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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-12-29 - Orange Coast Pilot.. CE . THURSDAY, DECEMBEtl29, 1988 2S CENTS Weather blamed. for six deaths Where the buffalo roam Handler J.D. CordOYa, w~ black T- ablrt, eyea bla mi.hty claar1e penned oatalde Weadn Soadi Cout Ptaaa Hotel In Coeta lleea. Ralpble, a 1,200-poand buf- falo, hu been tbe Unlvenlty of Colorado mucot •Ince 1988. The achool'e football team -the Balfaloe -~:fu• BYU ln tontcbt'• Freedom Bowl ln A . elm. Body of homeless man discoverednear Coto de Caza; CDµnty 's crops threatened By BOB VAN EYXEN Homeless shelters remained CN .. Mtr,... l tefl crowded throughout the Southland. Cold weather killed sax people 1n Mana&ers at the Orange Coast lnter- Southern California this "'eek and faith Shelter in Costa Mesa said caused problems for farmers and Wednesda' naght that the) ha' e been motorists. and weather officials say 11 turning people a""a) all "'eek because will remain cold through the week-of a lack of space. end. although temperatures will be The cold snap has also resulted tn a slightly higher beginning Fnda). shonage of blankets and scveraJ Tn Orange County. cold con-social groups reported Wcdncsda~ tributcd to the death of an uniden-that thev had run out of blankets to tified homeless man whose body was hand ou·t to the homeless and needy. found Monday in a rural area near Farmers throughout Southern Coto de Caza. authomies ~lic"e. California set up wand machines to He was found on a fire road clad protect crops such as strawberries and only in shons_ and a hoOded vegetables from frost damage. swcatsh1n . Emplo)ees at lr~·inc-bascd Deputy coroner Barbara Mitchell Tre~sure Farms. one of Orange said the cause of death was still ~1ng Count) 's l argest ;tgnc.ultural fi rms. . invcst_ipted and that the man's next · worked through Wednesday ojaht of kin had not been located yet for fighting the frost. a company official positive idcntifiCation. said. Several deaths related to-the cold • So far. the 6.200-aCJ'C' farm has were also reported in Los Angeles. escaped any senous harm. Wind and in the Santa Barbara area near machines aild overhead sprinkling President Ronald Reagan·s ranch a S)Stcms ~e used to protect the crops. homeless man e,•1dently froze to Meanwhile. snow and rain fell death in an avocado orchard Wednes-Wednesda} night on pans of Nonh- day night. em Caltfom1a. which as also ex- pcnencang unusually cold weather. Weather forecasters say most eoastal and inland areas in Southern California wall experience temperatures about thrtt dcgrttS warm.er beginntng Fnday. w11h highs reaching the low 60s and low temperatures dipping to the 30s and 40s. Moderate wands of up to IS mph will accompanv the slight warming. according to forecasters in Los An- geles. Increased winds have al read)• been fell 1n Orange County. where air traffic controllc~ re crscd the land- ing and takeoff directio n at John Wa)ne A1rpon in response to the freshened breezes. ··Takeoffs arc now to the nonh and landtn~ arc commg in from the south.' said airpon spokeswoman Kathy Rutherford. ··1t's a tower dcc1s1on: an} um~ winds rtach ti vc to I 0 knots the) ma:t-reverse the d1rccuon." As a l'C$Ult of the chanac-jets arc approaching the airpon over New- pon Beach and taking off over Tustin. Hcav) sno~ and fog Wednesday closed both d1rccuons of Interstate S over the Grapevine. the maJor nonh- south throughway an the mountains , nonh of Los Angeles. Laguna discount~ await snow birds . UCl's Kevin Floyd's driv- ing lay up at the buzzer gave the Anteaters a 91-90 win over UCLA./C1 Six military installations In California have been recommended for closure by a presidential commission./ A3 World ~ Investigators hope ident- ifying the type of ex- plosive used to blow up Pan Am Flight 103 will help lead them to the bombers./ Al Coast Recent rainfall has allow- ed the Orange County Fire Department to re- open some wildlife areas closed because of fire hazards./ A3 Index Bulletin Board Butinesa Classlfled Comics Crossword Entertainment Opinion People Pofice Log Public notices Sports Weether 81 B•-s C5-6 88 C6 86 A7 87 A3 C•. 6-8 C1_. A2 Canadian tourists escaping the coldest month will find a warm welcome here By LESLIE EARNEST Of .... Oellr NM 118ft ' ·in its most elabo~ate attempt to lure tourists from a foreign country, Laguna Beach businesses are con- ductang a campaign to sha "e approx- imately 20 percent off pnces for Canadians who visit in January. Thro ughout ··MapJe Leaf Month 1989." more than 100 Laguna hotels. restaurants and sho~s wall offer discounts and other 1nccnti\'eS to "is1ting Canadians. Some merchants ~ill accept Can- adian dollars straight across for U.S. dollars. saving the v1s11ors around 20 percent. Currently. a Canadian dollar 1s ~onh about 80 cents an L'.S. currenq. The campaign. ~h1ch wall include free parking for Canadians who rent autos from Nauonal Car Rental and will even allow Canadian chefs to be flown an to cook at Laguna hotel restaurants. 1s pulling out all the stops to make v1s11ors from the nonh f~I at home. accordang to ,!.aguna Beach Ma or Robert Gentry. "We ha,en·t had such an elaborate program for tourists.'' Gcntr) said. ··we kno~ d~mograph1call) that we have a number of Canadians who wanter an Laguna Beach. Januaf) 1s the coldest month 1n Canada and It looks hke 1t"s going to be the coldest Adult papers .reminder of earlier fight Fl. ht e S--11 -McDonnell Douglas Astronautics -""""-__ o_v_ r exu a Y __ . co .. reading passages tha~ "ere tak$n e xplic it n e w s p a p e r s OUt Of Context and Sprinkled \\Ith four-letter words. like n e d to '70s battle No books were e\er pulled from B y ROBERT BARKER OllM.,..,,... ..... ~ battle over sexuall) e>.plicit newspapers dispensed from""'news- racks 1n Huntington Beach has evoked memories of an earlier day controversy in the city involving First Amendment issues. In the early 1970s. fundamentalists launched an assault on books used in the H untington Beach Unaon High School District. At about the same time. a food vendor was putting religious messages an to bags of potato chips sold to students. library shelves and the .. endor "as asked to remove the Chnst1an state· ments from has potato chip . Shenkman said. Ralph Hauer. another Huntington Beach resident "ho served on the board with Shenkman. said a com- mittee of librarians and English teachers found that the books an question had redeeming educational features. Shenkman asscns that he didn't like the idea of censorship then and he doesn't like it now. though he sa> she finds the sexual!> explicit newspapers repugnant. .,.., ............ Ron Shenkman. a former mayor and a school board trustee during that controversial time. recalled that critics would hold forth at the microphone at board mecungs 1n the old education center near the "They· re trying to force their "alue system on other people:· Shenkman said. "This can lead to (others) telling people what they can and can't read Where do )OU draw the ltne? Do }Ou legislate what they·rc itoang to watch (Pleue eee PORJlf/ A2) Some of the eesaally oriented newepapen for ea.le ln local neweracu. Petitiq_n protests trash fee in HB BY ROBERT BARKER .... .,.., .......... Jerry Falabella. 44. is fed up with taxes i"n Huntinaton Beach, and he"s tryinJ to trash the U ra-month rcsi· denttal trnh collection fee that went into effect in September. Falabella. who said his first threc- month t~sb bill of S 17 .08 comn due on Jan. a 8. 1s penu~ that ht also faces a sha rp increase on his wattr b1 II while payinaa 5 percent tu to the c•t) on water. ps and power ulililty bills. He lwl 1-lcbed a dnve and pla ns to carry signatures to the City Council on Jan. l 7 to demand that officials mcind the trash foe. If they don't. he's ronsidermg takana steps to put the issue on the ballot for the next election. he said. Fala~lla. a teacher in the West- m 1 nster School Districtand a 13., car rcstdent ofHununaton Beach. said he personally collected more than I 0 signatures from pcopk who oppose the fee. ··one e lderly woman 511d I re- minded her of a youna Howard Jarvis. .. he said. "I think that she meant 11 as a comphm nt:' Falabella claims that the trash f~ -"h1ch has bcen the ObJCCt of• porad1c battles bet~etn home- O\\ ncrs and ell~ leaders for about I S ,ears-amounts to double ta,at1on · He reasoned that 1f the city docs charge for trash collection. the charae should be included on propen)' ta' bills so that 1t could be deducted from fedcrar income ta.'c th Ruhnau. an Internal Revenue r' ace pokespcrson. s.a1d Wednes· da) that the tra h fC(' can·t be dedu led~ hen lasted a a separate fee or ta' 'he said 11 could be deducted ··1n some cases·· 1f 1t 1s in ludcd 1n propcn) ta,es. Falabella said he h()pes to ~in the suppon of recent I) elected rn) coun- cilmen, Dorr MacAlhster and Jim 11\ a. who "'ere quoted 1n their campaign literature as being oppoSed to the tra h fee. ~ tac-1.lh ter. ho~ C' er. said after the election that he as und«1ded about the trash foe and that the tam1x11gn literature 1n question went out "•thout his ._no"ledgc. (Pleue ... TllASB/A2) month in Laguna. ··eut we're going to make them feel nghtat home-.,.,1thourwcatherand our hosp1taht). ·· Gentry said he doesn't think locaJ residents wall ~annoyed by the free parking offer to the tounsts from the nonh. ··in the ~mtcnime the parking in Laguna is ca~ somc.,.,hat and the local residents really do cn1oy ha ving (Pl--.. TOUIU8T9/A2) Irvine and Karl dissolve company By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Ol .. 0.-,,... ..... Jam~ M lnme of the pioneer Jrnne fam1h and tuart Karl Jr. have ended a bncf partnership in a video producu~qn "enture. The Orange Coast businessmen. both said to be malhonaircs. reported· ly had formed Karl-If' inc Films 1n Corona del Mar to prodU('e children's videos. They announced this "'eek that the partnership of J.I. Films Inc. and Cooper/Hamilton Inc had been dis- solved and that Karl's firm. Cooper Hamilton. would take o'er all of the operation. The compan) apparent!} as named af\cr Karl's two son . Lea Backer. general manager for In ine's Corona dcl Mar firm. JM I Inc . said throuJh a spokesman that the~ have a pohC) not to talk to the pres about their business dealings. Ho~e\.er. the spokesman denied that the d1ssolut1on ~as an an) wa) connc-ctcd ~11h Kart's recent legal troubles. ··11 "a JUSI a run-of-the-mall bus1- ., ne s dec1saon ... he said 'o one at Cooper/Hamilton 're· turned the Pilot's calls Earlier this month. Karl .,,,as fined S60.0u0 and g1\.en three )ears proba· uon for '1ola11ng federal campaign rontnbut1on la~s. Karl. 36. pleaded guilt. to funnel· ang S 185.000 to the Gan Han pre 1den11al campaign and other Dcmocrauc candidates.. Others arc under 1n'1cst1ptton 1n the 1llcgal'campa1an fund1n15ehnM. including Laauna Beach dc"cloptt David tem and former Han cam- paign finance director DouaJas Rosen (Pl---mVDIS/A2) 2 .Orange County lnmates remain at large One fled from a medium securtty f aclllty: the other mad~ a br~ak rom O~a,nge_C~unty JaU He .,,, as \\Carina 1 aold J:tlJ Jumps.1ut In the othct rcttnt "'ape from Thco Lac). Robtn H td.s. a uspccled car thief br<*e awa\ on Jul) .? I. tak•na a car that had bctn let\ 1n the Jail's p1rtun1 lot. He "as rcaptu~ on Jul) 2S. One ot~r neaped Oranac Count) J11I inmate alto remains at lals. M1th1tl Let T a)lor, 35. alto ttnoWft as Anthon)' GilMtU. broke out of IM centnl IMt'l's. ,ail '" S.n11 AM i• Q\ ember I'°"& With f°"t OI~ I I !t ·court ds employ rs rictory;·on employee suits ts, warmerdayson Coast SAN FRANCISC~P) -The .ia1e ~me Court y restricted t~ riaht offired worken to sue their employers on the arounds that a dismissal broke a promise of con· tinued employment. onl promise of continued employ- mtnt. Justice Allen Broussard. who wrote OM of thrtt separate dissentina opinions. accused the majority of "a radical anempt to rewrite California law in a manner which ... will laYc the wronafully dilCha,.ed worker without an adequate remedy." Bul he rcjec&ed araumenl11Cttpted by uac .ppaa.ac c;oun1 in recent yean 1ha1 I wromf\11 firiftl. lft bed· faith violation · ol' the employer's promise, also amounts to a ton or civil injury. with a substantial in- crease in the potential damqrs available. In a maJor victory for employers. the court ruled 4-3 that a worker who is fired without good cause. in violation of a company's express or implied promise. can sue only for reinstatement and back pay. and not for emotional distress and punitive damage awards that often are much larger. Citing the need for "commercial stability," Chief Justice Malcolm Lucas wrote that it was "important thaJ employers not be unduly de· prived of discretion to dismiss an employee by the fear that doing so will give rise to potential tort recovery (for additional damages) in every case." The rulin1 remstatts but sharply limits a suit by Daniel Foley. who was fired from his SS6. I 64-a-year job as Los Anacles branch manqer of Interactive Data Corp. in 1983. after telling the compeny that his boss was being investigated by the FBI for embezzlement from a former em· ployer. Such suits have been recosnized in other commercial contexts. like an insurer's breach of its promi~ of coveraae to a policy-holder. But Lucas said the employer-employee relationship has "less inherent rel· cvant tension" and commented. ''The interests of employer and employee are most frrquently in alignment." U.S. Tempa. ... l• ,. 13 41 25 23 ot 13 eo Calif. Temps. The court allowed employees to seek the additional damages when their firings allegedly involved viol· auons of public policy. such as a worker's refusal to violate a law. But Lucas placed new limits on such suits. saying the policy involved must serve the public and not merely the em· plo_yer's interests. One pro-employee as~t of the 8 ruling was the court's willingness to allow suits to proceed based on an County jail inmate has seizure, dies By BOB VAN EVKEN Of ... o.ly ..... Ital! A 6()..year-old man in jail on drug charges died early today after suffer· ing a seizure in the jail wa rd al UCI Medical Center. official s reported. The man. whose identity is being withheld pending notification offam· ily, had surrendered to the Orange County Sheriffs Department shortly before 2 a.m. on Dec. 17. He had outstanding warrants for possession of a hypodermic needle and other drug paraphernalia as well as for failure to appea r in court. "He had been at the central jail in Santa Ana. but he became ill Wednes- day afternoon and was initially taken to Western Medical Center:· said Lt. Dick Olson. a spokesman for the Sheriffs Depanment. Olson said the man. believed to be a transient from the Santa Ana area. was taken to UCI Medi cal Center in Orange. He suffered a seizure early this morning and was pronounced dead at 5:40 a.m .. Olson said. There ha ve ~n 11 deaths at Orange County jails so far this year. including seven in the jail wing at UCI Medical Center. records show. As usual with jail-related deaths or deaths involvi ng law enforcement offi cers. the matter is being in- v~stigated by the Orange County d1stnct attorney. An autOps) was scheduled today. Olson said. The boss later pleaded guilty to embezzlement. Fqley. who had a spotless record in nearly se ven years of employment. ref used a transfer to another office and was fired two days after he got a merit bonus ofS6.762. His lawsuit. still in the pretrial stages. co ntends the firing violated a promise by the company ofcontinued employment and w~s a .Pre!ext .for .covering up wrongdoing. in v1olat1on of public policy. In today's ruling. the court said Fole) could not sue for violation of public policy. because his alleged duty to report misconduct to his employer did not serve the public. The ruling allowed Foley to proceed with his breach-of-promise suit but li mited his potential damages to lost salary payments. Lucas cited Foley's allegations of that he was promised continued employment by oral assurances of job security. consistent promotions and raises. and reliance on company policies. Those aUegations.~f:proved~ could make his firing a breach of contract. Lucas said. . TRASH ••• From Al FaJabclla said Wednesday that he'll Pe "extremely disappointed and the voters will be extremely disap- pointed" if MacAllistcr and Silva don't follow throup on promises . The City Council last July ap- proved the trash fee to help pay for major l)roje<:ts facing the city. In I 970. the council dropped a monthly trash fee when it approved a S percent tax on utility bills. Officials from time to time con· sidered rcinstitutins trash fees but until last July. ~ected the idea. Opponents say officials nearly 20 years ago promised to never charge for garbage pickup. Officials say there was never such a promise. The water rate increase. which went into effect shortl).' before the trash fee. biked the bill of typical homeowners from SI 9.20-to $26.60 every two months. 34 17 ., 23 19 27 ~ 25 14 ·II IO •32 ... n 70 41 .. 21 It OI 45 07 44 IS •5 13 •5 H 4 1 Of 29 CM 22 OI 35 17 CM ·It • 52 II 13 09 2' ,. 21 17 8l 72 51 35 34 CM 71 21 " 54 40 n · :M 20 42 21 37 2• .. 16 4S 24 71 73 ,, Of .. 21 72 42 ff 31 " 29 53 31 ~ 17 52 25 40 33 7• 21 11 03 27 11 OS 02 5' 33 11 7f 31 • •7 " 21 ,. 45 24 11 IO 37 20 53 21 37 21 70 21 Tides TOOAY 8econd IOw 7;S3 p.m. ,..., ..,....,...,~llvd .. 17-42 ww.e, 11 n ' v..., ....... 25-42 L..-11111111~ ... _ ..... 42 Loi Mg9lll ~ ·--2M5 flr9I ICM t-01a111 2.i ~ ,, .. ..,., 4..2 tow I 0 P.111 t.S """ llOp.111. 1.2 ... ..,., • 4:51 '·"'.:i.. ... ,,. ........ 111. ............. M. ......... ,, ...... -.... 13 ..... ,... . · Slaying linked-to ~rratgnment delayed. a specialized gang · ·Auto crashes into restaurant 1n theft of labor case By IRIS VOKOI Ot"'9o.ly ......... A Mission Viejo man's arraign· ment on charges ofthefl oflabor from three illegal aliens has been continued until Jan. 19. Hugo H. Cicardini. 34. was sched· uled to be arraigned Friday but asked instead for a conference with the district attorney before he decides how he will plead to the charges. Cicardini was arrested in Novem· bcr after Antonio Ramirez. 24. Hee· tor Leon. 2S. and Javier Leon. 39. complained to Costa Mesa police that the pain1ingcontractor refused to pay them fo r work performed in June. 1 Cicard1ni reportedly picked the three workers up at 20th Street and Santa Ana Avenue in Costa Mesa. He is accused of paying the men only a portion of what he promised and then threatening to report them to the lmmiiration and Naturalizatio n Ser· vice 1f they complained or not receivi ng tbe remaining S 1.800. When Cicardin1 did not pa ylhe men following repeated police notices to do so. the distric t attorney's office decided theft of labor had occurred and issued an arrest warrant. IRVINE, KARL SPLIT·~· From Al Karl. a resident of Big Canyon and a graduate of Corona del Mar High School. made the bulk of his fortune marketing Jane Fonda worko ut and Playboy videotapes. Dunng recent co urt hearings. how- ever. Karl's attorneys argued that their client as in debt and was in the process of selling his home to raise money. Irvine is the son of the late Myford Irvine and an heir to the Irvine famil y fortune. LOSANGELES(AP)-A man has been charged in the Dec. 15 slaying and robbery of an armored car guard. and the lead Los AnJeles police investiga tor on the case hoked him to a gang blamed for a series of such hold ops. Sheriff Sherman Block told a news conference Wednesday the charges and a warrant for the arrest of Marchand Elliott. 20. were issued on Dec .. n . bu t authorities kept quiet for a \\<eek to protect Wl\OCS~S. But wath Ellioll still at large. the sheriff released a photograpll and description of Elliot and offered a SS.000 re~ard for information lead· ingto hisarrcst in connection with the slaying of guard Patrick Rooney. Rooney. 35. was going toward his armored car after mak ing a money pickup at thl' Lucky Market on Lakewood Boulevard in Bellflower TOURISTS .•• From Al long-term tourists in town:· Uentry said. when an assailant shot him once in the head and took his money bag. sheriffs deputies said. The dnver of a van the robber jumped into for an escape ha s not been identified. Elliott also is sought in connection with an armored c.ar robbery Oct. 31 in Inglewood. Authont1es have been rnvestigat· ing 13 armored car holdups and three possibly related bank robberies car· ried out over the last year an L-0s Angeles. Ventura and Riverside counties. Block said there is no proof as yet to charge Elliott with other crimes. but Los Angeles Pohce Detective Nor· man Roberge said he was believed 10 belon_g to a ring of as many as eight bandits whose increasingly brazen robberies have left two armored car guards dead. MONTEREY PARK (AP)-Two d iners were killed and three others sitting at the same table were seriously injured when a car raced out o f control and plowed into a res· tauranl, officials said. Three othqr diners received m inor injuries. The car ba rreled into the side of the tiny Four Happiness restaurant at S p.m. Wednesday. hitting at least one table of diners and coming toa stop all the way inside the eatery, said police dispatcher Sally McC'om». "It looked lake a war zone -no it looked more like the pictures from the Armenian eanhquake," said Fire Depanment Battalion Chief Ernest Pruett. At first. police and tire officials said the driver appeared to have suffered a heart attack. But the driver. identified as 7(}. year-old Rud y D'Agostin of Sherman Oaks. wa s treated and released from Huntington Memorial Hospita l in Pasadena. A 17-year-old girl and 37-year-old man, both unidentified. were pro- nounced dead at the restauraot. J he car pinned the victims against a wall and a hot stove. authorities said. PORN FIGHT IN HB ••• "The long-term tourist is really more welco me by the residents than the day tounsts because the long-term tourist typically leaves his or her car at the motel and hoofs around town. "We literally had to di sassemble the wall to free them," Pruett said of the victims. From Al in lheir own homes? You have to be careful that you don't open up a Pandora's box ... Pornography is something for the courts to define. not the City Council. he said. Collen McCammon. a 26-year-old nurse who earlier th is month launched the campaisn against the adult newspapers being dispensed from newsracks on city sidewalks, said this week that she and Shenkman probably aren ·1 on the same page. "I wonder if he's looked at these (ad ult newspapers)?'" she asked. And they are being put out on the streets where they can do harm. she said. McCammon, who enlisted the help of PT A offi cials and church leaders. appeared recently in City Counci l chambers to complain that newsracks with the offending material have proliferated next to the main post office on Warner A venue. She said adult newspapers have shown up on recent days in racks in other partsof the city. too. She has asked ci ty officials to get the material off Huntington Beach streets. And they spend money." The proposed ordinance would As--pan of the festivities. Joan restrict the number of ncwsracks in Winser. con$ul ~cncral of the Can· the city for health and safety reasons, adian Consulate in Los Angeles. will City Attorney Gail Hutton said. visit Laguna Beach on Jan. S. She will The allocation of newspapers into be the guest of honor at the Leader· racks wouldn·t be based on content, ship Laguna Luncheon sponsored by though. To do so, Hutton said. the Chamber of Commerce and the "would be to run afoul of precious Laguna Beach Hospitality Associa-tio n. Joan Win.er rights of American citizens." Four days later. Chef Fritz Hutton also said that the proposed Engelhard. executive chef of the Hotel Laguna owner Claes Andersen. ordinance probably will require firm s Westin Hotel in Winnipeg. will arrive "Havi ng the ability to sample the that place newspapers in the racks to in Laguna as part of the Canadian food preparation and supervision carry liability insurance. Month Visi ting Chef program. from one of Canada's finest hotels City Councilman Tom Ma ys. a "We think this will be one of the fun ript ~re in Laauna Beach without Among those injured was a 12· yea r-old boy. who was in serious condition at Huntington Memorial Hospital witb a broken wrist. broken collarbone and chest injuries. saidr nursing supervisor Judy Pruitt. The youth was not identified. A man was in critical condition at Arcadia Methodist Hospital along with a seriously injured woman. said nursing supervisor A o Van Meter. Three people were treated for minor injuries 11 the scene and apparently did not require hospital care. Ms. McComb said. McCammon said she and her followers aren't trying to tell anyone what they should do in thei r own homes and bedrooms. But the adult newspapers carry ads for prostitution. show explicit. hard-core photos and discuss what might be considered bizarre sex attacks. she said. McCammon. who maintains that states with the highest amount of pomoaraphy have the highest rates of rapes and child molestions. has prompted ci ty officials to draft a newsrack ordinance. which should come up for a vote in mid-January. member of a city anti-pornography events for Canadian Month." said having to travel so far is exciting." / com mittec. said the ordinance could •-===========::::::::=::=::=::=-:=-:==:-:=::=-:=-:=::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::-:=::::::::=:::==---=.....-- Winning lotto numbers By nte As1oclated Pr~H Here arc the winning numbers picked Wednesday night fpr th e Californ ia Lottery's twice-weekl y "·Louo 6-49" game: 14. I S. 41. 42. 45. 46 and the bonus number. 23. Players who correctly guessed all six numbers will share a prize pool of S 12. 7 million. lottery officiaJs said. All those who picked five numbers plus the bonus number will di vide ORANGE ....... COAST --· rm.I MAINOl'ACI 330 W.. e.y St C:0.1a -CA among themselves a prize pool of$ 1.1 milhon: fi ve of six will share $882.000: four of six will share $802,000. Three of six is worth an ausomatic SS per winner. The numbers were chosen by Lotto machine during a television broad- cast oria.inating in Sacramento. The sales from Saturday nipt to Wednesday's drawing were S 16 million. rcaulate adult publications by limit· ing the number of ncwsracks in the city and by assigning their use to publications based on circulation. .. It's a very tricky situation." Mays said, "and we have 10 be careful how we regulate newsracks and map· zincs. rm a firm believer in First Amendment rights, but there arc limitations." McCammon, who said that ii will be sad if one adult oewsrack remains in place, said she plans to work with Assemblyman Gil Fersuson. R·Ncw· pon Be~ch, for lq.islat1on designed \O curb pom~phy. One of Fersuson's bill, which prohibits nudity on the front pqe of pubHcatfons in MWVKks. has been sianed into law. MacCammon said. Sflc'll help with Fersuson's cfTons 10 bin the publications from newsracks that have nudity or what some consider oblcenity. she said. .. :.: ... .... ...,_ 9o11 ISIO. Coete ,....._ CA tM29 -....... a "2•MPI. _,_ & edotOrlll, .. ,-411 JratcaU 842-8086 ....... ,.. ..... . -~ ,._ .... .,. ···"' ......... , ........... ~ .. .. YOL.11,NO.• ..... ................ ........ _...,, ..,.,, .... _ ...... .... ,,,,,,.. ..... ........ Cli alilll Six military bas in state targeted for clo ure 1, IUCHARDDE ATLEY • 11111 ........... Six military installations in Cah- fom11 would be shut down under a presidential commission plan de- siancd to reduce the U.S. defense bUdaet. includina the historic Pres- idio Army_ Base at San Francisco and three Air Force bases. • The six were among the 145 military bases or installations throu~o.ut the country a govemmen t comm~ss1on t~ay proposed closing or pan1ally closing for annual savings ofS693 million and a total savings of SS.6 billion over 20 years. The Commission on Base Realien- ment and Closure called for closing 86 installations. including 52 military housing units. Five more installa- tions would be panially closed and 54 others would act new missions and additional personnel. Implementation of the recommen- dations will follow a complex Word to the wise procedure invotviDt ~fense Scc- mary Frank C. Carlucci. both Houtn of Co...,aa and Georae Bush a~ he becomn president on Jan. 20. The process 1s desianed to withstand political pressure from conpnsmen trying 10 protect bases 1n tfleir districts. Carlucci will have until Jan. 15 - fi vc days btfore he leaves office -to accept or re,ief:t the ~net's findinas. He will not tla;..e the option of picking or choosin& amona the bases. Approval of the padaae by Carluc- ci would send the issue back to the House and Senate, which may block the closinp if both pess resolutions apinst them. GeorJC Bush. after he becomes president, would have the right to veto that resolution. and his veto could bt overridden by a two-thirds majority of both houses. Under the plan. Nonon AFB near San Bernardino. George AFB near Victorvilte and Mather AFB on the Military balle8 tlult may clOH In Calllomla WASHI NGTON (AP)-Here isa list ofCahfom1a m11t1ary bases which a aovcmment panel recommended today should be closed. no1 cons1ructcd or COn_lb1ned with other bases 1n order to save the Defense Dcpanmen1 SS.6 b1llton over 20years. The repon atsosaid March Air Force Base n(ar Ri verside will have a s1gn1ficant increase in pcnonntl due 10 base consohdat1ons: AIR FORCE INSTALLATIONS George Air Force Base. to dose M11her Air Force Base. to close Norton Air Force Base. to close NAVY Naval Station San Francisco. Hunters Point, not to be constructed. . AllMY Presidio. San Francisco, to close. Hamilton Army Airfield, to close. MISCELLANEOUS PROPERTIES Salton Sea Test Base. to close outskins of Sacramen10 would be closed, along with the Presidio. Hamilton Army Air Field .in Marin Coun1y and the Salton Sea Test Base. In add111on. the Hunter's Point Naval Station planned at San Fran- cisco would not be built under the plan to save an esumated S5.6 billion Aa llJckey Moaae looka on, Minnie Mouae aUpa word• of Scbembechler durina( the team'• vtalt to Dlaneyland. The wUdom to Unlvenlty of Michigan head coach Bo Wolverlna meet USC a Trojana ln the Roee Bowl on Jan. 2. Crime spree only nets vitamins, wine An-Irvine man went on a I 0- minute crime spree that included stealing vi1amins and cheap wine before being arrcs1ed, Foun1ain Val- ley police reported Wednesday. A man identified as Chris1opher . Goodwin, 33, began his stran~e · Monday morning spree at the Vn- aminShop, 91)4 Edinger Ave .. where he alleiedty stole a bottle of fiber wafer·v11amins. "He opened the bottle of vitamins and took 3 bunch but he must ~t>t have liked the t)pe because he was seen spilling them out and throwing the bottle in the bushes:· Fountatn Valley Sgt. Lee Pepka said. The man then walked about six doors to Dick's Liquor. 9074 Edtngcr Ave .• and tucked a 94-cent bottle of 'Yine inside his pants. Pepka said. "The female clerk saw the thefi and set off the silent alarm," Pepka said. "She also tried to prevent him from lea' 1ng. but he pushed her violent!) again t tht' door Jam. then fled from the store:· Pepka said the man polished offthe bottle\\ ithtn St'conds. left the empt) co ntatner tn the store·s parking lot and walked across the street to a Taco Be.II restaurant.· But he apparent!) wasn't in 1he mood for Mexican fore. .. He was ti') 1ng 10 get some beer ... Pepka said. The spree ended when Offictrs Ste'e Issacs and Daniel Llorens am' ed at the sce ne and arrested Goodwm. Gooch..,1n "as arrested on suspi- cion ofrobbel') and booked at Orange County Jai l in heu of $25,000 bail. The clerk dtd not require med ical attenuon. Pepka said. -By Joy~ Bodlovlcll Car owner surrenaers, l>ut BMW at large By JOYCE BODLOVICH Of .... .,..,"-' ..... The case of the nearly reposM:ssed BMW has come to an end -son of. A Costa Mesa resident who alleged- ly pulled a gun to prevent a man from repoliessing his s1ylish car last month has surrendered to authorities. But lhe car-that's another story. It's still at large. In late November, Costa Me~ resident Alben John Vega. 40. al- legedly interrupted repo man Michael Long as he attempted 10 hook Vega's 1982 BMW to a tow truck. Vega reponedl) pulled a handgun and ordered Long to leave his car alone. Vega then sped away an th e nearly repossesed car. accordtng 10 police. Pohcesa1d Vegasho\\ed up Dec. 14 at the Costa Mesa Police tation. But he \\as not dn\lng 8\,1W. Detecu'e Dan Hogue stud. ··we sent tw o plain clothes gu~s to ti') and bag him at \\Orlc on De-c. 13. but he wasn't there:· Hogue said. "\\ ord mu t ha' e gotten out becau~ : Highway Patrol to check · drfvers' sob:riety tonight B1UUSYO&OI OfllleDmllr"'4 ..... I Officen from the California High- -.y Patrol's San Juan Capistrano station will conduct a sobriety check- point at an undi1elosed south county k>cation tonilhL The idea of such checkpoin1s is not to arrest drunken drivers in larae numbers, "it's to deter," said Ken Daily, a CHP spokesman. .. We just pick an arbitrary night on or about Ute weekend" to conduct the checkpoints, Daily said. · Vehicles l'Ull"I through 1he cbeckpoint will be stopped on a random bui~ beainnina at 9 p.m. Oflkwn usually beain by talkina to lrillM • A youna man who knocked on the door of a home 1n the JO bloc:k of ' fonuna East Oil Wcdnnday afler-. noon said he was sent by a Miahbor to be lldof'cd. The m1dtnt called pohcc after concluchn1 1ha1 t~ man ~as ectint "IOOfY·" No annt was mack. • • • Somcoee llok a microtCOPt from a cloctor's oft"t« &n lhC 181 ()() block of C.avtt Driwe bct~n 6 p.lft. T~ ._,and I L m. Wcdnndly. • • • about every 10th driver. ··but around the classic drunk time. I to 3 a.m .. we start slopping every single car.·· Dail) said. Motorists who fail a field sobncl\ test will be arrested on the pot and booked at Orange County Ja11. where a chemical test will be administered. Toni&ht's checkpoint will be.-the third die highway patrol has con- ducted in the south county 1his )t'ar. The last was set up on Coast Highwa) in Laguna ~ch. in conjunc11on·,..1th the Lquna Beach Police, whale the first was hetd on Old Coast Highwa) 1n San Clemente in COnJUnct1on with that city's police depattment. "We usually do about one a quaner." Daily said. "We'd like to do a lot more. but unfortunate!} funds don't permit 11." Much of the .,xpense 1n,ohes 1he use of officers working oven1me to man the checkpoints. Daily said. The stops ha' e proved to be good dt'tcrrcnts to drunken d"' mg. Dail). sai d. On nights pubhcized chcckpotnt arc conducted. "the acc1dcnas go down '"' olving drunk dn,crs and the arrests 10 down," Dail) said. "\\'e know it \\Orks." The upreme Coun carll?r this month upheld a Cahfom1a u- prcme Court ruling that use of sobnCI) checkpoints did not v 1olate dnvers' nghts. Th1ny canons of Armor-All "ere ot La (as1ta <\\enue 7:45 a.m stolen from a busaness in 1he 1900 Wedncsda}. bl~k of .\lion Partway some11me • • • th · th >\ Pf} tool was uted to Optn the rear caricr •s mon. • • door oh 19 1 To)ota truck perked 1n .\ brown 1987 CheHoltt Van \lia\ IM 9000 block of0.1sr. Avenue" 8:30 stolen i'om tht 20 block of .\uto a.m. Wednc'4ay tostcalaSlOOpo~r Center Or1,·e Oft WcdMtde\ afl\"r· it•. noon • • • A "'id' lifteG IM IHftlf'S off I P-ta1av..-.; ._..,..._shedatletl aaequn SCJ1neo1tC ................ -.. lriN IO 8t lllJt E.ttid Ave. II «dO I m fOfte GPft\ ..:,";;mila 1910 • WedllClda..I and stole products Fonl INdt _.... •• tM,... lllottt ,..._.M 11 I O.• • • he shO\\ed up at our front desk the ne).t da)." • Vega "-3S arrested and later ar- raigned at Harbor Municipal Coun. where he was released on his o"'n recognizance. He was ordered to return to co un Jan. ~6. As far a the BMW. pohce said the} 're unsure\\ here 11 1s. -\ kt'~ to 3 re 1dencc 10 the 18000 block of Mu ir \\ oodsCoun ma) ha ve been used b~ someone to pin enti: and ransack 1he home. No propcn~ appeartd to be taken. Newport Beach T"o tedJ1e and three bra.pner· pant\ combo \\t'l'C reponed stolen from· the • ret Fantasy Lingerie store al 31 N. :'lle"-pon Bhd. Loss wa s S.?01. • • • An un kno"n su~tance tha1 ma' ha't bttn sugar was poured into thr gas tanl of an engine of a ~eh1cle parked at I 91h 1rect and Balboa Bouk' ard. causmg an es11ma1cd Sl .500 damage. • • • ~ nC'Cklace "1th diamond pendant q 1lued at SS.000 and a $700 aold bracelet "ere tolcn from a hott'I room at 4545 Mac<\nhur Bhd. • • • <\ 'andal cut thn.~ "\l'._st\al>Cd holes in tht' con,crublc top of a 1988 Ford Mustan.a parked on the 1000 block of cast Balboa Boule,ard. ca.tall .. If )OU'rc !ltOp~ b I l~O pollC'C- mtn 1n a s1n1tc car toda). be cal't'ful about compl11n1n1 to the oohct chief -one of them might be C'h1cfO.,c nowckn. no"dtn and patrol C11>- ta1n Tom La1ar kn their desk duttts bthand 10 IC'C ~hat the officcn an tM fitkl to throuah on a rouUM petrol Drpanmnu 01'k1ab sa) the p1ir eecs t•lkr "e~ ontt in awhile .. IO to on ,.trol. • • • ~ UOO rid•lll crop v.as "okn ffOllt the' R1tnh Lauf'f'n Polo \hop at Sout1t nationwide over 20 years. The report 1uued 1n Waih1naton, D.C.. also Slid that March Air Fortt Base near Riverside would have a significant increase 1n personnel due to consolidat1on. Plans 10 compkttly ihut down the Presidio in San Francuco. where the Sixth Army 1s headquartered. was a surprise to the office of Mayor An Agnos. "What we heard was that it will close panially," said the mayor's spokeswoman, E1lttn Maloney. It is still not clear whether the announced closure will affect the operation of Letterman General Hospital. an Army fac1li1y located on the base. The Hunters Point station was to be constructed 10 suppon the USS Missouri if the Nav) decided to base the battleship and other ships an San Francisco Bay. Maloney said today's announcement suggests the ih1p will bt bawd etteYthett. The lhll1doWll of Oeorar. a tac1ica1 tra1na111 aar base 1 n the dewrt 70 miles northeast of Los A111tln. would sipal hard ti mes for the Victor Vattey commun1t1n of Apple Valley. Vic- torville. and Hesperia. where the base contributes an estimated SS t 6 million to the local economy. U.S. Rep. Jerry Lewis had said Wednes- day. The base is responsible for S. l S4 c1 vi han JObs. George Air Force Base is home to the 831 st Tactical Air DiviS1on, with 5.246 military personnel and 6.2S9 dependents and a gross annual mili- tary payroll of $109 million. The d1v1s1on's two winss fl y F-4 jets and practice on bombing ranges in the descn. West German Air Force pilots atso train on F-4E's at the base under a S60 m1lhon contract with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. .. - Rainfall eaSes fire hazard in wildlife areas By LESLIE EARNEST °' .. .,.., ......... Recent rainfall has allowed the Orange County Fire Dcpar:tment to reopen some Wildlife areas previously closed because of extreme fire haz- ards. .. E~ year we open wharwc ca11 ·fire ~n· and close 11." said K.a1hlccn Cha. public informa1ion officer for the depanmena. "This )'car. fire season opened the carhes1 in 25 )Clt'S." The reason was a combina1ion of scarce rainfall and warm weather. according to Cha. .. Basicall}. all the grass and brush covered areas reached what we call critical fire danger 1c~els." she said. But recent rains have restored moisture to vegetation, allowing some local wildlife areas to be reopened. Areas reopened Dec. 20 included the unincorporated coastal Irvine Ranch area bordered b) the San Diego Freeway. Newport Beach. Coast Highway. Laguna ~ch and Laguna Can)on Road. Restrictions have also been lifted from 1he unincorporated South C~st area between Laguna Hilts. Coast Highway at Laguna Beach. Laguna ~ La Paz. and Mouhon Parkwa). .\lthough th~ areas are no lon,er closed because of potential for fires. much of the land is private property and not open to the public. In addition. fire officials arc issuing reminders that fire safet) should be a )ear-round concern. ··we urge the citizens to s1ill take precautions about how they hand~ any kind of fire near the wildlands.." Cha said. She also said the areas could bt closed again. ··All it will 1ake is for the San la Ana wi nds to come back and to di) us out to a hazardous condition.·· Cha said Wednesday ... It doesn'1 take more than a couple of days." 911 call ends Santa emergency A young Westminster gJrl "ho called.the 91 I eme~ncy telephone number 10 find out wh y Santa Claus missed her home go1 a late Christmas deli~e" from some ofh1s law-and-order el es. The call from 8-'ear-old Brenda Cervantes ca~ an TUC1day aflemoon. police Sgt. Richard Grodt said. .. <\little girl came on and said she wanted to kno" "here Santa was because mommy told her Santa didn't come to 1he house beca use he was helping the Pohce Dcpanment. ·· Grodt said. The girl was one of four children. ages 3 to 16. who were at home in • the care of the oldest wh1h~ the mother "as seei ng a doctor. Grodt said. When police called back la1er to talk to the mother about her child pla} ang with the 911 line the) teamed. with the help of a Spantsh translator. that the family was financially burdened. The depanmen1 took up a collett1on tha1 raised S 175. Gifts were purchased and delivered Wednesday morning to the family's apanment on Gotden Nugct Circle. Grodi said . Power outage closes Huntington LibFary By ROBERT BARKER °' .... .,.., .......... ~bout 100 people v.ere evacuated \\ ednesda~ night "hen a nearb) pov.er malfuncuon plunged tht' Huntington Beach Central L1braf} into darkness. Libra!'\ officials turned on 1he emergenq generator and used a megaphone to request all patrons to Coast Plaza. • • • ~ burglar ki cked open a door on Vnn Ness to steal a bic)cle. The 14-~peed C"rus1cr "as' alued at S 1.600 Lapn&Beach Poh~ ~ere called to a home 1n tilt' 300 block of Third trcet at 7.09 p m \\-cdnesda' v.here 1he resident said someone "as pttptng into the v. in- do."'. • • • Ca h and checks totaling SI O. "00 "ere taken from a locat1on in the 900 block of South Coast H1gh"a' on \\ edncsda) • • • Jewcln "onh S700 "a reported stolen from a home in the 400 block of .\rro~o Chico Dn'c on Tucsda) Ran~B1acla • " hohd~ panr_ hostt"Ss m the 6000 block of \. larc Dnve called police \\rdnesda) ntlht to break uohttown assemble on the main tloor. The) also sent emplo)ees "•th flash lights to make sure no one was marooned in darkness 1n the lower reaches. There were no lnJuncs and patrons did not panic, Library Operations uper' 1sor Jan Hah orsen said toda). In fal't. some of the students lingered over their research work. reluctan1 10 leave until the last minute. Halvorsen said. part) that got out ot ha nd. T~re were about 50 t:> 75 people at the part) and mo t of them were .. crashers." she said. • • • Burglars smashed a windo" at the Church of Rehg1ous Science's Mmis- 11) of Pra)ers in the achffShopping C'en1er and tole a $550 tele' 1sion sci. ~ secunt) suard sa1Q there have bttn s1 m1lar 1nc1den1s 1n the past few dan. • • • • Th1e~eS' stole tv.o purses with a value ofS~80 at 1hc third floor nurses station at Huntington Humana H~ pnal. I ,~Beach Bhd. • • • Someone entered an apartment in the 19000 block of Delaware Strttt through :in unlocked rear door and stoic a S200 tclc' 1S1on sci. ••• ~mconC' stole 30 canons of c1garettC'S at Beach Liquor. 19731 Beach Bhd. • • • Thieves stole a SI ~O watch, a S 180 bracelet a $1 .500 nng and a S.tOO camera from a car parted at the Plc1fic Coast Hill\way at TM Bluf&. Crash Ylctim dledof aataral caaw r a bnck ptlntt'f, SM wa pronouM'ecl deed at 1M tttne. AaOfantrCountyCMOMI'"~ .--.............. ,si.,; .... .. Wt• r• .............. lk9! • -CCMll .......... .. ...... Nn oat dlc °*" • ... ,, Toumament of Roses adds !~!~!:~ ~=:.:::~:1~~!~~~~~.~ of R~ Parade will feature a first. a !OP .. was grand marshal as~ little ~rl flowers used in the parade include weddana aboard or:ie. of the . floats 10 1939..-.Mrs. Black. 60. ~·II. repnse roses. chrysanthemums. orchids. ~rformed before mil hons of viewers her role for the 1989 parade. carnations. marigolds. baby's breath. of the New Year's spectacle. "I can't imagine a more ap-sweet peas. iris. lunaria. poinsettia. Durint Monday's parade, Carie propriate person to symbolize the daisies, strawOowers. daffodils. tulips Humphnes, 21. and Ron Simms 23. tradition •nd history of the Tour-and mums. will .~ on the "Romance in Cali-n~ment than S~irley Temple .Black," To join the parade. the Ci ty of fom1a float. said John H. B1uar Ill. president .of Yokohama. Japan will sent its Kanto The two will recite their vows in t~e Tournament of Roses Assoc1a-Gakuin Marchan& Band. w~at is ~ing descri~ as the fT!OSt uon. . • Olympian Rater Johnson will lead w1del)'·W1tnessed Amencan wedding. Also . an honor of the parade s nine riders from the American Ridina Oflic1als estimate that the 60 floats. ccntenmaJ. the .1 00-ye~r-old state of Club for the Handicapped. Another 22 musical units and more than 250 Nonh Dakota is. sending the North horseback contingent is from the eq_untrians will be viewed by 300 Dakota Centennial Band ~nd North United Otlegation of Apache Chiefs. million people worldwide. about one D!tk0.ta Qov. George A. Sinner. who This year's Rose Queen is Char- million of them at the parade site. will nde an a cove~ wagon. . maine Beth Shryock. a 17-year-old Humphries, a California State Uni-The parade begins aJ 8 a.m. and as Pasadena resident. The WestridfC versity Long Beach student. and followed by th~ Ro~ Bowl battle School senior is planning a career m Simms. a student at the Los Angeles between the University of Sout~ern communications. College of Chiropractic in Whiuier. California Trojans and the Un1ver-The first Rose Parade was Jan. I. wtre chosen among entrants in the sityofMichigan Wolverines at 2 p.m. 1890. when Valley Hunt Club mem, ... •• 5 ... Dozens rescued from Hollywood high-rise fire LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fire- fiahten rescued more than a doun ~ from a I S-llOI')' Hollywood office buildin&. many of whom hud- dled on the roof an near-freezina weather after a blaze broke oufon the ninth floor. Seventeen pco~IC). includin&~ two chil4ttn and two fircfifhters suffered millor smoke inhalation and were treated at the scene of the fire. which ianited shonly befott 9:30 p.m. Wednesday. said Fire Department spokesman Jim Williamson. Names of the injured were not immediately available. but none were seriously hurt. officials said. It took 150 fircfipters from 21 engine companies more than a half hour to dollSC the names. "I was really scared for the first time in my life." said Tess Sonaco. who was one of several people who fled the buikhng on their own rather than wait to be rc5eued. ' Scarth for the Most Romantic Couple Parade officials estimate that more bers staged a display of rose-decor- in Southern California contest. than 20 million flowers wer~~scd on ated horse and buggy teams prior to They are the first couple to be the 60 floats. The larger float builders. an afiemoon of public games in the married in the parade. such as Lofihouse. ha ve the blooms town of 12.000. · Patrick John•n of-0.brlelaDDli•• bttof 9J•mall•p to a ft•t that wtU be pan of lloacl&y'• Toanwnent of a ... parade. "We smelled something burnins- Then we started looking for whett 11 was coming from. There was just the smell, no smoke alarm or anythiOJ." ' said Sonaco, who works for a nursing referral service on the buildina's 12th floor. RoSe Parade's who, whtit, when, Wb.ere and Wh"y More than a dozen people either Oed to the roof or to floors above the smoke and names and waited fo r firefipters to escort therp down stairwells to safety, officials said. PASADENA (AP)-Here is a r'u ndown on the 1989 Rose Parade and other information useful to parade spectators. WHEN: The two-hour parade stans at 8 a.m. Monday. WHERE: The parade begins at Maylin Street and Orange Grove Boulevard. turns east on Colorado Boulevard and continues on the 12-mile route to Sierra Madre Boulevard and turns nonh to Paloma Street. THEME: .. Celebration 100." GRAND MARSHAL: Shirley Temple Black. QUEEN: Charmaine Beth Shryock. LlNEUP: 60 floats, 20 marching bands and 275 horses. POST-PARADE FLOAT VIEWING: The floats will be on display afier the Rose Parade on Paloma Street and Sierra Madre Boulevard. TABOOS: Police say prohibitions cover alcohol. illegal druas and fires that are not in elevated. fire-safe containers. Fires are banned if it is windy. Also not permitted are selling spaces on the street or sidewalk that is not an official grandstand. saving spaces that are not occupied and sitting in the street prior to midnight before the parade. Tents. couch~s and boxes are not allowed along the parade route and horns m!Y not be sold or given away during -t'-le~ Years an the city. PARADE AND ROSE BOW L PARK- ING: Parade parking is allowed in legal spaces on city streets staninJ at noon Sunday. No parking is allowed on Colorado Boulevard. nor m red zones or temporarily posted "no parking" areas. Illegally parked vehicles will be impounded and could cost up to $200 to be released. BUS SERVICE: Afier the parade. buses will run to the Rose Bowl every 10 minutes for a fare ofS2 round trip. Parking is available at Ralph M. Parsons Co .. 100 W. Walnut St .. and the city parking structures at Ramona and Garfield. Arroyo Parkway and Union. and Unioaand Eair Oaks. ROSE BOWL RV PARKIN'G: ParklOJ will begin at noon on Friday continue through Mon~y at Brookside Park. at $35 per niaht. The R V's must include toilet facilities. PARADE ACCESS: From the 1-210 exit Lake, Hill, Alladena or Sierra Madre$an Gabriel. From Freeway 134, exi• Fair Oaks- Marengo, Lake. Hill. Altadena or Sierra Madrc- San Gabriel. From the Pasadena Freeway, take Arroyo Parkway nonh 10 any major east-west strttt south of Colorado. Note closures below. CLOSURES: Beginning at 8 p.m. Sunday. closures include the Orange Grove offramps from the Pasadena and 134 freeways. the Del Mar approachcS to Route 7. the Sierra Madre Boulevard-San Gabriel Boulevard offramp to the 2 ro freeway and lhc R-0ute 7 onramp at Pasadena A venue. The buildina was not believed to be equipped with a sprinkler system. fire officials said. Svidcr said it was built before ordinances were adopted re- quiring sprinklers in l~I hiah-rises. Damaae was esi1mated at $250,000, Williamson said.. The building's ninth and 10th floors suffered extensive smoke damaae. he said. Cause oflhcfire wa-s-under-.tn- vestiprion early toda , W1Uiam'°n said. HUGE SILE State firm says it will market a safe sex test TELESCOPES-BINOCULARS • Scope City, the world's largest and most complete telescope & binocular discount centers offers you te.lescopes for astronomy, lend/sH, view-homes, 1port1 & photography as well as 8 huge -c =--~election of blnocula~s for every purpose. Rlflescapea and ecceasoriH. ~ -Q•..O 'f4!n " • Celebrate 1he holidays with up to 5~ aavfnga at an Scope City" locations. Expert non· ~I r._, ., commtSSlOn staff to help you choose the instrument best suited for you. 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N A FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIA ,, " MOUNTAIN VIEW(AP)-A test that tells a woman when she can have sex without using artificial birth con&rnl to avoid preanancy has been . developed by a biotechnology com- pany that said it will be at least a year before it gains regulator) approval. Monoclonal Antibodies has rc- lease<Ldetails about the test that 1l said provides valid results onl y during the second half of a woman's monthly cycle. after ovulation. The test. which Monock>nal sa\d wall sell for S3 to SS per test when it's marketed, measures progesterone levels to tell women when ovulation has happened. When the hormone level is high. it indicates that ovu- lation has taken place and conception is no longer possible. The test involves putting a spot of urine on a pad. If the progesterone level is high,. the sample stiows no color. If the test sample turns blue. a woman would be liable to become pregnant. Monoclonal President Thomas Glaze said the test. which would be necessary once or twice a month. would appeal primarily to cou~les who want to avoid artificial birth control for moral or rell&Jous reasons. Dr. Mary Manin. an assistant professor at the University of Cali- fornia at San Francisco. said women can get the same information provided by the test by tracking their own temperatures. "It could provide an additional comfort level for those couples using the rhythm method," she said. "But patients sophisticated enough to use a test like this aren·t likely to be using the rhythm method anyway." Convicted murderer kills himself in San Quentin cell SAN DIEGO(AP)-Theapparent suicide of a death row inmate who murdered two San Diego police officers doesn't ease the loss to the department or victims' families. Chief Bob Burgreen said. Joselito .. Uerry" Cinco. 29. was found dead in his San Quentin cell by a correctional officer making rounds, prison spokesman Lt. Cal White said Wednesday. Cinco. whose death was discovered Monday, apparently hanged himself by fashioning a noose from an 18- inch-long sock and tyi ng one end ofu to the top of his cell door. White said. He was sent to the Northern California prison in July. one month after being sentenced to die for the ~ptember 1984 murders of police officers Timothy Ruopp. 31. and Kimberly Tonahill, 24. the first woman officer killed in the line of duty in the depanment's history. Cinco was tned in Orange County because of extensive publicity about the case in the San Diego area. "On the surface, Mr. Cinco's death would appear to close one of the tragic events in the history of the San Di~o Police Department," Burgrccn said an a statement. "But a lot of innocent people still have to live with what happened that night. Families have been tom a~rt1 lives altered forever. Mr. Cinco s aeath doesn't change that." Cinco, who was housed in an individual cell like all death row inmates. had not displayed any suicidal tendencies dunns his five months at San Quenti n, said White. &~ , · ' .. ,NEW YEAR'S EVE A80AllDTHE E. II! In the Lounge from 9 pm * ENTERTAINMENT BY JASON CHASE * MIDNIGHT CHAMPAGNE TOAST * MIDNIGHT BUFFET *PARTY FAVORS * COME EARLY FOR BEST SEATSI •1... ....,... ..... ,."" ~-.......... ..., . Laae••Dlaer ............... 1511.C.MIHWJ. NewpartB.-.0. 675-5790 '· Controversial CIA of ficlal -named to U.S. security post WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent-elect Bush has picked No. 2 CIA official Roben M. Gatesas hisdeouty national teeurity adviser and is aominatina career intelliaence analy.1 Richard J. Kerr to replace Gates at the spy qency. Gala .. knows the system, the critical imJ)Orlanct of the an~ncy proceu for ~tial decesion- makinaand lbedctaalsoflbe manaae- ment of that procesa, •• Bush said Wednesday in a saatement issued in Wuhiftllon while he was huntina in Texas. Gates pined national attention in the sprina of 1987, when President Reapn nominated him to succeed the lilte William J. Cuey as director of central intellilence. furor over the Iran-Contra affair delayed Senate confirmation of the nomination, and Gates asked that his name be withdrawn in March 1987. Gates has denied consistently that he tried tocoveruptheCIA role 1n the Iran arms deal. and he has kept a high reputation amon& 1ntelhgcncc ex· pens on Capitol Hill. The vice<hainnan of the Senate lntelliamce Coramiuee, Sen. Wil- liam Cohen, R-Me .• said Wednesday that Gata ""bliT a tremendous reservoir of Went to the National Security Council staff. Cohen, i1I a saatement issued throusb a spokeswoman, called Gates .. an outl&Udina choice. Bob Gates is a lou for the intelligcnce qency and a pin for the National Security Coun- cil." Gates would serve as deputy to Bush's desipated national security advi1cr, retired Air Force Gen. Brent Scowcroft. Now, Lt. Gen. Colin L Powell is national security adviser and John D. NearoPOnte is his ~~· a~intment is not subject to Senate confirmation; that of Kerr as deputy to CIA Director William Webster 1s subject to hcarinas by the Senate inlClligcnct panel and a two- thirds vote of the full Senate. Had Gates been confirmed as director of central intellia,enct. he would have been the first CIA analyst to have auained that post. Previous CIA directors either have served 1n the spy aaency's clandestine service or have come from outside. like Webster or Bush. who was CIA chief 1n 1976. Kerr has spent his career as a CIA analyst and administrator. Webster said the appointment of Gates "is tribute to him and a vote of confidence for the aJCncy. While we will miss him here. his appointment 1s a real plus for the national security of this country." Kerr is "a hifhly qualifltd, C'"IA career otlker ... ; sa id Webster. "As deputy director for intellia,ence. head- ing up the analytical side of the aaency. Kerr is my principal adviser on the production of finished in-telligence. and is widely respected throughout the intelligence com- munity." The Kerr selection also won praise Robert Iii. Gatee on Cap1tQI t-1'111. "Dick Kerr's appointment sends a message that the new administrauon is recognizing professional excellence in selecting top offi cials in the intelligence area." said Sen. David Boren. D-Okla.. chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Gates. 45. has served with the CIA for 22 years .• incl uding a fi ve-year loan from 1974-79 to the NSC staff. OrMge eo.t DAILY PILOTIT'1wedey. DIDeMber' at, 1-Aa Eastern inspects 46 older 727s; groUnds 2 more I By TM Aa~iated Press Eastern A1rhnes began inspectina 46 older Boeing 727s with special tqu1pment after grounding two more of the planes for fusclase problems. and cracks turned up in an out-of- serv1ce OC-9. Also Wednesday. a Federal Avia- tion Administration spokesman said the aacnc) will propose a rule ne>.t month requmng operators of hun- dreds of older 727s to strcnJthen the aircraft by replacing some rivets. Problems. meanwhile. plagued fi"e flights on other airlines. including a Pan Am j umbo Jet that returned to New York when an cngme fa iled over the Atlantic Ocean. The New York Post said the passengers on that flight included a man heading for Bntain to 1den11fy the body of his brother. who died in the Dec. 21 crash of Pan Am Flight 103 in Scotland. No injuries "'ere reported in any of the incidents. Later Monday. a 24-)'car-o&d 727 was grounded m Boston after a three- 1nch crac"was found in rouahly the same area as the hole 1n the other plane. Late Wednesday. Eastern mainten- ance workers 1n M1am 1 found signs of corrosion 1n the same area near f usclage nvets on another 727. Ccrcmsak said. "This 1s being cast as an Eastern problem . but reahsucally, it's an industry problem." she said. noung that other maJor airlines fly more 727s than Eastern. Della Airlines on Wednesda) said it was inspecting its 727s. ln an unrelated 1nspect1on. ap- parent cracks were found 1n an out-of- scrv1ce McDonnell DougJas OC-9 1n .:\tlanta. Cercmsak said. 4 rescued, 7 missing from sinking cargo ship Eastern be&an using electricaJ cur- rent to hunt Tor imperfections m the older 727s Wednesday night. Eastern spokeswoman Karen Ce remsak said in Miami. _ The F .:\A will propose in Janual) that opera tors of older 727s be requ~red to replace. some n vets. agenC) spokesman Dave Duff said sn Seattle. Duff said 1t had not been • determined ho"' man) airplanes the proposa l would cover or how much 1t would cost. The proposal 1s s1m1lar to a proposed rule 1ssued 1n Octobe r that would req uire operators of older Boeing 737s made w1th the sa me cold-bonding process as the older 727s to replace more than 7,000 ri vets in each ofthosejets. DufTsaid. More than 100 737sand 8 13 727s were bu1h with that process. BOSTON (AP) -Rescuers plucked four seamen from the stormy Atlantic after their 2SO-foot cargo ship sank. but one died and seven others were missinJ today, including a crewman who shpped through his lifc"jacket, authorities said. and we are continuing to look for seven people," said Chief Petty Officer Bill Ball. The rescue effon was hampered by heavy rains and~ to 45-mph winds and 20-to 2S-foot seas, the Coast Guard said. copter to Falmouth Hospital, where nursing supervisor Kath y Correia said one was dead on arrival about 6 :45 a.m.. apparently o f hypothermia, she said. The· other crewman was in stable condition. she said. Jersey. Trumble said. The captain sent a distress signal at 7: I 0 p.m. and lost communicauon about fi ve minutes later. the Coast Guard saic;t. "This 1s on our own m1 11atl\e." she said. She said the process could be earned out during normal mainten- ance. should take about a month and isn't expected to disrupt service. An aircraft. flyina over the area spotted one of the men on a life raft about 7:30 a.m .• but rescuers found the raft empty .\"hen they .uathcdJt Shonly before 5 a.m .• Coast Guard frogmen jumped from a helicopter and saved two men who were drifting without.rafts in &he-water. They. were bcJl pulled aboard &he copter. said Coast Guard Lt. Paul Wolf. The crew abandoned the Lloyd Bermuda in two rafts after the sh ip's load $hifted during the storm Wednesday ni&tt~said Conruuard Lt. j.g. Jonathan Trumble. The ship sank about 160 miles south of Nantucket and 200 miles cast of New A merchant vessel. the Eagle. which was nearest to the Lloyd Bermuda when it went down, was guided to one of the rans by a Coast Guard plane. Wolf said..-- .Jwo Lloyd Bermuda crew mem- bers were pulled aboard the Eagle. but a third was lost at sea durina a rescue attempt. he said. The airhne conducted visual m- spettionson most of its 111 727safter a l~h hole opened at 31.000 feet Monday 10 the fuscla~ of a Tl'i/ n eade<f l'rom Ri ester. N.Y. 10 Atlanta, forcing it to ma ke an emerg- enC) landing 1n Cha_rleston .. W. Va., and causing minor inJunes to tv.o people. The earlier proposal came aner a -20-foot .section ripped off an-Aloha--"""' Airlines 737 over Hawaii. killing a flight attendant and injuri ng 61 "We jL1,st~ word that the motor vessc Medalion recovered the life raft and there was no one on board .The two-were transponed by heli- people. Duff said the latest proposal had been in the works long before Monday's incident over Charleston. Winds in East, snow in Midwest leave six dead PTL formally sold to Toronto investor By ne AIHdatH Preu Hurricane-force winds with gusts up to 77 mph Wednesday triuercd the collapse of a Philadelphia factory roof that killed two people. hampered effons to rescue the I I-man crew of a cargo ship that sank in rough seas off New Jersey and blew off pan of 1he roof of an airport terminal near Baltimore, au1horities said. More than 350,000 bui&dinas in the Nonh- east lost power. The fast-moving cold front that brouaht the winds to the East left snow in the Midwest. where four people died after. shoveling snow in Indiana. Two jets skidded off run- wa ¥s at Greater Cincinnati Inter- national Airpon. which shut down for an hour Wednesday. Several cit~ endured record-low temperatures this morning. includmg Oakland, where It was 35 degrees. two degtecs colder than lhe record for the date set in 1978. and El y. Nev .. where it hit 18 below zero. breaking the record of9 below set in 1966. In Southern California's high de· sen. a motonst distracted by a rare blanket of snow hit a guardrail. killing her 80-ycar-old passenger. authonties said. A tanker truck skidded on icy Interstate S near Redding 1n nonhcrn Cahfom1a, smashed into cars and blew up m a fireball. causing two minor injuries. The winds that tore through the East were clocked at 77 mph in Baltimore. 67 mph nr Maninsborg:- W.Va .. and 60 mph 1n Newark. '.J .. and Elizabeth Cit y, .C. The wind knocked out po~er to 185.000 customers in the Baltimore area. 100.000 in the Wa shington area. 30.000 in Delaware. nearly 11 .000 an New Jersey and at least 31.4001n New York state. Many remained without power early today. In Philadelphia. two people were killed when secuons of a factor'\ roof crumbled and smashed into· thei r cars. said a witness. the Re'. Roben Falkenstein. The wind helped cause the roof to give way. Cll)' Licenses and Inspections Comm15Slon~r Don S. KJ1acrman. CH~RLOTTE. N.C. (AP) -A U.S. Bankruptcy Coun jud&c signed an order Wednesday formally sclhna the PTL ministry's assets to a Tor- onto real estate investor for $65 million. Buyer Stephen Mcmick has 11 da)'s to come up with a $3.25 million deposit. If all aocs as planned, 10 41 days. Mem1ck would assume the administration and operation of PTL's hcadquaners. Guaranteed Qua~ity. Guaranteed Lowest Prices. Every Day. l :ta3~SET I CROWN aNllj V1S1JNS IDOKWARE PLUS FREE GIFT Sec-through 8-pc. set cookware lets you see what's cooking wiLhout lifting the lids. Durable cookware for rangetop and conventional or microwave ovens. 10" skiUct. 5-qt. Dutch oven, 1 and 21h-qt. saucepans. 4 li<is. Plus. free gift with purchase: 3-pc. 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SunllA~. •7M>atWS f !'OM IN Mew r~) t~I >. "'9 .._h Ol'I lelK1' IM. TUM left OR U. ,.._ .... "°" ,'Mt 4~ F....ttle ... AMFl-..ff\ f'"-. •La MRI. 411 a n•U._ I-* HieMdleS..~ .... , ......... ...................... ............ ~---­... Qltm ..... • . ' I EzJ)erts to determine bomb type LOCKERBIE. Scotland (AP)-In theireffons ao identify the bombenof Pan Am flight 103. investiptors sought today to determine the type of plastic explosive that downed the jct and ~here and how it was planted. American carriers stepped up se- curity It Heathrow following a direc- tive from the British Transport Department. a spo~eswoman for the department said. On Wednesday. British authorities ordered U.S. airlines to toughen their security for checked baggage in light of the Dec. 21 attack. whicla claimed the lives of 259 people aboard the Boeing 747 and at least 11 local villagers. '"At this point. we don't have one particular lead or theory that we think 1s more promising than others ... State Dcpanmcnt spokeswoman Ph yllis Oakley said in Washington. "We are simplX pursuing all the leads that we have. U.S. authorities ha ve Posted a $500.000 reward for information leading to the prosecution of those responsible for the crash. But Charles Price. the U.S. am- bassador to Britain. said today it was unlikel) the U.S. government would retaliate if tht killers are identified. ··1 don'a know of any contin~ncy plans that involve some form of retaliation on our pan. and I can't imagine that it is very likely ... Price said at Heathrow International Air- pon before boarding a British Air- ways plane to New York. Of the investigauon. Price said: .. , am sure that w~at they arc primarily interested in is the same thing everyone would like to know -that is. how., the bomb got there. who put it on board and where it was located." . BAA. the airport authority that runs Heaahrow and six other British airports. said U.S. carriers im- plemented tougher security measures at midnight. American carriers ny to Heathrow and Gatwick airpons in the London area, to Manchester in northern En&land and Prestwick in Scotland. At Heathrow's busy Terminal 3. used by both Pan Am and.TWA. Pan Am staff were ask ing passengers bound for WashiJlltOn and Miami whether they packed their own suit- cases. whether their luggage con- tained anything that could be used as a weapon and whether anyone had asked them to carry items for them. French border police said securiay was stepped up at Charin de Gaulk' and Orfy airpons in Paris. with special measures aimed at Amencan earners. They declined to elaborate. Officials 11 Rome's Leonardo da Vinci Airpon said manpower was incrnsed af\cr the crash and that security personnel are on alert. The in vestiption is known to involve Scon1sh police. the FBI. Scotland Yard's anti-terrorist branch and federal police in West Germany. The New York-bound night oria- inated in Frankfurt with a Boeina 727. Amona the aroups under suspicion are the Popular Front for the Libera- tion of Palcstine~eneral Command. a Syrian-backed Palestinian faction headed by Ahmed Jibril. and the Abu Nidal group. The Popular Front became the first terrorist orsanization to bomb an ai rliner in night when it blew up a Tel Aviv-bound Swiss airliner in the mid-1970s. according to Ian Geldard. director of research at the private Institute forthe Study ofTerrorism in London. Fony-seven people were killed. He said the group may have felt itself isol11ed from the Middle East peace process becautt PLO chief Vasser Arafat recopized Israel's riatn 10 exisa and renounced ttr- ronsm. lcading to PLO-U .S. talks this month. Geldard. ho~ver. said he con- sidered reputed terrorist Abu Nidal .. the top suspect because he's the !host capable of undertakina a mission of this type ... Abu Nidal heads the Fatah Revol- utionary Council, a Palestinian fac- tion opposed to Arafat's recognition of Israel and talks with the United States. The Libya-allied guerrilla aroup has been blamed for dozens of hijackinp, bombings and assassina- tions since it broke with Arafat in 1976. On Tuesday. Abu Nidal's group said from Lebanon that it win "painfully saddened" by the crash. However. expens note that Abu Nidal does not always claim respo nsi- bility for his attacks. In announcing that a bomb down- ed flight 103. British authoritietsaid Wednesday the residue of explosives recovered from the debris was "con-sistent with the ~ use of a high performance plastic explosive:· •'--...... SalftCe ezperta of Britain'• Ropl Air Poroe work oa tlatf noae and cockpit of Pan Am Pu,Jlt 103 In Lockerble. • : FAA ort1ers_ t1gfiter screening of passengers:. baggage i WASHINGTON (AP)-The Fed-that a bomb caused the Boeing 747 to Bremer said today on "CBS t his specific changes . that arc being airlines both in the United States and out how the bomb got aboard flight era! Aviation Administration. mys. crash Dec. 21 on a flight to New York Morning" that "we have a very good directed at the airlines. Agency abroad, althouah many sec urity 103, where it was placed and what it' tified at how a bomb got aboard Pan from London. the Reagan adminis-chance" of finding out who was spokesman Fred Farrar said FAA measures are imposed in cooperation was made of. It's not known whethef Am flight 103~ began searching for tration promised "all available as-responsible for the bombing but that secu!itY experts are st!ll working out wittuheothergovernmentsinvolved. the bomb eluded security at. Frank-~s~ible secunty laP.SCs by . U.S. sistance" in investigating the bomb-"w(rc a long ~ay fr~m .those cop-deta1l~ofthen~wrequirements.some Wh ilelittleevidencesofarhasbeen fuft .. WestGermany.~hereA1aht 103 airline~ abroad and directed t1ght~r ing. . clus1~ns at • this point.'. ~e said of w~1ch are likely not to be made uncovered to indicate who might be onginat~, as a Boe1ns 727, or a( scrtening of passengers and their U.S. officials ~id there was a wide offic1~ls don t yet know 1f 1t was a public. responsible for the Pan Am bombing. Lond~n s H.cathrow Au·~n. where baggage. . range of terronst g~oups that may tetronst anack. . . . Much of.the focus is expected tC? be U.S. officials said there are a number the fl!aht shifted to• Boe1na 747 for Government officials acknowl-have been responsible. Bu~ P~ul .. Th~ F~A. meanwhile. said 1t ~as on tightening passengers screening. 0r -tential suspects. They include the tnp to New YQrk. ed~ Wedne~ay that a wee~ afier Bremer. the Stat~ Department sch1~f rev1ew,1.ng . current secura ty inspection of carry-on luggage and rad~I Palestinia ns such as the pro: ScmorFAAoffic1alshaveacknowt- !he Paf! Amencan World Airways of counteI{erronsm, told r~rters 11 measures bem~ken b U.S. air taking additionaLprecautions \! ~-OpUlar Front for th btber-a c;_d~)hat thty are perp_!exed by the J~~bo Jet explodea over Scotland. was .too earfy to focus susp1c1on on a ~amers abro~d becau~ o ! e .• m[):. match all baggage with boarding tion of .Palestine _ General Com~mbina beca~se boah the Fra!tkfun killing at least 270 peo ple, there are.no pa.i:ucul ar grou~. ma. and said 1t w~s prepanr:ig more passengers. mand, and the pro-Libyan Abu Nidal and Lond~n airports •r:c cons1d~red har~ leads on ~ho put the explosive Vt(e sho~ldn t narrow ou,r field of stn.ngen~ security .r~quirements .. 1 . .11 be t f group as well as an Iranian group the to be pamcularly security consc10.us device on the Jet or where the deed inquiry until we get more ~v1dence 5>r ~h1ch will a ff or~ add1~onal protcc-d n ~~e cases 1.tt1 a mat er 0 Guardians of Islamic Revolution' and ~an Am h~ undertaken spec1~I was done. intelligence that leads us in a cenain -lion to U.S. air came rs and the egrte. arrar sai · · security precau11ohs because of a tip Shortly after it was confirmed direction .... There isn't any prime traveling public." The FAA is responsible for estab-Bremer said among the tasks the airline miJht be a target of a Wednesday by Bntish inve~tigators sus t," he said. The FAA in a statement did not cite lishing security requirements for U.S. confronting investigators was to find terrorist bombing. 2French hostages arrive inPariS- PARIS (AP)-Two French sisaers held 13 months by Abu Nidal's Palestinian terrorist group arrived IOday in Bcnahazi. Libya and will be turned over to French authorities.. Vie state-run Libyan news agency JANA reported. • The agency did not say where the girls had come from. The French news agency Agence France-Presse. citing a source in Paris. said the girls, Marie-Laure. 7. and Virginie. 6. arrived this morning by boat and were turned over to Libyan authorities at the pon. The qency quoted the same source as saying the 11rls would be taken to Tripoli to be turned over to a French government official The ·news came 'minutes after Foreign Minister Roland Dumas of France said his government's efforts to win the rcasc of the girls were on the verse of succccdina. An employee in JANA's Paris office. reached by telephone, said the release of the &iris came after an appeal from Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi. "Following the appeal by the 'Guide of the Revolution (Gadhafi)' on the occasion of Christmas for the release of hosaqes detained in Leba- non. the two little French girls Marie- Laure and Virginie have been freed ." the employee said. reading the JANA dispatch. "The two little French girfs arrived in the city of Benghazi and measures have been taken so they can be turned over today 10 a delepte of the government and their family," JANA said. Shiite tiase --- destroyed ill Israeli attack SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING, Smoking By Pregnant Woman May Result in Fetal tn;dry, Premature Binh. Ana low~irth Weight. • ' r; .. ~ .. t : r ' r .. No .on·eissafe from the maw of terrorism The world was prepared for Wednesday's confirmation that a bomb blast ripped apan Pan Am Flight I 03 over Scotland and sent 259 innocent men, women and children to a sure and senseless death. American diplomats had bttn warned, and several terrorist group$ qaimed responsibility before the hard, cold facts were indispu\able. The world was ready for the truth, but how docs one prepare for the horror ofsuch an act? More imponantly, what happens next? Some counteMerrorism expens and families of the victims saY. that a response must be made. and that it should be quick a nd massive. But where wi ll that response be directed? The G uardians of the Islamic Revolution claimed responsibility for the·bombing.as retaliation for the downing of an Iranian airliner by a U.S. warship in the Persian Gulf. Why not take another poke at Moammar Gadhafi? There are rumors that the type of plastic explosive used in the Flight I 03 bdmbing is the same type Libya's madman leader stocked up on for his terrorism activities. Other so-called experts point to Abu Nidal. or the Po pular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. How about Abu Musa's's rogue PLO faction? Syrian President Assad used each group to force Vasser Arafat out of Lebanon. Each group hates Arafat. Even the factions oft he PLO that follow Arafat's lead are critical of his recent condemnation of terrorism. recognition of Israel's right to exist and talks with the United States. . Some skeptics even ask iflsrael might not be a suspect. In the day·to-<iay realism of Mideast politics that may not be so farfetched. Israel's reaction to the U .S.·PLO talks has been anything but heanening, and Israel has taken covert action against the United States in the past. George Thompson, a former foreign service officer who served in the Mideast. recently wrote a column for USA Today that said Israel should not be above suspicion. He cited the 1954 fire-bombings of the U.S. Embassy, Consulate and USIS offices in Cairo and Alexandria, which were blamed on Arabs, but were actually carried out by Israeli agents. He says there have been similar actions orchestrated by Israeli agents. Who do we blame? Who can we trust? Will Flight 103 be the incident that con~inc_es the American public that our leaders and diplomats ate impotent to protect us when terrorist leaders want to paint their causes red with the blood of innocent victims? Or, will we listen to moderates and remember the words of Winston Churchill when he said "jaw.jaw is better than war.war." When the question about what caused Flight 103 tocrash was answered, it only raised more questions. Those questions and the consequences of the answers are bcina studied in secret meetings. held by the world's intelligence agencies, but tM effects are felt by everyone. T he senseless carnage of Flight I 03's destruction was felt here in Orange County as it was in 18 other states and I 0 countries that claimed one or more of the victims as residents. FJi&htengineer Jerry AvrittofWestminsterwasoneofus. He andhis family are part of Orange County; a pan that was violated for some obscure political reason beyond his or her · family's control. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, promulgated by the United Nations, says everyone has the right to life and .. security of the person," and that "no one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life." Those arc comfortin~ words from a forum where representatives of the world s nations are supposedly working out their differences. Tell that to Avritt's family and loved ones. For now. American citizens can only join what the residents of Lockerbie, Scotland. did on Tuesday when they paid a spontaneous tribute to the dead as a rcfngerated van began moving the bodies of the victims out of town. According to the Associated Press repon, ··An honor guard included police, mountain rescue teams with their dogs. local officers and Pan Am flight attendants. "Some women wept, and others bowed their heads as the van rolled slowly by. One man saluted and another raised his hand in a gesture of paning. ~ "The only sound on High Street. as the main street is known, was a squeaky axle on the trailer. .. Residents stood silently for a couple of minutes. then m elted into the night. A cold rain began to fa ll." · Fading into tile night and that cold rain are symbolic of our grief. The cold darkness of terrorism has again proven that no one is safe and everyone is vulnerable. Opinions e1tprHMd In thla space are those of the Dally Piiot. Other vtewa expresaed on thlt page are thoM of their authors and artist•. Reeder• comment la Invited and can be sent to The Deity Piiot. PO Box 1580, Costa M ... ,92828. U.S.-PLO talks What (PLO Leader Vasser) Arafat's statement means. however, is far from cenain. He does not speak for everyone in the PLO. much less the entire Arab world. And he is notorius for chanJ.i na his position to suit his circumstances. Israel doesn t believe either Arafat or the PLO has chanaed and wants nothing to do with them. ft may be po coincidence that this initiative was taken by an outaoinaadministration at a time when the political fallout can bC min imized. Presidcnt<lect Bush was undoubtedly involved in the decision. It will now be up to the incoming Bustudministration to make what it can of this breakthrough. B...,,,,• Stllr-8.U.U. ORANGE COAST. ,.,. ~ ..... ...,~ (.._ ~--..... .. ,..., Aaecllll(-................ , ... ...... .... ( ... ............... ......... a .... ::.=..., Cltf l• .... c.... .__. .. s.tal• c..... ....... .... r ...... l..., c.... ..... ----....... '· • A7 Battle over lack of gun t safety rules 1\ J i~AS~N~:~!~~~~ " I ~1g.ned to inflict bodily harm~butnot ~1 1n t~e way 1ha1 Roger Deluca T.1 expenenced 11. r The An2ona man was on a hunung , tnp when his rn<ltlver. lucked in its ~ holster on his h1p~lew a hole through DeLuca's nght leg. He says in a lawsuit that he and a friend were hef11ng a deer carcass when the animal's anfler bumped the gun or the holster. The bullet damaged nerves in Deluca·s leg and the resulting limp has aggra va1ed a back prOblem. Deluca can't look to the federal Badly brOken congressional bUdgetprocessneedsfixing -government for help. federal safety watchdogs keep tabs op the safety of everything from baby doUs to jumbo jets -everything except guns. The Consumer Product Safety Com- m1ss1on. the federal Trade Com· mission and the Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms have no On Jan. 9. President Reagan Wiii -which tboscdecis1ons will be made - submit his last budget to the Con· not onlY next )ear. but year in and grcss.d · · ·11 be · ed An once again. 1t w1 1gnor . Each year. the executive branch of our government is turned illSidc out to prOduce projectio-ns for the follow- ing year's spending. The Office of Manqement and Budget collates information from every federal agen-cy. producing a mammoth document titled "Budget of the United States." Then, when it is delivered to Capitol Hill by the deadline set in law. the other party that controls the Congress pronounces it "dead on arrival." One xear. they even put it on a stretcher to illustrate the point. For its pan, the Congress offers no realistic substitute. ln practice. the overall budget is determined by individual spending decisions rath r than the other way aroun . Our congressional budget process is badly broken. With deficit spend- ing running out of control. it's high time we fixed it. · Immediately after his inauguration on Jan. 20. President Bu!h will have a brief window of opportunit) to push major budget process reform 1hrough the Congress. ln January 1981 . President Reagan used his immediate post-inaugural political clout to launch a successful campaign for historic across-the- board martinal tax rate cuts. But the spending side of the equation was never adequately addressed during the Reagan presidency. That's where George Bush must pick up with "phase two" of the Rea8an Revol- ution. Bush's proposals must call for dramatic. fundamental change. Just as Ronald Reagan challenged the existing orthodoxy of taxes. George Bush should seek to rebuild the budget process from its foundatio-n s. This 1s no time for a "summit .. with the Confress. a la Howard Baker and Jim Miler in Dttember 1987. to agree on next year's numbers. What sets cut next year is not nearl} so 1mponant as reforming the process by year out. A rational federal budget process would encourage the Congress and the president to cooperate in making timely decisions on appropriate O\ er- all levels of spending and taxation. The present system. however. does nothing of the sort. Deadlines set 1n law are routinely missed. Deadlock between the president and the Con- gress has become routine. resulting 1n government.wide shutdowns. The incoherence of the budgeting process. and the increasing lack of discipline in congrc~sional decisions to spend money. led President Re- agan near the end of his presidency to organize the White House Working Group on Budget Process Reform. After a year's stud). tbat working group has proposed a complete overhaul of the current system. The working group's proposal 1s embodied in legislauon l drafted. The bill has been reviewed for cons11tu· 11onality by the Department of Jus- tice. and -subject to negotiation on the Hill -u·s ready to fly. Herc are some of the bill's maJor features: • The Budset u" -the reform proposal requires tha1 Congress enact a binding budgeL law by May 15 of each year. As a law. not a concurrent resolution. 11 would be presented to the president for his signature or veto. This would ensu re 1hat the budget reflects the pnon11es of both the prcsiden1 and the Congress. • Simplified Budget -under 1he reform proposal. the budget would lit onlo one page. It would set ce1hngs on governmen1 spending within broad budget categories. The current S}Stem requires Lhe preparation of a h1ghl) detailed budge t con sum1 ng thousands of pages. which the Con- sress routine!) reject without read- ing . .t. high level of gcneraht). in contrast. will make agreement "11hm Congress -and between Congress and the president -more hkel). • Enforce ment -bcc.ausc the Congress regularly violates ex1stmg laws concerning the budact. the reform proposal puts "teeth" in 1ts requirements. One such enforcement ·mechanism is a super·ma1ority vote requirement. If Congress wished to violate a budget ceiling once adopted. this would require a two-thirds vote. .\nother cnlorccmcnt mechanism I .. reSCISS1tm" '3UlhOri" ror the president -similar 10 3 hnc-1tcm 'eto. The president \\Ould· be authorized 10 rescind pending 1n e\CCSS of 1hc budgct l'l'1hng.. • 'iusiainms ~kchamsm -1n the e' l'nt Congress tails 10 l'nact :i budgl't a1 all. an ··automat1t· ton11nu1ng rc.soluuon"" "ould rcappropnatc th(' pre\ IOUS ~ ca(S k\ d Of funding.. Sincc both the pre .. 1dl·n1 and 1hc C ongrc an.• hktl) 10 ''ant 10 deal ''1th some 1mponan1 al·\llunt d 1 I~ feren1I~ lhan in the prn 1ou\ ~car. th!\ pro' 1dc an 1n(l'nt1\l' for them .lo agrcc on a budgc1 II also pn.·' l'nl a 'ihut-<lo"'n of the go,cmml'nt in J'K' of deadlock • Entitlements -the reform proposal requires tllat Congress af· firmat ively determine on an annual basis the<lesired level of pending for each program. Prcsenll). federal spending on entitlement programs is esscnually immune from the annual aP.propria11ons process. Under the bill. 'irtually all federal spending (excepting onl) Social Secunty and interest on the debt) would be subjected Lo ann ual fiscal d1sc1phne. This important proposal "'ould restore san1t~ to a congressional budget process. Ctrls Cox is Qe cooge.1m--.dttl from t~ 41,. Coef'n11ioal District. U.S. 'sthirdcenturyrequires a rethinking of our values authonty to...kecp defective firearms off the mark el. It's up 10 the alleged victims to ask the courts to decide who is at fault, after the fact. Deluca has sued the maker of his gun, Sturm, RIJICr and Co. Although the model that Deluca carried was discontinued in 1973. an estimated I mil hon of them could still be in c1rculauon. Numerous lawsuits have been filed alleaing a dangerous defect in the design. ihCcompany has refused to launch a recall. blamin& the accidental shootings on misuse or neallaencc. Mether the federal government should protect consumers from defec .. tive guns may be the next biggun fiabt on Capitol Hill. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio. is known for his battles with the gun lobby. He has asked the-Gennal Accounting Office to investigate whe~r better safety devices on guns would prevent ac· c1dental shootina deaths. · Questions arose in Congress in the m1d-l 970s about the jurisdiction of the Consumer Product Safety Com· m1ss1on wticn it came to guns aod ammumtJon. The National Rtfk Assbc1ation and lawmakers such as Sen. James A. McOurc. lt·ldaho. and Rep. John Dinacll. D-Mich .. succcs.s- full) fought efforts 10 regulate gun safet). They claimed 11 was bad-door gun control. But others. including Sen. Edward Kennedy. D-Mass.. questioned wt\} even gun enthusiasts wouldn·t suppon a measure that simply protected them from defective merchandise. The NRA is proud of saying that it represents the consumers, not the gun mdustry. But an NRA officiaJ testi- fied. before the Senate in 1975 supponing measu~s to keep the Consumer Product Safety Com- mission out of the gun.inspection business. NRA attorney Richard Gardiner told our asSOC1ate Scott Sieck that lawsuilS filed 1n,·oh mgJUn accidents arc effcct1\C in stopping defective guns from being produced. That• means consumers arc sole!} responsible for challenging the safet)' of guns and the) can'tdo it untJI it's to late. umerous gun manufacturers have weathered lawsuits over guns tha1 malfunctioned. More than 230 claims ha\e bctn filed against Sturm. Ruger O\er accidental discharges of the "Old Model'' (the one Deluca owned ) s1ngle-ac11on revolvers. Those guns were introduced in the 1950s and are considered cpllectors· items. Many of the alleged incidents have resulted 1n IOJuricsand 25 ended in deaths. Kotkin and Kishimoto call for Amefican business and this nation generally to rethink their values - "everything from racial attitudes to manaacment values" -to cope with "new and radically different rea lities Colorado's Gary Hart was riding high in his quest for the 1984 Democratic presidential nomination until rival Walter Mondale asked a fatal question: "Where's the bttf?'. Although neither Hart nor Brown still serves as a leader. the forces that once stood "1th them r.cmain on the scene. still cr111cmng the old liberal order and tr)ing to work out a vision of the future for a rapidly changing world. One of 1he more interesting recent attempts 1s "The Third Cen- tury: A.menca's Re urgencc in the Asian Era:· an important and stnk- ingly different economic a nal)'S1s b) Joel Kotkin and Yonko Kishimoto. MARTY SMITH The compan) stopped makina the gun. but ne,er recalled the ones on the market. Sturm. Ruger attorney tephen Sanetti says the firm has ~m~..-a~ responsibl~ 1n notifying the Old That there was little or no beef at all behind Hart's claim to be the can- didate of new i~as quickly became apparent. Hart st mblcd -and kep1 stumblina -as e tried to be more specific about what he would do as president. New ideas? It turned out that while Han reprexnted ~hat ma} yet prove the key clefMnl within the Democratic PanyoftMfuture. it ~as one that had not ~t formed a coherent ideolOI)', much less a spt"Ci· fie plan of action (or a~ prnident. Han's candidacy 1n 1.984. and apin early in I 98f until disclosures about his n1ng with Donna R:icc ended his campaip. scf\icd as' a rallying point for thole who re- coaniud the inadeqacinofold-style liberalism and latter-day populism in C<>Pina wnh the problems of today's wortd. Earher. in the latter st.qcS of the 1916 Democratic prcstdcntaal pnmary season. Jerry Brown's cam- peip aurac:ted similar suppon. Al 90vemor and as the son of an artier 90vttn0r. lro.n abo ~ a laldi"I s)mbol ol 1 .,:ntration of YOU"I lt'1IVISIS who ~ lt'OPl"I for MW ....-Ches to politics and IOV· mu11nL Foull lus shonconli• au dUef ac'alll\te, Brown diet IOt'Mthiftl _,.. br IMi~ p1acts wtthin his ldlailli•u--fOr many of' them and CWilll•~ 1n the effort to .. .,,rw-. The two authors 1akc up a fa\iontc theme of the Hart-Bro"'n set. that the Paci fic Basin 1s replacing the Atlan11c Basin as the 'AOrld·s chief economic and poht1cal arena. 1m1larl). a sh1fl of po"-Cr conunucs "'1th1n this na· uon. a .... ay from a Nonhea5lbasc and generally to'Aard the West and the Pacific. Their araument. ho"'ever. ~ well beyond Horace Grtele) ·s s1mple "Go west" advice -althouth 1t includes that clement. It stts this nation's entreprcncunal and prq· mat1c SP.tnt as remain"'& a key asset that will sc~c 11 'Aen in future compct1t1on with more-doctnnaitt and less-open soc1ct1es 1n !II& as ~II as in Europe. The) call for the tJnitcd • tales 10 look Co 1ts trad1t1 onal Mrcngth includ•na 1ts opcnncu and to 11vc more aucnttan to .\s1an marteu "'h1&c tden11fy1na less ~•th Europe • Tht ~ araues that ma]OC' MW natK>MI 1nfturtKn tNlt are "icwcd even bY IOfM tibtrals as cnlthi .. nauonal problems can prove to ~ ~ aum. if proptt1) maftlled. Tiit 1ncwate ... ) mulurac1al na111tt of 'mmcu toclCt)' and Ill I.flt llfttltt- lflll10ft O! '}'OUftlrf woRttl from Third Wortd -MtioM ~ tllld • f«ton 1hac sho.w help tM u.-.. tatn now \hit 19" ttnt(f of tw .. world's econom) 1s sh1 ft1ng from the European-.\1lant1c ba m to 1hc .\ 1an-Pac11ic b3s1n .. Regions such as uthern and orthem California. ulh Florida and Tg'as an.• all l1lcl~ 10 C\pencnce unprecedented t'ntrcprcneunal ac· ''' 1\\ and marl..ct sro" 1h. thanks to the impact of the nc" .\mmcans." 1hc) v.ntc •· This trend could not come at a ~ttcr time for .\mcnc.n business. Lile 11s European cou ins. white .\mcnca 1s ~g1ng rnp1dl). the ccooom1call) acme ~nwn1 of the population 1s 1ncrcas1ngl b.ur<kned by a larze mass of retire~ rcqu1nna massive suppon for 1he1r housina. food and med 1cal net'd . Kotkm and K1sh1moto call for mcrican businns and this nation ,cnenill~ to rethink. their 'alues - "eVC'l')thlllg from racial amtudn to manqcm~t \alues'' -to cope •·1th "new and rad1call) d1ffertnt ~ ah tics:· "The fh1rd Century" ~111 not~ as the tinaJ economtt marufnto for lhe YrOUld·b( ~ 10 Han and &ro-1'. h would RCM havt provi*d an tbc beef Han ntt&d '° dc8I '"'h Mondlk's ~ion 1• their 1914 ~-•• n don ..,. a ru.-rr ft'finrmmt "' tk • ..._. ... of tlw C11CBhlily ....,_ cnhCtOlllw oN litiiiil Oilff. r ........ It a 111M 1' I Ip 'I I ' M I 0"' ners about a safety enha cement . de\ ice that can be added to the gun. The company has ad,en1sed the device in mapzines and has SC1\t letters to about half of the estimated one m1lhon owners. Gun manufacturers say 1t is 1m- po s1bk to place failsafe standards on guns w11hout banning them altog_ether. Thcysayaaun 1sa weapon and rs inherently da"ICf'OUS. Jad....,.. .. ~~ are •Tflllk81e1 nt ' fl . 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Azusa Ave. (818) 986-8385 SANTA BARBARA 3711 State St (8051 5ff-0300 OUTLET CENTER 5555 E Olympic Btvd .. City or Commerce (213) 72"4-838 1 ._.._..,..._N_,,... .. .,...._.. Ill .. °""9t ~ . # . ' .. • I S ' . CE r:I THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1981151 ~ Kan IOUCIU Newport firm's float salutes the arts BSbaad marches to top hoaors '- Congratulations to the New- port Harbor Hip Marcbta1 Bud ofNewpon Harbor High School. Recently members took sweepstakes in the Corona del Mar Christmas Parade with the help of Bret $allden ofNewpon Bcachasdrum major and band d irector Kea Owea. ' .. Mike Yetter stands in front of the mirror and practices a variety of techniques for wav1na to the crowd. Now some may think it's a joke. but when )Ou're selected from 300 people · to nde a float in the tOOth Tour- nament of Roses Parade on Jan. 2 it's important to pracuce. Yetter. 30. of Orange will stand atop Newpon Beach's Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company's entry that is decorated 10 resemble one of history's greatest Italian grand operas ... A 1da." The entry 1s inspired by their theme ... Cdebra11ng the Perfonn1ng Ans -A Parade Within a Parade." • Yetter said evef)one has gone out of their way to gi ve him ups. "Some of the gu ys have been razzing me and g1\ 1ng me pointers on the kinds of waves I sbould do." Yetter said. ··what l\e been told 1s there's three popular waves. We have 'Stoking the Watermelon Wa ve,' ·washing the Windows Wave.' and Queen Victonas's ·Screwing the Light .Bulb ~ ··· _ As Yetter tned to conceal a JJ:in. he ioked and said he was selected for his ·intellect and good looks." Actuall). it staned with Pacific Mutual and its family ofsubsidaries. Pacific F1nanc1al Companies. .. That means they were the overall best everything," said CatherineStuan, booster parent. "They got the highest score in every competition that included the music, flag and drill team, marchjnganddrum major." Pacific Mutual'• Ro.e Parade Ooat celebrates the perfonnlnC arta with a acene from tbe opera, "Aida:" (Pleue eee FLOAT /82) Exciting things are being plannB! for these marching mu- siciansr On March 4, they compete in the Laguna Patriots Day Parade in downtown Laguna Beach ... and during ~pring break ti\ey're off to Hawa11 for another com- petition. • • • A bit of culture for lucky sixth graders? Sixth graders of 19 schools including those in Newpon-Mesa Unified School District.private schools, Harbor Day, Lady Queen of Angels and Park·Private Day School were guests of the N~w.~ pon Beach City Art Comm1ss1on at two performances of"The Nutcracker" ballet. Performances were scheduled earl ier this month at Newpon Harbor High School and per- formed by Ballet Pacifica. Former Newport Beach An Commissioner Molly Lyacb is the executive director of the ballet company. Commissioner Chairman Sud)' Blattermu said the com- mission was pleased to present this special holiday performance to the students in the community. • • • Looks like we have some outstandingjocks trained at the Newpon-Mesa YMCA. Bill and A.Dae Fordianl of Newport Beach have not only traj ned. but competed with the Newport-Mesa YMCA Masters team for more than four years. The team is composed of swimmingathletesoverage 19. And talk about success. Bill has placed first in the U.S. Biathlon Nationals for the past two years in the 50-54 age group. He recently finished 11,292 overall from a field of23,000 in the New York City Marathon. He plans to continue his train- ing and competition with the Y Mastersas hepanicipatesin IOK races, marathons. biathlons and triathlons-including the up- coming Catalina Triathlon in March. And Ann is keeping up with ··swim" of things. She has placed first in the Rosarita Triathlon. first in the Big Bear Triathlon series for the past two years. and fourth in the USTS Traithlon in San Diego. Ann also competes in lOK races and biathlons. and is currently training for the upcoming triathlon season. ' (Pleaee eee HOftORS/82) Bullwinkle will be on band to mln&le wttb p eso and help tbem ring in 1989 at a eober celebration. Ring in the new year at sober celebration Here is a novel idea: Ring in th e New Year wi th Bullwinkle at \Our side. · Bullwinkle's Restaurant 1n Foun- tain Valley is hos11ng an alcohol-free New Year's Eve bash from 9 p.m. until 12:30 a.m. Joy Williams. the restaurant's gen- eral manager. said the e\ening "'as planned in cooperation with Mothers Against Drunk Ortving. he said n was a way of ensuring that people have a safe New Year's Eve. "We do a lot with local schools:· she said. "Last Halloween we had a haunted house and everyone had a good time. W11h the push to ha'e a safe New Year's Eve. "e thought \\C could do something alcohol-free here:· A ponion of monc) received from ticket sales will be donated to MADD. Williams said.· Tickets are S6.50 fo r adults. S5 for children 5 years through 12. and free for children 4 and under. Tickets will be available at the door. The restaurant will close down to the publtc at 8 p.m .. and those with tickets will be allov.ed in at 9 p.m . .\t the most 400 tickets "111 be sold. she said. ··we want a nice size crowd to make 11 fun but not so crowded people can't get around and enJO) themselves.'' she said. W1lltams said everyone will ha'c a good umc because of the vanct> of aCll\'llles planned throughout the (Pleue eee 80BER/8 2) Work begtn$ for summerfestivals. By JOE BEL BRUNO CM._Dillr,._.IW For officials of Laguna Beach's annual Pageant of the Masters, prep- aration fo r the summer performances really start in the middle of the winter. Organizers of the pageant and the Festival of the Ans are alrudy in high gear as they eagerl)' prepare for tfie 1989 season. which starts in July. Though the shows share a brief run, it is really a yearlong affair for those involved with raising funds. dcsi~n­ ing costumes and sets and creating an. "It is constant -planning for next yea r's pagea nt," said Glen Eytchison. who is in his 11th year as director. "When looking for artists and pieces. there 1s really never a time to catch )Our breath. It is a full-umc job 1n every sense of the word.'' Eytchison. a Newpon Beach resi- dent. started prepanng for the ne:<t pageant right after the fast one closed in August B> reviewing paintings. sculptures and other an works. a select few are chosen to be born on the stage. "When looking for a panicular piece to include in the pageant. l have to be aware of the aud1ence·s nttds," he said. "PCOJ?le like to see anists who they art familiar with. Sometimes. i1 1s hard to be able to produce those:· Wtth the anworksalreadychooscn. Eytchison and other Ofglnizcrs will now be spend ing the next month conducting a Large-scale castin' call. More than 400 performers will be needed. ~ Sawdust Festival. now in its- 23rd year. is also a,_ycarlona efTon. Already this )car. officials have been wrestling with ctty specifications to build a new $470.000 facade and office building. Pcft\aps out of all those involved with the pageant and fesu al. 1t 1s the artists who really work year-round for thee' ent. For Josh Conna. a 32-)ear old Laguna Beach resident and an1sL Olea Eytcld9oa thts year's festival has been lo'ng ant ICI pated. "This wtll be m) first year panaci- pating m the festha1:· said Conna. "l have really been pushing myself to create crcati'e and qualuy pieces. Buyers kno\\ when things are rushed.·· ~ · . (Pleue eee ART /82) Dance integral to.instructor . to ensure balance in her life By JOYCE BOOLOVICH CM ... 0.-,,._. .... Glona De Fore walked through the soundless. mirrored studio with a dancer's gait. Soon a medley of musical sounds from the jazz. tapand ballet classes would re"erberate through the halls. Though ·the s1ud 1o·s namesake. Jimmie Defore. has been dead for nearly two )Cars. h1s1~1dow said the dancer's electric presence sull lingers inside the do-.e gra)-shaded Costa Mesa building. .. Jammie was an enthus1ast1c and e'en mg teacher:· she said. "E' ef)- one loved to be tn his classes ... Defore. a Broadwa)' dancer for 20 )ears. died at age 62 after losing a battle against pancreatic cancer. .. He had more guts than an)one l''e e"er seen:· Mrs. Defore said. .. We ne,er disc ussed his death. onl> h1sgett1ng well. He taught up through November. He died in January." Born in Kansas. Defore launched his career dancing on the street comers of Kansas Cit) wtth Count Basie. He performed with Jack Cole Dance Co. as a Jan dancer. He appeared as the principal dancer in Gloria DeFore such Broadwa) shov.s as .. Gu)S and Dolls ... ··Copa ... "Pal Joe)·· and .. The PaJama Game:· Tired of tounn$-Defore opened fi,e studios an Kansas. The cold "'inters linall' prompted his mo"e to the warmth olOrange Count). and 1n 1976 he opened a studio 1n Newpon Beach. "I met him "'hen I took a class:· Mrs. Defore. a former professaonaJ dancer. said. ··we d1dn ·t hit 1t ofT. I thought he was arrogant: he thought I was conceited. When we got to know each other we changed our minds. We were mamed in 19 9. It was a fabulous rtla11onsh1p:· Mrs. Defore said the cancer in- 'aded her husband's bod). but not his spmL In 1986. the) looked to the future b) moving from the Newpon Beach 1ud10 to the 9.()()().square-foot Costa Mesa ate. .. .\1 first we did all the teaching.·· she said ··\\e probabl) tavght :!O Jazz and tap classes each week. We did ha' e a ballet teacher I had minor back su rgef) tn 19 7 and that slowed me do"n "I mainh do adma nistratt\c "ork no". but I do teach about fi, e tap and Jazz cla ses a "eei..:· Mr . DeFore sa11J after her hus-- band's death. the studio became a catharsis for dealing with her gnef. "Linlt~e man~ "1dow . m)' "hole ltfe didn't change:· she said ... Dance seems to ha'e al"'aH rescued me Pleaee eee DAl'fCE/82) 1Cruise boats available for viewing gray whale migration Cruise boats for viewing the gray whale migration a well as dolphins. sea lions and marine birds are available at Newport Landing. Departures will be at 10 a.m. and I p.m. Monday throuah Friday: 9 a.m .. noon and 2:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Pnccs arc SI O. adults: $6 for jun1on and seniors. The senior rate docs not apply on weekends or holidays. . For more information call 67s.-OS'°. ' I : ~oca• on eatl1J6 dl.arden A free suppon aroup, ANAD, for people concerned with anorexia nervosa or bulimia is offered from 6:.30 to 8 : p.m. on Thursdays 11 the ~strano by the Sea Hospital 1n the J)olphin House Livi~ Room. , The aroup is led by Elhn Brnslcr. M.S.W .. and Jan Grcp, M.S.W. For information. call Bressler at , 496-=3474 or Greaory. 497-307S. f Storytlme at Nesport Jlbnry f Pmchool Storytime will be held at the Newport 1 leKh Public Library as s-rt of its s-nicipauon in The ~-Youns Reader. a nationwide cams-Ip by t~ · of COftltCll IO ~ tile joys and tmponantt ot and reeclina for younp1er1. nc Newport librarY w111 pmn• 1t.e !eSliont through Januaf) and t-ebruary on-weckda)s. Hours are Balboa branch. 10:30 a.m. on Tucsda)~. Corona del Mar branch. 10 a.m. on Tuesdays: Mariners branch. 11 a.m. on Monda)S and Tuesdays: and the Newport Center branch. 10:30 a.m. and I 30 p.m. on Wednesda}'S. St0ryt1me 1s free and parents are u~cd 10 roroll chaldttn at their local branch. The Feb. -1 session at Corona del Mar will be satncd by V1c~1 K4atz1n for the he1rina impaired. Add111onal 1nformauon ma)· be obtained by calhn& Jud) Kelle) at 644-3186. Coane for piano teachers A thfft'-un11 counc. "Traching the Piano." v.111 be offered at Golden West Colleac in 1h~ pr1na ~mcstcr. Stucknts will learn throuah lecture . discus ion • ttadinp, rcxarch. demonmauon and o~n t'd tcach1na The course 1s 1n1endcd for teachers. or an) one who pla)S the p.ano. ' The class will be ta~l b) Or. Allen Gales from 10 1.m. until I p.m. on FncJa)s , .. "'"' Jan. 13. 1udcn1s uMUre if they mttt the prerequisites for the class ire achiled IO mroll 1nywa) and 1ncnd the first day of cla ' tom .. C10W1t requimMnts. bto:C•i;r:-c:Jt:.~~unhcr 1n~1t1on ma~ I College patron• to meet Golden West Collcgc·s new president Juda th \ allcs will address the GWC Patron' on Frida). Jan IJ at a luncheon m the colle-gc's commun1tr, center The \Olunt~r suppon group will hear how the~ can help the collcgc president who was appointed an .\uaust tO 3 h1e\.e campus &Oils IO the Mllt dttack The lunchron will be held at 11:4S..nd v. 111 cost S6 50 J>Cf person. R~rvat1ons \~an be made b calhn' Cathennc la) maker at 891 -.:1349. J e wish i ssues explore d .. k "• h l<,<,ul·!I on 1h1.· < ont-:mpor:.1 ' '\:11•' '"11 lx th-: ll'\l)Oll,' alklrc \ \'' l(;ihh1 lk1man ~h.1.1lm.11l .11 ,111 l'thn1\· d1111w1 'f•on.,,u\•,I l" 1he Jcv."h (lllll11n11111' ( enh:1 ol '''uth Or.rngl' ( nunt~ on Jan I ~ an I .1 •un.1 tk.h:h ~·haJIDIJll ... fomln f'l'\'<1dcnt \)I 1h,• {('IHI.II C nnlcn:n"~ ot \ anc111..111 R.1ht'11\ 1 1 he 1 p m dinn\·r "111 ~adt ,)f)' the 11\)up·., .11rn11,1I ~·hol:u 1n Kc<,l(knn· flana ram tha1 1.on11nu''' 1lw 1olh1\\1na ~~ "llh j 0..1&d ~a .. t;ii\t JO\! imiup J1 u'"on tm 'u(·h \ltn,•n\ ... ,C'n" n a~ r,'\·~nl lilOl"~­ .k" ''h ~ontronta11on' 111 ( 111"a10 • K,·11,trat")n Hl~h1'k' tm·ah .net '~ ~m1na1 •• ind nHl'I tx· 11.'1.1.'I\ l'd b\ Ian ti l tl\I ,, I.., :'.'II ltll llll'nl~r .. .tnd ~' lt111H>n·nwmtx·1., C ~•11 ~4"'-:1n1ut \H.11H "'lm mtll\.' 111h11 m.111on. Y offering aeroblc claan If one of~our e-. Y~r's rnolullons 1s to gtt beck 1n shape. no• 1sthc ume to llfllSler for an ~robicdusa1 tM ewPQn-C'osta Mesa YMCA. Classes wtll be offered at 9 a.m Monda)·s throuah Saturda~s. S:4S p.m .. Monday throuah Fnda>: and 6:~S pm Tuctda)'S and Wcdncsda)S. The ti\e-wcck SCSStOftl cost S1S. Tonin1andcond1.,on1ntdaucsv.1ll be held at 8a.m. Monda) 1hroucb S.turda) and at noon on Mondays. Wedncsda!"S and Fnda)"l. For mott 1nfonna11on. call the \' at 642-9990. Ba.pltal nlaateen .,,..,., Voluntttn to UMll 1n vanoeas .,., of holpi.,t opnatlOM 1nclud11t1em<llfRCyroot1S tnMpori. •= 1n I.ht tteo~ room • .,.... .. foiod "8YI and dunes. arc brlftl __.., br F~ ·Vlllt)' .__.. Hose-ial and Medical {'enter. . To bf tlilible. vohntteen ..._ 111t M ._. 1 S 1i11 avaallbkforOM......._,*A,. 0.-'*'" wort.luftdl...t..-.., Call 919-llfl.aa.:I ....._I 0 111• .. I . . .. .. .. ,# . .. ' .. ' .. .. . .. .. p , 81 C Ormnge COMt DAILY PILOT I Thurtdey, Decembet 28, 1988 Newpo~ day-care f~cilitY cat~rs to the mildly.ill IJ UTY BOUCHER ............... Ifs Monday mornina. Sue Dunham of Irvine is rushina around aettina ready for work when she notices her J.year-old son is listless and not himself. After a temperature check she realizes there's no way she can send him to the day-care center he usually attends, and there's no way she can afford to miss another day of work. What does she do? She simply picks up the phone and calls Rainbow Retreat. a day-care facility for the "mildly 111." "We take child ren two months to 12 years old." said Dr. Sheri Senter. founder and president of the Newpon Beach facility. "If childre n have a cold or the flu we take 1hem. We ccnainly wouldn't take them if they had an undiagnosed rash or temperature of 104." Founded in 1982. the National Pediatric Suppon Services created a child development day-care center called Step by Step, and later de- veloped Rainbow Retreat when foun- der Shari Senter. 36. realized the demand for mildly ill child care. The day-care ponion of the facihty, Retreat located in a section of EastblufT She observed children were sent to Elementary School. beains attcptina day-care facilities when they should "students' as youna as 6 weeks. have been kept home. "We are ofleri~I child d~v~IOJ:?: · "Here you see a sick child in the ment ra~r than JUSt baby-sittma. director's arms all day." Senter said . Senter ~1d. . . "The child is out in the middle of . "Babies have a ~1ly r;?Ullne. J~St thinp because the director i' wortc- !!ke the .o~~ ~h1ldrcr:i. ~he sai~. ina. except she can't .set anythina . One a_ct1 v1ty 1s c1.rcle umc. They sit done because she's tendin1 to tile sick !n a c1~cle and sina sonp and do child." interaction." And after opening centcn in New- port Beach, Huntinaton Beach. Anaheim, Pasadena and Glendale. she realized the need for Rainbow Senter said Rainbow Retreat is a relief to parents because they know their children are beina taken care of. "It feels better for me becau1e I know he's beina monitored real well." uid Dunham. ••1t'1 an important option." So Senter opened a Rainbow Re- treat in each Step by Slep location except Glendale. As soon 11 a child is sick. tbe perent may call and make an appointment and brina him in. The child is evaluated, and a nurse makes sure the child ,ets his rest. medicine if needed and vatal ~s checked. Rates are Sl.50 per hour to.Step by Step members. and S5 an hour for non-mcmben. And if the child limply has a n1nn noee or.sliaht fever, he's not bored. ..We have a daily routine just lilt we do for Step by Step," Senter llid 00Tbeft'1 music time, Wk time puzzles. and quiet time. Every ~ i com*1eY disinfected after a chi playi widi it 10 no ,mnsare spread.' Althouah this is an answer to th workina-peren~s pnyen. ~nter 11i thn are operauna It a ~t. .. l'd like people in the communit to know this service is available." sh said. "You don't hive to be a mcmbe ofSlep by Step to receive care." SOBER ••• FLOAT SALUTES ARTS •.. From Bl evening. The ticket includes an all-you-can- eat pizza buffet, I 0 tokens to the game room. family movies and dancing. she said. "We have a 'quiet' room with a fi replace and la,..e screen TV that will play family movies. The dessen and bevcrqc ~~ Jwill stay open all night for purchases" The .disc jockey will spin a variety of favorite dance tunes in the main dining room from 10 p.m. until closing time. Requests arc en- couraged. Hats, noise makers along with sparkling cider will be provided at midnight. Bullwinkle Restaurant is on the comer of Magnolia Street and Warner Avenue adjacent to the Family Fun Center. For additional information call, R41 -6373. Prom Bl The compeny held a contC$t for all its employees. "The .contest was a cross between-solvin~ a crossword puzzle and word search, • he said. "There was a block of scrambled letten and IS clues were pven. O.Oues like. what is the lonant runnina play on Broadwa)' -which is 'Chorus Line,' I hope; he added. .. And another example, what are the three B's in clauical mus.ic? Once you answered all IS, they were submitted met the winner was selected at random." Andy Morrison, public affairs manqer, said Yetter wa1-definitely lucky. "Out of 4,000 employees there • were 300 entries and S6 were win ners," Morrison said. Out of those S6, Yetter's name wa drawn. "I rcallywas1unnin1forthesecond prize -tickets for the bleachen," Y ctter said. "I wound ue acttina those (tickets) for my family. • This marks the second consecutive ycarofperticipation for the 120-ycar- old mutual life insurance compeny, located at Newport Center. The peaeantry of the triumphal opera is recreated by 23 float ridtrs clad in elaborated ancient E&yptian costumes -along with Don flonald, floral director at Festival Anists and of course -Yetter. -By Jc.ty llNckr DANCE INSTRUCTOR ••• We need vou. Yea! Chargen The C~en. a Huntlqton Beach Pop Warner claeerlea~mqaad, took ftnit place ID a cheerlea competition at Hun~ Beach BIO l boo(. Memben of the troap are (eiandtq, from left) Proposition 99 passed. Raising taxes on cigarettes 250%. Adding over $600,000,000 in new taxes to what California smokers are already paying. What can you do about it? We pro- pose you try DORAL. h 's one of the Top 10 best-selling brands in America. And the only one with a low price. Get Top 10 taste and save money, too. That's our proposition. Can you afford to refuse? Sauaae Gatee, Diana' Zeftllla, Katrina Perkin•, Karina Emohoff, Sommer Pedrosa, Jennifer Oland aad Belinda Con- lon. &Dd Hated, Shannon Kennedy, MeU.. llarkoftky aad Joana Emohoft. Available in all your favorite styles. Prom Bl emotionally. h helped my grief by doin1 the work of two." She said the studio is both for professional dancers and for amateurs just havina a good time. Children stan takina classes at qe 3. One panicular tap class lists publi- cist Gloria Ziancr, county Supervisor Harriett Wieder and Mirilyn Nielsen, wife of Irvine Co. vice- c -u . ,..,..,.1111911CCO co. SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : Cigarette Smoke C o n t a i n s C a r b o n M .o n o xj d e. ULTRA LIGHTS ms: 7 mo H*". o.s mo. 111C01r11, LIGHTS. LIGHTS MENTHOl: 12 mg ... _.., o. 1 "" natiM, LIGHTS ma. LIGHTS MENTHOL DJ's: 12 mg. "ta(', 0.8 mg. nicolM'18, FUU FlNOft OJ'a: 14 mg .• _.., 0.1 .... ...... ---·-=.. "-----~--,.-n FULL Fl.AWA MENTHOL, FULL FutJOR MENTHOL ms· 1S mg. ....... 11 ""· naine, Rill FUMJR: T7 .......... ' tD .... nicOIN, "'· pet ciglnna IJt flt ~ • ' • Chairman Thomas Nielsen. on its roster. , "We have a huge coterie of people who dance for pleasure four or five times a week,'' she said. "Dancers arc probably the finest conditioned ath- letes. And with dance you never act bored. We have attorneys, doctors and housewives." For those who yearn to see their name on a Broadway marquee, the studio offers a non-threatenina am- biance, she said. ..By professional standards, theater is usually a dog~at-dog atmosphere," she said. "Here we learn, but we also help each other. Most of the dance teachers in the county come here to take classes." The studio currently has 2'4 tcachen. All arc professionals whose rnumes list TV. music videos and staae work. ''I have a whole stack of mu mes:· she said." l never b.iruoyone before I see them teach first." The studio is also the scene of "master classes" where well-known dancers tc.ach a series of classes. AnCl in March. the New York School of American BaJlct will hoJd its summer auditions. "I want this to be a place for dancers to do their best work anisti- cally, but at the same time still be themselves." she said. "To me danc- inJ is like flyin1 on your own without winp. You have ao<>d music and you become like the music." HONORS ••• From Bl • • • The Capl1truo CUmber Pia y- en provided entenainment re- cently for Imperial Savings in Newpon Beach. ltay Ulwelllal,-vicepresident. hosted an open 6ouse for cus- tomen and business associates. The firm featured works by James a ....... sculpture-Cut tssanist, and county anist ....... 9realSa ·. . I ed. mpena vangs 1s ocat an Newport Beach and its head- quanen is in San DiCJO. Imperial Corporauon of America isa divenified financial Services company with more than S 12.3 billion an assets. • • • Let's hear it for those Orange Coast College students from around town who were honored by AlpU Gamma Slpna. These students were accepted into membership recently for their academic performance dur- ing spring semester 1988. So ... wnh no further adieu the • recipients are: ReMl1J.81MaaWf,Aael1 1""1• Nlelle A._,,.., AmJM.hleru::-.~el, ,,Mac.if. G Tney I:. Barrett, J• W. Bru&,Aaa M . F.ftlteta.lllAJ'.&Mell. OreprJLM11Mz~­&m. J. zw.er. An are ewpon Beach residents. WelaYlteJ• te .... n ...... .._•eem••tJ...,. •• 'Zii Wewutw-..1..-,.. , ........ ......, .... ........................ ....... ..... , ........ 111m. .. J>elly~1P.O .... IMI, C... w ... nell, ... marllltte dtt an.dim el KatJ ••••r. ART ••• ,._81 C•aa. who has been supponina him.er• a waiter. believes that he and otber anilU will hive a IOOd ,.r. Alina~ .-n-cinae, IM hal turned out 20 paifttinp he eapectS to tell. •I bl'WC lard IO..., .od dlinp .... die l=ltivall." M liML •1 j• .... ...... well• .............. ~~o«\ythetimedle111111mer llOvtf. , • I - I I •·~~ .................. ~ ............................................... llill!l ............................... °'~~~"09~C~;OM:::;t~O~A~l~LY~Pl~L~O~T1'Thur9c18Y~~~~·;Dece.~~rnb*~~29~,~111~1iiii~81~ Mother describes earthquake ord·eal . Ga_~e chffcf her I to drink while they 'were buried alive in rubble for 8 days - pare~ body. hospuats 1n as httlc as a week. but the b1J. darl e)cs has started to talk Her temperature was dangerously differ about INhether Petrosyan's again and to smile. • EDITOR ·s NOTE -The D«. 7 eartltauake that killed an ~timated ., .$$,()()/) people brought tragedy .and low. her blood alarminJly thick •nd blood helped keep Gayaney alive. In her hospllal bed. she strtnp she was in shock. said Dr. Silva "For a child. the concentration of colored yam throuah cardboard dolls Nennyan. her phys1c1an. The girl liquids in the body 1s much more and plays with a teddy bear - 1ouchan& or harrowina as the tale also was 1n a deep state of depression. 1mportan( than for a n adult." Christmas gifts that Jcb Bush. the son Susanna. Petrosyan told this week 1n a and wouldn't talk or smile. Nersesyan said. "For Gayaney. her of PresidenHlcct George Bush. gave soft voice from her Yerevan hospital Petroysan. also dch)drated, was mother's blood played an 1mponant. her when he v1s1ted the hospital • ,,sorrow1ocoun1lessArmenians. But it also was a time for bravery. Herc is , one ~oman 's sto,ry of her light to save , the life of her child. as they lay buried alive for eight days. bed. Jiven intravenous Ol11ds and placed perhaps dec1s1 ve role." Sunda} . Around 11 :30a.m. on the day of the in a coffin·hke box so that pressurized Dr. Ripsimc Parsadanyan. who Gayanc) 1s too }Oung to under- quake, she said the two were driven oxyaen could be pumped around her treated Petros~an. d1saarees. "Susan-stand what happened to her the day by Petrosyan's husband, Gerkham. a as a treatment against exposure. na lost a very httle. even ins11nificant she was buried ahvc. shoemaker. to the apartment buildina It was then that doctors discovered amount of blood. What saved them "'Bad people pulled down the house on Leninakan's Kamo Street where that the woman. who also has a 7-was that they were toatther. The where we were. and we couldn't get Karine lived. year-old son who was not hun in the mother didn't have lime to panic. She out." sh~sa1d ... I wanted my father to Petrosyan. a petite woman with eanhquakc. 1s two months' pregnant. had to think of her child.·· come and defend us from th~ bad ..,By JOHN· THOR DAHLBURG A1111'111d ""''#tit., thick black hair and curvina eye-Doctors say both mother and Gayancy 1s s1ill weak and has a li~t peopl~. B~! he didn't come. Not for brows. wanted to try on a black dress dauahtcr could be released from their case of pneumonia. But the girl wtth lon1 lime. 8aaanna Petroeyan YEREVAN, U.S.S.R. -Mother and daughter were entombed in eternal night and theiq>nly food. ajar with puffed shoulders that Karine r:::===-==-------------~-------=-----_:__:_ _______________ __:.:_::=.. ___ _ had for sale. , of jam. was aone. Tons or smashed concrete around them had become their prison. "Mommy, I'm so thfrsty. I want to drink," cried the 4- ' . year-old girl. ;' Gayaney Petroeyan It fit her perfectly. As she took it ofT at 11 :41 a.m .• the fifth-floor apart- ment began to tremble. then shake violcl)tly. Dressed only fo a slip and her underwear. she grabbed Gayancy. wearing a heavy winter sweater. and ran to the door. Then the floor opened up and the 36-unit buildinacollapscd. The three fell into the basement. with the nine-story building crumbl· ing around them. Although trapped on her back. Petrosyan found a 11/i-pound jar of blackberry jam that had fallen to the basement from Karine's pantry. On the second day of their captivity - the day Karine died of her injuries - she gave the entire jar to Gayaney to cat. . : Petrosyan said she found a skin, perhaps thc,one she had tried on. and made a bed for Gayancy to lie on. Despite the bitter cold. she took off her stockings. and wrapped them around her daughter to keep her warm. As the days passed. and Gayaney·s picas for something to drink become m ore pressing. her mother rc- mcmberc<fSOmcthing she had seen on tclevision. "It was a pravam about an explorer in the Arcuc who was dyi ng •' Susanna Petrosyan said she wa;-of thirst. His comrade _slas~ed open· , trapped flat o n her back. A his h<1;~d an~ gave his frie nd his · • prefabricated concrete panel 18 blood, she ~id. inches above h~r head and a crum-Losing track of time because of the pied water pipe above her shoulders unchanging darkness. Petrosyan ···kept her from stand ins. She wore only doesn't know what day she ~ut open a slip, and 11 was horribly cold. her fi ngers. or how many limes she • , Beside her in the darkness lay the used the m ethod to feed her daughter. lifcl~ss body of her sister-in-law. Jier thoughts wandered. She S8\\ ... 1 Ka~nc. She had . bee~ crushed by scenes of her life pass before her e}'es. falling walls, and died pinned beneath and she hallucinated. · 1: rubble one day after the Dec. 7 · earthquake lev.cled much of i · Leninakan and other towns in north- western Armenia. 1 "Mom my. I need todnnk," sobbed Petrosyan·s daughter, Gayaney. "Please give me something. .. : "I thought my c hild was going to .. die of thirst." Petrosyan. 26. recalled. , "I had no water. no fruit juice. no liquids. It was then I remembered • that I had my own blood.~ Although she was trapped 1n dark- ness. she could shde o n her back from side to side. Her groping li ngers. numb from the cold. found a shat- • tered glass. She sli ced open her left ind~x Tinger with a shard and gave it to her daughter to suckle. ~-· The drops of blood weren't enough. "Please. Mommy. some more. Cut another finger," Petros:r'an re- m embers her daughter saying. The woman made more cuts in her flesh. feeling nothing because of the bitter cold. She put her hand to her child's m outh, squeezing her fingers to make m ore blood come. "I knew I was going to d1e." Petrosyan said. "But I wanted my daughter to hve:· Many stones of courage have emerged from the eanhquake in Armenia. but few. 1f an). are as "When I closed my eyes and opened them again, I could see boxes full of apples and bottles of lemonade," Petrosyan recalled. "I told my daughter. 'My child. there are so many things to eat and drink.' But when I reached out to touch them. they were gone.·· Gayancy cried that she wanted to go home. ··1 want to be back in my bed again. and see m y daddy ... she said. "I lost all hope:· t~ mother said. "l was just waiting for death." 0!' pee. 14. the eighth day of their capt1v1ty. rescue workers opened a small hole that let in a shaft of light. ··w e're saved!" Petros) an cned. "There's a child in here. be careful not to hun her!" she screamed as they got closer. Her husband. a shoemaker. was uninjured by the quake. He was with the rescuers and the two tearfully embraced. Petrosyan was placed on a stretcher. Mother and dauthter were flown to Yerevan, Armenia s capital. 60 miles away. Gayaney was taken to Chil- dren's Hospital No. 3. Petrosyan to the Armenian national hospital. Gayaney was 1n intensive care for four days. hooked up to intravenous bottles that dripped hqu1ds into her New law restricts ·employers' use of lie detector.s WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Many suspidon that the worker was in· uses of lie detectors by private volvcd in the loss. employers became illepl Tucsda).' Any such polygraph examination under a law that the Amtrican Civil would have to be conducted under Liberties Union calls a "holiday gift strict conditions, with no qucsuons to worltina peo ple." . about personal beliefs and sexual The law, which took effect six behavior, and the~ results alone months after beina sianed by Presi-could not be used as a basis for dent Reqan, aenerally bans all ran• discipline or a refusal to hire. dom polysraph examinations and "Complaints about polygraph most uses of the controversial devices abuse and firings based on polnraph for pre.employment purposes. abuse have been one of the single "We expect that the new law will laraest sources of calls to AC L ban 80 percent of the approximately 2 offices nationwide." Goldberg said. mmion pol)'lrlph tests aivcn annual-"Now employees can complain to ly," Judy Go(dbera, the ACLU's the Depanmcnt of Labor or go into lelislative representative. said in a coun to protect themselves against prepared statement. these inaccurate gadgets.·· Goldberg The law's restrictions will be felt said. most hawily in 28 states that lack She said the law would have its : their own statutes restrictinJ the use area test impact in these states: Ala· • oflie detectors. Goldbera saad. bama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado. '· Not covered, however, are federal, Florida. Gcol'Jia, Illinois. Indiana, state and local ~vemments and Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana. M1s- firms doina sensitive work under sissippi. Missouri, Nevada, New ~~~ ~t,e Defense Department, Hampshire. New Mexico, New York. The only other exceptions to the North Carolina. Nonh Dakota. Ohio. tcneral ban apply to companies Oklahoma. South Carolina. South which manufacture. distribute or Dakota, Tcnnesstt, Texas. Utah. dispense controlled substances and Virainia and Wyomina. aome types of firms in the sec:unty Goldbera sajd that cmplo)crs 1n pard, armored car or security alarm the followina states. which allow fields. busincssn to request people to take 1n -..': •-h 'bi ... 1 lie detector tests. al.o could be ' • nc: .. w pro 1 ts an em.,.o)et affected : Califomaa. Hawau. Idaho, from beint fired, d1sc1phntd, or ,, dilcriminated qainst ~ly for refus-Maryland, Montana. Nebraska, ~·· hnnsyl" .. neaand Wilcomin. i .. IO submtt to a polyaraph cumin· The mnaini• · 14 Mtes Ud the auon. Otstrict of Columbia ba~ llws , l• • An eml)loyer can rt'q~st a wo,ker banni• polytnpb n......_ tbf 1 : IO lab a he dc1«1or teit af the worker maploymcat .,..,... ..a dlllilC ""bid l«'ell to m1n1n1 or da""lfd ..,_. Ide .......... °"' *' II* ~' 1Mlerial1ndifthtempk)ycnet1fonlt""tt.lllleral •-if dllr • .... in a written state~nt a realOMble ..atctiw.IC'COl'dhle•G.i'a • Save 5100 Reg. 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Every Toy Goes at an Unbelievably low Price! • Battery-Operated Toy.s • Remote-Control Cars • Educational Fun Toys • Electronic Games • Musical Toys •, "' JM Otange Coaat DAILY PILOT/ Thursday. December 29. 1988 General Automation to merge with Bridsh firm Sanderson Electronics bid acceptance comes as surprise to Alpha-Micro execs General Automation Inc. in Anaheim has terminated its merger discussions with Santa Ana-baS(.'d Alpha Microsystems. and has signed a letter ofintent with Sheffidd, U.K.- based Sanderson Electronics pk (SEL) that provides for a convenible loan of$ 1.75 million to GA. toge<her with warrants that will enable SEL lo purchase up to 51 percent of GA in the form of new common shares. The letter provides for a con- version price and warrant exercise price of70 cents per share. According lo the announcement tnade by GA Chairman Alexander W. Giles Jr .. current shareholders will retain their shares in the company. The transaction is subject to SiJn· ing a definitive agreement. anuci- pated shortly. "The SEL transaction will keep GA as an independent. publicly owned company. with GA shareholders con- tinuing to hold GA shares, though SEL can potentially become a ma- jori!)' shareholder," Giles said. "SEL is a supplier to the value- added Pick market in the United Kingdom and Europe that will con- tribute substantial, valuable expertise to the manaaement of GA:· Alpha Microsystems confirmed Wednesday tha1 at reet-ived notifica- tion from General Automation Inc. on Dec. 24 ''terminating discussions" toward the companies' proposed merger. President John Cain expressed ·surprise and disaJ>pointment wilh the action taken by General Automation: "I only learned that General Auto- mation sianed another letter of intent with Sanderson .Electronics from a press release carried by the wire services on Tuesday. Since Dec. 9. Alpha Micro has expended signifi- cant resources and energy toward consummation of the deal with General Automation and was fully expecting to go .forward with the proposed tranSKtaon ... Alpha Micro reports highest aet bJco11Je Alpha Microsystems has reported net income for the third quarter ended Nov. 27, of$814.000. or 25 cents per share. on net sales ofS 13.132.000. Durinathe likequarteroftheprior year. the company reported a rrofit of$493.000. or 16 cents per share. on net sales ofS I . 907 .000. For the nine months ended Nov. 27. Alpha Microsystems reported net income of $2,091.000. or 66 cents per share. on net sales of $37.996.000. This compares w'th net income of $780.000, or 25 cents per share. on net sales of $33. 936.000 in the like period last year. "We are delighted l-0 report our sixth consecu,tive quarter of improvina revenues. These results are our biaftest quarterly revenues and net income before· extraordinary items in four years," said Roben B. HilchC'OCk, chairman of the board and chief executave officer. "We attribute our success to our qualit~ dealer network and the competitiveness of our produC't. • Hitchcock also commented on Wednesday that in took.in& toward the future Alpha Microsystems has recentfy acquired a worldwide licenst to Ver·A-Tel. a biometric voice verification technoloay. This technoloay provides a high degree of accuracy in voice verification and can be used in a wide variety of applications such as computer security, building access security and bank funds transfer security. Alpha Microsystems designs. manufactures, markets and services multi-user. multi-tasking computer hard- ware and software products worldwide. The company's fam ily of high-performance computer systems supports from two to more than 300 users. . Test finds teens' economic illiteraCy ram pant Paal Volcker NEW YORK (AP) -American high school students have an alarm- ing deficit of economic knowledge. according lo a survey in which two- thirds didn't understand profits and more than half couldn't supply a definition for demand. Economic education is "not in the kind of shape we want it to be." former Federal Reserye Board chair- man Paul A. Vokker said Wednesday at a news .conference sponsored by Joint Council on Economic Educa- tion. a non-profit coalition that underwrote the survey. The survey, a 46-.question multiple choice exam taken in M'ay 1986 by 8.205 11th-and I 2th-grade students in public and private high schools in 42 states. found: -Only 34 percent could correctly define profits as "r.evenues minus costs." -39 percent selected the correct definition o(Gross National Product: "the market value of the nation's output offinal goods and services." -Only 45 percent realized that government deficits result when spending exceeds lax revenues. -Less than half-47. 7 percent - knew that "economic demand" for a product refers lO how much .. people are willing and able to buy at each price." The news is "not good if you believe that a basic understanding of our economic system is. important if this country is indeed to be effective in what everyone realizes is a period of global competition," said Volcker. who confessed that he himself had never taken economics in high school. The exam was the first to document a paucity of economic knowledge among U.S. students. Economics thus joins a growing list of disciplines including_ writin~ ge- ography. foreign language. science and math wh ere recent tests have shown U.S. students achieving at dismal levels. ' The ''Test of Economic Literacy" was devised by William B. Walstad. a University of N(braska-Lincoln economics professor. an·d John C. Soper. an economics professor at John Carroll University in Cleveland. Walstad urged states and school districts to make economics a part of the curriculum from elementary school on, to require it for high school graduation and to provide teactlcrs with the necessary , background to teach It. ·"Teachers are the first to realize that they have in&aequate bac:.k- ground in the subject." said Roxanne E. Bradshaw. sccretary·U"Clsurer of the National Education Association, the 1.9 million-member teacher union. On average. students comectly answered only about 40 percent of the test questions. But ~hey did .e~en more J>OOrly on questions perta1mng to inflation. the effects of tariffs on trade, and the inlJ)act of investment on economic gro'!'lh. Economic illiteracy is apparently even more pronounced among min- ority students. Try questions a bout inflation and tariffs NEW YORK (AP) -Herc are sample questions and answers from the Test of Economic Literacy taken by more than 8.000 high school students in 42 states. Included arc the percentage of students corrtctly answering each question. I. Of the follo~~liawhich is the most general cause of low indi vidual incomes in the_Unili tcs? -~a) Lack of valuable productive services to sell .:z b) Discrimination. against nonunion workers c) Unwillingness to work (d) Progressive tax rates Correct answer: (a). 29 percent 2. Sandy Smith can take a job paying SI 0.000 a year when she graduates from high school. or she can go to college and pay $5.000 a year for tuition. Measured in dollars, what is her opportunity cost of going to college next year? (a) SO (b) $5.000 ~c) $10.000 d) $15.000 . orrect answer: (d). 27 percent 3. Which one of the following gro~ps typically is hurt the most by unexpected inflation? 1 (a) Manufacturers . · (b) Bondholders (c) Borrowers (d) Farmers Correct answer: (b), 17 percent 4. Joining a union and electing representatives to negotiate with the employer is referred to as (a) a closed shop (b) the seniority system ~)collective bargaining d) right to work legislation orrect answer: (c). 60 percent 5. The price of shoes is likely to be increased by (a) new machines reducing the cost of shoe production (b) more capital investment by producers (c) a decrease in the demand for shoes (d) a decrease in the supply of shoes Correct answer: (d ). 50.2 percent 6. Most of the revenue that Amencan business receives by selling products or services is paid as (a) wages and salaries (b) rent and interest (c) profits (d) taxes Correct answer: (a). 40.6 percent 7. Which of the foflowing usually would reduce consumer spending? (a) a decline in consumer incomes (b} a reduction in personal income tax rates (c) an expectation that prices wwl soon rise (d) increased government payments to individuals Correct answer (a) 53.1 percent 8. Unexpected inflation is most likely lo benefit (a) persons li ving on fixed pensions (b) life insurance policyholders (c) savings bank depositors (d) people who owe money Correct answer (d). 24 percent 9. Reducing tariffs usually will (a) decrease the number of jobs in protected industries (b) decrease the number of jobs in ex~rt industries (c) ~ecrcase the average s.tandard of living (d) increase consumer pnces Correct answer (a), 22 percent .. . ·- NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS .. Onlnge COMt DAILY PILOT /Thurldav. Olcember 21, 1• • - THURSDAY'S CLOSING PRICe8 WHA T AMEX DID WHAT NYSE Dir NEW Y~K (AP) Dec 29 NEW YORK CAP) Dec. 29 ~. """· ~dvanced , I ~dv~'lCed , ,, ec11nec1 ~Kiined nc anl>ed ncnangeo ota~l>sues 1• Otal IUUH New nighs 11 New nighs New IOWl. J1 NewlOw• ~ A~H X LE~DER S NYSE Lt~DtPS NEW YORK (AP) -Satft. • Om NEW YORK IAPl -Sales; • o.m Thursday price and Ml Ch•"9e of the 10 Tnursoay 1mce and net ctianoe of the IS most active Amertc•n Stock E11cn11n~ most ac1t11e New York Stoc.k E11c;hll"'" 1u~rad1ng na1ton llv •t more than sl ':c~:ading nattr.nlaN~ •t mar'• thentf: ~ omm ~l· t. + 1 pp,•J11J,.1m • O -•• Ft]~~~ v~ ; L)'~ r: ~Ylst•r 1'· • l '"' '. c oBav ' 13 , ..._ "' ePStCO • ' 391, + 1, rullLoom ~· 6 • + • ~l~~~~P hsf.• fl.,~ -! ~: ~•cri8fu.tai , 1~~ + : NorsraPw 1 1ttl 2>. •, ATtno 2 '. +1-16 RJRNab I.I , 1. ~ rneovs n 21 t ,.. _ . ~tora~Tcn 1 09 , p, ln~$!~1;" PIA !ft;I ;•9 ~ ±j le-'• Go Lo Quon s ME TALS QuoTEs HEW VOAIC CAPI -$pol _..,.,_ INl.i prima Thur~~ • ........,_ $I ~SO pet l)OUncl NY Come• ll)OI fftOllll'I WIO C....,·$17t40aPOUno US 0.111\91-a c._..., · 156 25 Cwtll pet po.Jnd NY Colnl• soot ~th Wed '--". 4242 '_,111 llOOMCI Dae· 2-75oentt •PCIUfld ~ n.. ·' 5~6 Mel91t WW' ~le pnoe per IO I ...,.., • S6o10 ,...,.,,. & w .. m.,, ton!>t ~ CIUO(•• ...,.., • S6 OU I* troy oz ~ C-... 9001 ~ Wed -_,.$290QO.$JOSOOpeor 761blleM -Yori. ,....._ l53I 00.$5'1~ 00 troy DI. H 'r IODntrlC1l ......._ • SS 10 00 H Y "'9rc -4 per troy oi Wed NYSE UPs & DowNs .~ lt'.:t : J'.~ • NEW YORK (AP) -Tiie tollowtnQ I'' ~"'+ •!snow' the New York Slock Exchan~ .,_ • stocks an<I warr1nts 11\al NYt oone uo ~• • 1ne most 1nd down Ille "'°'' 1>11,.0 on i + percent of cnanoe r19arottss of vOlume "' tor Wed No ~urthl$ lrll<I 119 below S2 11re incl· i!' -udeO Net and oercen111ge Ch•no-s ire the • ditference beCW"" 11\e C>!'tVIOUS C.loS•nQ ~ CK"•ce and Weone58V$ s 'l P m orlet 1 ._. • NMM &.Ht Ct'1, P"Cf, ·-•, 1 ~an1um 1 10.lt + 17 • UP 20.Z ~... • 2 v1 ~b~YC":iH •• , + ' Uo 1• 7 ~+ 1-11 3 v1 ~~H j~5:J~ 12 • t 1 l Uo 1'.0 '' ! B:uasH · 1 .. 1! 1 , • 8~ 'S:g ~~~l:~r 3t>olG S03t1 f i •, 8~ H ~I~~~~ ~ 86ofE 12 12 \ t 8~ B l ~~l~t~o I: ~ ~: 1·1 fa v1TodO~ t 1 Uo 6 13 WstnSL • 1 Uo 6. 11'11\tfSCo I I Uo 1ocr11 , , Uo 6 stFinFCI • lti Uo ~~o Ji~' h. tl: anoeCo l • , UP .. nlCo 1 l<O lt Uo IPnl ~ + 1 Uo anson w l "' I • UP fll\SC~ Inc " • Uo 4 ®Qer o • Uo •· $ MOC OfP • loo t Uo t ' " Power 9fil, + ·• n1erco 91 • ~ -• Pan Am :lw Hanson , l•llll + • • Dow JoNES A~ER~crs NASDAQ S uMM4R r OTC UPS & DOW NS NEW YORK (API -TM fOllow1ne IKI $how' tne Over • 11\e • Countef $tocilS 11"° w11rr11nts Cflllt hllllf gone ~ Ille tn0$I rno down Ille mosl based on oerc:ent o cNn" for W.O No secur1hes tr11dino De!Ow 12 °' 1000 $Mres 11re lnc:lude<S Net 11n<1 oercent•Ge cn.nees If'• IM d'tferenc:e De'"""" lhe orevlou~ cl05'"9 once ano w~' ••st °' bid Drlce. ,_.l'M &..H1 CM I 11111 800 un • l·tt,.+l3·f6 Uo 2 Ho,09\aOle 2 l l Up J Stend•ll . Sl,. l uo • PHP Hll •' 1 >.. Uo ~ lntotech l"' i ~' Uo AeroS11s1Eng 1 ~ Uo AllPt("nJ~d '• 1 Uo l Specl!vComo .a.. ', U~o Aur•Svst (,' :a. o I l'r•nslnd + • o West~r~e t '• o l rlotdSld 3 H 6 :lw Uo nJW 29 1 3'"l 4 Oluml.O, H ~ IS M 1cro.9e -ulllnc 14 _. IOC I New i. l.e t111esm~o f"-+ ~ om~rssl•b ~ > + -anOPhcs 3 i + lti AM 0~~~io 21' I ~ ' •rwfll ' • ,,. • I Mier ~ 1 '1 mwsn 1i + ~, lnltr"'-lrK oo4tes + '" LAlf _,. .. -.... -.... _, i\-... ~~-~" 1 " - , l / ·I Be DAILY PILOT/ Thursday. Decembe< 29, 1988 ·New Year's Eve's not yet sold out Many of the big New Year's Eve panics are already sold out. but there are still some OpPonunities for those with unsettled plans. They ran_Je from black-tie big band celebrations at swank hotels to cruises to Christian entertainment with fireworks. At the top of the hst of availabilit> is "The Wiza rd 's New Year's Eve Gala" at the Irvine Marriot\. This benefit for Turning Point Family Services, a family crisis center in Santa Ana. has reduced its prices in an attempt to a\tract more people to the pany. Tickets now are S290 per couple (of which S 120 can be written ofl). which includes a four-course gourmet dinner with wine. beverage tickets. dancing to the Wayne Foster Orchestra. a Monte Carlo Night with prizes. unlimited champagne at mid-night. a PoSt-m1dnight entenainment spectacular and a buffet breakfast at I a.m. Formal ature is optional. Without dinner. the cost isS 180 per couple. Rooms are available for an additional S70. Similar nights of fancy are avail- able at the Ritz-Carlton ($ 175 per person includes a sumptuous dinner and a room) and the NewPort Ma rriott ($225 per couple for an open bar and a th ree-course meal). The Ink SPotS will entertain at Bubbles on the Balboa Peninsula. The S 181 .50 per couple includes a five-cou rse meal and a bottle of champagne. If yo u're looking for someth ing with a bit more of an edge. the Nick Pyzow Band will play rock 'n' roll at the Blue Beet Cate near the NewPon Beach Pier. The $25 per person includes dinner ilnd two glasses of champagne. Re~rvations are re· Quired. At the Cafe Lidb in NewPort Beach. a S 10 cover charac will get you in to hear and dance to the Tony Ou~rrcro Sextet. The jazz club also is.offerinJ a special New Year's Eve menu. with prices ranging from Sl6.75 to $39.95. Two parties will take place at the Queen Mary/Spruce Good Entertain- ment Ce nter. Guests at the "Spruce Goose Rockin' New Year's Eve" party are encouraged to wear '50s attire and they'll dance to the music of Johnny Rivers. Big Daddy. and Captain Cardiac and the Coronaries. The pncc is S45. The ··Queen Mary High Society Cruise" will feature Les Brown and his band of Renown. the Billy May Orchestra and Latin big band Matzacote. Tickets are S75. The Hornblower Dining Yacht is offeri ng a real cruise on NewPort Bay on New Year's Eve. The cost ofS 150 per person includes a dinner of filet mignon with lobster tail. veal cal vados with scampi and pheasant with madeira sauce. a full bar. dancing to li ve music and party fa vors. Reservations are required. A nu mber of Christian enter- tainers. including Bryan Duncan and the Allies. will perform at Knou's Berry Farm on New Year's Eve. The evening will culminate with a fire- works display. • llll lllMtl ICWllT llU91l tcMWAlllHHHtl Of VITO TEQUILLA SUlllAISE (A) • TWiii (PG) 11:• J:JI ,,. J:M 11<• 11!11 J:H ,,,, ,,. t:it • SCROOGED (PG) U4UMiH1Hl lS , * lUlll lllUM THE NAKED GUN (R) 11:• 1:• •:• •:• •:• 1tt• * ~~~o~Jr• Rnurn U 10 ne •:U 1.M 11:1' •U 34 9!>0!> ORANG! Mt1t011ol•...,O. 11 lfWIS -- Tht CIT V ShOOP•f'tt Ct ntt r \IAM t .. 14..R•SfAl (Al otfOA•' s •• ,. R!AW "~ ... ,. 'i' OLIVER & COMPANY (G) 1'11nllt .. ••IPGI RAllllMAN (RI ~wi.:r .. r TEQUILA _ SUlllRIJE (R) ""'1 LllMI ._.,(Ill THE NAKED GUN (R) C.-. Te,._.. (Ill .. I Chrtatian entertalnen will perform New Year'• ETe at Knott'• Berry "Farm. .. --·-........... -· i\.lt ........ llW• .,...,. .... .,. .... ... -..... ~ C't'JllllllM •lllW'M .......... ~., ........ f·--~ ...... ......., .... , ... , .. t]t!.. ....,~ •cot••... •t\.tOllO ...... ........... • ............ . .-...-o..-c..... ( ....... ~ .............. ...... --, ........ ~ .... ... , .. , ~ ,., ..... .. .. ,. . ,,.. •coau ... ......,..,°" ICA(:ljl •u -.a• • ....,,..., •ACM ,..~ -°"""' , ..... ~~ ..... ,,,,,,... • ...... '" • • .. ,., .,...., '11 •• , .,, .~ ~ .... w~.,.-.. ..... m-- --Court upholds $10 million awatci to ~aquel Welch 'J LOS ANGELES (AP) -An ap- ecllate COUrt has UP.held actress Kaquel Welch's S 10 million award in her lawsuit apinst Metro-Ooldwyn- Mayer and others claiming. she was wrongfully fired from the 1980 movie "Cannery Row," Fourth District Coun of Appeal Presidin1 Justice Arleir.h Woods wrote the opinion. which upheld -Wetc~Tlll\fmcnts that she was fired without reason for the movie. except to become a scapeaoat for its cost overruns. Welch. who was 40 when she was dismisstd. was replaced by actress Debra Winger in the movie which co- starred Nick Nohe. "Cannery Row" was a box-office flop. Welch has not had a movie role since. Woods' opinion refused to chanae an award of S2 milli on in com- pensatory damages and SS million in punitive damages. The oriJinal de- fendants included MGM. Its presi- dent David Begelman. and th e movie's producer, Michael Phillips. Wood's opinion dismissed defense contentions that a ··special rela-tionship" should have been showed between employer and employee. ··This is a bad-faith discharge case. and the trial court followed well established law that no special rela- tionship beyond the employer-em- ployee relationship 1s necessary in a bad-faith discharge case." Woods wrote. Under terms of Welch's contract. she was entitled to full payrt).c.ttj if fired without cause. She was ~~ied after she put her makeup on at.hQ{l'le rather than at the studio. Sl)~.;had permission to do that, and sua.,:5&ed tt in the interest of savina time ... .:. The appellate court aarecd.~th Welch's contention that tfie miJu:up issue was a red herrina. .~;.. "The record sugests the aefen- dants may .ha v.e ha~ different ~~r­ lying moti vations, Woods wrote. "Phillips wanted to protect ~fui.ielf from removal from the .J1!f'"· Bcaelman neeMd to protect h1'·~w Position at MGM and shQ.\V: J1is strength in dealin1 ~with sta~ .. ~ MGM wanted a different actrw,for the role. .. -; ... "The end result was the same: a conspiracy to falsely blame We.kb.for the production's problems and.. to create a pretext for firing her· .wbich would provide a basis for not ~ng her under the contract," she wiof.C. The coµrt upheld all the c~iins. including a slander award a~inst Beaelman and MGM for a staiOllient Begelman ma(le to Rolling:SfOne maaazine that Welch had br~a1:Jled . her contract. • Woods said she did not reiim' as excessive the sums awarded to W~J~h. includin1 S3.75 million aaa1hst MGM for conspiracy to in~ce a breach of contract and anothe~3.75 million aaainst MGM for brcSh of the covenant of _good faith arid fair dealing: and SS00.000 punitivc.'1;tm- ages aaainst Phillips. : -- 'Twins' No. -1 for 3 HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The Christmas holidar, weekend saw the comed y "Twins. · starring Danny DeVito and Arnold Schwarzenegger as brothers separated at birth. take first place in national box office receipts for the third consecutive week. "Twins" pulled in $9 million over the Christmas weekend. followed by ··Rain Man." a somber study of autism starring Dustin Hoffman and Tom Cruise. which attracted grosses ofS8.7 million. ticket sales ofS4. 7 million in a limited release. :.,., "Dirty Rotten Scoundrel~·; .. the Steve Manin-Mi~hael Caine remake of I 964's con-man comedy "Bedtime Story.'' landed in fifth pla(.'ltwwith receipts ofS4.5 million. ··Ser~ ... comedian Bill Murray's new"tnter- pretation of Dickens' Chris1'Y'!as classic. fin ished in sixth place on sales of $4.2 million. In seventh• •was "Oliver ana ·co.:· an animcrtt'd• op- date of the Oliver Twist story.~...,hich drew S3:5 million . In third place was the comedy ''The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad!." featuring Leslie Nielsen as a --------------:----------------1--------------....-----------------l bumbling Police detective. which cQllected SS.8 million. In fou rth place "Hellbound: Hell raiser II ."·°' ttcw horror movie from writer' •eH~e Barker. netted $3.19 million in eighth. "Tequila Sunrise," a moody drug-dealing drama with Mel Cl~~n. Kurt Russell and Michelle RWl'er. collected $3.16 million in nin~nd "The Land Before Timo;" ... an ani mated talc of a baby dineuwr's perilous Journey throu1h a prehistoric world, grossed $2 nw11ion TEQUILA SUNRISE 12:002:301~ 7:JO 10:00 SCROOGED (PQ.13) ll:lll:tldl'AHIH TwtNS (PG) 1:15 3:30S:AS1:00 1 :1 TWINS 1:153:301~)8:00 10:15 SCROOGED (PG-13) 11:451:41••1:1s •~ IO'JD ..-SECllET 12:•5 3:00 r:1s 7:30 t :cs DtRTY ROTTEN SCOUNOAELS (PO) 11:412:00 4:101• t:ts ........ ...a .. 11:• 2:111:00 J:al , ... ......... °""" c:e.y) OLIVER & COMPANY t-::~===~!r. n:oe 2• .:i:317:0l l:31 SCROOGED . (PG-13) 1:15 3:305:451:00 10:15 THE NAKED GUN (PG-13) WO til t:JI 12 I~ It» T£0ULA SUNRISE (A) 11:412:00 dD 7~ t'JO was "Work ing Gi rl." the corPorate Cinderella comedy with Melanie Gnffith and Hamson Ford. w11h " L . NE OF THE GREAT ()NFS ... I ., II ( • ' \ ', I I • h'. "' ( 1 l ' I ' \ ', I ' I~ '\' I I< I I I I I ., \" "I I\ II I) s ·1 ~ '• • q .. '.. ' """Mf1l ,._ CMll mflOll9KI 111,.. --.& ... ·-"''" I' 1n 10th. • ... MOVIE S Comedy reianed-: .. in 1988===-- \ -\ Medical students work I Ong, ha~d for degree Dear Ann Landen: I am a •founb- 'medical student, and I wonder many people undentand how t it is to become a doctor. If ~I doubt that they would be so eaeer ,ttJ jump on the bandwqon to coft4cmn the medical community, whiclr ii the beat in the world. , lbave been in school forciaht yean -'Mr years of lf'lelina competitive undl111actuate studies, then four ydtf'Of medical achool that can be Ciet&:ttbed only u demandina and diftuJL TWtre are no shortcuts. We must ~ill much u possible because it is hmnan life that we wiU eventually be resd6ftsible for. Afterp:actuation, I will enter a four-yaf~ncy ~· This means ~ Iona ~~ ... d~fficult climb. Finjdly, when I am \,31, I will be able to . do What I have wanted to do for a very 1oar·time -be a competent and compuai~natc fhysician,. In additi~n to "me umc haye invested in pn!~ftl for my ~rccr I have sac'l'jftted much in terms of financial adftnc:emmt, livina dn $8,000 a year aftet' p.yina $8,000 a year in tuition (alwa_ys borrowed) while in school. This 'ii below the poverty level for this nati'olt I am a collcae paduatc, tops •1•f"\t in my class. and while my peers arc havina their second or third child, or buyinaa home, I am tryina to find the money to buy a suit so l will lQOk presentable. I have no qualms about how difficult this journey has been but i resent it when I hear people ~dae docton their nice cars and vacations to the Caribbean. Believe me, those docton are far behind many of their peers. It's almost as if they have lost 10 years of their lives. Why is it that no one bats an eye when a 21-ycar-old boxer can have a net worth of SSO million but when a doctor acts SI 00,000 for kcepina people healthy and savina lives they resent it? Got an answer, Annie? - O.P., Roclcford, Ill. Dear 8-t.: 0..'t leell at me. I'm .,.....hie. Some of my beat frina are llocten. A 11eater cucen ls M• 1.., &k medical ,,.fes1l011 eu ••mve &k IJ'eed of lawyen ud 1'elr m.rderou ma1,...ctiff 1alt1. ftat's die ~I .... u.. today. Yoa uve wrtuea a very pod letter ud I am pleaaed'to priat It. \ . . . Dear Ann l.anders:'bur son has not called me i.Mother" since he was in \ p'lde school. He has ne ver in his life called hiJ father "Dad." "Artbut" married recently and his wife never calls me anything either, althouah when we first met I asked her to pleaae call me t;>y my first name. Arthur and his wife arc 30 years of qe. They arc both educated and successful in business. Should I make an issue of it or is it best to remain - Nameless in Akron Dear A.k: . Pleil die appropriate mommt wltea yoa are aJoae wltll you .. ud ~la wife alMI telf tktll euetly laow JM feel. De It la a low· MJ, -attaatery way, empbst1· lq llow m9Cll lt ••W please y ... 1 ....... t be arprise4 if Uley ~1•1retl you r~t. Sometlmea all it &Uet 11 to tell people euctly wut 11 .. youmlad. . . . .. -Dear Ann Landers: I am tired of aoina to weddings and hcariflg, ··1 now pronounce you man and wife." For l\Ca vcn's sake, God already pronounced him a man when he was born. This person is about to become husban~. Why don't..thc..,clcrgymen say so? -Bugged an Barstow. Dear B•ued: Most of tllem do now. Yot1've bffn 1oing to tlte wroa1 weddln11. . ~are.nt Aid~\tor holidays· .. \ ~a drt'am the other night where I adjusted all the mirrors and reseLall Willie Nelson raced out on stage with the dials to get back to Barry his guitar and bepn singing "Blue Manilow. I forgot Where I was going. Skies." A banner an the background From all appeara"ces. the refnger· read, ''AID FOR PARENTS." ator is a monument to obesny. Prot'ceds were 10 be used 10 assist jammed full of sup lies. But look "'°'hers and fathers in mopping up clo~I¥· The milk can n is empty. So aftec the disaster of having their is the ice cream canon the pizza box fl:OWR children home for the hot-and the olive jar. Four omatocs have 1da~s, one slice off them. Tw apples have •Theseare kids who drop in fora few bites removed. In the cu board arc 12 ~leaving a path of destruction in boxes of cereal ... all ith th e seal thci,.wake. It takes months to restore broken. normalcy. The house that oncer ng with jO)' T-akc my car. They did. I turned on and laughter now .seem's ~csolatc. the·ipition yesterday and got chest hollow and empty with the k!ds gone. ~ins from the volume of the radio. · This is because they took ~Ith them My scat was pushed back so far I felt all of the bed linen. s~all appliances. like•I was in the backseat. By the time luaagc. TV set. k1tchenfarc and . ( . exercise equipment. What has taken parents years to pay for and assemble has been load~d into compact cars and is on its way to a new home. For weeks after they leave. little reminders of them still pop up - tennis balls in the hall planter. empt) film boxes m the sofa cushions. Some of the devastation will take time to surface. It will come with the first utility bills. These will reflect the front door that was left open for two days, the extra hot water for washing hair every 15 minutes. I slept a sound sleep knowing that someone cared enQugh to stage a concert in our behalf. The govern- ment doesn't care. God bless yo u. Willie! BJ CllARLBS GOREN mHllAR lllAIUP .East-West vulnerable. South ~. ------ NORTH •KI 7 6 V' K Q 12 0 Q 119 .. •5 Only a\teetotaler couf d C/a·im to drink Jjke a fish, \ WEST EAST •CJ•l •J3 V' 10 6 5 .. V' 9 • 7 O AK7 0 165 •A93 •17642 SOUTH • A 10 9 5 V' A 3 -0 J 3 2 • K Q J JO Tbe· ltiddina: s.m w... Nortll East 1•· , .. 1 0 ... 11· r .. 3• r .. .... , .. , .. ,_ • Qpenina lead: Kina or 0 -Jtast the timina a defender adopts in tak:ina his tricks can occaaionally pve away his holdinc to an utute ~er. The inference on this band is'lliabt, but ii better than nothina at all. ne auction WU routine. Note N<?iJ~'• up-the-line rapon1e of one ~ond rather than abowina a ma- jor, which pv~ North-South the e>piMktunity of locatina a ...._.. fit in any one or three suits. Yes, we know three no trump is the better con- traet~ 'but who can you fault? It'• ctit~t to point the finaer at either player. Ap1n1t four spades West wuted no wne in cuhln1 the kina-acc of dtamondl and ace of clubs and Cldt-ine· With a diamond. Declarer wu f~ with the loll or • trump trick. and ;-the percentqe way to a¥0kl t.hat wu via a .. Devil's Coup." To accomplbb the desired endina. de- da(~ lint Md to decide wlUch de· fender wu more Ukely to be Iona in t.r\Unpt. He concluded that West's umeemly bute to cub bis three t.rlcb WU becaUIC be thCJUl,bt be m~t have a trump trick, 10 be eledect to play West for three trumps to an honor. T.tie contract could be made only 1£W•t's distribution wu apecitlcal- ly 3-4-3-3. So declarer won the cUa- mond, cashed the ace and klna of heule and ruffed a heart. NeJU he c:aibed the kins of clubs and rurred a,.club. Then he returned to band With' a bean ruff. :D.ifdartr ud But were now down tO tWo tnunpe IDd dub e.dl, wbUe clammy ad .,, .. leCll blld tine • tlmlpl. Wbm ...,.. led .. lut c:lllb, W• wu ruined. 11 IM ruffed ........ would cmmatr Oii tbe Mlllt _. .,... IM lul two trictl ~-..-...or~.lflM iJdlil wtlll .... ...... .. ' O\Wr'8lf wlda tM Mii .. I oflM•Ofb ....... •• ... ... two trtcb. u .,... ......... .. Drinks like a fish" is inap- propriate. Fish don't drink all that much. Better fiaure of speech would be "drinks like a camel." It's not unusual for a camel to chuplug 27 gallons in 10 minutes. When the hostess serves you some 10rt offood you don't much like. what do you say? Noth inJ. right? The Yoruba people of Nigeria have a ritual sentence for that situation. and it's perfectly proper to say ~1: ::1 don't think I know how to cat this. Q. Does an antc!lter have teeth? A. No teeth. no Jaws. The moon is aettina farther and farther away. Its orbit around the earth is ever widening. Someday llS shadow will be 100 small to eclipse the sun entirely. So say the scholars. A West Gcnnan co mpany made excccdinaJy fancy exercise machines. Its ad aaency printed sales messages on paper handkerchiefs. and hired young pretty models to drop them near unescorted men. Fear was the manufacturer wouldn't be able to tum out enough machines 10 meet the demand. Didn't happen that wa y . ..\d gcncy couldn•t hire enouah girls. They kept running ofT with the unescorted men. Q. Why is sheep meat. once it's roasted. called mutton? A. Anglo-Saxons herded the flocks. natcd males as royal .i>ols. Queens and princesses appointed remale fools. Historical footnotes suggest female fools were harder to find. Higher the altitude. the 'lower the cancer death rate . Can an celskin wallet ruin your bank cards? A Michigan bank clcrt.. says yes. Claims the eelskin's elec· tncal charge demagnetizes the card's coding. Reports one customer 'o\-Cnt through four cards before they figured out what was wrong. Q. Who first came up wtth cheesecake? A. The old Romans. Recipe called for flour. cheese. honey. egg and poppy S«ds. Q. Wasn't the first private c~c. Allan Pinkerton. a black man? A. No. sir. he was a fair Scot. but he becameaheroofblacks.Ashopofh1 . a cooperage. was a way station 1n the Underground Railroad that piped black refugees out of the South. Pinkerton fought slavery .in numer- ous real ways. Their word was sheep. Normans banqueted orr the meat. Their word was mutton. Please do not usc )Our dart) underwear for a dust rag. Not in Q. You said the spinning top has Cahfomi a. anyhow. That's outla"cd been a plaything in every socactr . there. What did Eskimos make tops out ori A. kc. Q. Who were the reliaious people who though.I at wron& to let an) bod~ dac of old age? So killed their older people? You've never heard of John .\lcock or Anhur Brown? You've heard of Charles A. Lindberah. thou&)1. Alcock and Brown were the two Enahshmen who flew a Vickers Vimy non-stop ~cross the Atlantic from Newfound- land to Ireland -eiaht.>cars before lindbcrah's fli1h1. Alcock cl'9shed a few yean later. Brown never flew apin. But while they lived. they were not robbed of their happy alory by the trracherics of fame. ln that matter. they didn't know how lucky the) were. Onl)' L1ndbtrah knew. MOtQuitocs bite bird \00. An historian takes 111Ut wid9 the old cla1m tbat ·~~ ••• thc Pilanmt how to fMililf dlir com rtd'Ch wittt 111t. &llilla .,,.,. w bttn .......... ., ,.... he .,.. A. The Tench Islanders an the Pacific annually took ~heir 40-)car- olds out. Q. Didn't Abraha~ Lincoln fi~t a broadsword duel with the llhnt11s state auditor. James Shields? A. Almost. Lincoln's futu re wife. Mary Todd. had a hand in 'o\-rll1ng a newspaper lcner cnt1cal of Shield Lincoln wai drqaed into it. He and Shields met to fi&ht. but talked each other cnu of tt. and btt.amt hfdona friends. You'"c •n 1ha1 character d~UC'd yp u McGruff. the Cnmt Dos. h's hoc wort. ,euana all d«kc:d out in a• l"up. So 1n the nose of the ~me 1sa beur~-opcratcd fan Q. Wllat •s Jon \'(l11ht's ftn1 movw! · A.A low~ POQ .\rt lil"!blh:J .. Fr1n•'i Greaent ,\d,entur(' OrMge COMt DAILY PILOT /Thur'ld8y, Oeoembel 29, 1911 ., r 'J l ~ 1 I 1:00 I 1:30 I 1:00 I 1:30 I a:oo I a:30 I 9 :oo I 9:3o 11 o:oo I 1 o:3o l 11 :oo 111 :30 I A.RID (March 21-April "19): De- cision feaehed con- cemina life style, residence, marital status. Public ac.- claim due, repu· 'tation enhanced, ex- SYDNEY 01111 cellent offer re-. ceived. Financial picture briabter than oriainally thouaht possible. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Check really is in maif. Attention centers around work methods, employment, pet care, dcpendeDts. promotion. T erm1 will bl clarified, dispute with love putncr is temporary. Virgo involved. , GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Accept challCnac. You will meet deadline and be amply rewarded as result. Relationship inte~sifi~. j_ustice .Pre".ails, views . arc vindicated. Scenano highlights darectJon, productJon, promotion.· CANCER (June 21-July 22): Search is concluded. more people become aware of your capabilities. Emp!1asis on idealism, principles, romantic . attachment. :N~o­ tiations reprdina propeny will go tn your favor. Anes represented. LEO (July23:Aua. 22): Message or~ ~!ates to fresh start in new d1rectton. Focus on style, creat1vtty. romance, p'Cen liaht for unique project. Youna. person becomes staunch ally. Another Leo fiSUJ'CS prominently. VIRGO ~Aua. 23-Sept. 22): Hold off on "money arranacment. ' If you play waitinJ pmc, better offer will be received. Two people involved, only one bas your best interests at heart. Family member provides missma link. UBR.A (SepL 23-0ct. 22): Moon in yo\lr sign accents .... ~ 1ru11auvc, indePcndcnce, ongmality. style. Some i.-~ll comment. "You~ personali ty has undergone tran~ formation!" Popularity on the rise, social activities increase. Gcmint involved. ' SCO~ (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You'll be provided with hints, clues. qtlineatc patterns. puzzle-pieces will fall into place. Backstqe maneuver revealed -to your advan- tqe. A differen.t rule will be enforced. Taurus involved. SAGl1TAIU\JS (No". 22-Dec. 21): Correspondence commands attention. What appeared superficial actually has plenty of su~tanoc. Give full play to intellectual curiosity. Member Of opposite sex seeks counsel. Relative involved. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Domcsuc adjust- ment involves address. relati vcs. mamqe. Attention also centcn around fundina.. mvestmcnt.. s.avinr aa:ou.nt. Protect autts and reputation. Be aware o legjtimatr source matcnaJ. A.QUA.IUUS (Jan. .20-Feb. 18): Some will insist, "You've missed the boat.-In actualtt). there ,..'IS mere delay, )'OOr servi~ aR considered valuable and you will be "reinstated." Focus on commurucauon. laquqe. definition. • P~ (Feb. 19-March 20): You could be asked to handle financ1al affairs of one who means much to you. Focus on trust funds, 10tercst rates. loans. credit. Dia deep for anfonnauon. reject superficial responses. Be tho~uah . IF DEC.HIS YOUR BIRTBDA Y yo u are on brink of excitinJ adventure. As year ends. you already perceived potential and rccoanize that you'll change residence ~nd possibly marital status. Durina past mOtith. attention . centered around intensified relationship, busineu and career, financial transaction. Jn January, you'll rectify recent error. techniques will be perfected and you'll have genuine reason to celebrate. Gemini. Saginanus persona 171ay imponant roltt 1n your life. Singer Humperdinck S'1ing Enquirer over AIDS story By ne Associated Press LOS J\NGELES -Entertainer Engelbcn Humperd1nck has filed a S50 milhon·plus libel suit against the Nat ional Enquirer. cla1mang lh<.' tabloid held him up to hatred and nd1cule when 11 falsely ret>oned he had AIDS. The Supcnor Coun suit filed Tuesday by Humpcrdinck's laW}er. Robert Rotstc.-1n. states the singer doesn't ha ve acquired immune defi- ciency S) ndrome. Furthcrmort. 1t said. he has nc' er tc tcd pos111 ve for AI D . The Nauonal Enquirer. a weelt.I) supermarket tabloid that boasts the largeSl cm:utauon of an> paper an ..\menca. said an the headline O\.erthc Dec. 27. 198 . SlOI) "Engclbcn Has -\ID Virus ... ··in shod.mg coun papers. the mother of En&el bert Hum~rdmck's 1llcg1uma1e daughter declares that the superstar smacr as b:m1tn1 the , IDS virus." the Lantana. Aa.-bascd Na· uonal Enquirer said. The first commert'aal the g().~car- Kathv Jetter filed papers an New old actor 41d was a spot for Fare tone Y k c ' · f I C ... _ and t1res'-'htchranabou110 \carsago or ity s ama y oun ~m ina "He did it "'S a fa , or tor Leonard that Humperd1nck, 52. provide for .. the financial future of her t 2·year-oki F1rtstone tthen president ofF1rcs1onc d h I ad led b 1 of C'ahfom1a). who had dona1td a aug ter. a re Y ru Ya coun o l1'bran to Princeton. "here I u:wan) be his dauah1er. ~ The woman's unsubstantiated and "'ent to school." said ~ohn traus false claims about the entertainer an a the actors publtc11y agent rcpl) anidav1t an the case wert The adea of a ·'01cc-ovcr for ult1matd) d1sm1sscd b) the New ~mpbcll's "tad.IN" tcwan. \ltd York coun. Yrhteh the tabloid failed trauco~ to rcpon. Humpm1mck's libel iUtt The pal w11h the tC('n·atc arand· d daqhtcr. "ho returns homf af\cr a sat · • • • d1sastrou date. 1s one of fi"c in • LOS .\NCiE LES -It's Jimmy senes. It bcpn l'\.lnn1n1 1n Lex teYrart'\ '01« all n1tn. tha1 un-Anetln an P'tmbtr In another m"takablc folk ) tYrant uf111"1 the spot. Str,..an pc~~ a•1rancbon ~ak('r'S tctn--at .,.andda1a1hter to not 10 l'\.lr\ a,,_a • h) offenn& him cat Campbell's 50up warm tOuP TM C'Ommtte\ll 1s the 5ttOftd of Tbt compan~ ~'" thf hand wcn 1cwan·1 Iona act1nt carttr . ..,bidt • sc1m~ 1huoup as not \Cwan·, h'u 1ncluck\an .\\~m) •ard for .. TM ,...... .... Ph11acklilfl'f~··a.w0.Car-noma-.. .,we e.d s.ewan <M' caMCfa, ~ nattd role) 1n "Mr Smith <.ion to t~t " wouad hr ft\ t'f'kic11\t' ... Wa\h1nc1on .... ·1t'u V.ondcrful l1~.. aMcl 1tG1ff Molconi. .mK>f' 'l\'t' and "HlhC)." pnf lllM ... ('ftMI\~ dittnor of \ I .I I · Bl Otange Cout DAILY PILOT I Thurlday, December 28, 1988 CA 1fo~N 1A 'B ENDf R f \rs\', Wclt't )Oii to ViSv~\ize b\endin9. "Daddy said this is a foreign car and it's very hard to get parts for it." · - by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE "Near as can figure it, he's breaking a date wit the Williams' Shih Tzul" PEANUTS \ GARFIELD I'M GOINu 10 MAKE A NE.W YEAR'.S RESOLOilON! DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE /I . IT SEEMS TO ME T~AT '<OU 00 AN AWFUL LOT OF NAPPING ... by Hank Ketcham ,.~-~ . \ J j i ! by Charles M. Schulz TH IS lSN1T A W~OLE NAP .. TMIS IS JUST A NAP SNACK . by Jim Davis by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan ARLO AND JAKIS FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE l DONTlfilNKM~ ~l~lfilS,EL cx:NT et:.81!'1. SHOE Asa~Oytr. plea;. talce a moment and. fill M #:lie enclo!ed. ~tionnaira . JUDGE PARKER FUNKY WINKERBltAN !t-.i ~R OF HAVlt-lG IHE MARCHI~ f:£AP~ 5E.u:cTE.D 10 PERR>RM 1~rrnE 'BANDFE.S-T • PRI~ 10 'TJ4E IOURNAMENI OF ~PARADE ... DOONltSBURY T.5188fllH11et, ~ • LllNlflt.., CJJr510fT" HS VA- CATrJN II H (AllliMAJIPlllJSH· lflJ Ki THI H/61151WT 'De. -NOCDllllarN by Garry Trudeau i t by Jimmy Johnson' rr LOOIC£DSO ~ OUT W't' 1~ Olfte! ., oy Lynn J"ohnston . e ••-,..•rt•...,. • .... o• "'• t ._.., .., ... ,..b tJ •o•d\ t.. fO f ,. • -¥ , ... ., .. -, • ..,. P R 0 V A Y I' I' I I' I G I T H M I I I I I' . ,~ 11 L r E" I .. • • ... by Tom Batlu9' .. . °"41 OICI timer to tl'Olllel I'm not Me llOW n.t11rt wor11t. but natUfe llllOWLlllOw 10 Oo " Ind ,,,., • ~ -1111no • . _ .. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1988 five ticks are eternity to ,F-oyd I • Bill UCI guarcfdriveSCOuit'S length for lay in at 6uzzer to bring win over UCLA , 91-90 lyEDZINTEL °'llr Net C:.u 11, •• el Where was Al Michaels when you needed him? Ask UCl's basketball team if it be- litves in mir- a~les. K e v i n Floyd's drivina lay up at the buzzer gave UCI a 91-90 win over UCLA Wednesda y ni&ht before a scflout 5,000 at the Bren Events Fl-d Center. -, This was one of Irvine·~ biggest wins ever in basketball. without question. Especially since the Ant· eaters (3-7) came in with their wom stan in school history. having lost to Cieorgia State by 25 points to o pen the ss:ason. UCLA (6-2). on the other hand. oome in as the heavy fa vorite with a )'<>Ung but talented team led by senior IPJard Jerome "Pooh" Richardson. JIJnior forward Trevor Wilson and freshman phenom Don Mcl...aean. a forward averaging 20 points a game. Just ·prime for the upset? Apparctnly so. UCLA jumped off to a 12-3 lead. then colla~ for the rest of the first half to trail. 50-39. The Bruins then charged back in the final five minutes of the pmc and appeared to have it wrapped up when Richardson $3nlc a lhree-point basket at the top of the key with five seconds left. But Floyd. a 6-foot-S guard . took the inbounds pass and raced the length of the coun. As he reached the key, he jumped high over forward Keith Owens and carefully laid the ball in as the buzzer sounded. Coach Bill Mulligan called it one of UCl's most imponant wins ever. ranking it with the win over UCLA in the 1986 NIT playoffs and a wan over Nevada-Las Vegas in last )car's Big West Tournament. "Greatcoachingjob. huh'!" he said. "Seriously, this was amazing. just absolutely amazi ng. Floyd was like a man possessed." Floyd led UCI wi th 26 poi nts. Mike Doktorczyk had 18. followed by Rod Palmer with 16 and Jeff Herdman with IS. The Bruins' Wilson led all scorers with 30 points followed by Macl ean and Richardson wi th 19 and 18 respccti vely. The Bruins. whose only previous loss came at Nonh Carolina. were in a near state of shock afterward. .. We should never have pu t ourselves in that kind ofhole ... Coach Jim Harrick said ... Irvine pla)cd a good aame and Flo}"d made a great play. Some niaJus are hke this. We ouaht to learn and be better from it." OCI played what Richardson called "hungry" basketball. Of the last play. he said. ··w e let him (Floyd) go because we didn't want to give the foul with a I-and-I si tuation. .. I knew that with fi ve seconds left, anything could happen. Five seconds is an eternity." That's what Flo)d said ... It was my shot to take all the way." he said. "We diagrammed a play like this in Vegas. Coach (Larry) Sunderman desiJned it. If they don't press. I c-ome to,et the ball and then look for an alley. hank God it went an. Maybe this 1s the stan of something good." This was cena1nly good for starters. The Anteaters shot SS percent from the floor and hit 8-of-1 13-pointshots. both high marks against UCLA th is season. ' It all staned in the first half. Reserve forward Jeff H~rdman led the UCI charge as he hit two 3-point shots to give the Anteaters thei r first lead. 23-21 with 11 :29 left in the half. Irvine led. 45-37 with two minutes left when Floyd scored twice and Doktorczyk hit two free throws and a 3-pointer. When Floyd hit a basket under- neath with 27 seconds le ft in the first half. UCI had its biggest lead. 50-37. After trailing. 12-3. in .the earl y stages. the Anteaters outscored UCLA. 47-27 th<: remainder of the half. Palmer hit three straight shots. (Pleue eee UCl/C3) DellJ .... ,.._.., ......... MULLIGAI CoU£GE BASKETBA LL Yes Virginia, there really is Santa Claus, ~68-3 says so Home cooking can get you the edge. if in the right~m Wooare the best tea ms in the West th1sseasonas"ea.pproach the beginn1ngofl989. I like Arizona. · UNLV. UC'LA.S1anford. UC Santa Barbara. Boise tate and St. Mary's. Who will be the best team in March ·· · 1sanothcrquest1on. 0 The fact that we "ent o ven ime w11h perennial '\CC power Virginia e1thers1gn1fics that we are improving or that V1rgin1a is not as good as usual. The) are 7-1. but have not been on the road )Ct and that will tell the tale. Virginia. under Coach Terry Holland.has"on 68ofits last 71 non- confcrencegamesat home. Yes. you read that right. 0 We thank we hve in the greatest area in thecountf). butafterspcndinf a few days in Charlottesville. Va.. can understand "hY people li ve there and IO\elt. .l.. Even the weather was nict (i n the 60s) and the traffic 1s nothmg like ouFS in Orange County. The University of Virginia was fou nded by Thomas · Jefferson and he preferred that note on his tombstone rather than being president of the U n1ted States. Our players and coach.es toured the campus and all enjoyed the area. 0 Congratulations to Dylan Rigdon of Mater Dea H1gh on being named MVP ofthe Tournament of Cham- pions. which "as held at Ocean View High. D}lan wall pla} for us next year. along wuh Khan Johnson of El Toro. who is also destined fo r greatness. 0 Our first three conference games of the ne" )ear are on the road at UC Santa Barbara. San JoS( State and UCI Coach Bill Mull1-an directs hi• Ant- eatera on way to 91-90 victory o•er UCLA. Jeff Herdman of UCI wrath~• for a looee ball with Don MacLean of UCLA Bruin•. Rob Doktorczyk rejects a abot by UCLA·· Don MacLean. tah tate. We ha' cal read~ pla)ed at :"ILV. Doesn't make iteasv. does it? (Pleaee 1ee MULLIGA1' /C3) DellJ ........... .., Mlctt .... Hantinaton Beach'• Joey IUjewakl aoea up between the defeue of trnne•• Bryan Allred (left) and Raphael Molle. SaliJts staggered, 39-38; fans chase after referees Edison gets big upse t : Cvijanovtch says h is team will not return By ROGER CAR~N Ol ... Del!J ......... Santa Cl::m1 lfigh's Sa ints. an 01tnard-bascd Parochial school "1th a basketball team that doesn't lose often. apparrntl) doesn't lo c ~K>Usl~. either. Titt Sa1nt1, who enter-ff the Coast Christmas C1afMc with an unbtatcn record. ranked No. I in Clf Division II ardn and tmlcd No. I in the I(>. team toumamcnl at Estancia Hip. wtrt Ul*l by Edason. 39-38. and from all appnrancn. the> 'rt '°"'1 tU • 10.l antt toda)' bc:nuK th\')·~ n~ 10 rorrtu their finh-~· 1rm1ftnal1 pmc wa&h Latuna Hills "lk ccoac;tt Lou ("v1jano\ 1ch) \lld he wasn't coming back tomorro"." said Chuck Perry. one of the tour- nament directors. "We assume he'll be back." said o\n Perf¥. also a tourney director. "ha~d on his signed contract. But I ha ve to say it. I don't think they will." Chuck Pel'T). who was 'crball) assaulted b) fansdcmandma to kno" "How much did )'OU P8)' off the rcfcrtts." said. "It was the "ors1 display of sponsmam1h1p r,c e\cr seen. The\ said 'It's al\\a) s thlS \\a). no non-Orange Count> team c'~ wins m Oranat Count). " no-show to a contract~ pmc I considered a maJor '1ola11on of ('If ruin. as well as ethics C'v1jano' 1ch YtlS '"Id Ytllh the offaciatina Wtdne~) an\! th<' ~nta C'lara fans wcrt C\ en madc:kr. chasina th( rekl'\-n and touma~nt ,-.tr.caah from the 41tttte after a la\t "'°t YtUh no lnnc.-kt\ hit th\' nm. bounced up. 1nd (Pl ...... CLA•IC~J Vallely has seen both ends of the spectrum of life Wooden·s influence has bee n a con stant source ofinspira tion By HOWARD L. HA NDY When~ Du ha' e r('ached the pinna-. clc 'lf ~uccess tn "01•r chosen wallc in life and ac- colades no" like 'intage wine. II would Sl'cm there are few horizons to stri ve for in the fu ture. But there arc also dep1hs and despair along the rood 1hat bn "ii rca Ii t ~ back 1n focu in vaue1,, 1988 a hurl). John Vallcl\ has bee n a t both end of the spectrum ofhfc and th(' former 11-C'I F basketball star from Corona dcl Mar High School has faith that thr fu ture 1s bright for he and his fa mil) Valleh pla)ed at Orange C'oas1 College tor t"oJears before mo' ang on to UCL.\ an t"o big ~ears under Coach John \Voodcn. Wooden's 1n- Ouence e'en no" 1s a constant sourc-r of setntual mOtl\ :lllon and uplifting for allel}. H 1s biggest momrn ts on the basket- ball coun came "llh the CL.\ Bru1ns1n 1969and 1970. He was not hca' ii) re ru1ted o ut of ~1gh school and an hl lim }Car at ()(' . lJ (' Coach Bob Bo}d ShO\\ed some 1ntcrest He did have otkrs from out-of-tate but didn't takl' an~ too scnousl\. During his ~C'ond ~car at Orange Coast. Jeri) i'oorman began th(' recru1t1ng prcx'l'S for l 'C'l o\ at mid· sea on. Denn} Crum. then a Bruin assistant coach. tool.. o'er the recru11- 1ng proces "hen Norman tumC'd 10 othcr endea' ors. .. Coach \\.ooden came dov.n to sec mc at m) home la te 10 the season. We had pla,cd their frc hman team at Paule' J>a, 1l1on and I had a good game.'· Vallcl ~ r'-'l-alls. ·· .\flcr I met (Pleaee 1ee V ALLltLT /Ci) ................. John Vallely, durtn1 hie pla~ days u a laot-•booter on Corona del Mar Hlgll School•• 6uketball team. Eagles outgun LagunaHllls Freedom Bowl tonight at Big A Prem Tait Assodalf'4 Prftl H15 dourloo~ no1\\ithstand1n@. Brigham )' oung football l"oa\.'h LaVl·ll Ed"ards '-'nJo~s a game ot ~at-and-mouse a much as an}· one o\s h1~ tram "cnt throufh fina l tuncuP' tor a .. n.'Cdom Ro.-1 matchup ~1th < olorado toniaht 11 ..\na~1m Stadium (6 o'clock). Ed•anh ~m 10 b\• takina .. n1tular dchaht 1n "uhhotdina I~ idtfttll) of h1\ 'tan•na quar- ~ ... nDDOll/C2) C ur li hit ... ix 3-poi n t h ot. to l cad E. r a n c i a i nlo thc-Coa l las ic en1 is \\'it h 64-6 1 \\'i n B~· S<"OTT STOEBCK o.., P11et c-...,•"' ~hm.• 11mc\ lhan not \\hl·n ·' mat1..·hup bct1o1.~n t"o k'am lool good on paper and an C\C1t1ng13me 1> prcd1('tl·d. the outrome 1s tar lc\s "Pl'\'tat. ular than the pr1..'l-\ffil' h\ ~. rhc duel bct1o1.1.."Cn the ba\~eth.111 team\ ot (\tan<.·1a H11h ~ hool ti nd Laauntl Hills. ho"c'cr. II\ cd up to II\ btlf1nga> the E.aalc~ "''n 3 \hootout 1n the SCC'ond round ol th\' C oa'l Chnst ma\ ( laS\I\' Wcdnl'\JJ\ n11ht M-6 1 For '1 m1nut\.'~. the '"" lt'.lm' pla\C'd tookinJ O\C'f" th1:1r 'hout~"· Vt1th btanc1a ' ~on-hH'\I \l\•PQIOt kid 1n ahc tina halt t.:1na 1h,· ta,._,, ach ant• of the-c' '"'""' "'has bttn t\ptral ~stuon tor tlk· Eaak' "'their 1tl-4l ~·l\on. '"'°'' .. c~ • . ph~ SI all\ lnlt'l Inf 1\.1 lht'll l>J"pOlh.'lll and thus hJd torch on 1h1..•1r oul,llk hooting. .. · \nd as u<,ual. th 1~ pn.'M'llll'd no prob km~ M1l..r Cun1c. ''a" '1rtuall' un~H'lp­paNc rn 1h1.· opcninj hJlt .l' he tl111k d long ~l\tJn1..·c tor hH' .l Jlo1n 1r~ 1.'n route to lb ti~t-hJll po1n1 ... Hr lin1\h1.•J "1th ~5. 1ndutl1nJ on(' mor1.• 3-point bomb 1n th4.' 1h1N quancr ••\\.l• l.'\J~'d1.'ti J b.1t1k .ind ~,·JUI 1t. . \J1d bt.in1.1a < o.K h r 1m Cl Rncn "h "·')JU)t ·' '''l)J J.Hnc hl'I"'"'-'" t1o1.o ~ooJ team\ " ,,.. , • I h1.. llJ"(t;) JUOlJll\ I l \.,Ill~. P'a>ina:an.'fil'l-..~•'' 1n\~tatn1.• and turn1na ml\"-'\j ~,t, into rv11u l;aauna Hill \it'nl()f' ( hm ShefTk1.'\('\i "''era I fast ~ab lclr the H1wb a\~· d1\hcd off four lil"\l~uarter 11\\1"'· ' l he Eagk tied the game at 19 "1th JU~t O\ l'r a minute remaining in the lil"'it (luarter. and took their first le.ct ..ccond latl'r on a 11-foot JUmpcr by ( Urtl . E tanc111 managl'd to maintain a three-point ma111n th rouahout most ol the ~cond quancr, ronnttt1ns on fil'ld goal at a 63 pcrttnt chp for t~ half Of 11 13 ficld--aoals ht-fore the antcrm1 ion. onl) two wett from tn\ldC IS t{'ct . me consider 1t da"lt'l'OUS for a team tll rch on lhc ~~h of''' pcnnll..'lcr \hoo11na. but the Eapn' fon thu\ tar ha\l~n't ll"Cft thttft lft option and ~O~ftl aa .. J ctcatl'\I t1.'ln' "n't a populer\...-.. tlC't. I · - iJohnson '• scandal voted Story of Year rrem 1'e Asaeeialff Prest Bell Johnson. fastest man in the world. m will s~nd the rest of his life running from a few ~nds at the Summer Olympics. He accomplished what setmed impossible for 1 mere1monal. and. as it turned out, it was. ·The fall of Ben Johnson to a steroi~ scandal was voted The Associated Press Story of the Year by editors and sports writers in balloting annouoced .Wednesday. The saga topped a list that also included the baseball heroics of Orel Hershiscr and Kirk Gibson. th~ trade of Wayne Gretzky that rocked hockey. and the reaJ-life melodrama of boxer Mike Tyson. On Sept. 24at Seoul.Johnson ran the 100 me1ers in a record-shattering 9. 79 seconds. What seemed imposs· iblc turned out to be impossible -without help. Three days later, the world learned how it was done. Postrace tes1inj de1ected traces of stanozolol. a pcrformance-cnhanc1nganabolic steroid 1hat is banned by the International Olympic Committee. Johnson. a Jamaican~bom sprin1er from Canada. was stripped of the gold and the record. and he wen1 home in disgrace. Carl Lewis finished serond to Johnson in 9.92 and was awarded the gold. 1 I Quote of the day \ Tommy Lasonla, manager of the Dodgers, who pulled ofT miracles to win the Natioha~ !:aJue Championship Series and the World Series. as fre·e agents hit the jackpot before and at the winter meetings: 'T ll tell you the most amazing thing about 1988. It's that Scott Fletcher (the Texas shortstop who earned $575.000 in '88) got S4 million." Lakers hold on to win, 128-123 Magic Jobsoa had his seventh m "triple-double" of the season and the Los Angeles Lakers blew most of a 21-poinl lead before beating the Philadelphia 76crs. 128-123. at the Forum Wednesday night. It was only the Lake rs· SC(;Ond wrn in the last eight games ... Elsewhere in the NBA: Roa Harper scored 19points. lcadingseven Cleveland players in double figures as the Cavaliers beat Charlotte at home. 122-98. for their sevcn1h straight victory ... Joe Barry Carroll fueled a decisi ve 13-4 spu n in the fou nh quarter with a pair of baskets and two free throws as New Jersey kept Indiana the only winless road team in the NBA with a 118-10 I decision over the Pacers ... Adriaa Outley scored six of his 24 points dunng an 11-0 third-quaner run as Detro•t snapped Phoenix's four-wnc winn ng streak with a 106-100 victory at home ... In Sal Lake City. Karl Maloac had 21 points and 16 rebound . and Utah went on a 24-8 first-quarter run en route t a 96-80 victory over Sacramento. Keenan gets 200th ca eer win I>Hls Savard scored a shonhand d Iii oal and newly acquired Adam Creipt ' ~ad the game-winner in a four-goal secon' period Wednesday. spark in,& Chicago to 4-3 victory over visiting Minnesota and 'ving Coach Mike Keeau his 200th career triumph ... lscwhere in the NHL: Rick Vaive, playing his first me with Buffalo after being acquired from Chicago. ored one goal and assisted on another to help lead the brcs to a 4-1 victory over "isi1ing Detroit ... In Winnipeg. O.le Hawerdulk'• second goal of the game Qt pped a three· goal outburst in a 75-sccond span as the Jets ended a fi ve-game winless streak by beating St. Louis. 6-2 ... In Quebec. Walt Pod41•HY scored a power-play gC:f!l with less than six minutes remaining in the third period to give the Nord1ques a 4-4 tie with Hartford. Craig Offensive Player of Y ~ar Roger C'ra1g of the San Francisco • 49ers. NFL co-leader in total yardage and c t key performer on 1he league's second- ranked offense. on Wednesday was named OfTens1ve Player of the Year by The Associated Pres~ Craig rushed for 1.502 yards and nine touchdown$ and caught 76 passes for 534 yards ,and one score. He\ rank~ third in the NFL in rushing a nd ei ghth in receptions. IN l'HE BLEACllBRS ,.._!fh -~- Early In the season, Coach Foonman dlscov· efs ~hat he wlll nqt be able to rely on the strength of his bench. Mic~igan up~t by Anchor&1e m Alaska-Anchorage. a Division II school. stunned second-ranked Michigan. 70..66. Wedncsd~ night in. the opening round of the Utah Classic beltind Micuel Jobsoa'• ~O points and TCNW Ft•r'• 18. Michipn lost for the first time in 12 games. Alaska-Anchorqc is 11 ~2 ... Elsewhere in college basketball: Eric McArtlt•r scored 12 ofhis2 I points in the second half as UC Santa Barbara remained unbeaten with an 88-78 win over lowlfState in the first round of the Kactus Klassic in Tempe, Ariz .... In the other Kactus Klassic game'. Treat E4ward1hadacarcer-hi&h23 pointsandTareece WMeler scored 12 ofhis IS in the skond half. indudina our free throws in the final minute. as Arizona State beat San Francisco, 82-76 ... ~aa..y CMt scored 19 points and five tCf.lalJ'lates also readied double figures as~No. 8 Arizona-"1tfeated Loyola-l"inois. 106-82. in th opening roun6of its Fiesta Bow~Classic ... Reill N ey scored 18 of his 22 points in t~ second half and De I W~&eaddcd 20pointswbilc keying a Utah State rall y as the Agics defeated Detroit. 80..50. in the open ground of the Hoosier Classic in Indianapolis . Sc ell leads lndlana, 34-10 PHIS, Tenn. Anthony EiJ Thom n and Todd ~llis received top ell• billing be ore Wednesday night's Liberty Bowl. Qu erback Dave Schnell stole the spotJight. Schoel • the game's Most Valuable Player, com- pleted 16 f 31 passes ·for 378 yards and two touchdowns leading lndia.na past South Carolina, 34-10. I Televi ion, radio · ~ TELEVISION S 1>.m. -LLEGE 'OOT8ALL: All American Bowl from B ~minghem, Ala.-lflinois vs. Florida, ESPN. 5:30 1>.m. -0 aASKETBALL: New York •I W•shlngton, WO~ 6 1>.m. -COL EGE flOOTaALL: Freedom Bowl from An•nel~ •do YS. BYU, Crutnnel 1 t. 7 1>.m. -COLL~GE BASKETBALL: CMP•ul vs. Seton Hiii In ~r Bowl Cluslc from New Orluns, WGN. 7:30 p,m. -COLUGE aASKETBALL: Norlll Carolina •I San Diego Slate, Prime Ticket. I 1>.m. -HORSE RACING: Hollywood P•rk replan , Ct1.1nne1 S6 (Prime Tlc.ket, 11:30 p.m.>. 9 1>.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: MemPf'lls Sl•I• al Tennessee (dellYed), USA. 9-.30 P.m. -WOMEN'S aASKET9ALL: Wnlern Kenlucky al Long a .. ch Sl•I• (dellyed), Prime Tick el: RADIO 6 p.m. -COLLEGE ,OOTaALL: Freedom Bowl from Anahel~olorado vs. BYU, KMPC (710). 7:30 P.m. -PRO HOCKEY: Vancouver •I Klnos, KLAC (570). '9UDAY TELEVISION 11 1.m. -PREP BASKETBALL: Klno Collon Holiday Cluslc cti.molonshlp geme from Pine Bluff, Ark. (tape), ESPN. FREEDOM BOWL KICKS OFF TONIGHT From Cl • • • Will it be experienced junior Scan Covey or redsh1n freshman Ty Detme~ Insiders arc betting on Covey. but It will be a close call. and have identical TD pass totals ( 13) and interceptions (I 0). "We've got two o( the~. and I'm not really sure who will start." Edwards said. "It probably doesn't matter. Both will probably play to rest. Edwards said. "Just to keep people interested. It seems to be a big issue for a lot of people, so I might as well keep the suspense going. Covey. who started the last five games of the 1987 season. has been No. I this season despite occasional before it's over." \ With neither player making an undisputed claim on the star\ingjob. BY U has a quarterback contf1;>versy, something that bothers Edwar<ls. who is accustomed to campaigns with such splendid passers as Gifford Nielsen. Marc Wilson, Jim McMahon, Steve You ng and Robbie "I have a lot of confidence in both of them. They're both good players." • Ch•nnel 11 •ti Regardless of who stans. Colorado knows that BYU will throw the ball often. The Cougars rank fourth in the nation in passina. averaging 323 yards per game through the air. indecision and a disturbing tendency to throw interceptions. Detmer started one game. tossing fi ve touch- down passes in a 6S-O rout of New Mexico. and he also appeared in a relief role the last two games -losses to Utah and Miami. Bosco. , "This 1s without a doubt the best passing team we've faced ," Colorado Coach Bill McCartney said. Covey has thrown for 2.607 yards. whik Detmer has 1.252 on about half as many opportunities. Both have completed 54 percent of their passes "We have made changes at quar- terback the last two games." Edwards said. "That'~ a departure for us. 1' prefer going with just o~e." Asked why he docsn 't name a bowl- gamc starter and help put the matter "They have an advanced concept to throwing the ball. Their tradition in passing under LaVell Edwards is unsurpassed. It's a superior scheme pla yed by kids who are bright and resourceful." Barons advance to semis otown tourney Hostina its own tournament. 1he Fountain Valle)' High boys soc .. ~r team made sure it would be playing on the final day. as the Barons captured a pair of games Wednesday by identical 3-0 scores. In its first pme. Fountain Valley blanked La Quinta. scorina all of its goals in the second half. Kyle James • tallied twice and Steve Wright added the other goal. while aoalie Joey Penaflor was called upon to make only two saves. In the quarterfinalsapinst Newport Harbor. WriJ.hl. Tony Meza and Shawn Muth scored as the Barons built a 2-0 lead aJ halftime. Penaflor was credited with six saves as Fountain Valley improved to 12-3 overall entering today's semifinal matchup apinst Santa Ana. Palos Verdes and Mission Viejo were matched in today's other H-~Nvl ,......VllU¥J.__,...._, 'OUlfTA.i VALL.a'r TOU911AM911T "-'·"' ll•Wt -.... •u I, CO r r• ....... , Wr ... I, Mollll I 0-.._ ~ ~ Aftl I, I•-t • L-8-11 WltWI I C-t ==Ii_ 't~..:.. I ~ ..,.,_ 2. ,,..... 0. • I I T•• J. ~ .leM a..c. I Met-J, f ........ 0.t I _.... ...... ,~, ca ...._, ......... ,, 1.-._,. ..._ • ,..,,..... ..,..,. J __, ...... ,_ ,,,._ t. IC,.,, t ..... ...... 4. IMf•. .._,,...,a. ....... ,_.. "...., --"""" ' ........ , ..... _ ......... , u.,.. ..... _.._, ....... .. ... ...,._, __ ....... _ ICINJ ....,,_ , __ ""'" , .. ...._,_._J.~V ..... I ....,._, ....... K.,1119 -I, W•« I GMllt -11.-t ~It-..,....,--. ..... I Gtillit -1(--J ..,_ l. ,___ 0.t I -fllle tUflllf Attlltlr-J, •• _,.. I ~ -llltWI l ,,.,..... Ocllf _,,. "'-'trl I G9llie -..._ s ""'-, .... l·I. ......... , __ . ......... Vl$l9 -----' ..,,,,..,.. I GMlll -· c.-. • semifinal pme with the winners scheduled to square off later in the day for the title. In other pmes: Newperc llarhr l, ea,&I.,... Valley I: Bnan Jones and Tommy Walker scored •'•and goalit Josh Klein ahd five saves as Newpon ldvanttd before fallif\I to fountain Valley. Marilla J, 'nMllM O.ll1 I; Mlua. Vleje 4, MariM t : Danny Armstrona scored twice and Ricky Rodriauez added another JOll as the Vikinp moved into the quarterfinals before bcint ousted by the Oiablos. Mission Viel.o tcored all four pis in the first half. includinJ thrtt from Joe Mumoore. in blankin1 the Vikinp 1n the second pmc. Marina falls 10 10-3--3. · ---..... ...... • ·--1, •• .....,,. • ....._ -.... ..,,.., ••• .., , __ 2. '""" • Ata99 '· .._. ,_ ............ , "--··~'-"· ~ I, ~ ,.,.,_ I IAttMle ............. _ . ....., -(1191 ........... uO.-t ...,_ o a:u•t1u ~ ..,._ "' ......... aotl ....-... .. .._ ... , --V-. t, 0-"°"' t l!I ~ J, ._ •• t --°" ...... ..,._ • ·--°" ~-.. .t.-:=.:., .,_... "' :7.:. ~ICtltl ~ '-l.C .... e cw-'"=,,_, 1 ~~ t II Der.-I, ..._. I CMllll,,_ ..,...,, I. GI*"' ..,... t ... ~-• _, t. ... ._ • ,_,....~ .... -.-..... ~auucflt.~Y--t C.-•-&"9-1 !:r.j ........... .....,. "' _.., ~ .. ,,., ......... '· VALLELY ••• hem Cl Coedl WOodm dunna that v1S1t. he .... IO have an inftl.lftK't on me and I wound up at UCLA. "John (Vallely) understood wt)at he hid to do to make tht team 11 UCLA:' Wooden was to say later. "We bed ham spend 1 lot of ume 1n pnttice on hi1 weakncws. He im- proved lnldually, but staldily. H~ dribbledbener and be improved his dcfenat 11 the season went alona. "I have learned that he's a m1&hty fine bo] as well 11 a aood baskeiblll player. Hiah ~isc indeed f'Tom a coach whose influence on his players was equally as strona as his success on the basketball coun. That influence still holds today in Vallcly's case. When his daughter Erin underwent cancer surgery. Wooden found out about it through a mutual f ricl)d more than a month after 'the surgery and immediately called Vallely at home to ofTer his sympathy, wisdom and any help he could give to a former player. Vallely was not only all-league and All.Cl F. but the leadin& scorer and rebounder for OCC at 6-foot-2. Some of his records still stand after 20 years at OCC. In high school and junior collqc, he was a forward but was transformed to a guard at UCLA. His first year with the Bruins he played with Lew Alcindor (Kareen Abdul-Jabbar today) along with Syd- ney Wicks and Curtis Rowe among others. The Bruins were supposed to win the NCAA title for the third strai&ht year. "Our big game in the plarofTs that year was against Drake: Vallely recalls. "They put so much emphasis on stopping Kareem that they let me run free. "They had us by 10 points early in the aame but we went up by five at halffime. The pme wasn't decided until the last five minutes there in College Park, Maryland." vanely scored 29 points in 1hat game. 19 in the second half. "If Vallely had not shot so well (against Drake in the semis) we probably would have Jost." Wooden said after the game. A newspaper report from that era said simply of Vallely's selection to the all-tournament team: Rick Mount of Purdue. Charlie Scott of North Carolina. Willie McCaner of Drake and Lew Alcindor of UCLA each started the season as the acknowledged standout of his team. Each ended it by starring in the NCAA tournament. And they were joined by John Vallely whose very presence on the· UCLA team was a surprise. whose very presence in the starting li nc1,lp was a shock and whose arrival to all· tournament status was a tribute to dedication. 1 To which Wooden added: "lt'seasy to see that John played his best ball of the season in the tournament. For a co.ch, that's a nice thin1 to see." Before the 1970 season, the Bruins were not supposed to repeat as NtAA champions because Alcindor;., had graduated and his backup. ~teve Patterson had taken over at ce"'ler. Vallely was named captain qf that team and Wooden said before stan of the campaian: "The mistakes ~ill be more noticeable this year. Vallely ................ UCLA Coacb Jobn Wooden and Jobn Vallely, durtni tbe . Bnalna' retan of terror ln NCAA buketball. must work to eliminate them. He has to learn to see the open man a little quicker and he has to hit someone with a pass when he's· being press,. ured." Vallel y was never at a disadva ntage as a shooter. He could hit baskets from all over th e court. One report indicated he would spend as much as eight hours some days shooting in his backyard on Balboa Island. and would practice shooting 365 days a year. He remembers the 1970 Bruin team as a fun group. Wicks. Rowe, Patterson and Vallel y were joined by Henry Bibby in the starting lineup. "That was really a fun baske1ball team." Vallely says. "We weren't supposed to win but we were quick and fast and always ran with the ball. When we"played Jacksonville in the NCAA tournament. they had two seven-footers and we beat them.·· When he graduated from UCLA. he was drafted on the sixth round by the Atlanta Hawks and played there for a year and a half before being traded to Houston. He remained another year and a half before signing as a playe r-coach for a team in Brussels. Belgium. He spent one year there before returning to th e Orange Coast Area .. He worked with his father in a small boat business and helped him develop some property in the area. He then opened his own business with panner JefT Jones -Newport Ski Company at 2700 West Coast Highway in Newpon Beach. They handle snow skiing equipment lftd clothing, sail boards and mountain bikes wtth as many as 18 gea rs for recreational purposes. "Our entire family enJoys snow skiing and we go as often as we can ... Vallely says. He 1s also associated with NILS. a ski clothing store that han.-S casu~ sports wear for women and with Water Rags, a clothing company featuring casual be~ch wear for women. Vallely met his wife Karen Iii Orange Coast College where she was a song leader during his time on the basektball Ooor. They have twq children. son Eric who-is 13 an~ daughter Erin. 10. John has been c~ching ~ric in basketball, basebalt and both in soccer. The inOuence of John Wooden orl John Vallely will be with him for hi' entire lifetime. Vallely has tried tq' pass this pyramid philosophy on t<? his )'oung teams. -"I believe that Coach Wooderl tau&ht us mo~ than basketball.'! Vallely says. "He taught us loyah~i respect. team work and industno ousncss amonp other things. I believE his Pyramid o Success formula is the best instructional tool other than tht Bible to be found anywhere. He never tal~s ab9ut winning.but gettin1 self .. sat1sfact1on from being the best you can be. It's something well wont. keeping. · "He emphasizes the fact that yoo may not always have the physical capabilities but you can always be tht best you can be by trying harder and developing what you have. .. "Coach Wooden takci a genuine interest in everybody's lives, evm after they have left school." • Vallely admits'he and his famity face the biggest battle of their lives al the present time but feel confident that Lhinis will work out for tht belt in the long run. His thoughts on this battle and the rea¥>n for concern will be told next weclc in a succeeding article. . It concerns things other than basketball and puts participation in S,P.:Ons in the proper perspective in life. Sailing series.offered at OCG Armchair sailors and old salts alike will have the opportunity to share the adventures of personalities who have distinguished themselves on cruises of high adventure when Orange Coast Collcge'spopularSailingAdventure Series gets underway Jan. 13 at OCC's Robert B. Moore Theater. Fairview and Arlington Sts. "Cruising Ports of the Paci fie Coast -Mexico to Panama" will be the subject of Capt. John Rains and Cap1. Pat Miller at the opening program, Jan.13. For IOyears. Rains' column "Underway,"appearing.in theSa Diego Log n~wspaper. has been required reading for anyone planning to cruise south to Mex 1co or beyond. In slidesand lecture, Capt. Rains will cover the popular cruising lo- cations. majorpons. weather pat- terns, cruising seasons. sailinJ routes and politic;al situations afTecung cruisers. John Rousmaniere. former West ALIOI loclllO BOATING Coast editor ofY achu ng Mapi ine who resided in Newport Beach. will be the second lecturer on Jan. 20. His -SUbjectwiJ1bc.:•£rom SlocumloAcbi.. -Great Voyagesin Small Craft." Rousmaniere is the author of 12 boo~sand editor of two others. His "Annapolis Book ofSeamanship" and "Fast net. Force IO" place him among the marine best seller lists. H 1s credits include books. videos reviews and magazineanicles. "Landfa lls of the Paci fic-Para- dise Found" will be the subJeCt of John Neal and Barbara Marrett. Jan. 27, whose muhimedia_pressentation oftheir IO yearsand 100.000milcsil"l their 31-foot sloop took them to such plactSas Pitcairn. theGalapqos. Easter Island, the Tuamotus. the Marquesas. Tahiti, Samoa, New Zea· land and the LineJslands will be recalled in lecture and photography. Neal's wife Barbara will address fea rs and questions that women have concerning offshore cruising. The final program, Feb. 3, will be byTaniaAcbi whochosea26-foot sloop over a college educa1jon for her -victorious Voyage -Alone Around the World." She was the first Ameri- can woman and one of the youngest persons to circumnavigate alone. Wah Gleckler is the coordinator of the series. Individual ticketsareS7 advance and $8 at the door. Series admission is S26advanceandS28at thcdoor. For ticket information. call 432-5527. 1• ,,. ,. College basketball scores UClfl. ~-re--· ... "' ---., Cll ,...,,·kO a ~ C"'ot1>e11 ts C..Wllie 11. .... all u .. cs ...,,..,... "" ........... " " (Ml C-.lt -~-tt ...,..,. ,._ c---.., ........ ,, ......... .............. ,J LIU 1'1 .......... , ~-,-...... . ....... 'I._. ........ .. ..... · "' ........ . """' ''~' n ,,., '-.._.,. ~" .... '"'" _ ... Or-St .... .-, 61 ,.... .... ..,._ *· ~ • ., ~"*"' .. " ---.. " ~. ....._ ... ~ ... ~ .. • °'4rtll ,. ..... "'-" ...... '"-· ,. UC S..... ............ II N ,.,,. ..... \lrs1~ II a. ......... ii II , .. rt I a-.w" ---... Or..-,.,, ...... u. 11 ....... Mlrn. -• .,_.,._ ~ 1i c... ...... -.......... ~ ..... " .... .... ,. •. ,,..... • ..... n. ........ . WlcMe .. .. .... • • " c-- Orange COMt CWLY PILOT /Thutlday. O.C.W. 29, .. rea squads preparing for league ~~a~e:n~E. -----op ~a players, tea!11S to begin quests ~~ .. ~~!~~s~l~i=~e~om ~~~(.':'>~7ci ~~~~~:~~c;_~ihcr Will tourney Of OOptit CSIO theneXtCOUp}eofweeks bounckrand thcat~m leader.Ho" Brenda Yttke ··Teamsoften double!'-e she1ocs1s how v.ego. When she had andtnpk ·team,and shecanpass SAN DIEGO -Ora• COMI 1ocomcoutofgamese11herbccause "'"ell.soshc1sgetunga lo1ofass11ts s Colleae fres hman Alan Schlina ~I · ofmJunesorfoulswe lostthelead. too. Bcs1dessconnashecan rebound JAi • scored 23 points and sophomott nJust a week's timc. lcaauc play the team." said Mustangs Coach When she 1s 1n. we are tough." and she 1sa sman defensive pla)cr... Dareclc Crane added 12 H the Piralel ii'1~~nl :~amq~~[k~~l::i=soh~~ Jhamcs Weeks. "She is a good outside The team everyone 10 the Sea v 1ew Ir' 1ne's ba$ketball team has been GOICH ckl~ated Rio Hondo. 63-SS. in .._ .. llo bask n.c s ootcr, capableofhittinaa J. Leajue will be ti") 1ng to catch is overshadowed b) the volleyball team basketball Thursday to capture die . P he ctball players for each school pointer, soshccanstrctcha zonc." University. which 1so1Ttoa 10-2 start. for the past couple )Cars. Pacing the San Diego Mesa Tournament. Loo~~~ to rcpcatas Pacific Coast Pacini the walfor the Estancia Two-time all-league selection Sheth.~) Vaqueros 1s Mona Brown, a senior Crane earned the toumamcal uechampsare the Woodbridge Eagles is P~tric.e umpkin. She is just Da vis is one of the leaders oft he forward wfao is a good outside shooter MVP award and sophomore Oerel rriors. Pacing the Warn·ors is a sopho~ore, but hasalreadybcen9an balanced Trojan attack. Davis. a 5.9 and the quickest pla)eron the tea m Johnson . .,.. ho scored 11 point&. was all-Sea V 1cw League player. The 5· center-forward. is averaging I 0.1 The early pick to win the Sunset Since then. she has had reconstruc-na med all-tournament. c Rathbun, who is averaging 16 guard is one of the top players at he r poi nts and seven rebounds a game. League. the Fountain Valle) Barons. uve surgef). yet she 1sst11l mentioned ~in ts per game. She has been named position in the county. "Since we ha ve improved and have had their share of problems. as one of the top guards in the area. The Pirates, 15·3• captured their tbcaJl-toumamcntteamineach of The NcwponHarborSailorsare L..~om•more balanced.Shelley's With twostaners ou1w11h1njuncs. H o -h I .. _ sccond1ournament1j1lcofthe Ka10R. oodbrid~c's three tourncis. J db S• .. G · · h ~ ~ s H k h h I unungton.x-ac isasointnc OCCC h T d G"ll 's praa·...-s ei Y ... cey i 1em,ajuniorw o numbersarenot asb1gas1he) once tacy 1sa a astakenovert ero e m1dst ofarebu1lding)ear.Jenn1fer oac an Y 1 1 - ., " he ist e mostskilled Payer on topped the Sailors in scoringdunng were. butshe sull has a majOT oflead1ngscorer. The senior guard 1s Ambrose is the onl) retumir1gstarter the all -around play of sophomore tile tea.m,andoncofthc topguards in the summer at 21 points a ga me. She impact," related Coach Doug Sore}. avera~ing in double-figures w11h a from last )ear's squad. Ambr~ leads La~font peed and freshman Scott l!!!e county·" said Warriors Coach has continued to be the Sailors· ··Most teams try to double· and triple· maJOn ty of those points coming on 3-the team in' 1nuall) c-. cry categOI")'. ~ tefano j ric Bangs. leading scorer in the regular~ason. team her. so she Just passes the ball off point shots. .\not her surprise in the unSt't · "LaMont pla)ed good defense and • OneoftheWarriors'focsisCosta CoronadelMaris10the m1dstofa to theopengirl.She'shadan Alh sonKrausc ma ybcthecomc-League1sOcean V1ew.TheScahawks dtd the things on offense that we Mesa. and although the Mus tangs arc rebuilding program with its record at outstanding career." back pla) e1 of the ) ea r. With her ha' e gouen ofTto a I 0..2 start. thanks needed h1 m t0 do:· Gillis said. ··Bolh l-4, they arc young and improving, 2-4. Howt'Ver. every loss has been by One of the most respected and presence at guard. Manna. which mamb to the pl;u ofCoSt'tte Smith. teams pla)ed match up. which is kind •Thestcadinginnuenccon the squad is less lhan IOpolnts, suggesting the Sea feared pla}ers in the county Is Kelly began the yearl1ghtl} regarded. has The 5-7 St'na orguard 1sa' eragmg I:? of a different defncsc. It takes ~ 1seniorpointsuard Kim Good. The 5· Kings maybetuminJthingsaround. O'BnenofMatcrDe1. O'Brien.a sudden I) turned 1ntoa maJorthreat points and se venass1S1s agame. thinking and reading to anack it and f0ot·3Good is averaging 16 points. The key to the Sea Kmgs is Kellee senior. stands at 6--0 and leads the to the Barons. Last season. Kr.ause led .. he 1sagreat all around pla)er," he did a nice Job for us where some of sixassistsandci&ht rebounds a game. Cohen. team wit h a 15 points a game. the Vikings toa 17-2 mark until a said Scaha"ks Coach Olhe Manin. our guvs had trouble. And he had to "She is basicafly the difference in "Kellee is the best shooter on the "She missed a couple of games w11h knee IOjUI") sidelined her. "She is the ke} to our fast break." defend· some bigger gu~s. - Sea.hawks rallyagain to teach semifinals MULLIGAN ••• From Cl Speak1ngof UNLV. I cannot remember playmgagainst a more mith, Sullivan uel comeback in 59-56 win over El Toro; Barons also triumph quaner Fabiola Nunez picked up the scoring slack. Nunez. a 5-6 j un ior forward , had 12 points at the half and had a game-high 19. "We arc now 11 ·2 and I thou~ht we had the potential at the beginnmg of the season to do that. but that we would have 10 play up to that potential." said Ma nm. "f or ttie most pan. ""e have. We often have three or four pla)ers 1 n double figu res and balance hke that 1s hard to By STAN GRANCH o..,,...c_.,,.,..,1 The "cardiac. kids" ha ve been reincarnated in the Ocean View High airls basketball team. The Seahawks are building a tra· dition of winning dramatic come· from-behind victories. It sta rted wi th their first game against Long Beach r~1y and It conti nued Wednesday night 10 the second round of the Marina-Edison Tournament at Edison High as they defeated El Toro. 59-56. "This was our type of game," said Seahawks Coach Ollie Manin. "It was up-tempo. There was a lot of , defensi ve pressure. It was scrappy. .and there were a lot of fast breaks. The &iris had to make a lot of quick dedsions. and I th ink they .made 1hem very well. .. • The game was closely contested .throughout and the lead change • ·COAST ••• From Cl then off the nm. Some of the Santa Clara fans •waited for the referees in the parking lot. but the officials were esconed out by an armed guard. One referee said he felt badly about the situat1 on when he learned afler- ward that Santa Clara had entered .unbeaten. but added. "really. some· .body's record 1s no concern of mine. Actually. I th ought the game involved Santa Monica. not Santa Clara. when •I was on my wa y to the game. ··But I khow when I called the • technical on their big guy early in the game it was a matter of stopping it right now." he continued as he demonstrated a flagrant elbow man· cuver. "That had 10 stop right now." "We got 'em." was Edison Coach Jon Borchen's response to the major upset. which sends 6· 7 Edison aP,inst 11·3 Dana Hills in tonight's 7 o clock semifinals. Ed ison rallied from a 35-22 deficit after three quarters as Santa Clara went into a stall and. as Borchert said. ·•stagnated out." Bryan Murphy got Edison within a point down the stretch and 6-foot-9 Bill Martineau put the Chargers over the top with a jumper from the lane. With 12 St'Conds left. Manincau blocked an inside cfTon by Santa -.Clara-and 1hcn th fi041I hope.. bounced away. droppi ng Santa Clara from the ra nks of perfection and sending its fans into a fre nzy. "Maybe people think they are. but they're not an Ocean View or a Mater Dc1,'' said Bonihert. ··11 was a good win for us because of the improve- ment factor. We were doing some really good things." · Murphy led Edison with 15 points: Shon Tarver was the Sain ts' scoring leader with 15. In terms of sheer numbers of fo uls. Edison was called for IS fouls. Santa Clara for 14 fouls. No one fouled out. In other championship quar- terfinals games: lrvbte II, Huca1coa Be•cll $'7: The Vaqueros racked up their 11th victory 1n 12 starts. but not before some stress points materiali zed in an armor which had heretofore appeared invisible. Coach Steve Keith's Vaqsd1sposcd of Huntington Beach. but 11 was a victory wh ich had others thinking "susceptible to the press" after Hunt· if\&lon Beach rallied from a S 1-42 deficit entenna the final quarter to 60-S? with l:S2 to go when Joey Kaner broke through to steal the ball and ao 1n for a layup. The Vaqs held on. but it was clear they had been hurt by Huntington Beach's press. "I was surprised too." said Keith of his team's mortal reaction. "We've handled pressure especially well 1n the past. but we were disorpnized and tentative." One of the ke)'S. or m1ssin1 key~. wasthe ava1lab1ht> ofa health) Todd Trout. who wH on the coun. but 11111 unckr cons1dc1able wraps bet'ausc of a lu'fmna 1llnm . .. He's really the key for us m handli• thf prns." said Keeth. who wu thin-ii"' ofh1t team's semifinals ma1dlup wnh Estancia ton11.tn and •nodtef potential ~ 'lWc really don t ttt that lnnd of qu9cknaa or ·area• ihoottftl en our ...... .aid ~th ut l.Uin(ta. • For • wttile. it •""9fed lrv1nt would set IOfM tort of mord • 1hc hands a dozen times. With fi ve minutes remaining. El Toro had built up a fi ve-point advantage. which was the largest in the ~me. The margin was pro.vided mainly by senior for· ward Kristen Bevis. who came ofTth e be nch. to score 17 points. Ocean View then decided It was time to deliver its 1·2 punch. "Yh1ch came in the form of Cosene mith and Jenny Sulli van. Sullivan. a 6-foot-2 Junior center. scored nine pomts in the final fi,e minutes. including the go-ahead bucket with 50 seconds left. Sullivan finished with 15 points despite miss· ing most of the second quarter because of foul trou ble. Smith. a 5-5 guard. had four points, three assists and two steals in th e same ume period. The senior had 14 points on the night. While Sulli van was sitting on the bench because o f fouls in the second defend." ~ Ocean V1ew pla: Mater Dei. a 48-41 winner over Long Beach Wilson. 1n the championship semi- fi nals at 8:30 a~m at Edison High. The other semifinal game featu res Fountam Valle> \S. Katella at 7. Also in the Marina-Ediso n Tour- nament: Mater Det..48, Long Bucb Wilson U : Kell y O'Brien scored 17 points and grabbed 14 rebounds 10 lead the Monarchs to the quan erfi nal victory. The winners broke loose from a 15-14 lead with a 16-0 run. beginning midway through ·the second quarter and lasting three min utes, 10 take control of the game. Wilson made it Delly,_ ,.._.. lty -II 8-a• Joey Katter (23) tallee tbe ba.ellne aaatn•t tbe defen.e of lmae'• Raphael Molle (33), Bryan A"llred Wedneeday . Vaqueros went o ut and dropped 1n 17 of 21 from ·the field 10 the firs t half (77.3 percent). and the) were ~till on a pace of 69. 7 percent (23 of 33) through three periods t>i:forc running into a stone wall 10 the prc~ncc of the Oilers' fourth-quarter pres . Irvine got off just three shots 10 the last eigh t minutes. but two were good for buckets and 1t held up as the difference. Irvi ne \\-ent 10 a four.corners tall in the last two minutes. and the 01lc~ surpnscd the Vaqs w11h a zonl'. one which Keith could not figure. bu t one which Oilers (oach Ro)' Miller said was conceived 10 "Just throw them a little out of S)'nc." It did in the fo rm of Kauer's steal. but l>Y the time they lcf\ 1t for a man and fouled 10 get th<' ball. then.· ""' just 27 seconds letl. Tro ut scored his onl) point of the game for the four-point mara1 n Dau Hills 1%, Loea Be.ell Jerdaa H: The Dolptun rallied. 100. eonun@ from behind with a :?4-14 edge 1n the founh quarter to send the Panther\ mto toda) 's fif\h-t>la c semifinal \ against Hunt1n1ton Bckh C'hns Delfi ( 19). John Llo)d ( 171 and Mike Frddtn ( 14) ~ared ICOnnt honor$ for Dana thlls. Whid9 now mttts Edison 1n tonjp1"1 dalm- pionsb1p tcnufinals. In con~uon brlct_ft ~ c.... ........ a.11 .... Hs Wnh • four-o"crw. ._to Dllil Hills Tucsda) n1gh1 and a 61\-1(! '1c1011 alread) m hand o'er ~ksa in non-league pla). the Sea K 1 ng.s nl·a rl) fell ' 1c11m to one of the big up •t of th~ lllOlllll U\:IUI~ !>\.'llllng \Ju\\ II anJ pulling 11 out late. Mesa had an c1ght·poin1lcad1n the SCl'Ond q uanerand 11 "'a tu~d at JI :11 halli1me before 6-foot-5 Bri:i n Spratt took his toll ""h 15 of his I 7 po111l!> coming 1n thl' second hall~ Ti mm) IU )CO led all scort'~ with 15. the scn·nth time at 20 or belier dM improves to 6-4. La1una Belt'll 55, GleDdale Hoover S%: rhc .\rtl!llS got double figure scoring from John Tre-.1no t IJ) and Onan Bus~ ( 11) 111 a clo~ly cont<' t<.'ll game. Tht' <\rt1st had a 19-17 lead .11 haltl1me an<l c\lcndcd 11 to 35· 'O af\cr threcquana<, lo \end HOQ\cr to tht.· l.lth place \Cm11inals Jun1orJohn Hillman oft-l oo,er k d all ~orcrs Mth 14 point Laguna Bcaeh 1mpro'cs 10 ~-~. HooH~r drops 10 1·8 Les Ala•t ... 71,S-ratl: Robe-rt ( onhsk. a f>.foot-10 Ju nu . k ortJ 2b po1nasfor19'cQnffin who1mpro,cd to 4-I. LOI Al Md a '6-;.. k.lJ throug~ •hNl...-1. ~ .. , ... u•sll ... ia\'wje H : t ilhc T ... ilM .. Mark Jobn~n S4or~d II lkCl'ntunon 101,vo\i'\J • llrart> to a l · I o ''"'u r1 1 n ... ....,,. 'i close in the second half but never caught the Mona rchs (8·3). Fountain Valley 53, FootJUll 48: The Barons con11nued their march toward the champ1onsh1p game by holding off the stubborn Kn ights. After a 14-14 tie at end on 1he fi rst quarter. the Barons took a two-point advantage 10 end the half. From that point on. the) slowly pulled away to their five-point marg.i n of victor). Pacing the Barons wasseniorpointguard tacc) H1saka. who had 24 points incl ud ing three 3· point goals. Valeact. II, Edl1oa 54: The Tigers handed the Chargers their second s1ra1gh1 1oumamen1 defeat. j umpi ng to a 21-4 first quaner advantage. However, Edison (2· 7) rallied 10 w11hin two thanks 10 the play of Knsden Tanabe. who finished w11h 27 points. Debbie Fischer added 13 for the Chargers. while the Tigers (6·5) were led b) Nanc) <\moroso's 31 points. Marlaa 58, El Modena H : The Vikings broke away from a 15-14 lcad by ru nning ofTthc last 13 points oft he first half and breezed to &he v1ctof). ad vancing 10 the consolation semi· finals today. Mel isa Sonmo led Manna ( 10-3) w11h :?2 points and Lisa Orosco added I 0. lo the Costa Mesa Tournament: NorD Torr0ce 11, CoslAl Mesa 55: · Center Laura Collins scored 32 pomts. including 23 1n the second half. as the Saxons rallied from a seven-point halftime defim to defeat the toume} hosts. . The Mustangs .(4-SJ had taken a 53-SO lead when Colhns scored seven straight pomts to gJVe North Tor- rance (6-3) the lead for keeps. K.Jm Good led the Mustangs w11h 22 points. Scll•rr 4S, E1&ucia 31: Patrice Lumpkin netted 14 points 1n a losing cause for the Eagles. now 1-3. S.ddleback 51, Y11tta VaJley 37: Melody Mayfield scored 19 of her game-hi~ 33 points in the fi rst half. then finished with 12 10 the founh quaner, as the Roadrunners ad· vanced 10 the consola11on bracket. , , On the college level: Santa Clara S4, UCI 51: Kathy Lizarraga had a season-high 16 points for er but the .\nteaters fell to 2-6. Unbeaten Ba~ons ( 10-0) challenge Mater Dei tonight Saddleback wins, continues'road to potential rematch Mike Morris continued to lead Ma ter Dc1 High in sconng since his return from iOJ.uf). but it "as poi nt guard Jason (Ju1nn .,..ho 1gn11ed a slumbering Monarchs offense in the .second half en route to a 69-63 bo} basketball' 1ctof) 1n the quarterfinals of the Orange To urnament Wednes· da' at Chapman College the Monarchs. 13·1. ""'II fa e FounLain Valle). 10.0. 1n one semi- final tonight. "h1lc ddlebad. fa ce) Capistrano \. allc' 10 1he other. Footh ill slo"ed th e pace m the fi rst half. u mg a 2-3 zone defense. but Mater De1 held on 10 a onc-pomt lc-a<H' 27-:?6. at the half. Then Qumn began to penetrate and lind the nght people -d1sh1 ng for 11 a SISt'i m the game despite onng onl) 1""0 points - and the Monarchs turnl-<l up the pace a notch. • The Monarchs built as much as a 10..point lcad m the third quarter. but Foothill qu1 ckl} trimmed the delic1t. Mom s. who had :? points 1n a dec1 ''c win O\er Fullenon in the tourne) opener. scored 20 Points and grabbed 10 rebounds. D)lan R1$don added 15 points and Demck Stone scored 11 of h1s I J 1n the second half. Mar~ Wilkinson. a 6-foot-4 junior. led Foothill with 28 poi nts. Fouataia Valley7t. El Tero II: The Barons of Coach Da'c Bro.,..n duph· catcd a pre' 1ous '1ctof) 0' er the ( ha rgers to mamtam their unbeaten record m the v.a' to the cham-~1n hip SC'm11inafs .iga1os1 \1a11.•r "\\ e'n: pla) 1ng p rctl) "ell nght no" " allo""ed Bro""n of h1 team's dfon. Capl1truo VaUey st, Marlaa 53: ~ou McCorkle scored 13 of his 11 point 1n the second half 10 help the Cougars sta 'e off Manna and .ld· 'ance tQ ton1sht"s champion hip ~m1 1inals •ga1nst SadJlchac~ .11 Chapman Coll~c 1n the Orange Hol 1dll' C"lass1c. The · V1k1na.s v.ere h11 "1th ~5 pcrwnal fou li and Cap1 trano Vall ') tum~ thcopponunn into 27 points from the line to drop Manna to '~ o'crnll hcrol ce P'<Jr~\ \1annJ·~ t>- Todav's schedule ORAll'GE HOLIDAY CLASSK C41nMNfton ~ 12·50--Qr Lu1~ran vs Seallle Kennedv 2:2~1...B Wilson vs. Anaheim Kennedy Third Ptllu 5-fnHIMh J:S<r-EI Toro n . Fooll'llll S:»-Marina vs. Oom1noue1 ChamciieMtlip 5-fnifWlls 7:10-Saddleback vs. Capistrano Vallev 8 S<r-Maler Oe1 vs. Fountain Vallev ~0-ior-40 perf~mancc 31 the fm:· thro" hne the Trojan "ere unable to o'ercome 3 slo" stan and "ere eliminated from the Orange Hohda~ Classic. The Lancers led b' as man' as I q points in the lirst halt after building 3 15-3 lcad after one quaner Ho""e'cr. the Trojans lightened the margin 1n the third quaner and entered the fourth do .... n. 44-4 2 But L'nn ersm (5· 71 "as unable to catch up and Orange Lutheran sealed the 'erd1c1 b) ncnmg all 15 free· thro" chance in the final period. as the Trojan "ere fo f'C'ed 10 foul for pos5ess1on. Pat Ferrell scored 14 points and Ert~ Glasscn 13 10 pace the Trojan . Saddleback IS, Doming11et 53: The Roadrunners ran their record to 11 ·I "'th three pla)crs 1n double figu re\. highlighted b) Elton \1oorc' .sea on· high I· poin ts and trong rebounding 1n the Orange Hohdll~ Cl.is 1c cham· p1onsh 1p quanerfi nals Thus 1he Roadrunners a~ onl' '1cto~ a"a) from a p!.ltcn11al re· match "Ith Mater Dc1 J team "hlCh has been 1n,ohed m thm: str.ught double O'ert1nu.· dco ion \\1th ddJebac~ addlebacl hajlded \ta1er Dc1 11·s onh lossm l4Jc-C1 t(\ns th1\\Car"1th a 51).5b \ ICtOI'} JI the 'C"P<-'l'l \lc'3 Tournament fi nals <\I the Can\ on Tllurnamt'nt· New,ort Hiirbor ff. VIiia Parti SJ: Thl" Sailors captured their tiflh tnught '1 to~ and 'IC'('Ood 1n th•' tournament to tam a champ1onsh1p scm1tinal' benh again t nta .\n:t High 1on1gh1 at tl. C'hn Lee orcd 17 pomts. 1ndud· ing 10 1n the fourth quaner .,..hen he went 6-lor-6 from 1hl' frw throv. hnc Pa11 Pa11 h "" lll W m double fiaun·~ "1tll h1 third \t~1ght Jou bk figure output. nett1n1 10 Point Scoll Gra) conmbuted 10 rc- oound~ fnr 'he v.1nncrs. U•iftnlly tSu ~· U ...... ~ M: r>own ~> IS cntm n1 the founn quancr. the \\ amon ralhcd to \litt the mars1n h..l four v.11h under ph) s1cal team. They intimidate you at ever) opport uni ty and if you are not tough. you are 10 trouble. We have great kids on our team and some11mes I wish a few of them were a liule more rotten. After spending eight da} son the road together. though. l guess it 1s really imporunt 10 ha ve classy leads. I real!\ like all of them -just wish they co u"ld play ab.it belier at ti mes. 0 -It 1ssod1fticuh to start as poorly as "c ha'e andcontmue to be positive. I alwa) s try 10 be. but occasionall y I let fh With a negative statement. then feel bad about 1t. You becomc o~sed with win- ning because that is what you arc judged on 1n th as society. That 1s the way it will always be and there is not much we can do about it. It 1s m> responsibility to tum it around. I have'been into too man. gimmicks and we have not been solid enough. From now on. we might not be as exc11ing. but we will be sound. The thing that hun~ the '!'ost is that almost all oft he players on the other teams that defeated us cannot even get into school at UCl. Oh well. I knev. that when I accct>ted the job. so there 1s no stnse in cry mg-about it. Wish we had more majors. though. 0 I am amazed at how many good pla) ers and coaches there are on this le \el. We thought Loyola of Chicago was a below-a veragc te.am and that we should have defeated them. then two nights laterthe) beata good Ten· ncssee..chattanooga team by nine and last Fnda}. the) lost 10 Brad le). I I I · I 0 . 1 n Peona. 0 I cnjO}ed watching the NBA game Christmas night between the 76ers and the Washington Bullets. Sron Brooksand Bob Thornton. t....,o ofour ex-players. saw a lot of acti on 10 the game and Brooks hit two 3-pointers. plus a reverse layin. Thornton was solid. boarded well and defended' cry well. Also playing with Philadelphia was Ron Anderson out off resno State. What I am saymg is that Philly won ~) 15 pomtsand had thrtt Big West C'on fercnC'C players on the noor for theent1re foun hqua:ner. Ofroursc. j the fact that Charles Barkley plays for them doesn·1 hurt. 0 Som to ha\ c missed seeing Brooks and Thom ton \ s. the Lakers last night. but "'"e had our hands full with L C'L .\at the same ume. . Ll Ho.,.. about th is score~ UC River· 1de I I 0. lo" a 9:!. Yes. a Dt \IS1on II school beats the fourth-ranked team in the nation in 1he final of the Cham made Tour· namcnt 10 Ha"a11. The onl} reason R1,crs1dc got 10to the tourney was because a 01' 1s1on I team dropped out at 1he last moment. L C R1vers1dc'scoach is John Masi. "ho was my leading scorer at River· o;1dc C '''College in 1968and 1sagood fm·nd. f am reall } proud of John - \\hat an accompltshment! 0 Hope all of}ou tia-.c a ~real New )'car. It 1~amaz1ng ho" 11me flies as \OU get older. ~ccan't "a1lto be 21. and 1henafterthat.1 tscemsasifevtty da~ as about four hours long. UCI ••. From Cl 1n luding a 3-pomt hot to makr 1t 12· I 0. and then Flo)d scored on a lay up to tie It. 12-11. The big d1fTercn~ 10 the fint half .... as 3-pomt shot Cl hit five ol \C\en v.h1le L Cl.A madconeofduee. L Cl bu 1 h 115 lead in the 5CC'Oftd MK 1t large~t at 13. 80. 71. w1th 6:lS llA. Rut Richardson h1t a 3-pcMnt lllOl to make 11 8().7t>. and WiltOft ...... on thrte tra11ht shot.s to ~ llR Bruin the lead. 85-84. with l:lllltl. The "n1eaten' Mike L.M.1 an\v.ered b> ron,crhnaa layup iMoa" l-po1nt pla}. and thn llit two 1mponant frtt throws wt.a IPe l'CI an 89--7 ~ wnh 12 •-.di left R 1chard~n swilbcd tbc-).pai lb but an etffftll fh c ~ u r · 1 t on 11\cdock IOl't· 10 )('lphomort· kd all ~ottrs "1th 22 point conn :"\ 11n \ln q of 14 Iron\ th~ f.cld. 10 JJ111on 10 pulhna do" n l.S ttl"•oond\ ~nJ blod. ina "' ~hot\ t.,o m1nu1M rcma1n1na.. ,..----------=------ Ho .. -e,N. Unl\ef"Slt ) ~alcd th«' d«1 ion ~' mal1na 1lt fttt th~ dov.n thl' \trch.h . .\II c!lht of tM' "1nncf"\· poin~ in the (ounh quanet ramc :at tht lu~. Do"n .,, 11 1ltcr thrtt ~UJn('n. \1.anna cul th«' Jtti tl t\) fou r poiot\ btlo~ c' cnlu~ll~ I '''"I h\ the '"" pu1nt nlltJln • Oraact L111111frH ';I, l "'"'' "") .,,, In iil pm(' ~ht~ n r ..... ir\'(J :I ombtO\"iJ For Woodbridlttl· l ~ Romalis :~-tc'Oftd I j poe•ts and I p= I ftbovnd~ ...._ fftd Sda-iddcd 12 poen~ lo A Ohauy 11 UIUOC)' C'allc!n 10. ~ > . N8A STAMDINOS w ...... c .......... l'aclflc DMu. w L Lalctn 11 10 Porlla n<I " 11 Phoenix ""l IS 11 Seattle 13 12 Golden State \ 11 14 QklOen 10 17 Sacramento 6 19 Mictwflt DMsien Houston 11 9 Dallas 16 9 Denver 16 11 Utah 16 12 San An'tonlo 7 19 Miami 3 22 EHtem Ceftference Atlantk Dfvf•let\ New York 11 I Philadelphia 15 13 Boston 12 13 New Jersey 12 16 Washington 7 17 Cl'larlotte 7 19 Central Dlvl•lon Cleveland 20 s Detroit 19 7 Atlanta 11 9 Milwaukee 15 10 Chicago 13 12 India na s 21 Wednn4NY's S<- Lelcen 128. Pniladelohia 123 New Jenev 118. Ind lane 10 l Cleveland 122. CnerlOlle 98 Detroll 106, Ptloenlx 100 Utah 96. Sacramento 80 I'd. .643 .S93 .S77 .520 .440 .370 .2'0 .667 .640 .593 .571 .269 .120 .692 .536 .480 .429 .m .269 .800 .731 .667 .600 .520 .192 TedllY'l G-Houston et Washington, 4:30 o.m. New York at Chluoo. S:JO o.m. Bolton at Delles. 5:30 o.m. Mieml at Seallle, 7 o.m. FridllY'l Games Clippers at Lellen. 7:30 o.m. Ptloenl• at New JerHv. 4:30 o.m. New York at Charlotte. 4:30 o.m. Washington al Cleveland. 4:30 o.m. Chicago at Indian•. 4:30 o.m. Houston a1 Detroit. S o.m. Atlanta at MilwaukN, 6 o.m. BOJton at San Anlonio. 6:30 o.m. Miami at ~ver, 6:30 o.m. Phnaoelohia al Ulah, 6:30 o.m. Lalcers 121, 76ers 123 GB 1'12 2 3112 s•n 7'1J 10112 1 2 2•12 10•12 14 .. S'h 7 10 11 11/) 3 s 7 lS'h PHILADELPHIA (123) -And91'son s-11 1·1 11, Barklev 12·18 11·13 36, GmlnSkl 7·13 2·4 16, Cheel<s 2·7 0·0 4, Hewlt~ S· 11 4·4 IS. Coleman 2·4 2·2 6, Henderson 4·9 3·3 12. Brc>oi<s 0·0 O·O 0, TllOrnlon 2-3 0·0 4, Wlnvate 6·10· 7·7 19 Tolals: •S-16 30-34 173. LAl<EAS ( 12') -GrHn 3·6 1· 1 7, Worlhl' 9·14 8·8 26, Abdul·Jat>ber 4·9 2·2 10, JohnJon 9·lS 8· 10 26, Scoff 9· 17 •·S 22. Coocier 2·6 4·6 8. Woolridge 3·7 10· IO 16, Thonioson 4-S 1· 1 9, Rivers 2·S O·O 4. Tolals: 4S-84 3'·43 128. S<ere bY ~,.., PP11ladel~ie 31 28 29 35-123 Lekers , 36 41 21 »-128 3·001n1 ~oais-Barktey, Hawl<l!'ls, H4tn<l«flon. Fouled oue-,-None Rebounos-Plllt.delPhl• 4S (Gm1nski 14) Lakers 44 IJot11uon IOJ. As· sists-Philadefui.iia 31 (Cheeks 10), Lakers lS <Jonnson 18). To1a1 fouls-Ptllladelohla 29, Lakers 26. T~hn1ca1s-BerkleY, ThOrnlon, Philadel1>nie Coad~ Lynam, Worthv. Allendance-17,SO~. COLLEGE MEN UCI 9l, 'l,tCLA to (--C---•} UCLA ftfll)ftp Wilson 12 6 7 30 Maclean 9 I S 19 Walker I 2 I 4 W1lhams I O 2 7 Rlcheroson 6 2 2 18 Marlin 2 8 l 17 Owens 2 I 2 S Rocl'lehn O O O O Tolals 3J 20 17 90 Hellllme'. UCI, SO·J9. UCI .. ,. ..... Label 3 4 7 10 Buller 3 0 4 6 M. DklrCl#. 1 1 4 18 Pelmer 1 7 0 I 16 Flovd ~ 6 4 26 Herdman O I IS R. Dktrczk O 3 O Tolals 36 \i I 19 91 3-oolnt goals· UCLA-Richaroson 4, \1-M Dolt.•orczvk 3, Htrrdman 3. Palmer ? Technicals: None COMMUNITY COLLEGE MEN., Orange Coast 63, Alo Hondo 55\ (Saft Dietle ~ T~) ORANGE COAST -Crane 12, Soeeo '?· Jonnson 11. Sclllin~ 23, Hanlon 6. DeS1efano 6- Love 2 AIO HONDO -Wicks 6. Boyd 7, Locklty 13. R.eeo 7. Chavez 10, Urgu1za I, Edwards • Halt11me. Orange Coas1, 37·28. HIGH SCHOOL BOYS CaOistrano Valev 59, Marina 53 (Oranee HtMIY O.nlcl Cepilfr-V ... y Mar!M left of Ip f9floflp McCorkte 7 7 2 21 Perks 9 4 I 21 Kosiott 3 6 2 13 Cameron 2 O 3 4 Mazurie 3 10 4 17 Th.Nguyen 3 2 S 9 Kosl O 3 J 3 Carreon I 0 3 2 Fan 1 1 • 3 F lel<ls O I 4 I Hurnev O 2 O 2 Newlield 0 0 3 0 Shelor 0 0 2 0 Hase1ri11 O 2 1 1 Schultz 3 2 ' a , Tu.Nguven I 2 2 S • totals 14 77 15 59 Tot_als 19 13 2S SJ ; S<ert bY Ouartws ,caol\lrano Valley 6 18 16 19-59 •Marina 6 13 9 24-53 • 3·001nt goals Caoo Vellel'-Mazurlt I, :Koslolf 1 Marina-Tu Nguvt n t. T11 NOUl'tn •I • T ec11nica ls None Mater Del 69, Foothil 63 <Or•nee tsllicleY Clank> • Feottlll Metw Del . •van Pell ;Parker .Dutt •Wilkinson :11enrotin .Garcia •Dol'lneltev . ft ft of Ip ft fl pf II> 1 O S S Morris 6 8 0 20 4 4 S 17 Kar1ch 2 0 2 4 J O 4 6 \Slone 5 3 5 13 11 6 4 28 ~iodon S 3 0 IS 6 O l 12 Quinn I o 4 2 OO I O Bovle 2318 0 0 l 0 Andres 1 I 2 S O'Neil I 0 0 2 : To1a1s 26 10 21 l>l Tolals 74 II 14 69 S<ort bY ouatnen : Foo111111 10 16 IS 22-63 • Maier Dei is 12 20 22-69 3·001nt ooals Foothilt-Vat;1 P941 l. Maler • De1-Riooon 2, Bovie 1 Technicals None Oranoe Luttteran 71. UnfnrsitV 65 (Oranee HtfldeY Oaulcl . Oranee Lu1Mrlllt Ull!Wnitv . leflllftp ·AuC01" 3 s 'l 11 Elmo<t '9ftpftp •• 0 4 8 JNeben 3 0 I 6 Harrh 2 2 5 6 ,eaoatori.n s 9 ' 19 Ferrell tO 4 l 24 •Colt s ll 3 23 Oliver 3 ' l • 'Dowding 3 ) I 9 Dle1tr ' 0 4 2 ;Bedard 1 I 1 3 Glauen s 1 s 13 Get-men 2 0 2 4 Hebb 0 0 ' 0 . Wlltlernson 0 0 2 0 I l Totals 20 31 13 71 TolalS 27 9 29 6S I Score l>Y 0Ullf1ers : Ounot Luther an IS 14 IS 27-71 • Un1vers11v 3 13 26 ,,_.s I· ., 3· ooinl ooals University-()tiver I. Glauen fecMlcels None ~Cle 65, o.mlftlUel SJ (Or ..... Htll*Y ClllUk) ~ s.MIM<lc .. """' """"' 40 3 1 Simon 1 2 1 4 6 2 4 14 MMsllalt 5 9 3 It 4 7 4 IS Dottin 6 6 4 18 2 I 2 s Moore 6 3 , IS O O 4 0 Gelbart 2 I 4 S S 0 1 10 A(IMW 1 0 2 2 O I 3 I GorntJ 1 0 0 2 0 0 I 0 1 21 11 2) SJ fotelt n 11 16 65 sc-by OuarWI Domlnvuer Sad<lleOetk 1 12 19 l~Sl ,, 16 10 16+-75 • 3·oolnt ooe1' None Tecnnlce1i· None UniwnlfV <so> n, .w ... ,.... u (Mt. can.... ,_....,,.., UllllWnltY W11 • r1de9 S.nto. Dodd Mll•sa Cternent 8eretet It Ivers Smllll OUPltUii Dis Tot ell ....... .. ..... 3 I • 1' AlnktnllY 4' 1 • 11 2 I I S Conett S 0 f 10 I 4 2 20 Tevtor l 9 4 IS O o 7 0 Corkert 0 0 l 0 2 > ) 1 Scflweer 4 2 3 12 l 2 0 4 Mc:L.emore 0 1 I 1 I 4 ) 6 S/letllllln 1 0 .0 1 7014Nelll 1077 I 0 4 2 Ml.Kony 0 2 S 2 20 n 20 o Tot111 11 is n s. kwe ... ONrtw1 U~¥tt'$1ty II n 24 t-62 W~ldllf 1' 10 IS 17-5' l-H/nl fe)jl" wooe111ri..-AtNt.tneiv 2, ~ 7, $11tn11Nn I TicMlcela: NOne. Ne...-1 ..__ ... VIII hl'll Sl CC..,.T........-) .....,, Her1Mr VIII Perll ........ l(U.hude .. .. .,, . Lff s 7 2 17 2 0 l ' O.Bulk , 0 0 • Melo 2 I I s Grav 3 l ) 1 Kirby s 0 0 11 Ngvv.n 3 0 2 • JOl\nM)ll 6 4 0 16 P¥1'11 3 4 I 10 GlbM>O J 2 2 I Long 4 0 I • fltMk•kin 0 , ' 2 Mertlnei I 0 0 2 Pff<itH I I 0 l W1lllet11$ 2 0 0 • To•eb 23 11 9 60 To1e1i ,, 10 8 SI Seer• bv OuerlWl f\MwO()(I H•rbor 2l 11 10 lt-60 Ville Park 10 " 14 13-~l 3·POinl 0081$; NewPO<l-DeBu•k Ptt1t-4(u,hud• 2, Kirby 1. T~llnlcall: NoM. Hl9h scMet bovi scores TO\MNMMNTS (Nit CllrtltlMl CleHlc (et ....... Mltll) ~··--~' Edison 39, Senta Clere 31 2. Dana Hills 62, Long 8eKl1 Jorden S4 Eatancie 64, Leoune Hiii$ 61 trvrne 61, Huntington BHch 57 CeMell• 0Uet1erflnell Cvoreu SI. Mln lOll Vlelo SO Corona del Mer 6S. Cost• Mesa S4 Los Alemilos 71, Sonora 41 Laguna Beech SS, Glendale Hoover S2 0....,.. NelldlY Clank <•t ClwNllMft C .... > °"""II ealllP Gverta111Mil CaolWano llelteY S9, Merine 53 S.ddlet>eek' 6S, Domfnouez S3 Fountain Vellev 70, Et Toro 61 Mettf Dtl 69, Foothfll 63 c--.... ~r1erlinell °'•rive l.ultieren 71, Universilv 6S Seallle Kenned¥ 62. Mlre1t,1e 60 Lon11 Beech Wiison 63, Orenoe S4 A~al'le1m Kennedy 63, Futlerlon '4 COLLEGE WOMEN santa Clar• 54, UCI Sl 1-..--1eoce> UCI Sam. a.re VfHe .. ., .... L" 0 0 0 0 Douty 0 0 S 0 AJl\stedl 3 3 3 9 Parks 5 s 3 15 Unfred 0 0 2 0 HOC>C>s 0 0 3 0 Dixon O O 2 O C11oooe1u Lucas Corbell Slaub Mc Nicoll Scllmu11 Swenoerg Cram1>1on Mullins .. ,. ..... s 4 2 l4 2 6 1 10 4 2 2 10 2 0 2 4 1 0 0 2 4 0 4 • I 0 0 2 Lizarrega 6 2 3 16 Johrlson 4 I • 9 MJlr·Klnnell l O 2 2 0 4 3 ' 0 0 ' 0 To1a1s 19 11 27 SI To1a1s 19 16 IS S4 Helflime: UCt, 25·22. 3-oolnt ooell: UCt-Lizarrage 3. Technicall: Nofte, COMMUNITY COLLEGE WOMEN santa a.!'Mra 12, Or..... c .. ,, 73 (-----> s.... a.rtlerl cc Or ..... Celst ........ fettllf• Ritchko 9 6 2 24 Arnobll 1 4 3 6 Klollnbrg S O 4 lO Ellerman s 3 2 13 Monretl O O 2 o Leuta • I I 10 Broo«s 1 2 l 4 HanJen 4 I 4 11 O'HenlOn O l O l Rittenhouse 0 0 l 0 FrlleY 4 O s I Green 9 s O 23 LeludM 13 O 3 26 Wrighl 1 O O 2 L()d(t 3 3 I 9 Bakos 4 o 3 8 Totals 3S 12 18 82 Totals 28 14 14 73 H1llllme: Sent• 8erbara. 34·31. 3··oolnt OCH1ls: OCC-Leule 1, Han.en 2. Tecl'lnicals: None. Golden West 15, Tacoma 12 ( DeMrt Aeulld· Aeblll) Tueme -Geklefl Wnt Houx wn111er Horton MarleH Fourre Wiison Don JoMslon ft ft pf Ip f9ftllfll> 6 o s 12 Johnson 4 O I I 3 O O 6 Cox 0 0 2 0 7 • s 18 Jae1<1on • 3 4 11 6 2 4 15 Swanson l 0 I 2 1 O O 4 • Gondrinoer 8 4 4 20 I 0 I 2 Sliger 8 0 I 17. 6 1 7 16 Hamlllon " 1 0 2 2 3 3 2 9 Jenkins O 2 2 2 Toton 11 2 2 2• To1a1s 34 10 19 82 Totals 31 11 18 8S Halltime: Golden Wesl, 39·38, Regulahon 71-11 3·ooinl goals· Tacoma-Marltll I. Doss 3 Tec11n1ca1,. None HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS Ocean View St, El Toro S6 I Marini· E clMlfl T eumll!Mfti) El Twe OcNn View Yoshioka HeiS91' Lind Bone 8evls Maunev Whilehe1d Retlwoldl Totals ....... "' 3 0 2 6 J 2 l a 6 2 4 14 3 2 1 8 4 1 I 16 ' 0 1 0 I 0 0 2 r o o 2 Collins Huemann Nunez Smflh Sullivan TakiclO Wolle .. " ..... ' 0 0 ~ 2 ' 2 s 8 l 3 19 1 0 , 14 1 I 4 IS I 2 3 4 0 0 0 0 21 13 10 S6 Totals 26 7 1' St Scere bY ouanen El Toro 11 l8 15 12-56 Ocean View 12 18 14 l~S9 3·P01n1 goals· Et Toro-6evls I. Tecnniceis: None, / Sdturr 45, E stancll 1' " (CMte Mell TewNr Estancle rr feftpflt». ftflllfll> Eerie 4 1 I 9 Inouye 3 3 2 9 Collins 2 O 2 4 Ikeda I 0 0 2 Keves I o I 2 Angulo 1 6 3 S I 5 Lumokln 6 2 I 14 De.Wckeen 3 2 3 8 SUzukf I 6 4 8 Dl.Wck,hn J 0 4 6 Sunoto o o l o Wong O 3 J 3 Cordf'tv o o 2 o Kola~ I o o 2 SwMt 0 .1 2 l TotalS 14 10 14 38 To11!1s 17 11 17 •S S<-by Qverters Ellencie 9 10 9 10-38 Schurr . 8 II 12 14-4S 3·ooln1 goalS. None. Techn1ce1S: None. I Norftl Torrance '1,;Costa Mesa SS (C.te Mau 1eurMl'Mftt) Nerttl TerrNCe C• .. Me18 Collin' Hlramoto Onomurt Hlravema 8oetlter ()(lewa Bee Inn To1als .. .,..... '9ftoftp IS 2 2 32 Good 1 4 3 n 3 2 4 8 Moore l 1 2 1 0 3 4 3 Scofield 2 2 I 6 o 2 1 2 Nguvert 2 3 3 7 4 I 2 9 Surmon 1 1 4 4 o o 3 o Brva111 l o 1 2 0 l 0 1 Au'tt!n l 1 4 1 2 2 J 6 Morrl' O 0 0 O 24 13 19 61 TOle ll 19 13 18 SS Seer• ltY Out~• Norin Torrance 13 13 16 19-61 Cos•a Me•• 19 14 11 11-ss l ·oo1n1 goal' Co1ta Mtsa-Gooo •. Technicals: None. Matef Del 41, Lil When 41 IMlrlN·•clsen T_....._.) LI WIMll I Ma• Del feftpflp ....... ~ Scrugg1 2 0 2 4 McDoneld 3 l 4 ' Jol'lnson 4 4 3 12 ArbOil l 0 2 2 Fov I I 1 3 Marlln ) l 0 9 HumollreY 5 o o 10 McCerlnl' 6 I J 13 Luevanos J 6 1 12 O'Brie n a 1 2 17 Fautkner O O 1 0 Menio 0 0 0 0 Wtll\ 0 0 0 0 Moeller 0 0 0 0 Berknaller O O O O Tolals IS 11 • 41 Tol•l• ?I 6 11 " kwe bY Ouerws LB Wllsonr Maltr Del 8 ' 12 20 3·oo.nt goals: Nontt. T Khnlc•I': None. 5adllebltcll 51, Yucc.a v-. 37 tCedllMtsaT~) hJttl1dl Yucca V*" ......... """"' M.Mvileld 14 S 2 )3 Sallee 3 0 4 6 Larriv• I 0 1 2 Monllmer 0 0 2 0 Andrew• 2 O 2 4 Kirk 0 O 2 o Sarmiento 2 O S • Mettlen 1 0 I 2 A,Me\lflel<I 2 2 4 6 Plante 0 1 3 I llekowkh O O O O FoteY 0 1 l 2 UrMrv 0 0 I 0 HifKh 1 • 2 ,, Fisher 1 O O 2 Ptsw 0 0 2 0 Devis 0 O l 0 TOI... 2'2 1 16 Sl Tol•ll ll 11 1' l7 -k9" ... OUel1an ~" IS 12 ' 20-51 YUCCie .Ya .. y 6 6 " 13-37 3•ooll\I llOlllS NOl'tt Tldlnlcal1: Sarmiento 1$) . MarfM SI, II M9deM 2' (MefN·lllllMll T~) .. .... ,.,.. N(l\1\1911 Ftvnq. OobJOn Aau Wl"iemt WitMOr• AfCMlll 0u¥elt """• """"' 2ll7 .. t n 01 11 0 1 3 1 Ol'OKO 5 0 0 10 2 o 2 • Soero > t 2 I o o 4 o Sottlno 1 • 2 n ' S 1 l 11 Kr-t 3 0 0 6 o o 2 o Yortlt 2 O 3 ' 0040<>no 0000 I 0 l 7 • Wrltfll l 1 0 7 Mevef• o o ,. e ~cl 0 0 0 v ~-· 1 0010 Tot1ta 10 6 II t6 Totlllt U 17 ICJ 5' ._.. .. Otlettart "'' ..... ~' ,, 14 16 ,,_,. o.e.rte 54, Unfwel • JI tOrelllt .... , ....... , °"'9r'le ......... FOl'O .. " ... s 0 ' 10 O.vi. .. ..... ~ 2 I 11 Zlllerlco.I • 0 I • .Jotw1IOll I I 2 3 8ekef' • • 0 16 Gender• I 0 > 2 CtlOerOll I 2 3 4 Seto 2 0 2 4 St.Gertie. I 0 \ 2 .Sele 2-0-2-' Su,GarC'le I 1 2 3 Cummlnes 0 2 0 2 $1ttn 0 0 l 0 Slav l 0 2 2 Hoover s l 2 11 Wolf! 0 • 2 • Jec:o«>a 0 0 1 0 ltldfoul 0 1 0 2 Sweeney 0 0 2 0 Totel' 23 • 19 S4 Totels 12 11 l4 as SC-bY Quef1en On1art0 ' 11 17 11-s. Unlvtnllv 6 1 9 ll-3S l ·oolnt ooe11. Nont. Tec11nica11: Unlvtrsllv bench. Tulltrl 4t, trvlne 16 (CMte Mew T_...,...) !MM TlfllM ........ .. ..... O o 4 o Pel'kfns 4 0 I I North H•nlev ROlslOll Gettv' Nlsnfmur• Lee O O O O s.<!ultr• 4 l 1 9 l 1 l 1 McGuire 3 2 o I 2 O 3 4 Julien 2 0 3 • 0 0 4 0 llnd$8Y I 0 2 2 2 l 2 s Hoeknmth l O O 2 Anoerson ' o l 1 Wiikins 2 2 O 6 Gonzalu O, 0 l 0 Lundiri 0 .t 0 2 Totals 1 2 14 16 Totals 2l 7 10 49 Sew• bY Oll•rt•n Irvine Tustin • 4 I 3 1-16 10 17 13 ,_... 3-ooinl goels: None. Technicals• None. Loera 53, Huntt.wten e..ctt 21 !MllrlN-adlsen T~) Hunti119Mn INdl • LMr• Oevis Jel'lr Clemens FOIHI Ambrose WOllf Ferdinand Bovd 1 TotalS feftpf"' ....... 2 4 3 I Yoshioka 2 4 3 I 3 O 4 6 Tiius 3 3 l 9 0 0 3 3 Roland 3 • I 4 1 I 0 I 2 Bervtn a 0 I 6 o o 4 O Sorour Y I 2 l2 O O 3 O Spark' • l l 9 4 0 0 8 ·LNne rd I 0 0 2 11 5 II 27 Totals 10-12-53 Seer• by Qllllrtln I l 0 3 F Huntington Beach 9 t l J?-27 Loara 17 t{ 17 . a-~ J·oolnl ooeis: Loera-Sorour ,. T echnicaJs · None Valencia 61, E 54 (Mllrlnl·EdlMfl T ) .. "" ~ ....... feftpflD FIKher 6 l 4 13 2 3 I 7 Moorman 4 2 S 10 2 1 I S Vinctl 1 0 1 2 13 5 4 3l Nii 0 · 0 1 0 4 7 I 10 Miiier 0 0 l 0 0 0 I 0 Tenet>e 11 4 3 27 '1 O 2 • lwamua I O l 2 1 0 2 4 'TOlels 23 7 16. 54 Total 15 ll 12 61 Store bv Ollllrttrs Edison 1. /9 19 ~ Valencia 1 12 21~1 3·ooin1 goals: Edisott-Ta be 1. Technicals: ,None. Fountain Valev SJ, foottlil 41 _ tMlrinll·Edl'811 T I Faottllll f9ftpflp Hiosak . 4 0 • 8 Welker 2 0 S 4 F .Mltchtll 0 2 4 2 Allen 1 O 2 2 Fo11e 6 13 2 25 Steinle.. 1 o I 4 Rasmussen I I 4 3 Totals 16 16 22 48 Scare bY Foothill Fountain Valley 3·P01nt goais. Foun1e1n Technicals: None . Hl9h s~ MARINA-aDtSON (C_. .... 091irtal1111111ts M.rine SI, El EU1tran11 40, Lake Loara SJ, Hunnnv1 Vele~i. 61, EdlM)ll (Olein!llM .... JGiliarti.,. .. t<ettlle S2, Minion ltlo 43 Fou11teln Ve .. v SJ,/Ft111111 • Ocea'> View 59. El T o 56 Mel~ Del 41, Lonf ech WllM>n 41 COfJ!.:~1 =)NT Canyon def. Westrtiiniter, forfeit Cyoren 57. LagUfl• HlllS 21 Tultln 49, trvlnet: 11 Sllddtel>eck 51, :' ca Velley 37 (~IW-~llb) Ceols•reno Vatter ~ T.-.tiuco HIRs 34 Schurr 4S, Estencla 1 38 Monlebelto SJ. ;sen ~temerlle · 43 Norin Torrence 61. Cos•• Mele SS LIBERTY BOWL Indiana 34, Seuttl Carolina 10 S<ere tw Oue"9rl Indiana 1 10 3 14-34 Soult\ Carolina 0 0 10 0-10 lno-ThOmoson 7 run ISlovanovlch kickl Ind-Miller 10 oan from Schnell (S1ovanovicri kick) 1no-FG Stovinovlcn 28 SC-Tolt>erl 34 t>tocked c>Ynl r11urn tMac:kie kick) lnd-FG S1ov~no .. lch 19 SC-FG Mee1<fe 43 Ind-Turner H ous lrom Schnell (S1oyanov1c11 11ick) lnO--Tllomoson I run (Stovenovlch kick) Atte,,oance-39.2l0_ TEAM STATISTICS llld Firs! downs 23 Rushes· yard\ 46· llS SC 12 27·23 Pas~nv m Relurn Varos 47 Como·Att-tn1 11-32-1 Punt' 6·76 Fumbles·LoSI l·O Penallits· Yards 6-40 Tlmt of Possession 33;04 INDIVIDUAL STA1'tSTICS llO .. IS·37·3 9·37 1·1 2·1.S 26:56 RU.SHING-lndlene: TttOmPSOn, 26-140; wev. S·32: Boyd, 4· 12. Mlltelllo. 2·7; Thornton, 1·3, Milter, 3·2, Schnell. S·lor·mlnus 11. South Ca roline: GrHn, 11·41: Olnole. 2-17; Hevnes. l·S; Bing, l·?; Williams, 1·2; Ellll 9·for·mlf!us ... PASSING-lndl1ne. Schnell, 16-31· I. 371, TllOrnton, 1· 1·0, 12 Soulh Cerollne: EHfs, lS-37·3, 1)0, NHL ...... ¥'. sc.r.. He riford •. Quetlec: • 8uffel0 4, Detroit l Chlceeo 4, Mfnnnot1 3 Wlnnioeo 6, SI Louil 2 TeMY'I 0.,,,... V•ncouvl!' et Klliea, 7;3S o.m. Toronto el Quaoec, •~s o.m. Pnfleoetollle at Pll"Ou<llll. •:U p,m, Bo,ton et New .JerseV. 4;4S o.m . Montreel et CllNrv. 6:3.S o.m. Coast Chri tmas Classic basketball qtiarteFfii:ials • EdlMft Jt, s..... Ciera• (CMfN!Mtllle Ollattllllllll) s..... Ciani ·-.. .,... .. ..... Sent• ' 0 3 I A.lelrd 1 0 t 2 Tarver S ' 3 15 TYier 2 0 3 4 McGill 0 I 4 l M4¥fltly 4 1 4 IS turreoe 4 I • ' Merlffleeu 4 O • I Clemon• 0 O 3 o TllOOe l S 2 1 1.eioie 1 l o s COlc»voh l o o 3 Howtrfh 0 O 1 O Carty O O 1 0 PetmlMlno O o I o $mvMI' o O O O Tolll$ IS 6 ,. 31 Tottb 13 10 IS 39 .kere t.v Ouvterl S.nte Clara 10 ll 14 3-38 Edison 12 6 4 17-39 3•oolnt ooel5· Senta Ctere-Tervtr I, Leloit I. Edlion-C~louoh l. Techriicels: McGiii !SC I. E•tancla M, U..... Hlls 61 (CMrntltlllalllP OuarWt••> L...-'4Cli ·~ ....... ..., .... S 2 4 I? Hef'edla S 4 3 IS 6 2 J IS Curll' I 3 3 2S 6 2 4 IS Mc:Oenlel ) 3 4 10 S 1 3 11 SChOift I 0 0 2 4 o 2 I Klar 2 2 I 6 HHS 2 , 0 6 Totels 26 7 16 61 Totels 21 14 11 64 score bY Querten Leeune Hill• 21 13 12 15-61 E •••ncia 14 14 11 I s--64 3·oolnl OO•IS:L111une Hllls-Houl«rr Nelson, Estencie-Curtil, 6,... Hertdfe, McD1J11e). TecMk:els; None. Irvine 61, Hunt;neton Beach 57 <~.Olle""11nats) Hunltlltfell INdl ll'YIM feflpftp .. ., .... .lhOmPJOn 6 O 3 12 Trou1 O 1 I 1 Ketter ' 2 3 70 J.Motle 5 3 2 13 Dr.eke I O 2 I It.Molle 8 1 0 II Klltw1kl O O O O Allred 10 2 3 2S Lucas S S 4 15 Ounmeyer 1 0 I 2 Pazanll l O l 2 Bains o 0 1 O Bulone I 0 2 2 O.Llttler 0 0 0 0 M,Llttter 0 0 0 0 Totals 25 7 l4 57 Totals 2S e tO 61 S<ere bv Ollllrt.n Munting1on Beach 14 12 14 1S-S7 Irvine 20 19 12 lo-61 3·PO•"I goatsc Irvine-Allred 3. Technice ls: None.. Mata Clara Coacb ~ c•aoYlcb ....... = =~.r.~t.· won't be for todaJ'• pme. Tourney schedule ISdl Place Semiflaal1 9 a.m.: Sonora vs. Hoover 10:40: Mission vs. Mesa Coa1olatlQn Semlflul1 12:20: Cypress vs, CdM 2: Los Alamitos vs. Lag. Sch Fiftll Place Semifinal• 3:40: LB Jordan vs. Htn. Sch 5:20: Lag. Hills vs .. Santa Clara CUmpl0111llip SemiflaaJ1 7: Edison vs. Dana Hills 8:40: Estancia vs. Irvine ~ Qana Hlls 12' L1n9-... ctt Melen 54-....,,_;.---- • (CMmillllHlillt QuwtefflMU) Lene INdl _... Dane Hlls MllCl'lell Woods Morris Livlng1ton K.8rown Arline M.Brown Klnv Tolllll .. "... feftlllf1't 1. 0 3 15 Dells s • ? 19 S I 4 11 Ltovd 1 3 2 l7 S 2 2 13 Fadden 4 3 l 14 3 o 2 7 $Plzuoco 1 I l 3 I o 3 2 Earnest I 2 l 4 2 0 l 4 Tevtor 0 l 2 I I 0 0 ? O'N.eiJI 0 4 0 t 0 0 1 0 24 3 16 S4 Totels . kaf9 bv ou.l'tln Lono Beec"1 Jordan 14 9 17 1.-54 Dane Hih 13 13 12 24-62 l ·polnt OMIS~Q!dltt-Mllchefl l, Morrll 1, L.lvlngllon I. D•M Hllls-0.Hs I, Fed<len 3, Technfal': "'-· c..... .., Mer "' c.to Meae a cc ............. , C... MIN C... flll MM ...... . .. .... 6 2 4 l4 Cwl8f1n~ ~ 0 2 10 1 9 ) 2s Herrington 4 3 • 11 Vu T.N11uyen LNllY knes DleOlll Omeve IUl'Mll J o l • Jeci.ton o o t o o o •o o s.rett , 1 , 11 3 2 '3 t We.Jot!Mon 3 0 4 6 0 O 0 O Mainer 2 0 I 4 00 3 0 PllN 0000 Fredtriek• s 2 1 n We . .JollnJOn 0 5 2 S Total' If lj 1' S7 Totel' 23 17 11 65 Sette bv ONrtln CCKll Mell 1' IS 10 lr-57 Corona de! Mer 17 14 12 22-6S 3·POint . 9081\: Coste Mew-T.Nouyen 2. Diel>etl 1. COM-Cwlertnie 2. Lalllfta ... ~ ss, ~ Hower n cc_.w~•> ~leade ~......, .. """' ....... McKeown o s 4 5 Hlllmtll '1 I ·3 24 llenlon 2 l S s Pinkney 3 l S • luu 3 S 2 12 Worden 1 0 3 2 s1affOl'd 4 o l I Wene 2 2 2 ' Trevino 3 7 3 \.3 Z..rlflen 1 0 S 2 QuieleY 2 3 l 1 N-lned 1 I S 3 8uchsblum O O l O Calvo 0 1 2 1 lreuer o J O 3 yonzele1 1 • 1 6 Cummlnv• l O O 2 Ttlell IS 24 17 SS Tolell 16 16 16 Sl Scere bY Qvel'tln Lt9U1141 8eaGh I 11 16 20-SS Glendele Hoover 11 6 1J 21-52 3·oolnt ooe11· 1.eoune Beech-luH 1. Hoo· ver-Hlllm•n 2. Pinkney 1. Los Alamitos 72. SO..a 41 cc .......... OUer11111M1S) Stlllra LM MalNIM feftllflD ......... fltiV91'8 1 0 1 2 SIOckWell I 0 0 3 FerlOW 0 0 0 0 Poll• 2 I 0 s CllM 3 0 0 1 Overbeek I 2 0 S Chi O O 1 O VeJHr O 0 2 O Holl 6 o 4 14 Seroeent O 4 O' 4 Hueng O o O O CMwbro O O 2 O Sllvege 1 J 2 S Grelllm I 2 l 4 Belnep o 3 l 3 WU'°" S 2 3 15 GrHlhOu" O o 2 o NaPOlllano ' 2 1 10 fltecktnwld S O 4 10 Conlllk 13 0 4 26 Totell 16 6 15 41 Totels 27 13 13 12 SCere llY OuwWs Sonora 13 6 8 lf-41 Los Alemtio\ 17 17 22 16-72 l ·l>Oint goell; Sonor-HOlt 'l, ChOe I. Los AlamllOl-Slockwell I. Wiison 3. Technlcels: None .• CVpress SI, Misslen Vleto so (CeMllltlen ~mrtlnetl) . Cyereu M6tslefl vi.ee 'lri,,raeo FIOWef'S JOMM)ll Smith GrMnlllen Bebl>lt Ric• Tolels .. .,...... ,..,..,. 8 2 3 11 Tenner 7 2 l. 16 2 O 2 4 E.Cremer 2 l 3 S 1 4 I 18 Arn•V• 3 0 3 6 3 O 4 6 M.Cremer 3 2 3 I l 0 I 3 WiHlem' 3 0 1 6 0222 Buchko 3107 3007 $aOtlle 1002 24 I 13 sa Totals 22 6 11 so sc-bV Quel1en Cv1>ren-23 II S 12-SI Min ion VieiO 10 13 14 13-SO 3·oolnt ooats. Cvoren-G"nitien J , Rice 1. TtclllllGall: None. ·ESTANCIA ADVANCES TO SEMIS ••• From Cl · wasn't able to find the net for much of third quarter as he missed on five consecutive 3-point attempts. But one of the criteria ofbeinga key player is to find other ways to contribute when a shooting slump Occurs. aod Cunis did exactly that. The Hawks' Pat Nelson canned a th(ec-pointer to cap a 5-0 run that saw Laguna Hills take a 59-58 lead with 2: 15 ten in the game. Following consecutive turnovers by the Eagles. Cunis leaped to intercept a Laguna Hills pass. taking it the lenghth of the court to regain tM lead at 60-59·al the 1:28 mark. "Cunis was on fire the first half. although he had a cold second." said· O'Brien ... But hi s steal was a big plar,; it gave us the spark that we needed. ' As though taking a cue, Augustin Heredia picked off yet another errant pass and was fouled on his way downcourt. -Hnedia missed the frtt throw. but Tim Kjar hustled to the rebound and Heredia subsequently was given a chance to redeem himself. Heredia sank two foul shots with 38 seconds left. ' Mt.JC NOTICE P\a.IC NOTICE NOTICa I 1201 Dove S1reet. Newport I dectwe under pene1ty ol NOTICI OP BOOK 4. P E 13, ~Mis: INVITINQ _,, Beech, C•lllornle In the per)ury thel the foregoing It Dl980LUT10N CELLANE S MAPS, IN CC·111 IObby of ttle t>ulldlllg al the true and correct end thet OPP~ THE OFFICE OF THE Nollc:elther•byilhal front ent~. thla <leclatallOl'I WU ex-NOTICE IS HERE8Y COUNTY AECOR. DEA OF Mlled bid• wlM be ved This .... II being con-ewted on Decembef 22, 0 Iv EN I II. I e, u c. SAID COUNTY. by Ille Chy of H lngton dueled by r ... ori of Ille de-1HI al Nftport Beech. &nglebtecht and Beyond EXCEPT THEREFORM 8Mctt et the office, of the feutt of P-Publlcatlon Callfornla Partners, a Celffornla Lim-THE NOfQHWESTERL Y City Cletk al City Hiii, 2000 Arts. Inc. under the 18fml of NICKOUTn D. FORD tted PlttMtlhlp, by TllC>nl.. 175 FEET. Mein SlrMI. Huntington • PromiMOfy Noll. Security Publlahed Orange Coat w. Burton. Gerterat Partl'lef, TN tleet eddr ... or other &Mch, CallfOfnie, unlll the Agfeement. end Authority to Daily Pilot Decembef 29, '*-fotofe collectMMy <l<Ji"G eommort deelgl'latlon of Mid nour of tO~OO e.m. On Janu-Pledge <lated April •. 19&5. 1988 IMI"'-• Partners under property; II purported to be: ery t3, 1989, et whlCh time Al any lime before the Tll-t97 the firm name of E119r9reen AloN ,...,,,. treller Park. they will be oP«*' end pub-..... IN debtor may redeem 3 II •• Clllltornla General Pwt-133 E. 11th StrMt, co.ta llcly and read aloud In the the eollel••I In aecor<lll'lce fiiitlC NOTICE MfSlllP, heV9 <lilaOtYed lhelf MeN. CA 92127 Council Chamber• for the wllh hi• right• under the Partnetlhlp • of December Said .... '#Ill be made tumllftlng 6 eonllruc:tlol'I of Callforl\la urtlform Com-K..a 31, 1HI, by muluel c:onMnl wl'lh°"1 c<Mlnant Of -· lraffic algl'lll lmpr~ts merclll COde by lel'lderlng NOTICE TO of the Per111eta. r1t1ty, upr ... or Implied, 11 & modlflcellons on Warner Ille tum ot 1329.153.0I pk.ls CREOITOAS OF 8Nce Englebl'echl 1\11 lhe to lltte, p DHUllon Of .,,. AV9. It Mlgnolla, Newlan • inlerest, ettorney f .... end BULK TRANSFER eutllortty lo ... , Partoerlhlp Wfl'lbfMCee lo •lafy the Edw1r<11, Sprlng<late, costs of Hie to be a. (S.C... 9101• ..... •• PIY end <ll9char09111 unpaid belenc:. due on Ille Grlhllm. BolM CNca and t8fmil'lecl et of the data re-e1o7 u.c.C.) 1tablllti. of the Partnership. rio1e or not• MGUr9<I by Atgonquln, In Ille City of dempllon ill made. Arrange-NOllce 11 llel'et>y given to cbllect an<I receive all Mid Deed of Tr\41. 10 wit: Huntington Beectl, mentl fOf tend8f' may be creditor• of th• wllhln monevt payable lo lhe P111-1782. 141. 1 t , plul lhe fOllow- A ... of p1-, apectfl-made Wltn Georoe H. DI~. l'llmed tr1n1f9r<H1•> 0111 1 nershlp, perform ex1111ng Ing M11m~ed coa1a. ex- catlOnl. and other COl'llrect Comrnerc.Bank. 1201 OOY9 tMllll trenst.r la ltlout to be corttracta and ec:t In any l*l9M and tdVencea el !fie <IOCUfl'lel'llt may be obtained Street, Newpotl Beectl, Cell-made on peraonat property !MnMI' ~ry 10 wind time ot tne lnltlail publlcetlon on December 22. tHI at the fofnie 92te0. hereinafter <leec:rlbed up the afflllr• Of the Partner-of thla Notice of Sale Department of Public Only c:alh or cashier'• The name<•l and meillng sNp. 17,759.29 NOTICS TO Worka, 2000 Main StrMI, Check m.cle payable lo .ddr... of the lrttended DATED: December 13, ~ 0WtmR HunUnglon Beach. Ca ll· Commerc.8anlt encl drawn trlnlfet()f(a) ate' l<AMAAN 1.... YOU ARE IN DEFAULT fomla, upon receipt of a on a flnenclll lnelltutlon IC· TAKESH 2110 ;Ith Street -.Cl IJeGLSMaCMT, UNDEA A DEED Of TRUST. non-refundable lee of <:eplable to COmmenle8ank Apt 0302 NewpOft e..a,' Pertner DATED MARCH 7. 1HI. S20.00. wlll be eccepted. CA t2M3 . ' lrfOllD P~I. a UNLESS YOU TAKE AC- Eecti bid thlll be me<le on DATED: December 22, The locetlon In Calltomll c.Momia Limited Rartner· TION TO PROTECT YOU Ille Propoaal Form end In 1988 Of the ctlfef eiiecuttv. ofllce Mip. Pittner PROPERTY. 1:r MAY BE lhe manMf prcMde<I In the COMMERCEBANK BY: Of prinClpll buelneu of11ce By: n.u. W • ...._, SO~AT A PUB;.IC SALE. conttact <loeument•. end George H. Dillon, v~ Preli· of the lrttended tfantferOf la: o.neret Partner IF y NEED AN EXPLA· lhall be .x:ompenled by a Clerlt. (If "lllM • etloW" to Publtlhed O..enge CoMI NA ION OF THE NATUAE cer1~ or cahler'1 c:Mck PAOOf O.F SERVICE BY tlale) 1934 H•bof ~ Deily Piiot December 29, OF / THE PROCEEDING Of I bid bond for not .... MAIL Cotta Meu CA " 1Mi AG/AINST YOU, YOU IMn 10% of the llrnOUl'll of STATE OF CALIFORNIA · AM°"* bu.I-narnee Th-200 SHCCONTACTALAW-. l'NOe ~ lo the COUNTY ~ ORANGE al'ld ldd,..... UMd by the YE . HuntlnGfon 8"ch t am ~ In Ille lnlendec:f Ir...,°' within P\a.IC NOTICE bet 18, 1HI COde of the S111e of County of Orenge, State Of tllr• ~ 1114 !>Mt ao far NOTICI OP ,_T ....CAN Tm.a end °''* lawa of Cellfornll. 1 am over the aoe • known to the intended .,.,.."*' COMPANY e ~~·-of Clllfornl• IPPll-of 11 " no4 • perty lo the lrlnlferM .... : I" "none" to TllU8Tlp l'9 IALE c ... .,.. .....,.=-. ..-; ca1119 t"9t'9'o, wtft'I Ille ••-within .ction; my bueloeu Po · .,.. ,... ....._ ....... ~ OI~ e.Otlorl only Of IUcil vatl-•d<lre1I 11: 1201 Dove ft:·>~ ~ v~~ On January 12. 1989 ti....,, 1M ._. ,_ "'9et • 111on1 thll may be requlled Street, Newpof1 a..cn. Cati-MeM CA • 1 l:OO a.m First ~merlcan ..... AM, c .... .., 11111 urlder lhe special ataM .. tornee 12290. . me 11"1'19( ) end mall Tltlt lneurance Company, • (114) -.aR11 l)urauant to wtlldl procee<I-On December 22. 1918 1 add~ of 'the lnteno: California corporation • Publlehed o..enge ~ 19 11erev11<1er are llken ~ the 1oreQ01nQ doc:u-tra1ttf.,H(a) are· AB-TrualH, or Suece11or Deity Piiot ~ 22. 29, 8'ICI wtllc:tl 111119 not been menl dftc:rlbed lie Notice of 0 0 LL AH l ALE 2 AR Trust•• or Subatltute<I tllt. J..-y s. , .. l/upern-ded by Ille PUbllc: s.le of Colletetel lo AOUHIZAD ertd KEY· Truetee,ofthltcer1•11Deed Tt1185 Olllllona of 1111 Labor intef' .. ted perti. In t111a ac· ANOOSH t<HORAMI 3143 of Trull E .. cuted by . Pt~ to labor llon by ~ e true aopy Helf Dome Pteaaant' CA RANCHO PARK APTS.. MJC lll1IC( tit Q1Ye11 ~ 111 IN lllel'eof enc:IOMd In a Miiied MSM • on, RUBIDOUX l.TO., A LIMITED 1---------- manner prOYlde<I by lew. envelope with poatag• Tilat lhe property perti. ':!'~.J~S under --~-.. No bid lhlll be conaidered lflereon MY prepaid: encl by nent ner.to 11 deecribed In t... -"' ,,.. tate of ....._ '' ·-- uni.. " la made on a form certified mall, return recelpl ~el ... OAOCERY •'AA-CALIPOAN&A, And recorded ..,._ ITA~ fumllhecl by tt1e City of ,.queeted, In tne United lT ' ."" APAIL '7, ttll• lnelrumertl The~ l*90fll are Huntington hecfl encl le Se.1.. Mall 11 Newport and 11 IOcated •t. 934 No. ll-151MOt. of OftlClal dOW'I bullMee a Mede In accotdanoe Wltfl the hecfl, CallfOfnll aodrMHd ~bor 191vd .. ,eo.ta • Aecotdl Of ORANGE Coun-PAOlO'S "'8TOAANTE. :::.=me: the P'CIPOMI • tollow9: Tne 11ue1neaa name u by ~·;:::, :::::= =~ · Coete Meaa. lacl'I trid~ must be Pace Pu«lllcatton• HoldlnO lhe NICI ,,...,Of(•) Mid ,_,.. there under NCOrded T8ftY9 H. Ooen, 14111 llcenaed •n<I atao pre-Compeny, Inc. 3531 laal tocatlon ill: BAZAA FOOO August 21. 1"' • ln9trv-lowllnt OrMn. Well· Qu9llfled .. requlre<I bY-.... Mlralom•. Anallelm, CA AND DELI ment NO. 11-42303'7, of Of· """"". Cell! • ...., Tiie City CMd of the HIOI Thee Ntld bUllc Ir It lrl· ~ "'9cofda of MIO ~. Don 0. Ooen, 1411 t Bowl• CltyofHuntingtonleecl'I,. Natllln end l l rida t~ to be c meted i.wrui money of the Unlt9Ct lftl Green. W•trntnat.,, ..,..,.. tfterlgfil to reject any Spiewelt, 19931 Lotenclt• II the offloe ot Etcrow En-ltatH o f Amerlca. • callt. ~ or all lllela om., Covtne. CA tt724 OOUllW9. lfle.. 17320 hecfl c:eaflleft'• cMc:tt peyeble to Danit H ~ 14111 8y the Meler of the City Aoean<I A. AMoe end P .. llvd .. Huntington Beecfti Mid TMtee drllWll on a lowllng G1Hn, 'WHI· CouncM ~the Clft of Hunt-1rlde Aeeot. 413 Senta Allt Cellfotnla 12111, on or after ..... Of. natlonel bllntl, 1 lftlrltler, ee.lf, t2eN tnoton hecfl Cellfornla the Avenue,~ hecl'I, CA ~ 17• 1'"· cMc:tt dfewn by a ttate or Ou H Helena. 1411 t lowl- .. fi oe, ot .-..,,,., 1918 A ,. ~ ._.. w• ~l'lltto ~ ~ ,...., .. ~ ""'°"· Of • MIO caf... 'We..MtMter .. c....... ...... I'!-• .._.. ....... • I'"""' cMc:tt df..,.. by ...... Of Cell! ..... Ct11ftt .. ._ CllJ .. ..;;t. SanttAMA~,Newport CoftlmerClel Code lectlon ...... .,.,.enctio.u.. Noe Y9ft ......,, 14111 .,... ... ....... ........ .... hecfl. CA 12113 "°' IOOIMton. Of aevtnoe '** lowllnt GrMn WHI· NIWPCMIT LAMDINe -> boat•, )0 -Mlllt ...... ~) ll'aee PubllclllOti Arla, Tiie '*"9 and~ Of --In Melton lt02 Of,,.._, Cilf. iiMs •nelef•. I Mnd blu, .it r.c-. coo, '1 ac#ln, ..... , Inc • 3$31 hM Mlfl!OfM, Ille peraon wltll wflom IM ttnenclel COiie enct """ Tiii Tran, 1411 t 11 cow COd, ~*'*' Orange COMt ANflejm, CA tllOt ~ ':.':. .....,, .. ~ ......... to do~ In lowtlftf •r;;u WHt• DAVIY'S LOCKllt t""9M leedl) -4 De1fY Piiot Decemtler n n Qllbort IClnoettlte CIO l.af11..,, noouMert, 11111 ......... -. ~ .......,, c:.9. boll•, is •nolttt " rOC'll fill\, 1• iMd '*'· tMi JlllVtlfY. 1• • • Joeepl'I A W'ttHIOCfl Jr .. inc.. 17$20 lwfl llvd .. .,.,. 10 ,.,. AIMrtollft TNa lllUelMll .. con· J mtektftl, JO white flln, • IOle, 111 tc~. ' ' n,.112 Latl'lam I W•1n1. At· Huntington 1 .. e11, CA TIH• IMuMOe ~Y .,..... br: •....,., ,.,,. 3 lhfftlltltecl, 2 c.aoaon, J ~· 7 Niii COii 1---------• lorn.ya 11 Law, 110 Town '214'7 end ....... -fOr ....... .. t t• ... ,_ ..... '9JC flDllll C.. OfM, IOtft flloor, llllnD dMN m., an, ONdllor .... II .. .., ar ... T"9 "1letre11t OOfn· - -CcMMe ...... CA MIO-tt10 9'1111 tit January 11. , .. -cinsa •• ..... """' .__. to .,__. IMt-~ ---Mn L Kalldi, 0....... wNdl le tfte ~ -..... ._.. IOAI .... -..... ...._. Noallof Guild, Gould, DlelftOftd I ....._ .. OOl....,.lt'an to.,..,....,..._ • .....,....._ -• ,...... ,_........ ....... ,_C..., ,_ ............... Dlllll 01 TNll 111 .. ~ .... •WA ofCollltUI bll,711tPllar.LGe""""" DltedDHI--1, -· ~ Ill 1111 ..... ...,.. NOTICI II MllUl'f" ~=~·tltO A8DOLLAll L~t.·= ... _ lttreet =· .. .., GtVIN, purtuant to lecclOft W. T.-.. IH • ._.. m.ti ., Or· ncM of fie~ Aftteft --.Verd. lvtM :::=:-...::... fttl llOllTHWafMl.Y .. o-wr. D e1 COMMIRCIALCODl.of .. •MOO. C.. ...... CA-= .NT.t. f, -""" .......... =-.._ lll0.000 .. ,_ .-..~CIO,_,.._ ~-~0.. ttll--·=K mlloft Art9, tnc ..... •tu ...... A191. N.. •t 1. Dllr '-D11a1• .• ...... I ..,CmlwNin ...... ~ ..,..._ •. A....,._, CA 1"I -~.-.. JI tl'J I, , .. el 10:tO ~~· It !"" --_ .... • -=-1 ( " • • .. ... CAi.;;1; 842-5878 THI DAlllY PILOT 'Cl.AM"lfO W,ICI! HOURS T~S.._M.r TOOAM·&ae> PM I h llll'O.y e 00 AM· I I 30 AM , ..,._ Coutltef M·' 8 00 AM-9 00 PM . DeADl•• 11'\.1•1.ICAl--" ,,~., .. _ COLDWC!l.L I BANl\eRO Jssociated ,• •4 I . ·' ,,.. Ot • " .. ''' "'"' ,.,. flft rllflll(v Miit "' ./Ill«• ........ ., .Ct-•t .... ') • ., .. ,.,., 09 l><f\# ..... "' h ... "''*" '~ Ml ,, ..... Mt• .... (~ .,.., .... t • ...,,, .,,.,-, ~·~ Ill Ml iAlt '""' o ..... ,...., .Ct ....... ~ ... ,. ..,. IJl'-t .,,., . .-·--...... ., ... ~tOf°--..C" ~~ ... ,~ ..... t•<HM .., ""'t c.Mt .. .... ~ ~· .... tc<• ... .., .,_.. ~·.,. (1..,.i: C•#\.....,. 9t ..... ..,. ... '"'" 4-., .---.II .... ---JO ..... , u r..-..,.... ..... "'.1911K.• ... W11119t ......... • ~ .. C"WQh ,........,..... ••' .. "-""""""-4 .. liM'Ce ._ ~. tlllritC't..P """"...., .... , .. "' ...... ._,. .. , ..... . let U1 .... Y• Sell Y .. p,.,,,.,1 Cal ClelllfW, 641-5671 for: informatio,r't & surprisingly low cost. FROM NORTH ORANGE 540-1220 FROM SOUTH ORANGE 498-8800 .. --4 lines 7 days -Pf1va1e party ~ No A9el • , o 80 Eatate. Comrneraei. Auto-• motive &o.ling, a1 Help Wanted I ---' _....._~ _ _.-: _ _.... ---~ ---- ~liir~t~=1;;-.~·Ul~il!'!s!''l''BFl'!'~~·~··~1 ·.... ....... .... ..... ....... ••• ..... ...... -"!!!!Cl PWIJC llmC( Ml&.. I PWUC ... • _ Ike IOHM PDMYH ..... ILi c..-.c ,171...,. ._. ..... •u• ....,. 1 ~•r t..,, , ... Fllf UBI IT Champi()tl •ed. grMt , .... clHft, 13750, fllCtmlUI • ..... Tiiie ~ .. con· 'ma~ .. ,NO~•oN l11911 a 80fl -llnee 2 Brindle males •I• .. -J f 3 • 1 I O O o r llAm ITA~ ~by a generll Pllfttter• ... ~. .. ,. .... • need '"°""' Are you ..._. .. _ MUSI ... wdt f8'1 In -~ -f 1ta.M3-3117(o4eel14) TN11119Mne ...... lfe ~ • ,... .......... IOflllfl 175I0-,..,.~.-1Wlghl ... OOIMd-...-.-.... IOW115'8·5032 _, ~llulll.--, .. ........,. WM................. lorN&.""'"9.Calll N7t4 . ...r.,;;,;e,,, ..... ....,..,,..,,. ----- . .... .... ...... n.,._ 09 NOPUITIH. 3100 .... .,.County C..-OfOr· LllE9'TY TIU. not Ou·, lecurily PKtllC It••• -0-to "-'·Time/FUii-Time Pay. Golden Aetr ...... puppteS, Cll113) AulofNlttc; .. ...... " .,... 2IO CoMa ..... County on Oeoembef ~· Dt ...... S50. IMM, ..,. t•H2 ~ OrM. w .. tern ...... & '99CWt No ...,.,lence ~ 5 wtll old, male & femele, • ...._ ... ... Mela c.1it t2t2t t2 ,.. Calll. 12111 • Catttotftla, lrvlM. Calll ., ... whtl • ~IY Eveninework. Wtll lraln. $120. •32-9004 IHv• .. .._...,... AutOlftallc, • ovtlnct.r. ~ L Qulellng, 3t00 ;..,I .... °' ... Cwt ...... Tiie "'°. C•-,927t• lhal has a OOOd NPY-Muet M nMllS>e'sonable ~ (88309) power "99f1nG, power 1tis1ol St Swte HO eo.11 Delly PllOt ~-15. 22. tomia, '31 New Jlefeey Tllit ~ ._ con-tatJon J.P. ~prlMI •New omc;. tocatJOn• tor ..,IV morning 06 eve _ ---• 1• .. • brake•. AM, A/C , ...._ c.i;f t2tH · 29 1 ... J~ 5 ,... .., .... Wt• 102. RedlllnOI. cM:ted by1gtnerll1*1Mf· hu ......, .. lmmedl... COSTAMESA nina ln~WOfkon• POODLEPUPPY SALE '(a87is) ~ (1 1·131)t t.lll. VICtOf H ~. 3'00 • . 'nt.117Callflt373 hllP openings lor lhoM 11 -· • I... p1' ba111. CJur WOfk .... T-Cup. Toy. M#ll, S200~ .. • • =-.... .. lneto4 StrMI Suite 2tO Tiiie Dutl,.... ii con-'"" 11atemenl -fMed and OYef In ourM1tket1ng --. ._ vs to • variety of retall $700 Hand ralMd Menym • • • --Cotti Mell c ... 92121 ' ducted by 1 corporllllon witll the County C19tti Of Of. Division. NO E X-Btwn 10AM-2PM stores In the 0 C c04061 751·3415 EJtec:. demo( I .,.,. This t>0itnet1 11 con· .....C NOTICl I Th• regllttent com-ano-CCMmty on O.Cemtl« PERllNCENECESSARY, (71-')755-1155 &f'M .. Contac:t a.a---.we•I 11118 IG.m1 . duCt9CI ~ a OlfWlt pen--Tm--CUIH•l8 llMftOed to lttinl&Gt l»uel· 12. 1... ,. ••• 11 e•,,_.. ........ &A cluri.u. ~ --W .. hl""lon I"-I •I 1511W119 ,_...... row - -nnt under tlle fielitlout Pwblllheel Ofenge ....-.t ......-·· ~ "'V ..... tautar\J lnven1ory'S'.rv. ice• ... llW m.-.r 'II Th;" reg11tr1n1 com-..,... ITA,,_.,. llUSineu name or names Delly~ o.c.m• 16.12, :::::::: ~"""": Wtllrt11t1/lrhln U 610Beec:h •54 ••tm• l1'!enWIL.!o !ranw:t buli-TtielallowWlgperws ... lletecut>OveonJu~ 1 .... ttaa 29, 19H,Jenuwy5. tNI " progr-tr~atk>f) Few e.jci'a Plzu in Hunf-Hunt!~ Beach llLIR ....... 1 .. ll•l•W Au~om::lc e cylinder ""' wndet the ffctitlOu• ~-~~:its 3100 .. Eduerdo Jorden. Sec· lll·11f' furnished. reeurn f•r• ~S:.:C~·h Mu9t be (7or14F)utl Oe1-012a8119s 6'1~7'.2 blm~-' .. L.t!"b-~.l:. I• Htt power ooO, toetc ... ~ :.-4edne::c,;:: ~-~ ~ot ~--o·.....,.s.M9~ .... aeo. ' T~ statement ~· filed -----............ --guerene.ect. for IPPC>lnt· ..,,. ; "' .,..... .. '"""'d .. -1 ,,..,~. power ... -•· 1977 ....... v. _,_,. -· -· ,._.. w1111 !tie County c..,_ of Of· PlaJC llnlCE rMnt cell 'OOn Hawt\"'9 OMV recotd. 064-0881 In lmmeculat• con • ,.p-CONSIDER .. tety, resale CHHlte. AIC, tilt . V Boyd OeviC1 L Qullllno, 11122 enge County on o-Tlbef -......:~:::::;::~~~ ...... ~ 145--2221, 11 lo 4PM Retail pralMd value S 12,500, value, Hly 60 mo. (10·478) 13 4f6 T~IOf r ternent wu flied lM Plllnel Drive. Santi 14 1911 FICTITIOU8 ---.:· through Friday. ••• -ILlll •-L--..ai.. Hklng $8,5(") or best purchaH llnanclng . lllft•-.. with 'rt.'J t Cieri! ol °' Ana, C&llf. 92705 • NOlM7 MAim ITA1W• • M tur~ ..... people __... offer. Call Rlc;k. 542-..188 Compat• HouM ol Im-·-.,.,,,.' ~; ~ Decem.,.; Victor ... ~. "· 13702 Publllhed Orange COl ll The lollo#lng per.anl ., .. LIULWTllY ,=-::~~/PT. Medlcai l!t§* Ali • ..,.... · 1 portal &eS•••· 2131114 __.. 2. ,.., =r:s-· s.n1a AN. Calif. ;>::r11otoecemt1«22,29. ~1R~a::co .• eti. F;::=-~!cc;t'~ benefits. Xlnt oppty for ~-•lllU MERCEDES. IG-1111 .................. ,..._ ~~ Oteoory o. MoCallland. 17 1 'JIWWlfY 6· 12• ~~M V1111 Bon1t1, Newpor, Hunt~ ~ 9dvancement. $4. 75---•••-- -•• .,..,.,.,,....,... v..iinga "8mecia, lrvlne, C&llf 927'• 8each. Cllll. 92eeO In tlngton 15/Hr. Contect Gary at 1931 Blvd, CM new 10-foot longboard. ....~' -Deity P1to1 o.c.tnbet a. 15. Tlllt ti..tlnees Is con· Cerolyn CafP9"1•. att ~d!!kf14!'.. !,Ion w/at 545--0431 or apply at JK 50 Select Oealer• $195, Hcellent con· & •·-·".. 22. 29. 1988 56 duc1ed by· 1 generll part· Ml.JC tlJ11C( v1111 Bonlll. Newport ""' ..-Gill. South Cc>Mt Plaz1. New arrivals dally! d1llon. Call 854-1036 V8 cyfinder. 5 lpMO men-Th·t ner~ "..... BNcto. Cllll 92teO .... , 2 yrs Calllomla llt Co.ta MM&. I ~--ual. ~ door toetc, Tiie regl1tt1nt com· FICTlnOUI ..,...,, Carolyn Cerpef't•. att up. Salary D.O.E. - -TrEdea PoW9f 11..,tng ~ "8.IC ll)TIC( ~ to tr1nuc1 bull· MAim ITA,....NT Vt1t1 Bonita, Newport, (71•11'7~ 1 S ... Hele> Wanted 193 t Blvd, CM Jilt brak•. caaette, A/C, nea ~ the tlcllttowt Tiie fOlfowing P«IOllt 111 Beach, Clllf. 926CIO LIUL~llY . -so Select Oeeler• lall II EV E {11·551)14n5 ".,_ buslnell name or MINS~ llUelnMlea: T1111 tNl!nes•. 11 con- Est Co.ta Mete Med Mel URGENTLY NEEDED DE New arrtvals dally! 22 Ft. R:dng Crul1tng CR I R llDl•ill--'1Cnnout .,...,, lilted abovie on NIA T~E BOMBAY COM· d\leted by: an lnOfvtOull OefenM firm ...U l9Cy PENDA.BLE PERSON to ~_.~Ill aal l Stoop, SIMPI 4• Ill HIP, NAm ITATIMINT VlctOf H Boyd. 11 PANV 3333 Btlstol Str"t Thi r•glstrant comr W/IO--lltl w •• work without supervision' ... •• ; .., 0 18 51250/obo 'Ill Ill BIJ mTILll The IOllowlng !*tons"' This statement wu hied •206; Coat• Meta Cellf menced to trenaact t>uei-..... p pef. I T oll I '""-·th A!r..v. • ·--·1 dol~llUllMIS u : with the "-··ty Clerk of Of· """""'6. • • MU under the flctlhoue et~ 755-0800 or ••u co. n ~ rest-r" ""''"'er-142·28 15 _.... RMI Es.-""""" .,,._ -:-~M~iiiiiiii~ii Coest •M. We tretn. ator, 5 yrs Old, almond 'II&• llT" S ENGETJ, 1 ano-County on Oec:emtl« Tandy Brand• Inc Dell· bullrlll9 name Of namee Liii .. 111•... Writ• H.O. Dickerson. cq4ored, S 125. Whirlpool 11111. Trw--t•tiea ' lmlll.IT 111 1• Ille M1rke1tng 0Hlgn 21, '"' war• Domestic • 550. a.iiey l11ted at>Ove on July 7, 1~ p SWEPCO Box .... -11n • Group, 17550 Giiiett• Ave., ,..,.. Avenue Suite eeo Fort Carolyn Carpent• . ~ lor lingle men. 1m111 hM ,.!.:i · steckab'e w1stier/dryer, 11.-ltt ILAZll Irvine, C11ot. 92714 Publilhed Orenge Coeet w-h T 76t07 • Thia statement -• liieo, wl oceenvlew.499-1531 9e1uv5, Ft. Worth, T1t whlte,5yrs04d,S125. --·,.... / Af(W~Of 2-wn..tdrlve,loedecl,new Lull! 1n1er1or1. Inc., Clll-Deily Pilot o-rtbef 29. Thli :~:""' 11 con-wlththeCountyClerkofOf. -a· UI Tai 78l8'l r--la--.. ,. ....... .... .... ,. ~ -tr1n1mlulon clean IOfnl1, t7550 Giiiett• AYe .. 1988. J1nuary 5, 12, 19. ducted ..... a COf"""lllon 119 County on Oec:emt>er ~ "-·•~Station a11~"ant .... ,... ~ ---1 8000 b • E ,· trvtne C1~I 92714 1"'8"' v,. ,..... 15 11118 6 YA Ca UC PIT days ~·-"' "'"' Hono 1985 VF1000A 8!> 13!M. Auto, IWl'S61 o o · v e · • " The reg11tr1nt com-• ttd 84-4- 0 7148 M.O. offioe ' PIT,°' FI T. apply in per-11111 •'9111•1 Dual• heedftOht, servlc9 86 !>28t. Auto, 2CN01'1 113-0319 di!~.:, b~~~~~~:u~on-Tfl.-20l menced to crenteet bwll-Pvblllhed Orange NO~ News Reporter son, Unocal 76• '3:77 Su-Footboard with r•lls. contract, super clean. 88 13!>i,iuto.loacled,647434 The reglsttent com--.JC lln1C( ""' under the fictitious Deily Piiot o-Tibet 22 ~ perlor (at Placentia) N.B. queen size S 195. 846-4293 $2995 847-6542 menced to tr1nuc:t bull-:.:-:-~-:, :o!m": 1988, Jenuery 5. t2. 1Nt .. h•frwtHIU 142·0480 CHOCOLATE Brown L a le ; ___ 1_ Hll PSartaleSI = = -under the flc11tlout ~ 23 t... Th-18t mid-Iii• Soutfiern Cali-.. ... SllaPiad Couch $150, Loll al -Hll_t_ ._.. butinns neme Of names lllCT'lnOUI .,..... C R T fornla dally w'ents In ag-llf SIT lllTllL Type Bunt\ Beds wlmatt. BEFORE you bUy, examine Ul-.3111 ·~= lbc>Ye on ~ber. NAMa ITA1W•NT Pr-=~ · llompson. Ml.JC NOTICE , • gressive repcrter who •Ut $125, setting everything, 125 uled Mercedel-Benz 15e0 Auto Mall Dr: 546-1200 Nancy K. Lusk. President d The !..~ .. ~tons are This 1t1tement wu filed _ __:.::;:;.;:;..;.;;;-.;.=....._""' likes challenges. Must T-Shlrt Printer needs 2 call for Info. 722-7665 and our r ... ie 1M11ng llllH«11or ·Co11aMtY This atetetMnl wu flied otnoR o""E ... N-CYGT. R .. VEL withthecouCoun1ntonyCteN0r~Of-".._ have dally or quallty people f06 Inventory Con-. plan. Comptire House of Santa Ana RE ,. enge y ...... 'ICnTIOUe .,...,, ~ weekly e1tperlence. Send trol. Sta.rt lmmed. Ac-Ltke new w•veless king Imports & Be Safe. 55 t;lrt· at EdlnnAr with the County Clerk of Of-SOUTH COAST, •2 Ex-28 1988 NAMI ITA1W•NT F a cover letter •. resume curacy• must. 650-9226 water bed. Beaullfvl oak 213171• MERCEDES. r· • ·•-· -• llllAITY enoa County on December acut1119 Clt'cte, Sult• 290, · '11tt27 The fo11owinO persons ar• end llve ... _........., to City _._ ..__.. .......... _. hdbd, solld oak aide tbls 7 DAYS alll 8, 1988 Irvine. Calif. 92714 Publllhed Ofenge Cout doinO ~ .. : ~ -·....-,_....._. & nOerbed d awers All ORDER your '89 or '88 . ,_ Resort Cornmunlcallonl, o .. ·~Pl"'t ........ __ ._. 8 15 NORTHWOOD CHINA Editor Steve Marble. P.O. u r · Service Hrs. Mon-Fri. Automatic, 6 cylinder, Publllhed Of119 Coast Inc., "-'•t-·•·. P.O. Bo.x 22 1"'9 .. :;--'',_ ' ' G .. RDEN RESTAURANT, Bolt 1560 Coste Mesa FIT fleJt hrs. $8/hr. good tor $850. Cute little oak Mere41des-8enz and get 7 00 9 00 PoW9f door lock, radlels. Dally PllO Oecember 15 22 ..., -·-'"' ,. • "-"f. 9..,;,26. No --·~ benefits. CM 642-0411 rolltop S270. 10· old st"'-the ear"' bird tease r•te. : em to : pm 1 t • · 19700. Irvine. Calif. 92713 ' • Th-. 152 4790 Irvine Blvd. • 1011 ....., · ... ...,,., '"" c '7 f 1 cruise, PoW9I' •I.., ng. 29, 1988. JenUMy 5. 1989 T1111 bualneH 11 con-1mne. CAiif, 92714 . ......... _ TELEM ARKETER For embroidered new couch ompare House o m-...,_ brak ... AM/FM, Th-167 tlon __ .,. MftTll'r T 2 L-"--· $200. Chrome & tinted ports & Be Sele. 2t31714 GET higher dollar value for ---due1ed by:• corpor1 ,,_ ""'~ Tat Sun seng, ....., 1111.DTATI ~1:~~01~1!sJ>~o:u~t~~ gluscott .. t1b1eS120. MERCEDES. you r pampered ::;ees1111' 11 1-5321 ~'~J"~,':.::C,c:;:.: et.-lr1~~~~Y.Teeng, Fm Tlftllllfll B I om • r I c a . 1 5 3 3 Lg pi.ypen white ooucn OUR 60 mo. leasing pro-Merceoea-Benz. Com· llll•T• IUll "8JC ll)TIC( ""' uno. tile ficllllou• ITAW OP 2 Le«M. Irvine, Calif. 92714 Limited 10 Monrovla.NB.CA92663 $400.CALL722-7 l lO gramllawfnner.Com·1 pare Houseof lmpor11 & --It._, buslnftl name Of nemes '""MllDl-NTOF This twlinest is COIT' natk>n9'°':1~te : MOVING SALE. Twin bed pare HouM of Imports & Be Sure. 2 f3 /714 _,_ flCTITIOUI ....... listed 1t>Ove on NIA UM OP PICTlnOUI ducledl>y:llulbandendwlle ket'-_,_will! ""-EARN , .... washer /dryer Be Safe. 2131714 MERCEDES. Nl-1111 U..ITATE•NT KerenA Orlng,P'91ident ..,... .. NAMI Thi registrant com-""' -•-..... -~ $400 $1000/WK Vil "' L H se MERCEDES The followlng_perl0(\1 1t• This 111tement wu The following persons menced to trlnl&Ct buti-llmlted earnings. For In-• warran.,, g. 00 · I _. ......,~ -.. Ulll dotng bvl!MIS u . with the County Clerk or Of-haYe at>andonecl the UM of neu ""'* the flctlt1001 formation. cell Jeck I pt~t•. B~own Jordin f Wla 11ft /J 62 000 miles, red, 5-Automatic, 4 cylinder, CALIFORNIA REAL ES-enge County on November 1111 Flct1tlou1 a..,11ne11 llU..,.._. name Of nemM Ayer• at SELECT •6AM· 12 Noon Patio Fumiture, Outside " " .... . aPeeo sun roof mint con-radiall, power ,,..,,ng, TATE GUIDE. 28-45 MISI 28, 1988 N1me. LUSK HOMES -listed aboYe on NIA BETTER HOMES & plants & morel 494-8788 I 113' ditlon.' $6300 • 675-3005 PoW9f brakes AM/FM Verde Or r 6, Coate Mesa. '*°'B CONCORD, 17550 Gilleete Tel Sun TMng GARDENS ::,=r.:·~~alrling NEW DAYBED WHITE & "'9 'll Lllm (#038121) A/C Warranty p1so5j Cllll. 92626 Publlsned Ofenge Coat Awnue, lrvlne. Callf.927t4 Thia statement was lileO REAL ESTATE 751-5000 BRASS. With mattresses , __ , 18 4~5 Guy Roberl TOfelll. 2845 Oaity Pilot Dec:embef 8, 15, The FlCtlllout Bualnett with the County Clerk of Of. RECEPTIONIST-ENTRY mta ....... 1. & trundle complete 6 Cylinder, lpeed manual. --... &IHU u •. •m•t•-·-Mela Vetde Or. •6, Coat• 22. 29. 1918 Name referred to abOv9 WU ano-County on November LEVEL BOOkKEEPER . .aU.112·12• $245. •846-4293* ~ ·~..,M/FlngM, powetr Automatic, cylinder, -Mela,C1111.92626 Th-154 l!Md In Ofenge County on 28. t988 • ·~g -br ... n , ,. • cuse • power door toetc redials mTall Th11 bualneH is con-M 1 y 1 o. 19 a 5 FILE '.an For GIUI Co. In Cost•lll-ws QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS te. A/C. Call for low price. cruise power it..,1ng' •.H -•1 ducted by: en lnd1Vldual Plll.JC NOTICE NO.F276t58 Published Orenge Coast Mae 642-ooM ltl-1111at1tl-1.. & BOX, OUIL TED! Loaded. Two to choose power' brakM. AM/FM: ... -The reglstrtnl com-John 0. L1191t a Son, Dally Piiot December 8, 15. lllTa-a.. BRAND NEWI S 155. from ( 1255) a/C H ...... ---._ mencecl to transact t>usl-ll...U !7550 Gillette Avenue. CAii· 22. 29. 1988 ...... , TRUCK DRIVER Part time C 8 .6-293 . cassette, " · urry on --• .,..a neu llfldet the fictitious ,ICTITIOUe ........ tornl1, IMne, Clalf. 927 14 . Th-153 All politlona, all shifts. E1t-1 ton box truck. good ALL * 4 4 * ...... YW tnls one! (2362) Sl2,395. Automatic, • cylinder, bvtlneu n1me or names NA• ITA'R•NT Security 'P1clllc S1111 --------- petience preferred, no driving record, Accent WOOD GAME TABLE & 4 111-1111 ....... fW radl.... ~ 11..,lng, 111ted 1bOYU!fl Oecllmb.er 1. The followlm peraons ere Bink. t4222 Cutwr Oflve, ftllJC NOTICE e1tperlence neoessary Interiors Bl 673·2860 CHAIRS $200. 2 WOOD Tricb HJSI 111-1111 power brak ... AM/FM, t918 doing butlneU 11• Cellfornla. 1rvlne, Celli. _ ........ ....., ....... ......,..._...__ APPLY IN PERSON • ' BAA SJi?7~LS $125. Call ,-A/C. (10·503) $2,995 Guy Torelli EXECUTIVE INVEST-927t4 ,ICTlnOUI llUIMH MON-FRI 10-1PMONLV Wanted herd working Ind. . :,.130 •• __..1 _., -.'ll&lllULJI •• .,..,..... Th1s 1111ement was filed MENT GROUP, 2524 t This 1>u11net1 wat con-NAlmlTA,.._NT New Restaur•nt Opening for construction work. --· • ~ 1 4 1 d - -wttll the County Clerk ol Of. Pueo de Allele, Sult• 250. ducted by 1 gener11 partnef· The followinO persons are INTERNATIONAL HOUSE $7-8 per hr. Call (714) llill9U...... HIS Automatic. ~ cylinder. Autom•J c , lrx.t<'·,y ~I ~r. -·--ano-County on December Lag11n1 Hiii•. Calif. 92653 9hlfl doing bu911'91111: OFPANCAKES fl"6-2l21d1y&evenlng. lmllW&.2tieleh ~ st..,ing, power~ oor ·:las. Ml-1111 7,1981 WltllamT.Whlte,lll(Gen-Thls1111emen1waahlad AMERICAN HOTEL t8782 Beech Blvd. Hev.•,_-.... without SEC. 6 r...:. 55. $100 I tber.ak!',·c AM. R/-F2M200' c...ewitth-~~· b=. ~:;F1.· .• , .... ,., P1rtner). HalekH .Miii the County Clerk of Of-LIQUIDATORS. 3400 Av-Cor f Const I _...,.. .,... " .,.,_.,, Pm ... LTI llUI Publlttled Orange Coat Farms, K1muela, H1w1ll enoe County on Dec:embef -Of The Ant. Cotta E ;-'~ ·t"'e1'J9·1 ~-Mltyourltems ea /o bo 248-7 486 10001 bo•. Mags. (2367) cHsette, AIC. E1ttra Automatic, 6 cylinder, O.ily PltotC>eoembef 1s.22. 98743 t2, t"' Maa,Callf.92ae qu um Y mp In 8181355-4509 S6 850 ltlarp. Like new! (2366) PoW9f door tock, radials, 29. 1988, Janu1ry 5, t989 Reainald B Oliver (Gen· Publltned Orange Cout Mary P. Ortman. 3400 Av- r ' aou l ........ ,. s11•47s. crvlM , power 11..,lng, Th-l7l ... t5artner). t478 Rallroad DailyPtlotDec:.-ntl« 15,22. -Of The Ana. Cotti Motor Routes available in W11hni11t1r ll1ltilllfo1 l11ch Fou1t1i1 V1H1r NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING Deliver One Day a Week - Must have dependable car and proof of Insurance Call 842-1444 Ask for Joanne Craney '" le n M ••11 ..... YW power brak ... CUMtte, Ave., St. Helena. C1llf. 29, 1988, Jenulry ~. 1989 Mell, Calif. 92626 BLACK LAB I •'f 1·--•1-U11 . AIC. 1111. 110-so11 ~.995 "8JC NOTICl 94574 Th-t76 Thia bullneu 11 con· F to good home •T• -·-Myglo Corpof111on, •Cal•-ducted by: an lncftvldull ree • 1 ......... IP 1111 -1t.-1 tornla corpor111on (General Pl8.JC NOTICE The regl1tran1 com· I female, 6 montns old. lov-4 cylinder 5 speed man-llAZll '11121 ..... I TATUmNT OF Partnef), 3800 East Coe11 menced to tranuct bull· Ing dog. 493--0328 uat, radlats. power steer· Automatic, 4 cyllnder, •--•1 AIANDOl-NT OF Highway, Corona de! M11, K...,.. neu ""'* the fk:t11tou1 FREE To you. temale Old Ing. power brekes. power door tock, cruise. --UMOfFICT1110UI Cllit.92625 ITA'TDmNTOF ~name or n.,._ EngllSll Shee9 Dog, 1 AM/FM, cassette. A/C. power steering, pcwer ....... NAMa Tiii• butlneH II con-MAMDOI El1T OF listed aboYe on OctOber 20, year Old. loves people Mags. aide tires. (2354)1 brakes. AM/FM, casset-The following per1on1 ducted by: 1 gener1t pan-UM OP '1CT1TIOUI 1988 Call 640-7669 I SS.275 te. A/C. (23'8) $6,250. .. ••• Rt hall9 abandoned the use of nerlllip .,...,, NAMI Mary Ortman - --II fW ~ the Fictitious Bw1lne11 Tiie reglatrent com-The loflowlng e>e'9on1 Thi• statement wu tiled OWce Fualtue I -ni -1111 N1me· LUSK HOMES -menced to trenuct bus!· haYe 1bendonecl the uM of wtth the County Cter11 or Of-'=;;. ·-1 •1-1111 •1 iiaz lllZ 121 PLEASANTON. 17550 MIS under the lictltlou• th• Fictitious Bullneu ange County on o.c.tnt>er I ~ MERCEDES SL 450 t974 -. Giiiette AYenue. Irvine, Ca111. bullMll name Of natMS Name: LUSK HOMES ·SAN 15, 1988 I TtNG a........... 1111, very clean. both tops, Mercedes 4 OR Sedan 92714 li91ed lbOve on Novembel JOSE. 17550 Giiiett• Av-,'°1117 ISelectrlc with Memory, *rm , asking $17,000 prlv•te automatic, straight 8-Alr The Fictitious Business t5. 1988 enue, lrvlne, Cllll. 92714 P\lblllhed Ofenge Coast plus eccessorles. s 100. •mlll-ml , party, work 645_4579 conditioning . radials, Neme referred to a.bOYe wes Jamee M. IMne, President The Flctltioua Bualneu Daily Piiot oec.mblf 22. 29. 673-4220 .. 11 ,89 M,..._._ av·"•b ... lor home 673_.335 Uses regular gas • mid-filed In Orange County on This 1tatement was llled NllM r...,red to aboY9 wu t..a, J1nuary 5, 12. tHO ---------1 " ....... .... ... night blue M. y t 0. 19 8 5 F' LE with the COUl"ly Clertl of Of· flied In Ofenge Cownty on Th-t88 PIN'lml lmmediateo.tlveryt '87 560SL loml(6705) P•erMetttterl NO F276157 enoa County on o-Tlt>er'------------------..a • 0 DOWN PLANS 77 •SOSL 8fft 83k (8214) John D. Lulk & Son, 9, 1981 FP-1520. enlergement & 1 • E1tten0-:,:;, Mo leasei:~ =~~::~1 1=1 M1·11M 1414112 r'Jr~~ ~:~c~~~;f:"-Publisned Otano:~=~ reduction. muttl copies. 2 • Unique 84 Mo purchase187 190E 18k·ml (83321 Sec\lrlty Pac:lllc St••• Daily Pilot Oecemtl« 15, 22. 11 trays, low uaage, like Programs/OAC -·-•-.a ·a.a-lank, 14222 Culver OflYe, 29. t988, J-.,y 5, 1989 A cl••ltled 8d I• en ••J ••J to Mii rour merchandlM, end It'• H•J on rour wellet, too. new.$1 ,000.CallMon-Frll •••ta l r---• Calllornl1, lrvlne. Calif. Th-169 72~~u.~~H~-MG GTB W7~hw~op. ~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ eom. .... comulgh.Corne ••Tl 1 red 1pcrtsear. fun to -In dMlllled. Your Aut~ Mercedes' drive! Good condition i.::.::.::_::_::_::_::_::_::_=:_=:_=:_=:_=:_=:_=:_~=:_=:_=:_=:_=:_=:_~;-:_=:_=:_=:_~=:_=:_::_~~~~==-::_~~~~::_~~-:_-:_-:...,-l 1301 Quall St. $1100 540-~783 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE OUREAMOUS AC AOSS 1 Polynes.111\ Chestnuts 6 Toddler 10 Pl1y parts t4 Ltlelesa 15 Parltele 16 ltnglll untl 17 Sey 18 -sa11'1 19 D@coy 20 Relallvn 22 Ptlf'lunclory 2• Pulpit 26 Penpwed 27 Surround 31 Ravege 32 Weigtlt UM 33 OelleC:t 35 Male anlm11 3e UK 11ver 39 Machine guns 40 Eac:11e 41 Motllure 42 OC!Of 43 Sorrows 44 81,nop·s seat 45 Arabs 4 7 Asian stulfs 51 Mrs Copper'lteld 52 lmbricat" 54 Had c:pver1 58 Swias rtvlf 59 GUlde 61 Pege 62 B1l1tc gvtl 63 Preas ~ Not mounted 65 Mat1mu1e s low 66 Bone pref 67 F1buhlls ,DOWN t Sitarist - Shenker 2 Jud1h lung 3 Labor 4 P11torll 5 James -6 .. NontenM!'. 7 Al the peltl 8 Uncouth ones 9 Avthorlz" 10 AbOve Wltlf 11 Short llrMt 12 Singer Me4 - 13 Liew 2t ThYt 23 Expto,1 25 Voting hcket 27 Modtlted pqnl 28 Chvfch part 29 Swagger 30 MIMI• equ1I 34 tnwerd 35 Split 38 S.ery lltlll B7 88nque1 '39 Scr-1pl&y •O Italian food 42 Fasten 43 CaultOUS 44 Unfurl 46 (NU--Roy 47 Glides 48 Benef'tt 40 Mingle 50 Cowboy oe•r 53 -macnme 55 Mt Muwetl 56 Row 57 Ounlers 60 Chemteal tulttx Newport Beactl tSAVE your time. ChOOM 111-1* from 125 previously ***** := o~~~c:"'/S: .. '11 lllUD 'II .n& ' s a I e . 2 1 3 I 7 t 4 - I Whit• Fully loeded. (2301) MERCEDES. Automatic, 8 cylinder, $8.~5 ..... ....... 1311 power doOr lock, radlels, --ft CNIM. PoW9I' steering, •1-1111 -'II D11TI PoW9f b!ak•. AMIFM, ... CHHtte, A/C, 1111. FOR SALE. 198...4 31.81 Automat~. a cyltnd«, (10-479) 13..:.295 BMW, whit• with suruoof. power OOOt IOcic, radials, 0111•111-- well-malntenanced, excl crulM power steering mmD cond , $12,500. Cell ~· br'M .. caaeette 780-8865 A te. 111t. 111-521> S4.n 5· IG-1111 BMW 1H8 528E. Flaw-11nm1•... ..., ..... , .. Ifft. •SOO miles. Bronze. mwaa -··-E.Jttendecl Warrtnty ., .. ,, $24,900 firm 720-9966 142-1111 Automatic. • cylinder, power brell... AM/FM, .. '111111 Buick, skyhawk 1984 A/C. (11·5'8) l&.995 CrvlM , sunroof. mags, ~~celnroo. fc~dc .. ~u8•.000o. •mlr1•. Olllmlllll•Tll-- 1 caaMtte. AIC. (2307) .... ... .. S 11 """5 beet offer over 13300.00 • • ·-.._ YW M4-2e21191s-esoo 141-1111 111·1111 I What's your home Mrvlce 1peclalty l §~J~,!t Alterotlon1? Acco .... t'"9? Auter°'"*' AdvertlM In cla111f led. ••2·1111 ••2-1111 CLASSIFIED ADJ'EllTl§IN6 §ALE§ We are ADDING to our sales starr. If you can type at least 45 wpm and have great telecommunication skills -We can ofrer you a hue aalary + commi88ion AND a V--plaee to work. hH n.e 411 hrt Tl•e .4 t'•ll•tle. Do younelf a f a•or -Call ua. P e•f>' B levl•• er~ I• \! eaae•• . 842-4321 ..... 330WMt..,8L CoetaM111,CA DIMESi\·LINE NAME c HAS RETURNED! ' Back by popular demand. 01mes-A-l1nt' will run Friday. Satur- day and Sunday 1n 1u own clarnf1cat1on 1n the Class1f1ed Ads Since this Is a ~la! offer, we have a Thl.K~day noon dndlint' and ask prepayrMnt for all ads. This Is ~n to all prrvate party ac1Vert1sers for merchandise not over s 1 SO (price must be hsted 1n adj and no M>t>rr..'latlons wl• be accepted. All ads will run Friday. Saturday and Sunday. There is a S-hne minimum at 20C per line ... So Y04ll tow cost Dlma·A-Une 9d Is only ... $3 .00. DEADLINE: Thursday noon PRICE: 5-hne m1n1mum • 3 days • '104 per tine = SJ 00 • "'" ads are prepaid by coming into the Di!llY Pilot to plact' your ad or ust' tht' coupon below • P11vate party merchandise onty ads No com- mercial ads, peu. hvestt>Ck, product' or plants Each item must be priced 1n the ad with no nenu aver SISO MAIL TO: otmes-A-Une Oa11y Pilot 330 West Bdy Street. Cost<l Mesa. Cl\ 92626 Da1ty Pilot hours Monday-Friday 8 00 AM to 5 00 PM PHONE ~----------- ADORE SS CITY~------------------- AMOUNT ENCLOSED~--~---- LINH I. t,------~ ;z, J. .......... -==------ s. t----•--t .. ----~- 1. ----'·--~-.... _____ _ .. STATE ZIP DATES TO lruN 641- S300 Mtn $3'0 S.00 14 to IS .0 78 • .· ---====:--,--:=~~~-.,..-~~~~~...,.-~~!""'!'!"!~~...ii.-1111111!!~!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!"'~..--~~~~-_,.-~~111!!1!1!~~-.•°';•; .. Collll DU.Y N.OT/Dnflt. Dll 1•• & --1111.BL...-.~.:::-= ..:-..:.-:....~ •11••'1~:·:1 .:r a...:. ::-..... ..:. .. -:.: HefFHI ...... Celft. =-,.,:' • "'=::. ---:...-• D .. ::-,fWWJ • =. =:c:v ,.. ..... _, !':'~-·-"...., Olf ti......=-.... "= ....._ w -. ..... .-. .. Ns 1 U I,~ -.. _! ;; MA 1A1M ,...._ ,-. 1'1""9'0CJllJ ... llllllC>ftOftY NOTH: Dina Murad, Ull ............... • .. LlierC...;';;'....... ................ -. ~ "!!.!!-==,._. .. *-T-. .• 0... .._....le .... MloreOIH.._, ........ O.U,W ............... C .. I ................ Tllllll ----C.0.Mured "l.1711111~--..,_., ..... 0.. ..... cllll9fl--UOl.7M.21 c.11. tf41a NoMlif ....... • ••1 ........ t1Cllf1 .......... CelllllrClatl flOr-TNI 11111 clblll -... Dllw "9t Dtttk I. 11. SYAINUU 1011 .................. Giii. TANGllUJINTANCMaLI Tiiie ........ oon-.......................................... c..sir ....... eu ...... C'AuntwClatialOr· n .tt.,.. ... w ........ c... ...... "'" MONRTY: Cft9Nl duclld 'r oa ...,....,. ___, tr • Cllll ........ _, ...... ~ t. ,_ ' .... C....., • N1 •.. n.--• c.11 _, ....... OltllRll ~ n.t II Illa blen ..... Tllla 11111 ••II -lllld ......... lllall _. II .... -_,........ • tn ta• Or-.. COlll I . ttlt ..... Ill. lwr11, H• el~ Wten I IT .... =-:.-::::: =-~~= :::.:.:c.:,~•;:.:: =--..-:-,:: ~~m•ll I , 11. •ur.. 0r-.."= !WIFPR =-~Nmwpor1 :':.°=-.":".':.".r!: ................. t , '911 ,..._,... 1:'11 ---.. .._ Til-Mll Ollw ,_ DICIT91r I , 11, W Nda I ~ 17212 c.ll tl7M ....... ----... GI .. Ultod Or ... ewe ............. M ... ... .... .... ..... n. ... ,.. HCftllld. I Ill ......... ...-ori' v1e10. m11111'r -··· ... .__ 111111 ....... II to M pl6d D11w ,_ Dlc1 "'* I . 11, ~ Md 1110 Pf• 1uper1e••• ,., tlle MJC Miii T-...151 .... SYAW c.11 ol ~ Riiis• all TNii ..,.,.;;-•• ~ llftlf.,...., Illa Mlrl 22. 21. t• ......, .,....... ., .... Pl~lllll• ol .. LelMW - -TM ....... ..,...... TNt ........_ 11 con-T1r1e,•u•. c/e Dew~ .. -......_ ....,,, ... 'r 01u ..., .. GI n..t11 n. Cit'/ c...1 o1 • Olde. "••-to llbor .._ -..C 111111 dc*ll ..,.._ • .,..... • , ..,_. oen-Hlrlerl. 1m1.. a.. ...... · ...._ --.-·"" Moallallc.._119CoMrol, Cltyol.._..,..... ..... ,. 11111 M ..... Ofllr lft IN 8TAWOI -~TIONAL EDUCATION .,.... .......... MO.lnl!M.c.11 •~.,.....,el l*IOMI.....,.. IO lee 2.073.. P9IJC.. ..... ...... ,.._...., W ......... 111'1.... MASSI POii ..... CENTI". 1UOO Von~ Tiie r .. l1trar11 co"'-t271• ,,_.,.,., • .,....,ol"'-orllllia Nollkflllll'9••i.11C1 U.OIHClllW HCtmDUl•lll I• KerrMll A~. lrvlrie ........ to 1reM9CC butt-.................... .. ....,.._ ___ 11 ·~ ~ .. .._...., .. aer .............. ..,.,,. • ••--•r.w n c.r:wn• ,_ lliue w ., .. loue ..,...,. l'Nll, 010 ~ • ..-. -............__ """"""'IObecontum-....,__ ·C«lncllf•Ol?afHunl· ___, ..,., •Cler If Ttte followtfto pereont n.......,...,.... .. Netlonal Educe1lon ..,.._"""'or ~ Hlrton. Etca .. One ltlftc n....-a.-_.. ICIMld . .._to IN 8bove CC-.. lfllllon ...... c.llfa NI .. HuMlllglon IMdl Ind It 119We IDlfldonllf" aw -of dc*ll ...... •: c.ietr. Irle.. Celllor"'8 oor-,llllld .... °" ~ 1, ptua. Stl. 5'0, IMM, c.11. :.\.,,,....., .. .......,, pt'OVltlonl, II 8E"VICE Nollollt.._ .. ,,."hll Sdidl'/afDUI ...... ,.., rMdllftwordlnoewllhlN Ill• flcOllOUI lutln•H SACRAMENTO Al-poretlon. 1UOO Von~ t271• ....._ MclrW. Incl llCAOW COMPANY. 3.e6 lllllCI ll6dt .. be.....,... C... llNllll•ill• Cllr prowlllal• ol lt'9 prapoilt ~ CONTININTAL IN-IOCIATU. St .. Alll'#lll AY. Kerr11at1 Avenue, lrvlne,I Jo11n fl 1umt Tllll bv1in1M 19 OOft-ZIP C.-.......... al .. W. EIM 81.. Lot Angelle. Dr .. City GI Huntirlgeon Clllll 11 .. Cllr ........ r9C1Jiremlllta. VllTMINT8 ANO PftOP--.. Unit J, Colla Mtta, Cllf. t27tl TNt 11111mei11 w .. liled ductld by. e ...... l*t· I , • ft I'.,~, c.) I'.: CA ... on or .,.., lrw-......... ofb If .. ...... ...... ..-blddlf ICIUll ... lllnY MAHAGIMEMT, 20l 1 c.llf 121H·4t11 Tillt tluliMel •• con-.... County Cllr'IC °' Of-nettftlp ltUllHIL I OILI I .. '-lletl\ epprOWICI by QlyCllrtletCltyHlll.2000 -........ (FM) l!Oerllld MCI tllo pre-...,_. c.ietr Dr. •1IO, 1rUG1 I. Nott, 31 .. All· CluetldDyecorporlllon I ... County on Oectrnber Tiie re9l1tran1 COM· IAICIR\'. INC., I C .. 1 NI ~of ABC. MMI ltr•. Huntlfttton ~ ...... •,........by llw WW.. c.llf '2715 W11f A1'lftUI, UNI J. Colla Tlte r19111rent com·l 7. t.a merlCICI 10 .,..-...-. ..,., .... taa4 WllNr'I Al OINr bullr-. nem. """-Callomla. unlT ._ P' I 7 9 1 • ...... Olllll TM City CourlCll GI "" The Flctltlout 8utif'9el ...... CIM ....... ,. lftlflCed to trlfWt ..,._ ' Nm11 ,__ under tM lctll6out ~.. ... -· Loa ~ lrld lddr 11111 uted by ._ hour If 2:00 P·"' Ori Jenlalry = .... Dll I I .... Qty GI Hwclligean "9dl,. N9rM r"'"9cl to eDoM -F• .,_.9llCll Tl'Ult, 1tO ,__ undlr IN lctitioul ~ Or8ft99 Coaat ~ MrN or ,.._ ~CA tclOll lr.....,~1> wiltlln tllr• 11, 1•. II wllldl tllc'I ~ .-.., I, -..,,,_ 911rtgM10 retecl W'lf lltd lrl Or8ft99 Couftty on N9wport Clllllr DrM, .,..._ ..,._ -or MIMI Deir,... Oeolntber 15, 22, ....., ~on Uoutmblr •. "'9ftlllllCILlodlllecur· ye1rt ltet "'1. to ,_ • ... be openld Incl~ ~-or 11 llldl.. J1nuery I . 1H3 FILE port IMdl. CIM .._, llled ~on 1113 21. ,_, .-..y 5, 1tll 1111 r,_,,...,..T•Nur:IMr. 11-. IO ltMttet-Ct).-lnd,..,lloudlrllNCoun-I'/ 911 order el._ City NOF2CM313 Thia buliftlee It COft-~Alttl.Vtoe,,..._ Th-172 LMYyT ........ Trutlle ..... lddrW. Ind (W "ftOftl", to ...... ) di a.nblr'I lor IN Meift PmJC llmC( CourlCll GI .. Qty ol Huftl· J.-A a.-e, 21133 ducted 111'1' I ...... pert-dtrtt P Codi .......... al aw Heme 8ftCI eddr... of ltreet PertUftg ltructure lrlllOft ...... Celitornll .. OcMft Vitti Of.. Soulll nettftlp Tllll .... ,,,...,. -Ned l'mJC m11C( Tllll tt.et-tt -Mid .......... -.: IPOONI lier-holder· SERVICE S-lftd w ... Melftt .... 1WldlrGIDlolrnOef. 1111. Lagyna, c.t. t21n Tiie , .. 1 .. rant com-w1111 ._ c-ty C11rt1 of Of., with thl County Cllrtl of Of-RllTAUMNTI, INC .. I UCAOW COMPANY. 3415 ~ lri thl City of WI--Celllill .......... C8lr Oren E. ar.lend. 1131 lftlflCed to 1r1rW1 ..,._ 8ft99 Count'/ on Dwc1 nb• ..._ 8'199 c-ty Ori 0.1mber ~-_,...,., .. 10 El W. Elolltll SI .. Lot Antelw. ~ a..dl. Notictlt...,gheritMI Cllfll 11 .. C8lr II ...... Pelcock Lw. Fullerton, nete uridlr l"9 tlc:tltlout I, tlll I HCJPIOUe-M 2. , ... CllftlftO ...... hlll 201, Lot CA tcroo5 A -of plane, apedfi-M111C1 ll6dt .. M .....,... ...... ..... Calf. 12133 ...... MrM Of na1N9 ,_, .,._ SYA~ ,_ Mtoa. CA tilOl2 Deeed: December I. 1181 c:ldonl. Incl othlr contract by tN Qty If HufttlftllGll -.... ..,... (FM) Thia llutil'9ll w .. con-lltlecl abo.e on October 5, ~ Or8ft99 Cwt• TM 9alowiftO Pl'eont II'• ~ °""91 Cwt Titet aw PlrlOftll prop-HI RI HI L' I DI LI C10CU1nei* may be oblaifted 111ct1 .. ttle ofb of .. -...., ducted by a O-Wtl per1ner-1111 D11r Plot o.c.Mlf 15. 22. • clOlr'8 ....,._ •: Diiiy Plot December I . 16, ""'IO be 11• ... rod II• WIRY, INC. onDlolrnOef21, 1llla11N City Catrll 11 Qty Hiii. 2000 fllubllttlld °'8'199 Coaat tf11p 1ruc1 E Non 21. 1 ... .-..,Y 5, 1MI M.lH.H. PAOPERTIES. t 22, 21, 1111 _..... lri ..,.... • """ IP 0 ON I It I I -Oepertmer11 of Publlc Mitri Street. Huntlftgton Diiiy Plot o.c.Mer 22. 21. Tllll .,........,. -Ned Thia .....,_.., -filed Tll·t• Clllorftil oenert1 oenner-T-...155 ............... IMl'CflM. TAURMTl, INC. Worllt, 2000 M• Str•t llldl. c.111orN. until IN 1.. wltfl IN c-ty Cler'k of Or-1----------~---------t---------+---------dlH, equipment, (or) Publlttled °'8'199 Coaat Hwlllfttton INch. Call-llOurof2:00p."'.on.-.-Y Tfl..111 .,. c-ty on Otcember "8JC ll)TIC( PmlJC ll)TIC( PmlJC llJTIC[ PmlJC llJT1C( IWnllure. Inna lftd equip-Diiiy Ptlol o.c.rnw 2t, lornle. upon rece1p1 of e 3, 1 ... 11 wt11c1t 1tme ttiey 1. 1111 ----------- ,,..._ ...... ·1111ho6d • 11U non-refundeble fH of• be openld Ind pullldy fmJC llJTIC[ ~ °'8'199 Coet1 jllO'ArGlei ... GI I ....,._ Tll-111 110.00. and reod tloud In "'9 Coun· Delly Pilot Oecernber 15. 22. ~ • HIRIHEL'8 DELI &ch bid INll be lftade on Ci1 CMmOer9 lor the •· 21. 1NI, J-.ry 5. 1111 ' IAKIRV. INC. Ind 11 ftaJC llJT1C( IN Propotll Form and In 1reordinary "'llft•enence Tll-174 IOcllod et: • '° 1 CM1PU1 _ the merw. provided 1n t11e and ,..,..,_of trl&Mc ...,_. OrM, IMM, CA tog9thef ITATW Oii contract-doculllentt, and A 11t of plll'9, apeclfi-Ill 1111118 _.. "8JC llJT1C( ,..... tN ~ dWribed MAllDDfZWNT Of INll be accompenled bye C8tiont.. and qctw contract The lollowlftO pertona e I co II o 11 c be w I r e O e UM Oii PICTITIOU8 certified or c.tflllf't check documerltt ""'I be obt8lriecl 111We ebaftdoftld° the -of ACTITIOUe WM On SIM Bier & WM MAim fW I bid bond tor ftOC ... on Decen*9I 20. 1111 .. me tha Flctlllout ButlneH um ITATW Pllce, LictnM TM following pertont tllen 10% ol thl MIOUftl of D1per1"'1nl of Publlc Name: WOOLF PAK ENGi.:' The lolloWiftO S--are No l'IOW ...... llewe ebandoned the UM ol me bid. lftade peyeble 10 Ille Wortlt. 2000 Main StrMI. NEERING. 2005 W. Balboe doing bu9lrietl .. ; lor llld premltH. for Ille Flctltloua ButinHt City of Hufttlftgtoft Beach. HuntlnglOft leach, Cell-BNd. Ste. 217. Newport MURAD INSURANCE pr....._ IOcated .. (tame NM!e: MURAD & MURAD Labor Code ol ttll State of fomle, upon receipt of e lelcll. c.itf. 12913 SERVICES. 27115 FOfbel tddr... INSURANCE SERVICES, CllMorrlle and OCller lewt of non-refundeble lee ol The F1ctitlout 8us1nett Rold. 841118 101. Laguna ' Thal thl tot.i c:ontlder· 2006 W. Balboe BIYd. Ste. l1'e S.-of Cellfomla eppli-115.00. Hime~ 10 aboYe •• Nlguel, Callf.12177 Mloft for thl ,,.-., of Mid 211. Newt>or1 Beac:ti, Clelf. ~ --..o. with the •-&di bid"""'" mecte on fled In 0r-. County on ~ M. Mured. 251'7 lvtlneH end ot Hid t2te3 caption Oftl'/ of WCfl wert-IN Propoul Form and In Nowe"'ber. 11117 l'ILE lleecoe,MlulonVlejo,Callf. llelftMC•) 11 .. """ °' The Acttt'-• au*-a1tona 1t1et may i.e ~ IM "*"* prowldld 1r1 me NO '35CM65 nee 1 1210.11•.21 Including In-Heme r.-rect 10 ..,_ w• under thl apedel ttatutet contract document•. and s1-s. Muted. 2..a12 v.. Tlllt bullneU 11 con- YifttorY •lmltect et I wNctt fltd In °'8'199 County on P""'*" to wtlldl proceed-INll be 9CCOrrlC*_, by e Flor.-. Mitllorl Viejo. c.itt. ducted • en lndMdutl oonlllla of .. tolowlng: Oclober 7, I H 7 l'I LE Inga ,_..,., "' taken certified or cetflier'• dl9dl t2't1 Tiie r9911t ran1 co"'" .. .. • CASH: (NINI NO.F357511 and wtlldl ll9We ftOC ..._, or e bid bond for ftOC ._. Brien Aoclel. t50 Flrat St .. ~ lo ltanuct bull- MIJC ll)TIC( PmUC ll)TIC( llOTICE OF STUDT SESSIOI GENERAL PLAN AMENDMENT NO. 87-4 ENVIRONMENTAL Il'IPACT REPORT NO. 87-5 (Ascon Property Site) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Huntington Beach Planning Commission will hold a Study ession in Room B=ll a the Huntington Beach civic Center, 2000 Main Street, Huntington Be~ch, California, on the date and at the time indicated below to discuss the application described below. DATE/TIME: Wednesday, January 4, 1989, 5:30 PM ~ APPLICATION NUMBER: General Plan Amendment No. 87-4/Environment al Impact Report No. 87-5 APPLICANT: Ascon Properties .· LOCATION: A 40 acre parcel located on the southwest corner of Hamilton Avenue and Magnolia Street. · 1 ' • 1 I \ • I ~ I ( ,_ l ~: REQUEST: ON FILE: LUD-O-CZ-FP2 (Limited Use District within an Oil District within the Coastal "zone within a Floodplain) To discuss the proposed amendment to the Land Use Element of the General Plan to allow up to 6.4 acres of General Commercial and up to 33.6 acres of High Density Residential to permit up to 900 dwell ing units . A copy of the proposed request is on file in the Department of Community Development, 2000 Main Street, Huntington Beach, California 92648, .for i nspection by the public. A copy of the staff report will be available to interested parties at City Hall or the Main City Library (7111 Talbert Avenue,) after December 30, 1988. ALL INTERESTED PERSONS are invited to attend said study session, however this is not a public hearing and public testimony will not be accept ed. -If t he-r-e -a r e-any -0£-Yle-F-quea ti ona p.1-e-a.se call Hal. Sinuno~s/Senior Planner or Ruth Lambert/Assistant Planner, at 536-5271. Mike Adams Huntington Beach Planning Conunission (1784d-7) II I ...,, ·c. ·r r e. Ml-A-0 Ml-A ·O c ' f • MH·CZ ... .... .,,,,, ...... •1-c:--:·:.i olf'~~ r..:r ff t\. i -• \ M2·0 - M2-0 I ORA~GE COUNTY, CJ.LlFORNIA NOTICt TO CONTiv.CTOP.S Seal ed proposals fro• contractor~ li~ensed in accordance vi th Section A ~ubsection 17, Proposal Requi re•ents and Conditions ~111 be received a t t he Off ice of the Clerk o f the Board of Su11trvisors, Room ~6~ , Hall of Ad•ini s tra t1on, of the County o! Or•nce. Sant a Ana, Cali forni a. on or before Vednesdav, the 18th day of Januarv, 1989 a t 2:00 P .~. o'clock, at vhich time they "·ill be pubhtly opened and uaifln Room 169. first rloor, Hall of Ad•in!stra tion, 10 Civic Center Pla:a, Santa Ana, Ca!1fornia, for the follovinc pToject to be administered by the Orange County Environaental ~1nace=ent hiency: COl\STRUCTION OF SOlmlPARJt PUMP STATION PB.ASE I -DISCBAJtc;[ ~CE KAIN -(Facility No. E01PS2) fro• -SANI'A ANA JUVD TO SOUTIJP.&U PUMP STATION(F\TI'UU) SCH::DUU: Oi VQU !TU!S I t•• Istiu ted Unit of lt•• I te• Price TOTAL No . Ouanti tl 1 l 2 1 3 l " 4-1500 5 21000 6 n100 7 L980 8 l 9 l (SJ Spec1alty lte (D) Deletable ltec (f) Final Ouant!:y 1'1etsure L.. s. 1'1obilhat Son L.S. Shor in' l.. s. Clu rin' anc! Grubbin' C .. Y. Trench txcavation C.Y. Trench Back!ill C.Y. Sedd1n& L.f . 72 Inch Re 1nforced Conc:ett Pressure Pipe -Prestress~ L.S. Corros1on Monito:•n• Systu !.. s. Devau::n, Cin fi~res 2 (in ~i1ures2 s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s Reduced construction plans, s pecial provision~ and other contrac t docu ents are availabl e for exac1nation v1thou: char,e or .ay be secured upon pey.ent. i.nclucHn' ...su.:e sales tax, o!: S 7.80 i f picked up in person S 10.00 if requested by sail f'1ans 2nd spec!!ications requested by ~ail are !tnt via U.P.S., so pl ease include the street acdress to vhich these documents ~ay be delivered. , A comple t e set of full si;e construction plans vill be available !or exaa1na:1on vithout char&• or may be secured upon P'Y•ent, includ1n1 sales ta~. of the .. ount shovn in the proper coluan in the table listed belo~. No . or Sneeis -· 1-5 6-!0 11-":"5 16-20 21-2~ 26-30 Cost oer set s 3. 70 7 .1.0 11.10 l ... ac 18.50 i:.20 l•o. o! Sbe_e ts 31-3~ 36-LO 41--~ 46-50 51-~! 56-60 Cost 2er set m .60 D.30 37.00 lt0.70 "'. 40 Add S2.00 t o 2rice shovn if elans are reouested bv ir.a!l. tttA Stand ard Plans and Special Provis ions (current !ssue) are also pa:t of this contract. Copies of the standard plans vith special pro~i sions are also available a: DU (Room 215) for an additional chtr&e. lncludini state sales tax. Pr1ces belov are for the bound version. s::.50 if p1cked up ln person s1:. 5 i! requested by ~i: A:l checks snall be aide Jl&yabl e to: tnviron•ental ~ana,e•ent AJency P. o. sda ~o-s (•ail!n' address) LOO Civic Center Dr1ve Vest. (s:reet address) Santa Ana, Cal1fornia 92702-£048 Orde:s vh!ch a re not prope:ly add:essed o: payab:e art subje ct to delay. The O!A shal: not accept ruponsibl!lty for tba: de:ay. 7he::-e ~:!! be no re!und !er retu:n o! p:ans and spec~al prov~s:ons. end return lS net req~i:ed . !i dder~ v 1st?\ni to ob•a1r. a !1st o! plan holders shall notify tKA.Publ1c Vorks at the address sho~n abcve, b} a11 and shall 2nclude • check payab.e to £KA/Public Vor ks in the e•ount to cover copy>ni costs o! the list o! ~lan h ld • The cop>~n' costs ••> be dtter,1ned by contactin, tht D\A b) telephone 1 ~ ( ;i:) 63l.-)L59'. Due to th• co•pltxi ty o! tM' s proJec ts and the typ1 cally lar,e nul!lber of b>dde::-s encouniertd on each proJect. the D'.A v1ll •ake no atttmpt to read a list of plan holders lo prospectivt biddtrs over the telephon,. !idders requestini 11sts of plan ho!ders are adv1sed tha t the ~i sl qll be curant &s of t~e dau of request and t .. at 11-t request sho\lld be ll"'td as to allov for nor•al ail service. The bidder's a ttention ts directed to the provisions in Section 4. •Proposal ~.qu1re•ents an~ Cone t:ons,• re1ard1n1 the requ1re ents and condlllons ~hich he aust observe 2n 1he prep.ra t1oh of the proposal for• and the 1ubaiss1on of the b1d. Ovestions on int erpretation~f the Plans and Special Provi11on1 pri er to the date schedul ed tor b1d openin& shill be addr.saed to Pa11el a Jones {134-27'!) Proj ec t tr\li n .. r, or to Tr1nci1co Al onso (634-2605), Project tn(i neer'a tn1ineer1r\I Supervisor. for ~i d results contact ~1chard Closson, Cons truction Oivi1So11 at (714)567-7110. Oveati ona concernin' purchase of Plans and Spec1 1l Proviaiona shoul• i.e eddr••••d to th• cashier. t.•..i.. c·:•) 63•-34~!- l y order of the toe:• o! Supe:vi1o:s o! th• Oreftl• County, CAlS!ornia . o.ce1 Dec.-ber lS. 1988 PUILISK1 • \ \ .. The Legal Department at the Daily Pilot is pleaMO to an- nounc.e a new service now avail- able to new busmesMS We will now SEARCH the name ror you at no extra charge and sa;1e you the time and the tr1p to lhe Court House 1n Santa Ana Then or course. after the Sf:ar<.n 11 compl•ted we Wiii tile your l1c.1111ov' business name Statement with the County Clerk publish once a week tor tour weelr' cs' requ1red by law and !Mn Ille 1our proof ol publl- ca11on w11n tne County Clerk '· . , ! ; .. _. /a.: "'<16 ,f"' • ~_: •I ;~·~·-·Dail •n .. eCHEVROLET g'g--Home of the Serengeti Blazer •1:tj%Hnw Call our lrient'.lty <j;jle<.men to, details 579-51 00 1-800-228-7240 t 7071 E Imperial Hwy' -Yorba Linda. Cahforn1;, THE BEST BUYS IN ORANGE COUNTY ARE ON THIS PAGE CALL ONEr NOW! o SADDLEBACK· Safes ~ Service Leasing ~ Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-aoo-a31.33n 114-380-1200 G CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa Over 23 Years Serving Orange County -£11fii > Sales • Service ,.... Leasing -.111<;2~.,..., • .._ ~a:i;-111 0-4J=~ 546-1200 Special Parts Line 546-9400 AC.UAA 1001 Guel ••• .... ,.,. ..... ...... leeeinO ..,._.Peat .. ... .,..,....,. 2983 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa. CA Ml-1111 SANTA ANA AUTO MALL 1500 Auto Mall Dr., Senta AM 135-3171 Newport/55 Frwy. at Edinger Sates Dept open 7 daya s.rvlce Houra Mon,·Fri 7am-10pm BUENA PARK STMnor~ r,A1t1J 11 r,nr111r PACIFIC OCEAN -I e..e.11tu. "~ COUN'TY'I au.T L.UOIA OF THI IMPOfltTI" tJ!~IL~~lu1! ' CO--IALIH • OLDSMOltLE • CADILLAC • GMC TRUCKS • NO~$ 0 @ •NO HASSEll NEWPORT ·~;~;-ALLEN . -~~~-. 546-0220 . SA N DIEGO FWV • AVERY EXIT 11'/582-0800 . ., .. ., 0 LAGUNA NIGUEL lftlrtiM II 11111 Piii . C1ll fir htlil1 842-4321 CALL ONE OF THESE DEALERSFORTHEBESTBUY 0 HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc. Mercedes-Benz · 6862 Manchester Boulevard Buena Park HllYl" . Cl.) ' :ns or 7;4~RCED£8, M·F' 7a·6p M·Y 8a·6p Whe~ 1-5 and 1·9lmcct. S.t. 8a-2p • Superior ~ ~o~~~:~~.r' ~ 7600 Westminster Blvd., Westminster (714)891-9378 (213)430-2843 8 Go.~ Orange Coast G,._o.~$ Jeep Eagle • -\:;).. ~ s.u.~oa • Sain } Ow # 1 IWorltr • Serrice Ml I023 • Leulac 1114 Harbor Blvd. • Coata Me•• 9 t 1: CAMPBELL . NISSAN/~~ ff.A04 •low Pt•<•• • No G1mm1c"' • Gteot Selection • Friendly p,.ople • f,cellent Senm~ 1183SIN<h~d (714) 142-7711 (211) ,.,_,.., •&EACH LINCOLN •RCURY •MUR SALES -LEASING SERVICE -PARTS (71 •> 848-7739 * lUOO IMch 11Yd. (71 •> 556-1008 Huliaqtoa IMch, CA nt47 • • • "l HONDA DSM.Sa IR OllAROS CO • - 0 s THURSOAV. oeCeu~ER 29. ,;.(ii JOYCE llllJVICll Newport firm's float salutes the arts earns natlonal kudos Congratulations to Orange Coast CoUege associate professor of dietettc technology. EleaMr Haq. She has been honored for outstanding service by the Am eri- can Dietetic Association. Huang was recognized for sev- eral years of voluntary service to the association. She helped de- velop the organization's national dietetic technician registration exam. • • • Fountain Valley has two new Pacific Mutual'• Roae Parade Ooat celebratea the performtnc ana with a ecene from tbe opera. ··Alda." '11ke Yr11er \~nds 1n &on1 of the mirror and pracucn a "lllC't> o techniques for ~-., 1na ao the cro~. No .. some ma) ttunk 11"saJOkc. bu& .. hen")ou're selected from JOO~ 10 ndc a Ooat 1n the lOOth Tour- nameAt of Ros.cs Parack on Jan :? it's 1mponant to practitt \ etter 30. of Onnat v.·111 s~nd atop \;ev.pon Bt'ach's PK1fic Mutual ufe Insurance Compan~ 's entf) that 1s decorated to ~mblt one of h1sto11 's gr"'Jtest hahan gra nd o~ras. ·· "1da ·· The cntl) 1s inspired b} t~r theme. "( elcbraunJ the Perform ins Ans -A Parade \\ 1th1n a Parade." Ycner said t\Cf)Onc has aonc out ofthtir -.a) to &J'e him nps. .. Some of the IU)S ha,·c been ru.zmg me and g1' mg me pointers on the It.ands of wa"es I should do.- 't etter said '\\hat l''t bttn told is th~re·s three popularwa\.CS We ha"c 'Stoking the \\atcrmelon Wa"e · '\\ashm~ the \\indo""s wa,e: and Queen \ 1ctonas's ·ScreW1nl the Lia.ht Bulb \\ a\e.· ~ As Y cttcr tncd to conceal • vi n. he JOked and said he -.as selected for his "antcllt<t and good looks:· Actually, 11 stancd wnh Pacific Mutual and HS fam1I) of subsadanes. Pacific Financial Companies The compan) held a contest for all its cmplo)~. • (Pleue ._ n.c>AT/82) police officers. Dulel Llorens ud Mlclaael Simko have just graduated from Golden West College's Police Acad~my. Both men arc top graduates. Llorens served as class president, and Simko class treasurer . • • • • G ood news for Christmasshop- pers who can't stand malls. The Orange County Swap Meet will be open until Dec. 24 from 7 a.m. to 4p.m.everyday. More than 1.200 vendors are expected to showcase their wares. Santa Claus will also make visits throughout the week. For more information. call Work on Lf:1guna 's summ~r art festivals goes on all year 642-4783. ; • • • RepresentativcsofHuntingtqn Beach and Fountain Valley re- ce ntly attended the annual Con- ference of Literacy Volunteers of America Inc. in New Mexico. They are Alli1oa Bryan, president of Literacy Volunteers of Amen- can-Huntmgton Valley; Linda Llgbt, literacy dircctor of Hunt- ington Beach Library Adult Liter- acy Program; and Ro1erComl Hd Mary Elle• Clcc.,em, mem- bers of the Huntington Valley • program. By JOE BEL BRUNO Of_.,..,,......., For officials of Laguna Bcach·s annual P-ageant ofthf Mastc-rs. prep- aration for the summer ~rformances rcall) stan in the middle of the Y..1nter Organizers of the pageant• and the Festival of the Am arc al read) in high gear as the) eager!) prepare for the 1989 season. which starts an Ju~ Though the sho"'s share a brief run l 1s reall) a )earlonj a1Ta1r for th se 1n Ol\.Cd Y.1th raising funds. de an· mg costumes and sets and ere ting an "h 1s constant planning fi ne't ~ear's pageant." said Glen Ey h1son. who 1s in tus I I th )car as irector. ··W11ca looluna for an1su ptccrs. there 1s reall)' nc,er a u c to catch )our breath It 1s a full-1mc JOb 1n e\CI') sense of the word. E' tch1son. a Ne"' po dent. staned prcpanng for the neu pageant nght after the last one closed 1n August 8~ re' 1e"' 1ng paintings. scul ptures and other an .. orks a select ft\\ arc chosen to be born oTI the stage .. When loolong for a pan1rular piece to include in the pageant. I ha'c to be aware. of the audtencc's needs," he said. "People ltke to sec an1sts v.ho they arc fam1har \\Ith Sometimes. It 1s hard to be able to product those .. \\1th the an1o1.orks alread) chooscn E)-ichason and other organiLers v.111 now be s~nd1n& the next month conducung a large-scale casuna c.all. More than ~ performers "'111 be needed. . The Sa-.dust Fcsu' al. no .. in 11s 1W ,.r. as also 1 )'Cirioni effort. ~tread) this )'car. officials ha'c been wmtllng .. 1th cit~ spcc1fic1uons tO build a n~ S·H0.000 fa<'adc and office bu1ld1ng. ' . ' Pc.maps out of au t.holc tn'-olvcd Y.1th the pqcan1 and fcstf'aJ, tt 1s the anJSts v.ho really wort year-round for the C\.Cnt For Josh Conna. a 32-year old La:&u na Beach rcsadent"tnd an1tl. this )car's fcst1val bas been Iona ant1c1patcd. "This w1ll be my first )e&r pan1c1- pating in the festival," said Conna. -1 havc~I been puihin1 myself to create uvc and quality ptetts. 8u}1 know •hen th1np arc rush . Co .,.ho has been suppon1n1 h1msc as a ""·a1tcr. bchc'cs that he and other artists "'ill ha'e a &ood )car Pamuna pan -time. he has turned out 20 paintings he cJtpccts to sell "1 ba"c heard so man~ &ood things about the fnmals." he said. "I JUSt ho_pr t~1r. as "'ell as the an1 ts hard efforts pa~ olTb~ 1hc time the um mer 1s ov~r" More than I .OOOdelegates from throughout th e United States attended the three-day co nference that featured workshops for pro- fessionals and volunteer teachers. tutors and admmstrators. Also in attendance were literacy students. adults and teens learn mg to read or speak conversational English through the literacy programs. Dan toe e integral to instructor Fo1o1nded in 1962, Literacy Vol- unteers has grown from one chapter in New York to a national orpnization wit:1 affiliates in 3S SJates...Ioday. more than 30,000 adults and teens are tutored in basicliteracy or English as a second language by volunteers. sure balance in her life If you are interested in becom- ing a volunteer, call 841 -3773 for added information. A workshop isbeingoffercdmJanuary. Upon completion of the training. the volu nteer wall be matched with an adult learner to work one-on-one fora minimum of two hours each week. • • • Students from Orange Coast College havc.be~n named to the national community college honor society, Alpha Gamma Sigma. Tt.omasCroftofHunt- ington Beach earned permanent membership in the society for four successive honor semesters. Second semester students who received temporary membership: From Costa Mesa: KJm Binder. SaDdra C1rboal, Daalel Earle, (Pleaee ... STUDSNTS/82) By JOYCE ODLOVICH Ot1"9o..ly ..... Ballwbakle-wW.be..aa ban.cl.lo mJn&l~wlth _Lu~ and help tbem rtna la 1989 at a eober celebration. '\ Gloria soundless mirrored studio wuh a dancer's ga11 n a mcdlt) of mu!>1cal unds from thc1azz.1ap and ballet las~s would rc\.erbcra1e throug the hall s Ring in the new fear at sober celebration Thq gh the: s1ud1os ~namc~kc. J1mm1 Defore. has been dead fo r ncarl) '"'o )ear'>. his "'1do"' said the danc 's elt>ctm. pr~~n e sull hngers 1ns1d the do' e gra~ ·shaded ( O'ita Mc building Herc is a novel idea: Rrng in the New Year wnh Bullwinkle at ~our side. Bullwinkle's Re taurant 1n Foun- tain Valley 1s hosting an alcohol-free New Year's E"e bash from 9 pm unul 12:30 a.m. Joy Williams. the restaurant's gen - eral manager, said the evening was planned rn coo~ra11on with Mother' Against Drunk Om 1ng. She said 1t was a way of ensuring that people have a safe New Year"s Eve. "We do a lot with local schooh.'' she said. ··Last Hallo-.cen "'e had u haunted house and c"ef)one had a good time. With the push to ha\.C J \ale New Year's be. "'e thought "'c .. 1mm1e "'a!. an cnthus1asuc and could do somc1h1ng alcohol-ln-c C\I: ting tcad1cr." \he ~1d. "E'e~- here:· on lo"cd to bi.• 1n his classes:· ..\ ponion of monc' rcce1,cd from Fore. a Broad"3) danetr for :20 ticket sale "''II he donated 10 ' ars. d1et1 at age 61 after losing a M DD. Wilham\ o;a1d ttk against pancreatic cancer Tickets are $6 50 lor adults. S 5 tor "He had more: gut than an)'one children 5 )Cars through I~. and lrcc l'\e C\er ~'l.'n ·· \trs Def ore said for children 4 and unda T11.:l e1s w1l ··\.\e nc,cr dis ussed his dca\_h. onh Gloria Def'ore be a'a1lablc at th e door h1sgctt1ng "ell Ht.' taught uprt1)~u 't The restau rant "'II do~ do"'n o ... ~O\Cmber He died in Janua . uch Broad"'a) \hO"WS as "GuH and thc public at 8 pm and those 11h Born in ~ansa . De Fore launche Dolls,' .. '( opa,' .. 'PalJoc~" and ·The ticket'> "'II be all'l"l'd in a1 Q pm .\t his career dan 1ng on the streca PaJam.1 Game" · the most 400 11(1>.t.'t~ "ill be wld \he comers ol ..._ansa C 1t) -.1 th Count Tired of tounntt. Defore o~ncd said Basic. He perlormcd v.1th Jack Cole the studio 1n ~ansas. The cold "We want a nice s1Lccro-.d to male Danct Co as a Jazz dancer He 1.1.1n1crs finalh prompted has mo\l' to (PleaM eee SOBER/Bl) appeared as the pnnc1pal dancer in the "'armth 01 Orange Count>. and in 1976 he o~ned a studio 1n e .. pon } Beach. ..I met him when I took a clus:· Mrs. Defore. a former profcss1onal dancer. said ... \\c didn't bu 1t off. I thought he wa arrogant. he thouaht I was conceited \\hen we aot to kno"" each olhcr "'e changed our minds.\\ c Y..ere married in 1979. It "'as a fabulous relationship .. \.1rs. Defore said the can er 1n- ' aded her husband's bod}. but not ht pint In 19 6. the} loolcd to the future b) mo' 1n1 from the c"'pon Beach 1ud10 to the 9.000-squarc-foot Co ta \.1csa 1te .. ..\t first "'c did all the 1cachin1." he said "\\.c probahl} taught 201azz and tap dassc~ ca1:h .. eek. We did ha'e a tiallet tcathcr I had minor bad. surge~ 1n I~ and that slowc-d me down "I mamh do admin1strall\.C worl now but I Jo tea h about the ap and 1an classes a w~k .. \1rs Defore ..aid after her hus· band's tleath. tht s1ud10 ~amc a cathar 1 lordcahng \\Ith her grief .. L nlllc man) widow m) '4hole hie didn't chanac ··'he said "Dan'c Pleue eee DAl'fCS/82) Cruise· boats available for viewing gray whale migration . CruiK boats for viewing the gray whale migration a~ well as dolph1n1. sea hons and marine birds are available at Newport Landina. Depenum will be at 10 a.m. and I p.m. Monda> throuah Friday; 9 a.m .• noon and 2:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Pnccs att SI O. adults, S6 for Jun1on and tcnaon. The 1en1or rate docs not apply on wec~nds or hohdays. For m<>tt 1nfonn11ion can 67S-OHO. Foca• on e.tln6 dl.arden A frtt support aroup. ANAD. for ptopk conet1T1cd wuh 1norcx1a ner~OM or buhmia 11 offcttd from 6.30 to 8 p.m. on Thursdl}s at the Ca~strano by the ~a Ho\p11al in the Dolphin Houtt L1vi'.'I Room. The aroup as ltd by Elhn Bmtkr. M .. W .. and Jan Orea.or,, M.S.W. For informauon. call Bressler at 4~J-t r4 otGtt1ory. 497-307'. • StoJ7dme •t Newport library Plachool ~ume wtU bl lwld at tht Newport Belctl "'bllC Library u pan o( lb P9ftltciP1tton an The Var°''"' Youna Reldrr. 1 nauon•i* campa1p by tht Llbrlry o(C~ to.,.._ ,lw JO,a and 1mponanc.-t ofbookuRCI rachns fOr you1t11wn.·· • nt Nt"wport library ·wtH pmn1· the 9n11ont throuah Januar) and t-ebrual"\ on "cekdavs Hour~ are Balboa branch. 10 lO am on Tul"\dJ" Corona dcl Mar branch. I 0 a rn on Tuc\da\\. \.t;lt1ner' branch, 11 a.m on Monda~~ and Tu~a~s and lhl' N~pon Center branch. 10 30 am and I 30 fj m. lsn WtdnndatL Scorytunt 1 frtt and p.1rcnt' arc uicd 10 cnmll children at their local bran<'h. f hc f cb • t ~''ion :u Corona del Mar •111 be signed b~ V1ci..1 Katlin for thl' htanna impa1rtd i\dd1t10"11I information l'\la) ht· obtained by calhna Jud)' Kdk) at 644-l I 86 Coune tor piano teachen A thrtt·un1t courS(. "lcachina the Piano " "''II Ix ofTcttd at Gokkn We t < olk&C' an the \pnna ~·mc'iter Students -.111 karn through lc"turc~. dtS<U'i\IOn"I. rtadansa. rntal'('h demonstration nnd ob~n 1.•d t\'Jl h1n1 The courw it intended for tca1.hl·r~. Of an) one "'ho pla\\ tlK' peano. l19t clan wall be tauaha h) l>r. \llen Cul"' f1 1m IO 1.m. unlll I pm on Fn<b)' \lart1n1 Jan. I \ Student\ Uftlal'C 1f the)' mttt the prcrtq u1 ,1te\ for the (''-" tr(' ach·lted tn mroll ln)'-a) •nd •tll·nd the lim da) of clu.\ to ~"ICW count rcquu~ment\ . .... ration 11 unckr •a). f unhcr 1nforma11on ma~ bt 9ed by calline 19S·U06 ... College patron• to meet Golden \\c~t (ollcac's nc-. prM1dcn1 Jud11h \ .lHt:" 1.1.111 addrtts the C..,\\ ' Patrons on f-nda' Jan I' at :a luncheon 1n ahc ~ollcgc's communll) enter The \.Olunt«r \upp<>n 1roup -.111 hear ho"' th"' uln help 1he rolleac pre 1Jcnt. -ho was al>f'\"n1cd 1n \ugu<,1 to ach1c'e campu) aoal 1n the neat decade The lunchcon w1llbc hcld11 I l:"S..ndw1ll co'i1Sti '0 rx-1 person Re)Cf\ auon' can be made ~' <'ailing fathennc Sia) maker at 91-3~9 Jewish issues explored .. Jl'" l\h '''II ., on th~ l Onl\'nlJ~1t.t1\ , "' •• w1'1 l'I\.' th\ h,0011.· ,1\.l'h'''' nl R.1bh1 tkrman "-I •• th\ an .11 111 \ lhlll\ dlllll\'l \J"(Hl\Clh."tl h\ th,· k\\ l\h ( lllllllllllltl\ c ,·nt1:1 111 ~1uth < )1,1n11.: < llllnt~ on J.il) I~ in I .1g1111.1 Ht·J~ h 'ha.1lin,1n " h11m,1 Jlf\'\11.t n1 ot th\ 1 ,·nti.il < 11n1,·r1. nn• ol \111,·11,.in R;ihhl\ r he Jl Ill lflnO\'I Y.111 lt.1d , \Ill th\' lfi!Up·, ~HllllJ;il hol,11 1n Rl,l\l\n\\ flh'lram 1ha1 ,,11rnm1 , ah, h1llo" an liJ~ "'1th ii ~lf.'I bt,·;a~t;a,t :in,1 ••111up dt\l.U\\1011\ 1111 \11'.h \UIT(nl (\\'nl\ :\\th,· f\'H'l1t ftl.1d:· ,Jc""" ,on1r,1nt:at11111' 1n < hu,,.111 R1.-g1'.tr ntmn ioduJ,., m,•nh -:lnJ a~· 'll'll\111.11. '"''' ' f • , ,. . • 1 • N 0Nnge C... DAILY PILOT I Thurtday, December 21, 1911 Newport day-care facility caters to the mildly ill 8J lin IOVCllER ............. 1t•s Monday mornina. Sue Dunham of Irvine is rushina around tetti111 rady for won when she notices her 3-year-old son is listless and not himself. After a temperature check she realizes there's no way she can send him to the day-care center he usually attends, and there's no way she can afford to miss another day of work. What does she do? She simply picks up the phone and calls Rainbow Retreat, a day-care SOBER ••• ~·· it fun but not so crowded people can't. aet around and enjoy themselves," she sajd. - Williams said everyone will have a aood time because of the variety of activities planned throughout the evenina.. The ticket includes an all-you-can- cat pizza buffet. l 0 tokens to the game room, fam ily movies and dancing. she said. "We have a 'quiet' room with a fircplact and larie screen TV that will play family movies. l'he dessert and beverage bar will stay open all niaht for purchaSC$." The disc jockey will spin a variety of favorite dance tunes in the main dinina room from I 0 p.m. until closina time. Requests are en- couraged. Hats, noise makers along with sparkling cider will be provided at midnight. Bullwinkle Restaurant is on 1he comer of Magnolia Street and Warner A venue adjacent to the Family Fun Center. For additional foformation call, 841 -6373. facility for the .. mildly ill ... "Wt take children two months to 12 _years old, .. said Dr. Sheri Senter, founder and presadent of the Newport Beach facility. "If children have a cold or the nu we takt them. We ctrtainly wouldn't take them if they had an undiagnosed rash or temperature of 104." Founded in 1982. the National Pediatric Support Services created a child development day-care center called Step by Step, and later de- veloped Rainbow Retreat when foun- der Shari Se~er. 36. realized the demand for m11dl v ill child care. Yea!. Chargers . The day-care p<)nion of the factbty. located an a S«tion of Ea5tbluff Elementary School, beains ac:ttptina "students' u~na as 6 weeks. -we are ·,. child dcvd• ment rather than jull baby-sinina.. .. Senter said. "Babies have a daily routine. just like the older children:· she said. "One activity is 'circle time.' They sit in a circle and sina songs and do interaction." l\nd af\er openina centers in New- port Beach. Huntinaton Beach. Anaheim. Pasadtna and Glendale. she realized the need for Rainbow Retreat. She observed children were sent to day-care facilities when they should have been kept home. ··Hft'C you Stt a sick child an the director's arms all day." Senter said. ''Tht child is out in the middle of thinp because the director is work- ina. except she can't ,1tt anythina done because she's tendana 'o the sick child." , Senter said Rainbow Retreat is a relief to parents because they know their children arc bcina taken care of. "It feels bcner for me because I The Cbaraen, a Hanttncton Beach Pop Warner claeerl•~d, took ant place In a cbeerl comDetttlon at Ban~ Beach W.b l bool. llemben of the IJ'Oap are (•landJ.n&, from left) Saanne Gatee, Diana Zesalka, Katrina Perkin•, Karina ltmoboff, Sommer Pedrosa, Jemdfer Oland and Belinda Con- lon, and -w. 81aanaoa Kennect1, lleU-llarkoftkf and JCNUI& ltmoboff. • Proposition 99 ·passed. Raising taxes on cigarettes 250%. Adding over $600,000,000 in new taxes to what California smokers are already paying. What can you do about it? We p~ pose you try DORAL. It's one of the Top 10 best-~Uing brands in America. And the only one with a low price. Get Top 10 taste and save money, too. That's our proposition. Can you afford to refuse? I Available in all your favorite styles. know he's bcina monitored real well.·· •id Duaham. "It's an imponant op&ion." . So Scnaer opened a Rainbow Re- treat in acb kp by Step location euept Glendale. Auoon au child issick. the parent may call and make an appointment and bri1ll him in. The child is evaluated: and a nurse makes sure the child~ his rest. medicine if Meded and vital Iii!'• checked. Rates are Sl.SO per hour to Step by Step members. and SS an hour for non-memben. And if the child simply has a Nnny note or shaht fever. he's nol bored. .. We have a daily routine just like we do for ~P by Step," Senter said. .. There.I music time. task time - puuln. and quiet time. Every toy is completey disinfec1ed after a child play, with it so no aerms are spread." Althouah this is an answer to the workina-parmts prayers. Senter said they are operatina at a clef.cit. "I'd like people in the community to know this service is available." she said. "You don't have to be a member of Step by Step to receive care." FLOAT SALUTES ARTS ••• l'rom81 ..The contest was a cross between solvi~ a crossword puzzle and word search.-• he said ... There was a block of scr1mbled letters and IS clues were pven. "Oucs like. what is the lo ngest runnina pla_y on Bf'Old~ -which is 'Chorus Line,' I hope. he added. .. And another eumpk, what arc the three B's in classical music? Once you answered all IS, they were submitted and the winner was selected at random." Andy Morrison, public affairs manaaer, said Yetter was dcfinitelf lucky. ••0ut of 4,000 employees there were 300 entries and S6 were win- nen." Morrison said. Out of those 56, Yetter'1 name was drawn. "I reallywasaunningforthesecond prize -tickets for the bleachers," Yetter said. ··1 wound UP, &Cttina those (tickets) for my family. ' This marks the second consecutive year of participation for the 120..year- old mutual life insurance company, located at Newport Center. Tht pqcantry of the triumplw opera is recreated by 23 float ridcn clad in elaborated ancient fayptian costumes -along with Don ffonald, floral director at Festival Artists and of course -Yetter. -By Katy Bollder DANCE INSTRUCTOR ••• Pram81 seems to have always rescued me emotionally. It helped my grief by doing the work of two." She said the studio is both for professional dancers and for amateurs just havina a good time. Children start takina classes at age 3. One particular tap class lists publi- cist Gloria Zianer, county Supervisor Haniett Wieder and Marilyn Nielsen, wife of Irvine Co. vice- c-iu. ~laMCICOco. Chairman Thomas Nielsen, on its roster. "We have a huge coterie of people who dance for pleasure four or five times a week." she said. "Dancers are probably the finest conditioned ath- letes. And with dance you never get bored. We have attorneys, doctors and housewives." For those who yearn to sec their name on a Broadway marquee, the studio offers _a ..non-threatening am- biance, she said. "By professjonal standards. theater is usually a dog-eat-dog atmosphere." she said. "Herc we ~rn, bu.t we also help each other. Most of the dance teachers in the county come here to take classes." The studio currently has 24 teachers. All arc professionals whose resumes list TV. music videos and stage work. "I have a whole stack of resumes." she said. "I never hire anyone before I sec them teach first." The studio is also the scene of • "mister classes" where well-known dancers teach a series of classes. And in March, the New YC1rlt School of American.Ballet will hold its summer auditions. ''I want this to be a place for dancers to do their best work artisti- cally. but at the same time still be themselves." she said. "To me danc- inJ is like flyina on your own without Wlnp. You have good music and you become like the music." STUDENTS ••• Prom82 • SYAGEON GENfAAL'S WARNING: Cigarette Smoke C.ontains Carbon Monoxide . ULTRA LIGHTS ors: 7 mg. ...... 0.6 mg. nicotine, LIGHTS. LIGHTS MENTMOl: fl mg ....... 0.7 .... '*""' UGHTS ors. LIGHTS MENTHOL ors: rz ......... 0.1 mg. .... FW RMJR ors: M ......... 0.9 mg ....... .. RJll RMOR M9ITHOl. Rll R.M>R MEHTHOl llJ's: •"" ...... u me. ,..... RU RMJR: 11 ... w . to .... nan. •. Pl' ......... Flt Ndlod. , s THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1~151 JOE In B1u10 Newport firm's float salutes the arts Young artists create posters Water was on the minds of grade school students around Irvine this month. and it had nothing to do with playing in the rain. ' Mike Ycttn-stands 1n front of the mirror and practices a variety of techniques for wavinc to the crowd. Now some may thank it's~aj9ke. but when you're.selected from 300 people to nde a float an the 1 OOth Tour- nament of Roses Parade on Jan. 2 ifs impon.ant to practice. Yetter. 30, of Oran_JC will stand aiop Newpon Beach's Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company's enuy that as decorated to resemble one of history's greatest Italian grand opera s. ··Aida." Th~ entry is tnspired by their them~ .. Celebraun& the Pcnorm1nc Ans -A Parade Withrn a ParadC.-- Yetter said everyone has sone out of their way to 11ve him tips. .. Some of lhe suys have been razzin_g me and &iving me pointers on the kinds of waves I should do,·· Yetter said. .. What r ve been told is thert·s lhree popular waves. We have 'Stoking the Watermelon Wave.' ·washing the Windows Wave,' and Queen Victorias's 'Screwing the Ligh1 Bulb Wa ve.'.. · The Irvine Ranch Water Dis- trict, in conjunction with the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California sponsored a contest for fourth, fihh and sixth graders to create posters to a theme of .. Water is Life." The winning entries for the Irvine Ranch Water District's contest were tu med over to Metropolitan to be included in its 1989 children's calendar, which can be pie Iced up at the Irvine district'soffice. ra~;;t'/b/"? a, °91,y:/. /N/t~ As Y cttertried to conceal a grin, he Joked and said he was selected for his 'antcllect and good looks.: Actually, It staned wtth Pac1tic Mutual and its family of subsidaries, Pacific Financial Companies. Pacific. llutual'a ROH Puade fioat ~lebrate. the performiDC arta with a .cene from the opera, •• Al&a. '' The company held a contest for all ~-n.oAT/112) Eastshorc Elementary's win- ning entry. submitted bf Micbel CUo,depictsathemeo .. No Water, No Life." Chao is a fifth grader. Meadow Park Elementary stu- dent Sabrbaa Slloti also had a winning entry. The poster depicts a rose, with "Water Brings Life and Beauty" written below it. Siloti isa sixth grader. Both artworbcan be seen in · the Irvine Ranch Water District office, where they wi 11 be on display for the rest of the month. • • •• As you are sitting back an<t watching the Rose Parade, pay· attention to the ·•Herc Comes the Circus" float, sponsored by the Ronald McDonald Houses of America. Riding the float will be South Laguna resident Lisa Page. The I I-year-old will be one of nine children to ride on the float. Most of the children have been in remission of cancer for at least two years. a significant milestone in the fight against the disease. • • • To dose out the holiday season, the Irvine Senior's Center is holding its annual New Year's Eveparty. lnsteadofstayingup until midnight to ring in the new year, guests will start the countdown at 2:59 p.m. The party stansat J p.m. Open to anyone, the New Year's Eve bash will offer a live band and an old-fashioned New Year's Eve countdown. Those who arc interested can call the Center at 733-1055 for infor- mation. • • • UCI has named the school's official historian. Congratula- tions goes to Sam McCallocll, a history professor. McCulloch has been the university's unofficial historian since the early I 960s. On and off for those years, he has been jotting down notes, tape- recordin_J interviews and logjng all significant UCI history. h was not until earlier this month that U Cl Chancellor Jack Pelta1oa made the announcement. McCulloch now intends to round out the story of the univer- sity with additional interviews and fact finding reports. • • • ScottHater,a self-described .. business coach," will be the speak~r at the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce breakfast on Jan. JO. Hunterconducts ~-aPSilSR/82) Balhrtnkle will be on band to mlntle with pe.ta and help them rtq ID 1989 at a Mber celebradon. ; Ring in the new year at sober celebratio·n Herc is a novel idea: Ring in the New Year with Bullwinkle at your side. Bullwinkle's Restaurant in Foun- tain Valley is hosting an alcohol-free New Year's Eve bash from 9 p.m. until 12:30 a.m. Joy Williams. the restaurant's gen- eral manager. said the evening was planned in cooperation with Mothers Apinst Drunk Driving. She said it was a way of ensuring that people have a safe New Year's Eve. "We do a 101 wi1h local schools.'' she said. "Last Halloween we had a haunted house and everyone had a good time. With the push to have a ' safe New Year's Eve. we thought \\C could do something alcohol-free here ... A portion of money received from 1icltet sales will be dona1ed to MAOD. Williams said. Tickets arc $6.50 for adults. SS for children 5 years through 12. and free for children 4 and unde r. Tickets will be available at the door. The restaurant will close down to the public at 8 p.m .. and those with tickets will be allowed tn at 9 p.m. i\t the most 400 tickets will be sold. she said. "Wewanta nice size crowd to make (Pleue eee SOBER/82) Work -begins for . summer[ estivals By JOE BEL BRUNO ot•Dllllr ......... For officials of Laguna Beach·s annual Pageant of the Masters. preparing for the summer per· fonnances really start in the middle of the winter. Organizers of the pageant and the Festival of the Arts are already in hi&h ' ear as they eagerly prepare for tile 989 season. which starts in Jul~. Thou&h the shows share a brief run, 1t is really a yearlong affair for those who embark in fund-raisinJ. set and costume designs•and creating of the art. "It is constant planning for next year's pageant·· said Glen Eytchison. wbo is i1 his 11th year as dircaor. "When looking for artists an4 pieces. there is really never a lime to catch your brealh. It is a full-time JOb in every sense of the word." Eytchison. a Newpon Beach resi- dent. started prcpanng for the next paaeant tiJht after the last one closed in August. By reviewing paintings, sculptures and other art works. a select few arc chosen to be bom on the stage •• "When looking for a particular piece to include in the pageant. I have to be aware of the audience's needs." he.said. "People like to sec artists who they arc f~m1liar with. Sometimes. it is hard to be able to produce those.'' Glen ~ Already with the an works chosen.,. to be acted out, Eytchison and ot'her ~i.ng a yearlong effort rs al5o a organizers will now be spending the fam1har tune to orpnizers of the nut mOJlth conducting a large-scale Sawdust Festival. now in its 23rd c;allin& call. More than 400 per-b:~ Al=. this year. officials have formers arc nccdcd to take pan in ma with city specifi- what officials coined as the "laving cations to build their new $470.000 an.·· (Pleue eee AJtT /112) _Dance integral .to .instructor t0 ensure balance in her life By JOYCE BODLOVICH \ Of .... DellJ,... ..... Gloria Defore walked 1hrough the so undless. mirrored studip wit h a dancer's gait. Soon a medley of musical sounds fro m thcjan. tap and ballet classes would reverberale through lhe halls. Though the s1ud1o·s namesake. Jimmie Defore. has been dead for nearly 1wo years. his widow said the dancer's elec1nc presence still hngers inside the dove gra)·shaded Costa Mesa buildmi-..J1mmie was an enthusiastic and exciti ng teacher ... she said ... Ever)· one loved to be an his classes:· Defore. a Broadwa> dancer for 20 )'Cars. died al age 62 after losing a battle agamsl pancreatic cancer. .. He had more guts than anyone I've ever seen:· Mrs. Defore said. .. We never discussed his death. onl) Gloria DeFore his ge1ung well. Fie taught up through November. He died in January:· Born 1n Kansas. OcForc launched his career dancing on the street comers of Kan sas Ci ty w1th Count Basie. He performed with Jack Cole Dance Co. as a Jazz dancer. He appeared as the pnnc1pal dancer in such Broadway shows as "Guys and Dolls;· "Copa.'' .. Pal Joe)'" and .. The · Pajama Game.·· Tired of touring. Defore opened five studios in Kansas. The cold \\inters finall1 prompled his move to the warmth of Orange County. and 1n 1976 be opened a studio in Newport Beach. ··t met him when I took a class." Mrs. Defore. a former professional dancer. said. ··we didn·t hit 1t off. I 1hought he was arropnt: he thought I was conceited. When we got to kno\\ each other we changed our minds. We were married an 1979. It was a fabu lous relationship.·· - Mrs. Defore said the cancer in- vaded her husband's body. but not his spint. In 1986. they looked to the future by moving from the Newport Beach studio to the 9.000-squarc-foot Costa Mesa s11e. "At first we did all the teaching.'' she said ... We probably taiWtt 20 jazz and tap classes each week. We did ha ve a ballet teacher. I had minor back surgcr)' an 1987 and that slowed me down. ··r mainl) do administrative work now. but I do teach about fi ve tap and Jazz classes a v.eck. •• Mrs. Defore said after her hus- band·s death. the studio became a catharsis for dealing with her grief. ··unlike man) widows. my whole ltfe didn't change:· she sajd. .. Dance seems to ha'~ always rescued me emot1onall). It helped m~ grief by doing the work of two. - She said the studio 1s both for professional dancers and, . for amateurs JUSt having a good umc. Children stan taking classes at age 3. One panicular tap class lists publi- cist Glona Z1gner. county Supervisor Hamett Wieder and Marilyn Nielsen. wife of Irvi ne Co. vice- Chairman Thomas Nielsen. on 1ts Pleue 8ee DAl'fCS/112) ~ruiseboats ·availableforvieWinggrayW:halemigration Cruise boats for viewina the aray whale mi1ration as throuah January and February on v.eck~ys. CoJJefe natron• to meet mu,.I ~ rc.~I\ c."-1 b) J.rn 6. l) I I i 17 50 for nl('lllbcrs ' well as dolphins. sea lions and marine birds are available Hours are Balboa branch. 10:30 a.m. on Tuesdays: r-:ind ~O tor non-m('mbcrs ( ~11 4~7-:~0"10 or 833· IO 17 for at Newport Landina. Corona del Mar branch. 10 a.m. on Tundays: Manners Golden West Collqc's new president Judith Valles n11.>rc.• inlorma11on Depanum win be at 10 a.m. and I p.m. Monday branch. 11 a.m. on Mondays and Tucsda)s: and the wall address lhe GWC Patrons on fnda). Jan. 13 al a y fJ'I. rf bf J throuahfriday;9a.m .• noonand 2:30p.m.Saturdayand Newpon Center branch, 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. on lunchconin1hccolleac·scommun11yctnter. 0 1e ngaero CC••~ Sundly. Prices art S 10. adults; S6 for junion and tcniors. Wednesdays. The volunteer suppon IJ'OUP will hear ho~ the) can If one of your New Year's resolutions is to ,et beck i• The senior rate does not apply on weekends or holidays. Storyume 1s frtt Ind parents arc uracd to enroll help the college president. who was appointed 1n Augus1. shape. now 1s the time 10 f'tl!Ster for an lerobk class at tht . For more information caU 6n-0550. childrn 11 tht1r local branch. The Feb. 21 session al to achieve campus goals in the next dttade. Newpon-Costa Mesa YMCA. Corona del Mar will be sisned bf Vicki Katzin for the The hmchcon will be held at 11 :4S and v. 111 cost $6:50 Classes will bit offered 11 9 a.m. Mondays thl'Oeld Foca• on eat1Jl6 clJNnlen. A free support poup. ANAO. for people concerned with anore•ia ncrvou or buli'l'ia is offered from 6: 30 to 8 p.m. on Thursdays at the Capestrano by the SCI Hospital 1n the Dolphin Houte Livina Room. The poup is ltd by ~urn ~r. M.S. w .. and Jan Ora.cw .i. "M.S. W. For 1nfonnauon. call ·Bressler at 496-J.414 or Gret0ry. 491.JOn. hearina impaired. Additional information ma) be ()Cr person. Rcscr,•at1ons can be made b calling Saturdays; S:4S p.m .• Monday t~ Fridly; Md 6:~S obcainiid ">' cathna Judy Kelley at 644-3 I 86. Cathennc Slaymaker at 891-3349. p.m. T~Y$ and Wedncsda~ The five-week tnlion• COSl $25. Coune for piano teacllen A tb~unit courx. "Tcach1na the Pia.no.·· wJll be ofTeftd at Golden West Collqc 1n the 5Pfll\I temn~r. Students will team throuah lttturcs. ditcuu1ons. readinp. rnearch. dcmons1rauon and obscn·cd tcachina. Tht coune is intended for tcachcn. or an)Onc who plays tht~. TM cu wtll bt taUlht by Dr Allett G1ln from 10 a.m. u11ul I ~m. on Fndays stan1n1 Jan. 13. Studtnts uasure 1f •heY mttt tht Pftl'C'QU1sa1n for the cu are advited to C'ftfol •y-a) and an~nd the fini day o( datl to rneew CCM1nc mauimnmu. ~ii ....-r wa.)'_. Funhcr 1nfonNticMt may be ..... by Cllli1119s-ll06. Jewish issues eiplored "J1,.·\\1 h ls,uc on 1hc (on11.·mpor.1f\ '-c.'nc.•· "•11 l'C 1hr kc.: no1c :tddn:-01 Rabhi H~rm:in ~h:i:iln1.ln nt ,in 1.•thn1c dtnnc.•r '!pon-,orcJ h~· th1.· kv. l\h C unununll' C cn1cr ot \Uth Oran 1.· C ount\ on J:in I~ in L a,un;a fka\'h • h:ialman " fom1cr pn-s1d1.·nt .. lll the.· ent1 .II ( ontcrrncc ut \nWrt\:;m R ;1llt\1\ .. The 7 pm d1nnc.-r "'II .. 1d. ofl the i•oup' Jnnual Scholar 1n R1."'1~nlc Pro1r.am 1ha1 n>n11nuc!I 1h1.• tollo•11'1 da~ -.11h a •1 ~akfa\1 and 1mup d1~uM101" on ,~·h l urrcnt C\Cftl' 1n t~ r\"C ~n1 Rl<l\ 1.;. J~8'h rontront;uion\ 1n < hk.-qo. · Rq1\tr111on 1ndu1.k\ ~If\ af1\I t""-' ~·n1111ar. and Ton1naand conCl1t1on1nactastes w1H br hdclat I a.m. Monda) throuah Sa1urday and at noon on Moedlys. Wcdnndays and Fnda~s. · Form°" 1nfonnat10n. ctn the Y •• 6'2·'990. Ha.pltal YOlaateen ...... Voluntttn to Ulltl in "·anom .._ fll .""_. .. operationsinctudi11cmaac crroom••-..• ta lbC recover} raoa. p · 'S fclOd --~• dutlft. arc beilll __... "1 Ft.111111 H0111Sll Hd McCliciil l:."nner. To • clili• -. mtu•1:•• av-...Mw._,,. a ~=..~.~" .. , ........ • ' . t: U 8 Orenge Coeet DAILY PtLOT/ Tftundey, December 29. 1988 1 Newport day-care f acillty caters to the mildly ill I a, un aovcRER .............. It's Monday fl\Orning. Sue Dunham of Irvine is rushina around aettint ready for work when f she notices her J.-ycar-old son is listless . and not himself. • After a temperature check she ' realizn there's no way she can send ' him to the day-care cen&er he usually • attends. and there's no way she can : afford to miss another day of work. What does she do? She simply picks up the phone and calls Rainbow Retreat. a day-care *":SOBER •• ; ':PrcmBl : l it fun but not so crowded people can't • . gel around and enJOY themselves,'' • . She said. · Williams said everyone will have a : good time because of the variety or • . activities planned throughout the ; : evening. 1 The tickcl includes an all-you-can- . : eat pizu buffet. I 0 tokens to the game ' : room. family movies and dancing. • 1 she said. "We have a ·quiet' room · i with a fireplace and large screen TV ~ that will play famil y movies. The 1 dessert and beverage ~r will stay ·: open all night for purchases." • , 1 The disc jockey will spin a variety 1 of favorite dance tunes in the main •,.dining room from 10 p.m. until · closing time. Requests are en- . · couraged. Hats. noise makers along · with s~rkling cider will be provided , . at midniJht. Bullwinkle Restaurant is on the ! comer of Magnolia Street and Warner • Avenue adjacent to the Family Fun . Center. For additional jnformatioo · call, 841-6373. • facili&y for the "mildly i'I " "We take children two months lo 12 years old,'' said Or. Sheri Scnlcr. founder and prcsadent of the Ntwport Beach fac1lit~. "If children have a cold or the flu we take ahem. We certainly wouldn't take them if they had an undiagnosed rash or temperature of 104." Founded in 1982. the National Pediatric Support Services cttaled a child development day-care center called Step by Step. and later de- velo;>ed Rainbow Retreat when foun- der Shari Senter. 36. realized the demand for mildly a&I child cart. The day-arc portion of the facility. IOC1ted an a section of Eutbluff Elementary School. beains acttpeina "studmts' as youna as 6 W«ks. "We arc ofTcrina child devel~ ment rather than just baby-sinina." Sc•ersaid. "Babies.have a daily routine. just like the older children." she said. "One acaivity is ·circle &ime.' They sit in a circle and · sing songs and do in&eraction." And after opening centers in New- port Beach. Huntington ~ach, Anaheim. Pasadena and Glendale. she rahzed the need for Rainbow Retreat. She oblerved children were scrt 10 day<art facilitits when &hey should have been kept home. "Here you see a sick child 1n the dirtttor's arms all day." Senter said. "The child is oul in the middle of thinp because the director is work- ina, except she can'& JC' anything done because she's tending to the sick child." Senter said Rainbow Retreat is a relief to parents because they know their children are bei na taken care of. ··11 fcdl better for me because I know be'• beina monitored ral well ... said Dunham. "h's an importanl option." So Senter oteaed a Rainbow Re- treat. ia ach 5lep by Step loca&ion except Oletldale. Al IOOft 11 a child is sick. the s-rent may call and make an appointment and brina him in. Tht child is evaluated. and a nune makes sure the child ~u hi1 mt. medicine if needed and vital ~s checked. Rates arc Sl.50 per hour to Step by Step membcn. and SS an hour for non-members. And if \he child simply has a ninny note or llipt fever. he"s no1 bored. "We have 1 daily routine juM like we do lar Step by Step." Senter said. ••Tbeft'1 music time. task time - puzzln. ud quiet tihie.·Every toy is comDltteY disinfected after a child playi widi il so no aerms are spread." Althouah this is an answer to the workina-s-rents prayen. Senter said they are opentin11t a deficit. "I'd like people in the communi&y to know this service is available." she said. "You don't hive to be a member of Step by Step to receive care." LLP.AT SALUTES ARTS ••• iu employees. '"The contCll was a crou beawcen IOlvi~a erouword ouzzJe and word ~ he said. .. There WU a block of tcnmbled letters and 15 dun were pvm. "Clues like, what is the lon~t nanni• play on Bl'Olld~ -which is ·C'llorUI Line.' I hope, he added. .. And another example. *hat are the three e ·s in clauical music? One% you answered 11115. lhey were submitted and the winner was selected al random." Andy Morrison. public affairs manqer, said Yetter was definitely lucky. "Out of 4,000 employees there were 300 rntn~ 111n'1 ~II Wt'~ wi n- ncrs." Morrison said. Out of those 56, Yctter"s name was drawn. "I really\lftiaunningforthesecond prize -tiftcts foT the bleachers.'' Y ctter said." I wound UP. aettin1 those (tickets) for my family. • This marks the' second consecutive year of participation for the 12().year- old mu&uat life insurance coms-ny. located at Newport Center. The pqeantry of the triumphal opera is recreated by 23 noat riders clad in elaborated ancient Egyptian costumes -along with Don Honald. floral director at Festival Artists and of course-Yetter. -By Katy Bnder DANCE INSTRUCTOR ••• Prom Bl roster. ..By professional standards, theater ··we have a hcotcrie of people is usually a dot-eat-dog atmosphere ... who dance for ure four or five she said. "Herc we team. but we also times a wttk. •• $ e said. "Dancers are help each other. Most of the dance probably the finest conditioned a&h-teachers in the county come here to Y f Ch de 9 letes. And with dance you never tet • take classn." ea. ar a r . · · bored. We have attorneys, doctors The studio currently has 24 lj'e ·ChaJ'ten, a Han~ Beach Poi> Saunne Gatee, Diana Zeaalka, Katrlaa and housewives... teachers. All arc professionals whose Warner claeerleaAJq eqaad, took flnt• PerlUne, Karina Emoboff, Sommer For those who yearn 10 sec their resumes list TV, music videos and place ln a cbeert;;ib1.11 competition at-Pedrosa, Jemalfer Oland UICI Bellacla Con-8 d h state work. ffanH ... .noa Beach BIO llcJaoof. llemben I d ted &baa name on 1 roll way marquee. t c "I hevc a whole stack of resumes ... ~· felan on, an -' DOD XeaaedJ, studio offers a non-threatening am-she said. "I never hire anyone before I of tbe troap are ( clln(. from left) llelUea llarkonkJ and Joana Bmoboft. biance. she said. sec them teach first. .. 1 : p;;;;================================:=:=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;:;:;;:;::=;:;;:;:;:;;:;:;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;;;;;::;:;:;;::;;::;;;;;;:;;::;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;:::;;--i The studio is also the scene of • : ----"master classes" where well-known • : c-11..1.111WDOe?OMCCOco. dancers teach a series of classes. And • : ;-}. ~m~~~~· .:!1~e~!ft1 ~o~~t~~~~~: . ~ : . .· : . . . . . . . . .. . audi&ions . .. I want this to be a place for dancers to do their best work artisti- cally, but at the same "time still be themselves-,'' she said. "To rnc danc- inJ is like nying on your own without wings. You have good music and you become like the music." . . . . . . : . . (.: . . ~ .. . . . ... ; . ' .• , . ) i . • ) , i . ~ J . • ~ . ~ . . -: . . . . . . 't • . . . . . . • ,. . ' .. . . . ~ . • • I ' ) . -• Proposition 99 passed. Raising raxes on cigarettes 250%. Adding over $600,000,000 in new taxes to what California smokers are already paying. ' What can you do about it? We pro- pose you try DORAL. It's one of the Top 10 best-selling brands in America. And the only one with a low price. Get Top 10 taste and save money, too. That's our proposition. Can you afford to refuse? t Available in all your faoorite sty/~ SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette " Smoke Contains Carbon Monoxide . \ UlTAA LIGHTS DJ's: 7 me ....... 0.6 mo .... U6HTS, UGHTS MENTHOl: """' ..... 0.7 ....... u&H1I-.; U6HTS MENTHOL Ws: fl nig. ._.., 0.111'1 . .._ Rll FUlfOR-.: lt 111J "W'. U .. .... All AM>R •NTHOL All RAt1JR M£NTta arr. I mg. v. u ... -. FW FU111t fl ... ~. \8 ... ~-~~'r~. .. ART ••• l'roal81 facack and office complex . Perhaps out of all involved in the pageant and festival. it is the artists who have been really working year~ round for the event. For Josh Conna. a 32-year old Laguna Beach resident and artist, this year's festival has been Iona anticiJ?!lted. "This wall be my first year partici- pating in the festival," saad Conna. "I have really been pus.hing myself to crate creative and· quality pieces. Buyers know when things are rushed." Conna. who has been supporting himself this year as a waiter, believes1 that he and other artists will have a aood year. PaintinJ part-time. he has turned out some 20 paintinp which he expccu to sell. · ••1 have heard so many ao<>d things about the ftstivals." he said. "I just hope their (the orpnizcn). as well as the artists hard efforts par off by the time the summer is over.' laklM ................ art ....... , .... . SPEAKER ••• ..._81 propam1 forcntreprenuen. own- eniad executives on how to lead and c:ommunica&e in businna. Wbat makes Hunter such a monumental ~kcr, accordina to chamber officials. is that he has been IUPly IOUlbtafterin the intematioftal bUlinesa tcene. Cumntl_I, he it wortil'.ll with •Soviet Union on appljilll_his methods to theirbulille*L"The WM!Kll ·~ '° tbe "blic. ID......_ ilavaillllle bycall- i111_*'IOl I. ...... ,. ...... ". .... ..