HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-12-06 - Orange Coast PilotI
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BUSINESS/ A6 THEATER/AB COAST /AJ WORLD/A4
THE ORANGE COAST · 25CENTS
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1989
Lawman faces dismissal over _copter flight
ly ROBERT BARKER
Of -DMly l'lot St11lf
A police scrieant who allegedly
bad a city po.lice helicopter ferry him
and a female comPl'Oion back to
Huntington Beach from Indio last
October bas received notice from
Police Chief Ron Lowenberg that he
m.ar be fired for the unauthorized
night. sources said Tuesday.
Panel
ponders
future
of park
ly IRIS YOl<OI
Of -DMly Not """
The Newport Beach Parks,
Beaches and Recreation Com-
mission Tuc$day told city officials to
investigate what can be done with
the narrow lot tn West Newport
dubbed "Pcot>le's Park" and resent
The commissioners did not dis-
cuss any of their own ideas at arcat
lellJlb Tuesday, but gave parks di-
rector Ron Whitley a list of thinas to
iovestipte, including various costs,
an assessment of the existing plants
on the lot and the feasibility of using
the channel front for a small boat
dock or other recreational activities.
Whitley will present his findings
at the January commission meeting,
at which time commissioners will
belin discusslna what they would
like to sec on the 3,00(}.square-foot
piece of city-owned propeny at 421 0
River Ave.
Voters. in a close race, rejected in
November the sale of the lot, which
the city only this year realized it had
owned since 1936. City officials
wanted to sell the waterfront land
and use the estimated $3501000
from the sale for public proJccts
elsewhere in the city.
However, the couple next door to
the lot, Jack and Mischa Alward.
bad disoovered the vacant. wced-
filled lot upon moving in 2S years aao and trar.sfonned it into a mini·
junale full of exotic plants and trees.
Neiabborina residents. as well as
residenu from other pans or the city
and even out or town, bad come to
consider the tush parcel as a neigh·
borhood park.
A number of city leaders ex-
pressed strona support for the lot
sale, sayina the property was too
small for a public park and that it
did not benefit the public at l.ar&c.
But the Alwards led the successful
pu1-roou effort to save the lot from
iale, which they feared would mean
the destruction of People's Park for
comtruction of a duple~.
FoUowina voter rejection of the
sale, t.bc s-rks commission was
asked by the City Council to ~ful
ly 11udy the property and provide a
tee0mmeadation on whether the Jot
should be retained 11 a puk.
Cornmjllioner Oale Demmer
uted Whitley to provide infor·
mation OD povidina tome type Of
water recreation activities at
People's Part. c.ommisaioner Vir-
,,.... ... ~NIK/AJI
lo addition, two officers in the
city's helicopter squadron were
notified they face lesser disciplinary
action in connection with the fli~t.
City Hall and police sources said.
Sources identified the sergeant
facing termination as Jeff King. a
department veteran who transferred
to the belicot>ter bureau after serving
in other pohcc capacities.
The helicopter allegedly picked up
King and a female compamon after
his vehicle broke down in the desen
city and transported them back to
the city, according to sources.
Lowenberg reponedly sent a letter
to J(jng on Friday disclosing his
intent to take disciplinary acuon.
The police chief declined to confirm
he'd sent the letter. explainint he's
oblipted by law not to reveal infor-
matton about pending personnel
matters 1nvolv1ng public emplo)ees.
He said the investigauon of the
unauthorized flight took "a lot
longer" than expected with in-
vestigators talking to a largt' number
of people in the inquiry.
Lowenberg said he's not taking
the issue lightly. He said he's fulfill-
ing his responsibility to the com-
munity by loolung into allegations of
misconduct and will Lake ap-
8111 GJor of Costa Mesa, who saw • bWae
whll• driving near Tustin Avenue,
.,..., ............ ~ ..................
pabbed • .. rden hos•, dllwbed on th•
root and hosed down the fire.
('0\'ER STORl. II.AM A OHDt:K
Lawyer took ·his h.~mps
defending Randy Kraft
1y JANET ZIMMERMAN
Of -o.-y ,_ sun
For the last four years, C. Thomas
McDonald bas -by his own ad-
missfon -neglected his pro-
fessional contacts, his family and
friends. He became consumed with
defending the state's most prolific
killer in a trial that generated
200,000 pqcs of documents and
nearly S,000 pieces of physical
evidence.
His client in that case. Randy
Kraft, was tentenc:cd last week to
death in the ps chamber for the
homosexual-torture slayinp of I 6
men Kraft picked up durina noc-
turnal outinas on Orange County
hiahways. 1"be finishina touches have ~
~ on Kraft's trial, but the case
11 hardly 1 thina of the past for the
47::-ytar-old McDonald. A framed coUlle of pictures from the trial -
a pft from K.raft•s family -adorns
the wall of McDonald's Santa Ana
office.
As he battles to build a private
leaal practice he has all but ignored.
McDonald ts constantly reminded of
the fight he staged for Kraft's life, he
said in an interview Tuesday. He 1s
opposed to capital punishment.
"We hold ourselves out techno-
logjcatly, economically and socially
as such an advanced country. yet the
way we deal with our problems is to
put someone to death .... To me 1t
JUSt docsn 't make sense," he said.
The Kraft trial was not
McDonald's first death penalty case
and it sunly won't be his last. but it
wu one of the more difficult and the
most unique, be said.
'"'fbe period of time. the dialotue
and the preparation we spent on the
cue is unique,•• he said. "I've never
bad a client that I've rcprnented
that loq. with the educational level Kraft has and a real interest in
participetina in his defense that
Kraft lw shown."
Kraft. who did not tesllf) on has
own behalf. maintained his inno-
cence. even as a upenor Court
judJe upheld a Jury's rccommen·
dauon of death. His sentence will
automatically be appealed to the
Supreme Coun and Kraft. 44. will
t:>t.L represented by coun..appointed
lawyers other than McDonald and
his co-counsel. James Mel'Wln and
William Kopenv.
Still. McDonald believes 1n his
client's innocence, althoU&h he said
Kraf\ may have been present dunng
some of the lulhnas.
"The Randy Kraft that I came to
know, after 1ntcrv1ewtna hundreds
of witnesses.. I just don't believe he
killed anl°ne. I'm not sayina the
facts don t support htm bc•n& pres-
ent at some of thcx, but he's not a
violent pcnon," McDonald utd.
lbe attorney maintains that Kraft
is coverina for the real ktlkr.
Nevertheless. McDonald saad
with 20/20 hindsiabt that he is un-
propriatc action.
The officers are entttlt"d to a hear-
ing before Lowenbcrg to rebut al·
legations. officials in the cit~ 's per-
sonnel department said.
The sergeant and the two officers
are entitled to appear at the heanng
with an auome) as part of the Skell)
hearing process. enacted to give em-
ployees due proceu in d1sc1phnary
matters. offic1als !>aid
ources said none have appeared
at a heanng yet to give their si~ of
the story.
Sources said some allegations 10
beyond the unauthorized helicopter
flight of 100 miles or so to Indio in
the first w~k of October, but didn't
elaborate.
The helicopter involved 1n the
unauthonzed flight was a Ntc-of-
IPlease SH FUGHT I A.21
Fire destroys
2 apartments
in Costa Mesa
1y PAUL ARCHIPLEV ..._,,
Of -DMly -Staff
A spectacular fire attracted hun·
drcds of spectators Tuesda~ and
destroyed two apartment unm 10
;OSIA Mesa.
A thick. gra) plume of smoke
could be seen nsing abo~ the Or·
angc Coast for miles as afternoon
commutcn headed home
Anne LaurcnL who w11h her hus~
lex at 1668 Tustin .\ve . was taken
to Hoag Memonal Hospllal for
treatment of smoke mhalauon
The fire was believed to have
started in a bad.. room of Lhe
Laurents' home. and she credited
the smoke detector wnh saVlng her
life.
When the alarm went off. Laurent
went to the back of the house and
opened the door to th(' back room.
Smoke quickl y billowed into the
other rooms .
Several passersby played roles m
preventing more widespread dam·
sure whether he would take the case
apin. Some critics ha' c said the
case was 1mpo ible from a defense
standpoint. but McDonald saad h11
side put up a "VlJOrous" ckfeiue.
But there were side effects outs1dt
the courtroom. McDonald said he
received thru death thrcau over the
course oft.ht trial but they ~tt not
enouah to make him 11ve up the
CAK.
McDonald aid he worked full-
l'9NM ... Ane>ttNIY I A.21
age, neighbors said.
Dave turt wd be helped evacu-
ate some residents before the fiJ'e
spread
.. It went up 10 about three
minutes," Hart wd. ''All the DCllh·
bors were hetpmg wt~ -
8111 Gyor was dnVlng by. jumped
out and grabbed a garden bole.
··1 saw tb1s gu y trying to SJlnl
over the hou~. and I said why don t
I JUSt hop up on the roof.' Gyor .. ..
Although flames threatened to
engulf the adjacent apartmel\U
where he was standina, Gyor said
cbmbl?f on the roof 1eemed like the
nabt th1na to do.
"If that was my house, rd want
someone to jump up there. too, -be
said. "That'& a scary t.hina to have
all vour stuff bum up." ·
several other meii who saw t.bc
thick plume of smoke arabbed boles •
and knocked on doors to warn i:ai-
dent.s of the danJCT.
"I hopped two fences to ICt over
1~-.. flft/A.21
Child nearly
Clrowns'fh
condo's
.waterway
Rat:.../nfested date-snake nand In hot water
-STIW 11.Maa .. ._ .......
--~-_.,.. I ) iM Cow •• (' h
..S. dln111ald W a ._. .....,: ... ' ..... ::_.. ... ,.., ....
.... , ........... 009-____
~·1'11 ..... ,. ....... ...
.. -.YMA• ... .._ ........
For the IOC08d lime '" two ween. ne Irvine Co. uanonced it wlU rOll
blct tbe flD1 OD aparUneftU ~ lllMd u aft'ol'Clable bouaina. th11
time drawiq prailc from tbe City
Council.
On iecommendation of city staff
ud council. Irvine Co. oflkiala de-cided to bue fu'ure rent increuea
OD median iocome flaurcs produced
bv lbe Department of Houlina and Urban Development and reduce
rent increues to an averqe of S.9
percent.
la MditiGD. muen wM piUd in-tlatid ·:es lhil ~ will receive a rwftmd"r:" anytbina tbe)' paid over
their new rent.
-we all ar:ioredate Tbe Irvine Co. comins bKk-with a proposition in
the spirit of tbe oriainal bond ~ meat,•• aid Councilman Cameron
Cotpove on Tuetday as he tbinked
1M development company for the
teal 4ecrealeL
The recicnt skyrocketina rents and
sublequent reductions effected 26S
apenroents in the city,. built by The
Irvine Co. with lU-rree financina
from the city in a bond qreement. •
The decision to u.e the HUD
LB mobile· ·11ome . . .
owners ask city
for rent protection
8y LISUI EARNEST
Of .. Delly .... SUfP ., . Lquna Beach residents packed
the council chambers Tuesday night
to ask that South Laguna mobile
home parks be zoned for mobile
home use only and that rent hikes be
halted while the city considers a rent
control ordinance for the parks.
The response of residents, many
of whom were bused from the
Treasure Island Mobile Home Park.
was part of a larger public hearing
on cbaqes to the city's zoning and
land-use rqulations. . . . .
"There are many senior c1t1ZCns in
the parks who are des~te. and I
mean really desperate,' said mobile
home resident Lucille Vlasis.
The purpose of the South Laguna
Specific Plan Consolidation, which
wu under consideration by the City
Council, is to absorb South Laguna
into the city's general plan. South
Lquna was annexed to the city two
yean ago.
The public hearing was the first of
a two-step process necessary to ap-
prove the comprehensive package
before an interim ordinance that
FLIGHT
fmmA1
the art McDonnell Douglas SOO E
that costs about SS00,000 to
$600,000. The helicopter, which can
travel about 140 miles an hour, bas
sophisticated surveillance equip-
ment on boa.rd. officials said.
It costs between SlSO and $450 an
hour to operate. Qficials said.
After the IndicY'fli&ht came to
li&bt. Lowcnbera changed depart-
m"lnt resutalions to require that all
so-caUed cross country flights be
authorized by the lieutenant in charJC of the aero squadron. not by
the seracant or officers.
Lowenbera also took steps to
tiahten non-official use of police
PARK
,romA1
pnia Herbens said she wanted to sec
a ctmahY dotk established there.
Commissioner Jo Vandervort
uked for an assessment of the exist-iaa planu, sayina she had beard
reports about bow rare and e-.otic
t0me of the peenery is. She also
ubd for cost estimates to curb and
pave half the lot for parkina.
Commissioner Taylor Grant
uked for cost estimates on mainten-
ance of the lot u a park in cue the
lot is kept as is or if the existina
Dlanta are to be tom down for a
lawn.
ATTORNEY
PfMIAt
time on the Kraft defense, rarely t.akin& on other d uties. He refused to talk ibout bow many hours he put
in per ~ becau.e ooW't costs ..odated with the trial have been ..... McDonald wu chie-f deputy pgb-
now guides development in South
Laguna expires Dec. 17.
As of late Tuesday night, council
members indicated they would take
action on the measure~ the next
council meeting Dec. 12.
While changes in hei t restric-
tions and the percentage of a lot that
can be developed have generated
considerable discussion during the
26 Plan~ Commission meetings
on the sub,JCCt, the most emotional
responses have come from mobile
home park residents worried that
redevelopment will force them out
of their homes.
The Plan.ning Comm ission
proposal calls for a rent moratorium
while city rent control measures are
considered and for a zone change
that would protect mobile home
parks from redevelopment.
The land-use plan carries over
Laguna Beach zoning regulations to
South Laguna where possible but
mostly retains the South Laguna
Specific Plan.
The consolidation plan would re-
strict residential building heights to
25 feet on flat lots and 30 feet on
hillside lots .
helicopters and remove them from
the category of an "E ticket ride"
when rides fonnerly were auctioned
off by charitable organizations.
During the course of the investiga-
tion. City Administrator Paul Cook
said be on~ was given a nde on a
police helicopter to the city to attend
an important meeting when his car
broke down at a Chamber of Com-
merec retreat m Fallbrook.
Cook said a police copter also
took him to Los Angeles Inter-
national Airport on another oc-
casion to catch a flight to another
meeting.
Lowcnberg and Cook both said
the flights were authorized and dif-
ferent from the Indio flight ,under
investigation.
All commissioner$ agreed the park
needs to be marked with proper
fencing to identify the property as
open to the public. "It has to be
made lO look like a park." Com-
missioner John Konwiser said.
The first and most important de-
cision the commission will have to
make, bowe\'er. is whether the lot
should be included in the c1ty parks
l)'S1em.
Since the lot is cumntly zoned for
duplu or condominium develop-
ment, the city's aeneral plan would
have to be modified and the site
would have to be added to the city's
rccratioo and open spa.cc clement
should city leaden decide to retain
the property u a palk.
lie defender for l S years1 before
Merwin talked him into taKing the
Kraft case. He said he bad no inten-
tion of aoina into private practice
and had been naive to think he
could finish the case in two years.
In the beaianina, he was .,.anted a
leave of a&tence from the public
defender's ofticc.. but that was re-
lcinded by the Board of Supervisors.
.. Mould -lower, IDOle itilble reat bia-for Nlidnu. nc company bid been usiaJ quar-=median iocome ~
thcd by Chapman C'dlcltt the
County Median Jncome
Incle-., which bad mistakenly in-
flated incomes, and therefore rents,
to levels which renters oomplained
were unreachable.
Hipl rent.I in ~ed affordable
bou11~ had driven many renten to
complain to the City Council . in
recicnt weeb that they were bdna
priced out of their homes.
The Irvine Co. had set rent in-crases. bued on the Oranae County
......... ~ ll.7 . t
emtilr. la aic.ober, IOme residents
..,. laformed their rent would
jmnp by I S.4 pen:nt.
"rve belD 10ld ru aet a 4.S per-
cent COit of livi!IS incttaSC in my
Uiy neat yeer. I Just don't see ho~ J'U be able to keep up," said Candi
S.ySor, a raicknt of the San Marcos
aparUnent complex, at the Nov. 28
Oty Council meetiaa.
With tbit latest rent reducti6n,
Ba_ylor'a li~room apartm~nt will coat her UOI eech month, m-
stad oftbe S62l per month after the
last rent roll t.ck. In fact. all raidenU who moved
iato .... •••nrz 11 18 1919. 01 ,...._. w ilat •• in 19t9, will
DOW ...... S601 per mooth . AD,..,-. '"i*d more tban the
$601 lid will naive a mund.
..lt'a na:' ::r tbu I hoped for. rm very •• Baylor said.
~Ol all l'Midents,)s>wever, wtte
quite IO baoDY. ·•rm ltilf payina almoet SO per-
cent al •1 .my bi '*'"" aaid Beu y
Frost. a three-year retident of North· wood Place whole rent roU beck on
her one .. bedroom home only
amou.nu to S2 per month. Frost laid lhe wu told, on mov-
ina into bier aparunent. that rent
.............. ,........ •.•...
iW'lill'' wer"e .... -her~· Nolbin& .., said abcMil .tbe county 1
mediaO iococne. • --However, JohD Maciha, vice
president• of residential aMt1t1 inan.
nt, said rent on ap9ttmeata in :':oct Pf'Oll'J1l have ~~)'I been ~on tbe county medllll income.
The only thina cbanaina in the
way the company calculates rent
Increases is who say~ ~t the me-
dian incofllC is. HUD or Chapman
CoUese's index. In the event HUD d~ not. pub-
lish a yearly fiaure, Maciha said the
company Will revert to the, OranJC
County Median Income ~nde~ for its
standard. · '
Screams
scare off
would-be
robbers
ly The Assod•ted Press
Two would-be robbers clubbed
three tellers closing up a credjt union
office at the El Toro Marine Corps
Air Station but fled without any
money because one of the victims
bepn screaming. a Marine CortK
spokesman said Tuesday. \ The FBI was investigating the
Monday night robbery attempt at
the station. Lt. Gene BroW!'e said
The tellers were ~loStnJ the
Marine Air Federal Credit Union for
the night but had not yet set the
night alann when they were attacked
about 5: I 5 p.m.
The robbers were either alread) 10
the building or entered through an
unlocked employees' door .
Plrefleht•n mop up after blaSI Mid fir• on boltt • New,art DUIMtl ._....on TuesdaJ· Each teller was hit on the back of
the head but one scrC'amed for hC'lp
In vestigators believe that caused the
robbers to Oee. Military police were
notified at 5:28 p.m. by a teller
calling on the 911 emergency hne Explosion guts unoccupi.ed
boat; 2 other crafts damaged
"No money was discovered m1s'>-
ing," Browne said.
The three tellers were treated at
hospitals and released after rece1"1ng
stitches.
Only general descriptions of the
assailants were available. Both were
described as m their late teens or
early 20s. One was white with lontt
blond hair. The other man was blat ~
wnh curly hair.
8y PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of -0.ily -Stal9
A 42-foot plea.sure boat went up in
flames and two others were damaged
Tuesday following an explosion at
the Newport Dunes Marina.
No one was on any of the three
boats when the fire started at about
10:10 p.m.
However. some people live on
other boats in the marina. which is
located on the inland side of Coast
Highway off Tremont Drive, and
several of them said they beard an
explosion, then saw flames shooting
up out oft.he cabin cruiser owned by
Tony Mokovitch. _
"I heard an explosion, a big boom,
and ran out," said Vern Schafer,
who was watching TV in his boat.
"Rames were going I 0 to IS feet in
the air. It went up immediately.
· "People live on that boat now and
then. That was my first concern,"
Schafer said.
He and others grabbed fire ext-
inauishers off their boats and tried
to battle the blaze.
Nita Drewner was returning from
the restrooms when she saw the fire.
She rushed down to the dock and
yelled for her husband Carl to dial
91 l. '
Toll agency hires FIRE fromA1 finance director
Walter Krcutzem, fonner admin-
istrative services director and chief
financial officer for the city of
Irvine, l)_as been hired as the deputy
director of finance and admio*.
tratin for Orange County's toll agen-
cies.
Krcutzen is expected to bcgjn
work for the Transportation Cor-
ridor Agencies in early to mid-De-
cember.
He will be responsible for all
financial aspects of the three cor-
ridor projects.
here," Todd Summers said.
Summers, 18. also stood on a roof
and battled the blaze.
"That house over there would've
been toast if not for the residenu,"
he said. pointina to an adjaoent
home.
Chris Kemmel and Steve
Strombera also knocked on doon,
wamina nei&hbors to get out.
There were at ICl5t two ex-
plosions. One was an air condition-
lDI unit; the other, windows beina
blown out by intense heat. witneucs
said.
Summen said he also warned
people to turn off their ps lines to
prevent further explosions.
A brand new Cadillac parked in a
carport atljacent to the apartments
also WU ~tted.
-1 heard a 'pop' and it was blazing
immediately," she said.
Her husband and others moved
several boats away from the fire. but
were unable to get too close.
"I couldn't act down there, If was
so hoL" he said_
Mokovitch's boat, where the fire
reportedly started, was gutted. Two
other boats sustained damage as
well, firefighters said.
Although cause was unknown
pending a~ investiga~on by fire. of-
ficials, netghbon said Mokov1tch
kept a li&ht on in the boat, raising
the possibility of an electrical short
sparking gas fumes.
Firelighters from Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach responded to the
4:45 p.m. call. It took 32 firefighters
nearly an hour to control the blaze.
Costa Mesa fire spokeswoman Susan
Wood said.
Red Cross volunteers were on the
scene as well. offering assistance.
Aanes Peterson. who lived in the
only unit in the triplex that wu
saved, said she would try to stay
with friends for the night.
A former showpn in New York
City, the 83-year-old Peterson said
she -.sn't worried about losina her
possessions.
.. I aot my pbonebook, .. she said.
clutchina her address book. "What-
ever else is in the house, I don't
care."
Fire investipton / were sifting. tbrouch the rubble late Tuesday in
teareb of the cause of the fire.
Dalnqe costs had not yet been
determined.
It was unknown ho" the robber\
fled.
Three gunmen
rob Huntington
hardware store
By the D•lty PHot
Three men with handguns robbt'd
Home Depot 1n Huntington Beach
on Tuesday mommg, pohce said.
The suspects entered the home
improvement store at 6912 Edinger
Ave. through a back door at 6: I 0
a.m. when employees were arriving
for work, Police Lt. Gary Davis said.
The robbers held IS employees at
aunpoint while they ordered man· aaers to open the store's safe, Davis
said.
After ordering the employees mto
a restroom, the robbers fled with an
undisclosed amount of cash, credit
ca.rd receipts and checks. he said.
Davis said the three suspects were
described as black males. 2S to 35
yean old and of medium bei&ht and
weifht. One was wearina a ski mask
dunna the holdup, Davis said.
The robbery is similar to teveral
others that have occurred in the Los ~les area since last March, Davis
He had already committed to Kraft
and the judge so he went forward -----------------------------------------
with the plan.
"You have to make sacrifices.
Sure, you're paid on the county rate,
you work an hour, you act paid an
hour, but you make some tremen-
dous sacrifices," McDonald said.
"Nearly everythiq suffered dur-
ina that time ...
Gem
Talk .JlL
BAUME & MERCIER
GE NEVE
!Wire CGmlll!CICIOrl tar men
W-.r ,..... tOtt""'
Jiftltt C'9MI ... ---
I I
. l
Holiday traditions
taught to the young
The Discovery Muteum will offer a Victorian
Holidly Cran Workshop for children between the
or 5 ind 12 years from 9 a.m. to noon
Salurday.
Participants will learn past holiday traditions,
play old-fashioned games, create Victorian decor-
ations and taste treats from the Kellogg House
kitchen. The class is in conjunction with the
Ol;rl•nds. and Gingerbread exhibit, which shows
how Chnstmas was celebrated at tho 1um of the century. ,,
Fee for 1hc workshop is $12, which includes
materials for four craf\ projects and light refresh-
ments.
The mu~um is at 3101 W. Harvard St., Santa
Ana. For reservatio ns or more information call
54-0-0404 .
Flrt!f/ghtt!rs for tots
The Ncwpon ~ach Fire Depanmcnt is par-
ticipating in the annual Marine Corps Reserves'
Toys for Tots drive by providing collection barrels
in all the city fire stations until Dec. 15.
Those intf'rcstcd in donating should bring
new, unwrapped toys to any of 1he fire stations
througho ut the c11y.
IJVoodbrldgt! Christmas party
Woodbridge Village Center in Irvine will host
an old-fashioned Christmas on Saturday. PlannW
acti vities include holiday crafts. pic1ures with
Santa, refreshments and entertainmen1. The com-
munity 1s invlled to the cn y-sponsored event.
For more 1nforma11on call Dt-erfield Com-
munity Park at 551-8638.
Holiday gl~s workshop
Irvine will offer a ch1ldren"s "·orkshop 1n
creating artistic hOhda)' T-shirts as Christmas gifts
from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday at the Fine Arts
Center 1n Heritage Park. 14J21 Yale Ave.
Tht' "·o rkshop allows children 6 to 9 years old
10 crt'att' unique shirts using fabnc crayons and
shiny paints. Pat11ci pants arc asked to bnng 1wo
cotton-polyester T-shins for pro1ec1s. ~
· Cos1 for the "class. tiiu&h1 by· Vif'gitua Moncur:···
is S 15. For rescrvauons or mort' 1nforma11on call
552-1 0 18.
Collt!gt! shows off fashions
Orange ("oast College "'•II present a fashion
show themed "SI) les From Sand to Silk"" at noon
Thursday 1n the tollegc cafcieria. Styles for men.
womrn and r htldren will b(' pr~·scnted and door
prizes "·ill b(o a'A·arded.
Studt!nts· art on display
Works b) stud('nts at Orange County High
School of the Arts w11\ he on display 1n the Ora n~e
Coast CQlle!JC l..rt Galler)· Friday through Dtc. 2 •.
The e;ch1b11 includes drn...,·1ngs. "''a1ercolors.
ceramics. pnn11nak1ng. opaque painting and JCW-
clry. • Gallery hours arc 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekdays.
The campu!. 1s at :!701 rain •1e"' Road. ("os1a
Mrsa.
For more 1nforma11o n about thc e.-.h1b11, call
at 432·50JQ
How to ht!al from abust!
ABC Group (Abuse. the Body and Crcatlvnyl.
will be prc$Cnted by Elilabcth Mclaren 1hrough
VOICES tV1c11ms Of Incest Can Emt'rge
Survivors) 1n a one-day "''orkshop from 10:30 a.m.
to 3:30 p.m. Saturda)
Group mC'mbcrs learn to participate 1n hcahng
adult symptoms related 10 childhood sexual abuse
through rreat1v(' tools of wnttt'n and visual
journals, inner sound and movement awareness.
For reservations or more information call
Elizabeth McLaren at 646-7646.
Tht!raplsts hold mt!t!tlng
The Orange l-ounty Chapter of C.alifomi_a
Marriage and Family Tht'rap1sts have their
monthly attomey/therap1s1 network luncheon and
program at noon Friday al the Orang.t Coon~
Medical A'Ssoc1ation Conference Cenlcr, 300 S.
Flower St., Orange.
Guest speaker will be Commissioner Richard
Vogel. Family Law Panel, Orange County Superior
Coun. speaking on ""How to prepare your client for
family law litigation ...
Cost is SI 3 for attorneys and memben. S 16
for gursts. Luncheon and program are open to all
attorneys. family therapy practitionen and thr
communjty.
for rescrva1ions or mart information call
6JS-7720.
Wednesday, Dec. 6
No meetings schudulcd.
Thursday, Dec. ·7
• 7:30 p.m. '"~-P......, Cemm,_,...,, counciJ chambers, I C1v1c Center Plaza.
• 7:30 p.m. Ne.,.rt Bead P'•--hc C..-
mht'-, council chambers. ~JOO Newpon Blvd.
CO\SI, DAJLYPILDT~.~1.-...
L.enney named Laguna mayor
lty Ll'SUE EARNEST
OfW-0..,--ill""'
Lida Lenney, an environmentally
mindod Democrat who Jost an uphill
battle for the 40\h Congressional Dis1rie1
seat last year, was unanimously voted
into the mayor's scat by her collequcs
Tuesday night.
The S6--ycar-0ld former teacher ac-
cepted the gavel from Bob Gentry. who
has served as mayor of Laguna Beach for
the past year. Gentry will rotate to his
former City Council position. It was
Gentry's second term as mayor.
Lcnney, who was elected to the City
Council in November 1986, is the only
member of the council who has not
previously served as 'mayor.
•
Lenney and Gentry have both been key
playen in the effon to stop development
1n Laauna Canyon. Lcnney founded the
La&una Canyon Constrvancy 10 promote
that aoal two years aso.
Lcnney earned a master's dcg.rtt 1n
social ecology from UCI in 1984 and
p ve up a teaching career rn 1987 10
devote more 11mr to poh11cs. She LS tht'
mother of 1wo grown adopted children.
Ounng her longshol run for Congress
aaainst R r publ1 can r and1dalt'
Christopher Cox. she defined herself as a
liberal o n socia l issues with pan1cular
concerns aboul the en\'Lronment and
womcn"s IS'iucs Onc of Lenney's fint
actions as a tounr 1J...,,oman was 10 declare
Laguna a nuclt'ar-free zone.
Marth.I Collison was elcc:t.ed mayor pro
tem. She was elected 10 the council in
1984 and also has served as mayor.
Stcppina aside, Gentry waa presented
with cards and aif\.s from fellow council
members, ,ncludina a T-shin from Col-
li10n on which were stenciled the words,
'"The only openly py elected official."
The phrast elicitW laughter and ap.
plausc from the audience bccausr it 1n-•
variably follows Gentry's name in every
news account.
Ahhou&h the year was marked by
tragedy (or Gentry, who lost his long-
time companion to AIDS, he called 1t
professionally a fun and eoJoyable tenn
as mayor.
o..,. ,,_ ,.,._ .,. ---
Employees Kimberly Wells and Mike Klauslng decorate Chrlstma• tree In the Dally PllOt 10.bby.
Oaily Pilot launches its annual
hol.iday drive .for needy youths
By the Dally· Pilot
'\,l·l"J ~ ()rangl' (. .1.1\I .tiildf\·n 1<11J he·
rl·l~ 111~ t•ll thl' gl"lll'r<•'rt~ of !hl·1r nu1rl·
,t1tlt1,•111 1i.·1~hl'-1r\ 1u1 \1111ll' hulid,1\ 1"hl"l'r
uudr1 111,11 11.-1·, !hi' <"hn,lrlla\
l h1.• \).111~ l'1lul h,1, IJ Ulllhl•d rl\ Jiflh
.. 1111111.d · (1111• ,1 I 1n ll· ( hn .. un.1 .. :· :ind
\ll~.llll/>°l'o hP!ll,: IP 1.t111l'lL ~.tllll• g1t"l!!o lnr
11\1. ,111l.!1r11 ,ind h"1'11 -.ig•'!\ p( lll'l'd~
(11.11\~1· ( u.1,1 1.inullt"'
I h.· ,,,111·1111111 11dl run 1hrL1ugti l>..·l
~!1 .11111 l)a1l\ f'1l<•I r1'a1.l1.·r .... 1d \l"rl1~('f'
.tll•I ~1np\11\1"•:, .. 1r,· t"l·1ng .1 .. 1.,·d h• dnn.11~·
11~·1\ \llllll,!l)pt"d jlJl'\l'lll\
l hc ~I ll' .. 111 h1: 1urn1·d '"~·1 It' lh•·
1h.ull\ \11,tr,· l!u1 \t•l\1.'' o>I { <l\\:t \\\",a .
"f111t1 111 turn '1111 dt~t11\iu1l" th 1.•n1 nn
( 1111,1111.1' I 11· lu h>i:.11 nl·1·J~ f,'.lflHhc\.
'"[)unn~ thl· h11lld,1' -.t'.'a\on . 11"' ca'' to
~<;I \'."a ught up 1n thl· hu,1ll· and hu,tll·.
d1tlilullll'' at "11rk .ind prcpara1 1un\ for
our ov..n lanuh cclchra11on~."-'Wild
l"1n:u!;111on ll1rl·<·t;,,. TPlll Bud d . ''ho 1~
hl"adin~ th'' \l·.1r·, dn'l'
··p1l·a~ 1alo.l' J n1onH·n1 l\1 lh1nlo. v..ha1
.i l'hlld', < hn .. 1n1:is 1' hkl· 1•hcn e'en 3
1110 •• h.,1 prt·"<-·nt di>t·,n·1 f11 1ntil thl' ranu !~
htal~l't ··
( r11t' l":lfl tx· drnpf'l"d nlT undl"r thl' < hn,una' 110.:1· lul"<lll"d 111 !hl" loihh' of
lhl" !>ail ) 1'11111 uni1i.'). 1Jll \\ Ha~ ~t .
I l1 .. 1a \le':t
l hl" ··(,11l· .1 ( 1ltll' ( hn,tma,·· prn-
ira m "'a' ... 1.1rt1·d ti•l" \t:.1 r~ a.Ell "'hl"n )ail~ P1l11t l"fllpl1 "l'•"' rc:il1tl'd rnan~ l hil·
Jrcn. l'Sflt'l 1;1lh k"l·n-a~,·r\. nus;ht no!
ll"Cl'l\l' an• g.111 \ lll"l"<.Hi,,· nf '1na n11al
hard!.h1p'>
The efTon ha'> gro"'n s1eadd) since the
firs1 \ear 'Ahcn JUSt 475 gifts 'A'Crt col-
lt•ctl·d. Two )cars ago. mort' than 1.500
g1t"1~ 'A'('re donated.
Last \Car. 1ht· gifts were d1srnbu1C'd as
par1 o( some .?.500 bundles of food.
e luth1ng and ro~s tha1 SOS dehvcrW to
nC<'d' families.
(i1fts should be un"·rap·pc-d or clrarty
markt'd for a bo~ or girl and 'A 1th the
appropnait: ilge range. c·ash donations
and non-pe-nshahlt' fOod als.o arc v.·cl-
l-o mt.
< lfftcr houf'I arc 8 a.m to 5: JO pm
• 'Al'C'kda)S.
.\n\ gifts dchvcrcd after O.:C. ~O "'11\ be
donalcd 10 Orange .... ·ood. thc coun1 y
ht,ml' for abuscl.1 and neglected chrldren.
Mesa approves bingo fund-raisers
By BOB VAN EYKEN
ex ,..,. o~ ~-''afl
<·o,ta \\c<;,.1 •h<1ntatile and Cl\I\. ur-
g:u111.11HHl' in nl'l"d of a fund-ra1s1nil
lx>o\t "di b..· a tile 10 organ1tc bingo
gan1c-. 111 Tal\C nlOnl·~. under ;i ne"'' c11~
urd1nan1•' ap1ll"l)\l'J ~.-ar\) Tur'M.ia) morn-
'"" The (·11~ ("ounc1I had already g1,en
prl·hn11nJI) appro' al to the mca .. ure la!.I
n1unth.
l{('pn:scn1a11''es of several org.an1za-
11ons 1otd thl· \11~ Council they IX"lieved
hingo v..ould be a useful fund-raising 1001.
Hoh t-l an..,111 prl"\ldl'nt ol the ( O'i ta
~l l·'oa \\•tl·r:in ~ tla!l. -..;111.I thl· hall"~ hm-
ttcd ca('h11.~1t\ n1Jd1· n1h1.·r l~ I'll., i•f mone~ -
n1a~1ng 1."' l'nl' 1n1pr:it u,·al
\11' ('C\unc1I 1ncn1~·r. appro,L·d the
hing.L; l>rd1nancc unan1nlt'U'il). although
<;('\ ('r.tl n1l·n1bt·r<; -.:11d th<'' "'ere no1 entlrl·I~ pk·a51.·d v..nh the ·prosf>C'{'t of
··gambling·· v.·11h1n c1t' hnut~
Onl\ <"crt1f1ed non-profi1 org,an1ta11ons
basccl · 111 ("osta Mc~ for at least thr«
)Cars "'111 be pcrm11tcd 10 hold h1ngo
games H\ lhC ("II).
Game 11ml'S 'A1ll bl· l1m1ted 10 11 a.m
to 9 p.m . and organ1za11ons will b(o
perm111cd to host no m ore than one game
a "'t"t'k
-\lcoho hc bcvrragcs will be proh1b1tcd
a1 bingo games and all gamrs must be
open to poltcc 1nspcctro n at an) 11mc.
Organ1lat1ons appl ~1 n1 for bingo per·
mns "'1\1berrqu1~10 submn lhc names
of all 1hc1r offic:crs for background
c hecks.
Each organ1zat1on w11\ pa) a hcensc ftt
of up to 550.
Thc new ord1nanCt" .,.,.,JI go into effc.ct
1n 30 days.
Missing yachtsman rep9rts he Is safe, stlll at sea
ly Chy N~s Servke
LONG BEACH -A Marina del Rey
mariner reported overdue sine!'
Thank.J&iving made radio contact with
lhe Coast Guard Operations Center in
Lont Beach on Tuesday and lndicated he
was safe and had plenty of food and fuel.
Robert McDouaJc, 61, s~ke in a calm
voice and reported the position of his 32-
foot slooo Minerva 11 1bou1 IS nilln
northwest of Point Con«pllon. sald
Coasl Guard spokc~"'"·oman EJil:abcth
Neely.
McOougle's son. Mike. of M1ss1on
Viejo h1d ~por1ed his fa1her ovcrd~ on
Nov. 23. when the cider man failed to
.show up for Thanksg1 v1n1 dinner.
McDouglc: had departed Honolulu on <kt. 9 for a voyage 10 San Franci·sco and
was e~pec:ted to make land in early
November, said Neel)°.
In 1 7 a.m. conversation Tuesday, the
mariner told the Coast Guard he was
unaware th1t he had been t~ subject of
an Uracnt M1rine Information Broad-
c.asl.
McOou&lc tokl the Coast Guard he is
in aood shape. has plenty of fuel and
provisions ind cxpcctS to land in Marina
de.I Rey on Dec. 8.
In the event of a delay. tomconc
should be nolified, the C~st GU1rd said .
UCI prof
seeks-FBI
fife on
ex-Beatie
By 808 VAN EYKEN
Cf -o...,. ,,_ '"""
.4. UC! h1stof) proft"Ssor who IS
challeng.ing the FBI O\"t'"r a St"Cret file kept
by thr bureau on former lkatle John
Lennon was back 1n coun Tue!iday try1ns
to wtn custod:o of hundrt"ds of pages of
censored documents.
Jon \ll1encr. au1hor of the 1981 book
··come Together: John Lennon and his
Time ·· S3\"S documents he obtained
unde; the Frero.om of lnforma11on Acl 1n
the early I Q80s show that federal in·
vcstigators. al the request of the CIA.
kept close surveillance on Lennon. par-
ticularl) on his pro-peace act1,·n1cs pnor
10 the 1971 Republican Nauonal Con-
vention.
Wiencr contends federal authon11es
were try1ni to neutralize Lt-nno~·s ac-
u~·ities which. n .... •as bel1c11ed. might be
pol11icall~ damaging to then prcsidcnl
Richard ~1,;on . "'ho was campa1gn1ng for
re~lccuon .
··w e know abou1 the N1•on Whitt'
HouSt" tn the \\'a1crgatc era:· Wiener
Y.1d.--iha1 the~ uc;cd the P<l"'"cr of govrm-
ment to get at the enemies of the pttSI·
dent. I call 1h 1~ 1he rock and roll Wa1er-
gate. ··
Bui the document~ IA'1rncr obtained
from the FBI consisted of less than a
third of Lennon·s 281-pagr tile . .\nd larsc
segments of 1hc 82 pages ht!" did o~ta1n
had been masked 'A'llh hcav~ black hnes.
FBI officials claim the censored ma-
terial tndud~ 1nfOrma11on that m1&.ht
comprom1sr nauonal sccunl}. and brini:
about rctalia1ion from a fo~1gn pov.-cr.
Wiener. rcprescntcd b~ 1he .\merican
Civil L1ben1cs Union. tiled suit 1n 1983
1n fWrral coun 10 In to force thc FBI to
release the censored-1nforma1ion .
~ federal Judge ruled 1n favor of 1he
FBI in Matc"h . \\'1t'ncr appealed. ··we think their exempuon claims arc
in111l1d."' A .. C LL' a t~o rnc y Din
Mannalefsk\ said. ··Tht' -kica that thett
wo uld bt' ecOnom1c or military rttaliat1on
against thc U nited States because ofwhal
1s contained in a file on John Lennon is
prepos1rrous. ··
He said Wiener and 1he .\CLU bchcve
the FBI may be w1thhold1ng the drx:u-
ments bccau~ 1t doe-s not wan1 the extent
of ns surveillance to be made public.
Mannakfsky s.a1d he did not lc..now
when the federal 9th D1stnct Coun of
Appeal would render 11s dcc1s1on. He said
he hoped to havr 1t wtlh1n 90 days.
U.S. Justice Dcpanment a1tomt'y
M iriam Nisbet. who 1s rtpresc:nting the
FBI , could not be reached for comment
Costa Mesa hires
finance director
11y The DaUy PHot
Susan L Temple, finance director foe
lhc city of Buena Park. w;u repl~
rttiriR& Cos14 Mesa Finance Otm:tor
Rohen Oman. Costa Mesa City Manqer
Allan Roeder announced this week.
Temple. of Hun11ng1on Beach. will
servr as the c1tr·s chief financial advisor
and will administer an annual bud.ad of
S67 million.
A veteran of 16 years in financial
manqcment. Temple has SttVed niM of
those years with the Buena Pait.. where
~r duties include treasury manaacment.
aienttal accounting. purcha~n, and dllta
processina.
A 1978 &r'ldUllC of Cal State Fu.Uc:noa
in business administration ind accoliln\·
iq. Temple also bolds an matcrs ~
in publk: adminsltn.tion and puMiic
• finaooe rtom the same unlva"lity. •
1m.e Sundly· ni&ht and Monday momina,. ••• window. then 1ook the S2SO pull-ou1
stereo from a 1988 Mazda pickup on
the 10800 bkK:.t of San Paco Av-
enue.
raidcnt wtis 1onc. Tbc resident re-
tu.med &om out of town and fovod
1tkct pteccs of ber silverware let aone. The loss was cslimakd at
o(W. lldl SU.... wllcte die padPod< --B I .. • ••••
Two palm trtts plan~ ln front of
1beCo&Iin1Co., 1401 Alton A"e., fell
mlm to thieves sometime between
l'rid&y DIP• and T...,.,.y momina. .. ,..,... rei>Ofted. • • • A SJOO concme vibrator .as - -... °"" 8"il4!iltl ..... :::-··· 1960Mal11St.-...... , p.m_~ .... = .... a IWOlll IU a. wbo
.. ..... dley lold policl.
A pune was \lkcn from a kx:atioo
ia \he 400 block of Nonh COlst
ttipway on Monday. The lou was _ ..... uoo.
'
S7,llO,, '. • • •
A suitcatc. tome do'lhitll and
linens weR-\Hen from a con-
domini\Nll on Bl~t Coun white
lhl l'Wlidence. ,.. beina shown Aw
...... by ..... --"'
Cotla ...
A Ible( -owr a ...it door •NcillJ 1om .wtlile•~--
ioiol101111,•cf -...S -two._ m a NI 1 0:1 .... __ ... _____ _ . •'• . _...,.., _,,_= .............. -... . _ .... _ .... _
-
•••
A th.id pried lbc: b* on a V~U.. -.n Rabbit l*'ktd at 660 To~ °"'"' Ori.. and stole a $4.50 rte.wood .,..U-n -!hit wu ...-..... """"-•••
----MOia am.--...... --o(W_Dri.._ • •• A••• lai dtie D)C) .... r6 _om..., ... -..... . _. W ctiltilw • S.-. ......
Na 11.ar..waa,. ... IMlll' "--·-,-----------. l.iie• loclpod-hi lk llOO-fl _.,~1 ~,I' .' -= A•lwi• ••-1 ,. .. Mor 1., "' 7 a • ...._ . *'LIL~ ' ~~
,.--, T; p .. J!,.=fl ~ f i; .. a .._. __ , ,,, . ........... ' :. =~~·.,::-.. ~ii '<••"•• 'Ii.ZS: . .. ... _, ,,, -
Cease-fire called In Phlllpplnes
MANILA, Philippines (AP) -inaumction. Rebel and eovemmeot fOrces called .. You, my beloved coun~en. I
a c:eue--ftre today and evacuated depend on you," she uid. 'Let us
buodteds of Americans and other tee each other on Dec. 8 and show
fore:ipen from hotels in Makati to the world that the majority of the
financial area .where fiahlina had rtlipi.nos believe in democracy and
kept them trapped for four days. will ajve everythina they can for
The military chief named a neao-prosress and for peace.•• f
tiator to discuss a peaceful end to The a~I seemed to be a sian the crisis with rebels who bepn a tbat Aqu1no faces mountina pressure
coup 'atlempt apinlt President Cor· amid the armed chaJlenae by mili· azon Aquino last Friday. tary mutineers and demands from
Aquino bad cartier ruled out talks her own followers for substantial ~th the rebels and told them "sur-cba.naes in her policies and adminis--
render or die.•• In an emotional TV tration. lddress today, Aquino appealed to ''I know that I owe my prcsidcn~
the ralipino people for support. to you,"Jbe told the people .... did
T...,• NM*• of San PrM'ICIKo ••dlan1•• •••11n91 wtltl
relMI 1raap1 ouul•• • Manlla hotel.
S~a· extemporaneously. an not thinP of bein& your president. I
obvaously fati&ued Aquino asked just wanted to serve you. I just want
rtlipinos to tum out in the st.ruts ~ to restore democracy. I want to
Friday in a show of support like the respect your rights. I am only askina
February 1986 "people power" ~ you to help me. You are my only risin& tbat propelled her into office source of strcnath for me to continue
and drove Ferdinand Marcos into our reforms in government. I also
exile. depend on you to see for yourself
Today was the sixth day of the what these people arc doing against ..
Disgra~ed ex-East German
leader Put ·under house arrest
EAST BERLIN (AP) -Erich
Honecker and other disgraced for-
mer leaders were put under house
arrest Tuesday, the government dis-
armed the Communist Party's i>ri-
vate army and the chiefs of the on~
feared secret police resigned.
East Germans. furious about past
corruption, surrounded secret police
offices in several cities to stop
further destruction of documents
that could be used to prosecute
Honecker, who was party chief for
18 years, and ilis former hcutcnants.
Under Honecker, the secret police
were the main instrument for keep-
~ people under control. The of-
ficial news agency AON reported
Tuesday night that its 19 top of-
ficials resigned but the new chief. Lt.
.Gen. Wolfgang Schwanitz. would
remain in office.
Schwanitz has criticized the or-
pni.zaton's past role in crushing
dissent.
Gucnter Wendland, the chief
prosecutor, also resigned following
alleptions that he was unfit to lead
corruption investigations.
Wendland was a holdover from the
Honecker era.
Communist Party leaders ap-
pealed for calm to avoid "anarchy
and chaos" in a nation that. in two
months, bas seen the dismissal of
two sets of leaders. mass pro-democ-
racy protests .. the historic opening of
Elsewhere in Eastern Europe:
By The ~ed P~ss
In other Eastern Bloc developments Tuesday:
PRAGUE -One of Czechoslovakia's two republics named the tint
government in 41 years dominated by non-Communists, and ta1b bepn
with opposition leaders on their demands for a new national 1ovemmcnt.
Leaders of the Communist.controlled labor orpni.zation took the un-
precedented step of endorsing a genera] strike that tho.opposition bas
threatened if the national aovernment is not chan&ed this week. An Interior
Ministry announcement said work on dismantling fortifications on !be ·
border with Austria would bcain Monday. -w
MOSCOW -The Soviet Union sharply warned West Germany at a
meeting of their foreign ministers that pushing for German reunification at
this time can only bring trouble, the Soviet news qency Tass repon:ed. It
said f.duard-Sbevardnadzc rccaUcdSovict experience with a strona Ger·
many during World War 11 in telling Hans-Diet.rich Genschcr "pro~
about a federation of the two Gcrmanys can only exacerbate turmoal an the
currcnt circumstances."
its borders and prom iscs of fn=c
elections and other reforms.
Th~ Interior Ministry said the
JOverment was disannin& the "fight·
~ng grou~" party-run malitias based
m factones.
It said the weapons taken away
included automauc rifles. rockct-
propelled grenades. anti-aircraft
guns and armored personnel car-
riers.
Western esumates said the mili-
tias bad 3.000 active members. but
could draw on reserves of 500,000.
East Germany's top lawyer, Wolf-
png Vogel, was arrested Tuesday on
suspicion of "criminal extortion."
the official AON news agency said.
Vogel handled spectacular East-
West spy and prisoner swaps for
years and was a confidant of
Honecker. He also represented a
fugitive East German official. Alex-
ander Schakk-Golodkowski.
AON gave no funhcr details of
the allegations against Vogel.
Territorial
auto insurance
rates banned
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -State
lnsuranec Commissioner Ro~ani
Gillespie, criticizing but implement-
ing a major provision of Proposition
103, on Tuesday prohibited auto
insurers from basing rates on a
driver's area of residence.
However, Gillespie allowed in-
swen to rely on a multitude of
factors, such as repair costs, health
costs and population density. that
would play somewhat the same role
as territonal rating -tilting toward
higher charges in urban areas.
In a move that is likely to be
challenged in court by insurers, she
also limited any driver's annual rate
increase to the percentage rise in the
national Consumer Price Index. And
she ~rohibited auto insurance rate
discnmination based on sex or
marital status.
The regulations also follow Prop-
osition l 03's mandate to guarantee
"good drivers," tho~ with no more
than one moving violation in three
years, rates at least 20 percent below
those of other drivers.
"The net effect will be decreases
for urban (drivers) and small in-
creases for rural and suburban,"
Gillespie said at a news conference.
She drew a mixed reaction from
the consumer advocates who backed
Proposition I 03 on the November
1988 ballot
WE HAVE
$50MILLION
AVAILABLE FOR THE PURCHASE
OF IMPORTANT PAINTINGS B·Y
NASA da~s eruption
that inspired Atlantis
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Scien-"You're talking about (the
us." tMen the bettle.zooe and a aboppiaa
Vicky Benito, a receptionist at t~ near the aa~ w~ evacu. Manila Garden Hotel an the Makati were taken until UT&QICmcnu
district, laid thit momina. .. All can be made for them to leave the
Americans are safe. The Americans country.
are all OK.." u S. Con~ul Bruce ae.rdaley said
At least 77 people have been killed some of those evacuated would
and more than 540 wounded since leave the Philippines on the fint
rebel soldien bepn their coup at· available fliaht
tempt. A rebel otllcer said Tuesday that
('. statement by the armed f~~ the estimated 21 S trapped Amcri-
wd the ceue-fire ~ould remain an cans miaht not 10 ~ because of ~ffect "until fwt.be; o~rs" in order U.S. support for .Aquino ~u~ng the
to allow a smooth wtth~wal ~f uprising, including provading air
hotel guests from the Makata ~~-cover early in the revolt. But . the statement by m1htary . . Chief of Staff Gen. Renato de Villa B~t a staten:icnt Wl;'ed today _said
also said the cease.fire was "in con-the insurgents cxecuovc commauce
nection with onJ<>ing negotiations" decid~ late Tu~r to free all the
to cod the fJ.lhtang.. Am~ncans because these A!!1cncan
De Villa desi(nated Brig. Gen. tounsts arc not our enemy.
Arturo Enrile1 superintendent of the T~y. however. a statement as-
Pbilippine Military Academy. to su~ an the name of a rcbe~ leader,
talk with rebels an the financial Bng. Gen_. Edgardo Abemna. de-
dist.rict. dared the msurgcnts were 1n a "state
More than 30 buses shiittled be-of war."
High winds, volcanoes on Neptune
SAN FRANCISCO -Photos taken by the Voyager 2 spacecraft show
Neptune has the fastest winds yet seen in the solar system, and reveal one
to four more active, ~yscr-like volcanoes spewing nitrogen ice on the moon
Triton, scientists said Tuesday. Neptune's jct stream winds posh visible
clouds of frozen natural gas past the north edge of the planet's Earth-sized,
hurricanc·likc Great Dark Spot at nearly 1.500 mph -about the speed of
sound in Neptune's atmosphere. said Edward Stone. chief scientist for
NASA's Voyager project.
Pro-choice candidate has sllm lead ·
SAN DIEGO -A~mblywoman Lucy K.illea, whose underdog
candidacy for the state Senate won national attention after a Catholic bish1p
denied her Communion because of her pr0<hoicc abortion campaign
commercials, siczed a large early lead in a San Diqo area spccia.1 election
Tuesday. K.illca. a four-term Democratic legislator. led her Republican
opponent, freshman Assemblywoman Carol lkn\)ey, by 47,831 votes to
47, 774 with 89. 7 percent of the vote ~ounted.
'\·\TIO'\ -\I, BHl•:•·s
Bush, Quayle differences denied
Wi\SHINGTON -The White House.' dealing with aftershoclcs from
the Malta summit. attempted to quell cnticism from conservatives Tuesday
and play down any differences between President Bush and Vice President
Dan Quayle on the Soviet Union.
On another summit topic. the administration said the meeting enabled
Bush to look ahead to possible budget savings two years from now as a re-suit
of likely arms reductions.
Bush, on has first day back an the Oval Office. ignored questions from
reporters about Quayle. who has offered a more guarded and skeptical post-
summit assessment of the Soviets than Bush has. Explaining the difference,
Bush's national security adviser. Brent Scowcroft.. said. "We have an
administration that is very clo~ly ahgned but I think it probabl} not
possible for people to speak laterally watfl one voice.'' "And there may from
time to time be difference of perspective but there's no difference an the
substance of the policies we're pursuing. ..
AIDS drug cancer llnk downplayed
WASHINGTON -Federal health officials say laboratory findings that
very high doses of the anti-AIDS drug AZT causes tumors in a.gJn&
laboratory rodents should cause little concern for people wiih AIDS. "The
Public Health Service still strongly recommends that AIDS patients ...
continue their zidovudine (AZT) therapy under-.... consultation with their
physicians," Dr. James Mason, the top health official at the Department of
Health and Human Scrvi~s. said Tuesday.
Georp Bellows Seth uslm•n
Frank W. Beuon Francis Wm. Edmonds
ChH. SprlAUe P.,an:e
John Peto
lists used ancient Chinese annals to equivalent of) 2 million Hi.roshama
date one of the most powerful vol-atomic bombs going off at the same
canic eruptions in recorded history time," said Pang, who presented his
-a blast 3,600 years ago that study at the American Geophysical
iDSP.ircd the legend of the sunken Union's fall meeting. "Santorini was Drug addict sent t st civllization of Atlantis, NASA said rouahJy 100 times more powerful 0 mona ery
Tuesday tban Krabtau (Indonesia in 1883.) E G Thomu Hart Benion Lyonel Feininger
0. E. Bemlnghaus Fn!derick frieseke
Albert llentadt S..nford Gifford
George C. Blftlh•m William GIM:kens
E. L Blumemc:heln John Haberle
lober1 Blum Wm.'M. Harnett
Jo1an Lealie Breck Maf'lden Hartley
Dennis Bunke.-O.lldeH .... m •
Charles Blll'Chfield M•rtln J. Heade
EalJ Carlten Robert Henri
MaryC...H E. L Henry
~C.tlln Ernest Henninp
Wm. Menitl 0.ate Edward Hieb
Frederic £. Church Victor Hlgine
I· G. Con ney Winslow Homer
11MNul <:ole Edw11rd Hopper
f. Sl ..... on C.Opley George lnMM
....... CArnell EMlm•n fohMOn
........ Crawfonl John~
..... cn,.y bckwell Kent
• AIMlnrw Delburs foh• Lafarp
a..rwo... FltaH .... Lane
...... o.ca.p '-lMamlllp
...... Did« w •. J. Mc;Clmkey
aiirt.O..wdt Wiit.rd Metcalf ,,.....,.. ... Atn.IJ.MUt.r
~.,...
Ammi Phillips
Edw11rd H. Potthast
Hiram Powers
M. 8. Prendergast
Willi•m ll•nney
Frederic Remington
Louis Ritman
Theodore Robimon
Norm•n Rockwell
Charles M. Ila.ell
A. S..lnt-Gaudem
John Slnpr SaJwnt
Cllu.Sch~I
Joeeph Sharp
Cliules Sheeler
Everett Shinn
frmnc'9 A. su ..
John Sloan
Joeeph Stella
Arthw nu
J=da•nd c. n.rt.11
J. H ..........
W.119rUfw
a.art. Ulridl
J. A. Mc.Netll WW....
T.W.Wlt .......
a.......wm.r
Gftlllt .....
. Mount St. Helens is a little bitty HARD NBER H, N.Y. -A longtime heroin USC1' has accepted a
The Santorini volcano destroyed volcano compared with this... jud&c"s offer to spend two years 10 a Zen Buddhist monastery instead of
much of the Aegean Sea island of A National Aeronautics and Space aoin& through a drup treatment program. The judge pvc Keith Brian
,..._ and ciccted cno""" sun •dmiru's·trata'on news rel--w 'd cf.· Scofield the option o going through his sixth drug treatment program or ba~q debris to chill ..... Earth'; ~ of the Santorini blast were felt entering the Zen Studies Society Mountain Monastery in Ulster County,
climate and cause summer frost. around the world, and the eruption about 70 miles northwest of New York Caty. ·
beadu~' aop failure and famine is "believed to be the source of The monastery's acting abbot. Junpo Dennis Kelly, sa.id Scofield is the
in · sa.id astronomer Kevin Plato's story of Atlantis, which tells fint criminal drug user the retreat has agreed to ta.kc in. But Kelly said Pana of NASA's Jct Propulsion Lab-of an island civilization submerged 1evcral of the 20 peo~lc living at the monastery turned to Buddhism to
oratory. by the sea.... ovm:ome drug addictaon. .,_ __ ......; ______________________ _..:...._ ______________________ ~
Sickness from supplement Increases
WASHINGTON -Rcponed cases of a raR blood disorder linked to
the nutritional supplement L-tryptopban have risen to 707, includio& at least
one death. federal health officials said Tuesday. The Food and Drua
Administration also said it has been detainin& all L-tryptopban shipmcnu
at U.S. pons as a foJlow·up to its Nov. 17 request for a nationwide recall
of 1.r~tophan tablets, capsules and caplets.
CUcs of the blood disorder known as COSJnophilia-m~ have ~n
reported in 48 Rites, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rioo accordina
to the federal Centen for Disease Control in Atlanta. '
H 0 H I U II H 11· I '
Colombian jet crash caused by bomb
BOOOT A, Colombia -lnvatipton have CIOOduded that a bomb
Colombian jet \bat cruhed lut month IDd killed all l '17 people 'b!r ~ it WU bidden under a teat. an oftk:ia1 laid Tuaday. SimmoGds. tbe minitW of~ did not :3. wbo may
Mw l!:.* tbe bomb, but sullPidoa Im fallen oo ~·· dnlt adk wbo bave bombed bub. .....,._.., bcMdl, ldMlol:I and Olbet
pulltic pllal.
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day's forecast
"NOC COUNTY Mn1IOl'OUTAH A•tA
lAOUNA NACN -"~(ny tog M"<O 10w ,..., IM (~t ,.,.., 100~ Of,..,.,.,. .. moul)'
Wut 10 iOUl"-11 Wonct\ 10 1 l mpn n I"'
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Is low. l0"'9"t "' '"' '"'°·40\ 10 -so. Thvt.S.,. n 1n. >Ow 10\ to nu t 80
'ITAL AHAi -"•1(n; 109 .mo <>w (IOuCI\
ttw JOUth <O.tl tlf )' th•\ motntng Ol"f''°""•\f'
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MO Tnuf\oay lOCM l\Otl"••\I wonoJ 10 10 lO
"tow pau u -"" unyont 0.9•rv>•"9 '"" •'1••
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IH'l'llS
DAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
November !O
nc and Peter Kramer. Laguna
.iel. girl.
-uki and Robert Rann. Fountain
ey, girl.
November !I
1nc and Thomas C 1urczak.
DC, girl.
o0rab and Scott Neubert. Foun-
Vallcy, boy.
abcth and Joseph Ahlad1s. Costa
I&, boy.
ol and Donald Neve. Costa
I&, boy
i.anna and Kelly Nagato. El
D, boy
rrie and Gary Bquc, Irvine. boy
Nevember !%
-y and Lloyd Miller. Irvine. boy.
iela and Ronald Clacklcr. Hunt-
on Beach, boy.
Nenmber !J
llDe and William Warnecke,
1tinaton Beach, boy.
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•
The Right
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I SONYI
Sony 80 Watt" Remote Control Matched
Component System
• 80 walls per cnanne1 amplilier remo1e con1ro1 bu 11 ,,, ~-bana
f'Qua ze• ana Oynamoc Bass Enna.,c.cr rDBFB
• aoub·r CoHSetle ;lee~ ,..,,., Dolb~. noose reauCl•on )nO ,,,,,,, sewed
aubb•n9
• m;atcnong )·way IOuC\pea~ers 10 wooler
• 25 AM FM preser luner w•lh automat•C 1un1n9
• sem1·aucoma11c bell a11ve 1urntao1e
s49991 1
ONLY S27 /MONTH ..
Technics
Technics M•tched Audto Component System with
5 Disc Aot•ry Ch•nger
• new tachn0109y 5 0.1e rotary CO Chan~ olle11 conseeutrve pl1y
20 step l)fogrammed play ral"ldom play ano .. tun• oefsampl11"19
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• stereo 1nt90reted 1mpl1ler with I 10 walls per chal"lnel al'ld super
t>u1ew1teh
• .. 2-lley A\/ remote contrOI comm11"1C11 all mlj()( lunchona or 1"9
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• auto-reverse duel cassette with Oolbye 9 NA
s
MGA 110 WaU-Matched Audio Component System
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• 110 watts per channel ampl1her w•tfl bu1n J" S band 9r1ph•c
equa1tze1 ano 30 lunCl•On A v •emote
• s1ereo aouble caseue aec to. ""''" norm.ll an.:i noqn soeed auoo1ng
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• Dolby• noise reauctoon oeetea\t'S tape l'•SS
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equaltlet • tutty eveomahc OC*'allO<'I belHtr,..,. tu1n11bfe
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s77991 1
mu y $42/MONTH-·
Mitsubishi Hi-Tech Component Sy .. em with 5-Dtsc
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• tuner1~pltlfef w11h 1& pr.-1 pr .... scan Oolt7y• 9'.lrtound ano 1 ~band eo
• 20 tr.a pr~mmable CO playet """" s-G11e changer and •
tunes 0"9fsamcMtng d19llal litter
• CO pl.•Y9f'• liber Ol>41Cal CMllJ>UI conMCta d•'9Ctly to pr"""'
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• rNQnet.Ully •hie!Oed IPdket' lyli.tft
i
\
I I
(
OC employers see rosy-future
lly f'AUL AICMP&.IY
Of .............
At the outset of a new decade,
Oraqe County job seekers will find
the most oppQrtunities in education1 dW"able aoods manufacturina ano ~ nnns, according to an em-
ployment outlook survey.
Covering the openina quarter of
1990, the just-released surver re-
vealed that 18 percent of loca em-
ployers plan to inc~ase staffina
leveJs. while S percent will cut staff.
Another 74 percent fo~~ no
change and 3 percent don't know
yet.
The survey is conducted quarterly
by the tempQrary help service, Man-
PoWCr Inc.
Sue Foigelman, Manpower
spQkeswoman for the Orange Coun·
ty area. said local employers see a
rosier picture than the ir counter-
parts clscwh~
"The present results seem to be
more optimistic than the con-
servative employment forecasts na-
tionwide," Foigelman said.
Nationally, emplo)ers seem
cautious, but not fcarfu\, of re-
cession during the corning decade.
she said.
Of 14,000 companies interviewed,
20 ~rcent wm be searching for
additional workers, while 12 percent
wilJ be cutting back. In the West. 22
percent expect to add <;tafT. while 12
percent wi ll be tnmrning their work-
force.
With 1989 coming to a cloM:.
employers rcpon a t}'p1t·al seasonal
slowdown on the 1mmed1ate
horizon, but n c onom1c stu mp.
Mitchell Fro stein. president of
Jobs will draw 3.2 million to state by 2000
from other states. PALO ALTO (AP) -Californians love to com-
plain about spiralina housina costs, smoa and pidlock,
but those problems won't keep ncwoomers out of the
Golden State during the next decade, according to a
tePort ~scd Tuesday.
Aboµt 3.2 million new jobs will help swell the
state'sj pppulation to 35 million by the tum of the
century, according to projections by the Center for
Continuing Study of the Cahfomia Economy. The
number of jobs would grow 25 percent for the state,
compared with IS percent nationwide, the center said.
California's edge in hiah-tcch manufacturin& and
international trade> -areas expected to grow in imPor1-
ance durin.1 the next decade -will help boost the
growth in JObs.
"International trade, especially Pacific Rim trade, is
going to be a larger portion of the U .S. economy, and
California already has a very stroni. very rapjdly
growing piece of this," said Stephen Levy, djrcctor of the
center.
The demographics grouP. said the state would gain
between 5 million and 7 million people -about half
of them newborns and the rest newcomers -during the
1990$. The newcomers will be spht about evenly
between immigrants from other countries and those
"Short-term blips"' in the semiconductor industry
we~ not of m aJOr concern. Le~ said. The center
predicted renewed growth for the Silicon Valley. which
has a tenth of the country's high-tech jobs.
ManpQwer, said that unlike the re-
cession figures of the early '80s. the
national outlook for the upcoming
period should resemble first-quaner
activity seen during the middle years
of the decade.
In the coming quarter, individual
industry outlooks include:
• Conttracllon: Never a strong
period in the construction trade. the
first quarter will find 17 percent of
employers increasing m anpower,
while 22 percent expect declines.
• Darable Good• Manofactarln1:
AJthough below the numbers of
opening quarters over the r>ast two
rears. figures show 12 percent in the
mdustr) plan employment ad-
ditions, while 11 percent foresee
cutbacks.
• Non-0.rable Goods: Manufac-
"Look around at the world as it really is," he said.
turers arc at or near the levels of
similar quarters of recent years. and
2 1 percent expect to boost their
workforces. while 10 percent plan
staff declines.
• Services: For the upcoming
three months, the Services sector is
the most optimistic: in the nation, as
24 percent will seek additional help
and 8 percent will cut down.
• Finance, ln1urance and Real
E1tate: Demand for new employees 'has been steady over the past three
years with few peaks and valleys.
Currently, 2 1 percent plan recruit-
ing. while 7 percent will reduce their
workforce.
• Wllolesale and Retail Trades:
The annual post-hohday doldrums
will attack this sector. w11h 17 per-
cent planning to continue adding
(PfHM s.e JOllS/A7J
j employees and 19 percent fore-
casting after-Christmas cutbacks.
• Traasponatlon and Pabllc Util·
ltles: Employers in this sector arc
predicting the most positive employ-
ment first quarter in more than a
decade, with 2 1 percent to add staff
and 9 percent cutting back.
• Publlc Admlnl1tratlon: A two-
year hiring boom makes this sector
one of the strongest in the first
quarter employment market, with
10 percent anticipating staff in-
creases and S percent expecting de·
creases.
• Education: At the mid-point m
the school }'Car. h it!<.' employment
shifting occurs. with 13 percent add-
mg nc" employees and 5 percent
expecting declines.
' Forum Institute ending operations
Cranston group got funds from Lincoln S&L owner
By JOAN MOWER
-edl'ttts\11-
WASHINGTON -The Forum
Institute, which received hundreds
of t.housands of dollars from Charles
J. Keating, a key figure in the sav-
ings and loan sca,ndal, is suspending
operations. its lawyer said Tuesday.
"Given all the proceedings. given
the involvement of (Sen. Alan)
Cranston and Keating. the board
thinks it's best they suspend oper·
ations on Jan. I,.. said Wilham
Jeffress. an attorney for the politi-
cally liberal grant-giving institution.
Cruz Reynoso. a fonner Cali-
fornia Supreme Court Justice and
member of the inst1tute's board.
said, "The whok publicity has made
it very difficult 10 rai~ money." Reynoso also said the Center for
Participation in Democracy. a Los
Angeles-based voter registration
group that Clanston helped set Up, IS
not "actively sohciung resources."'
Reynoso. chairman of the center's
board, said directors planned to d is·
cuss the center's future at the nc"< t
meeting.
The center. a 'oter registration
group founded by Cran~ton·s son,
Kim. with help from his father. also
received $400,000 from Keating in
February 1988. according to
Cranston's spokesman. Murra)
Aander.
Several of the Forum lnst1tute's
board members refused to talk about
the Washington-based group, refer-
ring aJI telephone calls to Jeffress.
.. We're all caught up in this and it's
a very touch) si tuatton. ·· said Ro-
berta Greene. a board member and
the institute's former deputy direc-
tor.
Keating. the Phocni"< millionaire
who beaded the Amen can Continen-
tal Corp. and 11's subsidiary, the
collapsed Lincoln Savings and Loan
Association in Irvine, contributed
$325.000 over two years to the in-
stitute. Jeffress said.
The lawyer said he did not know
why Keating gave to the Forum
Institute. but. "I assume Keating
first learned of the act1v1t1es through
Cranston or through Rob Stein ...
Stein 1s a former consultanl to 1he
Democratic Pany.
The non-protit, tax-exempt in-
stitute, created m 1981 by Stein. 1s
an organization that "gives grants to
groups that encourage voter pamc1-
pa11on a nd pubhc education." re-
cords show.
An exarmnat1o n of the institute'<;
Internal Revenue Service docu-
ments. testimon>· from the House
Banking Com m1ttee·s hearings on
Lincoln. and Cranston's "'nr?anc1al
disclosure forms show an mter-
locking network of ties between the
Cranston. Keating and Stein and
organizations with which they were
affiliated.
Cranston, 0 -Cahf.. a strong sllp-
poner of efforts to register new
voters. 1s one of five senators under
investigation by the Senate ethics
commiuee for acceptin$ campaign
contnbuuons from Keating while at
the same time intervening with fed-
eral regulators seeking to curb .._in-
coin's lending practices. He had de-
nied any wrongdoing.
The Lmcoln failure. which 1s the
sttbJCCt of numerous federa.I and
state invest1gat1ons. 1s e"pected to
cost taxpa)crs S:! 5 b1lhon. the larg-
est single thn ft collapse
The Forum lnst11u1<.· raised S2. I
m1lhon in 1988. about $300.000
more than the pre~ 1o us year. the
group·s IRS record'! show. Among
(Please see FORUM/A7t
OC · fiousing
~ffordability
remains at:
14 percent
By City News Servtce
Only 14 percent of households in
the Orange County Rcgjon could
qualify to buy a median-priced
home in October. unchanaed from
September, the California Associa-
tion of Realtors said Tuesday.
It was the third consecutive
month it had been at that level.
At the October median price of
$253,034, households there needed a
minimum income of $83,657 to
qualify, and they faced monthly pay-
ments of $2,091 .
A year &JO. 20 percent of the
households 10 Orange County could
afford the median-priced home,
which sold for a revised $222,036.
In the nei&hborin& the ,Loa An-
tcles Rcaion, the Affordability lndell
also remained at 14 percent.
At the October median price of
$222,S.2, a Los Antclc.area bouae-
bold needed an income of S73,67'
to make monthly monaa.e S-Y· menu of $1,S.2, the CAR laid.
In October 1988, a sjnce-reviaed
20 percent of hou.sebolds could af-
ford tbe median-priced bome in Los
AMtlct. which sold for a reviled
Stto.519.
Statewide, 19 ecrcent of boue-
bo&da earned the ancome needed to
quali6 fot a monaaee k>ln to
~ the meclian-priced, exitl-
Ull. li.lunily home, uar &om ll f:T'~ September and 7 pm:cnt
Diie-Detection
9'11 FDA •pprov•I
•
CHll~ll t•'\I
Yor-k installed
as BIA preslaent
Prom st.n end WIN reports
The Buildin& Industry Association of OnnF County in.swled
WWJam C. Yort. president of the
Southern California djvision of Shea
Homes, as president of the orpniza-
tion. ·
Also installed were ~lip Bec-
taeevt, principal of Prcvie-Real
Estate, as first vice president; Da.W
Celestia. vice president of planning
and local aovemmentaJ affairs for the
Mission Viejo Co., as second vice
president; Geogrey S. Fearu, ex-
ecutive vice president for the Bald\Vin Co., as treasurer, and
DeuJ• Moe, senior vice president of
marketing and corporate affairs. as
secretary. • • • The Planning Center of Newport
Beach announced several promotions
and appointments to its staff.
Appointed senior project man-Wiii ..... Yortr
agers we~ David D. Clarti, Terry L. Campltell, Frull RokllllH and
l.euetla J. Grobeclter.
Qark joined the firm last January as a senior environmental
planner and was previously an e nvironmental consultant in Oran.p
County. Campbell previously managed his own finn, Analytie
Planning Service, in Redondo Beach. Hotchkiss was previously
director of regional strategics and planning for the Southern .
California Association of Governments. And Grobecker bas more
than 20 years experience in planning and architecture, including five
years with the Irvine Co.
Kenneth Reynold• joined the Planning Center as urban planner
and project manager. He was previously a general partner and
developer of commercial propen1es m O~nge County and was
president of O'Hara Development m San Diego County.
Robert Mabee JOmed the Planning Center as assistant project
manager. He was previously project manager and office manager
with Bonar/Orchard &. Associates m Phoenix. ·
Donald Arambula WH laired a• a 1ealor deslper. He was
prevloHly a plauer for A. Wayne Sml~ 6 AHoctates, a plaaala1
ud la.Ddscape arcllltectaral firm ln Plaoeabt.
Yacoeb E. Atalla was promoted from computer services
manager to computer sen·1ces director. Prior to joining the firm in
1987, Atalla was an associated in the computer consulting firm of
Fullenwider CAD Service of West Los Angeles.
• • • Implant Technologies Inc. in Newpon Beach has ar~intcd
Job.a J . Qalu as vicce preside nt of sales an~ i:narketJn_J o ~1oSof\
Medical, Inc .. lmplant's wholly owned subs1d1ary. Qutnn w1ll ~so
serve as director of sales and marketmg for Implant Technol<>11es.
In bis newly appointed positions. Quinn's primary responsibility is
to direct and promote marketing strategies for lmplant's advanced
medical device. the CrashCan Companion(TM). The CrashCart
Companion is a computerpnnter system that creates a new s~ndard
of care for medic.al personnel who are trained and responsible fi
advanoCd cardioresp1ratory support in hospitals. The CrashCart
Companion is marketed b> B10Soft Medical. Inc.
• • • LI.Dela Monpo, a Huntington Beach resident and manager of
international sales and tourism for Knott's lk'rry Farm. was elected
to the board of directors for the Cahforn1a Travel Industry
Association
Mo ngno JOms 25 other kc> to unsm officials from throughout
thC'"state 1n scrvmg a two year term on the association·s board.
L}'.n Howard &. Associates. an employment services agency
based in Newpon Beach. opened an office at 28202 Cabot Road in
Laguna N 1guel. • • • ~arriou Hotels will open its third moderately priced Courtyard
ho.tel m Orange County on Dec. 19. The I SJ.room hotel, with rooms
pnced from S50 to $76. 1s located at 2701 Main St., Irvine. • • • lnteramerican Builders Corp .. a residential development com·
pany, relocated Its corporate offices to the TriQucst Business Center,
I 5375 Barranca Parkway. F-106. in Irvine Spectrum. • • • Romac &. Associates. a employment service in the accountina
and financial fields. opened a franchise office at 18500 Von Kannan
Ave .. Irvine. • • • Orange County Federal Credit Union will hold a grand opening
for its headquarters at 1211 Oyer Road. Santa Ana, from 11 a.m.
to I p.m. Dec. 7. • • • Ralphs Grocery Co. held a grand rcopcnina of its remodled
supennarket at 14400 Culver Dnve on Nov. 30. • • • . Fc~Trex Construction Systems held a grand openina Dec;. 4 for
its awrungs showroom a&. 16662 Gothard SL, Huntinaton ~ch. • • • Unacrie For Less opened a store in Irvine in the Mervyn's ~
TllJCt Center at Culver Drive and Barranca Parkway. The HnaeriCf!
chain bas seven stores 1n Oranac and Los Anaelcs counties. ' • • • TYR Sport Inc., a manufacturer of competitive swimwear reloca~ its ~fficcrs and djstribution center to I 5,000.squa.re-fooi
plant ui HuntJnaton Beach. The company was previously located in
Lona Beach.
C \1 .1.'\U\H
s.Jes and Marlcetina Executives International it boltina a MW .....,. ':'C for Oranae County sales manqen, rnarketina
direcu>n andineu ownen. Located at Chesney Commwtica·
tiont, the f\anc:t.ion will be from S to 7 f..m. Tbunday at 9 Corporate
Put., Irvine. Call Jane Harkins at 26 -6460 for more informatioa.
..
I
I
I
~
I
h
"'
I
ush seeks professional to replace thrift regulator
AIHINOTON (AP) -Tbe 1re political couectioa. ICCCll'diJll Mid a '?.9•'M!DI woa'1 be in piece int panel. laid his commit&.ee isJUJt dent Bush'• son. Neil Bulb, ~ t11t ,.._&eitlratioe ~D loot.int to an Ind~ IOW'Ce, .mo spoke on before uuary1 wben Conpua te· 11111ed ill invntipuon of the sav-on Silvcndo's board of directon. will be ~ .. he aid.
r I 1UCC.-. to •vinp IDd loen coodition of anonymity. turns fTom holiday RCeM. inp induJtry's cnsas. Oonu.lcz sajd the comm11ttt wall
palator M. Danny Wall on Tuet-Candida• under oon1aderation Early speculation centered on This f'all, Gonzalez conducted also concentra.tc on the consmu-
Under lqJl1at.ioo enacted la A~ust, the directot of t.be Wift
'Oftlcc lerVet a five-year tetm and
muat be confirmed by the Senate. y, while the chairman of the include &onatlme otfid.alt with the three e•perienced replaton: more than SO hours of hcarinp tional queflion of how in 1988
!Ma. Ben!dna Commitlee taid Federal ReterVe S}'11em and the • R.ichald F. Syroa, praicknt of focusina on the collapse of Lincoln Wall's qency without specific con· Rep. Jim Leach. R-lowa. a mem·
bcr of the House BankJnt Commit·
&.ee, wd the new thrift rqulator
"has to be able to stand up lO
powerful interests wathtn the indus-
try. on Capitol Hall and, frankly,
wath1n the administration ...
ariftlt that led to Wall's tttia· federal ~it Jnaurance Corp. the Fcder&l Reterve Bank or Boston Savinas and Loan Auociauon or sressionaJ authorization, was able lO
1Lion ~ "just the becinnina .. of The admanistration, in 1C&rehina a.od a former president of the Feder· Irvine. Lincoln is upected to be-commit the aovemment to spend1Q&
e iJlvesupuon. for a succnsor, is consuhina al Home Lotln Bank of Boston. come the nation's btgcst S&L fat.J-S40 billion on S&L rescue deals.
Tbc administration wants a~ pro. Treuwy Secretary Nicholas F. •William H. Roelle, a Iona-time we, at a cost to tupayers of mo~ And, the panel wtll explore whether
..ional resulator to head the Office Brldy Jnd chlef economic adviter official of the federal Deposit In· than $2 billion. the FBI should have more vigor· 'Thrift Suoervtsion, rather than an Michael Boskin, said White House surancc Corp., now in char&c of s&L The 1CSs1ons trigertd a torrent of o usly pursued shady S&L ex-
ipointee WhOIC chlef qualifications spokesman Marlin Fitzwater. He rescue deal• at the Resolut1on Trust ~ criticism directed at Wall, leading ccutlves.
Corp. · eventually to his resagnauon Mon-"This as JUSt the beginning. ... We
Neither Wall nor has immediate
p~eceisor. Edwm Gray, bad reau·
latory expcneoce. Wall bad terved
u staff director of the Senate Bank·
in& Commmtt under Sen. Jake
Garn, R-Utah. Gray wa.1 a former
pubhc re!.lloos eAecuuve and press
secretary to Ronald Rcapn's 1980
campaagn.
""'' '''1:n1n Mii \I \lll' UIU
NEW vottK CAP) Dec. 5
1
NEW YOlllK (AP) Dec. 5 lg 1 l
'\\'I·: I .I-:\ Dl·:Hs
ii,.,. "
•,
• 0 c:oe
DOft 10\L~ .\ \ ER.\Gt~~
flETAl .. S PRICES
NEW V<>f\K IAPl -SPOI non ... roue met.el Pf!C*I
..-clay
~ 1400pe< l)Ol...el NV Co!M• tC>OI month
A ~ • , , ~ • l>OU"O u s .,.., .... 1-•
~ ... 11 0620 c.tl" per pound NV Comea 1001
&AM • ~ _. ... oovnO
Zlfte • 73 -· • ~ __ ., T1lo • IS 1730 _, ... W-~·• Pftee per lb I ...,_. 15 515 H...Oy & Hannan (()My dlOl!y quotal
.._ • 15 5~ '* troy oz NV Com.• "'°' month ..... ..,_, • 1215 OO-S300 oo '* 1e 11> nu11 N..,. .,,. .
,...._ • 1!2S 00-UJCI 00 lroy 01 N 'I (conttKtl
\ASDAQ Sl''l.'l.\R'
GOl .. D PRl('ES
'l·st: ("OflPOSITt: TH:\ '\S:\("TIO'\S
• William Taylor, a senior regu-day. GonzaJn said be may conduct started wath Lincoln bcausc it's the
latory official at the Federal Reserve additional hearings on Lincoln, prototzye ... of everything that went Board. now servina as an advixr to After that. he said would explore wrong. Gonzalez siud.
the administration board overseeing other S&L failures, includana Salver-At the White Hou~. Fitzwater
the RTC. ado Banking, Savings and Loan As,. avoaded questions about whether the
Rep. Henry 8. Gonzalez. 0-socaatlon in Denver, Colo. That case president or his top aides wanted
Texas, chairman of the House bank· is polit1caJly sens1tave because Presa· Wall t<? quit. "He resigned and it
FORUM
f romA6
the grants the institute handed out
were a total of roughly $305_,000 in
1987 and 1988 to the Center for
Participation in Democracy.
The forum also gave grants to
projects dealing with clean aar, youth
and leadership training.
Cranston's aide said the senator.
who has a personal pa.ssaon for regJs-
tering new votcn. traveled around
the country raising money for has
cause, including money from Keat-
ing.
"As far as Alan is concerned. this
is a good cause." Flander said.
Cranston first met Keaung either an t 98S or 1986 and learned that the
Phoenix businessman contnbuted to
a range of causes. from anta-pomo-
g:raphy drives to Mother Teresa's
projects, Flander said.
Cranston then sought mo ney from
Keating for the Forum Institute. the
Center for Part1cipat1on an Democ-
racy and USA Votes, a prOJCCl or
Stem's company, New D1mens1on
Resources Inc .. Flander said.
New Dimension paid for more
than a dozen trips for Cranston to
travel around the country raising
money for voter regjstratton dnvcs
m 1988, according to Cranston's
Prices sag amid economic
uncertainty, profit-taking
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
market slumped Tuesda) amid
profit-taking and o ngoing investor
unccrtaanty about the darectaon of
the economy.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials fell 11.95 points to
2,741.68.
Dcclinang issues outnumbered ad-
vancers QY about 9 10 7 an na-
tionwide trading of New York Stock
Exchange-hsted stocks. w11h 831 is-
sues down. 656 up and 506 un-
changed.
Volume on the floor of the Big
Board totaled 154.64 malhon shares.
up from 150.36 m1lhon 1n the
previous session.
Strength in technology stocks ~
v1ved a. saggmg market earl) an the
day after International Business Ma-
chanes Corp. announced a ma1or
rcstructunng. IBM saad 1t planned a
$4 billion share buyback. a cutback
of 10,000 !Obs and a founh-quaner
charge or S2.3 billion.
But the market retreated JUSt after
madda). partly on profit-taking as
anvestors capatahzcd on recent gains.
Wall Street analysts said ~llmg ac-
tivity, hke the buying act1v1t)" that
preceded 1t. was concentrated an
blue-chap issues while the broader
market languished.
"The market has had a nace little
run. It got a little heav) so 11 wall
trade off a lank bit before at stans
another run:· said W Daniel Wal·
hams, equ111es analyst at D1llon
Read & Co
Tuesday's stock act1v1t) also was
tinged wnh skepticism about the
outlook for the econom) and cor-
porate earnings. said A.lfred E Gold·
man, equ1ues anal)Sl for >\ G Ed-
wards & Sons Inc. 1n St Louis.
'"The market 1s an a vef) confu~d
state and we ha'e a tug o' war going
on.·· Goldman saad.
Investors on the one hand are
bullish about the long-tenn outlook
for Eastern Euro'1C and prospcctS
that the Federal R~rve walJ move
to a voad a recess a on by lowcnng
interest rates. Goldman said .
.. On the other side 1s a very
unclear outlook for inflataon and
corporate earnings.·· he said
Observers said investors were be·
ginnanf to tum their attention to
Fnday s November unemployment
numbers. which could provade a
better indacauon of the econom y's
direction.
Market paruc1pan1s arc hoping
the data confirms t.he slow.growth
scenano suggested by other rcccnt
economic rcporu. analysts wd.
Further evidence of an economic
slowdown could prompt the Federal
Reserve to lower interest rates.
financial dasclosure forms.
Stein. who has been anvolvcd an a JOBS
number of philanthropic causes over From A 6 the years, refused in two telephone ··0ocs anyone reall) behe.,e that we will ha\le less use
conversations to answer an) ques· for technology over the next I 0 years'>"
not fluent an English. wall not be able lO ta.kc ovCT future
m1d-lhet JObs. according to ~ report.
"However. this as about the way th1np have been
an the 1980s. and Cahfomaa has met the challenscs this
posed, .. UV) saad. "'There 1s no reason to think we won't
be up to 1t again:· uons about his in volvement wath But the center's repon warned of a possible "mis.-Cranston or Keating. He said he • wanted the controversy to subside match .. of JObs and the state's future work force. which
h increasingly wall be made up of 1mm1gran1 m1nont1es .
A recent stud) b) the ASSOCtatton of Bay Area
Governments saad a the shon.age of affordable housin&
could curb growth an the San Francisco Bay area.. But
the Palo Alto group saad that problem as countered by
"decentrahzauon .. as companies and worken move to
lc:ss,-crowded areas.
before he talked about is prOJCCts. Four out of fi ve new members of California's new labor
\lSE tPS & DOft\S
NEW YORK (AP) -The followlno ll1t WWI Int New Yorll Stodl Excti.nge 1tock1 1nd w1rr1nt1 thet heve J»OM up tl'le most 1nd dOwn the moil blMCS on percent
of Chln99 fO< Tuesdav.
No securltln treotno below 12 « 1000 '1\erH ere Included.
Net I nd perc:ent1ge ctlall9" l,.e the differ~ between the orevloul d o•lno orlce and Tundav'• S:JO P.m. orlc.e.
u~'f1 Up 1 UP . Up .
Up f· Up . Up .1
Up 7i UP 1 Up 6. Up 6 UP UP Up UP Up Up UP UP Up UP UP Up UP Up Up Up
OT( l P' \'D DOM''
force in the next decade will be minonties. half of them
immigrants.
w~ucated m1nont)' work.crs. particularly those.
'M:>rklng ~ oJters plenty of short and long-1erm bene-
fits. And Holiday spa adds one more: Join now b onty S19
a month for 24 months. That's $19 down and ~ 23 monthly payments of S19. With an Anrual
~A Percentage Rate of 152%. Faclltttes rrD( VC6y •
UMmD and some restr1cttons ~ S1op bV CJr'tf
TIMECMY Holiday Spa todayb a free~ bl.
8 fiilo\ySR\HFALm ewe
f I'''" \I
It was a shootout
of OC chorales
.....,,_.c:cssso•.....,•
Jn two 1uoceuive cveninp the Performfoa Ana Center saw OranlC County's two massive chorales concertizina pandly thi.J put
weekend. First, the Pacific Chorale 5COf'Cd an ouutandina •~•
Saturday with holiday classics. Then. the Master Chorale on Sunday
went 10mcwbat Hollywood, with a film and muaical spree fcaturina
Shirley Jones in what is becoming a holiday trldition. The Pacific Chorale began Saturda~ with .. 0 Come All Ye
Faithful.'' It was sung to perfection as C'Onductor John Aleunder
bad chorale members enter wa.lkjna down the left aod riabt aisles,
linsina as they came.
Countless bright spots followed, lDcludina Rcspiahi's "Laud To
lbe Nativity," featunng soprano Deborah Mayhan. mezzo-soprano
Debbie a-cc. and tenor Daniel Plaster. Though Ms. Mayhan sana
beautifully she could hardly be beard at times. Ms. Cree, on the otbef'
hand.. sana with bnghtncss and clarity. Mr. Plaster's performance
was quite &ood. We expect to hear more from him.
More melodious dehghts followed. including "Somerset Wu.
sail" (a.rranacment by John Rutter. who appeared three times on the
propam); Katherine Davis' "Carol of the Drum .. ("LmJe Drummer
Boy") was marvelous. English. German and Welsh songs continued
to pour forth with an outstanding blending between the ChoraJe and
the Northwind Ensemble, which included David Riddles, principal
bassoon with the Pacific Symphony.
Ralph Cato sang "Sweet Little Jesus Boy," a spiritual. It was
Cato's first time with the SOOJ and his delivery was quite well done.
What began with questionable staging. ended with the most
impressive Pacific Chorale ~ncert in some time.
Sunday evening at 7:30 p.m .. almost sharp, the Master Chorale
began three shows in one, which lasted a total of three hours. It was
The Master Chorale, The Californians .• and the Pacific Symphony
Orchestra with Shirley Jones.
Using a scm a<ircular sound shell as a back.drop. conductor
WiJliam Hall and the chorale ensemble, opened w11h Vivaldi's
massive "Glona" in 12 movements. Soprano Judith S11nla, (who
was rcccntly in Carmina BuraJla with Master Chorale) sang warmly
Mezzo-soprano Debbie Cree, soloist with Pacific Chorale the
prcviQus night. again presented herself beautifully.
In the first half The Californian<> added an upbcat·hohday touch
singmg .. Home for the Holidays." '
The second half featured "The Gloria" by John Rutter 1n three
movements and "A Carol Fantasy II" with arrangement b) Carmen
Dragon.
For the next 45 minutes the chorale stood in silence as the
gorgeous Shirley Jones show proceeded. Decked out in a full-lenith
red cape trimmed in white and in a red gown that twinkled with
sequins, she sanf. nearly all of her Broadwa) musical and film h a~
from "Carousel,· "Oklahoma." "The Music Man" and finally. at
10:30 p.m .. she sang an encore of "Silent Night'' as the audience
jomed 1n.
Feet were tired and ac hing as the long-sufTen ng Master Chorale
finally got to sing its finale.
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WHEN IT
COMES TO
FRF.SH PASTA,
WEG O
lb G REAT
LEMrtHS.
Come taste scrumptious,
easy-to-twirl posto mode
fresh f!Nefy ~ ~ht here
at The OtlYe Garden.
1111\llH
It's a wonderful play almost
ay TOM TITUS
o.-y ,_ c. ..... -.
The musical stage vcnion of the
movie classic "It's a Wonderful
Life" isn't a wonderful show -yet
-but af the taJent and enefJY
expended on the production at the
Laguna Playhouse arc indications,
there arc wonderful things in store.
Mo nday night's preview per-
formance of this West Coast
premiere by lyricist Sheldon
Harn1ck (who gave us "Fiddler on
the Roof ') and the late composer
Joc Raposo renects numerous dcti-
c1enc1es of a work in pr<>grcss. How-
ever, the core is sohd indeed, and
w1th the excising of some 30 to 45
minutes of fat from this three-hour
prOJCCt. Laguna would have itself a
true hohda) treat.
Bringing a movie favorite to the
stage -as was done with "Prom-
'~'· Prom1s.es:· "Sugar" and ·'Ap-
plause" -rather than the o ther way
around 1'i a tackh'ih business. You
\I.ant to preserve the spirit of the
o riginal witho ut appearing tQ Xerox
11 fhu), Harnack has chan'ged the
namc<i o f his leading characters from
Cieorgc and Mary to Frank and
Kath\ and turned the villainous
ha nker Potter into ~tiler.
\11 ta r. '>O good. But the crucial
~quentc an which George/F~k is
<,ho\l.n b) hac; guardian angel what
thl' v.orld \l.OUld have been hke
v.11huu 1 him in 11 1s bumped off the
tral I.. "'hl·n the fantasy flight bccom-
l''i thl· angel's idea rather than the
hero·, fhc memorable "I wish I'd
nn n ht't·n t>orn .. hne as gone. and
'o " tht• hcan of the o;cene.
~1 nrl'OH'r, Harnick takes entirely 1
too long to reach th1'i point. dallying
.ilong the v.a) with some extended
'"-Cnl''i and ~upcrfluous. though
">l'llrlll'd hat' of musical business
">Ul h d!> .i ( hark'iton dance contest
and a numhcr celebrating the gJones
nf lrn~u 1n1. v..h1ch ~hould lx scraped
o il thl' plJtl' 1mmcd1ately.
f hi\ noted II also must be re-
U1rdcd that the Laguna production.
with '0411c marvelous performances
at ''' u·ntcr. 1s a splendid. enllc::hang
c>.pcncnlc Director Douglas Rowe
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has constructed a solid foundation
for what should be an annual event
under less.-hurried circumstanocs.
Ralph Bruneau an the central role
of Frank Bailey borrows libcraJly
from the charactenzation etched in
celluloid by James Stewan, but bis
Frank is a harder, more realistic
character. angered and frustrated by
his inability to move on to bener
things. Hi s musical lament, which
begins as a lullaby to his daughter
and segues rnto a v11nohc release of
inner furies, is superbly ac-
complished
Valene Pcm·s Kathy, the loving
wife who stands admirably by her
faltering mate. exh1b1ts more spint
and soph1st1ca11on than Donna
Reed's mo' 1c counterpart. And her
s1 ng.ang voice is pnceless.
The underhanded Herb Miller
(ncr Potter) who sets out to ruin
Frank financaall) as rendered with
depth and d1me ns1on by Nils
Anderson. recalling the Fredcnck
March character an the movie "Ex-
ecutive Suite:· Michael C. Maller
sktllfU'll) enact~ the pathetic Uncle
Billy. the inclTcctua l drunk who sets
the wheel'> of tragedy an motion.
....... Git ......
"A Wonderful Life" is ticketed for
a brief two-week engagement at the
pla)'houc;c. 606 Laguna Canyon
Road, Laguna Beach. with cunaan at 8 p.m. Tuesda}s throu~ Saturdays
and 1:30 unda)•i. closing [)e(-. 17.
R•lph 8rune•u •nd V•l•rle .-errt 1u r In t h e musical ··A
Wonderful ~··· M the Lagun• .-1.yhouse.
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E DD I E RICHARD PRY OR
'1
AMIMGIDI -·---·-•-llflllll9•--
Oh tannenbaum,
thou truly art
a fir·e hazard
The aromati~ scent of a freshly cut fir should triaer
two ~W rem1nden: One that Christmas is but a -(ew sho~ days away and. more importantly that the dead
tree in. the .livina room is little more than lbe tindlina of pou:nlial disas1er.
That ~like warning really is nol so much
hUJ!lbua-Otrirunas trees an: beautiful symbols of the
holiday ~n ~1 they ~~st De handled with care. The key I~ the holidays 11 the -~b1llty to enjoy and there's nothing
like a house fire to ruin your whole day.
No, ~·re not s~gge~ting that we dispense with the age.
hc;>ld trad1t1on of tnmm1ng the tree, just that we decorate
with eq.ual pans of caution and safety.
Chief James F. McMullen, California fire marshal,
offered several steps to a safer holiday season:
•Replace all smoke detector batteries.
. •Have two ways of escaping from your home, es-pea~ly from bedrooms, and designate a spot to meet once
outside.
•Recut the trunk of your tree at least one inch above
the old c.ut and put it in water immediately. Check the water
level datly and refill as needed.
~~cc Y<?Ur tree away from heat sources, including
tclev1s1ons, betn$ careful not to block exits with the tree or
rc-arran&cd furniture.
.•dictk lights bcfoi:c putting them on the tree or
outside on the house. Ds1card and replace the sets if wires
or bulb filaments are exposed, sockets a.re cracked or
broken, or plugs and ~nnectors have loose or missing pans.
•Never leave a lighted tree unattended for long periods
of time. Turn the lights off and the room heat down when
leaving the house or retiring for the night. In fact, it helps
to unplug the tree lights a1 the wall socket. rather than
relying on the switch. ..
•Re'!lovc the tree from 1hc house as soon as possible
after Chnstmas. Never bum Christmas tree branches or
package wrappings in a fireplace or woOO stove.
To tho!i:C' sugges1ions , we might suggest ho meowners
borTow o~e of lhe precau1io ns practiced in public buildings.
For. as ht tie as .s 12, the_ lot. where you purchase yo ur
Chnstmas tree will spray 11 with a fire retardant chemica l.
It is not foolproof and is certainly not designed 10 take the
place of other safety steps. but ii does add an extra measure
of protection to ensure there is joy in your holiday.
Opink>na ••preaMd rn lhis space are those of the Dally Pllol Other
views expret.sed on lhis page ate those ot lhelr aulh0ta and arll•I•
Readers' comments ere Invited and may be sent to The Dally Pilot. P Q .
Box 1S®, Costa Men 92626
1'00 \ \ I' HISTOR\
Today is Wednesday. December silllh. the-340th day of 1989. Thctt: arr: 25 days left in the year.
Today's Hi&hh&h1 1n History:
Ont ~undrcd years ago. on Dec. 6, 1889, Jeffers.on Davi~. the first and
onl} prc:s1den1 of 1hc c·onfedcra1c States of America. died in New Orleans.
On this date:
In 1790, Congress moved fro m New York to Ph1ladelph1a.
In 1884. Army cng.inecn oomp/c-1cd conslruct1on of the Wash1n1ton
Monument, 36 years af'lcr the comcrsrone was laid.
In 191 7, more 1han 1600 ptoplc died When two munttrons sh rps collided
in the: harbor at Halifax. Nova Sco11a, selling off an txplosion that
dev1st.atcd the tny.
1.n 1921 . an Anglo-lnsh trcaty was signed 1n London, providing for the
creation of the lnsh Free Stale.
In 1923, 1 p~idcntial address was broadcast on radio for the first time
as Pttsident Calvin Coohdgc spoke 10 a JOint session of Congress.
Jn 1939, the ('olc Po ner musical comedy ··ou Barry Was a Lady:·
ltarrin& Ethel Merman and Berl Lahr. and featuring the son& ··Friendship,"
opened on Broadway.
In 195 7, AFL-CIO members vo ted 10 expel lhe International
Brotherhood of Tc.1msten. (The Teamsters were readmiued to the feder·
a11on in October 1987.)
Jn 19S7, America·s fin1 a11emp1 11 pu1tina a satellite 1010 orbrl blew
up on lhe launch pad a1 Cape Canaven.1, Aorida.
ln t 969, a con«n by The Rolling Sto nes at the Altamont Speedway
1n Livermore, Cal ifornia, was marred by the deaths of four people. includina
one .,ho was stabbed by a Hell's AftJtl.
Jn 1913, Houtc minority leader Gerald R. Ford was sworn 1n as vice
p · nl, succccdin& Spiro T .. i\Jl'ICW.
n 1982. eleven sold1en and six civilians were killed when a bomb
I by the lnsh National Liberation Army exploded in a pub 1n
Uy, Northern Ireland.
Ten yean qo; ll'li n's Ayatollah Khomeini urgently appealed for
national unity after 1wo days o f clashes between opponents and suppor1ers
of Inan's new ISIJ1m1c Con1111ut ion.
Today's Birthdays: Photographer Alfred Ei~nstadt is 91. )azz musician
Dave Brubeck is 69. Senator Don N1ckks, R-Okla., is 41 . Actor Tom Hulcc
is 36. Comedian Steven Wright 1s 34.
_oR-AN-GE-co-As_r D_l_ily Pilat
"'' t'(Wf!r llw ~.
ROSEMARY Cll t;RCH~-'N -r1·e1.l!iiHF.H
Tt•\I TA IT
Editor
00,'\i •·E~l.1':'11'
A•oti•ll' F:ditor
TO\l 1:1 A\I,\
Nr. .. ·~ Edilor
~TEVE \fARRJ.F.
Citt Edltot
ROGF.H Rl.()(>\I
fe•tllltM f.dilitr
ROGER f.A Hl.SON
Sporlt Editor
TOM 8UDD
ore.a.1• Di....-c:rttr
TERI PVPO
Cirt.•laliM M•r•tetl•& M•t1•~'
808 fllANK
H ... 01:1ft'ery M•..,
CllAl.DN GOOD
C..1..w Srt•ke M•Npt
PaAMOI) SHAH c .....
RHONDA llEt:D .. .. , 'I Nss pr
~AIAaNl!O C.. M 1-1rr
•
J-':\\ REI CllE:otBt:Ht.
Rtot•il Sain ,\tan•~tor
c;HERI rRt:L~A'
a..-tltrd '9•n•jll'.l't
JUO\' orrr 1 .~c
Lq.I Ad¥fl rli1ing .\lanaarr
BECK~5.HENDERSON
Art f>i""'tM
MAaYCARTER
A4~._. ..... ,
ALISSA T ADi.OcK -"'--HEl'f~Y llNICHT
,., ... a .. •a •1r
U!A TAN EV p,..PJws., .......
PA 1111C1t TOOi.
P.,.Pswf4 ..... .:::v. ':1:.~~!!.
m.&.DAWI •• .,, .... ,
Wedi~, 0.CJ10W e. W M
·Schools spark heat
To the id11or:
.\, ~la11;pa)l'r and a parrnt IA ho~
dJught ·r goc!t to ('orona dcl ~iar
f ligh ' ·hool. I .,., ould likl' to e11;prl''is
nl) thoug.h1!> un the prrsent h\SUl'
tx·fure thr Newport·Mcsa Unified
~hl)(ll Dr'>\rrct board of lruSJl'CS
rrg.arding l l.f!ti:room \l.\tta 11on h\
p.trl'lll'\ Tht· ne.,., Tl'gula11ons .,.,ould
n11I allo" a pan:n l to v1s1t a tla\!t
unk·'' hi' or her ~ont1r daughlrr "a'
1n that cla\'
Th(' recl·n1 <.ehool hoard election
hrnuglu 10 \ighl rnan) issues con-
crrn1ng ( orona dl·I ~l ar Hi gh of
Y.htlh I"'"' not a.,. arc For ell.ample.
hoth '>1dc' \lf '\omc t·ontrovers1a(
1\,Ul'' ha\\" nnt bern prescn1cd to
'>tudt•nt~ :I\ n1anda1ed b~ la" R·
ralt·d mo\IC' ha\t' httn ~ho,,..n to
Ull<lt•rage 'lutlcnl!t u.11hou1 parental
l 11n'-l.·1u f)nl· 010\ 1c sho...,n I had
lll·finltl'l~ 1o kl nl~ daughh·r no1 10
'-1."l" i I uck 1l~. 'hl· did not altl'ntl that
lla,,I l>i\\.U\\100 of a mall getting
..._.,u,1ll) aro u~·d h) handhng fecc<; 1s
not an appropriate '>UhJ('('l for high
\lhool <;tudcn1' I could l'"tpound
fuflhl'r \\'hat ha~ happened to our
con1mun scn'\I.· moral hcha\ 1or"
·\fll·r l".\plo nng 1hc~ issues. I
ha\c quc\tion\ as to ,,..h} the prescnr
\t huol hoard n1cmhcr<; seem to de·
1\·nd th \· ··anylh1ng goes" al·
11111,phl.;_rc .,.,·h1ch 1s beginning to
prl'\ail al C..orona del Mar High.
1 n\tcad of follo.,.·1ng what 1s man·
datl'd h) 1;,..,, 10 lhc classroom. the)
arc lr)ing to J..ccp parents out of lhc
r ki'>'>fOOITI .
l .,.,.ould hkc to publicly request
chat all parcn1s at the school (and
1ho<;C .,., ho plan co S('lld their ch1l-
drt·n lhl·rcl examine these issues
lhl·n1"t·)\T\ -I do mean issues. no1
j)l'T<o<J!lah11c<; (io 10 school board
mcc11ng~. I 1s1cn .,.,,th an open mind
to thl· dl\CU'i'>IOnS Don'I be 10·
llucnl't'd by heaNI) o nl).
·\ga1n. I am s1ncC"rcl) conccrnffi
:ihout being 'ihu1 out of classes I
..-.o uld l1kc 10 oh<;cr,·c. There arc
<;omt cla!t!>I..'\ I Y.ould not wan1 m\
<;on ur d;aughll·r to take unlit ·1
oh~T\l·<l 1hem
Wha1 rs thl· school board tr;1ng to
hide" '" rh 1\ legal"
VIC'KI MINARD
Nc.,.,·pon fkach
DOD
To the Ednor
'\s elected officers of a church
congregauon 1ha1 rC"prc§Cnts a d1·
\Crsi t) of views, both theological
and pohtical, .,.,,e feel obligated to
speak out against pressure groups
1hat arc warning our community
that they intend to impo§e upon our
sc hools 1hc1r own spec1fic moral
code and sy~IC'm of censorship.
We behe,·r 111 and tf'! 10 c'cmphf)
good famd~ values. one of which is
rl''>IJCC'I for all perwns and for
human d1ffcrcnccs Par1 of our spin·
tual tradition has al<;0 httn <;uppon
for pubhc education and the free·
dom o f 1hc mind. We both o ppose,
and fear tho$<' ,,..•ho '\Cf\C no11cc tha1
1he1r goal t!t 10 ··caprurc·· the pubhc
sch(Kll S}Stcm 10 funher their o.,.·n
narro"' rnds. no mancr ho" C'Xahed
thr~ 1mag1nc tht'm 10 tie
JAMES\\' .\NGELL
ln1cr1m Pastor
Rf)BER f P STEWART
.-\s~1atc Pastor
t 'l1AR LES H SWORD
("lcrk of Session
'\T. i\-f .\RK PRESB,'TERIAN
T o the Editor.
CHURCH
/\lc~·pon Beach
OD D
Does an)'Onc cl~ get as tired as I
do of heanng 1hc seemingly endless
pon111icat1ons of Jo hn Gustafson on
the suhJcct of how his extrC"m1st
Chrii;tian fundamentahsl organ1za.
tlon 1s going to chanac 1hc moral
cha racier of our Ncwpon -Mesa t lni·
fred School D1s1nc1 for us"
Ha\1ng gro wn up 10 the same
M1d.,.·es1 10..-.·n as John as a kid. I
would suggcs1 that if ptoplc·s moral-
1ty is what Mr. Gus1afson's real
concern 1s. he might be bct1cr ad·
vised to look in his own back yard.
perhaps e'en his own "family tree ··
!)LI .\NE SEVERSON
C oo;ta ~1esa
DOD
To lht' Ed11or:
The :"Jo\ 19 Ptlor earned !.C''cra/
lttl('r.\ n.·gard1ng 1hc "profc~s1onal
education rsta bllshmeni'' and a
group of part'nt--t.·1111en!t wnh lhe
audaclt) 10 challengr or qut·st1on
··1hese·· programs.
I find 11 health) 10 scr ihe failt"d
education s)slem ques11ont'd b) the
citizens. I also find 11 hcallh)' 1ha1 all
a~pccts of relevant material be dis·
cu~scd on any subJCCt.
The group challenging !hr prC>-
fcss 1ona1,_ I!> ob¥1ousl~ com1ng from
a higher moral plane and expressing
\ alues that have deteriorated.
1hank~. 10 pan, 10 our cducauonal
~~\tern. The fact high moral st.an·
dard!t are not represented and not
supported 1n the classroom is ccr·
t.ainl) (Justifica1ion1 for paren1s and
c11i:t:ens to btcomc concerned
To refer to people as ··m1ht.anl
flindamcntahsts"' for challeng.ing a
puQh c school teacher "ho presents
only the positive side of a g.1)·
lesbian ltfest)le or spends classt1me
rolling a condom on a banana 1s
ludicrous. For S.J().OQO.S4 S.000 ii
~car. ~·e certain!) deserve bcner 1n
1hr classrooms
We, unfor1unatC"I). ha\C" a s~·s1cm
Lhal allows content control and
teacher pnvllcgc to go ''tnually un·
chaJJengcd thanks 10 1eachers·
union-clC'Cted school board trustees
and valuclC"Ss matenal a.s d1rccted by
Sacramento.
It is fng.htco1ng lo think 1ha1 New.
por1-Mcsa is onl)' "!hC' 11p of lhc
icC"berg .. 1n the biased prcscnt.a11on
of matenal to 1mpressionable young
adults throughout our public school
system. Since-teachers 1rc protected
by the unions. as well as Cahfom1a
laiw. shouldn't 1hc s1udcnts and tax·
payers be able to evaluate the pres.
enta1ion of matenal. withoul be1n1
called Radical Right Wina FJJnda·
men1alis1s? Don't we deserve-10
have good morals and high pnn·
c1ples taught 1n our l,ClO percent ta.1 ·
supported schools"
If l he public !K'hools will not re·
s~nd to' lht c111zcns who pa)' lhC'
bills, perhaps wt shoukt suppor1 a
voucher system to acqu1rc 1hc-best
cducauon fo r our ch1ld~n. II ~·ould
certainly be morc: rcspons1,·c than
the monopoly thal 1s apparently no
longc-r rcspion\jblc 10 the taxpayers
of California.
TOM STEELE
Fountain Vallty
No cheers for champagne article
To the Editor: and had some. Sorry. Mr. Carlson.
Well, "there he goes again:· In wrona once ap1n. But. 1hen on
Roter Carlson's N ov. 11 ar1i cle on Sunday, he rcpor1cd, "'The faithful
the Newport/Coro na dcl Mar foot · 1oasted their heroes, bu1 reports of
bell a.a.me. he lets it drop that the ..... cha.mPaafle bcin& spilled on the Sail·
Newpor1 Boosltn set up a table 11 on' &ridiron were sli&htly eua·
1be 2~yard line and stancd servin& aerated. In fact. the champqnc.lille
champqne." bottles wtrc: of app~ cider. There
Now, one has to ask what wtre the wun't much time for a "'sample.··
boosten thinkin1 about'? Or,· how but it's bcen ·confirmcd th11 indeed
did they keep minors (playen) from it was apple cider ...
drink.in&'? Why would a n:portc1', It was as if someone clx reported
even a sporu reporter not (oUow champagne bein1 served. when it
this up mort: closely'? 6r. if be did wu Mr. Carlson who ttp0r1cd it on
not bave all the facts.. why repon: It S.turday. Don the above.10und Utt
at all? , , ._an a1tempt to 1tt the record straiaht lui. ltke 1n J98S. wbm Mr. orJ ust more rumor splUdinf? Even Cuhon let drop thll Shane Foley, when be seu out 10 clear tbci nlOOt'd
quttterbeck (or Newport, was he JQves doubu.
rwnond 1o have been recruited by I don't know whaa Mr. Carlton
Mlb Oiddl,., tbcG lbotboll cooch bas Ollinst Newport Harbor HJP.
at Harttor, wbicl\ was later provtn io We've been In tbc ams tor si.1 ,_,.
be toeally ·1a11e. Mr. Cariton just DOW and lime after time he''"'"*' namor .,...si .. •in, hQ narrow minded pea on Ncwpon.
. WeQ, it WM OftlJ .. Martinelli& 9lrild111atColches.1\h)nea. at\lden• St>utfflll Appl< Cidtt." I was theft "llDll .. ppon..._ Why!
In clos1n&. thcrc 1s very httle I can
do about Mr. Carlson other than
write this letter and do what r vc
done twice 1n lhe pa.st because of
Mr. Carlson's articles -canttl the
Daily Pllot.
DICK MASON
Santa Ana Hc-t&hu
Fired up over 'idiots'
To the: Editor:
This lcttn is mally addresaed to
the idiots who say after firn. .. I JUCSS.WC foraot to put new bs.ttc.ries 1n our smoke detector .. or, .. , 1ucs1
I fell uJeep smolcjrw."
If they want to iftcinerate 1hem·
telvcs, that is lhci'I businesa. But
they Jiive 11'0 fiaht to cnda..,; she
Uva of \heir families and neiahbon
trith tbetr stupidity.
LAURA OLSON om. M ...
Alcohol not needed to have fun ·
Te .. .._,
•c110.._ot ... ••~-~ • .. s-._,_....., .....
~---.. -··~
--..,_ ,. ,, .. .,.. ... . . -... ---··· ·:i:z.--··--... .... •• 11 PArik ....... '?! J, ·-= -_.-..... -•rnw~-..11111r_, =if! ----·~.: -·. ·-----... co I ...... -.
Lagunan
foiled by
aluminum
question
Whc-n Laguna Beach star1ed 11s
curbside recycling program. Mayor
Roben Gentr; ~id he was con·
v1 nced that ··Lagunas ecology.
minded c111zr ns would pa.n1c1patc
enthus1ast1call~ in the program."
Dorothy 1s an ccolog)·m1ndcd
c111zcn and \'Owed 10 pan1c1patc
cnth us1a~11catly She 1s also a wife.
mo1hcr of two prcM:hool children,
foster mo1her to a m1 .. cd breed
puppy and ac11\e 1n t.,.,·o organ1za.
t1ons 1n town.
She ~·as moti,·ated even mo rt'
when she read that the tncrgy saved
""'Ith one recycled aluminum can
would run a TV for four ho urs. the
cntfl)' used to produce a glass bottle
would run a 100 wan ligh1 bulb for
four hours. and a s1 ... foo1 stack of
newspapers ~·ould save a JS.foo1
tree from being cut down.
The bins for recycled matcnals
.,..·ere deiLvcrcd with 1nstruc11ons.
Plastics and aluminum go into the
hght blue bins. glass goes into the
dark blue bins and nc-...·spapers into
the wh11e bins.
Simple enough. isn't 11~
Dorothy picked through her trash
and ~!vagtd a mayonnaise Jar. a
peanut buucr J&r. a hght bulb. two
soup cans. two pickled bec.1 cans and
threr plas11c soda water bottles.
Then sht read the li ne pnnt. All
bottles and Jan. must be nosed clean
and caps and hds removed. No light
bulbs. windov. &Iass. mirrors, pyrtx
glass or crocker:-c.an be included.
Doroth~ found out you can't n nSC"
out mayonna1!1C and peanut but\C'T
iars You need hot. soapy water to
&C't them clean
She: also dl5Co\_erc.d the l111Jc
plastic nnp lcfl on ihe soda water
bonles do no1 comt" off as ca~1I\' alt
tht ca~ do She left the 1ars soak1n1
in hot soap) water whtle she went to
the praae to 1c1 a srrcwdn\·er to P')
the nngs off the bottl~.
In 1hc meantime. Junior was yell·
1n& for a Band-;\1d for his "owie"'
that he 101 when he pulled the set of
fokhna tr'lys down on top of him.
The-baby was Cr)'l n& -Dorothy
kM"'' n was becl UK she needed
changing -and !be dia~r coukl
not be included in the collect1on of
pape<S.
These t"'·o emergencies t.aken cart'
of. she finished washing the jars and
stancd rinsina out the food cans and
frozen food trays, She-checked the
1nstrucrt.1ons again. No aluminum
frozen food trays. no food cans. no
JUiee cans. no 110 cans -JUSt
aluminum cans.
Thafs when I go1 the first call
from her.
Thert was a Wlnll edgt to ha
vo1oe when she asked, "How do you
tell an aluminum can from 1 LLn
can?"
I wasn't much help, Most
aluminum cans have rounded bot-
toms. I !Old net and aren't IS hclvy
a~ un cans ... To be safe.'" I added.
··Just put 1n the beer cans."
She tossed the nnscd food cans
t.ck 1n the ll'Ub and started pullin1
the accumul111on of newspapers out
of the trash to pul in the white bin
as per 1nslructions.
.4h. yes. instructio ns: Ncwspapen
only -no paper naplc1ns. paper
1owtls. or paper plates. No fl\l&I·
1.1ncs or Junk mai.l. No puppy
papers She had a aood accumula-
t1on of those 5H'ICC the puppy was
paper trained.
The puppy -wtlett was she? It
was susp1c1ously quic-t. Dorothy
went 1n10 the livinc room and fouod
Junior ly1na on the floor pjarint:
wi1h the seuffina comina oue of the
cusluon that the doS was chcwint
on.
Th1fs whtn I 1()1 the-ICOOnd call
from her.
"Thc-y don't rccylc foam rubber, ..
she said. "The baby is cryint,:tn
and l'V1: spent mon: 'time c .,
up th~ trash lbia mOf'llina th&a
l\avc-ek:an.iac up u.c. kitchen.''
The nea:1 dly she told me she
carried out her oeaUy tOf1cCt ncwt-
popen IUld llid lbcm """" .. .., of htt nripbor's juk mai'l. Siie •
still sun& ho on ftlC)'di'W-but U...
rKYW !ii: Mvc 10 Ran fTona ICftllt1I. ud ,_..., .. __
I wlf ......... -IO ...
be 100 modi of.-~ ilto ._ a •• oonilllOlutioft.a.-~ lwlOO ____ _ -....i· .. :;c-· m1a1.,_._.... N&
Siie cm com• m -,,!!j ::: '!' ... i;v .:-.:-~
~· "{;-:-.:;. "O sS • ..-.--=. ,er c.,..-.&e a
• ..
AM Ot ... C.. DAlt.Y N.OT/ w.dne9d1r, O.C: 1wa1r 1. ..
Trying to end .addiction to her cru I boyfri nd
(~ ldm behind bis a.ct. .. DEAR ANN LA.NODS: rve
blilld of people beiDa addicted IO ~~~~:1o
ftw more than four or five dais, I become depresled and 10 runnine
b9dr; to bim. Every time we ~ up l eet the
sbakes and ay for boun. rve lolt
Richard has always been manipu· 1evea J)C>Unds in I 0 days and fed
lative and mentally abusive. rve that life is too m'9Cb for me. utely becci me lddicied to another person.
UDlil DOW. rw ._. eeeiaa .. Ridwd .. for
tbne yell'I. When WC first ltaned t0 da-. I WU very independent and be ,.. a~ poaesaive. After ._ ,_. ow rolll are revcned.
Naw le ii indesadent and I have tiecame wtpic:ious and jealous of
every woman be loots al
never known an)'ooe •bo ~ be so I~ been •Wokiaa of suicide. •
._,. and lldonna one minute ~ My ,_..mid family have tiiii9
IO W of hate the nell I could~~ j:jDd. _. Hf;prti~ They aU IQ .... abcMat the cnael and 51dtSU4 \ ftD ... -.0 llc>d .. thit ~'1 ~-dait~bu~IOme.lld '-*Y .. IWt(.butlaMYMJlle really .,. wffll ~ Iliad. 1D let him eo. even tboQP I taow
I decided to see a p1ycbiatrist, he's bed for me. • tblatioa it was all my fault, but the Should I check into a meatal
docD' 10ld me Richard needed bclp hospital and• there uatil rm awe
-1lwt I. He ........... 1-u .. ....,.1dlilp)'!Jfedu
- A SCllBW ~ IN IOWA D&d IOWA: Tea .. ,_....,. ..... •••u111e fw ••t• 111h1 _. There is very little affection be-
tween us. We mostly ~t. l'Ve tried
1evcnl times to end th11 crazy rela-
cionlhip. but whenever we are apan
Yibat the doctor said, be was • ~na tCleet out, but I won't let
counldiq. When I told · y~ it• ~ person inside my
and llCCUscd me of "talkina a t , ~.Alla, tdl me what to do.
..nee, ..................... .... ,.. ................... .. free,_..., ........... , ....
Cnsuer .......i ef ...... ~
9YSydney~
1f•eMay, Dee. I
.uua (Man:h 21·April 19): You discover
••eteape route." Liabt actually shines at end of
tunnel. Focus on freedom. ability to work with
Nies and regulations. Honor could be bestowed
by institution, charitable organization.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You wished for
rapprochement with family member -it will
happen by tonight. Emphasis on timing, luck.
speculation, personal magnetism. You might be
saying. "I guess I didn't know my own strength."
GEMINI (May 21·June 20): You'U be
provided with special keys. rights and per-
missions. Emphasis on honors. achievement.
added popularity. You'll be chided concerning
diet, apparel. You can afford to be good spon.
CANCER (June 2 I-July 22): Various cycles
point to vindication. possible promotion. What
had been an obstacle will be transformed into
steppingstone. Agent reveals existen~ of "slush
funds.." Scorpio plays prominent role.
LEO (July 2J...Aug. 22): Lines of communica·
tion open. daal<>Jue ~ns regarding unique
financial transaction. Manor l~I flaw will be
erased. Scenario features reading. writing. ~
l .. '9. 80\·o
newal of acquaintance with ,_.., of Oppolite
sex .
VIRGO (Aug. 2J..Scpl 22): Attention con-
tinues to center around home, security, major
domestic change. Financial status of partner or
mate proves revelatory. Means you learn plenty
about money and how it geu that way.
LIBRA (Sept 2J...Oct. 22): Focus on home
entertainment. handlina of delicate objects in-
cluding china ware. Special guest will insist,
"You've got a secret and I want to lcnow it." It's
kidding on the square.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2J..Nov. 2 I): Scenario leaves
no room for indifference. It is aJI or nothina -
emotion, physical attraction spotlighted. You
could be on destiny's toboggan ride. Older per-
sons involved. including pa.rent or employtt.
SAGITTAIUUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Individ-
wal who had been ambivalent might declare, "It
is now or never." Sale or purchase of property
featured. Search for ideal mate continues on
mental plane. Aries figures prominently.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Take in-
itiative, refuse to be disturbed by relative who
emits "emotional static." Take charge of your
•
own fate. Study Scorpio message. You are on
brink of major adventure. Proceed with con-
fidence.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2().fcb. 18): Relationship
with older woman, possibly mot.her, can be
considered .. unorthodox.•• Money is involved.
You could be ac:cwicd of losing something of
value. Grin and bear il Leo is in picture.
Ptsca (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): Wednesday
night .. social .. could prove invipating. will
verify your cun'Cnt popularity. Spot.li&ht on
image, ward.robe. humor. Some will use the word
.. allurina" to describe you. Gemini, Slginarius
play roles.
IF DEC. I IS YOUR BIRTHDAY ... many
persons have commented on your voice. You are
capable of teaching. acting. singina. You also can
be self-indul&cnt to the point of havina a .. sweet
tooth." Taurus. Libra, Scorpio persons play
important roles in your life. You'll travel this
month, you'll be sensitive concerning body
imqc. You11 be more independent in 1990.
could also be madly in love. with July being most
memorable. lpng-standina relationship. situ-
ation is currently beina concluded.
Trend coUld mak~ women green with envy
Neither vulMnble. Wat deals.:
WIST
NORlll
• '7 5.
Q Q. 7
0 J '4
• 7 5 4 l
EAST
• Q •• '' 1
Q •• 'l
• KI
Q J9541
0 •• ''7 . '' 0 K51
••• 11
SOU11I One declaftr QPCWed East's Una
• A J J or spedes witll tbe ace ud led a
Q A K ctillmoad to I.be jlct. 11* would
O A Q I l ha¥e secured the contnct had Wat
• A I Q J hdd the tiq. Unfottunllldy, the
The bidclina: monarch was witla East, and a spade
Wat Nertll F.Mt S.... retu.ra allowed tbc def enders to col-
Paa P.a P.. l NT lect four spade t:rid.s for a one-trick
... ... ... set.
Opmina lead: Six of • The otba dedaref help up oo tbe
In the ina .. -..... 1 ....ut-match be-ftnl round of spedes, then won the
tween the t-='k:;s~ti:'" chambers. second. A diamond to the jlct lost,
the House handily defeated the Seo-and silKlC East was out of spedes
ate. Early next year, the wi.nncn will declarer was able to take the rest of wy tbe British P.•rliammt in the tbe tricks. sa¥e oac. Buttbc coatrac:t
first Transatlantic Govenuncntal would ha'VC failed had Wat hdd the
Olallcqc. Almost all the players Oil Una or diamoods.
both teams were Republicans. We The winn.ina liDc is to bold up the
arc not sure wbctba an infusion of ace of spedes ooc round, win the
new Democrat blood in the Senate second spade and then cash at least
Ask the boss lady if she'd dye her
hair arcen? No? Nor would but a few
exceptions. However, a student of
social trends says many women mi&bt do so, if certain other women did it first. This analyst contends ~·s now only one woman in
America capable of starti!lf such a fad: Barbara Bush. Don't think she's
aoin& to do it.
The piano was invented in 1709.
euctly 100 years after .. T hree Blind
Mice" was written.
obj~t of affection to offset uneasi-
ness brought on by your momentary
low regard of yourself. Shrug.
ouJd •"--r three rounds of dubs and tbe ace clomiromine ends the compulsion w reverse UK outcome o next
in many. What they're looking for year's match. and kiaa of hearts. Dedarc:r lhm
now is a similar druJ to stop the Both teams dedand three no exits witb the jack of spllda. Wat
compulsive fingernail biting. They trump on this band. Both declarers can cash three IP-* tricks. butt.Mn
think they'll find it. adopted a reasonable tine or play, mu.st SUITCDder tbe p!D( .....
If uked to name a toothless mam-
mal. ~ou can say anteater. Any
others.
That U.S. city with the most
movie theater seats per capita is
O eveland.
It's when you're dassausficd with
yourself that you're most apt to fall
an love. Such 1s the theory attnbutcd
to that renowned Love and War
expert Theodor Reik. Partly a mat-
ter of cao. be has said. You find an
Raphael, a legend
in his own time.
~.ttle~~
Nitti al ttle a-u.nc •
~ ICnown fot hi\
wnw al cob. bm
Md P!Nioft. ht bKM'M •~iflhlsown
tt!M. And now. comes
.__.,aunu,fw~ °' ........ .,.Aly ...
totid braM -. ....... Md
KC'ftfOMt. n.y IN~-.... w.c fftd --. whet'!! \Of ... ........,_..., ... ~ .. m••• tor ,...., homt
Quick. name the only animal that
runs backwards to attack. No. sir.
you should've said porcupine.
Am told fleas run about 80.000 to
the ounce.
Numerous people compulsively
pull out their own hair. Doctors say
an anti~eprcssant drug called
but neither found the almost sure-trick-ether by lc:actina a heart to
What's different about Sunda> trick line. Can you do better after dummy's queen or a di.a.mood illto
night? That's when the most ~plc the lead of a 51)ade? dedaref's ~ tcnace.
have trouble sleeping. Or so their .---------------------------
complaints to doctors indicate.
You can figure the makings for
that rain on your windshield was in
the sky for about thrtt weeks.
On the MOVE?
Sell your extra household
items in classified.
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LAURA
Tiie .,... ..... ..
For ..... dotld.
Ind KelCIDiea.
..... •'twsd .... -~--.. ..• ...
-...., ..... ..._.., .............. :ti'• .. ....,_ .... ., ........ 11!19 .,._enee ...._..,. Corone def .._... Johnson twins -Wnton Jobt1an la No. 44. Wanen. who had 45. now sports 41 on his cllnt.
Double the .pleasure, double the trouble
Johnson twins have given Corona del Mar football foes unique dilemma
-JON flllGUSON Of_..._ ......
They may be identical, but they're
aot nec:iemrily the same. 1lle simi-
larities somctunes seem endless, so
1bc individuality is sometimes h.ud '°ICC.
Corona dd Mar football coach Da~ Holland tbows one thin& -
tbey-re an invaluable pair of athletic
1aleats as his Sea Kinp try to defend
dlleir OF Division VI football cham-
pionship. ..
Weston JobftSOO and Warren
Johmon att identical twins. They
eltjoy playina a few &QOd-natured
IC I H \Sk•: rH \I .I
Injury bug?
Who cares?
Just win 'em
Late Oholl kic:bd the basketball at
dlle md of the first half in the Ari-
~ Stacepmc. then went
after the cilliciaJs and WU ancstcd a
"tccbnical foul tO'eVf!'l the ICCOnd
bait Come on Uafe. you will ruin
yoar nn. aad people will SW1 c:allias you Bobby! a
How U>Ulb is the Bia West Con-
ftrencle? Loew Beach State defeated
Pwcbae aad & tome of you in yOur
lOs aad aarty 40s, it was Rick
Moat's toD wbo made the t.d pass '° li'ft 1bc win 10 the 49ers. c:aJ State f\allerton continues to
. by.,._ ICOftS. New Maic:o Stace
JllCw Melloo, wbic:b is one of
vorilel to win the WAC.
UC Saata Bartma lost a dose
at Iowa in the final of the
llllrwllieyeOa:sic. To be tbat dolC is ..a accomplishment if you ha~
._.to Iowa Oty fOr a weekend
UCS8 beat 8ndley by 26 points in
fin& road of the 10Ul'DUDellt.
· loll a tbfte..p>int in the .... ::llolic * SoatbWCllcnl,.;::.::
---·· n.t isWJGer--place Ill a wia. To top it o«. Fremo
defeated Kum State met
...tKSU wa pidmd bilber
ICaaw iD dile er a: I l'lG polk.
A,...ee•bythe....eof
0.hm._. H-~.,..__':!UlGM/UI
jokes from ume to tame with the best
oft.hem, and many have been fooled •eo-..-.. ...........
more than onoc. ln fact. someumcs
they have to work at at to distinguish
tbemlelvcs.
"We kind of do our own thing. but
if we end updoi"' the same thing. we
do it." Weston sud.
Except when they both wake up m
the morning and meet up with each
other to find out they've put on
basically the same clothes.. Then they
cbanaic. Or on occ:asion. Weston will call a
friend up on the phone an has room.
and then Warren picks up the other
e11.tension to call the same fnend and
finds out he's already on the line.
Or one time when their dad, Larry
Johnson. took Weston out to lunch
one day and Warren out alone a
month later. He found both ordered
the same thing.
When they enter the spon s arena.
its the jersey numbers which dis-
,tingu1sh them. Someumes that isn't
enousb when 1t comes to announcers
at games or newspapcT mugshots.
In their younger years. both pitch-
ed and played infield in baseball and
played the same pos1uon m soccer.
At CdM, both arc wide receiver·
comcrbacks m football and guards m
basketball. Both once played vol-
leyball in the spring, but each gave 1t
up.
They have not only played two
sports at CdM, but they have played
them well. Both of them -Warren
and Weston.
It's not too often that a coach can
have a great player go down for some
reason, yet have the perfect replace·
ment in the wmgs. a.·,
Last season. with the two serving
as staning comerbacks and shanng
one wide receiver position opposite
senior Jeff Clark. Holland was pres-
ented with some untonunate news
before a Monday practice.
Warren was stanmg and had
caught s111. passes an each of C'dM's
first two games. whale Weston was
seeing time but had not caught a
pass.
"I was already dressed." Warren
said.
"He didn't know he had mono,"
Weston chimed m. "He was already
dressed m has pads. and mom got
that look on her face."
"I was already to go," Warren
added. "Then I massed thrtt weeks."
"That was one of the hardest
thmgs a mom had to do." Wendy
I ..... SC•ML •AS&ETBALL
Moriarchs
collect
another
crown
lly llEID McO.ATOfY
..._ .... c.. .... -.
If ever a bi&b school basketball
COllCb could 6na a reason to be upset
after his team just won a tour-
nament champio~lp. Macer Oci
Coecb Gary McKniaht is the one
most liftly.
After bis Monarchs defeated Lona
8c8ch Jordan. 7<M9, in the cbam-=l> pmc of the Costa Mesa-n Harbor Til:>-Off Tour-
nament. McK.niabt sc:ofdcd his team
in the locker room for not playing
with enOQlb intensity tbrouahout
the whole pme and bcina out.re--
bounded by a much smaller team in
the teOOnd half.
.. We pla~ pretty wcU in the first
half and didn' shoot real well in the
leClOlld half." McKniaht said. "We
broU down in every phase of the c:n the second half and they
·ltated the boards. We just
didn "t execute real (J't'tll and they steDDed up their intensity ...
Scirdan didn't have a sinak of-
hsi~ OC' defensive m>C>u.nd in the fint q.aana and that was much of
the reuon t.bey trailed 17-8 at the
end of the period. When they bepn
to poud the boards. the Pantbcn wa-e able to stay dOK to the
Mourcbs and were only oullC:Oft:d
by three points in the 9CCOftd half.
.. When they bepn 10 dominate us
OG the bcmds, I IW1ed 10 8el &.. uated., ... McKnilbt said. .. We Wft'e
aho doilll lilly tbinp with the ball ,..._ .. MONAllCHS/UI
' /
............. ~··-............... .,.,.., .... dler .... c•• CNn•-MI•• ... ..,.., • ....-1•••· · .
Johnson said. "He wasn"t fcchna
good, and Weston had mono the year
before. He had a blood test on Satur-
day. and he was all dressed in his
football gear, and I had to go tcU him
that he wasn't going to play. I had to
tell Coach Holland too.··
"I said 'thanb for telhng me,' "
Holland said sincerely. "He bad just
hAd a great pme too.··
"I said Weston can do anytb1na
Warren can do," Wendy Johnson
said.
So Weston played the entire game
on offense and defense. He cauaht
five passes for S'S yards and one
touchdown and intercepted three
passes, retummg two for touch-
downs. Weston .went on to catch 14
fPteae 1H JOHNSONS/&J)
Artists
push by
Chino,
88-71
n.o.-yNot
I
l..quna Beach Hi&h's hi&h-Oyina
Artists raced to their fourth stra:iab.t
victory Tuesday ni&ht as they opened
their own basketball invitational
with an 88-71 verdict over Olin<> to
qualify for a quarterfinals berth
.,a.inst St. John Bosco Thursday.
Actually the Artists slowed the
tempo in the fourth quarter in order
to pull it out as Olino trailed by just
a 63-60 count entcrina the final ciaht·
minute sqment.
Ed Bowen orden:d bis Artists \n10
a more s-tient tempo at that point
and it produced a 2S-I l fourth-quar·
ter ND.
Dain Blanton led all scoren with a
penonal hiah of 3S points. nettin& 19
of ll from the line to pecc a team
dfoC1 of 31 of 43 free throws u Laauna took advantqe of mulive foulina by Chino. OU.no bad three playen foul out
and bad 31 team fouls. compared to
the A.rtisu • 13.
Indy Butcher ( 17) and John
Trevino ( 16) were also in double
fiaura for the Artists. who won their
leOODd pme in two nilbts and in two
tournameots. bavina bca1e0 o.u.e
Lutberan on Monday for that
ICbool's tournament crown.
• C.orona dcl Mar was witbout
four of its blue chips. but the .. Litde
~ .. ~ i 'vdy belaiM me exploits of~~ 0cMaa heae. ICllior Mart. . ... .,..._ ... MTISTS/at
wants po~r
to ~Ip ~rsuad~ Yount
to stay with Miiwaukee
,,.. ""·.-..J111• ,,_
MD..WAUKEE -A local judee, COA-C&;
coned lbal Robin Y ouat IDIY leave the y ~ •ewen rot a IDOft lucrative
o8lw, ...-led 10 cbildreD ~_J_!O '!!.ite leaen IO tM American Lape MV.-WQI bim ""there
ate ~ more important tbu moacy ill ~."
Milwaukee County Circuit Judie Cbarlet
Sdludloa, a OM-time vtndor at MilwaUbe County
$Mdinm wbere the Brewen play, uked ~ ~t WilcoMia 10 write Yount and ..._ him 10
cMle ~ ~ money...... ....:... .• C!-t. •• ..11.~ ..... phn•• on uDJea ... uia iuu power, .;JWl-
said. .. rm .U. 10 Mk the children of this state to write
leaen dim:tly so Robin to let him know tbat there a.re tbials more impor11Dt than money' in liR ... love,
• loyalty, devotion and the cqmple that a ballplayer sets
for kids. ..
It may seem a bit unusual, but there's mountina
anxiety amona Wisconsin sports fans ahnut Yount'a cboice. • -1
Yount, 34; bit .318 for the Brewers last seuon with
21 home runs and I 03 R.Bls to win bis second AL MVP
award. He bas been with the Brewen since 1974 and
needs 96 bits for 2., 700 lifetime.
An offer by the California A•ls' is reported to be bet~n $13 million and $16 million for five yean,
including a large signing bonus. Tb~ . Brewen are
believed to have offered Yount $9 mdhon for three
yea~ decision is not expected for at least a few days,
aiviDC Schu~son an~ other Brewer backers time to
orpmze their campaign.
The Brewers have already forwarded letters to
Yount from radio listeners, Milwaukee Mayor John
Norquist, Milwaukee County Executive David Schulz
and Gov. Tommy G. Thompson.
"If it's a grass-roots type o~ thing. it might be j~st
what Robin needs to prove to him that the community
is upset just at the possibility of him leaving." Brewers
marketing executive Dick Hackett said.. . •
"We're banginJ on by our fingernails because 1t s
a day-to-day situation. 1 told (Scbudson) if .be wanted
to do something. it would have to be done fast. rm sure
Robin is making up his mind now and we're not sure
which way he's 4omg." Hackett added
Schudson S8Jd Yount bas an opportunity to send
a messaae. in an era of big money dominating sports,
that other thin~ count m ore.
"We hav;: JUSt come through the period of Robin
Yount's last 16 years in baseball."
tp I 0 I I O I I 111 U \ \
"It too.le players 20 yean to make the jump
from $20,000 to SI 00.000 salaries. It too.le them
less than two years to 40 from SI millon to $3
million. I'm no economist. but if there's a salary
curve riaht now, it's going straight up" -Angels
Manqer Do•1 Rader.
More surgery for Dravecky
NASHVILLE, Tenn. Dave ----
Draveclcy, who battled back from cancer to * pitch for San Francisco this season, will
have suraery in January because of a recur-
rence of a tumor in tus left arm.
Oravec.Icy. 33, will undergo the procedure at the
Sloan-Kettcnng Memorial Cancer Center in New York
on Jan. 4.
Oravec.Icy spent most of the season in rehabilitation
from surgery to remove a cancerous tumor from his left
arm in 1988. He drew national attention when he
returned to the G iants in August and beat Cincinnati
at Candlestick Park 1n his first game back.
In bis next start. however. in Montreal. Oravec.Icy
shattered a bone in tfis left arm while making a pitch.
That fracture was healing on schedule when he
sustained another brealc in the arm durinJ the team's
on-field celebration following the Giants' victor}' for the
NL pennant in Game 5 of the playoffs against Chicago.
Other sports news Tuesday:
• Former San Antonio Spurs star George Gervin
will try to launch an NBA c-0meback from the Con-
tinental Basketball Association by playing for the Quad
City Thunder, the team's coach said.
The four-time NBA scoring champion bas a&RCd
to sian a one-year contract with the Thunder, Mauro
~o. coach of the Rocle Island, lll.-bued team.,
said 10 published reports Tuesday.
Leonard Jeopardizes his role u backup
quarterback wMn, for the fourth time In two
games, he fumbles the cllpboard.
Angels wlll open In Seattle
~ ANAHEIM -The California Angels
will open the 1990 season at Seattle on
Tuesday night, April 3, and entertain the
Mariners in their home-opener six days ----
later, it was ,nnounced Tuesday.
The Angels will play three games at Seattle and
three at Oakland against the defending World Series
champion Athletics before hosting the Mariners in t.beir
first home game on Monday. April 9, at 6 p.m.
The Angels' first homestand will feature three
games against the Mariners. four 8$3inst the Minnesota
Twins and two against the Athletics.
The Angels have 10 homestands during the season
with the longest lasting 13 games, from Aug. 2-15. Of
the Angels' 8 I home games, 64 arc.presently scheduled
to be played at night and 17 during the day.
The Angels also announced Tuesday that they ha_ve
sign~ a three-year player development agrceme!lt wt~h
the Boise liawks of the Northwest League. Boise wt.U
be a O ass A affiliate of the Angels. whose association
with the Bend. Ore., Bucks has been terminated
Dodgers offer arbitration
~ NASHVILLE -The Los Angeles
Dodgen offered salary arbitration on Tues-
day to pitcher John Tudor and outfielder
John Shelby, executive vice president Fred ----
Oaire said.
Tudor, 35. was 0.0 with a 3.14 earned run average
in 1989. He missed mo~scason ~u~ <?f
surgery on his ten elbow. left shoulder and nght t1b1a
on Oct. 27, 1988. . . Tudor is a free agent and St. Louis Cardinals
manager Whitey Herzog said Tuesday the club would
like to sign the left-bander.
Last season. Tudor madcSl.3 million ~e i~ 105-68
lifetime includin' a 21-8 mark for St. Louis in I 985: Sb~Jby, 31. btt .183 in 108 games for the Dodgers 1 last season. In 32 games at Q ass AAA Albuquerque. he
bit .286.
1111\1'10'\-H \UIO
T9UvtSION
Noon -ltootlO: PRCA ~tloMI Finals from Las Veeat (lepe, ello et t P.m.), ESPN.
4 p.m. -COLL•G• 8ASKSTSALL: Providence n.
Oemton from Greensboro, H.C., ESPN.
4:30 P.m. -HOOC•Y: Westilngton el Pitt~,
SoortlChennel.
6 p.m. -COU•G• aASKllT8ALL: Duke n. Svr-
KUM from Greensboro, N.C., ESPN.
7:30 p.m. -HOCK•Y: Vencoover et Kings, Prime
Tldtet. I P.m . -HOltSS RACING: Hollywood Partl repleys,
Channel 5' (Prime Tldu11, mldnlol'tt).
I p.m. -COLL•O• aASK•'BALL: Oavton et Miami.
Fla. (delayed), SoortlChennel.
10 p.m. -HOCK•Y: New York lslanden et Hartford
<delavecn. SoortaChennel. RADIO
5:30 p.m. -COLUG• aASK.m'BALL: Lono 8MCtl
Sta'-et BnldleV, KottG 0190). 7:30 p.m. -COLL•G• USK•'BALL: USC et
Potttllftd, KN)( (1070).
7:30 p.m. -HOCK•Y: Vencouver et Kines, KL.AC
(510).
Harry S. Green, Inc. & SCC's home
streak halted COSTA
SA
y
protldly p reKDt
The 0-"Y Not
The Southern California College
men's basketball team bad its home
winniJlf ltJU.lc snapped at 20 Tues.-
day nicht. falling to Cbriatian
Heritqe in a ooSHX>nference pme,
88-86.
lbe Vanpards ( 4-2) appeared to
have the pme in hand with a 7).66
edvanu.e midway throuah the 1ee-
ond half. but the Hawks (4-3) •uraed ~ tbanb in put to 10me deadly
3-ooint thootina by Mark Krutz, wflo WU S for 7 from bonus r&JllC
and finished with 23 points.
Jeff Bickmore (2S points), Riek :=•lt;ad~~~sc.<l!i = Witmer wu 3 for 4 &om
the 3-point line and 9 for 1 S
ownll.
11111 PN• 1 blll. It'• .,...,. .
wllia you'ft ~II iD a IOUf• w like becauar ~'19 ftve ~t days ~m.t
and you belin 10 pkk up
lilllllita." Mole .)'I of DO practice are m
the MOUICbt' tuhlft u Ibey left
euty today for MJuouri IO play die
11at1'1 three-time ddendiaa aate cbampiou.
'"To make tbiQll wone r..-us, now we bave so ID on the road with no r~ widl ill front of over 0.000 ad .... bome team it
three· •• state cbampiona," McKNal!1 laid. ... , •• aoinl to be •
Nil 101i11a ._... for ua.. We'U be ftJilll l*:t oe ~Y and aaanilJI the Tounament o(Qampiou OD Mon-
day. 8'at., J re-tba(I wMt
pnaealOD 11 for. Lona Beach Jordan probably wish-es it bad so many problems. Tbe
Pantberl who finished the tour-
nament 3-1 didn't have a ainale play-
er ICOrc in double fi&ures and it
wun 't became they were so deep that
they could spread the wealth around.
They were constantly forcina up bad
shots in traffic and as a result bit
nothina but air on five shots.
Mater dei got 19 points from auard
David Boyle 11 points from tour-
nament Most Valuable Player
Charlie Andres and I 0 each from
Andy K.arich and Derck Stone. Also
named to the All-tournament team
was Dan O'Neil who contributed 8
points off the bench.
ARTISTS
From Bl
John Paulsen as Savanna was a 68-49
victim in the first round of the
Lquna Beach Invitational.
Flint scored 21 and Hesse and
Paulsen dropped in 19 and 11 points,
respectively. Hesse added 13 boards
and junior John Upham contributed
with 9 points and 11 rebounds as the
Sea Kings (1-0) qualified for a quar-
terfinals matchup with Compton
Thursday night at 8:30.
"l was pleased," noted CdM
Coach Paul O rris. "This was our first
start and we bad some first-quarter
jitters, but once we settled down we
were O K. Doug played very well
inside and our press bothered them a
little."
• Estancia's G uty Heredia scored
14 of bis pme-high 20 points in the
fourth quaner to fuel a raJJy which
fell short in the Eagles' 65-60 setback
to Loara in the Garden G rove Tour-
nament.
Included in He rcdia·s fourth quar-
ter total was a pair of 3-pointers as he
tried to bnng the Eagles (0--2) back.
Mike Haas added 14 points. along
with nine rebounds and Torrey
Hammond added I 0 points for
Estancia. which meets Bolsa Grande
at 5:45 today at Garden Grove High
in a consolation semifinals.
• Liberty Chn sttan stayed winless
in three outings. falling to Leffingwell
Christian. 58-41 . in a non-league
matcbup. John Carpenter paced the
winners with 19 points. while Steve
Cha{>pell notched 17 for Liberty. in-
clud1ng a pair of 3-potnt goals.
''I would hope we could play ~th
any team in the country on any 11ven
niabt, but I don't think we're a domi-
oatina team," McKni&bt said. "I just
think we play real well toðer as a
team and uee our tremendous depth
to our advantqe. We don't have any
superstars just a bunch of guys who
lcnow how to execute on the basket-
ball court." . James Jackson led the Panthers in
scoring with 9, followed by_ Reggie
King with 8 and Deandre Smith 7.
Despite being at a tremendous
•Ocean View Coach Jim Harris
watched his quintet gi ve him five
players in double figures en route to a
season-opening 77-52 victory over
visiting Fullprton.
"OvcralJ ll was a pretty good ef-
fort." noted Hams, who takes his
team to San Luis Obispo for Thurs-
day's opener against ttny Coast
Union High in what appears to be a
.-.. :tfrh••· _..ball _. ~ at11111w WM OOllld jump aad did ..... .., ..., ... la me toUfDUMOt cilld do: Hold I.ht
M:..._ __ .. , 10 oalJ -lbcJC on na.. vm--C)CIC8lioGt. -~ were mucb bllllr, but we bdd our own on the bOllrda. .. said
Smith wbo bad four ~ &bots.
----Boyte on 1U01: mmve ahou uadcr the bllkA .. If we could bavc ~ off to a betwr lboodQS n~t. I we mjpt bave beca able IO make tt a
bill .-me·" I
~bete iD tbe IOUl'Damcnt: • ~ p 14 points from
raerve ....,.S UeD! Npyen, six oom.
ill on J.1)0iDllCJ in die 1eCOnd tWf wrm tbe ICOl'C still close, a~a the RoldnmDetl c1ere.aec1 Hwnuiaton leadl 6S-5S for Lbird place. Seddleblck bad to OVCl'C)C)me a
9C)Od shoo~ Dilbt tom MURapha
Abdi, who firushed ~th a pme-hiah
26 p<>ints. Tc~ of ~ potnll came
from the free.-thro• li.ae and he also
puJled 19 rebouJlds. The pine wu tied at 47 when the
Roedrunnen went on a 18-8 run to
clote it out.
•Newport Harbor aot IS point
from Eddie Martinez before foulm&
out and I 0 from Ian Lona as the
Sailors beat Costa Mesa. S0-46 for
consolation bonon. XaVler Hanna
led Mesa with 14 poinu and Bret
Die~ll added 13.
•El Toro went crazy from thr~
point range. hitting 1 0 th~ pointm
as the Chargers beat Irvine High
69-54 for fifth place. David Molle'
led the Vaqueros with a game high ~3
points.
-3:30 mismatch.
"I thought Greg Evans ran the club
well and Lee Quinn came off the
bench and did very well wnh 10
rebounds." said Harris. Marcc.-1
TenBerge and Darren Ernst each had
9 rebounds.
Evans and TenBerge each scored
16 followed by Quinn (1 4). R)an M~rtin ( 13) and Jim Gwaltne) ( 11 )
GWC tourney off and running
~
Cerritos College. the defending state community co.liege basketball
champions. and Riverside. last year's Orange Empire ~ofercnce
winners head a list of eighl schools scheduled to compete in the I I th
annual Golden West Tournament beginning today with two fint-round
contests in the G WC gym. . . .
Coach Jim Greenfield's Rustlers (6-3) will play Citrus tn the
opening round on Thursday at 8 p.m. ·
Cypress and Glend~le will hook up in the first round ~t 6 p .m.
tonight while Riverside and Cerritos play at 8 p.m. Ttp-o. ff for
Thursday's first round game between San Diego Mesa and ~telope
Valley is at 6. •
Four games ~ill be played on Fnday. beginning ~t 2 p.m. w:ith the
two losers of ton14hfs gam_es. The losers of Thursday s gam~ wt~I play
at 4. Tonight's winners will play at 6 p.m. while. Thursday ~ WUlDcrs
meet at 8 o'clock on Fnday in the double~hm1nation tournament.
.. Antelope Valley 1s real strong this year. they have some Division
I kids on their team:· Grttnfield said. "Cypress has a couple of 7-
footers and they·re real strong. too. They also have a lot of experience
and a lot of players back from last year.··
Cyprcs.s enters the tournament at 6-0. while Glendale (7-3) and
Cerritos (7-3) have also started out o n a good note this season.
Last year. Oxnard defoated Cemtos for the tournament cham·
pionship. Golden Wrst has never won its tournament.
Fnday·s winners tn the losers· bracket will play at 4 p.m. on
Saturday in the consola tion cha mp1onsh1p while the third-place game
is scheduled for 6. The utle game 1s at 8 p.m.
HIGH S('HOOt GIHl.S R -\SKt:TBAl.I.
Edison 's Fischer sizzles from
3-point range in 83-32 vic,tory
The D.-Y ,lot Ericka Miller chipped in with 14
for the Chargers as they tuned up for
Edison High senior Debbie Fischer Thursday night's invasion of highly-
put on a shooting performance never reordcd Lynwood.
seen before at the Ch~rs· gym in 1n other prep girls action:
sirls basketball -naihng a school •Julie Worlc.man scored 16 points
record 36 points as she led the way to as Fountain Valley used a productive
an .8~32 n<?n~leaguc victory over third quarter to defeat visiting Gahr.
Whituer Cbnsttan. S2-44, in the Barons' season opener.
-Tbe-S-foo~-9 Chargen' forward hit-Fountain Y~.ley trailed at t~ ~f.
7 of 12 from 3-point range. giving 29:26, ~ut limll~ Gab~ to JUSt six
here t S of 26 from the perimeter in polDts 1~ the third penod and ~ 5
Edison's first two non-league vie-ov~ m the second half to wtn
tori.es. go1D1 ~way. .
Her e~t )-pointers in Edison's Seruor forward Jennifer Barbaro
opener ued a state record and she was a force on the b<?&tds. ~ullina
bad six of those in one quarter. down 12 rebounds while sconna 11
points .. and Carolyn Fox contn bu1ed
I 0 pomts for the Barons. .
•Estancia got off on the n ghl foot
with a 50-36 victory over v1s1ting
Canybon as junior Patrice Lumpltn
dropped m 14 points and clearrd q
boards. while Melody Earle and Lil
Collins Joined in with big ni&ht.s
Earle had 13 points and 1 assists.
and Collins dominated the boards.
• Mater Dei opened its campa1in
with a closcly<0ntested 56-52 vie·
tory over Valencia in a no n-league
Mttle on the Monarchs' floor. Joan
Maurer bit all U.X free throw tne~ 1n
the fourth quarter and was 8 for 8 10
the pme to help the Monarchs.
Lakers wake up for 111-103 verdict
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Mqic
Johnson ICOred nine of his aeason·
hiab l4 poinu in the final fow
mfoutes Tuetday niaht u the Los
~les Liken added more fuel to
their one-sided crosstown rivalry
wilb the Loi AJlldes Oippm ill •
l l l·IOl Yic:toty.
Tbe defeat WU the Qi~' 2.4tb
in 1 row at the Forum. 16 of tboee
comma after they moved to Los Aneeles from San Dieao at the stan
of the l 984-8S aeason. Their last
victory in this buildina was on Nov.
21. 1981 -eiabt days aftet-Pat Riley
replaced Paw Westhad u bead
co.:la o( the Lalrm.
Micbael ~ added 10 fourth.
quar1Cf poiou for tbe l.aktTJ. Tbe
Oippen, 0-6 on the roed lbia aeuon,
were led by Ron Harper with 26
points.. Ken Norman added 22 and
Danny Mannina scored 13 of his 16
eoints in the final period lo keep the
Oippen in the game.
Cooper bit two l-point shots 10 a
67-tecond span. the first one Jiv1ni
Loi Anarles a 86-IS edee, and 1hc
aecond tyina the game at 89-89 with
4:SS left.:
freshman. He ii about 6--9 and went
10-for-IOfrom the fldd in the Gold-en Bean' win over USf" tut Satur-
day. 0eorte Dlayed ~ &eque butbaU fOr f. years.
0 Oail Ooodrich wa at ourpme ........., ..._., widl Ma-. Brian.
wbo ila-at Santa MOilica ~., ..... ...... •dlelaylor-Ooodridii ....... ~ y~ .... ~ ..,.., .... tirmerpl
........... t..lim; 111..t bit Wife -~ .... O.:•··--.. ..... ~ IF'="~= =----· D
I
Game-basters
Out ..... , up eetiMI ,..,. fill • ,..... er ... , T~ ~":eston Johnson (Corona del Mar). toucbdown pua from
• 46-Warren Johnson (Corona del Mar). pus from Todd Kebrli.
Lu& wee.It'• ruMaa leMen 17_1 ~~hanc Sherman (Edison), 2l·144; Brian Lucas (Corona del Mar),
Lut week'• ,. .. .._ lea*n •
1: Donnie Smith (Edison). 22-38-1; 296 yards, I TD; 2. Todd
K.ehrh (Corona dcl Mar), 7. t 4-0, 162 yards, 2 TDs.
Lai& week'• receMa1 leaden
I. Brian H iqins (Edison), 8-1 OS· Rocky Balch (Edison). 6-7 3;
Weston Jo~nson (CC?rona del Mar), J..9 1; 4. Shane Sherman (Edison), J..SS; S. Mike Cu nningham (Edison), J..41.
La1t week'• 1cortq leaclen
I. W~ston J_ohnson. (Corona del Mar), 18; Shane Sherman (Edison).
l 2: Donnie Smith (Edison). 12.
-
W.arren Johnson Weston Johnson
Field hockey not_ just·
fancy for East Coasters
not have a problem " and many of them havCZ\ worked very
Standing 1n the wa)' of West-hard over the summer: Coleman
minster and Newpon Harbor as de-s11d .. But we are vel) 1nex~nenced.
ln 1984 field hockey was dropped K.nstana Bass (Junior dcfenscma n). fendmg league champion Hunt-Most of the players are freshman or
as an official CIF Sou them Sccuon Michelle Keller (Jumor forward). ington Beach. The O~krs return nine sophomores and the) arc JUSt leam-
Champlonsh1p sport, but despite the Knsten Bowman (senior forward), players, including fi ve starter'> from mg the game
fact that most schools stopped offer· Karen SuLuki (Jumordefenscman). last season's squad. but the~ ha'e a "Two )Cars ago we "-On the C IF
ing n ,field hockey as still going strong Lmda Tran (Junior goalie) and Amie new leader in Denn) Pirtle."' ho 1s title. but we have ne\er "'On lea~ue
in the Sunset League. Wang (sophomore forward). the only new coach 1n the league and I would hke to do that. It wtU be
One of the reasons Lhe sport has In field hockey the Sunset League .. I think we ha\C a good chantc: a d1fficul 1. but I thmk "'e have a
hung on has been the dcd1cauon of 1s compnscd of its regular members rtpeaung as league: champs ·· Pirtle chance I am realh C'\tlled about our
the coaches, who arc walk-ons. The wtth the excepuon of Ocean View said '"We ha' e I 0 ~ophomores o n chances for next ~~ar though "
g.irls and the coaches work JUSt as along wtth Newport Harbor's Sailors the team. The} are \Cl) good ath· Pacing the Baro n'> are Lon
hard as the basketball and soccer The Sailors return eight ptayers le1es, but the~ lad. e :1:peru.·nC'e Onlc Fitzgerald (Junior goahel. M1t·hele
teams. but they do 11 wt th out the from last year's third-place team f" e the) learn .ho" to pla) th1-. game "'t· Du bu) (thrt'C·\ear ">entor deknder».
pubhcny. oftbem starters. and Sill th-year should be 'Cl) tuugh .. Beck) Md can {o,ophomore fo r-
Westmanster Coach Carol E~man Coach Kath) Van Doorman as Jenni Walk.c.-r 1 ~n 1or lof\\..trdJ c1nd "'ardl and \ln 1\ and\ an1a PetC'r'>
has been the onl) field hocke} coach hopeful the Sailors can 1mprO\.e on T1ffan~ Delp I sen1ur ct•nten 1""'11 rt'· 11 .... 1n wphc1nll>ft" '>l'>ttl"'i .... ho pla\
the Lio ns have e'er had When Title last season·~ performance turning all-k..tgut· rx-rti.1rmt·r, le.id • r 1~ ard 1
IX gave girls equal opponuntt} an .. I "ould hke to finish higher than Huntington Bt'Jlh .\l\o rt·turninti \\ th IJ nl"' l..il.l"' n 1h1' \CJr.,
1973. she started the field hockev 1h1rd this ) ear. and so far I thank "'t' ton he Oiler' an· T mta '\n die team third·' car \1anna l 11at h
program that produced a C IF cham-are on the nght track." Van lsenion. T ma ~unu l'>('n1on and Le ~hl"lle' Luth n·.il11t·'> ht·r \ 1kings
p1o nan 1980. Doorman said "We haHsome good Luong<semor) ha,e1ht•lf"-Ofk.l Uluu11ur1hem
• Despite the fact that there 1s a returning players and some solid Belinda Kernkc1mp ..ind .\m1ta ··< >ur go.ii I'> 111 pla' good he><. ke~
tournament at the end oft he \car newcomers so I am hopeful. I would V. estcott arc t"'-O \ophumorn v. ho and 1mprm t' ''1th .:ach game v. h1l h
that CfO"'-OS the unofficial CIF hke to win the leaguc title th1!> )t.'ar.. are sph111ng tlml· a ... goaH .. l't'P\'r "'C ha\l· hn·n doing~> f.tr ··Luth
champ. the league title 1s the pnmaf! Two-time all-league right ltnkc:r "V. l' pla,t'<l F t1untJ1n \ .illt'' l''t'n ,a11J "V. t· ha\t 'r>t'ni JOJ thJt .... 111 tx·
goal. Melanie Bo\ er (senior) leads Sc:v.· 10-IJJ '>1.l\hout uur ri'l' 'c:111ur' w I our fo..t'' 11 "c: lJn u't' 11ur '>r>t't'd °"l'
"We: Jin ashed third l\\.lJ )car' ago. port Harbor . .\lso returning 1s tht• think that indtl dll' \.\t' '>h11uld ht• 'houlcJ du"' di
second last year. and th1!i )ear "'e Sailors top !>Corer and all-league for· tough." P1r1lc \a1<l .. f hl· l..t·, Im u., I'> I L·ad1ng the d1J1gc: tor tht' \ 11..ing'
want to finish in tirst," E-;eman said. ward Moll) Denneher(Jun1or) to'u~ olJr a1hlet1L ahil1t' .rnJ karn to art' lkcfo.., Tokr l'-t'nwr l.'C:nter bacl.. I
"We have nine returning plavt.>rs. Minding the net 1s fi rst-year gualil' pla) as a tc-am If"' c < c1n pa" "t'll an<l 'ion&,"-1m hen1or centt'r for·
and I think we have a good chance. Michele Hennese} (sophomore). and 1f"'e CC1nt1nue 111 "'orfo.. hard v.e "'ardl Pla"nggoahc 1s "'1colc
:·The key for u~ i<> to put the ball in .. Expenence ts cvei: thing for a should be real good ht•tau~ \\t' h.n t• '>cl'lc} "ho 'a" part-11mc: c:ll'tllln at
the goal. We have a good d efense. In goalie. but Michele IS \Cl) talented a qualll} benl'h \\hlL h l/.l\t'\ U\ rlenl\ that '!.pot la\t '>\'J\110
the past we ha vc been 1 n command and she has o nl) allo"'ed one goal in of depth ·· ·· 0t-sp11c: o ur 1 ne \pentnce there 1s
of games. but Just could not score. If four games. so she 1s do ing a good The Fountain\ alle' Ba ron'> ltist a great team '>r•n t ht·rc ··Luth ~1d
Sunset League takes it seriously
we can average t"'!.O to three goals a job. their last gamL· ot 1tw ~ l'ar 1n kague "The girl\ hk.t· .:alh o ther and the~
yard touchdo"n pass in the comer of game "'e should h:n c: a great }ear." "We ha' e had a great ddcnsc the la!>t ) !."Jr and fc:ll rrom '>nnnd to are ti) in~ 't'f\ hard V. e don ·1 ha' e
the end zone. but the pla) was called Return mg for the Lions this \car past couple of}ear'>. but "'-l' need 10 founh and fllth-H·ar ( oath \l1fo..c: an~ ind I\ 1dual hill dog~ here: .\II JOHN SONS
FromBt
passes last season and Warren
snagged 28 Each had two touch·
downs on receptions and l"'-O on
interception returns.
Then in the CIF basketball semi·
finals against ~tornings1dc. Warren
had been starting much of the season
but fouled out in overtime. Weston.
who had seen onl) spotty game ac·
tion all season. came in and h11 the
pme-winning free thro" 1n the wan·
ing ~conds of O\ cni~ This season. Weston h :?6 recep-
tions and eight touchdo ns. t\l.O o f
them on runs. while rren has 33
catches and one touchdown. The)
are both much stronger on defense
than a } car ago. "'hen b} their own
testament. a <>trong pas<; rush made 11
easier to pick up 1ntercc:ptwn<>.
"It's real unique for them to be
that good." Holland said ··The) can
tum a g.ame around and thC') have.
Yo u kind of feel so metimes dunng a
game. 'The) 're going to do somt.'·
thing.'
"In m\ ~areer as coach. l'H' nc,c:r
had k.1ds "ho can gu to thr ball (as
rece1\Crs) ltkc the) do .\nd the) 're
hitters. We ha't.' a thing called the
black watchc'>. which the) 'rt• on. It's
like the Scott 1sh guards "ho "'at ch
the queen. and the pla}ers 'Ott• them
on."
In football, Warren wears No. 45
and Westo n No 44 But Warren's
1erse) was stolt.>n from the equipment
room recentl)'. so he donned No. 43.
Jn basketball last season. Warren
wore No. 25. Weston No. 24.
"They've JUSt been real close since
they were little." Wendy Johnson
said. "One wo uld crawl tirst. then the
other o ne would catch up and walk
first. then the other would do some·
thing else first. Yo u never could say
one was better at one thing than the
other. or o ne "ould cume along and
be bcttt.>r at something elsc.
Academacall). the} both have good
grades, about the same G PA."
It stall goes on that wa). Both·
started Junior vars1t) basketball as
sophomores. Weston began to con-
centrate more on football b) his
j unior year. realmng hc could do
more after high school an that sport
Warren concentrated more on
basketball as a freshman and
sophomore. but JUSt decided he hked
football more as a JUOJor
"f or a whale. Weston was the re· ~iver and Warren wns the defensive
back," Holland said. "Thc.-n at turned
around. Now they both start both."
It even happens game-by-game.
'Tll get good recogn1t1on as a re-
ceiver one game. and he'll do well on
defense," Westo n said. "Then the
next game. he'll score a touchdown
on offense, and I'll get recognition on
defense."
How about play-by-pla_y.
In Fnday's 27.0 semifinal playoff
upset of Sunny Hills. Weston scored
three touchdowns and cau&ht three
passes for 91 yards. While Weston
was scoring. Warren was scttina him
up with two catches for SS yards. For
their accomplishments, they were
selected Daily Pilot Co-Players of the
Week. • On the Sea Kings' first play from
Krim mqc. quarterback Todd Kebrli
unloaded a 66-yard touchdown strike
to Weston on a post pattern. Late in
the fma quarter, Warren cauaht a 16-
back. arc Wendy Turner (J unior fo f"':ard). score more. This )ear we ha' e a Coleman bche' c:' h1, team ha~ lht• tht'se girls "'ork. v.dl together ..
In the second quarter. Warrt.>n\ Brandy Ramirez (sophomore for· much heller offense and if "'e can get talent 10 do betta SU• Grucb's colomzu ppe•r s
46-yard reception to the 17 set up an ...-w_a_r_d_)._L_1_sa_z_1_n_n_l_se_n_1o_r _h_n_ke_r_>_. ___ t_w_o_o_r_Lh_rcc __ goa_l_s_a_ga_m_c_"_~_s_h_o_u_ld ___ ·_·v._e_h_a_ .. _e_s_"_re_t_u_rn_1_n_g_s_1a_rt_e_r_s ___ e_v_er_y_W_edo __ e_d_•_Y_· ______ _
improbable score. Weston·s 13-)ard
touchdown run "1th a bad snap on a
field goal.
In the fourth quarter. Warren
made the catch for a 9-yard gain on a
third-and-6 at the Sunn) Halls 14.
.\fter a penalt~ knocked the Sea
Kings back to the 20-)ard lmc:.
Kehrh hit Weston o n a ~().,ard
touchdown pass. ·
So. thev takt.> turns with ac-
comphshnients. It's a na tural since
they first \tarted cra"hng.
lalT)' Johnson added. "The:) were:
never 1dent1cal (in accomplishing a
feat) at o ne po int 1n ti me. The)' were
always 1dcnttcal 1n ab1ht). al"a)S
similar but not idenucal. They're
different personaltues. O ne's a ltt1le
more resenc:d. but he can be outgo-
ing as -well ··
That's \\h\ this can all be confus·
ang.. Holland has the d1scern1ng e)e
-w1th his glasse<> on. he notes -to
1denttf) them w11hout game Jerse~s
b) casting 11 on a mark one cames.
A couple of )ears ago on ._pnl
Fool's Da). the two dec1tkd 10 S"'-1tch
class schedules. Warren "'-Cnt to
Weston's English class wtth the same
teacher he had one semester before.
Their mutual friend kept pushing a
desk into the middle o f the room
from behind him and the teacher
finall} took exception.
"She said. Weston. wh) are you
aeung like that." said Weston.
having heard the stOf!
"She had liked me before:· War·
ren said. "She said you're going to get
detention."
Weston added . ··She lo,ed him.
and expected me to be hke ham. She
said, 'Why can't you be hke Warre n.'
It was Warren being Weston.''
Warren responded b~ saying., "I
guess there·s a black sheep in e'ef!
fam1l) ...
Being seniors an high school. this
could all end. Or "'1ll 1t. Both hope to
play college football and ha' c talked
to the Air Force Academ).
"I don't think we'll go to the same
college." Warren said. "lf"t' do. "'e
do: 1fY.e d on't. we don"t."
U nless. Weston added. .. that'o; a
better package."
Holland. who thanks the) can pla)
maJor college football. said. "If the)
conunue an life the "a) the) are now,
somebod)' 's going to get everything
out of them. That's "hat it's all
about."
Larry Johnson said the most 1m·
ponant aspect of collegc sek ct1on is
being able to maintain their indepen-
dence, whether it comes at the same
school or a different one.
"We get along well together."
Weston said. "If we go on a famil>
trip, it's like having a friend alons-'
The oat family trip is the football
team's outing, which could very well
be likened to a family endeavor.
Twin titles could be an o rder for the
defending champs.
"CdM h adn't ever won a title in
the history of the school." Warren
said. "Now, all of a sudden. we can
win two in a row. tfwc can act back·
to-back championships. it would be
amaz.ina."
Alm ost as amazina as the twins
who could help brio& Take 2.
\.....,;.,,,, I Motorcrattl
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~~1!4:::' ..__., '' ,, 2388 .~.::.;: ~·i •' 244 c..-c:-•·.,.--~
~-,. ....
IACH
OUAl/T Y! VAlUE! SElECTION! . -. ...._
··~ " ..
IATTarf CMAIGIR 47"
Mustangs rout foe, 1-0
Freshman forward Jacob Oarcia
tcored four tee0nd-half p is u bOll
Cotta Mesa pulled aWly from a l .() =lelld to crush t.o.n in 1
eoccer match ~ 74 OepiM added 1WO
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10 s M1 t s ....,
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11 6 M 7
10 7 ••
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4 12 .250
4 IS .211
C.-WOM.-• • ."2
10 ' .625
10 ' .625 • • 600
1 t ... 1 t ....
6 10 .l7S ~.-.sarw LMw'I m, a..... ,.,
..._ YOt11 110, PN~la 103
lollott 114. Cllar1ot .. 101 Porti.tlcl I 13, Mleml 101
Ur.ti N , Clevt&end IO
Chlc.oo "'· o.nver " Mlnnaote '2. New Jenev fO o. .. , 107, Golder! St•t• • S..ttlt 133, HolAton 123
Secremento 1 II. Mllw•llltM 103
T ........ a"-Ne'# YOf'k et Boston. 4:)0 p.m
Mleml •I f"tllladelpllla, 4:30 P.m Atlant• et OrMlndo, 4:30 P.m.
Wellllneton et O.trolt, 4.:30 pm
Oenvw •t lndlen., 4:30 p,m
Golden Stet• et Sen Antonio, S.30 P.m
Lallen 1'1, OllllMn IOl
-
I
2 J~
6~ •
c~•s <1a> -NOf'men 9-14 4,7 12.
5"llttl 7-10 3·4 17, Wolf 3·7 0-0 6, Gr-ent 2·10 0-0
4, Her-11·17 4-4 26, e.nlemln 2·3 0-4 4. Mennlftl 7-10 2·S 16, G•Nlck 2·3 2·4 6. Mertln
1-2 0-0 2, Youno 0-0 0-0 0 Tot•I• 442 7' 1S-2t
10l. L.AK••s -Green 3-9 7· 10 13, WO<llW •·IS 2·4 11, Tl'lomotOn 3·4 2·2 I, Joflnton 11·20 12· lS
34, Scoll S-1 0-1 11. Olva<: S-11 1·7 11, COOP9f'
4·11 2·2 12, Drew 7,3 0-0 4 Total\ 41'" 26·36
Ill. Sc-•v o-nws OiPoW\ 21 IS lO JC>-103
Lellen 27 29 IS 41>-111
3-POlnl eoei.-<11-• 0-2 (Gr•nl 0-1, Menln
0-11. I.Ken 3·13 cc-2·4, Scon 1·2, Wortt'lv
0-1, ~ 0-2, Johnson 0·4) FOUied out-Smltll
It~~ S2 (WOif I), Lekan 43
tG,_ 10). Aubts-<:lf Poeo lO (Grent 13),
L.Men.29 IJOMMI>• IOI Total loul•-<tfooeo l2.
Laken 21 An~•• ens
COLLEGE MaN
awtdM H--.. .. S.C.. C.-... 16
(wt·<*--)
OW1s111Mt ...,... s.c.i c-...
Krutr
Fo1ter
Meeler
Cllllhem
Soucie
St9"en Mumew
.. fl pf Ill .. "pf"'
I I 4 12 Devis 0 2 2 2
t 4 1 23 Wiimer 9 0 2 21 s 1 4 11 Scrueg1 a 2 o 11
30 46 Mounce 30 46
9 l l 24 Henlum 3 2 2 I
0 0 I 0 Moore 1 0 3 4
I 0 0 2 Dwinell I 0 3 2
Bickmore 9 7 I 2S
Totelt JS 9 17 • Toten JS 13 17 16
Helfllme SoCel COllelle, 49·43.
Tlww-PC>lnt 0091\ Cllrl"len Hef'llege-t(rH tr s. FOiier I, Soue:le 3; SoCe l COO.O.-Witmer 3
~ tcer'et
w•ST
Alt Fora n. Doane '° ltrlt!Mm Young 6S. Artzone SI ..
~ W, U.S tnt«nehonel 17
Orelle 65, Sen JoM SI 47
ldeNI 61, Gonzeee 47
MonteN 12, Pac Lull'teren SI
~dln9 M-, Tn<ne11e_. n
Sen Frenclaco ti, Nev.O.·fftno 61
Utell 71, WUl'llntton '2 W. Tun SI 14, S Ulell 7S
WYOmlnll M. E ... nsvllle 64
SOUTHW•ST
ArttenMI '°· Mlu lu lPOI 76 c.ntenerv "· TeKn Af.M .,
Ho!Alon 65, O.Pa.it '9
C*lehome St '3. Memof\11 $1 M
MIDWEST
lndlane 11. Notre Oeme n
lndlene St '9, S.M SI. 41
Mer-'1• 7S. LovOle. IN " (oil Mleml, Ohio '3, E. Kentuckv 7S
N. llllllOll U , NetH'e.-e 5' North-'-"' 1•. Tulene 1t W. Mk:llfffn 17, Vetoerel\O 74
Wlctllle St 11, SW MIUOUl'I St 61
SOUTH
Ale,-91nnln1Nm 1t, Dreoon "
llrmlnehem·SOutller-n 13. Samford 71 ~ 61, LOYOia, Md. 62
o-M St. 76, hrrv 7S
Howerd U. to, Nor1Me1ten1 74
..,.. 74, l"lorlilte " JedU~IV ....... St F'91er'I '2
MoleMed SI. 12, ~ ·E Sflore 71
N. CMollfte St. 61, SI JoN1'1 SI
New OrlMfta 69, Florlde Af.M "4
SW l.oublllne '2, McHMM SI 12 s.f9fl Hell 76, Welle Forttt 74 (ol) '°""' Flor1de ... Stenoll S4 T ...... M, New Me11lco IS toll
11"""9Tedi16. ~ 7S Wlfl& .... Selwn '4, N. Cerollne At. T 14 •AST NTrlV 7'11, ~ f. MMY " ~ Col 105, #dliov " 9ualMI •• Lvcomlnl 4S Cer1*1 IS, Coloe .. n
Felrftlld 5', Cent. Connec11cut SI J7 0-... Wuhkwton 71, Old Dominion 61 1041
Hw1tllnl a . •11oc1e 1t1enc1 n ..... .,...,1.~n
Ut\lllll 103, ~ n MolW'ftoutfl, N.J. '5, ltlder "4
New HemPlhlre to, lrown • ~ St. 71. o.or .. MalOft ff St. ""-Y's, Md. e t Delew.,., DOCS,, mumps
W.t Vlr9lllle 14, Mw'WI 56
._..KMOOL90YI ....., Del ,., ,,.,.. .,
(c.lit ............. ~ Twu...el
--Diii ......... ....... .. .... _
•1210 ln'ent >OJI
••11tHerrlt 0000 1 I 0 4 Klfte ) 2 I I
21>Ssc.tt Ot2l
0 0 0 0 ltoeer-tfl t 1 J 4
J 0 0 • StewWf 2 0 0 4
JS•ll Smltll JJ27 •tJIO...,,..,. 0211
0111C.......IJOJ 1 I 2 2 lt-P:I O O 1 0
•••• ~ .JJJt ttOI ~ 00 10 IOIOHul!W 11 13
t4 tt 1' Jt T..... 1' l7 0 tt .............
,,.., o.i 17 " It , ....... ,. ...... • It 11 ........
.1'rw •• ..-: """* o.i lo¥lt 1, °""' '·°""a.
.,.. ......... cc-P'll • -·.....,,....,....,
...-. •TWI ....... .. .....
6 I • 1J C_... J I 1 6 I 6 211 RIMI I I 110
t•l• MWtlll 601l7 0001 ..... 0010
0010 ~ 0001
1002 ..,_.. JOit lllJMldlMI 0010
1002 z.-0010
OOOOl"'WtOft 4011
0 0 0 0 Ewrett I 2 2 19
I I 0 J 10 12 I S4 TOIM 2t J It .. scer.. .., Ollertw\ IMht 11 • II 11-54 El Toro 23 12 20 1..._.9
Tllr..-OOlnt eoeM: Irv~' 1, Balm 1.
El T-<-sere1 1, Martin S, Somet-1 l, EV«ett I.
....... , M..-r so. Cel .. Metil 46 tC.... Mfte • ...._, ~ .,___.. T--.1
......,......., C.•Mne
Maf'llnez
$M1
MdnlM oeeu.-ParlMI
Neuven F~n
Lone Tolef\
....... .." .. "' 7 I S IS OleMI 4 4 0 13
1 002 Pon9' 0010
1 0 12 Henne •llU
) I I t Voeket 2 2 J • )231 1..MllV 4 1 2t
2 0 3 .. 4 Herding 7 0 l 4
0 0 0 0 s 0 ' 10 n 4 IS so Totef\ 111124'
Scwe" Que,...
Newoort HertlOr 10 11 IJ Ir-SO Coal• Mele II 17 9 .._.... nv-.... oo1n1 ooeb Newl'O't-O.Bu111 ? CO\te
~enne I, DlelMlll I
T ec:Mlcef\: Non.
Sa UI 1'111dl '5, Huntl: ..... 1 a.ac:ft SS
(C.... Miu·~ T1P·efl T~)
" ......... ~ s.MltN!clr
Jellr
Lu<:el
Morion
Abdi Duong
McAnindl
T•YIO'
Vlectlol lertl\
L.ell•Shett
Toi•!$
"""'"' .... .,.. 4 0 2 I McFerlane 4 I l 11
3 I 7 7 Moor• s 2 3 12
' 0 I 2 lt"l"ef' 3 0 4 ' I 10 I 26 Gomez ? o 2 4
3 3 S 9 Geioer1 3 3 3 9
0 0 0 0 Acvne 2 0 I 4
I I 2 J Nguyen S 2 I 14
O o 0 o F1t1oera ld I o o 2
0 0 l 0 Torrv I I 2 3
0 0 I 0 Che~t 0 0 0 0
10 IS 16 S5 Totei. 26 t It 6S
kwelt't~
Huntington 8Mdl 11 t n -ss
Seddlebeck 17 16 14 lt-6S
Tllree-oolnl -" S.dd1911eck-McFartane 2, Neuven 2 T edlnlcell: Se<ldleOedl Coecn .Quinn
U9uM BMdl ... aw. 71 tu.. a..ctt ......... ,......,
L.a9IMe a.di OlMe
Trevino eor.-. Smllll Klr_.
Bien Ion
IMCl>er
N\ur'phy
Buu
.. fl 11111> 19 " pf "' s s 3 16 Welte o 2 o 2
3111P9nlen0 OJS3
0 0 2 0 Hempton 7 I 4 IS ll07Holmn 1032
I 19 0 JS Wllllem1 a S 4 21
7 2 J 17 wonimen 3 2 S 9
I 2 4 4 Woodhu4 I I I l
0 I 0 I McGlnnll 1 0 s u aurrouo111 o 2 4 2
Tol•ll 27 JI ll .. Totell 27 16 JI 71
Sc-" OUerten Leeune l!leecl'I IS 24 24 2s-lt
Chino 17 22 21 11-71
Tilree-POlnt goals; Levune Beec~Trevlno I,
8oretle I, Buteller I Clllno-WO'kmen I Tecllnlcela; Trevino (Lil
C.... _. Mar 61, Sav•nna 4t
(U-... di llMM!tenel)
Se~
ffoor!Guez
Lvclle Preuu·
Trumoour
i mltll
Enctow
ffem~ef' ,...nedo
Sueeto Tote ti
S.vanne
.. ""'"' l I s 1
l 0 3 6
2 0 4 ' 3 0 I 6
• 2 2 10
I 2 l ' I 0 S 2
0 0 I 0
0 0 2 0
C.-•Me, ........
• 1 4 21 F'tlnl
~
MurPllv
Peutw n
UPN'm
HflM
2 7 ' 6 I 0 1 2 s 0 s 11
J 3 2 ' s • 2 19
11 s 26 ., Tote!\ n 21 11 "
Sc-. " Ouenen IS I 13 ll--49
COf'one det ~r 10 11 n ,,__..
Thrw-ooln• \IC:ll\ Savel'lne-~mltll 7
CdM-Fllnr 2. Peul\P"I I
Tect1nlcel1 s. ... nne Coecll Gr-v
L .. ,.. '5, llst9ftda 60
(CO. ...... ~T~)
LM,.. •st.l'l(.le
19 ft ... "' 19 " pf "' Wl'llllOCI< 1 2 2 16 TrullllO l 0 2 6
Hsu 3 O J 6 Der• O O O 0
Acosle S 0 l 10 Hef'edle I 2 l 20
Giiison 1 0 2 2 L\I 2 0 0 4
Geudlo 7 3 2 16 F.-Of'ngr 1 4 l 6 Vanderhoof I O O l "401t•n1on O O 2 0
Kuel 1 0 2 2 H41» _ 4 fi 2 14
Cl'Wldbrn a o o o Hem~ 2 o 10
Meoolo 0 0 1 0
Collins 0 0 0 O
Weulnl< S o I 10
To1e1s JO 4 11 6S Tot•I• n 11 n 60
Scwe ..., Ouef1en ~
Loer• 11 14 19 21-.s
E'tencla 12 13 14 21--.0
TllrM"'POlnt ~ Loer-Ve~llOof 1,
E1tenc~edle 2. Hee1 J Tedlnlc.ab: .._.
Oc:.R Vl9W 11, ~.--n (_....._., p---oc.. Vltw ...... _
Aries
Hll
8.ctl ltlA)el
Hernhorn
Olton ~
Miu
IM<tl T04els
.......
2 I 1 6
2 0 I 4 J I s 1
3 0 \ 6
3 0 I • ) , 0 10
3 0 0 7
1 0 2 2
I 0 ' 2
E""I Ev-
Gwettnr.o
QulM
Tenler11e
Manin
UDllMI
21 S 20 SI Tote"
,_....,~
I 0 2 4
, 2 l " S I I II
7 0 2 14
7 2 I 16 4 s I ll
I I 0 J
n 11 u n
Fulltr1on 11 6 16 I :>-52 ac... View u n 24 1..-n ==~71 ·-•..-.V4> .. -·
""°"' 2, Olton 1 .,_ ' Tec:Mlcei.:
• sa. L.llwtv aw. 41
/ (_ ....... ,
UMfTY °"""9R ........... ~ ...... _ ...... _
4 4 J 12 ltOlllMon t 2 1 '
1 I l J ltlwre 2 O ) •
6lt17 C-..n 0 444
011 1 LACeur ooio
01 11 s.Nevel 4011 1 214~ 1112 114)u.Nr 4151
c:er..... t ' t" .... t J 2 1
U U JI 41 T.._ M 1' M • ..............
u..ty °'"'*" t 1 ' ~· L.AMll9wll OlrtallM • , 14 2 ._,.
Tllr"~""'t ... It: '-l!Mtty Chrla• ~I. TldllllCllll: ..._
L.etuM ~ ..... ..
(wt..._ ...... ,
2:>0-<lllflo :::,~ ~11on1 a.-. ... w .. eo11 ... ~,,_.-
.-Torrence"'" 5ev_,. lc:ot1106etlonl uct ...... ar,w. • julllDr •
Sc»-Sen Oemente n. Serre tcontoletlOfll •----.. --d-7-Founteln V...., "'-P.c:Hlca (COlllOtlltlonl ...,_a ._.,., W ~ w
l:.»--erw-ollncte vs.. Whittler Cllrlltlen tfllN t•-All•Aimertcan'
cc11emp1on"'1p -rteri!neb> footltall IMMlon T...-., 1tJ
ex.en View n.":"~$2 tfte AaocMIH ftr ....
Letllnpw .. Ctwllllan SI. Llllertv Cl'lrl\llMI 41
Hlttl lcMlll tlrtl IC9r'el ~~::. :;..~> t_ ......... ) Pftt TIMI
Meter 0.1 56, Velencle S2 Of'P•MU
e"ende 50, Canyon 36 -Andre Were, Houston, 62 2,
Founteln lfenev S2, Gellr 44 :lOS, lunlor, Olct!lnson. Tuel. .
Edi son 13, w111111er Cllrlstlan 31 ltunnlnll bedl• -Anthony Tl\otnpton, In· ,.,..,_,s.ti dlenll, .... o. 20t, aenlor, T«r-• Haute, Ind.;
unlv«11tv :M. Founteln Vellev 21 Emmitt Smllll, Florida, S·IO, 201, lunlor, Pense·
Cost• Meae 47, Loere 23 COie, Fie. ltecelveri -Clerti:llon Hines, Duke, 6· 1, 170,
HIGH SCHOOL GIRU • ...._ u. WNtl*' awtstlM n
(.-........ ,
~°'"'*"
ltel'lm
Jectnon
Wllllam1 ,,_,
Cruz Llncltlef g
Gree• Hulrln1
Pie•
Ououa
.. " ..... 2 0 I 4
2 0 3 4
I 0 0 2
1 0 2 1
I I 2 l
I 0 0 1
4 I 0 9
I 0 0 2
0 2 2 2 I 0 l 2
·--.. " .... Meruveme 1 2 o 4
Fltcller 14 I I 36
Miiier 7 0 I 14 lwemeae 2 o O 4
Crook1 6 I 1 13
CO!doulll'I 3 0 0 6
Arekl 2 o O 4 F'919f'M>n ' I 0 2 2
senior, Ches>e4 HIM, N.C.; Tere~ Mell'lll, N-
M .. lco, S·t , 167. aenlor. Slone Mountel11. Ge.;
Emmanuel Heuird, Houtt:>n, S-9, 112. lunlor,
Oetv City, Cellf.
Center -Mlcfleet TeM.1, Ftorlde SI .. 6· I. 254,
senior, O.C.tur. Ge.
Guards -Eric Sii•. T-'"· 6-3, 213. aenlor, Germantown. Tenn., Joe Ger!Wft, Colo·
redo, 6·l , 2'0, lunlor, Placentle, Celff
TecklM -Jim ,.,...bo, Arll.eme1, 6·4. 262.
senior. Memol\11, Tenn .. ~ Kullt. Mldl!Hn SI ..
6·4, 212, senior, WHI 81oomfletd, Midi
lteturn W>eClell" -lteghltl "ltoc:ht'; lunel,
Notre Deme, S· 10, 17S, IOOllomof'e, Wllkn·
lerre. Pe.
TolM 14 4 13 l2 Totals
Ple<*llclier -J•ton H•nton, WHlllnglon SI.,
6-0. 1"4. IOOllOmOr•. Sp()ltene, We111.
l6 4 s 13 ou•eNss Sc:ef"9 by Que,...
Wl'lllller Cllrlstlan l 11 6
Edison 23 17 21
TllrM·PC>lnl -II: EcJlson-F~ 7.
T ectlftlcell None
Unemen -Cllrll Zorlcll, Notre o-. 6· I, 12-32 Ml. lunlor, Ct\lceoo. Greo Merli., Mleml, Fla ..
If-Cl 6·•. US, \«llor, Penn~en. N.J., Tim lltven,
use, 6-S. 260, Mnlor. Sen Jose, Cellt.; Moe
Gerdn«, ltllnol\, 6-2, 241. lunlOr. IM!eneoolls.
Feuntaln V...., S2,, ~ 44 ,_.....,.,
Gelw
C01lln1 Brown
Wlnllon
Aten
Weldor1
Bremllv Harp
Osalo
Kur•I•
BerlSCS.le
Winek•
.. " ... "' 4 s 2 ll s 2 s 12
0 0 3 0
1 3 4 s s 0 4 II
0 0 I 0
0 0 I 0
0 0 2 0
0 1 0 I 0 0 3 0
I 0 2 2
,,_..,.v...., ., . ..,
Wiiton
Fltll
Stenke
Fox
Worllmen Shell
Murden I
llert>ero
.. flpffll
0 I I I
0 l 3 J 0 I , I
I 0 ' 2 s 0 4 10
3 10 2 16
0 4 I 4
2 0 I 4
4 l 4 11
LlneOKker• -Percv Snow. Mlcl\lgen SI. 6-l, 244, senior. C.nton, Ofllo, Keith Meeents.
Ai.Mme, 6·S, 2S6, lunlor, Motlllt, Ale., Jemn
Frencls, Be~. 6-4, 250, aenlor, LeMar-.
Te us. leek• -Todd Lvont, Notre Dame, 6-1, I"·
lunlor, FUnl, MIGi\., Merk C.rrler, use, 6-1, llS,
lunlor, Lone leedl, Tripp Wetllorne, Mlchlllen,
6-1, 1'3, lunlor, Gr-een1boro, NC.; Leltov Sutler,
Florida SI., 6·0, lt4, tenlor, Jecu onvllle, F'\e.
Pufller -Tom ltouen, COIOraclo, 6·3. 220,
lunlor. Llllleton, ColO. sec-.. Teem l>'PeNsa Querteroack -Melor Herrl•. West Virginie.
ltunnlne 1N1Ck1 --.!Slalr Tllome1. Pwnn St ..
Tote!\ 16 11 17 u T 01e11
~by Qua,...
Jemea Grev, THH TKll IS n 19 S2 ltecelven -ffOI> Moon . SvncuM, Den
Gel'lr
Founteln veuev ThrM ·POlnl goal\
T ac11nice11 None
11 " • 11 IS I•
Biison, Tutw, Wellev CerrOll, Miami, Fla. .,_... Center -Bern Br0tlell, We11'1lnplon. 1~ Guero. -ffov arown, Virginie, Ed Kine, Gallr-Welde>rf I
CMVeft ••IHde
,.,...n inez
Antllonv
P9tronl1
Oelllev ffll-n.om.1
19 " pf "' 0 7 'l 7 E•rte
0 I 0 I ColllM
l o I ' lreuet 2 l 2 7 Gercla
4 4 2 12 • Corcirev o J 4 l s-1 Ven Horn 0 0 l 0 BievlN
Gomel
Lumottln
Gercle
.. ""'"' 6 ' I ll l ) 0 9
0 0 I 0
0 0 3 0.
1 I 2 l
) l 4 9
0 0 4 0
l 0 • 2
' 2 I 14 0 0 1 0
""°""'· Tec:klH -Doug Gte~. Neo<Hke, Cllrl1
Pon. DUiie lt•llim SOKlell(I -Miii• e .... mv. IAlnob.
Plecettldtef' -Pllllto Dovie, Aletietne
Olf'•Nsa
Linemen -MMe Spindler. Pllllburllh. Cortez
KeMeGY. Mleml. Fie . Odell Ha90ln1, Florl&i
St., Jeff Alm, Notre Oeme
Unetlec:ker1 -Alfred Wllflal'M. Colorado,
Junior S..u, Sou111ern Cer,Andte COlllM, P9flll
St
ledt1 -Cl'lrl\ Olollem, Or--. ltetOle
C-. NeOre.-e, JOl'ln Mentium, Ale!Mlme,
8efl Smllll, Georol•
P\#tler -Sllewn Mc:C•"llV· Pvroue
~T_,,
°'P•MSI fotall
Cenvon Ellencla
9 11 14 36 Totets
Sc:we " Olle,... II 14
17 17
Queri.r1Mlc:tl -OerMI" H-n. COIOl'edo.
ltunnlne l>Kk• -llelM artMt, t.w• St.1
' 1-)6 Mike Pflnole. C•I Sl•I• Fullerton I I-SO ltecel...,.. -R"91e ltemt>erl, WMI V"lllnla,
10 10 21 so
Tl'lrff-oolnt goeti None
T KM lee I\ None
Mater Del 56, V811nde S2 ( __ .....,.,
Velencia Matw Del
Kfflon
Lo
Grene«
O.Lone ~
Vettnc:MIQJ
Maler o.t
.. ""'"' """"' J 0 s ' McOoneld • 4 2 20
14320 Menlo 2226
4 I 2. ~ 1 ... 10
4 0 I I Gewr-onul 4 0 S I
D 2 2 2 Ill..,.,• 0 0 1 0
I 0 4 2 tmewlello 4 0 ) I
I 3 2 S Burtlllell« 2 0 2 • 21 10 1' S2 Totals 21 14 20 5'
Scer-.111¥~ 14 10 12 16-U
14 • 16 1~
Tilr-llOlnt ooe11. None Technlc:eb: ,._,
SO( ( f R ,..;i" .._;
...............
•""'9~WT ...... s....... ,.....,.., C•r ' B 0..1lfll••
Tu.tin 7, L....-9Md'I 0
~ J, SMte AM V...., I
Trlibuco Hiia 2, Weltmlrll19r I (4-J 11-IOull
OW. H* •. """*""" 11 T.-nM"•t1
3 iun.-cor--,.,.,, .... ...._. Het'bor s 111.m.-Fooetlll "" su•r• ac:ti TilllrM!ln't .._ • ..._ s..-mr
3 P.m.~leeo vs.. SM °"1wftte s o.m.-EI Toro vt. lrvlM .........
~--1.u....• Coate MeM acer-. Gwde •. D. Or.in. 2. Mlhirrw'lled 1. s.w.: Hlll'llllfW'ey .. ........ a. ..... 1 ............
-~~A-WT -...s.......
Tl 11•;"5C B ._.. w...t ... 1 .........
Sell~ I ,........., ~ 1
Tr*-.-a l2. L.-.. ~ I
T.-rt ct1 rel •* I S ,/ J llA-T""911 ft. 0.. H9t S -..m.-EI Ter'O ,,._ Trev -tr I II • It ._. 1, 1 rt am• t ~···· ~ --()oM¥ 1. s...: , ..... ,,
Chris Smltll, Brl9hem YOunO, llldierd Budlen· en. Nor111wfttern.
GuerO• -Mof\emmed E-onlDI, Brlllhem
Yount; C>Mn 01,,...,.11, Mlc111N11
TKkle• -Sla<:v LOllll, ClerMOn; Cl\er1ft Odiorne, TuH Tecll. .
Center -Jake Young, NellfHll•
tteturn IPKl•llst -lton Grev, Air FOf'c•
Pleceklcker -Cllrl1 G•rdoc:kl. Clemt.on. o•P•Ns•
Linemen -Arttlur Welltef'. Colorado; ltuu..i
Marylelld, Mleml, Fie.; lt•v Aenew, NorTtl
CerOllne SI., Ollver lernetl, l(entudlv
UneOedler• -lton Coa, Frnno SI • 8oO
De,,., trteNm voune. Ten"Y woooen. SV1'-
11CUM.
lec:kl -Ad'len Jonn, MIHOurl, Herlofl
lenlett, Mk:ll!Hn St., Ken Swllllne. Geortle
Tedi; Jenwt Wllllem1. Fresno SI.
COMMUNfTY COLLEGll
~-t--1 ~ ""-11-0 120
10-1 102
10-1 101 •·M n t-2 71
t-2 " 1·4 ..
7·3-1 JO
6-4 20
7·4 14
.... ts ......... 1 N
\. L9 ..... u .. : t-: ...... (JHJf a. '-...... , ... ~ ......... '°""'"•~ <»-n; &. .., _..,..,. t•u1 1.
..,,,, .. 1 'I 9 • tw-a)I t. """ v..., Ct1_.,, ti. ........ flH).
CIP 1-A L ...... Diii C .. I,, 2. ~ (IH)I I.
C•fltrw ~ tfto-4); 6. LOI AIWllllW c•wh s. Mor.-v..., m -111 " ten•• ......,. (lf-1'>1 1. El Toro t1>-lll1 I. ..,... (lloU)I t. 0.. VIN Ut-t,, 10. °""'911
(11-ti).
CIP •·AA \. ._ Ctl•IJ,, t. ~a IH-S>; J.
..,_ Amel {17-WI; 6. J,W, ~ 121-ll; l
QnwllD <•111 .. ltlwnlde ~ (12-7); 7. O.W. (JI-JI; I. #1.JJtr CIO•lil; t. ComtiOll
cw-1111 10. Ce11on11a u ... >.
QI' .. .
1. ArtMla (ft-71; 1. GeneaN (10-12); 1 LA ~ tl0-14); 6. ltlo Mela 121·5); S. Cretaftla VellY (1'-t); 6. aantow (2)-4); 7. IC-*'V
("-f); I. IE.I Modllle (201); t. luf'rOUlfll,
.,,...,. (17-7); 10. Futllrten t f7-7).
QI' J•AA 1. Molllll lllde (U.-.); 2, Servti. t12·111, J.
,_.. US-IOI; f.. ltol!N Hllll (242 S). S. ~ (1)-10}; 6. Trelluco Hllll (2$-1), 7. ~ t1'-10); I. ltrM-Dllnde (21·11, 9 El
OorMo t20-5); 10. Wfttern ( 17·61 etf' )·A 1. Notre l)eme, Sllermen Oek1 (11-1), 2, LAI ~ (15-l); I. SI. lerMrd (Zl-61; 6. C...
-Mw <•11>1 S. St. Paul (:ro-.1; 6. Pedfta OH; 7, S.1'1 Luis Otllsoo (11·11; I. ltencllO
AtemllCM (12-111; t, Herverd OJ-IOI, 10. Yucca
' Vellev (It-7J OP 2,AA
1. Sente Cler• (27·31, 2. Verl>um o.t (11-121,
J. a.Mlnll (21·61; f.. C•tlledrel (24-SI, S. S.nte
MerNrll• (9-161; 6. Wllllller Chrlallen 123·71, 7 TetlecehPI ( 17·6); l. Plu\ )( 16· 161; 9. Chemlnede
(t-lll; 10. Twenlvnlne Pe1m1 (t-13).
CIP t·A
I. Notre Oeme, ltlv«slde (12·13), 2. Serr•
(10-121; l . Or•noe Lutl'lel'en l24·SI, '· Cro"roect• (11-121; S. Weslem Cllrl1Han (lS·ltl,
6. Vlllltv Chrl•ll•n 116-t); 7, $1. JoMPI\, Sent•
Merle C12·1fl; I . El $eOUndO tlS-lH; 9. Moine
(t-11); 10. St. eon.venture OS-tJ.
Wit.STUNG
Hlttl lcMlll
CtP 4·A
1. Cenvon (AneN!ml; 2 lndlo, 3-Arrovo. f..
Co.chetle Ve llev, S. Sen Clemente; 6 El Ooredo.
7. e-enie, I . Fontene, 9. Hw•llf•• ~
10. El Modene
Ctf' J.A
I. Doi ~'· 2 Sent• Fe, 3 ltlO Mew, 4
S.v•nne. S. Victor Vekv. 6. Velencte, 7 WelnUI,
I. WMI Torre~. t Covlne, 10 El ffencflO Clf' 2·A
I. Ala\Cedero, 2. L.Atgune Hiib. 3 ._...,, 4
None Ville, S. Whllller, 6 Cenvon Scwlnll1. 7
Buen. Park; L ~I 9. Metw Dell 10
Sc:flurr.
Hlttl~
Clf' 4·A
· I. Pel01 V«cJe•. 2 Simi Vellev. I. •-..i 4 He'#ttlorne, S Clllno, 6. M4l1W Dell 7 ffovlll, L
0-VW.1 9 Newllurv Peril. 10 South
Torrence.
Hlttl scMlit tllrtl
Clf' 4·A
1. Celll1lreno V•lllY. 2 Simi Veltev. l.
E-•nui, 4 MIHlon lflelo, s.-El Toro, 6.
Arcedle, 7. ltovel; I. Soutll Torrence; 9 .• ._,
10. Hewtl\orne. Clf' J·A
I. Avoure; 1. Miiter DelJ 3 C•nvon (Anellelm); 4. Moreno lfe~v; S. 111\hc>o Monr·
90l'fWN; 6. Le Quint•, 7. llal\00 Amel, I. S.nte
lertaere; 9. Buen.; 10 Orenoe.
DEEP St:.\ •
MIWPOllT LANotNG =: I floe!, 14 angW\
10 Mnd MU. l mect>eret 7 KulPln, I
~. 6 ca tko Den, 24 Ill~ percn
o•v•Y'S LOC1<•1t <....,_., 9-dll -4
110at1, 37 angler-\ SO l>onllo. 1'2 rocr. coo. IS cellc:o MU. 31 send Clan JS mec• ... et 4 111ue
-Ch. II ~ed. It tcull>ln, I llnQ" COd, 6
tr'"9r lltl\.
GOl.J .:J ...... -...........
(et C:-... Lair• CC)
l'ht •¥'•....,.. I. Joel lte,,_ (OanercJI .,,cs Ooue ltlellter
(Olell; 3. w rv Bruner (Lot A"llelft, 74; 4. Mlk•
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JoM SIOl>om (Huntington llaechl. 12; I. Henne11
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POrt IMc:hl. 74.
110( kl\ ·~ .
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CAMl"a•LL COMf'•••NCa lm'ftM OMlllll W L T
14 10
12 ' I) 11
12 u
10 u
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14 12 2
12 10 s
12 16 0
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WAL•I COMP•••MCe
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T ....... • ... ~ 1111 11.m.
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201111111fter1tV-I, M"*'Y MMM, New lee·
11114, IAJO. I, lerl ,...._..,., ICemell, ktel'lo,
UNLV, HO.N. 3, JWI lldrmeft, Swedln, Univ o1 ....... HIUl .•• T1m ..... .,....,., 2:CD-04 t lttcerdO JlnleMa, v~. ~&. 6. Steten ~. Sweden, IJM.1'. 7, Keltfl OeMlton, LH
v ..... unettec:Md, t:Jll.111. I, ••v C•rev ~. Mau., INrMI'• o.i.n, 011
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Teua. ~ Cllv. 16:02AS. •. Jim Petatrldlet41, Pwemut. N.J., New WMY Wew. 16:0U• s.
...... IC.Ollldl, tetmont. ""-"· $1enford, 16:09 21
'· Erle 1111dec:, Oen...,., Co6o., Soutllern 111 Univ., 16:10. ... 7, Jim Semnw'co, MedlMlll,
Wisc.. unettacl'ted. 16:11.5'. I. Jure Bucer
Y U9CK1evle, 16: I UO. 400 fr-lvle ,....v-1, Soviet Union
(Venlemln Tevenovlctl, E~IY Kelrleh, Yuri
.. sllkelOV, lfi.difnfr TllecheflkO), J~.64 2.
Sweden, >:2).ts. 3, Univ. of Miami, Mleml. .J~.00. 4, tndl•ne Univ.. 81ooml11111on, tno . J:JUO. S, UNLV, Let V ... t, l:33.I{ 6, Univ o1
Net>relke, Llnc:oln, Nee>., 3:l:l.41. 7, JerMv
Wel':OO•, CMrrv Hlll1, N.J., l:lt.36
WOMSM
100 fr-tvle-1, Nleole Helllett, SI
Petertburl. Fla .. SI. P9tenbure A-llc:s, S6 l6
MCOMl. 2, Cerrle StelnMlfw. Sc:ollldale, Ari! ,
PllOeftlclen Swim TMm, 57.07. 3, Mitzi Kr-.
Tltuavlle. Fte.. Mlallon Bev, S7.4S. 4, Jane•
Joroemen. 1tldllefleld. conn .• srentord, s1 u s Julie c-. St LOUii, Univ. ol Ten•, 57 76 6.
Avelto Neuno, J-. S7.'1 7, Letllll Ann
Fe!lef', Loul1vllle, Kv .. Univ, of Te .. 1. 51.09 a
Megen ()eillng, MerCM !Mend, Welh .. Clll.-
51 n 200 ClrMJlllrOlt-1. Netllelle Gleue<e. Can·
eele, 2:32 46. 2. 'Trecev Mc:Fer1ene, Pa1m
Scwlnel, LOf\lllOrn, 2.33 76 l , Tori DISIMa
Svracv ... N Y , Min ion lev, 2:3SM 4, Guvtelne CIOuller, Cenede. 2'.36.02 S, Amv Shew, Mluion
Vlelo. Cell! .• Univ of TH••· 2'.ll.n '· AnnellH Nl,lro, tt•IY. 2.Jt.03 7, Lori Hel~. Edina
MIM , StenforO. NO.S6. I , Laure 8-t•. ~
Arll , Mele A-Ila. 2-AI .00 200 llUllerilv-1, SutnlT*' Sanden. ltow v•Ue
Ce lH.. Cetlfornle CeoOel A-lies. 2:14 1S 2
Erik• Henwn, l(lng ol Prvn t•, Pe • L0119'10rn
2 102. l . Angle Weslef'·Krefll. CemOOeli, Celi!
unettec:Nd. 2:16 Sj 4, K•IY Arrla, Virgin••
IMcll, Ve .• U11lv ot TexH, 2:16.IS. S, Mlct>9!1-
Grlgllone, Ale .. ndrle, Ve., Stenford, 2;16tt · 6
Merl• Geuelln. Cenede. 2:17.'3. 7, lecAv Cr-o•t
~"· Arlzone MMlln•. 2:11 .... I . T•r• ffvan Pr1~ton, N.J . &erketev Aquetla, 2:12.12 100 treeatvte-1, Janet E,..n1, Placenlla StenforcJ, 1:30 62 2, Jene Slllllmell, Princeton
N.J .. P9ddle, 1:•7 21. 3. AndrH Hevea. ~~·COie. Ft•, Univ. of Tuea, 1:47.7' 4, Stacv
Ceuktev, Evanston, Ill., Longfle)rn, l ·Sl 76 s
Erik• Henten. l(lne • LOftlll»rnol Pruute Pe
1:!2 16 6, Crl1t1na Sou l, ltetv, t ·S3.90. 7, H••'"''
Grevlln, Miami. Mleml <Fie.I. l:Sl.01. I. Mit ri BrHwetl, Ptent•tlon. Fla., Min ion Bev. a·saa
400 frMllYle retev-1. University of T .. e1
Au"ln, Te .. 1 (Jutle Cooper, K•tv Arrl1. Amv
Sl\ew, Lelllll Ann Fell«I. l :Sl.OS. 2, Lononorn
Aquatics, Austin, Ten•. l:S4.•S. l , StanfO'd Pelo Al10, Cellf 3.56 2S 4, Mi.ml, Fie , Mlam1
l .5' • S, Sier• of Centret Ftorlde. Wlntar Par~
Fie .. 4:00 SO '· Cermet Swlnl CIUI>. tndlenePOli. 4'03 66 7, ffetrlevef' Swim CIUC>. Bel!lmore MCI
4 OS ts a. l«nen Getor1, 8otlon, 4'06 63
T-~ Man'l C~I. Miam i (Fie.I. 203 S P01n11
2, Univ ol Net>r•U.e, 166 l. UNLV . 112 4
1ne11•n.. n s. s1enf«e1. n
Men's US !>Wlmtnlno Ctull>-1, S•lm Flor'Oa
Ft. Mv«•. Fie .• 112. 2. Longl\orl'I, Austin, Te•al.
111 J, Mlulon Bev. 8oc:e ffeton, Fie, 100 4
Jerwv W•llPCK. C,,.,.r-v HI•. N.J .• n. s. JarMtV
GelOf'I. CreMor-d. N.J . women·• CP!leW-1. Te .. a. 460.S. 2. Sta n·
ford, J3' l Mle ml. Fie . 11.
Women's U,S Swimming C~I. L-1\0fn,
Austin, T•••I, 297. 2, Min ion Bev, 8oce ffaton
Fie., 170 5 3, eemer 1 Getori , lot ton, 70 •
C.llfornle Ceolt•I A-lk1, S.Uemento, Callf 62. S, SI. F'919"bwrg AQU4111CS, SI Pw!ef'lllur11
Fie .. 60.
8A18M.LL
AIMl1Qe ........
BAL TIMC>ttl: ORIOLEs-Sllii'ied Jev Alelrlcll
encl Arla Tlredo, ol~; ~ ,,,..,, talCfl· «. encl Jeff Mc:Nllltlt. ~-outft91der encl •""'*' 11\em 10 ffoc:llHter of IN tnt«nellonel
\.MeUe.
I( AN SAS CITY ttOY A~Aat'Md to l«ml wltll Stew CrewtorcJ, pltc:Mr, on • __ ,...,
contrK1.
TE-XAS ltANGEltS-Aereecl :o *""' wltll JIA'o Frenco, Wlelder. on• ttw_,,..,. comrec1
extenllon ""°'*' 1"3. TO.ONTO ILUE JAVs-Nemeel L.MTv Hisle
minor !Mew"'""-lnatruc:tor and JOM Steemt n-.w of KnoxvtRe of IN Souttlet'il LNeue ................ NEW YC>tll( METS-Tl'Med JoM Mltc:llell.
oltc:Nt, end JoeQUll: Coll'lrerel, oulflelder, IO Ille
leltlmot'e Orlolel tor Keltll "'*-· outfletOer end c-Melle. llftdler
....,._.LL
........ lelill.1911 A•...:•r ...
GOLDEN STATE WAltltlOllts-slened JONI SM.av. Cllll«. MllWAUl(EE IUC.K5-Adlvel9d Greo
Andlnen, CllllW. trom the 1nlw'ed llst. Pieced
Miff Gf'evw. werd, on the lnlur.s 1111
f'OOTULL ....... p ............
CLEVELAND BltOWNS-~ that
Den FIQ. ~ tuerd. ... min Ille ,_lndlr of the ..._ Wltll e11 lnlJred leff kllet.
54()..1220
496-6800
$2.44 per day
Thafs ALL you pay IOf
"' lines. 30 day minimum
In the
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
HUT ltc&Tlll
1Br 1Ba upstrs lg patio
S625 2Br 2Ba spac1oui!>
s~25 Poo1 gu relng
net No pets $500 sec
645 5853 145 E 181f'l SI
I
Laguna ~ach 2648
COMMANDING VIEW of
coaM Wall-wall glass
Bed<:h across street
LU~UllOUS Large lhl rm
Gourmet ~itch Pv't deci<
1Bdrm $9~5 No pets
LOW Deposit 494-2265
1 S1ud10 ocean v•-t>lk to
t>e8Ch ulll pd $675 mo
SJOO oep No last to
mo .. e 1n 497-4581.
249-1211
Newpert ~Mh 2669
11tEXCLUSIVE GUARD11t
•GATED COMMUNITY•
11111 CUTll
2BR Apts wt2 cat garage
central A C _,bat fire-
place micro wasrter &
oryer hk ups Gol1 course
view All mall'lt 1ncl Sorry.
No oe1s 644-0509
11tSTEPS TO BEACH•
lmmac; 3BA & 2BR. trplc.
Cl w w Cl f'lk up S 1200 *
673-2507 •
?wamFlllT•
llWNIT IUllU ~ * W1Tl IUT SUPl1f EXCLUSIVE BEACl'I
COMMUNITY
BA" VIEW Beauttlvl 2BR
2BA Micro Cll w fl,.e-
place; garage & eo)Oy our
prv't t>each S l800 "" ""'w1tenanee inc.I * ... , lliM btra• SORR'Y filO PETS
C&ll l l6-H11
U HllUClll.M
Wali. 10 beact'I S595/mo
Agenl Dave 645-3683
lBA BU( BCH F~lttv
gar , person $700/mo
r•l'f 118 t 36th SI
6'6-3623 723-4018
3 BLOCKS TO BEACH
tBR all utts pd. gar. tnOry
rm yard ruowd nrs P9t
ok $635 Ken 650-1111
SPIClllS 2111211
New decor trp6C pool. no
pets $995/mo SA0-1911
•211111lN* Frig dl....,Uher sto"9
1nc1 No pets 5-45""'855 ., ........
Frig dlshwastler. stove
incl No pets 5-45-4355
**We SI Newport t
House to t>e8Ch 2BR
2BA yrly Furntunlum
S 1025'mo 642-3850
lltCI Tl IElll
Sllllff
38R 28A upe>er unit. ger-aoe DIW W/0 I* up,
S t t95tmo
210 Lug<>nta
TSL MGMT 642-t&03
• 1 MONTH FREE RENT
11tBLUFFS 2& 28a. f'ptc,
pooll2carports/COln w/d
S 1050 No pe11 722-8011
11t Eastbl uff elean
townhouse 2BR 1'~
frpk;. pool, ~uo, earpc>f1.
$899 NO PETS 722-8011
.. ·ti1,11••WINll•1 .. •• , .... 11111•··-,.. ............ ....
",....,., ........... .
dBi •• ~ ........ ,_.
IPfEI IPT IH YIEW
lBr 1Ba nr NPT CNTR/JW
$795 .. No pets 6"0-136,.
TODAY'S BRANDON
CROSSWORD PUZZLE VO\l 'reTheGre•tesl!1 L:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::~ 1-~~· L~°"'~· D~ ... 1 ·~r;.:; ~~-.::'~ .:::.'!
'9 Mora or leQ
50 VIOtin ~
$.3 Be uninl'liblllllj ......... ...,
57 Satisti.s sa ,.,,,_.
59 PUMdon
eo Taut
81 Cutltng -OOWN
410.....0fa6d .. ._ ...
.. , Leg,_, so w ... 1POJ1
St CrOC* u ...._. .• kin
S4lltlf9'9 .. _
HAPPY ADS :
meo!a 1111perler'lce. S.Od ruume to Or•nQ9 Gout
Dally Piiot 330 W. Ba1 St.
Costa Men. 92627. Or CALL Fii llFH•ITllll cen Unda a1 6'2-4321 . Exl. 250.
Autos I 9100
mua1u1m1111 Ex~ condlUon, My •
loaded, 11,000 mllM,
702-368..()968
HONDA '12 ACCORD
2 DOOR HATCHBACK
N o mat1er wl'la l
you re doing your
l'l ometown
ne'*si>~ The ..., ... his 1n
s.-a a . .-ssn
....... .,..., ...
tcW~··· .•.• :::... ~ ":..L~."C ....., o.ta ,. • ,_, cafl .-...., .,. ,.... e111 ue
.. 1'1141 M-431 t b.....,.. ,, .. , ........ ...... •. .. ........ .....
... , 9 ... ... ·=.._. .... .., ..... . .._ ..... ..--.... _. ......... ...... a:. ..... r-........
In accordance with the provisions of Section 204(b)(5) of the Clean Water Act of 1977 (Public Law 95-217).
County Sanitation District No. 6 of Orange County is required to notify all users of Its sewerage system of
the rate and portion of the ad valorem taxes paid by its users which are attributable to wastewater treatment
services. This District. the jurisdictional boondarles of which are presented on the accompanytng map,
receives a portion of the one-percent ( W.) basic tax levy collected annually from property owners by the
Orange County Tax Collector This notice 1s being published in conjunction with the malling of the Joint
Consolidated Tax Bill by the Tax Collector to enable users to determine the share of their basic property tax
levy which 1s used to pay for wastewater treatment services provided by this District . ..
This District annually receives approximately 2.74% of the 1% basic tax levy collected from the property
owners in the Distri\t. The revenues generated for the District from the basic tax levy are not sufficient to
pay for all the ongoing operations. maintenance and replacement/rehabtlltatlon costs associated with
collecting, treating and disposing of the wastewater generated from the properties within the District.
Accordingly, all residential and small non-residential users In the District must also pay a supplemental user
fee. which for cost savings la collected for the Oistnct by the Tax Collector with the annual property taxes.
The annual supplemental user fees in County Sanitation District No 6 are presented in the following table:
Slngle-Famlly
Rffidencee
$49 00
Multt-Famlly
Rffktencee
$29 00 pet unit
Smell Commerclel/lnduetrlel/
Governmentel UMn
$35 0011.000 sq ft Of t>ulldlnQ
The following example identifies the combined amount a homeowner will pay for the District's services In
1989-90 1f he/she owns a home with an assessed value of$ 100,000
Baal• for Payment Amoc.int
2 74•1. x 1•1. basic tax levy
x $100.000 =
Annual fee for smgle-fam1ly
residence
Total annual amount paid to
District No. 6 in 1989-90
for wastewater services
Annual Amount
Paid to Dtatrict No. I
$27 40
49 00
$76 40
Large industnal and commercial users of the sewerage system pay their proporttonate share of the cost
of wastewater collection. treatment and disposal services based upon the actual votucne of wastewater they
discharge and the amounts of biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and suspended f.ds (SS) In their
discharge. Th~ following schedule Identifies the rates now In effect for these large u in fiscal year
1989-90:
Flow 800 ...!.
($/million gallons) ($/ 1.000 pounds) (S/ 1.000 pounds)
$148.56 $124 69 $160.78
Revenue$ collected from these large users are also used to pay for the ongotng operations. maintenance
cfnd replacement/rehabilitation costs of the District's sewerage system. These Industrial uMrs pay fees
ranging from several hundred to more than $7 4,000 per year tor transport, treatment and disposal of their
wastewater through our teclllties.
If you would like additional Information on the charges you are paytng fOf wastewater collection,
treatment and disposal servtoes. pteaae call the District's staff at (71 4) 962-2411. extensk>n S. The District's
administrative offices are open from 7:30 a.m to 5:30 p.m .. Monday through Thursday, and 7:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. on Fridays.
Pubilshed O~ Coast Daily Plk>t December 6. 1989
AOAlitS
•
•
01llCllllDAILYNOl'/Wldl11d1W.DI I ..... ._
by Bii K-COO .. IU CVLT'Ull& bJ Moratta l Maratta PSAllUTa
1'1Al'fCY
"WigQlin' a loose tooth hurts,
but It hurts good."
by Brad Anderson
"Enough?"
, 0 <
:> ... ,o
..{• .o () _, " .. '
0 /\ •·
'..; n ,.
ARLO AND JAl'flS
Al( MAii! ITT>
llO U!Ji!
Ii
I
l
I •
...
OE1'11'11S . THE MENACE
NO.'•~' MEANS
TWICE A VEA~ ..
GARl'DtLD
by Hank Ketcham
~ ,. . ., l FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
'WROllGAEllJN,~IS ,\\1TCllE!L! G1RLSAR!o
Of 51.J&.RAllOSPICE ... NCJT°VlllE6'R 'II ICE01 '
I
i
by Jerry Scott
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
JUDGE PARKER
ABBEY, I Tl-ONK IT WOULD BE 6ETTER. IF
VOV DISCUSSED THE TENNIS COMPLEX
ALONE WITH SAM I THEN, AFTER HE 'S HAD A FEW DAYS TO THINK ABOUT IT.
I CAN ee AVAl~eLE FOR ANY QUESTIONS HE
MIGHTHAVS/
FUl'fKY WIMU!:RBEAl'f
OOOl'fB8BURT
•
by Jim Davia
by Lynn Johnston
OF~IT~0T-·· 1HE ~Olt»fl'<Ot!!f ~TIL~IT
-!
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harqld Le Ooux
by Tom Batluk