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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-12-19 - Orange Coast PilotMONDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1988 25 CENTS Bail and ·fatewell; Coast c ·Iears Bounctn pellets surprise residents. utntghtskiesc ear orparadtng boa ts Marble-size chunks of ice fell from the skjes Sunday and provided Or- ange County with yet another chapter in this month's Weird Weather Digest, but forecasters say thinas Cabinet choice- President-elect Bush today named New York's Rep. Jack Kemp to head the Department of Hous- ing and Urban Develop- ment./ AS World Foreign Minister Shimon Peres says Israelis will talk to the PLO if declar- ations renouncing ter- rorism prove true./ A4 should return Lo normal in a day or two. • If you thouJht you were hearing someone playing pingpong on your roof Sunday, you weren't alone. The brief hajlstorm tap-danced on roofs and streets from Huntinaton Beach to Mission Viejo, causing no reponed damage but a lot of spectacle. Restaura teur earns annua l chamber a wa rd By PAUL ARCHIPLEY OflMD.ilJNltlUlf Hans Prager was restless. A self-described ·A· personality, he was bored and beginning to regret that he had agreed to attend the annual -and so far sedate -Newpon Harbor Arca Chamber of Commerce installa- tion dinner. But he began to realize he might be more than just another chamber member in the crowd when he spotted his 84-year-old mother in the room. Accustomed to being the host, the owner of the four-star Ritz restaurant in Newpon Center soon learned he was the guest of honor, for a change. J>ra.ger said it came as a "total surpnse" when he was named the I 988 Citizen of the Year at the recent banquet. A Jiving Horatio Alger success story, the 59-year-old Prager rose from the ranks of Nazi Germany refugees to become one of the nation's premier ·restaurateurs. Born in 1929. Prager was 10 when his family fled Germany shortly after his father had been released from the concentration camp at Buchenwald. (Pleue Me NEWPORT I A2) "Ifs unusual to .aet it in the coastal ~ and definitely unusual this earty an the year," said Michael Lewis, National Weather Service meteorol<>sist. ··eut when you get any kind of water around cold air, hail is what you get." Unusual haJ been &he norm 90 far in a month that has brou&ht howlina · summer-like Santa Anas l'ollowed by bitter, snow-bearing skies. The latest spate of rain and chill this weekend caused surprisin&ly few problems along the Orange Coast. according to local law enforcement officials. About 16,500 Southern California Edison Co. customers in Orange County lost power briefly over the weekend for a variety of reasons, includina cars hitting power poles. cold temperatures, rain and even isola~ li&htnins strikes. Western Medical CCnter an Santa Ana •as forced to operate on auxiliary power generators for more than an hour Sunday. Edison spokesman Mike Manin said power for most customers was out for only a half minute or less. but some Santa Ana custo~n were still without power this momma. There werenoseriousoutaacs in coast ciues. Manin said. The chilly weather and anter- m ittent showers didn't deter thousands of people from· lining the shores of Ncwpon Harbor \O watch the 80th annual Newpon Harbor Boat Parade of Lights. Clear skies graced the first two nights of the gala holidayA_event , which sailed along smootn\J'. according to Newport .. .......... "-.... Hana Prater 8tanda in fron-1..0f Ida renowned 1'ewport reetaarant. Tile RJta. Beach Chamber of Commerct Presa· dent Richard Luehrs. ''We didn't have any problems. It was a bit nippy out 1here, but we had 1woclear1ughts, •· Luehrs said. "It was great." • Panly cloud) slues were forecast through Tuesday, with a 20 percent chance of rain late today increasina to 30 percent tonight, Lewis said. Hiah temperatures today weren't expected to break the 60-degree mark, and lows could dip into the upper 30s toniaht. (Pleue Me WEIRD/ A2) $25-;f)f)f) fine for dumping sewage By IRIS VOi.OJ Of .. .,.., ........ The Reuben E. Lee restaurant's parent company must pay a $25,000 fine for illepl dumpi,og of raw sewaae into Newport Bay and may have to pay another fine of up to $20,000 to he Santa Ana Rcgjonal Water Quali- ty Control Board. The Restaurant Ente['Pri5CS Group was assessed the $25,000 pcnaJty after ·pleadin& no contesr-Thursday to one misdemeanor count of violauna state water code. As a rtSult, charges filed apinst restaurant General Manqier James Wade and Area Manaaer Patrick Dudley were dropped. The two man~crs and the corpor- ation had ori11nally each been charged with two felon y ~unts of unlaWful d1schaf'I( of scwaae. The floating restaurant. an authentic rcpbca of a M1ss1ss1ppi riverboat. alJelcdly operated a plumbina syslem that dumped waste mto the harbor. The waste allegedl y was dumped three to sax umes a year. whenever the restaurant's pumping system malfuocuooed. Prosecuton not only ac.ccpted the no contest plea, but aJso lowered the charscs to misdemeanors. "We felt basically the activity was more negl~.nf than intentional. and if 1t was negligent, u·s a misdemeanor under the lav.:· Deputy OJstrict (Pleue 8ee REUBEll/A2) I Business 85-6 87-8 87 A6 A9 A7 C_leanup Of oil spill nearly comple~e Clasaffted CrOS1Word Entertainment Opinion ~=notices Sports Weather 89-10 8 1-3 A2 -Top prize aoesinto Edison's food drive BJ ROBERT BARU R °' .. ..., ........ Edison Hiah School students have com~ a staaeringly successful canned food drive for nttdy families in Huntinaton Beach and adjoinina cities. They collected nearl¥ 8,QOO cans of food that the Hunt1n1ton Beach JuniorWoman'sOub haulcdawayin truck.lollds. The club will pack the food and distribute it to poor fa milies in ill annual Operation Merry Christmas propam. Other IChoOls in the Huntinaton 8eadl Union Hiah School District joined in limillr outpourinas of lloliday llMOft tmen>Sity. A&. Marina lti&h. the students stored their colleciions in Principal Ira Toibin's office. They collected so much that Toibin hid to find another ~ to work. ofticialt said. "Thel, absolute_ly outdid the mselves. • tacher Ed Pooc •id. fountain V'llley H~ School also rcponed a wccessful fOod drive. And saudents there also previously took blankets ud food to the hunpy and !cold in Meaico. At Edilon, students were buuina 'fri\b Wei of individual exploits. Two 1 1~ David Barry ud Kyle M ttacale. colllclfd 400 cans of._. between ahem. SolUI .._.., meda ca.. won the --~~ictt-tohe•Dim party. fbr colectiftl -mOll bMI. (fin I -•lllJAI) By BOB VAN EYlt.EN Of .. .,.., ........ Huntington Beach Co. offi cials said they expected to finish mopping up an oil spill toda)'. that dumped 500 gallons of crude oil into the soil at a condominium complex across from City Hall on Friday. The oil spewed from a ruptured production pipeline under the dri ve- way at the complex, which is located at Yorletown and Lake avenues. Officials do not know how the rupture occurred, but say the leak was contained before 1t did any serious daf1\lle. "We actually got lucky; not that much spilled." said Joe Gonzales. an inspector with the Chevron Oil Co., which owns the Huntington Beach Co. Some oil spilled into a drainage ditch and reached the beach. but the bulk of that mess was cleaned up b) SatunSay, said Roger Work. acncral maneacrofthe Huntington Beach Co. -a development firm. "A lot of the oil is still in the soil at the site. but it's not goi ng anywhere ... he said. "We should have that last part of it cleaned up b) toda) " U.S. Coast Guard officials. who monitored the spill. said lmle oil ~ched the open water. Most of the 011 that reached the beach ~as baited in I makeshift containment basin and sucked into tanker trucks. The broken two-inch p1pchne car- nes crude oil from a leased pro- duct1on Sile near Cit~ .Hall to a processing plant on Huntington Av- enue. The plant 1s J01ntly owned by Cu) Oil and the Huntington Beach Co. Work esumated the total cost of the spill at $30.000. That figure. he said, includes replacement of a ponion of the cobblestone driveway at the (Pl eue Me O&/ A2) . Fitness (:ICademy 's futute is beginning to look flabby F rem staff aa4 wire reports Fund-raising failures. missed dead lines and local disenchantment are tbreatenina to shatter former NFL CI09Ch ~Allen's dream ofbu1ld- ina a S?O million national fitness academl in south Oranse County. Allen s National Fitness Foun- dation, endorsed by Ronald and Nancy Reqan, Bob Hope. Walter Payton and Donald Trump. r.11sed about $3 million from 1983 to 1987, far less than needed. Most of the money is now gone. Money for the academ) was also raised by a 25-yeu-old North Caro- lina woman who ran the entire border of the continental United tatcs on behalf of the aca<km y. She com plrtcd her 10,800-milc jog m Septcrnbcr. dashing into Anaheim Stadium at halftime 4uring a Rams game. ~utocrat1c leadership, high O'cr- head. questionable spending. poor umc management and pnckl~ rela- tions wuh local official combined "'1th the lack of support from prospcc- uvc benefactors to cast doubt on the nitcd States Fitness ~cadcm) pro- ject. Onetime foundation executive di- rector Bob Math ias. who won the Olympic decathlon gold medal twtce. blames his former boss. · .\llen. 65. was asked to seek donauons from a Im of "eahh' co rp o rai e leade rs and ph1lanthrop1sts. but refused. Mathias said. "He said he didn't have lime for that." Mathias said in a recent 1nten 1cw ··He worked on other projects .. and as a result. nothmg happened .. .\lien . ...,.ho never suffered a losin.& sea n 1n 14 'cars as a professional head coach. biamts ht own lllC\pen- ence 1n fund-raising and business. but also attnbutcs the foundauon·s woes on the failure of the U.S. public to embrace the project. _ .. rm not a fund·r:uscr," Allen said. 'T'e nevtr raised funds. "You sec. I'm lund of na1"e. l d1dn'1 think an}onc would object to doing something to help the future of this country." <\lien. who was named Nauonal Football Ltague <'Ol<'h of tM year (Pl ..... ACADUIY /.UI Suspect gets lost while fJ.eeirw scene of robbery on PeDinsa£a . • Conaty'• womenjall hamate. r:aU nnllorms a fasJJJon felony The womee Uled IO .., blue jeus. shirts, swaatjedceu, ud leaDil tboel. Jail ofticiala l&id they decilled to switch tbe uniforms to cut coaa. But sberifrs spokesman LL Dick OllOD wu waaware bow mucb JDODeY wu beilll llVed . .. With tbe jumpeujt you oaly bave one piece.•• Ollon said. .. It's an easier type o( thine for inventory.•• Tbe jumpmitl have maps. white ltitchina and the words .. ~ County Women's Jail" stenciled on tbe blct. latllld oltenDit lboel. tbe in..,... Gip lrOUDd ia black canvas .............. --au. dolll" by daew °"'Tbere01 DO arch IUpport," Cof· 6nu said. .. lf you bave to ll&Dd for IDY lmslh of time, you fed it. ~·re lllo very cJanteroua if ~·· any water around." Deputy Public De~ Holly SteenberJen said the officen usually .. tab a real humane approech" to tbe women inmates, but ~ it teem unfair to llCl rid of the old unifonnL .... Israeli parties to form gove~nment JERUSALEM (AP) -Leaders of minister was.still tryina to set smaller Janel's two main political · blocs, · religious and nationalist parties to Ukud and Labor, aareed today to join a broad coalition. form a coalition government, media .. We cannot drink 'l 'chaim' yet," rcpons said. he said, referring to the traditional State-run Israel radio and Israel Hebrew toast mcanina "to life ... television both reported that the two Israel army radio said the aaree- penies reached ~eemcnt when mcnt -seven wccks after pertia- Likud's Prime Minister Yitzhak mentary elections-was reached in a Shamir agreed 10 demands by the meeting between negotiators Dan center-left Labor Party that Labor be Meridor of the ri&ht-w1ng Likud and given leadership of the powerful Moshe Shahal ofl.abor. parliament finance committee. It said Labor and Likud also settled Avi Pazner, a top aide to Shamir, a dispute-over how many Jewish said agreement had been reached on settlements would be built in the major issues but that the prime occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, aareeing on a figure of five to eiaht new settlements in the nel(t year. Labor bad been tryina to bold down settlements because they could be an obstacle to the party's plan to )rade land for peace with the Palestihians. Likod. had promised as many as 40 settlements to a nationalist party it was tryinJ to lure into a coalition. The army radio report said any settlements after the first year would have to be approved by the Finance MiniW)', which would beJ>caded by Labor leader Shimon .Peres, now the foreign minister. REUBEN E. LEE FINED $25,000 ••• Prom Al Attorney Diane Kadletz said. Newport Beach Police had rec- ommended felony charges on the theory that the plumbing system's design indicated intent. B<>th Kadletz and police en- vironmental coordinato r Greg Armstrong said they were satisfied with the S25,000 fine. although the original charges could have brou&ht a\)put ma~imum fines ofS I 00,000'. "We ho~ the right message was conveyed,· Armstrong said. The conclusion of the criminaJ aspect of the case now opens the door for a penaJty to be assessed by the regional water quaJity control board. HcaJth officials had already issued a complaint for two spills documented during investigations, but the board had agree4 10 delay proceedings because of the pending criminal action. said Bruce Paine, sanitary engineering associate for the board. A Feb. lU public bcanng before the board was scheduled on the assessment matter, but the fine may be negotiated and settled before-then, Paine said. The $10,()()0..a-day fine is the maximum the board can levy for a dhcharge. Restaurant Enterprises Group was not available for commenL FITNESS ACADEMY ••• From Al four umes in 12 ycan. has not been accused of misappropriating. the money. In fact, w records show he hasn't drawn his S 125,()()()..a-year salary sjnce January 1987. · After Allen formed the foundation in 1983, Oraqe County leaders virtuaUy pve him the 190-acrc {>arcel, and plans for a sprawlina fitness trainina center for volunteer coaches and teachers were drawn up. ~ The~ included a 120-foot-hiah "Flame of fitness," a va11 .. Gate of Strcnath" and a main buildina 1,200 feet &Ona and 300 feet wide. The lcademy was to be built on a 190-acre site aJo• the banks of Aliso Creek between Laguna Beach and Aliso Viejo. lftbe academy is SCf'lpped, the site will automatically become part of a 5,4()()...acn rqjonaJ park. NEWPORT RESTAURA:NTEUR HONORED ••• From Al The family briefly stopped in Italy before moving on toa refugee camp in Shanghai where they struggled to survive under the Japanese occupe- lfon. Both his father and grandfather died there. But it was during those trying days that Praacr began what would tum into a litC-long l ove of the restaurant business. He became an apprentice cook there in 1945, and when the family wasaJlowed to immigrate to America. he immediately went 10 work at restaurants here. "I got very, very lucky," he said. "When you first go into a career )'OU really don't know what you want. But it's been great for me." His first job in the U.S. was at the renowned Scandia. He also appren- ticed at the Waldorf Astoria in New York City, taught cooking in the U.S. Army. worked at the Tail-of-the- Cock restaurant in Los An&eles and was executive chef at Metro Goldwyn Mayer studios. After returning to Scandia for the fourth and final time as executive chef, Prager went to work for Lawry's in 1959. > He rose to general manager in the specialty restaurant division and opened the popular five Crowns restaurant m Corona dcl Mar. In 1970. Prager formed a partner- ship to open the Gulliver's restaurant chain. In 1976, he opened the Bell and Crown. followed a year later by the opening of the Ritz. then located near the Newport Pier. He moved to Newport Center in 1982 when Paci fic Mutual went looking for a top restaurant for its plaza. PTl&ef describes himself as a son of "benevolent dic\ator" to the 110 people .. ~ It thf IW.. As a naturalmd citilea, .._~a s · place.in his heart for tbe · ny =rues who work in th res-taurant. "Most of my guys arc qualifying for amnesty," he said. He relates to "those who rcaJly care about America and arc wiUing to work hard." "I have no feelinj at aJI for those who expect everyth1n1 to be handed to them on a silver ~latter. This is the land of opportumty. An)'1hing is possible," he said. Tha doesn't meap Prager has turned his back on those less for- tunate than him. His selection as Citizen of the Year was made in large part because of his philanthropic work. For instance, he founded the Ritz Brothers, a charitable organization with more than 750 members. This year, the Ritz Brothers will donate more than $75.000 to such groups as the Cos~a ~csa-based Save Our Selves organization. It is Prqer's willingness to help his fellow man that led 10 his selection by the past honorees. "It's not any one S(>C_Cific event." chamber president Ri chard Luehrs said. "It's how often. We look at a guy who's done the most. "It's not because he's chaired this or organized that. but because when- ever you ask, he comes through." Even a heart attack and open heart surgery several years back haven't seemed to slow Prager. Widl . ,.ty DO moua- tainl to=•. Pft..:.: lo apen yet aoe.ber ralmannt an the IPrina. 1n~· ......... and ton-in-law, _.nu to open a casual eatery \ reflects the Orange Coast lifestyle. The Yankee Tavern restaurant will be located at the old Baxter's site on Bayside Drive neat Pacific Coast Hif!!way. • It will be a place in which you can dress anyway you want and you won't have to make a loan with the bank to IC' out of there," he said. Unlike the aourmet dinina ex-~ It the Ritz, the DCW restaurant will specialize in serving old-fashion- ed but popular fare like pot roast, brisket of beef and varied catch from the Atlantic seaboard. Pruer hints that he may slow down after tne new restaurant opens. The Yankee Tavern will be de- sisned in such a way that it could be duplicated elsewhere -should his partners "have the desire and abili- ty," Praaer said. But he won't be helpina lhat effort. "I'll just JO visit," he said. There IS one area where Pruer will step up bis participation. FoDowina his selection as Citizen oftbc Year, he confessed with a smile, he•u have "to do • little more for the Chamber of Commerce now." OIL ••• Prom Al condominium complex. "We'll repair the break in the p1vement with asphalt today, and then when the weather clears up, we'll One ~otto ticket worth $6M put the cobblestone bmck," he 11id. City officials say f:riday's oil spill was on the small side for Huntiqton Beach, a city whote around is SACRAMENTO (AP)-The mid- week lotto jackpot starts over at an estimated SS million after someone picked all six numbers in the weekend drawina. a state lottery official said. The winning ticket bou&ht in Los Alamitos is worth $6,050;286, said lottery spokes,.,oman Kathy Manzer. Winners' i'dc tities arc unknown until they c · their prizes. Tbe num rs picked by machine Saturday for the twice-weekly "Lotto 6-49'' pmc were: I, 8, 18, 19, 20, 27 ~~E Illy l'lllt MAIN °"9CI -•WWI-., ti, COM• M.M. CA 1111111.-.. eoc 15IO, c..--.. CA mH ~ .... '42·""· .,....,_ • edllorllll ..,_.HI • and the bonus number. 34. crillCl'OSICd wtth active and inactive Seven players picked , five of six pipelines. · numbers plus the bonus for S.232,466 , Jn ......... l987, a broken line at each. Those tickets were bouahl in OoldeftWest Street and Ellis Avenue Pleasant Hill. Stockton. Hacienda oozed 400 pllons into lbe toil. H · •h Los A I N · Both Fnday's leak and the 1987 es.,.ts, nae cs. auonalf:ity, ru,..,_ an dwarfedp"l. 1 1981 • ...in Riverside. and Perris. ....--2 .,,. A he "'"3 · k had fi . that susbed I .000 Ions of cnlde no1 r JV lie ets . 1v~ <?f llll oil into soil and ttorm drains. That numbers for a $2,309 1nd1v1dual miapoccumdlntthanamilef'rom· payout. There werc.19, 729 winners in • the t.tell spill. the four out of 11x category. each Friday's spill was ditcovered 11 ticket &ood for $38. 7:20 Lm. Ja•tcaU 842-8088 • U1 .,,,,_ .,_ .. ........ ,... .... ., u ......... , ................. ..... ..... -~· ....... ,...,..,.. ..,.,, ..... .... ........ ,... ... .. ----Oln 1JIJA 'JJfJlflHll • U.S •. Tempa • Tide~~ • TOOAY $.cOtlO ll>gll 7 22 p m 3 6 $eCof\d lo. II 53 p m 2 I TUUOAY "~' "'Gh e 23 1 m e s F111110w U7pm 10 SeconO 111911 8 ti p m 3 7 Sun .... lodly •• 447 pl!>,·-TUftday ., • 52 • m .,.., NII .... 47 P"' ~NII 11 4 25 I m T~. and ,_1122tpm CM ministry founder denies charges By 1'lte .A1Mdate4 Presa· A financial committee of lhe Full Gospel Business Men's Fellowship International in Costa Mesa claims its founder used thousands of dollars from minjstry funds to p1y personal bills. Demos Sha.lt.arian denies the ac- cusations and claims 1hey stem from a power strugle within the Pentecostal congrcption. Af\er an audit. the financial com- mittee demanded Shakarian repay $168, I 20 allegedly used for personal medical and lqal bills. It also claimed he used $107,916 in ministry funds for travel and enter- tainment expenses. The committee sent a letter to the Internal Revenue Service informing the agency that Shakarian's income from 1981 to J 987 was $276,036 higher than he reported, said committee chairman Gerald Walker. The committee also accused Shakarian ·s son. Steve, of using S7S,326 in church money for travel expenses during a seven-year period and another $34,595 for beby-sittina fees. Shakarian said his son is also innocent. HIGH SCHOOLS' FOOD DRIVES SUCCEED ••• From Al But class members unanimoulsy vo~ to give the, pizza to the need~. fiaurina that the hungry needed It more than they did. OneclulcoUectcd $24 in food, and their teacher, Bruce Belcher, matched it with money out of his own pocket. Student body President Juhe Gee said that when she took office in September her top goal was to involve the students in helping out the community. The mammoth food drive was the perfect example of that. she said. But Edison students, w_!io have "adopted" Ocean View Elementary School, took clott\ina and toys to the elementary children even though the high school students had a day off ·from classes. • "There's been a &JUl turnaround of spirit (at the school)," Gee said. "It's totally opposite from last year. The entire student body ~ts along. We're like one big family, not a school." Darren Lance, a varsity football player who also is a member of the student senate that planned the food drive campajgn, said students arc now considering the idea of organiz- ing a chanac day when they come back to school in January. They'll empty their pockets of change and donate it for a aood cause. "We don't need it, and it will go 101 good cause1" he said. Edison Principal Brian Garland said the food drive reminds the younasters how fortunate 1hey are not lo be hunary and in need. ..It Jives them a spirit of brotherhood and being their brother's keeper," Garland said. "They're showinft their concern and love for their fe ow man." WEIRD WEATHER CONTINUING ••• Prom Al Skies should be clearing by Tues- day, with temperatures climbing into the lower 60s, bewis said. Rain-slickencd streets caused by linaerina showers Sunday were blamed for causin& a teen-ager to lose control of his car and slam into a power pole with enough force to cut the car in two. Roan Von Tran, J 7 of Garden Grove was thrown 50 iect from the wrecltqe and suffered serious head and internal injuries from tbe crash, Anaheim police Officer Mike Bran- nipn uid. About S,000 Pacific Bell customers in the Saa Fernando and San Gabriel valleys were expected to be without complete phone service through Tuesday. Phone service was lost over the weekend because of wcather- rclated problems, said spokeswoman Lissa Zan ville. Snow was fallina Sunday niaht in the Cajon Pass, and motorists on Interstate 15 were advised to carry chains today, California Highway Patrol Officer Charlotte Foley said . The storm snarled traffic and heavy snowfall forced road closurn late last week on Hjpway IOI in San Luis Obispo Coun~t lnlentate S in the mouarains aonn of Loi Aftldes and on Interstate I 5 in Cajon Pass above San Bernardino. Sliahtly more than a tenth of an inch of rain fell on downtown Los An~les on Sunday, boosting the city s totaJ to 2.22 inches for the season, compared to a normal level of 3.41 inches for the date. · Mountain areas will have west to nonhwnt winds to 30 mph, with snow level liftina to about tne 61~ foot level. Hi&h temperaturn wiu be in the 40s ancJ lows toni&ht will be in the upper teens to upper 20s. n. A...a.le4 Pren ceatnhte4 ..... ,.,,.,... 0rMg9C0Mt DAILY P9LOT/..._, OeoelftDer 11, 1-* Al M AKING THE GRADE .,__ ~ ---~ Drive for canned food to benefit the hungry, homeless Mock court involves trial and error Bt.?REG &LEll&X A canned food drive to benefit Share Our Selv~ °' ....,,.. .... in Costa Meu is bein1 conducted throuah Friday at Chad Ti liner always thought being a defense attorney the chiropractic ofreces of the Irvine fa1ttity flwlth-1o-~~-t1am"°""1job. Center. "You act into this 'Perry Mason' syndrome where SOS · fit · f th t h 1 th you want to act up the~ and say, 'Where were you on the 11anonpro 1 orpniza ion a e ps e niahtof .. .' "Tillnersaid,smilingandshakmgh1shead. "h homeless and hunary people throuahout our area. If doesn't really work that way." a aoaJ of 12,000 cans is reached, three of the doctors What Tillner and 17 other Corona del Mar Hiah have pledpd to donate a matching cash contribu-School students discovered .during the· recent Orange tion. County Mock Trial Competition is that n takes a lot of Donations will be accepted at the chiropractic hard work to turn the wheels of the Amencan legal system. offices, 141 ~Culver Drive, Suite 103. Additional And they apparently learned quite a bit: The team informationmaybeobta~edbycalling857-1888. was one of 16 to make it to the semi-finals of the · Winter classe. sc.IJedaled Reg!stration is being accepted for the city of Laauna Beach's winter classes, which are scheduled to_ begin in the first part of January. Classes will be offered in such areas as dance, excercise, martial art~ tennis, spanish, dog training, cooking.. and vanous crafts. Winter proarams are beina mailed to Laguna residents and are also available at the city's recreation department, located at SIS Forest Ave. Further information can be obtained by calling the department office at 497-3311 . ext. 201. Hotline tralnlng offe'ted competition. A total of 46 teams from across the county joined in the competition. • Corona del Mar was eliminated in the semi-final round Nov. 29, but adviser Don Lowry called the com~tition a success for hi s students. "They really learned a lot. which is what it's all about," Lowry said. '"They got more of a working knowledge of the legal procedure and legal courtesy. It's good education." ,Each mock trial team learned the ins and outs of a fictional case called People vs. Willow. The fictional defendant, Chris Willow, is a high school dropout and editor of an undervound newspaper who is charged with one count of inducing a minor to take drugs and one count of selling drugs. )"here is n~ rig~t or wrons verdict in the case, and only wnness test1mon1es arc scnpted. euminauon, croswxam1nation. objection and other courtroom techniq~. The compeut1on took ~ at the Oranae Count) Courthouse in ~~~Jrr~ ,...1,.,;·~~~ .... -+-t>usmess was cone . J e.ach team in the compet1t1on, with1>0intsawa fororpnization. presentation and the effectiveneu of examination and cross-examination. Joel Rosenquist. an attorney for Corona del Mar's defense team, said the intric:aC'les of the legal system surprised him. '"You really have to prove someone guilty beyond a reasonable doubt," Rosenquist, a senior. said ... lfthere's any doubt, they're innocenL You have to cover everything and be able to support everything." Tillner said he discovered that the term "reasonable doubt" has many,inte~tations. .. h gets.weird.'' said Tillner. also a senior. "It can be almost anything. You just have to plant a doubt 1n the judge's mind." Senior Eric Antebi a pr:osecutor for the Corona del Mar team, said his mock tnal experience showed him the meaning of teamwork in the lepl system. ''You pretty much have to work together on everything,· said Antebi, who wants to be an attorney. "It can't be a one-man show or it doesn't work ." . All three participants aarecd that defending or prosecuting a real case would be far different from their experiences in the competition. "It's fun to do 1t like this," Rosenquist said. "But if you had the power to put this gu y 10Ja1I for 20 }ears or let him walk. that would be pretty scary:· Tillner agreed. ''The thing here is that n's fun . You can sh"alre hands after and go home." ht ~la':"'' Nobody's ................. "-..... The Oran~ County__Scxual...,('s~ul~etwork is offcnng SO fiours of free training to anyone interested in volunteering to work on the Orange County Rape Crisis Hotline. The 6-week course will co,ver crisis inter- vention, counseling skills, advocacy skills and human resources available in Orange County. Classes will meet Monday and Thursday evenings from 6:30 to 10 and on Reb. 4 from 9 a.m. to S p.m. The Corona del Mar team. spht into prosecuuon and defense teams, worked on their case for about a month before the competition. They met after-school with th~ attorneys from the Newport• Beach law firm of'Sheppard. Mullin, Richter and Hampton. going over methods of I going to be s1tt.ina in jail. · "Th11 would be the unfun part.·: Doa Lowry adYIMd mock trial competlton. Be&ining Jan. 16, the training features presen- tations by local therapists, human service providers and professionals from various backgrounds specializing in sexual assualt and related issues. Further information can be obtained by calling Lynda Austin at 538-78-78- Daily Pilot readers and advertisers are urged to donate unwrapped new gifts to help make the paper's fourth annual "Give a Little Christmas" program a success. The gifts 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. Gifts can be left under the Christmas tree in the lobby of the Daily Pilot offices. 330 Ba y St., Costa Mesa, on weekdayS-8 a.m. to S p.m. Gifts will be accepted through Dec. 2J. The"Givea Little Christmas" program was started in 1985 when Daily Pilot employees realized many children -especially teen- agers -would not receive gins becauS( of family hardships. In the first three years, more than 3.000gifts have been distributed through the program. Goel: 2,QOO gifts for local children Current merk: 453 Mon.day, Dec. 19 • 6 p.m. H•atiastoa Buell City CoucU, council chambers, 2000 Main St. • 6:30 p.m. Cotta Mesa City Conell, council chambers, 77 Fair Drive. Tuesday, Dec. 21 No meetings schuduled r Santa 'shelpers workingbehiitdbars By n e Associated Press '"It's a good job, probably the best in the rounds with miniature circus animals that compound," said Rammos, 39. of Laguna twirl on a red wooden base, and boxes full Jim Ram mos is behind bars. serving 120 Beach, who as a teen-ager worked for of tiny, uneven wooden pegs that stack days for drunken driving, and much of his Matteflnc. -together fofi game called wobbly blocks. time is spent being Santa's helper. Rammos has spent the past two weeks The finished tO)"S arc gi ven to Orange- Rammos and 11 other inmates at the making pull-toys from scrap wood, mclud-wood, the county s home for abused and Th La B h J .1 . 0 . ing gray elephants. green alligators and nel!ected children. eo cy ranc a1 m range are using brown camels. ' jail time to craft toys for abused and . William Steiner. executive director of neglected children. · Other inmates are making merT)·go-the Orangewood Children's Fou ndation. 500protest eviction ·or ~aychapter · from church SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-A gay priest with AIDS led 500 people in protest of prayer and sona as the last chapter of a national ga) Cathohcgroupstill meeting 1n a pansb church in a major U.S. cny was evicted. Holding hands. si nging traditional church hymns and carrying crosses and lighted candles. local members of Dignity and their supporters marched a mile from St. Boniface Church after an .. exodus service" to the City's cathedral Sunday night. "The churclt has been my father. my famil y, for much of my life. particula rly after my physical family rejected me for being gay." said sobbing marcher Jeff Koerner. 31. "Now rm doubly an or- phan." A Christmas wreath bearing a huge pink triangle. a symbol of the p y nghts movement, was left at SL Marys entrance doors. Dignity leaders portrayed the1rcv1cuon. brought about by a refusal to endorse Church teaching that homosexuality 1s immoral. as a gift from God. and said they would abide. "But we walk from here free ... for to sta) would have meant for us to accept self- hatred and self-doubt," Jim Lonergan of Dignity told the congregation. The local Dignit) branch had sponso.-ed a Mass at St. Boniface for 15 )ears. but Archbishop John R. Quinn on Dec. J banned the group from all church propcrt) after Sunday. Quinn said a special Mass at t. Maf) 's Catbedral on undav evenings "ould be • • • Tom Fry. co-foander of J>tcnlty. natloaal l•J Catllollc IJ'Oap, l•da memben lD a candleU,ht proteet la 8aD JlnDcl8co on SaDday. offered as an alternative for the Dign ity branc!U-350 regular members. At the final service. the Rev. Bob Arpin, who has Al OS. said the ouster challenged the group to accept persecution as Cl.rist did. .. To us. God is givin_1 the hol) task for being tn this world filled with hatred. prejudice and death to teach the world to love again," Arpin said. "We. whose love we are told is perverted." To cheers and applause. Arpin told the crowd it was sending "a clear message to the church in Romc:Llkc us or not. we are )'Our sons and daulhters. your pnests and nuns. ~our faithiul ones. We are the church.· Durin& the service. the COf!grepllon sang trad1t1onal h) mns and offered nu· merous prayers, includmg one for the pope and the local bishop, asking that .. their heans ma~ be turned from stone to flesh " By sponsonng its ~wn Mass. 01gnll~ was able to get pnests to gi ve tails reflecting its \'le"s. not nccessanl) the church·s. on homosexuality and other issues. Catholic officials across the countr. have ousted D1gn1t~ aroups from church fac1ht1e s m nearl) 40 cities dunng the last t"o 'cars becau~ of the 1986 reaffirma· t1on b, the Vatican that homose"<ualm is an "1ntnns1c evil" and 1s mcompatlble "1th Ca1hohc dogma. the fund-raising arm for the home, described the toys as top quality and popular with the kids. _ _ _ ~ "They're really darting.·· he said. "The guys really do a good )Ob." Instructor Harry 81lhnp, who oversccs the makeshift Santa·s workshop, said the inmates also act college credit for their work through Rancho Santiaao Collqe in Santa Ana. ' • TV. director Harold Bopper dead at age 81 Harold ••Jerry" Hopper. who directed films and episodes of the TV bits "Gunsmoke" and "Lea"e It To Beaver," died of hear1 failure at a San Clemente hospital. He was 81 . Hopper, wh o died Saturday at San Clemente General Hospital. wor~ as a radio script ·wnter and film editor before he bepn directing movies in the ear1y 19SOs. · He du"CCtcd IS films. including "The Pnvate War of MaJOr Benson," "Pony Express," "The Atomic City." "Never Say Goodbye:· "The To> Tiger" and "Naked A.hb1." He turned to tele' 1 ion directing 1n the 1960s. Hop~r. born in Guthne. Okla., on July 29. 1907. as survived b) his wife. Dorothy; six children; 15 grandchildren and three areat·p-andchildren. · A funeral was _planned for 3 p.!Jt. Tuesday at San Clemente Presbyterian Church. Bunal will be pnvate .• Andean condors released in state LOS A GELES (AP) -Three ~nckan condors ha' e been ~t frtt ID a mountain refuge so b1olog1sts ca n test techniques they will use to save Cahforn1a condors from exunct1on. the U.S Fish and W1ldhfe Service said toda) Only 28 endangered California condors remain abve. all in zoos in Los Angelesand San Diego, whcrt officials are trying to act them to breed 1n capttvll) ID hopes of starting to reintroduce them into the wild m fi,e to 10 )Cars. Man-, 28, critical after crash in.LB A stereo valued at S 1.500 "as stolen in a burglar) in the 19000 block of South Adams Street on Sunday. The burglary ~as discovered at 10:22 p.m. Newport Beach A suspect entered a residence ID the 100 block of Santa Rosa Court earl) Saturday and took S!5. The intruder. who entered throu&h the "lndow. was known by the res1den1. • • • Police were called to a restaurant m the 300 block of South Coast High· way at I :57 a.m. Sunda) where two people were seen standing outside brandishma firearms. The suspects we rt ionc when officers am' ed . was scratched and dented afternoon. turda~ Coeta lleea lmae .\ rn1dent of the 60 bloc!. ofE~cter "as nearly stabbed by one of two men he caught break1na into his car Saturday n1aht. As the resident ap. proached the car. one of the men took a sy.,1pe at him with a knife. then fled into an apanment comple' "•th the other suspect. The resident '-'3S not IOJllred.. -\n intruder pned open the front door 10 gain entl') in a house m the 1000 block of H1ckol') sometime dunng the da) Thursda~ while the resident was at work . .\ Jewclf) box and JewelT) va lued at $91 0 were taken. BJ LDLIE EARNEST ............. A resident of O,anae was critically ir\ju~ Sunday af\emoon in a car wreck that tied up traffic for nearly two hours alona Coast Highway in U.unaBach. f'redd Goodwin. 28. W.s hit broad- side after he pulled his 1987 Mitsubishi Mi,..e out of a driveway on the ocean side of North Coast Hithway ~of McKniaht Drive to malte a left tum just before 4 p.m. The driver and ~ssenJer of the second car Michael OoUfas 0wcns, 18, and Celia Alice Scrivener. 18, both of El C.n. sustained minor 1if\iuries. Owens wu drivina a 1986 ' ButlllltoD lleecla A dtizenl bind nidio valued at S 79 wu llolen from a car in the 1200 block ol!n A"lflo Drive at about I :10 a. a. MonetaY. Solne'OQC re-~ llMlhed IM ~111rr-sidc Window IO enter the car. BIOod WIS foaid on lbe unUhed window. ••• Two me1a wert arrtlkd after al- uytllt 10 break in so a car ia the Plftilll lo& at .._launt llMI sarectt at I l:ll p.m. Chevrolet Camaro. A helicopter stood by in a nearby field as firefighters used the Jaws of life to remove Goodwin from has car. Goodwjn. who was unconscious dur- ina the fliaht to Mission Communny Hospital in Mission VieJO. was listed in critical condition this morning followin1 SUflttY. Following the wreck. traffic "as slowed to a crawl when all but one southbound lane was closed while invest1ptors examined the scene of the collision. ._ Both Owens and Scri•cncr "ere cumined at South Coast Medical Center in South lquna and released Sunday cven1na. Ozone Surf and Skate, 2905 New- port Blvd .. was burglarized over the weekend. apparentl) by a hot-headed surfer. The store's employees re- ported that an aluminum storqe shed was forced open and 200 packages of surf wax and li ve surf- board baas were taken. The thief then used the wax to leave a messa_JC on one of the store windows: .. Ozone sucks. Thanks for the wa"<." . . . ~ Someone got 1nsJ<Se a parking lot surrounded by chain link and barbed wire fence and entered a 27-foot Bayhncr boat throuah a shd1ng glass window. The boat's owner reponed two tadios. a tele v1s1on. a compass and a depth finder missing. The loss was estimated at S 1.3 IO. • • • Two Wlndows at Halhday's Men's Cloth1na at 1104 lrvuw A\'t, Wttt smashed S01Mt1mc between Satufda) n1pt and Sunday mom1na in an apperen1 auempc lO remove cloth1na frOm Ille datplay C8IC'I. Howtver. iron llCUrity 11~ illlldc tf1e •indO• kepi die drid..,_ lak1na the clothn ............. ••• .\t appro"matel) the same time. a v.oman reponed heanns three proplc outside her residence in the 31000 block of Holly Ome. Officers found no susJ)'Ctsat the sctne. Police report the woman had been dnnking. • • • A rock was apparenth thro"'n • • • Someone stoic the bumpers. teer- 1n1 whttl ind stereo from a I Q6 Volkswqcn Bua while the car "as parked 1n the 50 block ofWm1erm1st bet"'een m1dntaht Saturda> and a m. Sunda)'. • • • Another unwelcome '1sitor entered a residence in the 400 block of Fair DnH sometime bet""ttn 12.30 and 6:40 a m Fnda) ""h1le the occupant~ were slecp1og and took cash and (1prettcs valued at SSO. • • • The manaaer of the Newpon Bay Inn on Newport Boulevard said a suspect flooded the first and second , floors of the hotel earl) Sunday afttt bell'\I asked to tone do-v.'TI a party. throuah 1 v.mdow ofa bu1ld1ng 1n the JOOO(Y block of Coast H1gh-.a) at approJl1mattl 11 p m. Sunda) • While police werr taking the repon. a --------------------------• suspect -posslbly the same person who threw the rock -made an annoying phone call to the same locauon. r--...v.u., " woman $hopper at .\lbenson's tOft. 16042 M11nol1a ""e . filled her pune 1nllad of a shopping ballcct wuh SI 11 wonh of c1prctlt1 and a bottle of whi~ci at 6 40 p m S.tur• da) and then f1cd •1thout Pl)lftl. • • • thttf uted bolt cuttm to cut the lock off a l~er at thC' Los Cat.llnos port\ O..b. 17272 . 'e-hope ,. btt9ttn noon and I I ~ p. m Sunda~ to steal a v.-allet rontain1na s~ ' • • • .\ 1989 Toyota< amry parted on tht lOOO bloclt of: La Perla "'TnUC: Truck Dips when driver niisses end of && Freeway Two' men 'A'tre 1nJured earl) this mom•na •Mn tMir pickup u·uck wtnt out of control and n1~ over II the IOUth tnd of thC' Costa M"' FrttWly. ecconl•na to tM C'ahfomaa Hllhway Plttol. The ICCidcnt ottumd al 2· JO un. ~ -.... )_)Op riPt Md becomes .. loulevud, CHP ~ TIKnlrilllaid.Tlte tnK'lt was ua\id•• 11 aa• u• detcmueed rate of liDeed _. kepi IP ... • !ft. ...... fll cw vile IO tM "-"' 111111 .... n. M () Aid asked ID getting Israel to Almo t 8,000 evacuated· from Armenia quake area = ta IQ~~ MOSCOW (AP) -Nearly •tooo people were evacuated from c1tin and towns shauered by Armenia·s Ql!bg_uake 11 aulboriljcsJqan try- Doctor tell• of deva•tatloa 1Ntoclear!Mara'"Of'all but Workers GLENDALE. Calif. (AP) -The involved in the cleanup effon. Prav-dev111ation ~t by tfle earth· ute1111ll, anydu111 ~ could ftnd1 looki111_in the rubble for tbeir lovea VIENNA, Austria (AP) -PLO chief Yauer Arafat said today he waes U .N. help in gettin& Israel to joia Middle East peace efTons. but he Mid Palestinians will not stop their uprisi111 in the Israeli-occupied tcrri-IOrieL His visit was seen as part of his c:ampaip to drum .up international twi1111 for a Mideast peace con-111 let under U.N. auspices. Arallt. ~kina to reponcrs at ' Vienna's SChwechat airport, side- llCDDed a question as to whether the hfeitine Liberation Organization would continue armed resistance apinst Israeli authorities. .. You mean resistance," he said ' several times. "Our _Reoplc will defi- nitely continue their intefadeh," a re~nce to the Palestinian uprising in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. His comment came a day after Salah Khalaf. the second-i n-com- mand in Arafat's Fatah PLO faction,. made clear the PLO does not intend to abandon the use of force. "Reagan may stop his govern- ment's dialogue with the PLO now if · he thinks he will be able to stop our attacks against Israeli military targets," Khalaf said Sunday. h was an apparent reaction to the United States statement Fnday that any PLO terrorist acts would derail U.S.-PLO talks in Tunisia. The PLO serves as an umbrella organization for eight guerrilla fac- tions which sometimes fight a()'long themselves or launch independent attacks on Israeli ta~ts. Arafat said he came to Austria "for more support in the directjon of peace ... for the process of peace ... Asked how he wants to bring the Israelis in the process. Arafat said. "through the United Nations and through the support of .... all people who arc looking for real just peace 111 the Middle East." da reported today. 3:::.C in Sovie& Armenia wu wone Another 4.j()() mothers and chil-...._ left by bomb blatl dren were expected to leave today for durina Worfd War II, a doctor told a Anapa, a Soviet children'& resort in crowd of more than l,800 Armenian· the Cnmea. the official Communist Americ:an1. Party newsplj>cr said. Within two to 1be~wumuchwonethan three days. only lf\en involved in the we 11w durif:!I World War II after the reconstruction should remain. it said. bombina of Berlin," Dr. Vankes Mother Teresa. the 1979 Nobel N~ told the audience that fiJled Peace laureate. today offered the the Glendale Hoover Hip School "Teruakian IOld the crowd. ~ they recoveted tMir dead ,.._, counted themtelva amona the r,-1 "said N•••n..11 1onunate ones, ~~1 -· • ·nec1 N~ said Y traJ • clop could not fi any more li.ve victims since many of the dead bodies had beaun to deteriorate. YaNer Arafat In Vienna ta1b wltb Aiola llock (left), Autrla '• Ylce cbaacellor aa4 foretan· mlalater. and Daoad Barakat (ri,bt), ofDdal PLO repr11entatlYe ID Autrla. Soviets the assistan~ of her reliaious auditorium Sunday. order, the Missionaries of Charity. The crowd attended the evenin& which operates orphanqes, hosp1-meetina to hear first hand about tals, food centers and schools in more deltnlction in the reaion hit by a 6.9- Both men described the Slate of , chaos !he)' encountered. T~n said officials "were not well orpn1zed in that they could not cope With the outpourina of help." Najarian added that 60 out of 130 than 25 countries. . mqnitude earthauake Dec. 7. Israelis will talk With PLO if terrorism ends The Roman Catholic nun met in "'There were tflousands of people the Armenian capital of Yerevan with diaina with their hands and u~a · viii.-were destroyed but ·that .. relief aid has been phenomenal. The aisport is filled with supplies." Prime Minister Niko~la!_!.i.,!I,_. BR~yz~h~k~o~v:.... -.!!!!!!!!!!!!! __________ ._ ___________ -:--: wno "warmly ffianked 'her for the kind feelinp. compassion. and the offered aid. ·Tass said. Tass did no t say whether the Soviets agreed to accept help from her order. In the past, churches and religious groups have been barred from enga&in& in public assistance or operating hospitals, schools and other Tass said the Soviet Union reached fold. aareement with American Telephone Armenians "':"h<?K. senses have 8i. Telearaph Co. to allow Armenians--1>een dulled by grief still hope to find to call collect to the United States. survivors uod.er~ollapsed home11nd where many have friends and· rcla-apartment bu1ldmgs. WASHINGTON (AP) -Israeli Foreign Minisfer Shimon Peres in- dicated Israel would not exclude Palestine Liberation Organization chairman Yassc{ P,.rafat from future peace -talks provided PLO declar- ations renouncing terrorism prove true. Peres did not name Arafat in a television interview Sunday. but said Israel was prepared to talk with "every Palestinian. no matter what his biography was. if he is not shooting and killing." He said Israel will wait "a month. a couple of months." to see if terrorism. including uprisin~ in the occupjed territories, ends. Israeli officials ha ve denounced the United States decision last week to hold a "substantive dialogue" with the PLO, strongly condemning a move that grants diplomatic credi- bility to a man Israelis accuse of mastemunding a campaign of terror against the Jewish state. Terrorism _played a large role in tbe firsi talkSU.S. and PLO officials held in Tunis last week. The session aook _place after Arafat last week met American conditions that included recognition of Israel's right to exist and renunciation of terrorism. Peres, in the interview on CBS. TV's "face the Nation." appellrcd to step back from Israel's refusal JO take pan in talks that 1nclude Arafat. social services. , The Soviets say they have received S 100 million in earthquake aid from a total of 77 countries. tives. Soviels usually cannot platt"collect calls. The official news aaency said Saturday that since the quake. tele- phone traffic between Armenia and the United States has increased eight- "We must hurry!-thescworaure now in the souh and on the lips of thousands of people who are helpina liquidate the consequences of the tragedy," the official Tass news aaency said in a report. =~pi~;tE~E.1~~'i·~~!~ Explosions in France kill l, hurt 12 ing apinst terrorism. has not in- cluded the stone-throwing and other CAGNES-SUR-MER, France(~) shocked and indipant over this Residents of the buildina were ac_u carriedouLb)t-Palestinians under -Two elplosions ripped throUSh I mutaerous attack." evacuatina rapidly when a second Israeli rule. four-story ~idenceJor immigrant The fint blast pulverized a car explosion occurred in the stairwell. So far, 332 Palestinians have died workers in th.is. Mediterranean .t'!wn parked at the entrance of the buildina. "We were drinkina coffee with a in the year-old clashes with Israeli ~rly today, ktlhna o~ person, 1nJ~r-which housed 97 people, mostly colleape when the explosion blew soldiers, includina three who were mg a ~~n and. seno.usly damaging North African immigrants. out the door and all oft&e windows," killed today. the building. pohce said. Pieces of the car were thrown as far said an empl6>yce of a transportation And despite the movement There was no immediate claim of as 300 feet away and the concussion company nelt door to the residence. towards peace talks. statements from responsibility.~ The anti-racism or~ broke windows in area buildinp. "We ran outside and we saw that other PLO officials indicated viol-pnization SOS-Racism, issued 'a Four other cars also were destroyed terrified residents of the center want- ence was far from a thing of the past. statement sayin& it was .. deeply and numerous vehicles damqed. ed to jump from the windows." He~lth codes new weapon in migrant camp crackdown DEA missed warnings of corruption Store guard threatens suici<fe, hospitalized LOS 'ANGELES (AP) -A toy store security •uard who waved a loaded 1u.n an<I threatened to kill hirmelf 11 holiday shoppers looked On WIS hospitalized for 72 hours of psychiatric evaluation, authorities Slld. tryin& to commit suicide," said Stt. Tim Day. CARLSBAD. Calif. {AP) - Authorities arc turning to county health codes in their crackdown on mipant worker camps. which arc be1na bulldozed in response to com- plaints from homeowners in fast- growing rural areas, officials said. Most who live in such makeshift housing are temporary U.S. residents who have applied for amnesty.., U, Immigration and Naturalization Ser- vice agent Teddy Hampton said. leveled, and about a dozen other plishti but arc bound by I.heir re-LOS ANGELES (AP) -Federal camps arc scheduled for demolition lpOftllbilisy to address the increasina 4r'UI .-nts hcrt, Caced wi\h ao inOvx in northern San Dieao County, where number of hol'lleOWDer complaints of Colombian drut dealers fleeiQI a authorities estimate 14,000 mipants about crime and other problems law enforcement crackdown in live in makeshift encampments allaedJy caused by camp residents. Florida in the early 1980s, saw Those migrants left without "On the one band. we feel com-themtelvcs as outnumbered and shelter, however, can't afford any passionate about it on a humane outaunned. . other type of housina. said the Rev. level, but we're tryina to balance that Tboee feelinp. compounded by a Rafael Martinez, director of North with a broader community health biP COit of'livmaand a remote boll, County Chaplaincy. The qency as-Slandard that doesn't allow a lot of provided ao atmosphere in which sists mipants who live in camps and fle"ibility," assistant count,Y health three Drua Enforcement Adminis- shehers dua into the ground throuah-direc10r Steven Escoboza said. tntion qents allcaedly went b8d, out the blckcountry. With the U.S. Border Patrol no accordina to a report in today's Los "Why did they wait untilthe winter loqer able to evict most of the Aqeles Times. and the holiday season?" Martinez mipants, officjals are tumina to the An internal investigation frompt- lamented. "The main concern on the be.al\h department a1 the chosen ed the Dec. 1 indictments o former part of the county seems to be to qeacy of enforcement b;ecause the qents John Anthony Jackson, enforce the rules by the book. ap-encampments consistently fall short Darnell Garcia and Wayne Coun· parcntly not realizing that they·~ of county sanitation codes. tryman. · Police subdued the unidenrified Coleman Securjty_ Co. auard about I 0 a.m. Sunday. Officers were told the auard Wll talkina irrationally and threatenin& to kill himself inside the Van Nuys Toys R Us store, said S,t. John RyJh . "It was reported to us by someone, we're not su~ who, that the auard wu acting erratic:ally with his aun out When officers arrived the l\llrd had his weapon out oflhe holster and was pointina it skyward. althouaJi he WIS not threatenina customers, O.y said. Officers were able to wrest the loaded weapon from the man's hands, he said. No cha~ wiU be filed apinst the - guard, pohce said. Theauard was taken to Olive View • Medical Center for 72 hours of psychiatric evaluation, 0.y said. . Nunina supervisor Jean Rennie said she was unable. to aive information about the man. .. People either have to call the Sheritrs Department or go a round- about way to the health de~nment (to have a camp removed),' he said. "We have no authority whatsoever to JO in there and tell people who are in the country legally that they have to move out of the camps." Several settlements near Oceanside and Carlsbad already have been dealing with human beings." , Health officials can cite property The Times says Jackson also has Health officials say they're sym-owncn for health infractions dis-been linked by federal investigators to pathetic to the migrant workers' covered at the camps. the suspected theft of 21h pounds of ----------------------------------------. heroin from a DEA vault in 1984. Veteran qents who declined to be identified told The Times that the chaotic atmosphere of the office ACLU credits Bush with increasing 01ein bershi p ~!action. ... holi~ k<Z.CZp.saktZ.S by halcyon de!'jS of ~nd,from OUT tDCfA:tns i v<Z-5'Z lcz.ction.. of bend ~inttz.d cma~ coppzr \::x:ooz5 . pri:uzd bY. co1J<ZCtora e U. OVll.r ~ \!.'Or ld, bo1h O!I toktz.~ of ta~t<z. ond-santimall, ... with~know~ mw.5t.rMot, volu.<z., t.hcry onz. th(l ant,~ of tomorrow. o bzout1f uL ~1f't to .&.ort or oOd to o coll«L ion. . plczo~ vi~it, o ur ~t.onz ~n , end. appnz.c.iat.cz. tnq d\ffqrcz.nc~. flCW'J>Of'l. bcl.och • !)79 J'let'Wpor't az.nt.c.r cir • 7l't/759-79'19 paaedtLna · ~29 90Uth lake aw.· 818/.50'+-93~~ wc•t,wood villll~· 1001 wutwood. blvd· 21~/208-~27~ meinplece/eonw one· 2800 north main"'· 71'*/~3·12" didn't aive anyone enouah time to pay attention to wamina sips that may have beaded off the corruption scandal now unfoldina. Many qents, struglina to make ends meet on a federal salary, we~ more interested in tran1ferrina out of the bureau to ICll costly cities, sources told The Times. At the same time, ttw DEA bad its hands full with hundreds of dru& lords who we~ settina up shop on the West Coast . BJ ne AIMdate4 Pren The <>rans County chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union is thankina President-Elect Georae Bush for a recent rise in membenhip. The number of "card-carryina memben of the ACLU!' has aone up 10 percent nationwide since Bush attaC:bd Democratic rival Michael Dukaki1 for ACLU affiliation as final proof of the candidate'• liberalism, HICKORY FARMS SOUTH COAST · PLAZA ------·-······· e TWO CHRISTMAS e e LOCATIONS . e e e e SEA11S atmn1AS LANE e e INSIDE IEAIS MAIN MALL 4J LOWEii LIYEL THllD L!VEL · 4Jt aJIT. SVC. AREA OUTSIDE NOIDll kOMS --------------PHONE ORDERS CHRISTMAS & YI IOUND 540-6991 said Sandia Jones. ACLU director of development The number of coun_ty members bu jumped from 2,SOO to 3,000 between Sepeember and November, she said. "People called up sayina that they wanted to become card<arryina members," Jones said. .. Many people filled in the 'referred by' blank on our member~hip applications with ~Bulb.'" Four killed In gang violence over weekend LOS ANGELES (AP) -Four ~. includina a ~ lhoo- piftl for sifts. were killed; and r 4 Others were wounded in weekend Piii violence that alto disrul*d two c:oncnu. authorities llid today. Meanwhile, a local miniller who coordinated JaCt lalb between ..,.. ~111 JUP dais Wm.met' called fbr a bol'lclay t1uce. Tbc Rev. Cbarla Mihal Jr., on Sllunlay led • CbriMmM IOod live- IWaY at a ComplOD '°""Ill ~ C:.~ ~:""""" IO jOin in "W're-'-tO ..._ tbe ~of Daia lftd kTiir.; in Loi~" aid MilDL ... ~w·;:~'°~= :-c..~ .... c... la die..._ I~ a 15xlW41d ....-ct~ ........... ••••ded in a 1111J11 • .._on 111111 ......... ..,...., ..... ~ t:t&::.U'= ..... ~._ ... _IBd• 11=-u a.ea.•.:. ..... "Ill .. ,,:::;11•-,_ Ar-~~1:, a:~ ;;;:; ................ ' .. OrMge Co.et DAILY PILOT /MoncM~. December 19, 1• Al Armenian earthquake, Bush add& Kemp to·Cabinet list t1ctht local economies WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmidnn-elect t e-i h ' J d h t 8usb IOday named Rep. Jack Kenap. once a estlng 01 1l aye ari y E~tE1~n~·"~~~ said that _IJ'PC)inunent may come u soon as from a faction of tbe left or rilbt or the c:eater or Tunday. The leadi• C1Ddidlte for 1eemary of wbalcver .... I am CODCaned a&Mat it; I~._ bealdl aDd lluman lerViCles remains Louis and wiU coatiauc IO be cor.ce1Md about it. .. 8ulb Sullivan, the Morehoule Medical School president said. · ., .......... .... otben. •Y .... H••= !;.... :!:.. :.,:,. Rug h•iled ICemn ~his role in !"Mi"! the tioD Almy, American Red Crou, income Wl cuts of the Reapn administration, and wbo would become Bush's fint black Cabinet The ~'~ ~ at .enc A;' .lie •!'!"¥n•me•• ~ -=====--=;:;::::::=====!!!!~~:!!!!~!!!:;::~~~==~~====:==;;~~====ii H .,. -' · he I UIWCn to IOmC. When I reporter said lie -~· ,enel"Olity ii bci111 taled dUs holiday_. in responac to the anbquake in Soviet Armenia and to the needy at bomc. By at least one measure -United Way's ~ for the year of 6 percent to 7 percent powth - donationa nationwide appear to have incnued. Charities in many communities say contributions of money. clothina. to" and food are at leJst kecpina pece with lut year and should pick up this week before Christmas. • But in other cities, contributions have dropped. hampered by cold weather, a shortlle of bell riqers, lhoppina malls mat benish fund- raiten from entrances, weak I~ economics, or even a drain on pvm from campaian contnl>utions earlier this year. Efforts to aid the victims of the eanhcnaak.e in Soviet Armenia appear to be having an impact on domestic pvina in some cities, but not in Pillsbury gives up, agrees to. tak€ever Vol -__..__.;_ u 'ted w said be was one of the .. premier architects of the food-C: :C.":.ber"'daari':ies. ay, opportunity society that we are tr)'ins to create." ID M•00• +,-. .... ... an .. -·-Kemp thanked Bush for the appoantment, and ___ ..... _._ .... ui ""11K uid he would leek a public-private partnership to Dian ~ ... ion ll&imaled at more '"WIS war on poverty ... He para.,a.ruect the late ~. ~000. IDOll charity ofr.aa.ls civir f'iahts leader Manin Luther Kins Jr., sayina he IUI d 11IOO..tYI!)1111 wtictber tbat has an .. audacious faith" in the nation's ability to bat ad ialo loc8I aivinl. restore hope to "distressed inner cities and those •111dle~ Red Crom, the . who live in poverty and delp9jr." tnee llJ 1JPP1111 ~ have prompted an Aside from Ke~p. transition sources said acra11 dae-board increue in pvi~ Bush has decided on Chicaao mua-tranlit ofracial said Philip Schuyler. ma~ of Samuel Skinner as transponation secretary and operatiom. plann1111 and develop- ment in 8olloD. • owner, ftAllJ>Sappoentment wast on Y dancintuoundtbei11ueofhowmuclltoeoeadfDr onc annoueced by Bush at a momina appearance llomdalDal. Bush replied, .. Yes, I wouldn't Mve before reponen. obrued it that way but that's euctly what.I've Rcmami .. at the microphone to field ques-been doi ...... tions oa 01ber topics, the president-elect said he He added that he doesn't believe commitment would take an intolerant view of an~ of sol · -a.i.. · _... let · ( •~sm ~·-a.'--Une Liberat1'on niu. to VUll I .,...._m II me&SUniu IO y lD 1a'IDI 0 K-""'' us r~ .... federal ljeodina. "There are other ways to skin a tion, wbi<b renounced such acts u the price for cat." lie laid. dipk>matic ditamioas with the Rcapn adminis-Bulb shed little liaht on the appointments ltill tration. to be made, but said lie wants an mersY ICICfttll'Y .. We would not stan off by showin1 any kDowledec•ble about nuclear iaucs who can llclp tolerance of PLO terror, and I don't care if it comes i~ ibe me of nuclear power. · . . ""The rapon1e has been the patest rve ever ~ in 18 yean, •• he said. .. ~to both situations-:- the ~ here, the hUl\ITY tn Armenia." No 'old boy' treatment for Tower's confirmation Amons the nation's bigest cities, collections were reported up in New York. Cbiallo, and Atlanta, but down in Los Aneeles. In the Midwest, Indianapolis, Kansas City. Mo .. and St. Louis reponed healthy donations. RU.Ff ELL'S UPllLSTEIY llC • .................. tm -.... mll'l IUl-541-llM WASHINGTON (AP)-The Senate Armed Services Committee will not play the ·•old boy pme" with former Sen. John Tower, presidc;nt- elect Bush's choice to head the Defepse Depan- mcnt, committee chairman Sam Nunn said today. "'The committee will have a ·hiper set of standards ... for the entire team," fiom Tower down th~ the Pentaaon's top set ofmanagen, Nunn, o.GL. told a poup of rcponcrs. Asked whether Tower would receive kid- glove treatment at his confirmation hearin& next month before the panel he formerly cha.i red, Nunn said: "We are not aoina to play the old-boy game this ao-around." Nunn said he Jnd Sen. John Warner of VUJinia, tbe panels' rankin& Rcpublic:aa, would in11ston Sttin& the full repon on Towerbytbe FBI, which conducted an extensive ~ in- vestjption following allcptions of wornanizi .. and 'drinkiDJ, and rtports about Tower's cozinet1 with the defense industry. HUGE SALE TELESCOPES-BllOCUURS • Scope City, the world's largest and most complete telescope & binocular discount centerS offers you telescopes for Htronomy, land/sea, view·homea, aporta a photography as well as a huge .,,, selection of binoculars for every purpose. RlflHcoPe• and acceHorlea. Sc~nae • • Celebrmte the holtdays with up to ~ .. v1np at all Scope City locations. Expert non- ,.,,,. commission staff to help you choose the instrument best suited for you . .,_, __ , _ • See the craters of the Moon. the bells of Jup~er. the rings of Saturn and more. fOf as little a S1ft ""'"·-·..... ma.UT. 1M Complete system LEITZ '~ .. __.,Wt 1m11 nw•• ... .... ..I! -Ult .. ma-I nm •mn •-UI-•Tl ••JOKIM s~s .-•,-•. ........... ...... ............ ........... &O°' DFF ,~.ts·~ ,so ... (lM) ., ... (Ill) -.-1 (19)...... (111) m.-(la) i-.-/IO tt IA/Ill a: J:: ... _ , ••• IAl9l MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -The Pillsbury Co. pve up its 21h-month fllht and ~ to a SS.68 billion tHcover by British conglomerate Grand Metropolitan PLC, two days after major counroom sctbecks. Grand Met will ~rchase all 1-------------------------'-'-·~'---------------------------------------,----------------------------------------------------------outstandina. shares of Pillsbury com- mon stock for $66 per share in cash, S3 hiaher than GrJnd Mel's most recent tender offer. which was made last week. "The shareholders cot much, much more money than either the market- place was offcrin& or Pillsbury's restructuring offered," Karl Cam- bronne. a lawyer for dissident Pillsbury shareholders."l think the shareholders did well." Lawyen, investment bankers and COtnf9nY offkials worked out the deals details Saturday and Sunday, and Pillsbury's board approved the deal Sunday afternoon. On Friday, a judac in Delaware, whm Pillsbury is incorporated. said he would issue prelimina!)' injunc- tions toda)'. to invalidate Pillsbury's .. poison pill" takeover defense. Doctor says Marcos still ~ requires care HONOLULU (AP) -DeJ>OK<! Philippine President Ferdinand Man:os, who contends he is too ill to travel for arraianment on racketccr- ina cbaraes. will remain under round- the-cloci Catt for conacstive bean failure, his doctors said. An ambulance took Marcos home Sunday from the hospital. where his doct.on said medication and rest had controlled the life-thrcatenina ail- ment A court-appointed doctor con- cluded in late October that Marcos wu well enouah to travel. It was not known whether Marcos' hospital- ization would affect a coun order requirina a trip to New York for an · mcnt U: Sunday if the coun would order another examination because of Marcol' hospitalization, a spokes-mu for U.S. Attorney Rudolph Giuliani'• oft"ICC in New York said that be would have no comment Man:o1 left SL Francis Medical Center in a stretcher Sunday after- noon. He didn't acknowledlc re- poncn' questions. Docton said Marcos' health had improved since he was admitted to the bolpi1al Dec. 9, but his heart condition would require a doctor's supervision. Man dies in fire at hotel SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - Frequent fire alarms may have left tome residents off paard when fire Swept throulh a downtown residen- tial hotel, iillina one person .and critic:aJly injurina another. a survivor laict. .. We're 10 uled to itt" said Helena M.8. TeleRado, a haira~r~nd ~(). ,_, . resident of the Mom1nas1de Hoed ""The fire alarms are always ID@w ·°"'-and they tum it off." ~ Chief Luther Taylor said Sullda1's fire was apparentl~ slaned bJ a dilcanled match in a third-Roor lflllmCDL w&--... ~~ ~~I~: ....... relickllt whole body ... .... la • lounlt-ftoor ll*tmeftt. Palkll llid IM victim wu .. 9. Mee idnJified the critically in- • en a1 ftilip Scoet. 39. He was ..... §.,·=~·t ~lend alto admined a rili-iill mote inllllltioa ud ..... llrobftnkle. ' ( • .. Proposition 99 passed. Raising taxes on cigarettes 250%. Adding over $600,000,000 in new taxes to what California smokers are already paying. What can you do about it? We pn>- pose you try DORAL. It's one of the Top I 0 best-selling brands in America. And the only one with a low price. Get Top 10 taste and save money, too. That's our proposition. Can you afford to refuse? SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : Cigarette Smoke Contains Carbon Monoxide . lUM U6HTS Qh· 7 mg V . 0 5 mg, lllC01-t.M;HTS, LIGHTS llENTHOl: 12 "'I-.._ .. , 0 7 ... ~ U&MTS •a. 1.SfTURllll Ws 12 "'I .._., 0 8 mg naw. ~l RM>R Ws. M "'I<.._.,, I I ... .._- All AMOR IBTlO.. fUU. fUMJR IOTHCl DJ's fl mg .... , 11 '"I ,.._ Rll flMlt 11 "'I-"W'. ti ... name. • ,. .,wt1I ~ Flt """*'· T A8 *DAILY PtLOT/ Monday, December 19, 19$8 1988 not great year for creativity (Editor's note; This is the founh in 1 series of columns reviewing the year L9~lJIU)ramu: Counrv rhe•tec l ByTOMnTUS ~,_C.•n• ••I By creative standards, l988 was on~ a so-so year for community theaters in Orange County -eight local premieres out of nearly 50 productions -but those that sur-faced to the top were among the finest accomplishments of any season in recent memory. Significantly. nearl y every non- professional theater group in 1he area manag~ to come up with one new show -not figuring in the Finally a Unicom Emporium. which special- izes (make that specialized) in actu-ally giving binh to theatrical projects. The Unicom, which will be bulldozed in a few weeks. offered a unique theatrical experience in downtown Huntington Beach. The grand dame of community theaters, the Laeuna Moulton Play- house, put on a tiny musical ("I Do, I Do") and a sprawling one ( .. How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying") on its gargantuan stage. A solid revival of"The Lion in Winter," a presentable production of ''Trit>-"The Oldest Livina Graduate," "Pie-Afraid of Virain&a Woolf~" with a ute" and Ora nae County's first lookat nic") and launch~ a season to be rau · •• · ::f 1~~ ·~~~~;:i~the~~~~1:'h~ p;·.;,r;;;, 'f~~';{;.' :•rd't)~ that Beach, this ~up i~hsho"w~~i':~~ theater which used to be known as the deck was "Larae Window on a Small admirable maturity. Moulton. World." Judptents shall be deferred Well-received production of the The Costa Mesa Civic Playhousc due ~our correspondent's dual role drama "True West'' and the comedy underwent a unique alteration -as ICT manaaina director. "The Foreianer" hiahli&htcd tbe founding d.ircctor Pati Tambellini, Probably the most improved com-season at the San Clemente Com-~ho had~gu1ded the t~eater's ~onunes munity theater in t 988 was the munity Theater, second only to since 1965, faded into retirement Huntington Beach Playhouse, which i.atuna in local lonactivity. The after her l~st b~rrah, an ~p~arance a.~ • eresentcd top-drawer productions of South Coast Music-al Theater con· Veta Louise Sammo~s. in .Harvey. 'A Chorus line" and "The Gin tinued its two-a-year pace with the Theplayhousewasdisungu1sh~by a Game"_ neither of which would lciddiemusical "RevenacoftheSpace compelling county premiere of have been considered by the thtater's Pandas" and the tum-of-the-century "Monday After the Miracle" and a conservative clements a few seasons treat "Tintypes." • rol!icking musical comedy," A Funny ago. Greg Cohen's doo-wop version The LP Repenory Th.cater cel- Thing Happened on the Way to the of "A Midsummer Night's Dream" ebrated its 10th anniversary by open- Forum." also went down quite ,easily. ing its own dinner theater with the Musicals reigned supreme at the Newpon Theater Ans Center where four oft he six attractions were sung a\ well as spoken. The best of the lot proved to be Stephen Sondheim's "Company," while local playwright- director Kent Johnson brought his original musical "The White Arrow" back for an extended look after a three-year absence. The Irvine Community Theater finished out its Middle American Season ("Period of Adjustment, .. 'frenetic farce "Bullshot Crummond." Theaforcmention.d Kent Johnson And the Stop-Gap drama therapy shook up the WeStminster Cqm-troupe showcased some splendid munity Theater with a scintillating actina il9 a le•than-snJendid play. "Grease" and evoked further "How to Say Goodbye.r. nostalfia with .. The 1940s Radio Which of these productions and Randy Barrett and Sara 8hialer Hour. Cohen also crept in to play rfi .. Dracula: The Musical" for high pc ormances were award-winning stakes and roast an old English efforts? That:S e~ctly.wha} the next N 6 N t ke 9 chestnut .. See How They Run .. two.columnsmth1sseneswilla~drcss ew u c· rac r ' · dunng the rest of the week. Finally. . Another playhouse Jlexing its thec~r:tain will clOS;C on.19~8 with the ~ ---- creative muscles this year was th~nveihngofthe Daily fl'.alot s man and d Garden Grove Complunity Theater~ woqian o( the year_ tn theater on . k .eeps tr_a 1• t1• on which followed a superb "Who's nstmas Day. -- Wrlter-dlrectorStone say~ parenthood mellowed hlm By MICHAEL RYDZVNSKI D9llr .... c-......... , explains the entire story for the sake of the man)' children in the audience. I ·ri od · f That's all fine and load. but must , Ba let Paca 1ca's new pr uct1on o Ballet Pacifica continue the practice Peter Tchaikovsky's "Nutcracker," of fading in the ballet's deliahtful NEW YORK (AP) -The writer-relationship to women, whether mother that are still being worked 1n me more and more in my work. I Op. 71 (189l), had something in overture and playin• its entire first director of "Platoon," "Wall Street'' you're a misogynist or not." Oli ver out," Stone said in the January issue think I made big strides in 'Talk common with American Ballet half underneath Ree~e·s folksy, con- and "Talk Rad io," known for his Stone said, addan~ "The issue came of Vanity Fair. "There was an ugly Radio.'" Theatre's recent new production of genial narration? Some of us would a~ film characters, says parent-up: 'Why in your films do you treat divorce and itcameatage 14,acrucial In an angrier period of his life. the same composer's .. Swan Lake": like to hear the music .. unadorned." h and marriage counseling have (women negativ~ly)?' age." Stone said, he returned from Vietnam they were both more traditionalthan Zali''s costumes and Tana·a nanon mellowed him. "And l tllink there's some truth to "And ha ving a child has, brings combat duty to live in a seamy. New innovative. Dll "You probe your feelings and your it. I think there's some anger and things out, these repressed things:: he York Cit}' tenement painted blood-In the case of "Nutcracker." one and Wally Huntoon's background relationship to your mom. your hostilities that l had toward my added. "I'm bringmg out the woman red from floor to ceiling. has the standard choreography by sets were all serviceable and attract---------------------------~~---------------------------Bau~ Pacifica~ fou~i~ di~m iv~whi~Mhma~hn~cdd~ • •l llllOll ••u· •-l T£QUlLLA SU•RISE (R) U·• t:Jt t:tl J:JI ,.,_ * SCROOGED IPG) IHU M• M I Zl tJS 1111 CHILD'S PLAY (R) COCOON, The Rttvrn (RI/ P'tets A1111.-..c•1 OLIVER I COMPANY (GI ........... CPGI CHILD'S PLAY (A) ..... c ..... ....... 4111 TEQUILA su•RtS£ (R) "'""°._f'MICIU THE NAKED GUN (R) C--.h ...... l•l SPF.NO 11IE HOLIDAYS wrrn AMERICA'S #JCOMEDV! .... emeritus Lila Zali. who based hers on props contained just the right the original by Lev Ivanov. For this amounts of whimsy, fantasy and year's ~it1on. Zali's work was staged credibility. by present company director Moll y Another "new'' point interesting to ,J..ynch and Sandra Winieski. one of mention is that in the Christmas Pacifica's dancers. scene that opens the ballet. one has The "new" in this new production perhaps the first interracial couple to was the music, which reportedly (and be represented in a classical ballet. finally) was not only of a single (How forward-looking. considering recordtng (and a compact disk, at the story is set in the late nineteenth • that), instead of a compilation of century.) uneven quality, but one that con· In Saturday afternoon's per- tained every note of the score. repeats formance, Shannon Campbell included. Thus. Zali had to invent danced her few solos withpolish and additional choreography to cover all grace in her role as Clara, the Little girl this reinstat~ material, such as th e who receives a wooden nutcracker as repeat of the "Grandfather's Dance" a Christmas gift from her mysterious -·-·---·-._..,,_, • .,_ in Act I. (Now. if only Zali can ye t kind godfather, Coun-:..::= =.f-'-==.-:,:.-.... ==-,.t--. =:--reinstate the grandfather as well ... ) cilorDrosselmeyer. Campbell's prob- ... -·-·-"'·-•'-'-·----·-This largest home-grown version of lem, especially as made apparent by a =-= .. --=.--=~ :;:.i.. =::;-=: ''Nutcracker," which is currently costume change. is that she isn't :=.-t:=-•=.._. =-..:=. •==.:-;:-..,:.::,• running at the Laguna-Moulton Play-exactly a little girl anymore. (The ai-'"'... -" ..,.,,,, .,..I.IN -house, includes a preliminary ori1111inal Clara -called Marie_- in ~--" ,.,.,.. ·-· .. ·-• ...,.,.. ____ .,_ .. T H f1i , ______ , "storyteller," Douglas Reeve. who the E. .A. o mann shon story on -================T==========-~--------=====r;:::::;:==========~~=:;;==========~ which the ballet is based. was no older than eight.) · RAIN MAN (R) 11 :452:30 5:15 8:00 10:40 (R) 5:15 1:00 10:40 TEQUILA SUNRISE SCROOGED (R) (PG-13) 11 :45 2:00 4:30 1:00 9:30 .,__s_:00_1_:_15_1_:30_...,. flY STEPMOTHER IS AN ALIEN (PG-13) 5:45 1:15 10:30 THENMIDGUN (PG-1J) 1:003:00,.7 ......... lwtNI (PG) 1:15 S:JO S:AI 1:00 t0:t5 OLIVER A COfl#'M'Y (0) 1UI , ••• 5:al , ••• Mii .... 1:414~J'}>:ao 10:11 ICROOCIB' .. .=~ ...... . ' COCOON: TH£ Rfl'UM (PG) 5:30 1:00 10:20 COCOON: THE 12:15 2:45 ~J 7:40 10• 'TWINS (PG) JUS 3:00 5:157:301:45 SCROOGED (PG-13) 11 :311 :41 W t.15 t:» 1d TEOtM.A SUNRISE (R 't S T N T 0 M CRUISE --== NOW PLAYING .... ........ """' sa.sue ... '°"° ...... •CJMMaa lllllTAllTC* c.....,oloto &lwlrdlWOOdlltldOt ew-.. c-v•r:.i... ""-551.QIM '14-2SU .. , ... , ~ ~C...11 Zl'l-UIO ... '°"° •Ulmu.ot. w .... ,_, .. ~......... "'*"la...... .....°'""' ~a... ..... 5fl..-.0 ... z._ l»tnO ltl~ •COSTAMQA ·~ ...... \Ila.IQ *IAllTAMA WfilWTilll ~c-c­ll't-4141 •COSTA_. ~a-c.. .... 2111 MIC,_, r....er-wi., ~ .-c.w l'lefie't Ill-Wit' II ... ....,.. ..,~ DrM·ltl .. ,..., ..... ,..,CMlllUOI ·~IUOI I ~~lOIH II ...,_ I =a-c.. =:;."""1ftQMoill . -a•••• -. =::::=._ .... _ ... , em 11111 •••-cm. .... .:-.:-~ -h •• . ··-........ u .. 11111•11 .......... ... , .... °""""' ......... ~ --· , ....... ,... .... -·······--_____ ,.. ·Mia-.,., .. .................... ___ , ..._.,.. ... ............. ,....n --._._,.. ..... ~ .... ,, .. a.nMYN tNteiatfsll a•wa11._111 .. ...... •1111 nw...,. ---· ....... -I I a Ula 1--iiiiii:'ftiiiMliiiiiiii;;;;---lll .,.. ..... _, __ --· ..,. WWWIM -----·... -....... -----... -..... ~ --· ... ----·- ICMY flMUll JI 11• ..... ,,,. 1111 .. '::'~ mmaT-·---., .. -.. .... .,.. .. hit a.41 •U .... II .. _,,_ .... ,.,...., ..... ~--, ........... . ....,_ ~-w .......... ,,.. ............. ... ----· ---_ ..... --·· --·---·-.... -.... -.... And would somebody please aive Paula Hoffner some more real meaty roles in the very-near future? This extrcmeJy talented artist · not only danced the role of the Supr-Plum Fairy with supreme poetry and classi- cally understated rcgalness befitting a prima balleri na, but she can act, to boot! She took a basically lacklustre part (acting-wise, that is) and infused It with life, her trademaFk expressive eyes registerina the slightest reactions to her surroundings, even when not the center ofattcnuon. Everyone else in the cast mostly performed their parts, solos and ensembles with eagerness and enjoy· ment. • .. Nutcracker" performs 3:30 and; 7:30 tonight, Tuesday and Wednes-· day. Call 494-727 l. . ~ AUTO FACTI ........... There is aood reason why a .... out of blllnce rnults "' suet! 111 "''"" ride . The compounded effect upon a wllllt that IS only three ovnca Ollt of ..._ wrtfl be exerted as twenty.two~ It hi&flway .-_ To --. "'°'* W anct, thertfofl, I tecMiciln wil rotltl I wheel and bll up to ... Oft I llldlill that 1111fy11S bottl stltlc ... ~ blllnce. Proper static blllnct tM iMD ICCCMHlt llle .... of ............... tn lfOUfld tllt wtMl's a Tils .. tribubon m111t bl Mii. The ~ bltlllCt c:Mcks .... distrlbltiofl .. ....... ..... COIClfl to ......... , ...... .. ttle ..... It. too. ""9t bl Mii. ff It is not. tlle .... .. "9Ct • don • .... ........ tlle .. eydlwO ~~--It .. 11111 llld -..... . ""•of '"Giii °"" ........ .. .... .. ... *"' ........ c..-.., .. ,... ........... it .. .. ..., ........ .... --..-........... ... .............. w . .. ... ,.. ..... '"'' ..... .., . ......... ...,_ .... = .. ,..,_ar.W1111 "'"* ...... , .... It Ult ............. 0 ... ....,......,.. ' .. ftOOE Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 19, 1918 . ., Wives glad that husbands admit that they dress up I &:oo I &:3o I 1 :00 I 1:30 I 8 :00 I 8:3o I s:oo I s:3o I 10:00 I10:30 l 11 :oo I11 :3o I ....... """" .. . .... DEAR ANN LANDERS: The let- ter from "Concerned Mother in asmnjfOn ab<>utner D·)Ca;-r-~ol~dr--==-=--=,.,.,..---,.....,; ....... ...Clll Aftcrbc1nat<>&Cthcrfo~r~o~v~~~a~yc~a~r~._J~i!~~J!::::::::~~;;:::15~i-;::Wi~~~~~~~~~::;~:;;:~!i;jjj~~i;;~~ii;:;:!Ji~~ Joe revealed his "dee . ..,dark secret" '"HC lOVCS to are a I WO an. son who swiped her panty hose and a .. his sister's bikini underwear struck a Ml eseecially when he makes love. L>1d I think 11 was weird? Not at all. I was just pleased and Oattered that he shared his inner self with me. familiar chord. I, too, swiped my mother's lingerie. LA.a I had been secretly cross-dressing since the aac of 11 , and at 18 I was buying women's clothing by mail order. When my mother discovered my secret she hit the roof. She was sure I was a homosexual, ~ssibly a child molester, and womed that I would end up in prison. .It took a Ion& time for my mother to cpol down and then only after I promised to give up my "hobby:· Of course, I didn't stop. I was just more careful from then on. But my rela- tionship with my mother was never the same. J am now 26, happily married to a wonderful woman who knew I was a transvestite before we married. She docs not approve, but realizes it is a harmless outlet for me, as long as I l keep my promise. to dress up only in the privacy of our home -which I -do. Just sagn me -HAPPY ANO NORMAL JN ALASKA. DEAR H AND N: From die looks of my mall &Ma week. Mlf of &k male pepeladoll of tk Ualted States ud cu. .. la drn1la1 •P· Read 011: DEAR ANN LANDERS: Tell that mom ~ot to jump to any hasty conclusions. Perhaps her young son noticed the ads for panty hose featuring Joe Namath and he wanted to try them. Or maybe he just wanted to try bikini new underwear and tell him if he wants to, he can buy something different. Then sec what he brings home. -VA. BEACH. I now help him coordinate his outfits and enjoy putting on his makeup and combing his wig. I must admit he makes a darned good- looking woman. The only thing that bothers me is that when we go out together hkc two dames. Joe gets a lot more whistles than I do. -CON- DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your TENT IN TORONTO. liberal reply to "Concerned Mother" · disturbed me and I felt I had to write. DEAR READERS: Aad people a1k me 11 I make •P lettfra! She was worried that her 15-year- old son was a "closet queen" because • • • she ~ad ~ound pan!Y hose and bikini .. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several panties hidden in has closet. You gave 'lnOnths ago you wrote about a her n~ he.Ip wh~n you told her not to Mineola, N.Y.; driver who plowed mention it to ~im. into a wedding pany limousine. I was married to a man for eight killing the groom and his brother. The years. Ahhou&h our sex life was JUSt bride died of injuries 18 days later. I so-so for the first five years, I thought thought you might like to know how he was basically normal. Then he told that case turned.out. me his big secret. Since he was 11 years old he had. cross-dressed in private. He thought I would accept it and that our marriage would be wonderful. I agreed until he brought it into our sex life. It turned out that he could not become aroused unless he was wearing a lace bra and a gancr belt. That was too kinky for me and I got a divorce. -BEEN THERE IN OHIO. The 21-year-old driver's sentence was 28 mont~s to seyen y~ars in prison. The Judge gave him the maximum and said he wa.s sorry he couldn•t make the sentence stiffer. On the same page of the newspaper I read where a man in Lubbock, Texas, w@s sentenced to 10 years for biting off pan of a policeman's ear. The Jury took only 20 minutes to pronounce him guilty of aggravated assault. Where is justice? -ATLANTA. DEAR ATLANTA: A tood qHStioD. flm•y lrA'l•H Tiet Gimme 1 WllMI of tr.Iii foftlUll t:f:\ N8C USA WhMI of Fortune ~Niwa Tod Em Hal llndlOy l=r.ll ••'Y ~ HiUblMin PrallO lhe lold Job Hope ChrillmH PrlllO the Lord • """~·. Canv11 ol Ice Hunt tr Lowe Connect'n Niglllltnt ...._ Current I Lo" Wl(AP 1n Attllr Luc ~ Clnclnnad .._ Tiit lest of Caison Chtllllan Oo119 Llftll le Ci.tll • underwear instead of boxer shon s. The next time your son goes shop- ping, Mom, give him money to get DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a 28-year-old female with a wonderful 33-ye.,.-old fiancc. "Joe" and I arc both intelligent and successful. We have a wonderful relationship and a terrific sex life. And I laave DO u1wer. E1peelally today. Complete t•Ylalon la.tinge In Sund8f'• TY Plot That's wry: Big city delicatessens order the fax of life Maybe you·ve seen o n TV how big city delis arc putting in fax machines. To take precise phone orders from office gophers nearby. So the ham on chccsc you call for at 11 :30 won't come back at noon as a rcuben. Nifty. Our Chief Prognosticator thinks everybody will have fax machines eventually. To order pizza, oriental take-out and groceries from small stores willing to deliver. Tucked away in our Love and War man's file folder labeled .. Laws of Babylonia" is Hammurabic Code 129: "If a man's wife be caught lying with another, they shall be strangled and cast into the water." Genius Relay: Same year Galileo died. Newton was born. A million Americans weigh over 500 pounds. A public health official recently said that, but he didn't say how he found out. . In 1777. an Italian became the first scientist to identify a cenain eel as femaJe. Ninety-five Jears later. another scientist figure out how to identify an eel as male. Baffling problem. Though not for the eels. A stinv.ay can't sting a swimmer while said ray also is swimming. So -- contends an ex pen who claims the ray needs suppon against the sea floor for lcvcraae to dnvc its stinger. Surpris- ing. 1f true. Q. Whafs the air pressure inside a champagne bottle? A. About the same as that in a big truck tire. Maybe 90 pounds. Husband Provides more hot air than car's heater My husband and I go through this every winter. We climb into the car and, before we back out of the gara,e. I say. "Tum on the heater. I m freezing.·· He recites, "I cannot turn on the heater yet. The car isn•t warmed up." "What's to warm up?" I shout. "If we have a heater. why don't we just tum it on?" . With this. he flips open the glove compartment and hands me a dia- gram of the engine of a car, which be made 30 years ago ... Find the radi- ' a tor," he commands. "Now look for tbe engine block." Then he proceeds to tell me how wind goes through the radiator. which is futr of fluids. The wind cools the fluids and with the help of a pump also cools the engine. I know the~ is l}O stopping him once he gets st.med c)n this discourse. He explains l\ow the heater has a thermostat in front of the water pump. which is sensitive to temperatures. It traps the water in the engine until it reaches a ccnam temperature. Then it is released and the car can heat up. As I fold the diagram and put 1t back in the glove companment. I ask. "So why do they have a whole panel of buttons regulating heat, and when you push them cold air pours out?" As we drive in silence. I finally broach the subject again. ··0o )OU suppose 1t will heat up before we get to where we are going?' "The car has no way of knowing how far we arc going." he says patiently. "Joyce has a car that can heat up her coffee and has a digital clock that tells her what time she will get someplace if she maintains a cenain If the disease called chcn1ical dependency threaten· you or sonll'Olll' you love, consider trus important altcn1acivc to the hospital' existing inpatient and day treatn1cnt program . .. In addition to outpatient t~atnlL'flt for chcmic.11 dcpcndcncv. Hoag now offers an innovative nc\V codcpcndcnc · program for people who c livl."S have been affected by the di5casc of chcrnical dcpc..··ndc:11cy. Call. Wc'11 talk. Any hour. Any day. (714) .s48-1i ........ r The Hoag Chemieal 'Del:*I A SCf\'lCC of .............. • speed. There's even a httle voice that tells her when her door 1s open, her brake is on and she is dri vina too fast. And you arc telling me that this car has no idea when 1t 1s going to release a little heat? .. "Her car probabl) doesn't heat up any faster than ours does.·· "You don't know that," I snap. .. You're Just being stubborn. Just because you have a heav) coat and a jacket under 1t, )ou·rc not even cold. Women don't wear as many clothes as men. No wonder we're sick all the time. We're sitting around waiting for BRID GE the heat to kick 1n ... We ride in silence a while longer. Finally I say. "I hate to say this. but I think you don't tum on the heat because at uses more gas and you're cheap. It's j ust like the thermostat at home. lfscasiertocurscthecold. I've never told you this before. but rm afraid to fall asleep at night. rm afraid I'll never wake up." He leans over and pushes the heater button and hota1r pours ouL "We had heat all the time. didn't we?" I say. "We did not have heat all the time. w e·,e been arguing for 10 minutes:· He's been saymg that for 30 )'cars. ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Q.l-As South, vulnerable, you hold: + AQ973 ~ AQIS • AQ65 •Void Panner opens the bidding with one club. What do you respond? A.-Don't jump shift unless you have a solid suit of your own or a fil for panner. With this hand you don't know where you want Lo play the contract, and you might need room for exploration. Respond one spade. Q.l-As South, vulnerable, you hold: • AQ973 " AQIS AQ65 +Void The biddin& has proceeded: Nortla East Soutll West I • Pas l + Pass I NT Pua ? What do you bid now? A.-lt's time to show your s1rength and check on the possibility of a 4-4 heart fit-partner could easily have a heart suit on this auction. Jump to thr~ hearts. Don't even consider three no trump yet. Q.J-As Sou1h, vulnerable. you hold: •AQ973 ... AQIS AQ65 •VoW The biddina has proceeded: Nertlil Ula So.ell West l • P-l • Pm l • ,_ ! What do you bid now7 A.-since panMr has limned his $1refltlh, but not his shape. there is no need for you to jump-a s.imple chanae of 1Uit is forcina. Therefore. btd two diamoocls. lbat w111 ensure that a fit is found, if theft is OltC. With diamonclJ. .-nncr .nn ram; he will bid a four..:card ban 1ull. if he hu one; and he will ta~ a ,p.ctt prefcrmce with three--anf suppon. Q .'-Boch vulMrable, as South you hold: •AJtj 9 15 OAQMJ •71 TM tMddin1 has prOcftded: CHARLES Go1E1 lliJortll East So•th 1 • Pus t • I Pass t + 1 • Pass '? ""nal do you bad now? Wnt Pass Pass A.-o cnsc in pussyfooting around. You have a partial misfit, but your diamond suit is a source of tncks and you do have the values to bad game. So go ahead and jump to three no trump. Q.S-As South. vulnerable, you hold: + 9S4 ~ A.J7' .. AQ1'76 •I Panner opens the biddina ~ith one no trump. What do you respond? A.-H panner has the riaht hand, you could make a slam. Firs~. probe for a 4-i major fit by employing the tayman Convention. &;d two clubs. That asks panaer 'o bid a four-card major if he has one. If not, his denial 1s two diamonds. Q.6-A South, vulnerable, ·ou hold: + 954 AJ1• AQlf'7t •I The biddina has proceeded: onll r..t 8"clil W• INT r.. 2• ... 2 0 .... ? What do you bid now? A.-AJtboulh a-w U. denied hO._ a fCNMad ..;or lllk. yo.If c:banCl9I b ......... ,. ckad. A di--llt .... flG lllc!I at&amindle ..... ~ ... _, b biddiq .... •1 JAfJ 11111 .. nal\tral, fordllllill--• llllill • nve-ard .... .... .. -.... will tell ,_ --,_... II I I HoRoscoPt ------ T..ay, Der. it By SYDNEY <>MARR ARIES (March 21-Arril 19): Financial obliption ,wil be no burden, could actually be trans- formed to your advantage. Focus on diplomacy, home. 11fts. added l"CCOf- mtton. Member of opposite sex 1s interested tn more than "flination:· TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Go slow, you have definite advantaac over competitors. Emphas1s on intui- tion. personality. ability to play waning game. Fundin.& will be ot>- ta1ned. You·11 receive gjf\ that adds to apparel. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You'll be in area that might represent ··sacred ground:· Focus on metaph)s1cs. psychic im~ion$. prophcuc dreams. Facts will be separated from fantasy. many will look to you for answers. CANCER (June 21-Jutr 22): Focus on power. authonty. ability to win ~our wa). Older individual says. You have earned my adm.Jration." Relationship 1ntens1fies. you·11 be m winners' circle. Capncom plays role. LEO (Jul) 13:-.\ug. 22): M1ss1on is completed. personal horizons broad- en as rcsulL Focus on search. drama. crcauvtty. style. Cr.ck highhfhts business. career. prest1JC, promouon. Love will pla) a maJOr role. Aries involved. VIRGO ( ~ug. :?3-Scpt. 22): Stress independence, crcat1v1ty, willinsncss to make new stan. What had been a mystery will be solved -to your advantage. L1ght is shed on subjects prcv1ously "proh1b1ted:· Leo 1s in picture. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): U n- onhodox procedures bnng desired results. Focus on teaming. teaching. reaching beyond rrcv1ous expecta- tions. Elements o urning.. luck riJe v.tth you. F~m1l) finances require special attention. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 )' Protect reputation. image, pos- sessions. Forces arc scattered, rumors fl v. 1t as neccssaf) to make public appearance. statement. D1vers1fy. d1spla' style and humor, com- municate fcehnp. Gemini involved. SAGmARIUS ( ov. 21-Dcc. 21 ): Wbat v.as regarded as setbeck as hkely to boomerang in )Our favor. What \:OU ha\.C been .seeking IS pos1ibly :.JUSt around the comer ... You·rc on nght track, ~mcnt 1s vahd but requires stud) CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Be analytical. take noth1na for granted, read small print. Lunar _aspect tulh· lights romance. creativity. mcssatt= relating possible Journey. Some wall c-omment, .. Your prospects arc so e°'Clttn&." AQUARIUS (Jan. :?0-Fcb. 18): De- fine terms. refuse to be CAJOied 1n\O snap dec1s1ons. Focus on home. propen). family relationships, 1i1- n1ficant domestic adJu1tmcnt. You11 rcccl\c fiaures relat1na to r«ent appraisal PDCES(Fcb. 19-Marrh20):Atten- uon could ccntn-around townhouse or other ~)' CimamlWK'ft s~•na 1n your favor. you mlllll be sa) 1n1. ··n.c pncc tt rilht.. -Ret.11ve decides about moMy. T aunat ftellattt proma~t!}. __ ... DlllCEllaD .. • YOUll llRTllDAY you aft tentative. int-~blc. loyal IO family, idr.M- lllK and roma•11e. TIMlnlli. cm.er. CIP'Kom oeoD1e pe.y ..... , ... •• )'OW ........... ct .. ......... pro••••• .... .. lnllll. You now me • = ..._ ................. .... Si....... ... •• -..Yi :'I .. =·'i--=~·=·=· =tt=M ~ . . Al Or9n09 Coat DAILY PILOT/ Monday. December 19, 1988 by Bii Keane COURT&• CUL TUU by Maratta & Maratta ... ,, ,. ' i J J I ., . "I'm gonna camp under it." M~. GRiLL AT (HRiSTMAS rtME MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE "I hope he jumps off before we go In. I wouldn't want the boss to see this!" PEANUTS DIO I SEND A '<ES, I REMEMBER Cl-tRISTMAS CARD SECAUSE '(OU I TO MARLA SAID S~E DION T LAST YEAR ? SEND VOV ONE GARFIELD WELL, C:IARFIELP, rr~ THAT TIME. OF YEA~ ACtAIN! TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE R08EI8R08E .. I TRINK l1LL SEND l-IER ONE ANVWAY ... .. by Hank Ketcham ~~ l J l J by Charles M~ Schulz MA'<BE IT1LL MAKE ~ER FEEl 6AD .. i I i 5 by Jim Davis by Kevtn Fagan by Pat Brady ARLO AND JANIS T~E ~'!>~. 8UT ~T'TO~ .. ' f ' I %~· • by Jimmy Johnson 'f/l. l fOe~T TO HIT -ouROfJr" FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE ~1.ynn Johnston SURE we.t-tR'Je. Aol.~8~ ..... we. SHOE TVCritic:.'S C'Drnft'. JUDGE PARKER DOOl'fltSBURY MY600.' HY"W ... 7AlfliN HIS .. .H/5 tN.M-1 0 \ JUSf~K 1tf.CO';H • EN. by Jeff MacNelly by Harold Le Do~x by Tom Batluk !'M A H16 H 5(.HCX)'-.. BA DIRECT'OR AND T M "'°61N& fW.; HEARING , •. ~ .•. SOMEHO()J I. ALWAC.>5 1l-«>UGHI fW-1 ~I ND WOUL..D BE IHE FIRST 10 <:;() ... · by Garry Trudeau UJ(/I(/ 'S()Mt-~ w;" W¥(TWVAN IJlJf¥N'5 CXWIN! \ •=-:...t!':'!....:O = '°"" fO l0t"' lo.1 l•l"P. -d• WEKANA I I I I' I I . PHRJC ,. r I I I , NIFTL ,_. I I I I I . ...... -.u•·-·---.... --· ... ,. ..................... __ ..., _..._,_.., _ __,_......, "I ' • _1snow ieBrown Willie Brown says he has gotten the mcssqc. In this legislative term, the Assembly Speaker promises to be "the symbol of policy making." We ho~ so, ~ut we are more than a little skeptical. Brown 1s 101111 to have to make some sipificant con.~ions if he truly hopes to shed his reputation u a polmcal power broker, and we have yet to sec hard evidence he is ready .to do ~t. H~ has ccnainly allowed plenty of ripe opponumt1cs to Wither 1n the past. Perhaps this time he is sincere. Maybe the batt one-vote majority that returned him to an unprecedented fifth term as speaker hit close enouah for him to realize that deep divisions exist with1n the Allembly and many of them can be traced directly to his office door. . T~ state A~sembly stands on the verge of a shambles .... It. is nddled with accusati~ns of corruption. Legislative gndlock has forced state residents to tum to the initiative proceutotryon their own to solve problems of the day-and that avenue has proven inadequate for the complex and ·heavy load it must bear. Willie Brown has been given a rare opponunity to fix the mess he has made. The honorable men and women of the state Assembly face the opponunity to let him. • • • Calllenla ol El c.}oe Willie Brown's triumph in being re-elected for an unprecedented fifth termasAssemblyspcakerwascloudedby the fac~ tha~ he was compelled to cast the deciding vote needed to retain has post. Heretofore, the San Francisco Democrat has been accorded that powerful office by acclamation. But the shifting political sands in Sacramento have left the flamboyant speaker on less stable ground than ever before. Although the Democrats picked up--threc seats in the Assembly last November, Brown will preside over a fractious house that is overdue for political and ethical reform. On the o~e .hand, he still must contend with the Gang of five, those d1ss1de~t Democrats .who fr~uently allied themselves with Republicans last session to bnng controversial proposals to the floor for a vote over the speaker's objections ... The speaker also confronts, for a change, a contentious Republican leadership. It used to be that Brown could generally cc:>unt on the tacit cooperation of former minority leader Patnck Nolan of Glendale to keep the opposition in line. Ai:i unwritten division of spoils pretty much allowed the speaker to have his way. But the recent FBI sting operation prompted Nolan to relinquish his post; his combative successor, Ross Johnson of Fullenon, is not the accommo- dating type... • .. Wilhe Brown would be wise, therefore, to heed the message of the uncommonly close vote, namely that many lawmaken have grown weary of the seedy business as usual in . the Assembly. lfhe expects to retain his ~t. the speaker had better spend less time playing petty politics and instead lead t~e way ~n legislative ~fofJ!i. He s~ould bea;in by honorin1 has promise to create a b1pan1san ethics committee to clean up the notorious mess in Sacramento, where votes are routinely for sale to special interests. Air fares The nation's major airlines almost in unison decided .. . to charge more for their services. Out went most discounted .. . fares and in came ticket price increases of up to 30 percent Since deregulation, competition has led to major mergers and the demise of more than 100 small airlines. U ncle Sam has done little to stand in the way of acquisitions that have placed control of two-thirds of all domestic flights in the hands of eight carriers. several of which also control airports and reservation systems. The round of fare increases and rising prices in other industries may be just the beginning-unless the government more vigorously enforces antitrust laws. A•b•ry Part (N.J.) Pres• Driving in fog The Highway Patrol and other law enforcement agencies are getting a workout these foggy days. "Drivers," said CHP officer Tom Sawyer of Merced. "just have to get it through their heads that they have to slow down." Recent chain-reaction collisions testify to the reason for his exasperation. And that doesn't count the near-misses. Everyone who has ventured out on the road can give you anecdotal evidence about drivers wtio won't slow down, whatever the visibility. They're pro~bly the same people who refuse to adapt to rain-slick roads o~ icy roads. or to any adverse condition, for that matter. Tl)cy know only one speed -overtake and pass. 1 Earthquake response The generous response to the disaster stems from humanitarian imp\llses. But it may also have been influenced by Soviet President Mikhail S. Gort.chev's attemplS to reduce world tensions. Americans and other Weaternen now perceive the Soviet Union as less threate(ling. That makes it easier to sym,.thizc with and help the eanhquake victims. In tum, the relief cff'on may help conviMe the Soviet leadenhip and people that the West doesn't seek their conquest or destrucuon. If that happens, this natural disas&er may help prevent the ultimate political disaster of nuclear war. ................ ORANGE COAST ,.,. ....... .., .... (..., ...... Ont. .. ,.., ........ An«llll [Mw ................ '-~ ...... lltwsl• .............. ....,a.dlnM ........ ClllllW '1:a~ ..... Pubksher CllJ( .. ... c.... ....... fllrb(Mlr .... ....... .. ......... ...,.°' .... ,... .. ,. ,..... .... Wllrll.C.. ...... CA~ ..... IMO.Cellt ....... ·---- !JushpracttcesLBJ-style pollttcs to dump Dom,.a Presidcnt<lect George Bush has diooed into the late Llndon B. Job-nson's bag of politica tricks to solve his problem with Californi~ Conaressman Robert Doman. Bush last week told a disappointed Dornan that he would not ,et the job he vcrj much wanted rn the new administration, the recently created post of drua czar. Headina the war apjnst the illcpl use of drup would have been a plum assiJ*!ment for the flamboyant and pubhcity-conscious Dornan. It also could have provided him with a valuable launching pad for a cam~ian for the Republican nomi- nation for U.S. senator in 1992, when the current term of Democratic incumbent Alan Cranston expires. Bush owed Doman something, too, so it was hard to deny rum the post. Yet havina him inside the adminis- tration presented problems. That's why an example set by Lyndon fohnson in 1964 seems to have been useful in sUUCStinaa craccful way out for the prcsident<lcct. f irst, thoup. the size of Bush's political debt to Donun must be understood. The Garden Grove con- gressman was an important early supponcr of the vice president's White flouse campaian. serving as Bush'sco-chairman in CaJifomia and appearing in his behalf in 34 states .. Doman's bigest contribution, how- ever, was in the early SlaJCS. His role was vital in helping the vice president win at least grudging acceptance by the party's right wing. Conservatives have been -and continue to be -susP.icious of Bush. His years in Texas fail to disguise his Eastern Establishment antecedents. That establishment dominated the GOP until the Sun Bell conservatives of the South and West pined control in the 1960s in a bitter battle tha1 has left lasting scars on ahc pany. The 1>f'C5Cncc of the uhraconservativc Doman in the Bush campaign. as well as memories of the vice president's ciaht years of loyal checrleadins in behalf of the Reagan administration. prevented right-wing suspicions from· erupting . into . ful!-scale rcbc;Jlion against has nomination. But the valuable role Doman played became a problem once vie- tory was won. Bush either had to reward the congressman with a high- levcl administration post or come up . with an excellent reason for not doing so. The reasons for not appointing him arc obvious 10 California and Wash- ington political insiders. He 1s a mercurial character whose p<?litical behavior is often outlandish. He tends to go off on his own with no advance warning. His presence as an insider would worry any president. Doman would be a panicular anomaly within the tightly organized. rather inbred. buttoned-down Busb team. Its members arc the ultimate insiders who represent mainstream es ta bl ish men 1-orien ted politics. Doman is a radical righ1-w1nger who is outside the mainstream and outside the establishment. But how could Bush say no to such a vaJuable ally? The president-elect found the answer -or as good an answer as was available -by handhng has Doman problem the way Johnson handled has Robcn Kennedy problem nearly a quaner- ccnaury earlier. Johnson took over the White House upon the assassination of John F. Kennedy an No'. 1963. I most immediately. he had to plan the I 964 election campaign. when he would seek a full fou r-year term on his own. The major question -who would be his vice presidential running mate? In their emotional turmoil OHr JFK's death, Dem ocratic Pany ac- ti vists saw lhc late prcsident"s brother. Robert. as the onl y choice. and began pushing hard for the selection. Johnson. who intensely disliked the younger Kennedy, had to find a way of saying no without making it seem a personal slight. Johnson's solution was to say that he wanted to keep his Cabinet intact and therefore would not pick an> member of it for lhe second spot on the national ticket Since Kenned)' still was serving as attorney general. he was automatically out of th e running. While that preserved the niceties. insiders weren't fooled about John- son's real motive, least of all the attorney general. Kenned) as said to have sent OJhcr 'Cabinet members a WT} note. saying. in effect. 'Tm som I took all you fellows down with me.'· Soon after. he quit the Cabinet to run successfully for the U.S. Senate from New York. Bush resurrected the Johnson man- euver and adapted it for his own use. He telephoned Doman fora chat. and toward the end of it Jct ham have the zineer. He told Doman that he had dcc1ded against selecting an)' situng member of Congress to an adminis- trauon post. His justification? He did not want to-nsk losing any-morc-Repubhcan- hcld scats. Nothing personal, Bob. The president-elect softened the blow by saying he wanted Dornan to serve as a point man for adminis- tration pf0$f3mS 1n the House of Representauves. ~nothcr member of the Bush transition 1eam helped, too. by telling one rcponcr: .. There are few people who worked as hard for Bush as Bob did. And an this business that's nol forgotten. He was very lo} al to the vice president. .. Dornan took the news "ell. His top congressional aide. Brian Bennettw told another reporter, .. It's not hke this 1s the end oflhc world. He's still a ll .S. congressman with a buddy m the White House:· Still the loyaJ all y. Doman c.ddcd that has failure to get the appointment should not be viewed as a slap an the face to the conservative movement. He added that he agreed that n "'as probabl) a good idea not to pick an~ Republican now serving an the House Perhaps 1t 1s. Bush m1g}u have been am proved on the pohcy by applying 11 earlier and more broadl), so that 1t prevented him from choosing the pamcular U.S. senator he dad as his vice presidential running mate. M•rti11 Smilt 11 • 1yodic•IH col•m11ist. Tlme i~ ripe to rais·e state tax On gasoline SACRAMENTO -You may noa have noticed it, but gasoline prices have been dropping like a rock in Lake Tahoe. For the first time in a long time, prices in California have drifted into the sub-7~nt range. Believe it or not. when adjusted for inflation. lltOline is cheaper now than during ihe panic days of the early 1970s. The reason for the drop is the worldwide alut of 011. And the reason for that is the chronic inability of the Qrpnization of Petroleum EJtponing Countncs cancl to make its pricc- and-oroduction agrccmenls slick. Whatever the reason. it's a fact. althouah no one can say for certain how Iona it will last. Ultimatclx. petroteum isa finite resource that will 1row in value as at becomes more scarce. The price drop represents. how- ever. a aoldcn opponuni1y for ahe nation-and for Califomia-todcal with some knotty public-policy is· sues. h would be a perfect moment for the federal 1ovcmmcn1 to slap a stiff tu on 1mponed oil that simW- tancously would make 1 dent an the rtdenl buciee' dtfk1t and the balantt of ~ti deficit. whllt 1nd1ftt'll~ spurftlll~ic CMI prod..ctMM and encMlllilll r.I COMtrVltton. Doint it MW. wtUlt 11119iinc ~ arc ~~llleim-ol --~ • t~lect ~ ·--~tlOft to .. IM ••C!ll own p.r1al •*'•111*.c>'·IMk•ftl. it's a window JJ a:nu11y t"81'1 hkcly to cloee before anythan1 occurs. R~rdlcss of what happens 1n Washington, however. the drop 1n gasoline prices presents Sacramento's policy-maken with a muh1prongcd opponun11y. Cahfom1a's go"cmor and state Legislature should kick up ga!>Ohne taxes by at least a dime a gallon Given the cumnt drop an price consumers scarcely \\-Ould feel the impect. A dime incrc~ ~ould produ<'t about S 1.2 billion a )car 1n new revenues that would shore up the statc"s very bclcaaucrtd transpor- tation bud&C•. mcludins long-de-fernd h1pway construction. main· tenanccand m&S5 transit. Somcoftbc money could be d1vened into local streets and roeds.. which ha' c b«n ntalcctcd in the "'lkC of propcn ~ ·IU.- Cuttint Propos1t1on 13 as Cahfom1a cities and counties have scrambled to pay for other services. A new psoline tax would rtduct some or the prnsurc on the ~•ate budatt created by en1ctmcn1 of ProJ)OSltion 98. the 9Chool financt sluft . With C'ahfomia's 49th-place r.ank- ina •mons 11111e1 in per ~paa Sl"nd•na on transporut1on. with 1he numbtr o( \'etrida HP1nd1n1 fister than e~ ..,.,...,ion, and Wlth conent1on thral~•"I 10 bunt 1hf state's econonnc bubble. the nttd for Ktion •dtar. Tht int~llMftt IO ktioft has bttft the .... , "of pohtteiaM. "'°"' Go\' ~ DeukrncJ•n do.-n, that a..,. tax incttue would spartan .t"cnr rftlCtl()ft lm°"I V(Mff1, - DAN WALTERS But e'en conscrvata\CS no" re-cognize the cns1s. Paul Gann SI) s his hm1t should be modified to c~cmpt 1ransportat1on-rclatcd rt\ienucs The Cahfom1a stale lcg1slaturc. at" clear. as w1lhng to enact a ps-ta' increase. Legislators might not ao for ad1me. ButJtn an1t1al nickel. 'Allh one~ ecol annual 1ncrc.1scs thereafter for another fi,c }cars. qu1tc poss1bl) 'AOuld pass lcaislallve muster. The. state's la" makers -most o( them. an>"a> -now ~hc'e tha1 fru$- trat1on over traffic outwc1ahs voter nppos1t1on 10 new ta'e The maJOr figurt standma in the "a)' of actlOn IS lhe fOVCmC>f. But he. too. 1s under 1ncta11na prenu~ from his own ~ '" the bu11Rtta communtt) to act. \.\c \1 111 don't know whe.thef Dt-. kmeJ~a_n intends to .ell a dtml term an IQq(). If he doc1.. he11 bt hat -end 1Mt hard-b) hlS Omlocrabc:CMll• on 1raftk C'OftleSOOft. jult n '9e fan ap1nst Jnry Brown on a hilhways auut•• YmRllO. h ~pecttntu Ver} ~ lllilUft.., ~-.:. °"' ....... t'iideM to ....... ·-ol voters a they ntllb dlcir daily romm111n. 0.. Willltn " • 111•r1f1I uf ? I Congressman Cox's memory too selective To the Editor: Jn reprd to the Freshman's Ne>1ebook wntten by Conaressman- elcct Chns Cox on Dec.8. his mcl1\onn of 1he Reapn Adm1nis- tra1ion seems 10 ~ quitt scJectivc. He mentions ahe stronter America that PrtSICknt Rcapn leaves behind • as well as a na11on m the midst of the. t~nacs~ cconom\c expansion in peace- time history. Whal he fails lo bring up is the glanng shoncomings of thal very same admin1s1ra1ion. How about lhc Amenca that wasn't pnvy to tax loophol~ and ,ovem- ment bailouts. Reagan is also ea Yi ng behind more Americans trying 10 .survive below the poveny level than ever before. The homeless snuation has never been worse, and the number of U.S. kidsgoins 10 bed hungry is at an all- time high. Yet. this in one of the world's rich nations, o-nc up;- posedly known for its unwavering compassion. How about the drug situation? Si nee Re•gan has been in office. the pncc of cocaine plummeted -now a cocaine rock can be bought for as little as S5 or SIO. • Just say no. How aboul saying "ncf' to Panama's Noncp and the res1 of South Amcnca. which is draining our society of its youth while we prop them up with millions of dollars in foreign aid. Sure, R~n was very presidcnti.al. But wouldn t the Amcncan people be better off with someone more conr ccmed with doing things instead of S)'mbohc gestures 1hat had little effect. . Cox closes has col umn by saying. .. we're already beginning to .miss Reagan:· I say goo<f riddance. JACK PARIS Costa Mesa Laguna Canyon must be saved for the future To the Editor: . I am a long-lime Lacuna Beach rCSldent. As such, l am cooc:cmed about the propoled development in La&una C&n)on. If the developmcet 1s illowcd.. which includes over 3.200 homes. 84 acres of commercial ~ \Clopmcnt and a network of paved roads. ti} add1t1on to widening Laguna Canyon Road lo six lanes through Orange County"s only natu- ral la~cs. the pnsunc beauty of the Laguna Beach area will be devastated. Laguna Canyon is one of the few untouched canyons remaining in Southern Cahfomaa. with 120 dif- ferent animal species and 600 types of plants.The proposed development will devastate the ecological balance between the animals and plants in 1h1s area and w1ll devastate the natural lakes and marshy wetlands of this region. This area as not only important to existing residents of lacuna Beach and southern Cahfom1a, but future residents who will have no other pnsunc can~~ns to enJO} unless they arc v.1lhng to dnvc to nonhcm Cahfom1a. HEIL.\ PATTERSON Laguna Beach TODAY IN HISTORY Today as Monda). Dec. 19. the 35.ith day of 1988 There arc 12 days left m 1hc )Car. Today·s H1ghhghl an History: On Dec. 19. 1843. Charles Dickens first published has classic Yuletide tale ... .\ Chnstmas Carol," 10 Eng- land On this date: In 1732. BcnJam1n Franklin began pubhsh10f, has .. Poor Richard's "lmanac. • 1n Ph1ladclph1a. In 1776, Thomas Paine published has firsl "Amcncan Cns1s'" CSSI)'. in "h1ch he wrote ... These arc the times that trv men ·s souls." In I 77. General George Washing- ton led his arm~ of about 11.000 men 10 Valle Forge. Pa.. to camp for the "in ter In 1971. ··.\polio I 7'' splashed do~n an the Pacific. windina up tbc ~polio program ofland1qgastronauts on the moon. In 1974, elson A. Rockefcllcrwa5 o;~om 1n as the .. , st vice prestdcnt of the l n1ted tat«. In 1982. 1he Polish aovcrnmnt formal! announced that manial law ~ould be uspcndcd as of the stan of the ne"' ~ear. In 1986, the Soviet Union an· nounccd 1t had freed d1ss1dent Andttl Sakharo' from internal e~ite. 19d pardoned his wife. Yelena Bonner. Ten years-so: Jul)' K'lecttOG beean 1n lcm, Ore . 1n the ca.e of John J. ll1deout. a«uted of fasM"I his wi•. Ot"eta. while liv1n1 wtth her. in tl9c fmt tnal of its kand. (Rtekout ... .cqu1tted, the couple divOft.'ed *' tht 1nal.) OM ~r -.o: The Pllelai•iee upn11na 1n 1~·1 occupied lllft.. Wtcl~toAriballl ....... whm: tnobl or Nna.-,_.. t .......... -~ .... ~nc:anaad ....... lilia T•f• .... JS: Ac-. Ciallr T~il49.~-tlluriol....._. •7. AdOr TU....._ ii 44. Mm a.. Joya ii 4J. ., .. 11 I , f I , . I -r ) I / ' I I ~ . I j - °'9ngeCOMt DAILY PILOT/ Monday, o.c.mw 19, 1988 I ! ·9 om us e - 0 ays . .. . - A Different Kind of Swap Meet . . ·Forget crowded m · and jobt us · all lVeek before Ch1·istmas ·for ' bargains, .savings and ev~rything Wider the sun. · 7 8 ' JO JI 12 13 14-LS J' Open the 17th thru the 24th t . ARLINGTON ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS - LOcatedat the 55 Freeway and Fair Drive . In Costa Mesa .. . . MONDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1981 LA obtains Evans, Roberts Rams' revenge offers re .. berth ~ They ~venge 48-0 loss to'49ers in '87 with 38-16 victory ., SAN FRANCISCO >(AP) -·Re- v'enge was more than sweet for the Rams. It was worth a return to the NFC playoffs with a wild-card benh after a 6-9 campaign in 1987. Jim Everett threw four touchdown passes and the Los AnJC:ICS defense sacked Joe Montana e1Jht times as the Rams spoiled the San Francisco 49en' celebration of a newly clinched NFC West title with a 38-16 victory Sunday night. The location was the same and circumstances similar to last year's f'Cl\llar-scasot1 finale. But the Rams bore no resemblance to the team that was h\lmiliated 48-0 last December. "Thinking about what happened last year, we had to win this pme no m~tter what," said Henry El ta rd, who caught seven passes, one for a touchdown. and set a team record with 86 receptions for the season. "It's also ourtickct to the playoffs." he said. San Francisco coach Bill Walsh said the Rams were the best he's seen them in his nine seasons as coach. "Hopefully it's j ust one game when ~wereflatand they were up," Walsh sajd. "I do know this. the Rams (Pleue eee llAllS/112) Julie Evans and Kris Roberts hope to find themselves continuina their volleyball careers in Orange County this winter when the Los Angeles Starlites opt to move their venue from Loyola-Marymount to the UCI Bren Events Center for the 1989 ~r Leaaue Volleyball season. The M(V's third season bqins Feb. 17 and concludes on May 20 with the playoff championship match bro.dealt l11Ve on ESPN. Each team will have an eiJht-player roster and play a 22-match schedule. LA is coached by Alben Gasparian, de> allo cotcbes the mcn:a and women's prosrams at Golden West Collete. this, year leading the women to the stale utlc. The two-time defendina champion Starlites de- cided to move to Orange County after drawina good crowds at several matches held at Golden West last season. Evans, who pduated from New- port Harbor Ha&h in 1984 and played her collegiate career at Peppcrdine. was selected by the Ponland Spikers in the MLV -0pen draft last October, but was traded to the Stanlites Sunday during a pre-draft deal which brouJht LA the No. I selection overall. Evans, a powerful 5-foot-IJ outside hitter, led Pepperdine to a 82-59 matlt duri na her career. earning AU-West Coast Athletic Conference honors three times and cwice earnina Player of the Year lauds.-She..served as a iraduate assistant for tpe Wa ves this season. , Anna Vorwerk, a 1988 All-Amen- can who led the Uni versi ty of Hawaii to a second place finish to Texas in in the NCAA D1vis1on l toum•ment which concluded Saturday. was selected first by the Starlitcs 1n the three-year-old league's inaugural col- lege draft · FO nductcd at the lea1uc offices in Redwood City. Vorwerk, a 6-foot-O middle blocker from Stockholm, Sweden, spent the previous three years on the Swedish National Team. · ' In return for Evans and the riJhts to Vorwerk, Ponland obtained LA's first-round pick. the s1uh overall in the sax-team league. and the riJhts to Dorothy Hen, a 6-fOQt-0 outside hitter from Pacific. The ~trade re- united Hen with her siste~iz and Terri McGrath. who ~150 ed.. Lo / AP&..mptalK a.ma 1111Ulint back Gree Bell (left) dl•ea Into the San FranclaCo defenae, and linebacker Fred Strickland (!Uht ) cel- ebratea Rama abth ack of Joe liontana. Wild finale leaves players bigfans Philadelphia passes Giants with 23-7 win over Cowboys From fte Associated Press Philadelphia. Se.attic, Cleve land and th e Rams arc in. The New York Giants. New England. New Orleans and Indianapolis arc out. Philadelp_hia won the NFC East and advanced to the playoffs for the first time since 1981 by beating the Dallas Cowboys 23-7. The Giants. who would have won the division with a victory over the New York Jets, instead lost to their stadium co- tenants 27-21 and 1hen lost the last wild-card spot when the Rams upset San Francisco 38-16 Sunday night. "We won in great style and I'd like to thank the Jets for helping us out.'' Eagles coach Buddy Ryan said. "Personally this rates right up there w1th the three Super Bowls r ve been to." The Rams advanced to NFC wild-card same against Minnesota. It will be in Minnesota 1f the Vikings win tonightapinst Chi cago. an .\nahc1m 1f the Vlkmgs lose. "That's the NFL," Giants quanerback Phil Simms said. "Sometimes you have to rely on ano1hcr team. We had thew chance in our hands and we didn't take advantage. We didn't take care of ourse lves." Cleveland beat Houston 28-23. settmg up a rematch with the Oilers next Saturday in the AFC wild-card game. The field was covered with snow and the temperature was 22 d~. "I don't want to come back to this rat hole.'' Houston receiver Ernest Givins said. ..The weather could be even worse 1han it is 1oda)'. But we'll be all right." "It's an example of our whole season:· Cle veland tight end Onie Ne"'some said. "We had a slow stan. things were gomg bad. But when the chips are down, we're one of1hc 1oughcs1 'teams in the league.·· • Seattle beat the Raiders 43-3 7 to Wln the .\FC West for the first time in the Seahawks' 13-vear history. Seattle plays at Cincinnau. the AFC Cen,ral winner. Indianapolis beat Buffalo 17-1 4 and New Orleans beat Atlanta I 0-9 to stay an contention. briefly. on the NFL's final regular-season Sunda). But both we re eliminated several mtnutes later. Phi ladelph ia's victory finished New Orleans and Cleveland's eliminated lnd1anapohs In Sunda} ·s action: Eaglts t3, Cowboys 7: Randall Cunnmgham lhrew two touchdown pas~s and a ball-hawking defense tnterceptcd Ste\ e Pclluer three ume (Pleaae eee WILD/82) lead the Un1vers1ty of Pacific to two NC AA titles. Roberts, a four-year standout for UCI after playing four years at Irvine Hi&h. led the An1ca1ers to their best record and fint NCAA berth in the school's history an 1988. At 6-(00\-'4, she was the tallcs1 player &aken in the draft and UCI Coach Mike Punu called her possibly the best middle blocker in college volleyball this rear. Another area product drafted Sun .. day was Corona del Mar Hip and UOP standout Brooke Hemnaton. who was ~lected 1n 1he third round by Minnesota. Herrington. a S· foot-I I outside hitter. was also a member of two nauonal titlists while • playing for the Tigers. Other first round lie!:, were Chi-cago Breeze: Mary (lllinoas): New York Liben1es: uric Wetzel , ......... llA.JOR/•) Within r~ach,.---rw UCI loses touch Loyola of Chicago blows lead, rallies ·to post 99-94 win CHICAGO -On an afternoon when the UCI men's basketball team seemed within grasp of victory, the Anteaten lost touch and watched a five-point lead slip throu&h 1heir fingers as their losing s1rra~ on the road reachta six games . Loyola of Ch1caao senior guard Keith Carter, who scored 17 of his 19 points in the second half, scored seven points 10 the final I :07 to erase a 93-92 defici1 and lead the Runnin· Ramblers past the Anteaters. 99-94, Sunday at the International Amphitheatre. "That was sad." Mullipn said. "That was a baJlpme wc should have won. Loyola d1dn't have their big- timc shooter. We had like 14 turn- overs at halftime against absolutely no pressure." · The Ramblers, 3-3. received 28 points and 13 rebounds from An- towne Johnson and played ooJy six players in the absence of center Gerald Hayward (back spasms). UCI sank 10 2-6, their worst suan in MOfY cx~pt for an 1dential opming m J978-79beforeCoach Bill M~lipn's arrival. They have lost six straight on 1hc road dating back to a win at San Jose State last February. "This was a pme I fell we had to wan. and we d1do't." Mulligan said. "So once again. here we go agam. I keep saying we've got to regroup and come back and play. We're going to have to do it pretty soon." Trailing S0-42 at the half, UCI Sunday's scores Ra.ms 38. 49ers 16 Seahawks 43. Raiders 37 Colts 1 7. Bills 14 Jets 27. Giants 21 Browns 28. Oilers 23 Eagles 23. Cowboys 7 Sam ts I O. Falcons 9 Chargers 24 . Chiefs 13 Buccaneers 21 . Lions I 0 Steelers 40. Dolphins 24 Packers 26. Cardinals 1 7 f~ to a 87-82 lead after a pair of Roa PaJmcr 3-pointen, bis fourth and fifth of the pme on eight attempts, with 5:29 remainin&. But Chris Funchess stole the ball and fed Johnson for a layin, then Mike Labat threw the ball away and Johnson hjt uother layup. Mike Ooktorczyk missed a 3-pomt atkmpt and DoU& Borders laid one in, then PaJmer massed a 3-point attempt and Keir R~n sank two free throws as UCl's Rkky Butler fouled out on a offensive rebound effort with 2:.U left. It put Loyola up, 90-87. 'We had a key turnover rilht near the end. Labat threw the ball out of bounds." MuJlipn said. "You know, (Kevin) Aoyd did that the whole first half. We're eight down at halftime, and then we come back and look like wc 're going to overtake them and win, and every time. we either missed the key shot or don't tlop them. Uulllhhhh, it's really diaufllli-.. .. F10yd drove for a saiort baseline Jympcr_ to pull UCI within ODC. 90-89. Keith Gailes hit a jumper for Loyola., then Labat. who scored 17 of his caf'CCT'-high 21 points in the second half, con,verted a conventional 3- point play to uc at at 92. After Loyola's R~ mlsscd. La"9t was fouled lllf Gailes, his fifth. Wlth I :29 to play. Labat hit the front end of the bonus but missed the second. C.aner drove baseline and was fouled. sinking the free throw for a 95-93 lead With I :07 left. After ucrs Kevin Floyd missed on a drive to the basket. Carter sank a baseline jumper with 18 seconds remaining. Doktorczyk tut the second of two free throws with nine seconds left to make '• (Pleue eee UCl/113) Lake rs drop big lead, lose LANDOVER, Md. (A P) -The Los Anaclcs Lakers became the NBA 's first repeat champion in 19 )Cars by responding to challenges. but t~ey wercn 't up to a small one Sunday night. The Lakers opened a 20-point lead an the first half, then saw the lowly Washington Bullets rail) an the S«· ond half for a 11S-110 victory. The loss was the third straight for the Lakers. their longest si nce a similar three-game streak last December. Reserves Lcdcll Eacklcs and John W1lhams le<1 the ' fourth-quarter ll.----=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!111 .... ._~~~~~·he . for only the second umc in their last 10 games. Raiders caa't pass Seahawks Up in end Krieg wins QB duel to lift Seattle, 43-37 LOS ANGELES (AP) -The offenses were specuicular. The dcfentes were diulten. And after the final pass had beca nu"" the Seattle Seahawks were in the~yoffs with the first division title in thW 13-~ history. O.ve IYiet peseed for 410 yards and four touchdOWns and Norm Johnson kicbd five field pis as the Seahawks beM the Los Aneelcs Raiden 43-37 Sanday and won the AFC West. The Raiden had a chance to win the ..-ud division in the final minute but 111 Schroeder threw four conteaative incQ11tplction1 from the Seahawks' 45. .. We knew thlt this was IOina to be a :WU.. ...-. •• Seattle coecb Chuck Knoll ... _ .... t.m.ell Job .......... lalt.., ................. Jflft'f ....... - • "We los11h1spmcat thcstan oftbc th1ro quarter when ~e gave them the momentum... the Lakcrs' James Worthy said. "We didn't sus&aan four quarters ofbasketball. and that's been our problem the last few weeks ... Worth y did has Job. sconng J l potnts to lead the Laken. He had 14 1n the than! penod. and was the only Laker to score for a span of almost I l mmutrs before Byron Scott added a lumper with 9: 19 left in the pmc. Scott finished Wlth 21 points. "We didn't shoot t~ ball well in the S«ond half.'" Lakcn coach Pat Rite, said "But the answer to that as defense. and we'rt not playina at. We JUSt p vc those gu)'s the opponunity • to look at the basltet without pressure, and they hit." Eacklcs ttplaccd Jeff Malone. who ICOf'td 34 points. at the Slar1 of the fourth quantt. with the lalkts tni~ ins 87-78 Lns than bar ... _.. lattt. they had cloeed to witMI 1 ~nt. and took thctf fint lald ti.ct tlw first oenod when &ctln IHll ,_ of' free throws W1th 2:5) f'CIMUHlll. Eackks ICOftld 11112 of'luapoim in tht founh qUll1tf Ind Willllunl Md 10olhill2 . . ne ............ '°., .... ._.......,. ........ .. --.... 1cn-1• ... l:JS .. main~_. ....... ., =..r.:l'c,:11:=1 " ...... ... ..... ~ ... --· ' Pride not factor In this Cow.boys· press conference IRVING. Texas -Dallas Cowboys EiJ president Tex Schramm said Sunday niaht •Im t tbat the team wm seriously consider selectint UCl:.A quanerback Troy Aikman with the first pick in the NFL draft next spring. .. If Troy Aikman is the quanerbeck he appears to be, then we will have 10 cons1dtr him very seriously in our thinkina and in our plans. .. Schramm said. Schramm held a news conference after the Cowboys clinched the top pick as ahe worst team in the NFL with I 3-13 record. _ · Headins into Sunday's pmes, Dallas and Green Bay were tied for t~ lea&ue's worst record. The Cowboys lost 23-7 to Philadelphia. and Grtcn Bay later dtfeated Phoenix 26-17. Had the two teams finished tied. the Packers would hive aoncn the No. I pick becauje they played the easier ichedule. IN THE BLEACBBRS ·~-... w ,,.,, "Yo, Greg. Heads up. I'll tip It to you." "I neverthouahtthedaywouldcomewhen I would have'a press conlcrence on the lut day of a game for being the poorest team in the lea&ue," Schramm said. "lt'snot somethingwe1reproudol Now. it'sa reality." , "I'm not proud of our draft position and I don't Oklahoma schedules rebuttal like it wonh a damn. But I guess WC' have to make the , best of it." NORMAN, Okla. -University of • Asked what possible reason the Cowboys could Oklahoma officials, perhaps surprised by • • t have fornottakingAikman,Schrammsaid. "Maybewe the severity of NCAA sanctions handed • need to study him a peat deal an<t sec if we can find down apinst the football program. schcd- somethina. I don't see that as a pank ular problem. We uled an afternoon news conference today to respond to just haven't studied him yet." the penaJties. Aikman will play with UCLA against Arkansas in SooMr officials had said durin& thcj nvestiption the Cotton Bowl on Jan 2. · that they expected penalties, but a1$0 said their "I guess l'ILhave to buy some tickets." Schramm cooperation with the National Collegiate Athletic qui~. "I g~ess it w9uld be a little awkward, thou.fl'. Association should help their cause. if we Slgned him ~ndtr the goalpost ~fter ~he ga~e. But the three-year probation, reponed Saturday . Schramm ~1d the C~wboy~ don t beheve A•kl)l.an night by an Oklahoma Cily television station, was can tum them into ovemlght wmners. harsh. Dallas coach T om Landry said last week "I don't The NCAA has barred Oklahoma from playing in ... · k Id d ba k · f w bowl games after the 1989 and 1990 seasons, and the u•tn we wou ever tu~ ownato~quartcr c ' e • Soonersw'llnotbeallowedtohavegamestelevisedlive had a _chance to get him. Y~u. ca~. t have too many in 1989. 1 . excepuonal players at one position. The sanctions also include cuts in the number of recruits Oklahoma can sign in the next tWo seasons, cuts in the number of paid visits recruits can make to the Norman campus and a ~uction in the number of Quote of the clay °"C Colllu, Chi~o Bulls coach. on his full-time coaches who can recruit off-campus next tint ejectJon asa coach w ich ~receded the Bulls sea'?.f· wasn't expecting something like this." Ken 112-93 victory over Milwau ce Saturdal , "I McMichel 1 a,·uniordefensiveback,saidSunday. "lt's a guess the auys were happy not to sec me. It s my first and I don'teverwant to do it again. But to get reaction o shock." a road win, I'll pay Sl,000." " The sanctions constitute a major penalty, thus .• ·· • p:laking }tvery other program at the university ------------------~_.... susceptible to the so-called .. death penalty" if any of those prOlfllmS is found suilty of major violations within five yean. Boward, Lewis lead Waves Junior forward Dener Dewan scored m acareer-.high 34pointsand MaterDei High product Tem Lewis sco~ 19 of his 27 at the free-throw line as the Peppcrdine Waves beat the Northeastern Huskies 96-91 Sunday in men's college basketball action. Pepperdine, 6-3. has wonsu of its last seven pmes. Howard's shot with 4:34 left gave Peppcrdine the lead for good. 80-78. There were 62 fouls called, and Pepperdine benefited the mosl. Lewis made 19 of22 free throws for the Waves. who were 42-of-50 from the line. The Huskies were 26- of-32 from the line ... In Top 20 coll~eaction: Alldtemy Ceet sco~ 21 points, includina l 5 in the first half. as No. 9 Anzona opened defense of its Pacific-I 0 Conference title by defeating Washington State 76-59. JM Beedkr pulled down 13 rebounds and sco~ 13 points, while Seu EIU.ttadded 13 points but hit only 5 of 16 shots to finish well below his 20.8 scorin& average. Devils rally past Blackhawk& Job MaeLeu and Pat C_.dler fil scored 19 seconds apart midway throu , the third period Sunday ni.Jht. gi ving re New Jersey Devils a 5-3 vectory over the Chicago Blackhawks in NHL action. Maclean tied the game at 3 on a power-play pl with less than two- minutes remaining in the second period .. : Jn other NHL pmes: Jeff Jack .. and Walt P....._J scored 37 seconds apan i'n &he third period. sending the Quebec Nord1ques over the slumping Boston Bruins 4-2 .... ~ Tocdtet scored two goals, including his lOOth in the NHL, as the Philadelphia A yers beat the Winnipeg Jets 5-1 for their fifth straight victory. The victory marked the longest winninJstreak for the A yers this season and raised PhiladelphLl's record to .500, at 17-17-2. Denver's Reeves fires Collier Defensive coordinator Jee CeWer and •• four other defensive assistants were fired Sunday by the Denver Broncos. one day after the team finished the season with an S.-8 record. Head coach Da Renn announced the firings after meeting with the coachina staff and players . . . SlefM F.Aer1salvaged some lost pride for Sweden's beaten Davis Cup champions, but the Swedes' decision to default the final match apinst West Germany left a sour tasle among their fans at Goteborg. Sweden. Edberg dtfeatcd West German Carl-Uwe saee., 6-4, 8-6, but West Germany won the match, 4-1 ... Dave Rlll sank six birdie putts as he and teammate Celleee Walker brcczcd 10 a four-stroke victory over hometown favorite CW CM Be4rtpa and Ju St Jn...thc · ent at Dorado Beach. Puen o Rico ... American M....-Slaqllte,. outduele<l countryman Slef'llml Martla and won the NASCAR Christmas 500 at the steamy Calder Park Tbunderdome in Melbourne, Australia. Shepherd. of Conover, N.C., who drove a Pontiac, was treated for exhaustion and dthydration at the end of the 280-lap race, which was held in humid, 100-dcaree 1emper11ture ... Vretll SdmeWereapitalizcd on 1 fan by her touahnt challenger and won a women's Wortd CuppanlslaJom race, eltendina her overall acad and movina closer to the ICISOn's tide It VaJ Zoldana, Jtaly. .. l thouaht it would ha~n. J mean, we sot caught doing something wrong.• said senior quarterback JameUe Holieway ... In 1 way it's sad ... it's sad because I know OU's going to have a great team next year. The probation win probably take away from the season a little bit. .. The NCAA will limit Oklahoma to 18 football scholarships in each ofahe nut two years. instead of25. The number of official paid visits by prospecti ve students athletes will be limited to 50 for each of the next two years instead of the allotted 85. and only eight full-time coaches will be able to participate in off- cameus recruiting in 1989. The NCAA also foutid "numerous and major violations," including; •A booster provided an automobile for a prospective student-athlete at no cost. •An assistant coach led a studcnt-a1hle1e-to believe that he would be "'taken care of ' ifhe enrolled at the school. •An assistant coach provided S 1,000 in c,ash to a recruit as an inducement to enroll at the' school. •Student-athletes were given cash for the sale of their complimentary season tickets. •The former recruiting coordinalor arranged for airplane tickets at no cost for a recruit and a s1udent- 1thlete. •Switzer supplemented the salaries of assistant coaches and staff and paid for rental cars of student hosts from his checking account. •Transportation, entertainment and inducements were provided to prospective student-athletes. Boston bolds off New York ReMn Panu scored a season-high 34 m pointsandltevtllMcHaleadded 26Sunday niaht u the Boston Celtics ended New York's sil-pme winning streak wiah a 117-104 victory over the Knicks. The Celtics nailed down their 14th consecutive regular-season win over the Krlicks at Boston Garden since 1984 with a 13-0 run early in the fourth peliod. New York led twice. 70..69 and 72-71 in lhe third period. With a 90-87 lcad. Boston went on a 13-0run, startin& with a layup by rookie Brio aaw, who hit sil of seven shots for 12 points. Patrtd E.., had 30 points for the Knicks ... In another NBA game: Ahem OlaJ••oa sco~ 14 of his 35 points in the pivotal founh quarter and added 17 rebounds and eight blocked shots to lead the Houston Rockets 10 a 120-109 victory over the San Antonio, the Spurs seventh straight loss. Greg AMer,_ led the Spurs wi th 29 points and 10 rebounds. Television, radio T•L•VISION 6 p.m. -"'o POOTaALL: Ch1Ca90 et Mtnnesole, Channel 7. 6 p.m. -AGUR• SKATING: Skate America exhibition from Portland, Maine (tape), ESPN. 7 P.m. -YACHTING: Pro Seti competition (t8"), ESPN. 7:30 P.m. -lWNNIS: Challen9e event from the Forum (lape), Prime Ticket. •ADM> 6 P.m. -"'° POOTaALL: ChlCHO •• MIMftOta, KNX (1070). --c---- MAJORLBAGUE VOLLEYBALL DRAFT ••• "9981 (Washinaaon); Min~ Monarchs: Janet Cobbs (Nonh Dakota Slltt • 1988 Division II player of yar); Chicaao Bttele (obtained from San J<>K Golddigcrs): Ann Boyer (UCLA): and Por1landSpiktrs: Dawn Davenpon (Texas). The San Jose Goldd111ers traded its first round pick (fifth overall) to the Chicqo Breeze for the riahts to Jayne McHu&h, a 6-foot-2 middle blocker fro.m [JOP. The Big West Conference offered lhe most players wi th eiaht drafted Sunday. The Pac-10 was second with StVen. 1•>-tll -.,.., ,.,,.., lM ........... ,.,,..... ............ dlolCel .. MF1 "' • "-· ... c-.. ........ 1811 ,...,, .... ......... , .. -· . ..,. "' . ., ... 1. ~1. DNM t=. =I Ma t·J t (Ill, ~ GeMam IMIMMieeal OH 1-11 1 NY, CIWtltY Hare (Atllalle I I.I OH H • MIM, I.Mt •lldlcelt l~I S H S IJ, 'II """" CIYUI OH 6-l 6. LA, Kris I011art1 CUCll Ma •·• T1llN ...... 1. Prl, Dlame ~ (TIM.I OH 6-l t. Chi, c-.. Wiiier (FIOrlM SU M8 J-11 1 NY, Mertilla Clncer-(Hew911) S J-t L Minn, 9tOIM Hwr""'9ft 1~1 DH 1-11 S. SJ, Ur TOWlll CUC 5ant9 kWel S S-tt 6. LA, Jeckle Mlf*r CID SI.) OH S-.. P..-.... 1. Prl, Tred S11Mter ",_ SI.) I H 2. Clll, Kim Hlclll (SM Joie If ... ) M8 1-11 3. NY, Amada Ollvtlra (Tea.·Art.I OH 1-t •• MIM, Jamie HalCNll (USCI M8 ... S. SJ. Nancv ...,.,_. (USC) DH S-t MLV C .... Draft ~. T-. .... ..,, C:-.. HI. 6. LA, LIM leYinlltOfl C.....,Cllnel M8 ... ,Int ..... ., ....... I. LA, Anne Vorwerk (Hewell) Ml 6-0 2. Clll, Mary e ... n Cllllllol•I Ml s-11 3. NY, Lt Ul'ie Wtllel IWethlnolon) OH S·ll 4. Minn, Janet CotlOI (N. Dell. SI.) OH 6-1 s, Clll. Ann lover (UCLA) s 6·0 6 Prl now" 0 ftVl'ftf>'l•1 IT"llHI MB 6·0 1. Prt, Gltlle JeftklM (New Ort> M8 J-11 2. Clll, Klf'il Fundleu (Fie, MM) DH H 3. NY, ~ lt""*9r.., (ftOrt, SU OH S-11 '· MIM, Nuacl S. SJ, Dawn Meldln• (Arlr. St.I Ma t-1 .. LA, Amy Havn (Stanford) DH H Boaatoa qaarterback Warren llooa fambl• the ball wlllle W.., ..eked by WILD FINALE TO 1988 NFL CAMPAIGN ••• From Bl Philadelphia, 10-6. won the division t?Y. virtue of two victories over the Giants. Cunningham threw touchdown passes of 12 yards to Keith Jackson and 15 yards to Mike Quick. Luis Zendejas kicked field goals of 37. 27, and 27 yards . .J _ J . Dallas, 3-1 ~ the second-worst record in club history. The Cowboys wereO-J0-1in1960. their first season. The Cowboys took a 7-0 lead o n Henchel Walker's I-yard run in the first quarter. Jet1Z7,GlutsZl:AITooncau&hta ~ard touchdown pass from Ken 0 Brien with 37 seconds left, putting the G iants' playoff chances on hold. The Jets. 8-7-1. led until Phil Simms threw a 9-yard touchdown pass to Lionel Manuel with 4:54 left 10 put the Giants ahead 21-20. -..._ II, <Mien U: Don SU'@U completed 25 of 42 paS5CS for 326 yards and two touchdowns as Cleveland set u_p a rematch with lhe Oilers in nCllt Saturday's AFC wild- card pme. Houston, 10-6. previously had clinched a wild-card berth. Cleveland, 10-6, is aoing to the playoffs for 1 fourth consecutive year. The Browns will host ahe pme because of 1 better division record than Houston. IUltl It, Pak91 t: Moncn Andenen kicked 1 30-yard field aoal with five seconds remainin~ New Steden 4t, Dolpllbl1 %4: Dwaynt Orleans, 10-6, finished w1th the Woodruff and Darin Jordan scof.eci second-best record in franchise his-on interception returns, Warren WH- tory. The Saints were 12-3 in 1987, Iiams ran for 11 7 yards, Louis Lippi 1heirfirst-everwinnin1season. AtJan-scored on a 38-yard reverse and Gary ta finished S-11, its sixth consecutive Andenon kicked four field p.ls. sub-. 500 season. Pittsburah, S-111 and Miami, 6-10, New Orleans tniled 9-7 after Greg each finiShed wtth their poorac Davis' third field goal, a 39-yarder records since 1969. with 6:03 remainina. Dan Marino failed to throw • Celts 17, Blllt 14: Gary H<>seboom touchdown pass for the founh time in replace<l an injured Chris Chandler in his last 5 I pmes and left the pmc the the fourth quaner and passed for midway throuah the founh quarter, 89 yards and two aouchdowns. Buf-He com~eted 17 of 31 passes for 19' faJo, 12-4, lost a chance to have the yards with awo interceptions . home-field advantaae for the entire Clmpn H, aief1 U : Gal)! playoffs. The Bills play the winner of Andenon p ined a club-record 217 the Cleveland-Houston wild~rd y~rds on 34 carries and Jamie game. Holland returned a kickoff 94 yards. The Colts, 9-7, rallied from a 14-3 Anderson broke the club record for deficit early in the fourth quaner. silllle-pme yardage set by Keith Hoseboom threw a 3-yard touch-Lincoln, who had 206apanst the clowa Piii 10 Mau Bouu aAd ~-the 1963 1'fl:: cham-YI~ t~ Bentley wi.th I: 19 to go. pionship game .. Erec Dickenon pined 166 yards on Anderson finished the year with a l6 carries. 1, 119 yards, the first Charaer to top IHM11r1 II, U.. II: Vinny 1,000 yards since Earnest Jackson Testaverde threw for 189 y1nls and had I, 179 in 1984. three touchdowns. He also threw hften it, CaNIMJ1 17: Don three in1erception1 to set an NFC Majkowski threw for 255 yards and season record of 3S. two touchdowns and Green Bayc1 Tesllverde, who threw his 33rd 4-12, avoided ill worst record in 30 intertieption to break Fran Tarken-yean. The Packers were 4-12 two ton's JI-year~ NFC record on the yean llO,t their wont season sin« Buca' fim ~n. was seven shy aoina I-Iv.I in 19S8. ofthe NFL record of 42, ICI by Oeorae A Jou by the Packers would have Blanda in 1962. pven them the No. I. RAMS AVENGE 48-0 LOSS IN LAST SEASON'S FINALE WITH 38-16 WIN •• • UCI'sPhaer ....... swims to third looked pat. We really Sot taken Orea Bell also r.ayed a k~ role in Walker wi~l6 yards, but was held Philadelphia's R:cte White. J~ 9-yard caleh tOr a touchdown •put." the rout., rushina I umes for 8 yards IO just SI on 19 carries. He r11n The first two sac s forced the 49en wit I :05 remaini ... INDIANAPOLIS -UCI juniclr The 49en. whose four-pme win-and a 1ouc:hdoWn. for 1career-hit190 yards when the to senle for Mike Cofer's 23-yard faeld The Rams IOI a &ft touchdown nina suak ended emphatically. LinebKter Kevin Greene had four 49en belt 1 Rams 24-21 at ~I to open the scorina after they had after the 49in' DCk Tbonw Brian Phaer finished third in the 100-clinched the division title earlier 1n fin1.quaner uc:ks before the Rams Anaheim in October. \ten to the 3. bounced 1 snap that pun-:..= meter breasutroke at the u.~n the day when New Orleans beat IOC dleir oftielllC in ecar and ICored on The Rams play Minnnoll in the Everett completed only three of his Helton=, ..... J) swim chamt"':iPI here y. Atlanta I ()..9. ~nished in 1 three-ID contecutive ~ afkr NFC wild card~ ne1t Monday. fint l~Stn. with an 1ntertieption, beat ftime. ... ICOftld from • q:111 the NCAA 0.m-way tie with the inll and llama at traili111 ).(). The Rams will the pmc if tilt but t advan~ o( ~ r1eld yard out two plays after Ronnit Lon pi iPI nellt IPrinaas the Anlellen 10-6 but won their third NFC West "Joe Montana it tbt quanert.ck or Vikinp lote MODdly nipl 10 Ori· c-=aon in drivi=::m• 38 f:rda was called for interferins with EJlard stood in fifth place after two days of title in a row and fifth in six yean this decade, and to make a ditrecult ei:n Francilclo will ._. a ,..,.,., lhlir In& touc arty n the at the 1D1J Hae. COlllpeUtion. hued on 1 3-1 record •intt the two ftilbt lw him is cunJy what ~ __. ~ Jol1111011 ca•• the Cofer kicbd a ~,ant ftetdJ::I Pliaer, lbe ua record-bolder• die foes. neilcled IO do, .. Rams a.ch John pme Ill two ..ti. :ri· ~·--~ 100. nd lOO-mcter ~ The Rams' third tuaiaht win pve RolUloa l8kl. The~ ............. Rouie I.Ou aild Jell Fuller 10 with no time maain1~ efter on.. ftaillled in 1:04.57 behind a ..- tbem an NFC wild-cant berth : '"We MW IO watch TV tomouow ~.wi.aau.e ............. .... ._. denied the Rams prevent de-H~~ ~ Min-•nddimi-(m-1••-~ubeforea..eMvw1.,.. Tiie ....... ~ 73 =~ fen• Aw JI yards on two quick In the IOO ~· die _. of York Oiuu. no. lael 27·21 •'te . ••'tejml .. tobc blcl•• 10.7• • na ..... lriaa Jadd Man = Mlllro •eo•NcwYortJetaonSuday ladle "Ra,i11ae...._ Tlae ltw M•PG• ... S.. ,,__ ·n ..-... .. 5:2J .. in .-Fred Scrictllnd lllCbd Montam U1cchi ad Tim Hi __. a-.la~lli-'1111 111121-IJ•tsWmewl cilcO's •• ltwe lime aad .ad u . ,..--.11wn-.ror21 fDr IM .-oDd time 10 llld die 49en' ..... Daw ~ ...._ tt L IJf .. lllllllldllll~iellle Mollw ...... in die ftnt .... ~· .. rumion oldie .... llalf, W....rwo~~dtion•l:f ~ -•;::i."" -wJ'4r:n--· and on 11vcn of the ftnt I S ocalion1 Everett then led the Rams OI) their ..... """'weDl blcll to ...... He N-. Jh .... .., fll JI,_. JOI • , ... '6 ... 5,..anda Ille went beck 10 pm11. Orene led the lQGllll drivt oflbe 'fr:74 ~ ~•Ii•°'"""...._.. •• =:.... ........... widt 120. a dlllt _.., .... I ~·~r:'bJ ··-..:. ....,. .... widi • .... =.\, ... He,........ =-a = ...... l ...... ..._..... ~::.,•1. ~· ............ -.=: ...... mck;iaat ............... ...... ..., ....... ... ............. =-IO.U fJI ., .. __ .,.,, ..... _,., *-cl ill the NFL to II 1tJ ......... "'"" ............. a lllldehll-U. t. '4. and • '°' ' • t" ~ ~ • • Nl'L ITAllGllH ....... c ....... .... W L T 10 ' 0 10 6 0 10 ' 0 5 ll 0 c.erll 12 3 0 10 5 0 5 11 0 ' 12 0 • 12 0 .... P'Ct. PJfJ PA ,'25 3'f 294 .'25 •11 2'3 .625 312 213 .313 2M 315 •••17 wm• .JU Ml J50 .291 220 213 . 2• MO 315 10 ' o .mm 31f 10' 0 .62535'3CM 7 9 0 .GI 3otS 317 7 9 0 .Ql3"3'1 3 13 0 .I• 265 311 AmerkMI cetllliAMe West W L T 9 1 0 I I 0 7 9 0 ' 10 0 • 11 l c.lr8I 12 • 0 10 6 0 10 6 0 5 \1 0 •Ht x•autt.k> 12 • o ~~ ; ~ g V.Jets I 7 l Pct.PF PA . 563 33t 329 •• 327 352 .GI 325 3'f .l75 231 332 .211 25'1 320 .750 .. 329 .'25JCM• .625 G• 365 .313 33' '21 .750 329 237 .563 3St 31~ . 563 250 214 .S31 3n 3s.t .375 319 3IO ~ 6 10 0 1 x-ctlnched division lltte v-ctlnched wlld c•rd berth ~ s.tuNIY"I Scetft Clnclnnall 20, We\Nnelon 17 (oil Den,,., 21, Hew Eneland 10 • S..Y"• Scerft ...,. 31, Seti FranclKO 1' *'"' o ........ 37 Hew Or1Mn1 10, Atlanta f lndlaMPDll• 17, 8uffelo 14 I TamN .. ¥ 21, Oetrol1 10 ~ 21, Houlton 23 Pl"111ur9'\ ... Miami 2• • New Vorll Jets 27. New YOf'k Glant1 21 Ptll 1Ulshla 23, Oallal 7 San 01eeO 24, ~1 Cltv 13 Greefl a.v 2'. "'-nl11 11 1 T ........ t GMW Chica90 at Mlnnnota, 6 p.m. •NO ll•GU\.AA SAA'°" N~L lllawtf scMdUlt s.t!INIY"I 0..... AfC Wlil Cenl Houilon •I CleYelalld. ICUO a.m M9MeY,Dec.i6 NfC Wiid c.rcl --"'· MlnnftOI•. •lit and time TBA Dec. JI eM Aft. 1 NFC Wild Card winner •• ChlcallO, dale •l)d time TBA N9A STANDINGS ....... c:. ....... Dalla Denwr Houston Uteh Sen Antonio Mleml Pedlk DMllln W L " 7 12 ' 13 10 11 10 ' 12 • 15 S IS Midwest OMllell 14 7 15 • 14 9 13 10 6 15 I lt Pct. ·"' .571 .565 .51• .~ ~ .250 ..., .652 -.565 . 2" .050 EASTmRN COM~•R•NC• New York Phl~la 8Mt0fl New.Jersey Charlortt W•sh'"9ton Ctev ... nd Detroit Attenta Chlce9o Mltw.uk• ......... AtlMlk OMllell W L 16 7 l• 0 12 ll 10 15 6 lS 6 15 c.ner.e DfVtsleft 15 s 17 6 15 9 12 10 l1 10 s 17 ~·~ WallillllOn llS, Lellen 110 lollOft m, New Yorll 1CW ....,.._ 120. sen Antonio 109 T__....._ No ..,_ ~ ,........._ ~ ·'" .513 .522 --.2" .2" .750 .739 .625 .s.s .51• .227 L.-.n .. Ollo80. 5 p.m. a...rs at GOiden Stale, 7:30 P.m. ......,. at New Yorll, «JO p.m. 0.... at Plil ldll ,,.., ':le P.m. s.ttle at A......_, 4:30 P.tn. uteft al Cltwleftd, 4;30 P..tn. Mletlll ., Oe!T'oll, 4:30 p.m. Olettotle af Mllwauk•. 5:30 p.m. Secramento ., Houlton. S'.30 p,m. Portlend at Den"9f'. 6:30 p.m. San Antonio •I ~-. 6:30 P.m. Ga 3 3 • ' • t r,A, 1 2 • 12'h 2'h • 7 ' ' 2\-'l 4'h s ll~ Pfl~I• v5.. San Frenclsco, silt, d••• and time T&.-Bultts ns, u1rtri no ~AFfa:fld Card wlnMr at 8ultato, dale •rid LOS ANGILIS (llO) _ GrHn 3·10 •·4 10, S..lllt al Clnclnnall, dale end lime TBA Worllw 13·21 S·6 31, Abclul·Jallller 6·10 4·5 16, SUftdlly, JM. e JoflnM>n 4·7 S·6 13, Scott 9· 11 J·l 21. TllOl'nPton AFC Ch•mp\on"'lp, TBA 3·4 O·O '· Woolrlooe 1-3 1·2 3, COOPtr 4·7 0-0 NFC Cl'lamp\on"'IP, T8A •• Campbell I·• 0-0 2, L•l'nCI o-o O•O o. Tot••• s...... Jaft. 22 ..... 22·26 110. ( ..._ .......... "'s--.-...., _ _., WASHINGTON t11S) -Catled9t 5· 14 4·6 i., 23'd .. ~ ao-:1 _.,,, ............ Kl119 •·II S·6 13. C.Jones M 0·0 2. Matone NOTE: If Minnesota wins !he NFC Wiid 14·21 6·6 34, Walker 1·6 4·6 6, Williams 7·11 (:ard, ltlt\I would lllaV at San Frencl5co and •·9 22, C.A.J~ 0-1 0·0 0, Coller 2·3 0-0 •. t-t~la would play al Clllceoo. ~-~~I ~j~ 0-0 e, EKklH S·7 2·2 12.Totalt 43·13 I NFLdl'•ftorellr . S<enlW~ I. D ... 1; 2. Green h v. 3 Oelroil, .._ Kensas LOI AllMlti JS 30 n U-llO t llv; 5, Atlanta, 6, famN 8av, 7, PittlOUfOll; Wa.nington 11 32 21 37-115 = Oleeo; 9. Miami. 10 Pl\otnlx, 11. Chlca90 Fouled out-+lone llt00uncb-l.01 AneelH LA llaldeot; 12. Clllcffo {from Wa511· 41 (Worthv 7), Washln9ton SI (Wllllafm, I; 13. Denver; 1' NY Jett. lS-21 10 be CatltdOe 10). As~11-L01 Anetlts 21 {JohmOll teflfrnlned. I), Washington 22 {Walker .,. Total loult-LOI I 9tams JI, ~ 16 Anoei.s 2s. Washington 21. Tecnnl· Scere IW• ~ • cM-Wa"'4neton coac:h UllMIO. A-11"'3. 0 21 10 1-)j l 10 0 J-1' ''"' ONrtet' SF-FG Cot« 23, U 3 S.C.-0-W llwn,-0..lotlmon 16 oe" from E-•11 ( Lemford kick I, 3:51 SF-4tattwnen I run !Cofer 11.lckl, t'.37 • ltamt-Ellard f pan ~om Eventt (l.amlold kick), 13:•7 ltafM-eall I run (L•n,lord klek), 1•·40 SF-f'G Cofer 46, IU7 TNr.aQNf1w 1 ltams-O.Jofwllon 11 oeu from Evertt! (Laftlfo(d kid!.), ,...32 Rams-FG ~d ... 12:20 , ... Q!Mrtw Ramt-0.Jol'lnlOtl S NU from Everell (l • .an1fo<d kick), 4:40 SF-FG Cofer 36, 14:51 A-62,..._ TU.M STATISTICS ltatnl SI' Finl down' 23 20 Rutnes·vard• J0·12l 21·70 Paulnt 201 246 Return Yard1 31 S3 (on'll>·AIHnl 19·31· I 22·37·0 Sackad·Yardt Lott 0-0 t·•S ~11 S·ll 6·U flumtllft·LO\I 1·0 M P9naltlft·Yardt S-l3 M l Time of Pouftllon ~~ 21:37 INOIVIOUALSTATISTICS llUSHING-ttam1, hi 21·•· a rown 1·13, Whit• 4·10, E,,.,•11 2·6. McG" 1·3, Guman l·I. San Frencltco, Crele 16·SI, ltathmen 2·11. Voune l ·f, Helton 1-0. Fla9ler Hmlnul II. PA.S$1NG-Ram1. E vtrell 1f·31· 1·201. San Frenc:IKO, Montana IS·2'·0· 171. YOIJl\9 J·ll-0-120. I COLLEGE MEN Ley .... c:Ncffe "' UCI f4 <-·<.....,_., UCI ~.Olicffl ........ L•bal 9 J 0 21 RDOer\ I 0 0 2 M. Oktrczk S • 4 14 Palmer 10 2 3 27 F loyd & S S 17 ~csm.n O O 2 O' McCtcmev o 0 3 o WlllltlO 1002 AnderJOn I 0 I 2 Galle\ JoMJOn Borde<\ C.,ter F UllC'lltSS ll09tf"5 .. " ... 9 3 s 21 12 ' 3 ,. 3 2 3 • s • 3" 7 3 4 " 1 3 3 s Butler 4 1 S 9 Total• 37 lS 23 9• Tolalt 37 23 21 " Halftime: Lovola·CnlcffC), SO-•?. J·POlnl CIOal\: lJCl-Palmer s. LOvOla·Clll· Cff()-Carttr I, FunchtH I. Technicals: Non.. C ..... meft'S K..-.S WHT ArltOM 76. WHlllneton SL St Pes>Perdlne 96, Nort11H1tern 91 Redlands ff, Lawrance t• MIOWHT Iowa SI. 9', 8radlev f7 Lovolll·Chlca9o "· UCI 94 • • I XHl8fTIOM Marathon Oil 96, Oav1dwn IO s. Mln iu lPPI "· NI-Mining, Ille West C•lllireflCI JeHn n Ca•-o-.1 WL WL I 0 3 2 0 0 6 0 0 0 4 I 0 0 5 3 0 0 J 3 TaAM "A'TISTICI <~Dlc.m ............ "" T-........... ,.,. .... Mnlcio Slete Ill PU 51.J .G .M UCleflle......,• 112 D.5 •.J WI .917 ,,..,. State 7.J 7U 6U '9S .m C.. State FIAlr1on u 710 ... s ,.., 111 ~ 6 5 11.5 7S.O •77 .n1 ........ Lal Veen 0.0 IU IU .GI .W Ulafl si.1e ·s.7 79.1 IU .GI 7 .. lell ..... si.1e . ·6.1 n.6 •. 4 All An UCI • IU IU HI .Of .n• Lone teecll Stat• ·14.I 6'.0 IU .Jlt"' RAE .... T_.. a-o..-. UC 5allta ferNr• 41.S JU 7.l Cal State Fulllrton 40.5 33.0 7.'5 New Me•lco Stale 0 .0 JU S.S FrftftO State W 2ll S.O Nevede-Ln v ... , JU ... • 1.3 UCI JU JU ·U LOl'I 9Mcll Stele 1'.7 G.J ·U sen JoM Sl•ta Ju •• -u Pac:Hlc l ... JU ·4.7 Uteh Slate 34.7 '1 0 ·U *INVIOUAL STATISTICS Sc.- ...... • ,. P'TPll. -~ Reid Newev, USU 1 20 1' 71 1U Cedric CeMllDI, CSF 4 3' 20 9' 13.5 C:Wrldl DeHart, ucse 4 J7 • " n .o Steve ...... SJSU S 36 ll 91 IU Roel P91mer, UCI S 3' 1 n ll.4 Je(vl1 CcMt, FSU 6 3' 2• HO 11.l M*e Oo'fte, UCS8 4 ll 6 6' 1'.3 CIWI\ FOii, UOP • 1t 1 6' IU Derek Joftel, CSF 4 21 17 '9 14.1 Jeff McCOOi, NMSU 6 11 6 es 11.2 lt•llllM1_81_1 .... CWI< CtMIDI, CSF Eric Mc>.rfftll, UCSll o--.. Wiiiems, SJSU JoMftV Roeeraon, NMSU JoM .-..11en, L8SU JoM Svtin. CSF MefC4 Flemlnl, L8SU Tonv FeltnM, SJSU Slacev Aullmon. UNL V Dofl Lvttte. UOP ..... c.rtton O.venciort, UCS8 Wiiiie JoMpft, NMSU Gr99 Anthony, UNLV Reid Newey, USU Anlllonv Perrv. SJSU Derr.. Feulkner, L8SU Rodnev Scott, SJSU Roel Palmer, UCI ·-A~ • 31 f.5 • 3' u s 43 u ' "' u ' ., u 4 32 1.0 ' 46 7.7 s 3' 7.2 • 21 7.0 4 21 7.0 ·-·~ • JO 7.5 6 33 s.s 4 21 S.3 3 " u s 22 ... ~ 23 •.• s " u 5 ,, u COMMUNITY COLLEGE MEN OrMle .,,..,. C......•te.t ( Tilrwtll D9c. 11 ) Gokleo West Oranee Coa5t Fullerton Rancho Sanrlaeo Rlvar5lde SaddleOac:k Cvpreu Cl 't eM1t WL 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o-o °""' w l II 2 10 2 ' 1 • l • s . ' 2 ' TE AM STA T1SllCS ( Tiltwtlt D9c. 11) Sar. CMl Det fG " ~ T""' Dlfl. Aw. Awe. ~ .Sii .Sl7 .510 GOiden Wtsl ll.l fO ll S .107 .'21 M2 63' Fullerton 12.9 71.6 65,7 Oranee Coasl e.4 70.3 61.f Renelle> S.ntlaoo • 0 n.• 73.4 ··" .soo CvPl'etl 2.0 72.9 70.9 llivenldt O 4 63"2 '2.1 S20 .... 7 '°' .no SaddleOaek -1.s 1u n 1 ns INDIVIDUAL ST A TISTICS SC_.. ....... M. Muller·Stacll, GW Seen Ktvh , 5ad BoObv JOYQt , Riv Vincent MtlOtl, S.o Alan Scllllll4K. OC Oareck Cr•,... oc Ai.111• Kreos. GW Elbert Oavl5, GW Geoff Adam,, Ful <>-Altamirano, RS "9¥91' 9otl0v Jovce. Riv 'lllncent MaM>n. Sad Geoff Adams. Fut Evrie Grav, Riv Alal'I ScllllnH. oc Make HUllllf. RS Ale11i1 l<ret>t, GW Sieve MoMr, GW ,.... Eltltrl O.v1s, GW Kettl MGIClnnev, FIJI SHn ICtvn, Sad Dareck Cr-. OC Antone Cur"'· s.d Miki Stewart, Riv Ctvb Mellin, RS Milla V•ro,, Cyp G l'G 13 Ill 9 70 II 93 9 S9 11 62 12 7f 13 " 13 SI ... 10 .. "'""' 63 319 3& 194 IS 20f 26 1'4 4S 170 27 llS S2 116 6S llS 13 109 32 13S A~ 2H 2U lf,O 16.0 IS.S IS.• 14.3 142 136 IJS G .... All'& II 116 10.S 9 17 '7 I 76 9.S 11 90 1.2 II I S 7.7 10 64 •• 13 " 6.2 l3 6' SI G .... Ave. 13 IOI l.J 10 S3 S.3 ....... 12 S7 .. ' 31 •I 11 .. .0 10 3' 3' • 21 3-S , .... Gem l"w< ...... ... ..,. fGM fGA fl'C\. lk>OOv Jovce. Riv '3 1'4 646 Geoff Adams, Ful 4' n ,673 Alan Schllnn, OC 62 102 .608 Evrl< Grav. lllv 56 ,. .SM Wendell Lauderdele, Cyo 22 37 ."5 Darrvl (orlf11n. Fut C3 73 .Sit Andre Lamoureu11, Cvo 41 70 .516 Olfalt JoflnM>n, OC 31 6S .SIS Vincent MalOtl. Sad 5f IOS .562 Vinet Hlron, CvP 33 61 .541 nine.,,_. fG hr~ ,_..,. fGM fGA Pct Vine• HllOtl, Cvp ' 12 750 D«tll Jonnson. oc 26 37 703 Marl\ lludomtlkln. Ful 14 t2 636 Corev Arnett, Riv 6 10 600 Mlk• VarOI, Cvo IS 21 S36 .Sffn Ktvts, Sad 1' ll .•7• JoM Guerrero, RS I 17 ,Cl Markus ~-Sled\, GW 20 4.S .... ''" Tlw9W ~ ... 'IW Ian Oonrtellv. Cvo Oave Yamatt. GW Marku• Muller·Slac:n, GW Kelli MGKlnntv. F ul Corri Arnett, Riv Gra'tlle Humo!Vtv. CYP Ma<land Love. OC: V•nct Hlion, CYP Mike Hunter, RS Stac:Y Andenon. Riv FTM F"T A ~ct. 19 19 1.000 l9 21 90S 63 73 "3 " .. '54 2t 2S MO 12 15 '°° • 10 '°° 27 34 ,,.. 11 n m If 2S 711J ltECEIVING-llams, Ellard 6·7•. JOhftt.Oft T-0, Co11 4·0 , Holoftan l-2'. hll ?-17 San FranclKO, T•vtor S-54, Flatler 3-n. Cralt 3·32, Ralllman 3-2', WlllOtl 2·34, Rice 2·1', Gteer 2·24, Htller 1-10, Frantt 1-1. Nevadll·Las Vten UC Satire 11¥11era Cel Slelt FulerloO New t.Wlllco State Fresno State Peclflc San Jose State Lono 8ffctl State Utah State g g ~ ~ COLLEGE WOMEN 0 0 2 s ... West C• .. ••r•ICI SMMwtrs 43, 9tatdlln J7 ken " °'*""' 14 9 14 6'-'3 7 10 10 10-37 UCI 0 0 I 4 C~ 0¥eral 01 16 WL WL Suftde'I'• SC-Nev~·L•s Vegas I O 6 O fint ~ LovOla·ClllcffO "· UCI f4 lon9 a.ecn srare I o 3 2 ..aMDUAL tTATin1CS lftrWllll Dec. t1) ---.... •N ClllN ~rv. SOSU 6 71 ~ Jor_,, UNLV • •I ~ MMlt\', UH s u K It a AlltllOf9r. UC se • • Traci Waite\. L.8SU • l3 Mia Sluk.-kl, UOP S M Yv91te lt-.rts, FSU 1 •7 Pwlnv TOW. L•SU • ,, JIAe 1-.. sosu 6 S2 GeN Millar, CSF 7 46 lttUU t81e "9wr PaY!ine Jordan, UNL V Chana Perrv. SOSU J4ldV Me6ll'I • UH Kit• NlttlOfW, ucn Julie s1uae11111. UOl9 Lore Alellltncllf, SJSU Sln'9lle Sruoek, FSU lrOOlle Mudow•. SOSU Yvette .. D«ltfl,, FSU l'Mlnfla Parll5, UCI AIMtel "9wr MlcMlte ._,lo, FSU Stlervt JonH, CSF JOdl P .... SJSU Sarllaf'a ... Inv. UCSB Sta<v Hunt. CSF Pennv T Oler, \.I SU L•T•\l'la Cauwv. SJSU Traci Wallet. LBSU CNStat LM, SOSU AYfthe 8!ook5, UH "Pia. ·~ 22 17 JO ' 7 2S 3' 17 • )) l .. 771 " , ... 114 12.t IS 21l ,, "' " 19.4 13' "' 7S ". 11% 1'6 125 17' 0 .... A ... 4 " 17.0 6 IS 1'2 s 10 14.0 4 S5 IU S .. IU 5 57 IU 1 .. '·' ' S2 l7 1 '° u 4 33 13 G .... A ... 7 40 51 1 31 s.J 5 25 so . '" .. 7 )J ., • ll 4S S 2'2 H 4 .11 4.3 6 2' 0 5 ,, 42 eotMAUNtTY COLLEN ~N OrMle .,,..,. Cco• 1nce (~ D9c. 11) C I WWW OWrllll w l 10 I • l s • 6 6 0 0 • 7 3 • WL Fullerton 0 0 GolOerl Wnl 0 0 Rlveuldt o O CvOl'etS 0 0 SaddltOa<k 0 0 Oranoe coa,1 o o Rancho Santiago o o INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS kertftt ...._ Vicki Sllv•, Cvo leckv Wavlend, CvP Kim Ellerman, OC Stllhnle Swan\on, GW IC9"1 Jonn50f!, Fut Kim Wit\Of('Gw DMlble WagMr, Fu! G fG 12 126 12 .. 11 " 12 71 11 '2 11 63 II 57 "~ 47 ,,, Q 264 2S 157 12 16' 26 150 " 131 12 131 Ave. 24.9 n.o 14.3 140 13.6 12.6 12.S ...... leckv Wavland, CvP Ctaudellt JatkJOn. GW 'Vlckv SMva, CvP ~l-a.II.Cl\, oc Kim Willon, GW Kelli JoMM>n. Fu! Kim Ellerman, OC G Ne. Ave. I? 12' 10 s 11 115 u \ 12 ICM '7 l 11 91 u II II to 11 ., 7 s 11 I I 74 Auhh ......, Deanne Cox, GW Kim Wiltotl, GW Steffi Strauu , FIJI lacky WeV\end, Cvo LIM CrOUkev. Fut Vill.v SIWa, CVP Dannette Arnoolt, OC GNe. All'& 12 1' 6-S 11 6S s.9 II 63 S7 n st .., 10 41 •I 12 47 ,, II 3' l.S 8aslcetblll scMdU6n COLLaGa MIN T ... 'I 5Pfin9 ,.rtlor !Midi J et Sout~n C•tffornla CDIM9t. 7.JO. w.-...v UCI •I \llrglnla, •:30 COIWIWMITY COlLIGI MIN T ....... Orenee Coa51 al LA Valltv Tournament tvs. Hancock. 6 o.m.l T ..... \I Or1nve Coast el LA Vtllev T-na!'Ntnt. w.-..-v Oranve Co.\I et LA 'llalltv T-n•men•. HtGff SCHOOL aovs T.._. Hunllnelon a.acn et Lone 8MC'll Wlhon. 7;30, M«rimac: Sfale (Au,tralla) at Marer o.I. 7:30 T ... \I I s.ddleC>ack at Dana Hllls. J<.30, Sant• Ana al Wettrn4n,1er. 7.30. SOutn Lake T.,_ 11 Mallf Del,7.30, LaWna Hiii\ al Unlvar~tv. 7.30; Newo«t Hartlor at San Oleoutto Tourrament. lnttM al I(~ lHonolu!Ul Tour· nament> w ...... v Ed1M>n vs Calll\lreno Valley •• ~ COlltM, 7.JO NeW1IOl'1 HarDOr al San Dieell1lo Tourn.rnent, Intl,.. ., K~rneha (Honotulu) Tournament lllwMe'I Cotta MeM at Corona del Mar, 1.30, Wood· Dridee at Etl•ncla, 7.JO. Marina •' M1M•11an, 7.30, ,.....,_., H•rbor •• San Oleguilo Tour· nament; Irvine II K~ CHonolulul Tournament '"*" L•ll-OOCI et Edl'4)n, 7 JO. HtGH SCHOOL GMLS T ....... LatlUN 8"cfl 11 $an Clemente. 7:30; Foun• lain v ... v •• Santa 8erber• Tournament, E1tanclll, NewPOfl Hartlor et 8olM Gr•ndt Tournament. ~v Fountain Vattev at S.nte Bal'Mr• Tour· nament; E•lencla. Newport HartlOr a t aotM Grandi Tournamanr, Woodbf"ldee, Huntinoi.i e..ctl, Oceen View, Marina, !Nier Del at Cvpres• Tournament. w....-v Fountain Valle¥ al San1a Baro.re Tour· __,,, E11encla. Newoort H•rtlor el aotw Grenda Tourna.mtnt. Woodl><ldee H1111llnoton leectl. OcMn View, Maril\a, Malet' Dai at Cypret' Tournament TIMlrMe\I Founteln v a .. v el Santa a.rtwtra Tout'" nament; WOOdbfldee. Hunttnoton a..cn. Octan v-. MMina, Matlf o.i er Cvcwns To;;r· nament; Wri'm1n,1..-at L• Ou•nl• Tournament, EdiM>n at L'tlnwood, 7 ff1ille\I WOOdbridee, Huntington 8"dl. 0c .. n View, Marina, ,,.,.,., Del at CV1M'et\ Tour~1. wes1m11111er et La Quinta Tournament LA-T.8rown recovered tuml* In end zone T.......,1 0-San 01119<> State O 0 6 0 <aanr klcA), 6:00. Miu lssiPPI 'llallev State al New Mexko Cal State Fullerron O O 6 I GOL~ SM-Largent JS NH from Krieg (N.Johnson Slale, 6:30 Fr"no Slalt 0 0 6 I Seftief·LNA ~ ~ lllck), 1:35. Utah State al Wtt>er State, 6:30 Hawaii 0 0 3 2 ._ .. SH-eladtl 17 NH from Krl" IN.Johnson TMMEl""'s 0-Pac:illt O 0 1 • .--.. L .. lat DwMe a.o. ~ ltle9) '"f'~~~klc~-~'~·~'~l:~S6.~-. ... i!WJ~--~~~--:-:::-:-~~~P~Klf~l<.:Q•-t~U~l~ah~,~6:30-·i..:.J< .. ...uata..J.:lll--'~~_,.,u•o..JJ, ID&..,}111.&.~~~~--l!-l!t..-~~-!-~N .... ~•~r~•~ll~•.~·~,..ll:t.OODOO~ ~ ~1-U--1• · 1 a et Sen l4Me S•ate, ' 0 2 3 SICIMVl·Rodrql, '100,000 '4-61·'5---190 LA-Gault SI oeu from Scllroeder (8al\r UC s.nta Sarber• at Oreoon. 7:30 UC Sa nt• Barbar• O 2 3 Graen-Mood\', sso.ooo '3-6'·62-lfl kl<k>. ~7. · New Hel'nPM\lre at FrtlllD State. 7·30 Tedllv'• Games LOPel ~ng MO oo " 65 62-1'3 Sff-FG N.JoMlon 3', 2.46 Norlhfflltrn ., Cal S•••• Fulllfton, 7;3S Fresno Sr••• •• San JOM State. 2 Ink • GelMI'. SJ. 000 • • . LA-f'G laflr 2•. 7:21. ----Y"• ~ UC Santa lk<bar• •• Nevaoa·LH VeHI. ~.:;ei, ~ Ji 000 6'-~-0-I,. SH-FG N.JolWOn 24, 1l OI. UCI at Vlrelnla, •.30 7:30 l(fnt c . '1 ' 67" .,._1'5 Sff-FG N.JoMIOtl 40. l4S7. 8rltlham Youne ., Ulall State.' o m. (USA UCI el Lone llM<ll $lalt. J.30 T~~~:.·~·= ~::::~:: T'lllN~ Netwofk) Pacific et Cal Stale Fullt<'ton, 1.30 Ku·L•tllel',11UOO '7·6'·67-200 SH-etaOtl 30 "" from Krlee IN.JO!lnson Rriode lllend •I Nevaoe·LM v ..... 1 pm Hawaii •• $an Francltco. s AIC011·8iel, llS.OOO 6'·6'·'4-200 lllck). 5:43. IESPH) ""*Y"• ~ StleeNn·Cllarlft, 112,SOO 6'·6'·'6--201 ~G 8ahf' 21. 7.11 Eastern Wlllllntton al Saft JoM State, 7 30 Fr""° S1ate al St "'-"'''• S Joflh•BetWr, s 11,500 6'·6'·......__,, See-WIMlams 75 pass from l(rl" __ , ... (N.JOt\nlOtl k~l. 1.3'. LA-S.Smllfl • oeu from SCNoeder 18atir lll<k), 13:4' , .... ~ SH-FG N.JonnlOtl 35, . It. LA-F«nandel 54 NU from la.tlf lllO), 2:06. SH-FG H JotlMOtl 32, ,_42 L.A-FG 8atlr 24, IUf. A-.1,127. ~. • T9AM STATISTICS S.. LA 20 n 30-lOI ,.. 110 .. 331 46 M l lf-32·122·4'·1 3·21 3·23 M6 S•43 2·2 M l-10 M • 26.22 JUI ..... II 0 N 2880 H•bar lhd. e Com M- (714) 14CM1713 c • ........ ,..,,...._..Ml TlrN IJU. U •.u.<TA II :t -11lA U ~y ~I IS,l•tl -ui.• ~flACa.ll lt- """"" -"""" CYll\lll It.. U1 ... .-...-. Jte IS-I ue UI ~-,,.,....,., s• l...._ I&\ U •JUCTA >·II -... 11 Ma -7 • ••1•7•S-l+JI ..... .. .,. ... ---~1-..... ,. -•• ,. ... 61 .. _ ~ ..... --· hlel .,. -~ ...... -"-"'" ~ ........... "' OLDS•OllL£/GMC TIUCIS J 2ll0...._8"d. • Ca.ta M111 1714) ,.~ Or~ C0Mt DAJLY PILOT/Moftcl9r, ~ 11, t• • •4'5 . I J UCI ••• Pnlla81 i1 97-94, but UCI baled after Ille inboudl and Caner .. k a pair witb aeven teconds ~IO-' iL .. We did uerriblc oftemiYety, .. Mullipn •id... '¥Cly. we ctid NHL STAND•IH ~C1t1811Ce Calo.rY' Klftll Edmon Ion Wlnnlpee V-"COUVtf' lm¥9le DMl6lll WLTPtl 23 S S Sl 21 12 l '3 19 12 3 41 13 12 s 31 12 17 s 29 GF GA IQ M 171 117 161 l~ 126 130 IJ2 114 ~ ihi~ atriabt. .. loY.ola 'comiat down and biftiaa all 1heir jum~ We've IOC tbe besl shoo&en rn lbe worid in pre-pine and practice. Thry shoot the re11 out. Then we set 1n a si1uation like that, andjul\ don't knock them down, ju11 absolutely don't knock lbem down." Detroit SI. Louil ~· Toronto Chlceoo NerritOM.- 1711 4 31 13 13 s 31 10 " ' 26 ll 20 2 2• • 21 4 20 Wllft Ca111 aia ~*'di DMl6ell WLTP'ts llJ lOJ. " 106 121 123 102 111 l .. 161 Palmer scored 18 ~ntl in the fira1 half and finished with a c:areer·hiah 27 paints, hittins 10 of 19 attempts. Floyd rcaistered 17 poinu • ~&orC"Zyk added 14 with his nine rebOund&. and Butler had nine points and a team-hiah I 0 rebounds off the bench. Pi115t>uren l9 11 2 40 Phlledelohla 17 l7 2 36 NV R~ 16 13 4 36 W•sttlneton 16 ll 4 36 New JerMv 13 lS S 31 G~ GA 152 136 142 12• 1)0 125 11S 113 114 131 Gailes. the Ramblers' leadina scorer, finished with 21 before foulia& . out, and Funcheu,/layina in place of Hayward, tallied.I . The second half staned out like the fin• half ended with Loyola takina conlrof of1hc pme, scorina on its fim five possessions to stretch a ~2 halftune advant.aac to a 59-49 lead with l 8:05'eft. NY IU.ndtn I 22 2 11 " m Ad9ml DMlieft MontTMI Boston Hartford Buff MCI Quebec 20 10 6 .. 141 113 13 13 9 JS 111 106 13 16 2 21 112 109 12 17 3 27 lot 1~ 12 20 3 27 123 157 s-9\1'1 ~ Q\ieOec •. ao.1on 2 Piii~ S, Winni0e9 I "9w nn.v S, Chica90 l MeltmY"I ~ HartiOf'd at Monlrtel, US P.m. Edmonton •• Buffalo, 4'.35 P.m • Wa5111ngron a t ~w Yorlt Raneers. •.JS pm sr. Loul' 11 Toronto, •.JS pm. ...Mionaota al VMCou_, 7.JS Pl'il T""411¥'1 0...- CalOarY at ICilla. 7.3S o.m New YOfll. IMender\ et Pl11Ull.lr9". US Om. St Loul' •I Detroit, 4:35 Pm. S.CC. M:ft I ..... ._.. ICMOOL 90YS T...., .fountaifl V.,,,.,, el .$lml V ... v T--·· Unl.,.,.sitv, Newo«t Haroor •• Mlulon vieio Tournarntnt; Huntington 8"Cll, ""-'-· E5ten· cla at Soutll Torrance T ournarnent T-*¥ Fountain Veltri •L Simi v ...... TOUl'"ttamenl, Unlvtrlltv, New-1 Hartlof al Mltsion VleiO Tournarnen1, Hun1\11111on 8ffcll. ~nna, E'1.r>· 0. •• South Torrana Tourn.rnent. cor-del M¥ at SYnnv Hill,, J ...... ., Un•versltv a t M.lulon V-Tournament T1lwMe'I Mllrit\a, Huntington a..dl. Ocffn v -11 South Torrance Tournamenl • HIGH SCHOOl. CMRU TMIY MiAik•n II Wt\rmlmtlf, 3 T...-. lrvlne et Tustin, l .lS; EOIM>n et South Torrance Tournament T•NIM ~ c.. (et~S..-.) Welt~4,S....1 SINGLES-Stetaft Edbere IS) ., Cen·u- Staeb. •·•. I·• Sieeo (WGl Clef W...,,_ tS) 1·10. 1·6, 6·2, 6·•, 1·6, P8trlitll KuMtn lWGl -t:IV dlteuil OOU8LE~«·Er.c Jeten {WGJ ctef Edb«"°At•den Jerrvd. 3·6. 2 ... 7·S, 6·l, 6-l , . .,.... .......... DAVEY'S LOCK•R 1.......,, a.di) -3 llOall. 2• •l'lllllfl. ISO cOd, 2 llahtlul, 2 Cllllco • bass, 17 send llel1, '9 mKktrtl, • K\Jfoll\. w.-....... , .. " FOOTMLL ........ , ..... L...- OEN'llER BllONCOs-Fk'te Joe Cotloer de· t.nsiY« coordinator. Stan ~ OtNM•v• r.ne coacn. Mvret Moore, toneo.ctlet" coach, Cllar'llt West, MCOndarv cOKll •nO lluC>on CM'ler aHlsfenl tint coactL LOS ANGELES RAtOEltS-Aetl.,atte Todd Cl'!r11ltnMll, littll encl, lrom lniUrtC r.-w Plectd Chr11 MGLemore, running t:ledl, on inturtd ~ LOS ANGELES llAMS-<latmed Mrllt Gumatl. fUlltlack off waivers Plllc9d Mar1I J«ue. ~.,. on lnlUl'td rtMf'YI NEW YORK GIANTS-Acltvattd l'iarno Carson, tineoacllw Placed Root> Wll•te de· len\IYI i.neman, on lnlured rewnre NEW YORK JET~ Erik M<Mtli.n. frM wfelv on lniured ,,_,,., AC11va ltd T errv Willlams. oefen\IW beet., from \lllurtCI rtMrvt HOCllllY ....... NedteyL ..... MINNESOTA NOftTH STARS-Tr.ote Scoll B,ygstac:t, lorwerd, and Gord 01-. de· fMt«NlQ to rM P1U...., P•rtm +or-S1eVe GOINS. ior.aro, •l!d VMle Siren. def9nMman NEW JEltSE V DE VILS-.ec.atled Chrl\ Terrerl, eoallender. and George Mc:PIMe, tor· ward from Utica of lhe Am«.c.n Hoell.ev LM9Ut Assigned ~ •rown. torwerd. 10 Utica NEW YORK 1Sl.ANOUt$-A»lened Patel.Ck Flatle'I. forward, 10 Scwtnefielel of lhe Am«lc.an 1'40CU¥ L"9Uit for ConGtlionfnt --COLLIN .t.aKANSAS-~ lton Huerv, for· waro. from tM t:lailletW tM m llldefinttetv EAST COAST CONFEltENCE-Admllltd lht Universltv of Mar'Vlan0·9alllmor-e COU!ltv to tM conterenc• N()ltTHEltH IOWA-AnnOunceO lhe rft4• (lal-of Eerie 8r1Kt, ,_. tootoel coedl Then Butkr. a sophomore Prop. 48 victim whe>Se time bas been limited by Multipn's discontent with his weight which ballooned durina the off-season, took control with one of his best sqments of play this .eason. Rod Palmer hil a 10-foo~r.in the paint, Mike Labat laid-one in and Butler grabbed an offensive rebound, scored and was fouled. subsequently t0nvertin& lhe ).point opponunity lo make ii 59.56 with 17:00 to play. At the other end. Keith Gailes missed. Butler blocked his follow anempt and, took a cttarae on a third miss by Gades. Butler Scored on a layin to cap a 9-0 run which pulled UCI withtn one, S9--S8. He had another block before Chris Funchess hit a pair of free throws to make it 61.sa. .. Ricky's toin& Jo have to play;• said MuJlipn of the 6-foot-7, 260- pound center. .. It's a shame he CouJdn'l lose a littJc bit ofwei&ba. but he's J_Oing to have to score for us. t~ s no question about it. .. Aoyd hit a pair of free throws and ButJcr made a steal 10 set up Aoyd's I S-footjumper for the Anteaaen' fim lead, 62-611 since the sevcn-miaane mark of toe firs1 half. The lead cha,.cd three more lime$ befOR Palmer connected twice to give UCI i1s 87.a2 lead. RAIDERS ••• rr-•1 pve Seattk a nine-point lead. Chris Bahr kicked a 24-yard field pl wilh 2:21 to to and Seattle got the ball back, but lhc Seahawk.s stalled. Los Anaelcs aot the ball at its own ll-yard line with 1 :08 remainina and no umeouts. Schroeder threw a 22- yard pass '° Mervyn Femudez. puttina the ball at the Seattle 4S-yard line. bul Schroeder·s last four ..-:s were incompk'te. The last one was in10 a crowd in the end zone and was batted away. "I'm as disappointed as_ you can set.•• Raiden COICh Mike Shanahan said. .., felt we should have come away with a victory. and didn'L The bottom line is they JOt it done and we didn't. It's the toughest year rve ever been throush. I want to conpatlllate SeattJc. I hope they ~ all the "l'· Kriea's been a winner for years. He s cool1 calm, collected and finds a way to Wln." Earlier, ~ threw a 3S-yard touchdown pass lO Steve LarJent and 17 and 30-yard scoring puses to roolc.tc Brian Blades. who bad four receptions for I 23 yards. Jobnt0n also kicked field pis of 39, 24 and 40 yards in lbe tceond quarttt and a 1S-Y&rder with 14:46 left in the pme. The Seahawk:s went ahead for aoocS on Johnson's 1ee0nd field aoel. which made it 20.17 with I : 5 2 left in lhc fint half. Scbrocdcr threw a SI-yard touch- down pass to Willie Gauh in the tceond quarter a four-yardcr to Sieve Smith late in the third quancr and a J4-yarcter to Fernandez with 12:54 left in the~· Bahr kicked field aoats of 26 and 28 yards earlier for die Raiden. Tim Brown tot the first Los Anades touchdown when he recovered his own fumbk in the end zone. Williams had tcvcn receptions for 180 varos ina ~ I rushlna with 59 yards on 14 carries. Bo Jackson led the Raiden with 67 yards on 14 carries. Krica threw bis first two touch- down peucs before ~-fim Quarter was over. s,ivl.QI lhc Seahawb a 14-7 lead. But Schroeder heaved his ICOr· ina pus to Gau.It on \M first play of the KCOnd q_ual1er. tyi .. tM ,.me. The. resi of lbe leCOnd quaner wm a bettlc of fidd pis with JollMOa Qckirw three and Bahr one. FRll OIL , •• WITH THE PURCHASE ANO INSTALLATION OF GENU- INE MITSUBISHI OIL FILTER ~MO LU8AICATIOH AT THE REGULAR PAtCE. I Or.nge Cout DAILY PILOT/ Monday, December 19, 1988 e Pltthp Moms I 11e 1'11111 Smokers: An important limited-time offer! Marlboro IT Just collect four UPC codes from cartons of any style Marlboro, Merit, Benson & Hedges, or Virginia Slims, and mail them with the form below. In return, we'll send you a coupon for a free carton. While this off er is good until February 28, remember, cigarette prices go up lam l So start saYing righ now for your free carton. Name O Male 0 Female - . ' ,,. SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : Smoking Causes Lung Cancer, Heart Disease, Emphysema , And ·May Complicate Pregnancy. • . -·------·--=·-'--- , ' , - tflWSTt tMl t tLASTI Address Apt. City State Zip Phone Oat'! of Birth L L What is the name of your regular brand ? ___ __,,.,..,,....,...,.,..,..,.,.,,,_---1fl't.L NAMt:t 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 Marlboro Kings: 16 mg "11,;' 1.0 mg nicotine- Benson I Hedges 100'1: 18 mg "t•C 1.0 .. Ricatine- Virgini1 Sli1111 100's: 14 mg "l•r:' 0.8 Ill nicotine 1v. per cigarette, FTC Report Feb.'85. Merit Kings: 8 nfg "t1r:' 0.8 mt / nicotine av. per cig1Htte _, FTC llllltod \ .... • ... · . .. \ • ~· .. • ... Orenge COMt DA&lY PILOT/Mondey, December 19, 1111 • Company earnings play catch-up with stock prices !J~~RRIER in 1988. the last 12 months' caminp rtponed by the stocks that .., ··t:.amanp and cl1vu:Sends have arown. and conunue And these days, of course. the market seems to swoon make up the index. to grow. and at cumnt levels will readily support NEW YORK -The past year has provided plenty of every tame it is confronted with evidence that the A~ysts at the firm's weekly publicauon The substantially haaher pnces than prevail today. suppon for those pundits who araue that corporate econo~y remains strona and is supporting continued Outlodk say the multiple as barely more than JO 1( you "Given the present reasonable valuation &evcls, eaminp don't matter much to the stock market arowth.1n profits. calculate 1t on the baSIS of their earnings projections for moderate monetary policiei and modest economic , When all the results are in, Standard & p00'r•s Corp. . Will ~II that, howe.ver, some analysts say the sharp 1989. ll hasn't been that low since 1984. growth, there as no reason why the stock market cannot esumates. corporate eaminp for 1988 will be up as m uch increases in eamanp thas year have done the market a lot . There as nothin& to ~vent the market PE from continue to ad~~ncc, not only over the course of 1989. but as40~rcent from last year, on top of a 2 1 percent increase of &ood. falhn& even f unhcr. Indeed, it Sj>Cnt more than fiv(.l'(il"5_ Ullo the 1990s. __ . _ in t.98L __ -When thepricc-ea111inp t1tia-ofttte ~P 500 soarea-below t-0 ln1"e late T970s and early t 980s. S&P's analysts aren't ~ sanguine about the market's Yet S&P's SOO.stock composite index showed a P,in over 20 to I in the summer of 1987, they say. it reached However, many market-watchers argue.at its current 1989 prospects. They predict a "bumpy" f!larltct that may for the year of only about 11.S percent as of mad-danaerously overvalued levelsand had to come down one levels the PE indicates that stocks aren't puffed up b} end the year S pcrocntto 10 percent below ats recent levels. December-. way or another. overly optimistic expectations. Bl;lt. lookina at PE rauos. theb also oblerve, "stock The numbers alSC? reflect badl>: ~n the image o.~ t~e . The first part of that ~uction, t~ about IS to I, was "last year's crash was triucred b) fundamental i:!~::;::s sh:J:~e'lita':~na.!..Jl~ I=-~ market .. •~ a mechanism that a~capatcs .-or das-achieved by a drastic drop in stock pnces an the fall oflast overvaluation of stocks," sa~s Norman Fost?ack in the companies with &ood carninas visibilit and stro cou~ts, '!'I Wall Street parla':'ce trends an corporate year. Fort Lauderdale. Fla.-based an vestment advisory letter balance sheets .. Y ill earnings six.months to a year in the future. Since then by contrast the mark•t PE ha~ i..~n Market I ""'C M ........ ,' h d b la Th k • h · 987 · •. · • ... ~ ~ L.V&> • ay~ at s ar to sec any year-y-year com: oon . c mar et s eras an 1 • and the meager increase !owe.red ~unher an a far more const~ctav~ way through "Although pnce levels art the same now as they were between trends an stock prices and camings. analysts like it posted for the year as a whole, hardly appear to have eamanas increases. rather than ~ducuons an stock prices. in early 1987. underlyi hg fundamentals have improved these contend. but over the long haul risangcamingscount been accurate foretokens of where earnings we~ headed The S&P 500 lately has traded at just under 12 times substantaaJly. for a lot. Fed Express to buy Flying Tigers' parent -i LOS ANGELES (AP) -Federal Express Corp. agreed Friday to buy the parent of the Flying Tigers air freight line in an S880 million deal that would give the overnight-pack- age com pany a foothold in the international air cargo business. The purchase of Tiger Inter- national Inc. would combine Memphis, Tenn.-based Federal .Ex- press. the nation's biggest expre~s package shipper, with the cargo. carrier founded by American pilots who volunteered to fly for China in the early years of World War II. Under an agr:ccment approved by the boards of directors of both companies, Federal Express will make a $20.871'2 a share cash tender offer Dec. 20 for all Tiger Inter- . .. national's 40.8 million common shares and equivalents. When financing costs and the cost of outstanding warrants and em- ployee options to buy T iger Inter- national stock are included, the value of the deal is S880 million, said Federal Express-spokesman Armand Schneider. Tiger International stock jumocd $2.SO to $19.371'1 a share on the New Yor'k Stock Exchange. Federal Ex- press d ipped SO cents to $46. 75. The offer is conditioned on at least SO. I percent of the Flying Tigers stock being tendered. The merger is subject to the approval of the U.S. Transportation Depanment and antitrust clearance from the Justice Depanment. Stock- I holders of both companies must also vote on the buyout. Federal Express. which covers the United States with 104 cargo jets and 137 smaller planes. has had its eye on the international market for some time. and has established routes to Brussels and T okyo. Federal EXpress carries overnight and s«:ond-day letters and packages of up to I SO pounds. The company has 63,000 em- plo__yces world wide. Flying Tiger, with 37 cargo jets and two passenger airliners. has sched- uled cargo service 10 North and South America, Asia. Europe. the South Pacific and the Middle East. Rumors that Steinberg was interested m selling the company to .. • max1m12e has investment liavp circulated occasaone\11 or more than a year and a half. ,(' i., In Tiger lnternat10~. Federal Express gets a com"ny wnh a colorful hi story that only recentl} clawed its way backJrom the brink.of liquidation. . Flying Tiger was founded 1n 1945 l?Y pilots who fo uJht wath Maj . Gen. Claire Chennault s fighter group of the same name. The Flying Tigers, who went to Chana in 1941 to fl y missions against the Japanese, later became part of the ' U.S. Army Air Force. The nicrs' civilian enterprise was the world's first scheduled air cargo lane, and claims to be the biggest. It has about 6.500 employees. J Trimming the.topper A Cbrlatmu tree and tbe Amerlcaa flu are flolMecl alae •torlea on tile ft.n&1 neel beam f• tlae $8 mlllloa Rewpon Place omce balldlaa ander eawtauctloa by 8Dyder-~non Ballden of fn1ae. Deetped by Ware 6 .. ,,,.._., Arcliltectaand deftloped i17 llcLac•la• fa-.wtm-tCo., ~ compla la located 90Gtla of Jolm Wa,.e Airport at tM corner of l'fe::r,:rt Plaee aad Do9e 9treet la Newport B•cla. It la ecbedal for compledoD la late 1989. Note these year-end clarifications by IRS The Internal Revenue Service re- cently published the standard m1lcqc rate that will apply for business males in 1988 (retroactive to Jan. I. 1988). For cars not yet full) depreciated. the rate wall be 24 cents a male for the first 15.000 miles. There was no change for other mileage rates. The rate for business mileage O\er I S.000 males or for full) depreciated cars remains at 11 cents a mile. Mileage dnven for chant) remains at 12 cents a miles. and mileage for moving and medical e\penRs remarns at 9 cents a male Fourth quarter IRS interest rate increased I percent. '\s of Oct. I. 19 8, the IRS will charge 11 pcrttnt on o"erdue taxes and pa) 10 pcrttnt on O\erdue rcfun~. The I RS issued clanficat1on of the ne\\ SI 0.000 cash transacuon n.tk The la\\ requires an)one engaged an a trade or business to repon cash transactions exceeding SI 0.000 to the JR . The aggregation rule requires that related cash transactions over a one-year penod be added toaelher and, afthcy exceed Sl0.000, the seller must file Form 8300 with the IRS wathan IS days. The I RS also rtminded farmers of a OvER THl CouNTER R11.n Scarr spcaal prov1~1on an the t ~IS6 Tu Reform Act. The provision allows quahfied farmers to use up to SI .SOO of unusable mvestment t.u credit catTYforwards to receive a cash re- fund of half that amounL The refundable credit is availab&e onl) on 1987 returns. It is limited to the smallest of 1) $750. 2) half oflhc taxpayer's anvestmqn tax credit car- l)overs. or 3) tile total tax liability for the I 5-)ear penod befort the earliest )Cir included 1n the carryover (ex- clud1na the m1n1m um tax. sclf<m- ptorment tax and most credits}. Farmers who ~re entitled to this cash ~fund but who failed to elect the provision on their original ,1987 t&A returns may file amended rctuml. IWpt btt ,, • certUletl ,,..lk aet'9m&ol wlti 9lfkes la Ne.,,.,.1 Bad. -• 0rMge CoMt DAILY PILOT I Monday, December 19. 1988 NV S [ CnMPOS1 n T RA~SAC l IONS • llONDA Y'8 CLOUICI PRICEI .. NEW VORK (AP) Dec. 1t 1 AM EX LEADERS Golo Ounrrs Mr T4LS OlloHs • ilr 111111 ar 111, .............. .,.. ........ ,. NYSE Lf ADf R\ NA s DA Q s I JM \L1 Ry NYSE UP s & DowNs OTC UP s \ Du~Ns . • ----4 llnes 7 days~ ... ~....,.,,....., CALL 842-5878 FROM NORTH ORANGE 540-1220 FROM SQUTH ORANGE 496-8800 • , 0 80 htMe, CGIM'9iam. Alilleo' • motr11e, ao.tinQ, or Help WMted " TN 0.... ~ '"'"" tw tffidlMl' .,... KC.,tc'f .......,,.,_ tc~ tr'rWt .. Wa.' ...... ti.• .._. ...., .... , ... Mira ... t ..... ""' .. 41.h ..... .,,.,, ~ .... l .... '""°"""_""_ .. ............... .,,,., .......... .... .,,.... .... ~.,,.. .... ,......... ••<... tor .. (Ml .. ,.... MNiC:. ~ K"*M..,,.,. fllfW ~ ..... -.. -............ --.,., .,.,...-. -............ "' .. , ........ ~ ...... ... ........... ~· ,,.,-..,. <~ .. ............ .,........ ........ .., ,,_._ .. ~ C:Mt\ a-. _.., ,_...,.,.......,.,......._.. ..... .... I .. Cenl.a..... 1111 •• ,.,. ..... 11• ... .. .. ·-.... -... I I h •• I •• ,_ ... ...... ~ - -· HARWHILLl.AfMI MYVIEW CT 2M 28A ........... .,.,., 4 -· • _,_, nn, .,,.., view. 13,00C>, condo COMPLITILY A•H ltowe, ..... Ulla. peld, .. 0 ~i'- ... 2tA•llHj_,_ NIW 3M or 2 & den FUAN •!•verythlngl .:.er: ,:t:,~· --~211 a2nd It. ,.. • • IWRMf ~~· .. ;;.....a._ + __. ... ,. ....-.~.--. ....... WI01N,u..M•t11e '**Yd pellO IUO ' •llllltR9~...... ,......_~dim IO -~liiilllDfmo ..-_., __ ....,. _...._ Cl'*!.._ ooeen. oMy llQMa. Yrty or mo. 2 c._.,_.. Betty "UM • & ~· beech . 1100/mo ,.... ..... ,,,,,. .. t-IOU· ._ Lt lot&w::-,.w~ mo.IOl'ftO.IUOO 730-0tl2~7-lllt Poot;= ~,;;·.; ,,..*ip~!ove tn-7133. ·~·o1'::.= = la • muet .... W llrfrell--llG CANYON 28" 28A eec.NOPET~2'47 lnci.NoP:.141'•• ... IHI A£!!!2!!.."f!"" your.....,,.. ~Ill IHl.IOO. c.11 Lia & ...... 1.1• condO, ..... pool,trpec, .... -. ;wotM&WWW Cleod ....... &oft--...... ol .... Te I Chuck-.131.1211or L6HOUii1nCdili.a.t2 2 pet101, 11eoo1mo sern...,...wio'* *'--* eo.auw..... prt&ng.looetlMa-no1 ..._ reu .. .._ 141-l743 llUdlea. MW ~ 714-720-3793 up large yard new '"'· dllll .... -ltove I<*'-' Oftl.... ..... of .., ........ hardwood floore: VILLA BALBOA 21r, ~&c1r1peasi&o1mo lnO.No ... 146-4156 'lll'taHfmo. *~4315 ~~':.:'· =· ~-=-.= l1110fmo. 173-7133 1.58a. 11.100. 3M~ E. 18'tl St. ..,_. IN -.,. 1f1 home I'll 8C APPtO• 17l-270aq/ft pows m -·-_. LOMly Jeamlne Creell p::,.11:T. 28' HOUM. TSL MGMT 142·1803 IEAuT.29r ... ~ blodl ..... Fem. "" .... ·~ ............ -... ., liilmlllmalll~ .-d-•d communtty, 8ALeoA4' fp$t500 •EASTSIDE28DAM• tob9y,2oergar.,w/dl* w/d , pool. Jacuul. Ci 211 "= pr..w Md..-,... -.... den, 28A ...... BAYFAONT 'eoncso 2et Geraae. no,,... Fenced up, °'*' beam ceil-1375/mo+dap IM-1117 I "°"· '",......., 1 ........ pool•. ape, vacent, 11850 Y8'd. CNld otl 1175 mo lng,be6oony, 11100/mo !!lfali 'II to mue ~ -l2200fmolew. C.il cot-CALL '4a-0111 '21 E. BAY _ _ _ known Md --.... ID 1eci l1t-34&-1t30 or l8AL80Aeov.28r,den, lSLMGMT 142·1803 W *fllllfTAILPACIE* belnwCIMd • new cerpet. Fr en 1g 11-.Mt 2141 trpec, epa. dodl. '2300 ... ~ 1 Appro. '200 lft, Jlirlt ~ •V9Fd w/WOOd liWlr'O '..c. • SEAVIEW 38r, 2.58a 18Aw/toft, 28A. Ffl*, ce-... 11... Mty rWlllll MW 1111911. ~._....,,.Qty Sey.._ Hll ...,_ Mii Wiil to Khoof a partt. ~::;'"'pool& ten-tMdfel celllnga, vtew, 3M n.. encl. gar .. w/d =-~•J. =--~ Hll. All In-QM aeon.. fl'I n r n-11~--==·IOO=~l3;1;-tl22;;;-a&11•1KI BAYFAON'f Condo 28' garage, 1pa, r•· hoolc up, MW c;.,J* ' ._/WT be pi•: 111•. a ,.... ~COM et Its beet In den dodl for IO' t>oet' dec0taeed.1985Hopeta. l11Hlmo f1tatl1• ltalah '=: 2000 lit IO ft prey tor .. Mii II ... ·····---aoedol• I lwcurtoul v...:.... ... 750 . 2151Pedflc131-t107 20I L.ugonla& 210 Grant ---• .... • .. lmlOke ,... -AMml. -•••• 3llR 2'MIA be9uty. Short _.,.... TSL MCIMT 142-HI03 .... ...-n. -MY n-T1'la .._.. .._ ...., 11111 ~LIT or tong 1erm .... lmmed LINDA ISLE 2 atory 58r, ·-..... UXUU6tR 6W dowa. At;, raMrm, .,,.. t.wt kno.n to Ill. 1 llSd ._,.,. 38" 28A. IQ FA oocpy ~· Cf110rwt boat dodl. I 10.000 28" 28A, 1000 l/f, new •11111 mf * Soadoue. 3 fu1 BA. ._. ~ /11"4 14M211 my r..-.a I • eunny& brtte$475,000 ' I pMI otl, 12800/mo ................. decor, prvt patio. Gar-.. mft ~tfi)I. & Jee. C1Dae to f1-..W M5 lllTIM-. c.IDOUGHEA88T ll&fmll1·1• age. Pwtt·Mttlng. ChMd VEAY ATTRACTIVE. lld .... 21M77-1147 .___. -PMYE"'° .. -...'= 7204ll0 Oii 1-.5000 otl. From l950 F,_ LMA. QUIET 28r 28a new -Al I• ~ lcubal 4BR'28A, fem-RfAW NEWPOAT SHORES 28A 2151Pacific631-t107 ..-..._ _:_ hk IHtal1 II 1•111 Hoey lplrtt,,_ :....-!11111• fly rm, 1 bllt to IChool. 2BA. 2 1tory houM, cor----· -,-• ..... • · · !'Mlle me -... YINlll >o0mm _.... grnblt. Heed ..f ......... ,._ -"-" ..,_ ALL NEW 3BR 2 cat,..,_ up, garage, SllOtmo. .. .. COMM. PROP. l1-4mll. · and WfN) 11MM .. .. ,......, 75 • · • ·-" ""' -· ...-----1ar ' -E--Z MOVE IN NOW! 008TA M!SA 'llCIHITY fast Mlel 14 5.ooo. &Ab-'Jt:Wl'\."'"'C/I I~\ II 11000 mo. 87M 912 Agt age, 99 fwlCe yn. 4101 HILARIA 48 'I' old reared ~ p .. BEHMHS l•I Hll · .., to r9Mlh ""..._ "'"· Call JULIA LIAO . . 825 Plumer, upet.ire looklng for,..,,... or room .... You WfN) --.. ... , 790-5000 or 751-5509 REALTORS NPTHTS. 48A(or3+ den), 11050. Bertwe 173-5771 TSL MGMT 142-1803 pretwr9blY In beMlh.,.. F t I I fti dJI dtwlne gift to ...... ... tltl ... llM lrg yd, view, 12500/mo. or 548-4181 llfter 5:30 ASAP. Wfl cc......, In-11 Tl ,..... h .,._. -11 Agt. t(athy 164-2235 •SHARP 48A 28A ltepe land atM. HenctyrnM done 90 me Md V• ... "{ •BACKllAY VIEW* J. Coombe Aeelty •eatiJIJl8 to beMlh. Gar w/Of**, n/"'*'· C.il 117-4050 .. In el the le.--_, ~lf"\Vfr'll'"'rff ~·w11 38R, lllepleoa, lrg Y9fd, .... LI 'II• dedl. 11360 winter, 01 ....................... TO my ........ na I, In 1111 .-. .Wt-"-"" I V l.. f.:" MW ~t. l1IOOywty 839-8722 COM. Pro4/F non lfNcr, ..,,, "'"L.......,""'" .. "'°" dl9klg• ...a ID REALT~S~ .... ~:~ n! 1111111•-BMut~ecaped. WAU<TO~NAHOAG =-~=-~d No:.::.~ ::-.:::;:~ •• _,.. SouthCOMtPtm,.,,._ ·~--qu6M, 1at9e, ~ Apu. •La 18". gee pd. F/P '400/mo. 721-4117 •WIDOWHAliii ._I..,.. ...e ID - Cuetom Wtory w/iu.tt abtanow.Newpelm,new 1BR 1BA.SCMetro.._ Poollepe.petlo0tdedt. 172! • LG 28R 28a FEMALE prof"°""""'*' fOr TOii 110,000/up No ......... fraM Y• llO IMdecllpilig I prvt IPL I carpet b6D yn kldl otl I I 5 0 Im 0 . p, a,, Prime loc8tion. T..,...1126. Pool, IPL for 28R .. IPt nice cred."'/no pen C.il 0. INIW how ........ ywa *· 3BR 2'MIA. 11100: Cliil 567:5747 · Propertlee 142•9797 1 lledloom saeo cov. ~ 1401 Superior nbrhood 1no1~0 + rt11onMeoc.mn11 * ..,.. ..... nlPf • I =:-~ :,-:,,~':g 38R 2'MIA 2-ety CONDO. ..... CMlt •trl nii'i..ln=lf Ave.~-utla. awl 111. 142·1571 I l•ll I llll ::" .:.:-= i-y= oniy-147"5~0. EX-_.., ....... lrg patio -11• COSTA MESA cfft!l~~l\Pmo Aoommm .... -....., ... fl/Otrl. "'-* CLUSIVE DoNlld Pfaff, Beck Bey locellon. 28M 1D::;;;::; co;;ao I•.. · ed tor H8 bC:tl '*·gar. voutorYourl.°'9~ 131-1211 11216/mo 567-5714* nr SC Piia. A/C, dlw, =~= Ind. No Cleen. qulee. S.00/mo. me Md my lowd -. ;Ei~~~illl fpl•.a. 1117 -llA • t• bekony, pool, llM/mo. 11M11f1L Ul1'W .. Avell 111. llMl11 ~ - ---F1Nplace. dlltc ........ 2 971-7811Ot751-2717. 2 Townhouee, e-.. f/p, 111•11 •••HUL Femele..,,.. to.... fftlM\ ADS ....... ,,., ptlllt .... ••--~---c. garage, 11250/mo. 28A28Aupegncondoln lndry nn. patio, dOM to --38R28A~lneo.t. UUIW preyer 3 COflHcuttwe ·-.........-CALL 54&-9114 getecf communfty1 DIW SllOfmo.. ' 2tN\ 2M+ DEN ..Me-. 1310/J'!"O llM 'h IDr flEE deyS. A,_ the 8*d -· •S8rf28alower .., ... ,_ 38" 28A, ..,_ e-age. balcony. ao. to lndry: 23148ANTAANA. Nllw cerpet, gareoe'w1o utla.141-4M1mms;ge ~ ::w,,:.':.,111~ 1716.000 MIUR...... new paAnt, new carpet, pool ' IPL 1700/mo. TSL MGMT 142-tl03 hkup, lerd. Clole to Fem to ._. 280 2BA c.a. nwr be. n.t ..,...._ 90 _,... •lln• new ctrapea. 11000/mo. MMl10or751-2787 119L111? lllL beec:f\..:7~= CondonwSoutheo.t & publlllh.,. dlltaa• • ~ _.. la :-:J to ~ owr -..ooo Oii ttlla plul cl!po!tt. 84e-t273. CONDO. 3BR 1W, dble Spaclou1 2BR Apt1. TSL MGMT 142·1803 ~~~-IG-1111 aoon • your ..._ ,_ lftCM. IO IUblN1 of· VIiia Balboa 1wcury cion-•UITW I-• gareoe, ptltlo, wfd, avail Beaut!M pool .,.., large bwt ........ MCP ::....."'?~2:.:: domlnlum home. Plante-W/.,.d & llngte_ car var· now. 1950tmo plua eec. rec. room &~= t•HI..... LAGUNA BCH. 30llfl Prof. Yl8A/MASTERCAAD. Get II a' I I If ~ pe1lo tion. st1utW1 Included. age, 1775/mo. ~ & 131·1211 Phll/Jadcle or room. ONLY CLEAN 28A, lg Iv rm, lhr 38r 3Ba hM. ,...,,. Your Cerd Today. 0..-d wltl\ pretty now. & call lmrrntately, JOYCE good CNdl1 req'd. CALL 754-4871 Terri mo. pwttlng, "'* Ind. No tennll. frptc, e-. pvt FOUND DOG OGe 11. Vic. or~ beG1i1 C-. C-- lbey IMng '"""" ..... 1111 BAANUl1ll,114 CURTlll3M211 ... Al.l .. lfTI peti.11175.723-1292 dec:kll50/mo4H-9113 H.I . BLACK OOCKER~1-61~ C::.,, Newport 8Wh emr'liN 1 D WWW: •MIU llT TW• -.. W...... ·~ _.,. ... -.e!Fto._.380 2BA ept ;,:;.:~~~ on ch Ht. b1 C311 tor apple. Mn & w•:t to al. Wiil trpec, w/d, .,.. to beMlh, lpeciol11 3BA 2'ABA 2 TIL ~ 38R 2'MIA 0111 the t>ey Neptune, N.B. 1410mo -t _.....,... ......... ...,.· -----1 toCIOIMUlftYpool, &et-gd cond, 11000/mo. Cell "MY· trpec, patio, lndry ...... ... 1n-•11wM1-11U cioM to~ I dl.i S400dep. Av911 lmmed LOiTCATS~~--ol 118111 ... bluff "'°PPI:• cent9r, Merti5>45-321oc1ey9 nn. poo1. Sml pet otl. c0ttim:12BM 1D _ . 1ng.91gdedl-&uperY1ew. 850:88091142-1222 E. 1nt1 and irw.. 1"·8Cliftl an;+ i=.,. tennla, church••· LGH ........ "'ln"-~ ...... 2 11075/mo ....... l?S-.912 .., ....__,......,. 2 ~ lenJ•hhl Yr .... .__ mo. 333' oam.lclhortMlr.~ ........ -**-m DM-ldlOClel, & petlcl Af· vuvc; .....,_, cvn, ..,, 'T• .._ ..,.,..,, c:ar ..-~· -·-C Md wtlfte male "~' v..,. JorMee prtoe tndudea atud.... new carpeting. NEWPORT SHORES BAIGHTON SPRINGS 2BR Ing. Ht5 Incl. utll. .it•"" Vie Udo 17S·92811-Hdll 2nd ..,.,,_ "*. M ver & bed!, deperta ..... 1211.000 h•rdwood floore, .. ...,.HT & -3 ...._ 1'MIA tr14ellel •duded 873-3039 E'llde 28". e-aoe iarr. ••----·--l.L ldlA::A --. male. •• ..._. •• 12/Jt, NllUme 114/le. ' 11950/mo 173-7133 _....,. ..,...... ........ .........., · d ..,.._ 1o ...:..... -·~• ~ • ...,.. .... 115-612' .. ,. . ftterfrOlllt hOrN 0/11 eJttra ......... I 1trwna. ..... ...... • .. ,..... yw ...... pat • _,, h • 28A 28A. "1*. e-. patio, ••• ••• It iiW AEWAN>I aoo. Colita celia... lili i.gec:omer lot. Mexican ment ger w/opnr & --upS795Jmo. pgoll1150/moM2-7851 -Mw AMMI Ho9pltal FIND GF~E ELKJNS tie ftoon.. bWnfd ceM-cerport. W/D hkup1. ..,., . 254e ORANGE .... 5'1-3794 • 0.~11'\N\ ._,....... lngalcozyfp.Communl-mlc:to, woodbum frplc, 1-.a TSL MGMT 142-1803 Executive TownhOUH E'llde c... ........ 10 -LOllt--64.,,..o-.-den--Aet-rl-.. ---.-I aE\LT~~ W/~ ... ,.. LJ000oole & te nnl1. =' .:E~ :t:>/:: + &1300/mo no peee COZV HOUSE 1BR ~· ~2:-\ 2 ~ rw ~ 790-IM4 male, 1rw. Ave I Unf,'. th h •--:.4·---1 ---------"-docn "°"' Pinkley -· Aelngeratot. Pftvat• .,.d. 8 1 __ 1 119.... 1 1 Jw= .__.. ~· No cols. ,.._ roug c_.,,"C'U '---------1 Pert!. Approx. 1eoo.t. 83 ·1400 E'810Elg2BR28ec:uetom no'*'· 2188 Maple J. t e.., • m, _ _. ...ct. 722-1908 • . . COLOWeU BAH~eRU I S8r 2.58a wf3 car pertc· -tlouee, frpk;. MW carpet. 1125 ISO-U52 _______ _....._ ______ _ ~':.~W:N,;' ~~~~•.,H:.r =·~-'=.garage Deluxe3BR2BAEMtlide MllllT-IPll ......,lllUIUI ,,~~ __ ,,._ .J REAL TORS w/1rplC. patio, d/w, cov-...... , .... FUlL SEfMCE .,..,.. ,.._ ,,-• MWl •T ~ erect pwttlng, lndry rm. EXCLUSNE BEACH WUICtlff I !MN, Npt lch __ • L I-~ _ ..... L 28A 18A Duplex, patio, no Mm+ -1995 No S*• 142·9479 COMMUHfTY Sign epec .. vt on w..tdlft ~ ,.~ ~ /Jn .. ' I ~ ' • • • Nwpt North Twnhm, 2BR. pate. SIOO/mo. 142..-011 Yeerty wfpetto & dllh lllJW~ HM beeut!M 1BR Apt .... 111 'T Expe\.1 the best: AET'IREO LOCAL wtta to ~~d'::" C:::.81°:~ SHARP EHtllO• 3BR ....... 142-3850 BKR. $395/mo. No kl1c:Mn. 0. ;::r.v ~r~g ,::,~: .. "'"' ~,I/Id MllW.-Tlm& t»uyCMINlhome.~ ·1227,000Agt.650-4191 ~~~·:,:ir 1;:s ... lft'411* pollt I good credit. e-.Pvtbd'll1350mo 1\~B,a IJ12 1118 • ~ . r ., -. ',.Jl i\ . s .,... ~ ~ ~~lt. hi Ii..... mo. Avl now ~902 Dec*, utltl pd. No pell CALL Cur1 II 631-12M ..... ... ....... ~ lch, Agt 541·5032 Oall • -1XPENINCE"thi8ood Nf9 • ' J!!p!!J 1111 SPACIOUS 28,. 2BA 2 857-1778 or 780-1713 ~100 OfF 1ST M~TH SOAAY.-flO PETS. In your own 4 BR, 2V. BA ...-llllf. llil A;U;-m;;; U:J ™ etory towMc>me. Garage. ATTA ACTIVE 2 BR E-:~~tt,Br :;,.a. llU J ... 11 ....,,1. lft towMouae Eut Side. ~ walk to 2 1 acree new 2iR hOrN .,,, .. .,.d, nr.plece. wet townhou• neer Ferry. • Enc:loeed o#eoe NWPT HOTS 280 tBA 2nd ftoor. Pl1v9te .. ,.. Illy 1111-' = .:°';: 'r"8 and beMlh utllia paid avail with pmam~ vi.a ber. Small P•t ok. G•r::•· patio. lndry. ar .. t atrno.pherel No trptc, kh remodeled, d/w: =:._•::c,~ nw L::: ... , ..... M 4 ~ &~ now. Mso. 31144 Sec· private, wtth palm• & 11025/mo. Agt87M912 110 yrty. 87~ pate. 1790. 146-9039 enc:loMd e-. lmmed occ. 333e Vie Udo ~s!;289 . cal to ..i ond Ave., South Laguna. troplcal flower9 tor term IUt. .... IHI l1IPI Tl ---EXi'RA LARGE ROOMS S9t5mo. ~170 1----------'----------------ltt 1111 C.il l1Ml8-2253 production. l245KIOBO Wfgt11. Yr1y 1950/mo Upper 3BR 28A, garage. La Cilmlall MTI LllUi llDe 1: eoe-s12-ee20 _..... Aot 122-tna o.ye (t034-C ve1enc:1e> UST Of HOMES 1t1e1 neec1 l4UP8RXBEB •17 ... , fuaa .. I •HIWILI 740-1755 £venlnQa 1115 No pe11 545-7983 ~~EA.'!~r12:' ~: ,...,. llW tor 11.00. 28A 2-Car Attached Gar· .... llfl ~.:;::.-=-~ : SUNNY 2BR 1BA with gw, KIDS REOUIAEDlll Eflide Qemente .,.._ Gare;ge & : AX & IEU. FOA m age, Skylght, 1154,900. · 1 _., 'A blodl/beedl. Sl50/mo 280 1BA Verd & gat. ywd. S725/mo 637--0631 (111)1724713 agU9S-5340 200ACAERANCHSITE carpet1, 114BA, 2BR yrly 818-790.7159 or 1750mo S500dep -.iiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiii"I--------NW Arizona. 1250/Acn. 11750/mo, 1tt, lut •n mo 631•5995 146-413 t · · Oen w mpec 3BR 2'MtA Jlm-N1mlf Ea, terms! Good...., dep. U7-6041 M·F ~-Bale. trp1c. gar. We'l IM Y'O'I .. down In lea,.. .... l•t taDle. f9ncinO. bealtlful M•IN• ...,.. & wl!nda -.U LAME 18r 1Ba 1565/mo, lndrj, eml fncd yd. Walk TODAY'S CROSSWORD P-UZZLE ~..,..._a.,..ofown-.-•11.1.•11• .,... & vtewa. Hunt""' tnlM 1144 iverv ;;:;:p 1&+a:n '°' a.oo eec:urtty. Available to bdl s1250. •92-1m ..... You !Mk• the V...._ 18". Fui -=ur-~. 875-1887 1 rnatUN adult. 404 •n Now. Cell for 1ppt. Wall to beec:f\. ocean V'9W ~~ -:'ec':1: lty. Gre91 loc..144-7211 119i1i1 •• ....... Iris. 1925/mo. See to ap-831"1879 2BA 1BA ~ground 1eY91 ACROS,S • 1QCM ... beneMa. ~ Over 2000 lft. Dbl gar, predate. 723--0977 LARGE 18A. DIW. cable 2BR 1'MIA. end gall. no 1 AOOlauel ! ._ -.i credit Aat ~""' I 1560 Agt 873-5354 LARGE 38A, 2BA. fir-.. TV hk-up. No pate! AefS pate. 223/225 La Pelome s B<eut! •111-IOOIO,.. Ev, Minda lilii1iliM"" 118 = ~ l=l piece, laundry, deck. 2 reQUlrecl. IMO/mo. (714)137-7918 9 Baroes 11500/ 2273 Mlner•I. 145-8111 ,. Sulce 38" 28A i1ses Wiil to NEA+lls XVliXki ~ . ran\ ~~5...0745 mo, MESA VEADE. 28R 1BA Elegant 1$ Nu•sem••O bWf\ Maoc. PooAI l9n-9hor1 term & wlntef ocean vl9w, view of main upper. °'*' cul de MC: 16 Plot .!!!!!!!;!!,.,;..,.!l!llf!!j nit 250 Cotton NB ll50to11400 beec:f\, 11175, 890 C.. LMge, prv 1BR. new paint. MH+. 2187 Hlc*ory 11 s>rolns .• 122 9730 °' 122-1251 waterfront Hom.. inc. nyon vtew.143-1253 Ct"pt. bfindl. ' llOhtlnQ. •11-1931 751.9493 Ensemble :ag :,·.~.o.~·on•own .... Ill-· Aealton 173-elOO Frplc:, porch. m/w1 • __,,,,~,,__,=· -..,,.=---- ..... ................ ...... ...... .... 1111 ctoeeta.AvaK.875-1811 ~~:~=. ~~=;,:~SHll ·~ ._ from untta. Bring your palntbn*I a ........ lllT ~ VfEW HOMES 11ft • -e-.. "9 belc:ony, nr bctl 22 Corrwed 0ne-..10Mnd.8tun-your Imagination. 38A 38r 38a+lof1, f/p, up-2BR l'nBA, CIOH to 1795/mo .. 111/333-0572 23 WaAhruSh '*'I SM 1M wlftoor to 28A famlly hOrN needed Ill+ 11 L •111fr• graded. dbl e-.• Oatdfw\ beach, 1950/mo. 900 NEWPORT ACROSS THE ~~ g~:~tq~~t • -._ ".,..... ,,.,.._ In N9wport Beck Illy. A 28A BA~ 11000 mo comm. pool, part!, IQ yd See Lane. 144-2111 '~& .,_.. ._--. lltttHat ... lltuatedOlllen -.. 17Mt21 12100/mo.147·7521 egt STREET. 2BR trpc:, Oat· 2~98 F~~,oon --7· f 7"T• Upper 2 BR. 2 BA + ofc agell25fmo. 11151rvlne •¥ ~ .,.,,.. parking. ~ '!>!.. L~ LIDO SANOS HOUSE. 31r •EXCLUSIVE GUARD• Avail Dec 11. 3101n Irie. •2. 720-9422 32 Oeef s ., ••• ..... lnoDme. 1816.000. -•MY_...,,_ 2•· ......, 1 •GATED COMMUNITY* 11300/M y I c II --·-------• 35 Be11111e C11 MMAAA price Call GAEG or -"""'' gar909, o ny. e Secluded 1 IPecb 28R 37 As.a11 ouoa.io OMAl•M a GIGI MlCHAIL tor more lnfor· block to beed\, •• Mlfll 1-t76-223I °' l73-t149· tBA I 38A 18A~1 on 38 ~·enc:" c;oty TMOMAI lftlltoft,1344.IOO. Oevel31·7756 B!tUT~~~ ~ telil... lili the EMealde. Q,..t lo-39 Un<IO .... W IU 1111 11r' 9Vell. Frpk:, wet bat, iCi;;Qmee §P.ci.lii ~~~.:: :~ ~.:,,":', llpaciOua I GfillM 1iN + micro. W/D l*upe. 2 c;., Great Eamide locf patios & end ~ 43 -.11",,.,."...i OOIW den. wtW a vtewfl e-w/xtr• ttorage. cen-1 I 28drma. Gar, cable tlreptace CloH to •• G•Mll goo 1'900/mo Ind utla. tral air. All malnt. Ind. IM. Gmbtt w/880, lndry ~I ~. C.il •S ••me<'-·~ & llte 28" 28A Sorry, no pets. l44-0509 rm. No pell 631-&427 5403•1 or aeo.soie •6 ~= -----• :0...0 ~10:~ l\taD11•-•1 •nit<fe•es •1.,. fOr .. ~ penon'; Y~137S-V92~38" ~lfield s1 ~·oe~ S7IOlmo 1n.5314 /11"4 2 '"*· l'fl, mlc:to, c1repee btt4nl. Fenced ~ ~Of1•!'f w/d Nlupe. 2 c. gwage. · 50 ~ nD FllllLT 10111 •JC*f MiQllhort.ood. • BR. uoi. ..., wtda lorwN1 dialDQ I ialud kitchen acl la W.U. OODlhactioD. Flowio9 floor ...... ~. $479.r. 711 •• ~ .. 11 WTll Ao1 122-euo1115-4tOI tr-I 11 ~s;-:ic:·~~· bee~ eurt2Ma 1'MIA DOV!A ...,,.. 3br pool s:;::.1i;:,. i 1:. = 8417 Victoria 'H'. .. 1720 :.. Lei """ ~ 11700. v ...... 18rtum/ pfft9 & nef9tlbothoodl )lac.;., "111S0imo. Drt¥9 I.Inf a.o. P.,ltlidge CO'f9 part! MllCt door. Ho,,... by 21•,.,.,..., e1Ma1 nr 11000· Agt 142•7708 28drm ,\4 .. 1195 • e•ta•.AB FUAN OfHJNFUAN HOME llMI 12 ... = 1'""'•.n.M•,114161 PEMNIUlAY!AM.Y COITA..aA s attt11-~ I mo. 1"';" JrO.ueo•· *DelW&e 18A +Den. 1BA c:n ..... .._ ~ Mlr'9old · lower Duplex. Patio, e-· 111..-a 1andecapect grouno1. * Liii • Lml * 1199, lndry. CIOM to •OCEAN vu de1Uxe 28A Pool & ... pettoe/dec:kl, •al\ 39A. ,.. orpc dlw beMlh. •251mo. 1 '-' l*tl, frPc:, dedl. gar gerage °' carpot1 ' ~. 11111......m • •Older. but ciMn 2BA 2211 E. Pac:tftc apt B. t hdroom 1170 • tBA """* In 4-Plu. Nr MIOtmo. See 1st CIH 2tldnn 1'.41a 1115 •Tiny quleC tlfll ooeta;ge. lctl. No prtu'I S77&/mo 761-1104/E 144-1722/D 1311 tlltl St 8'1-1111 bealMd ~ ywct. *Sl"taA""*"cwio.. --------Near 1ttOP9 ( beMlh ....... Gw .... frplc, 28A. 18A, t cw garage. 1 lledloom 1105 1715 NO PITS m..11 ..-O. l1H0ea. Qfoundftoor. peUo. all tedr'fn 1'48a 1115 MA 1M ...... "'*· WI.LI IDTILI :Ofn:"s.J-1=.•· 151I218' St 54W40I V9Fd. garage. DrM by 1.'¥•111• ... Apt,.,...,, l .... II.a... fM t11 -Hel iotrope . o... tM aA COndo 28" tM. KJdl......., lndryttc:.2~..--. 1W1p l1IOOllM. 175-ntt w"9, dbl geraga, vtew. el near~ I~ no ,.._ palrlt eeow. & crtM . ....., -28A, ,_. 90 a1Mnltle1. 11271/mo pete, Weatalde CM t750lmo. fs1 ..... SCNt: Simpte stitChel end easy shaping ,,... this coat. lllOCeSS 9'0rl· u. worsted yam fOf COllt. ecerf, end CO:llrMI cuffed ha onceo:~ S4zea 10-18. $3-25 PLUS S1.25 P"'1 FOREM::HM~ ORDERED. •-• y , _I ~ 711-61IO 11'0ll11'0hM 141I•1-~--T"""--.:rr:11 .... -flflrfJI ~.o:fttu::·rmr: .,,... new ar.2iiii =~,=BA.,.......,...,,-.,-,.,...,..,1g.,...._,,1 1.-.iiii-iliiii!i-P."-P!i~I OfffR GOOD nRJUGH -·---~,•--"llllftl••--._, OnM&aa dlft.n..2.-Y.dllle.-. cer C'.;i.""' ..,,.., f ... 3 ••to WWW llWOU,, - .,_ "9 CttAfiiiit. MEF IM. ~rn'f~ :f.,,_~= =~-==No ....... LJl,I ~ ... ,. •-tt•l't. ,._ W... rn ----....,_,... .. -~ t?MIOO.llOOO U60tii1.••--IM. 1!11C'raM11r-11PO•L-.l901+1J.M. ............. W1t1ttllll-lll. La9" .. IM!lllla.P\JNl .... ._.,._, """'*' Opti on•• 1 OatO for Information WI• --....... -~.----urllt .,.... ... , ..... ___ .. ... -.1m .,__..,,.,.,..,., ... ,..114-ll042G M»l'N.w • .-.,._, .--. ... 11aa & surprlalngly ·-..... ---.. --,MiaA---. teo liii6I ....... *MYTllimN• { .... 'fl/AllCMlfer~... ,.... ........... . ~ ~ ............... -. ..... 11• ..... --pool, ...... ~.., -. .... .._.. ..... low cost. 91 ltCH. ,.... ,.. -.,-t1D ...... gar. No,_. .. _,..aa•?lllllwMla •tNY&•111 I a ~~~~~~~~~'!!'!!~~"!!!!!!"!!!~ • "'.::_4111 J.~ ----•1 • .., It-· ....,.7 • Rad.. .. --• J " 23 St TreolCl••"O" sa s.mo .. ars S9 F"Me 60 Betore now 61 Vogue 62 ven.c:-. P41rt 63 Cheat .. 64 Oan~~h sou no 6S ColOf.O DOWN I $e1:rur1 7 Oueoec un111e<s1ty 3 Ac;tlOn plac;f! • lt1rovgh S Ra~1gt1 b LOYe 8118tr 7 rooo MXJ•c• • 8~ 9 WIK~ 10 1(1>; group 11 Shl9f .... ,o t;:> F8 Iott 1J S mob< 21 M"8 eg 1•~· ... MS.....eo 21 MAI ma••"QS 29 s.,,.. '° "'" 31 H~.0•1_,~ ·~·°' 3~ Sn4-bll )J ~.t 6 3• S.na e I m p s 000 ~· oif"; 36 ?vs .,.•001 )II Fa1 •1 80 0-:U~ •:> v .... teo 1001 4!1 Wt'f'll by •Ii e.,rlf'r.qU4' ••Pane 8 •• Aes.'1 •9 U'SSR coon 50 51811oon 5t Go "unvrt S2 OtMr LM SJ Emonenw ~5 ~"'9 .,9 s"' .. chOlO • Ofenge CoMt DAJL Y PILOT I Monday, December 19, 1988 •ACCT CLK • BOOKEEPERS •PAYROLL file Clerks General Office Recept ton ls ts Accounlanls. Typists Data Entry CAN HELPl 1 Call Today!! 'r- Work Tomorrow!! Have Holldav sssss~s ·s f or Christmas! And Enjoy!! Ur~enlly nl'eded near your home! DL WEAVER 1820 E. First St. #200, Santa Ana (714) 54 7-0550 ONLY .1-e.8' .8 7 Days Left. . (J TILL CHRISTMAS ) ACT NOW!! ' '& CREVIER 'lh Ill IOEJ '1111.111111" UYll A ml tJm\.£S or CUPll-OlllD-. IS 73S1 Awto. IMPl'S61 86 S28e. Auto. 2CM>761 88 73S1,au10,loaded,642434 Sales -Service Pert1 -Leasing 131-3111 546-1200 .MllHlrMr·C ... ...._ 1500 Auto Mall Or.•F=o=RD=-....,., .. =--=-Pr-obe,,_...,,a=r Santa Ana turbo. Bledc10~ 55 ~~·at Edinger =~15,2 <ftN 7 DAYS Service Hra. Mon-Fri. FOAO 82 &con. 4 epd, 82,000 ""'-· '9d. 2door, 7:00 Ml to 9:00 pm at250, ~llOI • . • Guatemalan influx divides sleepy farm town a, JAMD IWlnNEZ , 'SO"-- INDIANTOWN. Fla. - Guaaemalan farm worken have sent won1 ~ home that this dusty commwuty east of Lake Okeechobee is the Pl9Qliled land, promptina a ionent of refu8eCI that some locals want to stop. .. E~ne told me there is wort in the fiddi here every day of the year." uicla.IM& laltean, 26,""Who arrived tbil month after pick1na croP.! in California and North Carolina. 'This is~ I want to stay forever." ~ut the last. thin& .many lonatime . residents of this low-1nco~e fanning community want as more Guatemalans. With 1he town ·s population of s.~alrady madt upof nearty 3,000 Gualemalans. some residents are ~mblinl about the competition for ~ the pollible · drain on nubltc: serv~ and the feelina that .rthey .. are ta.kin& over. .. The resentment ... inst them is buildin&i .. said Pete Marovich, owner of a fertalizer busineu and outaoina president of the Chamber of Com-men:e. "There's sim'!!Y too many here1bntle tow:n to a6i0rl>.'"" Still moft Guatemalans. mostly Kanjobel Indians who speak a dialect even Spanish speakers from their own country can't understand, Row into Indiantown to escape the violence in their Central Amencan homeland. Word of mouth and letten from relatives and friends already here send out the message that year-round GaatemaJan clJl.lclren.,... tMdaJ oatalde their apartment. jot» Pf.:Ovidiftl free transportation aR plentiful for thole wiUi111 to pick oranaes, .,apefruits, tomatoes. cucumbers and cabblee. in the U nncd Statn. New immipatioa policies enacted last ~k may slow lbe flood of Central AmericaM into Florida. The measure would sharply limit the SmUlllen called ··coyotes" chaflt number of people panlcd asylum. the Guatemalans upwards of S 1,000 But the flood hll already swamped to sneak them across the U.S. border Ind. tow · C 1·~ · · d T aan n. into a 11omaa. Anzona an exas. "The blacks that live around here federal officiali say about 300 to used to ttt all the work. but th.~ ralTl'.'s 400 OuatcmaJana_cross tbc border in _want those Guatemalans. said th• h da The .. .. $ftlf(5ft Qary, a Cl~ farm WO as way eac . . Y· coyotes contl'IC1or .. Guatemalans are the Chafle an addlhOnal $~ to ~ hardest damn worlten I've ever see9. port ref~ to farms an Aorida, They're like machines." !"'OSt to lndaanto~n and lmmokalee Often criticized for its role in an southwest Aorida. helpina the Guatemalans settle in U.S. lmmisration and Natural-lnd~ntown is Holy Cross Roman · t' r-.· ffi · I ho · Catholic Church. which bepn its aza ion .x-n1ce o acaa s, w estimate e«---....;th ... _ fint am· vals 1· n 1982. 30,000 to 4'0,000 Guatemalans are in '""u -· uK Aorida, say most who entered illepl-It operates a refueee school. a thrift ly have applied for amnesty to wort shop and a service center to help new amvals complete immiaration pepers, learn Enalish and find hous- 1na. "If the American people want to help them, let's help them in their own country," said Lt. Floyd McAWster, ran~ ofTacer of the Martin County shenfrs substation in Indiantown. Church officials .. create problems by givina them legal as- sistance." Church workers say the 30 refugees who arrive every month arc diligent, aentle people who aren't beina given a chance by an intolerant community . .. There has always been resistance in Indiantown. It's not a giace that adapts well to change, .. sai Yolanda Martinez, a staff member at the church service center . .. It was the same way when blacks came and Mexicans came,·· she said. "They love them out pickin1 the oranges, but they don't like to sec them walking around the street." Other church wortcen remember when actor Paul Newman donated a bus forthe refugee school in 1985, and days later it was pelted with rocks by white teen·agen. .... $ Many of ttie refu~ families live in an area called Blue Camp consisting of rows of tiny shac~ and one:room apartments, often without electricity A Gutmw•1•n famlly makm I .. way oatalde tlae:lr aputlDeat ID ladlutowD, Pia. or running water. - With no public housing in Indian-... can nonnally be traced to alcohol," town, some landlordS .CiJalJC the said sheriffs Deputy Brian Roberts. Guatemalans as much as SlOO a 1'hey drink like crazy. That, more month. than anYthi'?fo ·turns people here The refuaee ~rca has ~n t~ site of apinst them.• a 20 percent in~ an pohce and At tbc tiny post office. where emefJency calls an the put year. refu1ees send money home so family county officials said. The most members can make the tnp, the serious crime came last mo!'th when a postmaS1a' refuses to help anyone Guatemalan was arrested an the rape who can't speak English or is not of 5-year-old boy. accompanied by an interpreter. "It's usually never anything big -"They're in this country now - lots of fipts. wife beaung -and it they should learn how to speak the language." saad Postmaster Ron Yates. Despite 1rowin1 resentment amona longtime residents. there Mw been no formal complaints from local 1overnments a1ainst tbe Guatemalans., said INS Deputy~ trict Director Geors Waldroap. .. I •y they should all be rounded up and checked out.•• said Marovidl Of the Chamber of Commerce. "If they don't be Iona here, they should be tent back to wherever they came from ... O:iJ.ce neueninctlon, bison bred for loW-cholesteroJ.meat . QIEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) -Mod-. dft pioneen of bison genetics arc tryina to brina t.ck laflC numbers of 1he burly beasts as a source of low- cholestcrol meat. Usina cattle u surropte mothers, a Cheyenne-based p-oup of scientists and ranchen plans to breed bison as the animal of the future for an increasinalY heahh<onscious so- ·cietY.· • "We se. there is nowhere near the number of bison for the demand." said Paul Butler. manager of the pup, Livest()(:k Research and In· nov1t1on ... In order to make any type of dramatic increase you've got to use the new techniques.' Bison were on the brink of extinc· tion at the end of the last century, when hide-hunters of the Great Slaughter reduced herds of millions to fewer than 300. Now bison arc multlp!yinL slowly, numbering 80,000 to 100,000, according to the Denver-based American Buffalo As. sociation. The animals also are arousing appetites in the meat market. "Basjcally the meat's better." But· lersaid, referring to positive results in recent taste tests. "It's sot more protein and less fat, and yet it's tender and flavorful." LRI wants to capitalize by getting cattle to give birth to bison and nurse the calves until they reach the ase of slaughter. With help from the Univer- sity of Wyom ing. researchers hav~ been artificially inseminating female bisons treated with hormones. Fertilized embryos are flushed out of the bisons and Implanted In cattle. allowing bison cows to produce more embryos without waiting to give binh themselves. So far cows have rejected all implanted bison embryos, but the confidence of embryo transfer experts and interest expressed by the Wyom- ing Department of Agriculture have fueled optimism. "We've JOI to perfect the tech- niques:· Butler said. "There are cena1n adjustments we have to make when working with bi5ons. They arc a big. strong, wild animal. They're not easy to handle." Colorado State U ni versity professor George Seidel. a repro- ductive physiologist who pioneered embryo transfer techniques with horses, cows, sheep and rabbits. does not doubt the methods will work with bison. .. The technique is not too different from the test-tube baby," Seidel said. "I would expect it would work." Similarly. University of Wyoming Animal Science professor Gary Moss said he is sure it can be done. Butler has been talking with buyers an New Zealand and Australia. Besides bison he envisions selling frozen bison embryos guaranteed to grow for about SI 0.000 each. Not everyone as so enthiwastic. Embrycttransfer proponent O.vtd MacKenzie, a Lousiana State profC'SIOf' of plant pathology, cau- tioned, "We've got to get smarter about how we do thas." . And activist Jeremy Rifkin. prtSi· dent of the Foundation on Economic Trends, warned in an appearance in Wyomana that mixing breeds in hi&h- technokl&y projects can lead to an undelin61c homogenization of speci- es. Nonetheless-a University of MlJC TICE Wyom1na marketing study sugcsted further uses of the bison. ··wnh bison. you can sell cvery- thina from the head to the taia:· researchcn wrote. "Bison by-prod- ucts include heads. robes. skulls.· leather aoods. wood and ~ made from thetr bones and horns.·· Bison ranchers are quick to point out (he profit potential of an enterprise that could dramatically increase the number of the species. "There's an incredible market for it," said John Aocchini, who man- llCS a herd of about 2.500 buffalo on the Durham Ranch near GiUene ... , wish we had about fi ve or six times the number of animals that we have." '••;m:a: ............. ••• a IW Cllll-.... ·aao cnngeeo.t DAILY PILOT/ Monday. December 19, 1988 »B. CHEVROLET Home of the Serengeti Blazer «tf b'•ffiW Call our friendly salesmen fOf details -5 79-5100 1-800-228-7240 17071 E. Imperial Hwy. -Yorba Linda. 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