HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-12-14 - Orange Coast PilotWoman rescued
Coeta 11-~ten work to free Bftlyn.
Parry of Coeta lie.a after a tramc accident
at 8":10 tlda ........... Pany appueady ~ lD front of Dodan ~of Hant-
n Beach. ~lnl f.-om eo.e Street onto
c
lleyer" Place. 8otll drl.en were taken to a-a lleaorlal B~tal lD Newport Beacla. Parry ... u.ted ID Mdou condition late
tlda mornlna wblle Harrod wu ln 1ooc1
condition aaa dae to be releued later today.
25 CENTS
School lecture .
by gay proteste4·
BJ PAUL ARcirlPLEY . Landa Seelhont. whose .two sons Gustabon'said. "That they're afraid
at .. ..,,..... arc lf'lduates of~ biah school, said to present both sides sugnts a
A storm of protest is growina she approached · iMtructor Mike htdden agenda ...
amon• ,,.rents ob"ectioa to the Marinoaboutbercoacemstwoyears Ray Wool-.,, another percna, .... ,,_ ~ ap-ago --..4 be ··old .. __ .. _ -· th• first -~ pearance of a homosexual speaker in auu ~ ~· ~ --· " cthoes that concern.
a Newpoel _ Beach hi&h school parent to ever complain. "They're saying they want to be fair
classroom. ' But dozens of other parents have -but only to their side," Woolsey
A representative of the p y com-· since joined her in complainin1 thll sa1d.
!"unityis invited each semester to an ~~Ilion offbe homosexual l_ifestylc Woolsey sa1d district policy dic-
introductory psycholOIY course at as inappropnate for 1mpremonable tales that controversial subjecu
Corona_del Mar ~igh School to talk teen-agers. _!!lould be freely dil(!ussed, but both abo~t has ch~scn hfestyle. ··1 said this doesn't belong in a trrst sides shou d be alJowed to present
. Disapproving parents say such semester psycboloSY cla.ss," Scclhorst their views on an issue.
d1scuss1on is inaJ>Pl:OJ?ri~te atth~h1gh said. "At best we'd like homoscxuaJ1-The district's refusal to permit an
school level. Bot 1f rt !S pemuned, ty out: anu-homoscxual v1ewpoint prompu
they "".ant t~e opportunity to present "As a compromise perhaps they Woolsey to ask, "I wonder what they
opposing views. could brin& in homotexuals who have have to hide?" ·
Although the course -and the gone straigbL" · Mary Chivers, who has thrs
one-day visit by the P Y speaker -In fact. the refusal of school youngei: children riot yet in biah
his been part of the school cur-officials to at least permit the prcsco-school, said, "I'm just appalled
ncutum for years. only in recent talion of an alternative view ts most they're aJlowma JUSt one side -yet
months ha.ve alarmed parents galling to many of the parents. they caJJ th~mselves open-minded ...
mounted th.e1r protesL. ~ohn Gustafson, wbo has two . Butdmncteducatoncounier~
School d1stnct officials stand be• children attendina Corona del Mar 1s no attempt to ~nt hom01Uua11·
hind the psychology course, aJthouah Hi&h, is amona those wbo have met ty as an altcmat1ve lifestyle for younc
it and a second controverslal class with Jacobson and Marino. people to consider.
ca!led family life arc un~er review, He questions their refusal to {>Cnnit "W~ would P,retent homotexuaJity
sa!d ~rona del Mar High School the presentation of opposing views. as a different lifestyle, not an altema·
pnnc1pal Dr. Tom Jacobson. "To me, it's intellectually wca.k,'' (PleueeeeGAr8/A2)
Coast
Despite the declining suc-
cess rate of local ln-
ttlatlves, the growth-con-
trol movement Is not deaci
In California, says Sen .
Marian Bergeson./ M
bay labor progra~ off to slow start
IF l 1-llJINV I CAN
BEAT THE c~el5TMA5
~IJSH I
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Workerssusp ciousofLag4naBeach's
offer to bus them to a different location
By LESUE EARNEST °' .. ...., .........
complamed about the workers con-
grcpt1ng near their homes. A city bus
-picks up taboT'ers on bottr sides of-the
The success of a program to street at Coast Highway and Viejo
encouraae day laborers and contrac-Street and takes them to a parking lot
ton in Laguna Beach to meet at a new a few miles away on Laguna Canyon
location was summed up by one Road.
waiting worker with a single word: So far. the idea has not cauaht on
"Nada." -Spanish for "nothina". with contractors. and workers appear
The program. which began Men-anxious about their lost wages.
day. was created after residents "Tiie police don't want us to stay
Mesa ponders
closing Palm
fire station
By JONA THAN VOLZKE °' .. ...., ..........
Costa Mesa needs two new tire
stations to adequately protect busi-
nesses nonh of the Sa11 Diego Free-
way, and officials are considenng
closmg the Royal Palm Station to
help finance the new facilities.
Some City Council members said
resjdents near the Royal Palm Station
at the comer of Royal Palm Dtive and
Adams Street have c-alled in protest 6f
the rumored closure.
While no final dct1sion has ~n
made, fire Chief John Petruzziello
(Pleueeet ROYAL PALll/A2)
Resjdents seein~
red cwer~olor-f-uf
shopjJlrig centers
Compatibility, not
a trend, determines
use of dramatic hues
BJllUIYKOI ... ..._,... ...
The use of dark purple and rust on
the archiiecture of the Tustin Market
Place and Costa Mesa's Harbor
Shoppina Center does not mean you
will tee a Rood of peanut-buttcr-and-
jelly<Olored bui~inp crop up in the
monthl to come, deUp professionals
ay.
Colon in arcbiiecture bave been at the center of controveny lately, with
the ult of dramatic hues at the Tustin
Market fltaee and Harbor Center in
ganicular dnwilll colorful remarks tom citizens and city oftlcials alike. The use of'"IDOf/ .,. .. and "lCn:a cona" hu aJaO been met with mixed
reviews ft-om udaitectum experts.
However. all thole intcrvt~
teemed to lll'et that atructure color is
not automaiically cholen by what the
latest trend is. lnst-S. buitcHna
daipen consider various t.ctorl.
such u competibihty with sunouftd.
inp and desirea Of the P!OPMY owner. 1nd mi• them caftfully to
produce the final maccrpiece.
The professionals interviewed also
seemed to aarcc the uproar ovenhc
Tustin Market Place and Harbor
Center stemmed mainly from the use
of colors not used before in Southern
California arthhctturc.
The 0'in" colon for the next couple
of years ran,e from canhy tones of
copper, coral and 1old to creamy
pastels of mauve and powder blue
inspired by the healthcare industry
and shocking hues of snpe-jelly
purple and lime JteCn insp1red by the
electric colon of the t 970s.. accordina
to .. Contract Color Di~tions.
1990-91," released by the Color
Marketig Group. an international.
non-profit UIOClation base.I in Vir-
pnia.
The O!P,nization of marketina.
merchandisina and desip experu
provides membcrcompen1es with the
latest information on color trends
throuah a newsletter and COfttnct
Color l>irections. 1 collection of color
swatches "reflectafll the conwnaus
rtUJ'dina future color movement"
While Newport BeKh archilect
Roben Borders caned the projected
color trends .. hideous." clirecton of
desiln at CYP Inc. ID Irvine •id they
embrac:e the ult ol more iatelllt
colon II a lip of IQPllillicalioft.
Residential desiln will malt likely
stick to haht =&. • a.mem.l delipl Ms ft 10 .. towMI
"mort Cllperi~~ ,ltyte (111••-r~•
'
here;· wd Victor Lopez. another
worker standing in front of the Circle
K who looked several times at the
waiting bus as he talked this morning.
"We need ... we've JOI to go over
there," he said, adding, "Nobody
knows we're there."
But f...aauna Bea~h Pol~e Chief
Neil Purcell, although agreeing that
the first couple days did not go well,
sa1d it is too soon to pass judgment on
the program. "I think we need more tjme,"
Purcell said. "I think it's premature to
speculate that n's not goina to work.
By all rights. it should work."
The problem 1s twofold. acsordin.g and go1na that two or three miles out
to Purcell. First. there 1s the difficulty 10 the canyon:'
of aemna the word out to the ''Althouah we have a JOOd rappon
contracton who pick from the 30 to wtth the.day workers in town, there's 60 workers who have typtcally stood still a rcluctancy. a·hcsstancy, on their
in clustm along the . hi&hway each ~"Purcell added. "They j~st don •t
mominJ. Then the~ as tlu pmblcm_ undmand that lhe-..c1ty ts-realfy-
of makjQJ-wOr ers. many of whom tryma to help them."
arc suspicious of poltce or &ny One week ago. city employees
government program, feel com-bcpn passing out letters to workers
fortable with being bused to the new explaining the program in both
location. · EnaJish an<S Sparush, accorchog to
"To date, we've not had that many Purcell. lo ~IUO°'J some COntrac·
take our bu.scs," Purcell said. torswercnot1fiedon1obs1tcs.hesa.td.
"There's still some fear on the day The problem has been com·
worker's part about aettina on the bus (Pleue ._ WOmM/ A2)
Judge Schmidt will face
.hearing on misconduct
The state watchd<>a for judiC1al
performance announced Tuesday
that it has ordered a fonnal hearinton
alleptions of misconduct ap1nst
Harbor Municipal Coun Judae
Calvin Schmidt.
The announcement from the state
Commission on Judicial Per-
formance marks the second time in
recent weeks the usually secreuve
watchdog agency has confil"rned that
it has ordered formal hearings against
a.Newport Beach judge.
In October. the comm ission sa1d It
woukfhold a fonnal hcarina for Judge
Bnan Caner.
Past media reports have hinted that
the judges are being investiptcd on
allepuons of swapping favorable
treatment for sex and helping fncnds
out oflegalja~s.
Peter Gubbins. a s~kesman for the
San Francasco-baS('d Commission on
Judicial Performance. would not
elaborate on the nature of the hcar-
inp or even confirm that the Judges
are being 1nvest1gated.
Formal hearings have bttn con~
ducted m pnvatc tn the past but nev.
slate law pennns the hearings to be
opened under some c1rcumstanccs.
including instances whercJudaes face
allcgauons of moral iurpitude.
Schmidt., 59. ~portcdl) IS under
scrutiny for allqedJy giving prcferen-
uaJ treatment to two reputed pros\l·
tutes. Della Chnsttne Johnson of
Fullerton and Pamela Grace Weston
of eiNn Beach. c:a t an a stJn o ration. John-son to d Fullerton ~o~ she had sex
wnh a fnend of Schmidt's in return.
for the friend's help m pcnuad1na
Schmidt to dea r up some traft-.C
(Pleue eee OOUJlT/A2)
auntington
approves
shelter for
runaways
By ROBERT BARltER °' ... Deir ........
" shelter for-the mynad runaway
children who roam HuntJnaton
Beach's Streets WIS approved iue.
day by the cny Plann•na Com·
m1 s1on.
The shelter Wltl be located an an
abandoned caretakers' hou~ nut to
the Chevron tank farm 1n Cetttral
Park near Gothard Street and Talben
A .. enue.
The helter. whtch will be siaffed
around the ck>clt b) proficssaonals.,
will have 20 beds when It openJ.
problbly neitt summer. But it as
('( p_cc:ted to expand as demand arows,
said Youth heller Praadmt C#OI
Kanode. wbo also \I coont1nator of
nurses m the H unu nc_IOn 8eec:h
nion Hllh Sc~ Dmnct. ··1,ust knew thecommunaty..,.....
suppon 1t and ,et aomcth•natoint fw
the bis. .. she laid today. ' • Gm Oncp. a member of 1llli · Youth Shehcr ~of dulaorl _.
a mtmber of \ht Pia•-Com-
m1ss1on that \'Oltd appro¥9f ... ~ prc>J«t. sud the .... ... .
prQvMlt countdtna ~ ;azuqi!li •
.. II toc-hdd~nand W ........
of dnkl abute * i! .. The facility is .....a caw the nearaa 1h1han
localed Ill o.dea L9 "' ................. .............. ~
.. 1'111M ii -~ ..., (II•••• .. ....... ... -----
•
Recall effort against two
county supervisors fails
SJ .. VANSBEN .............
Recall efforts apinst two Otan,e
County supervisors bave failed, aup-
ponen of the efforts acknowledpd
today.
Recall proponents had tarseted
supervisors ·Harriett Wieder and
Tom Riley for their aJJeac:dly ~
development stands, but sponsors of
the recall efforts said earlier this
month that they believed their move-
ments would faJI short.
Doua Lanaevi n, who sponsored the
move •inat Wieder, confirmed
today T&laday's deadline had come
and aone without his ar~p_havina
pthered the necessary 20,XJO siana-
tures on their recall petition.
"The period is over; we didn•t
make it," said Lan,evin, a Hunt-
inston Beach businessman. ..We
wertn.-t that far oft', but we did an
assessment and we definitely didn•t
make it."
He said .his ~up would probably
not renew its effort.
"If we did, at best we would
Ton of cocaine confiscated
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A ton of
cocaine and $6.2 million in cash were
confiscated and 12 people were
arrested in Southern California drug
raids in suppon of a nationwide narcotics investigation.
The seizures and arrests were pan
of a 2'h-month nationwide cocaine
and money laundering investigation
headed by the U.S. Customs SCrvice,
said spokeswoman Mary Anne
Noonan. ,
Tbe Southern California task force
included investigators from tbe Los
Angeles County and Orange County
sheriffs departments;.. West Covina
Police Dcpanment. urangc Count)'
Reaional Narcotics Suppression Unit
and the federal Internal Revenue
Service, the Customs official said.
Details of\he operation were being
withheld .
WORKERS IN LAGUNA •••
From Al
pounded by the fact that not all the
workers live in the-area. Day laborers
who take the Oranac County Transit
District bus from their homes in
Santa Ana and Costa Mesa to Laguna
Beach each morning must also be
educated about the city's plan, Purcell
said.
··There's still. 1 think, a ccnain
amount of misunderstandinf. about
our pr<>sram ... Purcell said. 'I wash
we were only dealing witfi our own
day workers who live in our com-
munity."
If workers and contractors cannot
be coued into meeting at the new
location, which is on the north side of
Laauna Canyon Road three blocks
east of the Sawdust Festival, the city
will have no recourse. Purcell said
"At this point there's no program
that's going to for.cc them to go to
either location," Pun:ell $4id. "They
can still be picked up down there at
Circle K. We're not forcing anyone.
We're asking for their cooperation
and the cooperation of the contrac-
tors."
For their part, the workers do not
seem to have given up on the
prosiam,. ei&her. AJtbouah be and I 0
other men were still standina in front
of the market when the first city bus
left at approximately 7:40 this· morn-
ing, Lopez indicated the workers
intended to cooperate. Maybe, he
sajd, there would soon be more
employers at the new location.
"We qeed one week more," he said.
probably o~ly shave a year off ber
term," tac said. "Tb.It would hardly bt
wonb it. I think we made our point."
Growth-control activist Tom
Roten said the move to ou11 Riley
hid also lost, but he said it could bt
reborn if the cin:um11anee1 were riaht. .
"The basic premite wu always the
hope that wt could tel the courts to
set aside t"°5e two development
qreements_ Aliso Viejo and Lafuna
Laurel," said Rogers. ''Then, with a
different board. we could have ex-
pected that they would be treated
differentfv v.'Jitn they wtre redrawn
and sent beck for reconsideration. It
doesn't appear that this will happen
much before the 1990 election."
"If that were to chanae and it
looked like it were going to get into.
coun soon, we could always refile."
YOUTH •••
Prom Al
county, and Huntinaton ~ch is 1he
third largest city, so there tnust be a
lot," she said.
Ontp said the Police Department
bas been "desperate" in that officers
don •t have a place to refer younpters.
It's not a cnme to be homeless and
when the youngsters ao to the police
for help, officers "have to look them
straiaht in the eye and tell them to go
back into the street," she said. Ortep said that youngsters who
commit crimes are at least taken
Juvenile Hall for housing.
Government grants and private
contributions arc expected to finance
operations. Russell Gedinak, presi-
dent of Guardian Savinp and owner
of the Charter Center, 1s paying for
additions to the building and de-
veloper Frank Mola is d-0ing the
refurbishment without charge, Or-
tega said.
The shelter will care for children
between 11 and 17 years: they will be
able to stay at the sheller for three
weeks.
The approval carries a condition
that an access road must be developed
to the shelter.
GAY'S LECTURE TO TEENS PROTESTED •••
Prom Al
1'.ive tifestytc, •• Dr. Jacobson said.
In his talks with ~rents, Marino
said, "I told them this is a reality, not
advocacy. It's somethin' their kids
arc goin~ to face when they leave high
school.'
Marino said the session is mostly a
qucstion..answcr period designed to
"ehmin~te misconceptions. erase
stereotypes and promote under-
standiDJ."
Notina that gays arc much in the
newi. puticularly in light of the AJDS
epidemic and recent stories of "gay
bashina," Marino said young people
naturally are going to hear and talk
about those issues.
"I'd much rather they bear the facts
in a school setting," be said.
Marino said he would never permit
the guest s~kcr to promote the gay
lifestyle. 'If the speaker staned
proselY!izing. I wouldn't have him
back.· he sa1d.
Neither does he agree with parents
who argue the students arc too young
to be exposed to such issues.
He said the vast majority are
juniors and seniors. A few arc
sophomores: none are f rcshmen. "I
thinklhey sell tht kids short, .. he sajd,
Jacobson said the course has been
reviewed time and again by the·staff,
experts and school board, and the
curriculum is presented "in an at-
mosphere and level that is ap-
propriate for high school students.'
Educators don't feel obligated to
present opposing views because the
alternative -heterosexuality -is
the everyday world in whLch the
students live.
"The students are essentially raised
in a heterosexual environment,"
Jacobson said.
In addition, educators noted, the
course is not required and students
who arc uncomfortable with the
presence of a homosexual speaker arc
not required to attend that session.
Parents arc notified at the begin-
ning of the semester about the
curriculum and qainjust prior to the
speaker's visit, and may remove their
children if they object.
School board member Sherry Loof-
bourrow said her cruldren have been
in Marino's class and she is satisfied
with the way he teaches it.
''We're comfortable with the ma-
\erial h~'s presenting, .. sbnaid.
Loofbourrow agrees that students
arc familiar enough with the op~sitc
viewpoint because of their upbring-
ing._ but they need gujdance when
confronted with different lifestyles.
'1That's what public schools are all
about, givingacc"rate information so
there are no stereotypes," she said.
But if such information is going to
be presented, opposing parents at
least want discussion of values to be
included.
Dawn Wippcrman, workina with a ~tional organization called the
Coalition for Appropriate Sex Educa-
tion. said the group wants family
values stressed whenever alternative
lifestyles are discussed.
She OPPoSCS a "morally neutral"
stance in which young people already
strualing with their sexual identity
are left to decide for themselves about
homosexuality, pre-marital sex and
other issues.
"Are WC toinj to teach liberal
values or traditional, constrvative
values?" Wippen;nan asked. "A larse
majority strongly favor tcachina right
and wrong."
ROY AL PALM STATION MAY CLOSE •••
From Al
said something needs to be done.
"For what we have in responsi-
bility and liability on the nonh side,
what we have 1s totally unaccep-
table," Petruzziello told the City
Council duringa study session this
week. "(The new statJons) are
absolutely crucial to future protec-
tion."
OfficiaJs estimate sale of the Royal
Palm Station would pay for the land
and construction of the Nonh Harbor
Station.
The council isconsiderin1a second
recommendation, however, that a
281h-cents--per-squarc·foot fee should
be levied on five north Costa Mesa
developments.
which responded to emergencies in
Costa Mesa 220 times last year. Costa
Mesa responded into Santa Ana just
12 times, Mc Duff said.
U.S. Tempa. Calif. Tempa. Emended .. ~ ::::::.~ a ,,,
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F ACELIFTSFOR CENTERS COLORFUL •••
Prom Al
and form and a bolder look, 1' said Sill
Kanou, director of design for the
commercial division ofCYP.
"The colors arc stronger,·· he said.
Kanotz and his counterpart in the
residential division, Paul Anderson,
said they will probably.join the trend
toward the dramatic, vibrant colors.
"Our company basically wants to do
stron-arphitccture and sophisticated
work. • said Anderson.
"In my opinion, coral is the worst
color in the world to use," -&a&d
Borders. who believes coral brinas
out a violent reaction in people.
However, "Color is in the eye of the
beholder." he acknowlcdaed.
Borden' favorites wilf forever be
canh tones, a preference he acquired
during his college days in the I 9SOs
and '60s. when those colors were the
trend. "'"
While he tries to keep his clients
from using "trendy cofon" because
they tend to date buildinas. Borders
said he also respects those who like
the dramatic colors and tries not to be
dictatorial. "You have clients who
want a buildfog that's unique and eye•
catching."
Colors of projects can be regulated
somewhat by certain cities' design
guidelines. however. Even without
such regulations, designers stm con-
sider the project's surroundinas and
try to create a compatible structdre to
prevent funhcr hassles, the pro-
fessionals said.
The deep crimson of the Tustin
Market Pracc's identification wall
alona the Santa Ana Freeway drew
such a violent reaction from citizens
and officials in Tustin and Irvine that
The Irvine Co. qrecd to paint the
sjgn over in the terracotta hue used as
the base color for the center's build-
inp.
Architect Ricardo Leaorctta, a
native of Mexico. feels the repainting
of the sip is "a mistake," said
Gerardo Alonso, the architect's rep-
resentative in the United States.
"He feels that for that scale of the
freeway, it wu needed that sometrung
hapPCn," said Alonso. "When you
drive up from Oraqe to Los Angeles,
it's very borina."
Lqoretta chose tem cotta as the
bacqround color because of its
earthiness and then wanted accent
colors, according to Alonso.
The palette for the whole center,
approved by the city of Tustin,
involves purple, bot pink and yellow as aoccnts for the terra.c::otta. Inspired
by the tones of old Mellican town&,
these colon have ··atwaxs been part of
Ricardo's an:hitecturc, ' Alonso said.
"I think it's a matter of being
educated with these colors," Alonso
said. "You have to learn it: you have
to live it!' -
However, Alonso admitted that
sometimes "we have to modify our
co&or because each of our buildings
has its own personality." for in-
stance, a Lcaoretta-dcsigned building
for IBM in Mexico was colored a
mellow gray with pink windows,
Alonso said.
"The intent is certainly not to
offend:thc intent is to imJ>rJ)vc," said
Michael Tilden, who helped designer
Peter Cate decide on the color scheme
for the revampina of Harbor Center.
Tilden is 1 sales engineer at T.H.
Liken and Sons Inc. in Lonj Beach, a
firm that specializes in des1an of new
shoppina centers.
The ~lette chosen for the reno-
vation of the qe.-old shoppina center
involves the use of purple. salmon,
lime green, jade, rose and aold. But
erm>loyces. and customers of the
center expressed di51ust when the
base colors of salmon and purple were
first applied a month aao. ·
Their attitudes win undergo a
chameleon-like chan,e when the •wni~d trim in the other corors
are , Tilden Predicted. "It
creates a more festive atmosphere,"
he said of the color scheme, pal-
terened aner the color scheme used in
the 1984 Olympics in LoS J\naeles.
"What we•re tryi"' to do is come up
With -an idca"lb"&t eversome atten-
tion," he said. 'This particular
center, the challenae is you have an aaina shoppina center. This is an
older, 'SOs-style sho~nter. The
place bad no continuity at all. It wu
basically kind of dyina. .. We wanted to do sometb.ina that was twi•bt, and we didn't want to do
the Oi'~Miami Vice' colon -tbe-
pinkl, pastels. We thousbt that was
overdone."
The desilnen alto ooDJidered tbc
dark hues oTtbc existina center -the
brown -tip band, the aavy blue
JCPeoney storefront and the forest areen front of i:be Lotus resaaurant -ind tried to retain the rich lbadea,
Tilden said.
"This took us all by surprile that it
would create this much publicity," be
said.
COURT HEARING •••
hoaaAl
tickets.
Weston, who has starred in more
than 30 po~phic movies, re-
portedly had a Jail sentence reduced
by Schmidt after a man who cfairned
to be a friend of the judge intervened
on her behalf.
Caner, 63, was drqgcd into the
allcptions when his name allegedly
was found among some of Johnson's
possessions.
Neither judae bas discussed the
allcptions. Caner said he and other
judfes are barred from discussina
matters before the commission.
Johnson reponcdly worked with
polioe inves11pting the judges at
Harbor Court and alltgedly amnaed
a meeting with Caner followin& a
secretly tape-recorded conversation.
But the woman reportedly backed out
of the meeting on the advice of her
attorney.
Carter's attomey maintained that
someone with a vendetta apinst the
judac was leak.ins misinformation to
the media.
followina a formal bearin&. judges
can be pun.isbed with 1uspenlion1,
censures or even dilb9rmcnt. If a
judte is ordered removed from tM
bench, tbe allcptions and case
against him become public.
authorities said.
PetruZZJello said the city j ust open-
ed its fifth station. the Civic Center
Station, but has no equipment based
nonh of the freeway, the heart of
Costa Mesa's hiah-rise district.
In a rcpon to the council, associate
planner Kimberly Brandt said the
fourth phase of'Metro Pointe, two
'develo=nu on Sakioka proeenics,
CJ . rstrom's Town Center
Transpacific Development and
Scaerstrom 's Home Ranch should
pay for the new stations.
But Councilwoman Sandy Genis
said she is concerned about a neiah-
borhood outcry if the Royal Palm
Station is closed. She requested
fiaurcs on the cost of the two stations if' the department keeps Royal Palm.
PetruzzieUo said kecpini the sta-rr======================================:
lion would double the ~rtment's
costs and "put an extra facility in our
PetruzzieUo and Fire Marshal Tom
McDufT said a study sugcsted the
Royal Palm Station, located across
from Mesa Verde Center, should be
moved to Harbor Boulevard and
South O>ast Drive while a new
station should be built at Anton
Boulevard and Sakioka Way.
Closing the Royal Palm Station, at
the cdae of a residential area, would
not slow fircfi&)ltcn' response to fires
in those neiahborhoods, the chief
said.
If the Fire Department's plan is
approved, the North Harbor Station
is expected to cost $2.8 million, but iu
annual operation costs would be
covered by savinp from the closure
of tbe Royal Palm Station,
Petruzzicllo sajd.
~~E lllJPllll
.U.OPACI
•w.e.rt1..C-.MMe,CA .
The cost of the Sakioka Station,
which would require new equipment
and new firefiahters, is estimated at S2 million, beausc the Sak.iokas
already pve the city land for the
station.
Tbe ~ fee would cova tbc
cost or bUJldina and equ.ippi111 the
new 11atioa and buyinaa tpeCial piece
of equipment for tbe Nonll Hatbor
Station, accord.ins to city reponi.
McDuft' laid the 9'ationl will patJy reduce the time it taka Costa
Mesa units to mpond to ellleflCncies
north of the freeway.
It will allO take the told off
neishborina stations In Sama Ana,
system."
The stations cost the city between
S.S0.000 and $600,000 a year to
operate, he said. Besides. he said,
livin& next door to a fire station
doesn't auarantee fl$ter responte in
''Pco have a false assumption ane~ncy.
that if they) live across from 1 fire ttation.i..J~> _.bavc better protec-'don •• RU'llDletlotaid. "MOit oftbe iliM, tbc ftrefilbws from ~ raJm ~IMJ!lll Ol'dac fieeMy, doi•
1i:::-1aid Costa Mam bu the
belt Fire Department for cities ill me
in the eountty. The depuunent
ICOl"ed -than . from Kbievi111• &.:'r'r:!'r~
no depanment in the COUDll'Y cowr-
int a City tbe size of COiia Meu bu
radled Out I.
°::I.::' ...... ., ...•
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Stock her wardrobe with DSf s easy to
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Traditional turtleneck in Red, Pink, White,
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Mock turtleneck in Emerald, Iris, Bone, Royal,
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• •
1 ~
Martriers Library
to liost families .
at film matinee
A special holiday matinee for the fJmily is
planned at the Marincn Branch of the Newport
Beach Public Library at 2 p.m. Saturday.
Films to be presented are:
-"Christmas Cracker," a non-verbal film
usina unusual animation techniques;
-"P1uto's Christmas Tree,'' Mickey Mouse
chops down the wrona Christmas tree; .
-"Snowman," a youna boy dreams his
snowman comes to life. The film is based on a
favorite children's book by-Raymond BritP~ and
-"Twelve Days of Christmas," an animated
venion of the popular Christmas carol.
Admission is free. The branch is at 2005 Dover
Drive. For more information, call 64+314S.
CIJlldren '• CIJrf•tm•• party
Cand.)' Cane Capers, featuring holiday crafts,
prnes, pnzes, a movie, pizza lunch and a visit from Santa, wilJ be held for children, S to 12, from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Saturday at the Harbour View
Clubhouse, 16600 Saybrook Lane, Huntington
Beach.
Children can also join in decorating a tree and
carolina.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneedey, Deel.,.._ 14, tW
&;/
8)' IOI VAN EYKEN f °' ....... ,....... ,~
The county BoardofSupervitORmoved ·~
a sltp cl<>1er Tuetday to a balf.aat lllea '~
tu hike to finance a propoed ue• ;mil in ·
Gypsum Canyon.
.Board members direc1ed county 8dmin-1119
1strauve siaff to conduct a deuiled
eumanatton of how such a tu iacru .-.
ma.aht be put into effect. . .. A tu increase wouJd ~uire special
state lealslanon before it could be put oe a
county ballot, but c-0unty oflicialuay dley • ..
beueve It would not be difficult to oblain
lea.islatJve approval. •
And the proP<>SCd tax hike may be tbc
best option for financina the 6,600-bedjail.
because funds rti1sed that WI)'. could be used for the operiuon oftbejad u well a Tickets, at $8, can be purchased ·at the Murdy
Community Center and the Edison Community
Center. Attendance is limited to 200.
The event is under auspices of the Huntington
Beach Community Services Department.
Picketing teacben In Laguna
Teacllen Dicket oat81de ~ Beacll Unifled
Scllool or.trlct Board of Uacatloa meettnc
Tue.clay neamc. Teacben Mek a ~s percent
~ lncreue and ban been offered 3 percent.
Tile picket llae wu deelaaed u an lnfonnatlon act only: teacllen la the dlatrtct are not on nrtke.
construction. •
Steve Kozak of the county admim.. •
trauve office saad the Board ofSuperviton _.
had chosen the tax increuc from a list of
opuons that included a special. c.oun-..-. ""-
t)'Wlde assessment district to pay for the New lm_age cllnlc tor women Jill. ·~
Saddle~clc College Community Services will
present a wardrobe and makeup workshop, "The '88
Woman -New Imaac Clinic," 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Saturday in BGS 318 on campus.
Participants will learn the secrets of creating a
new total imaac, plus how to enhance self~onccpt.
Topics will include using color, enhancing one's persona] style, shoppina on a limned budget, skin care, hairstyle and cosmetic color selection.
For more information , call the community
services office at S82-4646.
.. A sales tax increment looks to be the ~
one that has the area test likelihood of'"" success," said Kozak.
"One advantaae of the tax increment is
it would require only a simple SO-plu-one
majority, rather than the two-thirds ma-
JOnty required to approve an assessment dastnct," M Slld.
County's United Way pledges
reach a record $18. 6 million Some board memben said. however,
that there were other needs, such u •
transportauon development. that miabt retros~t, I guess iC wasn't that un-bcstbemetwtthasaJcsWlinaate. By GREG l.LERKX °' .. o.llr""' .....
Despite a $600,000 pledge shortfall,
United Way of Orange County posted a record at)'lount of donations in 1988 and
officials say the organization has finall y
rebounded from ~nt h~rd times.
United Way of Oranac County an-
nounced a total 1988 fund-raisin.a pledge
ofS 18.6 million, up nearly S2 milhon from
last year. That is an 11.2 percent gain over
last year and the biaaest jump in fund '
raising since 1984. The organization had set a 1988 fund-
raisinaaoal ofS 19.2 million, but that figure
-.yas "more hopeful than anything."--said Judith Trest, vice president of marketing.
Nationall y. United WaY, was hit hard by
dwindling contributions an 1986. forcin•
the organization to freeze the amount ol
funding to its recipient organizations. Last
year. United Way of Orange County took
an S 16. 7 million an pledges, about
$700,000 short of its goal. In 1986. the
organization was $2.S million short.
Trest said this year's increase will also
mean a thaw in the funding freeze.
"The past three years we've had some
rather dismal campaisns." Trest said. "This is a phenomenal increase. It's good
to be back on track apin. ••
Charlie Rinchan, volunteer campaign
chairman, said he was surprised at how.
close the organization came to it~ taract
pled&e goal.
"We realized that it wa ~ real stretch t.aract. but we dec ided it was better to reach for the stars," said Rinehan, president of
Avco Financial Services in Irvine. "In
reahsuc." "l think we need some coordination of
Trest said the record-setting pledge efforts here." board Chairman Harriett
figure this year was a sign th1.t a new Wieder saad. "I don't think the WlJJ9)'Cn
marketing campaign had paid ofI More want to get hat twice." .~.
vol unteers and more "personalized" ap-The board also asked staff to invcstipte ' proach were the ~eys. she said. usana a pnvatc com~y to provide jail services. as has been <tone in some other ' ''Rather than go1ng in and saying 'We countjcs. ancludina San Diqo.
want to raise this much money' we let lhem Tbe adt of a jail in Gypsum Canyon bas
(companies) design their own campaigns," met with resistance from residents of
Trest said. "That's really the direction of . nearby Anaheim Hills who have qualified
the future." an initiative on the 1990 ballot that wouJd
The personalized approach also gave -prohibit construction of new jails any-
local business persons a chance to ask where but in Sania Ana. . _
questions about where th 'r .d~nllions Santa Ana Mayor Dan Youn& it spoa-J --...e=-1
would be put to-use. sorin1 . a. c;ounter ~ that would ,4 • "Letting people know . where their prohibit Jiii co~sU'Uct.l~n an Santa Ana,
money is going, that's what people want to -whac,h 1s already ,th~ .sate of the central know, .. Trest said. · -men sand women s Jllls.
Daily Pilot readers and advertisers arc
urae<f to donate unwrapped new gifts to help
make the paper's fourth annual "Give a Little
Christmas" program a success.
The sifts will be turned over to the group
Share Our Selves in Costa Mesa, which in turn
will distribute them on Christmas Eve to local
needy families.
U.S. scientists going to Armenia
\
By LEE SIEGEL .,...._.,,..., ~.--------------:-------;.._-------------------,----------------., by the ··arccnhouse effect." dcplcuon of
the protect1ve ozone layer, exttnction of thousands of plant and animal species,
exhausuon of enCl"I} supplies and other
natural resources, and widespread pol-
luuon.
Gifts can be left under the Christmas tree in
the lobby of the Daily Pilot offices. 330 Bay
St., Costa Mesa, on weekdays 8 a.m. to S p.m.
Gifts will be accepted through Dec. 23.
The "Give a Little Christmas" program was
started in 1985 when Daily Pilot em ployees
realized many children -especially teen-gers -would not receive gifts because of
family hardships. In the firsl three years. more
than 3,000 gifts have been distributed through the program.
Goel: 2,000 gifts for local children
Current mark: 339
Wedne.day, Dec.14
• 7 p.m. Lqaa ae.c. PluaJq Comml11._,
council chambers, SOS Forest Ave.
• 7:30 p.m. F .. &alm Valle)' Plau1q Com-
mt11loa, council chambers, 10200 Slater Ave.
T1Jul1Hlay, Dec. 15
American and Ru ssian scientists will
study world envi ronmental problems and
the devastatin& earthquake in Soviet
Annenaa under JOint aarccments between researchers from the two countries, it was
announced in Irvine on Tuesday.
U.S. National Academy of Sciences President Frank Press and the president of
the Academy of Sciences of the U.S.S.R .• Guriy Marchuk, made the announcement
at a news conference at the U.S. academy's.
West Coast co nference facility at the
Beckman Center in Irvine. Sixteen U.S.
earthq1.1ake experts will leave for Armenia
in seven to 10 da ys. according to Gail
Porter, spokeswoman fo r the U.S.
academy.
The agreements were announced after
meetings in Washington last week and in
Irvine this ~eek between officials of the
Amencan academy and a 17-mcmbcr
delcptaon from the Academ y of Sciences
of the U.S.S.R., Porter said.
The Dec. 7 Armenian quake, centered
near the Soviet-Turkish border, measured
6.9 on the Richter scale and killed at lcasi
SS 000 J>COple.
.,.... ............ '-......
"The consequences of the rapid arowth
of our population coupled with sJobal economic development now pose a saanifi-
cant threat to our continued existence,"
the two academiq said in a joint statement in Irvine. .,
The Americans will v1s1t Armenia ~ '
improve scientific undcrstand~ng of such
canhquakcs. Cf\IJDcerina knowlcdle of the ..
failure of structures and techniques for
post-disaster assessment, and to allow
early apphcauon of this knowledJc to reduce the effects of such disastcn an the future," said Frank Press. president of the
Arncncan ac.ademy. J
The U.S. team wtll include Iris.-•
moloaists. architects, structural and ; ~tcchn1c:al C111Jnecn and uperu on ..
andustnal faciht1cs. ~e operations,
emergency plannu~a and utility lifelinn,
Press said 1n a news release.
No meetinp scheduled
The U.S. and Soviet academies also will
fonn a new JOi nt Academ.Y. Committee on
Global Ecology, which wall "assess global
threats to Eanh's ecological well-beinf." ••••••••••••••••••r"' Among other problems, the committee will consider warming pf Earth's climate
U .8. Nadoaal Academy of 9cleacee Preeldent Frank Pre. and
SoYlet Academy of Scleacee Prealdent Gurly Marchak met lD lntne
OD Taeeday.
"Sance 1964, w NAs-tra.s....,o=rp=nc::::az:::T-=-1 ....
number of milar teams to conduci oo-sate invcst1ga11ons of disasters, especially
earthquakes." the academy said.
"Previous teams have studied canbquakcs
an .a\laska. Mexico City, central Greece,
Algena. Romania and Turkey."
Suspect captured after
hitting police roadblqck
1'ewpo1t81acll
A business =· ractina '"Pain Center -Dr. H k -Pitkin& in tM rear•• wu II from the front
lawn 114321 Bin:h SL loss wu S700. • • • Four 4-foot-by· 12-foot bey win-
dows were shat~ by bulleU in tM th~tory bu11d1na that houses the
Promi1e1 nit)ltdub at 333~ W. Coast
Hishway. LOSI was ~800. . ' . A computer and pnnttt valued at S4.000 were 11oltn from Empire
financial, llOI Dove Sl.
down Main Street a ~f times before tettiae up a k with
their police units at Main and
Oocbard areeu, Lt. Joba F01tcr said.
Tbe pursuit repor1edJy staned near
Roteerans A venue and Beach Boulevard in tbe La Habra Ila,
FOiier laid. He said be did not know wbat toucbed off the cbue that
reportedly bit speeds in excess o( 80
milel Ul &our •• times.
FOlter alto said it was unknown
bow fast Hamiltoa wu drivina when bit tnlCk bit tbe police can, which
sustained moderate damage. Hamil-
ton •s pickup received heavy damqe,
Foster said.
The location ofGotbcrd and Main was picked u a site for the blnicade,
Foster said. because there was little
traffic in the area and it leslcned
chances of utjury to passiq motor-
ists. Foster said that Hamilton. a resi-
dent of HuntitlJlon Beach, wu
lodaed in the city Jail on suspicion of
reckless drivina, evadina amst and
buraJart. • ,
ex-boymend threatened her with a house. hascaraot towed. and wMn he
handaun. He appeared quite intox-clauned atthtnextday. the phone was
icated. she said. aonc. • • • Scroolie as alive and well in Costa
Mesa. lwo electrkal. 3-foot carokn.
valued at S40 each, were lakrn •Iona
With an clectricaJ noel candle. • • • Somtbody shot a bullet t.hroup a
home on Stureeon . The llUI ...-.
thfW&h two Windows ncf I N1r
fencr.lhe homeowner laid lw 6111't know why tomebody Would** 1111 houle. • • • Acarlek .......... M~I wulUahm••laclld . .....................
• • •
wath ats motor running for an hour at the rear of the HQme Depot. The
resident said it happens once or tMcc a week but that the motor was "rc~ll)'
loud" this time. • • • A resident an the 6900 block of
Lydia asked offittrs to check the
house next door because ne1ahbor·s
d<>a was constant!> blrk1na-Sht's
lived there four yours. sht said. and
knew that the doa was not barking
normally. Offken v.erc unable to
locate anythina amiss.
1"1.ae
rcponcdly throwing Chnstmas lights
in the str~t. The youth v.erc gone
whtn pohtt amved. • • • Parking bloc ks valued at $60 v.erc
taken from the 31000 block of Coast H1ghwa) ..
Poantaln Valley
.\ S\lo~t-toothed burglar broke anto
Zack's Famous Frozen asun at
161 45 Brook.hunt St. early Tucsda~ morning and stoic $35.10 and two
bapofcand ). • • • Someone used a la~ piece of wood
to smash an aar cond1t1oruna screen at
.\mber Construcuon. 17160 New-
ho~ St. early Tucsda) momiq. The
culpnt left balce tracks and footprints
an the din outside the buildina. • • •
I
' ,.
A locked 1988 J~ceP Cherokee
parked 1n the 17000 block of
Brookh rst Strttt was buralar'ized •
Tuesda y morn1na and the stereo and
bank checks wonh S l.920wert takm. • • • •
A TV "alued at Sl ,750 was &ale.en
from a house an the 16000 block of
Mt -'ckerman Cu'Cle when someone smashed a wtndow to p1n entry early •
Tuesday momana.
A tttn.qc boy took his mother's
fur coat from their Saverne Cart'lc
home and sold 1t to a local pawn shop
It was not known how much tht bo)
aot for the COIL
.. ........................................ lillm ........ J:
• • • Someone stoic a coffee table from a
home in the 50 block of Chnstamon
Sou th sometime Tunday afternoon • • • A 1980 Toyota ptekup truck was
stolen from lM I 7900 block of Filch
betwttn noon and Sp.m Tuh da). • • .\ ps powered ridina la"n mower \I.as stolen from the 4000 block of
lacaa On\e bet~n 2 and 3 p.m
Tuesd&\
Auto b;!~ary suspect'
didn't l fast enou1
-If what Costa Mesa pohce say 1s
true. Monday was a b9d day for Jatt
Luis Mtndou to tr) and steal a stereo
from a car p1rkcd tn the I JOO ~k of
~n Strttt.
\f endoza. 30. aJlqrdl) tned to Pf)
a st~ from ,.. paiktd car. but 111
ow~r. a 19-year-old Mission V.e,o
woman. reuamed to ~ car 11 ht
~a.ell st~ wtth the smw. Lt Omni•
" blue and ~hate 1'.q 0 To)c:nt Cos! saicl, .
pad.up truck was apparamh ~tolfn ~ athout idnlil1i111 htnelf • IM
from the 300 bl of \pie tr«,. car~ oww. die WDrA• llbd M11t The \th1cle wu la l Ktn at ~PPl'O'· .whathc .. .,...._. .. _ .. .._
1m.attl) 1 p.m. on :rucsda~. u •-u ~ C• _... Ii 6t ....
• • • h•m•o ........ *ir.61! PohCT "c-rc llt'd to Del Mar .. He dida'l rs· .. C: \tnue and ta Marad trttt t l' Afttt C~ .....
am Tueida\ \I.ht~ 1u,tn1I~ wert 11..ut<-h am*., 1 """-tit
.,
•I
;
I
I I
I .
l
I
A4 On1nge eo.t DAILY PtLOT/ Wedneeday, Oeoember 14, 1988
.
5-min.ute AIDS test clears • t
FDA, Clue on sale in weeks
BOSTON (AP) -The first five-
minute test for AJOS has been
approved by the U.S. aovemment,
and authorities said it is 99.6 percent
accurate and offers the fastest results
of any tests for the deadly disease.
The test was cleared Tuesday by the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Its maker, Worcester-based Cam-
bridge Bioscience, said it should be on
the market in a few weeks.
.. This technical advance should
help mak~ting available to all who
wanJ -tef be tested," FDA Com-
miuloner Fran~ E. Youna said in
Washington ... It will also be panicu-.
larty useful in remote areas of the
world that lack the facilities for earlier
approved tests."
Th.e results of those earlier tests -
now the mainstay of AIDS screenina
-frequently are not available for
weeks.
Gary Buck, chairman of Cam-
bridae Bioscience1 said the new test,
caJle<t the Recomoijen HIV-I Latex
Aalutinatipn Test, should be useful
anywhere that quick results are
important.
"The big boon is that it's fast, and it
will be useful in Third World coun-
tries and places wh~ lab facilities
might be less than ideal in order to
screen large populations in a rapid,
simple way," said Dr. Paul Skolnik, a
virologist at New Enaland Medical
Center.
The test is 99.6 percent accurate,
Buck said. But the company rec-
ommends that as with the current
~·
screcni11f test, called the enzyme.
linked ammunosorbent ... y. or
ELISA, blood samDlea that are
positive for the AIDS vi1111 be
confirmed by a time<on1Umi111.
backup test called the Weaern blot.
Tbe speed of the Recom ...
means thOle who are free of the virus
are likely to be aiven the IOod news
immediately, Buck said. ltut thote
who are prot>ably infecled will be told
further testina is necessary .
Like other AIDS tests, this one
checks for AIDS infection by spottina
antibodies to the human im·
munodcficiency virus, or HIV, which
cau5es AIDS. ••All of the present (ELISA) tests
require, under the best of circum-
stances, three to five hours."
,
Bush offers
Cabi net job
toYeutter
W ASHINOTON (AP) -Presi-
dent-elect Bush has offered the Cabi-
net poll of llriculture teeretary to Cll~ Yeutter, who bu been Presi-
dent Raipn'a..,ecial U'lde repmen-
tative the ~ three years. a Bush
transition aide •id IOday.
C~ Fuller. co-director of the
transition offace, said Bush and Yeuuer "met this momina and there
will be an announcement this after-
noon.•• H~. the aide declined to-
aay specifically what post the an-
nouncement would involve. .
Yeutter, speakina 10 reportefl
today after an as>eeannce before the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, side-
stepped questions about a new ~t.
lna 1986interview. Yeu1ter111dhe
aJways wanted to be qriculture
secretary. but he abandoned that wish
when he became caught up in his role
1s the nation's No. 1 trade representa-
Trade deficit dips ,.,.,0, ro," to bus· 1·n e· SSman f~vf9r;,aaa" named him to •hat pos•
to$.lo.35billlon 1. I .l. 1 .J.l. AnotherpossibleCabinetmember,
Samuel Skinner, who is a top con-• b •dd • g ,r. PT'L tender for the job of trans~rtation WASJUNGTON (AP)-The U.S. w1n s I' 1n 1 cor secretary, has not yet met Wllh Bush,
trade deficit narrowed to $10.35 .l. Fuller said.
billion in October, the smallest im-On the most conttoversial appoint-
balanoe in three months, the govern-COLU MBIA. S.C. (AP) - A and only a fittle more than half of ment question -who will be Bush's
ment reported today. Jewish businessman interested in what he offered a month ago. defense secretary -Fuller said the
The Commerce Depanment said PTL's real estate agreed to pay $65 Reynolds approved the cash sale FBI investiption into former Sen.
that the merchandise trade pp be-million for the assets of the scandal-after polling major creditors at a John Towers back1f9und should be
tween what the United States impons plagued ministry, but refused to say if hearing. Most said it was the best deal finished by the end of the week.
and what it sells overseas fell by 3.1 he would allow its evangelical oper• they would Jet for what once had been Tower, the leading contender for
Growth--control
movement Is still
alive Bergeson
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
chairwoman of the state Senate's Local Government Committee says it would be a••foofiah political mistake"
to decide that the declinina success
rate of local powth initiatives means the Jl'(>wth-control movement is dead
in California.
"The lesson-I dr3w from iast
month's elections is that our consti-
tuents are not hapgy with land-use
initiatives, nor are they happy with local offacials' decisions about de-
velopment projects," Sen. Marian
BerFson said Tuesday at a hearing on
growth manaaement.
A repc>n released by the Newpon
Beach Republican said that the
success rate of local growth-limiting
ballot measures d~lined from 76
percent in 1986 to 50 pe~nt this year.
California voters have acted on 336
so-called "ballot box planning"
measures 11nce 1971, the repon said.
Most of them -54 percent -were
initiatives desianed to control
powth. Six percent were "tandem" or
alternative prooosals put on the
ballot by loc.af officials, and 40
percent were pro-powth proposals.
Voters have approved 61 percent of
the P'QW1h--control measures, 40 per-
cent of the pro-srowth proposals and
3S percent of the tand~m prop-
ositions.
Two-thirds of the proposals were
placed on the ballot in the last three
years, but in that time the success rate
of slow-growth measures has drop-
l>Cf inda Manin, co-chairwoman of
Citizens for Limited Growth, blamed
the defeat of some growth~ontrol
proposals in Southern California on
the growing sophistjcation of, and
heavy spending by, the measures'
opponents.
Insurance official's
post deemed partisan
percent from a September deficit of ations to continue. a $160 million empire. the post, met today with C. Boyden
SI0.67 billion. The head of Heritage Ministries, "As far as I'm concerned, the),ig is Gray, thetransition'sl~lcounscl, to SACRAMENTO (AP) -The elected by the people in the same
The decline. the second con-PTL's religious successor, however, over -l'm approving the saJc, ·the go over some of the findinP. of the elected state insurance commissioner time, place and manner and for the
sccutive improvement, was slightly said the deal means merely a change judge satd. background check, Fuller saad. created by Proposition 103 should be same term as the aovernor."
better than many economists had in landlords and pun:baser Stephen Mernick, a 34-year-old real estate Several members of Congress have a panisao post, Secretary of State . Daniel~Meade said Eu, the state's
been predkting. For this reason, Mernick told him he was "sensitive" mag.nate, on Monday bid $36.2S suggested the Iona process of checkin,1 March Fong Eu said Tuesday. chief election officer, based her inter-
analysts said it was unlikely that the to the religious operation. million at Heritage USA head-out Tower would weaken him poJita-"Our attorney looked into it and pretation on the fact that the language
figure would create wrmoil in Memick, a nonpracticing Or-quarters near Fon Mill, one week cally if and when he is chosen. But concluded it would be a panisan compares the election of the com-
financiaJ markets. In s0me months, thodox rabbi from Toronto, bouB}lt after PTL founder Jim Bakker and Fuller said he thought Tower would position," based on language in the missioner to the election of the
an unexpectedly bad number has sent the assets Tuesday for $10 mil hon thr« former associates were indicted be strengthened by the P-rocess be· Nov. 8 ballot measure, Eu's press governor, a partisan post, and does
stock market prices plunging and less than the vaJue placed on it by U.S. on fraud and con,J?iracy charges by a cause FBI agents have left no stone aide, Caren-Daniels-Meade, said. not alter a portion of the state
pushed _the dollat into a tailspin. Banktruptcy Judge Rufus Reynolds. federal grand jury an North Carolina. unturned. The proposition1 which incl udes a constitution that outlines what of-
----------------------------------------------------. 20 percent rate rolloack for a number fices are nonpartisan.
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Sn~w, fog hind ~r
rescue work for.
quake surVivors
MOSCOW (AP) -Fri~d. fogy due to fog in Yerevan.
weather and problems in the Soviet At the airpon in Spitak, "a hute
supply line cost retCUen vital time quantity of 1ood1 desperately needed
today in their race to supply Anne-in the d1sas&erareas has piled up," the
nian earthquake survivon with food, Communist Party newspaper Pravda medicine and shelter. said.
All flights between Yerevan. the lt said there was no rqular suooly
Armenian capil&lL and the disaster ofhot food.to survi von and &bat there area were halted oy rain, snow and were difficulties providina tents to
fog. and the forecut wu worsenins. survivon and rescuen. Villqes
The weekend is expected to brina around Spitak, near the epicenter of mo~ snow and up to 4S mph winds. the quakeJ were among the hardest·
About S,400 people have been hit _places. •
puUed from buildi!'f' wrecked in the George Reid, a spokesman for the
Dec. 7 quake which oft"aciaJs say Oeneva-besed League of Red Cross
killed at least S~,&00 people, injured and Red Crescent societies, said in
13.000 and left )UU,000 people home· Yerevan that Soviet officials had
less. asked for t.cnts to set up housing and
The survivon "are almost totally emergency medical services in 48
isolated in the oold, .. said Dr. Bernard villages.
a.u er
-.
Of~ CoMt DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, December 14, 1... Aa
Israelis reject
PLO as partner
in peace talks
GENEY A ~P) -The Palestine Liberation nization remains committed to elimination of the
Jewish state and thus can never be a
putner in any peace talks, Israel told
the U.N. General Auembl_y today.
U.N. Ambassador Jobanan Bean
aid "vape phrueolo1t' of the PLO'sdeclarauon in A1Jeria "cannot
hide the PLO's commitment to the
common denominator that unites all
its factions: the path of rejection,
violence and terror."
Therefore, he wd, the "PLO can
never be a nqouauna partner" with
Israel. Several mcmben of the PLO
delea~on walked out during Beio 's spcei:b.
He propoted that "occupied
Palestinian land" be pl8Qed under
U.N. supervision, with an inter-
national forocdeployed IO protec:t the
Palestinians and ovenee withdrawal
of Israeli lJ'OOPS. He did not specify
whether he was rrimi111 only IO \be
w~ Bank and Gaza. occupied by
1Sr.e1 in t967.
But Arafat upeei some when he
paid tri~tc to the yearlona Palelti· nlan uj)risina in the Jsndi-occuDied West Bank and Gaza Suip. Al re.st
323 Palcltinians and 13 lndis bave
died in the revolt
Soviet Deputy Fore• Minister Vladimar Petrovsky 111d Arafat's
speech "Opet'.IS a windo'N of ntw
()pponunit1es" to resolve the Middle
East oonflict. Mankikian, who returned to Paris Soviet television on Tuesday night
after visiting Spitak, a city that was · showed rows of tents near the ru ins of destroyed by the quake. the town of Stcpanavan, but it said The communist youth newspaper many more were needed.
KomsomoJskaya Pravda quoted "There arc not enough tents," the
A plnlna father bolda Ida d•d clllld In Lentnalr••. one of
t.lfe cltlee laardeet bit by tbe eutbqaake.
Bein made no reference to Tues-
day's speech by PLO chairman
Vasser Arafat in which he appealed to
Israel's leaden to join the PLO an
direct. U.N.-supcrv1scd talks and
~ntcd a thrcc-s-"peace 1n-1tiative."
He repeated the Soviet stand that
only an international peace con-ference can solve the Middle East
conflict.
CaCt. Sergei Bobylev as saying in one commentator said.
vii ~that "survivors are dying from In its Tuesday editions.-Pravda Lcninakan to keep order.
cold. ' gave the first indications that looting
Trucks were struuJina over snowy and other crime, were becoming a
mountain passes to bring tents and . problem in the disaster area, report-
blanketsto survivon, racing the onset 1ng break-in attempts at a jewelry
of even worse weather. store and apanmcnts and the slayin&
Premier Nikolai Ryzhkov, head of
earthquake relief, said on Monday
that a "s~ial situation ... had been
declared m Lcninakan and Spitak to give the 'Soviet army power to
maintain-peace. At least two relief planes bound for of one person.
Armenia, a French Red Cross plane It also said helmeted soldiers
with medical P! and a Belaian plane wearing bulletproof vests had taken
were held up in Moscow early today up positions in the streets of
Michael Hurley, a spokesman for
the U.S. Embassy in Mose.ow, said
today that Soviet rescuers had re-
. Swe.dish suspect detained in.
prime minister's assassination ..
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -Police today detained a Swede wtth a
history of psychiatric illness and a
previous manslauabter conviction on
suspicion of assassinating Prime
Minister Olof Palme, officials and
news reports said.
The Stockholm district court
named a defense lawyer for the 41 •
year-old suspcctJ a court clerk said, an
indication he tlccd almost certain arrest afterquestioninginthefeb. 28,
l 986 slayina.
hJme, a four-tenn prime minister. was shot to death by a gunman who
Oed down a darkened street and
escaped. The prime minister was
walkina home unguarded after seci nJ
a. latc·ni&ht movie with his wife, Lisbet, wlto was arazcd by a second
~l~L '
Swedish radio quoted the detective
in charic of the case, Hans.Olvebro. organization of the investigation as confirfnin& that a suspect was from scratch, including 17,000 tips or brouabt in for interrogation. He said leads, the news reports said.
reports oftbe detention could under-The national news service TT
mane the.investigation. quoted police sources as sayina the
The detention of a suspect was the man had been under surveillance as a
first movement in the investigatfon prime suspect for several months.
after a two-year standstill and despite The reports said Palme's widow
an SS million reward offered by the wouJd be brought in to try and
government 'd ·fy h Attorney Arne Llljcros went to the 1 entt t e suspect.
courthouse Immediately-after he was The reiiorts by TT and two major
named defense counsel and was not tabloids, Aftonbladet and .Expresscn,
available for comment. his office said. the suspect was a 41-year-old said. man fro m Stockholm with a criminal
The suspect was questioned early record and a history of psychiatric
in tbe case and admitted he was close disturbances. .
to the scencofthe murder on the night Swedish radio said the suspect had
Palme was shot, repons sa id. He was a previous conviction for stabbina a released for lack of evidence. drug addict to death in 1970 only a He came under scrutiny again-few blocks away from where Palme
during a police review and re-was killed 16 years lat.:r.
........... ~.,.4Plfl"' ..... _..,, ___ _
NEW fl wrmp. Loc.ATl(Mlj D ("'H) 8"9-6611,
W,E Or.angct~ a1Ltmoo,1 block
N. of91 F\\ }' & I block F.. ()(HarOOc 81"1
·--·-r---~
A.ltiCAHt:IM '1 C'l-tl <Xl·~10t. "\If\!\. \t~lll.i, I hkx:k . of Lt tlln Cost"' MEs.\ r"1 (7 MI ~:\~ !•K> H.utxv 81\d, (hch•nd1hnft) Ornicl Ht:NTl~~ 81Ac.H IJ ('"H) ~ 1919. 17\Wl &.K'h Bk-\!
21 ~'.arrltr. In the; Ch.mer <.:mtrt
MISSION VllJO 0 Cl-i) """'O ·OH.U. 2·HOI AHdl Pk1tt•)' at s.m 01e~o f\\ ,.
OIANGE 0 Cl_.) M9...?HI. C\U f_.~, K.itl."11.a. A\\'. 'll~t o( Tu!'ttrn '\\'C
'
quested ma·ss quantities Qf plastic
sheets for use as temporary shelters.
Mcdiql ex pens say 111s already too
late to hefp the countless thousands of
people who remain trapped under
rubble and that relief efforts must focus on the -hun ancl homeless.
Ryzhkov has pledaed to keep search-
ing for survivon as long as 1t was
possible .
Mexico prison
fire lnvestlgated
MONTERREY. Mex ico (AP) ,-
Authorities say they arc invcstiaatina reports a fire in a state prison that
killed 20 inmates in an overcrowded
dormitory was sparked by paint
thinner thrown durina a fight.
Six prisoners were injured, thrtt
seriously, in the blaze Tuesday at the
Nucvo Leon state penitentiary 1n
MontcrTCy, the state capital and i
northeastern industrial city of nearly
2 million residents.
R-aul O.rza, state communications
director, said a preliminary invcstip·
tion indicated the fire was an acci-
dent. Garza said it appeared a lighted
candle ignited a curtain around .an
altar to the Virgin of Guadalupe.
But authorities were looking mto reports a prisoner threw paint thinner
during a fight inside the ward and
another inmate ignited the thinner to
start the fire. Gana said.
R E B
Arafat in hts ~minute-speech
asked Israel and other nations ··to
come here, under the sponsorship of
the United Nations, so that together
we can forge that J>e:aCC." Arafat's peace mitiauve called for starttng with "a senous effon" under
U.N. guidance to set up an anter-
nationaJ Middle East peace con-
ference.
In Cairo. £.aypt, President HOIDi Mubarak tooay praited Arafat's
speech and disputed Washinaton's
view that it failed to meet U.S.
requirements. "I do not know what
more is required from ArafaL"
The U.S. State Depenment said
Arafat failed to recosnac explicitly
Israel's nJht to exist, a Washinaton
preconditton for recognizina the
PLO.
Israelis kill Palestinian
accused of two slaying&
JERUSALEM (AP) -The army
today blew up the home of a
Palestinian shepherd accused of kill-ing two lsraehs in the occupied West
Bank ... Jcwisn settlement leaden called on ~Ii citizens to be quicker to use
firearms in clashes Wlth Palcstin,ans.
The army said the shepherd
blu~ned a scttler to death with a
rock Tuesday, then stole tbe dead
man's-rifle and lciUed a soldier before bei~ shot to death by Israeli troops.
Tiic violence occurred as PLO
leader Vasser Arafat offered a new Palestine Liberauon Orunization
peace initiauvc to the u.N. General
Assembly in Geneva. Israeli leaders,
includina Prime MiolSter Yitzhak
Shamir, rciectcd the offer u insuffi-
cicnund dated.
The settler's widow, Leah Perea.
called today for more Jewish settle-
u I L D •
ments in the occupied West Bank and
Gaza Strip.
··we will con tin~ to ~ild, to brina
new homes and industry bett and
develoe, the place -that was his
dream, ' Mn. Perea said on Israel
radio. ~ Perea. who baS three children
and is prcpant with a fourth, aid:
"My children and I will continue to
Jive here and build the place ... even if
~(the Arabi) want blOOd.-Tbe army clamped a curfew on the
shepbc:rd's ~of Burin near the
reh11ous. Jewilb settlement of
BerUba and tbe city ofNablus. Israel
routinely demolishes t.be homes of
suspected gucnillu.
Also today, soldiCR lbot and
wounded ID 18-year-old Palestinian
in the Bwtij rcfutee camp in the Gaza
Suip, Arab rcpons and hospital
officials said.
T H E
................................... : ........................................................................................................... .
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t
~t-e Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Wednesday, December 14, 1988
Aerobics_t eachers-to-be
sWeat it out at Golden Wes
Dlllr ...........
a
PrUcllla Ficke. who la punutnc a muter'• proepectl•e aeroblca hl•tructora at Golden
dl{pee In eporte medicine, leacle a ct ... of Weet Colleae. ·
BJ IONDllA lllAN&ER
.... NllOeilllS ' I
Anyont with a hot leotard and taut
body can teach aerobics., ri&ht? After
all, no apecial tninina ot cenification
are leplly required.
But the qualifications of the in-
structor oulht to concern people who
do aerobics, says Pri1eilla Ficke.
She teaches a class at Golden West
Collqe for women and men who
want to become aerobics instructon .
Ficke is the women's athletic
trainer at Golden West. She works
with the prevention and rehabili-
tation of spons-related injuries and is
punuina a master's dep'ee in sports
medicine. She has been teachina her
aerobics 1instructor's class, which
meets for two houn a week for eiaht
weeks, for the past eiaht years.
Ficke divides her coune into two
one-hour sessions. The fint hour is
spent lecturing the class on the
various forms of aerobics, beginning
with the basics. There's "non-im-
pact," meaning' there's no elevation
of limbs. There is also "chair aero-
bics," used mainly for the rehabili-
tation of injuries and by. elderly or
disabled people.
The standard introduction to aero-
bics for most people is "low-implCt. ..
Althouah low-im.,.ct can Fl quite
lively, almost everyone can do at. It
may or may not be uted 11 a 1tanin1
point leadana eventually &o .. hiah·
1mPKt" or tnditional aerobics.
After the lecture, all the students 10
intO-the elercise room and take turns
leadina the class in the week's
assipment.
The. _rou.tine1 must be olanned
ahead oflime to coordinate die 1erfes
of jumps, bends and rhythmic sway-
ing to music the student bas cholen.
Marie Han, a nursina student, is in
the class because "I love to work out
-as much as four houn a day -and
thought that teacbina aerobics would
give, me a chance to do 10methin1 I
~nj,oy as well as make a little money at
It. •
Most of the students in the c&ass
expressed the same desire to beab&e to
teach aerobics part-time while pursu-
in& colleae or a full-time job.
Bart.ra Ellis bas just started her
own skin ca~ business and felt that
being able to teach aerobics would be
an enjoyable way to supplement her
income while building up her new
business, r
Jan Naylor is an aerobics instructor
now, and was advised by fellow
instructorl who bad taken the cou
that it had a lot to offer. She decided t
aive it a try hmelf.
Some students said the most di
ficult pan of the coune ii not t
elercilCI but bavina io st up in fron
of a pup of stnfllm ltlM>Wina tba
all eyes in the room are followinJ you
every move. ••Jt can put you into
panic," said Naylor, "if you don'
know wh.S you 're doi~"
Ficke does not take her duti l~tly. She knows the daqm o
doina ~n e~ercise im~y. ··M
reputation 11 at siUe With
students and I will not sip
certification ·for anyone who has no
met all my requirements.,. she-says.
... To ~n with, a student must
cenified an CPR before completi
this class. All homework ulignmen
must be completed. Students· mus
know and un<lentand the effect o
movement on the body. They mus
have a knowledae of anatomy, inju
prevention, pro~r techniqUe an
basic physiolOI)'.'
The drop-out rate for the class i
hip. Most students who becom
discourqed tell fjcke that they didn'
realize it was so difficult to teac
aerobics.
Introducing yourself to th~ neighbOrs
Platano1 has alway•
been committed lo
crealillq the hne1t
mH ican ltyle meal•
at the lowest po11-
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jutt In time for
ChristmH, we're of·
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only '9"
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llllAYllUICI
All l!T~-1nclud7 cnam• =:· -~·l Nit ~ na muflln wit O\lt comp l· m•nta.
AllOl~POWl9 a..~ t•n •• pl-c le n9 n • IMMI· ric. c ~ • ct:'Z cr10TL. ea.Yf!.. ..it MUI" C,..._ft\ a_YOCado
IVllA
Two ~rn torti~la ~ roll:t a~ 11t:!ffed ..itt c I~ un -l• wi
t;rr:....,.. m~ ·~-· ~ !!.'!~ ~""'m S. wit rlc.
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C&L ... Afl s "''J P• o C.lam~ In• alic>o\&e better necl to • qo~n b.....-n with .~ ......... ,,_ and coclau.il • .._
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T•kt, chu=.t of ~~ chk eau wtth I 1191': =3; tom..:J ~1>1ona. t relrl cw mmcan
rle.
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CIOOll TWO I CIOOll TWO I CIOOll TWO CIOOH TWO 'I.ts 'I.ts I 't.ts I If .ts
Anos Con Pollo I Anos Con Pollo Anoa Con Pollo I Arroa Con Pollo
"M unch1" Platter I "Munchy" Platter I "M unch,.' Platter "MunchJ " Platter
Picadoe Picado. Picadoe I Pacadoe
Calamari I Calama ri I Calamari Calamari
Enchilada Sulaa Enchilada Suiaa I Enchilada Suaaa I Enclul.ada Sulu
BundaJ Brunch I Sunday Brunch S unday Brunch I Sunday Brunch
llDt •IM • aor ot1'ot ofltf llDt •1111 • "'' otlltr tfltr I llol •IM • '"' OIN< orttt Not •M • .,,, ot!le< •"tt Mol ,,.,, ···~ IM>t 0.1 I Nol •11111 ""'" lllt-0.1 Noe .., ... ~ Ta>t-Old I Nol ....... 111 , •• , °"' °"' ...... cM<i ,., ..... °"' .._ (!le(I ,., .,. I °"' ._ tllt<* lltf IJCllt °"' -C'*1 lltf IJllle
I went to a wonderful neigh-
borhood get-together last week. It was
a kind of shanng that you and the
people on your street can experience
too.
Walter and Darlene Gerken arc
prominent and contributing mem-
bers of our community. It was no
surprise when it was they who invited
us all to this holiday block pany.
Walter has been publicly honored
for his professional ach1evemems
while he served as chairman of the
board for Pacific Mutual as well as for
his participation as a benevolent
community servant. (A few of us also.
know him as a demon tap dancer.)
Only his neighbors know, however,
rr--------------------------~-~
Attention Womenl
HORMONE REPl.ACEMEIT THERAPY
....... 1c111•11111
Dr. Normal K. Beals, Med. Dir. of the Women's Health Care Cllnlc In
El Toro. will conduct a number of seminars on hormone replacement--
therapy (estr~o..~_progesterone). -
Dec. 14, 7:30 Best Western Newport Mesa Inn
2642 Newport Blvd, Newport Beach
Dec. 19, 7:30 Mercury Savings
7812 Edinger, Huntington Beach
Dec. 30, 7:30 Mercury Savings
23021 Lake Center, El Toro
ADMISSION FREE
For inf ormatlon or reservations.
Call (714) 855-0525
l.1111
·Auan
that he left the basketball hoop on his
after-the-kids--leave newly remodeled
home so that the new kids on the
block could continue to have a place
to play. · ·
The Gerkens have been living on
Point Loma Drive longer than the ~st of us. Walter says that, in the role
of "block elder," he felt some re-
sponsibility to gather the troops
together for this holiday party.
I, for one, am glad he is so
responsible.
New nei&hbors, Mark -and Jenny,
Harriet ana Bill. Mason and Leah,
Lin-da and Gary and the Lins, were
introduced to the "old -timers."
Stories were exchanacd about arown-
up kids and about the little ones who
have brought new life to our street.
I discovered a lovely. interesting
neighbor named Nancy. We've been
living here on the same block for IS
years and we've never s~ken.
And Linda. She has laved here for
several yean now and we even have a
friend in common. Yet we had never
h en met until the Gerkens' party. (I
suppose you could blame busy sched-
ules.)
I teamed that Harriet, my nelt-
door neighbor, is back in school ----------~--------------------------------:-:-::---:-:-------------------...._ __________________ ....::..., __ ""T"" ______________________ -4-------------------------
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you can receive during surgery is
your own.
Ry receiving your own blood during
surgery, you can virtually eliminate
the possibility of contract-
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Hepatitis and AIDS.
That's because vour own blood is
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Even if you're not anticipating sur-
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u to store your blood for future use.
In fact, the Federal Food and Drug
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the storage time for blood to ten yqars.
For more information
on storing you r blood, ask
your physician, or call
us today.
Newport Autology Cffiter
MedJcal Plaza at Newport Center. 1401 A\'OC2do A\-enue, Suite 211, Ne\\pon BHch. California 92(,6()
(714) 546-0631
..
RUFFELL'S
UPIOLSnRY llC. ........ c.... ....
Im-.... CllTI IUl-Ml-1151
RINOSOFOOW
from TOP:
l 4K $200. 1 IK $400.
14K $395. 14K $285. llK $400.
CHARLES H. BARR "'
studyina psycbol~ ... that th
Gerkens' daupter Ellen is prqnant..
that Bev is the new owner of a Coro
del Mar florist shop ... that Tiffin
and Kirsten are both lovi°' it at U
... that Kun is already a semor in hi
school.
It was 1ood to see Jim lookin
recovered and healthier.
I 'was Jlad for Mary to be sur
rounded tjy old friends as she mourn
her father's recent death.
Somehow it felt like being in th
middle of a wonderful plar, - a real
life "As-The-World-Tums· drama.
Californians are famous for hidin
behind fences and doon. Here, in the
land of perpetual sunshine, nobody
over 16 ever 1oes outside except
perhaps to retrieve a newspaper.
Ga ... doon open, can come and
go, but it's only the little guys who get
to know anyone.
Steven, for eumple, is the nei~
borhood goodwill ambassador. He s5
years old, bas lived next door to us fo
the past year, and comes by to visit
regularly. H is parents know they have
no secrets -Steven tellull.
Every street necdsa catalyst-couple
like Walter and Darlene to help tum it
into a nei~b(>rhood which can be
nourishina for everyone.
Holiday season feels like the perfect
time to Ft staned.
Perhaps with r.our neiahbors you
could plan a · team-effOn" block
panx.M~d r. .. Bill uoa , 1ormer m1n1ster o
St. Mark · yterian Church, once
said, ••families are supponed by the
community which surrounds them."
JULIAN
WHITAKER
Supplement s
can boost
endurance
Dr. Richard fitzpatric1 a
dermatololist in San Dieao, bad oeen
nannina fl to 18 mires a week ~larty for yean. He and his
prlfriend badjustswted to train ft>ra
mantbon by 1ncreuina their weekly
milelee when I recommended that
tJley supplement their diet with L-
Camiti ne and Potassium-Mai·
naium Aspanate, two products that
have been shown to increue en-
durance in well·tnined athletes.
To date there have been hundreds
of Pl~ ddlnina its role in the above
conditions, and only recently bas
there been a commemaJ proc:eu
available for manufllcturins lalF
quantities of 1.,Cunitine.
In 1979, re.ardlen in France
band tbat ~tu.a the diet of
welkrained I lelel witti $ --• Of
Uarailine ~ far -~ allDOlt dou~ tbeif endurance lime
on the treadmill.
roc.ium Mlpnium AlpU\lte
allO increws piysic:al endurance,
but by I di&reilt mechanitm. Tbis
aubllance i1 an atential co-filctor in
the metabolic ~ of .IMllY pro-
duction in 1be mitochondria. .
Nowhm 'in the medical Htenture
blw I found repons aa 1'Cunltine
and Polluium ~m Alpanate
Ulld ~ fOr iac:u ued en-..,.._ IO Fitaaaric ad C:-:Y
WIN= Clll. lie WM lllOI• It .. Pht *YI ... ~ ...
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IMirnaani•..._
•
Orenge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Wedneedey, o.c:.mw 14, 1981
Fluor's '88 net earnings increase 112% to $56.4M
Net eaminp for fiscal 1988 of SS6.4 million or 71 cents per share
were announced Tuesday in Irvine by
the Auor Corp., reprnentina a 112
percent increase com;ared with net
eaminasa ycaragoofS26.6 milliol}or
33 cents per share.
Revenues from continuing oper-
ations for fiscal J 988 were SS. I
billion, up 31 percent from the SJ.9
billion reponed for 1987.
David S. Tappan Jr., chairman and
chief executive officer, said, "Fluor
Daniel, lhc company'& cnfinecrinJ and coostruction unit and our pn-mary business activity, delivered
sipaficanlly improved results. The
company's investments in CC?l1 ~nd
lead also made a stron1 contnbuUon
toeaminp." .
· New enfincering and construction
orden rose 47 percent compared with
last year to $6 billion. Backloa at year·
end stood al S6.7 billion, up 43
percent from a year ago.
"The upward quanerly trend in
Fluor Danael'a profitability over the past year has been very cncouraaini."
Tappan said. "The beck.lot is well
di vmified amona the five business
secton -industrial, hydrocarbon.
power, process and ~vemmenl -
and nearly 25 percent of the new work
put into backl<>s in 1988 came from
oytside the United States."
Profits from A.T. Massey Coal Co .•
Auor's coal investment, were well
ahead of the pnor year due to stron1
demand and produc1ivity gains. Coal
rnulu wcrt also favorably impacied in the founh quancr of 1988 by the
previously announced UMW settle-
ment amountina to S4.3 million after w or S ~nts per share. The Doe Run
Co .• Fluor's investment in lead, also
reported strona profits for 1988
compared with results la5t year due to
much improved pricina.
For th• fourth qua net of 1988,
Auor posted net caminp of S23.6
million or 30 cenu per share. Net
eaminas for the fourth quaner of
Sb: Delta II
rockets to be
made in RB
The U.S. Air Force has ordertd the"
prodoction of six more Delta 11
rockets for S 119 million at the
McDonnell Do11glas facility in Hunt-
ington Beach.
By placing the order, the Air For'Ce
exercised its last production option
on an earlier contract. The onginal
con1rac1 agreed upon in January 1987
called for seven Delta II rockets and
contained two options for a lo ta I of20
rockets.
Last February the Air Force ex-
ercised the firsl option for seven more
rockets. Total contract value is S680
million and includes stan-up costs.
special studies and launch services.
The Delta II will be used primarily
to boost the Air Force Na vs tar Global
Positioning System {GPS) spacecraft
inlo orbit The OPS is a naviption
satellite system the Air F~rcc wtll use to provide ··pinpoint" accuracy for
users anywhere on the globe.
In addition to the Air Force
business.. McDonnell Douglas has
received contracts for two Deltas and
five Delta lls. which will be used to
launch satellites for commercial and
civilian purposes.
The Delta II is a more powerful
model of the rockets McDonnell
Doudas has built and launched for
NAS"A since 1960. The Delta has
proved to be one of the world's most
reliable rockets, achieving a 97.9
percent success rate over the past 48
launches and I 0 years.
Final assembly of the Ocha 11 tak.C$
place m Pueblo. Colo. Launches arc
scheduled to take place from the Cape
CanaveraJ Air Force Station in
Florida.
ICN Biomedicals
declares dividend
Directors of JCN B1omed1caJs Inc
of Costa Mesa on T uesda} declared a
quarttrlydividend of3.5 cents a share
on the company's common stock.
The dividend will be paid on Feb. I.
1989.
ICN Biomedicals Inc. develops,
produces and markets products for
the biotechnolOJY research and
clinical diagnostic markets world-
wide. For its third quarter ended Aug.
31. 1988. the compan) reported net
incomeofS 1.5 million on salcsofS 13
million.
increase ovct fourth quarter
revenues ofS 1.2 billion.
1987toWedS14S.S milhon 1ncludJna a sianificant one-time 111n associated
with comp&elion of the company's
rcstructunn~asram and related income tax 1t.
The company's continuina oper-
at1on1 aieneraaed eammas before tax of $36 m1lhon for lhe founh quaner
of l 988 compared with a Joss of.$44
million for the same penod a year aao.
Revenues from con11nu in1 oper-
ations for the founh Quarter of 1988
were S 1.6 billion. a 12 percent
Tapp&n said, .. We are beaanllll&
the new fiscal year lft strona nnan&J
condition. Positavc cash ftow WU
eenerated. by the company's <>P*·
ations and was enhanced by~ from 1987 aaet ules. Lona·lmn
1s nO\N below$ I 00 million resulti n
a debt-to-tow capital ratio of I 6
percent. And we have over S
m1lhoo 1rr casb and invesunenu n
hand." ..
MEYD ltELLY
Sales leaders naDled -by Toshiba A1nerica • I
At the Telccommunk.ations S)'stems D1v1S1on of THklba •
America lac. 1n Irvine. Lawnace Meyer has been named vice :
president of national sales. He wiU be responsible for all sales
activnies, assoc11ted sales and product training for the di,'is1on's
entire tclcrommunicauons product hne and sttll direct TSD's retail
product sales. R.oyCalr'09 has been appointed rcgjonal sales manager
for the Midwest rt'g.!On. • • • • • MicUd Brut of Mjss1on Viejo has been promoted to project
manager at F•scoe. Williams, Llad1ru & Slaort IDc., a civil
engineering and surveying firm in Santa An•. He is currently
managing the design for the Village Square South rcs1denttaJ
development in San Clemente. . . . .
Fount.am Valley-based PrWo & PrbJo GueraJ Coeuactors
announces the appointment of Jue ltelJy of Huntington·Beach as
conlroller. • • • TerrUyu UmHtam of Rest• HaintyU1ts an South Coast Plaza
has attended the Clairol Advanced Haarcolor Jnst.Jtutc in Chicqo.
She and 12 other st~hsts were selected for this a~ard from amona 11.000 hlllnlVlists at 750 RC&lS salons 10 the United States.
Umentum is the founh St)'ltst from this Costa Mesa salon to win a
national haircolor award competition in the last year. tncludi ng salon
m.anaatr. Susan Dcfaz.lo-POQ!e. • • • ROHM Corp .. a leading semiconductor and high-technology ,
manufacturer, has announced that Martia Miller has 1oined the
Irvine .. based company as marketing services manager and S&eve
BilMp has been promoted to manaa.cr of distnbuuon sales . • • 'l
Reynold R. Welch. president and chtcf cxccuuve office of
Miuloli Hospital RepouJ M~ Cea&«, an M1Ss1on V1CJO bas , annou~ the appointment of lrune resident. Gary G. ~ as ·
senior' ice president of the hospital Fybel has 14 years of expcnenct
in the health care industry. m~t recently as ch1efex.ccut1ve officer of
the Placentia Linda Commun11\ Hospital an Placcnua. • • • O'Douell. Armstroag & Partaen, the In ine~ba~ com-
memal/industnal r~I est.ate '"'estment and de\elopment partner·
ship. has named MicUel Smi.-as markeu ng coordinator for the:
firm·s Irvine SP«trum proiccts. lnJotnt \CnlUrc ~1th The Irvine Co .. •
O'Donnell. Armstrong & Panners will na\C de, eloped :!.2 m1lhon.
square feet on 144 acres at the sne by the end.$ o'fth1s year. Smith will=
overstt the leasing for the pro1ccts. .... Huntington Beach resident Bolt Dtckes has b«n named sales 1 manager of DntaJ HeaJ.-Services, a Long Bcach-bscd company•
which otTers prepaid dentaJ plans to 120.000 members an Ca11fomta. t
Washington and Colorado .
WE HAVE EVERYTHING
YOU NEED!
FOR YOUR
NE W YEARS
PARTY
.. ,.,.
A llt• ....
Liii•••• ........
OPEii 7 DAYS • MOl.-SAT ... 30-5:30 -
IUll. 12:9-5.-00
11141 .. , ..
11111 &1171 ........ •. ....
,
A8 '* Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Wednesday, December 14, 1988
I NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
~ -t: ... + ....
·='.b t~
ll
~~ l4¥t e
'I I
~
'
WEDNE8DAY'8 CLOSING PRICll
Prices fall in light trading
NEW YORK (AP)-Stock prices fell in hght
trading today in a listless response to the latest
news on international trade.
Before the opcnina the Commerce De~rt
mcnt reported that the nation's trade deficit in
October came in at SI0.3S billion, down from a
revised SI0.67 billion in September and a shade
below advance· estimates on Wall Street.
WHAT AMEX DID I WH AT NYSE 0 10
NEW YORK (AP) Dec. 1~
AMEX LEADER S NYSE Lf AD f RS
GoLo Quo1 £s +\.\
, Dow JoNf s Avi R~r.Es
ME TALS Qu ons
NASDAQ SuMM nR r
NYSE UPs & OowNs OTC UPs & DowNs
•
Newpdrt Council
finds,b3.lm for
growing pains
SomethinJ imponant happened during Monday•s New-
port Beach Caty Council meeting and the extent of iu
sianificance is stall unfolding.
In simple terms, the council approved a resolution
opposing sewer and water line improvements on East Coast
Highway until Pelican Hill Road opens to divert traffic
around Corona del Mar.
That action brought a collective sigh of relief from
Corona del Mar residents because it removed the specter of
gridlock those utility projects would have caused. It also
kindled some uneasiness among Irvine Co. officials because
the utility projects accommodate their plans to begin
developing the Irvine Coast.
The Irvine Coast development includes 2,600 homes,
hotels and golf courses between Newport Beach and La&una
Beach. l t 's an important project -one thatlrvine Co. oftiCials
tout as a showcase development. ·
Company officials have spent years planning the Irvine
Coast and moving those plans through the political mine
fields of Newport Beach and Irvine. Their concemJ about the
resolution approved Monday are understandable because it
has the potential to affect the development's timetable.
It's also easy to understand the apprehension of Corona
del Mar residents and merchants since those utility projecu
have the potential to tum East Coast Highway into a parking
lot.
The resolution, which was introduced by Councilman
Phil Sansone, gives the council leverage to lessen the traffic
crunch those projects will cause. It's also a cinch on the
construction process that removes the possibility of one
contractor tearing up the highway only to have another rip it
up m onths later. As dumb as it sounds, similar situations have
occurred in the past.
The Irvine Co. plans to begin work on Pelican Hill Road
next month. Company officials said Tuesday that it should be
opened for traffic in 1990. Construction of the golf course is
scheduled this summer, and company officials reportedly
want to besin turning over some of the land to the home
developers an 1991 .
Whether the re.solution , which can easily be amended by
the council, will adversely affect The-Irvine Co:s timetable
remains to be seer\. We suspect the utilities projects,
completion of Pelican Hill Road anaearlydevelopment worlc
on the Irvine Cpast can be dovetailed into a schedule that will
allay everyone's concerns. But that's not the ultimate
significance·of what happened Monday night.
While the resolution was being debated, Irvine Co.
officials asked that they be given 30 days to talk to sewer and
water district officials about their development plans. That
request set Sansone up for the most telling comments on
development plannir\g we·vc beard thjs year.
.. Everybody's been planning, but until now nobody's
been talking:· Sansone said.
Developments along the Orange Coast, by their nature.
focus on the area where most of the building will take place.
However, too often the effect of that development on
residents and merchants who li ve and work near the project is
a stepchild in the coordination of construction schedules.
The water and sewer projects on East Coast Highwa_y are
necessary for The Irvine Co. to proceed with its lrvanc Co
development. Those projects will disrupt the li ves of Corona
del Mar residents. The work also will touch every business
person and commuter wh o uses that road. ·
The projects and traffic diversion should be coordinated
for the least adverse effect on residents and merchants as
much as iJ is for the benefit of the developer. Jn the past, that
has not always been done.
Sansone's resolution establishes a focal point for more
attention on the overall effects of the first phase development
of the Irvine Coast. By itself, the resolution is a simple thin$-lt does not stop development. It can be.easily amended, and It
helps smooth out the potential for a traffic and construction
nightmare in Corona del Mar. It is a balm that helps ease the
growing pains -without resorting to an initiative and
citywide election.
l'he council has demonstrated how city officials should
be working to represent the interests ofbotb their cons tit ucn ts
and the businesses that help contribute to the affluence and
economic stability of the Orange Coast.
B-2 bomber
The Air Force's new 8--2 steal\)'s bomber may be a
technological military wonder, but it costs too much.
The sophisticated plane, 10 years in development. is
intended for attacks on the Soviet mobile-missile force. Its
radar-proof design is intended to enable it to penetrate far into
Soviet airspace to find and destroy missile-launchers.
However, the technology it is supposed to use to find the
missiles does not yet exist.
The price of a sin&le 8--2 is more than SSOO million. The
cost of' a fleet of 132 S..2s and their base equipment is
reportedly $57 billion ....
This is an astronomic price -unduly hiJh considering
that huge fleets of advanced cruise missiles woWd pr<>t.bly be
able to perform the same kind of mission at a fraction of the
cost.
We hope that the Bush administration and the new
Congress will give the 8--2 program a long. hard look. bHllll_,,.,,. Star
ORANGE COAST
llilJPilat
1 Rosemary Cludlnan
Publisher
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Wedneedey, ~ 14, 1988
Traffic suffers wliile the
'
.big rigs keep On trucking
Increase in truck-car wreck reports
shows how severe problem has become DAN
WALTERS SACRAMENTO -It was the propan1on of trucks 1s expanding
Sunday after Thanksgiving. Tens of while . that of cars is shnnking. In
thousands of holiday travelers, many 1981. trucks were Just over 20 percent
of them skiers returning home, were of the total, but by 1987, they
on Interstate 80 beaded west 1oward constituted mo re than 23 percent. from the previous year. the CHP said.
Sacramento and the. San Francisco Another, more direct, approach is Bay area when an accident occurred. Trucks, needless 10 say. ~ke UP. bein~tried in Los AnoeJcs It involves more room than cars which. 1f . . · 0 • •
A truck and trailer rt8 jackknifed. anyt hing, have been shnnking in size. regu uons aimed at 'Cutt1na the· blocku~g both.westbound l~nts of the and the big rigs arc much less number of trucks o~rauna dunng
trans-SRrra hrghway 30lT1lternsrur-maneuver.able. ~---rrm~n_o\U~ti~ and Auburn. trucking companies. under economic mferenualJy on freeways,
No other cars were involved, and pressure from deregulation of the T~e 8°'i! of~ P[,°'SQm is to reduce
the driver of the big rig was only industry, have pushed to run even pea ck true sc![3 ic Y perce~ and sli&htl y injured. bigger rigs and have pressed to keep tru 'f u congesuon bL per-
But occurring when and where it dnvers' wages down. wh1ch produces cehnt. t mcludes dif rect regu a~ons on more 1oex.-rienccd dnvers t e pertentagc o a company s trUCk did, the otherwise routine mishap "" · fleet that will be allowed to opeT&ted
created a gigantic traffic jam. The For all of these reasons. the poten-during--peak-hours. wtth spccal
highway was closed for more than six ual for car-truck conflict has .been permits to enforce the rules. Another
hours. and homeward-bound motor-expanding at acometnc rates. The aspect of the program 1s creation of a
ists were compelled to either sit it out result, not surprisingly, 1s a ns1ng rate rapid response team to clear awa)
or take lengthy detours on two-lane of truck-involved accidents. truck accidents q_u1ckl)'. .
roads. In 198 l, trucks were 1nvoh ed in 9.5 The program 1s not -.1thout con-
11 was another skirmish in Cah-percent of the total number of fatal trovcrs). Some companies may. it's
fornia·s increasingl y tense struggle accidents and 4.4 percent of tnjury believed, an1fic1all) e'\pand their
between cars and trucks for shares of a accidents. In 1987, the rates "'ere 11.2 flttts by buytng up old trucks to kttp
highway system that 1s inadequate 10 and 4,6 perttnt. the number of operational vehicles
handle the demands of both. The conflict between cars and 'Unchanged. Busmess groups v.-orr)
The statistics tell the story. trucks. as expressed in accident rates. about an impact on their act1v111es.
ln-thMix years between 1981 and 1s a nationwide, phenomenon. but one Nevenhelcss, something hke the
1987, the number of cars and trucks that's especially sharp in California. Los Angeles program 1s inevitable.
on California's streets and highways It's one. the~forc, that 1s drawing We si mply cannot conunue to pack
(not counting those from out of state, gn;ater attention from local and state ever-greater numbers of cars and
such as the one involved in the' l-80 offi cials. trucks into a system that 1s expand mg
mishap) increased by 23 percent, or One approach 10 the conflict has in t1ny mcrcments,
an average of nearly 4 percent a year. been an expenmental program con-If '-'C are unable or unwtlhng 10
. That growth rate is substantially ducted by the Hi&hway Patrol to build more roads. we must br wtlhng
higher than that of ~w population, crack down on retKless truckers on to make the ex1st1ng routes more
and .much. much higher 1_tran-ex~rested routes usma. efficient. We must encourage car
pans1on ofthecarrymgcapac1tyofthe undercover patro cars and a lot of pools and staggered '-'Ori hours to
road system as presently operated. publicity to magnif, the deterrence e'en out the traffic flow Reducing
The ~verall result is an increase 10 effect. · the impact of truck traffic. espcc1all
congestion, evident 10 anyone who The intens1\.e proaram reduced dunng peak h.Purs.. has to be a major
uses the system. truck-auscd tnjury accidents b) 11 2 goal.
It's made wo~ by another fact: percent and truck-caused fatal Du W•lt~N I~ • 1}'11tllcat~
within the mix o( vehicles. the crashes by 33 pert"cnt in the test areas celuul111.
Cave-man tactics to unseat
Willie Brown hurt state GOP
In replacing Pat Nolan with Ross
Johnson as their m1nonty leader.
Assembly Republicans made little
difference tn the Ideological complex-
ion of their leadership. Both are Cave
Men, the description that's been
applied to lower house conservatives
who i01tially were swept into office
dunng Cahfomia·s 1978 anu-govcrn-
ment, anti-tax rebel lion.
There·s a world of difference in the
ways Nolan and Johnson operate.
however. This was demonstrated
anew last week tn Johnson's vain
attempt to den) Will ie Brown
another term as Assembl y speaker.
Nolan. as leader. -.as hardly the state
Capitol's most subtle J.><>lit1c1an. but
compared to Johnson s bull-1n-1he-
china-shop approach, he d1spla)'ed
the finesse of a Metternich.
Johnson's anti-Brown maneuver
already has backfired on him and the
GOP. Bitterness amona Assembl y ~e_publicans has lncrtased. State
· GOP Chairman Roben Naylor aJso
has becn caught in the cross fire.
The internal GOP d1sscns1on
arows out of Johnson's strong-arm
methods to force all 33 lower house
Republicans into a coalition with the
Democrats' Gana of Five behind
Charles Calderon of Whittier as
Assembly spe.alcer JO place of Brown.
Calderon 1s one of the G•fl.I of Five
•ho spent much 0(1988 reuding with
l'rown.
The 11"1 and the 33 Republicans
iottthef are two votes shon or the 40 nciieded to d«t a speaker (The
A9tmbly 11 swncnt has only 7q
members beanaJe of the death of
Dema<l'lt C..nis Tucker.) Johnson
~ to peel Off addh1onal Demo-
Clatl W '-"Pltdti• ma rna1hf\P iMo 1111 clitlricta or four he th()uaht
~ •"' -Norman Waten or ..,........ Domnuc Con"' of San Jaile. ~ Ou~ of Rh'trside anJ
newcomer Ted Lem pert ofSan Mateo
County. The mailings urged 'oters to
call or wnte their o\ssembl) represen-
tatives. demanding that the oppose
Brown for speaker.
That, in 11self, was an un-
precedented move on the r,c /of a-
speakersbip election. But Johnson
took still another and much more
controversial step. Working ~uh a
Gang of Fi"e front group. he caused
esscnt1aUy the same ma ilings to be
sent also to thrtt .\ssembl~ Re-
publicans whom he feared might not
go alona with his idea -tan
Statham of Oak Run. unn) MoJon-
nier of Encimtas and Gerald Felando
of San Pedro. Johnson followed up this strong-
armma of fellow Republicans by persona~I warning the thrtt th3t an ~en to r letter. oven he s1gna1ure
of GOP 1aum w11htn their d1stncts.
wo1,1ld be mailed to voters unl~s the
tno voted Johnson· "'a). These
second letters. some of which ~err
sent. raised the poss1bll1t) that the
lawmakers would ~ rttallcd unless
they bo~ to Joh~son's wishes.
.MARTY
SMITH
Before the session staned. there
"'en: hopes that a relatJ\ICI) smooth
rela11onsh1p betwttn Brown and
Johnson might result 10 mort
b1pan1san cooperation m the lower
house dunng the 19 9 session Thost
hopes no"' are con aderabh
d1m101shC'd.
The cont rovers) has pread outside
the GOP Assembly Ca~us. too. tate
Chairman aylor has upset some
Republicans ""ho say he allowC'd
h1mS('lf and the state party orpm:u-
uon to be drawn into a mo't to
d15'rcd1t thrtt ot'the pan) ·s members
1n the Asscmbl). The anaer aptnst
the chairman may bt unf11r.
In an 1nterv1cw, Na)'lor indicated
that while he knN! that Johnson
(llanned an cfTon to kttp all the
Republicans tn a bloc. the st.ate
chairman did not h ow that the same
pubhc strona-arm1na that was be1na u~ on the Democratt alt0 would ~
Johnson's etTon flopped. Demo-
crat Calderon pined 34 votes -
those cast by the Gaf\1_ and only 29
Repubhans, One GOP memtlcr.
Cathie Wnaht ofS1m1 Valley. refused
to vote for any<>M. The thrtt Re--publicans laf'ICtcd b) Johnson dtd emplo)cd ap1nst the Repubbc.ans.
not vote for Calckron but did not vote One final lroft)' Jolanton was
'for ~own. either Instead, with their outsmarted b) the three ltcpublecans
tonaues 1n thc1r chttks. thc cast t~r he 9Utpectcd Of leduna party loy8lty
ballots for a Rrpubhcan -Johnson · Whtn the tctuat vote was taken, they
h•mKlf CUl 1bftr t.Uou for a R~
Brown was tl«ted wuh the t.rc 40 ~hiae '°"...,.. led most of'lut C8UCUS
\Otts he nttdtd. but his PQ1nion 1ull 111'° voc1111 ~ • Dttnocni -and•
Sttms solid enoulh. for now. One ~ ~r otfarm...,.. '-*" t.d.er. Democr1t "Llo)'d .Conndty of Ce111CMwea. ll IML TllM,.... far
SlcTlmenao. was at.mt Tht ptJW • ~~~Of pw 1 r l9d
chosen at a 5PC(11lcl«t1on 10 luccecd ........ ~
TUC'lttr almost ~rumly will be a .., ...,. Ir • 11•~ I I
Dem 111 and hltl'I~ suppon Brotm. crl l . .,
Ali
WEW
Christmas tree
li~hts know
a6out show biz
There seems to be an unwritLCn law
that Christmas decorations, inclUd-
u111he tree, should be up no later than
Dec. 15. I'm t.alkina about famiJy
homes now, not bu5inesses Where
merchants stan unpacking orna-
ments nghl after Halloween.
I try to stan early enough to replace
all the bulbs on the strings of riahts
that worked perfectly last year, but
have exp1n:d this year.
Through the years we have added
new Stri np ofltghts 10 OUT inventory
and each has a a iffercnt type of bulb.
Some have two-pronged bases and
some have a single square base that
plugs 1010 the socket.
It gets more involved. Part of the
two-pronged bulbs have round
prongs and some have beveled
prongs. Of course, they're not inter-
changeable so we keep spares for all
three types. .
Each year. I resolve to toss the old
lights out and start over. I never do.
I'm too cheap. I figure if it's broke and
can be fixed -keep it This wastes
ume, and it's a maner of which is
wonh more - my time or new liahts. Yes, I test the bulbs before f put
them on the tree because once they're
on the tree. and all the ornaments are
on the trce too, bulb changing gets
complicated.
O'er a period of days there arc
always S('veral rebel bulbs that refuse
to work. On one old strins. aH the
other bulbs sho~ their support and
bhnk out too. Tryina to find the
original mutinous bulb is almost
1mposs1ble without removing .some
of the ornaments. Sometimes after
finding it l, unknowin&ly. replace it
w1 th one of those tWinklina bulbs that
I thought had been discarded
I don't object to twtnklins bulbs OD
Ch nstmas trces as Jong as they aren't
on m)' tree. I find mysclfsittina there
baningmyeyeswitheach twink..lcand
becoming more exhausted by the mmutc. _
1 should be more patient with
Chnsunas tree hghts. AfteT all, they
arc only taken out of the bakes once a
year. I can understand why they
wouljt want to get as much attention
as p6ss1ble. ·
When the hohda}S art over. bact
into the boxes the) go. Then they art
stashed on a shelf in the garage. atuc
or closet and no one thinks about
1hem for another ~ear
There the~ stay 10 the dark.
1mpnsoned 10 a box and pushed back
as far as possible on the shelf -
solitary confinement.
It's a long wan unul next Dcttmber
\\.hen these httle bulbs will escape
their cardboard cells again.
It must be frustraung. They huddle
together and think of the special trce-
lighttng ccremonjes that were h~d
e"erywhcre from the White House to
major shoppmg malls. They re-
member how the people stood around
and watched in delight. They heard
the oohs and ahs.
For nearly a month they have had a
stamng bohda~ role. And then the
curt.am falls. The hghtsgoout and 111s
all O\Cr
Well. that's show bu
Col•mWsl Au Wells Ut'el m
~Nlpel.
LETTE RS
1,
Help protect our
animals' rights
·,
To 1he Editor
I would hke lo state my opinion
rc-gardtn)?. animal nghts. Too often
newspapers tend to do stories about
poor ammal treatment and stones on
a01mal act1\'1St groups that break the
law. CIC
I thinl.. that instead oflhcse lundsof
tones. }OU should have more an1cles
regarding how the communtty can act
IO\Ol\cd JO actuaJI) helping. Yow
hould publish names. places and
meeungs regarding comml1n1t} tn·
'oh ement and stress how ~ all can
help protect the nghts of animals.
I hope to sec more anlc:les in your
paper -.1th more informallon on how
th~ commun1t) can actively help
protect our animal
JENN IFER CONT~
Hunt1naton 8eada
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Pomona Frwy. and ReMM>tr St Phone: 714-590-2007 TOMANCa: Hawthorne Blvd. and ftolt St. Atone: t1S.371•1'0I. Open Monday'lhru Friday 10.9, Slllurday 10-8, Sund9y 12-6
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Dllllr .... ,...... -... ._
<>c.a View'• Ted Pelonla (aboYe) &rabe a reboand u
Merrimac'• Clutatopber ~ck loou on; llater Del'•
Derek Stone la J.!reMared by two Sena defenden (~t);
and Ooean View •Todd Korman (far rlebt) reboaada daiint
Taeaday'• To~ent of Champion double·b•der.
WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 14, 1988
Ocean View ,Mater Dei r .011· into semis
•
Seahawks topple
Australian quintet
in 98-55 blowout
By STAN GRANCH o.IJ .... Cen 11.' I ,....,,
The Merrimac High Tigers: came
from Australia to play in the Tour-
nament of Champions at Ocean
View. They quickly learned one
thing: the Scahawks arc not very nice
hosts as the blew out the Tigers 98-55,
Tuesday night in opening round
action.
. From the tip. Merrimac appeared
to be a step behind Ocean View. The
Seahawlcs rattled otT the first 12
Point.s of the contest and wilh three
•minutes left in the first quaner and .
Occ_an View up 21-8 coach Jim Harris
called of the dogs and put. in the
second team.
However the second team over-
powered the shellshocked Tigers and
they had to be replaced a few minutes
later with the third team. By the time
the first quaner buzzer sounded the
Scahawks had a commanding 30-10
lead.~
"It is nice that all 15 players got to
play a lot. in fact. that is what has
happened in our four previous
games," said Harris. "Merrimac play-
ed hard the whole game and they had
a lot of pressure on them. and it
seemed to take them the first quaner
to settle down a little .•
With the outcome of the game
already decided in t~ first 8 minutes.
Harris used the game to work on a
couple of things.
Ferrell's 1 9 paces
Uni past Laguna
By BENNY RICARDO
Dlilr .... c.f1 II' I Rlll ii
You play at home and yet you're
the visiting team so what do you do?
You play like a visiting tefm and miss
your shots, throw the ball away and
let the other team outhustle you.
That's exactly what the University
High Trojans did against the Anists
from Laguna Bdlch Tuesday night
before pulling out a 52-46 victory in
the second round of the Irvine World
News Basketball Tournament. ,
Not until the I :50 mark of llle
founh quarter did the Trojans force
some turnovers and make some
crucial baskets to pull out the victory.
U niversity Coach Lee Jackson
commented, "for 3112 quaners.
Lquna played harder than we did, we
were tryana too hard and did not settle
down until the final minutes."
The much smaller Laguna squad
showed a lot of hean and desire in
pressuring the Trojans into numerous
turnovers throughout the game.
"We missed our free throws and
they made theirs: it's as simple as
that," said Laguna Bea,ch Coach Ed
Bowen.
The Artists made 3 of7 free throws
in the second half, but all four misses were the front end of one-and-one
situations. Laguna wn able to take
advantqe of its (IUickness against the man-t~man defense of the Trojans.
"Laauna used the UCLA hif!l post
and tlie beck cut hun us, said
Jackson. "Luckily for us, they didn't
hit the front end of their free throws.
''I thouaht Lquna played much ,
Thundev's scttecMe
~ ~ Ouartwf!Mls ~OO!hlll YS Legun1 811Ch (I I U111· 11enllv) •:»-Horth n. EIMnhOW.,. (I I 1,...,.,,.,
.-s.~ vs Woo«wkKle (II
WOOdtlrideel
.-s.n11 An• "'· F1Ubrooll (II Wooo· l>rldoe) c--. .... OulrterllMfs
•:JO-Paramount n. Palos V1rdu Ill Unl111rsllvl >-Edison 'Ill. Laeun• Hflls (II trvinal
•:»-Oen.I HIM$ 'Ill. Esi>er1n11 (II Uni·
wnltvl >-Lone leech WillOft v1 Coron. Clef MM (I I Irvine)
Clleu1$1J--Oua'*11Mls 7:30-Lone a..c:n Polv YS UnlYlf'illll
(•I University) " 7~•n "'-IN lne (•I lrvlnt ) 7~-*v vs.. llrH·Ollnoa 111
Wood«Wldoel
.-Mef'tna "'· S.111n111 111 lr111ne1
better than Corona played. us. We
have trouble apinst teams that come
after us."
In the third ~uanet with Univer-
sity's 6-9 center Stephan Mumaw out
with four fouls, Laguna really began
attacking the man defense by getttng
the ball to forwa rd Dain Blanton. Not
until the last three minutes did the
Trojans switch to a zone defense.
"We were getting the best of them
when they were in their man to man.
but we're just not big enough to beat
their zone," said Bowen.
The Trojans' Pat Ferrell was forced
to take over inside when Mu maw
picked up his founh foul in the first
two minutes of the third quarter. And
take over he did. as he played above
(Pleaee ... DlVDU/83)
Tonlltht'• ac.IJedule ~'*' Semitlnels S:JC>-8osco Tech vs. Wnrchesler 7-Morningslde vs. ~rrlmac ~ S.CMCI RW
1;30-<aPO Vallev 'llS Dominguez
THURSDAY'S SCHEDULE
S"' Place UmlftNI
Bosco Tech-Wulchester loser 'llS.
CaDO Vallev-Domlnguez loser --~~
Maler Del n . Fresno Edison
.. Mike Frohn (a senior point guard)
is JUSt missing on his shot and I left
htm in so he could work on it. He 1s a
funous competitor and when he
misses it makes him mad."
As the game progressed three
questions came to mind. Would
Ocean Vie" break IOO?ThcAnswcrit
(Please eee OCEAN VIEW /83)
Heredia Lacaa
resno E ison is
next for Monarchs
after 61-49 victory
By STAN GRANCH
Dllllr .... C•t 11, .. I
The Mater Dci High Monarchs
survived a very sloppy game and
emerged through a muck of turnovers
and missed shots with a 61-49
triumph over Serra in the second
round of the Tournament of Cham-
pions at Ocean View High T~esday
night.
Monarchs Coach Gary McKnight was uJ)9Ct wtth his team·s per-
fom1ance and he let them kno" about
tt after the game. spending more than
Estancia shoots down
Huntington Beach in OT
Eagles advance.-
at La Quinta after
winning, 71-_6_7 __
By SCOTT STOERCK
Delly,.... eo.-r..,.,...,,
A comparison to Dav-id ve rsus
Goliath may be a bat of an exasgera-
tion. but the 71-6 7 O\ eni me victory
posted b) the Estancia. basketball
team over a larger and much more
ph)'stcal Hunttnjton Beach squad
Tuesd;t) night in the La Quinta
Tournament evidenced a s1m1lar
result.
The Eagles utilized their steadiness
at the foul line and their all-around
quickness to offset a large rebounding
advantage held by the Oilers.
.. We were a hule \\Omed coming
in, because they't'c such a ph}s1cal
team.'' admttted Estancia Coach Tim
~mev aclJedule
"°"""' <Con,.._tton Semfflf•> 6-West Torrance 11s. Torrance
(~SemiflNll)
I-La Quint• 'llS. Katella nuncs.v (CenMUtien SemHIMI)
6-Hunllnglon Beach '115. Cvi:>reu
((~Mio Semfflf•> I-Estancia vs. Et Modena
O'Bnen. ··we aren't \Cl) imposing.
but wc·re fast. and our kids ha\e a lot
of savvy."
Apparently. 58\V) comes in hand)
at the frce--throw ltne where Estancia
made &ood on 17 of 19 attempts.
ancluding four straight by junior
Augustin Heredia wtth less than 30
seconds remaining in O' en1me.
The contest was tight throughout.
as the teams cmeracd from the
halftime break knotted at 35.
(Pleaee eee &ST Al'fClA/83)
UCI struggles before posting victory
Anteaters seal verdict In final three minutes
to turn back Eastern Washington, 112-10 I
llJ JON FERGUSON °' .............
Bill Mullipn did something he
hun'l done much this season. and so
did his team of Antcac.en.
"We win becaUte I wore a coal and
tie,'' Mullipn said after the UCI men's bakelbetl team ran ils way to a
ll2·10l victory over Eutem Wuh-
in&ton in a non-conference pme
bdort !,,.219 at the ~ Events
Center 1 uaday. The verdict im-
the Anteatm to 2-4, whi~ the-
fell to 2·S.
owner. UCI had=inabutan ~ time with the or junior
DIYid Peed -who ecored a c:areer hiab 42 PQ1nt1 -before tealina it in
the hnal three minutes.
"We're not aoina to have any easy
pmcs," said MulliJan, whole team
faces Nevada-Las Veps. Loyola of
Ch1cqo, Vifllnia and UCLA befo~
openina the Baa West Confere""
1Ca10n an earnest. "If r.ou think t.,.,
wasn't easy, wt won l tct another one.''
Beforehand, Mullipn said ht had
etched ih scone for this tCUOn \he
1earn'11ty,,!e1 rcuam•na to and sUck•nt
with the rwl-c:oun pma ~· thf 11me. It wasn't too effective in
forcilll turnoven until &he finish. bUt h 11CCOmpjilhed its main objective of forci~ a .. ,.pe«d tempo.
"ThC press made a lot of mistakes
but 11 forced the tempo ... Mulhpn been a good team for 35 minutes. but
said. "We 83' e up a lot of la) ins. but the last five minutes we·\'e had
we're playing that way, and we're trouble. To ae1 something. }OU ha\e
1oing to give up a lot oflayans." 1og1ve 1t up early on. The)' had a lot of
tn the first half, UCl's press fo~ • d~pth and later on. 1t wore us down.
only two turno\ers but was beaten b) We made tared mas&akes.
long pa$SCS overthe top onl)' once tn "It's a credtt to their coaches to
the second half. Eastern Washmaton sttck wath 1t tall the end. They could
bepn to cap1tah1e on the .stratea> b.a~~ called at off •1th five minutes to
most teams ha\·e used ap1nst the ao. 1
Anteaters' press and qu1ckl) rqa1ned For one. Kevin Flo)d. who movtd
d'lc lead. to the point auard position. was
Trailing 74-71. ucr forced a pair of happy With the mum to ~ 11Yk
tumoven and 1ook a 75-74 lead It anttc1pa ttd before the teUOn opened.
worktd aaain when Palmer stole a He scored a career hiah 28 poanb by
pua and hit a dnv1na S.footer 1n the h1mna 12 of IS shoes. while. Roa
lane to tac '' at 82. Thtn after 1ak1na Palmer. who vacaltd the po1nt to the lead for aooct. 87:86. wuh 6:21 ronttntrateonshooti11.hit II of'~I.
mna1nina, two ront«UU'-e Eastern 1ndudt!'\I 4 of 6 from tlaree-poin•
Wuluftllon tumoven wert con-,.,_, for a ~biP 26 poin&
vcned to boost 1t to 9 1-86. Floyd sumfMd up this YOUlll..,..
"We·re very '""tf:'ienced·" .. ad of Anteaters• curmu diletn• bell. Elsla CC*h Bob oftnan ... We've ,,., ... -UCl/891
20 minutes in the locker room
"tallang" to has team.
"I am very displeased with our
perfonnance tonight, espcetall> in the
second half:" McKnight ~d ... We
did not use our heads. We just were
not sman out there. We arc not
recognizing the other team's strengths
and weaknesses.
-1 do not lml>W-We are-a young
team and I guess I should be more
pauent wtlh them. but we have got to
stan think1n1 out there ...
As a result the Monarchs. now 7-1
and ranked No. I 1n Orange County
m the prcscason rankings. find them-
selves pitted against htghly-rcgardcd
Fresno Edison. the team which
knocked off Westchester in the first
~ ofthts tournamenL
It was Fresno Edison whrch
eliminated Mater Dc1 from the state
tournament last season in what was
remembered as one of the more
controversial endings of the season.
Tuesday's contest opened with a
thud. Both teams were not in sync and
the defcnSC'S dominated the first
quaner. as Mater Dei led after the
opening quancr. 9-5.
However. in the second quaner the
Monarcbs' defense-created a few
scoring opponunities a.s Mater Oct
pulled ~way to lead by JO at the half.
In the third quaner, 6-foot-4 senior
guard Dylan Rigdon decided ll was
time to blow out the Cavalter1.
Rigdon, who had 11 p01nts atthe half,
scored 13 of the Monarchs' 15 points
an the third period. On the night .
Rigdon finished WJth 32.
..Dylan had a fair night.'. related
McKn1ghL "I was not to happ)' wuh
(Pleue eee llOPfAJlCB8/B3}
Parks puts MarinC,!
in IrviiJ.e quarters
By KIBK WOLCOM'
Dlllr l'llel C•1111ua1
With 20 seconds left in Tuesda} 's
basketball r me at Chnst College
Irvine. an Manna High trailing
Santa Ana by one potnt. &oth teapis
had a prett) good idea ""he rt U\t t>all
was going.
No one knrw better than CheroL.ee•
Parks. The 6-foot-I 0 sophomore
center had already scored .:!4 points 1n
the game. including all 11 of the
Vikings· points in the founh quaner
So. v.hen Parks toolc a pass at the
bascltne and put up an 8-foot Jump
shot that gave Marina a stunning
59-58 V.tn, Vikings' Coach Ste\e
Popovich wasn't so much surpnsed
as rche\ed.
.. , thought we could dP IS· I reall~
dtd." Popo\ 1ch said afft'r Manna
came back from SC\ en points do"" n 1n
the founh quaner
Wuh tne ""in. the V1kangs ad-
\ anced to the quanerfinals of the
In inc World Ncv.s Basketball Tour-
nament. and will face Savanna on
Thursday at 6 at In 1ne High.
"This was a good one for us as a
"oung team to come back and win,"
l>opo\ 1ch added. "Games hke thtS
de"'elop character for the team ..
Parks. one of Manna's \.flrcc
sophomore staners. ts de' eloping at a
rapid rate this season. 4.fter turning in
a game-high 19 points and sc' en
rebounds in the Vikings' 75-24 opep-
ing-round \lctory· over Costa M~
on Monda). Parle$ led his team in
those t\\O categones ap1n on Tue -
dake finished wath 16 points. five
rrbounds and four blocked shots.
c-onnccting on 12 of 16 field goal
attempts.
Thi :-.Ssu)en. another sophomo~.
scored eight points. ruckin~ up the
slack in tbe first half·"" hene\ er the
Saints' zone defense kept Parks fro m
the ball. Teammate Duane Cameron
added 15 points and four-rebounds.
But Manna. ~ )'uch shot 28 of 4 7
(.596) from the floor. ran into trouble
1n the third quaner.
Marc ewfield closed out the first
half hilling his onl y basket at the
bUller to put the Vikings up. 3.:!-31.
But the momentum quack}) shifted
after interm1ss1on, as Santa .\na took
off on a 15-6 run that ga'-e them a
4t>-42 ad vantage.
··we pla\ ed a good th11 .:i. but Santa
.\na had a" couple of steals and came
up v.1t h some cheap baskets. "'eJu t
didn't protect the ball.'' Popovich
said.
While tumo"'ers hun the\ 1kmg in
the third quaner. the) de\ astcd the
Saints 1n the founh . Emptoying a trap '
defense and hea'' pressure on both
ends of the coun. "Manna held Santa
Ana to s1it points 1n the final quaner
Ttie Saints' Chaunct~ W oolnd~e.
who finished the game "'l\h I point .
and Oscar Wilson ""ho contnbuted
14. combined forJUSt one point 1n the
founh quaner Onl)' Marl.. Zamora
was etTectne for Santa Ana down the
stretch. netting four ofh1s 18 po11Us in
the closmg quaner. '
When the Saints' hooung turned
to ice. a se"'en-pomt lead qu1d.ly
melted into a one-point defiCJt with
three minutes to go
Heck quits
baseball job
atNe~rt
ly ROGER CAllUION °' ...............
Wayne Heck, "ho has coached
Newport Harbor H.,tt's beteball tnm ~r the past sn years.. has
resaped an the wake of an apparent
pemnal pressure. -,.e ~ latt Friday," OOA-
finned Nritpon Hart. Pnnctpel
Dennis Evans. who said his athleUc clirecior. Bdl Ptmca. was ia the ~ of putblll ICJlfthtr I list fJI
CllPrlH -to fUI Ille ~. ,_Ml a • ...._ oldh~a tbe ~willatwoor..._,_... .. .. .............. '°.... ..
apK1ld. --'°be ..... ...... _ __,..,
•
81 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Wednesday, Oecembef 14, 1988
;pi:e feet ball fans offered very.few guarantees
Some Super Bowl contenders of past at the bottom of lhcirdivis.ions.
When John McKay wasat Tampa
Bay 11kkm ~ tten cverywhtte
with tht sayiA& "Knock Mc"Kay 1n the
Bay." Once McKay wauddmainaa
aroup off ans at a benquet. McKay
told tht crowd to be petien1. that ll
taxes time to build a winner. An
elderly aentleman responded out
loud, ''Some of us don't have much
time."
Growing old can be interesting to
say the least. I live in E~ndido
which is near retirement haven also
caUed Rancho Bernardo. I love going
down there to talk to some of my wise
old friends. ,
Sal Marciano is a Pillsbur&h fan to
the end and I asked him what it was
like to be 7S ycarsold. SaJ said there's
not much peer pressure for one, but it
can also be tough. Like if you run out
ofPoli Gripdurinp baJel eating
contest or you can tdec1de if you've
saved too·little-oMtaycd too long.
he would end uphav1~amore&irls
than Rock Hudson, hiaher morals
thanJimmySwauari. more money
than John Connally, and that Chuck
Noll and Tom Landry would be in
jeopardy ofbeing fired forlosina too
many games.
At the bottom of the divisions you
find teams like Pittsburgh, Dallas.
Green Bay, Miami and Kansas Ci ty.
Combined. these teams have won 11
of the 22 Super Bowls. These are
teams wi th a rich football tradition.
Y cs, that's Tampa Bay where
durin& the hurricane season can act 400 miles to the pllon and durina the
summertime you buy a steak from the
supermarket and it's cooked by the
time you walk home.
According to Sal, the interesting
pan about aging is who would of
thought that itne lived long enough
Then-thereare the other two teams--
in the boll om of their division,
Tampa Bay and Atlanta. But then
that's not news. they've always been
Then lhett's the Atlanta Falcons
the team that draws 14.000 people to
a homepmc. Theydictctraw•2.000
plus to the Bia A over the weekend
when they tried to act in the way of the
Rams.
Reunion slated
for powerhouse
Co1npton tea1ns
Froni staff and wire reports
When the Compton College Tartars [!]
won the 1948Junior Rose Bowl football ell•
game in Pasa ena before nearly 50.000
fans; rwo-ycar college competition was in
the zenith of its long history.
The game in Pasadena's famed Rose Bowl on the
second Saturday in December drew the fifth largest
bowl game crowd of the year. Raymond .. Tay" Brown
was coach of the Tartars after earning All-America
---. honors himself at the University
ofSouthern California as a tackle.
Hugh McEl henney was 1he
starting fu llback on the un-
defeated ( 11 -0) Compton team
that defeated Duluth (Minn.).
48-14. in 1948. Bob Moore was
second team and Jack Gibihsco
third team fullback. Moore later
started at UC'LA and Gib1lisco at
Oregon.
McElhenne) went on to "in
llcBU.eaaey All-A merica honors at the Uni-
versity of Washington and later became an all-pro for
the San Francisco 49ers. He is 1n pro foo1ball's Hall of
Fame.
All three fullbacks on that 1948 team have been
invited to join their former teammates and other
ath letes from the post-World War II years af a reunion
in Long Beach on Wedncsda). Dec. 1 i.. The event will
be held at the Golden Sails Inn on Pacific C'oas1
Highway that night.
"We are inv1t1ng members of the 1946-47 and '49
football teams as well as all former athletes in other
sports from those )Cars to Join us:· said chairman And)
Logan. a quarterback on the '48 team. "We have to
make reservations in ad vance and would appreciate
hearing from anyone interested as soon as possible."
Logan may be reached at 364-4377 for further
info rmation.
Quote of the day
Leonard Hamilton, basketball coach at
9 kfah oma State. on his team being listed No. t 4
m the New York Times preseason basketball
rankings: "I think somebod) 's playing a JOke.
That's probabl y one man's opinion. and I
probably gave him a nde sometime and he
probably likes me. Ifs Cllher ome-body that feels
sorry .f~r me and 1s trying to give us some
rec?Sn1t1~n. or 1Cs somebody who's m} enemy and 1s trying to get me fired."
Port gets new role with Angels
Mike Port was named Tuesday as iii Executive Vice President-General Man-
ac&er and Chie f Operating Officer of the
California Angels.
Port. 43. has sened as the Senior Vice President
and General Manager of the Angels for the past four
years.
As Chief Operating Officer. Port wi ll have
complete reign on all facets of the Angels' organ1zat1on.
"We held in1t1al d1scuss1ons on this subject wit h
Mike during the season.'' said Gene Autry. the Angels'
Chairman of the Board
Kings sell Phair to New Jersey
The Los Angeles Krngs have sold the
nghts to left "1ng L)le Phair to the New
Jerse)' Devils. the NHL team announced
Tuesday.
Phair, 27. has. pla~ed for the Kings' America n
Hockey Leagueaffihate 1n New Haven. In I I games this
season. he had two goals and three assists for the Nigh thawks.
In another matter, Kings General Manager Rog1e
Vachon announced that right wing PauJ Kelly has been
loaned to the Devils' AHL affiliate 1n Utica. Both Phair
and Kelly will report to t1ca immediately. the Kings said.
Hershiser Sportsman of Year
Orel Hersblser, who says he hasn't iii
changed much even though his life is a lot
different these days. received yet another
award Tuesday when he was honored as
Sports I llustra ted's Sportsman of the Y car. Hershiser.
, 30, was very happy to accept the award from Sports
JUustratcd "For me to wm this award, when you
compare it to all spons people, it's very very
• humbling." he said. "l thou&ht one of the ofympic
: athletes would win it. This award means to me that
you've surpassed your own sport." ... The Cincinnati
Reds, hoptng to strengthen their bench for the 1989
Jeason. concluded a deal Tuesday with Boston that sent
left-handed relief pitcher Rob M•rplly and infielder
Nld E•1ky lo the Red Sox 1n exchanae for pitcher Jeff
Stllen. infielder-outfielder Todd Beada1er and a
pfiyer to be named later ... TOii)' Gwyu, a three-time
National W,ue balling champion, signed a contract
extension Tuesday with the San D1cao Padres that will
pay him $2 million in 1991. The deal a'5o includes an
option for the next year that would pay S2 million.
Gwynn. 28• was signed throu&h the 1989 and 1990
asons at >I million per year before qreeina to the
extension . , . The Piusbur;ah Pirates and 0.n Parter
quaetJy teUled a lawsuit Tuesday over Plrket's
admitted past drua use. avoidina a trial that threatened once api n to drq some of baseball 'a bi~t names into
1 PittSbu~ courtroom. Pirates President Carl P.
........ said the team won "a very 1ipificant
conCession" on Parker's I 979 contract. which ~uimf
the Pirates to pay him SS.3 million in ~red
PIYmeDts throuaJl the year 2007. Parker. now with the
OUJand A's. played for the Pirates from 1973-13.
IN THE BLEACHERS
With perfAct timing and execution, Leonard
sets up a scream and frees his teammate for a
jump shot.
Capitals move into tie for lead
Mike Gartnu and Bea1t GHtaf11on ~ each had a goaJ and an assist as Washington '
defeated the Nordiques in Quebec. 4-1 ,
Tuesdl):.nigbJ.i!td moved into a three-wa y
tie for first place in the Patrick DI Vision. Tne Capitals.
one of the hottest teams in the league. have won IOand
tied three of their last 15 games to draw even with
Pmsbuf'lh.and the New York Rangers ... Elsewhere in
the NH(: Jim Koni and Aaron Brolea scored second-
penod goals as New Jersey came from behind for a 4-3
victory over slumpinsSt. Louis in East Rutherford. The
loss was the Blues' third in the last four games and iheir
eighth in the last nine games a~inst the Devils ... Paul
MacLeu sco red his second goal of the game on a power
play with 3:06 left in the third perie><i. lifting the Red
Wings lo a 5-4 vic tory over Minnesota in Detroit. The
game drew 19. 709 fans. marking the 80th straight time
the Red Wings have drawn more than 19.000.
USC turns back Seattle, 87-53
AatNDy Peadletoe scored 20 points m and Roule Colemu had 16 to hcl USC
defeat Seaule~ 87-53, in a non-conference
colleJe basketball game Tuesday night at
the Sports Arena. The Trojans, who won only seven
games last season, moved to 6.2, aided by 12 points
from Alu Pollard and 11 each from Cltri1 Moore and
Andy Olivarez. Seattle, 1-8, was led by Job JUag with
17 points. CartScHideladded 10 points and fi ve assists
for the NAIA Chieftains. The Trojans led. I 9-16,
midway thrqugh the first half when Pendleton scored
eight points in a 13-0 run that upped their advantage to
32-16 with 7:40 left in the half. The Trojans led by as
many as 37 points down the st~tch, dominated
rebounding in the game, 54-25, and forced 32 Seattle
turnovers ... In the only pme involving top 20 teams.
Jolul Mortoa scored seven straightj)Oints in a 17-2 first-
half run as No. 17 Seton Hall routed Rutaers, 96-70.
The Pirates improved to 8-0 this season.
Sanders wins Maxwell Award
Barry Sanden of Oklahoma State [!]
added the Maxwell Award to the Heisman •II• Trophy he earned earlier, and used the
opponunity Tuesday to knock down
rumors that he would skip his senior year &o play in the
NFL. "I'll be at Oklahoma State next year," said
Sanders. "There was a rumor noatina around that I was
going to the NFL. But I never really had any intentions
of entering the draft," Sanders said durina a telephone
news conference ... The NFL Players Associauon on
Tuesday presented its counter proposal f~r settling the
two-season-old laoor dispute, 1ncludina a free agency
system similar to the ones used in major lcquc baseball
and the National Basketball Association. Under the
union's plan. any unsigned veteran with six or mo~
years of NFL service would become an unrestricted free
agent. The number of years required for unrestricted
free agency would be reduced in the subscQucnt years of
the contract, down to three by Feb. I. 1992. The NBA
adopte~ a similar plan earlier this year ... Orcaon
Coach Rln B....U and two San Francisco 4~n
assistants will be interviewed this week for the vacant
football head coachina~tanford Univenity, Athletic Director .U., aid Tunday. Brooks,
o.r.e Seifert and o..AI •join Texas-El Paso
Coacfi W S..U and Stanford defensive coordimtor
Did MaulaJ as candidates to replace Jed Elway, who
was fired earlier t}tis month. ·
Televtalon, racllo
TILaVlllOlt
4:JO o.m. -COLLl•I aASICITIALL: Nft»rHka
al Ohio Slate. ESPN. 6 p,m. -,...0 IASKaTaALL: Lakers at New
Jersev (ctet.ved>, CNnnel '· 6 p,m. -.... 0 HOCKIY: Klnet at Plllsburgh
(ClelaVed), Prime Tldltt.
6:30 o.m. -COLLIGI IAM<ITIALL: Auburn al
Vanderbilt, ESPN.
I p.m . -HOllll •ACING: Hollvwood Park rlPlan. Channel !'16 (Prime T~at. 10-.lO 111.m.).
f P.m. -11',;,TOllCYCLI •ACING: FIM World
Chemolonltt';.. from LeMeM, France (1 .... ), ESPN.
12:30 ~.m. -M>X ..... khedUl1d Terrv Horrlt vt.
Stev. L.ltltl In 12·round MIP9t-wetterwtlttll bout from us v ... , (...,.), £SPH.
•ADIO
' P.m. -""° aASICITIALL: ......... at New JtrM'I (..._), KL.AC (Pl). -
6 P.m. -....0 HOCICIY: Kinn et ~ (delaY9cU, KPZE (1'91).
7:30 p,m. -""° IASllTaALLi Miami •• c ...
pen KltTH (ftO). t".io P.m. -COU.IH NIKITULL.i r ..... ,
L.Gnt' llKft ltafe (dlllYlllJL Kl'D <n•> . TlllMIDAY TmL8¥9Dll
1 1t.m. -eGLP: Klrtft C"' .,..,. ~. Hewell.
15"t.
BEIHIY
RICAIDO
'Rank.in Smith. the owner of the
Falcons. tried to solve the losina
problems oft he Falcons last year by
firinaall thc people-with last names of
Smith that were on the Falcon ~yroll. Sm ith put the blame on his
offsprinas for tbc tc.am '.s ioabilityJ o
win. The team is loaded witha lot of
very hiah number one drat\ choices.
The beauty about the system that
Pete Rozelle has created 1s that the
fans of these teams can now get '
excited about th~prospect of drafting
a top collcaeplayer. These days. the
top collcae players offer no guaran tt:e
that they Wiii achieve .,.UlnCM IA &be
NFL.
If you 'vc ever wondered why the
great &ams of the pest are no~
winn1na. look at their drafts. Some
area a teams can be turned out with
one bi& draft.
The l>ittsburah Saeelen laid the
foundatioRlfor their future Super
Bowlteamswith the 1969draf\. In the
first round, thty took Mean Joe
Grttne and he occupied the middle ol
thedefensdorthenex112ycars. In
the third round they took offensive
tackle Jon Kolb and in the 10th round
they took defensive end L C. Green-
wood.
In the I 970 draf\ theyaot Terry
-Brad.sbawJlonSbanilinaodMcJ _
Blount. In the 1971 draft they got
Frank Lewis. Jack Ham, Gerry
Mullins, Dwi&ht White, Larry Brown,
Ernie Holmes and Mike Wasner. In
1972 theyadded the"lmmaculatc
Reception" man Franco Hams,
al ong with Gorden Gravelle and
Steve Furness.
The 1973 draft produced nobody. -
but the 1974draftoroduced Lynn
Swann, Jeck Laml;en, John
Scallwonh. Jimmy Allen, and Mike
Weblter.
8ytheendoltbe 19741CUOnlhc
Slftlen were wearina the ftna of four Su~ Bowl nnp. 8Ut who have they
drafted lately? In I 9U they drafted
Darryl Sim11n the first round and
he's no lo~on tht 1e1m.
If you continually draft olaycn that
are ma,.Pnal at best in the fint round,
your tam i190in1 to be ma,.Pnal at
bcstas well.
Parity hu been the dream of Pete
Rozellcand he's made it into a reality.
Wuhinatonand Denverbaveal-
lready been elim,inated from any
Dlayoffs ~bi.lilies, while 1be _._
bidersat 7-8areincontroloftheir
own destiny.
Like m old friend Sal sa.id1 "I
didn't reaflyrealize I wu,etl;lqold
until I spent fiveminutesk>otinaau
picture of a horse before I rcalizeCl
Lady Godiva was on tht horse."
I think the same problem exists
with coaches in the NFL
UCISTRUGGLES,BUTWINS;l·l2-101 ~ • •
Jl'romBl
"We're not big enoogh to play half
coun and we're not quick enough to
play fullcourt. but we re better at this
than the half COlJn. It loosens everr-
body up. Their shooting touch 1s
better. You're not thinkin,a. if you're
open. you've got to make 11."
"Kevin strtl hit a few bumps. but
Palmer seems like he's more confi-
dent:'~~ulligan said. ·
The Anteaten have hit-below SO
percent in each of their losses. above m both of their wins.
Floyd also pushed the break well,
commiuina only t~o turnovers.
"I feel real aodd there," Floyd said.
"Rod'saotaaood soft shootina touch,
takina those 18-. 19-, 20-footen. I
played this in hi&h school.
What won this one was the Ant-
eaters' ability to shoot from start to
fihish. UCI hit 40 of 66 shots for 61
percent in the pme, including 9of12
from thrcc-pomt range. and sank 82
percent from .ttie line. Eastern Wa~h
ington shot 54 percent. four per-
centage points under the UCI de-
fensive average.
The shooting percentage was mO're
impressive, considering UCI re-
ceived but two baskets from inside I 0
feet in the first half-but held a 54-48
advantage.
FTeshman post player Elgin
Rogers. making his first start on his
19th birthday, scored but two points
in the first half on a pair of free
throws. but he responded with I 5
points and fi ve rebounds the rest of
the way. including 13 points in the
final 10:23 of the game.
"Well, my teammates got on me at
halftime." Rogers said. "They know
what I'm supposed to do. They said
act like it's practice and go out and
pJay hard. I just turned it around. I
was kind of nervous at first with it
being my first time starting I didn't
know it was my binhday until
(assistant) Coach (Bob) Thate told
me:.\'
"It makes me stay in the pmc,"
Floyd said. "I concentrate on the
clock situation.I. being a leader, a
coach on the uoor. because some-
times I would have lapses in my
concentration." ·
UCI came out and hit 6 of its first 8
shots and 12 of its first 16, all from the
I 0-to 20-foot range. Palmer scored 15
points in that stretch, his last basket a
fadina 14-footer from the baseline
which pulled UCI within one. 33-32,
with 9:41 remaining.
"At the half. the post posi tion had
two baskets and one rebound.''
Mulligan said. "But three of them are
freshmen and one's a seni or. Right
now. we're a strong perimeter team.
but we've got to change that on the
inside."
To that point. the Anteaters had hit
75 percen( but still trailed. The next
time down, Mike Doktorczyk (16
points. nine rebounds) hit one of
UCJ's onl y two shots oft be half inside
I 0 feet for a 34-33 lead. Floyd hit two
baskets, one a layup, and Doktorczyk
sank four free throws to compktc a
12-0 run for a 43-33 lead.
Tuesday's cotlege bas-ketball scores~
WEST UCI 112, E Wa!nlnolon 101
USC 17, s .. 111e S3
Drake 66. M nneso11 S2 M¥cer IO, Snorter •7
S.n FranclKo St. 11. Cat Poly Pomona 10
SOUTHWEST
Mlcl'tletn St "· rn ·Cnlcavo 7• Mldlletn Teen 7•. Wl' -w-lor 65 Wr19nt SI 15, SI Frencl,, N'( ,.
Mlu lu lPl>l St 76, New Or1Mn• U
Pen Amerkan 76. SW Texas St 70 Pllilll~ •• SW Ol\lallOma I•
SOUTH EAST Columblt 72. NYU 70
Conn«llCUI 71, Falrlield ..
.Selon HaM '6, ltu19tr• 70 Ttxn ·EI Pno 12, Ntw Mexico St 14
MIDWEST 8111 SI 63, ValPartliO S6
Arkan"' 1•. Mlu lu k>cll 61
Centrt "· Kt ntuekv St 7• CltmM>ll tJ, S. C1rotln1 St 70
Mllryl1nd 1•, Monmouth, N J 70 St. 8onaYtntu~ 11, Nl191ra 71
llllt1nov1 ff, OrtHI 71
Lallen center Kareem Abdal-Jabbar trl•
to work Illa way aroa.nd Cle.eland'• Brad
"' I JI lit
DaacJaerty on tile buellne dartq ftnt Cla&f'8I' of Taeeday'e NBA pme. • Maglc llfts Lakers over Ca vs
Johnson's triple-double sparks
!..!. 1-102 victory: Clippers routed
FrHI 'he A1NClated Prn1
lt'sa simple equation. sa_ys Earvin "Magic" Johnson.
Play good defense. and tht offensive numbers take care of
themselves.
"What we were able to do was like &ood shots and act
back on defense." Johnson said Tuesday niaht after he
scored 31 points and collected 12 rebounds and 13 assists
to lead the Los Anaeles laken past the Oevcland
Cavalien at Richfield, Ohio, 111 • &.02. The triple4'iouble
was his sixth this season and the IOht of his career.
The Laken mede 5 7 percent of their floor shots whik
hmitina the Cavaliers to 43 percent. Ckvdand was
unable &o use its NBA·leadina defente to set up the fast
btaks it usually runs.
.. We •• a lot of film of them tettina layups and
dunkin&on ~ .. Johnton l&id. "We didn't want that
to hUDin to us. •vc a very toOd 1.nnsition pme."
karmn Abdul abbar. honored at halftime llecaute
he was maki• hi• last a~raMe at the Richfield
C.oliteum. started the prne aftn mini~ the previous
1even becaute of a 1pr11ned riaht kntt. He finished with
six points.
In other NBA 11mes: Tnll ..._. 111, alt' 1n ti: Kevan Duckworth
tcOred ll ofbil II points in the lhird quarter and had 10
rebounds to lad Portland over the vila11na Oippm.
Portland won its third 1tr1ilbtoevenn and bat the
Clippers for the 15th consecutive time since 1986. The
Clippers have lo~t seven of their last ei&)lt.
a.Dell lU, Ce.Ida 111: In Landover, Md., Bernard
Kina scored 10 of hi1 30 points in the final 10:23 as
Washin&ton snapped a seven-pmc losina streak by
beatina Boston for the KCOnd time lhis ason.
118"'9 IM. ... U: In Cbicaeo. Dominiq~ Wilkins
scored JO points and sparked a third-quaner burst that led Atlanta over the Bulls.
I.aids 111, Nel1 Ht: Charles 0.klcy scored 18
points and Sidney Green arabbed 17 rebounds u New
York handled New Jeney 11 Madison Squa~ Garden.
Paeen 111, H.,..&a lH: Reserve John Lona ICOred a
season-hip lS points and Vern Flcmina hlld a triple. double wtth a carttr-hilh ll rebounds u IM Plcen
defeated Charlotte at lncf11napoH1.
ab•erteb 117, W.....,..111: Derek H~ madr
contttuuvc lhrec-point sbols witb1n a span of .W leC'Ond1
in the founh quarter. lmdina Dallu over Golden Slate at home.
I.ml I• Tien II: Jeck Sikma ICOred -.leUOlt-hilh
26 pointt and Rick~ Pierce ICOred 19 ai Milwaukee bat
Philadelphia It the -SDectnam.
~•lt•I• 1-. ... Ill: In Seattle, Dale Ellis
ICored J poinia u die =:a bat Phoenix. .. 1-.-.. PrellleJ accwedl 11M19"-
h'lh · ~6 apig.and ~IO binded Yilililll San
Antoneo•t 'l:l:'IOll. "-illl Ill.II Ill: In l>nMr. ~te
l..ner Iii' I ..,_ftced 1118Ck wkll 2J poimt at 1111 N .....
bleaed -HOUMacl.
J!.tJl'E TOURNAMENT •••
the l.apna defenden Ind j)OUred ID I
pmonaJ seuon hiah of 19 J>Ointa.
The Uoc:kout _punch ror Ferrell came wben be rebounded a mitaed
free ~row put it in and then stole the
en1u1na pus and jammed it in on a fast break.
The four consecutive points by
Ferrell ~ve l,he Trojans a lead they never relinqwshed.
1...a&una's John Trevino played an
eitcclTent floor aame 1n4 hit some key ou~side shots including a three-
poanter. Laguna ran a very tight zone
throught most of the pme and they
w~ cxt.rel'!'ely physical apinst the TroJans anStde.
Thouah--Ffll"ell aot the-point , the
real hero of the pme for the Trojans
might hive been the timely play of
Lance Elmore, who converted some
fut break opeortunities and free
throws into ellbt points in the final
quarter. Junior Oliver was 6 of7 from
the line for the Trojans.
"We're startins to understand our
offense and learning to attack with it"
said Jackson. "I never would have
believed that Mumaw would score
two points in this aame after scorina
31 and getting 16 rebounds the ni&ht
before and we woul(l still win tnis
aame. Stranac niaht."
The Trojins started slowly~ and
Jackson is hopinl he won't sec a
repeat Thursday mght. That's when
No. I seeded Long Beach Poly
furnishes the quakertinals opposi-
tion. •
In other tournament action:
Jntt.e 71, EIHDllower 5%: The
Vaquerosimproved to 4-0 and rolled
into Thursday night's championship
quarterfi nals. fighti ng off
Eisenhower's pressing and trapping
defense for a wire-to-wire victory.
Four players scored in double
fiJurcs for the winners as Brian Allred
(22), Todd Trout (I 5). John Molle
( 12) and Raphael Molle ( 11) took
command.
quanerfiftals aame With Kennedy
Tbundav nisbt.
.. They're ju111 helluva team " said
Woodbrid,e Coach Bill Shinnon. "Bra is very strong and very physical
and we aot hurt inside."'
Fred Schweer and Joey Cohen were
each in foul trouble early. and that
didn't help the Woodbndae cause,
either.
"We're: youna and we're aoina to
&el better,'' promised Shannon,
whose team dops into a seventh place
quarterfinals pme apinst Saddle·
beck Thursday on the Warrion' floor
at 6.
C....4el Mar H, MIHM VleJe
H: Brian Spratt scored 14 of his [6
points in the second half and Rich
Mather dropped in a 12-foot jumper
with 25 seconds left in rcaulations to
send it into overtime.
Once the Sea K.inp' aot into the
overtime session their defense took
over, shutting Mission Viejo out
while Matt Herrington (a bucket),
SJ>ratt (two free throws) and Matt
Cwicrtnia (a free throw) put it away.
. Jeff Jackson stoolc out defensively
for the Sea K.in.15 despite· the fact he
has yet to practice a minute.
Cwicrtniascored IOpointsandhad
ei&ht assists; while Spratt added eight
rcl>ounds to his 16 points. Herrington
led Corona with 17 counters.
Next for the Sea K.inJS Thursda¥
afternoon at Irvine High {3 o'clock)
will be Long Beach Wilson.
EdilH st, Norco 35: The Chargers
jumped all over the Couprs with a
I S-S"lead through the first quarter and
a 29· 7 halftime bulge to qualify for a
consolation quarterfinals game
Thursday afternoon against Laguna
Hills (3 p.m.) at Woodbridge High.
0.-, ..... ,.._ ..,._. .....
Glenn Baham of Serra •natches rebound away from Mater Det•a Andy Karlcb darin& Tuesday'• &ame at Ocean View.
Orenge Coalt DAILY PILOT/Wedneed•v. December 14, 1118 -_.
OCEAN VIEW ROMP& •••
From Bl
almost d1d.
With 30 seconds left the Seahawks
had two chances to cross the triple
d111t bamcr. but the first posseu1on ended on a turnover. With three
seconds left Randy K.arhner fired a
20.foot shot that JUSt missed and
Ocean View (S-0) had to settle for 98.
Second. ·how many Scahawks
v.ould score in double figures?' Senior
guard Grca Evans had 11 points m
about the same number of minutes,'
wh ile senior center Todd Norman, ~mor forward Ted Pclonis and
sophomore center Marcel TcnBcrgc
all added I 0.
The final question was how well
would Brendan Le Gassiclc. an all-
Australfa performer, o or er-
nmac. Le Gassaclc. who's brother
Darryn is also on the team. had 27
points. including four three-point
goal~. I
"I am really loolc1ng forwatd to
fnday." said Hams "This team has
yet to be &ested and 1 want I.hem to be
tested. That 11 wby we olay such a
tough non-leaaue scheduk .
"l do not know 1fwe can play with
the Capo Valltys and Dominauez'a,
yet because cvcrythana has been easy so far. Playma in thlS tournament will
help refine the team. Who knows?
The Vcps tournament next week
may get us rN!cfined.
"We arc m shape physically to play
With anyone, but f don't thinJt WC
ready yet mentally. The auys need to
learn to play with intensity for a
whole game, and they have not betn
asked to do th.at yeL ·
· Ocean View wiUplay lbt.,winner..of
tonight's-Capistrano Valley, Domi-
nguez game in the semi-finals on
Fnday night at 8:30.
Merrimac will 'play tonight at 7
ap1hst Mominpidc1 wbich lost to
Capo Valley on Monaay in a consola·
tion game ..
MONARCHS WIN, 61-49.
From Bl • •
his sbot selection. but he .1s a good
shooter and he ll''cs 1t I 00 percent. ..
Ucspatc ll1gdons' heroics. the
MonarcM advantage grew b) only
fou r. and things d1dn·t look good for
Mater De1 going mto the founh
guancr as ll had two stanus with four
foul s. l
.. We pla}ed very poorly in the
second nalf." said McKrught. "Our
dcfcn:.c which had been adequate in
the first haJf. was non-cx.1stcnt in the
steond. We let them dnve the lane.
Tb us. we were forced to foul them and
we got into foul trouble."
Just when Serra seemed to be
mak10g a move, the Cavaliers would
self-destruct. Serra was credited of-
fically wnh onl y 19 tu movers (Mater
Oe1 had 20), but many of those came
in cnucal moments an the contest and
dcstro)ed any momentum ll had
gained.
Serra lost the game not only by poor
pla' t'tut with f"'(\r frtt-throw shoot-•
1ng, The Ca,ahers were 8 for 22 from
the. hnc for 36 ptrccnL compared to
Mater De1's 14 of 19 (74 percent).
The Monarchs pulled away to a 20-
point advantage wuh three minutes
left to ice the pmc, thanks to the
outside shooting of Rigdon. Serra
nailed a couple late three-point shots
to make the final marg10 a littJc bu
more respectable. (
"This )car we arc all young. with ••
two seniors and 10 underclassmen ••
and we arc going to· strugle in
December,'' admmcd McKnight.
"This 1s tbc youngest team we have
ever had, but we arc talented.
Hopcfull) by the umc January comes
around we will be playing smarter and
be a stronger ballclub.''
"That's kind of what we're looking
for," said Irvine Coach Stcvt Keith.
"A lot of guys helping out."
The host Vaqueros took an early
lead, jumping to a 32-17 advantage
throu&h the first half, but it was not
until Allred went to work in the final
staaes of the third quarter that Irvine
took complete control.
"I was reafly pleased with the team
effort," sajd E<Hson Coach Jon
Borchert. "Bill Martineau did a nice
job inside (eight boards and 19
points), Steve ihobe boarded well
(seven Caroms) and Art Baird shot
real well aJ the start of the game (he
finished with 12).
"It was just a game where we were a
little qwckcr and sharper than we
were the day before and I saw some
progress."
ESTANCIA TOPS OILERS IN OVERTIME, 71-67 ...
From Bl . .
Eisenhower cut the lead to ro with
just over two minutes l~ft. but then
Allred dropped in a pair of threc-
point shots and added another
bucket; scorin1 all eight of his..third.
quarter points in the final two
minutes.
"That pretty much iced it for us, ..
said Keith1 whose team now faces
Long Beacn Millikan in Thursday's
quarterfinals.
"We match up sizcwize,'' said
Keith of Millikan. "But speedwisc
we're in trouble. If we can get in our
halfcourt cxcution game. If they
break us down in the full court pme
then we're in trouble."
Brea-OUMa H. Woodbrid1e H :
The Wildcats turned it on with a
22-11 run in the first quarter and were
never headed as they qualified for a
Lo•1 Beacla Wllso• 71, ~•ta Mesa
53: Timmy Nguye n had a season-high
30-point performance. but it wasn 't
the lcind of game tfc wanted as he and
his teammates suffered through 25
turnovers cnLoutc.to an exit from the
tournament.
The Mustangs. now 2-3 overall.
have the next eight days off before
embarking on a travel date with
Corona dcl Mar, and Coach Dean
Cooper is taking the time to mold a
new system after disbanding his
sophomore team.
"It was really a tough decision,"
said Cooper. "But we were spreading
ourselves so thin. I moved all the
sophomores up to the junior varsuy
and varsity, but had to drop kids and
cancel the sophomore scheduled.
"I've brought my sophomore coach
up with me and we're going to work
on the basics."
The Oilers. who owned a 21 • 7
advantage on the boards after t\\O
quaners. were able to get the ball
inside to center Scott Oralee for much
of the third period. after which
Huntington Beach led, 53-48.
It was at this point. said Hunt-
initon Beach Coach.Ro).Mill.et.. that
his strategy may have cost his Oilers
the game. ·
"When we took the lead at the end
of the third quaner. we went mto a
delay-type offense in order to control
the tempo," Miller explained. "Bu t
our shooting went cold and 11
backfired on us ."
Through three quarters. the Oiler
bombed awa). from the penmctcr
with much success. as their eight
thrcc-pomt field goals. w 111 attest.
But in the final period. including
the overtime. their shots faltered and
the Eagles' defense began to den)
Oralee the ball underneath.
Estancia. meanwhile. led by Mike
Curtis. went on a 9-0 run to begi.n the
fourth quarter and regained the lead 1 at 55-53 "'"h under SI'< tn1nutes
rema1nini. Followrn~ a 61-61 ue with I :24 left.
Curtis and Heredia hit two foul shots
apiece to g1'e the Eagles a 65-6Jjead ~luc-0-appcarcd--saft'iJ'fitil onl} five
seconds remained.
W11h se'en seconds left 1n the
fourth quarter. Huntins1on's Ste,cn
Lucas approached the loul hnc for a
one-and-one opportunity. After sink·
mg his first attempt. Lucas fired the
second shot off the nm and into the
hands of Drake. "'ho m tum fed the
ball back to Lucas 1n three-point
range \\here his ensuing shot found
net and e\tendcd the game for thrct
minutes.
It was a pla' that turned out to be
big for both teams
Ob' 1ously fo r the Oilers. 1l ga'e
them another chance for ncton But
11 was the reacuon to the pla} b} his
Barons stay unbeaten, 87-76
Fountain Valley 5-0
following victory over
El Toro; Sailors romp
The Fountain Valley High boys
basketball team kept itS unbeaten
mark intact Tuesday, night with a
convincing 87-76 Vlcfory over El
Toro in the Barons' gym.
After racinJ to a 37-27 halftime
edac, Fountain Valley steadily in-
creased the margin in the second half
and cruised to its fifth win in as many aies this year.
"We pretty much controlled the
second half,' said Fountain Valley
Coach Dave Brown. "We played very
well defensively. Mike Mcrh had an
GIRLS VOLLEYBALL
All-Academy
League
Tyson-Bruno
setFeb. 25
LAS VEG~(AP)-Mi~e T)'90n·s
otr .. nckln defenJe of hat ~vyweipt title apinst Frank Bruno 11 on
••n tet this time for Feb. 2S at the
La Veps Hilton. a 1pckestnan for
the hotel~ says. Tyt0n•s fint ~t since his 91 ·
teeOnd knockout of Micheel Spinks
last June 27 11 to be formally
announced at a news conference
nunday tn Los Anerla. said~ llftke cucutivednectorof'pubhaty
and ~Ill for the Hilton. TM ftehMn. &heir maaq1n and "':~°l':~~ r..-drlaill of the maldl, which
Ml a.em paetponcd ftve times.
excellent game and dominated the
boards and Tom Weaver did a great
job handling the tempo of the pme
and directing the offense."
Merli collected 18 of his team-high
24 points in the second half and
contributed nine rebounds. Tom
Weaver added 1 S points.
In other boys pmes:
Newport HarliOr 54, Su Clemente
35: Chns lee dropped in 24 points.
hitting 11 of 17 from the field , as the
Sailors collected a runaway victory on
the loser's noor.
It was a season high for tl)c Sailors'
standout, improving his overall aver-
age to 13.6 per pmc.
Coach Jerry OeBusk's Sailors went
to work on San Clemente wi\)l a
strong press and. forced I 0 first-half
turnovers and were 1n com mand b) a
21-8 margin earl) m the second quarter.
The Sailors tum to tournament
Qlay nc'<t. w1th a 3~p.m. game against
Escondido at the San D1egu1to High
Tournament on Fnda> ..
Newport Clllrlsllu 70 Pacific
Slllores H : Leading by JUSt four at the
end of the first quarter. the Con-
querws put the game away b)
halftrfne wnh a 28-11 ccond pcnod
advantage. kc)cd by Jon Bahnsen.
Jcrcm) Clarie and Wa) nc E'erctt
BloomiDgtoo c.ristlu 58, Liberty
Cllristiu SI: The Mmutemen lost on
the road and dropped to 4-2 as
Bloomington Christian parla~ed
three double-figure scorers to gain the
verdict.
SOCCER
Laguna survives Marina.
Stal'sfoul trouble boys,g!rls
ti t Laune Rush and Trena)
0
1tardma• post wins r s s r y or each hit a single free throw to male "
31 30 1 U 1 31-28. The Dolphins closed the gap to -w n; n one with 14 seconds left \\1th 3 field
1 1 t goal. but a desperauon $hot at the preva s n ourney huner from m1dcourt missed Its
For most of the earl~ part of this
season, the fonuncs of the Laguna
Beach Hi&h &iris basketball team
have rested on the shouldcn of senior
center Liz Stal.
But in a non-lcque pme Tuesday
niP.t at Dana Hills, the Artists were
wnhout their b1g 1_un for much of the
pme because of foul trouble. How-
ever. Laauna was able to survtvc.
takins a 31-30 victory over the
Dolphins.
Stal picked up three fouls in the first
half, then her fourth early in the
fourth quarter, forcma LaJuna Beach
COICh Grq Marsl\aJI to SJt her down
for much of the way.
··Shemuathavemiaedaaood lOto
'' minutaofolayina time 6ecause of fouls." said Manhall. "But while she
was in there, Li1 Mid Dina Hills' bit
ICOref (~ret Schineneck) to 1ust
four points.
Schineneck suDDlicd nearly all of
Dana Halls' at1.1ek: tcOnlll 24 Points.
while Stal. despite her limited duty,
finished with ll reboulicll And 10
~nll. Dana Hills &ook a 21-25 '-I iit the .... ~°' ....... S" wM1i SUI bit a pair of he
MlcQ KJempn dMI IM .-c.
mark. Laguna Beach (4-1 ) enjoyed a huge
advantage at t~e fn-c-throw line.
outscoring Dana Hills.11-6.
The An1sts are back tn action on
Thul'5da at 7 p.m. 1n the semifinals
of the Santa <\na Valle> Tournament
In other 11rls pmes:
llalvenlty ••· Newport Harbor H :
The TroJans ad' a need in the consola-
tion brad.ct of the Savanna Tour-
nament as Denise Gandara scored 15
points and grabbed 11 rebounds and
Lau nc Sato had a standout dcfens1' e
effort. Un1vcrs1ty. now 5-2, resumes tou1-
ncy play on Th\.lrsda)' at 3 agams1 La
Habra
The TroJans ltd onl)' )Q.16 at
hatnimc, but '<>On trctchcd the
mara1n to nine and coa~ted home
with the win. taC) G1cm led cw.
port with 18 po1nts.
Wider•& OrtaUu U. Ntwper& arts.._ U: The Conquerors drop..
J:!n!~ J.l overall v..nh the loss at
NCWDOft Onstian ~lo5fd within fi-. a1 -)l.ll 1n tht &atttr Slall'I ofiho
.. me befort y~ldina the final li'e ~nll. K.at1man Malek ~ottd 1 l• '°'=and Wendy BahnKn haJ ntn<' lbr wpon Omtaan ..
It's betn a successful pt"l"-leaJue
season for the Manna High bo~s and
11rls soccer program
The bo's 1mpro' ed their record to
S-1 Tuesda\ v. uh a 1-1 '1ctory o'er
Long Beach Wilson "-e' in Martin
and Kc' tn Bruno e1.11:h SCQrcd 1n the
first half and goalie Bill Klein stoppc-d
four shots a the \ 1~ings held on for
the "tn.
The V1ltng JJrl team blanlNS
Tusun. 1-0. as Debbtc Klein scored
both goals.. one in ca,·h half. ~telan1e
Frales asS1Stc<1 on tht fir 1 aoal and
Juhc Muchc the sc,·ond a the \lanna
g1 rls mo' cd to 4-1 -1 on the season
In other bo}: SOC\'Cr
Foutai1 Valley l. Sota Au
Valley Z: Joe Kille orcd his third
aoal of the pmc on a pcnalt> kid:
with 15 m1nu1~ rcma1nini tn the
match to gl\c th~ &ron\ their fourth
'1 tol) tn fi, e out1nts 1h1 ~ason.
In inother 11rl' match
Newpert H_...... i , lApM 88dl
t : The Sailors dommated pla
throuahout 1n re..:ord1na thtir third
\'tetol') aaa•n t one <kfcaL Dav.on
Batrd SC'Ored t~1ce and O.n1elk
Tomawl' on« 1n tht tint halh~~n
Nt"" port took. a 3;() kact
WMArWtt l,S..Ck••lt l :Tht
Wamon ("amC'd 1hc uc \\htn Ton)a
D1unlla hca1..IC'd m a lrncr ~1d: b)
Tma H.a ll m1Jw \ throu1h 1ht~rnnd
halt •
team that pleased O'Bnen. we don't do normally such as our
·• i\fter a pla) like that. a lot of 11mcs man-10-man defense," 'he explained.
a team will JUSt roll over." O'Bncn "We'll switch. to a zone dunna said. "But we really bounced back. league... ·
and that's a great sign." -.\fter Lucas' ~i~~E:sfanru-lllill------------
poured-m-tffc first points of the Libert , s James ovcmmc on a play that O'Bncn felt Y '
boosted his plave"' cmouonallv. 8 kl h d "It was follow10g their umeout:· UC es onore
O'Bnen recalled. -we got the ball to l1beny Chnsuan High's Bryan
Curtis on a back-door play and he James and Cbns Buckles were named
went uncorncsted for a layup." to tbe All-Clf small schools ei&ht-
Hc rcd1a. who fint shed \\1th 18 man footbalJ team as selected by
points. hn two free-throws before the members of the Southern Section
Oilers were able to ansWt'r w11h a Football Coaches Assoc1ation.
la) UP by And) Thompson. "ho had James. a semor linebacker. and
19 points. Buckles. a Junior kicker, arcjomed by
Cold shoonng and turnovers "\IC-Co-Pla}'crs ofthcYcarEarl Rbodcsof
11m1zed Huntington Beach Late in the Coast Chnsuan and Bnan Charluns
contest. but Miller attnbutcd them in of Bloon}1ngton Chnsuan, a pair of
part to some cxpenmenung he's runmng backs.
doing before the league-season be-Coach of the Year honors go to
gins. Harold Strauss of Bloomington
"We tned some thtngs tonight that Chnsuan. .. ---------.. -----------------~ HECKRESIGNSPOST. . .. • • From Bl
later than the end of Janual) ..
It will come from etthcr a current
full time teacher or Trom someone
with walk-on status. as was the case
w1th Heck
''\\'a~ ne had my total suppon m
terms of the cnswng season " said
E''ans 1n recalling the snuauon for
\tf C'Ck. "But according to Wa) n.s:. It fe
tS too short. He was worlcing for
peanuts and apparent!} dtd a tremen-
dous JOb 1n terms of managing the
field.' ·
.\ parental group. howe' er labeled
as boosters and c' cntuall) disbanded
b-, order of E'ans because of the la ~
oi suppon for the coach. apparent I~
was not comfortable wnh Hcck's
record. which reflected one appe.u·
ance in the CIF pla)offs m 1~'5
dunng has St\·\Car sttnt
"l''e gone through 1t (~nt dis-
content) before " said Heck. a l'\cw·
pon Beach entrepreneur m the ice
cream business.
·"It's aJwa)'S there a:i e' el)' school.
but n got to be a tough thing on me
and 11 was affecting m) famal> I began th1nlong about m~ pnont1es
and n brought me to the re~hiauon
that n's not something I can conunue
doing
"But I have to tell \OU It was one or
1 he saddest da \ s of m')' m:ent I 1 f e The
pa) was S 1.500 for the season. but I
would ha' e paid them to do 11."
"I guess it's hke the se,·en-,car Itch
It's hard for me, because I fed like I've
lost m' best fn cnd. But the) 'II get
another coach and he'll do a great
JOb"
Heck said the cnuc1sm leveled at
him "ere "d1rtttcd at m\ ab1l1t1es.
"It "a a parent that I thought
"ould ha'c k.no"'n better. someone
"1th a lot ofbac~round m baseball h
-.as Bill inger:·
1ngcr as a former profcss1onal
p11cher of considerable note. wtth a ·
l 2-vear career with the Dodgers and
.\ngels, comp1hng a lifetime earned ·
run average of 3.24. And, he v.-as :-
instrumental an in1uating Lillie
League baseball into the Harbor area
rC'CCntl) as an alternative to a r.ro-
gram called Harbor Arca basebal .
"icwpon 1s a school which ha
endured decades of· l~an years in
baseball. Tbc last champ1onsh1p
season "'as believed to be 1948 and
the Satlors' appearance 1n the CIF •. pl~offs an • 5 was one of the · h1 ltdm of baseball h1stor) a1 the:·
sc ooT • H~k·s outfit upset highly ranked
EJ Toro 1n the first round of the
pla'"ofTs and lost a 3-2 decision to a powerful Diamond Bar mnc m the
second round
.\mong the Sailors on that team were Joe) Jamcs(Clc,eland Indians)
Jon Dishon (UCL.\) and Mann)~
.\dams ( l!CL i\ ).
Evans does not appear to be ha pp)
"uh the loss of the Newpon Beach
resident. nor 1n the wa~ the vacanc)
occurred.
"Parent are entitled to cnuc1sm."
said £,ans. "But when boosters
orpntzat1ons turn into roastm.a or--
gantzauons. "c're acmng our pn•
onues m1~t'd up··
faans could not predict whether
Heck's replacment will be fro m
w 1thrn or from outside (walk.-ol'l l. but ·
said. "It's difficult In some WI)$
good people arc scared awa) without
parental support "
Hee~ said added rcspons1b1ht1cs at.
home ( 15-month-old daughter Ha)"
le~) wa also a factor 10 his dcc1s1on
• .. 1 hadn't bttn able to make tht:
dec1s1on about g1vm1 baStball up, bu\'.·
the parent discontent reall) 1ot me:-
th1nkina." said Heck. "For the tun« ...
and effort.then a group 1s after )OUI' •
head··
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7
I
l 'h
~ View 91. Meo1mK CAultnle) SS
CT---• ., CMTJ'I t)
Mti•llMC:
.. ft ... Chrlatle 0 0 1 0
II Le G a•c k 11 1 1 27
3 2 2 11 2 I 3 S 0 0 2 0
2 3 0 7 0 1 2 1
0 0 l 0 I 2 0 c
Toltb 19 10 13 SS
( Ocellll "'9W' .. "r • Norman c t 10
Erntt 3 O 1 6
Evena .S O I 11
T d.P91onis C 0 2 10
FroM 4 0 0 t
Tm.Peton11 1 I 0 S
Gweltne'I' • O O I MatJln t o O 5
K•rllnef' 3 0 0 ' PtlilllM 2 0 0 •
Willlt(IOl'I 3 0 2 6
Pri»U 7 0 2 4
Ttnleroe J c t 10
Plfrl I 2 I •
Totals 42 10 13 ft
ktn w Quef'1iln
Merrlmec 10 17 II 14 SS OcHn View JO 26 73 71 ft
, Half11me:Octa.n View S6, Mttrlman 17
Tllree·oolnt 1199ls:M4lrrln-..c: II. Lt Geulck
4, COUCll 3. Ocffrt Vltw. T9d ~I\ 2, EVt M
I, .EIJlbn_ J~MetJJr.t L T~:N-.
Mater Def 61, Sen'• 49
IT___,,el~)
--°" SWrll .. ft... .. ......
Ri9don 13 • 2 32 M • n a • II II • ' I
Stone 2 o s 4 l 2 4 10
8oyle •O l 98allem 173 C
Quinn O • 1 • llumev 2 I I S
Karlcll 2 • • t Wllllam• I 2 2 4 llovd O O I o Wiiicox 3 I 2 7
Nolan 0 0 2 O Devl1 I 0 I 2 Detroit
CleYetend
Ala.JI!• MllWaukH Chicago
lndlane
16 4
. 13 s
13 I
10 I "'lo 10 5 14
.IOO .722
.619
.556 .500 .263
O'Neil 1 0 I 2 JohnlOll I 0 2 2
2 A/ldr" O 2 o 2 Caroente< S o 2 13
3\l'J Totab 22 I• 17 61 Looe1 I O O 2 5 SCtn llY Total' II I 17 C9
6 ""'-ltr Oei 9 21 IS 16 61
101h <tS«ra S IS 12 11 C9
TWM9Y'• sar..
Lass 111, Cleveland 102 Pwltencl 113, ~ n
MllweultM lot, Plllladttoflla 91
Wuhlneton 115, Bolton 105 lnclleN 115, Cl\W'lollt !CW .
New York 121, New Jf(MY 100
Allenll 106, CNcffo W o .... 117, Golden Stet• 111 Oen\'tl' 126, Houlton IOI
Seattle 126, ~Ix 116
Sacramento 1•. Sen Antonio " TNllY'I 0-LM.-s ., New HfMY. 4:30 0 m.
Miami at ~. 7:30 o.m. _
Utefl e t Bolton, 4:30 o.m.
tlldlane et Cn.rtotte, 4:30 o.m.
PtllledelPNe et Atlanta, •:JO o.m
~eullM al Detroit, 4;30 o.m.
• L.Hen 111, Cavelen 102
LAK•IU (Ill) -Green ,., 2-2 IS. Wortfly
10-1' 1·2 21. AOOut·JallClar 2·6 2·2 6, Camolletl 4·9 2-2 10, JoM$0tl 11-19 7·10 JI, C_, 3·4
2· 2 10, Tl'IOmOIOn S-10 0-1 10. Wootrldoe 3·4
2·3 .. TOIM: u -n 11·2• 111
CL•V•LANO ( 1021 -Sanden ?·I 1-2 S, Nenc:e 1·16 4·S 20, DaUOflel'ly 6·12 2·2 14. Price
9-17 2·2 21, H.roer 12·26 •·• 30. Wllllarm J·9
6-6 12, ENO 0-6 0-0 0, ROiiin• 0-0 0-0 Cl. TotalJ: .o-H 19-11 un. seer. ... ~
L.-ers JO lO 21 J0-111
CleYelenO 29 29 19 2S-102
ThrM·oolnt 009t1~reen, JC>Mson 2.
COOHr 2, Price. Haroer 2. Foui.<s out-None. RIC>ouncb-Laken u (JOllnlOll 12), Cleveland
SI (Dtuof\erly 11). AHlll•-Lt klf'I 21 IJOlln•on
13), CleYtland 29 (Price 11) Tota l foul1-La1ten
11. Cleveland n
A tttf!Nnc-20.CW I.
Tral ....,.,., 113, Qppers t2
c~IU en> -""-""'no 3-11 o-o " Normen 7· 14 1·3 IS, Kitt 1·3 O·O 2, Dalley S· 10
2·4 12, Grant 4•6 0-0 I, Wllll•m• 2·9 1·2 S,
Nl•on S-11 0-0 11. &.nlamln I · 13 2·2 11, w~ •-6 0-0 9. Gondrezlek 2·• 0-0 •· Garrlek 1-1
0·0 2. Tolab: C2·• 6· 11 91. ~TL.ANO (Ill> -Bryant l·S 0·2 6.
Kt<MY 6· 12 2·2 14, Duckw«lll •-11 6•1 II.
Drexler 6-IS 2·3 I•. Porte< 6· 11 0-0 12. JOllnlOll
7·10 3-6 11. Vounv J·S 2·2 I. llrancti 6·12 2·2
I• AnderlOll •·6 0-0 I. Nael 1·2 0-0 2, Fe<relra
0-3 0-0 0 Totat•· 41·97 17·2S 113
SC.. IW Oua"9n c"-'' 1t n 20 31-n POl'tland 23 3S 29 26-113
TlltM ·PO!nl -·•-Nixon. w~ Fouieo
out_.._. 11.ooundl-Cll-n •7 CW~ 11. l"o<tland S6 COuclr.w«tll 10) Anl111-Cltooeo
17 !Nixon 6). F'on .. lld 31 (Porter II Total foull-<t~' II. Portia.II<! 13 Tec:MI·
cab-JOl\n$0n, Kite
Alltnda~l2.14
COLLEGE MEN
UCI 112., EHfllm We....... 101
(W •Cef .. MCI) ••• ....,. w ..........
.. ft ...
PMCI 17 6 • C2
Plf'klns S 3 I 13
Klno 1 o 4 11
McMallon 2 0 2 s
Sufflvan 6 2 2 II
Smlln o o o o
All>f'K lll 0 0 0 0 °''°" 3 036 Garrison I I 3 3
Totals .. 12 " IOI
UCI
.. ft .... Let>at 2 1 2 11
Rooers 6 s J 17
M. Dktrczk 4 6 I 16
Palmer II O 3 26
Flovo 12 • 2 21 Heroma n 4 o 2 II
Wlllteto 0 0 0 0
McClo•klY 0 1 I I
Mav 10 1 2
TotalS 40 23 IS 112
HeHllme UCI, SA· ..
Tllr"·oolnt -1$ EH lern WHllln11· lott-Sunivan •. PM<! 2. MCMiiion I.
UCl-Patme< •• He<Oman 3, OoltlOl'Cl Yk 2. T KMIClll None
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS
E1t.nd1 71. H""""9Nn S..ch 67 , __ ..._.,
l•tMcill H"""""'8ft a.di
.. ft ...
6 6 I II
10 ' 2 lO S 0 3 II
0 1 2 I
,..Ml I 0 I 1
l(ar • I l 9
TllOmolOll
Kaller
Oralle
Klwwikl
Lucu
.. ft ...
1 2 3 19 2 2 • I
9 I 3 19 s 0 J 12
3 ) l '
Totals 26 11 12 71 Tot ell 26 I 16 67
~ IW ou.n.n
E5tancla 11 11 IJ 17 6
Hunllneton 81.cfl 20 IS 11 12 2
Tllret·oolnt llOt ll E "an cia-Curlh.
Mc0enlt4, Hunflnoton llHct1-Tf\om0$0tl 3,
l(etter 2, Kllewslll 2. LUCll
Tadlnleell· None.
fteuntaln Velltev 17, El Twe 76 , __ ..._.,
11 TW.
feftpffll 7 6 • ,.
,...,..Ill v...,
R JOllnlOll
Revnokls
Everett
Sl\ennon K Jonnson
TllOml>\Oft ~" HOtMll
s • • 15
I 4 5 6
4 2 3 10 • 11 3 19
I 0 0 2
0 0 2 0
0 0 0 0
HoOan
Muroen1
Merli
Corcoran
T.Wee~er
Hetltlusdl Ngvyen
Coot! D Weaver
Pnllll°'
lllcllel
Steed Searcy
Totals n '11 21 76 Total•
SC.. IW °'*"""'
.. ft .. "' s 0 • 11
2 2 2 1 12 0 • ,.
I I 4 3
6 I 4 IS
I 2 0 4
0 2 0 2 3 I S 1
l 2 I 10
0 0 0 0 I 0 I 2
0 0 I 0
0 2 0 2
~ 1326 17
Et Toro II "t3 17 ll-76
Fountain ValleY 13 2• 23 ~7
~oolnl 00911 Et Toro-It JollMon 4,
lltv'nOldl I; Fountain Vellt• ttoeen 1, Murden!
1, T Wffl'f( 2, D Wttvef' 2.
T tCMlcall "'-·
Hallllme: Mater Del 30. Serra 20
TlvH -oolnl goats:Mater Del. RlllOon 2. Bovie
1. St<ra: Car111n1er 3, Mendenllall 2.
Tec11nlcals: None
Unlversttv 52, Lleunl S..dl 46
!Irvine Wartd Htws T~l
UiWtnlt'I' U9UM e..dl
Gtanen ~ : "; ~ Trevino ;e ; ": ~
Mumaw 1 o c 2 Quigley I 3 2 S
Ferrell 9 1 3 19 Cummings O O I 0
Oliver o 6 o 6 Stafford S I 3 11
Dleft< 3 1 1 1 lllanton S O 3 10
Elmore 5 2 1 12 McKeown 2 3 3 1 Harri• o o 1 o 8ucnsbaum I O 7 t
Totals 21 10 13 S2 -To1t11 19 7 16 46
ktn 1W Qvartws Unlvtf'•ltv 12 7 IS lt-S2
leguna 8ffcll 11 10 " ~ Tlt(..-ooinl -b. Laguna 8ffCtl -Trevino
1.
T acllnicals: None.
trvtne 70, E!Mnhewer 52
(ltviM Wertct Htws Teu"*"Mt)
IElMilllewer nw
"""'"' .. ft ... HarOlle I I S 17 Trout • 1 I IS
Jimm.<IOll 4 7 I 16 J.Molll S 2 12
Lon<IOn • 1 • 9 R.MoOe • 3 :J II
Fol lt< 3 0 • 6 ANreO 9 0 I 22 Sipe o 1 o 1 Ounmevtr 2 2 3 •
CamP<>ell O 2 O 2 Bain• 0 0 • 0
W"I 0 I l I llulont 0 0 0 0
0 .Lllller I 2 • • M.Llttter 0 0 I 0
Totals 19 13 11 S2 Total• 2S 16 16 70
Sc.,. IW °'*""' Elsennower 11 6 u 21-52
lrvl111 20 12 17 21-70
TllrM·ooint 11oa1s· Elnnllower -JlmmtrlOn
1. Irvine -Allrea 4.
Tecllnlcats: Elsennower coacn. 2
Ellson s•, N«c• JS
(ntM Wtftd Ntwl TturMmeflt)
Hwee ·--Be.Horn
Brown
Harr in
Welsll
Lallllm
Br.Horn
Puleo
fe ft pf tp feftpffp
6 2 J I• Muronv I o I 2
3 I 2 7 TllOOe 2 I 2 S
I O 2 2 A.8alrd • 2 0 12
3 0 0 6 MerllM•U t 3 2 19 I O O 2 Tvler I 2 0 •
1 o o 2 Srnvw o • 2 • t 2 O • Colctowll 2 0 2 • Carey 3 I I 7
B 8alrO 0 2 0 2
Total$ 16 s 1 JS Total• 21 19 10 St
NOt'CO
EOilOll
Sctff 1W 0-rtws
S 2 16 1•-3S
TllrN -oo;nf oo-1•
TecM b b: Nont
lS 14 IS ls-59
EOl'on -A llalrO. 2
Cerona det Mir 56, Mlsllen Vlete Sl
(INtM Wertcl New1 T___,..)
Ms-.. VIM C-... Mer
E.er.~
Amen
Nlerk M.C.arner Wlllltm•
Wlfkle
Lacaml>f'a
.. ft.... ..ft ... 9 C I 22 Cwlertnla 3 2 3 10
2 O S • H..-rlnoton 6 S 1 17
3 2 o 9 Sorell S S • 16 s 2 I 12 J•ckson I O 2 2 1 022 Plllla 00 40
0 0 • 0 Fredtrlck• 2 0 0 4
I 0 I 2 ft\ttller 3 0 2 7 ~llhl 0 0 0 0
Wt.JOllnlOn 0 0 1 0
Wt.JollnlOll 0 0 0 0
Totals 21 I I• SI Totel• 20 12 16 S6
San ... ~erlecb
Mission Vlt io " 12 10 Is l>-S I
Corona dtt ""'-' IS 7 • 12 17 S-S6
Tnrtt-oolnt 009ls: Mlu lon Vltlo -Mark I
CdM -<:wlertnle 2, SC>rall I, M4ilrtt< I
T echi'llcals: None
Mlrtne St, Sente AM SI
(INtM Wtftd lffWs T~)
Mel1M S..... AM
C.....-.<on
Carreon
Fltldl
Newf"oelcl
NllUYtn Perlls
Scrlullz
Shelo< Totets
.. ft... ..ft ...
7 1 2 IS M.Zamora I o 2 II
2 0 0 • ClleVH 0 0 0 0 0020 Mtdlne 100 7
I O O 1 Vema 2 0 0 • • 0 0 I Wootrldee 6 S I II
12 2 2 26 R.Z-e I 0 0 2
2 0 2 • Wiison 6 2 1 I•
0 0 0 0
2t 3 I Sf Totals 24 9 S SI
Sc4" .,., OMtterl
Merint 10 n I• 13 Sant• Ana 17 I• 11 6
Tllr"·oolnl -11· Santa Ant: M. Zamora 2,
Wootrldlle
TK11nlcal1. None.
L.,. S..d'I W1Mn 76, Ceate Meta SJ
(ll'Wle Wtftd News T-11•••0
CM1it *'-La WIMfl
Vu
T.Nguyt n
Ciiano
Kunst Burnell
Herotno
Yoc:kel
L11nv
H.Neuvtn
P.N9uvtn
Omave Dlet>al
etrnn Toteb
~ : "! ~ DHlllell r' ~ ": :
10 7 I 30 D4N>PI S • 2 IS 2 S I 9 FO'I' 0 0 I 0
O O 3 O Grletb'I' S 0 2 II
O O I O Htrwt 3 0 I 7
0 0 • 0 K110n9 2 0 0 • o o o o Mccowen I O O t
1 002 Pearson 333 9
00 1 0Smllll 202 • O O I O St-erO 3 0 I 6 o o o o Wiiiams 0 0 I 0
0101 Wlnn 1012 o 2 o 2 Totals l2 9 16 76
16 IS lS SJ
k-" °'*"""' Co11a Mell 19 13 13 ~t-53
Long 8-dl Wlbon 24 17 20 IS-16
TllrM-oolnt toels: Coate Mew -T. Neuvtn
l , Vu I. LB Wilson -0-1, Gr'9tbv I,
Herbtr1 I TKhnlcals; None.
K~ St, ••••1au11 12
,.,,._ -.... T-I -) te•••·• ........ ~ ~:-:-: .......... ,,,..
MenN11 6112H ..,_ 711•
Dottlll 3 1 l I °"""* 0 I I I ,,,_, 0 1 I I T......., t I S ., ~I 0 C 1 C ....... 4 t J ti .\tMW 3 t 390.Vls 20t 4 Gomei I 2 I • Wlllletnl 1 I J J 0... 0211
Totalt 13 20 16 SZ Totall 21 16 24 "
SC.. ... ---..
Sadt91111t:k • 11 ' ll-tl l(l(IMdy 11 11 12 ,......,,
ThrM-POlnl 90M, SeddlJUt .. -AllllW 1,
Menhtll 1. KIMedY -"91teNlll 1, lertl• 1. Ttdlnlcell: NoN.
...... 011119 ............ St ,.,.,,.. -.... .,. ___ >
.,..~ .... .... ........ .. .... .
Stewert 4 t l 10 Colltn c S S 13 Wiik..-7 6 2 t3 Tevtor 3 2 l I
Cl'ii1ieetlett1-t I c I SOtweer 2 0 c ~ Ptlee O l l l COl'Mn 20 1 5 wic..men o 111~vio120 C""110n 3 2 I I McLAmote 0 2 I 2
Pittman • o 1 9 ~ o o o o
ENtt 0 O 1 O 1eucc1o 0 0 2 0 Huctaon 4 2 2 10 SMMlll 2 0 I C
...... 0 1 01Mur'Pfl'I' 10 1 2 SNw 3 0 0 6
Wiison 0 0 1 0
Totell 24 16 16 16 T01111$ n 9 21 "
SC.. ... ---..
llfM-<>llnOe 22 17 20 %7-ft Woodllrldllt 11 19 16 1,_,.
TilrM-oolnl ~ llfH·Ollftde -Walt.If 3,
Plllmen 1. Woodllrldet -~ I, C01'118"
I, A.nktnez'I' 6. '
Tedlnlcela: "'-·
New"'1 Her1*' S4, SM CllrMnte JS cw .. ...._)
.......,. ...... s... OerMl"9
LH Fr-n
Oe8ulk
Grav
Niwven
Parllfl
Long
A talus ~lexlc
Martinez Totals
..ft... ..ft ... II 2 I 2~ RlellarO I 0 I 2
203• Bell 1 043
0 0 0 0 °'''" 0 2 0 2 4031 Smtih 1 002 c 0 2 I Pel'doen 0 2 0 2
2 0 0 4 Ounef\M 4 3 I 11
0 0 2 0 MorNn S 0 2 10
1 0 0 2 HeoedOl'n I 1 l 3
1 0 0 2
I 0 0 2 26 2 11 SA Totals 13 I 10 JS
Scere ... ~ ~twoort Harbor 17 10 IS 12-54
San Clemente 6 13 7 9'--'3S
TllrM-POlnl eoels: San Clemente -W 1.
Ttchnleall: None.
1111m11 ... ., av. sa, Ubertv av. s 1 c-••••> UMrt'I' awtstlell .......
Clla-'I
!k'l'lklan
Elltll
Jemt1
Price
Wedi O'Conntr
.. ft ...
1 0 4 IS I 3 2 S
6 0 4 12
3 2 • 9 2 0 0 •
0 0 2 0
2 2 I 6
' CllrtltlM .. ft ...
ll c s 26 S 4 l IC s • 1• 2 0 2 4
0 0 1 0
Totals 21 7 17 Sl Toleb 23 12 IS SI
SC.. ... 0-rten Lltlertv Cf\flstlan 17 13 1 lf-51
8loomlnllton Cllrl"l•n 12 12 IS 19-SI
Tlt<"·oolnl 00911: LIC>el'IY Cllrl•llan -
CNOMll 1, ~I.
TecMlcab: N-.
New"'1 Clvlstten 70, Pedflc SMres S2
(W•IM9W)
.. Kiiie SMrft ......, Cllrbtleft
Hu;"
Brunntr
Dotnt llurkt
Hust4I
Sorllllltf
Novllskv
COfltn Dletza
.. ft... ..ftpffp
6 J 3 IS CUllllO 0 3 I 3
• 2 2 22 Curto o o o o
0 0 C 0 ltUKll 2 I 2 S
0 0 S 0 VIM! I J 2 S
I • S 6 AndrtW$ I 0 0 2 I I 4 3 O'arlefl-0 '1 0
0 0 I 0 8alWIMn 12 C 2 21
3 0 • 6 C•rHH 0 I o I
0 0 I 0 Clark 6 0 2 12
E<wwtll 4 I S 9
Hum* 2 1 1S
Tolels 19 10 29 S2 Totals 27 14 11 70
Sara .,., Quef'1iln
Pactfic Sllor" 12 • 11 9 2i>-S2
Newoort Cllfl"lan 16 21 t lt-70
SI
Thr-POlnt ooais: Pacific snor"-erunner
TKMlcals· None. H..,_ lcMlt sc:eres
lrWle W... Newa T..,_,,.,.
Qe;JI II •Is S.C... ....
Long INcll PolY 71, Foothll 67
Unl...,altv 52. L.-8MCtl 46
MllllUtl 67, It lvenide Nortt1 65
lrvlN 70, Elset"-S2 KenMCIY 59, s.ddteOeck S2
llrM-OtlnN 16. Woodtlrldee S9
Merlllt Sf, Sant• AM SI S.v-•• F.-OOk 42 c-a. ... s.c... .....
P•IO• Verdes "· C«one 51 Paramount '°.c Garr; 57
L.eeuna HI• ,.., Loa AmlllOI SS
Edison 59, Norco 35
Dena HlllS 54, 1tubldcKl11 S3
ENltf'enza 13, Clnvon Sorlnes 79
Long Btech Wiison 76, Coate Mell S3 Coron. de! MM 56, Mllalon Vleto SI
u 0...... Tw_. ''"' ......
SS
Estenlca 71. Hunttneton 8tecll 67 Cot>
El Modena n. C'l'P'tu 69 ..........
Fount•"' VelleV '7. El Toro 76
Newport HertlOr SI, Sen Clemente 35 ~ Otrlltt-n 70, PKlflc SllorM S2
Bloomlneton Cftrlltltn 51, ~ Cllflltlan
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS
LA9UM e..ctt JI, 0.. H1b JO ,_ ..... ,
l..MIMe a..dl DMI Hltl feft-· .......
Stet Goddera
Short
Mertow
Herdman
ltus/I
KlemHn
1 • c 10 ScMncll 10 ' • 1•
12 SC Sdlwer11 OOCO
0 I O 1 CllrlsleMOll 0 0 4 0
2 O • 4 Ward I 0 0 2
17 1tNolen 00)0 011 1 S.ltd 1 042
0 2 0 ,
S 21 lS 31 Totets 12 6 21 JO Totals
k-""Qwrtlrl LH una llffcll 11 6 S 9-31 Dena Hiiis 4 12 6 t-30
Tll<te·oolnt -II: None.
Technlc•ts: None.
WMdc:rnt +4, Ne•"'1 Clwtl1ten rJ
1-... ...... 1
W"*'9tt ...._, OWldeR .. ft__ .. ft ... Lllustr~ 2 2 I 6 Kimmel 0 0 :J 0
ltOOlnlon 10 1 3 21 °"""' 0 1 2 1 T~ 0 2 0 7 lerlltOile 3 I 4 1
McKrnnon 1 1 1 IS Miiek s o • 10 ~ooo•ltMMn •1 29 WlllNlml 0 0 0 I .,_ 0 0 I 0
k hmlllr OOOIWelllf l0 1 6
SQ 0 0 I 0 Nldlolll 0 0 0 0
Totals 19 6 6 64 Totals IS 3 17 l:J
lar'8 ... .,....
Woodcrnl Clltllllln 12 9 IC ,._..
Newport Clltlstlln 1 ' ' 11-l:J TllfM-POlnl toell. NoM.
TICfWllcM. NOll8.
-~--------------~
•
Tangled up .
IDdlana'• Reale lllller (31) cllmbe all oYer 0.Ye Boppen
of Cbarlotte Tum, NBA pme In lndlanapoU. Ta..-J.
Uftlftnlty ...... ..., ........ 26 cs.vm.. T•••-l .............. ..... ......
Gltm
llunll• Auum
Ryen
KCH>iko Hell
Greee
.. ft.... ..ft ....
7 J 2 11 0.1111 S I 2 10 0 01 0.Jotlmon 3329
2 0 I • GenAre S S I IS
0 0 S 0 Salo 0 0 I 0
00 30 Sase 1 002
I 0 • 2 Slav 0 0 I 0
1 0 12 Ho 0 0 10 Wolff 1 0 12
HUllMI 0 1 I 1
ltldeocJl 0 0 1 0
Toteb 11 > 17 26 Totell 15 10 11 40
~-.~
NewpOrt Harbor 9 7 • .... 26 Ulllversllv 9 10 10 11-40
Tll<M·oolnt -11· Ntwoort Harbor-<;Jtm I.
• Tt</lnb t• N-oorl HMllOr l>enCll 1, Wolff !Ul.
NHL STANDINGS ~ C.•enu
Celgerv K.._
Edmontdri
Wlnnli>e9
Vencouver
Detroit St. Louis
Toronto
Mlnnnot•
Chlc•oo
SmvtM OM'*' WLTf'tl
21 s 5 0
20 10 1 41
17 11 3 37
12 10 s 29
12 lS 5 29
Nerrls Otvtllen
GF GA
136 13
166 125
166 126
111 116 109 106
17 ' • 31 127 11• .
12 13 4 21 " 99
11 17 • 2 2• " 125
' 16 5 23 94 114 7 19 4 II 121 14'
Wiiiet C.""w. Patr1dl OM'*' Pittsburgh 16 11 2 34 136 127
NV R•noen 15 12 • 34 125 111
Wethineton 15 12 4 34 lOI 106
Phllade!Ohl• 14 17 2 30 126 121
New Jersev 11 1• 5 27 101 120
NV l•r.nders 7 20 2 16 II 125
Montreal
Boston Hertford
8uff110
Quebec
Adllml ~
19 9 6 ... 131 104
12 12 I 32 103 95
13 14 1 27 104 " 12 16 2 26 104 121
10 20 2 22 111 149
T.,..._Y'• Scer9I
wasnlneton •· Quebec 1 Detroit S, MlllMI018 • Ntw Jenev c. St. LoUI• 3 TNllY'a ._ K... •' Plttlbur9'1. •.JS o.m.
NY IMenderl et NV Reneers, 4:3S p.m.. EdmOnton al TO<onto, 4:3S o.tn.
Hartford •I ClllcNO. S:lS o.m.
IMIM> et Wlnnloee, S:lS o..m. ~ ........
Wetftlllelon et Piii....,.., 4:3S P.tn.
ECIJ'nOntOn 11 hlton, C:.35 o.m.
MonlrMI el QueOec, US e.m.
TorOfllO et Ntw Jersev, 4!4S P.m. PlllMlureh ., NV lllanden, HS o.m.
Hertford et St Loul1, S:lS e.m..
NFL STANDlllGS
... tllMI C111larwie
v-S.n Fran.
Rema
NewOrleens
Ata.nte
x-Chlago
Mlnnesote
Tempe Bev
Detroit
Gr"" e.v
W..t
W L T
10 5 0 9 6 0
' ' 0 s 10 0
Central
12 3
10 5
4 11
4 11 3 12 ••st
0
0
0
0
0
ftcf. ll'ft ll'A
.'67 353 256
.600 369 277
.600.302 274
.333 235 305
,IOO 215 117
.'67 371 206
.267 240 340
.2'7 210 m .200 214 291
NYGlanls
Philadttc>hle
Wethington
Phoenix
Deltas.
10 5 o .'67 331 2n
' 6 0 .600 356 312 7 I 0 .667 321 367 1 1 o .667 327 Jn
3 12 . 0 .200 251 351
~ C.""•ic:e
-----Wnt
Seeltle
Retdln
Denver
S.n0ie90 Kense•CllV
v-Clnclnnetl
Houston
ClevNnd
Pittsburgh
W L T
I 7 0 7 I 0 7 I 0
5 10 0
4 10 1 c...erat
11 4
10 5
' 6 • 11 ••••
0
0
0
0
x-BuffelO 12 3 0
0
0
1
0
New Enoland 9 6
lndlaneP<>lls I 7
NY Jets 7 7
Miami 6 t
ll-<llnchtd dlvlMon !Ille
Y""'<fi!ICW Plt't'Ofl 118<111 ~ ... OllMI
I'd. ll'ft ll'A
.533 296 m .667 211 326
.667 306 342
.333 207 31t .JOO 241 296
.733 421 312
.667 401 337
.600 276 265
.267 296 Jt7
.IOO 315 220
.600 240 263
.533 337 301 .500 345 333
.400 295 340
Welhlntton •t Clnc""'811. 9:30 1.m. New Ene!Md et Denl'f(, 1 o.m.
...... OllMI
•-at Sen Frencllc:o, S o.m.
Seattle el ........ I o.m.
Alllnle al New er.en., 10 e.m. eun.1o et lncll•o•a'I•, 10 e.m.
Detroit el T.,,.. ltY, 10 1.m. Houlton el Clt\lelend, 10 e.m.
Mleml et Plltlllurfll, 10 e.m.
New V01'11 Gllnta at New York Jet,, 10 a.m.
PhllNllS 1111 et Dalin, 10 8JTI.
K-Cllv et s... Oteeo. 1 o.m. Gr"" eav et ..._.... 1 p,m,. •
MIMI¥'• ..... OllQ9o et M!Melole, 6 p.m.
•ND ••euLM laAIOM
NFL ...... stdltla
NATIONAL COM,U•MCa
°'9IMe
"""""°'' ChlcaeO Sen F renclKO
Gr""lev ·-
L•~ TUelDAn •u.n 11•-·------1 l'lllT llACa. ' ..... ,...
~ llACI. I "* -........... l~I M• ... ...... ltw -,._, •• ,,....._.,,,,__,
~ 1--. CT.WVI l• 2• UI Ar..-WW. , ..... , •• , .. ·--,....., '""""'' ... ,,,,,. .....
11 IXACTA IN I .... m •
~iuca.1 ..... _
,.... a.. ... '"*"' " .. , .. , .. ..... 1o.n...1 >• •• s...1 ...... 1~1 1141 ,.,. a.a•
11 IUCTA IM I .... K1M
'•
1""' HU II IUCTA 12-41 .... Ill•
~aaca.1 ..... _
.._. 0.-CM.-J 1tA rM ........... ) , ... ,,........, . ......,,
"'-HU. II laacTA 1~41 .... 9'Ut,
l'IPTW llACa. 1 ..... -• ...... A-CltMrl 7Mta ... .,....,0..-1 ....
socc•• H• lcMel MWI NON·L•aeu•
J'1f -... -== JMI Jiil ..,
,..,..... v..., a. ,.. ... v..., 2
Fountain Valley Korlnll: KIUtv 3. Goalie
MYft! P9neflor 6. Senta AN Vllev tcOl'lnll: Ramirez 1,
Gonzalea 1. Goalie MYft: ltuoelcave I.
Helftlme: n.cr. 1-1,
MlttOl9 1. L9e ltedl ...... 1 Merine ac:orlfte: MMlln I, B<uno 1. Goelle
aa-: Klein 4. Lone 8eedt Wiison tcO!'lnll: 8tr1lam8" I,
Goalie Mvel: llXtl\I S. Heltllme: Merine, 2-0.
H..,_ lcMll tlr'tl ...,.. ......... _,..... 1.,......
Merine acorlne: Kteln 2. GOllle .. ..,..:
Rossman 6. T111lln 9Mllt MYft: Temoleton l
Half!lme: Me<lne, 1-0. .............. s. L.allMI ltedl •
NewPOrl Har110r ac:orlne: ltlrd 2, Tomulcll
I, Wood 2. Goalie MVft: V.iolvll I, Hufl!'ller o. L"""9 "8ch eoetle MYft! Cl'lftlev 5 Weenie 2. Helfllmr. NewPor1 HertlOr, 3-0.
W11a7*I I, SM 0..-l Woodtlrldee acorlne: DW<lle I. Goalie .. .,.,
8oometdllt 7. sen Clemen .. tcOl'lno: Devis 1. Goalie MVft
LeclMrd c.
Hetftlme: San C*""'1tt. 1-0,
1WeldlY'• lr•••dl•• MlaUU ···--~ CALIFOttNIA ANGE~ Mike Pon
executive vice prnldent-""""81 meneeer eftd
dllef OMt•tlnll officer. IOSTON ltEO SOX-Acciund ltOO ~'I', oltdlef, eftd Nick EMlk'I', flnl lleaemen, In
HcMnlt tor Todd 9tn~11191f. llnl M-outfleldtr, .Jeff Slllera, oltclllf, eftd • ,...,., to
be "8med leter.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-A~ !Ml
Don It-. oltdllno coeclt, w• nol return next ...-n. Named Ed Brlntunen Amerlcln Leeeue
scout. ......_.LAMM
CHICAGO CUBS-Sold "-contredl of Jeff
HlrKll, Dave Me1tw1 encl Joe Kreemer. oltcfl· en, 10 low• of ttw Amerlcln Association.
SAN DIEGO PAD•Es-E11I~ IM con-
tract of Ton'I' GwYM, outfleldW, lllroullll 1''1
with en OPllon lor 1"2. All-1all ..........
NASHVILLE SOUNDS-fMmecl ltev ltlo-
Ptlmevtr ollc:hl'!..' COid\.
aAIKllT8ALL .........................
DALLAS MAVEltlCKS-Act1v1tec1 ltO'I'
T8'lllrt, forward, from the lnlurtcl 1111. Waived
Steve Alford, tuerO.
OENVElt NUGGETS-AcllYeted ~
JllMtt, twwerd, from Ille lnlut9d 1111. Plec:ed .Jev
Vlnc:eftt, forwerd, on the lniUted !Isl . NEW JEltSEV NETS Pieced Wellw lerrY, torwerd, on IN lnlured Ital. Actl'tleted Kellll
l.11, torwwd, from Ille ~ IQ.
UTAH JAZZ-Waived Sc:olt ltotll, forwel'd.
Actl¥eltcl lc*lv .._, 9Ull'd, from IN
lrlluttcl 1111. ..
lletfTM •ACL I mlt ffOI Ill-¥ llue CTr-1 UO l.29 t.M S.... SNawe¥ IToddl UI t.Je ua.. C._..,.) l.• Time, HU.
ti lllACTA IH I Hid tt•
~IUICl.1 ..... -. Ln ~ c•-.1 "M 1M U1 .. ,.,,, ...... ,,.., ~ ... ,,,_. IKUllllrl tM
T'"'8. HlA. II IXACTA IJ-" ....,. ....... 11DAILY~11·N) ..... tltt& ........ ,. #tllv!' .......... ,..
Orange Cout OAILY PIL01'/Wedneeday, December 14, 1M8 •
CALL 642-5878 Private patty only No Real Estate Commercial. Automotive. Boating or Help Wanted
-You cen now cell the D•llJ Piiot ClaMltled Dept. on S•turd•r morning from 1:00to11:30 •.m. to pl8Ce your 8und8y •ncl Monur •••
MMDTAn _,,_ "" ... All c-,..-..~ Int -1 ......... 1m
HOU Ill/CONDOS-Wit~,. ~ °"' OI C. ,,_ IUS 0.-.. 1007 0...0I .... =. IHO ---100. 9-/'-1 li7S ..... -..... 1007 ..... ,._., 1• c...---1011 r_...,. 19'0 c-.. _ IO'n 11.e.._ 1.00 c--11114 .. .._. I.,, --'* "'-ion ••nau ,_,,..., 10)4
•' ........... -ICMO MOUlll/CONDOS .-.-~ IOU -1°'4 o.-.1 . ·''°' '--ICMI ............ 210. '-... 1090 ..... -..... 2101 '-......, 10'2 c ........... JI II ....__ ICISS c-.. _ l\'n _....,. 1097 c--112• ...._._ 10.. 0... ....... 21,. s-c-107•
.,_ 21n
S-Mo>C.,--1079 ........ V"6ot )1)4
s--10IO ~ .... 11«1 ---HeilMo 10l4 ..................... 11•1 ..... c-_ 1°'6 .... 21 .. s.....'-IC• '-...... 21 41 , .. '°'° '--.. 21'° ::-,.::-. ,.,,
MISC. I.I. JU$ --.... 11•7 :.s·--.. 21 ..
217• --c..i--... ,,.,.
CLASSIFIED INDEX
642-56
FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY
FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY
COLDWeLL
BAN~eRO
-816 TH8EE ao••
....... t.mlty detached home on 1reen·
-.cl With pooll In Irvine! 3,000sq. ft . iolM and 8,000.q. ft . lot. Property
fl'ked ., $36(.000. 759_,, ••
S11t Y "' ,,.,.,.,!
C• Cla11111M.
641-5671
for information
& surprisingly
tow cost.
540-1220
.. llOO
. . .JI . . .
.....
......... ,,. MllC. alNTALS o•••••••nn• .._,_ .,, ................ JIM C.-J'f.-110/I ... 2"JO --.OSJ ..... c-_ 11 .. 0..--"°" """''-1"IJ -•<>...,. .,. ..... ~ -?1 .... -1106 ---...,_ -----1190 ...,._ 1711 .....--)OOo ~G.Mt .., --,,.,, w..lt&-3011 rv -..~ .. RAlllP•TAno. APAITMINTS _, ..... 1n•
,_
Jiii•
-~. m• GA•A•l4 UI o.-.1 M02 0-.,.'--2140 aOATS ..... -,.,. .._ 170 c;....., •101 a.-.. 7011 ............ MG1 --l'h• ---•IO. ,_ "°" ~-,.II ..... -.-t 101 ""' 101• c-.. _ ,..,, , ...... *'° C.-4"' .... •'21 ,._,. 101• c--ltl• c--•ll• ,...._.., .. . .. SICIO ~ 1'011 --,.,. lllPLOYMlllT --SICS 0...-.,,. '--1'-1 ....... 1030 111-,.,, a.;,.i/Ollu S..00 _y..., .. )4 """'_, __ l'(ltJ ,.........._, ~ (......._Do-.... lOll ,_ .. ,, .... S'°6 ........_ ..... •140 .................. ,..., (.......,._... ,,,0 w.. "'o ~:_-.,., MISC. .................... *2 (...;.,..,._ W-.1 "" (Moo/-»>O .1 .. --0.-.-ss:io ., .. -IOIO u.--,... ,,.....__ '"' .__ •''° C-/IN(1-9014 u.-... 16JO ._ ....... •U2 .,,. ~s.-'-....... US2 MaCllAl•ISI -..... .,., ....,._ ,.,, ,__,_ •\tt AUTOMOTIYI _....,. ,.., ••••••••• "-.010 ,_... .... .,., ........... , ... .....--.Oii \.-'-""""" .,., -'-t010 -~ 2•7• .. ....... ·-.01' -'--'-tOU ... ,.,..~ ,.,. ,_ .Oh
.. _.__ -........ ,.., .._,.. .. -tOlt & Wlieoll 0.-' ....... -.... _....., 2 ... ...... Oult ... <--•f-.01• , ....... tG:lJ ..... c--. 1 ... ..__ '-.011 -VICI -..... '-2 .. ...-0,, ........ ,_ ,., ... t02'2 _, ,_ 1..o --_,.""'.,. .ens .F .... y tOto _..,,.i-..___..... .oJO ..., ..... ~ -......... l.D'• Ol'le. ,._ 'l-_,
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
Monday •......•... Sat. 11:30 AM
TUieday ........... Mon. 5~30 PM
Wedneeday ..... Tues. 5:30 PM
Thurtday •........• Wed. 5:30 PM
Friday ............. Thurs. 5:30 PM
Saturday ............. Frt 5:30 PM
Sunday ............ Sat. 11:30 AM
CLASSIAED OFFICE HOURS
T tlephone Service
8~M
Sat"'dey 8:00 AM· 11 ·30 AM
~Count• Mondey-frlday
8-00 AM-5:00 PM
'42-5871
Tne Daily Pilot stnves for ettlcieney and aocurecy
However, occas1ona1ty errors do OCGur PIMM
T1stenwhen your ad is read bacil .nd cheek your
ad daily. Report errors immediately 10 S.2·5678.
The Dally Pilot accepts no liability for any en0< '"
an advertisement for wtuch It may be respon11ble
except lor th41 CO$t ot the space .ctually occupied
by the etror Credit can only be allowed for the first
insertion
SeMce OW-OtY ~ 0r-.eo.1
c.. °"'" AUIO Pllol ; l'\eM Estala TabiolO-·~-.c
Os>en"-
"'-"" ... -
"""" amout!l llOI --30 de\11 • ,........., """ o. 8UDl9CI 10 DUI noC ....._ 10, .....,_ C11er119 ~led a! 1 ,,._ ol IN U11P91C1 ...,_
Der "'Cit"" .. co11ec1-co.I• -W"I --.,,.,.,,., ....
Kid's
Craft
Workshop
"'°'9.
"
..
1 ..
I
Sl.25PW811.28 PM
FOA EAOf ~MAN • ORDERED • ..
'
..
88 Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/ Wedneeday. December 14, 1988
ACROSS
t Ac.ire~
M 11rll>a
S Armeo Q•OuC'
10 Specre
14 Unhapp, """'d
15 Fr&QuRnl •
16 Prer
17 Pro~y
20 Oecad
21 Spirit
22 Wand,.rAr~
23 E•OG&•tJ
2• Level
25 Protect
28 Apses
32 Assron•
J3 Ale serv•nQ\
~ Untold P<>"'
35 A G11rON•r
38 Tickel
37 Gradual
38 Molher (;ynt
39 frMman
•O B•ac• c .. •d
4 1 Hem 1n
"3 Mll<le up
""Roar 45 Readily
46 Un11e
•9 M ar1tsm11n
~ COUPie
53 L.gn1n1no
SOV•C"
17
20
32
35
38
se C•'>lerr .,. Ea• ·n•o •,a G•oomt
Df>ar
!19 Emme1s
60 Pre"""' 6 • ><ammer pan
DOWN
' n1en1
'I ulv s ~1n
'Sign or
oorfldom
• CompBss Pl ~ Comt>1ne<J
6 Garbage
1 Man's name
8Emt>eO
9 ln1erm1ss1on
10 Cuts up
1 1 M s L1nOt>ergl'I
12 Doer suit
13 Forage crops
·.; Lurches
19 Swea1s
23 8aseoa11 s
Rose
24 Annuity Fr
25 Weapon
26 OoOOtn
'17 8ri11sn -
28 Slit~
29 Goose
JO lyric PQem
31 Bas1eo
6 7
PftlVIOUS f"VZZLI SOl YID
3:1 lieu
36 Sl'IOOI<
37 Sunday drive
39 Area
40 LampOlacks
•2 1-!oodWtnlls
•3 Ja1t slang
45 Blind
"6 Brtstle
8 9
•7 Outltne
•8 lmpar1ed
49 Tu
50 F1n1Sl'led
51 Cou
52 Precursor
~ DtSOleature
55 Gratuity
v I •
-~-~·--
...... --~l'
' • I . , • •
CLASSIFIED AllJ'EllTISINti~
SALES
We are ADDING lo our sales staff. ·
If you can type at least 45 wpm and have
great teleeommW.ication skills -We can .
oiler you a baee salary + eommi1Sion AND· ..
a (je#ll place to work.
hll l'l•e • hn n.e '4 .,.,,.,..
Do yoanelf a faYOr -Call aa.
Pell)' B le\' .. I er .J I• V e••e•i.
842-4321
. -. . ,
' I
. -...
~ .. .... ...
...
Motor Routes
'
available in
Westminster
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
Deliver One Day a Week -
Must have dependable car
and proof of Insurance.
Call 842-1444
Ask for Joanne Craney
Mt.IC NOTICE
a9'ME LIB 39,000 mn ... 110,000.
(• 1KJR700) Deya
831·8135 Ev•1Wknd1
&CS-1593
Tncb ii31
iiU §358 Crew C:b
Duelly, •eo e ng ..
LOADED. 114,000.
720-8731 ..,,.,... ...
plClcup, 5-speecl,
IUtpel'IMon lift, low mitM,
·~ cond. '5000 OBO. Cindy &Ce-MOO.
ewtet-5701
MUC NOTICE
Hid a humdtUm dey? c.... Wtty run Ill 0\191' town when
fled Is Ml of exciting lnfor-you can ioc.1• Plrt• '°' 'fOtil metlon. anOQue auto In clueified?
Ml.JC ll)llC(
IC ... ,. IC ..... and BENJAMIN JOSEPH K ~ A PETITION has beef\ t>led UQAL NOTICE 9510 IS l lC00£ AMEND-NOTICE TO
NOTICE Of' NOTICE Of DEATH KANTER NOTICE CW DEATH Dy Sandra G Long In the ON>INANCI MEHT NO &a-81 "*-JC CW • WllllOM '°" ANO°' ~UmOM A PEllTION hu bMll filed ANO°' "TlTIOM Sul*IOt Court of Cal1f()fnl1, NO. 2111 SYNOPSIS M~•T '°"
• NOeATI CW TO AOMMISTI" by Bruce Kftlllf In the Su-TO ADMINISTI" Covn1y of Orange t'9QUelt· ·AN ORDINANCE Of' THE Ordinance No 2967 MLIAM Of'
u.-.. ~ ft.Mlll•-....r .. -• cylinder POWllr door Autometlc;, 4 cylinder,
k • POWllr door '°'*· ~ loc , r edle11, c:rulH , PCMel' eteenng, ~ ~ttn.-rtno(M11)~M=. t>t••· AM/FM, A/C ' • · {11~5041 P .IM ass::.--sz=:-
ea.-1 .. ...,,,
u '== '11 """:.::..11mu
Autometlc. • cyUnaer. Auto.,.,,. Mlrtt oondttlol'I. = esc:.:*· redlM.. Loeded. \,ow mil••
POWIW• t>r•• ~ (2HM82.a) U.116.
c:MMtt•. AIC. tilt. (S-280) 1111 I llTD '
114,"5 , .. , ••• SU l&m.. • ..,.. · n•1•• .. Ml-1111 111/I0-1111
DEATH N o11~r,
~IQN WIU. AND £STATI Of P9fk>f Cou« ot Cahfornla, fSTATI OF lng that 'Salldra G Long ti. CITY OF HUNTINGTON amends tilt Huntington •UNOa
'°" LITTl"S £0WA"1> KAIUOOZIAN County or Ora~ reques1-CHA .. US f , 1pp01nled as 1>«sonal rep. BEACH AMENDING SEC· BeKh Munoe1p1t Code to Coty or Huntington Beac:h, JONES Carolina, Roary on
lUTAmNTMVPO" CaMNumber. lnglhltBruceKarttlfbeap-STl"41.NS resentauve101dmln1sterthe TIQN 9061 OF THE HUNT· allow spec111e temporary 2000 Main StrM1, Hunt· DA y 1 D KA y S Wedneeday Decem· ~THI 1•TA'Ta Of!: A·1..o:tl polnt9d 11 personal rep. c ... Number. estate ol the deGedent ING TON BEACH OROI· u9" Within the Res1o.n1111 1n9lon BHCll Cahl0<n11 JO "'"" .IOMATMMt To all 1\61($ ti.o•llC1a11es resenllllve 10 administer tile A·14'1112t THE PETITION requests NANCE CODE TO PROVIDE Agriculture(RAI OttlOICI SUD· 926411 (714) 538-5224 NES, a resident of ber 14. h•oo at 7:00 ....ca HOPK .. • ete<lltor5 conungent cr9dl· es111e of the IMCedent To 111 h•rs. t>enetie\artfl. euthor1ty to adm1n1Ster the FOR CHANGE OF DISTRICT iect to eond•honll uM e>er· To 111 tnllfffttd Ag«ICl8$ Huntinaton ~ach. P M . a\ Pi• r c ~
~ ~ tors and persons wllO may THE PETITION requests cre<1nors contingent C<edt• fftll• und.lr the lndepen· MAP 12 FROM C3 TO '"" Ind to l1'ow tempo<ary 1GtOUO$ lt!CI ~ pasted away Decem· Bro\Mrs Bell Bro.d·
• A·~ 1>e Ot"-tse 1ntef1ted '"IN authOnty to ldmlnater the tors and Plf'SC>nl whO may dent ·Adm1n1suauon or Ea-TOWNLOT SPECIFIC PLAN rec:reat.onal vetloele sioraoe On or 1t>0ut Oecen'lbef 16 ber 988 1 ,.,..._.. Cha-' eo.
Tcralt heirs, beneflCllflff. Wtll or 9Sllle or bOlh ol ED-""" under the lndepen-be Ot"-1M lnlatS1ed rn Iha lllH Act CThls 1Vthor1ty ... SECTION A ON PROPERTY 'Mlll.n Ille Rnlf!Cted Manu-19611 Iha C·ty of ri\lnltnglon l l , 1 . ._....... way . ~· la
cred1tor1, contl~I credt· WARD l(ARAGOZIAN dent Admln11tr•hon of Es-""'" or Hl•I• or bOth of lows Ille petSOt\11 repl'eten• GENERALLY LOCA TEO AT lactuttng 0.$1t<l IMl-A\ Mil>-Beacll WI r~t tl'le us brother of Gordon Mesa. Mas of Chris-'°''· 11\d person• Who m1y A PETITION nasbeen llled "'" ACI CTllll euth0t1ty al· CHARLES E STEPHENS 1a11ve 10 tall• many IC110f\S T .. E NORTHWEST COR-1ec:1 to cond1toonaf 1.118 pet• Oepertm.itl ot Hous•ng •nd Jones of Ocea.nsidt'. u.an Burial Oil Thun·
be otherwlM tntatsted tn th• Dy EOWARO KAFIAGOZIA/11. tows the persc>f\11 rep!'-· A PETITION llH been hied wOhout ObllJnor•g coun IP· NEA OF &TH ST REH ANO mot U•Dan ~I tHUOI A.190 survtvino is a day Decem~r 15, at
will g( .. tate, or both, of JR 1n tne Superior Coun or t1tlve to take many actions by GE AA LO 0 STEPl'1ENS proval BetOfl raking certain WALNUT AVENUE THE FVLL TEXT OF THE to , ... ,.. Fede< al FVf19s "-....
JO ttli THAN HEMING Ca1tlotn1a COl>nl)I ot Orange without obtaining covrt IP· In 1111 SuP4!tlor Court 01 C111• acllons. howev..-, the Pl'· SYNOPSIS ORDINANCE •S AVAILABLE under Title 1 01 the Housing I nephew• Edwin C . 10:00 A.M.. al St.
HOPK'lNS. OTHERWISE reouesttng that EDWARD prov1t Beforetaklngcerteln torn11 CountyotOran9ere-aonat represen111tve 11 ,.. Ordinance No 2963 tN THE CITY CLERKS OF· and Comml.lntty O.Vel09· C r ouch of St. Joachim. Catholic
l<NOWNAS JONATHANM KARAGOZIAN JR be •P-ect1on1, ~. tti. Pit'· questing 1hll GERALDO Q\l\rtd to give nottee 10 amendsS9061o1111eHunl· FICE ment l<ct ot 197' (Pl Thomas V1rg1n Church. Costa Meta
HOPKINS, JACK H pOtnted as personal rep· son11 rep<._,tatlYI Is re-STEPHENS~ apf)Olnted 11 tnletelled persons uni.u 1ng1on Seacn Ordinance ADOPTED Dy tM City 93·S83l lor the IOllO'lltlng PfO-I Wands ~ a sister Interment H 0 ty HQ'Pl(INS ANO JOHN resen1a11vetoadm1n1stet11'1e qu1...0 to give no,ICle to J)efs.c>oal 1epr-111Ne to tMy hl'le walYtd notice or Code 10 pt<>WM tor cllange Covnetl or the C.ty or Hunt· iect '
HOPKINS estate ol the decedent 1nt11ested peraona unless adl'NnlStet tn. estate ol 1111 consented to the Pl'C>POMd ol Oostrlc:t Map t2 changing 1nglon Beac:h at • r99u1air MAIN-PIER SECOND Phyllis L WA9Qll of SepWch« Cemeieey.
/.. P!.TtTION has bMll tiled THE PEllTION requests tlley ht._. wa.....O notice or deee<Senl echon I Tl'le tnd~I the zoning •of prooerty meeting neld Monday Oc1o-BLOCI( IMPAOVEUENTS Tustin, CA Vwtation ~.CA. ln beu of
by W1LLIAM EOMUNO IRE· IUlhotlty to adm1n1S1er Ille conMttted to lhe Pl'<>POMd THE PETITION requests adm1n1S1r11oon authorlty W'lll located on the nortl\WeSt bet 3 1988 l>y the IOllowtng J lleM lundl w II De UM<l I will be Wedne9day Oo~ contnbutions LANO ANO MICHAEL J estate under 111e ln<S~· action.) The lnd191fldent .._.th<>nty to adm1n1ste< 1111 De granted unleu an corner of w11n1.11 Ave<IVI rotl call VOie 10 omPfOW the public ngllt· O ' 81AD 1n the Superior Court dent Adm1n1s1ra11on 01 Es· administration autl'IOl'lty wut n111e under tlle lndepen· 1nter191ed person flies an eno S1ath StrMI rrom C3 AYES Counc:llmemDrs of-way (alley only) on the ecember 1 <l. al may be made to the
ot Calllornla, County ol Or· tates .-.c1 (lhis autnonty 11-be granl•O' unteu an dent Admtntslrauon or El· ob1ec:11on lo this pe11t1on end (Genefal Busmeu Oistroet) Ketty Green. Ers1t1ne Mays blOc:k l>Ol.lndeO Dy u eon Sth, Pie~ Bros.-Smilhs' Diabetes Alloci.adon.
1nge.requee1lng that WIL· lo~ the personal represen-lntlfffted pe~ tiles an tat" Act (This authority al· sllows good cauM Why the to TownlOt S~tk: Ptan • Wtnehell. Benn1S1ef Walnut ano Olt"9 '"the City Chepel from 2:00 Pierce Bros. Bell
Ll.t.lllt.:EOMUNO ... IRELANO tatwe to take meny ecttons obfectlon to tlll1 petition anc:t Iowa lhe personal represen· coun sllould not grant the Section A (Reslder>t11I) NOES Covncllmetnl>et'J ol Huntington e.acn. Calt· p M to 9 00 p M Fu ero.dway M...-. ......... A~ICHAEL J, BIRO be w1111ou1 0Dt11n1ng court •P· ll!OWI good cauM wh)I the tatlve lo take many actions 1utnor1ty THE FULL TEXT OF THE Non• torn11 Tne tme>tOYM*llS • • • ".:"' -J ~ted .. peraonal rep. provil Belore taking cenaln COl.ltl lhould not grant the wltl'IOul obtaining C:Ol.lrt IP' A HEARING on the pett-ORDINANCE IS AVAILABLE A B s EN T c 0 u n ...... 1ncillde llndefgroun<!Jng neraJ R1"V1C'e to be Costa Mesa DirectorL
r....,.attvetoadmlnllterthe actions. llowever. the pet· 11.1thor•ty l>f'Oval &.lore taking certain uon wtll IM held on January IN THE CITY CLERK S OF· cotrneml>efs IF•ntey ovt ot of u111tll•. ,,... 1 ... 1ureo held ~ber 15, atl 642-91~ aeta'li ol the ~t son•l representative os re-A HEARING on the petl-ec:tions. n~. the I*· 5 198911 1·45 PM II\ 099• FICE room) lllte)I i:>e-..ment MW walk· Hunungton Beach ---------
A ttEAAING on lhe pell· quired 10 give notlCI lo Uon w1• ti. held on OECEM· sona1 representative IS r• No 3 IOceted at 700 Civic ADOPTED by the Coty CfTY Of' HUNTINGTON w11ys and lenCS~ng a
tlon•wlll be held on o.c.m. interested pe<sons unleu BER 29, 1988 II I 45 PM. In quired to give notw:;e to Cef>tlf OrtYe West Senta Covnctl of the Clty 01 Hunt· MACH, CO!'iti. ~way, contormong to 1ne downtOWTI Lodg~ •380 Pterce --------
bec:,.JI. Itel at 1:45 p M tn they 11ave w11ved notK:e or Dept No 3 located et 700 1nte<Hlecl persons \'U,O~ An• Caltlornte 92101 lngton Beach 11 1 reg\1111 Cl,., C~ C)eStQn Q\'tdel~ '276 999 B r o I · S m I t h S ' ~AClffC VIEW Deft. No. 3 located II 700 consenled 10 the PIOPOsed CIVIC Center Drive w .. 1. tlley !Wive walYIO nollee or IF YOU OBJECT to the meeting Mid Mond•V Sep. P1.1bhS11eo Orange Coast An Envtron!Mntel ReYlllW Mortu.ary Dlrectors. •MONAl ~AM
Clllilo , c.nter Drive w111, ac11on) Tiie independent Santa Ana, Calltoml192701, consenttd 10 lhe propotad granting ol tl'le pet1ti0fl, you lember 19. 19'8. by the IOI· Oa"YPllot Oetotier 18 19811. Record (ERA) l'IH b~ (714) 536-6539 ~.Mortuary
S81)t1,"n1.Cllifornl192701 adrn1n1s1ra11on authority wlll IF YOU OBJECT to the action.) Th• Independent should elthlf apPear at Ille towing rOll call vo1e amended OecemDer 14 p1epareo for the P.01ec1 ---------Clla9lf •Crematory lt':)'OU 08JIECl 10 the be granted unless an gra.nllng of tti. pelttlon, you aom1nlstret1on 1u1nority Wiii heanng and state yovr Ob· AYES Col.ncitmemDers 1988 t<*itlf~llleCltyol HIJnl· SAVAGE" 3500 Peciltc view Drive
grlll)1jng of the c*ttton, you 1nt1r11sted person hits 1n sl'IOuld either appeer at Ille be granted uni en an i.cuons or l1le Wfltten obflC· Kally, Green. Flnley, Ers1t1ne W-2Sll 1ng1on II whteh dOCU· Newport e.ac:1> should lllther IPC>Mf at the ob1ecuon101l'l11pe11110nand heanng and state youc ob· 1n111ested person mes an uona w11n the court belOf• Winchell,8snnrster ment1thett"9pr0jeet1scat· TIMOTHY EUGENE &«-2700 neeNG IW'<S atate your oD· sho.,..s gooa ceuN Why 111• Jeellons Of tile Wl'•tten objee-ob,.cuon to tllls petition and th• hearing Your appear-NOES. Counetlmemt>ers Ptlll.IC NOTlC[ egotocally ellcludtd from Ne· SAVAGE. age 29, ~lone Of fhwrttlen oblec· covrt should not grant the tlons with the coun Defore Shows good cause wtly the ance may be tn person or l>y ABS E N T . Co u n • . ttOnal [n.,.ronmentl Polq born tn Newport
tlOn• llJ!ttl the coun before 1u1h0t'1ty . the heerlng. Your appear· covrt st!ould not grant the your atlorrwy cl1members. Mays (Out ol Mo. 'CM071 Act (PL 91· 1!10) require-..,
the ...... Ing. YOUf ~II· A HU.RING on the pell--may ti. In l)erton Of b)I aulhor•ty IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR Room) RCTITIOUI eu..... ment1 Tht• ERA la on ,, .. at Beach. September I,
Ilic. may ti. In pet'ton or by 1ton will De lletd on January your atlOfney • A HEARING on the pell-or a conll~t creditor of CITY OJ HUNTINGTON MAME STA'ft•MT 11'1 fOllOwlng lldOr-1959. passed away your attOfney. s 19119 •I I 45 p M 1n Dept. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR llon >NIH be l'leld on January tne oec .. Nd yov mual file RACH, c...-8toclrway. The folto....lng oerson• .,. c--ltedl..,, City December 11 1988 1 I,. ypu ARIE A CREDI}' OR No 3 IOCl!ed II 700 CMC or • contingent Ctldltor of s. t9119 at t 45 p M 1n Dept your ct11m With Ille covn and City Cleftt doing buSll'leU IS C'-"' City ot Huntington' •
Of .. 'contingent creditor ol Center Or1ve West. S1ntt !he deoeaM<I. you mull Ille No 3 loe•tld II 700 CIVIC mall. c09y to the personal Publiahed Ora~ COHI HIGH PERFORMANCE Beacll 2000 u .. n Street He 1S SW'Vlved b y his
UW'*nnd, you must hie Ana Cahlom1192701 rcl1lmwlththeoourt1nd Center Ortve West Santi represent11iveappolnted by Dally Pilot September 30 MARINE ENTERPRISES. Hunltl\gton BHcl\, Call· mother Peggy Savage
youccMlmwtttlthecourund IF YOU OBJECT 10 tnemell acopytothepersonal An1.Ca111orn1192701 thecourtw1tn1n fourmon11111983, lrnendeQ Oecemt>er 1350 W COLLINS UNITK tornie 92648 Houalng and of C o sta M esa . rNil.a copy to the peraonal granting of tne pelltlon. YoU representative aP9()1nted by IF vou OBJECl 10 1111 trom the dale of lirat IS· 14, 1988 w.258 ORANGE. CA 92667 Red....ioom.nt brothers R o bert r~mtlw appointed b)' snovld either appeer at the 1111 c:ou:r1 wlll\ln lovr months gren11ng 01 tn. peuuon you suance of lette<s .. P<oYtded Dinny Eowerd M1n9 Publ•sn.d Orange Coas1 . • tr.court~ tour montt11 nearing and s111• yOUI" ob· trom the dale of tirlt 11-snovld either appear et 1111 1n Mellon 9100 ol 1111 Ca«· "8.IC NOTlCE 1740 N Bedtoro Cttcle Ol!ty P>oot o.c.mt1er 14 (Linda) Savage. El lfom the date ol first 1s-iect•ons or file written oDj.C· 9Ull1C9 of letters as P'OVid«I hNnng end 1111e your ~-lorn11 Prooat• Cooe Tiie Ananeitn CA 92806 19&8 Toro. WllliMn (Dla.n· auance of letteR .. provided ttons with tll• court betore In section g 100 ot Ille Call· i-c11ons or ttle """"en oblec:· time tor hhno Cla1m1 Wiii not ~ c~T This bus neu • con-W-259 ne) Sava~ of Mus.ion
In Meiflon 1100 of tM Cth· the !\earing Your appear· lornll Probate Code fhe 11on1 with the court Delore ••l>ltt PflOt to tovr month• cw CAUF~ ducted Dy an ind•v.Ou• V S ...
fontie Probate Code The enc11 m1y be on pe<son or 1>y time !Of filing claims will not the n.aong Your appeer· from the date 01 tlle nearing cOUWTY °'°"ANG& Tne re91111•nt com· RECYCLE I e JO• te J> 1' en
t'"'9 lor llllr'O Claims wllt not your auorney expire prior to tovr montlla ance may be 1n person or by noticed above In the Matter of lhe ~ to tr1nsec1 t>us"I Sav age of Cos la ••Rl'JI prior lo IOI.It mon\111 IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR l!om lhe date Of the n.rlng your lllO<My YOU MAY EXAMINE Iha Aj)Pl<ation 01 ness under the l•Cht•OVJ Mesa. sater, Regma
fromlhe date of the hearing or • con11ngen1 cred1lor or noticed above IF YOU ARE A C~OITOR Ille kept Dy the court. 11 you Klaus Peter Danner ovsineu "'"'' 01 names through the (John) Tadlock of ~letd abOlle. Ille oeeeaMld, vou mull !tie YOU MAY EJ(AMINE Ille or 1 conun~t creditor ol are e e>e<aon lnter"tld tn IO< Cl\ange of Name hat9d tbove on J1n11ary 0 .. d ~MAY EXAMINE the yourcta1m w11n1ne court1nd Ille kept by the court If you 1ne dec: .. Md, you must !tie the estate. you may file with No. A t4s154 1183 "'ILY PILOT Cost• M esa, an
-._ by the court 11 YoU mait 9 eopy 10 the personal er• • person interested •n yovr claim with rne courl ind the court • IOfmll Request ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE Danny Eowro Mang Clasalfled Pages I r a n d m o t h ~ r ., ... penon lf'lllfffl9d In representati.e •PPOinled Dy th• .... ,. you may ,, .. With mail • C09Y to Ille pefSOt\el lor SPICl•I Notice of Iha hi· FOR CHANGE OF NAME Th .. $1•ttmer>I ... ., htec:I Mar~\ K..i_ghl. So t~t •• you may hie Wlll'I the COUtl w11n1n lour months l.he COUft • formal Req~t repteMntlltve appointed D)I 1ng or '" inventory and •P. (Sec 60e4) , ... 111111. County Cle<' of Or·• Turn unwanted
the CCM"1 a formal Requett rrorn 111e dll• ol first IS· IOI $c>«lal NollCI of the Ill-the COUft w11nin tovr months l>f'll_,,.,.,t ot .. ,.,, UNI• K...,s Peter D41n"lf hH ange County on N~t>er '°' Soed8I Nola 01 the 111-suanc• 01 letters u provided 1ng ol 1n Inventory and 119-from th• oat• ot first ts· or or any pe11t1on or eccount hied 1 Pet•toon in 1n1s court 28. 1984 ,,..150 items Into
11'9 °' an lflventory end ap. 1n sectoon 9100 or rile Call· P'••Mment ol Mlal• auet1 sulf\Ce or letters as provide<! H l!f'OV!Oed In section 1250 ror an order allowlng pelt-Puoltlhe<I Orange Coast money tod•yl
Pf'alMtll9nt ol •t•t• UHi• torn11 ProDa•• Cod• The or of any petition or account in 14Ctlon 9100 01 lhe Ca11. of the CehfOfnla Probate tior-lo Cl\enge n1s lier OailY Pilot Deceml>lt 7 14, FINDI
HAMOR L.AWM-tn. OU~
Mortuary • C-18f')'
Crematory
1625 Giiie< Ave
Coate Mela
~o-s~
N~MOTHI"• •LLMOADWAY
~Uri')' • Ch_,..
1 10 BtoacNray
CQ911 Mesa
'42·9150 ....,,.,....,.
2983 Harbor Blvd
Costa Mesa. CA )
141-1111 °'~petition or account ome tor tiling c111m1 will not as provided In section 1250 tornie Prob11• Cod• Ttle Cod• A Requ•t lor Special n•me trom Kleua Pet., Oen· 2 28 !988 w2so C .. .__..,. through ci~d
11 ptcMded 111 section 1250 .. plre prior 10 lour months or the Oallfornla Pfob•t• time for toting c111ms will not Notice lorm IS 1v11leDle lrom Ml' to Kltua Pet• Grose iii iilliiiiiiil••lillilliiiiiiiil-illiiill--iil'lil ·····•••lii•••li of the c.illornt1 Probate trorn 1roe date of the neettng Cod• A Aeq1.191t for Special IRPlr• prior to lovr months 11141 court clerk IT 1S HERE8Y ORDERED e411r A Aequ91t tor Spectel noticed above Notice torm la available from trom the c:tata or the heanng Attorney lor Petitioner 1nat all i:ieraon• 1n1er•ted 1n ~'°""II 11tallable trom YOU MAY EXAMINE lh• th• COUtl Clef\ notlc:ICI lbOYe MARY 80UGHEN OAR, tl\e matltr ator..eid •PPMr ttll£court deft! tile kept DY th• court II you 8'uce Kanter. Petll!Onef YOU MAY EXAMINE the 2388 I E.1 Toro Aoed, Fourtll !Mfor• ll'llS court tn Depart· 81~ '°' Petitioner •r• • person 1nte<ested 1n IDWARD •. LIVINI. Ille"~' l>y I~ eouft II"°"' Flocx El TOfO, ca11lornl• "*'' No 3 at 700 CMC Aaiiert W Liltte. EIQ , •875 the estll• you may Iola wrth Ito .. -A I OOULD, At-are e !*'SOfl 1nte<ested tn Pul>llshed Orange Coast c.ntlf OrMJ West s.t"ile ~Court, Suite 440 111e covrt 1 l0<m11 AeQuesl t•...,e fef ,., .. ._.,,, the fftate you may tile Wit.ti Deily P110t o-nbef 14 IS Ana, CahlOfnia on '2 27 NePcw1 BMcfl. CA 92MO. tor Soec111 Notte• ol the ltl-.-A ... 9' tM ..... Ute the court • torm•I Request :Z 1 1984 1988. 11 2 oo o clOCk PM
A9mey for Petitioner tng of an 1n~IO(y Ind ao--· L• A ........ CA_, for S~·· Notice of the hi· WTII* end then enc ,,,.,.. .now
blllNd Orange Coast pra1Hment ot Hiii• usete Pul>llahed Orange Cont Ing ol en 1n¥entory and •P· cauM. rl any !My haw wtiy Piiot o.c.mbef 7. a. or 01 any petltlon or account Dally Piiot o.c.mber 7. 8, pral.-mel\t or IS tat• HMts PlalC NOTlC( said 1>9t1t10n tor ctlange ot
911 11 provided tn section 1250 14. tt84 or ol any petition or ecc:ount name ttloul<I not ti. granllCI
• W1h254 of 1ne Cahtornte Problle WTl'l253 u provtOed 1n Mellon 1250 'tell~ ~II IT IS FURTHER Of .. ed I CO<I• A Aequest 10< Spec:11I •-II' llftftl'r of the Cahtorn11 P1ob1t• NA• •TATl•NT that a copy of this order to • ftmJC NOTU Notte• rorm •S •vlllat>te from ~ ...,,_ Code A Request for Speclal anow c.auM ti. l>U~ in I the court clerk Nol~ form 11 avt•l•Dte trom \'lie !04\Qwlng penons Me Ille Ofange Coeet Delly PtN>t F-'" ... --·· A11orney tor PetlllOnlf' ACTrnOU9 MMM.. the COUf1 clerk dorng DU9'NSS.. • ~per of ~·· ---ITAT'lmNT ROBERT W LtTTlE. At· ...._ •TAT9.mtn Att0tney tor Pehtt0ne< PAOOVCTtON LINE CON· errculahon ~ In tt1C1 ~ penon• .,. torn•y 4875 MacArlh11r The tollowlng persons.,. Pl'llhOJotlnGolO Atlomayat SULTANTS •• ~ .. pat'!· county It ..... ~ ......
....,_ • Covrt. Suite 4'0, Newport Oolnv bulilnela 11' L-. 1201 Dove SI Suite MflhlO 28 Sun River, IMne. fOf lour conteeu,Ne .-,
1,..m .. r1n9. 3088 Baecn. CA 926&0 R POULEl. attll Alic•• 470 Newport Beach CA Celtlorl\i• 12715 """'to Ute day of NICI MM•
Q ettw Avenue, Costa Published Orange Coaat Per1'w1y, 1.tguna Niguel, Cl< t2MG M;cnMI G Tun. 21 Sun lnO
CA t2t2t Ditty Poto! Oe<:emblt 13. 14, 9~17 Pub111hed Orange Coett River Irvine. Calllornla Dated 1111• N ayne Cr.-tord 308& 20 t9ae Sydney ei..11man. 33898 Detty P1101 O.Cemtiec \3 \4 92!.'s ..... .,, p...-23 E .aAllla 'L .... "4
., A~ue Coat• TW382 c.,. Cov., Laguna Nlgvel, 20 HNI ... 1e.. " ....... m• JUdge of tl\e CA t2t2t · CA 92f51 ' TW313 erelo lrvtn• Caltlorn•• SUpet'tOt Court
'lowd lryent, 9201 L•· ~NOTICE . Jacob Vlnograci, 3143 92714 Kletie htar D•""•'· •Clrde fountain VIM-Bonn Or!YI LaQUN 8-c:h. ..UC M)TIC( W1l•·em F C4liPI* 20112 -...,.., .... L-
CA 1210• IMM CA 92f51 Cove c.,cle •. H11nttn91on "-"""''" ...... CA tNelnff• 11 con NOTICa Oil MA'n4 Tiil• bulln"' la con-ll ... , EINch Caitforn1112647 -'
by • '°'"' .,.,,tur• AND"' NtillOM Oucted DV a general pen. NOnca °' DIATH Tll•t b11 .. n•H II con· ~ Orange COlilt
e re911tr1nt com • TO ~Ta f*INp AND OI' NT'ITIOM ductlfd by 8 general Ptfl• Deity PtlOI Novelnoer 30 0.-
to .,.,Net DUl1· llTATa Oil The r eg111r1n1 com• TO ADMIMITIR ,,.ral\oe> wnber 7 14 21 , ...
111\def tfle "CllllOU• ....... -" ICANTl9'. mtnCed to lrlf\NCt Ou•I· llTAT1 °' Th• rel)lllrant COM· ' W·241
.. Mel. nema Or h•mtt• .... ........ • Mt8 unoet IM llcltllou• PMD "" RATTaAMI. m4netd to tftn~I blitl• ---------
llMMt on No11etnl>9' 1. •• .a. •AllfTIR t>ut1,_ n41me Or n.-s .... llMWfl .. ,_. ~ 1"41 llc'llllOllt rta,IC NOTIC(
......... -llSted IOO¥e on .. ,A PMD .... MTTaWI ou .. Ma n-°' n-"'",1--........... ----...... ---._... llAllfTIR JacoO Vlf'IOfl'ad C... ......_. bated abOve OI\ I I 11M L.IOM. ll011CI
C...--., Thia S'latefMnl .,.._,Mad A·~ M~G Turi ~AM:I
"'9 ~ ci.tc Of Of· A-M911 W1tt1 Ille Counry Clarlt ot Of· To.,.,,.., r.n.toC>w.-ftltl i&Mll'ftllll was Med "° -1
County Oft ~-To .. ~ ~. 81'199 COUl\ty on ~Mr Cfeoot~ cont'"991ll etldl· ~111 I~ Counr, Clet'll OI Of• ~N ORO.NANCE Oft TH( a.oitors. ~"'Of"I credl• 17 ,... tors and~-.. l\O may ... County on No'<41'1\oer CITY Of! HUNTINGTON
,.... tori. 9'ld '*'°"' ""° flleY ,_ tie ot,,...,. '"'-'*' 1n t~ )• ,... ,. .. , l{lt(:" •M!NO+tifC\ r"E
Orantf C:oaat oe Olflellfll9 inwetted In """"lhecl °'llft09 c~ .. OI ...... "' DOlll ol Putlltafled Oranoe Coaat HIJNT1...0TON 8EACM o .-""°' Novemtiar30 0.-Ille wtll Of ttlate, Of IM>ttl of OeltyNo\NovMtt>e!' 30,Qe. JAIO l. H 111~0£AAft!. Oe1f'1tPtlOI Oec..-nt!et 7 1• OINANCE COO! S!:CTtONS
STARTING 'A NEW BUSINESS??
The Legat Depa.rtment at the
Darty P1tot 1s plea9ed to an-
nounce a new MtVi<le now •vall·
able to new buSlnesMS.
We Wiii now SEARCH the
name tor you at no extra charge,
•nd uve you the time and the
trf p 10 the Coun HOUM In Santa
Ana Tnen. of c:ourte. aft• fhe
March ta comptet9d we .wtM hte
your tiet1ttout buSIMM n9'M
st•tement With the County Clerk,
publish onee 1 WMk tor tour
-..ti• u (9q\lt'*9 by ,.. •nd
ttMin me your proot Of publl-
elt!On wtth \he County C*'t
t'leate stop by to ftte your
fk:tlttoos bu11ness st•tement at
the Daily Pilot Legal Depart· "'*''· 330 West 8ay. Costa
Mesa. C•lifornla If you can not
atop by, P-... call u•
II (714) 6'2~21. EJltenalori
315 or 316 ancs we wtM meke
arrarioements for you to tiandte
this pr~ by"*'
If yOU ltM>Uld NW eny further
queations. pteltM cal ue end we
w+ll be more then g-.CS to --'tt
you
Good luck 1n your
newbua.nesaU
;:-.....
7 14 tt 1te1 tlNJAMIN J ltANfl" ellO °""°9r 7, t•, 21, 1... altOkl\<IWI\ M fAfO L A.Al• 2 I '~e tNe 1101 l<NO 9510 O' I ANO W·2~11~MMNJ ~ ~I I WMIAD~~ N[W IECT~N~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'
(.
Orenge Coat DAILY PILOT I Wednesday, December 14, 1988 • I
Smokers: An important limited-time offer!
....
0
N
N . . Marlbor~
--~-- -----= -=-:=-:---=
--..
·-· -
-----0
0
"'
...
E
l .
Just collect four UPC codes from cartons of any style Marlboro, ...
Merit, Benso n•& Hedges, or Virginia Slims, and mail them with the form
below. In return, we'n send you a coupon for a free carton. While this
off er is good until February 28,
remember, cigarette prices go up
January 1. So start saving right
now for yo ur free carton.
..
g Name O Male 0 Female .
•fll<'-T• •\I I I •1..\~1 • Address _Apt.
City State Zip
Phone( ' ! Date of ~irth L L
What is the name of you r regular brand? _____ ,...._,.,._..;_~=:.....;;;;;..
1H'LL SA\IE1
Is your regular brand 0 Menthol 0 Non-Menthol
Are any of these words on your pack? Check one.
0 Lights/Low Tar/Milds 0 Extra Lights/Extra Milds
0 Ultra/Ultra Lights/Ultra Low Tar 0 None of the above words
By returning th1 form. I certify that I am a c1gartlle moktr at lea l 21 years of q e. I am wilhna
10 rtceive free sample of cigareues in the mail. sub~t to apehcable late and federal laws.
L1m1t two coupon per l>(?rl>On. Offer available lo Cahfomia residents only. Offer hmited to smokers 21 yea1 of age or older. Offer ends 2128189. Please allow 4 6 wttks for delivery. E
L , • Pluhp Morris Inc IW I
______________ ....
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : Smoking
Causes Lung Cancer, Heart Disease ,
Emphysema, And May Complicate Pregnancy.
Marlboro Kings 16 mg "tar:· 1 0 mg n1cotine -
Benson & Hedges lOO's 16 mg "tar:· 1 0 mg mcotine-
Virgm1a Shms lOO's 14 mg "t1r:'O 9 mg nicotine 1v per cigarette,
FTC Report Feb '85 Ment kings 8 mg "t1C 0 6 mg "' .
nicotine av per c1garene by FTC 111ethod
.. , -I
I .
I '
..
J
:
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1988
•
ASY JTH
•
·• PARKLL>> ·~
• •
HE: "60-MJNUTE HOLIDAY 'MEAL
•
Holiday entenaining can be easy and
elepnl-wben )'OU know whit to do. Plan
ahead with simple-to-prepare recipes, a
festiYC oemerpiece and your finest tableware
to make holiday celebrations distinctive
and memonble.
MARINATED
TOMATOES
WITH ROSEMARY
2 whole tomMoes, chopped
1/4 cup olive oU
l teaspoon l'OlellW"y
l teMpooabmil
l teMpoonsall
l daft prtlc~ minced
l tbla Fl"l9dt breed or baguette
l cup shredded smoked
moaarella~
In medium bowl, combine tomlltOCS, oliYC
oil, roeenwry. t.sil, ult and garlic.~ well
and rmrilllle I hour or O't'Cmight. Cul French
bread into 24 dain slices. Place on baking
sheet S IO 6 inches under helled broiler. Broil
one aide un1il aoldcn brown. Place 2
eeaspoons IOmllo mixlurc on wllOded side.
Sprinkle wilh dale 11111 ~Wider broiler
unlil cheese melts. Sene warm. Makes
6 to 8 servinp.
-substituee: • ounca FM chee9e ,, .... ,,._,
• ·~
•
"Even people wilh 1he most hectic
schedules can find time to enrertain during
the holmys-if they are orpnized," says
Marie Rama, Director m~ &: En1er-
1ainina for Korbel Cbamp9gne Cellars,
producers fl America's a-m. premium
CHAMPAGNE:
HAM
l (3 lo 4 pound) booelal ham
I /3 cup Korbel ChamlJltllW
1/.4 cup honey
1/4 cup lll8ple syrup
1/ 4 tr I • DIOll matt
Wllole doves
Hell oven to 3SO degrees F. Place ham on
t.king rack in baking pan. On top of ham,
mU.e diagonaJ CUIS I/ 4 inch deep to form
dimnonds. In center of each cflllnOnd. pl.:e
a Clove. In small bowl, prepare mariftlde by
combining remaining inaredienls. RemoYe
I /4 cup marinade; set uidc. Bake him for
I hour. basting ham frequently. Remove
ham from oven; baste with reserved
marinade. Mak.cs 6 to 8 serving .
. '
champegne. "Ma.lc.c )Wr job easier by sdcct-
ing recipes thal require few ingndiems and
short prepuaa.ion time. The recipes recom-
mended below can be ready in an hour and
·make ~ve use fl ingredienls lhat you
• probebly luwe in your kitchen.•
WILD
fECAN RICE
l cup whole pecans
4 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons brown supr
1/2 teaspoon sround dmamon
4 l /2 cups dllckea brodl
I teaspoon salt
l rup brown ritt, alK'OOked
· l cup white rice, uncooked
Jn medium skillet, aut~ pecan 1n
2 tablespoon buner. Stir in brown sugar
and cinnamon . Cook until mixture bubbles;
set aside ..
In 2-quart saucepan. bnng chicken broth.
remaining buner and salt to a boil. Stir tn
rice. Cover ughtly and let simmer 20
minuces. Remove from heM; Stir in pecan
mixture and let -stand un1il all water 1s
lbeorbed. Makes 6 to 8 servings.
For Ill extra touch of elegance. try a coil.led
boule d premium Calibrrua champagne. Its
crisp, fruity taste goes with all IOods -from
yqy ec;> ~ -and appeals ro white and red
wine loYCrs alike. Noc onJy does champagne
take the pesswork out of choosing the
f)ROCCOLI WITH
SHALLOTS AND
. fEPPE:RS
I head broccoli, cut into Ocnnttts
1 sballol. minced
J tablespoons oil
I large red pepper, cut inlo strips
I larJe ) ellow pepper. cut Into stri~
1/4 cup cider "inepr
2 tablespoo~ soy SllUtt
1/2 t~poon lf'OUnd black pepper
In medlum-.auccpan. blanch broccoh: dram.
In large ktllc1. sauti muleed shallots 1n 0 11.
add peppers. broccol1. vinegar. soy sauce
and black pepper. Toss well. Serve wann or
ch11led. Makes 6 to 8 serving .
. \
HOW 10 CHILL A B01TLE OF CllAMPMiNE: '
lb chill a chlmp9ane boaJe quickly and emily. pl.:e it in a wine or
ice buclla, twlf-filled ...... -wr. -9-e .. JO minutes nu~
will llM nllipi .. .,..._.cWI ... .._ o.hcrw1sc. \klrc
Ille bame •• Nlalp1 • • b ""''•L a') am hour. Nnl"r anempc
ID dlil d i • ill .. ,_, • 61 bame could explode
'.Ii \
To keep sncra1 boctb chil~. place the~ 1n a large tub or
corilalner. spread plenly d tee cubes lround c.ch bottle ud fill
panaally with cold waecr. ~ be careful eo wipe each book dry IO
pmtent hppqe whak Krvtng
t 0
right WtnC for }'UUt meal. Its bubbles Create
instant "'cltmospherics"!
Before )'O'l begin )'O'lr meal with family
and friends. don't forget ro toast to a JO)'OU
holiday ~n and a happy and healthy
New Year . ..
HOLIDAY
MENU.
MARINATED WMATOES WITH
ROSEMARY
• . ~
•
CHAMPAGNE HAM
• ~·
I WIW PECAN RJCE
• • •
BROCCOU WITH SHALLOTS
AND PEPPERS
•
STRAWBERRY CREAM ROLL
?.· ,.--. ....
..
5 TRAW5E:RRY
CREAM fZOLL
5~
l l cup sugar
3-' cup floor
I 2 teMpoon baking pott'dtt
I e115poon vanila. ntract
te~sah
Po•·de.ttd supr
1 cup •·hlppina cream, whipped
2 tablespoons san•bttry ~es
I s"nl stnwberries
Mini sprigs
He..1 oven 10 400 deg~ F. Grease 15 ~
10' I-inch 1elly roll pan. then line bactom
v.11h v.a,cJ paper which ha!I been gl"Cl!Cd
In ml'\cr bcM I. heal ~and sug.ar \dJf listl
and fluff} Slowt) lldd flour. bWna powder.
vanilla and '8h
-Pour into grwied .ielly roll pan Bake I$
minute\ or until cake spn~ beck when
h1hcl touched Cool cake on ""''re rsk 10
• mmuto. Tum cake oneo toWCI ~ willa
powde~ wpr. ~off waxed ,.,er. W
up al°"& long Side. Cool on wire radl.
Unroll cake'.
Wblp nam un1t1 °' peiks fOffil. FOWia
~nwtierry p1eservies. Sple8d in~ al
ale. I inch from edF· lloll .. cllllt lill
chtll 1 hour. -. wm rem.. ••
cake wich .adillOMI powdered ......
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.... .... ~610lten ...
..
••
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C2 Ortinge Coaet DAILY' PILOT/ Wedneedey, December 14, 1988
Pinot blanc-a misunderstood wine
BJ MIKE DUNNE -..a.11, ...........
The restaurant wine list that is
bold and mature as well as deep and
broad is the wine list that includes
at least one Pinot Blanc.
That's right, not many wine lists
measure up to that standard. and it
isn't because Pinot Blanc is es-
pecially difficult to find. thoUJhjust
a handful of California wrneries
produce it as a varietal.
More to the point, consumers
and restaurateurs apparently just
don't understand it, let alone as_>-
prcciate it. They seem to think it as
Pinot. Noir made as a ~le blush
wi~ (it isn't), or,hat at's a poor
distant cousin to Chardonnay (true,
a family resemblance is there. but
shyness need not mean lack of
chlrac1er), or that its only purpose
in life 1s to provide the wiry and
anonymous backbone to sparkling
wine (while that is how most of
California's Pi not Blanc is used, the
arape is really much more versatile
than that).
When Pinot Blanc is crown in a
cool climate and when it as handled
attentively in a cellar where its
potential is understood and cn-
couraaed. it produces a table wine
dry, firm. crisp to the point of being
moderately tart, refreshinJ and
with a subtly complex kind of
tropical fruitiness.
Give it a bit more care -barrel
fermentation to start, for example
-and the result can be so bis,
round, fleshy and buttery that in a
blind tasuna it easily could be
mistaken for a Chardonl)Ay.
That's the kind of Pinot Blanc
they arc producing at the Monterey
Peninsula Winery in Sand City.
Just pick up a bottle of the
Monterey Peninsula Winery 1987
Arroyo Seco Cobblestone
Vineyards Pinot Blanc ($9.SO).
include it in a blind tastina of
Chardonnays. and watch it rack up
the points. A prediction, if not a
sure bet: It would finish at or near
the top of the rankings.
• Winemaker Marta Kraftzeck
makes no bones about it, she
intends from the outset to produce
her l>inot Blanc in a Chardonnay stYJC. She totally barrel-ferments 1t
to get a rich, oaky complexity; then
for more depth she leaves it in
prolonaed contact with the len (the
lediment tf\at falls out durina
fermentation and storqc).
What's more, she blended 5
percent Chardonnay into the 1987
Pinot Blanc. just because the
Chardonnay made it ••taste better,
with more of a middle."
Of course, it didn't hurt to start
with some of the best Pi not Blanc
pickinas in the ~tate; of the 2,000
acres planted to Pinot Blanc in
California, half is in Monterey
County. where the cool climate
consistently yields Pi not Blanc hiah
in extract and acidity.
Food sugestions: Kraftzeck su1-
gests that the wine be ta.ken with
broiled Monterey Bay salmon,
some veal dishes or just about any
chicken dish.
Sandwiches eliminate the fuss
People rarely .. entcnain" at
home today; '' simply .. have a few friends over ... to play Trivial
Pursuit, watch a football game or
celebrate a promotion.
These casual moods.-call for
casual food, like this Tower of
Turkey sandwich. Sandwiches
eliminate the fuss of hot foods.
allowing friends to cat when they're
hungry. If the football or tri via
game becomes an unexpected
thriller, there's no need to reheat a
temporarily neglected meal.
The Tower of Turkey sandwich
offers another advantage: easy·
preparaton. Instead of· tediously
assembling eiaht separate sand-
wiches, create this one, impressive
sandwich-for..a-crowd.
combinations of cheese, tomatoes,
lettuce. coleslaw and an assortment
of turkey cold cuts.
Once the upper crust crowns the
tower, insert a circle oflong skewers
to hold the la)'ers in place. When the
pna·s hungry, cut the sandwich
into wed~s and eat like a water-
melon. ·
Another ·time, prepare Turkey
Pocket Sandwiches -slices of
smoked turkey breast with lettuce,
tomatoes and alfalfa sprouts, all
tucked in pita bread. Drizzle home-
made garden herb sauce inside each
pocket.
TOWER OF TURKEY
1 road loaf .. Ueed bread
i tablelpoeu bnwll mntanl
I leaf letnee leaves
~ ,.-M•terey Jaa Heese
l medln1 &ematea, llleH
1 me41am om•, IMlllJ 1llcet
I .... weod er plastic 1bwen
Cut bread horizontally into four
layers. Spread each with mustard .
To assemble, layer bread. lettuce,
turkey ham and cheese; bread.
turkey cotto salami, coleslaw and
turkey bologna: bread. lettuce.
smoked turkey breast, tomato and
onion. Close sandwich with top
brea,d crust.
Insert 8 long skewers through top
crust to bottom of sandwich. Gar-
nish each skewer with cherry
tomatoes, olives. pickled or
cocktail onions. Cut sandwich into
8 wedges between skewers. Eat like
SANDWICH
1 pacu,e (I onces) 1moked
t•rkey breast
' leaf leu.ee )eaus_ ~~
I &omate 1Ueea
i pita bread (aboat I-lad!
diameter), c.t la lla1f
~ C8p alfalfa 1pr08t1, optlouJ
Gardea.Herb Saace a oaacea plahl yoprt
1 small carrot, allredded
Ya small c.camber, tMaly sliced
2 tablapooa1 fblely cllopped
Ollioa
14 tea1pooa dill weed
For each sandwich. place 2 slices
turkey, a lettuce leaf, 2 tomato
slices and 2 tablespoons sprouts in Begin by slicina a round, unsliced
loaf of wheat or rye bread into four
horizontal Ja,~eISi Lansb each.layer
with mustard, then stack with
1 pacb1e (1% oucet) hlrkey
varlety-,O
1 cw, coleslaw
a watermelon. 8 servings. ,
TURltEY POCltET
• a pocket half. Combioe. sauce
ingredients. Serve 'h cup sauce with
rach pocket. 4 sandwiches.
•[Ner :JI Y•S of ttpentllCI Ill
----seledlng lllCI P'"'""9 lllms 9111r111t•
111e q11111ty rou ·• fiM ..., 11 .. _. ..... ~~.._._n. ,.. ••• ,. ....... ~
•OUf rwe $111Ce buds ll'ICI savory herbs
cOllllllnl Wllll honey lor • taste expenenu
ttllt lllSIS..., ....... ,... ..... "-.. ,,.......
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llltY•ttt Ctnlri •
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"'°11• 1m1 m ?tt1
C .. A.lfllMI
3700 f C.I ""J. •2' "'°"' (7H) 673·-
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("41 lowt1 'tau 201 W Wh!n1t1 IMI 9083'
Mefttl 11 fl ltfe ltoM) '21JO {I "9llf W of lelCll IMt ) "'°"' ,,,., llf.3127 ~ (213) ... 7114
....i••llACll -............... .., ... 11114111
-"Rllllla ..... a.. .... , , ....... , .. ,
11t1ont 1 mi ... 1m ~ m •1 111 9960
TUST• 13771 lllwllOll Ave •IS
(Tlllftfl "911) 12MO
"-' 111•1 731-1111
J
J J
f I
• tk11\t •l.1l1~I ... wt (41 .. ., ,.._. .... ,."I 11...dfo•"--'' :o1t~·114,," I ~ltw-n\.f'fUf !:.."~ • HONOMkfQ ,
•' •• , I
One-pot dish
makes cleanup
a real breeze
Better Homes and GardeD1
You can't beat this combination
of homemade Italian flavor and
one-pot convenience. Dinner's
ready to eat in less than 30 minutes.
ONE-POT SPAGHETTI
1 pond aroaad beef or b•lk pork
111111e
1 small oDloa, cllopped (Ya c•p)
i 14 ~ -ouce caas 91ckn brotll
1 1-oallft can ltallu-1tyle
tomato paste
~ teaapooa dried ore1uo,
cnalled
Ya teaapooD bottled minced pr·
lie or "9 teaapooa 1arllc powder
14 teas,... ,.pper
1 ..... .,.petd,bl'Hn
Gnte41 Parmesaa dteele or
1llrMM4 ClledUr cMele •
In a large skillet cook beef and
onion until meat is brown and
onion is tender. Drain off fat: Stir in
broth. tomato paste, orcpno, prlic
and pepper. Bring to boilina.
Add spqhetti. a little at a time.
stirring constantly. Reduce heat.
Boil aentJy. uncovered, for 15 to I 7
minutes or until spaahetti is tender.
st1rrin1 frequently. Serve with
cheese. Makes 4 scrvinp .
~FGHTN;~
~lff
•
Ameltcan llloet
MIOCialan. ,.._,_.... ..........
Lamb dishes
spotlighted
.. American lamb Cookery
Basics," a 24-page booklet, features
information on selection, storing
and cooking the meat, describes
various cuts, and offers a guide on
roastinir broiling, grillin~ braising,
pan-broiling and pan-frying.
· Published by the American
lamb Council, the booklet is avail-
able free. To get' a copy, contact
ASPC Distribution Department,
LCB-FE.t 200 Clayton St., Denver,
Colo. G0206 or phone (303)
399-8130.
Products
introduced
to market
NEW YO RK (AP) -The
graham cracker was born in 1829.
An ordained Presbyterian minis-
ter, Sylvester Graham. invented a
cracker made with unsifted, coarse-
ly ground wheat flo ur. His cracker
was quickly adopted by bakeries
that wanted to produce it in large
quantiti es.
Now, in 1988, the Nabisco
Biscuit Co., which began making
graham crackers in 1898, has Teddy
Grahams, a new line of bear-
shaoed. bite-size snack cookies.
l"eddy G rahams come in a 10-
o uncc package and are available in
honey, cinnamon and chocolate
flavors. "Teddy Grahams is a fun-
to-cat wholesome cookie made
espec1ally fo r kids," says Sharon
Fordham, a spokesman for
Nabisco. A half-ounce serving con-
tains onl y 60 calorics -less than
six calories per cookie.
Other new food products now on
the market:
-Hershey's Chocolate Milk
Mix: an instant hot or cold mix, it
comes in a colorful 16--ounce or 32-
ounce brown and yellow container.
beari~ the fam iliar Hershey's logo.
-Croonch} Stars: a star-shaped,
cinnamon-flavored, ready-to-eat
cereal from Post Cereals. The cereal
is Jim Henson's first lice nsed food
item.
For more adult tastes:
-Golden Granulated turbinado
sugar: a pure premium unrefined
sugar with a soft golden color, tight
texture and subtle buttery taste,
produced from naturally arown
Louisiana sugar cane that has been
crushed at the mill where the juice is
extracted, rather than at the re-
finery. A vailablc in a gold, 4-pound
bag.
-Kellogg's Common Sense
cereal: ready-to-eat oat bran and oat
bran with raisins cereals. Each
serving contains 13 grams of oat
bran. three arams of dietary fiber.
-Pillsbury Ready to Microwave
Fudge Brownies: rcfriaerated
brownie dough in its o·
ready for the microwave. The
product yields nine fudgy brownies.
-Green Giant Microwave One
Serving Vegetables: eleven of the
Green Giant's line of best-selling
vegetables and vegetable combina-
tions, packqed in a plastic micro-
waveable tray that can 10 di~tly
from the freezer to the microwave
oven to the table.
-"Truffes Exquis," a new line of
bite-size. shell-molded truffles from
GodivaChocolaticr, available m 10
flavors includina hazelnut pralme,
raspberry and soft butterscotch
caramel.
Booklets:
-"fiber for a Healthy life": a
fiber information and m:ipc book
ftom the Kelloa Co. that 1nctudn
60 reci~ (and <tO colorful oholo-
papM). T.o order: tend Sl.95 and
.......... PllODaCl8/Ct)
...
Orenge CoM1 DAILY PILOT/Wednledey. Deoember 14, ~Ml ca
Game hens perfect entree
for elegant holiday dining
These succulent little Rock Cor-
nish hens feature a nchly flavored
rice stuffina studded with dried
apricots, roasted pecans, minced
pun onions and seasoned with
naturally brewed soy sauce.
~-............... .
Aprieet-IUee a......,. Bake 1n 375-deartt oven 4
minutes. Brush hens thorouahly
with sauce; cover loosely with loil.
Bake 4S minutes tonaer, or until
hens arc tender, brush occasionally
with remaining sauce. Makes 4
servmp. , HOUDAYHENS
' Ired or &Mwed Rock Corals~
IMlls, eadl ab .. t 11/• poud1
~ e.p us.rally brewed soy
Ullce
Y, CQ apricot Jam
Remove and discard aiblets and
necks from hens. Rinse hens under
cold runnin& water, drain well and
pat dry. Combine soy sauce, Jim
and nu\meg; brush cavities of hens
thoroughly with mixture.
Prepare Apricot-Rice Stuffina;
stuff hens equally with stuffina.
Place hens, breast side up, on rack
in shallow foil-lined bakina pan;
brush skins lightly with sauce.
•Apricot-Rice Stuffina: Coat 2
cups cooked rice with 4 teaspoons
naturally brewed soy sauce. Stir in
1/4 cup diced dried apricots, 1/4 cup'
toasted pecan picc1es and 1.4 cup
mi need areen "Onions-and tops. : .1
THE. BEST COUPON . .
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HUGHES SLICED BACON ....... EA. 1.39
I MlllUTI MAID
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RISH FRYIRS
CALIF. WHOLE llODY CHICKEN(
LB.
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W M8S. ...... OL' McfARLA•D
CHICK• •11 GROUND TUllKIY
noz 1 89 90•. FAT FREE • 2 79
WHITE & DARI< FROZEN
Al l WHlll MfAT .•. 2.H IA. • 3·L8 PKG IA. •
FARM RAISED FRESH CATFISH FILLETS ....................... LB. 3. 98
·.POTATO CHIPS
TWIN PACK, ASSORTED~---
c
HILLSlll•I fA•MS
SAftA ..
FLAV0R SEALED I 89 SMOKED POllSH BEEF
POLI.SH OR POLSKA La. •
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B.B.Q PORK SPARE RIBS ...... LI . a.a•
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SllACIC c--=-
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NEW ENGLAND .99 SMAu BOX ~-
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VARIETIES ..• 67
16-0t. 89 B·Ot lnstont Coffee
HUGHES SOUR CREAM.. . .. .... .. .. ....... TA STER'S CHOICE .. . ............. 4.89 01nty Moore
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GE TANGERINES·
ORLANDO, SWED & JUICY
5·lb. Bog lnd1v1duotly Wropped
TEXAS RUBY G RAPEFRUIT .......... I .ff BRACH'S CANOY
8 Oz Pkg
lB 1.49 FRESH MUSHROOMS
Frnh .89 ROMAINE LETIUCE .EA .59
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llA.....aY
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CHUTNun NANKA SKINS
CHINA$(,\ II SllMIN 69
MllS. WCTH'S
AP'PU fttl
J7 10 •I OZ 3 49
_.lllS112•AL ICI CllUll
.89 ?P;llCK 1 79 C OllO e 9-0Z
VARIETIES
SLIClO 8 OZ • l2 OZ
PKG IA ••
IN .... _.. TUlt"I e
JUIC( ASSORlED
FLAVORS
26·Ct Super O r ::JO.Cl Reg
KO TEX MAXI THINS .... ..... . .. , .... 2. 19 Sapporo lch1bon 3 S·Oz
BEEF. CHICKEN OR ORIGINAL RAMEN
ll·Ot
• 29
.69
8 Oz
RICH S W HIPPED TOPPING
12 Ot Vor1e1tes 8-0t. Non-Aerosol
CONSORT PUMP HAIRSPRAY .... . .. .. : ... 1.59 SHIRAKIKU MANDARIN O RA NGES OH BOY STUFFED POTATOES
Con1od1no 9-0t Anorted
FRESH RAVIOLI ........... 2.29
Pr.ciovs 12 Oz
RICO TI A CHEESE . . . ...... • ... ... 1.ff
...... llAftOllAL •. ,._
12.oz
CHUB 1.99
(•IF"AYUl•la•1•1·e~
CAllADIAll a.ua
7S0 Ml 6 99 • •
I 7S hte1 81~
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:6 •• 99 7SO-ML ~
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Magic M.ountain
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1.99 ............
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I
Ortnge C0Mt OAILV PILOT/ Wedneeday, December 14, 1MI
Sweet treats ring in the holidays
Nothina rinp in the holidays like
Christmas cookies. Whether you
orpnize a Yuletide cookie swap or
make JUSt o~ batch to have on
hand as a quick gift for friendly
neighbors, at just wouldn't be
Christmas without them.
Everyone has traditioA&l
favorites. but a delicious new
cookie recipe is always welcome.
Herc are three distinct recipes, all
using the toasted goodness of
California almonds for ~nusual
flair and flavor. Almond Paste
Sugar Cookies are rolled in the
traditional style and then cut into
shapes.
Almond puae aivn them a
special festive 0.vor, reminiscent
of the holidays in Germany. The aJaz.c may be tinted and used to
decorate simply or elaborately as
time permits.
Almond ~~ ate. also
European in style. Replete with
tou\ed sliced almonds and Qndied
fruit, thedouah is simply mixed and
dropped, then baked to a lacy,
mouthwaterina crispness. Ginaer
Gems pair toasted whole blanched
almonds with candied ainser for a
unique flavor combination.
Drizzled wiab lemony sJuc they are PllCt almond pule i.n food
abeolulely imliltible. processor with metal blade an place:
procna until finely chopped. Add
ALMOND PMTB butter and supr; proceu until
SUGA& a>O&IBI thorouahly mixed. Add ea white;
~ ftf (C ewet) ••=•• ,..ae, process until smooth. ~ flour llPllJ...., and cinnamon: procns unu1 douah
I ftf.....,. ----forms a ball. Remove from pro-~ ftf "'IU cessor; wrap in plastic and chill 'h
1 ea..... hour or until firm.
I "fl tlMr Roll dou&h on lightly floured ~ lealfH• etmmoe work surfare, approximately If•·
S etlfl ,. ........... ,, 1lfted inch thick. Cur into desired shapes.
5 .. ta1t1et,11u mut Transfer to a lightly greased baking
1 seas,... almoad exaraca sheet· bake at 325 degrees, 10-1 2
Food colortq min,1tes, unril lightly browned.
~::--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---:-:-~~~~~--:~-=-=====-=-i Removccookies1&acakerackto
cool. Mix together powdered sugar,
milk and almond extract.
.-#
Meat Dept. Savings
Sliced Bacon ,~ ,..oz 99•
Meat Franks .()HNW()M(U ,..oz 87•
Pork Loin Roast :-:-'-LL UI 12 79
Corned Beef =IAOS POIHTCllT UI s139
Lunchmeats ::"'AA~S H-OZEA 69•
Pork Loin Chops BOOIELUS l8 s2a9
Rainbow Trout : UI s189
Compare these Low Prices
FROM THE STATER BROS. FAMILY OF EMPLOYEES.
13-0Z
• 12-0Z
6-PK.
Frozen Food Favorites
Vegetables =-,.ozl1 OI
Vegetables ~~~= 1.oz W
Tyson Chicken ~sc::i-£~[()11 NS-OZ '2"
Burritos ~ Mll 25•
Gortons Fish =IATTUIQll '3" l2.0Z
Cookies =c-14 1.0Z 1279
Orange Juice ~~ 12.oz 11 OI
, .
Grocery Specials
Reynolds Foil
Firelogs ~
Orange Juice=C-.l[O
Margarine ::i:::ro.s
Hawaiian Bread ::=
Sour Cream :r'!'~
1MO'T•1•
~·1·· ..ors1H
1.w 99'
I.OZ
1131
,~95•
·LB
Garden Fresh Produce
Cranberries ~9"\A,,,., .. mall ,,.oz ,..,lA69-
Onionsu. HO 19Wl£T.-.. Ul 25•
Gra efruit ~~ll~S-fT_, 11-U-f_" '149
~TED WITH ORNAMEHT'S
a..........Ta111
SZ"~ • POT
White Zinfandel IUTnllHOMf .,_'2"
Gallo Wine !u:::o:=kMC ,Wftfl •2•
Seagram's :::~
Carolans .... ~
Michelob ~~~
l7klnll•10•
110& '6"
Apple Juice ~~=mEO .. -01
1 139 Potato Chips ~·"~~ ,«89-C..wa llarre
Walnuts ~ .~•1• Canada Dry Mixers 1 v~ ,UTUl &s• Vodka
C & H Sugar ~~OOQOEH..a-,.oz 53• Pepsi Cola ~c:~.. ,41ml 99' ~
Royal Gelatin lVAMTH .or &9• Schweppes M1xers .vMETb ·~65• I --1·7!HJTER
Lipton Tea Bags ,~'239 .--:;;=...:;:..=..=-=-==-=-.=:--;:;:,...:;:;~----;.;====::;--------
Pineapple ~"~e::::.:-· Cl!VSMlO 11>4165• = f.~J ,.:,-;: =. AOVERT1SED ITEM GUARANTEE Surf Detergent ~~II u~ •1 • S·~~ ====:. ~l&~ifiijiij:!E:piq : ~::.1!.":.:.. '*:. :ec.:"'m"':.:
Fabric Softener ~::u tt«•p ~_f-_F--; -w:::=:.,--~.-..+-+-....... -.....~.... E·!~="E:E-S
Paper Towels _=-"°~-,..._,4Ql8~ b~~~~~~~~~-_,!---~u!W:L?~!!coe~· !~!~~"9GWT~a1i~.:.:!~~l~·:.!!.T!!~~--~~!'Ull~"""~--.::...,=:·:·:riecan..== ........ ==°':....,~:'°: .. =::.J .··· ··. -~ . ..··"'•,, ., • J , .. ~ r , . ~ •• ~o • ''' ' I • .. ' • • j • . .. . ..
······----------- ---• ...... • .Ii
•
. . ._,_ -_,.~~ ·-. -. . ..
Divide ataze into separ~.te bo~ls
and tint each bowl as desJrcd with
food coloring. Spread cookies with
gJazc and allow to dry and harden
before serving. Makes 36-40 me-
dium-size cookies.
ALMOND NESSELRODD
1"' ""liked .................
"'ee•••sar 1
"' eep Mlvy cream
s sabletpoolll baa&er
1 eep flHly cMpped cudfed
fnfl
.,; eep Ooar ·
1 &ealpooll snted oru1e peel
•.4 tea1pooe aim ... enraet
Spread almonds in a sinale layer
in shallow pan. Place in cold oven;
toast at 350 degrees, 9-11 minutes,
stirring occasionally, until lightly
toasted. Cool. Remove l cup
toasted almonds and chop fine. Set
aside.
Combine sugar. cream and but-
ter in heavy saucepan. Brina mix-
ture to a boil, stirrina ocx:asionally,
until sugar is dissolved and butter is
melted. Remove from heat; stir in
reserved chopped almonds, un-
chopped toasted sliced almonds
and rcmainina ingredients.
Drop dough by rounded tea-
spoonfuls onto weffgrcased baking
sheet, 3 inches apart. Flatten dough
mounds with a fork dipped in hot
water. Sake at 350 degrees, 5-7
minutes..· until cookies are golden
brown. Allow cookies to cool I
minute on baking sh~r: transfer to
a· cak.e.faek to fmish coolin&r-Store
in ajnight contaiher. Makes 4
dozen cookies.
GINGER GEMS
1 1.4 c•p• ••ole blaac•ed
almoacla
-1 1.4 eept eac• batter ud 11pr
'4 cap miaced cryatalltied eta·
1er
t tea1poeu powdered pacer
!~ eeps Ooar
1 cap powdere4 1qar, sifted
t aabletpooll• lem• Jllce
Re4 UMI 1reeD food colorlq
Spread almonds in a s1ng1c layer
in shallow pan. Place in cold oven~
toastat 350 deJrees, 12-1 S minutes.
stirring occas1onally, until lightly
toasted. Cool. Grind 34 cup toasted
almonds in food processor or
blender until fine. Cream together
ground almonds. butter, sugar .
crystallized ginger and powdered
ginger.
Mix in flour until dough forms a
ball. Divide dough in two. Roll
each piece to form a loa l Y2 x 2-
inches in diameter. Wrap and chill
logs, until firm enough to slice,
about 30 minutes.
Slice dough into •/•-inch Slices:
place slices on ungrcased baking
sheet, 2 inches apan. Press I
toasted almond into center of each
slice.• Bake at 350 degrees 10-12
minutes, until cookies arc lightl y
browned. Remove cookies to a
cake rack to cool.
Mix together powdered sugar
and lemon j uice. Divide glaze
between 2 bowls; tint red and green,
or as desired. Drizzle cookies with
tinted glaze. Allow glaze to dry and
harden before serving. Makes 4
dozen cookies.
•Jf dough cracks around almond.
allow slices to warm and soften
slightly before pressing in almond.
PRODUCTS •••
ProlllC3 one box top from Kcllog's All-
Bran cereal to: Fiber for a Healthy
Life Box 551 I, Kalamazoo. Ml
49063-551 I. Bcsurctoencloseyour
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allow 6 to 8 weeks for delivery.
-"Oat Meals!": a collectaon of
10 recipes from muffins to main
dishes and dessens from the Quaker Kitchens. The booklet also
provides microwave information
and nutrition information on
cholesterol. for a free copy. send
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ment 12, 847 West Jackson-5th
floor, Chacaao. IL 60607~3018.
-"Kahlua Recipe Book": con·
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coolen. main dishes, cookouts.
coffee cakes. drinks and desserts.
For a free copyh.....~'.!.!~ Kahlua Recipe Book. . ~t PRl,
8o1 230\. Loa Anples, CA
90078-020J.
, ,, -, , ... " . -,\ ' , --' -. _ .. . ..
12 Pack
Pepsi
R'l.J.;;orDn-l:Oz C.mr
I.-Tuo-1~ Pac4s PtF FmruJy
279
Martinelli's 129 ~I'o~~kling Cider
Bot tit
9Gorton's
Clams
G)ffb!1;5c!omaco Sauce .39
Penma Canned Cat F 41, 100 1 V .tnttltf-6 0 1ma C"'' ~
tft Tree ~~eet. Pink Grapeliuitjuice 1 29 W 46 01mtT C111 ~w~ n Com Oi l 1 09 • Jl 0HJlff &J1/j
9Mrs. ~ubbisons 99 Dress1n2s
Rtr..J.ar Cir c"""'"::J •
I} t>..<Kr Bo.:c
Star Kist • lid \X-hite Aloocore Tuna 2 69 P.Klttd m \V.atrr·I ~ J O ur1<t C.111
Lft Soft.salp Pa.'iteb 89 9 Dtcoratf)r or c ..,..ntry °"'f".; s Oun.t Conumtr •
CoLmllY Hearth Pecan Pie 2 99 8 hid• Silt • E.i
Birkholm 's Cinrtunon Bread 1 79
I Po.ltd Lo..{
Vons Sugar
5 Lb.. Bag p,,,,.,
Cr.1Nt/J1tJ
------LIQUOR
~Cook' · 0laJ'Tloo211e V '""..,,, t ur• l>ry-1~ M)tJ,,,., &>tdt
A Codrs Beer 12 Petek W Drrtfr. I""' • 11 o-~ c-
GaJ 10 \Xihitc Grt'tk1Che « u,.,,., s,,,.,,..,.,,r / f , __ ltonlt
169
One Lb. Bar-S
Sliced Bacon
Break/ast Favorite ·
16 Ounce Package
Olympic Meal
11h Lq. Bread
Ro.nJT~
or S.ind~icJ,
Mission :
Tortilla Strips
/ />oomd
8.ig
Jell-0 69 Gelatin [)essert
A110r1tJ Fui.o" e
6 O•ncr89ic
Vons Ripe
Pitted Olives
/.ftdu.m ~Ill
6 Oimcr C.m .79
< .. . 79
Bonele.'\5 Round or Rump Rt,L-..{ ? 29 lSOi O#Oltl&ef .-,_.,-~-'"t..,.,H,. ·•~Lb ~
Boneless Chuck Roasts ? 09 US D .-4 CHOKI ~-• TJ-m T,,,n.,w.t l• "-'
Boneles.s Ne\YYork 'irloin Steak 329
L SDA CHOICEBtt'· • Tlvi Tn,.,....J Lb
Fresh Am. etic:m lPO Of Lunb 2 49 l'SDA CHOKI -b U
Zack\' or F<Ner F.uins Turke\~ 89 Pn..,,.c',J,f C'01.1•. 1: .: • -i.~., r ,,. •• L" •
Fresh ?Jr's PriJ~ Rnbti112 011<.:ken." 99 C.U om1o1 Crot"' S ,, • l ~·~o1ov~l1 ~.J.· Lio •
Hom1el Crn't~ S 1 l l~m1:1 · 349 B~ Lb
FlVin12 Chicken Dnm11nectes 219 F ,rJ, or T'rwM ll•
.. . . {
1-Vp 6-Pack
Regular or Diet
7-Up Gold or Cherry 7-Up
12 Ounce Cans
Tropicana
Orange Juice
~or~
H iJ.f C.!Jorr Cato1t
f 89
VONS PHOTO PROCESSING
Double Prints or Bigger Prints
For The Low \'ont Price
12 Exposure Roll Dn"rlo1 6' Pnnt 2 99
24 Exposure Roll Dn<tto1 & Pwu 5 97
36 Exposure Ro ll Dn>tlo1 (r Prmt 897
Oise Film-15 Exp. Dn~op&Pnnt 449
Tuo st.md.Jrd lilt color prints from tJch •:tg.z:1~t
/jom an\' roll OJ 110. 116, Jf mm or Due color
film c:41 Prows 4CC. 1000. 160C SpttJ E:xu.i.
---SEAFOOD---
Fresh \X'escem O\~c1~ 1 79
1J O..n,t I•• · E"-
l n1itation Kmb ~ Ieat Fla.kl::; 2 59 (Fm/, l\r..b Mw S.JJJ 16'1 l h U,
Jumbo S('allops 8 49
trolrlt/Defn><ttJ l •
Alasktn King Cmb lj;.--g &. Cl . .l\'12 99 r;;:J;(J T ~ T<'tl.tl Lio
---FROZEN---
Piaswect VPOf"f2hle Blenci5 1 19 SM-'...._,.~~
~~Frozen Peas or Co111 1 19
tiltrd 97 ,,.
-,...,~~~ .
••••• 110-t
...
Jerseymaid
Ice Cream·
Old f aj/J10Mti-Asroned Flavors
Hwl/Galum Rund Carton
2~ 00
Imperial
Mar2arine
I Pou3 Packagt
Quarter>
Knudsen
Sour Cream · 105
109
~ \...t \ l ~ t
I" -4"*',.C"'' ,
Reddi Wip
Topping
Ltf..f.t C'f'tlm ; O..raa-.-1t'f0tnl c.,,
Ad\-ertised Items Att Good Only At Vons.
,
ce DAILY PILOT/ Wednesday, Oecemw 14, 1988
·Alexander concocts lovingly Handelian 'Messiah'
choir powerfully
and subtly meld
By a.AVS HECHT .......... c-,.,, ......
year's Pacific Symphony and Pacific
Chorale production of Handel's
"Messiah."
John Alexander, the chorale's di-
rector and co"cen conductor, both
promised and delivered a special
performance Monday niaht at the
Orange County Performina Ans
Center. Bravo!
choir. only slightly laraer with 60
members, worked totether with
precision and finesse. The soloists
were cast as ifby Handel himself, each
voice powerfully portrayina the full
color of the text.
modest and reserved tone exhibited was simply elepnt. His powerful
thouah the performance. The music voice reached out with the orchestra
approached the audience rather than and one could feel his pleasure with
bOmblrdina. it with an insurmoun· each phrase. Mack was pven a liaht
table wall of sound. The result was a accompaniment, so be did not battle
deliberate, F ntler but more powerful . the orchestra and so the text, which
"Messiah.' Handel wrote in EnaJiah, could be
The fint soloist, tenor Jonathan understood.
Mack, followed the sinfonia. When Bass Louis Lcbhen ~rformed the
he stood, the hall fell silent in second solo, "Thus 111th the Lord,"
anticipation. Mack's interpretation with an authority to match the
proclamations. Lcbherz's praence, -------------------------r--------------------------... both vocally and ph)'licatly, domi-"A SIDE SPLI'ITING IV\l1111'11T ~11 A AY nated the stqe. One could feel the
The orchestra, the size Handel
intended with 24 members. and the
These clements, united under Alex-
ander's baton. provided a feast of
power and subtlety. The openina
sinfonia expressed formal and stately
pacing. without ostentation, settina a It's wonh trespassing to sec this
• \AAflDll• ~fin..11L.. almost paternal warmth in his voice1 A n&D"l"VV\TT~1"1"111A~n ro~m,, despite his imposina visqe, ana
J7U\.l • •U\J UVl,. • nm,• .Dnu. some female chorale members peered
OOl&T STlllMIU MutJU
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a.TYROnM ~ ... ...... ,. ...
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L
•
at him seemin&ly in awe.
M~soprano Jacalyn Bower's
solo emet)led from a deep and strona
foundation. Her interpretation was heanfeh, expressive and mo.vina.
with a voice combining both warmth
and . a certain timelessness ap-
propriate to "Messiah."
Soprano Virainia Sublett granted
an exquisite rendition of her solos,·
which weretenderand rich. Her voice
cajoled within the broad ransc Han-
del demanded of his soloists and easily capped the most de manding
high with unstrained confidence.
The tint chorale piece, "And the
glory of the Lord" was met with equlij
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"Toast of the Town!"
"WICKEDLY FUNNY!
sop'ftr~tiiF:11>0c?J9EoY:"
-]t/frey Lyons, SNEAK PREVIEWS
"IT'S RICH, NASTY AND VERY,
VERY FUNNY •• !'
-Joanna 1.Angfield, ABC RADIO NETWORK
"FRANK OZ HAS DIRECTED WITH
A DEFT liAND .. :'
-Pet~ Traven, PEOPLE
"IT'S A BREEZY, STYLISH,
DELECTABLE COMEDY .. !'
-Su.son Gr~ WMCA-RADIO
MICHAEL
CAINE
A fMNK i~ S'IMMAR'nN MICHAEL CAIN£ • IK7M"EM 9COOM>ltEl3"
-Ol.F.NNt HF.ADU' .. APtl'ON ~ .. BARBARA HAJtR1S -· M1Lt1 OOOOMAN
_,.STEPHEN A I011T.R .. WIUJAM SCHARF --· ROr WR.I -·~ alCHAEL llALUWJS ,,, --D\1.£ LAUNER .. CHARID Hllt9CHHOltN
-· llU.t: LAlJID .. S1MLIY SHAPllO. PNJl. HfJINl(j -· BfJINAllO WIUJAMS r1111;:aa___ -.. PIANK<Yl If.!! .. -.-. --~·•• . _. -----·--
TODAY
st= --=:.=--=--=-*E-"= •=· --· ·-·-IE!r .. -;r ....... n.:---li.L-=r--.. ._. ·-=e--· a=-~ ~-=--"" m-.&"i:
Ml!§ ---'--'1111fn~ICIOI: r1r ............. -.....w.., ...... ,_..
anticipation. The chorus was ti&ht
and refined, and their smaller
numben pve them more breadth.
Before the performance Alexander
said, .. There's so much brilliance in Handel that can't be interpreted with
larae forces." The brilliance came
throuah, and the result was briaht
chorale pieces. when briahtneu was
due. However, the chorus fully con-
veyed the ncccssary apocalyptic feel-
inp as well. as in "Since map came by
death.0 -
Alcundcr's interpretation, 1m-
possible without the excellent forces
at his disPOYI, opened with con-
fidence and stateliness reminiscent of royalty, and appropriate for
"Messiah." Jo the finish. the per-
formance maintained the powerful deliberateness with which it orig-inated. ·
Soloists and conductor returned
af\er three ovations. Aleunder in-
vited the audience to sing along to the
"Hallelujah Chorus," during which
the audience, orchestra, chorale. and
soloists sang like one faniil y. Bass
Lcbherz passed his music to a nun in
the front row who then shared it with
her sisters.
Run to get what tickets remain for
Saturday's 4 p.m. performance.
Rare views
from Arctic
NEW YORK (AP) -Arctk wolves live far from humans and
have never been hunted, so they don't
know enough to run from someone
with a aun -or a camera .
Wildlife photographer Jim
BrandcnblUJ and wolf bioloaist
David Mech took advantqc of the
wolves' tolerance and occasional
curiosity during two yean of observ· ina them from a camp on Ellesmere
Island, Canada, Jess than SOO miles
from the Nonh Pole.
The result was 'some rare and
amazing!y closeup foo~e of arctic wolves for Brandenbura s National
Geographic Explorer film, "White
Wolf," premiering Sunday on Super-~ution TBS:-·
Ellesmere Island is barren, so there
was no way to hide from the wolves.
But the scruffy, white-coated critters
were merely curious about Branden-
bul'J and Mech's tents and cameras and four-wheel motorcycles.
Their remote location keeps the
wolves safe from persecution by
humans who in other areas of Nonh
America kill them for attacking
domcsti' stock and sometimes.just
for sport.
Wolves live under somethina of a
monarchy, and the king and queen
are the alpha male and female. At one
~int, the alpha female, nicknamed
'Mom," came close enou&h to Mech
that he could toss her &its of his sandwich. She also allowed the men
to come within a few feet of her frisky
pups.
The narrative, read by Richard
Kiley is rather ploddingly written
and doesn't do JUSticc to the film footaae. Brandenburg is more
aniculate with his camera.
Assistant to sub
for ailing Ratt le
Satu~y's performance by the Los
Anaeles Philharmonic Orchestra will
10 on as scheduled Saturday despite
the illness of conductor Simon Rattle.
The concert at the 0ranac County
Performina Arts Center wiO be under
the direction of assistant conductor
David Alan Miller.
Rattle has pneumonia and
pleurisy.
From kicker
to Vanna's
new sidekick
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Rolf Beninchke, a star placckiekcr for the
San Dieao Charaen football team,
will take over as daytime host of the
P.?,PUlar television pme show
'Wheel -of Fortune,' BC -an-
nounced.
The current host, Pat 5-jak, will
continue hostina lbe syndicated
niahtlime version of the show. 5-jak
has announced he is aivina up the daytime 9"0lf'lm to anchor a late-niatu CBS talk show debutina Jan. 9.
'Beninchke bepn tapina today.
Beninchke's shows also will immiere
on Jan. 9. Beninchke, 33, who retired at the Cha~' all-time leadina ICOl'er, was '*keCt from 30 finalists for the job after a series of auclitiq_ns. said
officials for Merv Griffin Pro-
duct.ion'i produc:en of "Wheel of
Fonune.'
Beninchke, who survjved a serious di~tive ailment while. Dlayina with
the Charlm. laid Griffin saw him five monihs IJIO on a Loi Aneeta talk
show ditcU•ftl hit beahb ~· " ... I never ...... t th11 wouJd ~· Peoole Md to conYincc me ma• 1 needed '°consider ma It's a brud-oew .., of my lift Uld rm
looldDI _ fOrward to it," said lenirlcl*e, wbo plaftt to continue
livi ill San IMfO. ~ther he nor oflkia1s for Griffin or NIC would ditcloee coanctuat
details.
'
PFDPJE Orenge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, December 14, 1911 C7
Huntington Harbour a sea
of lights for boat parade
By VIDA DEAN
Huntinatc:>n. H~rbou.r is lit up like a Christmas tree.
Actually, it is l~t up hke t~ousands of Christmas trees
-~ spectacula.r d1spl~y of lights and decorations. The
ennre community gets in on the decoratina holiday spirit
and they have done it for 26 years.
It was party time Saturday and Sunday along the 91h
miles of decorated homes on the waterways of the seven
harbour islandsJ.. as the Huntington Harbour
Philharmonic \..Ommittee of Oranae County ~onic sta&ed "Musical Memories" boat parades.
StAty-one elaborately decorated boats cruised for 21h
hours in view of the on-land private partygocrs who
exchanaed greetings ~ith private partygocrs aboard the
boats.
Lading the parade o n the 58-foot boat of Mario and
Diana Antoci were grand marshal Jlm Mlller, his wife, J~. and their guests including Jue S&atler, whose
husband, Leea, was a parade captain and Ml11y Prowell,
SMllJ and Jerry Brodie, and Pat Doty; husbands Co41r1
PreweU and Ben Doty were night captains.
following the lead boat were past grand marshals
including Geor1eOaae with wife Joaua, MlkeStltz1a1er
with SMiiey, By Dod with Jue, Bob WatlOtl with Carol
and Pat Kelley with Yvone.
Third in line was the 58-foot "Dot ken" of Dot and
Kn Boerplpoa. Besides the host couple, the boat
carried committee members of the HHPC including
chairwoman Bobbitt WiUlam1 and her husband BUI.
Also, OCPS pr~ident Nucy and Fruk Posd (seeing
their first parade), OCPS chairman Jack and Nucy
CaWwell, Jerry and Clteck Railey (seeing their 14th
parade), 8'lrley and Jack Levcrea1, JlldlG and Kevia
lve)'.lf'd Dorotlly Sllvermu.
t'The parades kick off our cruise oflights which starts
Wednesday evening (toni&ht)," said Bobbitt Williams.
Tlle ~blic can board I 00-foot vessels and veiw the
masnificent decorations each night through Dec. 22.
Tickets for the 45-minute narrated boat rides are $7 for
adults and $4 for children 12 and under.
Committee boat passenger Oeboru FalroD . is
chairwoman for the cruises. "The best way to get tickets
now is come to our office. I sold $4,000 worth today,"
added f airon as she cruised along. The office is at 16897
Algonquin St .• Suite I Huntington Beach, and is open 10
a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
"We have more lights than ever before," said
Williams, noting_the lights of the Portofino neighborhood
-a new joint effort spearheaded by Dlue Sllvermu.
The boats in the parade were being judged for
Dlillr .... ,......~ ......
Coco Malchow, Deborah Falron , Lbada
Roaan and Mary Dannlna ftnd the party food. .
trophies by a panel including &.atty Leslie, newlywed
Dulle (Devt.e) Bu&oa, Claire McNaJr, BlU Lef&Mue
and BW WaUecll. (Earlier in the week, the HHPC awarded
trophies to homeowners for their efforts.)
Awards were handed outat the Huntington Harbour
Yacht C lub at a dinner attended by judges and committee
members including dinner chairwoman MW1e Bolcemb,
club commodore J ack and S. Gros1mu, who were
aboard the boat judged "most beaut1fyl" (decorated by
Louise and Sam LaCorte), Bart.ara and bani Seeu,
Doris and B•rt WllU1, Marllya and Curles Bo9t.le, Moeka
and Jack Keep. Also, stopping by to get the big crystal
'bowl sweepstakes award were members of the Sunset
Aquatic Yatch Club · the Cllat WeU1 and Ray Fla.llden
families, all in Santa costumes.
"I think the parade went well. Only two boats had
trouble, one grounded and one lost its transmission, the
weather was so nice ... no wind. The event is a lot of work,
but it is so great the way the whole communrty comes
together. It's fun and there is really nothing in the world
like it," said Miller.
I 6:00 I 6:3o I 1:00 I 1:30 I 8:00 I 8:3o I 9:oo I e:3o I 1o:oo l 1o:3o I11:oo l 11 :3o I
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m NIC USA Whael of Jeop111ftl ~ fllysttllM Night .., T11tlng11'1 ~ TOl\lgN ..... Today fo11une Coult Boom Show
Em Kennech Doug PralM the Lord Prliw the Lord R.W Sd11111blch T8" Johll Or. Tni111,...
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tSI • • IOoNld Sultlt11ai.1) • • (Robefl Catrldont) H.tve.o .. Hrlchh!W OIMIMt Hits
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NICI( Denni• Oon~lt IC1n1 Do Obi. O.rt 11r. Ed IP. Oukt 3 Sons ID A.Id Saturday SCTV l~.fn c. 54
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Complete telewl8loft ........ In • .....,.. TV Plot
Confessions of an overeater
DEAR ANNLANDERS: God only
knows bow many people are locked in
a life-and-death struggle' with com·
plilsive eating. I happen to be one of
them. Ovcrcatcrs..An_on)'JD.ous saved
my life.
Please print this letter so your
readers who have eating disorders can
recognize themselves and do some-
thing about 1t. Thank the good Lord I
did. Herc's the true test:
Are yoe a compablvc cater?
I. Do you cat when you're no t
huns_ry?
2. Do you go on eating binges for no
apparent reason?
3. Do you have feelings of guilt and
remorse after overeating?
4. Do you give too much time and
thought to food?
5. Do you look forward with
pleasure and anticipation to the
moment when you can eat by your·
self?
6. Do _you plan these secret binges
ahead ofume?
Au~
lMHIS
reached your goal?
10. Do you rcynt It when people
tell you to .. use a httle will power" and
lose some wctght?
11. Despite evidence to the con-
trary, have you continued to insist
that you can diet on your own
whenever }OU wish?
12. Do you crave food at a definite
ume of day or night other. than
mealtime?
13. Do you eat to escape from
worries or disa~mtment and re-
ward yourself with something for-
bidden to cheer yourself up?
overeaung. If you answered yes to
seven or more ofthesc.Quest1ons, you
have a serious eating problem.
Overeaten Anonymous welcomes
veryone-wbo-wtnts-to--stap eatina
compulsively. There arc no dues or
fees for membership. Our primary
purpose is to abstain from com-
pulsive overcaung and to carry this
message of recovery to those who still
suffer.
To find out more about OA's 12-
step recovery pr<>snm, write • \o:
Overeaten Anonymous, •OH
Spencer St., No. 203, Torrance,
90503.
I am -RECOVERING JN AR·
UNGTON, VA.
DEA.R RECOVERING: YM u4
Din •e41.todten.
l'•e lla4 a tremadou am .. 1 •f fee••~ frem readen wH laave
18e!C-dd wt .. OA after every11d8c
elM faJW. I recemlDeM du. ap-
pned wlleleltearle4Jy. Grand manbal Jim and Nancy caldwell and Bobbitt Willia m• and frtenda cnalH ID
Jodie lllller at awarda table. parade. 7. Do you cat scnsibl) in the
------------------------------------------. presence ofothers and make up for 1t
when you arc alone?
14. Has your physician ever treated
you for being overweight? I 5. Does your obsession with food
make you or others unhappy?
To cMH wllo are ... QrisdMs u4
tkrefore uve tneble wtdl die
aspect ef OA IMt~ diem a.
pet dtelr faJdl t. JCAS ~ritl. I
HUett dlat dley .-.di.le dteir ewa
cntra.I flpre of werHip aH .. a fftly
dlemselves Die baefitt of ~· ft.e
prop-am.
GREAT NEWS FROM
WIN :
• Hawa an Va .. al on
5 Oavs Ard I 2h'
• Ca forn a Ort, ..
'Ae~ e"'1 Gt-• l"· ~· .:. · l:l1 •v'
Ca~ forr .; Rn • ·
I
8. Is your weight affecting the way
you live?
9. Have you tried to diet for a week .
(or longer) and given up before you
By CHARLES GOREN
ud OMAR SHARIF
North-South vulnerable. North
deals.
NORTH + I 7 6 4
" Q 10 9 ~ K 5 3
+AK 3
l\'EST EAST
• J 5 l • 10 J
Q AK4 3 'V JSS
¢ 9 7 l ") J 10 I 6 + 10 I 6 + 9 7 4 2
SO TH
+AK Q 9
\:) 7 6 2
¢A Q 4
• Q J 5
The biddina:
N~ East ... . ...
2NT P-4. ·-
Soutb
l •
3 T
Paa
HOROSCOPE
W~t
Pass
Pass
Pus
--~
...... J.Dtt.U
By SYDNEY OMARR
If you answered yes to three or
more of these quesuons. )OU have a
potential problem with compulsive
Opening lead: ?
Few people have had grcaier un-
pact on the game of bridge as a
player, writer and editor than the
chairman of the Goren Editorial
Board. Richard L. Frey, who died
Oct. 17 after a long il~s. His
achievements arc too many cata-
logue in a bridge column. Suf 1 . 't
to say that it was his ability as editor
that guided many Goren bndge pro-
JectS from ideas to fulfillment; that
it was his training wbich was rcspon-
. sible for honing the talents of at
least four m-.jor bridge writers; and
that his playing skill was rccoifliz.ed
by the American Contract Bndge
League when they in tituted the
master point plan and conferrred
upon him o ne of the ten honorw
Life Master titles they a"at"dcd. ~c
~ill miss him sadly and long.
There arc many remarkable
hands testifym1 to his prowess as a
player. One of our favorues 1s this
quiet hand from a rubber bndge
game, m wbich he held the West
cards. We like North's decision to
jump to two no trump on his bal·
anced hand even though he bad
four-card support for bis partner's
suit. H is decision to correct to four
spades is less felicitous.
Frey realized that the chances of
finding his panner with two tncl.s
"ere remote. However, be had lis-
tened to the bidding, and that
brought forth an idea. The queen of
hearts was quite probably 1oing to
be in the North band, so he found
the dt'>1l1sh opening lead of a low
heart
Not surprisinily, declarer played
dummy's nine, and an astonished
E.tst found his jack held the trick. A
heart return allowed West to cuh
the ace-king. West continued with
the 13th heart. East ruffed with the
ten and, when declarer overruff cd,
West's 1aclc was promoted to the
etting trick! "'
AAIES(March -1 --\pnl 19): What ap~arcd to "slip
a~y" wiU come bounc1n1 back and )OU get provcrbtal
second chance. I nclucks love. mone}. fitness Older
1ndiv1dual, authont fiaure. pcm1bl> father. Will figure
UBRA (~pl. 23-0ct 22): Go sJow, be d1plomauc.
realize that recent gift may not be returned despite 1n1t1al
10d1cauons Meuaae will become crys~l<lear. Spotli&ht
on emplo) ment. pets. fitness.
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21): What Vi8s lost will be
ttrovertd, '1e-.s v.111 be '1ndiated, you'U actually be
selected as .. mediator." Sclf<0nfidcncc 1s restored.
ind1v1dual who on1inally laid blame on you will now
acknowlcdae error.
promuicndy. ·
TAURUS (Apnl 20-Ma\' 20): Stress 1ndepc:nden«.
courqe of conv1ct1on, rt"af1ze you arc due to make
amends for ~nt errors. Member of opposite SC\ d0ts care . .-111 no tonecr be ~u'e about 1t.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Financial windfall 1s
dishnct posid)ilit). What had bttn 9'\lhhcld v.111 be
rclcucd. Cancer and Capncom people play s11n1ficant
roln. Mo~ fa•ily, propcrt) fiaurc ~m1ncntly
CANCER (Junt 21-July 22): lnd1v1dual you rcspcc1
dtt'larn. .. It 1s ubiquitous. 1t lS chnivc and you beuer be prepe~ to SlJCnd more than on11nally annapattd."
Focus on ~nonahty, body 1fn11C, ~ulanon.
LEO (July 23-Aut. 22): Money bdOftll .. to another
comes into )Our hands. at teast tftnpontity. Focut alto on
love rclattonsh ip. emit i v1 ty. offer that involves challeftlt,
dcadhne, tn~I. vmGO (Aus, 23-Stpt._ 22~ Reed and wri.tc. cMdt
ICMltte materill. bt percetM•~ 1n ~ wida ..-tc
cl..es.hints..mer 1= Memwof~tc1niluy1119to
"1ell you tometlt•ftl. .. Protect your -.• fill*. .. .:
SAGITrAJUlJS (No . 22-Dtt. 21 ): focus on power.
authonty, ttttnt investment wtucb will pay d1vldmds.
Respon11beht1CS 1MttaK. rclatJOnshtP 1n1m11fiel. Lone-
ranac ~ come into focus.
CAPIUCORN (Dre. 22-Jan. 19): tum.:r::: et
removed, )Ou win thends and influence . ~
will be "bidcbna-for your lttVtea. pn)ducta. ·sy
nt1,rooms uDWUda. CllJAIUUl(Jan. 20-Feb. II)'. You11 be '"llMhiw" conc~nuaalepl rilltts. pmrnaions.. ~ oe..,..
llltus.. ~Mnlrip. c:Mece to recover llllilc:ill -. ~.~II ftD8id. . ,._(~ ~MardllO):F1nti~~
comet. -Will com-• • ,ow II ,..
wtuen. ~.~r-il) -·~· c S S II i1I 1•1111 ..... ti ...... rw;;• If ......... ,... ... ............... l:t• .....
.Scorpio peGllle • •w• 1,....
__ )
ca Ofenge Coat DAILY PILOT I W9Cloeeday. o.o.mw 14, 1888
TBS
PAMIJ.Y
CQlCUS
by Bii Keane COUJlfTg a CUL TlJJtE by Maratta a. Marana BLOOll COUl'fTY
-·---..
"Deck the malls with boughs
of holly ... "
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
··1 can't find my credit cards."
PEANUTS
• I
J
I
' ..
WOK MAN
DENNIS THE MgNACE·
by Hank Ketcham
~·
by Charles M. -Schulz
'f'ES, StR .T14ERE SEEMS TO BE A DO I THINK HE COULD
10SECTION 203; TUE
·TURN SIGNAL
5140ULD 8E ACilVATEO
BEFORE THE VEl-llCLE
ENTERS me
INTERSECTION 11
MISTAKE .. WE CAME FOR A 006 PASS A DRIVERiS TEST ?
LICENSE. AND T~E'(VE 61\JEN ~IM -
A TEMPO~AR'I' DRIVER'S PE~MIT... : '---__.._,
GARFIELD
~c,i AM I .80 R£0 ... eoRE P, eoRE+>. ~ORE.P, ~ORE.P
DRABBLE
NORMAN, l'IJE. &Ul
WAIT1"'46 ~ T"o
~\MIN
&09Sl8&08E -CT'' ~I QA..t PrOOf ,
IMflCf -~1'-.. , ....,_,...--~~----' ;..' ..... ....-t
a
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
lUt:~ FAl~ rf,GIRL-1 ~=~FfOVf~!
ANt7, 11\JCl ~Y. .zt.At\J~N6-'b.J ~LP litllK-fi'O'N' MY t.AF{EeR! A ~~~~.........,.. 0
0
f
by Pat Brady
ARLO. AND JA1'18
GE~.ff~Y .• I .WOW
't10t} ~ WiU. ...
.
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
JUDGE PARKER
~ ltE. AA~~,
D?NI l"E8S ~lt-E
HA1Rm ri -L .________......
by Jimmy Johnson
!JHE. ~'( AAf, &llGUlill
~.'
by Harold Le Ooux
YES ... BUT IF YOU CAN'T
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DOONESBURY
A f<XJr/JALJ,,
6M1t~ I
1H()(K,HT we t MR& (i()IN6
• 7tJUJNOfl • I ' ..
by Garry Trudeau
by Tom Batluk
•::::"::':...:-~ .. ~-::
•• to to•,... fov· .,..._ .. -.ch
TOOL IN
I 1· I I' I
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