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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-01-26 - Orange Coast Pilotte moutof first place SPORTS/Bl ORA . GECOAST/A3 T H E ORANGE COAST Lawmakers urgejoin! airport for · counties ly The Auodated "'"' Two st.ate lqjslators on Wednes-- day wscd Orart,e and San Dieao counties to JOin l<>sethcr in develop-· mcnt of an international airpon on or near the Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base. Assemblyman Steve Peace, [). Rancho S&n Oiqo, said he will introduce a bill this week that would allow supervisors of the two counties., and pcrnaps Riverside County, to band totethcr to seek the airpon. Peace and state Sen. Manan Beraeson. R-Newpon Beach. who will co-author the leaislation. said · that the airpon problems of San Dieao and Oransc counties arc so similar that it 1s loS1cal for them to work toaethcr. "We have aU this t.alk about 111 international airpon an San Oiqo that t\as been 1oin1 on for years and years, (but) we don•t have the numben in San Dieao to justify it. .. Peace said. "Oran~ County has the same problem wath John Wayne Ai~n that we have with Lindberab F. tt I . Taken toertbcr. the eopulations of the twocounllcs would Justify such an airpon, he said. Be~'!t_ whose district indudet pans of uranae1 San Dieao and Rivcnide counties. said another mouvauon 11 a threat by Los Aqelcs to create an airpon authority .. by force" that would include Oranait County. The authority could force an international aarpon at EJ Toro Marine Corps Air Station "Los Anaclcs has a different set of circumstanct'S," Bericson said. "These dec1S1ons should be relqaled 1 to the counties." · hacc said he wants the st.ate to Cultur•I comparison c:.rotrn D•v .. lllow• off SOM• tradttlon•I llllftonos on t111,eer 81 N•WJIOrt .._..City ... ., frCNll th• cttr'• slater city of ~·-•· J..,.. D•vtl, • ,......._, of die Stater Cltl•• Aaoct.tlon ..._.~and secreury to Newpon-1 ,..,or. . Soviet offld abandon hope of finding more quake survivors ORLO/ 1 25CE TS T H RSDA y·, JANUARY 26~ 1989 ~~te' s death spurs Gentry's activism ly LANCE IGNON OtlN~NMSU# As Michael Gary Burdick la y 1n his beddy1naof AIDS. he medea point of watchina the Laguna Beach City Council meetin~ on the local cable channel. It wasn t to keep up wuh the latest munic1paJ issues, but to watch ·for a sianal from has comparuon of nearly IS years, Mayor Robert Oen· try. Neither the audience nor the other council members rcahted that when Gentry h&htly e1nched his car lobe as he sat at ihc dais that 1t was meant to reassure Burdick that he was th1nkin1 ofh1m. But there was no need to s11nal any lonaer at Tuesday's mectina. Burdick had succumbed to the deadly virus the ma.ht before at Hoaa Memorial Hosp1t.al m Newport Beach He was 49. Dunna an interview at his house folloWlnl the council mect1na. Oen- _.. try recounted bow the virus sl~~ took Burd1ck's hfe and admitted the ~ibillty that he may J\ave been anfectcd. But despite the sadness and per· haps fttr Gentry. 50. naturally feels, he also finds a certain solace 1n tus friend's death. Burdick 1s no lonier suffcnna. "I'm strong tonight because m~ panner 1s at peace. and I know that I did everything that I could to mate ham comfortable." Gentry. the count) 's only openly homose.lual elected offic1aJ. also con- soles himself wtth a sense of pndc in the way the py and ~btan com- munity has organtz.ed to fiJht AJDS As one of the found ina members of the AIDS Education Task Fo~. Gentry has been instrumental in tryina to inform pc<>pk how to a~oad the acquired immune deficiency syn- drome The virus lolls b~ weakening the MktNtel 0., aur .. body's immune syitcm, lcav1n1 It open to a hos\ of other diseases. In 8Urdick's cue. lhe pnmary cauSt of dtatb was t'6bertulostt. Gentry said an autopsy will offlC\ll- 1)' determine 1f8urd1ck died of AIDS, althouah he had already bttn diaanoscd posiuve for the human 1mmuno-<Sdic1eOC')' CHIV) test The prOccdurc detects the prcStnce of AIDS anubodan in the blood and 1s the first wam1na that someone has conll'lcted the vina While p)s arc sull at h11h risk, the infccuon rate has slo~ amona thas aroup. nurse e~dem1ol<>11 t Ehz.a· beth ~w1ck sa1d la t )tar Others at nsk arc intra\-enous drua user!>. Health officials also warn that tt could present a a,row1n1 threat to tctn,..•rs .. , am so proud of the p y and lesbian rommunll} We ha"e re- duced the rate of this d1~uc and created ( upport networks) that art a model for the world," Gentry satd. Sance µJ83,--9-i3 DCOOle have been infected with AJDS in Oranae County and 539 of them have died, Oraqe County. Health Care spokeswoman Kathy Ht111nssa1d. Ofthosc923, 123 live in Laauna. Cou~n_tywide, the AIDS rate is .36 per l,000. In LaJuna the rate is 4.71 per I ,000. HilJlnS said, one of the h1ahcst pcr-cap1t.a levels in the coun- try. Oentl') said 8urd1ck's death means he v.111 llave to redouble his advocacy of AIDS prevention. "Some people say you should nol t.aJk about this and I say JU.St the oppo11te." The disease is 1ransmined v11 three mediums: blood, breast milk and sexual semen, with semen beina the most danaerous. Some tttea.n:hcrs also bche\,e tMtt lS I chance of It be-Ina uansm1ucd throuah ahva. but the evidence 1s 1nconch11i,e. Hts fnend's pass1n1 l.lso means Gentry ~•II now undtrao an AIDS test a well. . "With Gary "bctt\I aick l could not handle k.noW1nt my own antibody st.atus." he said. "It truly would ba~e dcva t.ated hun (1f l tested pc:Kiti~e) and M nccdcd me to be strona to take carcofh1m." Gent!) 1d he fttl no· ..,- toward Burdtdc for po 1bly bav1na infected him. "This as a VU'US. There's no vl.lue Juctsmcnt w1tb a virus. for me. It's hke Sl}tnl that tf thctt a~ btn.h defects. }OU should top ha tQC sex." In tcad, Gentry will remember Burdick a a fattbful companion and as a man v.ho v.as de.cpl)' devoted to his famil) , "We pndcd ourselves on bc1n1 togcthe<r more than most socially acceptablc couples 1n the nauon. Our formula was simple, and that was wt f~ase ... GENTifY I Alf provide stan-up fu.ndana so the coun- ues could t>caan searchma for an 11rpon location, preferably near the San Ot~nae county line. While the bill would not stipulate a site. Peace said he believes that Camp Pendleton in nonhcm San Dteao County should be C01Wdtttd. Teacher accused of molestation denies fondling girls 1y dtfS"YOfCOI -v ~ • padm 1n -a eomfonM\1 Jnanncr. he< .. satd on the tand 1n hi\ m tatton tr<>Ak ai hoot ~ .RAf c ~ ~tobcr, • h1lc a fif\h The base ~ould be ideally ~uitcd 11nce 1t already 1s on a uansponauon c:omdor for mass transit and rail ICUSS, be said. Of .. ~,..,... never touched the breast or bullocks tnal at Harbor Municipal Coun T 1 1 f girt said she v.1tncsscd the incidents. of four youna •irts. ouo 1na. an -)ear 'ctcran o Newport lkach element.ary school .. The defense also ron11nucd lo tea h1na. 1s cbaflCd w11h four counts teacher frank Touolina Jr. testified "I would bave remembered some-charactcnze the~ )Ouna a1rls "ho of misdemeanor child molcst.atton Lindberah Faeld would have fewer , ....... IH AHtl'OtrT I Al f Wednaday that aJthoua.h he some-thana hke th.It; it didn't happen," the brout}\t charics apins1 Tozzohna a.s four of his tudents have allqcd he times puts bts arm around h11 fif\h. 42-ycar-old science and math teacher connivinastUdents who of\cn 1ot 1nto touched their brca 1s and buttocks f 'O\ t :H s·r·on\ PHO• II .I· Decision on assault rifles backfiring ~90ll VAN IYKIN ~2¥'' riftc, kllhna ft vc and ----~~_,.._...., ____________ :Olt:~:-Olftl11nno.Med that Randy Garett is stt(k1na by h11 he wO.ad i.....sia 1 11 .AA..ision '° s•~ telh-m1hU1"'--t"'... · IC 'l 1'°P te •na ~ ._. ··• • 1 , .,. auna wlM>ll ..._..and fin~ QP.ICll)' asuult nftcS 11 bis Costa Mna Po" inade Wftl lnOft suitable for mahtary and sun shoP. '*than for huntiftl. 8Ut M'1 bclann1na to wish he Since then Gattfl has bt'Cn tome" hldD'l ..aect IUs moulh about it. thins of: 1 celebrity, a hero to NAY .. I've llld eaoup. 1 ba~'t bttft and 1 Yillaitl '°tome. able tocOactuct 1nybusinaa; it'• bttn .. I'd~ IOfM d1~ llM ="~::,t~~~ ~~ -=-~ty ... betaid.""but l ... Gran• ao,. oe Ncwpon ioUecvard. :..;7,r~ 'P!e1 = ~ The decilion ... iplirUd by the ~ ...._.,. llJ.klna to )OU PY' 11CW1 llll weet tbat Pllrict P\lrdy, a (die_ ... meaaally disturW drifter in Sl«k· _ .. _.,.._..Ill )OU. thlS 11 the last toDt Md ooeMd firt on a~ ia• '1111ofcbdclmwitt.a1tt1ai-euMMnatte ~Miiii•~ on the itsue bas also come from members ot thr ,eneral public. both by phone and the iMtaboA..----"We'vc bttn dch•d •Ith rN1I in the list tYtOdl)I." he said ... About 9S pc~nt of1t has been pos1t1ve EAetpt for a few customen. w response hat been favorable. Ewn distributors. the ~ty of them, have btt!l very ~·~. ahhoulh thetr pohC) Ms blfft noc to klH6c Pf'tlS about 1t ~~u t u toOn 1t was not at all." The duunciion bttwftn military ... uh nflcs and other tcmi.auto- matic wcape>ns has COfM under fire from lhc N1uonal Riflt Auoc.ahon. whole chtdWulu~on l~ist said in a ttttnt 1nwrvecw that ·an se><>rts nflcs now an USC ~ere OnlJn&ll)' dcs1aned ~•th maht.af) usn 1n mind sell 11Jd. bOWC\Cr. 1b11 he had httlc trouble dmd1n1 which weapons were preferred b) hunters and wttt purchased for their m1ht.ary appeal. "It wa pretty easy 101n1 down out shelves and dec1d1n1 which wcaporu we were ~01na 10 take out," said Garelt. "It s a question of lht con· ftturauon of the aun. the color, •he1ber n will accept a scope. and .,,hat the mapnne capaaty 1 and aJso which ones our own customcn have complained about That was also a cnteraon Wc',·c bttn asked countless ttmcs. .,,hy do }OU carry th ts ptrtK'ular ~ca pan." fl'te ... '"..US/ Alf Unexpected low bridge halts traffic on 405 Freeway 2S ~n and )'OU Ft a ftthna t01MtJU111 iul ., npt. 001 now ii I Im it. aomt o( the ._..will ... lhe hcway. So I dMM I will ill!ll ._. doWn. bui the --lilli II it ~ ltOp Oft I .. ._. 9ll•1w will "'*bty nan ......... °',.. .. Left w"bout a choice. the nahcam rnidet'll braked to 1 halt an lhc slow lane of the southbound frec""-a)' -all 91 fttt of his n · Two lanes ot tht lrtt~a)' ~re shut down for two hours t>tainn1na at IO:JO am. •hik lnJ)1 maneu,crcd h11 way out of tM s1tuallon with the GOODMORNI G fOOd .................... \•············· c 1-5 In ft Mrvkt ......................... AS help of the H•lh~ay ft.trot .. The f ~'IY was -very crovr.Jcd.. .. lf\11• said ... It •'Is tembk l'Mrc •a 1 ~ 11vin1 a t1d.ct 10 •Ju> and I hailed him do-n. I •1 r tot a probkm here and thtre ain't no """> rm 1011'\I to ~t unckr th1 tiridte.'' fPINM9",..._AY/AJf Otfenst attomc)' John Barnett contends the sirls fabncatcd tM molestation 1nc1dents to act l~•M'" TEACHER/Alf School chief defends his ban of gay -lecturers ly80IVANEYKEN °' .. ~ ........ The supmntcndant of the New- pon-Mcsa 1n1ficd hool Dtstnct·on Wednc!(b) defended hts decision. announ~ this ~k.. to ban homosnuaJ q>cakcn from lddreu- ina a Corona dri Mar Hiah School psycbol<>&)' class. for)cars. teacher Make Manno has '"""ed p y &Rd lesbian ~km once a semester to lilt to b1 introductory ps)ChOIOI)' C The pnK11ce, v.hich Manon aid was t.~ on a neutral. scientific poi nt of \ 1cw tov.ard the t~ of KAUlht). Pf'O' c.>kcd proletlS from some pattnu who •id they wlawd an ll\t1·homoR\uil vteW pr'9nWd in the dus 1J 'Nell . upenrutndtnt John icoll annial- ly upM&d Manno's rilht eo 1nv1• \ht P Y iptaktft to hlS tle' but Nit'QQ annowK'td Tuetday ~hal he Md tt\tncd ht POMhon, .,.._ .. QASl/AJt .• radbury concede 'laura m~y ., TEACHER ,.......,.., T oz:zolina fired. ~ioned by 8-:.mett and Deputy District AUomC", Kelly MacEachem Wednesday. Touolina denied the airls • s&ories that he had slipped his hand up their shirts and rubbed their brcasu. .. Oeftnitely not, .. he answered re- peatedly. He said sometimes when children become upset about their work, .. I'll put my arm around them .. to comfort them. He also often puts bis hand on their t.cks or shoulders to direct them, ht said. The teacher testified he was .. absolutely shocked" when he read a note he had intercepted as it was passed between two of the &iris. The FREEWAY From A l California Hi&hway Patrol Officer Rick Baeza first slowed traffic so lnaJiscouJd maneuver the truck to the fast lane of the freewly, where construction workers said the brid~ was a foot hiaher. "But once there I knew I ain't aoina to make that either,•• said lnaJis.. .. By this time they sot the whole freeway shut down. I'm tryina to back up with this 9-axle ... and everythin& is screwed up. There must have been IS cops there by that time." Ron Salmond, dispatcher for the Los Anaetes-bucd Challenae Tran,.. port Co .• said the-~lifornia eep.rt- ment of Transportation was unaware of the temporary brid~ when it issued a permit to the company. The Highway Patrol closed two freeway lanes for more than an hour while Inglis unloaded the Caterpillar tractor from the truck. drove it under the bridge. drove the truck under the bridac and then reloaded the earthmover on the truck. Once that fat was comple1ed. Inglis continued on to a construction site in Laauna Niiuel. GENTRY FromA1 were committed to a relationship no matter what happened." Burdick had been a hairdresser since the aae of IS . He was cuttins a woman's hair once when she told him of a youn& Vietnamese boy who had no family to stay with for Chnstmas. "Gary said he has a place for Christmas. He brou&ht this kid home with a paper sack fulf of clothes and he didn't leave." Gentry said he and Burdick railed the boy for JO years. putting him throuahcollegeat UCI. Thcfosteraon is currently an engineer. Gentry met Burdick in 1974 at a health club in Lona Beach. They AIRPORT FromA 1 fliahts but could remain open as a ••teecser•• for the international airpon. Peace said. Jn a sutement. Camp Pendleton officials aaid they recocniz.e the difficulties faced by Oran~ and San -'-"'-'-+-:--+---~.ll·iq11.alU.01ici_ ~in air trans- portation. but addecf"we strcnuou y OPJ?C* all pro~ls to locate a t'Cf?On&l airport• It the base. ~· ~ in &be .., in-:=:... .=~'Y'") Su 'lerMldino County lberift'1 oftkia1a codnned for tbc ftnt time WdrttcflllilbcJM ......... taMft .. , ia Julf l Ml '° OM of four labomtarie. iD die Uai'8d sa.. tbal perbm dlie DNA tab. The preliminary ..... iadicaled the lkuU CltiP .. compoeitioD wu cooU. tent widt 1.aura••• = ud the booes ...... '° • lebon- lot)' two weeb llO for more leltina. aberitra ~Jim Bryant said. Resulta of lhole testa arc expected IOOD, be added. Bndbury said be did not want IO believe the report that DNA \elU indicated the bones are pn>bably the remains of his dauabter. "My 1ut instinct. as a father, J want to believe sbe'ulive. but wben I look: at the infonution that'• co~ina note said, "I'm aoina to tell my mom Mr. T 'l"Ooleaed me and YQ\J IU)'S beca~se he will ttt fired" and "I aarce withyou.1 want him fired." He said be saw the nolt thrown from the second row to the first row while he lectured. ··1 saw who threw it and who it teemed directed to. .. be said. Tozzolina said he took the note to school principal Alvin Zeidman, wl)o subsequently called a mcetina be- tween thcairltand teacher. Tozzolina said be also denied durina the meetina touchina the airts' breasts. When Barnett asked if he has any sexuaJ interest in children, Toz:zolina replied, "No,J do__n 't." Questioned by Barnett about whether the jirls were comet in their testimony that they were aood stu- dents. Tozzolina said, .. Not accord- in& tom~ records.·• He said four of the airts' were flunkina science and had a C ~or below in math problcm--solv1n1 dur- ina the first six weeks of class. Under questionina by MacEacbcm, be ad· mitted those arades reflect the results of only one test and that out of 29 students in the class, 18 of them flunked the tint test. Tozzolina aaid for approximately two weckw prior to the accusations beina made the v.oup of airls "mi,.. behaved" and did not tum in their homewort. He said he kept them for detention aa punishment. Ke said he felt th~ were subse- quently anarY at him for sivina them low pades and for lceeptft.1 th~m for dc1rition. One of the airla. 'ln l 1- year-old, "frowned at me rather neptively" when he told her ahe oWed him another half hour of detention, T ozzolina said. That airt was also overheard say- ina. "I will have a lot more friends when I act rid of Mr. T," by sixth- arade teacher Penelope Ferrell. Ferrell, who testified to Tozzolina's honesty. said a couple of days after Toz:zolina left on a Jcave of absence followina the charsn. she overheard the airt make the statement to a sroup of about five or seven friends in the hallway. bepn hvinft t<>sether in Laguna Belch the fo owina year. "There is no other flac:r in the county where the two o us could be who we are and act the support and undentandina and IClCq)tance." It was this devotion for the city that kept Gentry aoina to council meet- RIFLES From Al That doesn't' mean Grarq Boys no lonaer carries sem1-.automatic rifles. Oarell aaid he wanted to make that very clear. "The word aemi-automatic weapons has been bandied around, used and misused too much these days.•• he aaid ... The one point I want to make is that huntina rifles I still Ql'rf'and will con&inue to cany are also sema-eutomatic weapons. There is ablolutely no difference in that reprd. I hive eliminated lhc mili- tary-type ritles. tbat'a all." Some commentators have also made a point ofthe atleted euc with which aM1ult rifles such as the Soviet and Chinese-made AK-47 and the ndi-m8de Uzi can-be-eoevened to fully automatic machine pn1. Gardl uid be knew that tome semi-eutomatic:I ~ relatively easy to convert while olhcn ~ matt diftkutt. lut he llid be did "°' ' Uvoueb aow Oft the bone ~ .. it's very diftlcWt. but I tiave to &tao toward the Jll'C)Mbilny that they're aoint to be able 10 prove thote are l.aura•s remains," Bradbury aa1d. .. f ve ncvn really deah wtth the poa.ibilil)' that Laura's dmd, and this la the tint time rve bad'° deal WJlh that and it'• teary. It'$ lerrifyin1 to rtalizc that tomebody may have acnaally taken your little ,;rt out and murdeftd ~r. •• Laura's diuppearanc:r more than four yean aao sparUd • nationwide teareh tb9t .,encrated more than 30,000ae.dl. .......... kid.med. 1o111 • S7',000 to S 100. 0e dte ..._. nwtet. BUt Mr &lblt COi" c'lded dlil be it ... fli1b iD dMn .....,. "I'm not the kind of palDll ~ aoina to slick my hil9d in dlie IUd ud play 01tncb. I bavc ao cir.al willa reality, and the fact that that lkull tap bas bttn analyzed u tbon>ulWY u it bu by the profeesioaal• who -1mow ,what they're ctoina in DNA raeua •.. and I know eta(JUlb about al aow I have to 1ake my bat off '° tM credJbility ot it ... problbl)' .... dealin1 with ~ Wf.ely a difllereDt chapter 1n what happened '° LMara &Gd what we're IO'lll to do &om a.. on out, .. Bradbury aid. Her bily opened a atotd'ront oftiee in Huntiqton Beach IO handle tips aad inquiries. diatributcd tbou11Gd1 of Oien lbrouahout the country and aot her photopaph placed oa milk canons. .. If lbe wu. in ~ mwdeftld ad tho. are her mnaim. tbeil a .,.. new bl.llpme•a opened up bin: Wbo did it. and what's bebll Clone about . it?" -.. ......... llr••-r~IW Tbe Bradburys believed their The aame airl had earlier admitted CLASS on the stand. without the jury present, that her friends had climbed throuah From A 1 a window to retrieve a note from ··1 said precisely to the pnnc1P*1 of Toz:zolina'sdesk. Thcnotewaulove Corona del Mar Hiih ScboOl the letter the airl had written that was practice ofinvitina members of what intercep~ by a substitute teacher has been called t6c py and lesbian who ~ Tonolina after he community to class w8'J to be atop. beun his leave of absence. pcd " said Nicoll. Damett had initially planned to "i am not sugestir:if that the present that bur&lary incident as subject of homosexuality not be evidence of the Jirfs' misconduct, but · discussed in class. In fact. I feel that it it was no1 admitted. should be. But I believe that the role Outsideofcourt,parentsoftheairls oftbe homosexual in ouraociety can saidtheirdauahtenarcwronalybeing be conveyed by a competent teacher depicted as bid children. Btll Fisher without the ute<>f 1uest speakera." u1d his dauihter was an A-8 uade Nicoll insisted that he was not student before the alle&ed molest.a-11vina in to the desires of parents or tion incidents and that sfi-ebccamc .. a othm whose views ofhomoseJtuality different person" because of the were based on relai;on. rouah tre.ttment she received when But he also said he objected to she came forward . Manno's contention that homose-x- Both teachers and other stude~ts uality is an i!"mu~ble, genetically have accused heroflying. Fisher said. determined onentat1on. "She's JOt no protection from the He said the district had ~un this school" he said. "She's been chased weekareviewofthescientificcontent home by kids .... It's disturbing as a of Marino's tcacbinaabout homose-x- parent to watch your kid pushed uality. aside. _ "I would not want homosexuality "She's a lot harder (now) than she presented as an immoral choice:· he ever was. She's a touih little cookie." said. "But one point of view is that Fisher said all the parents them-homosexuality 1s immutable in the selves put their daughters "on tnal" genes. lake the color of eyes. That is and explained to them the seriousness the point of view of Mr. Marino and of their a~usauons prior to going ofthc American Psychiatric~· forward With the charaes. lion. Another equally vahd point or "Before all this happened, there view may be that 1l is a learned were no problems," said Kathi Flood. modifiable behavior. I want to find mother of the girl described by out whether or not there 1s a body of teacben as the chief rabble-rouser. scientific opinion that is different F1ood rebutted the teachers' tC5\1... from that which is put fCKWll'd by the mony that she had been called to the 1 American Plychiatnc Auociation." school often for conferences bcc-ause r Nicoll said a cli11ricl panel would of her dauahter's behavior. "I've rev.eiw the. content of the courx but never been called," she said. that ~IS ·decision about the outside In fact. she said she has been the speakers would stand reprdless of one concerned with her daughter's the outcome of the review. performance at school since 1he .. There is no formal mechanism of alleptions came to liiht. "I've called review for this type of decision ... he every day and asked. 'How's my kid? saad. "And I do not believe it's a How's she doing en school?' .. and anevablc issue throu&h the teachen' have been told by teachers that union either." everything was fine. she said. Some students and parents ob- Attor;neys ~re e.xpected to fin~sh jected to the decisi~n. sayina it prescnt1na 1hcir evidence today. with amounted to censorship. the jury slated to beain deliberations "I'm soanarY that Dr. Nicoll would Monday. do this ... said Brooke Reed. a senior inas throu&hout Burdick's illness. Gentry said Burdick wanted it that way. Gentry first realized that his com-panion mi&ht have the disease in March 1988 while he was watchinJ a shde show dep1ctina the st.aaes that AIDS v1cums go through. The sud- consider that issue important in the controveny over the sale of assault rifles. • "I'm not a gunsmith, so T can't really tell you which ones are easy to convert and which ones aren't, but t don't think that's the point," h~ said. "You can fire off an awfUI lot of rounds in a short time just by pullina· the~wit.h yourfinaereach time. I don t think it makes all that much difference whether it keeps firinJ automatically when ~u keep It pulled. Tbe point 11, 1t s a crime to posttsa a full)' automatic rine unless you have a specific permit for 11:· • den weiaht loss. 1t was Just hke Burd1ck's. Burdick finally souiht medical treatment in November. "When I first met Gary. h1sareatest fear in life was death. Toward the end he didn't fear death." A memonal service will be held for assault rifles. "I've heard that it m1&ht bin all semi-eutom1t1c rifles. ancfifthat's tbe case, I would not JUppon 1t ... be said. But a spoktsman/ot Roberti uid the bill, which wih be introduced Monday. would only bin the sale of the type of weapon Ga.rell has already ceased telhns. "We will define it in the bill." aa1d Bob Forsyth, Roberti'' press I«"" retary_. "There wtll also be a few spccffic weapons mentioned. such u the AJC.-47 and the Un. But l beJievc the bill wtll provide for the coatinued sale of 1em1-.au1omatic huntina rines andtarstriOes." The National Raftc Allocietion bu ~v~~.~~~~s1~: ~ · Lanuna Hiiis, furioustbat1Jr0Upof~wbo1re · :J~ so nain could tct the district to do ltyh d so~iaa like ibat. Where are t.hcy ( 00 Piii to saop? Next they could tel uplet about aome other topic that • ~"don•t like and have thal boned question to Pam Meftdettohn. wholC dauPtcr Maed!th isal~a student in the~ go to voters also said she objected to the dcci110n. "I t.hiftk the kids are old en• to be expOlled to this topic.•• she uid. ··1 couldn't .ee it in junior hilb tchool, but these arc hill' tcbool aeniors. I don't think the superintendant's de- cisiol'I was npL" Senior Gabrielle Minor1 another student in the class., accmca Nicoll of bowina to a narrow, relisious point of view. .. It's terrible," she said. "Every time he ~ts the slip tea 1quene from the community he tiabtens up like a clam. I don't know wlly people act so upset at the stiptest hant of aome- tbina that'a out of\he ordinary. This is not a reliaious school. lt'a supposed to be a public school w~ students receive a liberal educa1.ion ... But a liberal edaac;ation 1s not foremost on the mind of Linda Scelhont. whose two sons are padu- ates of Corona del Mar and who took Marino's clas.s. She, applauded Nicoli's dccia.ion. .. I'm just sonci1ed," she said ... We feel it's not approenate material for a haab ICbool class. • "Seclhorst also said she objected to Manno·s ~ition that homo1uuali- 1y iutneti<:all~ determined bthavior. "Wt•ve spoken to numerous psy- cholotiJts who say that n i• some-thina in the person's environment that detmnanes whether tlacy will be bomotexual and that people can cha.nae and adopt a hetcrosnual lifestyle." But the basis for her objection to the bom01Cxual speakers, she said, is her belief in "traditional moral values. .. "That's what our country was founded on:• ahe said. Burdick 11 l p.m. Sunday at the Hotel 1..a&una. His body will be intem:d next to hia arandmother at a cemetery in Cypress. "'f&c arandmother, 1f anybody '" his hfe. pve him ~mussion to be who he was and the strcnath to be who he was." announced its intention to oppose RobertJ's bill viaorously. OareU., a financial supporter of the NRA, wd he wished thcorpn1zat1on would 1i1 down with Os>POftell1' of assault rifles and dilC\W the matter. "I'm s.1ad the NRA is there and I ,encral_ly IUpt)Ort lheir IC'tivit1es," he said ... But I think they have to flnd some middle around on th11 iasue. You have to take into conalderation ahe mood of the country and What the cumnt situation ia. ··1 ulMletaand whit their objection Is. but I think diieY med to ai t down with e>pp0nent1o(thcte waponsand ialk over What _types of measures •illat be ecceptUle '° bocb Iida. .. 1y JAHET ZJMMfRMAH OIJ'-..S.W. Oranac County's incorporation and boundary-seuina a1ency Wednesday rejected a ttaff rtC- ommendation and voted instead to place the Laauna Hills cttyhood measure on the ballot After more than two hours of testimony and doz.ens of speakers from both sides, the LocaJ ~ncy formation Commission voted 4-I to let midcnta decide whether to in- corporate. Commission staff .bad rec· ommended denial of the petition, sayi~ it would hamper rqional plann•Dl efforu, uneven!~ distribute revenue an '°uth Oranp: County and reduce f uturc efforts for incorpora· tion of other smaller com mun1tJes. Assistant Executive Officer James Colan,elo told the <0mmission that denial of the ~tltion ~ould -allow LAFCO to fac:r an uncertain futuTC with the WJdcst poss1b1lttJes avail- able." One of the s11ckingpo1nts has been the 1ndus1on of Ltisu~ World, a community of 21.000 that would make up almost half the proposed city. Residents in the retirement villqe have spht over the 1ssue. In vouna to include the c1tybood proposal on the ballot, Com- missioner G~dd1 Vasquez said the resjdents in the affected area should be allowed to decide. "No one wins today;· he wd "There are three componentS. the proponentsJ the opponents and the residents 01 Leisure World." Chauwoman Evelyn Hatt, a New- port Beach City Council member, said 1f 1ncorporat100 1s approved. the city would have to assume two development aareements already adopted 1n that area. Under the ag.rttments, the county free-us zomna and other' land-u.st restrictions. suaranteesna the de- velopers the ri&ht to build 1CCX>rd1na to current plan In ~tum. the developera undawnte construction of new road and pubhc ficihties • The 1ncorporat1on wue will now ao before the Board of Su~itoa The pn-posed aty would be bordered by ll'Vlnt. Laauna Beach. Dana Point, San dcmente and San Juan Cap1llrano, as well as Mimon Vi(jo and El Toro lO the e&Sl ()ppgnent Wallac:r Bjornson, head oftheCommaueeAp1ru1 lncotpora· tion. called on the commauton to dmy the pelltaOn becauie 1t would man "atMior'sM.ion of resources for a limi&ed n.unbtr of people IOUth of LmweWOdd. .. The diatJncllon between mihtary and sportina rifles could becomer-----------.,:;;..,..-.... __ __. __ ....._ _____ ..-.. ....... _....~----_.;.------~~--~----.....:..._ ________ ..;;;._ more important if the state lqislature were to ~a ball beina proPosed by k...Scn.__Dliv1d Roberti. D-Holly- wuodf that would. 'ban the aale or asuu t rifles in Cahfomia. GarelJ 11ad he Md heard about the propolal, and was conc:emed that it milht be too broed in its definition of 'There is no way that a rq.ional airport can be located anywhere on Camp Pendleton without reriously ~·na or cunailina all the trainsna we do taere;• LL Col John ShotwtlJ said in the statement. f \I II OIC'\I \I 0111 IC\ .. We will take every measure ~ to prevent that from hap- ~iQI. besaid. PaCle and BerletOn'a ,!>Ill would mpec:t the i~ of each county'• 8oerd of Superviton ~ allowina them to vote on partica- palioa in 1,JOint 1ulbori1y, Palcellid. h allO Would allowtbe IUpeniton IO determine the 1utflority•• vodna llnlCtllf'e. Tiie .C>Pli9n would be available for llivrnide County to join, he said. ly n. •••• d l ltd Pl'em Here are the winq numbers IMcked Wednaday' niPt for the California 1.oaety•1 twice-wiiekly .. Lotto~ 11me: 6, I, l Ii ll. 4)," and the bollua number, 29. PlaJCfl Wlao COINcdJ ...... Ill a ...... wil I tiim_pCim of tl millioe. locaery "= .4°' AU tbo1e wbo ;a.t ft_.. aumben plua dle boaus numllir will divide Ml 'HI I'' 11 '''«· Just call 642-6086 VGL•m.• . a190111tbemtelvaIprizepaolOf'S1.6 million; five of aut will nre 1145,000: four of sil\ will tblle S761,000. Three of aix is worth an •utoma* U per winner . The numbers were dtoKn by Lono m8daillt ..... a ----........ C9M q•illl in ........ IO. The ... tom Saturdly riilbt to Wedq 11d9y't dnwiftl were SIS.I milffoft. •"'1·---~ ......... 149 ..... "' ... ,,,,. ,_..., .. •...,....aw ~c.­_ ..... c.... • ............ ,,. _.... . -... ..., ,_ CtfC ......... .... ' f · i l I t ! • \ t.~• \I\ it High school bands to perform in.He The Hua~ lacb eo.cien Bend will combine bus wilb &be M1riaa Hiah School Coacen 8aDd and lhe Mari•~ 8Ucf to praent a hr~ at. 7 p.m. Sal.uday m lhe Hununaion Beach Hi@ School auiditonum, Yorkt0wo Avcn~ and Main Su.t. Tbe beedl w1ll p&a~ rnarcMs;; show iunn and claMic.al eelec1ions. &ch will perform a sbon concen tepar1tdy. They'll combine for three numben and cond\IM •ilb .. Stan IAd Stnpc1 Forever." Llo)d Glick. maftll!Cr o(t.he Hunlinaton Beach Co0CCT1 •nd. said the conct'11 is aimed at funhcrina the musical expericntes of lhe blah school mU$ical aroups. Handlca~d gofng'flshlng ~ Volunteer Center of Orantt County, Central/South div1S1on, w11J offer a prOIJ'lm to help handicapped children team to fish 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday and March 17 at Los An&eles River Lakn in Anaheim. For further information, call 9S3-S7S7 or S82·3176. Photography class at OCC A two-pan workshop te.achin1 the basics of 3Smm photocra_phy will be offered from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. today and Feb. 2 at Orange Coast CoUqc. Professional photopaphcr Eleanor Anderson will discuss such topics as camera oncntauon, film selection and charactensttcs, natural and an1fic1al hghung and compo$1tion. Pan1etpants are asked to bnng 1 camera. instruction manual and roll of film to I.be fim meeung. Each person wall be aiven a photo assisnment. RC&IS1ration can be made for $25 at the OCC Community Service Office 9 Lm. to 7 p.m. For information, call 432·S880. Lupus Foundation speak~r Dr. Panaht, rheumetoloaist. will speak to the Orange Count)' chapter of the Lupu.s Foundation of Amena at 7:30 p.m. tonil)lt. The symptoms and treatment of lupus. a chronic conncct1ve tissue disease affecting the body's autoimmune system, will be discussed at the Unated Methodist Church. IOOO S. State College Blvd .• Anaheim. More information may be obuisned by c.alhng Sl~SSSO. Berg~son at ~ld~rly car~ forum Sen. Marian Bergeson (R·Newport Beach) w1JI speak at a forum on health care for the elderly from ~ a.m. to I p.fll. Fnday at the Irv.me Co. conference center, 550-C Newpon Center Dnvc. cwport Beach. Roy Azamoff, director of Eldercarc Maruts.e. ment Group. and F. Bums Jr.. public policy consultant in Sacramento. will also speak at 1he evenL There 1s no fee for attendance. but scauna 1s hm1ted. Call 68()..0122 for add1t1onal snforma11on S~nlor busln~ss m~~tlng corr~ctlon An item 1n Tucsd1ly's ed1t1on of 1he Dail) Pilot pvc the wrong date for a meeting to orpmzc a consultms firm of seniors with bus1nes~ cxpenencc The mccuna Wlll be held Monday at 7·30p m 11 the Red Lion lnn, 3050 Bnstol St . Costa MeS3 For informauon on the proposed firm , 10 be called Seniors Wnh Amazing Talents. call 522-0 03. Squadron to t~ach boat~rs An accelerated, seven-week boat1n1 clan is offered at the Balboa Yacht Club by the Balboa Power Squadron and wtll bqJn at 6:30 p.m. Monday. Presentauons Wlll cover equipment seam- anship, charts and charttna. coastal nav1gat1on. 9"otint '8d ~laled &Ub.Jects. Tbcclub1sat 18018aysidcOnve1n CoronaOel Mar. For information. call '432-8716 Student leadership prlm~d A teaden}up conference wtll be held in Humanincs 101 at Golden West College, I S744 Golden Weit St., Hunt1n1ton Beach, from 8 a m. untd 6 p.m. Saturday. The prosram coven fund-raasma. advcrtmna and markcuna. voluntan1m, events plannina and student nahts and resources St'1Clenu of hash school and fout·)car collcaes art in Ylted. . Tho ~rcai1tration fee 11 SIO Al the door, ldmiuioo is SI 2. For infonnation. call 895.-8781 . f \l .t :'\D\H Thursday .. Jan . 26 No mertinp 1ehcdukd Friday, Jan. 2 7 No mcetinp tcM<tukd 1'01 If I I Of, ~----..................... . Mary Harres pets tier tlone aacardl D•rtr at th• ~"'"'"9'°" •••ct• a4ueltlian Cent~, wtlk9' die man-.•~ · . -r New manager of equestrian center will f ace,hurdles . 9y ..otlllt'T aAMCI• or .. ._,......, A woman wranaJCr has taken the reins 11 the Hununaion Beach Equcstnan Center. a facility MKkC'd by cpntroHrsies that bavc splashed over into the couns and Cll) Council chambers Mar> Hams 31 , will ta~e o'er full manqement of the 2S-acre facility She and her father, Willard Ham bouJhl out panner Eddie Milljpn's $hare in the HunllnJton 8cacb Equcstnan Center. a concession company holding a 2S-)ear least Wlth lhe (tty. The announccmeot of the depanurc of Mtlhpn, a former JOCkcy J. was arttt~ with applau~ by members 01 the Huntington Ce-ntral Par1c Equestnan Center a aroup formed to deal Wllh &ncvances lodged at the stables at Gol<kn West trett and Elias Avenue. "W11h Ma!) Harris as manager. I ha'e h1ah hopes that many of the problems at the fac1ht) will no longer e>.ist," Norma Vander Molen, chairman of the group. said Wednesday. Oen Ontga, a member of the ot)' Planning Comm1ss1on "ho took her horses out of the fac1ht)' because ot concerns O\'er M1lligan·s manaiemcnt st)le. said horse boarders can look for "better management and a sense of fair play" "Onder Kam • l'Cll~ - M1lhpn mana,c<t the fac1ht) since 11 bcpn operauons 1n 1982 Mar) Hams and her father Joined ·M1li11*n u ·~ in 19 6. Hams said Wednesday she believes tUt the troubles. which she blamed oti pct· sonaht)' conflicts, will be left behind at lk center that's home to more am lOO horses She said she'll w 'th lftideau to put on more pubhc suet. as f rtt polo matches and h Hams studied an1 I sc bu iness at Cal Pol)' Pomona aGd Coast CoUegc. She keeps her own Bacardi Dark. at the center. In 1987\ horse owncn filed a rub o( damaac t aims with the. city alleai~ operators 1llcplly raised boa.Riina ia. There were also allcgataons by some boarders that the center did not provide pi;om1scd f1C1ht1es. And a dispute between Millil*n and horse owner Linda Shue wound up 1n West Oranae County Mun1c1pal Coun. M1lhpn evicted bue, claimtna she broke stable rules. disrupted traanina classes and thrcat~ned the safety of others. huc claimed 1n her lawsuit that M illipn was rttahattn& for her filtnt complaints with the Cny Council. Judie Jonathon Cannon ruled that M1llipn hid the riaht to oust Shue Whtle some horse owncn have com- pl11ned poradtcally to the City Council, -Others-ha,C-.Sald thatJUSL a kw boian:lcB "'ere belong up the fuss and that equcs· tnan center officials were doioa a IC)Odjob. Expanding LJ3 ecological.re _serve _studiecJ ly LESLIE EARNEST Of 1N Oa9y ,... Staff Spurred by residents who say some d1 ... ers 1n north Laiuna w.1ters arc d1srup- t1ve and environmentally m~ns1uve, the La&una Bc.ach Cit) Council took steps 10 expand the city's ccol<>J1cal reserve -a move that would proh1b1t remo,al of all sea hfe from tht' area Addiuonally. the council agtttd 10 tempotanly pro' 1de a staff member to hand out fliers at D1\'ers Co"e '114,•1 1na scuba divers tha1 the underwater' sport could be banned If thr) do not follov. rny regulations. The counCll agreed to ask the '\late Dcpartmt'nt of Fish and Game to conduct a study to venfy the necessity of stretching the ecological rescn-e The rcscn.c cx1ends from Mun Beach 10 Divers ( O\C and. 1( enlarged. would envelop a con1~guous coastal ~trip that runs nonh 10 Crescent Bay The blufl! bct\\e-en OiHrs Co'e and Crescent Ba) arc now part ofa manne hfe refuge. which includes Boat Can)on. Shaws Covt' and Crescent Dav Beach. W1th1n a refuac area. scahfc can bC taken 1f 1t 1s not on the cndaniercd soec1c~ hst But all ~ahfe is prol«ted w11hin an ccOl<>iJCal rc~rvc. according to Cuy \1anaact Ken Frank. Ma}Or Robert Gentry and Councilman Neil Ftttpotnck were absent for the 'ote Tue"1ay Notina this was not the first 11mc the issue bas surfaced, Councilman Dan Kenney said 1t may be ume 10 get tou&h wuh rccalc1trant d1 ... en "Each ume we S4y 'If lhc divers don't get better, ~e·re reall) go1na 10 ha\'c 10 do something,' .. Kenney ~1d "I don'\ know how much tonger v.c t"all do that and maintain our crcd1b1ht) .. In hopes of solving wha1 has become an on101n1 problem for sc:a 1de re 1dent 1n nonh Laguna and to rc ... crK what some think. ts a trend toward dcplc11on of the area's sc:ahfe, 1he C11y Council had asked stafTto research 1he problem 1n No"ember. uff rntmbers loo'-ed 11 d1\'<'r ac11v11) 1n La Jolla, Maui and Oahu and concluded there was a lack of controlling ordinances an):"herc 1n the Unutd tatt's. City stalT also d«1dcd re tncuofls on scuba divers would b( v1nuall) 1mpou1ble to enforce and l.'Ould automaucall) b( challenged by the di ving industn John Land. a member of a prof es 1onal diver' organizauon PADl. said divers arr general!) mindful of the environment and that a handful of troublemakers ha'Cll' en a bad name to innocents who rnJO)' the spon "Divers arc aware of their en' iron· ment." Land said "It huns me to think that a lot of pcople think all d1,·ers ha"e on 1hc1r mind 1s hunt hunt. hunt, hunt. lo.111 kill. lo.111. kill." Ahhou&h t.aauna oflkiab ha"e mucd fliers and cttttcd 1ans rqani1n1 diver etiquette. those cffons will no"' be re- peated. But cit ) staff has ulJHled -ihe most cfftct1"e soluuon.is dangJ1n11n the future By 1990. an undcrv.ater park 1sCApccted to be completed 1n Cl')'st.I Co,e, nonh of Laauna 8) the )e3r 2000. when Cf) tal Co'c rn1dents mu t lea"e and a rental opcrauon and tram arc in pl•cc. officials expect instructor\ to be-ain rrrou11ng their d1vin1 cla s there But Dean Bcrlo.o. chairman of Laguna Beach-based Manne Life Pre-~n at ion s.soc1auon, said di\ er prescn1 problem lttat ~u1rc 1mmcd11tc 111en11on "We rc co nee med about w h11 's h;,ppen- Laguna to continue pressing for canyon area annexation ... j " (, I )' LESLIE EARNEST promrse Of"-0..,."'°'Sleff .\t Tuesdafs mce11ng. the cit) nx-ommcndcd a 10.month del3) to rt'SOhc a Tht' Laguna Rea h Cit) C'ounc1I aarced number of issue . incl uding a Cll) w-1de to keep the tire burning under an anne\a· conlro\'C'"'~ 0' er 11lcpl hou 1n1 unus. an t1on ctlort 1n Laguna C':an)on. despite a important 1!>sue 10 can) on residents s1me rcrommenda11on by city staff to delay tht" many have built S«ond unllS on tht'ir prcx.-css for I 0 months propcn1cs With two of 11s five mt'm bcl"\ ..ib ·nt. the . ( an)on resident\ protc~IC'd 1he council did not have thc neces.s.3r) fou r propo!J('d Jcla) \a~ ang the) h.t' e been votes Tuesday 10 pre1onc the pro~n). 1 councd long enough and want a comm11 step pnor to annexation that IJ\'es prop-mcnt from 1hc rn~ cny ownen a surancM on their land-usc nahts. 'The people 1n 1hc can)on a~ people of action," $11d ~ndy Lucas. s-m<"tnb(r of The council however. put the 1uuc on the ~una C'an)on Propcrt~ ncr~ the 11t'nd1 tor their fcb 7 mcc11n1 after Assoc1a11on .. The)'"'c been wa111ng no" Wuna Can)on tt's1den~ threatened to for aC11on for month~ and month and -pun the ru1 fl om undc1 the C'lty'uffoA,~.,__-m001.h W~10~1f lou "ant annn the counly tcmtory. us or 1f )OU don'1 · Anncuhon or the land ca t of t..aauna ner ~·Of II \l.&S ume to get 'on Wt th C'an)on Road from the 8i1 Bend curve to ll oroffwuh 11.' Coun<.1lman Dan Kenne El Toro Road hi btcn 1n tile works 1ncc chided can)On rcs1dt'nts .. When pcopk m la l January the can)on needed ~mconc to speak for In December. city plannen p~scd t~m. 1t'\ gencrallx bt'cn the cit), not the 2on1n1 and .pohcy auidelinn for the rount> of Oran anMxat1on. Cin)On propen)' owncn. The~ Ill\ e bttn se' era I s11cky po1n1~ 1n ho'*C~er. were unhappy with the l'llfs the ncao11111on 1nclud1na "hat to do proposal and ~ubnuttcd their o~n Plan. about tbc SC"COnd units 11\a1 C"ould bc'Comt' Since thef\ the cit)' and propen) o-.ncrs 11lepl under city lonina laws ha~e bttn tr)tnt to l>C90'aalc a com-Canyon rt 1dt'nU pointed to probl'm th-at urtaoed~lu the qu .an~ cd u.th Laguna and then a le~ month\ la(er adoptrd mrasurcs to phase ou t illegal um ts uth Laauna residents w"trc g1' en fhc )~3r\ to con,crt their propcntt'\ bad.. 10 s1ngle-tam1I~ hou~ C an)'OO residents ll'JUC zoning for their area should rcOa.:1 the c-an)on setuna. Rc-s1dents sa) tht'ir lots arc larger the) ha'e fe,.-cr park1n1 problems and 1he1r $C\:Ond units arc mo ti) free stand1n& a opposedto thccon,erttdgara c.-ssn • uth Laguna "\\ e were afr:uJ that tbc Ctl) ""ould lone us an) old w-a~ the~ "ant and the OC\t thina wt kno\,\ "' ""ould ha'e 1n pector~ l.:oockm& on our door." Rich rd Luc:ac, .cUf'lci lhc mt"Cllng Wednesday momina. ho""C\Cr, the cit~ and propen) ow ncrs ttachcd an Bl«'t' ment on a cit~ 1de poise) that would allo"' c.an)on rtStdent to ~t'Cp their 1«ond un11c,, ndv Luca 1d \lthoua)\ not eve!) 1 U<' ha bttn tt$0hcd. Lucas said he c\pect the council to appro\'e a prczomna package at the ne'\t mttt1na The Local ~nC') orma11on Com• mi 11on hcanna 11 JChcdulcd for 1arch I 1ng naht now;· Bcrco said ··There 1s absolutely no doubl whatsoc .... er that the en\' 1ronment has been SC\ICrcly dcP.lctcd," The &Qff rtJ«tcd sc"eral posslbihucs, includin1 1mpos1na user fees on student d1vtt$ and 1n tructors, which they deaded "'ould create an unreasonable burden for law enforttment Staff also nixed the idea of 1mposma a curfew on da"VCrs. But propeny owner Howard Lewin. w-hosc home lS pcrthed abo"c haws Cove and who $&Id he has quieted d1-.cn a$ early a 6 30 a m .• eneouraccd the council to t.a~c action 1 "I ha"ealrcadylo tonetenamasarnult of the no11e." ~v.-1n ioald ··1 «na1n.l) don't look forward to the weekends now. and 1 drtad to think ot what's 101na to happen in the summer" till. not all rcsidcn arc anno)cd by tbe divers Bc\'crly Mo 1er. who lives at F1 t"rman·~ C'o,e. 1d d1\'crs a a aroup arc "more dchcate'.' "'"h manne hfc \han art' c.h1ldttn "'ho an a"> their finds in bu lt't .. Ar:cordtn& to Mos,,er. 1t 1 the dn crs "'ho could become an "cndanatred $1>tt•~" "I'd hke to keep the d1"crs. .. Mo 1er said "I think of them as part of lhe sea hfc that I'm watduna OUI therc .. Armed men · take s 13,000 Rolexwatch By 808 V J\N EYKEN "' Of-0..,.NlotSC... v -- rmed bandits attacked a Costa Mesa man outs1de his home Tuesda) nl&ht. cutting h1 face and stealing his $13.000 Role\ w-atch Thc ttack ~n "hen Nestor Daniel Pneto, 47. returned to his home 1n the IOOOblockot Begonia trtttshonl)'afier9 pm afkr ha"ing coffee with friends at uth Coast Plaza t'neto told police that two masked ro~bcn. ont" ol thcm brand1shin1 a 9mm blut' steel au1omat1c handgun, acrosted him a he got out of h" car 1n front of his garage Tht' _1un-w1eldmg bandit reponcdl'r nruc~ Pneto a1.:ro the 1de of t~ face . cau 1ng a dttp cut Pneto 1J he rts•~ ho"c'cr and ufficd for a ft'w minutes w.1th the robbers, at one point v.ttnth1na the sun from the hand of the a sa1l1nt . f>iieto 1d he a11rmplt'd to fire the 1un at the 1n1rudcrs but was unab~ \O He satd one of the robbcn then too~ the 1un from h1 hand\ JU l betort the t""o Oed Thc '""o ~usp«\ "ere dCJCnbcd a about fttt 6 1nch(1 tall One was wtarina a red bandana around h1 face and the other 1 ~and wh11c kt mask. untt and called pohcc but the su\pt<'t. ~ho 'AU 1dcntifiC'd, •as not locattd T*O t~ncs v.-crc stolen trom a home 1n · t'he 20 bkxk of Ba~\lde sometime Tucsdav anrmoon. · • • • mcont entcrtd Mardan hool, 695 \\-. 19th 't on Monday n1&bl or Tuaday mom1n1 and tera-kd a racial cptlhct on 1table.TM1n1Ndcr cn&cfCd throuab an open window betWttn s·SO p.m and 1 Lm. lniH • • • Sonwont smashed the 'IWindow o a VolU-.n Rat*t &ad llOk the sttft'O Whtlt the car"' petted 1n tht 1600 block of McGa• Avenue 'Tua.- day. Huating10tl .. h 'A woukMlit bUiaJ,ar who pried open Hcav)'·dUI} alum in tam door a Wlndow and WJI U')il"I to att into 1 framn wonh S l.JSO *Crutoltn from rriidC'ntt 1n the 600 block of Utica a COMCNC\l()n te at Irvine t'nter Avenue at about 4 a.ra. Wfdnada). Ori~ and Yale venue t'arl wu routed and ran when 1 dot woke Wcdneaday mom1n up and suncd batiuna,. Tk uspctl Bowhna cqu1·p;,cnt and 1 •lett'O "'~bed as about IS )'tlf'I old. wtrc MOltn from a p.ckup truck . He left has btC')'de betund that was omUct 1n lht 15200 block of Lilk: taken 1nto cvtdt.~ ~ offittn tlrdcbrtwecn I Op m. Monda and 6 Tlucns ranwtCld a home 1n the am. Tuetday. 16000 block of aenantsnt unt and Someoac ,cJe•,•TV aid \l1*o ISOlc~ryval~:t S l ,<XX> ~ NCQlder fi'Olll a bolftC '" tM .. ,..... ...,.. two """. and JO ·bloS olC'MnlaaMly bctM<n I womn'1bronwu1nbq'da1n a.a. m 4 p.& T-.dly. t1M S100 blOtt olHeil A*I•. • • • • •• -) • Baker confirmed by Senate; foreign policy goals given WASHINGTON (AP) -The Sen- ate unanimously c:orifinned James A. Baker Ill as ~ of It.ate Wednesd3y as , M~ority Leader Georae Mitchell~ to cooperaie with the Bush admioiwatioft while pumuna a Democratic qenda of improvements in the minimum waac. housana. health care and the environment. Mitchell outlined hts pis for the 10 I st Co~ includina ••true bip1ni11nsh1p" in foreian pohcy, as the Dtmocratie<ontroUed Senate moved toward votes on two other top-level appGiotmenu. Confirma- tion seemed assured for Elizabeth Dole as Labor.Secretary and Richard Oarman as budget director. The vote was 98-0 to confirm Baker;. who served as Treasury Sec- retary and White House chief of staff under President Rcapn and wa PrelidentlJush's campaian manager last year. Baker. Dole and Oatman were the first Bush appoin&ccs to face con- firmation votes 1n the Senate. At- torney General Dack Thomburifl. Treasury ~reta~ Nicholas Bra~y and E.ducauon Secretary Lluno Cavazos are holdover apPOintments from the Reapn admm1stration and djd not require confirmation. Jn the busiest day so far oflhc new, l 0 l st Co~. committees also held confirmalJOn hcarinp for Defense S«retary-deli&nate John Tower and several other Cabinet nom1ntts. The House was not in ses5*1, but inside the Senate chamber, speeches by Mitchell and Republican leader Bob Dole were followed by the introduction oflcsislation for the first ti~ this year. · The bills ranged from a measure to block the prop<>sed $45,000 ~Y raise for bwmaken -ot.fCpeal it 1fit takes effect on Feb. 7 -to Dole'~ proposal for a balanced budiet amendment to .the Const111uon. · Dole, who spoke a few moments after Mitchell, pledacd bipartisanship and added it wu the intention of the Republtcans 10 .. suppon and funhcr the cause of our new Republican president." Mitchell. in a speech that 1ttmed drafted to reply to Bush's inaugural address of l~t week. said the presi- dent had ··put his hand out to me and the speaker of the house. I now extend mine to him ... Soviet quake' s fatality count revised to 2 50 I SHAR0~1 U.S.S.lt. (AP) -Of. facials on wednetday abudoned hope offindi111 any mott aurVivon ol the carthquaie pd m&ldslide that iaundaled dvec mountain villlees. and said this tetllement would be decbcaied u a common srave. AJoas Wltb tbc Nd news that no more survivon could e1tpect to be found. thtre alto was aood news: otfidals uid the death toll from Monday's djuster was only about a quarter of the l ,000 they ori11nally bad estimated. In addition, a youna man described bow bis 6-day-old cou11n miracu-lously survived the quake .. K.bolmurod Barotov, 17, •worker 1n a Sharora bekery, Yid his mother had JODe to Ill)' With her SIStcr, who hadJUSt ajven birth to a.daupter. His aunt's house was completely buried by the mudsladc. but the lit~ 11rl survived because her father held her above his held 11 be and the rest of tht family died in a torrent of mud, be said. . "We will transform Sharora into a common arave with a monument to commemorate the victims," uid kJlusain K.asymov, a rqjonal Com- munist Party chief. Plan ihtroduced to complement Pr oposition 103 -SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Assembly the bill as an attempt to' deal with "the underlying Under a no-fault 1psuranc:e system. accident insurance panel chairman Wednaday unveiled a costs" that arc driving up insurance premiums. vicums arc rt1mbuned by their own insurers no-fault auto insurance propOll) be said would Voters defeated the 1ndultry's own no-fault plan. without regard to blame. Such plans restnct court make Proposition 103 work and thwart future Proposition 104, which would also have barred suits. Currently in California, costly lepl battles voter revolts. The plan wu viaoroualy auacked by iovemment teJulation of insurance. arc often waged m a.n attempt to collect lar&e sums trial lawycn. 1lrc Califoruia Trial Lawyers AsSOClation. from those re sp<>nsible for accidents. Assemblyman Patrick Johnston, a Stockton which becked its own ratc-<:uttma 1n1tiat1ve and "If this Le&tslature fails to adjust the auto .. T:----... • 'lwled Bertin Wall' proposed at border W ASHINOTON :._A 4-m ik·lona ditrh thata JI.Ill.CC Depu1me'M allria.I compared Wednctdly to a "buried 8ri'ltn Wall" as o&l•Md ba IU'ttdl otlbe U S -Mellican border'° stem drua sm~•na into Southm\ Cahforaia. ..•• &he plan ii beina criticiitd .. IOO little IOO late .. by I .,.., ~ ldvocalel buildins ~nc:es aJooa lbc bofckf and blalted as rep;a.ve .,, imm~t riabll orpnizauons. · • • Auociale Attorney General Francis A. Keallftl II 111d he. propolld &be idea lut faU as 1 -ay to d1acouraee dn.w "".'._,.. from .driv1na loedt of c.ocaine. marijuana and heroin across the bordCf !*fS.n ~~ The ditch, which Keattn1 likcned to .. our bu~. krhn Wall' Wiil bedttp and wick enolJah to discourqe sm~ from driv1111 tNckt ·~can acros the border alonaa four-mile Strttch of flat cktc1't cut o(SI~ Y"dro. I Hotel safe sex kits proposed .. . BERKELEY -City officials. hop1n110 stem the spread of AIDS ml)' require innkeepers to put safe sex kits beside the~ book.in each hotel room. .. Cena1nly 1f hotels can have a Gldeon·Biblc tn every ro6m. they can include uafuc1 ldt," stid nunc pract11ionet Leland Tra1man, a chn.acal AIDS researcher who prop<>sed the idea. · ·•Theft could be a si&n Wllh each kit sayina. 'The Bible ma) save your soul, but this will save )Our hfe,' "said Tra1man • . The proposal is scheduled for a hcanna before 11\c C1ty s Communny Health Advisory Committee next month. CouncHman offers to buy back weapons LOS ~NGELES -A ci;y councilman who offered to b~y semi- automawt1c weapons back from citauns 1n the wake of the Stockton 1ehoolyit!d massacre WedneMay displayed an Uu assault nfk turned U\ b)' an unidentified woman and uraed others 10 follow her cum pit Cmdr. William Booth, sp<>kcsman for the LosAnacles Police Ocpanment, 111d the weap<>n was turned 1n at the Va.n Nuys p<>hce st1L1on and would be tested to determine whether 11 was involved 10 any crimes or had the 1lleaal capability for fully au tom.a tit fire. HoJden said he would pay up to $300 for each aun Democrat who fouaht all five insurance-related fouaht the industry's no-fault measure, denounced insurance system to control costs in a s1an1ficant initiatives on the Nov. 8 ballot, said 'voter-Johnston's prop()Sll, citin& a need to gjvc manner,suchasth1sbillwillac00mplish,thenhm WASHINGTON -President awroved PropOsition 103 will controJ rates only if Proposition 103 a chance to work. certain that neither rate rqulation nor an elected Bush's embattled nominee as it as combined with somelhiq like bis ~fault Insurers, the perennial foes of tnal laW)ers, insurance commissioner (provisions of Prop-Ssccretary of Health and Human plan to contain the cost of providina insurance. uy that attorneys oppose no-fa uh systems because o 1t1on I 03) will reverse the trend toward hi&her Services wooed and won the suppon The insurance industry hailed introduct.ioo of they reduce lawsuits aod thcrefore lawyers' fees. and higher pr,emiums," Johnston said. of a cadre of conservative anti- --------------------------------------------------abon1onsenatoBWednesdayand1<>t a fresh endorsement from the prest- dent. .. THE WORLo ·s BIGGEST TOY STORE! ldw Our Price 79 99 Instant Rebate . 20 00 5811 SAVE•20 ON nta ATARI 7IOO OA SAVE•10 ON THI! HOO AT TOYI '"R" Ult 0 ~Syite<n Sega 3-D SUPER SYSTEM Targets feel like they're coming right at youl 3-0 gtaues, light phaHr, control pads, Mi .. ile Defense cartridge WN ==t~~ ...... P' ~~ ........... ~ LJN MAJOR LEMMIE 9'1M BASEBALL •..•.. -~- Konem1 9'1M LIFl!FORCE .••.. ··-- Louis W. Sullivan appeared to have calmed the uproar w'hlch broke out when Sen. Bob Packwood of Orqon, a pro-choice Republican, said that tn a recent mcetina Sullivan had expressed his personal suppon for the Su(>reme Court's 1973 Roe vs. Wade decmon lepJ11.in& abortions . Bush's chief of staff, John H. Sununu wd ulhvan had sugested that the key p<>s1t1on of under secre1ary be a.iven to Cons1tnce Homer. well known for her anti- abortion views She is currently director of the Office of Personnel Manaaement Homer's app<>intmcnt was expected Lo be announ~ soon . Bush fo rms ethics panel WASHINGTON -Pm1denl Bush, say1n1 current law fails to keep the 1ovcrnment sufficientl)'. honest, on Wednesday estabhshtd an ethics pantl Lo take a fresh look at conflict-of-1ntcres1 standards and rtt0mmend new ones. In nam1n1 the ctaht-member Prelldenfs Comm1u1on on Federal Ethics Law Reform, Bush wd he wanu an "un1mb11llous .•. code of conduct to ensure that those who serve the public trust avoid any actual or apparent con01ct between their pasonal and pubhc interests.·· However, he u1d the standards of conduct he wall propose for exccutavc and consre 1onal offietals should not be .. un~asonably restnct1ve" to dissuade capable pcopl( froro entcnna aovcrnmcnt 1trv1tt. Meteor creates flreball over Oregon PORTLAND. Ore. -A huae fireball sp<>tted o"'er northwcttC11'1 Ofcaon and IOU them Walhin1ton on Wednesday af\crnoon .,., probebl)' an unusually la(J.C and fiery meteor, expcns say. ~ Th( saahtJnt<Was re~ned to tbe US Coast Guard· I" m~chst travchna on a coast.al hiabwa)' about I :30 p.m. Lltct, dozens of Wltnel9d rep<>ncd 1t to broldc.lst stauons from the coast to soutb-ceotraJ Was!u"lton. Bl'\IOC ~lnhowtr of the Orqon Muteum of Science and lndust1y 11td that Judc>na from the various re-pons the firebell wu probably a bofadc. a bnlh.ant meteor that appears to exolode 1n the Earth's atmosphiett. Some bolidcs are la,.e enoush that they fad to burn up completely before hinina the c:artb'1 surface as mctcontt' Accident prompts removal of warheads WASHINGTON -The Air Foret ~oved the warheads ffom five of iu SO MX nuclear m.Juilcs late last ytat af\er a su,nmentme ~t tn which one miuilc came IOOte a.nd fell to the bottom of its u.ndnp'ound silo. accordiq lO a published~. The ftvc m1•les were pen of the ume prod'-'ClK>n Jot and Air Forc:e 1nvcsti11t.or1d11eovered a common probltm that forced the safety ectton. the W1sh1naton Pott said. · The wnK"e it Stall t.ty11\J to decide bow to re,_., t.be five m1111ln. tacta or wh icb it daiped to carry Io warhcadi. the peptt added, quot ins u•*1\ttfifd sources. The Air Force i'd\aled to confirm the 1«C>Unt on Wcdnadly. HOHi U HHll 1' Bechtel tied to ''"' gm factory 8EAUN -A West 0eman ~ M)'I a -~ ol Bedttel 0rouD IDC. pro\tidid flneaei111 f'or an lnqa poilOft 111 (ectcwy in tbe mid-191()1 and lb Soviet apertl helped Mid il. ltit Ll•~as:•u 1• lor IM AIDlric:m comp117, llid: ·11·1 aa II. --· not build..._. or ft .... ..,ai111ottbe killd in ..... _....." 1r Jiiiwat ltrtia •• ...,.., T.-tc-. • •....., .... , .. d w11111t11Md ldi1dlled flwP'lblicaa .. todaJ,•i• ••W•lillona ..._. cia••• .............. ud ...... iMdtuUoinl ...... , •"'*- Winds to diminish . . ·~-... Calif. t~mp ~---l•._..,.......,, ... ••~nt..id St U ..,_ S7 )ot .,.... se u ..... » ,, ~ '°It ~ ~ .. ~ It 0 C~C.q ti 0 ,..,,..,. n 1111 ,,~ .• HJS ~ st n ....... «" .. 0 OHl'll\H\ Gladys M. Thompson, 30-year NB resident Gladys Mon~mcry ·•Tommy" Thompson, 93. died Ja.n. IS. A Newport Beach te'Sldept for 30 ~she as su.rvived by.htr son, Joe P. TbomptOn Jr. of Ora.•· a dauah· ter, Suzanna Thompson of Palo Afto, fou.r pndchddren and four pat· lf'&Ddeh11d.ren. F u.neraJ servtces we.re held at Fairhaven Monua.ry precedana bunaJ n fat.rhaven Memonal Park 1n Santa Ana. Walter Wine, chief pharmadst at UCIMC Miwon Vie)O ~tdent Walter H. Wine. chief pham\aC1st at the UCI Student Health Center for 1he past 20 years, died Monday. He was an· strumentahn ntabhshana the lcad1n1 student health center 1n the net~ork of 31 Un1vcnuy of Cahfomia cam· puleS. Wine. IS, was born an Los Anaeles. attended h.iab school an Alhambra and pad~tcd from the.UC B(rkclcy School of Pharmacy. Wine, who owned two drut sto~. wotMd u a merchandise manaaer for the Paafte Coast davmon of Sars for 24yean. He also was a mcmberof1hc Newport Beach Country Oub Wane as survt"ed by his W1re. Rosa.he, daua,hten. Eunice and Mary C..thenne, stx arandch1ldrcn and e1aht peat-srandch1ldrcn .. 4' .. .. •> 0 .. u ., 0 '1 .. ... .. J9 ., •> JJ • • " ., u n urf Report ., .. eo ... u )7 lOCA "°" •I )J Hw•=I-* t) u ...... ~ u 11 .. ..._......, .. ,. n... ............. •• •1 ei.a.w-... .. •• ue--...:II w ~-... ca.-.. •I ---.N .. ~· .... ..._ .._.. tS J7 .. l6 .. u Tid~. 11 tO " )J • °' TOoAY ----1 ""' 24 .. 2~ .. 2.) .. 2·1 -1·2 '°" ,, .... .. n =-~-1109•"" ., •• .. -"' J l hcOftCI .. s ~'"' o• ---~· 1113•1'1' ., 6.11 ua 20 11 .... l t ·~·"' u ~ NO tOMr a S 11 pa fftft ''CS.,••Sl.tM_._.,.S llp4!!!. ,.._,~IOIMyMt MIP"' _...., ,,.u, • •o .,.. -,.~. ~ • IO S4p• . .fUMraJ 1C"1cn will be Mid It 1(1 a.m. today at t Kahan Church an Mission ViCJO Bunal will follow at . Pac1ftc Vaew Memonal Park an Cor· onadel Mar. J . Floyd Andrews, former PSA president SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE!!! J. floyd Andrews. 69, a former World War II pilot who later helped saatt one of the nation '1 most $uccns- (ul comnu1~r atrtint$. dacd Wtd~ day 1n Sen Diqo .. A pdoc in the Royal Air Fortt dun111 Worid War II And~'S help- ed IOIW1 PSA in I~~. In theairhnc's -early .da)'L he '° tunn •ou&d take over &!w controls o ont o e C81riet'• DC-ls IO Oy pautnecn between San CMto and Sin Fran· citcO. Named PSA ~nt in 1962, Andftws tried to 1nttall 1 family sptnt 1moft1 dw worticn and he •Ml*<i no 4* addrell him u Mr. Andrc-t. Ht aho ~ intlltute ont of Ont fiot!qucnt~ ~m oflcnna d1a-counted tam or fm: tnps for the urtutt's repalar cusaomcn. UP TO 60 °/o OFF ALMOST EVERY ITEM IN STOCK )A 15·30 ONLY Australian tyk. r'fld Mound the 'cOf na. MclroM Aw•• Wc•U* '"•llOll So.it. CoHI Plau C'"'-k Callen~ 213 JS% lll 171 11\~ 711 ·~10 JJJJ I S1 979J FINAL CLEARANCE Additional 25 3 off on our January clearance sale. Merchandise alreadl priced at 25-753 of . Intimate A_ppare l, Sleepwear and Lounnwear ' ~., .... ,,,~ ... Hillaldlool. • • • Pfc. ~ Y. ,..,.,, .. , son or £UliN.c I. Furuyama or lrv1nt, has compAaed be&ac U"11n1n& at Fort IC.no•. K)'. • • • Navy Seaman Recruit Matt W. INC&. a raidtna of In ine, hu comp&eled recruit 1ra1n1oa t Ra:nu1 Train•!"& Command, San Otes~ A 1987 pad~ae oflrvtM H1&h ·hool. heJOlned the NA\') R~ts 1n Ma. 1988. . • • • Air fOt"tt Airman ht Class lft W. Ne..... son o( Anna Ri tucr ol Laauna N11~l.hasam .. td ford.ut) 11 Nelh1Air force Ila Ntv. • • • h)' Fi~man llcmut ,...,, r. .....,, son o(Larry 8. aad Diaaat Shellc·y of Hwmnpll! ltach, Ml coms)kted rtcrUit U'IUUftl at Recruit Tra1n1na Command, San Oieeo A 1~87 aradua&e of Ocean Vaew Hip hool. . he jotned the 1\1}' an St-pttmbtr 1918 • • • Air Force ~L llKJ F. TaJllr, dauahttr of SaJTy and Jack Taylor of Hun11n1ton Beach. has amvtd for dut) 11 Tanker AJr fortt BaK. Okla. he 1s a 198'4 fflduate of Edison H iah School Hunttn,ton Beach Thursdau , danuaru 21 FORlllUEllTORV • ·~· 'J Or-. C... DAILY PILOT/~.~ H, 1t1t Day also super for Associates to raise funds ly KAREN REED o...., .... c-........ Midda~ Sunday, J SO people gathered in tne ballroom at the Four Seasons Hotel, Newpon Beach to support The Associates-and some of them were even men. Not bad, considering it was Super Bowl Sunday. According to Pew Goldwater Clay, new president of the fund-ra,sing support arm for the Orange County Trauma Society, months ago they had scheduled the brunch for the 29th, but "somebody" reported that date to be the Super Bowl. "We thought we'd done our research well." she said with a laugh, .. but low and behold .. ..'' No matt~r. ·the $65 per person brunch featurin& former Sen. Barry Goldwate1 (Clay's dad) and Maareea Deu autographing their books "Goldwater'' and .. Wash- ington Wives," respectively, started early enough so bowl parties could still be attended. "We'll be out of here by two," confirmed Scott Hornsby, "and home in five minutes." Guest Nora Jorgenson. standini patiently with two books in Sen. Goldwater's line, said, "I'll be going to another at two." Two o'clock seemed to be the magic hour. but Just in case guests badn 't finished their lunch of cold cucumber dill soup. bow tie pasta, and chicken and beef tenderloin with basil and peppercorn sauces. a television was set up in the ballroom's fo yer. gotte~ the trauma prevention system on its feet, West explained, "We wanted to take it furttier. Vil-ginia Bender came to our rescue." Funds raised by The Associates help. further the eff~ns of the society._ taking trauma prevention programs natJonwade. Ac.cording to Clay. "Trauma is the No. J cause of death in America today," Clay and West presented Bender with an award for her dedication, but once she took the mike she was more . interested in ~romoting her upcoming "country party," another Associates fund-raiser. Set for June 16 at (where else?) Knon's Berry Farm, the party promises to earn more than the $52.000 raised last year. "Where the Orient Express ended. this (party) will.be beginning," said Bender as she took table sale sign-ups. Jobn Fossum (who sold the most tables last year) was the first with his hand in the aar. Upon arrival. champagne and chardonnay awaited guests who quickly purchased books and lined up - sometimes -20 ueep -for the personalized signatures. PHI Beader has a stack of Ii ve to sign, and former Costa M~sa mayor Bob Wilson brought a special book ... From Jennies to Jets, .. a history of Orange County Aviation" originally suggested for publication by Goldwater in 1968. The brunch, organized by Clay. Bender, Sandra Dr. Job West, founder of the Orange County Brodie, Mary Reafsoyder, JoAane Stewart. Mary Aan Trauma Society, had nothing but praise foT The Wells. Mary Lou Hornsby, Janet Fossum and Diane Associates and founder Virginia Knott Reader. Having Slemoo1, raised about $4,000. HHI Df.;1-: By CHARLES GOREN TURN mosE NOSTRUMS UPSIDE-DOWN Sunny side of the street depresses her Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH +AX <:;>AX Q J 10 3 ¢AX S • J s WE.ST EAST • JI 6 l • 10 5 <:7 7 ·<:;>9.165 ¢ Q J 10 9 ¢ 7 .. 3 +Al43 +Q96l SOUTH • Q9743 <:;> 4 2 <> I 6 2 • " 10 7 The bidding: SouU. West Paa Pus 2NT Pus 3 + Pus 4 <:;> Put S NT Pa11 P.. Pus North 2 <:;> 3 <:;> 4 0 5 <:;> 6 NT Eat Pus Pus p.,. Pus Pus Opening lead: Queen of ¢ You can't play bridge by rote. All those generalities you learn as a tyro serve only a.s guidelines in the play. On this hand you have to go con- trary to two of those rubrics, de- pending on what line declarer adopts, if you want to be sure to defeat the contract. Since South had showed mini- mum values, North was a trifle ag- sressive in the auction. His bid over game inquired about a club control. When South dutifully bid five no trump to conftrm possession of the kina. North opted for the no trump slam to protect his partner's mon- arch from immdiate demise. A low club lead would have given declarer no chance, but West was not clairvoyant. Declarer won the diamond lead in dummy-and cashed the ace-king of spades. All be had to to to make his contract was to get to his hand so he could discard one of dummy's losers on his queen of spades, and the only suit to off er a means ol transportation was clubs. However, declarer was faced with a choice. He could play East for either the queen or ace of clubs. Since West might have led a club from the queen, be decided to play East for the lady and rely on a club finesse. At trick four declarer led -a low club. Now we know all about sec.. ond-hand low. but if Ea$t had heed- ed that saw, declarer's ten would force the ace and the kina would be the entry to hand. &ut if Bast rues in with the queen, there is no entry and the cootract falls. Now let's assume that, instead, declarer leads tbe jack of clubs at trick four. If Eut "covers an honor with an honor," the. def enders are dead. If he plays low, declarer ap.in is frustrated from p.inina entry to his hand when West does his part by withholding the acc. For lafonaadoa abo•t Cllarla Gora'• .ewsletter for brtdae plaJ· en, write Gorn anctae Letter, P .0 . lox '426, Orludo, fla. 32802- '426. INTRODUCING. • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: This is no joke. I have heard about people who suffer from somcthins called "SAD" (seasonal affective disorder). They become depressed an winter and need lots of indoor li&ht -to make up for the sunshine that they miss . mHicatiH. TIM fact t.ut brlillt OIMt'elent Hpll bl Mr efflee make lier feel aervMs ... JuaPJ. ll aot uueal. S.me patlall w1lo llau aadety dtsorden report 1lmllar 1ympCemL "'here are pro1ram1 &Mt cu ltelp tllese people. Aayoae wllo Is blteret&ff ~~.:--" dte ne,tea1JM EvaluU. at-* NeL.Yon I am just the opposite. Rain and gray skies make me energetic and cheerful. Sunsliine makes me feel11te a withered, dying flower. I get dizzy. clammy and crabby in temperatures umbla UaJvenlty. He provkled tbll over 1S degrets. Even indoors, I respoase: frefer the dim light of a 25-watt bulb. ucertala forms of depress1oo1 do State P1ydiatrlc lutltate. TM tele- ~ .. mber 11 (U!) Hl-i'JJ4. AllileeP we an base4 • SM Eut Coast, we woa.14 be llappy lo &lve pWUce &o U)'Olle wllo wi11te1 to CODtaCt 11.0 keep my drapes closed during 1he 1 -'fl ti f tlte day and prefer darkness to sunshine. · Tb~~t ::;;;.. f, .!!:.C:.1 affe~~~~ ••• The bnght fluorescent lights in my disorder. 'hlese people bffome de- officc make me nervous and jumpy. pre11ed oely bl die wlater. ney feel During the summer I become so le*rllc, tllelr appetite 1acrea1ea depressed that I feel like committing ud tiey teDd &o ovenJeep, L111tt suicide. U.erapJ M• provea "lpfal. DEAR ANN LANDERS: The let- ter you printed from the dru& addict whoblew$40,000was1ntcrestin&. but what about the ordinary smoker? A youo& acquaintance of mine, age 1 S, just 'Started to smoke. For the fun of it1 we did some calculatina.. Am I alone or are there others who "Some people, a dte odter blld, suffer from this? Please check with _ become depresaed la Cite sprla1, fall your experts and come up with some or 11mmer. M11ell k11 ll bowa aboat answers. -HAPPIEST IN THE dleae more ......i clJNrden. It SHADE (SA TTLE) cot1ld uve some~& a. de wl" a DEAR SEATrLE: I contacted Dr. ctwa1e bl &M.11ermODet. la 11 aJso Herbert Pardet, cllalrmu of tile po111\le &Mt lite womu WH wrote departmeat of psyclllatry at Col· co•ld beaefit from utWepnsuat Tne p,remisc was as follows: "A .. and "B ' are twin sisters. "A" smokes a pack of ei~ttcs every day from age I 5 to rct1remen1 at 6S. Assumans the price of c1prettes (SI .SO a pack) will never'° hi&her in SO ycari. "A" II 0ICOS(.0P1-: Tllar1day, Jan. H By Sydney Omarr ARJES (March 21-Apnl 19): Some- one behind scenes will have plenty to say abo.ut your "performance." Emphasis on employment, practical issues. serious negotiations an con- nection with financial secunty. Leo figures prominently. TAURUS(April 20.May 20): Study Aries message for valuable hint. What appears on the surf ace is not necess- arily factual. Decision is being made rcprdingd1teetion, purpose. motive. Break from tradition is imminent. GEMINI (May 21 -Junc 20): Di- versify, seek more space. check infor· mation connected with sale or purchase of propeny, durable aoods. Long-distance call could provide "missing link." Another Ocmmi plays dominant role. CANCER (J unc 21-July 22): Puzzle pieces fall into place. You migh1 be '\t:MS'I \h.J:H' saying. "f1nall~ 1 know exactly where SCORPIO (Oct lJ..Nov. 21); I stand!" You II be enliJhtencd re· You'll satisfy skeptics. p~tiae wall gardina financialstatusof onc close to sur&e upwards. Emphas11 on display you. SCorpio will fiaure prominently. of slulls. romance, abiht~ to imprint LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Questions your own style. Relat1onshi~ in· are answered·rqarding basic values. tens1fies. financial backina wtll be special collections, personal pos. -available. . , sessions. You'll teeeave written ma-SAGmARIUS(Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): terial which requires serious con-You prove m~or point, rcstnctaons sidcration. Mcmberofopposjte sex is removed as result. Spotliaht on interested. dealinp with people you admire. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22): Home Idealism dominates. You could appliance that had been "out of locate ··soul mate." Focus on promo- order" will again be "workina." tion and prOduction. Focus on domestic affairs. luxury CAPRlCORN (Dec. l2-Jan. 19): items. possible reunion with family New infbrmation received conocrn- member. You'll receive aift relatina ina advert1sina. pubhcuy. focus on to romance. dissemination of information, LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Study unique publication. ab1hty to locate Taurus mcssaac for valuable hint. individual recently embarked on Much that is presented is evanescent. journey. Aquarian involved Be aware of quality, insist on proper AQUAIUlJS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 18): Sud· guarantee. Individual who is reluc-den SUflC of p<>pularity relate to tant to s1an name should be avoided. tceent publicauon, support by in-Caution~ -icUaeen~ve.-wosnaa. Spotliab ~ will have nothing to show for this expenditure except a huge pale of ashes and butts and a pau of very black lungs -if she's still around. that is. If "8," on the other hand, places her St.SO a day in a relatively modest 8. 1S percent tax-deferred investment plan. at age 6s she will have $435,462 in cash. and probably the good health to enjoy it. -· R .J .S .. BRIDGEWATER, N.J. DEAR &.J.S.: Maay ,e.ple &ae eal completely wttn Y" tai. aM9t "'8t ctcareues eaa 4le to "eir Hart, 1..,1 aM vunlar 1y1tem. Bat wltea you tall m-.e)', "•Y beceme very mlldl bltereated. ftaakl for •rttta1. Maybe wlten dte am.ten 1et oat ~r caJc.taton ud dilcover tut Twill A 1peat '27 )'75 Oii dJote eoffla nail• tlley may decide to••lt. • • • DEAR R£ADEBS: Remember die easay au& po.la&etl Ht ltow eacll of H ll im,.nut evea ""P we mlpt Mt .. ._. so? Well,. th Ht.Mr Hr- face4. He 11 Rldaari H. lAoaey of Colorade. He wrote It bl lt58. on 1ntu1t1on, teach1na, special apP.?.r- anc:es. Money held 1n escrow wall be released. PISCES (Feb. 19·Marth 20): ~I aareement l•kcly to contaa n loopbplcs. You'll 1nst1nc1ively know w.h't todo. when \0 do it. Rcp.ut.auon miJhf be at Slake. Make 1nquancs. diversify, display sense of fitness. humor. IF JAN. H JS YOUR BIRTHDAY reeat loll will be receve*. Yoa midlt .. , MU~e lt MW, Mt &Mre wlfl" lit,...... a. ~nte ta P'-'n· ary. Healdl ..,,. • .., JM11 lleve vaUd~tytelacreueiacMae. ~Cuc-er ,en ... IJlaJ hn- perlMt ,.. ta ,.., Ule. Maa1 arc ,...,._. '1 JMI aMlttJ te wen wtU -'er.,,....,.. ¥M ......... •1· ..._ • ...,.., .... ,. v .. ·,. .......... , ................. ...uc. A .... t ••••llb ..... la "'6c' ,.. .... Ila.Jew .... Mut&al -...ww ..... !fMlllOllM...~------ Mel Torme's sour note hits awards panel His criticism may cancel winning a Grammy Award "You think twice befOtC you II)' you want to travel. ARd I think tba' • terrible:· he •td. "In this bus1ness I'm 1n travel an awful loc." The 72~,ar-old MaJckn who ne. to Australia to fttm the TV movie "The Hij1Ckj111ofthe Acbllle Lauro.'' hU bee9' ICU~ moft than 50 ~ inc:hldi111 ;.-. in the TV leries "'Saelb OI SU Frandtco.. and the mom .. Pinon .. and .. Nuts. .. nc movie .,., • 19_, huact· ~ ol • ....... criaile ~ ii to -bftild~M.lloeNIC. Mlldei' 61 in Neilllville IO_. t~ ieeb of llCU"I dma ll Vanctnelt Ulliwnity. • LOS ANOEUS -Ma A. a.. Ml lidded MOCba' c:teclit to I rtMM .... iDChdal roles ia ~ lllCMll Md a IOUr as U.S: Am· 'bun fat ....... O.W.. S7,. -tleaed T~ to .. = " ...... el 4llliMic l&c• CD.;; * ca fllJ 9'! • 11111 •-c·--.-~ .... .=m •iifi I --• • Litter-free zones in Newport Beach wen worth costs Newport Bach's City Council will soon be asked to cootinuc and expand what hu to be one of the more IUCcets(ul citY projects in recent history. ~ ~ the 1• .people on the city's Enviroamental Quali~A«ain Commatlee developed a plU to reduce litter and IClected McFadden Square u the project's lat ua. · Tbe object wu to creaie a litter-free zone -aa area (){tbe city not cluttered with un~tly paper CUP'. wrapper:s and the other .. of m~.~ ·~and the tourism teat0n. Saps were peantcd. the lice Department beefed up its petrols and wrote more tickets for linerina and a lix·pcnon cleanup crew was hired to pick up trllb. The liner crew. which wu later reduced to four people, worked u many u seven days a week to keep the stteets and sidewalks clean. The ~m cauaht on and before Iona merchants beaan postina btter-free sips in lhelr windows. Accordina t0 <rrea Annstrona. a police officer who specializes in environmental matten arid who worked on the htter·free zone propam, the effeci was infectjoua. Residents and tourists noticed the sian• and many accepted the liJns at face value. The results were wen won h the effon and the SI 61S40 spe~t on the proaram because the area soon had a ''Disneyland look.•• It worked so well the committee wants to expand it this year. Cost estimates for this years litter-free zones are: S 12,SOO for Mcfadden SQuare; $21,SOO for the area between the Balboa Pier to the Balboa Pavilion;.and $6, 700 for three blocks alon1_ Marine A venue on Balboa Island. Council memben have to uk themselves if it's worth $40. 700 to have a cleaner city this summer. We think the money would be well spent and think the expansion of the prosram and reduction of iu cost for McFadden Square a.re encou.ragina sians. The proaram will help increase the awareness of local residents and be a const.t.nt reminder that they, too, have a role in ma.kins their ci~y look like they want At the same time, it will be a demonstration and warning to tourists that r:-iewpc>n Beach will not tolerate careless and thoughtless huenna. Litter-free zones made·a difference at Mcfadden Square la.st year and that difference should be expanded to other areas of Newport Beach this year., Oplnk)nt expreeeed In tNa apac:. are thoM of the Deily Ptlot. Other Nwlexpreeeed on tNa pege ere tm. of their llUthOra end wtlsta. Reeder•' commentt we' lnvtted .na may be ..,,, to TM Oely Plot, P.O. Box 1seo. ~Mmat292t. et I 111 IC \ et I ( I ' Teaching economics Add one more subject to the things most high school student know next to nothing about: economics. A national survey of 11th-and l 2th...,ade students by the Joint Council on Economic Educat.aon, a non-profit group, found a shameful level of ianorance. Of more than 8,000 students tested. two-tharchdidn't undentand what profits are. and more than half couldn't define economic demand .... St.ttcs and school districts should make.economics a pa.rt of the lcarnina mix st.tttina with clement.try school and require it for hiah school graduation. Tcachcn should be provided with the necessary bacqround to teach it. We're happ)' to say beJinnina this year, California will require a course an economics for hiab echool araduauon ... The key to the United Statescompetinasuoocssfully in an mcreasmJ)y more complex and competitive world economy is education. In addition to readina. math, science and other subjects, the well of knowledte on which our younasten will draw should include economics. Sele cting schools G1vm1 parents a say in who educates thesr children - and 11v1n1 pubhc schools a co ncrete incentive for ucellencc -1s an idea whose ume has arrived. Le&aslauon to let parents select schools, even aero s d1stnct bound.an es, was proposed ... by state schools chief Bill Honla. And President Bush 1.lso bu endorsed an education prC>p'lm cmphu1.zinJ amilar stratqies. known as .. choice:· for 1m_prov1na schools. Honia's reform is u simple as its IO&ic is clear. He would permit ttudenll to switch schools within a district, or move rrom one district to another -ti.kin& thcar $3,000.a-year in state aid wnh them -aa lona as the new district accepts them. He ,,....... ~-~vent tnnsfm that uptet inictPtaon plans or that ··w.m 7 thc best scholanand athletes. but dillrictl doint a poor job could find themselves with dwindlina ctua. The retOrm isn't likely to ch.ans the educational lancbcape ovemiaht. As HoniJ pointed out. only about S percent of pere11ts opt for transfers within distncu where they 1.re permitted . .But he's ~bly riaht that I 00 percent of the parents like havina the choice. Reader 's comments welcome ORANGE COAST ..... ... ..... ........... .. a.. ...... ....... ....... : .... congress should improve its imag~ Defore raising pay In a recent column, I outlined House Speaker Jtm Wri&ht's scheme to increase Conare.ssional pay throuah the beck door. Jud&inc by the letten and teiea!ams I've received, 1 lot of Orantc Countians arc up in arms over this -and justifiably so. Over the last few weeks, my ofTtec has received hundreds of letters, phone calls. mailarams and telqrams cm this issue alone. You'll recall that under this clever scheme pay bikes art scheduled to ao into effect automaticaJly. without a vote uni~ Co"arcss passes a joint resolution of disapproval by Feb. 8. So by avoidina a vote for just a few more days. Wrifht. 0.Tn., who 1s under investipoon for a number of senous ethical and lela1 charJes. wan l!C'l an additional $60,000 on top of the SI l S 000 he's already makina. In adClition;. the 1111.ries of other memben of \..Of\&IUI wiU ao from $89.SOO to S 1 )S,000. The manner tn which mcmbcTs of Ccnsras are addrcssina the S-Y raise debate illustrates the sulf between the real world and Wutunaion th1n.km1 (1f one can even call it "tboua.ht"). In the real world, where the 1urv1vaJ and succeu ofa company or firm lS tkpendent upon the pcr- fonnan« ofits employees, salary and ~increases arc aencrally based on merit. When a firm 's casb now IS impaired for any reason, when profits art down. or when expenses outstrip revenues. employees arc often alked to tiahten their belts. Manaacn no lonacr receive bonuses. Directors' stoek options decline in value. In short, pay cuts. not raises, arc the order of the day. Jmqine, for example. walkina mto your boss' office on the very day 1tls announced your company has posted 1u 2Sth annual loss in as man)' )can. lmu.inc telhna him. "Bou. l need a rauii!" .. You need a raise? I sec. With what justification?"' "We.II," )OU reply. "the~ are several reaJOns. First, thcrc·s 1nfla- tJon. F11r compen.sauon of em· ployees regu1rcs that the purchas1n1 poYrer of our salanes not be d1m1n1Shcd as the cost of hvina aon up. he was lhe most famous child 1n Oranee County. Blond, brown eyes and all miles Her pbotasraph was e' C'f)"Nhett for• whale -on bumper auckc.rs. post~rs and bus l\Op placards. You could hardl y tum around wtlhout 1iee1na her innoctnl face stanna t.ck. But laura Bradbury was not an icon few tb1nts ~ nonnaUy usoaate -.th chi.Id.hood. She was a victtm. Tbc child vanilhed Oct. 18. 1914 dunns a family ca.mpuw tnp to J•ua Tree Nat.ional Monume.nt. She wu l yean okt. It was auwned at the time that w had been k.idnapped, ~ tome have aince aoec:Ulaled • umply wudtrtd into the dacrt. The cat' attl'IC1td national atten· uon and Laura btcame a symbol of IOf1I, 1 s-inf\al eumple of bow twileed a plec:c tbc world had bttome and bow a thdd could be s.natched &o. w parcnll and then aamply di.,.,,... I _. Malit and Pa.tty ltadbury a h • after Laura ~. J:11eJ lild _... mumed home to ............ "Rift weft trWrll thn'IS that llllide • i ... taioe Oii me 1n that ............ The ft ...... that -weteJ-i ...... people -I W ... I WG•IP Wldl t.htft dtd· ... -o1.-.. ... "'-· AM•1r .. IM ._ ol )W. nnDltiYilll .. a.ills •• Cllll 0 _,., , ...... ... ' ... a-1..I I I --........ -;--............ ........ =~dliM-• ... ,..Clild ........ . .... .., __ 2,_. .... ... .. After all boss. in practical terms. I JUSl can't buy as much wnh my current salary as you could with )Ours ba<'k an 1969. In 1969, you could comfonabty pay tu1uon for two children on a salary of S-40.000. Harvard Colleac charicd S2.000 a year. Harvard law Scnool characd Sl ,7SO. "In 1988. howcYer, I'm havrna trouble supponina two children at the same school on a salary of S89,SOO. Harvard Collcae now charaes $12,7lS; Harvard Law School now charaes S l 2,300. After taxes. 1h1s means that tu1uon for two children - ex.clus1 ve of other colleac-rclatcd expenses -takes approlllmately 4'0 percent of my sal~ "When compattd wnh the salanes . of beJtb9ll pla)crs. mo vie s&ars and practtCtna lawyers. the d1spant) as even mort shock.1na.·· At this point, your boss sta.rts semna uncomfortable. .. Harvard. ch? l'Mfs a.II ~-ell and ~ but what about your JOb performance? After all. 1h1s com- pany's ao1na down the tubes. If you'd done a better Job we m&&ht not find ourselves 1n this fananc1af mess. and I could pal you whatever )Ou want " "That sexactJy so," )ou'd respond. .. When you pa)' people less than they dnerve. you act less than thetr best effort. One of the bc$t ways to help me get senousaboul my JOb 1s to raise my pay.·· Chances arc your boss ~ould be downria.ht anpy by this po1n1. But imaaine admin1stenna. at that very moment. the folJow1n1 coup de ,,-acr "We really shouldn't be ha vinJ this araumenl, boss h's unsttmingly After all. as controller of this com- pany. I've already amnied for m) own pl)' raise to 10 into effect automaucally " Sound outrqcou.s'> Perhaps. but 1h1s 1s exactly ~hat the Co n1'"6s IS 1n the process of<iotna. Many of you ha"e pointed out m your letters that be)ond the pay raue 1t.stlfl the procedural conspu:•C) b) wh1cn 11 1s to be accomplished as equally obJ«t1onablt That's v.h_> an the open1n1 da)"S of the IOht Con- VCSS. I ha\C co-ponso~ SC\'en time. and l panicked. ~om a t'rcttcd when he cau&ht a cold or ran a temperature 'How could I 1mq.ane what 1t would be hke 1f he was was suddenly. 1nexphably aone? 0\'CT the next few )e&l"S, l tal~cd with the Bradbury with ~ulanty There were stAbt1na, there were llpl. &hue were clUH and there were binbda)'I and holidays that broua.ht the ~1n of Laura's d111ppnrtn(C bubbhOA bee to the aurface. Mf IOn turned l ind then 4. My da~tcr •as born. And laura was still m1111"1-1'm not sutt how or whnl 1t started. but it btcame obYtOUJ that lhe rclatioas between the 8redbury and some membtnofthe n Bm\atd1no henft'"1 Drpenment wtrc trained Mike Bndbury was convinced the authOritia h8d faded to follow up lcadsaftd hlld wroneJy c:onch.Kkd that Laura .as hkdY. dead. The Sheriffs Deparunnt1., mitred by his cnuc11ms. ~ ~aled the flCt that Bred· bury Md 0.-C been I IUIPttt lft bl dau1luer's d111ppe1ran c e. A~ abo t...a.d that IOme bolie ...... ts baad i• tbc JOltt~ r,. .. .,..........,Laun·a. O.IMdairdnttt....ryolU-.n't ~ 1..-. llftidt &hit inct.icled a ......... Ol IOIM of the ~-IMdirtyli .... if,ouwtH-Mli •1111• die iwtM:ll. I ._.. ._.. ...... ,... IJICled • ......... ., .. _ ... •a•t I W Qb.. lllllli,-=lll:lllitWl-ad 11111' ................. ... "£:1., ....... . .... • .::. =:,:r.,·:.=.: • lqMU'ltc pieces oflqtslat1on to attack the pay raise 1u uc from s.c.,.eral pcrspecti ves. l -House Rcsol uuon 24 would amend the rules of the House 10 rcqwrc a recorded vote for any conlJCsstonaJ salary adjustment lo be adopted. 2 -House Joint Resolution 62 woUkl dlSll>J)r0¥C \he conarcwon.al pay raise recommended b) the Quad· rennial Commi 10n for the lOht Con~ 3 -House Resoluuon l2 v.ould nulh(y the recent S-Y 1ncrcaK for mcm&ers of Cof\lttS . 4 -HouJC Resolullon 329 v.ould tkfer any pay raise appro"cd b> the IO lst Co~s until the ti~t da) of the 102nd Con~s. S -House RC'SOlu11on 330 v.ould dder any future lary adJustments until the bqJnn1n1 of the Con1ttss followina the cumnt Conarcss an which the pay raise was appro"ed 6 -House Resolution 331 v.ould amend the Quadrennial Comm1 ion Act to separate congrcs.s1onal salary recommendations from uccut1"c and Judicial salancs. 1-House Rcsoluuon :!S calls for" ban on honorana Last year. no fev.tr than I c:an- d1datcs -many of them wcll- qu&J1ficd -ran for our 40th ("on- gress1onal 01stnct Most unusual for a JOb tha1 dOtSn't pa) v.tll enot4h. v.ouldn'1 you sa'., One of the loudes1 arauments m fnor of the pa)' ra~ 1s that v.-c mu t make pubhc SCf"\itC'C i more attractht calhna. lmpro"1n1 the 1mqc of Congress b) ehm1natm1 back~oor scams such as the ronJ1ns1onal pa) raise, howc,er. v.ould 10 much further toward this ob)«lt"e Ctrl1Cu11 Ii~ Ifft Coqrn1loul D111rk1'1 ~mu. ma me a mscns1t1"e. contnle, inac- curate d~pt1"e and a fcv. names r"e 1ncc let roll off my ~houlder. ull. ""'" ha'en't tailed 1n(C. M~ son1snow6and m)'dau1htcr 3 And Laura Bradbury 1s llll m1um1-Tbe story. which had lowly faded dun"' the last two )Urs. became the stuff or headlines apm this month w11h thcne"' that a DNA test owed a st/Ona pou1b1hty the bone fraa- mcnts wcrt Laun ·s ~ Bradbu')' and I'm onl) rclauna what r~c rt~ 1n th•, piper and othe Yren: furio'H Yr1th the rtPof\, larJcl> bceaU9t no one con tu I· tat &hem or even bothettd to 1ell them that such \CSU '*Crt be1nt Nn. And bthe firs& time I think ma~bc I unc.tcnuind the Bndbut')'I Why shoukt they abendon hope? Wh y sboWd they ac«1)C somt<>ftC'I SOCCU• latt<>n that tbaC bona arc Laura's? Why lbould they havt to leem from 1e>me tckv1sioa repof1tf lhlt a bilh· u eat 11 brina Ulfd to ftnalty wrap -.p dlt a...a.n .....,, CMC! D;iJ ii 118 cmld Ud ~ M\l'C IO -0 ii.ail tlity .. ..,. .. ,,. ............... ............... . .... .. ~. Jenuliry 21. 1111 A7 1111111 ' Information for burglar alarm letter incorrect To the Editor: Thll 11 a rtSPOnte to Mr. David You"''' letter to the echtor concem- 1n1 the monitorina of bu~ alarms by the Newpon 8Cach Polace Depen- mtnt. Some of the information be prcsenled was incof'f'CC't. Our cny has 3,990 monitored alann systems. Private companie$ monitor 3, 119 systems. while our department moniaon only 17 l. The 99.2 pm;.ent false alarm rate applies to all of the systems in the city. ~pprox1mately IS percent of thctc false alarms arc monitored by pnvate coms-mcs and the remauuna IS percent by the Police Department At the present ume there are . I JS false alanns per system monitored by a pnvate company and .083 per system monitored by the department. Our depanmcnt responds to all alarm activations as part of our service to the community. A false alann fine is levtcd only after the third false alarm in a calendar year reprdless of who monitors the sys- tem. Thcn:forc, 1t does not compute that false alarms will be reduced 1f monitored by a private alarm com- pany AR& CAMPBELL Ouef~i&>licc Ncwpon Beach County's older bu ild ings should not be demolished To the Editor Since we arc cdebratina Oranac County's Centennta1 it seems to be a &ood tame to ~valuate our practice of tcanna down the old to build the new The Bowers Museum in Santa Ana · 1 ge111n1 ready to expand and one of the plans LS lo tear down not only the beautiful Torana House (used for many ~cars by the Torana Art Leque for their art cl&sses, etc.). but also the ~all mural so beautifully pe1nted by Emeho Va~utt. Thts wall is a ptect of h 1story m nsclf, ""Stn«""lt dcotcu ~ prosrcss of en.nae County from lhe lndiaos to the present time. Tbc e•cuse the offiaals at the museum &l"C 1 that 1t 1s too co th to mo"e It .. -.en. Wh) not lea\'C It and voork around 11" This is suttly what 1 done in other countnes that treasure the old and bcauufuJ The museum staff has onl)' rc«ntJy been cbanaed •nd obviously the new off.ciaJs are not into his-tory . 1sn 't that what 1 museum as for'> As for the Torana house, this 1s such a lo"el)'. old bua~na wttb all the classic beauty of dcslan onl}' used man) )CMS ago ThtS too 1s "too e~pcn 1ve to fix up:· Even thouah it could be done and used as p1rt of the museum for small. special exh1b1ts. etc A.pan. why not wort around it'> Another~ 1b1ht)' would be 10 move 1t 10 Hen~ Park. .. instead of plan- "'"' on us1na the land 1t stands on for a dnveway' We mu t tan canna for the classic. old bu1ld.inas ~e have before there~ no more and our world 1s fitted wtth Ila and steel If all concerned ouzens would wnte the Bowen Mu.scum and c.x- prcs1·ttmr lhoua.hts about this mat· tcr. ma)'be they mtaht m:ons1dff JOY PAITERSO Laau.na Naaucl TOD'l I\ HISTORl ' . ! . t s ! ' ' • y It n .t '· I, . . • N t l. a I I· d t It t, e .t c ' d 0 e s :r e ., t s ,, Al Or ... COM& DAILY PILOT I Thurlday, JMU9rY 28, 1989 - • ISIDn . . ........ . ~ . .. . The McDonnell Douglas Realty Company John wayne Airport MoriOrail: A Real Alter.native to Gridlock People with vision fuel Orange County's booming economy. They turn problems into challenges; ideas into real. solutions. Visionary government leaders, capable of seeing the "big picture" and overcoming all obstacles, are v ital to moving North America:S first public transit airport monorail forward to reality. We believe we have such leaders on the Board of Supervisors and the City Councils of Irvine Designed by the Transportation Gro up, Inc., the monorail will be built entirely with private funds, with no cost to taXJ>;S!YCllt · It is a bold experiment. But we believe there Is no , be_tter way to test the capabilities of such futur- lstk: transit systems than In the laboratory of real world ex~ience. Government Leaders Embrace Vision --------------,;.tnd Newport Beach. Mc.Donnell Douglas Realty Company applauds the Orange County Board of Supervisors. the ountyAirport Comm;ss;on; Orangt CN-tt'thl-------- Transportation Commission offk:ials. ~ City of .. McDonnell Douglas Realty Company believes DSNJ. is the time to begin solving our most urgent problems ... like gridlock on our roads and frttWays and making the air clean for our children. Monorail Offers Hope for the Future That is why Wf! want to build this unique . exciting monorail to Hnk John~ Airport's new terminal with our nearby Douglas Plaza devek:>prnent. Irvine and mem~s of the N~ Beach City Council tor sharing our vision of the futu·re. Their support ls vital to com~ng the final Important ~s needed to bring the monorail to life. Your support is atso nscrWaf. Make sure }'QYr c1cetcct otfidals koo\N bow you rm at>out cru cxr.ltlng. pollutknfrft. ~ Innovation In Qriogc Courcy transt. Private Industry. wOrktng with~ government leaders. can ma~~ County a better piace to five \Wrk ... and travel MCDONNELL DOUGLAS REAL TY COMPANY BB \k>n Karman Avenue Su~ l20Q lrvlne,~CA 9Z715 f7MJ 833-2133 ,.1 • ~ . ... Kreps leads GWC Golden Wea Collete found it1elf an anotbct ~~~~K>D d&UiQI <>rans Empire mcn•s bUketbill Weclnaday mpt and forward Alnis ~came lbi'ouah tWKlt en route 10 a career oerformance which led the vi11t19 lusden to a 92-SS victory over<... )'Prell Collete. K.rcpa set career hialu with )I points and' l 2 rebounds. bil 12 or 17 shots from the floor and tptted 1 Golden West su,..e at the start of the second half to key the victory. The vactory was Golden Wcst•s second straiaht after openina the conference season widr four loues. improvu\I the Rusllen to l 7-8, 2 .... and anto 1 four-way lie for fourth place. Cypress fell to I 0-13, 2 ..... Markus Muller-Stach added 22 points. Elbert Davis had 13 points aod Steve Moser had 10. Davis also had 10 assists and hit ~of ll free throws in the second half. Kreps had ei&ht points in a I(}..() run to open the lint half which put Golden West ahead, S0.39. with 16:20 to play. Kreps lwLll of the Rustlers• lirst 13 second-half points. but Cypress rallied to pull within five. Golden West rebuilt its lead to 73-62 with 7:2S to play but the Cha,..en kept the pressure on. Nate Shea·ban•s basket ~lied Cypress within three, 84-81, with 2:00 remain· 1na. but Kreps slammed one home. THUASOAY, JANUARY 26. 1988 I 00h1 ,f. R\('M ---~·:.--... --------. ~---··..r ...--..- ~~ ~--~~~--~-·· __ .. j --... _ -----• _,..... Md& LeKll petlJ fir•• bacll In action M Royal Albert Hall In London. He arMI Jtlll,..... won Matters Doubles trophy. Leach used Australian Open as steppingstone ··· Last year's win catapulted him to top of ratings ly JOH l'lllGUSON " Of .. °"'¥ ........ • As the l 989 Grand Prix tennis tour ~s. Laavna Beach's 24-year-o!d IUct leacfi finds hunsetf batt Ii t\I In lbc same forum but from 1 much different perspective. It was just a year aao 11 the Australian Open that leach and penner Jim PU&h of Palos Verdes bqln their ascent to the No. I spot 1n tht world points standinis for doubles. :The pair won their first grand slam event last year 1n Australia and went on to capture SC\'Cn m~ tour. naments, 1ncludan1 a tour-capp1n1 victory with the Masters Doubles title in London. Leach was also the top. ranked doubles player tndlVlduaJly. The duo split SI 6S.000 for winnana lhe Nabt$co Gtand Pnx. bonus j)()Ol and shared $72,000 for winnana the Royal Albert HaJI Masters title, Leach's btgest thnll. "To win a grand slam title 11 a dream come true." Leach said of the '88 Australian. "It helped for the rest of year. After that, f had the con- fidence to win the rest of the tourneys. .. The Australian was only the third Grand Pnx toum1ment that we had played toeether. If we hadn•t won bett, I oon•t think WC would have believed ounctves as much." The ~asters title aveqed a forfeit loss in the finals of the lJ.S. Open t9 Scraso Casal and Emilio Sanchez. Leach became ilJ and the tandem withdrew. "We a<>t a little revenee:· Leach said. While Leach and Puab stand sixth in the world rank1np, they defeated the U.S. Davis Cup and No. I-ranked team in the world of Ken Flach and Roben Squso three tunes 1n three mcctinas last season. P1ayina 1n the Davis Cu_p 1s one of Lcach·s pis. Thed1fTerenccon the tour comes in the consastcncy of the duo, which was knocked out in the first four five times. "Guys like Flach and Squso always do Well; they never lose until the quanerfinals," Leach said. "I probably played more than was Jood for me, but I was chas1na the Nabisco bo~pool" This Wttkend. as the No. 2-secded tandem at the Austrahan Open, the duo attempts to defend their title in the event that served as a sprinaboard to succcu. Their semifinal victory over Marty Davts and Btld Drewett today advanced them 10 the finals. Whdc a repeat would be a welcome victory, the doubles tour obviously docs not draw the 1nention of the~ ranked sinales playen. Ifs the siQlkt tour wtucii bolds Leach·s cha.IJeftee for lbc futu". .. It's unbelievab&e how the media and the public look at the linalet playen as such heroes and all the endorsements they set.·• said USC Coach Dick l.cllc:h.. Rsck·s father. .. Even tbouah (Rick's) No. l ltl the world. no one·s calhna him. 1 think he's like to prove he's a top sinales player too. because he was UI th~ 1unaors (compeution) and c:olteee. 1t•s the succas 1n doubles wtucb binders Leach's ability to climb the sinaJcs ranks.. becaUte be has usually been c:ompctina an the final three rounds of a doubles tournament when he needs to be qualifyina for the sinalcs portion of the next stop on lbc tour. Leach had reached as hiah as I 10th tn the sinalcs rankinp. but cuncnlly stands 2fSth. He qualified for the Australian, onl)' to face I 6th-seeded Amos Mansdorf in an opcnina round m&lch. losina._6-7, 6-2. ~. 7-6,_ ··1 missed 1 lot of chanocs to play SUWCS (In 1988),'' leach said. ••J could have went to a few tournaments and been 1n the main draw, but we went to the bl& tournaments because there was more money and (rankina • ......... &iACH/821 Two months' variance: It adds up to 41 painful points Coast absorbs 82-45 beating at the hands of host Riverside Tigers in Orange Empire decision The T11Crs took a 41-27 lead early 1n the second ha.If by punchina in six in a row to open lbc half. Then Johnson made two )..pointers, the last one with 16:32 left. to make it.41-33. From that point, it was all Riverside. lly ltlCHAltO DUNN o..,.,..c. ....... RIVERSIDE -What a d1fTercncc a couple of months can make . Jn 1 brutal second-half spankina by Riverside, the OrHac Coast Collqe men•s basketball ttam fell victim to ·the T1aers and fell out of first place an the Oranae Empire Conference. "We _aot our buns kicked,'' said OCC Coach Tandy Galhs, who~ Pirates absorbed an 82-45 loss at Riverside City Collqe. ··They're b11 and qulCk. you've aot to play sman and clever qaanst them and we didn't. When you atl beat by Me sans stagger Artists Costa Mesa uses two overtimes to claim 6 1-60 win lly HUGO RIC.MOO °"'¥ .... c.. ........ Jose Casas sank 1 free throw with four seconds rem11n1na to sivc Cost.a Mesa Hiah a 61"60 ..-in an double Pacific Coast League .......,. OWrlll W L W L s 0 ,, s • l 12 1 3 , 5 11 1 • 3 ,. 1 • 1 11 1 • 3 t2 overumc over the host ~una Beach Art11ts Wednnday n1aht an a hc1fic Coest Lncuc buUtbeU pme. The tcraPPY M..stanp battled beck from an C\lht-poent deficit in the fint half 10 ICM the pmc into ovtnime. snappena 1 t 2-pme to.ina •treak and improvu11 the1r o~cralf ttcotd to l-14. "We•ve bttn filhna J0tt's position wnla freshmen and ~ .. Mid M~ Coech Dean C00ptt. .... , we•re finally comina tcJldhtt u ........ la ea e.atint fin1sh. Cuu was bal6d afttr Aaro. Brauer came off d9e ._. b' Ge Artists 10 sen• 1 .}. ..... IO lie tlM l!llM It 60. C'au. Who Md mi...t ftlM Plnft for lbc R ... oui&aftdi"I .. he ta 16 ....... udcaMe •P "' .... ...,,..,,.. .-ner top die Mu111• pia11111ioa. 1'111 MMI e:•=r IO 1111 .. i. :o:.=. ':/:, .... :C.-:t."= =·· ••::··~ ........ ....... _rt1r.MliT9"illoltn ... ,..,._ .......... ... , ........ 1124 40 ... well, we were totally dominated by them. Penod." OCC. which never had a lead. defeated the T1acn, 49-4S, back an November an the Mt San Jacinto Tournament. That was back 1n No- vrmber. thou&h. "That's two months ago ... G1ll1s said. "(R1vers1dc) Coach (Bob) Bo)d finally aot them 10 play tM ~ay he wanted them to, not the way &he) wanted to. They have more talent than we do. What happened an November makes no difference." There has been a ch1nac an Ra•tt· side much like It d1spla)ed ag.a1nsl the Pirates as the Tigers rolled an the second half to outscore OCC. 47-18. This was supposed to be the co nference showdown. only the cur- tain fell on the Pirates as soon as 11 wa~ hfled. Ri\tcrside. 20.8, S-1, Jumped out to a4.-31cad.thenbrokeoffona IS-I run to take a 15-poan t edge when 9· SO was left 1n the first half. The blowout reaJly bepn, how- ever, in the second ul( after the Pirates, 19-6, 4-2, pulled to within six (33-27) 22 seconds before inter- mission. That's when 0.rcck Crane Mok a pair from the ~ow hnc to cut the deficit to six and cap an eight· point run for the Pirates ..., .......... i.r .... ~ &.. ..... , D-. ••nton loMI Mn41e ...... 4-fense of .....,, leeve c... fMI. TWNt vu 1121. area .,.. .... fitOt. G1lhs knew the strength of River- side, featunna 6-foot· 7 Enc Gray and 6-8 Bobby Jo)ct. was inside. And. the Tigers dominated the boards, outrc- boundang the Pirates. 32-19. and scored mostly from close ranac. All but 11x of the T1acrs' JS-points in the first halrcame from tht inside. Joyce scored a pme-hl&h 22. h1tt1naon 11of19 from the Ooor. He also bad 01nc rebounds and sax assists. Gray, v.ho scored 10 poant , grabbed seven boards and had two steaJs. R1 vcnidc's 1uards. MicbatJ Lewat and Cory Amen, were aJto a handf\JJ for the Pirates. Lewis had 12 points and 51X assists wh1k Wilham Htahler came off the bench for the Tiacn to score 10 and pb three rcboun<h. Htahhahts for the Pirates., There werclew. OCC's Derck Johnson hit on three 3-point shots to account for bas nine 90snu al\d LaMon1 ~ and Ch1l) Hanlon shared tcam-h1&h honors with 10 points Crane, -tio was I of 13 from tht ftoor, pulled down five rebounds and dished oft' sax assists. Overall, the Pirates wtrc I 3 of 48 from the field R1 vmu:Se bad four I S-po1nt leads tn the flnt hatfbcfo~ the Pirates cut 1t to Cl&ht at lS-27 b> halftime. The Ttten went on 1 21·2 run, 1ndud1na 12 strai&ht. .. They pla}.ed well." Gillis sald of the TlFrs, "They took us naht out of what~ '*Anted to40. Of course. we didn •t let any seoond shots., WC dido 't act any rebounds. We're the ~t rebound1n1 team 1n the Seaaue. Tiiey did JUll about anyth1na they wanted to do. "We don't defend anybody, we haven·, dont It au year. Anybody can score from 2 feet away from l'le basket. We Just don•t defend thefi." Pooff· Eagles pull it out in OT behind Curtis' magical touch Estancia escapes with 63-60 overtime w in over host University I)' ED ZINTEL o_,.,....c ......... . Mike Cunis put on a Maa.ic (as an Johnson) act at Un1,cn1ty High Wednesda)' ntaht. sconna 32 points an lud1ng EstanC1a to a 63-60 O\.'Cf· t1mewaoo,ertheTroJanunSc1 View Leaaue play. Cunis. a point 1uard ..-ho has led the EaJlcs to a 17-2 record (4-1 an lcaaue) lolrllh has 22·poant per same a' eragc. must be one of the outsand· ma pla)ers 1n Crance County this ~ason He has. much h~e Mqic Johnson. done 11 all for Estancta. So1 far be 1t for Euln Coach Tam O'Bnen to understand ..-hy Curtis has no1 )Cl bttn recruited by 1 m1Jor ' collqc ,,-Y,a~t-s-..,,-11-1-1 t O'Bncn after watchana Cunis almost s1nJlc-handedly win lhe same for Esianeta by sconna 26 points 1n the St'C'Ond half and overtime, 1nclud1na fi,c 3-poant shots. "The IU) as 1~1ble and no one has &I "en him a look .·· The lookers -the toeoutJ - undoubtedly w1ll 1f C'un1s ktcps lhas up . Tbc6-foo1-I stnaor hit t""o baskets Sea View League L ...... OWrlll W L W L ~ s 0 lt 1 E•lancla t 1 17 2 Corone del Mar J 2 tl • UnlYeOitv 2 J 7 12 Tustlo 1 • 10 t NewPOrl Hl t'b« 0 S 11 f WMIMldltV'•~ E•tancla '3, Unlven.llY 60 (ol) Se~ "· NewPOf1 Harb« .. Corone del f!Mr 61, Tu•lin S1 ,,.. ... , c;..,... (7:JI) E•lanc .. •I~ UntYenltv al Corone de4 Mar Newoort Harw 11 Tu$tln to tan the ovcn1me. 1ncludm1 a J. point basket on ~hach he con' ened into a four-poant pll\' v.hcn he was fouled He then hit a 10.foot shot and follo"'cd with a feed to Tam KJ•r w11h a ptrfttt pa s underneath, which KJar turned into 3-poant play wtth 3 taMll~ and for all It was. nonetheless. a vaJ1ant effon by Uni"mll> (2-3 an lcaauc. 1-12 o"crall) The Tro,an :.t led by Enk Glauen "'ho scored 2u points. huna 1n Iii'" t the Eqles' up-tempo same. The~ trailed tv.1ce b> nine points. ancludana S0-41 an the fourth quancr Center Pat Ferrell came off the bench 10 score three baskets 1n the founh auancr and then Gluten and stan1n1 center Stefan Mumaw sparked an e1aht·po1nt spun that sa"e Un1ven1ty a 31-SO lead with l:S6left. After Estancaa·s Auaustin Heredia sank two free throws 10 make at S2·S l with SS scconds rema1n1na an rcsu· lauon. Cunis came upw1th 1 rebound underneath and t~n made two frtt throws to make 1t S'-51 with ci&ht seconds left Glawn. a 6-foot_. smaJJ forward. then buned a 3-po1nt hot from tht top of the kc) at the buuer to send 1t into ovcrtJmc ··we've mack .l-po1nt shots at the buzzer hke that before but at stall hats you as a shock when 1t happens:· said O'Bnen. But the least shocked b> 1t all was the coolest pla)er on the court. Cunas Ferrell made two free throws to stan the O\.C11Jme penod to 11ve University a S6-54 lead. But that•s when Cun1 turned a httle bit of hi maaic His 3-potnt ba ket came with dcfendcn in has face and ~Jumped to ·fbl"t'e tbt fOut. - His next hot was a 10.footJumper an the lane an heavy traffic. His final act was a buUct pus 10 the oix-n KJar underneath the bukct. Jusunolbcrda) 11 theoffa. naht:' "He JUSt IS the COOIC'St player l'\.'C c' er seen,'' said O'Bnen. Yet O'Bnen was careful to 11vc credit to Un1v~t}' for pushana h11 ,,.._ .. S&A VISW /NJ UCI hits road again to face New Mexico State Ant~at~rs hOp~ momentum of two w ins at home wlll carry over ly JON PlllGUSON or .. ..._,,..._ Conu .. hontc did •ondtrs for tc\.erat pla)t>D on thit UCI mm·s bakctblll 1t1m la t Wttk ~they PidC'd up ~ '*' of wan ow. the ntdltt'\ ~•II •..,.n, ... r..._ ... _... . : . I ~ : ; l '· t '. I t t \ ~" ,49er running backs in wrong plao at right time on game-winning play ffOMTheA.ace..d~ SAN FRANCISCO -Runnana becks ---Roter Cnia and Tom RathmH weft in the ~ WIOlll ~ on t.be IOUCbdc>wa Dlay that ~ won the Super Bowl b the San francilco . -i9en. 1 newspa.,er reoor1Cd on Wednetdly. The San Francl1CO ~miner 11id Cra•1 and Rathman 1waooed lidel on the play, known H "20 ha.It.ck curl, x-up," when quaner6eck Joe Montana hit John Taylor in the end zone with about 30 seconds Id\ on Su~y. The -i9en beat the Cincinnati Benaals. 20-16, for their tbird NFL championship of the 1980s.. When Montana launched that pass with 34 seconds Howell agrees to contr~ct Third baseman Jad a.weu and utility c;;. • player Dunll Miller siped one-year con-.,,.... tl'8CU with the California AOFls Wednesdar. • • Howell, 27, will earn about S..S0.000 thas -.on wbile Miller. 29. will earn SU7,500C Both playcn ' bad filed for ll1ary arbitration. Howell asked for a salary of$-i9S,OOO and the Aqcls offered $400,000 while Miller asked for S 187 ,soo ucf the Anecls offered S l 07 .soo. The =. 'np of Howell and Miller leave the A.qeb with four -WallJ Je,.er, ClaW O.vlt, Gres ...._ and ..,.... -who have filed for arbitration and not aareed to aerms ... In other baseball sipinp. &Jny Pilebla ~hed a $2 million 11lary fasttr than any other pla~ in baseball history when he llJUd to a one-year deal for that f11ure with the Minnesota Twins. Puckett, an outfielder who will tum 28 on March 14, can earn an additional S~OO}>OO this season in bonuses ... Four other players racneo ..,.eements on contracts Wednesday. reducina=yen in arbitration to 92. Jeff a..... and Pit ~ to a lwe>-year contract for S l.67S million. IN ,.. llteed with the Pirates at SS I 0,000, a raite ofS I S0,000 for the tint baseman. Outfielder <*tM tkDewell and lbe Cleveland Jndjans agreed at S37S,OOO. a$12S,000raite. CalCberMMehta. traded to Baltimore on Tuadaj' from San Francisco, aarecd with the Orioles for about S2 I S,000. a S70,000 raise. UNLV breezes past Aggies Sophomore SlaeeJ A ..... ICOmi 17 ~ points and had ei&ht reboUnds to lead the • 13th.ranked Nev.aa-Las Yeps Rebels to a ' 94-68 Bia West victory over Utah State ---- Wednesday ni&ht in Lopn. The victory moved UNL V's record to 14-Y overall and 9-0 in the conference. Utah State fell to 6-12, 4-S. Aupnon led four Rebels in double f11Ures as they easily ran pest the Allies in1he second haJf .•. In another~pme: Dexter Bewail scored 27 poinll and T .. LewJ• 2S ts Pepperdine dum~ Loyola Mary-mount1 l 04-79. in a West Coast Atbletac Conference pmc in Mahbu. The Waves, winnin• their fifth strai&ht pme. moved into the WCACleadat 5--0,one-haJfpmeabeadof St. Mary' a, and 13-7 overall. The loss ended the Lions· 19- pme. rqular-season WCAC winnina streak. which bel&n apanst Pepperdine in the last pme of the 1986-87 sea.son. The Lions dropped to 4-1 and I(). 7. Loyola's a... GalMn. who leads the nation with avefllltS of 33.6 pqints~nd 14.S rebounds, was-held to U JM)ints and only two rebounds. Jeff Fryer had 22 points for lhe Lions. QI OTt:OJ.THE D.\ \ MycMJ =ro• of the taken. on the match up of Seattle orward Xavier McDaniel with the La.kers• Orlando Woolridae: "Jt's 1 coach's dream - X vs. 0 ." Cllppers routed by Dallas : Man Aplrre tton:d 14 of his 24 points --- durina a •2-point first quarter Wednesday • ~ -niabt, a team-hiah for one period this season, ,· ... -es the Dallas Mavericks beat the Los Anaeles _.;,_ __ 'Oippen 1t Reunion Arena, 117·98. The Mavericks. Joeen of nine of their previous I l sames. led 42-31 after one period and 70.S6 at halftime in bandin1 the O ippers =their 12th consecutive dcfeaL Their road record is 2-22. !Dallas' lead.never dropped under 11 points in the final ·three periods .. .In other NBA pmes: a.rlel BanleJ laad ~points. Rell A.ll•ar-came off the bench to te0re •32 and Philadelohia rallied in lbe founh qQltter to defeat Oliclao. 120-108, apoiliq M1dlMI .._..,, near-record ·10 OOOth ~inL Jordan's 33 pointa raited his NBA career toiaa to 10,000 in 303 ~Jordan, in his fifth season. ~ lbe milestone in fewa" pmes than all but one ocher player -Wlh a.. 'I e ' m, 1'ho needed ju11 236 ~ ... Dctroit's 6-foot-l WM ft1•11 sank a hip , '1'chi!'l layup over 7-7 M.-.. ... with 14 ICCOnds 'f'CmaiDIQI and the Pistons held oft' Golden S\aae for I ·aos-104 win at home. It was the Warrion' teCODd defeat ~naan ei&)\t181M winnina. streak ••• a.a..,._ ~ 14 of his 27 ~nts in~ final quner and Indiana ~ Boston lo one field pl in the final 6:30 to beat the •vis1tin1 Celtics.. 103-94-lbe Pacen' tee0nd victory over :Boston 1hj1 season ... Durell Qrtfft .. made a }.point :shot with 19 secondJ left., aivina him a pme-high 27 :points, II Utah beat the Spur1 in San Antonio. 107-103. . :sabres extend streak to 8 . left so•. c-. ... IUllll Med IO Ii• up bchilld him and to Ids left:' whit llathman ~ '°Crail aad to tltc riaht of Mon1an1, the ~uid. ' But Craia lined up'° die rillat iad ltalhinan to lhe left. ruaai111 their petWftl comctty but on the wn)ftl aide. . ' .. When we brok.t the huddle, I uw Tom lane up on the left. ud that wasn't the time to a~. so I just lined up on the ript." Craia •id by tdcobone from Hawaii, where he IS Je'lUftl ready for I.he Pn> Bowl. 4 ran tbe Q.arl to tltc riaht. and it worted, because they double-covered me." .. Ma~ we'll run it that wa y next year, .. Craaa lauahed. It can't be too bed if'we won the Super Bowl wilfl iL" ~ • I 1) 11 b • , .... Wyche agrees to contract Sua Wydle said Wednesday that he has aarcect to remain IS Cincinnati BenpJs coach ~ under aerms of a new five-year contract. '(::.>" Wyche's team had one of the most dramatic --- turnarounds in NFL ttistory this past season. After aoing 4-11 in 1987. the Benpls won the 1988 American Conference championship before losing. 20.1 6. to the San Francisco •9crs in Sunday's Super Bowl. Wychc's previous five-year contract expired at the end of the 1988 seuon. Wyche. 44, recei vcd$2S0,000a year under the old contract. but refused to discuss his new 11lary or other contract terms •.. aw " .... beaded to Pebble Beach on Wedne;:a~~t with San Francisco 49crs owner BMe Jr. OYer whether he will return for an 11th season as coach. Walsh was unavaalable for ·comment, but has sec:-retary confirmed that the coach planned to meet with DcBartolo on Wednesday. She said he left no word on when an announcement will be made. Griffith Joyner wins honor ,,.,w. Grtffl• ...,_,, the Outtn of Seoul whoorcbestrated three~kkn n its and * one silver at the Summer Olympics and authored two record-snwhina perfonnances ---- durina_ 1988, Wednesday was named The AQOClated Press Female Athlete of the Year. Griffith Joyner kept the award in the famil~. Her sister-in-IJw. J8dde JeyMl'-&enee. was the 1987 winner. "FloJo .. brouaht attention to henelf not only with sen11tional ~mpJishments on the UKt. but also with her dazzlina rac1n1 attire, her Mandarin-like finaernails, her flllhy ri~ her nowina hair and her radiant smile . . . Defendin1 champion Steffi Graf, turnin1 on ber awesome power after a shaky 11an. ovtrWhelmed arch-rival Gia Ft* ........ of Aflmtina. 6-3. 6-0, in the Australian~ today to rach her ejahth straiaht Grand Slim final. Graf. who hun 't IOlt a tet i.n lhe tournament. Will to for her fifth comecutive Grand Slam tit.le GdfRdt ~ Saturday apinst fif'th ·aeeded IWIM..,.of Czcichoslovakia. wbodowned unlteded Ir" C C..W.O o(New l.ealand. 7~ (7·2>. 4-6. 6-2. an tbC fint 1emifinal . TaL•VlllOll 11 a.m. -TINNtS: AUllralan °"'1 from Mttbournt (delaVedl. ESPN. 4 p.m. -COLLIG• •AMSTaALL: Nori" Caf'ollne· CharlOtte at 8radley, ESPN. 5:30 P.m. -NO •AM•TaALL: C""-• at Houlton, Z Channel. 6 p.m. -COLUG• •ASklTaALL: O\lke et North Car._ Slate, ESPN . 7:30 p.tn. -NO HOCK•Y: VancoYYer at Kin91, - ~~ .......... y .... ~~llrwltclto,eui .. ( ......... ~ ... .. ....:. wtaile me :.: ~ ... , MW iWMlered W. lilllla ~ .metn in 1911. at ~..I hive pev;d WIJ, fOrl NC la 1919. ft'• tied of ivee me a fedi• ol ~-... lcoet*d. 1.-cb •id of • 1911.-c>a. ........ ~· ii ... ...uy MW IO-. It's Dice Just IO be pla~ ia ee .... couna oa the daJ or.e ... . "Tve .,._.. almoll everybody an doulllel Wllca I walk on IM coun ia doubles 1fedJiu1 cu-. anybody. I tnOWI CM (lily man in douilel. IO I Uow I CM play with tbein. Hopdmly, I will uae it to improve mz Ii..._ I bow I cu play the~· fil .i eflon IO llooll bis lilllCS J'lly. Ladl will Piii on IOlne or tbe doubles IOWMmnts to plly in I.he main draw ol Olher tmlller lOUt-namcnaa. He .... IO break the 10P 100 before ICMOn'smd. lhboulb he.-s not M&re that'• attainable lhis tcalOll. Lach emctted from USC u the first four-time AU-American and played his first profcaiOnal match in 1917 al Wimbledon, althou&h be had played there aa 1986 W°hj)e still auendina IChool. .. It WU really exciliftlt" teach Slid. ''I bad played there my Junior year of colS.. but my fint time es a profissioqal was a lot more excilina. J was lookina forward to aoina pro for so Iona, since I was a kid. In the fint round, we bat the team iMt had won the tournament the year before. "It's still excitina for me. because I'm um ~ty new to it ... Leach S pertoenhip with Pu&)l, who he bad played apinst IS a youth on the j unior's circuit. bepn in aronic fashion durina l 986. "I was suJ>poled to plax with another pertntt, bul I c0uTdn t gefin SEA VIEW ·froml1 team to the end. "We needed aood pines not only from Curtis. but le.jar and the othcn. On paper, Uni is an excellent team. They're a lot bi.saer than us and we h.ait to be pat1enL When we were, we were fine. "I would 11y we're rilbt where we want lO be ao~nto Friday night's pme qainst lebeck." SaddleMc:k (S-0 in leaaue) handed Estancia its only loss in leque earlier this season. As for Univcnity. Coach Lee Jackson 11ys be tw seen a lot of imP.rovement in the last two weeks. • We pla~ our best pme of' the season tonight," he 11id .... We play extttme!Y well an spurts and toft in othen. But when our bi& men play well we can be awfully touatr.~ Mumaw, the bigcst of Trojan at 6-9, was held 1n check by Estancia's press. He scored 13 Points and had six rebounds.. ElsewheTe in the Sea V"aew: c.r... •I Mar II, 1Wda ii: With four starten sconna 1n double faaures. the host Sea K.tnp put it totethtr after a slow lint quaner to improve to l-2 1n leaaue. I J.-6 overall. and in the process snapped a two-pme losina streak. "We were a little son defensively in the fint quarter and Tustin shot very wellj" noted Corona del Mar Coach Pau Orris. . ''But at the 1tan of the seco9d quarter we played touahcr defensi ve- ly and a were a little more peticnt offensively. Brian Spratt tally played VCT}' well, on the boardsand ICOrina." Warttn Johnson's job on defense was U> oonwn Tuslln ahaflJlhooter Cheavly Ly and he respoeded by boldina lbe Taller to ciabt points. PCL ''°"''' Np~ contnbuted key free throws 1n lhe teeond half' to help lbe Mu~dOle the pp. The Andu •rned to alow the pecc up ;n tbc leCOftd half. ~ Btacb !went into a llall i.n the fourth quarter with the ICOft tied al SS. The Artists never tot the IOOd shot ofr, however, and tbC buuCr tOUnded •ndjna the pme into the Ant overt.ame. It went into a eecond ovenunc after HO\ 11 'f, Wltb &bi odlCI' ..,u.er, so I bed to p&ay with Jim IDd we ended up wiuana the tounlUnent. .. Lacb laid; The duo won .U ftve aoumaments it paei'ed in IM iitdlite terics. and went °" ao win fttbt of the fint nint toumamentl lbey played te>tether dati• into the 1917 season. Tbe two played loeether in 26of21 tournaments last season, Leach peir-Lna. wilb Dan Golde and Stefan Edberl in one each . "It lakes a toll on your body. even af you. just ao to N~ York, and CO!"e ~.. Leach 111d of the sruehn1 1ehedule. "That's somcthina you have to &et uted to if want to play touah. You can't aft'ord to play poorly i( wan& to move up. A lo& of 1uys cha!'F their IChed:ule to .ccomodaic for that. Lendt won't awit.ch time zones fasL .. J bad a rally lOUlh year but il paiGoff'in die end. 8Vt I oouid bave ~ .... ., ............ ·~· • . _..,.... aaDllftlil. ..... =:-:-.., .......... .... Leida lift. ... ::·--......... IOW8ld 1M end OI dill ,_,• ..... ... -... 1.Lo1d•1WO ..... Wen die ....,.. ........ -., _. came over and helped llt •Y = IOfns. He knows my ~ than anybody, to it iWlll)' ~;Yes. But he's udetermined uever. . .. Thefe'• a lot o( hard wOrt .... volved," Leadl aid. "I ha"C IO complaints; I lo"C lenlUI so muda. I•'• j1ll& a bonut. When. I lolt a match. I wnk o(so maay tbanp I:d ratberaot be doin&. I'm rally hippy IO be wcceufw enc>uP· to make money and lt'lvd arouftCl. lt's not all fUn and alOfY, but I'm not complajnjna ether. .. , reelly like to compete and rally like to WOtt on my same to imprcwt it. A lot oftima.1 don't want toaitt "P. early and~ it or practi« a cou~ Of times dun• the 6ay, but thole dli!'P aren ·1 toutll to ovewoomt. nc aa• menl of pll)'inl in a bit maldl ~ a top player JO i.hc world is well worth it... . The road lo the pment tuccas ha bttn a Iona one. but there'• much more to acxompblh. From ptayina hookey in k.lnderpnen to pnct.ice tenius. to playin1 the biaest tour· naments in the world, Iach has never bad a sinale rqret. ••My dad was aooc;t. ~n the sense be never pressured me," Leach 111d. "If tic had pressured me, I miaht have resisted more. He never made me practice. For that. 1 think it was l()od that I never suffered any bumouL I think that's why I still love at today. "It doesn't teem like that lona aao that I was playi~ at _Lquna Beac~. I think my whole hfe~omegoaJ ofbeina a professional made it speed by • atways-lootins to that ... .................... ~ S••n Sutford of Lafluna aeach tM&es •"" ....,. .. tw•aur• of Costa ...... n... NeUJ•ft durlftil PCL Matchup Thunday. .. He dad a areat Job.'' said Oms. "He really made him work has tail off Jeff Jackson played pKtty wtll and Mau Cwienma sot U$ 1oan1 With a couele of threes an the fourth qua.ncr. .. Cwter\nia desttVes the red badae of courqe. He's been sick aJI ""eek and went nearly all the way He JUSt hU".11 IOU~ for us:· Coronas balance shows up in scorina -Spratt led Wlth ls points. followed by CwieT1nia ( 12). JackJon (I ~=~~~son (I I). It, N..,.n Har'Mr ••: The Roedrunnen improved to 19·1 , >O, desoate a solid show1n1 by thr host Saflora, who were within di~ tance at 17-12 throuah the firs t e1ah1 minutes. but faded 1n the second quarter under a 21-9 1eiae. Malru Dottin ( 19 points). Crail Marshall the 61'1t overtime was scoreless and Vu broke lbe tie with two free throw,. But Trevino answered wath an outside shoL The Mustanas pulled ahead by three w1 th 2 a IC'COnds left as Vu made one of hll free-throw attempU. Brauer then an1we~ wath bis l-po1n1er lO tae at.Calla was then fouled lO ,et the opportunity to wan thepme. It wu an especially fna1tratina Jou for the Aniats.. who fall to 1.11 overall, 1-4 i.n Jeaaue and would appear to have lost any hope ofa C'IF (11) and Sean Samon (10) led a balanced attack. Hatbor's defense rose to the oc· ca.s1on at umes. but the Sa1lon didn't have enough firepower to deal wtth the CIF S-AA ·s top-rated team. as well as the No. I team in Onnac County. NcwpGrt falls to 0-S 1n lequc, but rema.ins very much ahve an the race for the playoffs. Two v1ctoncs in their last fi ve starts would IJVC the Sailoru 13-12 ovcnlll record -which would keep them in I.he l-A ~ayom hun t rqardlcss of their finish an leaauc play. Chns Lee and Cra11 OcBusk led Harbor w1th 12 pointt apttce. Oc- Busk, a Junior. h1t 4 of S from 3-po1nt ranae. ptayofT benh. Only five straiaht Mns would pua them into a better than . SOO overall record Elsewhere an the PCL: ,....._.Hilb 71, W11•ni1t• M: The Wamon.. dnptie dou~a&H te0nn1 from Joey Cohen (U). Bo Ashkena.zy ( 13) and T 1m Corien (I 0). were unable lo k~p up wuh Trabuco's bi& advanta11C wath ill ansJdc pme, u well u bOerd It was Trabuco Hilb' e1ahth stra\&ht victory and amprovcs the Mustanp to 13-S. S-0. : Dcfenseman nu BealeJ scored one ---·~ IO&I and set ut.•e'!°ther Wednetday niaht as a -;ihe"ButralO SI ran lhe1r u~ ID'tik ~~ :to eiaht pma with a 6-3 NHL victory over --- :the l{ed Winas in DctroiL Buffalo is 6-0-2 in ill pest ei&ht •£'!:.and 22-21 ~ overaJl ... Ehewbere in the NHL. W : ICOred his 1eeond pl oftbe ~at 12:38 of' the : thard period and Pittsburah came back afterlotinaa three-~ 9Ql.I ad to beat = WinniN. U ... Jn Hanford. Prlmt Tldlet. 8 s A t-1 c,.!,::'t. (~'f~C: =~~nit• ,......,. __ . -eat-~w--as r UO p.m. -COLUH hlKITULLI ~"°" State ~ \;; me a E>A§-Way- PMll ~.,..... with J 1:09 remainina to lift the •Whalen anto a 3-3 tie witb St Louis ... In Toronto. MAJ : ark*1eY defteca.ed Ona ........ , IOftl shot at the : Maple Lea& create l:STinU> overtime to fVe Bolton I : 2-1 viqory, endina 1 tbfte.pmc Bruins•• strait ... • ..... LMmer ICOred twice and Cbicaeo uted thru lbonbuded plt to win in E.dmontoA. ~l. , at calffornle, EMtN. RADIO S:JO P rn. -NO llAIK•TMU.t C....... et Hou:ston, l(ltTH ('30). 6:l9 •-"'· -cou.aH MSK•TUL.L: UCI at New MellolcO see., Kftll (11'0). 7:;10 ~· -NO MOCX•Y1 V~ at Kine&, KLAC (5'1J. 7JO p.m; -COLL.aM U.STMLL: UCL.A et w ..... , .. , Sta .. f.::KMPC (711). ~ •"'· -~I •• M9C8TULL& UC ..... ......,. et Lo"I leeclt ...... KMNY (~. 7;Jt •.l'f\. -c:ou.a .. ~ USC et w.tll 1t1 , K .. X ( _.,, r \HI\ HUI,,_. I' l Rlverllde tops ~UC/pairopens with vi~tories occ women 111111,~..-... uu.oo ••ll1rtn.s.:-·- Moralhan600,000=t' or ..-.,iftdoolludou Wlllbe =---~eltow. •Ii• ............. 10 • .l~ and com..,.. oleilluN balib rrom more1Mn I 501nacl name lines. ~~ofeuubiaon inilicalel.-11 ... IOOntOddtW1ll be lnliti•IMir .. a etllnt boet .-..,,,•If--Man theft 400 ..._ ... ,..1pmentand mY-~. n.:=•blop111trOlnl·IO ax~llLm.·IOp.•. .J ... •Mall!J""' ... I I La•7p&S... days. Admauaon wtll be SS for adults. $2 for children 6 to 12. and children under 6-111 be adnuncd free. Di ... count coupons for admaMIOft aR availabfc from SCMA membrnand Other merinc MOftS. The Los Afteeles Convention Centcrislocatedat l201 S. F"~ St in downtown LA a •1boe Power Squadron wdl o&r a MWICCdaatecl belie boatil'l~Y datlfOr.aJud powa-bolaen sau:E:nMoaday . ll · will111rt116:JOp.m. at tbC Y 8dat Oub. l IO t BIYlide Dri~ Nl...-,on ._., fDlliuctlolawi8CO¥tr ... ~ u~t~eql!ip; meat, ••01'1'9UOCll. Niii of'IM f'09d.~ .. ....-... .. tRMll*ibood .............. . Clllllil• tieUdopen IOtM public. TllmWilbea..UMlflt& saudeltail..ty willL For,.... ..... -.e111 .... lo.M4l2-1'116. man ...... ~ ...... • L Lllaer'I 'fl " ..._... H •• --24 " GcMdeft Slete 20 " PortteftCI 20 " S.Uemento 11 26 ~ lO 2' MMtwett ~ Utetl 24 IS Houltoi'I n 16 OMat 20 11 '*'* 20 20 s.nAntOnlo 11 11 MJeml 4 )e • ....,.es,. ... ..... ... Mt A» .6D -SM tf1 25' .615 .590 .a. .soo 212 .lOS .. t 2 • • 14'h 1''h I 31"> 4~ 13 " .... -. -~ ·; ... . .. -. ......,........ ~ M exico c••• ftan AIMftmn Center, 6:JO p.111. JV: None. Radio: KPZE ( 1 I 90) ~ '"-Y0tlP. "' ~· 22 ll .sso 4\'t av JOM FEllGUSON IMton II 21 ........... 1' 13 We$Nntt0ft ll 13 C"-'k>tte 10 )0 ~OM.-c~ lO • Detroit 26 J2 MilwlMAM 24 l3 Ataente 25 " ChiCMO n 1' t1 1t 462 • ,410 10 .361 11 250 16.,., "' * 4 "" Sh .641 Sh SfO 1lfi 212 ""' J!Vrteaters(6-9, 3-3) Proba~ surters ....... F 11 F Sl c 33 G 21 G 32 Heme, ......... Gr.- ~ H«dtNn, •·•· So.. RiCkY Bullft, •·7, So Mlke OoklOt'ClYk, 6-f, Sr, Rod PaN'Nf', 6-3, Jr. Kevin FIO'fd, 6· S, Sr. • Key Jttt«Wf ~ 6.7 6.0 14 1 17 9 1U •• 21 52 7S 29 21 Indiana ~4•tc..... DelM m: ',. ,.,. ... 11• Ri. "' (l!iQeO '°' Detrelt lOS, c;..._ Slttt I .. 3 Ml•• LelNI, 6·S Jr (10 4, 3,1), 20 Just.n Anderson, 6•5, So tll. l O>. 22 ROC> ~IO'CZYlt, 6·9 Jr t• 7, U); 25 ar .. n McCIO~ltev, 6·7 Fr C• S, 2 S> llldl9N ta e.IOll M VIM 107, $ell~ lt:I T•Y'\ 0-. a..ws ., Hou\IOft, no •m StctttMlllO ., ............ •JO '"' lndltM ., w.~. • 10 • m 0..-et M.Mnl, UO • m C'*"'"' ti Utefl, 6.>0 • "' Mil•~ •• Porllt/ld, 7 30 p 11'1 ,,....., GtMft O\enofft al L.alrWI, 7 lO "" s.cr-to ., '°'*'· •JO • m.. Geldll'I Stet• ti Pll~UUf1tt, •JO Pm Oe"'9nd et OtW'oot, s t rn left .,,, ...... 0.... s •"' w~ at Chieffo. uo • m. New York t i "'-'ii•, 6 lO tt'I' Allellta ti 5-allle, 7 PIT! COMMUNITY COLLIGE MEN RtwrMclt 12, Ofefte9 CN1t U '°'..,. '"*" c~., on.. C..at It~ .... .. .. .. ...... 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J OO 2• -S--.T~ 11' •• h••O -lt1 S..• T-t'.9.1 U lllACTA CH -IX• U OAA.Y ~ tt-• I I -USl.JI: RAM, AC, MOTORCRAFT or PUROLATOR OIL FILTERS .. .,,. . ., ..... ~ .. ...... ··~ 16!! • We cony From AC Motorcroh ond flV'Olot()( 0<1 f11t.,n for most ompor• ond.~tt< ~!ft. • lnntt 1 REGULAR TO 3.29 6 ~ "' 97 EACH • '1bur chot<e of Conrol or Vallrol1ne HPO ond .411 Cimo oJ1 • limit 12 qvorf\ • SAE. JO, lOW-~-' lOW0 40, 20W·:HI M ar.,._ C... DAil V PtLOT I Thw9d8y, Januery 28, 1989 • TD P•MD,T ClltCU8 by BU Keane COUNTU CULTUltS by Maratta & M•atta "Mommy, why does your old diary have a lock on it?" • llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson "Stop pretending you're out of fuel! We filled you up on dog biscuits an hour ago!" PEAl'fUTS REMEMBER WMEN we WERE PUPPIES AT Tl-'E 0AJ5At' MILL PUPN FA~M? I CAM'T 6EUEVE t'VE GROWN UP ro WIN AN "U6LV P06 "COMTEST. .. GARl"IELD TUMBLEWEEDS LJH, 1HE <DNfOV ~f!'S'T'S 'JKq1' ~ '1f;)f' ~KllU& OFF ~I~ CAm.E:'4j ~ 1b ~t: AS'f001HPICK'S. v DRABBLE aoesl8aoes p f\~15 OF A BAND·A\D . . n\E PAPS rHAl M"T(~ES NO ~t110WN S~i JIJ -n>NE· "THE PA~T \~~\ ML'> \HE ~N~ Of F THE PAR\ 1H~T HE~>'tH iCALl~ 5£ ALS lo THl SCA8 ' ··----... - DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham ~ l f .i ~ ,_'Up ~THAT W>6MY NEW &k5LE,MR.W11.-~. . tt>W'O fT SOOtro 11 l < • I ' by Charles M. Schulz by Jim Davis AH Y£!>, 'THE. OL' •• SE.CONC>!> AWAY FROM 8Ll~f"UL ~OMt'E.R '' &OPc,i !>PA~M by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin f8gan ~·~~ ~ Mf,'U.. ~Mf, NOf ... ARLO AND JAl'OS .. FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE JUDGE PARKER "°"'"r VOJ-n:\™ r!J1 NOSE. IS ~S.9? NOl IF YOU CAN REACH SAM THIS EVEN ING, HAVE HIM CALL ME AT HOME, M ISS SANCHEZ t DOONB88UllY by Garry Trudeau by Jimmy Johnson MC.."' rr JN01IM ~ ~~' by Lynn Johnston i~rrf t't./ ~ 1S 1Co ~u:>~ by Jeff MacNelly by Harold Le Ooux by Tom Batluk ' ---...._.., ---~--- • 642-5678 CLAlllFIED INDEX "2·5678 ... .-TM OIUJt• co. ... .. ,... 80UTM OllUQI co. -1111 COU>Well BAN~eRU &fMlaiiL' 1022 iiiliii•• 3•" 2•A . Penor•Mlc oeMf\ 6 NII ._ Qui9t wt·d•· .. c. sno.ooo ,.._. C9I fOr epptm ...... ~ t.;n.tpm ...... .... .. ,Ing pt"eetltfOU:• -w. ~.,.,,.,,,,,, 2M Wllh 011rf fem rOOf\'I '-6 Ofoow. Herdwooa Uoort, ""t• tot 10. 1 IOtqft remodel "°""*"'. ,. lltOdl "°"' ~ ~ l•d' $,..,. ...,., ,:,. '""'°' ~ ..... Ontr ~ 21 ,,....,I ... CAU.MJ-4111 ---- ... • Baby Boutique 540-IZJO 496 tlOO 7 _'1"."1 .:-::. ' As a convenience to our Dally Piiot customers We're Open Eartier and Stay Open Later tor New ads, Corrections and Cancellations. To Place Your Dally Piiot Clasalfled· ,.,, ... Cail 842· 7 f(UI) ADS ARE FREE Cal: Ml-1171 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACftOU 1 Ou1cti ertl•t 6Feet II WNith ,. 9c:ad• 15 '*"'-'nted ti lnt•lor ,.,~ 18 Parmlstlw 20 Newt 21 MYllcal note 22 Absconded 23 BloOd P8'1 25 Lun.cy ,., o.-n• 211 ManMr 30 T ulCany city 34 lnv11a ~~ 31 Kind Of lnrtllullon 311 Good t~tar spot 42 Band group 43 Endured 44 bper1 4S Ceremony 46 Hand tool 4 7 Sltln IMlon 411 Flowef S1 Aesllf'IO plac.t S<I s.s>aretor 51 F.calMtura 80 0.Vic.. IUlf 2 3 4 14 81 Liar 63 Unmixed SA Wear •••Y 15 GrMll latt., 66 Paradise 87 Kilmer worlt 81Aula Ill Lettar1 DOWN 1 Underworld 2 Ouicit 3 S__.hN<IS' t>Ond •Monument 5 Strokes 6 Distant 7 Wotda lrom ~·~ I Sault -Maha !I Powdefy 10 Inner P<•t 1 1 U.pec1an1 12 Chvtch part 13 Si.tgh 111 TtUSI 24 Allots 28 Cowboy ONT 28 l(n191'1t 30 Foot 31 Clum- 32 G.rman tlwr a3 Hll Sp ,. Acidity 35 Ftt pref ... VtOUS "1ZZLI 80U IEO 37 Rhlnal 38 P1~pan 40 -shin 41 lnfatlor 4' Affvmat111e &I G1aMCI 411 Heedt Fr 50 Woin Miwy depletion SS YOUf'O I M ... 57 Transter St lnYOCate 82 Uly Fr 10 11 12 1~ ' . DAILY PilLOT .... .., .. .......... NEWSPAPER DELIVERY * NO COLLECTION * Early mornjn6 motor route available Mu I ha.-e dependable vehjcJe and liability in urance. ABOVE AVERAGE EARNI GS Call 714/642-4333 between 6:00 a.m.·5·00 p.rn. ( t.t) 6a.m.·10 .m.( AT& UN) -AR£1' V*ILABL Buatla•ton Beaeh Ce t• Me .. , F••• .. I• \'•lie , A ew .. rtlleae• CIA'S.fD'IB• A•YE•'l'ISINB SALES Weare ADDING to our sales tafl. . II you can aype at le•a 45 wpm aad ha•e .-• telecommunieatioa lkiU. -We: can eller yoa a bale~+ eommllliOD A D ~~~~~rt a~ It plaee lo work. IWln • •,,,.,, .... n--..... 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" • I t f Call our friendly saiesmtn for dnaitl 579-5100 1-800-228--7240 17071 E. Imperial Hwy.-Yorba Linda. California o SADDLEBACll Sales Leasing · Service Parts STANTON F OCEAN • CADILLAC • GMC TAUCKI n•/582-0800 SAN DIEGO FWY AVERY EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL ln1rt111 11 Dis P111 1111 fer l1lli11 842-4321 CALL ONE OF THESE DEALERS FOR THE BEST BUY 0 -HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc. Mnades-Benz 8862 ManchcstcT Boulevard Bue-na Park • Saperlor @~~~~=~~ 7600 Westminster Blvd., Westmlnste (71,)891-9378 (213)(30-·~ G JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS • AC.URA 1001 Ouellt. Newport-..Ch • Low ftuce• • No G1mm1clr, • Gfo•t Soloct .. " • f,.endly fteoplo • facellent s.,••<• ,..,, .......... .. ............ (7' •) Ml·1111 (111) ..,.,., L8ICOlM Pl~ •auce --SA LIS -LIASDfG SERVICE -PARTS • •• • • .. • • HAVE • • Whit could be better than ceJebrllirc Mardi Oras in New Ort.. M a W11Y IO jazz up winier'! lmlsine· .. ~ iJr doUbloom and tads llJWd from csaMl &Ila ... Mncq in the ltiatlor aa onedthe many bmll t.Us ... ad perhlpa bell~ Ill, endlaa ~ on the di5tinctive and hearty Cajun/Creole fare bi which New Orteam bu become • world renowned. • ... Unfonunarely, not all d us can take a Mardi tru l..n.. But you can c.prure all the magic and excitement d MarcU Gras in your own home with this IUlhemic New Orleans meal from the two "first fiunilies" d Louisiana bxt products. McJlhenny Co. and the Wm. B. Reily Co. - For l20 years. the McDhenny family d Avery Island has been the tole producer d the 'M>rld~famous TABASCO-pepper sauce. Similarly, four~ dthc New~ based ReiJy family have manufactun:dtbeic dlslinctive hnc d ~ products such as Coffee wllh ChJCOry and new Cajun-Creole Dinners, as well u IOO-year-old Swans Dawn Cake FJ~ It's ~ co sec how the experience and expertise d these two families 1eam up to make an unbeatably delicious feast. But C\'en bc:uer, the complete meal shown on this p-ae is easy to make and economical, whether or not you're an experienced cook and whether you're feeding just your filrnily or a large party. · • No~ly. a full -coute Mardi Gru fca.u would take ~rs in~ kitchen and a shoppina can OYerflowtng with ~ierm. By using the new Luzi1nne Gumbo and Jambellyi bin: ner MiAes, you get authenck fl8YOI' tn just 30 minutes. Adding TABASCO pepper sauce • lets you 'picc them up to uit your own wie, and impens a subtle extra character. The Sau.sage and Chicken Jambalaya and Seafood Gumbo recipe are direct adapCalions from some d New Orleans' most famous restaurants and are treasured Mardi Gras fawnre . So 1 the piquant ~icy Beans side dish. Similarly, the recipe for Caf~ Noir is a New Orleans tradition, wtuch dictates that~ should be sef'\'ed "black as ha&c. hot as hell, and as sweet as IOYC." No Mardi Gras dinner should finish withoma King C* br des.ten. Desiped IO reserOOlc a crown and topped with a white glaze with sugar crystal and draa6es done up in the March Gras colors of purple, green, and gold. thi traditional coni:ction ha.~ a tiny baby doll Clther babd or luffed inside.~ Tucxy person who gets the slice containing the doll 1 designated the "king" or -queen· for the occasion and tw to bring the next Kmg Cake. ,, If Whether you WlSb to go all out -dressing up your borne m streamers and twvin& guests amvc 1n masb and costume -or merely co add a "lagniappe" (or LnUe tomedlinc extra) lO a family meal, thi Mardi Gras repa$l is 1 feast tbr both the~ and palate. With ' Ca Jun/Creole food'! h becoming an American fiM>nte. there' no tune ltkc Mardj Gras to 1..tlm~ In bon temps rou/,.,7 . which i how we s.y an New Orleans. ·t.et the good time\ roll!" Bon Appcut! ,. 'f I ow lt"8 Can Tum E~ Mealtime lnao A MardJ Gns The enure hne Luzi nnc CaJun-Creolee dinners-Jambalaya. Gumbo, Shhmp Crc· olc, and E«lUff6c -are a q\uck, economical. and ddteious way to enjoy New Orlcans- ''Yle dining at home everyday, and noc Just once a year or for special occas10M. For a free brochure filled with recipe and serving suggesuons, send a sclf-addre&.'ied \tamped '10 bu"ime e~lopc to : • • , Luzianne Cajun-Creole Foods P. 0. Box (,()296 New Orleans. LA 70160 ___ .'tfttJ .. [J t' A11d • THURSDAY. ~ANUAAV 26. 1989 9' -· .. • • • . ·~ A .. • • • • • ' ) • ~Ci{J/ .. f _____ .._tablespoons ------ 1 nitdMn red or pttn IWPP"°• dittd' .kl.Ul.llJ&ID.Jl!.u;&.----------___,,_~..Ql~i;:alfoC-llllJUL------------"41 l /4 cup •hite vinegar 1-l 2 CUJ>'li ~r J/4 In 4 or 5 quart poc with tight~fin1ns lid heal otl: ...t kidbeu and ch.ckcn wwrd lipl)y browned. GradulUy idd bmm Ind bri,.. kl 1 bot I. Stir in diwr mix. kJlnMOrl Md rCJ ptppt'r '3UCC C~t and \tmmtr 25 minuleS. •irri"I OC'CL\i<'inall). Gam1 h ~i•h IC'CC'n oni<>M. just ~ ~rv•"I· • Mako • rvu11., . ~,~ • ........ l II c..-...-d*1w, Jalflc9111 .... .. • (about I cup) S.1/2 C'UplWlllkr' 1 ,_.. (I ounca) touw.o. awnbo .-..-1 CM (16 omttS) whole IOlna&oeS, brobn ............. : = :=a')C. ":':. okn,dmwed pOad ,,.. ........... ~lned, or l poirDd ,,,_.......,. daa_.. In 4 or 5 quan poc v.1th u ht-firu§Oil: sUt pep-per 2 minutes Gnidually add -.wr brina IO 1 boil. SCir In dimer mill, tomatoes and rild sauce. c~r and unmcr 20 minulfi. umng occas I> Add okS1I and shrimp: immer5 rrunut looatr or until hri_mp are JUSC done. • Mikes 4 tcrv1np ~ ' • oet: One pound ohny ~~fresh or f'roml. • thlwed we~ INI) be subtl~-= shrimp l tablespoons supr I cup •"Mer t lablespoon mU!Urd ~. cnNted 213 cup \qdll*' oU 4 lnedham dofts prtic. tbinl slked 113 fUP nonfat dry milk J bl!)~ J t~bakiRK~-der 1-111 tempoom sail I ~ , .. nilla 1-1 4 to 1-1 fl ta.spoOaS ~ pq>per uce 112 ktipooo sah l pound grttn beam • 8 • -~ 1n large sauce~ combine walir. vmcpr. ar. mu..~ seed. prtic, bly ~. salt and red pepper~. Bri•C to a boil. reduce heat. C01>er and unmer S nu nu ) Add irecn bea:ns COYCr and unmer IO mmu , unuJ tendcr- cnsp; ~from heat Arranae be.am an hall d1\h , cover compktcly v.1lh vinqar mixture Cover. chill <Mmcht. Mak 4 rvi .. U.ht Lemon Glue <r«ipe folk1Ws) Coloml Sapr ,,..cah and ~ Snial CW. or Ptastk Baby Dor Preheat ~n co J756 F.. Grca.<.e and nour a tO-i~h f~ tu~ pan 1ft flour ~nn and combine -.1th u ar, -.11h!r. tl1l, dry milk. biluflll fJO\l'dcr \'antlla anJ ...at an~ btlY-1. M1~ un11l 'mooth. Wh ip the egg "-'h1tc' unul ~ilf. fvlJ wh1PJ'Cd cg wMc into the batter uncd evenly blended ~ bittier mto the prtpam! pan Bake 40 to~ mtJMn until ~bounces bee\ v.hen gentl> touehed 1n the ceneer. 1\tin aut d f*' onto \:lkt rack. cOOI thoC'\'IUply, Orizzk with LliN LcrAOO Glaze and dccoraae wilh parpk Md ,,.. JMllll' cl}SW nd ~MJ d~ • • Ma .. e\ one IO-inch~ tube cake. 20 "ICC'I · ....... I.-Glilllt: M1t 1 cup \tftnd pow.t&• - •• I ~ fTah lemon ,_ce, l/2 lif ••1111• ..... lllftOlirind, aa.rlllill.t 2eo3111*l1Ptamhnl.., •ii .... ",,,.. ... QR bi ...... ~ .. '· Cl Onnll COMI OM. Y N.OT I TllUtedlr. ~ 21. .. SU ANAMllll JM V11tage Ctntl!f 1122 So 8ro~hurst 92804 l•I Ball Ao1d) Phone (714) 635-2461 CORONA HL MAI di 3700 E COISI tiWy m25 Phont (714) 673 9000 ELTOIO 24601 A ayttlOftd Wey 112 (Bell Tower Plau North It El Toro Road) 92630 Phone (714) 837-3822 NUetT•IT• IUCI 19069 Buell IMS 82648 (Nono Rllpfts Mlrttt It &atfltld) Phone (714) !'1'·8575 LAUllA Sycallofefltln 2471 W Wtlittltf Blvd 90631 (t llgtlt W of Beach Blvd ) "'°"' ( 213) 694-2114 GUiii 1419 N Tustll\ (tt IC .. 1111)12667 Ptlone <n•> 997-9960 TUSTll 13171 ~Ave 1113 (Tustin Pim) 82680 Phone (TI4) 731-6616 .. Create own world of sunshine . , with a spread of Caribbean fare Winter on the calen...dar inspires rooted in African culture, with mOlt of us with tbouahts of tropical European accents. plementina other inp-edicnt&. Toss 1 refrcshin1 salad, shake up a punch and, perhaps, flambc some fried bananas for dessert. Ifs almost like being there! places -like the Caribbean. And If you can't eteape to palm tree while each of the islands bouu its land, why not create your own own special Ravon. the entire area's sunny world by treatina friends to 1 lll!!lllJ!lll!ll!lllll•ll!l•••••lll•••••••ill•lllil•l!l•••••""•••••I rich, colorful cuisine is deeply samplina ofthete-currently very ·---------------------------------------------------. trendy -dishes. In keepina with CARIBBEAN POU ROAST ' · :~-:. MONEY SAVING COUPONS :~·- Getinore nutrition .... .. .forlffiS .... Ond"<M I dU holt \ht>al Total' ha.s 100'\ d 12 \1tam.lns and ITllnerals and rs an~ "OOrctd calcium Tha1snm\1tamin and mineral nutrtlioothan Ill) otherctml Looking for Oat Bran? ........ , ... ____ ...._ Cheerios has ifi - ~ No added flavors Made with •uReal·- Fftlit JUiee and NatUral Fruit Flamrs -··-----------, ..... 1 ........ , 1121 I the Caribbean'• eclectic character, red~ below benefit from the 1dchtion of two hiahly venatilc NofWelian cheeses . Festive Caribbean Pork Rout. for eumple -juicy yet relatively lean -is stuffed with an authentic blend of fruit, ric:le, rum and ainaer. Bindinaand mellowin1 the mixture with its nutty tute and creamy consistency, Jarllbera supplies an intriauina new dimension. Rich yet delicate, this super adaptable cheetc is also comparatively low in calones and fat, since it's made from pan-skim milk. Pa)'in1 bomaee to a Jamaican duste, avory Nokkelost Meat Pies make an imailtible aide dish. Spatted with curry, chilies and thyme, they derive a lion's share of teaSODins (rom flavorful Nokkelost -spiced with cloves, cumin and caraway. Like JaTlsbera a p1rt.tim milk cheese, Nokkelost also mclu readily, combinin1 and com- ~ ewp flMIJ dl1.,e4 celery ~ C9' dlPf Ill .,.. .... (tallMM) 1 ...U ct.ve prUe, m-.. t IUlelpun Mrter er aarpr- lM l Ctlfl eeekM rtce • .......... dlPflll 1 Ctlf ..... JulAeradleete ~ Ctlf cn1Hd plaeapple, ...... 1 lealfH• sn&M Ume peel l IUlelf 11•1 lime jatce l .... .,.... nm (er u - sweeieaM .,,ae jatce) "' ................... , ,.,....,.. .... ~ cwp ftnnly padM lll't • W.nnpr l ~ltlf 11.. nm (or u- sweete9M.,,.. jatce) Ume, plaeapple, ceeoa•t slices (.,u.al) f'9ease Me SUNNY /CJJ You can eat favorit es and reduce choles t erol If your New Year's resolution was to act th.at cholesterol down, take heart. It is possible to eat the foods you like without ~uc1nrcaJones and still lower your cholesterol by as much as 25 percent, rettnt research shows. You just hive to make three chlnaes: l) ~uce fat intake by choosin1 lower fat versions of beef, chicken, poultry, fish, milk and dairy f~ 2) hmit added fau and 3) eat more fruits. vqetables.. breads and cereals. · Tbtraulti11dtetlower1n fat and h'~in fiber, vitaminsand minerals. accordina to retearcher Rita Doua.heny of the Western Human Nutntion Research Center in San rraocitc0. Recent studies hive shown that fruit. veectable and a.rain fiben can hive a cholesterol lowerin1 effect. And the best news _yet. "Prtici_panu in our studies were very hlppr, with their diets. They ofttn found it diffacult to cat all of the food.• said [)ouaberty. 1rbe reason: rep&acina fau with complex carbohydrates lives the feelina of full nett often auociaaed with biJh-fat meals. "Acceptanee of the low-fat diet wu pracUcally 1nst1ntaneouJ. Bccaute of the incrate in bulk and the tow amount of food, complete adape.ation to the lower fat dicu took about a week;• wrote Douahetty in the American Journal of Oinical Nutnuon. October 1918. . Patients an thia and other studies by _Oouahefty reduced their daiu!fyfat intake to 30 ~t ofto1.1I calories or las. Diets in the a conWned abuurl IOO adorits dl1ty. Chotntm1t lowered an 1vet11t of ti to 2S percent. Within aich ()(the food lf'CMll" followirw are SOfTle foods to focUs on in llrivi .. for a more bean-healthy diet: -Dally P..-lowllt or nonfat milk, loWfat or nonfat yoaurt. Mommta cl11111, loWtat cot&llC cbcae, buttermilk, lowfat or nonfatfra.n~ -rn111 -.. v•u•••e: a11 fNi~ a11 veeetabks, belled clrild NL poll~ broiled fish, ~f trimrried of visible fat, tuna canned in water tiln bambWFr chicken or turby without skin. · -li11t1 _. -• •k CNatmal. Whole-·Wheat breed. tordllM. muffins. railin ~ pica breed. wheat cndcn. P9ltl and rice. Fruit compote delicious .................... Qmck cxic*i111 ia tllle microwave -.. • c11ar1 •,..,... oruen ................ MJn nulla.POIS I _ .... &1117 Fruit-based snacks, temptingly healthful Muftins rft8Y bt the la1al food ~ witb muffin lllGpl IPrinsina up in lbc)ppi.. malls and new muffin mix-flavon crowdina suptt- market shelves. Muffins provide an easy. hot- from-tbc-oven snack or brad that has health writlen all over it Tropical Fruit Float is a natural for enter1ain.ina teens. Ifs a little more than a soda and not quite a deuen. Just combine fruat, ice cream or froien yoeun and soda. PRUITY BANANA MUFPIN letife ...... , ....... ~~-·' ~ ....... .... ................ , l jar (It .-cee) ma rue~ ·eMiTlet 1 eg, .upaty bUtea ,. "' MtlenDJlll 1.4 n, ktter, melte4 S'IMtU1,maslle4 "' a., ~1.,e• wala•t• t M9Cet cream dteae, tof&eltH Grease bottom of muffin pans. In. large bowl sin toeether flour, bakin& powder, salt and supr; make well in center. Drain chem es, reserving 4 teaspoons syrup. Chop remaining chemes and add to Oour mixture along wuh egg, buttermilk, butter, bananas and walnuts; stir until just blended (about 2S sllokes). Fill muffin cups V> full. Bake at 37S dearccs for 25-30 minute . Cool on ware rack. Combine cream cheese and reserved cherry syru p, spread on warm muffins. Makes 16 muffins. TROPICAL FRUIT FLOAT I jar (I oHcU) marascbhlo cllletrles l cu (I OUCH) cntbed plDeap- ple. ndralned l buua, peeled 1 plDt vanilla lee CTeam or fro1en yocart 1 cu (12 onces) lemon-lime soda SUNNY FromC2 In skillet cook celery. green onion and garhc in boner. until celery is tender. Remove from heat: blend 1n nee. banana. Jarlsberg. pineapple. hme pttl, hme Juice, 2 tablespoons rum and gmaer. Drain chtrrin. reservins 4 cher- ries and V. cup syrup. In blrnder, puree ttma1n1na c~nin. pineap. pie, banana and ttSef'Ved syrup untjl smooth. Divide into 4 tall &laues; add a small scoop of ice cream or froun yoaurt to each atus. Tilt ~ and slowly add soda. Add anotMr scoop of ice' cream or ,frOzen yoaurt. Garn1d\ each &lass with a whole 'marucbino cherry. Makes 4 servinp. · '--"'..- Cut pockets 1n front of loan at I· inch intervals. Spoon filhng into pockets.• Place roast an shallow balung pan Add 1/1 cup water to bottom of pan. Roast. covered. at 32S degrees 25 minutes per pound. For last 30 minutes. uncover roast Blend brown sugar and 2 table· spoons rum. Brush over roast. Gamash wath lime. pineapple and/or coconut slices, if demcd CHUNK LIGHT IN OIL OR WATER Makes 6 to 8 scrvmis •ff there 1s remam1ng filhn&. spoon into buttered balung dash and bake. covered , last half hour alona wtth roast Serve on side of planer NOltltELOST MEAT PIES Flllhl1: 1 ~ pou41 leu Jroud beef 1 tailapoM cook1q oil ~ e11p ml8ced celery I amall oaloa, mlaced i 1ar&e clovet 1arllc, mJDced Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites ~ ure4ded Nokke•o•t Round Steaks :a. l• •1" Vegetables ~.:.:~· • et1p cMpped 1reo clllllles \'a teupooa carry powder Boneless Ham :...~::~l(-• 1169 Potatoes 'i:~~.01... ... I~ ¥. te..,...ult C • an.,... toarttly 1roud Rump Roast ~~u •cu· •• 1189 hicken Nuggets .~.' rt:~,... u.yme, cr111bed <•r Turkey Ham ~~...;. • 5149 Burrito ;~. ~a1n• drted > s· T A F. h F·11 cn•t: 1rloin ip oast :.~:--fCU« .• s239 1s 1 ets :.~-..;--; .-...·~-- •·.or •119 OI '159 ... Ol s1 e7 ~'.)/25c 1'7•1Y $269 ''°' s109 1_._ __ .J..slCcap1..,. ..... 1!:.ted1i11~a1~i-u,.!!'t°!.!d~~~ ,.._.,~D~o~v~e~r Sole ,.~, .. s339 Orange Ju ice ::· 1 :=-~~. meltff a I Ut ,...-r.te=-a=---s=---'.':""--:------,.~m---rt-:;;awa11an unc:-t:----.. -QI_,._.,.~ 1 c., NCN•t.-f1av•rt4 milk• '1; e11p f~l7 1nte4 c.H1111t Glaa~ 1 tgJOlk 1&8MH,...smllk In larac killet brown beef in oil , s&inina to break into bits Add celery. onion and prlic: cook 5 minutes, stirrina often. Rcmo\'c from heat: cool acvcral minutes. Stir in I cup Nokkclost. chilic • curry. salt. pepper and thyme. In 1arJC bo•l combine Oour. bakina po~ and 11h. G~ually blend an shortenina, coconut milk and COCOftut. Knead 10 to I 2 tune on liptly flc,um:I boatd. Roll out to V.-inch thacknns: cut out •·inch cirtta, PlllCC ~ ta~n fillint on half of taeh d~ cutlc. Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials . Sandwich Bags lll'\ Solo Cups -~ p--.°' Orange Juice =:- Yogurt :' Promise Margarine ~ 8 Stater Bros. Dips ~ .. -• 401 5e Bread := " ~ -n .. •1• Tortilla Strips ~~. " · 55' Coca-Cola .. ~ " MN 29' Seven U ~°" - ~•1s1 ll>CT gge s1n .. OI 7 VARIETIES BETTY CROCKER 6.5-8-0Z Garden Fresh Produce Walnuts u,..,,. Onions o .. ~ "_,. Mushrooms-:-~ ... ,.."-· •Ol Paul Masson : .. .-·u- Se gram 's Gin ~O\A Go n Spirits .:; .Hamm Beer ' 1 75·UTEA 11' "·~ , .... sg• ~· •3• ·a:~ '29' Fold other half of'acfi cirde over fiDi-.; bnash -w111' water. Pidedlrt 10 ial. PWeon liihtly 11~ bWlll ~ Reform aap1; roll oat and fHl as abO~. •·r---:::=:::::::=:::::::::::::::!::::::=~_..;..~~.;..._~~:::::::::==::;;::=;;;::;~---------...._.~.--:=--~~~ Combine .,... .... for tllu; -it 10 bnlell ....... Top with ,... ... Nc*blolt dlelle. lake • J50 ...... l~aautet. w.dllDldn.M.U.lboat2claieft ... --.... .. .,.. .... OIHl•I Milk. a( Cl?Fljil•aft•bll.a.. ~cup -· 4*DSd1 _. I nap mia ..... .,... LetlllM • u.-.. ... CHt•lla .... rilled swo i h, v ggie sal---- provide a ta ty, low-cal entree Orilled.-t1andtealo0d11e10 · GU"D....... ~ ...... ,,_,.,,,, ..., .. , widt American couumen W1'111VBGBTOLS1+1.u 'A elf it11rill • .... due IO their .,ad caste and nutri~ ~ elf wlllll __. _ tional benefits: I a•HjllrilarlM ... artktl1~e I tllill1,1• dlH l t ' IN Thi10rilled SWordfilh with Vea-.....,.. I u a:n • ,. •• ... etable Sal• cnaree combines the l t .. l•lf••ellftel ~· populfr fin ftlb wida the aoodness l tlllllra•r• .... Jld" Liml9l ~ ... • Of marinated anicboke hearts. The t (I • I ••eH __.) .. ....,... ::•:: lftic:bob.olive oil-lemon juice ••11••, l-illdl ~ 1 a a.-1 .. mariMde lldda a riCb flavor 10 the I..._ ,arili; rWonlfilb, i.nd veeetablc salsa v......-Salla: Drain artichokes, reSttVina pr:ovidn a unique south-of"'lhe-S larp (I~ •••••> ......... marinllde. in sballow ..... dith. Set ~taste. 1 , 1111 .... , • .._ ~ artichobl aside. Add olive oil and ""--~.;..__;_~__:..----------------~~-'--------------------------~----------,.-,---..,.---.,..-----~ -----------------------.lemon ju.ice lO dish . then 8dd 1wordfi1h, tumina to coat. Marinate. covered. in refriaeiator I hour. DITAIU IN IYOM WE ACCEPT COUPONS FROM OTHER SUPERMARKETS PLUS UNLIMITED DOUBLES MeanWti.ile, dice ai'tiCbokes and combine with tomasoes. areen pep- per. red onion. corn, cilantro, chilies, 2 tablerpoons lemon juice and salt in medium bcnri. Refiieer- ate I hour. Remove fiill from marinade. Broil or·Jrill 3 i~ from beat or medium alowina cOaJ~ 410 S minutes. on a aide, until fish flakes easily. Just before .er- vina. dice avocado, tprinkJe with lemon j uice and stir into aalsa. • To serve, place swordfish on platter, spoon on some of tbe aalsa. pmish with panley. Pau mnain-ana salsa. Makes 4 servinp. ·. .. •••••• nAUANURAM USDA IYm ...... . -CAIPO•HIA W .. Y ...... FAM. PACK CHIO<EN 99 THJOHS ... La. 1.M UL • ~~: UL 2~29 8£~~~0 UL 2.39 CHOICE· .. an IONUE.SS IUF 2 69 WHOlE Oft HALF UL • Block Lob.I Or low Solt HORMEL SLICED BACON ....... LB. 1.59 • FRESH I •9 IDAHO RAINBOW TROUT PAN READY ............................ LB. • .. Pon Reody lrond, 12.Ch Pkg All VEAL STEAKS . . . . . . EA 2. 19 PBELL'S - SALftl• CllACIC .. 79 ZEST A • 1 LB PKG. • • 22·01'.. O.terv-nt . · - PALMOLIVE LIQUID DISH .............. 1.29 ASSORTED -7·0 2. M ·Ounc4t Louncfry O.tereent CONCENTRATED ALL .. ............. 1.29 .. IKA• CATN .. KAl KAN .ASST. 6 02 CAN \4.0z. Con Auo11ed PEDIGREE DOG FOOD .29 .... Al ED DELICIOUS Vine Ripe 2-lb Cello Bog CANTALOUPE ............................. LI .• 59 CARROTS . OttlLLMASfta .. ft I AM00K • •.. EA A9 .... SAPPOllO tCHlaAN RAMIN Sweet Crisp U S NO I MclNTOSH APPLES ....... ..... .ll .69 R£D YAMS. .. .......... , ........... LI .S9 c -----·----r·-· -· · ·" --· -" ---.. ~ ... . . • ~ -. - -I&....>. -~ 2..K.MA'Mi_.. oa oms=_. CHICKIN ••ANKS Mii IUM GI •All ~~~ .99-~.?l 1.19 t----= ASST 29 3 s.oz • IUTTtllMlllC OI HOMlMAOl 12 oz 9-0z Flo1 vor .. ties SANTINO'S FRESH PASTA ... .. ................ 1.19 6 :W Ounce SeotoMd s.ow.ed KAJINO NORI TSUKUOANI ........... ........ . ........... 2A9 1.10i. MlcNwowe I · .... '9ll.SIUltY ~ZZA ... ...... . . ...... .. ..... , ~ 1-1.b Pkg GRILLMASTER CHICKEN BOLOGNA .................. M 7 75-0unce Pdled VegetmlH SHIRAKIKU MIRIN ZUKE ................................ 2.a9 1bs.oa.~ PIUSIUttY AtOZEN POPCOltN ................. 1.79 I 5 LITER •••••• ,.. ... .. Aft •••• 6 Pod! 12.01 lottlet, lrnpot'ted SfMPATICO BEER ............................ l.M 1.0 ltt« Chofdonnoy CltEEKSK>E ClllARS ........................ ".J a•••un ..... 9.M ,..,._--.. '..-·--~ -· . -· ..• ~----l . - .0 COUNf I I .()a ShGmpoo Olty °' Dty HEAO I SHOULDERS ..................... 2.n Wide Solid 2.0.. V0t1et"- SURf OEOOC>ftANT ........ • ............. 2A9 Glarksbur:g chenin blanc reliable wine ly MIKE DUNNE ~--~ Clarksburg is one of California's smaller and more obscure, unusual and underapprecialed wine ap- pellations. Sacrameo~f!S ba.ve a pretty&~ idea where 1t as, since at takes its name from a community just a few miles south of the capital. To Sacrameotans. however the name Oarksburg is more likely to conjure up visions of pear orchards than vineyards. pears historically be1n1 the ama's principal crop. Nonetbclcu, the Clatbbura ap- pellation, which coven a chunk of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta rou&hJy 16 mifes Iona and eight miles WJde, lS planted to more than 3,000 acres of vanes. Thouab at least eight winc-lf'8pe varietlt:S arc srown 1n the rqion, Clarksburg is best known for au assertively frujty chenin blanc, which in recent years h.as accounted for more than haJf the medals the atta has won in competitive wtnc Judajnp. The Clatk.sburg Wine Growers Association. made up of 20 arowen and wineries in the rqion1 wants consumen to know that tne area produces notable wines other than cbcnin blanc. To that end, the aroup not Iona -so arranacd a tastana and luncheon to ihowtase its wines. includana but not by any means limited to chen1n blanc. As far IS this eelatc is concm\ed. the wtina conftnned that chen1n blanc still is the mOlt conwtcntly reliable wine 10 come out of the delta. But amona the other varie1als. one of the more impcusive was the 1917 Clarbbu11 Zinfandel of Bosle Vineyards ($6). This isn't a rich, heavy or comple~ zinfandel, but one turned out m a style that teem.I to be startirw .to catch on W1th consumers: lilbt. Crab, simp&c, fniity and aromauc. with a smell clean and youna and a flavor aooe&l•DJ and lively. . 1'hc WIDC ... made from the fint small crop off a v~= that the winery had c::. over to zinfaridel. ~·· ~nemak~r. the mull, bclicvina that the ~ritednna Of the wine ~va that hveJy net virictially dastinct zin. /andet need noc come from otlly old vi~ "The common witdom is thlt vines have to be 60 yan old before ~y, but tbat•1 bone poob." DOil. It problb_ly didn't bun. of co.ane, that be ...., bladled 1ht fnait unti'aditioulty, primarily by ra menti• die mmt at un....-.aly coOI 1er:n·~ lO wllicb he Credits wiae 1 PR**.ced =' lrOIDI and ill -Uwty .... FOod ~ .... tikci ............ .., .. diall. ._rbecnd " 11me birds and ..,.__. ilMit .... 111d in oliw ail. 11111-. 1111•1,. 11191il IDCI jmt a._. Glnm ••I) . Wesson Oil ~-c-0/ #'0-cr..- Large Art1Chokes Na1 Lilw FlAor • __ .._.,.,._,.,,_...&M- • ' _ ......... _p OZEN~---- Fmh StH1thmt ' u.JJ 4 Ptld&.,a Pw P•.,/' Minute Maid OrangeJ,uice ~. c"*"'!"l s Pf.tu c.1a-"''ti~ Jn:1-G"'°" c;.,.. Swiss Miss Pudding A--""' F"-rt 4 Ptd/1' 0-:W P.Juft .98 Vons Monterey 219 Tack Cheese ~ CJilor,. 0--F-'1 P.Jt LJ, (Rlpi. "1d LA 2H) . ' Country Hearth129 Donuts J ~ COtlllfl 0-.. IC.....P ... ---S AFOOD--...... .. --DELI/DAIRY-- vans ... liced CookL-d Ha111 ] s9 'o--r °"°' r..._,, Hebrew 10131 Kosher F~ 2 09 ., K'fOtlrwwrYI 1: (lo.lu P.Jt laketolake..~ i S9 C°'7 • L"""°"' {~ ' P«*•ir Sanlento ~ed Oleee 169 a;,J/.,, M~ °')alt ~ 0.-. P ... Mitchell '' Honey Ham 1 89 SloJ-4 o-r ,..._,, d~Bun~ }99 ~ Qwtrw-1 '-' ,, ... Wet~ ~'atch~ 01eeSe 109 1'<:M.t0.....- Brown Cow Farms Plain Yogun J 19 '40....C- [)ole OillledJuic 229 SMMI flAon-44 0-U C... -------LIQUOR-- Ten High Bourbon, 999 Ron Rico Rum .r'°"""'c"' • ··~ 1.11 LiM lknlt u. Gallo 299 Blush Chablis You Co)t A fur Rilt•t# • (llPl'll!"l~ll~' 1(\ll'11' \ ' ' \ 1 1 ' ! 1 • ' -GROCERY /BAKERY- Chicken of the Sea 119 Sol id Wh ite Tuna au.. ' ( ... <:'alm I..uncheon Meat 149 ,Jo;;,.~c- ~ Quaker 1 NacuraJ Cereal 399 w or.;-1., ~ 6' Our-u °"""' •• ~ ~ .. s Viva Sabel Dres.stng 99 W ,...,_.,rw•-"~-40t ,.,_ . ~ Ly &.sin Tuo • Tile Oeaner J65 QI!'~ .. T'W":s,..,_110..-c- G ~raft Potatoes & 9 9 Chccsc Side Dishes fifet:a ~-I r::,J • Gld>e A· 1 Splghetti 69 It Oliiii&o ,,..., • a ~~O.Vlh 1()C) TilOllla.S ~ Muffins J 19 ~•.*r c..-r-... Ven Lent ~h Bre-~ 139 I J ~.SliltiJ1..I/ Carnation 1~9 Hot C«oa J s...tv ...... IO•'llC...,... ) • DAILY PILOT I ~. Jenuery H . 1989 EN . Super Bowl easy winner of TV ratings race NEW YORK (AP) -Herc arc the prime-time ttlcva11on ratinas as com· piled ~the A.C. Nielsen Co. for lhe week of Jan. I (>.22. Top 20 liillif.l&S anclude the week's ranking. wmt full season-lo-dale ranking an parcnlh· cses, r11in1 for lhC wttk. and 1otaJ homn. An "X" in parentheses deno.lcs one--tamc-onJy prcientatton. A rattna measures the pcrcentqc of the na· t1on's 90.4 m1Hion TV hom~. I (XI "SuMf 8owl XXlll Sell Fr~ ft CinctMtll.'' NIC, 4l 5 tellfll, ,. ) mllloft '*"" ? ()() ''$UM( low! XXlll PMl-Oel'N, .. ..C, )2 5, ,. • tnllllon ~ l (I) "The Cott>v Sftow," NIC, 2Sl, IU mllllon llOMet 4 (2) "°*"'.'' NIC H 7, to S mlloon ~ t Cl> • ltotff-," AIC, n 1, 20..S ~ ,..,,.,., I\ l .ISl'l '\GS I 6·00 I &·3o I 1·00 I 1 ·30 I s·oo I s:3o I 9:oo I 9:3o 11o:oo I1o:3o l 11 :oo I11 :3o I . . . . . ..... CH ,,.... Gone •Mown ,...._ ltnGte L.ntnt ..... ,.. ..,.. a .... Edalofl Show .,_ D ..... •c Enltt\alll. USA c.-, IDttlt lMI C"-9 1::. LAU. ...... lMIMl ..... Tonlahl ITCHMY Show WOfld lo4 c..on 'a M191111"'· ,.L Chltllel SlMln!V Aet111n of a Man Calltd l4orM (l'G. 1'51 Newt FMnin. Call C'*" llu l C11at11 Sctllch -• IRtdlatd Ha"'9 Gale ~'l1Hldl I Dy~ .......... ~ ~.-iw D ..... HllWI AIC Ey• on A firw ltoa\anct Ollf(li'Jf ..... u. ® CIS ..... PM Enttn.111. .. Ho1111 Parlldl• Knou Lancllno ..... Pat..,.. ..... ,Maaalnt IToniotc ...... . IJ A TIMI l0¥t Win, LIM ..... 1:~ ..... ISMloN PollOI Wo_, 1"""9• ""' Co11rwc1'11 or Of• & Son Tolllllt ~II ®) AIC ..... Sl.oplt"• Win, loM A Fine Aomaia Dy'*'J Htertia,..t . ..... N~ICMt ..... Court lor Or• m TlwM'• FM1i, M'A'S"H Cwttnt VIII A.dt5 CR. 'Ml • • INI• ~. Wiide CurrM M lo• ColllM l'IW r ... Allalr l't¥I BrtMet. Rot>tfl 1i,oc1Wm} Allalr • LUCY m eo.., GlllWM I WllMI ol ,Jtopetdyl Al TNt .Im (II. '711 -..... Miiioy. Rdildgl AIWllO Kiii lfeall Fortune ~cw Sc:tled«, Jea1'tl ~-' Em lllti-a MacHtll l•ll .. , Wiid Plane1 Elr1ll T,.. Mytltryl npec-Tiit Sif'191ng D• Slllt of the Art Aeoolt New.Houf Ani!Nlls Ck!lllt Pvnlt !Of Mo11t II ltclJW kll tSI Polla Em Nee USA WllHI of IJtoPMdJI C019¥ 1Dtll•renl Cr-s 1: LAln H-Tlleletl ..... IT.aw Fortune Sllow WOfld of Catton cm Dw191C TllHlpeon P11 .. lhe Lord ,,... the Lor.I Pnille Ille I.Al Id TIH Jay ltnel & Hal TodlJ s.klAoll You llndwt el fllf'lt·°'OIM Mur· au .. ,.. Fnigal llllw'• 7 Helo-Nanny l nt .. '1QC ..... ,.,... n...i .. Mpteryl lnlpc- det T !\II The Vltdlel At port Gourmtl lu'atf Miid M Pa!llOll StlMI 10t Moise II m le"'1y Ho99n'1 Pefry Miion Hof• I~ M. 1,.., I~ Van TN Fugnrwi HMrt ol Crime Hllblliel ... ,.... Alclng Moo1t Nun Llrw A&E ITi.-•'t o-e II<-fW11d;EMI TN haoart o ... IA• Orw Woll\M/Two 151 IDavid~t\lft'I IT1p Dance Aled!ldtr ... ,,..,, nai .... ION W0111an or Two CNil UNY 1t11111 LM J lt\ltNAG News 1-ntYIHW (:>DOl'\t HtwtHIOl\I ICrosahre NeWIHoohl UMltt IS11ortt CSPN IE*ll of Ille U1¥ lSl 11:\ltnl ol U.D• !Pubic POiey DIS Hafts 91111ller or :MIWr ::tlullu IPYt/1111 ne Walt Ol-Y Prettlllt id•QOltt: AdvtnlUfH 111 T_,.. IK.1 Zorr11 Ou• lllOVlt ~ ColltClt a.11et1>a1 lMI II N c; Sta!t fl .... I I Soorts.Cl 1 ! Col1t111 ..... ... '11111 llM l l~ISMI SpottU ISoo1tsCt1 FAM Mr. Hom IS! (!'et ti Amtric1 & 11\t ltn Co"'"'lndments Mr. Hom (Pai1 I) f?V, •• tu.Yid c:.iirrao,..\ Tiii 700 Club GAU No11c..ro tw Ill · Noticitro ECO Nolic1t10 ECO Morgan StNllt'• EncycJo-1wa111 I.Ill • Min 1PC u , • Bom II\ Eat LA. {II 17) • Smoking ln..O. tilt HR. H80 Co"'tna HoN ISlOI p«lll:IS. IHowll Mandel ~ l.bydl ICnltcll lolllW\ Pa.A :-__ UFE E.R. Eay ~ :ipenllf: For Hire Cagney & llcey TM VIOlltlon of S.1"111 McDm4 ra11 •• Sp•nMt. fOf H,,. The loy in the Cit l allou ('!51 -• How the Well WH Won IG. '31 ·-The MAX Pt.tiic lubblt 150 1"1'l IJ•ne rono1 l .. M•Mlll 'I.lames s.-it ()Ibbie Refl'O'ds) Prioc1pal NCK w11-llHM. Dart GNQtl llooMy at. Ed !P. 0\lh J Sont ID. 11MCJ l:>l!UrUy l:K.lf l~ Clf S4 Ar latlv No enlightenment in Grove staging 8yTOMTrrus O,..NMCen .... -.o• Watching "Lily Dale .. at the Gem Theater is an experience 50mcwhat akin to spendina the day with an elderly aunt. You owe her the councsy, but you'd rather be some- where cl~ . Horton Foote's plodding exercise in fam1hat noundenn1 an 1909 Hous· ton as visually.and tcchn1eally1ttnct- 1ve, watJ\ some performa.nccs ,that play the strina.s of the emotions lake a skilled harpist But the magic ingre- dient of empath)' is m1sstng. and along Wllh il. involvement. :Tne Story plays out in novelistic fashion a youn1 man travels from his small Texas &own to sec his mother and sister. who have been separated from him for many years, since the death of his alcoholic father and his mother's rcmamagc to an 41pnght (and unbcndina) pillar of the com- munity. He's scekmg a reunion with his family, but the stepfather will have none of it. Why? Ah, that's the quesuon -the unanswered question 1n Foote's scri pt which is hardly illustrated in director Daniel Bryan Canmell's producuon for the Grove Theater Company. Neither in the youn1 man's lengthy expository scc~e aboard the-train to Houston nor an subsequent events at the home 1s an)-enhghtenment fonhcoming. Compounding the quandary is the sister's attachment to a "wild' yoµna man who's also viewed by the stepfather as something akJn to the plague. Yet the old man's attitude f Uly ~ DllYI 1hc miled ~n1 · Of love aid 1elf-pro~uon. racbin1 ""' (.,.-ttM> ton. but rd'~n& to sund MP IO her h...a.nd for h11 ..u. In the title rote of t~ lf'Nled ·~ ld(-indu~t ai1ttr. Vma Spa•r ti a f'!ct~ o( petulantt and petta~ witb just ~ heartfelt emouon dafoWD an to keep btrauracuvc. Rick Franklin u then~ stepflthe~ (called ..Mr. O.vcnpon ·.even br ba! ~aft) properly endows his~ wtt~ hmate:d aimcn1aon and m11nt11ns has • enJ&mAtac presence. • Compleuni the c.ast are Dietrich Bader as the 1111.tr's boyfncnd. •well· meanina clod who seems far les.s litabk than crosby·s c~~· yet who ftu in more readily wJt.h tbe . family~ Mam.e Crouen. 1 tfa!". car companioa MM> typtfin the m..-.s ziei101t wbo make up the buc:kJe•on Texas' Bible belt. and Don R. Ha~s • in 1 brief ctosana cameo as the boy • uncle, an invcteraic pmbkr. The play is ~ighcd . down ~ilh Cl•J Cro11tr, an~ Vllu extended exposato~ 1nfonna1ton .bout t ... _ '"'amalt an fnend1 of the Spaft91er In.. ly Dale." •K " prinapals Yihic one assumes -changes and warms dunna the play, incorrectly -will evenh&ally co~· while remainina 111unchly chilly tributt to the story hne. Coht11on as toward bis o....,n stepson. apparently a luxury that author FOOlc CanmcU's cast performs in t1Jht could not afford. harmony with t6e cha.ractcn as Lil Da' ., · cnme consadff painted, and there arc a few beautiful " Y •C ea~es~ · moments Of "'--Lth"o·-"' and die-able dramatic wtilh,k and is r>la>!~ "'~.. '' .,.,, ,,-nicely aaatnSl vii Morales covery. But the scnpt keeps them at• mcucwously detailed parlor setunc. distance from our hcans, a distance but the all-important vanuc of an· no amount of skilled interpretation volvement fails to materialize. Gnbrid,e. In the central role oftbc youna man Performances continue ltfroulJ'J scekina a sense of bel~nsing. C1ay Feb. 18 at the Gem Theater, 12832 Crosby rcnde~ a po11nant P.Cr· Main St., Garden Grove, with curu1n formance; pertacularly after ~allin1 at 8 p.m. Wednesdays through Satur- victim to a fever which keeps him an days, 7:30 Sunday and Feb. S and 3 · unwelcome auest in his mother's p.m. Feb. 12 Call 636-7213 for t1c~e1 house. Donna Fuller as his mother informatton f SEl ll•a Slloet IS. Mu1111y r52 • It.qi' SI~ u jfl ., • /ell( ll'\Olll flowtl'I 1n 11\t An.c SHOW IPuppetoon Movit !Tutt 182 1~13 ~ •• ··..,~··• H.'I~ S1-Jvstc.t lR &7 • • l"'~rtll'I l(QYt, ll lvow Momma l 111n nc K!U'llt GoodDyt IPG '11 u ISa '\ Field Yur o1 tl'lt 011gon IR -n ... Otllh W1sll 3 •10 t~ 111 ~ • USA S11t·Ra 'Ca ttoon M,11111 Vice Miirott. Sn• Wrote Ja11111r lrvti' 'P'l ~ • JJOI' l tw"S M amt V1u CD sales outstrip LPs for first time WOR IT"' \>lltouc11ao111 Nlws 8 Ho1I !Motton Dow,.., Jr IArsenoo Half •Jot Fran\11'1 WTBS AIUtra: TN Wnoi. Sl'IOCl11no Story '~ (IC• -(t.'Cllltl t>eClll • fMAo.c IR ·71 u IMl'IO~ 11Cipl'\ ~""IU ... 11' i WPIX l Hvstlt !Sl IUljA IOI\. 1uaa CCIL 1~11 .. 11 IH mooner IS\11 Trttl IH1tnawn 1u:.• Ton. IA~~ NIA 81Metbll1 (S lCI Los Al'i!!t'H I! HO\r'IO!' IHYln. 01l1Qll1•r "G '70I -l~obe!I .... ,,.."' »ril'I l.IAS\ U 112 •s Ur Nit II GL Eftrl,,G,HE 1 2'1JUU1tll0 * •ll 11 ... I HT 11-l TEQUILA SUNRISE IA) • lltM aun JAMUARV llAM1RI 1UUJ'UN11U• * Ut121UM72U>l ICllWAQU UHll OIYll * TWIH (PG) l'UM,KtN HUD IR) """ ........ {Ill AAINMAN (Al a:--:tt .. r OLIVER a COMl'ANV fGI ............ "" "9CfUl IKOIMIOMIUY mlfO. MISl'IW ~ UllllM IAIN&UI 111 .,,.,,.J • •• u 11• UUlllktrN ntlMMIOM .,..,,. • , 11 t ........ , ... .. WAU-YI Olrta l C~,. 12MIAl ~*H-.......... ·~·--(· 1MJl1f. .... Sl!opping I ltrry IA~ IMOYI• WASHINGTON (AP) -Vinyl long-playing records, whose popu· lanty has been under steady attack from cassettes for more than a decade, took another step towards OOUY nllltCMfm _.., Ml.IAU IMUrf IUOIS ,,. , a\ ., .. >111.Mt111141 tOUY lllilt04US'llfl ., ..... IOMCIUU& IAIN&U1 1 1 •••1•1•• Gil~'* C\IM ,,.ta, 1.JO•• ••• CIOUM DWHCtT 1,.u1 12.Jt. at. JJ llMlllOlt ~lllll80\lllNlY WIAYtl .,.. ... , u ..... ..,. ,,. ,.,. ~--­MllMIDM(No-IJI l>.)t 1 >t 4 U .. II .... , ... ... , ·~~ llllftl ........ ,... M ACCIDINfAl ICMdT jNt .......... ,, . llOUTl19IO' ~U.l•UIM .. WIO TWSINI 11., u •• , ... 1•1t -.U~autlW .,....<MM Mn IOrl8I KOU l•S .... ,.. ........ ,." IP· mm .......... •ACllCDm ~1 ·-..... -.Y_ .... _ I01Cn 1•~ &A UY• W CM.&a .5-ltlUl IN ·-¥.!Rri@J Assocaauon of Amenca said. Music lovers spent SI billion for CDs in the first six months of 1988, a nearly SO percent pin in dollar sales over the same penod an 1987 When CDs were introduced an 1983. the) accounted for JUSt SI 7.2 million m sales, the RIAA said. Thcicnerally more expensive CDs surpassed LPs in dollar sal~ for 1hc first time in 1987. E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar ~MC\llt ,,.,,. ---------MUTIMOTllllSMMa ,,..,II &73-4740 Reyn SPQC>ner Sportewear Introducing Our 1989 Spring Collection Sportewear • Wedding Form als • Acceseories ------ ICMWAU..,..... mo IWS INI tCIOOOlt ,.. •II IWAP •U fYllYIJll a* -'"' ~HRS: 10un-8:30pm Mon-S.t THERE'S A NEW NAME RllTERD ... MATURITY RATE 30DAY 8.65~ 91 DAY .... 180 DAY 9.10. • I du try,con u rs reject idea off ee on S&L ·deposits aboul lbe iDdullry'a uoubaea • .. 41 ..... IM)''rc r.ci,.. tbc problem," Sandacr said. The meia criticiam ol tbc ida. -It woukl dilcou,...e 11vinss when the United S&aees haa 1 •vU... ra&e lower than most dc~eloped countnea. -It -oukt wronal~ile consumers for: a problem moll II)' wu t about conere-onally-mMd11ed .,. ... a •e1u~ o'?'the reaulaton to ride herd on &llC ibd~'• bo&dest nsk·takera. -11 WCMald fOrce k>sln on S&Ls and banks, deepenina lk crisis n wu inkndfd to cure. That is becautt if they PMKd. th( clwte on to customtta, many would switch ihetr rhGMy to mutual funds or other invatmenta. lflhey didn•t pass on the charat. they would loee money. • .. No matter how you respond to 1t, you would come up with somethina that worb counter to what tMy wan led to accomplitb in the fint piece," S.ndllr Mid. Janet IM, .10, wbO kcepl her moMyatOreM w...,.. Savanp an Lot A~jo1Ded IM n«ubva aa bruili .. the ldlnllHlttaUoft'I fee a thinly d1tp111ld tu, .. h *OUld be unfair, becaYlt any type o(ancome, )'OU alttady r )' tuts On It -and )OU pay 1aMI Oii the an&emt. •id Ms. Lee, a Su Dimas raidmL .. Maybe they ahould 1tt YP some son of ~lat1on that wMld lreep them (SALi) from etttina into troublr in the Ant ~ ... rather than h1u1na the depositors." "I can•t btlitve they rQUy think this is a IOluuon to the problem," satd Norman M . Coulson, praidcftt of Glenfed Inc. 1n Glendale, pattnt of Glendale Federal Sivinp and Loen. one ofthe five bieaest thrif\.a. . "One of the problems an our country ti our 11vin11 ratC'S are not as h1ah as they should be and Uus is just another 1mped1ment," Coulson said. IRS agent; e~.:.bank president accused of phOny loari~ · SAN DIEGO (AP) -An lntemal leveoue ServN:e ._.., from ... na Nipd and a former but praident tie amated °' compiri• to amnee 1 134,000 in fraudulent pmonal loens to buy a boutt, sailboat and rental ptOpeny. accordjna to a criminal complaint Stanley E. Gardner, SS, the former =nt and chief executive of San to National Bank. bu ~ pilty to one ftlont count of conspuacy to/ defraud the Encinitas- H 1 s' "t:ss "01· t:s bued insututaon, Assi1tant U.S. At-tof!'CY Sttphen Clark said. Gantner, the U.S. SmaJI Bllltness Adminilttauon'• .. Banker Advocate o(tbe Year .. 1n 19'4, was named 1n a ont-count complaint filed Fnday by the U.S. Attorney's office. A federal panel Jury also 1nd1ctcd Bobbie Jack Tadlock, an IRS qcnt an OranfF County, on cipt counts of con~111cy. false sta&ements on loan applecations and misapplication of benk funds. Protecuton contend Gardner used hll position it the b6nk lo IP.prove the phony loans between Apnl 1984 and May 191S 1n the names of Tadlock and another man, Leopold Sa.las, to purchaK investment rental pr<>peny 1n Dana Point, a 26-foot sailboat and to pay .()ff a trust deed on Oantner's home in Del Mar. Gardner, a ch1kShood fnend aod Whittier Colltlt fraternity brother of Tadlock, also AlJeecdly laundered the loan ~· throuah a smcs of Beckman Instruments re J:>Ofts Virginia Ueberroth joins boards : In Santa Ana 1 1 percent sales increase in '88 . ; Virsini1 M. Ucberroth, of Laauna Belch and New York, has been dec1ed to the board of directors of The flnt Amencan Financial Corp. She also was named to the board of the company's pnnc1pal subsidiary, Fini American Title Insurance Co .. Uebaro1h. who started her pro-fessional career as an elementary tcbool teacher, has ~n chief finanaal officer of a larac travel company and has served u a corpor· ate officer 1n several companies involved in real eswc. Carmina. business development and construe· lion. In addition she is involved in a wide t'aflSC Of CIVIC and Community orpn1zat1ons. includina orpnizina and speakanaat financiar seminars for WO~. Pnor to the I 984 Olympics, she restored an e1&ht-meter ~ht, the An,eli&a, wh1di was the fint U.S. vessel to win an Otym(>ic told medal. It was used u a Oaph1p for the 1984 Olymptc pmes yachtina events. She also helped to established the First lntcrsW.e Bank Athletic foundation 1n Los A~les. The First Amencan F1nanc1al CorJ>:. bucd 1n Santa An~ operates 1u title insurance business throuah its principal subsidiary. f irst Amencan Telle Insurance Co. The firm ofTen title !ttVK.'CS throu&h a network of more than 4,SOO offices or a,ents 1n all 50 states. h also provKles title servlCel an Guam. Meiuco. Puerto Rico, the V1raan lmnds and the United Km&d<>m Bedmu latlnlm•l• hu re-ported that saact in 1988 increased 11 percent over l 987 to $170.3 million. Operatina income increased 40 percent to S82.9 million. Pretax income increased 9 percent to S74.2 million. Net eaminp were up 9 percent to $42.S million. Eaminp per share were $1 .49 vs. S 1.36 in 1987. Sales in the fourth quarter of l 938 increased 6 j)CJ'CCnt over the lake quarter of 1987 to $199.1 million. Opcrati!'I income increued 10 per· cent to $22.6 million. Prew income decreased 10 per· cent to $20.2 million as a result of interest expense related to the re· capitalization of 8«kman u it be- came a public company as well as a pin on sale of property in 1987. Eaminp per share were 39 cents compared to 4S cents the previous year. The weaker U.S. dollar had the eft'ecrofaddi~S20million to sales in 1988. The effect on the fourth quarter was nca.tiaible. Loufs Rosso, president and chief executive officer, sa.id, "I 988 was a aood ~for Bedcman Instruments. cspcaally 1n international mark.cu We are on ta,.et with our objectives. and bdieve ihat we are well-pos- 1uoned for conunued p:owth. .. Weare pleased with the recepuon of our new SYNCHRON CX4 and SYNCHRON C XS clina cat analyzers, which were fint shipped 1n the fourth quarter. They repracnt an 1mponant ldd1t1on to our d1aanost1cs product hnes. •• In the life telcnces market an which ~k.man bolds a leadership pos1t1on. sales were hiaher in I 988 1n every major product line. Beckman Instruments is an inter· nationa. I suppher of diqnostic and btoanalytacal laboratoey instruments, test kits and consumables for health care and hfe sacnces markets. The Fullenon-based company has ubsidaarics and other affihates in I 20 Junk bond chief is out under terms of Drexel _lea bar~ain ~t rema1n1na taracts of the investipuon and 11 e•Peatd to be indJC\ed 100n on rackctecrina and fraud charan, He is said to be one of the country'' wealthinc finanam and ~ponedly makes S200 malhon a year, mostly in a yearly bonus paid at the bqjnn1na o(lhe .ollowina Jtar. . 1berc 11 no chlnte an Mr. Milk· cn'a po11tt0n, and bis IUOf'..MYS arc conunui1910 prepe1e to dcknC:I him .... UY ~ that may be bi'cMIPt, .. ~m said. He mid~ ~t's f!!O~ilions ~~to Aft Mtlkn .. ,nd to iefllat IO '9Y W. the compcnsa· uon lw IMl ....U due an '19U is a v.olldoll ot M Pf'OCCll and an 1-M----f Ol Mr. Milken's con. .... ~ ..... '." Ill~ ~·1 pay ,.W:U balvcd .. "'9 ... Drad ·cMef' CMCUUVC Fted 1""' ._ er · ... ..,. .,..,.,. ........... -iMimlOft Lowell M-.. .. ..,., .. .,.,... .. t9id hit ~.HIOnit~ ·-· .. B:. 2'r'.l:,"inon .... = .... .-..... ~°'"" ,... ~ ....... finn. • .,..,SEC_, Equine magazines win two awards Rich Publications, the world's largest pubhsher of equine mapzmes, was awarded the American Horse Pubhcauons prestigious excellence awards in two out of three cateaoncs. Best Media Kit and Best Subscn(>tion Promotion awards were p~ntcd to the San Clemente-based pubhsherat the AHP annual meeting at the Disneyland Hotel. ~ "We were extremely pleased to be recognized by our peers for our cffons." said Patty Rich, president of the firm "We have a dedicated editorial, saJes and araphics staff whose teamwork made 1988 one of our best years. we·rc lookina to even more arowth 1n I 989." Rich Publications· Oaph_1p rnapzine. Horse & Rider. was founded in 1960. The mapz1nc has a 100,000-plus paid cm:ulat1on throughout the United States and Canada. Other Rich titles taraetcd to d1fTcrent segment of the equine market include: Horse Cai;c, Horsew omen and RODEO ACTION! countnes. Luer Preda ... eo..,. announced WedOC$day that the company's mar· kct nuctwitions arc unrelat~ to the Irvi ne-based cor1Jpany activities. Grcaory A. Miner. vice president and chief financial officer said the company has no pcndina news that would cause Wednesday's drop 1n its share pnce. Miner added the company 1s on tatJCt wi th pubhshed analyst repons. Laser Prccasaon dcs1ans and builds laser-based test and measurement instruments comb1nin1 advanced electro optics wi th microprocessor tcchnol<?I)'. The company's products are used an fiber opt1c communaa· uons.. laser research., quality control. chemical analysas and appla~ spec· troscopy. Anaheim-based Geaeral Aat .. madea lac. and Sheffield, Unued Kin&dom-based Su4eno• Elec-analn ,Ac, or SEL. have complctrd the acncment announced Jan 9. followina approvaJ of the qrument by SEL sha~holdcrs on Monday Leonard N. Mackcnue, GA vice chamn.an and cb1ef eJ1Ccuuve officer. said the a&recment prov1d~ for a convenible loan of S t.7S million to GA, together with wamnts that wall enable SEL to purchase up to SI percent of GA in the form of new common shares of the company MackenZJc said that SEL full) fund~ the SI 1S m1lhon loan on Tuesday. and that those fund have been transferred to GA. In commentan~ on the aarccment Mackenzie said. 'GA's products and d1stnbut1on have always been outstandana. and continue to lead the markets served by the Pick opcrauna system an breadth of ofTenn1 and overatl pncc-pcrformance charac· tensucs. This new fund1na will enable us to ta.kc better advantqt of the sales opportunataes that we encounter ~orldw1de. "The funds will be used for general workina capital purposes. Wlth par· t1cular emphasis on accelcrat1n1 the producuon of S) stems for our 1ocre1~ sak .. 11JA ha1rman Paul Thompson said that GA 's third quaner, endm& March 31 . should rcncct the 1mpro~e· f..._a,_ Sff RE.'°"1S/Clt ...------------------------------------------------ H E FUT URE OF ! r UR FAS HI ON .. 1' -A M 1649 ESTCLIFF DRIVE EWPORT BEACH, C 9266 645-1446 other accou nts at tbc northern San s1m1larly the anvolvcmcntofm1scon· Diego County bank. duct by an IRS employee." • Salas. also a lonatjme friend of Tadlock. wbo examines records Gardner, had minimal involvement and handles audits for the IRS, is in the aJletcd scheme and cooperatrd expected to surrender himKlf for earty in tfie th~~ear 1n"es1ip11on arra1anmcnt this week. An IRS by the FBI and IRS. said Caark. spokeswoman wd the aeency hasn't Thou&h tbe a.mount of money taken any d1sc1phnary actt0n ap1nst 1nvo1vca does not make 1t a m&Jor Tadlock, Sl, ofl..aauna N11uel, but an fraud case1 Clark said it needs to hr admin1strauvc review has be&un. prosccutco v11orously because it con· "l thank I'll be vindicated in this cems "the v1olat1on of tM fiduciary whole th1na. I thmk ifs all benk duty by a senior bank offic1aJ and ... ,,...,. ... LOANS/cat ~f •)'l.~"Ct'>-."&S"l!!'s,.Jl.W)~nt~•"' .. cnismas~ - ; Winter Sale '89 ~ ~ _a{)~ ~ g Featuring (!7IoAtlr Upholstery ~ 4 ~ ~ at40% off l ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ >: r. It f.! ~ -= ~ ): 11 ~ &c ~ ~ l ~ ~ JI ~ ij ~ ~ ~ s Select .fron1 I 00 he st selling C0\1er on any o..f .Baker furniture f rames and save 40% n o~·. D on 't delay. ~ ~ I JJonJ(femert ~ Snterioo I n•i; '"''"'' "''·' H • '"'" c """ ""' ~ ( l'l\hJ \1~ I !Jf:una Hmch ~ ~ (i l4)h42-ld'>O · <7 14>4~46552 ~ ~~~:,.P.s~m-s~~~ll'>'.1':.~>'.~~~ L ' \ JA UARY FUR SALE TH RSDA Y, 26TH THR-~ T RD Y, 28th 9 a .m. -8 p.m. 20o/o to 40 o/o OFF ted F ur . . ... Pepsi signs Madonna as cola ad wars grow . NEW YORK (AP) -Pepsi.Cola Co. said Wednesday it had signed pop SW Madonna for a alobal ad carn- 1)9ip tbat industry watchers said would cban vi rain waters by debuting a sons in a television commercial. ~ -ftrina the latest volley in the newly cscalatina marketing war with CoCa-Cola CO. -also will sponsor a planned world tour by the IClrell-si..-later in 1989 after the releale of Madonna·s first album in three years, .. Like A Prayer." The Madonna announcement comes on the heels of industry leader Coke·s new ad campaian aimed at pusbiaa sales of Diet Coke past Pepsi, cunently 1eCOnd in the market be- hind Coke Classic. That effort marks the first time a major diet soda has squared off directly apinst a leading supred competitor, sipalina a new intensity in the years-old cola wars. Coke earlier this month siancd pop ~ Georac Michael for a series of Diet Coke commercials. on top of a campeian already featuring hockey star Wayne Gretzky, model Elle MacPbcnon and .. Miami Vice" star Don Johnson, a one-time Pepsi pitchman. "Wbat•s obviously sba_ping up is Georee Michael and Diet Coke versus Madonna and supr Pepsi," Coca Cola USA s~csman Anthony Tor- torici said. 'frankly, we like those odds." • , Terms of the Madonna contract were not disclosed. but if history is any guide the deal with the brash singer of "Like A Virsin" and star of the movie "Desperately Seekins Susan" should be in the millions. Pepsi's award-wianina ad cam- paiJns featuring pop music bepn 1n 1984, when the number two sof\- drink company sianed Michael Jack- son and bis brothers to a SS.S million. one-~ deal that was the largest of its kind at the time. Two years later. Pepsi signed Jackson for a reported S 10 mHlion to develop commercials over a th~­ ycar period. Rock stars Tina Turner. David Bowie, Lionel Ritchie and the Miami Sound Machine also have appeared in Pepsi ads. ... Pepsi has really pioneered the entire music marketing phenomenon," Pepsi USA spokes- man Tod MacKenzie sajd. "People expect us to be on top of what's new. what's hot and what's next. Madonna is next" "I think we set the trend and others have followed," he said. Modeled as mini music videos. the Pepsi ads have taken the common tactic of celebrity promotions a step further b_y using popular sonas as the center of a direct sales pitch. The Madonna deal adds another OJ( IP\ \\D DO M\' twist: using a commercial to debut a son& aimed at a popular audience. Pepsi said the title track to "Like A Prayer" would be heard publically for the first time in a commercial to be aired in prime ti me early next month. The suwe is scheduled for release March J with the album to follow March IS, Warner Bros. spokesman Bob Merlis said. "J don't recall anyone orchestraung the debut of a new record in a TV commercial," said Ken Barnes. editor of Radio and Records, a music industry trade pubhcation in Los Anaeles. "It's a new stage in lbc marriage between commerce and the •rs." Ruder urges LBO caution DREXEL ,. .. CJ WASHINOTON (AP) -'fM . chairman of the Securities and EX-IDeltY ucf;dae ckfUnc1 teeuriti~ ·= Comsnininn on Wednesdllv ftnl·~~ Panws .... ..J.t -'I' # • o..ellli9edto ... ol~rtl"IW' C.onsre-to move ~utiously in ddalli of a.e P111J ~n Wmncs-- tryuaa to ute tax law cha~ to stem day, with la~ nom.i f . CUmin the aanent wave of lever..,ed sayina, "It miPt 11 .ell all come ott& buyouts. at once." "You should be aware thlt your The~ baipjn ..,cement .. docs committee'a ICtivitjea may inOUC®C not ~vide any pro&ection what- • acock market that is sk.i'"ttish and soever from crilnin&I prOKCution or nervo""" SEC Chainnan David civil liability to any individual or to Rl:*r told the Senate Finance Com-~ny entity other thUi Drexel.·· it said mauee. • .. ..,._ Ruder said SEC atudiea aft.er tJae • Tht_ ..... ee~mm.aeta1~.111.~ (or,Drcltel to October 1987 stock l1\IJ'ket c:rMb --S~ mUicMI ID cr11niul .fi~es • .. ~....a tha £.-tn'buu· m avil -..o..wM· The mna1n1:r ... o.-t. one 1M<10r. con. "I )alto -.:u~~ ........ ~ · i to Its teventy WU leaislaUOft theft ~ --~ Jn beina considered by the House Ways ~~ •• . I be ~$Cd t_o and Means Committee to curtail cornflllltl.e C'IVll claiman~ who some of the deductions on interest may sue O'fet IOSICS sustained by P1id by companies to holderfof hish· Dftaefs acuons. . yie&4 junk bonds. The ~ent also required Drex- . el to pay SSOO million of the $6~ RU:def' adf!ll~trd that the double millionglty on the day it enters a taxation of dividend~ -first as part auilty a date which U.S. At- of the ~ percent ~ncome LU on 1omey udolpbGiulianuaidwill not ~taons and apin when they are be 1tt until after the SEC approves the d1stnbuted to ~reho~en ~ per-1eulement. sonal income -1s help1n1 dnve the Drexel also must pa)' 8.S percent leveraaed buyout or LBO interest on the initial SSOO million up phenomenon. untal the day it enters a aullty plea. But he said he opposed tax.in& the Undtrlhc plea barpin, Drue.I also anterest that levcrqed companies pay aar'f'cd to put any 1ndsct.ed employee on Junk bonds as a way of cqualizins on a leave of absence and fire them if the 11.l treatment between the two they are convicted. So far, no current pnmary means for raisins captital: Drexel employee has been ind1c~ in debt or bondsand stock or equity. the two-year probe. . Stock market runup extended to highest post-'87 erash level '\. M II \ I ' \ '1-. DI D NEW YORK (AP) Jen. 25 ' , ' ·~ , , , . . ' , . ' '" . . • ,t DOM JO, •. , \\JR\fil·\ '11 I \I ' 11 HI C I ' '''P\Q\l '1'1\K\ ly CHET CURRIER ,., ............. NEW YORK -The stock market pined more ground Wednesday. extending Tuesday's runup to 1ts highest levels since the crash of 1987. The Dow Jones averaie of 30 industrials, which had climbed 38.04 points on Tuesday, rose another 9.46 to 2.265.89. With four sessions toao an January. the average sports a pan of better than 97 points since the start of the year. Advanci ng issues outnumbered de· chnes by about S to 4 in nationwide trading of New York Stock Exchanae- hslcd stockshwith 820 up, 648 down and 520 unc anacd. Volume on ihe floor of the Bia Boatd came to 183.61 million shares. :J apinst 189.62 million in the previous •:} session. Nationwide. consolidated .J volume in NYSE-lisi<d •Hues, 1n- clud1ns trades m those stocks on rqional eitchangcs and in the over- the-eounter market. totaled 217 .SS million sha~. Analysts said the market lately has seemed to be emerging from the Iona shadow cast by the crash. The Dow Jones 1ndustnal avcr- ase·s nsc Tuesday to its h1ahest level since before Black Monday Oct. 19. 1987 was widely seen as a bas step 1n that direction. The market also has been helped by a risina dollar an fore1sn exchanac and fa.lhng interest rates 1n the long-term bond market With all that. however. brokers said there rema1ned many skept1«.. e~­ pect1ns a slowms economy. who v.~rc unwilhns to chase after stocks at their current levels. If the day had a theme. 1t was upbeat eam1nJS reports, sometimes accompanied by dividtnd increases. For e.umple, DuPont rose 2~ to 981h on word from the company of h1aher 1988 eam1np. a d1v1d~nd increase, and plan.sfora buyback of as many as 20 million shares, or about 8 percent of the 10111 outstandina., Phelps Dodge pined 2¥• to 60'\. trad1n1 at new Sl -wcck h1&hs The company posted sharply h1ahcr eam- inas for the fourth quarter and raised its quarterly dividend from 40 to 60 cents a shaie. Upbeat eaminas ~rts bolstered such other stocks as Wah Dt1ney. up 'h at 72. and Smithkhne Beckman, up I 'i\ at 52. On the downside, Amre suffered the day's b1UC1t pm:cnta~ loss, tumblina 3'h to 6 ... The company said 11 may pc»l a loss of about S2 malhon for 11.s current fixal quarter.' which ends nelt week. Cray Rtsearch, which spoke of sianificantly lower results for the first quarter than the companble period last year. fell 4''• to 6()l/ •. • • • In Costa Mcu Arthur E. Svcndlcn. e.twrman of the board of the man-~--~neral panncr of .._..,. hdlk LP~ bu announced that the baud of directol'I declared a 7 So«nt· pcr-un" cash dtslributlon rep- mmtana the final quarterly di1tnbv- uon ~laun& to 1918 resulu. The distribuuon as payable Oft Feb. 281ouni1holdcnofrccordon Feb IS. vendttn said Chat this February 1919-4iltnMlbOR·._ -.--~-UM~­com~n)"s 1981 policy to pey cash da1&nbuti0ns to unit.holden approx· imauna 60 ~tttnt to 65 petttot of the panncnhip eaminas for the yur ended Dec. 3 I , 1981. FHP makes history: with its beginnings in 1968 Two decades a90, youn9 soldier• were fi9htin9 in Viet- nam and American utronaull were cloee to lancli.nq on the moon. Twenty years a90 in Oranqe County, the tj!Y of Irvine wu but a dream and county r..tdenb were ju.t beqinninq to ahoJ> at Fuhion Island and South Cout Plaza. It was Abo in 1968 that FHP first opened it• health main- tenance orqaniutiou (HMO) doors in Orange Coaaty. Like the city ol lrn.ne, the reqiou'• major ahoppin9 nW.lt ud Orange Couaty ill gmi- eral, FHP bu matured COD· mdenbly du.rinCJ the put 20 yea.n. So much .,, nfP DOW u counted &mODCJ the ei9ht larv- eet publicly traded oompuaie9 in the county, with an.nual revenues ezceedin9 $500 million -a far cry &om 1968 when the company report«l Physal TheraptSts, .... l1mm1l1ns•, •••• ..,, , ........ 1,.., ..._ M1h1., and .... '-of Start Physg TherlPY and the New Start Spene Center, contanue to offer ... .......... , .. ... ...... .............. •Ev ....... • Hinds on T reatmenl This approadt 1s ubttzed 1n proper postural ali&MMnt. bOdy mechanics. manual therapy tedwques, soft tiule mobllaation. therapeutic and stllliliatiuft exerasa. • Plblllt Edlcation "Bacbchoot" 11 a three session procr• desCned to tlldt pmtntJbve blcti care Ind maintllnance. ..-. The first HMO hMd-Growth iD IBP'a lliember-$980,000 in ?9ftll...._ ~eJ'ed ill OranQe County, ahip hu hem eqully dra- ''Wllma FHP fint Cll •••d iu rHP oriCJinally wu located in m&tic onr the lut 20 years ~~L!doa~no:.ai:r,;,1,W~ a rented 3,()()0..tqUU•foot Two dacadM ~. the com- cw.-.a;, ae ..,... awdicaloftice. Todaythecom-pany proridad lae111h care aDd uoand LoecJ ••ch for pu_y owna a 13-acre campu Mnica9 to 19,000 •=ambers eneral J9U9. I belined tben, in fount.in Valley where ita Tod.a.J'-FHP w ,men than u I do ~ow. tUt Oranqe ~rate beadquarten, 125-400,000 m..i-. -90,000 County wowd &!'an import-bed acute care hospital and of who work oc r.ide an ant ~bin . c:2pany',~ fia91hip medical center are Orange County. Robert G":er, ·~ .• ~led. Mor• than 900 em-Gru.mbi.w repon. FHP's FHP' 1 founder and chief n-ployeee work in FHP medical CJ?owth h.u tiMia the r•ult of ecutift officer, Mid. and dental centen in Oranqe ' two b1 lacton: "Fint, the From ita -.rl*l becJimllnCJ County. Indepenct.nt phy1-HMO Act of 1973 which in foant•in Valley, l1IP bu iciau, und.J' contract to FHP, mudMed eap&o,eu to offer oontina.d to qrow and proe-al.lo pl'orid. ca.re. ,.._ .. ,.. ,,,.. 41 Los Caball0ros· is within reach .....west: Animals also need homes -. WW keeps impro~ing ·after_2~ y:ears of S \LCCe_ss~ W ei9ht W atchen hu been 1"i9ht probi.m, that helps vidua.11 who need a little more proqram is alao available. is "Why men 9ain wei9ht after auoceaful for moH tha.n 25 them when workin9 with aupport in loan9 wei9ht. Wei9ht Watcher• will com• to maniaqe," Roberto Mid. yea.r1 in it• reduction and othen," hthleen Boberto, di-One of t:.!:dici currently the place of employment or maintenance proqrama for rector of public relation.a Mid. beinn diac in the inner your community -in areas W ei9ht W atcheu ha1 o.erw.ic,iht perlOU. Since itt ,.. 1uch a1 women'• club'1 coo-center• and acheduled m .. t-beqinnin9 _ in New York, Seftl'al procpam8 ue ••ail-cucle qroup ii "Why women dominium compleze1 or other inq1 all over Southern Cali- W •irJt Watchen hu ex-able, includiDQ the Tra-9&in wei9ht after marriage," orqaniud qroupa -for m .. t. fomia . The qroup currently ffi thr h ditioulm..tin9, m.mbe11 fol-Roberto Nici "Thi• '"DU to onaned a new center in S&n pan itt 0 cee ou9 out low a diet proqram and attend be of major interest to a lot of inq• al well 41 makinq iure r-C h the United Stat" and kept itt w .. kly qroup meetinqi; Inner women, we are qettinq a lot of individu&la follow the d iet ~!~er ~::r-:i~r T~r!!:,d :.u proqrami up-to-date with new Circlemembenfollowthediet inter..tin9 reaaon1 and con-plan. Thi1 proqram nMd1 a 80()..333-3000. Or, for more pla.u for individual• and plan and attend sm&ller qroup ceptt from our qroup•," she minimum amount of members. information, contact the main qroupa. mwtiD99 (10-12 people).1'bb Mid. One of the current topic• office in Santa Ana at (714) A unique concept tht hu proqram is cJ.iCJDed for indi-An at-work or community heinq e•plored for thi1 qroup 835-5505. helped the Wei9ht Watchera r -:::============:==:=:========================================:;--pr~am work IO well i1 all the staff at W ei9ht Watcher• has been throu9h th• procpam. "Every-peTIOn baa had a . Dr. P riestly holds 2nd blood drive Priestly Chiropractic in Co1ona del Mar i1 holdin9 its fourth community blood Drive in two year•. ''Th• Red Cron i1 really low this year -on all typel of blood," Dr. Carol LeBlanc, D.C., Mid. "We've had an enthu1ia.tic r"ponM, lut year we col- lected 75 pihts of blood, thi1 year our 9o&l ii 100," 1be l&id. The drive will be held Feb. 9 from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. IABlanc encouraqee people to call and make appointment.. "Cur- rently we h&H more appoint- ment time• available in th• afternoon, a1 oppoeed to the momin9.'' Pri..Uy Chiropractic i1 a full ... mc. office with a medi- cal doctor a•ailabl• u well u a m ... ur for pereoo1 with aoft tiaue or Dluculu probleDU. Chuopractic, meenin9 ma- nipulation of tbe tpiM with the hand.I, la a natural and non- tn vuive t.cluaiqae for relie•- ' iD9 DOI oaaly MCk and back pain but hM1la4·: tM entire Mnou IJdta. By allowiD9 aenou 1,ILL to faRtton properly, IDUJ clile1_. C&ll bepreYeDted.~toDr. Knlia Prie.Uy. A co••••ity-orlented pr~, PiMllQ; tau lw .. , d th.-lood ddftl rallDO mon thu bar .. of food b tbe llUCJ1111a Oruve CoaatJ. H.ta blood clri"9 ... u.o .... ,. beea "'J IDDDI 11fal. Pri81lJJ Cldroprldic la loi-11 &I .. 3117.1. ·Colile lliclll- .., ia CcriM clill Mar. fm ............... ~ ....... IClll ... cs ~- _._ ............. oall (7_1~)_ 971-7113. __ t.llaDO ................. --.. FHP icture," W..cott Price m, From,.. 2 hfP' • prelide1lt and vice an HMO in their employee chairman of the board, Mid. ''Th.ii company'• ltl'afec;iy benefit packa9es and, second, for aucceu includet MTeraJ this company 1 ability to. an-elements. In addition to buic ticipate chanqes in the market health care tel'Vices, FHP a.Jto place and deliver new prod-offeTI dental, optometry, home uct1 to the public." health and nospice cue. Besidea offerinq pl'epaid FHP' 1 streDQth liea in it• ability Medi-Cal, prescription druq to control the quality and C09t and dentaJ proqy&m1 back in of 1ervices we J:ioride to a.JI the late '60s and early '70., -L-11 d FHP was the fi.rst HMO in the our me~r•, . ce Ni · westemUnitedStatesto1iqna ~~~·· , w:H~Y UJ:nin~ Medicare ruk contract with the federal qovernment. 1urance ·• hu introduced fHP,1 Senior Plan _ a the company'• neweat product line -Choice Plan. Tiu. comprehensive ran9e of ben-offers busin ..... and em- efit1 offered at no monthly ployees tradition&} qroup life premium -proved to be IO and indemnity h-Jth in- populu that 6,000 .. Dior• HMO d IPA eDl'olled in the first two weeks iurance, &n pro-9f4IDI, and an ezperienoed it was available. Today, more utilisation manaqement pro- tion of a 1enior volUJltMr 9!0QP at ita fountain Valley Ho1pital. Volunteer op- portuniti• are-available-in a wide r&119e of areu -from administration to patient care. Senion i.llte.retted in the Fount&in Valley program may call Artie Spaldinq at (714) 965-1356. At.o, in celebration of ill 20th &llllivenary in Oranqe County, FHP Ino. announc.d it ii 8J)Oll90rinq a juried com- petition to award a $35,000 commiiaion for an outdooY IC'Ulpture. ''The winnin9 work will be placed ~~ _ _permanent display at the fHP corporate head- quuten (in Fountain Valley)." Eyewear keeps up with 1.ashions than 100,000 Mnion part.ici-9f&m for collt containment. pate in the Senior Plan, mak-Participatinq compa.ni .. can inq it one of the lu9est of its alto oPt for FHP'• commercial kind in the nation. version of the Senior Plan, If mild-ma.nnered Cluk "Growth in membenhip is called Senior Security. Kent wu to purchue new than 21 JMll of practice in the readi.nq ed clririn9. Co11taci Newport Beach area. The of-leu weuen uully have a lice, in the Newport Hills pail of pnNICriptioa ql&aes on Center at Su MiCJlMl Drive h&nd u a baciup. just one part of the corporate FHP a.nnoWlOel the forma-e,...ar today, he would find ;:=====================~ a npeY .. 1ect:ton of qla.aea 6 ORANCE COUNTY'S LEADER 4dvancetl 1iYPn()~l1eraPl' .«Usoclates· TOPS IN HYPNOSIS TRAINING FOR THE COMMUNTTY IN COMFORTABLE CLASSES OUR OTHDt SUPERIOR PffOGRAMS INCLUDE. • Pl.ST-LIFE R£CRE.'SSION/FE:A 17 • £RICKSON/AN CONF'ER£NCE STATE-oF·THE-ART HYPNOSIS/FEB. 16 • MEETING YOUR INNO CHILD HYPNOTICAU Y/FCB. 1' PR/VA TE SESSIONS AR£ CONDUCTED IN BEAUTIFUL SURROUNDINGS Wn'H OUALIFIED/LICENSED PROFESSIONALS MAKE A GREAT MOYE FOR YOURSELF -JOINUSNOW- FORRESERVAT10Ns 724 1352 AND INFORMA TJON · ,.. U..t would mile hit old horn rim.I u outdated u, well, Krypton.it.. Nore and more, optometriltl such u Dr. Jack Connole, O.D. of Newport BNch ue offerinq a variety of g.._.. and contact JeD ... detiqned to suit rrery taste from the truly heroic to the more mild-mannered. Connole and hil wile, Syl, have ... n m&ny imlov&tion1 in eyeweu du.ri.Dq their more and Ford, hat been attendinq Technoloqy Abo plays a to the preteription eyewea.r la.rqe put in the eyewea.r neech of patienta for more than revolution. Aocordinq to Con- four yea.r1. nole, diapoubl. lw are the The Connol .. f ... 1 that the cont.ct lem technoloqy of the many choice1 available to future. The new lemet have thoM nHdin9 corrective bMn edn.li•ely tested and lelllel mak.. ..lectinQ eye-are now .tartinq to b.come wear a fun and fuhionable av•ilAble 011 the muket. The ezperie11ce. ManJ of Con-cli8poMble leuet are elfi- nole'1 patienta .. 1ect MVer&l cield, con"D.ient and health- len'" for d&y ud ev•Ai.DQ ie tb&D lt&Ddud cootaci wear, u well u for lpOl'ta, , ,.._ ... IYIWRMI'• 111 WAKE UP FEELING GOODI You can live a fife that is pain-free. We've ~en helping ~ do just that for over 9 years. Chiropractic care is helpful in treating Injuries. and can be used to STOP problems BEFORE they occur. The CHIROPRACTIC H~ALTH CENTRE Fount• Valley Dr • ._.., L Swlltn ~ We ~CIMl.tt tn ;;;::------f ~ ty heMh ~re. usir-,g Phys1ul Therapy, and ottwr moc:tttn tect~s. YOUR LIFE CAN BE PAIN-FREEi 961-00SZ ....... ~---. SMllie D .... 111 ...... POl&I ... ,._. Custom.ers are at-ease in pet store U you atep into the IDWl, but a~ly ltockecl, pet .ton in FonntAin Valley JOU iuy be czre•d by Sadie, the ltore' I malCO* ud a tA)Ated Blue Front Amuon 11(ho will talk to you, or do one of her famou ...... ' Dou.Id Fo.ter ud Auqut Court, OWMrl of thi1 homey little .tore, c&lled Pet1, Pett, Pell will allO qr..t cu.tomen with a friendly attitude and enthulium for ••erythin9 certain food," F<>Mer added. d091 and catl; u well u for from AKC beaql• to tropiC41 Suppliel ud toya are &bo in birda. "W • clip naih and fiah to their "exotic reptiles abundance, and everythin9 i1 winq1," he l&id. Aquariums, and i.n.lecta." easily acceaible for cua-bird and ha.msteT caqet and Foster and Court, both tomey'1 impection. "We want otheT neceaary nppliet. p_re•ioully employed at cutomeu to come in and feel Pet1, Pell, Pell i1 located at Hu9h" Aircraft, decided 1ev-comfortable here."' 19696 Beach Blvd. at the er&! monthl a90 to 90 mto The store al90 ha1 a qroom-Newl&nd Center in Fountain -' La Croix diet features high fiber, low fat food More than SO percent of AmericADI are overwei9ht. Why? Simply put, we do not Mt the type of fooda that the body ii iud. to Ht. 1 or teu of thouM.Dda of yea.r1 the hUIDUl body hu suniYed OD food1 hi9h i.n fiber. and low in fat (com- ple• e&rbohydrates -70 percent, fat -i 5 percent, protein -15 percent). The typical American Ht1 food• imt the oppoeite: low in fiber and high in fat (carbohydrat• -25 per- cent; fat -45 ·percent; protein -25 percent). In addition, mo1t of the e&rboby<lrat• we Ht are refined and ha•• little ot no fiber. Thua the typical Ameri- can iood intake has oo.• fourth of the fibeT ud thr .. tim" the fat that the body ii mact. to handle. Thil type of d.Wt can cha.n9e the. body metabolism in auch a way tb.atlnuch o1 th• food we Mt OOet directly into the fat cell Dr. LaCroix'• chet ii pl&nnecl to qive individuals hi9h fib4tr, low-fat, &nd ad• quate protein without ·hunger. It ii not a fad diet. It ii the way you 1hould eat the rest o1 your life. Everything you eat can be bou.9ht at your local ma.rket and cooked in your own kitchen. Dr. LaCroix'• office la located At 6094 W &rD9T Ave. in Ku.nb.nqton BiiCh. For mo.re inJoTmabon, ~ C.U (71,) 84.2-8841. businea on their own. four ino &nd bathin9 Mrvice for Valley. monthlaqotheyopenedPeti, l~~~~~~--~~~~fi~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!!liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiliiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Peb,Petl. I "I think we have been 1WD wars to • 1ucceaful becauM we try to make our store comfortable - with a friendly, homey at- mo1phere," fo1ter 1aid . a·rculalilin Cllll DllSCle talie: "Somethin9 el1e that maket u. popular a.re our re&10nable pricet and hi9h quality prod- ucts." The store canies a la.r9e 1uppl1 of animal food. E.-~ially in frfthly mised bulk. 'W • a.re very proud oJ our food we offer for birda ln bulk -it ii mised frfth and cuatomen e&D _.what they a.re buyin9, u op~ to bu.Jing ba99ed food, ' he Mid. Dry and cuned food for doq9 ii a•ail&ble in a •arlety of mix•. "We h•" dry foodl hued in beef, chickeD, lamb and eMn ••&C4ldo -for anim•l• who may be allerqic to Center helps people meet fitness goals "Tomonow, I .u.rt my fit- ..... pr09f&m. ''or ''Tomonow, I 1tart my dW." Haw ...., ti.-..... 109 .ud ... ftlY Wordl? Tiu. .. the ta. cf JMI _..___.do,_..._ Toa .wt oat hall ol cJood m•lkw• ad all the d ......... la tM world. Yee,..._• w..k « two, yw "" tap ud ieop, MYWv woiW IO laArd b a _. or twot ... clclil't ..,.. oledla~~ltk•• ... OlwiomlJ, .... la ..... ..... .... ... joocl ..... , ......... .... ,. 161 -"' ... ,..... ,,, • ~!zing In the tlMtment of emotlonal and ~I PfOblem• • en.is lntet'<19ntlon • 011yUme treatment prootam Monday lhru Frldey • 24-hout 9hoft and long>tetm hoec>'taHzation ptOQrllml • Fully llCenMd and eca•dited NEWPORT HARBOR 1901 IAl1' 16T11 n-a&IT IUWPOllT aACll. CA 91'6l {7t••Ml .. JIO .. "'""""" ti/ C#1111Jn7. ~ C_,.,,.,i<J'lt .. ~~ ~?h -~ ~'-.:: /" ~ ~. ••• Or just 011 ll11r with 111111. 3355 IF Via Udo in Newport Beach one block east of Lido Marina Village With ptenty of free parking. Pia -· OilMax makes oil changes q_uick, convenient Do you drive a ca.r with dirty oil because you can't spa.re a day without wheels to have it chanqed? Well, iJ you have just l 0 free minutes, Hal Tucker and ru. lubrication special- ists at OilMa.x in Huntinqton Beach can do the job -and more -for a fraction of the cost charqed by most ser- vice stations. It's only $23. 95 -add $3 to $4 for four-wheel drive . and certain older or luxury model vehicl ... The price covers a 1 S- point custom tervice treat- ment in en• of OilMu' 1 four clean work bays. • .. The service includes an oil chanqe with up to five quarts of Pennzoil or Cutrol products, a new PellllJOil oil filter, the qreue and lubri- cation of all fittin91, an air filter iupection, a folJr tire preaure check, an examin- ation and fill of all enqi.ne fiuich (steerinq, brakes, tra.nsmiuion, battery, tran.a- ule, differential and win- dow washer), a complete interior vecuum.inq, and if you have 2~1/2 minutes more, a ca.r wuh. CoME SEE nm I.AftGEST FA.MaY FITNESS CLUB IN nm WEST ••• RIGHT IN YOUR OWN BACKYARD! 17Z72Nedlfl ...... fOUftllila V..,, CA 9J'79I ,.~,469"' C..a.Otl#f OilMax' 1 quick 1 ube aecret ii manpower. nu .. eq>erienced tech- nicians are a.aiqned to each vehicle to oil and qreue a customer'1cu, truck, or van into top runninq form an<! keep a peraonal.ized main-- tenanc. folder to record each visit and remind a customer when terrice ii needed aqain. A lticbr attached to the cu'• wind- 1hield remind.I customers when to btinq ca.re in for the nezt oil chanqe. For moN information, call (714) 9M-7110. TLC to hold grand opening in HB TLC Medical Group will be c.lebratinq the qrand opeuinCJ of ita Huntinqton Beach fa- cility at 10188 AdamJ Ave. on Ju. 31 at 5:30 p.m. with a ribbon<11ttin9 1ponaored by the Huntinqton Beach Chamber of Commerce. Dr. fruciafoo..c..M.D., zudi-c.i ditector for TLC Medical Groap, ii looltin9 forwa.rd to tlae opportunity ol introducinq wbAt may IOOD become the C01D1Dmaity'1 mOlt innovative mecticAJ facility. In attenda.nc. will be memben of the Hunt- ~ S..Ch Chamb.r of C-eerc., liif&J()l &mutter, Members of the City Council, City Administrator Paul Cook, Miu Huntinqton S..Ch and medi& repreMntati..a just to name a few. Refr.mm.nte will be .erftd from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Foo and members of the ~I lt&lf Will be cm hand to demonstrate the office's mod- ern aurqical techniques and equipment which have been .p.ci&lly adapted for mdu1- trial medicine and emer9ency cue ~plicationa. TLC Medical Group bu its own way of sayinq thank• to the community for makino it• medical ptactice the 1uccet1 it hu beoome over th• past fi•e yeua. Alonq with the cpand . teltiYiti• it will be r.::: free HIB iamuniu- tiont for children bet"Mn the •CJ" of 18 montlu to 5 YMr• of aqe. The immWliutiOUI will be qi YD Jan. 27 tluouoh f eb. 4, 1989, Mond&ytb.rou.qh fnday, 8 a.m. to 8 p .m. and on Saturday from 8 LID. to 6 p.m. No apoiJ!tment will be nee.a- u., to nteeive thi1 inoculation. Haemophih11 influena&e type b ta a t>M:terium -a qerm -that caw a. nu•ber of infections in children. This b.cterium b often called Hih, a.nd cau.MI many common, and IOllUt MriOUI, i.n.fection1 ~1 far the m09t Mrious r"ult of Hib ii meAinoiil•, an inf ec- tion of the li.Dlnq of the b r &lJl ud ipinal cord. Up to 10 perc.Jlt of children who have Hlb mn.inqitil dJe. Of thOM who lift, many may have permAa•t d••acJe to the ner- YOUI ., .. llD -th.ii ln.fection ii the IMdiD9 caw al acquired mmatal N&AidatioD. Children you991 th.ail fmt JMJ'• of ao• are e.peci&lly at rid for thi1 ell ...... Hlb C&UIM other infection. u well ''rlotitia, a type of lnfec:ticm C&D caue a child to cbob lo ct..th u.nless tnNted at one., II a.bo cau..d by ff.Dub. for more laforaation, call n.c MedicAI Gro\ip at (714) 961-3286. ---\ . Personal attentionis trademark oilocal club P•reOnally Fit offer• eaactly WU~ ita JWDe impliel - p.nonal fitnea tra.inin9 on a one-on-on. buia to educate indiridull on exerciM and hM.lth. Randy Olahen, owner of tlae club with ad.or .. in eaerciM pby1ioloqy, 'believe• that educatino people on fitn.ea help1 ~revnt hMlth prob- lema. we &re • p.HOW trainino and rehabilitation fa- cility that offen physical train- Peters maximizes health with chiropractic service Dr. Guy Peten bell"" in mazimi1in9 individual'• health, u oppoeed to tre&tinCJ IJlllplO~I. ''J &m primarily conoemed and committed to peopi. ahiftinq their conc.m from nckn ... and 1ymptom• to m•Emilinq their health," he Mid. That i• why Peter'• Chirop.ra.ctic Center in Hunt- inqton Beach eaten primarily to fa.mill" and indiriduab who want to uae chiropractic Mmce u a preftntative m"IUfe. "Moet people a.re not aware if they have a problem, symptom. do not alway• occw until it it too late, or very •ver," he add.cl. Petet• recommenda that ,,.. ..... "11n/f'.141 ......... I ~°" ALL PIT IUPPUIS ~-· ....... Oeod*v M . f. lM inq for people with lower back and neck problema, hiqb blood preaure, 0Yerwei9ht &nd other problema," he Mid. At well u a fitnea traininCJ club to <Jain atrenqtb, fiel:ibili- ty and e&rdiovucular fitneu, Olshen Mid. Located in Corona del Ma.r, the club hu been open for almoet two yMrt and it bated on an appointment only work- out ecb.dule. "W • only allow five to •ven clients at any c;iiven time -keepin9 clubca.n plan a prOCJl&m to 1uit Mlliont personalized lo an anyone. "Th• equipment it individual's needa.'' Ol1hen d•Qlled to prevent injuries said all the trainers are and qive a better workout," deqreed in an eserciM or Hours are Monday throu9b sportt medicine fjeld and they Friday 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.; desic;in a p.reonaliaed pro-Satuzday 6 a..m. until the last 9ram1 with each client. appointment, and Sundays are Equipped with ttate-of-the-specific appointmenta only. a.rt equipment -MUJCle For more information, or to Dynamic• -=-u well u 1r.. rilit Personally J'it, located at wei9htt, PTS Turbo 1000 ••-" 3100 E. Coatt Hi9hway in erciM biket, Life-cycle, Heart Corona del Mu, call (714) Mate and a treadmill -the 72 l-8&U. . . Before. Before you know it. M ktn~a 1zablf"OlffPf't'l\I I Ill rh1• "·'~ )"ll l•xi 5hould11 I takP rnn'\f'r 'l11:u ... \\11) \\' ·t~ht Watdwr.:. cl"('at1'Cf 1 lw '' "' l! tS!I Quwl.. !-1111 <PS'• Prus.tram "uh ''" '' mplt·r tc1 US4'. Pxpan<h>cl f<lod fllan arul optional 1•x1·n·i....• pl.m \II to nt.tkP 11 •··L'l•1r lnr you 111 lo't- " ·1ght ra .... 1 L•.1.."t) •ar·~ progmm "a..' mon· than :W:t. fastt•r 1h.u1 hcofon· < >ur l\P\\ l!l~!I pn1~r:11t11 11\it'll IM'ltPr So call tlw n11ml1'•r bt•l.,w for tlw \\(~1~1t1 \\,U r hn:s lc'll·at1rn1 11Par'Pst ~011 And )ou'H bP tht> s1w ~>11 ,,,mt hdon• ~nu know 1t ,....,.3D-3DllO The C..••=tlai•"' o..-........ ~ ........... -........... r--- 1 I I I I I L- '~FOR 1989 FULL SEMESTER PLAN c)""' i ., 24 -WEEK CURRICULUM 1"' ' ~ ,.,,, . With Special Curriculum Material . a Planner Book and an Exchange Man.,er. (A S 19 value!) Hormones can enhance quality of a wo·:man's life Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is probably one ·of the most important metlical contributions pra.c- ticed that enha.nces the quality of a woman's life, Dt. Norma.n Beals, M.D. a.nd director of the Women's Health Care Clinic in El Toro, Mid. "Some women need HRT at age 1 7 others as they qet older a.nd just about all women from the age of 40 n,.d hormone · r~placement," he said. Beals oilers lectures a.nd information explaininq HRT a.nd the ben- efits it adds to a ~a.n's life. Some of the conditiom that hormone therapy is ree- ommended for are: PMS; ~enopauae; heart di1ease; cbJonic back pain; insomnia; · post-partum depreuion; post hysterectomy; weiqht qain; impotence; hip fracture (os- teoporosis); and ma.ny other problems. "One of the most importa.nt thinqs ii that HRT cuts down on ca.noer of the breast, uterus and ovaries," Beal added. Beal says it is important that women get a blood teat to find out their hormone levels. Women's Health Care Center is lqcated at 22706 Aspa.u St. Suite 501 in El Toro. r or more Information, or to schedule a.n a~pointment, call (714) 855-0525. Are You Receiving. Physical Therapy? Is Your Condition Improving? Our computerized therapy is painless, non-in- vasive and highly effective in aecelerating tissue repair. Patients overwhelmingly prefer our pro- gram to conventional physical therapy. Why? Be- cause it works. C811 todaJ for lllOre lftfennetloft (714)7~5433 PKJFIC 11'1STTTUfE lr'1<: ADVANl~ED PHYSIC AL THERArY l 11710 Eaet w......, Ave. Ste 'IOI, Feune.ln v.-, NOW OPEN MEDICAL GROUP WAa Quilty Jl«lk&I Cue AlHI "°" eo.t An l•,,.U.t. .. • Family Practice • Elective S~ery • Minor Emergency • •Work lnjuriet • Pbyaicals • L.Cention A Brok.en Bonet• •Complete x.a.y & IAb Diqnotis • -wllf6e ctven-- January 27th th.ru February ,th, 1989 Monday throU9h Friday 8:00am-8:00pm Slaturday 8:00im~:OOpm No Appolnt~nt ~ry TLC MEDICAL GROUP urces parents wJth children 1-5 yrs old to take advantace of this opportunity -will be given only at HB toca~ 968-3266 Selliors can retire with care Seniors are sometimes neglected in California's fut-paced aociety, but at The Huntinqton Senior Heaidence, seniors can enjoy &n active retirement and _personal care. " "The residents we have livino here are pretty much doinq what they would do if livino in their own apart- ment -more becau1e 11'• have more re1ource1," Merry Nickerson, adminis- trator, Mid. The Huntington caters to men, women a.nd couples, •991 60 yean a.nd older. "Most of our residents are in their SO.," she Mid, The board lUld cue facility ca.n accommodate 61 residents.' It currently baa 59, Nickerson added. "One of the best adva.n- taqes of a senior re1idenoe ii that the ~pie do not live alone. When a resident needa help or just someone to be around, thereisalway1 someone available," she Mid. . "It'• not just the care and MrTicee they 9et, but it. the feelin9 of belonqinq; of beiDQ part oJ a family, 11 F,,_ ieft. ~Totter Dell, A8'•en ...... WMlls •nd ............ 1t•rtklf•ll111 "' .............. . Nickerson ezplained. Special event. and ac- tiviti" are pla.nned to qive resident. an active lifestyle if they wish, Dee Alperen, activities director, said. "Som• of our planned ac- tiYitiei include shopping trips, movi", awim.minq, harbor cruiMI and. mo1e," 1heMid. V ac&tions are another event which qiv" r..ulent. tomethiluJ to look forward to. "Remdent. leave on va- cation to vmt family mem- bera for e:rtended Yilit.; or anotlw1 aide is th&t families can lMve •Dion at The HuntiDQ'ton if tlwy wiah to 90 on vacation and that family mem.be1 do.I not." TU Huntinc;iton Beach Senior Reaidence ud Con- valelcent i.a locat9<1 ·· at 18851 florid& St. ' .... . Skin is. also impoitant for fitness minded people AlonCJ with bein9 more aware Of eureilbl9 and diet- inCJ .-. ud .women 1hould a.ho keepm mind that the 1kin ii im~ too. At Skin Dee inHUDtiii9to1lBMch, Debora~ Schwalbe Woods not only oUen faci&la and body care treatmente, but educat .. indi- vidU&la • wlut will benefit their skin. · "Proper akin care not only cleans, but slows down the a9in9 proce11, keeps akin toft and more vibrant,,, w oodJ said. She U9" the European method for f aci&la and has trained both in the United State. and Europe. "I think what is important to people i1 the quality of •nice ana the a.mount of education. The more educated about akin care and akin care probrem1 an individual i1, the lea ptoblem ·they will have with aqin9, acne and other akin prob- lems," she added. Woods uses Pteacription Plus products for all her ,.. beauty proqram1. "All the products I use are custom blended, so at akin chan9e1 I can chan9e the product. It is dMiC]lled to work with all akin conditions." She recommends a akin care pr09ra.m for men, women aod children with akin problem. "A faci&l a minimum of every Iii weeka will give individuals the maximum result. -the texture it smoother and>Jhe akin stays hydJated." Skin Deep · ii localed at 16045 Bolsa Chica in Hunt- inqton Beach, in Giqi'• Hair-. tty lea. r 9r more information, or to schedule a.n appointment, call(714)840-3844. Hayase: Dentist/ patient relationship is important Dental hyqene play1 an imporl&At put of everyday life -and aI0119 with bruahinq and floai.nq, people 1hould visit a deutt.t every lix months, Cameron H~yue, D.D.S., with a.n office ill Huntinqtou Beach, said. Aud tilldinq a good dentist, someone you trust with your teeth, it not easy. "I went into private practice so I could do my own job and · dd it pro- feuionally, without followin9 someone e1-'1 concept of the 'ri9_ht way'," Hayue Mid. Hayue qraduated from the University of Pacific in San Franci9co u a Doctot of Dental Surqery, and bu been practic- HRT 1989 LECTURE SERIES by Normal K. Beals, Jr., M.D. Founder and Medical Director of Women 's Hea lth Care .ffOIMONE REPLACEMENT 'THERAPY Hear the facts about hormone issues and treatment of PMS. menopause, Post Hysterectomy Syndrome and other health concerns addressed by Dr. Beals, a 30-year practitioner and international lecturer. HRT IAdun S.rie9 1t Mercury Savinp in El Toro the tint Tueed.ay of each month, 7:30 pm. Call 866-o625 for information on other dam and location ot lec:tun eeri• 3rd ANNUAL BLOOD DRIVE inCJ for more than l 1/2 years. He recently opened his office 41.7211 WAJner Ave. Hayue is experienced in &II phuea of denti~., from clea.ninq to root canals to coemetic dentillry. "Cosmetic dentUtn j1 th~ new wave now -people are more aware of lookinCJ and fMlin9 CJood - and havi.n9 a nice smile is part of that," he Mid. Compoeita, veneen and crowns are all part oi c91metic-deniiatry fhal makes teeth look better, he added.,. Believi.n9 in a patient'• com- fort it part of what .et.a Hayate and his pr-ofeuional ata.ff apart. "A petton cominq intoa doctor11 or dentist' 1 office is there for the qu&lity of care available -if that perton i1 not a eate aboull>ein9 there, they will thi.n.k they ar• not 9ettinc;i the quality of tervice they deeerve." r or more information, or to schedule an appointment. call (714) 8'2-2275. :1M 11/JfO Hi!llEl'M M4altl4 •1111 ... to .. DAILY PllOT~ • .......,, 21. 1 .. -8 • Day hospital provides all alternative for adolescen~s ~ Adolescents today have more presaure to perform or eYen conform to certain social pressures -and with the stress of the '80s environment -.they are filldinq it harder and harder to cope. Newport Harbor -An Adolescent Hospital that treats children from a9es 11 to 18 recoqnizes problems with children today and offers a day hospital proqram that benefits adolescents and their families. "This is the firat of iU kind ill Oranqe County, and the pro- qram offera educational and therapeutic Mrvice1 to adoles- cents who need stronq aupport to live at home," Cedric Davis, L.C.S.W., proqram director of the Day Hoapita.l, said. The Day Ho•pita.l proqram ~ccommodate 12 to 16 adoleacent1, Dav.ii said. "The proqram beqin1 at 8:30 (8 a .m. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil TIE SllPE OF TllllS Tl •E! 110 &llllCIS! Dr. Schaefer speclaltzes In a developmental program teaching you how to maJntaJn your ldMJ weight using your personal phyak>logy. OAIJ. , ... ••••1111T AT (11•)•2-"" aLIWIU.lmllfll s,.·,.., ...... , .. c...I 18837 Brootihurst. Ste. 205. In Cenniel Au.a, Fount.in VllMfr/ if they would like brealdut) and ends at • p.m. -the achedule for the day includet individual educational pro- 91am1 -to 1t .. p up with their achool curriculum; group therapy; phy1ical education; outinq1; and apecific activit" or lib.rary time. They alao ha•• fr .. period.a and br.U. where they can watch mo'fi .. , play the stereo or u.. the com- puter, 11 he added. "We offer oiler f&miliea comprehensive continuum of clinical ca.re ezclulively for adol..cenlt. 11 Staff for pa- tient'~ at Newport Harbor'~ include Dam, a liceD.Md clinical 90Ci&l worker; ~ education t.acher; a tMcbiD9 auiltut; other IOci&l worbr1; an occupetioul therapW; rec- r.atiou.l therapillt; &rt then- pt.t; and a medical doctor and reqm.red nw• ii on -.ff. I"--SH ~AL/P• 12 Medical library is designed for public "For · yow health i.nlor- mation " thote a.re the word. Mike Rgy, president of The Health Education Library uaea to deterlbe the library in buildinq 360 in Newport Center. "The library wu desi911ed for the qeiwral public'• ue only -not for doctor' 1, 11 Roy Mid. The library often infor- mation, in layman'• tenu, for the pano• who wants to understand a JMdi~ pro~ lem, he added. "It ii eometim• ....Wr for a penon lo read ud under· ltand, rather thu u.t.n to eomeone talk and undentand. Thi.I facility helps patient., family or friend. understand a probl.m, 11 Roy said. The ataff at the library are well.qualified and willing to help, he Mid. "They will explain cleuly what a penon ii rMdinq or help them find IOIUt1Wa9 apecific. ,, Compaten .i.o help in the reee.uch of new topics. With a wide r&Jl99 of test., joUJ"Da.11 and Yideoe written for the hMlth c&r• prof.-ion, u well u lituratur• for the laypereon, rililon to the libr can be aaured of finding :furmation beneficial. Tha library open.eel in April 1987, and wu founded by the HMlth Education Foundation, a non-profit orqania&tion of hHlth ca.re profeaionals and concerned lan-ople. The fa.cility ii dependent on donation.a, and currently Boa Mid, they a.re ha~9 proble1111 ra.itinq funds. "Th• public nMd.t to bow abcNt the li- brary and its benefita to Or- an9e County, 11 he Mid. Located in tuJte 206 at 360 Su Migul Dr. in Newpon Beach, the library ii op9D Monday throu9h Thund&y from lOa.m. to4p.m. For more information, call (714) 759-9395. SUNWEST BARNS, INC. From ...... bernl to compl9te..,...,..,. center CM 1 ,..,,,,N#f PRll MOCW CM OU01W TOOAY GI tlfJ" .. ,_ ...... i11111ll111nf FITNESS .•. ,,..,.... every aow aad theu. ln fad, the ro.d k> libHll, upon which many ol JOG feel all alone, demuda a oemiD l•••l oJ comm.ibnnt and dedication, Rob.rt Bmu1, pr .. ident of Shape Up Center, Mid. Commitment &Jld dedi- cation are not worda uau&lly associated with fun. Aa a matter of f&ct, the whole pro- cea oi ..&•••9 ill wpe ... m. more · • work than uythin9 else. Yet. beiDQhMlthy, fita.nd Doctor holds appreciation dayJan.28 Dr. Paul P•tty at Mile Squu• Chiropr&etic in Foun- tain Vall., ia holdin9 a com- munity appreciation dar, S&t. Jan. 28by a~tm•nt.' More people are minq a war• of their health ud the benefit.a of chiropractic care -10 we are qivinq people a chance to come in and benefit from our servic" at no charqe," Petty said. lookinCJ your beat i1 <»finitely worlhwhile; a.nd ••eryt.h.in9 worthwhile ta.k" a certain level of commitment a.nd dedi- cation. rou mull find a way to qet the maqic to be committed and dedica.ted, to stay conaia- tent with your fitneu proqya.m. But, how do you do this? Since you do tbin91 that you like and enjoy, ~then you should find 10ine way1 to make your fitneu procpam interest- in9, stimulatinq and even fun. Tbua, you are that much cloter to your fitne119oal1 and able to be tliat 1'1UCb mote committed to your proqram, Bumi added. One way to make your procpam more fun and de- velop commitment at the same time i1 to use the "buddy" system. Your buddy ii yom tralnin9 partner,.aomeone who i1 aa committed as yourMli. This per10n could be a friend, relative, 10meone you meet at the health club or even a peraonal trainer. Mutual motivation and 9oal1 are major rea10n• for the IUCCMI of the buddy ayllem. The buddy 1ystem work• only if mutual 9oal1 are 1et, a.nd the type of traiJUnCJ and eserci9et to be done are aCJreed upon. Tim" are alao Mt and aqreed upon; and the o•erall time period 1hould t>. 10methin9 to which both partnera are able to commit. You 1hould make appointment. on your calen- d4\l for yoUY workouts H you would any other important com.initment. You ahould a1lo 1et 9oala - definite, a.mbitioua, realisti<: and meuurable. It i1 best to llart off with 1rnall, believable Qoal• over a aborter period of time and commitment. As you 1110Cll d Willi tlliii, larqer 9Q&b aad o..-a ioara9r period of commjteMt bl .which to tr&iD with Mcll other. You 1hould have con ..... with a prise to the winner npplied bythepa.rtnM.Aho,youwill want to incofl>:Or&te a vuiety'bf actiriti ... fot more inJorma.tion, the Shape Up Center offera one- on-one physical tbera.py, aero- bic• and nutribonal weiqht proqram1. The center ia located at 462 C E. 17th Str .. t in Costa MeM. For more infor- mation, call (714) 631-3623. Don Kott Van Center Southern Callfomla' s Leading Dealer for the Disabled Announdng the aft new Apollo Van. Designed for the Disabled Person on t he go. Luxury equipped with all the amenities you need, or we can custom design the right van tor you. Several F1nanc1ng plans available. VA approved over 25 years expenence Call 1 f800J 262-5688 for further lnform•tlon Don Knott Van· Center 405 Freeway -Avalon Exit Carson, CA Mile Squue Chiropradic will perfonn the followinc;i tervi~ at DO cwqe: examin- ation, 1p in&J adjustment•, diathermy, ultruound, inter-ferential therapy and inter-~------------------------------------------- seqment&l traction. If s-raya are neoe .. ry the charq" are reduced to $5 per film (nor- m&lly $30-$40); makinq the total cb&r99 of $20 to patieota. "'Chiropractic work• - people are beincJ m«• hMlth conaciou ucl want to do thin;• mo19 uta.r&lly, such u chi.ropractiC Mmce. Thia treat1 problems without umi; druo1, it trMtl the root of the p1oblem, not jult 8J'lllptoma," Petty Nid. · A qradu.ate of the Puadeua Coll999 of CIUropractic, Petty bu hen precitidD9 lour YMI• in C&lifonia. H• opened hi• office ln Fout&ln Vally l 1/2 -,..n-990. ~-in qiriD9 .,.-1•11 ft1J qentle treatmtllll," IM .dded. "I tbiak .. ~Of CAI• ud tlM palu 8aal ltAff .U UU. cillOe amr.ut &om othei c~..._~;.., Mid. He at.o -••llMMI wpple-lnft• if •I 1 llel.; HoUa -Mili Squie ~ ..... Moacla1 t fdlat&O.la.a .k>6 p.a ....... .,... •• 16541 •11'\ ..... la roan- tala Y...,. Jes -bdor- ..... •to 1a• 1 •mu ar-•· oall (714 ) • ome. a_f the Orange County Yoga Center • • 2 complete weight rooms/ FRff Instruction • Over 50 aerobics classes each week with certified instruc tors • Raquetball l!t squash courts/ fRf.lf clinics • Licensed massage starr -------.. • 25 Meter heated outdoor pool 1·,. • Sand volleyball I fRt:f clinics ,, / &. OFF • fRff Ct\ild care 1NtTIAL fE£ • Basketball Gym • PWS many addition a I amen Ille · Under "[W mana.ment, compktdy ~nonted at mnodeklJ. ~'-! Expires I /l 1 /89 New Club Hours: M·f S l<Mm·l()pn\. S.VSun S.m·7pm HIA&.1" N#IJ AT....,Aft ............. ._,,,,.,.to._ DAllY PtlOT~. ~ 21. 1--11 • • • • t f i ( • ..: ,. •• 4 ' !fi • l It iliif-.: 1t ~ ' Acupu ncture cures many illnesses ... Dr. Louis Y.C Lu of Oriental MedicaJ Clinic in Jiuntinqton Beach, offen another alternati ve to cer- tain medical or petlODal problem s with acupunctwe, the traditioll41 form of oriental medicine. Acupuncture oriqinated in the Orient more than 5,000 yean aqo. It ii the oldest system of medicine HOSPITAL ... Frompage 10 Some of the problems adoletlCenll mi9ht esperience that nec .. litat.. the type of environment &Gd therapy the Newport Harbor Hospital can provide ue: •Attention deficient di10rder -trouble holdinq attention. e Per10nality di10rden - mood 1Win91. e Depreuion w1thdrawn or anqry •Poor sociahz.ahon -inabili- ty to maintain peer rela- known to contemp<>Tary man, Lu said. / Lu UMI fine, 10lid nee- dl.. to ltimulate 1pecitic point• on the body pertainino to individual problems. He al10 \lift berbl to aid in hia procea. Lu treats 1Ucb problem. u weiqht loa, stop 1mokinq, &rthritt., back ~ and other probJema. 'for 10me There are many more prob- le1111 uaociated with adol .. cenll today that could benefit from the proqram Dam auq- qestl familiM contact a psy- chiatrt.t or othet licenM<l clinician who ca.n evaluate the youth. thi.DQ1 it ii. i-eally eHec:tiYe and qood," he Niel "The problem ii that mo.I people don't come to me lint, but u a Lut r990rl." The office ii locat.d at 19072 Beach Bl•cl, Suite C . For more information, or to tiehedule an appomtment for a oouultation, call (71 4) 962-7905 . for lndiridW. ii two to thrN months and recommends fa.m- ill" try to coincide it with •mester breab in tiehool. Newport Ha.rbor -An Adolncent Hospital ii located at 1501 E. 16th St. in Newport Beach. r or more in.formation, call (714) 6-42-9310. The ba.pit&l ii currently oUeri.og an after tiehool pro- qram. The•mceitfr .. tothe community and dOee not need a prof ... ional recommen- dation to be en.rolled Punta are encoura9ed to contact Davi• at Newport Harbor. Vehicles ma.ke life easier for disabled Dorin9 tM lut ...,eral yMr1 the 909ftllment w nude it euier for the dJNbled popu- ldon bJ ita llUUlciAtory r• quiremenb tor t.ciUtiet euch u public ban~pped puk- inQ, wU.lch&ir acceMible buildin99 and reltroom1, curb cuta, rampe into buildin91 and public bU trauportahon. difficult in the everyday life of the handicapped. One of the main criteria• fo r adolescents to be admitted to the day pr09ram ii that they recoqni.M and admit they have a problem, Daril 1aid. "The Day Hospital ii a collaborative program -everyone mu.I work t09ethe1 the stafl, patient and the family." He added the avenqe lenqth of the proqram tio111hip1. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;::===================::;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiii~ With th ... chan9H, other J*JPle ha•• felt the need to Foul' iDdJnduah who have combined their reeovrce. to make life MAMT for the wh .. 1- chair-bound popul.ttion in- chide. Don lCott, OWDeT of Don Kott Van . Ce11te1 in C&r1011; Phil Nelton, Iott general man- a9eT; Mike Mooney, owner oJ Apollo Revcon Motorhom• and Roman Rybc1yn1ki, Apollo ul .. manaqer. J 1718 MONTANA AVE. SUITE 7 LOS ANGELES, CA. 90049 f 2 I 3) 826-7 I 7 I • Profmionlt stiff tD mess ,., .................... • a. ... ,....., ..... ,..i ... ,.., ...... ........... _,.Gein~- make ch&n9 .. lD different areu to mU. lituhou lea f"-...... VIHICl.UI"• ua ' OMMUNITY APPRECIATION DAY! Mile Squu. Ch 1opr.ctic •ante to t.b&nk the communi- ty! Web.vededand 8at~~.il-••rJ' M. I N9 COMM UNITY APP&SCIATION DAY. On that day ft plan to Jive •wtY our .. me. RSI. That mMm that all the followjns will be perfomed at no ~ Eu.mination, apin&I edjwuaeau. iffathermy, wtnlound, ln-.rfnent.ial ~ and inteTMsnMntal tnletion. If your s-raya ue out Of elate or ~. S. a new iajUry ud s·raya an nec1 1&'J, .. are reduci"'S our 11- 181, .. to16.oo pe1 mm <nonr..ll7 '30·'40). ThS. ...... ~ ~· •• ,.,. .... -814ant,~JO&l120 00 Tim'• a 8 AVING8 OP •tlO.OOI We .. 1eome 10'.l to brillr in your family and frienda few t.blt tremndoua oppOftwaity. EYE\llEAR... duction of durable, li9bt- ,,..,... weic;aht fraw. Sta»-<>1-tJM...an leue1; ud an eqUiY&lent in · met.I allOJ11 sucb u titanium, • cQ9I to a ,.ar'1 npply of ruthenium and otUr 1pa~ ideDded ..., leD.MS and •99 malCW:. are QOW u.ed m clNldwJ dutiou. the desiqn and pToductioll of 0~bh coat.ct leun 1r.odem pTeteriphon ey99laa ar• ti9 ..,. Oi tM future," fr&JUS. Goaaoli llidcl •-n... are no Howner u modem u ., ... repl.M 1•F 'e, CIMD.i.DQ IO]U-WM.f maJ ~. thete are tion ~ or .clepo1it 10m• old-fuhioned •aluet build-tap." that will alway• be a part of For die edftahuoua CODtact Connole'• optoJUtry practice; leD:14N .. ooloNd contact. valuet such u friend.Un ... , are &Wllll&f4 ia ncb fuhion dedication and community ahAdee M Mdlt 9fMD, aqua support. Connole i• the family blue, brown and the very opt~metl"Ut to many Newport newMt, riolet. Beach residents, and he r99- Tbe tecb.Doloqical break-ula.rly 1ehedule1 appoint- tbrouoh allO incluct.e •Y• ments of the children of the 9lueet, with new materiah now-qrownup patients he ha1 beinq utiliwd l.n the pro-been treatinq lince they were "k.nee-bi9h." ffe't OD a fint- n&me buia with.):D09t of bU patients and all of U.m con- 1ider him to be f;Jienclly and MSJ-90inQ. The Connolee allO ... their patients during their tr .. hoUt• while parlicip&tinQ in JUDJ of Newporl Beach'• worthwhile community p1'<>- jectl. Som• of the orqaniaa- liou they a.re currently aup- portiDQ include the Corona ct.1 Mu ltiw...U.' fund-ra.UinQ dri•• for the Marian S.r~n Aquatic Center and the 552 ClUb; Connole' 1 office ia located at 2628 Su Miquel Dr. in the Newport Hilla Center. Fo1 more in.fotmation, call (714) 64+0165. Noh un:ger pains Globe covers the hard-to-insure Dr. E. Lowell Schaefer, and bit wife and ulistant Thelma, adviM patient.a that "they don't have to at~• to lo.e it." Shaefer offers weiqht control and thenpy at hu two offic.a. "W • phyaioloqically treat people -we teach them how to eat ptoperly, thr .. timet a day," he Mid. Schaefer hu an office in San Gabriel and one loca.ted in Fountain Valley at 18837 Brook.burst, Suite 205. For more information, e&ll- (714) 962-S#t. When lnlurance compa.niet hear tUt a perlOn wants health, life or accid.nt in- surance ODe of the lint q'Uff- bons ~ ia "do you ha•• any pr..ailti.DQ hNltb con- ditions?" li youi answer it "ye1," chanoet a.re their answer will be "no." Glode Life ud Accident Insurance ID Riverside cb&nCJee tla&t auwer with its unique coaoept of provid.inq health i.Dturuce co•etaq• to client.a with pr....m.&q con- dition• who ha•• not been able to pr•YioualJ qet lll9uranc• cove1aqe ... Aleo people who ha•• insuruce and are pay- 1n9 hic;ah premhuu will uaually be &bi. to ;et in- surance chMper throuoh Globe," ..,. s...n~ m.ana9•1 of the Riverside office aaid. We insure people with con- ditions such u di&betet, epilepsy, heart attack or •ur- c;iery, cancet and aeveral other conditions normally not cov- ered by othe1 insurance com- paniet, Seara Mid. If someone already hu in- surance with tom• of th ... problem1, they will uve money if they cban9• their plan," he Mid. Globe doesn't raiM its rat .. baMd on indi- vidual policy holden, they are inctMM<l on an overall buia. "U the rat•• are inCTeaMd, then it i• increued for all policy holders in California We ha•• had a 3 percent i.DCTN.M in the lut •v•n yea.rt," Seu1 wd. Another benefit of Globe i.nluruce u that it cannot be cancelled for any reuon. "It ia qua.ranteed renewable," be VEHICLES said. TheM polici .. a.re foy • •• Frompage12 individual• under 6~. nm qroup bu de1i9ned .. Globe luurance u al'? the ap.cially built Ford vans with larc;int writer of Medicare · wh .. lchair lifts that enable the auppl~~ents in thf! Unit~ d.iabled per10n to CJet into the Stal••, S.at1 1&1d. Th11 van on their own. tarc;iet• the 65 or older aoe Indi•idual adaptations cpoup. available on the vans include: Globe Life, baaed out of roofs that can be raiMd eJl-Oklah~ma, ha• blen in ~uai-tend.d doora, floor lowerln91, net;t 1~ce 1951 ud 11 a drl••rudpoeen<Jeradaptiv• nationwide company. tt .. rinq d.Ticet, hand con- For more information, trolt, power ... t bu.. and Globe Life and Accident lo-c;ialvaniled tt .. l floors IO th• 1wanc• Co., located at 10590 whMlchai.r can mov• around Maqnola Ave. Suite 204 in insid.. Other adaptatiom can be made hued on indiridu&l needs. "With our qovemment r• coqnizin9 the need for f acill- tie8, the lour of u1 men wanted to oet the diubled back into enjoyi.nq their own freedom,'' Rybcsyuki Mid. "We wanted to make it poaible for them to live a tr .. r life and to one. &CJa.in make them mobLle." for more in.formation con- tact the Don Kott Ford Van Center in Cauon at 1-80().262-5688, or A~o 8"con at(213)834-58s8 Rivemde, 1:4& be reached at 1~32 2 TK FC• Y<Ut DENTAL CtfCl( ... 7 IOI T10£'S A aDT F-.Y DOOIST • Ytu IDilamlJOO /'- Our tully staffed f acilitr .r .. A Quality Place To Work Out handles all your family a dental care need . Frol'D' X-rays to cleaninJ & to filling simple cav1ties to root canals. We make your viaita painless and pleuant. Get Your T,.,..,, From the Experts! --'ltl 1110 • 111 bet -1:..-.11_ «;;:oet• !·- Fiefs of 8Yernisht A Series By Ken D. Lacroix, M.D. Metabolism Recent scientific research has shown that there Is a definite difference between the fat cell metabolism of a normalwe+ght person and that of an overweight person. As you know. the fat cetls In our body act as a fuel storage tank just like the gas tank In your car. When you start your car the gas your motor needs comes from the gas tank. Likewise when our body needs fuel the fat cells are there to open up and put fat Into the ~tood stream to be ufed as energy. In the normatwelght person this In exactly what happens. In the OVERWEIGHT PERSON. however, THE FAT CELLS DO NOT OPEN UP PROPERLY. The body then gets low on energy and we beCome tired and/or hungry. Secondly, In the over.wright person the food we eat goes tnto the fat cell faster than It does In the normalwetght person. This is refated to an overproduction of Insulin. Thirdly, In the overweight person, as we try to eat tess, we not onty • tend to become tired, but our overaJI metabolism slows down. Thu. fewer calories are needed for our basic body function. Consequently, the overweight person may ACTUALLY EAT LESS than the normalweight peraon but does not loM weight and often has a low energy level. It Is no wonder that we ovetweight people usually become frustrated, depressed and angry. Call now for a free staff consultation to ftnd out how you can lose weight AND NOT BE tired or hungry by eating nature's way -a high- fiber, low-fat diet. Ken D. LaCrolx, M.D. 8094 Warner AM,.. Huntington Buch, 12147 (714)142 ..... 1 Introductory Off er _Ofl._Y _____ $ 4900 • 2 Personalized Trainings • 2 Weeks Unlimited Aerobics • FREE Assessment & Exercise Consultation SHAPE-UP .CENTER m.c t IM k. c... ... CALL TOOAY ·All ages benefit from treatment Dr. Robert Swain believ .. in makinq people well, that ii why the Chiropractic Health Center in Fountain Valley caters to the youno or __ old. "I have treated infants folU' days old and Mnior citizens 89 years old," Swain said. And, what these individuala all want ii to feel better. "Some people fear qoinq to a chiropractor -most of their f ea.rs stem from not knowinq," he said. "People think that since we are adjustinq vertebra and bone, there ii a chance of damaqe. But when adjust- ment• are properly applied the ch&noe ii one in a million,'' Swain explained. sw.an offers .,....., Huadon .. e•fNrl•nc• to pa- tients. Swain treat. mjuri•• re- lated to auto accidents, 1porla, headaches, back and neck problem• and "just the basic me11 of everyday life c&n came muec:les to tiqhten up." Some occupation• are rouqher than others and may ca\118 mote problems, PETERS ••• - Frompage7 everyone -from iDJant1 to Mnior citizens -have a 1pinal check. "When new patients come in we have a consul- tation, then usually x-raya and an ezam. After that, I Mt up a proqram for corrective care if he aa.id. "Firemen, con- struction jobs and positions where a person at.a &nd drives a lot or does a lot of liftinq and bendinq tend to have more problem's," Swain added. Swain, a resident of Foun- tain Valley, graduated from Cleveland Chiropractic Colleqe in Lot Anqeles Cum Laude and has been practicinq for nine year1. "I am definitely concemed the individual need. it," Peters said. "I practice strictly under the oriqinal principals of chiropractic -I locate and correct the mil&liqnment. I don't miz physical therapy or &nythiiiq elM with my trMt- ment1.'' ' Peters ofJer1 reuon&ble with a person'• well beinq -that ii why I make sure I am. available 24 boun a day -lust in cue." The Chiropractic Health Center'• houn a.re Monday throuqh Friday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturdays by appoint- ment. The office ia located at 9895 Warner Ave. Suite D in Fountain Valley. For more in.formation, or to schedule &n appointment, call (714) 963-0052. price. for individual•, u wel a.1 s~W l&m.ily rat ... Hi olficea abo accepts mo.t in l'\ll&nce plan•. Peter'• Chiropractic C.ute ii locat4td at 17672 Be&c Blvd. in HuntinC)ton Beach For more inJormation., or t tchedule an_ ~ppointment, cal (714) 847--t995. llDll1 LTB llSDUICE? New look, more activities set Sporting House apart Offerin9 more T&riety in fitnea actiYiti.. the most clubl, The Sportinq HoUM in Newporl Beach hu recently under9on• a total refwbilh- ment in ltnactur9, attitude and mana9em.nt, Spy10 Kimble, general m.&A&qer Mid. "We .,. a •mce-oriented club and wut to qiYe mem- bers what they want ud deae"e," Kimble Mid. The club 0Her1 the lat..t up-to- date facilitiel in a cleu en- vironment, he Mid. Chu991 include additions in the locker room• ol new sink• ud counte11, new lounqe chain ud tabl" for the pool &rM, 1prin9-loeded floor in the atudio and a new wood floor for the qym, a1 w.ll u many mo1e improvement.I. The 45,000-iquare-foot club cunenUy features 11 raquet ball courts, fow 1quuh coUJts, thtee sand volleyball court•, outdoor pool, free weiqhts, aerobic cla11es, buket.ba.11 coUJt and wei9ht tJaininq equipment. The club recently added three more Stairmaster' 1 and i1 upqtadin9 its other equipment, Kimble 14id. The Sporting HoU18 is located at 3601 Jamboree in Newport Beach. For more information, call (71 4) 752-0565. Finance is aprobie:m of divorce Durin9 divo1ce, bnucia.l questions cu ran9e from com- mou concerns a.bout joint credit cuda lo complu dilem- ma.a o-.er tu... Certified .. Financial Planners Victoria Felton-Collins, Ph.D .• ud Vi- olet W oodhouee will 1..1i.wer · muy o1 the crucial question• about divorce finances in a televiled proqram to be pres ented by the City of Costa Meaa in February. The proqra.m, "Financial Bea.liti .. of Divmce," will air at 7 p.m. on Chu.net 61, each w edn..day in r ebrua.ry. Pacific Institute uses advanced therapy treatment "We feel it ii importut to educate the public a.bout thetl choices ud options," Wood- bou.ee, said. "Becau.. the disruption crMted by diYorce cu lead to lonq-term fin.anc1a.1 problems often overlooked in standard eettlements. Our 9oa.1 Located in the Metro Center in Fount&lD Valley, Pacific Institute of AdYe.Dced Phylical Therapy bu, for more thu two yea11, prO'fided pain ud streu therapy uainCJ two state- of-the-.art inatrument1; the Electro-ACUICOpe ud My- opcl•. Althouqh traditional phyai- cal therapy teclulique1 ud eHrciM pfOCJT&ma a.re UMd, the t:rMbuntl locua on the UM of th ... two hi9hl7' effective therapeutic mod• tiel. Pa- cific lmtitute ii tM lint clinic in South.na Caliiomi& to oiler individuali1ed, com· prehenaive tJeatment1 usinq the Electro - AculOOpe/Myopulee system. How doe1the therapy work? It waa bated on a meuUlement of the-electrical impeduce and conductance of impaired ti11ue. The computeriled in- 1trumenl1 simultaneously monitor and deliver a painlea, non-invuive tJeatment to re- store impaired tissue to a normal electrical environ- ment. This allow• the body to heal iteelf at a CJTMtly ac- celerated rate, with the ad- ditional benefit of reducinq or el.iminatinq pain. Patients re- 1pondin9 slowly or not at all to conventional phyaica.1 therapy often find dramatic relief from Pacific Institute'• thetapy pro- CJT&ml. NumetoUI clinically contJolled studi .. and papers ha Ye been publiahed support- in9 the efficacy o1 thit tech· noloqy. The adTuta999 ol the ther- apy offered by Pacific Institute ar• m.&DJ. Reccnery ud reb&bilitation time .... mqnificantly reduced. The numbe.r of therapy "You Oon"t Have to Live With It .. • Nttk & Back Pain • Stresan..teadachcs •Slop Smoking • Wdght Losa '·' • F'ttna.k/Male Dlaorden Dr. Loala La, 0.11.D., C.A. lto7Z ._. M llJll 0 l• I& ~ 7I05 WtC (et~) tlillltOTl01-. .. ._ ..... ...-.:.1: CALL .u&• ....._...e.a "' ... _,..._ teaions requiled is aha re- duced. The therapists· a.re biqhJy tI.ai.ned and esperienoed m the UM of the1e instrument•. Treatments are painleu. Pacilic Institute Inc. at 11770 E. Wamer Ave., Suite 103 in Fountain Valley. Call (714) 754-5433. ·. ii to help people recoqnile th rilu ud futuJe couequenc.. ol divorce 80 they cu make the best decisions at a time when they are ezperiencin9 the worst emotional streu." Woodhouee allo pr ... nll aeminan on divoro. in Or- uqe County community col- l99n. r or more i.nformabon, call (714) 755-32~. Why WAiT Foa 11IE Yua 2200 To HAw ThE Body You WA!" I You CAN HAw h Now!!! Ftwd . e AwMIAWI 21J 4J4-ffJt p..;¥. EIKTu ic Mwdi s......un.. • WOllllL10Mwdt~ -.Ai.,..,...., • Sp.ft • Ottlla Rl:lAn4~ • Am CtlWin • 5.,.n:11 ...._. T-..nmrn hpa:Wir Alma ,.....,._., __ ._ C-.U....m4 ..... AMl.,W. • N.#nii1ie1111in • S•• • -~a.-...., .. • HUil• ....... Acx:•n4 ........... , u. ..... . _....... ..._, -· . ~·-.. . ..... p.a. .............. .. .... ~~ .., .... M••• •ft It :ant .... DAILY N.OTl1'lwldlr. a my a 119 -ti .,,,.._.. l Qfiliilw41bA M ~ ~ ffl J~ -•t • • .• I .. The expanded FHP health care network helps you enjoy something everyone covets. Good health. To that end, the mediQJ centers and community physicians in FHP's health care network stand ready to serve you . Qualified physicians and health care professionals understand the irnportanGc of basing patient relationships on trust and genuine concern, as well as medical skill. Yes, you can choose your own doctor . You can also choose to take JftVfDtatJVe health rouswn available at FHP such as healtheducation c~, yuriy physicals, and more. With FHP you also haYC a choice of: • FHP'1 T rip1e Choice Health Maintenance Orpniution (HMO Plan with medial ccntrn in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bunadino counties), group model plans, and FHP community physicians. • FHP1ndmmity Health Plan. • FHP Senior Security Plan for .... ,,,, . . retirees ol employu PIP'. • FHP Senior Plan~for Kniors with Medic:ue . •6iJity, arts-------------- A & 8. Options Aft avail.bit for PutBonly. You Stt, wie Ettl the putat wealth~goodMal~Whichuprm.~why Wf! believe in and cncour_age ~ lft sfylri. Fer information on criiollment au: EmployuGroups-7W95J-8706or2t3/493-6.Ut. Senior,... -.xw225-647.