HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-12-21 - Orange Coast Pilot,
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1988 25 CENTS
Slaying suspect IQ.ay have BB link_
Manarreste
case to
By GREG 1.LERU °' ............. •
The unt0lved Laura Bradbury case
received a small breath of life Tues-
day with the arrest of a 46-ycar-old
San Marcos man who was onct a
suspect in the disappearance of the
Jumbo jet
crashes in
Scotland
LONDON (AP)-A Pan Am
jumbo jet bound for New York
wi1b 258 people OD board
c:rabed in tbe small Scottish
IOWll of Locbitlie this eveniQI
Uout ID baur after avina
Loodoa"• Heathrow Airport. ladepeadeat Television
News reported tbat tbe 8oeina
747 apprendy crubed into I r:e:-~ boute1 in rtlie ill IOUtbern Scotland. It qllc*d eyewitDCllCI u
IQial 1bey •• .. a buee ex-DIGliOD and a ]()().foot fireball." It said ematmCY crews were at
tbe ICllle, and tbere were DO
immectiate details Oil casualties.
°"Tbere fl DO speculation at
tbia DOiat iA time u to die cauae of t6e 9CC'ident," said Pan Am
...._ Pamela Hanlon
Diego strangling
ut Laura Bradbury
Huntinat<>n Beach girl.
Alan Michael Stevens was arrested
Tuesday in connection with the
straqulation of a tynthia Lou
McVey, 26 of Livermore. Her nude
body was found Nov. 29 near the Pala
Indian Reservation in north San
Dieao County.
So Viet
students
eager to
see· Coast
· R.ain, an I I-hour ride in a school
bus, and a chaotit arrival were the
unlikely prelude to Southern Cali-
fornia for a group of 40 Russian
visitors who trudged into the Westin
South Coast Plaza hotel late Tuesday.
But by this morning, thinas were
looking better. A sparklina winter sun
dawned like celestial alasnost over a
day that promised all the essentials of
Southland hospitality.
"They want to do two thingsi they
want to JO tQ Disneyland. and they
want to 10 to the beach," Costa Mesa
host Nancy Noland said. ··We're
going to do,both." .
Police arc also looki na into possible
links between Stevens and 39 other
murden, including the infamous
Green River slayinp in J.hc Pacific
Nonhwcst.
Stevens. who is 6 foot 6 inches tall
and wei&hs 360 pounds, was one of
the original suspects in Laura's-disap-
pearance from a camPlf'Ound at
Joshua Tree National Monument on
Oct. 18, 1984. She was 3 years old at
the time.
Nicknamed "Buzzard." Stevens was a resident of Joshua Tm: at the
time of Laura's disappearance. A which handles the Bradbury cast. will
former bouncer and security guard. travel to San Dicao Count) to
Stevens aroused the suspacion of question Stevens, spokesman Jim
investigators ~hen he chanaed the Bryant said today.
appearance of a van he owned. Bryant ad mined that Stevens was
The man believed to have kid-connected to some bizartt c1rcum-
napped the blond. brown-eyed gJrl Stances surrounding Laura's disap-
was seen traveling in a blue van. pearance. ·
Stevens reportedly changed the color In . court documents. San
of his van from green to brown. . Bernardino sheriffs investigators es-
AJthough authorities eventually tablished a hnk between the Bradbury
eliminated Stevens as a suspect. case and the slayings of Clifford
investiaators from the San Lcvi11c. 41. and-his a.irlfricnd, Toby
Bernardtno Shcnfrs Department. Ann Santan&elo. 2 I.
.,,
Their bodicf were found buried in
adjacent d ry lake beds near Twen-
tynine Palms several months aft(r the
couple had gone to sheriff's in-
vestigators to identify an acquaint-
ance as a suspect in Laura's kidnap-
ping. They had been shot to death .
Stevens was not named as a suspect
by Leville and Santangelo. but both
were acquaintances of Stevens.
Bryant said. He dcclmed to discuss
what the couple told investiptOl'5,
but said their information .. didn't
(Pleue aee 8U8PSCT I A2)
School district
namedin$1M
harassment suit
~ ( 'I
H,B--employee~
boss subjected her
to sexual remarks
BJ ROBERT BARKER °' .. ...., ........
A female word processor operator
filed a SI m1lhon lawsuit ap1nst the
Huntjngton Beach Union H1&h
School District on Tuesday. claiming
that her boss sexually harassed her.
• Deborah Carello, a resident of
Westminster, alleged that Richard
today he was sucposed by the lawsuit_
but had not seen the lepl papers.
Kemper said tfw the district's
affirmauve action officer. Doris
Lo~. conducted an intemaJ
1nqu1ry intoallcptionslast year. "We
beheved that everYtbing had been
molved and that there had been no
additional problems," Kemper said.
Kemper said Plum ··was talked
wnh" at the time of the internal
inquiry. He said there had been no
follow-up by Carello or her attorneys
before the suit was tiled,
iDNew York. wbo COllfinned
die crMla and said tbat 243
people and 15 crew memben
aboUd.
.. The rain will stop," she-added
prophetically.
The Russians, a group of young
computer buffs and their teachers
from the city of Troitsk. which is just
outside Moscow, were scheduled to
arrive in Costa Mesa at 6 p.m.
Tuesday for a thrce-da}' visit.
...,._,, , .,_, • ,-Phtm; diRCtOf of the-GistFK&'s adult
Jared Price (left) and Vltya Odlllt8GY matcb ap carda ued to education prO&[am. subJected her to -•· tbe RaMl•n student wttll lala boet famll• sexually exphctt remarks.. Jokes and
In the suit, Carello alleaed that
Plum told "ofT<alor and tasteless
jokes ... ·of the most offensive sort;'
made sexual comments to her •
rubbed ap~nSt r ana gave her
porn<>sraph1c cartoons.
J"9AA 1 • canoons. Carello also allqcd that Plum
whistled at her. Siie said DO pe...,.:r list WU
immedi1111J awillble for flilht
103 wlaicb OriliMted in Frank-
,_,; W• O.may. Sbe aid it
--to arm. ia .. Kenaedy Airport in New Y Olk at 9: 19 p.m.EST.
Tbe ftiabt left London's
Heathrow Airport bound for Kea~ Airport in New y ork
at ICkl Lm.
But a !eries of small delays alona
the way, and heavy traffec in the Los
Anecles area. kept the group and thcar
companions. a group of Oakland
junior hiah school students. on the
road for an extra two hours.
The Iona trip from Monterey.
where they spent Monday night. lcfi
the aroup tired and understandably
grumpy.
But several of the Russian students
and teachers manqed. with the help
of inleflW'tlerS, to muster answers to a
few questions.
··1 tiked seeing the mountains when
-.e were travehng. •• sasd Lena
Koptclovalle, one of t!'lc students.
"Where" I live. we have forests and
rivers. A lot of forests. But no
mountains."
Noland. who will be Lena's host for
the next three days. said she was
excited and happy about the prospect
of a aucst from the Soviet Union. .
.. We've had foreaan JUCSU before,
but never hkc this. The) 've alwa)'s
been busiMSs associates."
Notand. a teacher at Cahfom1a
School in Costa Mesa. said she was
recruited as a host for the Russian
v1sttors by Stc\-e Penney. another
Costa Mesa teacher wbo organized
(Pfeue eee SOVIET I A2J
The suit was filed on Carello's
behalf by attome~ for the California
School Employees Assoc1auon. a
union that rcprcscnts non-tcachen in
the district.
Plum said toda) that he .. catcaon-
cally denied the whole thing... but
dedtncd funher comment. S&)tnl he
needed to consult an auomc:, first
larT) Kemper. su~nntendcnt of
the 14.000-student d1stnct w11h high
schools in Fountain Valley. West-
minster and.Huntington Beach". said
"Ms. Carello told Mr. Plum that
she found the whistling to be humili-
auna and degradina. Mr. Plum M>kt
Ms. Carello that be viewed the
whistling as a compliment.... the
lawsuit said. L-
Plum pve Carello dozem of paecs
of typewritten Jokes -that 'ftfe of-
fensive on a racial lc"-el. on a sexual
le' cl. on a handtcappcd kvd. on a
reh11ous level." CSEA attorney Peter
(Pleue ..e UXUAL/A2)
lndez
Births
Buhtln Board
Bullnell
CIMllfted
Comics
Croaword
Deeth notices Entertainment
Food
A6
A3
C6-7
C10-12
Old Sol shines for the winter solstice
Mind& Body
Opinion
=notices
SPorta
W•ther
C9
C11
C12
A10
C1-5
A8
A11
C8
C12
81-4
A2
By BOB VAN EYKEN °' .. ...., ..........
Pagans in Southern California were
ctlcbrating today's winter solstice
under sunny and cloudless skies.
which lent an unseasonal sparkle to
the ancient celebration that takes
place in the year's darkest hour
But a Cost.a Mesa practitioner of
California's version of the old pagan
tradition said good weather docs not
interfere with the celebration.
.. This is one of our heavy-duty
celebrations,'' said Kahena. who
works at the Costa Mesa shop Visons
and Dreams. ..Of course. in Cali-
fornia it may not be as pertinent as in
other places because we really don't
feel the cold and darkness of winter.
but it's still a time of ritual rebirth for
all practitioners of the old religion."
Kahena. who goes by only one
name. practices a religion that blends
3 shelters off er a
happier holiday
for some homeless
Communities rally
to open f acilittes,
provide fOOd, gifts
IJ LESLIE EARNEST ...............
Homelessness is bleak any time of
the year, but the chill of wmter can
add a bitter eds.
And when Christmas rolls around.
•a.den with expectations of joy and memories of a briahter day. people
who live on the Streets ml¥ find I nCw enemt -their ..aina spirits.
an unexpected way. Thanks to new
homeless shelters recently opened in
Laguna Beach and Irvine. at least a
small number of the county's home-
less will be abk to keep warm. trim
trees and maybe even bike cookies.
According to April Clayton, day
su~isor at the Laguna Beach
fnendsbip Shelter. a turkey dinntt
and presents will bri&hten what could
have been a dreary day for the 19
residents who moved in since the
shelter opened Nov. 7.
"Most of them would have been on
the streets." Oayton said. But the
conversion ofan apartment buildina
at 133S S. Coast Highway into a
dorm.style homeless shelter has
chan~ that.
the 'ancient ~gan rehg1ons of Europe
and the Middle East wtth sa<alled
New Age ph1losoph).
For her, the solstice 1s a ume for
changing life styles and building new,
more harmonious habits.
Central to the winter solstice ntual.
she said. 1s a practice knov.n as
"casting a circle.'
"In casting a circle. you ask God to
create a sacred. med1tau ve space
around you and those v.uh you.' she
said. "The traditional diameter 1s
nine feet. but the limits dc~nd on
who you are doing 1t wt th. For
example. iftherearcchilden around. I
usuaJI) include the bathroom 1n 1t. so
the kids can run tq the bathroom 1f
they need to v. i'th'out break in& the
circle."
The purpose of the solsucc ntual.
she said. is to get in touch v.1th the
dark. m)stenous side of hfe and
consciousness .
..
"In paganism. as opposed to Chris-
tiantt)'.. we d on't have lhisallaood vs.
all evil," she said ... We. in fact. don't
c.all 1t evil. but simply the darker side·
of consc1ousnC$S. To honor your
fuUness.. )OU have to honor that side
as well."
Astronomers say the worst is
behind us. however. Tbe actual
solsttcc. the moment when the sun 1s
fanhest fro~ Orange Cou~-. curred at 7:-8 a.m.
Suspect
Beldin
Sia Vick's
robbery
.... .......... -....
By JONATHAN VOLD.E °'_...., ........
.\ sing)~ fingcrpnnt left at a South
Coast Plaz.a JC"'elry store durina a
. SI 2 m1lhon heist led to the annt
' Monday of one man and the idcnt1fa-
catton of a $econd tn connection with
the brazen Nov~mbcT robbery, polacr
reponed.
Jereal Deon GnfJen. 20. was ar-
rested 1n Culver City on Monday
"'hen pohcc stopped bis car for a
traffic v1olatton. Costa Mesa Pohcc
Ottecuve Dan Hoaue said.
When Los Antrlcs officers ran a
check on Gnffcn. they di1covmd a $100.000 Costa Mesa arrest ...,.._..t
alleJ!na GnfTen took pan in the Nov. 2 3 robbcf'l of a Sia viclt ,, ,cwdry Mort
1n South Coast Plaza. H.,e uid. While additional SUpPOrt systems ~ly sprina updunna the holiday
1CMOn, ih11 ~r some Oi'a"fe Coun-
ty families wdl l'elebrate Chnstmas in·
CommunitY. residents have drop-
ped off bcaut1fully wrapped presents.
(Pl--... llOIBL&l8/A2) Apdl Cla;tea. day..,....._ at ......... ._.._ elaelter, at•Ja w•e dorm.
Four well~tnled black men,
heavily armed. entem:i the~
StOtCJUSt bcfOtt Its 9 p.m.'ttoli•MMI
ordcttd about I 0 anaomcrs nd
cmplovecs 10 lie on tht ftoor; COiia
Mesa S... Sam Conkiro said.
OCC Withdraws development request .
mun1ty Collemt Disarict Chancellor
Oavtd BrownCll ~·the de~
mcnt scheme bCfoft aht Costa Mesi
Ci~ Council.
Brownell drC>Pled""--' the rcqunt
btf'ore the C'OUllCil IUI) consi«ttd it.
and city offialle N~ by cha111·
illl tht zon1111of'IM l4«rt propeny
to pubhc or wmi P•Mic ult. That
dnianltton allowls~ hospt· tals or SJm1lar um.. 11id. :
. ..
datenn's proptn) f'llhts.." •t tlaal request was~ by tht couoril OcMrat plan amtndmcnts..
whech • tlMt c:ate would chaftle the ~ ol thc PNl'tft)' to ·~ COMlnlttioa ollMllMkaticy houliftl, art proccmcl only ~ a )air. aad
offiaall told tht 4"1ttnct to WIMt.
'nit manrr ....-ft'd • tlw councll •nda Monday. 'but " •as wwthdnwn bd'Oft atw ~ btllft.
\
OM. 6and1t then ordemt the ._.
ma~r to opm adl o( tM ~
cases and tht robbcn tcoopell *'
iewclry. mos&ly dialnoiRdl. into
Slavd 's shoppi"f •
They left. MOft .... •
shound vUWty ,_;1hll. ·
1n with the beavy a.· • • ASlavick·1cai1pla~IOWpalice-
o(1Mtudib-•tlll ... tlillr
that dlf. iaquim11 ........... ..
IC>mt ..... ~-.. --.,·---bcitll•C-Mela . -r.,.,.lllllilld -..... "! ....... _..,.
~ ........... "' .. _ ..
USPECT ARRES'tED ••• .......
lad•ywbett." Tkir deaths have never been
I iolved.
Bryant said invntiptors .. never
had anythins to P'n Stevens" to
Laura's1'1i11ppearance.
.. He wu investipted as one of
• muy people we talked to," Bryant
1. -t1id, no&i• that inveacipton ques-
' tioncd more than SOO people. "He , offered information, but so did many
other people."
, Still,· followinJ TuesdAy's arrest,
u invett111torsare interested in Stevens
apin. '
, "We'll Probably ao down lhereJnd see if it's worth anything." Bryant
said.
• Asked if he thou~t Laura was still
alive, Bryant said, 'No. I don't think , so."
The Bradburys. who have kept up a
search ~for their dau,hter since her
disappearance. could not bt reached
for comment this momina.
S&evens' arrest resulted from physi-
cal evidence obtained af\tr McVey'1
body was disco~ercd, but he !s. not
believed responsible forallAOk1lh•
under investiption, said s.t. Liz
Foster of the San Dicao County
Sheriffs Metropolitan Task Force,
who declined to elaborate.
Similarities between McVey'1 slay-
ing and some of the others, which date
back to l~8Sf include strangulation as the c.ause o death and the remote
location where her partially clothed•
body was duml>Cd. Foster said.
All of the identified victims were
female prostitutes or transients, and
the task force is investigating to
dtlermine if the1r slayinp can be
linked .
M(Vey's bod) was found near the
.,.. where tht ~ly mutilated
body of an unidentified woman wu
discovered Oct. I, 1-986. In Dettmber
1986. the nude body of Melissa Gene
Shitt, 22. *&s fOUnd in the 11me
,eneral area. She had been stran&led
with a heh that was still around her
neck. authorities •id.
A connection between the San
Dieao County deaths and 40 .. Green
River" serial killinas in the Pacific
Nonhwest also remains under in·
vcstiption, but Capt. Bob Evans, a
member of the Green River Task
Force probina those sJ~~~. said
Stevens isn't believed to bC the person
they're seckW.a.
7'k Au.clald Pttu CMlrllHlld ,. IAJ1 ,.., ..
~ SOVIET STUDENTS VISIT COAST •••
Fl'OIDA I
the Southern California part of the
visit.
Another of the Russian students.,
· Vitya Odintsov, somehow seemed
less tired than some of his compa-
nions and spoke enthusiastically of
the trip.
''I love Oakland\ it's a beautiful
city. and San Franc1sco1" he said. "I
• want to see Los Ange es and Dis-
neyland." ·
Asked what he thouJl:lt of Ameri-
can food, Odintsov said in English,
"It's OK."
But he added that he liked Ameri-
can drinks very much. His favorite is
• oransc juice. he said.
"Wehaveorangejuice in the Soviet
Union. but it's not very good." he
said. ~
with computers.
Her visit resulted in an invitatio,i
to stUdents in the Oakland school
district to visit a computer camp ln
the Soviet Union last year.
This year. the sons and daughters of
the Russian host families-were in-
vited to come to ~lifornia.
"The whole thing is centered on
computers and telecommunication."
said Penney, an En&lish and reading
teacher at TeWin~le Intermediate
School in Costa Mesa and a member
of ~e Orange County chapter of
Computer Using Educators. or CUE.
It was through a frie nd and fellow
CUE member in Oakland, Peter
Hutchins, that the Orange County lea
of the trip came into being, Penney
said. •
"He contacted me and said the
Russian kids had specifically asked to
visit Disneyland and to sec a
Southern California beach." he said.
.. Most of the host familes were found
through the parents of my students."
Numerous large and small dona-
tions by businesses have also enrich-
ed the trip, Penney said. Amons the
local donors arc the Westin South
Coast Plaza. which donated the.use of
a banquet room and hors d'oeuvre.of
fruit and fondue for the aunt•'
arrival. Conroy's Florists in Costa
Mesa also donated flower arranae-
ments for each of the Russian pestl.
U.S. Tempe. .. Le ... ._ ... _ .. n
Andlor• .. 17 -.... u ..
.... City ., 44 ....._. 15 51 •n•..,_... .. .. ...... 40 32 ...... " 41 .... 17 • ~.SC .. IO
N.C • 43 ~·::· 31 20 91 30 Qnclrilelj 51 41 ~ 11 37
~Ohio 57 42 ~Wortll • • = 67 M
44 22 OlaMllllM ,, ,. = 57 II 31 OI ·~· M 30 ,..,..,.. 11 15
::~~ 43 23 N 3S
HollalUlu • 73
"°""°" 7t 14 ....., .... a JI ,,._, .. 71 12 ,,.._.. 73 41 --M 29 ~City IS 24 t:."I: 55 ..
14 41 ~ IO .. =:.r:-17 57 75 71
.... Olmlw n 51 Calif. Temps. Eztended =-~ 56 50 57 32 Hill'. low tor 24 110Uf1.noot1iD11 5 • m ~ doullr .. ...,._. .._. a-iw 43 20 ""°""' ...... Colt ... ~ .. Ortllldo 78 51 ..... ~H11M5a10C.-.11140a. rt•u 1t1111e ., 47 ........., 61 ... ........ a 41 fln*a .. 41 ::::ri ..... 51 45 '-IS 40 45 • ~-57 N Surf Repart • ......,,Ore ... ,. •• 41 :.:.!•' • '° .. 53 . 40 .. 2t ::o.:.r-49 35 LOCATIOll .. IMAl'I llLOlll 17 21
::::::::, Crty
.. 3S ~~ 1·2 POOr ... Lmkec.ty 42 a6 52 40 ... An!Onlo 74 51 50 31 ...... ~.~ 2-4 POOr t::. .... 43 17 a.a-to 63 42 40lll sveee. ~ 2-4 ~ 43 37 ..._
e2 IS 22"cl ...... ~ 2-4 POOr .... f.:' 71 67 lenl>lego 52 42 .... = 2-4 POOr
35 ,, 8Mfr~ 51 31 ;:-Cllmer!M 1-3 POOr lioull -~ 1-3 POOi ---ao 21 Long9eldl 51 .. w .... ..,.:n .... dir«tion Wee1 t...-:.1'1'"9 51 .. 51 49 71 16 ~ • 50 .. T~ 51 ,.
56 42 T-u M MolW-51 44 , .... II a2 -~ 54 .. Tides WMlllllglon.o.c. II .. Monwey e2 M ..... 57 49 Newport 8Mcl> • 56 40 ~· On4ltlo 93 41 S«ondlow tl30p.m 13 Smo1Report Pllm 8'lrlnOI !15 40 Second hlgll l:Olp.m. 39 PIMdenl 51 31 "'-'"" 56 39 ~· l"ollll8lll ...,d Inda r,ih 0.50 a.ne.r-c11no 57 43 flrtl low 1•24 e.m. 23 IMGebllel ~--mods-10 _, -..... AM 13 41 ~IOw 7 44 ..,,.., u 21D0-2" *Y llllllelllllM: 300 57 50 3:12p.m. 14 ..,._....,.,..Firll ..... 19 ....... .,.,. 51 '3 8-ldhlgll t:U p.m. 38 =--~ ... s-.ct.
Sent• Cruz 51 45 ..,._Merll 55 50 Sun .... IOCMy .. ·~-p.m • ,... Sent• MonlC8 37 21 Tilurtcley • 6 53 a,m. Md .... at 4 4' S... ...,_IO MecMlu "'4 ... 30-42 TMotV.-, 57 47 pm. ...... ,. Q rt v-. ............ 2$-42 Torr-~ 41 Moon n.a • a.11 p ""· ..... • 3' Laa--...._ CIDNClll)... •• ___ 42 w..wooo Another of the visitors, an history
teacher Marina Poznainskai¢f said
she loved the art galleries in San
Francisco and Berkeley. SEXUAL HARASSMENT ••• -......... 52 ao Loi Mlll9I Ajrport.... __ ,_,, __ 4CM2 Y-.NM Vtt •7 30 • ,. TillnllmJ, ... ,... ....... p"'
"J went to sec some graphic artists
in' their studio and I reall y liked their
work, .. she said. "And I also lik6:1 the
architecture in San Francisco and
' Monttrcy."
But the thing that has most im-
pressed her so far on the trip is the
personal interaction, she said.
"I like the people and the rela·
tionships between Russian and
American people," she said.
The visit is designed to foster those
kinds of relationships. Pennex said.
The idea belan when the wife of an
official at the Soviet consulate in San
Francisco went to an Oakland school
-10 see-what the students were aolng
r romA1
Janiak said.
~rello filed complaints with the
EquaJ Employment Opj><>rtunity
Commission and the California De-
partment of Fair Employment and
Housing bel'orc filing the federal suit.
After the formal complaints were
filed. Plum "backed off of his overt
conduct toward her." Janiak said, but
allegedly continued his harassment
by increasing urcllo's workload.
~rello sought psychiatric help to
cope with the stress ta\,lsed ·by the
alleged harassment, but she never
considered uining her ·ob Janiak sal .
"Why ishould she have to quit? If
there's discrimination &oing on, why
should the discriminator maintain
his ~ition and the victim quit? She
decided to stand up for her rights and
not be continually victimized.'. he
said.
Kemper said that he "ccnainly" is
an opponent of sexual harassment
and put out information about
sensiuvity to the problem to all
management employees Jut year at
the time of the internal inquiry.
Th Anoclated Ptt11 co.trlh ld
'-41• 11«y.
; HOMELESS FIND REFUGE AT SHELTERS ••.
From Al
' four turkeys have been donated and
Clayton's mother gave the shelter a
tree. Then, to top it off. first-through
fifth-graders from Top of the World
Elementary School arrived with
homemade tree decorations.
"It's the most beautiful tree you've
ever seen." Clayton said. "The
1 teachers were crying. We were crying.
1 I talked to the teacher and said, 'You
don't know what you've done for our
Chirstmas,' and she said. 'You don't
know what you've Cione for ours.' It
was rcall x a touchinJ thing."
~· A family of four 1s expected to be
ti the first residents to move into one of
two recently renovated farmhouses in
Ea.st Irvine on Bun and Sand Canyon
,, roads. H;ld the farmhouses been
V bulldozed as originally planned. the
family would likel y have been home-
less, according to Ann Miller. director
of Irvine Temporary Housing. which
will o~rate the shehers.
While she declined to gi ve other
• infouRMion about the residents or
who a.ht live in the second house wh~ ttopens in a few weeks. Miller sai~ ttls volunteer effort to tum the ~idated I 920s-cra farmh ouses
into cozy homes ha s been a boon to
the city's efforts to care for its ·, homeless.
"We're just so thrilled to have the
available space.'' Miller said. "lt"s
way beyond our wildest dreams
really.
"It's JUSt the coziest feeling.'' she
added. "I know that anyone who's
.,, been a part of 1t has a sense of
ownership about the project."
Charlene Turco, an Irv ine resident
who spearheaded the renovation
project and directed volunteer work-
days each Saturday since the project
began in April. said it was harder than
she thou&ht to let go.
"When aJI is said and done and it's
really over with, you feel pretty sad
about it," Turco said last week after
the final wall was painted and the last
picture hung. When the utilities were
turned on Turco said she took her
'" own famify to the farmhouses one
1• niaht to ring the doorbells and flip on
the liabts.
.. The ps and the electricity, the
!.I' water, they all work." Turco said. "I
r. pess, little by htt.le~. (I was) tearina
myse!faway (rom IL
,,
Before she left one of the farm-
bouta, Turco said she sat for a
minutt in one of the bedrooms with
her 4-year-old son and looked out at
Christmas liahts in the distance. Her
eon, who hat been by her side durina
much of the eifon, 11id, "Mom, I'm
~~E 11111 Niii
_.Ol'PICI
-... 99J 11 Coe!•.._, CA
gonna miss these farmhouses, too."
But as volunteers in both cities let
go of their projects. needy residents
are beginning to settle in. at least
temporarily. And for future families
down on their luck. the shelters will
mean new options.
Accordina to Miller. Irvine Tem·
porary Housing does not keep a
waiting list for the farmhouses or JO
apanments scattered throughout the
city. Instead, needy people arr given
referrals and told to keep in touch if
things don't work out.
.. We encouraie a family, rather
than being on a hst. to keep in contact
with us if they ha ve not fbund other
solutions," Miller said. •
Shelter· and counseling arc avail-
able for farmhouse residents for up to
90 days. A pantry stocked with food
donated by community groups and
citizens will be offered to residents.
While the Irvine farmhouses may
feel more like si ngle famil y dwellings.
the Laguna Beach shelter1 which was
once a hotel, seems more hke a college
dorm.
On a recent afternoon. Clayton sat
at the oak dining room table with
large windows on two walls and
talked with obvious pride about the
residents and the project. At full
capacity, the shelter can house 25
people.
Currently 10 pcoP.le. includin& one
youth, caJI the facility home. Resi-
dents can stay a maximum of 60 days
in most cases and I 80days if mentally
handicapped. Most of the residents
have jobs, she said. Others arc
looking for work. Often they do
volunteer work in the community.
.. Our people are really motivated."
Clayton said ... We're reall y proud of
some of the progress they're making.
.. They do volunteer an awful lot
and I have to stop them and make
sure they ta.kc care of themselves,"
she added.
The shelter. which currently has
seven bedrooms and five baths. will
add two more rooms -one with an
octan view -when the last tenant of
the former apartment buildin& moves
out at the end of the month.
While some nearby residents re-
sisted having a shelttr open in their
neiahborhood. Clayton said there
have been few complaints.
"At first. I auess the community
was concerned and now they teem to
be pretty comfortable with at," Clay-
ton said. "They're still apprehensive,
but we've been real quiet, to they're
almost bqinnina to ICCept us. ..
In fact. the ideas for both shelters •
were born amid controversy. In
Irvine. residents had protested con-
vening the farmhouses -once used
to house migrant farm work.crs -
into homeleu shelters on the grounds
that they would be unsafe environ-
ments. Opponents claimed the
houses, donated by The li-Vine Co .•
would be a risk to residents because of
alleged high asbestos content and
excessive noise.
In Laguna, residents were caught
off guard when Friendship Shefter
Inc. a non-profit orpnization for-
med in January 1987, bought the
apartment building in early August.
Controversy may have been qu!et-
ed by the fact that peopl~ must wind
their way through official channels
before they are accepted at the Laguna
shelter. All residents at the Friend-
ship Shelter are referred by other
organizations. Clayton said.
..We don't take people right off the
streets." she said. ··That's so we don't
become a soup kitchen. because that's
not what we arc or intended to be,"
Although Clayton is pleased with
the progress of the shelter so far, there
is still much wor~ to be done and
there will always be people beyond
the shelter's help. One woman who
stayed briefl y at the shelter opted to
leave early.
"Sometimes they've been out on
the street a l~ng time," Clayton said.
"It becomes a way oflife."
"There will be difficult cases that
will go back on the streets," Clayton
said. "But we try. We&ive it one good
try."
Although many Laguna and Irvine
residents, and others in surrounding
communities, took part in making the
shelters a reality. strong personalities
fueled both efforts .
In Irvine. Miller praised Turco for
hereffons.
"She really is a Dhenomenal force
behind anythinJ. She has .,eat vision
and, because of that, she helps others see what miaht be done."
"Charlene doesn't really see the
barrien that others do sometimes.
and that's so special."
In l..quna, Clayton pve credit to
Phil May, Friendship Shelter chair-
man. and to the steedy day-to-day
paidance of shelter director Colin
Hendenon.
··1 would •Y that Colin throup his
steadine11 hu pulled it throulb ...
Cla)'lon said. "I think Colin Ren-
dmon is a miracle worker. lkeentJy
pointed us all in a direction and we
went there."
_ ...,_ 90ll 1MO, c.e......., CA mn
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.... 1 Ja.tcaU 842-8088
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SLA VICK~S ROBBERY ARREST ....
PromAI
one· of the largest."
After the robbery, Cordeiro <Se. scribed the men as professionals, and
said thel may be linked to three other
Slavick 1 robberies in the Los Angeles area.
But police fo und a sinale thumb
print in the Costa Mesa store, Hogue
said. That print was run throu~ the
'uutomat.ed fi naerprin1-1def!!i-
fication computer, Cal-ID, ancf
linked to Michael Jae, who turned 21
a week after the robbery.
Working with Los Angeles Police.
Hogue obtained photographs of Jae,
whose last address was in Compton
and of Griffen. allCJedly known to
associate with Jae, the detective said.
The phOtOIJ'lphs were mixe~ ~ith
several others and shown to v1ct1ms
of the Costa Mesa robbery. The
victims idenafied Jae and Gnffen as
two of the fou r men who held them at
&unpoint.
Annl warrants were issued for
both men, but authorities have yet to find Jae, Hogue said.
Griffen was also identified by a
victim in a Slavick's robbery at the
Northridge Fashion Center in early
November, Hogue said.
Hogue said Griffen would be
arraigned in Harbor Municipal Court
in Newpon Beach after preliminary
proceedings in Los Angeles. Los
Anaeles authorities were already
seekina Griffen on larceny and traffic
warrants, Hogue said.
"I'm not sure when he'll be ar-
raigned down here, bul he'lfwork his
way here eventually," Hogue said.
lllclaael Jae
The de1ective said Jae and Griffen,
held in Los An.ieles County Jail in
lieu of SI00,000. were also being
investiptcd in connection with the
other robberies.
Hogue credited cooperation be-
tween the Costa Mesa and Los
Angeles PQlice departments and the
statewide fingerpnnt computer index
with the arrest.
· "It worked out real well for us,"
Hogue said. "But without Cal-ID, we
may have nevel\J()lved the case.•·
Still, ttie detective said it's ques-
Jereal Griffen
tionable whether any jewelry would
be recovered. None has been found.
and no weapons have been recovered.
Hogue said jewel thieves typically
sell their stolen booty fora percentage
of what it's wonh for cash or drugs.
The metal is often melted down and
the stones reset to make identification
nearly impossible. 11 "We're hopeful we can recover
some,'' Hogue said. "But I wouldn't
bet my career on it."
Anyone with any information on
Jae isasked to call Hogue at 7S4-S202.
CAMPUS HOUSING PLAN SHELVED •••
From Al
each. Developers submitted
proposals for each of the properties,
but the djstrict has only a&reed on one
proposal, a deal with the Zand Co. for
the 14-acre parcel.
The deal would return as much as
$300 million to the financially
strapped district over the term of the
lease. officials said.
Nelson Zand was unavailable for
comment today.
But even with the withdrawal.
Gene Hulchins, a leader in the
Qpposjtio~ to private development at
OCC, voiced concern .
Hutchins told the counci l he op-
posed the plan because he thought the
district has yet to make a stronJ fund-
rajsing effort in the community and
should do so before turnina to
development as a source of revenue.
More than 530 letters opposin& the
plan were sent to City Hall before the
meeting.
Councilman Orv Ambursey. an
OCC almuni. warned Hutchins that
his continual protests might soon fall
on deaf ears.
.. It is not this council's responsi-
bility to define whether OCC has
surplus property and whether theX
should use it as a development. '
Amburaey said.
~
Orlftlll C.. DALY N.OT/Wednwiay, Oiicember 21 , 1W Aa
Turn-of-century
Christmas decor,
music on display
Bolid8.y giving a year-roundjob
An exhibit detailina how the holidays were
celebrated at the turn of the century will be presented
t!tjs month at the Discovery Museum of Orange
Cqunty. ·-
A Victorian Christmas tree, old-fashioned
decorations and holiday music will provide the
fcelina of the era. Visitors can try on period costumes
and panicipate in special craft ac1ivities at the
museum.
It will be open 11 a.m. un1il 3 p.m. today
throuJh Friday and Dec. 27 to Jan. l . The museum i~
located at 3101 W. Harvard St., Santa Ana.
Admission is SI for adults and SO cents for
children under 12, with a nominal fee for craft
panicipation. Further information may be obtained
by calhna S40-0404.
Contributor to 'Give a Little Christmas· ,
rive In ssatis acUoningtvingtoothers -
By LESLIE EAJ\NEST °' ...............
Four years.aao. as she sat watching 1he
children tear into Christmas presents at a
family ptherina. Mary Jane Wood got 1he
fcelina 1hinp had gone too far. The adults
didn't really need inything and the
children received too much, she said. so
she decided to bail out.
At the same time. lhe Orange Coast
Daily Pilot launched its "Give a Little
Christmas" prosram to provide gifts for
children of needy Oranac Coast famil ies.
Wood needed no more encouraaemenl'to
jump back on ~~ft-Jiving bandwagon.
"I hcanl about the P1lo1 program and I
said, 'I'm aonna do that next )car:" 1he
l.a&una Beach resident said. "So I told the
kids. 'Nobody sets anythin1, no1 even the
kids,'They•veaot to learn tog.ave up th1np
too." ·
And with tha1. Wood got busy.
The 68-year-old woman staned makina
and buyi ng presents. spending the money
she previously allotted for her family.
Wood's actions alone "'ere a boon to 1he
newspaper's gift dnve, but the presents
began multiplying this year when her
friends Sot involved in the project.
The informal bu1 durable "Sli1cb-N·
Bitch Club," made up of five El Morro
Mobtk HorM Park rnadnts. mollly 1n
tMir la&e 60s. have been spendins lunch-
llrncs knitbftl and crochetans ~ for more than a dccack. wo0ct·1 idea of
cratina a Christmas bonanza for needy
children btcame a creative ou1~ for the
aroup.
As a ~ult. aPP!_C?ximately SS a>ft• -
indudina good1e-filled shoppina bqs,
decorated stockinas and Barbie doll1
weany handmade clo1hes -were drop-
ped on by the women this year.
Shopping stans early. lhe work 11 spread
1hrouJhou1 the year and 1he payoff comes
in December -for the children and the
women.
"h's JU St an ongoing proposi1ion."
Wood said. "I've gotten a lot of satisfac-
1ion out of it. It makes you feel aood 10
know that some little kid who wouldn't
have had anything is getting a prncnt."
In aJI. more than 2,000 aifts are eaoecsed
10 ti nd 1 res11 na place beneath the
Chnstmas trtt 1n the Pilot'1 k?bbr.· TM
dn-wt bt&an 1n November and wdl nan
throuJh F"nda)'. Pilot ~rs. adveniten
and emplo)'e« have been donatins new,
unwrapped prestnts which will be turned
over to Share Our Selves of COl&a Mae.
The aroup will in tum distribute them on
Chnstmas Eve to needy local families.
Gifts can be left in the Pilot lobby 11 330
W. Bay S1.. Costa Mesa between 8 a.m. ahd Sp.m.
For her pan. Wood said she is already
looking at ads for gJfts to put unc:kr next
year's tree. And no one in her family ha1
complained about the 11fts bein& rerouted,
she said.
"I got a darhn& letter from one of my
nieces who said. 'That's a very nice thin& ~~!,)'Ou're doing. rm glad you thoupt of
1t, Wood said. ·
CIJapter •upporta 11enlon
Seniors With Amazing Talent is forming a new
chapter in Oranie County.
Seniors with management skills in business,
who are disenchan1ed with retirement or have
difficulty finding executive placeftlellt in the work
force can obtain more information by calling J.B.
Morris at 552-0803.
.NBstudents '·ustsa ilb'With
Women's group to meet
A suppon group called Women Who Love Too
Much will meet twice weekly in Newpon Beach to
help resolve co-dependencies. •
Meetings will be held from 6 10 8 p.m. on
Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4029 Westerly Place.
Further· information may be obtained' by calling
838-6298.
Resolve to give blood ln '8_9
The-Orange County ChaP.ter of thc...American...
By IRIS YOKOI
Of .. o.llr .......
Nancy Reagan should solicit Charles
Hughes sixth-graders at Newpon Beach's
Mariners Elementary School to conjure up
slogans for her anti-drug abuse campaign.
Just observe some of the crea1i vity that
flowed from the youngsters dunng a
OARE class Tuesday afternoon:
"Only real slugs use drugs," said Peter
Kim. II.
"It's not wonh it fora 10-minute high:·
advised Christina Farrell. 11.
"Getting high makes your friend level
low," said Noelle Heany, 10. '
DARE instructor Lavonne Campbell. a
Newport -Beach Police dctttt1 • had
assigned her students this week to create
and act out anti-substance abuse com-
mercials, which were professionally
videotaped by Jan Anderson. a police
reserve officer and former television
cameraman. .
In addition to the group-created com-
mercials, the students individuallr ga ve Computer renalr worlcshon statements against drus and alcoho use. r-r DARE. which stands for Drug Abuse
Red Cross will have bloodmobiles in the community
on Jan. 23. It will be at St. Andrews Presbyterian
Church. 600 St. Andrews Road, Newport Beach,
3-7:45 p.m.; call 631-2880 for an appoin1ment. A
bloodmoblfe will also be at Mesa Verde United
Me1hod1st Church. 1701 W. Baker St .. Costa Mesa,
2:45-7:30 p.m.: call 641-1982 for an appointment.
A I-day workshop tha1 offers hands-on ex-Resistance Education. was created in 1983
eerience in repairing computers will be offered by by the LOS Angeles Police Depanment.
Orange CoastColleae'sCommunityServicesOflice. The 17-week program is aimed primarily
The workshop is scheduled Saturday, Jan. 21. 9 a.m. at sixth~graders taught by a uniformed
to 4 p.m. in Room IOI ofOCC's computer center. police officer. Students use role playing to
Attendees will learn how to change and lest learn about self-esteem and law. enforce-·
-chipsand monitors, localize problems,,-check.fo....wiu--1 mcnt, as wtll as drugs and-their effi ........ --._
c-0ndense space availability on hard disks. find lost The Newport-Mesa Unified Sc hool
or damqed clusters. create a visual picture of files. District began the program last year. said
and speed up and check drives. Campbell. who spends an hour a week with
Participants are asked to bring several blank each sixth-~rade class in the district.
floppy disks. · CampbF came up with the idea to do
Additional information is available . calling commercia s after noticing the astounding
432-5880. display of wit during role-playing ex-
em9el. She said the crcati,•ity of the
OCC regl•tratlon
Open rq1stration for Oranae Coast College's
spring semester is Jan. S-1 in the college adminis-
tration office. Hours are Jan. S. 8 a.m. to 7.p.m.: Jan.
6. 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.: and Jan. 7. 9 a.m. 10 I p.m.
The spring semester begins Jan. 9. and late
registration will be allowed through Jan. 20.
Registration fees are SS per unit to a maxi mum of
SSO per semester. Financial aid is a vailable.
Regi stration information is available by calling
432-5678.
I Victorian era art eihlblt
An exhibition of the fine and applied ans
produced durina the Victorian era goes on display
Jan. 18 at Golder) West College. Prints, paintings.
photographs. furniture, clothing and decorative
objects will on display through Feb. 3. The gallery is
<>pen Monday through Friday I 0 a.m. to 8 p.m. and
Tuesday and Wednesday evenings 6-8 p.m.
Additional informa11on is available by calling
895-8783. Admission is f rce.
studcnl commercials h~s consistently
amazed her.
"Some kids rapped and danc~d:· she
chuckled.
"These gu)s arc JUSt fabu lous." said
Anderson. who has worked on pro-
fessional anti-drug use advenisemcn1s.
"They're a great resource. I'm going to
sic.al some of their ideas for future
commercials.··
Campbell plans 10 show the com-
mercials. which wall be cd11ed b)
Anderson. to parenls at the DARE
graduations in February.
Although they had a couple of weeks to
prepare. some of 1he Mariners students
admitlcd Tuesday to putt inf toscther their
commercials in a mauer o minutes. Ye1
the productions were well done.
The groups of 1hrce to four s1udents had
10 minutes to rehearse their commercials
before they were called by director
Andersbjt to the "set." which consisted of a
•
.... ... __.. __ __
Jan Andenon Tideotapes Kelly llelntee'• eom-
merdal meeeaie at llaiinen Elementary School
d~ tile DAil& -Dir-. ~ ....... nee
Edaeatlon -proeram for-a&tla-cruen.
telev1S1on camera. a stage light and a
bulletin board as a backdrop.
Despite initial 11gglcs and blushing. the
young actors and actresses snapped into
professional seriousness as soon as fello"'
studen1 Mand) Cla) Ion clapped the plastic
slate and announced. "Take One:· fol-
lo"'ed immediately b) Anderson's call for "action .. as the camera began to roll.
"Companson Commercial" featured
I I-year-old Scon Hildcrbrccht as the
narrator. w11h 1wo fnends portra}ing a
"non-beer user .. and a ·'beer user."
"This man has h1,1h self-esteem :· Scott
explained as he pointed to the non-beer
user.
"This man has low self-esteem:· Scott
said. pointing to the beer user. Josh Ho)'cr.
11. who hun~ his head.
Scott continued to compare the two,
noting the non-beer user's ph)sical and
mental annbutes and the beer user's lack
of them. F1nall}. the beer user crumbled to
the ground. an apparenl v1ct1m.
In ··8ccf Lesson Commercial,'' two
young actresses drank beer (soda cans
covered wnh foil ) S«Ved to 1hem by
another '\-O ung actress who wore a sign
around her neck: "Joe·s Bar -'Bartender
Joe:·
Although at first the bar patrons noted
their be'eraf.CS had ·•great taste-and "'ere
"less filling. · they quickly chucked their
cans and decided beer wasn't a miracle
dnnl after a concerned onlooker e'.\-
plained the negatives about alcohol.
The other groups· commemalswereJUSt
as 1mag1na11ve. as were the slogans the
students said to the camera in 1ndiv1dual
close-up shots.
··Not all drugs are killers -JUSt 1he ones
you abuse.'' Josh Hoyer said.
Josh explained that he crafted tha1
statement from when .. we talked about
what drugs "'ere and the different kmds of
drugs:·
Campbell said most of 1he students'
slogans v.ere of their own creation. not 1ust
repeats of phraws heard durina DA.RE
sessions. .. Kids who I wasn't even sure
heard a thing l sa_1d reaJly surprised me."
she said.
"The) 're listening.·· said Hughes of the
students. "The) ,rt the messatt-~ do
care 1bou1 themselves and cspecl&JI)
about their fam1hM.. ~
Brady Young and Dave Snowden said
the) were recently approached by some
se"cnth and e1&hth-graders who bad bttn
smokinJ. "They said. 'Hev. do )'Ou wanna
smoke? and "'e said. ·Jlf o way!'" Brady
said.
Da vc. whose father is Costa Mesa Poli«
Chief David Snowden. said he has learned
drug dealers ··don·t ca~ about people's
hvcs -they JUSI care about money.··
.. Drugs arc rcall) bad for you and 1f you
ake them. you can really mess yourself
up.'' Noelle He.an y e"'plaincd.
"It won't make you forget your prob-
lems." Heather Bathen. 11. said. ··1fll
make them "'orse:·
MacDonald, kin at odds over lawsuit funOs
Wednesday, Dec. 2 1 From staff ud wire reports gJven to the n11ed Wa\ ot .\menca in
honor of Collette. K1m~rl> and Kns1en
MacOonal<t.-stabbed to death at Fon
Bragg. N.C.. tn 1970.
lav.su1t agam t author Joe McG1nn1ss.
v.ho "'rote 1he book "fatal V151on .. about
the killings followmg mtcrv1c"' s "'1th
MacDonald
case allo"'ed Kassab 10 file sun for the
mone'
No meetings scheduled
Thursday, Dec. 22
No meetings scheduled
MacDonald. a former Arm) Green
Beret doctor. was con' 1cted 1n 1979 of
murdering his fam1 1_). He 1s sen 1ng three
life terms in prison for the cnme. ~
The bool concluded MacDonald "'il a
murderer. v.hich he denies.
The mother-in-law of former Hunt·
ington Harbour resident Jcff rey Mac-
Donald, the one-lime Arm)' doctor con·
victcd of killing his wtfc and daughters.
offered Tuesday to settle a dispute over
$325.000 in proceeds from a book about ••••••••••••••••••r the crime by gi ving the money to chant). Mildred Kassab proposed the mone) be
Earlier this )'car. MacDonald v.on
$325.000 in the seulement of a federal
rhe tunds \\ere impounded under a
'itate l:l"' that prohibits a person from
profiting from 1he1r crime. The Judge 1n the
"Mrs. Kassab brough1 this swt not for
hcro,.n gain. but to pttvent the murderer
of her daughter and granddauJtlters from
profiuna from the en mes.· sa1d her
attorney. Wilham Pncc. ··tf JefTre) Mac-
Donald 1s sincere m hi s professed &rieffor
1hc '1ct1ms. Mrs. Kassab believes he Wiii
JOin with here 1n thlS tnbutc to them."
CM motel drug raid nets sometime Tuesda). No one "as 1ngton Strttt where the C,nnch or res1denual v.alkway in 1he 200 block
injured. some of his hdJ>Crs ransacked the of 19th trttt was found miSStnl
house and look SSOO m Christmas Monda) n11ht. Theo•Ticrlasuawthe
Costa lie.a gifts. But 1he prescots v.ere found 1n a co, er around noon that day.
Mesa C?Ouple, six others A Merecdes Benz hood omamen1 'acant house 1•0 doors do-.n and
was stolen from a 19 0 4SOSL parked returned to the thankful owners. Lapna Beach • • • at South Coast Plata. Thieves used a bnck to mash a Rose bush~ wonh Sli S ~taken • • • w1ndo"' ai UJtr Fncndl, Computer. The rear wheel of a motorc,clc "'a~ from a home 1n the lOO bloct of
s1olen while the c)clc "'as parked ma 1741 0 Beach Bhd .• and tole four Lcdro1t 1rect on Monday. 8J IONA'l'BAN VOUU: Flank Martinez-Alvia and bis wife. ation. pragc at 3400 A'cnue of the .\n h computer modems valued a1 S640. ••• .............. Ava Maria Alvia-Ortiz., 26, both of The arrnls actually started in Santa "as valued at SSOO. .\lso on Monday, a camna valued
A 41-,..,...-S man and b.il wile COlta Mela where anated when Ana, Boylan said. When officers first • • • Newport 8eecla at SlOO Y..as stolen from the Main
police eataed their room and allqed-arrived at the motel, lbcy saw three Officials at Dominoes Pizza. 3015 A rn•nt of 1he 1300 block of Beach basketball courts. were anelle4 Monday Dilbt wbea Harbor Blvd.. rt'port.cd somebod) •••
adercowr COlta Mela police of-ty saw tbem :i, heroin and men leaving. They followed the men Gala~) Dnvefound two la~e hole in Poll~ ~rt called to Hnlkle flt8ce
ilUecdDI the narcock, ylan said. into Santa Ana. where the officers bough! a p1ua pie "'Ith a bogu S.:!O 1hc etched ~ss w1ndov.-s o his front-and South Coast H.P~ at 4:19 &.I bur'M iato IMil' Oilier Avenue • • • .,... roomud~ found them Tbecouple's 9-year.old boy wu in allqed_ly witnessed a dru& buy. A $381 btqcle was stolen from an )ard gate Tuesday mom~. He p.m. Monday where one riva bed
~ ... lltbeir ,..,...~ the room witb them, wa1Cbina. the Artated in Santa Ana on suspicion open f<raF 1n the 3400 block of n estimated the da~ at S2. . rt~rtedlh kicked another dnwr's
tefl&!Ul said. The woman WU book· of possession of cocaine and heroin Raftt Circle. • • 'c icle a er a dispute erupted over I08 .. ed into 0ruwe County Jail. while were Joseph Mark Gleason, 36, Mark • • • <\ppartntly someone v..anted to dnvmg habus. Jaall,~=werearmtedon Martinez-Alvia was booked into Patrick Hennessey, 37. and Terry Several han11ng and Ooor lamps ha\C a place to hana new Omstmas • • • .......,. 01 me .i the All-Star COlta Mela Jail. The cbiJd WU Wayne Ellis, 36. The three are 1971 wcrt stolen from a sto~e unit on clothes.. Six round cloth1S'fi racks. Someone broke into a house in the
lu .., ..... Boulevard after Placcn11a Street. The l1gh1 v.erc wonh $2.400. wett ttmoved rom tilt I 000 block of Glenncyre Su~t on
;:, wa1Cbld .....a rooms idcnt-releued lo other family memben, ~uatcs of Estancia H1&h School. valued at ntarly S7.000. Side walk-..a\' of The O.tc0\ery hop. Monday and took UO in cash.
., ......... pollible dnla Boylan l8icL JI:,-nsaid. 2361 E. Coat H~y. • • •
•~ Va llL Tam 1oy1an Mid Anated in a room "J.•tenld unckr ylan said the amount of drup f'-tala Valley • • • A thief entC'ttd a rnadcnce 111 tt.C
Chula·• name were raciey Own seiled was small in aJI the mats. A S l .000 •ilbo91 CO\'Cf stored 600 bt()(k ofGnffith Way on T.-da> -r..dly. Gayner, 3S, Teny Tbomu Buyge. While ~ mau,ement of the A SSOO stttcO was taken from a 1111nst • fence at the beck of a and lcf\ with S2. 0.. room. iD ......... people locked 1988 0.1hatso parked in 1h( ......... ~ .. , •.•. -..... 37, and Gina Maria Collura, lO, lllOCcl is cooperative with polkc, 16000 block of Harbor Boulcnrd ...S to .... AM crtmiMI anoney Boylan ml o.z;:r. and Collura .,,... said complaints about~ IOfMtnne afttr) p.m. Tucsda Oail0..IMtdll~-DOt were boobd into County Jail mt 11 tbe All-SW Inn date bK • • • Robber a•aUlts bartender .. I I. 11aMliel .-.. could on ~ ol ..._ under t.bt ~~ Somtonc broke into a 1994 Honda
Ml .. ••• •• llr ca mm•• IDd it inOueDCll 8lld pa I ·oa of heroin. ..Yeseerdly's UT'CStl weot real Attord ~rited an a carpon 1n th(
................ d .ctuaUy while..,.. ...... at c.. Mesa amooda." IOy&an laid. "'Everytbins 16000 k of Harbor Bou~ard
~ Tunda> monuna and stole a A lirmalt bmnc1•r at KJm Lan's th(n stok an und19(ao.e.I -• • el r•••• lw IM room. Jail OD auspkioe ol proMIMll Yiol-worbd out PlrfeCtly far us. ..
stttcO. Plitt 1n Foun&ain Valk) -• truck cash from th( busancu He din IDllt • • • O\Cf the head wtth an tmPl) bttr 1h( bartmckrs kt>., and led• w A burtlar ent~ Hunt1r;,.ton Val-boet)( dun .. a robbery. pohtt IT· 1984 bro•n N11.11n Maaama. ..... Dl)tona from the 40 blo(k of ~uto and stole a cash "IJSkf. cash and ae) Pme~ It 9779 ti 1st! ""e poncd . Gnswotd Mid the •Ill 1~·1 ..
A loc'8I Sc~ok a Chnstmas Center Dnve brt~n 10 p.m. Sun-1evrral p~ cant. The \Otll takt late Monda) n1tftt and M• S~70 The t.ncnclcr of the .&oon at natM 1t postt~ T•Y· He -
da) and 6 1.m. Monday . was estuna It mott than Sl.000. f'rom the oft1tt 1"21 Bu1hald A~ • .,.llOMat the dttcribed 11 .t.1te • ._JO. 5 I ...... ....,. * 'door of a holne • • • • • • ........•11cll tnMofthe t:l l a.tft . ._.It.Monda). 1~ and 16S 1'0lMdl. Hr 11111 i8 die 10 blotk of Olgrovc brt~n 4 bu""1 dambcd lh~ the roof TM front window of ll vdaacle Fountain Valley Polict 91t. UrT) browe haituda• 11 -.-jp& Md I 1.m. Tilctday. of a busenaa in &ht 141 blo(k or ~rked 1n the 4400 block rl lto1buf') A On~ almo1u1olc °'""f!'8!. It am.-.11id. nt~wntftlililldll • • • SolMonl .... blut l 919 Dod9lr ("ulvcr Dnvc on Tuelllly mom1n1 vc was bloWn out~ a 88 aun ~ 1n the 600 Nork of Hun,. ™ -~ stnd "" ... the head. ta1n Valle) Comm....,
• ,,
•• r
•
...
Abortion remark ruckus
puts Bush team on defense
WASHINGTON (AP)-E.ducator
Louis Sullivan, a lcadif'I candidate to
Mad the Department of Health and
Human Services met today with
conservative Republican con-
pasmen in hopes of calmina their
concerns about his views on abortion.
President-elect Bush was said by
transition aides to be determined 10
move ahead with the appointment,
aJthoQh no announcements were
scheduled today. Bush advisers told
Cbicaao transit official Samuel Skin-
ner to return home because an-
nouncement of his nomination as
transportation secretary WIS bein1
delayed yet apin while decisions on
prospccu for other posts were bCin1
made.
Sulliva met with Utah Sen. Orrin
Hatch and Minnesota Rep. Vin
Weber, outspoken abortion oppo-
nents, as well u transition ce><lirector
Robert Teeter, transition sources
said. .
The session WIS part of a damqc
control operation mounted by the
flush team to salvqc the nomination
of the man who would be the first
black named to the incomin1 Bush
Cabinet.
Sullivan and Bush's top aides spent
much of Tuesday in talks with anti-
'abonion leaders. assuring them that
the medicaJ educator's views were in
line with those held by the president-
elect.
Bulla oppotr1 abortions except in
cues ofincnt, Ott rape or when the life
of the motber would be endantered
by a futl-1mn ~ncy. and he
oppo.ses federal funding for
abon1on1.
SuDivan was quoted in a newspaper
interview 1everaJ.days •.as sayina
he supporu the natn of a woman to
seek an abortion -a position at odds
with Buth 's -but opposes the use of
federal funds to pay for it.
The article tet off an instant protest
by abortion foes, but transition
officials indicated on Tuesday niaht
they thouaht the nomination was bee\ on uxk.
Girl narrates attack Ship's belly
-on-family-in 911:-call--ripped open
ARLINGTON. iexas (AP)-An 8-year-old shrieked and sobbed diUI• seized
in a call to a 91 1 operator but manaaed to describe an intruder's attack
on her father and her brother's fatal shooting of the assailant. MIAMI (AP) -U.S. Customs
Police said the I I-minute conversation between Valerie Nelson Service qmts usina blowtorches
and the ajrl, Laura Hollinaswonh, allowed the operator to get help to s~nt 30 houn rippina apart the belly
the family quickJy. of a Panamanian freighter before
Laura. who was taught in school tocaU 91.Jjn an emergency, spoke findina their version of a white
to Nelson as the family tried to fight off the knife-wielding stranger Dec. Christmas: 4, 792 pounds of cocaine
14. hidden in a secret compartment.
The ~ntrude~. Do~&.las Spencer Collins. 19, died of a shot from a • The shipment, which was destined
hununa nfle, ~hce sa10. . • . for holiday consumers, brought a
Dale Hollingsworth, 36, the c~1ldrcf'! s father, was .s~bbcd in the five-day total of cocaine seized on two h~. arms and ~nds an~ was listed in good cond1t1on today at arrivi~ freighters to 6,733 pounds.
Arhnaton Memonal. Laura s 14-year-old brother, Buddy, was \rcated accordinatoauthorities, who said the
for stab wounds on. a hand. . shipments were from the same or-
1..aura. according to a tape played-by 1>0hce on Monday. told niz.ation
Nelson where she lived and that the intruder was demand.in& to know 11 -n.-· fi .__.. --"" _ where to find a wallet. a •A> amount con .sea~ "!--e 1t
Sculpturing snow
Jamie Prlwaad Sllawa Seaaedyareall amll• u tbey pilot
tbelr p&aatlc 91ed down a lalll near tlae rt.De Ara Center at tbe
UalftnltJ of w--..ta-eteftU Pol.at. TIM_,. are~m, l'eCHI at tbe cam,.. Cblld Leanllq aad care Center.
. .
FTC revives
list ranking
cigarettes
WASHINGTON (AP) -After
nearly four yean wi1hout 1 brand.tty.
brand analysis, Ametjcan cijarctle
devotees arc once ap1n confronted
by The List.
The List -which itemizes tar,
nicotine and carbon monoxick con-
tent in ciprttte smoke -it._~k1 released Tuesday by 1he fCOft'al
Trade Commission for the fint time
since January l 98S.
The new compilation, based on
tobecco-industry tcsu of 272 var-
ieties of ciprcucs, showed that
varieties of Carlton and Now ICOred
lowest in all three catqorics, eucdy
where they ranked in tfic 1985 list.
At the other end of the spcarum,
Old Gold Straights produced the
highest amounts of tar and nicotine
and varieties of Century 251, More
I 20s and Tall 1205 produced the most
carbon monoxide in the tests.
The lilt ~ fomacrly donc..aA11~0--
ly1 with the testina done by an FTC
laooratory. After the release of the
1985 list, theqcncy halted the testina
program it bepn in 1966 in the wake
of the U.S. suracon general's findina
that ciaarcnes arc dangerous to
human health.
In droppina its tests, the FTC cited
budgetary constraints and said .such
scientific sampling was not consistent
with the chief functions of an qency
dominated by lawyers and econom-
ists.
The new test results were produced
by the industry-supported Tobacco
Industry Testina Laboratory under
FTC oversiaht and usina the same
procedures previously employed.
She. said her father was "covered with blood." At one point she O!'Cofthela,.ntcocamebusu~n U.S.
screamed, "He's got a knife!" and sobbed, "Pleeccaaase! Oh. God! h1s~ry. The drup had an est1~~ted
Buddy!!!!" estimated street vaJue at SSO m1llton.
The sound of a rifle shot could be heard on the tape. Laura then The latest bull came Tuesday after
whispered, "Oh. Oh, he killed the auy." Customs •nts. actina on a tip, spent
Nelson asked, "OK. who aot shot? Your father shot who? Honey! the weekend stakin& out the Pan-
Can you tell me who got shot?"'· amanian-rcaistcred frciahter Santo
Laura replied. "He shot the auy that came in here." Dominao Expreu, authorities said.
Lighterpunishmentforteen who
kifled homosexµal shocks Dalla&
Nelson later convinced the children that the people outside their The J(X).foot ship, oriajnating from
house were police officers and persuaded Buddy to put down the aun northern Colombia, docked at the
and let them in, said police spokesman Dec Anderson. Miami River, Customs spokesman
• Michael Sheehan said.
DALLAS (AP) -Sen. Edward ing "No more Hampton" and others
Kennedy, Texas Treasurer Ann Rich-~rryina si1ns that said "Biaot Re-
ardsand other elected officialsjoined sign," plhered at City Hall to ~riahtsactivists in attackingastate demand the resignation of District
J who said he gave a killer liahter Judge Jack Hampton.
l _ ~ . ~nashment because his victims were "Dallas bears the shame for every Uudge sets Jan. 31 trial date for NOfth~ .. ~"::s~, actions of.the s.;;-!-~~~sit~tm~·:nd~;c::~~~~
' Judge tn Dallas County violate the president of the Dallas Gay Alliance,
'WASHINGTON (AP) -U .S. North's lawyers. Barry Simon. press-that date," John Keker, one of the fundamental principle that everyone told the protesters. "Dallas cannot d>i~trict Judge Gerhard A. Gesell ed the judge to set a trial date. prosecuton o n the staff of indepen-stands equal before the law. The afford the imqe of hate for as long as
tDday set Jan. 31 as the starting date Simon said the defense "would like dent counsel Lawrence Walsh, said suggestion that those who kill he sits on the bench.
fbr ~ trial .of. form~ Nation~! to get s~bpoen_as out" t<? a number of afterthe hearina. homosex)Jal.s dese.r vc sh.~rt~r Hampton told the Dallas Times
unty Council aid~ Oltver North 1n peo~le, tncl1;1dtng some ~n the Rea'8n There still arc lepl obstacles that sentences is bigotry at its worst, said Herald in an interv;:;rublished last lran~nt~. affair. admin1strauon who will be leaving couki derail a trial of North, panicu-a statement from K~nnedy. 0-Mass., week tllat he 1ente Richard Lee
Gelcll sdec1s1or:i ca~e at ~he end of go~emment !"ext month. larly the question of using classi.ficd read at a Tuesday night rally. Bednarski 18, to 30 years in prison
hour-Iona hcanna 1n which one of We certainly hope we can meet documcnu. About SOO protesters. many chant-instead of a maximum life sentence
on Nov. 28 because, in pan, the two
men Bednarski was convicted of
killing were homosexuals.
"These two auys that aot killed
wouldn't have been killed if they
hadn't been cruising the streets pick-
ing up teen-aae boys," Judae
Hampton said. -
Hampton's remarks have
mobilized the Dallas flY community
more than anythin1 1n yean, Way-
bourn said before the rally.
"The chanae is we...-rc not sitti"I on
our hands. We're fiJhting back, he
said. "It's the first tame we've taken
the initiative in this manne~ in getting
rid of a bigot."
What's a 3~1etter word
for 'crossword?' Fun
By BILL STIEG • I ,,._.....,
NEW YORK -C R -----D.
Deoending on your outlook, it's a
nine-letter word for either frustration
or fun. The crossword puzzle, which
turns 75 Wednesday, thrives because
of those elements, experts say.
It can be frustratina. for instance, to
ponder what four-letter word
matches the clue "weddi~~ke
artisan," but fun to find that icer"
fits perfectly. .. .. MOl1 of the problems we have in
everyday life don't have clear-cut
10lutions," said WiU Shortz. editor of
Games mapzine. "Crossword
puzzles have definitive answers. and
when )'OU ,et that answer, it's a very
satisfylna feelina."
Crosswords arc descended from the
ancient word square pme; elemen-
tary forms appeared in children's
books in Enaland durina the 19th
century. But the modem crossword
was invented, out of necessity, bX
Arthur Wynne, editor of the "Fun •
suDDlement of the New York World. ;,It was the Sunday before
Chris1mas, and he had a pqe to fill,"
Shoru 111d. The diamond-shaped,
31-due "Word-Cross" puzzle ran on
Dec. 21, 1913. and was an immediate
hit.
A typetettcr trantpOICd the words
four weeks liter, and the name
crouword stuck. A crossword cult
formed amODJ readers of the World,
other papen _oepn runni~ ~
and by 1924, tt was a full·fledled
craze.
More and more newspapers print-
ed~'"'"• with the nocablc exception of The New York Times, which
dilmilaed tbcm 11 ... primitivuon of
mental nen:ite" that wouki soon fade.
The craze Wed. bu1 the ~ Del'lilled. By 1942, even the Times
-l
~ M
2
4 -32
6 7
10 ll
114 15
16 19
'/2 23
26
28
I~
2-). WhM berpift huft(CTS
<ftjoy.
4-S. A wrinft' ackftOWkcfer·
n.cM.
(>.. 7. S.:9\ Md nod\ ... MOf~.
10-11. A bwd.
14-IS. Oppo.cd to &cs..
18·19. Wl\M dws pun~ es
22-23 Aft aNtMI oJ P.N
26-27 1lw clow oi • day
28-29. To d_..
)(\.)I ~ f'lunl °' IS
8-9 To cuk1vM~
I :!· 13 At-ol w(k.,.j,w ef,)f\
16-17 WhM an11Su lnrn to • 20·1 I Fascnwd
24-2~ F~d\M\t~'lltll'~W('
33
.H
C'J
3
5
8 9
12 13
16 171
20 21
li 25
27
29
31
10·18. ~ "~~ ol ~
Soft'ud pal•.
6-2 2. Wl\M we all should~.
4·26. A day dnam.
?-l 1 A'*-'·
19-28. A JMl"Oft
f .7 p_, ol YOUf ~
lJ.)() A nw-r "' Russaa.
1-)2 Toto"'""·
)}-)4 An arOft\aoc plan(
N -S A hM
~4 .)1 To ~tt _._
).1 ~ ,.,. <'4 a sl\1r
20.29 ~
s.~7 E•c~
9·2~ Sunl! an 11\vd
tl·.21 A boy
Ud '*"ted, h1ri"1 Simon cl
Schulter editor Mar,aret ~ Farnr to edit Its
en.word ~· The inftuential .. .,_.. llady Of cl'OllWOf'ds." 11 S1'oru
clUI ber, _,.. in that position until
1969.
... , f'
Tiie ftnt crwwont panle wu P"Mlelled oa Dee. 21, 1eia.
~tel punla b New York map.
ZllllC.
F11m betDed bri .. tbcmcs. humor ud "modera pllyfulneu .. 10 JKOblaft. • .,....,,~~ ~ Sbonz llid. eune.alY.. =~':.~it.:: = IDOft ol puale ~ r.: Mr .... JS .... IO write I lntcai
atUoM. r..~..:-cahun ...... ,..... •• , ... ~ ..... 4*r
ca ad• IMll 11!9 Ill cw noa-cau•llClllllt*llid. da::t ~ !llini .iid. 111r u ..._ o1 won cu • J_-~~:·= ='~··-·!·-~· ·~ ... ---"' !'JC . --1111 ...... like PDua . ....: ~-=·':ooo-= l!otlmL_'\:.9:..-ieT.C: ........ il.a.11J. TM Ill ill ~~~i::c;= --=~r,~ .... 1,.;~1111 I .. .. Git,,.... ....
.
•
Or.nge COMI DAILY PILOT /Wedneedey, December 21, 1.. ,.-.
. CALIF ORHIA
Labor PalfyOKs
coalition with
Likud in Israel
Re .. an encoUJ1l'le•
Deulimejlan to run
again for governor
J
JERUSALEM (AP) -The Labor
Pany today approved Joinina a
coalition with the rival Llkud bloc, vin~Uy usurina the formation of a
national unity aovemment to run
Israel for the nelt four years.
Earlier today, the riattt·wina Likud
voted to approve the· aovernment
after an ovemi&ht session marked by
shoutina and 'heated debate. Israel
army radio said the two panics would
formally sijll their qreement Thurs.-
day momana and the new aovem-
ment could be installed by parliament
immediately.
At a mectina of the center-left
labot's l ,27S-member central com-
mittee, pany head Fol'J'ian Minister
Shimon Peres ul)Cd the deleptcs to
otcJor the accord,sayjf\Vl was_;he
only chance to stem Israel's growing
isolation and conflict with its West-
Russlan crew ends longest space mlSslon
Meanwhile, California Republicall'i
Pany Chairman Robert Naylor salci1
he met last week in Wuhinaton with '
Vice President-elect 0.n Quayle and
incoming nauonal GOP Chairman'
Lee Atwater and received aswrances
both would urge Bush to join Rapw'
in asking DcukmeJlln to run ..-in. ,
.. If the president-elect were to call:
and underscore how imponant.tt is to ,
the party for him to run apin, it could 1 be one of the few things that has a
chance of mOuencing him," Naylor
said. • ,,
Veteran political consultant Stua.rtr
K. Spencer. who ran Dcukmejian's
last two campaigns. rcponcd.ly u
Reagan to lobby th4',Jovemor.
Spencer has said .. n 'll be a disaster"
for California Republicans if Deu-
kmejian doesn't run in 1990.
But despite-the piessurc floin
leaden to run again. Dcukmcjian has
insisted he hasn't made up his mind.
''He told me he will make up his
mtnd over the holidays," said
Michael Frost, the governor's chief of
staff.
MOSCOW (AP) -A Soyuz space capsule
carryina two Soviets who set a space endurance ~rd and a Frenchman landed safely today after a
three-hour re-entry delay caused by an overloade'd
computer, Tass said.
The official Soviet news agency said the craft,
which separated on schedule from the Mir space
station earlier today, touched down at I 2:S7 p.m.
Moscow time 60 miles from the Baikonur space
center iaSovitt Central-Asia. _
The Tass news agency said Tuesday that the
cosmonauts had completed one year in orbit, but
~itors of the news agency said today they had
received incorrect information fwm Mission
Control about the length of the night
Manarov and Titov left the Ba1konur Cos-
modrome in Kazakhstan at 2:18 p.m. on Dec. 21,
1987, making their flight about 80 minutes shon of
a full year.
went on to break Romanenko's record of326 days
in space.
The official Tass news agency said the crew
switched to a back-UP. computer program after a
fault developed in the operation of the on-board
computer. the main engine fired to slow the
capsule at 12:08 p.m., and the living quarters and
Instrument module werejetisoned. Tass said.
Oil companies' permitsfbr
off shore drilling nullified
"Immediate medical check-ups showed the
cosmonauts arc feeling well," Radio Moscow said.
The landina ended mankind's longest space.
mi9&ion. Vladimir Titov and Musa Manarov had
been space for just under one year. Jean-Loup
Chrctien·of France, who came down with them,
spent nearly a month aboard the Mir.
11 Red Cross
evacuees land
in Switzerland-
Radio Moscow said Titov and Manarov were
undcraoing tests to determine how well they had
endured their lengthy flight. Soviet officials have
said the ability of cosmonauts to endure long
periods in space is il key to a manned flight to Mars
they hope will take place shonly after the turn of
the century.
Titov and Manarov replaced a crew including
cosmonaut Yuri Romanenko last December and
As expected, radio contact with the craft was
lostJ>ct~n a height of 90 miles to 50 miles
because the craft was enveloped by a plasma cloud.
The capsule's parachutes opened at a height of
about six miles.
Soviet television reported lSeforc-today's
touchdwon that "automated telementry showed
an overload in the computing complex." of a
system aboard the Soyuz TM-6 capsule. It
provided no details.
SANT A BARBARA (AP) -The
county Planning Commission has
nullified a permtt allowins two oil
companies to begin pumping <rude-
011 and natural gas from three recently
completed offshore platforms.
I
The commission invalidated the
permit because the companies -
Chevron USA and Texaco Inc. -
underestimated concentrations of
poisonous hydrogen sulfide in the
!Fv-it y~ ~ <(/~ ~El
'
LARNACA. Cyp_rus (AP) -
Eleven Red Cross officials who were
evacuated from Lebanon after they
received death ·threats arrived in
Cyprus today on their way home to
Switzerland.
The International Committee for
the Red Cross said in Geneva on
Tuesday it was suspendina its hu-
manitarian operations in Lebanon
because of"scrious threats against its
delcptes on mission in Lebanon.
placing their lives in acute danger."
INVENTORY · LIQUIDATION SALE ·
The evacuees eiaht men and three
women, left five hours later for
Zurich. Six Red Cross officials re-
mained in Lebanon and were due to
leave today.
"We're disappointed," said Francis
Junot, deputy chief of the Red Cross
delegation in Lebanon. "We received
a communication from Geneva and
were ordered to leave ... I can't
comment on the nature of the threat."
London police
seize arsenal
LONDON (AP) -Police raided a
south London apanment today and
seized a cache of machine guns,
exelosives and equipment used to
build bombs. authorities said.
They said the equipment was
similar to that used in bombs by the
Irish Republican Army in its drive to
oust the British from Nonhem Ire·
land.
Commander George Churchill-
Coleman, head of Scotland Yard's
anti-terrorist branch, said it "cannot
be discounted" that some bombs
have already been planted, and said
two "eltrcmely dangierous" men arc
bei~ hunted. Police appealed to the
public to be viailant for suspicious
objects. The haul included ··a substantial
amount" of Czechoslovak-made
Semtex, the elplosive often used by
the IRA. as well as an unspecified
number of machine pns and other
firearms, bomb-mak1n1 equipment
and photOlf'lphS of two men believed
to have fled the apartment.
103 to· 503 OFF most items!!
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At hcuna Crystal.. . S14S ea.
Laree selection of
Waterford Stemware,
ciftware and
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F .. l ine of SWAROYSl{I Sll 95
S39 95
S" Tennts Paper Wttaht S18,9S
(Goitef also 1wailatlle)
natural gas, county officials said.
Tuesday's decision could dclaY.
production-from the offshore. 011
platformsfo,.up to a year, assumma a
new permit is issued.
Chevron lawyer Ralph Mayo said
the oil companies wi11 appeal the
commission's rulina to the 'county
Board of Supervisors. A Chevron
official estimated each day's delay in
opening the platforms could cost both
companies a combined $500,000.
PCI ,_I,_
Store bombing•
prote.t fur traile
Crystal Globe 7" T ltl
Rea $19 95 "°" S5U5
LONOON (AP) -Authorities say
animal riahts pups claimed re.
•spoalibility for firebomb attacks on
101DC of Britain's leadina dcpanmcnt
110l'CI. The attacks late Monday and early
Tuelday pt~ Dillllcs. the larltst
deputment store in Pl}'ll'!outh. E'na-
llDd; sianed fires at Selfridecs and Harrodl in London and 11 Howell's in
canlifl', Wales; and bad evaaa-
alioa of Rackham• in Birmiftlham,
Enaland. ~~•id. lombl band at Rtckhams and at
d9e HOUie of Frater in Lolldon, a ~· ltoft on O.ford Slreea. ......... n.re were no iltjurin. ....,. ia MMch1•er said 1 ..-..
E dteleNC!livedateleDltwcaU
-
.. A...._.U....ion =-=·=.r:.· .,.... ........ ~ ... ~ ....... --... .. llidt... ··r ~--IJlllll
'
• I l -
I
0nnge C0Mt DAJLY PILOT/ Wedneeday, Oeoembet 21, 1918
UINT .IOID'll llOIPITAL
New1••1r n Deborah and Daniel Lyons. Costa
Mesa. Jirl
Nevemwtt •
Rosalinda and Rottr Rodriguez.
Saota A!\!.~ ~y .
lllS8ION HOSPn AL
Nevetdertt
Jewel Ann and Guy Robcn Brown.
Oranae, airl
HUMANA HOSPnAL
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Deeemtlerl
Mr. and Mrs. Konrad Krauland, Huntinaton Beach, girl
0ecem ... ,.
Donna Sell. Huntinaton Beach, girl
Decem-.er?
Sandra and David Orgill. Fountain
Valley, boy
HOAG MDIOIUAL HOSPITAL
Dec••'-rt Mr. and Mrs. Randy Lay, Huntinaton
Beach.air!
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ktttschmar.
Newport Bead\, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Grabendike.
San Clemente. boyl>ecemhr S Mr. and Mrs. William Kadi, Laguna
Beach. airl Mr. and Mrs. David Martinez. f oLJn-
tain Valley, girl /
Mr. and Mrs.·Stuan Weedn. Newport
Beach, girl ;
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Simmons.
Huntington Beach. girl
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Zeek. Dana Point,
boy
Decemher4
Mr. and Mrs. John Weber, Costa
Meta.Jirl
Mr. and Mrs. Tettnce Zwarka,
Irvine, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Phuoc Cao. Irvine. boy
Mr. and Mrs. Hunt McKenzie. Costa
Mesa. &irl
Deeem•erl Mr. and Mrs. David Whitebird, Costa
Mesa, boy ~rt
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Hanrahan.
Newport Beach. boy
Mr. and Mrs. Randal Brothers,
Irvine, girl
December I
Mr. and Mrs. James Work, Irvine.
boy
SAJIJ CLEMENTE ROSPn AL NenmberU
Clare and Mark Saddoris. San Juan
Capistrano, boy
...
Ne9...._U
Sara and Francisco Moreno, Dana
Point, boy
NeT ....... H
Deborah and Wade Watn. San
Clemente, 11rt
Dece .. er I
Maria del Carmen and David
Moreno. San Juan Capistrano. airt
Decem-.ers
Janell and Jerry Junaemann, San
Clemente, boy
Deeem-.ert Awilda and Hector Pantoja, San Juan
Capistrano.boy
December I Marcia and Robert Rau, Laguna
Niauel, girt
FOUNT AJN VALLEY
REGIONAL HOSPnAL
Deeember I
Robin and llu11eH Plotnik. Hunt-
insu>n Be8ch, airf HOiiy and Todd Babbitt. Hunt1naton
Beach.boy Deee••ers Naheed and Najib Sufi. Fountain
Valley, airt
Dec:e•er4
Kerri Guill and Majid Oelahd.
Newport Beach, Jirl l>M•••er• Mary and David Williams. Costa
Mesa. twins. boy and airl
Shirley and Gullerrno Ltrma. Hunt-
ington Beach, boy
Sylvia and Mark Wurtzbacher. Hunt-
inaton Beach, boy
Felicia Oliver and Sjohn Williamson. Irvine, girl
December I
Jennifer and Bryan Shaw, Costa
Meta. boy
Shari and Drnil 8ourdon. Hunt-
inaton Bach,Jirt
Anetla and Bryan Benton, Hunt-
inaton leech. lift Kellt aad David Johnton, Founwn
VaJley, boy
DeeemMr7
Susan and Ronald Eddinaton, Hunt-
in1ton Beach, air1
Karen and Richard Toubman,
U,una Ni1uel, Jirl
Jennifer Napoli and Alberto
Cervantes. Fountain Valley. boy
Deeemlltrt
Michelle Talmo and Michael Ketler,
Huntin1ton Beach. boy
Teresa and Shawn Kart, Huntinaton
Beach, airl
Stay safe over holidays
The Huntin11on Beach Neiah-
rbood Watch orpniution is offer-
ing the followin1 tips for over the
holidays:
• Stay alert to surroundings and
people around you.
• A void carrying la~ amounts of
CfSh. Pay for purchases with a credit
card or check when possible.
-t--.-9""1v...-u'ftnrc:ar and-dose 1he
windows, even if you're only gone for
a few minutes. Lock packages in the
trunk.
• Be extra careful with purses and
wallets. Carry a purse under your
arm. Keep a wallet in an inside
podcet.
• Be extra careful about locking
doors and windows when you leave
your house. even for a few minutes.
Ltave lights and a radio or television
on so that the house looks occupied.
Runs PC-Compatible Sottwer•
e lit-in MS -DOS-loads automatically w~hout diskettes!
1n'::1udes 3''2~ 720K disk drive and V9f58ttle Personal ·
OeskMate .. 2 software. #25-1053
With CM-5 Color Monlto~!fl· ~rat•
Only 1798.95 #25-105311043 ltema..S.95
MS-DOS/Reg TM Miera.oft Corl>
Low Ae 115 P., lllonttt •
Reg. uses Instant-loading Program Par car·
199.95 tridges. 128K RAM. #26-3334
An.chee FD-502 Color Thlnllne Diek #0. Reg.
To Any TV 299.95. 126-3133, Sele 191.95
Dot-Matrix Printer Cut 29%
OMP 132 By Tandy
Save •110
26951 Low Ae 115 Pet Month•
Tandy and IBM'S graphics printer ~ulatiohS. Prints In
draft and letter quality modes. ButlHn tractor. Prints up to
120 cps. #26·2814 IBM/Reg TM l8M
Pocket Color LCD TV
PocketVllic:>n9·22 By Realistic
11!ftG!i Save
~-191.95 '40
L-Ae 115 P., Mol"lth •
Direct-view screen, upldoWn search tun-
ing. #16·159 ~eriffextra
Full-Feature Mobile CB Radio
TRC-474 By RealiS1lc
Save '60
7995 1~
You get ~ off and lt'8Y drive
with confldenee. lnltanl accees
to E~ Channef 9.
#21-1
Amazing Light Dl9play
1ttuma-SCorm,. By Realistic
Reg ....
111.ts .
115P.,111o"91• '20
Come In now and get 17% off thll fucinlding
gtttl Constantty changl~ "tiahtning bolts" ,.
ipond to touch or muliC. 1-42-3035
Portable El8ctronlc Keyboard
Concertmat,·350
ByAMlletic
25~0ff
f
Capture special holiday
memories-just point and
shoot-the camera 00. the
restl Features infrared auto·
focusing, 6-1 power zoom lens,
auto color-balance and iris. variable-speed shutter. self· Includes tt.rdcMe, Shoulder Strap,
timer. #16·801 BMtery Peck, Charger, A/V C...
Dual-Cassette Ster
System 200 By Realiltic
SllVe
'80
........ 9'5._ ....... _.
...... Hlah-SpMd Dubbing 211·15 With Synctwo-Stert
AM/FM tuner with FM-AFC, 2·
speed tumtab'e. matching 28''2"·
high 2-way speakers. #13-1229
VHS VCR Cut 18%
Model 21 By Realistic
S.ve Save
150 '81N
Synchro CO-to-tape dubbing, auto·
March on CD. Dolby B NA. 114-527 ........ ...,.
"9g.71.15
Dtgtt8I Reedyf
8" woofer, 2112" tweeter. eo t
W8fta c.pectty. Reel walnut fin..
llh. 19 x 10'k x 71'2"'. #40-4034
Mini Telephone
ET-121 By Rlldk> Sheck
Cut 35.,,.
12" :Ii
Pueie' dieing. While,
143-505. Btown. 143-508
Reg. 71.15
An unbeatable buy at
$20 off I Tone/pulse'
dialing. 143-544
Rechargeable Lantern
By Arc~
Cut
3?Mt
13•:.ii
I
• Wait for public transportation or
rides in busy, well-lishted places.
•Teach children to 10 to a store
clerk and ask for help if they're lost in
a shopping mall. They should never
go into the parking lot alone.
• If ~ou ao away. get automatic
timers for your lights and a radio.
Have a neighbor watch your house
and pick up mail and newspapers.
'
--NORMAND¥
Decorative Metal Refi.nishers
..
Quality
since 1930
• SILVERSMITH
.. •
• DECORATIVE PLATING
• POUSHJNG/ R£STORATIO~-
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•LAMP REPAIR/
WIRING
• LACQUER FJNfSHING
•CRYSTAL REPAIR
We will make your
hOlidays shfue!
BRASS •·COPPER • GOLD • SILVER • TIN
1603 Superior Ave .. Co.ta Mesa, CA 92627 (714) 67~3132
STOP BY OUR SHOP tr SHOWROOM FOR FREE ESTIMATE
r
AND ENGLISH COUNTRY
PERFECTED AT RAUL DESIGNS
hcl111ive Gifts for Your
Holiday Season
1771 lld' ... ea A•e. Buua,tn a..-. CA 11141
llOUl8c Monday thru 81turc1eJ 10...a,ID _
(714) 89"101
...
\
OrMge Coat DAILY ptLOTIW~. December 21 . 1111 A.7
Inju~ed Samaritan's family gets aid for .holidays
Community and f rlends surprise wife
after man nearly electrocuted at crash
rcteue crews delivered him to the "Tm really lucky that people in my Albany, N. Y .• Medical Center partial-town and otber people around, they
ly paralyzed, with serious internal just have been really aood and
injuries and bums on his neck and supportive and everyth1na.•• he said.
knees. tean in his eyes, whtn asked what
life of the pany-ht'd brina his banjo
or ~iw. The unfonunate part of the
acadent. he can't move h11 hands at
all. But that may JUSt be a matter of
therapy," Stoddard said.
dnv1na with a suspended license. A
coun clerk said he was releMed oa his
own recc>ptzance pendina an appear-ance sometime next month.
BURLINGTON. V1. (AP) -Pal
Paquin uys s· '"s been amazed by an
outpourina 01· suppon since her
hulbend was nearly electrocuted try-
ini to help an accident victim. A
neiahbor plows her driveway and a
m~rc:hant dropped off a Christmas
tree.
.. Somebody else brouaht us our
wood, and people have been stackina
our wood," she said. "Every couple of
Inmates
days I'll come home from the hospital
and dinner will be on the doorstep."
On Nov. 25. Ed Paquin ran into
downed electrical wires while rushin1
to aid the driver of a truck that struck
a utility pole in Shaftsbury, in
southwest Ve~nt. As nis family watched from ttieir vehicle. 7,200
volts· of electricity pulsed throuah
Paquin's body.
His sister, Alice, revived him and
Today, Paquin. 35. is in fair keeps him aoana.
condition and recoverin• slowly at "It aives you some faith when you
the Medical Center Hospital of Ver-feel people have faith in you. And
mont in Burlinaton. He receives bum thal's tfte way people have been treatment and therapy, and his 7-makin1 me feel."
year-old dauahter Catherine reads to Paquin is a self-employed
him. The other day he reached a carpc"ter and member of the Rescue
milestone -he moved his lqs. _.Squad in his hometown of Fairfax, a
.. I'm aJad to be alive, but it's really small town 15 males northeast of
hard not to know how much and how Burlinaton. A fnend, Dan Stoddard. Iona it's aoina to take 10 recover," be described him as full offun and life.
said last week. "He's a musician. He's always the
friends said it was JUSt like him to
rush to the aid of an accident victim.
~That's why he was on the reKue
SQoad in the fint place," his wife said.
Ironically. the driver of the truck apparently picked his way throuah
the live wires and left the scene
moments before the Paquins drove
by. accordina to police and witnesses. Michael Hulbert of Bcnn1naton
pleaded innocent Monday to chafaes
oflcavingthc scene of an accident and
Pat Paquin. a pan-tame, free.-lanc:e
journalist, said the most difficull days
were the ones ri&ht after the accidenL
"It's so hard to explain to anya.
who hasn't aonc throuah ii. the
Constant fear you'll att a call from the
hospital and sometbina wiU be
wrona." she said.
Jn the last week or so, after stayina
with relatives while her husband wu
in Albany, she returned home and
was ,,eeted by the acncrosity of
nc11hbors and friends.
do yule
slJoppbJg .. ---
by mall -
Prisons' populations
are substantial part
of catalog business
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) - A
mail-order catalot firm t.hat has
~un cate~n1 to the capti~e au-
dience of pnsonen repon$ Chnstmas
sales are on the rise. --rhey are very JOOOCUStomers a~d it's developed into a substantial
segment of our business. Where else
are they aoing to go?" said Monimer
Polep, chairman of Holyoke-based
Paysaver Catalot Showrooms Inc.
"We even got a thank-you letter
&om one inmate who said, 'After all.
our money is a.s Jood as the guy that
hasn't bceri caugrit yet."' he said.
Paul Hahn of the 2,000-member
National Mail Order Association.
based in Los Angeles. said it's impossible to tell how many inmates
order from catalogs, but sales seem to
be up everywhere.
"We don't kccJ> any special
stitisucs on sales to prison inmates.
but my sense is that they have been
increasin1 as prisons have eased the
regulations on what kj nds of ~ckages
pnsonen can receive,'' he said.
Polep said his company's Christmas sales to prisoners arc.up 25
percent this year, but he won't divulge
exactly how big his business is behind
bars.
At the I IOO-inmate state prison at
Norfolk1 Sit. Christopher Cameron
said he 1nspcctS about 30 packaaes a
day that inmates have ordered from
catal• .. We don't allow them anyth1q like hacksaws or sholl\lnS,"
he said.
for the three weeks before
Christmas, however. the prison suspends its rules apinst mailed food
and allows inmates to rec~ive pack-qes up to 25 pounds holding mail-
order and homemade delicacies.
To inspect the food packages. the
prison must hold up inspections of other packqes. which wait until after
Christmas to reach inmates.
"The food is more important and
meaninaful to them anywa y," Cameron said. "They can get clothes
all car." f: laraest purveyors to the Nor-
folk prisoncn arc Cook Brothen.. an
JUinois-bued catalot firm spcciaJ-izina in low-cost items, followed by
Service Mcrc:banditc of Nashville,
Tenn., and mcrc:handisinaaiantsJ.C.
Penney Co. and Sears.. Roebuck and
Co .• Cameron said.
Clothina is the ~sales item at the
medium-security pnson. followed by
towels, television sets, radios and
fans, he said. ··we've put toeether a little booklet on what they can order, but essential-
ly it's any basic necessity," Cameron
said. "They know by word of mo~th
that if there wett any problems with
anyone tryiq to brin1 in weapons or
drup, we would cut t.ck on the
~and we can trace it riaht back to
who is responsible.·•
Payments att made by the pri~n
pnst inmate accounts, he . sa1~.
Tbey build upKCOunts by worluna 1n ~n. or by ,cttina money from
ibeir families. -Replations on what prisoners can
order vary widely. from state t~ state
Ind prison to ~n, accord~na to
.... and fedenlofficiala. with federal
pritonen ~I~ . only limited ca~na pnvllcp. . . ~ bave to have apeciaJ pnor illlon, but half the time the 1aue
nol IO mucb the rcplatiom but the
that our inmates jusa c1on•t have
abe money ... said Kathryn Johnson, a
~ for the federal bureau
=-treats its prison c~~tomc:n '-just like any others, said IDCJUIWOtnan Kathy Gucfa. except
it deliven .-kales directly '!' ~ rather than to its retail
'"Obviously they can't tel .out
Dick~ their~~ .. she said. lllt Piyaver laU employees at-
juta to its ~son bulinas... and mbNaa is a panicularty busy time.
Tbe woman in chafle of the
tompany•s prison sales. wh~ asked IMt ber name not be utcd. said some 9' Mr dealinp with inmates "have
Jilllped restore my faith in human ...... ""SomeUma they don't ~rt the ..... dmJa riebt a~ if 1t'sJU;11 • cif'clollmt. I tend 11 out andJUll
I llOll imide II to what IS owed ..... llw9yl I ,et a chtd t.dt," ..... . -. alellerhmamanatAtta
VOit) who llid ltc .. -~ ... re== :.Tr ,a:,:
=-=~~..,..... .
Check every department for SPECIALS. This
6-hour SALE Is sure to have the GIFT That's Right
For EVERYONE on your holiday shopping llst.
Misses' Casual Hosiery
A~ -.ortment of cdcwtul, eporty Ind~
'hoeiery fot eny OCCMlon. Many ltylea, many m.. and meny gtMt aavlngat:Scock up on our 25~ aavtnga. (~ '
&-Pack of Sport Socks for Boys
In UIOr1ed ICytee ~ edotS...,, 3 49 sporty atJiped top9. Crewatyte fot
comfon and suppott s. M, L, XL Aeg.
Stoett Uf> and save! sue
Triumph Recliner By Stratford®
=:..::r~=~w! 249" Pflce In 1916. Quantltln
NmlWd lo l10Ck on h8nd. W..
OeltYery extra. 1411.91
YOUR CHOICE 2~
&-inch Winnie-The-Pooh
Speci.J purchue •.
Quantities limited.
•A apeclal pur~ though not
reduced ii an exceptioMI value. 3••
· Men's Men's
c:.~11on l:EVI~®
Tube Socks 1 OOo/o
sa.99 Cotton 4.99
-1.00 Stone-----'-----
VOURCOST 3?! Washed
~~~~~~Jeans
Tandem
Stroller
=t-6999
Dual front ~ivel wheels.
Folds for euy atcnge. ~Ides
two at a time. 138498.
1788
Quantities l.Jmrted
Stonewashed for
maximum com-
fort. Why pay
more for Levi~
famous fit.
6 PM 'TIL MIDNIGHT ONLY
nn
c. Speeken Cnlftame'! ToOI Box 12-Ft. 8ooeter c.1111~
::i.. 14!! ~---.!!:. =--... 1~: ~=-----.. .......... --.. IOUfld ... '*'of ,..__ ...... ..-, fllllf ...... 11ra-. s"'~ ~ ....... --.. .,., ~ _._,. ...,. __
'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Wednesday, December 21, 1988
UCI child care: Playgrounds
are zoned for independence
By SUSAN FIELD
o.lly "9t C9"H• 1A•1nt
I The tables. chairs, windows. toilets
and sinks look like they were built for
Lilliputians. Putting children in an
environment where they can learn to
do for themselves is part of the idea
behind t he unique University
Montessori on the UCI campus.
Barbara Caldwell, whose dauahter
attends the child care center. says
that's what makes it so good for her.
"Everything is within reach. She can
do things for herself."
The school opened in the fall, but
planning began fi ve years ago. "This
bepn as a vision for an exceptional
chtld care facility. This was to
provide. on campus. not only a day
care facility but a place for instruction
and research." explained Horace
Mitchell, vice chancellor of Student
Affairs. r.-.,.:L.;;;1---+---.-T~c:.::;at;:-,r-a~ra=r:o~ry-:-:-r-ap~p~:r=oa~c;;;c-~wa:-:::s
i.=:..=..::==~;;:::,:,;:;:;,__:_ _________ _.;....;, _______ _j complemented by the decision to
o.lly ........... ~ Lee...,_
llary Miller, an employee at tbe UnlYenlty lloateMort,
help1 5-year-old Stephanie Fitch build a •ky8Craper.
c:let You,. :J);j/anl Parent Winier Wu~ uj
.JJolida'I Wu~ 1}ou .
allow a center on campus that was not
owned by the university.
"We are the first. to our knowledge,
in the 'nation to have a privately
owned child center built on stale
universi ty land ," says Cheryll Ruszat.
who owns 1hc center with her hus-
band Richard. Cheryll Ruszat has a
masters degree and a California
credential in early childhood"\duca-
tion.
"We are very fortunate to work
with a university that is progressive.
and with geniuses that listen." she,
said.
The Ruszats will retain ownership
of the center for the duration of the
ground lease -40 years. After the 40
years"have passed. the building will be
donated to the university.
The RuSlJlts were chosen to open
the school based on. among other
things, the quality of their program at
Villqc Montessori of Irvine. They
operated the ceruer there for 13 years.
The uniqueness of the center
continues into the buildina itself. The
architect was uason Pomeroy As-
sociates, a firm which has been under
fire recently for its projections on
renovations at John Wayne Airpon.
But the University Montessori build-
inJ has earned the American Institute
of Architecture award for Outstand-
in~ Contribution to Architecture.
One arrhi1cc111ral fcaUlfLoL lbc
center is the 1nc:lusion of obKrvation
rooms for watching the classrooms
without the children knowing they an being observed. The observation
rooms were built primarilr for
parents to view their children without
the children being disturbed.
Other observers. suc h as re-
searchers, also are allowed in. but by
appointment only and after the
parents of the children and
Montessori directors have given per-
mission.
The child c.are center has both
Women's
condom
,inyented
PALO AL TO"~alif. (AP)-
A new condom ror women bas
distinct advantqn over the
diaphf11111 and . t~itional
condom for men, its anventon
claim.
Early testina indicates that
f'or both men and women. sex
with the .. Women's Choice
Vf&inal Sheath" is ,enerally
about 11 enjoyable u •eit
without it, they said Monday.
··compared to the male
condom, which is like wearin&
11tove pr raincoat that kind of
deadens 1ensation for the man,
this tends to heighten sen-
sation for the man." said
Roben Lash.
"The bi1gcu_awt:AWLqs::-u-t,--t
at 11 jives women the con-
trol," Lash said.
The inventors expect the
sheath, made of natural latex
rubber, to be on the market
latenextspring. AtSl.SOeach, ,
the sheath costs about as much
as a premium male condom
and offers the same {>rotection
to both panners against AIDS
and ocher sexually transmitted
diseases. they said.
Dg you worry about yQU
relative living alone dur-
ing the long cold winter?
Can they manage tne
·furnace. shopping, doc-
tor's appointments?
VOL VO, MERCEDES & BMW
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Oil (.lt ~"Cl 11n<ludt"o uol & l1herl '29 95
Surgery often unnecessary
to ease blocked arteries
Why not bring them to
l Huntington Beach for the
winter months. We offer
a lovely, home-.like set-
·., ting, delicious meals and
personal assistance. Our
a ctiv i ty program
provides daily enjoyment and new friendships.
Your famil}'-pr-0vides the speelaHamily moments. Share the-
Thanksgiving dinner, trip to Disneyland, the grandchild's
Christmas program. the quiet time of sharing together, the joy
of the holiday season.
fltll llltAKC INSPECTl6"
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located in Auto Spectrum, 520 W. Dyer Rd., Santa Ana, CA 92707
714/641-4927
--HOURS: M-F 7:30-5:30, SAT 8-2. Call for Appointment
•~ In today's treatment of heart dis-ease, the location and ~verity of
cholesterol blockages in · the heart
ancries is considered all imponant.
The¥ are routinely determined by a
special X-ray technique that requires
a catheter to be threaded into the
heart arteries for the purpose of
inject.ins-a dye-; lfa problem irloun •
the patient is often subjeeted to either
bypass surgery or anaioplasty.
'Jo make !J1 .A S pecial W;n1.,. :Jelep~one ...
THE HUNTINGTON SENIOR RESIDENCE
11851 Florlde St., Huntington BMch
However, recent studies have fail-
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aner.y blockages as indicators of futu~ hean auacks. That challenges
the need for bypass surgery, the u----------------------------1 angioplasty, or any other procedure Cllllifil• developed to open up arteries choked
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with cholesterol. is the answer to your buying In 1983, close to 800 men with ' and sell1'ng needs. significant blockages were randomly . assigned to undergo either bypass
Prlw9k atudle 11350; ......_ ....... llOO monthly. 1•2 Hll SU!Jery. or be treated with medi-~~~~=======~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~----------=-=-·.....:....::......:....::..._ _________ I cations only. At the end of five years.
the results were surprising: the>K
treated with medications fared just as
well as those who had surgery in SP.itc
of the blockqcs. The operauon failed
to either reduce the death rate, or
even the hcan attack rate in men with
blocked ancries compared to con-
servative therapy.
%
Annual Yield . Current Rate*
ON DEPOSITS OF
$I 0,000 to $99,999
FOR 180 DAYS
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS REGARDING AMERICAN SAVINGS
~ WE .WEICOME YOUR CALL.
1-800-24 7-'J19'J• Monday -Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.•Saturday 8 a .m. to noon
%
•
Even more surprising was that the
number or severity of artery
blockages was irrelevant to the final
outcome. if the hean was fu nctionina
well. Patients with all three of the
hean1s major aneries blocked fa.red
no worse than those with only one
anery blocked. The death rate for
both aroups was found to be only I
percent a year.
This low death rate in men and
JuuAN-
WHITAKEJI
·-
women with blocked aneries means
that. for many who are now under-
aoing bypass suraery. the operation is
more danaerous than the disease!
Nationwide, bypass surgery carries a
S percent monality.
Recently, a ·prominent .ca.rdiol<>I}'
aroup from Harvard published their
results in 88 patients who came to
them for a second opinion on the
need for bypass surgery. All of these
patiefltS had been told that they
needed the suracry to avoid a
catastrophe, but the Harvard aroup
determined that 74 of the 88 could do
just as well without surgery. At the
end of two years, there were no deaths
in those who chose the non-surgical
route.
Often in medicine. beliefs -not
scientific proof -dictate physician
behavior.
T he safest approach associated
with the lowest death rate and the best
outcome is appropriate medications
coupled with appropriate life-style
chanacs.
Remember. always act a second
opinion when recommended to = any invasive or danaerous re.
*Sub tantial penalties imposed for early withdrawals on term accounts. A!lnuaJ yield based on daily compounding
when interest is left on deposit for one-year term. Rate, yield and term subject to~ witalout nodce.
Sbe!loJc .... earri•! iiiict Wei in 14K
From T~SJ J5, SlJS and S49S
DEPOSITS. FEDERALLY INSURED TO $100,000 BY THE FSLIC '.
cttA ta H. BARR
AMEBteAN ··SAV
~FEDERAL 8AVIN6S AND . t0-~SSOCIATION
' I ..
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' I•
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. . -........
-
Orange CoMt DAILY PtLOTIWednelday, Oeolmber 21, 1W Ml
•
e
0 . e 0
..
l i
~
~
I he .
I
A
Forget crowded m ·and join-us
all week before Ch1istmas for
0 .
bargains, savings atid eve g
under the sun.
,. .
~ --1 2 3
5 6 7 8 ' JO
JI la. 13 14 L5 J.'
Open t he 17th t
,.
Located at
the SS Freeway
and Fair Drive
In Costa Mesa
. .
\
-
55 ......... "* .... ~c... ....
A Dlf/ermt m-1 of S.'9 llltd ._ .... cma ........ 2 .. 1
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I
A l O Wedneeday, December 21 , 1988/ DAILY PILOT
'Women on the
Verge': Fresh
and very funny
Al modovar m a kes
Fellin tesque farce
variout whacked-out characters and
plot twists arc brouJht into play.
Waitina in the wings are the other
"Women On the Verge": Candela
(M-'1a Barranco), on the lam from
the police and Shiite terrorists: and
By BILL THOMSON Lucia (Julieta Serrano). former lover
o..,NMc.n .,. 111 1 of Ivan, fresh from an asylufll.
.. Add to this dueling answerina Women On Th~. Ve~e Of A machines, Gazpacho surprise. a mys-
Nervo us Break~own. ~pening.t~ay terious medical report and the m-
aL1lie-Balboa Cmema 1uiokthc..titJC-famous-Mambcr'faxhmd""you ·~trr
of Woody Allen's latest tribute to to sense that_you're onto somethm1 _~an ltbank a,oodne~). Wha~ w:itm a 11Ule offlhCDeilen ~th. Thctt nave here arc equal portlOf!S _of 30s as a hilarious commercial send-up
McCarey and '60s Felhn1. run which would be ruined if I were to 10 throughablend~r.by'80sAlmodovar. into detail.
What a treat at as these days lo find Both Maura and Almodovar's fine
a ~omedy that challenges both the screenplay have already won festival
mind .and the eye. At the heart of !he awards. The fast pacing and camera
story 1s th~ breakup of a longstanding work arc also pluses in a film unusu1tl relat1on~h1p between Pepa (Carmen in more than one way. It is not a
Maura. Jewel of the Al.modo"'.ar stock sequel. It is not a re-make of a comedy
company) ~nd .the ph1landcnng Ivan done 20 years ago. It is not a custom
(Fcma.ndo Guillen). both of wh~m designed vehicle for reigning stars of
wo.rk in the film industry . dubb1"!g the day. It is fresh and funny.
voices. As they say "breaking up 1s It also is subtitled which. for me. in
hard to do" and funny too. as the this day and age. is almosta blessing.
'"""' .,.,,.,.. ,. c1111111 • MY n ENOTHER IS
RAlllMAlll 00 •• Al ALIEI ~·13)
1111 •:111:• ll:tt -IZ:lt Z:lU:ll 7llt l:llt
• ltll 11... llUllT t•ll ICllWAllHI Hllll DIYO
TEQUILLA SUI RISE (R) * TW11S ('G)
n:• t-.lt 1:111:• t1:• u. 11 z:n •:• 1:• •~n
* SCROOGED IPGI
11 •z111es1n1n
• CHILD'S PLAY (R)
• UIUI ltlLMNI
THE U KED GUii (RI
11.• ,. ••• ·-· t<• ,~.
• 1~0J£D~Jr Rttvnt
U lrz •S WTW tt IS-
•'' J4 ~ ()flAlf(;( Me11opol111nO. II t (WIS
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,,.~ ••t lM•S••l t••"toaa,
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COCOON, Tha..Rthtrn IRl I Ptvs .-... ...... 1
OLIVER
& COMPANY IG I
........ _tPCll
CHILD'S PLAY (R)
.... teN11 te.Mf!Bl
TEQUI LA SUNRISE (R) .... n. ........ 1111
THE NAKED GUii (R)
C--.Te ....... 1111
-OlllVf lltS OfU-
ftOAYH )l/WU•OU • u.oo u '"fl .i•uu •on11
LA PhlllJarmonlc
players Ingeniously
·go against grain
C&rma Ma ...... ~ ..... llarcoela .. Women OD tlae Veqe
of a Ne"°"8 ~own."
BJ MICHAEL KYDZYNSKI ....... c. ••••• :Ila I
Would you believca musical saw in
a symphonic concert at tM Oranac
County Performing Arts Center?
Well. believe it, bcc.ause it hap-~-Sunday afternoon durin1 an Qranar County Philharmonic So-
ctety-sponlOl'ed event.
The Los Anteles Philharmonic
Orchestra. directed by its co.assistant
conductor David Alan Miller in his
county debut, performed noted black
Amencan composer William Grant -Stiff't imqinativc-erranaemen o
Henry Creamer and Turner Llylon ... s
1918 sona. "After You've Gone." The
com~ included a solo for bowed
musical saw, played with~I ost
nonchalant facility and muc mor
by David Weiss, the orches ra's co-
principal oboist.
The unusual tone qualit~s of the While the people sitting behind are been a force in the Spanish cinema "instrument" elicited liaht laughter
mindlessly blabbing away you can since the beginning of this decade. and great deliaht from the nearly full
still keep up with the story. I was "Women" serves as an open invita-hall as well as a slightly prolonacd
blessed by being able to watch this lion to ao back and view his earlier ovation for Weiss.
film alone at a press preview, which is works, "Matador" and "law Of In fact. the all-modern program
as close to heaven as I'll probably aet Desire" being his most recent. Ii also was unique in that it was roughly
in this lifetime. heloed me rationalize why I've never divided between two of this century's
Director Pedro lmodovar has -really cared for Gazpacho. -most prominent mus1car develop-
D U 8 T N T 0 M
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•NUNTMTOllllACH •MIM'OflTIUCM I •PREllHTEO IN Ii ..,_ I f..-Qw111 Cer'llt E-"'-1~ -(JJ--1· :!:""..:..:=.:! en.ono '"·01to . .
ments: post-Romantic classical
music. as embodied in the works of
Sir Benjamin Britten and Jean
Sibelius: and jazz. as exemplified in
the Paul Whncman band arrange-
ments (including Still's). with a mix
of the two as represented by Igor
Stravinsky and Leonard Bernstein.
Miller, a young conductor who was
filling in for the orchestra's principal
guest conductor. Simon Rattle (out
with pneumonia), led the
Philharmonic in an exuberant yet
disciplined manner. The orchestra
responded to him better in Britten's
"Variations on a Theme by Frank
-Etridge." Op. W,a 1937 work !or
string orchestra. than in Sibelius·
Violin Concerto in D Minor. Op. 47,
from 1905.
In the Sibelius conceno, thouJh.
the orchestra tended to la& behind
Miller's beat, a problem that didn't
resolve itself until the final move-
ment, where areater rhythmic clarity was also finally effected. For his pan.
tire soloist. Philharmonic ton-
certm1ster Alexander Trcaer1 in-
jected a peat amoun~ of fcelin1 an his
lines, althou&h cohesiveness between
phrases was sometimes lackina.
Stravinsky's "Ebony Concerto for
Clarinet and Jazz Band" ( 1945 ).
which aives very little for the solo
clarinet to do, was given a more
asstea 11au accountOY lfi -
down Philharmonic. Co-principal
clarinetist Lorin Levee did a work-
manlike if uninspired job with this
and the more substantial "Prelude.
Fugue and Riffs" by Bernstein. who
like Stravinsky with "Ebony,'' wrote
his piece for Woody Herman.
Movie crowds
pref er comedy
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Holiday
movieaocrs are favori na comedy over
drama, as the li&htheaACd "Twins"
topped the new drama "R"lin Man,"
accordina to weekend box-office fig-
ures. For the second week in a row.
"Twins" was the nation's most popu-
lar movie, and two comedies, "T~c
Naked Gun" and "Scrooged" fin -
ished ahead of the serious "Tequila
Sunrise."
Accordina to figures issued Mon-
day by Exhibitor Relations Co .• No. I
"Twins," focusing on non-identical
brothers (Arnold Schwarzencgcr
and Danny DeVito) separated-
birth, grossed $7.8 million.
In second place was "Rain M~ni"
the new drama about an autistic
savant (Dustin Hoffman) on the road
with has conniving brother (Tom
Cruise). "Rain Man" collected $7
million.
The constant alternation between
violins and the low strings contrast-
ing or.supporting one anoth.er and ~he
cohesiveness of the entire string
orchestra gave the Britten work its
strength. Among the more ingenious
effects executed were the violists
holding their instruments across their ----------------------:-------'-------------..,,---,---------------i chests and strumming them, a la
RUFFELL'$ ukeleles. in accompanying the vi-
Two other comedies continued
stronaly, as ."Tbe Naked Gun: From
the Files of Police Squad!" and
"Scrooged" finished in third and
fourth place. respectively. "The
Naked Gun" a spoof of police movies
starring Leslie Nielsen, sold $5.6
million of tickets. while "Scrooscd," Bill Murray's comic interpretation of
the Dickens classic, pthercd $4.6
million.
RAIN MAN
(R)
11 :452:30 5:15 8:00 10:40
THIE NMED OUN
(PG-13)
11.lD 11u• s• 1• •• IUS
TWINS
(PG)
1:15 3:30 $:45 l:OO 10:15
OLIVER I COMPANY
(0)
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2:05 4:.S 7:30 10:15
ICROOGID
(PG-IS, t1:JO 1:41 •:00
1:11 .........
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tPGl
5:30 7:45 10:00
COCOON: THE
RETURN(PG)
5:00 7:15 t:30
DIRTY ROTIEH
SCOUNDRELS (PG)
5:15 7:30 9:45
•1 II #I IUlllNG CRt
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(PG-13)
1:15 3:305:451:80 10:15
olfos. and the lower•string players
UPHOLSTERY lllC bouncing their bows across the stn ngs n • ( spiccato). again underlining the
.......... C...,len!
llZ2 -IUI., CISTA •SA-541-1151
violins' varieted melody. At all times •
the players were right with Miller. In fifth place was the new comedy
"Dirty Rotten.Scoundrels,'' starring
•1111 ____ mttiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiipiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilillll-----... Steve Manin and Michael Caine as dueling con men, opened weakly with
receipts of S3.8 million. It was SPEND DIE HOLIDAYS
Wl1H AMERICA'S
*ICOMEDV!
••••
Altfml rtll ·--.... -·
foUoW'Cd by "Tequila Sunrise," a
drama featuring Mel Gibson as a
reformed drua dealer, which drew S3
million .
Ralph Baksbl
mtrodaces tooa:
'TattertoWJJ'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Nick at =.--·==-•:.,::io_ ·=--0:::... ·~c.w Nite. the cable channel that has o. ..... ,,._ .,...,., "' -tt•--· ..,_ revived old sitcoms for prime time, is -._ • ...., •---•u-----•w•• . ~i:-= .. --~--~:r-::.'* :::.:.:;-;:: aeuina its own new cartoon series. ---._ ~-·-www•w•• But Ralph Bakshi's "Tattertown" ""-,_,__ ------..... -will fit rir.t in -it's about discarded ,,,_ .. ·--" •·•"1 --___ ,,m-,,. ·--·--·-----·-obiectst atcometolife . .._.._ _____ ..;.;...._~ Bakshi said the conce{>t of "Tat-
...,.._ ....
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,.
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1111 a.41 ......... .... _
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tenown" began as doodhng in high
school.
"It's been in development for 15
years,'' Bakshi declared. ..It's my
monster. It started in hiah school as a
comic strip. It was an excuse to make
fun of who we arc by the objects we
throw away. 'Tattenown' is a world
where everything we once owned
comes aJivc."
"Tattenown.. debuts today on
Nick at NiJht with a Christmas
special that introduces Debbie and
her stuffed doll Muffit.
Debbie is the only human an a
world where inanimate objects come
to life. Muffit becomes the evil ruler
of this maaical world, while Debbie
strualcs to bring her back to the real
worfcJ.
Thirty-nine additional half-hour
episodes will be shown on Nick at
Nile in 1989 and 1990 .
••1t's nostalsic, with canoons and
stuff from the 1920s and • 30s." Slid
Bakshi, who is best known for such
adul1 anim1ted features as "fritz the
Cat," ··Heavy Traffic," ··coonskin:·
··The Lord of the Rinp" and" Amcri-~n Pop:· He also produces ·~M~ty
Moute: The New Adventures for
CBS. . .. Tanenown," he uicl, "has a kmd
of 1926 stylc to iL This is my fint true-
to-life thins for kids. My other
canoon1 were more for lldultl. It's my
Int lleP into Disney's worW Of "'9olaomc au""for tidl. Stln. I think
...... wiU likt .M "Oltlleia of iL
·11 won't be 11•liric11 "Milhty
Me>ute. • I think kids will 11t lfioet wonderful aoys nanni111 al'OUlld. I
thilllt IMY11 Ill it. Y• can't lalll
down IOtieM.-We'I Mw*-~o( music. Paul Mftlmln _.. lnmd music, DUc Elli~ ...,._
liated -... bol ........... ..........................
llblliwtl ........... ... ......... ""'*' ..... -Dr. lem'orrhl .... llitlt--.•Ttd . who.......... "' .. ...... ...
.... ~,.ilii ... --~-
n
t
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)
Rangers add just
enou~h authority
..______..,. o maKe parks fun
,,
UI Mesa's park rangers arc walking their beats with a
more authoritative gait this week. On Monday, rangers were
pven the authority to write tickets to people suspected of
violating the law in the city's 2S parks.
The sianifi~nce of that distinction may seem minor to
some people, but to the rangers it's a vote of confidence - a
vote they have earned.
The rangers, a woman and a man, wear uniforms and
carry police radios. They ca n summon police in a moment's
notice ifthey'nced help, but their radio and uniform were only
tokens of a uthority until Monday night.
Since August, the rangers have patrolled Costa Mesa's
parks from 9 a.m to I 0 p.m. seven days a week to protect city
property and help people who use the parks.
They have also warned park users who abuse or violate
city laws to either get their act together o r move along. So far,
the rangers have handed out 156 warnings for leash law
violations and 600 for drinking alcohol in the parks. There
were other types of warnings but drinking and leash law
violations are most common.
Warnings are now a thing of the past. T he rangers can ·
wfite tickets, and while that authority may mean more to the
rangers than people who use the parks. it is a logical and
prudent progression of the park ranger program.
Costa Mesa hired its park rangers last August to do a job
so simple we wonder why someone had not thought of it
before. T he rangers are symbols of authority-a symbol that
has been absent in some parks and caused city residents to shy
away from the recreation areas intended for their use.
City Manager Allan Roeder says the use of civilian park
rangers allows better patrol of the city's 375 acres of recreation
a rea without pulling police officers off their beats. -------Police like the idea. so do city officials who get the
complaints about park abuses. And, the public likes the
program, too.
The rangers are not an intimidating forct, but they
represent a not-so-subtle reminder that there are rules park
patrons are sul>PQ9Cd to follow. That presence and the
knowledge tha(the rangers can write tickets should be just
e nough to deter the often small but annoying situations that
can transform a pleasant stroll in the park into a source of
irritation.
City officials and the rangers should be complimented for
their efTon to make city parks more enjoyable. We hope the
program and the success h has shown so far continue.
Opintons expreued In thlt apace are th098 of the Deity Piiot. Other
Yiewt expressed on UH9 pege are thole of their author• and artlata. Readers'
comment la Invited and can be tent to The Daily PUot. P.O. Box 1560. eo.ta
M..a92&2e.
Noriega vs. Bush
T he incoming administration will soon learn t hat some
of the major problems facing this country before the
presidential election -su.ch as Gen. Manuel Noriega of
Panama -did not go away and still must be dealt with in a
decisive manner.
T he Reagan administration never did come to grips with
Gen. Noriega, who had been indicted by the United States for
taking bribes to convert his country into a safe haven for the
notonous Colombian drug Cartel.
T he Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee had
produced massive evidence of Gen. Noriega's corruption a nd
dealings with foes of the United States ....
-Gen. Noriega continues to demand that the U.S. pull out
its military forces in the area.
The new administration should make it clear from the
very start that the U.S. is there to stay because the security
situation demands it. And. at no cost, should we allow the
Panama Canal to fall into the control of foreign forces.
Th JHrUI, Ne'W Ulm, Mia.
Budget deficit ·
Politicall y moderate economists and political leaders in
both parties generally agree that additional federal revenues
will be needed if President-elect George Bush is to reduce the
federal deficit.
T hey are right
T he question is how to accomplish the job. Candidate
Bush said read my lips, no new taxes. Well. the election is over
and many believe a way m ust be found for him to experience
a change of heart, or lips.
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski. D-111., wants to help. He
~poses a I 0-or 15-cent per p llon federal psoline tax, on top
of the nine cents now characd at the pump. This is a tensible
proposal, but not the only one that should be considered. AS I
a barrel oil impon fee alto deserves review ....
Since we must have some tax boost, why not put it on
psoline, or imported oil? Such a tax or fee would encouraae
conservation as well as production of more fuel-efficient
automobile1 and that, in turn, would rcdU« America's
powina consumption of petroleum.
S.l tM Pnl·lalelllpettr
ORANGE COAST
l'lllt
w...-y, Declmber 21. ,. A l l
j
a..
Wws
Cooking
joy of a
Christlllas
hostess
In spite of the time and labor
involved. there arc rwo advanUfFS to
cookmg Christmas dinner for the
immediate family and shirt-tail rcla-
-UvCI -- ----------
fim, the hostess/cook acts tO
choose the menu and use the recipes
she wants instead ofsomcthina yucky
that Aunt Mildri:d always fixes for
Christmas dinner.•
I'm the hostess/cook this year. My
menu is planned, and the shopping
partJy finished. It will be a traditional
meal; I'm not going to take advantage
of my position. But. as ole Blue Eyes
put it, I'm going to do it my way.
Gol n • d b t . I.. Family members di~ about
r worne a OU Dea.et ~~~g.~~1f~rE.~!
There is no way you can get all of the it . ._ t D • ~-----dressil1Jl>utofthecnekH!Mkft¥' W. .1.10U eu me• an O.D r-Op ~r:s:o~o~~~0!~e·~~~._-+-~ ':.1 1
next day when you're sliana turkey
Republica n s fretting over s pecter of
Democratic ticket lead b y Van de Kam p
SACRAMENTO - The cream of halfway through his second term as
California's Republican Party leader-governor.
ship was pthered in the state Capitol Once again. the real interest lay in
to conduct the quaint quadrennial the governorship. specifically
ritual of the Electoral Collcae and whether Dcukmej1an would defy
make the results of the preceding convention and seek a third term in month's_~identiaJ election official. t 990.
-Sut tfic rea internt amonaoofh--DwmRjiarneased the fatc31s-dur-
party activist.sand political media lay ing a private luncheon. He said he
not in t~ presidential balloting -would rtvcal his plans and then, after
that already was prcordajoed -but a prqnant pause, told them he
intheident1tyofthoscwhowouldrun planned to spend the holidays with
for aovemor two years hence. his family. Kc rtpc3ted the line later
The year was l 980 and the presi-when reporters asked him the in-
dent to be elected was Ronald evitable question about his plans.
Reapn. The state's Republican Beneath the quips. howeva, there's
lieutenant governor, Mike Curb. had an increasing belief among Re-
alrcady declared he would run for the public.an leaders that Deukmejian
governorship in 1982 and to many, has decided to end his 28-ycar
seemingly had the nomination sewed political career. One prominent Re-
up. publican, who was bettina SS-45 for a
But as Curb chatted after the third term bjd just a few weeks aao.
ceremonial vote, anothe1 Republican said "it's now 55-45 tbe other way."
politician stood a few feet away and Another said only a strong appeal to
quietly confided to a small group of pany loyahy from Reagan and Bush
political reporters that he, too, might could tum Dcukmejian around.
run for sovem or in l 982. There's little doubt. judging from
The interloper was George Oeu-Dcukmejian·s public comments and
kmejian, who was haJfway through a sccol1d-hand reports from intimates.
termasattomeygeneral. Withinafew that he believes he should quit
weeks. OcukmeJian had fonned a politics and devote the nut few years
political committee and the rest, as toeaminasomescriousmoneyforh1s
they say, is history. Deukmejian family.
defeated Curb in the Republican Unlike many in politics, Deu-
primary and went on to win two tenns kmejian has h ved on his salaries and
as governor. not traded on his positions for
On Monday. eight years later, personal gain. The Dcukmejians
many of the same Republican movers arcn 't poveny-stricken but neither
and shakers collected themselves in arc they wealthy. The question is
the Capitol to conduct the same pro whether a sense of duty and loyaJty to
fonna chore. casting their47 elec\oral his earty, in response to urgjnp from
votes for George Bush and Dan GOP leaders, will overcome his
Quayle. personal aversion to seeking a third
Curb, havia:ig lost his bid for the tenn .and th.e undoubted attractions
governorship in 1982 and another for of pnvate hfe and several hundred
lieutenant governor in 1986. was thousand dollars a year in income
there. So was Dcukmejian. now from a prominent law firm.
DAN
WALTERS
Some sec a tipoff to bis lntenuons
in the fact that he recently shifted
$I 00 000 itt-ampeign ~funOs-io the
relief of eanhquake-stricken Anne~
nians.
The i ovcmor has mdic.ated he'll
decide for certain within the next
month. But as of Monday. few
Republican tcad;crs were with ng to bet
that be'll go ag,aan.
The Republicans arc conettned
that without Deukmejian on the
ballot. Democrats -most likely in
the person of st.ate Attorney General
John Van de Kamp -conki recap-
l&&.re the aovcmontnp and thus con-
trol the reapponionment of tepslat-
ive and conarns1onal scau after the 1990 census.
Given the facts that Democrats
finagled at least five extra con-
gressional st"ats after the last census
and California will gain fi ve more
seats after 1990, there arc substantial
stakes for the Bush White House in
controlling California's reapponion-
ment process.
There are other potenual Re-
publican candKLates: retinng baseball
commissioner Peter Ueberroth. state
Sen. Ken Maddy. ex-Rep. Dan
Lungren. Los Angeles Police Chief
Darryl Gates and. most rcttnlly.
newly re-elected U.S. Sen. Pete
Walson. But none of them. Re-
publican leaders behevc, is as strong
as OcukmeJian 1s now. Each. in other
words. would need some building to
make hTin competitive with Van de
Kamp.
OH W•lten 11 • 1yadkatd
coltUD•i It
Book dep1cts Reagan larger
than 11fe: Nancy ranks lower
WASHINGTON -Helene von
Damm invested 2 1 years of her life in
Ronald Reagan -rising from his
secretary to ambassador to her native
Aus1ria. Hers is a Cinderella story
turned sour with a heroic president
and a wicked queen by his side.
President Reagan keeps his Tenon
coating in von Damm's soon-to-bc-
rtleased autobiography. "At Re-
apn's Side." (Doubleday)-the first
of the post-Reagan memoirs. Von
Damm may have set the tone for
Monday-morning quanerbacking of
the Reagan era. The immensely
popular president is portrayed as
la,.er than life while the first lady
1aUs the fall.
Von Damm claims that Nancy R~n tecretly forced her out of the
admtnaraaion in 1985 and plotted
with moderate Cabinet members to
soften the president's ronwrvat1vc
agenda. The usual bad guys. Ed Mee~
and Lyn Nofzi~r. rate fa vorable
observations from von Damm. But
she nOes the normally bullet-proof
reputations of George Shultz and
James Baker.
Our associate Scott Sleek reviewed
an advance copy of von Damm·s
book.
Von Dlmm was Reapn'ssccretary
when be wu aovemor of Cahfomia.
and lhc tblJoMd barn to the White
HOUie. ncre she .,cw restletl. SI~·· IMI die pr111idcn1 wn "to undtmand-
i"I lw IMMI' even ..ttd me to
-.... a~I for him or ,rt 1 cup Olede. •admits Rtqan hid 1
lu 7. rs IMftt IC)'k Ind cktc'riba .. .._•a kind man wtdl a P.t
....... who eeva~illof
••• illd ... obhviou' to Wbilt ::= -"°' oblivioua. • peanas her " unl)ftd1C-tllllt _. powcr-hu"lf)'. M"'" Raipn tll ... ltfttd b) tM 1iAfh.cntt Of
Ja r .... .....
anr1 JtJl\f PH \Pf AR
then-National Sccunty Adviser Wil-
ham Clark, panicularly his hard hne
~pinst the Soviet Union. Von
Damm claims the first lady and her
alhes. Shultz. Baker and Michael
Deaver. smualcd the Soviet am-
bassedor into the Wbi1it House 10 sec
Raipn in 1983 wi1hout ~llina O ark.
It wn IMir anempt to mo~ Reapn
to-ard warmer relations Wlth the
Soviet Union. she tuspects.
"I can't say what &Mir motivations
were." von Damm wntcs. "But I
believe that Shultz was after the
acclaim of the press and possibl> a
Nobel Peace Prize. while Mrs. R was
hopina the summlll') wo.ald prove
popular with the pubhc for her
husband.'' ~
Von Damm drops some JUtC)
1n«'Ck>tcs about sexism 1n 'he White
Houw. Male Cabinet members ~· fttftd to 1hen-presidcntaat aack Ehu~
btlh Dok If "tchoolmarm1sh." The)
~ even Ins n.um1111 to U.N.
Ambassador Jeane Kut.-tnck. ··1
rtmember how thot'ked r wu. after
Jeane had liken a p.nec:ullrt> •ouah
itand ll a mcetu'a. to hear the bo~'S
wonc:tmna 1f·n ~ tbe -rons tilM of
the month.'" \'OC Dlltnm wn'"-
Rnpn ~cd ¥on Dlmm to be
ties pmoftnii ...--Pd tlilen ia
1981. ht offeft4 htf en am••• llcw's
poll. but Mn.. ltftPn ltood tn tM
-a)'. She ciJled won Damm 1n lbr a
pnv11t chat and prnisu~ her to hn'ft ~1' thr 00\t. Sl}tftl R<'•" nttdril ~at ho t ... ,\~r\'ntlr.1n httrycs.
r
m) career had prosressed tar
enough.'' von Damm "'ntcs.
Von Damm accepted the post in
.\ustna. but that's where her carnage
turned into a pumpkin. She divorced
her husband and married an Austrian
hotel o"'ner. Von Damm said the
circumstances surrounding her mar-
na1e gave Nanc) Rcapn ammuni-
11on to end her cuttr. In 1984. Shultz
told -.on Damm that the president
wanted her 10 resign. Von Damm 1s
con' meed It \lr&S the first lady's idea.
but she thre"' in the towel anyway.
CH .\0 I OPEC -U.S. 10·
tclhgencc rcpons claim that the
O PEC 011 cartel 1s break1f\I apan.
.Despite recent postunns ~\ate cancl.
our sourttS behevc oil pncn could
dip to SI 0 a blrttl by earty nnt year
-one-fourth the pm-e 1n 1980. The
oil-nch na11ons arc cuttins each
other's throats over market shar\' and
that"'"' dmc the pnccs down. Lo"
gas prices v.ould gave the Bush
adm1nstnt1on an excmc to step 1n
with a ps tall "'"h1ch " now bcina d1~usxd behmd clotcd doors. The
e'CuSt' ~ould be that low 011 pnccs
pose a nauonal sccunt) thmat b¢...
cause the United lates would be-
come mo~ dc~ndent on 01l 1mpof1s
MINl-EDITORI L -Secretary
of State~ hultz took his lumps for~fusa"Sa ~1sa to YasirArafat. lltc
Plldtine Llbcrat1on °'Jlnintion leader had to hokf has tOHW out of
to•n -an 1ncon"cnlt'ntt lhet was bk>w:1l up into an 1n~I aTOr.
But SllulU Ml""'' IO play ha ..... I _.... 4nM nc PlO .._~"t ~
INl1ed. Ti.t U•tid Scatc'I Md to -..~ ............ .....
neil ~ .. fofttd lO reMUla wnud• _. rwa1111a.tt hnet aa no
:acatillll --. Now tht Uaated
s.. -~· ..... cwtioR. ., _ _,.,......,,..
eaf 'C
for sandwiches.
Some members want weird thinp
in their turkey dresSi~ .. i:aisins.
apples, ortcrs or prunes. This year
they wil have Pcpperidge Fanns
dressing with a little onion and celery,
period.
We will have baked ~ms. That's
notoneofmyfavoritcdisbes.. but I'm
wilhn& to bend a little. And ~ need
some color on the plates. T urkey,
drns1ng, pvy and creamed onions
arc all t he same color and the yams a1ont with cranberr)' sa~ will be a
nice contrasL -
The yams will not be baked with
marsbmaJloW5. even if Aunt Mildred
does think that's the only way to
prepare them. I don't like
manhmaJlows and tberc arc always
some left over in the pecQee that I
don't know what to do with. l'll bake
tbc yams with brown supr and
orana.cjuice.
And now we come to the dessert.
There will be no plum puddina. I am
not a puddina pcnon -rice, bread.
tapioca or plum. I don't object 10 IM
lUlC •much• I do to the IOWk1 of
the word 'pudding'.1
It's not that I'm finicky about food .
I eat practically everythina that grows
above or belO"' the ground. and a few thin~ that swim and fly. teat nearly
all of ihe pans, inside and out. of
animals. I have a fnend who can't
understand how I can eat tonaue. ~How can you eat somethina that
comes out of a cow's mouth?"'° she
asked me.
And this from a woman who cats
Clf:~t I digress. Back to the puddin1-
0ut of curiosny. I sot out my
cookbook.·· Joy of Cooking" a.nd read
the recipe for plum pudding. The
recipe took up five and a halfinches
on the paac and st.ancd out, "A uuly
fesu ve Christmas djsh that needs
patjencc in the makina. The sl siit-
hour cooking is necessary t all
the suet melts before t our
pan1cles burst. ... "
I read no further.
Dcssen will be pie -mincemeat.
pumpkin and pecan, all baked with
loving hands at a bakery just a block
away.
The second advantage of having
the family dsnnef' ts the reaction oft.he
guests. All of theft\ know the li mits of
m\ culinary skills. If the) arc pme
en.ough to come and then complain
before. dunng and after the meal, It
will be mission accomplished.
I'll be abk to keep all the leftovers,
and next Christmas Aunt Mildred
can have the family dinner . Col•.,,,., Am .,._ lltW bl
i.-Nlpel.
Today 1s Wednesday. Dcc. 21. the
3S6th day of 1988. There art 10 da)s
left 1n the )car.
Today's Highlight in History:
Twent) )'cars ago, on Dec. 21 .
1968. .. Apollo Eiatu:· with
astronauu Frank Borman. James A. ,
Lo"cll Jr. and Wilham A. '\ndcrs
abolrd. was launched from Cape
Kennedy, Fle .. on its way to human-
kind's ffn1 ort>11 o r t~ moon.
On th11 date:
In 1620. the Pllanms aboard t~ "Ma)Oower"~nta~forthtfirst
umc at what is now Plymouth, Mus.
l n 1891. IC1Cft usts PierTe and Mane
Cunc diteo\lered radium.
In 1913. the first Cl'OlftCWd puzk
was publtlhcd. tn the~~
rnmt of mt New YOl'tt -Wolt!L
In l 97S. ta'°' is1s \n~ a mat-
1"J of the~tio9olPt•*Upon•• COUMna •• V~ Ula :I:° people and .......... tO
Iii ,';t•d.e l.*9ila a .. 7 ud
........ Mc1dlllat.,. ..... Id wr N••lllll ,..._ 4 ·11
...... ol ....... Of oil --N«1ll Adaatec. Tn ,.rs RID= ~ itt Des
PlaiMk•;•ct•e• lollil W. o.cy
Jr .. a .J6.,.r ... maWcllll Iii ol-
hlll. • --r"' * 1tatai• ~ ll -.. Get)' -mer ce.,, .. .....
'
lwm>l
SMyo 1C»-Watt* Stereo
$ystem with 18 Function
Wlrele• Remote Control ~
• dual stereo cassette deck with high
speed dubbing.. continuou
playback, l'"OOlby• NA
• 5-band graphic equalizer
• 10" 3-way tower speaker systems
• AM/FM stereo synthesizer tuner
with 18 presets
• semi-automatic turntable &
cartridge
• 100-watts• per channel stereo
Integrated amplifier
• infrared remote control
• attractive oak tinisheo cabinet
s529s1
ONLY 123/MONTH*"*-
JVC 100-Watt* Onkyo 150-Watt* Remote
Component Rack System Component Rack Syllem
wtth Semi-Automatic wHh Programmable CD
Tumtable Player and Double
• 100-wau· amplifier provides plenty c ... tte Deck
of power to •s>e•kera tor dynamic mr-r.mge sc:runa -• power amplifier provides 150 wafts.
• double cassette deck features per channel 10 speake~.for
continuous play f0< hours ol dynamic sound
hstenmg p\easure • wireless remote preamplifier
• d1g1tal synthesizer tuner features '40 feetures ··co Direct" switch and
AM/FM station R£_esets for easy se11en inputs tor add1t1ona1
access to your tav9rite local component• stations ...,_,..._::__,___ • CO playe·r features programming ol
• semi-automatic belt-dr 11e lur9J!!lmi.4:..~ p 10 16 tracks for random play
for smooth listening to recor double cassette deck with albums computer controlled tape transpofl
• 3-way speaker system delivers leatures high-speed dubbing and
crisp highs and deep, clear lows continuous pla'(' • precision turntable features fully
au1oma11c operation
'699971
OIH.Y ao/MONTH-
5159997
ONLY-Sit/MONTH*"*
Symphony of ht
winners announced
:r .. ':~.!' Philharmonic Committee. which !!if!l IDOllCJ far lhe Ora• Coun'l The Hun1in11on Harbour Plaalhannoaac ~Y.°• Cbilclren 1
Philharmonic Committee'• 26th an-mlllk ~ dilttibuled ftien to
nual SJmphony of 1..;pts boat pende javi1e midlMI IO penkipe1e by
and, home dCcorau• conlll& m dlcorali• ** llame or boaL
Hunti..-on Harbour proc1...t • "°"'--~:t111Mmbenand number of award winnen in a ra• delip pnJ,.._weUoiaviled
of ca1C10riel. , to terVe uJUdlll * conlllL
This year's con&mi....conducted dur-Membeti otlbe ~can view the ins tbe boat 'pende ucc. 10 and 11 , decorated homes tbftMllh TIMlnday mw SI boats and 84 housn as on the annual Cndle ofU.. 10ur.
entrants. An estimated 2~l000 ~ se
Th H · npected to ride uac cbaJuNd I QO. -.p;;;;:::::;--~'.""""'::--;;:::e==="="=t '="='='o=n==="='::::r:::;b;-o_u_r-:t foOt eacurUC>a -. that cnaite the ,..
1 1
waterfront com ... hy every hour KENWOOD from S:lO to l:JOp.m.
JVC 100-Watt• AuclO
Rack S~em with 3-B11m
LaMr -Up CD Pialy•
• 100-wan· ampliher proVldes pfenty
of power to speakert '°' dynamic: full-range IOund
com-pict allCptayir"wlt~Oiim
laser pick-up otl~ra precise digital
stefeo 10und
• double ca.sett• deck fHtures hi·
speed editing and synchro dubbing
• semi-automatic belt-dnve turntable
for smooth h•tening to record
albums
• dlgital synthesizer tuner features '40 AM/FM station presets for fast
access
s979s ______ 1
OILY 142/MOITM-
. . The cost for die cruite is S7 for
adulll and S4 for children under 12 ~°'· Tbil yar°I I~ 1..-cl
redpieat in the walwfrcat bomes
ca-.wy w -• ~ winner ~~ Smith, ...., of Everpard
Paint C'omPllllY Md llh-)1* relident
• 12s-watt' lntegr.eed arnplltie< with of tbe harbor. Smith's bome wu ~~-9'= r~i: transformed into a North Pole vil-
-.ptR.,..-fordyn•ttlc f"" ... ,.,..r,ge---+t.--~ c:omplclc wi&Ul~in:%1..:;ln~-=OW..:.:-_-j_
•ound and quaint buildiq ftonta, 6Y or-
• dual c .. Mtt• deck teatur" full . man Meyer, dniiner-manqer of
logic operation and Dolby'• nol.. MalU'Oianni Parly Productiom.
reducion The other award winnen in the
• syn~zed digital tuner provldea waterfront homes catcaorY were:
20 station P' ..... tor t•t acc..S Ray and JICkie Coupe, Most
• handy unified r9m0t• control Beautiful; Judith Adami and chil-
operat•• nea(ly all tvat•m d · ... _ Hol' function• from acrou the room ren, Best Tnbule to uK> tda)'
• 3-way •s>eaker •vatem delivers Seuon· Mario and Diane Antoca,
cri•p. clear hight and rnonant MOit Effective U1e of·~'.!j Betty
lows ~::S = =-~. ~~~~:
s7_ggs1~
ONLY 135/MOllTH**
cal;
An and Mary Pmer, Most Tra-ditionaJ.i Mary and Stuan Malderz Most \..OnlCmporary· Stephen ano ~vN::a.;.:os~lif:i~n:--~ ---.. ....
John Schoetder, Beat Youth Decor-
ated; Joe-Bon loni&cio and Luz
Gonzalez, Daip Excellence: and
Dwayne and Mary Lund, Besa Trib-
ute to Theme. Award winnen in the o«water
homes ca~ were: Patty, candace, Cynthia and Bob
Chick, sweeps&lkel; Janet Perricone
and Joe and Vincent. MOit leautif\al;
SCeve and Omile Jona, .. t Tribute
to the Holidar_ ~n; Joen and Gail Urben, MOS1 Effective Use ofl.iahts. Pae, Judy, Mike and Allison
Hambrick, Int Display of Orit-
inality; Lany and Kathy Simmons.
Most Whimtical~ Miehaet Cavallo.
and Joseph Scheitzach, Most Tra-
ditional; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Erickson,
Most Contemporary; Matthew
Thomas, Bell Youth Decorated; Ray
and Gloria ferry, Dni&n bcel\ence;
and Paul Claeyssens, lfest Tribute to
Theme. .
Award winnen in the waterfront
multiole homes catetorY were: lf.ic'hard Davidson and Mike
Cooper, sweepstakes; The Flemina,
(;ocbran and Hilains families, first ·
place.
The s~iakes award winnen in .
the offwater multiple-homes cateaory
were Dr. and Mn. Richard Rae and
Mr. and Mn. Jlon Kotloff.
Fint place in the laaoon home
cateaorY was awarded to lmotene and
Dou~, Hunt.
Award winnen in the deepwater
condos catetorY were: John and Chartotte Christiana. 1~ individual home; ttfr.
and Mn. Spencer Alter, first place
individual home.
Winnen of sweepstakes or tint
place awards in previous )'tan who
used the same award-winnana decor-
ations apin tteeive special awards. The repeat winnen in the waterfront
homes cateemY were:
Doustas and Kathleen Brownell, silver 1w award (for tee0nd-year u1e
of •me dccaratiom); Paul and Kathy
Byrne,.. Pl Mr a .. rd (for third-year
u1e or same decorations).
The repeat winnen in the oftWater ca~ were Dave and Eileen Al~t, who received a silver sw.
Boat parade winnen were:
Suntet Aquatic Yacht Club,
awetDllUa(Oint Wells, boat owner,
and by Flandm. desianert. Hunt-
inaton Harbour Yacht Oub, Most
Beautiful (An Woods, boet owner, and Sam and Louise La Cone,
desipen);
HuntiftllOO Harbour Ski Oub.
Best Tribute to Holiday Season (John
Prato, boat owner, and Don Barnett.
desipcr); Bianconi ~ily, Most
Eft'eCtive Use of Liahtsf'rj· Bobby Cor-nelius, Bell Display of · "nality;
Baca family, Most him11ca1;
Canwriat" tunab. MOit Traditional; Classic Antique Motor Can Society,
MOS1 Conaanporuy (f.arl. Belk, boat
owner, Court Prowe!J1 daianer);
Franco •mily, MOit lteliajous:
Paul CW,•"' lest ,,Animation; Newcomers Club, Daip E.Mllence
Job Vellil, bolt owner, ud David
It's Time to ·Face the music! dula•->;
D vnQq Of La Mirllda, Oood
Neipbor Aw.nl for ROIH'llklent ~11; Kntand Selva tunnies,
Bell Tribute to Theme; laaifacio..
Gonzllla lunily, Tribute to World '-:le; and ~ ... ___. of <>raaee. Bell eom~F.;{;y~ Now ... Thls week onlY at All Clrou" City looallonl.
$2,50.0 Express Credit Available S.. Our ..," CounMfon for Dee.Mt
,. D•y "9tum o.,.,an ......
Corcull Clly will gi.clly 01we 1ou 1 lull
rtfutld, w111\\n l0d1ys of yout p..rcnau 11
you .,. not H llthed for any , .. •on Wt
8H 1"-•1 you '""'" 1M ~rcnaf\CS•N •n -CotldftlOfl w1tn your Mitt rt<t •CU canon 1114 tcc:naor,..,
Ct'91111 City L.w ,._. OWlf•nlff ...
ff wffhtll !le> hyt of yovr purcl'l•M 11
Cltclllt C11y, yov f1nf tne 1.,111 111m lor
.... _. 1nyioc.i Mote.1nch.lftn9 OUt• -11
refuNI 1111 doffeft,_ • ,Wt I~ of 1111 ..,.,encl Tl'llt -.,r 9llCludel the C-CUtl °"°'*"""•
BAKIASFIELD
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OMNGI COUNTY
._,_laDN 8Mc1118t.o 1714) 2»IOOO
lb llAt'I« ...... 1711 fdl"'9f AYI
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OUTLIT CINTlft
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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 21. 1918
Eagles' rally spoiled
~SUie (far left) and Lia Colllaa (11) battle •••OD llorpa (55) and TA
Estancia iris fall
y two points in
tournament final
Jenny Newsome, who wu later to
be named Most Valuable Player of
t~toumey. scored with 20 seconds to
IQ to spoil an Estancia comcbeck and
lift the Rancho Alamitos Hiah ,iris
basketball team to a S4-S2 victory in
the championship game of the Bolsa
Grande Tournament Tuesday night.
Estancia (6-2) had trailed by 13
points at halftime •. but forsd a tic.in
the final 30 seconds bc(ore News-
ome's game-winning basket. The
Eagles missed a chance to send the .
game into overtime when a shot with
~~..IL!IES.:.U.._.i.-._----lli&.JiX"-"ICOORdf-f . . . .
Jlallelte (14) for nltoaDd. Bete.nda Coach
Lia llcl'tamee (rtpt) directed traflle.
All-tournament team selections
Melody Earle and Patrice Lumpkin
led Estancia with 18" and 13 points
respectively.
However, the Eagles' chances were
hurt with the loss of start ins forward
Shannon Suzuki, who massed the
game with a sprained ankle which was
suffered in Monday's victory over
Bolsa Grande. Suzuki is averaging IS
points per game for Estancia and was
named the MVP in the Beverly Hills
Tournament.
In other girls games:
Tra.._. Hlll1 H. Newport Barbor
H: Hurt by the loss of leadina scorer
SlaC)' Gicm for much of the second haU~-theSailors were unable to hold a
five-point lead entering the fourth
quarter and dropped the consolation
final in the Bolsa Grande Tour-
namenL
Giem, who suffered a knee injury. s
had 18 points at halftime and was able
to return in the final quarter, finishing
with 2 1 points despite only playing
haJf of the fourth period. Jenn Ryan
posted career highs in points with 12
and rebounds wath 18 to keep New-
port Harbor (I-7) withio range.
Otto View 13, Cerrilel CJ: The
Seahawks' Cossette Smith showed
perfect shootinl form, connecung on
9of9 from the floor and 3 of 3 at the
line for a game-high 21 points as
Ocean View prevailed in the Cypress
Tournament
A S-foot· 7 senior pard. she was an
all-tournament choac:e recently at the
Savanna Tournament and 11.aned ofti
in the same style Tuetday. Jenny
Sullivan joined her in double fillura
with 13 Points. and shr ua 20
(Pl••-mm.a/M)
~<?i~:iJ~l!1p -MonaEehsRig(don-)-gam·e-,r-oll, 7-0-46__._._
CHARLOITESVJLLE, Va. -
Tbe UCJ men's basketball team wiU try to salvage somethina from a lhree-pmc road trip when the
Antaten visit the Univ~~ of V~nia today (4:30 p.m. ).
UCl brinp a 2-6 overall record
and a two-pmc losina streak into
toniPt's game qainst the
Cavilien, the Anteaters' first
meetina_ ever apinst an Atlantic Cout Conference school.
The road trip bcpn with a
100-U loss to Nevada-Las v~
last Thunday and continued wnh
a 99-94 defeat at Loyola of Chlcaso on Sunday.
:sopbomordorward Ricky But-
ler. a three-time all-Clf player
&om Ocean View Hiab. is sJated
to make his first stan toni~t.
markina the fifth strailbt startina
lineup that Coach BiD Mulligan
lau employed this season.
ater Del ace hits 23of24 from the line,
has dropped 50 of last 51 charity shots
UCI basketball coach Bill Mullipn
is in Virginia today with his Ant-
ea1en. but chances are be already
knows what haPP.Cned at Mater Oci
Hiah Tuesday nipt, due to his vested
inteTat in Monarchs' standout Dylan
Ri&don.
The 6-foot-4 senior auard. who has
already verbally committed to attend
UCI after his .,.aduation from Mater
Dei, no sooner saw a phenomenal
streak of 35 straight free throws end
Tuesday night after missing his ninth
attempt. but then went on to start a
new one of IS. giving him SO for his
last 5 I attemets from the line.
Riadon finished the night by scor-
inj 2j of24 at the line, and combined
with three field goals, led the way with
30 points in the Monarchs' 70-46
conquest of their out~f-Slalt foe.
South Lake Tahoe, which came
south with an unbeaten r:cord before runntna into an 83-S6 loss to
Capistrano Valley Monday ni&)lt. was
caJled for 28 personal fouls and four
technical fouls. And they paid a price
for every one.
The Monarchs obliged by connect-
ing on 39 of 4S from the line in
improving to 11-1 overall.
All of this did not set well with
South Lake Tahoe coaching. a_p-
parcntly. as the coach was called for
three technical fouls and was eventu-
ally ejected from the game in the
Monarchs' gym.
It was 37-17 at halftime and in
terms of a "game." at never ma-
terialized.
Elsewhere Tuesday:
Newport Harbor tt, Saa Mare!el 13:
Chris Ltt scored 28 points and Eddie
Maninez added .a scason-hiah 17 as
the Sailors closed out the San
Dieguito Tournament by splitting
fourpmcs.
The pmc was tied at 14 followins
the first quarter. but Newport (5-4)
erupted for 31 points 1n the second.
includina nine from Ltt, to pull away
to a 23-point margin at halftime.
The Sailors. who had suffered from
poor shooting in the two losses in the
tourney, shot 53 percent (33 of 62)
against San Marcos. Everyone played
and scored for the Sailors.
Newport will be off until next
Tuesday when it o pens the Canyon
Tournament.
Lapu Htu1 U , Uaivenlty H : The
Trojans didn't show up for school. or
t~ game. untal 11 was too late as they
fell to S-5 overall.
"It was a non-school day and it's
University history to c:to this," said
Trojans Coach Ltt Jackson. who
watchesl his quintet fall behind. 23-6.
hittinajust 3of17 in the first quancr.
"We were gemna-good shots, we
just didn't focus or concentrate." satd
Jackson.
Universatyoutscorcd ~una Hills.
20-S. at the outset of the th a rd quarter
to tac the game at 38. but the visitors
scored the last nane points of the third
quarter and as Jackson saad ... That
was the same."
Erik Glasscn connected on three 3-
point shots an the third quarter run.
and Junior Oliver stood out at both
ends of the court for U na.
SadcUeback'8, Dua HUI• 44: Tony
Agnew caused a turnover an the
fading ~onds, then went on to sink a
pair of clinching free throws as the
Rams on a roll at
just the right time
They take winning
streak of three into
Monday's game
Prem Tiie A110Ciate4 Presa
The Rams appear to be on a roll
AP.in, and their timina may be just
nll\L
New York Giants had beaten the Jets
Sunday afternoon, that would have
closed the door on the Rams' playoff
hopes. The Jets won, 27-21. on a
touchdown pass with 37 seconds left.
Rams Coach John Robinson said
he had been confident his club would
be in the post-season again.
"I expected to make the playoffs,"
he said. "I've expected to make the
playoffs every year that I've coached. I was surprised last year (when they
didn't make it) ...
The Rams were considered one of
the NFL's better teams until they fell
into a November slump that saw
them lole all four pmcs that month.
But they've won three straialn in
December, includint imprnsive vic-tories over two division title-bound
clubs, the Chica,o Bears and the San
Francisco 49en.
The Rams now face the Minnesota
Vikilllt in a wilckard playoff pmc
Mondly in the Mctrodome.
''I don't say that arrogantly. We've
been in it five out of the last six
(years)."
Amona the offensive standouts for
the Rams this season have been
quarterbeck Jim Everett and wide
receiver Henry Ellard. who are
among the NFL's best at their
positions.
Ellard cauaht six passes for 74 yards
and a touchdown. Jivina him a club-
record 86 rectptions for an N fL.
leadina 1,414 yards.
Three WarriorsAll-CIF
on Divislon VIII team
The Vikinp won the riaht to host
the pme when they dcleated the
8eari, 28-27, Monday niaht. If
Minnaota had lost, the wild-card
COftlell would have been in Anaheim. The It.amt' conf~ WU built up Sunda:r _niatn when they defeated the
4ir:Jl.f6,atSan Francisco. to earn
the yOft' 1pot. lams came periousl} clote to
millina oet on the playoffs. If the
The Rams' defense has done its
share, too. The Bars, Falcons and
49ers combined for two touchdowns,
and one was scored by Atlanta on a
muffed punt. The Rams sacked San
Francisco quancrbacks nine times.
4"1 of them by Kevin Greene.
The Rams will carry a I 0-6 record
into the pme apinst the Vikinp.
whoare 11-5.
Schweer. Yurkovich. Seymour.
La una 's Crabbe collect honors
four Orange Coast Arca football standouts have
been ch<>Kn for all-CIF football honors on the Div1s1on
VIII tam -three from Woodbrid&e Hilh. as well as
Lquna Beach High's place-kicker. Jason Crabbe.
Quarterback Fred Schweer. linebacker Mike
Yurkovich and running back Scott Seymour. althou~
the latter was placed in the Sttondary. were singJed out an
addition to Crabbe.
· SchWttrledWoodbndge.the 1987Clfchampion.to
the finals and a two-year record of 2S-3.
As a senior. he completed 196 passes on 373
attempts. good for 17 touchdowns and 2.576 yards.
OFFENSE
HUntlngton Beach volleyball
team runner-up in tourney P•. Plll,er, ScMel 8 David Lowtf'), Trabuco Hills
15-10, I S-tJ then the latter fo\Wlt 8 Tim Gutierrez. Santa Clara
Ra. Wt.
6.() 175
6-1 185
Yr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr. Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr
beck thro flve roundt of contola-B llon Kems. Atalaldero
tion brae ct 1Ction, includina a 8 Mike W1pet, St. Monica
victory over hilhl)·,.rded Monp. • Ra Carpinteria. Seat.a Paula
to challeftle fmno i• the ftnals. '-"• Fred SdaweerS:~ Frano.1'o~. Mid• to,_• wa Man v;a C1ll'a WR~ w · ~on WR 1:. C'*ilO A .. iidcuo .... Clan
Halls 91. Monica ~!IMI YMI .... ........... .....__ Uluftl Beach
S·ll 205 S-3 160
6-2 185
6-2 180
6-l 180
6-1 180
6-3 190
6-3 HO
~ 270
6-1 HO
6--4 ~80
6.() ~H
5-9 16S
6--0 17~
r
Sr
Sr
r
r
Although his Junior season was cut shor:t b~ two
games because of a broken collarbone. Se)'mour ran for
729 yards on I S9 camcs for a 4.5 a'•crage. and he caught
42 passes for 413 )ards.. In all. he scored eight
touchdowns.
Yurkovich scored seven touchdowns. 1ncludina one
from 25 )ards out with an interception.
Crabbe's npert1sc as a place-kicker was evident the
entire season. mong has boots as a scn1orv.erc J-pointers
from S2 and thrtt 45-arders. He had three kicks O\cr SO
yards IS a JUnaor.
Trabueo Hills quanerbac k David Lowery, who led
tM Mustangs to the C'IF championship. v.as named
Pla)erofthe Year.
He completed I :?9 of 255 passes for 2.181 ards and
17 touchdowns.
The team.
.....
DL DL DL DL DL
LB LB LB LB lB
L8
DB
OB
DB p
DEFENSE
Player,SdaMI
Jim Buchanan. Paso Robks
J.R. Perez. Santa Clara
Todd Stcuss1e. A&oura
Steve Barker. Maf') Star
Enc O'Bryan. Yucaipa •
Makt Yurlto"ICh. Woodbridtic
CalTl<'k O'Qu1nn. APara
Rod Smal.ley. ~nta 'Ynez
Ptter Mc:OOwan. NOU"e Dlln.e
Rob Wlutt. Et Sepnclo
Travas R..,._, IMoollti~
Tam Mannaftl, Trllbuco Hilt.
. Ott xymour, W~
Chns Ray .• .\tatcadfto
'tC\f Btundtll Nonl1'off'
. '
Ra. Wt. Yr.
6-3 241 r
6-S 260 Sr.
6-6 230 Sr.
6-3 205 Jr.
6--2 230 Sr.
6-0 210 Sr.
6-2 2lO Sr. 6-2 2U Jr.
6..() 115 Sr.
~2 ~ Sr .
6-0 210 Sr.
S.11 17' Jr . S.11 ,., Jr •
M> 160 Sr. .. , 11S Ir.
Roadrunners (9-1) escaped the upset
bid of the host Dolphms in a non-
Leaaue .PJ!le. ..,
Limited to a low-1COriftJ pme,
Saddaet.ck found iuelf in jeopardy
when Dana Hills had doled the pp to
4S-43 and wasat the tine for two lhMs
becaute of a tecl1aical foul
The Dolpb~t it W> one, but oa
tbe ensuing inbounds play. Aancw
knocked the ball IOOIC for the wm-
over. Dana Halls falls to 8-3.
Suta Au 7', Westm~U: The Lions could do little t after
stay1n1 with Santa Ana or three
quarten in the non-league pmc.
Westminster manqed JUSt three
points an the final pcnod, and what
was a two-point pm~ at halftime
turned into a romp for the visitors.
The Lions (2-6) were led by Tim
·Dietel. who scored 17 points despite
being plagued by foul trouble.
Pirates
prevail in
OT, 73-65
.o\fter allowin& a six-point lead
evaporate in the final five minutes o(
regulation. the Oranac Coast C~
men's basketball team recovered an
oven1me to cam a 73-65 victory over
Los Angeles Trade Tech in the
consolation bracket of the LA Valley
T ournament Tunday.
The Pt rates sun for the conto&atioa
1itle at 6 o'clock this evenina.
Coast led. S6-SO, with 4:S6 remain-
ing an regulation before the .. vcn
ralhed to score the next eilht points to take a 58-S6 lead an the flnaJ minute.
Derek Johnson netted. a 3-point
shot with I 5 seconds remaanina to
&l "e OCC a 59-S8 advanuiee before
Trade Tech was able to tie it apin on
Chns Johnson·s free throw.
The Beavers repined po•111<>n in
the final seconds followiiw an OCC
turnover. but were unable to convert.
sending the game anto overtime.
The Pirates (11 -3l took command
in the cllra ltSllOn after John
McKntlht's free throw pve the
Beavers a ~S9 eds.
Dareck Crane flit ...._ straaabt
field pis and Alan SdlliMS a free
throw for a 66-60 Coat lellid. Tl'lldc
Tech never threatened apin.
Crane. who had nine poi ... an the
ovenamc penod. finitllld wt\19 a
season-hip 27 poants, 12 men dlan
h11 avefllC en1enna the ..-c. De-
sptte be1na held to 1"rile ,._
Schhncs did manaee a 11•• laiP
eaaht rebounds.
ror the .. vcrs. ~ ~ ton had 18 poants end MC" WI I
whale Rod MaaCMI ........... I rebounds to ., witll ..... ,....
before foulina out. lft I collm ~:
llCill ~., ••• --...... , ... ne v·-...... ~ ...... ... ~-.•ao-__.-._.,_....-, ......................
ll~!CC'--•alM,_11 .. .......... sws -c as'c 1a .....
r
Super Bowl ahow
at halftime to take
on new dimension
From 'he Asaeclated Presa
NEW YORK -NBC will broadcast a •
three-dimensional Super Bowl halftime •mt
show in January, and Coca-Cola Co. will
distribute 20 million peirsofspecial &Jaues
so viewers can soak up the full effect. it was announced.
N.etwork executives said the protram would be the
first hve 3-D broadcast on network television and
potentially the hiahnt-rated Super Bowl halftime show
ever. 1
The annual pme for the NFL championship
traditionally anracu one of tele vision's bigest au-
diences, but the ratinp usualJy dip between halves.
NBC expects 54 milhon households will watch the
Super Bowl.
NBC Sports executive producer Michael Weisman
said the 3-D presentation was the latest in a series of
innovations the network has tried in connection with
football broadcasts.
During its 1986 p~uper Bowl show. NBC
broadcast a "silent minute'" to ajve exhausted viewers a
break from commercials, and a few years earlier, it
broadcast an entire regular season pme with no
announcers.
Ahhof£ v~w.:!!:~l~eed the &lasses to get the 3-.....u~Ql.;4-..u, • ftime lhew alt&-it special
45-second Diet Coke commercial that follows it. the
picture will ap~r normal for viewers without glasses.
The special effect is the product of a new
technology called Nuoptix 3-D, developed by Terry
Beard, founder and head of the Los Angeles-based
Nuoptix Associates Inc.
The ~tented process avoids distortion or double-
imagjng of the picture for those who do not have the
special glasses.
Coca-Cola said local bottlers will distribute the
special glasses with purchases of Diet Coke for about
two weeks in advance of the Jan. 22 contesL
Not content to let a volley sound in the cola wars
without responding. Pepsi-Cola Co. announced separ-
ately that its Diet Pepsi brand has agreed to be the
official sponsor ofNBCs NFL player talent show to be
broadcast before thepme. The talent show will match
NFL P,layers in competition as singers, dancers and
comedians.
Calling the announcement .. a surprise move,"
Pe~i's executive vice president of marketing and sales,
Michael Lorelli, said "Diet Pepsi's end-run on Diet
Coke just signaled the start of an intense off-the-field
battle."
Quote of the day
YA SflNKIN'
JERK! CH:N
'rWR EYES,R£F!~
YOU'RE MISSIN&
A GREAT GAME.~!
Slaney suspects wide drug use
NEWVORK -Mary Decker Slaney, m the premier American women's distance
runner, says there is extensi ve drug use
among track and field athletes throughout
the world, and many of the users go unpunished.
Slaney.: the U.S. record-holder in all outdoor
distances rrom 800 meters to 10,000 meters. said
Tuesday there is a big "cover-up" of drug use ii\ the
spon, and in order to clean it up, all athletes should be
tested by an independent agency at any time during the
year, not only at meets.
Slaney said that if a number of tests turned up
positive, such as Ben Johnson did at the Olympics, n
could be scriouslr damaging to track and field.
"If you nai people for drugs, the results will
suffer." she said at a luncheon, ann<tuncing her entcy
into the mile for the Feb. 3 Millrosc Games at Madison
Square Garden. "The results won't be as good and
people won't wa\ch.
"But how long can it go on? There are tests that are
positive, but they are i3nored. swept under the rua."
Some of that. she thinks, occurTed at the Seoul
Games. ., "People want 10 see good results," she said.
She said the use of masking agents, making drugs
impossible to detect, have hampered the testing
process.
The athletes think. she said, that if they can "•et
around the 1estin1. that's fine."
"You're clean," Slaney said.
-
I p,. B" ~I ..
Lake rs
beaten
again
They su er ourlh
strat htsetback;
C ippers a so lose
Prom Tiie A1Mdaled Pren
John Paxson hit a 12-foot jumper
with 3:28 rcmainina ind Michael
Jordan then scored six straiatat points
on a basket and foor free throws 1s the
Chicqo Bulls dealt the visitina Loa An~lcs Laken their fourth straiaht
loss Tuesday, 116-103.
It is the first time since March 1979 that the Wers have lost four straiaht
pm es.
Chicago scored 13 consecutive
points in the final quarter asthe Bulls
built a IJ 1-IOOlcad.Jordlriliad 13of
· l.poinis in..ihe float quaner
The Bulls1 winning for the eighth
time in their last 10 contests. bad
fallen behind I 00-98 on a Magic
Johnson jumper. Johnson scored 31
points.
The Lakers· James Wonhy scored
20 of his 2 .. points in the second half.
In other NBA pm~
Warriors 113, Clippers 111:
Winston Garland scored l4 points
and Ralph Simpson I I in the final
quarter to rally Golden State past the
Clippers in OUland.
Garland, who finished with 22
points, posted the second triple-
double of his career by addina 11
Kew York•• Kenn1 Walker (left) re.eta after coUW.•na wttll
R_egle lliller of Indiana wlllle •otna for reboand Tae.daJ.
assistund JO rebounds. Chris Mullin straight road game, equating a club
led the Warriors with 30 points. 20 of record set in the J 988 and 1983
them in the first period. Reserve Olis seasons.
Smith added 20 points in 27 minutes. Bawb lU.. Solllcl I 11: Moses
The Oippers, whose road record Malone scored nine of his 30 points in
dl'OJ)ped to 1-12, -ere led by Quintin the final 5: 17 as Atlanta turned back
Oai\ey'1 34 points and IO rebounds. Seattle at the Omni. Atlanta led 99-84
C.Yllllen 111, Jau H: Ron Harper after three quarters. but Seattle's Dale
scored 32 points and Cleveland's Ellis scored 16 of his 30 points in the
defense sparked a 32-6 third-quarter final period as the Sonics got within
run en route to a victory at home. three points.
pmc with 2: 12 remainiOf. then
forced Sacramento's E.d Pinckney to
take an off-balance, 8-foot shot from
the lane that bounced off the rim as·
the pme ended.
811111 UI, 8pul 110: In Phoenix,
·Eddie Johnson came off the bench to
score 27 points -11 during a
decisive 29-S third-quarter spurt -
as the Suns pve Coach Cotton
Fitzsimmons his 600th NBA vj~ory.
Fiusimmons. S7, now has a~·
record in 16 seasons with five
different teams, including two stints
in Phoenix.
Jim Leylud, the Pittsburgh Pirates manager,
on catcher Junior Ortiz, who stutters: "I called
him to wish him Merry Christmas, and the call
took 27 minutes."
Mark Price scored 2 .. points and Brad Bas U5. Horaeh 1 U: In Mil-
Oaugherty added 21. as the Cavaliers waukee .. Terry Cu~mings scor~ a
improved to 16-S. Their. 762 winning season-high 37 points and Ricky
perccnt.aae is the best in the NBA. Pierce had 17 founh-quarter points as
Pl1to111 llf, Heat lft: Mrian _!h.e 8 ks rallied f2.r the win Mil· 'Bark.lea A..1.t--t.-. bout •.-r..._~ ~-'--..... n""'ey scored nine o is 19 points waukee, whlchhad not ICCf sTnce t c ·-T'll"w"'• ~D iv lUuure in the first quarter 1s Detroit broke to middle of the second quarter, went on
hkb Ul, Pacers llS: Gerald
1 iJns stored ntn~ ofhis-21 point~
during a 23-4 second-quarter run that
boosted New York to a rout of
Indiana, the N~A 'sonly winless team
on the road. Minimum salary to rise in '89
The minimum salary for baseball Iii
players will rise to $68,000 next season. a
Iran Barkley watched sadly five years •. a big lead early and defeated Miami at a 22-7 founh.quarter run behind
ago when Roberto Daru beat up his pal, home. Rory Sparrow led the Heat Pierce to take a 112-98 lead with S:03
D M · WB · · with 23 points. left. avey oore, to win the A Junior Maverlcll1 HS 7krs HZ: Rolando Reelletl 115, ~· 114: In Hous-
middleweia.ht title. Barkley couldn't do Blackman sco~ 20 of his 24 points ton, Buck Johnson's two free throws
Trail Bluen 1%7, N'!Ueh lH: Jn
Denver, Terry Pomr ti1t a drivina
layup with 25 seconds remaining for
the winninJ basket and Clyde Drelller
scored a carecr·hiah 43 points as
Portland defe1ted the N ugets.
SS,500 increase from the current mini-anything a6out it then, but he ca n now when Duran, on in the second half as Dallas prevailed with 23 seconds left boosted the
the comeback trail again at age 37. challenges him for at the Spectrum. Sam Perkins had 25 Rockets to the victory. The Rockets, mum. The mimimum baseball salary is •
pegged to the Consumer Price Index and is adjusted
every two years. The CPI, released this morning.
showed an 8.9 percent increase from December 1986 to
November 1988. The average baseball salary was
$438, 729 last season, according to figures compiled by
the Major League Baseball Players Association. Eighty-
four players on the roster or the disabled list on Aug. 31
made the minimum ... Second baseman Jim Gutaer
agreed Tuesday to a two-year contract with the
Milwaukee Brewers worth SI .5 million. Gantner, a I 2-
year veteran who batted .276 in I 55 games in I 988.
became a free agent at the end of the seaso n. He and the
Brewers had agreed on the salary weeks ago but the deal
was held up by a disagreement on guarantee language
covering a possible owners· lockout in 1990 . ~. Third
baseman Steve Battllele agreed to a two-year contract
worth $960,000 on Tuesday with the Texas Rangers.
The Rangers also said relief pitch.aCraJc McMartry
had agr~d to a one-year contract.· ft.fcMurtry will earn
$275.000 ... The Chicago White Sox said Tuesday the y
have completed the purchase of the Tampa Tarpons,
who will move to the major league team's winter home
of Sarasota. Fla .. and play as the Sarasota White Sox in
the Class A Florida State League neu year.
the WBC middleweight title on Feb. 24 at Atlantic City, points and Mark Aguirre 2 I for the playing without star center Akeem N.J ... When l fouaht for the title, that moment was for Mavericks, who won their fifth OlalJ·uwon. who was eiected from t.he me," Barkley saidlucsday. "This is for Davey." Moore " ,..
died in an accident two days before Barkley u..,.et
T'Mma1 Beans w1th a third round knockout last June
to win the title. Duran will be his first defense of the
crown ... Phoenix Ca rdinals fullback Earl Ferrell, who
tested positive for cocaine use three times this season
and could not be located after missing a mandatory
team meeting and physical Monday, contacted the NFL
team Tuesday and said he was all nght. "We have made
contact with Earl. He has been located and he's OK."
said team spokesman Terry Bleboe . . . Rutgers
University basketball center Aadaoey Dackett, ar-
~ndolph ready for new start
LOS ANGELES -During his many Iii years in the ma1or leagues, Willie Ran-
dolph has seen countless ballplayers strug-
gle as they've switched leagues.
Howeve r. the Los Angeles Dodgccs• new second
baseman plans not to let that happen to him as he
becomes a National Lcasuer after playing for the New
York Yankees the last 13 years.
··1 think the adjustment is going to be smooth,"
said Randol ph, who was introduced to Los Angeles
media Tuesday after signing a two-year contract with
the Dodgers as a free agent. "l think I can fit in here very
well.
"I'm a big boy. I understand that I have to work
hard and do whatever rs necessary to get the job done.
You play the game 10 win. I know how to prepare myself
to h(lp the Dodgers win."
About to enter his 14th full season in the majors.
Randolph is prepared to make a new start.
The 34-yea r-old infielder became expendable in
New York after he struulcd through an injury-filled
I 988 season and the YanYecs signed ex-Dodger second
baseman Steve Sax to a three-year contract.
Randolph said he comes to Los Angeles ready to
take full advantage of the fresh stan.
"This 1s a great opportunity to funher my career."
Randolph said. ''I'm looking forward to the challenge of
helping my new ballclub.''
raigned Monday on then charges, was declared
ineligible for competition by school officials Tuesday
after 1t was disclosed that a coach had posted his S l,000
bail in violation of NCAA rules ... Pete Myers, a 6-
foot-6 swingman, signed a one-year contract with the
New York Knicks Tuesday. To make room on the
roster. the Knicks waived veteran guard Ricll Carlisle .
.. The Minnesota North Stars on Tuesday came to
terms with center Mike Mocluo, the first overall pick in
last summer's NHL draft ... American record holder
Mille Barrowman came within 2VJ seconds Tuesday of
breaking the world mark in the 200.meter breaststroke
as he captured first in the event at the U.S. Open
Swimming Championships in Indianapolis. Bar-
rowman 's timeof2 minutes 15. 72 seconds. sixth best in
the world this year and ninth best all-time, was honored
as the meet's best performance on the final day of
championships. Also Tuesday, Jeuy n.m,... of
Dover, N.H., won the 100 freestyle in 57.00. The I 5-
year-old claimed her first national title with the victory.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
S p,m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Wake ForeSI
el Duke, ESPN.
7 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Rhode Island
at Ntvade·Ln Vega\, ESPN (rePlevs at 9:30 P.m. on
Channel 9).
7:30 p.m. -PttO HOCKEY: MlnneM>la at Klrl9$,
Prime Ticket.
I P.m. -HORSE RACING: HoOvwood Park
reNV$, Channel 56.
9 P.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: BYU al Ulah
Slate (dtlavedl, USA.
10:30 P.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Holiday
Bowl c .. n lc cMmolonshlp Mme from Sen oi..o
(delayed), Prime Ticket.
llADIO
4:30 P.m. -COLL•OI 8ASKIT9ALL: UCI et
Virginie. KPZE 0190).
7:30 P.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Callfornle
at UCLA. l<MPC (710).
7:30 P.m. -f'ltO HOCKEY: Minnesota at K1"9S,
KLAC (S70).
Tonelli 'shat trick lilts Kings, 7-3
Frem ne AsMda&e4 Presa
John Tonelli scored three goals,
leadit11 the Los Anacles Kinas. who
had beaten Calpry, 6-5. in overtime
at the Forum on Oct. 8 to a 7-3 victory
over the Flames Tuesday niaht in an
NHL pme in lnaJcwood.
The K.;np beclme the fint tClm in
the ~ to beat the Aames twic:c
thi1 seat0n. CallarY has the NHL's best record. 23-6-5". Ind the Flames lead Los AneeJes by six points in the division
nice. Tbe Kinp •Ito snapped aoalie
Milre Vcmon's 12-pme winnina
--. Vcmon, who replaced staner
Riek w~ It ~32 of the teeond oeriod. faCled 14 shots and pve up
four pfJ for the lou. He now ha a
14-.l-3 mark. Ton;u aot his fifth career hat tri<*
,
and first as a Kmg. Ironically, his last
hit trick came against the Kinp on
Nov. 28, 1987, when he was with the
Flames.
Tonclli's first goal came at 8:24 of
the second period and tied the aamel.
2-2. His second score came at 2: .. 9 01
the third period and pve the Kinp a S-2 ldvantaae. His final aoat came at
9: 19 as the Kinp moved ahead 6-3.
Luc Robitaine had two aoals for
l.osA:ln. EIK~ in lhc NHL:
Peq ' I, l1l1ad1n I: Mario
Lemieu1 tcOred lait leCOnd pl o(lhc
pme willt 5:51 remtimftl, then
Ulil1ed Oil .. Emy'• ..-..n•Mr
2:25 later .. Piftlburp e111te1NW its
home unbeaten semi 10 JO~
The hnpins ire on 1 9-o.: I home·
ice ~ttt1k. wt.de the lslandm hive drop~J 1 l of thear lut l .. pmn. The
ls!andcn an on an 0.1l·1 jlicle on lbe ..
l
road. with nine straiaht losses.
Kelly Hrudey stopped Lemieux at
16:34 but Errey followed the Play and
pushed in the rebound for his 13th aoat
Lemieux, who had been 1topPCd on
1 brCluway with 6:32 left an the
pme. beat Hrudcy on another brClk-
aW1y Ins thin a minute later.
Lcm.ieux look Errey's pen. foqht off'
two defensemen and put a IJ.foot
shot over Hrudey's aJove at 14:09. wi~~tct empty net pl
Stew Yzetw KOnd hil JW ........ 1.aa..a:~n .
llliclwat ~ lbe ft... IO ~3tie11tbelted i ....
Yzennan who alto Md *-
attistt. ran his point-tCOri .. ~IO
22 prnes. ty1111 the tam NCiOrd Ill• .... ..,...
Arizona roars past Huskies
No. 9 Wildcats post biggest
wtneverinPac-10, 116-61
Ceballos scored 23 points and had nine rebounds and
Qcrck Jones added 22 poi nu and 12 rebounds to lead Cal
State Fullerton to the victory.at Titan Gym
Nonhcastem (3-5), behind most of the way, moved
in front 46-45 with 14: 12 remainin1 on an offensive
rebound and basket by Steve Camey. But Mark Hill hit a
three-point jumper to put the Titans (5·1) in front SQ..47
with 10:41 left and they went on to pull away in the final
minutes of the pme.
From Tiie Associated Preti
Anthony Cook and Scan Ell iott scored 20 points each
and led No. 9 Arizona to its most lopsided Pacific-rO
victory ever, 116-61 Tuesda)'. niaht over Washington.
The rout eclipsed the Wildcats• 44-point spread over
USC last season. The loss was Washingon's worst in
conference P11y, breaking their 52-point deficit against UCLA in 1974.
lJC SUia Barbara 77, Ores• 14: Carrick OeH1n scored 26 points to lead undefeated UC Santa Barban to
its seventh straiaht victory. The Gauchos scored the
game's first seven points and never trailed. Their widest
read was 18 points. 42-24.
Arizona, using a fast-break offense and pressure
defense, scored the final l 7 points of the first half for a
S2-2S lead. Elliott tcored six points in the streak. The
Wildcats outscored Washington, I S-4. in the first 4: I 2 of
the second half.
~ 115, Nor*ra Mk'&pa 75: Glen Rice
scored 22 of his scason-hillh 36 points in the first baJfas
No. 2 Michipn romped. ihe Wolverines, 10-0, enjoyed a
SQ-21 rebounding advantage over their Division It
opponent.
Geerptewt 17, Virpaia Ted 57: Jaren Jackson and
Charles Smith each scored 19 points and No. 6 Gcof1Ct~wn handed Virginia Tech its second straight
lopsided defClt. Jackson scored eiJht points in a 13-0 run
that helped the Hoyas tum a SQ-38 lead into a 63-38
advantq.c with I 0:22 remaining.
Arizona S-1 for the season, is 2-0 in the conference.
Washinaton lost its Pac-10 opener and fell to 3.3 overall.
Jn other colleae basketball:
........... l&ate Ii, Ari.... State H: Brian
Quinnett scored 2 .. points lo lead Washington State to the
Pac-10 victory. The victory raised Washington State
record to 5-4, 1 • l in conference play, while Arizona State,
which saw its five-pme win streak snipped, fell to S-2 in
its lequc opener.
Cal Slate Nlerua 11, Nortlteuten 18: Cedric
O.l1hm1 UZ, S..tlten Utall State 14: Mookic
Blaylock made a ~is Eilht-rccord nine 3-point shots 1nd
scored a career-hiah 3l points to lead seventh-ranked
Oklahoma. Oklahoma, 7-1 , topped the JOO.point mark
for the fifth straiaht pme.
.Switzer Says he won Paperurgea
titles fair and square Switzer to resign post
Oklahoma football
coach responds to
NCAA sanctions
son, said Tuesday he received money
from alumni but said that Switzer was
not aware of it.
"I went out and aot my own (money) from the alumni." Jackson
said in an interview on the CBS news
show This Momina. "Barry' Switzer
had no idea what I was doing and he
hu no idea what most of the people at
the 1ehool are doina, but he has to
suffer for it once they tct caUS)at."
While ldmttt1na that be and othen
violated NCAA rules, Jackson said he
believed it was unfair that the entire ~Mould Ider.
.. Wby doll lbe wllole IYltlfD have
to IUflir becaU. of IO~ tbat hlPDened to IOlftebody?" JaCboa
said ... If I've committed tometlli111 wrona. I want you to blame me, not
blame the un1venity. A couple of
eoecbes were involved in this. Bany
Swiucr Ud no idet about it bu1 the
whole 1yt1em hu to suffer ...
JICbOD did not specify which
COICbel were involved.
The NCAA uid h found two
1n1&1nca where an lllitlant eoteb
offered i8ducemen11 to recruits.
'"I know and I believe that our
c:oecbc•do DOI violarCAA rulel in """1 to ... to iadwc 1 r••
IO ·~ llid Switlir. lddi• hi ............. ,...,,.,,....,.
.. w ..... ""' .... rectuh-i111 m1d'iM. We do 1101 Ol~lt•trate Hlimll Mn16t111en1 of ......_ .. bt
aicl bit voi'1e nai111 It U...
TULSA, Okla. (AP) -Oklahoma
football ooech Barry Swiuer shauld
rcsip in the Wike of"NCAA sanctions
apanst the tchool's footbetl ~m.
a Tulsa newsp1per uf'Fd in an
editorial Tuesday.
The Tulsa Tnl>une said the rcsia-
nation would help the football ~ anm recover rrom the more than St
million Ion in revenues IWO.iected
durina the team's probatiOn durina
the ne1t two yean.
.. How many violations would
occur ifhad coechn understood that
sanctions would be followed by 1
requesa for their ~dona?'· the
afternoon newtp1per•1 editoriel rad.
"The NCAA can•t im~ such
conditions. but Rltfttl can if they
have the COUfllt to s&an a new
tradition at OU. .. Swiazer can help by ~iftl."
The NCAA pieced Oldlboma's rootblll ~ on • ......,ear orobltion MiDclly (Or lO violllioM n. unctions w the Soonen hm bowl ..... ror two yeMI. live teteviliOll~Dnt...,..ud
linlita d91 aumbef offooeW nicnaill .... ,....
~=:rs~~··(~ ~-.... =-,.....,..-=-· '=··~ =-·~.!f': =............. .. ~ ~i..-wltll • flln111."
l, 11
' I ' cone med over Solomon's knee
Mlririesota Uneb&cker a
btg key to Vtkes •game
Chic:llD Bean and was oa mdChts after the ..... He hu become die key to many of the
Vikinp' many ....Uve lcbemes becausc.1 unlike the ocher liacbldren. he .ever leaves the field. Bums coasidcn Solamoa to be ont of his EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP) -For all best aacklen.oneofhis ... PM1defendenand
the CNdit that Dla~n like Keith Millard, 'oey one ofhi1 smartest players.
BroWMr and Chris Doleman receive, Solomon wean so many hats for the linebldrer Jesse Solomon ju11 may be the v·a.: .. _ · .. _ ti 1 MinMIOla vw .. -· most valuable defensive uunp tra.111 may taM: as many as ve payers .._ to replace him. pla~ida is why chief amona Coach Jerry .. I thouaht lt&t Ray Berry played pretty
Bums' man~ concerns is a knee injury that ~II in there (Monday)," Bums sai~. "Con-
milbl •Solomon out of Monday's NFC ~tva~ly, .~e cou&d replace Jesse in some wi1~~ apimt the Rams. situations.
Tuetday wbat his main concerns Conceivably, Bums added, Walker Lee were into the playoffs. Bums didn't Ashley could be used at Solomon's weak-side
hesiWC '*11iie iN_ury to Jesse would prob9bly lineblcker spot, especially on runnina downs~
have IO b&No. I. O.vid Howanfcoukl move over from strong-Solomon ..m.nec1 his knee in the ftrst half . side, especially on passinJ downs; reserve
of ~ Dflbt'1 28-27 victory over the defensive back Darrell Fulbnston could move
up. lpin in passina situations. and Browner.
the 11ron1 safety, could fiU in under cen.ain
circumstanc:a.
"We haven't talked about all the
possibilities." the coach said. "Jesse as a very
fine foott.11 olaycr. He's an antricate part of our
defensive scheme. His speed and hitting. And
his intclliaence. He's hard to replace."
Bums was heartened by the fact that nose
tackJe Henry Thomas. who IJlissed most of the
last two games with a rib injury, should be back
Monday.
But injury-prone running backs Damn
Nelson and D.J. Dozier both had to leave the
Chicqo pme with leg ailments and their status
was unknown. And backup nose tackJc Tim
Newton had fluid drained from his knee
Tuesday and was doubtful.
Bums said he was displeased wi\h the
m~ia'scoverqeofMonday'sgame. which saw
the Vikings squander a 21-0 lead and have to
hold off the Bean with Ash&ey's 94-yard
interception tttum with 2:37 rematnint:
"Did we win 11? I wasallexcited until I read
my momina paper," Bums said. "J thootht I
was l'eadina the obituaries."
Bums dosed out Tuesday's day-aftcr-the-
S'mt mccuna with rq><>rters by proposins that
the NFL set up a hockey-style penalty bO• to
punish players who ,et into fiahts on the field.
The Btars and Vik.inl,$. lonftime NFC Central
arch rivals, 101 involved 1~veral on-field
shovin1 matches Monday. "
"They always call offsetting penahies," he
said ... They've acknowlcd,aed that these 1uys
act into a fight and there s not a thina done
about it. •
..They should do like hockey. where, for a ~riod of time. like a penalty-box deal, (the
offenders) have lo be off the field. (Otrsettina
penaJtics) are a cop-out by officials. There
should be something done to penalize or curtail
faabting;" Je.e Solomon
Oilers aren't thrilled with the Dawg Pound
Jflft'f OlanYl11e
r--,r-orS::::-:wl1Mt1--.:-----.-----:----o i1en-Sunday a.,d earned the-bcrttrapinmhe Herzeg ttoesn·c share H1gftsm1tH s rowas ra 1 or a _ -v1c ory.
Oilers. enthusiasm for the stadium's atmosphere. A Houston victory would have eliminated
"Everyone's talkin1 about the Oeveland The gencraJ manager said he complained the Browns and given the Oilers the home-field
Stadium but I love it," Hiahsmith said. "I love Monday about objects being thrown from the advantaac for the .wildtcard game.
it when you come out on die field and everyone end zone seats called the Dawg Pound at the The Oilers had a l 0-6 regular season record
HOUSTON (AP) _ Houston general is booing )'.OU and ttlrowing things. end of the field where visitors arc required to that was up and do}lt1fltroughout the season.
manaacr Ladd Hcrzeg has complained to the "It will be much sweeter to go up there and warm up. "' fouroftheirstlltioss\scame afterthey blew NFL about the fans and facilities at Cleveland's come back with a victory. I have no doubt that ''Doug Shively (assistant coach) f.Ot hit in leads.
Municipal Stadium. we're going up there and kick Cleveland's the back of the netk wrth an ice ball, · Herua
behind... said. "We've requested ifa net can't be put up to But the Oilers haven't lost re than one
Coach Jerry Glanville jokes about the The dressing rooms arc crowded and the protect our players from J>rojectiles, we'd like to game in a row all season and e each losses,
place. " field can become concrete hard or a slush flip-flop ends of the field with the Browns they've rebounded strongly t owing week.
But Oiler fullback Alonzo Highsmith says depending on the weather. during pregame warm ups." Linebacker Johnny s says the Oilers
it's one of his favorite places to play football. ··we'lljust use this game to get used to the Herzeg said NFL Executive Director Don have to change their patte now that they arc.
Highsmith gets his wish Saturday when the cold weather," Highsmith said. "It docsn 't Weiss agreed to investigate the conditions.. . in the playoffs.
Oilers return for tht--Seeond time thts week to bother me. A couple of pairs oflongjohns and-a The Oilers, who haven't won a non-strike "It's tou&h anytime your emotions arc
play the Browns in, the AFC Wild Card playoff bowl of soup and I'm all riaht. pmc in Municipal Stadium since 1981 , took a goina up and down but that's the t)'pe of
game. It was there that the Browns beat the "I really like that little dressing room." 23-7 third quarter lead Sunday before the business we're in, .. Meads said. .....--------------=-------------..::_ ________ :...:___;,~:.....:::..:.::.:.:..:.;._..:.:..::.::..~~:.:_~~....;;;,;;;._~;:.;;;;~_:,..;.:_~~.:=.::;::.:::;;;:.;:;.:. ________ __
Ryan's hope ls for
Eagles to seize the
opportunity now
-------. --Phtlaoeijilila awaits
Dec. 31 date with
Bears or the 49ers
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Coach
Buddy Ryan is trying to sell his
Phi ladelphia Eagles on the
philosophy that when opportunity
knocks, grab it before some other
team does.
''The th in~ I want them to realize is
that you don 'set these opportunities
every year:· said Ryan Tuesday. who
claimed at the be&inning of has first
season in Philadelphia that he was
going to take his team all the way tha1
year.
This )'tar, without the fanfare. the
Eagles find themselves on the road to
the Super Bowl rs the winner of the
NFC East.
To the contrary. Ryan said at the
beginning of the season he was at least
a season. maybe two, away from the
Super Bowl. During the season. he
chanaed that slightly to say he was
aheaabf his five-year plan to rebuild
the Eaates. Ryan has two years left on
his five·year contract.
The &ales play either the Chicago
Bears or S"an Francisco 49crs Dec. 31
in the Conference divisional playoffs.
Ryan said he told his young team to
think only about that game. "There is no iu_arantec that you'll
be back in this situation nellt year or
the year after. So. you ~tter take
advantaae of the opportunity you got
right now," he said.
And Ryan believes thal his team is
ca1>1bleof1oingall the way right no~.
He said this isn't the same as his
prediction three years ago at his first
trainina camp that the Eagles would
win the division. "I said we were aoing to win the
division my first year here for a
reason. But anybody who knows
anything at all about football knew we
didn't have a chance to do it."
Ryan said he bragged that first year
to protect his young players and make
himself the center of any criticism.
"ljul the blame on someone who
coul handle i1:· he said. fully
expecting a less than winning season
hack then.
But he's not kidding this time. He's
c-0nfident that his I 0-6 team can reach
the Super Bowl.
"This team is now playina smart.
physical football, smart being No. I ,"
Ryan said.
"We have quit making mistakes.
We arc plus on turnovers. The big
thing is that they have learned how to
study and they work at it.
"The offensive line gets better
every week. It· s doing an exec lien t job
of playing together. The backs help.
Randall (Cunnin~ham) is calling the
right protection.·
49ers could put Walsh
over tl~e top, and more
San Francisco coach
is one win shy of 100:
maybe retirement
SANT A CLARA (AP)-A victory
in the upcc:>mina Super Bowl might be
the push Bill Walsh needs to retire as
head coech of the San Francisco
49ers.
Or not.
.. It problbly would if we wtnt ri&ht
throuah to the Super Bowl and won i~" Walsh said on Monday. the day
after his NFC Wtst champion 49crs were a.nered by the Los Anaeles
Rams. 38-16. ·•1 suppo9C that would be a 100d
way to IOOk 111 career. but I wouldn't
even a~ntee 1hat."
Walsh S7 has coached the ~9ers
for 10 ycian,'has one year left on his
current contnct and has talked
frequently about Javina the side-
lines. He needs one victory to reach the~ IOO mark.alcvelhc'llsharc with jus& 17 othen in NFL history.
Widl a Super Bowl v~ he would beOMflf~~ nestohavc
du-. Nfl: litla eo '"-credit.
--.wbolelCMieamhiltwo
.-. to 11!'99" beb'e rneetins = Mia ... Vikiftll or i1a I.Illa New Ycer"s ._ t1il •disturbed" ~
dleloll10lkRam1.
"There isn't any way to pass that
(Rams defeat) ofT with any Cllcuses,"
Walsh said. "But really. we almost
don't have time to reflect on it
because it's an all-or-none situation
in the next pmc we play."
Walsh said he has no preference as
to which team the 49en will meet,
even thouah they already own a 24-21
victory over the Vikings earlier this
season.
"All of the teams look touah1 and
maybe that'~ for the best," he said. "I
think the Rams have a lot of
confidence. and I think they can play
Minnesota head-t<Htead.
"So we'll study both tcams(Minne-
sota and Philadelphia). Not so much
for wha1 they do. but to acquaint
ourselves with their personnel to aive
us whatever edlC -we can set come
nut Tuc5day momina." Walsh said.
Walsh opened his weekly media
luncheon by rcadina off a lcnathy
iltjury report that included the Mmes
of I I playcn..
The most disturbinc area of con-
cern i1 co,me~k. w~rc Eric Wr:i&ht hu rc-in,Jurcd his poen. Don Oriffta
ii llill OUl Wtlh I te'paftted .,...,
and Tory Ni~on hM fa1P9¥ated lais
riOtMlftltnftl. •
l• tbl loll to the Rams. rvoltie= .......... OllT7I,.,.... .... ~-=: .......... ~ =--::.9'1.r= cwkletbri
HIADam SPIAICIU . ::,:;~~.:.:;.·-3 .. 5 .. -. _,_ ....
......, • ·~oo .... "" -
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)
TAILGAn NIT
•tr"" -~ --.... ·~·"' .... • •W4t2J 'f/l/4"U ·-32t! • O-t,.., ·~# . ·~ •l.. .,...,,.. • ~'9¢1 .. ...,.
•
BOOSTER
CABLES
• By Auto-tune. • 8 gauge, 12 ft.
• Keep o set handy for emergencies.
• 100% copper cable. • Tangle-free
construction. • #812AS
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FUN GIFTS FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY
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Detroit 116. Mleml 100 LAf1e 1 1 l 3 TownM!ld 1 O NlwPofl Hetbof 12 16 11 IC>-49 n.....1.-ti -a Id t of•••-Mltweuk11 125, Cllertolle 11S Atalua 1 0 2 2 Wiiburn 0 2 Trebuco HIW. 10 1l 13 11-52 ____ ... aeGD ft -.ace pre8 ell r-1-•
Houtton 105, Secremento 104 Allxldl 1 2 o 4 3·POlnl eoel': NlwPOtt Herbof-Gilm 1, Portlend m. DlnYll' 12• Mertlnn 6 • 2 17 t1umlte 2. Phoenix 121, Sin An!,:11~ IO Wl•leml 2 2 1 ' Tldlnlcets: Noni.
T ... Y'. -Tot• 33 n 11 '° Tot•IS 21 " 20 '3 Cllvlland el BOiton, •:JO P.m. san w Quet1llrt o ... , el New Jerwv. 4:30 P.m. .., __ ..,,_ 1• Jl 20 ts-to Ut... e t We2•1-on, •:JO p.m. Newtlort .......... ... ..-·· Sen Mweot 14 I 17 2.........., Mllweulllll ., Clletioltl, •:JO p.m. )-llOint eoeb: NIWPOf'I Herbor~ll I,
SNllll el Miami, •:JO p,m. .... ......___ 1 •--u-·--·-""'f 2 "1111 I s.cremen10 et Sen Antonio, 6:30 p.m. ...._ ..._ ; -· ..,.. ~ "" • " • ~· ._. Swettllf 1, Gtlfflltl 1. ai.ert 11 Houlton, 5:30 p.m. Tldlnlc:9la; Noni.
Dltroll el ..... York, •:JO P.tn. ~ Del 71. 5eu1t1 L.Mle T ..... 46 Ptloenlx el Dell-. 6:30 P.tn. --Portlend ., Goldell Sl•te. 7:30 111.m. • &.-..... , .....
Wis 11', Llllltn lOJ .... ..,,:::-. ..-:... •L ITA•llll
LAKlllS(la)-Wortlrt '"" 5''24, Grllft Mer-. t I 5 O .._ J I 1 6 Cl lll Cl h I K 1-2 1-2 J, Atldul-Jelleer M 0-0 4, SCott '21' S-1 t 1 2 ~ I S J 5 ...,... D1w11119
0-0 13, ~ IHI H 31, ~ 4·6 >-• Altlllerf I I l 0 .._. 4 0 • I W L T .. .. ••
11, ~ 1·3 0-0 2, COOPtr H 3-"4 t, ..... 0 0 1 0 ..... 3 D I • Ca6NtY 23 6 5 51 146 '3 Woolrldel >-• 0-1 6. ltlven 0-1 0-0 O. Tolei.: ..._ I ..17 3 23 0-1 2 I 4 1 _ ....., 1-
lt-7' 21·2' 1CD. e= 1 • 3 6 M1nt1 2 J l 1 ICllll 22 12 -._ -CMCAOO (116) -Gren1 N 0-0 I, Sellen o l 3 1 ..,..... 2 3 1 1 EdmOf'llon 1' 12 4 G 1M 13t
2·4 0-0 4, Cemwlltlt I· 17 4·4 to, Vlncenl •-t 1 I I 2 .._,.,.. 0 O 1 0 W'"'""9 U 12 S 31 111 130
4·• 12, Jorden 11-23 11-n c . PlllPlfl 1·4 o-o .._ 1 o • • ._,_,, o o I O' v..ncouver 13 .17 s 31 117 114 2, Pexson H 0-2 14, Hod9n l·I 4·4 12. ..... 1 • s 2 ..... 0 0 • 0 Nwftl DMlitft
Conine 0-1 0-0 0, Hellv H 0-0 2. Totel&: 3'-11 ' 1dllllllllt I I 2 6 ..., I 2 I I r.t=' 11 11 • t0 13' 126
31>-3' 116. ._ I 1 I 1 • -"'" 13 lS S 31 109 112 Sar'I .. OMftlra SC-.. • • • I . -· L.Mtn 2• 2S 33 21-103 . .... I t ' I ,.,..... 12 20 2 26 1• 149
Cllbeo 30 2' 24 l>-116 ~ T111... Ttllll IS• l6 JI =-10 17 6 26 100 123 J·Polnl toell-<OOHr 2, Worttw, Scoll, .... ..,, ,. · I 21 • 20 121 161
out-Seller1. ltlboundl-t..allln 46 ITllOmOIOn 17 11 tt-111 Pexson •. Jorden 2. Hodlls 2. FOUied ~-I n..t S 12 1>1 Wllln C.••a
;~· f:::::n son\~::.'.!:' Wi:a':.':~:;.+. · NCF ~LAI' :r.t: ·c!i-~r ,.,.....,.,. htrldl ~42-l5
~::~~~lllceeo 21. Tldlnl· fi111t•; ...... (SUI. . ~ .. -:~ ~~ ~ : ~~
A1Mndeoc-11,A7'. V91e¥ 51, M. ..... 40 W .... •IOll 16 1t • 36 11'
Wtrrten 11J. a..ert 111 'tT p Uf If ClliL2 ) New JlneY 13 1S 5 31 114
CUPn•S (111) -Mannine M• 0-0 14, ,,_ ..... a --NY.....,_,., I 23 2 11 "
Norrnen 4-17 o-o I, Kiie 1-4 0-0 2, o.riev 15·27 • • 11 • II ft II• ~ ~
4·4 34, Gtent 9·1' 0-0 11, Wiiiiam• 6·9 0-0 13, H111M S 2 • 13 ~: : ~ , MontrNI 21 10 6 a 143 11•
C. Smlltl 2·9 O·O •· INlliemln •·6 •·• 12, Garrick ~ 6 1 l 13 ............, 2 6 1 IO Botton 13 13 t 35 111 lCM
3·S H 6. Totel&: SHIO l·I 111. Wor1unM I • 2 I -Hertford 13 17 2 21 11J 111
GOLOCM nATa lllJ> -Mullln 13-21 4-4 9llller 2 I l • ~ ~ : ~ : 9ufftl0 12 17 • 21 11t 13' ~\~ 1:: ~ ~~-~-~~s3it 'J: ::" I T ~ t a... o o • o Quebec 12 20 3 '11 123 m
Smlltl 7· 12 '21 20, 1o1 I·• 0-0 2, Hle!llM 0-3 1 I AIMYe 1 0 3 I Tll9Mn'a S-...
H 0, Altord 1-3 H 4, Stanis H 0-0 2. Totell.: 16 I 16 • ~ ~ ~
3 ..... 22•11 I~ ... ~ • 17 ,_. Oenlt ..... ~ J
ClloMn 2' 26 34 n-111 14 6 ........., T...,._ ._
GOiden Slete 31 22 lO -113 • 41• .._, ?'M Nft.
3·Polnl IOM-Wllleml, Genend, ltldwnond, ........ """"'°· d 111.tn. Alford. Fouled ~. RMlounds-<.-.n .,,.._ ef Wlf ........ 4:35 P.m.
62 IOlllrt 101, Goldell Sl•ll SJ (Garlend 10). I I ·-di • DIM .... .. Ntlaurtfl .. TOAMe, f'.JS P.ITI. ~ 31 (Gr.lit l•l. Go6dlln Stell 26 ) Qi.-c .. MeMrelll, ~ p.m.
(Geftend 111. TOfel ~' 21, GOldln (-I II New Jlr'N¥ el Wlmlllee, 5!35 P.m.
Sl•ll 12. TICtlnlc:W-Kll1. Sr a 11 .,.. ... W911111Wtoft .. Clllcelo, 5'.35 111.m.
Altencteoc-12.m. MeraNI 1' f 'f: Diii 1': If 3 v_,_. .. Edl'Wlon, 6~5 111.m.
COLL•H MaN Dlftln 2 l 4 7 ~ 7 1 • IS ~ 7, ,.....-J s.c..c ..... , ... ..,..AtWn ....,. 2024 ,....,. 2311 ._,...,,~ -o-t 2 4 • I SpQuece 1 5 0 7 Ce!Nrv O 2 t-3 (-· • WWW) = 3 2 1 11 EerNt I 2 3 2 LcK Alllllea l 3 J-7 s.r"'8 A,_. S.C.. C-... 1 3 2 S Teytor I 0 1 0 ~Int """'
fl ti "' 19 fl tt .. • O'Nllll I 0 I 0 t. LOI i\1191191, ........ M, 10:tl flllwnel·
Allen 3 • l IS Dixon 3 s 2 11 T'lllll " " 15 .. Tot• 15 " 15 .. t~. cal (Wwfw.-l, •:12; w.:.c::r : g ~ 1~ =-! ; ; :~ ..... IW OMftlra Cllurlll, cal (.....,_we), 13121; T. Hunter, Cel
Low 4 O l f Mentflllcl 10 3 3 23 f:.. J~ . :; ~ 1~ l~ (toueNnl), 1':51; ~!~..:ilor11:~·
Herrell I 2 l 11 Bickmore • t 1 27 J-llOlnt -Secllllltl di .._. 1 ~ lnel, 1':5I; ~ PwtM ' · EMtott 0 0 0 0 Ven Atsllne 2 0 2 • ....,_,.._ 2 F!..o:::Al* 2 ,.._ -.~ 1 •a.-._., L...-. , ..... Tomlin 0 2 2 2 Welhllm 2 0 1 4 __....._ ' -· ' • -... --....--. -•· ._ l 0 " 6 Gr....,.. • I 3 f Tedwllcall: M.nlle• (5). (N); J.. c.ttwv. Mc:Crlmm9 J (Lei*), 7:50 HodlMln • ....... Ii: LOI ..,_, T.... 12 IOudlftnl, HlidlOrend 1 0 4 2 Brennen I 2 0 4 s..... AM 7t, Wt• l • 41 • .. 5. LAI .......... Roell... 2$
McMenut 4 0 0 I ( ....... ) ( Ontlly), .. .JI <•I; 6. LOI ......... Erldlson 0 0 1 0 -LeM11f I CMcflola, Dudlnnl), 16:11. ...,,... Tot• n 10 2s 73 Toi... ll 26 14 103 s-Ml wuw 1 111 ° n•r • LA , .... Y °' eeme>. l:G;
Helftlml: SoCal COlllll, '2·2'. II e"' • II• .. • er-, LA C ...... I; 3:36; Mdortrt, LA 3·llOlnl 90ll•. SlwlnO Ar11or-A.llln J, LowOlr M.lamw• 7 l 2 1' Sllew 0 0 l 0 (......,), 6:2J; Mullft, Cel (trlppine), Ht;
I, Love 1, SoCal COlllW-LUNIY I. OIMel 0 l 0 3 Ollttl • 1 4 17 ltolllrtl, cal ( ... Intl. 1e:2•; ltoblt .... LA T~lcal: SlwlnO Arbor bendl. _.. J : J l~ ~ 1 0 0 2 CalnNllll, 11:»; Wettlra, LA (lloolllllel. lf:At; .J~· JIMMfl Ollure ~ ~ ~ : • .,,..., cal ,,..,.._,, 1~; Otto. Cel ~ SCW'M Mmn 1 0 0 2 ~ 2 O 5 6 (roueNfttl, 1~; T. HYnter, cal, --mlllor
Air Force 1:~S:;..~llS =. ~ ~ ~ ~ Ii(_.,.. l I 1 2 i:=j, ~~ .. .151~"'>.'·1~
Arl1one 116. WWllnOton 61 lt.bmon ~ ' ~ ~ ROUMel 0 t I I ............. LA, _.... ,.._ (,...,...., CS &Mtr11114d '7. UC O.vts 11 wn.t ISllll 1 0 S 2 ~I. ltdt; M. HuMlr. cal, ,._. CS Fullerton II, NorltltHllm 61 ...,,.._ 0 I I I ~ (,..,.._), IHI; DIQrw, LA,
FraM St. 91, New ~ SI W.w • 1 I f --IN!• mtlm !di.ct (holdllll, MIUIM!lel, Mont-... Sen Olloo '5 TOIM 26 11 13 74 Tolab 11 l n 41 aoo.
Mont-St. 100, Nor'tll Tens 75 "--te .. Aa Sar'I IW ~6 11 20 f7-7• 7 ftlN r':'.:' 13 IC Ne¥Ne·lt-f7 Soutllern Metr\. ~ _, ... _ . LOI ..,....., r-.
s.it Cler 76 "s. JoM St 6J Wnlmimllf IO 15 U >-41 Grettllyl. 2-M; 1. tallefy, LooO 12 , • ...,._,, ~ eoi:.. l03 Sc,,, Art-73 3""POlnl eoelt: Senta AN-M. z.mor. •: J:At; •• Los ......... , .... 14 cer-,
UC ·---·-~-• n "'0r •• WalmlMler-Vu 2. Oudlftnl), t:lf; ll. LOI .......... Wetten t -"• __ ,. ' "°" -T..-......-... .. .....__ (SAi, w-1mm.'-MnCh. ,.._ -'--T .... _. Utell '5, Pedllc '5 _,..,.....,. ... .._. •• ''""' (Allbon, Cer.....WI, -· .---....--. ._..,.
Wnfllneton SI. '5, Arlrona SI. Sf "· Cel, "°'*'minor (CflerllN. """"'"''· 4:1'; MfOWHT COLLEGE wet.WN MeCtlmmon, Ce! lroueHnll. ~If; ,..._I, Cel Oevton 72, Mlemt, 0111o '2 UtWenitv ef Sllft Dteet ff, UCI 6t (tOWlhinll. 4:1'; Otto, Cel, mlac:oftduct, •:1';
Ev-ville 7f, l uelullll 54 <-·HllMWWW) TeYlor, LA ('°""""8), ~If; ........ LA
....... St. 55, SW Mluourl SI. SI UQ UIW. Seti Dle9e (rOWlhinll, 4:1'; Laldlew, LAlf(r~l:.!'.!!I
MlcNNn 12s. N. Mlcllleen 75 .. fl "' • .. • .. • Weller•, LA, ~. •: : -~· .. , .. ..._.., SOUTHWHT Douty l 3 2 9 Gollnldl 2 5 o 9 Ce! (Meafllng), 7:0 ; Nlcftolll, LA (hooklnel. 7:57;
Cotoredo SI. 62, levtor 5l JohnMln 2 0 4 4 Hunter 0 0 t 0 • ..,,,, Cel, --mlnor·mlsceldlci-..mt
Oklllftoml 132, S. Ulen .. Pwt!s I l • 19 L""""' 3 S s 11 mltconcluct (~, lrWlnel. 10:'2; Olurte,
,.,,, Houlton St. 102, GtemllllnO SI. 12 LAe • I 3 ' Mncerl 7 • 2 " cal (rouetllnel. W:U; Ctlurll, cal, """' (lllflt-
Teaaa·Atllnlton •• N. Arlzone 12 Ahllledl o 4 3 4 Etne.rle 3 • 2 10 Intl, 17:CN; McSort9¥, LA, _... mlflor-fllelor IOUTH I 1 1 3 Lemery 0 0 3 0 (lftterflf'ence, IMl ... ter), 11• .... .....-,,_, Awelurn IS. Ve. CommonwMlltl 7f = 0 0 1 0 Cllerecklla 0 0 1 0 cal (rouetilne), 1'!22; ..,,,_,,.,,LA (f'OUlfl·
Florldll St. 113, Soultl r:1or1cte 11 Llrerr"' 4 o 3 11 Pert!"" 6 1 3 13 1n1Llt:22on. ~-----••tt-JS. La F...,_ 7•. WlnfhrOP 61 lotl Mlr·l(lnnell I l 0 S Jones 3 1 • 7 -• ~-. == J~~"v~ so Totell 23 17 21.. TOI• 24 20 n.. ~~>-~ I .. •;
LIU 111, TIM.•Mertlll If Helfllml: USO, 40-21. La ~ I ti 10. .
M1mPt11t St. 7', Oartmouftl 75 3·POll!t ..a: UCl-l.lterr ... 1 011•11 Crllr •i WY (lt ........
MIMI Tenn. '1, Loulalene Tedi 17 HNht SCHOOL 0.U '"91t, v.,.., 14--~J 19:21 ...-. W.-lt). LOI
Mll1l11 ..... St. •• EMI CMollM 7f ~ Y1tW Q, cerrtllil a Alltml. HlmW 17+t (»-JI). N. CerOllM St. !Of. A-.mt SI. II Mtelat~ 16,a
SW Lou11ien1 •• Alcorn SI. 72 Ccwir-T•• at) ......... McCrwy. ~ •Yell ~ Cerellnl 1•. OHo St. • c:..... a... *" aom. SMM Hnw.
W. ltentudlY M, Jec:ktofl St. 70 "ft f/I • 11 tt .. •
. IAST Fullme 5 3 2 13 HeufNlw• 2 I 3 • Geereetown 17, Vlr ... Tedi S1 Her... 5 2 1 lJ Smlltl t 3 0 21
lllalr "· c...... '5 Grlfflttt 2 I 0 • ..,... 6 1 • 13
-...., ... Hofalr• " HulNltt 1 0 1 2 .... 3 3 2 ' ,_.AMmtrn fllMer 2 2 J 6 T•ldo I I 2 ) ,,.,... .....,, Stlttne 2 1 l 5 .... 2 l 1 s
........... c.tM 1001 T.,...... 111, Ale.· .... mlillflem " ,.,.... 0 I I 0
(,._) Newwro 2 2 I 6
Met • """' • • 1 0 •-cNce9o 101, M ....... tO (llnll Totell 17 t I G T_.. 2' 11 lJ 6' Mlt99ll St. 11, r ..... St. 61 1ttwo1 ,_.. .., o-rw.
Miit La Cerrltol 13 6 I 1 1>-43 a.i ,nllldlco 76, HeWell 72 (flral) Oceen View IS lJ tt 16o-1o1 c...... m. 1~ St. 1s lltllrdl J·llOll!t ..... : c.rrttoa-Her ... 1. ---DAV8Y"I utclC9 c-. ._., -a ...... » .....,,, ........... INCMrlf,
... ~.1~.lllllCld.
N,L ........ ltMlrl
(Alll) NAT'M*AL CC*PUIMCI
w.lker. Dell. Crelt.s.F. ::..,= ~ ,.,,..,,..,
..__ct,N.O, s. Mlldllll, ,.._,
Mevft,N.O.
...... -Andll'Mln, Chi. Selldlrs, Wesll.
lver-.Pllll er.it. $.I'. Eltrd. ..... •a.S.F. ,.,,..,,.... ... , ... SF ,. ... ,, ..
Cofer, S.F. ~·AndlrMn, N.O. c. Nellon, Minn, Lllllmlillr, West!. ~. Del.·Plll. lulllr, Chi.
0..,All. """..,·Ott. DlfGtKo. Ptlol.
A•C:.W. Ya TD .., m 2IN f746 IS t
111 • JNt JI 11 7'1 231 2'11 11 10 ea m l3fS • 11
m •1•" GI • a 15
.. •1 " -ltl 12 05 ttl 11 " *"' '" ......
'
Alt
J61
310 -2 .. -m -* I .. no
Ya ... &.9TD m•a.t•s ,., ....
lilt u .. 16 '* ... • 11 1llJ I.I " s '= ~ J ~ mu » 5
mu "• 621 J.7 " 3 . .._..
NO Y• A119 Le TD
16 141' MA ti le 15'1m:nt.?"-.. .., a "6 1U 2' s llMflt.7 tt6 7' SJ4 7.0 II 1 n na 11.1 • 12 n ms 11.t " • n ,.. 11.1 • s 7270SU D4
61 1197 16. I S2 7
.. 570 I.A 27 1
PAT N ... ,..
••1 ., .. • 121
•·• .... • 111 l2·3l ... 11 110 •·4' to-K • '°' .0-41 lf·:N .. '7
JS·J6 to-27 • '5
37·31 lS-" .s 12 25-27 lf·JO S2 12 22·23 10-21 • 12
G ·44 12·21 51 11
·---COIH'l••..c•
OicUnon, Ind. $1et1Mm,N.E.
AndlrMln, s,o.
WOOcb,Cln. Werner, SN.
•oiler, Hou.
McNeil, Jet• lroob,Cln.
Tl'lelmes, luff.
Wllllerm, S.. .
Toon, Jet•
CleV1on, Ml•. Hll, Hou.
ltMd,Butt.
SlllAlf. "''' v. Jotlmon, Din. PMl.K.C.
GIYIM, Hou.
•~.c11v.
JenMn,Mle. Wllllems, See.
............
Aft C.. Ya TD 111t • mun• 14 221 ,,. 17•1 • I 294 ,.. ., v I
2" 116-. 7 ==, ... ft 2j --• 17 4'4 DI N 1'
... "" 17 " m ,. 1 12 ......... Aft -2'7
215
203
266 2S1 21'
112
207
l .. . .._..
YaA¥9 &.•TD
"" u 41 14 ".. >-• S2 4 111' u J6 ,
11'6 5.l 56 IS
10'15 3.9 " 10 1002 4.0 11 10
... 0 • ' '31 S.1 51 I •1 u 37 2 in u .. 4
NO YaA119 LGTD n 1067 11.5 •2 5
" 112' 13. 1 ., 14 n 1141 IU 57 10
71 '61 lU '5 6
70 I05 11.S •2 5
" ... 13.2 .. s " 902 10 .. 7 '° ,,. IU .. 5 5'S7'U 3'2
• '52 11.2 ll 5
• 651 11.2 75 l
Norwood, Bulf.
Alldll'son, Pill . ~I, Inch•
Z........Hou. LMflY.~ N.JotlMon, SN.
Kerllt, Deft.
Selv,Cllv. Lowery, K.C. ....,,....,.
.....
T111:t1• WA TD••llec ... Pll
15 I• 1 • " 15 15 • • "
Klc:*e
14 I 6 I 14
14 0 '4 ... .J• 12 I 1 ..
12 • 3 1 n n1021n
111010'6
101001•
10 I " ...
PAT N LePll
33·33 Jt·31 .. "' M·35 •>t SI 111 •• &JI SJ 1'4
•• 12·J4 SI 11• G ·G D-• •tit .,, •• fl 115
3'-J7 D-11 SI I05
32-JJ 24-2' fl .. n-n 21-• 51 * ,, ..•.. "
IOCCIR ..... ldlell....,.
SIMI VALLIY T'OUmNA _ _,.
0....... .. ,_ "*' 0 (~---~-.. .. 2> Oxnard eoelll M-: Cllevn 7.
FOY!lleln VellY eoelle Mllft: ......., 3,
TllOme• 1. , ...... v-. ... -e;.,,..., ....
ome say
entertaining
is an an. But
anyone can
entertain
dbtlessly with a siq>le, yet
elegam menu that ttqUires lit-
tle advance preparation and
only a few last-min* ddails.
,-Th~s holiday ~eason,
pronuse to entertam more
frequently-and with greater
case -by stJeamlinq )'OW'
party plans and serving a few
carefully chosen recipes.
A beef roast is always a
good choice fOr eneer1aining.
Almost ew:l)'OIJC enjoys the
tlawr d a roast, wlooce it is
OYen--ready, ~ is little i>r
the cook to do. A beef nb eye
mist, rubbed with a blend d
garlic and herbs, and cooked
the WltJ you like it, is espe-
cially testive. Serve the beef
with an easy, flavorful
Madeira sauce and golden
O\ICD-roaBI pocmoes. The
sauce can be rrepared while
the roast stands fbr carving,
and the partially cooked
potatoes brown right along-
side the roast.
Crumb-mpped ~
an euy party dish n:._
sons. The rich, nutty ftawr d
toasted almonds, combined
with Parmesan, dill and
lemon juice oomplernents the
thic~ juicy tips and sam d
Michigan asparagus. The
canned or frozen asparagus
takes only minutes to cook
and is nice to NM on hand
for spur-of-the-moment
entenaining.
For dessert, serve Cherry
Cheese llut, an impressive
finale that is ~y sirn-
plek>~ The rich crumb
crust is accea• with crunchy
toasted almonds and a hint d
cinnamon. The sparkling
Cherry Cheese Tart
1-1/3 cupl flour .
1/4 cap .... browD ......
1/4111 .. -....... •' -l /3 cap ...........
l/lcap.,,..,_.ed
b_.,.,ltrll
1 ...... (1 .... )
~dl1r11, IUfteued
1/2 cap µ::dutd ....
1/2 trn..-IP'*d--.peel 1" t ~ .............
1 a.llh1•11• klrKla or
". llllcond ....... 2 tr ••a-corwtadl
l can en omcet) wt dlll'ry
pie ....
~ IWI If 111 rd wllilpped
~,lfd I ed
Pref.-""1ell IO 3'0°P. Combine flour, brown supr llld cirnmon in llnl1l
bowl. Wilh .-ry blender or 2 knives, .cut in buDea: umil mix~ resembles
COl'DIMll. Slir 6 lllbklpOOftl llmonds ao flour nuaure. Preas .., boaJm
r18-1 /2-iDch 1p1 illlbm pm. 8Ue 20 IO 25 milMel or until aoidat bran;
cool. -..-her cram cheae, pOllll1dered ...... CJr1111e peel IDd llmond
mnc1iD ... bowl;1e181ide. Blead liqueur wl con Well uiml dmol¥ed
in medillln ...apm; ldr in 11rt cherry pie fiDU.. ._ dlerry mhlln to
a boil <Mir .......... ...,.. unlil flicbN d. Cool~· Splmda.n
dw miauemttoprlcooled CNll; topwidtct.n, ~ Sp!Mle wtlh
remainias chopped almoada; c:hlll. 'lb terW:. cut °*'1Cheele1Ut -wcfaea wl 10p wtdl whipped cram, if desired . ...._I ~inp.
topping combines ready-to-
use tart cherry pie filling with
kirsch or a favorite fruit
liqueur. Orange peel and
almond extract flavor the
.-
ere.am cheese filling. For a
relaxed party day, the dessert
can be made a day in advance.
To round out the menu,
select a seasonal salad, such
.MENU
Tossed RontaiM willa ~
&ef Rib E.,e Roast MoiM Madeira~
O\'tfl &ast«l "'--*
A.tparogw >Mda AMontl 1'lmw.mn Crwmb.t*
Bakery RolU """..,.
<Mrry Clttt# ..,.
CilftJmOft Ct#«
Asparagus ~ith
Almond Rrmesan Crumbs
3 ... ,. '· -batter, dbkled l/2~,,..--c, ...
1 ... ....., h cec'
1/2 ....... -weed 1/2 alp .... .....
oh•*• 1111eed
l /4mp..W~
dleae
J ~ ( .... 15...aNCll)
Mli ......... .....
aJll .. ..... ...................
)lb
Mell 2 ••11poom ~in fryU. pm (Mr medium hat. Slir in bltlld
ea ,_ lllllic ..a dill weed: cook Ind llir u1i1i1a•lbl11oe acJldea tnwa.
..._.; hm 9-; lcit in lhnondl Ind PW11J 11 U cbeae. Sel l1i*. Cook
................ ;drlin. 'lbll ................... juict
to~~. Spooa ............ , .. dilh-9.,......, wilh mmm ...... ....,._.maw. M.-1.-villp. "
~--(IMl2wwA>~Mic'"a ...,. ... cwlllllltipa
-.t.rA 1111 fti-'--'M"''a .... I
as Tossed Romaine with
Vinaigrette, pick up some
rolls from the bakery and
embellish the after-dinner
coffee with cinnamon.
Now wasn't that eaIJY? This
winier, have fun-and enlel'-
tain ~y, anfuDy and .
TIMETABLE
The day hebe the party
• Prepare Cbeny CtalC
'Jart.
•Prepare Almond Par-
mesan Crumbs for
Aspmagus.
-•-setdJe-11bte.....-liiillid~01-pnme.-iiio--
tbe serving dishes.
• Pwdme a cemerpieoe
and/ or UIC bolidlly can-
dles and pine boughs.
The day d the party
• Pick up rolls mm the
b*ry.
• Clean leultee iJr s.a.d
and pn:p8l'C vinaip:ae.
• Chop shallots and mell-
u re ingredients for
Madeira Sauce.
• Prepare the prtic-herb
rnix1we aod rub CYmly
OYCf roast. Refrigel'lle
until ready to start
~·
• Peel pocatoes; micro-
wwe. drain llld cool ....
ready to oil and place
a.round l'08lt.
• Put )00.I' iJet up and relax
a~ rnilmles hebe your
guests arri\e.
Beef Rib Eye Roast
with Madeira Sauce
and Oven Roasted Potatoes
l ckwes prtic. mlnc:ed
l tempooasalt
l ldlpooa ,_,, cncbd
bl8clr. pqlpel' .... dried
dtyme lelrftS
l /2 taspoon drted wnc-1mws ._,.,_... bell,. 1,-e .,,...
8 me.11-....... peeled
MdmlllMlf 0 1n ly
J / 4 cup Wiiier
J tablr1paw ,.1dl1 ..
1 /4cupflMly~
9'n'IAI
Jcup9'1111em ctlt ..., .......
l/l cap Ma1lllta wt..
I a.Ill pD09tu ,, ... ......... , .......
W f I di Press= salt~ with a French kni~ IO brm a pasee. Cwtllilw
paste w ' r. thyme and aarnaon: rub CYCnly (Mel' surfKc rlbslf ..
eye roast. P\ace rout. fll side up. on nck in open l'OlllCiftl pm.~ -
thennomder to bulb is '**'ed in cbe lbicll:esl plrt bat nae .__ • II.
Do noc add Wiier. Do DOC COl'ler. Rt.st in J'°°F ""1ell ID ........ "
doncnieu. Allow lpprolimnldy 18 10 2, maw per ,.,..t. H wt 7 ,
• place pocMOcs and waler in 2-quan. ~-cnrmole. C0111Ji' _.
microMYe on HIGH power. ~ID 16 minutes. unril ............. I& 6 u. after 8 nm..s. Dnin. Brulh pol1lklCS wilh oil; add., ......... ......
lall3SID40~<-l~time. ~~----• •ecilten W9F b ~; 155-P b medi l; IM-W: b _. ..._ A I
pc-. ........... Alow w to -.115., JO . 11 .. .
pl8Ce ..... ~ ..... 0 1' ., rile ... " ..... ..
10 reach M09f b 191e; ..., lw •t fi : l'JrP ........ --•-sauce. skim .. f'nn 11 di&...-.,: Adi ' P 1 : ..... ...
llelll2to3ml1 •• SdrlwiL0AlaldUr I l11t• MC a.-
111..-jllica ...... .,.. dilnalwd. /ltM-.-; ...
lncflMI ....... , I 'f-.; -· Cl ''51-..... la--• 3/4aap.Slrww.__,.... Gar ,._.. ..... _...,
if ........... )14 a.p-. :r.::. ----
• •
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C2 Or11n99 Co.t DAILY PILOT/ Wedneeday, o.c.nw 21, 1911
.. •
.Messy world.of hors d 'oeu es b.ard to IJaa
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~Ne••le"9ee
SACRAMENTO-In the words
of one of the world's areat cooks.
how often does one meet a fresh and
unmessed hors d'oeuvre?
How often. indeed? To para-
phrase cook and a uthor Elizabeth
David, how often does one meet a
"ea ti• hand to mouth ... This larat
new food aroup. which the FDA
hasn't yet binned -but should -
includcs the following:
fresh and unmesscd person. these
days. after the hors d'oeuvres have
been served? Rarely. I suspect. For
this is the Age of the Stupid Hors
d'Oeuvrc. Toncllini on a stick: Even if you
Stupid hors d'otuvres make don't aaa on cold. oily pasta. which
millionaires of dry cleaners and this is. try eating these dangerous
aive ne~ meanina to the phrase ditties without dnpping oil on your
bololn or i..U .. your cheek with drink and on &be floor.
the Iona. ~ bamboo skewer. Mystery~ Most of thne Besides. they spin, and the oil fties. lanauilh on the bOn d'oeuvre Dlate
Shrirmt and OJl&en still in their unlCts aunts arc ravenous. They
shells: Tbete stinky. wet and un-include variously shaped dou&h
araceful items are auaranteed to and leaves. If the douah is mo. it
leave a lastina impression on the either shatten between your finaen
next pcnon wh0te hand ~ou shake. or jsso &ouah you can't bitethrou&h
""nm" for pa&es and other clelicacies, &hin is da..,ous. Wa&chi~ a dieln' &ry 10 ~ up a
paper.than slit'e of cucumber loeded
with deviled em or liver pate i1 not
a pretly siaht. In ftiaht from tray to
mouth, tile lmd q_uickly becomes
decoration for the front of a dress.
And they arc pan of a larger it. Once inside a mystery packaae, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~cat~ryweshallcall: ~u~K~«themystery~wpc~ Garbqe hors d'oeuvrcs: This hot, runny cheese.
As for raw v•tables. celery and
carrot1, arc fine, but broccoli,
cauliflower. peas Dods and beans
arc murder on the diptive system,
All it takes to make them diaestible.
and a more attractive color. is to
blanch them fint.
•ourr•e SP.!C• budund llWOfY '*"' includes chicken wings and Oversized hon d'oeuvrcs: For
combine wittl honey for• t1111 aplrilnce drumettes, spareribs and un-folks not 1oina on to dinner. theme
tt11t exists e111W • MwJllllM ... _. trimmed veaetables. Their remains arc areat. But they can leave a 1ues1
.._ • ,,_...~ ___ leave the hon d'oeuvre table look-holdina four more bites of some-
ina like hurricane Annie has just thin& lhat turned out not to taste as
passed by. good as it looked. Traditionally
And pity the poor host who hors d'ocuvrcs -as translated
provides cloth cocktail napkins and from the French, "extraneous items
then must unwrap them at night's outside the main works .. -have
encl. only to find sticky chicken bttn intended to merely whet the
bones and smelly shrimp shells. appetite, not feed body and soul.
Droopy. too-Iona asperaaus Therefore hon d'oeuvrcs should
wrappe<I with somethina slippery: come in practical bite-size pieces.
The somethina -ham or salami When 1hey don't. they belona on
that won't stay curled around its plates at the table.
host or a pesky piece of pimiento -Load lltd/or raw veeetables:
falls off if you aren't quack. While the concept is approved by
Polenta .. cups.. with dollops of the American Hean Association
.mushroom duxdle:. Poor polcnta-(and the Amerian Dry Cleaners' was never meant to be anything but Association), it can loose 10me-
mush. Tryina to make it hold thing in the transferance from hand
duxelle is too much for humble com to mouth. ,. ·
arits. The cups collapse in your They say you can never be too
hand and end upon yourtif'. in your thin, but an the case of veaetable
All &hcse make a case for revamp.
in& the cocktail hour, now that
Americans arc drinkina letl hard
liquor. And as drinkina the bard
stuff was one reason stand-up hors
d'oeuvrcs were added to the dinin1
ritual, it is time to consider aoina
blck to the days when hors
d'oeuvrcs were manapble. smaJI
bits unknown'° dry cleanen.
Let's hear it fbuim~. delicious.
spicy vatieda or Oliva. nuts,
str0na cheeses. and piquant pates
111eant to COH the ~ate before
dinner. In this * of fut food .
openin& a jar of olives or poppina
the tor on a can of nuts seems the
lotica thins to do. Hmmm ... remember cucumber
and cream cheese sandwiches?
Updated favorite convenient
"Fully coaUll n apiql lbd for my sar*'I .--:-
A holidly fMrite him you'I find elllW II,_ C-~
-~ ljgH(l~J!~~d-i!g[~
........... .....,.. ..... .., ...................... 1........ .,... __ ..__,.,__,, 1111111:
•MNt•CMeteorS1111wiOhrtJTt1J1••C1t•1111 •llll1 ........... '* ... ,. , ..... ,.,.. o.c H a..
Die 21-!3 I •AMII 7 00 ... Dec 28 IO 00 AM le UO PM ASIC AIOUT OUI UlllOUf COUPOI POUCYI Bring in Sfl/ imitm1 coupon fOf 1 Dec 24 1 ,. MA to 1 oo ,.. Dtc ?Mt io oo w 10 & oo PM
spirit sliced·gl1zed him end receive their COUllOfl NWinp lowlrd yOUr purdllle of our hem. NOH Die t• ~Dec n.1tore pllonn •'*" tuNy s111ttd
Av•ll•bl« •I then Honeyl.abd. 1to~1 (listed ~1.
ANAHllM ~ El TORO ~--u lrAllA
The Village Center 24601 Raymond Way •2 Sycamore Plaza
1222 So Brookhurst (Bell Tower P11z1 2428 W Whtttter Blvd 90631
92804 (al Ball Road) North at El fOfo Ao1d) 92630 (1 hght W ot Beach Blvd )
Phone (7t 4) 635·2461 Phone (714) 837·3822 Phone (213) 694-2114
CORONA DU MAii HUNTINGTDI IUCH OIAIMif
3700 E Coast Hwy 92625 19069 Be1ch Btwd 9~ 1419 N Tu.stJn
Phone (714) 673 9000 (Next to Ralphs Market at Gaff1eld) (at Katella) 92667
Phone (714) 848·8575 Ptlone (714) 997-9960
Hont•vB.11.t'd .md 0, dft' "'K•>ll'rt>d tr.c:lem.:trks oi the 11dfty I ~!Mr Tru~t
ruslli
13771 Newport Ave •13
(Tustin Plua) 92680
Phone t714\ 731-6616
• HONE~ED ...
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Harvest season brings a return of
heany favorites, like stuffed acorn
squash. In this savory and up-to-
date version, the difference is two-
fold -the fillina and cooking
method.
Created by the home economists
at the Kikkoman Kitchens, Boun-
tiful Stufl'ed Squash features a
nutritious fillina ~f around turkey,
sweet onion, crunchy red apple and
seedless raisins. coupled with the
speed of microwave cooking. In
fact, ii takes less than half the
normal preparation time .
There's also a difference in the
seasoning. Low sodium lite soy
sauce adds a snappy briskness that
unites the diveraent inare<fient$
into a deliCious filling that also
complements the nutty flavorofthi
acorn squash.
BOUNTIFUL
STUFFED SQUASH
l aeena ....-. eac• U..t 114 ........
~ e.,~1.,edoaioll
1 tabae.,1•1 ••etaMe .U ,.,.... ..... hlrkey
1 np flllely clloppe4ll i'ed eookiag
apple
1 taltlet•u• aJJ.,.rpose O•r
3 &ablelpeHI lo• IMJ•m lite .. , .. ..
•,4 e-. ...... nllbll
Cut squash iD balf lenathwi1e:
discard seeds and fiber. Price, cut
side down, in microwave-tafe bak-
ins dish; cover with plastic wnp.
Microwave on Hish 4 minutes:
tum squash over and rotate dish.
Microwave on Hiah 4 minutes, or
until squash is tender, yet firm.
Meanwhile, saute onion in hot
oil in large skillet over hi&h heat
until translucent. Add turkey and
apple; cook and ·stir over medium
heat about S minutes, or unlil
turkey is no lonaer pink. Sprinkle
trourevenlyovermeat mixture; stir
to blend.
Gradually stir in lite soy sauce:
cook and stir until sliahtly
thickened. Stir in raisins: remove
from heat. Fill each squash half
with equal amount of turkey mix-
ture. Cover loosely and microwave
on High I minute, or un&il fillina is
heated throuaJl. Makes 4 servings.
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BEFORE YOU BUY... · :
---
R E B u I L D • T H E
················································-······························································································· .
Huntington Beach Municipal Pier
L A N D M A R K
Late Gift Suggestion:
Looking For Something Meaningful And Unusual---And Chea p
For A Christmas Gift?
For S25 yo u can purchase a Grant Deed which
entitles you to honorary ownership of one
square foo t of the new Huntington Beach
Municipal Pier.
For SIOO youI wi ll receive membership in our
exclusive Century Club which entitles you to
have your name engraved on a bronze plaqucY
to be installed on the new pier, plus other
Century Club benefits.
Get Your Certificates at the City Public Information Offace
2000 Main Street, 536-SS I I
REBUILD THE LANDMARK
Count me tnl I am enclosing my check toward
building a new Hun11ng1on Beach Municipal Pier
and I II be ready 10 ro•n tn the celebra11on of 11s
!If And opon1ngl
0 M y check 11 enclosed 0 I prefer quer1erly b1ll1ng
My first check 11 enclosed
0 I prefer to pledge t __ over 1he neic1 three
yHrs My first check 11 enclosed
EncrosetJ s mv con1r1bu11on of I understend 1he1 mv contribu11on 1s 1ax
.:J S25 O t SO O 11 00 0 ,250 0 1500 deductible I em proud to 101n my friends and
,..., O neighbors 1n bu1ldtng e new Hun11ngt6o Beach ~SI 000 ssooo 0 510.000 0 '25.000 Munie1palP1er
•
RE BUILD THE LANOMAAI(
HUNTINGTON BEACH MUNICIPAL PIER
2000 M11n Strfft. Huntington leach CA 92648
1714) 536·5201
MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO '9ER RESTORATION
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PROPOSl'l10N 65, a new Callfomla law, requires that you be given
........ regarding poslible cancer or reproductive effects for
particular consumer proclads.
GET INFORMATION ABOUT
~mLE WARNIN~ REGARDING •••
•CANCER
• BIRTH DEFECTS
• AND OTHER REPRODUCTIVE HARM
FOR PARTICULAR BRANDS OF
CONSUMER PRODUCfS
'CAI,J, TOLL-FREE
1(800) 431-6565
IN CALIFORNIA
This free phone call Qets you clear and reasonable information about
particular products BEFORE )'OU buy them .
• Not all products pose risks.
• Not all producers are participating in this free phone service.
• Call if you have a question about cancer or reproductive harm from
chemicals which may be found in consumer products .
• We11 check the brand and type of product.
• We11 ~ you clear and reasonable information about products before
)'OU buy them.
Thil free call is a public service ci the
INGREDIENT COMMlJNICATION OOVNOL,.INC.
CALL BEFORE YOU BUY ~1(800) 431~
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Livingston CA.
has the ideal
weather and soil to
grow yams that are
sweeter and more
tender than other
growing are1S.
"~ '~
Lb .•
12 Pack
Pepsi or Slice
Rtg..lar or Dttt-12 Oull<'I' C.u11
litwit J.11 PadtJ
Vons Brown 'n
Serve Rolls
T 1Lu1, W'-1. fl.,Jry or S('>,lmt
1 l Cowu P.«l.'"+,'c" un;JI J P ... .tUJ,'O
279
.59 .... ,,
5 Lb. Bag \ 99 Del Monte 49 ~~~~z:,!?otatoes • Canned Corn
B.Jkr, Boo or ,..., Whok Kc-mt/ or Crr.un-16 Oz. C.n •
(CMI G'"" lNIW Rtr or Frmch S~-16 ()7 .49>
Jerseymaid ~69 d Jerseymaid 89 Whioping Cream ~Sour Cream
8 Ooma ~.artl)tl • 16 O..ritt C.trlOl'I •
(16 Own Cmon-1.19} (J2 0.-, Cmon-J.S9)
--MEAT/SEAFOOD-~ PRODUCE-
Prime Turkeys Graoefruit O
C,,J{"""4C;ou:n Lj, • Ju10anJ fl.teh111 Vti..mms R
10 to 11 Lb< Aur.r,cr Wt1t,ht BmJtfcr Eyr ~
Boneless Round or Rumo Roosts 229 ~~~eUed Walnuts 2 }!,500
L's.DA. CHOtaB«f '··n.. r,,,,.1£,,Ro.Jti..-1Jtu~"· Celery Hearts 89 &.?b1~l~~~~ ... ~~w L,,.209 Bi;~~~ Peas , P1t1 •89
Boneles.5 New Yock Sirloin Steaks 3 29 "o..n« r""1t• 0 Pit~ • u.s DA. CHOKIBref-W' n,,,. Trimmtd Lb. Sweet Anise 69
Fresh 11"2 of Iamb 2 49 Lcon..rFi.lwrW sm1s a .
U.SD A. ~Amtrl<"Jtl u . F l 1 all Sq h 49 Vons Whole Hog Sat&ge 1 69 .v[~~ .,S ~J uas LL
MtJ,.,,, or H"' '-"· l 8 9 Fresh ?.it's Pride Rmqjruz Chicken.5 99 arge
C.J/orrtMA c-1to7u.1tt;r.wr'li'+ u.. . Tomatoes t!,~el Cure 81 Hams L,,.3 49 R1""-'J--.-P<tfectJodbon1Lb. •
Frvirnz Chicken Drumettes 219 \'V'hole Peeled Carrots . 99 F~ or t°'roltn (Chodtm LMrS-.19 /.h.} U.. 8•""1 LJn-.1 Po-1" P-.lttqt P~t •
r~~estem Oysters £11.1 79 ~ J;_ed Pooltoes Plti • 99
Imitation Krab Meat Flakes 259 Fresh ucean Spray Crcll1benie 98
(Fmh Kr# Mtt1r S,J,,J-J.f>'J U,.) U.. I~ 0•"" P-*Ou; Pkt • f~~-~~ u.849 N~~n~~ Pock Bo,699
~~~_,LegandClaw L" 1299 Large
Artichokes
Bo.l..S'"6 HOl or ColJ
Almaden 3 F600 FROZEN Chamounc O · Pet RilZ Pie Shells 89 llWtctlt"'--.,JO M.... R lSW.f'tf,...,,_100.-Pidt• •
ts-1tt fAltJ Roman Meal Waftlcs } 19
100.-,. ... e Miller Beer 499 Bridgford 97 12 Pack RollS . H~ ~-G-.w DN(f ,,,,.,,, "-1-V a.. • IJ N~l .............. /20.rtft
' l ..
-~
Jerseymaid
EggNog
J2 ONna Carton
(64 0"'1'1a Carton 1.79)
.8
Laura Scudder's 99 £!>p~!,?B~~ApS • s"'" c-1L~n ro 1 o~ s..,
U.iJ 1 Pw Fa.uly.
1$ I ~Jerseymaid 2 f500 Ice Cream OR
AJJO<UJ FLA°" 00 F~
HJ/ CllUon-Rowrd Cmorr L, ........ ,.... .....
~~;~tBacon .99 . ~~f~3!,., ·,. 259
81~11{/.us filt.OTllt 5,...y [,Ju. J l9
-~R~ERY/BAKERY-Jt, DELI/DAIRY
Libby s 89 · Vons Mild 219 E..1!~~k!~. . • s~~,s~~~.
2900UXYC1111 Rq P.d--1.U O J
Ralston Chex Cereals 2 59 \"ons liced Meat Bologna 1 19
Com or Rxt-111 Ot.Nt Bot J! CR PJri Rq or n..rk J! OJ. Bttf'lYolo,;n.-119!
t9i Vons lv1i"<ed 'ut'> 2 79 Grudenia Whole r..lilk Ricotta 109 • 1!0--,Cn JSO.-,P~ 8 ~~tf""Dish":lShmg !Xtergt"m J 29 Gru-denia Mozzarella Oieese 209 16 O....a P.:Jucrr
Welch's ~in~ GrJ[)e Jutce 199 DJ11y fresh Smng Cheese 1 29 V;r rrc~M;. . 69 ~~:1~6~tP~a~ 1 89
a.w~!!~~-·~xers • r-.J..Jerse m .d f89 ~r-w-~ ~~t~r a1 ·~ ~ Del Monte Asp.1rJgtt' 1 87 -<-'...,.~ 9 JS o--t C.ot ._ 1 Po.Ni Pid.6
6 Pack Coke or Spnte 1 79 RrpLn or 0.,,./ ! o ..... t ( "''
CounuY Heuth PC\..~U1 Pies 299 8"S~ •
Counuv Hearth Donut-. J 59 E~:,~::: 69
SMWF~on • ,o-.,.p.n.., ___.._
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()qnge C0Me DAILY PILOT/ Wedneedey, December 21 , 1MI
Calif ornia.-style carbonara
cuts preparation, not taste
In Italy Pasta Carbonara means Made with all frnh, natural
houn ohhoppina and preparation. inpedienll such u lowfat milk,
In California Pasta Carbonara lakes grated Parmaan or dry Monterey
on a new meanina: li1ht, delicious Jack cheele, fresh parsley, and
and quick. butter, Puta Carbonara can be
With the help of modem science wholesome and satisfyin1 -yet
and fresh: California dairy proct.~ li_..t. Aftercrispina th~ bacon in the
ucts, a Creamy Quick Pasta ~1crowave and ~lun1 .the ~sta,
Carbonara recipe can be whipped simply ~nd all 1nared1ents 1n a
up in no time. Who would have bowl, microwave ana serve.
thousht in Milan, Italy, that such a How can Pasta Carbonara be
delicacy could be made in the lighter? Simple. This recir sets its
microwave. creamy texture from percent
CHRISTMASHOUASFOAALLSTORES
CHRISTMAS EVE; REGULAR OPENING
7:00 P.M. CLOSING
CHRISTMAS DAY; CLOSED
MON. DEC. 29th; REGULAR OPENING
8:00 P.M. CLOSING
FROfv1 THE STATER BROS FAMILY OF EMPLOYEES.
Butt-Half
Smoked Ham LB
GRADE A CAUFOANIA-GROVVN
ARMOUR STAR 1~/o NATURAL a .. or Tom
LB
FRESH
•
STATER BROS. WHITE OR WHEAT
llNWll fl Serve ASSORTED VARIETIES
Rolls
6112-0Z
Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites Garden Fresh Produce
Boneless Ham :.~FllUWAf£1UOO[O l8
5179 Vegetables ~. HO•~ 99'
Leg of Lamb ::ie~~~ LB
5229 Budget Gourmet !~OISHllS ST0$7$-0Z 69'
'Lil Butterball Turkey =::~ Ll gge Oh Boy! Potatoes 2VAA •HJl 89'
~sausage Roll =~ •9-0l
511' Petite Peas C•W '"°' 1139
Roasting Chickens ;:FAAMS L.99' Waffles ===IVTTff!MLIC .~99'
!
Western Oysters ~ 9-0l JAA
1189 Apple Juice 9'HfCA ,z,oz 7
Beef or Pork Chorizo CNMUTA ,.oz 79' Flavor Pops ~QA~"
Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials
Butter ~~ '"°' '1" Gallo Wine 1·VAMTil•
· Cream Cheese ~ "°' 89' ·Jack Daniels ~,
Sparkling Water~ •kfll gg. Crown Russe Vodka 119! Cup-0-Noodle .. -.. .... 49-Irish Cream ::::::.
107-01. SPtudtding SnaDc~S !'~~:oc"'no"~:!: Seagram's Gin lXTMOllY '"'1'1'9"
a er Bros. 1ps >VAii ,~ ~~., r--c;;=:-~
Cranberry Sauce :"~ ,M>l 49' Sour Cream :AllOH IM>l 79' c=;.
Libby 's Pumpkin ~ 83• Mushrooms :::re.. ~CNI es• •••
Coffee :::..CMOICf HO.OZ •51• Tillamook Cheese .VAii ~ •1 11 8 A:
Laundry Detergent :-......... .S1 79 La Paz Mix .--.. ~'1 41 ."!,,,,,_
Firelogs = ~kl 1141
Peanuts ~ # ,M)Z '249
Marshmallows :"'~Oii--,M)Z 1r
Chocolate Morsels =.n
Oran e Juice =="'MD
(i'1 .,,..._ .....................
•
lowfat . milk, makina it liahter in
flavor and lower in caloriet. As a
result, this dish will satisfy and ~every member of the family.
So brina a little Italy into your
home in minutes. Now Creamy
Pasta Carbonara can be made rich
and deliclous without breakina
your diet.
CREAMY QUICS
PASTA CARBONARA
~ .............
I~ e8fl lnfa& mUll I~ ........... eerm&ard ·~ ""' ,......, ..... ..., M•&erey Jas or p.,.....
clleele '* .. '4 .... ,... red ....... .nues ·a.auae
.,. .. 14 ......... ,...., .......
ltlaek...,.r .. aute
............. (,refenllly
fresla), e9Nel
I &ab ........ IMIUer ·.
I wllele 9111 pl•• I ea yolb,
~ CllP ~ ,,.. ,anleJ
Line microwave-proof pan with
3 layen paper towels. Arrange
bacon slices flat on towels; cover 11
with 3 more layers paper towels.
Microwave on hilh · S to 61h
minutes, or until crisp. Set aside to
cool. Cook linauine accordin1 to
pac~ directions.
Whisk together milk and com·
starch in 2 or J..quan microwave
bowl or casserole. Cover and
microwave on high for 4 minutes.
Meanwhile, crumble bacon. Stir in
1 'h cups cheese, pepper flakes,
black pepper, linguine. butter and
bacon.
Microwave, uncovered, on hiah
for about 4 minutes. Remove from
oven and stir in eas and panley.
Serve immediately. Makes 4 to 6
servings. ·
State ports
worthy of a
capitalP--~
By Mil.E DUNNE
lllQllf ...........
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OrMge CoMt DAILY PILOT /Wedneld8y, DeoernNr 21, 1-cJ
•
Microwave oven: An indispensable applianc
CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) -More Def'.lt ud fresh and frozen vea-wavable foods for all qe aroups. mates 400 microwave products -cooluna recipes. IJina codes to deurmine coc*llr-.
than 20 years aao. the first counter· eta~ are the products most often The institute has compiled the 1,200 if you include line extensions Oven features to watch for: tame. Thia technoloSY i1 avai
top. microwave ovens became uted in the microwave. followina information on micro--are introduced in American -Senson: These devices are now in the United States and J
available to American con1umen. Consumers like to reheat takeout wave cookina in America: supermarkets each year. desianed to help make microwave For the microwave user
Today, nearly three out of fo&&r food in the microwave. The CMI -The microwave is no lonaer a -New microwave product coo[ina easier by indicatina when cooks from tcr1tcb, here are a
homes1ntheUnitedState1baveat study says nine out of 10 micro-luxury item. The microwave is emphasistendstofallinthescareas: food is done. Linon Industries' ncwdevelopments:
!cast one microwave oven, accord-waveoWMnrehcat takeout food in found in 7S percent of U.S. homes, kids' food, includina pasta. pazza ovens now have a popcorn sensor -Micro-dome is a pint-si
ma to the Campbell Microwave the microwave. and it is predicted the percentqe and other safe-to-prepare snacks. that '"listens .. to the com. When tbe canner to preterVe fresh produce i
Institute. Almost one out of I 0 U.S. Pizza, hamburaers. fried chicken wiJI increase to 80 percent by 1990. lunches and side dishes; hiah· poppina stops. the oven automati-l 0 to l S minutes.
households has at least two. and Chinese food are the most -Accordin.1 to "Inside Ameri~ quality adult food, like cheesecake cany tum& off. Several models by -Baken Mate is wat'"'"'nVll•
"Now with more than half of all popular takeout selections, accord· ca" by Lewis Harris, by the and brownie dessens, frozen break-the Sharp Corp. have a humidity paper used like plastic wrap, ~DI
women workina, families are be-an110 the study. And a surprisina 20 mid-l 980s, microwave products fasts and snacks such as French sensor for easy preparation of a does not need ventina. Baken Ma
comina more self~ufficient," says percent of all takeout foods re-were the sixth most frequently bread pizza. variety of foods ranaina from is made in Norway and is now bei
Bill Piszek, the Microwave In-heated in the microwave comes purchased products in the super-Accordinatothcexperts,ifyou're potatoes to cream or clear soup. distributed in Canada.
stitute's marketina research man-from supermarkets. market. shoppina for a microwave, choose -Scanners: More microwave -A crispma. browning paper i
ager. "Everyone in the household As for snacks, popcorn and pizza -Bob Schiffmann, a food and one with at least 600 watts and ovens will have the ability to scan soon to be tested in four U.S
now is usina the microwave oven at remain the most popular micro-microwave oven consultant, esti· several power levels if you'll be recipes or special product pack· markets by EZ Por.
differenttimesofthedayandfor ...---~~----~------------------------------------------------------------------------------~----------------------~~-different meals -makina the
microwave an indispensable ap-
pliance."
Accordina to a study conducted
by Piszek. children as young as 6
years of aae are usina the micro-
w.aye with their parents' super-
v1s1on.
The study says children between
the ages of 6 and 12 use the
microwave most often for lunch
-and snacks. Teen-agcrrusrit an
average of three times a day. mostly
for lunch. favorite foods prepared
by the youngsters are pizza and
popcorn, with frozen dinners and
SOll_p frequently by teens.
The CMI study also shows that
older adults are overcoming their
resistance to the microwave. Three
out of four of the consumers
surveyed aged SS and older now use
the microwave.
What accounts for the micro-
wave's pol?ularity?
Convenience is one factor. Microwave-read~ items, such as
popcorn, frozen entrecs and din·
Warning
issued on
uncorking
Attention champagne con-
sumers.
The management at Cook's
Champa_Jne Cellars believes that
Cook's Champagne, w 1c recently
converted from plastic to natural
cork closures, may be reaching
many consumers who are not aware
that a corkscrew should never be
used to open a champagne bottle.
The winery has recently learned
of several incidents in which con·
sumers have improperly attempted
10 remove the natural corks from
Cook's Champaane with a cor·
kscrew, corkpuller or other foreign
object.
In these instances. the cork was
broken off by ..failure to twist the
cork out propelly. Subsequent use
of a corkscrew to remove the cork
from the champagne bottle caused
the bottle to break.
To open a champagn~ . bottle
safely and prevent senous mJury to
eyes or hands:
l) Only open a champagn~ bottle
that has been chilled well. DO NOT
attempt to open a warm bottle.
2) DO NOT shake the bottle.
3) Point the bottle away from
yourself and others while opening.
Flying champagne corks can cause
serious injury.
4) Carefully remove the wire
hood.
S) UsinJ a towel, securely grasp
the cork with one hand and twist the
bonle with the other hand. While
twisting, pull the cork out of the
bottle.
6) DO NOT attempt to wiggle or
rock the cork out. This can cause the
cork to break off.
7) NEVER USE A COR-
KSCREW, corkpuller or other
foreign object to remove a cham-
pagne cork as this can cause the
bottle to break. If a customer cannot remove the
cork by following these instruc·
tions, he or she should return the
unopened bottle to the place of
purchase for exchanae or refund.
Dressing's
quick, tasty
Better a..et ud Ganlem
Two bottled dressings plus the
marinade from anichoke heans
make the quick dressing for this
elcpnt salad.
STAI••• 81 ...... AST
lMGE END '8. 2.69
U.S.D.A. Choke IMf I 69 CLOD ROAST ............................. LB. •
I
Semi·SWNI 12·0%. .
NESTLE MORSELS ........................... 1.79
I .... .•.
CHOICE ••m1:1• .. AST
IEff' Rll 4 89 112 OR WHOLE '8. •
LB. .....
KIC DU.CO•
1-ll
PKG. M. 1.79
FRI• PACIFIC OYSTBIS 1~ •..••. EA.2.09
~7-ult,
llC•A&W
REG OR Dt£T 89 • B·Oz. lnstont Coffee
TASTER'S CHOICE ............................ .
·---CllACKas
SMALL BOX
VARIETIES 1.17
G1ont 2·lb. Bog
MISSION TORTILLA STRIPS ...•••••. l.M
AYIL OllANCllS
·t GREAT STOCKING STUFFER$
~$
s
long Green • 'I 12·0unc• Troy CRISP CUCUMBERS ........................ -STRAWBERRIES ....... . ... EA.aA9 Solod Size
TOMATOES l B A9
I r·---. ·--r----~_)
...... __ ,_J._ ___ --~-•_.... ... _ _I..'-·--
L
HU(M41S c;lllA~ Q4llSI
eoz •• ~10H • _J 8-0Z
TUBE
16-0unce Can
CITRUS Hill ORANGE JUICE.. ....................... 1.79 Donolo 12.cn. Assorted
DELI STYLE MEATS..... ... . . .......................... 2.M
Jon Oonolfe 26 To 30-0unce
CHEESE OR MOUSSE CAKE .......................... ~ ... 9 1 S·OI Cor1on
GARDENIA RICOTI A CHEESE
u
.... ···-· ....,_.. .. ..........
2~.s
OUNCE 1.09
1-0unce Dried Mu~• " MIVAKO SHllT AKE . . . . .. .......... I •
l .S.Ounc• 79 SHIRAKIKU BAMBOO TIPS .............. .
2 ....... . ...... ··~·
EXTRA
FANCY a.as
............. 1.19
750-MI
CAllADIAll a.••
750ML 6 99 •
J & I SCOTCH .................... le.M
I ?$.liter
SMIRNOFF VODKA ................... le.M
A • ••••• t \ GIA••Dl•IAY
6.99 150 Ml.
I •t• ••••• ft! IOY
TURKEY
STORE '8. 1.89
L I
Wilson Tende< Cuts .. PORK lOtN CHOPS. .. ............. ,.LI. a.
..........
•OTATO c111r•'
TWIN PAO<
ASSOltTH> .79
6.t-Oz Oceon Spf-oy Cron. Or Gropefrult
JUICE COCKTAILS . ... . ....... 1.89
Orange Ca.t DAtL Y PILOT I Wedlteld9y. December 21, 1MI
Reinsurance agency proposed to oversee thrift cleanup
WASHINGTON (AP) -Federal
reaulaton are proposinc the creation
of a new qency. possibly drawina
money from bank&, credit unions and
11vinp institutjons, to oversee the
cleanup of the money-losina savinp
and loen indust~.
The federal Home Loan Bank
Boerd, which reaulates the nation's
3,000 S&Ls, on Monday sent the
broad outUnes of the proPOSal to the
Treasury Ocputment, which is for-mulatj~ the incomina Bush admin-
istration s plans for dealinJ with
hundreds ofinsolvent savings institu-
lions. •ncy spoknman Karl Hoyle
said.
Bank Board Chairman M. Danny
Wall, in a speech to the National
Housina Conference, proposed what
he ~lea a "reinsurance •ncy" for
all federally insured financial institu-
tions.·
On an unrelated topic, Wall also
said the blnk board is ofTerina to
make foreclosed properties from fail-
ed savinas institutions available to
house the homeless in a half dozen
cities.
The bank board's insurance fund.
,,. ,,
the Federal Slvinp and Loan In·
1urance Corp., has been peyina for a
record numbtr of SAL racues this
year primarily throuah promissory
noies pledaina future income from an
1;15CUment on still-operatina in1titu·
t1on1.
Wall ha1111u.ed previoush' that the
fees peid by Sills to the FSLIC, as
well as by blnks and credit unions to
separate insurance funds. were meant
to cover a "normal" level of failures.
not the "cawtrophic" level of the
current thrift crisis.
Throuah Monday, reaulaton said
Economy
arowsat
2.5% ace
in quarter
Terry Beud, ~t of l'f-:: lllke BebMlortr, Ylce
premdeat of adftrtlalD.f for -COia and Doll Wet.,
encatift cllrector of tile lrFL try on 3-D ,i ......
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
economy expanded at a moderate 2.S
percent pace during the July-Septem-
ber quarter, the aovemment reported
Tuesday. but analysts said arowth
was rebounding and "the Federal
Reserve Board probably will nudae
interest raies hilher as a result.
The Commerce Department said
growth of the gross nahonal product.
the broadest measure of economic
health, slowed during -the third quar-
ter from 3.0 percent in the 2nd quarter
and 3.4 percent in the first three
months of the year. Super Bowl halftime
show, ad to be·in 3-D The GNP, after adjustina for
inflation, rose $24.2 billion to an
annual rate of $4.01 trillion in the
third quarter.
By SKIP WOLLENBERG ,., ............
NEW YORK -Coca-Cola Co. has
been stuck with 20 million pairs of 3-
0 glasses ever since an episode of
"Moonlighting" was nixed last sprina
by the writers' strike. The company
says it just found a super way to use
them.
The soft drink giant, the National
Football League and NBC announced
Monday they would cooperate in a
threc-chmcnsional broadeasl-of the
12-minute Super Bowl XXlll half-
time show and a 45-sccond.Diet Coke
ad next month.
The Atlanta-based comJ?8ny said
its bottlers would distnbute the
special glasses with purchases of Diet
Coke in the two weeks before the Jan.
22 contest for the NFL cham-
pionship.
Coca-Cola ordered the aJasses
earlier this year after agreeing with the
"Moonlighting" producers that a
commercial and a portion of the fi nal
show of the 198 7 -88 season would be
shot with the new 3-0 technology.
But the episode was canceled after
the writers went on strike and the
Coca-Cola commercial never was
made. Production of the glasses was
halted at 20 million and they were
stored while Coca-Cola looked for The GNP fiaure for the third
other TV showcases. quarter, the slowest expansion pace
Network executives wd the half· since the final quarter of 1986, was a
time program would be the first live slight downward revision from a
3-0 broadcast on network television. preliminary estimate of 2.6 percent
and would continue NBC's tradition issued a month ago. Most economists
of innovation in football coverqc. bad been lookina for a sliaht upward
NBC broadcast a .. silent minute" to adiustment.
give viewers a break from the Super The trend should~ good news for
Bowl pre-game show in 1986 and Federal Reserve pohcy makers who
aired an entire reaular season game want to curb economic growth to a
with no announocn a few years ago. ran~ of 2 pe~nt t~ 2.S ~rcent,
Viewers will need the aJasses to act w~1cb ~ey beJ1e~ 1s sustainable
the-3-D effect. but a ncW1Rhno1ogy~oun11aftsina inflauon. .
called Nuoptix 3-0, developed by However, the government Slld the
Terry Beard, founder and bead of the temporary ~ffects .of the summer
Los-Angeles-based Nuoptix As-drouaht, which shoveled. crops and
sociates Inc .. leaves the picture nor· scared pastures, are mask~ng the true
mar for olhen. · st.rength of the economy in the final
The patented process avoids the nine months of the year. . .
distortion or double-imqing of the Drouaht losses of S 12.3 b1lhon
picture that the 3-0 pr~ of the reduced" the G~P ~wth rate by 0.9
1950s caused for those without percentage points 1n th.e ~ond
special glasses. q~rter, O.S ~n:cntage points 1n the
Not content to let a volley sound in third and will knock more than 1.0
the cola wars without respondina, percent off of fourth quarter rate.
Pepsi~Cola Co. announced separately The growth rate in the final three
Monday that its Diet Pepsi brand has months of this year, excluding the
aarecd to be the official sponsor of effects of the drought, will top 3
N'"BCs NFL player talent show to be percent., most economists believe. In
broadcast before the big game. The the first half of next year, assumina a
talent show will match NFL players return to normal farm production.
in oompetition as singers, dancers the economy will be expanding at a
and comedians. rate between 3 percent and 4 percent.
i 1iilliiliM5111r------------------
. ~--·--········-·· In 1?89, youarehkelytobeoneo!milllonsof CALL· 714_641 .. 7737 Americans over 64 years old who will pay a . •
surtaxundertheMedicareCatastophic I FOR THIS SPECIAL REPORT.
Coverace Act. I Or write;
How wlll the new Medicare supplemental 1 SHEARSON LEHMAN HUTTON
premium affect your pocketbook? Can you 650 TOWN CENTER DRIVE
afford a Federal surt.a~ up to S 1,600 more than 1 COST A MESA, CA 92626
your expected tax bill. O Please wnd me• copy of She1rson Lehm•n Hutton's
Get the answers now In Shearson Lehman I SJ>ecl•I Report. "C .. ntrophk Health care. A
Hutton's Special Report, "Catastrophic Health C.t•strophlcTu lncreue?"
Care: A Catastrophic Tax Increase?" Find out
SHFAR&>N
LEHMAN
HUITON
how the new surtax 1 NAME !Please prlntl
affects you. And what
you c.n do to mlnimtze ... A ... OOR-.. ES-s-------------
its bite.
, To rec;elve your free
CoPY· call
Cllf SIAIE ZIP
c,;;_;._ ______ or return t~ coupon.
lklSINESS PHONE HOME PHONE
MANCA LOCAYION NAMt Of hNAM:IAL twtM'f ··-----------.......,IK., ....... ~ ..... -
..
they have molved the cases of I S9
in.olvent thrifts this yar. More than
400 insolvent SALi remain open and
hundreds of others are close to
insolvency.
The reinsurance qency would
oversee three insurance funds -for
banks, SclLs and credit unions. It
could collect premiums from all
three, spendina them when one of the
funds aot in trouble. It also could
ser\'e u the mechanism for further
borrowina to pa)'. for the thrift crisis or
11 the conduit for any money Con-aress wanted to spend on the cleanup.
Bank. boerd member Lawrence
White, in an interview, said the ~·aves open who will pey for the Sell deanup and whether a new
aeency's expenditures would be
counted toward the budFt deficit.
"I don't think it is intended to be a
back door way of ,euina them (t,.nks
and credit unions) to pey for the FSLIC's current problems:· White
said. "The concept is both 1 fundina
mechanism and 1 forward looking
means of dealina with catastrophic
oosts" in the future.
Meanwhile, The New York Times
repc;>rted that the R~ . .clminis-
U'ltion, in its 1990 _ DUC1fH, will
acknowledee for the first tame that
some tax~yer money mutt be spent
on the thrift industry problem.
An admin11trat1on source, wh0,
declined to be named. told The
Associated Press that the Treasury
Department estimates the coat of
restorina the thrift industry \0 health
at $60 btllion to$7S billion if interest
rates remain unchantied and 11 hip
as SIOS billion ii interest raies
increase by two percentaae. points.
(
NY SE CllMPQ)IH T RAt.SALTlONS
' ---
Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Weclneeday, Deoemw 21. ;1W * CT
RDNl8DAY'8 CLOl•G P-8
NEW YORK IAPl DK. 21
1 ~l
AMEX L E~OERS
GoLo Quon s
-,
META LS Quons
OTC UP s & DowNs
NASDA Q S 0~~~R ·
NYS E UPs & Do~~~
\
"'
C8 Orange COMt DAILY PILOT/ W~ay. December 21, 1918
Spyglass Hill Philharmonic
Committee stays in tune·
ByVlDA DEAN
The chorale singers in Orange
County bad better stay on their toes
and sing pretty. TheS{>yglass Hill
Philharmonic Committee members
arc humminaalona riaht in tune.
"You should start your own
chorus," Laara Friel told the women
last week at a holiday luncheon at
Five Crowns restaurant in Corona del
Mar.
Fries was there with three other
Clarendon Carolers to present a
programofholidaymusic. Wordsto
favorite carols were distributed and
everyonc),oined in on "Joy to the
World.'" Silent Night", etc.
Close to 60 members and guests of
the committee attended the luncheon
and had their choice of a soosedinncr
or the house specialty, pnmerib. The
restaurant is ope of the group's
favorite and they have returned year
after year to enjoy the English-style
place and its abundance of traditional
Christmas decorations in every
room.
Amons those there were Spyglass'
first president Tndy Ra1ma1sea, the
current president Barbara Sudenoa
i\nd Mary Forte who fQunded the
Orange County Philharmonic Society
•:ommittee in 1973.
Others were Martlaa Greem. Jackie
Lokb, Pat Stayaer, Ca .. y Udall and
her sister Houy FredeulMarc. Crystal
Sdar,NucyHIU,LylliaMeCnskey,
By CHARLES GOREN
ud OMAR SHARIF
Both vulnerable. West deals.
NORTH
+ Vold
i?Ql65
·, A IC 10 9 7 4 3
+AQ
WEST EAST + A K J 9 3 + Q 10 6 S 2
~ J 10 2 ~ K s \ 6 2
+K8 72 +J10643
OUTH
+ I 7 4
~ A9743
Q J 8
• 9 s
The bidding:
West North East outb
1 + Dbl 4 + Pass
Pass Dbl Pa s 6 v
................. "-......
LoDJltlne memben Jackie Lokka ~Ye left). Pat lltaper,
Tnaayllafmueen and Mary Porte. ow, PremdeatllUbara
Sandenon, Joyce••--• alld Jlella JerealM ... ,,..tree.
Pllyllil Me,er, Carol Wlllea, Pat
JHea, Marpret Clark, Marte De-
Pass Pus Dbl 'us
Pass Pass .
Opening lead: King of +
In the best of all possible worlds,
you would be rewarded for your
good deeds and punished for your
crimes. In reaJ life, unfortunately,
that is-not always-the--casc.
When North could force his part-
ner to bid at the five-level vulnera-
ble with his repeat takeout double,
South judged that his car<h would
a1J be working, so he leaped to six
hearts. East's did not have a double
of seven hearts, let alone six. How-
ever. his action had strange repre-
cussions in thr nll'lv
West led the king of spades,
ruffed in dummy. Declarer could
think of no reason for East's double
ocher than a trump stack. In order
co bold his trump losers to two
should East have started with all
maid. BelpJeremtu and Jeyce
Reaame.
four trumps, declarer cJected to lead
the queen at trick two. That also
offered a chance to make the con-
tract should West have a sinaJeton
jack or ten.
West covered perforce, and de-
clarer _woiuhc....ice...-:rb-e-wu still
one chailrce for the contract-that
trumps were 2-2-so declarer Jed a
trump. West was able' to take two
crump tricks and two spades for
down three-800 points out of thin
air.
Had there been no double, declar-
er would have made the contract
easily. The normal way to play the
trump 1uit is to c:ub the ace .. tbat
lead toward tho: queen. Since the
king wouJd have dropped, declarer
would have had no trouble in hold-
ing his trump losers to only one, so
he would have romped home with
TV l °i
Complete t•vlalon lletlnp In Sunct.r'• TV Piiot
T-he first1-smoke-fi-J1ed room '
An Associated Press reporter
named Kirk Simpson covered the
1920 Republican Convention wherc
Warren Hardina was nominated. The
behind-the-scene decision was made
in what SimP.50n called a "smokc-
fillcd room. • Hardly spectacular
phrasinJ. Shows no special literary
skill. But it stuck. It's now in
dictionaries.
You've read that fish in polar
waten have antifreeze in their blood.
It's known ice cream companies want
to add that thing to their confections
to aet rid of the crystals. They've been
conductint scientific research on
those fish. Cuttina them up. Insofar as
I know, there has been no movement
to stop them.
Q . What was the point of the hoop
skirt?
A. It was invented to conceal the
prcgn~ncy of the French Empress
Eugemc.
Some fancy words make sense
when you brc&k them down to what
they reall y mean. Take
··cephalapods." That's the scientific
name for the octopus and &quid.
Means nothing more than ••head ari
feet."
Q. Wasn't it once qainst the law td
JO lO church without a JUD?
A. Indeed. Jn several l 7th<entury
American colonies.
··is there a pammatically cOrTCCt
sentence ~nning with the word
'Us'?"' That s what I asked. Oicnl
replies: ··'Us' cannot be uled aram-
matically as a subject of a sentence.
But I just did it." Qivcontract.
__ P_L_A_N_N_l_N_G_A_P_A----RT_.....:Y_? __ F I di t d t ta t j
FOR SOME Of THE BEST VALU~S IN TOWN ... VISIT... unera rec ors nee ' 0 use c I
q j
from '. ~
39C Each /:
Box of 50 -$16.58
~
HORNS ~ With Tassel
24C Each
Box of 100-$20 40
24C Each
Box of IOO·S20.40
~ ~
NOISEMAKERS
40C Each
Box of 50 · $17.00
Box of 50 -$17.00
SERPENTINES
40C E•clt
Box of 50 -117.00
• WE IEIT HEUUM TAlll •
WE HAVE EVERYTHING YOU IEED
FOR YOUR IEXT PARTY
OPEN 7 DAYS
MON-~)AT 9 30-5 JO SUN Nuur1 tu . t' :/ ... , ..
CltJ ........ " ........ ............
~ ......
n .......... 1 ..... ,.,,... ~ .. ..,. .............
••••• 1 ...
an 1. ...,_. .., ................ 111• ..-
11 VtclOfy llYd
171G c.... ........................ "'" 11Nl11
Near "'*"" Hltlt Miii .. W. """"9 .......................... Ml.-
at ,ICtlk • ................................. f1141 ... ..
LllMllNWl't FtYt '°"'' C-Mf _ ........................ 11111-..m
Woodt\111 11111 Soutrl , ......... ..., """ ..... -. . . . . "'" .... 1 IJlocll .... tf ,.,,..
11M ............................. .
J..-. lflCI llooi!llR I '-rk 0.. Center 11111 Crlallll9 IW. . • • . . . . .. . Plat --
" '9clf!C CeelC "'91"t1y -.......................... ,. .. ..
1 Moel! "'°' ...,... ·~ ""' •· "" ._ . . .. . . .. . . . . .. . .. er••.._ 1.-.btltf~ .... ,_. .......,_ ..... .. . . . .... . .. ,.....
V...alMc:ertia
DEAR ANN LANDERS: When
my husband died suddcnl)', we told
the funeral director that 1t was his
wish to be cremated but that the
family wanted to view the body in
private fint. ~ funeral director proceeded to
tell us what part of the body was
water, and what was bone. tissue, etc.
We really did not want to know all
that so I interrupted him and challJCd
the subject. At the private viewi~
the funeral director said to me, "His
feet were so swollen I could hardly act
his shoes on." and "'the reason he feels
so hard is because we had to pump a
lot of ox~ into him."
A few months later, my sister died
and when we were viewing the body beforc~sitation. the funeral director
(a different one in another city) said,
"I ~d ~terrible time with her mouth, · two-year ,........, lllCl8M CMrHI
FlllDI II tO Stay toaethcr properly due la psydlolep, MreaHIDftt aM MW
to the tube beina in so long." Also, a. deal wldi IM famUy. ·
"Don't touch her hands -they were .. •1 ...... ...... a family
so swollen and discolored I had to put memller ub apeeUk ......... er
a lot of powder on them... die fuenl ..,,_.,_..dial eel'lalll
I am wondcrina if these individuals eKplulatleM are........,, nlall•n
receive trainina of any kind. I was ....W M ....... die c•• ...
appalled by these comments. They tails. Tiie ..,_..,. ,.. wldi are
caused us a arcat deal of distress at a clods,....._.. er Mil.
time when we already had more than • • •
we couJd handle. DEAR ANN LANDERS: What ia
YourQPinioniswanted.-B.D. IN your opinion about aynecolotiats
CHJCAOO. telling their patienu to leave their
DEAA B.D.: I apoke wtlll 8*11 E. shoes on when beina eumined? S.U... euc.Un ..,.._ of die I know two women. both in their
NalleMI hMnl Dtncten Aneda-mid-20s, who visited docton in
Ilea. different cities, and both were asked
Be ..W au fmeral .. recten mat to keep their shoes on. One woman
be Ucw ... nere an " mertury was referred to the aynecol09i11 by her •nll • 1M eMmll'J. n.e .... le mother (wbo was never told &o keep
her shoes on). This woman Wft
wearina hiah heels and the nurse told
her to fake everythina off but to ketp
her shoes on. The other was aJso
instructed to take off everythiq -~' her shoes (which happened 10 be laish· heeled boots).
One thina I know for cenain ia thai
if my tynee0losist or his nurse &old
me to keep my Shoes on I would ask, ••Wbat on earth for?"'
AJUI, do you know of any ~ wby a woman lbould keep her
on ia die ~· or should docton be . Just lip me " BAREfOO IN IWNOIS:
DSAa MIBPOOT: I eMeW .,...,..,.. .......... ....,au
........ ..., ............ 1 .. .. ~ .............. ,.tttc _ .....
..,.
by 811 K_,. COON ID CULTVltS ~ M•Mta & U.atta
'What's your phone number, in case
I think of anything else?"
by Brad Anderson
-------'"""' om.we better take-dowA1----1-1-the mistletoe!"
PltAJlfUTS
TUllBLSWEED8
Dlt1'108 TBlt llEl'fAClt
by Hank Ketcham
by Charles M. Schulz
by Jim Davis
ONCE AGAIN , l'HE LAW OF
GRAVITY fU .. AR!> rr!>
LJ<il."' Hf.AV
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
eJAAt DtO
"4Q) GtT "'M '?
by Pat Brady
"" .... *' Mf _._,...,," .
•
0.-.,.. COMt DAILY PtLOTIW~. December 21, 1W C9
ARLO AND JAMS
N)lj., lJPE.'!J ij() ~
~'CAA IWQ'O(
~~lV~
POR BETTER OR POR WORSE
~ POrnNG HAY ca.i.a , ~ll"lS~. r ~~Y?
JUDGE PARKER
DOOIUSBUllY by Garry Trudeau
by Harold Le Doux
·~ : ... ~:...:. : ... ........ ,.. ~ .........
by Tom Batiuk
.. r.,,. ......... _ .................... -. ._ ......... ...................
::-.!':'~ ... --
••
•
CIO OrM09 Cout DAILY PILOT! Wedneeday, December 21, 1818
CALL 842-5878 FROM NORTH ORANGE 540-1220
FROM SOUTH ORANGE 498-8800
--4 lines 7 days ;,IY ... ~ •· No .... • , 0 80 Eetete, eomm.rciel, Auto-
• motive, Boallng, or HelC»
Wented.
..
You cen now call the Dally Piiot Cl8ultled Dept. on Saturdaf morning from l:OO to 11111 a.m. to plw rour Sunder and.._., .._
•uman
... All
HOUlll/CONDOS
~. 1002 ..... _ 100.
..... ._..... 1007 c..-..--. 1011 c-.. _ ion
c--102• 0..-... 1026 e.r-...... ion ,....... ._...., • IOlol
~-10.0 ~....-... 100
-... IOM '--lo.I '-... '°'° '-...... ICW
i.M-'°" _....,.. 10'7
...._,._ Iott ... a.-.. , ... IOH
-.... ~ •• 11171 S--. IOIO
'--........ IOM .... c-_ , ...
.... '-· IC. ,_ • • •• IOIO
MllC. ....
..... -. 1100 ..._.... . .. "" ..... &C:-.... ..... , .. IUO
-.............. . c_,i..,er,,.. _, ..........
'-'-.. O...OIC.. ......... O...OI_,,.,..., .. .__,,_.,.o.... _,,,_., r-...,.. ..
:I~ .......... .
•nrrau
l17S 12U
IDS 1• 1915
UJO
U7S
ISIO
,Uto
HOO . 1'25
HOU Ill/CONDOS
~ 2102
--1* ..... -''" c.,..._-·'''' c.-.i-.1117 c..-11H 0..,..... .. ... 1116 t•r-. . . .... 11n ,_...... v..., . . ,,,.
.-.....-..... 11.a
-..........-.. 110
-· 11 .. i..--11• '-... , .• i..-...... ,,., i.M-,,,,
-Vlo!io . 21'7
..._...... .11f/I
'9o0--........... tl76
.... -~ .......... 2111
CLASSIFIED INDEX
842-5878
COLD Well
BANl(eR O
associated
""' 1• "'•I , . . ,
~ ' -
·~,~. Merrill Lynch Realty
e....r~
Something Special. New carpet, floor.
Ing and decor. Incredible curb appeat.
Open air .. ngle 1tory wtth 4 bdrm,
famlly rm, apa, & kev-to t>Mch.
$&25,000.
141-1220
•IHO
---·. .. ... 11• .__.....,. , ......... llM .... c--.. ., ,tllt
.... '-... ...... ••• .11• ,...... 11to
APAITMINll a-. .Mall
.....~. ..~
..... -.......... MG7 C.....,..-, .,., .... Mii c-.. -......... 1612 '--............ .
O..llolol ...
Ill-.. ..wi ._v-,. . ...... .................... »IO .......... ....-.-. '. »a -. . ..... a... '-...... . .. ... '--• • ....... JMD '-...... . ...... ,.. i.iio,_, . " .. HIS
--""" . • .. . "2M7 ...._........ . ,,... s.a.-. . .· .. w. ... -c:.,.-. . . .. .,. ._._ ......... .. ---........... ...
.... c--·· . ,.. .... '-,.. f-. ,...
MllC. llNIALI c-i.tt...._ ,,.
~ . . ....... 770t ................... _,,.. ............ .......... '"' -...-.............. ,,. .... ,......... ... .. .. .,.,. ....... -............. ·""' ~ .... -............ .,. ....._ ...... ···-········ ,,,., -......................... ..
........................ ..... == M ...... "WM ..... .. ......... ,,.. -=-····· ,Jiii -.............. ,... . ....,,.-. ................. ,....
............................. 1 • ......... , ..................... ,....
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
Mondey ........... Set. 11:30 AM
Tueedey ........... Mon. 1:30 PM
Wedneedey ..... Tuea.1:30 PM
Thundey .......... Wed. 5:10 PM
Friday ............. Thura. 5:30 PM
Saturday ............. Fri. 5:30 PM
Sundey ............ Sat. 11:10 AM
............. ---···'>······ .... ... ,..... . ......... ··"" ....... . ........... .. .._. ..................... ... ..... -........ ............ ., , .......................... ... OlifC-. .... ......... • ., • ..,._ ................... ..
• .....
~ ...................... tlllO ~ ............... toll
olWlllMa ....................... tlll2 ,.._,.,,, . ~ .... ...
Mia-... . , • .. .tOU c-& ,...,._. ... .. • tll1'
~ ..... , .. ,6011 _,._ .. . .......... ,.., ....,"-',.,. .......... .., ..... _.._ ... .., ......, ............. ..s a... .................... *7
,_, ........ ,. .......... ... .....--.. ...... ..-........ .. ...... a.-............. ... ..... ............. .. ..........................
TV ................... .. ..........
o.-.1 ................... I • .............. , ............ , .. ........................ ttor <-.................. tltt c---............... 61 .. ... ............... ,.. .,,. ......................... I,. ........................ tt.a __. ................. tld
..................... ti .. ........................ ........................ ,. ......................... ltJ
--............... 61'7 ......................... ti .. S-..... ............... 61IO
---.................. 610
. ....... .
I lllD .............
o.-r.I ............... ·"'' .......................... 1012
.... ............. .. .1014
a,Ml8I • .. .. . . .. . . '°" ........ . ·•·· '°" ...._........,,.._... ••.• NO
....,....,.._. 70ll2
MllC. ......... '-""'"..,,,. ~ ....... .
AUTOMOnYI
..,.
.11114
.. IOll
-..-. ................. to10 -~ ... , ·'°'' ,,._~ • . ......... MO .......... , ........... ...
,.... .. .. • • • ts)S
-• .... .. • ...... tO.o . .....-10.... . . . • . . . . tl06S ~. .. ......... ·'°"° -. ..................... fl • ....... -... ,,.,, .. , ... ..
Mia • ._. ............... ,,,,.
... CTOlml
...... ~ ....... ., ... _, ............ Olly
~o... cw ............... _._ .. _......, a~
a.lie ....................................................... ~ ___ ,....._, ____ .............. .......
a,. .................................. & .... ... ...................... _._ ......... _, ........ ...... .................... ,...... .................................. ................ ,,..,. .......... ......... ,......., ........ _ ... _,_ ............
Yow s.rw:. Directory
AepleMnte11ve
141-4111 .... 111 --
•
,
EARN
$400-$1000/WK
CA.II DLPI I
File Clerks
General Offlcr
Receptionists.
Accountants .
Typists
Data Entry
Call Toda •!!
Work Tomorrow!'
Have Holtday
$SS 8 SS S's
For Chrtstmasl
And EnJO "
U~ntly needed nHr your home'
DLRAVIR
J820 &. rfnt St. #200, Santa Ana
(7J4J 517.;osao
ONL Yf#4 DIY' Lrit_.
TILCHllSTMA
AO NOW"
1 Stetue
6 Story
10 Oaoer•t• 14 E~
IS Goll tlazetd
16 High P'el
17 Ontario ,,....,
18 ~• ft> Funow
22 WOOd pref
23 tneugurete
2• listless one
25 NeH down
28 South of Men
:l9 Soo9s 30 Anilhecl
35 Regulate
36 P\l~
37 SWISS canton
38 lnSll>ld
4 I Sir>ger o.tle
43 lined up
... F'lked 45 Begulte
.. Aeet>ond
so DeY\etes
51V~
55 TenNSMe -
57 AMulty Fr.
S8 F:io-
59 To - -r.ghl
on
21
35
DOWN
1 Adhefents
2 Mentel
3 SWMt
4 Sc>Hly slu'UI>
S Propertln
6 Tread plus ,, ....
7 VernM:Utar
a Pror11
9 Compe1en1
10 AllolrMnl'I
11 Straighten
17 Shale e g
13 Esteem
19 Melehlesl
21 Cotor
24 AoOenlS
25 Spe9Cly
2t 8ellfwletl 27 P9rcha
21 ~• 30 "W'Nl e
relillfl
31 Cape
S2 Pr~ted
33 Of IN Scots ,.. Swcumbed
M~-
7
39 l1"99f'ed 47 On ec)ge 40 Cancel 48 p._, .,.,..
'' ()IK"I •2 Beg 49~ed « F...,_ ~ SIS..~
45 T!Nler to -52 Aboerd
10 ~ 53 Mw:irlda '6 Perlu.n.y $4 $#\tell• llQUod 5' &lppor1er
a II t1 12 13
STARTING A NEW BUSINESS??
The Legal Departl'T\ent at the
Daily Pilot is pleased to an-
nounce a new service now avail-
able to new businesses.
We will now SEARCH the
name for you at no extra charge.
and save o.u the, Ume and.lbe-
tnp to the Court House In Santa
Ana. Then. of course. atter the
search is completed we will file
your fictitious business name
statement with the County Clerk.
pubhsh once a week for four
weeks as required by law and
then file your proof of publi-
cation with the County Clerk
Please stop by to file your
fictitious business statement at
'the Dally Pilot Legal Depart-.
ment. 330 We st Bay. Costa
Mesa. Callforrna. If you can not
stop by. please call us
.at' (714) 642.432-t &tension
315 or 316 and we will make
arrangements for you to handle
this procedure by mail.
If you should have any further
questions. please call us and we
will be more than glad to assist
you
Good luck 1n your
new business"
OUR FAMOUS
HAS RETURNEDI
Back by popular dtmand D1m!'s·A·L1ne wrll run Friday, Satur-
day and Sunday 1n its own clilss1f1cat1on 1n the Classified Ads
Since this 1s a spet1al offtr. we nave a Thursday noon deadtrne
and ask prepayment tor all ads This rs open to all private party
advertisers for merchandise not over s 150 (prrce must be listed
In ad) and no abbrev1at1ons will be accepted. AW ads win run
Frrday, Saturday and Sunday There 1s a 5-line milllmum at 20C
per llne . So yOtJr low coS1 Olmes-A -Une •d Is only ...
S3.00.
DEADLINE: Tnur\CJ.ty noon
PRICE: 5-trne minimum • 3 d~s • 20C per line = S3 00
• All ads art preipa1CJ by com1n9 into the Daily P110t to
place your ilCJ or use-tht" coupon below
• Prrvate pilrty mtrchttnchst only ads No com·
merc1al ads Pt" """st'>ck produce or plants
• Each item must Ot prictd in the ad with no Items ever
SI SO
MAIL TO: Oimes·A ·Une
Oi11ly P11n1
HO Wt\t BAy Strt"Pt, Costa Mesa. CA 92626
Dally Pilot hours
M onday·Frrdily 8 00 AM to S 00 PM
NAM£ PHONE ------
ADDRESS ______ _
CITY ___ _
AMOUNT ENCLOSED
UNIS ~---~
I.
2.
).
4.
,__ __ _
STATE
OATES TO RUN
t-----------------...--------
5. ,__~----+-------~
6.
7. ;-------+--------------
• · ..--------+-------
••
ZIP
$300MINIMUM 4 WOf\OS Pt:R LIN~
NOA88REYIATIO+I$
CAMBOa
M A R G U II: R I T B Pml.IC lllTICE
CLAIRE CAllROSE, -swd away Diam-PICnnGUe •MIYll•B••11M•
ber 18, 1•. She II T=:~ auvived by her ICID doing.....,_~.,.
Tully H. Seymour, ,.. POUl.ET. 21111 A11ci11
and IJ'Ulddaqhter P.m..,, l.egune Nlgull, CA
Andre Seymour. -~ ... *"*' 33111 Catholic Prayer .... Cepe ec-. LllgUM. Niguel.
v ice Wedneaday CAta51 ...
(today) at 3:00 P.M. at Jecob Vlnograd, 3143 ~ View Mern-~2~ir· Laguna BMch,
oraal Park Chapel Thi• bualneu 11 con-
wl th Rev. Chria ducted by: • generll pert-
Heath of Our lady Mf~: r1g111r1nt oom-Queen of An1el1 l'NnOld to trenuct busl·
Catholic Church of-MM under IN fictitious
ficiaU,... lntenmnt ~'*:NI~ ,_..
wll1 foDow in PM:lfte ..... -.......
View Memorial Pule. °'* •111w.ll WM lled P a c l f i c V I e w ...,. .. c:o.tr a.tl of Or·
Mortuary Dlncton .. ~ °" ft«••• &M-2700 . 17, 19111 ,_
ll'ACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAAK
C«netery • Mortuary
Chepel • Creme!~
3500 Peciflc View Orrve
Newport 8elCh
6«-2700
HAMIOR LAwtf·
MT.OUVE
Mortulty • Cemetwy
cr.,,,.tory
1625 Glalef Ave
Coate MeN
540-5554
N"CE a"OTHHI. •LL MOADWAY
M0<1urary • Chepel
110 BrOldWey
Cos11 Mes.
SA2·9150
0.1rer'1 Flenn
2983 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa, CA
141-1111
'
Publllhed OrM09 Coll1
0.lly Piiot ~-30, De-cember 7, 14, 21. 1988
W245
SECTION 1. Tiie Newpor1 leedl ~Code II,_.• •ldld to lnalYde ~ a 11. ~ ~ Thie CNpter Mell epply to II Pf°'*1Y In dt. City.
SECTION 2. Tiie PWWng Olreotor of ttle City of Newport leedl 11._.., .................. to .........
ptowll6one of ""' CNlptw.
Sec*oM:
20.71.010 lneent Md Purpoee
20.71.011 DiA•tlcM
"OAANNY UNITS" Ct4APT8' 20. 71
20.71.020 u. flwmlt......., 20.71.0H DlnlaJ,-.11 atenderde
20. 71.030 y~ of Occupenc:y 20.71.0SI ........... ......., 20.71.040 , • .,. ...... of u.
_you'll Ind
ANEW
OF ADV_
• ~ 1n
RLD
·UREI
'
•:ti • .. ..
Local churches celebrate the birth.of Christ
Christians along the Orange
Coast will have many choices to
commemorate the birth of Christ
as numerous services arc planned
at area churches. ·
The~~dc: -rd of ~ Bilk, a
partnership congreption of the
United Church of Christ and the
Disciples of Cluist CNveotJ•,
Saddleback tbtstiu c:iud will
have a family service at 5:30 p.m.
and a candlelight service at 11
p.m. on Christmas Eve. T he
congregation wi ll worship at 11
a.m. on Christmas Day. The
church 1s at 30121 Niguel Rd ..
Laguna Niguel. • • • -St. Jolln tile Divine
Episcopal Ol•rcll, 183 Bay St..
Costa Mesa, wiU hold the annual
children's Christmas pageant at 6
p.m. Christmas Eve. An open
house with light buffet is planned
from 7 to 10:10 p.m. at St. Johns
Manor, with services and carols
following at I I p.m. ••• -Lacau Buell Uaited
Metbodist CUttll 21632 Wesley
Dr .. South Laguna. will have its
traditional Christmas Eve service
at 7:30 p.m .. featuring instrumen-
tal and choral music. Service on
Christmas will be at IO a.m. • • • -UDitariu Cllwd of SaddJe-
LF£esVOUA
MOST \ilU.lJAM E POSSESSK>N.
~ITON.
back Valley will have its tra-
d itional C hristmas Eve
candlelit.ht service at 7 p.m. at the
Viejo Efcmentary School, 26782
Via Grande, Mission Viejo. Sing-
ing, music and a play will be
featured. • • • -Flnt . UaJted Medlod.Jst
Cllud, 2721 Delaware St, Hunt-
ington Beach , will have'
candJelight servcsat 7and 11 p.m.
on Christmas Eve and a service at
I 0..a.m. Christmas Day. ·~·· ..... -Presbyt.eriu Qud of die
Coveuac, 2850 Fairview Rd.,
Costa Mesa, will have a family
worship service with caroling and
s_pcc:ial choir music at 7 and a
Community service at 11 p.m.
Christmas Eve. A 9 a.m. servi_cc
will be held on Christmas Day. • • •
-Newport Harbor Seventll-
day Adveatist Qarcla, 271
Avocado SL, Costa Mesa. will
present Calvin Taylor in concert
at 10 a.m. Dec. 24. • • •
-Lmtlteru Chld of die
Mast.er, 2900 Pacific View Dr ..
Corona del Mar, will have a
candelight service at 10 p.m. on
Christmas Eve and a Commu-
nion service at 10:30 a.m.
Christmas Day.
Of all the: ric hc:' you coukl k aH· to your family. thl· most
prcciow. ~ thc: J(ift of lire:. )'<>ur t><:qul~t 10 tht· American
Hean As.<\Oei:uion :w.urt.'l> that prKdc:s.~ kl(2l)' h}' oiupponing
research into hl-an diM.-:be prevc.•ntion.
To lam more iliout th« Pl:anm·d (,i\ ing Pmgnm. call U!>
today. 11 ·~ the fin.t ~tc.·p in makinl( a memory th21 w ts be)•ond
a llfetimt'.
'M:'RE FfGHTll'G Fa?~ Liff
{J American Heart Association
• • • -La,••• Presb1teriaa Cllm'd, 4 S Forest Ave., will
celebrate the holiday with a l 0:30
a.m. service of Christmas Day.
There will be no Sunday school or
adult study classes that day. • • •
-0rup CMsl Ualtariu
Umvenallst a..ra, 1259 Vic-
toria St, Costa Mesa, will have a
special Christmas Eve scrv~ at
7:30 p.m. The service wiJI feature
songs with emphasis on tra-
ditional carols, readings and can-
dle lighting. • • •
-UaJtariu-Uat.venalbt Pel-
lewUip, 429 Cypress Dr., Laguna
Beach, will have a Christmas
social at 10:30 a.m. instead of
regular services on Christmas
Day. • • •
-Crystal Callledral, 12141
Lewis St, Garden Grove, will
have a special service at 10 a.m.
Christmas Day. There will also be
a celebration of song and Scrip-
ture at 6 p.m. • • •
-Pint UaJte4 Me~1t
C'tl•rdl, 420 W. 19th St., Costa
Mesa will have Christmas Eve
Candlc lighting services on Sat.
Dec. 24. a Ceremo ny of Scripture
and Carols will be at 7:30 and 11
p.m. The Youth Ensemble, soloe
and Tableau of the Nativity are
planned for the early family
service at 7:30 a.m. The Chancel
Choir and soloists will~ the
I l ~.m. service, with Rev. Oalal
Gough speakan& on "Your
Christmas sw•· at both services.
On Christmas day the Sunday
morning services will be at 9 and
l0:30a.m.
CHRISTMAS at
ST. MICHAEL'S AND ALL ANGELS
EPISCOPAL CBUKCB
5:00pm
10:30pm
ll:OOpm
Cbri1taaa1 Eve
Holy Eucharist & Pageant
Gift of Music
Festival Choral Eucharist
Cbri1taaa1Day
8:00am Holy Eucharist
1 O:OOam Holy Eucbaris~
The Rev. Peter D. Haynes, Celebrant
S!SS PACIFIC VIEW DRIVE, CORONA DEL KAI, Uf-CMa
Cefe6rate Cfiristmas
at
Soutfi Coast CommunityCfiurcfi
51 'Iratfitional Cliri.stmas 'Eve
Saturday, Dec. 24, 1988 Five Cllrillnm Eve Senica
4:30 • 6:00 • 8:00 • 9:30 • 11:00
Tan Twnmona. tpUkina.
(Child~ al 4:30. 6:00 p.m. only)
Clirisf!naS AfomintJ
Sunday, Dec. 25 10:1.S.... ,....., an.-Senice
T•11rn •·., ¢3' .
(No Qild aR psvwided)
Soulb a-COi t11 a.m
5120 8oaila c..,om Dr. IMle. CA 92715
-(714) 154-7e00
2 -CELEBRATION OF LIFE/An A~ SuppMment to the DAILY PILOT/Wedf...ay, December 21, 118l'
• • • -.. Ne•~-.,.n ...._ IAdteran
a.rt6, 791 Dover Dr., Newpon
Beech will haq·daree candleliiht
servica Cbrillmu Eve with
special mulicat S p.m., 7 p.m. and
11 r:m. •1t*ajna will be
providod for die S And 7 p.m .
servia:l wida Hol1-Communion
at the l l J.& .-vice. Christmas Day ICtV1Cle will be at 9 a.m. with
speeial bymm IDd carols.
BIRTHDAY
CELEBJIATION
SA~,DaC.14 cau•TMMIVI
1:00 p..m •••••••••••• Qlildrln's Str\11Ct
7 30 p 111 • • • • • • • ._ Will chow & bells
10:15 p"m. • • • • • • • • • • aw... Concet1
11 :00 p.111. • • • -• dw & on:hestra
SAllT JAlllS
EPISCON.L CHURCH
3209.Lido
llewpwt Be•• CA· 92663
714/675-0210
.............. al ... tr .............. ...
Hom~le8SCan identify With first .Christmas couple
NEW YORK (AP) -At a private local ~ providina
Manhattan church that com-the homeless. with f~:
memorated Mary and Joseph, the and IOIDe ~t
pair was portnyed in a modem Pike added m an interview: mode -a homeless couple .. The ...nwina callousness and
· r. ·'--'"'-willi' ·-o~f!--..i. to live side-hununa .or ...... KO.. • by_rwi.th ~---'y _...___ This has become the P.liaht Of U1U u~ IUIQ.ila
hundreds of thousands of people everyone. What we tee is the
across America today, just as it erouon of the worth of life. of the
wasthepliahtofMaryandJoseph <lieity of the buman pcnon.
2,000 yean aao in Bethlehem. We see more and more toler-
"They also were homeless,.. ance of vio&ence, a depleciation of
says the Rev. Thomas Pike of life. Our nation is really at a
Calvary-St. Georse's Episcopal Cl'OISl'OIMls. If we don°t reeolve the
Church whose annual candlelijht islue of bomeleunea, every
service is presentina their utu-cberisbed institution in American
ation as current rather than past. life will be afrected by cynicism
They. like many nowadays, aacl doubt."
Pike said that while the spread-
ing severity of the problem may
represent the .. dark side" of tfie
picture, the massive volunteer
response to it represents the
"brighter side ...
.. An incredible number of in-
stitutions are workin& on this
crisis," he said. "Millions of
volunteers of religious, educa~
tional and philanthropic institu-
tions are involved. h's a real sign
of hope.
"Literally every community
and town on the face of this
nation, through individuals and
groups, has mobilized suppon for
hungry and homeless people. If
the President builds on that, we
can have hope that this terrible
traaedy will be alleviated."
The congreptions run 130
shelters that house about 2,000
people per night -totalling
400,000 last winter with more than a million meals served.
About 24,000 volunteers have
served in the program since it
began in 1982.
It started then with only two
churches -Manhattan's St.
Joseph's Roman Catholic Church
and Calvary-St. Georse's
Episcopal Church, but bas sin«
spread to a wide inter-religious
network.
.. had no pl.cc to stay,•• a4ds Pike, Estimaaes have placed the
who also heads the board of New number of U.S. homeless at up to
York Cit)" s iJi1Crfaith Partnenhip 3 million, wanderina the streets
for the Homeless. ••That family and byways of cities across the
also was wanderina the meets. co~ crmwtina soup a· , 'ke -whoatimatS"New-~o-.. n. The-•• Plke
City's homeless at about S0.000,
said the inter-organizational part-
nership here has become a
.. model for places all over the
country. Hundreds of them have
Bcsjdcs the sheltering and feed-
ing program, the partnership also
runs a permanent housing oper-
ation, Project Domicile, which
has helped relocate 3, 700 home-
less ~pie from .shelters and
welfare hotels to permanent
apanments. --rRYbad U>Ctelf ver""'l&Clulclftunt1na temporary shelter by
in a backyard siable. a cave. Then niabt.
they faceCI penecution and bad to l>ike said President-Elect
flee. Theyh8d to leave for another Bush's expressed boees for a
country. Tbey Were~" 0 ptJer, quieter" nanon aren't
In a similar way, be •JI the likely .. if he doesn't listen to the arowina multitude of bolRelea cries in the streets of the home-
Americans is a ''crisis not just in less.
the lives of individual VJCtims, '"There's no way American but a crisis in the whole identifi-society can be deaf and blind to
cation of this nation." this cnsis. Most people are hoping
As chairman of an orpnization Bush ~vides leadership in deal-
described as the nation's iarJest ina wath it."
picked it up."
He said the "the key to it is
partnership," not only among
religious congregatjons, Prot-
estant, Roman Catholic and Jew-
ish, but also with civic, labor and
other organizations as well as city
and state agencies. .
Christmas: the eloquence of si..Ience
By GEORGE W. CORNElL
AP Religion Writer
A whispering, a still small
voice, so faint and passing
strange.
It seems remote, yet positive-
ly near. How puzzling and in-
distinct. But wait ... be still.
"Have you not known? Have
you not heard? Has it not been
told you from the beginning?"
Far back, it trembled in the
prophet • s cry, re-echoing
through time. So dimly distant,
yet persisting somehow, linger-
ing in the present hour.
"Draw near, 0 nations ...
Hearken, 0 peoples .... your sal-
vation comes."
A world, strident and ~
tracted, scarcely hears. A res-
Uess clangor fills the in-
troverted air, and overwhelms
(Pleueeeean.&RCS/Pate•l
llAU08 CIWITIAN
CHURCH
2~1 Irvine Ave. NB b4S-'>781
Pastor Gene Swanson
C!Mu111uu £w
Flllllly ClrolS w ~t 7 Pll!
~ S'M,1000 . ! C~ation of Christ Birthd•y
Celebrate Cfirlstmas wltfi us
CHRISTMAS EVE -DEC. 24
CbildND'1 Service 5:00 PM Carol Service 7:00 PM
Candlelisht 11 :00 PM
CHRISTMAS DAY DEC. 25
Festival Service 10:30 AM
"The Best Christmas Gift"
CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH
760 Victoria. CoU Meu .
631-1611
"We present a united response,
cooperative and not confronta-
tional that maximizes com-
munication in dealing with the
system," be said.'
Pike. 5 L. who twice has been
nominated unsuccessfully for
diocesan bishop- in Los Angeles
and New York -said that 400
New York City churches and
-5yna.g~ucs arc involved in
providing food and shelter to the
homeless.
Pike, also a director of the New
York Landmarks Conservancy
that helps fund restoration of
historic sites. said a criticial need
in reducing homelessness is re-
form ofthe welfare system.
It .. is not supporti ve of family
life," be said. "It ought to suppon
and encourage families to star,
together and encourage stability. '
Under the circumstances. he
said. ..Some of the most heroic
people in the country are women
raisang children."
mP QD'T IN 'l1IE <JMll fl' YOOI ~
f(.!liJi!~M Ert LUTHE~ANJ cu~~C'~I
16351 SprlaCdale, Buttactoa Beac~
(Betweo £dlaCer 6 Beil)
•~!ft FUlilJ Wonlip
Deciellller !4, 7:00 r JI.
• ...., eo..u1oa Semce
Decelllter H , ll:SO P.11.
• CUimlu ...., 8mice
Decemlta U , t:OO A.II.
CBRISTIAlf
BOOKSTORE
2500 W. Coast Hwy
Newport Beach
631-1974
HOURS Mon·Fr1 911m-8pm
Sal 9em·6pm Sun l 2pm·~pm
The last minute gtft may be the one most
treasured for a ltfettme. We personalize your
book or Bible wt th beauttf ul permanent
imprinting. Most imprints can be done while
you wait.
Gift wrap available.
CA RRATION OF LIFE/An AcMrtlllug Supplement to the DAILY PtlOT/Wedneedlly, Oeclmber 21, 1911 -3
------·-~--~·~
Golden West College
Swap Meet
FIEE
PAIKING
FREE
ADMISSION
Presents
'I< ~'I< .t Don't miaa our week·
w,~;:;:;::;;_• ly swap meets on
ft :U ,::r 11 =:. Saturdays and
Crr•t •¥1,.1 on Chricmucilll It decorllio111
1ay11. clolh1,.. Jl'Wl'lry llandtMde arnamen ..
It muc!i more
Thunday 6 Friday, Dec 22 .l 23
111(1.,._
s.tunta~ Dec 2-4
"'"-la.a.. 3 p.a.
k!"Jt'.U ·
Sundays
8:00-3:00
p .m.
Call (714) 893-2389
for further information.
Golden West & Edinger Streets • Huntington Beach
~ ~
c:,Airporter qnn
Wotel
Dancing To The Chuck Battaglia Group
Reservations
833--2770
•special room rates for New Year's Eve
c._Airporter C/nn
Wotel
18700 MacArthur, Irvine
(across from Or•nte County AtrportJ
"With
Brandon's
New
H~Buffet
Your
Christmas will
never be the same!"
ONLY $14.~ ptr person
Childttn Ulllkf 1 l -S6 q;
Tis Lhe sea.~on of joy. so givt' your family a ~f1 lhey'll Ji''''· A
1f'ldllional Chrisurw buffet a1 Brandon·s.
Brandon's Traditional Christmas Buffa
Twelve Ele&a nt Salads
Fancy Roa.st Turkey with Appac Almond Stuffing
Prime Rib of Beef
Honey Glazed H am
Se..onal Vegetables
GIHied Ya.ms
Whip~ P0«arocs and Gi~ Gravy
Fresh Cranbf:rry ltelish
Oclightful ~sncs
Pumpkin P~
Ho&ict.y Buffet 1 IMI 10 lpm
Make Youc ...,...ioM EarlJ
The Be"erlJ Herimp Holel
1800 Barber Lam Mtlpira "'°8-4'32-63J I
H50 Avenue ol dw Ana. C.O.ta W... 11+7,...1303
Resenationt rftXNfttnencled
Adjacenr to the 8e¥ttly Herit.,. Hoc~I
I
·-C!LEBAATION OF LIFE/An Adwalllllg ~to .... DAILY PILOT/Wedn11-. a.cu -11, ..
Now is the time to make
Your Holiday Reservations!
OPEN
7 days a week
from 5pm
R
E s
E
R v
A
T
I
0
N s
673-0910
ccxo "' rmzas
~ _, _......._-. ---.,.
..-.-----~--..o-...· ............... ., ..
w 1ca• ...... --...-..._.__...,'---... -----'---' -.......~ .,.
-~ ...................... _.
__ C>ooo. __ _ .... ,....... .... -. .......... -°'--
"°'"''mzw ------... .....,,........, ..... __,.~ .... ...... c....c...-....... .... -,..,.... a.... ...............
...._._ ~ • -0-.-. .-""-. ......... ,...,c........ .. .. ---... -·-.-. ....... a... ... ~ ... ..
-~0-.. ............ .... ................. .. -------....... ._.... _ . .__ -_ _, _ -.... -... .. --~,... ....... .... .-.c.-, .... ...... ---"'5TM ___ .,....,. __
---·--~ --._ ,._. ........................
---M'C ...... --. ...._. ..... ~---~ ---· -°'---·--.-c-... t..-.... ------.................... . ... -----.. ._ .......... _ ...... -···
--------.. ... .. .
~~ .... .,........, ....... ._ 0-. ,....._, .... .... .._ .. -----·-_...~---..... ---------... -·-__ ......_. ____ '-'-·-___ ..._ ___ _
...................... .._..,.
ASH a MfWOOO --------------..-.. .... -.....c.-. .... _... ......... ~ ... ---------------.... _ -.... ........... . .. -------.. 0.--........... ._ .... ---"'-a....acca•1..mc. --·-___ .. __ _
c:-0.:.::.. ...... = ---.--.... -... -----........ ,..,.._ .... ~ .__ ......... _ .. -AilllCMMSNCRS -............ ._., ... _. _._ . ....._._. ............. -
"Love (Oris&) is ,.Ueat _.
kiM; leve (Qrisl) Is •t jMIMI ............ ..w .,._
...... , w relle. IA•e (Ckist)
-...a._.t•lts(Ms)ewa
way •• .is Mt irrttaltle er re-
seMhll •• .Mes Mt rejeice at wr.a. Mt re.l*es la ript.
Lo•e (Britt) ~all IMBp,
ltopes all IMap, elldun all
tkblp. Love (CUl1t) •ever --. ... ''
-Finl Coria~ 13
--------
For The Merriest December 25 ·--~
Gtrofun!,~!tA speci __
Holiday Menu:
Served From l 2 Noon
• Roast Long Island Duckling
•Smoked Pork Chops Apricot • Veal
Picattc • Baked Red Snapper Belle
Mcunicrc •Roast Tom Turkey
• MedaJlions of Lamb• Roast Prime
• Rib of Beef • Halibut HolJandaisc
• Broiled New York Steak •New
York Pepper Steak'
All EnttttS include Soup ala Re11le or Mixed Green Salad With Choice
of Drnsing. Strina Beans Almond1nc, Race. Parshed New Potato or
Candied Sweet Potato
HOLIDAY ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCING
Make Your R~rvations Now For Christmas Eve. Chnstmas Day.
New Ycar·s Eve 32802 S. Coast Hwy.
(At Crown Valley Pkwy.) 499-2626 Or 496-5773
South Laguna Niguel
?lewpod
Bead94
Ope. ~oe
CHRISTMAS EVE
-
•
..
... -:.:··:--.__.,.____ .. ---------·
SILENCE divulge what they had found, things in her heart."
• • • and traveled home a secret Later, in his ministry, he of.
From ,.,e 4 route to guard their hallowed ten slipped away in solitude for
silence. information. reinforcement. ln the golden
Thereby does Cllristrnastime Twice again, the woodsman orb of silence, he drew strength
attain its timelessness. Eternity J h u_...a his dut · th and peace, the elements enfold-
Crystal Cathedral presents
the 'Glory of Christmas'
is 1'oined with time. "When the il~sept rea~ f Ysl m e ing his nativity on earth. More than 160.000 people will s en munnurmgs 0 eep -flock to lhe Crystal Cathedral in time had fully come," wrote warning him to flee to Egypt to The racket of the world, the Garden Grove this holiday
Paul, ''God sent forth his_ son, protect the child from Herod's ringing, roaring,· growling, season to witness the ei&hth
born of woman ... " The riches sword in Bethlehem, and later, pounding din of engines, in-annual production of "The Glory
of the quiet wellspring of in-indicating the return to Naza-stnunents and tongues may ofChristmas."
finity were poured into the th deaf i to th
of re · en consc ence e The pqeant boasts the laJFSt shrill and finite episode mor-From his childhood to the age gracious wooing of that silent indoor set in the world, with
tal man. of 30, Jesus' years were sphere, but it endires. And sJ)CCtacular special effects, a cast
Aptly, silence clothed the wrapped in utmost silence. falls upon the tranquil ear. Be of more than 100 volunteers, live
process from the start. The Nothing is disclosed of them. still to hear, he said to man, and taped music, dance and
wise men of the East did not ''His mother kept all these and "I will come to him." colorfuf costumes. The story line
----------------------------------folloW5 the biblical version of the r •••••••••••• binh of Jesus with historical and
• cultural authenticity.
11 w · I CATHOLIC BOOKS AND GIFTS This year's production will run
I 90 I I E. Adams Avenue fon Magnohf t--thro~~ . .23 with three per I ~, ~on Beach --96J-7fl5 -formances nightly at 4:30, 6:30
'Jl., I and 8:30 p.m.
I \ i;-I / "~' n _.,., __A~~ n _d"lie n. ____ -The success of the paaeant J, \ / I / Men I 14/'e ~--.:1 ~" ~. ;nenu depends a great deal on the I \ 1 I;,_,,.~ ,,., 11 structure that houses it. Designed ~ specifically for the all-&lass build-1 r.:=:=:=::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:==========..-1 ing, the set is not confined to the ' -s 'll I TWO CANDLEUGBT SUVIC~ TO BE HELD floor, but literally soars tbrouah-I / '!1 '\~' ', , tl I · 7 p.m. and 11 p.m. out the buildi!!J. utilizing the 200-Meditation to be presented by foot high ceihna and 400-foot-s Hi The Rewnnd Donald w. Kuu. Senior Minister wide base. A nae ls fly through the
JJJJC "" un' •
1
AaiaiedbyT'heRevettndLoriJ.Soudtr,AllocieteMinister air, special effects thunder over I-'-'I\ andT'heRewrendOr.RobertE.Crewford.Adjunc:tMiniM.tr head and sounds of the season
surround the audience with
I The Chancel Choir will sing at 7 o'clock with stereo-phonic quality.
duets at 11 o'clock and a guest flutiat-at
show remains lhe tender moment
of the Shepherd Child's sona. The
grand entrance of the Three kinp,
riding their Camels down center
and side aisles, also leaves a
lasting impression.
The hosU of eight ••Is fl~ing
90 feet above lhe audience 1s a
panicularly dramatic moment.
The special technolop for the
angels was developed by Peter
Foy the leading exponent in U.S.
the8trical flyina. Foy ••flew" Mary
Martin in the onainal ··Peter
Pan" and later pefformed the same service for Sudy Du~n.
"The. Glory of Ouillmu" is
dependent on the volunieer sup-
port of almost 200 ~le who
make up the cast of villqers,
Roman soldiers. anaels and ICina.
Additionally, more than 2SO
ushen and traffic controllers vol-
unteer their time durina the busy
Christmas rush.
Tickeu are priced at S 14, S l 8
and $25 and may be purchased
with a credit card by callina 54-
GLORY.
Checks or money orders can be
written to .. The Glory of
Christmas." 12141 Lewis SL Gar-
den Grove 92640. I both services One of the highlights of the I r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;m;;;;;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;,;,
I Childcare for childr•n four •nd under •t 7 p.m. Mrvice ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH only. Sund.,, wonbip eervice. on Chrl1tma D.,, •nd I N•• Yura D.y•t 10•.m. only 23802 Avenida de la Carlota I Lquna Killt (Off South-bound 1-5 fwy at El Toro E~t.) I COMM UNITY CHURCH, CONGREGATIONAL ~ &N ~ 24 I UN ITED CHUK.CH OF CHRIST s:30 PM Family Eucharist
811 Bello&rope Avenue 11:00 PM Traditional Mid· Night. Mua
\
Corona de l Mar, California 9262G
Pt. (71 .. ) a .... 7 .. 00 aw,,_.. ~ ~ 25 uone: ' .,.,.. .. 10:00 AM Combmed Holy Eucharist: Rite IJ
I I I I 1.. ................... ...
'~nd This Q:hristmas with
the .family of <Bod"
Or. John A. Huffnwn. Jr.
Prochq
"REALIZED IMMANUEJ.-
GOD wrrH US!"
CHRISTMAS EVE
CANDLELIGHT SERVI~
Saturday, December 24, 1988
5:00, 7:00, 9:00 and 11:00 P.M.
''THE GIFr•
CHRISTMAS DAY FAMILY SERVICE
Sunday, December 25, 1988
10:15 A.M.
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church
(iOO St. And:mMs Ra.d, ~ Btach, Calibnia (7l'f) 631#2880
(8Cn* from Newport H.rbor '¥ Sc:hool • lrvint & 15th.)
Olild car4:, K
and~.b
the-5:00 and 7:00
ICn'kaonly
The Rev. ~ N. Sandy. Rector
The Rev. Lomr E. Weaver. Asst.
NEWPORT HARBOR LUTHERAN CHURCH
798 Dover Drive
Newport Beach, CA 92663
(714) 5'8-3631
PASTORS: Rocer J . Bers and Kim Eifert Kroptad
COME CBLUIATE
We11 linc praile unto the Lord in a •ttinc of' warm canclleliabt and
brillian& poimettiaa. Everyone ii .. 1come on CbriatmM Bve for .me. a& 6 P.M., 7 P.M. and 11 P.M. Holy C-•un6oe wW be
celebra&ed at the 11 P.M. ..me. oaly. Paator KIOptad will preach on
..Awsy iD the Manpr" at the 6 P.M. WTice wbicb ii....,...,., for
JO'IDI people and their ~tioa in the atory ol CbriM:maa.
Fnorite Cbrimn.. earola trill be IUlll· P-.or Bers will pnadl OD "tbt Gift ol Lowe" at tbe 7 P.M. Md ta. 1 l P.M . .me.. Mn. Dime
Frilbee will "'9 for tbe bearins impeind at the 6 P.M. ...tea.
SO,UUins will be aYailable at 6 P.M. and 7 P .M.
Aniw 16 IDinut. euly and eatjoy f•tm Yule&ide mUlic r.turinl
tbe NHLC .. and IOlie&a with ..-W inmumeasai .-at &lie 7
P .M. _. II P.M. ••icee. Afl ..._ wlll iDdude s1oriou1
Cbrfst M ... wl ..,.a.I ..... 11llct6am ........ U1 fort.We
• ,..,... ............... "'tbe Cbrtlt CMld!
Qr+.c n ~a... will be at t A.M. Chrilm. D117, with apedal .....
(
Knowledge casts light over darkness in the World
By GEORGE W. CORNELL
AP Rell ... Wrt&er
A blue-gray canopy rolls
acrou the lowlands and up tht:
sides of the plateau, covering
the city ol David in shadows,
wiping the last purple shimmer
from the eastern sky. 'The som-
ber silhouette of the hills dis-
appean in the night.
Now it ia possible to see the
stars.
"The light shines in the dark-
ness, and the darkness has not
overcome it."
children under 2, but Jesus'
family fled with him to hide in
pagan exile.
Storm and dark surrounded
him, and stalked him from that
day to this, assailing him with
death itself, though it could not
contain him. Vet his resurrec-
tion, too, was in the middle of
the night, to pledge enduring
dawn.
·'The darkness is passing
away," proclaims St. John.
"The true light already is shin-
ing."
Such an atmosphere identifies
· • ... the revelation of the mys-
tery which was kept secret for
long ages ... " writes St. Paul.
" ... the image of the invisible
God ... in whom are hid all the
wisdom and knowled8e ... ''
In the curtained night arrives
the gift of Christmas.
"~t the light shine out of
darkness,'' God decreed when
\ ~~ 'h z first the earth was made. and
I I // ,/ I % / so it did. ~ ~\·'. ~I. And now, in Christ, give ~~ · thanks, exults the gospel of St.
singular disclosurt LI projected
on the stage of history.
It gleams on every age, and
meaSW'es time across the ca-
lendar, from Anno Domini until
today. "The Son of God has
come and has given us under-
standing to know him who is
true ... " writes the apostle
John.
Cloaked in a midnight veil
lies the coun SI ana inlty
black the stony recess where
JeSUI was born, but in the
deepest shade the sight ex-
pands to recognize the subtler
rays, the diamond flash and
rare illumination.
tile real ocale of"Olrisbnas. ~~
Luke, "the dayspring from on
high has visited us, to give
ligfi{ to Olem tna Sit irrdar~
ness a'nd in the shadow of
death, and to guide our feet
into the ways of peace.''
Vet, even in the lesson, ll~
gers mystery. How could it be?
How could God, the infinite,
presiding over untold worlds,
condescend to be a tiny waif, a
peasant's child, a homeless
man who trudged -the.. bills ol
Galilee?
"I have come as light into
the world," his words an-
nounce.
A whistle calls in the black-
ness of the valley, and
crouched there in shrouded
watch, the shepherds spied the
spark which beckoned from the
cavern. "Behold ... ! "
And learned eastern Magi, in
their dim far-off observatories,
saw the signal in the sable sky.
"And lo, the star ... "
Across the vacant miles, a
year or more ttrough dusky
gor• and desert plain, they
came in searching wonderment.
At last, they found the child
and joyously, "they fell down
and worshiped him.''
Gems and incense wreathed
that haunting room. Vet dark-
lirt1 clouds encompassed it, and
danger filled that brutal time
and C111r's iron empire. The kine'• militia struck, slaying
He came and comes beyond
the tense of time, in darkness,
to enlighten, to reveal. And
what intelligence does he con-
vey? St. Paul defines it:
.. The light of the knowledge
of the glory of God in the face
of Jesus Christ."
From some past, the forlorn
cry of sages, patriarchs and
prophets had beseeched a
closer view, a deeper .under-
standing of Almighty God. He
seemed so overwhelming, dis-
tant, great, his ways past fmd-
ing out.
"Why dost thou hide they
face ?·' the troubled Job im-
plored. Go forward, backward,
left or right, and God could not'
be found. "I am hemmed in by
darkness ... Oh, that I knew
where I might fmd him."
And Isaiah cried, "0 that
thou wouldst rend the heavens
and come down."
So went the age's plea,
through yearning prayer and
even in the spreading eastern
cults and frenzies meant to con-
jure up a sense of supernatural
presence.
SICOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, N.8.
SIOO Padftc: View Drift, Cd.II
&U-!817
J.; .. -~ ;,. e,t'-u .. , ,,,, ,,.., ....... , .. , ·I CJ.,,·Ji ... oJ.
W, ,,.,,,,, ,.. 1 •• 11,,.J ..,,. ClwiJ1 ... .S,· ... u S"""' e~ .... ,,,.., 2'.,
2.c, .. '-25. •' 10.00 .A'tl/
ChUd Care Provided
"He that sees me," said
''Entheoi," they called the Jesus, "sees him that sent
dizzy climax. "God indwelt.·• me."
The day was overcast and In SC!'ipture, an .eternal being
dark, and so it is in changing .. is. ascribed to. Christ, a oneness
ways on every Christmas eve wath the mind of God, .his
though pageantry and balla~ "logos," "word" ~ re&SOf!mg
may depict it as blithe. m~tall>: as em~ed creative-ly an action and m speech upon
Into every .. present dark-his birth as man.
ness" rears the beacon. "He w~s in the beginning
Into wintry yesterdays, into
gilt-veneered uncertainties, di-
lemmas and alarms of now and
unforeseen tomorrows, ."the
way, the truth, the life" breaks
through the shutters of the
world.
"The bright and morning
star," the book of Revelation
designates him.
with God," writes John. "All
things were made through him,
and without him was not any-
thing made that was made. In
him was life, and the life was
the light of man ... we have be-
held his glory ... "
Through the pall of murky
aims, confusion, fears and arti-
ficial "gom" and glitterin~.
the strange phenomenon, the
'·For now we see in a mirror
dimly," Paul writes, "but then
Face to face. Now I know in
part; then I shall understand
fully, even as I am fully under-
stood.''
The darkness hovers still. It
isn't gone. The record co~
stantly confirms the circling
gloom. It forms mankind's
proscenium for the star, a star
which shines ~ly in
Olristmas.
"The people who walked in
darkness have seen a great
light," the prophet Isaiah fore-
saw. "For to us a child is born,
to us a son is given ... and his
name will be called Wonderful
Counselor. Mighty God. Ever·
lasting Father, Prince of
Peace ...
"Arise, shine, for thy light
has come."
And he said, "I and the Fa-rr=:====================:::=i ther are one."
The Christmas vision fmds
him and the longed-for knowl-
edge of him in the coming forth
of Otrist.
"llartlen ~!ft"
5:SO or 7:00 Pll
"Cbistau llor1l1g at
llarblen"
9:00 All We Invite \"nU h• Jt>in u. u we celebrate
the btrth ul the ti.by Jesus. ~r Mrv><el ~30 Ir 10:1~ AM
I 000 8iooll AY9 ,....,,.., ...... C'1 ..., moM-eoao
CHRIST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
20112 M8gnol'8, Huntington Beach 968-4fMO & .
Gary J. Watkins. Pastor ~:
CHRISTMAS EVE 1
CANDLELIGHT SERVICES ~ ~ ..... __.. ...
7:00 PM Famtty Service 1 ..-
11:00 PM Communion
CHRISTMAS DAY
10:00 AM Fllm!ly Worstup
CMd Care Pr0¥toed
Welcome to the
FIRST UNITED
METHODIST CHUllCH
4 20 West 19th Strefl
C06ta Mesa. Cal1tonWi
ALL SAINTS CHURCH
with &v. Ga.Jal GocJKb preaching
on CluUtmas Eve and IUv. Tim
Mull on CbristtDM morni111.
DEC. 24
CHRISTMAS EVE 1a-. arm MtJ Holr COIMll#lion
DEC. 26
ST. STEPHENS
~--Hal}' Cr mum
DEC.18
HOLY INNOCENTS
,...,~
1928 Boole of Common Pr•yer
l/Joa1 Bushard St. (South of Talb«tJ
Fount•ln V•lley 96'J~Jll()/
DEC. 25
CHRISTMAS DAY
9:JOMI Holy Commun.Iott
DEC. 27
ST. JOHNS
9JQlm
/AN. I
HOLY COMMUNION ,.,,,, '°""
CHUSTKAS EVE CANDLELIGHTING
SEIVICES AT 7:SO ud 11 P•
Youth Enaemble and Tableau ot the
Nativity for the Family Service at 7:30 pm
and Chancel Choir for the Tr.ditional
Service at 11 pm
CHllSTllAS MORNING P AlllL Y
WOISBIP AT I ucl lO:SO ..
With the Chancel Choir and 1<>108, and
interview with the~·
CANDLELIGHT
SllVICE
Cll IMATION OF LIFE/An Advertte6ng Supplement to the DAILY PfLOT/W9dnwMly, December 21, 1918 -7
•
•
8 -
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give tlze gi/t "I C11teetai11me11t
GIFT CERTIFICATES AV ,..,,..U AT AU. EDllf ARDS CINEMAS
flUIMAM {R)
t t :45 2:30 5:t5 a:00 1o:AO
W()At(ING GA If') 1"X S1(llEO 5:30 a:OO 10:15
n4E NAKED GUM
(PG-13)
S:.S 9:30 10:30
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