HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-12-27 - Orange Coast PilotDANCE/AB COAST/A3
THE ORANGE COAST 25CENTS
'Godot'
pl~ght
Beckett
dies
ALMANAC/AS
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1989
OC ·Romanians applaud changes at home
Many sc1y they wanted Ceausescu was defiant to the end
public trial for dictator
By BOB VAN EYKEN
Of -Dally ..... IC.-r
News of the execution of deposed
Ro manian dictator N icolae
Ceausescu brought mixed reactions
from mem bers of Orange County's
Romanian community Tuesday but
most said they were sad to see even
so brutal a figure as Ceausescu
killed.
Despite the bloodshed. most local
resident agrttd they were glad about
the changes occumng in their home-
land.
Roman ian television reports
Monday showed pictures of the
Stables'
dciors to
close
for good
By ROBERT BARKER
Of -Dally "'" Stair
The last ho~ was supposed to be
evicted from Smoky's Stables in
Huntington Beach on Christmas
Day.
But Smoky's. one of the last three
stables that remain in the city. is still
open for business -though owner
Fred Burkett is keeping a light touch
on the reins.
He's tned to find new land but
prices are too high, he said.
Burkett. who said he rented space
for his first horse for $10 a month 13
years ago. was j ust staning to make
money, he confided.
But land values have skyT<x:ketcd
so much that he and his w1fe Alexis
would have to pay about $8,000 a
month rent for the SO to 100 acres
that arc required. He's been payina
$400 a month, Burkett said.
Burkett, who's hired a laywer, says
he doesn't know what he's goina to
d o. The owners of about I SO hones
arc in pretty much the same fix.
Former U.S. Olympic divina
champjo Pat McCormick. who
keeps her q_uaner hone. Sissie, at
Smoky's, saad she and other hone
owners "are sitting o n pins and
needles.
"lt'_s really so scary, the bi• co~
porataons can come in and W1pe at
out," she said.
"There's hardly any place that's
left anymore. I'll probably have to
move down coast or to ParamounL
But we hope some miracle hap-
pens."
Kathy Edmonson, who keeps a
horse at the HuntiRftOn Beach
Equestrian Center, said Tuelday
there was "an absolute lhonale" Of
places to keep hones in the city.
"They've really dwindled. Tbe
land has beco me too valuable," the
said.
More than 30 11ables operated ia
the city not many yean aeo, accord-
ina_ to one estimate.
Currently only the Equesariaa
Center in Central Park and Hut·
inau>n Crat Stables are bomdi111
hones in addition to Smoty'a.
An employee at HuntiftllOll Crlll
said T'Uelday the landowDer i1 ...
ni111 to dnelop the property w
Ellis Avenue and Oolden W•
Street and the future of the Mable ii
uneenaia at bell.
Smoky'• SCablel owner lurtd
CODllndi tMt be bu two ~ ..
Mniftl OD Ille ..... be llOldl hla ~-Waw Dillricl. .. Mlln>Poti• wbk:h ii ....... to ... lbe property to _.. ~
tp11111 -STAii.i/Ait
bullet-riddled bodies of Ceausescu
and his wife Elena. The repons said
the couple had been executed b(
firin' squad following a secret tria .
"Im happy about the freedom,
but I still don't believe in just ex-
ecuting people witho ut a trial,"
Costa Mesa resident John Muntean
said.
'"That is doing things the way the
communists did. They should have
tried Ceausescu in public, to make
him know what they did to the
Romanian people."
Muntean said most people in Or-
ange County's larae Romanian com-
f Plene see REACTION/ Alt
8odJ of Nlcolae CeMIHSCU
11 lhOw on ROllUnlan. TV.
Ready for Rose Bowl
............ .,._ .....
Mldll .. n cwtt .. Sdl••ll•dllerC ... INefllM
.................. Tue111.,. .. -co..t Col· ·-·He _.. leM 1111 Wolnltlle9 •1••-USC In llM
ltoM 8owt on New/Yer• D.,. "'-7 In Sports, •t.
By MORT ROSENBLUM
AP~1•C0t,.~
BUCHAREST, Romania -De-
posed dictator Nicolae Ceausescu
defiantly denounced the revolt that
toppled him from power and rcfu~d
to recognize the leg1t1mac) of the
tribunal that sentenced him to
death. a videotape of his trial show-
ed late ·Tuesda).
Waving his arms and 1-5hout1ng
with his forlorn \.\1fc. Elena. seated
nearb\. CeauscM:u branded as hes
the c·harges that the couple was
responsible for the deaths of 60.000
during 1he1r 24-)ear reign and the
crackdo" n on protesters last week.
· "Ever)lhmg 1ha1 was said here
was false. and I don't want to talk
any mo re," he declared at one P.01nt
··rm not guilty, I'm not guilt) I
"•ll answer only in front of the
G rand National Assembl) and in
front of the \.\Orking-class. These arc
hes." he said as the couple sat
bl'hrnd a table. with no other people
1n the room v1s1blc
La1er. the videotape broadcast on
Ru manian television sho"ed the
bodies of the couple sprawled b) a
wall after their executions Monda)
b> firing squad. the first confinna-
llon fo r Romanians that their rn ol-
u11on had been won
.\n official said the couple that
ruled their count!) toge1her "ere
granted 1heir last "1sh· that their
e>.ecu11 ons be earned out s1mul-
taneousl}. Hundreds reponedh '01·
unlt:crcd fo r tht! threc-member.finng
-.quad
fhc re"olu11onary National Salva-
ti on ( omm111cc. which says 1t 1s a
pro' 1s1onal go' emment until free
elcu1ons can bo.· held in Apnl. chose
Ion lhc'>ru a'> cha1nnan ofa new 37-
mcmllcr goH'.rn1ng council on Tues-
lla'
It al~ na med a~ pn me min1Ster a
prute.,.,or "ho ~1d he co nvinced the
arm~ to Join the rc,olt
.\dd1t1onall}. the ne" government
""ucd a decree that thro"s out some
of < l·au'>t.~ u·s most '1c1ous and
opprt:'>'>l' c la"s -including those
proh1b1ting w ntact "llh foreigners.
tree tra'cl and <.'\Cn ownership of
I\ IX" nters f Ptease SH ROMANIA/ A4f
(. 0 \ I< H S I 0 H \ I ·. ' \ I H 0 ' ll 1·. ' I
Feathered ..friends put on
show for wetlands tour
By ROBERT BARKER
Of Che OMly ""°' Slaff ...
.\ formation of wh11 e pelicans
skimmed 1n lo" over the waters of
the Bolsa Chica wetlands. Common
loons also were on patrol. gliding
under the walk""a) al the ecological
reserve looking for a bile to eat.
Egrets. both common and snowy
white. put in an appearance. So did
ducks and a 'anet) of other birds.
abundant was the turnout of
feather) creatures that Col. Charles
S. Thomas of the .S. Army Corps
of Engineers proclaimed the area to
be "teeming with wildlife ...
Thomas was pa}ing his first of-
ficial v1s 1t Tuesday to the
marshlands south of Warner A venue
and separated from the ocean by
Bolsa Chica tatc Beach and the
Pacific Coast Highway.
He was effusive in his praise for
the work of local residents who
carved out a compromise to end a
decades· long battle to conserve the
area.
.. Something pretty mspinng hal
happened ." Thomas said. "I hkc the
process of local ~ople work.ing
thmgs out together and not throwing
11 at the feet of the federal govern-
ment.
"This was of national 1m~rtancc,
but 11 was resolved where 11 should
be -at the local level.··
He lauded the Orange County
Supervisor Hamett Wieder. c hair-
man of the Bolsa Chica Planning
Coalition that last May hammered
out an agreement that calls for I . I 05
acres to be restored to wetlands.
open space and en' tronmentall)
senslll\ e hab11at.
The plan aJso calls for re s1dent1al
de' clopment on 41 2 acres b) land-
0 " ner 1gnal Landmark Co of
In inc The specifi c number of re 1-
dent1al units hasn't been de-
termined.
·A nangable channel from Bolsa
Chica 10 the ocean and a I .6QO.shp
manna. the two maJOr bugaboos to
enviro nmentalists and residents.
"ere e:\cluded from plans.
In October. the o\m1gos de Bolsa
Chica environmental organ11..at1on
and Signal settled a h1stonc, nearly
I I ·\'ear-old lawsuit.
The Amigos. an organization of
about 2.000 members. challenged
1he nght of the state to trade
udelands and 011 na.hts to Signal 1ti
1973 in return for a 300-acre
ecological reserve and an option to
acquire an add1t1onal 230 acres of
wetlands.
It is the role of T homas. as re·
gaonal commander o( tbr .S. Army
Corps of Engineers. to evaluate the
proJect for the purpose o f obtaining
federal permits to grade o"er some
o f the ..-euaods areas so that the
project can go ahead.
Thomas said the h1a.hest pnonty
will be to avoid filhnf in the
"etlands. The developer will have to
sho w there's no pracucal alternat1,e
in order to get a grading permit. he
said. The company 1 yet to ta.kc o ut
Col. Chari•• T'hollla1
grading permits. he said.
,gnaJ Landmark Prcs1dcnt Peter
Denniston said Tuesday that at wu
1mponant for someone of Thomas'
stature to show the ··1evel of interest
and enthusiasm·· that Thomas dem-
onstrated. "'The fcder:a.1 process is
very cn11caJ ... Denniston said.
Dennisto n said plannen arc
proceeding with vanous elemenu in
the development plan and that pub-
lic hcanngs arc slated lo bccin in
, ...... lff \IVETLANDS/ All
Indonesian band on
march to Rose Parade
ly ftAUL ARCHPLIY
Of-~ ........
They marched cnsply up a nd
down the Huntinston Beach park.in&
lot JUSt south of the pier throuahout
the day Tuesday. The Sampoema
Band Indonesia, 144 members
stroni. rchcancd' hour-after-hour to
hone their perfonnance into top
~.
After all, they will be lndoncsaa's
fint rcpracntauves In the century-
old Tournament ofROtCS Pandc on
New Year's Day, and they want to
be It their best.
Who would have thouaht they'd
"8 bt here a year -.o? Theec arT
WOl1rcl'I ftom a manulM:turi• plant la Eat Java, the Smnpe>ema Co., ...., ol whom h8d never CVft held
aa n.rument before, ltt alone DlaY· 9d ud mM'CMd in oae of the
WOltd"t lftBlier ........
They had no idea what trumpets
or trombones were suppoeed to
sound hkc, but they were de-
termined to play them.
Accord.ina to bend director Tbom
Jenk.ans. about 40 of them dedded
SC\cral months aao to form a ba8d
as an after-work Ktivtty.
The lf'OUP IJ"CW and brouPt i9
Jenkins. a North Carola• ..a,,_,
free-lance muuc consuhut lad
band chf'CC1or.
They applied for -ud were
accepted -to-march 10 the ltoll
PanKk.
For the put 11 moedtl, Ibey~
rehcaned )5 to 40 boun~ ...._
On Jan. I. there will be 'Z7 • 1 • 11
in nati\'e ctre.. ........... n
provinces o1 1-.... fil I I the ................ ~
f'ldo &o•••d.
They'I .. ....,. -.. -..,:a rr•-
GOOD MORNING
.,,.. . ,. ,...,, ... ...
........ ~,. .... H
·--~---.. n. 0 ,, Coualy -llou!I of
.............. illlan.2-il = M 10 UDOint A••nt Di.. A-Miduiel Capizzi 10 fill 61 pali1ioD of diMrict anomey as a.
Nllll& ol Cecil Hieb' appointment
10 I Solpaio< Coun bench.
A Illa• poll of supcrvdon Tues-
day iedaled at leal1 three, and
~~ aU fi\le, feel Capizzi should
ll1l ti · ' lbocs and that the board
bu the duty ud authority to make
the appointment. Supervisor Roger
Scanlon uid he may even make the
motion to appoint Capizzi. ... Tbomas. Avdeef, one of three
memben of the district attorney's
'oftioc who have announced intcn-
'tioos to run for Hicks' post in June,
'repe91Cd on Tuesda,y his intent to
pun~ lepl . •t:tion if the board
appoints Capizzi.
Supuvisor Thomas Riley said
Hieb 1mt a letter lO supervison ~.Tuesday ~ them bis resipation
from the distnct attorney post will
be effective a1 noon Jan. 2.
Hicks, wbo has been the county's
district at&omcy since I 966, was
appointed an OnRF County Su-
perior Court judge Friday by Gov.
'STABLE
From Al
mark Co. of Irvine, sent him a
notice two months ago to leave in 60
days.
' The· tan4, at Bolsa Chica Street
and Warner Avenue. is localed
within the boundaries or the Solsa
Otica wetlands. Officials said the
parcel of nearly 42 acres figure in the
company's developmen1 plans for
the area.
Burkett, who offcn hayrides and
has farm animals at the site, com-
plains thal too many stables arc
closing and there·s not room· enough
' to play any more.
"They keep us sane and we're not
shooting everyone:· he said.
Burkett, 46, said his stables
provide a "homey .. atmosphere and
an affordable boarding and lodging
fee that ranges from $1 25 to $165 a
month.
Laura Nelson. who's boarded her
l>tukmejiaft. VllC&ne)'. ,
The lunina of bl• appoiatmtnl "There's sim~y no time to call a bu been quntioned b)' A vdef'f, Mio ID"'Ci&I election," tir said. l&id be believes the l'>vemor'1 a,c.. liOn wu a l)loy for Hieb to saep Kuyper said statutes do not speci·
down before his term explra in June fy ~ ch~f trial deputy should fill a
and bave Capizzi -Hicks' sup-d1stnct attqmey vacancy.
posed heir awarent -appointed as But A vdcef said Tuesday that
successor, pvina him the election Kuyper is , l'reading the wrona tce-
advanlalC of incumbency in next tion." Avdecf said he SP.CCifically
year·s campaip. directed supervisors 10 ... Section
Avdcef, a former Santa At1a. police 26542 of 1he 1ovemmen1 code,
offirer and district attomef in-, which provides for the chief trial
vcstiaatoi:, contC'nded voters a~ deputy to temporarily calT')' out the
proval of Proposition 59 in 1987 duties of district attorney in the
indicated !he dis1rict a1torney event of a vacancy.
should be elctted, not apPQin1ed. Avdecf said the section lists the
Avdecf further said aovernment assistant district allorncy and depu·
code mandates~ vac.ancy should be ty district attorney. rcspcctivelf,
filled by th.e chief ti:1al .depu1y, cur. aOer. 1he chief trial de~uty. •• t
ren1ly Assistant D1stnc1 Attorney provides for a succession.• Avdcef
James Enright, who has not an-said. ·
nounced his candidacy. Avdeef said Kuyper is simply re·
But C<?unty Counsel . Adrian assuring supervisors that under acn-
Kuyper said s1a~e law pro.v1dcs the eral _law, 1hey have the right to
board of supervisors appoint a sue-appoint a successor. But with a
ccsso.r-in the case of a vacancy: The specific SCl~tion providing for the
appo1n1ct mus! t~en serve until !he filling of vac<incit's. the board need
next aeneral ~lctt1on. KuyJJ:tr ~id. not exercise that authority, Avdecf
Kuyper said the consu1u11onal !)3id.
amendment that provides for elec-"The offi ce is not going to fall
tion of district attorneys doesn't apart in the next five months,"
preclude the board from filling a A vdeef said. "Since there is no
-IY rop .. _,..__
•""upinlbe ___ _
cena111ly ..m1 and let l!!e cllW trial
depuly fill .... pooitloa tor -··
But IUf'CN!IOn SlanlOD. Riley
1nd HllTIClt Wieder IOicl llloy Ill olail lo vole ia fl.var ol Capizzi
because be i• well.qualified. Super-
vison Don Roth and Olddi Vu.
quez could no1 be racbcd for com-
menl but Riley •id ht believed the boa~ vote would be unanimous.
··rve already endoned Mike
Capizzi when he announced his in-
tent to run," Wieder said. "Mike
Capizzi is the cbirf deputy 10 the
district at1o'mey, and &e certainly
has helped tJ>e Oranac County'.s di.,.
trict attorney's office pin. a areat
reputation,"
··1 think Mr. AVdeef oqht to
understand Mr. Capizzi is head ind
shoulders the mOlt qualified for the
position," Stan1on said. "I credit
Mr. Capizzi with eleanina up OraDfC
County politics in the 1970s. 'This 11
a man who is qualified and deserves
the position."
He added that "critics like Mr.
A vdccf ouaht to face reality"' and
understand the supervisors want to
••
pick I well-qtiallfled pmon IO cany
DUI lbr .... "IO we doa'I have
Newspaper plant
chemical leaks
Into storm drain
.. ,. c:aretaUr IOVtmmeaL.. -~
In related ll<WI, ~Ian'& of-.,, .... ~ ,_
fice announced T~y ~I the Cletnup crews worked lale into
aovemot bad aPIJOlntcd Robert H. the niaht Tuesday to flush out a Qalli.~ of N~ ~h u • stonn drain that had ~n con· mun1apeJ coun ,Ju .. 1n , ~ West_ taminaitd by drainaae out of The
OnlWI; Coun1y Jud•ctal d1stnct. Timn Onn~ County plant.
Gal.livant •. .SS, ~placel Judie Batallion Chief Judy Jewel uid
Marvin G. weeks, who was elev1~ed workers at the newspaper called at
to the Oranae County Supenor about 4 p.m., shof!IY after discove.r-
Coun.. ina some leakqe into a storm drain
Gallivan has served as an Oranac south of their plant at 1375 CC?u~ty M_unicipal Co.un Com· Sunflower Ave.
mlUloncr llnct 1986 .. Prior lo that, A hazardous materials team from
he WU I partner ~th the C~ta the county 1csted the substanct and ~eu law ~rm ofGalhvan, Schm1es-found it to be a developer fluid used 1na Ind Bit~ from 1976 to 1.986: in the printing process at the plant,
He had his own law practice !n Je"·el said.
Santa Au from 196910 1976 and 1n She said consiruction "'Otk has
. Newport Beach f~m .1966 to 196~. been under way at the plant and the
He WI~ I deputy d1stne1 attorney 1n . developer was somehow channeled
San Diq,o from 1965 to 1966. into the storn1 drain.
A member of the state bar a!'d.the They could not determine how Ora• Coun'y Bar . Assoc1a110~, long ihe flu id had been leakina into
Galhvan received his •. bac~elo~ s lhe storm drain. which empties into
dq,rcc from. l:<>Y~la Un1vers11y in th e San1a Ana Ri\•er.
1957 a.nd ~1s JUns d~tora~e from Ho"·evcr, tests down stream
the Un1~en1ty of San Diego in I 964. sho"·ed it "'as tnildly acidic and not
He will,~ paid $82 .• 054 per year a ntajor l'nvironn1en1a l threa1 , Jt·"·e] as a mun1c1pal court Judge. sa id.
After diking the s1orm drain with
sandbags. oflicial !> were a"·aiting the
arrival of a privat~· toxics cleanup
firm from Upland.
BAND
From At
marching in the Huntington Beach
parking lot in 70-dcgrec weather this
week was like a reprie ve, Jenkins
said.
"We've been marching seven
m iles. three tirnes a "'eek. ln 95·
degree 1cn1prratures." Jenkins said.
"It's nice nt>t to finish up soaked 10
the skin for a change."
Except for o ne band n1embcr who
once \\•as an exchange s1uden1 to
Canada. none of the group had ever
been o ut of thl· country before.
Jenkins said they flew fron1 their
Eas1 Java homl" base 10 some other
islands in that counlry to do some
sho.,..,s -not so n1uC'h fo r the ex·
pcric nce of playing as for the ex-
ix·ricnct of fl ying . .. qu.ancr hol'le·Morgan. Sarah, at
Smoky's for 2V1 years. said she'll
have to move out of the city if the
stables close.
Smoky's Shibles. one of th• last three In Huntington Beach.
~-,._..,._ .......
11 stlll open for bualneu but not kH long.
"I didn't ~·an1 tbeir first tnp 1n an
ai rplane to be 14 hours long."
Jenki ns said.
She likes to ride her horse and
......enjoy.the views of .the Pacific Ocean.
she said. 1
Another boarder, Lcz.a Ward, JO,
said she rides her horse "every day."
"It's the only place you can gel out
and see the country," she !)3.id. "I
feel sad."
Valerie Boston. regional direc1o r
of 1he non-profit South Coast Pony
C.'lub. also noted the shortage of
horse stables. She said that Orange
County is "zoning them out com-
pletely."
.Boston said people are afraid of
hoi:scs and feel 1ha1 1hey infringe on
their rights.
"But this country would never
have been devel oped without
horses.·· she said .
, ................................................................................................................................. _ ............................ ~
T hl')' "'11J l'njoy 01her fi rsts duri ng
their 1n p as ~·l·ll. including a show
at Disneyland . afirr which they will
ha\'t' frl.'l' 1in1e 10 l"njoy the amuse·
mcnt pa rk. and a celebration in their
hq nor..._1n Hun1ii:igto n Ek·ach where
th l'Y are stiYing. -
REACTION
'From Al
• munity wcrt tired of the bloodshed
that has claimed the lives of many
thousands of !heir compatriots in
recent weeks.
'"Most of the people who arc here
are Christians. and they don't like to
hear 1bout killing," he said. "Bui we
arc happy that our country is rid of
Ceausescu. He was really a killer. Ifs
almost unbelievable what he did to '•Romania.··
The Rev. Laz.a.r Gog of Emmanuel
Rom1nian Pente<:ostal Church in
~ Anaheim also had mixed emotions.
... Of course as a minister I am no1
'!APPY that even such a man as
WETLANDS
from Al-
" April or May in the halls of city and 0ranac County governments. Balsa
' Cbicl currently is in unincorporated .~Oranie County terrH.ory bu1 is slated
to be anoe•ed to Huntington Beach
eventually. •
Hvntin&tOn Beach resident Aynl
Monison, who went on Tuesday·s
., Bola Chica tour With O ffiCiils, said-"he could see the northern most mesa
from the interior to the south.
"It has amazing breadth," Mor·
rison said. "I live my vote of thanks
10 the people who worked on this
(compromise). It's one of the biggest
Wftlands in the country."
leau~scu is killed." he said ... But I
am happy 10 see thinp changing:·
Gog sa id he had hi gh hopes for
Romania. but was slightly disturbed
that 1hc provisional government
wh ich followed Ceausescu's ouster is
n1ade up entirely of communists.
albeit reform-minded ones.
"I'm hoping that maybe in April.
if.,..,hat 1hey say is true. we wi lt have
free elections and a multi-pa rty sys-
tem," he said.
The bro thers of an Orange Countv
resident who was reportedly sunned
down in revolutio nary violence
while visiting his homeland during
the Christmas holida ys also ex-
pressed little glee Tuesday at news
!hat Ceausescu had been CXC<'uted.
Ja nel "John .. Antimie Jr .. 21. had
gone to Romania \\'ith his brother
Constantin 10 visit John's girlfriend
in the citv of Cluj and to deliver
food, medicine. and other supplies to
a church there that is serving as a
relief center in the strife-tom coun·
try.
shon order Iha} the former leader
had t:M..-en captured and that he and
hlS "''ifc. Elena, had been executed
fo llo.,..·ing a secrel trial.
"We're glad about what happened,
but "'e still feel too sad in o ur hearts
about what happened to our
brother." Mike An11mie of Fullerton
said .
Antin1ic said fri ends in Romania
had managed on Monda)' to find an
o pen phone line and had told 1he
fan11ly that Constantin had gone
back to tht· scent· of the attack to
claim his brother's body.
He said no one had heard from
('ons1an1i n si nce Monday. Another
fami ly n1en1bcr. Cornelius Coca,
said Monda\' that Jo hn was to be
buriedj n the· town ofMarginea, next
10 the grave of his mother.
Au re l Anti mic. another of John's
brothers ..... ·as equa lly low-key in his
response lo 1he news of Ceausescu's
Correction The two brother-5 were auacked. a
family friend reported. by membcn
of Ceausescu's infamous security A story in the Tuesday edition of
force. which has been fighting the Daily Pila\ incorrectly indicated
against the Romanian populace and Carlo Miune owned the Mione's
1.b._e_acmy. \\<ho banded t~thcr late-re5tauranl in Costa Mesa. The
last week 10 topple the dictator. o wner of the Costa MCY Mione's is,
While Constantin escaped with and has been for several yean..
only a minor bullet wound, John James Liddicote, who purchased the
was killed. the friend said. business from Carlo Mtonc's brother
Ceausescu. who appeared securely John. Carlo Mione is part of a joint
in office only weeks ago. was forced venture trying to o pen a p;zza place
to Oee the Ro manian capital, Bucha· near Balboa Pier.
rest, on Friday. News foll owed in The Daily Pilot regrets the error.
irv.1Ced Shutters
MANUFACTURED a FINISHED Hiil ORANGE COUNTY
death. He did say, however. that be
felt oplimis1ic about the tumultuous
chanaes taking place in his native
country.
"I'm a Christian so rm not sup-
posed to want 10 kill anyone," he
said. "'But I'm glad about what ha~
pened. rm most &lad 1hat preuy
soon Romania will be just like here.
wi1h a free system. I have absolu1ely
no doubt about that."
lonel Antimie Sr. left Romania
a nd..ettled in Orange Counly in
1985 with four of his sons and two
dauahters. The family owns a con-
1racting business in FuUenon. Two
sons, as well as a number of other
relatives. remain in Romania.
Store employees
flee from fire
By Ctty News krvlce:.
Fire Tuesday night chased a hand-
ful of t•mploy-:es fron1 a Thrifty drug
sto re 1n a G arden G rO\'C sho pping
center.
Garden G rove Fire Inspector Ed
Lukas !i3id the blaze "''as reported
about 9:29 p.m. in 1he 10800 bl ock
of Katella Avenue.
"The fire .was contained to tht•
Thrifty," Lukas said, adding tha1
about half dozen other stores were in
!he shopping area .
No doubt. thl• ,·1si1 wi ll De a bi 1 of
a cultural shock.
l\·l1ke Rill'ry. chairman of the
Tourna111e n1 of Roses n1 usic l·om-
n1illel'. said onl' member expressed
concrrn about band members being
able to b<it hr: in an area like
Southern California "'·he-re river5 are
so scarce.
But perhaps thl" grca1e st shock will
co1ne "''hl'R p;irt of the group visit s
thc local mountains to sec snO"'' for
thl· fir..1 1in1l".
The fact that lhl' only local snow
is art ificial "''on'1 matter, Jenkins
said.
"These gu ys put o n coats when
the temperature falls 10 80," he said.
Just call 642-6086 ORANGE ~Pilat
COAST .....
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Delivery
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don't you like? Call 1he number above and your
rnessqe will be recorded, trantcribcd and de--
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IJO W ~ i< • Con• Mr ... '"''' llllMl.od!~ PO llo• 1~6(1 Co"•"'"• c.o, •l ,,16 C~••~~ """ 6•J-s11o111 """,..." 0~0(~• N•w• ..-.i \i>OI ... 641·•111
Allt•~JOPI'! ~n 6•1-41JO N•W> S6Cl 1114 "'
5-0.IJJJ F,<\ll ~' 6)t.1~1
Is Guar•nteed
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used to record letten to the editor on an~ topic.
Contributon to our Letters column musl 1ncl.ude
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Gem
Talk
VOL. 12, NO. 311
e,1c.~
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"-" f ~. £"'<11 \1tltl .II ,,t''°""' a c~ l••<"'-Ofl1<t• c"""mMI
Clrculatlon
Telephones _ ..
~P~ '°""'' ~·tlJI
l-N'9Jl'I .... ._
Quality. It's as important
in diamonds as in
anything else you own.
Tioetti-toadlaniond thin mttts th< ey<. And to
uadrm.nd dw dlflir1aicn brtwttn diamonds is to undf!'r·
-•h~ 4Ci-Cll).Color, c1.,;1y ind C.rot·W<ight . Its
...... 4Ci thac MIU HdllO tM voluo of I dilmond.
't110cllfln-......... n diunonds.,. subtk indttd,
.. 1o=Gfdlacrlmln11Jn1 ,..to, ltiquallty thlt malros ••-o. .. jowllor i& th<oxpon whrttdiunonds •-d A111ne_ .._,... hlaf>-qualjiy dlmionds 1a•-,,.,...,,. .... ......,,ntfwiOonhtino;oyour
'" ... " 1111-wliai .......... .
Qlialltll lti tHllls .. ta And iii• imporllftt In dlamollda .... ...,..,... .... ,... .....
.... .•...
I
DAILY PILOTIW~. Dloember 27, W Al
Ar:t league to see
portraitist at work
OC soldier killed in Panama I
to get·milltary honors at burial
The Huntinaton Beach Art Lape will meet
at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 3 in the Newland Barn, in tbe
Newland Center at Adams Avenue and Beach
Boulevard.
Frances Fraser known for her portraiu in
pasttls and oils, wiil demonstrate her tecbniq_uea.
She will do a ponrait of a live model. Oonauon1
for the paintina will be aivcn to the scbolanhip
fu nd. •
Members arc enc-0urq.cd to brina their
an work by 7: I 5 p.m. to participate in the monthly
competition. The public is invited to attend the
meeting.
Blood donors ne«l«J
The American Red Cross will conduct a Blood
Onve from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Jan. 3 at the
Huntington Harbour Red Onion, 16450 Pacific
Coast Highway.
Pfc. ~ Dennl9 9rown
''°'" staff .rMI wire '9POf°U
An American soldier who was killed an
the early hours of the American assault
on Panama will be buried in Orange
County with full military honors on
Thursday, relatives said Tuesday.
Army Pfc. Roy Dennis Brown. a mem-
ber of the elite Rangers group based an
Fort Benning, Ga .. that led the assault,
was killed in the early morning hours last
Wednesday.
Brown, 19, as one of at least 25 U.S.
servicemen reported 10 have d ied in the
weeklong mihtar) operation. and the
only one from Orange County known to
have penshed.
Brown's body was brought back to
Orange Count)' on Sunday n1gh1 from
Maryland, llis mother. Julie Otto of
Buena Park, said.
A public memorial service for Brown
wall be held at 11 a.m. Thursday at Pierce
Brothers Dal y-Bartel-Spencer Mortuary,
2425 W. Lincoln Ave. in Anaheim.
Burial wall follow at Holy Sepulcher
Cemetery 1n Orange, 7845 Santiago
Road ..
A mahtary funeraJ detail from Fon Ord
an Northern Cahfornaa will perform a 21·
gun salute. pla~ Laps and drape the
Amencan Oag over the coffin for pre!oen-
tataon 10 Brown's mother.
There "as be: public vae\lo ang at the
Anaheim mortuar) on Tuesda)' The
v1ew1ng continues today from 2 to 8 p.m.
Brown vew up an Buena Part and
graduated from Magnolia Hi~ School ia
1988. Family members said be bad
always wanted to join the service and WU
on a first name basis with the local
rccruiuna office.
His mother said her son called home
for the last time on Doc. 17 to advise her
to keep her eyes oo the news. SeveraJ
da)s later when the invasion was detailed
on ne"'s reports. Bro .... n's mother said she
knew \lohat her M>n had meant.
~ uniformed officer showed up at the
family'!. front door the following day.
Famll} members agreed that Brown
died the ""a) he "'ould ha'e wanted.
The dri ve as to replace blood supplies depicted
b) holiday emergencies and recent disasters.
For details or an appointment. call 846-3339.
Scuba diving Instructions Father sues hospital over removal of organs
The City of Costa Mesa will offer several
sessions of scuba diving instruction early this year,
One session begi ns with on Jan. 8. Otber group'5
begin Jan. 10. Feb. 5 and 6. and March 5 and 7.
Each class runs from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. All are four
weeks long.
The session includes ~l sessions and class
lectures with slides and videos; fo ur seuba dives
and one ~kin di ve. incruding two at Catalina; PADI
Open Water Di ver certification; certification card,
textbook, dive planner. log book, wall cenific.ate
and patch: and college credit where applicable.
Cost for the course is S 185. Transponation to
Catalina as e'<tra.
For rcserva11ons or more information call
645-2797.
Dance teacher at OCC
"'' ersat ) of Maryland dance instructor
Ahm Ma)eS .... ,11 te-ach two dance workshops the
"eek of Jan. at Orange Coast College's Dance
tud10.
Ma)c'i taught dance at OCC for several years
dunng the 1970s. He has been a principal dancer
with the Glona Newman Dance Theater. the
Mal)land Dance Theater and several other dance
en cmhlcs in 1hc Washington D.C'. area.
One workshop will be in intermediate to
ad vanced level modem dance techniques, from 10
a.m. 10 noon Monday th rough Friday. The other
will tx· a partnci;tng doubles workshop for dancers
at all lcn·ls. from noon 10 I p.m.
Registration fee 1s $35 for both workshops and
SI 0 for 1hc partnering workshop only.
f or more 1nformat1on. call 432-5506.
B'nal B'rlth Women to m~~t
Coas1hne chapter of B·naa B·nth Women will
mee t al 7:30 p.m. Jan. 3 at Irvine Heritage
Regional L1brar~. 14361 Yale Ave .. Irvine.
Kall) Barto~ of K111y's Fashions will speak on
the ··ru,\cr of lf·Presentataon and how to Dress
for · uclc '> ...
.\II women arc 1nv1ted 10 anend. Refrcsh-
nll'nl'> .... ,11 be ~ncd. For a ndc or membership
information. cnll 544-49~4. 786·6270. or 639-3353.
UC/ center wants volunt~~n
ll( l's Brain Imaging Center needs volunteers
10 a .. ~1s1 facull) and staff with a variety of tasks
andmhng hm11ng patients and their families.
anw.cnng phones. coondnating mailings and
producing the brain imaging newsletter.
Operated through the UC'I Psychia try Depart-
ment. 1he center's studies include Alzheimer's
disca~e. sch1tzophrenia and depression.
For more information or to volunteer, call
Dec Harvey at 856-4245.
OCC op~ns nominations
Orange Coast College is seeking nominees for
its Alumni Hall of Fame. Sponsored by the
college· Alumna o\ssociation and Associated Stu-
dents. the Hall of Fame honors formeF students
who have gone on to achieve success in a variety
of fields.
Nom1na11ons should be sent to Douglas Ben-
nett. OC s director of lnstitutionaJ Advancement.
at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. 92628-5005.
Deadline as Jan. 31. 1990.
Nominees must have enrolled in their first
OC classes not later than 1980. They need not be
graduates 10 be eligible.
Past inductees include boxing champ Carlos
Palomino. novelist Clive Cusler. actor William
Kan. South Coast Repenory director David
Emmes. ma.ior league pitcher Dan Quisenberry,
superior court judge John J. Ryan, Olympic gold
medalist Steve Timmons. Orange County Sheriff
Brad Gates nnd more.
(. ·\ l .t :'\ D ·\ R
Wednesday, Dec. 27
• 7 p.m. Lapa Bud P1aullli Cealmlss ....
council chambers. SOS Forest Ave.
Thursday, Dec. 28
No meetings scheduled.
POI If I I Of.
lly The Auodated Pr~ss
A distraught father who clai ms a hospi-
tal broke the law by harvesting his teen-
asc son's organ s for transplant without
has permission still doesn't know when
his son died.
Ronald Berner claims in his Orange
County Superior Coun lawsuit filed in
1987 that the UCI Medical Center and a
surgeon robbed ham of an opponuni1y to
spend a final moment with his son.
Steven 8t'fTler, 14. was struck by a car
in September 1986 and was on a lifc-
suppon system with severe injuries. m-
cluding brain damage. -
"To this day. I don·t know when my
son died." the grieved father said in an
interview With the Orange Count) Rega~·
ter pubh~hed Tuel.da y. ··My life hao; been
a nightmare. I thank about them cutting
up my son , and there's so much anger.
"Why didn·t they let me see ham?"
Berrier was vacationing in . Mcx1co
when he got "'ord ot has son's injuries.
"Just don't let them do anything unul I
get there:· he told his brother. Gerald.
who in turn relayed thl' instrucuons to
the head nurse.
Explaining he was a religious man.
Berrier said he believed 1n miracles and
wanted a chance 10 touch h1!> son an a bid
for divine intervcn11on. He never got the
chance.
His ex-wife told surgeon tcven Weins-
tein she was happ) her son's heart. lungs.
II\ er. k1dners and cornea~ were heang
gl\ en to people "'ho needed !hem. When
Bemer am,cd a1 l 1CI Medical Center.
hl' "'a~ told his son had died
·1111 co nneeted to hie support ma-
chtnl·s. the bo> "a" flown 10 tanford
Uni' ers1t} for the organ·removal
procedure.
"The\ 1old him lhe kid wai. alrcad\
dead and an fact ht: was J USt am\ ang a·I
Stanford and was un hfe support," at-
lorne) Jud~ la van. "'ho represents Ber·
ncr 1n the suit. said on Tuesda'
"If 1h1: other parent gi ves actual no11cc
of oppos1t1on. then the} cannot proceed
"'tth the han esting process:· la' an said
.\ ttome~ Mark Franzen. "'ho rep-
resents the SUTReon and medical center.
Assemblyman Gii l'erguson, accom1N1nled by his
wife, Anita, takes an oath as he turned In
D~P'lle4 .......
candidacy papers to u.. Pl .. rslcl ·and Terry
Mccaffery.
Ferguson files papers, faces three
other candidates in Senate race
By PAUL ARCHll'LfY
Of -~ Not SUiff
Assemblyman Gal Ferguson expects
high name 1dcnt1fica11on and a standing
arm) of volunteers to forge a victory for
him in the 31st Senate District spcciaJ
clec11on.
Ferguson. R-Newpon Beach, filed
campaign papers with the county R~s
trar of Voters office Tuesday, the filing
deadline for the Feb. 6 election.
The special election was made necess-
ary by the resignation of former Sen.
William Campbell. who vacated the of-
fice to become president of the California
Manufacturers Association.
Ferguson was one of four Orange
Counhans who filed . Also running are
Brea City Councilman Ron Isles, Demo-
crat Janice Lynn Graham of L.aauna
Hills. who ran unsuccessfully against
Campbell in 1988, and Thomas Whaling.
an El Toro businessman who also lists
himself as a Democrat.
At least one Los Anaeles County can-
didate, Assemblll"'an Frank Hill, R-
Whittier, also is 1n the race.
Voten will be allowed to crosa party
lion in the special election. If no sinale
ndadate gamers more than 50 pcr<'Cnt
of the 'otc. the "inners from each pan'
.... ,11 face one another in an ~pnl I b
runoff.
Ferguson. cn11c1z1ng Go' Deu·
kmeJ1an's l'lcct1on date choice as too
soon. said ... , thank it's going 10 Ix· the
shortest elect1onccranf 11me an the h1s1011
of California \Olers.'
But he al so said the tame hm11 could
work to his advantage because he boa<1ts
high -and positive -name 1dcnt1ti-
cation in much of the 31st D1stnc1.
"The biggest problem candidates w\11
ha ve is making 400.000 registered voters
aware of their name:· Ferguson said.
"That's an advantage I have."
It also will mean spending less than the
other candidates, Ferguson said. Still. he
expected to raise up to $350.000 for his
campaign, the bulk of which would go for
selective mailinas.
He has about $50.000 in seed money
from his Assembl) campaign account.
and has pledges for more than haJf of the
rest he hopes to raise.
Because of the hkehhood of a haht
voter turnout for the special electaon,
candida&es will spend a lot to brina in
lafl'C numbers of absenttt voter beJlots.
100. he s.aad.
Ferguson also remains a candidate for
re-election 10 his "'0th ~ssembl) D1c;tnc1
seat.
hould hr "'in the nate <>eal. a "Ide
open race 10 replace ham in the A sc.-mbh
can be e"<pected 1n the Republican pn·
ma11 in June.
Several potential candidate ha' e tiled
nouce of intent wnh the Fa ir Political
PractKC!> Comm1c;s1on. and other" ha'c
C:\prc<iscd inter<" I.
Ho ...... cver. man} said the) ""ould dro p
o ut 1f Ferguson loses the Senate race and
wants to retain his Assembly scat.
Among those who have announced or
whose names have been mentioned as
potential cand1daLes tn the Assembly nm~
are Newport Beach Councilwoman
Evelyn Han. Irvine attome) Wilham
Crosb) and congrt'SS10nal aide C'hud..
De Vore.
Other names an the rumor mill indudc
Phyllis Badham. daughter of forme r Rep.
Robert Badham, Dan McNerne)'. assas·
tant treasurer of the count> Republican
Pany and an Oranae Count> dt'put)
distnct attorney. and Ron Cordova. a
Newport Beach auomey and former as-
1emblyman.
said perm1ss1on "'as obtained from the
motht'r and "all our protocols" were
foll1l\\Cd. The couple had been di vorced
10 ~l'ilr!. hut hared custody of Steven.
"\\ c obtained proper consent from her.
( ahtorn1a ta"' s1a1cs in these t)rpes of
l'mcrgcnq '>ttuata on<i. one adult parent as
fine·· <.aid Lari') 'itahl. the hospital's
director of risk management. The hospi-
tal maan1a1n' 1hc father's objections were
nncr n:IJ\Cd 1u the medical center staff. Bcmcr'~ la .... ~cr lontends the hospital
had a dut) to nottf) both parents.
.. r he) dchberatd~ deceived me at the
ho!.p11al to get h1<i organs." Bemer said
Pretrial motions "'ne proceeding slo'4-
h and la' 1n said 11 ma\ be a 'eaf before
the caSc.· goc<. 1u trial · ·
Woman
charged in
man's death
By BOB VAN EYKEN
.\ '11.'\~pon Beach "'oman will be
lhargl·d "'•th murder following the death
of a malt' rcla11,e she allegedly ran down
"'" h hl'r l.U Del IQ. po lace said Tuesday.
JJml''> \\ ard. JI. died at Hoag Mem-
onJI liow11tal on · turda) at 5 p.m .•
four da'., jlll'r a tam1h d1~uss1on with
'i -~car-old Bett) Yo.ung Davies rc-
poncdl~ 1urned '1olcnt on a Cost.a Mesa
'>lfel't
{)a' 1es and \\ ard "'ere walkmg an the
M){J hlod of C ongress trccl the aftcr-
no<ln of Occ 19 d1~uss1ng family mat-
ter., "'hen Da \IC: reponedl) returned to
her \1crl·ede\-fknL. "'h1ch was parked on
1hc '>trcet. C osta Mesa police Lt. Sam
C ordcaro said
Ward thl·n reponedl) approached the
l°ar and Da' 1e!I alkgcdl) threatened to
run 0' er him he then allegedly ac-
lclcratcd and strud. Ward. who rolled
o'er tht.· hood. ~mashed the windshield
and fell an10 the street.
Da' ar'> allegedl) fled the scene, but
'lum·ndcred 10 ( osta Mesa police Dec. 20 .
!)he "'a booked on susp1c1on of assault
"'1th a dcadl) "capon and rcle.ascd when !>he posted S.,5.000 bail.
Lt. Ga~ Web ter said Tuesday that
police "'ould now ask that the char'F
against Da' ac be amended to murder.
Da' aes \lo lll rcma10 free DC1ld.tn& uial
and b31I .... ,11 not be changed.. Webster
"iald
Shooting victim's
condition serious
By City News Service
A 4-ycar-old an Clemente girl. ~
hevcd to be the fi~t person in San
Clemente 1nJurcd in a drive-by shootina.
remained an senou<i condatton Tucday.
Pnsca Caudillo was play1ng with
friends on a sccond·Ooor balcon)' ln the
100 bloc~ of Avenida Pelayo at about
7:45 p.m. Chnstmas Eve when a shotpn
\loas tired toward the balcony from one of
two paSJan& c•rs.
CaudtUo, who was struek by pdktl in
the forehead. e}e and stomach, 11 bei•
treated at Mission C'ommunity Hotpillt'
n Ckmcnte police s.t. Jim n.o..
said the .Jtootina was ibe rautt ol a
n valr) between San Clemente ud S..
Juan Capistrano pnp.
Fountain v.ney radio and about OM ~t·a worth of canned, boaed and frozen fOod were A burtlar stoic S3:300 in audio millina from a home in tbe llOO
equipment and CAUICO $~ damaer block f Ttvwide La fter ... _
but nn ofJ and Oat in a Font 8ronco
after the employee realized the bill
was fake and confronted him.
• • • /\ dark bl~ Ford ptckup was
stolen sometime Monday niaht or
Tuesday from whtte it wa1= on the 500 block of Spn .
The car's li~nte plate was 2 91161.
at 184 Vict'"ona St.. 11 esumatcd at tPlaahcd on wall LI\ die .. el
$200. Qlenatonc Onvc and 0.-..
after brealdna Into 1 Mazda RX? on ° -~ M 1 ""'
MacKenzie Ri~er. '\venue. = :;t ~c:"..;'~~e~ !rd":
Poliee amsted suspecu who Mrt male, ~bly her estnftled hu•
1een ahootina out windows with a band. appuentll .~ Uvina there.
88 1un at the Fountain Valley A raident of an apanment in the
ScboOI District. l 7110 OU St. Dam-l 00 block of llnd Snet renaned
• was ntimated 11 S l ,280. bome after eome time awa" ad e • • I
An estimated Sl,3'° in cub and t'ouDd die doon nlocbd ad n-jewelry~~ stolen tom a home OD merout illml ..... iDd~lll U
the I l IOO block of Violet Cirde aftlr ~ Jm. a cr,...a 11111111. I
.......... Ucked in I door to 91in Mfbolnl. I ...... ...t I don -camlDIW. A 1 rMllar .. two lft-1· • • • ..... .... two.:...~ .....
All ... ,..,._. W••i....., ,_ 1M _.... ..S dGOk• lllii :::.:.· .. aa.::-.. ~ :;z:1 my ......... ii ... .... .... , •• -.. "°° Mid ol Aa ,. • , 17 ... ...
• • • A woman reponed her wallet was
taken from her open pune while ahe
shopped. mottly in the frozen food ancf ineat teetions, of H\llha ma'9
ket, l UO Irvine Ave. • • • A dllt b Poll loll Newpon. 3157 llrdl .............. ac-
cidln..aly left die ....... depotit bli CODlaiailll 1540 in c:ab and
dMlcb -top Ol blr cs and drove olf.
Im-
····"--r. .... ·'ll-'t. .. Ne•111tl11.. .._.II
AU.• '? ••I pa] '] -. llll••liiiiliii
• • • A 1987 red Mazda pickup with a
white camper wU was l10left &om
1700 luranca Parkway. appmutly tom tbe Prinuonb petkina lot. .
Unknown va~; did S 1.300 in Street.
darngr to pttns and -'>lf cans ai
the Cos&a Mesa Golf Coune, 1770
Golf Coune Dr .. on Monday. The
smpectS ~y cut IC!OUrity
cables boldint tbe tolf cans and
drove tbem onto the counc betwecn 2 and 7 Lm. • • f A bqde wonll 12'0 waa llOlen ft'Om • -...... iD .... 1 IOO ..... ol
!uw' Oriw bft•ee• 7 aad I p..m. Ma1111, .
• • •
-r-:r----=-.--:. • .
' ~ . ' "" . .,.·; ' ,,
ring embassl s; Bush u~
PANAMA CITY, Panama ~ -nt ._. al die U.S. Sou
0-WM clilcwed Oen. Manuel AD..,. ~'I fate witb the
Vaaic:an ambe•-b Tuetday, and
P.um1niem returned to work after
a -* or ftshuna. Tbe Vatican Enibauy, w~ Nor-
iep IOUlbt uylum Sunday. was riieed by U .S. troops. In Wuhina-
toD, Mite House spokesman
Marlin Fitzwater said the Bush ad-
ministration told the Vatican "vel')'
directly" it wants Noriep returned
to tbe United States to stand trial on
~clwJ.el·R .. cea 1n ome wd the Vatican
would rather band him over to
another country, but one of those
couatries mentioned, Spain, has de-
nied Noriep political asylum.
Noriep WU toppled Dec. 20,
when U.S. forces invaded and Presi-
dent Guillermo Endara was sworn
in.
There wu a Ouny of activity at
the embassy startina at noon. when
Gen. MuweU Thurman, in charge
of all U.S. torces in Central and
South America. drove up with a
caravan of ledana. jeeps and
armored personnel carrien.
Monsipor Sebastian Laboa. the
papal nuncio, emeraed three times
over the next three houn and con-
ferred with Thurman on the street.
Thurman waited· in his car durina
pauses between talks.
Troops also surrounded the
Cuban Embassy, in a downtown
sector where other embassies arc
based and where fightina erupted
Monday night. The city was quiet
Tuesdaj. Ange Pino, the spokesman (or the
Cuban diplomatic mission in Wash-
ington, charged Tuesday the U.S.
soldiers were refusing Cuban
diplomats the right to leave or enter
the embassy and the ambassador's
residence.
The State Dcpanment denied it,
saying U.S. forces "do not intend to
prevent normal djplomatic activi1y
by Cuben personnel."
Later, a Stale Department press
Invasion aftermath:
Other events Tuesday related to the U.S. invasion of Panama included:
WASHING TON -The Bush admirust.ration said it wants to heu
millions of dollars in assets deposed dictator Manuel Noriep .U.CUy
transferred out of Panama. Justice Department spokesman O.vicfRunkel
said U.S. officials will tile papers today in more than a half-clmcn countries
where, he said, Noriep had bidden "illepl drua money" amountina to mOR
than SI 0 million.
MIAMI -A Panamanian officer considered one ofNonep•s .. rifht-
hand men" and accused of helping the deposed dictator smugle cocaine
for the Medellin canel pleaded innocent before a federal judae. Lt. Col. Luis
del Cid, 46, faces racke1ccring. drua-smuaJina and money-launderina
charges in 1he same February 1988 indictment that accused Noriep and
Medellin canel figures ofimporuna cocaine into the United States. The
commander of a Panama Defense Forces unit in the nonhem Panama
province ofChiriqui, del Cid surrendered to U.S. forcd Saturday.
officer, Mark Dillen. said the U.S.
forces might ask Cuban personnel
for identification but there has been
"no prevention of entry or egress·· at
the embassy.
U.S. forces had encircled the
Cuban. Nicara~uan and Ubyan em-
bassies to prevent Noriega from
seeking asyl um there.
As the asylum talks wen1 on, U.S.
military sources said they quelled
scattered fighting from Noriega loy-
alists and made arrests.
Crews began picking up mounds
57 kllled In State to prohibit sale of high-risk
:;~ ~!:.!:~ junk bonds by state-chartered S&Ls 'Y McClatchy N~s Service o~ces m the slate. . . Da~is .said it is his understanding
SACRAMENTO (AP) _ Fifty-Just so no one gets that idea m that s1m1lar orders arc being drafted
seven people died on California SA<;RAMEN~O -Bu!"1'ed by min~. Wt: ar~.sayi~g you ca.n't ~o it.:· by the U.S. Office of Thrift Super-
roads during the Christmas holiday the Lincoln Savings finan~1al scan-~vis said: ~~ JUSt don t think 1t vision. w. hich regulates the 67 feder-
weekend and 2, 1 14 motorists were dal. th~t ~ost t~ousands of 1n.ves1ors as a good 1d~a. . ally charted S&ls in the state, and
arrested for driving while intox-t~e1r hfe s ~v~ngs. the state !S pl~n-A temporary order as expecled to by the U.S. Savings and Loan
icated. both figures up sharply from ning to proh1b1t the sale of high nsk be sent 10 1he I 17 state-chartered League, a trade association for the
last year, authorities said. Junk bonds .from offices o( state-S&ls by the en~ of ~he wet;k and industry.
The weekend count, which began cha~ercd 1hnfi!_ _ bcc~me . effective 1mmed1ately, An es1i mated 23,000 investors _
at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at W!Htam Davis. ch1~f de"}>u~ c~m-Davis ~1d. N~xt mof'!th, the depan-mostly reTirees li ving in Southern
midnight Christmas Day, was the m1 ss1oner of the Cahfol'J'!1a vangs ment will set an motion the fonnal California _ claim they lost nearly
worsl 1n the United States. and Loan Dep~nmen1, said Tuesday process to get pern:ianent regulation S250 million when they purchased
Across the nation, 353 people died 1hat no such _Junk bon~ sales cur-10 bar sales of uninsured bonds at uninsured corporate bonds sold by
on roads and highways, compared to rently are taking place an any S&L S&L offices. American Con1inental Corp.
386 fatalities last year.
The death 1011 in California for
last year's Christmas weekend was
48, while 1,491 people were arrested
for driving under the influence of
or alcohol, 1he California
way Patrol reponed Tuesday.
e CHP attributed this year's big
increase in DUI arrests to a
crackdown aimed at getting drunks
off the road over the long weekend.
Of the 48 t>eOple killed in C HP
jurisdiction this weekend. 35 weren't
wearina seat belts.
ROMANIA
FnNn A1
The government also ordered the
Interior Ministry's brutal security
forces be J>Ut under control of the
Defense Ministry. which oversees
the army that sided wi1h the revol-
ationaries.
According to radio and Romanian
sources, security forces loyal to
Ceausescu were surrendering by 1he
hundreds Tuesday, apparently con-
vinced of defeat by news of their
ousted ruler's execution.
But sporadic aunfirc stm rang tbroulh parts of the capital. where
Mercy killing suspect doted on wife
C HICAGO (A--P~ -Retirecf
policeman Gerald illiams doted
on his ailing wife or years. Bui,
faced with hean surgery and worried
that he could no longer care for her.
he sho t and killed her on Christmas
Eve, police say.
Both authorities and neiR}lbors
man} buildings "'ere burned or bat-
tered b) lhe hghung between arm)
un11s bad.mg the revolution and
secret police loyal 10 Ceausescu.
Ceausescu and· his wife were re-
ported captured on Saturda} and
tned and executed 1wo da)S la1er.
Telev1s1on early Tuesday broadcast
the first footage of 1he couple in
capti' 1ty. along wi1 h 1he film of their
bodies.
The 71-year-old Ceausescu looked
gaunt a nd unshaven and denied thal
he ordered the bru1al suppression
during last week·s protests agains1
his rule.
His wife. some1imcs restrained
sa"/ Alice Williams had begged him
to end her suffering. but he still faces
firs1-degree murder cha~es.
''He was a very loVlng. caring
man." said ne ighbor Marie
Kitzmiller.
Williams, 67, appe.ared briefl y in
court Tuesday, accused of shooting
from ~peaking b} her husband. de-
liantl) blasted back at unseen pros-
ecu1ors accusing the fam1l} of
stashing hard currenc} an S"'iss
banll.s.
"Prove 11:· she retorted. "This is
a base pro,ocauo n."
· (cause cu dcn11:d 1hat there "ere
deaths 1n Bucharcsl's Palace Square
on Thursda). \\hen there were re-
ports that troops fired on protesters
who turned OUI for his failed pro-
gO\ crnme n1 dcmonstrntion.
"Nobody was sho1 in the Palace
Square." Ceausc!>cu said.
The governmen1 said 1he couple
had stasl)cd more than SI billion in
his ~ife ?,f 44 years an the head with
a .38-cahber revolver while she sat
in a wheelchair in 1he dining room
of their brick bungalow.
Williams declined to comment to
reporters after his appearance before
Criminal Court Judge David
Erickson.
foreign banks.
A m1l11an officer who asked not
to be identified said 300 soldiers
'oluntecred for the finng squad. but
onl ~ 1hrec were chosen. T he
Ceauscs<:us· last wish was to die
1oge1hcr. he said. .
··.\II of us wanted 10 sec the
d1c1ator shot. You have seen 11. the
d1c1ator.. have been executed!"
exulted a Bucharest Radio an-
nouncer.
A group of diss1dcn1s. intellec-
tuals. disaffected government of·
ficials and rebellious army com-
manders have been 1rying 10 run the
nation under the umbrella name
National Salva1ion Commiltee.
All stores
CLOSED
ew Year's
Day
of Noriega
of ..-.. and rmdblocks erected
10 Mil IOoliaa were comina down.
The DOl'IDll traffic snarls of this
leaSide capital of I million were t.ck. wa11ened by U.S. troops
blockina some ~or streets.
Many stores that had not been
looted bare reopened, but mos! basics remain in short supply. Taxi
drivers. most of whom hve in the
poorer and most heavily looted sec-
tions of the city, seemed particularly
adept at findjna goods not available
over the counter.
Fifteen tons of emergency medical
supplies have arrived, and civilian aid ·aroups are due in to help.
The first vice prcsiden1, Ricardo
Arias Calderon, called for public
employees to return 10 work Tues-
day and many did, althoup it was
not possible to detemune how
many.
In Rome, sources said the Vatican
would P.robably allow Noriep to go
into exlle in another country rather
1han han<t him to the United States.
They have no ext.rarution treaty with
J
the United States and ~.Roman
Catholic church has cnhcized the
U.S. invasion.
The Vatican's deputy IPOkesman.
Monsaanor Piero PennacChini, said
contacts were beina made between
the newly installed Panamian aov-
ernment, the United States and the
Vatican.
Spain and the Dominican Re-
public have been mentioned as poss..
1ble refU4Cs. but the Spanish aovem-
ment said it would not take the
fallen aeneral. Noriep has a daugh-
ter married to an army officer in the
Dominican Republic.
The whereabouts of Noriep's
wife, Felicidad. and two of bis three
daughters, Sandra and Lorena, are
noJ known.
A State Dc~nment soun:e in
Washington said the United States
had demanded "in extraordinarily
tough 1erms" the Vatican tum Nor-
iega over to U.S. custody.
But Fitzwater declined to rule out
the possibility 1hat some other op-
1ion might be under consideration.
(' \l,IJ'OH'\I \ HHIJ:J·s
From Daly Piiot wire servtces
Motorists save stranded woman
LOS ANGELES - A band of mo1orists plunged across a busy freeway
s1rc1ch on Christmas Day 10 save a woman in a stalled car who was the
targe1 of an alleged sexual assailant. police said Tuesday. The passers-by
thwarted the rape and risked their li ves by running across lhe Golden State
Frcewa) to help the woma}l. police said.
The woman and her infant were alone when her car broke down near
the junc1ion of lhe interstale and 1he Antelope Valley Freeway in the Sylmar
area. She was awaiting help from her boyfriend when a car w1th four men
inside stopped and one of the me n tried to assauh her. The Good Samari tans
stopped and ran across busy lntersta1e S to help capture the assailant who
fled into nearby bushes. along with 1he three other men.
Police car firebombed
LOS ANGELES -Los Angeles p<?hce an11-gang officers chasing a bo}
on fool 1hrough a Lincoln Heights neighborhood Tuesday night returned 10
their patrol car 10 find it had been burned up by a Molotov cocktail. The
homemade firebomb apparently was lobbed a1 the unmarked c.ar by gang
m<.'mbcrs. said Officer Bob Brogclman of the LAPD's Hollenbeck sta1ion.
'\ .\ 1' I 0 '\ ·\ I , H H I t : t · S
Refinery blast vldlm found .._ ~
BA TON ROUGE. La. -Scarch'ers on Tuesday found the body of a
second 'ictim of a Christmas Eve explosion at Exxon's gian1 refinery here
1hat damagl·d buildings six m11<.-s nwa). Property owners. meanwhile,
lloodcd the plan l's offi ce wi th calls ahout damage caused b} the storage tank
blast.
Officials said they were 1ry1ng 10 determine whe1her the second body
\\a!> that of an E\\on worker missing since the blast. Investigators from
E\xon "l'rc s11ll "orking to d..-1..-rmine the cause of the explosion.
Federal workers get pay hike
WASHINGTON -President Bush on Tuesday signed an eitecut1 ve
order cafD ing ou1 legisla1 ion raising top governmen1 salaries by up 10 35
percent and gl\ 1ng all federal workers a 3.6 percent cost-of-living pay
increaSl'.. The order. signed b) Bush a1 1he prcs1den11al retreat at Camp
0 :1\ 1d. Md .. follo"s his s1gna1urc earlier this monlh on a pay raise and e1h ics
bill.
ndcr the pay pllckage. to p-level members of the executive service
le' cl. who now earn a maximum of $99.500. would earn SI 07.300.
F amlly slaln, set on fire
DRYDEN. N.Y. -Police on Tuesday were looking to question a
bicyclis1 seen riding near lhis small upstate New York 1own shonty before
a family of four was shot to dea1h and set afire in their suburban home.
Warren Anthony Harris. 39, his wife. Delores. 41 . their daughter. Shelby,
15. and son, Marc. 11 . were found dead Saturday morning ai\er neighbors
in the affiuent suburb of Ellis Hollow heard their fire alann and called
authorities.
All four had been shot once through the head between 6 p.m. and 10:30
p.m. Friday. Police have given no moti ve for the cnmc.
Bush begins hunting vacation
WASHING TON -President Bush as off on a six-day hunting and fishi~g v!lcation in. his adop~ed state of Texas. White House spokesman
Marian F112water said Bush wall keep close tabs on developments in Panama
by telephone.
l\ 0 H I . D II H 11·: I· '
Gorbachev going to Uthuanla
MOSCOW -President Mikhail S. Gorbachev will undenake a mission
to Lithuani~ within days tot!)' to bring th~t rep~blic's renegade Communist
Party back into the fold. Soviet party officials said Tuesday. The Lithuanian
Communist Party declared itself independen1 Dec. 2.(' creating the f111t
major crack in 1he monolithic party forged tty Vladimi'r Lenin before the
1917 Bolshevik Revolution. 1
_Gorbac~ev blasted the ~ithuanian pany leadership al a plenum of the
Sov1et pany s Central Commntee tha1 met Mondar and Tue"1ay to consider
the Lithuanian move. But, in a repon published Tuesday an the pany
newspaper Pravda. he also uraed ·•maximum restraint" to aJlow emotions
to cool.
lsr•el attacks guerrillas In Lebanon
RMEILE, Lebanon -Israeli warplann destroyed a Commurust Party
rommand post.south of f?etrut on Tuctday, houn after paratroopcn t.cted
by aanb and 1 1r rover Wiped out another Communist hue in southeastern
Lebanon. Police said nine people were killed and 26 wounded in the two
attacks.
In Beirut. tbe. Leblianc ~ dcf'Uled a car riaed with 16S pounds of aplalives neu Prime MhUller Salim ROii• office JO minU1es before it wu
.. to '° off', police met.
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-water pipes burst in cold
By The Auodat.ct Preu
Temperatures rose and snow
melted Tuesday in the South. but
thousands of people had no water or
little pressure because of pipes
cracked by the record cold wave.
Temperatures stayed below the
frcciing point overnight throughout
much of the South, but were ex-
pected to reach the 60s 1n the Caro-
Hoas by the end of the week. the
National Weather Service said.
A1rhnes resumed normal sched-
ules Tuesday at Charleston. S.C .•
after reducing flights because of
snow, which piled.up I 5 inches deep
1n pla~s along the coast Sunda)'.
The Myrtle Beach Jetport. closed for
a third straight day Monday, was
able to operate only dunng daylight
because runway lights were covered
by snow, said Todd Crawford. depu-
ty airport director.
At least 96 deaths from the Plains
to the East Coast had been blamed
on the cold since Dec. I 5.
The worst of the water problems
was at Jackson. Miss.. where an
estimated 60.000 homes and busi-
nesses were w1thout water or had
greatly reduced pressure. Frozen
pipes had cracked but the biJFSt
problem "as that the Pearl River
had frozen around intakes for the
municipal water system.
The cold caused substantial dam-
aae to Flonda's S3.5 billion citrus
crop .
. .. ._,
-
Fountain Valley Hos ital' s
Emergency De~ent emains
Listed hi Excellent Condition.
Trauma services, regretfully, close at
Fountain Valley Regional Ho pita l o n December 27.1989.
Our commitment to basic e me rgency care, however,
remains unchanged .
We continue to specialize in 24-hoµr treatment for chest pains,
breathing difficulties, broken bones, bums, spons injuries, industrial
injuries as well as minor aches and pains. These illnesses and injuries
constitute 97% of our emergency depanrnent cases in recent years.
Less than 3% of our patients have been trauma patients.
We're 9Clll M*'iicr Oae ID BmawmcJ CUe.
,
OrMge c.... DAILY PILOTl\Vedn••~. Dea••• n. -M
Samuel Beckett, 'Waiting For
Godot' playwright, de~d at 83
PARIS (AP) -Samuel Beckett,
the lhr. frish-bom author whose
despainna vision of the world in
"Waitina For Godot" symbolized
the peuimistic strain in modem
writina. has died in Paris, hi1
adopted home. He was 83.
The poet, playwti&h t and novelist
died Friday but the death was not
announced until after a 1mall. pri-
vate funeral service Tuesday. His
publisher. Jerome Linden, said
Bttkett died of respiratory failure.
The model of an artist who makes
no compromise for the sake of popu-
larity, the Nobel Prizc-winoana
writer attributed his success to "an
intuitive sense of despair."
"There arc no landmarks in my
work," Beckett once said. "We are
all adrift. We must invent a world in
which to survive, but even this
invented world is pervaded b)' fear
and guilt. Our existence is hopeless:·
After the announcement of his
death. ~veral mourners gathered
amid the neo-Gothic mausoleums of
Montparnassc Cemetery to place
flowers on his si mple granite
marker.
"I admired him very much." said
a French philosophy student who ht
a candle at the graveside but refused
ogive his name. "I've read most of
his works and fou nd them ve?.
movmg. I cannot believe he's dead. ·
At fi rst. Beckett's audience was
limited to an intellectual elite. But
the reclusive writer and his plays.
especially "Wa11mg for Godot,"
came to be emblcmauc of a difficult
modem st) le of literature e'en for
people who never read or saw the
works.
"He was m the forefront of mod-
em literature:· Bnush playwnltht
Harold Pinter said Tuesday. "H e
was totally original and a man of
great courage, not only 11) himself.
b ut in his work. His worlt knew no
bounds."
Jack Lang. France's culture minis-
ter. called Beckett "an immense
writer. exccpuonally exacting, who
has profoundl} marked his century:·
Beckett It vcd m Pans si nee 19 3 7.
working with the Resistance in Naz1-
occup1ed France during World War
11. for wh1t h he won the Croix de
Guerre Wlth a gold star in 1945. He
once said he preferred "France m
"ar 10 Ireland 1n peace ..
He "rote some of his ~ome works
1n Fren h and some 1n English.
translaung them himself mto the
other lan,uagc.
Beckett s last published "Ork was
an 1.80 I -word novella m March
mr..R AVAILABl.E
RJRAUMITED
llMEONll'
1't)
called "Stirrings Stall.'' a med1tat1 on
on old age. Only :?00 copies were
pubhshed and sold for SI . 720 each.
Beckett's world echoed wnh cncs
of agon)' and compassion at the
fu11li ty and loneliness of human ex-
istence. peopled with vagabond cou-
ples caught m a never-ending mas-
ter-slave dialogue.
Cnt1c J.D. O'Hara once called
Beckett "one of those anists fo r
whom the m1senes of tile "orld are
m1sel). .
The m1senes fi rst caught an au-
d1ence·s eye in 1952. "hen French
director Roger Bhn rescued from
obscurtt) Beckett's two-act fable
about t" o tramps wa1ung for a third.
Godot.
Their grim JOkes arc mtcrrupted
by a brutal fat man dnving a slave
with a hea\ y burden. The fat man
later returns blinded and moves on.
The tramps end the pla} suit waiting
for Godot. _
The play was translated and per-
formed in more than :?O languages.
When it was staged last }ear at New
York's Lincoln C:cn1er,w1th Robin
Williams· and Ste' t'-Martin as the
two tramps. it sold out
The stunning tnumph of the 1952
production foc used attenuon on
Beckett's earlier Y.Orks. wi th their
recumng theme of the de painng
'agabond.
Later pla)s developed Beckett·~
themes of man·s lo 1ng battle against
destan).
In "Endgame:· a bhnd paral)llC
laments his fate whtlt has senile and
William Duval,
helped HB youth
ly The D.-Y Not
William E. DuvaJ. a 12-yei.r resi·
dent of Irvine, died of a musive
hean attack on Christmas Day at the aac of 57.
He was born in Cleveland, Ohio.
on Jan. 30. 1932. and moved to
Cahfom1a 1n 1955 with his wife and
family. He laved tn El Segundo and
Hunungton Beach before moving to
University Park in Irvine in 1977.
Du'-'al was acuve 1n youth and
high school sports as a team man-
aaer and booster. He founded the
Hununaton Beach High School
Booster Club and served on its
board of directors for several years.
His firm, Duval Management Inc.
of Woodbridge. provided invest-
ment management services to indi-
viduals and small businesses.
He is survived by his wife. Joyce;
three sons. Steven. Mark and Ed-
ward Du val. all of Woodbridge; four
brothers and sisters: and two grand-
children
Services v.111 be held Thursday
morning at St. John Neumann Cath-
olic Church an lrvioe. The family
asks that contributions be made to
the .\mencao Hean Association. Or-
anec County chapter. 4600 Campus
Dn,e. Irvine.
Minnie Luthiger of LB
Minnie Luth11er. a resident of
Laguna Beach for about 25 years,
died of a heart attack on Christmas
E\c at the age of 84 .
he 1s survived by her son Ralph
Luth1ger of Palos Verdes and a
granddaughter.
~i:vices Wlll be held 11 a.m. Fri-
da) at Laguna Presbyterian Church.
41 5 Forest A vc.
cnppled parents die of despair m
garbage cans.
In "Krapp's Last Tape."·first per-
formed an 1969. a nearly blind old
man pla)s back a 30-year-old tape of
his o" n voice and realizes he no
longer understands the words he
used m his )outh. Beyond hope or
amb1t1on. he ~mains mtercsted only
1n tnv1al ~m inders of his sex life
and other bodil) fu nctions.
.....
ftgure hired ·by S&L' s ow r
W ASHINOTON -Three days
before federal buk ~ ap-
proved a delay in 1eiDna Uncoln
Savinp and Loan in May 1988, the
ptjvate KCOuntant wh<>1e audits in-
fluenced the decision switched jobs
and went to work for the thrift's
~wner1 accordina to documents and
antervJews.
The two replators whose votes
delayed the seizu~ for a year say
they did not know at the tune that
the 8CCOUntant, Jack 0 . Atchison,
bad taken the new job -said by one
member of Conaress to pay
$900,000 annually.
But in recent statements, both
said their decision coocernina the
fate of Lincoln -the nation's costli-
est thrift failure -miabt have been
different if they had been informed.
"Cenaioly, it would have bad an
effect on the decision bad he (thrift
r"CP.lator M. Danny Wall) known."
said an aide, Kart Hoyle ... Could it
have swuna the other way (in favor
of immediate 1eizure)? Maybe."
Atchison could not be reached for
comment. and his lawyer declined to
discuss the case.
By a 2-1 vote on May 5, 1988,
Wall and the Federal Home Loan
Bank Board decided apinst a rec-
ommendation from San Francisco
rq&&JalOl'I to teize the troubled UV•
inp and lou. The poup decided
instead to launch a h federal
eumination of the thrift's books.
The effect of the decision wu to
permit the bank to continue opent-
•na for an additional year under the
ownership of Charles H. Keatina Jr.
By the time the reaulators ousted
Keatina and took control on April
14, 1989, the cost of protectina de-
positors bad soared, and may now
total mo~ than $2 billion.
Wall at the time was chairman of
the three-member Federal Home
Loan Bank Board, and now is in
cbarJc of its sin&)e-administrator
•ncy, the Office of Thrift Super-
vision. He announced his rcsia-
nation from the OTS post after
Conarcss ~rcssurcd him to quit be-
cause of bis handling of the Lincoln
case.
The delay in seizing Lincoln gen-
erated a barrage of news stories
about Keating, especially the S l .3
million he and associates con-
tributed to campaigns and causes of
five senators who intervened with
the regulators on his behalf.
The Senate Ethics Committee has
begun a formal investigation to de-
tennane whet.her the antcrvenuon
was linked to the money. All the
1enators have denied any wroaa-
doina.
Since 1986. favorable a&adit ~
pons on Lincoln had been written
by Atchison, who was manqina
partner in the Phoenix office or the
lartc accountil firm of Arthur
Youna -now mst & Youna.
Bradley Boland, Keatina's spokes-
man. said Atchison bepn workiD:J
for Lincoln's pa~nt firm -Amen-
can Continental Corp. of Phoeni1 -
on May 2, 1988. three days befo~
the crucial mcetina of the bank
board. House Bankina Committee
Chairman Henry 8. Gonzalez, D-
Texas, said Atchison's salary with
American Contine ntal was $900,000
a year.
An Ari.bur Yo ung memo con-
firmed the t iming of the job change.
saying that Atchison "decided to
accept a position with American
Continental Corp. effective May I ,
1988."
Last Nov. 7. Atchison refused to
answer questions before Gonzalez'
committee. claiming a Fifth Amend-
ment constitutional right against
self-incrimination.
At the time Atchison switched
jobs, the San Francisco-based regu-
Explosiori boosts heating oil
prices, prospects or shortages
NEW YORK (AP) -The prices
of heating oil futures surged Tuesday
in the wake of a weck~nd explosion
at an Exxon Corp. refinery in Baton
Rouge, La .. boosting prices and rais-
ing prospects of f unher spot oiJ
shonages.
The accident at the plant. which
normally produces some 4.4 m illio n
gallons of heatin' oil daily. ag-
gravated a price spike caused by the
record-setting cold snap that has hit
much of the nation. Supplies of
home heating oil already were tight
before the explosion and the ac-
celerated demand bas pushed retail
prices as high as SI a gallon in some
are.as.
· Wholesale prices also shot higher.
as reflected by oil futures. Heating
oil contracts for January delivery
jumped I 0. 74 cents fro m Friday to
close at 92.48 cents a gallon on the
New York Mercantile Exchange.
Other contract months. which arc
• subject to daily price limits. rose
Stocks mixed
amid Interest
rate concerns
NEW YORK (AP) -Prices
closed narrowry-mixed on Wall
Street Tuesday as rising oil ,f.~~s
trigered concerns about in ·on
and interest rates.
Stocks·tracked the credit markets
for much of the session, declininJ in
early tradina as Treasury pnccs
slumped. Wall Street later shook off
the drop in bonds and moved mod-
erately hiahcr, but in late afternoon
the credit markets continued to fall
in response to a surae in oil prices
and stocks pve up their pins.
lbe Dow Jones averqc of 30
industrials closed 2.13 Jower at
2, 709.26 after risina • high u
2,728.88 earlier in the day.
Advancina issues were sJjghtJy
ahead declinen in nationwide
tradina of New York Stock Ex-
ch.ans-li.sted stocks, with 712 up,
664 Clown and SS2 unchaqed.
Volume on the Door of the Bia
Doud came to a slim 77.61 million sham. down from 120.98 million in
the previous session. Many traders
wae nleDCliaa their Christmas hol-
iday weekend. Nationwide, consolidated volume
in NYSE-listed iuues, includina tnlda in tbote stocks on rqional acbulla and in tbe over-tbe-
coater market. totaled 99.09 million lbam.
T.-.ry {M'ica skidded ftnt ~
cmm of an tncreue in Japan's ~
c:ouat rate, wbicb railed tbe specter
of iallftll ra1e1 ri1in1 in tbe United S.. 10 keep up with Ja119De1C "=-CGDliDUld IO drop ia later
from I. 75 cents to 2 cents a gallon.
Crude oil and gasoline futures also
rose. Traders said the price rise was
exacerbated by thin trading volume.
because man} pan1ci pants had not
returned yet from long holiday
weekends. Markets were closed
Monday for Christmas.
The February contract for West
Texas Intermediate. the bof'lchmark
U.S. crude oil, rose 62 cents to close
at $21. 9 1 per 42-gallon barrel on the
New_ York Mercantile Exchange.
Unleaded regular gasoline for Janu-
ary advanced 5.49 cents to 60. 94
cents a gallon.
"The re's no stopping prices for
the s h ort term until the
temperatures warm up." said
Dillard Spriggs. president of Pet-
roleum Analysis Ltd. m New York.
Exxon. Mobil Corp. and Star
Enterprise. a Texaco Inc. affiliate.
reponed last week that some of their
terminals in the Nonheast had suf-
fered tem porary oil shortages and
customers were sent to other facih-
ft H \'l '\St-: DID
NEW YORK (AP) Dec:. 26
Prft.
ues or forced to wait for new sup-
plies.
On Tuesday. Texaco spokesman
Peter Maneri said no funher infor-
mation was available. Mobil's of-
fices were closed for the holiday and
telephone calls went unanswered.
But Exxon spokesman Jim Davis
m Houston said the company would
not have .any problems supplying
contract volumes of heating oil to
custo mers. "There is some fl exibility
in the network," he said.
T he compan}' has about a week
before supplies become a problem.
Davis said. noting that "·Exxon can
increaS(.' heating oil production at its
refineries in Baytown. T exas. and
Linden. N.J. Davis said it was im-
possible to predict whe n the Baton
Rouge refine!) would begin operat-
ing normally again.
He said the crippled plant bad
made a large heating oil shipment to
the East Coast on Saturday and
hadn't planned to supply the region
agam until after Jan. I.
NEW YORK CAP) Dec. 26
Prft.
Advenced T"'ff1 :r,~ Adv~nced T~ ,.~
Declined i '~oci,.. ~J ync~"9ed ot•I t'ues ~•w hghs
nc nQed
1 01e'l1uues n JO
ew lows
'\SI·: l ,I·: \Dl-:Hs
NEW YORK !AP) -S.ln, • P.m, NEW YORK _(J.Pl -Sein, • o.m. Tundey price end net change of the 1) Tundey price ..... net change of the 10 most ecllve New York Stock Exchange most active Amerlc•n Stock Exchange ls~radlno n•"=. ally at more :han_l!, IH~t lredlno nell~ fly at mor•,:han Sl. ~NEng 2, 16, ~~ ~ lnll tie , 1 11• f'fi..
tverlv 1, 17, ~ + ~ ~•noLa B , -V. uon . YI -'.AJ cholSev , 1 -14 Ed"s l'I -v. rultl~ 62 1• + VJ -YI \••sAlrCo 5'. 11'h -11.
ti'A :t }l ~b~oro 1~: 1~~ -1/•
s 7 IM :+2 no~c I , Jit. t ~
st odak ~:,··'I 'ti -14 'Sfl Itel 1 , -..., nyFd ~_., +1.,.. Home 11 , ~ +1S ....,
.... + .-
NEW YORK (AP) -FIMI Dow Jones ~11· ~ 1 . +: ~ 1 1.t;1 . -~
wfik ·111
"1-:'J' .\I ' PH If I ·'
.... YOl'llC Id! -... ·=··---...... T~.7300 ........... tf'l~ .... fllOMI r.,.
0..., · 11.!UI a....._ U.S. ....... .. ~ ., ............... .,., 0... ....
L9911 ........ ....... --Tl-• .... ....... ftl -1U2• ......... ....-.......... 1 __ ........... ..._ ..... ., ....
__ .... ...,.., •• fff 0.-............ ,..., _,.-·-··"· ........ .,._
....._.-.-. .. ..,a.1u.~
"It...--·'·--"'"'• T-.
'\SD\QSl 'l'l\R\
NEW YORK (API -Most ectlW OYer·the·
countet" stocks SUPPi~ :Aso.
v t:
laton were tellana the bank board
that Uncoln wu in suc:b terious
trouble that it sbouJd be taken over
by the aovenunent.
But Atcbilon's a&adiu, accontina
to a tranlCript of the mnk board's
May S, 1911 meetina. concluded
that the thrift bad enouah reserves
to cover lo11e1 and had met net
worth requirementa.
Faced with the differina opinions.
the mnk board conducted its 2-1
vote to frecz.e Lincoln's level of
investments, transfer the mnk board
investiption from San Franciso to
Washinaton and beain a new probe
o f the rrvinc, Calif. thrift.
Wall and board member Roter F.
Martin voted in tbe ~ty. while
member Lawrence J. White con-
stituted a sina)e-vote minority who
favored immediate aovemmcnt tciz-
u~.
Martin uid in an interview that "I
didn't know " that Atchison had
gone to work for American Con-
tinental three days before the meet-
ing. He said he "would have been
concerned" bad he known, and
"absolutely" would have raised
. questions about the impartiality of
the audits.
"We were were very dependent on
the accountant's o pinion," he said.
Freeze expected to
drive up food prices
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
freeze that struck A o rida citrus and
vCJetable crops sho uld drive up food
pnccs somewhat. but not very
much. an Agriculture Depanment
expen said Tuesday.
The expen, Ralph Parlett of the
depanment's Economic Research
Service. said an earlier forecast that
food prices generally may rise 3
percent to 5 percent next year is still
valid.
Overall food prices arc up jn
average of about 5. 7 percent this
year, the larJeSt annual gain since a
7.8 percent Jump in 1981. Much of
this year's increase was due to linger-
ing effects of the 1988 drought and
poor weather early in 1989.
'T m not worried about my over-
all forecast (for 1990) at this point,"
Parlett said m a telephone interview.
'lSJ: l PS 4 DOM''
l I .---r Greatest: incFease ~ ,_ I
in hiring expected
in south county .
lly City News Servtce
Executives with 26 percent of California businesses eipcct to
enJarge their permanent office staffs durina the first half of 1990.
with -the greatest increase fo!CC.ast by south OnrtF Co~nty ~m
ployers. according to a statewide survey released Tuesday an lrvtne.
Employment level~ arc cx~ted to remain .the same by 66
percent of those interviewed, while 6 percent projected a ~
for the first six months of the year and 2 percent were unccrta,a
about hiring plans.
The fiaurcs - which arc close to projections made for the ftfl
half of 1989 -are based on interviews with 1,501 busiM!lt
executives in 15 areas of California.
Commissioned by Th.omas . Temporaries. ~ temJ>c;>rary h~lp
service with headquaners m Irvine . the survey 1s one m a scnes
designed to mo nitor office employment activity thro ughout the state.
The greatest increase is forecast by executives in south Orange
County, where 40 percent expect to enlarge office staffs. The smallest
increase is anticipated in East Bay/Oakland, where 18 percent of
those interviewed said they are planning additional hiring.
However, the disparity between area hiring forecasts for 1990
is not as great as were prOJCCtions for the first si1 months of 1989,
when the highest percentage increase was 46 percent and the lowest
7 percent.; >
"The gap in area hiring projections has na rrowed, so that with
this surve"y we do n't sec the peaks and valleys that were so evident
in the survey we conducted for the first half of 1989," said Bonnie
Nash, president of Thomas Temporaries.
More conservative this time is Los Angeles, where 19 percent
fewer business executives plan to hire this coming year. compared
with· 1989. Nash said. In Riverside. forecasts dropped by 15
percentage J>?ints.
In addition to South Orange County. the greatest increases in
hiring are projected in Santa Clara County (34 percent). Bakersfield
(32 percent) and Long Beach (31 percent).
In addition to the East Bay. projected mcrcases fall substantially
below the statewide average in the San Gabriel Valley (20 percent),
Los Angeles (21 percent). San Bernardino. Nonh San Diego County
and San Francisco/Peninsula (each 22 percent) and Riverside (23
percent).
Areas nearest the state average are Sacramento (28 percent). the
San Fernando Valley and Nonh O range County (each 27 l)Crcent)
and the City of San Diego (24 percent).
Typists wi th word processing skills will be in greatest demand
stateWlde, to be hired by 2 1 percent of those interviewed. while I 5
percent plan to hire additional general clerks. Nash said.
Also in demand will be accounting clerks ( 13 percent). recep-
tionists with t,Y.ping ability ( 11 percent) a nd receptionists with
switchboard skills (I 0 percent). ·
OrengeCOMIDAJLYPILOT~.0.:1 .... 27,.. A7
..
·s assistant an unwanted V-isitor when wife's away
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a year-old woman with a job that
uira 10me tnveli~ When I
Urned from a tw~niaht business · p. I found leftover barbecued
n in the fridec. My hu1t.nd
"') eaplained that he had in-
h11 youna (attractive) 1tudent-
nt to our home for dinner so
could catch up on some paper
. (She had never been in our
me before.)
I ellploded when "Jim" told me.
e co~'t understand why I was
furioUJ. He made me sound like
h_ystericaJ nut.
Tbriollowina day I received a
tcr'ih>m Jim's assistant sayina the
en ... was perfectly innocent, that
Neither vulnerable. South deals.
EST
J 2
NORTH
• " 10 9 V> A 10 9 I 2
0 A 3 2
•KQ
EAST
• 7 5
K 4 3
J1754
7 5 2
V> Q 6
0 K Q 9 6
• J 10 9 6 4
SOUTH
• AQl643
V> J 7 5
0 10
•A I 3.
Nortll EU
2 V> Pau
3 + Pus
4 0 Dbl
4 NT Pua
6 + Pus
Openina lead: Five of 0 I
We have remarked before on how
(tell lesson hands tum up at the
ble. This hand is from the recent
all North American
hampionships.
Notlh-South were playina two-
ver-one responses as a same force.
us, North's raise to ttlree spades
owed a aood hand-a jump to ~.fades would have been a sign-
there was no hanky-panky and ~ is
.upset because I accused her of mis-
conduct.
That letter did not make me feel
better, nor did it convince me that
the evening was an innocent one. Jn
fact, her denial made me even more
suspicious.
off. A.fter East's lead-directina
double of four diamonds, South's
redouble showed second-round
control-either the king or a sinaJe-
ton. Four no trump, by partnership
agreement, asked South for extra
values, and five spades denied any.
North, however, had enough to go
on to slam.
The contract hinges o n losina
only one bean trick-something
that can be accomplished with two
finesses if West has at least one of
the missing honors. That was des-
tined to succeed as the cards lie, but
declarer, Gary Hann of Ann Arbor,
Mich, found the textbook line to
guarantee his contract regardless of
how the beans were divided.
The opening diamond lead was
taken with the ace and trumps were
drawn in two ro unds. Dummy's
club honors served as entries for two
diamond r:uffs, and the ace of clubs
.... was £!l&h~to co~ple~ strippi~ the
minor suits from both declarer's
hand and the table.
With t he groundwork laid, de-
~-------------, clarer simply led a heart and insert-
..., ....
642-5678
ed the board's nine. East could win.
but he would then either have to
yield a ruff-and-sluff by returning a
minor, enabling declarer to get rid
of a.hean,Jor lead a heart into dum-·
my's tenace. Either way, declarer
could claim his slam.
CREATIVE JEWELERS
of L"I""" Btadr
"Exten ds Best Wishes
for a Happy NW Year.'' &· --............. x:c:-m N4lth Collt Hwy •f4um Bach, CA '2651 • (711 tM M
'Raphael, a legend
in his own time.
~.tt.~
Mi\I ol tM a.NKWM•
~ KftCllWft -"" ... ol ~ob. '°"" ~ ................ ............... .,.
lime~-.~ .... .._... ............ "' ........ .._~ ... ....................... •a•,...1'i¥• ........ • .................. .................... -1•o•llr,.., ....
Now Jim is anpy becauK I ~
t(d in such a volatile manner. He
&lied me ''priuish and jud&-
mental." I am funou1 with him for
tellina the woman I wu upseL I
consider that diuoyal.
This is a 1C<:Ond marriage for both
of "'' and I want it to work. Am I
wrona to feel that Jim should not
have invited the youna woman. to
our home when I was out of town?
Am I beina old-fashion~ ~nd ~n
fair1 I'm loo close to this s1tuauon
to be 100 percent objective. -
H U RTING IN TEXAS
DEAR HURTING: la my oplaJom
Jlm WU Mt ef UM. YM llM a rtp&
te feel &Ila& IM ... ,._ J .. pn•t.
llOICO'C 01'1
WeUea41ay, Dec. U
ARIES (March 21-A pril 19): What
had been Occting comes ro rest.
Means you have opportunity to ~in
firmer grip. Lunar aspect coincides
with foresight. recognition of your
own potential. Unorthooox friend
stands by your side.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Re-
cent investiption o f "where the
money went' pays dividends. Tums
out no one was to blame -it was
self-indulgence. carelessness at-
tributed to all. You 'II receive
messaae which elevates spirits.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Atten-
tion revolves around fi nancial
aspects of recent remodeling.
purchases aimed at beautifying
home. Emphasize diplomacy, re-
mind family member of diet, nuui-
tion. Clandesune meeting stimu-
lates.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Plans
for ex~ans1on subject to delay. Ride
w11h ude -don't provoke individ-
ual who has what )OU need. Stress
humor. p;i11encc. versatility. What is
l ,.'9. BOl"D
Jim's u1l1tut Ml .. ....._.. 18 r.., lleme •Ilea JM.,.. Mt el aewa.
alM llteU.ve IM -..W MC laave
re,.r&ell JMr ea~ve reeeu..
u4 Utaa die wemu 1 letter •f ...a.I
mMe lier leek evn mere pllty.
("He .... HC••e• lllmaelf ICC.HI
~maeU.")
• • •
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I always
told myself that when I had kids I
would never trcal them the way my
mother treated me. Mom was quick-
lcmpered and hi&h-struna, She never
actually beat u~ but we were slapped
around a lot. screamed at constantly
and were always being punished for
some litllc thing.
required will come to you. Virgo
involved.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Throw self
into fray all the way. Emphasis on
dedication, m1ens11y. forceful acti on.
Love relationship grows stro n$ -
creative hormones spin rap1dl).
Travel plans change. young persons
involved.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Check
Cancer message. Lon$·range pro~
pects clanfied. Recognition received
from distant land. Scenano features
idealism. romance. possible Journey.
Burden rel4111ng to monc) Wlll be
hfled.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22): tress
I'm 22 ycan old now and have a
bcau11ful. active 3-year-<>ld son. I
love my child with all my heart, but
I sec a 101 of my mother in me and
I hate ii. I'm always yelling at
"Tommy" and spankina him too
hard and too often. I want to raise
ham differenll.)' from lhe way I was
raised, t-ut it 1s difficult because it's
the only way I know.
I feel guilty and ashamed. Ann.
This lovely child deserves a better
mother. When I am angry or fru~
traled about things that have
nothing to do with Tommy, I find
myself picksng on him. When he
reacts. I let him have 1t. I know if I
don'l stop doing 1h1s. the boy will
independence. style, creat1v1ty.
You'll be saying, "It's time for me to
be more on m) own!" Sense of
d1rcct1on. purpose restored. You
know where ~ou are going and why .
Refuse to be held back!
SCORPIO (Oct. :!3-Nov. 21 ): B)
following IOtUlllOn )OU c-ould hit
financial Jackpot. Conservative
Cancer native wants to help only 1f
}OU help yourself. Message becomes
crystal-clear, Lost an1cle will be re-
C'O\ered.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc 21 ):
01\ers1fy, stress confidence. make
contacts with those previously out of
reach. Scenario features social ac-
ll\ 111cs. poss1b1ht)' of whirlwind
counsh1p. What yo u seek 1s close at
hand.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19):
Someone throws proverbial monkey
wrench into plans. machincf) needs
011 and plants require watcnng. Be
aware. alert. ready to revise. review,
remodel. Secret that had been
withheld is revealed.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 18):
have zero tclf~aeem and no coo-
fidcnce.
He 1s a bcautifuJ boy, inside and
out. I don't want to ruin bis life~ but
I'm afraid I'm doina just tat.
Please, Ann, ~ue me. I can't do
this alone. What should I do? Where
can I 10? I don't have money for
therapy. Help me and my 10n. r k>vc
him too much to bun him tbe way
I was hurt. -A CRY FOR HELP
IN S.C.
DEAR S.C.: nere II lae.t~::.-... ~lnay•fw.-... el
odaen .... It, IM. Here'• .,...,.. •
write: PUfth .u.,_..., 1711 S.
Sepelve4a Blv._, s.l&e %71, Lei Aa-
1eles Ml4i.
Communication received from close
relative -involves trip, possible
v1511. W1 h can be fulfilled 1f per-
sistent. confident. Love relationship
once more on track. Gemini plays
maJOr role.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Favor is returned twofold. Individ-
ual you helped get back on feet
returns 10 present reward. Scenario
highlights gifts. music. fine food .
Love relationship will flourish.
Taurus figures prominently.
IF DEC. %'7 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY:
Recent confusions served purpose
- now issues can be settled, includ-
ing financial and domestic. This past
m onth. family member shared
asp1rat1ons. intentions. In 1990,
>-Ou'll be o n more soljd foo':ID&.
obstacles will be transformed into
stepping-stones. Anes. Libra persons
pla) 1mponan1 roles tn your hfe.
Ahhough you can djsplay fiery
temper, you also arc a natural hu-
manitanan. A maJor move occurs in
February, could relate to residence,
mantal status.
Jolly old England revered the birch rod
In 14th-century EngJand. each .stu-
dent graduating to be a schoolmaster
received 1n solemn ceremony his
diplo ma and a birch rod to cane ·his
future pupils.
Even a gorilla in the wild has to
rail for help sometime. evidently. It
docs so b> clapping its hands. I'm
told.
Q. Wh) did South Afnca ban
tclc\ 1s1on unul 19 75?
A. Most available programs were
in Engh h -from Great Britain and
the Unncd. -States. South Afncan
leader~ felt that cuhural advantage
to English speakers J)C"nali1ed those
who spoke Afrikaans. the language
of the Dutch dco;ccndants.
If you want 10 loc;e weight. eat
alone. So suggest<; a diet doctor.
Retired people hke 10 make their
last stands 1n college towns. cv1dent-
I). Most scholarl) enclavco; •have
numerous retirees One 1s pan1cu-
lad) 1mpress1\e -Chapel Hill.
N.C. Of its 35.000 residents. 11.000
Vintage Time: A business
that runs like clockwork
It all started out as a hobby for Laguna's Brice
Woodward, but when he discovered he had too much time
on his hands. he turned It Into a business.
Woodward operates Vintage Time, a shop special-
izing in the sale and repair of watches. clocks and
timepieces of all kinds with the emphasis on the antique.
"I started collecting antique watches during a four-
year stay in London," Woodward explains. "and I also
made collages out of old watch parts. With this business.
I've graduated from watch destroyer to watch preservM."
Woodward, a native Californian. has been In Laguna
for nine years, following a stint at a watch repair shop In
Boat Canyon. Time has been an obsession with him for
aa long aa he can remember.
"I woutd scour antique stores, flea markets and even
swap meets across the country and Europe for unusual
old plecea,'' he said. "It was a hobby that became a
compulsion, so I decided to open a store."
Woodward deals In all the major watch brands
Hamilton, Bulova. Gruen, Elgin, and even Rolex. The
demand for old Rolexes is very Intense. he says.
Unusual clocks and other unique timepieces line the
walls of hla Laguna shop. but Woodward says his specialty
now 11 wrist watches. Particularly If they've been around
for 50 years or so.
"What's old Is new these days," he points out.
''There's a constant revtsion to vtntage timepieces, per-
tlcularty the unique, esthetically brilliant pieces which I
strive to buy and sell."
Woodward la self-taught In the art of watc~rtng.
Tucked away In his small shop are over 100.~epatr
p6ecel for watches of all major manufacturers. He says he
can feel the peraonaffty of the watch by tinkering wtth Its
Inner ~Inga. "I've~ been lnter991ed In old watchea," he Nya.
"They .,. eo dlverM, and you CM never muter them or
IMrn .,. there ta to know about them. Otd watchea are a
conatant lldventure. · · Woodwsd delvee Into hll adventuree daJty from 11
Lm. to I p.m. at Vlnt1199 Time, 500 Broedway, Leguna
Bwl\. He CM be rWhed .. 487-8740 or 4M-8262 by
people wtlh time on their Mnda.
AN ORIGINAL CLASSIC WATCH
UNIQUE GIF 1-
INV NT IN TIME
arc retired. Pntnear a tt11rd. Re·
markable.
What! You're feeling a ltttle gu1hy
at the moment? Good. You know
what Theodor Reik said: ··The sense
of guilt 1s the hallmark of c1v1hzed
humanity."
If you"re typical. you'U spend two
rears of )Our hfe try mJ to return
telephone calls. a stat1s11c1a n sa)S.
Hungary long has had the highest
recorded su1c1d{ rate worldwide.
Now that Hungary has new plans for
its future. correspondents arc mak-
mg notes to themselves to check that
country's su1c1de rate neXl year. Be
interest mg.
Will Rogers said ... HaJf our life is
spent trying to find something to do
"uh the ume we've rushed through
hfe trymg to save:·
Not all can set their minds when
the> go to bed to wake up when they
want to. But tests sugest one out of
e' ct) six of us can do it.
OPEN7DAYS
• One Hour Enlargement
• One Hour E-8 Slide Developing (120-135)
• One Day Kodachrome Developing
• Same Day Print/Slide
• All Other Alm Services Available
Hours: Mon.-Frt. 9-8
Sat. 10-8 Sun 10-5
-
-
t P aclflca continues Its fine Ch
1y llCHAllD awn
.._-.cue u •••
Twenty-three years of PCl"fonnina
the CbristmaHeuon ··Nutcr1ekerl'(
ballet by Ballet Pacifica has not
dimmed tbe spirit and aooeal of the
century-old work. Founcllna anistic
director Lila Zali cho~phed the •
compants version of 'The Nut-
cracker,' drawing on her extensive
backpound in Russian ballet for her
inspiration and creatina a truly de-
li&htful story for children and adults
afike.
The ballet begins, traditionally,
with the Christmas Eve party at the
Victorian home of "President" and
Mrs. Silberhaus (every production
changes his title), with children and
adult auests arriving, prcsentjng &ifts. dancina, and playing pmes.
Zali's trainina in mime is a~nt
here more than in many other pro-
ductions. Her version of the dances
in the party need to be updated,
having been oriainally set for non-
dancing adults pressed into service.
Now danced by accomplished
dancers, the entire scene becomes a
bit flat as the cast awkwardly moves
through a static. unchallenging
dance.
derful gifts, was played benevolently
by Charles Johnston. In this pro-
duction, he qwckly discards his
cloak, and with it, the mystery of the
character, becomina instead just a
nice old man. Perhaps ltss threaten ....
ina to the children. but some of the
wonder is lost. too.
Drossclmeyer's life-size dancing
dolls, a girl and a bear, provide a
charmfog interlude, well-performed
by Sara Shisler and James Pollara.
Zali gives the production a lively
battle between the toy soldiers and
the mice, with a particularly active
faaht between the Nutcracker Prince
(Lee Wipnd) and Mouse King
(Charles Glidden).
A highlight of the evening 1s the
. performance by Janine Paulsen and
David Miller as Snow Queen and
Snow King in their pas de deux.
Technique was clean and exciting by
both, WJth some wo nderful Lifts. The
ensemble work by the "snowflakes"
revealed careful studio training.
Gi.DfCf, his aliud_y tall frame
hei&Jltened by three-foot stilts and a
voluminous skirt hidin& a multitude
of "Jingennaps." Andy, the pi~y-isb
leader of the ginaennaps. danced by
Illa Shisler. imposed her presence on
the entire scene. a delightful little elf.
"The Waltz of the Aowen" fea-
tured the Dewdrop Fairy (Paula
Hoffner) and hercavalier (Randy
Barnett) in a well-executed duet.
Zali's cborcov.aphy for the flowers
leaves one w1sh1ng it were longer.
But it was the pas de deux of the
Sugar Plum Fairy (Kristi Moorhead)
and the Nutcracker Prince (Lee Wig-
and) which was the hi&h point of the
ballet. Th~ two performed in per-
fect harmony. lifls and pirouettes
clean and sec ure.
O ara, the Silberhaus· daughter,
was performed on Friday's per-
formance by Alexandra Runde!, and
brother Franz by T im Gerlach.
While Clara's role was well-de-
veloped, Franz· character was not
and bis personality was not obvious
until Just at the moment of breaking
Clara s nutcracker doll.
Clara was transponed in her
travels through the Kingdom of
Snow in a white sleigh and placed
upstage center for the second act in
the· Kindgom of Candy,:,.where she
sits on a small throne through the
following divertissments. Sumi and
Dan Bemey's Spanish duet was per-
formed with style in spite of a few
shaky. uncenain moments. Leslie
Huffs performance as the Arabic
guest was near perfection. though
the mimed gestures of her two male
slaves failed to evoke any Arabic
images. The Chinese. Russian and
German guests gave perfectl y en-
joyable performa nces. Phillip Haney
towered over the stage as Mother
Ballet Pacifica's "Nutcracker" has
become an Orange County tradition.
Zali laments. "Every time we think
about doing something else. some-
one tells us we must do it. So we
d o ... "The Nutcracker" is a difficult
production for a small company.
with its huge cast and elaborate sets.
but Ballet Pacifica does it and does
it well. It is hoped that some of the
minor weaknesses might be
strengthened in the pany dance
scene and in character development
for Franz and Dossclmeyer. but the
production is a charming and
wo nhy part of Orange County's
C hristmas.
The Bear and th• Doll fdanced by Ja111e1
Pollara and Sara Sh191erJ p•rfOFlll at the
Chrlltlll•• ave party In Ballet Pacific•••
"Nutcracker.••
Herr Drosselmeyer. Clara's mys-
terious uncle who brings the won-
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12 25-2 40 5 00 7 30 10 10
......... 1)1-9
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W. I~._ ftlOladaa rA .. Ion Karie ii llada '-•owlnl and ~'lorn on the FouJ1h
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perllapl eeand ID your mt1llOI')' fOft'Ver."
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lie -I""'• .. .. t R .. eN1J--. lie Clllries Ille ftkn heroically."
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Put seat belts
on your list
of resolutions
You better not pout, you better not cry, rm telling you
why.
The CHP is craclUng down.
Led by the California Highway Patrol. law enforcement
officers throughout the state are planning a major
crackdown to catch motorists who have not caught the
buckle-up habit.
"fhe state has a four-year-old mandatory seat belt law,
and 1t plans to bcgrn earnestly enforcing it on Monday.
It 1s about time.
The Highway Patrol is empowered to only cite viol-
ators who were first pulled over for some other offense.
That restricti<?n should be changed if safety is truly a
concern . Despite the restricti on. the C HP still writes about
60.000 seat-belt t\ckFtS each mon th for drivers and passen-
gers. A fi rst offcn c costs $20 and ubscquent offenses cost
$50. •
The C H P estimates that fewer than half of California's
Rrivers co~ply wi th ~he law . The goal is to have seven of
every 10 drivers routinely buckle up. The reason is simple.
Scat belts save lives.
The state Dcpanment of Health Services blames traffic
tccidents fo r more deaths among people under 44 than any
other cause, including cancer and heart attacks.
A. H1~way Patrol spokesman said about half of those
who died an traffic accidents in CaJifomia would have li ved
had they been wearing their seat belts.
Recent statistics show the law. however it has been
enfo rced. has been helpful. While there has been a steady
increase in the number of accidents for the past several
years. the death rate has declined. That decline has been
attributed to several factors. incl uding the seat-belt law and
tougher drunken-driving enforcement.
. H.owever, some motorists refuse to be convinced by
statistics o~ $20 fin es. They shoul~ know that tryin~ to brace
for a 30 mtle-pcr-hour traffic accident would be hke trying
to catch a JOO-pound bag of cement dropped from a second-
story wi ndow. and that will really make you cry.
Opinions expressed In this space are those of the Dally Pilot. Other
views expressed on lhls page are those of their authors and artists.
Readers' comments are Invited and may be sent to The Dally Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa 92626.
OTHER \'OIC'ES
Minorities need clout
Already a maJo rity an the state's public schools.
minont1es arl' proJcctcd to become. collecti vely. a majority
of all Californians b~ :!003. But the demographic facts of
life -that on a' erage the) are younger. poorer. less well-
cducated and in man~ case not yet citi zens -translate
into a lack of poh11cal clout. Hispanics. fo r example. make
up 22 percent ot the <;tate's population. but only 7 perce nt
of 'otcrs an<l lcs than J percent of llS elected officials ...
ome Democrati c incumtx'nts. black and white. who
fear compe1111on from Hispanic challengers have been slow
to l..'ncouragc political part1c1 pation among their Hispanic
constituents. la t )Car. one Republican campai~n oreaniza-
ti on ~cnt pa t ethical bounds to intimidate Hispanics out
of coming to the polls at all.
Noncthekss. the activities of grass-roots ethnic or-
ganization and the t•ncouragement provided by the history
of upward mobility by one minority after another during
th e past two centuries leave room for optimism. So does the
fact that some of those now on the upper rungs of the
polit ical ladder arc wi lling to take the chance that by
entici ng new Americans into the process, their own fortunes
wi ll improve along with the system. · Tbe FresDo Bu
We're getting mad as .hell
t
Georgette Watson was not afraid to get involved. In
Boston. she founded Drop--Dime. a hot line that acts as
a conduit for tip on drug pushers.
That's terrific. She deserves the whole community's
respect and admiration. There should be more people like
her. Not only in Boston. but in any city in any country that
has a drug problem ....
In the motion pi cture "Network," the hero defiantly
yelled from a wrndow that he was "mad as hell and wasn't
going to take it anymore:· People like Georgette Watson are
fed up. too.
Tbe Col•mb•• (otlo) Dl•JMl d
-OR-ANG-'( c_u A-ST l_a_ill Pilat
TO\I TAIT
Erlitor
DO' ff.'l.f.'
"""uriatr •:d11ur
TO\J(;I \~I' 'r•• Editor
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seem 00t TH£n
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THE. kECE~SfON
/5 COMING
Bush may later reg·ret
invasion of Panama
President Bush should have spent
a httk more ume stud} an~ the his·
IOI) of .S. relauons wath Laun
.\meru:a and talked more \I.1th his
poh11cat ad' 1~rs than generals
before he ordered the in' as1on of
Panama last week.
The days when .S. gunboats and
Mannes to)sed out go' ernments of-
fcns1H' to Yankee interests or
propped up d1 cta1ots friendl} to the
United States should be pan of our
h1stol), not current atTairs.
There 1s httk doubt strongman
Manuel Noriega 1s a despot with
strong ll l'S to the cocaine canels.
And tt wa) obv1ou) None~ used his
defense forc.·e., to nulhh l'lcr11on
results and create his o,\ n puppet
go,l·rnmcnt. Pres1den1 Bush'!\
ad' en tun: 1n10 Panama has found
)1ttle uppon from the rest of the
"or Id.
Tht." Bush .\dm1n1)tra11on·
reason) for tn\ading Panama are
\\Cal. The prl·s1den1 said the acuon
"a'> neu:.,sar~ to protect -\mencan
c111zcn-. Ii' ing in Panama. defend
lhl· Panama ( .inat. 'uppon the na-
11on·s democratic proce<;<; and to
arre t Noriega. "ho has heen in-
dicted 1n this counll') for aiding the
coc::11 ne rartds.
The two 1sola1cd incidents "here
an unarmed Anwncan "as l.1llcd b\
Panaman1a'n forces and another C . ·.
c111zcn was beaten and his w1fl'
thrcatenl.'d do not warrant a 26.000-
man invasion force. the killing of a
sull unknown number of Pan-
amanian Cl\ ilians and the destruc-
tion of their homes.
Ne11 her 1ntcrna11onal la" nor
moral decenq allows such a bru1al
response w11hou1 better evidence of
a Panamanian pogrom against l ' ..
c1m ens. In fact. many nations reject
a country's nght to invade their land
to protect foreigners living there
There has been no solid e' 1dcnce
presented that the Panama Canal
\\as threatened b~ Nonega or his
thugs. Dunng 1he past t"o )Cars of
~rowing an1mos1t} between Wash-
ington and Panama·s swaggering
bully. Noriega has been careful not
so say or do anything that could be
construed as a threat to the canal
because he knew the United States
would welcome an excuse to send
troops to protect the canal.
Panama docs not have a historv of
1.t:·rrt:ns
a .strong demonat1c .,, stem. In 1903.
afkr negot1Jt1on.-. bct"Cl'O Wa!'.hing-
ton and ( olomh1a for a canal treatv
brol.c do"' n. U S. \.\arsh1p~ helped
PanamJntam ouo;1 th<.•tr { olomb1:10
rukr\. L n11I \\ar V.orld II. thl·
L n1ted ')tall''> trcJll'd PanJma J' J
prulel'turatc JnJ \COi ~1anm'' tRl're
"'henl'\ l'r "' interl'\l\ "'l'rl· thrl'Jll'n·
eJ
For more 1hJn 20 \l'.lt'>. Panama·.,
urngrl''' and prc,1Jl·nt ha' t• h\.·l·n
under thl' thumh ot .,., m1l11an
kadcr'> \nJ "'h1k <.1l'O '\om:g;.i "a'
helping lhl' l I\ lOndul·t 1t' "'ar
aga1n<.1 '\H .• 1ra11-ua V. J\h1ng1on
d1dn'1 to \l'l'm 10 mind thl' PUPP\'I
dc:mOlraq or '\onl'ga's as<.0<:1at1on
"1th drug lord.,
It seems more hkl'I\ the undl'r· l~ing reason Bu<1h ordered thl.' 1n-
' as1 on of PanamJ \\a\ 10 finall) get
nd of :"-!oncga. L1!.t." an c"tl l\\ln of
Da' 1d fon ng a rnlo.;su!I. h<.' ha"
<..uf'1,ed t\\O }Cars of pohucal and
cronum1l prcc;<.urc h) thl· l n1tcd
·tall"!. and thumbed his no"e Jl 1he
bchcmo1h 10 the nonh. runmng h"
countr: as he pka">cd
Who in lhl· I n1ll'd Siatl'<.
\\Ouldn't hkl' to I.nod• this p1f)-
squcak off h1!\ ix·J,·,tat''
But "h1k thl·r1.· 1s a gro,,ing bc>d)
of C\ 1Jence that ~oncga was alhc:d
10 the rocaine rancl and ''a asw;1.
ing them -for a fee -in drug
trafficking and mone~ taundcnng.
oth<.'r nauons \CC Nonega lcs'> of a
threat to lhc regio n than the l '-
1nterfercnl'C in Central .\merKa
V. ashington·., arrogant 1reatmenl
oi Its ne1ghbor<1 1n 1h1s ccntu~ 1s '>till
a 'en ~n 111,c issue in Central and
South .\menca Fe" there ha' c for-
gotten the l S Mannes' 10\a4>1on of
the Dominican Republic in 1965 or
Grenada in 1983. Cuba"s and
Nicaragua's present anu-.\mcncan
rhetoric arc the result of l 1. . med·
dling 1n those countncs.
That 1s "h) thl.' Organmmon ot
.\mcncan 'talcs 'Oled ::!tl-1 to con·
dc.mn lht' Bush .\dmin1s1rat1on's at·
twns (The Cn11ed late .. "as 1hl.'
lune d1ssen1er. "" nations Jb!i·
lalnl"d. I
I he ·1n,as1on "as 1n '1ota11on of
0.\ chaner. v.h1ch states membcrs
i:annot meddle in the doml.'stu.: af-
tinn of member nauon'> ··d1recth or
tndiret:tl}. for an) reason "hate\ er ..
.\nd "the temtol) of a stall' '"'
'"' 1olabtc 11 ma} not tx· the obJC t.
n en tcmporanl~. ol m1hta~ OC"
l'upa!!un .. on an) grou nds what-
t'\ t'I
\\ e ha' c once again damaged our
crtd1b1ht' 1n L111n .\menca and arc alri."3d~ reaping the consequences.
'outh .\meru.:·an nation!> "orlong
''1th l ·. m1hta~ per'ionnc:I in
fig.hu ng our rene"ed v.ar on drug~
are no'' loo ing fcarfult~ at the l .S
fon.l'' in thc:1r i:ountne'i
Peru ha' l·ancelcd l . -Peru' 1an
program 10 tlnd and dcstro) co-
ca1nc·proouc1ng tabor:11one'> 1n lhl.'
.\nde~ \1ountains. 11 al .. u "ants to
<;antcl 1he Februa~ anti-<1rug ~um·
mil in Colombia thal Pre 1dent Bu h
plans to attend Peru ha alread)
~•d 1t \.\Ill not attend the summ it.
( olombta and Boh.,, 1a. the other
pan1l·1 pants. rondemned the L'
ac11un in Panama bu1 ha'e not \Ct
commented on the summn ·
.\nd in Panama. the Pentagon ha~
had to end in add111onal troop\ to
rt•sturc ordc:r and what wns ong-
inall~ descntx·d a' a three-tla~ oper-
auon has entered 11s ccond v.cek
\\1th continued s.por.rnc fighting rc-
poned.
L' .S troops ha"c surrounded the
\ a11can and -for some reason -
<.. uban embassies. demanding that
the \ aucan turn Nonega over to
1hem Jt'<, unhkeh the Vaucan will
g1,e up 'onega because the Cath-
olH. church condemned la t "eek"s
in' as1on .
If M>meho" l ' forces get their
hand!> on '.'-ioncga. the~ plan to
1mmed1a1el~ )hip him the L"nited
tales to face cnminal charges. 1g-
nonng the fact that Panama ha no
c\trad1t1on treat~ \I.Ith the l 'n1tcd
talcs.
The arrogance continues
Tom Clula 11 t•~ D•llr PJJ01'1
a~w1 Hllor.
Balboa Bay Club value
is a matter of debate
To the Editor. To the Editor:
I have just j ust finished reading C.. MelVln Durslag. Los Angeles
Shea's letter yo your paper reprding Times spons wntcr. had an intercst-
the Balboa Bay Club. and I am very ing stol). D1d )OU ~now Bob Lune.
anJTY! San Francisco Giants owner, asked
How dare he say that ~. the the cit)' for a ne~ stadium. and 1t
people of Newport Beach, could not was voted down 84,000 for to 86.000
take care of this "small beach with apinsl. • he is gomg elsewhere.
polluted bey." E · Fint of all, when has it ever been ver 'ote tor a music center.
a burden for a city to own water history museum or an center? nronen~ndly, it is prob9bly 1 T~'d set voted down too! ~.ma:.1 ··became the BBC has Did you know the Lo5 Anaelcs ~ports Arena. the Coliseum and the all lhoee .. private:• ualy build.inp Great Western Forum in ln&lcwood
everywhere cite. Thirdly, I am wre were built with pnvate. funds:> Alto,
that the BBC hu contributed 1t 1eas1 s a little bit to the POilution of the bay. t>oclsr Uldium narrowly survived What it dae BBC but a poup of a reltrendum aimed at block.ina
.. elite" ~ "Yins to llide a piece donauon of public land for the pro.
al ,...... hlft the S*bUc? lt is ,ectriw ~ know tht Bechact Corp. is ;::c lllMI 1D'I an hictifte, Mr. livins s 12 mall.ion for a super uain?
I ......... llf-• my aua J"U Wiii', •yone and 9¥elroM .._. •....,. • ~ ........... witll ,... .. 1Ju1 wiU have•--.. oe .... -...... ,.tolPlllCldlelfl .... l':.-;.-::-...:::-:r~ -lf 119ey Md a VOICI • .. ....... ...= ~ "'~ ii.a.a ...... J. • .. .... •:.,:-~.-a: ~-,;-:•'rl·~:-*
•• I =Nj1 kt'9J•• llB Alt '. llG U11n1 ........ 1111HuillliM
"'2"" .... -".lillll&&•a.1· 1111 ... • .... ..., aaa 'sn • P"' • • ._
Ho-hum
predictions
for the '90s
It's that 11mc again when Jeane
Dixon makes her pred1cuons for the
tuming >Car -1n this case, the
coming decade
I in'ested in the tabloid which
publishes her furt.'Cast each )ear. I
don't '"'anl to be caught unprepared
for the 19905. The headline read
·· 130 .\mallng Pred1ct1ons b) the
\\ urld's Ll'ad1ng Ps~ch1c ··
Must ot her pred1c11ons are pre·
dauable. but she atwa)s throws 1n a
le"' .. cn!><ltaonal ones. This ~ear she
ochC\ cs that Princess 01 will rettre
to a con.,.en1 and become~ nun. that
Michael Jackson will walk on ~he
moon. and the ghost of Ferdinand
M;irCO) will inspire an upns1ng in
1hc Ph1 hp1nes
~he abo claims that Gorbachev
"Ill bec:ome the George Washington
of the ccntur, .
.\fter goang O\ er the rest of her
torccasts careful!). I found nothing
that makes me euher look forward
10 or dread the ne>.t 10 years
t-or instance. I'm not excited
about Madonna havi ng 1wo chtldren
b) the end of the '90,, or Cher being
npix·d otT financ1all~ b} her young
to' er. or 1ha1 most 'oters by the
middle of the next dt."cade will be on
the far side of 40
I .tlso question whether she is the
"orld's leading ps)ch1c. Most of her
pred1 uons fall shon of being
".imallng:·
A s an example. she claims there
"'Ill be an assassination attempt
against a L . President elected m
thl' '90s o "hat's ne" about that?
W c'' e had a f e" of tho.se tn the la.st
hundred ~cars.
A.ccording to Dixon. the spons
"orld will loSt" a promtnent athlete
to drugs. there "'111 be more eanh-
quakes an the ·90s.. and there will be
a rac<.' not in the middle of the
decade
Some of her other prophesies arc:
Human error \\, 11! cause an aviation
disaster 1n the earh '90s. another TV
C\ angehst "'111 be· accused of fraud.
and a :-..a'' earner accident will
cause a fir<.' ·al ~a
'\oth1ng <;tarthng heft' These art'
SUbjeCtS "e talk about O\er coffee in
the morning and dnnks in the eve-
ning
~ former president wtll pass awa~.
a great beaut) of the screen will die.
a se' scandal will force a senator's
rcs1gna11on. and Prince Charles
could be king b) the end of the
de ade These arc .. amazing .. pred1cuons?
Frcqucntl > al the end of year
v. hen her h!\t appears. I cut it out
and sa'e 1t so I can check on how
man) came true. I have yet to arrive
at a figur<.' -I can never find my
cor \ ·think be1:lg a ps\ch1c isn't so
d10icult. I belie~e I routd come up
\\-1\h some pred1ct1ons that make as
much sense as D1iton·s.
I fore5tt a prominent pol.Jtician's
~•fc filing~ a d1,orce 1n the next
decade. Th J be an.gr) mnarb
exchanged n the two p<?liti.caJ
panics in t e 9::! pres1denllaJ cam-
paign. and Zsz Zsa will sell her Rolls
RO)CC. .
You want some far-out ones?
How about -In m1d-90s Barbara
Bush will get a facelift. dye her hair
red and divorce George? Or George
Bums\\, 111 tak<.' fl) mg lessons and act
his pilot's hccnse so he can Oy
himself and his new bnde, an 18-
y~r-old wauress. to Hawaii for their
honeymoon?
I also predict that 1f Jeane Dixon
sticks to the ob' 1ously predictable.
which make up most of her lists. she
will not have to WOrT) about her
reputation ,as the world's leading
psychic. It "'u) be as safe as a cat 1n
an aviary
Cel ••• , ..... .... """ la I...-NPL
100\\ l'Hl,IOH \
Today is Wednetdlt}'. Dre. 27, the
.361 t day of I 989. ThetT are bar
dar left 1n the >1:8'· Today's H1abliaht in H.istofy.
On Ott. 17. 1831. ~
Char1cs Darwin set out on a Voyllle
to the Pacific abom'd the HM5
Bcqlc. DaJ'Wln's obscrvatiou clw--
1 na the voyaac helped form the belis
for his throry of evolution.
On this date:
In 1822. tetenttst Louts Pu1eUr
was bom in Dole, France.
In t 9001 militant prohibitioailt ~ Nat10ft carried out ._ ..
publte tmubilil ol • ... .. .. Carey Hotel in Widli... Ka.
In 1927. ""Show IDM.'" OM of'•
m.,r WOfb fll •Al ...... .....
cal theMer. Cl'• •Ill • ... i._. na..iaNlwYd •• ltll. .... qlr
••• laNlwYefll.: .. •=. . f>I •
•
.,
•
,
-~ ~
Ola .. ~ DAILY PILOT/ w.11....._, OeoemMr 17, W il.~~~
by 811 Keane COUJllTS• CULTUU by ....... a_, ....
"This fruitcake doesn't have
enough CAKE in it."
llARllADUKE · by Brad Anderson
~~ _I
1
J
I
I •
~ "You can always tell when he's done
something embarrassing."
NANCY
ARLO AND JANIS
SOftY 'GI Dl~'T C£f A
!lldt.eMT FOf ~1MA!>!
( ... .. t
r
I
J
I
I •
YrN JV5T 80V6Hf
Yov"-5E LF A Mo'li E
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham I I
am!ltii:=~~
by Jerry Scot~
by Jimmy Johnson
by Kevin Fagan
AU. llliMT. WMO DIO IT?
COME ON! CONFESS!
GARl'IELD
FOR BETJ;ER OR FOR WORSE
1 r
SHOE
.
JVDGE PARKER
I GATH E R IT WOULD s e .... l"'eAL COUP 1F YOU CAN GET KIKI MULDOON TO e&COME INVOLVED IN THIS Tl!NNl9
COMPLEX '
FUl'fKY WIWKltRBEAN -> ~-·...-~~~~~~~......,
.. I ~·'f BELIEVE WE WE.RC L...UCJ(q E~ 10
Fl~D FMJl'I~ 1MIS CL05E
10 a~ SOMMERb' ~!.
l.IEA~ ... II 51-K>ULD ~c.>
BE A FtP'f'EEN OR~
MINUfE WA&..K 10 HER mR'ftl FROM HERE ,,,
by Garry Trudeau
by Charlil M. 8dUz
by Jim Davia
· by Lynn Johnston
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batluk
~W ! LOOK A'f All.. Of
1HE O<Jr-Of -5-rA'fE
P&Jrn:.& !
I« I B\,hl llC\11
Chicago
leaves
traveler
chilled
I went to Chicago for two days
(I'm sure some of you.wi sh I stayed,
but no such luck) and had dinner at
Mike Ditka's restaurant -the food
was pretty good, but the service was
terrible -now I'm a poor man's
Elmer Dills.
h was I 0 below zero so it was
im~rtant to fCt inside somewhere
quickly. I can t believe I lived there
for 25 years.
I lo ve California. We complain
about freewa y traffic and they have
it too without the sunshine.
0
The Chicago papers aren't nearly
as good as the ones out here either.
Of course. we're JUSt comparing
spons sections as I'm a dumb coach
who can't read much else.
They're also more expensive.
0
This 1s a true story. I was in a
Chicago hospital with my niece and
two doctors were talking about
Bobby Kni&ht having a problem
wtth one o(his pi,yers who had been
kicked ofTh is high school team.
They said he never should have
gone to Indiana because he was a
typical Nevada-La, Vcgas,-type re-
crui t. I told them I resented the
statement and my niece laughed.
Hope they didn't think I was
Tarkanian ince I'm better looking.
By the wa)1• the player has been
trying 10 get in Missouri and his
name 1s Lawrence Funderburke.
0
DePaul played Marquette while I
was there and they drew 10.000 fa n
before Chnstmas. They must be a
hean1cr group than we have to be
out there in that weather or dumber.
0
I sa~ Terry Brennan. ex-Notre
Dame football coach 1n the late
I 950's, at church on C'hnstmas Eve
an Winnetka. Ill. He was fi red on -
you guessed 11 -C'hnstmas Eve.
0
Here's a great quote from Rod
Thorn, vice president of the NBA
and former general manager o f the
Chicago Bulls from one of the Chi-
caso papers. who after draf\1ng
Michael Jordan said:
"He's a very good offensive play-
er. but not an overpoweri ng one.
He's not the kind of guy who'll
single-handedly turn around a
franchise and I'd never ask him to
do that."
At least he drafted him. Jordan
was the third player taken that year
behind Akeem Olajuwan and Sam
Bowie. who 1s now with New Jersey
f~ne SH MUUIGAN/12J
~Hoard has
undergone
learning
process
From The Auedated ~rns
Leroy Hoard traveled a Iona way
from his native Louisiana to learn
bia lessons about football and even
biger lessons about life.
Hoard. the Most Valuable Player
in Michipn's 22-14 victory over
USC in the last Rose Bowl pme,
will play a key role 111in when the
third-ranked Wolverines (10-1) iake
on No. 12 USC (8-2-1) in a rematch
on New Year's 0.y.
That is a lot of responsibility for
a pla).'er who still has a year of
eliaibility remainina. But there wu a time when neither
Hoard ·nor Michilan Coech Bo
Schembechler thoulht he would
make It becaute Scftembechler n ·
pec1ed Hoard to be more than just
• fooclllll ,..,..
•1.e1vy llM Bal liven me lrWbll.
l"ve aiven hlm trouble_l·~
Sdlembechlel' •id Tuetday u 1M
.... he8ded for pnctioe .. Onllel
COlll C41Jcwe. ''We'w bad ane
diw•ntentl aad I'm die held caecla. He oc:alioMlly m'-' a
dill." A1M1 ewry lime lie clael, Hamd
"-:.919.A."'::D.... .... dine r---• to ... tl1¢0.• IO a ... ..., ...... -· ........ . ...... "'. -~ ...... '· ....
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1989
Edison looks ahead after blowout win
Chargers, Irvine to meet after each post victories at Coast Classic Aside from Rice's 15 points, no
other ypress player could ~
more than two points apanst
~1son 's defense. lly llOGIR CARLSON
OflNO..., .... ...,,
Edison High's No. 2-sceded
Characrs and the Irvine Vaqueros
swept to first-round victories at the
Coast Christmas O assic basketball
tournament at Estancia Hiah School
Tuesday evening. but the emphasis
didn't seem to be what was happen-
ing, but was going to happen Thurs..
day afternoon at 3:40.
That's when two of the Oranse
Coast area's heavyweights duel an
the championship q uanerfinals after
Cypress and Banning. respectively,
offered little resistance en route to
56-2S and 61-52 defeats.
"It's a typical Irvine team," noted
Edison Coach Jon Borchen after bis
team handled Cypress by 31 poin ts.
"They move the ball well and they
play solid man defense. We're going
to have our hands full. And. they
don't make mistakes."
Borchcn compa~ the task as
similar to dealing with Capistrano
Valley inasmuch as Irvine counters
with a one-man wrecking crew in
Br•ndon Jessie 1421 tr•bs rebound •w•y from te•mm•t•
Steve Thob• during •dlson•1 easy win over Cypress.
Tedev'I lcMcMe
l:~os AlamltOI vs. Estancia Rt~rves
S·2~egune Hiiis vs Cor on• del Mer
7-Tuslln vs. Hunllngton Beech
1:40-Coste MeH vs Mission Vlt lo
John Molle'. very much in the man-
ner of a Scou McCorlcJe of Capo
Valley.
Irvine Coach Steve Keith. was saw
his team breezing a1 half\1 me. 33-13.
as Borchen viewed, pnl} to see 1t
melt 10 an e' cntual na nc-pomt
margin due 1n large 10 a \Cry ag-
Mc Daniels
returns
to spark
Estancia ~-.
By REID McCLATCHY
Dollly I"-Co<H...,_.,.
Sometime the return of a kc)
pla}Cf 10 top form IS all II Lake'i 10
turn a good team ~•th a lot of
potential 1n10 a bc11 cr team "1th 1he
ab1 ht) 10 turn 1hat pou.·nual 1n10
victories.
Junior guard Paul McDan1cls who
missed Estanc1a's last game and has
.,played the last three weeks Wlth a
case of the flu. regained most of his
strength in ttmc to help his team 10
a 10 1-52 blowout of V1s1a High 1n
Tucsda) 's opening round of thr
( oast Christmas ('lassie al Estancia
McDan1els. who!>t: top output 'iO
far this sca!>on was 13 1n a season
opening IO'i'i against Woodbndgc.
contri buted a game high 17 po1n1s
on 8 of 14 '>hots and helped lead a
pressure defense which never let
Vasta get 1n10 1t'i game
Vista. according to McDan1cls. is
the l)pe of team 1ha1 v.111 <ihoot the
3-pointcr 1f 11's open. and will 'lll'P
out a fe~ mort' steps 10 get 11 ofT 1f
co,crcd at the J-po1nt li ne
"W e "ere taking a~a) 1he shots
the) "anted :ind 1h:it was the dif-
ference in lht' game:· '1cDan1els
..aid ··w e l..nc~ 1hc) hked Lo shoot
the three. so 1f ~c stepped out and
pla)ed them tough "e'd throv. them
f PIHse see EST ANCIA/83)
gress1,,,c Banning defense w11h no-
call officiating. .,...,.., Edison in a
d11Teren1 llgh1
.. The) ·re a 101 li ke we were la!>t
)ear:· ~1d Keith "l k CBorchen)
has a pla~ er for l'' c~ role ·•
Hcre·s ho"' 1hc 1v.o first -round
m1sma1che'> v.cnt Tuesda>
•Jared Ric<' a 5-foot· senior
from C~prcs\. lcd all ~orcr\ "'Ith 15
point'> hut 11 v.ould be the under-
statement of ll'lc \car 10 sa' his
cfTon!> v.ere the ( entunono;' · high
point
The Chargers, led by 6-foot-I 0 Bill
Man1neau'c; 11 pouus, suraed to
leads of 12-2 an the first quarter and
0-7 ~1th 3:2 3 s~nt in the second
half a ()press never got ofT the
ground
It 1ook C'> press 5:30 of the first
quancr 10 score and by half\Jme the
( t:nlunons were down. 20-7. hitting
~ ot W :i11empts from the field.
"~ l' ~ere a hn le frustrated by the
'lov.down tempo." said Borchen..
f Pfease SH EDfSON/IJt
...,..-....-..
Edison's .Tom Tyler watches ball Intently whR• .,. A4
Jared Rice of Cypress at Coast Chrtstm•• Claulc T~.
Marina, Mater Dei enjoy romps in tourney openers
lly RICHARD DUNN
o...,,Not cot•~
There was httle respect fo r th e
hosts in the opening round of th e
25th Ora nge Holida} haske1hall
tournament Tuesday night al Chap-
man Collegc·s Hulton Spon s Center.
The "illain wa'i Manna's Vikings.
"ho complemented their inside
s,ame wi th omc fine outside shoot·
1ng against Orange.
Cherokee Parks. Manna's 6-
foot-11 Junior ccnter. controlled the
Panthers underneath. but 11 was
HrcrH Shelor and Sca n Hasclng who
pu lled !Ill' V1 l..1ngs along dunng their
lir\l·half runs as Manna crushed
Orange. 86--l8. to advance into th e
quarterfi nal round aga inst El Toro
1on1gh1 a1 7: 10.
Parks poured in 26 points. 10 an
the second quarter. and grabbed 12
rebounds as the Vi kings (7-4) built a
47·25 lead at the intermission.
The Panthers (5--l). who were
ne'-'cr 1n 11. "ere down b\ two, 7-5.
wi th 3:34 lcf\ in the fi..St quancr.
The) never came closer.
l:k h1nd '·prnnt bomhs h) I ra' 1'i
Ho)J and I h1 ~gu~rn. 1hc V1k1 ngs
"cnl on .1 10-0 run to make 11 11.·
Hasclrig. "ho tin1.,hcd w11 h 14
points and tiH· hoards. dro\C n1rcl)
through lhl· rain! and scored on a
la) ·UP '' 11h three 'icrond'i left in the
tir.-.t quarter to gl\ c Manna a 21 ·9
cdgl' alt er the tim c1gh1 m1nu1c-;.
Shelor. who scored 14 points and
added nine rebounds for the v.in-
ncrs. scor('d three of Manna·s first
fou r basl..c1 10 tart the second
quam·r. Orange· Thu Hu) nh h11 on
DOUI Wener
.l -'·i:x11ntl'r to pull hi\ team 111''1th1n
Ill ( ~<>-2!1l in lht: 'l'l ond llUJrtCr and
( .11 l '':ll hnl'l'bn lo. uin' crtl•J .1 th ree·
point pla ~ \\Ith l lll'\ ktl to CUI thl'
Pan1ha,· J criu1 to n1nl' ~4-~~
Orange "(lulJn'1 'lllfl' lht• rl'\t ot
the tir'>I h.ilt. hm,ncr J' l\it anna
tinl'hl•d thc Wlnnd qu.1nn \\1lh a
I 3·U \PUrl ltl (.,\U\l' ,1 hlo\\ Clllt
H1ghligh11ng the run Bmd ncttl'd
J J.poinl \hn1 Jnd PJrlo.\ l h1ppcd 1n
"1th 'ii\ points
··You t~ to do 1h1ng )OU need It>
du "hl·n ~ou haH· a Ing lead. hl c
rx1'1 up <,trong and step to the ball."
\ tJr1 na c uat·h tc' e Popovich said.
·\\l··,l. pla~l·d tough games at tin:ies
"hen "C d1dn ·1 do that. but tonight
"l' g.ot 1 t going.
··\.\1th fC1ur pla~cr<; (averaging) 1n
J11uhk figure\. v.e ca n shoot well.
\\l· a· 1n1 ng to l.Omplement our
1n\llk i..imc That's going to be a key
111 lcJSUl' Im •1s ..
\tanna sho"cd no mel'C) in the
third 4u:iner outsconng Oransc.
20.~ t0 tale a 67-34 lead. The
f Pfease SH MAlttNA/Ut
Weaver, Cunningham, Motherway
selected ~ to Southern Section team
j,
..
c ~r says
State admitted
by ~buddy system'
Bo Sc:IMlmbecbler tbe Micbipa fool.
ball ~ and adlkdc dinaor, •YI Bil ~
Ten presidents ultd a "buddy l)'ltem" to ~
vote Pmn State into the conference lut
week.
Scbembechler, speakina publicly on the subject for
the ftnt time Tundar. lamented the' fact that none of
the Bia Ten athletic directors were consulted before the
action.
"The president of the Univer-
sity of Jllinoi* (Stanley lkenbeny) ~neered'\Jthe whole thina,"
Scbcmbcchlcr uid. ..We were
never consulted.··
Schembecbler, while notina
Penn State isn't ·•stratepcaUy
localed." said he wasn't bitter
about the situation.
"I'm not sayina it's a t.d
deal," Schembecbler said. "But it
illustrates what I've been sayina
Scll••ll•dller about the mood of the presidents.
"In the next five years, the presidents will com-
l>leiely confute the field of intercollqiate athletics.
Then, they'll dump it on the athletic directors and saY.
'You straiahten this out.' Then, by about the year 2000,
it may be t.ck on track apin.''
,, I 0 I I O I I 111 U \ \
S.. WJdte, Cincinnati coach, after the
Bcnaals defeated the Houston Oilers, 61-7: "That
realfy is the dumbest football team, the most
undisciplined, stupid football team I think we've
ever played in my life. It's bard to believe they
could ever win games."
Lakers rally to win by two
Magic Johnson scored 27 points, in-----
eluding two free throws with 19 seconds • ~
remaining, as the Los Angeles Lakers came .r ~
back from an eight-point deficit in the final ----
2:40 for a 104-102 victory over Sacramento Tuesday
niaht, the Kings' ninth straight loss.
The Kings, who have now lost 37 consecutive
rqular-season games at the Forum since October 1974, a~ar~._tpJ~ ~ntrol when Danny Ai.nge hit a 20-
footer, gavang the Kings a 102-94 lead with 2:40 left. But
the Lakers scored the game's last I 0 points, four each
by Jo hnson and Byron Scott. who finished with 26
points. _
In other NBA pmes Tuesday:
. Cel~ l~Z. CUPfen 111: Larry Bird scored 27
points. 1ncludmg a pall' of frtt throws with two-tenths
of a second left. and Reggie Lewis had a season-high 28
off the bench as Boston extended its winnfog streak
over the Oippers to 11 games.
Jau 133, Warrlon Ill: Jn Salt Lake City, Karl
Malone scored 18 of his 39 points in a runaway first
quanq and John StQ.Ckton had 18 points and 17 assists
as Utah stopped Golden State's .. six-game ~inl'Hng
streak.
N•ets IH, 71en 111: Jn Denver, Walter~Davis
scored 24 e<>ints. including a key jump shot with I: 16 t~ 10, leading the Nuggets to their fourth consecutive victory.
&.Ids I .. , Beat H : In Miami, Charles Oakley had
19 poiJUS and 12 rebounds as New York overcame
Patrick Ewing's worst scoring night of the season ( 11
points) to win its seventh consecutive game.
S.. 1%1, Trail Bluen 115: In Phoenix, Kevin
Johnson had 31 points, 13 assists and I 0 rebounds
while Andrew Lang set a club rerord with six blocked
shots in the second quarter to pace the Suns.
. S,.n H7, B~net1 1%: I~ Cha~lotte. Terry Cum-
m.in.gs mat~ed ~1s sc.ason h~h wtth 32 points and rookie.~vad Robinson (I~ pomts,_ 14 rebounds) domi-
nated ms1de as San Antonio won its sixth consecutive
game.
P~n ti, Mask M: Reggie Miller scored 22 of his
28 points in the second half. leading Indiana to the win
at home.
Nets ltl, B.ilets H : Roy Hinson scored a season-hiah 31 points and grabbed 11 rebounds as host New
Jersey snapped a three-game losins streak.
Buis l U, Tlmberwoln1 tt: Michael Jordan scored
28 points and Scottie Pippen added 22 for Minnesota's
ninth consecutive loss and the Bulls' 10th victory in a
row at home.
Beeb 111, Rectets H : Jack Sikma scored 26
points, including 13 in the fourth quarter. to lead host
Milwaukee.
Devils extend Rangers' skid
Kirk Muller's second aoal of the pme ~ and 16th of the season with 2S seconds left
in rqulation gave New Jersey a 4-4 tie with • •
New York at Madison Square Garden and ----
atended the RalllCR' winless skid to eight pmes
(().S-3).
EllCWbere in the NHL Tuesday:
....._ I, Retl W-.. I: In Buffalo, Scott Amici,
Rick Vaive and Benoit lfotUC scored late in the third
period to lift Buffalo to "the win. ~ I, Pns" I I: Bob Joyce, Dino Ciccarelli
aDd Midlal Pivonka ICored third-period pis for host
Wubiqlon, which trailed 3--0 after one period.
....... I, Mafle Leafs t: Craia Janney scored twice
and.au!sted on two aoals by Cam Nedy to sperk the
Bruins m Boston.
Wllalen I , N91' .... et I: In Quebec, the Nordiques were less than sill minutes away fiom encliJll a 13-same wi._ streak but were tied when a sboc by Hudbrd's
Kevin Dineen deflected in off the abte of Queb;ec
defememu Cunis Lacb)'lhyn with ':46 left m the tlbnl DCriod.
... I, •B•lle1t•a.•wllW1a.. I: Breu Hull repined the
NHL ICOl'ilta. laid witb two pis ud Paul MK• eaa ... ~ Mcme.o ...., ICOmS twice . fer the llua in St. tom. apleClC
..... I. Hwa llan I: Winai~ rallied with four
_. in the third period, eendina villtina Minnetota to ill Ilda defeat in ll pmea.
I favored to win Super Bowl
I r-- -Oa ,cneral level o( ~· lbe 49en swt 11 dear-cut fll Ill -DOI
OQ)y to racb lbe SUper Bowl, but to
win it. pertiaalarty widl Joe Mon ..
tana in ~ form. His 112.4 ratina
was an NFL record for a quar ..
terblck.
' ' •
~·
~ -i.:,~ •...
" ... 'Biggest marlln I've ever seen,' I told him.
'Probably go 900 pounds,' I said. 'Better looa·
'-en the drag,• I told him."
UNLV routs 49ers, ·78-58
Lany Johnson scored 17 points Tues.-----
day night as 12th-ranked Nevada-Las Vegas .~
beat Long Beach State. 78-58, in a Big West ,· -.
Conference game in Las Vegas.
David Butler and Greg Anthony added 14 points
each and Stacey Augmon and Anderson scored 10
apiece for the Rebels (6-2, 2-0).
Lucious Harris scored 17 points. for the 49ers and
T yrone Mitchell had 15 for Long Beach (6-2, 0-1).
Long Beach yulled to 41-37 in the first two mjnutes
of the second hal but UNLV responded with a 19-2 run
over the next 10 minutes to take a 21-point lead with
8:35 remaining. The Rebels led 39-30 at halftime after
e~chan .. ng leads with Long Beach six times in the first
nine mJnutes.
In the only other game involving a ranked team
Tuesday:
Arbuas 117, Delaware S&ate 75: Mario Credit
toppe'1 20 points fo r the fourth time in five games and
No. 11 Arkansas (8-1) held Delaware State to two field
goals in the first eiaht minutes. C r-edit finished with 23
points. Todd Day had 19 and Lenzie Howell 13.
Martina Athlete of Decade
Tennis player Martina Navratilova,
who from 1982 through I 986 was ranked *
No. I. bas been named Associated Press
Woman Athlete of the Decade. Navratilova ---
received 283 votes in ballo ting by sports writers and
broadcasters to far outdistance one of the young tennis
hotshots. Steffi Graf, who had 69.
They were followed by Florence Griffith Joyner
(61). Jackie Joyner-Keesee (30). Nancy Lopez (27),
Katarina Witt (4), Ingrid Kristiansen (3). Evelyn
Ashford (2) and Grete Waitz (2).
In Qther sports n ews Tuesday:
•Jockey Pat Valenzuela returned to racing after a
60-day suspension for failing a cocaine test and rode
into different trouble. Aboard favored Flom in the first
race of Santa Anita's Opening Day program, Valenzuela
took the lead early in the six-furlong dash. But coming
down the stretch, Flom began weaving. He finished
fi rst. but the stewards rulecf interference. disqualified
him to second and awarded the victory to Ms. Leroy.
Now Valenzuela faces a possible suspension for failure
to keep his mount on line.
•Former two-time world champion Donald Curry
of Ft. Worth. Texas. stopped Brett Lally of Detroit 41
seconds into the second round of their scheduled 10-
round junior middJeweight bout in Las Vegas. Curry,
155 pounds. dropped LaO y, 156, with a riaht hand early
in the second round. After Laity took tile mandatory ei~t-count. Curry landed two left hooks before refertt
Richard Steele stopped the bout. ·•
Two~ qo, the Saa francilCO
49cn finished 13-2 and were
prohibitive favorites to reach the
Super Bowl. Tben they were sum-
marily dispatched by the Minnesota
Vikinp in their first playoff pme -
at home.
That fact should be kept in mind
as the 49cn ( 14-2) enter this seaon's
playoffs with the best chance to
repeat as NFL champions since the
Pittsburgh Steelers last ac-
complished the feat a decade qo.
Or as Coach Geof'JC Seifert said
after the 1eason ended Sunday: "The
trick now is to keep it aoina."
Still, it's not difficult to classify
the 49crs as favorites aoina into the
Super Bowl tournament that will
culminate in New Orleans on Jan.
28.
It's also not difficult to sugcst
that the NFC, which bas won the
last fi ve Super Bowls, should be
prohibitive fa vorites to win apin -
the five NFC pla¥off teams were
16-4 collectively this season Ip.inst
AFC teams with the 49crs and New
York Giants each aoina 4-0.
Moreover, the team with the best
record in the AFC, I J-5 Denver. lost !O the only t~o NFC play.off teams
11 met. the Giants and Philadelphia ~&les. And both those losses were
in l>enver.
The playoffs begin next Sunday
with the two wild-Qrd games.
First the Rams arc at the Eagles in
a meeting of two J 1-5 teams. Then
NFL announces
playoff schedule
NEW YORK (AP) -The
NFL announced its playoff
schedule Tuesday for the wild-
card pmes and diviaional round
of pmes.
On Sunday, the wild-card
doubleheader opens at 9:30 a.m .
with the NFC pme as the Rams
(11-5). play at Philadelphia
(11-S). That will be followed by
the AFC pmc at l p.m. with
Pittsbu!Jh (9· 7) playing at Hous-
ton (9-~1-
The divisional playoffs arc set
for the weekend of Jan. 6-7.
Pittsburah, which qualified for the
playoffs for the fint time since 1984
when Minnesota beat Cincinnati,
29-21, Monday ni&ht. will be at
Houston -in this case, two 9-7
teams.
The quarterfinals take place Jan. 6
and 7.
On Saturday, NFC East champion
Buffalo, also 9-7. will be at Central
champion Cleveland (9-6-1) fol-
lowed by either Philadelphia or
Minnesota (I 0-6) at San Francisco.
On Sunday. either the Vikings or
Rams will be at the NFC East
champion Giants, whose 12-4 mark
was the leasue's second best. fol-
lowed by either Houston or Pit-
tsburgh at Denver.
Jets' fans get wish:
Walton fired as coach
NEW YORK (AP) -Joe is gone.
Joe Walton's seven-year term as
coach of the New York Jets ended
Tuesday when Walton and his
coaching staff were fired by new
general manager Dick Steinberg.
Fans who chanted "Joe Must Go"
and waved banners urging team
O\\ner Leon Hess to fire the coach
got their wish three days after the
Jets finished 4-12. It was their worst
record under Walton. who was
53-57-1 as coach.
.. What we·ve done 1s tell Joe
Walton and his staff that we're going
to make a change ... said Steinberg.
··Mike Hickey (d irector of player
personnel) has tendered his resig-
nation. Jim Royer (pro personnel
director) has been retained as direc-
tor of pro scouting, with his duties
defined a little differently.
"All of the scouts will be retained.
I guess that's enough damage for one
d .. ay.
Fired from Walton's staff were
offensive coordinator Rich Kotite.
defensive coordinator Ralph
Hawkins, and assistants Zeke
Bratkowsk1. Ray Callahan, Wally
Chambers, Make Faulkiner, Bobby
Hammond, Rod Humenuik. Larry
Pasquale and Jim Vechiarclla.
Steinberg met wi th all of them ex-
cept Pasquale. who was told by
phone.
Walton. "who was at the news
conference. said. ..The only state-
ment I have to ma e was to wj_sh the
New Yorks Jets. Dick Steinberg and
espcc1all } Mr. Leon Hess all the best
in the future."
"I had nine good years with the
Jets (he was an assistant for two
seasons before replacing Walt
Michaels in 1983). We've had our
ups and downs. but I've certainly
enjoyed them all."
When Steinberg was hired earlier
this month as the Jets' lirst general
manager in 15 years. he was given
full authorit> to run the football
operation. Although Steinberg never
said Walton was definitely out until
•Doug Harvey, consjdered one of the greatest Clf defenseman ever to play in the Natio nal Hockey HOARD
But only 10 weeks llO. after they
dealt for Hmcbd WaJUr, lbe Vik-
inas were in &bat ca~ and they
barely made the p1ayons -lettina
Cincinnati close a 19.7 deficit to
22-21 with nearly nine minu1e1 left
before ICOrina on 1 fourth-down
pass that just made the tips of third-
strina tight end Brent Novotelsky's
finaers.
Now they have new life and have
the personnel to make the moat of it,
notably a defense that reaistered 71
sacks, one short of Chicaao's 198S
NFL record. "~f we had lost, there wouJd have
been hell to pay," CoacttJerry Bums
said afterward, althouah the "bell"
presumably wouldn't have been .his
Job -General Manager Mike Lynn,
who made the Walker trade. has
repeatedly said the coach's job is
safe.
Minnesota is the only NFC play-
off team that has not played San
Francisco, but it was the Vilcinas. an
8-7 regular-season wild-card team
who went into Candlestick Park two
years ago and unceremoniously
dumped the 49ers, 36-24.
Denver's home-field advantage
makes it the fa vorite to represent the
AFC for the third time in four years,
particularly since Houston, liable to
be its fi rst opponent. is horrendous
on the road.
Joe Walton
Tuesday. he did approach Bill Walsh
about coaching the Jets. Walsh. who
led the San Francisco 49ers to thrtt
Super Bowl championships before
retiring to a broadcasting career after
the 1988 season. said he was not
interested.
League, d ied in a Montreal hospital. one week after his From 81
65th birthday. Claude Mouton, a Montreal Canadiens ningham was also essential to the Oilers' offensive spokesman, said in a statement that Harvey died after successes.
a long illness.
From 81
that surprises you. He told me when he recruited me
how hard it would be at Michigan, how much time we'd
spend in the classroom. But I said. 'What the heck' and
came anyway." •Goalie Stephane Fiset stopped 33 shots and He rushed 169 times for 822 yards (4.9 per c.arry)
Dave Chyzowskj scored the winning goal as Canada and 11 touchdowns, caught 26 passes for JS9 yards and
o pened the world junior hockey championship tour-three to uchdowns, and completed 7 of 14 passes for 120
namenl with ·a 3-2 victory over the United States in yards. The 6-2, 195-pounder played tailback, fullback
Turku. Finland. and Quarterback dunng the course of the season.
•Edmonton Oiler goalie Bill Ranford and Hart-Motherway. a senior and considered a top college
ford Whalers center Ron Francis were named co-offensive line prospect. used his 6-4, 255-P.Ound frame
winners of the NHL Player of the Week award. Ranford to lead the way for 1,000-yard rusher Keahi Oifford en
recorded three straight victories and bad a 1.00 aoals route to the CIF playoffs.
apinst averqe for the week. Francis bad three pis • Other players named included Division I oo-MVP's
and seven assists as the Whalen won three strai&ht Bobby Sylvester, a linebacker-runnina back from Fon-
games. tana and Ron Riven. San Goraonio's 2,000-yard back.
• Teny Cumminas. who averqed 27.6 points, 6.7 Rivers wu~·oined i• ..... --kfield by q .. ----a....:.-k n;bounds and three steals to lead· San Antomo to three M UK ..-. ua1 ui;i \-.;
victories last week, was eelectcd the NBA Player of the Jack Manu of ·vision ID champion Paramount and
Weck for the period endina Dec. 24. runnina beck Napoleon Kaufman of Division VJI
I I I I \ I' Io' . f C \ It Io
TWLn'lllCll
•:30 p.m. -COLL9H aAtlC•TaALL: La Sell ~
ONo State from New OrlaeM. ESPN.
•:30 p.m.-'1tO HOCK•Y: VV•lhlMfon at New .Jersev,
Sc»orfsChannet.
5:35 P.m. -'1tO aAtlC•TaALL: Atlanta at OaMa1, TBS.
6:30 D.m. -COLL••• ••••TaALL: Mltaourl at MemDtlls State. ESPN.
7:30 p.m. -"o HOa<aY: Catearv at Kines. Prime
Tldlet.
t p.m. -COLLm•a aASK.-TaALL: UCLA at Fresno
State, ESPN.
10 p.m. -cou..•a MIK.-TaALL: ~ Medllon at Ok....,. (clllh9d), ~
12:30 a.m. -NOlllS llACllll: Loi AJemitOI "8rNU r..,..n, Prime TicMt.
llADIO
7:30 p.m. -Piie> MOCXa~ Cllllerv at Kines, KLAC
(510).
' •. m. -COLLIH •AIKSTaALL: UCLA at Frnno
State, KMPC (710).
runner-up Lompoc.
••• QB
RB
RB
WR
WR
TE
OL
OL
OL
OL
OL
K
DL
DL
DL
LB
LB
LB
LB DB
DB DB
DB •
BL WL Yr.
6-0 190 Sr.
5-8 18' Sr.
S-8 I" Jr. 6-3 190 Sr.
6-1 180 Sr.
6-5 230 Sr.
6-4 2SS Sr.
6-S 240 Sr.
6-4 23S Sr.
6-3 24S Sr.
6-4 272 Jr.
S-9 17' Sr.
6-l ll' 6-l lU
M 22' 6-l 225
6-0 190
6-6 220 6-l lll
S-10 170
S-11 171
6-l 19' MIU ,...,.
But by late 1n the 1988 season. Hoard had almost
had enough. He was growing weary of the continuous
yelling and was begi nning to think he might never
please Schembechler. Finally. he went to the coach's
office and said he wanted to talk.
"He sat there and he listened," Hoard said . "That
really impressed me. Then he explained to me why he
kept after me all the time. what he was trying to act me
to do for m yself.
"After that l said. 'You can yell at me aJI you
want."'
A few months later. in the last Rose Bowl, he
carried the ball 19 times for 142 yards and two TDs
Ip.inst USC. Hoard was the only player to rush for I 00
yards 1pinst the Trojans that season.
This year, playina both tailback and fullback .
Hoard bas rushed for 724 yards and six touchdowns.
He'll be It tailt.ck for this Rose Bowl because Tony
Boin,. ~e Wolverines' big-play tailback. is out with a
knee Injury. Jarrod Bunch will play fullback. "Lero~·s hard to tackle," SchembechJer said. "He
sets bi& ys, too. He acts about one a pme. That's
what we ave to have against USC. We need a big-play
(Uy."
lrish's Rocket may be limited
Da ~IAMI (AP) -Rocket Ismail. one of Notre
. mes cleadbest ~ffensive ~pons, may only be a
manor put of the lnsh arsenal in their final pme of the
seaon.
.. CoKh Lou Holtz said Tuesday that a shoulder
11\JW'Y ~bly will limit the speedy IOl)bomore to spot
duty IPllllt top-ranked Colorado an the Oranae Bowl on New Year's niaht. :~ ma1. ~nd out b~ ~n play more, but we're not ~~=-·b~ at, Holtz •1d. ·we are plannina on aoina wt_,.., , OD a. Ste8dy buit."
1.w ~~dislocated his left shoulder iD a 27-10 drii.'° ~on N~'" 2,, did not ~le in cons.ct ....,.._-, dunna Notre Dame's tint wortout in
................ ..,.,, ... ....
lrvlne•1 John Molle', who scored J1 points, defends ... lnlt
Terrance Ross of .. nnlnt at Coan Chrl1t111a1 Cla11k.
ESTANCIA
From Bt
out ot' rhythm. When we took that
awa}. e\ cry1hing else stan cd to go
our wa}. Our constant defensive
pressure was the difference.
"We JUSI "'anted 10 gel by the first
game with a victory. and we knew
we couldn·1 take these guys lightly.
The> pla} the ~me run-and-gun
type of offense we do. We like to
pla} that way because we have a lo t
of small and quick guys."
Vi sta con\ encd only 2 of 11 shots
in the first quaner and was down
I 0-0 before ~coring 11 first two
point o n free throws wi th 4:44 left.
The Eagks 1hen went on an 18-5 run
and led 28-7 after one quancr.
When the Panthers wcrcn•t having
the ball stolen b~ the quicker Eagles.
the~ "'ere either throwing up prayers
from "'a~ out o r throwing the ball
3\\a\
The ~·cond and third quaners
were pla~ed much the same as the
fi r'>t "'11h 1he ob\ rously more patient
Eagle!. domina11n~. The} outscored
the Panthers. 43-f7. and led. 71-34.
heading rnto the final stanza.
"\\ c kncw the} were capabk of
scoring brg numbers. but thank God
that d1dn 't happen 1o n1gh1:· Es tan·
c1a Coach f1m O'Brien said. "I
ha\cn't !>e('ll them play. but they've
score(.! ovcr 80 points a couple of
ti me~ th1!> scason. We matched up
s11ewisc wi th them and wanted to
run. Thev JUSI didn't shoot like I
thought they were capable of shoot-
EDISON
FromBt
"but we had a httle talk at halftime
about being paucnt. We hit our first
fi,c ho1softhc second half(baloon-
ing the score to JO-7) and that
pleased me.
Edison ""ent on 10 up the lead 10
42-11 early m the fourth period
before Borchcn began pulling his
first hne -Manincau going out
wtth 6:53 left and Steve Thobe mo-
ments later.
The Chargers finished going 27 of
43 from the field (62.8 percent) as
they improved 10 8-3. Five players
shared scoring hono rs with
Man1ncau. ra nging from 6-10-9
points each. but it wasn't an. e ffon
which Borchcn expressed a great
deal of pride.
"We've been off since Friday,"
said Borchert. a left-handed expla-
nation for some raucd play in some
parts of the Charaers' pme. •,
•Edison's quick j ump ~led to
what transpired in the lrv1nc-Ban-
nina collision as the Vaqueros
stunned the Wilntl1111on-bued Pi-
lots with a 13-0 run at the out.let.
The Vaqs.:. now 7-'· expanded the
maram to JJ.13 by halftime with
Molle' the focal point with 20 of his
pmc-hiah 31 points.
MARINA
''°'"II
ing.
"McDanicls was back so we were
at full strength and that was nice.
This was a confidence builder for
our team. and wc·11 need it. because
we'll have enough tough games
throughout this tournament and Sea
View League pla). It wasn·t a tough
game. but we C.'.ln still draw some-
thing pos11ivc out of 11."
A game hkc this had 10 be a relief
to O'Brien after seeing his team lose
on a shot at the buzzer to Foothill
two games ago.
"The Foothill game nun a lot,"
O 'Brien said while lau~htng.
"Games like this don·1 hun.'
W11h the home cro wd cheering in
hopes of seeing its team break the
I OO-po 1 nt mark, the Eagles
outscored the Panthers. 30-18. in the
fourth quancr on I 2-of-18 shoo11nf .
What made thc founh quan er s
outburst e\en more 1mprcss1ve was
the fact 1ha1 11 was done w11hou1 top
scorer Gut} Heredia who fouled out
at the end of the third quancr.
Heredia 1oincd Mc Daniels with 17
points and the} ""ere followed by
Torrc} Hammond with 15. Son Ly
with 14 and M1kc Haas w11h 13. All
c1gh1 who pla)ed srnred at least
eight points.
Charles Walker led Vista with 11
points.
Estancia (6~3) will now play Long
Beach Jordan. an 86-69 winner over
winner over Glcndnlc Hoover. in
the second round on Thursday. for·
dan t6-4J was paced by John H1ll-
man's 26 poin1s.
Bann1ng's major proble ms were
not in dealing w11h Irvine's 33
points as 11 was with trying to solve
l rvine·s d1 sc1plined man-to-man de-
fense.
The Pilots managed just 3 for 25
from the field ( 12 percent) in that
span (I for 12 m the first quaner)
and about the o nly way to describe
it was a matter of 22 bricks.
Bo rchert bad certainly seen
enough and left. but what he djdn't
see in tht' second half was a pafr of
officials who allowed Banninas' aa-
gressi ve double· and triple-tea.min&
the ball go without a whistle.
Keith voiced numerous objec-
tions, but in the aftermath declined
to repeat his comments.
"We inflicted a lot of the pain on
ourselves.'' said Keith. "We had a
lot of sloppy ball·handling. We
made same poor decisions. We
never should have let that team act
back in the game.··
Eifht sccond-haJI Irvine tumoven
and JUSt 13 attempts from the field
helped wake up Bannfoa's shootina
abilities. as well, as the Pilots drop-
ped in 17 of 32.
Bann.ins closed to .S7-'° o n a J.
,point shot by Torrey Tobias., but
that was as close as the Pilots would
come after trailina by a 3S-13
marsin early in the third quaner.
six practices in the last eiaht days
and toniaht was a aood warm-up.
The compttition in this tournament
will set a lot tou,Mr In a hurry.
··we need 10 play well in this
tournament because we didn't do
some 1hillfl well in the Tournament of Champeons. We dicla't ,ct inside
very well and we clicln'& lboo& ~
well. Tonilbt we did a ~ JOb
inside and we shot blnel'. but we
have '° do &Mt tbr four ....-. "
Maw Del Dia",....... v_, ~&atl:J0'81M ........
Tiit .......... "" ill ...... ...... .
~~ .......... _ I .. b.r'&r..trr. I .... , .. _ ... .. ..
CIF, State previews at Marina
The Marina Hiah airts basketball
&OUmament is the best in the Oranac
Coast area , and arauably in the
Southern Section. Once known as
the Marina-Edison Tournament, the
boliw-season attraction turns nine
years old today.
In the past, the tournament was
for junior varsity and varsity teams
(with Marina and Edison switching
off each year as to where the varsity
and junior varsity played), but the
j unior varsity part has been dropped
and now Marina is its pennanent
home.
Silltccn schools, all with realistic
playoff hopes and aspirations, com-
pete. Five of the six Sunset League
members (all except Westminster)
will participate. Thus, this tour·
namcnt provides a Sunset League
preview as well.
T hrow in Estancia and Mater De1
and the Orange Coast area has a
very strong Oa vor in 1.his to~!!!·
nament. t
The timing of the toumaTcnt 1s
key. It is the last chance for~eams to
prepare for league play whet' thl'
games reall y count. Also. ~a use
the competition is so good. tt allows
coaches 10 see where their teams fit
in and if they arc really playoff
caliber.
Last year's winner was Ocean
View. The title signaled that the
Scahawl<s had arrived, and they
went on 10 win the Sunset League.
This year, the Seahawks appear
even s1rongcr. They are undcfea1cd
through I 0 contests. and they talk
about not just winning league or
Cl F. but a state title too.
.. It really meant a lot for us 10 win
the Marina Tournament last year,"
said Ocean View Coach Ollie
Manin. "I think this is the best
tournament in the CIF and it show-
ed that we were one of the better
tcam1.
"his &Otnl to be very difficult for
us repeal 1hou&}l. h 1s hard 10 tJc-.
lieve. but the tournament has aouen
even stronaer, and we have a poor
draw. For us to win. we would have
to beat Lona Beach Wilson. La
Quinta, and then Han j ust to reach
the finals.
"Han won the 5-A title last year,
and they are ranked higher tha n us.
They have an all.CIF, all-American
center in Sarah Wilson, who is 6-3."
The possible Ocean View.Han
match up has fans. coaches and col-
lege scouts drooling. Both schools
boast of strong a nd impressive
centers. Jenny ulhvan (6-2). last
year's tournament MVP, leads the
Seahawks.
Not onl} wo uld 11 be a battle
between two of the best centers in
the state. but 11 could be a preview
of the 5-A championship pme.
Ho wever, Ocean View 1s not the
onl) stro ng area team 1n the 1o ur-
nam~n1. Marina rs also off to a fast
stan, winning 11s first eight bcfore
dropping its last tY.O
"We need to get back 10 our
running game," said Manna Coach
Pete Bonny. whose V1k1ngs employ
the Loyola Maramount o ffense ... In
our last two games. teams have held
us in the 50s. while before that "'e
were averaging 67 po1n1s a game.
.. O ur s11e docs hurt us. (Marrna·s
starting center is o nly 5-6). but we
have to learn to deal w11h that.
Traditionally. whoever finishes in
the to p the 1n this tournament has
done well in 1he playoffs. and I think
we can bc in'that group:·
Manna plays the first gamc of the
tournament this morning at 9· JO
against Loara.
Estancia. a 3-A school, 1s Ir) rng
the unchancd waters of 1he Manna
Tournament after spending 11s past
Chnstmas 1n the Costa Mesa I o ur·
nament. Eagles Coach Lisa
McNamee believes her 4-4 EaaJes
)"ere J USI a break or two away 1rom
bnng.ing a perfect record into lhe
tournament.
"I reall} think we COllld be 8-0
nght now:· Mc Namee said. "We
ha\'C had some poor shoo11ng. and
""e lla\ e not been as mten!>C as I
""ould ha\C liked us 10 be either ··we "'anted to pla~ in thrs 1our-
namcn1. bei.:auSt.' the Costa Mesa
r oumamcnt 1s rather ""eak
although "'Cha\ e ne'er ""on 11
When )OU pld\ better teams. )OU get
belier
"This"' 111 be a nice pre p for us
before league pla~ T hrs to urnament
rl·all~ has a pla )ofT-t} pc atmosphere.
"'hat "'11h all the good team!>. so 11
'ho uld help us once we reach the
pla}offs lo ha\c been 1n the sam(•
kind of atmo~phere:·
The Eagles ha\e their work cut
our for them. o pening with h1ghl)·
regarded Lake""ood
Earherm the )Car. Mater L>cr
oach Brenda Yeckc admitted her
team was in the midst of a l\1.-0·vear
rebuilding program. Well the ·
Mo narchs (3-4) cannot seem 10 bu\
a break as 1he} open ""llh Han ·
"V. t' arc making progrcs'I and
1mpro\ 1ng Y.1th each game. but "'e
ha\I~ a rcall} tough task ahead of
us:· Yecke said. "We ha'e been
79.!
ft.
15~!
-.. ....
J..K."91n ........ _ 9'' ----·-•Cl~
'
... ·. ·.• .....
pla)'1n1 better. and our defense 11
1mprovina. but we arc still a hot and
cold team. In our last pme, ~shot
46 perctnt from the field in the fint
half. but then only 23 perocnt in lbe
second.
.. The aood news is that we did at
least shoot 46 percent in a half, but
we have to be more consistent. and
that will come with each pme. It is
JUSt a matter of time."
Hun1in1to n Beach Coach Nick
Bartlett has done a 1o00 job of
turning that program around. His
Oilers are 4-5 and improving, and
1hey could be the surprise team of
the to urnamt'nt 1f the can get the ball
10 bounce tht'ir way a couple of
times.
.. I have been real pleased with the
progrc!ls we ha\e made and with our
pla}:· Banlett said ... We have lost
games b} l\l.O, fo ur. and the. no one
ha~ blOI-' n us OU\ •••
Fountain Valle) <8-3) 1s coming
ofT a 1h1rd-placc showing in the
( h1no T o urnament Paced b' Julie
V. orkman. and w11h Coach Carol
Strausburg calling the shots. the
Baron!> once again have a playoff
t~pe team
Edison ~pons a 5-2 record and
took la~t week ofT 10 rest and en JOY
lht' hohda}S. Wt1h the freshening.
1he run-and-gun Chargers figure 10
be rolling. Debbie Fischer. who 1s o n
a pace 10 break the Cl F mark for 3·
po1n1 baskets leads Edison's a ttack.
0
T OCS. V's KhecMe
9 lO • m -~r.n. "' Lo.re 11 • m -E \tanc11 "' Lel<twooo 12 JO D"' -Hum ngron 8eac11 vs Mlu lOft V1eto
1 Pm -Kerella vi EdrM>n
• D,.. -ocean View vs Lc>n9 Beecn Wiison S lO D m -Valene1e vs Le Qu1n11
7 D,., -~ler De Yl He rl
I JO D m -Founra•n Veti.v vs Foo1111u
Sto GraJld'• col•11111 •ppevs
every W~y.
46!!' ••
\
•
• r a .......... • LN.
LaMn • ' .7tt ~ " ' Ml ...... 11 11 •• ........ 11 II .411
GoldlnSt•te 10 11 ...
~ ' 15 .J75
5-crWMnto ' " .I.cl ....... ~
S.n Antonio . 11 ' .750
Denver 11 ' ."1
Ut-'! 17 ' .. ,.
0..-1 13 12 ..520
Houlton 12 15 ....
Mlnnelof• 5 21 .1'2
CMrtotte 4 20 .1'7
• ....,. CH1llr•1ce
AtlMk DMlllft
N9wYork 11 7 .720
Bolton 15 11 .577 ~la 14 11 .5'0 WH hlnoton 12 14 .462 New.Jeraev I 11 .)(II
M&.ml 7 21 .250
c ..... OM.-.
Chlcaeo 17 ' ..,.
At .. nte . ,, ' ...
l~ne " ' ·"° Detroit " 10 .615
Mllweuk" 13 13 .500
Clev ... nd 10 14 .417
Ori.ndo ' 11 .333
T......-1..,_
L.M'" ICM, Secremento 102
9-IOll 112. ~ 111 New JwMY 101, Wl ahlnelOll '4
Sen Mtonlo 101, Cl'llrlotte 12 New Yortl 100, Mleml ,_.
lftcllMI "· Orllnclo '° C"lcleo 112, ~'• tt Milw8UIM 103, Houtton 9'
Denver 11•. PttllloelPflll 111 Ullh 133, GOiden St•t• 111
'"'-1• 121, Portie"° IOS
TMllY'1._
Sen Antonio ., W•tlllnOton. •:JO P.m. '~ •• Orlando, •:JO p,m. ~oll 81 C~. 4:l0 P.nl HoullOll 11 M'-toll, S PJl'I.
Atlent• •I o ..... Sr.30 p.m. ll'tlllNlloNI •• $Miiie, 7 p,m,
lolton 11 S.Cr1mento, 7:30 p.m.
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lill-SlcrlfNfltO JO (Alflle •>, Lllltrl Jl
(Joflnlon 14) Tolll tou11-s.cnmento 14,
UklO 1" A1te11dl1ic-l7,"5.
c.-a 112, a.en 111
IOITCNI -alrd 11-n •·• f7, Plnckftev 2-l
M S, ll'Wltll 4· tO >-• 11, Joflnlon 2·4 >·• 7. P8xson 2·S 0-1 4, McH ... 9· IS 2·2 20, L-1• ,. ,,
10-11 21. Kltlne 1-l 0-0 2. Gamole 1-J 2·2 '· M.
Srnllll 2·3 0-0 4, C. Smllll 0-0 0-0 0. TotM· 0 ·17
25-JO 112. CUPP9•S -Sinllll 12-17 M2 l3. "°'INll
3·• •·• IO, lenlemln •·7 2·2 10, Heroer 1·1' •·• 20, Gr•nl 11-20 2·2 24. Mennlnt •·• 6·7 I•. Gerrlck 0-0 0--0 0, WOif 0-1 H 0. Tot•IS: '2·82
27·3S 111. ...... ~
lkltlOll 2J 2' JO ~ 112 Cli-1 2' 24 3S 26-111
3·lllOltlt toe11 eouon 1 ·• Cllrd I· 3, McHlll 0-1), ClloMr1 0•2 (Normeti 0-1, H•roer 0-1).
F OUl8CI oul-N-ltt«IO<Mlch.-eotton 5' ( 1'8f'ltll
lll, Clloci.n 41 ($1'111111 •>. Aul1t1-8o1ton 21
IJOl\nton •>. CllPN!'t 2' (Gr•nt m. Tol•I touta-eo11on 25, CtipHn 23 TKMI·
cel-Jollnton. Attende~ls.350.
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WHT Ntv.O.·Let ...... , 7', LOll9 9Nc11 St. 51
IOUTMW91T Arh nYI 117. Dele•8'8 SI. 75
DIJ·P'f \ +
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4' Mllld beu, 1' eetleo beH, 41 bonito, 21
KulPln, 3 "'"°"'8cl, S roe11 fttll, J 11811bul, IOI
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Dlue oerc11.
Ex-teammates,
friends shaken
by Martin's death
~
The death in a Christmas night
automobile accident of five-time
New York Yankee manaaer Billy
Martin left bis former teammates
and playen shaken.
Martin, 6 1, was killed when the
pickup truck in whtcb he-wasridins
with a friend slid down an embank·
ment near his home in Binghamton,
N.Y. When the news spread, the
reaction was shock.
"It's like losina part of my own
family:· said Yankee owner George
Steinbrenner. who tangled repeated·
ly with Martin during the manager's
five tumultuous terms with the
team. "I was just with him last Wednes-
day when he came down to entertain
2,000 underprivileged kids in
Tampa. Billy said this meant so
much to him because he never had
anYtbina like this when he was k.id."
Steinbrenner compared Martin's
death to that of \'ankee catcher
Thurman Munson, who died in a
plane crash durina the 1979 season .
He said he had spoken to the ex-
manqer at least 20 times in the last
month, makina plans for the 1990
season when Martin was to serve as
a Yankee vice president.
"He's aoina to be awful bard to
replace," the owner said. "He wu
one of a kind. There are not many
people in the world who can be
called one of a kind. There's not
another like him. This will be a very
difficult season comina up."
American Leaaue president Bobby
Brown was Martin's teammate with
the Yankees.
"It is always tragic to hear of the
642-5678
passing at a relatively young age of
a friend and longtime colleague," he
said. "But it is especially sad to get
this news on Chnstmas Day."
"Billy was a player who got the
most out of his abilities. He really
knew how . to play the game and .
played his best in the bi& ones -
llt(e so many of the Yankees could.
As a manager. of course. he could be
brilliant at times but was also
plagued by the loss of control of his
emotions on the field and by his
antics off the field.
"I prefer to remember him as a
fiery and winning player and man-
aser. He was proud to be a Yankee
his whole life and I'm onl y sorry that
that life was cut short so tragically
this Christmas Day."
Yankee manager Bucky Dent
called Martin "a true Yankee -one
of the truest ever.
''He always said he wanted to a
die a Yankee. He was his own man.
He was fiery and could be charming.
He was a great manager. It's really
sad. I'm thinking a thousand dif-
ferent things about him."
Yankee pitcher Dave Riahetti
said, "Billy Martin was a great rMn-
a,er and a great friend. He was the
fiercest competitor I've ever known.
As a player and a manaacr be was
shrewd. touah and determined. He
had a brilliant baseball mind. No
one was ever more devtoed to the
Yankees. He was a good friend to
me and I will miss him as will
playen, executives and fans every-
where."
Martin was hired as manqcr of
the Yankees for the final time Oct.
20, 1987 when he took over for Lou
_I; , ~ r;. -.
-. ll .
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Biiiy Martin
Piniella. who had replaced him two
years earher. But he was fired again
June 23. 1988.
He had been fired on Oct. 27,
I 98S, j ust before the start of Game
7 of the World Series between Kan-
sas City and St. Louis ending his
fourth term as Yanltcc manaaer
which had bejun April 28 when he
replaced VDIJ Berra 16 games into
the season.
Bar fiahts on consecutive niJhts in
Baltimore was the beginnina of the
end of Billy IV. O n Sept. 20, he sot
into a fight with a bar patron at the
Cro.ss Keys Inn. where the Yankees
were stayina. The next ni&ht. he
broke his arm as he fouJbt Yankees'
pitcher Ed Whitson in the hotel
lobby, in an elevator and in the
parkina lot. Althouah the Yankees
were 91-54 under Martin. Steinbren-
ner decided to switch to Piniella,
In 1986 and 1987, Martin served
an advisor to Steinbrenner and as a
television commentator on Yankees'
broadcasts before rctumina to the
duaout apin in 1988. But then a
scrape in a Teus topless club led to
his final firins the followina June.
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NEW YOltK JE~lred Jot WMIOll, NI coec"· •1c:t1 Kottl9, ofllMl11e coordlnetor; •• H1.a1M, dlftllll111 cooutllllfelr; llld Zal
lr1ikowtlll, •n CellllNll, Well't C,..,,,.. Miil• F8Ulklner, llotl&lv ....,_.,, ••
.._.., urrv PelOUlle encl Jim Vedllarel
eta111111t coecftn. Announced 1111 realtftlllon
Mike Hlckev. dll'ector of •ver -IOllMI. HOCKIY .............. u..e
NEW YO.I( •ANGE•S-Senl Mlk• •ldlu ooetle. to Flint of 1"9 lnternelloMI Hodlo Leeeue. ST. LOUIS I LUES--tc.lled 08
TI!omllnton, left ""'"'°· eftCI ••ndV Shrc de,..•Mmen, from Peorl• of 1"9 lnternetio.
Hockev L-.ue. Sent Glen FM1"9rtlone, d
i.nwnen. to P9orle.
Martin autopsy cancellation
questioned by prosectJtor
PORT CRANE. N.Y. -An autopsy on former
New York Yankee manqer Billy Martin was canceled
Tuesday at his family's request, and a prosecutor said
that could make it harder to cbarJe the driver of the
truck in which Martin died.
The Broome County sheriffs department reported
slow proaress in investiptina the Christmas nipt
accident that killed Martin, 6J . and injured a lonstime
friend. William Reedy of Detroit, who was at the wheel
of Martin's pickup.
Sheriff Anthony Ruffo said it would be another day
or two before the alcohol level in R~y·s blood was
confirmed through laboratory tests.
Reedy was chafled Christmas niJht with a misde-
meanor charge of dnving-while·intox1cated and faces a
fine of up to S 1,000 and a year in jail.
Authorities said the pickup skidded off an icy road
Monday evenina in front of Martin's 148-acre farm near
Binghamto n. I SO· miles northwest of New York City.
Neither man was wearins a seat belt. authorities said.
Ruffo said the accident happened at a hairpin curve
that has a history of accidents.
Icy, slippery roads and Recdy's unfamiliarity wi1
the area were believed to be factors in the acciden
Ruffo said. He said the spttd limit on the road was !
m~h. but did not know how fast the truck had bee
SOlnJ.
Mechanical failure of Martin's four-wheel-<1ri1
pickup was ruled out, the sheriff said. "T he true
checked out fi ne," he said.
An autopsr. scheduled Tuesday was canceled at tl
request of family members. said Michael Doll. spoke
man for Wilson Memorial Hospital in Johnson Cit~
Broome County District Attorney Gerald Molle
said he hoped to persuade County Coroner Patric
Ruddy to conduct an autopsy in spite of the famil}
wishes in order to pinpoint 1he exact cause of Martin
death.
But Ruddy said an autopsy would reveal little th
an external examination did not.
"He died, basically. of a fractured neck." Rude
said. "The chest X-ray was reasonably intact. belly w.
normal, blood count was normal. It's all in the oe.
area."
Reedy. owner of Rccdy's Bar near Detroit's Tif.
Stadium, suffered a broken hip and possible broken nl
in the accident. ·
Hershlser's feat voted tops In 'BOs
NEW YORK (AP) -The record
stood for 20 years. S8'Y> scoreless
inninJ.S, a tribute to Don Drvsdale's
pitchin_a dominance durins tfte sum-
mer of 1968.
To break it would require a level
of pitchina consistency rarely
achieved -six shutouts and then
some. Orel Henhiscr. ac:e of the Los
Angeles Dodaen, fisured old Double
D's mark was safe, especially from
him.
"I never thouabt I would break
the record," lfenhiter said ••I
thouaht nobody would break the
record. But now I think somebody
can break it. becauK I'm nobody
special."
He was wrong there. O rel
· Hershiser was more than .special in
September, 1988. He bordered on
the unhittable, throwing S9 con-
secutive scoreless inninas -67 if
you include the playoffs -to punc-
tuate the Dodaers' rush to the Na-
tional Lcaaue West title.
The achievement was voted Per-
formance of the Decade in a poll of
sports writers and broadcasten con·
ducted by The Associated Press.
rcceivins I S6 votes to far out·
distance the four sold medals won
by Carl Lewis in the 1984 Olympic
Games. which had 77 votes.
Then came Wayne Gretzky brea
ing hockey's 200-point bamer (7•
Roaer Clemens' record 20-strikec
pme (30): Steffi Grars tennis Gta·
Slam (29): Jose Canseco's
homer-40 steal season (26); E:
Dickerson's 2, I OS-yard season ( 1
Dan Marino's 200 career touc
downs (14); U.S. Olympic Mirat
on Ice ( 12); Matt Biondi's scv
Olympic medals (7); Butch II
ynolds' 400-meter record (1
Woody Stephens' fi ve strai&ht 8
mont winnen (S); Gres LeMoqc
Tour de France victories (2); Gt
Loupnis' 1988 Olympics (2); Ja
Nicklaus' last nine holes at the 19
Masters.
From North OrMge County
From South Orange County
540-122'
496-680
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.,..All ... ffie aA. 21,. s1.1001mo 1aA. ttM 0utl6depe11o. ~·0:11~~!0 o.. 711-1911 "~·~:~0...::-= lllRWllll 1ume...-1enoe.c..-•••l'''I ......... ,. DUkliaM• tun._, emontti ...... I~ ftlg a OM-Poot . ....,Nid ..-_..· now'lllOl...0 t?s-ei.o ..., .. In AcoountlnQ. •11111-....., nw Avl.ftO'#tol/15190.119 No Pete. 1825/mo. 7M-5'1o~e1,_7717 · ....,.. E•c1'11t~ llPI
• L 11~''"° 27th St. ~t. ~ 645-5&53 °' 173-8132 ...... u 2 ~~ We .. ~ ofter1na . o="-J:::•;..:.: UdO * 1 9201 * 175-847 • Prudentl1i 1BR cw"' d IP99 ... !ASTSfOE 28A 18A 1141 I 11111 ..., Deily :W:a;a;•·'-compeettho9 .-,Y. fUI dlltl/I./ ,.,_. ,..._
C1111. Rlty fenC.cl . 'dotle· .,. Wlo-t9Q9. Cloeeto..-y. b1oCk to beeatl. Utile pd. lllafmfU .......... LM6f S30W.-• tt• --...
rlA. 3'1' IA. tii Vt. --...a/J,tlo, to t tllng l Avel l now 11711 S300 dip ..... llllllllllll ............. CM .. ..._.,CA92127 ~j ~II Pt:~INJon· ~~°'.": T-T,.._=·~-=: P a vici';i. 111~7~::2 11sormo. Agt 131-7370 .... to ':w.1n Aleo he. • 'to • .::::· 1'11111 lill........ ~~~.i:"= ;'.nt;'~ en.a-tic. <»-........._ 1414111 ·-
Ollllk>. .. ........ IU1W room to rent. l300/mo *~ 1 -.ullllG ... 1 pencMbte 1n.ide ..... --y~ ...... 11-lllboa 1 BR. ct .. n, vertical r9mOdelHlgtlcelt-4t7-45&1cw24t-1211 •Cloeetobeech ._ -• llllllT• r~Mt:t wittl ~ .._.,.
1yrldg• HA. 2BA, ...... ~~:··,o"' "'~""~:2 ~R. 18A, ~GI'-•Comm'I Spece Av.ii .. lll1rn1811 :+ """' typing .... I/NJ Earn 115-UO"". = eonoo. trplc:, w/d. poof, 2606 Vk:tOfla. 650·724.""' age. Nft car"'. !*nt, •Fr• !let-CALL TOOAVI 1ome computer ex-T...,,..,.. .. _. IP9-1tt ger, a.: gm.. no Attrectlve 2 BR. IUndectt, _ __ mlnl blinds, dedc • ...,.,. VIW IDTAI • •AOOOUNTINO Cl.EAKS perlence. The CMdidate ~1715
peta l t,•25.154-2141 S>Mnty pWl!lng, ·II~ 10 IU 11& •• unlt.115-1427. * LUllVE ARD* ... =~C~EE~:RS rNnt ti.Ye .,, eaccelent P/l ...
_ .. _._ weter, yrly 11000/mo Specaous. ~reet loc.tlon. '*°"•TEO•COUMUllllUNlTY• 11Ml12 phone pereonallty llnd ...,.r• 673·7689 Gii ln~t ~• S725mo •JR ACCOUNTANTS 9"j0y working with the 3 to 4 d9Y9 per .......... BA 2 BA end unit ~=-=,...._.-- -· ... ' ""'· · public .. weft .. ao11er11ng SIMM frte:dy n/ ....
S1 13i5Jmo 7....,. · LARGE 28R. garage, 645-5853 2:,~t~;rd,2,,::'b~: IUIHa llM VM:atlon, hollday pay, new~ otc. s.. °'*' 561-1~
• . P 111 o . m I c' ow av• '* 1BA & 2BR 18a ,..,_ S 1150/mo .--tu 2Br 1Ba. 2920 bonuMS provided. C1Jt lnt., .. t9d parti.a ailould It 100/mo NO DEPOSIT llaJrs gar l~dry e...-place. micro, wuhef I No ~'7' S.a.wa ~ IUL llTATI ...
673·4999 DIW, 'no i>911 M<io-se15 E'SIOE C.M. 1BR. stove. dryer hkupe. Golt courN ~ • 5 CROWNS REUNION D.L w~ Tempe>rwiee contect Cheri FrMn'\Wl •• We'r• ••pending 04Jll ....,,
645·6662 °' 540·5446 rtlfrlg, frplc. lfNll yd & N':' ~= ':'4n~= Sorry, Sift Clttnentt 2676 PARTY! 25th Ann1vetllfY 979.2900 t00% FREE la-G21, bl. M1. reetdentlal ..... In ,..._ 2607 --~tlo, utilltl• paid. ' ' March 1990 Ex-Co-A -port e.ch I IYrrOUfWo l~~~~~-....;;;.;,,;.1 •2BA DUPLEX. Quiet & $650 mo-mo. s.41-1627 Ne., Gener•I Hospital, worke<a call sue Cross c:counung Ing lrHI E•c•ll•nt
9NEW LEASE·3BA 38A + 11' blocll to beach, 1 BR good area. Larg.e yard. --•WA--• 3BR 2BA di stove 660-2720 2 1/90 PIYllLL ACCT mMIY 1.,m1 avellablel Com-ternlly rm In ~d getec:t w/0<.n vu, new crpt & sngl garage S7SO llUT LllATlll ,.__, 1 1 · A 1 't18 s 745/mo' 213" by / ' Earn extra MOf1eY Men & mlUlon to aov.11n hOU99
JumlneCreetc$2'l)C) vert blinds. trig 535-BBern•rd.647-7540 1Br 1Be up1tr1, 1g P•tlo, ••llT-1111111 rp c. v:sa-7859 · PIUWllA/llSTIOAll CLEll womenn.-dec:tto delt• training & aupponl c.I
f BA YCREST COURT $805/mo yrly 673-6947 *•TREES & YARD;.-$825 2Br 28a 1p1C10U1. *WITI llAT lllfl* ------REGARDLESS ol CREDIT am•ll GTE Nelgnt>Ofhood Don DeTnomu 10< en• G~TED. Upstelra. 2BR ' lRG BR 2B I $725. POOi. ga1. refrig ui... R-.As HISTORY Call s.49 .... 204 Newspapef publlStllr\g & phone.t>OOks Must be.•• pointment George ElklM 28A 2 C-1 garege W/O . IBA. c:arPort r 1 rBa lwnhouse. lrplc, Incl No pell S500 sec EXCLUSIVE BEACH -· cn..n commercial printing lee.It 18 yeas Okl & nave C o Re I I t or I •
Incl .Looks Ilk•~ Wiry Steps lo the beacn pnvacy & no pets $1075 645·5853 145 E 18th St. COMMUNITY company seeks payroll & Insured ~ICle Part & 714-75t-9t00 ciean 51250/mo ' S775/mo, yrly Avail tit 646·7t04 _ __._ __..__ BAY VIEW Beautiful 2BR Rooms 2706 Lost I Found 2925 accounting clerll wtlh lull ume a 811 bledY 1 ft
-·YR. IDGE G"'TED 2BR 181twBalboa.675-2558 ... E'SIDE 2Br 1•~Ba_l_g HUGE custom dtx nr new 2BA Micro d/w hr• m1n1mum one yeat eit· v a r n U .... lll•IT PIT "'v" " · .. • up,....r QUIET lBr Oen · • & io' MATURE M .... room tn _.1 E ..,.. daytlgnt hours only Al WV" 18A,manyupgtldel.Tlle2 BA. 1 BA ups111rs 1wnnse,pa110.wldllkup k A l $7501 • plece,gatage en Y'ff' houseon Newportee.ch ~rieocempayrv. x.,.... i o bs temp o ra r y Lt bookkeeping. gen qt..
lloo<. s. pl9"tlllon lhut· refrtg. gar 35tn St 1 blk Near storesl bus $795 d:2.539;g;eso-..s.t~ P1rYlBRbelB~hBS·l 1~~•sA99ao5 golt courM Share b•lh fNIU\ ADS lent benefttl • 662-75211 M/F EOE flee 1·530 ~F. 0..... ten W/O & rtlfrlg Incl from bell $775/mo yrly • 253 CabrtllO 5•8·2456 " •Y .... Reta $335/mo ~2-3529 uunu NAiii CIAST __ .. n-a· Corp. Jotlnn, 642-n24
$1100/mo dep 854-6198 •WTllH•-IHTE SEREll All matnt9"anee 1nc1 _ _ ...:••---I In 113-1333 * 112111 &PTS• 3BR 1BA conage w 1D Prestigious IMng. Oulet. *~~~~ ~:.* Hottfs/Mottfs 27 18 ARE FREE ~~ ~~~~ L~~~:~°n11~ u~~Z~ ;~~ IECEm I
From $550/mo & Up nkup Has carports for 2 garden. pool setting. lBR AH 1 l1Mt11 Ullll IUCI Cal·. Costa Mesa CA 92627 pension addtng revot-•IPllT 1'111111 673·4928 or 675·5068 cars No pets $8751mo $625 Elec1ric gates to ._.. Attn C0'1troUe< ut1onary 1ec/1nology to 3B~ 2;;!A :,:.t°Zvt ln~ ATIRACTIVE clean upper Avl t ti 15 722-6294 ~~g~~t:. mf:~~· ~hv N! sPllllll 11121& llTll 111 142·1111 (71416'2..AJ2 t ::'~~~s111~n!':' d!: r, l50 .Aulty 8J1.12ee 2Br tBa Vearty Deck, •EASTSIDE detached pets.• 642-3146 Newly decoraled, frptc, Wkly $175-Up. HMt pool &ITHS lure set-ups or full
w1111 or wflOOll word pro-
oessi.ng needed tor ._.
assignmenll Top pey +
bonuses vacation a hcllo-
lday pay Call . iar. lndry 1 blk to bch 2BR lBA garage W/D -pool. $995/mo 640-1911 steps 10 bch, cable, kite, First Aclora Group ts an mou111 reconstrucllon. -925 • dep 548·3 727 hk·up no 'pets S850 Newport Across the street -maid svc 985 N Coast I II m CALL 645·9857 2BA. trplc, oarage $795 * 1•• 1111* Hwy. Lag Beach 494-5294 FOUND BLACK & TAN •ctors menagemen r have an outstanding ca-D L WM>N Tempcw.,..
YEARLV-3BR, 2BA Steps No pets. t665 Irvine Ave Frig. dlthwaah4tr, stove 1 ••i-wi baby Pug dog w/collar ::1~:; f:!,torprU: ~:;.:.~~~ fuf~~~! 1179-2900 100% FRU
WM~M
. ' . . .
__ __,,-..,.-,.__,=-=-to beach $875 92 1''1 E CLOSE Tl ALL! "2 Call 720·9•22 Incl No pets 545-4955 w IU--;i -•in 1 FO\Jnd on beacll in NB Jects. Classes and rep-pkg &;'ov~nt potenttal
NwPt Crest Condo lg 38R Balboa Blvd ALSO 1&2 Tnree 2BRs lBA. laundry llOl I OLUIU -•l•I lllO* 5k11~7.~'!: 4n~ ~~~4 673-~0l8 rese n 1a11on1 Call for r1g11t indtvlduals ~~~~im •
2'1BA, dbl gar. spa. BA apts, 675-5068 room, close to bus & tBR & 2BR or 2BR Frig, dlshwaaher. stove Nwpt Blvd. CM 6'6-7445 FOUND CAT Male kitten. 213-962-9075. Superv POtt11on avall I~ seeking profeaalonal ,
poolltennls, walk to bch sllOps. Wiit accept OC wlpatlo. All w/pvl gar-incl No pets 545-4855 -----long 11a1r black & mottled E Quel candidate Send re-friendly receptlonlat.
$16501mo tse 544-3049 Housing S725-$7451mo. ages. dsllwshr, cable ILICI T-1 IUCI Roommi tts \I/anted gray vac Eastwood & *Cl F * sume to Lab Manager, Pteaae S«td resume to:
NWPT HEIGHTS HOUSE Corona def Mar 2622 2257 2268. 2272 Maple ready. pool, spa. BBQ, 2724 Haz e 1 brook H B w anted Carlbbean4 tyle 629 Terminal Way "5. p 0 97011, Newport
2BR.2BA,p\11pOOl&JK 28R lBA Soot Hwy,p\11 TSL MGMT 642·l603 lndry lac1ht.es GOOdloc 12101FF 964-5658 menu F I T P /T Costa Mesa. 92627 or, Beacn.CA eHeOor<*I
Grdnr & pool Hf'V Inc patio, garage Xlnt cond •Clean. quiet & spacioos 177 E. 22nd St 631·7376 3BR 2BA upper unit, gar· COM, large 3Br 2Ba noose FOUND GOLDEN RE· 642-20 11 call Rot>erl , 752· t716 714-241-1114
$1,500/mo 648-92116 Outet Reis r eq · d 3BR 2BA. 2 car garage, pa•ISI• YllW •-s .,,., D/W. WI D 1111 up, with laundry, gerage 2 TRIEVER mi.. tema1e CLElll/O••llll P/T •SI OUll RESIDENT • ..,,.R -S t0951mo 675-3446 encl patio. storage S 1125 -ar 1 i'\'195/mo rms avail. S4751mo M/F. 12119 v1c No Sa n -Com tort Inn Costa Mesa """'
ICUIFlllT 111 llA NO PETS 640-2495 2BA 2BA. fireplace. 210 Lugonla 720-1006 leav! mes.sage Clemente 492·9804 M,ature res,pontt ~ S ?:.aF evefllnns PI T FfT con: PIT posltlofl for delull9 Beautfurn,wl d$1600/mo •T1ny qu1e1 tBR collage balcony 2t51 Pacific ---or morn a .,rs..... ..,. · HB t8-un11 9PlbldD.Wll
winter 631· 1336. beam c:e11tngs pauo. fplc IJOQ llSOlllT $950 No Pets 63 t-6107 TSL MGMT 642-1603 COM PROF FEM 25-35 LOST Gray Cnow Dog, 4 Appty in person Quality 1 tact Ron 631·7840 trllln if l'MIC.u. $2501mo.
" -Nr Sl'IPS". ocrr504 Jasmme •L11rgr?B ground noor ---•1 MONTH FAe~ RENT .Non·sm9ker Avail Jan mos...old. .collar NEEDS Hr Photo. 149 R1v.ers.1de 847-2622, ~
Perk Lido Twnhm, 3 ~Ri 2 $799 NO PETS 722·80 11 •2BR ceiling tans dish· TllS IS Tll PlJCltl •BLUFFS 2Br 2Ba. fptc:, t Unfurnished room & MEDtCINEt Vic; Cliff Or & Ave . Newport Beach lllftl·RllllT ~~01~ C:~ .:~5gar e;;~0~: 3BR 2BA. woooburnmg wasll~r. cable. enelosed 2111 UIU &YI pool/2carports/coin w/d bath In 3Br 3Ba house. Santa Ana. NB 64~40 tO Previous exp not req'd 25·30 hrs, Ne.pon Beech ~~~~
Owner/Agt 646-83 t1 l/p. dlw auto dble gar. garage Top area. parll-llke setting s 1050 No pets 722·8011 ~~~ :,.u~~:m~e18:1i 646-~000 963·5733 •rilll WUTIIUS / area c.it _640-79~ • rl'~
new carpet patnt sun 324 Victoria 54&-3706 Beautifully maintained •SHARP 1BR. ne w OeeOee.°759-3313 LOST htlle white POOdle w•r.R• lllYEll IEEIEI --
WEST NWPT 28R $850 deck vaulted ceilings HOLIDAY SPECIA-L 1BR Apt w/garege or tar"""I paint enc narane -Xmas Eve Newpo rt .. ,., F II •---VILLA BALBOA 2BR. sec Call S75·7 t l 3 carporl Vaulted celling. ,,.. · · " " FEM non-smkr to snr 2Br Het 1115 area REWARD! Lunch or dinner New or estab an.cs cour... • ........ __
gale $995 1210 OFF! balcony. flreplaee, pOOI. ~:~~~~•;~::;:~now tBa home w/lrplc In Cor· 673~5065 or 642•3022 entertalnmenl llc:enae route Need new model .. -
NWPT 2BA Twnhm. lrplc. Charming 2BA. lrg kll. sep spa. BBQ. Also 1BR Apt ona del Mar S5001mo _ 642·20 t 1 econo car & insurance ••••••
patio S 1,300 d/r l i p, dt>le gar strg * ALA MOANA APTS t! down w/pootslde patio APT rental. yearly 3Br No ~IS 644-7725 LOST man's gold ring, ---Hourly rate & mileage -•.-
NWPT BCH B1yfrnt 2BR, Soot PCH S t250mo Avl t & 2BR. 1BA, DI • 1st • Security 2Ba No pets Unfurn gar smokey grey stone, ex· CILUOTHS Paid nohd•ys 1noent1Ye1. D • ..
2BA Condo. lab vus now 282· 1t 16. days. beautiful pool area. large No pets 549-2447 space 1 blk ooean.'bay Looking for a ntCe 110fNl1 pando band. vie Superior Don Rooeoo ~s 1n b0nvte1 Current D M v ld J
$1,500 730-6752. eves rec room & laundry room. Avail j11 650·0 ltO Neat non-smkg prof M/F or Pomona Senttmental Santa A/la Is now ntring reporl & proof of in-
LI[)()'., ISLE Elegant 1 bd. Diana/Suzanne close to sllopa & buses SPACIOUS 1BR. Pool. snare w/own9f · Pvt oa value. Rewardl 548-8321 coltec:tora with talent & aurance requlfec:I. Some
sundeck S1.600 DUPLEX $585-$675/mo lndry rm. carport, stove, BEAUT JBR 2BA. open I Back Bay $500 722-7300 -0 0 PE'f-awe ~rlence Bl· company car routes
NWPT TWNHM 3BR. dock beacll Re~ov~::k~Brt? 530TSLWI Wl11Tllson relrl~ No peta $585/mo beam cell. fr~/d Stir M/F to snare 2BR 2BA. tg~ C~S~ S~~D/~euter l•ngu ar-Engllsll & ava11ab~ Aw!Y •t .
s1 850 New carpel wtd gar No . • $3 642· 1401 aft 3 gar Blk lo t>ea ~00 garage. w/d, near t>eac:11 Referral NOYFEE Span1sn Earn $15k to WISTlll ITlnl
SEA.VIEW Guard-gated pets s875/mo 760. t356 722-9012 or 642-1603 M:s, j~~:~~ 997 1· $375 . 'iullls Call Roger •CALL 978.PETS • S18k per yea1 Excellent .....
3BR ll<>use $2,900 Sorry No Pets Hunt. kich 2640 e e leave messaoe 650-t04 I benehts & owo<lunlty !7805 SkypatllC.rcie •E CdM 3BR. lab 0<.n & bay Cl&lllH -1111 Pl.WI , ... ,. "'9 lnternted apphcan11 call vu• $3,500 Cosu ~SI 2624 con HOUSE 1BR 1BA. carpets. drapes, . N B F to snr 3 BR. 1 blk to s a Iv 81 ore 0 r Ev a IRVINE
PEN PT •BR. ocnfrnt llOO OFF iar. d/w, coin laundry 1 blll 10 bay or beach' bell assoc pool. tennis, lleurrtllatwasietlle 558•3366 (11•)211·1111
riome $4.000 •WTllll * 675 mo 2 t t6 Hess $685/mo yrly 675-6606 w/d. a\11 Jan/Feb only z1,,.ro4 ,,1111, ------
B 1BR tBA. lrg fence yard, 846-645 1 or 536-3764 -$3501mo 548·8•9• Lisa aa..J a.--.1. llmAl.,,. LIDO AREA ytrnt dock. • ..... , Newport Heights. 2 sty ,.,.. .... ,.. ,_ BOYS a L Ins ••P P<tlf Non-arno61«
furn, 2BR .. den "4.750 tBR. small backyard, gas ~~~~?:.;~~~~~::,<>; Lot •LI 21121& illl* Twnllse-styte 2 BR ,., NON· SMOKING room-fr• IPI effiee. universal Ad~stment Co. Wattrfr........ .... washer/dryer hook-ups 622\lt Center Walk to bch Garage. No BA. w/d hkup"-encl gar mate needed to s11are 3 lehln te St. I Q l' H B Stev.n 968-0«8 IULT .. ••1·1• No pets 645· 1631 Aft 4 TSL"'MGMT .. ~2•1603 "'' 960-62311167·1776 Nr Ho.Q $850 759·t053 bedroom Costa Mesa · •
-'" house Call 979· 7026. hutelltwt Paritll 11.U. lllP P /T
Nwpt Bc:n close 10 t>eac11 htlter, 1M11 . • • East Costa M ... .,. ..
prot n·smkr to stir•, very s,rillc .... &n I.I. Must have own transe>or-to 3 BR Condo Wt d. gar-• talion. S ~ds on exp
age avl now 5•8· t 760 P~s 3002 OUICIC CAM FOii For appt call 64 1 ·9280 THE HOUDAY• ~!Or Helen, Iv message
Nwpt Creal beaut remO<I COLLEGE PROF 65. -•ru r lfOW. Medlca-I -
2 BR. 2 BA Condo Fem seetis lady, sttm sh 1rev 11 .. 15 v ... ON ••••T-
n-smllr, no pets $500 . '• expenses PO Boll 6751 WOM I YE...ol _.., ....
ut11548-7 139 Hunt Beactl 926 15 ANO I ATUM>AY Pert Time Medical Front !~!ii]~!E[i!!§l "!!'""--'!"'!"-!"'"'-~~ll'Ou CAiii AV("AOE PEA wn office. exper 6"•·8722
Ptrsonaf Stfvkts 3004 Nurtea Aide
I -• •••1 175°0 mm UU IT&FF 2.W IAUI --St•ft needed to wono. wtttl L SUPERIOR WeltcoverlnQ Car "'stor199 Near Santa .. YUl'I m OR MORE dev di• .Oultl In group tel!• eAc:el1enl ~• of lnstallatlon. Removal Isabel/Elden 760·8364 Hourly/Overnlglll Fun CONTACT •· .. J Coet your home. pets & pUlnlt Will Repair. Prompt. Lie --time tor aJll C•JI Dawn PH,,..,,..E --1 l'10me MUlnQ an e etc. Many Reta. 751-6355 •566215 M•rll 642-6842 GAAAGE ·Car or storage 723_5135 VT'I -· Mesll Good benef•t•. 181111
WHILE YOU'RE ~ WE gals lhd hang together ~e:r bF:~ry ine ~~~ ::~ ------.. _-'1_1ac_~~-~_i'_::_:: __ 0
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HOME MGMT CO Stnp-pa1nt-ln1tall. Ad· 714-673-3345
• No Collection •
tarly morning
motor routes
available
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dependable
tr anspor a hon
and hab1My
insurance ..........
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betwtt11 6 a m 5 p m
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HouM. pell & plant care. vice to th• Cfuy 14 yr1 1-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,_.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I
Refs, Lic.llna 5e7-4&47 HP 633-7172 My lime
L!J EJ
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
$2.44 per day
That's ALL you pay for
4 tines, 30 d-v minimum
In the
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
Few more lnfonMtlon
CALL TOOAYll
Ill Fii Liii
Y04.if hMce Dtrectory
Aeprw:atlllve
142-4121
111.111
un• Coast Con11ruc1ion.
Don't d411•y Cell Todey few
911 your Concrete needs.
LIC.51510& 714 748-t3e1
ACROSS
1 Mee1 ...,en1s
6 Matron
10 Kind ot bean
1• V-11• 1!'> ,.., ludw.g
16 BOUQuel
17 llrml
18 Pto0f8SSl\Otl P1r1y membet
20 lnquffe
21 Retreat
23 l and t>O<ly
2 • Op.noon
26 8ftdge move
28 lntonetoon
30 ln-•ments
31 A8VINI
32 Subwey ge1e
36 F1sn
37 CatOIS
38 EUf country
39 Canedl Of't(!
42 --
•• Unw1long •SPY-• 46 Sioe roeos
4t Wltef·
IOftenln9 lf9edleilll so llcl6eteel
51 AeM
S2 Hencl IOOI SS "Thats ragriu··
58 Slmiler
2
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3 •
60 E.,,. s gatelen 6t Food
1111Clleoe< 62 C.nema nem
63 Sun IC)9Khe$
64 09'\dlel
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DOWN
1 Pro
2 Cool orinu
3 Ooet'9I • 5.,,
5 Ocean rout~
6 Ch8'oe , I' .. .,, flvef
8 11 1000 ""'" 9 Pioe IO"'t
10 l MSl tlUI
11 Stetues t2 Aeron's
brothet 13 Sharp ,,.
19 lnlellec1S
22 ()poo9it•
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25 lnp tegment
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27 TIWef'M
21 ()ppoMO to
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2t s.. Of ~ 30 Graue> ._ 32 Sleent
33 Eahllu111ve
34 Plenty
5
35 lo..e oe11,
37 French rtve<
40 Old Ut< coens
• 1 e.o oetel" •2 Aunnets
43 Odd Sp
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48 BroncobuSl8'
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57 L1ie.ime
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OPS e.tn help. Celt today
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