated by the huge popularity of the
swimsuit issues from its rivals, Spons Illustrated and
Inside Sports.
What'• a faj1hful follo~r ofSpon n\apune to think?
.. Our readef'I ans aoana lO be happy that Sport
mapzine chanaed 1ts mind," sajd Exccuuvc Editor Kelly
Oamu. 5Pof1 is revivina its swimsuit 115ueJust weeks before
$pons llluttntcd cekbntn the 2Sth anniversary of it
ftrst 1wimswt edition wtth a bhtz that wtll 1nelude a pey.
cable propam, a home video and a desk calendar.
Sporu Illustrated desiancd its ilUual swimsuit issue u •travel feature to briabten up the dark days betwten
fbotb&ll and bueball, when many Nonhern c1t1es arc
snowbound and sports fans are bl~.
The swim1wt iliuct penod1cally have sparked
protests that the tectioos arc sexist, exploit women and
are unsuited to a sports mqazine. Some readers threaten
subscription cancdlatJons, althouab Publisher Donald
Barr wd he bad fewer than SO cancellauons due to last
year'11wimsu1t 1ss~.
Sporu Illustrated charses about 28 percent more for
ad SJ*lC and 7S pcrcnlt more for a single copy of its
swimsuit iuue. It expects to sell nearly S.S m1Uion copies
of this year's special iuuc -which hats the newstands
----~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~------~--.......
Feb. 6 -com~ wtth l milboo for reaular aJSUes.
Home Box Ofllct Inc. plans &o btoldCut a 47-manutc
vuSeo about shootin& t1'e swimsuit istUe ~veral times
1tart.1na Feb. 9. A lh&hlly loqrr home video will be
available a ftw days later in Video and ret.11l 1t0ttt. Brideet Potter an HBO eucutivc, llid mailcn had
placed about 3SO,OOO ordtts for the S 19.99 home vadco. It
will carry two automobile comm~ials for which
Chrylltr Corp. paid S337,SOO.
Next fall, a l&)eClal lSth anniversary dnlc calendar
will be published (or 1990 u11na photos taken for the 1989
1W1m1uat ilaue. Tom Ettineer of Spons Illustrated
EnlttDriaeuaid he expects to sell about 2 S0,000 calendars
at Sl2.9S each in additaon to S00,000 of the usual wall
calendan at SI 0.9S each.
Mquine executives dcchne to say how much will be
made from the 2Sth anruvttSl.1')' 11 uc and related
productst ~but Busaness Week map.nne esumates total
sales cou10 reach, S30 miUaon.
ln1i.de SPon•, owned by Century Pubhshana Co. in
Evanston, Ill., has it' ninth swimsuit issue on the
newsstands, and bopes to sell 850,000 copies compared
W1th a normal rate bMe of S00,000.
Tbe m111rinc•11nt 1-..nswt i9UC wu a puody of
$pc>rt1 llhallrleed's vent0a, abowilll pncty womea ut
swimwear canyina rolled·ua> copies Of the compcti&.ioa '•
rwimauat auw.
.. ,. ,.... 10 well-reccawd thlt -e decided wt Would k.eei> doaoa our own every~ ... said manewr Jmy
Croft. . Spon mqazine tned its fint swimwit iNUe In Mattb
1986, ftaturina swimsun-clad women athleaa from all
fields, but sa1el failed to improve.
In his mnaqe to readers last year, then-editor Neal
Cohen wrote, ··We didn't feel comfonab&e with the .,..n,
they didn't fit our mapz.ine."
This year, Spon uK<I profmion&1 models. Publisher uw Green is look.Ina for a salet boost -but ~·t say
bow much - in Sport's rate base of 850,000 eootes..
Green makes no apolOIY for the chanat in
philosophy on swamswt 1 ues.
"What we1rtshowu1P,hereiuppropriatefora youna
male audjence," he said. 'It's part of what sports are aJJ
about"
. '89 ma~ket .hds first back-:-to-back· declines
..,
t11is •
--
-------~ --. ---------
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ror a term of your
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You'll can1 Pacific 8. 75 °O 9.14 Savings Bank' high
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Pfus. you'll receive
an .. Entertainment '89 ..
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more in your area.
So visit the Paclfk Savings Bank branch
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Because only a Pacific Savings Bank CD
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~,-.r: 6'1lllltantW ~rwry lor nirly wt1Ml'llWN Hat"" 'M.I.., t 10 clMl'W' Mulmum
ckp(•ll 890,000 l>ote not a.ppty to LAA and J\lmtio CU.. l.Jmll ON
tnt.-11•1nmtnt !Ml book ptr hc111vh<"'1 C>ITrr r11ri1m1 M11rrh 31 I
or wfll~ uppltcit IMC Th .. ofYn 11 llllMllAl.W to lllctlvkl11al9 on~
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~ tn t~ IRS M llddlUonal lnlrlftf In I'
1
f !f)c ._ ...... __ _ ---
Trade deficit figures due out today make investors nervous
By PETER COY ,.;.,..,...111,...,
NEW YORK -Stock pnccs fell
for a second day Tuesda) as nervous-
ness· over trade deficit figures due
today contnbuted to the market's
first back-to-back decline~ or 1989
After edaing down I 43 points on
Monday. the Dow Jonesavcrageof30
industrial stocks fell an even I 0.00
points to 2.214.64.
Dcchnang issues outnumbered ad-
vancing ones by about 4 to 3 an
nationwide trading of Ne" York
Stock Exchange-listed stocks. w1th
624 up, 800 down and 545 un-
changed.
Volume on the floor of the Bag
Board came to 143.93 malhon shares.
up from 11 7.38 malhon an the
previous session.
Na11onw1de, consohd~ volume
in NY E-hstcd issues. including
trades an those stod.s on regional
ft'HAT '\l'SE DID
NEW YORK (AP) Jan 17 Prev.
Ao11onced Tl 'I ~echned ,~. nch "990
Qta11risues 1~ ~ew rc ohs ew ows 6
'.'\l'SE LEADERS
METALS PRICES
exchanges and 1n the over-the-
counter market. totaled 172.29
milhon shares.
Traders womed that the Com-
merce Dcpanment would '1ve the
market an unpleasant surpnse with
ats repon on the merchandase trade
deficit for No\'embcr. said Rodd
Anderson. vice president of equity
trading at Sh~arson Lehman Hutton
Inc.
Expectations for the gap ranged
around S 11 billion toS 11.5 billion. up
from SIO 4 ballton an October
Also weighing on the stock market
was a retrenchment 1n the dollar.
which has run up sharply an recent
weeks, and another rise an 011 futures
pnces. which arc at 14-month highs
Some anal)sts said the market
seemed healthy an spite of the
successive setbacks.
"When the market as concerned.
an) bad new~ wall kill tt Lately the
market has shaken off bad ne"s,"
M'HAT A,_EX DID
NEW VORK (API Jan. IT Prev.
Adv1'nceo T~l m Declined
yndlanoeo Oll l IJSYeS ~ltW h1gh$ 29 ew lows 7 7
AttEX l .. EADERS
NEW YQRK (AP) -S.ln , • P.m Tuesoav pnce and ne• chan91 QI 11\e 10 mos I ae1111e Americao Stock. Exchange
luves. tradlno nallon~!ly al ml than s 1 Name Ve st Cho. TexesA1rCP I , \t t+ ~ MagmaCPPf • , '
Amotnl s . 2 '• -• ~11aProo • 1 i. -• hllLgD1s , I l . + \t ngy~v S eoc~da o •. 31 • + • r.11Telcho 169. + 1' edcil~m \ l .. • ~ -11• IAvSIPr •• •
GOLD PRICES
'\l'SE ('O'IPOSITt: THA'\SA('TIO'\S
'"~ .. FlkS'f l .. ,~
FtoOoc I• '1""'9 U7
said Wilham Lefc, re. market
strategist at Advest Inc.
Analysts said the market could be
influenced by the fourth.quaner
earnings rcpon at lntemauonal Bust·
ness Machines. due Wednesday
Profits arc expected to be up because
of good mmacomputcrsalcsand pans
from an arbitration award from
FUJltSU Ltd.
Apple Computer plunged 31k to
40"• on volume of nearly 6 8 m1lh on
shares. making u the most actavcl)
traded issue on the over-thKounter
market or any market. Apple said us
earning.-. ro'ie . 16 percen1 an the
quaner, in hne with expectations. but
also said ll was cutting pnces of M>me
Macintosh computers and compo-
nents
(ntel. another over-the-<:ounter
issue. fell 11• to 231/• afier announcing a
10.4 percent decline an quanerly
earnings.
Much of the markel's action was
related to take<>\ ers or other '-J>CC•al
s11uat1ons
Texas Eastern rose P,, to 4611 on
heavy volume after soanng 14 ''• on
Monda) .. It 1s bc1na sought by Coastal
\l'SE l'PS 6 DOft\S
NEWI YORK <AP) -The followino "" stlows 11\e New Vork. Sl°'k E•ch1nge SIOCk• and warranh lhtt ha11e goM vo IM moil and down ltle mo•• baHd on Perctnt 01 'hanoe for Tvesoav No secur1tie• tredlng belOw \2 or 1 ocn snarM art 1nclvded Nel and e>ercent1ge cha~ ere the d1llerence oeaw"" the Prevo0u• clo•i"9 price ano Tundev's S30 pm Price UPS
1'?.net>svc J~ 1 . ~\J~h~u~· PatkrOrill , > Up I
Rd98al adJ Pl '• • UP 1
• ~AIOln 2 191>1' 4 l t 1' UP I 11 1rnS1r ' f ~ '> UP I) arnrCpmpir • • -t" 't UP 3
namP ~'* ll + 1 • uo 7 J 0$CoCQ 1,.. -t I . UP 7
HldSonCP '• + • UP 6 FedNM~wl I'• 1 • UP 67
2 ~-.!~~~ t • ': 8~ ' l a SICP tl~ UP 1
• >Cklbrv 4 '• • UP 6 •tOIEllP 1 Uo Un1ICP ~ t UP l1~ildFn • UP rl TV C > t UP
W Inc ~>! Uo 4 WMmanCo 7\i ,,, .. UP •
C:omwM1g 2 • • • UP • C 'tCIOOslnd 27 • I • UP • 4 Munslng..,r 2 .. • Up • S PtrlT'LP pr S > • UP 4 DOWNS 11~1tr~n 3 , -~· CelR IT 4.\\ -., ~Ii ~k i l -•• ~r.~r\r 5 = : fl~ ~II 11,. = ~ X g 1 ... -I T > -• '11vl:r~}~h 111 ·~ = ·~
~ ·~-l .. ~na •• -• a'f•l~~IO I e = l: 11aneo r1nicn Inc > -• utooata • -1·e ~fi~l~0w1 -
1~ u~t.ti ~ urlNor pf ~
enJO(I wt • -• KSC!en
• • 2 ' • • :1
tor 42 a sha~. or $2 49 b1lhon.
Mamon rose 1/a at 33 on rumors.
daM:ounttd b) some analysts, that II
malht be the subject of a takeover
oner.
Among other actively traded
NY E issues. RJR Nabisco ro'ie 'It at
9511 •. Amencan Telephone &. Tele-
graph rose'• to 29'h. and I BM fell~ to
123 •.
Amonga1rhnestocks. UAL rose I'/•
to 113 h on speculation of a takeover
auempt by Saul Steinberg. who has
acquired a S percent stake. NWA rose
l l<• at 59 on rumors that UAL ma&ht
tr) to bu) at as a defense against a 61d
b) teanbcrg.
The Dow Jones averaae of 30
industrial 'toeh fell relatively more
sharpl)' than other market measu~s.
mainly because one of •ts compo-
nents, Good~ear. fell 21f. to 51. The
compan) said tt expects to rcpon
founh-quarter earnmp from con-
tmu1ng operations that are down S3
percent from a year earlier.
As measured by Wilshire As-
sociates' index of more th.an 5.--000
acta"ely traded stocks. the market lost
S5.20 btlhon, or 0.19 percent.
The NYSE's composite index of all
ats listed common stocks fell 0.30 to
159 48
OTf l'PS '\D DOft\\
l
I
, w~.J--.-y•.1111
I UllOHl\I
Forget th£_ irony,
. skinheads remember . .
tough ·prosecutor
An auomey who defended one of three skinheads
convicted in a brutal py-bashing attack thinks it as 1ronec the
skinheads will serve less prison time than they would have
bar&ained for because the distnct attorncy•s office pushed for a
stiffer charse.
While the irony should be acknowlcdaed. the d istnct
attorney should be commended for rc}CCting the sure th mg and
prosccutin& the three to the fullest extent of the law.
Deputy Dtstnct Attorney Thomas Avdctf pursued
JUSllCC, not a guaranteed sentence or anotberchec:kmarl( on his
record of convictions.
A vdcef sent a clear and loud mcssase when he opted to
pursue attempted murder charaes against the neo-Naz1s.
He clearly told skinheads and others who would reven to
such animahstJc behavior that the people of Orange County
won't go soft on them, we won't look the other way.
The people won't tolerate such offensive offenses.
C:l l l J 'C:J C)
And Avdcersactions reassured those everywhere who arc
concerned about misguided attempts aimed at oppressing
people, whoever they are. Gays, Hispanics and females arc
among those should cheer the district attorney no matter the
outcome of the trial. The three skinheads arc. after all. going to
pnson to pay for their crimes.
''-&ff&'°~ St.t)\ \C It ~ cmfOl. "'\\.\. .. , &O~\NG ~ --PRUN\MCi se>.&ot\,,,/'
Defense Attorney James Sweeney says the three neo-Naz1
skinheads might have received more prison time under a plea
bargain to assault charges. But when Deputy District Attorney
A vdecf filed attempted murder charges. the pica bargain was
ref used and the case went to trial.
The three managed to beat the attempted murder charges.
though they rcccaved prison sentences ranging from four to
seven years for assault convictions.
New presi~ent confronts old
problem: The host~ge dilemma
Some an the legal community miJht quesuon the d1stnct
attorney because the three, according to Sweeney, were
prepared to enter guilty pleas to charges with 15-year sentences
that probably would have resulted in them serving seven-year
terms.
Looking at the case in the clear hght of hindsight, the
defense attorney might be right in one sense. His client and his
two brutal buddies might have been "lucky." There are many
who continue to belic\'e the three skinheads did auempt to
murder Roben Thomas Joyce when they entered Heisler Park
armed with a metal pipe. ,
From our perspective, the district attorney had little
choice but to seek the stiffer charge. Had he not. other
questions m1&ht have surfaced.
Would die Judge have been as inclined to hand out the
stiffest sentences allowed for the assault charges 1f the
attempted murder charges had not pressed by the district
attorney's office?
And would other skinheads be mchned to pick up a metal
pipe and go in search of gays knowing they could plead to a
lesser charge 1f caught?
An aggressive prosecutor ma) help us to avoid ever
answenng the latter question.
Optnlons expreMed In thla ·~ .,, thoM of the Dally Plfot Ot'*
Ylews tKPJMMd on this page are thole of their authon and ar1ist1 ~·· comments ere lnVlted end may be sent to The Oalty Pltot. P O Bo• 1580.
Cotta M ... 92626
0 ·1 · 111·: H \ 0 I ( · 1·: S
Border checkpoints
1y WALTER R. MEARS ,.,,......c. .... -·
WASHINGTON -A new prcs1·
dent with an old problem. George
Bush knows of no swan stroke that
would free the Amcncan hostages m
Lebanon -but he also knov.s that a
signal to Iran could help.
So the prntdent-clce'l says he can
visualize a day ofbetter U.S. rela11ons
wnh Iran, a statement which in itself
1s a gesture he hopes could helP. produce "keys 10 unlock the locks. ·
Meanwhile. he promises to pursue
any path that m1gh1 point toward
freedom for the hostaacs.
El&ht )Cars aficr the Tehran cm·
bassy hostages were f rccd on Prest·
dent Reagan's inausura11on da).
Bush come to the White House w11h
nine Amcncans held capt•' t' b)
Leban~ kidnappers
Their phgh1 has not produced the 11r of cns1s that persisted while 52
mcncans were held an the embassy
for 444 da)s. until the hour Reaga n
took offi~
With smaller numbers and no
1dcnufiable "11la1ns 10 blame. let
a1onc televise n1ghtl):. the cast-of the
Lebanon hostages as a nagging head-
ache that won't go away.
Rcqan did not mentton thr hoslagcs 1n his farewell address this
last oews co nference he said the
Unned t.ates eventually must nego-
tiate with Iran. "beca use 1he) ha"e
control of these people." Bush 1sn'1 so certain that Iran fully
co ntrols the s11ua11on. .. My view IS ~alert to opportun1·
t) ... he said in an in1crv1ew "I thank
the cca~·ftrt ~tween Iran and Iraq
has po1cnual for amchorauon of that
hostage snuauon. but I think 11 ~ould
be improper to assume that Iran
controls 10 a key all these host ses I
don't think we know that."
Nevertheless. the prcs1dcnt-clec:t bcheves 1mprovc:'d U rtlat1onsw1th
Iran could help "I'm one who thinks
it's tn our interest to have better
relauons with Iran And I'm one who
thanks that Iran can take a handful of step and demonstrate that they want
~tter relations with the Un11cd
tatcs
.. And so to the dtgrcc Iran holds the
kc)', holds mo 1 of the kc)'s 10 unl ock
the locks. that could be helpful " he-
sa1d
He emp,has1ztd his me sa,ge 10 Tehran. ·They'll rud this The) know me . I know their v1ev.s 1
don't Start ofi Wllh the view that we
alwa)s have 10 be at loaierheads with
Iran .. I alsodon·1 nart off w11h the naa'e view that 1f )OU ha~e some dramatic
mccuns. that's going to rt"Sult in th('
instant 'l'clea~ of ho I ('S who are
not held by lnin (who> ma>~ held
b> clients of Iran · Meanwhile. he promised. thr new
admin1s1ra11on wtll ~l a wl\ out
"Wr arc not go1nl 10 lea\C on" rabbtt
1ra1I une\plored ·
The ho taac-takers in ubanon do
not directly reflect a aoH·mment but.
anslead. shadowy group of h1'11e
Moslem e~trem1s1s opcraung 1n the
turmoil of Beirut S11ll. the) an-
rcspon 1\'C to the wall of Iran Three
captl\t Amencans were frt't'd "h1le
the Reagan adm1n1strat1on wa) send·
mg secret arm~ h1pmcn1 to Iran in
1985 and I "86
Lon~t held of the capu\C Amen· cans LS Ten) Anderson. chief Middle
East correspondent for The As~
soc1a1cd Press. ludnapPtd on March
16, 198 5 -two months afier Pre 1·
dent Reagan bcun the term of offict that ends on Fnch) In add111on to the
nine Amencans, at least !.C''en
c1t11en~ of other nations arc held
hostage
The lraman hot e cns1s was an issue 1n the presidential campa11n of
1980. work1na to Reapn·~ ad"antagc
in the elec11on 1h:1t ousted J1mm)
Carter. But the dilemma of frecana
them never bcame has. they "'ere rtleased JUSt as he took office. The
kidnappings tn ubanon rt-<'rtated
the problem in a d1ffcrcn1 form. and led to the worst internal en 1 of the
R~gan )Cars the Iran.Contra scan·
dals
The Reagan admin1s1rauon found
no solution. desp11e tM prnade-nt' earl} \Ow that "our pohc)i •111 be
sw1fl oind effe<:U'te rttnbuuon ·
.lga1mt ho'itagt'·takcrs There wa no
v.a., 10 make rttahat1on wor~ 1n
Le6anon
ince d1sclo ure of the Iran amn·
for·hos1agt's sh1pmt'nts the adman•~
tratton ha'i pla)'C'd down th<' ho tiAi<
s11uat1on 1t could nol l't'~he
Bush 1nsutcd thett was no dcc1 ion
to lower vis~!.!.U' and. pu h th<' ho tagcs down The admm1stra11on
agenda b«au~ of that tp1\Qde Ht
said that "a n't a matter ol pohc}'
But 11 certain!) v.as a maucr of fall
Walter R. M~•,..., vltt pttdde•I
ud col•m.11111 for Th .Auo<'i~~
Pt'ra, .. , rrporr~ °" Wu.i..1100
for mott uu ts }'Hrs.
In the federaJ governme nt. things move slowly. Early on
Jan. 2 the languid pace killed. Four members of a young
family on its way home to a new year in the U.S. afler
celebrating wtth family in Mexicali died as an unsuspecting
Horacao Aguilar inched the family pickup through the lane for
four hours before reaching the border. The bodies were
discovered by U.S. Customs officials check.mg for con-
traband.
The (death) ccn1ficate likely won't men lion 1t. but four of
the eight border crossing checkpoints were closed, rontnbut-
ang to the traffic that backed up for more than a mile duf}_ng
those hours that the Aguilar pickup idled and pumi)Cd
p0isonous fumes into the camper shell where the mother and
children slept.
Only after bodies were dascovercd did Custo ms call in
more inspectors and open more bays.
Budget battles indicate we want
more than we are willing to finance
A cure is wh•t Calexico Chamber and cu y officials arc ready to demand now in the wake of the Aaullar death . City
officaals spent considerable umc last year pleading wtth
lmm1arat1on and Customs offiClals lo either reopen the old.
abandoned Port of Entry or add two new bays at the present
factlity ...
True to form the feds want to study the idea for anor'her
year.
But the deaths of the Aguila rs demand a rapid cure to the
border crossana problems.
Imperial V•ll~y p~.,
Drunken driving
Making drunken drivers pay for the damage and horror
they create on the road is an adca that can be crit1c1Led onl)
because it 1s so lonJ in com1na.
St.a.rtina the fint of thas )'Car, all those convicted 1n
California of drivina under the influence of alcohol or other
impeinna substanC'CS and -ho cause accidents Wlll face
addition&J penalties. They wall have to pay up to S 1,000 to the
California Hiahway Patrol for co ts in rnpondina to the
scene. Drunk.en dnvana is unlike most crimes in that few people
who commit it set out to do so. It cuts across all economic.
soci&1 and IC(Jlrapluc hncs and is a crime that almo t anyone
who drinks alcoholic beverqes can commit •...
The new CHP assessments should make some people
sober up before hcadina out on the TOid. Those who don't
heed the law at leatt may pay for it in the wallet ,.. s.,-.w , .... ,.,.,,
· ACRAM( TO -There arc
strikana. almost uncanny. paralleh ~tv.ttn poltucal debates now under
way 1n both Washington and ra·
men to
In bolh capitals. the dominant
poltt1cal topics arc 1a~es and spend· ina. •
In both. lame-duck Republican
uecuuves -Ronald Reagan and
George DcukmCJ1an -ha' e sub-
mitted austenty budgets to IXmo-
cratac lq9'lators.
Both bud1e1s slash into health.
.,.el fart. and C'ducataonaJ stf' ices
favored b>. the Democrat wh1k
protce11na fast-arow1na. Republic.an·
ra~orcd cateaone the Pentagon 1n
Wa h1naton. the penal 'i)stem 1n
en men to Both budacts also, howt,er arc
prechcatcd on continuation of a
~nMona pcnod of economic pros-
pcn1y
Both bud,eu mersc pro pent) and
au.s1cnt) b)' t)'1na themschcs to some
~J tt1lra1nt on 1pcndina. tht'
Gramm·Rudman dcfic1t·rtduc11on
law1n Wuhtn•ton. thcGann LimMn
Sacramento. The e\ccuu"cs are con
1cnd1na. 1n cffttt, that their hands are t~: they are telhri& lhtir Dcmocra11 '*
cn1.a that 1f they arc unhappy Wlth
tht IJ)ee1fk prosrammauc cuts the)
sh<>Uld offer others for the block -known" th.al Democrats hate to say .. no .. to tn)onc.
1n both capitals. 1ht un\'t1lina or
the tMadleu hat bttn 1ttc>mpan1cd by wel~ted t.o-ts of pean from ~ atrec1cdl c:om&itucnna and P:art1s.an
......... --:::.. ••HCUIUoN ftvm lawmakcn, COU•
...... ~ Wida demalldl that tl\CS be
..., ........... raited '°rd.cw tht heal prn~utt ...... IM Rrpubliean UCCUll\CS a....'¥:!-.. ,.., .. rad-my-lipi oppo\iti n -eo • MW wcs. bd.evina that the) "::a ...._ llf IM....,.,,,. oftht ~01m 1n
P-... Fvctntncal '8.U'I and ,...2!!.. 111 -. Hd that 1t'1 a mancr
-,. 1 'rs pnonua
rather a cont1num1 national Jcbale
O'tt'r how much i''>"ernment "c
Ammcan w.tnt and he>~ much "f
arc w1lhn.J to pa~ 1n ta\t'\
The ~"tdcncc ~ould ant11"-a1e 1hat
mo t of us v.ant more than Y-e rt
w1lhn& 10 finan~. lhertb\ enticing
pohllCLlns into ti) 1ng 10 'iall f\ lhO!oC
mutual!> cgn1rad1ctory 1mpent1'~
The Reapn White Hou~ and the
Dcmocrattc on,~s ha'c con p1rtd
for the pa t e1iflt )Cl~ to bu~ gun .
bu11er and t.u cut b rvnn1ng up
hu~ bud~t defirn that were
finanttd laratly b) fore11n ~nke"'
thu\ ec> 1pon1n1 the economic elT~ts
of deficit pcndinJ. ·
The rrsult ha bttn a lon1·runn1n
('(Onom1c boom that ra1~ all pol111-
cal ships But the moment of ('(On·
om1cand pohtt J tru th 1 amHnl for Re~pn's u«c r. corac Bu h.
The tnck for Bu h -• nea& one if
he can pull II Ofl -I lO ~C'an the
ao"cmment from its 1pend1na b1nte
IOVtl )'. cnouih to h01d an economic
nottdi\le, a tnck made more com-
plicated by has tttmmsfy implacable
oppos1t1on 10 new talct.
The po:l1tics of ahfom1a's ~
arc a hn.k d1ffercn& \1ntt the C'•li-
f omaa Ute to"emmeiu. vnhkc the
fcdctal eovmumnt. 11 not Juppolird
IOD\\ I' Hl,IOR\
Today 11 WedDCtdiy. Jan II. lM
lid• clay of 1919. Thtft are 347 da)
ltft•·--~· T odly's hilhlildtt an 9-ttt •
to run up de1tc1ts I hu . there 1 a
more direct <.ornlat 1on btt~ttn in-
l'limc and outgo The lane d~ sci blurred The past
t\\O Stilt' budJelS flirt v.;uh red tnk
and thert' an informal deficit· pend·
mg process an w-h1ch the state 1mpl)
po 1pones pa}tnt 1ts bill\ for a month
or 1wo The \tate. morco"er. enpg~
1n a more-formalized debt pr~ss b
shilling w me spending into bonds
that art repaid over man} \<'US.
£s)tnt1ally. ho"'t'rr. 1h( debate 1s ~1m1lar Cahfom1a. h~e the federal
go"ernment. cannot fulfill all pend-
ing demand!. within e11htr reH nues
or 11!1 ~pcnd1na hm11 Tht' pohtacal
question to ~ rc~l\ed •~ whether
Cahfom1ansand \Oter!.-thc two arc
001 ~ sanl) the same -pla« a
higher pnonty on pubhc ~r'\:ICt\ or
on mainiaanina relat1HI) low tue 'fhe rtalit) 1 that mo<1t (ah·
fom1ans. hke other Amencans want
both htlh lc\lcls of ~f\ 1« and lo~
le' cl o1 ta:\n The want 10 rcdu~ "unneccssar) .. or "v.'l tef ul.. pend·
1ng. wh ich mean the. want 10 reduce
tho~ ser' ices that the)' don't per·
sonally ust-or 1deoloe1call) suppon.
That amb1valen« VtU 1raph1cally
d1 plated dun!'I last ~'tar' clccuon
when C'ahfom1a votcn boo ted taAC'S
on c1prtllC"S. ref used to loosen the
Gann L1m11. and decrttd that ichools
should ar-t a ircater 11\al"t' ofa~ailablc
pubhc ~source
Pol111cians could. and did read
tnto those actions just abou\ an)'·
thins Thus the confu on 1hat c .. 1 ts
in the Capitol O\'tt prionttcs mertly
rt0('(ts thll in the laf'ICT '°''ct .
0.. "att.rr ,. • 11Nkeld t..rs •...
.,Todafs binhdll~ Movtt dinaor
Jt>hn Boorman 11 '6. •MOii
-ntcr 1'obb>' GOtdtborO .. 41. Com·
td1a1M1.,..mu11aan ht"'*'°"
Numbers
game gets
credit for .
confusion
It's usually after you Uck the
envelope and seal it that you sec the
words pnntcd on the flap ...... s rour
account number on your check?'
1t has ha1;>pened to me so often thal
I'm t>cainn1ng to shape up now and
put the number on 1hc check when I
wnte 1t. This takes more time than
making out the check.
Most of the charge cards ·rrom
department stores have lOor l l diaits
1n the account numbers. I have two
p sohoe crcditcards;one has I 3d.iaits 1n 1hc ·account num~r and the other has IS. My Mastercard has 16 digits
and my chtck gu:r.mtce card has ! 9
dlgits I try to have cnou&h cash on band ""hen 1 shop for groceries to save time
for both the cbcck~u1 clerk and me.
E"en lhouah they lcnow me in the
market, rules art rules and they must
record the num~r from m )' check
1uaran1cc caret
If 1 ha\.-C to pay With a checlt, lhC
clerk acts 1n a co mfortable position and tans ..,..n11n1-In the meantime
the ice cream bcilns to melt 1n the cart
of1he customer'bclund me. Recentl)' the market added a small
machine al the checkout counter that
1s supposed 10 ~ more conven1en1
and save time. The customer inserts a
card and punches a few keys. lflhert
arc no flashana h&,hls or alarms, the
clerk gives them the-nod and the)'
e>1ck up 1he1r JtOCtnCS and leave .
I'm not 1011\ft to get one of t~
t-:ards F1rs1 of• , v.hcn any money is
w.11hdrawn from my account. I want
some paperwork 1n hand to "enfy u.
And secondly I do not wan t to put
one mott plastic card 1n my \Ir-. Utt.
I l\a're 10 pack up my wallet w11h
both hands as it 1$and not bccautc•t •s loadtd ... ,th ca~ lt IS loadC'd wilh
cards -all ..,..1th daffe~nt account
num~rs
Wh) can't we ba"e one num~r" ~\ our Social ~unt) num~r 8)
the lime a person 1 old enouah to bu>
on c~11. he has a Soc1aJ Sccunl)
num~r E'en some babies arc as ucd ~aal ~unt) rants nov.
Most adult ha"e mcmonzcd 1ha1
number aod 11 could even be pnnted
on our checks ThLs num~r could ~
on all of our other accounts or
bu aness tran uons There are a few eJ1:ccp11ons. Tele·
Qhonc num~rs. license plate . and
Zip codes.
We gtunou.ih nmsa:n~callsasn 1s
-v.e don't v.ant to make our phone
num~rs an) mo~ accessible. The
personalized license plates a~ popu·
lar and a source of income for the state so we want to keep them o wa~
would 11 v.orl ou l for the Zip code.
but I Stt no reason wh) It can't ~
ustd on all other occasions ..,..hen an
IC'COUnt. or ID num~r 1s required
r11 probabl) get a lot of feedback as
10 ""hY thts isn't fca.s.able. People
npp1n1 )OU off because the) have
)OUr Social Seeunty num~r. for
instance But pltnt)' of people h&H
thlt trouble with the p~nt set-up
>\ccount num~n aren't ha.rd to get
hold of A request to sec a customer's
Social unt) nrd v.ould ~ a
safcauaro
When a computer 1s fed a number
with from 13 to 19 d1gi1s, and one of
the digits 1s omitted, or a couple of
them arc transposed. that
a rdholder'!. account 11 1n trouble h
n take da)~ and even wttk.s 10
stra,ahten 11 out This s1tuat1on ' more apt to h.appen w 1th the lo"'
account numbers c-urrc ntly used than
with our nine digit Social Sccunly
num~~ wc·,e played the numbers pmt
long cnouah . I make a mouon .. -c
S\l>'ttCh to one num~t for a II acwunts.
Do I hear a ~nd?
Col•mallt u JreD1 ,,.,,.. a. ,_.,... '6wl
Reader's
comments
welcome
;..--:~~~~-JF1~,-;!n~•;a;! .. L_.,,_.t~1'111~=1:J !':ilia bee-cen &be pohu· ---~&IC IO 1 ZIFI& .... OM maa ~udc -On:ln. tJ.·••·•'"" ~ Kttlcn amved "' Aaasuah1\ loc.an) .11--~-----------------------·--budlr:t benk. but la) tO CIUlblitll • ~ rok>ny •
..
I
AIO DAILY PILOT/ Wed"Mday, Januaty 18, 1989
'IO\ 11 IC I \ 11 \\
'Gleaming the Cube'
reduces Hardy Boys
to one skateboar:der
9YJOE aALTAKE
..:z ........ s.w.
Thett's motivation but no motive
· in "Gleaming the Cube." a murder
mystery that lacks a central nervous
system.
A boy's brother is found dead in a
motel room and it's written off as
suicide by everyone, except the boy,
of course. He decides to investigate
the matter himself. with the help of a cop who empathizes with the bofs
gnef. The cop, a macho type, wants to
do it his way, but when the lc1d
'COntinues his snooping, the cop stalks
off and the kid is on his own.
h's all fairly current and 1t does wotk.
except for the lame rcasonin& behind
the brotber's death.
Without a reasonable motive. you
end up with a movie filled with
dazzling skateboard action, stilted
suppomng performances (hopeless
Steven Bauer plays the cop) and a
showcase starring perfonnance by
Christian Slater.
Hl\11"
Chamber's flaws
are still pleasing
1y MKHAEL RYOZ'YNSKI .,.., """'c. ...........
The On.nae County Chamber Or-
chestra made pleasant mus•<' Monday
evening at the South Coast Rcpenory
Theatre Monday evening.
Music duutor Micah Ltvy led 23
players seated amid the set for CR's
current-tunning "The Road to
Mecca" in a fairly cclec11c mix of
Baroque. classic and contcmporal')
music.
would have bttn heard tn the SOtb
row, and Leonard appeared uncom·
fortable at v1nou1 limes an the
concert. He alJo seemed unable to
make up his m1ndas to whether or not
to play tM orchestral pessaaes. some-
tuncs pla)'lnJ one note befott ner-
vou ly dec1dina to stop. sun. he m de up for 1<>me of his
techn1cal liux pas with e.x.prcui~e
playinaofa lofty order He excelled 1n
the m1ddJc (slow) movement, where-
in blS controlled manner belied his
intense lync1sm, particularly in the ~per register when elayed softly.
The orchestra pve him adcQualt,
unobtrusive suppon throughout the
concerto. ·
He solves the case.
"Gleamin' the Cube" is .. The
Hardy Boys' updated and reduced to
one boy and gimmicked-up by malc-
inJ the late brother an adopted
Vietnamese kid and by mak.ing the
kid-hero a skateboarding freak (all the
better for the filmmakers to do a twist
on the staple chase scene at the end).
If nothing else. "Gleaming the
Cube" (a skateboard term me•ning
triumph) does provide youna Slater
with mouvauon to spare. ano the
actor resf>Onds by emoting all over the
place. It s a formidable performance
-ne<rJames Dean. replete with
punk look -that recalls every young
movie rebel with a cause. Slater 1s
closer to a young Brando or Dean
than to his brat-packing peers. filling
his performance with Method Acttng
tics and shrugs. mumbles and slurs.
all of which contrast with his blond,
beach-boy good looks.
Chrtltlan Slater and Steven a.uer star In ··01e .... 1ne the
Cube:·
The highlight was the most roccnt
work on the program. Toru
Takemitsu's 1957 '1Requ1cm." wnt-
ten tn meniory of fellow compoStt
Hayasaka, was reahzcd 1n a bnllamtly
understated yet emotional manner by
the strings. Very austere yet (strangely
enouah) melodic hoes follo~cd one
upon the other almost wtthout n:sp11e
from this reKrved bleakness.
Leonard i:ouldn't rttitt an encore,
but should have qwt while he wasn't
ex.actly ahead The slow "Sarabande"
from the Unaccompanied Cello Sulte
in C Minor by J. S. Bach was marred
by additional technical flaws, not the
least of which was Ltonard's ra1lu~
10 establish a firm pulse in the
betinnin1.
Get this lod-a real role'
For the record. the direction hen! 1s
by Graeme Clifford, the Australian
editor who made his d1rcctorial debut
by guiding Jessica Lange through
"Frances" (and on to an Oscar
Grove to consolidate, turn pro
Company will take
~festival approach '
lyTOMTITUS
Dmlt .... Col .........
A major change 10 operations has
been announced by the Grove
Theater Company for its production
schedule at the Gem Theater and the
adj_a~nt Grove Shakespeare Fes11 val.
UCJinning this year, the Grove will
run us seasons from June through
December, consolidating a year-long
program into seven months. It also
will adopt a contract Wlth Actors
Equity, thereby becoming full y pro-
fessional.
"By putting ourselves off stndc
with the ttst of the theaters in the
county, we will play to the strength we
already have established in the sum-
mer," explained Thomas F. Bradac.
founder and anistic director of the
Garden Grove company.
Shortening and consohdatmg the
season will "take a festival ap-
proach." Bradac added, noting that
productions will be mounted s1mul-
taneously, rather than one at a ume. The Gem Theater also will 1n-
The new format will begin June 22 augurate a Youth Production Work-
with "Romeo and Juliet" in the shop, which will stage two plays from
Festival Amphitheater. running February through Apnl -the new
throuah July 15, followed July 5 with .. darlc months" for the compan).
a play yet to be announced at the Gem The new format means the clim1na-
Theater. "Cyrano de Bergerac" will tion of double seasons and ma1hngs
occupy the amt>hitheater from Jul> for the Gem and the halccspcarc
29 to AuJ. 5, while Athol Fugard's .. A Festtval.
Ltsson From Aloes" will be presented "Now." said managmg director
Aug. 6-Scpt. 16 on the indoor stage. Richard Stein, we can advertise in a
Oosmg out the amphitheatcr~r-way we couldn't do earlier We can
tion of the season will be "The wo ~romote two plays at the same lime
Gentlemen of Verona," playing rom Doing ~verything twice ~as not onl>
Auj. 24 to Sept. 16. The balance of the costly, 11 made no sense
t 989 ~son will consist of "The Ticket pnccs wtll be increased to
Scound~I." Oct. 4-Nov. 4; "Twelfth from S l 0 to S20 at the Gem and from
Night" Nov. 21 to Dec. 23, and the $1 0 to $23 at the amphitheater. The
Grove's traditional holiday piece. "A J t urrent 11cket ~calt is SI 0 to S1 7 at the
Child's Christmas in Wales." wit h Gem and S 15 to $18 at the
dates and locauon to be announced. amphitheater.
The Grove Theater Company will The company also 1s cons1denng
form an alliance w1th Cal State mounting produc11ons to tourOran_ge
Fullerton'sdrama department, which County and Southern California.
wdl provide rehearsal space and the according to Bradac. These, howc"cr. n~ed scenic and costume shop will not occur in 1hc 1989 season fac1hues. In return, the college s drama students will be given inter-The Gem Theater 1s located at
ship J>r<>srams and will be used in 18252 Main t.. Garden Gro'c
non-Equity assignments on stage and Further 1nformat1on can be obtained
baclc stage. by calling the boil office at 636-7~ I '
Michael Jackson rebounds in LA
LOS ANGELES (A P ) azed hght show and hean-thumpins At least 19 million copies of the
Thousands of fans howled Monday choreography. record have been sold
night as superstar Michael Jackson D1ehard Jackson aficionados "Bad," which produc-cd five No I
took center stage adorned in silver didn't seem to care too much about hits, will be recogruzed Jan 30 w11h
chains. resuming a concert tour the star's canccllat1on of several the "'Amencan Music Av.ard of curtailed in November when he concert dates, the first of which was Ach1cvcmcn1 " Some hits from the
suffered swollen vocal chords. last Nov. 14. album includc "'Man tn the Mirror." a
Jackson's manaaer. Frank Dileo. "We figure it's a once-in-a-hf cu me Grammy nominee 10 the Record of
had announced that this would be opportunity," said Glenn Busse. a 26-the Year CllCJory: .. Olny Drana."
Jackson's final concert tour. year-old San Diego resident who "The Way You make Mc Feel," and
The 30-ycar-old pop phenomenon made the long trek with his wife. "I Just Can't Stop Loving You:·
was clad in black when he opened the Nancy. Jackson performed songs from the
show to about 17,SOOpeoplcgathcred The reclusive pop star embarked '"Bad'" album Monda> along wuh h1to;
at the Sports Arena. He hat the stage at on a 16-month solo tour to promote from earlier da)s
8:45 p.m. complete with synchron-his best-selling "Bad" record album: Only ti cket holders who bought
-;::==========================::;,scats for the canceled Nov 14 to Nov 22 dates were allowed to view
~c:::ll----Monday's ~rformancc. Howe ver.
scalpers abounded. One man. who
refused to gi ve his name. said he was
sclhn& scats for $7.S each. C: f .fl~ Jackson performed 10 only one of
his su scheduled Lot Angeles per-
formances before his phys1c1an urged
hjm to cancel the rest ofh1s dates.
Jackson will finish out his shows at
the Sports Arena Jan. 26 and Jan 27
nomination) and later did "Burke and Wills."
You ma) wonder what he's doing here
I know I dtd.
'Days of Our Lives'
top daytime soap
BEVERLY HILLS. Calif. (AP) -
NBC's ··oays of Our Lives" was
voted the top dayumc !.tnal in the
"The 5th Annual Soap Opera
Awards" honoring outstanding
achc1vemen1 for both daytime and
pnme lime tclev1s1on. Winners were
selected through ballots sent to the
more than five mil hon readers of the
magazine Soap Opera 01ges1.
T\' LISTl:\GS
The first violins supcnmposcd
their tonally ordered themes on top of
tul'Jld. atonal harmonics 1n the other
stnngs in a near-flawless mamage of
counterpoint and homophony (music
conceived horizontally and ver-
t1caJly, respecuvcly).
Soloist Ronald Leonard, pnnc1pal
cellist of the Los Angeles
PhtJharmonJc Orchestra, had some-
what of an off night techmcally 10 his
featured performance of Franz Josef
Haydn's Cello Concerto in D Major.
Perhaps it was due to my bein& seated
too close to lbe stage. J thus was pnvy
to imperfections (a finger heard
rubbing alona the strin& or the sound
of the bow striking the strina) usually
lost by the time the sound reaches the
tenth row.
But a few 1ntonauon problems
Georg Phi hp Telemann's Su11c an F
MaJ Or came off as more of a scm1-
v1ohn conceno and showed off the
experuse of the orchestra's con-
cenm1stren. Diana Halpnn. Playtna
mostly fast-paced solos that revealed
high degree of both talent and
mus1c1ansh1p, Halpnn dcfimtely had
the better solom's night,
She also proved herself the ideal
team player who adJusted to the
orchestra whenever the latter. in an
overall average performance, strayed
a little from the set tempo of any given
movement. Ltvy, thous)\. thouaht
the applause fervent enough to repeat
one of the movements fo r an encore.
I s:od I 6:3o I 1:00 I 1 :30 I 8 :00 I 8:3o I 9:oo I 9:3o l 1o:oo 11o:3o l 11 :oo I {~]
cas 11111de Ne•• Edalelfl
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r-CIS ® ...... ,
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&lint
Ptoplt •
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GOl\f TV ioi fht Equ.d1t1 Wlwg"' Hen P4' s..-~
SM• S_~-•---4
USA UNol\IM Yy11trln Highl Iott lwo AoNld Rt1gen Ntwa Torughl
Todl Coull D~t Succtu Sto Sil.)•
NIA IHUIW los ~ CIClP''1 •• los ...... fo•J!\il\ ~ ChMrt Tul
'l»en ~
Eyt on <How1t1g Htad of
l A. Pa1n1 IN Cllu
En1t1Uin TV iot
Ton. N
W111. Lost
or D1ew
Will, lost
or Otew
Wondtr Hoo~1·
YHrt 111•n
ltw Equ.alu.,
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S1•1lll t1 lllwl ..... ........... ,...
DEEP STAR SIX
Clark Gable's son
signs for movie rotes
LO NGELES (APJ -John C1arlt Gable. the 30n of Ktor Clark
Gable, has 11ned a thttc·movie
contract with a We~ttm tilled ''Bad
Jtm .. set as his fint film
IOUY tftlMO wnt -111'MllA ...,..,
Gable. 27, was born to Kay Gable
several months aner has fathtr's
dtatb 1n November 1960 and ~
11 ted an acuna C'al't'er untiJ ~tJy.
He hu been a profns1or\al ofT·rced
race dn"'"tr. $42.95 Mllcl9 NOW ONLY
42 Potfl'alt Ale--:
1·10113, 2-8x10&, 3-5x7s,
15 _...., 9 NM# Mlnl-Potttalts .wt
12 AJl.OcC4181on c.pfJon Pottnlfl ,.,
Right now IOf only $1695 you can g« 42 professtonal portra1i.1ne1ue1ino a t0kl3 and
12 Alt-Occatt0n Ceptt0n Pof1fa111 ~utl ·~)'Our Chotce 04 30 metNQN) Tt•e·a no llPPQll'ltment ~ry and K ma11 wefcom9t babies, ctuldntn. ~ultt and groups
"'-01K ~ 11 NCll aocl loOl\lf f4AlleCI Nol ~ ~ ,,, CJrlllr ollt! ()lw ~ IC*lil I* family ~tall SUM _.1!1141
'··.iturmq 12 All Orr 11.1<•'' •
1 J 1 r / c 1 n fin r tr , 11 f'. · a
2200 Harbof Bl .. Costa Mesa
19101 ........ be., ._ .. ten leach
15440 leach Bl., ..........
400 C .... Dt Estrlll, San Clemente
~-=-· •.
~, .... ,~ , ........... ..
Ol.WMMI M CUii (,..ta) , ......... ,~ ....
....,_
WIUWt ........ ,,..~
ftl AICmMAl ~ fNt , .. *' ....... ".
IOUfftNO;;;Wi iii
.. I've finally come to ac~pt who J
am and who my father was.. .. said
Ga Jc 1n a re«nt slltcmcnt.
RUFFELL'S
U191.STUY•.
..
..
WEDNESDAY. JANUARY l8, 1988
CIF places SantaC/ara issue on hdld
'Bailout' decision not~xpected until February
Citinaa IOf,iam ofissucs, and
maybeJUStlJvtna themselves a ltttlc more tune t>d'orccomin1 to some
decisions, the
LouCv1·
JIDOVlCh
Bailout from
the Coast
Cbristmas
Oas.sic at Estancia Ht&h
in late Dectm·
beiwillJOinto
mid-Febru.uy
before the
CVIJ•-cH smokeclears __ .... That's when
(Feb. l6)abluc-ribboncommmceof
four from the Cl F Southern Section, •
Newport
Pro-Am
lures 74 ~
pros
Tourney features
mixture of young,
veteran golfers
By HOW ARD L HANDY
~ ..... c.r • ..,_.
Max an a blend of )Oung, cager, up-
and-comana stars with a spnnkltn& of
veteran and senior pla)crs and you
have the formula for the 1989
Newpon Classic Pro-Am golf tour-
nament that will be played at New·
port Beach Country Club Fnday and
Saturday.
A total of 74 profcss1onaJ golfers
will vie an the l Sth annual event that
benefits Hoaa Memonal Hospnal. Presbytenan through the suppon
group 552 Club. More than $800,000
has been raised for the hospital
(includJna more than $90,000 last
year) sanet the tournament staned an
197S. Adm1ss1on and parkanaarc free
both days.
This year. two former champions
arc an the field along ""1th such
veterans as Frank Beard, Tommy and
John Jacobs, John Lanning. Alan
T ap1e and V 1c1or RcgaladQ The
former champions include the only
two-umc wanner. John McCom1~h
(1 985 and 1987) along ~tth Ton)
Gnmcs. victor an the ra1n-shonentd
1986 event
McCom1 h. one of the lonacst
hatters among 1he pros. wall be
challenged for the distance title by
former t"osta Mesa High star Dennis
Paulsen. McCom1sh ""on 1he PGA
Tour 101'1 dnv1ng champ1onsh1p an
t983and pin an 1987
The Santa Mana rcs1den1 was the
•winner of me pro-am pon1on of the
tournament la t )car alona """h
amateur Jim G1anuhus of 811 C'a·
nyon Country Club.
tnclud1n1CoronadelMarH1gh's
Tom JacObson and former Costa
Mesa Pnnc1pal Robert Packard, wall
anform me Southern Sccuon ex·
cc:uuve council of thetrdec1s1on.
It all_pcrtatnsCv1Janov1ch and htS
Santa Clara Sa1nts. *ho pulled out of
Estancta Htah's 16-t.eam basketball
tournament after losing a game to
Edison tn the ~ond round, leaving
Laguna Halls without an opponent on
the thtrddayofthe tounament. and
lcavinaHunttngton Beach without an
opponent on the finaJ day.
Cvijanovich and the co-directors of
the tournament, Estanna's An and
Chuck Perry, will ~I\ vene before
Jacobson and Packer. as well as Dr.
Gary Sm1dderksofLA Bapust and
Bruce Kcun1ng. the upenntendent of
&llflov.er ('1lnst11n Schools on Jan.
30.
At that time. the Perrys will prttent
the evtdencc and ubmn their b1 II\.
and c .. 1Janov1ch wiU be asked to
explain has acttons.
Jacobson as the prcs1dent-clect of
the councal, Keunana is the prts1dcnt
ofmecounc1l, Sm1ddcrks is the
treasurer and Packer, the suP._Cr·
intcndentofllte Duarte Unified
School District.1u past president of
thecouncal.
So, 1fnothanaetsc. I don't thank
anypne 1sg91n1 to pull any wool over
theareycs. Each 1sdct'p wuh ex·
penencc
At issuejs the VtOlation of Cl F rule
151.3: "
..When• school fails roe~ irta
contesr ipttd uPon. A>ithour11vi111
no11~ to rbe other school and
S«unn1 an honorable ~lease, 11 may
be suspended from membership ...
Clf Associate Commissioner
Gnmcs, who finished second to
Jon Chaffee an las1 )'ear'-s tournament.
fPIHM lff GOLF/82J Terry Ser-..• f21) pulls In• re~und. Kyle Lundy f41J 1pr••d1 out the defense.
GIRl.S 8 -\Sk•:TB.\l.I.
Dean Crowley sums 1t up this way:
"lt'squatc senous. It's son ofli](e
looking au murder case. You m1f1t
aet 2Sycars, or you m1&ht act hfc.
Will Cvijanovich, a) l·}'car vet-
eran of coachanaat Santa Clara. have
the book thrown at him? Or w111 his
contention that he withdrew has team
for the "safety of our younasters," be
bought. ·
Crowley admmed he had viewed a
videotape oftheaamc. and althouC}l
heurced thcofficiatin& was poor, at
was nardly one-sided.
As for the "safety" foran~·onc.
from what has been dctcmuned the
only agrcssors were Santa Clara fans.
"Really what we have here as
whctherornotRule ISl.3was
v1ola1ed," said Crowley. "That's the
issue. ·
"Schools conduct tournaments as
fund-raiscn, and schools participetc
in order play conteSts. Those two
schools (Lu.una Hills and Hunt·
1naton Beaclt)loslpmes they had
counted on pfay1n1-Thaf s the issue. Because a coach made an arbitrary
decision ... " Also at issue is s1mply what road
the section will take on this.
There's noqucsuon the)'.'d hketo sec this one disappear. CvajanoVich ••
the son who is at the stqe ofhfe
where most ofhjs ume would seem to
be runn1n1around collecuna vanous • •
awards for has past endeavors.
But the coaching profession with
· fPleaseseeCJ,/82)
Dangerfields,
garbage men
obtain :respect
Vanguards win again,
Westmont can't cope
at SCC 's pit, 71-69
By ST AN GRANCH
~ ,,_ c-. ... -..
For years the Southern C'aJ1fom1a
Colte&e Vanauards ha"c been the
Rodne) Danicrfields of lhc Golden
State Athletic Conference
The Vanauards returned four
starters from last year's squad which
ued for the conference title with
Westmont. but they werr packed to
finish seventh 1n the e1&ht·tcam
league an a preseason basketball poll.
Thus. the Vanauards ha"e been on
a m1ss1on, and Tuesday nt&tll when
they hosted the Wamors. the stakes
""'Cf'C h1&)1. Both schoots came 1nto the
GSAC pme with 2-0 marks, and
when the buzzer sounded end1n1 a
very phys1caJ and emottonal pme.
1he Vanauard.s were Id\ standing with
a 71-69 tnumph endt1'J 1he Wamors'
five.pmc wannana streak. "The k.tdS found I WI) tO ,.,In, It
was not a coacbina miracle:· said
Vanguard (' ch 8111 Re) nolds "In
hinds1&ht I "ould have done some
th1np d1ffertntl) tO~ard 1he end of
the game. We were up b) 10 wtth four
minutes lef\ and we look thrtt quick
shots letting Westmont fiaht bad(
into the pme I should ha"<' gone 10
the four comers soont'r
It was a game of strcal>.s, and ~hen
( ( 14-2 O\'Crall) pulled awa\' 10 a
69-59 lead ""11h five minutes left. the)
appeared 10 ha ve the game an band.
Suddcnl) the Vanauards' ~hooting
became ice cold and the> would not
sco"' again unul Todd 0 1\on hit two frtt thro-..~ 10 put the \anguards up
71..07
\\. cstm ont ( -8 oHrall) scored wt th
t ·09 left and the \ anguard n-·
mained an their four comer offense.
but the stratcg\ backfired when Jim
Mansfield had 'to force a shot to beat
the 4S·S«Ond clock The Wamors
SCC-1 8111 11.,'"*91
came chll'<ll down the coun. when John Mounce stnppcd the ball into
th<' hands of Pt11l Hifl. who was fouled
wtth 17 S«Onds left
Hall. srneraJly a Jood free throw
shooter, massed &1v1n1 the Wamors
one more chance. but two 5-foot shots
and a up at the buzzer failed &Jlowu~1
the\ anauards to escape wtth the win.
"\\estmont's defense totaJJy t00k
us out of our rhythm:· RC') oolds
rtlated "\\hen we w't'rc down 8-0 at
the beginnana I called a umc ou1 and
told the bo) to relax and not tr) to Jet
11 a.II back at once. I 1old them to pick
up their defensive antenstty and ll helped u set back an to the same ..
Leading 1hc charsc for the Van-
guards""" Hall. The 6-1 senior auard
lead C 1n sconng with 16 H tll also
had SI\ stcaJs and s1~ as 1 ts.
"We call Hall the prba&e man
bccau\C he creates havoc on defense
He 1 not a great shooter. and he often
has to auard players four or five f Please 1H SCC/a2t
CCI crushed
Seahawks hold off Edison in 64-59 victory AN DIEGO -Ron Hubbard
poured in 27 points and KC"van
Barbanck notched 23. anclud1na
fi"c l-J>Oint goals. as Point Loma
'Iaz.arcne claimed a 119-92 Gold·
en Ulte Athlc11c Conference win
O'er Chnst College lf\tne Tucs-
da) night 1n men's basketball
Clark named
Westminster
football coach
University takes over Sea View lead; Newport surprises Eagles
Octan View H1gh's Scahav.k\
ma.ant11ned their s1rangkhold on the
Sunset Leq_uc &iris basketball rare
Tuesday nt&ht as Hc1d1 Hascmann. a
6-foot senior forward. dropped 1n a season haah 22 p<>ints and pulled
down 12 rebounds an a 64-59 \tcton
over the v1~111na Edison Charae~ ·
" heJUStpla)cda~atpmt'."sa1d
her coach. Olhe Martin
Add1ttonall), Jenny ull1 van
scored 11 points and Fabiola Nunez
conlnbuted 18 p<>1nts. h1ttan1 6 of 9
from the field and 6 of 6 from the I 1 nc
''That .. as artat," added Manin.
.. We really needed those. I'll tell )Ou."
PH I I' I 00 111 \I I
~an Vic ... ranked l'io 4 1n the
CIF 4-()1v1~1on. 1mpro,cJ to 19 1
overall. 4-0 an leagu<' pla) ~11h 1hc
VICtOI").
Edison. now l ·3 1n league pla't ,
ursed 1n front bncn .. an lhc third
guaner but do" n the sire1ch Cos'l<:llr
Smnh pro,cd 10 be lht b1gd1fTercncc
Foulmaand hoping for misfites 11 the
hnc. Ed1son'Hhancc\ went dov. n tht'
drain as Smith connected on 6 ot .,
fret throws
Kmdcn Tanabe led Edi on w11h 20
poinu and the lhargcrs' tough pres
v.as a b11 factor. but the ability of Alh
Tak1do to &ct through 1t and e'<ecute
pro'<'d to bc another .id,antaJc
Ocean \ 1ew [)<r,("whcre in the . \.ln~t
l''ouotain Valley U . MarlDa ~~ The.'
Baron\ 1mpro' 1ng to I'·., o'crall
and on<' game off Ocean \ 1ew 's pact
in the ra c tor the league title at l-1
got a ~lanced efTon from all hand .
led b) ~U\ct' H1sa~a t~Ul, Kam i
811.kr ( l l) and '\ 'elle 't barra ( 10)
H1saka ~as the team lc;idcr in
rebound v.11h eight as the Barons
raced to a 40.18 halfl1me lead and
roasted home Manna fall' to \. f 1n
lcquc plaf. I S-4 oHrall
Hutla&tOD Bead '°· w,1tmla1kr
U : The Oilers claimed their first
unset wrn in four outings. taking a
I '·point edgt at half\1me and brttz·
1na on the L1on ·floor
Jennafer mbrosc notched W
points ( 14 1n the first hall) and 13
rebound while Jana Da'is had 16
points and c'&ht rebounds Po~er
torv.ard Jennakr Johnson v.a credi-
ted "1th 20 rebound , and point guard
1cole Wolff bad six steals for the
Olien. 3-12 o-..craJI
In the ~a V1ev.. Lcasue
Uolvtnlly 0 , 'httla H : The
TroJans v.on the battle of Sea View
unbeatens. holding off the T11l~n
f,..ase see GUtLS/82t
L'ippincott, Katovsich decide football futures
•
Edison tackle d ecides on Cal; C dM linebacker going to Colorado
ly K»Gl:R CARLSON °'_.,..... .... ~
Two of tht Ot'al'\IC Coast arc1'1
blue chap hi&h ~ hool football pro
pttU -AJl.CIF st.andouu Chns
Lip.,incon of Edison and "ll.:CIF
John K.atov1sch of Corona dct Mar.
have vtfbelty comm1nC'd for four·
year tcholanh1pt It major lftMJtU·
ltOM. Lippincott. I ~t offmM\IC &ack&c.
11 oa has *I)' \0 8ntdcy wnh the
Golden BcarS. Whtie Ka&ovlidt, the
C1f "8~ o( lbc Ym after '-Sina
the Sea Kin&1 lO H unbeateft cam·
lllllP ( 12.().1) oa the Wly IO lhc DiVilioe VI crowft, Ml dtolea Colo-; ,.._
l)C)l'1& ~ • .... ltd ~OIM tM ~' cm.bit.-. la~M@tl. I 25().~ -I 6-fboe.: rnnw. "' rcma1_. ~ 15
\Chool dunna ht~ tour at Ed1wn and
it came down 10 a choice brt~ttn
BYU and four Pa -10 schools -
Wuhanaton, nzona tatc, Ore: n
and thr e\Cntual choice. al
.. Tht) v.ert all att•t hool' with
pat fac1ht1e• and v.;11h areat
coech1n " said Ltppcn ott "But CaJ was dote to home and at ha that
acadcm1 reputation tha1 mrant a
101:·
Uppanrott •111 maJor 1n poht1cal
tc'lcnce. The fall of '89 Wlll mos1 hkcly be a
rW-shin )cat for him. but he tw
already ac«ptcd that s-n of the
pme. -1hc) want me to come an
rady to paay, but rm sutt it'll ht a
mt-th 1n year.·· ta id the Ed 1ton
ttnaor. ~ malty ~t boiled doWn \0 IM lect .... no.er to home. ..
Ed1t0n CIJICh Dl\lc Whtk labtlcd
u,,,,.c ...
11 '.n uccUcnt d«111on b) h11 bi&
&acklc. c1t1na ars up-and-comal'll
P'Qlf'lm in the Pat-I 0. "'I'm happy aboUt ttus," said Whi
Ka&o\IStCh, the tttond of two
Katovsim brothers to COtM '"'"-" Corona d(l Mar the pat two )Wf'S,
hid ok>rldo' attcnttOn ta nee JPrina
dnll and a rombanatton ot t ampus
and 11mo phert. a v.ell ~ the
roa hana taff and pla~en, made ll a
s1tuat1on he could not dtn~. "I pretty much wanted to '-o hert
for av.hale.'' s.a1d Kato" 1cb 'But as
for what comes nut. I know 1f JUSt
hkun)th1n1clsc. l'll ha .. ctoworl for
what I cam.
K.atO\' ich. at 6-foo•~ 220 pound
will "'*' in bu.st ncss He was a frcJ.hman at ~Je1n Hi h an
Hou ton before trans~mn1 to or· ona dd Mar thrtt years aao wath older
bn>thcf, John. the latier prctentlt an '"~ part of OranlC Cout Col-ee.·s,._..m,
ltc Md viii ts 1tt up for Cal. n wtll
at QfteM. but afttt the Co&onido
Vlllt M c:uc:dttd out the belaocc of
thclCWulc.
Hit C'Oldl. O.vc Holarid, •" be
WU ..... with the daoice. ~CJlo. ......... ,..,,.....w11CW-.. .. llid Holland. .. They've hktd
ham 11n.ce ""1ftl."'
The Eagles. who fell to 4-14
O\erall and 0-3 in G AC' eta),
wert led b> Keith Rogers 18
points. while Brad hroeder "IS
tops an rtbounds for CCI v.1th
nine
t .
'lckey Shuffle' has
grown from infancy
into a national craze
~ TlleAllodatH .......
MIAMI-The "lcltcy Sbuftk" has become the hottest dance step ~ in Cincinnati and attracted national attention for Bengals rookie lckey ~
WOOdl. This is a history of the craze and its pan.iculars:
. fteDuce
ThrH boUnctno
SttP• 10 hi• lefl,
rlel\t hand
111tendlnt holdlnti
the bell. The shuffle has undergone revision durina the season, but remains simple
Woods spreads his feet a pan, holds the ball out with one hand. leans to the side and
lives a couple of bounces. He then switchts hands with the ball and leans the other =1: The shuffle is capped off with Woods hopping on one leg and then spiking the
ftePlace
Woods ori&inally did the dance in the end zone after his
touchdowns. But officials penaliud him ma Nov. 27 pme
apinst Buffalo-when he scored three touchdowns-for an
excessive end-zone celebration. Since then, he's used the
sideline as his stage, running with the ball behind the Bcnpls
bench after he scores to do his dan~. Woods has hinted he
might risk a S-yard penalty and shuffle in the end zone if he
scores in the Super Bowl.
fte Woo Woo W.o
Ttlr.. boUncl1111
•190t to hi• r19ht (Ht mev rtsie•t ,,..,, one and
two with ontv two bou~) e I)!Jripg the playoffSi Woods.has added a finishing touch
. to the shuffle. After spiking the ball, he and the ~f.lls'
'
-. defensive backs -who call themselves the "SWAT Team • -
_., twirl their index fingers and yell "Woo, v..oo, woo."
Spikes
11\e bah.
"That's just somethina we a~ in the playoffs just so we could be on the
sideline very ha~py and partying a little bit, because the playoffs arc a big pany,"
Woods said. "Its an even biger party when you win." .
'AeOrlJbl Woods, who scored I 5 touchdowns this ~son. developed the shuffle on the
spur of the moment early in the season. "ljust happened to be sitting at home listening to some music with my mom,
my wife and my children. l just aot up and started acting crazy, and I 1old my mom
t·was foing to do this if I scored tomorrow.
,, ,, . ,, .,, ,,
" happened to score and I did the dance. Founecn times later. ifs sort of a
household thing that everybody's doing now."
...
~ With team members. ~Woods lwlrls his finger
and swivels . nermeact
Youdiarne it Shuffle contests. A television commercial featunng the shuffle. kk.ey shuffie sonas. An appearance at ChiJdrcn's Hospital 10 Cincinnati to teach
younP.ters how to put their toes into the two-step.
'I think it makes a lot of people happy, too," Woods said. "I .. ent to Children's
Hospital in Cincinnati, and JUSt to sec the reactions of the kids kind of made me
happy and kind ofbrought a couple of tears to my eyes.Just to Stt the smiles on their
faces from the 'lckey Shuffie' -1 thought, 'Wow. l never did think 1t would make
an impact Jjke this, but it does.'"
his hips
De Rest
How far has the shuffie's popularity spread? The Bengals arc finding out 1h1s
week, as they're greeted constantly by dancing Floridians.
"It's become a fascination of the whole country," Wyche said. "We drove b) a
filling station in our bus and people ran out of the filling station and staned the
'lckey Shuffic.·"
~Five agree, avoid arbitration
=-/
NEW YORK -Alvin Davis and five •
othen avoided arbitration Tuesday by ")t!
agreeing to new contracts, while free agent •·· ··•
Neil AJlen found a new team.
Davis agreed to a thl"Ce*year $4.45 million contract
with the Seattle Mariners while Aben ag.rccd to a one-year
contract with the Cleveland Indians wonh $325,000.
Shawon Dunston, Zane Smith.John Cerutti, Edwin
Nunez and Al Nipper. who had tiled for arbitration.
agreed to one-year contracts, reducing the players m wary arbitration to 127. Davis, who made $922,500 in 1988, will get $1 .25
mil)jon in 1989, $1.425 million in 1990 and $1 .725
million in l 9~ I . He batted .295 last season with 18
homers and 69 runs batted in.
Allen was S-3 last season for the Yankees whh a 3.84 ERA and made $250.000. New York did not want hJm
back. With Oeveland, he can cam $75.000 in pcr-
fonnanoc bonuses.
Dunston and the Chicago Cubs agreed to $550.000. almost double the shonstop's 1988 salary of $232,SOO.
Nipper aareed with the Cubs to $410,000, a S 13,000 raise.
Smith and the Atlanta Braves agreed to $450,000. the
same salary he made lany~r. Cerutti and the Toronto
Blue Jays aareed to $417,000. a raise ofS 187.000. Nunez signed for about $300,000 with the Mets, a $20,000 cut.
Heat-Suns game postponed
Gunfire and rock-throwing in the area o( . -1'
Miami Arena forced the postponement of • ~
Tuesday night's NBA game between the ,.
Miami Heat and Phoenix Suns. Lewis ---
Sca.atfel, managing general panner of the Heat. said at
·1: l 5 p.m. EST, IS minutes before the stan of the game.
that it would not be played. on the recommendation of the
Miami city manager and police chief ... Elsewhere in the
NBA: Oak EW1 scored IS of his 28 points in the second quaner as Seattle dealt the Los Angeles Oippers their
10th straight defeat. 130-107. The Sonics, who won their
13th consecutive home pme. outscored Los Angeles. ~22, durina the second penod to take a 69-46 halft1mc
lead ... De.u1a Bopaea and Mlke McGee each tallied 24 points and Lester Couer scored four points in a late 6-0
spurt as New Jersey handed visiting San Antonio its 51Xth
straight loss, 117-112 ... Gleu .. Doc" Riven scored fi ve
points in the final 2: 13, including a key 3-point basket. to
stave off a founh-period MiJwaukce surge and power Atlanta to a 111 -98 victory at the Omni. snapping the
Bucks' six-pme winning streak ... Micllael Jordu. held
to just t l points for three quaners, scored 11 founh-
period points and had 13 assists to help lead Chicago 10 a
I 03-96 triumph at home over Indiana ... Harold Pr~11ley
scored seven of his gamc-hi&h 24 points in the final fi ve
minutes as Sacramento defeated visiting Houston.
123-109 ... Job Stoclltoa sank four free thrpws in the
final 14 seconds and Karl Matome had a game-high 26
points as Utah defeated the Trail Blazers in PortJand.
l 11·110.
Ql'OTEOt'TllE DA,.
S...1 AN.,..., aencraJ ma~ or the
Oakland A'1, as he bcpn contract oeaouatjons witb
Jose Canseco, aware that the American Leque's
Most Valuable Player in 1988 won't come cheap:
"Our to~ues are in the water, and we're tryina to
decide if 1t'1 oold or hot. ..
I'.\ THE BLEt\C'HERS
Late In the third quarter, Eunice draws a sec·
ond technical foul and earns an early trip to
the parking lot.
Graf blanks foe In Australia
MELBOURNE. Australia -Defending
champion Steffi Graf routed Rene Simpson • • of Canada, 6-0 6-0. today to move into the ,,,_-
third round o? the Australian Open tennis ---
championships. Graf. scckma her fifth stra1&ht Grand Slam title, lost
only six points m the 18-minute lirst set. Sim~n. ranked
9.sth m the world, manaacd to win 20 points JO the second
set but was strtl no match for the top seed
Telller hired by Columbia
NEWYORK-RayTclltcrwasnamed a ·
football coach at Columbia Tuesday, talung
over a prOIJ'&m that l\as the worst ~rd in
the country over the last 2S years.
"It's the bi11est challenae in coll~ football today.''
was his explanation for seeking the JOb as Columbia's
founh roach in the last si" years.
lrlsh to play In Kickoff Classic
National champion N9tre Dame will * meet the University of VirtJn1a 1n the
seventh annual l{jcltofT Oass1c to start the
1989 colleae footbell season, the Auociated ----
Press learned Tuesday night. The pme will be played on
Tbutlday ni&hl. Aut-3 !,, at 01ants Stadium. Both teams
will be ma.k.ina their IU"St appearance in the Kickoff
Cassie ... Cieof'aetown buk.ctbaU coacb J• ,,..,...
did not make the trip wtth the Hoyu to Providence on
Tuctday for &oniahfs pme with the fnan as be
oontinlled bis protest over the recen_!ly 8doptcd Prop-
osition 42, a tchool spOkesman said. Tbompsc>n walked off &be bencb bdore drle tipoff' of lul Saturday's ~·--Col J ~ in pro1e11 ~the new llCldemic standard&, .taieb if not mtt by incomina frnhmen w1U coat that student .. th~te any financial aid
as .ell u eliJibOity for the firit year ..• Three stanen on
the New Mexico Sute bukdbell team were injured
Tuaday when the van they .ere in was stNCll and rolled
over at a (Olly intcrteetfon near the Fresno airport, police
said. The ·1nrec Allie *"j~ured were center Sine McO ...... friuGW11161 andauardJeffM~.
All three .ere u.tcid and rdeliCd at F"rano Community
HOlpital .•. llteW...,.,.. icored Wee pis and had
twoulisua1 the LotAMtlel t:.utn beat the Kanw City
Cometa. 9--S, ln a~ fndoor Soccer Lape pmc at the
Forum .
1111\1'10,-H \UIO
-
\1\\l'Of(I ~I\''" l'Hu ,.,
Tournament has featured
1 4 wi.nners in 1 5 years
Jon CbafTtt became the 14th ~1nntt 1n 15 yea,. or
the Newpon Oauic Pro-Am (Cro5by Sout~) aolf
tournament at Ncwpon lkach Country Club last January
when be fired a teeord 64-66-130 two-<lay total to defeat
runncr .. up and former champion Tony Gomes by five
strokes. John McCom1sh. a two-time winner here, and
amateur penner James Gian uh us o~Big Canyon C:ountry
Club, won the pro-am team compeuuon with• minus 18
score of 124. Herc's a hst of the past champions and tbe year they
won the event:
• '
1988-Jon Chaffee. l 30 (tournament reco~; 1987-John McComish, 138 (won in playo ; 1986-Tony Grimes. 6 7 (first round cancelled, rain •
1985-John McCom1sh. 133 (tied previous record)~
1984-Bill Britton. 133 (tied previous record):
l 983-Make Gove, 135: l 982-Ed OouJheny, I 3S:
1981-Mitch Mooney, 135(won in playoff); 1980-Bob
Mann.
.,.
1979-Bobby Bake~ 1978-Gary Groh. 133 (tied
previous record)· 197 1-Brucc Fleisher. 133 (set
previous record); 1976-Bob Ent wood. 139:
1975-BilJy Ziobro. 13~
... ·~ ,,. , . .. --Winnini teams in the pro-am portion of th e
tournament amateurs listed first) include the following:
1988-ames Gianuhas, John Mccomish;
1987-David Streiff Bnan Tennyson: 1986-(tic) Alex Arcady. Bill Malley; Roben Gottener, Ame Dokka: Tom
Talbot, Gary McCord; 1985-(tie) George Chelius, John
Stark; Kenneth Hulben. Jay Oon Blake; 1984-Roben
Lcvisce, Mike Cunnina; 1983-Harlan Erickson, Tom
Anton; 1982-Jerry Helpcnn. Jay Cudd ; 198 t-Jcrry
Helperin, Rex Caldwell; 1980.-:-Barry Hallamorc, Bob
Mann.
Layout at Newport aeach Co""UJ Oub.
Stats now a big part of PGA Tour
Statistics play a bi& pan m most major spons events
includmp baseban, football and basketball.
19 79-Jim G1anultas. Rocky Thompson:
1978-Tom Tal bot. Ed Fiori; 1977-(tie) Will Layman,
Bobby Walzcl: Lloyd Hallamorc, Mike Walters;
1976--Gcorge Argyros, Bob Easawood; 1975-Jack
Banta, Bunky Henry.
Gol stayed in the backaround for a number of.y~rs but the PGA Tour now bas 10 different cateaoncs in whic~ statistJcs are kept and 1he winner of each is
rewarded wnh S2S.OOO at the end of the season.
Former Newpon Oass1c Pro-Am/Crosby Southern
players were amona the leaders 1n all catqones for 1988
* * GOLF
Froml1
won the only event here that was
sbonened by ram in 1986. Like
McComisht he picked up his tour
card again in the December QUJlify-
ing_school compcuuon.
Cbaffee is not competing this year.
He is in Afnca where he is pla)'lng the
tour in that country and will not
return to the st.ates until after this
week's competition. Paulsen was the 198S Iona dnving
champion and a finalist in the
qual1tymg schOQI in Dec:cmber but
failed to act his Tour ca.rd back. He IS
a product of Costa Mesa High. In the 1989 PGA Tour media
guide, 29 of the 74 entrants here arc
listed as prominent members of the
tour.
In add1t1on, the monc.y w1nner and
runner-up in the Golden State pro-
fessional tour arc also entered -
John Flannery took the money mlc
last yea r and David Games was the
sccond-pla~ finisher.
Among the veterans, Beard and
Tommy Jacobs are probably the best
known. Beard, who g1aycd here the
past two )'cars an will become
ehgsble fo r the Scmors tour later lh1s
year, won 11 PGA Tour tournaments
GIRLS
From81
after butldma a 10..poml lead 1n the
third quaner.
Tusun. 9-8. 2-1, managed to tnm
the deficit to three but could come no
closer.
Conquerors roll,
Minutemen fade
in Academy
Newpon Chnst1a.n H1ah's Con-
queron Sot a )3-point effort from Jon
Bah.Mtn and an obvious lack offouls
called on the winners helped produce
an Academ~ l«aue boys besketball victory for Bahnsen & Co, 7().61 , ll
the expense of host St. Michael's
Tuesday afternoon.
The decision improved Ncwpon
Chnsttan 's teeord to 11 ·I overall, 2-1
in league.
Newwrt Chnst1an was hit wt th Just
three fouls and St Michael's
produced one free throw from them.
Elsewhere JO Acade~aaue play:
St. M1'11te&'1 14, rtJ aria·
t1u 4t: Tt\e Minutemen saw a 32-2.S
half\1mc lead v1n11h in the second
halfas host St. Marpret's of San Juan Capistrano rallied to post the win.
Uberty Christian. which fe.11 to 6-6.
1·2, was unable to penetrate in the
teeond half, nor could the Minute-men effectively aet their fast break
&oina as St. Marprct's improved to
~overall. 3-0 1n leaauc play.
sec
From at
inches 11lter than him. but be 15
sct1ppy and be always tceml to be
around the ball, and he always 1ttm1
to come up the key s&ealt. How can
Y.OU ~ a SUY hke that out of lbc lin~'-!P_r sec went on a l l-l run late in the
flrtt half, '° the de pme •• 33 and each seam would lidd a bucket lea Vint
the contat tied aa SS at die rid onalf. ne -.;nniUn.:: second Mlf • saw cmw Jeff come ao ....
He sand me nn. Ii• Po1a11 ~IM
dunng bis career. He was the leadin&
money winner on tour m 1969 and
won two Tournament ofCha.mp1ons
titles in 1967 and qain in 1971 .
Jacobs, a live-time winner on the
tour, is the former head pro at La
Costa CountryO uband now 1sat The
Farms, a new layout in San Dtcao
County. He was a member of the U.S.
Ryder Cup team and won three
Southern California PGA crowns.
Regalado h.as won two tour events
in IS years with his best year comma
in 1979 when he earned $82,964.
Born in Mc"ico, he was the 1970
Mexican amateur champion and won
the Mexican PGA title twice m 1972
and again m 1978. He was also a
member of the Melllcan World Cup
amateur team twice.
Lanning bas pla)ed on the Senior
Tour for the last four years and
finished 25th on the 1988 money list
Rex Caldwell. who won the 1983
LaJet Classic and will be play1n1 m
his fifth Newport Oass1c this year
after re-qualifying for the Tour.
finished sa"th on the 1983 money hst
with $284,434.
Tap1e, whose best finish was 42nd
on the money II.st 1n 1979 With
$88.113 earned. "WHI be making his
fifth appearance in the ioumament
He lives 10 Laauna N11ucl lnd
Umvcnny, 14-4. 3-0. wu led by
Denise Gandani 's 15 points and 13
rebounds and Shelley Davis' 14
poanli and e1aht rebounds.
New_IOrt Harbor 41, E1&uda U :
Stacy G1em sank a free throw with 11
seconds ltft to a.ive the Sailors L~
upset victory over the v1 111na Ea&les
With the score ued at 47, Giem
drove the lane and was fouled. She
made the first free throw, but m1ucd
the second, a.iving Estancia one last
chance. However. the £aales turned
the ball over, preserving the -win for
NeWl)On._ 2-1 3-12.
G1em fini$hCcs with 12 points, and Nc~rt. rallymg from a seven-point
halftime deficit received a strona
defens1vceffon from Jenn R)an. who
also bad 17 rebounds. Melody Earle led Esta.naa. 11 "6.
1-2. wnh 19 points, while Patnck
Lumpkin added 11 .
In the Pacific Coast Leque:
Cesa. Meu H , LapM HWt Jl:
Jim Weeks' Mutt.aftlS raced to a
29·12 halftime Jead and wttt never thrcateocd as they rtCO~ their fint
lcquc victory in three stans and
improved to S.11 ovcraJI.
Maurttn Moore xorcd 23 po1nu
and Denise Surmon chipped m with
l I points ..... butanotbcr who spa.r~ed
was KJm vood with I 0 po1nu and 12
Wiit
"We shot better than we have been
doina and our pre ure .JOt to them
e1rty," said Weeks. .. We really de-
served th11 one."
Moore teortd 10 points 1n 1Af
secoadquanertoputtheMu tana,s1n
command.
balf, pbbcid four 1traiif't rebounds and 1n one ddrisive ~
blocked three ahou. The ~foot· 7
IOObomote finilhed with IS points. 7 ~&ou.nch. and 4 bl«ked shots. bdOre
fouhns out with tbttt minuta left.
.. Jen: bad a bia aamc ror us. u R~ said. :•ffe baa a quick
relC:ue and he can shoot over anyc>M.
tk 11 still leani1t1 and be IOlftttima
puts die bal1 on lbC floor wben he
lboulda-t. He IOl tii.t IOwud the end. since bt bll IO play all die aimc.
He ii die ooly cn1et on the team,
wbea M ii out I have IO aar ftvc ........
* leaches at the La.gun• Hms Golf
Ranae. Plty in the tournament that pairs a
pro with an amateur partner for 36
holes of compeution over two .days
(f rida_y and Saturday) waU beain at
7: IS Friday morning with the final
group each day setting ofT the ttt
around noon.
Amona other players listed in the
1989 media gu ide arc: Jim Booros,
Oatk Burroughs, Frank Conner. Ja)
Dclsing, Joel Edwards. Fred funk.
JcfTHart, Steve Hart. Pat Horgan, Ed
Humenik. David Jackson. 8a.rry
Jaeckel, Karl Kimball. Greia
Ladehoff. J .L. Lewis, Ronnie
McCAnn, Mike Miles. Tom Pernice.
Mark Preti. Billy P1crot. Ray Stewart,
Lanct Ten Broec~1.B1lly Tuten, Grca
TwlJ&.'. Duffy Waldorf and Bob
Wolcott.
The wanner this year will pick up
the larsest pur5C in the history oflhe
event. $7,000. A total purse of
S4S,OOO 1s being offered to the pros
wuh second plact grtt1na $4,SOO. One
un1Que twnt to the tournament is the
fact that each pro who finishes the 36
holes sets a check for S2SO reprdlns
of where he finishes.
The low pro on the final day will gr1
$250 with other cash pnzcs for tht-
pros paid m the pf"C>.am poruon of the
event
Weo4brM11e 74, Onqe 44: The
Wamors rcmatned unbeaten 1n three
lca1ue outings by racint to a l 9·point
halftime lead and cru111ng lO the win
at home.
Leslie Rathbun notched a pm~
h•ah 23 points and usa Wehrcn
acfded 20 (or Woodbri<fac, 13-S
overall Oranae is 1·2 1n lcque play
Tn.IM!ft HUl• 51, ~ Beada .e:
Lal Stal accounted for the bulk of the
AnHts' attack with 36 po1nt1 and 23
rebounds. but 1t wasn't cnouah It
home apinst the Mustanas. Lquna
11 7-{), l ·2.
In the ~naclus Lequc: Mater Del M, Bw.., ... .,.._.,
41: The bOJt Monarchs put 1t &Oeether
in every depanment to 1mpn>ve 10
14-S ove:raJJ 4-0 1n IQ&UC play.
.Kelly O'Bnen. a 6-foot center.
ICOn:d 25 po1ntS and had l .S re-
bounds. oonncai~ on 8 of 1 l from the field and M.nkina all rune free
throws. Con Man.in added ll poinu
and 11 rebound and Tammy
Arbott's rcbound1n1 and defense were cnuc:al
Add.1t10.Wly, Km.ha TbomptOn
sccred nine potnts and had silt auists
as lhe team leader at the point.
Bishop Mon\IOrnety falls to ll·S
overall, l ·l 1n I~ play.
In the Ac8dc-my Leac~ __ :Llt.ert7 C•r 11t1aa H , St.
.......,...., 14 Sharon Crouch 11COm1
IS po1n1-'~bbed ll rebounds and
dished otr 12 Uldtl for her 6fth
tnpk>double ohhe teaa0n u Liberty
breezed lO lhe roed wlD.
Liberty, 9--J, l-O, was 6bo ~
t)y frtlbman auan:t Jnuufer car.o's
19 points a.ncf Healhe.r Cidnicty•e 12
po1n11 and a J rdlounds.
...
r
I
t
•
tOHIHIHt40HU
rct ...
'76
600 l MO J
,55' 41h
.m ' 294 IJI/)
270 15
MidwMt
.61l Hou11on
Utetl
Oen\ltr
Dallas
.5'5 .,..,
·"' 2 52' J S.n Antonio ~ml 21• 12 11• \7"')
~ ....... c ..... w..
Nitw York
Ptlu.detc>hl•
loslOf! Heww .. v
Weihtnoton
Ct\Mlotte
Clevelend
Detroit
Mllwe!M(M
Atlante
Ctlluoo l~na
Atleftlk DtVk*
25 II • .6'4
20 16 "' 16 ,, 457
IS 21 417
II 23 32•
10 26 271 c.mr.i OM.-
27 7
23 II 21 .,
23 ..
21 1•
' 26 T""4MIY't k-S..lltt llO, ClllMn IOJ
~ •• ,,,,...,.,..Nd
N.. JefMY 117 5-1' Alll-112
Allenla 111. MllWl\lllff " Cl\ieffO I«> lndle,,. 96
S.Uam.nlo 123. HOUlton IOt
Utall 111, Pofllencl 110
TMH"5 Gemel
ca..ws al Lei!.,-•, 1 lO 11 m
lkKton •• Pflllaoe Ml••. 4 lO • m
Nt# WMY et 0.trOll, 4 )Cl o 1'I
cnertottt at M•t••v-ff no om
Otnv• et Otlle•, SlO o m
New Yoo et Go!Oln \te ll 1 30 om
SuperSonk1 130, cnooen 101
s
I Y>
10
13
IS
• s ., s ) . )
Ill?
CL~llU -Norman f n 1 S 10, !om11n
6· 13 7·11 It llenlem111 S I 3 4 13 Oellev IO· la 0-0 10, Hl•on 2•t 0 0 4 WOii l 1 0 0 1
Gondr•r•ct. l • O•O '· W•A•l ml ,. 10 1 1 14 1(111 2·l 0·1 ' Totel• 4'·fl 14·24 107
SIATTLI -Caoe 9 It St Jl. Mell.IV 4 t
1·1 10, Lill.,. 1 12 • 4 11, E'Clt l1 '2 1 1 71
McMiiian 4· 10 2-3 10 ~Oen.el t · U l • 11
TIVNll I ' 2·l 4, Polvntee ' t 0·0 8 $<'-"-2·1 0-0 4 LUCH 0-1 1 4 1 >ohnlOtl I •J 0 0
2 Toren S2 IOI 11 ?I IJO
Sc-h Ova..-. c~-• 2• n ,. lr101 s..11.. ,, 40 11 )4-1)0 3·-1 ooe•l-Wolt Ef l 4 FOUllCI
CMJ!-None R.oounctJ-<:Q_, St (Normen
lll. Seattle 60 ICeoe 121 Al~'"-<:~°"'' JI
IGondrtrtek, N11on SJ S.etr,. JS IMcN\lllaft Ill Totll l°"'l -<:1-• 10 S.111~ n hc:MI·
CM-M<O~. Norme11
All9ftde~ 11 402
ALL·STAllt VOTING
Ea •t.m Conference
(~entw.MeMIYI
I MoM\ MllOIW At11n1a 2'1,W 1 Petr•Clo.
E wln9 N-"'°'"· tt6.Stl l llrlMI 0 1\191'Ctr1V Ctnetend Ito.as •. Rootrt P•r•ll'l &otlon.
l•S..397 S JaCll. s.11.me Mllweu• ff I 1' S.S •.
61• U lmMlt. 0.1ro1t, 110 •SS 1 M•I\•
Gmlntl\I Pfllledefl>l'tl•, 17,0tlJ I, &It Certwrl9nt. CMauo 41 m 9, Sieve Shoenovlen. tncs.ene .
lt,311 ,_.,.
I, ~nklut Wllklnl Atlent1 407 IS1 1
Charle• 8arllllv, Pfllt•Ollc>nle 260. 141 3 Lerrv
Nanc:e. Cleveialld 17S,.O. '· Larrv lllfd llot·
ton 170.0f5 S. ICevln M<H•le, Solton I" '33
• k n•rd 1(1119, WHni1191on, 1.0 UO 1 C""1ft Otlllev, Ht"' vori., 13' 23' I JoM
W1 •anll ,....,_t>d 126 lSI 9, JOM W •1m1
We•11,,,.1on " 1n 10 Wevme11 T .oaie ln
d .... .. ltl ~rib
1 MIC,.... Jo<Ol "i (lhCIUO SIO 53' 1 ,.,.. .. ~IC• Cle..,...,_d, 22' 6n 3 h ·I " ThOml\
Detroit 105. tot 4 ltOll Her-, C •••ll"CI 1u.-S Me~ Ja<i.lOft New Yl>fk 175 100
•· Olnlll' Jollf'lOft, llol•Oft 1'2 7.0 1 Jell
Meione WHt1<"9•on 140 d 1 a Heon
Mewkltl"l, PTI~.. IOI 1tl t G .. M River\,
At11n11 IS !110
COLLEGE MEN
SoCal C ..... 71, Westmont 6t
CG--. Stell ..AINetlC C.,,..._.J
Wetlmellt ~ C ....
.. ".... .. It .. Ill !(.,.,,..,,..,., 1 1 , • M-. • l 0 • s
Sintot S 1 1 fl kt.xiii• t 0 I 14
Perre " ' 8 l 10 Hil 1 1 • 1' MallMwl • 1 I 10 0 •O<I 0 1 0 I
FrllOmal\ • I 1 9 Nle•,t...O f 0 I t OOll1 0 0 I 0 Lu<>d• 0 1 )
Hant ) 0 1 • ll•Omo<e I S I~
Welker O 0 1 O s .. enner 1 2 1 •
Tota ll 1' '' rs '' Tote'' ,, 10 11 11
Hatfflme lS lS
l ooint 1>0A•• We••mont-1<1m,.,,.,9f I
SoC11 C~S<rUV9t 1 Mov"<:t I Man\l•H
I LUROY 1
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HIGH SCHOOL llOYS STANDINGS ~ L•91'e
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Southern California Col-
1•9••1 Pttll Hiii drives
toward bucket tn Tuesday·s
71 -69 win over Westmont.
Hltltl •cflMI boV•
ANGll.US l.IAGUIE ~M Del S, Sf ~eUI I
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21 17 • so
16 ,, 1 39
14 22 • 36
16 27 J JS
12 26 7 l 1
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p,11sburg11 2S I• • S4
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)1 II 6 68
11 18 10 46
19 21 s '3 11 lJ 3 J7
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159
154
161
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161
163
193
202
157
118
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172
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DEEP SE~ ..
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L.aaewooel, lt-5, ' L..o\'Olll, 14•2, 7, SI. Monk•, 13·2, I ~•n, 15·4, t LI ll'oly, 12-t 10 HoeM\, ... ,
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l ·S, 10 Dene Hilb, l)·I
STATR OM~ II Ct, 4•4A
I s.n hrMtdlno, 17·0, 2 GlenO«e, 1•· I,
3 v1e1or Valley, l•-J. 4. Jtl.,,.-•kle Polv, l>·•,
S lntlewood, f.4. 6 Pwrl•, lt·S, 1 Camarillo, 12-l f Celon, 12·4, t Wetllel\e, 10·6, 10 Sul1inv
H11n, 11·7. '" ... 1 OomlnDutt, ll·4, f St Paul. 14-i . l
(l\arler Oek, 1'·,, 4 Ar1H le 11•4, S IUe
MtM 1'-l, 6 J W Horii\, ll·S, 7. ll1WIH
Al'llet, 11·'· I lar"O• 1)·2, t ltecliOndO, 11·,,
10 Crncente Ve y IO·S
ST A~ OIVIMOff Ill
CIP' >·A
1 ltOlllllll Hlb 13·3 2 S.venne 16· I J Le
Ca!\ffa, 1'•1 4. E llMda. l4•2J S ComplOfl
12·5 • &rH ·Ohllde 12·6, 1 MOrn•n9~ 11·•. a. c.r-.. Mar, ll·~ t El Dofaoo ll·•.
10 South H, l?·t.
OtlW• LeouN HI• 11·4
STATI OIVISIC>H IV
Cl' '·AA ·• 1 Bell·Jtff 15-1 t CatwllO, ll·2 l aan-
111"9 ll·• ' Wllllti« CIWt5hen. 11·' 5 Ce·
1...ore1 12·3 • Tetledlel>l. t -2 1 Yucca
VeU.Y •-s • Mltelnte 7-J. ' Et S.V\lllOO
10 St G-v~vt
CIP' 2·A
I S.nt1 Clere 13-l 1 Orel\ff Lut11e<a n,
U·• 3 VeJtev Cntt5han I,• 3. 4 Cenrw•. ll-2 ~ S«r• ,_, ' St Antll<>nv S·I 1 PerKlett,
13· I. • SI aonaventure, t ·S. t WtOO 1·3 10 \/1~1141 Chfilll•,,, 6·7
ST A TE OIVlStON V
CIP' l·A
I Puaoene Po111. ll·O, 2. 8 1•1\0e 0"9<1, 11·4. l O.li.wood 10-3 4 Cite. )·3, S Souttwrn
CehlOl"nte Cnr1Shan. 11·4 6 LA 8aPll•I, ll·4
1 Mammoth, t· I, • MiUIOll Prep, l·S, ' F•lln
81P1tll, 11-3. 10 Camp IC.11Pttriell, t·l
Cll" Small~ I a.l·Alt Prep f•6 2 HffPef'lll Chfo lfla n
10-l. 3 P•!Qftm 9 I ' Gr•u Community l ·l
!>1 Mero.rel l SS, 6 Cal Lut!W•n. ,.\. 1
R1Wt ~191' • •• • Cu~•1'1'141 Va .. ., ' • '
811iw. Cllf•lttan 8·4 ll ....._, Clw'lfllM\.
11· 1.
Hlefl ~ elt'•
ST A Tl OIVISfON I
Gii' S·AA
I Mofn "9lo0e IS 1. 1 a Getell9nl ll-1 l. ,,_.,..,.. v•n. 12·11 ' Fonte"41 l~·I, S Rub-OOU& 12 0 a LvnwOOCI 14 S 1 LI Polv
11·6 I £1 Two 11 1 • APClle V•liev. 12.,
10 C11a11ne1 t'1llnch ll-6
CJI' S·A I Cl\&nll 16·0 l Hart, 14·1, l "-"• ll•l
• Ckea11 v-. 11·2' S s,ant1 lkrO.ra 10 ~
• Tnouwno 0.11., l•·f, 1 0nre1t0 I~· I, • MarMll, lS·l. t Nftt Covot\ll 10·1, 10 Gahf
11 •
S1'ATE OIVIStON II
Cl, •·AA
1 /lll•U >On V•elO U·l. 2 0oW1W'I 1)•4, l C af"'e rllto 13 4 4 tJnl...,1"¥, 1>·4, S lie~ e,
' 1 • Cenvon 11 S 1 v.,.•ur• l • 10 I Ceoon.
12·• t WM114'f' 11 l 10 Pe<"rl, 11 •
CIF 4•A
I PaiO• Vef~ I) 3 1 Lot Allot '' 0 l
Mu•• 11 l 4 Ktt•lla 1) l ~ J w Nortl'I, , ••
• Cv0<•s• 13 s 1 w11111~. 11 ·•1 a
8 urrOVOh' llul'l>IM, 11 '· t l • Habre , 11· ~ 10 a ·'1IOP MOn•llOfl'llt v u •
STATE 0.VISION UI
ClF J.A
I a··· ·OI noe I\ , , $1 JOtcP'I. I• l )
Compton • s • P9'm 0.M<I I' 2 s L•
~""''' 11·3, • A~nv 10 S 1 !>an O.m.1 12· S I LOt'!'OOC I I 5 t lota.uci.ro 10 1 10
Rene.no A:a"TI '°' II I
STATl OIVl~ IV
Cl' 2-AA
I St Jo~ S."ta ,.,.., a 10 S 1 a.t· ~
15·1 l •-lt·S • MOlro a.y II l s
Ramone COi!•.,.., l) J 6 Pomot>e Ce•l!Oll<
I• 5 I Y.11111 e< (lw •'·•" 8·3 8 l.OU o
7·10 t St ~••• 11 • 10 ~-.1 "' ... c eCle<'I' y 1 )
STATa DtV!SfON V
Cl,. l •A
WashingtoA
signs deal
with Angels
a)'The Al1odMH,.,...
Frce~•aent outfielder Cla~I
Washinaton. whose llCftt said didn t
want to leave the NewYoR. Yankees,
ncvenhlus Sl&Md a three-year con-
tract walh the Calfomia Anatls T~
day.
W11hinaton, 34. will• receive
$2.62S million durina the life of the
contract. He will tet a $300,000
s11ninJ_ ~nus, $87S,000 th11 )Ur, $575,000 1n 1990 and S87S,OCJO an 199 1. Also, he can cam an addataonal $50,000 per year tn performance
bonuses.
The left-handed h1tti~ w1,hins-
ton, who earned $480,000 last year,
has been 1 fuU -tunc major leaaucT
since I 97S and has a JifetarM battJGt
average of .280 with l SO home run
77 3 ru ns--batted-1n and 29S stoltt\
bases. . · Last year. he hit .JOi wnh l l home
runs and 64 RBI. Whale pla)'ln& 1n
126 games. he had 140 hits in 4SS at·
bats and stole l S bases.
WashinJtOn was anitally offered
S l.S million fo r 1wo years by the
Yankees and Ute offer wu then
"upped moderately.·• according to
Tom Reich, Washington'sagcnt, who
added that the Yankees never went
beyo nd two years.
"This was somethina that l never
expected to happen," Reich said. "l
expressed my regrets wtth respect to
the Yankees They had ex.elusive
access tO Claudell until naht before
Chnstmas. Raaht before Chnstmas.
he p ve me a list or teams l should
contact. and one of those teams wa!I
tht Angels
"We nc"er intended for ham to &ct
away from (Yankees owner) Geo~
(: teinbrcnner) because he 1s m y
fnend. But when Claudell asked me '° pun ue ..other avenues, my fi rst
obhgataon 1s to my cltent.
"Claudell Wa hingtono1dn't want
to t~"e New ork. George treated
him ~ell. The fans treated lum well.
New York ~as &ood to him."
AREA ROl '01·p
Barons earn
• soccer \Nin
Moll y K~ kendall orcd two &<>al
andJantllGrecnl) added one-all in
the first half -as Fountain Valle
High do"'~ host Mann.a J.I •
Tuesda in unset League ga rls SOC'·
ttr
Tht first-h If outburst staked t~
Barons to a 3--0 le.ad and more than
oftsct th<' g<W in the second half b~
Manna· SU1 Grcganac The Hctor)
1mpn>'C'd Fountain Valle\ to 2-2· I m
lt'llU<' pla\ '\.\ hll<' th(' \, 1(ings fall Ill
l-1 -1
In anoth<'r Sunset match
I Role,.,._ 1·1 1 M U O> Pfte> t ) )
Le S er•e A<ll~Y ' I 4 LA lleot \1 I) 4
S 'i'fft't•n (IV ti e , 11 5 • ~men nd 11'
& 1 I ~l1lllf-40t P.ICI 1·1 I V\oOOOC•n t
'"' '' an a 5 t S ••• Va .. ,. t • 10 Or!•ariC '"' l•·•!! • \ CIF Smllf ScMel>
1 F1nt Lu''""'" t I 1 lleP' \I ('W '"•"'
10 l l P '9"'"' tt I 4 Lilllt1V Clwu~ •·1'
\ ae•nt1 CPI( l ' •" • 4 .. New-1 Olt\JISM. 11·1, 1 lle11'1411 C'lr ll e 10 1 f Ve ~ ("" \
•·•" t 0 t R.o HOt>OO Pr~ 1·S 10 P'Ol"W 8ao1.,1 1 C
ffHtlDcton Btarlt 0, Westmlns&u ·
t: Both 1eams mo'C'd to 1-2-2 in
ka&U<' u Gina Corbin of the Otle~
had " sa"cs and htr W<'stmmsttr
counterpart. Juht Jone , had 14
In a ~a View Lc3.1u<' match
Ntwport Harbor 3, Eacucla %. SOCCER
Hlefl •ChNI boVI
• (If 4·A l .Peto' V•ati 19-0-0 2 S;mi ¥1\19Y 1• 1 o l. Menne, 11 ~·ll • Ne .. our. Pe" t J I S. (ctsef\, l ·l·JJ t S.1111 Mon<• 12·,·1
1 Dem..., 10-l·1 I H•*'b9'"' I s 1 f Feunt.llf'l VaAln, U·6·1i 10 Wnt To<re"l:e
t • )
Hlefl sdloGI 9"1s
Clf l ·A
1 'Ill UIOfl V t .O l 0 I 7 S"' Ve••
• I ~ J Oe~ M ' 1 1 f • E \M< erre ·~ 0 1 \ Cei>'\"a"O V• ... II ' I • Ito••
11 1·1 , Ma••llO< ., \l l ) • '°""" Tor
••net 1 7•S • WHI Tor••"(• 10 l l 10
Uo-e'\CI ' l·J
Httlh scMll
SUNSET LIAGU• H~ ... Cll L WMlll'llMM I
Mllf\1 "(!',..... e...:· \(Ot ~ 'Iii•'"' I 0
Ml" _,. M~t 8ee<l'I 1 0
Dan1t'lle Tomasack scomJ htr th1N
goaJ or th(' gam<' with about the
minut<'~ remaining 1n the second hall
to brca~ a 2-2 II(' and J" c th<' 1lon.
th<' '1ctOf) at Estancia. Both team~
arc I ·2 an league pla)
In boH oettr
Matu Otl $, t PHI 1: fhc
Monarchs 1m pro'cd to 2-1 in league.
6-OH'rall ~hind the !>CC>nn& of
Bnan Oram. v.ho~ two goals put 11
out of reach afier t Paul had closed
to 2-1 m th<' Sttond half.
In fitld hocko~
Hutlqtoo 8tadl %. Watmlu~r
t : Jtnn1 '\\ralkt"r and T1ffan) Delp
each ~n'd a soal for the Otkrs."'
1mpro"C'd thelr un~t League record
to S-0-1 wtth the \lcton on thCJr
homt field
• BEEFSTICK 1su ... u A ,.us ... cm •HARO SALAMl11T-.uAN1
• HAM "OUALITYI • PASTRAMI 'V RY l£AN)
• TURKEY (OO~MET TY\[ • ROAST BEEF 1TOP OUAllTYI
your cholC'e of bread
Each sandwich mcludes mustard. mayonnaise.
lettuce, dill pickles. red onions, cheese & fresh
tomatoes
$ 2 SQ pet MJtdWlcll
Niau.-.....,, ... ·-'SodwicMe
WESTCLIFF PLAIA
17th & lmne
Newport a-ch
Nest :ro
H-..MeAJW.li'e
. .
.. ~ CClllll CWLY fltl.OT/ Weclniledllt. ~ •. 1tll
Party-goers -get taste of South Africa
..., ......................
.19' 0weM. In cfulr.. of 9U11d partlel. Wfdl COlllllltttee ••• .. •n c.thetin• Thyen •nd Dot Cloctr. aetow. L•• and ICl!l'l llllrsteln ..... food.
Lobby reception
reflects theme of
SGR performance
9yVIDADeAN ...... c.o .........
A generous taste of South Africa
was served up for 40()..plus premiere--
niahters who miniled and munched
on byesar and kef\a at South Coast
Repertory .
They had just spilled out of
Mainstage into the theater lobby
where a post performance Guild-
sponsorcd buffet took on a South
African atmosphere in honor of
South Afncan playwright Athol
f ugatd's "A ~oad, to Mecca." • . Along wit~ Ote byesar (puree of
,fava be.ans served with fried pita
triangles) and the kef\8 (beef on
skewers). the theater lovers found
food treats (by caterer Eclat) such as
briks (tuna ttnd capers and cheese.
wral>Ped in filo and fried), filfil
mra\ad (pickled sweet green peppers)
along wiih fruits, veggies and cookies.
Xav .. r and Ollvta Johnson. Director Martin aenson and actre11 Christin• Healy at party.
It bas lon_g been a tradition at SCR
premiere night performances that a
lobby reccptJon follow and the food
refleCts the production setting as the
audience bas an opportunity to
compare notes on the play.
"The play was wonderful." said
Xavier, Newport Beach florist, who
donated lhe buffet floral arrange-
ments and is a member of the SCR's
Golden Circle support group. "I like
heavy philosophical plays."
··1 liked it ... great acting, but not
sure I understood it all. The light
didn't come on for me." commented
Rlcllant Tripp, AT&. T director of
public relations. attending with wife
Myna. (The light referred to a dramatic scene in the pla y when the
stage is filled with candlelight.)
''He (Fugard) hits you with. so
many ideas. You think you have it all
figured out and, then pow, he comes
at you from a different ~irection. It was powerful and gut-wrenching.''
said OUvta Job.uOD, long-time SCR
supporter.
"fugard gets hold of you slowly
and then he wrings you out. .. said
director MartlD BenaoD. This was the
thtrd Fugard play presented at SCR and Benson has directed all of them.
The audience also~ has the op-
portunity to meet the cast, but it
didn't take long on thtr ni&ht -:-only
three in the c.ast and one of them Nan
Martie skipped the partying due to
~nrealistic expectations cause of anger .
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hus-
band and I have raised a large family,
ellch chiJd very different from the
o.ther. They range from extremely
ambitious to somewhat un -
motivated.
Our children received different
levels of education. Some have been
more suc.ccssful career-wise than
others, but on the whole they have
chosen pleasant spouses, brought up
respectful, caring youngsteFI and
have managed to get along quite well
financially with occasional help from
us. l truly believe, especially in this day
and age, that we have been blessed.
We have never had any earthshaking
problems with any of our children or
grandchildren, or with each other. My husband (I'll call him "Dan")
feels we have failed as parents because
"Mary" doesn't keep an immaculate
house, or "John's" car is never clean. or "Joan" s~nd.s money on frivolous tbing.s, or ''Bill's" kids have atrocious
ll\8nners and talk with gum in their
1 ... ,.. 80\'D
mouths.
I keep reminding him tha 1fsqu1te
extraordinary to ha ve had 40 years of
marriage and no maJOr calamities an a
family of our size. A few hurt feelings
here arid there, but no big blow-ups.
As the years fly by. I sec Dan
becoming more obsessed with
"unmet expectations." He nurses his
an~ry f~lings and becomes increas-ingly bitter. He docsn 't realize that he
1s not perfect and that be has not
always fulliJJed my "expectations."
Dan quit going to church because the
minister wasn't ·•spiritual" enough.
He openly encourages the children
(especially the aduh males) not to
attend church.
I love to walk. jog and dance. Dan
will not join me in these activities
because he "gets enough exercise at
work." So 1 JOg. walk and go to church
alone.
Mr future looks bleak. It is possible that will be a widow with financial
burdens because Dan has a good
chance of dying from Jung cancer
before he is 60. The man lights one
cigarette off the other and refuses to
quit. If the cigarettes don't get him. I
sec myself growing old with an
incrcastn$1Y angry and bitter man.
complaining more and more because
everyone has failed him.
Ann. please do a column on
expectations, rea l and unreahstic. I
keep telling Dan that you can't change
people1 but he says I'm wrong.
I behevc this is the reason so many
adults (mostly males) say. "No matter
how hard I tnedhl could never please my father." T c result is d1saP.-
pointed parents and unhappy chtl-
dreo. r hope my letter will touch a tender
spot in some of your readers. Please
encourage children and spouses to
clip and mail this column to the
offending member of the family. -
EVER PRAYERFUL, EVER
HOPEFUL IN MIDDLE AMERICA
DEAR MIDDLE AMERICA: I
Htpect you llubaDcl'1 dJtsatl1fac-
tloD wltlll flit 9Udru I• rooted la die
fact daat lie aever rettlved ucondl·
tJoaal love u4 approval from llb owa
fatber. Tile ureallstlc 4emud1 lie
makes oa Ills ... , ud daapters are
tJae resalt of 111• u.tattmea dream•.
He wanted 1111 cflUdreD to be perfect
beeaase k never wa1. Of coeine, daey
faUed llim u4 lie feell "9eated."
Valeu Du 1tt1 t0me daerapy
(fl1&111Y uUkely), yo.r propfftl·
cariou may well be correct. I flope
yoe are as 1troa1 •• yoe 1eem to be
ud tat yoa will coatlaae to malDtala
a positive attltmde ud co.tlHe to
cont you ble11la11, eo matter wut.
Starting from scratch started with prizefights
A round in the early prizefights
lasted until one fighter hat the dirt.
There. he had 30 seconds to rest plus
eight seconds to get up to the scra tch
•line drawn across the center of the
ring. If he didn't make it in the 38
seconds, it was said he was "knocked
out of time." That's where we got
"knocked out." It's also where we got
"starting from scratch," as previously
mentioned.
. -...
A Utah State University survey
'\EttS.'I ·\Kt: HS
proves that 90 percent of the men who
own dogs talk at length to said dogs.
8.ut it does not ex plain what's wrong
with the 10 percent who don't.
lacking a .thumb1 the infant
elephant sucks tts trunk.
Color of a woman's eyes reveals
nothing whatsoever about her charac-
ter. You and I know that. Still.
am ateur analysts continue to claim
brown eyes tend to be more ex-
prcssivc. So they contend a woman an All-Star game. but who was the
with such eyes., 1f and when she flirts,~ youngest?
signajs in a most rntriguina manner. A. Dwight Gooden at 19.
In Love and War, they say, nobody
sends a message like a brown~yed Said 8 fellow in the barbershop:
woman. "Talk about gJf\ed children. you
should'vc seen our grandkids
Christmas morning!" In that book of yours. if the odd-
numbercd paacs aren't on the right. it's a mighty weird book.
·· As recently as 1923 an some states.
Q. I know Satchel Paige at age 47 you could bC arrested for smokina an
was the oldest baseball player ever in public. History repeats. rm told.
Ex-Beatie back in U.S.S.R. without hit song
By The Associated Press
LONDON -Paul McCartney will be "Back in the U.S.S.R." with a new
album and a radio call-in show, but
without the hit song from The
BeatJes' "White Album."
The fonner Beatie will answer
questions from Soviets in a live
phone-in radio prOlflm to be broad·
cast to the Soviet Union on Jan. 26.
the British Broadcastina Corp. said
Monday.
McCanney'1 appearance follows
the November ~lease of his new
album, "Bick in the U.S.S.R.,'' ~uccd exclusively for distribution
Ul the Soviet Union. The album doea
not contain the sona of the same
name recorded by The Beatles. Boot~ copies of the album have
made it into the West, tellil'.'lforSlOO
to $250 a copy an the United States
and for .. much .. sass in London. The New York Times rt"pOncd last
week. In the Soviet Union. the fint
bitch of 50,000 copies sold for • rublet each, about S6.60 at the official
rate. The owner of a record 11ore in New
York's Greenwich Villlee lllat . . coUectabll reciont1 llid
he IOld two of the
..... I.be holida~fbr about sun ne ...... ... 1M11ti1
-1101 be med._.. M «*lined .. ._ .......... ....,_ · ""elina la IM So¥ill U..._ ..,...,, 46, imld la I lllllllMftt
..... ... ilciOrd .._ ~ i:r= to .................. , 10
lllWW•dlatwhll.,-11' ntma.
counesy of tbe BBC."
Prime Miniller Ma~ TbatcMr
chatted lona~istance 10 Soviet• &ast
July dairina a similar P"Jl'llD. Slat
took 15 C:aJll on topics fi'om alasftOlt
to her boutehold chores.
Oown1na Strftt in an interview
publitheid Monday wilh She map· z1ne. .. Theft muat be so many clever,
C11'91* WOIDe9 out abele tbat WC do
not bow about Who have control of = in dteir mm..-who be~ bit 11-..W 11 men in~ ofloe. -••.
T1llllClw hll-=::-only one WOW ID a paa lincc eom•to,...,1a 1m. ra 1912.lht aliemlilddll..,....._..ot
-·91 ........ " ... ........................ ,..... ...... ......, ....
ltOMI -11lil lilllM 11111 u
Va.le•U.O will show has htah-fashion
collection 1n Paris for the fint time on
Jan. 26. durinJ the sprina-summer
couture week, at was announced this week.
Tbe collection will tint be shown
here Thursday, clos1n1 the Rome
hip-fashion week, the fashion house
said. Valentino Oaravani, the de·
siJner's full name, has been showang
bts ready·to-wear collection in Paris
for I S years.
BEVERLY HILLS -Talk show host,.._, ear.. ~&ved a sur-
. plu,a from the wife of slain
n President Anwar Sedat
she made Aft ununounced
appearance at a fund·railef for an
lsneh university. .-.. ..,., praiKd Canon u "an
American who i• 1 household name thf'OUlbout the woi'ld, a man who has humorously chided us tbt our short·
cominp and brouebt la•ter into our liva.''
Sineer ..... L1wrw1 iervtid u
the m•ter of ceremonies a& Ille ...,...
Aaitded dinner~ ~ID raiie money for dOllrilliil ii c...·1 name 10 Hebrew u.._.., or
Jcnalllcm, publicilc IM ...... laid. Canoe. ._. OI ..,,_ T_... Sbow" ror 26 r-!li _._.,.Dae
H*t• Uni .... ~lc~WMI
for .. •-al--....
PH Ar:=••• c rim TD
HI ·m-~ =·· =\..-.;: I ~lll~•-11 ..... •
her heavy schedule. (She has been
hchooptcring in from LA commit-
ments just in time to 10 on.)
Actor Alu MudeU making his
debut at sq~,:i. aod Cllri1\ae Healy, in
her second ~R did join the group. "I
enjoyed doing the play. It hasn't been
done very many tames in the United
States and this is its West Coast
premiere," said Healy as she arri ved
on the pany scene with Benson.
Prior to the production, the
theatergoers were treated to a cham-
pagne reception in the lobby. and
were greeted by a committee which
included Dot and Ralpla Clock, Loli
DaJJey and Catlterlle 'hayH.
"Committee members arc the ones
weanng the white carnations." said
Th yen. who explained &hat those who
attend premiere nights and us social
llOHOSt 'OPI:
Wednlday, Ju. 18
ARIES (March 21 -April 19): You
could be "overwhelmed" with op-
portunities for increasing income Be
sclectiveJ. stick to solid ground, con-fide in ram1ly member. Shon tnp
involves relauve. Cancer native plays
role.
TAURVS (Apnl 20-May 20): Focus
on humor. versattltty, chance to expand personal horizons. Lunar
position accents income. payments,
collcct1ons. appraisal of personal
possessions. Gemini plays featured
role.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20): Moon
m your sign hi&hhghts originality,
inventiveness. danng. sex appeal.
People who thought you were
"trapped" are 1n for proverbial rude
awakening. Almost miraculously,
you emerge victorious.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22); You
discover secret "hiding place." Focus
on msmuuons. chamable organ1 La·
t1ons, contac' with and1v1dual who
can help you advance in career.
Clandestine meeung involves ro-
mance.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Focus on
chanae, .desires, sensuality. per· formanoe. You'll receive applause.
scena rio highlights approval.
creativity. romance. Mone)' comes
from career. business acuv111es &ck
royalties will be paid.
VIRGO (Aug. 2l-Scpt. 22)· One tn
position or author1ty has "change of
heart." Keep opuons open. bt ready
to take greater charae of your own
destiny. Look for loophole 1n lcpl
agreement Pisces play' paramount
role.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Good lunar aspect coincides wnh com-
munication, language, travel, physi-
cal attracuon. You're presented with
deadline. By mceuna It. financial
reward results. Love rclauonsh1p wall
grown strona.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
You'll enc-0unter "fiery" ind1v1dual
who challenacs. inspires. Infor-
mation previously wnhheld w1U be
released -con«ms money, possible
HHIUf.;1 .
By CHARLES GOREN
and OMAR SHARIF
YOU BE THE JUOGE
Both vulnaable. North deaJs.
NORTH
• Q4 v A J 10
¢ A Q J 10 7 6'
l.. • 5
WfST £AT
• Void • 9 7 3
Q ''' Q 1532 0 K 9 8 S 2 () VoW
• K 8 7 ' J • A J 10 9 6 2 SOUTH
• AK J It I'S 2
Q &Q6
0 3
•Q
The biddln1:
Nordt r..t
1 0 ...
3 0 ... ......
S Q ,_ ... ...
s.. ..
2 •
3.
4 NT ' .
w ... ... ... ... ....
Op-ha Wld: Four Of • ltuidJ&M Wdhaa wt play of mu
...... Al lmt OM of dae.,...,... ...... -..~-... . .,... no. wl .. the .... . .....
................ jualp
•'ft ........... llAl...af·
........ 0...Nalda ..... ... .... ,, ... _ ..... ...... =-.r-... ···-fl .. .
opponunaties are holde~ of special
PN season uckets and their auests.
Producing art1s11c director David
Emmet and ROD Merrlmu, presi-
dent of the board oftrustecs. were on
stage to welcome the PNcrs to the first
play of the second half of2Sth season.
The aud1encc incl uded Bobbla and
James Vudeber1, Pat and Carl
Ndtser, Jim and Joyce JHllce, Tua
Slaerwood, Teresa Reaare and
Stewart Wooclard, Emma Jue ud
Tom Riley, JoJ Owea1 (VP1n charge
of dtr'Cct services for the guild) and
Lee and KlDg BarsteiD,JUSt back from
Washington for the swe.anng 1n of
Sen. Pete Wilson and Reps. C..-11 Cox
and Dua Ro~rabacber and just in
time to pack up and fly back to
Washington for the inauguratton -
the fifth one they have attended.
anhentance. Anes. Libra persons
figure prorrunenlly. ·
SAGlTTARIUS (Nov 22-Dcc. 21 ):
Refu~ to backtrack -go forward .
insist on "legal proof." Empbas1s on
creativity, reputation, public rela-
tions, partnership, marriage. You'll
make fresh start by getting to hcan of
matters,
CAPRICORN CDcc. 22-Jan. 19):
What you had been neg1CC1Jng will
surface Includes areas of employ-
ment, health. pets. basic issues Close
relative talk~ about possible tnp.
Remember resolutton con~mtng
t1m1ng. budget.
AQUARlUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
favorable moon aspect coancadcs
wnh pcn.onal maaneusm. adventure,
vanety, ~"' You'll 1mpnnt style, new
allies will be attracted and )Ou'll be
cnpaed an creat ive project. Gemini
involved.
PISCES (fcb. 19-March 20): De-
tai ls arc presented an connection wuh
property. sccunty. lon1·ranaeproJ.cc1.
Be thorough an your anvesuaataon.
cspec1ally 1n connection wtth ac-
counting procedures and payment
schedule.
IF JANUARY UIS YOUR BIRTH·
DAY suddenly )OU discover . your
own voice' Style 1s 1mpnnted,
creative acuviues accelerate, ro-
mance no lonaer 1s a 1tranacr. Cu~t
cycle emphastttS f~h start, pton-
ttrina spant. chance 10 display unique
qualtttcs, caeabilit1cs. Ane Libra
~non pla) 1mponant roles 1n your
hfc. You are dynamic. couraaeous
and poucss dee-p humanitarian 1n·
stancts. You tra~cl 1n February, July
wall be mcmorablt Jn connecuon wnh money and love
West led a club to East's M:e, and
the defense rated las case. Declaru
won the heart shift, drew trumps
and claimed the balance of 1 be
trtcks. and the hand wu thrown in.
Obviously, a dia_mond lead would
have dcf eate.d the lam. What went
"'rona?
Those who would fault Wctt for
not teadlna a diamond arc bcina
unduly harsh. How was be co tnow
that his pannu was void? The
blame ahould 10 to Eut for noc
tdlina panner to lead a diamond.
How can be do that? By doubtina
six spades! WIMn tbeopponenu bid
freely to slam, you arc not eoint to
pt rich with a pCnalty doubla. Un·
las they have loit their .._, or
Un.lea tberc la a reiilly fre.t dbtri-
bUtion, t.be mo.t you cu bope for ii down OQC,
Theodore l.Jlbtner .... , led a ~ UIC fot tJw double wbeia lM
opponeMI ... bid to .. ....
tarilJ-tt ..... " ........... .
NOr-a,, ll ... fot ........ ollM ......... ..,...., ..... ... .....................
df)IJ ............. ....
..... Nlf ........... CIJI lit .............. _ ...
tllm ..... IO ..... f , II I
W.Wllfte-*'tda•rMll1&
TD
P•Mll·Y cmcua
by Bil Keene COUNTSll CUL TUU by Maratta & Marttta
"I wanted Grandma to hear her
purring, but now she won't
do it:
}
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
1-Jll( ............. , ........ ~ .........
.. There are other chairs In this house. Why
Is this one so popular?·'
t
1
I
l
' ....
1, ,s 0
L\\Tlt OL\) LADLE
tROM ?A5ADENA
u·,
1RE2t.1NS AAE JUST TV ~THAT VOIT GO A.WAY I/
PEANUTS
HOW 00 '(().} ~VITE '<OUR OWN
BROT~ER TO AN 1'U6L '< 006 ..
CONTEST., I DON'T EVEN KNOW
MOW TO BE61M T~E LETTE~
.0
l ./
I 18
GARFIELD
TUMBLEWEEDS
Dear Ugly,
AS A uOVERNMf.NT
EMPLOYEE. I
C7£5(RVE. RE"!JPE.CT
-·-· ..... ~.., ............... ....._ ..
DRABBLE
,,
R08Sl8R08S
•
by Charles M . Schulz
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
by Pat Brady
"
Or1n99COMtOAILVPILOTIWedl~.~ .. _. ~
ARLO AND JANIS
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DOONESBURY
WEl..l AC.1UAU..C<, i"HEli!E
ARE 5EVERAk ~~E:.5
ARQuND 1bU.>t-J -fHA"f NIGH"'r.
I _... .,.tF
(( ~.,, -""'-~-•''r»l.I.,., . ~ c
by Garry Trudeau
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNelly.
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batiuk
tf'5 I.. KE 1"HE •~AUGVRAk
BALL.. WHE.RE rHE.
PRE.$10€N1"" J US'f MAKES
AN APPEARANCE A'T' EA04
ONE I
• J
..
I
' ...
()qnge CoMt DAILY PtLOT/ ~. Jenuety •. , ...
642-5678
• t
From Ncwdt Or•.ge CCKA"ity
From South er-. County
540-1220
496-6800
You can now call the Dally Piiot Claaalfled Dept. on Saturday morning from 1:00 to 11:30 a.m . to place your Sunday and Monday -··
REAL ESTATE .... ~ 1115
f:"r,--~ 1n,
FOR SALE .......... -..-l,U, LOOI,., We l«JO
HOUSES/CONDOS °"'Ole...._., .. IS'l'
CM OI S-"0::,: IUO a-... IOOt ........ ,, ...... -U1' ............. loot __ ,,~
IJIO ...._,_. 1001 ""'" ......... IS90 c.....,__ 1011 •t ·:::r 1.00 c--.. _ ICIH •l w 1.,, c--107• _,,..,. ·~ El .... 1032 RENTALS ,__"......, IOJ4 ........._....,. '°"° HOUSES/CONDOS ._,........._ ICM2 -1044 a-. 1107 , __
104 ..... ltlond '106 l-Ho· 1050 ...... ,_ 2107
'-........ 10» ~hoct. 2111
IAl<of.-IOU
c-.. _ ,.,, _,,_
1°'7 c--,.,.
......,....-~. loef '0.-..... 21U
S....0.-1076 El, ... nn s....-.c-.....4 1071 ~.,...., .213"
s....-IOIO .-...,._. 21«! I ...__. .......... 1'&1 s.haAM ........ .. IOM " .. S......C-•-IOl6 .._
Se.Ill!~ IOll '-....,, 11 ...
lv•hn '°'° l-Hilh 2150
i..-...... 11S1
MISC RE l.mli4'-215, """-.....,. ,.., --r 1100 ....,._._ 21 .. ~· Ac, .... 112, -~ 2176
~,,_....,. llJO Soft-C-111•
CLASSIFIED INDEX
642-5678
FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY
FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY
...,,
,.... 1007
... ,_.,MPLD P..--,•ca;;;.-""'!"'---•4Br/28a upper t-~·•·•••ml!l!l!!I •38tt2e. IOW9t 1002 $795,000 ...., _______ __
Sall Y •• p,.,.,,,1
Cel ......
642-5671
for Information
& surprtelngly
low st.
540-1220
4~
' MISC. UNTALS ......... 21111 ANNOUNCEMENTS -... ...... ~. tl'4 .... c..-. ,. .. c....,,l.....,,._ 2702 ..... ~ ,. .. o..,.i.. 21CM ,_ ,,.., ·-110t
"""'61 -2111 "_, ....... .2m
....... ,. si.,,. 2n• •.....i.w""""4 m• 0-.,.. ... _ 21.0
APARTMENTS '""'-,,.,
0-el 2t02 MllC l-,, .. ........... '* EMPLOYMENT ...... ,........ 2t01 ""-"_._, .. ~_.. , ... '-'"'-c-.. _ ,.,,
t ..... ;"'"':°W-4 c--1.t• .,....,...., ,.,. fl ,.,. 2631 ,_., ...... 1611 ..._...... ...... 2..o """'"'---'1'41 -, .... MERCHANDISE i.....,. ""'~. 1..e
'--76)0 BUSINESS &
... _
i.....,. Nogwl ,.,, ~ """"'-"" ,.,, FINANCIAL ,,_ _.,._ , .. , ~ ............ _. , .. , -..k><s.i. 2900 -S-0.-... 2616 "'-0,.11•-· ~ c-'t.,._.., --~ ,.,. ..,_,w_.. ~ ~ s--,.., -°"""-,_ ,,... '• ,.., _..._.......,. , ... --w-,.., _., ,.... ......
...... c-_ , ... -...,1.i-191• ....,._
So..-.~ , ... -...,w....., ,.,. -..... 1-7~ _,_.. lO • 1911 Offi<I ·-· ',...,_
DEADLINES
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
Monday.................. Sat. 11:30 AM
THE DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS
T elephOnt SeMc.
Mond1y-Friday Tuesday .................... Mon. 5:30 PM
Wednesday ........... Tues. 5:30 PM 8 00 AM ·5.30 P M
SllJJrd1y 8 00 AM· 1 1 30 A M
~ ms
JCI07 ..
J017
)01•
>011
UlO ssu
6010
6011
.011
60U
'°" 601•
'°" eon 602,
tO>O
MM-' -7
ao1t OPEN HOUSE ~j
~ DIRECTORY eoeo
totS ......,.._._... ..,
TRANSPORTATION
BOATS GARAGE SALES ~ 1011
°"""""' •107 ,.._. 1011 ........... '106 w 1014
~Sll 101• ...... _
•101 1'011 c-.. -. '12t ,..._,.
~..__...,~ 1020 '--. .,. ~ 0-h/..,.._ 1f1'11 °""" ....... ..,. ,_"...., . .,. MISC . _....., ...... tl-0 .___ .,., ......... llOIO -.... '->i lhl/t ....... IOI• l--•141 ~,,._ IOll '-..... "'° '-....... . . ... ,, AUTOMOTIVE .....-111oie .,., . ..._,_ .... .... ._ t010 --••to ·-s.-,..,,. ..,.,
-~ ........ . .. , ._ .......... tern
• 'MoMI o.-o-ta>O ·-· fe»' v-_,
SERVICE ...,._ °""""'. tOo<> I.._ fl*> DIRECTORY _,,_ ...
fOfO ._........,... flOO ~ ....... s.o.. ......
.__
fl()()
Thursday ................ Wed. 5:30 PM
Friday ...................... Thurs. 5:30 PM
Saturday ...................... Fri. 5:30 PM
Sunday ................... Sat. 11:30 A~4
Buslnaa Counter
Mond1y·F rlday
8 00 A.M.-5.00 P M.
142-5878
CHECK YOUR AD THE FIRST D-A Y
The Dally Piiot atrlv" for efficiency and acx:ur.c:y
However. oc:castonally errors do occur Pt.ate
llalen when your ad Is read back end check your
ad dally. Report errora Immediately to fM2-5678
The Dally Pllol a<:eepta no ltablllty for any error In an advertisement tor Which It may be responsible
except tor the cost ol the space actually occupied
by the error Credit can only be allowed for the first
Insertion
,.,..., -"°' p..o -30 d~ .. 1'9QW.O -~ IUbjecl IO, bul not Mmlt~ 10 "'*-ChWOM ~-It l '•'A oA !he~.,..,_
per ,_,111, II c:ollecuon co.It MCI~,_
.oi.enome.,1._
.. Motor Roiltes
available in
W11fllli11t1r .
Hu1ti~11 l11ch·
Fount1i1 Y1ll•J
NO COLLEGTING
NO SOLIClrlNG
Oehvet One Day a Week -
Must h•ve'dependabte car
and ptOof of lnlurance.
2-1444
We're looki ng for people
w ho want to earn loads.
II \l\>UI •mbi11<>n ·~ r..:1nr. hut wur 1nc"'1tt" II.a• '\l."'AitJ l.L
1 ''~"'I 11•11mc t.• m~l.t, ur ""'"f ''' !.~}llPiwt 'Tran"'
A> .m ,.,.me •'!Xr~mr, ,,,1111 m~ki->•'W oov.n ~ '""''and
tun ont ,,f 11>t h1Wi01 "~1rrn1.111,>11 pc'r,tnt rn cht
1nJu.cr, tuuhnr. ••ur i.....J, Wt ntn fl'°' ldt lrtt u~1nin&
"' Jfl \<)Ur , AIW oll 1,l i ~,lCl<J tan h• qu.1hh )OU m~•t
• flt ill k'" ]} VOh 1>IJ
• 8t "'tlhng to 1nw-.1 .ll ~.t•t Sl,71X' ma lf.Kh•l un~
\ )U ~lmiJ~ "''"" '"..,.. tW11h ii m1111murn Jo-.11 ,...,.
mtnt hn.111<111 ~\•l\l~lkt' I\ .l\:111.lb!( h\ q~llll('J
.. rr1i,~111\
• \1<'<1 I'"" 1 otn<I 1>1.1' fl."•,, t.lnJ.11,h
' -.1a11 ' <'.llctt 1h.I Ugo f'l...:c. Litll Mll'IO <>'4'1 142~
"''" tar !.'ltpc r. '>
CLASSIFIED ADJ'EllTISIN6
SALES
We are ADDING to our sales taff.
U you can type at lea t 45 wpm and have
great telecommunication kill -We can
offer you a ba e lary + commi ion A D
a (jUtd place to work.
hll Tl•e .t Part Tl•e A ttal,.We.
Do yourself a favor -C..U us.
P egC' B levl• er J I• Ve•• ••
842-4321
Daily Pilat
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
2 3 •
SI CwWne st Time of oey
11~\-
12 lnll4ed a Sakfl ... ~
t6 GI.in. .........
''~· DOWN
5 7
3t ("CS .a NotU1~
42 Mounlllll'I pool u 'teneora " l.,,..,. .. ,...,, ..... _
47 PforoOUe
46UWl*td
··~
• 9
soc...
53 a.ten•• ~
5.5~
M Motllle
57~
IO SftDOd
..
. '
NEWSPAPER
DELIVERY
" .. ,.
Early morning motor routes available
Musi have d e pe r~dabl e "ehirle and li a bilit y
insura nce.
7 day1 per week.
2:00 a.m.-5:30 a .m.
ABOVE AVERAGE EARNINGS
Call 7 14-642-4333 be1ween 9:00 s.m.-6:00 p.m. (M -Fl
AREA S AVAILABLE:
Huntington Beach
Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley
Newpol't Beach
DEATH Nor1c £s
PACtFIC VIEW
MEMOfllAl PANC
C«nettiry • Mor1u.ry
Cti~ • Cr..-nmtOfy
3~ P1oert1c View Ori-.. --·--&44·2700
NltCI lll'OTMtlltS
llELL UOAOWAY
MOr1ufllfY • Cll•pel
110 BtNCh•~
C.0.11 Mn1
&42-9150
...... , .. ,., ....
2983 Harbor BIYd.
Costa Mesa. CA
140-1111
STARTING A NEW BUSINESS??
The Legal ()epartmen1 II the
Oaily Pllol It pteeMd to 1n-
nounc:e • new Mrvice no. avall-
•t>M to new bu~
We wlN now SEARCH U'ltl
na~ for you 11 no ••tra dtalge,
and .. .,. you the tlm, and the
trip to the Court Hou•-. Senti
An1. Thtn, of eourtit, ._ the ...,en lt completed we wMI me
your flctlOOUI buitMM natM
at...,.._.t wttf't tM County Clerk,
pubtWI onoe I ,....._ IOf fotlr
-·• ........ bylawond ,...., "'" ,_ p<ool .. publl-°"''°" """ .... County c ......
---·---
'
p..... ltop by to me your
Uctltious ~ ••• ,.,,.,... II
the 09il)o PKoli L9Q91 Oep1rt·
rNnl, 330 W•t Bey, Colli
MeN, C.fornia. If you can nol
11op by, plMM e8I""
11 (7f4) M2-432t, EJi:tenafon
315 or 311 8nd we wtfl ,..._. .,...,......,. .. kW you to ._and ..
tllla_by ...... .,... __ ~ ........
~--. P'Mllf Cll YI end .,,.
""" ... """" ,,_ good to -Cc. lue• In you•
ner. IM•ln111ll