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1991-01-14 - Orange Coast Pilot
u. ORANGE C 0 AST Ir ... ,.., fl "' ...... Good Morningl Generally clear today, with Sant.a Ana beat expected. Coast.al/Inland hips from 75 to 83. Lows from 49 to 58. For the Oranae Coast's most com- plete weather information, ancludina boatins. fi shina and surfing reports. sec page AS. IN THE NEWSROOM . They're tyina yellow ribbons around t~ lamp posts, porch liahts and JUSt about anythina else that stands still ... Not only do the nbbons and bows demonstrate suppon fo r Amencan fortts poised to go to war with Saddam Hussein an Kuwait and anywhere else. 1he sale of the )ello"' nbbons wall help out a patnouc event in Huntington Beach ... All proceeds will ao into the kitty to finance next year's 87th annual Fourth of July pandc and fi reworks show whose theme 1s •• ptnt of Amen- ca ... Pnces for the wcathcr-rcs1st.ant nbbons bcs:Jn at SS for a 24-inch nbbon and bow for a mail box post or hght standard ... The 3~1nch medium nbbon ties around a trC"C and costs $6 .. The 48-anch size costs $7 and fits lamp posts and other larsc a ppurtenances ... The nbbons arc available o n the second floor at Caty Hall. 2000 Main St. QUOTES Of THE DAY .. Evt'ry small shop owner in the downtown area fttls that he or she 1s s11tin1 on a1old mine. They think the city has deep enouah pockets 10 fulfill al/ their dreams. If I wt'1'e a developer. I would 10 our to Barstow and build a shoppm1 center on some land I bouJht. rather than deal with the~ small shop owners who eJKh f«I they own a significant part ofrhe um verse.·· Huntington &ach Mayor Peter G~n. on downtown ~evelopment IAI ). 0 .. The safest way to double }our money 1s to fold 11 OYer once and put it in )'Our pocket. " Kin Hubbard TODAY'S EVENTS A The Cost.a Mesa Ptannina Com- mission will meet today at 6:30 p.m. an the council chambers at City Hall. 77 Fair Drive. • The Newpon Beach City Council will meet today at 7 p.m . in the council chambers at C tty Hall, 3300 Newpon Blvd. •World renowned v1ohn1st ltzhak Perlman makes his Orange County recital debut at the Pcrformma Ans Center at 8 p.m. Call 646-0CPS or 556- ARTS. •The Oranae County Chamber Or- chcstra performs at the Irvine Barclay Theater at 8 p.m. Tickets are SI 2·$29. Call 854-4646. COMING A TIRACTIONS •The next Readtn' PllC ruM Jan. 27. Pleale tend. your-poems. llOrin, ph°'°""* and ....... IO....,.. f>aF, Onllli c..e...., .... llO w. Bly St .• Costa Meta. 92626. . INOE JC ~ 141101 .... 11111 ... 842-··· 9llm CH *ii '-11 Monda y, January 14, 1991 25 cents .: Earthquake predicted In area· by Jan. 31 LOS ANGELES -A seol<>sist who claims to have correctly predicted the t 989 Bay Arca eanbqauke said Sunday there is a SO percent chance of a S.0.mqnitudc or laracr earthquake within 140 miles of Los Angeles by Jan. 22. Geoloaist Jim Berkland also said he was 80 percent sure of a S.O.maanitudc or laracr quake by Jan. 31. Berkland cited the larae number of m issina animals. biJb tides. an eclipse and the drought as the basts for his t>red1cuons. ··Based on the laraest number of m1ss1n1 animals in the Los Angeles T imes classi- fieds in the last I 0 years. SO percent higher than normal tides assoctated w1th the partial eclipse of the sun on Jan. 15, and the unusual earthquake drought of the last few months in the Los Anaelcs area. I am calling for a serious earthquake," Bcrkland sa~. J .. The quake could be as far north as Parkfield __ iJn southern Monterey County) but 1t will probably be south of thert Should the quake be in the Parkfield area the (U.S. GeoloCY Scrv1oc) will vef') hkcly be able to detect subtle precursors within a day or a few hours and issue a Ltvel B or A a1en.·· he said. Bcrkland added that he wanted to dis- courage .. the type of over-reaction .. that accom panied Dr. lben Browmng·s predic- tio ns of an earthquake in early December 1n the Midwest. His predictions can be heard b) calling Quakchne at 900-USA-JOL T nat1onw1de o r 900-844-JOL T in the Ba) Arca "'Our scn1ce provides eas). t1mel) and l • PeynetOrenge COMl Deify Pll04 The view of Huntington Beach from Pacific Coast Highway changes as new buildings emerge amidst the old . Revitalization plans may be revived Editors note -ThlS 1s another in a ~ries of articles on rede"elopment in Hun11n1ton Bach. By Ruu Loar Orenge eo.t o.y Not H U N T · INGTON BEACH -The derailed re· vitalization o f Main Strttt may be back on track within the next 60 days, accordina to city officials who are stud yi na prop<>sals fTom two developers Gettana the second phase of that re- vitalization aoina can't come 5oon enouah for P1ers1de Pavillion (Phase I of downtown ~evelopmcnt) rcuulers. who say they·~ struahna to survive. In fact. Pierside Pavillion. on the south side of Main Strttt 1s now up for salt'. but dt'' elopers aren "t t}ing the potenual sale to tht' sluggish retail market P1ers1de business 0'4ners say the\'·re hurting and sales '40n •t get any better unul completion of ·ffdeveloipment at Main Street and Pacific Coast H1gh""ay. alona with the openina of the dcla)ed Mann movie theaters and the rebu1ld1n1 of the Hunt1nston Beach Pler ··we·rc wa1t1n1 for the other !lhoe to drop:· said Paul Wimmer. O"A-ner of two restaurants 10 Piersade Pa v11l1on Wim- mer also owns Mu welrs by the Sea. the p1ers1de rntaurant he purchased in 1917 shortly after 1t was built. .. You get a little Jaded after awhile." Wimmer said ... We kill project off with rhetonc •• Altbouah the latest round of Phase II proposals was required to be .. propcny- o""ncr generated:· cat)' offietals concede one proposal has no property-Owner su~ pon The c11~·s rede,dopment agt"nq ,., now stu<b1ng proposals from C"oultrup Dc'elopment of Seal Bea h and nu Mon1ca-hased ht"ldon L Pollack Ob- scn crs \a\ Pollack 1s fronti ng tor another dt"' t"loper but officials from both Poll.il ~ and C"oultrup v.ere un· ava1lablt for comment .. The proposals had to be generated b' propen) 0'4nt"rs:· said Barbara Kaiser deput' Cit} administrator Kaiser o'er- sccs the r1t~ ·s rt'dc:"elopment a.genq a\ dut-ctor of ('("Onom1c development .. The rnun(ll ""anted the propert) owners to ha"e one more chan~ to act toaether ~•th a developer and ubm1t a proposal.·· Kaiser said. heldon l Pollack don not have the blck1na of an) propert} owners.. accord- ina to Kaiscr. v.h1le s11 of the nine propert) o,,.ncrs 1n"olved did l&n on to See MAIN STREET~ ..... complete acce s to earthquake prt"J1ct1on , alona wtth curttnt se1sm1c lC"t1vny ·• "d Ryan S. Wood. pres1den vi QuakeLlac. ..The public ha'I a nght to know 1mmcd>· ately about 1 m~nd1ng earthq uake acuvity. Quakelane was developed and promoted as a methocf to get the '-'Ord out 10 people interested 1n eanhqu .. kt°' .md earthquake safet) ... Wood said The call cost\ SI per m1nutt' and S:? for the first, and o•krs a money-batr" guaran- tee -By Clry N~•• Servltt Newport massage capital? Emergency moratorium considered by council By Bob van Eyken Or~ Coast Oaity P"°' !'.E\\ PORT BEA( H -Officials htte arc~ "omed tha1 the CH) ·s d1suncuon as the ma\\:l[te l.lpllal of Orange Count} 1s turn- ing 'e"pon Beach into an Cit) • To add res\ the issue. (It) Council mem- ~" '-'111 lonsider an emergtnq ord1nancx \fonda' placing a -i5-da~ moratonum on the l'i'iuance of business licenses to nas.sage tht'rap1\l'i .ind l alhng for a stud) and other possible ~tnct1on., on the industr) "e"pon Beach no~ has 54 hccnsed mas~gt' parlon.. mort than an) other Clt} 1n tht' count'. and more than tbc c1ues of Hununcton Beach .\nahcim. Costa Mesa. nta .\na and In ant' combined. accordma 10 a repon h' < It) Attome) Rohen Burnham It 1sn·t ma s.agc that '40mes city officials so much, a'i th<.' prost1tut1on and other 111~1 act1' 1t1<.''i tht'' '>a) often go along wi th the trade .. In the past la~ enforcement has tra- d111onall) found massage parlors to be the ~urH· ot cnm1nal act1Hues of vanous kind\ ·· \aid Newport Beach poh~ Set .\nd\ (1on1s .. We haven"t bad an arrest for pros11tu11on 1n 'the past couple of years. but our unden.·o, er operations have found a num~r of unlav.ful acts. and there may be 'iomt' arre\t\ 1n the future ·· Burnham \aid in his report that .. m.iss.ige parlon ma~ ha'e the potential ... to rt'dUl't' propcn' 'alucs m then 1mmedt- Jte '1c1n1t\ and otherv.1sc contnbutc to a bh~ted or skid rov. · condition in the \ 1un1t\ . \ta'isage parlor operators in the oty take (.'\Ct'p11on to the gt"ncrahzauon that their c\tabh'l'hments are hotbeds of 1llcpl activi- t\ ~'eral contacted Fnday qreed to d1'K.uss the matter but said they did not '-'3nt their names used because they feared otfo.:ial hamusment ""I've bttn m the business for 20 yean and r, e never Sttn anyonc convicted of pros111u11on tn ewpon Beach, but rvc seen the poh~ violate people's nahts pie• t) of umes:· said o ne masseuse. \he \aid the city's stnct lteens1na and l."ducat1onal requirements. wh ich include a profe saonal competency test and a thorouah back.around check. have kept prohlems to a minimum. ·Tiranted. there arc places out theft See MASSAGE.-. .. 'Only God knows' II war Is to co•e: U.N. cblll Iraq plans to fight to keep Kuwait eyu..~ A•D 1'111f ,,_ _.., hours Iona. The ratttinl took pl.cc two days before the Jan. IS U.N. deadline few Jnq to _.ithdn._. from Kuwajt cw (ace poeuble att.l('k . ·1 have al-ays said tbat I am nett~ ~imistic cw pasimistic but atways hopcf ul. I Coukt DOt have bin I llm'daly-ermraJ if I was DOC hopeftal... Ptra de Cuellar 1okS rtpOIVn in .... rte.t Albd if IMft would be Wlf. hr "'9 spoodfd; "'II ii I qn•ioa. if you bdicw i• Ood, a.t; Ood It...._ If ,w a"1 bet~ aa God. ... '--" ... • Ollllir ........ •Im .......................... U.N. !ec.nt) c..a ti 6t .. 1M M11• Students send love, hope from II ly ......., liinl• 0.-.. c:... Dllr ,.., HUNTINGTON BEACH -T1* llida M HaltNMw View bOOI MW ·~ IOlnt prcay ........ ~ ... WI .. ftl'e°ll IMll ill 5-1i Anlllia. S;;1n....__. ....... ..... ,, I 11• •-0.lnWI !' ..s Dllr0..:11a ..... • ._ HMlf'll .... _. .. .,.._ ... ._ .. b 6 •• ..... " .. ,,,,...., ..... ,,, ..... Orange Coast People Mllclllllll • 11,------. One of the most successful amateur distance runners in the world, havi ng gained national ~ognjtion in Sports Illustrated and Runner's World mapzines in 1990. Lahtm, 46, has won 102 races sanctioned by The Athletic Congress and competed in 30 marathons. An assistant manager at Bay Side pharmacy ii"! Newport Beach. Lalum began racing in 1980. llAITEI Of ·111 UMHllE Lalum staned runnina to re- lieve stress. but competitively he's reached a zenith. and now he's prepared to take a back seat. After all. racing became stressful and seemingly started to defeat the onginal purpose ... What hap- pened is that I got to be the master of m)' universe. Some, tames. It happens when you're a~----- kid or in college. bur1fgotm~ chance with thi!> at age 3.S. The way I run now. though. it's probabl} mort' quaht)' and less quantity. I run in a smarter fashion and go less males txcau~ I've done most of the things I've wanted to do and l'\.C gotten away somewhat from the highly competata ve end. I've wanted w get back into the l'nJoy ment. Racing can be so stressful and no" rm laking not being an them." NO HOBBY, A RENEWED VIGOR------ Lalum. -Aho set a U.S record last Scptemht·r h~ placing first . '\t'rnnd or tharJ an 213 l'l'n1fil'J races an a ~O-month span. '>urp.1-,,1ng the l 1li(6 marl.. ot 41 h~ Boston·, John Brook. ex- pcm·nled racing a!!. mml' th.in JU!!.t a hobb> "It lo.ind of rekindled m) lOmpt·t1ll\'ene~s. l u1uld do 11 -A11hout ha,ang l•> h11 a ball and I toulJ dn 11 alonl' I J11..ln 't ha' l' to reh on \omehod\ ebe I \\>Cnl into the trenches lor 12 'ears and got ~II th1!1 out ol ·,l -I didn't i..n'(l" 11 "ould be there I "a' 11r.d1ng as I "as grcm1ng older that I "a~ dl rx·ace with m} cum,Xllll\l'ne\<; I didn't get great \;.tll\fal 11un llUl ul m~ \\Ork II "·I'> rrell~ hland. hut I found out I ~oulJ tJl..l' all tho"<.' tru,tralaon' nut on the tral·k anJ ht· ht·tter ·· ... FAMILY AND TRUMPET MAN ------- Born and raast'd 1n Leed'>. '-1.D .. he pla\l·d the trumpet an high "chool and college heforc graduating Imm Minot I n1,ers1 t} (forml'rl~ ~1anot 'ita1e Teachers Collt'gl'l 111 1%7 \\Ith a B.\ degree an Business .\dm1n1!>trat1on Lalum. \o\hO mo,ed to San Diego an 11168. 11,ec; an Orangl' ""•th h1" "-lfe. \1a nannt• lk has a 2()-year· olJ son. < hns "I 1dol11c:d Dot ~\ l'rlO'-t'n I d1J J lot of dance banJ!I and I '>till rfa, a lalllt' hit arnunJ home-I like DmelanJ mU'>IC -Compiled by RicbJlrd Dunn Local News Briefs Man kllled In tb11ter robbery TORR<\NCE -.\ )Oung Valanda man working at a Torrance cinema comple' was shot and kalkJ l·arl\ 5unda' when two other }UUOg men robbed the Lhea tcr a!. the ·la':lt movie of lht' night fin1shl·J. Torrance police ..aad. Torrance police detect1 .. es later arre'itt•d Kl'\. In Waters. 18. and JerT) Lee Strong. 19. at their <1eparate C1ardena residences an cnnnet·taon ""•th the shooung. police said. Both men were being hl'ld JI thl' Torrann: Jail "•thout bail h:lln" cmplo}ees took the gunshot \JCt1m. Donald Larry I krnande1. t 9. to l 11tk (om pan~ 111 Maf') H11.,r1tal "here he died JI 2 2"1 J m V..atl'rs and ~1rnng alkgl'JI~ entt·red thl' t 'nlll'd <\rt1St'> C inema" .11 th1· !kl ·\mn f .1\h1on ~quare ahout I :"35 a.m , th1l'atened thl' t•mplm~'l' <JI 1tunro1n1 .1nJ took 1hc1r propen,, police said During the rohbcn . ont' u t the gunmen confronted Hernandez and \hot him I le and h1., lomrJnaon lkd. Bomb tbraat Interrupts n1m showing LOS ANGELES -:-.tel\ aegocr<. "atlhang "Not Without M~ l>aughtt•r ... 1 film ba .. ed on an \mcncan "oman and lh1ld's escape from Iran '-'l're forn·d nut ol a thl'atn \aturda~ night "hen a bomb 1hrl·a1 "a' called 1n Polite \earcheJ the \\I< < l'Otur. I .t tlwatl'r 111 ( l'O tur) Cat\ l(JI ahout 'll minutes hut c.lldn't find a homh. 'ia1J Ben \nfone. thl'Jll'r llt1l'I of c;tafl "\\l• got the threat about 8 .t) (pm) tl\t'f lhl' rhone." S~lld a 1twa1cr \.\urker \\ho dcl1111l'J au ht: 1den11ficd .. -\ gentleman called Jnd \a1J J bomb "a~ going 10 go off an a k\.\ manutl'S." 1'.ihl' '><lld theater offinab l'\<ll'uated thl' \0<)-~at audatonum \\hl'rl' the film "as pla)ing and CClll cd polile Mo~1es an the other I \ theater~ an the complex Wl're fin ished anJ people "'ere alrcad ~ ~tarting to leave. she said. .\fter police determined the tht'ater ""a" safe. ~nfone said the sho"ang ""as continued. School lllllflt d1nc1 1111111 HUNTINGTON BEACH -The third annual Cahfornaa Compac\s "oldies but goodies" community dance and buffet dinner is scheduled Feb l. at the Old W(.\rld Restaurant. The event as Jointly sponsored by the Huntangton Beach Ctty School D1stnct's California Compact and the Hununaton Beach Chamber of Commeroe. It has rajsed has ra1sed more than SI 0.000 for mmi-grants to help district pupils. For further information. call 964--8888. Cll••• 111111 ...... 11•111111 HUNTINGTON BEACH -The Chamber of Commerce, sponsor of 1he Huntington Beach Outstandina Citizen Award. is seeking nomanalions for the 1991 recipient. The deadlltle for nomination forms to be received at the Chamber offtee 11 Feb. 20 at 5 p.m. The nominee mu.st live or work in Huntinaton Beach. He or she must have pctformed an extraordinary act or service in the commun11y -heroism. human:itananism, chanly, or other aood deeds, and l.bc 1erv1ce mu t be voluntary. Meritorious servioc can be w1&Jun the last year or over a span of years. Nomination form1 art 1va1~ble at the Chamber office located in the Seachfl' VaJ&qe bopina Cen1tr, 2213 Mam t., uite 32. For more infonnation. cau 536-8888. 1"he award •di be ~ted 1t the chamber's 17th annual mc:ctuw and dinner ICheduled Mardi 22 at the Waterfront Kilton. _,,_, ,,,,. ,,.., .. ..,, ..,.. ........ ,. The World •.. In Four Minutes VILNIUS, U.S.S.R. - The Soviet army impOSCd a curfew and named a miliaary commander of the Lithuanian capital Sunday after troopS seitcd a television tower in an assault that JCillcd 13 people. More than S,000 Lithua- nians gathered in Freedom Square to defend the parlia- ment buitdina against any at- tacl. They defied the 10 p.m. curfew for more than two hours bcfor~ dispersing at the request ot President Vytautas Landsbcrgis. Addressing the crowd from a window of parliament. Landsbergis said the military commandant had promised an a negotiating session that if ~[JJ""[~ilZto Lithuanians carry off a civilian who was wounded during an attack by Soviet troops at Lithuanian TV tower In Vilnius early Sunday morning. the people went home. the Soviet army would not try to seize the building. President Bush said the cra ckdown "threatens to set back or perhaps e\<en reverse" the new U.S.-Soviet relationship. Chief of Staff John Sununu said Moscow's actions in the next few days would determr,,e whether Bush goc-s aht"ad with plans to atterula .summit in February with Gorbache'. Bons N Yeltsin. prt•s1dent of the Russian republic and Gorbachev·!> main rival, ,met Ballar leaders in the Estonian capital of Talhnn and la ter urged ;Russian soldiers to ignore orders to attack l'I\ alaans. He Joined the pres1dent<1 of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia in asking the l lnated Nauonc; for an international coiiference on the Balucs. Barbara Bush breaks 11111 11111 111111111 Vt .\, 11 1 "GTON -Barbara Bush broke a bone in her left leg ·unda~ "hl·n she hat a tree \\hall' <,ledding at Camp David. the White H \)U'il' !>aid Tlw m1o;hap occurred on .in ll \ hall whale the first lady was m a -.Inkling part~ "1th Prt'<;1dt•n1 Bu'>h. -;nl'ral grandchildren. actor Arnold '°ilh".1r1enl'gger and olhl·r iul'"'" .. Th1· l•S·\l'CJ1·11ld ~1 r" Bu\h "a' talo.en by ambulance to a' hospital .1 n llager\to\\ n. \fd .. ""here '\.-ra)" revealed "a non--Oasplaced frac\ure lit' the ktl ti bu la honl' ... \aid ht•r rrc\S SC<'rctary. Anna Perez. fhl' in1ur: J1d not rt•quare J l'J'>I. but Mrs. Bush was ordered to ~ta~ off tht• kg for three da)s anJ wall require crutches to walk after that. Sl'ie r1·1urned to the While I louse an a wheelchair. by Shera! LeBeau ORANGE COAST'S ONLY FICTIONAL DRAMA SERIES ft11mJn ~11k' "alkl·J hfl\kh through thl' Thomas Raley Terminal. mancl1ng at thl· nr.ms1\l' tacihl) that had anscn sane(' ha!> la!>t '1"1 10 the Orange < 1')J'>t Mile!> qu1ckl~ llaggl·d do"n ;1 lah. to\\ed his OH'rn1gh1 bag 10 the scat not to ham and !>lumpt·d ha~·k 10 the <.eat. "BalhoJ Ha~ Club:· ~ad M1k,. quKkl) adding. "and af you can get the Ra 1Jer game on thl' radio l'J :ipprccaate 11. .. The l..lh Jmer ohhged and then pulled onto MacA rthur Boule' ard T ht· day was sunn) and "arm and the traffic on Mac.\nhur , .. as light. Males wondered again \\h) he'J never moved herl' C ena1nly has father had oner massed an opponunll} to urge ham to do so. "Raiders· fan-:i·· the cabbie pned. "Kanda If thl') l''l'r get a quanerhack thl·~ might he danger- ous." Males an<,wereJ . "I kno" \\hat ~nu mean." thl.' ca h dn,er. rrankang up the 'olumc of the pla)off game "'t ou got fm·nd.-. 1n town''" Miln c;hnok hie; head. looking out the \'vandow as the c:ib purred r.1 ... 1 Nt'\\ptlrl Center. "Na". not reall~ My dad la ved here. I u\cd 111 '1'1t now and again. Soak up the <,un t heck out the local taklll .. . ··so .... 1w·., \our dad'l" Tht• cahhll' "'as a talkative httle fellow, ~1de' 1h11ught ll1 himself "\\-ell. hl'0 !> dead no"" Rut ~ou might have he-ard of him." Male' rau,eJ a\ the cah Jerked onto ( oa't Highway ... His name "a' (orb t nrk\ Miles .. fo flt· , on1tn11Z·J ... DldY•Know? Southern Pacific angina stuck In Infamous peat bogs •In Huntington Beach: On Jan. 13 1906, the Southern Pacific Eng1nc i'ou. 2215 bl-came mired an thc peat bogs surrounding Smt'ltzer. now the location of Golden West College. The engine '>:'Ink into the soft peat and at took live days and nights of constant labor to get old Engine No. 221.S back on the tracks. The unstable peat as still causing problems. Buildings arc cracking at Golden West, but none of them have sunk yet. Repeating our rormrr request -~nd your historical facts to Did You Know?. Oraace Coast Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626 -or ~'('·ft' sunk. Pollce Log Cleta-fl , • ...., 5 JOHANNfSBUkG. South Africl -Police have amsted 10 people in connection with the mauacrc of 3S mourners at an African National Consre-funeral vi.ail, the aovemment said Sunday. Law and Order Ministtr Adriaan Vlolc also impoted an immediate 9 p.m.-to-4 a.m. curfew on the Sebokena black township, w~ '"'Saturday's pre.dawn attack occurred. He pve police wide powen to detain peoplo and to put down unrest. A statement from the ANC attacked the police for failina to protect the moumc~ sayina it "leads to a loss of confidence ... extendina riaht up to the minister:· ANC president Oliver Tambo promised to orpnize tclf-defentc units. Police sajd two women were burned to death and five houses set on fire in Scbokeng in apparent revenae attacks for the assault on mourners holding an all-night vigil for a slain -A.NC activist. It was unclear who was behind Saturday's massacre. No details on the identities of those arrested were immediately available. ....... •Ill Cll• ... •Illa NEW YORK -From his hospital bed, the Rev. Al Sharpton urged followers Sunday to tum the other cheek after his stabbing by a white attacker. Supporters staged a rally in the mostly white Brooklyn neigh- borhood of Bcnsonhurst where the outspoken black activist was stabbed in the chest as he prepared to lead a protest march Saturday. The wound from a .S-lnch k1tclten knife wasn·rrrrc:threatening. ~ospital officials said. , ..... ..,.., ta 1111 a11m1111• 1n1 LOS ANGELES -Cash-strapped Donald Trump is giving up the histo_ric Ambassador Hotel property where he once boasted plans to build the world's tallest building. · Trump and and a group of partners agreed to accept a nearly $48 million deposit the Los Angeles Unified School District had put down as part of a lawsuit to gain the property for development as a high school. "By withdrawing the deposit. they concede our right to take the property." distract attorney Richard K. Mason s~ud. "from our perspective, that is a major victory. It is not a sale but 1t 1s a concession. Now the only issue is how much (it) is worth." Trump Wilshire Associates bought the 23..S-acre property in 1989 for S64 million. It accepted the school district deposit Friday. "We hate to lose" the property. Trump said m a prepared statement. The New York developer. whose financial empire 1s on shak) ground after a sencs of money troubles. said he believed the courts would award him "a great deal morr" than the district's $48 malhon deposit. -By Tit~ AHocl•led Pt'fft News of the Weird lblly Ill• 1111111 II tlll llltt• If wnt1 """'•• MODESTO -We are what we. um. throw away. Nobody knows that better than seven san ata nans from the ~t!lnaslaus County Environmen· tal Resources Department who are proving 11 in first person. As of Fnday morning, they had soncd through 12 to ns of trash and still had that much more to go. Call th em "garbologasts." They're college-educated pro- ORANGE COAST llily vr.Q.!t. DelYery guerMtee! I ,.i .. llll ,_,.., PIPlf llf f L ii\, Oii bllal9 10 Lii\ ........... ,., .., -°"" CUlllllms ..,_O..,MMm lt.-..._ta~••1un. ......... Uld,..., ............ ,., ... ,_~,...., To mike a oonectlon. I II .. 0..,.. C... Olllr ............ IO......,., .,,.. 11 .,.,.. fl ......,_, T•,....."' -• .... r ~ .. ...,..,.,.._..., ... .._ ..._.L..._ a... ....... V'-..._. Va•4 --&.u.M v-........._r.., 0-."'-0llllll.e ...... UlllLMM ................ ,...-=:~ ::r:: ........ u;ae1•• •O.?'b' fec;saonals dressed an protective moon suits. hard hats. boots and masks and fighting the cold and the odors of a modem-day archacolog1cal dag, The information they gather when they're through wall help the county decide how to en- courage more recycling in order to reduce the ai;nount of garbage thafs dumped ln a landfill or burned m the "aste-to-energ) plant. That means s1artmg at th" dump. -By McCl•tdy N~w• ~rvl~ How to reach us at the O.lly Piiot Clrculllllon Olw'll~ 142-4333 Advert laing Clw l 1d ...,..,. 0...., ~, Edltorta l ..... 540-1224 Spot9 142-4D) ...... llP01lfaa M&-4170 M81nofflce Bwineu oflot 142-4321 ~-t:SHi902 " aym ho&. cutenc and • ttmo1t contro• dtv1et, Wllh I 10111 valut 0($28$ Wtft SIOlcn from a ear In \hr patkana IOJ of the Hohda)' Inn, 3131 Bri•tol 1., br1wctn noon ind 1:45 p.m. Th1.u·tda)'. Some.one entered a ttSl<knoe an the 10600 blodl of later and SHtle two vadtocaset'~ recordetl and cash ror 1 to111 iake or S990. 0 Someone phoned 1 bomb lbreet 10 1n untden· t10ed 1tore at South Coe.-Plan 11 1:16 p,m. Tllunday. No bomb -. .. (ound. D A bu 1ncu at 207$ NN'J)Ol1 Boulevard "'u 1>urat.ar11cd 1 huNSat No further dtta1ls wt'n! avail· 1bfe fnday 0 A car parUd at Orcenv1llt Sttft't 1nd unflOWtr A ~nuc was rtponed l10ltl at 12: 50 a.m, Fnday. A run ""°" ... noc 1nii.ble ,,....,. .. D In th 9300 bloc\ of' Thyme Me.1 a WOft'lln tcPof'lcd that IOftleOM •«* tbe left had!_. and &ad t.lht of htf' 1969 VoluWllftl •tt00 WlllD'!· I 1&• ..... r\\ midtnt 1n the 1600 blod of RhOne la.e said an KQua intanct e11mc 10 vase• and ~ ht left abOut an hOur llttr. a ~ walcb •aluecl ac S2'0 wu m1u1ne. • • . The cbilfy IO~ -of. ft.cial city IWIOntty Ind &be stiff lansuaeie were the tip. oft: The Fred Column was in trouble •in. "You author ed an an kle ... which brou&ht much needed attention to the im- plementation of the Ncwpon Beach recycUna proeram ... the hand..ctelivered letter bqan. "While we as cititcns apenclate lhc publicity you focused on the prosram, your article did the City a dis- Fred Martin service by not clarifyina the ~ ~A. ./! questions you raised on the C L~'-"' .eparation issue." _ _ Apparently we dis- ICf'Viced the city b y poinung o ut some oxymorons in the brochure sent out to prom ote and explain Ncwpon's (and Costa Mesa's) new truh-recycling program . On the front page was: "No preparatio n or separation required." On page three were "simple rules.'' whic,tl included Sill areas o f trash ~paration. We reported tha t people were confused. And that's what licked-off the Ctty of Newport Beach Environmental Qualtty Affairs Committee (NBEQAC. or maybe just EQAC for short). "Wtule you are correct that the brochure notes 'No preparatio n or separation required' and later provides rules which descnbe de Ired separation procedures.~ EQAC continues. nlhcsc rules att merely gu1dehnes to make processing least costly and prevent contam1nauon of recyclables." EQA(' goes on to S&) • "City staff notes that (the brochure) should have read ·No Mandatory preparation or separation required' and the 'rules' noted a~ guidelines. This will be conve)'ed to the public. hopefull) b) )our ne"spapt'r. and future Cit y publicauons We hopt' )Ou will publish the contents of this letter in a ttmcl) fashion " That mut" a micabl) resohed. I asked Dave Niederhaus. general sen.ices director for the city. ho"' things were going. tras h· reqchng"1sc "Yet) -.ell.'' he said "Gn.~at, in fact. In the first week. we n:c)clcd '17 percent" Prell) dam good, seeing that state law mandates 25 pt"rccnt b) 1995 (1 c .. :!5 percent less trash dell\ered 10 landfills> Most c1t11ens are coopt"rating. "We had one lady "ho sorted e,·ef)thing she had. a nd put it all out front in 10 different bags.'" N1edC'rhau'l chud.lcd ... .\ctuall)'. we hope all the peoplc aren't thDt good: ll would be tembl) time-consuming." Retter the 10-bag lad> than the hea vy thinler who called the Ed1tor's Hotline and 'iuggested that pnsoners wrt the trash "Being that "e arc bus) Jnd "Ork a 40-hour week. I see tha1 we rcall> don't have the ume and that the) do.'' H ell of an idea. .\nother thing that had !)('Opie wondenng: When the trash picker-uppers dump the bags and bo'es into their trucks. a machine irowls and araunches and squishes 11. Doesn't that JUSl np up the bags and put all the 'ituff back cohabiting again., Nope. sa~s ewport's trash l)COOn. ··we don't compress ll as much a'i pt'Oplt' might thinl r .. e httn out to the rt'C)Cling center twice and ha'e ~n \Cr) fe" burst bags." The tllg te\l for Nc"pon "'II come in Apnl v.hen lht.> (.RT. Inc reqding lentcr 1s romplcted. full) equipped and running full tilt Th('n commemal 1rash will be pulled into the program Newport Bcalh 1~ one of the fe" mun1c1paht1t.>s "h1ch allo"s compc.·11uon in thl· bu'iincss of commercial garbage hauling. "Most c111es Ileen~ 1ust one contractor." N1cdcrehaus said. "we ha'e about 15 opcra11ng hae. That makl-s 11 a little difficult to pohce. but we "'II .. Meg.a to ns of lac;t wccl 's Ne" port-Mesa trash has al read) been t.ompactcd. bakd a nd 1c; on the high seas. route to Taiwan. and other plalCS -fh('re's quite an amazing turnaround cycle. Some of 11 will be on its wa~ bac k here in Sill to eight weeks as lO)S. kitchen appliances and the like " The)' don't waste a lot of time with our "astc. one might sa). Fred ftf•rtia '• coloma rUJJs Mooh11, Wrda~•d•Y• aod S.t•r· thy1. j Bulletin Board NEWPOltT If.ACM -The Or.,. 0...C o.llJ ..... ~ A.MiNnc:t l..alue or LlpAa lk8ch and the Auut.ancc Letpe of Newpon lkach att co-spon-'°""' a 1tnet o( lec1um known as the 1991 Town Hall cdebnty Knts. The lect\Ut't Wiii bt hdd Oft Monda)'• at IOtlO a.m at Edwards Cinnna 'J"Matt't in Ncwpon Center, Newport Beach The IChcdulcd 1pclicrs arc: Rex R~ (Jan. 28). a lilm cri11c whOK rcv1f'ws appear in numerous national mqninH and the syndicated teJt'Yis1on show ··At the M~in .. : Admiral Elmo Zumwalt (Feb. 2S), a popular formal head or the 0 .S. Navy who W\U discu s &lobel is- sues; Dr. Wamn Thomas (March 2S). the recently rctimt dirtttor of the Los Anp:ln Zoo who wtll discuss 1 rttcnt vo .. 'o Ararat: and Vil'Jima Graham (Apnl 22). an author of five books and former tckvmon talk show host. Tickeu arc av11lablc for the C'Ompletc .enes of four lcctutts at $45 AdJUSt· menu cannot be ma~ af\cr tickets arc pu~hatcd. Apphcat1ons arc procn~ 1n tflc order rttt1\'t'd. To order 11ckc1 call 67)..61.)() ()( 721-8737 YllCA-' 1111m NEWPORT BEACH -To s.howcasc 'its addmon of nc.-w outdoor fac1ht1l"'. the Newport-Costa Mesa Fam1I> YMCA will be ofTc.-nng frtt one-wttl sucst pa~ 10 use the faC'lllllt'S on Saturday from 8 a.m. 10 5 pm. Aerobic classes. a children's carnival. fitness tcsung. a rummage 'lalc. pn1c d raW1np and refreshments v.111 bt' of- fered all da) For more mformauon. tall tht' YMCA at M:!-9990 • ....... (0 TA MES~ -From 15 C't'nts 10 SO cents. books v.111 Ix offered for \ale 31 th<' C'os~ Mc.-!MI L1bra11. 18S5 Par!.. Ave . on Saturda~ from 9 am 10 3 pm NEWPORT BE-\( H -Tht' 't'v.pon Balboa Rota!) Club 1s prMt'nttng "Prcm1crt '1gh1 ··a benefit car \hov. 111 raise funds for C'ancrr patients fam1hc<. drua abuS<' program\ and th<' ddt'rh The t'' t'nl "'111 lake plan• Feb I~ from 6 lO pm 10 '1 30 pm al thl· ;\naheim Citad1um v.11h demons1ra11ons of 19<>1 forr1gn and dom"11c cal'. hors d'ocu"~ v.r\tl'm mu<.1e and a s1len1 auC'l1on T1l·l..c1s arc S50 pt'r ptr~n and can bt' punha~d a11hl· E'en1 Offire or ca II H8-.a-q4 ~ ' Pltfllll .. ••ICllllllty <.O~T;\ Mf\.\ -Thl' p11falb of mascuhnll\ in thr ·qo., I\ lhc topic ul J1'>l.U~\1on for mrn uni\ 1v.1lc .i V.l't'I.. - on TuesdaH from 8 to 9 JO pm and Thursda\s from 4 Ill 5 30 pm -al lhl' Rrrakav.a\ Ht'ahh Corp Thr lO\I 1<. S 111 ptr ptro,on I Jll Q~~. :~Q for rc<.n \altOO\ •••'•elm •c11111 HL!'Tl,<1TO' BE:.\C H -111 111m the Woman's Club v.h1ch 1s dl'<.ltlJl,·J to n1mmun11' 1mpr11H'm('nl 1hrou11h \ olunt~r '!en IC't' aurnJ a pol lul I.. lunl hC'OO on r Ul'\JJ\ JI I I ~I J m I ht'. membrr rcnu11men1 lunlhron "Ill tx- hdd JI lhl' Huntington lkJ•h \\urn.an·\ ( luh .co T t'nth \1 r or mon· mlur· ma11t'n , all 'Ifill-'~~ti NE\\ !'OR l Bl\( H -l he nC'v. Wrsl :'l.lcv.pon C ommun1I\ ( c:nll'r lor wnwr llllll'n' tn "('~pon lk.i.-h " ~king 'olunll·t'r ~pan1\h 1n\1rullor' and 01hC'r 1n,1rullnr\ in 01her das'I('' II \Ou v.ould h lo..c.-10 tealh a das' 10 lh<' cldt'rh .-all Barbar.a al 1>.U.. l:!40 "JE\\ PORT BE-'<. H -( hlldrrn ,,1n P3nlc1patC' in ··Prnchool Plu\ · ··"'-1d National gas prices down LO ANGELE.~ -Gasoline pnet"S across the natio n frll an avera1r of ncarl) SC\Cn cents in recent 1.\-l"d 'i, reflecting reduced seasonal dC'mand. acrnrd1ng to a sut\ C) rdC'a\ed liunday STRINGFELLOW Public Meeting January 18, 1991 7:30-10:00 p.m. The a'ernge pncc for all grades of gasoline at full and self-service sta· taon~ was I '3 4 '\ cents per gallon o n Fnday. a drop of 6.85 cents since Dec. 11. according to the biweekly Lundberg Sunc). Since Iraq·~ Aug 1 invasion of Kuwait. ga.sohne pnces hit a high o f l4709ccntson0ct. 19 -81 Tte AHocl•I~ Prns RUFFELL'S UPIOUTflY llC. .......... c..... ..... tm -llll.. CISTl llll-Ml-llM GLEN AVON ELEMENTARY SCHOOL 4352 PYRITE ST .. GLEN AVON . 1 Purpose To provide tne community with 1nlorma11on about the Record ol Oec11ion tor the Stn~fellow site Agency personnel wilt be available to answet-quesOons and to discuss detail• or the document A COC>Y or the Record ol O.CISIOn and the Adm1n1str1t1ve Record will be pl.ced In the Glen Avon Library ~ted By: Department of Health Services and Environmental Protection Agency. For More Information Call: Bill Draper (916) «5-9S.3 (7 14) 782-4267 6 1 7 Lido Park Drtve • Newport ~ach • CA 92663 (714) 673-8800 Call for brochure The Little tan Oil The Bay ·y Monday, January 14, 1911 • Fat ub," -Tot lt'ntt," -Ancr Lunch 8unch M1n1-hool," and other ac- ''"'''e' b) enrolhna in the Toddlrr 10 Tttn Proanm or the N("lt.l'On lkacb Park Bcxht1> and Rccrca11on Ots-n- mt'nt To t'nroll. C'•ll 644-31 SI RICllllPltlll RI Y to take oath today C11111111..w:. H UNTIMQTO BE.\CH -Women 1n nttd of suppon with <'C>-dCPt'ndcDC). rcla11onsh1p .tad \t'll·hC'allng problemi arc beina offt'l't'd help throuah the Af. fiha1ed C'oun\ehna \t·n ire' each Thurs- day from S lo h fl m f or mo~ 1nfor- mallon call 84K-tm.i ~cm"tltlll All h1&h \Chool\ 1n .\mc.-m::.i h.a'c been t'ncoura1rJ 111 \ hoo"· one \tudt'nt 10 compt'tr in an t'\\3~ (Ompt'Ullon conductt'd h~ lhl· lnJu\1n:1I Leag~ of Oranar C oun1' final"" v.111 Ix ,hoSt'n on Wt'dnc.-\Ja' 'x h11IJr..h1p-. v.111 total St0,000 for lhrt"l "'inner\ (all 476-:!:!4:! lor murl" 1nlorma11on Jaycen 1111 .. ••Ull NrWPOR T tu \( It -Thr 'e"'pon Harbor JJ\H"t°' "'111 hul<l 11\ Januan Jmner mt'l'l1"!1 ffil mhc:r\hlp Jn .. t' nn Jan lll JI lhl H .. ilhoJ HJ\ ( luh Thl nll'l'l1n(! ''h1d1 hl:g1ns JI ti m pm "''" hJH' .1 '~''""'' 1lwml'. v.11h J ski v.car .ind l·qu1rHnl·n1 pn:-..:ntatmn h\ Nt'\l.P'lrl \l..1 < 11 Jilli 111, \hov.1ng ot a hot..Jtl@.ge r '" 1 mm ll' Thl' S 111 h-1 "' luJn .. tinnl:'r I or morr 1nl11rn1.11 11 11 1 .ill l{oh.,·r1 Halo..n JI h~O-lo' I Fllllwslllll lll'llf'I • ( olk-gL gr.1JuJ\l'' luolo..1ng lor v.nrl C.-\ptncmc in 'lalt' Jl'•hl1l\ arc en· lllUra~rJ 111 .1ppl\ h•r lhl' 1'141-•C fr''I< Mar' m I nruh \,'< nlhh r """"''hip PrngrJm f hl• pro~IJIH t(l\l'\ llllllfl' praJuJle\ the 11ppc1rtun11' 111 "'"'"""' .1 tull·lllllt' '>l:ill m, mh..·r in an J\'4·rnhl' mC'mh..·r'\ Offilt' 111 tomm11lt'1 1111 11 munlh' P.irllllf'Jlll' .,,., llr,1 han1! li.n11"'1t'd~1· 111 lhr ( J l1l•lrOIJ '''f.l\IJIUll' lllr••UJh v.nrl. l'\fl•:n,·n11' 111 th· ( .1p'1 •I and rl'(lularh '"'4heJukd J .111, n 1 'M.11111\ar.. '"" tlu<lt'll tn < .t 'IJI 1trJml·n111 r rllo"'' I< I\\ "'lj!nllll'nl\ \lffillJr In th,,,. 1 I lqn,l.111\{ J\\l\IJrt' Jnd c11mm111n· llln,1111.1111' 1ndud1n11 ,11n· '111m·n1 '"""''' llJ1lint' lctt1'IJ111m hill Jn,11"" Jnd k~l\IJll\l' prnpo\JI rt•\1',H1h llhl\1 .hHpl,·.I Hll • 'hl l'f'1• gr.irn v. ill h'• ,., , ,. ,1 m .. n1hl\ '"JX'nJ ••I ~I '"'' l'lll\ 111\'\lh.JI hL'Ot'I ,, I fl'dll '"' llOt \t'lnl'\.lt'I Ill l"IJdUJll' "'' '" lr<1m ( .11 \IJI 'J' ,11llt"lll" '' .11'" ~1.1111 ti \pf'll t JOI\ lllU\1 hJ\t' ll'\l'l\\'d J tnllqtl' Jqmt tn 1111• t\t ~1n11111~ ul 1hr k•llo" \h1p \C'.H f 11. I I I'''' I 1 ht• :ll'PlilJl11>n Jl'J,!lin, I' \l.1r. h I .1nJ ll)ll!t' inr .. r mJl111n '' ,J\.t ,,1hk t>' ,Jiiin~ 1:1 \1 •IV• I l I Bullf'ria Board run' \lond•h •ad TburJd•tor ~ad ilf'mf o/ iotf'rf'•I lo 811/lnio Board. flr•nt«' C OHi D111h Piiot JJI K B•t 'I Cosi. \ff'.u l!,!I Pltll!>«' H'od "' f'Ot ootu·f') •I lt"asl ll•o •Hh twlorf' l.b" f'\ f'OI By Robert Bar1cer Onnee Coeet Deity Piiot NEWet)RT BEACH -Tho mas F. Riley, a to ugh former Marine Corp ~neral. 1s out to proH you can•t kttp a good man down e\'cn 1f ll IS JUSt 14 day~ aner undergoing quadruple bypass surgel). Riley. 78, admittedly weaker than he im agined he'd be from the ef- fects of the opt'rauon to rcmo\c blockages from blood vc~~ls near his hC'art. plan~ lo be on hand this morning when he 1~ sworn in to has fifth term ol olTtu~ at the Hall o l "dm1n1S1rat1on in 'ianta .\na Hamett ~ 1cdl'r o l Huntington Beach and Oon R o th ol .\nahc1m ~lso will tale their ll<llh\ of office at the start of their nl'\I. lour-~car terms "I plan tu Ix-therl· R11t'\ .,.ud unda~ "Thi\ 1\ m' lilth ter.:n and the ne t tour 'I.' Jr\ \I, 111 tlC l ntll'al to Orange (<>uni\ Riln s<11d thourh hc'c, begun to realize 1n the la\t kw da~' that the c,urgn"'.o ha' 1all·n morC' ol a toll - f'ounuil1 \•II~)' Sclllool D11trict \tondl) Chud.v.agon \JnJv.1ch u1cr t>arrt'I\. fru11 JUlll' mill.. T11ud1y Hol dog v.11h h.i~h hmv.n\. lru11 hJr hun lJl\up mu,tanl mill.. "f'dnn da} &.in .ind •hl"l'\t"' llum10 Jppl1 IUllt' \UPl r \haht·1 ( h<ll.111.tlC' m I.. nut.day. P,m, mdl \.mu"llh lfC'\h l1u 1ru11 1u1•c •Jhup mill.. Fnd1) T J< "' m \l'd 'l·tr.<'iahlt• JUI'' lrll IJ \hd\ IJlll "1U<l null. Ha.1l•1toa BH<"lil f ll) \<'boot 011trlN ~tondn l)uc~J1llJ I.I• \JU•l' e71r 11•: \JIJJ lru I Jnd ~U<(' 1 ur"fa' H ut J1" 11n 4 l'iun mu\tarJ JP''lc...iu,, h.iL.,·J h..·an' IH' lrc .. m •UP "'f'dnuda\ < ht, L..-n nu~L'li. and roll l..l'llhup p.ll l.t•I IJll'r nutQtrl\ m•n~t· "' Jj!•'' Tbursdl) C hl'C\.t r;i' 11111 v.11h nw;it ,,tU•l' 11"\4.'J \JIJJ '"" lun tru1I\ t•nda) < hen~: pr11J J1,t•J f>CJ• hn ! "''ICU t>n•"' n1 l.a«•na 8ud1 t alfitd S<-lllool 01smr1 Mondav tkC'I •r , hl'C''>t' hurin hut kllUlC p1d,h'\ "1J\ll Jppk IUl\t' hJ~ lll "' I "l I h 1Y , h•11n· ''' mill. T·~~d•) H Jhhl\ • hC'1.''< f'l//3 "'lU.lf(' l!' , n 'xJr' '""<'J \,Jl.tJ l:\Jr hlf'f'lnf l h1llrJ f'lnt'Jl'f~I·· hJn.111a' and IW/l•n f"<'.I h ' h I nun, "Nnf"\dl\ < h1, L.en nuU ''" J1flp1np. \tJ' •nc.-J , hilled ILA~ L :;) reg. $6 5 to $85 OVER 200 PAIR IN BRUSHED COTTON. CORDUROY a Lrll'fEJlfS , "I'm not a trong as I thouif\t .. Rile)' the sa.tpt-n1sor of t.M f1flh Dt tnct thJt trr11:h~ from c pon Beac h 10 n Clemente. 1d he•ll also II) to attend f ucsda)' board mcc110g and thnl ··.ao up.. stairs" 10 h1!i fifth Ooor o ffice to ian "a couple of papers " He a lso plans to have lunch with his tafT. But he·c, planning to cut back o n act•' 1t1e and h1!i social calendar for awhile He said his wife Emma Jane 1 hning up escons for M>C1al ac.tl\ 111cs to "h1ch thl· Rile''> ha\.e made commumentc, · '2.. Rik\ ..aid lhl· recu~uon hac, fon.ed him lo talt' an 1nH•ntol"} ot thing' that hl' 1:an do and acu' 1ue' he'll ha'e ll• hi.· .arC'ful wtth "for a"h1lc u "111 ha'l' 10 be Rile\ at hall·\l'lt.'l·d tJt(' \t·n \l..inan Berge'>on. J{. Newpon &Jd1 ''lated to adm1n ister thr oJtl 111 R ile' <. crl·monic' Jr( sc.hcdulcd at 10 '\O am at the board heann~ room nl the H.ill {)I \dmm1strat1on 10 < '' l < l'ntn Plant Santa -\na lru11 hl·me' :in1m.1I mill.. Tlllar~d•) 'llJ\ h•I " \lllP' ..al'la lrllU•<' <h<'c" •Jrful '"' i..~ ran,h J1r ll11ur 1un1ll.ll <h1lll·d trc'h fru11 ol lhl 11.i' lh1x oind "'hllt' n11li. Frida) I< 1h ti '-'uc tiun tJlt"r rnun.1' 1rt•oim' '"k'IJv. " lfl••V. mv.1n nc>odk' \ Jntl • r.1J I "Ill I hlll\I 11 n "' 't•pon-\teu l DJhN '4. boo I Distri<'t \1ooda\ lhrihurgc • r hol dog •r ,.. !' lnC"> pmc .. ppk rup •ho1u· ul nut .. Tu~\dl) P.1n1al..t" v.11h ..ausagc or h<il .J.,~ laler 101' pc.il h \l1 t' C'hlllll ul '1 ... "t'dJlf'sdD\ 1 om Jog 11r h111 Jog .. I , .... J \JIJJ .ippl(")31Kt' 'h<>tlC uf mill. Thur dn T url..c' gr .. ,' ~ powton .. h 14alnul hrcad or hot dog. l..C'rn1·I r Ir ·,h h;inana ch01n: ol mill fnday Purl nug l·I\ and ll'a h1"-u11 r h,,, do~ ,,1rr111 \lltl\ v.uh R.tnth d1p t •kd lru11 thrn•<' nf !Jldl.. Ottan \'I~• 5'<-lillool District \tonday· li.imt>ur~a lrc.-nth tnc.-\ v. llh , at\Up.gntJ>C.' 1u1ct' 'hoin· of null T•f''.lda\' Pancal.c.-v.11h \Hup -..u...age' l.ltcr lot' ,11,~J pt·a, h('' ,hutt(' 111 mill.. W~do~ da' l t>m Ji.:~ 111,\(.-d ..:ilad JPl'l '\.,hill ,h1'l<l" •II 1111lii. Tbur da) lo(1)J\I turl l"\ ma,~d r<•IJI I('' In 'h !'iJnana v.ht'JI roll ,h,uLt· .. 1 mil~ FrtU)' P irl.. nu~ch loHTul ""'n' ,h1llC'J lru1t J1n~r roll tho1.c t•I mill.. $99.99 ~~il~'lr~ reg. $45 t o $75 $} 9. 99 INCWDING BOSTON TRADER. SAltATOGA. REGATTA RUPP·lll:W'Pt a ont:ERS reg. $275 to $450 wtSTClff PlAlA 171h & Irvine A.ve. Ntwpon..a (714) MJ.,.., TO $29.99 14.•1 lflll 14'1 ... ·lluJ or 11111 ·buy a h1•1 llday "1tbouah Southern CaJifomia·s balasina market is softenini in the face ofthe weakening economy and, woctina oonsumer confidence, it &till can make good sense to buy a home in 1991 as opposed to rent- lftl, Thia oonclusion is based on a new "Home Buying Decision Mat.rill," developed by ow Orange County office. The matrix c:an offer potential bornebuyers some help in deciding whether it makes more toonomic sense to buy a home now or to rent. The home-buying matrix gauges the economics of purchasing a home compared to renting. based on such variables as down pay· mcnt, interest rales, appreciation, tax rate and maintenance costs. Althouah potential homebuycrs may be jittery about purchasina a home at this time, there arc some excellent housing values in tbe mar- ket, which arc made even more attractive by the fact that interest rates arc coming down as a result of the Federal Reserve Board's recent cut in the prime lending rate. Based on these and other factors. our matrix shows that, from a purc-- ly economic standi>oint, buying a home in Southern California is still a solid investment if appreciation continues over the Iona term, which we believe it will, and mortgage rates stay below 12 percent, which they are. As long as the buyer has enough money to make the down payment and can afford the monthly mort· gage. propcny tax. and other pay- ments. he wiU probably come out ahead financially in the long run since whatever payments he makes will be more than compensated for by appreciation and tax breaks. For instance. if the potential buyer expc-cts the average apprecia- tion rate over the next several years to be 5 percent (modest by Orange County standards) and the cost of fund s (i.e. mortgage rates and fore-- gone income from the down pay- ment) 1s I I percent. the monthly cost of owning a $250.000 home (The averqe monthly rent in south Oranac County is about $870 and countywide it's about $773.) However, the matrix is a theoreti- cal pide. and only takes into con· sideration such essential eoonomic factors as appreciation an~ interest rates. It doesn't wei&h such other important variables as emotion. closeness to one's family, safety or convenience. AJso. it's important to note that while lona-term appreciation of .housina prices m Southern Cali- fornia, coupled with stable interest rates, -41'ake purchasing a home an attractive investment now, that could change if appreciation re- verses or interest rates signific.antly increase. p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-il after ta'< breaks and appreciation are taken into account. i.s $770.~3. According to our matnx. owning ~ this home is economically cheaper ' ~ than rl'nt1ng comparable shelter. 1 Ra.WU ......... c• A-cy elace 1957 Drive Sensibly In The New \'ear. Gary We1combe, • member of I.lie Oru1e Coa11 D•Jly Pilot Board of B•1l.oe11 Ad.,l1ers, 11 • partaer la Keuel.ll La.,ealll•I It Co. I 4'1 N. Newport Blvd .. NB 63-77•0 Near Hoa_i i ·~nEHST:\'.'\IH :\a; Ll\.I:\(; THl 'STS A Free Seminar Presented by SCOTT A. BOURDELAIS ATTORNEY AT LAW TOPICS OF FREE SEM INAR: t REVOCABLE LIVING TRLtST a,·01d lhl' cost and delays of PROBATI:. t REVOCABLE LIVING TRL'ST reduce or ehminare estate taxes t REVOC.\BLE LIVING TRL'ST 3\u1d coosen ator!lhtp proceeding~ t Income Tax ad,·anrages of Commun11' property The Daily Pilot's -:1 Board of Business Advisers Specialty Expert"" .. • ~mpany ' ~ . Accounting John Link Link Murrel and Co. . . . I Auto lnduat.ry Oary Cray Oranice Coaet Jeep F.gle I Finance, Pel"IOnal Gary Weecorqbe Kenneth Leventhal & Co. I Financial Strategies KenNlcolaa Financial Strat.egies Group! Insurance Chip Stassel State Farm Insurance I lnveetment banking Wahs Cnau.enden ID Cnmenden and Co. I Law, E nvironment Ern4!1l Brown Erne« Brown and Co. I Penonnel, TempoT'&l')' . Vicki Heston Henoa Penonnel ,..nc:y l Public Relation• Gloria Zigner Zignerlt Anoe. Public Rel. I Real E1tale, Commerlcal Tom Glb90n IlifTThorn and Co. I Real E1tale, Re1idenlial Milton E. Naylor Grubb It Ellis Re1idential 1Stock1 Alan Freeman Sheart0n Lehman Bros. I ......... ,,.,~ ..... Charles Bucks, CEO of Alrvlalon Inc .• watches In-flight video on the personal TV system that wtll soon be available to first class passengers on some airlines. Video revolution takes to the skies SANTA CLARITA-Airline passengers will be abk to select their own movies. make telephone calls and even buy duty-frtt goods without leaving their seats with a system lxmg marketed by a Valencia-based firm. Airvision lnc.'s video systems arc small enough to fit on the back of passenger scats or on armrests. "Yo u could put all of Macy's department store on this thing. .. said Charles A. Bucks. chief executive of ~·sion. a subsidiary of Dutch electronics giant N. V. Philips. ,. · The· fledgling company has re~ched deals h Mex1cana A1rltnej. Air Holland and KLM Royal Dutch Ai rlines to equip 24 planes with personal video S)Stems. A1rv1s1on plans 10 install systems in the first-class sections of t\\-O Air Holland Boeing 767s this year. For nav1gat1on buffs. the '\\'>tl'm~ feature "Atr Show." a channel w11h a video map showing the plane's progress toward its desttnat1on. Other companies in the 1n-01ght '1deo market are devising s1m1lar products. · ln·1Re-base<l Son) Trans Com Inc .. a d1 v1s1on of Japan's Son) ( orp .. and Pasadl'na-based i.\" icom lntt."mat1onal teamed up last fall 10 mal.l' a S) \ll'm "11h shopping and reservations options. -By lb~ Anocl•te4 Pru1 t Protection from Nursing homl' l u't' t Designate l'RO l'tll decide }our ht'.alth care when }OU are unable Huntington Bc11ch Lthrar v A11lh1111 1<1wm1 Sold, 1-/Jills lead list of wartime investments T.1lhert & (,uldcnwc'I II uni m111on Ht-.•< h WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 16. AT i:OO PM Or•tnl>!« l.1hran M.un l\ran•h t 1Jmt'r 111 Chapman & l enter Ctr} ul Or&nl:t' I llltk t-, l-.11,I ot 1,l,1''><'11 THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, AT 9:00 AM Chf111n ' t 'aft'll'rlll Corn.-1 P11w11 de \·:.lt'nt 111 & El I oru t«I L1111una Hilb Lontmcntal F\rcakfo~I will ht.-"Cnt'd By Jack Sirard t1onc; Trad111onall). in' es tors are ad-W1th the threa t of v.ar JU'il hours , tSl'd to turn to hard asset'> surh as 3\.\3). 1s tt too late for tn\C!>lors to gold and !lthL·r Others prefer do an~th1ng'> .\nd tf )ou're chang· Tn·a-;un bills or that old .\mcnran ing !ltratl'g11:'>. "h.it huni.cr., ot tn· fa, ontl' _ hard Lash 'estmcnt c;afrt~ should )OU dud \\hen Iraq tn\atkd Ku\.\.llt in into 1n the L''enl the "ar of words <\ugust. rhe fa'lt mone) wac; madl' in escalates to 1hat of It' e bulk ts-and lhl' rapid run·up 1n 1he· pncc of 1111 hombs" <,tOCk'i. Wht ie the rc\t ol the marl.ct Or shou ld tn\e'\tors make a .11cl·o,··r"d that the ··ighl-)ear n•" PROPER F~HATE PLANNl1'G CAN BENEFIT YOl. At\D YOl R FAMll.Y u > ~ ~ -. ..-. FOR Fl'RTHER INFORMATIO~. PLEASE CALL 1714> 541 -9569 change al all'? tn l'QUttlC'i had come to a halt, 011 --------------------------__ ..___T_o_u_g_h_t_•m_e..,_<_in_d_t_o_u_gh __ q_u_e~-. stocb t.'nJO)l'd J rc<,urgcncc. "tth i thL· shan·s of 011 giants such as ~ Enon and Tnarn leading the "a» Start Now ••• Lose up to 25 lbs. in only 6 weeks! TODAY 6 WEEKS IF YOU WEIGH 170 LBS. YOU COULD WEIGH 145 LBS. IF YOU WEIGH 160 LBS. YOU COULD WEIGH 135 LBS. IF YOU WEIGH 150 LBS. YOU COULD WEIGH 125 LBS. IF YOU WEIGH 140 LBS. YOU COULD WEIGH 115 LBS. Let Gloria Mar shall des ign a weight .. loss program for YOU! •\ lll·l ll 1< >l''I \.tf'\L' I\, .1 t . I ' 111 ., .. 1 In thl' cn,uing months. most of the\t.> compan11.·5 haH' \Cl'n 1hc1r '!.hare' drop liack liut thq 're prob- ahl) not at hargain-ha .. cml'nl pncn l'\cn 1f thr prKl' of 011 take' otT again Most equtl) anal)sts sa) rhat the o' era II market t'i not thL' place to Ix. OcCUUSl' II \.\I ll almost CCrtatnl} fall 1f <;hots arc lirl'd tn thl' l\t1ddlc a<,I PrL'\Jtltng a<l,tcc 1s that 1f thl'rl'"• a prutralll'd war. ~ou don't v.ant tn hl· 1n -;1ocl.i. until lherc\ a light at the end of the tunnel. Thl' wt•al.nL''i\ uf the <;toe!. marh·t "a~ l'' 11.knt WeJne~a' "'hen Sec· retan of ~tatl' James. Bal.er and Iraqi. f nrl·tgn l\-11n1ster Tariq >\11z met in Sw111aland. Earl) in the da\. the Do'' '"'as up 40 points. but on. ncwo; that the ta lk!. went no· "hl·rc. the market nose-dived. clos- ing lht• d:n do" n 40. a downswing of 80 points Mui.1 pt:oplc art" unfam11tar with war and its etTects on in"cstments. so 1hc lo"'·rt~I. or no.mk ,strategy ts often preft"rred. In man~ wa )' "t'.rt' opcrn11ng in unchaned waters. and analysts 58)' ht!>tom al tompansons cannot be made bcc:ausc 11mes have changed. During thl' "ar 1n Vietnam. 1hc l ' S t•conom) was not in the earl) stngec; of a rl'CC'SSton. 3S ti IS toda) r unht•r a war no"' could deepen the t>conomtl' do"'nturn because 1t "ould force 011 pnrt''> higher. which tn turn rnuld put a c;trnnglchold on tht' t'\ onom\ l\10"1 tn' cstmcnt au1hon11 c'i agree that gold. the dollar and short-1crm liund,, such as one-year Tr<.'3\Uf\ h1lb. "'II ~urge 1f fighting hrL·a~., our Thl' npected Jump ts alm<"I .i 't'lf-fultilling prophec) be- l .tt1\I' tll\l'\IOr'> au1omat1cally put monn in to th csl' ··,afc ha vens" in 11nw' of turmoil \arramento tinant·1al planner fllrl·n.1 I uord offers this 'itmple ad' Ill. lor <1hort-term invcstors: .. < a\h. ra,h. t•a h or gold, gold. gold < 3\h lan hl· an} thing from Trea"u~ hill\ 10 t>ank accounts - 1n gtH><l han l.\, .. shl' says. If \ou're 1ncl1 ned to invest 1n gold. ·do 11 through a mutual fund, <1he alh 1<1c<1 "It\ the easiest wa y 10 gel in and out 1n n hurT) and you don't end up paying as much 1n comm1o;s1 ons as )OU "ould in coins or bull ion." Foord sa)S. One thing to remember 1s that gold 1s not a buy-and-hold in vest- ment unless tt'c; a small perccntJlgc of )Our portfolio. she warns. Gold funds are 'en volatile For in- o;tance. loo!. at· the Franklin Gold Fund In 1990 tt was down about 24 percent. but it was up 42 percent in I 989 In I 988, 1t lost 11 percent but "as up 51 ~rcenl in IQ87. Another probkm "1th '"'·es ting at t1me'i ltkc thco;c 1s that most people don't think th rough their strategy "If )Ou're a bu)·nnd-hold in- ' cs tor. \ ou should suck with 1t. Wartime results arL' not as bleak as )OU ma} thtnk Dunng World War II , thl' m3rkl't did l('mble in the earl~ )ear"i. bu1 picked up qu1tr a h11 tht· last 1hre<.· )cars." she says. Foord advises investors not to make arbitraf) changes in their rortfoho'i, pan1cularl} tn their re· 11rement programs 'iuch as 401(kl plan~ ··Set )Our strategies for the ne" )ear and stick wnh them Being 100 ix·rcent tn' eo;ted in thl" !itock mar- ke1 probabl) isn't wise. particularly 1f :,.ou "'" need )Our cash in the shon term .. J•d Slrard 11 • flaaacl•I c:olomaJ11 for Ill~ McCl•tcby Nr"' ~r.,lt'r. "' . . ' ,, '. ,,, , ' 111.! 11 1r111111L I rl 11 1 \Irr 11 .IJ', L I •1111 • ,,,, • .I ,, 1I"1 111; ''' lrin~ ' , ,, I .. L I 'I I"" ii ,, I ... 1 '"''II\ IX (ll"'ll\1-l'HRt l'if H.}l'IP\H\l !1 1·111! 1<•1l1 11\•11111 111J11 j .. ,. 111' ' rL 1 1 11 •11111" 'I " 111 t 1~11rc J r, t h 111 Procurement laws go by wayside in rush to supply troops in Gulf l ARI \(, t OL'\'iHOR~ ,, d pr"k "' '" .i, 1, 1.:111.I, 111.I "'" .... 1.1i,:1 \11U 1·11·f1 llj •I th1 \I.I\ I• \11111 11 l'IChl I."' >.'.• .. ii A CONVF:-.ll'\T COMFORTABLI:. ATMOSPHF Rf 1h.1r m.1h·· nrn 1 I"' .1 plr.1,lir1· 111rh1•u1 rmh.1r.1,,ml·nt Gloria Marshall FIGURE SALONS "Exclusivt WtigltJ Loss for Women Only" °'*' d.llly •• Ill IO • JO " "' ~ 9 • m to 3 p Ill ,..,, credit CMOS KcepleG Gloria~~~ the lollowtrg olt#M: -------lit••• "111-----lltll lfNm ma••1 "'·--=== ....... .. .. By John King A1soct1ted Prns WrllM WASHINGTON -In us rush 10 move critical ammunmon and sup- pltes to U.S. troops in the Persian Gulf. the Pentagon 1s al times b) passing procurement rules and making multtm1llton-dollar deals on a handshake. With war po siblc any time after the U.N.-authonzed deadline of midnight Tuesday. the Army is scrambling to ship 30-day supplies of fuel. lubricants and equipment parts to Saudi Arabia for newly arrivtd heavy around forces. The kits arc loaded with tank-and other parts expected to we.er quJckJy an combat and arc modeled af\tr peck- qcs created last fall for the fif1t 11mon:d divi ions to rach Saudi Arabia. "I'll hive that in the air within a wed::· M~. Oen. Charles M. Mur- nm AMllllC'AN Hf.Alf AllCl:IA'llC»I ~IWlilW. I , -,',, ~ . , ... ' 1'1111 ............. -- ' ' ra). th<.· .\rm) '!I dcput) ch1tf of staff for supply. maintenance and trans.. ponat1on. said 1n an interview Fri- day Ahhough th ose shipments won't arrive b) the deadline. Mur- ra) ~1d: .. We can go 10 war on the 15th and wr can sustain that war and we can keep the pipeline going, both by surface and air. that will allow us to sustain a war for however long at takes." More than SI btlhon has been \pent on food, clothina and medical supplies for Operation ~n hield. It is difficull, however. to put an tlllct figure on ammunition, pan and other hardware, althoup it i1 at le.st tn the hundreds of m1lhons of dollars. Most recent contracts aren't 1pecifically earmarked ror the ~ sian Gui( deployment. Rather, they will refill stocks emptied to supply the Mideast force, which is ap. pro.cru na 400.000 troopa. Many "iatina contl"ICU ha~ an option &hat allows tbt Pm11ton to order equipment as ftftded at a previously set price. Murray and other Pm..,n ol- fkial1 •id the Anny. .. wdl .. Olher ICt'VlCa, .... ..,... " ....... ~" cll8li Witlll -I ppt .... .adi.. to viola~ COii= procNam and .,,......, law because of emergency needs of the gulf forces. The number and value of the~ deals won't be known until the aarcements arc formalized. For example. the Army is buying hundreds of powerful engines needed for heavy equipment haulers from Roacr Penske, the former race car driver who owns an automotavc business. No formal contract ell.ins. "He was the savior or our nee1 over there." Murray said. "Penske immediately shut ofT all civilian buyen for the bead ena,illc and turned hi• entire production line over to us, ttveral hundred en1ines v~quickly," Murray •MS. .. Th11•1 a time. bis bucks oper- ation -he 1d it on a handshake." A IC'ftiOr ~n...-oftkial in· vo1vcd in procurcrnnt said he was aware the Army and Other acrvic:a had viNtcd contnc:tina pro«durn on ltwral OCCNionl lincc lhC d?,!oyment bqan in AUIUSL 'We'd ra1t.cr not bl¥e to do it thal Wll)', bu1 what it coma down lO ti toi"I b1 IJIC boic* wt ....... Of' llftiw'I &he ...... WI betiew ti needed DOW to P"*CI OW bat and live lhetn dae ~ IO ftPt.. .. llid the oftkill. 11 11H• • -~°'-C'S:. ..... ......... , ....... .., ........................ I L i. • \ Monday. January 14, 1111 • .. .... r-. ....... _ ......... _ . . ,.,,, .. , .. 11'11 lllP toward fttn111: Consult the prol11sl1nal Nora Lehman ,,.,,..,.... fiz,,_ L / ""/' .. Well, a flCC lift's not ao•na to help," my friend snapped on hear· ina that a mutual ac:quaintance has just underaone tome elective sur· acry. "'She has to straiahtcn up the mm that's inside first. .. As you m1aht auess, that rcferen· ce was to psychological "mes ." h occurred to me, thouah. that "straightenina up the mess that's insidt'" is as aood a aoal physically as it is psychologically. I decided that what I was go1n1 to do with this project was t'Stablish some kind of parity between the improvements a &ood therapist and a talented plastic surgeon can effect with those of a proper exercise and diet program. Speaahsu produce the best re- sults -tee above -erso the way to do this fi&tU WIS to ICl pro- fns1onal help. I IWUd by brainstormina this idea with Maurttn Hardina. a per- sonal trainer at The Sports Con.nee· tion in Costa Mesa. A firm belie"er that women can arutly improve their self-esteem by aettang control over their personal well-beina. Maureen wu enthusiastic about what I was at- temptina -that is, to see what improvements could be expected fro m a supervised fitness program for a woman in her early 60s. She suggested that the first step in "doing it riaht'' was to stt if our family dooor. Jack Skinner would find me fit enou&h to act fit. Tests taken, the results were like everythina in hf'c - a combination of &ood new, and bad news. My thyroid tested a little on the low side. And while my EKG was deemed "perfect"; m y blood presurc "not bad" at 138/78; my triglycendcs. at 132. "about aver· age" for my age. my cholesterol level -248 -was "more elevated" than Dr. Skinner would like. Sio~ exercise and diet can have a dramatic effect on lowenna cholesterol. he endorsed the plan. Step Two in volved the conven- tional way to measure one's physi- cal cdndmo'tr -w11h a tape mea$Ure and a scale. Tht results· Magnesium therapy offers relief for.~thmatics Attention asthma sufferers! A safe new therapy with a vel) old drug could be helpful and de- crtase the need for some of the more dangerous drugs now used to rchevc whttz1ng. In the Feb. 27. 1987 issue of the Journal of the Amencan Medical Association. researchers demon- strated that magnesium sulfate. a safe and common!) u~ supple- ment of magnesium. was dra- mat1cl) effrct1ve in rchev1ng the wheezing and measurabl) 1mprov-' ing lung function. Ten patients w1th mild attacks and three hosp1tahud patients w11h St"verc attacks "ere given a 20-minute intravenous in- fusion of mJgnes1um Tests of lung function and pulmonal) resistance (the constnct1on 1hat cause the whee1ing) were mndr before and after the infusion In all patients. 1he rrsults "ere clear The "hcc11 ng "as rehc\t'd, and the lung function tMts im- proved over I 00 pt'l"C'Cnt. Jullan Whitaker, M.B. The rc~rchc:rs arc unsure as to "h~ magn<'"um had such a bcnctic1al efTect on asthmatic "'hcczml-HoY.rver. 11 1s known to rela\ the smooth muscle ~Its that con~trict the bronchial tubes caus- ing the problem. and It 1nh1b1ts the relcaS<' of histamine from "'h1tt' blood c<'lls H1su1mmt' causes rapid pulmonal) constncuon and in- itiates the wheezing in the asthma attack. Asthma patients do suffer. Dur- '"' an attack. there can be such constric11on of the lung passage- ways as to make breathing almost impossible. Each breath is charac· terized by a high pitched wheeze that often can be heard without a stethoscope. These patients require strong med1c-at1ons to oprn the bronchial tubes. Perhaps the most commo n mcdic-at1on used toda) 1s albuterol, taken by inhaler This medication can cause racing of the hean and hC'an arrh} thm1a as "'ell as a drop in blood pressure Persistent use of this m<."d1cat1on can be dangerous. but for mam asthma sufferers. 11 1s the onl) m~·d1ca11on that relieves the whee11ng. In se' ere ca'ICs. steroids are often f'C'qu1red to sho n circuit the allergic reaction ThrSt' drugs are e' rn more dangerous than prrs1stent use of albu1r rol but again. there 1s oftt'n no cho ice Inside Medicine It is possible that magnesium. which is inherent!) safe. could re- duce the requ1remrnt for theSt' drugs in asthma patients Instead of causing heart 1rrcgulant1es. mag- nesium prtventc; them. This stud\ e' aluated the use of intravenous· magnesium. but mag- nesium gt v<'n b' intramuscular in- JCCt1on ma\ "'orl Jucit a~ Y.ell for some One patient 1n this office staned g1\lng her<iclf magnesium tnJecllons C\Cf) other da> at home and wt thin t"'o da} s she was able to stop using her inhaler completcl)'. When she returnqd for a ch~ckup the whee11 ng.. "h1ch was severr wht'n she "'as lir\t seen. had almost d1s.apprared com plctcl~ If ~ou "ould like a cop) of this mt'd1cal stud~. seed a ASE (legal size) to me carr of the Dally Pilot, PO 80\ 1560. C osta Mesa. 92626. Jallaa wtltaku, M.D., aodH>r of ver1J111 HHrl DlseHe" a11d "Reverslo1 Dlabete1" f Waroer Boot1J, 11 dlrtttor of tbe Wllitabr Well•~ lastllete I• Newport Bucb, Dental care uses home-building principles I By Or. Mlct\ael J Gahagan1 Sped.. 10 lhe Dally P*>t ~nt1strv c~n be performed so that your · oral health can last a lifetime. One of the ke) factors 1n maintaining good oral health 1s in1t1al sound planning by }our den- tist. ~nustry defin1tcl> 1s an <in and a sc1enc-e. but 1t also as common- sense planning to"ard an end re- sult. The modem day dentist has many excttmg new dC'\clopmt'nts at his fingertips to offer )OU the most cosmeticall} plasma. structurall) sound and long-last in& dcnustl). sune}1ng to make sure all o r the structu~s of a bu1ld1ng arc in proper position for the construc- tion. So 11 1s with teeth The teeth n~d to be properly aligned to to ler- ate all the forces from the bite This proper pos111on also 1s n~ssan to achieve the best esthct1c ·result The orthodontist helps with the pos111onang of the teeth for the proprr construcu on and for cosmetic appeal. This 1s all ~valuated b} the general dentist who utilizes the onhodonust as an integral pan of the dental trea1ment team. d1agnos1s. 1s able to present to the patient a realistic plan of the "'orl to be done This plan includes the sequence <lf dental treatment. the time nt'Cessar) to complete this trea1- ment and an estimate of cost for the enure plan It also will '"'oh e the edurnt1on of tht' patient for a com- plete underst.ind1ng of all steps from stan to tin1sh Dental treatment planning 1s onr of the ma~or factors m the success or failure of dental treatment toda) It 1s \Cl) important that the general contractor has an arn) of top-01&ht sut'lcontractors and architects he can count on to complete a building as 1t was designed who 1 respon 1blc for lh<' ultimate organ1Lat1on. SUpt'I" 1!i1on and final resu It Please make sure that "hate' er dcnustr) }OU have done 1s proprrl} planned so. whrn the "Orl. 1 com- pleted. therr are not an~ rem:uning problems to be faced in the futurt' Please also make sure that the drn- tm )OU S<'c tales t~ time nect"Ssal) to do a thorough c'aminauon and d1agnos1s This requ1~s gathenng the proper da1a through rad10- graphs. clinic-al e\ammat1on, con- suhat1on "tth oth<'r specialists as n~ed and a final treatment pres- cnt4t1on elooilcal ~QDdltJQD Present GC>lll Height 5' .. 114" S' 4 1/4" Weight ISO 127 Upr Arms 12 in: 10 If}." Underarm JS" 33" Bust •O" 36" Waist 3 I If}." 26" Abdomen 41 112· . 34" Hip 39 1/2" -~ " 36" I Thigh 2J l/2" 2r ' Sports Club/lrvLOC (th11 club and. The Spon.s Connection are both the Oranat County cluldren of Spotu Club/LA ) has the equipment to commit to the comput.c1', and ~ fore to paper, what one knows 1n ont"s hean -that the bod 1sn•t in the best cond1t1on. Don't ask what the numbert in the table below mean -aJthouah I'll find out 1f you really can. Just note that the compule1' spat out what "1s" aod Y.hat "should be ... t.:nreah~uc goats? Perhaps. But would you a1re<' that it's better to shoot -1n th•!> case -too low than too high? (Next Time The E.11erc1sc Pro- gram l R~sult~ of a Mi~rQFit t~st Present Goal Aerobic fimess 89/Fair 34/Fit Bicep srrength 26/Fair 50/Fit Body fat % 37.6/Fair 28/Fit Flexibility 14/Avcrage 17 /Fit Re sting hean beat 81/Unfit 65/Fit • Maurttn Harding. now not pt'rN'ntag,· le> bt.·. at m ost 26 ~r onl> m) trainer but m) consc1enCY'. C't'nt I haH· pointro out that would ~' s she isn 't concernro about btct'p t:tkt' mt· l>c:\Ond "fit" to the ''ath- strt'ngth That"~ good' But she sau lete" cat,~on he me~/} nods and she '4C>uld alw 111,e m' bod) fat sa.' ~ "/ l no'4 ·· I sa). "We 'll sitt'" Center offers solutions Hl'NTINGTON BEACH Ho~ do }OU reduce stress. wome~ and fear;'' Tht' lut1on <iouf'C't' (enter has thC' an\~C'r It "'" hold a kcturt' on tht' 1op1t on \.\ t'dn<''l- da' from ~ lO Ill 30 pm .al the ll'ntt'r I ~n~2 Beac-h Blvd. .\l'>O "'omen dealing w11h stress intl"l"l"'l<'d in a uppon netwo rk. att '"' 1tcd to call the Soluuon Sourcx < t'ntc:r at CbOOI 61 -3305 for a free nt'~ 'l<'tter Have Your O"·n rer~onal Accountant '",\\ l YOUR Tl\H. up to I'> hour'.\ monrh • \\t· ~'ill h.,nc1k \our pcr,011.\l .H<n11ntin": • T .\kt• <. ontrol of \our t' 'pc.·n't'' • \\c pi\\ \01u month!\ hill' • Prt·p.u.\tinn of hud~t'f' • f.-t< ii 1 I ,\t t' t ,\\ pr l'I >.U Ii I r< • II • R d er nu e ' • Rr.,on•lll•· R•? RB 71-1 / 189-0-195 Consulting Group This dent1stl). ho"'ever. has to be planned and structured very much as one would do 1n constructing a houst'. Most general dentists work with a team of specialists. very much like the general contrac1or works with his subcontractors in order to obtain a final result. The general dentist ut1hzes each of his specialists the same wa) a aeneral contrctor uuhzes his sub- contrctors. The general dentist 1s ~sponsible for ovenccin1 the members of n1s team by careful monotonng of the periodontal t~atment and orthodontic move- ment. It also 1s necessal) that the gen- eral dentist have a team of highly quahfied specialists "ho can g1\C him the rt'sults necessal) to com- plete the treatment as 11 was planned It 1s the general dentist. JUSt as 11 1s the general contractor. who 1s the ~pta1n of the team and All of these 'a n ous steps sho uld result in the dentist and the patlt'nt mo' ing to~ard a comon goal. thr soh mg of e'\1st1ng dental problems r;:=========================~ for a lifetime result With o nl) per· 1od1c ma1n1enantt nccessal) Prop- er!) planned. dentist!) can be re- warding. both from a struClural and a cosmeuc '1cwpo1nt The aencral dentist d1agnoscs by obtaining a thorou&h health history and dental history. This is done by collectin_g information throuah a clinical cuminallon. radiographs.. models and other diagnostic aids. As the uchllcct ~ould plan. so must the aeneral dentist diq.nosc. Ontt the dental spcc1alists have told the dentist that the foundation 1s sound and the structural suppon is in the proper position. it 1s ume r.:=========================:;-1 for the general dentist to start con-Servin& Newport Harbor, Costa Mesa, Irvine The general denust refers to a penodontist. who 1s the engineer responsible for the structural sup- pon. The structural support is the aum and the bone foundation that the dentistry will be built upon. If there are problem~ lhe period- ontist shores up lhe foundation throuah various treatments to make sure the aum tissue and the bone suppon of the teeth •~ sound. Whatever dentistry is built on this foundation will be atronaJy 1up- poned and tona lasllna,. The periodonust may make rec- ommeodarions to the smet:al den- tist reaardina uaUMnt nec:aaary ror additional suppon from 1 dental ~suuction 1tandPoinL The trn· craJ dentist may contidct implaati. crowns and bridp to ai~ ed· ditional support. incorporauaa tban into \be ftaal V.tmeal Before powiaa the foadluoo. tbcre it precitr maaurias and struct1ng. This 1s when the 4Cnenl denust docs his work. prcpanna the teeth for cosmetics utilmna veneers. crowns and other modem dental restorauons. The dental laboratory is another member of the team and an mtcaral part of the construction. The labor· tory personnel a~ very much hke the finist\-urpenlen in that their wort is very delicate and attention to detail is very important The acneral dentist supervises his laboratory personnel and is rapon- si~ for their wort. Once this la~ oratory wort is completed. the tcn- eral dentist puts totetM:r the fioal rttonsU'UCllon acconlina to the predetmniMd P'ans 10 that 1t tS tructurally tound and cosmetically pkasina. A tc>Uftd dental plan hu 10 be built from tM p-ound up. Tbcre has to be I ~bk pat)' b all of the people involved wim thit wort. Tbt raponsibk pmon is \be p- cnJ dentist wh(). thfouth ~ plannina with an 1cc111ra1e • HELP WANTED • OtrrSIDI COMMISSIONID SALES RIPS Bxaellent opportunity for lelf-etarter. Plwant ~ S2'0 per week draw, ta cmnml11lial\ an aD al•I .._.._. 71t •ID 021 DAILY PILOT Cl.O.EJ fllw~ ~~<&~/Inn ~jom • ~ 9'00#. .. ,~- When 19 dae l>Mt motor hotel •rvlns the Newport~lleea ..... T Where la the*&. qull&7 aot.or ho&el 700 can to to for peat locad• and.,_, fthaeT For htn Gt11n., BlcleaW117 or B-'n111 Oanll-.. t.Dowl111r-•• offer a cWcie fl 141 p; a•w..aJ)J .._... ... ...-rw inll .. 11115: .. ldnp. two ....... --...... -... Wt .....,._ .; • ._. ...... , ......... w ... ~.r1 .......... . ..... , ,, • ...,.,..tl ........... ,.rt .. R1i11n•~_..._u.,... ' ,._,.. 1au •••"• .. ..... _,.._...., .................. ...., ........ . k ................ J ............ ,,""... .. • ... 11 Ii ............. ,. JfflP&l•M1' JAi, .,., .. ':. ................. 0... ......... .._.., .......... I f bit ... Atro.,. 11' bl •wr L .... I ._ ...... 9I1~M rtu°M ...... ...,., ... ,. .................. JU -.. ...... Your single source for comprehensive medical services. Tbe Medical Plaza Association, located next to Fashion Island in Newport Beach. provides tbe most comprehensive group of physicians, dental apedal- ista and outpatient medical services in Southern California. In one convenient location! Nearly 200 bealth care profesaionall are available to meet your individual health care needs. .,.,.. lclam and dentiltl are available in each of U. followinc ipedalt.iel= A"'1D' ~....,. .... r•'cr ,,., ..... ,..,._ ::,:,:;., •• $.(ti) I 1 I == ..... ....... :-'.:Ct ..... ....... ...... Nw tc l'bal 8 I • 3 If& .. ,,. .. 0. lWIPR 7 .. .. ClmrW•aDmbe Southern California's ... I • manet is softenina in the ID Of IM weakenina economy and, • d''• conswntr oonfidcncc, it ia cu meke aood sense to buy a Mi;ne in 1991 as opposcd to rcnt-bi. This oonclusion is based on a ..., .. Home Buyina Decision Matrix,•• developed by our Orange O.Unty office:The matrix can offer peecntial bomebuyen some help in clecidina whether it makes more economic sense to buy a tlome now or to rent. The bome-buyina matrix gauges the economics of purchasing a borne compared to rcntina. based 18 buy I on such variables u down PIY· ment. interest raacs. appreciation, tax rate and meineenence ootlL AJthouab potential homebuyers may be Jittery about P'&rchalina a home at this time, there are some excellent housi~ values in the mar- ket, which are mack even more anractive by the fact that interest rates arc comina down as a result of the Federal RetttVe Board's rca:nt cut in the prime lendina rat.e. Based on the9e and other factors, our matrix shows that, from a pure- ly economic standpoint. buyina a home in Southern California is still a solid investment if appreciation continues over the Iona term, which we believe it will, and mortgage rates stay below 12 percent, which they arc. As Iona as the buyer has enouab money to make the down payment and can afford the monthly mort· gage, property tax. and other pay• ments~ he will probably oome out ahead financially in the Iona NA since whatever payments be makes will be more than oompensated for by appreciation and ta" breaks. For instance, if the potential buyer expects the avcraae apprecia- tion rate over the next ~veraJ years to be S percent (modest by Orange County standards) and the cost of funds (i.e. mortgage rates and fore- gone income from the down pay- ment) is 11 percent. the monthly rost of owning a $2SO.OOO home ' (The avenee monthly rent in IOUth Oranee County it about S870 and oountywide it•s about S773.) Ho•ver. the matrix is a theoreti- cal auiM. and only takes into con- sideration such n.cntial economic factors as appreciation and interest rates. It doesn't wei&h such other important variables as emotion, closeness to one's family, safety or convcnienct>. Also, it's important to note that while lona-tmn appreciation or bousina prices in Southern Cali- fornia, coupled with stable interest rates, make purchasina a home an attractive investment now, that could chanac if appreciation re- verses or interest rates significantly increase. 'jiiiiiiii;;;:;;;;;;;;;;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ill after tax breaks and a pprcci at ion arc taken. into account, i~ $770.~3. According to our matnx, owning ~ this homt' is economically cheaper ' -than renting comparable shelter . 1 ....... .._._ce A-cv mee 1t57 Dri\·e Sensibl\i In I he New \'ear. Gary lt'~mbe, • member of IM Orup C:0.11 D.Uy Pilot Boar4 of Bulael1 Advl1en, 11 • parmer Jo Keuedl Z..veadlal It Co. '41 N. Newport Blvd., NB 63-7740 Nea r Hoag l .\DE l{~l.\\I >l\l; Ll\'l\L TI\l ·sTS A Free Seminar Presented by SCOTT A. BOURDELAIS .. ATTORNEY AT LAW TOPICS OF FREE SEMINAR: e REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST , avoid the cost and delays of PRO BA TE e REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST · reduce or eliminate estate taxes e REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST · avoid conservatorsb1p proceedings e Income tax advantages of Communll> propert)' ..--------------------------------------------------~ The Daily Pilot's Board of Business Advisers Specialty Expert Company Accounting John Link tink Muml and Co. I Auto Industry Gary Gray Finance, Pereonal Gary Weecombe Kenneth L11Venthal .\ Co. I Financial Strat.egiea KeuNicolu Chlp St.aaKI Stat.e Farm Insurance I tnveatment banking Walter Crouenden m Cnmenden and Co. Law, Environment ErneJtt Brown Emat Brown ana Co. I Penoonel, Temporary ViddB•ton Public Relation• Gloria Zigner Zirner • AalOC. Public Rel. j Real Estate, Commerical Tom Gibeon ruaThorn and eo. I Real Eat.ate, Residential Milton E. Naylor Grubb 4' EUia 'Retidential I Stocke Alan Freeman Sheanon Lehman Broe. . ,, ... Charlea Buck• CEO of Alrvtalon Inc., watches tn-ftlght W'9o on the personaa TV system that wfll soon be av11t1ble to .flrlt clua peaaengers on some alrUnes. Video revolution takes to the skies SANTA CLA RITA -Airline passengers will be able to select their o wn movies, maie tc eptibne call and ~!' buy-duty-f~ goods without leaving their seats with a S)'5tcm bt'1ng marketed by a Valencia-based firm. Airvision lnc.'s video systems are small enough to fit on the back of passcnaer-5eats or on armrests. . . •• .. You could put all of Macy's depanment. s~orc on th1~ t.h•na. said Charles A. Bucks. chief executive of A1rv1s1on. a subs1d11ry of Dutch eleo1ronics gjant N.V. Philips. . . The fledgling company has reached deal.s .wtth Mex!cana Airlines. Air Holland and KLM Royal Dutch Airlines to equip 24 planes with personal video systems. . ·-. A1rvision plans to install systems in the first<lass sections of two Air Holland Boeing 76 7s this year. For na~'1gat1on buffs. ~c s}slems feature "Air Show," a channt'I with a video map thowing the plane's progress toward its destination. . . Other compan1c-s in th e in-flight video market are devising s1m1lar products. Jrvint"-based Sony Trans Com Inc .. a d1v1s1on of Japan's Sony Corp .. and Pasadena-based Av1com International teamed up last fall 10 make a S) stem with shopping and reservations options. -By tb~ A1uc'lalftl Prn1 I Protection from Nursing home Costs I Designate who will decide your heahh . care when you are unable TUESDAY, JANUARY IS, AT 1:30 Pl\1 Hunranl(ton Beach l,ahrory Balboa Room Sa/ti, T·llills lead list of wartime investments Tutt.en St t:oldcnwl'~I Hunlanl(too Realh WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 16. AT 7:00 PM Oran1ie l.1hrnr~ Mn an Rrnm h Corner of Chapman St ten1cr l 'lly of Orun11c .l hlti...ks Ea~• of <;101o-.cll THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, AT 9 :00 AM Clifton'• Cafeleno Corner Po~ de Valencia & El foru l«J Ulj!Unll Hill' Coo11nental Breakfosr wilt be ~ervcd By Jack Slrard tions. Traditionally. in'estors are ad· With the threat of war JUSI hours vised to turn 10 hard assets such as away. 1s 1t too late for investors to gold and sih er. Others prefer do anything? .\nd if you·re chang· Treasuf\ bills or that old .\merican mg stratt·g1cs. "hat bunkers of in· favorite._ hard cash. vt"stment safety should you duel When Iraq invaded Kuwait in into in the e' ent the war of words August. the fast money was madt' in escalates to that of hve bullets and the rapid run-up in the price of 011 bombs') stocks. While the rest of th e mar~et Or should investors make a discO""red that the eight-~ear r1r .. PROPER ESTATE PLANNING CAN BENEFIT YOl: AND YOl'R FAMILY •-. , .... FOR FURTHER INFORMATION. PLEASE CALL 17141 S41 ·tS6f changt' at all ? rn equ111es had come to a halt. oil ~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~----~-T_o_u_g_h~1i_m_e_s~a_nd~_1o_u_g_h~q_u_~_·_ stocks c~o)cd a rcsu~cnce, with Start Now ••• Lose up to 25 lbs. in only 6 weeks! TODAY 6 WEEKS IF YOU WEIGH 170 LBS. YOU COULD WEIGH 145 LBS. IF YOU WEIGH 160 LBS. YOU COULD WEIGH 135 LBS. IF YOU WEIGH 150 LBS. YOU COULD WEIGH 125 LBS. IF YOU WEIGH 140 LBS. YOU COULD WEIGH 115 LBS. Let Gloria Marshall design a weig ht- loss program for YOU! A m 1 rt 1ocs \H:~u . R,·, 1 .1 the shares of oil giants such as Exxon and Tc\aco leading the wa). In the ensuing months. most of these Com panies ha' c seen their shares drop hack. but the) ·re prob- ably not :n hargain·basement prices e,·cn 1f tht• pn~e of oil takes ofT again Most equity analysts say that the o' erall market 1s not the place to be. bccau!.e 11 wilt almost certainly fall 1f shots arc fired in the Middle East Prc,.i1ling advice 1s that if thl·re·s a protracted war. you don't want to be rn stocks until there's a light at the end of the tunnel. The wt"akness of the stock market was l'\ 1dcnt Wednesday when Scc- rctaf) of State James Baker and Iraqi Foreign Mini ster Tariq Aziz mt't in Switzerland. Early in the day. the Dow was up 40 points. but C1n nt'ws that the talks went no- where. the market nosc~1ved. clos.. mg the da) down 40, a downswing of 80 points. Most pcopk arc unfamiliar with war and ii!. efTccts on in vestments. so the IO'-"·nsk or no-risk strategy 1s often preferred . In man) ways we're operating in uncharted waters. and analysts say h14'toncal compamons cannot be made because times have changed . Dunng the war in V1t'tnam. the l i .S. econ om} was not in the early stages of a recession. as 1t 1s toda). Fu rther. a "ar now could deepen the t'conom1c downturn because 11 "ould force oil pnces higher. which in turn cou ld put a stranglehold on tht• econom} Most 1nvestm t•nt au1hori11es agree that gold. the dollar and shorHerm bonds. such as one.year Trea'iu~ tnlls. will surge 1f fighting hreaks out. The ex pected Jump 1s almo'lt a self-fulfilling propheC) bc- C'ausc 1n' c.-stors automat1cally put mone\ into th(·~ ''<iafc havens" in t1mec; ·or 1urmo1I. acramcnto financial planner Elfrl·na Foord ofTcrs lh1s simple ad' ice for short·tcrm in vestors: "Cash. ca'ih cash or gold. gold. gold. C'a'ih can be anything from Trea'iuf) b1ll'i 10 bank accounts - 1n good banks.'' she says. If ~ou're inclined to in vest in gold. do 11 through a mutual fund, she adv1sc'i. "It's the easiest way 10 I get in and out in a hurry and you don't end up payi ng as much in comn:t1ssions as )'OU would 1n coins or bullion." Foord says. Ont' thing 10 rtmember is truu gold is not a bu~ -and~hold iovcst· mcnt unless ifs a small percentage of )Our portfolio. she wams. Gold f und'i arc "Cf) volatile. For in· stanct', look at the Franklin Gold Fund. In 1990 1t was down about 24 perct"nt. but 11 was up 42 percent in 1989 In I 988. 1t lost I I percent but was up 51 percent in 1987. Another problem with invt"Sting at time" like tht'se is that most pcopk don·1 think through their stratt'g~. "If )Ou·re a bu)·and-hold in· vc stor. you should stick with It. Wan.me results arc not as blt"ak as ~ou ma } think Dunng World War II . the market thd terrible in the earl) )C3f"'. but picked up quite a bit the last three )t'llrs." she says. Foord ad' 1scs investors not to make arbitrary changes in their portfolios. particularly 1n their rc- ttrcment programs such as 401(k) plans .. Set )Our strategies for the new year and stick with them. Bcina 100 percent 1n' cs tcd in the stock mar- kC't probabl> 1sn 't wise. panicularly 1f )OU \\Ill need )our cash an the short term." J•ct Slr•rd J1 • ll•Hclal columal11 tor tbe M~rdy N~rn ~rvl~. '" '""r J,. ",., .an.I 11-.111111111: ( d.,11.1 M.1r,h,1ll\ ,ll·I .. I "' 1....'"'' l r rnn'" 1111 ,, 11-pl h l'lll«lll dranl ~1.) •'1''''1" rr,·r.11 ~.•i:•·,I 1111 ,J "' '"'"' ''' 1'>11\ ~XCI L''>l\'I I X~RrlS~ H.)UIPMF.'.'IT , dl·,1..:rw I 1 '"'·le r Ill' \••Ill \H·11:l11 1. '" .111.1 " ., l •11 , ,,, •ni "'' 'r•, •. .i ll)!IH< j'lt •l•l1 Ill' Procurement laws go by wayside in rush to ·supply troops in Gulf CARIN<, ('OU!\ ELORS rl·.11 rr.•lc"''""·''' , .. l!lll•ll· .111d l·nn•1ir.lli(l. ~11u l'\1•n ''er •I thl' \\,I\ 111 \our ,,,.,~ht I'"' L?• .. ,1 A CONVENIE:'llT COMFORTABLE A TMOSrHERE rhat m.1kc~ l'vcr~ vm1 a plea~urc "11h11ur cmh.ira ,mcnr. G oria Marshall FIGURE SALONS "EzclNSiw Wtipt Loss for WoMm O"ly" _,.._,,,"' IOllhm S....U,tal'll tohm Mll!Of"*<Mdt~ GbM .,...,,., con.-•nfl>• a.we ,,. ...., o1fM: -----19m .......... ......... ---..... .,. •• -QMll .. .... ---.. ..... ......... ........ ---Si! _ _., trwt• ... ..... === --iii By John King Auoclated Pr ... Wrltet WASHI NGTON -In its rush to move criucal ammunition and sup- plies to U.S. troops in the Persian Gulf. the Pentagon is at times bypassing procurement rules and making mult1milhon~ollar deals on a handshake. With war possible any time after the U.N.-authorized deadline of midniaht Tuesday. tbe Army is scrambling to ship JO.day supplies of fuel . lubricants and equipment pens co Saudi Arabia for newly anivcd heavy sround forces. The kits are loeded with tank and other perts e>lptttcd to wear qukkly 1n combat aJ\d arc modeled aft.a peck- ~ created last fall ror the fim armored divisions to reach Saudi Arabia. "I'll have lb.at ia Lbe air within a week," M~. Om. CMtta M. Mur- ra). the Army's deputy chief of staff for supply. maintt'nanc.e and tran~ portation. said in an interview Fri- day. Although those shipments won't arrive by the deadline, Mur· ray said: "We can go to war on che I Sth and we can sustain that war and we can keep the pipeline going. both by surface ind ai r. that will allow us to sustain 1 war for however Iona it takes." More chan SI billion has been · spent on food, clothina and medical supplies for Operation Desen Shield. IC is difficult. however, to put an exact r.,urc on ammurlidon, pans and other hardware, althouab it is ac least in tbe hundmls of millions of dollars. MOit recent OOOllllC'tt attn't specifically cUmathd fOf the Per- sian Gulf dcplOyineat Ralher. dley will r'fflll 11ocu nnp1ied ro supply ~-------------.. the Midalt b'ce. "'9idl i1 apo .,.,...i .. 400.000 ........ ' ' . , ' __ ............ -. MlimJaillUllC!llaUW .. 'feU oplioa tMt allDwl lhc Pr'atlNI ID °'*'~•,···· • .......,. •. pre~iomly .. price. ......, .... adllr • 9 lf9 ,,,. ... llid ... Amy, .... . .... , ........... , ' ........ ... ............... "'fl' .. ... ...... " ·-· law because of emeraency nttds of the gulf forces. The numw and value of these deals won't be known until the agreements are formalized. For example, the Armr is buyina hund~s of powerfu cn,SJnes needed for heavy cqujpment haulers from R•r Penske. the former ra~ car driver who owa1 an automotive business. No formal contract exists. "He was the 11vior of our fleet over there," Mu.nay uid. "Ptnske tmmcdiatiely sbaat Off all civilian buyers '°'the bead eftllne and turned his entire producdoa line 0\ltr LO US. IC'felal bundred enaines v~quickly." Mwnly llid. '1'hlt's a ume .......... .,.. a11on -he id it on 1 M II**" A emior Pe-11.... omcw t. volved in procwcmn1 llid lie w aware die Army ...S ads ••k:lla hlld violaled a>e~ prac1t w •.,,.,..on...._._* deDkn--~~~· ill A C 7 • '"••· ··-.......... ft ·:.=-... il---IO ., ............. . ~ dllSFll! .. -------= .. ;,re ....... ..•. , .. " .,,.,..:= ..... . Nor a Lehman Attention asthma sufferers! A safe new therap wi1b a very old drua could be helpful ~nd <k- crease the nttd for some of the more danscrous drup now used to relieve wheezing. In the Feb. 27. 1987 issue of the Journal of the Amencan ~ed1cal Association. rcsearchen demon- strated that mqncs1um sulfate. a safe and common!)' used supple- ment of ma,ncswm. was dra- maticly effccuve in relieving the wheezing and measurably improv- inJ. tuna function. Ten patients with mild attacks and thrtt hospitalized patients with severe attacks W"Crt given a 20-minutc intravenous 1n- fus1on of maincs1um. Tests of lung function and pulmonary resistance (the constnction that cauSC"s the wh~zing) were made before and after the infusion. In all patients. the results were clear. The whttZing was relieved, :ind the lung function tests im- proved over I 00 percent. ·we11, a f8'le tift'• IOt eo1.. ao help," my friend anapped on hear- ina that a mutual ec:quaunancc. a.,. just undeflone tome elective ¥- ICfY. "She ha to stnilbt.en up ibe mHS that's inside ftnt." Al you miaht auess. that rdettn- ce was to psycholQlical .. mesa." It occurred to me. thouah, that .. straiahtenina up tbe mcse that's inside" is as aood a pl physically a it is psycholQlically. I decided that what I was aoina to do with this pro,ect was establish some kind of parity between the improvements a aood therapist and a talented plastic suraeon can effect with those of a proper exercise and diet program. Jullan Whitaker, M.D. The researchers arc unsure as to ~ hy magnesium had such a beneficial effect on asthmatic whttzang. However. 1t 1s known to relax the smooth muscle cells that constrict the bronchial tubes caus· 1ng the problem. and 1t inh1b1ts the rclea5t of histamine from white blood ctlls. Histamine causes rapid pulmonar) constncuon and in- • • Speriali• prodllce the belt ,. .... --above -crao 1be way 10 do lhit f'iiht W11 IO ~ ~ re.ional help. t llUted by braiasaonnina this idea with Maureen ffardins. a per.- IOnal trainer aa Tbc Sporta Connec- tion in Costa Mesa. A firm believer that,, women can pally improve their Kif-esteem by tettina control over their personal well-beina. Maureen was enthusiastic about what I was at- temptina -that is, to sec what improvements could be expected from a supcrvited fitness prosram for a woman in her early 60s. She sugttted that the first step in .. doina it riaht .. was to sec if our itiates the wheezing in the asthma attack. Asthma patients do suffer. Dur- ina an attack. there can be such constriction of the lung passaae- ways as to make breathing almost impossible. Each breath is charac- terized by a high pitched wheeze that often can be heard without a stethoscope. Tbesc patients require strong medications to open the bronchial tubes. Perhaps the most common medication used today is albuterol. taken b)1 inhaler. This medication can cause racing of the heart and hean arrhythmia as well as a drop in blood pressure. Persistent use of this med1ca11on can be dangerous. but for many asthma sufferers.. It 1s the onl y mC'd1cauon that relieves the wheezing. In severe cases. steroids arc often required to shon circuit the alleraic reaction. These drup are even more dangerous than persistent ust of albuterol. but again. there 1s often no cho1ct Inside Medicine un family docior. Jack Sklnner, wouJd find me flt eno~ to ,et fit. Tesu taken, the results ~ like evcrythina in hfe -a combinat1on of eood news and bad news. My thyroid tested a little on the k>w side. And while my EKG was dttmed "perfect"; my blood prnure "not bad" at 138/78; my triaJycerides. at 132. "about avcr- qe'' for my qe, my cholesterol•· level -248 -was "more elevated" than Dr. Sktnner would like. Since exercise and d)et ca(l have a dramatic effect on lowcrina cholesterol. he endorsed the plan. tep Two in volved the conven- tional way to measure one·s physi- cal condition -with a tape measure and a scale. The results: It is possible that maancsium. which is inherently safe. could re- duce tile requ1r~ment for these drugs in asthma paucntt. Instead of causing hean 1rrcgularitin. mag- nesium prevents them. This study evaluated the use of intravenous magnesium . but mag· nesium given by intramuscular in- jection may work JUSt as well for some. One patient in this office started giving he~lf magnesium injections ever) other day at home and within t\\O da)s she was able to stop using her inhaler completely. When she returned for a checkup the whttzini, which was severe when she was first SC"Cn. had almost disappeared completely. If )OU ~ould hke I COP) of this medical stud). seed a SASE (lcpl size) to me care of the Dally PUot, PO Bo, 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626. J•llu wtlltter, M.D., Hl.llor o/ .. Reverslaf Hr•rl DJu .. e" alHI "Rennlo1 Dl•Hte1" (W•n1er BoobJ, 11 dlrttlor ol t.k Wllltter Welblns lulit•le la Newport Bnel. Dental care uses home-building principles I By Or. MlchMI J. Gahagan ~ to tt1e Delly Plot Dentistry can be pt"rformed so that your oral health can last :i lifetime. One of the ke y factors in maintaining &ood oral health IS initial sound planning by )Our den- tist. Dentistry defin1Lely 1s an an and a science. but it also is common- sense plannina toward an end tt'- sulL The modem day dentist has many excitina new developments at has finacrtips to offer you the most cosmetically pleasina. st.ructuralJy sound and lona-la.stu11 dentistry. dlllJOOSIS, IS able to prncnt to the patient a reahst1c plan of the work to be done. This plan includes t~e ~uenct of dental treatment. the lime neccssar) to complete this treat- ment and an C$t1mate of cost for the entire plan. ll also will 1n,ohe the cducauon of the patient for a com· plete undernand1na of all steps from start to finish DentaJ treatment planning 1s one of \he ·maJor factors 1n the suettss or failure of dental treatment today. It is very 1mponant that the general contractor has an 'lrT'I) of t~fl1aht subcontractors and archnccts he can count on to complete a bu1ld1na as It was designed. who 1s responsible for the ultimate organization. superv1S1on and final result. P1easc make sure that whatever dentistry you have done tS properly planned so. when the work is com- pkted. the~ arc not an)' remaining problems to be faced in Lhe future. Plcast also make sure that the den- tist )OU sec takes the lime nettssar) to do a thorou&)t examination and d1agnos1s. This requires pthenng the proper data through rad10- IJ'lphs. clinical examination. ron- sultallon with other spcc11hsts as n~~ and a final treatment prn- entiuon. fa ~bDnl ~andltr2n Pretenl Goal Height S' 4 1,44· s· 4 1.44" Weight ISO 127 Sports O ub/lrvifte (this dub ud The Sporu Connection are bodl IM Oranae County cb11dteta. ol 5pGrt9 Club/LA) ba the equapment IO commit to the computer, and ~ fore to paper, whal one ~ !D o~·s heart -that lhe bod dG t aa the best condtt1on. - Upr Anns l2 tn." Underarm 3S" Bust 40· 10 In." 33· 36" Don't ask what the numben in the table below mean -aJtboulb - rn find OU1 1f )'OU really catt. Just note that the computer spat out what .. 1s .. a_nd what ··should be ... Waist 31 1n.· Abdomen 41 &n." Hip 39 in.· Thigh 23 tn." 26" 34· 36" 22" Unrcahst1c aoals? Pa'baps. But would you agree that ifs bener to shoot -in th 1s case -too low than too high? ( ellt Time The uem.se Pro- gram.) R~~ults Qf a Ml~roFit 1~~1 Present Goal Aerobic fitness 89/Fair 34/Fit ,_ Biceps strength 26/Fair 50/Fit . Body fat% 37.6/Fair 28/Fit Flexibility 14/Averagc 17/Fit Resting hean beat 81/Unfit 65/Fit • Maureen HardJng. now nor ~~ntage to ~. at most. 26 ~r onl:, m} tratner but my conscience. c-enr I have potnted out that would saH she isn't conc-emed about blC'ep take me ~\.ond "fit" to the "ath-st~ngth That's •ood! But she Sll)'S kre" C'IJtc-go°r) he merely nods and she iAOuld also like m} body far sa.\S. ··r 1.nol4 .. I Sii}, "We'll tee'" Center offers solutions HUNTINGTON BEACH - How do )'OU rcdutt stress. womcs and fean" The Solution Source Center has the an v.er. It v.111 hold a lecture on th<' topic on Wedncs· da~ from 1 lO to · 30 p.m at th<' (' Ct'nter. 18352 Beach Blvd. "lso. women dealing wtth stress inlertstcd in a support network a.re '"' lled to call the Solution Source Center at ( 00) 62 ~3305 for a free n<'~ ~letter This denttstry, however. has to be planned and structured very much as one would do in coostructina a house. Most general dentists work with a team of specialists. very much like the general contractor worts with his subcontt1c1on in order to obtain a final ~uh. It also 1s necessary that the gen- eral dentist have a team of hiahly qualified specialists who can give him the results necessary to com- plete the treatment as it was planned. It 1s the aeneral dentist. JUSt as 11 1s the JCneral contractor. who 1s the cap~1n of the team and All of these vanous steps should result 1n the dentist and the paL1cnt moving toward a comon goal. the solving of existing dentaJ problems t-;::========================~ Tbc aeneraJ dentist diagnoses by obtainina a thorouah health history and dental history. This is done by col1ectina information throuah a clinical examination, radi<>sr1phs. models and other diagnostic aids. As the architect would plan, so must the aeneral dentist diqnose. The aencral dentist refers to a periodontist. who is the enr· neer raponsible for the sttuctura sup- port. The structural support is the sum and1he bone-foundation that the dentistry will be built upon. If there ~ problems, the period- ontist shorts up the foundation throUlh various trallMfttl to mak~ awe the pm tiuuc and the bC>M suppon of tbe teeth are sound. WhaieVCr dentistry is built on this foundation will be auonaJY· IUP-poi1ed anct ioaa _mu..._ The pa iodoetalt may mate ~ Oftlmetl dllioel to tbe ltDel'll .. tilt .=:f .,.uneat '*' 111ry b · ....,ontomaclee..a reconWtioa •.tpoiat. ne ~ n deldill IMJ caalider iaplsa11. aww and W'.ids:ra. to li¥t ~ ditioMI .....,i. • .,.,.. .... .... ilrlo ... Im.a 11•m11L ... PDWi• ... •·*~ .. ii ........ "" for a lifetime result Wlth only per- iodic maintenance necessary. Prop- erly planned. dentistry can be re-- warding. both from a structuraJ and a cosmetic '1cwpoint. Your single source for comprehensive medical services. =-~ .. 'f ....... ,.._ • 0 11 rs • ,,, 5 ... 1 , • .., I 11 ..... ,..., ..... =::;;· ......, a w a an u r ....... • a • R J I 8 II Oe•• . • • ..,. (IJ') •f I d I o.•z ·~ .... ,,...., r.i· kl 211 • 'a ... ra' r 1 =~ 1': SS a 5 t ··Opera is alavc and well in Qr. ante County," said David OiChiera, diR!Ctor of Open Pacific, celebratina its fifth eeuon. Indeed ... Madame Butlttfty" sold out its scheduled perfannam:es 11 the Oranse County Pcrformina An Center and anolher mattncc Md 10 be ldded. Sa1urda)"s ~nina nl&ht festivities included a pre<oocert chicken dinner at the Hyatt Rqen- cy Irvine for patrons; and a pasta and dessen hobnob at the Center Club afterward for east and be- jeweled and glittering "Butterfly" lovers. "Madame Butterfly is a great way to stan out the New Year:· sug- gested center patriarch Henry Segerstrom. Hal and Jeanette Segerstrom con- fided 1ha1 ··Madame Butterfly" was their first date more than 40 years ago Bill Robens. who with wife Barbara underwrote the production \\ilh their $1 00.000 donation. had ne.,.er seen "Bu1terfly .. "We'~ new opera enthusiasts ... Robcm adm11tcd .\ctress J uhet Pro" Sc.'. attending the post reception said she was also "JU'>t gelling into opera .. oc1ahte -;ongb1rd Glona had Gellman confided he knc" all the "ords because once upon a tame 'iht· ~ng 1hc role of Buttcrth Board r haarwoman Fl oss ~chumacher guessed she has seen ··suncrth .. more 1han an' othei: opera .\ii "ere impressed \\Ith the ka1url·d Japanese-horn -,oprano ) o~o "..atanalx· FYI Rita Ful'Ole\ manager of Rl·au1on Pans an <;( P confirmed '>lghting' of s1ngl·r "11chael Jackson la-;1 Thur<,t!a~ < lad 1n hlack leather. Jad,,on "'1th 1hrl·e hody- guardc;, c;aun1erl'd into ReauJ On to inspect thl· hand·pain1cJ d<.•n1m iackrt<; on dt<,pla' Did hl' hu~ an~ thing'' 'u Ru1 he did pop tor a le"' autograph" Jad,,on al,<1 in- ,,.,,,,, Co11t Art ,,,., Carol Humphreys Sp«'led the new smog-art exhibit at the SC'P satellite of the Laguna An Museum. ... "Vanna Whnc as my new best fnend. She's great." noted Jolene Engel upon returning with husband Dick from their Aspen 1uant. Both were amon~ the chosen few attend- ing ~ite•s marriage cettmony to George Santopietro. ... A clannet serenade and a cookbook-cover food butTet created b) .\nn Dreyer highlighted Roger and Janice Johnson's intimate 4'0aree on Fnda) evening for the popular Carl t. Clair. new conduc-t . '°' or the Pacifl( Symphony. "T111 John10D'1 lguna Beecb. oceaDo ~ Shaapi-1.a was filled to the brim Wlth cWTCnt and prospective Marstro Socacty memeben (~ symphon)' donors) delirina 1 pri. vate moWMnt with the Manuo. In a public moment charmer St. C'tair sasd, "A symphony OC'CMstra 11 a rcfkct1on of the community 1t ser- ves. Our orchestra is alive. on the move, hiah~spiritcd and ~icated to bnn1in1 the finest musjcaJ an to Orange County." ... Shirlee Gu.enhcim was sur- prised to find 2S of her "closest pals'' awailina her arrival at the Ritz Re taurant last Friday. Amona those attending the happy bin.hday celebration were Mary Lou Horsnb). Lynn Hirsch. Mary Roosc.,.elt. Lillian Auor. Pat Allen, Dot C1ark and Dori deKruif. No ordinary cake would do. Hans Pna- er prepared a seven-layer mousse torte for pal Guggenheim's cel- ehrnt1on. ... Lea P<.'tcrsen and her friend Lilli Labash kicked up their Oranse Count) heels in Sbcramento last wttkcnd and attended aJl three night of parties cclebratina Pele Wilson's inauguration. Amons 1hc fol il. she spotted were cclebnt1es Maf) Hart. Henry W1nkJer. Hugh O'Bnen and Wa)-ne Newton plus locals l\nne and Bob Badham wilh daughter Phyllis. Buck Jones. RQ&cr Hobbs and Harriett Wieder. Ed and F1oea Schumacher. Lee Peyne/Orenge Cout Oady Pt1o1 Hana and Francc10 Ayala with Renee and Henry Segerstrom Opera Pacific director David OIChlera with Marla del Carmen Calvo and board presfdent Dr. Walter Henry. 'addiction' is psychologically :based DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a profeuor or psychiatry and di- rector or the Se1Ull Dysfunction Prosram at Loyola University in CblQIO. Lut Stpt.cmber, I 29-)Ur-Old -oman came in to see me. Her husband had lcn her. She bu two children undtr S ycan of qc. She took a clippina of your column out of her puflC and.said, .. Thjs 'is what I have.'' The column was 1boul a 22· year-old woman, smart and pretty, with a college dqree, lov- ina parents and many friends. She wrote. "I started to have sex wittr an occasional auy when I was IS. When I went away to co11qe I became wildly pro- miscuous. I told myself it was because I was away from home for the first time. in a new city, free of parental supervision. It's been five years now and I'm wane than ever. J've ..slC11L with so many men I wouldn't re- cognize half of them if I bumped into them on the street You advised her to contact Sex Addicts Anonymous. The reason f am writina is to point out that the term "sexual addiction" has ~ome a popular catch phrase th~ past few years. People tend to believe that wildly promiscu- ous behavior as an addicuon an the way that alcoholism 1s an addiction. This is entirely falSt' Alcohols m an\ol\cs the abuse of a chemical which categonzes the problem as ph)siological. There is no such component an out-<>f· control sexual behavior. The woman "ho came to see me had a manic-depressive 111- ness. People who have this prot>- lem are often hyperactive. have insomnia. sometimes spend Ann La nders ~ ' ,, ... • -· .u:s money recklessJy and mdulac an fast dtivina. I put her on carefully monitored doses of drugs and she is now stable. back at work. and living a normal life. -Domttna C. Renshaw, M.D. DEA.A Oil. RENSBA W: 1'ut '" •• , .. latett1tlal ud ... formadft letter. DEAR ANN LANDER : Re-j prchng your comment an a column about so many couples ' waiting to have fam1hes until their luxunes were paid for: This letter as from an older mother who waited until the two kids an m) husband's first marriage were paid for My tum came when t 1 was 40. Our son. now 16. has an I energetic 56-)eU-<>ld mother and a 'Cf) health)'. active 9S-ycar-old 1 grandmother. I don't hear him 1 comphuning that we're too old. -Jeanne Roper Garman.1 New Orleans DEAR JEANNE: YH _.... lllte I great aroap. YHr 109 11 a lucky lad. YHr laa1baM la plnty lucky, too. Tell lllm I said so. Botwinick brings optimism ·with him to Newport .Harbor .\ h11 of lnll'fl'\111\g Jrt Ol'\\\ \\,1\ unco' crcd at thl· rl·n·n1 hcnetit rt·· l ep11on for Lagu nJ Out fl'at·h ha1 l- ing the opening of Eh-;1um Thea1n- cal's Orange Count~ prl·m1cre of "Bum Th is." !'I' pla~"'nght Lan- ford "'!Ison Laguna entrepreneur and an patron George Raab. a do'il' fri end ofa l.'cna1n member of lht• Nl'"P<>n Harbor .\n Museum's hoard of tru~tees. mcn11oned 1hat 1hc long. arduous search for a museum direc- tor "as at long la'it 0 ' er all 1hat Mov/1 l/1tln11 ....... ludl 8Al80A (INIMA 10' f 8A'llO.ll l 'V•l ~ 1, I' Hldd•n A9enda 1 ~ If IOWAltOS N«WP'Otn CINIMA lo< '-'"''"'" "' '' ' v" b44-0/l!O n.e --··· l'an Ill Il l I \ t If \ Green e,.,.~ '!).. • .e • \ ~ O•rM•• w"tt wo•v•• , • • v .. IDWAltOI ISLAND CINaMA '• • ,,, • .., ... , . H ..... Alone 1P w I t I MerM-Pt 1 , JO I \ q • A• ... •"I.... ,.{, I I I() • 4 I " I( 6 Mt·s•'J ·• ~ 4 .. I \ H ft 4 ICl .... ffe-1•" Cott • I 11 ·~ • H '. • 14•-kluonM•""• rr, 1 \ •\ 11 Not W-MJ D•"""fer t• If i • lfj fl 10 10 UDO CfNIMA ""4f"'wpor1 8'td ,., '4""'f H VII ul'" ' If!!\() nte Slt•ltff .... PIJ • • N ~n TH&ATn J'l()S f "' .. i• .... , ' I , I~ ,,,_ft ....... M ... ,, I "•\ Cati .... IDWAltOS CIN9MA CINTI• I 101 H•ibo• l \ot ~.,. • v,.,~ C.-nri-1 •1• 4 1•1 "--"'""'-ll'Cil S •S 11 10 I\ I M•" '""9 A Ultte ~ fl'Ctl \ II • \ ~ rwnkd 111 h.1prx·n "a' tor lhl' hoard to g1' l lhl' 'ok rl nu1n1ng tinali\I fl<, JPr'rt"..al \\ rl'pc1rwJ 1n 1he Dail) Pilot F r 1 d a ~ m o r n 1 n g \-1 1 c h a l' I Bo1"1n1l~ tormcrl' oi the (or- wr.rn C1a lkf') 1n \\a<,h1ngton D l and the Brooli..h n "1uscum has !x·l'.n namrd 10 thl' m11'1 pn''>t1g1ouc. P." 1t1on "1th in lhl· Orangl'. Coa'lt .irt \l'enl'. .. r he bo..ard I\ hl·aming. I hat's lhl' feeling around hl·rc and "'e arc Jll 'e~ l'\Utl'.d ..ahout 1hc future •· SJ1d ....... , T.illl"'f T- l ......... , .... v ......... • ""• """''• How•• • IOWA•DS CtNIMA t-t it.. ll'w11 Advr, iAw.-•• .,,,. ~ • .,.., Ill ~ H-80• TWIN CIN8MAI ....... ,., Ii'•" I '4 I\ • \fl~t 6-~ t\O lll .... ere-te" (Oft ' I \ " II •O r \ / O•f'M•• """" Wotv•• ,. • t 1 tc- Mil.A COllllCMA ~'-A.ti. t ti I ~" 1 ; 4; ,'\ ldwM• IC:hHH'h•"th I I .t N1 TOWN CUfTllt CINIMAI 11' ~\I ,..,,,, • • -Wit-... , o • ...,. •• , ,... I Kl I 4 " I '# • . "°"'· Aton• ) I 4\ .. t A it_ 4 T"• ............ StlJ ~ 4 I • ' IO .. D..w•• ...... Wetwet ~. I I IJ 4 4 1111 SOUTH COAST !'LAZA 81 l•li \,~,,, _. 411 •I 11 Aw•entne1 1rt1 I • 'lJ i •. t. " J JO I C-e See ,,.. P' .. •tllt• fl!• ' I '> • • I ~ 4\ I H•"'let 1PC.,1 lf) I 4 4\ I I\ t(l SOUTH COAfT Vl&.LAGI '"''" '""~' •I 8""ol ~40-0~•· J M-•"4 A Llnle ~ 1P•,1 ' • H ~ WN't T ...... T-"'<:. Ao I TN 1tw.N "-• 1111 \ I JO 10 , _ .......... fl'C.f loo~ I IO 10 t~ II_... .... IOWAllOS C~ QllfTWC /1111 W"'""'' "•• 841-0110 I .,_ .. WW. Wei¥ .. 11'<1 I II 1 10 )() 2 ..... -lf"Cil\I\ 1 JO '1 4\ ) .,.._ c...11 lf'G I )f 6 I\ II )C) 10 4\ 4TM .......... fll 1"1 i I IS .an c\uhcrant \1 a\lnl' Cia1txr. puh- hl II\ J 1rl'1.1<1r for th<.· modern art rnuwum 0 fht" "or~ nf one \Cr) C'\cept1onal 111111n Jtor an .irt1 Ill C'\pressaon "'t'nt on hne Thursda} night an C o\t.1 \ksa al the Laguna .\n Mu- '-l'um·, \outh Coa-;1 Pla1a Annex "k.1m \hl•ll', Thi.' ~mog Coller1or" " a mrH'd media in<1tallat1on that Jl tualh u\l'' th<.' polluted at· mmphl·rc of I m .\ngcles to crcall' hrr 1magl'' Aw ... •"'"9' t(1 IDWA•OI HUNTINGTON TWIN "\' I V • • \1 .... •-••9"'1•" Cott re, 11 \ • II Ill I\ • Mer.-.itlt r ' 4 • • v I\ IPVlll THI UHIVl•SITT CIN8MA •I •\ C-.,• '" •• H 4 .... I ltlw••• lcluo•"•"'" 11'<, 1 It • lO " H ' 1 , TJoe -•IJo•r 111 11! • Kl I lO 10 4~ ~ ...... " c-. ,. , , ,, \ 1(1 II I() I\ • Tioe lt .. tU. Ho.,1• ·• 4 JO ~ t JO \ -W",._ MJ o__.,.,.,. ,pc, • lJ 4 •\ 1 " •\ .. _. At."• • \ II JO 10 JO wooo••1001 CI NIMAI ..... f .t '"""At ( ~#' L'f ,.,.,. \ tJb\\ H-• ~ P(, t \ ) I\ \ 4\ R 0 I\ I ~ WM't T-lft9 T-P(, I ~ \0 <I lo() J M•" '""9 A Uni• lH)I tPC.1 l 4\ ' '~ • .,, ,, • )() •• , 1 •• , 4 lttw .. 4 kit--11'<1 I Ii I 4 \ C 1, I 11 ~ l('IH \ ... , ... ,.. Oowft ""4•• 1C11 I ICl M••M-• 1P<1t \I\ I 4\ 10 flmtllllllly POUNTAIN V~ TWfN I • hunl f<I"">"' Ill .. 11111) "--· I'( i II \ I( I\ I H .. ..,,._ .. , o ......... '", I ,, ~ , IC> 10 PAMILY POUlt CINKMA t l •nt"H•"" \I •A• I t 1 ..,........, " • \ I 0 1 .......... It I 4\ I> II I\ 10 I\ )1-.. 111 kb-• ,,.r, 1J I ~I\ l It l 4) ·~WM'• T ...... T-1l'r, 111 4 Il l Me" '""9 • UtUe ~ fl'C. I IJ I '>(') "'.O t 4\ l.llllllllCll IDWAllOI lount COAST LAGUNA 4 II> \ I r••U H~•y 4'1 1111 I n.1 ..-~ Ml 111 \ II ~-, .. I" • '., 4 ., , ' tO ' .\bclcs pla ce!> her t0mplex mech- anisms on the roofs of buildings .ind lca\l.~S 1hcm fo r a pcnod of 11me Later the stencils are remo~ed and the d1sgus11ng particles "'e art> forced to hab1tatt> with leave a photograph1c-li~c hght to dark fig- ure to ground 1mpnnt U-t'~ hope <\hclcs'<; Lurrcn1 '>Ulll' of work as \hort-lncd -don't get me wrong. 1t'o; ex1raordanal} "'ork I JUSt don't l Jre for the medium. .\t the end of the opening. \OUflC'> dl·~ rahed J mad scene of c;cream1ng teen-agers and a qu1ckl) emp11ed g.ilkf') It seems that the mul h-famcd pop singer Michael Jach on tapped into South Coast Pla1a nght al closing umc with an 1.·n1ouragc of \crious sccunt} t)-pcs. "v1oo;t of the art lovers turned into ~pontaneou\ Jackson fans and ru'lhed out for an autograph from the pc.·rsonahk !>upcrstar 0 \t the lohh\ of the First Inter- ''"'" ... 7:00 7:30 8:00 II D II • • David &anenberg state Banl an do"'ntown lagunil &ach as a c.Jrpnsingly strong exh1- b1t1on for such a venue entitled "People • .\ Retrospective." a body of work ranging from early '88 to last year by the mult1-1alented French national Se(ge Armando. -\rmando. 4 I. 1s the designer-in- staller-preparer at the Laguna An Muscum and has been active 1n the Pacific Rim an scene for over 20 years. with 1h1s anqu1S1t1ve ta~nt roaming from San Francisco to the Mc,1can R1 v1era an search of an- sp1rauon Has recent suite of work as a ~nes of famous ponrans of rt'bd an1sts such as .\rteau. Braque. Man Ray and Lqer who we~ on the cutting edge of 1he1r genre of creat1v1ty including poetry. music and painung. The First lntt'rstate exh1b1t10n of Armando has bttn up for several "'ccll.s. but due to the post1ve ~ac uons rt'CCIVcd the displa> will con- tinue a whale longer. It had been scheduled to come down at the end of the )car Why Armando's aa nvas and maxed media asscmblqes featuring entwined sucks as not 1~ a p llery 1s a question with no easy ansv.cr. Al least they arc aeccss1ble fo r viewing and purchase. which is. after all. what a pllery pcrpctra\es to do. only With much less access to read) cash. For more informatton. call 361-9613 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 ..... Meftt.-""11 CIC Rooll .... (A) (In SW.01 dA•lllla M~. JMU9fY 14, 111117 .... L I tl 1 It 9dit0t & vtc.preeklent ......... managing 9dtt0t . • -WJ 4 ntght edlt0t ......... Jtl, chairm8ft .... W ...... Jtl, executive vtce pr•dent • • L 11 l L vice prelkSent & gener81 menager Edltorlal Ling time coming, but worth the wait Leonard James must be proud and we arc envious. In case you don't know the story, in 1972 James hauled a keel rnto lhe backyard of his Costa Mesa home. Then he bepn the incredible task of building his own 45-foot yacht. There had to be at least a few of us who laughed at the thought of anyone actuall> sticking to any project of that magnitude long enough to complete it. Democra~ bungle war debate, GOP joy remahis constrained Dad we ever undcre umate the persistence and abilities of Leonard James. Last week after nearly two decades of work. the detailed and handcrafted Connilen -a combination of the first names of the 56-)ear.old cabinet maker and his wife -left her backyard home and met the sea for the first tame. Her maiden voyage was a dramatic one. It started when the lar&c craft had to be hftcd over the James's house by an enormous construction crane. It was taken te dock on a huge trailer. Neighbors and other well-wishers came out in force to watch the unusual sight. The whole event caught our fancy. What a wonderful thing to show for your free lime. evidence you did more with your life than sit an front of a television "'atchmg old movies. We wish James. has wife and the Conn1lcn all the best. May she and her owners find glass} seas and man} more adventure . Today In History Toda) 1s Mondav. Jan 14. the 14th da) of 1991 Thcrr art' 351 da)s left in the year Today's H1ghhgh1 in H1stof). On Jan. 14. 1784. the United &ates ratified tht' peace treat)' "'uh Enaland lhat ended the Rc,olu11on· Br) Wnr On this date In 1639, the fi~t cons111ut1on of Conncc11cu1 -known a\ tht" "Fun- Write to usl damcntal Orders" -was adopted at a mccung in Hartford In 1742. Enghsh astronomer fd· mond Hallcv. who observed tht" romel th31 now bears hi~ name du~d at the age of 85. In 1898. the Re'. Charles L Dodgson -belier known as author Le" 1s Carroll -d1 t'd less than t"o week befort' his 66th b1rthda~ -By ,.~ AHocl•tH PnH ......... ._ ... ...,Piii... The._ ......... ~ corr~ice from our reedeo-• we ,.ques1 let1«• be kept to llPC>'O•lmalefy 300 worct. Any COi I eepondenc:e ~tty tonger then 300 worct. wM be s><ln* •I our di9crellon u • f $' k j, ... f 2 t or ,...I Community COl'M*•t.,._ .. •-ved rot ..._ pertinent to cttlea and towna Mono tN Oninge Cout. Guest comrneotartea may pertain to any pubic ...,. Edttof'lel reeponaee we ~ r0t rec>uttat. to edltonal poatttons of tM-_ _, ..... LMI.,. con8ktered 10 be Nbetoua Of In bad t•t• wtll not be ptlnted Wrtt.,. we limited to tour eubmlUklna a month. All~ mu•t be llgMd and lndude tM wrn.r'a addr ... and tMphone number for \llttflcatlon ~- L.et*9 lh0utd be ldd,.._, to tM ..... --.... 330 W•t Bay Stteet, Cotta Meu. CA 92627. Attention: Lett.,. to the Edlt0t. Wrtt.,. with queationt.,. Ufged to call tM Dally Piiot at (714) 842 .. 321, Ext. 352. ' WASHINGTON -Republicans reacted with unwonted glee 10 con- gttSs1onal Democrats. divided and uncomfortable as they mishandled Pm1dent Bush's call 10 war. But wiser heads an the GOP constrained their JOY. fearful of the political cost when the bullets began to Oy. The abysmal performance by Democntt1c leaders was enough to cheer Republican spints, sodden after a miserable autumn of d1scon- tcn1. P~1dcnt Bush's step last Nov. 7. doubling troo~ in Saudi Arabia w11hou1 rota11on was not perc-c1' ed b) the Democrals as des1roying the ra11onale for sanctions Because congressional leadtrs de· layed formal debate until less than a weeil. before the Jan. 15 deadline for ddam Hussein's withdrawal from Ku .... a1t d1s~ntcl"\ nsked Sttmmg less 1han patnollc and being linked w11h left·"' 1ng freshman Sen. Paul Wcllstone of ~1nncwta Ho"'c' er. a da~ of rC'Ckonmg ma) be nranng .\stute Rt'pubhcans kno"' that the margins in Congrrss. rcOtt1ing the public mood. aft' enough to OC'Clare war but not enough 10 fight 11 for long. They sec sal\at1on from r 1thcr an ckventh hour d1plomat1c sc11lcmen1 or a hghtn1ng m1h1ary \ 1ctory. Otherv.1sc c;hort-tcrm gain ma) be long-term pain for Rtpubhcan fortunes The mo mt'ntar) GOP bhs'i strms from the demonstration that Demonats arc not read) for scnous presidential politics. ThC' pany's rank-and-file lawmakers grumble that their leaden should have called for a post-clC'C uon debate onct the president put the huge, non-rota11ng m1htar) force in the dcsen. Congrc!>S then could have exam- ined the w1~om or foll) of this course as last "'cck's humed procttdmgs could not. That mistake was compounded by House Ma1onty Lca~r Richard Gcphard1 1"'0 weeks ago when he suucsted cutting off funds for U .. troops 1f the prcs1dent sent them to war without a rongrc s1onaJ OK. That was a reflexive 1mitauon of · the Democra11c ma,ontics taklna ---------------------------, away ~capons and ammuniuon for ., IB I J TFl~I-Nicara1uan Contras and nsked re- Best of the Hotllne Ed1t«•s note· Tbe folJo-..11t1 are simpks of Orate C..t DaltJ Ptt.t'• reada' comments ind cnu- o sm Tbe PUilt publiJbe$ tbne rrspc>nsrs on • rqul.ar l»Sts ind enrour-.s its ttlldtts ro call the Editor's Hodm~ 11 641-6066. Plcatc rtmind Jim Wood lhat people who bit' hislory art doointd to repeat 11. He doetn't look too ~ '° mwaber tllM Hitler CO-.. ha~ belii ltQPPid bcti'e -ph I d cM .... woctd iaeo Wortd W• II 19d I IM9* Sedde• HWUI -tie ~ ..,. ---c.. 0 A cc.••l • Jim Wood's ..... Jaa. 10; I jllil -IO__. ... llr .... :• Orie ca·. s l' ••• ...... lcilWCln• .... ._ ._ .. rtnt Hit..._._.• ............... .......... • f hi ....... •• , u' ............ cDllW .............. _ . . w. ......... '* n•nlrn ...... ...,..,. Rowland Evans stonng tht' part\·., Vietnam-era image of being not quite patnot1c enough The finishing touth v.a~ the ad· vent of Paul Wcllstonc as the t"pllome of toda) 's (Xmocrat o freshman ~nator in mcmof) has been so bumptious .\ftcr 1m· portuning V11:c President Dan Qua~k dunng the swcanng-in ler- emon~ b~ handing him a '1dco of a M1nnewta peace ml'C'llng. "dis· tone deliH'rcd onr of the Senate's earliest ma1Jen speeches r' rr - a screed against war In the Hou~ uOP cloakroom. lcadrl"\ l·rad.ed that freshman Ot-mocral\ "<'rt "° far to thr kft that the pas 1on1tel> progrC"S\l\t' Rep Barbara Bo'C'r of California had become the model for moder· at1on Republic ans "'ere" unJt'r· s1andabh dcli,htcd to forsct b.tnl fa 1lurrs and broken ta' prom 1~ and "'a'r the Oaa of ~tnousm The amb1,alenct of the GOP nc\Crthcless 1s personified b) Scn- atr \11nont) Leader Roben J Dole He rttumcd from • '1s1t 10 ~an sas t\\O "'l-cls aso in a gloom~ mood -about chan~ of l'' rr leading a Stnatc maJonl). about economic prospects and cspec1all~ about war In Kansas. as elsewhere. people arc not ready to fiJ)\1 Iraq. Af\cr publicly uagcstina 1h:u rr· stonna the emir of Kuwait as not v.onh one .\mcncan life. Dole put has houlder to the whcc:I as the pm1dent's floor kader -but not "'ith his heart 1n It, say GOP scna- l uied 10 undcmand that onl)' two th1np in life were ccruan. death and wes 1 thank )OU a.n add a thard. that after a rain the IMdia .-ill alway repon that there 1 no relief' for the dfOU&hL I nonce )OUI *>nes. u -.di a in t.bt LA. Tirna. I would like someone to explain. 1n nGetei1at1fk terms.. wtty a nice ~ raia ..... , bdp. Robert Novak to~ Dole's he.an v.as not whcrr his shoulder v.as bcc'au~ of m151Jv- mg.s "'1dd~ fe lt "'1th1n the Senate m1nonl\ ahout "'here Bush 1s lead- ing the "nation Sen Wilham ( ohen. a liberal Republican. 1s def)'ing public opinion in Mame to upport the prt'<i1den t But 1n doing '><> he attal krd th<' ··disappointing. lkplorablc per- formance" of Japan and (1erman\ 1n contnbu11ng to the ··coah110n " Other Republicans "'ere uncom· (unable b\ thl' central bacl stage role of .\mencan-lsrael Pubhc .\I· fair> C'omm1tll·c thr pro-lsrarl lobh' 1n lining up t'nough Demn- c rat1l 'OIC'\ to pa'>'I thr "'ar authon1a110n It 1~ bmcr tor (10P kader' tn rth on the orpn1za11o n that has lrcat~ ~1 much m1~h1cl o' C'r thl· NSI grnerat10n\ for l ~ go,ernmt'nh \('('ling an l'H'.n-handrd pohn in thr \11ddk East \fan, Republicans "ant lo dt'p1ct the truncated debate '' proo f that \\ cllstonian Democrats v.on 't gl' 10 "'ar an) 11mc. an~ plalr But Dick Gephardt 1s no '-' cll'I· tonC' and no pacifist. He 1s ~nou I) conu.·rnrd abnu1 the \ 1ab1lm and \ alut' of tht' l mtt· dom~ and ·sheikdoms that Jrc up- held in the Pcn1an Gulf v.11h .\mencan trcasurr and po'ls1bl) blood Potential for that an11ude 10 ~ onatc through the electorate 1 another ~son Rcpubhc.ans pn) so dc\outly that "Ir 1s either avened or "o n qu1ckl) Huntincton ~ad1ff' Homeowners AS90Clauon should aue the Hunt- incton Beach Co. tor ac. of prop- erty valun. Tv-o. f.btt es anolhcr tona continuou ffutlnti .. cum· pie of the cit} co..ncil mtJority bet.na contrOUcd by the Hunu~n Baeh Co. , ..... DC Legends Millionaire's death remains area mystery Ed11or's Nore: This 1s the firsr of rwo 1rr1cles on tM mystenous deach of M)ford l n me. /nine Compan)' president. in 1959 On unda:y. Jan 11 , 1959. around :! p.m . M)'ford Irvine mult1·m1lhona1re president of the lrvint' C'ompan). died of thrtt sun· shot wounds -two 1n tbc ab- domen and on~ m the head. Two weapons v.erc used a shot· gun and a pistol. and the) ~~ found b' his •11de His bod} was d1SCO\crcd in a basement storage room in his In inc Ranch home b) his wtfc and fh e-)car-old son The Orange ( ounl) hcntrs Of- fice and Coroner's office de- termined his dea1h as a su1c1de. H1\ famll) said 11 was a bom1c1dc Myford In inc needed money - S6 million dollars. $650.000 of it b' thC' nc't da> H1<1 ni~. Joan Irvine Burt said she told htm Saturday that she v.ould be able to raise $8 million on the sale of 100 of his Irvine Company shares to her. by borrowing on her shares. he said <1he .... ould call ham un- da)' as soon as the deal was linahzed He said he would be home O n unday. he had lunch at home "'1th his second wife. Glona and their son. James M\ ford Irvine. and then went..t9 th.( .irvmc Com. pan) offirc on the grounds of the ranr h as he somcumes did on. v.cckends Hts Y..tfc put their son down for a nap and went 10 her sewing room. .\t 3 p .. m . J n lninc Bun called to report that thr stock deal was finah1ed and Glona lninc and h1tlr Jamt'\ a'I was their c ustom . v.t'nt 10 tht office to meet her husband He v.as not there On the wa) back to the house. shr \a"' a bascm~nt hght on and went dov.nsta1,..., to investigate. Therr 'ihe found the hod) of her hu<1hand M)ford wa') the )Oungcst child of J I the ~cond James Irvine and fran~r~ \nita Plum and lacl cd the passion for tht' ranchland.s that had urn\umed h.., grandfather. father and older brother Jase. .\ t.ikntl·d p1an1\I and compostr. he l.l.OUld ha'<' made music hrs rarttr but handled finanr1al mat· ten 1n \an Francisco for his father ln\tead In 1~'5 Jase lnine. J I 's older son. "'ho had bttn groomed to handk 1h~ II' 1ne C ompan). died of tubcrculo.,.., J I v. as de' astated by his death. and brought M) ford from San r ranc1srn to help manage the ranch M)ford v.as made prcs1~nt of the In inc Foundation which was formed in I QJ7 10 proVlde finanetal aid for pn"atcl) supponed educ.a- uonal and chanf.able 1nstitut1ons. The founda11o n was pveo control of 54 per ctnt of the company's \tock, v.htch pn-vcnted any family mcm~r from pining full control o'er tht ranch. James Irvine 11 died in 1947 whale on a fi h1n1 tnp in Montana with several fnC"nd H1 49.}tar-Old IOO became president of a ranch of about I 00.000 acres that held one of the laraest Va.lcncta oranee povu in the v.orld. for de"en years M)'fOnl Irvine auided the lmne boldi11t lft ~ lhift &om .picuhure IO ...... de- vcloplM'nL lrvim Ten"lltt ud C.... aora wm _.eloped wt 1M lnil wer "' dlli"tnld hlil dli C1llJ'lldo ltjver duri .. * lrrt 111 of MJfont lrvia He W • 11111 .. ., -...., ...... , .. , ... , .... ........... . n..•tm.e111ol61 ....... ...... ...... _..,s- ~,-. ... .,.'.·-"' ... --· -n. ... ·~ '•· .. ...., 0 -~•Or .. • tittle ...... .. Couty .. .... Lai, WINY , .. "•,... . ............. ...,.. ....... 71111S OCEAN BOATING ....... ~ ....... °"' ... Ctlltll w""1, ,., .... Wlltl lecll -"' to TODAY'S SUN .... lm ... tOu.ts•-tf7 llOftllem ""* lo 2S -·=tfllllff ~ Sunrise: 6:59 a.m. FISHING to IMd COid cMdln ti redhltl Mii Sunset: 5:14 p.m. •brll ... rtlllOft• *" witll -llM 11m. cao bm. '*'°' w111tt .... ~ 0 () 1st Otr. Full Moon Last Otr. Jan.23 Jan.30 Feb.6 REPORT SURFING lOCAlllll • ............ l·l """" .... M llCIM llldl ~ Sill Cl.a ... $111 ci...e. 2-4 , ....... : ........ .......... , ........ .... .., .. ......... 8fOllTS: • • CCllO --.... ® © *1if LOW ....... ....... = ,_ ~ ......, ..... .... ..... Ma"""' ,...... .. ....... ........ ........ ...... .. ,..... ,... ...... ......... .. '* ... ........ ....... ..... , .. ....., ........ ., • • • • • *'*' STATJOMUW rn ~ en l:::J ~ El (f ~ c!:l ..0.WRS ltAIN r..srows nUIR!'• ..,,,, ICE , &lltlW '1 C:UllOY a.OLCW ....... ~. .. .. .. • .... • • .. . 11 • llll.tltClf II • U• II .. ........ .. • i! • .. ... .. .. ll II .. ... • • u • , ..... fWll II • •• » " ... n • .. .. • • .... • • 1: • • ...... c. • • .. 11 ... • u n ., 11 .. ,. . .. . •• .. 11 11 11 n • 11 • • n •• " 11 JI • '1 11 ii 41 • = • II • • II II • • 11 • • Jl :=.. ... • p •• • • Q • 11 • .. . .. Cit • • 1' II • Jl ....., l4 .. O• " .. ,.. II 11 •• • a ... • • •• fl " ,.,. v II Ma sr ,. , .... n .. •••n ICCIPll lrtlstlc PNPllll By Mlmf Ko Orange COMt o.lly Plot He bro\llht her to the mu- 1eum to see her favorite anist, Escher's work. Escher wasn't on display at the Laguna An Mu- seum though, instead Karen Carpenter. 24. of Lon• Beach bumped into a framed white canvas with the words: "Karen will you marry me?" on it. It was about noon, Sunday, when Carpenter noticed the painting. which was hang.Ina in front of Charles Howard, Gordo n Onslow Ford and Stanley Haytcr's "Pursuit of the Marvelous." and answered. "yes.·· Carpenter's fianoe Scott Williams. 21 . of Huntington Beach arranged the surpnsc proposal wuh Ellen Satlof. pub- lic 1nformat1on officer of the museum. A student teacher of an at Robert Bner/Orainge eoeet <>My Piiot Their focus. hearts in Saudi Arabia -Harbour Okonek, Chandra Gunn, Jenny Warner and Cory View pupils Jeff Keohen. Gregory Statton. Kelli Droege wit~ teacher Debbie Bennett. Millikan High School in Long Beach. Carpenter said she knew Williams would propose in a creative way. but wasn't expect- ing it until her binhday in July. "I wasn't suspicious at all." she said. "I think he is wonderful. LETTERS From A1 herds are followed b} ~aud 1s dm - ing TO)Ota La ndcru1scrs' "We arc not fighting a "ar at this time:· Mc( arth) ~1d ··y, e hope that b) being here v.c will scare Saddam Hussein and he "Ill go back to his count~ of Iraq so v.e don't have to fight .. Please understand that "c are not he-re Just to protect oil field' We are here l'lecau'ie ~ddam Hussein attacked the nation of Kuwait. "His arm) has taken people.,· homes. lands. car'> a nd propert} most o f the '-"Orld bcl1e\cS he 1'> a criminal. "We ha\e to help our ~aud1 friends so he will not do the same thing to Saudi Arabia ... Cpl Matthew J. Pitman. a resi- dent of Ri\erside. wrote: "I would JUSt like to tell you that all of us Marines 1n my unit really apprtc1ate all the support the U.S IS gl\ ing US ··\\e ha\en·t done a nything so far. but \OU ne\tr know what may happt•n" Gunne~ gt Da..,1d C "Viper .. Henderson. assigned to Hthcopter l 1ght .\ttack Squadron-367. called ~audi .\rabta ··a big beach m inus the ocean:· ··1 "ork the night the night shift and hi t the rack (bed) at 8.am. after breakfast and a sho""A<er. "I "akt up at noon because 11 1s 50 hot m y rack and I arc com- pletcl} soaked 1n sweat. '"So I get up. wai t about 15 minutes for 1t to dry and I go back BEAUTIFUL, RICH, INTELUGENT, SWF, 27, Blonde, blue eyed, with 1 lo¥e for tllvcl. theiue. fordp filml. nf romllltic waJU on 1hc beach. teeb Mt. RJaht to live 8-ppily ever lftet find out how to meet 101DeOOe like this or place a fRf.E Id of.,. own in DATELINE. See ck:Uill In today's claslified ICClion. • t.o bed and repeat as needed (smile.) Sgt. A.L. Vice wrote: "My tent has your letter hanging in it to re mind us that we have to keep the s1tuat1on in co ntrol so that every- one has the same chance in life ... Fifth grade teacher Debbie Ben- nett said her pupils arc concerned about the prospects of war. Most of the bo)S fa,or going 1n and bomb- ing while the girls arc more reluc- tant. she ~1d. MASSAGE From A1 where you can fi nd illegal ac11v1t1es. b ut I think 1\"s a very small per- centage ... she said "It's the same with an) profe ssion: there's good and thcrc ·s bad.·· Glen Everroad. the city"s busi- ness license supervisor. said the city might consider lim iting the number of parlors 1n a gi ven block. and prohib1t1ng them from operating within a certain d istance o f schools. residential zones and o ther sens1t1 ve areas. MAIN STREET From A1 the Coultrup proposal. Un Gat1. developer of Piers1de Pa ' 1lhon 1n partnership with Japan-based Haseko Corp .. said he was interested 1n Phasc II. but did not submit a proposal because of the requirement that proposals be made in conccn w11h propeny own- ers Gata. president o f Huntington Beach-based California RC$0ns. said he made a proposal about a year aso to dty officials for. de- velopment of Phase II that received no response. .. My understanding was that just the property owners were involved this time:· he said. "Apparently Coultrup had a better dcaJ than I had." Officials at Haseko Corp. have confirmed that Pienide Pavillion is NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION I'm going to: l . ) Lose 5 pounds 2.) Slow down more often 3.) Take time to smell the flowers 4.) Recbar1e my batterl• at The Little Ima OD The Bay SMLw\e Norfteet/°'*'09 COMI o.lly Plot Scott Wiiiiams and Karen Carpenter especlafty enjoyed thte piece of art at Laguna Art Museum. and this 1s a wo nderful surpnse "When I saw the painting. l tho ught 1t was pan of the show." Carpenter said. Williams said he told Carpenter that Escher's an Was on d1spla) to get her to 10 in the museum. "I had no doubts she would sa) yes.·· he said. Williams gave C11rpenter her great aunt Ruthie , Alpenson·s engagement nng. ··My great aunt was a neat older lady. She left me all her rings. and so this ring has sentimental value:· Carpenter said. up for sale. but deny that the Pavillion·s sluggish retail market as the cause ... T he retail \\as v1nually I 00 percent pre-leased pnor to the beginning of construction:· said J im Shaw. d utt1or of investment services for Haseko. "That is o ne of the reasons P1en1de Pa vtllJon is appropnatt to market now ... Gata said he 1s co ns1denn1 a buyout of Hascko"s share of the pan nersh1p. adding that J\e would also consider selling his share of Pi ers1de Pavillion 1f Haseko had a buyer for the entire project. The city Redevelo pment Agency. meanwhile, will either recommend one of the proposed developers for the Phase 11 project to the City Council. or reject both proposals within the next 60 days. "In the past, the projects proposed were financiaJly un- realistic.·· said City Administrator Michael Uberuaga. "Retail de- velopment is difficult, beau1e you've got to aenerate the activity IUQ From A1 ition when he meets with tht coun- cil in New York on Monday. "I can say that I have a very &ood idea of their position and I rep- resented some ideas of my own, all in the sense of findina a peaceful solution to this problem, .. he uid. Perez de Cuellar hltd uid S.turday he carried no specific propoea.11 to Saddam. The U .N. chief. wbo arrived in Paris early Monday on • ftiabt trom Blahded. ... to meet with Presi- dent Fnncois Minmand later in the momina and theft leave for New York. lw&embou'I fordp Minister Jacques Poot. who holds the ,.,.... iaa pmidettj of the European Community. Wll reportedlJ IO ft; to Plril to meet witll ... de C_., betn a Monclly • 11q' I fll e<: ~ mi._.. la L•an- ~ '° 11'Dltlll .... llil ani¥111 • 1.11 .... ... olPlril;,..... ... ..... .,.. -..... -: I After 10 months of datina, Carpenter and Willi.ams and said they wlll plan the weddina for sometime this summer, and spend their honeymoon in Mex- ico. The two have recently be- come members of the Lquna .\n Museum. "I enjoy the idea that they like the museum.- Satlof said. She added that she thought the proposal was a "ro- mantic and fun kind of thing. lt's refreshing to have someone approach me with an idea like (Wilham "s). ·· there before you can make 1t profit- able." Even with Ca ty Council approval. the developer must work out an a&reement with the city manqcr and propeny owners before con- struction begins on the north side of Mam Street. Some property ownen insist on rchab1ht.allon o f their older buildings. rather than re- development. And others arc op- posed to use restnctions imposed on the Phase I development which proh ibit rcs1den11al units on higher floors. "Every small shop owner in the downtown area feels that he or she as snung on a gold mine," sajd Huntington Beach Mayor Peter G reen. "They think the city has deep enough pockets to fulfill all their dreams. If I were a developer, I would JO out to Barstow and build a shopping center on some land I bouJht, rather than deal with thete small shop owners who each feel they own a sianificant pan of the universe." the talks, said any last-minute peace initiative would be up to the Ameri- cans "because they arc the ones now raisin& the sJopn of war:· In the rcmarb to Iraqi media officials. carried by the official Iraqi news •ncy, Saddam also said that Perez de C'ufllar was eocou,. to return to Btabdad .. if tbett it 1 desire to arch for the meoa to peace." However, in the murb re- por1Cd ~the BBC, be imilled there mutt a liat to lbe ,... ... iMue. U.S. offtcials have ........ IDy tie between the two i...._ French Forcip Minister Rolud OumM Mid in a •vWOa iMlr· view in Paris lbat lbe WOitll .... , ~"&om ... "' llid ... mflht &ravel IO a-eitM ttJ I till Oft ..... Paa de Qdlr ..... Sec1etay o/9'* J-A. .... 111 IMl whll ........ ~ Turtrey, °" s. ... , ..a '"' _., cliec 111llwol•*lllll._llle l;.qi......, Ill cme 11-. ' • I I I f -JMU8ly 14. 1991 The~ Plot Ill ...................... -- Cincinnati puts tiger in Allen's tank as he leads 20-10. victor y By Stan Wyman er-. ~ ~ Plot LOS ANGELES -It's lik.e Los Anteles IWdm Co.ch Art Shell said all aeuon Iona -.. Thc road to the Super Bowl aoes throuah Bu:ft'alo." He's acttina IM opportunity to travel that pe th because the Raiden whipped the Cincinnati Benpls. 20-10, Sunday in a second round playotr pme before a sellout crowd of 92,04S at the Loi Anaclcs MemonaJ Coliseum. The winner of that pme, scbedu.lcd to be played in Buffalo next Sunday at 9:30 un. (PST). will wear the crown as AFC cbam- p1ons and represent the conference in Super Bowl XXV in Tampa Jan. 27. The NFC will send the winner of next Sunday afternoon's clasbl>ctwecn New York Giants and San Francisco at Candlestick Park. For Los Anacles. 11 lS a return to aJ<>ry. It hadn't played 1n a post season contest for the past five yean. SbelJ wd he was sure his team wdl be ready to play when lbey take the field apmst the Bills, winncn of the AFC East t.1tlc and. hkc the Raiders, wtnnen 1n the second round of the play- offs. Both LA. wtnners of the AFC West crown. and Buffalo dttw first-round byes. Theu meetma next week will be a re- match of a pme played earlier this season. It will offer the Raiden a chance to act even wtth the Bills. who overcame a 24-14 fourth~uarter lead by the Raiders with three scorn m less than two minutes. .\ccordina to Cmt1nnati quartcrnaek Boomer Esa1son. the Raiden are "really aoing lO have their bands full .. He went on to say: .. Thc Buffalo Bills are everything they're advertised to be. In my mind. the Buffalo Bills are the team to bcaL" It was that kind of talk which proved so costly to the Benpls. They cot Marcus Allen mad. Raiders' Marcus Allen (left) and Steve Smith (right) congratutate tight end Ethan Horton on 41-yerd fourth-quarter TO catch wtlk:h ~ Raiders up '°' good. Accordina to Howtc Long. some of the lknpls "didn't cnuc1ze. Ld's say the) chaJlcnard him You don't do that Marcus." SM RAIOEASM • Divac's season-high 22 lead Lakers by Rockets INGLEWOOD -• Vlade Divac scored a ' scason-htah 22 points and James Wonhy added 2 1 as the Los Anacles Wers handed the Houston Rockeu their 14th consccuuve rcgular- scason defeat at the Forum. 116-97. Sunday niaht. Seven playcn scorC'd 1n double fiaurcs for the Lakcrs. who recorded lheic seventh stra1aht home triumph -their lonarst such streak since capturina their final 13 home pmcs of last season. Otis Thorpe scored 24 points for the Rockets, who remained wtnlcss he~ in the rqular season since Jan. 30. l 98S. Houston is 2-3 11nce losina l'Cnter Akcem Olajuwon. and they won't see him back at practi~ for at least another eight weeks. The N BA's leading re- bounder is scheduled to undergo suraery at 7:30 a.m. <CSn Monday an Houston to repair an inJUI)' to h1s nght eye socket. The Rockets outscored Los Anaeles 12-0 after Maa.ic Johnson went out foe Larry Drew with I :09 ten in the third quancr. Thorpe's slam dunk whh IO:SO to play followed a shon hook by David Wood and a slam dunk by Kennard Winchester and shccd the Lakers' 18- poinr marsin to 82-76. -,~ But Johnson returned followina a umcout and the La.ken scored 11 of the next 13 points to restore their lead to 93-78 with 8:09 rcmafoina. Houston never sot closer than 13 points ancr that, as Johnson finished with 17 points and 16 usists. Oivac scored sh points and Johnson added a dnving layup •nd four usuts during a 21-9 burst that extended the See LAKERSIM llmg8rl111 111111 on U.S., 18-12, In Wlllll 1-1 r. 11111 Rlzl PERTH. Aust.raha -The United States men's water polo team j u1t missed meda.1- ina at the VI World Championships here Sunday. faUina to Hunpry, 13-1 2. in the bronze medal match. The United States, whtcb auaranteed itself a benh in the 1992 Barcelona Olym- pics with a tie on lbundly and finished founh overall out of the wortd's top 16 teams. kept the pressure on the Hunprians throupout. ~ Yuaoslavia maintained its No. I ran.kins in the World by debtiftl Spain. I-7, in the told medal match. YUIC)llavia UIO won told medals at the 1916 Wortd Cham· pionsh1pa, 1984 and 19" Olympics and the 1990 Goodwill Games. Italy and Ger· many ftnished ftfth and ulb mpectively 10 capture the other two available au• ma1ic Otympk berths 11 the Wortd C'hmn- pionships. . HUlllllUY led die U.S. by OM pl at tk end of.OKK p&iod, taklna a 4-3 advanta,e at the first stop, 7-6 at halfl1me and 11 -10 after three periods. The U.S. evened the score for the sixth time in the match, 11 -11 , when Chris Humbcn trorcd his third pl of the day with S:4l left m the fourth quancr. Hunpry took. a 13-1 l advaniaee with 3: I l rem11runa. but the U.S. puUcd within one w~ Roben Lyan oft.oas 8e8ch took advaat11F of a 6-<Mt-S 1i1uation to ICOft with 4S teCOndl mnaiai... . The U.S. repined~ with U seconds to· play and drew a kic:kout With 9 lttOnds fof a 6-oD-S, but tbe Hu...,;an. held ·them otr fof the one-point win. Jeff Campbdl (lmne and UC1) ud Erich Fiteber tcored two ...._ . Mille Evam (UCI). David lmbenitlo JN'•port kacll). Doua Kimbell a TerTJ Scbroeder added OM' ... _., .. ...., ... Amoa State ""8 USC Ill OT, 84 80 TEMPI. Aria. -Pl 111 I .. _ .. J...a~ ,_ ....... ,, ...... .,_ 2S ...... la erwtl•1 •Arllalll-... UIC. i ..... Ii ...... o 0.. .. Ill _ .. t1•1• I _. I .. , • .. Hostetler powers Giants Backup QB leads offense, defense shuts down Bears ' rushing game in 31 -3 win By Barry Wllnef ,.,. Spor19 wn• EAST RUTHERFORD. NJ. -The Gtants turned to their Hoss and their hones unday and rode them into the NFC champ1onsh1p game. Jtff Hostetler conunucd his perfect WOft as quarterback.. leading New Yortc to a 31-3 victory over the Ch1caao Bears. Hostetler, the Iona-time backup to Phil Simms. now is 5-0 as a starter. "1 could sense the guys had a lot of confidence 1n me to act the job done," Hostetler said after throwina for two touch· downs. ruMtQI for another and makina nearly every bta play New Yortc needed. "That helped ICttlc my nerves. .. Not that he ever looked cdaY· HOl1dler proved wrona all thole cntics wbo ..... dcrcd if he had an Nfl.Aluality arm ad the O\ie.rall skills to l\lade a team ift dile playoffs. ··1 wu bcarina that stuff' all week ad ii was ,ettina old as the week went-.· M said. ..It was fnastratiftl. .. So he took out his &wnDoM • .. lean. who ~ IO dolftinmd dill .., Md the b&ll for 21 min._ ll JUI 11 • .. Jdf pla~ like he WM ia a .. 15.• , * S.llk• ...... ""° c-... am ,. WM I dnmit oocne .... llllOldiMry l1llc plays be ...... ,._ ... dnwille dllc bd. he Ml F 'kt "' ..... _, there." Wi6Sillllilaouaof ...... . .. ....,. lla•lllJ ..... •••: 11111* .. llll I I .. . ,. -..... Oillli • ¥l:n1rlll ... ftlt 'e .. . ... ,,., _____ _ "' ... _."' •-.... ------...:_::. , I' " ; l'We't ~ ~ bc IOIM bowlina mow,._,_ ROie eeninl jolad blcau• u etilibilitr coe-.. •Y' bis D11D1lbouldtl'10 om &be Hall olFw ba1o1. Theft'• ec:Mna 10 ~&Im "'he'• su&red .a•" lid: compk\e witl1 memoin of his pla)'itil days ud pralina 111uments about Ty Cobb and America's trtmblina bun and four-~not-1-priloo-malle.. But befo~ the Roee pedals swt to drift ~ down and SPortswriten acrou lhe country lll'\am tbeit baajoes and start sinaina. ·'Willow Weep for Me,., C1mm1111PJ here's another view: Touah luck, Pete. Tw a hake. Rose, who would be eljaible to appear on neat year's HaJI of Fame ballot if the committee's rec- ommendation 1s turned down, has been rtlcased to a halfway house after spendina five months in prison. The temptation is to say he's paid his dues -let him in the HaJJ, post haste. But there is somethina about lbe siaht ot him, walking 1hrough the snow. that bowl of douabnut hair hanging down. that brina.s back everything he's done to cheapen baseball. h's been pointed out that Rose is already in the Hall of Fame. to the tune of six uniforms. three bats. Sports break Teen-agers no IORllP (fear match with Graf MEL BOURNE. Australia -To --- hear the teen-age girls gossip about Steffi • • Graf. her hair 1s graying. her game 1s ,,,,,,- stak and she's about to retire to the old ---- lad1e vi lla for tennis ztlhonatn.'S. The .\ustrahan Open starts Monday with a lot of hra\I~ tall, from >Oung pla)ers and their fans ahout the l'nd of Grafs three-\ ear reign as champion and four-,ear run as No. I 1n the world. Thi-; i<; the year of Monica Seles. the talk goes. Or ~an Joe Fernandez. Or Gabnela Sabatini. Heck. an\ of ihe top pla)crs can bear Graf Just listen to thl.'m "'There 1s a fe-ehng around the locker room nowada'" that \OU can win (against Graf)," said Fernande1 a I 9·)car-old Floridian who exposed v.ca l.nl'S<;(.'~ in lirafs backhand in last )Car's fi nal here hut hi'it 1n 1-wo sets ""lot long Jgo pla)ers faring Graf were beaten hefore the\ v.cnt out." added Fernandez. seeded No. l "I thin!. an1.om· in the top 10 can win 11. Once \ ou -.ce ~ ou can bl:a 1 hrr. ) ou lose fear. .. ( ertainh Crral 1\ no longer feared b) No. ::! seed ~lcs. 17. v.ho heat her 1n the French Open final. or No .i 'iCcd 'lahJl1n1 20 v.ho beat her 1n the U.S. Open final and \ 1rg1n1a hm'i Champ1onsh1p semi- final\ Tel1vl1lon-ndto BNStftlll ' 111'9-tll • (1rorgt0lu"n·\ 1llo1n11\a £SP' .a 'Op ni • K1n~-r>r"I' Pnmr T tt ~rl .a 'O pm • "-ntr~s-HJ"l' TRS Hl'i pm •Buch-Bull' \\C,"I 'iJll pm • lnd1ana-Purdut· fSPN ll '" pm •Rocket\-< hprr~ Pnmr T tl l r1 7 '<J pm • ,l . .,. "1l'\l•IJ 'llJh: I rcsno Slate f~P"I '> pm TELEVISION Collr1r BHlltlball I p 11 \\ r\lrrn 11.rnlut k' al Jad1.\4in\Cllr <,pora- ( l1~1111c I J \U [lm l1l'Ofl ttc1"'n oil \11fan!l•I [<,p°" t, 111 rm -lnllt•n~ 11 Purdue £'P"" 1rrpn1t\ .it 1: '10 J nJ I I I'm -... ( .. \l('\1\11 \tAlt' al f rt'\OU '>lilt' , ,p.., Pre Hwb)' J 111 I'm "''"'' •• ..,,., .. Jrr~n rnmr I 11, ~<'I Pro Bulirtkll ' 1• nm '-r"' \ urlr at \II.int• l 8<, ' 1. '"'1 \11 14.rnlt.<"t' at < h1up1 "< ,...., -\ 1 ii m Ji,.u\tun at ( ltl'!'<'" Pnmr l 1t lt.r1 s .. i., • r IT' -Thr« t 'andrr Hnhf1cld ht1uli rupct l)>o1an1 \lunJ nin J\J l);a .. 1 ( l'llltll \It'\ <.,1r,..1n '1"11111 and \d1hon l(,..,Jnrur• 4 l'llNt \pun\( h1nnrl Ill \ rm '._.,,;a\ /~mlkl11 • \ "rm.1ndu \ <'U~O .,, ,.r1gtil\ KalKI RUt"ll \ ~\ l nmn" \ akk1 lt'.1tht'l"'riah1s fr11m lhr I orum 1ckl1•cdl Pnml' f,<~rl 11 pm -I c-unard lltern\ v.rllrr..r1gh1 ht>ul lrum 11181 'I"''"' h•nn<'I ~u ' lo rm -Fnah,h Lc.aaur ""'fVllll••n IUIJC'I pon~ I h"nnrl RADIO Pre HOC'lif') n pm -K1n1\ lll 'lrw Jrr\I"' ldl'lo111'dl XTR.\ (6~1 Pro Bullrtball • lO I' ni -lh1u\111n at< l1pprr' KNI <\ fll llll C'oll''' 8Hllfotb1ll ' "'I' m ( al \111r ullrnnn JI \an JO\e Stair KMNY lll'IW) .......... = ............. _ ... a.am1 '1 _ _,_ ... , Id aapa llbe Ra n. "mrtr rd ,.... m )lmr .... lloltwocwS..11, ltlS. .... MF'-llill 4,192 to .... Cobb• ... 11 Ml 1111. .. .... ... -Hall ....... \19 ......... ... historic ., .... _ ... IOld ii • ~ .. SI 29.000 to rai• moeey lw lait ....._ 1'11111 followl tbt pattern let by a ... "'°' cm me nillll lie -banished ftom b.~me, wa1 on Cal* vai. N«Wort IOllina liped ta. Roee'1 carny life otrtbo lelcl ia Wbal lbe cmunit· tee WU lookina 81 when it ¥Oted. ~ WU banilNd tom lbe pine by the late A. lanlea Oiamani for - pmblina habit and IRS troubles. ud lhe ODillmiuee said be lhouldn 't be allowed Oft t.be ballot a '°'II a he's on the indiaible list. Simplt. Sensib&e. To the point. In makina that recommtndalion. commiuee members were sayi na they cton•t putiaalarly tnase Amcnca•s SPortswriters -tbty saw the wri1CTI IGM- ina Rose onto lhe Hall of Fame truck wbile be'• llill banned from baseball. As if to underline dtole fean. the 7-3 vote broke alona the lines of buebalJ people and SPortswriters. The seven vouna to keep Rote's name off wae American taaue president Bobby Brown. former AL president ~ MacPbail, former National Lelpc ........... ~, .................... .. __ ' ... LAST CHNlE i----- lb~ 50!'£ HCX15 ...... ==: e-.'=··=-==-= ~'~ 1111.t ......... llollia .............. ...., .1--ludl O'Neil. Vocill ill._..·~.., .., ol Pw 1111iw1 Ed Slmcl Md~ Mil ............... . f'oW o1-. vodlll ..... Role 8N OD tM 16- -Hall ol Fame tlom'CI of. -..an. w1aic11 meets M. 4 to ccmider lbc commiaee'a rwoammendatioll. The dincton may wind up~ to aep Roee olf the blUol. but even if they do tbeir oppotition isn't Ubly to lllt. In a world wt.ere a U•time ban from sporta for .... divll comet clowa to two ~ then'• no way tClli will be ~ out o( lhe Hall of Fame. In a world wlllle Denny Mclain it welcomed bM:k to an ()ld.. TIIMll pme at Tiatr Stadium aft« winnina the AB- Sleue Swerpt1aka and soendi"I 1WO ya.n in jail. aObody'a to•na to suffer for lofts. Sponlwrittts are only too willina to let bytoocs be"= to keep their tunnd vision foeuted on that aolCe ~n home plate and cencer field. They"re not ac>ial to bold a man out of the Hall simply tMau. he's weateled and Ucd and sold pans of himself on the cheap. Saack, supponina his vote •inst the ban, arped thet the committee shouldn't be stictina its note into bitltr Hall of Fame business. "I think it was a principle involved here," be said. Diil lilll C111l111' llPlli Paul Mad.can's goal with 7:12 re-~ mainina in rqulation time broke a 1-1 tic and Brett Hull had his 4Sth aoal in • as many aames as the visiting St. Louis Blues ended the Montreal Canadiens fivc-pme wi nnina streak with a 3-1 victory in NHL action Sunday nighL In other NHL games: • Esa Tikkanen scored two third-period goals to lead Edmonton over Philadelphia. S-3. Tikkanen broke a 3-3 tie when he took a pass from Glenn Anderson and fired a lhot between the peels of goaltender Ron He~tall at 10:04 of the final period. •Brian Leetch's second aoal of the pme enabled host New York to survive a blown three- loal, first-period lead and beat Hanford, 4-3. • Brtnt Sutter, Randy Wood and Derek King in a 4: 14 span over the fin al six minutes gave the visitina Islanders a win over the Nordiques. 4-3. • Phil Housley and Pat Elynuik scored goals 32 seconds apan in the second period as host Winnipeg beat Calgary. 4-3. sending the Flames to their third straight loss. -n.a • 1111 el,_ -.rd ol dileaan ii .. ,,_. .............. °' ..... " SIKll"I ript. There ii • ~ lavohed. .. it't DOt &M OM M dUb it ii. TM priidpll ia¥0Md ii wMlber ..... MMMW cloel to dc11111• me~ ol ....... It .. impanat • .-.... Ille .. '° ..... iL Tiiie wrilln wbo want lloee ia tbe Hall 'ol Fame wiU 1alk about bow if·you held a man so ICICOUnt a what he does off the fldd tbe Hall Would be an but anpty. Cobb was a nci11, tbey1l •Y· and Ruda wu a men1al hobo and there were more 10Ute1 and loUlel and l0ten in the pme than you could shake a Shlsr IL But molt alob-blob pla~ were voted in when writen were awuhbucklins an a btothetbood o( fed. eye, pretendi• to bob in lhe 11me pca,...rcen boat witl1 the players. Th.e>te days are aont. Sporuwntcn should be uk.ina now if it isn't pat time to dnw tbe Une -askina if there's a point where you stop wiakina behind your 'hand. takina a tlua &om a bonJc ~ycrs arc pusina around, and •Y. "That's ed ." Cmon. 01C went lo prison. and &e•s st.in JOt three months to ao before the aovernment is •tidied be~~Mh~ti~. ' Can't the baseball writers at least wait until he's unpecked his bep before they pick him up on ~ir , shouJden and carry him throuah lbe stftetS. sinaina. "for he's a jolly aood fellow:~ Past WBA champ Dokes may face multiple charges LAS VEGAS -Former WBA heavyweight boA- ina champion Michael "Dynamite" Dokes was ar- rested for investiption of drua charges this weekend. Police said Sunday. Dokes. 32, was booked Saturday night for in- vest1ption of possession of cocaine, influence of a controlled substance. rcsistina arrest, destruction of evidence. speedina and faili ng to register wi th police as an ex-felon, said a city police desk officer who declined to 11ve his name. Dokes was released Sunday momma after pc>stina a bond for S9.800. Arraignment was set for Feb. 4 at Las Yeps Ju~ ticc Coun, said an em- ployee a.t the Oark Coun- ty Detentio n Center. •Jeremy Rocn1ck scored two JOiis and added an assist and Ed Bclfour recOTded his league-leading 28th victory as host Chicago defeated M mncsot.a. .. 5-3. Dokes was drivina a Mercedes Benz when he was stopped for allegedly speeding on at 8: IS p.m. Saturday on U.S. Hiah- way 9S. Police said . Told he was under arrest. Dokes "said be wasn't a9ina" and bepn ----------J to run, the desk officer Michael Dokes said. Dokes alleaed1 y Monroe's 48 keys NC St1t1 Rodney Monroe scored a career----- high 48 points. helping host North Caro-• _, lina tatr rail) in thl' second half for an ' • l0-83 '1ctor) unda) 01.er 24th-ranked ---- Cieorg1a Tech. Monroe got "llhin I 0 points of the school single-game scoring record by former Wolfpack All· Amencan David Thompson. who "as on hand . Ml ·nr<X also scored the most points of any N.C. State pla)cr in an .\tlanuc Coast Conference game. Thompson's record of 58 points came against Buf- falo tate 1n 1974. In other coll ege games· • Mah k Sealy rebounded from his worst of- fensive outing of the season with 26 points as l':o. I 0 <;1. John's ( 11 -2. 2-2) ended Connecticut's 22- game home winning streak wi th a 72-59 victory over the ninth-ranked Huskies ( 12-2. 3-1 ). •Bill y Dreher scored 13 of his 19 pomts in the second half and Bnan Hendnck added 16 as Cah- fom1a (5-8. 1-3) won us first Pac-10 Conference game. 70-68. over Washi ngton (9-4. 1-3). P.-t•, Wllll11111m Blu ... EA T RUTHER FORD. N.J. ---- T CIT) Poner had 26 points and I 0 assists • <. and Buck Williams scored 24 Points and _, __ _ led a third.quarter burst Sunday night as the Ponland TraJI Bluers stopped a two-game losing strrak. beating New Jersey 11 6-101 and sending the Nrts to their I 0th straight loss. The Nets led 63-62 with 6:53 left in the third penod when Ponland scored 12 consecutive Points. six by Williams. The Trail Bla1ers led by at least six points the rest of the game. Portland, which leads the N BA with 31 v1c- tones. has not lost three in a row. RlllPI NCllVll Cllll 11111 Fonner He1sman Trophy winner George Roger~ will ha\ e his drug pos-- scss1on record era~d as a reward for undrrgoing drug rchab1htat1on. In ex- e change, he will perform community service. Col- umbia. S.C . officials stud Two days before leaving office last week. former Sohc1tor James Anders agrc'Cd to put Rogers in the prc-tnal interven11on program. Rogers could have faced up to I 5 years 1n pnson 1f he had been convicted. He was charged in April wi th possession of cocaine and marijuana Wlt h intent to distribute Jn other sports news: •At least 40 people were lolled when fans began brawling and a panic ensued during an exhibition soccer match in Johannesburg. South Afnca. pohcr s~ud. Eyr witnesses said most of the deaths occurred when panicked spectators ~ crushed against a fence around the field and tram- pled b> people Oee1ng the fighting while other people were stabbed to death 1n the fighun' that erupted in the main grandstand at the exh1b1t1on match be· twetn t\\-0 club'> from Soweto. -From It~ A11ocl•ted Pre.,. -of tilt •• , Roa Aadenoa, Ph1ladelph1a 76crs forward. pressed into the starting lineup Saturday when Charles Barkley and Hersey Hawkins were Injured. scorrd a season high 26 points in a I 09-99 victory over New Jersey: "I said I'd only get a chance to start on this team if something ever happened to Charles Barkley or Hersey Hawkins. I hope J didn't jinx them:· tossed a bag conuunina a white substance from his pocket. the desk officer said. The contents of the beg were under investiption, he said. Dokes was captured in a vacant lot. -By tat~ A110Cla&e4 Prest Amateur rallies, gains piece of golfing history TUCSON. Anz·. -Phil Mickelson escaped the chilled em brace of a snowman in lhe desen and. wilh birdies on two of the last three holes. gained a linlc piece of golfing history on Sunday. In golfers· parlance. a "snowman" is a score of 8 on a hole. And 1t was that ugly number Mickelson achieved after hitting two shots into the Arizona- Sonora descn and one into a bunker on lhe 14th hole. From a one-stroke lead when he stepped on the tee. Mickelson "'ent to three behind and a tic for fifth when he left the grttn. But the 20-ycar-old left-hander took advanta&C of a massive collapse by veteran pros and. Wl lh a victory in the Nonhem Telecom Open. became only the second amateur since 1954 to win a PGA Tour evenL Mickelson. a Junio r at Arizona State who already has matched one of Jack Nicklaus' am ateur martrs. scored lh1s tnumph over adversity with a clo ina 7 1 and a 27':. total, 16 under par. Tom Punzer, a 39-ycar-otd veteran. and Bob Tway. a former PGA champion. e.ch faltered late in the round. Punttr took a double-bosey on 18, and Tway had a boseY on 17 as each dropped into a tJe for first one ahead of Mickelson. Mickelson, steady and comPoscd as a man twice his qt, mPondcd with a birdie on 16 to tie. a per on 17 and the wir .1ina b irdie on 18. By UM .bMdlld Press Gennan sets 1, 500-free world record Top 10 U.S. swimmer Sanders earns first gold in 200 butterfly By Larry Slddona I# Spotta w• PERT H, Australia -Joera HoR'- mann shattered o ne of swimm1na's lon1t1t-standina world records Sun- day, choppina more than four tce- onds off Vlad1m1r Salnikov's mark in the men's I .500-meter freestyle •t the World Swimmina Cham· pio nsh1ps. Hoffmann, who wont.be 400 fttle- atyle Friday, took the lead at the m.mctcr mart and the Oernaan held off a cballente by atty leMcr K.ieren ~rltin1 to win bit llCOOd told in 14 lhinU1a. »36 •1>9111 s.JftikO¥. Mio ICt tbe mconl .. 1913, pmCl'1ed a bottle ii CMID- PllM 10 Hofftnann •t the pa11=f'8CO news (Oftfercec:e. hrtjn1 alto was well mder Salnikov's prtvious mark of 14:S4.72. He came ia at 14:50.SI after ICniftl a blillcritls .-e OD 1 wiedy -...a. n. two 9'¥Cr .... ... .-1.01 ... ...., • .., ol .... 100. .... ..... "I .... I cOWd .... rMa .... blm•Mil ..... Na 'st Prior to Sunday's race. only Saln1kov and Austraha's G len Housman had ever been o fficially under 14:56.00. Housman had a 14:SS.2S last year. Jn ackhuon. Housman had the worid's fastest recorded ttme, a 14.S3.S9 at the Commonwealth G ames last February. That was h•nd·timed, however. and only electronic tamina u recosaniud for world ruordl. KCM111n8n never was a fador in the WOl'td-litle r.ce. flnilhinJ 6J\b 1n IS: 12.42 in t.be faAest 1. ~ hatyk t1p1-man ftndb an bit- '°'.f ~ °"1111 broke tM two- ·mlnute bm'icr ta the mea·1 200 individual rDedJcy. hil lecoad -ortd mM1t and IKond Ude ol dtc meet. D1na11. ...... woftd ud °""''* dllmpiOa. ..... 1:59.36 1a1Maaermep;e•iom-'Dlvid ................ .., ... ,_ ... IO __ dll ..... ~ .... ---.. .,..,. .................. ... this meet. If I knew what was wrona. rd have done somelhina to try to fi x it." Second to Damyi was Eric Namesnik of the United States.. in 2:01.87. Namesnik chaled 0.m)'l home in 1 world-ru.ord 4: 12.36 lut Tuesday. Summer Sanden of lhe Uruted States aot her fint told medal after a silver and a bronze. She won the women's 200 butterfly in 2:09.14, almost twO l«'Ondt better than nan- ner-up · Ric Shito of Jap1n in 2; 11.06. Hayley I.nit of Auwalia. the 200 freestyle winner, wu thu'CI at 2:11.09. .. My ClOKb kept telli• 'me lbat cech r.ce ii toiDI IO let better and better at the meet fl>el OD. Thia it a pat way to nd ii -rm r1a1 ......,, ... s.n.n-. D-. Y~OIQiM .,_mi ....... 50 .. 2S.47 ..... Amerial'• Jcuy llto ........... ...,,.. • 25.17. Unllld ............. lwtmmer ............. .. ...... ~~"'* .. World ......... a.w,u •. lw,00 Hotl I n ..W.. •A1 I 11t1t _ .. ,, ... ,.., ........ ...... --. ..... ...... .. ....... .. .... .. r ,.... Alld ..-It WM al over, &M ............. ., 235 yll'dl ~ Mia .n,illi 2 I U.. tbr 140 ~:. I..... .... WM Vcr)' toulb, .. AJ'-IUd. .. , bow it may not have tooted lbat way, but we bed to play at hard 11 we could to win . ., Bo JICk10n pidccl up another 77 yards oa Ii• carries before •~ina the pme with a hip pointer on the leCOnd play of the tee0nd half. Jack· 10n, however, said he will be ready fortht Bills. But it was the Raiden' defensive uait ~hich put a halt to the C1nc1n- nati dream for another year. The Benpl.1 were limited of JUSt 12 first down• and 228 yards of total o&nw. I 04 throuah the air and 124 ' on the p-ound. lly contrast, the Raiden ecncratcd 4'07 yards or of- fense, with quarterback Jay Schroeder completina 11 or 21 passes for 172 yards and two touch· downs with one anttrctption. Esiason completed just 8 of IS puses for l 04 yards and one touch· down, while bean& sacked four times for 46 yards iQ. lpsteS. .. We 1 pu( '1..,i rnsure on IOi<>ni..er today," Lona said. "We sicktCI ))im a couple of times and came a'1ay with the win ... MOndey, ~ 14, 1•1 Allen comes through in Jackson's absence He gains 140 yards after Bo is sidelined by hip-pointer injury By JOhn Nadel AP Spom Wm« LOS ANGELES -Befort' the acason. Marcus Allen rcponcdl)' asked the Los An&elcs Raiders to trade him. The v.ord befort' the t.radina deadline in mid-October was that he was on h1 wa y to San Francisco But the tradJng deadline came and went and .\lien 1s still around -and w arc the Raiders "Marcu was phenomenal." dc- fcn sl\ e tarkle Bob Gohc said after said he M\let th<>uabt he would be pla)'ina tlsewbcre. ••• en)Oytd au the attention." he Ntd. bout Jackson's LnJUl)', Alkn s~ud. "Bo and I alway knew 1f one of us iot hurt, the other would have to pick up the slack. Today, at was m) turn." It'll be the Raiders' tum to see if anyone can beat the Bills at Buffalo next unday. So far. nine team indud1ng the Raiders.. have tned and nine ha"c failed. ··ifs 10103 to be a chalhn& elC.- penencc.'' Brown said. ~·1 sucs you lOUld sa) v.c O"-e them one." Brown was refemog to Buffalo's 38-24 \ 1ctol"\ O\cr the Raiders on Oct 7 Los Angeles' first los of the ~ason It was a pmc in which the Raiders led 24-1 4 earl) 1n the founh quaner before the Bills ~ored th<' game's finaJ 24 po1nu The Raadcrs, in fact moved the ball 6.9 yards per offensive pla), while the Bcnpls were held to 3.8 yards per play. In other words, the Raiders domi- nated on both side of the ball althou&h the score~id no& reflect it. Raiders Mervyn t:ternandez breaks free of Cincin- nati's Carl Carter and falls Into end zone for AP LMlrpl'IOto touchdown on 13-yard pass In second quarter of AFC Olvlslonal Playoff Sunday in Los Angeles. llen gamed 140 }&rds on 21 car· ncs unda) to lead the Raiders past Cincinnati 20.1 0 and into ne\t un· da)'s AFC Championship (,ame at Buffalo "He's m' hero 1t·~ not JU t his talent. his .ib11t1~ II he get> nicked. 1f he get\ hun he l..ecps on going." Raiders defens1\ e <"nd Ho..., 1e L,<>ng S<11d. ··Marcus .\lten was not cnt1crzcd. but challenged b' some Bengals dunng the V.C!'d. r"e ~1d It before. He''> the toughest gu) 1n the league" Bro....,.n was 1n"olved one of un- da\ s biggest pla)s - on a thtrd· and-:!0 pla) from th<' Los Angeles ~2 <'3rl\ in tht" founh quancr. he caught ·a 26-)ard pass from Ja)' ~hroeder 1 hre<' pta)s later Schroeder thrC!'v. a 4 1-> ard touchdown pass to fthan Honon to <onap a 10.10 ti<' and t'nsure the tnp to Buffalo It was Cincinnati who drew first blood. That came at 12:07 of the second period when Jim Brctth connected on a 27 yard field goal to cap a nine-play, 87-yard drive. The Raiders rapidly answered to take the lead about 4111 minutes later when Schroeder found Mervyn Fernandez an the end zone for a 13- yard touchdown pa s to end an eight-play. 80.yard dnvc which used up 4:38. Schroeder explained afterward~ thett was no sense of doom or rah- rah in the huddle aficr the Bengals took the lead in the second pcnod or lied up ahe game tn the founh period. Schroeder said, ··we all looked at each other and knew we had a JOb to do. This team 1s ltke that. I'm proud to be a pan of it." It was aficr the Raiders Jeff Jaeger kicked a 49-yard field for a 10-3 lcad with S:4 I gone in the third penod that the Bengals settled down to some serious v.ork. Cincinnati mounted a 13-play drive wh1c1I consumed 8 minutes. S2 seconds and culminated with an 8-yard touchdown pass from Esiason to Stanford Jennings wtth 3: 11 letl in the th ird quaner. .. It was so degrading when he Juked me out and I massed that sack:· said Raiders defcns1\c end Grq Tov.ll~nd . ..,..ho was burned on the to uchdown pla) but came back to make tv.o sacks later to kill other dnvcs ... , got burnC'd on that touch· down and I "anted to do ~me. thing." Le s tha n three minutes later. Schroeder led the Raiders down field on another 80-)ard dme. this ume ending tt with a sensational 41 -)ard bomb along the nght sideline into the hands of Ethan Honon for the winning touchdo" n. It was made poss1bk earlier in the possession when the Raiders. trapped deep in their own temtor) facing third-and-20. broke loose on a 24-)ard pass from hrocder to Tim Brown. It sa~-c Los .\ngcles a new lease on life and kept what was a sputtenna drivt alive. ··we pla)ed an excellent game an the sense that v.c didn't gi ve up. we perservcrcd even though we didn't take advantage of all our chances.·· hell said For all intent and purpose. that wa the game Jaeger finished the scoring v.11h 21 seconds left when he kicked his Sttond field goal. this one a 2S-yarder for the I 0-potnt final margin of \ 1cto11 For Mu Monto)a. It was an es- pecially swttt v..1n. He had been a member ot th<' Bengals for 11 }cars when they lefl him unprotected in the Plan 8 draft last spnng. "I think thr~ did a great JOb get- ung read~ for us v..hen )OU consider all the tnJunrs tht") have." he said "But 11 doesn't get an~ better than 1h1s It was s..,..ce t to v.1n 11:· S<·hroeder much mahgn<'d dunng most ofthl· !>Cason . ..aid 11 feels grcal ··10 !..no \\ )Ou're going to pla) in lh<' confcrenr<' r hamp1onsh1p gam~ .. Raiden 20, e.neat1 10 ~'"°"•"'" C1nc1MAll o l o 1-10 LO\ Anoele\ 0 1 l 1~10 s.<...i~ C~G 8rH<I' 11 2 il LA-F9',.._I l) PH\ "°"' S<:"'- (JMO« II.Cid lll TlwCI~ LA-FG J~ 4t t 1' "-"'OV•,_ C-J-"9\ I NU Iron> E\ •\on 8rHoC" 1 .. 0 1 ) II LA -H«lon «1 1>41\• ''O"'l xnro.o.r J•...,... IUCll I. t'OI LA-FG J•-1\ 11 «' •-..i o.s TEAM SlATISTICS Clft LA F '"' c1o .. ,,, '1 10 lluU\e\•.,.rO\ 1' 11• J1 7H PH\•"9 !II 1§.1 lltlur" v.,o, I I t0 Como All•lnl • ·~ 0 " ,, I S.c"ea v •ro\ Lt\! • -. l '' Pvnt\ \ \1 2 tO F.......,..\ lo)\I I 0 0 0 '"9nell••l y ••Ck s 0 0 T me or Poueu o" 11 1 11 O IHOIVlOUAL STATISTICS ltUSHING-C "< ""•' woocn I I) 8 •0C•l 11 ,. 8•" s 14 E \18\0" ' 11 l 0\ •~11•"" A '" ~I uo Jeco.\O" 6 11 s,..,.,,,,, ~ 11 PASSING C '"' M et f \•HO' I IS 0 UM LO\ A""let, Scllroeotr II 71 l 117 ~E CEl\llN(', C l'IC•Me ti tH1•m• } ) Bro""" 1 II ll•oo•' I 11 Jenn""' I I NOOO• l S MCGH I 0 LO\ Ar~ t\ >1?"0" t 11 l llrow~) t7 F••ne'<MI 1 H "''•" I 7t V• '" I S ""SSEO FIELD GOALS N~ \\1dc rcn·1,cr Tim Bro\\n added. "Whene' t"r v.e nC<"d ..oml'th1ng done around hen-11 alwa~\ comt'\ do...,n lo \.fJrCU\ .\lien " .\lien" load \\a<, 1m reil\4.·d altl·r Bo Jal-k'lt>n \U\tJinC'd \\hat he later l3llt.'d J hip pointer at thl· rnd of a 14-,ard run on tht• ~·lond pla~ ot thl· third qu.1m·r I hl' tnJU~ \hl'l,cd JJli.;'><rn for the rest ul thl' ~me hut atterv.ard\. Jal ~ .. on ~1d hl· 1ntL•ndcd 10 pla~ aga1n\t the Rill\ JaLl.;<1on g.iinnJ ,., \3rd\ on SI\ l·arne\ ht-Ion.· k.1' 1ng .\lkn p1d.cd up "'Q \3rd\ on Ill LJrrll'\ ""Ith Bo on thl' tx·n" h "\\ l' ha\l' t\\O uul\tand1ng bal I..!.. · Raider<. ll>Jl h .\n \hdl \.ltd "\tarlU\ -\lkn ha\ bct·n thl· ron,ummate team pla\er It'\ JU\t thl' '>.lmc l..tnJ ol toothall he·~ h<-en pl:l\ ing tor u\ throughout h" \J· rt'l'f lx''Pllt' thl' trJdc rumor\ .\lkn "\A.e l1tf'l'IC up With \he bti play l-0 Tim Brov.n when v.e had to and that'\ ...,hat it's all about this tame of tht' \t'ason .. ~hr~der said. ·•1t w~ JU)t a gr('at ind1' 1duaJ effort b) Tim He made a ~at mo\e on n and got a big. big pla) ' ··one v.a\ or the other. that was 3 big momentum )Wing." Hrnv. n caught the pa s near the l O\ .\ngef('\ l'-t and broke on<' tad. It' 10 p1l l up the first dov. n "It \\a'ln't a tough catch at all. the t>all \\J' right in m) face·· Brown ~·d .. .\ht'r the latch. }OU JUSI II') to [tl'I II up tht' field.'' The tk·ng.tl\ pla~cd wnhout stan- ing kit ~uJrd Bruce Reimers (anlle 1nJuf\ 1 and .\II-Pro left Ullckle \nth11n\ \.1 unoz (tom rotator cum ~1 unn1 \\3\ 1n uniform. but said he v.J\ 1n too much pain to go 'I \.UUld n'1 functaon:· he said .. I v.J\ grnng nuts on the sidehnc b.at I lc."lt l\.1rk ~rafford v.ould do a bt-tt<"r 1ob He did an ncellent JOb \\ l' thought all v.eC!'k he v.ould ·· Giants' new-look defense stuffs Bea'rs' run game Safety Duerson gives NY coaching staff hmt on stoppmg his old team (11ant\ Lalllt' fn" [)of'S('~ said th<' ncv.-loolt drkn'><' didn't conlu~ the Bears but did ~e .:&\\J\ "h.H 1hn do be-\t By Tom Canavan AP Sc>orte Wuter E T Rl THERFORD. "Ii J -Da\C Duerson didn't ha'e a tackk. an assist or e'en a pass drOe'\·1ton in 1he 'e1o1. \ ork Giants' 31-3 1o1.in o'er tht• Chicago Bear\ in unda~ ·s NFC ~m1final No. old Double D's contnbuuon against his former IC'ammat~ was s1o1.ea ted out of him a couple of \\t:t."l..s ago ··1 v.ai; intcrrogatrd b~ our roaching staff." Duerson said. ·· .\fter about an hour I 1ust kept y1ng 1f we stop the run and make them pass.. that will g1'e us our best chance of v.1nning " Th<" coaches listened and plans w('re prcparC'd in 'K'Cret .\s tht" game approached. practtc<'\ \\art" closed to the media. T hl· rl·Json \\J'> rl•,eakd on \)unda) '('\\ 'url , hangt"d II\ dden-.<" sv.1tlhtng from II\ trad111onal '-4 front. ...,here Lav.renLe Ta ' lor nurmJll~ pla\'I .1 ru.,hing l1ne~acl..C!'r to a +.3 front \\ hl'rl' Ta' lor plaH .l\ a true hnehat i.;('r ht-h ind lour hnl'ml·n "\\e tal l l"d J\ J \IJIT •. (11anl\ dekn\I\(' lOOrdinJlur Rill tk•hlhld . ..aid "\\l'0 H' tx-c.·n rrad' 10 u<,(.' 1h1' .1g.ains1 an' opponent hut \\l" folt aga1n't lhl· ~ar.· running gaml" 11 v.ould work " Dad 11 l'' n r hl· lkJr'> \l.l'fl' hl'ld 111 ~ ~ ~ard' on 16 lJrl 11:\ '-l"JI \nd1:r\on the :--.o 2 ru,ht•r in th«.• 'iH tx·h1nd Ram \andcr., had 14 'ard\ on I:! t·arnc\. \\ h1k Brad \1 u\ter picked up on 4 cam<'' incluJing l>n(' \\ herr he lo t a 'ard on founh-and-go.il Imm thr (,1ants' I 1n the \l'C'Ond quani:r '' hl·n \OU go v.1th a four-man front 1t°s m:in on mJn :"o one 1s unro\ <'red and tht'rc 1s no1o1.h<"rr tor tht' hn<"men lo go 'r ou can•t ')C.hcmc .tnd u\C' ~umb1natton blocks up front and that'' v.hat the\ do a 101:· Thl' < 11.lnt'> al\<, 3ddcd a ...,nnkle to the 4-3 h' h;n 1n~ ..ali.-t\ \hron (,u~ton pla~ cloS<" to thl" line -\o thl' Bea"' wen-real!\ facing a front l'lght thJt v..i., 'ltJlkl·d agamst the run. ~t u,tl·r ..aid the BC!'ars h3\(' practtcrd t.1g.i1n't tour-man lront'i all ~ason. but JUSt \·ouldn 't ~rt tht' running game going against ,l.\\ \or!.; .. ,u onr ha!. pla.,ed 11 the wa) the Giant pla,<'d 11 ltW\ · \1uster 'ia1d "It rcall~ bottled u' up It'' J dcll'n\l' \Ou ha\e to throw against and that'\ 1o1. hat "'<' tned to do .. 49ers facing expected foe in NY Giants 1991 Town Hall Celebrity Series Our 23rd Season By Tim Liotta AP Sc>orts Wnler AN FRANCISCO -Nrxt on Joe Montana's postseason hit hsl stands the NC!'w York Giants, the t<"am the n Francisco 49ers fig. un.·J all along they would have to beat for a shot at thcLr third ron· sccut1H 5uixr Bowl utlc. "I thtnl. v.c realized there would be a good chance that v.e v.-ould (pl&) cw York apm). ~cs.." 49cn coach George Sfafcrt said. ·• ... The) 're Sollll lO rome out here v.,th a Hndetta and at the same ume T think v.e're 1oma to be a de- tcmuncd club. too.·· The 49crs mo"ed as close as any team ha ever come to wioruna thttc trat&ht uper Bov.ls b} dc- fe111n1 the Wash101ton Redskin 2 ·I 0 Saturday tn the NF divi,aonaJ pla)ofT pme. After winnin1 consecutnc upcr 01.ma E¥W10n W• (21) breetta up pea Intended for a.in Aon Bo"'l . the Pittsbur&h Stttkn act- Mom. during ftrlt qu9rter of NFC ptayOff geme at Giant• Stldtum. vanccd into the 1976 AFC Con- fettnce utle pme only to IOtC 24-7 1111111 rushina -the 8can did no• make to t.k OUJand Rlldft's. a rushina fint down -and was not Tbt 1971·72-7J Mwn1 Oolpbans From 11 a fac:1or in the pa ins 11mc. pla)ed in the 5'apcf '°"'· but me c.nhoft'1 I-yard dive With ttvtn• • ..Ob,eouily, tM)'re the No. l Dotplains lost in tbcif' ,.,. ..,.,_.. ~ 10 90. rush1na atam and -c held thnll, IMC ud then lhled io In* the W1'itr Holledcr wu pidins tbc and you c:an't upea 1Mt. .. llid PllaYo& 1n l974. offcn•. New York'• defealive notr !Kkk .Erit H~ Wtao · ·fie s.w-1ow1 is IOmetlrina IM a.or. -Lftrence Ta)tor, Erit mcMid 10 kft t8Clle ht dte blr-49er1 .---. ooe '° ---HOWMl Md E~ Walla-wen man front ~ Cima llri1tl11I • .,. -.i·-WOIT1 -...... i ~ on ea.---.. 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Mf'Cft lJ tWn~te C,oe-.p Hlth KftOOI elr1s NC* ·allll' 111 INCi , .. _.,.,_, c..---.. ---"-1 Corr-e Cll4 ~' KOl".of'lo9 ""*"'*' ao.'"'*" l S.'19'\ w~~·""11' ~ 11 --·· ...... ..., ......... ....,Vtl'll w ...... .......... ,,,..,,,. ~ Oelfell ,,,..,._. A-. -ow-e- Lalren 116, Redletl 97 HOUSTOH -I -1•11 ... 16, r-11 It 1·• !•, L. Smllll t•I H 4, -·-1·11 1•1 It, I( Sm<!~ )-1 0-0 1, l'....,CI ••16 1-0 I, W-1·4 1·1 6. FelH 2 .. l 4 \, J--l-) 0-0 2, W-te< 1-2 Ml. C-..r 0-0 0-0 0 1-d 0-l M 2 Tela!\ '1•100 IO·l· t7 t..OS ANGii.iS -~ M > H 12, -.... t I• 1·1 21 Ol•.c t•ll ••• 22 I _..,..' US • 11 Scon S·I 2·2 12. Gr.-> .. S .. 11, T ..... I ll 0-0 I•. ~ I 1 0 0 J ()row 0-10-0 0, C-1-1 M I. Smit" 1·1H1 T-J H H lf'Tal.C• •·es tt·n 11• SarwlW~ Hou>i... n u 11 11-t1 L°' ... .._ 11 11 11 ~11t J--1 __ .__,..,. S·ll ,_,,_ )•$ I( Sin•"' I I FIO¥G l 2 W-0-l I -O·l t L°' ·-· 1 1 CWoni.,, ?-2 .... ,"'1 0 l I! -0·1 Salt! tll F...-..,, -.__,._,.,.. S. II. StN1'1 lit L°' A-fl 10.•.c ll &u.\tt~tofil ,. tf:•VO io LM Al't ->< CE -161 Tollll ...,.._....._,,..,. n L°' A-U A-II la4 Cole9e men WIST °''''°""• St a.. V\C IO 01 Ce•ffor"' • PO >Ne~ ""V•• .. $OVTM A'-•B.,~em .. \' L°"'' IO H Ca'<>' "9 S• 'Cl C.-o • fllCfl ll Sou•" .. __ tt ,. ( (...,,., .... It.ST s~ JOl't'f", n Cor"'f(.'c"'' ~ "°W U ~ ZS flAalO I.AST WlllC t UNI. V ti 0 Mal S.• .IOM Slelt fl •S b9et Uf•f'I \t1•• 11f •l DH• F',~ State U1 " ...... 1.11 .... .-.. ... c.-.... ............... ~......... c...... ....... M.Me I•• .... -• .,_ ................. . ~.... . ........ """"' _,......., ...... a-. .... "' ... , ................ .... &..aMy ........ .._ ... ,.. " .......... 1 ... 11 ... -• ~· ~•1'1 .... ~lfHI ......... 1'611 ... ......,. IC-Cll¥ fJ·~-::=-..... ...... .......... 1 .. ., .... .... ti ...... CWellM M ··J Mel Vlrl!lllli T-1111', ti. a LIO Clt-)1 -0-... .. ,._, _. ............ ,, ...... c-llt·31 -Wwlt .... .,. ................. ..._...~ ... -. .... c--..•• ,,__,,,..,,-~,._i.i..., .. _..,...,..,, D New ••u Mete \IHI ...,~ ""°' ..... ~ -UC SeMe ..,,_.. ...~ o-111t Tedi It-SI llal II He l4 ~ •11. -........ c...-,_ ...., It TlllM II ~ 1-1 ..., II .. ~ .,._ .,_.,, IMI .. UWI t.M& c ........... .. ..., uc.u m.~ .. ~ ....... .,.,,,_...SI 14 We ........ J'I S1 USC .. ""-SI '1 ttCM al TW • rMID UST wal9t I ~ Ste>t llHI _, ~ n-u -,_ 9'·U '"' 1e • " ............ Jt l w.-1"•11 _, Ne II C*- 11·1i. _, ... J """" c., ..... Mele ID-Ill, J .. J -C-Sle19 I l?·ll -O!At ............... ,~ m-••·'" . ,_ ,,,.,, -· ~ " n -Kffllueh •Jt S ..._ !IHI i.1 ,. ... IS UU "'" 6. UHl..V IU·OI -· S... -Slelt N·». _, ... n 1..-a..c11 ,, ... •1s 1 ""'-11211 -·~a. 10.-.0, •al No JI Iowa N 1$. ot I a-. 1 IMI .,..1 GMrela Slate n·o. -1 *'"' caro11N1 "al• tOO-S.., o.a t l'IDt.O. ft .. t St-d 110-ll -I Ho IJ Wa...,... fOfl 15• 11, -• Wa°"""..., State IO 1• 10 11 .. ,_. 111 ., -· ,_ •• ,. .... , No l ~ $le ... N·1t II __ ..,,. It-JI _, ~ M 61 to.I .. Moc ....... Stt lt t1 1l 1' C-Ct·>I io.t to No l v.,...... I HS tootte --ll al IJ Wa.,,.,...... ti l 11 IO•I IO No t S•-• 1~11 -t Cat.lw,,.. 11 SI t• ,.,..._, IU ll _,No JO h• .. 1' 61 ... , h•H T«fl M ., IS LSU Cll·ll _, M'""-Staie 1' '6 -· Ne S A-.rft U .. l• ""-'~ 11 n ... , J«,..,. , •• ,. 1' '1 .. , M·.WU-Sta•• ti 61 l1 WH ...... 11 ... 1\10• ft> I -·-•av S•e!t '7· ...... , Seutfl FIDI• 1S '1 ti C-1teU4 IJ J .,.., y .... ,,. •• .. ,. •• , ,, ~ ' ,, 0 ..... s.t.Of'I ...... "p " ...... _, I) J 0.-' i;.. ... 0 .. ft , .. llJ -· eo. .... c-,. n _, •o \• -• ti., 10 f ••• , • " ~,, , .... 0 t• .,,~, , ••• -· 11-n 11 " ..... HO.nl ... •> " 11 ~-· 7 )l twat ltuftOI\ .., t1 IM' 'O No'....,_ .. u .. n L-a..c" Sta .. •• s1 ~·..,Ho • UNL" •ts JJ tau' a,.. fee" I • o.a• NE lOU'\.a•a IJ·U .... , SW ............. ti• 1• No<•e 0-t JI i..•t l wt"" IO M ... , o.f'•"'" .. lS ()lo .. _ S1a11 I) 1 _, '''"'""" II .O -• Kan .. , II U 1 Af·'-anr..tl t\ I o-.t J u ,e1 IOt .. o.a• re ... , .... ", .. Water -11 eAS19AU. ._._.._ DETltOIT TIGEltS-Tf.-d Jflfl aoo- '"-altc. ..... lo Ille~ Or-..., Mid<.,, Teti-, ~. ---to ,.,.,,,. wltll l etllelOI\ °" a --l*t- ''a<t __ .._ NEW 'l'OltlC ~TS-A .. -to - -Meuw Seu., u iaw. °" • -· .._, contrect ST L~IS C41tOINAl..S-A9<-19 "'"" wm. T.,.. ~ri. utoct.,.,. • ""'r~r C°"'tfll<t A.,... ..... f'nl, wltf'I ... _......_~ .... ,... ~..,. (ef\tf'.,... IMl(ITSAU. ... _ ......... .._ NEW JEU EY HET~ OerTICtl r.ar.... • . .,. Oii .... "'-lad bl Ac l>Yaf.. , ••• o-.. -· ....... .... .......... ,, NEW YOlto, l(NICI(~ I- L• W "~ C#'W .., .... ...,.,,.., It! 4 Ct"••'eid Stu.wt Gf'ev ~ frOl"'I "'9 """"' ... ,, '0DT9AU. ... _,_.._ MINNESOTA VIKINGs-Fo<ad l'tove ,_.,~, °"""' ._, coor.,...tor ~ eoe s.-...... -. .. ~ ......... IOOCK•Y ...._.._,. .. ...._ ~TltEAL (ANADIENl-Tt- c;.. • ..s 0'°""• -10 "'* Yan tau.,,., r~, * 1 ~ '°"""° •ett ·-· NfW Y~' llAH<;EllS-Ka-ft.c• l~nne~1 .,., *·~ kom l"'ONmtot1 of 'fW .,.._ICM"' Hoc.II.•• L ...... J ,,..,..... 114• ti 0•~ -0' N• p'9 • ONo Stet• t~• n o.•t NOf't;,.w-nttofft ·------------------------101 62 OMI W1KC)t"\ ,. '1 6iO s Nor111 Ca<ol,,. IJ " o.a• -•1tno tos n. -·No 11 v .. o .... " .. i o• t Ar11~ (I) fJ EN•I Soufnet'" (•11 IOnl .. t7 ... i. .... , No 1 UCLA 11 '7 I UCLA f IJ ll 0.1• A• 1<1"• S•e•t ., .. '°'' to No ............ 11 11 I S¥rac11i1oM If J' llOl' •o ~ 11 1>111.-... •>·19 O.•• ~ .... Ha .. _., t Cor-"""«-•tevt n 1• De•' Vlff.-nov• 1• 11 oe.1 Centr~ (ON"lle(h<Vf Stere 11\ ., 0,1 •o No to ~· .JOtttt ' n·St 10 St ,_ ' 11 1 io.1 10 5-'0f' .... u n ••' No • c ...... ioe ... • n jt \' <,.n•uc•" 11-11 0..' Miu"• i•e11 .. 10 OHi ,..,..,,.,,_.... 11 7f lntemationlll WO-LO CH~Stl~S let ........ A11 ... _I MIN ........ --ldl H-•v 11. ~ 1'-llft 11 .._,. • ) • 1 IJ U""'.0 \ti ff'\ J 1 4 1 11 H~,., KOf'-"'9 Mflll 'O\ t Ooct ) Pt>'...-1 &.~ P•"•"•"• I •Ot1' I \lrnc1t I u ... •.o S••'tt \IOl<-"'Q ... ~. > (•,..._.,,, 1 ~ K""°' I ( ••"'' t J,,,.....f'I lllllll I 1/1 ~1 I '\l'"'• ..... r..... ---td> Y~'•"• I SN"' 1 ,,_,_ t ¥U90'\ ••·• 1 S..4' J Hvneerv • u rto S'•'•' ~ ire• t G.,.......,.. 1 So"•' U"'tOfl I •w.t•re a ' lltor"'\e~• \0 C_...c. n Cwoe 11 ,.,.•"'<• tl Cet\eOe •• (" ne 1\ fo.,o• '• ..._ l«••.NS _. .. ,_,_,.. I ~f'\CI 1 '•".ea.. J U"'"'" s•atH • .... .. ~,. 1 .u\.,. • . G4itm.elt• 1 •• l•......,., • ''et"IC• • e,.,,. LAIERS From 81 Laltcrs' six-point halfhme lead to 82-64 with I :55 lcfi in the third quarter. Di vac paced the Lakcrs to a 55-49 halfi1me lead with 12 points and Johnson added nine points and six assi sts. Terry Teagle hit three Jumpers off the bench en a 3:48 span. including a 17-footcr that extended the takers· biggest margin of the half to 47-37 with 5: 15 left in the second quarter. The Rockets, who never led en the half despite a 27-19 rebounding edge, narrowed the gap to 47-45 w11h 3:22 lefi as Sleepy Floyd and Vernon Maxwell fueled an 8-0 spun with 3-pointers around a slam dunk b) Buck Johnson. But the Lakcrs' Byron Scott hit a 19-footer and a dm 1ng layup 1n the final 2112 minutes to fi nish the half with 10 points. -By tlte A11oclated Press all tll1nl lei V Winter Serles NIWPOaT llAOf -Tbc third ... qi lbe Wiallr lllill ...._.by Newpon Harbor Yldt Oub .. ••• 52 .._bl eilh• dwa ..Wns in lilbt winds s...•1 .... Sadly. TIMI ftnal ... of&M leries will be next Jan. 26-27. Here'•. loOk ., the t&andi• after three lcp: ..Ye ........ ...... • CU ..... , -t Tlftll ~ (NHYC), t. ...... KIMev (NHYi)k ! ~ LYOlll INHYC), It ._.., -1 Of'lt ~·Het111Y nnM CNHYCli 2. M ~ I ..... Yeefd aw.): 1 ....,, Dlloll <CYC). ...._ C• .._, -1 1,.111 Y....., IUOIAI; 1 Oerrvl M9llMI CUCllAI ... A 6 I (I lllMt\) -1 W"1tfteY FIM• CNMYC)I I. ._,.., ,.,_ n•tYCl . ... Cl 6 a CS .._._, -I, Irion 11tM1 (NHYC), t JelWllW ,.,.., (NHY() • ... a Cl lleel\) -1 sc.tt n...tt (NHYC); I. Kevtft 0.-. CNHYC) J. ..._ Mevw (fltHYCI. iii.ii (t ..... ) -1 Jfff .... -.OY ~ (MaYCI, I. IM C.-((NYC~ 1 Sclltt ltnwf·O.-, ~ CNHYC), U. M 1.1 .._ta} -1. Ga.n Kc.Nlfl (eYC) ·~·~Pu.t UIC From 81· while Yamcn Sanders had 11 rebounds. The Trojans ~re without senior forward R.onn.ie Coleman. who missed the first pme of h.is career with a sprained ri&ht ankle. j "We found out one hour before ~ left the bold that Ronn~ couldn't play," USC Coach 0eol'IC Ravclina said ... Totether w1th the trainer. we decided i1 was in Ronnie's best interest that he didn't play on it. I'm &lad the pme didn't reflect his absence." The Trojans had beaten Arizona State fou.r strai&ht times before Sunday. includin& twice here. "We can't play much bcner than this," Sun Devil• Coach Bill Friedcr said. ·•we found a way 10 Ft ii done at the end and Fontana made a bi1-timc play to tic it. "The key was acnina the ball inside to Ike and Jamal. We doublc--rcammed Miner and it was effective in the first half. But he still found a way 10 &el the ball and score. He was just phenomenal." Arizona St.ate forced overtime at 7S-7S on freshman Dwayne Fontana's drivins layin with eiaht seconds rcmainina :__the 14th of 15 tics in the pme. Faulkner's 1wo free throws and Austin's baseline ,.. JUmpcr put the Sun Devils ahead 81 -77 with 1:10 left in overtime. .. ASU really played well down the stretch," Raveling said. "We had a few turnovers early in overtime thal hun us. Other than that. ~ played pretty well. ASU plays really hard and they probably have one of the quickest teams 1n the lcafC 1his year." Miner. who had 24 second-half points. cut the Trojans' gap to 81 -80 on a 3-point goal with 51 seconds to play. But USC aot no closer as Whttler ma<k a free throw with 22 seconds lef\, Collins hi1 one with 10 seconds showina and Faulkner made two foul shots with two seconds rcmainina fo r the final mara:in. There were eight ties and 11 lead changes in the fi rst half before Duane Cooper gave USC a 40-39 lead on t~o fret throws with no umc showing. -By dte AIMdatH Preu From North Orange COWYty From South Orange COWYty 54().1220 496-6800 642-5678 EJ CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5678 FROM NORTH ORANGE CO. FROM SOUTH ORANGE CO. THE DAil Y PILOT CL~SSIFIEO OHICE HOURS 1~5"'\tfe9 MOn-Fn a.m.s 30om e.a.-Counlet M F 8 OOllm ~ 00o<t> MAOl. .. I PVBUCA TtON OEAOllNE -tty f.-Stty w-.,.cs..-, flluneltty Fno.., SetlilOav Sunoey Fn 530 PM Mon 530 p"" r.-530,,,.,,. Wee! 3JO PM T hut's S JO PM "" 3 30 Pt.t Fn S 30 Pt.4 CHfC~ YC>Uf' AO THE "RIT DAY Jr--. Q4•IJ P o• ,,,,,,_\ f()I f!fhCtenCY and K C:Uf'Ky M(·Wf'•f'1 U(.\.•h•it.•Ooltly f!lf•()f\ do OC.CUI Pte•w hit~ .. ,...~ ""'' 111 '' '""° 1>.o<~ .no chf'<:~ you• .a 0•••1 Rf'r ort ,..,...,, ·m"'f'<l•ltlf't~ ti) 6•1 5678 Theo...., Pole>! d<Cf'tl" no tnl)oM~ tOt any MIO<'".,, .ci,,..11_.,1 f0< ....,.., .. ,, '"•Y ""' ·~••1>141 ••C9Jll cor ll'WI (.OSI tll ll'>e ~f' ""'"•"• 0<.cup•t!d l>y tl\f! ""°' C1t!d1t can only De '-'Ur()~ tm thfl f1t\I •n"•f'hon Any amount t><>l Pll•O '"""" 30 OllYS ltt •fQu"ed w•M De liUl>l@CI 10 rwt not~"'''~ 10 lfnanc• cil••QM c.omp..t.O af 1 ,.,. ol 1ne uno&•O l>•l&ntf' .,.. moo1n all t<llleetoon cost\ lf\CI eny •~11sona1>i. 1110<ney • •~ .. ... ... . t,.. l.i ... ' ~ '. .. _., ~) <f ' • • . .#' • I!' \ ••• 111111111 .. .... ·~·.-. . . "' .. •' -t I .. 11•,,• ~ . • .. l -... - .......... "' . ... • • I • Q.3-Neither vulnerable, u South you hold: •KQ7 •AX • AK76 H7M Your nght·hand opponent open• the bidding with one dub. What action do you uike? A.-lt'a a choice bet•Hn double and one no trump Whlle we know a lot of players who would bid one no trump with thts hokhnc b«aUM of shortness 1n the m•JOtl, our prefer· e~ is fo r double The hand 11 t.oo m-h 1n pnmt va.lun not t.o probe for • suit rontnct IQ.3-~tither "-ulnerablt. u ~th \OU hold· •KQ7 •AK + AK76 +97M The biddina haa ptocffdtd E .. t South Wcwt North I + Dbl PU9 I • p._ ? What acuon do you &.ake" A.-SuU no good 1<>luoon OM no trump would play from Llw wroni sick. two dubs could launch the auction into orbit wuhout a Mfe landing placr. pua 1s u,ty. The i.ut of enla 11ttnu to be a bid of two Q .•-Aa South. vulnerable. you hold. •AX •762 t AQJ6 +AKQJO What al your openl.DI bid'> A.-We know all about b.avinc all four .Wta aiopped to open two no lnlmp or tta eqwvaknt-until we pteked up this band. Since a.ay oth· er openmc t1 even wone. our chotee t1 two no trump tf we play 22·24 potnta, two dube followed by two DO trump 1( our ranee ia we&ktt. Q.&-Aa South. wlnerable. you hoki •AQ782 • 832 t 08' H The b1dchn1 haa proceeded: But. Sooth W9R N~ PU9 P ... P .. 3 • p ... ! What eel.Io n do you take? A .-Firat, let'• ~l all thouc:bta that partner ia p:reelllptins-bt' would have thrown in the cal'da With a weak band. Kia jump muat be hued OD aound valuM. but Wlth ahon.nna in the ~n; thus a de- •ttt to make it difficult for the op. ponenu to eni.r t.be auction Our voe.. I°" to five daamonds.. with DO l\lAr&ni.I It will make. Q.6-M South. vulnerable. you hold. +95 • J 62 • K792 •A853 The b1dd1111 haa proceeded: Eut South llVMt N.u.. I + P.. P.. 1 • p._ ? What actaon do you uh? . A.-ln the belancmc pomLK>A. putner'a IUJl btd doean\ prom~ much-'"th a really cood hand. ht would haw reopeMd with a double. Therefore. you have nowMre near ~nouih w ventutt one no trump. Pua. and aee what ~Iopa. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE I ACftOSS eaaaylSI SS Spoil• 57 Pond SI Cod tvoe SI A¥OICI IO Proo ,, v ... ..,, iudge '2 Celled 13 CoioreCI DOWN 1'Sa-- 2 Hit1M1 3 -QJC\a 4 Part of Qty ,.,.,. 5 Stood up I Didn't wor1I , ........ 'Cleo lndOen • Conceit '84lme 10 -c.11• 11 OofNetlc ,.., 12 0.-C 13NY ._,. 21 """ n Artnoye 25 AMI lw"9 210....... 21~ 2t ~toot .... ,_ .. "......-.~ a ww.-..-si --. ,.A .... ... ~"' ~ ... w.... ...... IO 0 1 £2 M .,......_. . u ..... .... MAa... 17 0.. hi• IXTM MONIY = ........ ... ow -1111n .... ...... .................. .__. .... ~ ,... 1n .,. _. .illl a ""' tollll u 1 111111' 1r. ......... ~..,. $700 11111111 .. ,. .......... EJ $2.44 per day Thet'a Al.L Yo" P9Y fOf 4 "'*· 30 day minimum In the SERVICE DIRECTORY ~.,,. • '.J • ..1 ,. ......... lllLY PILIT'S Due to 'delays at GTE the 900 Dateline service will not be available In the Huntington Beach/Fountain Valley area until February. We apologize to our readers for the Inconvenience. amt, •tlllUWll ~VI 3004 lllllUIMY,H WIUll &la •• •••m MWM wn owM. 21yU1. ~' mn,w .. Is your buslneH moving to a new location? Announce the move In claulfled. Otder, siro•s•a.Mlf i.oy WF(33)~1ngfothMd· -..TB.Y entr~. would-be~. ttwouoNY w.,,.. to !Met 11 SIJ ... a ._.,down 1oW11'150+ some SWM WtlO antoys ~ :"'~ •treetwite rogue enllgfltanad multi~ -.C a.ty for 11t11n1~ -~-~--....:....-.....-..;.1...-~_;_!...........;;..;..;..~........okAZ:.:Z!IC.::.J•*iilll.. I ... ptotaaalonlll eent1• being 190nllneou1 & a... lest r•tlOMl'ltp (3'~ .._.... tplC:ey gal. wllltng faceted entrepreneur, .. ~ •1350 mM tot.,_..,, gott, out-ec:t¥enture>Ya Kida and yeert) Funny. "'*11"9 to deal wt1h mee11ng th!t YefY ltlgl4bgent, aUl'Kt· .. mTI 1111 -door ectMtlaa, ~ peta 0 K. No drugt SWM 30, 5 8" 175 lbt wey Gr .. t ftlendkthtp "4, wordly, high morw et~ No19"'10ke, YefY GrMt a.\19 of humor ~ new romance to ponlbte. and you now 40'1, 1ooklng fOf In· Seeks i.dy wfttl two,_.. ltte llk:Otlol. 12294 •2279 r.::owr 1 W811t to 1twt '#Mt thjt can le9d 10 ttlfl.gent. ~11tle9ted, to~._..., c:otd Yl>- llTll... -1.1 .. ,_ UYE" di,.'~ ~~ '•f ,VoU3.._'r• • t:M9 ete;ant iecsy of t11te and ._. '">'·tour. "'· 'tee· Slim SW wtc:tow. Moved SWF 42, vety lttr~lve. ..-3S" Call"'""' -"-· l&.&llY DMAm... ctw. ti l33-4 ~~ ~ h•r•·tffkt m•I• Of alCCIUfUI, nonJtn'IOker AIRITWlll.Y AttrectlYe. 5'7''. lthletlc, t --11T n•1-"*" • 1$31 t.ma1e triendt to ¥1911 Seek• t ... ...itt1y, fun IWllT an 153 lbt. 10..lh. QOOd· -· • , .. ..... local points of lnt.-t. loYlng, romentlc SWM , humored, I0\199 mutlc:, SWM, 33. 5 I • 140 lbe 11f 1111.- Lunch oc dinner 42•.55 With strong dallre NeY9I' merri.d, 8 • 170 lbt, 1nt1qu1t, gerdenlng, llekl lllm & •ttrlletM SWM 41 lovee .... 5'10", N/Smoker, plane ror permenent r•I•-llllllng an exotic lady cooking, 1 .. kt In· WF 25-35 fOI'. po.tbte 206 Iba, good buld, ~ 12271 tlonlhlp. "2211 with brown akin end talllgant, effactlon1t1, latUng '911ttonlhip Mu9t heir, good "n" ol bfown bedroom~ for good-looklng lady llk1dlnl~out,tr1Wland ~ Y«Y~t• Seeking Men 3003 1W a fR??'? i LM llT LnT en axctung monopnous • ,,,. 1 quiet nn.. at home. hard Wortr• Liil• ~ -Looking to dlW Into r .... SWF~. ~ 50•1, ral1tlon1ttlp • 1353 "t330 Ila, beect\ welts. ~. ow~~~ .!1;... ::t~.~::c:; =~,:1~~ ·nu-r:.r· r!'!J.'5~· '~~ ........... Lift" ·-'-1 -------flgure-4011h. LTku tMlhore,andQUlet..,.. lng..itad)ultldllnoafa emottar, lllf..employed SWM 27, 8'1'" 200 Iba "'111-.!- youngerettltudas,baecl'I, nlng1 elone. NHdl male 45-65. •2293 SWM2evetye6ander,lotll Dancer. ITIOlll&a, Vagas.. loc*lng for SWF hOnelt, 31,...USWMIOWM29+ dining, danc:lng. mcMee. 11urturlng. 11354 held body, 8'2", 185,.,. MnJco __.end&. Look· IPO"tme. cerlng. ro-for ..,..,.. t~lehip. IPO't• llncerlty ~ UllT IUllY .._ Super..,, l>Utl1. need••'· Ing fOI' 90f'M04'ie loc*lng mentic, loyll and low. to entoy epon.a. ~ ty, aenM of 'humor, .. id IJI .. 30'1, 115 lbt. ettr~lve lactlon1t1, lnt•lllgent. lor 1omeona 1lw1y1 cudd'9 I'm I b6g (not In muetc.outdoore._..of travel. REAL frland1. NaVW blonde, 40tlfl SDF w/llMI Of humor Com-amotionaltV MCUte, IVllll-35-45 reedy 111345 tumm)') Mnllttll'I 'Tadd)' ~ No M'OkeldNQ!a. I #2295 ~ed~oteulonal. fortat>te In• bait gown u 1bl1 swr: for unrHI •••••• J.U 1 _ a..r. 11335 Soe dMik. Kids o.tl.1 Seek• h1eellgel1t""' per-In ......... handlome ~lute • 1332 ---' -. ·-•227' • HmTllll-.i ion, SWM, 42-IOlah antrapranaur w111m1 et.ea.~. n<wMmOl!ar, LW,"331, ' -NJll'nOlkar. E.oJoy fo916ng, Ill• 112280 l&TTLI ill••• ftnancllllyandemottonet--.. 31 . ...eciSWMJDWMao+ dining dlndng, llkilnG. lllLI ~ ve_ry comfott•bl•. ~ 8WM 2t l'I" 11111 trWI for einc:era r*tiOlllNp, NMtnQ: TWo baecl'I con-Tiil l --s..i IOft and gentle ~N, llbaral, tunny DWM M , 5· 11" 2GO 1be an-.....,_ iro-Mir a~ enjoys movtee. ""'*· doe. 122n SWF, 21. ~= enJOys tarnala 10 bl 1 pe;r, Age You· cl'llc. educated, ttl1y Joy• dlnlne. d-::J· Md ..,. of tuft, .._. MnM of humor No romenoa. · danc-ul'llmportent bUt oeara to °' unW, Wllgl'lt con-moviaa. WlllM on ...... tor ff'tMda ot 1rnoka/drugia. Soc drink. "'1TI .... -Ing. get aweya, qu6lt 1Yeo-QfOW and care 1 ""*· doua. """· ..are. met• N/lmdler _.. ~ poMlb.. r ... tloft9'11p. Kldlolcay. H:l9l 31,..-SSWMIDWM29+ IWtgl. w1llc1 S .. klng •l333 rilrge"'*tded rt347 lady •1361 •1327 • lor 8'ncare r•tlOMhlp. epaaei SM for fatting r• -1 • __. -, ..... liiiiiiiii":---aAllY a HH enfoy ~ rnovi ... ~=•"'P c eu m• IWIHI' ~=:;an~:'~ ,_lllllm I llllllllllM --muatc:,out a.IMMOf 185 1b1 .._-d wortllng, SWM looking lor 40-50 ---·-mftW Ac11Ye. .ttrd\19. ._., humor. No amo«e/~. ElllllTIC clMn cut. nice dteUllr, ~old ttlm pretty io..... SWM a root btond blue Werm. 1111•"1'"· lfCW•I "positive" t•ntlem•n ~~7:rlnk. l<ld• 0 · I .-!11111.Al SWf IOOklng for '"' right •bte SWF to IMr• Gott. o.atree moncoamout. 8WM "°"*' '"' ... with "~ of l'lumor'' Blnd/Blu, ethletle, hard· women •bout the urne trsvel. dinner. denca, 1pont1n1ou1, affac-of hUmOf. F« ,,_IOltllp, for tneodllltp, Mwn· Whan YoU write 1 clualflad worklng/pleylng , .. 11, ege tor fun end compe.. walk by Iha beect\, mulic tion.t• eoul IMt9 Pan tr•vel. H .. lthy non· turalactlllttlaa. I llYI In ed,lndUdlaUhlr.cta·end j .. ncer• out-going 29_37 1 nk>nlhlp Could thlt bl & l~tar. Live In New-timer. t1"d not .-pond. emoller. ,... •· f't ''. Newpott IMaf\. ,UIO 91' the,....... YoU ..nt. fun romantic. • 2292 ' you? • 13'e _, Pott • 1:M2 • 1344 111 Illa. • 1'43 HOW TO RESPOND TODATEUNE· • Call 1-900-844-0100 e Enter 4-digit code appearing in ad e Listen to greeting • Leave me ssage (you can change it if not sati . fied) When leaving a message • Leave your f ir"il nan1c • Mention your i ntcrcst~ e Tell your age • De cribc your appearance e Specify your pref ere nee~ e Include what you liked about the person you arc responding to You n1ay leave a 30 ~ccond message. You will be auto1natically billed 98¢ for each minute. FREE PERSONALS USE THIS FORM TO PLACE YOUR FREE PERSONAL AD GUIDELl~JE S PRINT CLEARLY (First three words ore boldface) 25 word mox1rm.m FREE ADS ARE MAIL-INS ONLY All CalHns Will Be Charged Regular Rote. -o r1o(IJT'A: r·c· 0-Jt•T O -_,1,J, ( ,,H,, • _,..... • NAME:------------------------------------ PHONE:------------------------------------ ~: OTV: SW'E: ZP: ---~.:=::n:;iatrr.:Qf ijf£s£1i! E: .. 111••,... i.i& ... ...... • • I I I -· ... • l'lCTIT10Ut .,... •• ..._ITA'nmwT. The ~ per'IOnS ., • doong~- SPRINGOALE VILLAGE APARTti.tENTS 14 118 SPf'ongOM Stf'Mt WMI· _,., Cail! 91683 Alen B ~ & .,_.,.,,_ C 0~ Trust-OI o-ger F'wnoty T N91 • 14177 1$'61 Chemocal ~ Mur.1 ong104" 9Mcf'I Celd 112649 lt1oa l>ua>_. •• C'O" OuCl•O Dy an un1n eorporaled usoe1atto" Otl'ler then a~• The r-01 .. re.ntt•I c:om menceo to tr~ .,_. -under t"9 F'ctrtlout lua1neu n•m«•l llS1en et>owon 1915 Ailn8 ~ Thie ltaletnenl ... ...l ""'"" IM County Clet1I ot 0. ar-ve County on ~bf-· 31 1990 READ Tt£ Q..ASSFEDS n... .. ~ por1I °'cal . ...,. • ... '" ........ °' .. °"" lllllnr •1 11 ..... .,... ..... ....,.... ...... ~ IDr,.., .... .,.. ~ STIRTII& I IEW IUSllESSl1 ,,.. ~ Olpeib1•1t ... °"' ~ .. ..., '° eMOUnCe • ,.. ~now..., '1b't '°,..,..,.... ~ w. .. now IEAAQ4 ... .--1ar JOU •no...,. c::lwga..,.. ._.,.. .............. ., .. ~ ttcMe In ...... Ma. n.. o1--. ...... .-dt .. QOliit'llld -· .. ,.......,. .. ,_ ...... ..... .. .. County °"'· .....,_ ClflCllaw.lkb ............ n .. .,, ...... 99\ .. ,.. ..... .. p.Mc•lan we~ a.tt. I PlleMt-.bflO .. \QWI • • ~ •• , ....... OllJ,... l.tgll °"*"'•"-330 w.. ..... co.ta ...... a.ts .... ,... cm. ... *' bf, ,._ Clll ua • (7'4} ..a-42t. El •• ltl ot a• _, ..... ,... •... . ... ,.. ., ..... ,,u ....... -. .,... ................. .... ......--....... . .............. ,.. Goodlllllll\,_ Whlll 1111 .. .. He was bein' the Pillsbury Dough- boy and I just poked him in the tummy." by Brad Anderson I a " That Qught to keep you off the couch." RARCY ARLO AND JA1'18 OVSIUIOAllD ADAll I OOtT FEEL ~ER1M:U. "ffi£ Y CAtW01 6£NO Hlf.4 - 1Ht Y CAAHOT &UK HIM. ~~ 15 SfONE Hf IS SfEfL_ - PREDBA88BT ,.,., L-------' TRUE ! TRUE ! '<ESSIROO ! FALSE !TRUE !~ALSE! TRUE ! VESSIROO !! ) ' by Chartee M. Schulz OKAY. MA1AM. l1Ll LEAVE OUT TME "VE5SIR005 " -I • . - by Jeff MacNelly DS1'"18 TBS llENACB by Hank Ketchum .. by Jerry Scott ROSE 18 ROSE bv Chlo Dunham J ~N'T CARE ~. LON6 ~OU SIT rH£fE13£AHAW~ YM'RE ~EAT fHOSE P~AS .. by Brian Basset .•. 'too M\~T <J\~ 1HaW~T~ H~. by Alex Graham i.~ I ·~ l J I 1 'M>Ht>ER \f THEY EVER GET TIREO ~ EA11 ~ SOGGY FOOD ?" by T _?m Batluk by Lynn Johnston ~~ W1NOO..UfMY