HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-01-24 - Orange Coast PilotI
ALMA AC/~5
THE ORANGE COAST
Ari •usplclous beginning SNnto.C::: IC.8tlUNllo Aid,.... •nd Yolhlhld• M•Jlnl• proce ~OM tflll on•llte ellar to the fow CMnert Of the
P"ott•rt'J diet wlll M the HltKhl OteMlcal lte1earch Center
Tourist
bureau's
support
may end
I)' fRIS YOtC'.Of °' ... ~Nol .. .,,
The Cuy Council threatened to
stop fund1n1 the ewpe>rt Beach
Conference and V1 11or's Bureau on
Monda)' wfltle re)«'llf\& 1he bureau's proPOAf 10 biins the defunct trolley Pr-* T......,.. Jr.
on
COAST/A3
.a UCI on Monay •• they performed c•r•monl•• to purify
the •ound for the UJ mlllfon facUtty. Construction ts
Kheduted to "91n In three weeks. See story on ..... a7.
25 CENT S
mare
a rtl IS
'American
tragedy'
WORLD/A4
·costaMesa
has millio .ns it
cannot spena
ly IOll VAN I YKEN
• Of .. Oal11'1ot IWll'
· Voters an Costa Mesa will probably
be votina next November on whether
to &ive themselvts a b11 property tu
bttalc, possibly cuuina some city tax
bills nearly 1n half.
Because of the \iOter-1mposed
Gann spend1n1 hm1t. the city ha
millions of dollars 1n tax rcvcn~
that 1tcan't use. That fiaurc will reach
$38.3 million b)' the 1992-93 fiscal
)car, city finance officials estimate.
lron1ca.lty, lllhouah the ctty IS nush
wnh tu re\enucs. the spend1n1 hm1t
will mean the cuy could run a deficit
as h!Jh as S6 m1lhon b) I 994.
·~e Gann hmll means \\e'rc
simply not attoW«l to keep all the tn
rc1rcnue wc 1'ttt1\le," said Robtrt
Oman. the Ctt)is director offinancc
Acconhna to members of th~ Cit)
Council. who heard a Oman's Pf'"SCO· tatton on the urptus at Monda)
n1&ht'utudy session. the th1n1todo is
au the \iOters whether the) want the
money back or whether the) "Want to
hft the spcndana hm1t so the cat) can
\pend the surplus fund\ on lftt\
impro,,ement or for some other
P~ppose the f11rest thing to do
\\Ould be to put It on the ballot and let
the \iOters decide," s~ud Costa Mesa'
ma) or Ptler BulTa
Officials say sates tax revenues
from South Coast Plaza and the cny's
row ofautomob1le dealcn on Harbor
Boulevard continually fill the city's
colTcrs. while spcndm11s not allowed
tochmb more than 6.2 percrnt a year.
If the Cuy Council docs vote next
month to put the surplus on Novem·
btr's ballot. 1rotcrs could be tempted
by ubstanual tax breaks.
A tallpe)cr with a S2.000 annual
ta-. b11J for his S200.000 houte could
Ste that blll slashed nearly 10 balf next
)car and the oty's portion of'. the
property taxes could drop to zero by
1993. Oman said.
Councilman Ed Gt191ow satd he
suspected the ocy's voters will be
sorely tempted 'to 111re th.cmsdvts a
tax rebtte
··La t time wc put a measure hke
this btforc the \Oters it was only a
matitt of S70." he said ... This time
it's a v.hole lot more money and l
"-OUldn't be surpnsed if the ta1tpa)tn
dccackd to take 1 t back ...
On the othtt hand. th.ere are plf;nty
of wa> the cny cou.ld u~ that money, ,rat ~re permatted to. Olat&ow said.
"P1rt1cularty streets.'' M said.
"Wt.'ve aot a lot of bad strccti ~"d
while "-e have money bud&cted for
trttt impro"emcnts. this would be
extra"
t~ 1H GANN/All
Student hearq plan toframe teacher
ly GREG KLERKX
Of -o..., Not S4-'f
I\ Manners Elcmentar) · hool
student testified Monda) that h<'
O\erheard three of her classmates
conspinna to falstl) anusc teacher
Frank Tozzohna Jr of molcstana
them in order 10 get him fired
Tozzohna. an 18-)ear 1each1ng
veteran. is accused ofkwdl) touching
the chests and buttocks of four Sth·
grade 11rls 10 his classroom and 1n
school hall"Ways last fall. He faC'Cs four
counts of misdemeanor ( hild
molestation.
Two o ( the allcgtd incidents v.crc
witnessed by other &Jr'ls who v.crc
thcmsct1rcs accosted, acrordanf to
Deputy Dlstnct Attom<') Kell\
MacEachem.
Defense Attome) John Bameu
contends that the molestation inci-
dents were fabncatcd b) thc four 11rls
and a fifth girl. ~ho arc all fncnd 10
order 10 gct Tozzohna fired
On the thud da) of the tnal ~forC'
Harbor Coun Judge Russell Bos-
trom. Bameu produC'cd his first
w11nesscs. includan& a I 0.> ear-old
classmate of the pla1n11fl1 v. ho claim~
to have heard the airls plot11ng to gel
Tozzohna rired b) ~y1n1 he molested
them
The alleged con\C''"'3t1on took
place dunn& re'CC onl)' da)S ~fort'
Touohna was su J>('nded pend1n1 an
1n"est1pt1on mto mole tattoo allcp-
t16n
.. he s."ttd 11 wa n·t true. but she
wanted 10 1ct Mr. T fi~ " 1he 11rl
said
MacEac~m a ked the 11rl v.h) M
ne"er told pohce 1bout the con' e~
t1on
.. I don't lnov. ·· ~hC' said . · The\
nc' er came up ind 1 kcd mC' · ·
The airl did tell htr motht'r 1bout
the an 1dcnt and the mother lt'-Sllfied
that she told school pnnc1pal "" "' Zeidman about the alleged conHrsa-
uon
&men also brought SC\ eral ot
Tozzollna's C'l>-~orkers to the stand
Moncb\ all of ""hom lauded the
teacher as an hon~t h1rd·"-Orkang
person v.ho 1s stnct but fair "-Ith h1~
students n ot the tC'IChcrs said ll
was unthinkable that 1 ozzohna could
have molested the airts
Teacher Ten; foster. v.ho \\IS thC'
first adult told of the allqcd m0Jcsta-
t1on and .. ho reported tbem to
h1dman de nbed the 11rt ch1eny
responsible for lhe allcpuon as
"d1 honest m1sch1e\iOUS. man1pu·
lattH" and someone v.ho ··seeks to
cause \\lr'S amongst studC'nts." he
also 1 ued a 1Jow1~ report of Tozzohna, whom she dcscnbcd as a
clost fnend
"II IS my bchcf that Frank
Touohna 1s 1ncapableof comm1ttana
su h an (act). and he 1s a man that
docs not tolerate filth ... and 1 man
who stn"cs to do •hat 1s nsht ..
Fo 1er said = t:.ck to the Sl~ts o(Newpon
Thtcouncildccidt:d tod1.cuu at its
Feb, 13 mfttint whtther to con1in~
coll«tina a 1-pcrttnt ~rv1ce f~.
which su~s the bureau, in Id·
d1tion to lhc rqutar 8·J>('rcent hotel
CO\IH,IOH\ l'I \Cl'
bed au. Mesa's El Pescador at end of its reel
BUmau members. who rcprnent n t t ,J I • / · ~ ., hottls. mtaurantsarwt other IOUriSI-nes auran reguiars compar-e C10S1ng to oss 1n 1am1~
.f
oriented bu11nnst1. said tht)' wett
no! surpnted b) the counal's dot· 8y eoe VAN IYKIN c111on. but they upttSscd concern or .. .._,.....,
that without the ldd1t1onal ta . the It's the kJnd of place \IWhert. local
city ~ ~ve .':'O market1n1 funds people JO for aood se.afoOd and
10 ~ ~ v1saton com1n1 an camaradcnc a dimly lit litOc place ''1:.::9.i:=°~p·le tl\O said the full ohtufTcd fish and memories. --. Unfonunately El Ptscador. or the ~oblern of tran~uon will con· E.P. as "IUlars call at 1s about to
unue to pl._uc t~ ·city without an • t;«omc 1 memory ittctl
altcmauw 1yseem lake the trolley. • A Coeia Mesa landmark for lS n.e cny C'MC1fd the 1trvtce chartr ycan. the EJ Pncador restaurant on t~ .Jan Ill> to fund '~ !>urtau. EaM l 7tt. trect wilt be tom down wltldl .llftl to lttf'IC't hip~ IOOft lO maU way for I shoppui& conre.noe aatmdea and \'Kation ccalCf ua-., wt.o comoltnwnt the de· nd'J....;..t.;,.·o ........ -........ _ ___. red ~ ol our commun.. A -•wm ..... '"" haso•1'"' ; .. eccord "I to the burau's mis..on the plllce with~ husblnd Jim for the ,ai..,...t. • ~ 11a yan. '"' '1 too bappy about 1t
Amon1•mostcfrttt1veMhcn11-You tllw no Mlel how many oJ i• cam.-.. was 1n ciltn·Pllt· our customns aR upttt about 1t ~ .. Clellin111on 1uicle" pub-•id Grai.m. -oo ~ tTaU)' need
titMcl ia _.,,travel and con,,.enuon another mtnt ihe>olMnt cca~ There .,...icDGial the bureau repoMat. arc so ma.y recail lMalineua around ~ ... Ill moftth1of1911. Costa Maa alrady. llua pl9tt has
dlt acr coUened St. 9 mllhon 1n bttn 1IK'Oftd~'°1 1oc of people
Qealf IPni!lllft from m.,, howts 1n for a lofte UMC. Newpcn up 19 petttftl rro..,; • 1>ilUK1 from the aoun,.-oncnt.ed .. w •• 1917.'thc butaft teU>od pa.a doett '°the balch. El • ___ .... , .. TllOLLIY /All ..... ,., .. .....,. ...... kx-aJ
chentele. Graham said.
··Our rqulars tend to bf the mot'<'
cstabhshcd m 1dcnts." shesaad "You
reall) have to care about people 10
serve a local chentcle hke thal. If we
were closer to the wa~r. maybt \\C
v,.ouldn't have 1ocarc so much There
would alway' bt another tounst. But
we're not like that.
··rnert's one oldt.r 1tnllcman. for
eumple. who came in here for )cars,
and al"'-a> 1111tthc same booth lfhe
and his wife -..eren't ~'"' 1n one n11tu. they'd always call to let u
know. He's had a stroll~ re«ntJy and
can't come 1n. but I hc9r he's doina
bttter now and that he an't watt 10
start comma 1n apan."
One customer wh~ h1s,tory IOC'
bock to the car1y da)'I " Witt~ Oanttr, a reurcd ·c~pon Beach
school teacher.
"It' rcall) bttn a lnnd of old folk
home for t~ of us in our 60s •net
older, .. 11id Dancer. "I went there the
fiBt time an I 9S5 with my mochtt.
Then 1n the later 'SOI I siopPcd 904"1
lhtrc. l ..as a )OUOI man and 1hett
fftt othtt places .. heft the )~"ltf
people \\ent. Bu t then 10 the late '6(
tarted aoina therc ~10.
"It' alwa)S been 1 place where )OU
could 10 and hear somC' n-gular
mu 1c, ha"e a dnnl and sit around
and talk and argue .\ lotofllloldau>s
arc JOIOI to be homeless when the)
ctosc"do"'n ...
A confirmed ba'ht'lor. Danttr ~1d
he had atwa) depended on El
Pescador and place like 1t for l(>Od.
fnendl) soetal hfe.
"It's always bttn a aood ptano ber.
and )OU'\C al'4a)s bttn ablt to ttt a food dinner 1hcre." hC' uid.
n tmas 1s alv.'I\ really ~tal
npecial= JOSIC I O\"Cf. She'd alwa)' IC 1t rc1tl) ntec and 1(
)OU didn't ha\t an) famal) nt"arh .
)'OU couJd '°then and fttl IS If )OU
weft IPtftdint hnstmas wtth rAm·
aly •
''And ~·,c alwa) had a bunch
of wanrna \Mft •ho knew eVtt)· body Md °*"4>'d &lat e\er)ORC ralt• IP«'ll." OM' Of, tllilll ltftlWI 11 C1roJ Dua. ... btr'$ IOI "I 10
Et Pe ...... • If 11 INMr '-ck 1n the
~OODMOR
COfl'W('s •••..•••••••.•••••••••••••••••• AIO ~································ At Cf'OllW'Otd .•..•••.•.•.•••••••••.•••••• IS ~ .•••••••.•••.•••..••...•...•. AS
"'-······························,··· ~1 '*-1111······························ AJ
earty da)
"I can ttmem~r aoing there v.otth
m)' parent ~ )C31") aao v.hC'n I \\U
10 "shC' s:ud "The) 'd send me home
1n a tu.1 so the) l:Ould st&)' at the piano
bar I hate to Stt 1t 10 It deserves :u
least I decent &oodb)e "
Graham said he 1 n't rt'ad to SI)
goodb)e )Cl The restaurant v.111
remain open until the end of ne\I
month. she said And C\en then. she
won't d1 ount the poss1b1lit) o(
opening another platt
"El Pescador 1 so wctl-lnown.
""C''d hkt to open someplact'clst.'' he
said. "Bui ll .. ould ha1re 10 be
someplace local: .. c'd .. ant 10 kttp
our local customen And I don't
know 1f'thctt's anyth1na v.c could
afford locally."
The probkm 11 that Jim and Jo Jt'
Graham 0 W1\ the moocst old bu1ld1n1
in -.hach their cst.abhshmcnt 1
located. but ftOt the land under 1t. The
owner of the property. lhc Cecil H.
McVa) Trust. hat decided to put the
land to more lucnt1ve use
Just •hat"'"~ on the land ..-here El Pncadof now stand has not
)'Ct been dewnn1rild.
.. It ••ti bt a rdllil cent.er of 1boUt
ffll&-.. Q.OSING/ AJt
l'tJblic: r1C>t ec ~s •••.•• , . •• . . •• • . . • . . . . 16.. 5"i1b .................•.•.•.....•.. 11-4
TV 1L:lll'tr1g. I.... . . .. .• . .. . . . . ....•.. Al w.-.r ........................... M
Newest buyers
of Duke 's home
pay S6.5 million
ly l'AUl ARCHln.EY
OI -Di11!7 ~ tuft
The Dukt' hasn'I hu!'I h1 hat there
10 a decade. but I.be Bl) horc man-
1on he called home for 16 )tan is still
kno\\o as John Wt) nc's.
The JO.room, 9,QOO..square-foot
hou achieved another bit of
notonet)' at the end of the )car when
11 Id for \\ha I -.as one of the biahcs1
pncc e'er for a s1~fam1ly rai-
dcncc in <>BOJC County.
Etcrow closed Dec:. lO at S6.S
mil hon lcs ascot Eleanor 8owic of
( oldw~ll Bank.er·~ ewpon lk»ctt
office Yid she didn't know of1 any
home 10 the count~ that has ma1cMd
that pncc
Bo~1c h tcd the property that 11t
on •hat manv bd1c"e i1 tM matt
dttirtbfC' loia&•on on Ne..,rt
Hatborin 1ay I 918. two yairufttt 1t
~nt on the market. ~lie. propcf1)' 1n thit .,.._ ranet wouad natunan) not 1tU'llC't muy
pn)lpe(1\, t~ ftft ~ ~
bu)'tf'S V I .. far It. lowie'lllid ,.. --·••1M1
I .
to aln
~---·8AllUll or .. .._,.. ....
Buffeted by a drop in bus.inns
when the Huntinaion 8ead1 Pier was
closed last July, downtown
merchants may be haded for a new
blow whee the second block of Main
Street is cloled to trafTJC for 20 to 30 days, probably in March.
In a letter sent to men:banu, Pubhc
Works Director Louis F. Sandoval
said the block will be closed in order
to put 1n sewer and water lines, rep&aan1 those that have to be
removed to make room for a SI 0
miJlion perkina structure.
Demolition oftbe buildinpto clear
the way for me three-story, 85()..space Pilkins structure may start as carry as Feb. IS, City Adminjstrator Paul
Cook saJd Monday.
One Mata SUeet resident said tbal
lhe dolure o( Main Street "could just
about put the finishina touches on
the merchants.. many of Whom have tlnlllled s.i nee the pier was closed for
..
TROLLEY
FromAI
reported.
· However, New{>Ort Beach hotels
are currcntJy runnana at a S9-pcrcent ~ncy level because ofincreasina c tJtlon from hotels croppina up
i the nei&hboring cities oflrvine and
Costa Mcsa1 bureau president Jeff
MorK told tne council.
If the hotels returned to t.h"e 75--
pcrcent occupency level of the early
1980s. the hotel tax would brina in
S2.4' mm100 durina me six-month
pcnod, the bureau estimated.
"This isa really important industry
for the cuy." said former mayor
Jackie Heather, who serves as a
citizen representative on the bureau's
board of directors.
Heather said she realized the im-
portance of keepina lucrative busi-
ness in Newport Beach when. durina
her ume on the council, the city lost a
million dollars in sales tax .. just like
that" when two computer C10tnpanies
moved to Irvine.
To keep the sales revenue nowini
inf the city needs to dedk.ate fund.s to se f·promotion, bureau members
said.
While most cities use the transient
occupancy tax for promotjon. New-
port has not used any of its bed tax for
marketina.. said Richard Luehrs. president of the Newpon Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce.
"Someplace alona the line. the cuy
needs to decide 1fit support$ tourism
or doesn ·a." Luchn said
"I think we need to be allowed to
continuc our effons toward bringing
the upscale v1s1tor to me city," said
Hemck Hanson, owner of Lmle Inn
on the Bay.
Newpon Beach also should inur-
rcct a trolley system to shuule people
from Be.Jboa Pter to Fashion Island
dunna the summer months, when
traffic snarls streets throuahout the
cityt butt.au members araued.
8111 Hamilton, owner of the Can-
nery restaurant, presented to the
council a plan for a four-car system
that would operate on a 17.4-mile
route. I 0 a.m. to I 0 p.m. seven daysa
week from June I to Sept. IS.
Durina the re.st of the year. the
trolleys could be rented out for
charters, Hamilton said.
"We believe this system would provide relief from heavy sum-
menime traffic and would be af-
fordable," he said.
IA~ft:UOU;
8Ut '*=•~ coewted MO..y 1 · IM&. while con-
cerned. they viewed tht ~ dolure
aschicOy a hwdle IO o~ on the
WIJIO~t.
Jan Oatrnn-. who's operated Jan's Health FOOCi 8ar at 121 Maan St. for 19 years, said she was "apprdlens1ve·
and at the city's mercy. But it's only a
month, and we're iakana it in stride."
"I'm very much for mlevelop-ment," she said. "We'll alt suffer and then do very well."
Gaffney, unhk.e many of her Col·
leasues. said that the closint of the pier didn't affect her bus1nna.
Lam Lawrence. owna of The
Bread Crumb rest.aurant in tht block
that w1JI be closed, said he has no
complaints and JUst wanted to see
redevelopment ~t st.arted.
.. We11 rely OD our reaulan. Every-
body it haaDna 1n there," he said.
N'ancy Chen, who h,as owned
Terry's CofTtt Shop at Fifth Street and Walnut Avenue for 10 )ears, said
lbe's-orried. Sht DOlimd •bis~ olf •acc I.he pitt WM dOlld m..,. worrin ~t maytle 111,d, wUI
comr. I hoOt God lidpl U1. • *-.. Cook. who noted IMt t.helid"91b
will stay opm. •id C081U11Ctiolt .. n
put I.he ara in disamy tor about II
months.
"There's no way to mitipte it,"
Cook said. "But hopefully the IOOd
umes will foll by the wauner otl 990
and the memaan11will1ate Pl(I in thtm.··
Jn the le&IC'r that PUblic Works
Director Sandoval~· lo men:bantl
OD Dec. 29, he laid lhe claiUR Of
Main Sines was required bec:a:IK of
tbe Darr'OW1te• of the st rttt. die depth
Of tilt tmK'hei and the C01*nlCIK>n
equipment that WU nttdeci.
Construction of sewer and waaer
m11ns was tentatively scheduled to
bqJn an March and continue throuati
May.Sandovaha1d. The street will bt
open durint spnna vacation March 11-26, he said. ·
..., ... ,..... .. '--..,_
··oo we r••llJ need .,......,. ......, ... ,.r .. alb •• ~ncador restawant co-owner Josie Gr..._.
CLOSING
From Al
8 ()()()square fttt," said Valene Kemp
of 1he firm IOC, which is handlina
leasina for the propcny. "As for the
specific stores, we don't know that
yet We're still 1n the prehm1nary
s&ages. ..
Teen -ager sentenced
in bicyclist's death
The tcen-aae dnver who hit and killed an Irvine youth last September was sentenced to JO days in Jail and
200 hours of community service after pleadingauilty to misdemeanor man -
slau&hter.
Pejman B. Alaghamandan was
driving a Volkswagen Beetle on Sept.
20. 1988. when he struck Da vid
Le1dal. who was ndina his bicycle to
classes at Un1vers1ty H1&h School.
The 14-ycar..old's death meant hfe
for Jeff Berg.an. a 26-year-0ld coach at
Mission Viejo H1~ Sch_ool who
received one of l...eidal's kidneys to
replace his own, which was f11hng.
......... ..........
Newport council approves thfiee
designs for street speed humps
lly lllS YOKOI
... 0-. .........
Three types of speed humps will be
construc1Cd in test locatJons follow-
ina tht Newpon Beach CityCouncll's
approval o( desians Monday niJht.
The council two wceksaaopve the
ao-ahead to place speed humps -
elonpted, less-severe venions of the
tpeed bumps often found in park,ina
lots -OD ~in bcach-aru strttts
for I tnaJ period.
Plans call for the humps to be in
place by the summer in thernidenttal
nela)ibOmoods of Peninsula Point,
~ntraJ Balboa Peninsula and New-
port Shores.
The city will monitor the efTcctjve-
neu of the bumSK in slowi.na traffic
durina the aummer months and then decide whether~ should be used in
other perts oltbe aty.
The council approved thrtt hump
dcsips, two of which will be 12 feet
Iona 1n the diRCtioa of travel and will
be u.sed on public streets ahd alleys in
the rnidcnt1-.1 areas. One dcsian rises
21h inches at the hump's hi&hest
point: the other nscs three inches.
Advan_ce s1sns wdl be posted and
"BUMP" will be painted on the
HOUSE
From Al
"We had two "cry strong backup
buyers who were very. very disap-
pointed." she said.
Located 1n the uclus1ve Bayshores
enclave. the home Sits on two-thirds
of an acre and boasts I S4 feet of
harbor frontasc. including a pnvate
pier and shp that can accommodate a
60-foot yacht.
The home has nine bedroom•. two guest rooms. 12 bathrooms anij stafl
quarters.
Oriainally built in 19SI , It has
underaone numerous additions and
renovations over the )Cars. Wayne became the third owner in
1963, hvina there until his death 1n
1979.
He was of\en see n wav1n1 to
·pavement before the hum~ which aJipment makes It d1ffkult
will be striped for funber visibility. people bectiJ114out Of apeces to
The third style of hump awoved speedina vebida, city ofr1C11l1 u is a smaller version dts•aned for use Retiden11 o( the apettmeats in
on city propeny. The hump measures yacht basin and boet owners. m
five feet in the direction of travel a.nd while, have complajncd about
rises three inches at the h1abest point. speed of the traffic tbrou&h
Two locations have beeil identJlicd marina, llltf'.reported.
for placement of the smaller hump: 1"hae ~ler humps !'JU also
the p1rkln1 aisle •Iona the north side stnped and ha&hh&hted with adva
of City Hill •nd the Balboa b'ltht ~ 1. t ffi · I h basin LAW erhorcemen o 1caa s . c· H JI ..a.: • Je A araued that speed humi-dam The tty a pauuna a1s lS onen t ·~create no1sc and may ca
used as I -bypass from Newport 1n iftC'fQse 1n the number oflaws Boulevard to J2nd Strttt. accord1n1 aeainst the city .
to a staff repon. The aisle's curved However. y;,.ffic En&Jnttr Rt
Finding parking no
probl~m for stud~nt
Micheline Webb, a theater ans
student from Santa Ana, won the
colle&e's first perJuna spot rafllc and will have a personalized park1n1 spot
on campus for the spnna semester.
Proceeds from the raffle will be
used to spruce up Sil classrooms in
the colleae's Home Economics Build·
1na.
v1s1tors as they cnused by 1n tour
boau over the years.
Burton G. Bcttinaen purchased the .home from the Wa)ne estate in 1980.
One of three daua)iters of Bunon
Green. the c~founder of Beverly
Hills. she also bouaht the underl)'lnl
land from the Irvine Co .. terminaung the rcs1denttal lot lea~ that had existed there.
The house u.nderwent extensive
renovation before 8ett1nien moved
in. includ1n1the1ddn1on ofa second
stor}' and a chanse in the facade from
the Cahforn11 rand! style the WaynH
favored to a French chateau look.
Someth1n1 that did not chanic was
the pnvate screcnin1 room where
Wayne had entertained many of the
ne11hborhood children on Saturday
afternoons.
Bcttinacn died an 1986 and the
ud Edmonston reported none of
claims filed apinst other Cali
cities that have used the humSK fi
number of yean haf been s
so&r.
Motorist killed
A motonst died tontaht after
ICcident on the Ri venide f reewa
Tbe accident occurred on
f1UW&y's westbound ta.na near C
Canyon Roed.
The victim was not 1cknt1fied.
house has mnained empty s1
then.
TI\c new owncn arc Mr and
Robert Cohen. He 1s a Bcverl> H developer and co-owner of the F
Setions hotel 1n Newport Cena.er.
They rcportedJ)' plan to fun renova~ the home and replace
dock with one that will accommod their new. 12().foot )'ICht.
Bowie said that lmina the Wa pro pen y was "a JrCI t upc-ne
She and her collcqucs were a
pleased ahat another Cold~U sa
agent. John Campbell. sold the ho
Bowac didn't Sly whether the n
owners will be prepared for the t
boau thlt will conunue to ahde
With the &UldCS po1nllt'll and
nounc1n1 over the anten:om. "T
was John Wayne's home." The bureau would provide $83 000
a year for the system. while fires
would aencrate SJ0,000. ads on the
trolleys would aencrate SlS,000 and
chanen would aenerate S2S,OOO, for a
total of S 173.000 in revenue, Hamil-
ton said.
l...eidal was in a crosswalk at a four-
way stop at Yale Avenue and Michelson Dove when Alqhaman-
dan ran a stop s1an. police reponcd.
Juvenile Coun Judge C. Robert
Jameson on Friday ordered
Alqh.amandao to serve 90 days 1n
jajl, but suspended 60 days of the
sentence. The 17-year-old dnver aJso
Jost his dnver's license for a year and
was ordered to pay an as yet un-~1fied amount ofre~tut100 to~c~==============~======================~ family. .
Cosu for the trolley system would total $31 S,000 a year. With oper-
ational costsamountmJtoS2 l S,OOOa
year. market1na $7S,OOO and coot-m~ncx feesS25,000,accord.ing to the
butt.au s plan.
More rain expected
The deficit of $142,000 could be
jointly taken up by the city and the
bureau. Ham ilton said.
The trolJcy system of several years
aao failed because of a lack of Sood
marketina by the city, lower quality
equipment and an inexpenenced
operatinacompany. bureau members
said. The latest proposal involves
purchate of brand-new trolleys that
hold about 3S passenicrs. Hamilton
said.
Council mem«rs balked at the
costs involved. with Councilman
C1arence Turner saym• be didn't feet
It was "a wise. sound investment of
dollars."
Councilman John Cox, who said he
has I~ supported the trolley system.
and Councilwoman Ruthelyn Plum·
mer offered words of encou~nt. ''I'd like to keep the trolley idea
Alive," Plummer sa.id.
Deioite the council's rejection of
the idea, H1milton said he was
optimistic. ''Ifs.obvious the issue of
trantportauon 11 not aoena to ao
1w1y," he uad. "We ,.ve (the
council) a point of reference."
Ju11call642 -6086
A storm that developed off the
Central C'ahfom11 coast brouaht cool
temperatures but htdc mo111ure to ~e Oranic Coast on Monda y.
Scattered showers were expected to
continue throu&h today and into Wednesday, w1tfi a SO percent chance
of showers forecast today, the Na-
tional Weather Service said.
Forecasters expected the storm to
drop 4 to 8 inches of new snow 1n the
mountafos. with the snow le vel
droppina to 3,SOO feet today.
GANN
FromA1
Gla11<>w said he would pr-obably
suppon a move by the councH to 11ve
~e voters the choice as to what to do
with the tax su~us.
Counctlman Orv Amburaey JOined
Bufll and Olusow 1n •ri"I he would
pr-obebly suppon a ballot measure.
lns than two yean •·in Novem· ber 1987, city vOters approved a
measure tha1 allowed Cosia Mesa
officials to spend S2. I million 1n surplus tax funds on strett and
<>f'AHOI
COAST
W..t do you hke abOut the Daily PtkM? What ·
doll't ,_ tau? c:.aa the number lbove and ~ = will be recorded, trantcnbed and dt-• • •P••-..._·
•->t•••rau •M.iillnWe..,llt Ylld 10 Nalnt letWI IO tk editor Oft Mf topic. C•ll'i'-.. IO ow~ ... column mutt 111dude ............ plMMteau8119trforvmfkauoa.
Tiii • ..._., oe )'OUf mand.
h aJso could drop anywhere from
one-<iuarter to threc~uaners of an
inch of rain alona the Oranae Coast
before mov1n1 out of the area Wednesday. Poli~ •ncaes ~rouahout the Onintt Coast reported no raan· related problems Monday even1na.
A second storm was forecast 10
brina a chance of showers earl)'
Thursday, followed by a thjrd storm late Fnday and Saturday.
Hi&1' temperatures today will ranae
from S4 to 60. Lowston1&ht will ranae from 44 tO SO.
stdcwalk repairs.
.. The money we've &Otten O\ler the
past two years from that blllot
measure has certainly done a tremen·
dous amount of aood," AmburteY
said. "If WC couJI Wnnel thl.S lal
money io the same IOrtl of proJtttS. I
sutpcct we could 90 •Ions way toward
eett•na our slrfttl beck the way ~
woulcf like io have tbcm and rally
make an improvement in our qi.aahty
ofhfe."
Council memben have not )et
decided .-Mn a meuure would be
pllc9d oa tllt ballot.
==-.......... ~
.. ,A .... ,..~ ..,,,..., .. ,., ,,, ...... 10•• ..,,_,,_,_
............ 0.. c ... ...... ..,...,. ,_., ..
~ ............ . _...., .... ..,. ,...
9"tA ,_ cotCwlM ....
~
SEMI ANNtJAL SALE!
R!Jlularty
S27SOO to S82SOO
Sl6~00 to SS9SOO
$50 00 tO SI 7S 00
S.S300 to StlOOO
MU ,,. ... ........ ......... .._ ..... SpQl't~
~il!I
Shoe
Gentlemen\ Oottq
~
s.ss 00 to S83 00
S48 00 to SllS.00 ses.oo eo Sl85 oo
561 Newport GenW DrM
'8shlDn llllnd. Pftpoft lilCft" M().i851C)
for
'" • = i 'i
Free conferences
will give assistance
to small businesses
A lain ol 6'1 coaMenca cooccrnis ll'ADIEE' ..,..ap1n will be oflmid IO eoa ....,. •• cntrepraeun ac.t moat • n.ie · --Will beheld on Tuaday.s from 2 to
4 p.m. at ~ic Savi* 2400 E. I 7tb st.·. Sattta
AM.
• Tbe upc:omins • 1ehedulc is Feb. 7,
.. Ell~ia,: How '° EDier tbc lnwrnatioul Mar· lret. led bY wa1w0tton; Feb. 14, .. Laws. Ucensina
ad luurucc~" t'.:und Bock; Feb. 21, .. Patall, T . IS: How IO Protect
Yow Qild... witb tM>iod ud MU1T1y
Roth and Feb. 211. ~Franchitins; What '° Know 8ef'oft y 00 Sip. .. lea by Chat1eS Perry.
Tbete ~· are co-cpolllOfcd by the Service Corps of Retired Executives, the Active
Cotpl of Executivn a.nd the U.S. Small Bustnns
Adm1lldtrat1on.
John S. Waddtll, SBA dastnct manqtr,
announced that for free individual countclina with a
coun.elof or for more tnfopnatton on thew prosram~. call SCORE at 836-2494.
GWC programs avallabl~
L«tures and workshops for children and aduJu
will be offered this month by Golden West Collqe in
Huntinaton Beach.
Breathina. stretchina. strcnathen1n1 and
cardiovascular exercises for ptqnant women will be
offered Tuesdays and Thursdays~ from 7 to 8 p.m ..
today tbrouah March 16 in Community Center I 03.
Tbe prosr1m fee 11 SSO.
Aerobic eurttses for mothers and their babies'
will be available Tuesdays and Thursdays. from I to
21.m .. stanina Tuesda)'and runrunathrou&h March
I in the Community Cenatr 103. Cost-~s SSO.
The fundamentals of polka music dancina will
be tauaht from 8 to 10 p.m. Thursday in the Collqe
Center. ftt 1s SS. ·
The techniques of proptr telephone etiquette
wtll be presented from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Thursday 1n Fine Ans 210. Reaistrauon 1s S30.
Chamber t o hear fonun~teller
fonuncterter Mark v;cior Hansen will speak at
the monthly luncheon of the Huntinaton Beach
Chamber of Commerce at I 1:4S Wednesday at the
SeachfTCou.ntry Oub. 6SOJ Palm Ave.
Admission IS S 14 prepaid for members.SIS for
members at the door and S 16 for non-members.
Reservations may be made by calling 536-8888
today.
TV bureau chief to speak
V1kk1 Varps. KNBC·TV's Orange County
bureau chief, will speak at a mcctina of the
Healthcare Pubhc Relations and Marketina As·
soc11uon at noon Wednesday at Le Merid1cn Hotel.
4500 MacArthur Blvd .. Newpon Beach.
Pre-rcsmrauon for the luncheon mtttina is S20
for HPRMA mem~ S2S for non-members orS2S
at the door.
For add1t1onal information or to rq.1ster. call
951 ·1733
Women In Communicat ion meet
The publisher of the Spectrum Independent.
Susan 1ms. will speak at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at
the Red lion Inn 1n C'osta Mesa as part of the
January meet1n1 of Women 1n Commun1cat10.ns
Members w11l be charJcd S 14. auests S 17 and
students S 11. Hors d 'ocuvres and beverages will be
served.
For more 1nformat1on. call ('her Zervas at
662-5600 ext. 2390.
Jews, Christ ians In join t meeting
Jewish and Chnsuan scholars will collaborate
for a three-day. 1n-<Scpth study to better understand
the Hebraic and Jewish roots of Chnst1an1ty at 7 30
pm Fnday. 10 am to S p.m. and 7 10 9 pm.
Saturday and 2 to Sp m. Sunday at the Church oft~
Crossroads. 2530 Warner ~ ve . Santa Ana.
The conference 1s free to the pubhc.
For more <tctatls. ca.JI Polly Gnm~ at {2T3)
370-0185
Interior design ers to meet
The Amcncan Assoc111ton of lntcnor Dt·
s1ancrs will hear Dorothy Glasc:ou discuss "NCJ<r
Ullln&" at 6:30 J> m. Wednesda) 1t 1hc Countf')s1~
Inn. JlS BnstoJ St., Newport Beach.
For rncrvattons. call 643-I S49.
( . \ I . 1: '\ D ·\ H
'r ur . day,Jnn. 24
• 6 p.m ~ ... aft~ Q t1 C.-eU, Counc1I
chambers. SOS Forest Ave.
• 7 p.m. Lapu leK' Sdleel BeeN. d1 met
otftc:t, S'° Blumont t.
• 7 p.m Hudltt ... ~ U.. KIO ldlMJ
0'9111d, d1 met education ~nter. 102S l '7or1tto•-n
A~c.
ednesday, Jan. 25
POI .If I I 0(,
"9•1•1t•n~
en m11lbou1 Mre amashtd
aometimc between Slturday and
Sundar. on C1aahna Drive. Ki111t
Rmd. St. J1mn' Pllcc, Devon Lane.
&ceUt Lant and Slndalwood Lane. • • • A 9'u.wy bandit eneered a duolca
an tile 900 blodt o( Wnt ..,_
loukvMI by retnOVlftl ........... ft'Om I ICMIV'Nd ..... aad.....,
..... I Jeutof0.tNICbftf aftd I bis
olOlenol ...U. • • • A rt'1 iltWI Ht llw 100 block ol Elli llyA._ .... ..,~~
.......... door peialed .... s....., .......
• L • ........ ss,1w_.o1 ...... g .... ·-••mill Wire .......... "' .. ,.. ---~·-.... l•••R c.» • HOJ E. ="'-=' ·ne _. .. ._.. • .,, ...... 1CCld111. .............. ...,. •••
l)'JN9TSMS DIAN ------Loa A..,ta Poltce Clairf Olllyt Oates oe
Mooday lauded a detWM by OM of ~ Cowaay'1~ .... llOl'CIIO1toP
ldliM military -uh ::I 0.1 wh u AK~ nfla. tbc type '° lull fivt
ICbookbtldml Ill SIOck&oa 1ua week. Randy Oatdl, pmidnt ol the Grant
8cwt ~ 1n Coeaa Me1L ..ad he will 9'op ldllaa 111 or 1evm modeb of 1em1-
automatic uuuh WC9pOM daiaMd for
mJhWy ftdd Ult.
, .. Tbis ll IO'ftl to be I VerY unpopular
view am°"' dealers ... bua we needed to
make a 11Ud and we did:' lw aUd. ~ s&ore. wbich will coelin to 1tU
-
ul
....... ri1n aDd odaer t'YPa cl weapons, C0taa Meta Poltee Chief 0."Vt ~n
will uy '° elimtNle 111 llNll aavee~ by allo endoned tbe weapons bu and ~ iete ... IO~ ncMllli"I ~otber1Undealento~1Uit, me. for Olhef mefdaand11e or 1tlh,. ttM "'I'm in suppon of Iba&. IOlllly. 100
• flPDM IO local ~ecc depAnnwnts' percent and I'd bu IC 1C1t OIMr pn l&Ora
SW AT aeams. CialeU aid. 10 tbe nation and Cahf'omia foloW sun and
Oa1e1. who hlscalled for a Statewide ben lhow some mpon11bllity, .. Seowden uid.
on1evetalauaultwea90n11wuonhandat "M1htary usault rifln are really aood at
the 1tOrC '° cndont Gard '1 decision and kill1na people.''
call for retpOMabAt aun Mln. Both Snowden and Garell called on the
Mudt of tJw iaproer over the sale of NationaJ .Rifle Auociauon to take a 1tand
.... ult wea~ wu spumd by la5t on the issue. Garell Utd h11 store hla been T~y·1 lullinp of dtmcnwy 1ehool a member of the NRA for yean. He idded
chaldml by Patnck Edward 'Purdy; a be wasd1sappa1nled the auociataon ha111 '1
drifter who •ned fire on the Stockton · takensomektndofstep .. sowedidn'thave ~nround with a Soviet-<lt:liped AK.47 to handle t!us on our own."
nnt arid a haftdaun. Gattll also caJled for tevampina the
I
cnmaul c:oun and rehabUIWMMl ,, •• L
.. The pn>bkm II DOI ,,. .. IO be IOMd
at Uut nd, •• he Micl. .. ,, I IO'"I IO M¥I 10
be IOlved wath education, but n c:u't b~ ...
.. ne.e ...., ...... -... ,
belonl in tM laand olthe ·~ aa... .. Oared" added. "We're not IO M8¥e IO .Wnk
thi11190trw to 1toP cnmc on lite llNeU. ."
We Just feel m0tt COll'lfontble i11 thtt
decnion Every OM that we don't Mil will
be Ont less out there,"
~II sajd he support• pcc,Ple's npt to
bear arms. "but I doft't think our (oundina
fathen had 1n mtnd that we should be sclli"I AK.<t7s to I 8-year-olds acrou lhc
COW\ter." -
Hunting~on High to ·bail skateboards -. 9y RORlrT I AJtKI"
Of ... ~,_--
•· Hununaton Beach Hiah School Pnnct·
pal Gary Ernst will ben all skateboards
from campus t>ea1nnina Monda~ 1n an
attemet to stem vandalism that caused
about SI 0.000 in damqcs at the school last
)'tar.
"We're bcina killed by skateboarders."
Ernst said Monday. "We've been undtt
attack."
.. , cauaht a couple of auys last summer
who bro\e into the pool and rode their
skateboards off the divina boards into the
water One tame skateboarders raced down
the aisle in the auditorium dunna a
pf'Oll'am. They aot away because they're
too Tast."
Ernst believes the school is an attraction
bcausc of us d1$t1nct old tower bu1ldin1
and prettysctt1na. The contours and ramps
of the stucco waits apparently 1J)sp1re
skateboarders to $eC how hiJh they can
chmb.
"We've cauJht kids from as far away as
Ontano," he sa1d.
School offiCJals have aone so far as to put
sl)ttd bumps on walls. But they hardl)'
derail the youna.sters who view t~m as
JUSt another charlena.c. he said.
Ernst believes skateboarders don't cau~
aJI the damaa.c at his school. but he thinks
they arc contnbutors.
He said "the bigcst h11" occurred last
month when vandals used clubs and iron
bars over a weekend to smash three school
vans used for field tnps and extra·
curricular and athletic ac11v1t1es. The vans.
1ncludin1 a new model that sustained
maJor damaae. v.ere purchased with
school funds, he said. The vehicles
couldn't be driven un11I repaired, he said,
Some riders view these speed bumps on ·walls as
Just another challen9e; uy1 .-rlnctpal Gary a rnst.
so •• of MoMaJ he 11 INmftlnt seutteboartb lit
Huntl,...on ••ach H'9ft Scftool. ·
Skateboarders already arc proh1b1ted
from nd1n1 their boards on campus But
Ernst has permitted students -many who
have K veral miles to travel to school -to
nde their skateboards to school and put
t~m 1n lockers But stanina Monday.
boards can't be nddcn. earned or stored.
Under the old pohcy. there ~ere shp-ups
on the no.nd1n1 ban on occasions And
when ndcrs locked their skateboards 1n
their lockers. vandals ~ould break in 10
steal them. he said
For firsH1me violators. \Chool officials
will confiscate skateboards and students
can pick them up at the end oftheda). The
touahcst pcnaJty. after three \lolauon~
calls for the skateboard to be confi.scated
and not returned until the la t day of the
school year and then onl) to a 1uard1an or
parent. he said.
In a pnnc1pal's ne~tettcr sent to
parents this week.. Ernst wrote that he's
anll)' .. because there are those amona us
who arc ll)'ina to destroy our trad1t1ons of
excclkncc. our ·Oiler Pnde; and the
Suspected drunken drivers' cars
collide in wrong-way CdM crash
A suspected drunken dnvcr remained in
scnouscondmon Monday after he allcged-
1) turned into the wrona highway lane and
colhded with another suspected drunken
dnvcr in Corona del Mar.
John Notman. 43. of San Francisco
exiled the park in& lot of the Studio C'afe at
3201 E. Coast H1ahway when he allcgedl)
turned west into the eastbound lane of the
h11hway ear1) Saturda). said Officer Bob
Oiklcy of the Ncwpon Beach Pohcc
Dtpa.nment
Notman ·s rented 1988 Chevrolet col·
lukdbead-on wuh the 198& Toyota ptd.up
bc1n1 dn\·en b) Grecory D Hose), 24. of
Orange. who v.as dn' mg east on C oa~1
Ht&hway, Oaklc> said
Both dnvers and three p.isscngcrs
suffered scno us inJuru:s 1n the I 2 45 a m
accident at Coast H11h~a) and Larkspur
Avenue. Oak.le) said'
Notman was arn~stcd on su .. p1c.1on of
felony drunken dm mg ilnd Ho\C\ v.as
arrested on susp1c1on uf m1~cmcanor
drunken dn" 1na ·
Notman ~as listed 1n )('rtous htlt ~table
cond1t1on Monda) at Founu1n \alk~
Reiional Hospital ~•th muluplc I.le.er
ations and f racturcs to h1 n&ht hand. left
hip. left c~e sod.ct and skull. a hospital
spokes~oman said
Not man's wife. Katherine. 38. v.a taken
to the same hospnal with moderate
1nJunes
A second passen1er, Richard Donan.
42. of Hunungton Beach. al~ suffered
moderate 1nJunc and was ta.ken to
\\ estcm Medical Center in nta i\na
HOK) v.as taken to Hoq Memonal
Hospital. where he IA.U treated and
released
A ~ssenger in has car Bradford Trultn,
21. of Laauna lk.H:h, v.as treated at H
f~ tnJUAes.. but-tnformauon on his
cond1t1on IA.IS not 1'a1lablc
Panel approves study on creating
super agency on transportation
8Y IOI VAN EYKEN
Ot .. ~ .... kl#
A commltlcc of Orana.c County tr111ns·
ponatton omctals and Cit)' rcpresentat1vcs
voted Monda) 10 bqin studyini a
proposal to combine the county's four
m.,or Cran ponat1on aaenc1e mto a
supcr-qency,
The ~I Y>Ould combine the Or·
ante County Transit District. which runs
the county's bus sy tem. with the Oranac
County Transponat1on Comm1 ion. a
l'q)Onal p&ann1na nC)
TM Last.uw Beath Tran It ~1cncy and
the ConJOhdated Transponauon Strv1c:e
Authori~1•<'h providn transportation fof frail y and handica~ rcstdcnts.
~ould also be part of 1he supcr·qcnc)
.. The committee voted to lllk stall to
Oesh out this proposal and begin to look at
what would ~ ln\olved .. \:11J com
m1ss1on spoke man Tom f-onune ··The
idea 1s for a board ot dirC\ tors that ~ould
con 1st of se,cn Cit) rcprescntall\t'\, three
memben of the Bo.ard of C)upcn 8'0r\ anJ
one pubhc member ..
me transPonat1on official\ \uch u
Transpoiu11on Comm1u1on bo3rd mem·
ber Dana Rttd, arauc the comohd111on
would 1mpro"c plannina anJ public
accountab1lit~
Ot.btts. such as tran 1t distnct General
Mal\IFf Jim Re1chen. hlH been auardtd
about the idea. Yy1na the) "'ould want \O
tee concrete tvtdcnce 1h11 11 •ould make
transponauon plannina more efficient
The city of Laauna Bea h, mcan"'h1le
oppo~s the idea
"t-rom l.aluna Beach's point of "IC'"'. 11
makes absoTutel) no stnst." Yid < H)
Manager Ken Frank .. , haven't ~nan)
e"1dcnce at all that It v.ould sa"e one
dollar '\nd 11 v.ouJd probabl) be more
e'pens1,e. For co.mplc. our Cit)' bu s
now ti) at thcc1tfscorpoarate yard v.:hen
the) 're no11n use If they belonltd to some
b1ger a cnC) thc)''d ha"c to find another
)&rd I don·t think people ha"e thouaht
this th1n1 through.''
The committee also voted to bqin
draf'lma a bill to be submttted to the tatc
lqislaturc pcrm1tt1n1 the consohdat1on.
-I
beautr and serenity of Hunt1naton Beach
H•fh School
· These pcop&c attack our school at "'ah'
-brak1na wtndo'*'> spray l)ainnna our "-'Ill~ wntma on our hall-.va)' and lockcn
and vandalmna our property and equi~ ment ..
In another bid to head off " .. ndahsm.
Ernst bas initaltcd ptcs to secure tU&nt
lockcn after Sp m. and on wttkcnds
New Congress
more liberal, but
not OC members
''°'"rt,,,, 9f'MS wh reports
While the Concress that con,cncd tb1s
month 15 hkely to take a liberal tum.
Oranae County's delcptton v.111 remain
taunchly conscrvau"e.
. mcncans for Democratic ct1on a
lcadina hbc-ral advocaq aroup. said the
House ofRcprescnt11t'C1 scored an a'er·
aae of 52 perttnt on its "hberal quoucnt"
1n last )car's 'ouns. the h1ahest figure
since the orpniz.auon bcpn rat1n1 con-
VCS 1onal \Ottn& records in 194 7
But of tM n C1hfomaa Repubhc~ns 1n
the House to rca1H a zCTO rauna. thrtt arc
from Oranac Count)
The Oranac Count) delepuon. all
Republicans. "'..re rated. Robcn Badh .. m
O. \\'1lham Danncmeycr O. Roben
Doman. O. Dan Lun1rtn. 10. and Ron
P kard. 5 Badham and Lunarcn dad not
sctk re-election. and Repubhnns
<. hn~tophcr Co,; and Dana Rohra~chcr
v.~rc elected to replace them
C ahfom11 lkmocrat1c Sen Ian
Cranston's DA rauna was 95 percent.
and Republican Sen. Pete Wilson had 1 IS
perct' n t ra lJ ng.
The Senate scortd an aHra~ of 4
pcrttnt on the kc) hberal-conscn-ativc
1 ucs ~lcctcd by .<\DA for 1u ratJnp. The
aroup's national director. Mal'( Pearl.
noted that senators v.ho v.erc up for f'C'-
clccuon la t )Car &\crqcd h11her liberal
scores ttian the ~t of the SC.natc. "and
their liberal 'ouna l'CC'Ord1 pro"ed n t to
be I habiht) "
n ucepuon Pearl d id not mcnuon v.:a
lov.cll P \\<cider Jr ofConn«tJCul. at 90
pcrttnt the hiahcst-teonnt Sm&~ Re-
publican. "'ho •-as beaten la t No\embcr
by Dtmocrat J pb Lie~n.
tltttnt1ty. cauJinahcr food to spoil 1n
her reftta1tor. • • • A thief entered a residence an the
valllcd at S2.6 • • • A thief broke into a motorhome
perked 1n t~ I ~ bl()(k of nta Cat~nnc trcct tarlt unday morn-h'I and r'tmo't'd SI JO wonh of
from a car perbd at Vanauard Way
and YotktOYwn LIM between J and
8·20a.m Saturday.
top to pin entry.
lntDe
I~ block of Aulna~ lane throuah
a rtar dogie door and stok a S200
VCR. • • • 8ufllrs broke into a 1979 C'1maro
1n the llOOO block of Ma~ood
Cude and 1t0Je a S4SO stereo and •
peir of iun;.tutcS \llued at UO. . . . ...
A rnidc'nt 1n the JOOO blOc._ of
Ponofino said IOmtOftC stole the
step& to a dock valued at S ,_ ..... ....,
A Senta Au woman wa1u111 for a
ridt Ul lht 11000 bk.rl of Wamn
AVHUC reoor* I man tn I Oodit
Van perled his car, penialty dittObtd
eed u~ tumttlf at I 4j pm.
s.ew.lly. • • • 5-c.~~ ... ~ ....... , &e aoooo~orv~cfMtnr
I p.•. 5uclay aftCI .eolt a llDOillol
•
~)'. • • • An qa·thrOw!n.1 ~ulpnt auackcd a
home 1n the 1 IOOO block of nla
Arabella Strttt It ) I m . Unda). • • • Ji.~ Somtoac bn*t 1n1oa 1989 'l'o)Ota eac2&tSu~y mom1na perked in tht
I WIOCtr oil.a H.c~nda !\\enue
a.net l'ftftO"Vtd cautttn. a tcnnt.s
rKqMet ud a ..,.n plus Ywrcnch
val.cdatS9.S . . ' . A 191) T o)'(Ma PlftC'G 1n the I I 000
al AIMllJll Cirdr wet bur· aWiaed euty SUndly motnl"I all'd
C'lmtra -""".-pmn• valUfd ll s 1.0t2 ... iam.
. '\ .
A imilbox was knoded off ll post
b) v•ndals in the JOO bk>cJc of Co \a
Mesa uttt between I and $ am.
·Sunday. • • • A robb(r appl"OICMd • ~oman 1n
the parttn& lot at SoUth Coe t Ptaz.a at
7:4S ·p.m, S.turday and arabbcd hcf
purse. Tht robbft-eta1ptd with the
purte and contcntl valued 1t S239, • • • Someone ~tfted • COftUMtt11I
bu1ld1naat 411 E. 171h Sc •• ~ the
ult and stok "' undct11H11ntd amount of cash Ttie ._.., rN)I
have had a key tO the buildi._ ~
lou MS btlic"ed to be RtWftll S100
andS2.000.
Sbttts of plyv.ood worth S 16. 7'°
Ytere tolcn from a ron"ruct1on she
~met1me unday e'enina.
• • • A blue 1980 , O)Ota pickup WU
st~n from the 470 block of Hayes
bet~ 10 p.m. Fnday and 6 am
turda •
• • • meont tOle tc\ aal i~m• or
JC.tr)' and a faa trtt from a h<>ftW 1n
thC 10 block Of Menk> A1tlc IOllWt1tM
o\U the wukcnd. • • •
M ONftllt C09iil DAIL\' PILOT/ T~, ~ 24, 1188
Abortion caHed ~American tragedy'
WASHINGTON (AP)' -Presj-
dent Bush on Monday called abortion
••our American traledy" as nearly
70t000 protesters matked the an-
niversary of the Supreme Court's
landmark decision iefalizing
abon ion. The march organizer said
the new administration should .. provide actions to carry out 1heir
words."
Bush, speaking by telephone hook-~ to the activists. said the S-upreme
Counts 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision .. was ~ng and should be over-
turned.''
.. I wanted to share with you my
deep personal concern about our
American trqt;dy -abortion on demand ,·· Bush said over
loudspeakers. ••t think America needs
a human life amendment and I think
when it comes to abonion, there's a
.
better way-the way of adoption. the
way of life."
The president said he was .. confi-
dent that more and more Americans
every year-everyday-are hearina
your messaae and taking it to heart I
promise you that the president bean
you now and stands with you in a
cause that must be won." ~ The Washinaton march ~s the foca l point of what was intended to be
a nationwide protest apinst the 1973
Supreme Court decision.
In Dallas, Texas. a crowd estimated
at 3,000 people rallied a1 Ciiy Kall
and march to a federal courthouse to
protest the ruUnJ.
Meantil1\e, Dr. Louis Sullivan.
Bush's choice for Secretary of Health and Human Services, has been tellina
members of Conaress the 1973 de-
cision shouldn't be overturned, ac-
cordina to the New York Times.
The ~wspaper, in 1oday'1cdiiions.
quoted unnamed sourca u saying
Sullivan said the decision shouldn't
be overturned. Sullivan cautea a furor last month when be said he personally
favored permittina a woman to
cbocse to have an abonion, but he later said he supported Busb•s pos-
ition.
The Wuhinaton crowd, estimated
by U.S. Pari Police at 67.JO(),
assembled at noon in sunny, mild weather on the Ellipse with the \\'bite
House as a backdrop. As Bush spoke
at the start of the rally .. which came
after a weekend of demonstrations
around the nation, the demonstrators
cheered his words and waved sians. Advocat~ of the riaht to abonion ~ttacked Bush'scommentsand wam-
'ed about the consequences of restric-
.ina iyomen'$ riJhts to abonlon.
.. Make no m1Stakc about it: Presi-
:Sent Bush wants to draa American
women blck to a time when they risked mutilation, humiliation and
even death in order to take the most
basic control of their own liv~·· said
Kate Michclmag, eitecutive director
of the National Abortion Rights
A~on Leasue.
Doualas Gould of the Planned
Parmtfiood Federation of America
said Bush appeared to be playina
down the abonion issue. notina that
· the president sent Quayle to mee1
with the t>rotest leaders instead of
meeting wath them himself.
~forGcorae Bush to succeed in the
future, be has to mute the controversy
over this issue," Gould said ... He is
pusbina tolerance."'
Duke leads Second huge Soviet e~rthqu~ke
mo'!rners in two nionths kills up to J ,000 atr1tesfor
Sstudents
STQCKTON CAP) -In what could be a final chapter to the tragk slaying of five refua,ee childrm on a
school playground last week, Gov.
George Deukmejian led more than
2t000 mourners at a joint Buddhist-
Christian memorial service Monday.
The multi-cuhu1'1 ceremony.
whict\ included eulogies in English,
Cambodian, Vietnamese and Lao-
tian, concludecl with five minutes of silence intenuptcd only by the read-
ina of each child's name and the
ring!naofa tiny bell every 60 seconds.
"Five minutes for five children ... May they rest in peace and may God
bless their families and friends." said
Vu-Due Vuong of the Center for
Southeast Asian Resettlement. who
conducted most of the ceremony for
1he one Vietnamese and four Cambo-
Clian children who were killed six days
earlier in a still-unexplajned attack by
a gunman with an AK-4 7 assault rifle.
The period of silence. starting at
11 :40a.m .. coincided euctly with the
time of day that the slayi ngs occurred
last Tuesday.
Twenty-nine other children, in-
cluding 19 of Asian descent, and a
teacher were also wounded as 24-
year-old Patrick Edward Purdy fired
more than 100 rounds in the play-
ground of Oeveland Elementary
School before killing himself. The mood in the cavernous Stock-
ton Civic Center was somber Mon-
day, but there were few tears.
Mourners wore black and white
ribbons, described as traditiona~
Cambodian symbols of mourning,·
and the funeral chantina of a dozen
orange-robed Buddhist monks alter-
nate<! with the Christian hymns of a
community chorale.
MOSCOW (AP) -A predawn
eanhquake in Soviet Central Asia
unleashed a SO.foot-hiah wall .of dirt
and mud that buriea a mountain
village and swept through at least two
others Monday killin.& up to 1,000
people as ~Y slept, officials wd.
The devastatina earthquake in the
republic of Tadzhik:istan was the
second to strike the Soviet Union in
two months. '
.. Almost everybody died," Zainid-
din Nasrcddinov editor-in-chief of
Tadzhikistan's official news agency.
said by telephone after visitina the
wrecked farming settlement of
Sharora. He estimated the number of
dead there alone at 600.
Sharora .. had more than I SO
peasant households before that tragic
moment.•• the Soviet news agency
Tass reported ... Now most of it is
razed to the around by the ruthless
foroe of the natural calamity." Tasswd the number of dead in the
disaster zone l ,800 miles southeast of
Moscow was estimated at 1,,000. but
cautioned that was a pre1iminary
fiaure.
.. Rescue work is beinJ. con1inued
and distant mountain v1Uqes have not been checked yet," Tass said.
Damaged roads were hampering
those efTorts.
The quake struck the southwestern
part of Tadzhikistan, a Sovie1 re-
public' of more than 4.8 million
J>COple that borders Afghanistan and
China. The 40-second tremor. at .S:02 a.m. (3:02 p.m. PST Sunday) was centered
about 20 Lo 30 miles southwest of
Tadzhikistan'scapital of Dushanbe, a
city of more than 460.000 people, in
the fenile Gissar district, a center of
grapearowing and livestock-raising.
Tass said. .
An official at Dushanbe's seismic
center said the quake was strong
enough to knock things off shelves in
tall aj)lrtment buildings in the city,
but that it caused no known damage
or injuries there. He declined to give
his name.
The U.S. Geological Survey in
Reston, Va., estimated the quake at
S.4 on the Richter scale, which
measures srouod motion as recorded
on a se1smop-aph. The Dec. 7
earthquake in northwestern
Annen1a, 1,300 miles west Qf
Dushanbe, rqistered a 6.9 on the
Richter scale and killed 2.S,000
people.
The earthquake unhinpd a wall of
sodden dirt and mud at least five
miles wide that buried the villaae of
Okuli-Polo and much of Sharora.
said Erk.in .K.asimov, an official of
Tadzhikistan's Foreisn Ministry. .. Almost alJ of the victims died
asleep in their beds... Police Maj.
Alexander Loparev. duty officer at
Tadzhikistan lntenor Ministry head-
quarters in Dushanbe.
Residents of another village, Okuh-
Poyen, apparently roused in lime.
fled in panic before the mudslide.
Supreme Court limits states'
efforts to help minority hiring
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Su·
preme Court. in what three justices
called ... Jiant step backward" for
racial equality, drastically limited
Monday the power of states and cities
to earmark public works contracts for
minority-owned busjncsses.
fedcracy and now flas a majority of
blacks on its govern ins body relied on
.. past societal discnmination" to
justify the quota.
"None of the evidence presented by
the cit¥ points Lo an).' identified
discrimination in the Richmond con-
struetion industry " she said.
But Justice Thursood Marshall. in
a stJn&Jna aluent, said lilt rulina
.. sounds a fuU.scale retreat from the
court's lonptandjn& solicitude to
race-conteious remediaJ eft"orts."
..Today's decision marks 1 de-
liberate and ~nt step blcltward In
this court's affinnative action juris-
prudence:' he uid. Adoption of such plans nationwide
woukl <>bf iterate the aoaJ of a col-orblind America, she said. Marshall, the courfs O!'lY, black
-. --.. . ..
Death sentence reversei:t
SAN FRANCISCO -The state Supre~e C~n on Monda.Y. ~v~ l
death eentence of a Mldera man .ror m~rdering. his es1raf\IC(I wtfc, ruhn1 t the proeeculOr ""1 have milled Jurors into behev1n1 thty could not aasc l
.. moral judament in decidina on the stntence. The~]ruJinsallowsa newpcnaltytrial for Peter ~lt>acher. 33. todeci
between a 1m~nce of death or life without the poss1bil1ty of parok.
f.detbacher was convicted of the April 198 l murder or Ltla Schwan
Edelbacber. who wu ki lled by a shotgun blast in lhe back, fired throuah t
window of her Fresno home.
Prison drug ring broken
SAN LUIS OBISPO -A probe Into a prison drua tin.a. in ~h1rh
inmates smuglcd marijuana a'!d cocai~e to hundreds ~f 91her felons..t~ clo
but the drut war at Californ11 Men s Colony conunues, authonttes sa
Monday. . · S 000 The completed case. which saw one inmate sendina out S. a weclC ~
druJS, was the laraest single case in CMC's 3.S-year his1ory. Assodate Ward
Gail Lewis said. . Authorities have documented proof of $30,000 wonh of (dru
transactions between January 1981 and July.
Miami officer charged In shooting
MIAMI -The policeman whose f.atal shoouna of a black motorcych
sparked last week's racial violence was arrested Monday and charsed w1
manslaughter only hours after the young man's funeral.
Officer Wilham Lozano, 29, was booked into Dade County Jail on t
counts of manslauahter and released after posting S 10.000 bond. said
Arthur Oemons.
Lozano was charied in lht k1lhnas of Clement Lloyd, 23. and All
Blanchard. 24. The two were sl)CCdina on a motorcycle Jan. 16 1n Overto
when Lozano allegedly shot Lloyd in the head. Lloyd died at the setne a
Blanchard. his passcnacr. died the nut day from 1nJurics suffered 1n t
ensuin& crash.
Cadillac recall requested
WASHINGTON -Sudden accelerauon in C'od1llJ1c cars made fr<?m 19
through 1988 has resulted an five deaths, a consumer affairs iroup said in
petition filed with the aovemment Mon&y.
· The Center for Auto Safety. a Wash1n1ton·based lf(>up. pe1itloned t
National H1pway Traffic Safr.ty Administration to order 1 recall of I. l m1l h
Cad1llac1 havana HT-4100 4.1-litcr VS engines.
AltOfCther, the ctnter said 1t knows or t 20 instances of sudd
aocelerauon in the Cadillacs. resultana in 63 accidents and 70 inJunes.
Soul stnger J ames-8rown__s_enieoced
AUGUSTA. Ga. -Soul sinl'tf James Brown rccciv~ a tX·)tar pn
term Monday af\cr pleading 1u1lty to an array of misdemeanor weapons 1
tnffic Chal)CS. Jn addition to the prison term. Brown. who also pleaded no contest
charan of drivina under the influence. 'WI.I fined S 1.000 Brown'& sentcnee would nan concumntly W'lth a Stit·)'ear 1enn he
serv1na in South Carolina. Hamrick said The cbaracs in both states stemm
ftom a two-state car chase last SeS*mber.
M 0 H I U II H 11· I '
Of the slain children, Oeun Lim1 6.
and Rathanar Or, 9, were Buddhist;
Sokhim An, 6. and Ram Chun, 6.
were Baptists, and Thuy Tran, 6, was
Catholic.
Votina 6-3 the coun said the
Richmond, Va. City Council un·
constitutionatiy discriminated
against whites in sayina a contractor
on any city buildina contract must give at least 30 percent of the value of
the project to firms at least one-half
minority owned.
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor,
writing for the court, said the city that
was once the seat of the old Con-
.. The dream of a nation of equal !lso ac~used . _the,. ~IJOnty . of
citizens in a society where raoe is armchatr cyn.iclSm 1n su.,est1n1
irrelevant to personal opportunity that the. set-as~~ was a product of
and a~hieve~e~t would be lost in a local racial pohtJCS. Salvadoran ftl ........ offer CIVlllV'Oftl
mosaic of 1h1ftin1 pref~rences based · Joinina Marshall's dissent wcre.r ~· • .,.~, -·:T• ·
on unl??ea~urable c~ms of past Justices -William J. Brennan and SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador -Leftm auemllas fitht1n1 the U ...
wrongs, 0 Connor said. Harry A. Blackmun. becked ac>vernment offered M~y to pan1cipate 1n elections and rnpect t p;;;.;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;:::;;;:::=================il outcome if ballotinc is postDOMd from March 'o September The Mani.1l·led tuemllas. who throuahout the 9-ycar-old cml war h•
"jetted ~ons u a •farct." tet tevtral ot'Mr cond1t1ons in what thty term artest' Shawtn4ot Execut1·on appeals den1·ed,· •·apotitic:a.lpn>pOSaltocontnbulttOpt~." aaaa lR"' Pmickntaal tlecdonaare IChedulcd for Marc.h 19. The auemllas ~ Dnur re In N eWDOrt Beach they be pottpontd until~. 1,.
-PROBLBMSOLVBRSFORPilscluPTtONS BunAy tells of 20 murders The 90vernment of Preadent Jose Napolton Duane was Studyina t 008MB'l1CS Ol1TS' STATIONIRY U pt'Ol>Ol&l and had no immedaate reaction.
1016 Bayside Dt., Newport Beach
Bi\YSI~ aNTER
~~
760-0111
ST ARK.E. Fla. (AP) -The hiahest
..:ourts of the aaate and the nation
refuled Monday niaht to block this
momina'• execution oC Ted Bundy,
who durina &he" &ut tbree days
conlelled to 20 mu'*n in Watem
~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~ii~~ii~iiiiii~~states. The 42-}'taf~ law IChool drop. out wu delCribed as subdued and
emoiional ..... met with ~)'Chiatrist INTERIOR PLANT
Sl\LE
30%
below retail
Dorothy Lewie. apparent as .,.,, of
bia II~' pn ..... tiona I ~ iblea..minute~t tblt lundy wu men..Uy incom~t to bC
executed
Oov. M1nina told_~ in
Tllllb111H, dlree ~ ~
tlllldilll by IO tUlllifti a.ndy af
llllCllll'Y -...,, .. ...... ... compeeracy.
AtW coa••M dw6111 tbe Weelc-
:Lf.: .&1:1.:~
Argentine SOldlen retake most .of base
BUENOS AIRES. Afll!ltina-Huridredl of tOkticn becMc1 by tlftkl a
mor1arl fqlined control OI mOlt or an infantry bite Monday IUlh• after:
hours of sun bettln With dviHan commandol ~ IO\'Cffttnent laid wen left· suertilla Five ....... _. killed IDd lnOft 1Mii l0 toldicri Mid pOlice wou~ theto~t news~Tellm reponed. C'altol 9Dclirra.W1e•y to Pmiclent ltril Allliiia. llid It._. 20 com....._~ killld. nt ............. • eMimated JO to 50tom ..... med I
Coca Coll deli~ lnldt 10 ailll th.,,. the main 1111 of the 3rd iafant
ftlimcftt ift La Tlllllda on dac Mtakint Ol Bueftol Aim.
e
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2
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Rain expected to continue through Wednesday
U.S. temp
•1 JO " . U IU ~ Ill s, •
SS lJ
tO " 41 1S
'1 JJ 10 S4
10 >• 4a J)
~ lJ .. " .. lO u l1 10 •
SI J1
SI ·J• ., «>
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S4 )4 ... ,
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!~ J; Tide 89MNAMA lillrf ..,.._
l..Gl ~Cony ) 11
Extended f oreca t
"'=:t::Z.~. al .,_., HI\' l""'tdq Md ~ Yu '''°"' ""4 ~~ O&'-"""W IN'1\'
0 HI I I \ H 11<'
Salvador Dali, 84,
Spanish surrealist
ly The AllodMH,,..
AGUERAS1 Spain -Salvador
Dah, who was amona the century's
m05t imponant painlen and created
a public amqc to match bis surrcahst
II\, cbed Monday 1n the town where
hewu bom 84 years aao.
The meltina watches and waste-
land of his dreamscape .. Persistence
of Memory" made an indelible im-
presaion on contemporary cultu~. It
is probebly the most celebrated of
suneahst p1inti~ E.qually idcnufied wuh "The
Divine Dali," as he hked to call
him.elf, we~ the pointed, waxed
mustache curlina up like ·a bull's
horns, Iona hair and a walkin& stick.
of which he owned mo~ than 30.
Dali, a founder of the surrcahst
movement, was the last of an
ouutandina scnera1ion of Spanish
painters that included Pablo Picasso
and Joan Miro. He died at 10:1.S a.m. at F!Jueras
Hospital. His physician, Dr. Charin
Ponsau, said: "Tbc cause of death was
carchac arTat brouaht on by has
~ptratory insufficiency and pncu-
monJa."
Dah had heart problems and had
been confined to a wheelcha1r since
suffenna sevc~ bums 1n a fi~ at has
home an I 984. He was taken to the
hospital five days befo~ h11 dealh.
The painler was born May 11 .
1904, to a notary pubhc an lh1s small
Catalon11n town. After a hfe of
Oamboyance and ccccn1ric11r. his
lawyer Mi1ucl Domen~h said Dah
died "softly, wi1hou1 malun1 any
spec1al last statement."
Kana Juan Carlos. a penonal
fnend. scn1 condolences. Culturt
MinlSlcr Jorie Semprun dcscnbed
Dab as the ''last of a scncra1100 of
creators who rt"olut1on1zcd art 1n our
century."
What Dah called hi s "subhme
craziness," bqan earl? He was
expelled from an scboo an l9l6 for
arropnce and bnefly 1a11ed because
of pohocaJ act1v111n for Catalon11n
autonomy
After bccom1n1 famous. Dah sa1d
-The only d1ffertncc bc1-.cen a cruy
penon and me as the fact tha1 I am not
crazy.··
He also said. "Life \\OUld be
pract1c1lly 1mpo 1t>lc on lhe aJobc 1f there ulltcd 20 or 30 Dahs But there
is nolh1na lo fear Thal ran ne"er
happen"
Ahhouah few cnucs faul~ Dah"s
Salvador Dall
lCChntcaJ vi nuoslly, theyd1d not hold
his work in the h1ghcs1 ntccm Mosl
felt bas was a flawed aalent. someumn
managing lo balance ~ahsuc tech· otquc and 1rra11onal contenl bul too
often caught up in has own role a a
poseur-painter.
Mosl of Dali's cnucally successful
works were completed before he was
35. Wha1ever the cnucs thought. the
public adored Dah. who also was a
decorator. fashion and Jewelry de~
s11ner and author.
A maJOf re1rospec1ivc an 1979·80
auractcd mo~ than a million v1s1tors
tn Pans and 2.S0,000 an London.
In Pans on Monda). p~untcr
Gcof§n Mathieu. a fncnd. said Dah was · more important u a cosmic scmus than as a paan1er. ·•
Jack Lana. F~nch cuhu~ m1n1s1cr.
said Dah created "p1c1oraJ v.ork of
tre•I ph1losoph~ $1&ruficancc.
while at lhe 11me tame m1k1n1
himself known lo a vast public··
Kuk Varnedoe. director of paint·
1n1 and sculplu~ at the Museum of
Modem Art an New York. said Dah
hcreatcd some of the most unforiet-
table 1ma,cry auociatcd Wllh the
surrcahst movement. but .. may be
e'en mo~ cndunnaJy remembered
as a shoYrman"'
The tuJhnt pncc paad for a Data
was $2.3 m1lhon by a Japanese buyer
paid 1n 1987
Lafayette Escadrille member,
Robert Eoff, at Laguna home
Robert Gnmshaw Eoff has died of
cmon11 at has home an Lquna h. lcav1n1 only tv.o known
survivors of the famed Lafa)cllc
Etcadrillc, the Amcnan volunteers
..-bo J01ned the French army u pilou
befoic the Uruted talcs entered
Workt War I in 191 7 He was 93
Eoff. a natt"e of Cbnstaansbura.
Va .• ~ed wtth the Amcncan Am·
bulance Savice COClll before M joined the Lafa)ct&e fu•na Corps, has ~-nephew, Fred non. wd Mon·
to« dtcd at h11 home fnday, satd
OraQ11e County Otputy Coroner W
K.a~th Eoff'• ~lh. tMrc arc onl)
two k.no-.m tuf'\'avors of the unit.
Thoft said. ,...... J.
honorary member ot the EK"adnllc.
identified the rtrN1nina ~urv1vors
arc Henry fon1cr. 100 New York
Caty and Re&Jnald 1ncla1rc q6.
Colorado pnnp, Colo.
After the United Lites JOt ncd the
war, Eoff JOlncd the Amcncan 9Sth
cro SqUadron. Fol~1na the .. r. Eoff V;Cnt to -.ort for RCA. Thon said. In I 9S2. he
optncd has o-.n bu"ncssn an
Honolulu and Santa Barbara. He
retired 1n .1962 and he and ha\ late
wife mo'cd lo La&una &ach, Thon
satd. A t>rid aravn.de ~ice """li
schedukd Frida)' an nta Barbara,
Thon said. Eoffiuurv1"t'd b)' a 1 tcr. Hamett
Eoff Cutlc of Rochnter. N Y . 1 hon
and a ~ni«t.
·•?Sc·=:·,_. ....... •,Pa ' ..................
"""BMket• Pl9nt• Md ,,..,
It )t 19 1)
JS H " )) " n Sl 1S .... u n
tO lt
7) •• .. 44
S• 1'
•• SS ... ,
.. ll SI )0
SI 1• U IS
......,,;EI 'I 'ER ..
Take heart.
If )QJ've ever lain awake
at night worrying about money,
yc:AJ1re rot alone.
Mmey is cmoronal.
And yrur ~ is the most
emotional money you have.
~ krow it. Aro so do
our rustanerS. Which could
be why mcxe than a milloo
c.alibnians trust ~
money to American Savtngs.
And our OJ.5tOO\eT ranks are
growing daily.
10day Amencan Savings
is $15 bllion strong. Ard, of
coorse, our accounrs are
f-cderal}y insured b up to
$1(XlXX) by the FSLIC. the
F-ederal Savings and Loan
Insurance Corpocaoon.
But maximum is
only~ ci the Amencan
Savings sttxy.
AN OLD IDEA THAT
~BRANDNEW
Ranember when yoo clkin't
~ to demand service?
Whm canmm ~Y and
caring \\ere the rule? Noc che
exceptk)()?
At American ~ we
have a way ci waking with
yoo that we call "Banking The
Amencan Way."
le dellVCl'S a biel ci per·
sonal service that. b the most
plrt, seems to haYe disap-
peared fran the ~
scene.
~ service starts
with ~ Ani American
~· ~ are secon3 to
·----
Ol~eun«)' )' 11 SM' COUIW)I 4 11 1t .... .... ,. O....tw••• ... ....,_. :~ .. _. __ ..... ........,;
~ H U coo.y .tC s IS p"' flrtt W~WU)' .ti • U .t m lW'CI :.f'll .te S .. pm
,__,M!UCOCMy#I )I .tfft -llHt
MIOlpm 1C t4"UW-MM)'.te8SS
•Ill lllWIM!O.te•04pm
mogrepor't
. Or-.. Co.t OAtLY PILOT/ Tueedey, Januwy 24, 1119
Doors open at 10 a.m. tomorrow ... for 2 days only you'll save 10010 to SOO/o
off our compare at price on· bedrooms, living rooms, chairs, sofas,
dining rooms ... ~verything. in casual, contemporary, country and
traditional styles from famous name brand manufacturers as Broyhill ,
Basset, Lane, Sealy, Simmons and more. Come early for best selection.
(
)
INTERMEDIATE MARKDOWNS MAY HAVE BEEN TAKEN.
°WHEN YOU use OR OPEN A wtCKES CHARGE
"Quality made affordable."
WICKES FU TURE--·~
'l
-
~ICAmNll.-.0 CHler wit19 a ........ 11ft" 10
...... ta s *• underwrite tbe NYC0-1 production no. ...-. of the Ora~ in()ruirCounty.
Cc:M&aty Pwfonnnta Ans Cenans .. ltreallyisaaiftaothecommunuy.
boerd of diNCtOr1 who avoid the to ~ C~ty," •id ~ant. OP.tA.inl •iPt CUI petty are really explainifts IMt ~ pricft fail to mlMlftl a bet. cover a ~ucuon as lavish aa the ~. So th c three individual operas. perfoimed ~ta Ut . u oaat Plaza over tbuia-day vi111 of the company was •• IM sue for what 11 · bccOm•ll a CUllOmary event spon-And Oranee C9Unty ·~PPQR to be soted bY &lat OCPAC board for patduJ for lhe 11fl ... Rieoktto .. was
vatitinJ ~ comp.nia. Sold O!'t --: and 1ickm for t~e
Tbis time at wu held in honor of the remaan1 .. ~nett att. much 1n New York City Opera, openi"I last demand.1(they'fe even av~11able.
week wtth .. Rilokno •• ..._.,-., ter:'Cral director of tbe compeny, lOOk unv out from her
The ~~nee party dKSn't ~irtwind IChedule '° atiHd bOth the
ICI ~ risht away, as a apecial S1ede reception and the Birraporet-
receplioa wu held beckstaee im-ti's party.
mediately ., the cuna1n \0 thank '°She's a real ~ " said board
the. Harry ~ G~ Steele Foun-pmidcn1 T .. KtMrkk. who had the ~uon.-A.ccord~PAC matkd· ~of aconina the daant first
1na director . . • ..,.... the ~-of~Aa:onS1naao~ndrick.
Steele foundauon wtll present the she 1 had an inhumane achedulc -
op ras
ont niPt hett, one niibt there -)et she smlled and chantd. ttnu1nely
with Ora.. County rnidents and
membtn olhcr own company.
It was weU after midn1pt, but
memben of the opcta company penied hardily. (Quite a contraSt to
the mort subdued troupe from thr
Ammcan Ballet Theatre.) Sills was a
tad concerned It the fnvohty of the
aroup, however, hopin• they re-
membered the next day's per-
fonnantt and didn't, party "too
much."
But the cast and crew had a reason
to make merry, characd with cel-
ebratina what Kendric~ called ... The
smoothest openma n1sht I can re-
member ... the show was almost
ftawltss.'' . '
To the untrained eye. the show
~Pl wa flawless, and party auem
1nchad1na Barry and SMrf &.Jla
and a.Aae and •• l1MllC raved
about the production. Even Silll
found littie to cnm1x. reputedly
totftl bKkstqr durina 1n1enn1Mion
only to adjust a cast rMmber's wia.
81rraporetu'5 poured out ns tra·
ditional 'after theater fart (indudina·
evff)'body'1 favorite. the aourmet •
pan.as). Decor was theatrical, wuh
feather masks hn11'l1 the wall•. As the
e"ent crept into the *te hours.
spmttd memben of the compiny
absconded with the masks-perhaps
fond of wunna them as they do on
s• 1n RaaoJeuo's orsY scene.
Dammuuve so~no Fa.1119 E ...
(Gilda. Raao&etto s dauaht.er, who had
one of the lOf\IC" dalh scenes in
musical theater) was arqanously
m1n1hna with the crowd -and eauna. When She ~ued an empty
plate back 9ver the pasa, bar lo a
snver. and he ~n to bus the dish,
she called after him, "No, fill it up'"
. ...... ,..... ... __ ...
Ma•ll•n Of dte CMI _....crew••~•• fe.titer •11111.
·loMIPr•~1111T-KerMlrtdl ............ leverf1 Stlls.ActonPllldt..,.... fc•nter pftotol wldt...,.. a.uett •rMI wife c.ttterlne.At""" ••~.;. •• ~en,....._ ae-.N. a.ert 8M HartJ ,.., .. ,.. . . .
ICICllU,I
By CHARLES GOREN
and OMAR SH ARIF
11D &ING IS DEAD
North-South vulnerable. East deals. .
WF.ST
NOltTH
•A J 4 1
Q lt 7 3
0 AQ l75
• 3
• 11'I1 6 3
Q I 5 4 1
EAST . "
Q " O K J4 1 0 10 ' . " •A J 10f1 5 4
SOUTH
• Q 5
Q AQJ 96
0 9 l
• 0 ' 6 2
• Sluiq South wu club manqer
Tom Snow. Alter his vulnerable
ovcrcall; North had more than
enousb to contract for pmc. His
~bid of two clubl limply added
u additional round to the biddina.
West led the klna of clubt, which
held. A diamond shift would have
been best, but West chose the ten of
spades. On the auction it wu most
unlikely that Wat could hold two
kinp, so dedarCT shoe up with the
ace and wu dd.iahted to see East's
k.ina come tumblina down.
A low trump from the table
fetched another kina from East, and
thinp were lookina up. Declarer
ruffed a club in dummy, came to
band with the queen of spades and
ruffed another club. After dlscard-
ina a diamond on the jack or
The biddina: spades, a spade ruff was the entry to
fMt Solltll Wac Nortll the closed hand to draw the out-
1 • l Q r.. l • standina trumps in three rounds.
Dtlll i Q r.. 4 Q Dummy came down to the ace-r.. ,.. ,.. queen or diamonds, while declarer
was left with a diamond and the
Opalina lead: Kant of • __ _;i:;:ueen= of clubs. East could not with-
Tbcrt uaed to be a bo1u.er aunt-at.arid the pressure when the last
lq New York brldae clubs who, ~was cubed.
becau.e of his pontlficatina while His last three carch were the kina-
kibiuiQI. earned the ok.k.name of jack of diamonds and ace of clubs,
The Rabbi. Tbc rule for which be and be could DOC afford to part with
became famous was: .. If the k.ina is any. He tried valiantly by discarc1ina
llftalaon, play tbc ac:el" He would the jack of diamonds, but declarer
bave been ddiabted by this band. made no mistake. A diamond to the
wbkh cropped up ln a duplicate ace f dled the now-ainaJeton kint.
pme at New York's renowned Cav-and declarer emeried with two over-
cndiab Club. tricks for an absolute top score.
I .. 'I. HO\ D
Giving departing guests water
was introduced as capital idea
Q.How c:an a poh&e hostess make
her ~ a.op aunhna hquor and
l&al1 lhinkina aboul aoi"I home.,
A. Can aen )OU v.hat IOIM h<nt·
c-.sian1111do1na• few )t•"llO in
-Wutunston. D C At 11 pm . they
aerve a round of plain 1« w-a1cr.
S.y.11111'1 bat for throat dry from so
mUcb con~uon.
If the kPf'-C~un of lnsh folklore
-.s dOint his job, be was makina
shoes.
5'ona in most diamond JC~lry
hi~ a ~Uowash cut. .
Car deMpcrl for cars have bttn
1ry1n1 to come up wuh some son of
ne-wfanaJed wind h1cld wiper o
luck. so far
You'd 1h1nk an)'bodY could draw a ftsh , bu1 a:ie.na illustrators say the
fish ''the hardest criuer of all to draw
WJtb llC'C'Uracy. Panly becautt of the
countlets ttala. Partly because the
colon fade immtdaatcly .. hen the fhh
dies.
Q. Who's buned 1n Al aponc's
arave? A. Nobody. ~ttttn tram-i:>6ed &he arave 1n Ch~'s Moun&
Ohvct CetMttty. So i'dauves ltfl &he
tombltone but moved the remain to
Mount Carmel Ccmetcfy •n Hitlii<k.
• Send a valentine to a veteran·
DEAR READERS: Did you know
there arc nearly 28 m1lhon veteran
hv1na IOday? These ve1erans. their
depeildenu and survivors of de-
ceased veterans make up nearly one·
thud of the nation's population.
On any 11ven day there arc appro~-
1mately 60.000 ve1erans ho p111 hzed
in 1he Ve&crans Admm1s1ration·s 172
medical centers nationwide. These
men and women served 1n World
War I. World War II. the Korean Wor
and the ~•r 1n Vietnam. The)
represent every race. color and creed
We can never repay these valiant 'vets
for the sacrifices they have made. but
wecandosometh1ngtochecrthcm up
and let them know that they have not
been forgotten It won't cost much
and 1t n~n·t take more than a few
minutes of :rour tame. Read on
Valentine's Da> ·~ Feb. 14 and 11
faJls dunn1 .. at1onal Salute 10
Hospitalized Veterans" ~eek Be a
sweetheart and send a valentine to a
vet. If you are Crtatl\ie, you m 11ht
even make one.
If you want to sign :rour name and
give an address. per'haps :rou'll get a
response. hould )OU care 10 send
more than one valentine. that would
~OK. 100. The more "alentanes ~ ou
send, the more heans you will
gladden. How about )Ou teachers out
there mak1n1 It a cla s project? The
valentines wall be d1v1ded amona all
the veterans ho p1tals an the nation
The addre 1s Ann landers·
Valenune Vet. Hines VA Hospital.
Hines. Ill .. 60141-1489
l'\'e aJwa)'s knov.n m)' rcaden arc
the most wannheartcd. canna people
in the ""orld Ltt's show the "ets how
much we apprcctate them ~nd )our
valentines toda) Mine 1s 101n1 out
this anemoon
love and Ktsst"s -6-NN L .\N().
ERS •••
DEAR A N -LA DER Three
}cars qo I sold my home in C'ah-
fomaa and mo.,,ed to Rhode Island to
be with m:r son. H1'1 wife suddenl) Id\
him and their t"'-0 little &irl VvhO
v.~rt IOand 14.
Thret months af\er I am"cd. m)
son was stncken with a heart atuack
and died. H 1!> wife came to the funeral
and we had a talk about the JJrl~ he
said she was not able to take cart of
them and that I could do v. hllc"er I
wished. so long as I didn't let them
become Y..Ords of the tate I dec1JcJ
to move back to Cahfom1a and take
the 11rls with me
I ha\e ra1~ seven ('h1ldrcn. Ann,
1ncludina two scu oftwtn l sull have
a 31 -)car~ld handicapped dauahtcr
at home. My htlle aranddauahtcrs arc
to ... cl) I can't understand ""hY their
mother rcfusn to make an effort to
kttp them with her
earl) c"Cf) ~eek she wntes tetlina
them how much she lo..,es them. This
real!) bums me up. The woman has
made no efTon wnate' er to suppon
them The t'ntirc burden bas been on
me.
Do )OU feel that I should allow this
dcrchct mothn-to continue to wnte
these letters? Please advise -RE-
SENTFUL IN RIVERSIDE
DEAR RIVER IDE. Your grand-
daU&hters need all the lo' e the> can
get. C:"en though their mother aban-
doned them. she m•> stall cared~>
Plt>asc find 1t an )our heart to fof'll"e
the woman and allow her to maintain
this bndge. Bndscs arc far ~ucr th.an
""-alls
Ex-Beatie McCartney to field
questions on Sovjet program
l y The Aasoctated Prns
LONDON -Former Beatie Paul
McCartaey ~1d unda) he'll \3) "we
want peace" ~hen he appears o n a
hve phone-an proV1m '41th So"1et
re 1dcnts th1) ~~k.
McCanne) has aarecd to field
quC1llons from the S0\11Ct Union on
the Bnta h Broadcasuna Corp 's
Russian Service for one hour Thu~
day
Mc<.annc). 411, ~1d the lkatles
\o\Cl'C popular 1n the Soviet Union in
the 1960s. m part for peak1n1 out on
peaa v.ath hat sonas such as "ltt It
Be .. and ";\II You Need Is Lo ... e."
"People al\o\a) used to tell u about
how 8catlC1' records and U\ 1s (blue
,ans) v.ert boOt~ and black-
markcted in Ru I.I. be said m 1he
interview v.11h Press Assoc1atJon. the
dome tic Bnti h ncvrs -aitl'\C).
"It alwa)' P "'C me a lot ofhopc and
made me 'h1nk that people and kids -.orldw1ck V."trt ba tC'all) the same."
M anncy 1n O\CmtX'r rcleatitd
1 new album. ··Back 1n the U R ;·
on the Soviet label Melod.a for
exclus1\C d1 tnbuuon 1n the '1et
Union The album went to 1he top of
SoY1ct pop__ music char1\ and 1ht
1n1t1al S0.000 cop1ts sold ou1 w11hin
two da)'S
LONDON -Hea.,,:rv.c11h1 bo\lnl
chameaon Mlkt Tysoo ~1d ~unda> he
does 'not r~ll> · want to 1et bad
t<>se&hcr With his e\lran cd Y..tfC
Robin C,1vens
"Bothofu . )OU ~now. we made b11
m1stakC'5 and I said thinas that I really
bouldn't ha'e 1d. l meant them.
bOt I shouldn"t ha"e made them
pubhcued.-T)son told anterv1t>wcr
0a ... 1d Frost on Bn ush 1elc\1\1on.
A k('d 1( he v. ant\ a r«onc1 hat1on
.. ,th hi$ tctren v.1fe, whom he h
\Ucd tor d1,ortt. THon said "well.
not rc,all ." ·
Tyson. 2.2. was sptakina fr m Las
Yeps ""here he 1s 1rainin1 for a fiaht
Feb. 2S •in t Bnta\h hca")""'C1Jht
champion Fr1nk Bruno.
kcd 1f he ' 10 control of ha hf.
now. TY1Qn said: "I'm lund of
tru trated at this p;irt1cular tame. hut
as far as bl-ans h•PP» I'm rontrnt
with what'\ go1n1 on •
H1) most pritcd P.O session are
"two d<>as that I hkc ·
FORT WORTH Tc-a -Willard
Scou, ~catherman on 8 · T\ \
"Toda)·· ~how. docs all ~rts oflhm1~
to add spitt to ha fort'(<&Sls, hut
Tbunday rould be a bit different
~hen he broadcast from tht uth·
v.c tern tock ·how.
Scott w11J gtl a chan'e to do the ~catMrfrom 1hebad. ofTc,.a ~.400-
pound lonpom.
It may be a first for ott, but 11
won't be for Te~ who has hterall)
been a upponina act for man~
cclcbnll O"er tht )ears
.\ctor arlton He ton rdu';C'd 1
chance to ndc him. but the Rev. Jtrrv
Falv.-cll t<><>k a tum. Another 10 mt~
the 17· ear-old stter v.--a former
tclcv1 ion penonahty Pt\ylh Gco,..t.
t11d Rohe Cov.den. Tu cnt.
P.ul McCartn ey
co~dcn said he doesn't know )T\ 1f
ou v.111 climb aboard. but ht W111
pro" 1de teps to help tum do so .
The \t.&11 of .. unday Toda)'" at
fK 1d unday mom1na they dNI
not know ott'i plans and no oee
from the v.ttlcc.b~ "Today·· show ...
in the office.
dilemma wall ontt mort be ah'e and ._1ck1"'° f~
can be otMaintd. promi finall) ,,.,11 be put an wnt•
Financial tatu of one \; to )OU also ~
anenuon.
PiltD (fdl, 19-March 0). You'll be ._.
contl'K1. Empha" -.111 bt on prOductton. ~
public Matton t~tton alto ttnwn aroad ..,, 1
lh•P. men.al 1 .. tu lmpnnt tt)lt. aMtn .....,. t.
dyMmK' fMftnp'.
IP J It •.._ maTllDAY d""8 FCbi_,. bvrdm wdl bt aiW. .,_ ... Will ,.... ;lbr 11¥&.
Rdel1Gnala•unC121111-..wv1Wll 1nllimt••,..
wtH1 .. IO In ID~ ....... ll'"IJll•lllla. .. Yoe lllw ""..-"*'·•Fl't'illet ..... w .•.,. Yoe• betelf ... =Rt.1RlialylOMW-.... ....... -y .... LIR.~M IRl.llil9fl•'I •1t..... .
I
M DAILY ,.LOT/~ • .1MU9rY 2~. 1t88
I\ l.IS l'l"\f9S
9yTOMTITUS
~ ..... c.. .......
To Neil Simo~,_~thina ii sacred wbell it comes to pcanifta material for ~comedy -not even the book of Joti in the Bible.
This was the unlikely source for Simon's .. God's Favorite·· a detour
into fantasy for America'• premier
comic playwriaht several )Un qo.
It'• been a rew years since this
particular show (a technical niaht-marc) wu produced on a local
community theater IU!le. and the
Costa Meta Civic Playhouse is rcviv-int this Simonized Scripture lesson
1!•th a comic venteance.
Thtre arc two principal inpedients _... apan from an imaainative set
desiper -~uired (Qr a successful production of· God's favorite," and
· director Doua Black has secured both
of them in his cutina of· Dimitri
Christy and Elion Harold. Christ)'
el\llCts the relwous ualot busa-
netaman whole faith is put IO the extreme test, while Harolil takes on
the plum role of the heavenly rneMen-eer who's sent from the ''bit 0 ..
upstajrs to implement the tonnents.
Christy's milliop 11 p&rticularly
dift"tcuh -playina heavy drama 11&in1t a blckaiouild of whiplash
comedy lines -but the IC1or briap it
otr with skill and power. As each
successive~ (fire, dilCUC. dtv-
astation) is visited on him, Christy
responds with eloquence, even when
oommunicatina throup sore lipt in
the rubble of the final scene.
The pan of J.c messe~. Sidney
Lipton,. is a marvelou1 Simon crea-
tion (piaycd on Broadway by Charles
Nelson Reilly). Harold skillfully cap-
tures the ethnic New York flavor of
his nebbi1h-likc charlcter and spurs
the ~ of the show relendeslly. . A mOlt impm&ivt tonlribu&ion to
W1th0ut him, we would have tbnlaow is ia tbc technical c«ectund
ArcbiMJd Macl..tiib'1 "J.8. ... with let .. of£uemc McDonald. who him, the show ii 1 c~k ~ becomes 1 bit carried
comedy with lauah lines in I.be most away in tbe ftrlal act. The acrid ameU
une1pecied plecet. Of amou ii all too real for: the first few
Rich JICbon. • •tcllar you~ ICtOt rows of I.be audience .in t~ smaJJ from~ COii& Ce>Ue9e..i1 ucel· theater.
ient u dk.rtprobate IOll w\Olc lack of "Ood's F•vorite" is 1 pnme c1.1m-faith conltaia1 hilariously with bis pie of the mid•point of Simon's
fatber'ncal. Loretla u.popveu fJne prolific career, durina which the ~ u Chri11y'1 ~pered, · playwr!aht delved into more serious one-dimenlioaal wife, wbo clin,p to 1op1e11'ut ~ned his one-line pa
her jewelry in the midst of at1aek. It's also one of his few plays catastrophe. with an accent on fantasy.
• Tbe otbcr two children, essentially Three more weeks of productfoo bacqround chanciers with a feW remain for ·•0oct•1 Favorite," with ni~ moments early on, &ft inter-DttfOrmances Thundays' thro\IS.h
preted by Jefr Nddcr and Kristen Satur48)'1 at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2
Schuatenek. Sylvain Pica.rd and :m. until Feb. 12 at the Civic
Adelina Peck arc effective u the yhou1t, 611 Hamilton St.1 Costa
foreip-bom 1erv1nt1 who stand by eta\. Reservations are taun · at
tbe fimily with outlandish loyalty. 6'°"5"69. •
I 1:00 I &:30 I 1:00 I '7:3o I 8:00 I 8:3o I 9:oo I 1:30 11o:ooI1o:3o111:oo I11 :3o l
fJ ..... =.
.....
Ou .....
--"°" Connect'n ,., ....
Court
M•A'S'H
011111111 a WllHI ol
... '-tun.
liLEOft,,G~HE
l:JIJ • ..,,, ......
• •L If-•HT 11-L
Wl'IMlof
FCNtuN
PYt .. the lord
TEQUILA SUNRISE IR) •
........ ~ ... ,.._ ... --· lt:4U• tdt PtJI ltJU
DUP STAR SIX IA)
""" ._ te111t " '" m
PUMPKIN HEAD (A) .... ............ ,
AAUHIAl llU ,..,,r
OLIVER a COWAIV (G) ................
™lu\~lfD
.... , ........ flll
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IOIWMll I I I 1lfl9
11,.,, ..... ~.= '°"' ..-0.lllWI ..... .... ,.. ....,.,..tea 1gm .. ..,___!_ .... , .. _ .. , ... -. .• ......
The ....
of ClrlOll
Tul
Ne• ~. Wiidt Cunllll Low
Allalf Luc
NIWI Malloy. RutllclOt Alllftlo Mall
IC I<\ I l <M
Schwartz elo.q"ent With Camerata
ly MICHAEL RYDlYNSKI
Diiiy""' Corr• ... ..,.
The playina of violinist Sefliu
Schwartl distinauished the latest
Mozart Camerata concen Sunday
evenina at Santa Ana Hiah School
Auditorium. As part of the chamber orchestra's
annual all-Moun m entitled
"Hal)J>y Binhday, Mozart." Schw•nz
otrettd the Viohn Conceno No. 5 in
A M~or, K. 219, with more than the
requisite amount of eJtpression and
elan.
Displayina a masterful bowina
technique that applied just the proper
amount of prnsure on the st'nnas at
almosunyaiven time. Schwarupve
IT'S
EVERYBODY'S
BUSINESS
WHAT IS BEING DONE NOW IN ORANGE
COUNTY TO HELP SOLVE CHI LO CARE
PROBLEMS?
For More Information Watch KOCE 50 on
January 25 at 8:00 p.m. and Call (714) 895-5050
for Your,,_ Booklets .
Orange County has the second largest chtkS
populltion In Cllffomll. A recent IUIVty shows
that the .,, of affordlble and qullty chlkt care
II one of the top lhrte c:oncemt of the Orqe
County community. Set Ytiaat loc:ll government.
bu .... and tducationll lnltleutlona lrl
dotl'I ID*-gt0Wtng cMd en neldt In
()qngt C:OUnty.
-·
-
ll'1)'d1,.t\I
Local gun dealer
begins assa·uit on
bloOdy weapons
Randy Guell sells auns. Jots of them. But the pttjicknt of ~ Grant Boy~ store in Coua Mesa couldn•t buy the rup~ of 1ee1na one onus auns used to massacre children.
Vasaons of the St~lcton school bloodkttina hdped spur
ihe llOre to announce 1t would tet out of the business of scllina
auault ~pons like the one used by Patrick Purdy to kill five
schoolchaldten and wound 29 other younpters and a aeac:her.
. . Some sun deaJcrs criticized the d«ision as a danam>us
anfnnaement to freedom. That point of view nqlects the
~Dl!Cf these auns pose to the ultimate freedom. the naht to
hve.
. We would like to add our voice to law enforcement•"
wbtch seeks to safeguard that right. Costa Mesa Police Chief
Dave Sl_\owden and Los An,eles Pohce Chief Daryl Gates were quack to support the Grant Boys• decision.
··1. applaud the Grant Boys ... Snowden sajd. ••a think they
are dom& what's nght."
Both police chiefs joined the arowing pubhc clamor for
the Nati9nal Ra~e Association to take a·stand against semt·
automatic or anti-personnel weapons, which are used only to
take human lives. ·
Gun~ such '' the AK-47 assault rifle or the Uzi
submachine gun have no role in hunting or taract shooting.
Guns .capable . of firing 100 rounds every minute were
ex.elusively deslJlled and manufactured to kill people.
~t;side of the military and special law enforcement
apphcauons. the assault weapqns are popular wuh drua
traffickers. bi& city street gangs ftke those that terronze Los
AnF~ and maniacal murderers bk.e Stockton's Purdy.
With the blood of children stm fresh on the schoolyard
plaw.ound •. it seems appropriate for other aun dealers to
ex.amine their consciences and follow the example set by the
Grant Boys. · )'es. the store's policy is still open to question. It will
continue to sell other guns, including huntin& rifles and
handauns. And no. the decision doesn't 'uarantec that
another mamac with another kind of rifle won t go o n another
bloody ramJ>l&e.
~ut who can remember seeing those tiny little bodies
lyina 1.n a ~t~lcton schoolyard, and hearing the h)'sterical cries
of tJiesr an~v1na parents and not want to try to prevent it?
Stoppina the sale of assault weapons is a good first step.
Outlawana their sale is a logical second one.
Opinions ex'preued In this ~ are thOM of IM Deify Pilot. Other ~-sN HI 1ISon1'* pege are thoM of their au1hora and artl111. R~1·
CiOIM*ltl .. wwtted end may be llint to The Deily Pllol, P 0 . BoJC 15e0, eo.e. ..... t2t2t.
O I 111 IC \ 0 I ( 1-:'
v
Money for schools
If the passage of Propos1t1on 98 expressed anything. 1t
was a desire to improve the state's public schools by
guaranteeing them a propon1on of the state budget. Wisely or
unwasely, it took considerable budgeting authority out of the
Lqaslature·s hands and wrote tt into the constitution. It
would thus make a mock.cry of the voters' intentions 1f. at a
time when California has the most crowded classes in the
nation and when it is struggling to upgrade academic
pcrf'o~~ancc, all the proceeds were ~o be dumped on the
barpinin& table and spent only on paying more for the things
the schools are already getting.
State Sen. Gary Hart•s S898 is designed to preclude that
by requirina that at least half of the additional $215 million
that will be generated by Proposition 98 this fiscal year be
designated to lower class size; the balance could to to other
purposes: 1nstrucuonal materials, student services. tafl
development and teacher salaries. That doesn't mean that the
state ought not to be improving s:ilaries. especially where
performance ment.s tt; it's only to sa) that other needs art far
more uricnt. .. On the other side 1s Ed Fogha. head of the California
Teachers Assoc1ataon, who seems to oppasc any formula and
seems to bchcve that since the CT A pushed the measure. its
members ou&ht to get the benefits.
Between them. Han·s proposal seems a reasonable
attcm_pt to reach a middle ground. provided that its term arc
specific enough that the money socs to measurable class stzc
rcdUC11on 1n fields and acuviues. like writana. ~here it's
relevant. and to other purposes directly related to tmpro\c-
ment in program quality. That's what the voters thought the)
were sup~n1n11n November and what they, and the tau~·s
schootch1ldren. deserve. '
TH Mod~•"' Bee
Resea rch costs
Does the world rully need another husc telescope?
San D1qo tatc University hopes to build. at a cost ohs
much., S2 million. a I 00.inch opttcal telc$COpc at its Mount
4'una Observatory. where the umvcrsity alrcad) operate a
40-inch tcletCOpe for educational purposes -The new device ""ould also serve a significant research
functioa . Astronomers will use the telescope to study the
nature of stars and to add to our understanding of the phy ical
uniVUK. T,chnol()Jic.al advances have reduced the co t of
buildi"' uch complell scacntific structures. and other
uniwnltia are e•oected to take advan1aac or that fan. SDSU's plan coutd flelp'the institution stay m the forefront of 8*0D0Cftl rnrarch and discovery. nae's aood for SOSU -and ifs also aood for San Dies<>
Couty aftd.,thc cnt1rc a&a&c. Cahfornia's robust tt0nomy
own much of an health to a SUOAI foundation in tM scimc:n.
Three or the nation·s 100.plus.iQctl tclcsCopn arc located in
Calitomia ... 'A ~or new venture here is sure to enhance the
"'lion's posation 1n an uciti~ devcl:f.cld. .,.. .. W1111 ... ., a CaJee
I
.... ... ...... ..... , ..
.. a.
1-. ....
CllJtYlll ... ._ ....... ----......... ... ...__
lllllH'
Majority
vote does
not prove
evolution
To th~ Editor: l read w1tb interest the ilrtid8 on .. New Evohmoo Po&iCy AdoDlel by
State Board o(Educalioa~I')·
The pubhc school syaem has al~
~n tcachina evolution theory in SCte~ classrOoms. The l&ale D06cY •
will make the ieachina of evolution
more dosmatic.
The saddest thins is that those
~students wh.o do not ~t ~voluuon will probably fall in bioloi>' classes.
thus d.asabhna them from enterina
any hfe science related carttn, such
as med1c1ne.
Science can be broadly divided into
two ca teaories: operations $Cicnce
and ongins 9C1ence.
GOP women feeling_
more clout in county
Operations science is cmpincal.
venfiablc and rrovable. Both friends and cnemtcs o the subject will come
to the same cooclus1ons about that
sub1ect. 1 define this to be puinc
ob1ecuv1ty. The Chinest blvt • sayina that truly verifiable fec:u are beyond dispute. An example is the
law of lf8V1t)'. Anyone defy1na the law Of aravity can jUmp from a hiA)\ ~building. and will suffer from me
consequences.
Blowina our cover 1s probably a dumb thina to do. However, I can't
keep my mouth shut any lonFr. J am
still fired up from what I heard and
debeted at the Republican Women's l..adtnhip Conference on Jan. 14 at
UCl's University Oub. We were
chaJltqed on so man y issues. My
poliucal Juices are still at full boil.
If you read mycolumn,)OU know I am dedicated to gettina Republican
women to stop being such docile
sheep and excn some leadership and
power.
To that end, under the creative ~nius of Lynn Turner. a think tank
and nctworkjng opponunity for
selected Oranac Count y Repubhcan
women powerhouses was f ormcd.
The Sood old boys call themselves the Lincoln Club. Ourd1stafT mcama-tion 1s "The Washington Group."
You can &et a feel for whether v..c
mean business 01 not when )'OU look
at our board of directors. Th<' prC's1-dcnt 1s a professor of pohucal science
at Cal State. Fullcnon. Dr. Barbara
Stone. Execuuvc d1rcc1or Turner 1s a
lon1t1mc elected mcm~r of the
central commmcc. and among 01her
thinas. past president of sc"cral Republican Federated clubs..
The rest of the board consists of
Sen. Marian Bergeson. Charlotte
Mousel (Cahfomia's Nattonal Re-
public.an committeeman and second vice piu1dent of the National Fedcr-
allOn of Republican Women) Jane
Crosby (chairman of the C1hfom1a
State Bicentennial Committee on the
U.S. Cohstituuon), Ann Botts. Butch-1c Poner and Ellie Faber (all pa~t
prcstdents of different area Re-
publican clubs) and mt'.
rhc Washin&too Group sponsored
the day-Iona conference on timely
pohttcal topics.
. I would use up my whole column 1f
I shared what v.c learned 1n the
momma session about the 1ud1c1al
system. women an man gemcnt pos-
1t1ons. and key topics of l"Owtb. cunaahng pomoaraphy and women's
issues. We were absolutel) frank anJ
candtd (that's wh y T loved 11) in tht'
afternoon scs ion We don't 1n v11~ rcponcrs so that we cnn fiiht things
out That is wh)' )OU ha\C not heard
about us and v.hat v.c've ac-
comphshcd I hope I am not
drummcd out ofthc corpsfor hanng
a few key "mtndboalcrs ··
The topic on enc program v.as
.. honcom1n15and Improvements 1n
Current Camp:ugn Prattt«s and
Reform .. It hould ha\C been 111ted.
"How Did Cahforn1n Republicans
Get into uch a Poht1c.al Mess''"
The panel was composed of thC'\t'
sensational women B:t) Buchanan.
campaign consultant and former tJ S
Treasurer. Eileen Padberg. camp;ugn
consultant (whose clients have in-
cluded Preside nt George Bush and
Chnt Eastwood). June Wallin (prcs1-
dcn1 of the Cahfomu1 Federation of
Repubhcan Women) and Mama
Tooke)' (precinct director. C'a hfom1a
Republican Pan)> After a prchm1naf') o\Crv1cv. of the
SlllC Of the late V.C I Ol lo the gut
question What can Republicans do
now that Go"emor Dcukme11:in an-nounced that he ""111 not run for rc:-clectJOn.,.
Hov. did v.~ let ou~hcs get into The onains science 1s the area that
such a M>rT)' state that v.e ha"e no one the theory of evolution is vulnttablc.
groomed for suCC'CSSion'> The Demo-Because the theory of evolution
era ts arc literally panttna an the w1 "P-pury~>ns to tell the story of the history We asked the penel to cntique the of life on earth. 1t is this aspect that
field We rcvicv.ed the polittcal makes 1t debatable. The fanber beck
ba.g.agc on the candidat~ who ha"c we utrapolatc, the. more unhkely 1t
sajd tht') would hkc 10 run There becomes. were no winners 1n that lot ;rt>ere is a k~y upcct of oriains
"Call ~tc Wilson home," some-saence. M.,onty vote does not one suucs1ed. The consensus wn determine the ~th. Not only do we
that the pan) v.ould have to~ really not know the d1~nt pest1 cv~n some
desperate to sacrifice our one and events. happened 1n Qur hfe tune .can
only national star. sometimes ha-.:e no unlque 9oluuon.
Readers of this column know that l . case tn point 1s the true nature of the
am high on Peter Ucbcrroth. The rap assass1nat1on of John .F. Kennedy.
on Uctxrroth that 1 heird from the Thett are SC\.cral theones a to how
audience. not the campa1an consult· he m1aht have been kt~. W.ho then ants. was that he sttms to want the have the exact ll<>ry: Stones that oom1nat1on on a silver platter and utrapolate irtto millions or even
might not ao out and campaian hard btlhons of yean can at be$t bt for the offict l truly beheve that if he educated I~ There mu.st not~ commns himself to run (and he n't any doamausm in"olvcd. The s1tu-
be CO) too much tonier>. he ....,111 be a at1on 1 ~t tJus •n>'WIY. formidable ciod1d.ate While rm Ev~ubOfU$lS have b!oulht forth a
pumn' t<>1cther th1 dream 11ckct I '«rhok $1)CCtrum oft.loon. spoon fed want Sen. Manan lkrieson to 10 for into Lhc mouths. of m1lhoM of our
hcutenanl IO\<Ctnor. )OUl\&tt aencnuon. and eft«\ivcly
No o~ has to tell her hov. to bramv.-uhcd them into a mcchant1lle . campa.ian v.orldv1cv.. M'-K.h ha.rm bu been done in the public school Ma>~
8) the WI).~ also tnc:d to hautc thal's why most 1enaton and con-
out v.-hat former Go" JclT) Bruwn i aressmen leOd t.bcit children to
up 10 Have )Ou 0011~ he's put on private .chools. sa ~ cloth and a hes and 1s runnma Another as~ of oriains sci~ 1s
hard for. state Dcmocr.u1c Cha1nnan. that 1t has no fu.nctionaJ vaJue. It
IJOb hes spit on 1n the past imply provtdcs sorm ph1lo1optuoaJ
C\'Ct. never undcr'C$t1m1tc Mr or rchg1ous fcd1np for its adherents
Brov. n He's d19e0vered the loophole upposc now the tte of the earth 1s
1n Prop 73. the campa1an reform doubled. Docs n affect an)'th1na at
1ni11a11vc While contnbut1ons to prcsient" Will the clock run slo~ candidates or officeholders are hm-Will our can last loncer1 Will we live
1tcd. the state pan) ha no rcstnct10M lonscr., on the monc)' 1t coll«ts to rqatcr On the oaher hand. 1f now by some and get out the votes unknown magjc. thcagcoflhecanJus Obviou~ly: in pohu thert 15 more hal\ed Another set of quC'St1om can
than one v.-a\ to skin a cat. And v.ho be raised . ..,hould kno~ that ~tter than <.ah· Onains 5C1tnce has no functional
fom11's cat ""Ith nine hvc c;u,. \alue Marbe )OU say the b~ of Moonbeam'> 20 000 ac<>IOgJsts 1n Amcnca will be affected. Thal 1sh1&hlyunhktly. MOil
Jadlt RH,.er 11 • rrtlh•I •I scologasts do not deal w1lb the• of
ewport Bnd ud • /wmer llJAfW' the earth. They deal with the evCf)-
e/ WI dry. day observable events and not the•
............................................................................ __ ofthecanh.suchashowto11K'f'CMC 011 production. how to make iuobol
I am 11ving )'Ou only a cuucle of a
thumbnail review of this board's
outside accomplishments. Take m) word for 1L.. this 1s a hea,)-<iuty
aroup. The) have the brains and the
follow1n1 to O'J"'n1ze anything (I
ccruunly hope l m not making the
boys feel threatened an an) way.)
There's no question about
one Reagan accomplishment
ly TOM CLANIN
The Ronald Reagan pr«1dcnl)' 1s
now behind us and 11 1s up to the
h15tonans. political an.lysts and stlf-
procla1mcd pundits to assess the pa t
c1&)\t years and tell us 1f they v.'trt
&Ood times or bad umn and \\'here
R~n·s place 1n history will be.
Did the lut cipt years result in a
real dctcntt that 1s the first step 10 an
can" o( aJobel tension ot lWiJI the
Rcapn Adm1n1 trauon be re·
membered u wandenoa lost in the
pohtal dctcns of the Middle East
and Central Amenca for tv.'O terms?
Will hastonans sat Ronald Rcapn
pve AmmQ bed. 1u pndc and put
its people beck to ~ork. or v.ill they
conchNk he bclpcd Amenca close its ~ to lfOWlna P<>"crt)'. homclns families and lhedctenorat1on ofa"1I
rilhts? l19iele arc question that will be
ddM!acd for many )Un and onl)' the penpcct1ve of ume .. ,11 ahc con-
duti~ answen to the Rcqan kpcy.
But thae '' no doubt of one
accompl11hmcn1 of the Rcaain White HCMllt ~....: IW cnckd talk of ibc 20.
,.r ~ntial cutK. Ronatd Re·
... ti tM ftnt Un1aed \Itel Pft'SI·
*91 lllKlt William Henry Harrit0n to
be._. ••a )'a" md•na tn zrro and
Id die .. oMc'e. h"t ..., IO *rua otr t~ 0)11'1
..,. ~Y edvoata and ~ PfOIM>MiAts " koou _. -,.1 min. lill e.o-do you
W.Wm ll•IW .... IMtt I no ...S ... llilim Uatled Suta
Ml f ll 8'J!l Jf»il"' .t.rtt IW hu 1 • 1f/l 1. I.I ... ,rove htt
... • -cww • t ..... of
~ ... -.
1840, cauJ.ht pneumonia dunns his
1nau1unit1on and died 30 da) later
Abraham I 1ncoln v.as elected 1n
1860.JUSl IO lime tO JU Ide the country tl'lrou&h a blood) ( t\ 11 War He v.-a\
rc~lec1cd in 1864. five da~ after
Gcn.Robcn Lee urrtndcred hi
Conf~ratc forces on pnl 9. I 65. he wa hot b John v. 1lkc\ Booth. 1
C onfedtratc )'mpath1zcr. and died
the M>.t day
James Garfield. elected 1n I O. alsodtcd from an a s 1n 's hullel He .,,-as shot b)' a mentally dmurbcd
off t«Stt~cr. Chark Gu1teua. and
died from the v.ound three month
later. on pt 19 19 t.
With m Mcll.1nlc). ""' elected in I 96 and re<lcctcd 1n 1900 wa hot
by an an.ar\:hl t, Leon iota u . on
Sept. 6. 1liKl1. and died ciaf't da>
later. lron1(all) h1 utct wr.
Theodore R \Cit, at fi~t rc1ectcd
the vice pm1dcn111I nommauon
-.hen It W.$ oOcred tn IQ()() b«au
he .. -.nted to be prrs1<knt and
bcht\ed b«omtn \<let ~ 1dcnt
..-ould ca't him into poliu J obh·
vion R00tevelt wa cl«ted &o a
tcc0nd term a ptt idcnt in 1904
Warren G. Hardina. ctteted an
1920. became 111 "tulc h1' adm1nis-
trat1on wa embroiled in• COfTUpt1on k.~l and died Au 2. 1923.
frankhn Roo "Cit v.a tu"'
et«tcd 1n 1932. prom1 "''the nauon
a• md to the Great OePftUion and
IW'OIUlliltOft, He WU ~1«1cd U• l 9.)6. 1940 and 1944, bri .. 1. IM
naUOft '*' of a ~ and into Wortd War II. HcdicdApnl 14 llMS.
ptot.bty panly frvm tlw nhaultKJn of'taditW thr natioa b' more than 12 ~ ,._.,... 9UC'h troubled u..s
h WM Ottftonat R.-wtk's ~ 11•• ~·r •Ml tlln•biht1 . 1nclt I Ed,.. 1'-t pra..... Ne-
·--~ .. 1'47 '°
Comments·
welcome
cconom1cal, find a better aradc of
mineral, reduce earthquake damqe.
Cl
E\cn 1f tbc qe of the canb has a ~t t>nnns to the hves of plosists.
v.ould the) die 1f lhc earth lS >OUO&Cf
than they tbinktt Ma~be that 1s Why
ttK cvoluuonast ph)'$te&St John Eddy
1d that he as probably comfonabk
with Bishop Ussbcn' date for the•
ofthc ca.nh AlthoU&h the story of Oenesis in the Bible dOC'S not fit into the scic~ classroom. whenever ona;ms are dis~
cu sccS. both pros and c:ons must also ~ ~ntcd OthC1W1sc. the public
school Wlll bttome effcctJve brain
v.ash machines to g1\e our ch•ldrcn a
mcchani tic and 11hc1st1c wortd view
C'HRISC'H I Costa MCY
TODi\l I' HISTOR\
•
f
'V
' AlO 0Nnge Coeet OAaLY PILOT/ Tu.cs.y, JMuery 14, 1NI
by Bii Keane COU1ITSll CUL TVU bY Meratta & Marana
"I tried to get a hamster but my
mom doesn't have time to look
after another pet."
llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson
"You should know the difference between
an earthquake and Marmaduke hiding
from the thunder and lightning.·•
PEANUTS
HE WON~! OLAF WON!!!
'(OUR BROTHER WON THE
''U6LV 006" CONTEST!
--z;
GARFIELD
'fME &EQROOM I!> FREEZIN<S IMIS
MORNINCt
DRABBLE
M ;55 ~AMM ERS
FAVO~\ TE: £)(.C,U5 E
I HAVE 10
Do M'/ NAiLS
·---.,,._.. ...
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
~ i·'l.4
J
I
I
\.
J'M N:JTA!W4~ UMDERFOOT. l SPE~O
A LOT Of~ IH '1JUR AAIR ,Y'KtON ! "
by Charles M. Schulz
RATS !
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
~KNOWVert 1 r1~KeSA Wl-!rt..E
10 a>lJN'f IHJf 1
ARLO AND JANIS
~ YOO'\'£.~ rT J.IJ,j
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
JUDGE PARKER
FUNKY WllfKERBEAN
I~
DOOIQtSBURY by Garry Trudeau
by Lynn Johnston
-I t"'EAN
f'tAL ll ~~
by Jeff MacNelly
by Tom Batluk
Oce•n View H..,.., 6 ·foot· 7 Todd Norman
fSSJ putts down • rebound from within the
> D..,. ..... _,...,, LM "~
th• tr••P of Mater Del's Chari•• Andres In
recent non·lea9u• basketball action.
-----
•
TUESDAY. JANUARY 2~1 1919
OV's Norman
still de~ating
2t~~r,it~i~u.!~!~!..~. '.Patton's
at1on to that of a basketball pla)er doubt to the next who saps With I Collete before hlS troops senior season 11 over. Sten in basketball ·:Todd sho~ld have no problem f" (with dastracuons from football),"
ly KHtK WOLCOTT ,,..,. ..... c.., ........
Jn his Mind's eye. Ocean View
Htab}s Todd Norman secs himself
weanng«lift'effnt colors -blue and
gold, cnmson and &old. or JUSI plam
sold.
Norman, a 6-foot-6111. 24S-pound
hnebac.kcrandoffen ive ltneman. has
narrowed bis football scholarship
options to three colleaes. Come
September, he will don the school
colors' of either UCLA. U or Notre
Dame.
Until then, Norman wtll still be m
aold. that is the canhnal and 1old
worn by the Seahwawlcs of OCttn
View. Norman 1s the team's ~ntcr.
an alumina s1&ht to his opponents 1n
any color he chooSC1 10 wear.
Not only 1s Norman tall. wade,
strona and aggrcs.s1ve, he 1s among
Orange County's pttp leaders an
sconng (19.S points per pmc), re-
boundinJ (9.S) and field goal per-
centage \62 percent). But even with
thi.s abihty to crash the boards and
inlc the jumper, hardly a day goes by
without someone askana him where
he wants to pl1y footbatr
"I try not to let 1t ict to me,"
Norman said "I try to keep straight
what spon I'm 1n. There's reall) no
problem when I'm on the cou~ then
u 's all basketbaJI. But once I'm ofTthe
court I think a lot about football,
too."
Norman sat down wuh Jim Harris.
the Seahawks' basketball coach, prior
to the start of the season and talked
about the media h)'pe surrounding
his p1gsJun career. and about makma
the trans111on from football to bask.et-
Harris said. "He's basketbaJl-orien-p • d ted and very competitive. He's our 01'· ~a
team leader. He's1on~Jnp0nsib11tcy· '.iJ \;;-
now and the team focuses on him to
... ::
~
ge~h.!rp~ptains Norman and He hopes they' re
senior auard Mike Frohn. the Sea-ready tO defend h1wks arc 13-7 this season. They ire
ranked No. 9 in Orange County and h i'gh Credentr"afS an the thick of a wide open Sunset
uague race.
Last year Ocean V1cwwon that ra~
with a 9·1 record (1 ~8 overall) and
reached the CIF S-A quarterfinals.
The sa1hna hasn't been quite' so
smooth this season
"This year's team IS rcaJ I)' strange. I
think wt' hive more talent than last
)CU but ~c ha"cn't been playing up
to our 1b1ht)," orman said, follo~
ing last Fnda) 's wan o"cr Manna
wfi1ch left the Seahawks at 3·2 an
league pla)
"We ve been banging our heads
ap1nst a '-"Ill stn~ last summer
tf)·ing to find out what 1s going wroni.
but we can't seem to get 1t together.
Wt lost to Hun1maton Beach carltcr this season. Wuh the talent we ha,,e
on our team. that shouldn't happen."
Part of the problem could be that
people i re finally W1 mg up to the
llknt orm~n hlS, himself. After
a"cragina 14 points and 6.S rrbound.s
a game last )Cir, orman's numbers
have swelled in ~•zc to match h1
1mpos1n1 frame.
Both his stature and hts stats arc
drawma noucc. BC'tausc of this,
Norman must work a.aamst a number
of frustrating defenses.
"Chan&ina two's, box.cs and one.
double-downs. tnple-downs and saa-
1.-..aw lff NOttMAN/82'
I
Wclromet0Athens.G1., 1n late
May.
Therc'sa p1lc of Joyous Anteaters
conjl'Cgltingcentercoun an the
University ofGeorsja tennis
stadium, fTothingat the trunk. eel·
ebrattnJan NCAA tennncham·
p1onsh1p There's General Patton
&l v1na hts Tank a hua.
It's finally happened. The UCI
men's tennis team has defeated
UCLA to win the tttk.
"This 1s such an incredible fcchn1
because we've worked toward this for
so long." Coach Grca Patton says.
"h's ~lly a feeling that's hard to
descnbe.
"h 's like having found out you just
won SSO mtlhoo in the lottery, betna
Frankte Avalon surrounded by all the
Jirls man old beach movac. s1tt1naon
a tropical beach s1pp1na1 pt na collada
and w11ch1n1a beautiful sunset. and
com 1 na to a plush oasas after tram pl-•
IOJ throuah the dcsen for five days •
v.-1thout water. all wrao~ tn to one.'
Buuzzzuzznnnf Well, it could
be ltke that. Patton wakes up and
sh1lccs his head, climbs out ofbcd and
heads foranotbcTdayofwork th1nk1n~ .. )'Cl.JUSt a~ne 1t."
Th1t s Patton. tbe ultimate
f,.._atelffl'ATTON/!Ul
Super
is still
··superb
Riverside can be·some Tigers at home.
Pirates have a big task ahead Wednesday night nS)\1 now. Tl1C1rstren1th 1s '""de and
that'-i ourwt'akn~s. The) beat
C)'prc sby 18and(RanchoSanuaao)
b) l8and(Rancho 5ant1ago)beat us
MIAMI (AP) -A ~at final
guartcr saved a bad ""~le. And so
Super Bowl XXlll, shoved bnefly ofT
the spon1ng world's tagc by tclt-
v1s1on pictures of a nary )'O ung blacks
burning and looting 1n the stm:ts.
exited Miami suit a star.
For openers. the N fl turned a tidy
St 6.8 mil hon profit from the game.
which under the leaaue's revcnuc-
shanni _ plan. translates tnt.o a
$600.000 bonanza for each cl ub
For scc:ond.s. o"em11h1 Nielsen
r111ngs showed that tclcvtSton stls an
6S ptrcent of Amcnca n household~
-almost two of ever) th l"C'C -""ere
on for the 49crs' dramatic final dnvc
Both v.-ere bi.a 1mpro"emerts over
last year's d1sappointina numbers
But most 1mponan1. Super Bowl
XXlll dcliveTC<I drama enough to be
remembered -first and foremost -
for the same. not for a muuina an
M1am1 •
.. The cvenu earlier 1n the V.'C'Ck
were and remain a real Lrqedy." said
NFL spokesman Joe Browne. filltna
1n after Comma 1oner Pete Rozelle
returned to New York to attend his
stc~n·s funeral. . •We were asked several urnu\tr"hat
wt -the NFL -were aoins to do
about 1t. Were we 101na 10 bnna
nation.al kaders 1n to help quell some
of the d11turbancn m Ovenown and
Laben}' Caty" Were we 101n1 to work
hand·1n-hand wtth the 1uthont1cs1
"But the flCl 1 ," Browne con-
tinued, ••that once lhe aamt was O\.cr
... tM tent was cloted and the local
lcadcrl were in Chal'JC.JUSt IS they ll't in cha~. properly. for the other ~I wcas of the )Cir ••"fhe tqinnana of the wttk tqan
on a note Of tr..,rdy, and noth1n1 11 aou-a to ov,rsbedow th1t. ht, )'CS."
he ldck<I. ••for what ~ were down
here for, which 11 a football pme, ~ ~re fonunate to have 1 aood one "
ulC'tl)' how fonur:! ~ns )'Cl ,...... ,,,
No. 1t '-"On't bcqu11c the same as
before, when Tandy G1l1ts· Orange
Coast Pirates pulled ofT a 45-41
basketball victory O\.er h1i hl)-re-
garded R1vcrs1de
And. )CS. Orange Coast College is
enJOYln& tremendous success this
season, far and bc )ond the pre-season
foresight ofG1ll1s
But for the Pt rates. Wednesda)'
ntght's~mc at R1 vers1de City Col-
lege. for first place in thcOransl'
Efl_'lpire Conference, wall be a htt lc
different.
Th.at's because R1vers1de 1s a little
different.
OtfTcrent fro m v.hen OCC' defeated
theT1gcrsmthc M1 nJacmto
Tournament 1n November
.. That was 1n the second wed . of the
season,"G1l hs sa1d. "And (of"\
mctt (R1vers1de'sc.xcellcnt shoot-
ingauard)d1dn'1 pla) that game
The) 'rca lotd1fTercn1 no'-" than the\
were then. Bob 8o)d(the Tigers' c ch. and former L. C coach) \\-3\
tl)tng to establtsh somcd1sc1phncon
that team
"The) '"egot t\lt<O 01' 1s1on I pla)
crs (Bobb) Jo)ce and EncGru>)on
their team, gu)'S who fell into the
Prop. 48 category. So the> wen• tl)1ng
1ocstabhsh \\-hat he (Boyd) "anted
them to do. No"" theJ ·re pla> 1ng. and
1hey're damn good. The} "vc &ot
bcllera1hlc1cs than we ha\C. and no1o1.
the} 're pla) 1n.f up to tht'tr prc-sca'IOn
C''tpt('tl llOnS Thosct'tpcctauons-.erc 10 Ytln th(
Orange Empi re onfercnce Period
l he onl) trouble 1s that the P1 ratl',,
19-S overull and4-l 1nconfcrcnct ..1n·
hurting. fylcr Koon a 6-foot-6
freshman. has missed the 1>3st t~o
weeks and 1s eitpccted to be out two-
to-four more 1o1.C'ds with a sprai ned
ankle
.\!though Koon 1sa backup hC'.11 bc
~rel) missed becau~ RI\ l'rs1dl'·s
~trl'ngth 1s inside.
Worsening mailers. (>.f~t-6
freshman center Alan hlines
sprained his ankle la t Saturda)'
against Cy press. a 79· 70"1ctory for
the Pirates. thuscrcaung a probkm
forCX'C underneath
'T > ler\lta\n't pla)mg. but hc d1d
com<' ofTthc ~nch 1n D«cmbcr:·
(,lll1s said "I don·t know 1f >\Ian can
pla)'(On Wedncsda}l lfhe can't pla}.
then we're go1n1 to be \mall aaa1nst
them
.. R1 "ers1de·s playing damn good
•
.. Coach 8o)d hugot thtm do1 n1
what the) wanted to do The) ha'c
tht be t talent in thr lcaguund )'OU
\lt On'tget an)' argument from an)-
bod)' about that Wt! ha"c our
hands full Not tha t w-c can't beat
them thcrt. but 1t' 1oing to be tough
there."
Jo~ce 1 6-foo t-8 and Gra) 1s (>.
foo t-7. both of whom were scheduled
to pla) at UNLV this season. Rl\cr-
s1de. 19-o'crall and4-I 1ncon·
frrencc. also has Amen pla)'in&
rt'gularl) and hot-shooting M 1chael
tewart. who has been "scoring I 5 to .?O points a game the last fe-. ~ct'ks ·
aCC'Ording to G1lhs
·• .\rnett 1sa °'' 1S1on I talent bu1 tewan 1s the one I reall} h~e:· Gtlh\
said
"We'll have to block 0~1 and not
make mmakes. Wecan'tafford to
tum thcballoverapinst them. We'll
ha' ea good chance 1f the tempo 1s the
same a 1t '-"as mthepmeearl) 1n the
~car. but I don·1know 1f""ccan(kccp
the tempo slo'-"cr) ...
If hhncs1s unableto play
\\cdnesda'. the Pt rates wall be fo~
10 match a 6-foot-3 pla}eraaamsta (>.
loot-7 gu) And nobod)' wants to do
(Please see TtGERS/8 2J
49ers sip champagne in aftermath
of third Super Bowl win of the'80s
'\ "1 FR.\ "IC IS< 0 <\Pl -Ncarh
\00.000 fan s ltned \1arl ct tl"C'C't
Monda} to wt'lcome home the upcr
Bo\lt l ch3mp1on \an f'ranc1sco 49en.
checnng. ~1eam1ng. and ~O\lt<ing
horns as the team paraded b> on
motomcd cable cars.
( oach 8111 '-'al h, ht\ third <,uper
Bo""l 'ICtOr) of the dtx m.k ~fel)
undt'r hi s belt and thl' upcr Bo\\l
troph" clutched 1n his hands. ~tin an
open car nc\I 10 Ma,o r .\n ~no'>.
v. ho -.a~ v.canna a rett 4Qer\ sv.eatcr
~hanna the car wu team O"-ncr Eddie
OcBartolo Jr
Quancrback Joe Montana. his
w1ft Jcnn1f~r and 1hc1r t"-O dau&h-
ters ""'' ed from the scats of one cable
car. Ht~ tc.lmmntc~ including pme
Mt»t \F1luablc Pla)cr Jen) R1ct.
v.avcd from other cable ca~ and
con,ert1ble cla 1c cars a dozens of
Police mo1orc)cles ind ,quad cars
nan .. cd the procc ion. h&h ts
fla hin-.
Rct1nn1 l'entrr Rand~ ( rev ...
'1dco1aptd the fan a the~ cheem1
-.uh JO\, wh ile dcfensc1,e ~ad ..
Ronnte (011 did a mock 1m11at1on cit
the .. lcke) huffic" aboard anothc.-r
cable car
Fan ptered from offi~ \It 1ndo""'
ltnina the route and lammed ~ll <'r
more deep bth1nd po 1C't bamcadl"'-
Confc1t1 hailed down on the PJ!l'itnf.
procC's ion as It crept along.
•· ot only did the 49crs la~ \Olid
claim to the 'Team of the , lk'
des1anat1on. but the) proH~d to thl
world that C11tforn1a 1s the tate ot
C hamp1on ... ~Jd Gov George CXu ·
kmeJLl n 1n a statement.
.. , lute the uptr incrs. their
man ement. coaches. and fan \ on a
h1 tone victory )CStCrda).
.. 11tfom1a 1s the home of the l"-O-
t1me NB~ -.orld c_hamp1on Lo
A.ngclcs Lak'rs It claim both maJor
lrque pennant wmners. the l o
An&c~ Dod rr1 and the l l~nd
\ s. ~Ith the Dod crs prcva11tna m
the '-' o rld ncs
·• .\nd now the Golden 'me ha a
1hrC't'-t1 mc upcr Bov.I champion in
the 19 • the San Franetsro 49crs.
"(an the Great Gretzky and the
Lo An&cles Kings be far behind'>"
.\fter the parade. the 49ers qutC'~h
tioardcd a bus and left for an
und1 loscd location. Police rcponcd
no 1rrc ts and onl) one IOJUI). a man
\It-ho fell off a lamppo t
Mean~h1lc. se"cral thousand fans
gathered at Cit) Hall, -.here the)
e\p«tcd spcccbes from the 49ns.
··\\c want Moni.n1:· the crowd
rtpcatcdly bellowed. despite an-
nouncements ftom poh~ with bull-
horns that ttam members would not
appear
Sc' era I dozen teens "-'tf'C chased
from thr butldan1's rotunda. •nd a
cordon of offictrs t~n took tltc1r
plact on the front tcps io block the
1.-..aw '"4'DS/Mt
Oilers' girls are sweeping their foes off the field
Huntington Beach closing in on field hockey championship
tomcth1nparoundtomakcu more u"'9fi' eon o11imtt," said Q\61 nlan.
.. I thank rhie reasons we hivt turMd 11
around ha~ beell-. of my
COllthi19 moves. eao.s tnlh the 11rls rally .orterw.Mnl and *>w.na
pal desi~. nwydeeervc mott Of'~
Cndat
'"Ont of our fi.-dlaftlllwas
,. ......... ~upottthe
'""9t lane.Siie •• .._.~ .. ior ••ncauu~t na ms'So ., .................... . on .. ,..,..,,,_,.-.... .... , .,. __ ., ........ ... ............ ...... ....,..die .............. -.A'-••1* .. nt'Pw.••!' ._. .. T..,am, .. ~ .......... NW
. ....._,;;:;;_. --·
l~uepmc Thtonl> aoalthe
defensep\'eupwa ma)-1 vktol')
overManM.
Pla>•naplic for!M01len 1
scnaor L)nn O'Connell. ·•tlnn i •
"tty~vcplltccpa. t1id
Quinlan ... Sht ataaclts the ball and
reaJI)' natl down the anlks on tht
Oppolf ttOn ·1 llMMs.. ..
Hun&tftl1on leKh appears to bt a
C1ndl for the top playofrbtnh Ind
Quinlan fttls tbtOden COUid 10 all
Uicway.
"Tiw .. two..,..1int8Cll 9-r ., ........ ~ ...... , ........
10W11m111o(IMJC11r1tCI-=. H••,..,,7-9.n. ... • ..... 9: .... Qlli .... ,.. --...... .... w:; • .., .. • -= ..., .... c:: ..... _.
•
Oftt I~ a&Meta hn 0... Coun1y are ~ to coepcte oa sa1-...y at * IJ'mt
luutl " = ~oc: llttf'e*&ion lo-ve .. hlMI llell Toumaawna a1 We1Cem
Bobby Sox IOl'tbal/
Hiltl. loaa&ed It .SOI SO. Wtatn110 Anaheim
·This cvan 11 pen ."of t~ Spttaal OfymPK'S
t"-n•ftl propam desianed for dcvdomtntalty chsableda~
nc PaCilcCoat ~Sox Softball l.allaw. opr_n lO ........ ~14. IS boldillC rqJ!lrlUOn for
Ill fin& ICUOn.
.. We h_ope W ~bite-will ~ out and •PP!" Uua ca .... aid llecrc.tion Supervisor
. Tm a.a,.,. -ni1 ~ve them a aood way 10
Slanupa will be ~ by rnatl th~
Jaollel) wi&Ja leuuc pma lO be playtd "' Ne~ a.ch ariCI COii& Meta. The l~wcdt IQIOO a.u Apnl I and the
:r::.srauon ~ '' S26 for IFS 6-8: $41 for all
tee ow a~· · &ia las&ead of their disabtlitin." For furt~r 1nfonnation. caJI 640-6216
The l&lilinsof~ &oumametn is bctnauamed
by tlls FNor Community lnvolvemnt Team. wluc:i i.s provld1111_ voluateers 10 hdp with the offlciauna and SUftillJ of $A8Ct ban.
For more infonNlt1on. call 121-6S IO.
Masters water polo
Water polo players -men and women qc 19 and up, arc beans souaht for compc1111on on the masters' level.
Sup~rcross
The 1919 AMA-sancitoncd Camel Supercros$ Series ipitts 11 Anaheim Stadium Saturday ~t iwihtheoPCninaraceofthe year. the Coors EXtra Gold Super ChillenJt.
Practices and scnmmaacs art beina h(ld at Newport Harbor H1Jh on Monda)s and Thursdays from 6-7p;m.1nd on Saturdays from 8-9'1.m. For funher 1nform111on. call 1~ Pacaftc Coast AquatK'S (4SS-3224).
Launduna the all-new I S-racc tour. 11 ""'II feature 2SOCc: and I 2Scc professional AMA Suj>ercross rac1na. The Anaheim evmt includes a SSJ.000 purse. The 2S<kc lineup features Team Honda's Rick Johnson and Team Kawasaki'1 Jeff Ward. who have ~n swappina th.c Supcrcrou Cham-pionship title bltck an<l fonh the p111 four years. Also. Team Honda's Georae Holland and Jeff
Stantonr... Team Yamaha's Micky Dymond. Shaun IUJOS and Damon Bradshaw; Team Kawasaki's Ron Lechien: and Team Suzuki's Erik Kehoe. Johnny O'Mara and Tom Tichenor.
amona otben.
Pony baseball tryouts
•• TryoulS and final rqjstration for the Costa
Mesa Pony Baseball spnna and summer season art scheduled for Saturday. from 10 1.m to 2 p.m. at Wilson School. located at 801 Walson St
1n Costa Mesa. Tickets arc priced at Sll, S20. S 16. S 14 and
s12·1 Child. rcn (10 and under) a.re half off the adu1t prica. Tickets arc available at all Tic:ketmaster Outlets.
The Pf'Olt'lm LS for boys and JI rb qe S-18 as of
Jul) I. 1989. All children will br accepted rq;ardless ofthelr abahty to pay a dona11on fee of $SO per pla)cr.
$40 for second player of same family and not to
ucecd S 110 per f1m1ly. Gates open at S:30 p.m. The autavaph and photo session is from 6-7 p.m. and rac1n1 beains
It 7:30.
Tryouts•~ for players age 9-18. Funhcr informa11on can be obtained by calhn& player aacnt Rose Mane Lu1s1 or lcaauc president J 1m Lu1s1 11 54~ 11 .
AddjtionaJ ticket information can be obtained
by callina 937-67SO.
NORMAN
Froml1
ging. he's seen it all," Harris said.
"lt hurt us initially, but I think we arc finally corrcctina it and getting
Todd in the game."
A&ainst Marina. a pme the Sea-
hawb won by 20. Norman was held
to four points. but bis prcsen~ was still felt. When the burly center got
bottled up inside, the ball went back
out to Frohn and Mike Evan~ who
scored 22 and 17 points. respectively.
Those are the kind of adjustments
Ocean View will need to make 1fthey
plan to repeat as Sunset chamr .. Jn
this time of transition. they co• Jdn 't
ask for a better man in the middle to help them through the changes.
''Todd is a decision maker. When
he speaks. ~ople listen to him."
Hams said. 'If there is a better post
player in Southern Qlifomia. I want
to sec him.··
PATTON
From81
dreamer. Only his dreams arc more
like visions. He's watched many of
them become reality while building the UCI program.
They're dreams that have led him
to the latest installment the Ant-
eaters having finished No. 6 in the
nation in 1988 and head in& into 1989
ranked fifth in the pre-season col-legiate ratinp.
UCJ opened the season with an 8-1
victory over UC Santa Barbera before
300 to 400 fansas Patton realized
anot.heroneofhi1 visions-seating
for SOOat the UCJ tennis courts. "(Mike) Brias inauaurated our
tennjs stadium with some pretty
sl:wpplayi~" Patton said after
watclunatheCoronadel Mar High
• product win in straaaht sets Saturday
after a near sleepless ni&ht in antici-
pation of the open in&.
"h wasfittinabccause the tennis
stadium kind ofbecame a reality
bccaute when he came here from the
area. It helped bnn& us some notice
from the community and bro"lht in
some donon. It was only appropriate
that when he came here today, he was tbccham~ bottle that bit lhc battleship .•
It would be another dream come
true ifbis Anteaters can come back • from today's match at UCLA wtth a
• victory over the nation's top-ranked
team. It would be even better if they
did itat theendofthescason when
the newly constructed stadium scat·
ina ~nas the Bruins, in addition to
USC, to play a match 1tUCI.
Rqardlessofthose matches, which
arc just two of 13 meetinp for the
Aalalenwith teams ranked in the
pre nallOl\Top2S Volvo Ten·
~olkliateRankinasformcn·s
Divition 1 aeams. n's t"e NCAAs r wtaicb llold tbcq~ UCl defeated
Ai•Top2Stamslastseason.
•&fM could beat the No. I team in
&bcnation. tbat'tawnome. but we're
TIGERS ,,..,
Unfbnunately for basketball fans.
there aren't many. if any. better
prcplinebackers or linemen 1n
Southern California than Norman.
While Norman has enjoyed his days
on the court, his mind 1s set on the
gridiron.
Now comes decision lime. He still
must make his choice between USC.
UCLA and Notre Dame.
Whether Norman continues on in
football after collegt. pursues a career
in busineu. as he plans to make h1~
major at one of the three schools, or
chooses an entirely different path. n 1s
a 1ood bet he will succeed.
"His bigcst attnbute is he's so
dam sman." Hams said. "I'm not
taking anything away from his ath-
letic abilities, but he secs something
once and he knows how to do it.
"As a basketball coach my only
rqrct IS that I would have really
enjoyed watching Todd develop lhroUJh collqe."
lookin&at the final ultimate 1oal of
beinain Geo~a for the NCAAs."
Patton said Fnday, sitting in his new
stadium. watchinaagroupwhich
includes all six of his top players back
in addition to several other strong
returners and a key group of new-
comers for the fut urc .
.. Th1s could be the year of h v1 n&
dangerously. We've got thematunty.
wc've1ot thcexpcnence. lfttdoc~n t happen this year .....
Back arc two-time All-Amencans 1uniorTrevor"Tank .. Kronemann
(ranked 20th in the nation), a
trimmed down version oflast year's
Shermah, and senior Mark Kaplan
(ranked tcventh), alona withjunior
Richard Lubncr. Add Brigs. a
sophomore phenom, plus team-
leader ¥ikeCadigan and1un1orSh1ic K.anrojL
Patton said the first four will
alternate amon1 the top four J)OS.-
itaons in the sinales hneup becau~
each needs the Chance to playap1nst
the best. C'.ad1pn and K.anrOJI will
formaconsistentduoat No. Sand 6
"We want to sec all four~u
chance it the NCAAs(ind1vidual
tourney) "Patton said.
In doubles. Kroncmann and Bnus arc ranked seventh and Lubner and
Kaplan ninth.
"Thck.ey wiU be.ho*-""Cll we.do at
No. 3 doubles ... Patton said. "Our
No. l and 2 doubles teams can play Wllh anyone."
Despite their complete retention of
talent, thearoupof teamsahcad of
them also returned many key players.
incl ud i n_1 UC LA and co-:holdera of
the No. 2 slot, Oeo~ and Stanford.
UCLA had an individual finahstand
semjfinalistat the NCAA individual
competition last season and two
doubles teams in the final.
"On paper. we're like the a.ins in the
Sports fllustraled swinuu.11 cd1t1on. •·
Patton said. "On the surface they look aood and then when you see them 1n
pmon, lhey have blemlthes. If you
look at us on t~turface, we look
good. But we·u really find out once
the sc.ason stans."
Kaplan is set to cap an outstanding
career after mak ing the semifinals
and'quanerfinalsof the NC AA
singles the past two years. Whafe
Kaplan is the quiet senior. Cadipn is
the team captain and senior leader.
"'The1uywho'sourunsunf.hero 1s
M1keCad1pn," Patton said. 'He's
the auy who makes the other auys
better. A coach is expected to do that.
but whenaauyhke M1kcdocs that
too, tt really gets the whole team aoin.a."
Kro~mann. whowent8-I dunn1
the fall season ap1 nst some of the top
l>layersi!l thenation before los1n1
fourstraaght matches for the first time
in hiscarccr, 1s in the best shape since he's been at UCI.
.. We talk about this beinJthe most
eimtin1quanerofhis life.• Patton
said ... Emotionallr. thcre'sa Jotof
pressure on him. I m not toocon-
ccrned. It's made him a little hunaner
thisquarter. Hc'sa lean, hunlf')'
coyote, and that's better than a fat and
sassy hyena.
-He'sa taraet for people now. He's
like the fastestaunslinaet 1n town to a
lotofauys. Hispme1ssomuch ofa
powerpme that when he's on. he's
touah to beat, but his m1rJ1n for error
-" not very la,.c "
Other top returners include
Carsten Hoffman and Mike
Saunders. thetcam's mo t improved
player, and top ncwcomen arc
freshmen Mike Saunders of Beverly
HallsHi&h(U.S. Top SO in bots 18).
Aaron Stolpman of Aleundna, Va.
(20th in boys 16 two years-.o>. Neil
CroverofLquna N•suel and redJhin
Sad re Gucc:be.
Their lofty rankinpare buildinaa
stronsbue forrecru1tinaand there's
nom11&akinawAn1e11en'an)'more.
"h confron~s our yen with the factthcy'~ea to be~ ...
Patton•id... euvetobveupto
tbat now that we're 1n the top five.
Thit tt our year to truly contend."
GIRLS ........ , ..,,... ........ -.... .... "'""' Utcu I lft, e ..,,.,_, ._ ...._,
~--a.... .. •c•M•1r1 .-. ............... ..,...,...,.. ... .... ..., ......................... ..,
""""'"'"" .. Ut• ....... ..., ,... ....... ,...,... ............................... ................... .................... .... . ..... .....,......... w
""~T.r.=-:5--• ... . .. ...,. ... ............... .. ..... .. ................ -...-.. . ,.. .....
r. al Fouls' author reveai
little more with his 1Vinterview
,...Tlti•'\mldF11• .....
_ llALEIOH. N.C. -Alt~ a fonDer ~ NOnh Carolina SUie l&Udent rnulllief 11ys •• &be public wdl bC .. lbocked and appeHecr ,.
lbOut ..._.tiom of wroiildOina 1n abe -. --· Wol~ tilakctbalt Pl"OllU' in a fonhcomina book. be
lhed little lipt on thc>ee chaf'ICS durina an telev1ted
interview .
John Simonds Jr.. t~t to be the IOUJCle of
aUepliou i• the boot ... Nnonal Fouls." wu 1n1tr-
viewed by NBC Spons dunna haJfti~ of the N.C. Siate·Nonh Caroli~ JI~ on Satu~y. He ~id be decided to 11ve 1nforma11on
about the Wolfplck prosram and
Coech Jim Valvano becautc be
t~t the public should see
behind the scenes.
··1 was on the 1n1uk. I 11w
thinp that the averqc public ~n docs not see." Simonds said
. . an the interview. fihich was eon. Vatv.... ducted by NBC iuvestiptive re-
'porter A{men K.eteyian.
Simonds apparently offered no specifics in the vidco&a~ interv~w. althouah it appeared that the~~ was edited to show excerpts of the conversation. The
interview was done with oenain condataons, but NBC
officials said Simonds received no money for the ~nt. The> said he did the interview over the
ot)jections of the book'sauthor. Pet.er Golen bock, and lhe
Over 58,000 expected
NEW ORLEANS -With about S8,000 4"
tickets already distributed, the Gecqetown-•
LSU clash, fcatunna super fmhmen Alonzo '
Moumina and Chns Jackson. appears to be• ----
cinch to break the 21 -year-old linate-tame, rqular-
5CUOn attendance record for collett besketblll. ~town, 14-1, was ranked No.3 last week.
Louisiana S&ate, picked to finish near the bonom of the
Southeasiem Conference, is 12-S and second in the SEC.
Jackson and Mourning. two of the most hotly
recruited younpters from ' last year's hiah school class,
meet Saturday 1n the Louisiana Superdome -Jackson
playina for LSU and Moumin1 for Ceo,.etown.
Jackson, avef'a&ing over 28 poinu a pmc, is the
nation's No.2 scorer. trailif\lonly the 34 pornu apme by
Hank -The Bank.. Gathers of Loyola Marymount.
Jackson ts the only fmhman in the top 20 scorers.
Moum1n1 1s ICOrina 13.5 points a pmc and leads the
nation in blocked shots.
The record sinaJe-game attendance. S2.693. was for
the UCLA-Houston pme at the Astrodome in 1968.
Elvin Hayes led Houston to a 71-69 victory over UCLA.
which was led by Lew Aldndor. Alc:indor later took the
name Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. and he is closing out an
illustrious 20.year career in the NBA this season.
The overall collcac attendance record. 64.9S9. was
set in the Superdome at the 1987 Final Four. H was the
second-place attendance. 61,612, at the 1982 Final Four.
The rqular-season record 1s third on the all-time
attendance list At theSuperdome. when basketball cro\o\<dS J)a5' the
40.000 mark. some art watch1n1 from teats 19 stones up
and 100 yards away from the court. pcenna at the action
over the top of portable bleachers rolled to courts1de.
Will Pencguy. the Supcrdome's vice president for
marketina. was cautious about forccast1n' a record
attendance.
q1·0Tt:Ot'THE D.\ l
"I ~ust wne back from 1ee1na 'Miu.iuippi
Bu.mina·. Then 1 looked out the wandow and saw
Mwni burruna. .. -Sile ... Wlketa, C1ncinnan
Benpls free safety commcnt1na on notma 'n M1am1
prior to the Super Bowl.
Trojan great Drury dies ---0 LOS ANGELES -Mori~ Drury. an
All-American runnina back at Southern Cal
in 1927 when he became the first Trojan 10
rush for 1.000 yards 10 a season. has died at ----
the qe of SS. Drury, who died unday. letter«! 11 Southern Cal
from 1925-27. Called by TroJans coach Howard Jones
"the ~lest player I ever coached.·· Drury pined 1.163
yards in 1927 when he was accorded All-Amcnca honors.
It took 38 years befort 1nother Tro1an ru bed for
I .OOOyards 1n11eason-M11te Garrettiot I .440yards 1n
I 96S. Drury Sttll ranks 14th on the all-time Southern Cal
rush1n1 hst wtth 1.686 career yards. Dru~. who was dubbed "The Noble t TroJ•n of
Them All • by Los Anaelcs Examiner ~ns wntcr Mark
Kelly, h•d h1sbestpmc for Southern Cal in h11 las1 pme
as a Tro,an. After nash1na for 180 yards and ICOrina three t~ns 91in1t Wuhu\&tOn. he was 11vcn a five·
minute l\lnch,. ·ovauon !>Y fans at the Los Anacin
Coltstum whcri be left lhe fidd.
Drury. the first Tro1an tnducted tn the National
FootbeJI Fouridation·a College Football Hall of Fame (In
I 9S.). also lettered an baKetbell, water polo and ice
hockey at Southem Cal. He v.-as 1 four-spon Jlar at Lon•
Beach Poly Htah before college.
peailh'JF.-...&EP . . 1 v.,...... '1111 a•f1,,..10ili11 flll lw
tbl1J11g•Gl'11' ... '= ......... ...... .., =--..,..,.,_ ..... -~= ~llNft_!•!~"'l·-·f ..................... v--. ... .. Al--=.=.=-.--...., .... faun Int ~~ :U:-'"'~ VII-llid. ".(My ) .-• :tie" received ~ cMli illd an .,,.,unea1. v.av-,...,_..., .-·1n allO lllacl-ins. tbc t~ ........... ,, .. .,...... c:an.•-" Tbt ....... of ............. ., ..... bukelbaU propam foclll. OD ... , 1""7 -. a.ct
·~ oll Ifie dust ;.diet ol * book. ''"'*'' bY Sirnoa A Sdamler. TbOle alleptioDI were IM!I= IWO weekends llO bJ Tiie News and Oblerwr ill . A"'9ftl lbc c:balp were that Valvano ... Nied
money from the WolfpKk C1&ab IO pla~ lhM pdes
ftrc ~ to help playen rcwn eliaibtlity, and that
players received cars and ~· Alto, 1bcdU11jacket said tbatonc player .. dehberate·
ly lost" an NCAA fi:rst;round pme so u noc to be
detected for drua use which would ba~e JCOP9rdized hia
NBA career.
K.eteyian, who narrated part of the intervaC'W, said 10urces idcntJfied Charles Shackleford as the player who
a.lqedly played below his caliber dunna the J 987 NCAA
tournament aame apinst Aonda to avoid drua testina.
SNd.Jeford says he nc\'er ialked to Golcnbock,
labeled the chlf'IC .. a lie" and also was rcponed to call the
book .. iJle&itimate."
I' f'Ht: Btt:.\('Ht:RS
HOSS' ~
• GO IN Fci<. ll
MEI ERS ~! 0±,oHJ If h
I
0 •
Jury trlal for Sweeney
BASS LAKE -A iury tnal was
scheduled March 23 dunna a heanna ~
Monday on a misdemeanor drunken dnvina ~
char&e apanst Frrsno State football coach
Jim Sweeney
Sweeney, who prrv1ously plt'aded innocent. was not
1n Bau Lake Justice Coun for the bnef heanna but was
represented by hts attorney. Robert Hoppe.
The veteran coach was stopped July I by a{'ahfom1a
H1ahway Patrol officer whosa1dh1s carv.-u WCl\'U~J on a
county roed an the 1em"Nevada foothills. 1ccord1n1 10
CHP spokesman Ronn Oom1ntct. ·
A breath ttst iaken at Madera County Jail sho"'~ that Sweeney had a 10 blood alcohol content. the level ~t
which a dnver 1s considered lcaally drunk 1n Cahfom1a.
the officer 1dded.
Afterh1umst.Sweene}' issued a \latemen1 sa_rina he
was stopped after leavin1 Sunn)~1de Country Club in Fresno to dnvc to 8a:n Lake
Kings swap centers
INGLEWOOD -The Lo An,ctes ~ Kinas acquired center teve Kasper from the
Boston Bruins Monday in e11c:hlnat for • •
center Bob Carpenter.
The deal complttes the "'futu~ con tdetlhons"
pe>n1on of the Kinas' acqu1sit1on of Jay Malltt from tht
Bruins unday "the Kin~ said. .
Kuper. 2~. 11 in his ninth NHL scaion af\er beina
selected as the Bruins' third peclc 1n t,he 1980 entry d,.n
ln49pmeswith Bo ton thau~ason. Xa per had IOaoals
and 16 assist
Kasper had his best season last )car -.hen he had 26
aoats and 44 aums an 79 pmes. He has I lS aoaJ and 220
autlll 111 S64 NHLpmes.
Carpcnteri 2.S, 1s 1n hisciahtb NHLsta\On Cumntl)
on lM in,Jured i t with a cniclcd naht wrist.
Titan pitcher out for year
Funeral services for Drury art private. aceordina to the Southern C'al Spons Information office. In lieu or CaJ State fullcrton·pocher Mark Bttk. 4111.:..•~ ~e~~a1o;:a~~~dat~~. beU ~n& ~~h~~~cH~~n~e~~ or:m':s'=~o of~*t~:~:~~:,:. • X .
Hentaae Hall Los Anaetcs. 90089-0602 will soo~ undcrao auraiery to reconstruct • · can1laac 1n that 1hould«. '-~·---sllps hu-Mkhlaan--BCck a 'un1orn t..J\andcr wall I tht.trtll ------' IUftll·ta ., ' • u::. season. t 1tans annou onday. Beet. Bnebell
Amtnca mapz1ne·1 pre.teate>n aU-Amenc:a PK'k. 1~
schedukd to undtfJO su_fJtfY in the ne•t two weeks
Beck was I(}. 7 in 1911. His I 6211rikeo\tts was a T nal'I
season recotd. brtakana the old mark of I 29 an 1983.
fl
• =•11 P9dlc ........ • L Pel. .. Llller-t 77 12 "'2 -~-D 1• m 3 ..,.. D 14 .m J 0...Stalt • 17 541 ' PwtlMd 10 11 Mt ' S.Cramento 1l ts -l•Y) a.er. 10 21 .2'3 16\lt MWwe&t DMIAM Utan n 1S 405
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WelhinOIOC\ 13 n 361 1l Chartotlt 10 2t .25' 1S'h c...tDMtm Clt.,...nd 30 7 "' Detroit 25 12 676 s ~-· n 13 m ' Attanla ,. I• m ,.,,,
ChtcAl90 n IS ..st5 I lndfana 10 21 .2'3 201h
MMaY'1k-.. C~ 142, GolcM<I SI• .. "'9
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0enwr el Ht# WMY, •.lO e>m C~ e l A119nte, 4JO em.
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11.FlorlOI Stele l.t I .U 14
12.lowe 14·1 6'1 7 I) flMYMe·L.e• '\1191\ 13·) "1 10
1'..SVT"eant IS·4 "'7 11
I 5 liiorlll CaroMI Sii It l:t· 2 40 I I S
1'1110o8N IS ' >21 It
11 on.o Stell 12·4 no 16 II Kenn • IS·l llO 17 If Stentord 1'·4 Ill 10
20 Providence 14· 2 ..
OHM1n re«ov11111 vol• TIMttMt S.J, C.-· ... Teen SJ. SI Merv'•· C•"' )6, Wilt Virtln ..
)0, UC Senta 811bere 24, St JOM'l t , l.ou1'1• ane Slllt .t, TtllH ·Et PH O 4, Kenut S111e 3.
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SW l.O\M•al\8 91, S.m HoullOI\ SI It
TulW 53 llino.l SI SI
MtDWEST
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SW M<t""'' St I I Ore l lt~I\ 11 W•• ·Green ,.., " ""''' -PM1<•~ SS SOUTH Aleof'n SI '1. Alelleme St 12
lellll.lnt COOllman 60 How11d U Sf C etnOOell 63 Dev Id IOI' SO
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( l(entuekv ~ Ttnnn\81 SI W
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M>H1e Ttftll IOI MortflMO St 61
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S Ceroitfta ii 107, C>tlewere St ••
s M.WH ool ,, New °"""' " So\1111 AleO.Me 10). Ject.IOtWillt 74
South '"°''"' ., Coe•l•I CerOI ne 0 Soulll FIOr'148 11 TemH W
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SI Frelkit , NV 61, ~" Cet SS
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STATa~t CW l ·AA DMl6am l. ...... ~ 0 1·1" 2. Meter .,..
<•1ll > St 8etll8fdl Cll •7, 4 lallewooo
l ''"S>. s. Lo,,_ c 16·?>. 6 .wit•en t 17-41, 7. ,....._ ..,..., ( 14.Jll f SI Mo!lice
(l.t-4, t LB J«N/I 112·6), 10 Sa/'lt1 Me
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I lf•Mdtlle ( 16·21. 2 C1Plllfe110 Vetltv
(IS-4), 1. lrWlt lll ·l)I 4 I UINI (l)·l), S.
~ VleW (1)·1)1 • MofMO Vallt\I (14 41. 7 c.lt•tCO 114·4), I l«\ltffl Hlb 01 ·•>.
' El Toro ( 12·1), 10 Oerir 112 61 Ollltn o.... H•!!t (l:HO). .._
C lO• ll). STA Ta OtYlllON ti
Qf'4-AA ~
1 s.n et<Mf dlnO no-o >. 2 OletldOf • nt· ll. l Riwerllde PolV II•·'>. 4 Ptfrlt
( 14·S), S 1,,..._000 (10-.,, 6 Vttlll' V8'ev
( 14•SI. 1 Caton (1)·4), I El Modelle ll•·SI, t T«rence 110-11. 10 Wftll•i.t Ill 71
CW 4·A OM.-I C>om"'91.1tl 11.t·•I. 2 St Paul (IS·6),
3 !too MtM C 14·l l 4 Cllert• Oell I IS·l l, s J w Noflft (1) .. ), • Arlft.. ( l:t·•>. 1
lent-CIS-2), I lttdOAdO t l>-SI t
l lM!I» Amel ( 12·1} 10 Nt'#t1Ur¥ Peril
112·51 aTATa DfVttlOM Ill
'Cit' l-A ~ 1 R~fl9....,. (1'-3), 2 S.wenne Ill II.
3 LA Canada 111·21, 4. ••tMdl 11•·1), S er .. -oi.ncs. c 1'·•>. • M«Nl'nldt 11> "·
7 Et ~--llS·4). I Comoton 112·71, 9 Notre Oeme C IH I. 10 Le Quonte 112 .ti
Otneo. C-• Met ( 11·411 Treouco
H•lb 112·S); Sell LU!t OOlwio ( 11·61, SO<illl
H•llt Ill-SI
STAT• DIVISION IV
Cl' t-AA OMti9ll I Ca~1llo OS·2), :t &etl·Jtff CIS·:tl. j
Benrilno Ol-•1. ' WM•• CIV'1hen (IJ·•I. s VY«a Vdtv ( ll•Sl •• Ttt1ecna1M (It 21.
1 Cethtdrel lll·.tl; I Mir ... ,,. 110·». •
Et S.VundO !f-11, 10 St o-"''"' 19·71
Ctf' ?·A OM.-
I S.nte Clete (IS•J), 1 Orente
l.uttlef'en ( 1'•41, ) St AlllllOllY (1·11 4 Vt lev Ovt111en (13-41, S Pereclttt (IS· II.
6 Setre (7· 101, 1 Cent..,,.. C 13·ll, I S•
I -venture !ll·SI. • , .. _, If SI, 10
\lilleM '"''''*' (1·fl STATI DtVlSIOH V
Of' l·A OMVM
I PeMOtne Polv ( IS-01 1 Soutll8tn
Ce 1for'n.a C11t~t1e11 ! 12•4), > I .,_ O.eoo
(12·51. ' Miiiion Pr• 110-SI S Celt Cl·•> 6 Feortl aeptlll (12·)), 1 LA au1 ti (1•·S)
I O.ll:~ (10-41 t ()llterio Cllt•••..-i
(t-7), 10 M¥v Ster ll Mt
cw '""' ~ ow..-
' e.t·Air ~-(10-6) , ~·· Olf'lsttan (13·)1, l PlllOl'tm Ill II. 4 Greet
Community (10-ll S lttOt! ClltllltM Ct·•I.
• Clll Luth9fen II·?) 1 C1.1nma V• .....
CI0-4) I. ...._, OWUllM (IMl1 t
Hemet .. Pioli 16·1). 10 Avetoft 16·.SI
HtGH SCHOOL GIRLS
STATS DIVIMOM I
CW S·AA OM...-
1 ~~ 117·11. 1 ltll Geroen• tJ,S·21 ). llteuM9111 V ... v ( 14•71; 4 FOt1tene
< 17· ll ~ l.I Polv (I) •I. • ltul>odOu• 113· II 7 L\lnwooel ( IS·•I. I AOOle Velltv
( 14•3), t Cr..Ml4 twnd• llS·•> 10 I I Toro
113-tl cu• s-A Ol¥t"8ft I C1'11no (lf·OI. 1 Hert (1' 11 3 II~•
(lJ·?> .. °'-View no-111 s Sen••
ler0¥1 (17·SI. • ()lllerlO ( 11 II 1 Wot Cowone ( 12· I), I Oellf Ol·•I. t TllOUMnd O.i.l l lM) II. Metw ()ej llS·S). Other• ,.,,,,,,.no Ve .. v llS SI MelWW
( U•Sll A"OYO Grendt 114·41
STATI DIVl:MON II
0, 4·AA OM1lilft
1 M>u.oft Vlt!O Ill l l, 1 Oownev
( l4·4), ) Cemer1lo C IS •> 4 UIWw"9V
11S·4>i S V-•• 111·71. • CenwO'!
A,,.l'leitn ( 1'•S) 1 Ce.on t 11 SI I ~' t
(IJ·•), t v ... rure 14 Ill, 10 Wnllelle
(12·11
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w...i'• Tlllnl ..... 0....
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Slt'ltl Gref. Wnt G«rMllY, • .., Galll'otl8
1Me (1), A.rtenltl\8 oef AIWI He!VtC .. UOll
MefllomecM, ""'1tlt. allO .. Ill Herr Cl?I, DevtOfl,
Otwe 7 • (l•ll. 6·7 tH> 6·l
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..., .......
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II ._._
ow.rat w l. 20 ,
IS 6
.. 1
II 1 • •
D•Y• arown and "'•
l'ounteln V alley Hit"
a.ron1 ere No. 1 In "' S-AA basketbeJI rankings.
STATI DtVIStON tit
(Jiit J. A DWblefl
I lrN·OMOe ( IS·2), 2 Comc>IOtl If SI > Perm Pt .. ,, 11•·2), • St JO\IClh.
L•i.-000 llS·41. S Le Ou1n1e tl•·l l. '
Atemenv ( ll·S). 1 San Dime• P •·SI, I Rencho Alem•IO\ llS-11. 9·Lll'l'IOOC l lt·•I
10 St Lucy'\ ( 17·61
STATI DIVISION IV
Cl~ 2·AA DMMeft
1 St Jo .. on. S.nte Mer .. (12·Sl 2 I
Jett II• 11. 3 lennoftll < 12-S), 4 M«ro l•v
I 12·31, S ll1mone Cot1v...,1 ( IS·l); •
Lo111•v " Cl · 101 1 Pomona CetllOI< I IS SI.
I Whtlhtr (ht '""' (f-•I 9 INnt .. 11.e
Aceoemv <I 41, 10 SI Mar\l'l (l·t J
Clllt l·A DlmMn
I S.ftte Clere ( 17 II 1 Velltv C..,.•"·•n
(14 ·JI, l SaM• Yntr 11·41 4 P \I\ )(
( t 11. S Le ltt.ne 1 ll· SI 6 T wtfllVntr•e
Petrm (f-41. 1 Mo.ave Ill·)). I a..-1
(It •1. t Perecltte II l 10 Crou1oech
Cll·21
STATI DfVISIOM V
Of' l·A OM.-.
I Ito""*"' I U ·l l 1 M·n-Proo
I 11-ll l L• S..re II II 4 F1ot1tr~ Prto ( IO·:t) S LA leotoll 14· Sii •
C l\ad•l(k ( 11 21 1 WOOCIC•H t Ctv st •"
< 10 SI I Sntr"*' lllO••" •·JI t Sit•.,. Ve v 10-SI 10 Orlterio Ctvtlltafl It 41
Ctf' Sinai SdlMti DMWfl
1 F"''' Lut!'ltfl " t9· II 1 h ot••' C11r1\
1141" (12·31 l P flm lt·l J. 4. UMnY
C.lvffltilNI It ·)); S. e.11111 Ctv••t.en 1a·4I 6.
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110 I) I A-Velftv (IV111,en It 0 . t Pecll;c Cllfl\hen <7·SI 10 lltr.et CIVllhen
"HiGH SCHOOL BOYS SOCCER
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• • :SPREAD : i THE i i NEWSf
t Work In the fNfK expending! t Newspaper Promotion ftekft t If you are aelf-motlvated Md
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For more lnformatton
5 15fMO.
NIW '19
· GIAND Piii
Cincinnati gives
Bengals a winning
feeling anyway
CINCINNATI {AP) -The Ctn·
cinnati Bcnpls were welcomed home
Monday as heroes. even thouah the
team lost the Super Bowl 10 1.he San
F,..ncisco 49crs 1n Miami.
· .. We thank you for your presence
here. Ifs very hanwann1n&," Paul
Brown, scncral ma~r and foundtr
of the Bcnpls. told an uproanous
crowd of at least 3,000 people at
Cincinnall's downtown Fountain
Square. "Our men played a tremen-
dous football game. and I've 'ot to say
it was a lfCI\ game, too. Y qu re super,
~love you, and thank you.'' • ·
Coach Sam Wyche told the bome-
conrina rally, arran1ed by city of-
ficials and an arm of the Greater
Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce.
that the fans were a b1a part of the
reason that the Bcrwals.. who finished
14-S, ~re undefeated at homedurina
the reautar season and the AFC
playoffs. Wyche referred to Cincin-
nati's Riverfront Stadium, home field
of the Bengals, as "the Jungle," a
name devised by Bcna,als fans:
"I told the balldub after the game.
although we didn't win on the
scoreboard, we made the winning
effort," WychesaidofSunday's 20-16
Super Bowl loss. "One of the reasons
that we had such a aood year was
because of people like you. When
other teams came into this city. they
came into the Jungle. where they
could not win a pme all year long. ..
Rookie running back Elbert
"lckey" Woods, who scored IS reg-
ular-season touchdowns. charmed
the crowd by doing the "Jckey
shuffle," a tongue-in-check dance he
popularized as a post-touchdown
celebration.
At least a haJf-<Sozcn other Jkngals
players also briefly attended or ad-
dressed the rally, 1ncludin1 wide
49ERS
From••
remaining crowd from somg 1ns1de.
An earty-mom1ng rain had threat-
ened to put a damper on the
homecoming. but the skies cleared b>
parade time, cappina a celebration
that began Sunday evenma.
The began pounng mto the streets
by the thousands as Montana threw
tKe winning touchdown pass to John
Taylor with 34 seconds remaining in
Super Bowl XXlll.
The result: a 20-16 victory over the
Cincinnati BcnaaJs.
"(With) the 49ers at the last minute
under pressure, we knew we had to
win," said Justina Valencia, 19. who
wore a red 49crs T-shirt and sat ma
carload of young girls dunna Sunday
niJ!!t's emotional revelry.
'I knew m my hean It wouJd be No.
I Nincrs in '89. We don't give up.
We're no Miami mice."
642-5678
receiver Cris t 'oll1nsworth,
linebacker Reaie Williams. dc--
f ens1 ve back Lewis Billups.
ptaccktcker Jam Breech, offcnme
lineman Joe Walter and punter Lee
Johnson.
Fans dressed an oran~ and black.
tbe Benpls' team colors, m1n&Jed
with office -.orke~ to cheer. ~ave
bannttS and dance to the music or a
rock 'n roll band after hstemng to the
Bengals speak. The crowd spilled
across the downtown square. into
surroundina streets and even filled an
overhead skywalk and the windows
of overlookina office' towers.
The Bengals' loss !)unday was their
second to the 49ers in the only two
Super Bowls an which Cincinnati has
played. San Francisco beat C1ncin·
nat1 26-21 1 n January I 982 1n the
Super Bowl at Pontiac. Mich.
Colhnswonh. one of only seven
Bcnpls players who was a member of
the team for both Super Bowls. told
the crowd Monday he hopts for yet
another chance to win one.
"I don't know how many more
chances I'm ao1ng to get to bnna a
championship here. but I hope to get a
few more. You people are the greatest
m the world Thank you vcT) much,"
said Colhnswonh. who turns 30 on
Fnday.
Williams, 34. a 13-)car linebacker
wnh the Bena,als who began scrvma as
a Cincinnati city council member last
June, said he will decide soon whether
to return for another season with the
Bengals.
''We're aoif1J to make that decision
very shonly. This 1s a very emotional
time, and I don't want to make a
humed dccisJon," Will.ams said.
refemng to Sunday's last-minute loss.
"The body 1s very beat up. But we'll
make that dcc1s1on soon.'
Sunday night's celebration was
marred by some bottle-throwing and
fights. and rowdy drunkards ac-
counted for many of the 90 arrests
police reported, said Sgt. Jerry Scnkar.
But 1t was mostly peaceful 1ub1ha-
t1on that rocked the Caty-by-the-Bay.
as fans danced in the streets. kissed
stranaers. exchanged high-fi ves.
honked their horns and forced pohce
to close a highway and many Cll>
blocks.
Fans wearing 49ers colors and
souvenirs stood tn the streets blowing
bullhorns and whistles. while others
climbed atop lampposts and hung
from street signs. Screams of
"Niners!" swept through the city.
In trendy Nonh Beach. thousands
of fans cloged the pavement and
street near Broadway and Columbus.
the lntd1t1onal center of the City's
celebrauons. So many cars filled the
area that the H1gway Patrol tempor-
anly closed the Embarcadero Free-
way from Broadway to Interstate 80.
CLASSIFIED INDEX 642·5678
FROM NORTM ORANGa CO •
FROM IOUTH ORANOa CO.
... , . . ....
MMM .. a
-""''°" -·--,...,_ ·-...... _ -·
CHICK YOUR AO
TMefNTDAY .............. ~ ........ ... ... .., ........... ._ ...................... . ...._ .......................... ,...
~-= :,.-,.:-=.-;; ...-.......................... . ~-....-i ...... , ........ .................. -----· "'..,._.._.__. .. ..,._..,,Cf..,, .. ............................. ....,
.. ...... ti 't
4ten quarterbadl Joe Montana wears a lt'9 .,.., ... lie'•
'"'91ed b y hll uugltter. Z·1••r·old Dubettl, on ttt• te8M'1 arrtv•I In San Pr•ncl1co Mondar.
Super bet, s1:1per win,
gives super headache
LAS VEGAS (AP) -tasino ownn-Bot> Stupak had a super
·headache and an extra SI million the day after the Super Bowl.
Stupak won the largest wager ever made on a football game m a
Neva(ia spons book Sunday when laid down a cool SI .OS0.000 on the
Cinc10nati Bengals plus seven points at Little Caesars casino.
"I'm a little under the weather today." Stupak said Monday. -1 did
a httJC too much celcbratina last night."
Stupak bucked the betting trend and came out a winner on a day
•where most of the state's spons books also won big when the 49ers failed
to cover the seven-point spread.
Most bookmakers took in more money on the 49crs than 1he
Bengals., and began countina theirprofitsaftcrthe 49crs won by only four
points (20-16).
"We had the b1gacst profit ever on a sinale football game." said Bob
Gregoru,oddsmakerat the Frontier Hotel. "It made our whole year We
doubled our profit for the rest of the year on this game.•·
Bettors wagered up to $40 million in the state's legal sports books,
much of it coming 1n a final frenzied weekend ofaction where bettors
stood m long lines waiting to put IJ\ their last wagers.
"fl was nuts. absolutely nuts. right up until pme time," said Terry ,
Cox, assistant manager at Harrah's sports book m Reno. "We did very.
very well on this game."
Stupak made has wager at Little Caesars, a storefront casino where
owner Eugene Mayday had adven1sed he was open to take up to SI . I
milhon on the pme.
At most oflhe sports books.a bettor had to put up SI I to win SIOon
the game. Mayday pve Stupak a SS0,000 discount on the 10 percent
"vigorish" charged by bookmakers. but was philosophical after tos1na
the huie bet
"That's pan of gambhnt, Ifs the cost ofdo1na business. We win our
share and we lose our s~re. · Mayday said.
Stupak, who owns.JI cps World casino, said fie dccided to make the
bet after having a fight with his Jlrlfnend Super Bowl morn1na.. After
trying to place It at three other casinos. he took two bnefcases filled with
$1 00 bills into Little Caesars and plunked down his bet
nc
remains a warning
on drug problems
Running back has
·probably carri~d
ball for last ti~
MIA.Ml (AP) -Cincinnati
Benp1I coecJa Sun Wyche 11ys the
dnMi ,.,_ of nanmaa beck S..nJey
W1flon is a wanu~ that * country needs to do someth1"1 about its drua
problems.
Wilson was suspended for the
Super Bowl after an undisclosed drua-
rctated incident Saturday ni&ht. less
than 2'4 hours before the pme. It *IS
Wilson's third d~ suspension and
probably will end h11 Nfl.. careitr.
Under the Nfl..'s dru& policy.
playen who t.est positive Tor drup
three times a~ banned from the
lelpe, but can appeal for reinstate·
ment after a year. Wilson's first
suspmsion, for the t 98S season. was
before the policy went into effect.
Commissioner Pete Rozelle ex'
pects to meet with Wilson some 1jme
this week to discuss the problems of
Saturday niaht. It's up to Rozelle to
decide Wilson's future. The com-
milliooer declined comment on the
matter at the Super Bowl.
However, Wyche said Monda)' that
SUPER
From81
to be determined. from its modest
bqjnninas as a one-day cham-
pionship between the established
Nfl.. and the upstart AFL. the Super
Bowl has arown into a week-Iona
euravapnza that this year brouaht
more than 2,000 nalional media to
M1am1 and can be wonh as much as
S7S million Lo the host city.
And to be sure, the N fl has made a
point pf aivina back much to the
COmmufttueS from which It draws ltS
mammoth television and uc~ct rev-
enues.
United Way commercials, done for
free by the players. arc a key fund-
raisina tool for an overall campa.iJJl
that reponedly raised more than $2 6-
b1llion for chant.able causes in l 987
-the last year fiauttS were available
In a less-pu6hcized move. the l~ue was commemorat1n1 Martin
Ltithcr Kina Dey by prov1dm1
SI 0,000 1n colleac scholarships to
m1nonty younptm in the city's h1ah
schools )USt hours befog nouna
erupted m the black ne1gM>orhoods
only a Iona pass from downtown
Miami.
And until XXlll, the b1gcst d1~
rupt1on an any of the chapters the
NFL insists be marlced with Roman
numerals were attent1on-actttna
pranks pulled by vown men bchav-
101 hke naughty children: the New
Y orlc Jets' brash Joe Namath blowana
curfew and auarantecing vtctory.
Cbicaao's Jim McMahon moonu\I a
hehcopler that flew over the team's
Wilson was re1n11.1ted by the NFL last A~I from his second IUl(Jit.DMOll
With a warnina that II WIS his last
Chan«.
Aiked Monday •hethet there was an9 chance of Wilson playiftf IP.In. w~ sald, "Pan of the satuauon comina._ into tht1 tellOll v.-as that ii was 1 final chance ..•. That was the
undtnland11111 that evC1)1body had
comina in. wt if there was another
relaple, that wotiaki be it."
Roullc and the Bcriuls hive ,
refuied 10 revtal detaifs or the
incident. which-came after Wilson
missed a team meetina Satu~
niP.t. Wyche and other acam om
sa1d they dadn' know Wilson's
whereabouu Monday. and they c»
chned comment on published reports
ofTenna diffcttnt versions of what
happened Saturday.
Wyche said tht;oe wu no 1nd1cat1on
of trouble with Wilson until the
incident. He satd he thought Wilson
had passed two drua tests admm1s.-1en~<f durina the week before the
game.
.. We ccrtainl~ didn't have any
indication that Stanley Wilson wa's"'
1oin1 to have a rda~." Wyche aid.
Within five minutes of thinas hap.
perung, everytbana was normal ..
practice session 1n New Qrleans.
That may be chanaina. Just as
Miami's sh1mmenna new skyline was
little protection ap1nst renewed viol·
encc to those who inhabit its bleakest
streets, so the Super Bowl may no
lonaer be considered as a forum only
forthinas that take place between two
chalk hncs.
A rcponed ~test march b)' blacks
on Joe Robbie Stadjum dunna Sun-
day's game failed to matcnahu. But
the Rev. Al Sharpton. the march's
rumored oraan1zer and leader. made
his way down from New York
nonethelesst even as the family of one
victim of toe sbootina and motor·
cycle crash that sparked the riots said
he was not welcome.
And when presled about who had
invited him, Sharpton said he re-
sented the question. "Who u\v1ted
100,000 people to the Super Bowl?''
Sharpton rctoncd; there was no law
allowins sports fans only.
Pcoprc with cau$CS both honorable
and d1shononable may be askin1 t~t
question before next year's Suptt
Bowl at New Orleans, or the one
scheduled for Tamoa after that
Ri&ht now, XXlll will be re-
membered for The Dnvc -the Joe
Montana-cnarnecred 92-yard march
that resulted in the wmnin' LOUC'h-
down with 34 seconds rema1n1n1 -
thou&h history is s11ll hold1n1 ba(k.
.. Amona the ~pie *ho were
here." Browne said. ~and rem~ber
it's a 1pon.s-m1nded crowd (a lot of
the pcoolc didn't come until later 1n
the week), I think the two c~enh -
the pme itself and the Ovenown
situauon -wtll be remembered ...
From North Or-. County
From South Orange County
540-1220
496-6800
NO COLLICTING
NOIOUOITING
CLASSIFIED ADl'EllTISI
SALES
6
WeueADDINGtoour I talf.
II you can type at lent 45 wpm and have
great telecommunication kills -We can
off er you a hue 1alary + comm· ion A D
a (jf/#1 p&.ee to work.
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20
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61 Cit!!
62 Spt~ 63 CM na.-y "II"'• 54 11anc:ii.
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tYl*'I a • -:..:= •11221 ... ._ ...... .._~ I , .. a o.,e wo11. T.a. nure • • I Hr9. CALL 11?-4'71 ... 13'm .......... daly MO
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.... IL 1111. ~ "' ·~· N\19 llllDllY • r.911 llPI ..... tor Riii ~ ·::~:w·~·-=1 :::•.=:Y ~ E"'ty tell9I poefflOn In• -·-ii3iE.C:O...Hwr eape11enoe ~7'.l ~ ... ~-UptoaGO •:-ic::-C.D.M. ?14-t7S-2'SO a.cl ,..,,.,.. In con-"*'' ~t '™'11 ~.--. Clll
fldefMle to: he"9 good '*'81 com-~· ~-' _. • munlc&tlon · ·-Muea ====~~== ._, .._ .,. lb6I 10 eo1n.poee let·
Tll 111.Y ··~d ~-..,.,::: ·w.. r=~.1-.
...... m .... g.. a fllln9.
Orowth po-.ntl•I Into Nzl'1 llCll!.... tQ!_I =11.= .. =~~ Nu ii·'Ln TV GOO> 873-1906 l~~~~~~~~I DAILY ~!.:::.=. 13 FT ZODIAC~~.... TlllTl'M• llLll/lml.. ,rt>rwat9 rot/btoYI l50 Future 1tM end ~R Cul1om '** I.IP ..._.. -~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiifi'""-8EN8ATK>NAL new cleC 557.2913 . rowing Mell. MAKE Of· at«eo w/~tte. Hi 1Mfl ...... FEAS. 548-4141 blc1t.• rMf llldtng win-Xlnt ~. LOADED. PILOT ,..,.._, 60t4 loaton Whaler 1tl5, dow.' Muc h m~r•I -'llllmml 17900/oftw.
(Mont-*) e.tt., ttwin (050Sl0) S7,t85 AMlten ....,_ Low,.,.._ Call 144-172' «
I Ft. SOFA-SLEEPER ,_.., io.cMd, to H.P .~ 125,"5 fa02t6) ' 11t/M24'17 •.. ..,. .........
l1•1Ml-4111 ... .,.lat.JU
~. con~Cocoe Yamaha, 1ter10, Lim--....... to~ ... wMUnct . :::'.::. M-=-~r'~~1·.=. ..... Automatlo, I c:yllnd•t. TOYOTA C.. 1113 OT,
BtNI Md·qUMn llH, bait tank, Lorwi,' trailer -·Ille =· ~k, radi.I•: ~.~~ct,.~:
walMf/dryet, ,.ltlg9r· 1 18•500 oOo154-9725 Autom•Ue, I cylinder, pOW ~ ~. lety, Pllint. Muet ...
ator + mot9I ._, otl•t SIOW doOr loci!, PC>"' cwene. A.JC. lwltlful lltl6 173-1217
CAU.131-te10 ........ 7012 TMb tOlS ~ pwo. btell• (920014)112111 IUllR'RH•• 11' .... IT AMIFM.' C:Wltl, A.JC'. .......... mum •• ,. .....
groofMd,clepend9*,... ="~-= Footb09rdwtttlr1119, £\'9Nde OutbOerd. MOY· 11Mf•ftl .. ~~)SH~~~ car. .... ~=.·~~ 1117WJLll ~~19!;.!:·~= beled~. mn/~..,ATI quwulz1.S196.l40-8733 l.nglS.OlblS400080 T1rt, 302. 0¥ltdtM, tOOI aw--& ... , .. NMdl ~t Ucou,mlr,L .... 40K
phone 11nee, N\19 good Conttict Loulel 1454135 9u1y lfOn office. yplng. 0y e.dl c:wtet 4 Ihm• Call 142-7701 • box. toK. Xlnt l9000. .... .... _ ltialJllm only, UU5 010 . ..._ U0.700 '974a4
tetephone mennefl I . flllng,~1!~~· c.. ..,, ~ ·~. S75. ,.. DC~ 'M en•> •.an ... 1911 .lCJ8 t'IY meuillc tH-t44t <1PPP1•1> MEACORY CAPRI AS
WOftl ... undlr.,,_,,.. lllfil1JIY Pto, 2 Pk lnctllttb S150 270 .,._. ~ hOln, -.. l .. P/I ... •~AIAI • ...... ...,....._.Original VOLVO 1tl3Dl.,Lceitltit 1113, U V8, ....,._., HI"'*'· Cel AdmlN• Ptlonee, typing, flltng, PIT all/mt • ..,. LngehrlUIOCl\aS35aml gtnerator. •ic~t con--tw"~ OWMt. I0,000 moatly Condition Whit• 24oor powet·ltMf'lno powet·
trator at 710-1711 l\oun, fliticlbfe. hnd r• Gr~ boating firm tbl I 2 cl\l $45 557-2113 Oltlon Sff.000 .. 873--6481 A.wto, AM/FM, tter•o ... Ille ... w lrMWay ,,,...., Hew..,. 5--~. 81K, .._, ' bflk.., amtmic:wtt•. 11.1rn• to: Shamrock ..-1 reep pereon w/ofc w/c11Htte. (705743) INT3)_.,._ vice r.cordl. No ecd· tw.lbtall• M400 cuetorn wheetl, 13eoo mflL.. Equlpm«it, P.O. Bo• computef i CUit. lldlls to FINE QUALITY L .. tl\et 3-ao.a.,. Chlrtlrs M .tH ( •'--Cet phone. CMck muat ... ea'o-e17' 131-2800
Mlnlltorage will tr•ln 10395, Coet• Mela. CA grow w/Co 8-cy/boat ~. ~· ... ~~eon, · _ .... "W'"Y FOR WEEK 'II Hiii " 114,IM ou1 tM othef XJSI pra .... HI HM 12127 l'lelptuf 722 9055 ..... r ... ,_ at.....--or """" " -llMI) & c:oodtllon bef~ ..tog VW 1t78 ~ ._.. 1"3 Otdl ~ _..
•11P· · • '4400. One yeer old. Sell ENO. CMt1er Stat..ot-. •Ill 111,111 thlt OM 123 450 COf\'*11*· mint COf\-Pl'9'M 8tougheln. 57,000
SITTER NEEDED •t •2100. 497-8834 Art 34' c~. Pkg . (Mee1) Rlcherd (T1 4) M2-M75 dltlon. new top MOOO "*'· Fulty loeded. 2·
for 18 month Old boy, E\19-NEW DAYBED WHITE ' dMI wlallle>s*'. 87&-7100 ... l.. -Ml w 175-t3a Door. 2·tON, Mint, s.cn.-llYDTISlll llLEI
11nn11Y
nlogt, Ilk tor El~th BAASS. With maur.... Demo iMMf,... ..... ., VW '71 BUS. Hew dutd\/ llcel4t00.81f..t4S-175'
a.41-7028 daya l truridl• compl•t•. Sal lolb 7014 ( > GS. a ir conditioning, oeneretor em/fmc:MMt· --·· • 1225 •840-8733• .... 1. --•1111•11 .... • --at•r•o WICllHtt•. te. tune . "'Mt 11500 r-9111.. -11115 • · --(11164) 09KE701. 17.tll • .,. · 4 dOot, exoel*t con-EARN QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS 1128, good condition, A M If M • . • t er • 0 STDUll 146-1451 dlllon, l3IOO (fl50AGL) $400.$1000/WK & BOX. QUILTED! wtth treH.. $1250. call WICMNtte. Low mJ..._ • (71 4).24f..155f
· BRANO NEWI 1155. 723-1388 2\'414411. 16.4H ••• 9 ~ ~~· CALL * 840-8733 * l'M'M -UM DI
rMnt. Ap~lcant muat ::~t~nda SOLID PINE 4 ipo11er spttd/Sld lolU 1 .. ICRlm... Afford.-tun, fMtMllC
8twn 10AM-IPM N\19 good ~ & com-*'1 IH + commltr.inmg l\dbo9rdlfootboard/ralll. 701 6 t• HU .... B1 W gr1Y. 10W "::J:• t-top,
' (714)75&-1155 :'::':' ~M=~ ..UWMl-lt11 ,=·~~ f,~~~ ~2ft BlyllMr Ciera CIWlc Triumph Spltfl,. bleck/cloth".lnt•rlor, :C:~: 1 ~'1"o 0 5
lllTmllT ,.,, •nd h•Ye good -.1.1.111-11• us 0 wltrlller.~. 1971. compl•tely r•· loaded. 111.000 pp (l1.JCCe2S)1l51•7547 _ .. _ I gremnw end ~no '? RW •• ~ ... NTED ...,e 1'1~5·10!>2~ --'llP/I ator•d· .... •hlte. camel "5-11.01 Ch•Yrol•t •10 Bl1z1r •W ... _ ... loye At1f1Wf1r t.-pholl9I take .a ._ .,.. ~ V.. ...._ w/ca.ette. IMU.. -500 obo • ....,,. <> •Dllfl•...., •COob meuagu & tillng l .. 111l•l .. 1• M&-0717 71~ ~om--.&bump-meNegte723·1804 'lllUl&Ul 1913,4JC4,mMU81t,.,.
NEWPOAT BEACH OtNER Orowth potenttal Into TEMPORARY HELP """'' er. 2X84715. S7.996 CONSIDER .... , reMJe r~. ale, am/tmcw, b9Ck mlNlon, air. ••cell~t 1400 W. Pectfk: Cout • ""'' Ill I 6015 Slps/Dodcs/Storll' y, ...... tint~ w'tndowa, m•chanlul condition Hwy, N.B. s.. aw or outllde ...... Sllt1lng fec:tory ......... bly. day &Cl ...... Yl lue . Illy 80 mo 15K m1111. 111,500 15800 (2EOCl78) JM*le M.ftl. 10em-4pm NiwyS7.50/hr.,beMflta. .-..nlnD lhlft1, $5.75/ht, C!NTER CLUI MEMBER· 7022 purchlH financing 080221. (7141 ..._2551 ......,14 IOcee.d nMr Hatbot & SHIP Slgnlffunt dla--- -&fll. Compere HouM of Im--.,.....,,.....,,_.,,__..,,_. __ .. ml...,. DAILY Mec:.At1hur. Cal ..i.nnltef count. P1eeM cell CALL ..,... •• pc>n• a e. S•I• 2131714 11lt 1811 CH£V'f SPRINT 19". red .
••••
'
---54<Mn1 a4W751 ~~ MERCEDES &ceMent condition, ale, Automatic w/AC. Mlf'lt
-CONSIDER .... ,, r...-. am/fm ~·· MWOOf, oondltlon, l3300 ••NOW HtAtNO•• PILOT m1•1 ELECTRIC OUITAR 30. sup •vllll* aall 1 'o Mutt .,.., ... , offer 11w111
• Waner• • Cocktail 11111•1• Brand new-Hc•llent • ~;;~~~~;;;,;;, v1 u•, •11Y mo. 17&-6153 Mllt1 r • Ho1u1111 condition Only u .. d bo1t1 only. Electric, A purchaH lln1nc1ng E\191/WkN» .,.,_'II ITIAll
•Booldleeper.71M121 ~~!!~~"~~t .:;re:;_ once. Str91-o<Utor Im· ~~=-~tlea a.ks 9045 ~:.~2 ~1~ 1111•11-V8.~ometle.AJC._PGMr ___ .___._ .... .., If t 494-9650 ltatlon, Mike ott. Call ,...... ,I I ' ltedl/tan, be lhl 11 QOn.-lfiMMg, power wtttdowe,
.__.,.. ...... .. men ' ~~1917 enytlfM SLIP WA.HTEO for ftll MUltang 1"5 ~or.ct. MERCEDES. dltlonl loecMd, Mutt Mii poww dOot loc*, Ct'UiM Wll'lm/WMTllllll wamt Ho 1 d Mlll•r Grind mllntalMd 23 h . pow. RN/black. VI, 1uto· S3S.250/obo 7M-0471 COf'l"ol· AM/FM at-.o.
FT/PT l)OlhJone avt. Ex-l1•/Ml-4J!1 ~WM, llwt wire & f ~~ Clock good con. bolt. PtMM cell Ray or metlc, original OWMr. tltt, we ..._. c:own,
au.Ne oceenfront ,... lii•ira bUU ltlc*C •xP· Drug te9t ;,Ion, ~t new, ssoO Sandy. 873-5272 M750 obo 14()..5875 & MERCEDES 30080 warranty Like new
taurant In So. OC Xlnt m1nd11ory. Call (714) 131-0433 • T~~='=· (11-MS)l14,4H. ~;:.:Kelle=opp~::t:·:··F~or1!.llPP1-·.:=======~e1•~==~--~t~or=Teny .. w-di "'---b d Ille. TranspGfUdon AAA41 llllport!d ?100 ,.~1on ..... 000 ISllW .. ..._. "-IMMEDIATE HIRE .,,. ng "'-· ran -. -.,......., • .-, · - -MW: Wht aatln wlleoe a ~14 * * 414-2704 _, ....
bMdl. IZ 8. Pd 11150, , .,... CREVIER 'll•FHlllW ..a.-1 NEWSPAPER
DELIVERY
aec:aaso.497-7370 UWlllTll ... 1• 11..,_ New enatn.. •Int conc1 • .._. .... J,.. to You 6022 1e1 t . cont a 1 n • d . (074975) DlemoncilliU ~ _.IH 117.950 Call 541--3931 HFl•W
1 • .._..,....., ___ , 11000/0BO. 142-5872 '111-111,,11 .11,111 'lh....... IBll 11111 4_..., eutometlc.A/C
Golden "-trl•ver-2yra d 1 y •; 8 4 1 • 0 7 1 1 (178"2) 'II II.Ill Mf" eJ'rtOE 11471 power ~ pow.t
Old. e,•yful. Colti.-5l!.' evee/Wknd• ... 1111 , 11.... Ole e.:.·:·iowml . brek•. pOW ~tdow .. =a-9~ good dog. 1 H'ID••T ....,_,peao(l1.Nt> SAYE I <•074t7al S10W dOOf loci!, etwa
. CIMn. ale, tittd\, full r.., 'II •--Ill.IN A mt DMfl.D (I •85 3000. . .. I 1t,t75 control AMlfM eterwo.
Early morning motor route available
Must have dependable vehicle and liability
bath S3e.50(mt8501)Pp ~191.,..0 (Ol315) --.. -OMO... Whlt-'btu, IOW ml ltt, .._, ~ ...__ W#etr//Fvn/An. a..a-0729 .. Hiil 11&.ltl 15 735 ... ..u1 (#181421) a2H to l/fir•clate. 6025 DWl'lond 9lu (0182'13) II Ule S • 2cys762 4 to chOoM from ( 8ZLM2) ' -' -1-40""""""'c'!"T."'!!'OIAM....,"'!!'ON....,.o -1 'lllLlll•M' •••,Ill al~wta.~ •13380SL ... 129:115 ElllMt•W In gold ring AppralMd Twln/b.cta. microwave, -•• Chln9 blualbtue mllL8
'2400 SW.no. aa25 TV, 1hower11 u b . ••JI a.lee -S.VSC. (#023818) ..... 1 msurance.
7 days per week.
2:00 a.m.-5:30 a.m.
1.0 CT. DIAMOND, IP-135,5001080 780-8234 1M! =11111t p1"1'9.~1"1''1"9 •II secs~, r '42.975 -------
pralMd "400• w:ttflce ... AllNITY Mw-•.. • • c•21a:r __.'llU S3500. 111-143.1759 l\aldefl.lituw1tor l\OtMfor ...... 1500 Auto Mall Or •M 300£.. .. ..12t.t75 ._ a::::::___ rent. 01y1lw••tcend1 *** Santa Ana Signal r~1p.aom&no 4 c:ytlnder. Momettc, A/C,
-·-"""""-145-3370 Clwonw wtlMll (•'204570 PC>"' """"9. POIMf ABOVE A VERA GE EARNINGS 60SS 'll RO 1•11• 55 Fwy. It Edi •87 3000 SAY br••· ct'UIM control,
ELECTRIC OUITAR uo;rc;:an, EXlf~. lmmec:ulat• OfU 7 DAYS ~~le:-~::· ~~~~ ;:ty_~· L=
Call 714-642·4333 between 9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. (M-F)
AREAS AV Al LADLE:
Brend n•w-eicc•ll•nt Scoocen ~18 Ownef'5-=~ltc. SM50 SeMQt Ht .. Mon~Fr1. (•15 151'3) '*' (2GNell7>•·'"
condition. Only uMd Suzuki 1"3 R.M ao. ~ PP· 87 7:00 llft'I '° t .00 Pf" e M08L. s.at.t75 W ....
once. Stret-o<Mtor Im-condltkltl oritlMI owrw 'll 111111 11ectc1pe1o utta low m1 ---~ _
lt.ltiOn. MM• ofter Cell S400....: 144 Onfy &14 ; ml -•..-$48-1917 Mytlml. 1 red, altl, ernlfmceM. baC* lllm ... PILlll a (•071158) Ml •1 Huntington Beaeh
Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley
Newpert Beaeh
••;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ... t.. tint.ct Wlndowl, ·---,__ --•• Alill!O~ 9010 151( mllH, 111,500 ·--w -, ,-J,·Y· • .....-,. •17 MOSf.C.. t&t.t76jp;;;;;;;;=:iiiiiiiii==~ ,..,_I °'llf'I-080221 (714) Nt-U51 wp eunroo · · Neut ~grey.-*' new 60S9 H, you buy ... em1ne • by ue. -15tt ml
1 _____ .....,._ 121 llted M9r*-"Benz liliw 1ii4 3259. ii ex-• UHlll m•ll
WURLITZER PIANO end 04/ll ,_.. :":S tr... alloy ..,...., I 1j01 QUAil 8T Tll ~TIN
1 ~':'?~~new. f::o~B~fe. C :1owredm.::.'14";;, NrW~~H 75~3020 2131714 MERCEDES. 176-IH2 ...-....
1.,A ' '.· l1 BI~·•·
\ 44 / K ""
PIMM •too by to ,... your
ffe11tl0ut bualMM ltltMMN"tt It
the Deity Pilot Legel Depart·
ment, 330 Weet Bey. Cotta
Meta. Cattfornla, If you can not
t tOO by, plM• cell Ut
at (714) 142-4321, E.xt..-on
315 "' 318 and wt ... "*'• atrangementt tor )'OU to hMdte
'""' procedUr• by "*'· If )'OU lfM)utd ..... ~ further
~one.~ c.I •end we wNI be more INn gled to ..... ,
c...""" In,~ new IMllnMett
Romantic
Roses
7158: Make a ptltow
tnmmed wtth filet
orochet l'OMI UN
~ac:t tht9ad ror I l'Olea. Otrectlon9,
details fof piflow pkAI
ecarf, ctoth tndud«t.
$3.25 PLUS $1.25 PIH
FOR EACH PATTERN
ORDERED.
OfFER GOOO THAOUGH
JUNE JO. t989 ....... ...........
.... t.111 ..... k
Otpl. 0000 .. 4000.
....... •1211MOOO. ,. ...,,,., MdrMI.
Zlp. ........ Hurn-_,.v, ......... . ...., ........ ,
Hitachi seeks ·
blessing on
research site
1y JO'ta l900t.0Vlc:H °' ............
Hitachi Chemical Lld. broke around 3'n a S t 2
million medical and 1tnet1c en&Jnttnna ~rch
ceft1Cf !-1 UCI on Monday wuh a colorful tnbute tc
lbe Shan&o IOds.
Tbe «),()()().square-foot H1a.ch1 Chemical
Reteateh Center is lbe first Jape~ research
caner to be built on a Umvmuy of California campus.
TM center i:s to be consll'UCted next to the UCI ColJetc •of. Medicine and as projected to be
compkted ID 'PODI ·1990. said Wade Rose. an
auistant dean at the CoJlqc ofMechcanc.
... We upect lhe bu11d1na to bqin an thrtt wee~" he aid. ..The fac1hty will conduct btololical rtttarch ID the hve-SCICT\CCS :._ acnetJC ~"I and mcdactl daq:nosracs. .. Hi-.chi cbote UCI because it was familiar
with our retearch 1n lhe area of atnettc ena,inccr-in1-''
Monday's ceremony, under the large white
ten~ was led by three Japanese pncsts who
performed the traditional Sh110-s~le around
purifiauion ceremony in full replia. Officials sa.id
1t was the first time lhe priests had conducted a
lfOUnd punficallon ritual OUlSldC Of Japan.
The reli ... ous around brcakina was intended to
upcJ evil sptrits from the land and to purify the people before asluna the aoos to d«eend.
Tustin-based Tit••.,_ lme. has
aanounced an 89 percent increase in
sales for its first quarter of fitcal l 919.
Sein for the quaner were 110,143,000, compared with
S.3S3.000 b the like quarter of
fiscal l 988. Pre-tu income for the quaner rose 42 percent to SI , 7 t 2.000.
comDered to ~Wt income of S 1.203.000 for the hke per.od last
year .
Net income after wcs for tht first
fiscal quarter was S 1.027,000, or l S
cents. per share on 6,87S.OOO shares
outstandina. ~ompared with
SI ,02S.OOO, or l 7 cents per share, on
6, 191.000 shares outstand1n1 in the year-earlier quaner.
and ~blcf' uecut1 ve officer.
"This renects our continw• abi.h-
ty to increase OUI revenue aftd pre-Wt
income. while we aoc:deraled our investment 1n new--product develop-
ment. chnal tnals.. ph~ educa-
tion and -otldwide martetml. ..
Tnmedyne 1s a manufacturer of
medical lascr synems, lucr cathekn.
fiber optic catbeten and optical
fibers. ••• A special comm1uec of Mla'8 D
IK.'1 directors bas accrpted a S 14. 7S.
a-shatt tender offer by~....._
tries a.c., accordu'I to a fihna W1th
the Securities and Excba• Com-
m1ss1on. Sana. Ana-hued Micro D
expects 111 board and oftkcn to
tender their shares to the Nashville·
based compeny.
Accord1n1 to another SEC filing.. on
Jan. 23 lnaram submitted • supple-
ment to its orilinal otTer. •••• America Heald! SerYket c.r,. in
Ncwpon Beach has announced that
two schedule rJDs have been ftlcd
with the Securities and Exchanac
Commiu1on. ' The ceremony was modified. S'hJhtJy. to combine the Eastern and Western around.brcak-
ina traditions. When rcpresena.taves from the
coUeeeand from Hitachi dug up the mound-of sand
with smaU wooden hoes and plou&hs. a 1old-
pa1nted shovel was added to the scene. A red and white ribbon WIS attached to the tool.
Shinto prlestl Naohlro Shlb•t•,
Katsuhlllo All ...... MMI YosltlhNe M•· JlllNI frOlll dte MeUt Shrine In TOllJO,
..., .... ,....., ......
perfonll rites purtty1n9 the four cor-
ners of die Httacttt OMtMkat aesearch
Centet' site at UCI on Mon.-.J.
Net income R>r the current quarter
was affected by a s11naficantly hi&her
tax rate-(40 percent for the lirst
quaner of fiscal 1989 vs. IS percent
for the year-earlier quaner) rcsuhma from the company exhaustma its nct-
operatina loss carryforwards dunna
the founh quarter of fiscal 1988. a
cnarge to cam1np ofS200.000 for the
start-up of the company's inter·
national sales effort. and an l I
percent increase 1n the weiahted
average number of shales outstand-'"J. from the year-ear1icr penod.
'The quarter end1n1 Dec. 31 1s
h1stoncaJly the slowest quarter of the
year for Tnmcdyne. due to the
holidays. We arc very pleased with
the 89 percent IJ'(>Wlh in sales from the pnor-year penod and our ab1ht)
10 match last )Car's net income, even
with a 167 percent h1aher tu rate,"
said Howard K. Cooper, pttSJdtnt
John Ga1rdner, a Toronto busi-
ne11man, reported ownership -of
SI S.466 sh~ 5.8 percent. of the
outsa.nd1nacommon stock of Amen-
can Health Services. •
Cal Kove:ns, chairman of the board
of Mount S&nai Hosprtal, Miami,
rcponed takina over contTol of the l ,44S.OOO common shares of Ameri-
can Health Services_ prcvtoUl}y
owned by the Haden Grou~.
The ceremony was followed by speeches from
Or. Ryoj1 Yokoyama, the president of Hitachi
Chemical and Kenneth Gibson, director of the
Cahfom11 Department of Commerce.
In return for prov1dm1 the company with
rent-free land, UCJ will receive 1he iround floor of
the H1a.ch1 bu1ld1n1 for rcscaKh and office space.
The un1vers1ty will occupy the top two..floors for
the 40-~r term of the lease When the lease
expires, the bu1ldm1 will become the pcope.rty o(
the UnJVers1ty of Cahfomta.
AJso dunna Monday_·~ ceremony. H1tach1
officials presented a SI S.000 check to rtp~nta·
11 ves of the Orange County Perfomung Arts Center
for the lmaainauon C'elcbrat1on program for children. ~-'" N.:JNG/•I
Teamsters
may settle
federal suit,
,. I report says
LOS ANGELES (AP). -Pros-
ecutors told Teamsters union leaden
to fire five top executives and
promlSIC internal reforms as part of a
formula atmed at sctthna a m1$S1vc racketttnna lawsuit, the Los Anaelcs Times reported Monday
"The ne1011auons are bc1na handled by the U.S. attorney's office 1n New York," an un1dent1ficd feder-
al source told the Times.
Jn New York. the lead prosecutor
in the case. Randy Mastro, declined
to confirm or deny the report He said
the aovemment was sull preparina to
ao to tnal Feb. 27.
Rcs1anat1 ons were demanded from
uccuuve board members Harold
f nedman of Cleveland. Joseph
Trerotola of New York, Rohen
HolmcsofDclro1t. Joseph A Morgan
of HaUandale. Aa . and Ted R. Cozza of PattsbulJh. the newspaper rc-
poned. Wilham J McCarth)'. Team·
ster prn.ident was not tarscted.
Ten other 1ntemat1onal v1cc presi-
dents who helped fctm the union's
aovcmina board wo"1d be pcnmtted
10 remain 1n offict 1f they silJ'IN a
pubbc s1atemen1 calhna for internal reforms wathtn the union. 1nclud1n1
the cstabhshment of secret-ballot
elections. the Times said
The lawsutl filed 1n June seeks the
removal of top leaders of lhe 1.6
mdllOft·rntmbtr union on arouAds
lhlt they arc under the influence of orpnittd crime.
In au unprettdentcd a t1on under
tbe Racketttr Influenced and C'or·
Npt Orpruations Act. the Justice
Ocpenmcnt contends that the Tcam-
stm Union is heavily mfluenttd by t--l'iillilllillJil'Wt -cnme-and 1 no to r
rcspomabft serv1n1 the interests o tts
mctnbnlh1p. It sttks the coun-
onkred ouster of lhe Teamsters' top
man11trnent. placement of the unton
1.11idtr coun trusttnh1p and 1n1unc·
tions berrina cma1n alkatd Mafia f'Pfn fiom any conllCl with the
Ynion 0r its ofY'tttn
Teanwtt otrJCaals could not be
rad.ed for comment allh~ the>
have pledfed co ftaht the law ult •1th
aH tMir retourcn. _.
,,.,,,,Ill''''''
('REDIT I.I'\•:
South Coast Metro Alliance
names 1989 officers, board
The Soi~ Coast Metro Alllaace introduced its 1989 officers and
duutors al the fifth annual mecuna at The Center Club. The} arc Vic
Boyd, QBM Companies. president: Roser Torrlere, Griffin/ Related
Propcntes. vice president: RlcMrd Nelsoa, C.J. ~crstrom & Sons. secretary: Tom Greabel, Transpacific Development Co .. trea~urer and
directors Tod F . Byen, Arnet Development Co.: RaH Cox, The Red Lion:
Sudy Eiell, Kathryn G. Thompson Development Co.: James E.
Hnwood, South Coast Plaza: James HettbrtU, California Paci fic
Properties: Robert Seddelmeyer, We tan South Coast Plaza. and Rieb
Wapu, PacTel Propenaes Inc.
• • •• CHrle Faiella has been appointed director of business de' elopment
for the Costa Mesa/Southern Cahforn1a office of Prome&Jteu Mau1e-
meat GrHp. PMG is a San Mateo-based firm manaJJn8 ncarl~ SI b1lhon m
rommerctal and rcs1denuat real estate properties 1n Cahfom1a. o\nzona.
Washington and Ottaon. Its local properties arc in H untmgton Beach .
Tustin. Thousand Oals. Redlands and Pasadena • • • M1ss1on VicJO resident Pam Wrisley h.as JOIOed James HarcUe
B•iW18& PnMl.ctt 1n that city as telemarketing supervisor J H BP include
Hardishake Roofina matenals and Hard1plank and Hard1panel lap 1ding
and boards for extenor claddma s~stcms 1n commercial and residential
applications. • • • Paul F1nkclste1n. pre 1dent ofRq1s Corp ofM1nneapohs. Minn .. has
announced that ~· DeFaaJo-PMle, manager of R~gls Halrstyllsts in
South Coast Plall, has rettl\'cd the pres1111ous 14th annual "President's
Award." The Cosaa Mesa Rqas Salon earned the corporation's h11hest
award for iu quality customer service, sales performance and outstanding
achievements over 1SO salons an the United States. Defazio-Poole won a
week's trip to Spe1n 1n connccuon with the profcsstonal accolade. • • • Decora~ Des. "'e nauonal shop-at-home interior design frandu ~
ing orpnization. has named four new distnct d1r«tors an California. Tom Sa.,... 1s JD charic of the franchises 1n the Oranp: County area. DccOra&Jq Om:-P'CIF4 u t,bc ninth futcst .,-0WJ0,;-nc:1usc b
by En~ m11121ne -is most rccocn1zable the shiny whate
ColorVans franchise ownen drive to chcnts' homes Equipped with 5.000
fabric. wall and noor covcrina samples. the vehicle i an interior de .11n
servtce on wh«J • • • C.~ ledn••, P .£. rq>onal ma.nqer of OTT Ena.mecrina Inc ..
was recently promOted to vice president of the national cnsjnceriRf and
~aint firm. Bucknam, .-ho JOincd the company last year. will rctatn his
reaioMI ~· rnpoa111Mhues while eaniap.una nto~ actively'" tbC corporation'• m&rtet1naand admini11rauve ~ms. OTT Enainccr-
in& recenliY marted its 10th annivcnary in business and has rqional
offic:a in Mittion v~. SeacOc. Wuh.; Anchof111e. lasb. and Atlanta. Ga.
1I axpayer Bill of Rights' outlined
Antoci burnishes new image
of thrift during federal rescue
9Y Glo.GI GARTtES ,,..,._..,..
LOS ANGELES-A few days after Mano Antoci of
Hunt1n1ton Harbour took the helm at American Savinas,
he was asked to OK adven1stmenu for a new 6-month
cenaficate of deposit payana a rather attractive interest
rate.
The newch1efexccut1ve balked at the thought of what
the offer would cost the savmp and loan. wh1ch had JUSt
been rescued from insolvency by the federal aovemmenL
But 1n the end he let theadsao -afterfirstcutuna the
rate a bat to a st1ll-compeht1ve 8 2S perctn1and1nsen1na
the "ords "hm1ted offer" m the ad copy. Antoc1 uses the story to dcscnbt the t1Jhtrope walk he
must execute as head of what used to be the s1n&Je b1gna
insolvent savmp and loan 1n the oauon: He must bnna 1nte~t rates down from inflated levels the struahna thnfi used to attract desperately nccdcd deposits. but not so low IS to chase away the loyal core of customen -1\o
have stuck w1tb Amcncan throuab four yc&n of public
travail.
At the same time, he must convey the idea the new
American Savin.as. bou&bt by corporate raider Robcrt M. Bass and becked by Sf.7 billion in federal promissory
notes. really is a new. solid and cons.ervauve institution.
.. American Sa v1np is a new company -W1th a I 04-
ycar-old 1rad1t1on -but a new company with a new
d1rcct1on." Antoc1, S4. emphasized 1n a ~t.acqua1nted
session Wlth reporters last week.
tockton-based Amencan. formerl)' the nauon's
K"Cond-btaest S&l-was seized b> the Federal Home
~n Bank Board last year and turned O\.Cf 10 1he 83ss
Group of Fon Worth I\ )car's end 1n cxch.anae for a S3SO
m1lhon cash infusion The aovemment assumed rc-
spons1b1hty for the bad assets - a huge portfolio of
foreclosed real estate loans and monp1e-bad:ed sttun-
ttes camma below market tnte~t rates -and promised
financ11I backina from the federal Otpos1\ rnsurantt
Corp. •
The aood assets. which at SIS b1lhon art lcss 1hat halt of v.-hat >.mencan used to be worth on paper. arc thr
property of the rccap1a.hzed ~mencan Sa"1np a
subs1d1 ry of a new. Blls-<."Ontrollcd pmatc holdinJ
compan\ caJled cw mencan Holdings Inc. An1oc1.
hired away from the No. 2 Job at the parent of Home
SavtnlS of Amenca. the nation·~ b1gaest thnft. 1s
chairman and chief e'tccutive officer of both the hoktina
company and 1he '-
Rival thnf\ cxrcut1\'CS SI) Antoci was a aood cho1~
for Bass 1fhc's 1ntcre ted an rc-cstabhsh1ng Amencan as a
conscrvall\'C. trad1uonally run thnf\. Thouah he 1sn't
widely known on a personal basis. Antoc1's rcputauon as
IS a solid numbers man who embraces Home Sav1ncs·
ronKt"VIU\le stratqy of emphaswna s1~family home
lend1na.
Antoci frequently m"okcs the Home Sav1ncs name and phjk>soph y. and the v1SJon of the new Amcnca.n
Savtncs he ~lntcd for t"Cporters is a near nurror 1mqc ot Home. He II concentrate on mvcstJna 1n Ll\lk·fam1ly mortpan.. the meat and potatoes oftbc traditional lhnf\
And 90 perctnt of those mortpan wdl be Slx-month
adJUStablc-rate loans. 'kh1ch protect t~ thnf\ from
interest rate swmp.
Ant0C1's •pPOmtment "sends a Sl&JlaJ that the 1nshtuboo LI IOl"f to bt run an a conservative and
tracbtaoaaJ fastuon, '_says Bob Adcltm, prcsukot of San
Dlcac>-bescd Home Federal Savings & Loan
He'sdcscnbcd asa hard woncerbut an informal boss
-most of h1s former co-workers call ham Mano.
scut:. d1\lcr and avid boater. he keeps his SS-foot
motor yacht moored offthe bade yard ofh1s house.
Somebody's showing
a lot of interest
• ID
..
Htintington Beach •
give us a call and find
out jUlt how much!
Susanne Frilot
A71~•843•9442
Regulators berated by senator
ov r non-rienewal of insurance
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Seate another camcr for itl ~ lhat evttythjne be handltd in 1he insuranc:c replaeon have failed 10 lut Robbins ICCUICd Mathias• bos&. most proper way," M11hias said ...... mov~ swiftly and decisively aeain~t lnwrance Commitaioner Rouni Wcw1ntanorderthatwilht1ndupin
an insurance compeny that qun Oillnpie, ol Nfteli .. oa • promi1e IO court."
sellina 1"10 Policies in C'.aliforftil bis committee to ~ickly · take 1 Propo5ition I 03, approved by the
becaute or ralMlalhina Proposition via<>rous ••police off~ role in voters in the November el«'lion,
103, astaae leftalorcbafled Monday. cracltinadown on Travelen. Orden insurers 10 cut ra1e1 for mOll ~n. Alan Robbins beraaed Deputy "Tfavdera has made it very clear to kinds of insunnce 20 perccn1 below
Insurance Commissioner Char this commitaec that t~'re .JOina to their November 1917 levels. It also
M11hia1 at a leaisla\ive committee ~ue whaaever is best fOr their revunP1 the way the indUlll'}' is hearina here demandina an expla-profits, lheir corporation," Robbins ~la&ed. makn lhc POii of in·
nation oflhc Insurance Department's said. "The onlr lhina &hit's ~ina to surance commisaioner an elected one
actioM •m• Travelers Corp. four cha~ that is 1f the palice officer ... and requires public bearinas for
Travelerl iuurance poup members says, ·Move, or else." approval of rate increues.
have stopped renewint auto in-Mathias, spealtina for Gil~. lmolementation of the rate roll·
SUr'lftCe DOlicics on arounds they responded that the department 11 beck lw been cklayed by 1he Cali-sura1M:e Oeoenmcnt of tess..-than-would be unprofi11ble under movina as qu1cldy as posaiblc under fomia Supreme Coun pend1na the v~ enforcement of Proposition
provisions of the voter initiative. and the lav. It served Travden >With 1 ou~me of an industry lawsuJt lhlt 103. Robbins.. the only commitaec
1.800 driven have lost their in-notice of non-.compiiancr with the tceks to have the whole measure member 1n attendance. was joined by
IUl'aDce IO far. · · law Dec. 23. bekl 1 hearint on lhlt rejected as unconsutullonal. Sen. Diane Watkins, D-1.m Antelet.
Robbins and the Insurance Depan-notice Jan. 4 and is IWlltina the The hearin& of1he ~nate Commit-a non-member.
meat maintain it is illepl under recommendation of the hearina of-It.eon Insurance, C111msand Corpor-Travelers. with man than 201000
PropoUtion 103 for an insurer to fi<:er, due by early February. ations is 1he latest in a series at which auto policies in California, .. sn't
n.c "'8rri repmcnl 16. 97 pet-
cnt ot me CM11111ad1111 aom o1
American Helltll Senices. "°""' it apec1ed IO became chairman Of lhc
board or Ncuromed1cal
Tecbno&olin. Inc .• roUowiaanupin·
off from American Heellh ServlCCS.
NTI it i wholly..o-nect sublidiary of
American Health Scrvtca. S. Lewi1 Meyer, ornidtnt and Chief ~live olr1Cet of AmtnQn Health
lenieel, Mted dull the company
welcomed dae investment in1emt of
Glirdner and Kovens. American Haltb Services Corp.'s
core businaa is the e11abbshment and
operation o~ dilp~1ic tre.u~ent
ceatcn affibaaed witb hospitals.
heahh maiaaenanc:e ocpruzations.
multi_-tpeciaJty dinics. and phys1c11n
practices. • • • ce....a.J l•lftd.al c.r,. in Or-angic announc:a 1t upects to report ~ eaminp for the year ended Dec.
31 ofS 1.6 million, com~red wt th S l
million in 1987. 1 pin Of60 percent.
Earninp per shire arc forecast to
rm JU .... IO II--.: tlllle 11'1. .. wida ll c.-,., = • FoUrth ••• ,.,. ...... ~:SI0 ...... ~000.or6
Ill! .. · TOlll._..•n..-.IO
$400 million, up 22 Pf:IUlll tom
Sll7 •nllion re;orted I )'Mf .rlirr.
Ceatnnial ..... c.,.. •:~
--independent bank -ll;oldi (Oftlpeny with ladquancn 1n ~
Ult Coun1y, and o-•ll blnk1
1ublidi1rie1 1n Northern an
Southern California. • • • A poup 1ncludina PMlldll G
i.. haucquittd the equivaknt of 6. ~rcen1 _ of , Tustin-bated Car ~ 1-.'1 dlu B commo
sham and 11. I pe~t of its clasa
common stock. c~ Enta"Pn
prov1cks nursina 1erV1c:n..
Accordina to 1 fihna wnh t
Secunttes and Excbanat Com
m1uaon. poup memben pure
$4.9 milfaon worth of convert!
ckbtntures betwem ~pt. I and Nov
18 fora total ofS t.•S milUon. It al
bouaht 29,000 class B sham fi
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Costa Mesa CourtyardS (714) &11·7631
Stoel.< prices yield to late se.lllrig wav,e
Traders scramble to cash in on market's gains of two mont h s .
tly CHET CURRIER ,.,.,.....,,...,
NEW YORK -Stock prices fell
Monda)'., yielding to a late wave of
selling as traders scrambled to cash in
on the market's pins t>f the past two
months.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrial up-about eiit!t potnlS in
the early going. was off I 6. 97 at
2,218.39 by the close. Declining issues outnumbered ad-
vances by about S to 3 tn nat1onw1de
trlding ofNew Yo rte Stock u changc-
listed stocks, with 553 up. 912 down
and SIS unchanged.
Volume on the floor of the Bag
Board came to I 41 .64 mil hon shares.
down from 166.10 ma Il ion in the
M II \·1· '\\SI-: DI It
NEW YORK (AP) Jen. 23
l
I '
I '
-. -1 ') +~
-'J + ~. -. -~ +1 -~ -3 _,,,
DOM JO\t:~ .\\ER.\GE.~
'lt-:T ·\l,S PRl('l-:S
previous session. Nationwide. con-
solidated volume in NYSE-listed
issues. includina trades in those stocks on regional eAchangcs and in
lhe over-the<oun&cr .market, ~otalcd
167.72 million shares.
In recent sessions, analysts said
traders had been responding
fa vorably to generally strong fourth·
quarter eaming.s reports.
They also said money managers at
1nvest1n1 instttuuons .continued to
put some of their large cash reserves
into the market.
But the market also was faced wnh
selling by traden eaier to cash 1n on
the gains io stock pnccs since late last
year.
The rally showed signs of bogang
M II \.I \'II·:' DI It
NEW YORK (AP) Jan. 23
\ 'll·:X I .I-: \Dt-:Hs
\\SD.\«l Sl ,.,.\Rl
GOl,D PRl("J:s
down last week when the Dow Jones
industrial ave,.. approached 2,247
-the level where it stood JUSt before it took a 5()8..point drop on Black
Monday Oct. 19, 1987.
Brokers say that 1s starting to shape
up as an are. of psychological
resistance for the market.
Energy stocks saatd as otl pnces dropped. Amoco fen-3 to 1S~ Exxon
If• to 44¥•: Texaco I 'h to S41/a; Chevron
li!i to 48l\: Mobil V. to 4 7'h. and
Schlumberger I~ to 341/a.
Other losen 1mon1 the blue<h1p industrials included lntemat1on1.I
Busmess Machines, down l v. at
122¥&; General Elec1nc, down v. at
45~; USX, down IV. at 30Ya. and
United Tecbnol<>11es. down lf4 at 43~
Money-center bank stocks were
mostly lower 1n mpontc to 1 Wall
Street JoumaJ column cuing new
concerns about Third World debt
problems.
\lSt: l PS A DOM\'
J.P. Morsan dropped ~ to 341A
Chase Manhattan V. to 31V.
Bankamcrica ~ to l 9Y< Chemica
Bankin& ¥. to 31 1!\, and Manufac
turen Hanover 'h to 29¥..
' Data General fell IV. to 17. T
company rtJ>Orted a SI 9.S milJio
loss for 1ts-fisca.I first 4uartet en
Dec. 24. Texas Eastern led the acti~e hst. u
I I/• at 481h. The company said 1
-would-loot" for other parti
interested in toppma a S42-a~h•
takeover offer by Coastal Corp.
As measured by Wilshire A
sociates' index of more than S,
actively traded stocks, the market I
S 16.82 billion, or 0.60 percent,
value.
The NYSE's composite mdex of 11
its hsted common stocks dro
1.03 to 160.13.
Standard & foor's indus1nal 1nde
fell 2.S8 to 328.83. and S&P-s
stock composJte index was down 2.1 It 284.50.
01( l P' \\D DO"'~