HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-12-27 - Orange Coast Pilot...
. <IW«IE CO\Sf
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1988 25 CENTS
Driver killed by gunfire in Mesa
Passen gers tell officia ls traffic dis pute
may have led to in cident on cul-de-sac
By JONATHAN VOLZKE
Olllleo.lr ........
A 3S-'year-old man cornered in a
dimly lighted Costa M~sa cul-de-sac
was shot to death Monday evening
after bcin1 chased several blocks by a
1unman who police say may have
Nation
Boeing 727wlth 110
people aboard forced to
land after a tear In the
fuselage caused the jet to
lose cabin pressure at
31,000 feet./ M
World
About 140 Afr ican stu-
dents and six Americans
are being held In Beijing
after a weekend of
d ashes between Chinese
and black African stu-
dents.I AS
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been anaered by a traffic dispute.
The Garden Grove man. whose
name was not released today because
his family had not been notified of his
death, was driving a van on Harbor
Boulevard near the San Diego Free-
way shonly before S p.m. when the
Youths
flock to
TV show
tryouts
By PAUL ARCHIPLEV
Of .. .,.., .........
More lhan JOO youths with ho pes
of becoming the Dick Enbergs and
Vin Scullys of the future stepped in
front of a panel of judges Monday
durina auditions for a new children's
sports TV program.
Executive.producer Chuck Foster
said more than a 1housand hopefuh
had inquired about the auditions at
the Irvine Marriot!.
They came from as far as Santa
Barbara. San Diego and Barstow to
vie for one of eight positions that will
be awarded on the program "Sports
Kids."
gunman bepn to chase him, Lt. Gary
Webster said.
Three other men in the van. who
were not injured in the shootin1i told
police the blond man was driving a
Buick or Chevrolet Caprice. Wit-
nesses told police the man chased
them from Harbor Boulevard to
Scenic Avenue and then to Cadillac
Avenue, Detective Dan Hogue said.
Cadillac Avenue comes to' a dead
end near the Costa Mesa-Santa Ana
border, and the van was forced to stop
in the 3SOO block. Webster said.
Both drivers aot out of their
ve hicles. and the car's dnvcr opened
fire with a larae-caliber hand&un.
Webster said.
Two shots hit the van driver in the
chest, and the gunman fled in his car,
Webster said.
The victim was pronounced dead
on arrival at Fountain Valley Re-
aional Hospital. the lieutenant said.
Although the man in the passen-
aer's seat of the van provided police
with a description of the gunman. the
killer remains at large. Webster said.
Hotue said authonttcs were unsure
what sparked the chase, aJthouJh one
passenaer in the van told police the
gunman. signaled for a lef\ tum but
then pulled back into tramc.
That incident, H<>JUC satd. may
have angered the victim. but the
witnesses said he did not retaliate.
Anyone who saw the chase or
knows anythina about the shoot in& is
asked to caJI the Costa Mesa Poficc
............. _ ........
Department at 754-5205.
Jn an unrelated incident Monday,
two tow truck dnvers reported a wcll-
drcssed man pulled a revolver on
them when they sped past him. The
men said they had followed a car that
continually braked for .mo~ than •
mite. and when they passed it. the
dnver pointed a revolver at them.
No shots were fired in that inci-
dent, however. and it appears uncon-
nected to the killing because the
descnptions of the drivers dtd not
match.
-Temples
alerted
to threat
of arson
Phone message,
gas cans reported
a t CM synagogue
By PAUL ARCBIPLEV
OfllleDl9r .......
A th rcat of arson and the discovery
of several containers of psoline at a
Cmta Mesa synag~ last week
prompted the Jewish Federation to
alert tempi~ throughout Qran,e
County.
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Entertainment
Opinion
People
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The planned national television
show was the' brainstorm of former
Congressman and two-time Olympic
gold medal winner Bob Mathias. It
will feature youngsters participating
in a variety of sports. covered by
children sportscasters in a "Wide
World of Sports" type format.
Nlckolu Cbil•er of El Toro &eb bJa •hot at an on-camera audition for a broadcuitbl&Job.
A secretary at Temple Sharon. 61 7
Hamilton St., discovered the threat
when she played *k the telephone
messqe tape on Dec. 21. said temple
president Arvin Kallen.
Police Log
Public notices
Sports
Weather
8 10
8 1-5
A2 Mathias founded the Irvine-based
American Kids Sports As~iation.
the parent organization that will
produce .. Spons Kids ...
Mathias, an unabashed proponent
of old-fashio n American values as
welt as physical fitness and sports.
wants the TV sho\o\ 10 emphasize 1he
AKSA motto "Panic1pauon Is V1c-
to :· ~inning and losing will be down-
pla)ed. Instead. viewers will be
reminded again and again that simpl)
pan1c1paung makes one a winner.
That concept was tried last summer
when AK.SA sponsored the first-ever
Earth Games at UCI. Nearly I SO
(Pleue .ee TV/A2)
According to the police report, a
male using a cfu&uised -raspy voice"
warned. "I am aoing to bum thiJ
temple down."
Later that day. prdcneB found
five containers of psolinc around the
temple grounds.
~Friends recall yttle traffic victim's spi-iit
Pohc:e confiscated the tape and
gasoline as evidenct 1n their in-
vesupuon.
Kat.lcn noufied the Jewish Fedcr-
auon of Orange County. which in
tum called other synagogues in the
area.
By IRIS YOKOI
Of ... 0.-, .........
Costa Mesa resident Dawn Ham-
mond was a typical California youn.s
person. "bubbly" and with a multi·
tude of friends. according to ac-
quaintances and family.
"She had literally 40 best friends;·
said her father. Kenneth Hammond
of Huntington Beach. "She was just a
beautiful. inquisitive. bright person.
She got up every morning and lived
the whole day."
Hammond. who had turned 20
earlier this month. and her friend
Warmer,
Wetter
weather
expecte~
By BOB VAN EVU:N
Of .. ...., ........
Slightly warmer temperat~ and
a chance of rain were expected
Wednesday after a weekend of wintry
weather in Oranae County.
Residents in many pans of the
county awoke today to find frost-
tinted windshields on their cars and af istening white roofs on their houses.
Tempnatures dipped to the upper
20s in inland areas and the 30s on the
Coast on Monday niaht. brinaing
misery to many and keeping farmers
up late to fight the chill.
"We've had a lot of people. really a
lot of ~pie." said Zena Marn.
direClor of the Orange County Inter--
faith Shelter in Costa Mesa. where
homeless people may find a warm
place to sleep. "It's always liu tbis
when we have cold weether. and
especiaHy in niny times like ~ had
over the Weekend .
.. We had to many last ni&ht ~Md
to send a lot of people to another
shelcer in San1a Ana.'~ Th~ Southtm Caffb'nia. tanners uled wind machines to keep
air circulatins around their cropa.
which helps prevent m.t da~ Alan Reynolds of lrvi""nMlled...--
Treasurt Fanns •id wind IMdliMI k~ fral1 da,... to a minimum in
his com .. ny's fields aad ordaaldl.
.. We did pmty well." he •id ... We
UIM _§111 IHchiDel OD all CMll' ~spots incl we
~-..... pc ......
(Pl••-WUI •llJ'MI
~.
Jess.ica Warren. t9. of Stanton. wtre
killed Christmas morning when a
Westminster police car crashed into
the side of Warren's vehicle at
Westminster Boulevard and New-
land ,Street. ,
The police car had its lights flashir1g
and siren sounding as the officer
responded to an emergency call from
two other officers handling a
domestic dispute. The ofl"tcer's name
1s b_cins withheld pending an in-
vesugat1on. -
The California Highway Patrol is
investigating the incident.
"That way. it's an independent
investigation:· said Westminster
Police Officer Tom Broderson.
The probe should take two to three
months. said Highway Patrol Officer
Jeanne Jungers.
Hammond and Warren \\ere on
their way to Hammond's brother's
home in Santa Ana to open gifts when
the 9 a.m. accidc.ntoccurred. accord-
ing to Janet Hammond. the young
woman·s mother.
With Janet Hammond gone for a
week to visit relatives in England.
Warren. a sophomore at Cal State
Fresno. had sta)ed with Hammond at
the Costa Mesa condominium she
shared Wlth her mother.
Hammond was a sophomore at
Golden West College, study1ogcnm1-
nal j ustice. She had plans to become
an FBI agent and was setting her
sights on transferring to UC Santa
Barbara to pursue her goal. her father
said.
"She was concerned about child
abuse and stuff hke that. She didn't
hke drugs." he said.
She had been interested in la"
enforcement since her Junior }Car at
la Quinta High School in West-
minster. her father said.
AlthouJl,h she ll\ed \\Ith her
mother. whohadJUSt moved to Costa
Mesa about six months ago, and was
closest to her. "We had a great
relationship." said the father. "We
talked all the time.''
Somewhat of a clumsy person.
"She drove a Volkswagen Bus that
said 'Shlep Rock' (on the license
plate) because she was always
bum pin& mto things... her mother
said. "She loved the beach and k.11ng.
alt the normal things."
In bet"'ecn seeing fnends. she
worked Monda), Tuesday and
Wcdnesda) nights and somettmes a
(Pleue eee YULE/A2)
"This is the first time we've had
an) 1hmg of this kind." Kallen said.
"We'"e never had any vandalism or
threats." .
However. earlier this year. Temple
Beth T1kvah in Fullerton was van-
dalized. said Merv Lcmmerman,
executive director of the federation.
"There was a problem with some
neo-Nu1 groups that had defaced the
temple:· Lcmmcnnan said.
In 1hat inc1denL a Chnsti.an group
dedicated to fighting anti-Semitism
stepped 1n to help clean up the
te mple. he said.
(Pleue eee All80N/ A2)
CM is b ·ad -news for drunken drivers
By JONATHAN VOLZKE °' .. ...., ..........
The white Chevy swerved a bit
when it made a left turn from
Placentia Avenue into a parkina lot.
but it looked like the type of tum
made when the driveway comes up
more quickly than expected.
But Scou May saw it a little
differently. He pulled his Costa
Mesa police cruiser behind the car,
now parked. and bathed it in blue
and red liaht.
Two men in the car lat11hed when
Officer May walked up. They laugh-
ed loo hard lo even move the beer
bottles clutched between their legs.
The bottles foamed over and spilled
when they hit tht driveway.
Four of the six bonles In the car
were empty.
Politely. May asked the men to get
out of the car. He sat the passenger.
an older man, on a nearby curb and
asked the other to step into the
parttina lot.
The driver almost fell. and
stumbled thf'OUlh May's field
sobriety test.
May handcuffed the man\ who
wasst1ll lauahina.and put him in the
beck of the .. tri>l C81'.
The other m•n alto -.s drunk.
but livedjust a coupk of blocks
away. In :spenish. May told him to
walk home.
May radioed ahead to the Costa
Mesa Jail to ask a blood techn1can.
called to the station on another
arrest. \o stand by. The off\c:tr had
his drunkm-dn""l IUll*t -who
admitted havi• bieD IMre btfore -booked into the jliil in less thaft
an hour.
.. Some DCOOlt are• '*I driv-en." May" llicl -.. ...... ,.. nol
OM of them.'' •
May llM>Uld k..,., He "Mii II
nearly 2'° ~-dnv1n1 arrnts
thi' )Ur. delplt t•SM otTfor a scncs
of su~rin °" Iris shoulder after he was hit on duty -b)' • drunken
drivC1'.
A )\it-yes ¥etlnl1t of the depart-
ment now r's ted to the traflk
d1v1SIOft, Miy lll'OWls *CSt Costa
Mesa -his OW llOmpeftl 1rounds
from n~ts of'illn>I -1n starch of dr'h'ers-.411111.
He knows IM .. Md ht knows
lbc letdc .... • .... b IO find ..
,.ho didn't was on rus wa)' to
church; the other had his son in his
car and was rush1na home a PtZU.
"lt'SJUSt astronomical how many
dn,ers on the .. road have ~n
dnnking." Ma~ said. ,.
Of the I 0 dnvers killed this year
in Costa Mesa traffic accidents, five
were under the anfl~ncc of ak:ohol
and a sixth was under the inRuentt
of drugs. Sat. John FitzPatnck said.
In 1981. 143 dnven deed in
alcohol-related wrccb count)'Wl<Se,
more than half of the 278 traffic
deaths. accordina to California
High..-.-a> Patrol statistics.
~nd the stattsttCS increase on New Year's Eve, traditionally a
night of drunken-driv1na hom>rs,
F1tzPatnck said.
"The thlr\8 about New Year's is
that the hkehhood of stoppena a
drunken dn,er 1ncreues becaUIC
there art more people dnnki..,
especially people who don't drink
throu&hout the )tar," the wrpnt
said. "'The) don~ Pitt themlefves. •• But Costa Mesa Police won't Id
up dnantat-dnvt"I chcdpoena on New Year·, Eve.
lnsaad of wanina for ~
drunken dnvcn to COllll IO diem. \ht depanmmt Wlll dedicate ~
teams-14ofTtttn-to1DCMll•
find them. The depart91CD1'1 ......
dnnkC1' <.'Ol*t alto Wlll be ll[lll'dlilti lw
Most of the ti~. May said. it's =who c1on•t IUY '* u-die
simple ,duc~odc "1olateons that .. ,._.,can-n.ht0tt-af..._ betray a tap$) dnvet" Swen-1na .• •~1 -· • 7; ._. wsttun the lant, even without cross-in me belicopeer. F1111'111tc:t ..._
• .. the lmlt bumps.. is a C"Ommon "-nty .._, • \be ...., •a t " · c..-.. ht bUt dlc)-11 be II* IO fhMI ... ..,. -.n. u " ~ ... una to tum on t =•i= O¥tr at...._ .. ar's ~ts. ~ :i! On a remu ~&rol Ma) JNlltd Fi ift •-• * o~ II driven for \'tolallOftt ,.,... DUI -.......... r D
ill ft'olii tMI bed ltft lllfft to I '' 1• ..... • Ml9 Y.,. ...,.. ... Ni• Ol •he dri~ ed-Ew. • tilt t q c• ta tid
lllillrd IO ck"21litll thlt nilld. 0.
SANTA MONICA (AP) -ne •?"! =· ....... luhi ... I .-., '1 rd_.
be ... ... piM lwa SS milliolt-to-S I 0 million political
and media campaian 111in11 im-
plementation ol lhe measure.
Tbc . ............,.. a~ntly
pl'ep!lfed for ~ to insurers
or b ute b,Y ind~ ~ina poups, was wntten by Clinton Reilly
Campaips.. orpnizer of the industry
campaip ap1nst the measure ap.
proved by voten in November.
Copies of the document were
relealed by Harvey Rotenfteld, bad
of Voter Revolt, the orpnization that
sJ)()nsored Proposition 103. Rosc--
nfield said a copy of the document
show plans for
against Prop.103
was mailed anonymously to has ~p
about a week and a half ..,. The
document wu da\ed Nov. 29. 1981.
.. h 's a PR (public rda&ions) mani-
festo to seek a victory that they can
never win," Rosenfield said. "h's an
attempt to manipulate the public."
Howevtr, Ro.enftdd .cknowl-edaed there is nothina illepl about an
industry lobbyina cams-ip.
No one Wu immediatery available
for comment at the San Francisco
office of Clinton Reilly Campaians.
The memorandum analyzes the
vote for Proposition I 03. which
orders an immediate cut in prices for
most kinds of insurance. In addition
to cutting rates 20 pen:ent below
November 1987 levels. the measure
would revamp the state S)'ltem for
rqulatinJ the indullry ~ ~ the
poll ol ltllUIUCC COIDlftlllloner an
denedOM.
Actina on an industry lepl
challenae. the state Supreme Court hu ICll\pOrlrily blocked imposition
of lhc rate cul but allowed other ~visions of Prooosition I 03 to take
effect. There will be a trial on the
merits of the challen,e.
Hu n dreds m is s ing in ship collision
The memo. as released by Voter
Revolt. recommends that the indus-
lry seek the suppon of leai•lators
fri>m rural and suburben disiricts
where ~it ion 103 failed to pin a
majority of the vote. It 5U1F1ts a
media and lobbyina campaign to take
advanta&C of the fact the measure
passed on the strength of support
among big-city voters in the Los
AJllCles and San Francisco Bay areas.
It suaests the effort would cost SS
million to S I 0 million a year.
Among other sugestions made in
the repon as supplied by Voter Revolt
are:
DHAKA. Bangladesh (AP) -A
passenger sh ip sank today in the
Dhalcswari R iver after beina
rammed by a cargo vessel. and reports
said 200 people were feared drowned.
The United News of BanpMlesb
said about 60 peopJe swam to safety
after an unidentified carao vessel
struck the rear of the passenaer ship
Shasayal. The report said the passen-
ger ship carried about 250 people.
The crash occurred near
Narayanganj. 10 miles south of
Dhaka. The Shasayal was headed for
the capital from Faridpur district
when it went down. police said.
four bodies had been recovered. They
said they had no further details on
casualties.
The United News said aflll)' on-
lookers attacked and ransacked the c:arao ship and beat uy its crew
membtn. The skipper o the vessel
wasmissina.
Police in Narayanpnj said the
passcqer ship had tieen hit from behind. The police said they had
seized the carao vessel.
Mohammad Ali, a survivor, was
quoted as tdlina the Benpli daily
newspaper ltte&Q that out of nearly
JOO passenaien, between 60 to 70
swamtoshc>re. Thereisnotraceofthe
other passeqen, the paper said.
. • Establishment of a high-F.Ofile
spokesman for the industry, either a
media-wise industry executive or a
hired Holl~ actor.
• Renewed efforts to persuade the
state Leaislaturc to adopt a no-fault
insurance law and other indusuy-
supported plans to hold down pay-
ments lo accident victims.
• An industry effort to poom a
candidate for the new eleCted in-
surance commissioner posL ·
Officials in Narayanpnj con-
firmed the passenger ship sank in Police said a salvqe ship was en
more than 30 feet of water and said route to the scene.
.. The 1988 campaian was clearly
not successful. We lost," the
memorandum said. "But l 988 is only
the bqinni"I of a long battle lo
educate Californians about the under-
lyina cost of insurance and to pro1eet
the ... bility of the California auto
i ..... nce system.··
BAD NEWS FOR DRUNKEN DRIVERS •••
From A l
record suggests the figure could be
twice that.
In 1988. May's partner. Many
Carver, arrested 383 motorists on
su.spicion of drunken driving.. more
than any other lawman in the county
and more than the entire Santa Ana
office of the California Highway
Patrol.
If three months of 1987 arc in·
eluded, Carver and May took nearly
900suspected drunken drivers ofTthe
city's streets.
"We weren't trying to set any
records or anything, but there were
Saturday nights when we arrested I_ 0
deuces (drunks), and we averaged six
on week nights." May said. "We're
just tryin1 to tell people that drunken
drivers kill people."
They arrested husband~and-wife
teams and twin brothers who tried to
switch places after being pulled over.
They arrested businessmen. laborers.
fathers. housewives and even a
woman who tested at three t imes the
lepJ limit.
Many of the drivers they arrest
have prior convictions of driving
under the influence, but May said
officers can't let that frustrate them.
"A lot of times when we arrest
someone, we know he'll be out and do
it again next week," May said. "There
nttds to be more education. and you
can't let things like the system
frustrate you.
"If you get frustrated. you're not
going to be as productive. h 's not
your JOb to put people in prison: that's
thej obofthecouns. Youjust havcto
beheve in what you do. And we do."
May said he's heard every excuse
and as much as he might want to. he
can't let a drunken driver ofT.
"People tell me they only had one
drink," he said. ··what's funny is that
they had three drinks. but only can
remember o ne.
"If you're an adult. you should
know better than to drink and drive."
~ympathy isn't really a factor. he
said .
"I always have sympathy for the
people. If you don't. you shouldn't be
HOLIDAY FATALITIES •••
rro..Al
start of the reJ>Oi·n period at 6 p.m. officials don't compile seat belt
Friday and midni t Monday, CHP statistics, Har.ncs said.
spokesman Sam aynes today. Officers will. be out in fo~ again
Meanwhile S8 people.were killed · for the upco~sng ~ew Years ~k
in trafficaccidentsdunnathe 78-hour end.~ his advice for motorists.
Ch · h l'da rt. ·od Har_;nes wd· nstmas o 1 y repo ma pen • -•• he . · d · · 11 he said. pnmary a . vise 1s to a ow
Roadway deaths were up signifi-you!"Clf plenty of ~1mc. to set where
cantly over the same period last year. you re aom~ csp_ec1a!IY •~the ~eather
when. 39 people were killed. and acts up aptn like 1t d1~ t~1s past
Haynes said foul weather. including w~kend. Go slowly, don t dnnk a.nd
snow. ice and rain, may be respon-dnve and make sure you~ wearing
sible for the increase. your sc~t belt and eve,i;yone 1n the car
Twenty-nine of the 40 who d ied in is weanng a scat belt.
CHP jurisdiction weren't wearing Th Associated PnH cootrllHlted
seat belts. Local law enforcement U. lib uport.
in this job," May said. "But if
someone is drunk, they have to go to
jail.
"Every time we arrest a drunken
driver. we take a potential killer off
the street."
May credits bis depanment and
supenors for their strong stance
apinst drunken drivers. The attitude
bro':llht changes in the department
booking process that allows the
officers to make drunken driving
arrests. book the S\1Spects1 and get
back on the streets more quickly than
in any other depanment in the
county.
Reports can be dictated for typing
later, and a blood technician goes to
the station to take samples. which
saves officers the time of driving to a
hospital.
The department also has its own
jail. eliminating the need to drive
suspects to Orange County Jail in
Santa Ana.
··1 don't think we have any more
drunken drivers than in the surround-
ing cities." FitzPatrick said. "But
somethi ng has changed in society. Ten yean 140. enforcement efforts
wcrcn•t likc.tpis.
"Honestly. the way Mothers
Apinst Drunk Driving has made this
such an issue in the country has
forced administraton to adjust their
. priorities."
Costa Mesa Police Chief David
Snowden suppons the effon. His
officers. honored by MADD for
arresting more than I 00 drunken
drivers, are the only ones in the
county allowed to wear MAOO's
"Century Club" pins on their uni-
forms.
"We want ~ople to stop drinking
and drivina..' Snowden said at that
awards ceremony. "But if they're
going lo drink and drive, they'd better
stay out of Costa Mesa."
ARSON •••
F rom Al
In cases like last week's arson
threat, the federation routinely
notifies all synagogues to be on the
lookout, Lemmerrnan said.
The federation had received no
other reported threats or incidents
since then, he said.
TV SHOW TRYOUTS ••• WEATHER •••
From Al
younptcrs ages 6 to 12 from the
Soviet Union. Mexico and the United
States competed in basketball. track
and field. soccer. baseball and swim-
ming.
No silver or bronze medals were
awarded. Only gold. And every
panidpant. whether a fint-or last-
placc finisher, earned a medal.
Usina sports and ph~sical fitness as
attention-setting vehicles. "Spons
Kids" win attempt to inspire and
educate children about such values as
honesty, int~'>." loyalty, self-re-
spect, sayin• • no ' to drup and love
and appreciation for family and
country.
Emanating from a clubhouse-like
tctti~ the show will take vicwen
arounet the world to watch children in
~~E Illy 111111
llUIOPPIC•
---..,. ... Calf• ...... ~-.
sports, from the "Pequito de
Matador" bullfiahts in Spain to the ··uuJe Kahuna" surfing cham-
pionships in Hawaii.
The prognm's reporten. indudina
four boys and four airls between the
ages of Sand 12. win be announced in
February.
Slowed by last summer's TV
writers' strike, the start-up for pro-
duction has been pos~ned until
Easter week, with the fint prosram
tentatively scheduled for afrina in
September 1989. Foster •id.
AKSN e"pects to announce a
netwon dtaf in January. Networks
ex~na intemt include tJtc Di~
ney Channel. a 1~tion firm bd
several cable netWori1. FOiier llid.
rro..Al
also spelled more work for ski shops,
but no one was complainina. ••1t wa an incredible weekend,"
said Ja)' M.cHovsky of Hobie Soorts
Lid. in Corona del Mar ... we•ve had a
very strona KISOn, but this weekend
it really took off.··
The National Weather Service
estimated the snow level wu at 4,000
feet in Southern California. and the
resion•s ski raoru were ~ina
heavy snow packs and e"cellent
lkiina.
A new weather sys1em from North-
ern California was expected 1o brina
.. rtly cloudy skin ~t ~ loW
temperatures raap~ frVm 31 to 46
~ Wedllclmy I temperatures
wae apec:ted lo re8cb w IOI. with
Qne laCal ..... , winds.
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Surf Report
Ti dee
TOOAY
_.....,.
t4 ... t-2 ..
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lecond IOw 1:11 p.m. -.a
.-IDAY
Fif91 IOW'---~·"--· :=':1i:iow 1:13Llft. 1:2.4 p.1ft.
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p.i;.... ....... .n ......... ~ ..._...,11t1 .... ,._••1tp.111.
Poor w.eather damp en s
Bush's quail hunting trip
BEEVILLE, Texas (AP) -Presi-
dent-elect Bush remained !CCluded
today at an isolated ranch but he and
his friends were not optimistic about
their quail huntina prospeets becaust
of poor weather conditions. his
spokesman said.
Steve Han said Bush. armed with a
shotgun, managed to kill some birds
on the first day of his vacation at the
Lazy Franch on Monday ... He didn't
strike out." Hart said.
But todal' Bush was not optimistic
about baainJ any quail because of
the austing winds and overcast skies
that threatened rain. he said.
Nonetheless, Hart said the party set
out o n their morning bunt.
Bush, an avid outdoorsman who
says he loves shooting birds. planned
no public appearances while at the
10,()()().acrc ranch about 70 miles
north of Corpus Christi and IS miles
from this rural town of 15-.000 people .
Hart said Bush viewed his time at
the ranch, owned by Houston
m illionaire Will Farish. as a chance to
relax away from the daily pressures of
the nation's capital.
Joining Bush on the-hunting trip,
an annual event for the last 20 years,
were Bush's brother, Jonathan, James
A. Baker 111, the designated secretary
of state, and Farish. Also staying at
the simple, one-story ranch house
were Farish 's wife. Sarah, and Baker's
wife, Susan.
-The Bushes. Bakers and Farishes
have a bond that goes back to the days
when they all lived in Houston.
Mrs. Bush remained in Washinf-
ton. to pack up the vice president s
house in preparation for the move to
the White House next month.
Bush's schedule for the next two
days will involve rising early to stalk
quail and then returning for lunch.
Hart sajd. Bush probably will take a
in the afternoon, do a bit more
ting and then retire early, prot>-
a about 8 p.m.
hough Bush described himself as
a "fairly good" shot, quail-hunting
conditions were less. than ideal on
Monday, the day he fl ew into Chase
Naval Air Station.
Locals said the 70-degree
temperature was too warm and the
bird population was devastated by
the summer drought.
Bush said he was not squeamish
about shooting birds. even though he
doubted he would kill deer. Discuss-
ing birds, he said, "Ourforefathersate
by harvesting game.'' ~
Work was not a high priority during
the holiday, even though Bush said he
broulflt along ••a little homework, a
little inaugural backgro und material.
a little readina.," primarily on the
budget.
Before he was driven to the hide-
aW.y in ·the 9Cru~ Bush,
wearing his pants tucked mto his
cowboy boots, told rq>orten that he
had talked by telephone to his son,
Jcb Bush. who was flying back from a
quick visit to Soviet Armenia, scene
of a devastating earthquake.
Jeb, a Miami real estate developer.
and his son. George. 12, flew into
Armenia on Christmas Day to deliver
toys and medical supplies to children.
Bush said his son told him the trip
was probably "the most moving thina
he has ever been involved in."
On another matter, the president-
elect also said he supported qyptian
President Hosni Mubarak·sovertures
to meet Israeli leaders in Israel.
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
Shamir also welcomed a Mubarak
visit as a way of moving towards
peace in the Middle East.
"The more contact they have ... the
better it is." Bush said. Asked if he
would visit the Middle East to
encouraae peace, Bush replied: "If I
thought it would funher the peace
process, I would get on tha.t plane
right now and go."
But he quickly added he is not the
president yet. and such diplomatic
events require planning and policy
reviews.
YULE TRAFFIC VICTIMS RECALLED ••• holDAl •.
Sunday as a waitress at Silky
Sullivan's, an Irish pub in Fountain
Valley.
"She was one of the fa vorite
people," said Silky Sullivan's man-
ager Dan Madden. "She never had a
bad word for anybody."
"She worked for us a couple of
yean and was a aood worker. She was
a real dependable t~ of gal."
The two women s wide circle of
• .
== ... ... ... ··-
friends encompassed acquaintances
from hilh school, colleac and jobs. In
hiah scliool, ther were s-rt of the
••popular crowd' on campus, said
Mike Zaby, who graduated 1n 1986, a
year before the two.
••They were two pretty well-known prts.." he sajd. "They had a lot of
friends.·•
After &raduation, they kept In
touch witla many of their hiah school
classmates and were often seen at
panies. said Zaby.
••They were always planning some-
thina.." said Janet Hammond. In fact,
the two J)lanned to attend Mardi Gras
in New Orleans this February with a
group offriends.. she said.
"She was a very upbeat person, a
very people person," said her father.
"Of course, I'm her father, but she wu just the greatest.··
•
Seminar examines
legal aspects of
hazardous waste
The practical, lepl and businm implications of
to1tic waste and hazardous su~ncn will be
addrnsed in a seminar by the Costa Mna law firm of
Rutan and Tucker on Jan. 11 at the Red Lion Inn in
Cost.a Mesa.
Intended for landowncn and developen, the
presentation will be in a case analysis format and will
include topics of potential liability, fllina of cost
recovery action and Proposition 65 iuun.
For further information, call Mary Durbib at
641-SIOOext. 540.
Jewl•h luue. e%plored
"Jewish Issues on the Contemporary Scene"
will be the keynote address of Rabbi Herman
Schaalman at an ethnic dinner sponsored by the
Jewish Community Center of South Oranae County
on Jan. 14 in La'una Beach.
Schaalman 1s former president ·of the Central
Conference of American Rabbis.
The 7 p.m. dinner will kick off the group's
annual Scholar in Residence Program that continues
the following day with a bagel breakfast an~ group
discussions on such current events as the recent
Black-Jewish confrontations in Chicago.
Registration includes meals and the seminar.
and must be received by Jan. 6. Cost is S 17.50 for
members and $20 for non-members. Call 497-2070
or 833-1017 for more information.
Coolilng class for cldldren
A seafood cooking cl~ children, 9-1 4, will
begin Jan. 14 at Irvi ne's wood Community
Park. .
Or. Joe Connor. a biol~ist and cook. will
provide recipes and teach fun, simple ways to
prepare seafood. The $35 fee includes supplies.
Call 660-3881 for more information.
Learn how to keep records
"Record Keeping for Small Busi ness" is the
topic of a Jan. 14 seminar at Irvine's Deerfield
Community Park. ...
Spor1soredby thecityoflrvine, the seminar will
address minimization of tax liability through simple
record keeping. Topics to be covered wifi include
tracking of cash receipts, income. billing statements
and general business tips.
Cost is $35 and more information may be
obtained by calling 660-388 l.
Workshop deals wlth diet
A workshop to develop a personalized program
<t of eating and exercise will be led by Jodi Dean. Ph.D.
on Jan. 23 at the Mariposa Women's Center in
Orange. Admission is SS. and more information can be
obtained by calling S4~-6494.
Learn to manage stress
"Stress Management for the Professional" is the
topic of a three-hour workshop offered on Jan. 19 by
Orange Coast College's comm unit)' service office.
Lecturer Denise E. Davis. a licensed marriage.
family and child therapist practici ng in Tustin. will_
discuss various aspects of stress and how to deal with
it.
·-The workshop runs from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. and
costs $19. Call 432-5880 for more informatio n.
DysJma toplc of meeting
The emotional and social problems of high-risk
learning disabled youth will be the topic of Dr. John
Sikors~}"s address to the annual meeting of the
Onon Uyslexia Society on.Jan. 27. •
While dyslexia occurs in about 14 percent of the
general population. it rises to SO percent in high-risk
youth in our juvenile justice system. The meeting
will address the on-going program to identify
learqingdisabledjuve nsle offenders and teach them
to read and write.
Call 786-0344 for further information.
Tuesday, Dec. 27
No meetings scheduled
Wednesday,Dec.28
No meetings scheduled
...
Holiday celebrated at malls, slopes
., ,,.. AIMda• Pnll
A blast of chilly wathtt packed the
homeless into lhthen and miuaons. while
holiday reveltn celebrated on the Cali-
fornia ska slopes and citrus ranchers
worked to keep their crops from frcczina
ovemisht.
Shoppina centers drew swarms of Cah-
fomians lookina for ~funds and barpins
on the day after Chn1tmas. Snow in 1he
mountains attracted holiday skiers.
"This is the best early season we've had
this time of year in a Iona time," said Chris
Dunn, spokesman for the Bear Mountain
ski reson at Bia Bear Lake in San
Bernardino County. "There's a lot of
festive people running around."
The stonn also brouatu a rare whnc
Chnstmas to lower-lyina rq1ons and
snarled traffic 1n San Francisco Bay area
with ice forcins momina closure of the
Antaoch. Carquinez and lkn1c1a-Martint'2
bridp
Mount Diablo in Contra Costa County
and Mount Hamilton near San Jose were
dusted on top 'Nllh snow.
H1shways 1n the Anaeles National
Forest nonh of Los Angeles were packed
bumper-to-bumper with sishtseers who
seldom. 1f ever. S« snow.
Bia crowds also formed outside shop-
ping malls before the doors opened on
what is trachtionall) one of the busiest
retail days of the )'Car. and many stores
opened early to accommoda1t tlw crush.
The crush started early-7: IS a.m. -at
South Coast Plaza, which heavily
advertised 1t1 after-Christmas sales.
8) midday, bara1n-hunten had free-
way off-ramps bloc\cd for about a mile u
they inched their wa) toward the mall.
where park.Ina ~as a nightmare.
"It's packed -u'll be maxed . out
today," reported Lora Dubbs. manaaer of
the 269-store GalJena in the Los Angeles
suburb of Glendale.
ln San D1cao County. dressing-room
lines were so long at the Nordstrom's
department store in the North County Fair
mall that men 1ook 1he1r bargain duds to
the restroom to ti) on.
Controlled cnao1 -.. lhe lnOOd at
Topanp Plau 1n Canop Park. where
some of the blgest lion MR at checkout
desks for Christmas cards and wrappinp.
"You save half the price," uid Candy
Arnesen of Chatsworth, shoppins at &be
Broad,.ay. "We come here every year:·
Another popular spot was the return
counter.
At the Galleria at South Bay in
Torrance. Larry Keel of Redondo Beach
was trying to return a briefcase his wife had
a;ven him. He said his wife didn't mind.
··she's retumin& what I got her, a real
expensi ve business suit.'' he ~id. "She's
goina to wan until the ~~owds die down.
but rm going for 1t now.
EdArnold:·Channel 5's_Mr. nice guy
By JOYCE BODLOVJCR °' ...............
Ed Arnold moves to the rear of his car
and unlocks the trunk. The interior is
littered with track shoes. rubber gal oshes. a
visor, trophies. an old Jaycee notebook. a
reporter's notepad and. of course. a
microphone.
It is the son of stockpile one would
expect to find in Arnold's car trunk'. A
career radio and television man. Arnold
always seems to be on the move.
And whether he's behind the KTLA
microphone interviewing a sports figure .
servinJ as a volunteer for any number of
charities, or watching with pndc.as his16-
year-old son conducts his first real estate
transaction, Arnold handl~ life with
undaunted optimism.
"I have a strong. strong desire to give
back." said 1he 48-year-pld Fountain
Valley resident. "M¥ mother was wonder-
ful while trying to raise her sons alone. She
is the ultimate. She worked two jobs ...
whatever she could do to make ends meet
for us.
"And though she didn't have a lot, she
was always trying to do things for other
people." Arnold said ... She instilled in me
that sa01e philosophy. That is why I don't
take money for benefits I do. I never felt I
should be paid."
Born. in Arkansas. Arnold was 14 when
he landcdajobwith radio station KOSY 1n
Texarkana. From filing records to hosting
a teen-age 'music show. Arnold said the
memory of those da)'S are bittersweet.
.. Things were tough at home so l had to
work," he said. "I wanted to play football
but couldn't. That hurt a lot beca use I
knew I was as good or better than most of
t~ players on the team. .-
"At 3:30 every afternoon when the)
went to pra<;ti.ce. I went to ~ork. When
they were through w1th practice and going
home, I was stilf workin~.
"Bu t I think 1t paid otTin the long rh . I
had an opportunity to meet several yo ung
entertainers like Elvis Presley. Johnny
Cash and Ray Orbison. We would book
Elvis for SI 00 a show."
....,,...,.....,.,.. .........
over to KA6C (Channel 7). where he spent
11 years. When the station was sold. he lost
hiSJOb. .. If I had been willing to stay in news I
would still be at that station." he said. "But
I really love doing sports .. Most of the news
is ntgative. and r ne-.er did jet a thrill out
of sucking a microphone in the face of
someone go1n~ through a tragedy."
But "'hat goes around usually comes
around and this summer KABC officials
asked him to return, Arnold said. But he
ttjttted the offer. deciding to work for
KTLA instead.
"I enjO) m) relationsh ip with Channel
S." he said. "The)' were there when I was
cut lose."
Arnold does the weekend Sporu Pase
dunngthe IOp.m. news broadcast. He says
athletes have proven to be the ultimate in
funny men. •
..I have done live remotes from ll>odgrr
Stadium and all of a sudden my pents
would be lowered to my knees," be said.
lau1tung. .. Rick. Monday, Jay Johnstone
and Jerry Reuss ... )OU never knew what to ellpect. ~ •
"There were times when I had my script
taken out of my hands or had it set on fire.
I have had pies thrown in the faces of
ecoplc I am intcrviewin&. It seems t~
Dodgers arc the most playful."
Ed Arnold In front of Fountain Valley City Hall. Magic Johnson 1s on Arnold's favorilt
hst, too.
.. He is so refreshing." he said. "There arc
lJmes when he is down. but never down for
Amotd jomed the Marines in 1958 and
was stationed at El Toro. His athletic
ability caught the attention of Santa Ana
College football coach.
"I did a lot ,if sports in the Mannes,
lhings I didn'ttet to do in high school," he
said.
He was recruited b)' Santa Ana College
-now Rancho Santiago -to play
football "'hen he was discharged in 1961 .
Arnold's first semester in college proved
more than an athletic and academic
ex perie nce.
He fell 1n love with the school's
homecoming queen. The} "ere mamed a
year later. ong. lie 1s one of the most upbeat human
··1 asked her to man:y me the first time I beings I ha ve been around.
took her out,'' he said. "She laughed, she • .. Rcgie Jackson and Bnan Downing arc
didn't think I was._serious." outstanding and give wonderful intcr-
Amold's early broadcast mg days were in views. but trying to jet them to do the
radio. He had disc jockey stints with interview sometimes is not easy."
KOCM in Newport Beach and KNOB in Arnold says he has had a few bad
Los Angeles. He returned 10 college and experiences.
earned a degree in broadcasting from Cal "(former Angel} Joe Rudi refused an
State Long Beach. He made his television interview and was downnght rude. My
debut in I 969. emceeing a fund-raiser for problem was solved. I j ust never asked him
KCET. · for another interview. If you tum me
Arnold polished hrs telev1s1on skills down. unless I am forced to do so by my
working as the weekend spons announcer employer. )OU will never hear me ask you
for KTW\ (Channel 5) and then mo'ed another question."
Little Saigon becoming bullion center Babywlthnew .
to be 1n the tens ofm1lhons each year . ..\ IJea:rtJmnrovltJd
no"-closed Internal Revenue Service 'I'' 8
probe sho"ed that in the first three months 8 GllEG llERll
By Tlte Associated Press
Shop owners in the I .S-m1le business
district in Westminster known as Little
Saigon trust gold instead of currenc) to
hold its value. because of their homeland
experiences with devalued paper mone).
About 60 proprietors have O{>Cned gold
and jewelf) stores in the shopping district
spanning from Westminster to Garden
Grove. making up one of the largest
bullion centers in the state.
Merchants here sec the relative stab1ht}'
of the U.S. dollar. but are remtndcd ol a
hard lesson taught b~ 1he Vietnam War. In
times of crisis onl) precious metals and
gems. not currcnc). can be trusted to hold
their value.
.. Gold 1s No. I with the Vietnamese:·
said Dr. Co Pham. president of the
Vietnamese Chamber of Commerce.
··Every Vietnamese likes to sa'e gold
because the mone\ in Vietnam \\as so
unstable." ·
The gold trade among the 8S.OOO
Vietnamese in Orange County 1scs11mated
of I 98S. three stores in Lillie Saigon °' ~....,,... ....
bought SS million in gold from a Los·
Angeles "'holcsaler. PaiF Watts 1s res~nding well to anti-
Vietnamesdamily in the area hid caches rejection druas adm1nmered after the 3-
of gold and Je'helry in their homes until month-old Costa Mesa girt began rejecting
several recent home robbenes. Instead. her new heart last week. her mother said.
man) fam1hcs are putting their valuables Paige spent Chnstmas mommg with her '
in bank safet) deposll boAcs. famil). but 11 v.as 1n a hospital room at
The V 1etnamesc communll) also st"nds Loma Linda Medical Center rather 1han at gold to relat1\CS m Vietnam . home.
Paige was readmitted to the hospital
Dec. 18 when -for the third time since the
D k •11 d • Ch • t D • h t• Nov.14transplant-sheshowedsignsof og 1 e ID rlS mas ay OUSe Ire rejfh~~~~~~~eri"h::~~cfly re1casedtothe
By GREG KLERKX
Of .... .,..,,... .....
A family dog died in a Christmas Day
lire m Tusti n started by smouldering
embers taken from a firepalce. Orange
County Fire Depanment officials said.
The blaze broke out at 2:22 p.m. at
13891 E1on Place. located in an unin-
corporated area ofTustln, said depanmen1
spokeswoman Pam Range. The fire was
contained in 13 minutes. but not before the
flames killed a dog sleeping 1n the garage.
which was Jtuttcd b' the blaze.
The lire caused $1 20.000 in damage to
the garage and att ic and their contents.
Range said discarded fireplace embers
sparked the blaze. The owner of the home.
Foster Moble). told fire officials he placed
the embers in a plastic garbage can outside
the garage after checkmg to make sure the
embers "ere cool. A lr'e ember apparent!~
staned the fire 1n the garbage can and the
blaze qu1ckl) spread to the garage.
Range said all fireplace embers should
be left to cool for at least 48 hours before
remo' al. then hould be hosed down and
placed 1n a metal garbage can.
care of her mother. Pegg). 'hho has rented
an apartment a few blocks from the
hospital.
Taking her daughter back to the hosP?tal
"as "th e hardest ih1ng I'' e had to do.' her
motherpid.
"It was really brutal putting her back
there. es~1ally being Chnstmas and all,''
Watts said this momma. "Butshesccms to
be domg fi ne. She's responding 10 the ant1-
re1ect1on drugs."
Report: Rape victims may be
better off resisting attacks
• • • Someone kicked in the front door
10 a home 1n the 10 blocl of ~1ist)
Mcado" 0' er the "cckend and stole a
video cassette recorder. camera and
watches. • • • .\brown 1982 To)'ota Crcss1da "as
stolen somettme unday from the 0
block of Lakeptnes.
P'oailtain Valley
The owner of thrtt cars parked in
front of hrs re 1dencc 1n the 16000
block of Mt Baden-Po"ell Street
reported someone smashed the rear
windo" of each car sometime be-
tween m1dn1gh t and 9 p.m. Monda~
Damaged estimated at $250. • • • .\ blunt obJ«t was used to shatter
ment. • • • Chnstmas presents valued at ncar-
1) S.WO "ere stolen from a parked car
sn front of an apanmcnt complex on
Iowa 1rret. • • • Two rings 'alued It $2.000 wert tolen from a car parkfd in the 1600
block o( Cecil trttll. • • •
LOS ANGELES (AP) -It may be
better to resist an attacker than
submit to a sexual assault. according
to a new study from the University of
California. Los Angeles.
goads the attacker into more viol-
ence.
said they responded by tailing or
reasoning. telhng their assailant .
"You won't ao to heaven." "I'm not
interested in )'OU," or .. I'll tell )Our
wife," Siegel said.
.\ cellular telephone and 1ottallet
were stolen from a 'eh1cle parked 1n
the 14 00 block of Yucca .\' enue
between 10 p.m. unda) and 6 a.m.
Monda).
theleflfront "1ndo1ott ofa 1987 1ssan
tania parlcd 1n the 10000 block of
La HacLCnda .\' enue late Monda}
night m order to steal a stereo and a
child's car seat 'alued at S.300.
T~ study. published in the Janu-
ary issue of the American J~umal <?f
Public Health. suaests resistance 1s
most effective when the assailant !S
makinJ verbal threats, but probably 1s
futile m response to ph)'s1cal viol-
ence.
"The bottom line is ... resistance
does little to increascone'schanccs of
injury," said Judith Siqel. associate
professor at the UCLA School of
Public Health and the study's main
investiptor. Vicums who fousht beck in 1he
majority of cases did so after they were harmed. which s~ts the
resistance itself was not provocation.
~earl.concluded. "When the assailant is usina verbll
pressure, it looks in a numberof catt1
hkt the vkum can talk t~ir way out
of it, .. Siflcl said.
The new study oontradtets earlier
rnearch ronduchna that resiscance
Sociologists have debated for )ears
whethrr resistance is more likcl) to
save a victim's hfe or provoke a mort
violent attack. but no consensus has
been reached.
Rape counselors say there 1s no
maa1c way to fend off an attack.
"We try to teach women sclf-
defense and then encourqe them to
deci~e whether they shourd even try
10 use it." said Tawnya Jackson-
Perry. asSOC?iate director of the Los
Anaeles Commission on Assaults
Apinst Women. "Only she SttS the
look 1n that rap1sfs e)'ts. 41nd that look is what tells her. 'If I moH'. he's
aoina to cut me up or brtak m> neck.' ..
Sieael's researchers surve)ed 3, I 32
men and women n1t1onw1de. Of
those surveyed. 36S had been seJtual-
ly assaulted or '1c11ms of an at-~mpted assault.
Ftve ~t of the vlC'tims ftrt
younserthan 16' )'ftlrt old. More than one-1h1rd of'lhc VKti1n1
.
1rftM ~f't'rttO,ercdfl'Olal•'Ml! .. 11(
\1011! th.lll I l"O I 'tnkn AOll ball\ MicMl~n and PWrhe
About one-fourth of tho e surveyed didn't resist. and shghtl> Hunttnaton Beach
less than a quaner fought back .\ woman said that someone pul
ph)'s1cally. four percent respQnded "sc,en or eight" nuts and bolts into
with loud and anary talking and 8 the carburetor of her 1979 Mazda and
perctnt told the attacker 1he~ had no that she had to get 11 towed aOe r
se'ual internt m him. hreakmg do" n on the frecwa)
Id ••• The study showed that chi rcn .\ resident 1n the 17000 blocl of
were the least hkely to fiaht b:id. ~tel son Lane said that three bo) s
"Children may ht more trusting of between Sand 7 )Cars old stepped 1n
others and less able to d1stmgu1sh at front of his car and pulled to) auns as
onset an act of affection from an 1ftht) \loCre hokh"g him up. Officers
:ittcmpt at ~xual contact.'' the tuJ) con,erscd ,.1th 1he bo)S and their
said "further. childf't'n arc soc1ah1cd parrnts. telling them 1t "as a pn:tt)
to be defef't'nt and obedient. partacu-Md idea.
f h • • • larl) to those in pos1uons o aut oril) "' rcs1drn1 in the 4000 blcxk llf
or power." · Warner ·henuc \aid that someone
Howtvtt, the 11udy found that \tok a bc1IC' ~rv from her 'l'h1ck
\'ICtams whO Md.,.. attaded on('(' that con1*1ncd StiO and other items
as chiktrea _. •adults ~C'rr ,en or ~..ht ·~oplc reponcdh
mott HIDllY !O ph)~1:all . "ere liahtu• and "teanna ur 1hc dlt ~ ._ to attt"mpt to pla c" at :abou1 11 rm. Monda' :u ..alMii..,• · thc(,anpank, IQ'X)J lkach Bhd • • • \ rn1dcnt tn the 80Cl0 blod. ofSaru
< 1r~le called tht tmtl'ICnC~ ~I I hnc . tO :a1 ~ 11 p.na. Sunda~ I ht H'rc>rt1n1 thit a pat ~ull teml'' v.a\ .,.. • ..,., .. d fonhctt k:1lhn1 ll ntiibborhood oll1e
• • • Someone gained entl') to a 198 1
1eep b) shattenng the passenger's
w1ndo" and steali ng clotfung. sleep-
ing b:lgs and a to) t)pewnter 'alued
at Sb.W while the ~·ar "as parled 1n
the I 7000blod.of n \fateo .\'enuc
on unda~ night
Newport Beacb
.\ resident on Montec1to Drive in
Corona del 1ar reponed the theft of
about S~. 00 1n jewel!') from her
home. u pects 1ncluded 9C\eral
workers v.ho had bttn 1nstdc 1he
house and more than I 00 autsts "'ho
had attended a Dart)' there ....
.\ camera. !lterto rtec1\er. CO
pla)cr and othtr items 'alucd at
about S4.SOO ~-ere buralanzed from a
dnmsfs offiet at 601 l:>o,er after an
cmplo}c-e machenantl) left a t.ck
door unlocked.
Man accused
of kidnapping
his children
M 0...,.. CoMl DAILY "LOT I T'*'9ay, December 17, 1M8
Hole in fuselage forces
jet's emergency landing
Oil pill's
toll:400
birds dead
CHARLESTON. W. Va. (AP) -A
86 federal inspection found a
fuseJaac crack in an aging Boeina 727
that tore open at 31,000 feet, forcing
the airliner. with 110 people aboard.
to make its sixth unscheduled landing
in five years.
Eastern Airlines Aight 2Sl from
Rochester. N.Y .. to Atlanta landed
safely Monday at Yeager Airpon here
after a 14-inch hole in the f usclafC
caused the plane to lose cabin
pressure. authorities said.
Two passengers were treated at
Charleston Area Medical Center for
nosebleeds and headaches as a result
of the decompression, said Gary
Chernenko. a hospital spokesman.
Two National Transponation
Safety Board officials who inspected
the 11rcraft plan to send the metal flap
that peeled off the fuselage to the
agency's Washington. D.C.. labora-
tory, for testing.
. It'll ao back to our laboratory in
Washington. our metallurgical lab.
and they'll use an electron micro-
scope ... to pinpoint the type of
failures on the metal itself,'' NTSB air
safety investigator Pamela Kleckner
said today.
It could be six m"Onths before a final
determination is made on what
happened, Kleckner said.
Passenger Sam Piazza. SS. a former
pilot from Boca Raton. Aa .. said he
and his wife at first thought a bomb
had exploded, a possible cause oflast
week's crash of Pan Am Flight 103
with 2S8 aboard in Scotland.
"We were cruising along and yo u
could hear the rush of the wind and
the pitch of the wind and all of a
sudden you could h~ar a big pop,·: he
said.
"I looked up, and I could see
sunlipt shinina throuah" the cabin
roof, Slid another pauen~r. David
Moore of Phocnil.
The openina in the crown of' the fuse~ was .. about a 14-inch square
hole,' uid Federal A viatio!\ 6dmin·
istration spokesman Jack ~er in
Atlanta. "Thott thinp start with a
crack and end up as a bole."
A five-inch crack had been fbund
on the fuscl• of the plane in an
inspection in July 1986, and ;cor-
rosion and a tiny wing crack were
found in April 1987. Slid Bobbie
Mardis of the FAA's safety data
branch in Oklahoma City.
Federal officials investigatin&
Monday's incident also Slid mcchan-i~I problems. including a failure to
maintain cabin pressure. had forced
the jct to land at least five times
during the past five years.
OCEAN SHORES. Wuh. (AP) -
V olunteen treated 700 waterfowl in a
makeshift bird holpital. as 100 more
binb were found dead in the wake of a
70,00().pllon oil apill.
The cleanup of contaminated
beaches should be complaed by the
middle of the week. Ron Holcomb of
the state Department of Ecoloay said
Monday.
The S;Pill O«Umd Thursday when
the oil bar1t Nntuc:ca collided with
the tua Ot'ean Express, which was
towina_ it off Orays Harbor.
Oil-fouled waterfowl have been ~ 11 far 11 40 miles nonh of
this coutal mart town. with 400
birds foa.ind dead since the spill
occumd. About 700 contaminated
birds have been plucked from
beaches and Jiven fluids and food at a
makeshift bird hospital at the Ho-
quiam Middle School.
2 babies found in Florida, Maryland
About I 00 birds had been scrubbed
to remove the oil from lheir feathers
as oflate Monday, said Jay Holcomb
of the International Bird Rescue
Research Center in Berkeley.
By TM A11oclatecl Preti
Two babies abandoned on
Christmas Day - one after his
mother gave binh and left a Balti-
more hospital and the second in a
park.ins pragc at a Sarasota, Fla.,
hospital -we~ reponcd in good
condition today. 1'
Officials in both states saii:i the boys
would be placed in foster care if their
parents couldn't be located. A youn!
couple who found "Baby Nicholas'
in the hospital garage said they want
to adopt him.
The 6-pound, 2-ounce infant
nicknamed "Noel" was born in Sinai
Hospital after a woman walked into
the Baltimore hospital early Sunday.
gave birth under a false name less
than an hour later and left the
recovery room. officials said.
Polfoc traced a woman who they
had been led to believe was the baby's
mother but she was still pregnant,
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police Sgt. Thomas lkrends said.
If found, the mother could face a
charge of abandonment, he said.
Steve and Robbi Carroll, who have
been married for 13 months, found
"Baby Nicholas" wrapped in a patch-
wor)( quilt in the parking garage at
Sarasota Memorial Hospital and took
him to the emeraency room.
.. We found him and we shouJd get
to keep him," said Robbi Carroll, 33.
"We fell instantly in love with him.''
I. ,.,. ..... , ....
Vol-teer Rada Henaley feeda flah to oll-co•ered blrcla
before cleantq-at a mall:eahlft hoepltal In Hoqalam, Wuh.
The rescued waterfowl, mostly
open-ocean birds such 11 murres. arc
beina fed twice a day with smelt. Of
those treated. 2S percent to 65 percent
arc expected to survive, officials said.
Oil ruins the insulatina effect of a
bird's feathers, which can cause death
from the cold, uid state biol6gist
Pam Miller. Birds can also be
poisoned from oil they inacst while
cleaning their feathers.
The cleanup Monday focused on
the most-contaminated beaches.
Storm chokes Midwest fiolidciy traffic
By Tlte A11oclated Pres• national Airpon was closed for two spent several hours at Chicago's caused a tractor-trailer to Jackknife
Snow. sleet and freezing rain hours Monday so crew$ could clear Greyhound bus terminal while re-on Interstate 69, triaerina a 42-ar
stretching from the Rockies and snow off runways. About 2S flights turning from a Christmas trip to pileup that left one person dead and
Pl · Oh' ·ed h I'd were delayed, airport spokeswoman Iowa. 23 injured. An unrelated 3S-ar upper aans to 10 stymi 0 1 ay Patricia Rowe said. h pileufc on the h1'ghway 1'n1iured e1'ght travelers in choked airports and on In Utah, the eavy snow caused the 'J snarl~ icy highways, causing at least Warmer air moved into some areas colJapse of a depanment store roof peop e. 10 tramc deatns. today. but cold air dominated the south of Salt Lake City. No injuries AltoSCthcr five people died in
At O'Hare International Airport in nonhem and central lntermountain were reported, since managers of the Indiana traffic accidents blamed on
Chicago. the nation's busiest. only area: Ely, Nev., registered 20 degrees Fred Meyer store denied entry to the storm. Also Monday. Illinois and
two runways were o~n Monday and below zero and had a wind-chill customers when they arrived Mon-Minnesota each reported one storm-
United Airlines. o Hare's heaviest reading of SS below zero this mom-day morning and found the roof related traffic death. Three people
user, canceled most outbound flights ing. · sa~·ng and creaking from 6-foot-died on roads in Wisconsin.
after 5 p.m. and an additional 16S The early winter storm Monday hi snow drifts. It collapsed soon Farmers welcomed the storm in
fli&hts ttfis morning. . dropped up to a foot of snow. closing a terward. -· North Dakotak-which like much of the
Nearly S0.000 passengers were interstates in five states. "Luckily they didn't open the store region had sunCred a severe drought.
stranded at O'Hare on the day after ~"I was stuck last year on Christmas or we would have had a major Up to 11 inches fell on parts of the
Christmas. one of the busiest travel eve at the airport, so 1 thought this catastrophe," said Salt Lake County state.
days of the year. Jcar I'd take the bus. Wrong!" said Fire Depanment Capt. Max Berry. 1 • ood • · r. Milwaukee's Mitchell Inter-an Gabnelson of C1'nc1'nnat1·. who I I d" · "t SI news.' saidwhcatiarmer
-------------------------.J..-------------r.:==============n==n=1a=na=,=th=e=w=·1n=t=er=w=e=a=th::;c.,r Peter Silbernagel of Linton, N.D.
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m1xeaas
term ends
Travel in
··fast company.
NEW YORK (AP) -Ronald
Reagan leaves office with his personal
popularity intact. but with Americans
viewina him unfavorably on man)
policy iJSUCS, a Media General-
Associated Press poll has found.
Most respondents viewed Reapn 's
performance ncptively on social and
governmental issues such as educ.a·
· tion and ethics. A majority also rated
bisjudpnent unfavorably.
er
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Yet Reapn retained his enormous
personal approval. A vast tw~thirds
endoned the way he has done his job
ovcraU. Many said history will view
him positively and SS percent said he
has made the country better.
The nationaJ survey of 1,084 adults
fouud two factors at the heart of
Rcqan's ~larity: hiah ratinas for
E • i his leadenlup and a belief that his ntertamment n The Burro Room economic policies the past eiaht years
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. ,
~~· ~~101 ~,-
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his handlin,s of defense and U.S.-..
Soviet relations. And he was seen as
an effcct+ve president: More than six
in 10 said he has accomplished most
of what he set out to do.
The survey was conduc\ed Nov.
10-20. shortly after Vice President
Georae Bush wu elected Rcapn's
successor. Despite Reapn•s popu-
larity, a ~ority uid they would not
have 11:1PDOl'led him for a third term
llpretadenL
He laves office Jan. 20.
Reapn'1 ratirw were hiah on
personal qualities: Two-thirds ranked
his leadership ability u excellent or JOOd and th~uarten favorably
rated his .charisma and bis ability to communacate.
Six in IOalso ranked him positively
for his 8CCOl1lplishments in office overall. But Rcapn did less well on
another attribute, his judp1cnt as ~t. with 53 pm:ent ntina him ...
neptavely .
~n ·1 poDUJaricy flailed on social illUel. On civil rilfa_ts, 5 I
percent rated him ftellliVely; on
education, S4 percent were ftllllUVCj
oO bousi~S percent; on Wllfflft. 61 pen:enL lix in 10 rated him
ncptiwlyon ilhandlintofethicsin
IOYemtnent. ~ndent• were lboal evenll IPlit oa aDOlber -... a .... n s .elec:lioDolWnlj..._ 86Moatw0
odler ~·= ...... Seft1I n, IOfltldhim wcnlllf • iaru.e. eilll1 .. IOoa U.S.-lcmic Nlldons. "ntPGJ~••a•"'ilaue --aa111 ... or....,.• poa!Uw dtol• ~ W" .,~ .. r:=:::.r~-= _, ....... 11.... ....
Witnesses say
rioter killed
after surrender
TEPIC, Mexico (AP) -Members of a special police commando squad
that quelled a prison uprisina killed 11
leut one inmate after he had sur-
rendered.
At least five inmates may have been killed at\er surrenderina.
Freed holtaae Patricia Castillo said
Monday that 1he commandos entered
the yenustiano ~amnza sta~e peni-
tentiary on Fnday "shooting in-
discriminately.
'"The squad was very anary because
they (the inmates) had killed their
commander. There was quite a bit of
shootina. They killed all the inmates
there. except one."
Of the four inmates in the room
where Castillo spent 32 hours as a
hoscaee. only Jose Martinez Palafox was captured alive, she said.
Maninez' name is on the list of 2S l)CC>ple who died in the uprising in
Tepte
I
0r8nge CoMt DAILY PtLOT/T~, Dec_..., 27, 1• Al
African, Chinese
students clash
BElJlNG (AP) -Authorittei
today held about 140 African stu·
dents and six Americans in a Nankina
hotel after a weekend of clalhes
between Chinese and black African
students.
Thousands of Chinese youths
chanung "Kill the black posts!" on
Monday surrounded the central Chi-
nese city's train stauon as tht stu-
dents tried to depart for the capital by
train, American witnesses said.
But police would not let the
Africans embark. one American stu-
dent said. Chin~ students at a university 1n
Nankin_g did not attend classes today
and officials at another school uracd
students not to panic1pate in further
demonstrations. Amencan students
said.
Several 1ruckloads of police pa-
trolled the Cit). the American~ M!id.
The clashes and demonstrauons.
which began Saturday and lasted
,. , 1 ,, 11, until Monday niaht, arc the latest in a
.China pndes Itself on its liOOd tics
w1th Afncan countries. Relations
between the Africans and Chinne.
however. have often been strained.
Chinese often arc QJ>Cnly racist,
say1n1 they find black people dirty.
The problem is compounded be·
cause African students in China arc
mostly sina.le men. who spend up to
six years here and want to date
Chinese women.
The six Americans held at the
hotel. all of whom are white. went to
the train stauoo with the Africans 10
express solidarity with them. 'fhc
U.S. diplomat, who~ on con-
d1t1on ofanonymity. said the protests ·
did not have an anti-American
character.
He said after talking to the students
that they were bc1na treated well but
wanted to return to their univcnitics.
··The average student feels he is being
held against his will," he said. A clerk in the pnson law ot1ice,
Castillo was among about 19 hostages
seiml Thursday by a aroup of
inmates to protest the denial of
Christmas pardons for good behav-
ior.
llotller 1'ller.a beld tlae laaad of 101ear-
old ADU <>nepyan wllea •lie an the
St.ten of tile Oi'der of CllarltJ Ylalted
eartlaqaake Ylctima at a b09Pltal In series of 1~c1dents between Oiinne
Yereftll Armenia. The Slaten will be and Chinas 1.500 Afncan students.
•-A1 .... ;-tla 1 ... a.. • .-.a( tla _ _. ... _.,-. Two years ago. the aovemment ----.¥"' oee--.,_.lll'U D e~ ...... -e. · crushed widesprcaH student ckmon-
The American students included
five women and one man. and arc
from U.S. univmities such as Duke
Un1 vers1ty in North Carolina and
Wesleyan University in Connecticut.
Their names were not released. -------------------... ----ml!---------1!11111-----------------strat1ons seeking greater democracy.
Egypt pressures Israel to rticognize PLO
~==============::;;;:--
-~ ......... ,_.
............. •' 11£ 1c: •Wt.it..._..,.._ CAIRO. Eaypt (AP) -~ypt wants Israel to apec: to talk to the Palestine Liberation 9rganiza-·
uon before President Hosni Mubarak will visit the
Jewish state, a Cabinet minister said today.
Butros Ghali, minister of state for foreign
affairs and f.aypt's sccond-rankinf diplomat. set
the condition today in a statement to reporters.
"E&YPt always has emphasized the import-ance oldWoaue and contact between the PLO and
Israel," Ghali said.
.. ln lijht of this objective, President -Hosni
Mubarak 1s prcpercd to visit Israel if it agrees to
dialoaue with the PLO," he said.
Such a condit~on would virtually rule out a
visit by Mubarak to Israel, which views the PLO as
Tests on
suitcase
may reveal
crash clues
LQCKERBIE, Scotland (AP) -
The first of the dead have been
identified from Pan Am Flight 103.
and investigators today began tests on
a suitcase for clues as to whether .a
bomb or structural failure caused
Britain's worst air disaster.
The suitcase and an unspecified
amount of wreckage were sent to the
Royal Armament Research and Dc-
ve lopmen t Establishment in
southern England "for more detailed
examination to determine whether
thef exhibit evidence ofa pre:-impacl
expt,osion," Michael Charles, the top
Bntish invcstiptor on the scene, said
in a statement
Transport Department press of-
ficer Penny Russell-Smith said the
tests bcpn today and mi$ht be
concluded "as early as tonight or
perhaps a few days.·
The Times of London reported that
the · suitcase. noticed lying among
wrecka&e. was ripped and torn and
misht fiave bctn damaged by flying
metal. The rcpon said the Fort
Halstead scientists "should quickly
be able to establish whether those
marks were made by an explodina
bomb."
Police said they hoped to release
five or six bodies to next of kin today
once the last formality of regjstering
the death in Lockerbie was com-
pleted. Names and nationalities were
not issued. One more victim was found Mon-
day, bringing the total in two tempor-
ary moraucs to 240. Pan Am said today it had de-
tennined that another infant was on
board Aipt 103, bringing the total of
passenaen and crew on the plane to 2S9. Eleven townspeople arc still
listed as missina and feared dead.
After three days of constant rain.
more than 600 rescue workers re-
sumed their search under clear skies
today for the rcmaininJ victims and
for missina wm:kqc. including sec-
tions of the airplane's winp.
Police divers joined the rescue
effort, scarchina the icy. rain-swollen
waten of the lakes. reservoirs and
bop in the lOOsquarcmilesofru14ed
terrain and dense woods surrounding
the crash zone.
Civilian and Royal Air Force
patbolosists and a ~P of onhodon-
tists say the identification process
would take another I 0 days.
-.. Iian releases
Brltiah tourist
LONDON (AP) -A Briton im-
P,ri1e>ncd in Iran for more than two yan on weapons chal)Ct returned
bomc today after bcin& released from
~ a Tehran l>':!son. Nicbollil Nicola. 23. was met by his
filther and br Foreisn Off ace officials
at London's Heathrow Airport.
He smiled as he walked down~
airpluc's ~ and wn then drivtn = out Of the airport from the
without com~ntina on his
...._ 1k fore'I" Oflitt would not
dill:lole bts '#MftaboUtl.
News ol Nicoll'• meaw fint came
ft'Oftl sM Erwlilh--l.a ...... "'"" ,.... Tehran fjma. which ,,
a terronst group and retuses to deal with it.
Rejection of any dialoaue with the PLO is pan of
the coalition agreement sianed last week by Israel's
Likud bloc and Labor Part)'..
Mubarak made a qualified offer to visit Israel
in interv\ews with the Kuwaiti newspaper Al-
Anbaa and the Japanese newspaper Yomiuri in the
last few days. '
, .. Why not goT' he said when Al-Anbaa asked
if he would visit Israel to solve the Palestinian
issue. "If this visit would lead to solving the
problem. and if it would lead to establishing a just
peace, then I am ready."
Mubarak told Yomiuri he had no firm
intention to visit Israel but a.,ain offered to go if
necessary to achieve peace. "But it depends." he
added. "I don't accept any preconditions."
Mubarak's remarks were 1mmediatel} wel-
comed in Israel and the United States. Prime
Minister Yitzhak Shamir of Israel. howe,er, said
the Egyptians must attach no preconditions.
Ghali was among the architects of the· 1979
Israeli-Egyptian peace 1eat). the only one between
1n Arab county and the Jewish state. •
Ghali·s statement 1oda}' was supported by
other government sources. who said a Mubaralt
visit to Israel was .. almost unimaginable" unless
Shamir changed his opposiuon to an intemat1onal
pcact. th.e conference and accepted the PLO as a
negotiating partner.
)
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A8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Tuesday, December 27. 1988
by 811 Keane COUNTER CULTURE by Maratta & Maratta
"Oh, g<>O{J, Mommy! You're makin'
the shortcake taller!"
I P
MR . LA MP05 MOTHER
(O MtS -ro viSiT .
Don't 5loucn .
....
llARMADUK.E by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE •NACE
"I'll wash my own back, thank you!"
PEANUTS
GARFIELD
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
R08EISR08E
by Hank Ketcham
-~
~
6AANDPAS THANKING ME FOR HIS CHRISTNAS
PRESENT ... WHAT DID~l GIVE HIM?"
by Charles M. Schulz
WI-I'< DO TWELVE
BIRDS TMINK THE'(
6 CAN PLAV HOCKE'( i ON ONE FROZEN
j WATE:'R DISH?
12.-Z7
: ~ ~~~t(~A i L_ -~l ·=' "-:<. r-_..i_, ~;==:r:':::J ~ q, I ~ . ":/ . . .. /
! -----..........__ ~ -
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
by Pat Brady
'
I
ARLO AND JANIS
-
I
by Jimmy Johnson
'-'MAT'S~ WITM~IOt.l FOR~£»>!> 5Ml
.•
by Lynn Johnston
MY A:E:T~CO\.D.
l'M \fUSfGET1fN't1y'
-.--.. SU~.
JUDGE PARKER
FUNKY WllfKERBEAN
BEFOR.E WE
l.£AVE , 1 NEED
1t> GIVE IH€
. £1..ECTRIC CDM~A CAU. !
DOONESBURY
by Harold Le Ooux
MEANWHILE I WISH SAM HADN'T
lOLD ME TO WRITE A LIST OF'n-tlNGS
I I LIKE AND DON'T LIKE ABOUT SAYLOR/ 50 FAR,I CAN ONLY
THINK OF THREE THINGS ANNOY ME/
by Tom Battuk
1 WAAI 10 &...E.l 1J.4E.M
KNOW 'TMA'f WE' L.L BE
MARa-tlNG IN "THE. Ra:>E
PAAADE ON NELO IJEAR'&
~ ...
by Garry Trudeau
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OW .. t.,~ th • I ~. e *O•cfl
fARCLf I r I I I' I • ... ;~ ~...:·..::..~~
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l'WIJD -...., _ _, ------
Ariother case of
'do what I say,
not what I do'
Young people beware. Bca.innina Jan. I, a conviction on
any drinkina or drug charge wilfoost you your driving privileges
for a year.
ft won't matter where the offense occurred. Your driver's
license and freedom of mobility is the i>enaJty even though the
crime may or may not have occurred while you were drivina.
The new law will work somethini like this: Anyone
between the ages of 13 and 21 will Jose their drivini ~viJqes for~ear upon conviction of a dru1 or alcohol cbarae. lf you are cau t and convicted for drinking a beer before your 16th
bi day, the driver's test and license will have to wait until
you're 17. If you already have a license, it will be revoked for a year.
Before you yell too loudly about the unfairness of this new
state law, remem~r that your legislators are just tl)'ing to
protect you. They want to ensure you have a longer life and can
point to statistics that show alcohol-and drug-related traffic
wrecks are the No. I cause of death for tcen-a1ers.
.. What about alcohol-related deaths for ~pie age 2 l and
up, and how did the 20-year-olds get lumped into the teen-age
bracket?" you ask.
Don't try to confuse the issue, we're talking about young
people, not about adults who use drugs or drinlc too much, then
hop in their cars and weave up and down the streets and
freeways.
But, if you force us to look at the big picture, you're right.
Don't remind us that nearly twice as many people in the 20-
to-24 age group die in alcohol-related traffic wrcck.s as those aJ"d 15 to 19. Oon'ttrytoconfusc us with lhefactthatoverthrec
times as many people in the 25-to-64 age group are kiJled yearly
in similar wrecks.
Regardless of what the figures say, it's hard to dispute what
its advocarcs are sayinf about this new law. They are right to
point out that loss of dnving privileges will make young people
think twice about drinking or using drugs. Few things are as
important to this age group as a driver·s license. so the loss of
that privilege is a good deterrent.
They also arc right when they say the new Jaw will probably
save lives -·young people's lives. How could anyone argue
about that? It may be a chche, but many of your elders sincerely
believe that you are our nation's most valuable resource, and
they want to protect you. ...
So get yourself together and face the music. California is
serious about showins young people that using drugs and
drinking arc not the th1n1 to do.
Walk a straight-and-narrow path until you reach that magic
threshold that comes on your 21st birthday.
Drinking and using drugs will still be Just as dangerous -
especially if you're driving under the influence -but the law
treats adults differently. Adults are more experienced, wiser and
more accountable for their actions.
Try to overlook the obvious fact that adult traits like aF.,
wisdom, experience and accountability have little to do wtth
right and wrong.
Overlook, ~f yo can, the logic that holds: If it is wrong for
a young person t rink or use drugs, it's wrong for adults to do
the same thing. orget about things like. if the loss of driving
ppvileges is a J deterrent to drinking and using drup for
young people, 1 s an equaJly good deterrent for adults.
ff you think this new law makes you a second-class citizen,
you're right to some extent. But it's being done because many of
your elders want to impress the seriousness and magnitude of
the problem on you. If the new law frustrates you bttause ifs a classic example
of adults telling you to "do what I say, not what I do." you have
some reason to get mad. But it's being done for your own good,
and political expediency. You see, few legislators would have
the political fortitude to try to apply the same standards to
adults that they are imposing on you.
.. That's hYJ?<>Crisy." you say.
You are nght again.
Low-income housing
The state Constitution says low-income housing projects
have to be approved by local voters. and the state Supreme
Court has taken this to mean that the voters nttd to know
something about the size .and location of P!'O~s before
approving them. That ruhn& by the 4-3 maJonty showed
common sense. but in the short run it's bad news for the poor,
who may lose out on some badly needed housing because of
neighborhood opposition.
... The justices, siding with Berkeley residents who had
sued the city for failing to tell. them mo~e about .a ~ropo~
project, thus kjlled a longstanding stat~w!dc pracu~ an wh1ch
cities provided only bare-bones dcscnphons of prOJCCts. -
... Still. this needn't be seen as a loss for the under-
privilCJed certain to provoke a new wave of homelessness throu~~'~t the state. The ruling should be taken as a si nal
that it s time to help low-income families in ways other t~an
publicly owned housing. which historically has provided
watering holes for crime. drugs and. more recently. gangs.
... One such idea. which has been used by the federal
government in limited demonstration projects. is that of
distributing housing vouchers to cover pa~ of the rent and
havina low-income residents make up the difference.
Housing vouch~rs w~uld not stiamatizt the ~r by
assigning them to cnmc-ndden enclaves under the guise of
compassaon.
... The needy. dependin& on their incomes. would. have
the freedom to hve anywhere they wanted. That's the lund of
integration no court could improve upon.
Ln A.9pJel Dllb' Newt
ORANGE COAST ..., ....
llnmry Clll I
Publisher
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Tl.-dey, 09a I ,.., 1.7, tlll A7
Newport's water concerns~
deeper than new lines in CdM
Hoora y. Councilman Phil Sansone
found his two-bx-four. In politics
there is a sayina. 'first you set their
attention. For that you need a two-by-
four."
Sansone has been slowly earning
arud&ina admiration but that was &efoi'C the Dec. 5 council meeting.
Everyone sat up and took notice
when Sansone called a halt 10 what
would have been routine sewer and
water projects on East Coast High-
way.
The Irvine Co. needed sewer im-
provements to proceed with its Irvine
Coast development. In an unrelated
matter, Laauna Beach wanted to
replace the lines that deliver its water
from Bia Canyon Reservoir. Irvine
Ranch Water District will supply the
water to the development alona the
Irvine Coast. Sanitation District Five
will provide the sewers according to a
longtime understandina between the
cityofNcwpon Beach and The Irvine
Co.
Newpon Beach has been in an
enviable position with its water and
sewer capabilities. Because this lypc
of infrastructure takes a long lead
time, it is the most futuristic of all City
planning.
Whenever I would dig in to find out
who was responsible for our excellent
status, one name would aJways pop
up -former City Councilman Hans
Lorenz.
What a touah. farsighte.t man he
was and is. How I wish I could have
been trained by him during his
heyday-1958 to 1964.
I recently asked Lorenz to tell me
how we got our down-coast connec-
tion.
First of aJl, the climate was dif-
ferent in those days. he explained.
Back then, the city did not automati-
.
call y take an adversarial position
when dealing with The Irvine Co. It
was assumed we had a common goal.
and Lo create the most e1tccllcnt of
cities we had to work for what was
best for everybody.
"However, The Irvine Co. would
often first try the easy way."
JACKIE
HEATHEI
When the oversized 36-inch line
with two pump stations could not
pin approval through Shorecliffs. the fall-back position was a temporary never go1 credit for it.
eight-inch line. Now that line is at We compared notes. and now I
eapacity and needs to be upgraded 1f have some new things to worry about.
we arc to serve the down coast. At last tbe city seems to be movina
After jumping throu&h all the toward some alternate water sources. ad~inistrative h~ps ana sculing ~he We kept saving up money when I
suit filed by th~ Fncn~ of the Irvine · was on the council, but we didn't
Coast. The ln:in~ Co. 1s, af\er many •nd 11 ''You can't drink money."
years of negouauon, understanda~ly wa~ one of my hyperboles tttat
more than readr to proceed on ns endeared me 10 the city manager down coast devr Jpmcnl. ·
Then whack. That two-b)·four hit The city finally JOined up with the
them right between the eyes. county water district. Lorenz and I
Sansone's resolution called for op-compared what we knew about the
position to sewer and water line city's investing an well exploration 1n
improvements on East Coast High-the Mile Square area. I promised to way unul Pelican H 111 Road was find out if there was any truth to the
finished to divert traffic around rumor that the county wanted to
Corona dclMar. The most optimistic trade this for more dcvdopmcnt
completion date for Pelican Hill nghts at the city and county Jointly-
Road is 1990. owned county dock. Lorenz rc-
lf anyone could solve this dilem· minded me that when these parcels,
ma. Lorenz could. However. he is aJong with the Sea Scout parcels. were
about to take off on a skiing trip. assembled 1t was with the under-
When I called to ask his advice. I had standing that both aaencics would
to wait until he finished a tennis work to protect this important wi n-
.match. He will be 78 on has next dow on the ba).
binhday and bn":gs the same vigor However. v.ic do need the ~ells, he
and C!lergy to h!s hfc as he brought to said. "We can't put all our trust in 1he
tbe ~lly Council. state aqueduct system. Look at what,
Did )'OU know ~.c owe the excel-happened to the Romans and the
Jenee of ~ur co!'1phc~ted water S)'S· Ma)'ans when the eanhquakes hit" tern to this mans farsightedness~
He helped put together the reser-
voir system. He was the cxpcn on the
city's water and sewer system but
Jadh Halkr Is a tttldHt of
Ne"'J»Tf Bead aM a fH'llJ~r m•r•r
of tat city.
Money~tandingin the way
of better safety for workers
or years, health experts wanted to -=
notify workers, but funds were rejecte<!
they're keeping an eye on Vice
President~lcct Dan Qua) le. too.
JICI
AllDSll
and JOSEPH SPEAR
~
Dunng the vicc-prcsidenual debate
in October. Quayle insisted he and
Bush had a commitment to safety cancer. Asa result, t4cuesofbladder
..for our working men a nd women." cancer were caught m the early stagn.
But Quayle's commitment d1dn·t BCSIN ESS AS USUAL -One of
go deep enough for him to suppon the pnnc1pal reasons for Pres1dcnt-
Metzcnbaum's notification bill - a elect George Bush·s hesitancy o'er
bill that c' en some chemical com· choosm& a new team to run the
panics favored. · Pentagon has bttn the strum of
Quayle and other detractors hid reports telling ham that despite this
behind that old standby -that a year's Pentagon financial scandals.
better ball could be drafted. They said no thing has reall~ cban~
the notification process would be a He has ~n informed. we ha"e
financial burden for smaJI busancssn leamtd. that only the hmned arta of
and that workers would sue their questionable pa)'mcnts to consult-
bosscs when they learned about the ants has ~n partially cleared up . c~posurc to danaerous substances. The ovef'111,.astc. management goofs
(The bill included a provision that and profitccnn& continue v1 nually
notification alone was not grounds unabated.
for a lawsu1L) . Despite publK"1ly over toilet "ats
Critics who also nuS«t the concern and hammers that could have bttn
that healthy workers could receive a gold~plated for what the PenlalOn
notification by mistake and make paid for them. the ~urcrMnt
themselves sick 'AOO)lnl about i1. program 1s .. st1ll aaushcr • fordcknte
The National Institute of Occupa· contractors. one Pt-nuiaon source told
tionaJ Safety and Health es stan1na us us.
own modest not1ficat1on propam, "E'er>bodY over her'C has been
but has only $~.000 to do the Job. lealu"f 5'Uff for months" to defense
Metzcnbaum's blll would ha'c inv~tors and e'en the Whnc
budaetcd SlS million. House. the source said. "But nobody
Tl\t ~ program is dcs"1\cd to docs a damn th1na."
keep people from puuck1nt said The nett m.,or scandal may twn
spokeswoman Diane Porter. Workers out to be 1n tht' armed Rf'Vtcn
att told they f8cot a nsk and arr subcontramna proct'durn.. On man)'
ldYQed to ha~ a medical (httkup proj«ts.t~attnowsomanyltveh
and monitor thftr health. of subcontra(tors. wnh ca.ch •• 1
.. , tlunk oeoolt ha'-e a f'llht to IJitt. that httlt 1s ltft to ttt * job
ltnow thftt halth sutus. .. Porttt told done naht
O'f r aS10C11te Scolt Sltft. "How they One Navy ~\TllCtor tokl ua.
de1lw1th1tisupio\ht1nd1vidual We "The\' u.&ked about Ltt lllC'OCD fcW
tr') tO lt1inplaceaSY*ft\1iO pcopte P"'C$Mkn\. 'TM) didn't need M• ill
don't o'c~act." thr Wl\lle Hou1e. ~ n«d him•
The OC'C\IPltlOMl health •MY llCttttar) o( ddtate. ltit llM •
has c:ondue1ed ~•Mtnal noufeca. lacocca to clclin ., 1llie mm °""
uon PfOP'Ul'S 1n the plst. without thttt I am "' , .. Off~ ~ caUll"ll .. ,~ ofpante )n 1911 , lft tbat I ihoulda' tit ..... illit f•
taom"""lll ~m 1n "II•"· -.meet •a.·---·--~"~::-Ga . llOlifitd l'.400 peop1t who wm-. ~ _.,. ,uJa-.., ..........
at hilh n of de'dos"na bladdcf .,.., •• 11ii11 S 'r
,I L .
I
Deslgn Review
Board deserves
more support
I
To the Editor:
J, for one, btlievc that the i..u-
Beach Dni&n Review Board huao.e
an ouwandina .)Ob. It is unbtunate
that advenary positions occur with
applicants and their architects. but it
is understandable.
With the ever cscalatina cost of
land, it is undcrstandabk that the
developer or homeowner will want to
build the biggest build1n.a or house on
iL We cannot permit this.
CcrtaJnl)' the couns have been
consistent that 1t isn't a riaht to be
able to build anything on your own
land. You have to respect the ri&htsof ·
othen and build an accordan~ with
the zoning and the nciahborhood.
Many cntics try to mU.c tbc
impression that all of the Desian
Review decisions are bucd upon
subjective judgments. This~ ~n
greatly exaggerated, as most deci9!1ons
arc based upon the clear wnttm
policies and guidelines of the city.
Certainly, one consideration is the
V icw Preservation Act. which is on~
of the areat contributions we owe to
Councilman NcaJ Fitzpatrick's lead-~
ersbip. ~f you bve on the ocean side of your
neisJtbor. you must compromise to
permit both to enjoy u much view as
practical. This rcqwresjudpneftt, but we most assuredly do'not want a row
of thrce-ttory structures block.ins the
view from all but waterfron l . properties.
The Dcsi&n Review com-
missioners have been doina a pat
job. but they have not been ,ettina ~
suppon they deserve from the City
Council. The City Council hears
many appeals, allows new infor-
mation to be presented and too often
ovCfTUlcs the boa.rd. The council then
bas their mfttinas go on forever, and
it robs tbcit time and attention from
other prenif\I iisucs. The commissioners arc citizens
who meet every Thursday niaht in
addition to spcndina many hours a
week reviewina the sites and plans.
We ouaht to be ~tefu.I for their
commitment and sacrifice. If the council wants to be able to
obtain the services of such quality
people in the future. it wou&d be wise
to show more respect and supon for
the commissioncn' hard work.
GENE FELDER
Laguna Beach
Lagunansmust
express views
on development
To the Editor:
Laguna Canyon needs to be saved
from the ovcrdcvclopmcnt that is
engulfil\& Orantc County. A public
meeting was hcJd on Dec. 14 to
dctemunc if our community had any
concerns regarding the proposed
Caltrans widening ofLaauna Canyon
Road, and/or the construction of
3.200 houses (Laauna Laurel).
About 35 cnizens .showed up to
CAprcss their concerns. The county
will be prepanna an environmental
impact rcpon that should clearly
demonstrate the adverse effects on
\\'Iler runoff, traffic. air polluuon.
wildlife and plants.
But these are no1 j ust 1ccbnical
Judgments: they are alSd affected by
politics. Each citizen's voice 1s
needed to communicate our concerns
about these prOJCCts. Each Laaunan
needs to wntc by Jan. 5 to Ros
Kosinski, Caltra.ns. District 12. 2SOI
Pullman, Santa Ana. and to Bob
Rusby. Environmental Management
A&enC}. Room 238, 12 Civic C~nter
Pfaz:a. Santa Ana.
At this point, tbcsc agencies pro~
ably think that a maJOrity of
Lagunans desire the development of
the canyon dcstrotint the beauty and
tranquility and briftsina with it even
mo~ traffic and ~ion. By not
wnung, ~ communatc our con-
sent.
GENE FELDER
tAauna Beach
Today IS Tuesday. Dec. 27. the
362nd da} of t 9U. There arc four
da}S Jtft 10 the )Clf.
Today's hi&hh&bt in history:
In 1968. ApoUo 8 and its three astronau~ ml<k a safe. n1ahttime
splashdown in the Pacific.
On this dltc:
In 1822. scientist Louis Pasteur was
bom 1n Dole. France.
In 1900. m1htant protubttion ..
Carrie Nation ca.med out ~ fint
pubhc smash• .. ofa bar. at tM Carey
Hotel in Wteh1ta. Kan.
In 19'9. ~ Julaana of lbc
Netberiands silned an .ct ann•ina to~ty to lftdonn&a .an-mOf't
tMn dme ccntuncs of Dutdl nalt.
In 1979. So.WC. bm teilld aMt-
t rol of 4fsba•itlu. Pruideat
HafizuUah Amia, do -~ thrown andneculed. ._,,.,..by
........~ Fi~,_...,; Pa ·11111 aw
dectllMI ttia elrt•y a 1Rdi-.,
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241 U.S...-.K n ........ ... .. _ .... _ ...... ...
......... ,.,. Ali Ap. -... .....,,. ..........
T IMnHian: Act ...
•llli}tlj-ill7 .... ,_A;. llK~~M-
"See 'rwlns' twice!"
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AS DAILY PILOT
'Legs Diamond' needs leading man
played in ftne 1queaky-voicechtyle by
Randall E.dwuds, and Flo, a toush-talki~ older woman played by the
temfic Julie Wilson.
"Tl l. L NF OF THE GRF :\T -(>,-f \ . Wilson, a musical comedy veteran.
wrinas some honest emotion from a
torch sona called "The Music Went
Out of My Life," the closest thina the
musical has to a showstopper.
I • • \ " I I 'I.' ' ) I ' 11 ·, ' I \ '· I JI'( ) \ ~ ' H I ' ; ' ' . . .
D s ,. N 0 M
HOFF~A CRUISE
~ftAINMAN
~
D NOW PLAYING
·~ _.,......,.
$3.mt
~
*ll TOllO
low110tlll0t0
681·'600
~°"-'' m.neo
*COSTAm.IA ~CWWNf.lnlef
t7M141
•COSTA.iuA
'-S.....C-. "-'S.Vll
TWl'ifS
(PG)
11:301:30 3:.S l:fJS 9:30111:30
AN (R)
1:30 4:15 7:00 9:45
TEQUILA SUNRISE
12:00 2:IO ~ 7:30 10:t0
....
H:alHU~ 7:JO 10:11
DIRTY ROTTEN
SCOUNQAELS (PG)
5:157:30 9:45
TWl'ifS
(PG)
1:15 3:30 5:45 8:00 10:15'
SCROOGED
(PG-13)
11:451:45 .. 1.151:3010'",JG
lltRlllG SECE
(PG)
12:4$ 3:00 5:15 7:30 t ;45
DIRTY ROTTEN
SCOUNDRELS (PG)
11:45 2:00 4:30 7:00 t:15
T£0UILA SUfRIE
n• 1• J.">n t11u
SCROOGED
(PG-13)
1:15 3:305:451:00 10:15
THE NAKED GUN
(PG-13) 12:30 ~d'jll1:3110:18
TEQUILA SUNRISE
(A)
t1:45 HI 4:30 7:00 t:IO
• llll llllH l•T •-l
TEQUILLA SUllRISE (R)
11:• 1:• l!ll 1:JI tt:•
-. SCROOGED IPG)
U41ZMiM1HtJS
llllTMI MlfHIAll T• U Wlll * AAllMH (RI
t:t14:tt1:• '""
WORKING GIRL
(R) .
11:111:45•:11111:151:4510-JO
THE NAKED GUN
(PG-13)
12:30 2:30 •:» ~ 1:30 ltJD
RA .. MAN
(R)
11 :45 2:30 5:15 l:GO 10:40
DIRTY ROTTEN
SCOUNDRELS (PG)
12:45 3:t0 5:15 7:30 t:45
SCROOGED
12:11 J:t~3~-1:11
TEQUILA SUNRtSE
(R)
12:30 3:005:301:00 10:30
SCROOGED (~13)
11:45 2:11114:151:31 M tt.•
TWINS
(PG)
11:401:AI ••1.11a:.1N
·~------------------------~
"WE HAVE A LOT OF COMPETITION •••
BUT OUR RIBS DON'TI"
llOW SERVlll •
fRESH LOCAL LOBSTERll
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There is one stunning production
number, called "Only Steal From
Thieves," in which Diamond mus-
cles in on the territory of his chief
rival . Arnold Rothstein, played by
Joe Silver. In it, the battle between the gangs is waged be.hind a giant scrim
and the hijackint of a train. ship and
truck is seen in 11lhouette.
Still, the success of this show rcs&s
on the success of the performer who
plays its title charactei:.i. not the
supportin& players. And Yeter Allen
doesn't quite deliver.
In other reviews:
"The creators of 'Legs Diamond' could not even come up with the
riotous larger-than-life fiasco of
which theatrical lesends are made." wrote Frank Rich m The New York Times. "The script, so confusing I lost
its thread before the end of the first
number, is a series of song cues that
never crystallizes into a story .... As
for Mr. Allen's songs, they arc so
deri vative they make Andrew Lloyd
Webber's scores sound idiosyn-
cratic."
Howard Kissel wrote in the Daily
News: "Allen's score seldom goes
beyond the.pleasant. lhouah it has
been attractively orchestrated and
there are several engaging choral
numbers .... His talent is supperclub
size -likeable, soft. intimate.
Neither as a son~tcr nor as a
performer can he fill a Broadway
stage . As a gangster, even a singinl and dancing gangster, he is hopeless.
Gebel-Williams
in farewell tour ...
From Dally Piiot wire service•
Gunther Gebel-Williams.· the
world's most famous wild animal
trainer. will launch a two-year
Farewell Tour of 85 U.S. cities in
Venice, Fla., toda y as the l I 9th
Edition of Rmahng Bros. and
Barnum & Bailey Circus premieres its
new season . He will also appear Monday in the nationally televised Orange Bowl
Parade.
Gebel-Wiiiiams, who had been a headliner with The Greatest Show Of'
Earth for ther.st 20 yea~ will be tht
focal point o a spcciacular tribute in
the new show.
Additional plans for the Farewell
Tour include special events in local communitin, a network television
special, celebrity appearances and a
commemorative proaram book.
"
TUESDAY. DECEMBER 27, 1988
Irvine extended, holds on to win, 62-5
By ROGER CAR~N
OflleO.-, ........
Hoover just
Irvine High's Vaqueros escaped what
would havclt>een the upset of the day Monday
afternoon as Glendale Hoover's underrated
Tornadoes came within a few whisken of a
staaerina upset before fallina down the streteb,
62-JS, in the first round of the Coast Christmas
Oassic at Estancia Hiab.
Coach Steve Keitli's Vaqueros, who came
ioto the day a, the 16-team basketball
tournament's No. 2-seeded team with a Oossy
9-1 record built over the firs~ three weeks of
December, escaped after seeing a lead which
they held vinually the entire aamc, melt during
the latter stages of the founh quaner.
The Tornadoes of Coach Kirt Kohlmeier,
a lonatimc adversary of Keith when the latter
was the cqach at Glendale Hiah, entered with a
2-6.rccord and. not a lot of promise against a foe
which had disposed of nine others by an
average of24.4 points per victory.
But with !II ucks left at was Hoover which
shoved to the front with a 58-56 lead off a 4-foot
shot by Gino Wang.
Keith's South Coast League representa-
tives, however..t finall y took charge at that point
at both ends 01 the noor.
After a perimeter shot missed with I :20
left. the Vaqs sot the ball again on a steal by
Todd Trout wuh 57 seconds to go and Bryan
Allred, who scored 21 points on the night,
responded with a 3-point bucket with 40
seconds left to put Irvine up, 59-58.
Today'• .chedale
3:40-Santa Clara vs. Cypress
5:20-Edison vs. Mission VieJO
7-LB Jordan vs. Costa Mesa
8:40-0.na Hills vs. CdM
Hoover missed trom the penmeter and
Steve Dunmeyer padded the Irvine lead to
61-58 with a peiroffree throws with 20 seconds
left. then Allred stole the ball and scorec:
another free throw with six seconds remaining
to seal it.
It was the first major scare of the season for
Keith's charges and the second-year Irvine
coach wasthorou&hly irritated with his quintet.
"That's a 2-7 team," he said of Hoover.
.. and we played right at that level.
.. We talked about grttina our feet on the
&round after returnin1 from Hawaii, but it looks
like it was just me doma the talkina."
Keith had reason for concern at halftime
after seein& his team waste a 33-23 lead and
settle for a 35-30 halftime cushion.
As the third quaner went on Hoover
stayed within ranae. then finally pared the
Irvine lead in the final quaner to ~49 before
aoina up by counts of S 1-50, 54-53 and 56-55
before taking its biggest lead at 58-56.
It was here, however, that lrvme went to
work defensively 10 pull it out.
··Had we had any son of defense durina the
course of the game, 1t wouJdn't have been any
problem," sajd Ke ith.
··we had nine easy games and even the one
we lost (in Hawaii) it wasn't this kind of
situation."
(Pleue 9ee lllVIN'S/113)
o.., ............ _, .............
Amoq llonday'a wbuaen
were -il1f.lltiaatoD Beach'• ~ Puaatr(left). la t1ae .... of ._..... •••••
Dain BlaatoD f 42) and ...... au. (4J). u Well u Bdea-
da '• Andy Scbolea (24) and
.... llcDaalel (21). la tbelr
dael wttb llatt Reclatenwald
(42) aad Soaora.
Eagles
trample
Sonora
By ROGER CARLSON
Of ... Dellr,... .....
Estancia High·s Eagles ran their
record to 9-0 Monday niaht in what
was easily the most impressive of-
fensi ve ou1borst of the first half of the
first round of the Coast Christmas
Classic as Sonora's Raiders fell victim
to a 95-53 conquest.
Uuhzing a scaring press 10 the first
quaner the Eagles established a clear
supenonty, and with an up-tempo
offense and sizzling shooting from
every angle. it all added up, to the
blowout of the naghL
Four different players hit from 3-
point ranse before 1t was over. 6-
foot-3 senior Tim KJar dropped in a
season h1ah 21 points, Mike Cunis
popped from 3-poi nt range four times
en route to a 29-point outburst and it
was over by halftime as the Eagles
swacd to a-45-~ 3-adva11tqe. -
SOnora, which entered with a ~
record. saw Estancia jump to leads of
8-0 and t 9-5 in the first period as the
~es nailed 12 of 17 from the field,
taking advantqc of six Sonora turn-
overs 1n the process.
Coach Tim O'Brien's Eagles main-
tained the pressure throughout the
first half. expanding their lead to
39-11 with 3:44 lef\ in the half. and to
43-13 wt th Still I :40 left ID the second
penod.
The win sends Estancia into the
champ1onsh1p quanerfinals •inst
Laguna Hills Wednesday night at
8:41>.
Henigan, · . Oilers Brown sha·re CIF MVP get past
Four Barons, 2 Charg rs-. -
Norman. 2 Monarchs cited
touchdowns. shares MVP honors on the 1eam
with Serv ite High's sensauonal running back.
Derek Brown. also a three-year s1aner for his
team.
Cook caught 64 passes for 1.1 76 )ards 10
touchdowns. includins t'A-O touchdo"'ns in the
J 1-24 v1ctol) over Bishop A mat in tht Cl F
finals.
By ROGER CARLSON
Of IN 0.-, Not Si.ft
Fountain Valley
H1gh·s Barons. C l F
Division I champion
after 1wo straiJht trips to
Anaheim Stadium for the
finals, dominate the All-
CIF selections w11h four
offensive c:Roices. includ-
ing two-time winner
David Henigan. the
Barons' three-year staner
Members of the First Interstate Bank -
Amateur Athletic Foundation of Los Angeles"
Board of Football Selections Committee made
their choices. and in add1t1on to He nigan, there
were three other Barons on the offense (recc1' er
Mike Cook. offensive lineman Glenn Christ)
and place-kicker Derck Bro""n).
Christy is a two-ume All-Sunset League choi~ at center and "'35 one of the pnmal)
reasons for Fountain Valle} ·s success on pJS
defense and in the blocling schemes fo r
tailback Kednc Po"e.
*
Also, Ocean View linebacker Todd Nor-
man, Edison defensive end Lamont Pea) and
offensive lineman Chns Lippincott and Mater
Dei receiver Tony Pena and defensive lineman
Jason Uhl were honored.
Al·CIF Oivlslon I
Offense
at quanerback. Realpa
Henigan, who com-
pleted 196 of 342 passes for 2, 785 yards and 19
.
--Henigan is a two-ume unset League
Offensive Player of the Year after leading the
Barons to two straight unbeaten leaguecham-
pionships seasons. "His favorite tariet was
Cook. the big 6-foot-5 senior wide receiver.
P os.. Piii ver, Scl\OOI
B-D~ek Brown, Servile
B-David Henioan. Fountain Viv
B-Bn an Harmon, Bishoo Amal
B-Russen While, Cresol
B-Jonn Robinson, LB Joroan
B-Johann Fuller, Lovola
B-M1cl'lael Carter. Lono Beach
R-Tonv Pena, Maler Dei
R-Jeremv Smith, Blshoo Amar
Viking defense, keyed by
Browner, frustrates Rams
Two early interceptions set tone
~Minnesota· s 2s:-1 7 t-riumph-
MINNEAPOLIS (A P) -The Rams. thwaned in
previous playofTtrips to Minnesota by cold and snow. got
perfect 69-degree West Coast weather indoors Monday to
play their new p1tch-and-ca1ch game.
r hey had one problem ....,: 11 was Minnesota safety
Joey Browner who did the catching.
While nearly a foot of snow fell outside the
Metrodome. Browner wa'I showin& rnside while he was
named an All-Pro. intercepting t'A-O Jim E'erett passes in
the first ciaht minutes.
They set up two touchdowns 21
seconds apan and sent the Vikings
on the way to a 28-11 victory that
put Minnesota into the quar-
terfinals of the NFL's Super Bowl
derbr,.
'When Joey aot those two
interceptions early. that kind of
rattled Everett." cornerback Cart
Ltt said after he hmrted Henn
Ella91d. -ho led the lequc in
siece1vina )'lrdlie. without a C'lltch
--until the fOunh "uaner. .. ,,., put a lot of prnsurc on him and he nt'ver aot
IDi"t;,c did all~ could to rault his C'llt·" Brownt'r said of'Evemt. who finished 19 of 4S for 2 .. 7 yards but was just
I for 2l in •he fint half, wt.ri *.111M:ftl.at 1uut.
.. We wm m1•ina up our IOftSl•nJ rw wasn't able h>
rftd wm ...
The victory wu tht ~ond \tra11ht 1n the "IF\" 1ld-
card game for the Vikings. who made 11 to the NFC t1t1c
game as a wild card last }Car and had to settle for the same
SJ>OI this season after fimshrng at 11 -5. a game behind
Chicago. rn the FC Central. The win sends them 10 n
Francisco for an FC' semifinal game on Sunda)
Ph1ladelph1a will play at Chicago Sa1urda~ 1n the
other NFC game. and Seattle will pla) at Cmc1nna11
Saturday and Houston at Buffalo Sunday 1n the >\FC.
But this "'eek belonged to Browner and the
Minnesota defense. ·
Browner picked off his first pass at his I afier the
Rams had taken the opening k1ckofTto the Mrnncsom 15.
That set upa 73-yard touchdown dri'e capped b~ a 7-)ard
TD !"JO by Alfred ndeoon. who also scored from a }ard
out in the third pcrrod.
Then. on the first play afier the kickoff. he got his
second, setting up lien Ricc·s 17-yard TD bolt up the
middle on the next play.
::A"!Y lime you make tht.bi1 plays earl). It helps
you. said Minnesota Coach Jerry Bums ... J<>t') 1sa good
IS any player in the kague. No one can pla> better. You
can sav anythrna about him that )Ou want as long as it's aood."
Rams Coach John Robinson. -ho COICMd BroWMr
1n collclr at USC. did no1hin1 to ._It Bums.
.. , ihink JOfy Browner tS the bnl Dll,u 1n the~
and 1 thiak he sho~ it today." saicl R0tiint0n. who•id
the Runs en~ the .. me wonied .-. the V1kinp'
front four Ind ltft it say•na: "It-. IMirC'Ovtf'llr ptoplc
who d1d I _JftM job."
Tiie blnl. w"°9t thtte ......... IO cftd the reaullr-.1& 10-6 wm the,..._-_,.., ,_.,,..,Qin,
1n111A1lllln•••t1l.rfirM WIU"l•hM,; 14-1 • .................... •••n••t;fivt ... .... _ ,..,
Polv
Ht. Wt. Yr.
5· 11 17S Sr
6· I ll S Sr
6·0 llS Sr
6· l lOS Sr S·7 115 Sr
5·9 l7S Sr
6·0 200 Sr
6·3 190 Sr
6·0 170 Jr
R-M1kt Cook, Founlain vanev
L-Martv Cano. Rubidoox
L-Chad Barron, ·Fonlana
L-ChrtS Lior:>incofl. EdiM>n •
L-Glenn Chrislv Founlain Vallev
L-Rav Madri~a1. Secv.i••
6·5 115 Sr.
6·2 235 Sr
• 6·2 22S Sr
6·7 250 Sr
6-3 2S5 Sr
6· 1 2.ao Sr
S·9 160 Sr K-Oerek Mahoney, Fountain Vallev
Al CIF DM$1on I
o.tMM
L-Mali Butkus. Lovola 6·3 230 Sr
L-Geoff Holl Rub•dou• 6·0 210 Sf'
L-Jason Uhl Marer De 6-• 2~ Sr
L-Chris Thomas Long Beacn Jordan 6·• 2~ Sr
L-Lamont Peav. Ed1M>n 6-1 203 Sr
L-W VatenliM . LO"O BHch Wilson 6-l 22S Sr
LB-Garrell Greedv Servile 6·• 2~ Sr
LB-BOObV Sylvester Fonla"a 6· 1 190 Jr
LB-Wade l(ennedv 8iShoP Am•I 6-0 200 Sr
LB-TOdd Norman Ocean View 6-S 247 Sr
OB-Jim Klein Lovola 6·• 205 Sr
DB-Oscar Ford Serv1tr 1 6-0 175 Sr
DB-Jason Jones Lono 8eaeh PolY S·9 170 Jr
DB-Loren C1Mo11, B•shoo Amat 6·0 170 Sr
P-Paul Slonehouse, Lovota S· 10 175 Sr
Artists
Huntington Beach
puts Laguna five
away in 58-54 win
By ROGER CARLSON
OftMO..,,... ....
Huntington Beach High basketball
coach Ro' Miller has been on the
nght side of Just four of nine dec1s1ons
so far. so "hen the> 're coming his
'Aa). he'd JUSt as soon get them with
scenic connotations.
He got the win. but rather than the
prett> sight he'd prefer. tt came a bit
on the u&)y side Monday evening at
Es1nnc1a lfigh where his Oilers quah-
ficd for a second round shot al I 0-l
In ine \\ednesday afternoon at 3:40.
"With so man> fouls. it's really
hard to get an)th1ng going." said
Miller after his team waded thro•
Laguna Beach, 58-44. in the fil"Sl
round of the Coast Chnstmas C1aute.
H1 Oilers had a 32-24 halfumc
lead and 1mpro' ed the margin to 12
points ea rh in the third quarter and
held it for t he balantt of the period.
but Laguna Beach cut 1t to ~SO with
2•4 left
··o\t half\rme Wt' talked about
1n1ensll) ... said Miller. "but when }OU
ha\e to top so many tunes for fouls.
u·s reall) hard to tet on a roll.
"Both of us ended up rnotti• &o
zone defenses because of the fouls. ..
The •h1stlcs were blown 43 timn
qa1nst the two teams llld b' the
most pan the pme -. a ltmdy
procns1on to the line.
Millers team finally suined rol1i111
v.hcn the Amsts. now 4-4. evened lht
count at SO on a I S-tOot shot by ~n
Mc Keown. Tha•'• when the Oilen ._ to ..-ort wtlh an instdc shOI by Scott
DrKc. ~loWftt by a pair OI tw
throws by Saevt' lucu.
Llpu leech cut M IO 54-52 • a
(le•r OI "'°" II me -" -5'aflord. but """Jory"-'· ... ...... l.Mcal. Koftd ........ ,.,21md.
&1 lowtn 's AniMI pullell 90 willilll
'6-54 wi1la 22 MCG•• left• I.., fl ,._..._.~W..T~Ma aa._ A.trn:J' • . ... ..... "'
()qnge CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Tueeday, December 27, 1111
Schembechle:r looking to mf)reve bowl Feeer-0;
f:
ROSE
\
Tbe team Wll wllitbd from the 11rpo11 on
cMner bum IO Lawry•1 ......... where
tbc plare!I wett to~ thtmtdvn in 1hc auual .. Beef Bowl ... The Trojan did their
bayy •li,.81 UM'J .. lua Dunday ni&ht
and work. I don't do that any men.
.. I'm nlllb j• hlDPY to be hett. At one
time, when r ... up°"-that hospital bed. 1hi1
lftlMd like a loltl ways awa~ ...
until 1916. when W11hina1on State played
Brown.
Overall. Mit'hipn has 1 5-7 m:ord in I.he
ROK Bowl. while USC it IS.-7 in Puadma.
• )..OS ANGELES (AP)-Bo Schembechler,
=to erue the s1iama of a 1-7 Rose Bowl
from an otherwise distinauished
d>acbinccarecr, brouahl his Michigan team to
C'alifornaa on Monday.
11 Los Ane*I lnterulional Airport ... We
don't ICt It very often, but WC prob9bly
deserve it this time."
Schembcchler has the most wins of any
active COllCh in Division IA. but has only 1
4-11 bowl record.
... ~ they're still tllled up rrom
~y's Cbristnw mah. and won't eat as
much." ScMmbechler said. .. Then, ~·11 take
them out on the practitt fitld tomorrow and
run it all off of them."
From a~ s&andpoint, Scbembecbler
conceded that this year's~ will be JUn for
him even if be doeln't Wiil. Lut year, befOre
the Wolverines beat Alabama in tbc Hall of
Fame Bowl, Scbembecbler was f'orced to underJo bit leCODd bean~ operation.
The Tro~ arr COKhed Dy Larry Smith,
who was a Sclannbedla. llli1tan1 bolh 11
Miami, Ohio. and at Micbipn.
"That Larry is a smart dtvil. and we're very
&ood friends.. bul I wan1 ~h::i know I w1n1 10 beat him in this pme." bedder uid.
"It's only natural for aood friends to
com~te hard -I don'1 care what pme 1hcy'"ri playina. ..
This Role Bowl pmci like mOlt oflhe other major bowl pmn. wil be played on Jan. 2
ratkr than on New Ye1r's 0.y, which is
1radi1ional.
Sdtcmbechler porKXred that point, then
briahtencd.
He is, however, 4-4 in bowl pmes during
this decade, and be joked 1bout that at the
airpon.
''l've never lost on Jan. 2," Schembcchler
said, lauahina. "By aosh. write that. Mar,be the
ex1r1 day win make 1 lot of difference. •
·The Wolverines., who won 1he Big Ten
Championship and finished the regular
season with an S.-2-1 record. will meet Paci fie
10 Confercace champion USC, 10-1. nellt
Monday in Pasadena.
;,"We like tha t underdog role,"
~hembechler sa.id durina a news conference
"This decade, we've won half our bowl
pmes, so I want you to undcntand we know
how to prepare now," Schembechler said.
Ml lake care of m~ better now, ..
Schembectl~ uid ... , uted to my up all niaht
The Wolverines played in the fin1-ever
Rose Bowl pme in 1902. when Fieldint H .
Yost's "Po1n1 A Minute" team defea1ed
Stanford, 49-0. The marain of victory WIS so
one-sided 1h11 the game wao; "'" ;-!:wed ag.-.in
It Wit later nosed. however, that Michipn
did in fact lose a Rose Bowl pme on Jan. 2,
dropping a 27-20 decision 10 Washington on
Jan. 2. 1978 . •
. .
. Iowa's 'cupcake' .
turns sour, thanks
to UC Riverside
From ne Associated Prest
Every once in a while the cupcake has m
a macadamia nut in iL
Playing so-called sure W's in Hawaii
has become a treacherous trip for r1nked
teams and more than one coach has left the islands with
a chipped sweet tooth. Iowa joined the ranks of the shoe~ troops when
the then-fourth-ranked Hawkeyes lost to Division II
UC Riverside, 110-92. Sunday night in the cham-
pionship game of the Chaminade Christmas Classic.
It's somehow fin ing that Chaminade's name be
linked with the upset, for the Silverswords pulled the
one all others in college basketball will forever be
measured against.
On Dec. 23, 1982. the NAIA scho01 from Honolulu
beat the No. I-ranked team in college basketball.
llQVirginia. 7T-72. It was a Christmas present to all the
teams which had suffered crushing losses to belier
teams. The liule guy can rise up and sting the big boys
every now and then. .
Plenty bas been said this season of the schedules of
Georaetown (Hawaii Loa. Hawaii Plcific. St. Leo and Shenendoah), Michipn (Gramblina. South Dakota
State, Tampa and four schools with Michigan as the
second name: Central, Western, Eastern, Northern).
There's always 1ha1 chance. Bert Bell may sound
corny as the years go by but, 'On an any given Sunday ., .
Iowa's Sunday was this weekend. The Hawkeyes
were 10-0, averaging 93 points per game with an
averaae. victory margin of 22.8. The only line on the
pme was a wisecrack about playing the Little Sisters of
the Poor.
~·we felt comfoa in they had proven that they were
a~ team and we uw a lot of evidence tonight," said
Iowa CoKh Tom Davis, whose team fell to ninth in the
rankinp. "They played very hard and i1just shows that
the talent level throughout the coun1ry is very good.
You can't overlook anyone."
Especially a team which came in 8-I and sets an
NCAA all-Division record with 21 3-point field goals in
36 attempts.
"We knew we could not go against their taller
llillYen on the inside," Highlanders Coach John Masi iaid ... We had to shoot from 1heoutsidcand hope to hit.
We put (reboundin4) as our No. I emphasis going into
thepme. lfwedidn t rebound. we'd be dead. We had to
pack it inside and just hope."
A grand word to end a statement when talking of
major upsets.
Quote of the day
DM1 Moe, coach of the Denver Nuggets. to
New York Post columnist Peter Vccsey af\er
Michael Adams missed the second of fwo free
throws al the end of overtime Dec. 6 and the
Nugcts lost to1he New York Knicks. 124-123. at
Madison Square Garden: "Why cou)d n't Adams
have converted it (the last free throw)? These arc
the things I fantasize about. How come they never
come 1rue? Tell you what. they still come a lot
closer in basketball than they do in my sex life."
IN THE BLEACHER$
WATCH
WHERE '1UJ
STEP ..•
Wayne loses his brain cell and timeout is
called.
New contract folbMcReynolda
NEW YORK -Kevin McReynolds • finall y got the mul1iycar contract he
wanted, agreeing to a three-year deal worth
S5.5 million on Monday with the New .
York Mets.
McReynolds, who threatened to become a free
agent after the 1989 season ifhe didn'1 get a lon$·term
contract by New Year's Day, gets a SS00,000_~1gning
bonus. S 1.6 million in 1989, S 1.3 million in 1990 and
S2. I million in 1991 . .
Tom Sclakovich, McReynolds agent, said the the
29-ycar-old outfielder will receive $2.3 million of the money~ riext season. A source said the Mets will pay
S200,000 of Mc Reynolds' 1990 salary in 1989.
The languaie covcrina the possibility oflockout in
1990 had been a stumbling block, holding up an
agrec men1 since last week. The Mets and McReynolds
seuled Monday on a neutral clause that will defer the iss ue 10 an arbitrator. .
"We decided that instead of trying to agree to 1his
issue, we wouJd punt it to someone else," Mets senior vice president Al Harazin said. .
Florida State'• Sanden to play
TALLAHASSEE. Aa. -Aorida Slate ••
All-American comcrback Ocion Sanders •II•
will play in the Jan. 2 Sugar Bowl qainst
Auburn despite his arrest in a shopping
mall scuffle, Coach Bobby Bowden said Monday ni&ht.
"Based on the facts presented 10 me, I do not Teel
that it would be fair to prohibit Deion Sanders from
playing in next Monday's Sugar Bowl." Bowden said in
a prepared statement
"I met with Deion to get his account of jusl what
happened. I delayed my decision until I had talked with
other individuals reprdina the situation and only after
I had satisfied myself as to what happened did I
determine that his eligibility should not be affected.''
Bowden said .
Kiili• brtn1 up three player•
The Los Anaetes Kinas announttd ~ Monday that 1hey bave recalled left winaer • a. !Apa, right winsrr Dave Pul9 and
cen1er fylvaiD C..tuler from lheir Nrw
Haven farm club oflhe American Hockey Lequc. The
trio will ~n to the Kinas io time for 1onighl's pme
gains& Mon1real 11 the Forum. The Kings are 24-12-1
for 49 points while Montreal is 23-10-6 for 52 points.
Lopnscored 12plsandhad IOassis1sin 22pmesfor
New Haven while Couturier had eight g01ls and 13
assists in 20 pmcs and Puin had 11 goals and seven
assists in 18 games ... In other NHL news: PllU
EllMI .. has made more than 30 trades in his 21/z Y.~rs
as New York Rangers aeneral manager but t~ost
difficult was completed Monday when he dealt left wing
O. llal1mey, cenler llrlM ....... and dcfenscman
N... Maciver to the Hartford Whalers for center CueJ WU.. and a fifth-round draft choice in 1990.
Maloney, 30. had been with the Rangers for 10 yea rs
and totalled 195 career pis and 307 assists. With 502
points. he ranks eiahth on New York's all-time scoring
list. .. Tradina Don WIS the 1oughes1 thing I've done as
teneral ma~r." Esposi10 said oflhe popular Ranger
forward. ''Hes been a class guy 1ll 1he way." ... The l Chi~o Blackhawks. in last place in 1he Norris
Division and in need of defensive help, 1radcd ri&ht
wina IUdl Valve to the Buffalo Sabres on Monday 1or
center Mam Cretcli ....
Penguins extend etJing to eight
Pittsburgh's R8 Browa scored 1:39 ~ in10 ovenime 10 give the Pensuins a 4-3 '
victory in H1rtfotd Monday m&hl. Brown
scored on a rebound after Whaler goal-
tender Mike I.hit slopped a low shot from just inside the
blue line. Marlo Letiaieu added his 37th goal and also
collected two assists for lhe Penguins, who arc unbeaten
in their last eight games ... Elsewhere in the NHL: r ... 1 SaMltnm scored two goals and newl y-acquired
Carey WU.. assisted on three scores as 1he New York
-Raqers defeated New Jersey at Madison Square
Garden, 5-1 ... In Buffalo, ~ lhaley scored two
aoals as the Sabres defeated Boston, 2-1, ind ex1ended
their season-high unbeaten streak to five games ...
-Reff La,... scored the winning goal with 2:51 left as
the New York lslanden won for only 1he second time
on 1hc road this season with 14-3 victory over Toronto
... Neal B,..._ scored one goal and had two assists and
J• CoeJ !I~ 31 shots to lead Minnesota to a 5-1
victory over vasitina Winnipeg ... In Chicqo, THJ
Mcltepey scored two second-period goals and Brta• • "le collected 1wo assists in the same period as the
Blues fcated Chicaao. 4-1 ... In V1ncouver. Joe N._.e.11' scored in overtime with Calgary enjoying
a 1wo-m1n advantage as the Flames beat the Canucks,
3-2. The Calgary center jum~ on a loose puck in a
scramble in front of ne1mander Tn7 Gamble and
flipped ii in10 the net for his club-leadina 24th goal of
1he season at 3:04 ... Joe SUie scored a shorthanded
goal with less than two minutes remaining in lhe third
period 10 give Quebec a 5-5 tic wi1h lhe louring Soviet
Ked Army 1eam.
Order changes in college poll
The 1eams in Monday's college basket-m
ball Top Twenty remained the same from
last week. but the order changed consider-
ably, wi1h Iowa dropping from fourth to
ninth following the Hawkeyes· upse1 loss to UC
Riverside.
Rooney denlea Noll'• threat
President Dan Rooney on Monday denied •••
PITTSBURGH -Pittsburah Steelers •
report~ lhat Coach Chuck Noll th~tened . • to resign over proP<>SCd changes in 1he
team's coachina staff.
"Thal isn't true." Rooney·tQld the Piusburgh-Pos1
Gaulle. "He didn'1 tell me he was sc>inf to quit: he
didn'1 resign. All 1ha1 s1uff is specul111on.
Jn a column published jn Sunday's Boston Globe,
sporUwri1ef Will McDonough said unnamed sources
indicated Noll 1old his coaching staff he was
considering qui1tin1 because he could not follow
Rooney's orden to fire some of them.
Stephen• win• rookie honor
New England Patriots running back • Job S&e~ today was named the NFL's
Offensive Rookie of 1hc Year by The
Associated Press. The soft-spoken star
from Nonhwnlern (La.) State became the focus of the
Patriots' offense. Stephens. who expected 10 be a
backup as a rookje, rushed for I, 168 yards, founh most
in Pa1rio1 his1ory and fifth in the NFL 1his season. He
received 30 votes from sports writen and broadcasters
in each NFL city. Philadelphia tiaht end &etdt Jaebea
aot 29 votes. Cincinnati runnina back lckeJ ..... 19
and Raiders wide receiver Tim Bnwa 4 ... Mlc!Mel
Collias scored three aoals Monday niaht to lead the Los
Angeles Lazers to an 8-7 Major Indoor Soccer l.equc
victory over the Wichita Wmp at the Forum. Sien
Kluey added two goals for the Lazers. who raised their
record to 6-9 ... Jeaepl P.11.um• Sr., who played on
1he University of Noire Dame football team that
featured 1he Four Horsemen. is dead at age 84. He died
Sa1urday in Nashville, Tenn .. where he was visitina a
. dauatuer ... Defensive coordinator Rick ea.Mele has
been appointed as acting head coach of the UC Santa
"Barbara football team. Athletic Director Stu M.-rtMa
announcid Monday. Candacle, 38. succccds Mike
Warrea, who resigned last month after four seasons as
the Gauchos' head coach ... Oraibi won his fourth
straight race Monday when he . prev1iled by lhrec-
quaners of a length in lhe S 115.550 Malibu St1kes, the
fea1ure race on opening day of lhe 90-day winter
thoroughbred mcctin1at Santa' Anita.
Televleion'-radio
TELEVISION
S:OS p,m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Houston el
Miami, TBS. '
6 P.m. -BOXING: Scheduled-Bobby Czvt vs.
Miki O.Vllo In lO·round llghl·llffvywelghl boYI from·
FOf'I Myers, Fie. 7:30 p,m. -PRO HOCKEY: MonlrH I •• Kines.
Prime Ticke t. 7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Seattle e t CllP·
s>ers. Z Channel. 1:30 p,m. -PRO BASKETBALL: New York al
Atlanta (dela yed), WOR.
10-.30 P.m . -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: St. Fran· cis, Pe. at San Oleeo State (delayed). Prime Ticket.
12:30 a .m . -FIGURE SKATING: Men's competition
In U.S. Pro ChamPionshiPS from OrlendO, Fla. O•oe).
ESPN. RADIO
7.30 P.m. -ftRO HOCKEY: Montreal al Kines.
KLAC (570). . 7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Seattle al Chi>'
pen , KRTH (930).
7:30 p.m. -COLLaGE BASKETBALL: New Or·
leans al Cal State Fullerton, KMNY ( 1600).
l :OS p,m. -COLLEGE BASKETBAtL: USC vs
Purdue al Rainbow Cleulc, KNX (1070).
~· !~-------------, ~f cUikcS~istrt7 I
Long Beach State dropped
by Alabaina-Birmingham
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From fte A1soct11ff Prest
Andy Kennedy and Reainald Turn-
er each scored 21 poin1s to help
Alat.ma-Birminaham defeat visitina
Lona Beach State. ~ 15, Monday
niaht in collcae basketball 1ftcr the
Blazers trailcd" most of the first half.
The victory improved UAB's re-
cord to 7-2 while the 49ers fell 10 2-6.
The pme WIS tied three timn and
the lead chanaed hands five limes in
the final four minutes of the firs1 half.
The teams were tied 43-43 at the half
after the 49crs led by as many as 10
points.
In the second half, the lead chanaed
hands three times. The teams ~
tied twice before the Blazers look the
lad, 56-S.., on a revenc layup by Jack
Kramer with 13:21 10 play in lhe
pme.
Tbe49en.aot wi1hin one _point after
a ti~in br.fohn Hanen. Bui a hook shot A n pul UAB ahead by
three with 7:26 to play and the 49crs
would not~t close apin. UAB's Ian Howard scored ·16
points. Ou ad 12 points and Barry
Bearden a<Jded I 0.
Long Beach Staie was led by
Hattrn. who had 14 poin1s. Rudy
Harvey scored 12 points, Tyrone
Mitchell I I an<t Rolf Jacobs 10.
In anolher game:
Temple M, Pem kale 41: M1rk
Macon rebounded his own sho1 and
connected on an ei&ht-foot jumper
with I :03 left as iemple defeated
Penn Stale in an Atlantic I 0 pme in Philadelphia.
Duane Causwell cont ributed I 0
blocked shots to break Temple's
record of nine, which he tied earlier
this mon1h.
The victory was Temple's 11th
straiaht over Penn Stale and the Owls'
27th in 1 row apinst Allantlc 10
opponents.
'
)
~VINE ••• , ...... ,
. Allred led Irvine tcorina w1th 21
points and Raphael Molle nened 19.
but the 6-foot·S, 26S-pound Molle
played the final half with a aimpy ankle.
.. We'll just have to wait 24 houn
and set about the ankle," said Keith of his center.
Hoover was led by the 22-point
effort of iunior John Hillman and I 8
from S-foot-10 junior auard Ron
Pinkney (includina I 3 free throws in
·the near-miss).
It ~as reminiscent in many ways of
previous encounters between the two
coaches. who had banlcd for years in
the Pacific Leaaue.
"The nature of the rivaly has had
some touah aames;· admiued Keith.
"Both of us run the same offense and
that lends somcthin, to it. too."
The victory sends rvine into a 3:40
championshae quanerfinals pme
aaainst Huntington Beach Wednes-
day.
In another first round game:
Lapa HUit 71, Lot Alamitos 13:
The Hawks captured an opener for
the first time in the four-year history
of the tournament. shelling Los Alamitos to pin a second round
benh a~inst the host Eagles Wednes-
day ni tat 8:40. Pat clson (22). Beau Hossler (21 ).
Chris Sheff (14) and Trent DeVreugd
(14) took turns for the Hawks. who
built a 65-45 lead in the second half
before settling for the 13-point
margin. It was Laguna Hills' eighth victory
in 11 stans -and the losses have
come by margins of I. 2 and 3 points.
Los Alamitos falls to 3-8. "They're biger and stronger."
noted Estancia Coach Tim O'Brien of
his opponent Wednesday. "If we
execute. it'll be a good game."
.Seahawks drop
173-69 .decision ·
LAS VEGAS -Ocean View Hi&h
senior Todd Norman connected fur
30 points. dropping in 12 of 17 from
the field and 6 of 10 at the line for a
season hiah. but it wasn't enough to
offset Las Vegas Valley Monday
evening on the campus of the Univer-
sity of Nevada-Las Vegas as the laucr
held on for a 73-69 victory.
The decision drops Ocean View
,into today's consolation secoml
round of the Las Vegas In vitational.
l Valley had Ocean View down by
116. only to see the Scahawks rally 10
within 69-67 with less than three I minutes to go.
But that was as close as Ocean View I wou ld get. dropping the Scaha wks 10
6-2.
' Norman was the only Scahawk in
1 double figures scoring. as well ·as I rebounds (I 0).
OCCrallles
for70-63
triumph
SAN DIEGO -With top re-bounder Alan Schlinesailing with the
nu bug. the Oranae Coast College
men's basketball team was still able to
rally and pin a 70-63 defeat on
Grossmont in the opening round of
the San Diego Mesa Tournament
Monday.
The Pirates advance to meet Im-
perial Valley tonight in the semi-
' finals. "We had a terrible stan today:·
said OCC Coach Tandy Gillis. whose
team fell behind 20-7 m the opening
moments and trailed. 39-34. at half-
time.
"We didn't play any defense early
on. Schlines told me before the pme
he wasn't feelina well. buJ said he'd
try and so anyway. we·rr be in real
trouble af he can't play (tonight)
•inst Imperial Valley."
ApinS\ Grossmont. the Pirates
( 13-3) took the lead with about four
minutes rcmainin& at 61·60 on a
J umper by Derek Johnson and main-
. tained it with a number of easy
baskets and free throws the rest of the
way.
The Pirates featured balanced scor·
irw with Crane leadina the way with
20 ~ints, Lamont Speed addana I 3
and JohnlOl1 and Scott DcSlefano
chippina in with I I api~c.
Johnson also dished off e11ht
assists. Coast's leadin1 rebounder was
point auard DarttkCrant with seven.
Newport girls lose
POMON I\ -Stacy Giem scored
12 points and Jenn Ryan hauled
down 11 rebounds but 11 wasn't eftOUlh Monday. as the NC'Wpe>r1
HartlOr Hllh &iris .. slu~t .. 11 tnm ~II
to the host tchool. 60-31. in the
opmiftl round of the G1nnha Tour-
n1mn1t. ,._ Sli'lon. Who wtrf 1dlcdukd \l'
play PUmonl IOday. fdl to I ·I with
the lo&
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.. Or~ C0Mt DAILY PILOT/ Tueed8y, Oeclmber 21. 1HI
lbUIS BEATEN ...
ham Bl
c>fthc"1r first nine possessions. but came away with Just 10
points as the Minnqota defense came up with the big
plays when it had to.
It was led by Browner. who also had a sack. and
linebacker Ray Berry. subbina for the injured Jesse
Solomon. He stopped Greg Bell on two plays from the 30
early in the second period and thwarted Ellard on a
rtverse in the third.
"Everett could have had a &ood day ifhc had an inch
or two either wa)'," Robinson 51aid. ~we just misconverted on a lot of plays early," Ellard
said. "It just kept the momentum goina their way.' ...
Bell. who had 79 yards in the first half. was held to
JUSt 12 in the second. and Scott Studwell spoiJed the last
threat with an interception, the third by a team that led the
league with 36 in the rcaular season.
Meanwhile. the offense overcame five sacks. three by
linebacker Kevin Greene. Wade Wilson. lifted for
Tommy Kramer 1n the season-ending win over the Bears.
completed 17 of 28 for 253 yards.
And it was the offense that put the game away with
two long toucbdown drives in the second half.
The first went 84 yards in 14 plays followina the
second-half kickoff and was capped by .4;ndcrson's I-yard
run. The second. 72 yards in nine plays. featured a 46-yard
pass from Wilson to Anthony Carter and ended with a 2-
yard pass from Wilson to backup tight end Carl Hilton.
It was the fifth catch of Hilton's three-year NFL
career, all of them for touchdowns.
"We wanted to get off to a good start and we did.''
Wilson said. "Then we sort of hit a lull. But we were able
to start ofTthe third quarter with a good drive and got the
crowd behind us again."
Everett's I I-yard touchdown pass to Pete Holohan
with I: 17 lefi ended the scoring.
For a while, the Rams,. type ind6or weather seemed to
energize them. But when Browner picked ofT Everett's
pass at the I and returned it 26 yards. it led to a 73-yard.
eight-play drive that gave Minne'°ta· a 7--0 lead on
Anderson's 7-yard run on third-and-6. The key was
another third down play-a 34-yard pass from Wilson to
J im Gustafson.
I# l11 1t111
,..
Everett unable
to Solve defense
Rams f endures
one of Is worst
games of season
He also had set a team record for , :.-~~-=.== 'L= mart let in 1913. ..Wbctberit wu tbe receavenor~
guanert.ck it doesn't matter.'' .. ~
Rams Coech John Robinson. • ·<
"(Everett) could have had a ~
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Rams day if he had an inch or two catbe~
quanert.ck Jim Evereu missed early way. Jim Everett had a pat season
and often in Monday's 28-17 wild-for us and lthouaht he played the bes~
card playoff loss to the Minnesota he could.'' o
Vikinp in one of his wont per-Said Everett: "We were just a hail(J
fonnances of the season. off on a lot of&hinp." J
"I'm very disappointed in m)'lelf... Vikinp defensive coordinato~
said Everen. who was intercepted Aoyd Peters credited the Vikinp
three times and had a completion rate secondary for shutting down the
of less than SO percent (or the first Rams' passina attack. a notion 1up-J1
time i_n 24 pmes. ported by Robinson. Everett a~
"I forced the ball to (wide receiver Ellard. 13
He!U)') Ellard too many times today." .. The coverqe by R~e Rutla~
The third-year q_uartcrblck from and Carl ~ and Joey (Drowner's))
Purdue hit just 19 of 4S puses for 24 7 roamina around the midcUe is what yards. more than half of which came won the pme for us.·· Peters said. ")
an the fourth quarter. Ellard, the ··1 asked the sccon~ry to ao one onl team's leadina receiver, finished the one and they came. throuah. If~
pmc with just four catches for S4 would ·have doubl earned Ellard,~
yards, all in the final quarter. they would dunk t to the auy 1 "We had ,.sses but me and Jim underneath and ( ms tiaht end
just didn't click,'' Ellard said. "We Pete) Holohfn and (runnina back
JUSt misconverted on a lot of plays Robe~Dclpino would start makina
early. It kept the momentum aoina aood . ys. • . . .
their way." Ro anson saad the Vakinp fielded Goina into the pme, Ellard led the one of the best defenses his team faced
Rams wath 1,414 yards receivinaand all season.
10 touchdowns. .. You know they talk about their
Browner struck again on the first play after the
kickoff. picking ofT Everett's pass over the middle and
returning it 14 yards to the Rams 17. On the first play,
Rice burst up the middle for the score.
lllnneeota'• .Uck Fenner (31) followa tbe block of Randall llCO.nlel
(84) .. he bacb into tlae Rama defenae darlnC wild-card aame llonday.
Everett. whose 89.2 percent quar-front four beina so excellent. but their
terback ratina was founh best in the secondary coverqe was superb
league, had completed 59.6 percent of l today," lfobinson said. "I think Joey
his passes for ).964 yards and an Browner is the best player in the
NFIAeadina 31 touchdowns aoing lea&uc and I think he showed it
into the pme. toaay."
Outcome no surprise to Ditka
Bears coach says he believed
"Minnesota would beat Rams
From Tiie Atsoclated Press
SUWANNE. Ga. -Coach Mike Ditka of the
Chicago Bears said Monday ni&ht he wasn't surprised the
Minnesota Vikings won the NJ:'C wild-card P,mc.
"I really thouaht that would happen,' DitJca told
reportersafterthc V'ikings beat the Rams, 28-17, earlier in
the day. "That's basically the way we prepared anyway."
With the best NFC record, the Bean, 12-4. would
have played the wild-card winner but because it's
Minnesota -from thesamcCentral Division-Chicago
faces the Eastern Division champion Philadelphia Eagles
on Saturday at Soldier Field.
··we had two game plans. but we concentrated on
Philadelphia." said Ditka, whose team flew down here
from Chicago on Christmas night to practice for the
playoffs. "I really felt it would be the Eagles."
Asked why the team flew such a long way to
practjce,Ditka responded. "Have you checked the
weather report in Chicago today?"
Up to 91h inc~es of snow fell in the Chicago area
Monday, while it was sunny and 61 degrees in Atlanta, 30
miles south of here.
"We don't have an indoor facility. We really can't
practice outside in the snow." said Ditka.
Ditka reconfirmed that Mike Tomczak will be his
starter at quarterback against Philadelphia. instead of
injured Jim McMahon.
"But it doesn't concern me that much who plays
quarterback.. What does concern me is who are the players
who arc 'oing to be close to I 00 percent healthy
Saturday,· Ditka said.
Running back Neal Anderson and defensive lineman
Dan Hampton didn't practice Monday. Anderson has a
pulled hamstring and groin injury while Hampton has a
badly bruised knee.
" make a tackle and I don't think I'll make any c"8tches,'"
Ditka said.
Ditka claimed in his autobiography that he
challenged Ryan to a fight during halftime of a 1985 game
after the two had argued over defensive assignments.
Linebacker Mike Sin&letary, a friend ofRyan's, said
the controversy between the two coaches "is not reall y as
big a factor as people make it out to be."
Ryan give. OW'D team edle n. Bean
PHOENIX -Buddy Ryan. in assessing Saturday's
NFC divisional playoff, said his Philadelphia Eagles are
better than the Chicago Bears at every position but
middle linebacker.
Philadelphia's head coach arrived at the Eagles'
practice field here Monday after watching the Minnesota
Vikings defeat the Rams. 28-17. in the wild-card game
that determined Philadelphia's opponent in the next
round.
The Eagles coach would concede only that Chicaao
middle linebacker Mike Singletary holds an edge in a
position-by-position rundown of the two teams.
Ryan at first refused to start a war of words with his
old boss. Bears Coach Mike Ditka. The two have been
feuding since Rl an left as Ditka's defensive coordinator
after Chicago's 985 Super Bowl victory.
But Ryan was reminded that Ditka said the inventor
of the "46 defense" knew how only to take orders, not to
give them.
"I've been giving orders all my life." said Ryan, who
was a sergeant in the Korean War. "I never took orders
from him, anyway. The old man(late Bears owner George
Halas) hired me before he did him ."
Ryan said the team had no preference between the
49ers and Bears.
But, he said: "I thought we were going to play the
Bears. I thought Minnesota would win in that dome noise.
And Minnesota's a pretty good football team."
Ryan didn't think the potential cold weather and
snow in Chicago would be an advantage for the Bears.
"That's Eagles weather," he said. "Give us five feet of
that. We like that old Minnesota Vikings weather."
l#k ,SI
Ditka also played down his old feud with Ea$)es'
head coach Buddy Ryan. The two have been feuding since
Ryan left as Ditka's defensive coordinator after Chicago's
1985 Super Bowl victory.
"Our team will play his team. I don't think he will
The Bears will face the Eagles without defensive end
Richard Dcnt1 who is gone for the season with a broken
ankle, and wnh quarterback Mike Tomczak probably
starting for the injured Jim McMahon.
Chlcaco qaarten.ck Jim llcllalaon (9)
talb 1rttll Jim llorrlMey at tlae Atlanta
Falcou' tralnba.t facWty ln Sawanee, o..
u Bean open playoff workoata.
ScottBroob
PHOENIX {AP) -Phoenix Suns
rookie auard Din M~erle. hospital-
ized with abdominal pain stcmmiRf
from mononucleosis, has an enJal'lfd IPleea and may bt sidelined up to three months. tie NBA tam'sdoctor
llid Monday Disht. Maierte. a ftnt-round pick of the
Sum llst Juoe and the No. 14 ovcra11
teleclion in the NBA draft, was d~ u havina mononucleosis
last Thunday and was ellpected to be
OUI twO IO foUr weeks.
He had milled the Dec. 22 home
pmc :p:!.nst S.n Anaonio with what
wa bet ed IO be the flu. But wtMln
M.;erte IOld 1am officials be did not W filltt, blood tatt were taken and din aane t.ct" politiw for rnono-auc:leolis.
'
For Brooks, making it to NBA has been a battle
enefitted from breaks
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -When Scott
Brooks comes out for prcpme warm-ups, he
looks more like a ballboy than an NBA player.
When he graduated from high school.
Brooks received only one scholarship offer.
And when his college career was over. he was
ignored by most pro scouts.
The S-foot-1 1 bundle of eneray has battled
his way to a spot on the Philadelphia 76crs
roster and become a favorite with the city's
basketball fans.
The 76crs have been a favorite of the 165-
pound Brooks. a native of California, since
childhood.
"Even thouah I ~rew up in California. the
76crs were my team.' be said. "Julius Erving
was my hero and I've always been a Sixer fan .
To be playing for them now is just terrific."
Making at to the NBA has not been easy.
and Brooks admits he was very fortunate just to
get a college scholarship.
"The only offer I got was from Texas
Christian, and that was really by_ luck." Brooks
said. "A former assistant at TCU was coaching
at a local high school and he recommended
me."
Brooks eventually transferred to UCI, and
put toaether two productive seasons. In his
senior~ear, heaverqcd23.8,and was second in
the nauon in 3-point pis per pme.
He was named UCl's Outstanding Athlete
for I 986-8r, but the NBA scouts didn't show
interest in him. Finally, through the uraina of
then-.assistant coach Jimmy Lynam, the 76crs
invited him to attend their camp as a free qent.
"Jimmy Lynam saw him play in the Los
Anaeles summer leque and was 1ntri1ued by
his hussle and ability," Philadelphia General
Manqer John Nash said.
"Jimmy also talked to (UNLV Coach)
Tyrone Corbin scored 21 points in his fint career sta.n for Phoenia and Eddae Johnson had 11
of bis 21 in the fourth period u the Suns bat the
llumpjna Los Anetlel l.aken, 111-96, Monday
nisht ror their ninth~ win at home.
The Joel wu the Laan' li1tb c:onteeuti•e Iott
on the "*1, lheir toneat lkein since March-April
1979.
Phoenix, 12·2 at home this tealOn, -on for the
I Olb time in the last 13 overall and moved within one pme oftbe PKific Divition·•tiae I.Men.
fto ... die SuDI ia 21 "' ..., , ...... 2S meeti -t='.,,,,, ... _., ftw dmes before Armon
OiUilUn't laJ'll .... a 7·2 ND la -ftMI IWO mtft.awonlle lll'llqUllW, patU1111lllSU1llrel4
to 11ay. They led 31 ·26 after one period.
Jerry Tarkanian about him. Brooks had 44
points against his team. Tark said they didn't
have anybody who could stop him."
He played well at camp last year but a leg
injury and a surplus of 1uards resulted in his
release. He joined the Albany Patroons of the
Contintcntal Basketball Association and, ac-
cording to Brooks. it was the best decision he
could have made.
"I was very fortunate to act hooked up with
Albany," he said. ••1t was a peat team wath an
excellent coach and the fans were out1tandina. It was a great experience for me.''
He was referrina to Bill Musselman, who
will coach the expansion Minnesota
Timberwolves ne:itt season. "He demands that
you play your hardest at an times and 111 result
everybody benefits."
Albany won the CBA championship wi th
Brooks scorina 8. 7 per pme. He also connected
on 25 of 76 3-point attempts.
Once apin. he was invited to camp by
Philadelphia, where Lynam had •uoceeded
, ...
Matt Guokas as head coach.
Brooks had an impressive preseason in all
phases of the pme. He was especially effective
with his ball handlina, having only one
turnover for every six assists.
Lynam, who was a superb point auard for
the 1961 St. Joseph's Final Four team. has insta~ an up-tempo system this year and
BrookTfits in perfectly.
"He can really push the ball up the court.''
Lynam said. "And "he applies great pressure
defense. He ,.sses well. ha[dly ever turns the
ball over, and he can Shoot. He's done
evel'Ythin1 we've asked of him." Brooks has seen meaninaful minutes in
every pme. usually replacing the veteran
Maurice Cheeks. While averqing only four
points, he is second on the team in assists and
his assist-turnover is five to one.
The only NBA arenas be had cves:iyed in
before this year wu the Forum, so C in
suds famous bllketb9ll buildinp as u on
Ouden and Madilon Square Garden bu been qui1e an e1paw.nce.
Fut, . J( R·
' I I ( ; ' I) k [J
NaA n A111*19S
--.. C1nllrwe PacMk Dtwtt-.
Hou, ton
Dalla' Denver
Utah
~Antonio
Miami
W L
11 10
16 10
IS 10
13 11
10 14
9 17 s 11
Olvlsien
17 9
15 9
IS 11
15 12
1 II
3 21
Pct.
.630
.615
.600 '
.542
.417
.346
.217
.654
.625
.577
.556
.280
.125
GB
I l
I 21"3
51·l
71,
10
I
2
2')
91,.,
13
Eastern c .... renc.
Aleftlk OMsien New York Phl~Phl ..
Bolton
NewJerwv
WaSl'llntton
cii.r1o11e
II 7
IS 11
12 12
II 16
7 17
.720
.S77 3 , .soo Sii)
.407 I .m 101> 1 II .280 11
Cleveland
O..troit
Ati.nt•
MilwaukM
Chicago
lndl•n•
Clfttrat OM"9n
II 5
II 7
.713
.720 1 17 9 .654 21,
14 10
13 11 s 19
.Sil 41,
.S42 S1 l
MIMev's SCern
Phoenix 111, UAlws 96
.208. 131,
Waslli119ton 120, New ltfHY IOI
H01Bton 97, Ch•rloltt 95
Ml•ml 111. S.n Antonio 109
TMltv's Gwnts
Seattle •t OlllPers. 7 30 P.m. New York at Atlanta, •·30 P.m.
HO\.l"on 11 Mi•ml, S Pm.
Cltvtt.nd •t ChlC1110, 5:30 Pm.
lndl1na •I MilwaUkff, S·30 P.m.
S.n Antonio al Dallas, S:JO P.m.
Boslon al Ot4vtr, 6:30 P.m.
PhiladtlPllla 11 GotcMn State. 7:30 p m. Porfl•nd at S.Cramento, 7:30 o.m.
w...,.v-s~
Phi .. cMIC>l'tla ,, LHtl'S, 7.30 0 m
lnolarwi •t Ntw mwv, 4 30 pm
Chaflollt at Cltvti.nd, 4:30 P m.
~nix at Ottrolt, 4·JO Pm.
S.Cramtn_!.o at Utall, 6:30 pm
Suns 111, L•llen ff
LAKEIU (Ml -Grttn 4·1 4·4 11, Worthv
7·21 2·l 1', Abdul·JaDOar 2·1 2·4 6, E•. Jc>Mson 1·14 S·6 n . SCott 10-n 4·4 24,
ThOmoM>n l ·I 2·4 I . COOHr 2·9 0-0 S,
McN•mM• O•I 0-2 o. RIYtr$ 0·0 0-0 o. Lamo
1-1 0-0 l. Totali· 37·'3 1'·27 96
f"HO•Mx 1111) -C11am11en 1·20 7·1 2l.
G1ll111m 6·16 2·3 14, L•"9 0-1 0·0 0, Corbin 9·11
l -l 21, K. JoMton l·IS 2·2 II, Wttl 4·4 1·2 9, Kwr l·l O·O 3, Ed Jollnson 6·17 9·9 21,
Nt•tv H 0-1 2. Ptrrv 0-0 0·0 O Totals· 43·•
24·21 Ill.
k«e " Quaf1'n L•lo.trs 26 24 21 25-96
Phoenix 31 21 19 33-111
3·Point ~ls-E•. Jonoson, COOC>tr, LamP,
Kerr Foultel out-N-. Rebounds-t.akers SI (Grttn 11), PMtnt. 62 !Corbin, Wtll 10)
Aul11s-L•k1n 21 IE•. Jonnson II. Plloenia 30
(K. Jonnson 13). Total louls-Lektrt. 2•.
Pllotnia n TecMlcels~Pllotnla Coech Filu lmmons, L•ktrs Coach Rllev. Ea JOhniOn
I ltitct~>.
All~nc-14,471
NBA IHden
Tiit NBA ~nolvlduel scori119, rebouno1ng,
eld ~I oercentege anel an1lf leedtfl through
~2S· SCerlM
Jordan, Ch•. ~!OM. Utah £11is.S.• Eltllli"1. Otn 'W1lluns. All
8 .rkltv. Pllll.
Oftxltr. Port
Mullin, G.S
.oi..u-.Hou e~umm1':.'c:i
LAL
oers. Plloe 8°' win9, N V AMms,O.n
Wer91y, LAL
B••ltv, Utah
Me!OM, Wash
Lever, Oen.
"lelcl GMI
B1rl<ltV, Pntl
Rodm.n, Ott.
Parisi\, Bos.
SC"-""'· Otn McHete. Bos G Aneltrson, S A
Price. Cltv. B. W1lltems, N J.
Jor~n. Chi.
LeYi"9llon, All
0
Denver •New York
Photni J
Pll1ladtton1•
Seattle
Portland
Hou" on LHto Atlanta
Clevtlan4
S.n Antonio
Boston
GOldtn Start
~ Mttwauto.H
lnd1arwioohs
OeHas
Team
G f'G H
24 311 20I
21 213 261 1• 260 123
26 316 9S
26 272 169
26 244 no 26 219 147
24 231 137
2s n3 154
24 240 110
fl 1J4 l•I
J6 209 "' 24 20I 134 24 200 142
2S 209 132
26 111 127
J6 n1 " 27 211 IJS
23 191 17
24 19S 104
PtrCtftfl ..
~Ave
141 lSO
I07 29'
6IO 213
721 210 711 27 6
717 27 6 716 27 s
611 2S I
620 2• I
590 2• 6 54-' 13 1
614 ru
SSI 23 3 547 22 6 sso 27 0
SSI 21 S
SSS 21.l 571 11 I
413 21 c
SOI 20 ~
f'G f'GA Pct
Of99nw
G
26 2S
24
26
14 26 2S
1' 26
7l
1• 74
2• 1'
2• 24
24
244 404 "°' 92 154 S97
1u ns m
106 190 sse
?00 3S9 SSi
161 219 SSi
149 269 SSl 136 24' ss:
311 566 541
107 187 54!
Pn. Ave
3191 1262 2961
"' 7 2816 117 3
2965 1140
2721 113 .
?947 Ill J 2105 112 2
2911 r 112.0
2171 110 7
2511 109 s
2S9? IOI O
2S71 11)7 4
1sn 1017 1714 107.
2SS6 106 s
2541 1062
2546 106 I
Cllt<eeo 2• 1S.U "'° Ul-11 21 21ll IOS I We"""9ton n "" 100 O.tr0o1 2S 1Sf4 IO:U New.Jet's.rt ,. ,... IO:J2 Cllarlottt 24 2•• 102'
S.Cr-to n nn IOI 0
M·aml 13 216' ,.,
T-0.-..
G "" Ave Cltvtt.no 23 2112 t92 Utah 27 1134 1013 o.,.., 24 24'2 1011 Ottr0o1 2S 2S.U 1011
Chi<ffO 24 2~ 103'
M~weuktt 2• 2497 1040 Boston 2• 2543 1060 All•nt• 26 27Sf 106 I Miami 2l 24'9 106S Ntw Jtrstv 26 2711 107 0 Laws 2' 2714 lt1.I
C"-rlOtt• ,. 2613 1019 s .. 11 .. 24 2627 109 s Houston 2S 27'3 109 7 Porttano 26 21" 1103
Ptilladt!Pnl• 26 2193 111 3 S.cramento 23 25'0 111 3
GOiden Stilt 24 2"1 1121
ln4l•n•P01is 24 2693 1122
Was'1i119ton 73 2SIS 1124 S.nAntonlo 24 2704 1127
Ptlotnix 24 271S 113 I New York 2S 2161 114 4 a..trs 2' 2't2 11S. I
Denver 26 314' 1209
( ..... '" 10 The Too Twentv Items 1n tht AsiOCiettO
Press• cOlltM beWltlbeH oo~. with first·oa.<t
vottt In o.renttwses, record thrOUllll O« 2S •no !Ml wtel< 's renk1119 •ecn ~ ~ I Oukt tu ) 7· 0 1167 I
2 M>ch11Mn (91 11· O 1123 2
3. Svracuw 111 11· 0 1065 3
4. Illinois 9· o 912 5 s Gtor111town (S) r-0 '26 6
6 Okla~a I· I 914 7
7. Nort11 C•rOCln• 111 10· I 176 I a Arizona 6· 1 141 9 9. lowe 10· I 676 •
10 Flor•N St1t1 7· 0 ,6?2 11 11. Missouri 10· 3 579 10
11. NevaO.·LH Vegas S· 2 S19 13
ll. Seton Hall, 10· 0 453 IS
14 Loul,ville 6· 1 '41 1•
IS. Ohio Stitt 7· 1 lll 12 16. South Cerotin1 6· O m 18
17. Georgia Tech S· I 241 16 18. North Ceroc1na Sta le 4· I 195 17
19. Tenneswe 6· I 123 19
20. Kal\SH I · I IOI 20
Othto receiving votu· Georgia 61, Connect!· cut 29; B•ll Stele 19; UCLA. 11, St "°"'rv·,.
Cali! 9, UC Santa B•r~ra I. Purdue 7, Tex11
7, Vinanova 7; lnolan• S; Le Salte S, Stanforc
S; We~t Virgini• S; Kansas Slate 4, WkMa
State 4. North Cerot•M CllarlOttt 3, Notre
Dame 2, Mielli!Mn St••• ~. Providtnct 1
Tell1S·Et PISO I, V•nderl>ilt I
c ..... scens
SOUTH A ... ·Blrmillllll•m 90, Long Buch St 7S ..-~-•AST
Ttme>le 50, PtM St ...
COMMUNITY COLLEGI MEN Onnle c .. st 10, Greswnent 6l
IS.. D1e9e Mew T--*"l
~ CMst GrftsmeM ....... .. ...... Crene I 4 I 20 wtnlen" 4 o O I
SOttd 4 S 3 13 Chinn 7 2 3 1'
Jollntoft 3 3 2 11 JoM\Oll II I 2 23
Sdlflnes 0 I I I Hall!Nn 3 0 s '
O.Sttf•no 4 2 4 11 TMM>r 3 0 3 6
Hanlon 4 0 I • Berk shirt I 0 I 2 Kos o o 2 o Barry I o o 2
Stevens 2 2 0 6 Totels 2S 17 14 70 Totals 21 3 U 63
Halftime. Gronmont, 39·34
l·ooint ~Is: Or•11111 Coast-JOhn,on 2.
OtSttfeno I.
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS
LH v ... s v ... v 73, Oct•n View 69
(Las v ... s T_,)
OcNfl Vltw Las v ... s Valtv
""pf"' '91tpftp Norman 12 6 • 30 ~oolnson 4 4 O 12
FrOlln 1 • S 6 Conwev 2 O 4 4 Even' 3 I 4 1 Harelff 2 4 O I
Kerliner I I I 3 Banto.s 2 I • S
T m.Ptlon1s 4 I 4 9 Raic' S 2 3 12 El'nSI I 0 0 2 Fraser I 0 2 2
~rltn 2 3 3 7 Ya rd I 11 3 26
Gwallnev I 3 o S Wiley I O • 2
Pll•Otl>\ O O O O Foster I O O 1
Plrr1 0 0 0 0
TO Peion1\ 0 0 0 0
Total\ 25 19 71 69 Totals 2S 23 20 13
• Sct!'t l>Y Ouartto
Ocean View 14 14 19 72-69
Las Vegas llatlev 20 23 13 17-1)
l·oo1nt goer, NO<\e
Technicals Ocean View
l>tneh I bench 7. lle'ltv
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS
GantW 60, Newport Harbor 31
(~ Teu"""*"I
Nflwoer1 Hattier G-W
Glem lzumlte
Koplckl
Hill
Rvan
Somen
McGuire
Gregg
Tot1f\
Newe>ort
G•nes,,.
.. " pf "' .. It pf "' S 2 2 11 Powell I O J 1
I • s 6 Rush • l I II
I I 1 J Huckett 3 0 2 6
I 1 s J Btni.m•n 7 2 116 2 1 1 s Hicks 0 I I I
I I I 3 M1klns 0 2 2 2
I O 2 2 Huddleston 3 0 3 6
1 o I • Rurfan4 4 I • 9 14 10 19 38 Totals 26 9 16 60
Score llY Ouarwn Hert>or 14 9 4 11-38
13 14 13 21-.0
3·001rt goers None
TecMiclll: None
Costa Mesa Tournament
(al Cesta Mesa Hitfl)
TOOA V'S GAMES
9 a m -Ceoistrano Valtev vs Canvon
10.30 a .m, -Tral>uco H111s vs Wes1m1ns•tr
Noon -Est1ncia vs Cvortn
l·)O p m -Lavune H1ns vs SChurr l o m. -Montebello n Irvine
4 40 p m -S.n Clemente vs Tusttn
6 20 om -Saddltl>Kk "' North Torra"Ct 8 o m -Yucca llahev vs Costa Mesa
'Gamecocks want to
,finish on high note
Sou th Carolina
has endured some
lows this season
MEMPHIS . Tenn. (.\P) -South
Carolina quanerback Todd Elhs
would like n o thing beuer than to
finish what he calls a )ear of eAtrcmcs
w ith a vktory over Indiana in 1he
Libcny Bowl.
The G1m ccocks staned 1hc season
winnina s ix stra11ht games before
fallina 1p1n in a 34-0 loss to Georgia
Tech tostan w h at would bca 2-Jshdc
to an 8-3 rqular season lin1~h.
.. Thctt have been som e big hig hs
this 5cason. but there ha vc been 0 1her
times when we j u st didn '1 play "'e ll al
1 a ll," Yid Ellis. who h as comple ted
183 of 3S4 pass a ttempt' for .2 • .?D
yards and nine to uc hdowns .
Despite their hot-and-cold season.
a victory O\.'Cr Indiana. 7-3-1. in
WtdMtday n11hfs pme (Channel 11 at S p .m .) would allow the Gam e-
cocks to finish 1988 w11h a 9-3 rl>cord .
wJuch would be the school·s Sttond·
bnt all-tune martc.
The victory al50 \\OUld be the
GalM'C'OCks' fint in a bo"'I 1n c11h1
postttatan tnps.
.. We have no rca\On 10 hold
an)thinabet't. but "c "'""" ""' "111 be .... ,, ..... "tlY~ lnd&aAA ~ ......
Elhs.atd.
··Their dcfcn~ '' <"3'~ 10 dc~:ntx'
LIBERTY
h 1s vcl). ''Cf) sound. I nd1ana ii.no \\ 'i
ho'' to p la . its dcfcnS<' \Cr) \\di. bul
"'e "ant to win badl) bccau c \\C
know a \\in o ver l nd1ana 1n 1hc
L1bcny Bo"I will do a lo t for us and
our program •
.. W i1h a w in we. can end the
sch ool's bowl losing streak. \\C can
cap off the season 1n a poslll\ c wa)
and w e can pro"c a lot of1hings to o ur
fans. our coach es and oursdH·s:·
Eiits said.
The South Carolina quarterbac k
says the game matches two team~
"ith similar g oals .
"Ind iana has excelle nt bas~cthall
and football programs JUSt ltkc us.
Tht) arc trying 10 step up and let tt be
known across the n ation that the' arc a football team to be reckoned "ith.''
Eiits said.
While Eiits "111 be ti) '"I to act th\'
football into 1he H oosie r r nd 1on"-.
Gam('('()Ck free safel) Ron R a bune
will be leading a South Carohna
defense I hat" 11111) to po ta halt to the
runnma takn" of 811 Ten MVP
.\nthon) Thompson.
..011r dcf(nsc has the abtht) 10 \eop
a n ) ru11mn1 ,,.am," said RabuM.
~' ~ ik-•14t14'1 m•~ of &M
pmc ma) hoki the, kc) 10 ,.K'1~ fOr
both lt'•ll1'\
•
Bell on loose
Or.nge C0Mt DAILY PILOT/Tueeciey, December 27, 1111 -
B•1t1mor1
01!11S
Wien.ta
Tecoma
San O•eoo LAun
KanH .sC.tv
»•»•. 3' 14 ... ,. ..
31 n ll u u
J7 2t 22 SI I• JI lt • '1 6S
ll J7 " • ...
JllJD• • JI 12 ll '5 14
3S JS 1' U '6
lS 11 2l u S. 3t 20 24 ... •
3' n 21 o n 3' 21 21 ., 6
3S 17 2S 42 S6
31 14 2t 42 •
SOCCll ..
MISL '~ w L ~. Ga
9 2 "' • s .61S 2
6 ~ 500 3 ,
7 • 467 4
6 7 4'2 4
6 9 400 s • 9 .JOI •
~'I'S sc-L.Htn 8 W<Ma 1
S.n O eoo 4 Tacoma I
TMltY's ~
Kansas C1tv at Baltimore, 4.lS P m o .... , •t Wttlllt•, S.JS o.m
........... .,.. Genws
Ultl'S at Oe1 H , S 35 P m Ball•mort •t Kensts Cotv S.3S Pm
Rama runnlna back Greg Bell move• into
the MinnHOla meconctary daring flrmt quarter Monday. Movln& ln for •top l• J oey Browner-(47) of the Vlklqa. .
NFL ptayeffs
WILD CA•D SCOltES
Af"C
S.tvrav. Dtc.. 14
Houstoo 24. C1ev11ane1 n · Nf'C
IMlldaY, Dtc.. 1'
Minnesota 2t lt•ms 17
CONl"E•ENCE SEMll"INALS S.tvrM'l's Games
Pt111aoe1onta et Ch1cego tCIWlnnel 1 11 9 30 1 ml
S.•lllt 11 C1nc1nMtl (CIWlnnel • at 1 om I SUncUy's G1mn
Houston II Bulfalo IChlnnt l 4 •' 9..30 • m l M1nnt sote e1 San Francisco CChannet 2 er
Pm l
CONFERENCE FINALS
Sunday, Jin. I
AFC chamPionsniP, TBA NFC c,,.molonshlo. TBA
SUPE• BOWL
s11nc1av. Jan. n (al Jet ltolllllt Stadium, Miami)
23rd Su~ Bowi ICllennet -4 el 3 o.m I
NFC WILD CARO GAME
Viltin9s 21, Rims 17
S<ort llY Ollarten Rems o 1 3 7-17
Minnesota U O 7 7-28
f'int Ou•,,...
M•n-A An4enon 7 run CC. Nelson k1C~l
113
Min-Rice 17 run <C Nelson 11.icr.J, I 34
Stc..W Ou•l1er
LA-0 Johnson 3 ous from Everett lL•nstoro k1cti.1, 1 42
Third Ova,,...
Min-A AnMnon I run IC Ne1son 11.•c~
S 3S LA-FG L1ns1oro 43 1)27
• .. ... ~ Ou•l1er
M•tt-H11ton S oau lrom W• '°" C Ne son
luel<1, 122
LA-Hotonon 11 oeu trom Everett
CLa nsfora k cti.l 13"3
Attenda nc-s1 666 TEAM STATISTICS
LA Min First oowns 19 70
Rusnu· varos 7•· 107 33· 103
PeU•"9 2JS 207
Rtturn Varas 60 SS
Como·Att·fnt 19·45·3 17·21·0 Sac1<1<1·Vtrds Lost 1· 12 S·46
Pun rs S·•a 7·42 FumDtes·Lost O·O l·O
Pen11t1ts·Yeros 10·S4 6·.tO
Time of Possession 26 06 Jl.54
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING-Rams Btlt 11·91, Evert11 7·1. OetP1no 3·4, Wnttt I 2 Ellard, 1·7 Mmnesota.
Rice, 11·79, O Nt1son 3·9, A Anderson 6·9,
Fennev. 2 S Wn•on S·I
PASSING-Rams Everett 19·4S·3 247 M1nnesote Wilson 17·28·0 ?SJ
RECEIVINl,-Ram' Ett.1ro A·S.C McGee
•·34, Holon1n. 3 u O JOhnson. 3·27 OetP•no.
2·33. W Anderson 2·'19 Bro .. n. 1·26 M•nne·
sore C•rter 4· 102 FtMl'Y 3· 19 Gus•ahon 2·S2 H Jones 2 21 A Anaerso". 2· 10. Jordon
1·19 Rice 1·12 0 Nes,on 1·6 H.ton. l·S
MISSED FIELD GOALS-Ram' Lansford 41 M11111esota C Ne son J4
COLLEGE
Bowl scores, schedule
CALlf'OltNIA BOWL
(Dt<. 10 11 Frfllllll Fresno s11tt 3S wnitrn Moel! gen lO
'"DEPENDENCE BOWL
( Dt<. U al SMl!Vttl«f, Le.)
Sovthtrn M·U•U•POI 38 Tues-Et Paso 11
SUN BOWL
(Dtc.. 24 •t El P8M, TeXH) Alabama 29 Armv 28
Ill. ALOHA BOWL
"1f<. 1S •t H...iutu l
Waltl1ng1on Sie rt 24, Hou"on ?2
BLUE·G•AV ALL·STAlt CLASSIC •
(Dt<. 1S at ~t'"""'"· A .. .) Blue 22. Grav 21 LIBERTY BOWL
IW"""4Nlv •t Memtlflls, Tt!Wl.l '
ln41•n• 17·3· ll vs South CarOI M (1·3·0t S
Pm l R1vcpml \' ·-.ALL AME A IC AN BOWL ~ .. ., •t ~. Al&.)
Flor.cl• 16·S·Ol vs f11tno1s 16·•·1), S o m ESPNl
fAEEOOM 80WL
(Tllundev at ANMtml
Br1g1W1m Young l ·•·Ol n COll>raoo 11·3·0
6 Pm (MIZIOUl
PEACH BOWL
( f'ridlv •I Allafttl)
low• 16·3·31 vs North Cerot "' State 17·3· ll 10 1 m IM11loul
HOLIDAY BOWL
IFrtdlY at 5-fl °'"81 Wvom1nv ( 11· I ·01 vs Okt•hOm• Stele
19-2-0J. S Pm IESPNl
GATOlt BOWL (Svnclav 11 Jadnenv ... Fla.)
Georgie Cl·3·0l vs M1ct11ga11 Stele (6·4· ll
S Pm IESPNI
HALL OF FAME BOWL (M9ndiV at T•mN, f'la.)
L~fsrane St11tt 11·3·01 •s Svracvse (9-1-0t
10 a.m INBCl
CITRUS BOWL
(Meftday 11 Or1aftde, I' ... )
Clem•on (9·2 OJ •s Oklahom• 19·?·0 1030
a m IABC I COTTON BOWL
(M9ndiV at D ... l )
Arr.anllS <10-1·01 vs UCLA 19·1·01 10 30
am !CB5t f'IESTA BOWL
(Mendav 11 T-. ArlJ..) Notre Oemt ( 11·0·0) vs West V rg.n 1
111·0·01 2 om INBCl
ROSE BOWL
(Meftdav at Pewoe.Ml
M<h'll•" •1·2·•• vs use 10·1·01 1 om
IABCl SUGAR BOWL (Meftdav 11 New Of'lt_,,\I
Ftor-41 Sl11e 10· 1·0 vs Ai>O""' 10-l-0 •
S lO o,,, IABCl
OltANGE BOWL
(Mende\' ., Moam<)
Ntl>ral~e 11 · 1·0 vs Y. am. Fa 10· 1·01
SlO om 1NBCl
JAPAN BOWL (Jan. 14 11 YOlrtflama, Japan)
TBA 1ESPNI
HULA BOWL
(Jin. 14 11 HOMIU!ul I om NBC
EAST·WEST SH•INE CLASSIC
(Jan. 1S 11 St•nforO)
NOOl1 (.t.BCl
SEN!Ott BOWL
(Jan. ll 11 MtbiM. Ala.I a 1 rn !M11~ul
NHL STANDINGS ~C.l•w:e ~ OMsien
Cal9arv
Kinel
Edmonton
Vancouver
Winnipeg
WLTPtl
24 1 s SJ
24 12. 1 49
20 ..,13 4 44
14 19 5 33
13 14 6 32
GF GA
lSO 99 191 141
171 142
123 124
136 14S
Detroit
St Louis
Minnesota
Tor on lo
Chicago
Norm OMsien
II 12 S 41 14S
14 lS 6 34 117
11 11 6 21 111
12 23 2 26 114
9 23 4 22 139
Walts CenlertMe
P•trick Dlvlsien
Pillsburgh 22 11 3 47 169
NY Rangers 11 l• S 41 1•2
Philadelphia 19 17 2 40 151
Was'1in11ton 17 14 S 39 122
New .Jer.se.y Jl. 16 Z .JJ 122
NY Islanders 9 2• 2 20 !OS
Montr;e111
Bo~ton
Buffalo
Quet>ec
Hartford
Adams Oivlsien
23 10 6 S2 !SJ
14 lS 9 37 111
IS 17 ' 3• 126
IJ. 21 3 29 132
13 20 2 21 123
~V'i Sclrft
'· NY Ringers S. New Jtr~V I Buff1lo 2, BostO<\ 1
P11tSOUrllh • H.rtforo 3 (otf
NY lsi.nden • Toronto 3 C1~rv 3, llancouvt< 2 1011 St Louis • ClllGlllO I
Mlnneso11 S, Winn•OIQ 1
Tedl'l's~
Mon•real •• ICMtis 1 JS o m Ptl.._Ottonlll II Wasn.nvTQll. U S om
NV R•~s at .. ew Jtr~y • •S om W....,.y's c.-
Harlford at Ouebec. •.lS om
OttrOtl et Bvlfa'O 4..lS Pm M•nntsot1 et Ch<el>O S.lS o m
St LOUJs et W1nn•otQ US Pm
NHL statistics
137
117
132
164
171
N•t•onet Hoc,ev Leegve regute r·st•son
s•atist.cs thro ... on S1.1noev Oecemoer 2S
S<wine LHden
Lem1e..i.11. P9n
Nictwllls, LA
Gr•t1ky, LA
V1t•man.Oet Brown Pgn
Kurn Eam
GP G A PnPom
33 36 5692 ..
l7 l7 47 ll l6 l6 ,. S4 11 14
35 34 40 ,. 21
3S 25 36 •I 10
37 ?3 36 59 )9
"" fllTt 4N~ V•t l1w-t4 )IO )00 "kT" •aCf
0eeo IN fltNM
NEWPOttT LANOING -2 l>oals. 31 •ng'tn I sand beu. 12 m.<:llertl, 32 rock Cod
60 SCUIP1n I blue Otl'Ch
DAVEY'S LOO<EA (......_,!Medi) -•
DOits 117 1ngiers 2 oontto. 20 roclo. fisll, 3
Cl ICO DaU, 4 s.ne1 beH, 21 macittrtl, 62 blue o.rcn 76 white 11"' 2 \Ole, 71 seulotn, I tQck
SH Otreh, 1 ~-d
TNs weelr's trwt lllMts
LOS ANG•U!S -Et Oor.00 Perk J.:ar.e, Lt911 Ler.n. Peck Ro.cl Parlo. Lake, Pud·
0'"9Stone L.i<t.
OllAJIGa -t..w• NdlUB Pat1l L.akL
•tvEaSK>E -Eva"' Lake ~ ... •••NUDINO -Praoo Plfk Ukt v~,... P•rk Lelle
VUfT\MA -P ru Leto.e
H..._v lnnUdl9!is
aAISaAU. ~u..e
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-AvrttO to terms with Mike Fla~n. 01tct1tr, on • two-vu r
contract ......... u..e
NEW YORK METS-AgrttO to terms with
Kevin McRevnoiels outf..idfr, on a tllrtt-VMr
contract
aASICETaALL
............. A ...... MIA.NII HEAT-W11...cl Anthony T1vtor,
guaro
NEW JERSEY NETS-Act1vai.c! Welt..-ee<rv. for waro from tilt lniurl'd list W11vt0
Ron C1ven1 Cl'nte<
HOCKEY ........ ~L.....CHICAG(). BL.c:ICHAwtl.S-Traoeo Attll.
Ve ve r19nt ••"9 to tilt Buff1tl0 S.Drts tor
Acsam Crt·ll'lton. center NEW YORK RANGERS-Treoecs Don '""-'°"'" ftoft lwine, Br,.n Lawton. center, •no N«m ~IYtr ~ to the H11rtford
WNoen tor C1nv Wilson ce<1ter, and • lilt
rouno «•'• cl'IOICe ~ 1990
EaJI CIHI rtldrt'f L...-
CAROLINA THIJt.:>ER!ltROs-Firlld Brian
Carroll htad coacn <;OLLEGE
ST JOHN S-Oeclart<I Greg "Boo'' H•rvev, DHl<tlbeH guero ""411111>le tor fife M><l11g
semester UC SANTA BARBARA-•med Rick Can·
ou .e ac tt119 llted tooroaij cot Ch
Santi Anita
MOMOAV'S •UUI. TS (hi ........ __ ... ,,__,
Fr•ST •ACf I I 16 -n
L 8 l L A.,,rxll\ !t•t.,.f'"!"I )00
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SllCOMO ••Cf • I , .... ~.
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THlllO •ACE • ' ~ • 1•9"1 Aue• P"<•• •00 JOI\ '"
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U fJlACTA IO.X S I M.0 '°"SO
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• ··--1S 011 ~,.,.. -s10~S1•
Q •
Holtz: No one should
. be favored in game
Even so. Iris h are
five-point c hoices
in No. 1 showdown
TE\IPF . .\m l \Pl-'o tf"(' D :inw
ma' hi: 1h1.· top-ran!l.1.'d 1.'olkg1.· l~"ll·
bal( 1ca m 1n the counti: but Coach
Lou H olt2 dOC'sn·t 1h1nk thr In h
\hould be fa ,orcd o'er !\,jo ' \\
\ 1rgin1a in the Fu.' la tkl"I
"l d o n ·11h1 nk there 1sa fa, on tc 1n a
bo\\I game. I n•all) and trul~ d on't"
H o lli s:11d \to n1.13} as bolh team
am,cd tor a "rd.. of pleasure and
prcf)aratto n to r n1.'\I \\C't'l' game ••
"h11.h 1<. ~1ng btlkd J .. The Ba1t11.'
for N o . I" J U<.I abou t C' er)" her<'
1.'\l~fll in ~1iam1.
The late t odd h 1 "lmrc Dame a
the-po int hno ntc 0 '1.'r \\c 1 \ir-
Jtnl3 1n ~tonJa} • sht'<llu ut ~t"cen
1h1.• onh unbeate n team) 1n the
rounll"\ 'Ro1harc 11 -0
".\ tX,"1 game 1s J11Tc~nt than a
rt1ulnr-!'Clwn pmc:· Hoh1 ~td
.. T o C'\J>l'(I 10 ha't thl· ~~foothill
1c;1111 \1,1u 1.·nJ1.'d up the.• waw n w11h 1!.
~alh r1d11.uk)u'
FIESTA
m1.1mcn1um tor s1\ "eek~ 'o u lo~
'our tundamcn tals. }OU lo se }Our
ttm1n~. ~ou lose \Our c nspnr •
··T h a t \\ h ) trange things happen
in bo\\I game 11·s reall} a o n e...,arm-
scaMln That' "h' I don't 1h1nk thett
arc an' ta,o mes 1n a bo~I game. You
JU ' ha'e t"o foo tball 1cams that an
:l\\ ful lo t of things c an happt-n to in
1ha 1pcnod l)I "l'Cil.S
• ··The ~hcdulc hasn't been e\actl)
the "a' "'c'd h~c 10 ha\c ll. but that
"as o ut of n t'C'co;sit). W e took :!1 l-3
"eel o il afte r thC' u1hern C'al pmc
( o ' ~6) lx'Causc oflinal exams. ap<t
1hc pla~crs had to .. \'CJ> thetr pnor1tin
in pcrspcc11' c
.. Fina.ls ended Dec. 17, we pnc.
h<"«t from Dec. 18-21 and thm we
sent lhtm home. I would M~
prcfcmd to romc out here a little bit
carl~r or keep them o n campus a lntlf
lon.·r ."
L1\lt"n1n1 to H oltz. one miatn ~
away v.1th the 11nprnseon tl\at Wn1
\11r111•aa StMlUld hr o. I and ~
tJilm( 0 I 00 OflO.
· \n' time \OU 1.-lc 'H' "1.~l\ 1ltl.
11·\ JU\l iimna· 1\) tl\ .l J1tkn:n1 •1.·am
'ou low ~our ltnHnt \OU lo~ ~our
rh' thm anJ wu , crtainh lo~ What· e'er momrnium \OU had -...----~~~J..;:::=-=:.;;==-"\-ou'l"C"not d~'ltlnut the~
1eam that c~ Ok' ~atoW:-If•
'1nuall) 1m to lN'p 'our
"I c1on·t think-"-~"· JMl)'4 a ....
.... ~ IWofliewMVC(loiola\'fttftlol Wm v......., .. ht kl~~MMiifj.
they'~ ....... •rill. a-1ul ..,. toocbd 1a1n.··
.. .. 0rano-CoM1 DAILY P1LOT/ Tu.day, December 27, 1918
..
Japanese 'key to success:
Educating beSt students
DEAR ANN LANDERS: It has
been more than 45 Yfan since Japan
had tp aive up its efforts to control a
larae pert of the world.
How many lives were lost during
the attack on Pearl Harbor? How
many warplanes and battleships were
destroyed in that war? In spite of all
the losses. the Japanese didn't get
what they were after. But now, nearly
half a century later, while we a re
drownina in debt. they are on top of
the world.
How did they do it? The answer is
EDUCATION! EDUCATION!
EDUCATION!
Not only were teachers and
professors· involved parents were
very helpful, as weli as the corpor-
ations and businesses that employed
those parents. Everyone in Japan is
on the lookout for bri&ht thinkers.
And they arc given all ihe help they
need to move up as fast as they can.
All outstanding students get an
opportu11ity to go to college. As a
result. the country gets the benefit of
the most brilliant and the most
talented. This means having access to
top-notch engineers, scientists.
financiers, all specialists in their field.
In our country, onl y those students
who can afford to pay can go. with the
exception of a handful of scholarship
stars. I wonder how many of our
young people with great potential are
A11
lMDEIS
lost because they don't have the funds
to go on.
Of course. not every student is
college material, and here is where the
businesses come in. The Ja.1?:3nesc
trajn their workers so they will tum
out top-quality products that can
compete successfully around the
wo rld.
The Japanese are wise. They
learned that what they could not
obtain Wlth force and weapons. they
could get with brains.
Perhaps we should take a few
lessons from t.hem. Maybe there is
still time. - A READER IN SALT
LAKE CITY
DEAR SALT LAKE: Tlte Japaaese
aren't tbe only one1 to laave &Mt Idea.
Jolul F. Kenedy Mid, "Tlte grealelt
nat•ral re1Mrce of aay eemlry 11 Its
youg people." AM Keue4y believed
tlaat we 1llHMIW provide u opper&IUllty
to eclacate all 1t1tdettt1 ... laad Ute
potential. B•t tlaat'1 as far as Ms
cwep&w•&.
Giie 4-J ,.,..,. we will '" IM ................ Nit ...
1N1•1e11 al lfterul•l • .,..... nft weeN malle aca ._. _.. ................. ~ .........
...,. 8M ...,... 111tem1 diet are
oltMle&e Wen we pl diem elf 1M
4raw ... 111Mn11. • • •
DEARANN LANDERS: My heart
went out to "Minnie," whose hu5-
band, Joe, asked to be buried between
his first and second wives. Here's how
we handled a similar situation.
When my first husband died after
23 years of marriaac (I was only 43
years old). I bought a two-grave ploL
Five years later I married "Bernie.••
I fi~urcd, why let my grave be only for
me. When either of us dies one
should be buried on top of the other.
We talked about it and Bernie aareed.
We went to the cemetery and they
said. "We frequently bury people that
way. We just dig deeper. 8 feet instead
of 6 feet.•
That woman in Florida should
have the grave that Uncle Joe is
buried in dug deeper and put Minnie
on topofUncleJoe. It maycosta few
dollars, b~t in the Iona run the famil y
will have ace of mind. - K. FROM
CICERO
DEAR It.: Bea•tif•l solatioa.
'hub for writiag!
B SYDNEY OMARR VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Lunar position accents ~ Ott H individuality, timing, judgment. intuition. Search is W y, · completed, long-distance call relates to possible journey.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Mechanical obj~t. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Stress mdependence.
which had been "out of order," W111 again be "':l"orking." creativity. courage of.convictions. You no. longe~ will be
Puzzle pieces fall into place .. rules an~ rcgulauons once "in the dark." Attractive member of opposite su 1s ready
aaain make sense. Information received restores con-to become vigorous ally. Leo. Aquarius are in picture.
fidence. . . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Intuition rings true.
r v I ,
... '-lf'lll ~ r< ••
F111Q, lhll Evn
•
TAURUS (April 2~May 20): Scenano haghhghts family member says, "Let's forget our differences and get
release from obhgation. greater freedom of tnought. together." Focus on pleasure, persuasion. charm, sen-
action. Format or concept submitted approx.imately fi ve suality. Gourmet dining featured for tonight.
days ago brings favorable response. There will be reason SAGl1TARJUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You'll be re.-
to celebrate. warded for doing what you enjoy -spotlight on social Luck runs out on her mom
GEMINI (May 21-Ju!le 20): Spot~ight on home, activity, popularity, communication, flirtation. Keep
family, domesticity, sccunty. St~dy Anes mcs~ge for resolutions concerning diet, nutrition, body ima1e. My 78-ycar-old mother recently We set out to answer the question.
valuable hint. Property value wal.1 be assessed an your CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Lunar, numerical celebrated her SOth wedding an-was it' Possible for a· woman who
favor. Lona-ranie prospects come into s~arp. clear f~us. aspects focus on communicatio-n. traver:-pUbltsfi'ing. niversary. Amid the gifts of crystal could count up to queen. kina and ace
CANCER vune 21 -July 22): Relauve who ~asses • exciting romantic interlude. l.n~i vidual who. made bowls and silver trays. and the cards by the time she was 3 to find
appointment might seek to have you serve as substitute. demands will now back off. admitting you were nitht. depicting two bluebirds flying into happiness with a daughter who once
Be kind. genero us, interesJed, but refuse to become AqVARIVS (Jan. 2~Feb. 18): Manuscript submitted the sunset, she confided to me that ripped the lining out of a purse
inextricably involved in nefarious scheme. Protect your approximately two months ago will again be "alive and what she really wanted was an IOolting' for a.coupon for 10 cents off
reputationf lnckinp" Focus on royalties. career. change. travel. "overnighter in Vegas." cat food when she didn't even own a
...
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You'll be rewarded for ·:past discovery. You're due to receive nc..w ac~ountin11 I have been to Las Vegas' with at? ··········•••! performance." Emphasis on paymen~s .. collecuons, PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Go slow. play waiting Mother before. She is an out-of-Whlleshe waswaitingfortheplane. ~
personal possessions. basic value. O~der m~!~1dual _says. game, check legal rights and permissions. Current cycle controlgamblerwhowouldbetonthe a man pve Mother his scaL He d id H bod · food
"I would hke to be m business wtth you. Capncom accents pubhc appearances. cooperative efforts. marital odds of the pope working four this bcca.use she walked with a limp ~rl~~ toefunclo~H~~k~dncys ~
_i_n_vo_l_ved_. ________________ __..;_st:....a....:tu_;s_ ........ aa....:s:....1c_d_o_m~es_t_ic_a_d.:..ju_s_tm_en_t_i_s_n_ec_cs_sa_ry ..... ____ """S.;...un~d~s in a ro_w_._ .. _______ an~ hern&J:lt.arm brushed the around. velop the capacity of two basketballs
Thts cond1t1on ~as caused by S80 This is what enables her to inse
worth of quarters in he_r handbag. quarters into the slot machines at th
BY
THE
POOi.
SERVICE
aerving SE A the Orange Coast
BeHablf\ Friendly Service
Doug Haunvald anytime (71C) •• 1311
r?Jiff~
. U~ Put litter in its place.
~ Cahforma Waste Management Board
(j/ea1m}f
~~-
c_,Airporter qnn
'Hotel
Dancing To The Chuck Battaglia Croup
Reservations
833-2770
•special room rates for New Year's Eve
c_.Airporter G/nn
Wotel
18700 MacArthur, Irvine
laer'*'ttom OfMte County Aifportt
( • •
Ro_ger's ardens
''Chnstmas Fantasy"
40% OFF
ALL HOLIDAY
MERCHANDISE
NEWPORT BEACH
San Joaquin Hills Road (at McArthur)
Hours: 9. am to 6 Daily
******************** INTERNATIO~if~KETPLACE
I
I • I ••• '
Indoor Swaprn_cC~'?fiStanton
' \ ~·t:' •' I!,.
10401 BEACH BLVD. STANTON, CA 90680
. ..
200 Booths • All Independently Run
• Clothinf •Sport• •Furniture • Healtla and Beauty Need1
• Jewelry • Au&o Acce1aoriea • Eleetronlc1 • f aat PoCMI
THOUSANDS or PIODUcrs AT TlllllNDOUS SAVINGS
Enjoy Shopping in a Pleaant ' Air Conditioned Atm0tpbere
*4~ (714) 527-1234 PAW18r.a
•Sat/Sun $1.00 (Childnn under 12 and Senior Citizens over 66 FREE)
IT WILL COST
YOU LF.SS
$ $ S AT S $ $
INDOOR SWAPMEET
OF STANTON
HOURS: FRIDAY 12·8
SAT/SUN 10·6
llfWY
~REEADMiSSiON--~ WITH COUPON 1
I ' ADMIT ON• ~---------------1 DL\WINO NAMS~~~~------------------------1 AD~am .
I . nu .. ,, ... .._,.._
-----------------------..
"Jf they ~ne~ what kin~ of '!?one~ I rate of I 4S coins every minute.
was carryans, she saad ... they d Jn the wee hours of the mornina.
probably comp a room f~rus. Asshe said. "Mom, maybe we couJd t
charged from the plane an Las Vegas, Hoover Dam tomorrow," and sh
s!le cupped her ~nd to her ear and said, "Is it on the Strip?" taste~ to .~he J~nate of .the slot As I redeemed my coupons for fi
machines. !hey re playing my shrimp cocktail that t clapped out o
song," she smiled. the airline mapzine, Mom select
You have to know about the herKenonumbersandpvethemto
sounds of Vegas. There is a metal tray runner in black stockinp and sho
below each machine where the coins skirt. Then she emptied out her Dixi
drop your winnings. I don't know cup of coins. She had the same loo
how they do this, but when a quarter on her face as Albert Brooks in "Los
drops in the tray, it sounds like a jet in America" when his wife lost thei
just buzzed your house. Two quarters nest cu. "I hate to say this." she said,
sound like a demolition ball iust fell "but rm down to playing nickel
on your car. Three quarters gave you machines.·· She played and lost he
the decibels of a spacecraft beina last nickel at the airport.
launched.and four quarters will make She was quiet on the trip home. At
you pass out from the pain. . the term!nal, I inserted a ~in in the
Gambling chanaes my mother rhone daaled and handed 1t to her as
physically. Her arthritis dissipates said bri~tly, ''I won! Here's Dad!"
every time she reaches up to pull the "It isn t the same," she said.
By CHARLES GOREN
u4 OMAR SHARIF
Both vulnerable. South deals.
NORTH . ".
\) ". 0 K9765
•AK32 wrsr EAST
• J975 • Ql3
\) Q 3 2 \) J •• ' 7 6
0 Void 0 QI 3 2
• J JO' 7 5 4 • Q SOUTH
• A 10 6 l
\J A 5 4
0 A J JO 4
•• 6
The biddin1:
S-111 ..... 1 0 ,..
5• ... , .... ... ,_
Norcia
4 NT
5 NT
'0
Eut ,_ ... ,_
Openina lead: Jack of •
Thia week, we will conc:m1ra1e on
sleaninl clues rrom lhe biddina and
play. One or the beauU. or brid1e
la that It lives practltionera a chance
to reason and inf er. rather than pro-
jec:& from a polition wbtre every-
thina la known, u in cbea. ThJ1
band fooled a many-dme national dwnJMoa.
CURLES
Go1E•
vealed the bad break, and declarer
could not recover. Since he needed
to ruff dummy's club losers in band,
he could not draw East's fanp, and
East eventually !COred a trump trick
and a club ruff.
East's queen of clubs at the first
trick should have fluhed a wamin&
sianaJ that declarer wu 1oin1 to
encounter bad breaks. After win-
nin& the opmina lead, correct tech-
nique wu for declarer to cash the
kin& of diamonds. When the trump
position shows up, declarer can still
aet home with careful timina.
After cuhina the kina-ace of
speda and kina-ace of hearts, de-
clarer should ruff a heart in dummy.
A marked trump fineuc is then the
entry to ruff a spade, and another
uump finesse alloWI declarer to
draw all or East's trumps. In prac-
tice, West wW be lqUeaed in the
black Niu, and declarer will collect
all the tricks. Even tbouib Nortb-South wwe .,..,.. fM-cud majors, Nonb
WU .,,..,.,.. to play in a dWDond A'lllMI fer a ...W dml •
slam nm GppOlke a lbne-ard IWl ci;: .n. 11 • ....,.,.....
in plftlllr'I bind. Wba South if 0CKJaLa •1111111'
ooald llOt bid •• .,.... ...... Nonb • ,.. ..... .... ., ..
llpld off ID lb ctia-oadl. ·~ DOUaLa,,. _.. llllil
Dedar• won me oplDiaa dub =·:I ' P.O ....... Ollllt-... ill dummJ and ..... dropped ..; ,.. ........ ..
the qulllll. A tnamp to me W ~ ..,1111 le '1'ca JEJ .. Ub"
,. y.t"REFQfttG~ ~'""'• ~Lff All~ .. .
• •
. '
Cllarleell.Jobneon
Projects
readied ·
to teach
economics
J u nior Ach ievement
startin fund drive to
support OC schools
Stressing the new importance of
economics in California schools.
Junior Achievement of Orange Coun-
ty and the Inland Empire is kicking
off JA's 70th anniversary with its
1989 fund-raising campaign.
Charles M. Johnson. executive vice
president in charge of Wells Fargo
Bank's commercial banking-group,
based in Newport Beach,_ has been
named fund drive chairman. accord·
ing to Tami Phillips, area vice
president of JA.
Thc_gQal of the campaign is to raise
SIS0,000 by next June, according to
Johnson. A similar effort last year, led by
Walter Blass. chairman of Shcarson
Lehman MortgaJC Co.. brought
$I 04,000 in donations for the·Orange
County/Inland Empire chapter.
"This is the first time that the state
of California is mandatinfeconomics
for 12th-grade students.' said John·
son. "Junior Achievement, which is
supported by businesses and com·
munity volunteers, can help our
schools meet this requirement
without asking the taxpayers form• ire
money."
According to Phillips. JA 's Applied
Economics course fulfill s the new
state economics credit requirement.
"We have more requests from
educators than we arc able to fulfill
financially," she said. "We arc only
limited by our funding, and that
comes from community support."
Junior Achievement was founded
in 1919 in Springfield. Mass.. by
Horace A. Moses. president of the
Stathmore Paper Co. His concept,
said Phillips. was to take the 4-H
approach to educating rural young-
stcrsand apply it to the ncedsofurban
teen-agers.
.. Or ... COMt DAILY PtLOTIT~. Deaenlb.-27, 1-* 8'1
Investors are not going for growth stocksli
Br CHET CUIUUER ,, ....... ...,
NEW YORK -The once-hal·
lowed Wall Stnet tradition of invest·
ina in powtb SIOCks has fallen on very
hard umes of late.
The crash of 1987 had somethi ns to
do with that. But as statistical
measures show, the bia market break
only accelerated a trend that has been
in motion forat least five, and maybe
as much as IS. years.
All this is documented by the
investment firm Kidder, Peabody It
Co., which publishes a monthly
compilation of what it calls the "Top
SO" -the SO issues traded on the
New York Stock Exchange that carry
the hiataest price~minp ratios.
~s you miabt expect, this list 1s
ty~ly dominated by companies
with stroft&JJ'Owth records: foreum-
ole. Coca-Cola. Walt Disney. ud Merck and Eli Lilly in pharma-
ceuticals. as well as smaller entities
like J.M. Smucker and Tootsie Roll
Industries.
Losically. stocks of companies that
demonstrate the ability to produce
above-average arowth should sell at
hiper P-Es than those with more
mOdest prospects. And they do.
But the difference between the
median P-E of Kidder's Top SO and
that of the market as a whole,
rej)f'CIHted by Standanl" Poor'•' decision .. stocks.
500-ltock composile index. has lately Under this. philosophy, money
contracted to the smalla& premium 11 maftlle'I at 1nvesona 1nStitutaons
has ever shown 1n calculauons dauna bouaht stocks of aJamour powth
bKk to 1960. companies with the presumed 1nten-
ln the 1960s and eatly 1970&. the lion of own1na I.hem forcvft'. It didn•t
Top SO's P·E sometimes was more matter very much how dearty you
than thlft times that of the Jeneral paid for these stocks, since you ~re
market. As recently as 1983. the never aoina to sell them.
premium stood at 2. S times. Then the recession and bear market
In November it fell to 1.3 times the ofl973-74 knocked down that notion.
market multiple. In effect. extra More recently. says . Kidder
powth is beina offered in the market· Peabody analyst Evelyn Fell, several
p&acc at almost no extra chars. forces have combtned to compress
What brouaht about this clevalua-the Top SO's premium -a~ona
tion? It started in the '70s with the them the takeover and buyout biftlC.
collapse of a style of investina that "Investors' ancnuon has been
focused on what were called .. one-focused on immediate rewards
Pet L•wn owners asking for
Justa tr-Im or-NewpOrt-Wedge
By ltATY BOUCHER °' ................
It's not unusual for Michele
Schmidt of Corona <Sci Mar to add
someone new to her list of customers.
After all. the hair-cutting business
is always growing.
However. this is a little different -
her client is a patch of grass in a box
called "My Pct Lawn," and Schmidt's
salon ha.s been named the first
"Official TrimminaSalon for My Pct
Lawn," by Greener Pastures.
Schmidt, 32, is the owner of
"Michele's Unique Techniques.''
"I had the order forms here and
decided to order one, (of the lawns)."
Schmidt said. "It's like the 'Pct Rock·
-but it's alive.''
"My Pct Lawn," invented by Paul
Kiluk of Corona del Mar, piqued
Schmidt's curiosity to the point of
ordering one. planting one and finally
doins die "dos."
"IJUSt love mine," she said. "Whc11
it staned to grow I couldn't wait to try
haircuts: After carin& for this lawn.
and then finall y creating new looks. I
thoupn it would be fun to offer my
services to the public.··
So Schmidt took the libertr of
contacting Kiluk and they decided
her salon would be the official ,
trimmer for $5 a cut.
Each lawn comes with "parenting
instructions," tellin& how to plant 1t
and keep i t ali'c'c. Also shown arc four
. different cu~, -or you can request the cut of choice from Schmidt.
"I love the Newport Wcdae," she
said holding her latest pct. ··My next
'do' I think will be a 'Melrose Punk.' "
Schmidt said it's no joke. Pcopl~
around the area have already brouS}\1
their pets to her and s e's enjoying
every minute of it.
And not just any salon can cut th~
lawns unless they meet certain
criteria.
"Requirements arc · simple," said
Kiluk. "You simply have to be a
pcnon who has a sense of humor.
green thumb, and willingness to do
this.
"The last requirement they have. 1s
to take an extensive traininaclass by a
reprcscntaive of Greener Putures-
that takes 15 minutes." he joked.
Schmidt is definitely amused with
her new venture.
"It's so much fun," she said.
"These pets make people lauah -
that's what I love the most. It only
takcsaminuteand I lovccrcatinancw look.s.··
Schmidt was born and ·raised in
Yakima, Wash. But she loneed for
warmer weather.
"Sol jumped in my car and decided
to visit my sister in California," she
said. "Before you knew it, I wasaivin&
haircuts on the beach in Newport. I'd
cut from 8 till noon -then break for
sun time and start apin with sunset
cuts from S until 9 p.m."
Sc)\midt said her customer list grew
so long she couldn't keep up the i1ecc
and found a little shop in Corona dcl
Mar.
"We just have a lot of fun ... she
said. "I love people and I love cuttin&
hair. So it was only naturaJ when I
grew 'My Pct Lawn: I'd cut him, too.
reaped throuah buyouts. ~ur ..
1np and such, rather than on the loa&-
term investment poleDtial of srowt~. stocks. .. she oblerves.
.. This has been accompanied by a
d1'm1nuuon of confidmce in powth
~ccts.'' • ~ax reform also did srowth stocks
no favor by climinatina the special
tax break for lona-1erm capi&al pins.
Capital pins arc the prime allure of
these stocks, sulee fast-powina com-panies usually pay modest (or no)
dividends.
Now that all investment income is
taxed at the same rain.. the fashion
has shifted markedly to a ··total
return" approach.
"And now that I'm an official
trimmer, I'm sure I'll find new fun
looks for other 'pct ow~f.$. • "
.........................
Oftlclal trl•eer lllclaeletlc••ldttrt..a PetLawa •L.a.,.
Lowe laolda OD to the ..... DOftlty la Coroaa de1 llar.
Small banks uniting
~~~~~~~~~1~~~:.~~~~n:~!~~~ D
banks throughout California have over California bank assets and rising
formed a California Community interest rates:· said Phil lngltc.
Bankers Council under the auspices prcside.nt of liberty National Bank in
of the Independent Bankers Associa-Huntington Beach. "I hope many ~
tion of America in order to make their other bankers will join with us in ou.r
voice heard in Sacramento. grass-roots effort to form a single
"Our ability to serve our customers effecti ve voice for independent
and community is threatened like banks."
never before. The American taxpayer "Our council. under the ·sponsor-
may be called upon to ante up as ship of the national IBAA. provides
muth as S 100 billion to bail out the us with a un ique instrument for
savings and loan industry. Their influencing our Lqislaturc as well as
FSLIC insurance fund is bro.kc. We as the U.S. Congress." said Clyde
independent bankers better make Gosscrt. vice chairman of the council
very sure that our legislators under· and president of Commerce Bank. the
stand and appreciate the difference largest independent bank head·
between savings and loans and our quartered in Northern California.
banks," declared Richard Mount the "This coming year. the banking ~
chairman of the newly expanded industry faces perhaps its most criti-
council and president of the Saratoga cal challenge since the bank crisis of
National Bank in Northern Cali· 1932. The problems of the savings
fomia. and loan industry will splash us all.
"The California Legislature will be We had better be informed on the
dealing with a long list of important issues and involved in the politica l
banking issues in 1989. There is the process if we arc to successfully
FSLIC er insurance fund deciding on surmount this problem." noted Steve
banks' role as insurance vendors Fried, president of Western United
under the recently passed Proposition National Bank in Los Angeles. I)
(i f.) (i) 6 f) .(1f) (jf) 60 ~
Whether you have
$100 or $100,000,
we have the high rates
and FDIC security
you're looking for.
'-.................. .
FDI(
-.. ....._., -·-· _.,.. -
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ---------.. 6.00o/o Super Passbook I 204' IFF all lair Ctltr I
-/,J/lf,1 ... (:1
Q ~\.i!l/ ...
I fllT11111 ... I ... llT I
··==and s2 I 951
, cond1tion1nc l nnse I
.. EXPIRES 12-31-11 I ---------HUNTINGTON 9EACH COSTA••A FOUNTAIN VALLEY
WarMt & GOldenwest
AlbertlOn't Centet
(714)841·5585
Calamari
Abalone Style
-topped wiltl mushrooms & bay •• -dloic• of potato
• ..,...d with green salod Of cup
of our own doM chowdef
Beech & Adams
New19'\d Centet
(714)983-7731
ttewpon Btvd. Brookhur9t ' Elllt In the Courtywds c.-.na Comw
(714)722-1889 (714)118-0187
GET THE FANTASTIC DIFFERENCE
• 'I. -, '• I ~ •, 1 •, • "' ~ I I ~ .&
--
t 1:30. 3:30
Monday -Saturday
ALL CHOICES
93.95
Ask vovr food terwr about
tnne wieciots
Fish & Chips
Basket
~rved witts Delonev•s
homemade tarter
50uce, 9ften
solod or CUP of
our own clom
chowder.
lit It I ••sat._. ........ •
Tureen of Delaney's
famous clam chowder
and 1/2 undwich.
-11 sandwic h of
vour choice
-Manhattan or New
England chowder
$2.500 minimum deposit which yields to 6.18°'o. Com·
pounded daily. paid monthly. No penalties. fees or limits on
.withdrawals. Rate changes monthly.
9 .00% S1nall Saver
' Sl OOminirnumdepositwhichyields 9.25'1-30 month term.
' Penalty for early withdrawal.
8.50o/o IRA's
$2.000 minimum deposit which yields 8.87~ by compound·
ing to itself. 1 month term. Penalty and tax penalty for
early withdrawal Call for other terms offered.
~ 9 ·~Q ~u~kt~~ona sU
month term. Penalty for early withdrawal Call for rates on
other terms.
~ 9 ·~!~m~!1!!~sup009~1 ~"onasU
month term. Penaltv for earlv withdrawal Call for rates on
other terms. · ·
So wMthf'r ~ou "" look Ing for Wt" ha\.~ 1u-.t "hat you rt" lookln~
hlght"r ""turn . FDIC ln<iur· ®fo r. All thl and mort'. brough t an<'C. or frtendlv. e-ffit'IC'n1 • ~ tOli{f'tht"r Into one plct t't'
M rvlC't'. you11 fi nd that Hf'rltagf' Thrift & lo.'ln _,
HerilBl/eThrilt •Loan~
1500 Atlema Avenue. SWte 109. C.ta Me.a. CA a626
fCorner of Ada-aad lhmtiiar)
714-m-7444
@
VY--@ ~·@w----.............
•
- • Oninge CoMt OAK..Y f»tLOT/ Tueedey, Deoember 27, 1118
NYSE C o~POSIH T RANs~cr10Ns
" : -=1 ·1 !
lEllli " ·I
·1
.. t ' '
Trading light ~oday
NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks weakened lat
..today in an extremely liaht post.Christmas tcssio
that brokers called a symptom of the sickly tradin
volumes and underlyangpessimism sutTered by th
market through much of the year.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials fcl
6.25 points to close at 2, 162.68.
WHA T AM Ex Orn
NEW YORI( (AP> Dec. 27
Advooced Declined Ul!CheOgecl Tolel TJsues New highs New IOWS
·1-~. ~v,ncecs
fined nchen~
NOtaf1 JS04tS ewhtehs New lows 11
AM EX LEADERS
GoLo Quo1Es
M ET~l~ Quaas
, NASDAQ SuMM.1R'
IRS tax forms mailed out
today have different look
WASHINGTON (AP)-The IOI
million tax forms bcin&. mailed out
stanina today will contain a wrprisc
for some taxpeycn. The forms lhey
receive will be ditTerent and simpler
than the ones the Internal Revenue Service maned to them last year.
Dnpite widesptead p:umbllfta that
the dnve t°'fll'd tu limplificltion
bu in.-d •&K*I a more com-plialted ayaa.ri. t1te•1RS is prediaina
that 3.S million Americana will be able 10 switch to the simpler fonns
this year.
To ~P make that projection come
true. tbclRSi1makinaaara1ttefrort
this NI' 10 direC'C aa...-yen to ahe
form ihaa is best fOr their tax
lituaaions.
The I RS fOnnftty mailed t.npe)'ffl
the type of bm Ibey Md uted in tbc
lftY10US year. However. for tbe first timt this )Ital', the IRS anal)'lld lhe
Mllnll IUPI~ lellt bKk 11111 Apnl IS ud lmd 1bo1e ftndinp to de-.. ._.,type olpecbje to lelMt ............ -.
., .... of IOllliMIJ --OUI tbr11mebm ........ itl .... .... .. .. U'rillll IO lend ....... 1U
variety of deductions. ThOtc cha
mean many taxpayers who o found it beneficial to itemize deduc
tions and file the Iona Form 1040 ca
now use \he Jimpler Form 1040A o
the simplnt form ofall, the 1040
wi\hout beina forced to pay h.
tues.
The IRS estimates that Form l
will require a tuptyer lO lpcnd
hours and 1 minU1el on
keepina, 2 houn and 28 min
leamina about the lew, 3 hours lftd
minutn PNl*illl the form and 3 minutes for copyine. membli111 sendl"I the mum io the IRS.
Tite 9 houri and 17 minutes
does"°' count u ~ 5
and 5 I minu1.cl the lll'ftC1 esllmata
aupeyer will need to fW OUl
1CCOmP1D7illalcbed1le A. ... " ~&':'tot.tr..=
intaat and divicleDdL
By coatrui. the IRS CllilNllel
ta•Pl)'el' aeedJ only I boar ud l
mintlla to complete die l040EZ.
lim .... lltS form wMdt c:a be ~. ~-~'!IL--':u: ~ lletndlf--'hive II t '**Ifs ............. .. I 1111 I ipok11m1n Fraak Keith.
Tbe Udllllilt 1916 Tu Reform
" A.a ...... .. rates. nliled tM ..,.. .._.. a.ddiftliMted a
below 150.000..
The ICMOA. dit omer Mort ..., bl...,~ mrNd or ... ...,donac ...... ... taillle ,...., ii ....... 150. • I
Na.\'N.O'r
C~DO"ICe MOVAS
T...,._'--M·f l"OOAM-130PM
..... IOOAM·t1$0AM ._ Couftl• M-F
I 00 MM 00 PM •aa..•
COLDW<?U.
BAN~eRlJ
.1 'i ~ocia ted .,
,.
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.,_...c:cw.c • .,....., ou....-.uwi
Wfltt .. «<'-" ,..., ......... .._.
...., .. ~ .. ,... NU .,_,, <f'IK• ,,_,,. .............. ..-~..,_~
'9WJ titlt JNO•.i\>Noit~~N ...... y.-. .,,., ...... ~ ...
.,....,~lf l'MYNI~ ._.,..., ........ cw .... ~
~ ~ .......... ""' .,.,., CIMiif
CM ..... M ..... .., .. flt'-' -14~ *"'*""" .................. ....
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......... -MMCe <"WW-~ ... }_,.., ... _......~ .. ,......,,.. .. ( ..... _.,..,_,WW
,~~~ ......
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... ~ .. ~--
-I
NEW O.l VBEO WHITE & •
&AASS. Witt\ mett1 DI 11
& trundle complete.
$245. -~293•
QUEEN SIZE MA TT'RESS
& BOX. QUIL TEDI
BRANO NEWl $1SS.
CALL * 146-4293 w
Ml.IC *>TICE "8.IC *>TICE NI.IC *>TICE
'lhlllmll
'II II.Ill MT" sans
A ml DMftO ~
CUPllE-a.D.WS
IS 7~. Auto IWl'561
86 ~28t. Auto, 200761
81 73Sl.auto.!Oadff.6424J.4
Sales -Service
Parts -Leul~
111-3171
1500 Auto Mall Or.
Santa Ana
55 ~~·at Edinger
<ftN 7 DAYS
SeMce Hra. Mon-Fri. 7:00 am to 9:00 pm
•
MERCEDES SL 460 1'174
very clMn. bolt! tops,
asking S17,000 private
party. work 6't5-457SI
hOMe 873-4335
••UL11
'12MIZllO
4 OR Sedan automatic. ---
straight 6 • Air condl!Jon.
lf!g. radials, Usn ~w
gas • mlclnight blue
U•tffMlf....S
Ml·l1M M1·1l11 If you're looklng lol' a Job, C11111fted 11&1 ,_.for you.
ACTITIOUa .,..... ~tC NOTICE 2000 Main Str .. 1. Hunt· purchaM off• are on Ille f0t UM cmte e YM ....... ..-.. Otlft, elWftl, fr .. , of the Lebo< Code, the 0.-tllat lhe had beel'I ltnctly w ..,. um ITATIMENT NOTICI Of' JOINT inglon Beach. Calif0tnl1. 10 public Inspection end copy· t•l•ika ne .. ..._, fMk bn, _./*'If, Iii partment hll lllClr1elned pronlblted ~om U91ng the um ITAW DUIMWT or
The to1owtng perlOM are "'9lJC •AJUHG consldef and act upon en Ing for lhe cost ol dupll-,.-ounlart, au ,..,._ .. w/4Cllrt that !fie general prevailing Y9hlc:le. Tl'le ~ pet'IOM er• TlllUllFOllTATIOM
doing bUllf\IN u · CITY COUNCIL/ amendment to en exl1tlng calk>n II tM office ol the eecttle• ....... .._.... c-. JenJl ~. 0019 • rlt .. ol wegem ~ble In DATfD: Nolllt'nbet 17, dolnl lluelneel •: MOf1C1 TO
SO. CAL CELLULAR MDEVILOf'MINT Own• Par11clpatlon Agree-City Cleftc, City ol Hunt· n111,11r e•rt IH lor· wtftMI, 1114. IMle llNle the county ltl '#hlch the""'°"' 1988 FM WEST REAL TY. 374 ~
PARTN ERSHIP. 703 AUNCY menl betwffn 1111 Re· lngton Beacl1, 2000 Mein nulldede1 le1ele1 .... ~A.:~.H14S l1tobedonearetnoeerates DAYtD 9GROS, At10f'ney Sou1t1 TY9tln, Orenge, Calif. ~ Jumine, Coron• del Mar, ,.,._..,_NT TO development Aget>cy ol the Str .. t. Huntington Beach . ..., ........ II uetecl qvtere -*"'•...., eee, l'fllee ha, establl8hed and publllhed f0t Ptelntllf•. 2300 EHi IHee SM6ad opoee1s f« the Cellf. 92925 OWM9' Clly ol Huntington· Beacl1 C1llfornla. between the .,e le c:wte -"8 au t11PM. tnltl by the Director of lndu1trlel 1<11e11a, Suite 205, An1'1elm, Cendtoe Joy Teecker, 22 WOik eno.:' Oft tlle pi9111&1'·
Scott M. Cooper, 703 'AATIC•ATION and Mole 0e,,.1opment Cor· 11oura ol 8:00 AM · 5:00 PM. c-. Slefller. H. H.: Sp. H111-Aefatlona. Coples ol the CA 12808 ~••ldowgrllD lrvtne c.Jlf titted· ~. Corona c1et Mar. ACIMEMENT POf•tlon. T11i. amendment Monday t11ru Friday, llX· St uetect no.,,_,, "' tt crt, MO. 2 crd ttlfe, «* wage rain ere on file at the Publilhed Orange Coal! 927t4 ' ' . STATE Of CALIFORNIA·
Callf. 92925 MOlA DEVILOfJMENT provides fOf D change fn the cluslve ol l1olid1ys. ,.....,.... • tletnpo, ,uecte Ill'., wttbd fmt OftQ ol the Chief of Plant Dally Piiot December 8, 13. Tami Jiii Taec:ller, 50 S.. DfPARTMENT Of TM,_:
Marty Flenagan, 19 C~ATION orlglnal release formul1 In Interested pe<sons m1y ,_,_ .. _.,iepuedeft utloe,Dettenei -.H•-Operations, F1lrvlew De· 20.27, 1Na Pine L.,.,.. Newport &Mcti, PORTATION: ,AOJECT
Merda L-. Rochftter. NY (llU9t-N9' w111cl1 the Redevelopment submit written comments quttar Ml ........ eu dfrtero tllt1 IMle bu,....... velopmenlll Cent• Men-T374 Calif. 12tee PLANS FOR CONSTRU·
14424 MDIVILOl'MIENT Agency receives Ila ultlmete Dddressed to the Cit)' Clertc , OlrH coe11 de tu , .. ._,MMe,: Sp. WIN · datory Site Inspection will be Thie bu9lnea1 Is con· TION ON STATE H~AY
This bualneH Is con· "'°-'ECT AMA) compensation tor lend being of the City ol Hun11ng1on Pf~ elfl Mleo ..._ bd ............... ...._ 11N1e held Fri .. Jen 20, 1919 at NI.IC M)TIC( ducted by: joint ~ture IN ORANGE COUNTY IN
duc1ed by: 1 general plf1· NOTICE ol 1 Joint public conv~. The emendment Beleh. Post Offtee Boll 190, deMfper ...... delD-'8. Monti. ONftfla: Sp. tam 10:00 A.M The regl1tr1nt com· COSTA MESA FAOM FAIA· nerlhlp heerlng by t~ Council also provides for boll1. Pit· Huntlng1on 891Cl1. C•ll· E1let111 ..,.. ,..,..... -tbl a 4 din. ...... ..... ,..,.... De11t1pinen... ITATl-..T OF menc4ld to tranNet boll· VIEW ROAD TO ARLING-
The regletrenl com-ot Huntington and ll1e aonal end COtporate guaran. lornla, 92e.8. prlOf' to lhe ........ ~ ..-ueted b11, lye Center, Vtcte1 .,...lee. AaAllDOfP'INT Of' .,... under the fictitious TON DRIVE
menc:ed to tranaae1 bu!ll· Redevelopment Agency 01 I~ ol Redevelopment Agen· 11our ol 5:00 PM. on Deeem-quiet•......_ a "" ebogeclo OW,_ ,_... tM right CMel of,._., O...,.lteM Mt UM Of' 'ICT1T10UI bullnon name or namet will be received at the o.-
,,... undef the fictitious the City 01 Huntington Beacl1 cy s lend value of $2,500.000 bar 30, 1988. l~te. SI no OOft-to bid et lll• Hl•. Publlthed Orenge Coalt IU ... 11 NAlm Hated eoove on (not yet) par1ment ~ TrMapOttatlon
bullneM neme or names on an amendment 10 lhe from Mola Development At the time and place oee • "" ellogedo, ,uecte ""c:Mw "'"•t'be made Dally Piiot December 27. The follc:;'~ pereona Candice Joi/ f'MCller 120 Souttl ScM'lng s1r .. 1'
119ted aooveon December 2. Owner PerOclpetion Agr-Corporation. noteo ebove, au persons ......., • llf'I MtWldo • Nf-wlttl c.efl eMr Md paid.., 1988, J1nuary 3, 1989 11ave •band the UM of Tiiie at•t9ment wee ftlud Room _,000 LOI A,.._:
1988 ment betwHn the Re· Al en alternellve 10 Interested the abOve m11tef eflflCta • 1b1 .. d11 o a .. tM""" of,..,_.... All T410 tl1e Flatltlou1 Butlneu with the County Clertc of Or· Cellfornla too 12 untll 2 Scott M. C009et develoe>menl Agency and proposed amendment Motl may appear •nd be heerd. -oftelN de eyUde ..... purcMMd .... .,. IOld Neme· CENTURY 21 enge ~ on December o'doctc pm on~ 5 Mole Development Corpor· 0evo!o9ment Corporeilon 11 CITY Of' HUNTINGTON (... et dlrecte1lo l•le-ID 11. Md -t be r.-...d rtlllC M)TIC( COASTLAND; 2870 San 20, l988 1989 ... ~time they ...
This 1te1ement wu flied etk>n ottering 10 purehase ~ .. MACH, C-le •oc:ti••r. ,..,.,, .. tM tllM of ..... .... Mb* Dr .. Newport 8-ch, ,..,_ be publicly OC*led Ind r.ad
wtth the County Clerit of Or· NOTICE IS HEREBY development Ag1ncy·1 Cttr Cleft C-No. UID1 "*feet .. ,,.., W Diii ~f:': c.Jif. Sl2860 Publiahed Orenge COU1 In Room 12 8t Mid addreel. lnQI County on o-Tlber GIVEN ttlet the City Council Pfoperty Dated· Deeernt>er 15, The na~ end addr ... of "°" lft tM ...C el....... TM FlctftlouJ Bu11neu Delly Pilot December 27, Proposal fOfmt lof 1NI
20. 1988 ol the City of Huntington Coples ol Ille emen<lmenl 1988 the court is: (El nombre y ~ .,...._ 0.-Md C~ORMIA Heme referred to •t>ove w11 1988, J1nuary 3. 10. 17. wortl are Included In a MC*·
, S..Cl1 end ll1e Redevelop-10 tl1e •~illing Owner Per· Publl111ed Orange Coast dlrecclon de I• corte H): SU· ........... perty. DMed INe COUNTY Of' fllld In OrlnQI County on 19119 118 book entitled·
P bll h_ ... O 401C aa menl Agency of tl1e City ol tlclpallon Agr~t loan Dally Piiot December 17, 19, PERIOR OOURT OF CALI· 17tt\ dey ot Die ..... ._ EDW ,,,0..0 ANMGU•RJ November 2. 1988 FILE T-408 STATE OF CALIFORNIA· u •.., range out ,.__ · 27 1988 FORNIA COUNTY OF OR· eftd lrd dey .. ~ A" .. ARDO. NO.F397121 DEP•R T ... .,· o.lly Piiot Oeeembet 27, !'funtlngton.,...chwflll1otda documents condi tions . Sa179 ANOE '700 Civic Center 1M. ~ llOf -~CHUCK LUCAS,)Ptalntitf1, Chatlel F. & Cllheflne 1111-M' llft9'M'r ,. TMENT OF f\A,_-1aaa. January 3, 10, 11. joint public riearlng on Janu· thereto by Sumitomo Bank Drive West Post Off.Ice Box ....... t lfte T:Jlt!Olll vs. ColHwortl1y, 450 Vleta ~ ""'~ PORTATION; PROPOSAL
1989 Vf 3, 1989. DI 7:00 PM in the ol C1hlornla and Mote De-PtaJC *>TICE 838 S t , A C1IHOf 11 ~ft11)> at --,.__. tOf JANET G. LEWIS, USA Rome Newport Beach ANO CONTRACT FOR CON-T~ Council Cl1embera, City Hall. velopmen1 Corporetlon ,.270• 2..0•~ .. ~ na, n • .............. LEWIS ) Defendants Callf si:zeeo ' K._ STRUCTION O N STATE
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Shm1no
6 Hurts
11 Chart
14 Harmoniously
15 Chemical
prefix
16 Exisl
17 -Carlo
18 Acting style
20 Melli
22 Painl COIOf
ex~t
23 MDSttCDle
25 Gradients
28 Flower PIOts
29 Tutelary god
30 Dances
32 Cl1urch part
34 ASI.,, Oiiton
39 Pieno keys
42 Su111h1de
43 Refuses Ofe
45 Distribute
.. 6 Ooean iunk
49 l•lerary
style Sufi
50 Keeps OUI
5<4 Divulge
55 Dutch Hiiier
56 Utopiao
58 Comlor1
60 Dishes. etc
63 Abdicele
68 Compass pt
2 3
14
17
29
32
39
43
60
66
69
4
67 Arrangement
68 Ob1ttw1t1
69 Ptwu COtn
70 Fllters
71 Churc11
council
DOWN
1 Vamoose
2 Gls' "club"
3 Compos1t1ons
4 Being guided
5 Extensive
6 Pe11t1on
7 Fasc•nator
8 Farm bird
9 Inner pref
10 Crumney dirt
11 Soutl1 or
Quebec
12 Having guns
13 Nobles
19 Ga09
21 Noo-amateur
23 -de lune
24 Cut '" rwo
26 -school
27 Miller
30 -case 31 "Beat111··
33 Lomb
35 . Good King
36 Manx11ome
37 Halle<
38 Revise
40 8ulld1ng
5 7
"°EVIOUI PUZZLE SOl.VED
annexes
4 1 Organ parl
44 Rider's gear
.. 7 Naps
48 --Arnencan
50 Pterces
51 A Bell lor
52 Insurgent
8 9
63 "My Gat -·
55 Lagerls11
57 Shorte<
59 Food flsl1
6 1 Tiny
62 Consumed
6 .. Equal. prel
65 Spread 111y
12 13
• ...,., '*· ' t . 'tCTITIOUI .,_.. HIGHWAY IN ORANGE ··-~o .... s The name. •ddrns. and '1llllt1hed Or-.. c-· CASE NO. 52258 Thie buDIMes WU con· Nam ITAftmNT COUNTY IN COSTA MESA .,_,.. telePhone numbef ol plain-De11 "°' D1u111b1r '17 . STATEMENT OF ducted by M lndlvidual (CITACK>N .IUDtCIAl.) lltf'• at10f or plllnl ff 1• ...,._,I,.. ' DAMAGES Thls.l tltement WM filed The fOllowlng persons are FROM FAIRVIEW ROAD TO
NOTICE TO DEFENDANT. wlthOUt en ":riorney 11· (B ' -y ~11 T 0 0 E FEN 0 ANTS, with the County 01et11 of Or· dotng bUllnesa II: ARLINGTON DAl\IE
(AvllO a A~IDdO) ROBERT nombre la dlreecion 'y ei nu· JANET G. LEWIS. LISA Inge County on December PRINT THREE CENTRE General wotli dMcrlptlon:
SALIZ. ATLAS CHRYSLER mero de telelono del "8.JC M)TlC( LEWIS· 20, 1Na • 18'. 2010 Main St. Suite A frMway, Including 4
PLYMOUTH, ELMER GAL· •t>ogado det demendanle 0 Plalntlfl•' d1m1g99 are u Publlthed Orange Coaat 180, lrvlne, C1llf. 92714 bridges, to be conatrueted.
l INS AN 0 0 0 ES 1 del demendanle Qui no Q1B1• fotlows: Oal(y, Pilot December 27, J. Douglu_ &,.a~. 3700 S. Tti11 project hU I goal of
THROUGH 50. INCLUSIVE t~ 1bc191do M )' LAW ttQDCa_ TO l£CIAI. DA 1HI J~ 17 Plu• Qr~Q~nJt.An .. 25 _w~t dlMdv•rullG90
YOU-ARrBElRG SUED 0 FF I c Es o 'F j 0 H N CONTlllACTOftl pl A INT I FF ED w AR 0 1ee•' • . . C111f. 92704 bUllneM enterprlM (08~)
BY PLAINTIFF: (A Ud. le"ll RAPILLO 7777 Cenler Av-DI ,. (11/tl) GUARJAROO T-408 Jiiiie 0. Lenoe. 3700 s. pertlefp9tlon
oem1ndando) MARIE BOS· enue s iie 203 ,Huntington Sellled propo .. 11 will be 1 Medical expen-to 1111-.,. llftTIC( Plan Dr C.201, Santi An1, No pre.bid meeting Is
LEY 1 n d GE o R GE eeaeh u Calllornl• 92647 rlCllY9d at the offtee of oat•· ,._ "" Callf 92704 • sdleduled for tNt protect.
STANOVICH Phone 7141848·48 .. 9 PLANT OPERATIONS FAIR· (•) Anaheim Rehab. In-Thi• butlneu 11 con-THIS PAOJ~CT II SUB-
You heft. CAl.2NDA9' DATE (Fecha) JUN 11 VIEW DEVELOPMENTAL stitut• $1,373.40 ec.-.. ductld by: hulblndand wife JEST TO TH£ BUY AMEAl-DAYS -"" IND ~ 1987 ENTER 2501 HARBOA lb> Todd L Pusott. M.D. '1CTTTIOUI WIMH The regletrant com· CA PROVISIONS Of THE
ID eented on JOU to ,.._ a Gary L Q,enwtlle Cleftl BLVD .• COSTA MESA, CA $2,315.00 N,,_ ITATE•NT menced to tran..ct bUtl· SUAFACE TRANSPOR·
1,pewrltten reeponee •t 9y: DcN1e·Bur11e OePutJ ' untll 2.00 P.M. on FRI., FEB. (C) S..ls Services $140.00 The followlng persons ere neu undlf the llctttlous TATION ASSISTANCE ACT
lht• court. Published Or~ Coast 3, 1989, at which time tl1ey (d) Cler Medlcal $55.00 doing bullnHI IS: bu11nes1 name Of' n1mee OF 1912.
A lettlf Of.,.__ c.t1 wlll Dilly PllOI ~~r 6 13 wlll be publiely opened and (e)Newpor't Harbor Radio-GVIM ASSOCIATES. lltted abOve on NIA Bids lrl reQUlrld for tlie
not protect JOU; ,our type-20 27 1988 • • re1d fOf performing wortt to logy S.-3.50 l TO • 19000 MacArthur Janie Lange entire WOC'll clMcrlbed here-wrltten f'9DtlOnM muet be · · T376 fvm1s11 ·a11 labor. materlals, (I) Hoag Memorlal Hospi-Blvd, Irvine, CaHI. 92715 Thlt 1t1tement wu fifed In. Al the time 11119 contract
In prlpef let• torm " JOU tools a nd equipment tel $545 llO Grau V1lley/Marguer111, with the County Clertt ol Or· Is awarded. the Contractor
w"'I !tie court to Mlf J-P\llJC M>TICE necessary to refn.l'Vfl lhe Sub Tot11 S.-,472.70 Inc . California, 4849 Goll enge County on Decemt>et ll'lall po91111 etthef • ~
eeee. DlbeSIOI ceiling Ille lrom 10 Eatlmll•d COii for Road, SkOkie, IL 80077 19, 1988 A Ncenee or I Com~llon " '°" do not Ille J-K .-..1 Kitchens, Units 1 t t11rough ertl1rolCOOIC knee surgery Tl11s buslnHs 11 con· , .... of any of tl'le followlng
,...,. .. on time. '°" _, NOTICe M 12, 28. 29. 30 Ind 31 end 1111 s 13.400.00 ducted •by: e corporauon Pubffltled Orange Coast lic«'IM ciullflcatlonl Wfllcll
loN ttte ~. Ind ,_ DISSOLUTION Of Laundry room 1st>es1oes Ettl mated coat lor 111• registrant com· Diiiy Piiot December 27. conttltut• • ~jOrlty of the
wegee, MOnl)' Ind Pfop-PA9'TNE9'SHW (ells, Pll>ft, dryers and Iron· arlhro.coplc 1nkle surgery menoed to transact bull, 1988. January 3, 10, 17, work: C-4, C.10, C-12, C-13,
1ftJ m1y be tallen wl"'4Mlt Public notice I• 111reby ers) II F1lrvlew De-$12,800.00 1'1911 under the flctltloup 1989 C.27. C.32. C-42.
further wernlftt ftom the given pursuant to Secllon velopmen111 Center, in ac-Sub Tot1I $28.000,00 bulln111 neme or names T· .. 01 Thl9 contract la subject to
court. 15035.5 ol the CallfOl'nla Cordano• wltl1 plan• and GENERAL DAMAGES OF listed 11>0¥1 on June 27, 111te contract non•
There -CJthlf ..... ,._ COfporDlk>nl Code tl1at tlie specification• thefefore. p l A INT IF F E 0 w ARD 1113 "8.IC NOTIC( Olactlmlnatlon •11d COll'I•
qulf-ta. You""' went p1rtnership heretofore Bidder• for tht1 projec1 GUARJAROO VM L Pelf, EicecutlYe VP pllance re qulrementl
to catl en ettomer rtgftt doing butlnels uncs. the lie-must posses• 1 current s t50.000 oo This 111..,,,.,t -filed ec.-pureuant to GOY91'nment
.. .,. W JOU do not "-" tltlous llrm name and Style of certlflc:ate IS an Asbeltos Ptalntltf Guer)aldo sus-wtth the County Cieri< OI Or· ,tCTTTIOUS IU ... SS Code. Section 12"0.
en ettomey, JOU INf eel en l<ar1·1rvtne Alme, at 3800 Ab1temenl ContrlCtOf la-tained the fOllOWing injUrleS: enge County on December Nam ITArn.NT Plane. epeciflcatlonl. and
•"DfM1 ,.._,,., Mrftoe If Eut Coast Highway, Corone sued by the Contract0t1' 1 Mueculollgarnentous In· 19, 1Na The lollowtng pwson1 are propoul forml for bidding
• ..... Md office (hied In Del M1r. County ol Orange, Slit• license Board. Any jury C41Mcll spine. F401G4 doing bullnest U ; tlllt project een oNtt be ot>-
the.,.__ book). Stlle ot Calllornl1, com-bid received where the bid· b Acute muac::vk>llgemen· Publllhed Orange Coal TUSTIN ARMS AS· t1lnld I I the Department of
DeDpuee de qw le en· poMd of Cooper/H1mlllon. def 11 not licensed es sPeCl~ toui Injury thoreckl spine. Delly Piiot December 27. SOCl~TES'. LTD.. 19000 Tranll)Ortetlon, Ptena and
,,.._ .... clteeton Ju-Inc, 1 California corporation. lied will be disregarded. c Acute mutculoflgarnen-1988. January 3. 10, 17, M1cArthur Blvd.. lrvlne, Bid Ooc:umenll. Room 39,
dldet ueted ttene llft plaio end JI Fiims. Inc .. • Clll· Joint Venture blddetl must toutlnjury!urnbateplnewlth 1989 Calli 92715 Tran1port1tlon Bull.Sing,
delODIAICA.L.INDA9'IOS fornlaCOtporatlon,dldas ol possess• JOlnt Venture m ulllple contusion• T-403 Tu11in Arms, Inc . call· 1120 N Street. P.O. 8olt
,.,. pree•rttar una the 10t11 dey of August, LicenM 1brulon1 and brulllng to 1111_ II' NO'""r forn11. 4849 Goll Road, 1142874, Secremento(, Cali-,..,_.,. Matte • ,.... 1988, by mutuel conMnt. Preference will be g,-.nted bilateral ribs. ~ 1.w. Skokie, ll 80077 lornll 11427'--0001 P"°'1I
.,tft4' en .... ccwte. diuolve 1111 Mid partnenhlp to bidder• properly •P· d Fracture ol the distal PICTITIOUI IUS.SI Thll business 11 con-91~5-3325). Ind l'NY be
and letm1na1e their relations proved u "Small Bull,_ .. llbula on the left 1n111e with ducted by: 1 corporlllon ..., It the aboY9 0epert.
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • Mortuary
Cl11pel • Crematory
3500 Pacific vi-Drive
Newport Beach
6'4-2700
HAAa09' LAWN·
MT. OLIVE
Morlu1ry • Cemetery
Crematory
t625 Glslet Ave
Costa Mesa
541).5554
N"CE MOTHERS llELL MOADW4Y
MOl'turery • Cl11pet
t 10 Bro1dw1y
Cotta Mesa
6'2·9150
11 partners lhll'eln end 111at tn 11CCordance with Sectlofl io11111can1 Injury to 1he T~~rn.NT Tl1e re,gl•ltllnt com· ment oftrln9'>0'11tlonomc:. JI Alms. Inc, hu withdrawn 1896 et 1111<1 , Title 2, Call-medial collaterll llgament of --""'persons ere menced 10 tranuct bull· and It the offtoDD ol IM Ole--
from and hlS ceased to be lornia Admlnl1tratt'l9 Code. the left ankle, making 11111 1 d~"\ ~~ :.';Y 2 1 ne11 under the llctltlou1 trlct Olreetor1 of TtllnSPOf·
11soclated wltl1 the carrying Appllcatlona IOf' preference blmalleolar ankle fracture. bullnet• na.me or narMI tetlon 11 Loe Anglela. Sen
on ol the business ol the mvlt be submitted lo Md e. Medial Goltltlfll lloa· COASSTLAND REALTY, lllted1boveonNcwemblf5. Frencltco.lndthedi9trle11n
parln9f5hip. epprOl/ed by 111e Small end ment atreln 10 the rlgtlt l!nee 217o an Miguel, Newport 1181 whlc11 the wotli 11 tltuatecl.
Notice IS also hereby Minorrty Bullnen Procur• with ponlble Internal o. a..c91• Calif. f2MO \Ian L. Pell. Eiiecutrve VP The auec ... tul bidder
given tl1at the bUslness 01 ment Alllttance Division. rangemerit Ind awelllng. Chertes F. ~hy & Thie 11etement wu hied ltlall lurniltl • peymerit bond
lhe pertnership wt" by con-1812 14th Street, Room 200, SPECIAL DAMAGES OF ~~:: ~alee~ with lhe County Clerk of Or· Ind• l*f«mance bond.
ducted In the Mure by SecrementorCA 15814. PLAINTIFF CHUCK LUCAS: Beecti c!.t t2Mo lnQI County on December The [)epertlMlit °' T,_ Cooper/H1mlllon. Inc.. 1 Requests IOI' lll\all bQll-1 Medical •q>en-to • • 19. 1988 portatlon hDr'DbV nodflel all Callfornle corpor1llon. WI'<> ness preference In the-wd date Thi• bullne11 I• con· ,.,Mii blddefl 'thet It wlll 1t-
w111 pay and dlscl1erge all ol the contract for the 1bcive (1) An.helm Renal>. In· ducted by: husbend end wife Publlthed Orange Coast flrmatlwly lnaufe that In any
ll1bllltles end det>tl of tl'll mentioned project Is medl 1utut1 11,:µ9,40 The regl1tr1nt com· Diiiy Piiot December 27. contract entered 1nto
p1rtner1111p. by 1ubml1tlng 1 oompteted (b) Todd L. Pueoff, M.O. menold to tranMCI bull-t988, January 3. 10, 17, pur9Uant to thl1 Dd"9ftlM-
Furthef notice 11 l\er1t>y form SOT 1 l with the bid S 1,8'5 oo ,,... under the flct1t1ou1 1N9 ment, dludwanlagld buel--
glven thal neither of the proposal No preference will (c) s..i. SeMces s 145,00 bualrl&ll name °' nameD T-402 neu enterprlMI wil be •f·
undersigned wlll be resp<>n· be gra.nted unlell lhD bid Is (d) Newpor1 H.,bor Radio-lilted •t>ove on Noll>Dmbet 1• lorded Nit oPPOftunlty fo
tlble. from this c1ey on for accompanied by the STD logy 173.00 1eaa 1111-.,. llftTIC( eubmlt bids In reeponee to iny OC>ttgatlon Incurred by 811 . (I) Hoeg Memorial Ho9p1: Chaflee F Colesworthy ,.-..., nu this Invitation and wilt not be
111e othet In It• own name of Bid proOQUls must be ta1 S555 IO Thia llatement w• flied "._ diecrlmlneted agalnDt on the
In tl'le name of the partner· eubm1t1ecl for the entire Sub Totll '3,765.00 with ~ty 'Y ~~ PICTITIOUI .,_.. eroundl ~ ,.., ooecw. °'
alllp work delctlbed therein 0.-Eetlmated coat for lnOI on Nam ITAftMINT national otlgln In conelder·
Oiled at Newpor1 Belch, vl1t1on1 from l>f•n• and arthroscopic knee eurgery 20. 1988 '411• Thi following person• ere 8tlon lof en ..ans.
Ca11fOfnlD, tht• 2A d1Y of No-epeclflcetlons WI" be ceuee s 13,400.00 • • Publlll'led Orange Coal doing bullneM •· MlnlmUfn .. rlltel for
vember. 1988 f()f rejection• of bld1. The Sub Total $13,400.00 Dell)' Piiot December 27, RANCHO VALENCIA AS· 'h Is pr 0 I • ct •• C00,19'/HAMILTON, Department hat the rlgtlt to GENERAL DAMAGES OF 1918, January 3, tO, 17. SOCIATES LTD 1llOOO prldet.-mlned by te aec:-
INC .. IJ: Q, ltuert KM't, Jf., wlllVe any Irregularity In a PLAINTIFF CHUCI< LUCAS· 1189 MacArtl1ur' Blvd.'.' lrvlne. ret"'l._OI llbOr ere Ill forth Pniallllrtt bid or to reject ll'IY or Ill 1150,000.00 T-405 Calif 92715 In h .. Mrielty nurno..d
J I Al.Ml, • C....,. bldL Ptel!\tiff Lueaa euttalned •-.,. llftftl'r ~ctlo \lalencl1 Inc bOOlll llluld fOr bidding _..., .... ., 81: ....,... M. No bid will be considered the lolloWlng lnjurlea ~ ""'~ Calllofnta. 4849 Odf' Aoec:i' purpo111 end entltlec1
... ftJ'I Flewtrt ntne, "• •"• nt unlW 11 It inecte on • ttan· a. ~t• ~ PtCTTnOUI ..,.... Sttc*le. IL IOOn ' "Pr~ and Contract."
Publllhed OflnQI Coet1 dard form furnilhed by lhe IOUI lnjWy oetW:al mplne. MAim ITA,.....,. TNI business I• COO• and In COOleD °'Mid book 2983 Harbor Blvd. Dally Pllot December 21, Depertment and 11 medl 1n b Acute ,,... .. llolgMlel.. me totlow4rle peraone.,. ductld by• corporation tnet rna;y be eumlned •""
C t M CA 1988 ICCOr"Oanc:e with the "In-toue lnfu!Y tfl0t9do eplne. OOlllO ~ • Th• regl1tren1 com-...,.. olftclD .. dlecrttled OS 3 esa, 1408 etr11Ctlon1 to Bidders." c. Acute~-GAMMAPHOTO 393 -iceo 10 trentee:t bo ... herelnt>efore whe,. th• ... A.•1•1 ---------PrO'fllCtlVI bldderl mey tou•lnfu!Ylumbermplnewlth Hamlfton St 8'11te R7 neu under the flctltloui plent. ~tlona. and ....v • ,. NI.IC M)TIC( exemlne end obtain plena, oontueioris and abf811ona of Coel• ,,.. CA 12127 • buliMM name or nem&1 PfOPOUI '°'"11 mey be ~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~==~--~=~~~--·~~~1.endbldc~~end~~ ~~~m~a~~~~ber -.~~~ I . --form• by c1lllng (714) tullontothtltfttlb.,..., H;,;;;i{ It Sutt ·AT 11 1911 'ederel ,.,1111mum ••••
NOTIC8 or r '57·5213 d. lnjuly to the rtgM knee Coete ::_ CA na~ · Ven L Pell. EucuttYe VP rlltel .. be llluld •lo STARTING A· NEW BUSINESS??
The Legal Department at the
Daily Pilot is pleased to an-
nounce a new service now avail-
able to new buslnesset.
We will now SEARCH the
name for you at no extra charge.
and save you the time and the
trip to the Court HouM In Santa
Ana Th«!, of courM. after the
search Is completed we will file
your fic11llous bullnee.s name
1tatement with the County Clerk,
publish once 1 week tor four
weetcs •• required by lew and
then file your proof of publl·
cation with the County CWk.
Please stop by to file your
fictitious bulineu statement at
the Dally Pilot legal Depart-
ment, 330 Wnt Bay. Costa
Mesa. California. If you can not
stop by, pleue call us
at (71•) 642-•321 . Extension
315 or 316 and we wlll make
arrangem«its for you to handle
tttl1 procedure t>y rnan.
It 90u should have any further
questions. pteaM eafl us and we
wlll be more than glad to assist
you
0000 luck In your
new bualneaalt
~ IAU A peymtnl tioncS. Sten-wttti pC*lble ..... COi-Thia ..-._ 19 This st•t&lftlWll wet fllld hOlder9 °' 1M DllOY9 ,..._,.
Of NWIOMAl. d•d form 807 1n 111 amount ..,.,., llgernent ..,..,., • ducted by: .,. ~COft· with the Courl!Y Cterti °' Or-~ booka. " ""'9 la • "°""" "°' ._ !fl.• JO ~ °' ... • ~ -.,.. T... ' -Courl"" °" ~ dlttelDiabet-.n ttlemlnl-k _, .. r "\o..4 .,,. ""* ec· ""'"' of -I("" .. , ..... n• reol•trent com· ,,,... ,, m u"' • .. • r. t e. ~ le ..._, .,._ .,.., ~ oontfect In· DffllDlorl no4e0 and 1 CCII-,....,_ to "...aet bull-• ,._ .,,_....,11..,_, _,, tM a.c. ~ te .......... =WI = .-...1n h • leWll ~ lt1'llln 10 tl'9 ,_ und9r tN flctltloul PublllMd Or Coat f'9WY OI t.800f and tM
...... ~.~ :. : oer.... .:c....... bidder .. rtgM..:w:·...,. .he victim• :.:::-~::.:r1·r = ~=uetyo.T.'!'~ ~~: =P ... ~-= ~ ....._. c.-. ....._ be required to enw into a °' • ---oollek>tl _.. ,.,,.. ~ ftled ttet' ""' ., -·-•!Oft• o
_ ..... C•s •C-.. oonereetuel tgrwnent In on...,.,_~ on ...,. 1NCounty ca::'°' Or-T-400 ~~~~,!'!!
....... C-., ........ "'9 lol'm ot D "ltMdetd .Myl7,11MMOt,_,VNet County 0-.lber --------.......... .,,_,_ • ..,..~,,.,,. :...--_.c:•,..__':': ==::·.,_*"' IT~ ~of-=-= =· ~.~ ttll °" ~ M1JC llmC( = tfl&fl tM "'I'* wege '" c .. u_.J!ssA•t'" ... awe°'~ onttt ~ "'OrwlltJ • .._ ~ ~ Ol'eflle ewa """""""to 1ec.aon 1m
LISI II I -... ...,. ~9"'0WtlbytMltete c.tloc1ll9.Thle1Gddentw ~Noco.~ ... 10 ~1. ~-=A~ .. oflML.-rCod9.-..... ............ et ...... Tl'le CGfttt8Ct la no4 ~ ~ _,.., -.n ttlt. ~ •· · ·-The 1at1ow111g,.,...... .. ., ........... ,_of .... .-'r 11 o •u w-on...._ l*1Y un1ea1 and 111,....,., uee Ll!Wll, en-nn dOlfla..,_..• II• OOUfltY tn wt11ct1.,.
... • ... 1• -.. It le...,...., by .. tN9ted•,,.....owned"J __, .. _ W'1NOHAM . LllQH ~ ........... .... ,,_,,, .._ .. fllll ~ ..... ,_,,_..,,.'91d9ultJeMt ..._..,._,._ DIAMONOllNC •1 ......... ..__1NDncMt
e'elHl ~-. H tlte • lnclucllng The 0... G L8Ma wM W Jn..... MJlllOUI. ..... POr1 ~Dr. ·~i.u New-of lN "::"'•II°' ....... '91 ::.:.1~.r= tf~Grirll hr· =~~:r::c':::t ..... ITATW POr11wft.Cllf, =-" ... •111"ti .. =~ ::r.: ........... Mlll MMl ............ con-...,......1. .......... ..;;=~ .... ~~-.::: ..... := ... II,...._
• ..,... Mn ....... "8C'9 of 16.000 0t lllOfe.,. ................... .,..awn, Cl & L C........ Ill Ct1f tM10 . llOMlan ....... ....... .. ...... a. ... Cllf .. CJelM to .... OOlltllCtOI _,..Ill lleM of........_ Olli " eo.ta M:'a. CA fti.t Moot9 II ii"""* .... ,... I Ww ...... . ..... c...., .. ..... ... .,.. -"",,...... .. ,.,.., .. ............ . ....~.,... .._......
....... C • ... 11.e llanH requ1re"'efttt CVC ......... tumengllA. .... 11117 L. ...... 9fld -· ............ CT ............. ,_ ... ..... t
11
1
11
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