HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-12-28 - Orange Coast Pilot-
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1988 25 CENTS
Two deaths.Cause conf~sion, ariger
Little Inf ormatton given on Christmas
mornin fatal collision with police car
By IRIS YO~OI °' .. ....,,... ....
Brief and conflicting accounts
about the Christmas mornina traffic
collision with a Westminster pofice
car that killed two women have
Jazz great Cab Calloway,
who turned 81 on
Christmas Day, under-
went surgery today./ Al
Two girls reportedly freed
after being held by a
Palestlnlan terrorist
group for 13 months re-
main missing./ AS
family and friends bewildered.
The beginning traces of anger have
also surfaced amid the confusion. but
those who were closest to vivacious
Dawn Hammond say it is too early to
vent rage.
.. We don't know much yet." said
•
Janet Hammond, mother of the 20..
year-old Costa Mesa resident.
Hammond was a passenger in a
Honda Accord driven by one of her
best friends, 19-year-old Jessica War-
ren of Stanton. As Warren entered the
intelsec tio n at Westminster
Bouli"vard and Newland Street
a~nd 9 a.m. Sunday. a Westminster
pohce car responding to an emerg-
ency call collided with the Accord.
The two young women, described
by (riends and family as popular and
upbeat 1ndiv1duals. were pronounced
dead at the scene. The officer. whose
name was beina withheld pending
investigation of the crash by the
California Highway Patrol. suffered
minor injuncs.
Neither the Hi&hwa_)' Patrol nor the
Westminster Porice Department arc
releasinaany more information while
the anc1dent undergoes an estimated
two-month 1nvesugauon.
Funeral services for Warren. who
was a Ca l State Fresno sophomore.
Index Marlon Harryman, a YOlanteer at Share Oar Sel•a, &l•a a blanket to Tom Flocca.
will be held at I I a.m. Thursday at
Pacific Vatw Memonal Park in New-
port Beach. Services for Hammond.
who was studying crim1naJ JUSt1ce at
Golden West College. will be held at
11 a.m. Fnday at Tnnity Baptist
Church m Westminster. ·
Initial pohce reports indicate the
squad car's lights were flashing and
siren sounding as 1l followed another
patrol car through the mtersecuon.
The t-.o units were rushing to assast
two other officers at a domesuc
dispute that reponedly had aotten out
of control.
Witnesses rcponed the second
squad car appeared to be cruisinj at
about 70 mph One witness. taxicab
dn ver l.aTT) Mansell. has also told the
H1ghwa) Patrol the police vehicle ran
a red light
According to Mansell, the signal
was green ~hen the· first squad car
went through the 1ntersccuon and
when the Honda subseQuently
(Pleaee eee D£ATB8/A2)
·cold weather
brings crowds
to area· shelters
-. -Share Our Selves
shortmlblankets
to give to homeless
By BO& VAN EYltEN
Of .. 0.-, .........
The wind was as cold as a winter
park bench on Tuesday afternoon tn
Costa Mesa.
But afternoon weather must have
seemed CO(llparatively warm lO those
contemplaung a frosty 111gbt without
shelter.
---l'hirwttk'~ frigid -weather-has
dumped ice puts of suffenng on
Orange county's poor and ~omeless.
And while people caugh t in the IC}
grip downplayed their plight. those
whose m1ss1on 1s to help them saad
their resources were taxed to the hmtt
by the inclement weather.
"We're out of blankets:· saad Jean
Forbath. whose Share Our Sches
orgarnzauon an Costa Mesa provMies
food and other assist.a nee to huncVeds
of needy people a day.
~Most of the people coming to us
1h1s week have been bomelcss, and I'd
sa} nane out of 10 of them, evm 1f
the) 've been an a temporary sbe9'er.
~lnNoif'INm
Calltomla ..-.,_,,.,
from •now. A3
haven't had any blankcls. so we've
been prov1d1ng them."
"h's not so bad for me," said Tom
f tooca, who.. received ...onc-d -tbe
blankc:ts. "but I've got a little dot and
I feel so bad fo r him. He"s old and he's
got arthnus. I think he really suffers
1n this weather."
Fiocca. a retired merchant seaman.
h\es on a S460 monthly Social
Sccunty chcd. plus what he can cam
doa ng odd 1obs. It as not enough for a
(Pleue eee SHEL TEU/ A2)
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Tests prove l>omb blew apart Flight 103
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By ROBERT BARR
A1111ll'lf,.,_.,._
LOCKERBIE.Scotland -A bomb
blew up Pan Am Fltght 103 with 259
people aboard as the Jumbo let flew
over Scotland a week ago. the Depart-
ment of Transport announced today.
Investigators found .. conclusive
evidence of a detonating hagh ex-
plosive" in wreckage recovered from
t~e Scottish countrysi de.
It said the e\ 1dence was found on hidden. or how 1t got aboard the
"two pans of the metal luggage pallet aircraft. It al o dad not specula te on
framework" -a metal luggage con-who was re ponsablc forthe born bang
tainer. or a possible mot" e.
"The explosive's ·residues re-In Washington. a State Depart-
covered fro m the debns have been ment official involved 1n counter-
positavel)' identified and are cons1s-terrorism said: .. We don't know who
tent with the use of a high-per-did It... The official demanded
formance plastic explosive." the anonymity.
statement said. The Transpon Ministry statement
The statement gave no informa11on . was distnbuted to news organmrnons
on the type of explosive. where it was in London as anvestagators convened
Teams toucli down at OC hotels
Staying at resorts on Coast is becoming
as traditionalas collegiate bowl games
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of .. O.-,Netlt41ft ,
With Southern Cahforni a hosting
the granddaddy and one of the
youngest grandkids of the college
bowl games, it somehow seems
appropriate that the teams should
choose to stay in family-oriented
Orange County while they tune up for
the aames.
And three of the four teams are
holed u_p in the (mostly) sunny climes
of the Orange Coast.
It's a business and public relations
bonanza for the hotels where the
players. coaches and supporters are
~tayioa.
Only Brigham Young cho~ to stay
in the city where it will play. Housed
at the Anaheim Marriott, ats pla)ers
will meet the University of Colorado
Buffalos in the fif\h annual Freedom
Bowl on Th\irsday at Anaheim
Stadium.
Colorado's players. on the other
hand, are enjoying the hospitality at
the Westin South Coast Plaza hotel tn
COiia Mesa while they gear up for
tlleir ttcond Freedom Bowl appear-
ance;
Down the San Diego Freeway. the
USC Trojans are encamped at the
Irvine Marriott while they prepare for
their 20th trip to the Pasadena Rose
Bowl on Jan. 2.
And over the hall on Jamboree
Road. their o~nent. the Un1versit~
of Michigan. 1s housed at the Ne~
porter Resort. The Wolvennes are
makina their 13th appearance an the
granddaddy classic.
Orange Coast hoteliers hope the
football powers· sta}s at their estab-
lishments will become as tradauonal
as the Rose Bowl itself.
The week between Chnstmas and
New Year"s is slow tn the hotel trade.
so the arrival of players. coaches.
fam ilies and boosters to fi ll up the
empty rooms makes for a merf)
Christmas indeed. .
.. They're.a great piece of business.··
saad Kendall French. executive meet-
ing manaaer at the Irv ine Ma rrion.
.. This is a fairly slow time of )car.
so to have heads in the beds •~ good
for us ...
"This 1s a great source of re,cnuc."
echoed Linda Barragan. public rtla-
uons <hl"'Ctor at the ewponer
Some of the hosts are becoming old
hands at handhng the particular
needs of a footbalJ team.
The Newponer sef\'ed as head-
quart~rs for Big I 0 represcntatt\'e
Machagan State 1n the 1988 Rose Bo-.1
matchup. It hosted the Den,cr Bron-
cos an 19 6 when the .\mcncan
Football Conference champion pla)-
ed the New York Giants an the uper
Bowl.
The Westin hosted the Gaant!t that
)ear. It also has housed the \\.a h1ng-
ton Redskins and as the official host of
the Los .\ngelcs Rams when thq 're at
home.
It's omewhat of a 'toup for the
Irvine Mamou to land the TroJans
who could ha' e sta) ed at an~ number
of hotels closer to their Lo Angt>lcs
campus or Pasadena game site. For
that matter. man) of the pla)erscould
(Pleaee .ee TEAMS/ A2)
IVomu kllled
wlHm IJercar
ldt8 plalJter
Condo lost in fire caused .
by:Christmastree's lights
A Newpon Brach woman was
killed today when her cars~ out of
conlrol into a brick planter 1n Corona .........
TM rniddle llld woman·1 name
was no1 reln1ed pcndina completion
ofa polk'e invat111tion and notiffca-
tion of •mily. Aaoldilll to witncan. the woman
Md just stopped 1t Van's Ckancn 11
IJ JONATHAN VOLZltE and her son. Steve York. s1t\cd
• .._,... throuah the rubble today.
-...., .. Thi• is all thlt's left. and I fOt1rC'onaMaansrece1vcdagnm wouldn'a pve you a D1Ckrl for 1t."
reminder on Tuesday that the York said. l'Sturift11~ward a pickup ~oflheChrisimauasondon't truck with some dilhcs, a painting
pus wid'I lhe holiday when a firt and little else in the t.ck. "Just
lpuW by Christmas tree lithts enoup for a dump run ...
paned their IWO-stOC')' condominium. Cain said she .... t the last to
Fite Oepanm~t spokesman Jim lelve the condominium before the
Richey said the four wtrc not at their fire. so she didn't Uc>w who left the
Seavitw Lane home \\hen the fire lipts pluaed in. Yort satd the)
started about 8:j() p.m . but 1hey usumed iltve tree would be safer
3512 E. C..a HipWly 11 10 i .m. redy left their Chnstmas tree thanlhetradittonala1tvariet>.buthc
---. pul&;,"I out or·-.... 1_ llh •Ii in. . wasn't '°'"' 10 '* an) m0tt ---_..i1 "n ~ .... .. ... a. ... ahve. and ahhouah chinca. · =:J:e: ~':era~~ whn the car ~~·-el bum u ftell as cut "I'm P"l ltome ... 1alt1"1 nunt
h __. .. _.., .. , ........... 1 .. _ busw ~~·'~~ • ~I re btt1n downlOday. Yort91id. •twenlCCllO ~ ........ -·"-11K: 1 -• hke!ldl. before, but my wife ..edn"t let me. ~y • .., lht dnvewty uno the . .._, ....S from ttw\uet \lir rm ibid noc to. now... .-_..lat Of the See"1 CanOy Shop. ,_. ,..,_ of:thc ~1nu1m 1nd · y ort and Cain pa M'SM"ite 1n tht
illld aa1•1d into I brid plaaler. • a·,,.,. It It~ Nici. rubbll IOdl). W1'ilr one m pmshed
..., 1d c11iona were IMI IM ..... we~~•S••oooror an thelllut. Von b&MalCCOftdC'lt .... ._, ha¥t 1Uffttm • ._... -•J5,,.tmllrcont~tt. ah\e.
.._.or llroke. 0. l midtnts. Dlllni Cain. "t saw Mr 1.111 under &M bed and . ,
thought she "'as d('ad. but then 11
mo\ ed."\ ork said ... he's ~~t. sbak}
and s1 nat"d. bul she·s OK."
Richey said ~1 firefiahtcrs bau~
the blaze - one oft he largest in Costa
Mesa this year -for 45 minutes
before" resthna 1t under control.
.\side from the the cat. no tnJuncs
or damaat to oth~ bu1ld1nas 1• the
Brookview compk '\ -ne1r
Paularano \\enuc and Bm 1ol 5'rec1
-.. crt reponed. R1chev ~ad.
The other condo occupants wine
t1na\aalable for comment. but Yort
said the)' all checked an -.1 th ..:h
other antr leam•ns of the fi~.
"That was our~ ron<-cm. dlilt
C\ Cr) ont "5 all .f'!"9t: •• V Of .. Mill. One rnidmt. Mah Cain. I Will
ha\C a surpntc •hen he ret urns'-
a urftna tnp 1n Mcu~o. Has ,__
was totally desUO)'Cd, Cain .said •
··1 taopt l9c IOClk a rbaner or dollm
-.1t" Mm," IM .ed.··~ t9-ta
ltOthiftl ltft here •••
a news conference an Lockerbae. the
village. which bore the brunt of the
~mg 747's flaming wreckage that
fell out of the sk) on Dec. 21.
The statement saad evidence col-
lected b> lhe Transport Department's
Ai r Accident ln.,est1gataon Branch.
.including the cockpit voice and fligh t
data recorders and the trail of" reek-.age on the ground. ··has led 10 t~
prelam1nar) conclusion that the C\·
plos1on took place soon after the
a1rcnft had cros~d the Scottash
border ~h1lst tt was in the cruise at
31.000 feet and that th as led directly to
ats destrucuon ··
"'Much an'es11ga uve work remains
to be done to establish the nature of
the explosi\e de\ ice. what it was
contained in. its locauon in the
,urcraft. and the sequence of events
1mmed1atel)' follow ing 1t deton-
ation:· the statement said. (Pleue eee,BOllll/ A5)
' City_official.s
warming up to
·idea of retreats
Bv LESLIE EARNEST Of·tM~Not &lllfl
The Bro" n ..\ t -~h1ch n.•\tnc1 pn,att mtcttngsamongpubhc
otlicaal -has.10 some degree. aho k~pt '-ll' offic111ls from cn10)1og soc1algathcrangs wherecon.,.cr~t11 . .ms3bout golf are ml\cd wath
discus 1onsabout Lonang
Fort he most pan. Cit) om 1al ha\e la mated the1rt1mc togethcrto
scheduled mecung.s. where the prc's and puhllc: are tn\ at,•d
But ome oflicaals sa~ the~ land 1l hclptul".u tames to meet 3" \
from the ragadtt~ that accompanac-; the a' eragc ,.,,\ c< unc1l me<"tan~
In In me. otlicaa ls found a gcta"a) mC\ ting ~a<1 urpn<,tngh
produc11vc. In Huntington Beach coun al members hd' e C\·
penmcnted walh more than one\\ ix oi··retn.::11 .. and Laguna.Bca'h
otli nalsan.· e\Plonng the 1de3 ofiindintt ne~ waHofmcc11n~
.\soncol htstirsttKt,ol bu tn( ancrh1Ht'-Ck'<'t1on an
,o,ember. Laguna Beach \ta\Or Robert vt'ntn instructed tht' Cl\\ managcrtoorganm~ a council mcetangout 1dc Cn~ Hall
.. "hat rm Interested In doing IS ha.,.1ng lhC'COUnCll Sil dO\lo n
outstdethccoun 1lchamb<:rsand talk about how "<'3rcgoan' to work
1ogt'lher a a team "Gen tr) ~ad
.. Ho-. -.ccan makeourmcetangs morc effc tl\t'andeffic1cn1 .and
ho\\ ~e can rcsol"e I n) daOert'nces ~e ma) ha\ e -;o that tht'ovcrall
benefit oft he Ct\\ 1s up~rmo\t an our mind . not our political or
personal relation hip.,·
To .1dht'rc 10 th<' Bro')\'n .\ct. the d1scu ion would focus OJ'l lhe
process of ao' eming rather than on cit) business.. Genlr) sat<f.
..w e· re a council that ha been atcd now for several )"Hrs. and I
think -.·e work qu1tt' \\CU 1oae1ht'r.and I think "'e hl\C' an oppanunll)
tO\\Orl>.c,cn doscrau team and to rcall) hl\cqu11c an 1mp1act on tht
cm." huaad
• ··Mostcounc1l~and most\:a t) 'tatTs ha\c )()mt retreat prottSSthty
go throuatd can't sa' that('\Cl')Ont h1 . but lth1nk thurcnd 1 for
councils to •Ork more a cohe\avc un1t1. •
Wh1le Gentt') 1 onl~ ~ugnttna a half-41) attl 'IU)-perhaps
somcv.hett 1n tov.-n orcHnat t ·n -'IOmccoanctl,haH bttn more
ad\cnturous
ThtC"ahfomaa u -.ut'ofl 111csconJ"'-'ll.,orbhopsat tt\eraJ
locations.. otTtrsns tra1n1nc ~~10M toromc~I' •h•le kecpu•
d1tcuU10ns Wtlb1n tht hma tiorthe Bf'OWft Ad..... Jn'& to Terr)
°'-"·d1r«tOC'of'trua1na •nh th( lc.liut· Thtpttt1and publiurc .-e~ to antftd tht mcci1"" but ramy dn. Laiut work~t P*"t at the UCLA C4"1~ center'" Lake '~ or at !tanfonl Camp at ~alkn u an.....Jutt ounidr
tht T ahot' aree.
Fatal crash
PoU. -·•ne wae where a !fewport •••la.,..... died toda1whenhercar9ped
oat of ooatrol and Into a brick plaater ID Corona del Mar. (ator,. ~Al)
DEATHS CAUSE CONFUSION, ANGER •••
l'romAl
entered the intersection. However,
the liaht had chanac<f to red when the
second patrol car came through.
Mansell said.
Mansell said he does not know if
Warren saw the second police car. "I
would think she would have, but
that's speculation." he said.
The impact of the collision was so
sre&l the two women .. never knew
what struck them, probably."
The cab driver said he stayed
around the accident scene about 20
minutes and then left because "it
looked like (investipton) had plenty
of witnesses." Howeve~. ~fter ~i.ng
news accounts m which police m-
vcstigaton questioned whether the
signal was red, Mansell decided to
report what he had seen.
"I fel' I owed it to the families." he
said. "lfit was my daughter, I'd want
someone to speak up.
While Mansell said both squad cars
had lighu and sirens on, Janet
Hammond bas received uncon-
firmed reporu that other witnesses
did not see flashing liahts or sirens on
the second police car.
The devastated mother, who was
visiting relatives in En&land when the
accident occurred, said that since she
returned home Monday she has heard
of these witness accounts from em-
ployees of Silky Sullivan's, the Irish
pub where her daughter was a
wai_!ress.
However, not havina IPokcn to the
witnesses, Hammond said she did not
know what to believe.
MikeZaby, who went to La Quinta
Hiah School with Hammond and
Warren, said many of the two
women's laf'IC circle of friends arc
questioning "why two cops were
going throu&h an intencction on
Christmas Day at 70 mph.··
WORKING RETREATS ENDORSED •••
Froal~l -. -
Workshops aim to improve coop-city. you have an atmosphere where
eration and communication among you have to keep it shon. keep it
top city administrators and council simple and you don't aet to sit back
members. A typical workshop will and relax with the other people," he
start late one afternoon run all the said. "By going to a retreat, at least
next day and into a thi.:d day, lasting you have one night when everybody
an intense 18 hours, Dugan said. gets to sit down and know each other
personally." "A number of cities, public agen-
cies and private agencies of all sorts The first retreat Bannister partici-
find that 1t is helpful to develop better pated in was in April 1987 ID Palo
communication skills." Dupn said. Mes£, near Rancho California. City
"They're hard-working sesstons." . officials and chamber of commerce
a;..:__------tip~lU"'l'ffic-liipa....,.rrttt'rhlVe . nclUded.__,cr..it'"'y.--i1rtt11embcrnttended. A day of meetings
officials from Huntington Beach and about how the chamber and couricil
Garden Grove. could help each other was followed'by
Huntington Beach officials have a round on the golf course. The
experimented with a second type of second day was consumed with
retreat, to which the public is also meetings, Bannister said ..
invited. However. the topics are not The next retreat will be Jan. 20-21
of much interest to the average in Las.una Beacb. Bannister and
resident. Huntinston Beach Mayor Councilman Jim Silva will also
Wes Bannister said. attend the next League of Cities
"lfl were a member of the public. I retreat scheduled for the followi ng
really wouldn't want to 1et involved... weekend.
Bannister said. ..It's more of a Ed111r Trotter, chairman of the Cal
housekeeping meeting." State Fullerton Department of Com-
But the meetings also provide munications, said he is not particu-
membersof city govcmmenu chance larly troubled about members of city
to rub elbows outside the rigid aovernment 1oina on such retreats.
structure of the city council agenda. While acknowledaina a "potential
Normally, Bannister said. "there for abusc1" Trotter said aovemment
just really isn't time to sit down and officials, ike other workers, need to
put on a .sports shirt and discuss step back and take a deeper look at the
things that you feel are important to job they are doing.
the city... "It would seem to me that it's a
For example, he said. productivity delicate balance that you always have
increased when cit~ officials had an there," he said. "There arc problems
opportunity to consider ways to sOlve that require pulling back from the
communication problems between day-to-day pressures and activities
the city's Planning Department and that you have in any_ organization."
Redevelopment Agency. between the In Irvine. city officials have only
Police and Fire depanments and met once away from City Hall. but
between city employees and the_ more_ meetiop will be scheduled.
public. Assistant City Manager-Paur Braoy
"It's a problem-solving thing. A Jr. said.
chance for council members on an "We have tried to have such a
informal and relaxed basis to sit down session for many, many years and we
with staff and talk about the prob-have been unable to get them all
le ms... together," Brady said.
The key word is informal. When they finally held a meeting at
"When you have meetings in the thelrvine Hilton Hotel to djscuss city
priorities -plans for the 1990s and
the move into the new civic center -
it was highly sJJCCCSSful.
"In my opinion. it is one of the
mos& productive thin~ we have done
between the elected officials and the
toe management staff .• ,
Besides the council members and
Brady, participan&s included the city
manqer, city attorney and fi.ve
Clepanment heads. The meeting was
9Jly a continuation of a City
€0tmril--meetin1 and the press a"d
public were invited. No reporters
atteoded. however. ..
Bill Bridles. a pijvate consultant
from Northern California, 1uided the
mectinf.
.. We see no reason why you have to
go outside the city as other 'J)COple
do," Brady said.
The only other time council mem-
bers have met outside the council
meeting is for a special session to
study a single issue. The "retreat"
allows more flexibility· and further
discussion on a variety of issues.
"You just don't take the time to
spend on really defving into issues
other than a speciar project," Brady
said. The "retreat" idea seems to fill
the pp.
"To a person. they thought it was
very helpful and productive." Brady
said. "I think· they . wotifd look
forward to doing this on an annual
basis." ,
Whether packed with business or
laced with golf matches, whether in a
ci!Y or at a mountain retreat, city
officials seem increasingly willing to
experiment with ways to meet.
According to Dugan. once city
officials take pan in retreats, they are
ttkely-to continue the process __
Although workshops and retreats
arc still mainly tools of the private
sector, Dupn said city aovernments
are starting to warm up to the idea.
··1 think if you looked around.
you'd find a lot of this sort of activity
happening." he said.
TEAMS TOUCH DOWN ON COAST •••
From Al
have stayed at home.
But sports information spokesman
Jay Worrall pointed out the team also ~ held iu prescason workouts in Or-
ange County. using the facilities at
UCI.
And coaches feel that gettins away
from a familiar environment will help
put the players in the right frame of
mind.
"We always do that before a bowl
game to get the excitement of being in
a bjagame,'' Worrall said. ,
The hotels help the effon by
festooning their IQbbies with decor-
ations and dressing staffs in team
colors.
Perhaps the single. most important
consideration the hotels must make
for football players is their appetites.
Linemen wciahing in at 300 pounds
get Hungry. ~
Fint on the menu is pasta dishes
because they provide plenty ofmuch-
nceded carbohydrates.
••Beef is out." Barragan of the
Ncwponer 11id. "Last year (when
Michigan State playen stayed there).
ORANGE ........
COAST __ , .....
MA81 Ol'PICI
MO W... lely SI . eo.ta MeM, CA
Mii ...._. lo• 1580 Coeca MeN. CA tHH ~ eea, 6'12·5111, .,._, a ec111on• M..aMI
we had lots of requests for grape jelly.
so we've got plenty of peanut butter
and jelly on hand. too.'
"If s particularly helpful that we
have an Italian restaurant on the
premises,'' said Robert Seddelmeyer.
sci:icral manager at the Westin. "They
enJOY that pasta ..
"When we do the food. we have a
LOT of food available,'' French said
at the Irvine Marriott.
To the uninitiated, some of the
teams' requirements ma'y kem un-
usual, French admitted.
"If you've never had a football
team. a lot of their requests may seem
weird," he said.
For example, the players show up
for meals in their shons. They're
taped in the same t.nquet hall w~
the_y've just finished catina.
Barragan said banquet halls nor·
mally reserved for sedate chamber of
commerce-type mcetinp are turned
into raucous tapina. trainin1 and ~conference rooms.
Perhaps the most unusual accom·
modation this year is the erection of a
corral on the lawn outside the
Wcstin's front door.
The Colorado mascot. Ralphie, a
1.200-pound female buffalo, is enjoy-
ing a diet of fresh grass there.
?' .. We're selectively letting her chew
the arass. so in a monthyou·11 never
know she was thcre.''-seddclmeycr
said. "It needed trimmina. anyway."
And despite the best efforts of
coaches to focus their characs on thc
comin& pme, collcae-qcd youth
from the frozen tuncfra to the cast
can't help but warm up to the
hospitable climate of Southern Cali-
fornia.
"They're a little rowdier than the
professional playen who have their
families with them;· Bampn said.
"But it's lots of fun.
"We do not crinar at the thought,"
"They do run up and down the
hallways late at niant." Seddelmeyer
said. "But they vinually have taken
over the entire hotel. so they only
bother each other.''
-=.::-........... ~
Ja.tcall842~ ............... ,., .. -.... ,_ .... .. •••111 ......... , .......... ..., .. .. ........ .......... .....,. .. .... -...... ... ...,.,, ..... ..... ........... .., .. .........
C111••11 Ti •• , .....
&c-. ....
-
eaves Coast clear., cold
The ..... lna ..... ofwln._...,,..INMd out ofloulhern
c.fornle ............. OOlll ...... tUt• "*drove ._., .. f//l IW1111UI· ........ to •tlLi anct m., .,._ w.t
raepanlllt1Dr0f'9~. _ The Ndon8I WMI'* lervtce lllued a froet w8mlng for
fWmen In the lntMd v.._. for tonlgtat and Thurlday morning.
The llonn lllft mo.I of Southern c.llornle INwrlnt bUt f'llitlvtt!m My ........ repor1ed.,, __ ICllttered
8'W downtown LOI Angltll, lurbenk and ...............
The !alt the storm wu expected to dear out of Southern
CallforlN by this ahernoon, leaving dear lklel and more co6d .... ,,., b9Nnd. ./.
HWw•=:=t..,..._.ed to range from 5e to12
wtth loWI at the from 38 to 4t and In the veHeya from 27
1037.
Local gusty north to northweet wind• of 15 to 25 mph wr• opected In the mountains. Hlgha ahould range from 32 to 40
with iowa of 14 to 22 expected.
U.S. Temps. Calif. Temps. Extended .. u OrletlCIO IO 13 High, low lot 24 llOlltl ellClinO .. 5 •. ,,, ,.,,..~~ ~que 32 11 PhUadalp.'lla 45 341 today. With • ~ Of "'-"• ' lw:ltfl#llge 34 25 PhOeni• 52 32 A .... a .. so 61 45 Ballertlleicl 41 ,. ""-'IV Cleer ,.... v-·• Dey with= Plll':'crc winclt below~ and~ Allln41C C.1y <17 41 Pot1 ,Ora. 42 21 Eweka 46 37 55 10 65. IOwS 32 10 45. 41 3t ....._,. so 37 ::r~ly 54 44 Fr-
:::o'*" 10 54 20 .02 LotMgalel 55 31
20 00 Reno 20 OS ~City 41 40 42 31 SILOUIS N 11 s.cr-10 ,. 34 loelol\ luft8lo 51 31 Salt I.all• c.t,{ 11 11 SMnM 43 .. Surf Report Clwteelon,S.C. 65 II S...Juen,P. , 12 73 San OieOO 15 44
Clwtolte.N.C. eo 52 Seema 43 21 San F1111C11CO so 41 g;: .. 31 14 Sflr:ef.:1 74 34 $anJoee 44 37 LOCA'nOll ....... 65 34 Siol.I• ... 13 .01 Stoc:lllon 3t ,. Hlll•linftOll ...... 14 .. c;....,_, 57 35 SP<*-• 21 12 a....ow 44 20 ...... ......, 1·2 ... 0..-'tWortll .. 21 Tampe·SI Ptraog 12 84 Big her 27 .()2 40lllltrw! • ....., 1·2 lllr , 12 30 Topeka 35 ot so 21 Oeylon Blyllle 1-2 poot o.n.... 31 -G3 Tuc:aon .. 25 C.UlllN 54 38 1·2 poot DalMOinM ae ot T\ilN 15 22 54 3t °""°" 42 27 10 4 WMfllnOIOtl,0.C, 41 43
C<lMfCity
~
=:::;•Pon
1-1 97: 47 41 ~~ ..• l-2 ,....,., 5' ,. ........... 27 .(XI 55 41 ........... : .... = ::-:..-31 22 31 34 .............. IS .. Tides .......,.. SI 21 ........, n ., lb 1 l t SI ,.
IO JO ......,. ..... ,. IMllllllPDlll 54 ............... 15 .. TODAY °"""° 51 31 Smo1Report Malllll .. n II Seconcllow l:SSp.m, ·.5 ..-.1pr1ng1 57 32 ,,.._, JI SJ ,......... !II 33 ic-c.ty II ,. lMUMDAY .......... 52 31 ....,..,........,...,....~O.IO
~ " 31 First low 7:22a.m, u 1111~ 51 21 ic::: ... ~t,• ~ 10 • -.. 30 ~ 2:07a.m. 4 a.Oellrtll SI 30 ; 2CJ0.21t _, ~ 300
...... llMdl 1' 14 low . 7:33p.lft, 1 ..... AM 57 35 Md llbowe ._..... Flrll ..... II .......... 37 q 8econd higll 12:32p.m, 3.1 ......... 57 2t pt'MM ~aN!Md ........... ........... • • ..... Ctuz 43 21 loday'apal . ..... on.na 11 51 ..... ~ 111 4:52 p.m .. tlael ==-54 27 4a 41 ~ • 1\51 a.m. lllCI •• M 4.52 -.vottiClly 65 40 1111 llMdl to MmWflU IMI .... -... 51 44 T-57 31 NorlGa,VL ~City 41 22
p.111 ••
U-rlllaM 10:ttp.m ..... M 1~2t w--. l: 41
.,,.., ............ v..., .. , ....... v a:s..42
Ugllna ..... ~ .. --··-···· .. ·••• 41 Olllllle 20 ,. •·"'· Ti1Ur9d9r, Md riMa .. 11: 13 p.m. y~.,,, 12 Loa.-...... Airport ..................... ...,
SHELTERS ASK FOR HELP •••
hOmAl
place to live in Southern California.
··1 stay wherever I can." he said. ''I
was in an abandoned house last night.
Sometimes somebody leaves a garage
door open ·and I can sleep in there ..
Church courtyards arc usually pretty
good in warm weather. They won't
usually chase you away. And~some
times somebody lea\ICS a bathroom
open so I can sleep in there.·•
-Piccolo, -Eiocca:s -Chihuahua,
pokes his tiny snout QU\ of a bundle of
clothes and blankets in the basket of
his bicycle.
The dOI is the ancient mariner's
only travelina companion. He is also
the source of considerable discom-
fort. althoug!l Fiocca doesn't put it
that way. -·
Bccaue he has a dog. Fiocca isn't
allowed to stay in homeless shelters.
Or, rather, he could stay but the dog
coufdn't. And that is not an accep-
table alternative to Fiocca. .
"I wouldn'tJ·ust leave him some-
place," he sai . "He's my friend. I
love him.''
Fiocca wears a boxer's flattened
nose. the memento of a life spent
shipping out on frcighten, and drink-
ing and brawling in port city bars with
his fellow seafarers.
The storm-washed face wears a
smile, however. even as he explains
that he doesn't know where he will
stay tonight. ·
"We're hurting these days. those of
us who don't have places to stay." he
said ... But at least I ve got my bicycle
and my dog. I really feel for these
families with children. They must
really suffer."
He said his wish for the future is
hatlie will iimhomeone willing to
rent him a small room somewhere for
about $250 a month.
... could help them out by doini
work around the house or the yard,'
he said.
Another homeless man standing
outside Share Our Selves acknowl-
edged this week's unusual cold, but
shru~ it off.
"Its freezing, but I've got a
bedroll," said the man. who asked
that his name not be used. "You just
cover your head and it's OK."
The cold isn't such an over-
whelmina reality to those homeless
lucky enough to be in shelters. But it several weeks ~ "to ~t away from
still manages to creep into their lives. the drµp apd violence. •
"There's no heater in the room in ··wften we left LA we had U in our
the back where we arc," said Charles pockets." said · Michael Kina. "We
Mcswain, who is temporarily rcsid· didn't have any~lace to stay, no jobs
ing with his two children· at the oranything. WeJusth,adto,etaway."
Oiange County Interfaith Shelter in Affer spendin1 some time without
Costa Mesa. "But l'd-ratherbrcold roorover their heads. the Kinp
than have a bunch of drunks around found lodging at the Interfaith
my kids." Shelter. Now both of them are
As looft as &here-i$.s:oom,the-lheltff-W-Ork-ing an&-"ing-said-he hoped ~kes alla~ilies and e~uples who are things w~uld !:Jcgin to look u~. He said
ID need, with no questions asked. he and hts wife had not suffered too
McSwain said he admired that much from the cold.
1Cncrosity of spirit, but feared that "A pan from getting a cold, it hasn't
some of the residents miaht not be the been too bad.·· he said. "And our kids
best nei&hbors for his cllildrcn. The are staying at my mother-in-law's. 10
shelter's tnaftalCn helped him by at least we don't have to worry about
offering a room next to tlie office that them being out in the cold."
is away from the units occupied by Zena Mares, one oft he managers at
most residents, he said. . the Interfaith Shelter, said winter
A professional roofer with 20 years' weather always puts a strain on the
experience, McSwain said he had to shelter's resources. Many, she said,
leave his native Texas when the have to be turned away because th~
company he wa'S working for went is no room.
bankrupt. He said he was attracted by "We give them the address and the
the high wqes in California but did phone number of the National Gu.M
not realized how expensive it is to live armory in Santa Ana, or some otl)lr
here. places," she said. "A lot of people
He said that. because his trade is in need places to stay. We act calls from
demand, he has no trouble locating all over. The Police Department.
work. The problem is child care. when they find homeless people, they
··1 could have started working last . always call us."
week," he said ... But I don't have any Forbath said her organization
place for my kids to stay. rm ~tting could use donations of food, mone)'
AFDC (Aid to Familes with Depen-and blankets. Share Our Selves 1s
dant Children). but nobody wants to located in the Rea Community
rent to you when they sec the Center, 661 Hamilton St., Costa
aovernment check. Mostly, they say Mesa, 92627.
Jeave us your name and number and
we'll. call •you. I can't leave the
number of a homeless shelter."
Bein_g without a home in the coldest L ldlJtnlnfklll• rbliJ08 patLoLthe y.car has also taken its toll &&·
on Terri Adams, her hUS6ina ano
their three children. ·
"We're staying in an apanment
that someone 1s letting us use for free,
but we don't have heat," she said.
"Sometimes we cope with it all ri&ht ,
but other times we don't do so well."
The cold and rain have also
contributed to keeping her family
homeless. Adams said.
"My husband paints houses, and
when it's this cold and rainy, there's
no work," she 11id.
Michael and Marilyn King came to
Oranae County from Los Anaeles
Thank you for your
Hollday eupport and we
look forward to lerYtnt
you tn The New Year.
...
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(AP) -Two rhinoceroses who had
been courtina each other at a pme
reserve were killed by lightni*'.'J as
th~y slept under a tree, an official
said.
The cow and the bull had been
constant companions in recent weeks
and had mated Dec. 2, said J.C.
Richards, the town enaincer of
Krugersdorp.
The rhinos' carcasses were found
Sunday at the Kru&ersdorp Game
Reserve, northwest of Johannabur&.
.
WD1tUrr PLAU ·:11th 1a ntVIN& ... ~-1oa1 •'NEwPO.rr a&Aat
-------4 ~-----·------------
Workshop helps
. women in business ,
A one-day workshop providina tips to women
on how to stan a business will be held at Orange
Coast Collqe on Jan. 21.
Jacqueline de Fiver-Daniel, author and bus1-ness-ow~er for 11 years. will present "Awareness
and. OptaoM for Women" to ai ve crca ti ve ideas and
busmeu savvy, for success in today's business
market. The ~orkshop will include a personality
profile and skills assessment for panicipants.
Registration is S2S and materials cost is SS for ~he event .• which runs from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Funher
information may be obtaine~ by calling 432-5880.
' Women execs to Install
The Orange County Chapter of Executive
Women International will install new directors at its
mectina on Jan. 17 at the Anaheim Marriott.
New directors will be installed.
Call 777-4999 for funher information.
Picking a speaker
"How to Select the Right Speaker" is the topic
of a noon meeting of Meeting Planners Inter-
national. at the Irvine Marriott on Jan. 4.
Bill Long. managing director of J.N.R. Enter-
tainment of Newpon Beach. will present the topic
and be joined by threepanelists who are professional
speakers: Bobbie Gee. Tom Bay and Rolf
Benirschke.
To register for the meeting. call 757-8332.
Teaching disabled children
A systematic. multi-sensory approach to suc-
cessfully teaching the learni ng· disabled child will be
the subject of a two-day seminar for teachers and
parents on Feb. 3 and 4 at UCI.
Dyslexia, a learning disability affecting I S-20
percent of the population. results in a child's
inability to read. spell or write. The seminar .will
address related problems in grades 1·9.
Funher information may be obtained by calling
the Orton Dyslexia Society at 186-0344~
Recreation claBSes In NB
A variety of courses including iennis. cooking.
dance and a broad range of crafts. are stan ing in
January throulh the parks. beaches and recreauon
department o!Newpon Beach.
Class offerings are detailed in the winter
brochure. available at Newport Beach City Hall.
library or chamber of commerce. Mail-in regis-
tration is under way and more information..ma) be
obtained by calling 644-3 153.
Performing Arts Center·tours
Free public tours of the Orange County
Performing Arts Center arc being conducted on
Mondays and Wednesdays, as well as the first
Saturday of each month by the Center Docents.
The tours go through many areas of the theater
rarely seen by 1he public. including star dressing
rooms. the backstage areas and the.center.room~
Tours mcetat thecamage circle entrance on the
strttt level at IO and I 0:30 a.m. on the first Saturday
of each month and at 10. 10:30. 11 and 11:30 on
Monday and Wednesday of every week. Reser-
vations arc required for groups of I 0 or more. and
further information may be obtained by calling
556-21 22. ext. 833.
Police Explorers meet
Anyone between 14 and IS who is interested in
learning about a career in law enforcement is invited
to attend a meeting of the Police Explorers on
Tuesday nights at the Newport Beach Police
Depanment.
Weekly training in first aid. criminal law.
juvenile law, firearms. drill and investigation are
JU St a few of 1he activi ties Explorers panicipate in at
the meetings. Explorers have traveled to Boston.
Washington D.C.. Mexico and Hawaii for con·
ferences and excursions. Meetings are held at the Newport Beach Police
Depanment, 870 Santa Barbara Drive. on Tuesdays
at 7 p.m. More information may be obta ined by
calli ng 644-3670. ·
Wednesday, Dec. 28
No meetings scheduled
Thursday, Dec. 29
No meetings scheduled
BB wants painting of pier's glory clays
BJ ROBERT BAR~ °' .. ..., .... _
Huntington Beach officials are looktn&
for an 1n11t to capaure on canvas the &lory
days of the manaled and mortally
wounded citv pier.
They'll pay SS.000 to the an1st who 1s
selected to paint a portrait of the 1,830-foot
pier that opened in 1914.
A howhna storm knocked SOQ feet from
theend of the pier las1 January and sent tHe
two-story End Cafe plunging into t'ie
ocean. Visitors, fishermen and residents con-
tinued to flock to the pier until July 12
when City Administrator Paul Cook
ordered it closed after engineers found its
underpanninp ~tt not safe.
The Cat)'. C ouncal formed a com mmee IO
find an artist to create the pe1ntina. which
will be put on display and used to build
finanaal wppon (or reconstrucuon of the
pier.
A ttproduction of 100 to 200 h1ah·
quaht).'j)Onls would be sold to ra1st funds.
city officials said. Posters could also be
reproduced and sold.
Some City Council members said they
wett concerned about spendin& taxpayer
money on the pro1ect. But Community
Strvices Director Max Bowman said that
revenue re~ived from the pubhc sale of
the limited editions and posters would
more than offset costs.
Bowman said that 1s what occurred 1n
t~ &ate 1970I when the City Co.anal
comm1~ an artist IO 1!9i~1 aa.t old Ooldm Bear njptclub 11 hciliC COMt
H1pway and Main Street. which was lawr
raud so make room for downto~'ft
redevelopment projects.
Cuy officaals havt embarked on pnvate
and public fund-raising campa1ps to
finance the pier's reconstrucuon. which 1s
expected to cost more than SI 0 m1lhon.
Construction may Slan as early as June or J~!Y of 1989 and continue for two ynn.
ofricaats said.
Officials arc upttted 10 act a clearer picture on costs when they decide on the
des1p. as well as how long and how h1ah
the new pier should be.
Rich Barnard. an assJStant to the city
adm1n111raaor. said that otlicills att hop-~IO collttt SI m1lhon fioaa local IOUICa.
Tliat is 1mponan110 lhow fedtraJ and SI.lie
oK.ca.als -who arc expec1ed lO provide
the hon's lhatt of the funds-h~ senot.tS
local rt11dcnts arc about ,cuing their peer
fixed. Barnard said.
Barnard said community members ha,·c
raised about SS0.000 so far. but maJOr
fund-ra1sin1 effons ha ven't been slated
until after the stan of the new year
RnidentsofAnJo,Japan -Hunungton
•ach's sister Cl\} -have contributed
about $7,000. Barnard said. A bia chunk of
that was raised when the Japanese bought
about 300 save-the-pier T-sh1ns. he said.
A comm1uct 1s leaning towards a
recommendation for the pier to be 1.500 to
1.800 fctt long. he said.
State's homeless fiiid shelter from snow
By Tiie Assoclaicd Press
Cool. clear weather was looked for after
a cold front blanketed pans of Nonhern
California and crowded shelters for the
homeless for the second night 1n a row.
.. We should still have fairly cold
weather ... said Roben Brown. a forecaster
with the National Weather Service. ··we
may see it a few degrees warmer due to
increased cloud cover. but we're still
looking at mid-30s to mid-40s 1n the Bay
area tonight... ,
Snow fell Tuesday in parts of the state
that rarely see a snowflake and although
the unusual weather provided amusement
for many, it caused traffic pileups. closed
many roads and endangered the lives of
street dwellers.
It was the first major snowfall in the
region in a dozen years, according to
weather watchers..
The snow was blamed for two atcidents.
one lnvolvins more than 30 cars on
Interstate 80 in Truckee and another in
which a tanker carrying liquid propane
overturned on Interstate 680 near Fair-
field.
No fatalities were reponed 1n the
Truckee pileup. but there were some
minor inJuries. according to the CHP. No
injuries or spill resulted from the tanker
accident. but 1he road remaine<1 closed as
workers removed the truck. the CHP said.
And ranchers statewide fired up wind
machines to protect their maturing crops
of lemons and oranges.
For hundreds of homeless people. the
cold weather meant being driven into
shelters. most of which were alrcad)
crowded. Los Angeles officials decided to
keep emergency shelters open another
night, and in San Jose. the National Guard
kept open its armory during the da).
Armones are used as temporary shelters at
night.
A mass of arctic air caused California
temperatures to fall into the 20s and 30s
Monday n11ht and kept the thermometer
in the m1d-10s to low 40s Tuesda). That
cold air turned the rain to snow as fardo"'n
as sea level. •
Truckee reponed Cahforma's lowest
temperature with 22 degrees below ~cro
Monday night. Redding had a lo"' or 23
above. San Francisco's lo"' was a relauvel)
warm 39 degrees. but the 1emperature
dipped to 34 at Moffen Field and 29 in
Sacramento. "We just got very cold air. and when
temperatures get cold enough, we get
snow:· said Dal)I Williams. a forecaster
with the National Weather Service 1n
Redwood City. He called the snowfall in
valleys and other low elevations .. , ery
unusual:' ,
In most of those places. surprised
Northern Caltfornians enjoyed only a brief
novelt) as the snow either didn't suck or
turned to rain as temperatures rose. Partial
YOGDC8ten In Vaca.Ule built a pair of mow penom followtq Tu9day'• freak mcnrfall.
cleanng and highs 1n the 40s and 50s were
expected later in the da~.
Elsewhere. however. particularly m the
nonhem San Francisco Ba) area and along
the nonh coast. snow was as deep as half a
f00t . authonues ••d.
Snow was 6 mches deep 1n W1lhts 1n
Mendocino Count). 4 inches deep in
Garberville an Sonoma Count)' and 3
inches an Leggett in Mendocino.
One 10 2 in ches of sno"' fell in Fairfield.
Swsun and Vacaville in Solano Count).
Four inches' wett reported in the Santa
Cruz Mountains.
"This is the first real major snowfall for
this pan of the Bay area and especially the
Nonh Bay tounues since February 1976."
said Make Pechner. a meteorologist for
KNBR radio m San Francisco.
Sno" was reponed as far south as
Gilroy. 30 miles south of San Jose in the
Santa Clara Valle}.
Even the Sacramento Valley. better
known for summer heat and winter fOll.. ROl
a sprinkling of snow. Snow fell trom
Sacramento to Redding.
"It's JUSt ~utiful. the roads are JUSt
whne:· said Donna Ford. "'ho reported 2
inches of snow at her home near Sutter.
In Colusa Count}. snowplb'-'S cleared
Interstate S. and h1ghv.a) workn-5
scrimbled to move more plows to SDO'-'·
choked vaUe) roads.
Highway 17 at the 1.800-foot Santa Cruz
summit bet .. ctn Santa Cruz and San Jose
was closed for several hours. the California
Highway Patrol ~ned.
Highway IOI was closed near W1ll1ts
from the 1.560-foot Ridgewood Summit to
the 1.500-foot Rattlesnake Summit. and
Highway I was closed from the Men·
doc1no C:ounl\ coast to Just nonh of
Willits was clo5ed. the California Depan-
ment ofTransponatton reported.
Fanher south. state H1gh"ay 1-8. the
main link bet"een SQnoma and apa
counties. was closed from L .. H1gh'-'8)
101 to th.~S1herado Trail.
Growers statewide fired up smudge
pots. wind machines and flooded imga-
uon canals '-'1th warming waters to ward
off the earl~ morning cold. said Cunis
Anderson. \ice prtSident for Sunkast
Gro-.crs.1he .. orkrs largest citrus market·
1ng co-op -.1th 6.000 groWCT" members.
"We'redoinggreat. Sure. 11 "as cold. but
we aot b). prcth '-'CU. We didn't h.a'e an~
dam•·· l\nderson said Tuesda\. "I
talked to some of the growers and the) got
b) prcU) '-'Cll. The gtO'-'Crs ha\e a lot of
ab1hty to protect with wind machines and
warm water.··
Navel oranges. the third largest crop in
unk1st h1stol). 1s now bemg harvested. as
are lemons. tangerines and grapefruit. he
said.
"'md machines and heaters also were
used to sa'e strawberries. avocados.
lemons and oranges at Foot hill Propenies
1n Corona. abou1 4S miles southeast of
downtown Los Angeles.
Fountain Valley lotto winner shuns pul;>licity
By JOYCE BODLOVICH
OflMO..,l'lletlt-
<\ lotto w1nocr from Fountain Valle~ has
stepped foN-ard to claim his S:?. 7 m1lhon
Ch nstmas gift but declined to be 1dcn11ficd
or discuss his future plans. lottel) officials
said.
··He dosen't \\ant the pubhrih:· said
lottel) representative Hcrm Dustman.
"We al"'a) s hope our "inners "'111 share
their good fortune. but someumes the) JUSt
pref er not to... .
The Fountain Valley winner selected all
six numbers in last v.eek·sdra" ing. He "Ill
split the nearl) SS.4 m1ll1onJackpot with a
ticket holder from San Bernardino.
The winners \\ 111 rccel\ e equal annual
pa)ments oH·r ~O ~ears. les federal
income L&.\ wtthhold1ngs.
In Saturda' ·s draw mg. Dustman said
three Oran~ C:ount} ucket holders "on a
lump sum of about SI n .ooo for scle-cung
fi\C of the SI' "'inning numbers plus the
bonus number. One ticket "'as purchaSt~
in Fountain \ alle\ and t'-'O ticket!>
purchased 1n Yorba l1ncb.
Du'itman said "ednesda} that onl)
Hugh Denison of Fullenort. "ho bought
his ucket in Yorba · Linda; has come
fol""'ard to claim his boot~.
Peopk '-'1th '-"1nn1ng tickets ha'e I 0
da) to claim the pnze. though there ha"e
been numerous instanres v.ere people
ha\ e tailed to prest"nt "inning ttckets. The
late' "as on~. I~ v.hen a t1d.c1 wonh
S3A m1ll1on wa forfeited
Motoris·t shot to death
in Costa Mesa identified
was dnltmg into lhe 1ntens1'c carc
untt. ln,esugators. thoulh. said the~
failed to detect a \\<h1tr when the' am, ed. · • • • .\ re 1dcnt 1n the 7000 block of
Ontario Dnve said two pit bull
temers threatened her son's dog and
then .. ere running free up and do"'n
the trcet TucS<fa).
.\ si>are tare "as stolen from a
To)ota van parked in the 1000 block
of Mam treet bet"'ecn a m and "' p.m. Tuesda).
Newport Beacll
I\ 1qss Dodge Ram \an '-'3'>
reponed on lire 10 a parlun1 lot at
~647 Mac.\nhur Bhd . .\n in\ot1p-
t1on re"ealed the \chicle had
pre' 1ouc;I) ustamcd extensl\e bod)
damage from a colhs1on into a
bu1ld1ng. Inside the·,an. papers had
been piled up and 1@n1ted, cau 1ng
c\tcns1'e smoke and fire damage • • • .\ pres1dcn11al Role\ '-'3tch \alucd
at S 15.000 '-'IS rcponed stolen from
an apanmcnt at 885 a vull l.dne
after the burglar J•mm1ed the front
door to gain entl) BJ JONATHAN VOLZU
Of ..............
Potice identified a.JS-year-old Gar-
den Grove man shot to death Mon·
day in Costa Mesa as Jeremias Diza
Delacruz. and ubd anyone who saw
the events leadina to his death to
conlllet de\cctives.
De&acruz was shot to death after a
short chue lhrouah the streets of west
Costa Mesa. The pursuit, apparently
initiated by Delacruz, ended in the
cul-dMac of Cadillac Avenue.
~
Poatala Vall.,
A female res1<knt 1n the 10000
block of Quail Avenue has bttn
receivina thttaten1n1 phone calls. • • A cair stereo and canttte 1apes
valued at $200 were liken from a 1980 l«ked Toyota Terttl parked at
Diamond Court and Mt Martt)'
Coun carty Tuetda)' mom1na. ••• A thief stole $402 wonh of tools
from tht Home Club at 16061
Brookhurst Street I I a. m. T uc1da) by
htd111J tht merchandise an his
cloth"'I and walk1na from the stOtt.
c.-....
A 47-Wtlt-Otd man was arTtSted
In the dimly lit industrial area. the
man Delacruz chased pulled a hand-
aun and fired three shots, t'-'O of
which hat the victim in the chest. I\
third bullet shattered the wind h1eld
of Delacruz's van.
Thrtt men were with Delacruz in
the van. but were uninJured. The~
provided authorities w1th a meager
description of the killer and ht
vehicle, but Sgt. Ron Smith toda)
asked for the publie's help 1n 1dent·
ifyina the aunman.
"'We still don't know IA-hat kicked
11\er allctedly pomuna a IOlded gun
at his roommate. Tht roommate had
KCustd hint ofstcahna his stufTwh1le
hf was in ,.ii. • • • An E.T. video. VCR. telephone nnd
answenna machine ~re Stokn from
a home in tht 2600block ofSanra .\na
Strttt.
A crook ,tok f;Oo from tk1d1's
frozen yasun and....., s~ from S~nsen·s 1tt t'f'dm 11 Mna Verde
Center after pry1na OP'ft the doon 10
both butinntn. ............
A..-iaaMi1181~~· ly pOuM......... ud
~
thl whole thing orr:· m1th ..aid. ··1t
could ha\e been a traflic d1spute1 he
could ha'e rccogntzed him. an\ th10g ··We'd apprectate an)1hmg that
could shed some hght on th1 ...
The gunman "as described a
blond and pn,babl}' in his mid-JO
H1 car was thought to be a bro"'n or
1an Che" rolet Caprice or a Buick.
.\n}one "ho w11nesscd the 4:50 p m. incident or has an\ other
1nformauon u~ful to authom1cs 1
ac;ked to call Dctcctl\e Dan Hoauc at
7S4-S20S.
garatt door ot a raidenct 1n the
17000 block of E~in Lane. • • • mconc threw a bride throuah ~
rear shd1n1·alass door 1n the I QOOO
block of H idol) Lant and stole S:? SO
1n cash. a S400 VCR and S UOO in
JC'Aelr); • • •
..\man .. as handcutM and 1A-a1t1n1
lor off attn to am "C at dac Sport man. 74JJ..Ed•neer A"e. TMMan. armtd
'-'llh a ~wdmer. ~ tntd to
break 1n10 a car 1n thit "*'irit lot al'ld lhCft f°oulht wtlh More _,.nl\ pcr-
50nnd-'"> put him 1a .....,,fk • • • ~ ""°" It ·~ ---b'oard at HuM1ftll• Humana .._,.w ~-
ported • lllOftl ~ ol inllnJuana ·
'
LapnaBeacb
.\n I I-month-old pupp) "IS re·
ooned missing from a loca11on in the ~00 block of Can,on .\cm Orne on
Frida~ e"en1ng. ••• Police were called to a ta,·em 1n the
IOOO block of South Coast Hllh-a>
at I SI a.m. Slh.irda\ af\er 1 pttSOn
\\J assauhed. The uspect dro\'C
a"a' in a hght colored 1967
Mcr,·c'<kl Benz He "as dcscnbcd 111
short and stock) "'h1te male. approll·
1matel) 30 'ears old. \\1th red hair. • • • .\ buraular v.a reported m the «>O bloc~ of M\nlc tn~et at ~ 46 Lm. Saturda~ . .\·surfboard and S"OO ~
nHS IOJ. • • •
\ tereo and cash \ ilucd at $900
"'~ ta~en from a "chicle parked 1n
tltc 300 block of Sin Tro~1 Coun on
turda'
lrTine
Bolt l Uttcn ~ ~ u\Cd Tue• 10
hl\'ak oix-n ,.,,, bo\cc; at a'-'<>".._
t1on satc 1n the 9~00 Modi. of'
Jeronimo Road. .\ number of le.h
'-'ere ~tokl'I • • • '<°'cnal 1~m1ofjt~tl" "~~1J~
from a h~ 1n tht ~ h'°°' ol
Falhnpt•r af'Mf th1\ mot1th. • • •
Arraignment set
in boating death
BJ IRIS \'OltOI ................
" Ne~ pon Beach hoat O'-' ncr 1
scheduled to be am1gnt'd Jan :?Oona
cnm1nal charge ~temmin1 from thc
<kath of his fntnd 1n 1 boa11na
acttdtnt ~rher this month.
-\lfrtd G1ustw1t1. ~8. YthO ta~
one count of man\lauahtcr 1n connCC"-
11on •1th tht Ott 3<kath '")f"ie•pon Beach rcStdent Wilham (1l0te. sur·
~ndnt'd to authonttn la\t Wt"dnc -
da~ and v..a rckawd the folk> .. 1n1
da) accordlf\& to Los .\necks< ount'
Shmfl's Sft frank Sakmo
Gau1e•1t1 a"'-dh •• 1nta\-
kMfd •hen ha I 9-loot plnsurc ~ t ~ •IH"lfT)tfll fourothtt pH'l"n· mm. ran into ~ rocks 1n loH"''
C-ove otY ( ·atahM IMlnd "' uMc-
q..a ICM •=) W>wfd tht .tltipptt hed a akohot k:"cl of
lb -~II o'er the le,el at which 1
ix-rson is presumed too drunl to
operate 1 boat.
Cito~ th<' 33-~ear.old \ 1ct pm1·
dent MThe HanesC'o. Inc in Oranee.
du~d of tnJunes 'lu0crc~ when the
impact of 1hc colhc;1on threw him
against a to,.. cabinet on the boet.
Glmc's stcpt\<>n Scan aud11lo. 22.
ufl(f'Cd K\.Cft head ll'IJUrinand I in
\tt!Ou but 'tabk cond111on at West·
cm McJteal ( cnacr m Santa ~na
•IU'C"ll' and h1 ot~r t-o pau-
cnat1'. Du 1d Wilken. ~7. and Ken-
ncth Morpn. 1.-. both or ~c-pon
Btach. '4!ffcttd minor inJ~
harbor .. trolman •hOwtt~
1ht ltt'idtnt has 11id M •• the b9it
\pm! OU\ ot thl-hafbOr Ind driw
d1re\'.tl' tO'l'-lrd the rock tWft
thoush hr \aid hf> alhawunated ""
C'l1m lhaVC' t~ ~I~ I'"" .. '
...
Jet passenger arrested in bombthreat
ALBUQUERQUE. N.M. (AP) -
The FBI ams&ed a ~after a
0.llu-bound Amencan Airlines 767
jet canyina 191 people landed II
Albuquerque International Ai~rt
for a bomb search. 1uthori1ies said.
''The initial invcsuption re vealed
that a passenscr was in possession ofa
note mdic111n1 1hc~ ~re bombs
planted on the aircraft.'' FBI ifCnt
James W. Nelson said Tuesday 1n a
wrillen statement released by his
office. "The passcnaer pve the note
10 a fli&hl ancndant. who relayed 1hc
information 10 the pilot. and evcntu·
ally the FBI was notified.
v1ola11na Tnlc II. Section 3, OI the
U.S. Code penain1na to datruction
of aircraft and bomb threats made
aboerd aircraft.
who decided to diven 10 Albu·
guerque around 4:20 p.m. MST.
Brown said.
Supreme CouFt-reverses·Bicd
ruling, upholdsdeathsentence
Aiaht 240 from San Francisco was
evacuated on a remole 1tretch of
runway. and the prassenaer who had
the note WIS taken into custody bY. the
FBI, American spokctman )im
Brown said in Dallas. Nobody was
injured, no bomb or weapon was
found, and the plane took off around
10 p.m. Tuesday. more than four
hours after it landed. Brown said.
Bomb-sniffina dop provided by
Kirtland Air Force Base helped
search the plane.
e TIM~ loblclcoCo 1918
"The FBI. aner a lenathy interview
of 1he ,eessenaer. took him into
custody, said Nelson. a&ent in
charac of the Albuquerque office. He identified the passenger as Peter
M. Cannina. 40. of the San Francisco
Bay Arca. Nelton said Cannina was
taken to the Bernalillo County jail.
where he was held for investiga11on of
Cannin1 was tcheduled for an initial appearance before a U.S.
mq,istrale today, and bail was 10 be
set then, Nelton said. If convicted. he
could face up to five years in jail, a
SS.000 fine or both, Nelton said.
Browp said tbc AOte surfaced while
the plane WIS in the air.
"There was a young male passenaer
sealed next to a woman. He showed
the woman a note." Brown said,
addin1 that 1hc woman summoned a
night anendant. and the man pve the
attendant the note.
The attendant notified the captain,
l'aMeftltt Sandra Klein, 22. of
Manchnfer. Cahf., said the crew
didn't announce anythina wu wronf! but everyone knew they weren t
landina in Dalla1.
"Everyone was calm. I was
amazed. Most of us thousht there was
a lavatory fire or tomething like
that," KJe1n said.
Passcnaen said they didn't learn
about the bomb threat for about three
hours after the evacuation. They said
they were kepi 1n a holdina area.
Ray Ca ndelaria of Houston said he
was told only 1ha11hc landina was "a precautionary measure.••
wm11111111, DEC. 21,ma
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
s&ale Sulnmt Coun rwjccied a ruli ...
by the ROie Bird coun and voted 10
uohold &he death sentence of a man w"ho murdm:d a I S-ycar-old durina a
1979 San Jose robbery.
The coun voted 6-1 Tuesday 10
uphold &he death sentmce of Marvin
hie Walker. who fatally shot Joe
Vasquez durin1 lhe robbery of O.n's
Boule Shoo in AUIUSI 1979.
Under (ormer chief justice Rose
Bird, the court upheld Walker's
murder conviction but reversed his
death sentence on a 4-2 vote in
December l 98S. The court found 1ha1
ins1ruc1ions by the trial judae and
U.S. GOV'T. ET.C. TEST ·METHOD:
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120's 6 mg "tar". 0 6 mg rnccmne; Ultra: less than 0.5 mg "tar", 0 05 mg. nicotine av. per
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I .. .
1ta&tmenu by the pros«~lor may
bavc ~rJy cauted JUr'On 10
disreprd defense evidence. .
But before the Bird court ruhn1
became final, the court voled to
rKon11der it When the case was next
heard 1n 1987. Bird and two col-
lca&UCI Md been voted out of office.
The ~IY vole Tunday was led
by Justke David ~n and f~nd
no misleadin& effects. in the same J~ry
instructions. The dissenter. Jus11ce
Allen Broussard. wrote the previous
rulina and was 1he lone holdover from the former majority in 1hc case.
Defense lawyer Carleen Arhdae
said the rulina would be appealed.
Q K : I U 4 R I t ~1
Lon~ime area
restoent, boater
James Ziegler
From staff aad wire reports
Lon11ime Orange Coast resident
James Eugene Ziegler died Dec. 24 in
EnaJand where he was visiting friends
in Arundel, West Sussex. He was 48.
Cause of death has not yet been
determined.
He was born Oct. t4, 1940, in Long
Beach, and was raised in Newpon
Beach.
He graduated from Newport
Harbor High School and Orange
Coast College before attcndina the
University of San Francisco.
An avid boater, he sailed and
crewed on the famil y yacht and was a
frequent participant iiwhe TransPac
races.
After working for Far West where
he teamed the restaurant trade,
Zicalcr moved to June Lake and
Cofville. Calif .. where he operated his
own restaurant.
Zicaler is survi ved by his mother,
Mn. Robert Ziegler, who was a 40-
year resident of Newpon Beach
before recently moving 10 Oceanside.
and his brother, John Ziegler of
Atlanta, Ga.
He also is survived by two sons.
Roben and Adam Ziegler of Balboa
Island, and a daughter, Jana Ziegler of
Beverly Hills.
A memorial service is pending.
Art appraiser
John Gillett
John Alanson Gillett. a longtime
Laguna Beach resident and an ap-
praiser. died Dec. 17 at his home. He
was 88.
Born in Gonzales. Texas. Gillett
was a descendant of an old Texas
pioneer family. In 1939. he opened
the first Scars and Roebuck store
outside the continental Un11cd States
in Mexico City,
He had been a resident of Laguna
Beach since 1959 and was owner of
Gillett Antiques on Pacific Coast
Highway. He was a well -known and
respected antique and an appraiser.
Gillett was also a former cider at
Laauna Beach Presbyterian Church
where memorial services were held
on Dec. 21.
He is survived by his wife, Rena:
so n. John Gillett Jr.: two grand-
children: and three great-grand-
children. Burial was at Pacific View Mem-
orial Park in Newport Beach.
A ward-winning
director Hal A•IJby
Academy Award-winning director
Hal Ashby. whose versatile. ·literate
style shaped 1hc acclaimed films
"Harold and Maude," "Shampoo ...
and "Comi ng Home." died from liver
cancer Tuesday. He was 59.
Ashby died al his Malibu home and
had been al work on 1hc new film
"Hand Carved Coffins," said busi-
ness manager Larry Reynolds.
Ashby. one of Hollywood's more
consistent artists. directed screen area11 such as Jack Nicholson in "The
Last Detail" and Peter Sellers in
"Bcin1 There." He also directed "The
Landlord." "The Slupcr's Wife."
"Lookin' 10 Gel Out and "EiJht Million Ways 10 Die."
Ashby's anu-war film "Coming
Home.' a story of a paraplegic's
return from Vietnam. won Oscars 1n
1978 for the film's stars, Jane Fonda
and Jon Voiaht. Bruce Dem. playing
a 1rauma1ized Marine officer was
nominated for Besa Supporting
Actor.
Ashb)' is survived by a sister.
Ardith Thompson. and a brother.
Jack. A memorial 1ervice by 1he
Dim:ton Guild of America was
planned for Friday. The family asked
contributions be sent 10 1hc Hal
Ashby Film Scholarship Fund, care of
the American Film lns1i1utc in Los
Ante let.
Radlo penonallty
.lolJa Rytf6ren
' RadiO-oenonality John Ry~n. a mellow-voittd Lutheran m1nis1er
known u ditcjockey "Brother John"
on &he oldies station KRTH. hu died .,.'6, RYclP:n died Monday niahl. The c:autt of death was not retealed.
Rydsen had m,oundcd from a
debl1ititina stroke he suffered while oa &he 1ir 1n 1982 and returned 10 work in l 9U to fint make com·
macials then host a midday show on
UTH·AM and 1 Sunda} nilht sho_w
Oii KllTH·FM called "Haven 11 ln
YMrMind." , ll~. who spoke in a smooth. Nlliilll bllrilOM\ started his brold·
-~r in &he Americaa Lutheran
Qllft:lt bJ recorcli• t1PCt ie I da11~h
'" 1 _.1 .w .. the iitll Of'I (11ri1111n nldio .a.ow for rod ..........
• ,.., I 1•111
Coftlu of 90llle of tlae .tctlma of lut ~eedaJ'• Paa Am Jloel9'1 747 crula at Locllerble ha•e n lined ap ID tbe
towa'• Cbapttl of Reet. Tile flnt bodl• were releaeed to tbe ftctbu' famlH• tlal91fMll, and aatborld• are •dll trytna to
ldeatlfJ all of tbe 258 ..-••encen and crew.
'
BOID' EVIDENCE •••
.._.Al
It Jaid wr«kale. be111r and part non, 16. of Banbury. EnaJa nd.
of lhf framtWod of~ mcial lt.lllllt Oa Tuada> JU&ht. Loc.k.tri»e rcsL·
s-Utt ~ bc1n1 examined b)'. Minis.. dents paid s1knt respects to the fi~e
ti')' of DefenK scientists, wtule more American v1ct1ms of tM Jumbo JCt
items have been collected by Au d1uaer whOK bodies were tM first to
Accident lnvcstipuon Branch 1n-leave this Scottish town since the vesupton "Wlll be subJCCled to New York-bou nd Botina 747 fell
lenstny cMm1cal and metallurgical onto It 1n pteces.
forensic uaminations." The town's tribute on Tuesda) to
Earlier today. news repons n ),the dead appeared to be sp<>ntaneous.
Britain said that heat damaac to the The convoy for the coffins bcpn at
plastic hninaofa cargo bay and metal a warehouse, now prcsKd into use as
slivers found embedded in the bodies a chapel of rest. An honor guard
of pasKnaers indicated that a bomb included p<>hce. mountain rescue
downed the Jet. teams with their doas. local officials.
In London. meanwh ile. pine cof-and Pan Am fl1aht attendants.
fins containing the first bodies of As a p<>hcc motorc)cle led the big
Americans killed in the Dec. 21 crash whi te refrigerator van past the town
arrived at Heathrow Airport and were hall. the crowd surged forward.
loaded onto two se parate Pan Am Some women wept. and others
fl1&hts bound for New York. bowed their heads as the van rolled
lo Scotland. authorities said they slowly b). One man saluted and
had formally identified two more another raised his hand in a gesture of
victims: M 1chael Jo'ICph Doyle, 30. of pan1ng. Voor~. NJ .. and Scan Concan-The only sound on High Street. as
Terrorists say French girls were
set free, but no one knows where
More anti-black
rallies in China
NA NKI NG. China (AP) -More
than 2.000 Chinese youths. some
yelling "blood for blood:· gathered in
central Nank1nf today in the fourth
straiJht day o anti·black ·1demon-
strauons.
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -There Khaled said Dec. 24 that the girls
was no trace today of two f'rench girl s would be released within 24 hours in
reportedly freed after being held by a res ponse to a call by Libyan leader
Palestinian terrorist group for 13 Col. Moammar Gadh afi, th e group's
months. mai n financial backer.
Walid Khaled, sp<>kcsman for Abu On Sunday. Khaled said th e girls
Nidal's Falah-Revolutionary Coun -were to be released "outside Leba-
cil. said Monday that the girls. Marie-non,'' but refused to say where.
Laure Beullc, 7, and her sister On Tuesday. he announced that
Virginie, 6, were on their wa y to Paris Abu Nidal had met the girls at one of
by plane. But they never arrived in the faction's bases in Lebanon. said
the French capital. goodbye to them and approved
In west Beirut today an official of arrangcments tosend them home. He the organization said: "Comrade refused to say when the meettng took
Wal id Kha led revealed :.i-thc: ta1e~t ·place. ...
information on the tw6 French girls The girls were seized by Abu
yesterday. There is nothtng new on . Nidal'sgun mcn aboard a yacht off the
them. lsraeli--0ecup1ed Gaza Stnp in No-
"Comrade Wal id Khaled as not in vember: 1987. Also seized v.ere fi ve
town and cannot be reached," said the Belgians and the girls' mother. Jac-
official. who 1denttficd himself onl) queline Valente. who 1s separated as lzzat. from their fa ther. Pascal Betillc.
Arab leader's
trip to Israel
put on hold
CAJRO, E&Y1>t (AP) -Chances
that PrcsidentHosn1 Mubarak would
be the first Arab leader to visit Israel
since Anwar Sadat have diminished
over his aovemment's insistence that
Israel talk first to the PLO.
Israel refuses to engage in any
dialoiue with the Palestine Libera-
tion orpnizauon, which it views as a
terrorist aroup.
Butros Ghali. the top Cabinet
minister and Egypt's second-ranking
diplomat, said Tuesday that Is rael
must talk to the PLO before Mubarak
will visit the Jewish state. But Israel
repeated its demand that a Mubarak
visit be made without preconditions.
"Egypt always has emphasized the
importance of dialogue and contact
between the PLO and Israel," Ghali,
minister of state for foreign affairs.
told reporters in Cairo. "fn light of
this objective, President Hosoi
Mubarak is prepared to visit Israel if
it aarees to dial<>sue with'thc PLO."
Government sources supp<>rted
Ghali's statement, sayin~ a Mubarak
visit to Israel was • almost un-
imqinable" uni~~ Jeru salem re-
-verses its oppos1uon to an inter-
national peace conference and ac-
cepts the PLO as a negotiating
partner.
In interviews with foreign news-
papers last weekend. Mubarak mad.e a qualified offer to travel to Israel 1f at
would help achieve peace.
He was quoted as telling the
Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Anbaa. ··If
this visit would lead to solving the
problem. and 1f ii would lead to
establishina a JUSt peace. then I am
ready."
Teen killed
in clash with
Israeli troops
JERUSALEM (AP) -Israeli
soldiers shot and killed a.Palestinian
t.ccn--.r and four Arabs were re-
poned wounded today 1n clashes in
the West Bank and Gaza Strip durin&
• scneral strike that shut most
businesses and schools.
Police used tear p s to disperse
stone-throwers in Arab cast Jerusa-
lem •. and the police SJ><?kcsman·s
off.a said three Palestinians were
detained. •
In Gaza. the army clamped a
cumw on four rcfuace camps. confin-
i, I SO 000 Arabs to the1t homes.
n the West Bank city of Nablus.
18-ycar-old Samsr Shchadah was shot
to death dur1na a clash with troops.
Ar1b repons said. Mihtary ~recs
who declined to be funher 1denuficd
confirmed the death and said 1t
occufT'Cd durina a "violent clash" 1n
the city's ccntr1l market 1ru.
Three Palestinians were wounded
by army aunfi~ in the nearby town of
Tulkarem. Arab hospital officials •id. A 13-year-old boy was shot and wounded 1n a stone-throw1n1 clash 1n
dw lum.J refu~ camp nair G111 ~: hospttal olfic11ls and rcport.tn
Shchldah was the second l'llcst~· nian killed 1n as many days. and h11
dlath r1atcd to at 1c,st lll the ....-«r of Palnt1n1ans killed tanc"C .,,...ion IP•nst lsraeh rule~ ta dlr occut*d tcmtoncs on Dec. I. 1"7. F•n«n lsreths 11to hlv~
dild. '\
An informed Palestinian source.
speaking on co nd1i1on of anonymity.
said Khaled was "intentionally mak-
ing conflicting statements about the
girls to dive n attention from th e real
location where they will be set free.
"I would n't be surprised if they
surface in an Arab capital in North
Africa," the source said. He refused to
elaborate. ·
Alaeria said in Janual')' it was
prepared to host the release oper-
ation. K.haled said when ttre Europeans
were seized that they were sp_ying-for
Israel. But Israels press reports said
the yacht was hiJacked while sailing ·
off the Lib)an coast
Lebanese security sources. speak-
ing on cond1tton of anonymity.
believe that the capti ves have been
held in Libya all the tame. ·
Hundreds of not p<>hcc carrying
truncheons hit demonstrators and
shoved others into p<>hcc vans as the
youths surged onto the street of the
circular intersccuon adjacent to the
Gulou (Drum Tower) monument.
Meanwhile. the last American to
remain wtth Afncan students forced
into biding by the angry mobs said tfic Afl'lcans arc:a'e1crm1ned not to return
to their schools 1n the eastern China
City.
"Absolutely no one wants to go bick... Heather McMillcn of
Portland. Ore .. said of the 140 black
African students who have been held
incommunicado 1n a suburban Nank-
ing hotel since Monday.
OrMge Co.et DAtLV PILOTIW~. o.c.nw 21, 1911
the mam street 1s known. was a
squeak)' u lc on the trailer
wo uld dcpan. but the patt 1s e•pec1Cd
to accelerate 1n commg da)'s.
Residents 5tood ukntly for a
couple minutes. \Mn melted anto the
ni&ht. A cold rain bcun to fall.
-'Police spokesman ~naus Kenned>.
the local police spokesman. uid 1t
was not kno~n -when the next bodtes
All 2S9 pee>ple aboard wett killed.
and J l mLW~ townspeople arc----presumcd dead Kennedy said one
more bod) ""as recovered T~y. ·
bonging the total 10 241.
The only thing that wil)
·-leave your holiday party early. •• • 1 h<· I f1l l..un I ,1rm' l'.1r r \ Tr.1\
llrm.: rrr ,, 111 \ 111r p 1rl\ .111d ''"'r .:11t ''' ' 111 1•.11!1 '" ll.IH
I l1l. 11 .. , 1" '' ,,, -.1111pl 1111 .. : 11w. 11 ·1~ rl1l r.1,l..~r' 111 I
111l~'l11n: •>tlr .1" 1r 1\\11111tn~ 1\1 11 "11< I\ : , 1 1rr' 1h.11 l."1' .1 '
L~:.: 111m .:• r ·h .: ,, .111
WEJTCLIFF PUll
NUT TO 1UXS OPEN 142-1172
17th a IRW. DM.Y Newport a.ch
Send A Gift By Phone
SURGEON GE NERAL'S WARNING : Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Result , in Fetal
lniury, Premature Birth. And Low Pirth Weight.
..
Orw.ge CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Wednetday, December 28, 1988
Husband of fat wife sa!'s
he's hungry for a solution
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Does anyone else out there
feel as frustrated as I do? I have been married for 20 years
and have never been unfaithful. My wife and I have three
wonderful children. The younicst 1s now 10.
This was a first ------------marriqe for both of
us. We arc aood
friends. We share
the same philosophy
of life. We aJJ"Ce
about politics, re-
li~on and bow to
raise children. We
•• lMDEIS
appreciate eac h •••••••••••• other's sense of humor.
The problem is that we don't have much ofa sexual
relationship anymore. We k\ss, but that's about it. The
fault is mine. I have no physical desire for my wife. The
thouJht of her body is not exciting or appealing. To be
honest, it is repulsive. She has become morbidly obese.
She says she has tried to lose weight but she can't do it. I
really fee} sorry for her bc<:ause she loves to cat.
I don't want a divorce, Ann. I love my cbildrcn too
much to break up our home and be separated from them.
I don't want to risk AIDS by aoing to a prostitute; besides,
that is not my style. An affair is out of the question. That's
not my style eitbet.
I've been reading Ann Landers since I was in college
and never dreamed I'd be writin& to you. But here I am.
Can you help me? -MADISON, WIS.
DEAR ·MADISON: SMw tkla colama to your wife.
Tell laer W1 letter la fNm Y"· Let lier bow you will do
every"1q ader ~e au to be ~JPOrtiVe if she decide. to
.. some&Mq U..t laer •...-t. Siie probably affd1
eHaaeUq as well as pnfealleul llelp with a diet ud
exerd1e. Write apia la atx m•tU ud tell me what
~ppaed. I'm bettla& *-P wtU be better.
• • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: In 1942, I was on the staff
of a well-known military academy in the Midwest.
One day the frustrated father of a cadet came to my
office very a&itated and upset. It seems he had just sold his
prefabricated housing business to the government for
several million dollars and he wanted to use some of the
money to assure his son's future. At the same time he did
not want to jeopardize his son's chances of being a hard-
working, productive young man by taking away his
incentive to work.
I understood what he meant because we both knew
that the boy was an untalented wimp with nothing much
going for him. Without batting a eye, I looked up very
quietly said, "Tie up his money in a lifetime trust fund so
that it will provide your son with an additional dollar for
every dollar earned after he graduates from college. Make
the terms foolproof and tamper-proof. This means he will
have to work to get the money but he still can live twice as
well as he normally would ha ve if he hadn't had you for a
father."
That was excellent advice 46 years ago and it is still
Jood today for any rich father in a similar situation. Pass
tt along, Ann, - G .B., CALIF.
Dear G.B.: T'Uak1 for 1hlpa1 my son1! NoW.1
destroy• inceative like bowhl1 you don't uve to do
uyW.1 becuse u hlllerituce 11 ri1llt tllere, walthl1. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was taught to tum out
lights to keep the light bills down. My husband says it
takes more electricity to turn liRhts off and on again and
that I'm kidding myself. Who 1s right?-= FRUGAL TN
C HA TT ANOOGA. .
DEAR NOOGA: You win. According to PllJlllp
Ro1enbacll, coordinator of Con1ervatlon Program• for
Commonwealtll Edison (Chicago), whenever Upt1 barn
tlley cost money_ ft doesn't co1t anytlllng to tarn ligllts off
udon.
Predictioris of earthquakes still shaky
Q. I thought both ibe Chinese and
Soviets had developed the ability to
predict the time of earthquakes ... ~
A. They've done so twice. ThC'
Chinese in 1975, the Soviets in 1978.
Each pinpointed time and place of a
big earthquake hours before it actu-
ally happened. But they've not done
so routinely and consistently. The
technique is not yet fixed.
Q. In 1872, the first woman to run
for U.S.· president was Victoria
Claflin Woodhull. nominated by the
Equal Riahts Party. How many votes
did she get?
A. Not a one. U.S. Grant bcafhe?
The French must not like TV any
too much, either. They read far more
mapzines than nationals ~lsewhe~e.
Twice a.s many per captta as m
England. A founh more than in the
United States.
Now that the historical records of
Bristol, R.I., have been keyboarded
into computers, some facts about
Puritan times in Colonial America
come clearer. h 's known, for exam-
ple, that. in one Jiven year 49 percent
of the new brides in that one town
were delivered of their firstborns
within eight months of the weddings.
chemical chain reaction that lets you sec. It's the fastest chemical reaction
known.
Q. What's today's going price of a
human skeleton?
A. Genuine human bone, about
$2,000. Plastic, under $400.
Among the professionals: Football
players outnumber baseball playen.
Who outnumber hockey players.
Who outnumber basketball playen.
In Finland, most butchers arc
women. In Sweden, most arc men.
Why this ditTerence?
By SYDNEY OMARll GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Atten-
tion centen on buildina. location, ftan4ay, Dec. H security. Check basic requirements,
ARJES (March 21-April 19): Reta-be familiar with tax, lease
tive wiU request your presence. responsibilities. Hidden clause could
Empt)asis on discussion reprdina figure prominently.· Pisces plays role.
travel, em~yment, romance. Be CANCER (June 21-July 22): Di~
"interested • but avoid makina defi-pute rcaardina direction, purpose is
nite commitment. Gemini, Virao resolved. Older individual, possiblr.
natives figure prominently. Capricorn, casts "decidina vote. •
by 3,596,090 to 0. Not even her · Add abalone and com on the cob to
husband voted for her. Couldn't. He the lengthening list of comestibles
was in jail. that get harder not softer the longer
Financial resources are discussed in TAURVS{Aprilil~May 20): Avoid frank. revealina manner. Aa:ept in-
That dry sand of Egypt not only lcapinatoconclusions-aif\rcceivcd formation.
mummified people but numerous but you could also be "billed" for LEO {July 23-Aua. 22): You'll be
writingson-J)apyrus, too. Letters. One same. Maintain balance and sense of relieved of financial burden. Cycle
such, a note from a son to a father, humor. Young person, possibly hiahlights chance to increase income, To get an intestinal supply suffi-
cient to string one tennis racquet, you
need two cows.
you boil them.
When light bits your e~e. a protein translates: "It'd be very nice if you'd Scorpio, likely to be involved. opportunity to pin additional mar-
called .rbOdopsin thercm stans a send me spo drachmas." · ~phasize standards. ket for product. Refuse to be limi\CCI ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_;__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---'"~~~~~~~~~~~--:-, by person who talks much, lmOWI
little. I
%
VIRGO (Aus. 23-Sept. 22): Stress
independence, creativity, style.
You'll set to ~n of matters and
truth actuaJly will prove beneficial.
Wear your colon: jade areen, pale
blue. Leo, Aquarius persons fiaure
prominently. .
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Some-
one "behind ICleDCI" desires to throw
monkey wrench into plans. Be aware,
protect self in clinches. Unonhodox
approach enables you to emerae
unscathed. Intuition will be on taraet.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Gain
overall view, )cave details for another
time. Information received approx-
imately four days aa<> is valid. Rec:cnt
contacts will lead to profitable
enterprise. Gemini, Saaittarius arc in
picture.
SAGmARIUS{Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Neither vulnerable. East deals.
NORTH
•&1976 ..
<:;> 3
O Al32
• lt 4
WEST EAST
• Q 5 2 • 10
<:;> K I 10 9 I 6 <:;> Q "
Current Rate* Annual Yield <> Vold <> K ti 6 4
•K652 •AQJ913
SO VTB
•
ON DEPOSITS OP
$10,000 to $99, 999
FOR 180 DAYS
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS ·REGARDING AMERICAN SAVINGS
WE WELCOME YOUR CAIL.
1-800-24 7-7197· Monday-Friday 8 a.m . to 5 p.m.•Saturday 8 a.m. to noon
•substantial penalties imposed b' early withdnlwals oo 1erm KCOUDCB. Annual yidd bMed on daily compounctu.
when interest it left on deposit tor one-year term. Riie, yield and 1erm subjecc ID cMllF without nolice.
%
'
•A I 3
<:;>A 7 5 2
<>Ql975
• 7
The biddina:
Eat Sotltll Wm Nortll t• 1 0 I Q l• 2• 2• , ....
5• °"' ,_ 5 0
Dbl ·-......
Opalina lead: Two of •
Stop, JOok uad listen ii IOUlld ad-
vice, not oaty for Cl'Ollhla tbe to9d
but allo f« wartiaa out Gpll IMlllDCI'
boldinp .. &be brtdel table. nu.
hand is a prime aemple.
North Judaed well in nmcMna
the double of n" clubl. While it la
true that with tbe s-1 of 11C1 of
beutl and • coadauMtoe that COD-
tr8Cl would haw , ..... bJ • utct,
oatbemon....a.......,1-s
dec:lanr would Mw roml*I baml.
l!all't ICI of dabl toM die b utct, aad e. llllft9d to tM ...... of
...... Dldllw ........ led •
'lrmODd to die w ...S ,. .... a
...... to .... ..... Aftll ....
.... of ........ IO tM tifta,
It will be necessary to revise, review,
possibly to renovate. Check ~
bility of relocation. Potential is
tremendous -necessary backina.
fundina will be made available.
Scorpio involved.
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Emphasis on movement, curiosity,
ability to imj)fint style. Status quo
will not suffice. Accept need for
chanse, now that your effon will pay
dividends. Virao plays outstandina
role.
AQUARJUS (Jan. 2~Feb. 18):
Focus on creativity, diplomacy.
greater self-esteem. Credit, recently
withheld, will be available. Romance
is t.ck on track 4nd so it emotionJI
bllance. Taurus will play paramount .... PllCl:S {Feb. 19-March 20): You
arc ''called back" by one who recently
dismissed you. Focus 'On pride, ac-
complishment, vindication. Terms
defined to yQUr satisfaction. Review
lqaJ procedures. Another Pisces in-
vOlved.
IF DEC.HIS YOUR BIRTHDAY,
you are intuitive, an e:iu::cllent charac-
ter analyst, you learn throuah process
of teacb1n1 others. Cancer,
Capricorn, Aquarius persons play
imponant roles in your life. Rec:ent
restrictions will be hfted, you'll have
pater freedom of movement,
thouaht, action. Durina 1989. "cycle
will leature marital status, travel,
possible addition to family. Major
domestic adjustment occurs in Janu-
ary. March and December hiahliaht
possible financial bonanzas.
,
CURLES
Gnu
declarer ruffed the club return and
drew the lut trump. The crucial
point or the band had been reached.
How should declarer play the spade
suit?
Those who rouow rubrics would
remember 'Eilbt ever, nine never'
and blithely cub the ace-ltina. But
ii that losica1 in the liabt or the
auction and play?
But surely bu a six-card club
tuit and bu lbown up with rour
diamoadt. If be bad a linaleton
b1ut. W•'a dlatributJon would
ba.e been 2-7-M, ud be would
probablJ u.e jumped to four
blmtl at hla ftnt turn. It ii more
prob9ble tbat Wiit hu onJy lix
beuta. leavlna But with two.
TlW meau that 12 or But'•
car• baw bem acc:ounted for, •v-illa blaa with oaJy oae ..-.. T1Mn.
rore, tbealmOll ...-utct llDI It for
c1ee1ars to au t11e .. of ......
... Ihm ,._ --to ....... caalnCI.
r.rwwn ....... a Ill
Genm'• =··· lir ...... .... ....... a.. .............. ... ...... 011 ........ ,.. ....
..
Car-pool lane
abtisers do not
deserve a break
Ca_r-~l lanes o_n Orange County's freeways will take on
a new s1puficance this week. especially for drivers who like to
dan in and out of the restricted lanes.
. Since the car-pool lanes' debu~ on local freeways. many
dnvers-too many of them -have used the restricted lanes
as zones Of opponunity. They weave in and out whenever
they get the ~pponunity or arc willing to take the chance.
A certain amount of risk is involved in crossing those
double yellow markers that designate the car-pool lanes
~use thescdriversare breaking the law. Most of them don't
think the law they are breaking is an important one. Some say
a law that permits only vehicles occupied by two or more
people to use the car-pool lanes is a dumb rule that only makes
freeway traffic worse.
Daning in and out of the car-pool lanes is·not a big deal to
them, only a way to show their defiance and gain a little
·advantage on the morning or evening commute.
. Jan. I sho~ld help ~hange that attitude because the risks
will become a httle higher. If they get caught, the extra time
they hoped to gainwill cost SI 50 for the first offense, $200 for
the second and $500 for third-time losers.
The introduction of car-pool lanes in Orange County has
not been a popular transi•ion in the rules of the road. Many
drivers and some of our legislators have resisted the reality
that times and driving habits have to chan_gc to accommodate
the crush of traffic on local freeways.
That resistance is slowly wearing down, and the best
evidence is the suppon from local legislators to put teeth into
the law to punish drivers who refuse to recognize that car-pool
land and the rules that govern their use arc here to stay.
California Highway Patrol officers traditionally give
motorists a three-month grace period to get used to new traffic
laws. That may or may not happen with the stiffer fines for
drivers who abuse the car-pool lanes. We think enforcement
should be immediate and consistent. .
Like them or not, car-pool lanes are a fact of life on the
freeways. Commuters who use car pools make a contribution
to easing traffic congestion. When more commutets use the
restricted lanes as they were intended rather than abuse them,
that contribution will bring significant results. .
Drivers who refuse to face this reality deserve no breaks,
no second chances.
CHP officials should take special steps to get that point
across. A new law with bigger teeth won't do any good unless
it is enforced.
Oplnic>nt expressed In this space ere thoee of the Deity Piiot. Other
vt.wl upreeMd on this page ere thole of their 9Uthort end 8ftltta. A11del 1'
comment 11 lnvtted end CM be eent to The Deity Pilot, P.O. Box 1580, Coeta
Meea9292e.
Federal pay raises
.. Underpaid" is not generallr a term used to describe
those who earn $89,500 a year, so it's hard for most people to
feel much sympathy for members of Congress. ~.
Thus Americans ... are not likely to passionately
embrace the idea of raising lawmakers' salaries by 50 percent.
Yet it's true that a pay raise for Congress is in order ....
A presidential advisory commission recommended that
memben of Congress. alonJ with federal judges and other top
aovemment officials, receive pay raises of SO percent. The
panel attached one stipulation to its recommendation.
thou&h, and that is the reason this pay raise should be adopted:
Members said members of Congress should get the raise .. if'
they could no longer collect speaking fees.
It's those speaking fees that leave Americans with the
impression that their lawmakers are being bought and sold by
the monied interests of the nation.
No one is suggesting that government officials should get
rich off their public service. But it isn't unreasonable for the
government to pay enou&h so that public service isn't an
enormous financial sacrifice; if that's the case, only the rich
can afford to run for office, and, in the end. it's the country
that ends up poorer. Dally JHrul, Ferps Ftilr, Miu.
Nurses shortage
A federal commission studying ways to resolve the
nationwide shonage of registered nurses called for higher pay.
That's no surprise. But the panel said attention also must
be given to increasing professional representation of nurses
on policymaking. The latter may hold just as much a key to the
solution as the pay.
The 19-member commission convened by the Depan-
ment of Health and Human Services noted that with
inCl'eaSing frequency, nunes provide services that should be
carried out by other heal" care workers.
In the past five_years~e commission said, the nation's
hospitals had laid off I 00,uuu staff employees and added their
duties to those of other nurses.
The p1nel also reported that nurses were being asked to
render more care typically performed by such higher-priced
personnel as respiratory and physical therapists.
Giving employees increased input on policy-making
matten has become more common in many lines of work in
the put decade u companies seek ways to improve quality,
increa1e com_petitiveness and contain costs. Nurses on the
front lines of the cxplodina medical care field should have
plenty to offer in that continued search for excellence.
ORANGE COAST ..., ....
Junrllle ("I&) G•aette
... ,.
u. .. ,....,
.... c. ..... .... [ ... ........
a.tYllf -c.-...... ........ ,... ...
11111-.....
.......
...... Dnttilr ....... ................ .. ... ................
a.1111111 "&a=· 41 ...... .... ... ... ~ .....
Or.nge CC>a9t DAILY PILOT~. December 28. 1918 A7
N£.W5 £0\TlNG 101: THE iRAGW'! .Of '{OUR t>t.Ml5E \5 1N D\Rt:Ci
PROPOR1lON 10 YOUR NAME 'R'ECOON11'10N.
Much. to do about some
used office furniture
"The best minds arc not in govcrn-
·ment," Ronald Reagan said in 1976~
"If any were, business would hire·
them away."
Then-candidate Reagan posed this
as a problem to be solved. rather than
an axiom. Twelve years later. how-
ever, the problem is still with us -
indeed, worse than ever.
Why is aovernmcnt so sluggish?
One clue is to be found in the nature
of the bureaucracy itself. Once-sharp
minds arc dulled by the slow but
1 inexorably grinding cogs of its
enonnous workings. Our 2~ycar
old federal bureaucracy is truly
ponderous.
A case in paint is the U.S. House of
Rcpresenaativcs itself. Not too many
bright minds fresh from American
enterprise are to be found there. In
fact, you won't find many minds
••fresh" from anywhere: of 4351mcm-
bcn in the I OOlh Congress. only six
were defeated at the POJls in 1988.
How small a turnover is that? Well.
the same number -six -died 1n
office the last two )etrs. In other
words. the pine box tak~ as man~
convessmen as the ballot box.
The bureaucracy supPQrting the
House of ReprcscntativC$ is every bit
as cakified as the membership.
What·, more. it's grown six-fold since
Lyndon· Johnson's presidency.
The weight of the bureaucracy 1s
felt everyWhere in the House. Con·
sider. as an cumple. what it takes
simply to obtain equipment and
furnishings for a congressman's of-
fice.
Now a congressional office is
perfectly suited to ~ run efficiently
on a personal computer network. It's
tcallY a smalJ business, with about six
people in the district and another
dozen in Washington. Most of them
generate a substantial volume of
correspondence and<locuments.lhe
two offices must communicate reg-
ularly. So you'd expect most congressmen
to use PC networks linked by modem.
right? Wrong! T hat's late 20th centul)
technology. Only 20 our of 435
members arc currently using PC
networks. And the burcaucraq 1s
res1sttng change.
Although the budget for office
equipment is ample. you can't just
walk into Businessland and get the
latest, chca~t and most efficient
computer. Office equipment may be ~urchased only from the "Approved
tquipment List." Unfonunatcly.
new equipment gels added to the
"approved" list about as fast as a new
drug gets approved by the FDA.
Presently, there arc onfy four PC
brands that arc "approved."
Although IBM is one of the four, only
certain of its models -not the latest
-arc authorized. Worse. the less-
CX])Cnsivc (and often more versatile)
IBM clones are not approved at atl.
The rcsulJ is that the federal
govemroent 1s paying top dollar for
computer equipment ycan out of
date .•
Obtaining office furnishings. I
learned. 1s no d'l'ffcrcnt. Agairi. e ven
thou&h tthe budget 1s ample. only
purcfiases approved by the clerk of
the House and his staft' arc
authorii_cd.
When it happened that a Chicago-
bascd monpae banking finn was
liquidating ns offices here in Orange
County, l jumped at the chance to
purchase some of its near-new office
furniture at barpin basement prices.
About $30.000 reaail value of
furnishings ideal for a congressional
office were available for S 12,000.
To get this bargain, however. I had
to act fast. Could the clerk authorize
the purchase?
Donn Anderson, the clerk of the
House. fonunatcly is a personaJ
acquaintance from my Wh~ House
days. I phoned him, and he said yes.
On his advice. l committed to buy the
furniture -obligating myself (since I
was not yet sworn in) to pav a SS.000
penalty lftbe aovemment de&ul1ed.
One week later. when the deal was
old and cold, GSA (the Government
Services Administration) nixed it.
"WC<lon't buy µscd furniture," they
said. "Even when it's near-new and
will save the taxpayers thousands of
dollars': I asked. ""Tl'lafs net."
came the reply. "Rules are rules. •
The ensuing spectacle was some-
thing to behold: one pan of the
bureaucracy, the clerk of the Houtc,
aangl:· with another. GSA insisted it
was ri t.. but Mr. Anderson intended
tom Sood on his word. He got his
lawyers to talk to the House Commit-
lee en Administration. His saafT
assistants talked to GSA. RuJes and
l'QU.lations were checked. Mttungs
~hM .
Finally. after several weeks. the
clerk seems to be getting his way. We
may get the furniture after all. Mr.
Anderson. an avid historian of the
House, tells me I'll be the only sitttng
member of Consress to have
purchased used furniture.
A victory. to be sure -but 1t'is 1n
such ways as these that the federal
government endeavors to gnnd even
the best minds into mush. \
Still. who's to say what can't be
accomplished with persistence? So far
the score is busi ness sense one.
burcaucracv nothing.
Just watch -rn bet WC set that PC
network. too.
Ctris Cox is tb~ eo11vn••~lttt
I,.._ Ille 41"1 C•1nss;..J •IJ•trict.
.
Consultants busy peddling
their candidates.£ or governor
SACRAMENTO-In the opening
scenes of .. The Candidate." a film
about politici, a campaign consultant
(Joe Boyle) recruits a young poven y
lawyer (Roben Redford) in Cah-
fomia to run for the U.S. Senate.
Althou&h the lawyer was the son of
a former aovemor (legend has it the
character was based loosely on Jerry
Brown). he disdained politics and had
not thought of running for office until
the consultant. looking for a winner.
approached him.
The film was mostly about the
Redford character. but 1t also ""as
incisive in its ponrayal of the role that
professional campaign managers play
1n shapin1 pol~tical contests.
They and the media have become
pivotal in determining who does -
and who docs not -tttk maJor
political office an 1980s America.
h 's a process that's being full}
exercised these da~ viw-vis the
aovcmorship of Cahfomia.
While the state Wlits to hear
whether its Rcpublan aovemor.
Gcof1C Deukmej1an. will tttk a third
tcnn 1n 1990, the pros are working
hard behind the scenes to position
their candidates. Republicans and
Democrats alike. to run.
Even Deukmfjian ha his pro-
fessional interference ruancr. S1uan
SP'ncer. the state's pre.eminent Re·
public.an e1mpaa1n 1una.
Spenttr. who maftlled Dcu-
kmejaan's fint am.... for the
l.cals&aturc and as a ,._.,,, ~dt'n·
t1aT 1tratepst with clo. Wllite H0t sc
tin. .,...s for Pltli .. n ltcwn 10 tek-..~IMl~and ys··--·~--... .....,er. a...-belief
.._ -PT hflR woa1-. ludn.a ......... .,*...,, •• . QC'. aa...,.._Olloti.a
one-time rcponcr who attached
himself to Pete Wilson. then mayor of
San Diego, more than a decade ago
and was instrumenaal an Wilson's
move to the U.S. Senate in 1982 and
his re-election this year.
Bos is becoming an independent
campaign consultant and as promot-
in&: ever so politely. the idea of
DAN
WALTERS
Wilson's runnina for governor in
1990. Not only would that be .\nome~ General John Van de
financially Jucrati'c -a ma1or Kamp.
statewide campaign can bnnt fees in v d K 'd ti h
the million-dollar-plus ran-- but an c amp. tnc1 cnta y. as t c _. onh scm1-dcclared candidate for would make Bos' new carttr as 3 go\·emor. a nd doesn't need a ~hind-
political manaAcr. thf-scenes pro moter.
Bos isn't alone. Whatever the potenq. af an). of
Sal Russo. who also "'ortled on Dianne Fetnstein·s poht1cal carttr
DcukmcJ1an's fir t gubernatorial comes from Ch nt R~ll). a San
c.ampaagn. has d«adC'-Old 11cs to saatc Francisco-based poltttcal consult1nt.
Sen. Ken Maddy. Now an 1ndcpcn-Reill\ continues to market. v.uhin
dent poltttcal con ultnnt. Ross is a small circle of poltt1cal ms1dcrs,
talking up Maddy as n uettUOf to financiers :rnd JOUmaltsts. the idea
Deulme,1an tn 1990although. asonc that Femstctn. ex·ma)'or of San
1ns1dersa1d. "He has to sell Maddy on Francisco. could run for governor 1n
the idea." 1990. To date. fe~ art bu) ing.
Ron mith. v.ho mnn~cd Ed But Reilly isn't a novice at the
Zschau·s campa11n for the U.S. trade.and Fein tcmcena1nl)1 n'1h1s
Senate 1n 1986 (he hlm>"'IY failed to onl) ptect ofmcrchand1~.
unseat Democrat Alan Cranston). is Whale one batch of professional
touung Zschau, a altcon V1lley campaigners 1s promotina candtdatcs c~ecut1 \.e. for governor. mtth rt"-for go\cm or. another is "'ort1na on
portedly has bttn "'ork1ng on statcv.l<k ballot measures v.h1ch. af
clam1nauon of.bchau's lcfio,crcam-ln}th1na. arc far more lucrata\t' .
pa1gn debt to pos1t1on him for a 1990 ~cill). as chief conjultant to the:
campaign. 1nsurantt industry for 1ts ballot
Thcrc·s no honaac of~rofe1 1onal mfasurcs 1h1s c•r. earned. u·~ bc-
chttrleaders amona Democnm. he,ed. betv.«n U malhon and SIO
ettMr. m1lhon 1n ftts He ind others .. ho
Kam Kuwata. v.ho v.-orlced for •ort the 1nmatt"e fldd alrnd) arc
Ian Cransto n an l 986 and for LA:o hclptng to wnte and ra11e 11\()ft(') for
arthy's unsucnsful ~natc bid dottnsof'poss1blr 1n11tativcs• 1990
thas >~r. has latched onto Gniy To tht bfoedrf publec. die cam·
0."1 the Mate (()ntmfkr and • ,._., e.d ekctlOfts arc reaat bit-
IM*ftUll candidaac for ao,c,,... '°')':To 9M.,.... •~ nnl l'Vilnd Ms
KuWl&a's ~ 11 that o.• alltllcly bcaiun •
would be 1 more c'c1t1na canc1.-. . a. .,.,..,
thin tht pullt1"~ frunt·runn<"f _. · •••111.
••
a.
IEllS
New Year
wish for
one more
I'm not wasting time writing down
New Year's resoluuons. l never kttp
them anyway and not making them
frtt$ me from a guilt complex.
Still n's hard to not think about
what changes )OU "'ould like to sec in
the New Year. The change I would
like to sec can be put an two words -
"one more."
I'm not talking about material
things; I'm talking about time. How
often have you needed ju1it one more
minute to finish something. just one
more minute 1n an hour could change
a multitudC'of things.
If.you doubt that. ask a coach who
won a basketball game because of a
last-minute" slam dunk.. Ask a coach
who won a football pmc because of a
intercepted pass that resulted in a
touchdown during the final minute.
Even more effective would be one
more hour in the day. I can't
remember having a pany or even a
few 1n for dinner that I didn't look
around the house and the kitchen and
then at my watch and think., -if I just
had one more hour." Twe~vc
hour days would be beodic1aJ to
everyone.
And what about one morc day in
the week? True. there arc some people
who would not wish for one more
day. A woman who is nine months
prqnant donn 't want even half a day
more behind ha burckn. A pcnon
serving a prison sentence doesn't
want another day. A patient in the
hospital 1sn 't yearning to stay an extra
day.
But, on the other hand, how many
students would appreciate just one
more day to cram for an exam? The •
mother of the bride could always use
one more day before the weddiQa -
and maybe the bridegroom could too.
An apPlicant for an imponant job
needs Just one more day to tet his act
t()ICthcr.
Everyone needs one. more dty to
get all the Christmas cards addressed
and mailed. The people buiklina the
T oumament of Roses parade floats
would probably seU their souls for one
more day to put the finishing touches
on their entncs.
A columnist would drool at the
thouaht or one more day before
deadline.
An aabt..., week .,.ad pn>duce
incredible accomplishments.. We
might even keep the five-day work
schedule and add the extra day to the
Wttkcnd. Who doesn't like a long
~ttkend?
One more day a week would add 52
days to our year and we would end up
with 417 days instead of 365 days.
Then you wouldn't hear people
saying, "Can you belie~ the year is
half gone," or. "Where did the year
go?"
If one more day a week could get
good results. what would happen if we
had ont' more week in the month? Or
one more month in the year? It's
muWj boating. but it wHI never
happen. °We have a most inefficient
calendar and have had since Julius
Caesar. more than 2000 years aao.
dccrttd this 1s the one we will use.
Even so. in 1989 I would like more
minutes. more hours.. more days,
weeks and months.
Or am I stretching things too far?
CMmai1t AM Wdl1 11.-n lit
LapuNlpeL
Today 11 WcdnndaJ. Dec. 28, the
363rd day of 1981. There arc three
days left tn the year.
Today's hi&hliaht in h1st9':)':
In I 94S. l'onsress officil.lly re·
coenizcd the Pledge of Allegiance.
On this date:
In 1832. John C. Calhoun became
the fi rst U.S. vice president to~·
s'le ppmg down over dtfTeTtnccs with
President Andre"' Jackson.
In 1869. Wil ham Fanlc Semple of
Mount Vernon. Ohio. patented chew-
ing gum.
ln 1982. evell Johnson Jr .. a black
ma n. v.as monall. wounded by a
pohct olli<-er an a M1am1 video
arcade. setting ofTthrtt da s of racial
disturbances that left another man
dead.
five \Cars ago A Pentagon com-
m1ss1on· cn11c1zed grown\& U.S. m1li-
tal) 1nvohement 1n ubanon. and
called for a review of altcmauvcs.
including more vigorous d iplomacy.
to achtevc U .. goals.
One )Cir aao: In Arkansas' WOrtt mass murder. the bodies of 14
rclauvcs of R. Gene Simmons ~
found at his 'home ~r Dover after
Simmons went on a shootina ~ 111
Rustellvtllc that clauncd the hvcs of
two omcr people. (Simmons was
con~ldtd o( thi RusacllviHe kitlinp•
he hu )'t'l to be med in the othtt ...... ,
Today's blnhdays: At1ot Lew
Ayres 11 IO. Ac:tOf Lou Jacobi 1t 7S.
Amm M111Jt Smnh 1s 54.
~t for toda~~ 0"H1$U>f')' rt"-
pcats 1tidf and • H1aory ntvtt re-
peats 1ttdf aft -=:,~Y trw .
We ~ kftltW aboul lhc
••fineldy we•• ~of •y-~lo~Df!llC'lytM ... -.r ........ -~ t'J = Trevel~a~. •tlish la (USl•t~~
., ,.. ., 2 ?lfl'lm
Po:verfy rate would
dfep if U .s. tallied
non--eash benefits
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Census Bureau. in an experimental
study, says the nation's poveny rate
in 1986 would have been significantly
lower than officially repon ed if the
government had used a broader
definition of personal income.
The study assessed poverty rates
under a variety of hypothetical defi-
nitions and found the reported 1986
poverty rate of 13.6 percent would
have been 2 percentage points lower
using a definition tha t excluded
income taxes and payroll taxes but
included non-cash government ben-
efits not factored into the current
standard.
The study also concluded that
without Social Sec4rity. nearly half of
the elderly would fall below the
poverty line. For 1986. the poverty
line· was $5. 70 I for a single perso n.
$5.255 for a single. elderly person.
and S 11.203 for a family of four.
T he study was the first of a series of
experimental reports compifing ben-
efit and tax data that previously had
been handled in separate reports.
It also was the first time the Census
Bureau had estimated monetary
values to recipients of non-cash
benefits such as Medicare and Medi-
caid.
The government's current defi-
nition ofincome includes ,.II cash pre-
tax income except capi}al gains.
including government be~fits such
as Soci~,I Security, veterans benefits.
unemployment and workers' com-
pensation insui:anc~_public as-
sistance. _
Some liberal groups have protested
the use of pre-tax income for de-
termining the poverty level, saying it
failed to take into account what the
individuals had left over after paying
taxes.
Conservatives. on the other hand,
argued that non-cash benefits-such
as Medicare. Medicaid. food stamps,
school-lunch and rent subsidies -
should be included as income when
determining the poverty level, be·
cause these Pf<>&rarris enhance the
quality of 1he recipients' lives.
Using the current definition. the
overall national poverty rate in 1986
was 13.6 percent. Among whites it
was 11 percent. among blacks 31.1
percent and among Hispanics 27.3
percent.
If the definition were amended to
include. non-cash benefits and capital
gains. the overall poverty rate in 1986
would have been 11 .6 peri;ent, U>e
Census Bureau reported. Among
whites it would have been9.4 percent,
among blacks 25.8 percent a nd
among Hispanics 23.5 percent.
The new study listed hypothetical
poverty rates under a variety of
possible income definitions. includ-
ing one used in the pri_vate sector:
income excluding cash-paid jOvern-
ment benefits such as Social ~urity
while adding employer-provided
health benefits.
Comparing the poverty rate among
the elderly using the current govern-
ment standard and the private-sector
formula shows the striking efTect of
Social Security.
Using the government formula.
12.4 percent of those over65 yearsoJd
lived in poverty in 1986. Under the
private-sector definition that ex-
cludes Social Security. the poverty
rate for that age group was 48.5
percent. -
In addition to assessing the efTect of
various government programs and
definitions of income on poverty. the
study listed an ind'ex of income
concentration under each experimen-
tal definition.
Wreckage remo!ed
Eastern inspections
find new crack injet
MIAMI (AP) -Inspections on
Eastern Airhnes Boeing 727s found a
fuselage crack in a jet in "roughly the
same area" where a 14-inch hole tore
open in another plane, forcina an
emergency landing. the airline said
today.
Eastern officials in Boston said the
Boeing 727 was arounded for ~irs
at Logan International Airport after
company inspectors discovered the 3-
inch crack in the fuselage Monday
night.
The airline ordered the inspections
of its Boeing 727 fleet after a 14-inch
hole tore o pen in the fuselage of an
Atlanta-bound 727 on Monday. forc-
ing it to make an emergency landing
in Charleston. W. Va .• when its cabin
depressurized.
ottaer pla.,a that were 1p1pected, she
said tc)day.
On Tuesday, federal offici~ls in-
ves1iptin1 the forced landina of
Atlanta-bOund Fli1tn 25 I said the
plane hll4 problems maintainin&
cabin pretsure shortly after takeoff
from Rochester, N. Y .• before the roof
ripped open.
"By the time they reached 31.000
feet, they were able to stabilize the
pressure," altholiah the hole in the
fuselage soon developed. said Na-
tional Transponation Safety Board
spokesman Ted Lopatkiewicz.
There was no indication what
caused the initial problem, he said.
A 5-inch crack had been found on
the fuselage in an inspection in July
1986. althouah the plane had been
cleared to fly in an inspection as
recently as September. Federal Avia-
tion Administration officials said. ,.)<,
Tow trucb clear vehlcl• followm.E a 67-car plleap In fog on
icy lntentate 215 near Salt Lai'e City on Tuaday. No
.erlou lnjurl• were reported.
"We're doing it o n our own,"
spokeswoman Karen Ceremsak said
from Eastern's headquarters in
Miami. "h's just as a precautionary
measure following yesterday's inci-
dent. ... We know that Eastern 1
Airlines is safe. We hope that pro-
fessionalism will prevail. ..
No problems were found in the
On orders from Eastern. mechanics
spent Monday night and Tuesday
inspecting 17 of' the airline's 100-
senes 727s and 28 of the 200-series
model.
,,..
' ' La:rgest ~nsolvent S&L's bailout told
WASHINGTON (AP) -Federal
regulators today announced plans to
rescue the country's largest insolvent
savings and loan institution in a
bailout that could cost the govern-
ment $1 . 7 billion and a separate. $5.1
billion aid package to help save fi ve
troubled Texas institutions.
,Jn the first case. the Federal Home
Loan Bank Board said it had com-
pleTe"d an-agreemen1-for-ihC'-sale, of
American Savings and Loan Associa-
tion of Stockton. Calif.. to an invest-
ment group headed by Texas
billionaire·Robert M. Bass.
According to the details of the sale,
the bank board. which regulates the
c~u~try's 3.100 savings an~ !oa~s. Perel!'"an. the takeover specialist the sale to the Bass sroup.
will mJ eCt as much as S 1.7 b1lhon in who 1s the head of (kvlon Inc., the With today's actions. the govern-
federaraid. cosmetics company. ment has resolved the case of 181
As costly as the American Savings As costly as the rescue packages will failed S&Ls this year. up from 48 last
bailout will tum out to be. it was be, bank board chairman M. Danny year.
dwarfed by the announcement con-·} Wall said that the cost to the Wall said today that he still expects
cerning the Texas institutions. government of simply closing the to meet his estimate of 5ettling 200
The bank board said it win provide insolvent institutions and paying ofT cases before the end of the year.
• $5.1 billion in government assistance depositors would have been far The board is rushing to complete over the next I 0 years to assist in the higher. . takeover of fi ve of ·the most In the case of l he California ~ran_sac~ions ~use tax breaks for
financially troubled Texas institu-institution. Wall estimated the cost of •i:tsh1ution.s getting government as-
tions. clos"ins theinstf\ution and paying ofT-s1stan~e w1ll ~ redu~ af\erJan. I.
The Texas S&LS are being taken depositors would have cost the in-Today's anno~ncement cul-
over by the investment group of surance fund. the Federal Savings and minates months of negotiations be·
MacAndrews & Forbes Holding Inc.. Loan Insurance Corp .. $3.3 l:J11lion. ·tween the bank board and the Bass
which is headed by Ronald 0 . compared to a cost ofS I. 7 billion for Group.
• ~eat dispute_
is leading to
trade battle
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
chairman of the Senate Agriculture
Committee ~id today that despite a
European ban on U.S. meat from
hormone-fed cattle some European
farmers still use growth hormones
like those at the center of a dispute
threatening a full-blown U.S.-Euro-
pean trade war.
The EC has said the meat c6n-
stitutes a health threat to consumers.
"The fact is however that their own
own farmers, not withstanding their
objections lo irowth hormones, grow
thei( meat with growth hormones,"
said Sen. Patrick Leahy on "CBS This
Morning." · t
"They realize as we do that those
hormones are out of the meat before
they're slaughter~. So that's really
not the issue;" said Leahy. 0-Vt.
Both sides are locked in an
acrimonious dispute which threatens
to spill over into other areas of trade
with America's European allies. Two-
way trade between the United States
and the European Community totals S 150 billion annually.
On Tuesday. the Reagan adminis-
tration vowed toimposeS 1.00 million
worth of trade sanctions apinst
European food products, starting at
12:01 a.m. on Jan. I.
The 100 percent duties will effec-
tively double the wholesale price at
the U.S. border for such popular
products as hams, canned Italian
tomatoes and imported wine coolers.
U.S. Trade Representative Clayton
Yeutter said stiff duties will go into
effect unless Europeans lessen their
ban on imported meat products
which contain growth hormones.
The meat ban -which is to be
applied to all European suppliers. not
j ust the United States -is scheduled
to take efTect on Jan. I.
Not when there's DO
Cab Calloway
hospitalized
after collapse
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) -
Jazz If.Cit Cab Calloway, one of the
last of the areat swina-band mu-
sicians. flew home after collapsina
durina a show in Tokyo and under-
went suraery here early today. ·
.
Proposition ·99 passed. Adding over -$600,000,000 in new taxes to what California
smokers are already paying.
Does this mean that you have to start smoking something less than a Top 10
brand because truces have jacked-up the price? Not when there's DORAL. It's the
only Top I 0 brand in America with a low price.
. Get Top 10 taste and save money, too. Smoke DORAL.
DORAL. The lowest-Priced Tup 10 Brand.
.. W.W...
Aooiloble
in all your fouorite style!
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette
Smoke Contains Carbon Monoxide. ULTRA LIGHTS ms: 7 mg. "tar". 0.6 mg. nicotine. LIGHTS, LIGHTS MENTHOL: 12 "'9· Ht8f'', 0 7 mg lllCOtlllll UGHTS ms.
UGHTS MENTHOL Ol's: 12 mo. ~ta('. 0.8 mo. nlCOtine. F\IU. RM>ft DJ's: 14 '"I· Hter", 0.9 mg. lllCotine.
FULL A.AVOR MENTHOL, FUll FLAVOR MENTHOL Ws: I mg ....... \.t mg. ricotin1. FULL FLAVOR: 17 mg. "tar", 1.0 mg .
,nicotine. w. Pl' ciglmte b¥ FTC methOO. . ,..·.
Wendy Serkin. a spokeswoman at
White Plains Hospital. would aive no
details on the nature of the suflCTY.
She said Calloway was in "stable but
critical" condition in the m:overy,
room and added that the "critical' ~lion was routinely applied
after such an operation.
The "Kina of Hi-de--ho." who
turned 81 on Christmas Day, col-
lapte;d from eahaustion durilll 1•tcr-
m111ion at a Dec. ll show and Wll
lakcn 10 Tot~.._. .... llid bit ~ Slln Sconlud. who ...
with him i• Japu at tbl time.
After beit11 tialed daeft for a week.
Calloway ftiw to White Plains • Tueldly "10 be nmr Jail home."
Sconlaftd md.
He WU edlllined to White .......
Hospiul around midnilbt. laid n.,.. ·
ina_ suJ91'VilOI' Alice Willillna. ea11oMy. w11ow-. •• wOltd
tour. hit canoelld II I llS:Cll. C1l1owty'1 ...._. "• ..... ............ tlllllll .. ..... ... Moodier." "'*' ........ ..
lrvina Mills.
Eagles, Bawks, hard,oD the· heart
u t J oe Reid's love for h is players. and game.-
a ppears-to have h is mind dicta tin the terms
The very nature oft he game is hard
on the heart, that much isa&iven fact.
For Joe Reid. the Laguna Hills
H1&h basketball coach. however. the
loveofhis team may be even harder
for him as he takes his Hawks into
toniaht'schampionship q_uanerfinals
gainst the host Estancia Eagles at the
Coast Christmas Classic.
h's not just the fact his team is
seeded No. 3 and expected to do well.
noris it the fact he goes up against the
school where he was the head coach
for three years before stepping down
from the walk-on job.
He goes into tonight'sgame with all
that on his shoulders. in addition to
the fact he was the recipient ofa major
scare in recent days-a heart attack.
Obviously he's all ri&ht. he was on
the floor Monday night during the
Hawks' 76-63 victory over LO$
Alamitos.
But his mere presence Monday
niaht was a surprise to some ofh1s
close friends, a small nucleus of folk
who were aware of the scare.
Asked about it, Reid said ... Where
did you hear that'! Only my closest
personal friends know about it. Lany
(Sunderman) ... Tandy (Gillis) ...
even my players don't know."
Reid was hestitant to discuss the
situation. ttut admitted that he felt his
RICO c ...
three narrow losses this season had a
bearin~on 1t. ·
'_'We velostbyone, two and threc
pointsand those close losses are hard
on you." he admitted in typical tilht·
lipped fashion. shakin& his head from side to side.
With his team in the thkk of the
hunt for the Coast Christmas Classic
crown. as well as the early pick for the
Pacific Coast Leaauc champ1onsh1p.
Re1dobv1ousJy 1ntendstocontinuc to
coach at U&una Halls throu&h the
balance of tftc season.
Any Iona-term decision asap-
parently beinasct aside until season's
end. althouah he declined specifics.
Reid took over at Laguna Hills last
season afterassistina until just fi ve
pmesrcma1ned in league play.
His team won fourand lost a tnple
ovenime decision at Woodbridat on
what was described asa phantom shot
by Woodbridge, and his Hawks lost
bya bucket at Blair in the CIF
playoffs.
His team's present 6-3 record
includesa48-47 lossto Dana Hills. a
74-72 loss to fasenhowerand a 60-57
loss to Edison.
Anothertuaat the hean comes
(PleueMe ll&AltT /BS) Dolphins
rally to
stopC~M-
oana Hills pulls it out
in four overtimes as
Sea Kings fall. 68-67
By ROGER CARLSON °' ... .., .........
Dana Hills High Coach Rich
Skelton just shook his head and
explained before it all ~n. ~wejust
can't get them out of their pme.
He was thinkm& of the potential
pitfaUs that he ahead for his Dolphins
Today'• .clJedale
c .............. ...
9 1.m.-l.os A .. m ltos (3-1)-Sonora (5·5)
10:~ Beed\ t•·•>-+ioo~ (2-7)
t2:20 1>.m.-<:"'"9 <2-7)--M. Vlelo (1-6)
2-Cosra M9sa (H>-CdM (S-..1 aw 7 OP ....... ...
l:~vine 00-1>-+ttn. 9eecfl (.-S)
S:2C>-5Mt1 Ciera ( 10-0>-EdllOfl (S-7)
1-i..B Jorden (6-2)-01n11 Hlls t 10-J)
I~ Hltll (6-3)-£stancla IH)
an their rematch of a La&una 8eKla
lnvn.ational showdown when Corona
was a 46-38 victor between the two.
And for three quarters all of his
fears were bei na realized as the Sea
Kinp suffocated Dana Hills with
their ma~to-man defense and own
tempo.
But some~f went ha~irc wilh Coroudd s~m-= • DuaH.USappla lbcirown t0f SICpped up preswrc and whit was
to tran~re was one for the books as Unl•erstty•a Junior Oll•er (left) clrl•a for tbe backet; Mike Cook of P-arb (rtiJlt) of Marina m0'9e8 la for an anconteMed bMket· C-Dana Hills pull~ out a 68--67 vi~Of)'
Fountain Valley ( 11) apllta a pair of · Wlleon defendera; and Cherokee UnJnrstty•a DaYe Dieter ln first roand play at tbe Oraqe Holiday C,;. in four overt1mt'S to move into
· toni&ht's cha. mpionship quart~nals
Unbeaten Barons of the Coast Chnstmas Oasste 11 b 4-• t• L • 4-Estancia High against Lona Beach reeze 1.0 DJD u. VJ C 1.0ry ~.£; r!::g~~h~~~1·rou1sbc~::J
Marina top s U rlIVersf ty;
Monarchs roll, 83-4 7
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .. o.IJ .... •Wt
much of a free hand.'' said Fountain Valley
Coach Dave Baron of his perimeter shooters. a
facet of the Barons' game which cast a shadow
over Wilson early in the second period.
Fountain Valley moved out to an 11 -6 lcad
through the first eight minutes. then Tom
Weaver. his junior brother Doug Weaver and
Corcoran fired in 3-pointers at the o utset of the
second quaner and after a cop pie of free throws
byCookand an easy Inside sllot by Merli. it was
24-11 Fountain Valley and curtains for Wilson.
Today's sc.hedule
CenMlll"°" O...r1eft1Mh 19:30 a.m.-Miraleste vs. Seattle Ktnnedv
11:10-FuUerlon vs. Anaheim Kennedv
seeing their coach CJectcd bcc.ausc of
s.4411ebad 7', MlraJesse 37: The Road-them. held off Corona del Mar in the
run.ners doubled their opponent's output. final three-minute overtime as Jeff
racina out to leads of 12-0 and 28-9 after one Jackson's open 12-footer with no
quaner to earn a shot at Dominguez in toda) 's lime left hat the nm and bounced oft
second round. "We JUSt didn't take care of the
Tony Agnew notched 18 points. netung ball." said CdM Coach Paul Oms in
four 3-pointers Malru Dolling adde-d 16 and the aftermath. "And. the) made their
Craig Marshall .pulled down eight rebounds to free throws and "'e d1d!l"t.''
12:5Cr-LB Wilson vs. oranoe .
2:20-<>ra ncit Lutheran vs, Univers1tv Fountain Valley High's Baro.ns arc 9-0 and
in this evening"s second round of the cham-
pionstfip bracket at the Orange Holiday Cla~sic
at Chapman College in Orange. and there are
some pretty good reasons for such a mark.
C~ Qua"9rllMIS
J:Slr-Saddteback vs. Dominguez
S:J<>-EI Toro vs. Founiain Vallev
7:10-Mater Del vs, Foolhlll
l :.O--Ca1>istr1no Vallev vs. Marina
go with his 12 points for Sadd~back. no-... I 0..1. The.Sea Kings. w1thJuSt four t~m · fouls in the first half. wound up with
Among them: Mike Merh. a 6-foot-5
iunior who scored 18 Tuesday morning as the
Barons cruised to a 70-45 victory over Long
Beach Wilson. dropping the latter to 8-4
overall.
Marina SS, University 47 : Steve
Popov1ch's Marina Vikings imp roved to 7-5
overall and into the championship quar-
terfinals tonight at 8:50 with a game against
Capistrano Valley after leading from start to
finish over the Trojans. who dropped to 5-6.
Mater Del IS, F•llertoa 47: The Monarchs four pla)'ers on the bench in a
snapped the Indians' si:\·game "in ning streak marathon second half, made even
in convincing fashi on. le-d b~ forward Mike more difficult by officials who had
Moms' sharpshooung. ' both sides 1n a commotion.
Also: All·CI F football receiver Mike Cook.
another in the 6-5 range. who dropped in a
season high of 12 (X>ints after getting a late stan
because of the Parons' CIF championship
football sea.son.
With 6-foot-8 Stefan Mumaw out of the
lineup for University the Vikings' 6-foot-10
Cherokee Parks had hs own way. especially in
the second half when he scored 17 of his game·
high 23 points.
played very "'ell. but I thought Mark Ne" field
did a good JOb for us m the founh quaner. We
need more scoring inside ...
Newfield scored six of has eight points m
the final eight minutes. Tuan Ngu)'en had a
season high 13 points and Francis Carron
scored I 0 for the winners.
Moms. "'ho topped all pla)ers "-Ith 28
points. was 12 of 14 from the floor in his fi rst
stan of the season. Morris. "ho ha been
hobbled b) a stress fracture in has left leg. also
had eight rebounds.
O}lan Rigdon added 17 points and point
guard Jason Quinn d1she-d ofTse,en ass1 ts for
Mater Dci. "'hich 1mproH~d to 12-1.
lnagame...,h1chscem1ngl} had 100
turning points. here arc some of the
highlights:
And: A squadron of 3-point shooters.
including guards Tom Weaver and j un ior
Derrick Corcoran. as well as Doug Weaver.
Despite the win. Popovich. too. was far
from thrilled with the an1suc endeavor.
"We looked like we were playing with
slippers on." said Popovich. "Neither team
Universit)'. which dropped into the con-
solation round against Orange Lutheran this
afternoon. was led bv Pat Ferrell. who had 16
points. 10 of those coming in the second half.
• .\f\er trailing 48-42 with 46
seconds left in regulauon. Dana Hills
got a si>.-potnt pfay with 36 ttcks le~
b} vinue ofa 3-point shot from Chns
Delfs and a fr~ throw b~ John Lloyd
(away from the ball). the scrond
attempt bouncing into Kevin
. e'<t for the Monarchs IS a 7: I 0 date o·:--;e111"s hands. who put ll m from 4
"We have four qf them who have pretty
Henigan,
Katovsich
honored
Mater Del pair also
na med to Southern
Cali fornia CIF team
Fountain Valley High quancrback
David Henipn, along with Corona
del Mar Hiah linebacker Johtt
Katovsich and the Mater Dei p11r of
receiver Tony Pena and defensive
lineman Jason Uhl. have been honor-
ed with All-Southern California foot-
ball honors as selected by the All-
Southem California Board of Foot-
ball.
The teams. 11 on offense and I I on defente, as well as a punter and placc-
lticlter, are the cream drawn from t~
nine All.CIF Dtvision teams.
BeClute of the nature of the team
there is no Ptayi-r of the Year chosen
to the-Super Team.''
Three olhers from Oranae County were Nlmed to the team -Servite
na11ni111 beck Derek Brown and
Servile linebecker Garren Greedy. as
well• Trabuco Hills defensive bllck
TimM.u•ftl. T1W 1nm1 are comlM*d ot a
vm.I who's who ft'om tM All.CIF
teams with Players of IM Van ... MVPI tom. dllmptonship ._... in
every directaon.
Henigan was a two-time All-CI F
D1vis1on I choice. as well as the
Sunset League's MVP two years
runnina. Fountain Valley won back-
to-back unbeaten leaaue cham-
pionships and twice went to the Cl F
finals in that span. winning the 1988
title.
Katovs1ch was the Player of thi: Y~ar 1n Division VI and the MVP of
the Sea View Leaauc after leading the
Sea Kinp to a 12-0-2 record and the
CIFcrown.
Pena and Uhl were two of the maJor
hcavywe1&)\1s from the Anaelus
League. which also scr\ds the t\\O
* Al·Clft sount•IU• YCTION ......
PM. "9yer, ScMll Nt. wt. Yr.
QB 0 . Henlten, Fifi V.-V 6·1 115 Sr.
RB 0 . Brown, Servi.. 5·11 17S Sr
ltl T Smitft, Ant, v-.. 6·2 215 Sr
Wit T. flllM, llM'9r Del 6-l lfO Sr
Wit M. YOUfte, *'• C .... 6-1 .. Sr TE I . MIR, Hwt, t-• 115 Sr
Ol. K. K•. S..... ~ t-J ftl St OL C . ...,_, ,.,.. t-1 m St
Ol. T. Mc0eilt1ll, ... I fl a t-S 111 Sr OLM.~··-Haalr K A. ...,..., U.-. t-1 IJt Sr
Servite choices to the top.
Manning. the only junior chosen.
was the PaC1fic C'oast Leaaue's MVP
after leading the Mustangs to their
league crown. as well as the IF
Div1s1on VIII championship.
There were three repeaters from a
~ear qo -LO)ola punter Paul
Stonehouse. l o)'ola defcns1,c back
Jim Klein and Santa MontCa lineman
Kevin Kelly were named for the
second strai&ht )Car.
P1a)us named will be the rec1pi-·
ents of framed scroll awards..~rom
First Interstate Bank -Amateur
Athletic Foundation of Los Angde
* ~ PM. ,_..,, lcMll w tt\ wt Yr.
OL J. Fix, Canvon. cc 6·3 235 Sr
DL M. Butkus. Lovota 6·3 230 Sr
OL J. UN, 'Mier Def 6~• 2.0 Sr
DL C Thome•, LB Jort9ft 6·• 2.0 Sr LB G Gr..-V, Ser.... 6·• 24~ Sr LI J K~. ,. 6-l ns Sr
LI J ........... Ant. W 6-t 17J Sr
oB J. ~ ~ •-• JOS Sr OB G. ,.,..., Cel'. ser._ t-1 "5 Sr
09 T. """'8lll'f, T"* ...... 11 175 Jr
DB S. ..... c..an... t-IO 111 Sr. PP .............. L~ .... lfS Sr.
• ..
against Foothill m the S«ond round. (Pl--._ COAST /83)
UCLA"'invadesBren Norman
to meet Anteaters leads OV
I continues its
ru e portion o
slate vs. Bruin s
In the midst of the toughest pan of
11s sc he-dulc. the UCI men's basket·
ball team entertains Pacific-10 Con·
ferenct foe UCLA at the Bren Events
Center tontaht 11 7:30.
.\s ofTuesda)". all 5.000 ~ts Mrt
sold. g1v1na the "nteaters their ftf\h
sellout 1n the h1stor} of the Bren
Center. The ot~rs were t"'o ~mes
against UNLV. OM qainst Cal Slate
Fullerton and
the othrr was
the <>P'ftCI' of
the facility
aaa1nst Uttih
State on Jan. I.
1987.
The Ant-
eaters.. comi111
offa thfttollmt
f'Old ::1 •a ........ ----f:tN~"T:
v qn. LOYOia of Oucaeo and Vir-
a1n1a. IS off'tO llS ~..,, 1n die 24-
ycar h11tOI') oltM.,......, 11 l-l.
l lCLA • ..-n-W.. is en· a rnu~nce undet .-llllead cOd
Hamt'k. The ... -6-1
..
and 2-0 in the Pac-10 following
'icton es 0' er Cahfomia and Stan-
ford last "eek at Pauk)' Pa' ilion.
It" 111 be the third mctllng bctWttn
the t"o schools 1n men's basketball.
"nh each team holding a victor).
UCI defeated the Bruins in the first
game-. ().. 74. at Paule)' Pa vi hon in the
first round of the National fn v1tatton
Tournament dunng the 1985-86
season. .
Last December. the Bruins evened
the senes with a 116-100 wtn. Thlt
pme marked the first ume a "1s1una
team had ever scored l 00 poents
apinst UCLA at Paule)'.
UCLA plans to start forwards
Trtvor \\ 1lson (6-foot·8. 19.6 ~onna
averqe) and Don Maclean ~6-1 0. 20.0): center Kevin Walker 6-10.
11.6). and auards Kevin W1I aams
(6-2. 4.6) and Jerorm .. Pooh" Rich-
ardson (6-1. 13.9).
Hamck. 1n his first season at UC'L~. prt\ iou~ly roached II Ptp-
perd1nc for nine !t'asons. lead1na the
wa,n to a 167-97 rttont, five West
C'oast Athletic C'on~rencc utln and
'" post-ttaton appnranca. andud-,, fo\lr NC A.\ bcnhs.
n his calftl'. Harritt 11 3-J ••Mt
l'CI (au. )ftf'. Pt~denc lat the Antta~rs. 91-19. i11 hti.). After...._., c:lmb. lM Aa•1•n
willbeicllMlilJea.7 ... .., ~ dll Iii Wat ... • UC s.. .....
to victory
Ocean Vie" H1gh's Scahawks
bounced back into the "1ctory
column and into the consolauon
quanertinal toda)' following Tues-
da) ·s 68-• S hasketball ''1ctory over El
C'ammo Real of Woodland Hills at
the Las Vrgas lnv1tat1onal
Todd Norman. who scored 30 1n
Monda\· 3..(i9 loss to Las V~s
\allc\. V.as the leader for Ocean Veew
ap1n: sconna 2" points and pulh"I
down nine rtbounds on the way to
MVP honors for the pme
Norman's boards. alons ,,.,1th nine
from Tim Pelon15 and teven front
Ted Ptlonis. ltd to Ocean VttW's
dom1nat1on. whteh bepn ewty with a 19-~ run 1n the firs• quenc-r. • -
"' s.he < an)on Toumamettt ..
"nahnm: Ne•,., ..... ... ,....,_
(HaJWU.• II: Tite 4'atlon ovcw:am 1
1 l-posnl lhot ~ T enn,.,.·1 Dlrrict
C'ha'es at tht buuer "'!"II IElkMI •
post the vsnorv .. ~--4t -Mt. c: d Toww LIU: (::...,.:..:
=::.:-·~; ~ 1111~ !P!! ._IScJI
...
•I
" fl
t
I
l
--------~
Orange ColiS'OAILV PILOT/ weonesoay, Oe<:embef 28. 1988
SchottenheiDler
calls it quits as
Cleveland coach
Frem Tlte Associated Press
CLEVELAND -Cleveland Browns Ell
Coach Many Schonenheimer. frequently •II•
criticized for assuming the role ofolTcnsive
coordinator during the 1988 season. step-•
peel down Tuesday as c~h of the NFL team.
Schottenheimcr and Browns Ownl!r An Modell
said the coach was dcpaning by mutual agreement.
"It became evidl'ftt that some of the d1ffercnc:es we
had. we weren't going to be able to resolve:·
---. Schottenhcimcr said. "We came
to an agreement that it was in
everybody's best interest that we
pan com pan). .
"I appreciate the opponun1-
ty Art gave me to become a head
coach. The onl) regret I have is
that (Modcll} and I and this
football team together ~cren't
able to achieve the goal we set for
ourselves."
Schottenheimer was smiling
lcbotteahelmer and appeared upbeat during an
impromptu interview Tuesday at\crnoon at the
Browns' coaches offices in suburban Berea. He said he
hoped to continue as an NFL head coach.
IN THE BLEACHERS
Titans fall in double-overtime
Tony Harris made a 13-footjump shot m
with five seconds remaining in the second
ovenime period Tuesday niiht 10 gi vc New
Orleans a 66-65 victory over Cal State ,-c
I t
Modell said he met with Schottenhcimer Tuesday
mornina and explained a program for next year.
including hiring an offensive coordinator and \."a
number of adjustments. reassignments.··
Fullenon at Titan Gym. Fullerton fell to 5J with the
loss ... Elsewhere: Forward MelviD McCuts scored a
galne high 26 points to lead Purdue pasLUSC. 68-64. in
first round action of the 25th annual Rainbow Classic in
Honolulu. The Trojans dropped to 6-4 ... Man Roe
ignited and capped a 14-4 run in the final 4:08 of the first
half with 3-point baskets and No. 3 Syracuse beat
Rutsers. I 00-81. for the undefeated Orangcmen'$ 12th
straight victory ... Jay B•rsoD scored 37 points
including a school-record nine 3-pointers and No. 15
Ohio State (8·2) defeated Florida. 93-68. in the opening
round of the ECAC Holiday Festival in New York ...
Sophomore guard Rodney Moaroe scored 24 of his
career-high 31 points in the opening half as No. 18
Nonh Carolina increased its record to 5-1 with a 95-SO
romp O\.cr Monmo uth. N.J.
. ~ . ~ : ; ! t i1
"Many. to his credir. was candid. frank as he
alwa~s has been. and he said he could not accept those
conditions." Modcll said at a news conference in his
office at Cleveland Stadium. J f
a Modell felt the Browns weren't keeping pace with
other teams in the division. "What I see I don't hkc. I
see Houston and Cincinnati as powerhouses ... W~
can't afford 10 tread water or mark ume." he said. . i
Modell indicated he didn't expect 10 encounter
problems in findins a new coach.
··1 have enough corporate ego to think people will
sttk us out.." he said.
II
FoR THE Rr co Ru
t NaA STANDfNGS
Westem Con•er•a
I Lalrars
Phoenix
Porti.nd
Seattle
Golden State a.en
Sacramento
~ac:lfk DMsien
W L
t7 10
15 10
16 11
t3 12
11 t4
10 17
6 II
MlctWtst DMsien ll 9 Houslon
DaU.s Denver
Utan
Sen Ant011lo
I Miami
16 9
16 11
15 12
7 19
3 22
Ea•tem C.uteu we
Atlantic Dtvtlieft
Pct.
.630
.600
.593
.S20 .uo
.370
.250
.647
.640
. 593
.556 .269
.120
New York II I .692
GB
1
1
3 s
7
91 2
t
2
3
101 2
14
Pflli.ctetonia t5 12 .S56 3112
Boston 12 13 .480 S''2 New Jersev 11 16 .407 11.,
Wasttlnoton 7 11 .m 10
Charlotte 7 II .280 10112
c.ntr.e Dlvl"9n
Cleveland 19 S .792
Detroll II 7 .720 11h
Atlanta II 9 ,647 2112
M ilwaukee IS 10 .600 4h
Chlcaoo t3 12 .S20 61n
Indiana S 20 .200 14'h
TUffdlv'i Sc"" a.i.en 104, Se1ttlt 100
Allanl• 121, New YO!'k 126 Houston IOI, Ml1ml tl
C levellnd 107, Chicago 9'
Milw1ukff 120, lndl1111 107
D11ias 110, Sin An!Of!lo 10 I
Ot<lvt< llO, Boston 109 Golden St111 119, Pllfladel0fll1 112
S.Cremento 112, Por111no Ill
• T .. v's Otmn
Prui.oetOfl•• 11 Lallln, 1.30 o m 1no11ne 11 New Jersev. 4.30 om
Cl\lrlOttt 11 ci.vellnd, •:JO o.m
'"'-'1• 11 O.tr0t1, 4.30 om
5'(r1'"4!fllO 11 Ullh, 6.30 O IT't
Tllundly's ~ Hou\lon el W1Sf'llttglon. 4:30 P.m
New YOf'-~1-CllieallO. S:lO pm
ao,1on •• o. .. s. S:lO P.m
Ml1m1 •I Se•llll, 7 Pm
a-.n 104, SUperSenia IOI
SEATTU (lto) -Cege S·• S-1 IS, McKev
1·7 1·2 4, Lisltr CH 1·2 I, Ellls 7·17 8·11 2•.
McMillan S-6 6·t 16, McOenlel s-11 1-10 11. Tnrtell S· 12 0-0 10, Sdloene t-4 0-0 0, Polynice
I· I 0-0 2, Revno4cls 2·3 ,_, 6, LUCH 2·• 0-0
S TOll lS. 33·76 31·45 100. CLll"t'llRS (IM) -MAnnlng 9·20 7·9 2S,
NOrman t · 19 I·• 17, Kite 0·2 O·O 0, Dei11v 9·20
t · 10 26, Gren1 0-6 o-o o, Smi111 S-9 •·I 14,
G1rrick 1·2 O·O 2, Btni•m.n 6·11 3·5 15, Witll1ms 2·S 1·? S. Wolf O·O O·O O. Gonortzick
0·0 0-0 0, Nixon 0-0 0-0 0 TOlllS .o-•· 2•·31
104
1 kwe by Outr1en
\, Set Ille 25 3'l 23 21>-100 Chooers 27 26 22 ~104 l·oolnl go,1s-e11;, 2, LUCH Fouled
out-McK•v RebOunds-SHllll S7 IC•oe 12>.
Cll-s 61 (NO<man II). ASSISIS-Sl•lllt 21
(McMill•n, Tllf'Hll 5), Cli_,s 31 (Mellftlno 7)
TOl•I fouls--Slellte JS, CN-s 30. Attenoanu-11,SOS
c..._ sewn
WIEST ·ltOCKlllS
Mon11n1 SI 9S, UC Dnts 73
New OrlHns '6, CS Fullerlon 6S (2 o!J s u11111 n. kMno 11
Sen Diego SI 91 SI Fr1nc1s, NV n
Sin•• Cllre 5" Frnno SI )9
SllnfOl'd 65, SI Mant'l 64 SOVTHWllST
Texu·EI PHO "· s CaroNne S• .. MIDWEST
WIS ·Green Bev st. ColorlOO SI 43
X1vltf. Oflt0 93. NiaN'I 70
SOUTH
EH i Cerollnlt 97, Nld.·Sanimore County 7t
Kenluckv IS, Ausllri PHY 71
Mlu lsslool t3, Sam Hou'ton SI 73
N CerollM SI ts. Nlonmouln. N J so
Wttl Virolnll 6', MArvland 61 IAST
Iona 65, Holllrl '° Provldlncl 100, ~1111 7t St Ptltr"I tl, Wl9Mf' st
Svr I CUMI 100, Rutlltl'S .. TOUWNAMtENTS
(f'lrlt ·~· ICAC HtNlv Ottlo SI. 93, F10rld1 61
St. Jotin'• 14. FordNlm Sf Per Wftt
Clemson II, MldOll Tenn n
0rt90fl IO, CllicffO SI 7S L* New MeJliCO 94, 0-.. Wnlllfltlon n
w.-e F0<16I 7S, F11rflll0 Sf .......
Purdue 61. use 64
COMMUMf'TY COLLEGI MaN Or-.. C•st 7', ........_ 45 <• oc... MtM T••u••t> ~c.... ,...... ,....... ,. ......
9 6 774 Miit 1014
J 0 I 6 Clllrll0r11t 1 J • S .S 0 I IS ,lllft I I t l
J I a 7 GeilM • S 0 7 11
21 4 $Glrw• 10 4 t J'. 12 .......... , J 0' 1)05 JIMloft 3026 I 7 0 4 k,_•e~w I I J t ~.-..01 I 0
Toi.la f1 If I.I lt Totelt 17 7 ll «.S
H1lllimt: Or•noe Coesl, 32·26
3-0CHnt goals: Of"•niMI Coe.s•-Jonnwn s.
Plloenl•-+i•inH 2. TKMic11S· HeSlflSllb IP). Hinton (DCCI.
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS
Fauntaln VWl//WV 70, LB Wlsen 4S
(0rMte HtlldlV Cllukl
LIM 8eldl WIMll FIUMNI Vllrt ........ .. .....
Fov l 0 0 2 T,WHver l 0 I I
Levine 4 1 1 lS Cook 4 4 1 12
Smllll 2 0 0 6 D.WHVlf 2 0 1 S Lim 2 o o • Phlllios o o O O
Willilams 0 0 0 0 Sll•d I 0 0 2
l'Wbtrl · o o o o N11uvtn 2 O O •
Pffrson 1 2 1 • Corc«•n 3 1 2 9
McCow1n 0 0 I 0 5elfCY I 0 0 2
GrlesOv 2 0 0 4 Hoo•n I 4 3 6
WllVldOOcld 1 0 l 2 Murc»nt 0 0 0 0 D1Sllitll 4 0 2 I Merli 9 0 l 18 Bldlel 2 0 I 4
O'OonMll 0 0 0 0
To••" 17 9 6 45 TOl•ls 21 9 12 70
Scar• llv QuM1tr1 Long 8ffCfl Wilson 6 1l 12 l~S
Founl1in Velltv II 19 2• 16--70 ~·ooinl ooel.: Wilson-Smltll 2 FV-T
W_..,er 2. C«cor.ii 2. D. Wt1vtr 1 T~ LI Wiison SCOl't«IOOI<
~5'.~47 ( °""'" ..... , Cllulc)
IJN¥w1ltY Mir* ....... . .......
ElmO<e
H1rrls Ferrell
Oliver
Dieter
Gtauen
German
ChlM
Tof11s
I l I S NouVlfl S I 0 13
0 2 2 2 Flelas 0 0 2 0
1 2 • 16 C1rreon 4 2 2 10
2 S l9 S11110r 0010
1214 Newfield 4 02•
2 3 • I Perks 10 3 • 23
1 o 1 3 Cemeron O 1 2 1
0 0 0 0 14 17 16 47 Tot1ls 23 7 13 SS
SC.... bY Outt19r• Un.ivtr,ilv 1 6 14 20-47
MAlrine 11 11 11 n-ss
3·POint goats: Unlversllv-Gllssen 1, G1rm1n
1. MAlriM-NllUYtn 2. Ttcllnlcl ls· Perks CMArlne)
Saddleback 74, M1r•1te 37
(Of'lflte H .... y Cllukl
Mlrlltstt SHlllMc.lr
Klein
Torrell
Gooctwin
800111
YIS\1$
Aldi«
Golcts1t1n
........ .. .....
S 0 2 10 Simon I 0 0 2 I 0 I 2 Mar5ft1M S 2 4 12
S O • 10 Oolhn 1 2 O 16
I 0 0 2 Moore 4 J I 11
0 0 I O Gelbtft l I 2 1
2 I 4 S AllTllW 6 2 0 II
3 2 o • Gomez • o o I Dtmou o O O O W1Ulam1 0 0 I 0
Hol'n O O O o
Rot>erto 0 0 0 0
Andtrwn 0 0 O O
Totals 17 3 12 37 TOlels 30 10 I 7•
Sc«t bY °"'""' Mirelflte 9 I 10 10-37
Sldaleti.c.k n ' 21 11>-1• J·ooinl goals Seddllblck-Agnew •. Tecllnic.11; None
Mater Def aJ, Fu19rt9n 47
(OrM9f H ... y Olulc) ,...... _.., Dtl
Ariu
Grffn
G.Bacn
P.81cll
McBride
Amin N\of'rls
Allen
.. ,,.,..., ........
1 o • l MO<rl' 12 3 l 21
2 1 2 S Kerich 2 2 2 6 I 1 3 3 Stone I O 1 2
S 1 I 20 Rilldon S S 2 17 I o 2 7 Quinn J O 5 6
142 6 BOYlt 4119
3 2 2 a •nc1res 1 I O 3
0 0 I 0 O'Ntll 0 0 1 0 MnvPtnnv 0 I I I
SoYd 0 2 0 2
NOllln I 0 I 2
Puente 0 O 1 O
GrHM 0 I I 1 eruovernan o o 1 o
lvev 2 0 0 4
Rotlen I 0 0 2
To1e1, 1• IS 17 47 Tot1ls 32 16 l• IJ
SC... " OMrttrl Fullt rlon 10 12 10 IS-47
Meier Del " 16 21 27-cJ l -POlnt eoels Fulltfton-P. &.ch 3, Arias 1, ~ltr o.r-Mon'tS 1, RIQoon 2 T tcllfllcals None
0c .... View 6', E l CamMe .... SS
(LH V ... s lrMta• •>
OC-Yltw II C.... .... ......... .. .....
Norrn1n 9 6 2 2• Reid 2 0 I •
FrOM J 2 2 11 Ferrel I 0 • 2 Evans 9 O I 17 Grlsiom I O O 2
K1rli1Wr I 2 O • Crow 3 1 2 1 Tm.Ptlonls 1 0 0 • Flnc119Y I 0 1 2
Erl!SI I 0 3 2 = 9 3 2 21 Mal'lln I 0 0 2 I 3 I S
T d.Ptlonis 0 0 2 0 c 1 0 0 2
Gw•ll"-Y 2 0 2 4 SfMle '•, 3 0 3 6
TenBer11t O O O o St1Sl•k 'J O 2 •
To111s 30 10 10 61 Tollls th/ 16 SS
sc-" °"'""' ', 0c .. n View 19 20 I• 1~
El Camlt!O ltHI S 1' 16 IS-~S J•ooi111 tolls. OV-Frohn I. &vens I
T tchnlcall None
...... 74, w ... ,.. 6)
"' (Ml. C:...... T-INA) .._•Y wu::ar-.
Bll!krllckr
Sorell
Z.Aw«ev
G.AwdrtV
CUlbtrlton
JofttS
Tofalt
..,,.... .. .....
6 I 3 ~ Ail*IMIY 2 0 I 4 6 0 • 12 (;Ofltfl 10 6 4 ,,
I I I ;J T•YIOr 1 0 S 4
9 I I 19 Corktfl 5 0 I 10
$01l0 SCI'>-IOS2
• 2 ' IO Mc.L"'*'t 0 0 1 o ,,_,.., ) 0 I 6
NW! 1 012
·Mw-.V > 0 ' • ~ci. o O I O
JI 12 H 74 TOIM t1 6 1' 61 1an-.---..
" t5 11 ....... 74
20 " u 11-63 CllMll 1, ,,.,,,..,.,,
New Port Hal'W' 65, Tlftftvsen 6 l
!C-T---'>
T-V-NnrllWf ...,_.
Green
B1roe<
Cn1ves
Jonnson
Brown
Molt• Ren tick
Totals
......... .. ....... 31 27 Lte S 2l12
2 2 1 1 OeBU\lt 1 1 2 3
13 4 2 33 Grn S 3 1 13
O 3 2 3 Nguyen 4 O 4 •
2 O 2 S P1ti\h 2 '2 12
2 3 1 6 L009 1 0 2 14
0 0 3 0 MarliMt I I 0 3 22 13 13 61 Tolel\ ts IS 14 6S
Sc-. by hriech
TeMvson (Hnwerd) 11 19 13 13 S--.1
NtWPOl'I Harbor 16 12 12 16 f-6S
3·POinl goals: TeMYson-Ber~ 1, Olevtt
3, Brown I.
Tecllnkels. C. DtBusk (NH), Coach DeBusk
(NH).
Hittl lcNll Mvs SC~
Tou.NAMENTS
CMst ~' OHtk (1t I.._.. Hilll) "'"' ..... Slnll Cl4r1 66, CYPl'esl st
Edison 46, Mlulon Vieio 42
LO!lll Btldl .JordM U , Cost• ~ 41 DIN Hills ... Corona Gel Mer ,, (4 OI)
Of"Mel ..... y OHtk
(at a..-C ..... )
f'irlt ......
C11>iw1no V1-.v IS. Or1r11Jt Lullleren 11 Merine SS, Uni,,...~tv 47
Dominouez 76, S.1ttte Ken11~v 43
Slodlblck 74, Nlirllftte 37
El T0<0 71, OrlMt 40
Fountein V1ltev 70. Lono Beacti Wilion 45
Foo•niN 66, Anen.lm Kennedv SO
Meter Del '3. Fuli.rton 47
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS
Fountain VWl//WV 5', Ell*'llftU 2t
(Mlrinl·Edbeft T__,_.)
E..-11111 .. _.... Vllrt .......... .. .....
Jones
N\ffdt Wermus Hernev
KO!'dlc Herl
Zlmmrmn
Fuliok1
Joti.nson
4 2 3 11 Workmen l I 3 1 2 1 3 S HiMll• 1 0 3 17
0020 Bloler 1204
3 I 2 1 Fox 2 • 0 I
? 2 4 6 Barlow 4 0 2 I o o o o L1"9florst 1 o o 2
0 O O O L1moror 1 2 2 4
O O O O Filll 0 0 0 0
0 0 1 0 Kuylleno.U 2 0 0 4
Yblrr1 1 0 2 2
Barbero 0 0 0 0
Hoole 0 0-0 0
Tot1ls 11 6 lS 29 TotllS 22 9 12 S6
sc-by °'*""' Es~1n11 6 1 12 .-29
Foun11in V•llrf 10 11 7 n-s.
l ·P01nl goalS. EMlef1n1_J_ I, Fount•ln
V1llev-Hlsak1 3.
OUM View 47, LMra 4l
(MlrtRl·ll.._ T__....)
Ge.-View Lewi
Huemenn
Smith
Sulllven
Nunez Tekldo
Wolfe
COiiins
N1v1rro
Tote"
......... .. .......
2 0 I 4 Yoshlolll 3 1 S 1
2 6 I 10 Nileo 2 0 0 4
4 6 2 14 Tilus 1 2 2 4
4 S 1 13 SNrks I 0 I 2
00 10 1tolend •2 S10
140 61MN9n 1 022 o o o o Sorour • 1 • 14
0 0 0 0
13 21 6 47 TOflls 11 6 19 43
Sewt llv QMrtw1
Ocean View 11 It 7 11--47
Lo.re 10 a 11 lt--.J
l ·POlnt goals: Lo.r-Sorour I.
Ttchnlcals: Lo.re benc:ll 2.
Mater Def 41, VMenc:la 43
(MertN·•4IMll T..-..1
Mlltlr o.i v....a
M.McDnld Arboll
~rhn
McC1r11w O'Br,._,
MAnlO ~ Burkn111er
......... .. .......
2 I 2 S Lo 1 I 4 J
2 o o • Andeuon l o 3 • 6 o 3 12 Amoroso 2 o 3 •
2 0 2 4 KMc:Onld 11 2 I 24 9 3 321 Ba I 0 1 2
OOOO Swwt 1002
OOOO Hwano 0010
1002 Okemolo 0 00 0
Gillin I 0 I 2
Tot1ts 22 4 10 41 TOf•ls 20 l I• «I
Maier o.i
V11tnc11
Sare 1W ~ 10 11 10 11-41
12 10 17 f-Q
J·oolnt oo.ls: None.
Llftl e.dl WIMn 45, EdtNll 44
(MlfW •• ._ T__, ..... ,
L9llt leecll ..... • ....
f9 " .. ... F1'•~'-.. " ..... W1rm11e O O O o -...... 1 6 1 20
JOfw\son S S 1 IS Moormen 7 2 1 16
Foy 1 0 S 2 RIClloff 0 0 0 0
Hvmonrev 1 2 2 6 Cl\lncller o o 2 o
Lu.vinos 4 5 I 13 Vlnch I 0 3 2
Sc"'"' •l it NII 000 0 F~ntr 0 0 I O Mltltr I 0 J 2 Crooks O O J O
twemew 2 O I •
Totlls 16 IJ 12 4S Tot11S '8 • U 4'
kwt .., Ollettef1 ~ heel! WllSon t a 12 lt-4S Edison S f 16 I._..
J•POlnt 90llt· None.
TtclWllcllt· JoMson (LIW>
Katlll 'I, MwW SI ............ , ........ ,
It.-. ..... ....... . ........
Oomta a l J ' KteuM 2 1 o s
JofWllon I I 1 J OrOICO • 2 J 10 ....., • 1, 1 Sortlllo 1 . 2 20
l•lwfY M S • » INft I 0 J 0
M_...,.., 122• S...t 2156
• ... ~ • 0 1 • --• • • • 0-.. 0010 One •••• Mual I I I 0 Y8"1t l I I I Olrminlit • 0 I I Mevrt I I t I v-. • 2 2 1
Tot• II I• 19 .. ,.._ 1' 11 N 11 ._..-. ...... 1'. , .......
Jf71t,.....
Quote of the clay McMlllan win• rookie boa
'*' C....._, OWMr of 1hr C"harlcs1on
(W.Va.) <iunMn of 1ht ContinHtal Betltctt.lt
ASIO(ial1on. ann ahe &cam drN a crowd of 619 f'or a pmc in I~ 12.500-sat Charlnton Civic
• Ctnan Coliw.am; "lnstt'ad of havina tht' an·
nounttr inlrodutt the players. I should have him
l'!trodutt tht' fans.··
Cllppen top Seattle, 104-100
Deny Mauta1 scored 25 points. m
indudtnj a reverse layup with l 1 seconds
to IO· liftina the Los Angtlt's Cli ppers to a
104-100 victory over the Seattle Super.
Sonics Tuesday niiht at the Spons Art'na ... In other
NBA games: Cleveland. with the best record in the
league. won its sixth straight game as Larry NHH
scored ei1h1 of his 18points1n the final 2:47 in a 107-96
victory over the Bulls in Chicago ... lleuM 'hen, o.m-... WUklM and Moses Mu..e ~n scored at
least 30 points as Atlanta held off New York at home.
128-126 ... In Dallas.MarllAplrre scored 15 ofhis33
potnts during a third-quaner spun. lcadins the
Mavencks 10 a 110-101 victory over San Antonio ...
Alleem OlaJ••• scored 14 of his 22 points in the
second half as Houston beat the Heat in Miami. 101-93
. . . Terry C..mlq1 scored 29 points. leading
M ilwaukcc to a I 20-f07 victory over J ndiana, the
Pacers' 13th consecuti ve road loss ... In Denver. Alex
Eull .. scored 21 of his 37 points in the serond period
as i'he Nuggets defeated Boston. IJ0..109 ... Kook1e
Ml&cll RicllmOlld scored a career-high 34 points as
Golden State beat Philadelphia in Oakland. I J 9-112 ..
. Harold Pres1ley hit a 20-footjumpe.rfrom the baseline
with one sttond left to give Sacramento a 11 2-1 I I
victory over visi&ing Ponland in a pme that saw KinJS
Coach Jerry ReyMl41collapsc wh ile protesting a call in
&he founh quarter.
Ertll lleMilla of the Nt'W York Jtts.
who k:d the AFC" wilh •t inlt'tftptions.
was named NFL l>tftnli~ RookW of &ht
Year by TM A11«ialcd Prell~ TundiY.
McMiOan. a f'm 11fety from Mlslouri dra~ on the
&hint round. wa1 the onl} rookie dchlive pleyt'r
named to the Pro Bowl ... Jndiaftl and Soulb C1tohna
-two 1camstryina LO shake aht ~ICllOn blahs -
meet ton11ht in &ht Ubeny Bowl 1n Memphis. Tnn.
Indiana. which has enjoyed a foo&ball rc&inh 11nder
Coach BWMallerJ,Clrrina 7-3-t record intothepmt
(Channt'I 11 at S p.m.). while South Carolina Rnilhed
the 1988 regular season at 1-J ... UCLA football C"OKh
Terry Domd• announced the loss of senior inside
linebacker Quce J...._, his team's leader tackler
Tuesday. Johnson. who had 110 tackles for the
Pacific-IO runners-up. will miss &he Jan. 2 Couon Bowl
pmc qainst Arkansas for tht' ninth-ranked Brui11s
because of a knee injury apparently suffered in• rtaular
season-ending loss to USC ... Fonner Scanle Seahawk
Jim Zen has been hired as the quanerback roach at
Boise Stale Univenily. school officials announttd
Tuesday ... RaJpll s.m,... will undt'_YlO anhroscopic
suraery to remove tom canilage in his tef\ knee on
Friday and will be sidelined for at least four weeks. the
Golden State Warriors announl·cJ Tuesday night .
Television, radio
TELEVISION
S o.m. COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Liberty
&owl-Indiana n . South Carolina from Memphis,
Tenn., Channel 11. ·
6 p.m. -OPP·•OAD •ACING: Mlckev TnomC>SOn
Grand Prix from Us veoas (taoe>. ESPN.
7 p.m. -COLL•GE BASKETBALL: OePaul vs.
M ln iH IPC>i State from New ()dffns, WGN . 7 o.m. -IOXING: Z Channel.
. 7:30 p.m. -NO aASKETBALL: Pl'tlladell)t)la al
L•k•n. Prime Ticket. . I o.m. -HOltSE •ACING: Sa11la Anita replay,,
Channel S6 (Prime Tlckal, m ldniohl).
Kings edged by Montreal, 3-2
9 o.m. -COLLEGE aASKETBALL: Arkanns at
Mluourl (delavecn. USA.
9:JO P.m. -COLLEGE aASKei;BALL: ~dine
a t NtY•da·La• Vegas, Channel 9.
a breakaway ~idway through the second '
Mats Na1llllld scored the tying goal on ~ 10 o.m. -COLLEGE aASKETBALL: UCLA at UCI
(de,.Yed), Prime Ticket.
RADIO period and ass1stt'd on Craig Ltldwl1'1 tie-
breaker early in the third Tuesday night as 7:30 p,m. -COLL.GE aASKETBALL: UCLA a l
UCI. l<PZE (ll90), l<MPC (710).
the Montreal Can~iens beat the Los AngelC'S Kings.
):2. at the Forum in ln~Jewood for their fifth straight victory .
7:30 p,,,,, -NO BASKETaALL; Pl'tiladelc>l\la at
Lektn, KL.AC (570).
El Tero 71, H"""""'9ft ... ell 2t
lMll'1M·l4IMll T---'>
H .......... -..0 EITwt ......... .. .....
Devis
J•llr
Cllm4tns
F099
Ambrose
Wolff
Acotll
Ftrclln•nd
loYd
4 l O f Y°"'loke 8 1 0 17
I O 2 2 Silvi 3 0 I 6 0 0 2 0 Lind • 6 0 14 o o 2 o Htiwr 6 I O 13
2 3 4 7 Vont S 0 2 10
O 1 2 I RttlwOldt 3 O 2 6 o o o o Wtllitliffi! z-er
0000 ~ntv 1002 s 0 2 10 Mullint.u• 0 0 2 0 levls 3 0 0 6
ltlbli 0 0 1 0
Tot1ls 12 S 14 29 TOIM 35 I I 71
Sc-. llv Quattlrl .,.IHllinoton 8Hcll ""2 14 s 1-29
El T0<0 24 20 17 17-7'
3·P01nt goals: None.
Technlcal1: None
Men11•111 SO, trw. 22
(C:.. Mew T-wwwu,..>
M tll 111 trWle ........ .. ........
CISlro ' 3 • lS HanllY I 0 0 2 O.Wovos l o 2 2 Nortll I O 2 2
Ho I 0 0 2 Gettvi 4 I S 9
Le.tfl 1 00 2 L• 2135 LM 0 0 3 0 ..... ,. e I 0 l 2
LONI 2 1 1 S MdlrlOI 1 0 l 2
,,,,._, 0 0 ' 0
No9uCfll 1 0 1 2
Ptftl 22 16
P!Kenlle 1 0 2 1•
T llllfllShl 0 0 ? 0
To•eti 22 6 17 SO Totels 10 2 I• 22
N\onllt)eilo
trvinl
Sc-llv Quattlrl 17 11 10 1~ 4 16 I S-2:2
J·POil!t goal.: None.
Ttcllnicl lS: None
...,.. Terrence 44, S.ddltback 42
CCMte Mew T_,__.>
S1d•ab1du Nel1ll TllTwt ......... .. ........
M.Mlvfleld • I • 17 Collins I 4 3 20
wmen•o 2 o 4 • Hll'•f'l'OIO 1 4 2 6
Larrlv• 2 O I • Onomure I 0 2 2 UrMfY 0 0 2 0 Hll'ev•ma I 2 1 • A.Mlyfleid S O S 10 lkletlltr 2 I l S Andrews 1 g. o 2 0Rw1 2 I 2 S
Rlllovicll 1 2 O 4 8M 0 2 0 2
Fl'11tf 0 I 0 I
Divis 0 0 l 0 Totals It 4 11 •2 Tol11\ IS 14 13 ..
Sare by Quattlrl
Slcldleble,k
Nofttl T«r•nc•
11 10 1 14-42
13 • 10 13-4•
3·POlnt IMIS. None. T tcllnlcall. SeddllbecJI COICll.
Cnta MIM SJ, Yucca VWl//WV 40
CC.. MeM T__.)
YtuCCa V*9 C..-Mell ........ ..ft ... 50311 Good 0636 2 I 1 S Moore 11 2 2 24
122 4Scofleld 201 4
343IO N9UY911 171 4 a o o ' SUrmon s o 3 10 2 O 1 4 Morris l O I 2
Austin I 0 2 2
Tolllll 16 7 10 40 Tofil$ 21 10 13 ~
sc-tty °'*"'" vuc:ee v11ttv • •c 12 1.-.0 Cos11 Miii 20 10 6 16-52
3·P01nt oo.ls: YUC:CI V1lle....-S111ff I. ' T tcllnk:lls: None.
Estencle 47, CYl!nla • Cc.II MINT _ _...)
...... c..,...
Eerie COiiins
KIYft
L"'°"'*ln
Suaulal Suftoto Trulitlo
Tote!s
....... .. .......
1 0 0 14 Ode 2 0 2 • I O 2 2 Mureroskl 4 O 2 I
2 0 1 4 l<OMk• 3 0 2 6
I 0 2 17 Mannlf1e S I 1 II J I 2 1 TlllOS 3 I 1 1
1123 MorlnaN 10 02
0 0 1 0 21 2 10 47 Totlls 11 2 I JI
SC-.., °"""" £1t1111ela IS 12 16 .,_.7
CYWtH 11 I 10 f-JI
l-llOfflt toals. E llencle-LUtn!*.ln I. Ttcflnluls None
Ulllwwsnv SS, E sctftdlda a
COr ..... -T ... _...)
UilMrlltY ·~ ....... .. .......
0.vls I 2 I If Frtnell 3 0 I 6 Joflnson 300 6 Dow 121 4
GaflCMr• I 4 I 6 Armstrone 2 O 3 4
S.to J O o 6 K Grove O o I O
SHt 200 4 HGrove 0333
SllY I 0 2 2 5'1M I 0 0 2
Ho 4 139 HoClure 010 1
Wolff 101 2
... uehts 0 0 I 0
ltlcltout 0 0 1 0 c""""'"" l o t ~ TOfllS 24 7 12 55 TOIM 1 ' '20
Unlvenlty
Esc°"°*
k-1W ou.tlln J·-· goal• None TtefWllc:lls None
20 13 .. ....55 ' s 2 lt-20
P'emtna st, NewPWt Hart»w 4 I
(GWIMT~)
NtwPlrf HI,_, ~
Gi4tm
tzumll•
'ltyen -
H1H
Gr199
.......... .. .......
2 4 I 9 Smith 11 I 2 2•
9. I 2 22 Jonn S 0 I 10
2 0 3 4 White 2 3 3 1 o 3 • 3 Jll'lklns 2 1 3 s
I 0 I 3 Jerry ) ? 3 8 ~rs11 122 • C>akr 0 I 0 1
Tol•IS " • II •I Tollls 23 10 •• 59
SCWt bV Guertin
NtWPOf'I H•rDOr 1 ' 13 12-• 1 Pomon1 12 16 IS 16-S9
l -P01n1 goal,, NtwPOl't Herbor-Glem l, ltumill 3, Gr199 I; Pomc>M-Smllll I.
ltcllnluls: Pomoll1 lllncll 1 .
Hittl scllMI lilttS SCtrft
MARINA ·llDtSON TOUllNAIM NT
(f'lnt ..... ,
Mission Vleio '°· El MoOenll )0
K•lelll '°· Manne SI Footll1N 49, LektwOO<I 31
Foun11in Vlllev S6. EW!ef'•nz• 79 El TO<O 71, Hunlineton lffcll 29
Ocffn View •7, Loar1 0 Lone 8"cll Wil\ofl ,•s. Edison 44
Maler Del 41, Vtllnela 0
COSTA MIJA TOUllNANMINT '"'"' ...... , C.c>lstr-Vllltv 74. C111von S1 Treouco HINs def. WHll'l'lntltf, lorf9tl
Estencla 47, Cyorns JI Schurr S1, Ll9Ulll HiH' 19
N\ontltltllO so. Irvine 22
San Clemtftlt 43, Tustin 31 N0<lll TO!'rlllCt ... s.ddllbKll 42
Centi Mew S2, Yucc1 v ... v 40
SOCCE•
Hittl lcNll MYS
FOUNTAIN VALLaY Tou.NMWNT
"'"' .... Sarft A hll
Ec:hson •. Len Alam11en 1. C1oiS1r1no V111tv 2. Los AlamllOS 1, E01M>n s. C1olstr1no V•lltv
0
I hll
Lono 8eec?I W1!\ofl 3, S.n Clemente 1.
Fount•in V11tv s. Lono heel! WilM>n o.
Founllln V111ty '· S.n Clemenll I c ..... Marina 2, Coront def Mar 2. SI. Jotln Iosco
2. COl'ont def ~r I, Marin. 3, SI JoM Iosco
2
Dhll Mission Viejo 3, H1111tlneton 1eac11 0, Maltr
Oei 4, Huntington lffcll 1, Mission VJeio 4,
MAier 0.1 2
II hll
El T0<0 1, S.n JOMUln O; El TOl'o I, Tllo\IMnd O.ks 0; Tl!Ousand O.ks I. Sin
Joacwln O , .....
Le Quinll 3, We.tmlrisltr I, C1nvon J,
Westminster I, Cenvon 3. L• Qulnl• I
G hll
S.n11 An1 5, l ultard IFrnnol 2; NtWPOl'I Harbor 3, lu11¥d !Fresno> o, S.nt• AN 0,
Newoor t H•rllOr O Hhll
Pelo$ VtrdtS s. CtrrilOI 0, ~k 2,
CerrilOI 0, PlllOI VtfdtS 3, SecklleOa<k 0 .......... v_., S. LARI IMdt .... t
Foun111n Vlllty scorlnt: MellOntv 2, Me11
I, Steffen I, Wrltlfll 1 Goalie """ ~flO< 2, Tl'lomas I
Lone heel! W~son OQlllt Mves: Grttt1 7
Hllfhmt. Founllln V111tv. l ·Q,
P-.U.V-.6,S.~1
Fount1111 Vlllttv SCOf'111t1: Wrlettt 3, Jackson
1, Jemts l, Mell 1 Goelle M'tft Pwnaflor J,
Tnoma1 t
Sen CJ9m1nte SCOl'IM Seti.Mii l Golllt
Ml'tft ........
I.
Hllftlmt: Founteln V111s¥, J·O.
...... i.c...•M1r2 ~,.,. s<orlne a.tiler I, '-OC1r'9ue1
............. 9'1c91
Mllrine sc.orlnf· Martlll t. larker 1, Oslllfo
-.-"1111 ., Mltlr D9I I
Mlftf Ott K«lnt. W1Mla1M I, Peck•rd I Hllftlmt: Mltslon Vltlo, 2-1
Matlr Del 4, Ila a 101 a.di I
Mltef Del tc«lne PICktrd 1, Wlllilm\ 2,
1tobi1..., 1. Goelit "'"'· Ammenn • HunliNtol'I ltecfl SCOl'IM SllOll I. Goelle
Ml,,. Miiier •.
Halftlmt: Miter Del, 1·0
......,, ......, J, ...... CP..-) I
Ntw90rt Hartl« sc.orlne Wtllltr I, klllrMll
I, All..., t. Ooellt N'llft' Kltffl .... ""'9rd ..... N'llft: COllflflo S Helltlmt Ntweert Hlt1Mlr, J·O .......................
Ntwoort .... .... """· l(tlln 1 Sime AN IOlllt N'llft' "-1111 2
Hlttl scMtt 91ttS
OCEAN VIEW TOUllNAMllNT
Flnt ·~ Minion Vltio •. BlsllOo Monteomerv o Huntington Beacn def. San Clemtnll, .,.n11
kicks
Foonteln v111ev def. L• Qulnl•, oenenv ktc
LOI Alamitos 2, CYOl'ess 0
CO!'Olll dlt Mar def. H1wthorne, .,.n11 kicks
I: MOdlft• l, Unhter<v 0 Dena HlllS 7, LllluM HiHs 0
Esoeran11 4, MArlne O West TO!'renct 3, Wtttmlnster O
Ocean View dlf. 5onor1, oen•llY kicks
Maltf Ot1 l , Temole City l
Editor! 2. P110s VerdH 0
Simi VllleY I, South T«ral)Cf 0
Arcaella 3, AlerNlny 1
·-4, LOI Altos 1 C1p1ttr-Velley •· St. Joseoll 1 ~s.c...·-N\lu.on Vitio 3, Hutitineton heeh o
Los AlamllOI •. Foun111n Vllllv O
Coron. Ott MM" 2. El Mod9lll o
Dana Hiiis dlf. E'"'lllll. otnaltY kKks Octan v;.w I, Wnt Torrence O
Meter C' ti 3. Edison o
Simi V...., 3, Arcldla O
Ceolstreno V111tv dlf. Buenl, MlllllY kiclt c_,..._ s.c.. .....
l l"'°I> Montgomery 2r San Cltmtnte 0
L• Quint• o.t. Cyoreu, HlllltV kicks
H1wtt1orne 3, Unlvers!IY I LffUlll Hiib o.t. Marina, l*ll!IY kicks
Wntmlnster def. Sonora, torl91t
El OOl'.00 2. Palos VerdtS 0
-·~. ; -.__,
NHL STANDINGS c ........ c. .......
SmvtM DMslen w L T "" GP: G
Calgary 2• 7 5 53 150
Kines 24 13 l ~ 200 IS
Edmonton 20 13 • " 171 14
V•nc01Jver ... 19 5 33 l23 12
W innipeg 13 l4 6 , 32 136 l4
Nerm Divtsieft
Detroit 11 t2 5 ... 145 13
SI. Louis 14 IS 6 )4 m 1l
Minnesota 11 " 6 21 m 13
Toronto 12 23 2 26 ... 1
Cl'tic890 9_ 23 4 22 139 17
Walft C•••ice Patrklt DMllM
Pitts«>uroh 22 l1 3 47 169 NY Ranoers 19 1• s 4J ·~ Wasttlnot011 11 14 5 41 126
Pl'tlledetol\la l9 11 2 40 154
NewJtrsev 13 l7 7 33 127
NY Islanders 9 24 2 20 105
Adwfti Dlvl"9n
Montr .. 1 2• 10 6 S4 156 Boston 14 IS 9 37 111
8uffal0 15 l7 4 )4 126 Quebec 13 21 3 29 132
Hartford 13 20 2 21 123
TueMeY's SC-
Montrtal 3, !(Ma 2
W1st11ne1on •. PN~ 3 NY Reneers 7, New Jersey S
1 1 1-:
2 0 o-:
) Orange C0Mt DAILY PILOTIW~. OecemOer 21, 1NI -
I c ;, ' , B .1 ) ~ l I b .1 ' .
OCCJllOt'i
Top-seeded Barons breeze t0 v:ictocy Wni:I.0
7&4
throw line. Debbie F1~her scored 20 points and ountatn Va ey eases past Esperanza;
_hosts Vtkes~Chargers fall in first round
llalella M, Mariu 51: The Vikings Stephanie Moorman added 16. but
mounted a fu rious rally in the second the Charaers (2-6) came up Just shon half. but ran out of steam against the a~inst the Bruins.
Kn11hts. Mater Del U, Valncla U : The
The Mustangs w111 meet on n
Torrance at 8 o'clock this evening m a
second-round game.
Estucla n , Cypress 38: Utt 10
their best start m four )ears. the
Eagles 1mpro,ed to 8-2 by winning
the opening-round game.
' Top-seeded Fountain Valley Hi&h
eased into the second round of die
Marina-Edison girls basketball tour-
nament Tuesday with a convincing
56-29 decision over Esperanza at
Edison High.
The Barons (6-5) next meet Foot-hill. a 49-31 victor over Lakewood
Tuesday. in the championship quar-
terfinals at 5:30 today.
Fountain Valley used an 11-0 run
in the second quaner to assume a
27-13 halftime lead. but the Aztecs
(3-6) climbed back into contention at
34-27 early in the fourth quarter.
The Barons. however. put the game
away by scoring 22 of the last 24
points in the game.
Manna fell behind 16-2 at th e end Monarchs advance to play Long eight of her points m the second of the first quaner and 30.10 1n the lkachWilsonat 8:30 tonight.as Kell>
quarter. first half before staging a comeback. O'Brien scored 21 paints and Con In other pmes at the Marina-The Vikmgs pulled within 41 -39 after Manin added 12 •
Edison Tournament: Christa Yorke hit the first basket of 1n the Costa Mesa Tournament:
Oceu View n, Loara 0 : The the fourth quaner and later were Cotta Mesa 5%, Y•cca Valley 40:
Patrice Lumpkin had 15 rebounds
to go with her game-high 17 po!nts
and Melod) Earle poured an 14 points Seahawks had to hold on after within one at 43-42 before Katella The Mustangs utilized a full-court
building an I I-point halftime lead ( 10.1 ) tallied the next six points to man-to-man press 10 build a 30-12 In othertoumaments:
and advanced to meet El Toro at 1 regain control. halftime lead and cruised to the Uaiverslty $5, Escondido H : The
and had s1A steals.
tonight. Junior Melisa Son1no led Marina opening-round .. 1ctol) to even their Trojans romped 1n the first round of Loara (8-4) sliced the deficit to j ust (9-3) with 20 points followed by Li sa record at 4-4. the Orange Glen Tournament tn
two at 4S-43 in the final 26 seconds. Orosco with 10. Marina recovered The visitors managed 10 cut the Escondido behind an 18-point per-
but Jenny Sullivan netted a pair of from a ~r shooting first haJf (5 for margin to 12 in the second half. but formance from hellev Davis.
free throws with seven seconds re-24) to hit 56 percent from the floor an that was as close as the~ "Ould come. Pomoaa SI, Newport ttanor 41:
maining to secure the win for the the final two quarters. Mauree n Moore led the way for The Sailors ( l ·9) were eliminated
Seahawb, now 10.2 overall. Senior Joni Easterly paced Katella Costa Mesa with 24 points. Denise after their second loss in the Ganesha
Sullivan ~ored 14 points and had with 33 points. including 21 in the Surmon added. 10 and Kim Good Tournament. despite a career-high
23 rebounds. j unior forward Fabiola first half. contributed 12 assists and 11 re-scoring output of 22 points from
SAN DIEGO-TheOranaeCoasi
.Collete men's basketball 1eam hen·
efitte<I from an unusual .. ea&Jll·point"
etay and v.ent on to defeat Phoenix
Collcae. 78-45. an the semifinals of the
San Daeao Mesa Tournament Tun-
day night.
The Pirates were leading by 12
paints 1n the second half when they
hit a shot. an intent ional foul wa~
called. as well as a pair of technicals
on a Ph~nax player. Sax foul shots
were convened and OCC was sud· denl> breezing.
.. It "as an unusual play:· said
Coast Coach Tand> Gillis. who~
team improved to 14-3 overall enter-
inJ ton1ght"s 6 o'clock fi nal apinst Rio Hondo.
The Pirates led onlv 32-26 at
halfu me. but qu1ckJy stre tched it to
12. setting up the bizarre series of foul
Stacy Hisaka. who scored 17
paints. hit three 3-point shots and had
shots. Nunez added 13 paints and Cosette Loa1 'Beacb Wilson 45, Edisoa U: ho11nn 1un1or point guard Alt lzumita.
Smith had tO. Ocean View enjoyed a .-----------------------------------------------------
21-6 scoring advantage at the free-HUGE SALE
HEART-TO-HEART •..
Pl'OldBl
tonight when Estancia provides the
OP(>C?.Sition. The Eagfes seniors were
Reid's sophomores when he left.
including sharpshooter>Mike Curtis.
Curtis scored 17 points in what is
still remembered by Estancia Coach
Tim O'Brien as the victory which put
him over the .500 mark at 14-13 last
~ason.
That was the43-35 "lead" Estancia
enjoyed in a non-league game which
was stopped with 6:20 lefi when
Laguna Aills Coach Dave King took
his team ofTthe court after a fight
erupted in the stands and across the
floor.
It was ruled "no contest" by
Estancia Principal Bob Francy. a
move which helped King remain at
Laguna Hills without sanctions from
the CIF. but as far as O'Brien was. and
is.concerned. it's a .. W .. forthe
Ea&) es.
Cunis was also instrumental in the
other meeting between the two
schools when he scored 19 poi nts in a
59-51 win in thc.-Coast Christmas
Classie last December. a game in
which O'Brien labeled Laguna Hills·
with "the better players" and his own
unitas "the bctterteam."
Both sidesarecOU}lting that one as
a "W'~r Estancia. As f4 tonight's game, the Hawks
enter th a starting unit which
includes four-year starter Chris Sheff
( 19.3 ppg).guard lkau Hossler( 1.i.6).
6-4 Pat Nelson ( 12.9). 6-6 Trent
DeVreugd(9. l)and 6-3 Billy
Schellenbcrg (8. 3).
Estancia counters with a quickness
that can match Laauna Hills.and an
outside game which is unmatched.
Curtis isaveragini 25.5 points a
game. Augustin Heredia has scored in
double figures in seven of nine starts
(13.9average): Tim Kjar dropped in
21 on Monday and showed 3-pai n t
range, and Paul McDaniel. Andy
Scholes and Mike Haas blend to give
the Eagles that fam iliarcrazed-
tempo.
COAST CLASSIC. • • Prom Bl
feet out to tie the game at 4H.
• Coronadel Mar couldn'tget offa
shot in the 1ast 30 seconds. but got a
bucket from Chris Pliha with one
second left in the first overtime to tic
it at 54. • Delfs hit a pair from the line and
a 3-paint shot. but Warren Johnson.
who scored 24 for Corona. tied it with
a pair with 25 seconds left in the
second ovenime. Delfs' attempt with
no time left missed.
•Jackson's 16-footer with 16 sec·
onds left in the third overtime kept it
going.
• And in the final segment. the Sea
Kings took a 6 7-65 lead with three
free throws. the last by Johnson with 30 seconds left. but Aaron Earnest. a
reserve who didn't get into the ~me
until the founh quaner. dropped an a
3-pointer with 16 seconds left for the
winner.
In other first-round games 'Tues-
day:
EdlHD "· MiHIOD Viejo ·~: For awhile. it appeared that maybe 11 was
. a game nei 1he~c1ally wa~ted.
inasmuch as the reward to the victor
was a date with No. I -seeded and
undefeated Santa Clara tonight at
5:20 in the cham pionship quar-
terfinals.
But in the en~. a_fter M1ss10.n Viejo had drawn to within 40.39 with I :56
left it was Edison High's Chargers
who responded with the win ning
effort to claim the decision.
"We just refuse to do anything
easy •• said a slightly beleaguered Jon
Borchen. the Edison coach. "Dave
Brown (Fountain Valley) has played
Mission Viejo twice and those games
were ugly. too. It was just a tough
game."
It was also a typical game for the
Chargers ina smuch as they were able
to get it done with balance.
Although they scored just 46 pain.ts
in the victory. four staners were an
double figures -Art Baird the lead~r
with 12. Bryan Murphy at 11 and 8111
Martineau and Steve Thobc-at 10
each. It was different only in th~t
Martineau was held to less than his
14.0 average.
Edison improves to 5· 7 overall and
1t helps soothe some wounds picked
up at the Fountai!l Vall~Y. lnv1ta·
tional when M1ss1on VieJO dealt
Edison a 52-40 setback in a game
Borchen labeled as his team's worst
elTon of the season.
It also sets u_p Ed ison's toughest
assianment of December with 10.0
Santa Clara. wh ich boasts 6-foot-5
Rim of the World transfer Shon
Tarver and 6-foot-7 Bubba Barrage.
Tarver is exceptionally tlu1d and
Bubba is as big and strong as his name
implin.
"We'll ti)'. Bryan Murph) on
Tarver first. • said Borchert. "We'll
have to play very sound to play w11h
them." Suta Clan M, Cyll'ftt $1: The
top-seeded Saints jumped to a. I ~-2
lead at the outset, but then fell v1cum
to some complaccncv and some
aroused play by the t'yprcss Cen-
tunons before sctthng for the c1ght-
point bulge. "We played pretty spotty. I 1h1nk
too much turke)' ... said Santa Chara
COICh Lou C'v1Jano\lch of his 10-0
Saints. .
Cypress pulled to w11h1n 43-40 1n
the third quarter and was still w1th11,
flvt with 2:30 lc1' (.S8-S3) bcfo~
Tarver took over to S<:Ore the Sa1n11
last aaht po11m. . T1rvtr led all ~orcrs with JO
potDIS. f L '.&.. •• ••f ~IS rtlll)'_ proud 0 OUf atu..
11td C'yprns Coacb Kt\•.n Lonu
.. Senta ('Iara 1 "-l111matl'
Cyprns fell to -· 7 ~nd ~a' ap1nst
M1ss1on Viejo at 2 in the consolation
round today.
Loq Bead! Jordu H, Costa Mesa
4%: The Panthers took off runn ing and
never stopoed in moving their record
to 6-2 with four players sconng in
double figures.
Mesa. short on numbers and rid-
dled by flu . got 28 points from Tim
Nguyen. but very little elscw~ere with
Tuan Vu the nex t leading scorer with
five points.
The loss drops Mesa to 2-6 and into
the consolation bracket against ,Cor-
ona del Mar this afternoon ..
Santa Ciera u , cvsaress SI
(CMlt Cllril9ml1 OHM<)
Sallta a.re c~" "' • !9 "o "'3 •, T'rlnl"•CI I 2 3 11 S1nt1na • -Ttrv., n 4 o 30 Flowen 2 0 4 4
McGill S 0 2 10 JOMson I 4 2 20
8urr1111 7 2 s 16 Gr""sllen 0 2 I 2
Ctemons O O I 0 Smith 2 2 l 6
Cole o 2 2 2 810bit O O 2 O
L1io11 0 0 0 0 Rice J 0 I I
How1rlh 0 0 0 0
Toti ts 1' a 13 " To111s 23 10 16 SI
~ ... ou.nen S.n11 Ci.rt n 13 10 21-66
Cvpr'tu I It 14 17-SI •
3·POinl ooets. S.n11 C .. r-Ta~ 2,
Cvprtu-tli« 2.
Ttc1mlc1ts: None.
Edison 46, Mission Viele 42
(CMst Cllmtmel Cleuk)
E._ MlaUlll VIiie
ThOtll ~rlinffU
Murllllv
A 811rd
Tavltf
Smv1«
C1rev
COIC:lou9h
"""'"' flltofllt 2 6 4 10 Tinner 4 I 3 10
4 2 2 10 E Cr 111*' 2 4 2 I
S 1 3 II AmtVI 3 3 2 9
2 I 4 12 M.Cr1mer 4 2 s 10
O 0 0 0 ~-I I 3 l I I 2 J 8utcl'lll.o 0 2 2 2
0 0 0 0 W1!111t 0 0 I 0
0 0 0 0 W111lem1 0 0 I 0
LKel'llOfa 0 0 l 0 Tol~S 14 18 IS 46 TOlllS 14 13 22 42
Sur• W OVllfWn
Edtson 1 IS 11 ll-4
M1n1on Vit lo t 6 11 ltr-42
J·oo1n1 ooets. MV-Tanlllf' I,
Ttthnicall None
L.,.. ... dt Jerdan 16, CeSfa Mesa 42
(CMst Clwlltmel 0.uk)
L ... IMdl _... C..• ~
Livinston
Merlin
Mitchell
Morris
RMCWvell Woocts
Arlonl K.8rown
M8rown
8rvant
Kln9 Totals
........ """'· 2 0 I 4 Vu 2 0 2 S
Jo 2 7 T Neuven 9 6 1 7'
6 I 0 IJ LMflV 2 0 2 4
4 02 1 larnn 1022 4 0112 l unllll 0010
I 0 4 2 Omav. 0 I 0 I
2 0 0 S PNeuven 0 0 I 0 6 3 0 IS H NllUVlll 0 0 I 0
221 • OltMM 10 1 2
S I 1 II
I I I l
l6 I IJ .. Tot.ii IS 1 ll 42
k .. llJv °"""" I Lon9 8ffch JOfdln 1' 17 lS 25-N
Costa ~ 1 II I 16-4,
l ·PGonl eoet1· JOrdan-tto'"°'oueri 4 Ari!,,. I, Mlldltll 1 Cotll l'Mw-T Neu~ 4. Vu I Tec!Wlic ... ,._
0-....... CertN ... ~ .. '1 cc..e O.•••• o. ... , 0...... C...•Mlr ....... .. .... o..f\ s • 1 17 , ..... lflle • s s l.S
LIOYCI S 1 S 17 HtrMefOll 2 'l S • Fldellf 2 • S 11 Jectl *I 1 I. l. 3
Soiruoco l 1 J • Wefl 2 l s S
Etrllftl 2 S I IO •J110t_,1 i M 1 'l•
T1¥tor 0 2 l I ,.._ J 2 ~ I
0'"""' 1 1 S t "'-i1ttl1 I I 0 I Jollnloll 0 I I I M9l1llr I 'l J 4
Kchndr1t I 0 • I --w• I • 1
Tollllt II 11 IS• "llllllt •ft• ..
0.. ........ ,
C.,... •,,,., i II ,:.=-, =.= ........ ,.., I.._ c... .........
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69!,~
M 0rMge Co.I DAILY PILOT/ Wednesd•y. December 28, 1918
'Pax Centurions' are the makers of peace on Eart
People rcachina out to touch
others, honorina the richness and
diversity of all people rcprdless of
their politics. race. creed, reliaion or
nationality.
This is a Jood time of year to talk
about this kind of brotherhood and ...
l'aJ< Centurions.
What exactly is a Pax Centurion ?
.. You cannot buy one ... you cannot
wear one. But with the ri&ht state-of-
the-mind, you can surely BE one ...
says Penny McManig.al, the Newpon
Beach rcsidcnt~nd anist who coined
the term.
"A Pax Centurion is first and
foremost a &;>Cace .Juardian who
accepts for himself/herself the re-
sponsibility for helpina to make this a
better world ...
..A Pax Centurion understands that
in order for our planet to survive. the
basic inherent aoodness in life needs
to be celebrated."
The world's people surely haven't Soviet Armenia.
disappointed McManigal in their The Soviet Union is in mourning.
rallying efforts on behalf. of t~c Flags arc at halfstaff in Moscow. and
homeless earthqua ke survivors 1n all public entertainment has been
~-------------------------------------------------.
canceled. But the rest of the world has
also responded in an unprecedented
Pu Ctnrurian fashion.
U.S. plann carrying relief special-
ists. rncue dop, and sua>phes were
dispatched to Armenia. h 1s the first
U.S. aovernment-aid effon to the
Soviet Union since the end of World
War II, when the two countries were
wartime allies qainst the Germans.
Other nations have reacted official-
ly, quicklY' and acnerously to the
Soviets' formal request for aid.
Even more notable. however, were
the people-to-people efforts. Pnvate
citizens from all around the world
have responded·
A special reporter for the New York
Times in Moscow alto noted the
aenu~ne c;>~tpourina by ordinary
Russaan citizens.
The Communist peny newspaper,
Pravda, wrote, "Plane-loads of·
donors' blood arrived. But whose
blood is it -Tan.rs or Russians.
Ukranians or Byelorussians -
doesn't make any difference because
we all on this planet are of one blood ...
Just lut monih. Penny McMa •
visited Ruuia to meet Soviet arti
In tMI role she -bendf I .. ~t." Her painiina. ''Pace for our e
dttn" lial been ldected by the YOU
Ambasudon of America 10 be liv
to President Mikhail S. Oorbecbev
Moscow I.his April II I You
Summit . It is the Pu C.:entunons ltnOlll
who are the sdf~led pu
of peace on Earth. They
people-to-peopk miracles.
Time for your
massage break UNWINDING
ACT NOW
Saw an extra
~
~ --------,--------~--
Early Bird Special
5!!!*2
on our~,.,.,..pad.111,
plusa"-10.13.
=*1495
HUUTl_,.eoGeNOW
Author says it's
the natural way-
to reduce stress
By SUSAN FIELD
D911r .... Ceftl 11 I •al
O verworked. gridlocked. stressed-
o ut America is having a nervous
breakdown. according to Gordon
lnkeles. But he has a solution. ·
"It has become a choice between
drugs or massage. It is not eno ugh. to
say ·no' to drugs. We must give
something else that will work. and
that is massage."
lnkeles is the author of .. Unwind-
ing," a new book which maintains
that stress can be controlled by
application of a few massage strokes
on specific parts of the body. "This is
a book to learn massage, and to realize a profes$ional does not need to be
hired. This is something to do to each
other," lnkeles said.
lnkeles predicts massage breaks
will someday replace coffee breaks in
American industry, and says it's
already happening. "Corporations
such as Apple and Pacific Bell have
professionals come in to give
massages."
" ... Massage therapy is goina into
the workplace because 11 1s an
alternative to stress that works."
"Unwindina" says the effects of
massage arc panicularly impressive
in situations where people must sit
and concentrate for long hours.
Massase helps alleviate fatigue and
increases endurance. the book says.
It provides illustrated instructions
for three-minute massages designed
to provide relief from headaches.
neck and shoulder pain, lower back
pain and sore feat ..
The book also includes techniques
for reducing nervous tension and
insomnia, thus prevenling wrinkles
and worry lines.
Massage therapy treats stress not as
a mental condhion bul as a physica l
one. According to tllis approach. the
body has trapped toxins inside the
muscles. There arc a few ways to get
rid of the toxins. One is to wait until
the body has relaxed , which can take a
long time. Mas.sage accomplishes this
relaxation in minute'S. according to
"Unwinding."
Evidence of the release of toxins
after massage has been established by
urine analysis, lnkeles says.
Stroking is a basic stress-oontrol
technique to bring OXYJen to the
tissues. According to .. Unwinding, ..
kneading then squeezes waste out of
the tisues. Friction is applied to
lubricate the joints and reach internal
organs. Percussion then soothes the
nerves and boosts circulation to a
The Art of Sensual~
GORDON INKELES
In .. Unwlndtna. •• Gordon Inkelee •howa how to reclace
•treee tJlroaCh m•••ae.
,....,...,,,,.. large area. Finally, stroking clears all .__ ______________________ __, _______________________ --. the waste and brings oxygen to the
blood.
'Massage." Since then he has writte
''The New Massage," .. Massage an
Peaceful Pregnancy," and now .. Un
So Do Ir ANn GET2 YEARS FoR 1. AND PAY NornING FOR 30 DAYS.
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Now its January. Again. Don\ go through Doesn\ that sound promising?
another year of guilty promises. When you can join Fadlities may vary and some restrictions
the most accomplished health dub in America and apply. Stop by any Holiday S.-today for a &ft
get 2 years for the price of I. And not have to come pat tour.
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1122 -..... CISTI •U-541-1151
The author became interested in
massage with his first experience. a
full body massage. He became
licensed and began to Leach massage.
His students wanted a book on
massage techniques. lnkeles said, so
in 1972 he wrote "The Art of Sensual
winding."
"Unwinding" contains consider
able nudity. which lnkelcs says wa
necessary for effectively teachin
massage. "Unwinding" has bee
chosen as a Book.of-the-Month Clu
selection.
* Travel in . fast company.,
After Cllrlstmas Clearance Salel . .
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• Cabrlolel.... .................. _. 813,400 · New • Golt 4dr .................... •.•1
TWo to .... "°"'· "1212, 1213 Nf "1220
• Quentum ......................... 113, 100 New Venegon ....................... t1..-
••225 NI, 1 ..... • 12UI
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I• a.. .... f""'8J
7111• I • ........ ~
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17141
I
J .. •
'
U.S. sales
~-·homes
r ·O>ound
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sales of u= homes ro~ 1.1 percent in Nc.~r. the first advance since
r'1:tysas credited the rebound. in
pan, to the stron& participatio n of
baby boomers in the housing market.
sayiaa their numbers alone should
helpiftpsales steady in 1989despite
forecaau ofhi&)ler mortgasc rat".
The National Assoc1at1on of Re-
altors uid on Tuesday that existing
sin .... family homes wert sold at a
scaloMlly adjusted annual rate of
3. 71 minion units in November.
compared 10 an October sales pace of
3.61 million units. s.tes bad shown no improvement
at alt iB 9ctober after dropping by I. I
percent in September.
Sales of new homes have been
risin1as well. In October. sales of new
sinale-family homes climbed to
731.tm units, the highest level in 20
months. The government will repon
new home sales for November on
Friday_
AMlysts attributed the sales upsw-
ing in pan to a growing number of
buyen an the marlcetplace.
"The fact is. the bulk of the baby
boom is now being felt in housing
markets across the co unt[)'," said
John Tuccillo. chief economist for the
Realtors group ... The strong pace of
existing home sales in November 1s
more i tribute to the numbers of
buyers out in the market than 11 is to
any particular .shon-term economic
condilions ...
The November gain was the first
increase since a 2.2 percent rise last
Ausust. -v
The price of an existing home
Existing
Home Sales , ........ ~-,,...ol-
0 JF .. A UJ JA SO N '"' ,_
Nov. ·a1 ca. '88 11ov. ·a I 3.37 1 l 3 .s1 11 3.11 I
edged down slightly 10 $87.900 in
November. compared to an October
median price ofS88.100.
Tuccillo said he expected home
sale prices nauonally to mcrea.sc 4.8
percent for aJI of 1988, aboul in line
with the ov~rall rise in consumer
prices. That would be down from a 6.6 percent price increase recorded in
1987.
The West was the onl y region of the
countrvd reponing a month-to-month
sales echne. a 7 percent setback.
which left the annual sales pace at
660.000 units. sttll nearly 18 percent
higher than a year ago.
ln November. the sales increase
was l~d by a 4.6 percent n~e-in ales in
the Nonheast. which cli mbed to an
annual rate of 680.000 units. up 3
percent from a year ago.
OrMge Coat DAILY PtLOTIWedneed8y, Deoefl\lber 21. 1W -
Most ATM users will pay within two years
Banking industry analysts predicting
charge for each transaction will spread
checluna customers. BofA cuscomns acuon for ATMs at their owa-...
who keep .. leu than SSOO in thrir and aa avcn,e of '° IO 7S ClllllS •
checkana accounts will have lO pay 30 machines on a net~ daat ICICIPll
cents for each A TM transaction. bank cards from other institutions.
A smaller pc~ntaat of customers A TM fees are the newest featuR oe SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Auto-
mated teller machines may do the
same thin& human tellers do. but
thef rc not aoana 10 do 1t for free -
not for long and not for everyone,
anyway.
According 10 banking industry
analysts, most ATM users will have
to pay for the service within two
years. the San Francisco Chronicle
reported Monday.
The Bank of America joined many
banks nauonwidt last month when 1t
imposed A TM fees on a quancr of its
at other m-.ior banks arc now payu,1 a hst of h1Jher c~ that buks
fees. But some anaJysts believe the have bttn 1mposina for bounced
chaf)tS eventually wdl apply to all checks. money orders. sa~ ~I A TM usen. boxes and other services. Some feel
'"Banks had huac barriers to over-have doubled in the put four yan.
come to tct people to use the accord1na to Sheshunofflnfonnauon
machines, t>ut once they became pan Services of Austin, Tex.as.
of the ~merican consumer's financial The A TM fees have paniculuty
habits, (banks) began to look for wa ys stunned consumer advocates becaute
to charge," said John Love. publisher banks are already savina moo:q by
of Bank Network News. using the machines instead btrina
Analysts say A TM users of the human tellers. w~ I~ future who make 80 transactions a The machines cost $30.000 to •'' a:; year will be charged an add1t1onal $40.000 each. They cost bank.I one-",•,J l1 S40. Love said banks will be charging quartertoonc-balfas much as human •'f il• '~ ,_c_u_st_o_m_e_r_s _2_s_t_o_J_s _c_e_n_ls_pe_r_t_r_a_ns_-_t_e_11_e_rs_. _Lo_v_e _a_nd_o_•h_e_r_a_n_a_ly_s_ts_sa_id_.
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l?~ l~P. Jl .. ll'• 21 • 21l· 2 1 2\o
•
The Beat Kept
Secret In Town
DECEMBER SI, 1988
v Special Menu I-' Music
v Fun I-' Frolic
Don't Miss It!!
Rese"'ations tarting 7 p.m.
Rew"atiou ( 714 )650-17 50
428 E. I 7th 1 •• Co.ta Mesa
r
THE Arr OP ENGUSH AND BENCH COUNTKY
PEIFEt'TED AT RAUL DESIGNS.
AFTER~ ef~
OPEN MONDAYTHRU SATURDAY
10:00 AM TO 5:00 PM
••
\
88 * Or8nQ9 CoMt OAJLY PtLOT/ Wedneeday, o.c.tnbet 28, 1988
NYS E CoMPo s11 t T RANSAc110Ns
WEDNllDAY'I CLOllNG
WHAT AM EX Dio
NEW YORK (AP) Dec. 21 NEW YORK CAP) Dec. 2t 4••,
~~~d l 1 ~·~d ~-~·=1 II nc•~ru:s h nged .... ot••'pues .... • 1 New ~gtis ,, la ~ewt11gtis
New ws ew lows • •
AMlX LEADER S
11 G 0 l D Q u 0 1[ s
, MET ALS QuoHs
NEW YORK (AP) -Flnel ~ Jones
vereoes tor wi~ ....... tp~: .12 :ff .' ~: '~ Iii u1 a'1~~ ~~·!~-···:a1
1 NASDAQ SuMM 1Rv
NYSE UPs & DowNs OTC UP s & Dow~s
•
•
~way they were
ll9lanie Griffltb and Don John.on nr::-red t~::er lut _..at tbe premiere of lier new , "Wor Girl."
Jel!Deon'• pabllclat Kid tbe couple. who were mamed in lfJ.8 and .epuated 8bortly afterward. will re-many. JiiaMD mon recently wu llnked romandcally wttb
Bjjka Strelaand.
. ~~parating facts and
JDJ'ths in tile Bible -lll)g ANGELES (AP) -After m~han 2.000 years, 1he mystery
aiW magic surrounding the Bible has
-nQt abated.
Historian-"BTChaeologist Johrt-
Romerexamines the Bible in a seven-
part series for the Discovery Channel
that auempts to determine what is
fact and what is faith. "Tes1ament: T~blc: and History" begins at 6
P·riii°i"d•Y· :El>t of our knowledse is based on
..W1ic structure:· said Romer, an
En~ishman who lives in Italy and EV~ "The ~rouble is that so many of
our .. saumpt1ons are wrong.
"W'?'ve given up our old myths. so
now We have an archaeologist tellin_g
uubOut the Bible. A few years a$O 1t
would'have been a preacher fron11n(~
doctf'alentary on the Bible. And 200
ycarslgodou would have been killed
1f yotr5ai the wrong thing:· John Romer ezamlnes the
DAILY PILOT/Wedneed9y, Oeoember 21. ,._ .,
If TV is your date for New Year's
NEW YORK (AP) -Unless
you're compelled to spend New
Year's Eve knee-deep in honki"f.
confetti-hurlin1 stranaers, there s
plenty of entertainment right at home
wilh 1 loyal friend who's been tbere
for you an Y.ear -your television set.
II doesn t hand out party favors or
free champagne, but Saturday ni~t
TV offers an array of musical specials
featuring, among others this year,
Johlhn Strauss. Placido Dominao. Mel Torme, Reba McEntirc. Man-
hattan Transfer, Robert Plant and
Hall &. Oates.
Public television is especially busy.
Check local listings with the big-band
sounds of" Happy New Year U.S.A.!" and Mel Torme; and "Live from
Lincoln Cen ter" with Zubin Mehta.
Placido Domingo and the New York
Philharmonic.
On Sunday. the Vienna
Philharmonic has its fifth New Year's
special on PBS. this time fca1uring
conductor Carlos Kleiber and a
program of Strauss music. Walter
Cronlutc is once apin host of the
special.
At a recent luncheon to publicize
"From Vienna: The New Year's
Celebration 1989," Cronkite recalled
that last year's ta pins of his introduc-
tion -from a balcony overlooking
the staae before the conccn bcpn -didn't exactly stir the holiday spirit in
everyone .
.. Last year. a harpist -more harpy
than harpist -showed up very early
to tune up her harp. Every time I &ot
up to say anything. the harp 1tarts
aoing." said Cronkite. ··we sent a
runner down askina her to desist for
five minutes. No. not for TV.
"I always thought the harp was
kind or a gtntle instrument. Not in
her hands. It was a trumpet of Jericho.
We sent tile managtment of the
house, in tails. She still was not
moving.
"Then two stage hands came out
and picked her up with the harp and
carried her out of the hall. outside
somewhere."
The show went on. as it will this
year. Jnc1Mntally. Cronkite's favorite
waltz 1s "The Blue Danube." He says
the Austrians might write them, but
Americans know the finer points df
dancing them. and he and his wife,
Betsy. impress the Viennese by re-
versing during a walu. ··They ap-
preciate this." Cronkite said. "Th~
have difficulty reversing in a waltz:
If you prefer to sec 1n the new year
getting down with some hard rock.
MTV offers ··Big Bang ··89." a
countdown of 1op videos. ~lose to
midnight on the East Coast. MTV
will go live to Times Square. where
comedian Sandra Bernhard will be
jomed by guests Gilbert Gottfried,
Roben Downey Jr. and Whoopi
Goldberg. among others. Then.
thanks to the magic or time zon6.
MTV will move to the West Coast for
its midnight celebrauon with com-
edian Sam K1nison as host and p1csts
who mdud~ roclcers Robert Plant.
Hall & Oates and Poison.
Want to rock but have no cable'!
ABC has ··o.ck Oark's New Yea,.1
Rockm' Eve '89," with live reports
fro.m Times Square on Saturday .
niaht. as well as the Cocoanut Grove
in Hollywood. fea1uring per-
formances by Natalie Cole. Taylor
Dayne, Richard Marx, Reba McEn-
ure and Frankie Valli IL The Four
Seasons. among others.
The Disney Channel will be rq>eat-
ing ·The Manhattan Transfer. Goins
Home." which 1sn 't necessarily a New
Year's Eve special, but featurn the
always welcome jazz sounds of the
famed vocal Q~rteL
Back oyer on PBS. Mel Tonne
returns for a second year as host of
"Happy New Year U.S.A.!"1 a bia-
band and Jazz show that ongjnatcs
live from Balumore. This year.
Torme 1s JOined by vocalists Rose-
mary Clooney and Lonetle McKee
and the Glenn Miller Orchestra.
There will also be ice dancing with
John Curry and JoJo Starbuck.
Samantha Fox is trying to have some fzin
NEW YORK. (AP) -Samantha says. "Everything I do I seem to ··1 Wanna Have Some Fun," her
Fox's latest hit single, "I Wanna Have entoy. I'm a really lucky r.crson to be third LP, 1s Fox's favorite album. She
Some Fun." expresses the young in JOb that I really enjoy. • also.alls it her best. ·· 1 think I've just
sinaer's carefree philosophy. Her sinr.Je is fast climbing the improved musically. You don't kno•·1
''Tm a very happy person. There chans. following the success of what sound is coming next after each
arc not many things that.really iipscl-"Nauahty Girls Need Love" an -rccord:' -me." the 22-year-old British rocker "Touch Me." The numerous produccn of ··1
"THI. L O'FOFTHE(i REATO'\f-"-..
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sit.SUI 511·9500 ~I~ 134.2S$3 , •T.oM7
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Wanna Have .SolT'-run" give the
album a special vanely m sounds and
styles. and includt Full Force, Fred
Zarr and the team of Stock.. Aitkin
and Waterman, who-also producc-
R1ck Astley and Bananarama.
OLIVER ICOWAIY IGI """ ........... ,
"AllMAll (It)
,..,,~r
TEQUILA
SU.ltlll UU
"°"l19111 .... C•I
AIJ.hough he looks for a historical Bible. foundation~ frequentl y examining .-------------..,,=--
biblital sites for evidence. Romer is ~"Ofoll"ll'"'~L<-4i•1tita1-._ .... llCA~ ....
also quite sympathetic to acceptance
onlauh alone. :.-w. insteao o A~am and . ~M~e social Oarwimsm." he said. "~.whole. I'd rather have Adam
and ~e. It deals with a story and is
constructed around issues ... 1:-bi first one-hour episode. "Once U~a Time." airs today. Friday and Su~tfy, and is about the origins of the
B~e.:• The second. "Chronicles and
IGW$." airing Jan. 8. e'amines the
acceracy or the Old Testament as
history. The third. ··Mightier Than
th&..»vord." is about the Hebrew
Bi ... .and the influence or Greece u~he writing of the Old Testa-~ The founh show. "Gospel
Tni&hr' airing Jan. 22. looks into the
hi$t'brkal existence of Jesus.
:·'there is no written evidence from
hi,.. own lifetime that Jesus ever
existed," Romer said. ··1 think the
most powerful indication or Jesus is
the church itself. Within a shon
period of time after his death the
church was established. That's in-
dication ofan incredible energy:· Jls fifth episode. ··Thine is the K~m." airing Jan. 29. is about
h.:Jhe Roman Empire was con-
vene<I to Christianity. The sixth .
"Power IL Glory," airing Feb. 5. looks
inrt>.'how Christianity and the Bible surii~cd the Dark Ages. And the final
show:'" Paradise Lost." aifin1 Feb. 12.
exaitiines what has happened to the
Bi< in the last few hundred years. ·~program is not only about the
Bi!zle but what is historically true."
sa1(l8omer. "It's ~inua~ly i.mpossiblc
to ~ve someth11\g d1dn t happen.
Yo-.jan't prove that Adam and Eve
didl"' exist. History 1s a scnes of
c,xpr.rienccs. Everyone sees some-
1h1111differcnt.
"])'le way t~is great boo~ has ~n tmor:d by kmp and pnnces 1s a
snaee>me tale. But what it docs gi ve
us 1S absolutely astonishing. The
BoaofGcnesis contains some orthe
oldftl stories in the world t But in the
lan1'l.tndrcd or so years the Bible has
~ea civic and scientific guide to ~iversc and man's society. The wa~~ lot of vicars use the Bible they
c:oUNI just as well use the Brothen
Grifttm." «omer has written . books on
a91 f&ypt and the Bible and has ~ oilier documentary series on
. He dircctrd the excavation of
tlit omb of Pharaoh Ramtn XI '"
79, and in 1979 co-founckd the
,.._n Foundation of Berkeley. c•. an organization dedicated 10 ~uon of the Royal Tombi of 118es. He has also worked on a.-.VUS archacol<>1teal "'Pfditions
l.nivers1ty of C'htCllO.
h\'cs an Italy but allO has I
\be Valley of tM Ku., an
IPCftl most of my 84uh lik in ...;a,y1islou• ,ountne5. .. ~•id . .. 1"1nedc a art•t 1mt)R'Ulon .
"See 'Twins' twice!"
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(PG-13)
1:15 3:305!451:00 10:15
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SCOUNDRELS (PG)
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-Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT I Wednesday, Deoemb« 21, 1988 •
by BU Keane COUJllT&R CUL TURlt by Maratta & Marana
"PJ's havin' a piggybank ride."
MARMADUKE
·~ '
by Brad Anderson
"My father says walking Marmaduke is all
the exercise he can handle."
PEAl'fUTS
1-tE'(. STUPID CAT! HOW
DO 'f'OU LIKE M'I NEW
WASTEBASKET 7
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THE NHvEST (oNDiM£Nf
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DErnns THE MENACE
1'2.-19
by Hank·Ketcham
by Charles M. Schulz
I 5MOULDN'T
MAVE 5066ESTEO
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by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
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DOOKltSBURY by Garry Trudeau
by Jimmy J<>!!.!00
A LOT Of taO& WMJU>1' PROUO~MA'4 A~~.' ?/'l~
by Lynn Joh~on
~·~ISNT~ Tl-EBESr~Y.
by Jeff MacNelly
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Battuk
WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 28. 1988 El
-~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~\~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Crumb Topped Clams
or..Oysten-~-
3 pnaDdl h llw' or llltlmeck dlllm
OR 2 ._. oy1ten In tiae-sbell,
well m llbbed
4 llk:ee --, coobd and cnunhled, lllft
2 tUle1pDGmolfllt
1/3 cup ftnely dlopped .,... onion
1/3 cup ftnelJ dlopped par*y
2 t1111h1, Dam --Juice
1/2 •• •poaa ....... lelnoa peel
1/8 twpoaa bottled bot pepper sauce
1 cup rtdl cncbr' cnunbl
1/4 cup anted....,_. cheele
Clw\WildcMI
lap the clams and discard any that do no(
cloee. Brina l /2 inch ..-r to boil in llJIC pot.
Add clams, COYer and sam just until shells pop
open, lbout 2 minutes. 1'ranUer to a ri.mmed
bUina sheet. Discard top shella. Loosen clams
and replace in juices in boaom <X shells.
~ green onion and parsley in t.con r.t
undl IOft, lbotd I milluee. ~ from beat
and add lemon j~ peel and hot pepper SIUCe.
Stir in cncker crumbs, Panneaan cbeae and
reserved t.con. With teaspoon, mound crumb
mixture <Mr clams, ptaSing gemly. Bake II
400° F ~ S minuees or until crumbs ue
.,&den brown. Mates about 36, 1-<XZ. CWm.
°'*" '\9rtldon
Shuck oyseers. Arrange on bating sheet.
Prepare crumb topping as abcNe and spoon ~r
oyaers, preasing aentJy. Bake It 400° F about
8 minut1ea or until oysten are just cooked and
crumbs are golden brown. Mates about 2
dozen appetizers.
umonDiU
Seafood Spread
2 pedr<f (Im. wla) MUte" cream
clnn1, llllh•1d
1/2 cup GGldell Dlpt9 I.anon Butter DID
c....._s...e
1/2 cup......, &Iced ..... --
1/2 tn.,aae Golda DI ... Lemon
PtpperS1• ....
2 cu .. (1 pound) lobater IMM, ftUed cnb
meat or a.nety dlopped surlml
letlfood, dlarouPl1 dnlDed
Combine cram cbeele, cookins uuce, green
oniom and -.oning. Stir in 1eabxl. Preas
mixture inlo ~ mold lined with plastic Wrap
or dampened c:b cac clodl. Qwer and cbill 4
houn or owaniabt-Uamold and prnisb with
flab dill or IJ1!ell onions. Senie with crackers
or melba .,_, Maka 4 cups.
. ,Spicy Marinat«l Shrimp
with AJ'OCtldo Dip
2-1/2 IO 3 PHIL ........ •1 JI I -.... ............. 1.
~ ..... c.-Style Slnnp
Mder..StMt I I
1 alfC1H11 ....-~Style ....__
1/Jmp._ ................ ..................
2 CHS I .. (6-. wll) r.._ 1MJCac1o ..........
Coot lhrialp wtlh S1wi11ip ..t Crab SeaMJD-
illl MUiliiilD,..... ....... ; ......
CanNDI ........ ---.... juice. ftJur
.... CMll' cooDd ...... Ccw-..S n6 ...
.... baun'or °"' IJb', a m .. flan
..-1 t ..S..,. wllla .i cModip. tf dlaind, ..... "' ............. »-75
-1 .~ ...
I
.. ..
Smoud Salmon with
Cucumber Dill Sauce
1/4 cap _,a ' e
l /4mp ..... ,....n
1/4 Cllp Goldm Dlpl9 Ltmoa ...... r CoM ... Swie
1 /2 aap flllely cllop,ed, peeled wt
teedecl cwmnher
l aablelpoom ( .......... frealt ..,..,.
2-1 /2 to 3 ,.,... smobd wllole salmoe or
odler smoked ... c .......... for..,,.....
lo.a ................ .
Combine rnl)'OflQaile, )IOIW1. cooking sauce,
cuannher and pmsley. CCNer and chill unlil
5el'Ving time. Place salmon on llJIC planer
prnisbed with cucumber slices and llmt poim.
Sef\'C sauce with chilled salmon. Makes about
20-24 appctizler servings.
l poulld1ea•..,.
1 /l mp Goldm ~Cajun Style
Barbecue s-ce, dhided
l ..... bell pepper
l red bell pepper
1 jar (10 m.)......, spiced
C!OdJteiloalom
15-20 medlllllHia a.mboo sbwas
Marinate scallops µi I /4 cup bubecuc saocc
b 30 minutes. Cut each pepper inro 1/2-inch
squares. Ren>O't'C scallops from marinade.
Arrange scallops and Yegdablcs on skewers,
alternating scallops. peppers. ~-(Kabobs
may be CCYCred and refrigerated Up to 4 hours
bebc cooking.) A~ kabobs on broiler put.
Brush wilh remaining bubecuc sauce. Broil
until scallops arc Of*IUC. approximalcly 4 to S
minutes. brushing with remaining barbecue
sauce halfwlly through cooking time. Makes
about 15-20 kabobs.
e~t Bn,nch
· Cock1ail
These arc a few easy ideas b making spirits
light and bright: '
• 10 b:q> punches cold and cause less dilulion.
use a block cL ice r1llhcr than ice cubes. 10
mike an ice block. freae Wiiier in an empl)'
milk coca.mer or baking pen .
• Dress up an ice block by addms n:d grapes
and bright citrus shces before freeziQg .
• Add Ptrrier and ocher ~ beYenges just
MflR ~ IO l'Clain bubbles.
• Offer peslS I party punch dlll is alcohol-free .
Pretty PenVr Punch
Jake from ' • 1113
.h6ce ,_... ' ..... .......... '""' ............ ~ 0..-.. ......... ...
-pp 4..._QJ._~._, ...
dllW
In a s-:11 ...... Oil l ii I ... jllice. .....
.iu!D ..S .... 9lir • I' ....... AIM .. )lice................... -
Pwriiir.Mli&lllllllCl ......
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Or!np COMt PMLY PILOT/ Wedneeday, o.c.mw 28, 1988
. atural
sources
best for
calcium
I The calcium in fortified foods is
not 111 available for ablorption as
calcium from natural sources. ac-
cordina to the California Dietetic
Association. Natural sources of calcium are
best, followed by fortified foods and
then calcium from supplements,"
said Linda Dahl, rqistered dieti-
uan and CDA president.
The Food and Drug Adminis-
tration has voiced strong objections
to claims that calcium in fortified
oranae juice is more readil)'. ab-
sorbed than the calcium in milk.
In recent years. calcium has been
one of the most frequent nutrient
additions to other foods.
.. These products have been
heavily marketed to capitalize on
the consumer's awareness of the
importance of calcium in the
prevention of such diseases as
osteoporosis," Dahl said.
According to CDA, consumers
don't have to rely on fortified foods
or supplements as there are enough
natural sources available.
Basing meals around the four
food groups -lowfat or skim milk
and CJajry foods: lean meat and
meat alternates; raw or lightly
cooked vegetables and fruits; whole
grain breads and cereals -will
provide for all nutrient needs.
especially calcium.
Dahl said that dairy foods pro~ide _rou&hly 75 perccf!t of the
calcium an die Amencan d1eL
"The ~blem with substituti.hg
calcium fortified cereal or orange
juice for a natural cakium source
such as dairy foods is that the two
are sources of com~tely different
nutrients." Dahl said.
.. Although lowfat or nonfat dairy
foods are the best source of calcium,
salmon (with bones), com tortillas,
spinach and broccoli are also
talcium sources," Dahl said.
YtYI OUIUI llo•tylffH., llllfl ti
AHMEIM
The Village Cen111
1222 So Broothuisl
92804 (11 Batt Road)
Phone (714) 635·2'61
COIOtlA DEL MAR
3700 E Coast Hwy 92625
Phone (714) 673-9000
uroao
24601 Raymond Way •2
(Bell Towet Plaza
North al El TOIO Road) 92630
Phone (7t4) 837·3822
MWT•TOlllUCH
19069 Beach Blvd 92648
(Next to Ralphs Market at Gar11eld)
Phone (714) 848·8575
Perfect '°' Company Gl!flng!
The great gift idea that gives a tasteful
performance whatever the occasion
-. This year let HoneyBal<ed.brand hams
represent your company, we've been
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With HoneyBaked brand hams
and Gift Certificates you can
dance through'that gift hs t
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• Belled tor over 30 hou
LAllAIU
, Sycamore Plaza
2428 W Whittier Blvd 90631
(1 ltght W ol Beach Blvd.)
Phone (213) 694-2114
OIANGE
1419 N Tustin
(at Ka1ella) 92667
Phone (714) 997-9960
• Hon.r Glued • SpnlSlced
(for eeey slicing)
• Party Treys
• Natk>nwtde Shipping
Gift Cettificetes
(redeemed nationwide)
Honeya.kedJHand h•m
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HoneyBak 1tore1.
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brandttams
"A Great Entertainer"
and a hard act
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(Tustm Plaze) 92880
Phone (714) 731-8816
• HONE~ED ••
.. • ~
I
I
I
0
~~,-1
Waffles 'Too Good to L'Eggo"
Golden crisp on the outside, tender on
the inside. With no preservatives.
iJust the taste you love to wake up to.
•M11DWC......,•1•ic-..~ -------------; ·MVE-
I ONANYl'IA~mr .J _..._. __ ._...._".:
... mAND ........
..
Some of our yearly ntuals.._.. loftl...,_aayomeaa
remember, and eome are recent.actidonl. Oneoftbc_....
American traditions i1 reduci .. ~ofalcobol. And
thanks to delicious moclnaill. the answer to mr
drinks, thilnewtndition i-.we~one.
Mocktails are easy to make once JOU ,et the idea behind
them. Instead of relyinJ. on liquor for ftavor, mocktails rely on
full-bodied beveraaes hke vqeaablejuice, mixed with anythina
from seltzers to spices to f rui ti.
The Sunset Mock tail, for instance, aetsa spicy kick fiom
horseradish and Worcestershire sauce, while the Cherokee utes
chili powderand taco sauce for its fiery navor. And since both of
these mocktails use nutritious vqetablejuice. they offer 1
doublebarpin:elimin1tionof1lcohol1nd1servin1of
vegetables in each six ounce al•ss. ·
And you don't have to be a culinary whiz to make delicious
snacks like Bubbling Cheese Bread. With 1 simple '7'0zzarella
cheese-based spread. you tum a loaf offrench bread into a
savory sensation in no time. ·
SUNSETMOCKTAIL
3 C11p1 c'1Ued vep&Ole J.teeor .. saltatNN •ea•taMe
JaJce
"' teal,... prepanMl lllenen4lU
'1ia tea1poM WorcestenMre ta11ce
Jn small pitcher, stirtoeetherall ingredients. To serve: Pour
over ice cubes in 10-ounceaJasses. Makes 3cupsor4servings.
Per serving: 36 calories.
CHEROKEE
1 np veaetable J•tce or .. talt added ve1etable J•lce
1 lellpoH lted Ullce .
1 tea1poom tea Nllce
'1ia te•••u• ,..... .... lleneradl1ll .,, .... , ... ,......cama.
14 ... ,,,. eMU ,.wHr
0. .. Lemliua-ttylellot Nllce
In small pitcher, stir toacther all inirC<fients; strain. Serve
over ice in 10-ounceglau. Makes I cupor I serving. Perservina:
65 calories.
BUBBLING CHEESE BREAD
'1ia c.,urd•e• meuarella daeeH ~ ~c., .. ,_ ....
'*-~···--.. --11Mf ( emcn) F....mkeM,blve4.._wlse
'1ia c., ....... Parmau elleete
In medium bowl, combine first three i"lf'cdients. Spread
chese5e mixture on cut side of each bread half. Sprinkle with
Parmesan cheese. Place on rack in broiler .-n, broil 4 inches
from heat J minutes or until bubbly and liahdy browned.
Cuteachhalfinto I-inch slices. Makesabout28appetizen.
Create classic dishes
with holiday leftovers
Traditional turkey pot pie or
plain turkey sandwiches are not the
only alternatives you have with
holiday leftovers. Your post-hol-
iday meal will be different and
dehcious when you use these
recipes created by the Kraft
Kitchens.
Center either dinner or lunch
aroun<I a Turkey Cheddar Pizza.
Or, try a variation on an old
favorite -tbe sandwich with Pesto
Turkey Sandwiches.
TUll&EY anmDil PIZZA ............
I t1•hlf 1• een 111M91
1 II 1•e1 -nfrlpratM ,....am :.::••*'-IMIOllaftl,
I~ ellfl ••H•• 111••...., .,,_"' .......... ,.".
IUtfl('ewtlllW
~ftlf ............... !::z<t 1•1iU•1H1I ...
... 1111111
. I ti I 1111 ..... .....
............ f4l1111•
Tasty dishes make dieting easy
Those utra pounds you on large bakina sheet. Bake SO
suapected you were courtina durina minutes or until chicken and
tbe holidays have appeared, and vegetables arc tender. Makes 6 ~·ve resolved to eat more spar· , servinas. Approximately 221
1naJy until they melt away. No need calories per servina.
to deprive yourself of the pleasures
of eatina. thouafl. These times call
for renewed attention to making
sm•rt food choices.
CHICltEN DIJON
1 .................. lktalt11
~ •rea•ts (abotlt 1 ,....,
t ~ ve1etable oll,
dlvide4
1 carnt, cat Lato J•Heue strips
1 ....... srea pepper, cat lato
Jalleme •trips
1 ...... P'ffD ODIODS, cat hlto Jlllleue strips
l e., didl• llndt ... a,*' wla.lle ...
t le I .... ., .... DIJ--etyle ••lari .
! &altlee,11u ee1111&ard
'iJ e11p mllk
Split chicken breasts in half; set
aside. tn large skillet heat I table-
spoon of the oil over medium heat.
Add carrot and pepper; cover and
cook 7 minutes. Add green onions;
cover and continue cooking 3
minutes or until v*tablcs are
tender. Remove from skillet.
In same skillet heat remaining I
tablespoon oil. Add chicken; cook
10 minutes or until browned on
both sides. Add chicken broth,
wine and mustard: bring to boil.
Cover, reduce heat and simmer
IS minutes or until chicken 1s
tender. Remove chicken to serv1n1
planer; keep warm. In small bowl
stir toaether cornstarch and milk
until smooth. Add to skillet. Stir-
ring constantly, brinJ. to boil over
medium heat and boil I minute.
Add veaetables; cook until
heated through. Spoon over
chicken. Makes 4 servin15. Ap-
proximately 254 calories per ser-
ving.
Most people already know that
fresh veactables. plain potatoes,
and chicken without the skin arc
staples oft he dieter's repertoire. But
these good. low.calorie choices
need a little boost to spark mid·
winter appetites that arc just as
hearty even though the scales arc
tipping. .---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~~----------------------.......
Country French Supper is an
imaginative way to build these
basic ingredients into a tasty,
satisfying, sin&le-servina meal with
the eye-appeal so important to the
dining experience.
Low.cal Chicken Dijon is
another recipe that turns ordinary
ingredients into an extraordinary
dish. Fresh chicken makes even tbe
most spartan meal as flavorful as
can be.
And chicken offers an excellent
balance of health benefits: it is an
important source of protein, but is
lower in calories, fat and cholesterol
than most cuts of red meat. A three-
ounce portion of chicken makes a
significant contribution to your
daily protein requirement, and
helps to provide .. the feeling of
fullness necessary to keep diet
resolutions strong.
COUNTRY FRENCH SUPPER
3 medJam petatoes, cat iJlto ~ -
lacll slices ' ,
1 pa~e otctn tll.lps (aboat
Z pouds), lkia removed
... Salt ud pepper to taste
3 carnts, cat l8to ell.Us
1 pond 1reea beus, cat ap
I medtam yeUow oaloas. qaar-
tered
I tablnpooas dry wla.lte wlae or
water
~ teaspoon clrled ~yme leaves
Z bay leavn, cnmbled
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Cut
6 (16-inch) pieces of foil. In center
of each piece of foil , arrange some
of the potatoes and 1 chicken thigh.
SCa1<>n with salt and pepper. Even-
ly divide carrots, green beans and
onions; add to potatoes and
chicken. Sprinkle with wine, thyme
and bay leaves.
Bring opposite sides of foil
together and fold over twice. Tight-
ly fold up ends to seal. Place packets
Quick-tips
for cooking
mushroom
Here are some quick tips for
creative mushroom cooki ng.
• Marinate whole. sliced-or
halved mushrooms in a good oil
and vinegardressi ng. Keep on hand
to add to salad greens, vegetable
side dishes. antipasto plates and
deli sandwiches.
• Saute sliced mushrooms in
vegetable oil. seasoninJ as desired
with garlic, herbs. chih peppers or
~ted citrus peel. Cool. then keep
refrigerated in covered container to
add fla vorto your favoritedishcsall
week. • Stuff colored bell peppers with
chopped or sliced. sautecd mush-
rooms in a spicy meat filling.
• Add flavor and elegance to prepa~ entrees by garnishing with
a few sliced, sautced fresh mush-
rooms.
MOST STORES OPEN NIW YEARS DA YI
ASSORTED
FLAVORS
Betty Crocker 10.5-0z. MWV
POP SECRET POPCORN .................. 1.79
.......
IHIMll .. AST
R~E~O La. 1.89
12 PACK MILLER
REG., LITE OR GENUINE DRAn
59
--12-0L M>nus
UMIT 2
ner1a• 1 -.er . ~:-;.. •LACKm MAS 12-0Z. Y• ~ FYA8
3:•1 . 1 -~No .49
Plont«s 16-0z. Dry Roost 'Stofi(ist 6.5-0z. Oil Or Water
COCKTAIL PEANUTS ..... -................ 2A9 CHUNK LIGHT TUNA ........... .. ....... 69
co•••••FP•ISICn PatllT an
HUGHES I 49 LL •
....
~ACK
MAMA llOtlA MDA
CROISSA.NT
CRUST 2.99
Rudy's Form 12-0unce ~ed Oven Roost Or BBQ
PORK SAUSAGE PATIIES ...... EA. 1.69 LOUIS RICH TURKEY BREAST ... LB 3.69 Foster Forms Or Zocky Forms Family Pock "
FRYER CHICKEN DRUMS . . LB •
• Add the freshness and flavor of
mushrooms to prepared foods such 2-Lb. Bog Dork G<Hn 9 as spaghetti sauce. chili, vegetable FRESH CARROTS .......................... EA .• ~9 TENDER BROCCOLI .................... LB .s Fr9Sh &inch
SPINACH EA A•
......... •u•••••m
PLASTIC
96-0Z BTL 2.99
I-Lb "'g
HUGHES BUTIER ......................... ...
····-ITALIAllSAllSA ..
HOT
Olt MILD
Porty Pock
a.a.2.29
.............. LB 2A9
CELERY & CARROT STICKS EA eff
soups and stews. r.-::;;;i~~~~~~~~~~]~~~~~~) • Tuck sliced mushrooms into a --~ ,_ & -·I• \! •• Al
fluffy omelet for brunch or light .... • ....... Dl•ll• MIX •AllCIUIT SU~'T~rn a fast food favorite into a • 7 n..s °' llAJOOO .. °"' •ACHOI. :::= ........ a•CK•
gourmet treat by smothering a ~:..... -> PACIFIC::;;~;;· INCL. waST8..aN195 1 99 I •. 9 hearty grilled burger with sauteed FltOZEN oJ°NCl • MICROWAVE • mushrooms. I •• ·LB. PKG. • ' 5-0Z
• Stick to your diet with a bowl
full of mixed greens and mush-
rooms tossed with a lemony
vinaigrcue.
Colossol Moloys1on
RAW TIGER SHRIMP .. .. ... . . . .. .. ........... LB. 11.M
11.ady-To·Eot
IMITATION COCKTAIL CRAB CLAWS ......... La. a ...
12-0unce
KRUSTEAZ MICROWAVE FRENCH TOAST ••••• I .~9
28-0unce
OH BOY TWIN PACK PIZZA ........................ I.ff
a.Al•OL
COlml'llOll
Tompo1t 32-Count Regular ex Svper
PET AL SOfT TAMPONS
lt>-Count Regulor ex
FLAVORED AlKA SELTZER
1.47
• Spoon sliced. marinated
mushrooms over a nest of freshly
shredded vegetables for a crisp.
garden-fresh salad. ( a •au••••••··• )>---~
• Top steam y-hot baked
potatoes with a mixture of cottage
cheese, cho pped tomatoes.
cucumbers and sliced frt1h mush-
rooms seasoned with lemon pep-
pe~ Slip thinly sliced mushrooms.
chopped fresh or canned green
chihesand shredded Monterey Jack
cheese between 2 flour toniJlas.
then fry until golden on both sides.
Cut into wedaes and enjoy with a
good salsa.
• Thread whole button mush-
rooms on bamboo skewers, th~n
brush with a barbecue sauce. Gnll
over coals until just tender. then
enjoy as an appetizer while the meat
iscookina. ·. • Add sliced mushrooms to stir-
fry dishes and v*table sautees.
• Top trilled fish fillets with
mushrooms sautccd in lemon juice
and butter. ' s
1.69
16--0z. Ant. Von.tt.s
RO JO'S FRESH SALSA .................... I .i9
12·01. Oet1 Style Sliced
GALILEO SAi.AME .. . . . ····'-" a.a•-..... .. .•.•
32..0Z .. WHOU
Olt HALVU 1.79
21'9& •••&&• ··~· ~a.as • Brown baa it ~•th a sack of OUNa
whole fresh mushroom~ on hand in U ·Uter , 1 s.o. . ..,._ ~
r;r re~tor for skinny snoc~-=' = ~; ........ : .... ·~~ ~.=!,······ ............................. -"
• S.uae shad mushrooms with ~ AJI .............. ......., UMEYA MCXMI .......................... I ...
slices of red and yellow peppers for • •••••••Ill••••••..-•••••••• 1 colorful vetetabk sidcdish.
..
PO•OY Y09KA
~7= 7.99
Cr.-5.de Full lite<
WHITE ZINFANOEl
,
.~-"
•&.Ill
Magic Moun
Gcw.aU..A• ht'•
-HU&
Orenge coast DAILY PILOT/ Wednesday, December 28, 1988
Tbirstilig for champagne data? Answers uncorked
NEW YORK (AP) -:-Cham-
pafne adds an .el~nt, fes~ive 'ouch
to any entertaananJ occasion. Clarie Wolf, chairman of the New
York chapter of the American
Institute of Winc13nd Food. offers
answers to so~e of the most
commonly asked questions about
champagne:
Q: Wat'• &be difference between
campape alHI 1parklla1 wine?
A: Every champagne 1s sparkli ng
• wine. bul not all sparkljng wines are
.. champagne. Only those wines
produced from certain grape var-
ieties - Chardonnay, Pinot Noir
and Pinot Meunier -grown in the
leplly desitnated rcaion of North-course. the reputation of the
em France. can be called cham-produ~r and importer mustalso be
pagne. considered.
Q: Wllaa food• are be1t wltb -Vintaac:: The champagne of
eampape? one ou~standing year. For example.
A: · Champasne is "crisp" in 1982 as . CO"!S•dered to be an
nature, so it as important to choose outstanding. vantage ..
foods that bal,ance this quality. -Non-vantage (without a date): Th~se foods can include hot and · a blend of champagne. usually from
cold soups, mousses, fish. poultry. more than one year.
pasta and all combinations of cgs. -Cuvcc: The blend or speciallot
Q: wua laformadea •• lite label ~ade fro~ scv~~I c.hampagne
will belD • m•lr•i a ,.rebaae vaney~rds an the d1stmcuve style of
deciiio•' ' a particular champagne house.
A: Knowledse of the following -Rose: This champagne is dry
frequently u~ terms will be helP-: and full-bodied. and can vary in
ful when making a selection. Of color from pale gold to salmon.
Rose champqnc complements
roast meats and pme and is a
delicious companion to rich des-
serts.
-Brut: dry champagne.
-Extra dry: medium-dry cham-
pagne.
-Demi-sec: sweet champagne.
Q: Bow llMMIN cUmpape be
...... ?
A: It's important to keep a bottle
on its side in a cool, dark place
where the temperature does not
fluctuate. Ideally, the storage
temperature should be 50 to 55
degrees F. Storing a bottle horizon-
tally will keep the cork in contact
NEW YEARS' HOURS FOR All STORES
NEW YEARS' EVE; REGULAR HOURS
NEW YEARS' DAY; 8EGULAR HOURS
MON. JAN. 2nd; REGULAR OPENING
9:00 P.M. CLOSING
with the wine. prtventing it from
dryina out or spoiling.
Although sold for immediate
enjoymen1. when properly stored.
champagne will keep us full flavor
and sparkle for at least fiv e years.
Magnums. which hold 1.5 liters.
can last the longest. Once cham-
pagne has been opened. a special
champagne stopper can be used to
preserve the sparkle for up LO 48
hours.
Q: Wua are tbe beat way1 10 cool
cUmpape? A: Champagne is at its proper
serving temperature if kept in a
wine bucket filled with ice for 20
minutes or p&aced for one hour in
the coldest section of the refrieer-
ator. If champqne i1 served too
warm, the wine foams cxceuively
when opened and loses ill sparkle.
If served too cold. the champqne
loses its fraarance. Remember.
never place champagne in the
freei,er! Q: Wut II die beta way a..,_ a
bottleelellam...-1
A: Till the 6ottle at a 45 dqrec
anJle. away from 1uest1. breakable ob).ects and windows. Unpeel the
foal and remove the wire hood.that
holds the cork in place, without
lettinJ JO of the cork. Us1n1 a cloth or towel to cover
the bottle, hold the cork firmly
between the thumb and forefinaer:
with the other hand, twist the bottl~ot the cork, in one dim:·
tioR.The pressure will aradually
he!J> push out the cork, resultina in a
soft pop. Never use a corkscrew
when openina champaane. Q: Hew 1fMHlkl ebmpape be
1erved? A: Champagne is best served at
between 43 and 46 d~ F. (A few
degrees cooler is best for a large
party or crowded reception.) Pro-
fessional sommeliers use the one
hand method; however, it's best 10
steady the bottle with two hands.
Hold the bottle with your thumb
in the bottom indentation (called
"punt") and your fingers support-
ing it along its side. Pour a small
.quantity into each glass. then fill
about two-thirds full after the foam
has subsided. To prevent drips, as
"""? you stop pouring. give the bottle a
9'-1'-~~~~. quarter turn. ~' _ --Q:-Wua-ay,e-.t-stan-dtoald be
1.\-aled for cumpape?
./ A: Any standard wine&lasscan be
used for champagne. However, the
-=---------- --
BAR-S
Baoo '
ideal choice is a tulip-sbaped glass.
Its bulbous base and inwardly
slopin.& sides enables the cham-J>agne saroma to concentrate at the
EXTRA FANCY
GOlde11 Dellcio11s
·~( ~-1~ Apples
'
--: ~--...-
.~
64-0Z
Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites
Boneless Turkeys =STAR
Chuck Roast :-L!e::'
Cooked Ham :;:o
Chuck Steak :=L!e:F
Uls149
Uls1 &9
Egg Rolls ~~s ,.
Jeno's Pizza :":~
·~ 5299 Pot Pies ~u 7-0Z39c
Lii
5179 . Croissant Pizza :==EFAAMS ' ICM)Z '259
Drumettes ="~..._
Boneless Ham ~~LEAH
Back Ribs ::~ED
22-0ZPl<G
5119 . Fried Chicken =:a -.oi'2"
L.'1 79 Jon Donaire ~~~c:'~ -~'4"
Ul79e Orange Juice TllEH•m ,N)Z•1•
Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials
4SSORIEO VARIETIES Dog . Foo~ =TIWN
Hot Cocoa Mix :r~.
Coffee ~:'s.co EXl'M980
Bath Tissue ::-.....:n'!v
Brawny Towels ~A~ ,«IU.69-
Wesson
Oil
Garden Fresh Produce
Lim es FOfl YOUfl HOUO•V OHUfl
Peanuts~:~~~
Mush rooms ;AHCV ~511 TEHOER &-OZ PKG
ASSORTED <XlLORS N«J VARIETIES
Ba wt
Ra•e• ==.-sz•• EA()<
Inglenook :=~v-er~,
Ronrico Rum =()A
Kessler ==
Stroh's Beer A£0UlAA LX!liT l&!~Ol•459
Stayf ree Maxi-Pads ~°:'~'1 4' ~
Fruit Cocktail uw .1.oz&SC Kerns Nectar =~MAHOO .u•1 1• 81.,w's ta Cadr 1 ·
..
Sparkling Cider MAATMUn 25~'1 09 Margarine ::::.TEAS ,.oz99• v.o. V ...
Tang Box Drinks =-°"-'..-85' Schweppes Mixers .--85• .9699 ,...._ ~
Seltzer ~:~~YOU t lCM)Z •1 11 Perrier Water =~WOOl!llMf oar95• 1.75-UTtA
Mayonnaise ~~=OR )2-01'1 51 r. ~=====--------...=====--"-----------~
. Chunk Tuna =:::-w~.. ... . .az69•
.Menudo =~~ -·· _ • ...az•1 1s
Nalley, Chili ~llOT-:-.:, __ .Mlt99-
:0og Food :.:.r:.OA-....-w IMa '841
ADVERTlllD ITEM
GUARANTEE
We ...,. 10 '*" on IWlll eufftctem Modi of
...,_. 1neic:tw ... II. ~ 10 oondlttC)IW
~ our conffOI. wt "'" cue oA en ...,....,
...... •MIN CHlO( .... _,., trllblll'9 '°" to ""' "' """ .... ..,......., ptlCe • .-i •It i.cc.r.. ...-or""""»_..
top of the glass. .
Flute-shaped &lasses offer the
same benefits. The saucer-shaped
or coupe glass is ~ot recommended,
since its wide mouth exposes too
large a surface of the wine, which
dissipates bubbles and prevents
concentration of the bouquet.
Remember to l>Olish-atasses-
carefully so that no detersent re-
mains. The sli&htcst residue de-
stroys the sparkfc of,champagne.
Upside-down
pizza makes
family flip
Beater Hemea ud Ganeu
~
Upside-down pizza? No fooling.
your family will flip over its areat
flavor. A package of hot roll mi x
makes enough crusts for eight
pizzas, so f reezc four for another
time.
To freeze them, place crusts on a
baking sheet in the freezer for about
I hour. Then stack with a square of
wax paper between thecrusts. Place
in a moisture-and vaporproof bag
and seal. To use frozen dough, thaw
I hour in the refrigerator or 30
minutes at room temperature. '
I
TOPSY-TURVY PIZZA
I 11-euce pacu1e llot rell ml1
% aablelpoola1 toasted wbeat
1erm
1 c.p ebopped broeeoll
I l-Mllce caa plua uace
~ lealpooD ltallaa ........
ended
~ tea1poo11 pepper
1 ~ e9p1 cllepped cooked avtey
or cMckn (I oaces)
I taltlelpoou anted Parmnaa
·CHese
1 c.p sllredded mo1urella
clleese ( 4 onces)
Milk
Prepare hot roll mix accordina to
package directions for pizza dough,
adding the wheat germ:-f:.enlough
.rest according to package direc-
tiol)s.
Meanwhile, cook broccoli, cov-
ered, in a small amount of liahtly
salted water about 2 minutes or
until just crisp-tender; drain. In a
medium saucepan combine pizza
sauce, Italian seasoning and pep-
per. Bring to boiling. Stir in turkey
and vqctables.
Lightly grease insides and outer
rims of four I 0-to I 2~uncc bakina
dishes. Sprinkle Parmesan cheese
on bottoms of dishes. Divide
mozzarella cheese evenly among
dishes. Spoon turkey-vqetable
mixture into dishes. Divide douah
into 8 portions.
On a lightly floured surface roll
or pat out each portion to e1tend l/•
inch beyond edp ofbakins dishes.
Place I portion on top of each dilh.
Brush with milk.
Place remainina 4 portions of
douah on a bakina sheet. Freeze I
hour or until firm. Seal, label and
freeze for later use. (To thaw, let
doqh stand at room aempenture
30 minutet or in refneerator for I
hour.)
Bake piu.u in a 37s.delree oven
about IS minutes or untlr clouP i1
Hain brown. To terVC1 immediately
loolen crust• and invert pizzas
onto .m,.. plata If nec1111ry.
carefully ...... filliftl IO ..... of cnasas. Maka 4 -m..
--PRODUCE---
Large Dancy 89
T an2erines • s_,,,,,.a~ Lb.
OIJ F111~YippnSltm .sunellK>llJ)
Fresh Blackeye Peas -a. 89 II 0111ta tug .. Pltg. •
t:ime Lemons 4 6100 T-6. F..U of]"'"' ~.1
Fresh Tomatoes 59 S.J.J S1"lt'-ln .. RJI LJ..
Mixed NufS, In Shells 99 H °""4y F "tonlt Lb. •
Greek StrinQ Fi'2.S 99 14 O..nrr P.Jt..-~ t:prly L1«l< Plt1. •
Fre;h Cranbenies 69 CANn prJ-,.1101 Pita U..'IW S11rplY L.M Nt1 •
-Dipping Vcgctables-
Fre;h li<.."1fl1a 39 f'Rtwdy °p'...Jt" CJmH 1•/tJ· 19 l'ltr.1 "1 •
Italian Sciuash 49 (f"B~l.'llil } lb ,
Fresh G.tUliflower 89 1Crb Htum 119 Plt1 I Lb •
Fresh Mll4'hnX)(llS E 89 I 0..rlft P«lf11gt "' •
Whole Peeled Qunxs 2 Lb. 99 B•mty Ult Pltg,.
, Blue Band Celery 49 c,.., SolNI St.llt1 B•n •
Marie Salad ~ipg 199 R-m or Lllf' ~ /6 0.lltl' Jn [11
---LIQUOR
~ ~~a!~C:gne3'1£oo -·"'-RU 1JO ML It/ r}.n~} /t F•> "
~~08cer . ~ 99 110-..H~I J
..
Taneerines . s;i;P..J f .ucy
S11nworld V arirty
Country Hearth 119 11/2 Lb. Bread
WI.., W'-tor
Assonrd Wholt Gr-
VonS
Paper Towels
!IOC0ttn1
Roll
Keebler
Crackers
Tou" H-Jn. ChtJ.J.r. C"-c, Wbr.u. WMiuMn-7 10 1.1 Oz. &if
Lb }99
u,459
u l299
,.299
Knudsen ·
Sour Cream
:4 0..nrr
Canon
Borden
s*· les Wr FooJ
11 P.dt.cr
f59
f49
a Pace Picame ~uce J 49 W /6 0..trc't'-'llJJ. 'tlt.Ju.m or Hot
A Del Monte Pineapple JuiLe J 19
• '6 OwntT c.,,
& Crisco OH ? 59 W IVpl.ir or Corrt-41 1t(t BOlrw -
Wmdex Tri2'?ef SprJ\ J 59
11 O..n" &tw .. .d>'io o..,.., F Rf,.
Martinelli's 129 ~p~kling Cider
& Vons ~li'<ed :'\ut~ 2-9 . W llO..,..t C.nt
Ct)lU1UY Ht."'.uth DonuL\ .,. 109
Old f.,;..,:,J, R~ "' {NtJ, /(k,./~ < r t'\°'
International ~tini Pit! 89
It P-.lt PWm.. ~ '''"' u It(.# ~"' °"""' ·.
Littoo Onion Soup 89 °' bi, "" l ,..,.,, •
6 Pack 0.i\e or ~)(lte 179
Rtpl.r "' c>wt I: 0.. 'llr ( -
/Vons
Cream Cheese
8 °"""" P..dcJ
Oran2e Juice {
SN<r Plin C~'" ~ C•~
Pl.., ( .:.Ja,.m ~ 07 C ""O'I
~9
--DELI/DAIRY--
Vons Sliced
Cooked Ham
i 0-..r S-.iw P.a. .:c,.c /l 0.-.(~;. .. rr r ... JrJ ~ : _...,
159
Kr.ift Cmcker H:.urel 01et.~ 2 39 l~O .. n.r P.11.~ '"'"' "l '''· '""rr
R<.?jo':-, S • .Usa }29
\tNi.m • Hot Ill 0 111111 C ,...,,,.,
D.mola Deli ~1e ~le-& 219 H•"'°' T ~ f'• ... ll'
lake to Like ,olh\' C.ht.'e:ie J 69
11 l •wq#vnt 9 tr k Ull'
l~tO Frend1 Ornon Oip 59
\ 0, /4 07 \tkt(J I .i• ,,,,,. "" •
Wilson 99 {u,.?-1bo Franks •
...
~ I n •
-
C8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT I Wednesday. December 28, 1988
CALL 642-5678
\ Privet• party only No RMI E•t•t•. Commerc:W. Automotive, Boating °' .,Metp Wented.
You c.n now C. l the Dally Piiot C .... ltled Dept. on S.turday morning from l:OO to 11:IO a.m. to pl.C. your Sunday and Monday eel•.
•MUTAn .... AU
HOUSll/CONDOS
O...• 1002 ..... ""'-'4 IOOt
.............. 1007 c.--.... ~ 1011 c-.. _ 1077
c--102•
--107• llf-1QIU ,_.,..., IO)o
.-...-ICMO
"""""'"" -10'2 .._ 1060
'--1M
'--1050
'-....... 1057 1•-10$5
-"leie 1067 ...._,_ lo.4'
... a.-. 1'11• --c.--1C17'1
--' la.I __ ......., '°"
S.-C.--ION ,._I_ H• ,_ '°'°
MISC. R.I.
_. ....
HOUlll/CONDOS
117S 1ns ,,,, ,.,
UM '"° IS7S ·-IMO
1.00 ,.,,
o..wl ..... ' JICllJ
--2106 ..... _. ,,.
ea.i---2111 ~.,-.. 11n ,__ 712•
_....... 2126
flf-. . 21» ,_........, JIM
~-,,., .____ """-.... , • JIG
-·.. . .......... 21 ..
'--· .21• '-..... JUO
'-....... • .......... 21'2 ..-........ ,. JIU
-""te . .. • • .. • • Jlt7 .................. ..... . JI ..
._ c:i.oo-... .. .. . . . • . .. • llH
.. Jo9 ~ ............ ,,,..
CLASSIFIED INDEX
642-5678'
FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY
FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY
COLDWeLL
BANl(eR O
associated
;.,; ~··. "''·~--~~R""
••• !" .. •1tl'()..t ;IY
rJn Nl[,[L
l.IAllt v f,,
~SiSUC IA TE 'i
let Ut Http Y"
54();.1220
UlllOO
.__ ...... . .__...._... ........ . ...... c--.... .. ...... iaeo-. .. ...... .. , ......
APARTMINTI
,,.
.2114 1111 , .•
. Jlto
MISC. llNTALI
C-./T ........ . ~-· ... .. .... ............. .. .............. , ..... . ........ -. .... ~ ...... . ...... , ............. .. .....................
0-.,..,., ............. . ...._ .............. .. ,,........,., .......... .
1IW
mM m» ,, ..
J1JJ ,,.,.
.in.
'1740
. ""' .21 ..
lllMOYlllllT
•••••••• .... _A&
• . JOtt
5'30
SS3S
.,_,., ................. 2'00 .._ = nll11 .. •• •• . 2tOt .,_ • ......... 2tOt
-Op H1 ••• ,, • ,,_ --· ........ ,.,, .....,,._ ............ 2tV .....,.................. ,,.,.
-.....f.O.'•· ....•.... .2911
"-''.__. ....... . .. .. ..................... ....... -.... , .....
,....... . ..... ,,.,,...,,.,, _ t 0 •• ...........
a.tool/Olllee • . • . • . . • , ..... ,, ........... . --.. a.,..__ .
o.-.i .......,_.,... ...
-SIOO SICll
MOD
''°' "'o SS20 lS30 Wt
-VICI •BTCll•Y ....._......,._.,
6102
''°' '101
'61JJ
611• . .,. .. ,. .. .,
614
61 ..
6141
•190 61'2 .,.,
61 .. ••eo 6112
•••••••• ••sn1n
MISC. .........
~fT ........ . ~ ..... .
AUTOMOnYI
IOIO •it .IOll
tOIO eou
MO
t030
PUBLICATION DEAOUNE
MoncSay ........... Sat. 11:30 AM
Tueect.y ........... Mon. 5:30 PM
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS
T..,_ies.rw. ....._.Friday
l:OO AM-6130 PM
The Daily Pilot 1trlvet for efflclency aod eg;urecy.
However. occaalonelty .,ror1 do occur. Pleue
listen when your ad is read b.ck and check your
ad dally Report errors lmmedletely to &42·5678.
The Dally Pilot accepts oo ll•blllty for eny en"Of' In
an advertisement tor which It mey be rMPQnslble
except lorthe cost' oflhe spec• ectuelly occupied
by the error. Credit can only be allowed for the first
Insertion.
Wedneeday ..... Tu.. 5:30 PM
Thured9y .......... wed. 5:30 PM
~~··-~JhurlJ:30 PM
Saturdey ............. Frt. 5:30 PM
Sundey ... : ........ Sat. 11:30 AM
s.turdey a:oo AM· 11:30 AM • ...._CounMr
Mondeyo-Ftlday
1:00 MM:OCIPM
142-1171
CLA§§il'IEll AllVEBTl§ING
§ALE§
We are ADDING to our sales staff.
If you can type at least 45 wpm and have
great telecommunication skills·.;._ We can
oil er you a bale salary + commission AND
a (jt#ll place to work.
lilll '11•e • ,.,,,., n.e .4 t'alldle.
Do younelf a f ••or -Call u .
P eUY B le~I•• er~ I• Ve••••
842-4321
HAS RETURNEDI
lbck by popular df!mand, 01~s-A,L1ne will run Friday. Satur-
day Mid Sunday in IU own claUif1cauon 1n t.M Clau1flf!d Ads
Since Chis is a special o#fff, we N-W a Thursday noon Of!~
'and -,,,~ ""all ads. This IS ~ to all private PMlY ~rtiwfs kK merc~w not o-nr s 1 SO jprice must be hstf!d
In adJ and no lbbrevi.ilons wll be accepted. AM ads wi• run
Friday. s.turda)' and~· TMrf! 1s a s..wie mlnimUm ~ 20C ~ HM ... So Y94" ..,_ C.-De.Mt-A·UM • Is Of,fy •••
$3.00.
DEADLINE: TtMJrsday noon
~: S·llM m1rwmum • 3 days • 20C ~r liM • SJ 00
• All ads arf! prepaid by coming into thf! Dif1ty Pilot to
plac:f! your ad or uu thf! coupon bf!low
• Prfvatf! party mf!rchandlst only ads No com-
mf!rc1al ads. ~u. llVf!StO<k. produce or plants
• E.c:h ltMI must be prlctd in Ulf! ad wirh no ltt'ms over
SISO.
MAIL TO: Dtmft-A-Une
Oiltlly Pilot
330 West Say Str"t. Costa Mf!sa. CA 92626
Dally Pilot noors '
Monday-Friday 8 00 AM to s 00 PM I
STATE __ ._zw _____ _
AMOUNT lNCLOSED ______ _ DATES TO ltullf --------
J. ._
••
I.
' . ..
'· .. ..
IJ00-4 WOlllOI l'lfl l.INI HO~t!QlllS ---------J ~------~
___ ..,-.....
I
642-567
•... *
Motor Routes
available 1n
Wllfwli11ttr
............ 11
F1111t1i1 Valley
NO COLLECTING
NO SOLICITING
Oe41vef One Day a Week •
Must have dependable car
and proof of 1nsuraooe
Ill 842-1444
Ask for Joanne Craney
BE YU OWN BOSS
I
POOOl.E PUPPY SAL.E
T-CUp, Toy, M~. S200-51
1100. H-1d 1'1119ed. Meny
calora. 751-3465
....... ••••Ill" ....
lftllllmlDOF ... .-. ...
IS7J5i WD.IWNI • ~··Aft!, 200161 • 7351.Mo.loMtd.6410~
S....-Servloe
iia:IITT
1500 Auto Mall Or.
Santa Ana
55 Fwy. at Ed
c.DI 7 DAYS
8eMce Hrs. Mon-Fri.
7:00 em to t:oO pm
53 ~Ott Cut>t
56 • .., peesege
57 Afire
58 Aoof pe11
51 -off drN'M
IO Gerti
81 Glend· l)fel
DOWN
1 &rd
2 Olove genus
3 YO(!( Ott Ofd
4 S.Ute
$Jobs
g T-..lhape
1 HMdy -8 •'Helj)!"
9 Mlk•reedy
10 s'""""-"' 11 Seed pen
12 Spee
13 Ex1oned
18 Peces
19 ContrOls
23r,...
24 Wu 81'Q'Y
25 FOOCI
26 Go
27 "" stand 28 Pitches
37 FlllWTlef>I
39 Shiowonn
40 F•t><IC
42 Instructors
43 Ob,ec:111
4 s Summota
..... .. •.•
... ~ 4 °" &eden eutofMlc...,.,.. I . NI
condltlOftlnt. radiate,
uw~::-,,...._ __ .... .-.t
111-1111
49 EJ\Closure
50 Globule
51 Taft Wlklly
52 Verity 29 Judge
JOao-
31 Auns aW11y
33 So.Qf'11y 0•1s
341 Tabby
'6 Neglect 10 do
47 Elllm•le
5" Gnw1apilie
55 Soc:i•
48 Awry $col lune lion
6 7 8 9 10. 11 12 13
15 ,,
19
22
STARTING A NEW BUSINESS??
The Legal Department at the
Daily Pilot 1s pteased 10 an·
nounce a new seN1oe now avail-
able to new businesses.
We Wiii now SEARCH the
name '°' you at no extra charge, and save you the time and the
t rip to lhe Court Hou• 1n Santa
AM Then. of COUf'M . •"•' the search rs compte'led we will tile
your fictitious business name
statement with the County Clefk,
pubhsh once a week tor tour
weeks as requ1r9d by law and
then file your proof of pubh-
cation with the County Clerk:
Please stop by to file your
hct1t1ou1 bus.ness statement at
the Daily Pilot Legal Oepar1-~nt, 330 West Bay, Costa
Mesa. California If you can not
stop by please call us
at (7141 642-'321, E•tension
315 or 316 and we Wlfl make
arrangements tor you to handte
this procedure by mail
It you should have any further
questions please c.11 us and we
will be more than glad to a1S1st
you
GOOd lucit 1n your
new 1>Ys1ness"
..
'Typical killing' breaks record for slaylngs in New Tor
By MITCHELL LANDSBERG reason: It may have broken 1he rttord for lh<' number of
New York C'i1y homicides in a sinak' year. On Chrislm11 Day. srven more people were ktlltd.
About 30 more homicidn are expected by New Y car's.
murderous city 1n tht count!J 11 De1ron. New York ractaed ill 1911 peak in violtnce duri••
ptnod of filcal retrndlment an which IM number Of poli~ off.cm had declined.~· the eerty ·ao., •
the city rebuilt the Police r>ep.n~nt and natiorial crime rates rell. the number of homicides each ye1r dedifted.
• 1' .............
NEW YORK -His name was Carlos Rosa. he w~s
19 years old and M died violently. The suspect and
mo.tive behind his killina are a m)'stery. but drugs are
beheved to ha ve played a role.
Those ~re th_c _bar~ facts behind ~hat was. in every sense,. a typical ktllang an New York City in 1988. Carlos
Rosa s death on Christmas Eve stands out for only one
Rosa. who was shot to death near his home on S1atm
bland late Saturday. was the J.842nd homicide victim of
the year. accordina 10 Sft. Diane Kubler. a poltc'c
s~keswoman. BysomecountS. the 1981 rttord was 1,841
lullinp. although police said later that 1,826 homicides
took Place that year. indicating the record could have been
brok,en earlier.
No American city comes close to New York in
volume of violent deaths. TM city averall'S five
homicidn a day: its clOteSt competitor. Los Anacin_._
avcl"IJCI fewer than three.
But the numbers have b«n inaeasina for several
years. and cr!minal JUltice uperts are vinually unani-
mous about the cause: crack cocaine.
We'll Help
You Get
There.
Will your current JOb skills help you get that promotion ...
o r make a career change? If not. let Orange Coast
College help you get where you want to go.
Examine our 240 highly-ranked academic and vocational
programs We'll give you a great start toward a bachelor's
degree. or assist you in preparing for a. job, switching
careers or advancing 1n your present field
Our graduates have proven track records. We annually
transfer more students to four-year colleges and
un1vers1t1es than any other community college in
California. Graduates of our occupational programs
score well on tneir stale exams and experience high rates
of employmerf. •· ·
Tuition is 1us.t $5 per unit to a maximum of $50 per
semester Ffnpnc1al aid 1s available
'L..
Drop by and register-without appointment-on
Thursday. Friday or Saturday. January 5-7. The
Admissions Office 1s open Thursday from 8 a.m to 7 p m ..
Friday from 8 a m to 2 p.m and Saturday from 9 a.m . to 1
pm
Become an OCC student this spring' Classes begin
Monday January 9 "Late-Start · classes get underway
January 30 Many accelerated nine-week courses are
also ava ilable
(714) 432-5678
0 ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
YES!
A00A£SS
Send me a copy of
"A View of Coast"
M•H 10 O"K"'"" o· ~"0•"' o\,jO~·••t"' ~' .. OC~l O••f'tlJf Cot.\t CoHfi)f 1"0 ' ,. r..ii•• f\oac:I Cot1•
Other ClllCI do have much ht~r homicide rates. New York ranks 10th amena major American cities in
number of homicidn per 100.000 people: the most
Prison therapy program threatened .
By V ALEJUE MEEHAN .. --...,,...,...,
JESSUP. Md. -A rapist charged
with attacking a woman while on
furlough from Patuxent Institution
may help doom the maximum-
security prison devoted 10 treating
violent offenders rather than punish-
ing them.
Coming on the heels of repons that
a Patuxent review board had panted
unsupervised furloughs 10 a triple
murderer. legislative leaders are
threatening to abolish the therapeutic
iqstitution, bt"lieved lO be the oi\ly one of its kind in the country.
"I iust don't think that it works,"
said R. Clayton Mitchell Jr .. speaker
of the Maryland House of Delegates.
who ha s called for .the firi"I of the
prison director. Norma Gluckstem.
"It has proved it hasn't worked.
Furloughs and that sort of thing for Norma Glaqbtern tho~ ty~ o~gh~ 10 be abolished." .
Criminal Justice ex.perts say the t1onal Association in College Park.
furor over Patux.ent's early releases Patuxena oJ)crates independent of
and furloughs epitomizes a national the rest of Maryland's penal system.
fear .of crime that George Bush with a review board that grants
exploited to defeat Michael Dukakis _ furlou&hs and recommends paroles
in the presidential campaign. based on itsdetermfoationolwhether
The Republican candidate blamed any o.f. the 710 inmates have been
Dukakis aner convicted murderer rehabihtated.
Willie Horton came 10 Maryland The prison focuses on therapy to
wnile on furlough from a Massachu-m~ke inmates remorseful for their
setts prison and raped a woman. cnmes.
"1 he majority of the prison sy~-Since 1982. five inmates who were
terns across 1hc county have been re-sentenced to life terms at Patux.ent e~amining their furl~gh progra~~ in have been paroled after spcndinJ an
view of the recent national pohttcal average ofnine years in pnson a laulc
campaign." said Hardy Rauch. dircc-more than half the average for
tor of standards and accreditation of inmates sentenced to life in
priso ns for the American Corrcc-Maryland's other prisons.
State and federal statistics for 1987
show that three yean after release. 18
percent of Pltuxcnt inmates were
conv1ctea again. dramatically lower
than 47.6 ~rcent for Maryland's
other prisons. and 38 percent for
federal prisons.
But Gluckstcm said she is worried
that Patuxent's success in reforming
its inmates will not weigh strongly
enou_ah tQ ensure that the prison
survives.
"I'm fearful policy is aoing to bt"
made on extremes." Patuxent's direc-
tor said. "The final issue is: Do these
people hpe a second chance?"
Some insist they don't.
"There is no early release from the
grave," said Wisconsin Appeals
Court J~ Ralph Adam Fine, an
advocate of punishment for violent
offenders. The fate of the victim and~ future
victim is forgotten once a cn,-ninal is
convictcd,,hc said. ,
Last week. Maryland Corrections
Secretary Bishop Robinson called for
sweepina reforms at the prison,
changes that would essentially
abolish the institution as it now
exists.
Robinson recommended to a
special lqiilative committee study-
ing tM pnson that Patuxent's inde·
pendent status be revoked and that
prison officials bt" stripped of their
broad authority to put inmates con-
victed of violent crimes into furlough
and work-release programs.
But he said the institution should
accept prisoners~serving terms of 20
years or less. More than 86 percent of
the prisoners now at Patuxent are
serving life or long-term sentences for
murder. rape and armed robbery .
Oluckstcm acknowledaes that
many Pat.uxent's }nmates hav~ CO!ft· mined heinous en mes. but ma1ntaans
that many criminals can be rapon·
sible members of society after treat·
ment Patuxent admits ~:!cJ one in four inmates who apply, on the review board's judpnent of their
ca~city 10 change. 'No one gets out of here until they
live throu&h their crime, that ra~ or
that mur<fer or whatever.'' she said.
Once inmates accept responsibility
and guilt for their deeds "they're not
goina 10 go ra~ or murder apin." she
said. adding. "ll doesn't auaranttt
100 percent success."
Patuxent has intermitttntly come
un<krfiresincc it was created an 19SS.
The most recent controversy bcaan
in November with the disclosure ihat
the Patuxent board had given 11
daylong furloughs since April to
Roben Daly Angell. 31. who was
sentenced in 1976 to three con-
secutive life terms for killina two
police officers and a teen.,.r.
-Ansell's furlouahs outraacd-Gov.
William Donald Schaefer. who
directed aides to revamt> the prison's rules for the Lqislature s review.
Then James M. Stavarakas, a
convicted rapist, walked away from a
work release job on Nov. 28. He was
captured Dec. 4 in China Grove. N.C.
After a warrant was issued cha.rains
Stavarakas with rape while he was missing, Gluckstem and the prison's
independent review board canceled
all leaves as of Dec. I.
International team plan' to climb Everest
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -An land. the son of Sir Edmund Hillary. door progrc:am: Kellie Erwin Rhoads. both 25 end from Stockholm.
international team of 14 men and who became the first man to climb 32.andJeffrcyRhoads.34.oflnkom. Sweden. Rcutenward and Lqnc
women will attempt to cli mb 29.009· Mount Everest on May 29. 1953. Idaho -both instructors for the have experience as professional
foot Mount Everest using the classic This spring's assault will mark the Colorado Outward Bound School mountaineering gui<ks and are vet·
mountain climbers' South Col route yo u!lger Hillary's third Eve rest ex-and accomplished climbers. erans of a Mount McKinley ex.·
this coming sprang. ped111on. Other team members include Andy pedition.
The 1989 American Everest Ex· . Als_o joining the expedition will be Lapkass. 31 . of Estes Park. Colo .. an The South Col route the team will
pedition will be led by Karen 1dent1cal twins Alan and Adrian Everest veteran; Steve Fossett. 43. of ust-wa~ first climbed by tbc elder ~ellei'hoff. 29. of Bozeman. Mont.. Burgess. 40. of Yorkshire. England: Chicago. a member of the 1987 Hillary. along with his Sherpa JUidc.
and Peter ..\thans. 31 . of Mount Glen Porz.ak . .W. of Boulder. Colo.. Snowbird expedition: Martyn Wil-Tensing Norgay.
Kisco. N.Y. president of the American Alpine Iiams. 42. of Whitehorse. Yukon. The route 1s unique in moun-
Joining the learn in the assault on Club: Tom Whittaker. 40. of Canada. recognized as one of the lead tainecrina as the only place that
the world's highest peak will be Peter Pocatello, Idaho. director of Idaho guides in Antarctica. and Michael requires use of aluminum ladders to ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l_H_i_n_an_._._3_3._o_if~A_u_ck_l_a_nd_._N~e_w_z_e_a_-~s_t_a_te_u~n-iv_e_rs_i_ty_·s~h-an_d_i_ca_p_pe~d_o_u_t_·~R_c_u_t_ers~w_a_rd~a_n_d_C_a_r_l _Jo_h_a_n~La-g_n_e_.~s-pa~n-"""'~d-oz_e_n_s~o_f_c_re~v-assc~s-·~~~ u.. ... C.• 9?626 0,20 • ...... • ~ ·• m.1 •o· ,. ..-..-.
. Ml.IC ll)TIC( __ PlB._JC_NO_TI_C£ __ 1 __ MUC __ NO_TIC£......,.._ 1_....:.Ml.=.:;JC;.;;...;.;.NO=TICE=~-i---=PlB.:.=;;.;:;IC..;.;NO::.;TICE~-_...;..Nl.JC~--NO.._TICE ......... _I Ml.IC NOTICE NI.IC NOTIGE Ml.IC NOTICE NI.IC NOTICE
95M03 must t>e made wHl'I euti only Ille ptovtllonl of I~ Ca1t-ourel'lase All purel'IHed K-.it Tiie name(t) encl "*ling eoridttlOM n ere lgl' ... ble AMA MHYILONINT Y 0 U R W .. I T T E N This butln"' It con·
NOTICE OF and paid l0t al tile ttme ol tornl1 Auction L1cent1no goods are SOIO as IS. a11d NOTIC("TO aooren ol the Intended to Ille personal tepreMnta-~CT AMA, TO H RESPONSE. IF ANY. MAY ducted by: an lndMduel ~ IALE ourel'lase All purel'lased Aet tlle undl!fs•oneo will sell mu11 t>e temoveo at lhe time OAEOITORS transferee(s) are· A8-uve Ttfl s>«oenl of amount AO•••TWD IY THE BE FILED ON TIME. Tile regltttent com·
OF n"IONAL goods are SOid as is. and It public: Nie by eompehllve of tale Sale subject to PflOr IOIYltion 6 D 0 LL AH LALE Z A R b10 lo be Oepotite<I witl'I blld, ITAft llOAM> M IOUAl.· DI USTEO OESEA SOLICI· menc«S to trentect buM-~ .. TY muslt>eremoveoattl'lettme btOdlflQ on tile 1211'1 day of eancellahon HI Ille 8Yetl1 of of the ROUHIZAD end KE Y· Of tuel'I oll'ler atnoul"ll at IZATION,~ANTI TAR !L CONSEJO DE UN neu under the flclltioul
No. 00101 of sate Sale subjtcl to PflOf J111uaty. 1989. ., 9 30 settlement between Ownet Commere111 ANOOSt-4 KHORAMI. 3143 may be ~··ble to tile NOTICll YOU HAYI A80GAOO EN ESTE ASU.N-butlnelt neme or names
Nooee 11 hereby given 11111 cancellation In Ille event ot o'eloek AM. on tne prem1Ses a11d obhgateO c>arty Oiied COO. Helf Dome. Pleetanton. CA s>«sonal repr11Mnt8tlll9. ...,. IUID. TMI COURT TO. OEBERIA HACERLO lltted •bow on Jenuary
pursua111 to Sections settlement bet-Owner where .. Id property l'IH tl'lls 28tl'I day ol ~ber. 11) A 8ulll Transfer ts 94se6 Bldtoroffeft'tobelnwri1· MAY DICIOI AGAINIT IMMEDIATAMENTE. DE· 1983
21701-21715 or the Cati· and obhgate<I party Dated been stored. and wtuel'I ate t9881nd 411'1 day of January, about to be mede That tile property pert•· •no and will be received 11 YOU WITHOUT YOU" EST A MANERA. SU Denny Edwrd Meng
tornia Business 1n9 Pro-tilts 2811'1 day or December. rou1eo II Public Storage. 1989 Public StO!'age Man· (b) The names and bus•· nent l'lereto is describe<! In tile etor ... ld office at any •ING .. A..0 UNLlll RESPVTESTA ESCRITZ SI Thia tlaternent wee lllld
lesSIOflS Code SeettOfl 2328 1988 and 411'1 day ol Jenuery. 2065 Placentia Avenue 111 agemenl Inc:. Tetepnone nett addr-olll'le Trans-~al 11 GROCERY MAR· time eh., Ille llrlt publl-YOU Mlf'OllD MO LA ft" HAY ALGUNA. P.UEOE SER with the County Olen! of Or·
ol tne Cahfor111a Commeretal 1989 Public StO!'agt Man· tile City ol Costa Mesa. (818l 244-8080. Agl!flt lor 1 .. or are. LARRY f . STOLL KET end is locale<! et: 1934 cation hereof and before THAN THE l7TM DAY M REGISTRAOA A i lEMPO ange CoUnty on ~-
Code Sec11on 535 of tl'le,ageml!flt Inc . Te1eonone County ol Orange. State of Owner ANO CARRIE H. STOLL. 116 Harbor Blvd , Cotta Meta. date of tall JANUARY, 1•. RI.AD T.. DA TEO December 22. 21. 1NI
C11t1orn111 Penal Code 111d (8181 2'4·8080 Agent for CaITTornla. Ille goods. el'lal· Pubhslled Otange·Cou1 23RD STREET. NEWPORT CA OateODeeemt>er 18. 1981 •OM1ATt011•LOW. 1918 "8tW
Ille prov1s1e><is or tne Call-Ow11et leis 01 personal pt098'1Y ~ Oalfy PolOt Oeoembef 28. 8EACtt. CAL9'0RNIA TM DOttness name ...,.0 t>y .IOMN "· ,AMaJl, A LAW AvtlOI USTWD HA llDO QA"Y L Q .. ANYILLE. Put>llttled Orange Coast
fornia Auct1011 L1cens111g Put>hslled Otange Coar;t scrtbeO below In tile mal· 1988. Janut ry 4. 1989 Tiie names lt\d bulinns file said transltl'or(tf'll .. td C.0 .. ,0 .. ATION, 2111 DlllAMDADO. IL T"I· ORANGE COUNTY CLERK. OIHy Piiot o.c.mt>er 7, 14,
Ac:I. 1ne undersigned "''" S4111
1
Da1ty P1lo1 December 28. tan ol of W·269 adOreaMt ot tf\e Trantfef" IOeatlon II BAZAR FOOD """"-at~ .... A. ._.. IUNAL ""H DICIDM By· .....,,. Dfttl. Deputy 21, 28. 1981
al pubhe sale by comoehttve t988 J anuary 4 1989 8ob MaNCI Sp E 139 · we AL RIEM ANO MARK ANO DELI AM, CA tr105-811 COWTM UD .... AUOllN-Clerk W250 bt0d1ngontt1e 12111d1yot W-271 wtrb0.frlg.2blleae,3bxs fltB.)CN()TIC[ RIEM ANO RANDALL Tl'lltNIObullltr1nlft<l1ln· Publithed Orange Coast CIAA•MOIGUIUD.M · ...._. 9lld TMet, At•---------
J1nuary. 1989. at 9 30 j Eurt Willson Sp. Et 18 • DENOS. 300 E COAST tended to ~ contummated Daily Piiot o.c.mt>er 2 t, 22. lf'OllDA MO MAI TARDI -..re .. ~. c.Mr.. "8JC NOTIC(
o'elOek AM on 1ne otem1ses fltB.JC fl)TIC[ nond1 ATC dr1 blk. 4 ~-KUOl2 NOTICE TO HIGt4WAY." 57. NEWPORT ac IM office ot· EICfow En· 28 1988 WT HILU DI IMflO, 191. 1eM l_.,, ..... W..111 _ _.....-.._......,...._...._ __
wl'lere s11d ptoperly nas at0ts. stv. 2 hret a mega CREDITORS OF BEACH. CALIFORNIA eountert. lne .. 17320 a..eh 11262 LIA LA IN,OllllACION AMeft ltM.. C.... ...... ...
been stored and wt11en are j •5M04 Rick Ptleter Sp E033 • BULK TRANSFER 92680 Blvd.. Huntington Beach, "8JC NOTIC( QUI ltOUI. CA ---NOTICE M 1oe1teO 11 Pubhe Storage NOTtCI OF dsk. 2 lddra, drur. (SEC 6l06-&l07 UCCI All other butlnet4 namn Caltlornit 92e4'7. on or afttl' TO ALL Pl .. IONI Put>ltlhed Orange Coast ~ 8ALI
2065 Newoort Blvd 1n lne PUeltC SALE WSl'lrtdryr d1vng equip. el'lr Notice 11 l'leret>y given to end addttSMt UNO by tile JenuatY 17, t989 ,ICTIT10U8 ..,_.. tlfftMITID .. T .. MAT-Daily Piiot ~emWr 28. M ""80MAl.
City ot Costa Mesa Cou11ry I OF ""SONAL Ben1am1n Ramirez Sp creditors 01 tl'la within Trantlerorwlthln thr .. yeats Tiiis bulk lrensler it sub· NAMI 8TAft....-T fffl MT• YAl.IDfTY M t988, January 4. 11. IH9 ,.,,..TY
of Orange. S111e of Cali· P,.OHltTY E20e • dr11r. tbl & 4 eht5, named trantleror(s) 11181 • , .. , put tO tw 11 known lo ject to California UnltO!'m Tiie loloWlng pertont we ~ANCI MO. 1111 M W-267 .... Mt17
1ornia, tne goods et1a1te4s Of No. 17't71 cltng, mttc bxs 2 blk.s. bd t>ullt transfer 11 about 10 be Ille Trantfefee ... NOHE Com0'18fCtaL~ Section doing ~ .,. THE CITY COUllCll M Notice II hereby QMln that
oertonal ptoperiy oescnbeO Notiee 11 hereby ~ven uw Mt. tvggage mad• on !)«tonal pr098f1y le) The IOcaUon and o-n· 6106 GARDEN BISTRO 3333 THE CITY Off 'OUN'TAIN "8JC NOTIC( purtuent to Jeetlont
below tn me matle<S of ol 1oursua111 to Sections Eer(O. M0tt11 Sp· E201 -l'letelnafter oetc:rlbed. tl'al delcrlptlon ol tile prop-TM name and addr"' 01 s BEAR STREET. NO 211. YAU.IY AMlllD9SG TMI .... _ 21701·21T15 ol tlle Celi·
Tom A Stow Sp 0052 ·121701·21715 ol tne Cali-2 IOl1s. er•b. blk. misc bsa. Tl'le name(s)andbullnta erty to be trentterr.o arec tile pertof\ witl'I whom COSTAMESA.CAtHH ~~ LOCAl. aAl.la ---~ •• loml1 8uelrl9ll end Pro-
stero& re<:vr drssr Slnd torn1a &ismess ano Pto-elll'lg IOdressoltl'letrensl.,or(s)ALL FURNITURE. FIX· c:lalmsmeybellle<lttJ<>yee PARVIN&CO .. INC .• 3333 ANDU..TAXOMIMANCI ,._,,._. ~Code.lectlon2SH
Alan Bagnall Sc> C070 ·1ress1onsCode.Sect1on2328 Ownet reterves tile "01'11 are PAULINE WRIGHT OBA TURES. EQUIPMENT, M~ L1rkln, Etcrow Encount.,s, s 8EAA$TAEET. HO 211. HGAMHMO A CMDrr ..._aTAT .... T oltNCellfonlleComntereiel
wont bnel'I. cltl'lg. misc bo or 1ne Cahlornta Commerctal 10 bid II Ille sale Purchases CHIC CLEANERS, 1495 SU-CHINERY. LEASEHOLD IM· lric . 17320 8eech BIVO .. COSTA MESA. CA 92828 '°" THE ,AvmwT M The~ pet'IOM we Code Sectlofl 536 of the
Owner reserves tne rtgl'lt Code S.Cuon 535 ol tne must bemaOewitl'ICMflonly PERIOR AVENUE NEW· PROV£MENTS, STOCK IN Huntington Beach. CA Thtt butlMH 11 con· aALll AND "99 TAXll doinobullneel•: c.IHO,nll P9Nll Code end
10 btO 11 tile tale Purc111ses Cahlorma Penal Code and 1nO paid for at Ille hme ot PORT BEACH CA ' TRADE. GOODWILL AND 92647 and Ille 1111 day for dueled by· a corporation TO THE rouNTA91 YAl.· Pf(()DUCTION LINE CON· the prcMelofll ol the Cell--Jffiiii~iiiiiiiiil--1 pureri1se All putcl'laHd The IOcal~ In Caltfort\11 BUSINESS NAME Of THAT ftllng elaif'M by any eredttor Tile registrant com· LIY AomlCY Hiii COii-SULTANTS. a geMral pert• lort\ll Auction Llceft-"'g
I goods are IOIO IS Is. 1nd of IM clllef exacuuve oltlce C ERTAIN BUS INES S 9"111 be J~ry 13. 1989 rnencec:1 to tranwt buM-llUMTY DIYIL~NT nenhip, 21 Sun Ri-. IMne, Act 1t1e 1111denlg11ed will tell 1 must be removed at tile lime Of princlpal builness office KNOWN AS. NEWPORT Whdl 11 the bulirint dey nett under tile llctltl~• AND THE YAUDITY MOR· CellfO!'nl1 92715 8t ~ _,. lly ~ltl¥e l ~---t; or sale. Sal• sub1ec:1 to P''°' of the ttantl.,Of ,1. (If "ume PIZZA CO.. 118 23RO before the conaummetlon bulineu name or narMt o.ANCe MO. 111 M TMI MichMI G TIKI. 28 SUt\ tllddW'O on die 11t11 Nv ot
eancettation 1n tile event ot ., above·· 90 111111 SAME s TREE T. NE w po RT date apec:ffled 1t>ove. titted above on December ,OUWT,.. VALLIY AGe... River. Irvine, Calllornl• J8"UerY. 1111. at 12:00
settlement be(-OwTlW AS ABOVE BEACH. CALIFORNIA Dated Daeemt>er 1, 1988 20 l988 CY '°" COMllUMTY H· 92715 o'ctoc:ll PM. on IN premtMt BAUER active member of the ,and obllgaled party Deteo . All otl'ltl' butiness names (d~Tlleplaee.allOO.teon AIDOLLAH LALIZA" PARVIN & co . INC . Jim VILOf'mMT ..OltMCl A Mlel'IMIR.P ... lk.23Em· wflere Mid Pfoperly het EVELYN C . BAUER. Methodist Church. t1'11s 28111 day of O.C.mber, and lddtesMS uMO by tile Of Iller which. the 8'* MMIMIZAO, KIYAMOOIH Perllin. Pr~t &A&.a.I AMO UH TAX eratd. Irvin•, C.lltornla 1iMtl "ONd· end wflfctl ere 57 f I f She wu born in Riv-1988and4tl'ldayo!January, intended transleror within .frantfef It to be c:onsum-INOll,..., Intended Trena-Thia ttatemerit wn hied UPOtl THE MOUITRIAL 92714 located It Pubk Stor"8. agr . ormer y o . C ) f 1989 Publte St0tage Man· thrM years IHI past IO far mlled ate. THE ESCROW leree(S) wltl'l the County Clerk of Or· AMA MDIYILOPlllNT W1tlilm F. Cepper. 20122 172& Pomonl Awenut In the
Costa Mesa, Cah-ersad~. a ~ ornaa. agement tne . Tetepl'lone u kt\OWl'I 10 the trinelarM FORUM, 23131 LAKE Publllhed Orange Coast ange Coullty on Daumt>et '"O'ICT ARIA, O"· Cove Clrele. Hunun,oion City of Coste Mela. co;,niy
fomia pa.Siied away She LS survived by 18181 244·8080 Agent for era (II ··none· IO state I CENTER DAIV£, SUITE L. Delly Pilot Oecembef 28, 2t. lNI ,_ M.TSMATWnY, A ..oft. hlch, Calttornll 921' of Orenge. Si. .. of Celi·
December 25 1988 at her 3 brothers John Owner NONE ' El TORO. CALIFORNIA tlll W·264 -no11 M TMS ..u8TNAL Thll bualneH 11 eon· fOfnll. tlle gooct., c:Ntt• or
K . ' . f 0 _ f San 'Di Publtshe<I Orange Coast The 'name(tl Ind bullnest 92830 ON OR AFTER JlnV-Published 0rafl09 Coat AMA MMVILOfltleNT ducted by. a general p.,,. personal property deecf10ed
mgman. Arizona. ot1uer o ego, oa11y P1101 o.c.tnber 28. eOOrMt 01 the transl., 1 ery 11. ,... -II' -.-Daily PtlOt Oeolmber 28. ,_.CT AMA. TO • ner1Np .,..__ 1n the fMher9 ot ot:
She WM. employed by Rodger Bauer of San 1988 Jltlulry 4 1989 llfl OONGHA AND s~ (•) Cllfmt !My be llled ~ ""'~ 1988. J•"'*Y 4. 11. 18, ADMINl8TID •• THI Tile reglttrlnt com· Bot> ...... -· 0143 ...
Bell Telephone Co. as Joae and Jim Bauer of w -270 PARI<, 18761 VIEW POINT with tlle office lflOWn MIOve. "._ "" W·H5 ITAft llOAM>,,. IGUM.· f\'l8"C8d uric:, ·~~u= dlllt, 4 ... cellnta. pool 1111.
an operator and then Goffs. California and "8JC MOTIC( AVENUE. HUNTINGTON~': IMI dat~3~.':" llOTICaM IZATIOM: ~ name -or ~ 21dcn.offCllW,mlilct>a•.bd
went Into u.Jes. Shel man y nieces & MMOI ~c;:4·,~:~Y pertl (g) Thi9-='T,.;.., It ( ..=:;Y "8JC m1a A Complaint hu been lie1ed~on1111aa -~\lpllollllry &p
wu an active member nephews. Graveside NOTICI M nent hereto 11 deterlbe<I ~ tutiiact to leellon 8109 of AT PIWAft IALI ..,..... ~ ;•;:::..: .:.': ~ G. Turi filed 0171 -tDalfl 11*11. · ecv .
of the Telephone Co. survives will be Tues-f'U&IC IAU 08'*.. .. FURNITURE. IN~ Code. . A,.. COURT M the Fount9"\ Vllley Agency with 111e"t!.n~ of Or· cttr/ ... wlltnd, Mite bat.
Pioneer Club. Aho an day January 3 at M ""80MAL FIXTURES AN D EQUIP-~~ W lupertor Cou;t of the TM9 8TAT8 M IOf Community Davel~ ange County !ti November ctoora. commetef tneulatlon,
l l ·30am at Riverview ~~ ~!NT. and It located at: PutlllMd Or Coeec ,._ °' C8'1tornl1 for tile c.....aN&l ,_,, pur.uent to G<Nwn· 21 lMI ~ ..,.. · .... 14t5·SUPERIOA AVENUE, anoe Countyol°'9nge "'9111tl ment Code SeetiOtl 53511 . 119111 ..,__,........Ille,._. .. Cemetery, Needles, HOttee Is hereby giVWt tl'lat NEWPOAT BEACH, CALI-= Pltot DaoemO. H . In IN IMttet of the •late COU91TY Oii Health and S ... ty Code Sec~ P\llllWled Orange Coaa1 to bid et the Mii. ~
California. Visitation c>ur1uan1 to Sections FO~IA 1 W-2'1 al WGOAY I<. COLLINS, OllUlll tlOn 33501 and CfllPter 9 Dally Pilot Daoemt>er 7 14 muetbe,....._.Clelfl~
prior to services 21101.21115 of tile Call-The butlneu name uMd c11<1111s CAmllO..,,_ (c:on-ldftg With Sec:tlOn 21 21 ,.., · •end p9ld IOf M tM IMW °'
loAM llAM t •'--lorn1a 8utinett and Pro-by ltle taiO ttan1teror(1) et P9JC ml1Cl NotloeitheretlyQ1'1911thet IUMMDlll(C.C,,, MO) of Tille 10 of Ptf12 of ' ' W251 pwch ... , AM ~ • a u~ letaoC>nt Code. Section 2321 H id loeatlon ,, CHIC tfle Yndertigned wltl .... •• ~~ Ille Code of CMt Pr~. goodt .,. ION • la, end
Jensen-Carpenter 01t11eCll•forn11commerc111 CLEANERS .... ~· .-. on or .,.., CITYOIJ A91VM,,. requeetlng tt11t Couf1 to"° -...-""* .. ,......... .... ...... Mortuary. Needles, Code. Section 535 of ""' Tha1 tllO built, lrantlet 19 NOTa TO JMuWY3. 1tlt, .. theolflce I.SY. a I .,.. ....,. .,,._ tM ~of Ordt· ~ """K ol ............... pttor Calif mia C~nl• P9nal Code and Intended 10 be contum· CMDfTO"t Of' of JOHN Ill. P~At<EA. A LAW ..... _. 11tl POUlft'W ~ No 1t19 ~ed by canc1l1tlOR Ill lfte WI of o the PfO'tllllont of Irle Ctlli-tN1eO •I the olflea of. I<. I twLK TAANenlt COA,0 .. ATION, H 13 VALLIY A .. llCY POtt tlleCteyCouncitoflheCtlyof ~-= ...... 11!'11 ...._. OW.. MEaRIU. lorllle Auction l1Centl119 SEAN SINGH. EIO.. (Sect 1101· 11"w111M1'1 Street, ~ A. CCl•u.TY HVILC..· 'oumlln v~ 1f10 Of• PIC-nA~-end all.911111 -'Y· Dated
EDNA IRENE MER-Act,tlleundtrtignedWlll ... Anlftielm. CllffOfnle tHOI •101 u.CC.) ..... Ane, CA 12705-6111 ....,.,a,...~ ........ ntnoe No. 001 ldopt.0 lly n.--.. \'* ... ~~:!..~~· at public: .... bye~IW Qr! or lfler JANUAfltY, 20. Hottot le t1eret1y ~to 10 t"9 hlQllelt and bee4 tN0-.. Ille F'OUMaln V~ Agency ._,. ---_.,...,~ --•• RILL. aee 95. She ~ °" the 12ttl Oey of 1W Ctechtou of IM wlttlln •· ..0 autltec1 to con-w tot COIMIWflity ~ dOli'I ~ •· tt1t ""* ...... MMo
WU • resklent of Jerwary, 1119. •t 11 00 ™' bull& lfanater II nCM nMled lranltwor(I) ... a tlnMltOn lly Ntld lupetlCW AL L , I •• 0 .. I ment HIGH , ... ,OAMANCI .......,. :;.., T..,.... ,.._ M f $3 o·~ PM. on tlle ~ IUbjtet to Clltlorn.e uni-ll\lltl .,.,...... II .._,.. lo .. COun. .. rigtlt. 11"8 end llTIMITID • ntl llAT· " YO\.I .W. 10 IPC)Mt and MARINI INTl"'"tlll, (I'll} I• • .......
"-A19\a esa or Where Mid property Ml torm Commerclal Code a.o. INde °" ,.,..,.. ~ ..... °' ..... dlC SIU II .. 19 .. "" VW"f °' ....., -~. yOU 13'0 w COLLlNI. UNrT K. °"'* yun. Born In Iowa Merl etcnd. and"'*" .. tton 8109. • ....... 1111: .... .... °' deettl, lflO .. """' =llJUJCI -,,. °' """' 1111 Wlttl tNt oaur1 no ORAHM. CA .... ., ............ u ....... er-. c.-on February 5th. 1893 loceted .. Putltlc Storaoe. file name and addrWI of Tiii IWNI•> lfld .......... Met'"*"' tlle...... cm COUllCIL °' ,..., lhen,,.,,.,.,., ar. tllt. oann.r ICIWard Mant. = ,.. DIU"*9f ...
and pwed away ln 20tl Newport IMS., "' tfle the person wltl'I wl'tont ICldrW ol Ille lftMndei ._ addlllOlllltt ~. lft 1'11 onY fll WW 1 written plH-lnt In ~ ~ Clrele. t • ~ '-._ W~ ~--•· Ana CalJfomia City of C:O..a Mela. County c:lelt!'8 m., be lllld le I< .,~., are; IC~ M4I to 1M tl'te cettatft YM&.IY ' 11111 "" relf*lll to tM oon~11 . .._ ___ . __ __, __ ....;. _______ ....,_
.:>1111-• ol Ofange. s .... ol calf. SEAN SINGH, ATT~ TAl<UH. 21t0 'llfl ...... ,..,,.._.~ ~ ... I &al& tM19 ...._. yOU dO to. 'flNI "°r
on December 20th. fornia,ttlegoodt.ctlet .... or AT LAW, 2090 s SANTA""' oaot .................. lft .. ~ -°'' 1'1--Jiii ............... l,tpOft ~-1988 She la IW'Vived P9'torelP'GPe'1Y C"Ul. SUIT! '20. CA'"'1 ........ °' C---.11 A ~ _.. .... , ~ tM ~ ... 1#111,,, by '17 nlecea "~"''=-m:'...-:..!' .. of, ~,!!411M. CAL.,ORfMA .,.. .......... c.r ... ,.,, .. ,._......... Mw-........... lfldtNaoowtrNJ ___ .1.. , ~~.I..
_.._ ~--, .... _ ....wge 011 -· ..... -....... end t"9 --.. of .... dltlf I n .............. to Wit' • .,... .__ TAW .... a"''"*" ....,,,... ,,... or .._ ...... M,......,~.. _,.pta UC Oitlt. Dd Ml, 4 ~ peint, tltlflQ Claime by My~ Cir ................................ n?ll -WM.• .................... In 11' Savka wW bf hekl Off CIW'I. twn '""'' 2 ••· 2 IMil • ~ fl. -., .. ......., • st • 11: .....,_, ............ CA _. .-i .. _.,, ..._.. .. _..;1 Ill 1111 •• ~id
Thundlay December Cln, lfWnt -I t ~ • 11'9 ~ .. (I .. _,. • ...... ~ Utl t7 ofTrm:t IOM • .................. •111•111. ---• PM Men-L .. VlklnO -1 1 --· ............... -., ,.. ...... .. ... ..... ... ... .. ...................... II n . 1988 12 at .•• ti*. mi.c ., ... '"*· ... .,..........._ c.. ...... ca .,,,...,., .......... ., t1e ..... ......,..,..... I 11
Harbor Lawn .....,. tofa. dtw Dated 0.0-Mt II. M ........ -t& llilll IR= =_, • ......... 1119 .. oMr~ Pc.~it!:~· .:"'Mo·~-:-' ::o.c:!:d ~ W-~.1 :\:1: == ~~·.: -~ F:rn; = a 1111 ·':.:-::.=;-.:;:. ' . . .................. en..~ .... ,... ........ oa • -. Dlnct..a by Plefw .... ._......:....._ .......... c.... ..._. .... 7-fl___ ....... JOIRIC ..,..... ...... o..--•• NlllNd~ • 11 mADVaGrMAT• "1 ~ '1· C.-........... ,..1'11111 = ,_. De 1ae "~S'D
..... 142-llsO =::..--=---.::..., -• ' ~O.,MAf
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