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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1990-01-03 - Orange Coast Pilot\. CO~ST/A3 WORLD/A4 THE ORANGE COAST WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1990 25CENTS UG:I, 80-70 SPORTS/Bl Judge challenges DA appointment lly IRIS YOKOt Of -Dally ... kalf A Superior C.o urt judge told Or- ange County supervisors Tuesday to rescind or prepare to legally defend their appointment of M ichael Capizzi as district attorney. a selec- tion the board unanimo usly made only hours earlier. The lepl challenge was filed by Deputy District Attorney Thomas A vdeef. who is running against Capizzi in what has become a heated and bitter election contest. Superior Court Judge Julian Cim- balok. siding with Avdccf. granted a court order that requires the board to rescind its appointment or have county attorneys appear at a Feb. 2 court heanng to defend the appoint- ment. "The board will not rescind the action:· County Cqunscl Adrian Ku yper said of the superviscrs' ac- tion He defended the appointment of ( ap1u1 as legal and proper. Ku) per said Capizzi. who has been chief assistant district attorney, will remain d1stnct attorney despite the legal challenge. Cap11L1 summed up Avdeefs legal advances as being a publicity stunt that came .. a day late and a dollar short." "I am the district attorney and I'll continue to be," said Capizzi. who was sworn in T uesday morning by outgoing D1stnct Attorney Cecil H1ch following the superqsors' ap- pointment. The 63-)ear-old Hicks. who scr- ' ed a~ district atto rne} n years. announced in August he would not ..,...._,......, ....... .._. seek rc-elect1on this )Car He wa~ given a Supc·nor ( ourt Judgeship t~o wccks ago b) (io,. George DeukmcJian and h1' rl·s1gna11on as d1stnrt a11ornc)' was dTec11ve noon Tuesda\ Su pen 1'>or., all backcd Fountain alle~ resident ( ap1111 to fill the une\pired term. ~\.1og he 1s tht· most qualified to lift Hicks· shoe'> But .\' deef a Dana Poinc res1- dcnl hJ' argut·d such an appoint· mi:n1 h~ \Upt'n 1sors violates the \CaCt' < on\111u11on and a ccused Hid,,· appwntmcnc as Judge as tx·1ng pt.1l1t1~Jll) urned to gi ve C .1p1111 lhl· ad,antage of lasting h1m'>4.·lt "' 1hc 10< umhc-nc 1n che J une di:l Cum .\,\1\IJnt IJ1stmt .\11o mey Ed I rn·m.1n " chi: third cand1datt 1n f Please see DA / A2) "Trial. finally opens in triple-slaying case f ram 1 9 80 By HOW ARD FINE Clly -• Se<vl<r In a trial dc:IJH'J rm nl·.trh .i dc:cadc: b~ kg.JI mJnl'U\l'rlO~. pr•''· ecutor., cold iuror<, l ut·•,da' a t11rmn law) er ma~1i:rmindl·d thl· ,fJ, 1n~' .. 1 three pi:opll-tound dt•Jd 1n J V.. nt minster humc :·Thi'> l·a\l.· I\ .itkiut thr l \l'' u1111n of three pt.•opk JnJ h,1v. l hnmJ' ~1 an1\lalu1 m,l\ti:rm1nlkd thl· murdcr\ ·· lkput' 1>1,trill \tt11rnl'' R1chJn.I \I l<.1nl( 111ld thl· '"·m.in Sl\-\\Uman 11 \l· Jltr1nJtr 1un 1n C Ir angc: ( ounl\ \IJfl\.'rltlr ( llUrl \lan1~·alu1 J h1rmn V. l·,1m1nqn a11urne~ " au U'><'d lll Jirn 11ng thl' !>la~ing\ of hi\ hnc fnl'nd Richan! R1111ont· '6 .int.I a l'I \t•ar-11l<l "'oman ant.I ~l\-,car-11IJ m..in '1c;1t ing him O\l'r tht• I 'l'<fl \km11nal Da' v.eekl'OJ Prosecuc11r\ u1ntl·nJ thl· dt·ren dan1. one: or tht• tounJ1ng mcmht·r' of Ch<' HC\\IJn n1oc1m 't k gJng. t1r dc:rcJ R1111onc l ilied after a J1<,pu1t· 0 \1.'f v.ho v.ould &t'I lht· rm1fit\ from drug \ale<, and a countak111ng nrcr- at1o n \hn" lhJI \1Jl11'l.alco >A a\ a fall l(ll\ R111h \J1J ·· f hi:ri: ,., no real l \ llkllll' lhJI hl' wa\ IO\Oh ed In .11 ' 1' p.. •I 1. n 011 n a I act 1 ' 11 ~ · · \1 Jn ... ,Jku 44. ".l!> arrested in \l.11, '' 1\-l JnJ ha' heen 1n Jail ' 111. l th, n rll:nJ1ng the outcome of prl Ira.ii nlt1l111n' hdore he wa\ ar- fJ1~n1.·J , 11urt 1.J'>t' has been plagued h, ., 1nduding a Jumbled , , 11.1n'l.r1p1 thal required two "'""'n' lll:l11rl' thr <,late ~upreme < 11 .rt I•• -.trJ1gh1cn uut and a 1udgr ' 'Ull Ilk 1n I 4!H! l'r11'1.'l u111r' ton1end Maniscalco "J' 1 • .ih1.·<l in illKtl drugs and ,, 11nt1.1tl111ng. 11pcrac1ons before the l..dl1n~' l k ma' haH· been a legitimate tiu,ir1l·"m.tn in lace 11P9 and early 1 •1/\1 l'\ul \lan1\Calco had another '"'' upJC111n J t.nminal enterprise th.11 1n,11hnl the \Sic of narcotics JnJ "1untnll·11 mone). .. King said. Brtght sunshine on Tuesday dr•ws • surfer t o the Newport Pier wher e h e t ests th• w•t•r f o lto w tn9 th• overnight "°""· King u 1d that oq•r lhl· nnl '"'' to three month\. the: prn\l.·t.ucmn v.ould pre'i<'nt more Chan "' v.1c- nt's'>t'., ant.I nunwmu\ nh1h1t\ Ill pnl\c: ~lan1'>t:Jk u\ 1n,11hrmenc 1n drug and u1untrrlnting hu.,inn\l.'' and hie, guilc 1n Chl· l 1l11ng\ l\.1ng lk'>lnht·d what proseculors -..i1d "t'rt' the "'rnt\ leading up to tht· \knh1nJI LY.I\ v.eckend. mclud· 111~ .1 1.11kd ,lltl·mpl b~ Man1scaJco .ind h•' J\-.tk.1a1n 10 placr a poison "" """' 111 chr roun1crfe1t money '' 11h lhl· 1n ccn11 o n of lulling R 111111n,· "hrn he rC1untrd the fake hill' Storm dumps V2 inch ·of rain on Coast If U>O\llll'J \IJn1\l.akn ,nulJ fal."C: lhl• dl'Jlh Pl'nalt\ I k tnld thr 1urci,-.; ahout Mani- '' Jk 11·, hnu'><' v.h1ch h<' termed a '1rtual ar\l.·na1.·· ~1ch handguns ,1nJ mll1C.lr\ a\'M!Ult n 0es. ly LESLIE EARNEST Of -0..,, -k.n After smugly enjoymg a sunny three-day weekend. O range Coast r~s1dents were Jarred awake early Tuesda) by a storm that brightened the sk) with lightening and drenched the area with almost a half inch of rain. Besides making 11 chat much hard- er to climb ouc of bed. the storm Sl'nt back-co -work m o to rists h)droplan1ng across slick streets ~here. tn one case. t'1ghc cars were invohcd in a prcdawn pileup 1n Costa Mesa. Purse theft victim's , year starts poorly lly IOll V AH EYKEN Of .... 0-,. ... SUff A Fount.ain Valley woman lost a big chunk of her life savings to a purse snatcher who escaped with nearly $200.000 in jewelry, cash and o ther valuables at a South Coast Plaza department store. police said Tuesday. Fumei Yang Chung said she was trying on shoes with a friend at the store when an unknown man sat next to her. srabbcd her punc and ran off. · She said she was carryina so many valuables in her punc because of the holiday weekend and the weddina of a clOIC family friend. .. An cqjncer at the compeny whct'e I wort; he's like my son; it was his wcddina. .. Chuna said. "I wanted to ajve to the bride a lot of my old jewelry." The "old jewelry" included lucb items II a $25,000 pearl necklace_. accordina to a preliminary oolice report. Tbe total dcclarcd value Of losses in the report ii S l 8l,S00. Chuna's son, Frank Vans, said bis mother was canyi~ an unusually laflC amounl of cub becautc of the New Year's holiday. "It) Chine1e tradition to sive a lot of money to relatives at New Year, and she knew the bub wouldn't be open over tbd'weetend," he said. Oluna said she shouted for help when the t.bief' toot Iller pune ......... P\ma/AJI While no serious inJuncs were reported a~ a rc<1ult of che storm. fl ooding ocrurrcd at Pacific Coast Highwa) and 5upenor .\'enue in Newport Bi:ach where i;ew<'r drains arc being inualled. 1 he downpour. .,.h1ch was un- lea<,hcd between midnight and about Q a.m .. dropped between .40 1nthes and 51 inches of rain between Huntington Beach and Corona del Mar In Costa Mesa. where last )'ear al ch" time 4 ~8 mches of rain had fal kn. the: c,torm pushed 1h1s )Car"s (PleaM ... RA.JN / A2) ('0\.ER STOR\. I ••• \ft & ORDt:H But dcll'n\l' at tornt''' ,ontrnJ ~1 an1 .... alu1 "a' \l.'I up h\ un..a,on 3\\lKIJll'\ ·'The l..11lcrc, hla mcd \1an1 .... ·ak11 111 a\1.>1J ha\lng the ra~ pinn<'d w chrm ·· ..a1J .\nJrr~ Ruth onl' ot ~lani\lako·, Jlll)rnc\\ ··b 1dl'Oll. v.ill he. de, eloped HI l-..1ng thi:n dcscnbr-d how Mani- \1.Jkn o hca1ncd a .. toy" scmi- au111ma11, rmcol with an eiiht-inch '>•kcnlcr Jnd cold h1!> assocaates he plJnnl·d 111 1..111 R1zz1o nc. T hl·n t-..1ng ~1d. Maniscalco OT· dnl'd '"" as'>OC1atcs. Phil Warren (Ptene SH TRIAL/ A2J Drunken driving law courts prosecutors By EMILY ADAMS Of -Dally ... Sc.,, While a new drunken dnving law appears to have created a wider nec for authorities to use in catching the drunk who slides behind a wheel. local police offi cers said the new rule hasn't changed the way they nab intoxicated drivers. Instead of helping catch the drunk. the new law will assist authont1es ~osecutc thoK who drink and dn vc. The law. which went into effect at m1dni&ht Monday, lowers the blood alcohol le' <'1 at which a person 1s presumed 100 drunk lo dnve fro m 0 10 perccnc to 0 08 percent. A per- son "ho ~e1ghs about 160 pounds gains 02 percent for each dnnk consumed. L1kew1sc. about 02 per- cent evaporates each hour. meaning that an average person would have to consume about five dnnks tn an hour to be legally drunk. "We could've made an arrest at .08 percent years ago. What matters as whether or not dnving is 1m- pa1red ... Newport Beach Pola Sgt. Andy Gonis said. "\\c wnuldn 1 ha\l' \topped <,0me- onc 1for t'rrat1l dn\ingl and chcn said. 'Oh 'ou · n· J n 01.1 go ahead on )Our ~a' '·• The 1mpat1 Ill thl· l.1" "'II he most apparcnc in thC' coun<,. a' prm - ecutt'r<i find thC'm'it'h r., "Ith a larger number of cn'i<'\ whac the dnver " presumed drunk. < 1on1c; -.aid . Law cnforcemt·nc ollic1als alS<l hope the la" "•II mal..t· dnnken think tWIC(' hcfort• lhC\ dn\e Local bartender. '3\ 11 'ittms 10 be wo rking .. I've seen a big change in the pt•11pk 1n tht• har chis year -buli· n1.·" ha., hct·n a li1tle slower and they 'K't'm mon· a~are." said 8u.n Au,ht•' har manager of Malarlry'1 lrnh (\uh in :--icwport Beach. l h11\l.' "ho tome 1oto the bar ha' l'll 1 hccn Jnnklng quite as much J\ thc' v.i:re last year and crowds arcn'I 4u1ce a\ thick at the popular v.att·nng hnlc. Busbey said. ··v...c l:illcd a lot of c.abs New 'l'3r°' L\t: and che~ were a k>t or peo ple \\hO amved an limos. IO I 1h1nl.. the\ v.t'rr definitely mon: coo- l~ ..... DM..s/AJI Two nuns iii Nicaragua killed in attack MANAGUA. Nicarqua -Two nuns. iodudina one from Mil- waukee, ~ killed and an Ameri· can bi~ and 1 third nun wac wounded 1n an anack on their car in northeastern Nicarqua. chwcb of· flciah and radio rq>Orts said Tues-da r. Church authorities said pnmeo ambusbed the car Monday niabt. but one II'.. lied later that a ~ mine ellplosion .may trave been rc- spontibte. GOOD·MORNING The Nicaraauan aovernment blamed Contra rebels for the inci- dent. which the Rev. Marcelino E.slr1lda aid took platt on a hiJhway near Pueno C.abeus in the remote Caribbean coastal rqion. about 200 miles nonbeas1 of this capital. The church said h had no mfor- ~ mat1on as to respoolibi.lity. Church officials and fanii~ 1fied the slain nuns a ounneyi.... 4S. of Milwaube, Md TCT'CSI KosaJes. a N~ Bishop Pabto Schmitz.. 46. ol Fo91 du lac. Wis.. aUliliary ..... fJI ....... ...... ,Ml I . I I I I .... DIM~. k-42. llllt yes vo&ed yea or ~l la 9•. percnt of a.be roll calls; Qril Co1., ll-40_ 97 percan; Roe Plrbrd. R-43, 96 pcrce&M; Willila DID- netl\eyer, R-39, 93 percat; ad Rob- ert Doman, R-38. 92 penmL Senaton on avenee voted on 98 percent of their cbamben 312 re- cord votes. Democrat Alan Crunston·s 'lotina record was 99 percent and Republican Pete Wilson was present for 92 peroent of the recorded votes. Individually, only 33 House mem- bers and one senator scored below ..90 pcrcem. • The bi&h turnout was no surprise, given the priority that i~mind- eel memben put oe IOOCI..., _.. ud the fact that moll roll calla are ICheduJed 10 avoid coaftict witb lawroabn' 1travel plus. Home and Sfnate percen1111N lllve ho~ in lbe low lo mid-~ throU.ahout tbis decade, and only in 1982. when the House rqisttrcd 89 percent, did either chamber fail 10 racb 90 per· cent. Members feel tbat hiab absenteeism from roU calls is politi- cally harmful, particularly when an qgressive cba1JenFr coaveru the 1ruancy into a campeip illuc easily comprehended b¥ voten Met home. But there is no widely beld view that hi&h attendance translates •utomati- cally into excellence in other con- ~...... '=•a. ............. Re,reeentatives like William• IMlil•I'-M!s n O' I Natcber, O.Ky.. wbo Ml aever ~ ~ ti daela'1 -*' •lidt. mined a Ooor vote Ja 3$ ,_. ia lhe llld Hlrilllt Po.adltlOll OID- Houte, and Oatles lamfta. ~FIL. ~ioaal ljledilill Wmll Uldl, wbo bu mi.eel oely oee cpaonup blcaUM lt 11 DOI dllat clilBcul& to call since ~~ .,. rated Dy co&-lllow up for Ill tM voe.. Wbal ii leaaues as e "leablaton. •are llWft in~ II loold• at ¥ocet many ot.ber...memben witb ~ memben mill and ny Ibey mile attendance. them ... But the c.ct that many unex~ Tho 1989 votina attendaace llonal lawmaken also have hiah survey by Roll Call Report Syndi· attendance boll&en the view that ~te is bued on all conpasional roll merely showins UJ> to vote bas little c:alls other than quorum calls. Mem- bearina on overall compelcnce. bet1 bid '° cast a yea or nay to be "Votina panicipatJon it not a counted " voting. good indicator or anythina other Perfect auendance in the 435-seat than someone's determination not House wu recorded by Republicans to miss votes," said Thomas E. Larry Combest of Teus. Timothy hnn1 o1 Mien 1111. n-P9tri of W&ICOlllie ... ~ AIJI of Connoetlc:ut. ud Demonaa Jiln Jon&z ol JMie• Dale K.ildee .C Micllipa, Tom McMllln or Maryland, Harold Volkmer~ Mil- IO\lfl and Bennett and Natcher. TM worst Hou• vuancy wu felistered by New JCney llwmabrt Jim Aorio, a Democrat wbo mitled 80 peftlent of tho cUIDbet't roll calls. and Jim Courter, a Republican who miued 7S percent Both cam- paigned most of the year for aov- emor of lhe state. Aorio won. Aide John Steele said Aorio ··was always here for the important votes" such as on abortfon and the mini - m um wage. A an Hale,, ~-skipper on ; 'Giiiigan' $ ~.Island,' dies Like the Berlin Wall, Tell mural sections to be torn down, sold RAIN FromA1 total to only 1.33 inches. The rain season begins July I. However, as parched as con- ditions have been, environmental resources supervisor Lane Waldner said it's still too soon to know if the area '' in the midst of a drought. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actor Alan Hale Jr .. who played the jovial skipper who led a zany band of castaways on television's "Gillipn's Island," died Tuesday. Hale died at St. Vincent's Hospi- tal, where he had been hospitalized for cancer, said Bonnie Churchill. a spokeswoman for Hale's family. She said he had been hospitalized for about a month after being diagnosed with the disease a year ago. The family said Hale was 68. but reference works listed his age as 71 . A native of Los Anseles. Hale appeared in 65 motion pictures. but became a fixture on afternoon tele- vision thanks to the syndication of "Gilligan's Island,'' one of the big- gest rerun hits ever. The show orig- inall y ran from 1964 to 1967 before going into syndication. according to the Complete Directol) 10 Pnme Time Network TV Shows. Hale played a chancr boat skipper whose craft. the Minnow. was lost at sea and wrecked on an uncharted South Pacific island. The show fol- lowed the misadventures of the pass- engers aboard the Minnow. "He was a great guy and a great physical comic.'' said Bob Denver. Hale's co-star on the series, who played the first mate. G illigan of the show's title. "He was so strong that I could run across the stage and he could catch me like a feather. That's what made our comedv so great." DA From Al . Den"er said in a telephone inter- view. Denver said Hale reveled sn his worldwide fame as !he Skipper and never tired of playmg the role in public. .. He enJO)Cd every single mmute of 11 ... said Denver. who made per- sonal appt.•arances with Hale as re- centh as six months ago. "He wore his slipper's hat all the time." The success of"G1lli~n·s Island" rerun~ ll'd to Hak's appc~rance in a 1978 reunion of the ·Gilligan's Island" cast members. The two-pan spc<:1al. '>'htch aired on NBC. had the islanders finally rescued, only to be shipwrecked aga in while o n a reunion cruise. T"o mo re st-qud spec ials aired 10 1979 and 1981. Hale 1s surv1.,,ed by has wife of 25 \Cars. Naomi: their four children and his sister. Karen Hale Wookc}. The actor was to be cremated and h 1 ~ ashes sea ttered at sea . don't even ha.,,e the authonty to appoint a depu1y dis1nc1 attorney. ''If the} do n't have power to ap- point deputies. certainly they don't the June race. ha' e the power to appoint the d1s- Avdecrs lawsuit filed 1n Superior tnct attornq,'' McDermott said. Coun also has the apparent suppon "We don't want the proverbial fox of Chief Deputy Distnct Attorney des1gna11ng "ho's go10g to be head James Enright. who ss not an an-chicken in the henhousc ... nounccd candidate. Enright is listed But Kuyper said the district at- as a plaintiff along with Avdecf. to rne} 1s a rnun1y position and the accordmg to A vdeefs attorney supervisors ha' c the authori1y and Kevin McDermott. dut} ui'rdcr sta ie faw to fill any The suit claims despite repeated vacancy in county government. demands for compliance, the super-"I thmk I'm still correct." Kuyper visors failed 10 comply with a sec-said Tuesday. "Second of all, the tion of the state code that designates supen 1sors have already done it and the chief deputy district attorney as (Cap11.z1's) taken office. It's a little the person who should temporarily late for an IOJUnction." take the helm if the district at-( ap1zzi also said A vdeefs actions torney's office becomes vacant. were too late and categorized them The board's decision to appomt as nothing more than a publicity Capizzi will deprive the public of the efTon. "In addition to being without constitutional right to vote' for the merit, it's a day late and a do llar district attorney of its choosing. the short... • suit claims. Further, the suit con-Capizzi. a 25-year veteran of the tends., the board action deprives district attorney's office. indicated Enright from assuming his lawful supervisors rightly appointed him role as temporary successor. above Enright and expressed con- The suit includes a dedaration fidence the county will successfully signed by Enright that states he is defend the appointment. qualified to serve as district at-"h was quite obvious the board tomcy. didn't want a caretaker government -"I have held the position of chief or lame duck administrator. I've deputy district attorney since De-always urged appointment of the cember 1966 and have, during the best qualified person:· he said. past 2~ yean, d ischarsed the func-"I think this is an ill-eonccivcd lions of district attorney on each legal effort.'' he sai<l of his col- oocasion the current district at-leagues· legal chaOente. torney, Cecil Hicks/. has been absent Hicks could not be reached for from the county,' the statement comment Tuesday. reads. In making the motion to appoint 0 Mlchael Capizzi has never acted C'apmi. Supervisor Roger Stanto1111 as or discharse<f the duties of district credited Capizzi as a key player in att~ in the absence of Cecil achieving Hicks' goal of cleaning up Hicks. politi cal corruption in the 1970s. Enrilbt's statement also claims he Hicks "chose Michael Capizzi as ~ was never cont.acted by any super-his fi eld general." Stanlon said. The vieors retardi"! the vacancy and two men's auack on political corrup- WMD't ofrercd 'the opp()rtunity to tion stopped the o utbreak. Stanton 1 ~t to the board my extensive said. ' QUalification1 to fill that vacancy." 'Ht was like a massive dose of f.ariah• could not be reached for Clearasil (an acne medication)," c:iommetat Tuaday. Stanton said. "The 1980s was a MdlenDoa coat.ended tbe district decade of deanJincss in politics in ..aorney is a aaace oftlcer and thus . Oranae County." _, tbe ~ bM the power to Ca~izzi said the appoin tment calls IP)IOiat a ~l McDermott for h.im to terve as ' the chief pros- llld dlal polic)t bM been 9-l)y ecutor until January 1991, when L 9'1'111' Or OIMf .... He alto ateit whoever wins tbe June elec:Uon 1 a CMI 9-tald tbowl IUpervdon taka over the post ly PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of -Dally l'lot St-'f The Tell, a photographic mural designed to awaJcen ~pie about the environment and their relationship to it, will be dismantled in Laguna Canyon beginning Saturday. Erected in May 1989, the 600- foot-long mural located in the Sycamore Hills area of Laguna Ca- nyon includes some 40.000 photo- graphs contributed by Orange Coun- ty r~idents and other Southern Cali- fornians. The dismantling is another step 1n a I 0-year project by local an1sts Mark C hamberlain and Jerry Burchfield to document rural Laguna Canyon and its changing face. Chamberlain said some two-foot DRUNKS From Al scious of drinking and dnv1ng. .. said Mark Lamb. manager of The Ware- house restaurant. also in Newport. ~ .. Also. a lot of our clientele come 1n boats or on bicycles. so they don't really have to worry about dnving." Lamb said. A patrol unit parked right in front of The Warehouse on New Year's Eve ma) also have been a deterrent for would-be drivers. Lamb said. Like Busbey. Lamb said his bar- tenders were aware of the change in law and were serving up drinks and designated driver advice according- ly. Altho ugh drunken driving arrests were up over the holiday season in Newpon Beach and Costa Mesa, one officer said he didn't think there were more drunks on the road - just more officers looking for them. With a well-known policy of zero tolerance for drunken drivers, Costa Mesa officers hope drivers will understand the city 1s not the place to be drivi ng if you've been drink- ing. "All we're trying to do is correct behavior... said Costa Mesa Po lice Sst. Tom Winter. who organized the h1$h-profile crackdown on drunken driving on New Year's Eve. ··we want evel)•one to know. if they're 1mpa1red and they're driving. we'll arres1 them," Winter said. With the new law in effect, Cesta Mesa may also be kcepin~ a few more drunken dnvers in jail. "In '89. we may have let a few .08s go after the} tested," Winter said. "But this }Car we'll be holding and prosecutmg them ... Colllslon snarfs traffic on Sa nta Ana Freeway By City N~ Setvk• A sem1-tra1ler and a car collided sections of The Tell will be available for sale for S2S each, with proceeds going to recoup costs and to benefit the Laguna Canyon Conservancy. Major donors will receive some sections of the mural. and other sections will be stored for future fu nd-raiscrs. Chamberlain said they also were talking to som e museums about ac- quiring parts of The Tell. Over the months. its creators have continued to document changes at the mural, which has weathered an'd faded under the sun and slowly blended into its surroundings. "It's fulfilled all we expected it to." Chamberlain said. The Tell has served as a son of monument to continuing protests by environmentalists opposed to further development in Laguna Ca- nyon. In Auaust. several hundred people gathered for a dedication ceremony, including the mayors of Laauna Beach and Irvine, and last fall thousands marched through the ca- nyon to the site to protest the Laguna Laurel project planned nearby. Dismantling will take place Satur- day and Sunday, with large crowds predicted both days. Festivities will take place betwttn 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Chamberlain said they will re- move the "skin" from the mural. but leave the skeleton for several weeks as a funher -statement about the effects of time on the environ- ment. Mesa delays action on saloon's appeal By BO B VAN EYKEN The Costa Mesa Ctt\' Council on Tuesda) postponed aci1on on a re- quest from the o" ners of Hogue Barmichaers for reconsideration of a tough set of restrictions im posed last month on the bar's operation. In response to neighbors' com- plaints of noise. trash and other problems allegedly caused by Hogue Barmichaels' patrons. council mem- bers voted Dec. 4 to cut back the bar's dancing hour~ and 10 restrict 1he number of people permitted to line up in front waiti~for ad- mission. The bar's owners were also re- quired to secure an additional 50 parking spaces. Jules Boryczewsk1, co-owner o f Hogue Barmichael's. said after the Dec. 4 decision that the new restric- dtions would kill his business. In a letter to the council on Dec. TRIAL From A1 and Daniel Duff). to kill R1z11one. The two allegedly Wl'nt to Rinione's home 1n the 6000 block of Navajo Road and shot Rin1one three times. Kang said Robert Robbins. another associate of Maniscalco sent to the house. saw Thomas Monahan walkmg into the house to visit R1111one. Robbms heard some mufficd sho ts and then saw Monahan dead on the floor. King told the Jurors. King said Robbms then told pros- ecutors he saw Maniscalco and Duffy o n both sides of the young "o man. Rena Miley. after she had been raped and just before she was sho1 1n the head three times. '!.7. Hogue Barm11:hae1s· attorne). Marc Lebo' 111. challenged the basis for the new restnnions. ~mong other cnt1etsms. Lebovitz lhargcd that C'll} o ffietals had failed to estahlish a clear connection be- tween dancing and neighborhood noise. "The Cit) 1s in essence attempting 10 achteH~ its no•~ reduction ioat b) making Hogue Barmichael s a ks~ attracti H' place to visit," Lebo\'itL said. "The cit y has 1nten- 11onalh dcnded to · hurt Mr. Doryc.~r" ski'~ hus1r.ess to achieve its goals. The C11y Council can decide to reconsider decisions taken at previous meetings. but only under cenain circumstances. There must be nc" 1nfo rma11 on that was not available at the 11mc of the original decision. The appeal for reconsideration will be taken up at an undetermined future meetmg. Disneyland vis it reaps a new car • By City News Service An Orange < ounty man who skipped tht.· usual TV bowl game fare and went to Disneyland 10stead 1s dn' mg a ne" car today. Tim Hopkins txcame the park's first winner of a I 990 GEO car as 1he Magic Krngdom kicked off its 35th ann1versa11 "Dream Machine" cl'lebration Monda). Hopk10s. 40, was visiting Dis- neyland Monda~ with hts brother Dave, 32. also of Orange. "The biggest rain months arc Fe~ ruary. March and April so we won't really know' until we start windin3 down those4 1hree large rain months whether we're going to see a drought or no t." Waldner said. "We're j ust playing it by ear right now." The storm, which was accom- panied along the coast by winds ~f up to 25 mph. also dropped sno~ in local mountains. accordmg to Rich- ard Stitt, forecaster for the National Weather Service in San Diego. Three to four inches of snowfall was reported in Big Bear. Stitt said. The cold fro~t. felt most severely in Central California, all but raced across the Orange Coast, officials say. High pressure moving from the west heli>cd shift the jet stream quickly into the Sierras, Stitt said. Although specialists predicted a 20 percent chance of continuing showers early today, clear skies were forecast for the bulk of the day as well as Thursday. After a high Tuesday of 59 degrees 1n Santa Ana at 3 p.m .. temperatures were exp<..-ctcd to edge up 10 the mid-60s today. . While Cu forn1a Highwa} Patrol o fficers rc~ved a number of repons of sk1dd1ng cars o n the rain-slick slreets Tuesday morning. probably the mo!>t dramatic storm-related crash occurred on the southbound San Diego Freewa> at Harbor Bo ulevard in Costa Mesa. That pileup began at 5: 15 a.m. whl·n a vehicle spun out of control and crashed into the center d1 v1der after being splashed with water by another car. according to CHP spokeswoman Angel Johnson. At the same location. I J minutes later. other cars began crashmJ. she said. Four separate crashes involving a total of eight cars occurred within a three minute penod at that spot, Johnson said One car, which had been \'acated bv the driver. was hit four or five times, she said. ··The rdad was slick and they were going too fast." she said. Only minor IOJunes were reported as a result of the collisions. she said. PURSE FTo m At at about J:45 p.m .. but 1hat no one ofTcred asMstancc. Her son said J)eople 1n the area might not have understood his mother. who speaks \\llh a hea' \ Chinese accent. 'Tm so worried. I can't sleep; I can't cat.'' ">he said. "Everything was in m) pur~ . .\II m) cards. my green c:ud. m} passpon. This 1s a big probkm for me." S he described the thief as an Asian man about 5-foo1-J wearing a white 'ihtn. Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Michael Millington said the case had been assigned 10 an 1nvest1gator but that no further 1nforma11on was avail- able Tuesday on the Santa Ana Freeway .------------------------------------------ in Anaheim. leaving at least one person injured and almost complete- ly closing down one side of the freeway for a time. The coll1S1on occurred shortly after I p.m.. just south of the Magnolia A venue offramp. The car involved in the crash o verturned and struck a light post. which came to rest across three lanes of lhe southbound freeway lanes, a California Highway Patrol dis- patcher said. Correction Due to a p(Oduction error Tues- day's prime time television Hstinp were published on Monday and Monday's listiap OD Tuetday. The Daily Pilot reerets U.c error. " '°" 00 ,..,. "-.,,,.,. ,.. o, • • 111 u• Wfott 10 • M ,,,,, yOl6 C(Jpt -w .,_.. Our C"'· -~t (.-" °"",....••"'to''"' ~ .. mote 1°"' wllll 1011• C1tUil•ltOll _.,, Gem T alk By J.C. tUIPHRl:S C«llflld ~I. ACS APffWS[R H1ppJ l1w Y11r! The above prayer, as well as the nostalgic poem on the ri&ht. I pass along to you this holiday season, in the hope that they w~I give you the same pleasure they have given to me. Grandf-ther clocks, as well as similar fine mantel clocks, have f 1eed down the challenge of ,plastics and modern desilf', so that today, such clocks will, in f1et, become true heirlooms tomorrow. To au our wonderful cus· tomers, whom we consider trtends. thanks for a fill 1989, lllit best wishes to you II for 1990. Winding the Clock When I was a little lad, my old grandfather said that None should wind the clock but he, and so at time for bed He'd fumble for lhe curious key kept high upon the sheff And set aside lhat llttle task entirety for hlmaelf. In time grandfather pUMd away and to that duty fell Unto my father who performed the weekty cuatom wet!; He hefd that clock• were not to be carelea per90n1 wound And he alone should tum the key or move the ~ eround. I envted htm that little tuk and wtlt* that I might be The one to be entruated wtth the lumlng of lhe key. But yMr by yMr the dock WM hit •xdullw btt of care Unllf the day the angel9 cem. and amoothed hfl ~ hafr. Today \f'9 tuk It mm. to do, Mk• thoM whO'w QOM befor•. I am a )Mb'9 guwidt.n of that round Ind ge..y door. And untH at my chamber door Ood'1 m1111no-... knoctc • To m. ~ lhall be r9Mrwd the right to wtnd tM dock. I J. C. fi~mp/.,.;e~ }ewe/.r6 ... ,... 1'M ... a..TkW..lft~,N THI CCMlrfNIJI - \J ~ . --. .. . ... ~ • r ' Divorce recovery designed for youth. The NCw,on Maa Oirh Oub in CIOQ.iunct.ion with Newport Harbor Adoletcent Hospital offtn a Divorce Recovery P'Oll9 for children 9 to 12 from beainni!'I on Jan. I 0 from 4 to 4:4S p.m.,at the . cluo, 1815 Anaheim Ave., Cotta Mesa. Sessions, led by a licensed family counselor, cover children's P.f'Oblems adjustina to divorce includina fantasies of parents ,etting beck totether and frustrations with step families. The poup sessions arc free to members and nonmemben of the club. Interested parents are asked to sip up immediately at the club. For more information. call the cl ub at 646-7181. R«reatlon dasses open In lrvlM Irvine's Communjfy Services Department of- fers several rccrcatjonal classes for youths and adults beginning this month. Amon' the more unusual offerings, are a class in performing magic for those 16 years and older, beginning Jan. 17: cartooning·ror children 1 to 11 years. beginning Jan. 2': and tot cooking for children ages 4 to 7 years. beginning Jan. 25. Other classes include raquetball, karate and tiny tot groups. Fees vary. Classes arc at Deerfie ommunity Park. 55 Deerwood West. Irvine. For ore information. call Program ._Coordif!ptor , ela Crof\s at 551-8638. Volunt~er mentors sought Rancho Santiago College 1s seek.in' volunteer mentors from the business and professional com- munity, especially medicine, to spend four to fi ve hours per month with high school seniors. The program is designed to help reduce the dropout rate and promote higher education. For more information or to volunteer. call the Volunteer Center of Orange County at 953-5757 or 582-3176. Bicycle trails mapped Irvine's Bicycle Trails Committee has de- veloped an "Irvine Arca Bicycle Trails Map" for cyclists. The map chans trails in Irvine. Orange. Tustin. Costa Mesa. Newport Beach. Laguna Beach and Laguna Hills. It is available free at the Irvine Civic Center. Chamber of Commercl' and most cit) and communit) parks and recreation centers. Planetarium shows on Sundays Ranc ho Sa n1iago College's Tessmann Planetarium hosts public planetarium show-; at 2 p.m. ever)' Sunda). The shows are sponsored b) the Orange County Astronomer.; . .\small donation 1s requested at the door. The college 1s at 17th and Bnstol streets in Santa Ana. For more 1nformat1 on on specific shows, call 66 7-3096. Eyes have It for screening Saddleback Eye Center will offer free cataract and glaucoma screenings in Laguna Hills dunng the second week of the new )Car. The first 1s from 10:30 a.m to noon on Jan I 0 at the Ct"nter. 23 161 Moulton Parkway. The second will be from 10 a.m. to noon Jan 11 al Laguna Hills Optical. ~353 1 Calk de la Lousa. The screening is simple and painless but docs not replace a complete e)r examination For more information. call the qe center at 95 1-4641. Quake preparedness fair Fountain Vall«y will host an Emplo)re Preparedness Vendor Faire from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Jan. 10 at the Communll\ Center. 16400 Brookhurst St. · The faire features merchants showcasins their earthquake and disaster preparedness supplie!> for businesses. For more 1nforma11on. call Salh Fran1 at the center. 965-4449. · Animal rights explored The Newpon Center Library. 856 San Clemente A\e .. continues Its Evl'ninf At The Library senes wit h lhl' second half o a special program on animal rights at 7 p.m. Jan. 10 in the library's Community Room. Sandra Behm and Debbie Wydel of PRISM. People for Reason for Science and Med1c1ne. will give an 1llustra1ed lecture on "Hidden Cnmt"s." telling why they think it 1s a detriment 10 human health to use animals to solve human medical problems. The talk presents the opposi ng side of an issue discussed in a December lecture. Talk s art" free and open to all . ('-\I .• :'\ D .\ H Wednesday, Jan. 3 No meetings schedukd. Thursday, Jan. 4 No meetings scheduled. .. 01 If I I Of, Conserv~nc.Y tQ oversee Bolsa ·Chica, lty ftAUL AKNl'UY Of .. o._ ......... The sty above cleared bY. a wmter storm, the Bolsa Chica wet.Janda Tuesday were alive with hundreds of lhoveJer ducks and black-bellied plovers feedina on the brine shrimp that thrive io the saltwater marshland. At the same time, on a blu'fl\op over- lookina the 1,60()..acre site west of Hunt- ington Beach. the Bolsa Chica Con- servancy was established. It was hailed by panicipants as a historic occasion. The conservancy will oversee rcsto- ntion. management. education programs and other issues tied to the wetlands. Its formation also provides a permanent organization for community involve- ment. An environmental bauleground for more than 20 years. the Signal Landmark Co. property will be panially developed, but the bulk will be subject to wetlands restoration for migratory birds and other flora and fauna. In May. Signal Landmark and the environmental group Amigos de Bolsa Chica ended their long-running battle with an agreement fo r a deve lopment and wetlands res1ora11on plan. Dr. Victor Lc1pLig. named its first executi ve director Tuesda). said estab- lishment of the Bolsa Chica Conservancy wa5. the first \lep 1n building a foundation for a lasting ins11tu~n that would guide restoration of the we tlands and later ensure its protection. Reflecting the cooperation between public and pn"atc agenc-1es and the com- munity that made the Bolsa Chica agree- ment possible. the conservancy's first board._ of director<; included rcpresenta- ll\ es-«om each group. Named chairman was count) Super- visor Harne11 Wieder. Other board members Wl're Peter Grel'n. ma)Or pro tern of Huntington Beach: Peter Dl'nn1\lon. pres1drnt of Sig- 0.., Nee ...... ., ........ ..__ Conservancy board members Shlrley Dettloff and Peter Denniston survey the wetlands. nal Landmark . D:.in Ciorfain o t the Cali- fornia State L and'i Comm1ss1on: and Shirk) IX1tloll. 11rc')1den1 of ·\m1gos de Bolo;a Chica \.\ IL'der prnl1CtL·d the prOJtt'I would be th L' .. greatest rL'\tora11on of wetlands 1n thL' t t.S. .. People th roughout the rnuntr: will n >mr to 'K'C man hv 1ng 1n t'Ompass1on and rnmpat1b1lit) with naturt." she said Dcnn1~ton ..aid the Bol<.a ( h1ca plan 1s rL'lL'I' ing muLh a11cn11on throughout thl' u1untf\ "t:.n \ irunmL·ntal 1'>~ues arl' lx't·oming more and more 1mponant. I-or a de- \ L'lu rx·r rn lhl· l'190s. 1f )ou·re not SL·n\lll\ c to the L·n' 1ronmcn1. ~ou 're in thL· "'rong hu!>1nl.'\\ ... he said Hailing l"'>tahh~hment of the con- '-t'n ann cl\ ..1 m1lc-;1one. Dt'nn1s1on rc- u1ed a ·Krn~an pro,c.'rb he said applied to H\llo·,a l h1cJ ··Treat the Eanh well. It "a' n111 g1' L·n 10 ~ ou h) ~our parents: it "J' lua hL·d l n '11u h) ~ uu r children ... Red Cross will help families locate relatives in Romania Alleged assault By DEBORAH SAKAMOTO Dally ....,, Co<rr__.,. The <>ran gl· < ount) rha111er ol the AmL'rKan Rn.I < 111". "'hirh ha' had ll' hando; full a1d1ng '1n1m<, of hoth Hur· rn·anl' I lugo :.lllU lhL' \an fran('l\CO earth· qual...c. ha' no" turned 11~ L'~l'" 10\.,arJ Roman1J In an etfon 111 hdp the ltx.·al Romani.in tummun11~. thL· lhapta 11i<la' "'di begin lhl· prnu''>'> vi tr.1ng lu 1oratL' tam1l~ mcmt'll'f\ 10 Romania. D11na1111n\ arc h1:1ng \ought 111 hdf) 1n 1ha1 l'lfort and rl·l.111:<l rdtL'f Jl ''' llll"' ThL' pron''>' of reaching rdat1\l''i 1n Romania "'111 not tx· e:.t'i) or 4u1cl... "';11 nl·d S) h t:l ~IL'\\ art. srx1!..cw. om an for t hl' rou n l) rhJ pta .. It 1s 1mposc,1hll· to predict hn"' long 11 "Jll tah· for a rnpon'c from Rnman1a It I\ \Cf). \L'I") d1tfoult. l'\f>l't"13ll~ In a 'itlll:lllun of f)<lll lllal Uf)ht•J\ al .. , Ith onh an in tl'nm g<nernmL·nt. .. It\ 11 1...t· putting a pu11k tngL·thrr:· Businessman to challenge Pringle in 7 2nd District By City News Service One wel.'k atkr thl' rontro' l'rc;1al poll guard case "a' scttlc<l. the lir\I challenger t'ame fornard I uc~a' for the 72nd A~~mbl) D1\lmt ~at nm' hdd h~ ( un Pringle Democrat" Jcrn Yudelc;on . a Ciarden Ciro' L' bu\lnl''>'inlan. announlcd his hid for the Sl.'at. '' hirh. after the No' cmbn I Q88. election tx"{ame the focus of a contro' er;' "hen '>tX Latino rl.'c;1dent'> filed \Ult a'ga1nc;1 Pringle and the Orangl' Cou nt\ Republican Committee charging thl·~ h'ired uniformed security guards to 1n11m1datc H1-;11an1r voters at the polls "The main 1'i'iUt' in this ca mpaign 1'i ( urt Pringle's fitness to serve the people ofth1s area. g1n·n his admitted role in the in11m1dat1on of Hispanic "voter.; in Santa Ana on Elc<.·11on Oa) 1988... ~1d Yudclson. Neither Pnngk. R-Garden Gro,e. nor his aides could be reached for comment. T he cac;e was sculed last week when Prinslc and the Orange County Re- publican Party agreed to pay $400.000 to the plaintiffs "ithout admitting tht"ir guilt . 60 Ceausescu allies reportedly Imprisoned. A4 \te\\ Jrl a<ldl'u I ht' 1r4ur\l\ 1111 1nl11rm.11111n. "'h1th tht l11t.ll 1 h.lplt'I \\ tll hdp fC\IUL'lll\ n1m· pkh· "ill ~· 't'lll t11 lhl' ln1anat1on.11 l 1111111111trl' 111 thl' Rn l < rn\\ ir1 C1rnr'a \\\ll/nl.1nd .ind ul11111Jh.'h w th l' Huma- n1.1n RnJ ( '"" · l hr rnjlll'''" ,,.,, ~· :tll"l'f)ll'\I tu<la) ,rnJ I h u r,J,I\ I 111111 I Ill K 11 111 JI I he I I 11111111g.111n Hl'Jl h ( cntl·1 I ll8!1~ (101h.1rJ '\1 \t thL· \anta .\na utlill· Cllll (n1IJL·n ( lflk l>rt\e. fl'ljlll''-1' \\Ill OC ..tu qitcd h111 h d.1 '' I rom X l ll ..t m 111 '> pm [ hl'rl' I\ 0 11 il'l' th11Ugh lhO\e U\ing thl' 't'f\ Ill' nHJ\l h1..· I hangL' t ount~ rC'>ldt"nt<, .111J rdJt1\l'" 111 tho<.I.' oc1ng \ought Thl' Kl·d C """ h.i.. 1"1'tl·d '1gm 1n Rumanian l IHll\ hl"' 111 c lr,111!!1..· < nunt' tn puhlicitt" tht' \l'r\ l\l' Bt•lorL· a'iking thl· Rell < rO!>\ for hdp "-ll'\\Url \U&gl'\l\ local rl''1dent<. tn the lll•lll' Jlfl'l'l anproarh -lhl· 1dq1h11nl.'. 11r n l'll telegram ·1 ha't: hear<l from Romanian tamil1cs 1n ( h.1ngl' ( ount ~ '"ho art• ha ' 1ng \UtCe\'> rt·.11.. h1ng their famil~ 1n that ulllntn ·· 'hl' .... 11J 'IL'\lart \au.I the IJ'ik of pr11\ 1ding l'lllL'rgrnl~ n1t·d11..J1 \urrlit·<. 111 Kt1 m.101J ha'> tx·l·n lltmplrtl·d though an L'<.llmated S 11 million i.. rn1um·d for rontrn uing rd1l"I .\~ 111 1-nda\. onh S..,55 had ht·en d11n atL'd 111 thl" ·lornl ~·haptt·r ( hn 1.." for I ht• Red < ro\\ ltH Koma· n1.111 Rl'l1l'I 'h1lUld ~· ma11l-J to 1h1· \ma1t·an Rl'd ( fO'>'>. Orange < ount' < haptcr. P n HO\ 11 lo..i. \,1nl.l .\n.fl ·1~, I I 1' Lagunans believe son near Vatican Embassy By the Dally Piiot \ I agun.i lk..tl h t·oupk \aid F-r1da~ th.11 thL'lr 211·\ t•.ir-ol<l '>1lll "a' among 1t111'l <ll·plm l'd 111 l'.1n:lmJ tollu"' ing the l " ln\J \1•111 t>l1 l>n ~II p,t 1'.1ul < \ott'i11pouln'. a l1·HP ~r.1d u.11l· 111 I .1~un.1 ~k:tlh lltgh Lhool. JllllH'd otht•r 'nld1rf\ frnm the ..,th lnfan- tn D1 \1~1un .11 I 1111Ord1n thr tcmJXlra~ 1..kphn mL·nt II• 1'.1n..1ma. uk.k named ··'nnfr11d I >.111\ t'I .tllorJing w tht' l ' S \1111) ~otl.'rnpout.1' 1' thl' '11n of Drno and \1ana \otl'fl'P"ul11' 111 I agun.1 Ekarh Iii., tatht·1 ... mJ thl') "flO"-t' f uc.'sda~ "HL' <;a1d om· 11f tlw gu~' 1n h1<; 11u tfil "a" <,hnt an<l hi.' ""nll'U 111 kt 11., kno~ 11 ,,,1,n't him:· l:kno ~Ptl'ntfl\)Uhl., ..aid H 1~ son. "ho JOl nl'd thL' .\rm~ in .\ugust I Qlil'I. "'·''on lcaH' and prcpanng 10 JOtn ht'I famil} fot thL· holida'" "hen he was called hack to dut' tfr"~ 20 ''nuld hL-,1,11111nl·d in Panama (II\ 1n mud1 Jh11ut 111, dul' ..... h1k thar .:Oh- '1ou'h hr ,.111·1 tl"ll° U\ H'n mu1.h:· hl' \31\.1 H O\.\l" l'r 1.111111\ mcmocr'i "1" J Ol''-'\· rarx-r plh1t11 -....1tlHUJ\ llf <,nldtt'r' patrnl- hng oul\llk thl' \ at1lan Emhav1~ "hl'ft' (iL•n Manud '-11r1l'g:i ton!.. rl'fugc and an· LOO\ 1n1.l·d 1ll1l' 111 thl' <,11ld1~h 1n the· p1l turt· ~,.1, ""tt•r11p.1uh" hi' tarher '<lid .\lthough the ligh11n~ '>(.'em' 10 he all hut O\l'r .... n1p..-r' .in<l minor outhrcai..., ~r' ca' rl.'mindt·r, th.II Panama remain., a da ngcmll\ rl~ll l' ··He JU"t l..n•r, )otero poulo'i ,,11J do~n.·· His c;on '' .inwng 14.1)(1\1 \ " "old1cr\ c;cnt to augml·nt the I ~.1100 alrcad) c;1a- 11oned at ba<,{'\ in Panama far. ~~ l "> SL'f' icemen and thrC't' Cl'1hans ha'e tx·cn l...1lled in the 111,ac;1on. and more than 300 .\mcnran soldiers ha'e been "ounded. "He was ~ared. natural!~ years old.'' ~Otl·ropoulo'i said The first l '.S troop' -1-i I of them - left Panama and returned earl' Tuesday He didn't l...now ho" lon(l hie; son to Fon Ord. By LESLIE EARNEST °' ..... o .. ..,. ""°' \1.ofl \ <.l'\u:il J\'-1ult that Jlkgc<ll~ took pl.Ill .11 J IJguna Hi:Jth ,L."' 'i l.'ar"' E'c f)..t rt\ 1.u hcJnng 1mpa1rL·J students from IP1nt"' l n1•l'f\ll\ High ~hool was lx·1 ng in' l''llg.ttl·d h~ police f ut'Sday . \t thl· pan~. "h1ch was held on High l>fl\c <111 l:<-~1..·•:ir·old heanng-1mpaired \\11man from 'L'"Pl'rt fkach '"as alleged · I\ f11r1.L·d 1n111 a hathro(1m JUSt after m1Jn1gh1 and .l\-..1ultcJ Thc: suspect. a 2n-~ l'ar-tild L..iguna Real h resident. is .tl,u hl'Jnng-1mp.1irL·J I hl· \U\Pl'l l hl'ld thr 'Kt1m down on tlh" ha1hro1•m tlo\11 for 10 to I~ minutes. l'l.'l11rl· thl' inu<ll·nt "a' interrupted by othn p.1n' -g<>1.·r<. "ho unlocked the bath- r1111111 Jrn>r "1th ..t t'rl.'d11 card. Laguna lk.k h PPllll" "lg.I K.:1: mund L..ard1e said. ·Ont· 111 thl· f>l't)Pk became concerned .11"\(lUI hn ~·1ng 111 thr hathroom for so l11ng ·· L .11 J1c <.a 1J \Iler J1\\0\ aing the fu ll)-clothed \\11111an pinm·d 111 the ground and the rn.111 ''•th h" f).tnh .1mund ht~ knees. one 11 1 1tw pn1pk "'hn opened the door p11111.. twJ lhl' 'U"Pl"l'l. Lard1e cia1d. I hl' '11ung "nman was taken home to htr mi •lhl·r "h11 wok her to Hoag Mem- • 11.tl 11 1 ... p11al l .1rd1e said ..\ nurse called r<ol1\l· .11 anprn\1ma1eh ~-.is a.m. I he pJrt' Jttrndcd b~ as many as )() Pl"11 pk ,nntinuL·d alicr the woman was 1.1!..cn hunw I .1rd1l' ..aid. In .1 '"-'l<lnu 'L'\\ 't car'-; Da) inc1 deni. p11li\l arrl'\tl·d J ( 1arden l 1rove reSJdent 11n "U"P•l 111n 111 rape after he allegedly .111.11.. l..l·J J 1 ''-'L·ar·<~ld Torranrc woman "h11111 hr h.1.I 1al..rn to a Laguna motel .tltl·I J dJll' I .trdll' '>aid. \lil had lt'l' l 11v.nscnd. 47. was ar- lt'\ll'd alkr tx·ing d1'>tracted by a phone lJll trom a v.11r~rr at thl' front desk who ha<l rl.'f)<lrtl'dl~ hc..trd the woman's sobs. l .mlil· 'did \.\ h1k Townsend answered till' phont'. lht• \ Kllm cli mbed from the ha1 hw11m v.1n<l11"' aqd went to the desk tor lwl r he •,:11d l o"' n-.cnJ ,,a., arreo;tC'd in the parkina lot 111 thr \cad11l l\.1otcl on South Coast H 1gh" a' a ft e1 office re; rcce1 ved a call from the trnnt <le'!.. at about 5:30 a.m .. La rd1c <w11d The suspect was held at Orangl' Count\ Jail in heu of SS0.000 hail Newport Beach A 20-year-old Corona dcl Mar man came out to his t 986 Toyota pickup truck parked in the 300 block of Lark.spur A venue and found someone bad deflated &U four tires. maticed up the·sides with a key. cut Ii~ enainc compartment wiTn and broken one windshield wiper: a burJlarizcd apartme"nt in t~ 1800 block of Pa(k Newport. store and t fouaht with the 'alued at more than SI 0.000 from stole a l 2-:l beer from a liquor door. burglars stole a computer store~s man r who tried to detain Sof\wa rc House. QJ80 Warner Ave. of San Remo was start It'd b) a noise while she was taktnf a shower after m1dn1ght Saturday n tht' bedroom. she found a wmdo" pned open. but did not find an rntrudt"r La~una 8.-ach .\ home 1n th<' 700 ~ock of Blue- bird Can)on Drive was burslarized Nev. Year's Day. The loss was not stated. • • •• ResJdents of a duplex in the 200 block of lOlh Slftet ~ surprited by a k>ucf4balll" folloMd by the liviftl rvocn 11rindow lbat1eri111- Policc found a .38 caliber bullet on the srouDd near tbe kitcben. but no OM Ml ~wed. • • • AD air~ I C8le of IWF-~ bocdn ol a;_,,. Club =ad nri•• _,. ~ hm•0.-~111 u•a.Mll llr JO.-• CIMI Clldl. • A ...-\l!1 ,.._ .. .., ......... • • • Someone broke a water pipe in a public restroom at Washington and Bay streets. causina water to flow out into the street. • • • A male SUSl'ttt driving a ~y. hep Cherokee-like ~n with three other pas5ensen inside tot ·~ and punched a ala• W1ndow at Mna Motel. 415 N. Newpon_.81.vd."'.'"l" aftrr a mold employee inwonnco bim he'd need to"mtt two rooms for the four of 1hem. • • • Oote lO sr.ooo cuh was miMiftl ftom a .... at At Ult dodaina store. 579 Newport Center Dr .• ~ lined '8bn d.uri111 "" baly aftet-OuitUnu M r..a.lleea .d F . ~-v ·1 • • • • them outsi e. rar~ClSCO vnl2 1 -Four hubcaps "alued at $800 were lcgu •. 24 and Santiago He~andcz-stolen ofT a Karmen G hia parked on Ga~a. were ~rrcst~ at 7.35 p.m. the 9400 btock of El Blanco Avenue. outside Sunshine Liquor. 724 W. • • • 19th Strttt. Diners er\joycd food and alcohol. Police arTCSt~• Norman JOICDh thl'n smack out. sticking the owner Nienstcdt, 31. of Costa Mesa. (or \\1thaSlll tabatMananas, 17171 alleauily breaking a.n Oranac Coun-Brookhurst St. • • • ly Transit District bus bench Sun-A reaident rcmovl'd his Sl.500 day. Damaec to the bench was esti-watch to wash his hands. forsot it. mated It $250. then returned 20 minutes tater to • • • find it JORC from the mt.room It po~eJi'y~ to 8:!'in ~:ft.~':; M.,-ic C.llcnden. 18889 Brookhunt the South Coast Plaza Sears store fof St. • • • an item of clothlna the had just BuraJan took mott than S400 in taken otr a store r'8Ck without eq~t ftoom the bMWll Clll'1 al purdlMiJll. U.. Cadarine N191. ~ fltllily flan Cntcr. 16800 Mlsn<>lia was al'ftMed 11 S:4S p..m. on IU:IPi· Ave. cion of peny theft. fom1.U. Valle7 lri• After ........... tbc ft'OM allil A..-.. hvilll on tbc 700 blotl • • • T"o mt'n weft' m1ure'd and another two arrested af\<T New Years Eve panics erutpcd into battles. In one incident. pof1~ found a man lyina in the slrtet after he'd been hit in the head with a bottle shortl y btfore mtdniJht Sun<iay. Hl''d bctn at 1 party 1n the I SOOO block o~ Humph~ . Circle whec.h police ~1d they broke up. A 20-yeer- 'old man was anated in C'Onntetion with the assault. At the Residence Inn 1\. 10 Morsan~ a 21-yeer-<>ld man.,...,... m~ ~ly after mlctailbt .... Police weft aa8ed tlO the ICe9e IO bfeek op I f'lbt bel-wmt WM - ""'' ft1 -......... uilll I botdt • I weepon. l • • • A person called pol\ce M~ momin1 to 58)' that an ex--temm 1n th<' 31500 block of Bluff' Dri.-e W stolen all property in the bo9e. includint m~or applianca. Ttte Iola was li~cd at S2.400. • • • .. The Dftlidlat'• ~ proposals ~ the &1Ca1 year blli•nina 0c:1. l , and could abt afl'ect eapendjtum thi1 winter. pated in l 98', when it dhed S2. l billion and terVed 6.8 million families and individual1. ~· ~· ... -·-----· I · i i t I . a • • • • lndl•n Affaln Ofllce bombed . The propam hd11t about 6.1 million houlehokh in the counuy. ma.inly by peyina part of their heatina billL Small pan.ions of it are used to help cover air conditionjna and insulatlnJ expenses and to aid famjlies in .daftler of losina their heatina service. ckdlHd to comrAtat on the ~advocates of lnldativcs tor low.income people said the cuu would dalftllt a propam that is already under-financed. "Tius propam has been cut enouah over the last few years," said Ed Block. executive director of the National Auociation of Community The prasram wu a favorite WJCt for proposed reductions under for- mer President Reapn ·s bud,et proposals. In aome years Reaaan's b~ts called for no appropriations at all on the v<>unds that refunds to the states. from oil companies who overchaf'led when petroleum prod- ucts were under price controls, could provide aJI the needed money. IUVERSID£-A bomb pluled iD the ....a...._ ollndiaD Atfain oftlce blew out' wiDdowl ud doon ud ripped out die Soar !;~ no one wu inhared, authorities aid. ll wu the lllC09d.' bomblna in Rivenide County in four daya but audioriua band no .J..J im mcd.iate link with a bombina that damaaed an ofticic on the Moroqo ~ Indian ReterVation early Friday. The previous bombina occumd about . 2 a.m. Dec.. 29 but was not discovered until 7:4S a.m., when worka1 amvf!d at a bullDCU office of the Moronao Band of M isaion Indians near Ban.runa. _ ~keswoman Barbara Oay of the Office of Manaeement and Budtet Action Pr~ms. · Federal eneray aid to the ~r started shortly after the A.rat; oil emblrao in l 973. ]'he prosram t;rlend kllls AIDS patient, himself Man hustled from Vati.can Embassy LOS ANGELES -A close friend of a 1J9ticnt dyina from Alps complications walked into Cedars-Sinai Medical Cent~ on T~y eve~na where he shot and killed bis com1>9nion, then commlt~ suae1~. The S. IS p.m. murder-suicide occurred in the patient's room. w d .hospital spokes- man Ron Wisc. Neither man was identified bctause (Clat1ves had not yet been notified. Wisc said. PANAMA CITY. Panama (AP) -A man emerged Tuesday from the Vatican Embassy, where Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriep took ref-uae more than a week ago. and U .S. aoldiers bustled him a~. A priest inside said be was "a little fish," not Noriega. At least two of the deposed gen- eral's top a.ides are lnown to have touaht shelter in the em bassy, and a Panamanian officer said many for- mer Noriep henchmen were be- lieved to be hiding in the Vatican or other embassies. "I can assure you none of the big ones left," said the Rev. Javier Vil- lanuM, reached by telephone in the embassy.;He said he did not know the name of the man taken out. Reporters and photographers with telephoto lenses RQSted on the roof of a nearbr hotel agreed the man did not appear to be Noricp. He came o.., of the embassy with two othcn. mcludina Villanueva, · and was turned over to the Ameri- can soldiers who sutTOund the com- pound. They marched the man to a helicopter, which took him away. Church sources said the man was a Cuban tryina to get a visa to the United States at the time ofthc U .S. invasion and fled to the embassy fcarinJ for his life. The sources. spcakmg on condition of anonymity, said he was flown to Fort Clayton, headquarters of U.S. Army South near Panama City, to be in- vestigated. U.S. Embassy spokesmen said they had no explanation. Col. Roberto Armijo, head of the Security Forces created since the U.S. inva~n Ott. 20. said Tuesday many former Nori~ aides were believed to have eluded capture· by hiding in embassies. The Vatican announced that one of its top experts on Latin America had arrived in Panama to help in the nqotiations about Noriqa's fate. Vatican spokesma n Joaq_u in Navarro said Monsianor Giacmto Bcrloco would ''live a hand" to the pai-1 nuncio, Sebastian Laboa. who as the equivalent of an ambassador. Navarro would not give details and said the Vatican would have no comment. The Vatican has said it was trying to convince Noriega to leave the building. but also has said it would not hand him over to the United States without his coasent. Foreign Minister Julio Linares said Tuesday he is confident the Vatican will tum Nonega over soon but urged patience. The government. meanwhile. closed two television and I 0 radio stations believed linked to Noriep and declared them .. under state custody." • President Bush named career diploipat Deane Hinton as am- bassador to Panama. the White House announced-Tuesday. Hinton. now ambassador to Costa Rica. re- places Ambassador Anhur H. Davis. who was recalled months ago. Officials in Washington said Deputy S«retary of State Lawrence Eagleburger would fly to Panama for talks with President Guillermo En- dara on U.S. aid to Panama and other issues. Panamanian o ffic ials sai d Eagleburger wo uld meet with En- dara and Vice Presidents Ricardo Anas Calderon and G uillermo Ford this morning. • Troops ·retum from Panama MONT~REY -A smaJI continacnt of the l4,000 U .S. \!OOP5 ~t invaded Panama returned home Tuesday1 sayina they aa:omplisbed ~et.r mission of helping to install a democratic fOYCmmcnt. Se.venty soldt~ based at Fort Ord arrived aboard a carao plane Tuesday night, followi~ 56 G ls who landed aboard a C-141 transport at about 6:45 a.m: after a bn ef stop at Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio, i:-cus. The sol~tcrs ~ere the fi rst uninjured troops to pull out of Panama since the U.S. mvaston Dec. 20. F'our die in parked motorhome SAN DIEGO -Four campers died of ap~rent carbon monox~de poisoning as they huddled in a motorhomc parked 1n the La&una Mounlllns on a cold a nd ramy night. authorities said Tuesday. Chari.es Kelley. a deputy San Diego County coroner, said the motorhomc s gasoline-powered aen~­ ator was running when members of the Mount Laguna Volunt«?Cr Fare Dcpanment forced the motorhomc's door open and found the bodies New Year's niptt. . . . NUNS From Al Vi"deo shows senator Tht' identified v1ct1ms were Kathcnne Walsh. 30; Michael McCrea, 32, and Conan Lemmer, 28. All three lived in San Diego. The name of a fo!J~h victi m. whose family li ves in England, wa_s with~eld to allo w the Bntlsh consulate in LQs Angele s time to notify his rclauvcs. '\:\TIO'\:\I. HHlt:t ·s 'Ill, Bluefields. was wo unded in the arm. .. He has lost a lot <.'f blood." said Estrada. ·a Roman Catholic priest in Bluefields. "He is out of danger." getting 53,000 check Northeastern Nicaragua 1s an isolated area with few roads. A stronghold of the Miskito Indians, it formed an auto nomo us part of the C ontra resistance . Blue fields. Nicaragua's mai n Caribbean port, is about 100 miles south of Puerto Cabezas. Sister Jean Steffes. mother su- perior for the Sisters of St. Agnes in fond du Lac. said reports she re· ceived from Nicaragua indicated the church workers were traveling be- tween cities and may have driven over a mine. "We're assuming it was a m ine. But we JUSt don't know," sn e said. She told reporters in Wisconsin It marked the first time members of her order were killed doing mission- ary work. She identified the wounded nun as Sister Francisca Maria Colomc!z 24, a Nicaraguan. The nun sunered head and face wounds. but would survive, she said. The mother superior said the two Nicaraauans became nuns on Jan. 21 , 1989. Frances Courtney, mother of Maureen Courtney Maureen. told JOumahsts 1n thl" Mil· waukce suburb of Wauwatosa. "I JUSt found out. the convent ca me and told me. The) know nothing eithe r. She is dead ... M rs. Courtne)'. who lives with her husba nd Russel. said her daughter had been in Nicaragua for 15 years. "She was supposed to celebrate her 25th Jubilee in the order this December," the mother said ... She was JUSt a lovely little girl. .. SACRAMENTO (A P) -Jurors in federal court saw a video tape Tues<la) of state Sen Joseph Mon-to~a aC<:cp11ng a S3.000 check from 'an umlerco,er FBI agent and prom- ising to help shepherd spec1al- intcrcs1 legislation through the Sen- . ate. Prosecutors played the FBI-made tape fro m a hidden camera to bolster racketeenn~ charges against Mon- to)a, a lleging that the El Mo nte Democrat took the mone) for his \Ole. / Montoya has plt\ded in nocent to bribery. extonion. rackcteerin$ a nd mone~ laudenng charges. He is the fi rst person to stand tn al as a result of the FBl's investigation of alleged corruption at the state Capitol. His trial entered 1ts fou rth week Tues- da}. resuming after an I I-day hol- 1da> recess. Defense attorneys contend the money he accepted dunng a June 29. 1988. breakfast meettng at a down- town acramento restaurant "as a lawful honoranum . The videotape showed Montoya joking that the check total was S30.000. then promising to wo rk for 60 Ceausescu colleagues re ported Imprisoned; punishment promised Jft.JCHAREST, Romania (AP) -Ceausescu and his wife. Elena. prison. The interim J<>vemmcnt said Tues-were convicted of genocide and "I estimate there are about 60 ... day it had imprisoned about 60 of other "grave crimes" against all close collea,ues o f Ceausescu," former didator Nicolae Ceausescu's Romania and executed Dec. 25. he said ... All evildoers from the old cloeesl usociates and would punish Whether or where they were buried regime will be brought to JUStice ... .. all evildoen from the old rqime." has not been disclosed. but the of-About 40 Cea usescu relauvci arc r . M ' , k Co ficial Yu1oslav news agency Tanjug thought to have occupied ranlcmg .-oreaan mistry spo esman n-q uoted Girbca as saying they were government posts before the popular = ~U~ f;1~.Jr~~~l~ ''probably buried on the spot." revolt that ended Ceausescu's 24- the C.eaulCSCU family" and the De-Girbea told a news conference all )Car rule. feDte Miaistry would announce executive members of the Com-The C~usescus' youngest son, ftanber details of punishments. munist Pany Politburo were in Nicu. and only daughter. Zoia, were =================::;:=================Tl captured in the early days of the Oonge ount" EVENT SPONSOQEO ev OGJOn J •1 • ........, violent two-week uprising that claimed thousands of lives. G irbca spoke to reporters hours after the National Salvation Front leadership announcN the death of intenm Deputy Foreign Minister Comcliu Bogdan. thl' kg1s lat1on "'hen 11 reached the Sc nail' noor. ''I'll be there ... he said. Monto\a received the check from FBI agl·ni George Murray. who was posing as a (icorg1a businessman "'ho "'an tcd a measure passed 10 benefit his fictitious company. Murru~. using the ahas of George M1ll<:r. ~uggl'sted thal Montoya ver- 1f) thl' total on the check because Murra) said he'd tx.~n drinking late thl· night before and might have "'ntll'n thl· v. rong amount. Thl' breal..fast meeting of Mon- tO\ a, Murra' and John Shahab1an. a Sc·nate a1dl' ~ork 1ng as an FBI oper- all '°l'. tool.. plac+ at a restaurant about l1AO blocks from the state Capitol. Another FBI agent si tting at a nearb' tabk with a "1deo camera in her purse recorded the meeting. Prosecu1ors allege that after ac- cepting the check. Mo ntoya de- posited S2.000 in his personal ac- count and took the remaining S 1.000 in cash. Defense auome> s contend that the honorarium didn't require Mon- to) a to g" e a speech and was legally allowed for his personal u~. Crews clean up oil spill near Morocco RABAT . Morocco CA P) -Heh· copters on Tue sd ay spra1ed chemical asents on a I 00-square; mile oil slick and cleanup crews vacuumed some of the muck from the surface of the Atlantic Ocean as the leading edge of the spill neared Morocco's coastline . Mo rocco said about 19 millio n gallol'ls of crude have spewed from the crippled Iranian tanker Khark 5, but environmental experts said high waves broke up much of the oil and 1t dissolved in the 60-degrc-e seas. Spokesman Daan Kaakcbcen of the Rotterdam-based salvage firm Sm11 Tak said the tanker's two leak- ing chambers had emptied by Tues.- day -"We haven't had any leakqc for the past 24 hours." But Moroc- co's official news age ncy, Mqhreb Arabc Prcssc, said about 530 gallons an hour were escaping. :::~1 E= ---.. - :mi BL PORTAL l..eo!l>e< AcoeUOt.., ~ Ruffel l's Upholstery Inc. ~SOion -· / C!r.· Moof borl ,.....,, ... ~CHiio ... --...... -- January Speclal Ill - Alaskan volcano erupts again ANCHO RAGE. Alaska -Redo ubt Volcano blew its top again Tuesday and sc1e nt1sts said the eruption appeared to be larger than those that occurred in December after the volcano emerged from a 25-ycar sleep. A pilot reported seeing "lightning and fi reworks" and a plume as high as '40,000 feet after thl' eruption occurred about 6 p.m .. said David Sto ne. a geoph)s1c1st "1th the Alasla Volcano Observatory in Fairbanks. Sc1ent1sts have been monitoring the volcano around the clock. After resting for a quarter of a century; 1he peak erupted Dec. 13 and spewed ash 33.000 feet into the air the next day. Varying levels of seismic activity continued through the month 1 O,CXX> gallons of fuel spills Into river PIITSBLI RG H -Officials predicted little environmental damage after 10.000 gallons of gasoline leaked into the Monongahela River from a runaway barge. and a second loose barge was reco vered Tuesday wHh Its cargo intact. T he two vessels were a mo ng at least 55 barges that were npped from their moonngs along a 58-milc stretch of nver on New Years Day by chunks of ire rushing through the rain-and snow-swollen waters. Thirty sank. some of which we re empty and the others lo"1ed with coal. Shuttle readied for Monday launch CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. -Workers switched Columbia's power on Tuesday as the} readied the space shuttle for launching Monday on the first of a record I 0 missions planned in 1990. Launch is scheduled for 5:06 a.m . PST. Liftoff had been scheduled fo r December but was put off because it was taking longer than expected to ready the launch pad, which bas .mdergonc a S50 million renovation since it was last used four yean ago. Durin' I 0 -.days in space, Columbia's crew of fi ve will deploy a Navy communications satellite and track down and retneve a science satellite before it falls to Earth in March. Study finds men suffer bone loss PORTLAND. Ore. -Men lose roughly 2 percent of their existing bone mass per year in the same 1ype of loss that can severely affect women after menopause. a study indicates. Men apparently suffer gradual bone lbss throughout their lives, compared with women. who of\cn suffer a marked increase m bone loss after the) reach m enopause. Dr. Eric Orwoll. who led the study by the Oreaon Health Sciences Uni versity, said in an interview Tuetday. Researchen believe bone loss in wo men is related to the decrease in cstrosen levels associated with menopause but no o ne has studied whether honnonaJ levels also affCC1 bone loss in men, he said. Poland raises food prices WARSAW, Poland -The non-Commumst fovcmment raised prices of bread. sugar and other staples Tu~y in the atest moves in a radical proaram intended to transfonn Poland's economy to capitalism. But aome workers. who avcrqe $37 a month in salaries, questioned whether they could endure the proaram. The Communist-backed trade union denounaid the chan,cs. T he mcreascs came one day after the J<>Vemment quadrupled electricity rates and doubled the price of paoline, postal services and bus Wes. The price of hiah quality ham, a favorite cut in Poland. nearly doubled from 90 cents to SI. 70 a pound. Compromise saves lsraell coalltlon JERUSALEM -Prime Minister Yitzbak Shamir ~ Tuetday not to fire Ezer Weizman, th us savina the 90vemment coaliuon, but b&md tile ecimce minister from the inner Cabinet for lbs .U.S leCl'C't cootacU with the PLO. The compromi.e-came lat than two boun beb'e the deedtine for Weizm an's dismiaal and in volves a fbndamental issue of lsnieti policy. ~fi111l to talk with the Palestine Liberation Orpniution. wb.icb lnel officially calls I lm'Orilt poup. It ended two days of crisis that threatened to brina down the .. national unity .. coelit.ion of Shamir'• lwdline Libd bloc and the center-left Labor Party, of which Weizman i1 a tenior member. Yacht with American divers sinks OUAYMAS, Mexico -A ~t c:anyi&\~Amer'om and a crew of bar on 1 di~:C auk in tbe Gulf fl C ad two ..-wen ~ after . DI more tlWl I day iD 1M waw, = aildlla llMI 1Uetda_y. 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V;tn.-10 Wf'\INOOd f OV'tT' I_. Vtiw Tides TOOAY Fltll lo. 5«<>"<1 l>IQI\ Sec0<>0 IQw THIMIOAY Fuc '"9h f 11s1 ~· Secon<I h'llfl Secono ro ... 8 07 a m I 22 pm 7 35 pm 2 39 am 939 a m J ti pm 8 30 p,., S7 4 1 S4 44 S7 J9 S1 4) S• 4b l>J 4S S8 Sl S<I •l s 1 4() H 41 s8 •• bl 47 bS • • ~I 4 ) SI 41 t~ 4q H \8 S\ •• }'I lb h I • 1 SR Jl sq •8 18 1'1 20 3 11 11 50 '5 3' 16 Surf /sun/moon LOCATION Hun1ono1on 84tach RJVet Jelly ,,,_POI I •Orn 51•..,1 Newi>o<I '2no 5,,..,, Newoe>t1 B•lt>o• w eooe l at;1una S..&en SI' Cle..-le 1121 '"AN 2 3 .... 4·6 QOOO • 6 QOOO • 6 , .. , •·6 ,.,, 1.3 Im• l 11111 lly TN Aaodated Preu PARIS -Patrick'Kelly, the Mis- sissippi-born designer whose bright, sassy and feminine styles adorned the Princess of Wales, Bette Davis and Madonna, died Monday in a Paris hospital, his compan) said Tuesday. He was 35. Manrne Planterosc. managing di- rector of Kelly's business. said he died of bone marrow disease and a brain tumor. Kell y was the first and onl y American ever to become a member of the powerful Chambre S>ndacale of Read)-to-Wear and Couture. the French profe~~aonal fas hion or- ganization. Has filled. km1nme SI\ le:> w11h signature touches like buttons or bows all over. billiard-ball decor. casual bandanas. attracted at1ent1on c\l·r since hl' t·ame to Pans in the late 1 970~. Srnrc IQ87. Kell} wa'i backed b~ Warnan). the \menrnn company that manufat·turl''> for names lik~ CieofTre) Beene and Dior. His dothes ha\t· sold at Saks. Bergdorf Goodman. Martha's and elswhcrt• in thl' l 'n1ted tates and at the po'>h rl·ath-10-wcar V1ctom: store in Pan'> · Nt·v.sv.eek mag;wnc descnbed the la ad -bark ..\ mt.'ncan a .. dov. n-homc Chnst1an Lacrtm ." Drcs">Cd 1 n out'i11cd OH·ralls. da\ - glo running shoes, T-sh1rt'i and engi- neer..· caps. ht• hard I} looked tht" pan of a l) p1ral Pans1an counier. In I '179. the pcnne} -less Kc-II} arceptn l a one-v.a' t1ckl't to Pans whcrt' Ill' li'cd w1th·a 6-foot-~ model named Kim and '>cwed hke a dt•mo n ,,14ay .-...... s-, l .. \ ""04' L""•'"'l"-'"'' l. l•ttlir •oc.• l~•·\lfll~ SI IS SI JO t1 V"' ,.r,.., ., "'"''')hi 1w \ ' ' p rn ~\I w~·~ •~P Sii 60 5,. ... , d•t1'Ch0" Wttl The a1 ant-gardl· bought his shght- 1} fun!.}. fun outfit'>. and 1n 1985 the :>hop \' ll IOI re ordan.l a fev. modrl'>. COArTA4 AnAJ -Moury <~•• .. 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"'-"""'' N"WJ>l'ff 8r.H' o ... ,,,."" ::>.,, ~, ""~ \01 "'Q\ "'''~""V P "''".,. ltOOtr' R•l1 8"-'H CREATIVE JEWELERS of Laguna Btach • 14KT· 18KT C,old /twtlry •Diamonds CThirtk of us) •Rtpriirs ec us tom Designs ()pot 7 !Mys k--Fret P.tti"I m North Coast Hwy •ugwy Bexh, CA 926.51•(714)49M849 Raphael, a legend in his own time. ~.IMMI~ Artitl ol It. bnaluancw ~ Known b his MftW ol cob. bm ..,.. """'°"· he bKafM I ....._. In hk own time. Md now. Comt'\ ~ flU(9b., -N'-blmi of ......... -lty In talid twaM 1auca • ...._ ns M'QllOI' ..... ~-....... . -.. ................ ,., ... .................... .... 1"9M b,..., .... 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U\ut 1, ().C\0 ""'ll<Jt' U' ' I un "" •H''' 11 101 P~C> ,_.1~ ,,,,,,,.. .. lfh'ul /f /"IQ •• •1,ua .,, t J ' 'N,,_. ~ ' ' • "1f' ''" ~ ..,...... ' .. ,.a ""'"~ t""C' P\ ~ .tt /00 }It 1 \r<o"'CI \t<IQI" Ak'•t At I IS, Jq'f M"O i' l'WO \t~ ~ft At 4N" "U fT\~r f" Ht• l">t:gan to '>hov. on his ov. n <luring the rt•ad } -10-\1car collec11ons v.t•ek. anll h1' <.hov.s v.crl· a h11 - .iccompJn1cd b} foo1-1app1ng JaZL or fC\l\,ll mU'>ll' Has dothe' t':lught the l'}t ut the fu:>s~ and d1sl:nm1nating Chambre ~'nd1'-ale. ''htth 1n 1988 unan1- 111oush dt'Clt'U t11m a member of the rt•ad\-io-wcar· branch Of m 44 mcnitx·rs at tht· ttmt· Kl'lh 11.a., tht· onh .\mt·n can. anll there ~ere onh I U ·forc1gnl'rs Jltogcther · H1., famou'> r hl·nts rnmt• in all \ILC~ and <.h::.tp...''> -"1adonna rlX I. 'itngt'r C1racr Jont''>. the Pnnc""'' of Wak'>. Kcg1ne thc n1gh1l'lub queen. and op...·ra \ln~l.'r Jess)e ~orman One ul h1!. l:l\ onte clients and friends wall Brue Da' is. for 11. horn Fashionable faucets at Laguna's West End Wegt As a rule. decorat!ve hardware naa been a rather popular Item In Callfornia for some time. Fancy door hardware. lavish faucets and swftchplates - one la hard pressed to take a drive and pass homes wlthoot at least one of these marvelooa embelllshments somewhere within. But when does decorative hardware become more than simply a pretty way of saying "hinge" or "faucet?" According to Steve Oold~teln and Oavld Schuci< of West End West, decorative hardware la a serious element of a home's development from the standpoint of both Interior design a.nd as a work of architecture's structural Integrity. It must be more tha.n just another pretty lace In the home. It must perform Its function perfectly. as well as tastefully, for a.n extensive period of time. That means the finest quality coupled with finer design. They mean solid brass, and they are very knowledgeable about It. "Quite actually, there Is no merit In purchasing a decorative hardware Item unless It's made of aolld brass," Goldstein says. "Brus la an lncredlbly durable metal that only gets better wfth age. Aa the years pass. polishing yields a warm and vibrantly rich patina. "There la true value In solid brua. It doesn't wear out - It yields beautiful cabinet pulls that won't break ott In your hand, door locks that won't fall apart, Jam and lock you out of your houM, and fauoeta that do not corrode and look unsightly. It all CC>f'MI down to quallty." Stew Gotdateln should know. He la the third generation of his Phlladelphla family's SO.year-old decorative hardware bu'SI-'*'· It's a buatnesa that trades In decOratlve hardware on an Inter.national leYel and has been reeponalble tor many produci developments In the field. Therefore, his professional experience la unusually ex- tenllve, lnciudlng both conauttlng and product delign com- mlUlona from many of the lnduatry'a major manufacturers. Theee unique experlenon make him one of the mott knowtedge- abte people In hit fteld. and rNlke W•t E.nd W•t In Ulguna BMch the beet piece to find decorative hardwere for your home. Another .,... of W•t End W•t'a experience la In the "'CCM"'m ........ m ... •>r>daJ ~ of the profeak>nal. Interior ~nera. archttecta and buttdera find their ftMf Mlectlon and higher leYel expert ... '*11QMrty hetpful. "When a CUltomet mak• a purch ... at W•t End Weet, t~ •• nutthMlnn more tMn )u8t a finer decorative harctw.9 product;rGcid-....n Mys. "They .. ,,.Ing a purch ... backed by a level of knowledge not generlllly found. ''They fMke thet purchw In confidence with the re.HzatJon thet the product le not only a ~ exctttng and bMuttful oompMment to a room'• decor, but • ~ fUncttonlal. durable product, punt! 111 d at the right price, that _. yteld many good .. West End Weste ci5 i • One Hour Pholo he lovin&ly turned out a battb of fried chicken during one of her tript to Parii. Civil rights attomq R. .J~ss Brown, 17 JACKSON. Miu . -R. Jets Brown. a c1v1J ri&hts lawyer whose clients included fames Meredith as well as a young black man who was I) nched be-fore he could be' brought to trial on charges of raping.a white- woman, has died at 77. Brown. who died of cancer Sun- da) at Hands General Hospital, took an earl) stand against segregationist J im Cro"" Jav.s and was credited 1n the 195Us v.11h filing the first Cl\il nght~ su11 in M l!>!>1ss1pp1 lie 11.a<, one of Mered11h's laW)ers in h1:> '>Ur<e'><oful bid tO break the color bamn at l 'nl\ersit) of M1ss1s- s1 pp1 tn 196:!. Brov. n also rt'prt·sentt•d Mack ( harlc" Parl.er. "'ho was accused of raping a v.h11e ""Oman in 1959 Parkc:r "a" hnchcd and thrown into the Pt•Jrl Rl,t·r after Brown raised the issue ol JUr) d1<,t n m1nat1on pnor to Pari.n ·, trial. In th1.· 1950!.. Aruwn filed the fir!.! Cl\ ii nght'> la11.su1t in thr state. on behalf of a m1111s1cr in Jefferson Da' 1!> C1>Unt) chalkng1ng laws that madt· 11 1rnpo<o\1hlc for blacks to \Ult' • Bro11. n 1n 194!! al!>O. '>Ought equal !>lllanl'S for hlack 1cat·hers tn Jackson and 1\orl.t·d 11.1th thl.' ~A...\CP Legal Di.'ft·n~ Fund in lighting di~­ n 1m1nat1on agatn!>l blacks 1n 1ram- porta11on and other publi c accom- m1.xfa11on'> 1n the I %Os Joseph Livingston, 84, writer won Pulitzer Pt;jze l'IPl:KS\ ILLE. Pa -Jo<,eph .\ l 1' ing'>l1.in. d Pu li11cr Pntt'·V. inning rt'portcr "ho<.e .. Busines' Outlool. ·• w lumn ..ipp...:arcu 1n more than 50 nt·11.,pap...·r-; ano" the cmin1r:. died Dt•t· 25 JI age: X4 The: rau ..... · of dt'.1\h v.as not a' a Il- a bk In IQJ5 ht· ~ame t•d1tor and t't nnuma'>t JI Bu'>int''>'> \.\ t'l'k. a poi.t ht' held fur ~'en \cars LI\ tng\tun '>tarte.d his column 1n 144' anti ust•d lht• lnqu1rt r 3\ hi'> bJ~l' from 14~ 2 un11l his death Ht' al\11 '':!'> f1nann al n l11or of the nov.- dctu1Kt Bulkt1n in Philadelphia from 1441'1 tu I %li. and held the <.ame 111le hnrtl~ at the Philadelphia Rcrord hl.·forc that newspaper closed Patrkk Kelly in l9·P He v.on hi'> Pulitzer in 1964 for a series of anic:ll's titled "The Power Pull of the Dtillar .. l1' 1ngston rcct11 cd a number of othe-r award'> 1n buliiness JOumahsm. 1nclud1 ng lhl.' LOt'b A v.ard fo ur time<.. the Hancul.'k .A.ward three 11mt''> .ind tht· <herscas Press Cl ub av. ard for t'\t'elknct• 1n business reporting from abroad three times. Ma~ Osslo, labor le~r and longtime civic activist ENt ·11" IT.\~ -Labor leader Max J. 0))10. v.ho 11.as known as much for h1~ Cl\ 1c co ntnbuuoas as his support of v.ork1ng people. died Dec 26 at Scripps Memonal Hospi- tal. Ht• v.as 81 . Hospital officials declined to rc- kase the cau!.e of death. 0".l!llo. v.hu came 10 Calll'omia from ( olorado in 1933. worked as a butcher in ( oronado foi: three vears before hem ming an offinal of the kKal ml·aH:uttcr~ union. 1.a1d long- 11mc tnend Lionel Van Dec:rhn. f or -l6 \tars. n~o sened as S<.'Crt•tar) and bu!>1ncss manager of l 'n1tl'd Fuod and Commcr.c1al Wurl.t•r\ Local 22 9 He rc11red in 1 %~ and had h'ed fl'C'enth in an Encinlla) rt•11remen1 home · atage 5., fhe cauSt' ofdeaah "'a~ not a'a1l- abk Mandenno. a la")er wh o was regarded as one of the best orators in the C1cncral .\ssembh. 11.as first eleCtl'd to tht' House 1n ·1 %6 He was elected 10 hi\ lir<it leadt·r .. h1p pos- 111on in IQ"'' Mandennu became speaker in Januar) Ht· pre' 1ousl~ !>t'ned a!. fl oor leader for the House Demo- crats and held othl'r leadership pos- 111ons OPEN7DAYS • One Hour Enlargement · • One Hour E-6 Slide Developlng (120-135) • One Day Kodachrome Developing • Same Day Print/Slide • All Other Fiim Services Available Hours: Mon.-Frt. 9-6 Sat. 10-6 Sun 10-5 497-8112 230 B each St rPP t. L agu n .1 BP ,1 c h l.. • ' ~ . ' .. d ( ' I ' ' ( I I , I l} • .. ' I • :· • • • ~ • • I· I . I • ' .. Os c•O...DALYN.OflW• 110 , ........... .. WASHINGTON {AP) -A pro. !lpCIC1ive key witncu in lbe 90vem- mca1'1 c1crense or its seizin& of.Li• coin Savinas and Loan Auociadon it refusina 10 testify, a1tomeys said TU<Mlay.· Arizona real estate dev~ E.C. Oartia has told the aovemment \hroqh •'tomcys he will invoke hit fifth Amendment protection qainst self-incrimination 1f called as a wit- ness in a suit challenpng the federal takeover of the Irvine thrift. said Pliul Gutennan. an attorney for the aovcmment. Government attorneys had told U.S. District Coun Judge Stanley Sporkin in December that they «- pectcd Garcia 10 be their top wit· ncss. testifyi ng about what they say was the siphoning by Lincoln's ownCT, Phocnill n1illionaire Charles H. Keating Jr.. of millions of dollars in federall\ insured deposits from Ille oow..0.la(llOd illlli....,.,, 'CJan:ia WU Ille pritlcipol ,.nici· paoc in two uuuctioos -one 1nvolvina a stock-junk bond deal and tht ot~er a 111lc or 1.000 acres or land ou11ide Phoenix -whic:h 1hc aovemment contends resulted in 1hc taking of more 1han $16 million fronl Lincoln . Despite Gutcrman's comments. Spork1n said he still wanted Gartia 10 lake the s1an<i in the Cl#. Attorneys for Lincoln and its parent company, AmeriCln Con· tinental Corp. of Phoenix, said they in1end to sUl>poena Garcia as a witness if lhe aovernment drops its demand that he appear. James Murphy. ano1he r attornry for the governmen1 in the case. said he expected to call Keating and his son, Charles H. Kratina III. as wit- nesses on Thursday or Friday. Murphy said he ~'iii call one of . ,. Keali:cc:.Jn.a.wa. 1lobet1 M. Wurzc Jr.,aftwitnn1~ocla. WurulbKher, u 1 aet1Jor vice -• dent ror Americaa CoaUnea I was the key putK:ipant in one llnd transtctlon th11 the ao:Yemment ls citing as an example Of phony land sales by Lincoln. Thc aovernmcnt contends that throuati a series of bolus land trans-- actions, Lincoln ~rckd unwar- ranted profits in order to funnel depositon' savings to American Continental. The elder KealinJ. who is now the target of a federaJ_ irand ~ury in- ,·estigation in Los Anae:les. !nvoked his consti1utional protection qainst self-incrimination in refusing two months ago to an5wer questions in a subpoenaed appearance bcfort' the House Bankina Commiltet:. Mean"'·hile, the government's chief regulator in the case acknow\. odtcd in tntimony Y.uesday thlt the uvinp and lotin had tokl federal resulatot1 in early 1986 about 1 LU arraneemcnt the ,aovemmen1 DOW says wa1 uled to siphon S94 million in redcrally insu~ deposits out of lhc ~rift. K vin O'Connell, the rcauJator who recomntended lhc ,ov~m­ mcnl's seizure of Li ncoln last April at a cos1 of up to S2 billion - potentially the heaviest loss to tax- payers among some 600 thrift fail- ures -admitted officials began questio ning the tax-sharina arranac· ntent only last year. O'Connell. deputy direclor of the Treasury DcJ>l'.lnment's Office of Thrift Supervision, had testified la51 month that thr arrangemenl be· tween Lincoln and American Con- tinental Corp. "''as "illegal on its face." Construction Spending Disaster rebuilding, rate dip fuel construction spend ing1 ~o1-..·s11 a ...,...,._ 0 JFMAllllJJ ... SO N --Nov. '88 Oct. '89 Now ... !41s.4l !41s6l l421 .71 '.\\1ASHI N(il 'ON (AP) -Con- structi on spending hit a IO-n1on1h high 111 No\'embcr. the government n:portl.'d Tuc~a). and an analyst annhutt'd thl· JUnlp to to .... ·er interesl rail'\ and to re building afll."r Hur- ncanl· !-l ugo and tht• San Francisco Ba~·aJl':t earthqu:ike. ··1 1h 1n ~ a rca~onahle argument can he n1adl' thal 'on1e tif the go' - l'rnnll'll! !lof)l'nd1ng "'as d1sas1cr re- l;ncJ." ..ard Da' 1d Berson. ch1t•f l·eonnm1~t for the Fl'dl·ral National ~l o rtg.-igr r·orp ..\ 1 l)\'rtent g:un 1n govl.-rnmenl sp1:nd1ng helped pus.h total o utla)S up ! 5 Jlt'Tl'l'n\ to a !ioi.'asonall) ad· JU:<tl·d annual rah; of S4 ~1 1 h1llion. \hl· ( ·onuncrl·e Oepanmcn1 rl'- 1>ort1:d . ll \1;p, lht' highest k•\l'l s1nCl' la ~l Januar\ \ S.J2~ billion. ll urnl":.tn~· llugo hti thl· Souih ( anil1na 1.oa\t Sl'p!. :!I. "·hill' till' l·;1rlhqua ~L· \ll"UL"k Northl·rn ('al1 · Dow opens the year on new closing high NEW YORK j .\Pl-Sto1.k pnl·c, advanced \harpl ~ and th1.· l>o~ Jone!lo indu!iolrLal a\ cragt· rcat:h1.·d a ne" 1 closing high Tul·sda~ a., 11p - t1m1 !.m about 1ntcrl·1;,1 rate\ '"\'Pl Wall Street 1n 1hc first 5l'\S1'1n o1 the new year. The Dow Jonc5 a\'t'ragl' of JO blul· chip stocks soared 56 95 10 clo'>l~ ar 2,81 0.15. surpassing ll'i pre\!Ou\ closing high of 2.191.4 1. reached las! Oct. 9. The closcly-wa1chcd 1nde.-: surgeJ more than 29 pu1n1~ dunng the la'\! half·hour of trat.l1ng a.J oni.'. tx>i"Jsll'd by compu1l·n1cd bu) 1ng rrogram~. Advanci ng issue' ou1d1:.1anrl·d de- cliners b) a margin o f :\ tn 1 in nation"'ide trading of Nl'" \'or~ Stock Exchans.c-l1stcd <;tocks. wnh 1,2 57 stocks ns1ng. -I t~ falhng ;u1d 333 unchangtd. Volume on the flour of thl· ll,ig Board came 10 162.07 n11ll1 o n shares, up from 1-15.94 m1lltun 1n the previous session. Nationwide. consolidated volun1c ·in NYSE-hsted 1ssuC"s. including tnidcs 1n those slocks on regional exc.hange!lo and 1n the o vcr-the- counter market. totaled 193.27 mill ion shares. ..\nal\\I~ ';11J \'lon111111r and ll't h· n1l·al 1al 1.1r' 11l·re tx·hind Tuc-.da~ ·!> rail~ S1ock' 11.'ll 1n l':HI~ 1rad1ng a!. 1n,l·~10rs 111-r\uu,1~ a"allcd thl· Na- tional •\\\0(1nt1un ul Purcha\lng /\l an:tgl'tl ll·nt\ n1onthl } \Ur\"l')' ufr1 s mcn1tx·ri. But ;1111.·r thl' a''rK·1a11on reported thl'rl' \\<I' l11n11n1ung "'l'ak· nl'S'\ in thl' n1a nufal·tunng l'C'onom ~ last n1onth . prices 111 0 1l'd hruadl~ htghL'I l "ht• l'ur(hn\lng /\1anagef'o lndl'\ g•11n l'd in IA•c(·n1h1:r. ri~ing to 48 l:l\.'rc1.·n1 f111n1 :'\11111.·nilx·r·s -16_0 pe r· cent. Bui 11 "'1' thl· c1gh1h \lraight n1on1h 1ha11hL' pur(ha,1ng n1anagers h;i \e rcpn1\l·J ""a~n(''' 1n lhc lil· iJu,1nal \\'l 1111 -a reading OClo" SO p...·rlTIU gcnt·rall~ 1nJ1ca1cs a s.lnw1ng 11f thl· l'1.·o nunl\ -:ind ti "a ~ this !'al'\ that n\01!1.atl·J ifl\l'!iolOrs l radcr' 1-x:hl'll'd tht• cunt1nu1ng ~1.·at..nc;,, "uuld rnakc the Federal Rc!lol·r1l' n1ore ll~L'I } lo nudge rnlcrl'S t rah.'J. lowt•r. ..\nal ~sls \aid g;:uns in thl· dollar also supported lhl· ra il ~ on Wall Stree\ . ..\ s1rongl·r dollar, g1 \'('\ the Fl.'J morl· ll'l'"a' ~11h 1nu.·rcs1 rates. and 11 also rnaki.·s l /.S stocks mo re anrac11\t' 111 foreign 1n1estor<,. Affordability index for housing improves WASHINGTON (A P) -A typ1· The r11~·d1an mean., tha1 h:ilf tht• cal American family's abili1y to buy fan11l1e~ rarn n1orl' ;ind half le\~. l>r 1 median-priced home impro\•cd in that ·half of the hon1c~ \ell fnr n1ore November, but many firs1 -1imc and half for less. bomebuyers still were unable 10 af. The 1ncrcak· in 1hc No,crnhcr ford s11ncr·typc houses. a trade index was anributed 10 a dechnrng IJ'OUP said Tuesday. morlgajC in1erc-s1 ra\cs a nd an in. The National Association of Re-crrasc 1n 1hc med ian family income alton reported tha1 its housing af-from $33.365 in October to $33.482 fordabili ty index rose to 105.8 in in Novembe r. the Rcaltor!lo satd . November. meaning that a fa milv The assoc1a11o n uses a composite with a median income of $33.48 i rate reflecting both li.\:cd -ralc and had 105.8 perttnt of lhe income adj"ustable-rale mortgages. By 11s cal- needed to buy a median·prictd exist-cu at ion, ra1es fell from 10.16 per· inc ltome costina $93.000. cenl in October 10 J 0.12 pcrcc:nl 1he TM index was the highest since next month. f.u.ry..c. when it R:Jistercd 106.7. "These 1wo faclors offset a slisht It -llJS.5 in ~tobcT. increase in the national median -------~ price, which rose from $92.600 to $93.000." it said. Thf c han4es increased the monthly princ1pil and interest J>IY· menl oo a median home by SI. to la November, fornia on Oc1. 11. Berson said 1h e governmenl set·tor had been growing strong!)' since July. so no1 a!I of 1he advanct• should be annbutcd 10 1he disasters. (;o,·crnrnt'nl spending 1otalcd $91..J hillion on an annual rate. Residential spcnding inc rca!>ed 0.6 P\'f('l.'nt. to $1 94.4 billion. on an annual ra te. hl·l pt·d b)· a 1.5 percent gain in s1nglc-famd) housing -··\\'ha1 ,,...c'rc §l·eing here is a fl'!iopons1: b) buildef"i to lo~·cr n1on - gage rates and increased sales:· Berson said. "\Vc're likcl} 10 M'e tha1 edging up for Jhc nex1 SC\·t'ral n1unlh'i but I don't lh1nk we're ~01ng 1u ~·c an~ surges l":causc hu1!dcrs "di rl·n1ain \l'T) cautious." [ hl· Fl'dl·ral ReM"rve hcgan le lling ~hl)f\-tl'ffll 1nlCfl'St ra1es fall grad· ualh 1n Junt· as 1nflat1on rnoderatcd and· 1hc econon1~c sho,,..·cd signs of ~lugg1shtH'!i.J._ Thl' Cl'R tral bank had propl)\·d up tht' ra1es 1n111ally to stcn1 in fla1 iona~ pressures. "' the l'Rd or Novt'mhcr, l"ixed· ral t; 1nortgagl· r:Hl'S were 9. 74 per· l't'nL :1ct·urding 10 a survey by 1he Fl·dera! l-l un1e Loan ~1 ortgagc ( 'o rp. Thl'} had pcakl·d al 11.22 percent 1n ~1arc h. Dcsp1 1c lo"cr 1n1crcst ra1es. con· !iolruct1un of non-residential bu1ld- 1n~s "'as J o"n 0.7 pt•rccnl to SI00.7 billion o n an annual ra1e_ l:k·r~n a11nbu\l'd 1he decline to ··ovl'r· hu1ld1ng. parhc ular!~ 1n offil't' build· ings." 1n recent \Cats. Industrial cunStruction advanced t.7 percent . to $18.1 billion. whi ch Uer,un ~1d "as good nl·~·s for tht' l'l'•Hllllll\ Occau!t4.' i! incrc:t'il'S pro- du.-11 \ l' 'cap;1c1 ! \. l'hl' tu tal curi\trucuon figur1.· ":l'i lllJ I 5 f)(.'rCl'!l l fron1 the ll'\L·l ol budding a )l·ar ago. :\\'SE C"O:tlPOSITE TRA:\SAC'TIO'\S o. o buy Union Pacific's real " estate assets ·' -. ''°"' ..,,. end .,.,. NpOttl Th &911 C.. has qrted to buy vinuatly all tbe ~.mate of a Union PM:ific Corp. subsidiary for about $332 million., o said TundaJ· The Newport Beach·bucd com~y., •. real etta investme nt "i'rm• bou&ht abou1 I 5,000 acres an~ JO bu1kl1nas, m in 1hc .West from Onion Pacific Realty. wd Harvey Turner. spokesman for the ~t corporation. . . The sale, expected to close next month, follows a_ dcciSJon April by Union Pacific's board to sell .the U1Cts of 11.S. real esui company. officials said. "The plan to dispose of rc:ahy 1s pan .of conunu1n1 effon to realize the intrinsic "~I~ of our ,d1vC!:"fi . businesS('s a nd focus our rcsourttS on rcman'!l1'1 opcra.t1ons. saJ Drew lewis, Union Pacific chairman and chief cx.ecuuve .on:-t<:ff Union Pacific Ru.lty still has about t ,000 acres to hqu1da. including the Wilming1on O il Field in Lon,_ ~h ~nd propcn1 in New Orleans. Las Yeps and Denver, officials said. Union Pacific Corp.'s subsidiaries include~ country's sec~n largest railroad. U nion Pacific RailrOMh-Ovem1le Transpor11llQ Union Pacific Resources and USPCJ. i hazardous waste mana n1cn1 company. The corp:>ration earned $644 millio n lasl year revenues of $6.1 billion. • •• The Fl•orocarboa Co. in Laguna Niauel has created 1wo postions to accommOdate future gr0;w1h and assure ~anqemen continuity. ThcS(' executive vice president posts arc being fiUcd current Fluorocarbon group vice presidents Larry Hanson and T Noonan. Bo1h ~·i ll rcpon 10 President Michael Hqan. Jn announcing the added depth in upper manaaement. H cited o pportunities for progress. Overall, 1he new corporate struct is designed to provide the greatest a~ount of support to ,. _di vision wi1hou1 making radical changes in how they operate, H said. . . " As executive vice president, Hanson will be responsible 10r acU\ 11tc!lo of Fluorocarbon's Fluid ~ting a.nd Adva.nccd P_oly (iroups. Noonan's role as excclf'iivc vice. president incl . responsibilities for The EAtrusion Technologies Group (formerl San1ucl Moore Group) the Engineered Products Group and CH d1,·is1on. The Fluorocarbon Co. manufaclurc-s polymer components for ~·1dc range of industrial niarkets. . . . . MlcroNc1 Tttlllnolop increased its sales by 500 percent dun 191)9. 1he compan) rcponed. also announc~nj the in~roduction o 1~·0 data r.1ora$l' s)·s1ems !hat employs Di&1tal . .\ud10 Tape ~nd Re"'ntablc Opuc;tl 1cchnology. The new sy~tem~ arc based o.n hich· performance technology and are aimed pnmanly 1oward high appl11.:a11 ons. . . . Thl· /rvine·baS(.'d M icroNcl spcc1ahzes 1n mass data sto !lo\J.lcn1s for Apple. Sun. IBM and compatible computen and 1hrough dl·alcrs and distributors worldwide. NEW VOR:K (AP) -Trie following llit sl'low\ 1ne New VOl'"k Stock Eicchang,e \tock\ and warrant\ tnat ha'l'e !KIM uD 1he mosr •nd oown Int' mos! ba~ 011 perun1 ol cnanoe !or Tvesoav No \ecurilie\ tredll!Q !MILOw 11 or 1000 snar's are .ncluaed Ne! al'ld percenuo~ clla~s are 11'1t.. dltlerenc e oetwHn The prev•ous Closing ork t 11nd Tuesaav's 3 JO om inice UPS NillnM Lail Chtl Pct. I v1LTV pte 1'• + '1 Uo ~·' 1 co1umsav pf j + '1 UP .0 ) Tran\cn lt1C • + :i,, UD 0 ' Fa•antnc 1~ t I Up '·! S EmerldHme 2 t '• Uo 1J ! Unltrode 3)to I ~ UP 1 2 F airCom 4 '1 Uo 12.9 I Muniingwr j\'li ''• Uo 11.B EMC Co ~ :i,, Uo 11.S 10 Tran1ct10Fn 4"e 'h UP 11.• 11 A.ileenl11c 1·1 '• Uo 11.1 lj Cllvron 1/ll '• Up 11.1 I Oateooin! •'• :i,, Uo 11.1 1• N11 vllrPIO l '0 + 1'• UP 1,.9 15 Tr1n1coE•o 'I + .lot UP 1 .7 '! MA'COM ''< + 'l'l Uo 1 ·1 1 Snvo,rOil • + ~ Uo 1 . 'I TovsR:U' J9:i,, + J'h UD . 1 HadsooCP l~ f ''• Uo 9., 1 ColumclaS... ''• Uo 9. 1 0 Le!iur Tee '11 ''• Uo 9. l Hall r:r11n1< f ''• Uo 9.1 ~lgn4IAor! '"" 1 Uo 1·1 4 alr:•dlP ~1, ''l Uo . ~ ra nt \ 2 'I• 2 Uo , .6 DOW S ..... 1 Z11011t11 Cp l W•wn OIB , iTV' i~,\ 5 toOMar n ! onStQr emosouo t1cint g rubEIU\ 10 Pll(heC:O 11 Publlck I~ 'l GrHnTrH 1 Verco 14 Pan "m 15 RhnePt wt 16 Nlc:olelln$! 11 c~""'" 'I Re•d11B1e n ~' '.imr·~~-o>A Pen:ophlc B \\t'lllld L.~e!lmeCP 1 RACMlll S ChaoarStl Permian SYC RHOUr Lul l'• ~M ·,~ -'I• 1 '7 -I . -''• l1o -•1. ... -"' 2 ~ -.... .. -.,, 111 -I r· -... :1~ ~ ~ )~ -,,.. ~ -... l..o -'I• 1 ,., -'"J ~-~ fll" -" l = 1 ~ .. ~ .... -~ I..,. -,,. ''11 -'- NEW VORK (,t..P) Jan. 7 AdYllllCed Declloed Uncr.anoed Total 1$lut' New high' New loWI ·"· i ''·j ' !: ... ••• '!! •• :i ~, •• •• •• :1' •• l ... •• '\\SI: 1.1:\Dl·:ns '11 I \I'-l'Hll I'- NEW '!"ORK !AP) -The f s.hOwl !he 0Yer· Ille· Count•r 11 w11rra11T\ !hat hlYf gone UP the 11 down lh(! mMt 0111ed Oii oetcenr ol ch for Tue1d1v. ~ No ~ur l!ie1 lradlno below 17\cw 1h11re1 are included "' Ne1 and i>erct11!19e cflanQoei -r.r d!Here11ce be1wHll the itrtwlou\,"'I 11rice and Tue1d•v'1 1111 Of !lld ollt''-UP• . Name Liii Cht P'ct. l Brool<lynSY 11 .. + ,... UP l tmolrF"o 1 I '• + 1'1• uo Arner~i!Bk j" t " Uo 4 HmeownSB ol '• "' Uo 5 Geo8 1dP•d l "' UO ! Adteclnc 1 · lot Uo PrlmtRK 't 1 Uo I ~11Be11r '1 ...., Uo aoOpHcs '• ''i Uo io 1.,.ylr•CO uo '• I'• Up 11 WllM111811 61.4 I UP 'l Homtlt'l!t t'llY 23·16 +5-1,Up l LoneStar '"' "-Uo 14 PacNvclear ll,(,, !.'I UP 1~ CedarGro 1 4 i"4 Up 16 Aurorn4_1d5v ~ "• UP I? N11lvresn1v 6 I.lo Uo 'I P!Ylchwch 4 'l UP nl~ "~~~~;,, ,l:~ '~ ~ hekRbt w! 1•1a 'I• Up enParcel 413-16 9·\t. U'O 111111Bc11 l''• :it. Of'lt!Hl!t'! '• !! 0011rOY! •1, .... ..... I Richfood l ~r.lnllM' it n1Fdl 4 onctF~ 5 Clt11.'"' ~ 6 8tn1Frk w 7 WaretiWC:lvt> i ~""r~t 10 H'8bl un 11 Hecks 'l ~nrtUnd l ne•Rttc I• '1"11dWot 15 vchmdCo 16 CoejeAlrm 17 APOQHTCh ll IU11hlM11m1 ri l ~~~~:: Fak:l>nOG Flf!hOlmen1 AmNlwk K Prod st! Comp," 6 ~leraJIE l.J DOWNS la11 CM ! .. -,.. 'tt -"' "• -llio "" -~ ,..,, -111• ! .. -.. '11 -"' :i.-. -'11 '11 -.,, , . .., -"' 31 .. -'IJ • •• l -.,, , . -" •9·16 -,,., '!" -l" ··-1'" = ,.. J,1,,-"" "'a -'"' "" -•;. 71-16 -J ·16 2'4 -t;, 41,. -lot 5\h -'11 NEW YORK (AP) Jan. 1 .. (" , , Ad•1nced T""ff[ ncl'llnged I Dec!~ lti ¥01111$1Ufl • New h!gh' • New IOWl 4 It e a d d . .. :1 lo , • I 11,1 •nd •nd '~ 1()()() lhe -sing HI n4 21.4 19.i II. 11. t7 4 16.7 IS.6 14.9 14. 14. 14 I . ~i4· 1 . 1 . t . I . I . j:t 4:j II i:l 1. •• •• ~J· ··. I: 1. I. I t f • I Public kissing a:galnst law In -Georgia l\ Georgia law makes 11 illegal to kiss 1n public. · Milkweed bugs migrate. Takes t"o or th rel' generati ons to complete a tnp. Yet the~ always wind up "here their ancestors wound up. Sa)s a siudcnt of this pheno meno n: Y c-s, mcmor) 1!> inhented .• but we don."t kno" ho" much 1s 1nhented. Babv seahorses are called "colts ... Dier' 1 ·tell > ou they're transparent? Y<lit can .,..atch their heans beat. I oJ ~actl{ 5.520 duelists in Ital)' fought -· 760 limes between 1880 aPJ4 1890. Thin~ percent were m1lt- 1a~men. T"COl\·Oine pet('Cnt. ed1-tO~ T weh e percent. lawyer-;. Twen- t) ~11lnc percent. "other." Occupa- t1d~ aren't reflected 1n the win-loss rcttl}'d . Onh 50 d ied . that's known. r,c; . ·•o )(' snapping tunle can't swallow unless 11s head ..-. u ndcrv.ater Ancient medical records show Italian ph~\lc1ans 1n .\ D. 780 of- fered this standard prescnptio n for coughs and colds: chopped httffried with onions. If that'<; not a ham- burger. "hat 1s 11? Th1'i suggests the hamburger ~tarted out as a health food in p17la country. Remarkable~ f,d President John F. Kennedy: .. n we got into office. the thing th urpnscd me most was to find wat things "'-e re JUSt as bad as we'd been sa)1ng they were." Report 1s o ne o ut of every 12 customers 1n the b1g<1ty sto res now tncs to shoplift something. , * the toads against the road · ers. Toad s. even as salmo n. go every year to lay eggs. If a toacfs native pond is go ne. that toad iiv6 up and dies. So how come we stiltinavc toads? o Ii ~ told the invention of the pa~r towel was an accident. That first • batch was supposed to have beeq soft bathroom tissue. •' cl If cattle on the move art called a clrove, what do you call a herd of . l, h~? A dnft, if domesticated. A r. if wild. t '!9 was Winsto n Churchill who said .. A fanatic is one who can't change his mind and won't change 1he sub- ject.•• "Recreational drivina·· is reported b~ pollstcn to be a preferred pastime of 43 pe~nt of Americana. Sur- prited to hear it Tbouatu it pve • way 10 "recreational jogjna" which tolt out to ••recrcaj.ional walk· Will recbeck. and report , Celebration music to their ears By KAREN M. REED Of IN Dally ,,_ Su" Although the Grand Ballroom of the Westin South Coast Pia.ta Hotel h~ been renovated, o rganizers of New Year's Eve's festive gala "Into then Nineties. A Musical Romance" still took a chance in holding a symphony concen in a room lined with. among othe r odornme nts. acoustical tiles. ' ll worked out amazingl y well. however. as the l1ac1tic Symphony Orchestra said farewell to the 1980s in a spe1cal presentation to more than 430 formall y clad pan y-goers. Music was. afterall. the focus of the event. es- pecially as the organizations collaborating fo r the evening were the Pacific Sympho ny Association and the Orange Count) Philharmonic Society. "It 1s the first time we have ever collaborated on a social event." confirmed OCPS executive director Erich Vollmer, attending with his wife. Patrtcla. The two gro ups have .,...orked together to bnng symphon) to count) residents. but not panics. according to Vollmer. The S) mphon) assoc1at1on had established a trad111on of holding New Year's Eve galas several years back. ··and we've joined with them to perhaps establish a traditon of our own." he added. . Rc\elers were treated to up-beat musical selections under the direction of conductor Tosbiyatd Shimada. Offerings ranged from V1enneS(' favontes ( waltts. polkas and the lake) to Broadwa) show iune many fl·atunng Soprano Enlyn de la Rosa. It "'-as evident that organizers wanted supponl.'rs of the l"'-O groups to mix and mingle. as tables ""ere stratcgicall) filled "1th represcntat1\·es fro m hoth or- gan11a11ons. There also .,...as no a""k.,..ard moment to ponder hm.' the proceeds from the S 150 per person dinner \\Ou Id be d1~ 1ded. as the evening ""as purel~ social .. h 's a brcak-en·n deal." said S) mpho ny board president Randy Johnson. "This should be one tJm(· that friends of .,~mphonic music come together and have a lt ttk fun·· Be~ond enJO~ing the concen. Johnson's "fun·· cjmc 1n the form of a mull1-course meal of petite marm1te of phea..ant. roast veal chop "llh madc1ra s.iun· and a chocolate s.,..an tilled with raspberT) mousse. as .,...ell as dancing 10 the music of George .\ndnson and Thl' :--.;a1urals .\t m1dn1gh1. the balloons "l'rc dro pped from the ceiling and ·· .\uld Lang ·~ ne" "dlomcd in the nc.,.. \ear. ( o mbin1ng 10 ~11niula1e that interest "ie.,... Year's f\l' "ere s~mphon~ t·omm1ttcc members Lornlne Lippold, Cornelia Maier and Michael Gllano, "'-1th ()( P"> reprt>scntat1\l''> including Eva Scbneldcr, Susan Beechner and Jane Grier. Former drug abuser tells it like it is DEAR ANN LANDERS: I recenl- 1} read that Timothy Leary. the radical LSD champion of the '60s. told a group of college students 1n Alabama that peo ple should ha\e the right to use drugs 1f the) "ant to. He also said .\menca's war o n drugs 1~ real!~ a .... ar against freedo m of ch111cc. As a former drug abuser. I would Ith· to sa~ tha t Mr leaf) 1'i WTong. ~lost people "ho abuse drugs are not in control of their It' cs. A person ma) choo~· to START using a drug. but aftn a \\.hlle the drug tx·gins 10 u~c him If 1h1s M'rl' not true. please tell me "h) a person using drugs and/or alcoho l will forfeit all his mone). his right 10 drt\l' a car and his J)('rsonal freedo m (b) committing crimes and being jailed). and destrO) rela- t1 onsh1ps "1th those he lo ,cs most in o rder to get his hands on a drug that his bod) and/or his mind era\ cs. I hope e\ef)one "ho 1s being used b) drugs 1.1.ill find the <1treng1h to mO\'C 10.,..ard conquering his or her add1ct1on. There 1s plent} of help out thNc. and much of 11 1s frl'C nr co' acd b' med ical 1nsuran{'C -C.G.C . DEAR C.G.C.: Tltuks for a fine letter. A good place to slarl is with a call to a drug abuse bolline. Here are three very good ones: 1-800- A LC OHO L. 1-800 -61%-H E LP (Spanish botllu: 1-800-HAYUDAI and 1-800-COCAINE. • • • DEl\R .\NN LANDERS: Please <.a~ \Oml·th1ng w J')C(1plc 1.1.ho can't le t go ot a lo\ cd onl· .,.. ho has died Thq ll'3\l' his o r h('r room nactl ) as ll "j' and turn 11 into a shnnc · PKturc\ Jrc all O\l'f the place It gnl''> ml' thl· ln:l'p<. V. h~ can't pcuplc 3ll'l'pt thl' fau that dead 1~ dcaJ .ind ltfl' I!> for thl' It\ 1ng" - MR RE \LIST IN ILLl '.':O!S DEAR REALIST: If people want lo leave lbe room of a loved one exactly as it was, what business is II of yours? \\'by begrudge U1em Ibis s mall comfort? Each person mull handle grief In bis or ber own -•Y· There is no standard lbal should be adhered 10, so lighten up. baster. • • • DF \R .\ '4:-.; L.\NDER · Se\eral month\ jgo I learned that a fncnd "a" ~l'll1ng married. I ha\C kno.,..n hn _() \Car'>. and o ur pare nts arc close. 1 · l..ne.,.. that the family is struggling financ1all). so I offered 10 lend her m) .,..edding go" n and veil. She "a~ thnllcd. I he .,..cdd1ng 1<, 1"'0 "'i.'d.\ 3\\3\ and I ha\l' nnt rcn·l\cd an 1n\1ta- t1on. although m~ parenK ha\l" been IO\ 1tl'd ~h mnther "as told "con-fidl·nt1all~ ... that the fam1I~ 1.-. ha' ing truubk kl'cp1ng thl· numlx'r. do.,..n I am ang~ and hun. M ~ parents tind thl'm\t'l\l·\ 1n a \Cf'. a .... i.. .... ard 1)(>\lt1lln I "a" h11il..1ng foN ard 10 'il'l'tng the hrtdl' 1n m~ go.,..n .\m I OUI of ltnl·" -~Tl .. ,:-.:En 1:-.: ( .\LIFOR'-:1.\ DEAR STL'~l'ED: To be married lo a borro•·cd gown a.ad DOI invite lbe person wbo offered It Is lo tbc worsl possible task . Thal bride mul be a brass-plated, world-class klu11, a nd ber parents are no belier. This is 1be ulllmate la cbullpa b. • • • "Tbe Au uoders G•ide for Brides" b t a// ,.e u1wen. ~od • 1ell-addre11H, Joa1, b•1hln1-1ize eave/ope ud IJ.IS to: Brldn, A.u Luflers, P.O. Bo;r llSlt. OJ~ap. fl/. IHI 1-ISlt. Both vulnerable. East deaJs. NORTH WEST • Q 10 7 • A 9 I' -A K I VoNI + AK943l EAST • s 2 7 s -J 10 6 4 J 4 3 2 •J6 K 10 9 8 7 6 S • Q s SOl'TH + K J 6 3 Q932 AQ • 10 8 7 T he bidding: East ou1h Wtst Pus I + Pass Pus 3 • Pau Pass 4 Pass Pass s Pass PaM 6 • Pass Pass p~ PaM Opening lead: Jack of North 2 • 4. 4 NT 6 • 7 • If you think this hand looks fa. miliar, you're righ t. It appeared in yesterday's column, but the posi- t10ns have been s1.1.11t:hed 180 de- grees. It's the same deal from the Fall NortR American Champion- ships, where six spades was defeated by the extraordinary lead of the fi ve of clubs. At o ne tab1e, seven clubs was reached o n the bidding shown. North had second thoughts about the quality of the suit in which he had made a jump shift, and "cor- rected" the contract to SC:\en clubs. outh dtd not like the contract, and rightly so . It might seem that, e\en though the trumps lie favor- abl). declarer ha.s to concede a spade me .... unfortunately for the defen~e. West found the opening lead of the Jack of hearts. and de- clarer was quick 10 capitalize on this blessing from Dame Fortune. The first trick was won on the table and declarer breathed a sigh o f relief "' hen the ace and king o f clubs drew all the defenders' trumps. Now the opening lead offered declarer an extra chance for his co ntract. Best technique is to cash the ace and king of spades. 1n an attempt to drop the queen. Si nce the opening lead vinuaJly marks West for the 1en of hearts, if the queen of spades does not come down, declarer next fi nesses the eight of hearts! When that holds, declarer cashes the ta- ble's remaining heart , com~ to hand" with the ten of trumps and discards two spades on the ace of diamonds and queen of heans. Curio us hand. The small slam goes down , but the grand slam makes! 1....-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ llOICOSC "OPI-. Wedaesday, Ju. 3 ARIES (March .21-April 19): Cycle hi~ -you 'll get your way. especially in dealing with members of opposite sex. Gift represents peace o ffe ring. Yo u might be stunned by its appearance. value . Taurus plays role. TAUR US (Apnl 20-May 20): Secrets dominate. Check Aries message. Something occurs behind your back that requires immediate atten1ion . Don't be afraid to point finger. Put a stop to rumor that borders on ' 1c1ousness. GEMINI (Ma) 21-Junc 20): You'll have something to celebrate. Lunar position accents aspirations. fulfillmen. t, financial pin alona with mcan-,. ____________ inaful relationship. Focus on power, intensity, opportunity to bit jackpot. CA.NCICA(June 21-July 22): Check Gemini !MK •. Scenario features fulfillment, abihty to brid&c distance. language barricn. You coufd be dining on foreign cuisine. Individual at top might be bowing to you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): All signals arc "Go!" F.mphasis on initiative. orig- inality. sex appeal. Somt"one important might declare. "You could win a large audience anytime you so desire ... Another Leo could play major role. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Answer to question: Trusl your.;c:IP. People who attempt to tell you what's good for you arc off-track. A foul has been committed and some cxpc"Ct you to pay. Make clear you have no such intention. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Diversify. ask. questions, check wardrobe. You'll lea rn more about publicity. phol~phs. l~l documents. Attention. also revolves around marital status. Music and wntina figure prominently. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You miaht be sayina to yourself • ..tmost unbelievina: "My heart's desire is beina fulfilled!" Work sets d one, credit is received, favor is returned. 1he right person arrives. Taurus involved. SA Gm ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 2 1 ): Lunar aspect coincides with style. romance. sensuality. Child helps you discover what had been m issana. Scenario features s1imulation, variety, renewed vi&or. In matter of specu- lation. number S is Jood. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Scenario features ho me, shelter, security. ability to set alona with older family member. You'll receive pft representing apprcc:tation for recent favor. Tb11 couk1 be start of somctbana bi&. AQUAAIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Answer to query: Slow down! You·~ missin& key details, possibly hidden clauae. Be ver.tilc while avoidint tendency to scatter forces. Relative will retum from abon journey with aooct news. PISCD (Feb. 19'-March 20~ Thole who laid you were out of the pme -ill be stutkd by your amuinc c:omet.c:L Focus on intmliJied love relationship, ability to meet dmdline. One ia llltbority saya. .. AM b it and you'll set ft!" IF JAN .• II YOUR ••1'10AY: Duri• JMuary. aaeotion ~Yolva around family member who ~la, IO.....,• w 1ilDe ...... to ~model, decoralC and 10 laJlt Mrioully **' .... lltJ6H. Yos c,cle &llil ,_, featurn tuitiftl 01 • •• varilley ... ,,.,..... ..... , I ... 0 IF , ... Slljt&arius pcnoaa DlaY important rolll • ,__. • Y• ut ..... atUll:liw. ~ aaa.bbte ... et ..... Y-W allo ll'C llllliiiw ~yow~ body ...... M-* Md Dlcember out1tancti• la. s799 *****************. P'aJS Bil -downs Cl1 famous mak• -• Pints • Sl*1s • Taps • Jackets • llld mmy more in · lades -Bop and Shoes. tury So. CaMlllil'• Bat Ktpt Slcrlt .s 100/c.s mask a master musician ., -JOH\I llOOS- 0.,, """ c-......... Looks can be deceivi111. Never has this phrase been more appropo than in reference to David Lindley, the rock musician best known for his side work for Jackson Browne, Warren Zevon. and Linda Ronstadt, amona others.. With his long. scraggly hair and loud, multi-colored clothing, the 45-year-old from San Marino could easily be mistaken for the main cbaractcr in his own compostition. "Talkin' To The Wino, Too." But whe1hcr you consider his ap~aran~ slOP.PY or colorful , there's little debate over the man's 1mmensi! skills as a multi- dimensional musician. At the Coach House on New Year's Evr, Lindley and his band El Rayo-X {pronounced cl-RYE-o-ECK-ccz) served up nearly two hour! of musical delights. rangina from his trademark reggae to wonderfully creative cover SOnfS. . One o~ 1he pl~asures of seeing Lindley perform is in observing his expressive fac ial and body language. Hi s occasional squin1i ng , bulging eyeballs, aod conlorted cheekbones all convey the kind of oddball though.ts wandering 1hroughtou1 his mind. Case in point: During the evening's early set, Lindley'tlnxiously pc'Cred out over the audience and sugges1Cd, "There's some kind of comic gearshift thing going on." Even as his stage presence may be con~dered somewhat zany and off-1he-wall, Lindlcy•s respected musicianship provides striking contras! in approach and s1yle. A unique vocalist and mult i-instrumentalist, he is 1he master of acousti c and electric guitars. pedal steel. lapstecl. Dobro. fiddel, six- string bass, mandolin. and banduria. His tcx 1ured playing is both precise and flexible, depending on the songs' structures and de- mands.. Bringing an emotional rcsonancl' to his guitar tines adds depth and personality to his craft. Eqbally impressive. the interplay bel\l.'ttn band members was frequerply exciting. Several songs during the set. namely "Gimme Da 'Ting." the Temptations' ··rapa Was A Rolling Stone." and the crowd-pleasing "Mercury Blues." vee red into e:(tended instrumental passages that drove 1hc rhy1hm and beat into fuller. loping grooves. A.11 that was lacking was a dance floor to groove on. , Other highlights included ex-Fact's ke yboardist Ian Mclagan·s excellent washes during their Cover of "Papa \Vas . .-\ Roll ing Stone": a fine nc"'' son$ called "Leave Home Girl"' that examines 1he connicting emotions of temptation and betrayal; and t°"'·o rollicking rockers ("She Took Off My Romeo~." the Beatles· ··Twis1 & Shout'') that transformt•d the Coach· HouSt" into a happy. throbbing mass of humanity. Few artists can put their stamp on songs b: such diverse musicians as Merle Haggard. Warrrn Zevon. the Temptations. and the Bea tles as ""'ell as Lindlev can. Bui "'ho else looks like Lindlev and ~·arks like a consumn1i1c pro'.1 -• ( I . \SSI( \I_ ' lly IDITH M. LIDeffR ,. ,. ,,.,.. ....... LONOON -More than 25 yean after launchina.her CNllde lO ck.lo up television. Mary WhitehoulC: is still fightina tO keep .tu, v\olenee and four-letter v.·ords oft' the air. Now. instead of being a lone voice. the 79.-year~ld woman has the backina of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Prince Charles and f\rchbishop of Canterbury Rob- ert Runcit. Her latest target is the British Broadcasting Corp. 's radio 'erialization of "'Lady Chatter~'$ Lo ' er, .. which began Monday ni&ht on the popula r progra m. ·:A Book at &"dtime." The D.H. Lawrence no\"c l is being read complete with St'xually cx plici1 passages and four· k·tter "'ords. "To givt' the status of "A· Book at Bed11ml·· to 'Lady Chatlerlc:y·s Lo' er" and the language which was inl"ludl·d in it seemed to us to be lutall~ inappro'priatc and ir- respon_s1bt..::· ~·1 n;. \llhitehouS(' said 1n <in 1nterv11:v.·. .. And "·ha! f' fell after listening to 11 last night reinforct•d wha1 I said. It gave the four-lcttt'r \\.'Ord and othl'f 1hings ;,1 sort of status and rt•spcc 1ibiht) .... If they can do l1 .•. then wh' shouldn't even·one else ust· thl' J.,ord all the 1in1t·? It opens tht· door v.1der and v.·idcr:· l "hc BBC prc<:tdcd its broadcast ""'l\h a "'arning about the explicit contenl. bu1 Mrs. \\1hi1ehousc said. .. , ha ve no faith 1n these warnings. The} anract the 'i.:ry people you feel the) ma) be unhel pful to." i\1 rs. \\'hitehouse's rea ction came as no surprise. Sh(' has been cam- paigning s1nre ICl64. when she founded her Nati onal Viewe~ and Li stt'nl'rS A.ssociation 10 fight .viol- ence on TV. It "·as the hcigh1 of the permissive 1960s and i\1rs. Whitehouse:, then an art teacher. said she had begun to dc1el't a great deal of sexual and n1oral confusion in the minds of her students over whit tbn' bad seen on TV. ~ , Her ma\n wte1 Wll the publicly funck<I JIBC. -N'adf ball' a million peos>'e siped 1 pe_ulion in 1964 10 clote down the BBC, accusina ii of broadcastina· "propapnda of dis- belief. doubt and dirt." The BBC stlycd on the: •ir, but barred Mrs. Whitehouse from hs proafams for 15 years. Its director· 1 general •t the time, Sir Huah Greene, said years later that her only contribution had been to raise the national level of intolerance. Mrs. Whitehouse wrote in her auto-- biograph)' that Greene was "above all respansible for the moral collapse of the '60s and '70s." Cri tics still acc use her of trying to be the nation~ censor. ··Young pcoplc arc not driven to excesses by explil·i1 scenes of sex on the scre en. She 's a very si~ccre lady. but one oftht• most m1sgu1ded ," said Harry Turner. managi ng director of Tek·vision Suulh Wes1, an indepen- dent company. lJtH.' con1rolle1 Jona1han Powell said: "SonlL' of her views are quite scns1ble. for ellamplc. against the ellploitallon of vio lence in the name o f en1t·rta inn1('nl. But her rc/·ection of tht' portra)'a\ of scxua rela- tionships on TV is a n1ore diAicull matter." She has complained about the P:Ortrayal of homosex ual rela- llonship!o rn tht• popular British soap opera "Eas1Enders" and ~xually cll- p!itit sct·nes "'~lcht•d by a I ()..year- old 1n "The Singing Dttective." a sem1au1 obiograph1l'al series by Brit- ish pla~Y.·nghl Dennis Potter. :\1 r:.. \\'h11chousc.• also obJCCted to 1he follo""·1ng .-\n1erican films 1ha1 v.l·rc sho"n over Christmas and i'\c\1 'fear's on Bntish TV: :! '"Holh"ood Shuffle" about the diilicuhi~S of a black actor tr,·1ng to n1akt' a l1v1ng. '"The language was in our terms and American trrms • -.... ~. M•ry Whitehouse absulutely unbelievable. I couldn'1 repeat i1 and wouldn't repeat it," she said. •"The Verdict." starring Paul Newn1an. which she cri ticizC"d for '""ery bad language and violence." •"Legal Eagles," starring Debra Winger and Robert Redford. "'It's violt·n 1 -a n1an \'iolen1l y hits two women to the Ooor. one is knocked out." she said. •"Volunteers:· which she said contained ··foul la nguage , obscene laniuage. blasphemy." Mrs. WhitehouS(' insists her dnl y demand is that broadcasters fulfill their responsibility not to offend ?83! nst good taste and decency or 1nc11e cnml·. "It isn'1 thal one's against sex. or showing on TV that men and wome n love each other. but it's the kind of close-up voyeurism that pcoP:le ire tick and tired of," sbe '"t'-1 don'I Wlln1 10 open up someo• else's bedroom doon and wt.~h -What's soinc on and J don't imqjte the vast ma.torily of other peopk do either. tn any case, we 111 know whit SCJt is about We don'I have to have it played out in front of our eyes." Mrs. Whitehouse may not be taken S('riousl y by some, but her spc«hes draw capacity audiences. And as influential figures such as Mrs. Thatcher have spoken up against overl)' explicit TV, Mn. Whi1ehouse has come cl~r to rcp- rrsenting mainstream British values. in the United Slates. the battle over the content of TV shoWs has been waacd by groups such as Chris-. tian Leaders for Responsible Tele· vision, a coalition of officials from 70 mainline and eonS('rvati,•e Pro!· es1ant dt'nominations and more than 70 Roman Catholic bishops. as "'ell as indi viduals such as Terry Rakolta. a Michigan woman who objt-cled 10 se:>1ual 1nnueodo on pro- grams such as Fox TV's comedy "Married ... With Children." In 1988. in what was widely seen as a backlash against the ~rmissive J 960s. the British government created the Broadcasting Standards ('ouncil. an agency 10 monitor .. sex and violence. taste and decency." Mrs. Whitehouse claims to have secured legislation to ban child pornography, control pornography 1n shop windov11s and on magazine covers. and classify videotape ren- tal!I. Ust month her assoc1a11on finally succeeded in gelling the government 10 in1roduce legislation 10 bring broadcasllng under the obscenity laws. Mrs. Wh itehouse's lates1 goal is 10 ensure 1ha1 satellite TV, recently launched 1n Britain. does not beam in SCll.ualt y expltct programs fron1 abroad. Symphony, Society make beautiful music together By MIKE RUSSELL o..,. """" ,_._..,. ... It was an elegan1 even\ for!~ who a11ended the gala New Year's Eve benefit en111\ed "\n'to The Nint- ties .. '\ Musical Romance.·· This romance cost S 150 per guest. It was no1 the first such e\·i.:nt for the Pacific Symphony Orchestra. bu1 a Nev.· )'ear's Eve conccn and gala jo1ntl) spon50red by PSO and 1he Orange County Philharmonic Socirty was historic. aud1l'ncc 1ntl'res1. .\nd a co unl y that isn't 1n1eres1cd in cultural sp1n1 1~ una11ra c11 ve to large c9rpora1ions who arc !ouk1n p: at Oran~c c·ountv as a new homt in future ~car~ C'ul1ural pro.,.,l·ss 1s all important to a gro"'ing ccornon~. f)1sp1ll' the finanac1 al aspc.·cts of 1hc gala some in attendance "ould sec it not as a musical associational dt.'but. but n1ort' as a fantas) dream scene taken from the-grand da~~ of the 191h--centur. Austro-Hung.ari.an En1p1rc It "·as a concen filled .,.,.;th music like sym- phon1l· 1xx:1r~ pounng forth check to check with chan1pagn t ;ind fine y.·ines. pheasant. roast veal. and a chocolait !l"an Jl·sst:rt y.·nh raspberf) mousse encircled b~ fresh e.,otu: fru11 filets. The Pacific S) mphony Orchestra is httlc more than a decade old while the Orange Count ) Philharmonic Soc1e1v is the count' ·s oldest. founded 1n 1964. Tht cost of bringing greai musicians and or- chestral events 10 the area in today's market is not cheap. Benefi t galas could be one anS\l.'Cr to the fund- raising problem that never ends. In actuality 11 could have raised somewhere around S60.CXX> tn gross sales. Tha1 's pocket change when booking a PSO or OCPS season. Then why do it? Answer: It also aains ticket purchasing exposure.and ~t 8:.10 p.m. guest conductor Toshiyuki Shimada ga\e the do"nsirokc "·11h his baton and tht' JO n1l'mbcrs of thl' PSO enSt"mbl c responded. pla ying Johann S1rauss· rou!l1ng ent~ march form '"The Gypsy Baron." "Vo1ct•s o fSpnng.'' again by Strauss. featured E\"Cl)n de la Rosa. the lovely coloralura soprano of the '90\ It: l ,ISTI '\GS Newport Beach ~a ....... 109 E ._,,, eo.a 6/\.JSIO "....,."' !. •. 1., JO ·-~ N....-otn" CINIM,11 )QO "''WOO'I (f"IP< 0.IW 644-0160 ,..,.,,_,.,.._ .. J...,.1•11,o I 10 1--• ...-lffil I]. 1 )0, S. I JO, 10 J AIW.,.1 /'"Gl l l )O l. SJ0.8 1S 10)0 80WAllOI llVINO Cl-M.ll ~ .. ,_ '"-· --Pon (M!fr b40-1 l \ IJ r .... 111) ll.'lJO, s. 1)0 tO l T .... a ~/If! I J IS, S)O, 1 4S 10 J "'91JNte.__..,,,fGI ll.l . •.& 10 4 Tl'NW• .. ,.,.. ..... 111) 1 ! 4S.1. t JO. I,' JO S ___ ,..._.M tfl'GI ll lO. l •S. S. 1 !S "' • ,_, --. .. !"1 1110, 1. s JO. e •O JO 1 a.-.. V-fl'G-!lJ 1!4S, 14S 4 6 IS. 8 JO 10~ l.o OIMMA N..-1 Blvd .ft N"""°" Vllq 67).SlSO Drtwtlof ... , D..., !~I I I. S I. • ill'OlrT l'MllAT"n l'IOS f (OMI 11~.y 61 )·6lll0 C--.C~llfl ' •.1 ••~ Cotta Mesa _..,._. C,_.,. CINTS• 1101 li•ttoO< ...... /a.n. Verdie Ct'l'llt< •1•·4 141 1.flw ....... jl'Cil 11. 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The enst"mble then performed the bns~ ".\nncn Pol ka:· b~ Josef Strauss. 1hen Miss de la Rosa ..ang "Adele's Laughing Song" from "Die Fledermaus." l'arning graltful applause. .\~no \"t('nncsc e'e "'ould be co mplete w1thou1 the famed Strauss "''ahz. ··on The Beautiful Blu e Danube." 11 "·as played 1n true Strauss style with an off-beat on carh third bea t. l "he SC"t'ne gracefull) changed 10 a more 20th- ceniur~ niuod "11h Richard Rodgers' walt z from ··c·aroust•I.'" sung by i\.11ss de la Rosa. She then sang Rodger5 and f-larnmers1e1n 's "Hello Young Lovers" TV LISTl~GS 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 • • • • • • • fron1 ""The King and /." i\11ss de la Rosa conllnued v.i1h \Y.'O Jcron1e Kern favorites. ")'ou .-\re Loved" and ··can't Help Lo\ 1n· That ~1an·: from "Showboa1." This PIL'Cl' tx·~1 e.\l'mpl1fied her vc:rs1t 11i1 v and added ver-ac1t~ 10 the fa\·orable 11em 1n Opera ·News (July I Cl88J 1n 1\s "Kce-p )'our Eye On" column. .\ final nurnbcr featured the PSO ensemble with a mL·dle~ o f pieces by Lerner and Lowe from "My Fair lad):· The audience offered such hearty applause that t"o encores would be played before conductor Shunada put do"'n his baton. The firs1 . a Viennese polka. bu • 1hc fa \'onte by all standards was Miss de la Rusa·s n:ndition of the difficult aria from Verdi's "la Tra' 1a1a:· .. Son1 prl· Libera." whi ch some said was sensational. 9:30 10:30 11:00 11 :30 "'·-· -"""'" -... -._ ...., of .. MMll Up -F11d A.1uur1 G • ~ . ··~ Islands have no pJace on county map . N~ man is an island, that is of course unless he happens to hve in any one of several neighborhoods that straddle the ,boundary between Newpon Beam and Costa Mesa. '·' . The~ unincorporated islands owe their allegiance to i.d neither City. Rather, they are. like other such pockets in . ;J)range County. governed from the county seat in Santa )Ana. 1. It is a~ ineflicient ~nd conceivably dangerous situation 1 -made possible out of inattention and complacency. Many residents along the Costa Mesa-Newpon Beach border d? no t realize they live outside the place they have bee.n calhng home. Many of them do not pan icularly care. .1wh1ch also seem s to explain government's attitude towa rd , 1the illogical arrangement. Funher. governments are powerless to u nilaterally alter the boundary ma p. which in itself m ay be a good thing. S tate law gives property owners vinually complete control over whether they are to be annexed to anothe r jurisdiction. Tha t prevents government grabbing valuable chunks o f real estate for selfish purposes. It also. however. seems to d iscourage mo re aggressive annexation policies by the cities in volved. , The d irecto r of the Local Agency Formation Com- mission. the body that oversees a nnexations and mo nitors bound aries of government jurisdicti ons, said Costa Mesa and Newport Beach generally don't pursue a nnexations with much vigo r. And that is generall y a m istake. . There arc no soltd reasons for lea ving un incorporated islands scattered about the Ora nge County landscape. Prior to Proposition 13. propert)' owners believed they paid less in property taxes by living in the county than they wo uld if annexed to a cit). so they resisted any ovenures toward consolidauon. Today. the propnt) owners who know where they ltve seem to be opposed to a nnexation sim ply because they see no direct benefit to the change. But there are benefits for governments and home- wners alike. Annexing the islands would reduce inconve- ie nce and inefficiency. saving waste that costs governme nt and taxpa)ers a ltkc. For example. county Sheriffs d eputies must patrol the unincorpora ted neighborhoods. which are spread out. forc- ing deputit•s to hop. skip and Jump in and around areas for which the) have responsibility. And prov1d 1ng such services as road maintenance is made m ore dtflicult because 1t must be handled out of the county rather tha n the closest c ity. Perha ps mo re importantly. annexing the pockets would help avo id an) confusion that could cost a life in a cn11cal situation. Som e res1dcnts of the a ffected a reas wo rry that fire or police unite; m1gh1 be slowed in rec;pond1ng to an emcrge nc~ because of confusion o"er which agcnc) has autho nt) for a ccnain area. It 1s a lcg1 t1ma1e co ncern. While the various agencies maintai n m utual aid pac1s, m ean ing they can call each o ther for assista nce. cou nt) fi refighters a nd shcnffs d eputies arc rcspons1hle for the.· 1c;Jands. They should no t ha\'e to lx. While statc law should remain unchanged to protect the rights of property owners. government offic ials in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach shou ld launch an aggressive campaign to anne'< the islands. QC Opinions expressed in this space are those of the Daily Piiot Other views expressed on thJS page are those of their authors and artists. ' ~eaders' comments are invited and may be sent lo The Dally Pilot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa 92626 • 'I ,.., TOD,\' I' HISTORl. " T oday 1s Wedne~a). Jan J. the third day of I 990 There are 362 da)s lefl in the year Toda} ·s highlight 1n h1stor): On Jan. 3. 1959. Pre'i1dent Eisenhower signed a proclamatio n adm1tllng :\laska to the U n io n as the 49th state. On this date: In 1521, Manin Luther was excommun~ated from the Roman Catholic Church. In 1777, General George Washington's a rmy routed the Bnt1sh 1n the Battle o f Princeton. N .J. In 1833. Bnta1n seized control of the Falkland Islands 1n the South Atlantic. (Alm ost 150 years later. Argentina seized the islands from thl' British, b ut Bntam took them back after a 74-da)· war.) In 1938. the "March of Dimes" campaign to fight polio was organ11cd. Jn 1946. Wilham Joyce. known as "Lord Haw Haw" for his pro-Nazi radi.o broadcasts from Germany, was ha nged in Londo n. ( A.lthough American-born. Joyce held a Bn11sh passpon.) By Tbe .411ocl•ted Preis .,,_O.R-AN_G_F c_OA-ST_D_a_ily Pilat tu() '" ,, W f' rvnrr 11-w NNt•I. TO.YI TAIT •:di1or IJO\ H .\LE\ .\uorialr Editor TOM Cl.ANIN :'\"""'Editor STF.\ E MARBLE Cily Editor ROGER BLOOM feature• Editor ROGER CARLSON Sporl1 f.dilor TOM Bl DD CireulelkHI DirHIOr TERI Pl'PO Orrulation \brlif'ting ~hn•ll"' ROB t'RA~K llom11 Dellvtry Mana,.er C.lfAl.ON GOOD <:utlnmn Sf.rvl('f' Man•1trr PRA."00 HAH c ... trot~r RHONDA WEED Date Prwea.I .. Mn .. n DON A JACOBSON Cttdh Maeapr JA '\:\ Rt:u :m :'\Ot:R<. Rf'tail "'•Ir" \tana""' (:ll ERI t'RU:\t" t:la11•ifif'd Ylan•l'f'r JI ·1n OETTl:'\l. I r1111I .\rl\f'rli•in1t \111na1tf'r BEC.K Y S. HE:\DERSO:\ Ari Oil't'('tor \tARY CARTER Ad ~nlf'H Man8f1f'r Al.I SA TADLOCK p,....p~ .. Ma1t8f1f'r H E.~RY KNIGHT PrHe Room M•1t .. •r 1111 ,. " ••• ~ ... LETTERS Canyon inhabitants' days are numb~red Tu thl' (d1tor· The scorl' nov. \Cl'm~ tu be 2-0 in fa,or 111 Donald Bren and h1~ rnhort ' a<. the pol1t1lal foo thall 1<. k1l ~l'd had: and forth 0' l'r thl' fu- turt' of pristine I aguna < an~on no v.. rnlkd thl' la\I 'l'\tl&l' or' a natural 11pcn 'Piltl' kadin~ 111 tht· P3r 1tir 1n ~uuthl'I n ( .ilitwn1.1 I ht· lit\ 111 In Jill' "'" not J ltl'pt thl' l .1gunJ l .wrd pr11Jt't t ''11h1n 11\ r1t\ hllUndJrll'\ Jnd not-<.o-l''t~'t'Oll'd \<:n \I.in ( ran,lnn'<. \ "1l hJd no l'I k1. t \\ h1k \11 Hn·n "no Jouht 1n hi\ 1. oun1111g. huuw gkl.'lull~ plJ\ 1ng .1mong h" '"'l·ll1ng m1ll1on' 1n p11.1li1' tlw 111\ 1.·h Jn1mal<. thJt in- h.1h11 the p l ttJ)O'>l'U 1. tlll\lfUlllCifl <Hl'J hJ\l' no \\J\ ltl l..no\\1ng th.t i 1h1.·1r tla'' Ill I 1' 1 ng .mJ r11.11ni ng t n·1.·h 1 n tht· ru\lll 1.hJrm 1111ht• lJl1\11n·, t111l' JH' '1.·r\ numt)(:n·d I hl' dl'1.'1 '>11.11.l'' 'I.uni.' .111d 01hn ,mJll .1n1mJI' \\Jll \1111n I.Ill pr..·~ 111 m,111 ' grn·d .ind , .. ·lf·d1.·,111.·, tl\ll \\hJI (11>(! , ... , :1<.1dl' tnr ,111 ~l lll'•,1t111rh .1111111,11' .ind hum.in' .1111..\' 1111 .Ill t1111l' \11on 111 Ix· h1111ntl l'J to tht· "l''I t" 1nlamo u\ tollv.a\ -1 JJHI tll thl' l'J't h\ an 1\land o'f trJl 1 hom1.•, '"' 'l'1.·111 1(1 ha' t' l'nough 111 .ilr1.·ad) lhl·,1.· .1n1ma1, "'ill be d"pl.tll'U anti llJlurl' \\Ill tx· tk'>prnl- eJ I h1.·n 11 ''di lx-1.o mt• Hrl·n ( a- n,on .1 hhgh1 1•1 u1ngl''>tt·J 1ratlil lOn\lrUdJOn nt>l\l' ,1nJ m11r1.· J)(ol- lut111n \ k'~ month\ al.(11 I rrn nn.t 1 n t hl' "·'' 1.· thl' < an\1•11 111Jrci1 "'11h mnrr thJO ~ 'ilHI 11lhl·r Ulntl·rnnt l lllll'll' JnJ "'·"~l·J mdn 1nt11 I .1guna ( a- n'"" 111 '1111.l· uur ta\(1r to i..l'rp I Jgun.1 ( Jl1 \t11\ 111 "' natural 'tall'. a tr1.'.l\Ull' for Ill"' .inJ for grncr· J11ttll\ \l'l lu \llnll' Othn\ 1.Jnll' lr11111 01111\ 1ng , llll'' 1hat ha' l' ft·lt lhl· \\,11111111 r.I\ .1g1.·, or prugrt'''· al.,11 I. nt ,,, n ,, , r11. h dn r It 1rx·r' dl''1 n ,, 1h.-11 11\\11 ,, .. ·n1\ tx-.1ut' .ind v.ildh r~· h.1h11.11' \nd lhl'fl' v.l·r1.· 1h1111\Jnl1' m111,· '' h1• "n1p.1thlll'U \\Ith our 111. .111' h,1nd ttf fll'.11.1.·lul p111tn11.·r, I 11111.· " ')Ill\ l.h running 11111 lor th1. \ .1n\1111 .111d 1111 .di 1h1.· ru,lll 1,.1111\ .Jlhl 1.h,11111 11 1111'1,lll\\ lhl· 111111·" ••01111~ 11111\ 11111 "111n "h1.·n Jl),Jll' g1.Jl\t 1.'.1rth mt" 111~ ~··"'' ''I.JI'\' ,1\\,J\ .111d \\lllJIHI f11fl'\ l'I l..i~unJ·., hJ l i..,Jrd '3nltuan to the link 1nnoH·nt oca\t\ and their htlllll'\ ,, lung j\ II (l'nlJIO\ a\ JI " lhl'fl' " '"" htl(X' \\ uuld \Ir Hren ~· v.11l1ng 111 .11.tl'PI J lol..l'n JollJr 10 hu\ uut hi\ IJnJ JnJ 1.11..l' J la\ "'ntt'-o ff to ll'turn 111 lht· t Jnng nlJJOnt~ that "h 11. h thl·~ 'hou IJ ha \l~ d n gh I ltl 1. n10\ anJ 'hJll' fornt·r'' 1, 11 too ll:ltl' I•> lkt l.1rl' I .1gund < .in,nn .i n:lllonal pJr\..' '-'ill 11 d&J1n tJh' thousand\,,, utnll'rnl'd marl·ht·r-, lO prnlt"\1 and p11"1hl~ p11. \..l·t thl' ltln\lfUl llllO JnJ "Wk t>I th11w I JgunJ I Jurl'I ht>nll'\" \\ h,11 \\ill 11 lJkl'' In rl·Jltl\ nnh a hJnJtul 11! pt'npk \\,1111 to '•'t' lhl' l11mpk1111n 111 thl' pr111t·1. t .111d 11111\ fur th1.• purp;1•w o l 1111111~ thl II f)tl\ i...l'h .1nJ to fill m1ir1.· "' tlhll , '1.'1-hurgn•nin~ hanl.. Jl llllll l' I hl g..1ml' 1' not 11\l'I \1.'I nl•t unlll till 1.1t l.Bh ""g.' .\ ~rl-.1 t u11ln II\ l' \111\l' l..ll""' It 1.Jlllltll kl fU '>l .1 fl'"' 1h1"'' 11."h tnt11 1h1.· h.11. i..,ard 111 "' 111,IO ·, ll\Kll,<11 ~'lHIK I Jj!una 1-k.tl h Newport-Mesa trustee's comments about holiday schedule out of sync f o thl· ht1111r I found 11 1ntnl'\lll1g th.ii a ll1l'll1 ~·r o l thl· 'l'\\po11 \k,.1 I nllil·J ~houl Hoard. Pnl' Jim r~· H11t1m h>"'l'rl'J lhl' 1">1111111 on lhl.' m.1Jortt\ ol .l'.1lhl''' \1lt1ng. Im tht· prt'\l'nt \l huul '>l'hl•t.lu k I k \lJt1.·tl th.11 tx-mg 111 \~ nl "1th m·1ghhonn!! \lhool dl\lrll I\ \h1•11ld ~· thl· pr1 nlJf\ lt1n\11.kratu1n 111 tl'J1. hl'f' l k Hrn1i11 Jho J\\l'rll'd thJI thl' '-l'" · pnrt-\ k'a 11.·:i1 h1.•r, '1111111! fnr t ht• r rl'\l'nt \1. hl'duk \hl''' no ,·omnn 1111 J,J1111iil'' \\llt• lll'l'd 1 htld 1..IH' \\ 1111 "l'>h t11 ,1ll\'lhl f.11111h )!.>lhl·nng' h.1,I. l J'l Jlld \\hl• 111.'1.'tl llH' \\l'l'i.. l)(·f1ir1.· C hn,lmJ' tn d11 1hl·1r 'hop- p111~ 11\ quill' .1 pp.1n·n1 th.11 I k B1111m·, 1\Jll' '1dnt 11p1n111n d•w' li11k 111 'U!I· I!•''' 1h.11 h1.· 1'11.·lil'' l'' 111 lht· 1kmn-~ l.Jlll J11l•ll'" 11 \\j\ lhl' ~·.ird 1h,11 hr11111Lhl 1h" \ .1k11Jar l\\lll' Ill: Inn· till' ll".11.hrr' t11 \fill' nn I 111 \Ir I>.-B11111n' 1nhirm:111nn llh ,·Ju1..11111n ••I 11ur '>tuJt•nh" thr 11111,t \ ot.il t • rnn•rn 111 Jll ll'J\. ht·r.. .111J thl· p1l·,1:nt "twJuk 'ott•tl h' lhl nu1unl\ ll'lkd' our cornm11- nH·n1 In PW' 1d1ng 4uaf11, l'duca- 111111 \\ \' \\11111..J not \htH1 1. h.rngc thl' l'du,.111 .. n Pl 11u1 I ri IM)O <11uJc•nt' 111,1 11• i.!•> 'h••rr11ng. \\ ... ll'J\l' 11 11• thr rea<la' 111 J1.'l ldl· "hll h " m11\t 1mponan1 JO-\:-.''-( OPP ( mt.l \.fr...i Lincoln S&L mess makes c~mpaign reform tenuous ll undoubted!' was the rno<;l loadrd que'lt1on ·r._.cr put to ·\Ian ( ranston during h1'i long can·cr JO poh11cc; lk wa'i a.-.l rd h' rumml·nt on campaign rclo rm l k \Ct'm<. hi ha'c ansv.cr1.·d 11 \\lthout bl1nk1ng -4u1te an ac~mph\hntl'nt. g1"l'n h" prt'\<.'nt d1flicult1eir; Fo r an) readers v.ho ha'l' hl'l·n 1n ~ntarct1la dunng rl'(l'n l month\. California'\ c;cnior l 1.S ~nalor find~ himself knee-deep in thr 'l(·an- dal surrounding Irvine-based Lin- coln Savings and Loan .\s one of the Keating Five. hc is 1he o bJrct of bitter nd1cule on late-night talk- shows for having accepted m o re than SI m il hon in various form s o f campaign contribution from ('harle<o Keating. thc former owner o f the bankrupt savinp institution Thc senator s standing in populanty polls is plummeting. Keating has his own troubles. A U.S. government c1v 1I suit accuses him of havinf looted Lincoln o f m o re than $1 . billion in astcts. In his fiahts with federal regu- lato ry aaencics. Keatina sought the back1n, of p«>ple in high placn - placts ike the U.S. Senate. He has bttn frank in acknowledcina that he souaht to buy political influence by makina lavish rontributions. Among his ~t pf\s wete ch~ to various eolittcal committees under Craft.ltOft '• conU'Ol. no. sifts ..,._, to have eerved ~·· pu ....... too. u least to .... e.•t that they helped Fl the 1&1e•lioa of Cran ton lftd tome of .. Ciolla&wl •hen leatiQI com---~he wu bdns tma*9 ....,, by tM fcdcnl 1D\tttnmelll en.uonjolllCd _.,t"..., other U .. _ ......... "'•horil., had ..... - dJJ*tllltf"-*'1........, 4bilf ••1111ru;tu11.W ..... ...,~ J1\l'U'l'l1on ot thl· gmernmrnt''i caS<.' aga1n\t LJOu)ln \a, 1n(t'i and 11.-. n" nt•r E\ac:jh "'hat l'k.turrt•d at thr IQ8., nw1.·11nf -Ot'tv.t't'n thr li'C' ~nator' and l J"1n (irn' v.ho "a" then the r hll'f fl·deral rcgula1ur 111 thntt in- 'it1tut1o n'>. n:-ma1n' a matter o f dis- pute (,ra~ has dr~·nhcd the sena- tors· actio ns a~ an attempt to sub,en the regulator\ process. T he senators have ~1d the) wcre o nly pro' 1d1ng o rdinaf) co ns11tutnt ~r­ ' ice h~ l~ ing 10 look into thr go,crnment'c; t3\C and determine- "hether the I incoln bankruptcy cou ld tic lcg1t1matel) prevented and the Jobs of the inst1tut1o n 's e m - plo)ct''i protcctC'd Most Californians take a dim view of C ranston's role in th1s. according to Men in -Field's latest pubhc opinion su rvey. The San Francisco- baled pollster la.st week ~C'd that the 1enato r·s favorable r.tina. which in October wu 64 ~t posilive a nd only 32 ptrttnt nctative, has tlu.mped dramatlcally. The lltat readi.. .,_, Cranston as boillt v1ewed •"onbty b)' Oftl}' ll s>t1*I or u.o. ~, weuae •1 ~' ho6d UftftavonMe oplniou of Mm. l'-dwonn.,poli..-.. MM i&. Cl'Utllofthas.. ... .. . ...... frilca ... to cw. die ~---., \IJt1· 111 lk1.\·mlx·r 'fll'ai..ing v.h1.•r1.· ht· 1..111 .111<.I ,in\'1.1.t'rtng qUC\tl\11\\ h\ hK.,\I ll'J)Orll'f\ \t 11nr .1pix·aranll'. tx·tn re a grnup of ...,tiuthan < ah rorn1J bu'i1nc .. ., leJdl'f\. h\' o utdid h1m.,.,·lf "hl·n .-.omrnnr ·a\ll'tl a 'tut''il1nn about munc~ 1n f>t.lht1c:' I l l\ \ntic.-. v.ould rl·g.a n.I { ramton·, rr,rnn<.t• a' rcp- rl'\('nllng thl' ult1mJtc in t hutzpah l 'l'n hi'> ''rnpath1ur' mu.-.1 ha'C' hl.1111.. hl·J m rr h1'i apparent 1n- \l'OSJll \ 11' 111 hov. th1· new\ nl tht• l\.t·a11n g l·11ntnhu11 on' hJ' r hurt him JO the e)e\ Of tht• ( ahfom13 puhhl' In rcspon<,e 10 the quc'lt1on. ( ranston transformrd h1~ role from that of 'imner to preacher :\ pres~ accouAt \aid he re'iponded with a general obscn at1o n. tha1 it's a d is- grace that m embcrs of \onJrt"SS must s pend w much time ra1s1ng t ampa1gn funds. Then hl" mused o n v.hat 11 m tght takl" to m akl" tht" public full a"are o( the probll"m ~an> o bsct"'ers 1.\-0uld !.a) that 1.\-e alread) have 5uch a scandal. although 11 ma) not ~t any effective re form<. in mo tion. One obvious difficult) I!> that the wrong m cucn- gC'r deh'°ered the messqc. Few \Oters v.111 want to look to OM of the Keating F1"e for r«ommcndltao ns on how to address thc !Candal's root CIUS('S. But there's another reason. too. Poltucal tcandals often •t in the way of. tither than help, one key element ofcampaip refonn -pu~ he ftunci-na of cttttlon races. When voem 1n UilCftd by tcandll. they betiolM ncn a hkd}I "° wppon the idea ot ~ tal ~ to-1'9Y '°' C8m~ ... .-..c ollce. nat llCC"'1 IOO ..._. .. iew•diftl tM =~r ndwy.-..f1*r ·= 'Sport' grapples with reality It\ mul h more difficult hc1ng a proll''i\mn.d '' rc\tlrr than mo~t pt•upk l\.'Jh1t· I'm llt•I tJl l.11~ J~>ut thl· pun1')h· ml.'nl 1h1.·' 'llPl"•'>l'dh 1al t' 1n thr nng I m 11.'ll'fl ··~ 111 thl·1r hac~<.tagt' hk f ir<.t thn 111.·nl J hu'>lnt'C.) nun- dg1.·r ur \l'\ r,.t,11 •r 'omt."ont· 10 gt'I thl·m thl' pr111x 1 union t·ard I Juuhl ii thn llJulJ i;t'l J ~ur1:n ~l'tor.,· ( 1uild lJrd t \\uuld probahl~ tx· <1n .\l lttl' I q uit . .\\\111.1Jll1n or .\mt·n- t·an f t·dn.1t1t•11 ol l l'lt•\1s10n dnd R Jd1t1 \rtl\I\ ,Jrd ThJt ' l•nh lhl h1.:g1nn1ng In ad-, d1twn ll• hrull· \tr1.·n1h lhl'' nt·ed to gl't 1111.(l'lht·r "1th thl.'n o pponenh prohahh J k" d,I\' ht-Ion· tht' mall h tu ''or!. , 1u1 "·format l of thl." upulm1ng n ent I rum the s1Le of thl' "'rn1k" I 1mJg1nc the m doing th" u' rr .1 dl'lu\l' p111a and a couple lx•t·r<. On1.t· thl'' dcl·1dt' "'h1ch one will v.1n v.1th "'hllh huld the' ha'e to arrangl' t1ml' tur n·hcarsal., \1o<it \..nu" Jll th1.· hl•llh Jnd technique\. hut thn hJ\l' 111 g1.•1 lhl' 11m1ng JU'I ngh1 .111J \\lfl' thr rrlt'fl'C\ 1n r hn nn·J .1 1t1J l..cup man o r "umJ n Jntl J h<11rtlrl'\\l'f 'ot lor a m11wt1. du I tx·l1l'' t' thn v.alk Jr,,und h .. :t\'n·n O\Jll.hl'' lrn1l.ing hl..1.· thn Jt> JO lhl' 11ng \\ rn1k1' JI"' 11l't'd "ardn1~· dd- \ l\l'r' l hn u1ul1.fn'1 ma\..r that 11.1mt'lll\Jl1l l'ntrJ1ht' Juv. n th1.· a•'>k 1" thl· nn~ 11 thn "'t'rt·n·1 v.ranng thP'l ~JU1.h t JIX'\ uompklt' '1.1.Jlh ll'"l'kJ J u .n ... 1r1l'' Jnd thl'H •ham- r 1111i...h1p b..· " lhl'' 111.il' 11!xrJ•l'' v.artlrotx· 111111.. "'"'''r\Jll\l' C lnthl'\ ll~l' thal J n· n111 p11. l.l'J ,,I) thl' ldt'I. -lhl~ hJ \\ 111 1-... ,1..-...1gnnt 11 r'1 h~ J pt·r;fln "--. "1th .1 'I' J m.1g1nJt1t1n Jnd f>t.lOr tJ\ll .1nJ th1.•n 111<11.k io order '-l \I tht'' nl't'J a \Cnptv.ntl'I Al·lml' 1hl· mJtrht''> t'speually lht' lhJmp111n,h1p ma11.hr'>. thq go on lJml·r.1 J nd n11111' lhl'tr opponrnis 1n grJph1, 1,·rm' "hat the) are going 111 Jot•• 1h,·r11 '1.1.hl'O the~ get them 1n thl· ring "'"1l' m·nt .1 drJrnJ coach. thl'' J.m 1 J11 1 ... , "l'll rt·aJmg tht· tue ,JrJ, I hd•t' nl• 1Jc<1 '1.1.h;it tht•1r JOlOml'S .1Tl' hu1 ii thl' ml·n ial1t~ d1~plaH'd a1 Ilic J ll'rlJ " lor rl'J I the' al\o need .Ill .llll•UnlJnl It• mJ\..t• 1iu1 <lt•pos1t'i Jlltl 'I.I.nil' 1.hn k\ tor tht'm f !Jr!.:. l.1g ll'JOl m.111. hr-. JfC lhl' Onl''i thJl~l't thl' f;in, l'\ntl'd fhe~ u,u,1lh rnJ up v.11h all lour v.rl'\tler-; Ill the 11ng JI lht• \,101l' lrm,· "'l''er m1•ld thJI thl\ " ilkga l or that the rl'll'll'l' '' horp1nl_( .uound \hal ing h" 11ngn .11 Lhl·m -1hc tan' l11ve ii \n111hc-r pan 111 tht· '>C'npt 1ha1 get<. tnt tJn' 1.·,u1ed 1, tht• fact that the F-•l(iJ gu" don't .il"'a'" "In This rl'lllllfl'\ J rt•mJll h romplC'te with a Ill'\\ '' rlfll I hl' v. rnllt•r' tJl..l' turns "hrutalh ix'Jl1ng l'.11.h othrr" 1n the nng and "lll r tin 1111..-n lll'i\ rach othrr lhll•llgh thl rtlf>t.'\ to the noor 111'1 "hrn \Ou 1h1n~ th1.· fe llow on 1 lw llt "11 l'll'.ing '11.1ousl~ to rtured \\ tll nt \ l'r Ix· ahlc lo WTCStk again. hl' k .1p' up drag' h1' npponrnt back 1n10 1hr nng and ha11ers him to thc 111.11 rnr the n·4u1rl'd roun1 of 1hrce. It lht· "punl\hment" hoth m en tall· ""' not fa l c. thc' would be 1n the ho<,p11al 111 a rnma1osc state for ii number of tla)'S befo~ slipping a"'a' 1n that (irt'at .\rene in the Sh Fon.unatel~. thr poundtnj 1s fake. So the' managr to grt o ut of lhl" n ng o n thl·lf nv. n and "'ill tX' hack for a rcpt·at rx-rfcmnanl'l' I h 1v. Jn I kno" all 1h1s'1 A.m I one of tht• dnoted fan'>" No. \.\ h1k flipping around the chan- nd' louling for another p rosram. l''r seen and heard a few ~nds of th!\ produr 11on. Cunosny finally got the be\! o f ml". and on four oc- ca.s1ons I've watched about 20 minute\ of thest' m atches. l'vt come to 1he rondus1on that when the match 1s over, the WTC"tler. and the ~fcrttS all 10 out together for a few bttn. \\'hat better wa) to cnt1quc each others D(rtormanC<"? Celflmahf ..... ,,. """' ,,, ~Nip& Letten welcome -. I I I I 1 · I I by Bii Keane "If you take a picture of me with Barfy. you can call it 'Beauty and the Beast."' by Brad Anderson "His teacher suggested that we have him tutored at home." NANCY ARLO AND JANIS DaABBLE ~l. ~f~EAl> SEES A SilvE~fiSH. r f • DEl'fl'flS THE llENACE by Hank Ketcham I ·~I /·3 "M~.WILSoH,COCJLDYOCJ STEPON™IS? I WN<T TO SHC1t\' JoEy HOW 1J.4E NEEDLE SP!H~f~ND." by Jerry Scott GARPIELD WfLCONIE TO"fROfM I ~ 5TRANCiER THAN .. ~----. F"IC:flON 1'H£ATER" SHOE JUDGE PARKER FUNKY WINKERBEAN DOONESBURY ._....--- ·by Jim Davi•~ UCf Pf. Of COOR!>E.. FOR THf. 5rtJFF Wf MAP£ UP TO MAt<E rr MORE. IHTfRE~TING' by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNelly ~!AU.'( rof< "OOGe OF US IN !CAAP ME.iAL-· 0 0 0 l1 A a by Harold Le Doux JUST TH~!!. ~te ... M R.CORT N-40 OUR N E W HOUS eGueST. MISS M U L DOON , ANO M l! I by Tom Batluk ,~.....-.-·~-...... by Garry Trudeau ... • ..._ ....... " .... eomca ..... ae ·rm .... ':" ~ :-~ ..,.. ., • w l'W • toed ol ..------..,.. Ind rm to --ol I DIRTOP I'*"" . r I I r I . I LEJEW I r 1 r 1 I S EY U" I I I I' I I t , 1 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3. 1990 He has 13 F's, but still 15' Heavily recruited There is a young man who is curre ntly playing at a Southern Cali- fornia high school who has 13 F's on 1 his transcript and is being heavily recruited by some big-name.schools. I a m not making this up, it is true and some of the schools are in o ur conference. 0 If the NIT continues to function, someone. how a bout the NCAA, should try to make it fair to the teams involved. The N IT 1s a preseason and post-season event. In both tournaments, there is no advance seeding pattern and the people who run the NIT favor the eastern team s, or the so-called big- timc schools who will draw peo ple. I realize they arc out to make money. but I questi on whether the tourney is necessary a nd if 1t is. make It fair or drop it. 0 Let's give a ll of the Division I schools a share of the television rev- e nue in the NC' AA tournament. I am not talking about equality. j ust a share. The m one} "'e a rc d iscussing 1s a stronomical and could help save a lot o f athletic programs that are in the red. In case you arc wondering about the TV contract. 1t 1s SI billion for sc\'en years. 0 T here are pro bably 50 teams that can advance to the Final Four this year. That 1sequaht). 0 Lorenzo Orr. probably the top high school player in Michigan. signed with USC. If the Trojans land .\rtes1a·s Ed O"Bannon 1n Apnl. and the} arc 1n the final~'"· accord ing to O'Bannon. L1SC' could be something in a fe" ) cars O rr and O'Bannon. alonJ with USC"s current fro'ih 'iensa11on. Harold Miner. wou ld give the Tro- jans a great 'itart. ff Ba nnon said he wants to go somewhere he can start. He can start for a lot of teams. hut I know he can start for SC In case you think that I am going after use. he could have sta rted for UCI a year ago when he was a high f Please ~e MUWGAN/Bl) B ·\SKETB.\1.1. Goast, Rustlers duel at GWC The Dally Piiot Orange C'oast College will try and snap a two-game losing streak while G olden West College. winners of the recent College of the Desert To ur- nament. hopes to continue to amaze as the intra-d1'ltru:t rivals meet to- night (7:30) 1n an Orange Empire Conference men'<1 basketball opener at Golden West. The Rustlers ( 13-6) ended the preseason portio n of their schedule b} winning the Desert to urnament last Saturday as Alex Kreps. G WC's 6-foot-7 sophomore center. scored 29 points a nd grabbed 11 rebounds in the title g.ame against ...\ntelo~ Val- ley, an 85-80 Rustlers victory. O range Coast ~ I 1-4). which won the Mt. San Jacinto Tournament in November. has been led this season by 6-6 sophomore Alan Schlines, who's a veraging 15 points and 10 rebounds per game. Chip Hanlon and Scott Destefano. · The Pirates were I 0-1 before losing to Skyline. 64-54. in the San J ose City Colleae Tournament final on Dec. 9. The Pirates were eltm inatcd in two straight pmes. « 011 .•:1••· •·ooTR\11 UC1'$ shoo~lng woe~ continli~ Utah State downs eratic Anteaters, BO-70 ~~ t~~:0r~~~a1~~gh~ lly JON flltGUSON Of .. DllllY .... -- The numbcn -m ost of them negative -summed tbinp up pretty simply for UCI in Tuesday's Big West Confb e ncc men's basket- ball opener with U tah State. A 39 percent effort from the floor and a 56 percent outing at the frec- throw line added up to a ~ 70 defeat and a 2-8 record for the Anteaters. UCI is shooting 44 per- cent from the field a nd 66 percent fro m the line this season. The Aggies, winners of their last four games. improved to 7-5. "You're ~oing to lose if the ball doesn't 10 in the hole.'' UCI Coach Bill Mulligan said ... Twenty of 36 at the line is not aoina to win pmes." And if the veterans are not producina. Mullipn's aroup of freshman will continue to sec con- siderable time. "The encouf'llina thin& of the team is the four freshman all played pr~tty well," Mulligan said . ''If we're going to lose1 we might as well get them some tune. ··1 want to set som~ of those young k.ids in the game. I don't think they hurt us. We made a run with two freshman auards in there. We need to get some of the o lder auys to get their shots to fall. ''I'm not discowqcd. I uw a lot of briibt thinas. But soon, I think we get into the meat of this (con- ference). Utah's aot a nice team. but there arc o ther teams that are bet- ter.'' seven assists. "The second half, I came out kind of light-headed and dizzy:· said But- ler, who started feeling 111 o n Satur- day. Through au of the negative The Anteaters managed to up numbcn, the Anteaters remained in their shooting perccntaae to 55 per-Che hunt thanks to some aggressive cent for the second haff. but at the man defense which forced 12 of the same ti me, their free-'throw per-A~es' 17 turnovers in the final 14 centage dropped to 48 ( 12 of 25). m inutes of the game. UCI cut a 1 S- T he most notable culprit a t the point defi cit to three. 63-60, with ll'he was center Ricky Butler, who hit 5:05 to play on Butler's follow 4 of 11 in the half, but he did scored basket. He was fouled but missed 18 ~lnts and grab eight rcbou11ds the free throw despite battltn& the nu. Rod Palmer. "(The man defense 1s) usuallr, ~ho said he fcl~ better sin~ return-what. we . play the best against. · inJ from a sprained knee. hat only S Smtth said. "I gi ve them credit. of 16 s~ots a nd scored o nly one-: -fPle8M see UCJ /HJ ~.._,.._ .............. . J e ff Von Lutzow fl•ftJ comes down and fouls Rich Jardin• of Don MaJ of UCI ... , .. within • crowd of A.91:' reboun4- Ut•h St•t• In Tue1day1 Big West colllllon at UCI. At r'9ht, Ing. Anteaters led their conference -.ener, 70. II Ifill S( ·11001. (; llCI .S Sl'O IC I' Ocean View still the team to beat in Sunset League, but everyone is in the hunt .\<; C"tpcctcd. the Manna High g1rl'i ba!>ketball tournament provided <;{'v- l'ral note" onh) achievements. narnel) Ed1\on\ up.:;et victory over Otcan Vic" 1n the champ1onsh1p ~hO\\dO"'n. Results from 11 and other tour- nament<; 1n 1hc area S<'em to 1nd1catc that the three Orange Coast area leagues arc\' 1de oix·n . W11h the lcagu<: 'ICason one week away. here·., a quick look at the area teams. Without do ubt. the strongest league in the area J'i the Sunset. Ocean Vic"' ( 13-1) has been talking about Cl F and state titles from the start. However. the Seahawks were shot down by Ed ison 58-53. S11ll . Ocean View. on paper. has the most experience and talent 1n the league a nd perha ps the most in the 5- A Division. led by 6-foot-2 senior center Jenny Sullivan. The support- ing cast of seniors A.Ill Tak1do. Tracy Wolfe and Fabiola Nunez is exct'l- lcnt. The Sea hawks appear to have two "t·aknesscs. Their free throw shoot- ing·~ 1ncons1s1en1. but m ore 1mpon- antl)' they seem to lack an outside shooter. Ed ison pla)ed a suffocating 1-011e on Sull1 van. g1 ving up the outside shot. but no one wanted 10 take 11. If you love underdogs. then ~ou ha\C to lo\e Ed ison (9-2). Edison's tallest starter 1s 5-9. and the) onl~ ha\ cone senior. but she 1s a good o ne in Dcbbk Fischer. In fact. Fischer was ill thro ughout the Marina Tour- nament and not near her best. but Ecfison managed to win an} wa~ What Edison lacks in height. C"t· pericnce and maybe tn athletic ah1h- t). 11 makes up for in heart. The Chargers don't know when to quit Thq were down 17-10 to Ocean View afterthe first q uarter. but some how they came back to win. Who knows how Iona Phil Abraham's bunch of overachievers will continue to excel? But o ne thing 1s for certait'. when you watch his team play you know they arc gi ving I 00 percent. t-ountain Valle~ ( I lJ-)) 1s still put- ting things togcthrr after lostng all but one starter (J uh(• Workman) There 1~ a w1nn1ng attitud e at Foun- Utn \'allc)'. and ( oach Carol Strausburg I.no" s ho" to get the most fro m hl·r pla ~ crs. so do n't be surprised to \CC the Aarons at orclo'iC lo the top. .\nother team that'" hard to figure out Is Manna. Thl' V1k1 ngs won their first eight. hut ha\ c lo.,t fou r of thc1r last six. Pete Bonn) 's run-and-gun team has hccn ground(•d latel). and the V1king'i -"ho al!>o lack heigh t (the1rccn1cr 1s 5-6)-need to find a \\a) to run again Melisa ornnoand Chnsta Yorke lead the V1 k1 ngs. who use the Loyola Mara mount Lfn1\ers1t\ o ffe nse. as docs Edison In fact. an Ed1son- Manna bau lc could look more li ke a track meet Who "'ould ha ve ever tho ught a gi rls basketball team would C\ er score I 00 poi n·1s tn a game. but ff9te ... tee GltANCH /Ill Mesa drops 58-56 semifinals decision t o N or th Torran ce The Dally Piio t Olt' 1a Dec am11lc had 20 points and I ~ reoounds. but II wa<>n'1 qu11e •Scores. schedute/114 enough to make up the pla\ fro m :-.lonh Torranct'<:. Laura Collins. as Costa Me...a lo-;t d 58-56 dcc1s1on in the cham1o n'>h1p 'iCm1finals of the Costa Mesa girl., ba<iketball LOur- namcnt Collins poured 1n JO potnl\ and grabhcd 20 rchound\ for North Tor- rance. which ad\anccs to the cham- p1onsh1p game ofthl' toumr\ against San Clcmcntl' ionight at 8. Costa Mesa "''II pla~ Woodhndgc at 6 20 p.m . for third place. Besides the fine effort from DcC'a- mlllc. the Musta ngs (5-5) also got strong pla) form Thu) Ngu~l'n "llh 18 points. Ngu)cn also had two 3- point baskets. Elsewhere 1n thl' Costa Mesa To ur- name nt. • Lcsltc Rathbun and Belinda Taub each had 14 points. but San Clemente pre' a iled 49-48 in the other cha mp1o nsh1p semifi nal game. f Pleaw 1H MESA/HJ No. 2 lri~h beat everyone, except Miami Holtz claims strength of schedule overrides 2 7-1 O loss to Hurricanes 8y SRVSN WINS _.,... ..... MIAMI -Firtt came the news ,.,_, No~ ·Qlme was only No. 2. Theft came two aspirins. Lou Holtz 901 rid of the p1ln oft.be poll~ now be 1would like IO Fl rid of the poll ittdf. ......... /!! At o ne poi\\t •. Hol.tz stopped to swallow two Dpirins bcQc continu- ina his news con~n«. Miami beaa Not~ 0.me 27-10 on Nov. 25. but Holtz Mid the F'l&htlns lriah still deterved to be No. I be- cause they had lhe nation's best re- cord and played ttw tC>Ulhctt IChcd- ule evtf. ··1 wan• ~ •o jtdt1ty why they dMtn ., pick --. Hoau llid. ''Doeloa•t. we•* ai8c teems aha& tWetlt in• bowl We pllyed ~ =*hn tbey wenat • e•aiboall We '-' dae ACC cil•p, "" lbelllT•dl••P.•*.._ r.aoct sr.•••lil.._. ...................... iildl11111h1• ill ....... ""' Notre Dame knocked Colorado odt o f the No. I . spot with a 21-6 victory Monday njpt in 1he Orlnac Bowl. Miam i chmbtd ftom sec:ond to first by bead, Alabama 33-2$ in the Supr Bowl. hat, and a 27-10 vic- tory .over Notre 0.me on Nov. 2S1 was wba• earned Miami the nationa1 dlrlmpio_Mhip. MiMli' .ato was choleft No. I in U nilld Prell lnternatiomJ'sCX*hes' DOii, and by USA Today.CNN. Notre Dunt wu ~ to dtinS. OM potDl betaind floirlda S.., by UPI. Mlllll if'Noere Dime il-..W ...... ..... Halla llkl.; ~ .. , ., .... -.h't"llOdicl .. ... ~ ............. O'IW the ptriod of time .... "Who accomphshed the most 1n 1989? Thafs how I look at it." At flrit, Holtz ckdi.ned to say whether he suppom a plllyoft' system that would take tfae dtdliOft aboot a national champioft "'9)' ft-om the Sports writm and broedcu1m who vote in the AP poll But '*r he taid &be national championMip •'tbo.dd be de- termined by computer ... Under the cuneat ~. 1M ·~ tdledWt the lritla play doan't ..y Holtz .w. . .. k. ,_ Nocft o... .. "1 of ....... " -tlicl. ..... , dailllt 111yi1111ila..-..,..1 ..... • r G cwll•ounW11tlilil 7W .... The Irish ha ve one chanae in their 1990 schedule -they dropped Southern Methodist. still rccoverina fro m the NCAA death penalty, and picked up Tennessee. which finished fifth in the fi nal poll. Notre Dame plays Miami Oct. 20 in South Bend. "It'll ~ a an-t pmc," he said. "Yoo'll ttt an em otional team." Colorado COKh Bill McCartney joked that he is now a strona propc>- ncnt o( a playoff. ··TbM's why wt loM." he said. "We wankd to 1ncreut the controvmy ... McCanney'a 1am could M¥e I& tied the No. l li1•don 1ritlMNt .-.. 1ion_.1_jbll by winnine. "The key on Tueldly monan. fl ~ Fl acited lbcMll lM ftltm. ... MeCanMf ................ .. petWeat wt.ct .. 4f -nil .. 11.wo•• M~· Jotln l'aul1en ... Sea Kings on targ~t for opener CdM puts Irvine aw ay again, this time with 48 -40 non-league win 9y REID McCLATCHY o.-y ,,_ ,_.__,. Only seven d ays a nd one non- lcague game are left before the start of Sea View League actton Jan. I 0th. and accordtng to Corona del Mar High &asketball coach Paul Orris, e~eryth1ng l!i fine a nd dandy with his Sea Kmgs. H is team is 8-6 and has won 4 of 1ts last 5 games. incl uding its last three at the Estanc ia Coast Chnstma!i Classic. and t!i very close to where 11 should be as far as preparation 1~ concerned for its Sea Vie"' opener at home against New- pon Harbor. "'We've finall) staned to come together as a tea m." Oms said. "We've finally gotten to JUSI about where I wanted us and thought we sho uld be at this point A couple da)S of practt ce and we'll sec how we stand w11h the rest of the Sea Vic"' League. It'!> gu1ng to be tough, ·but I hkc the-progress we've made." The Sea Kings combined a ltttle bit of e\ Cl) thing Oms has taught them m the preseason with some athlettc ab1ht) a nd game sttuatton decisions that can't be taught to defeat In me High for the second game in a row. 48-40. T uesday night at Corona dcl Mar. The Vaq ueros according to C'oach Stev{' Ke11h ar(' not where he'd like them tO be for their South C'oast League opener Fnda) at ho me against El Toro In fact, unless they start working harder. he said they could be in for a lot of trouble. The~ arl' 8-8 and have lost 3 of their iast 4. and with Ca pistrano Valle). El Toro. Mission Vie10 figu- n ng 10 be 1 n the top echelo n of Orange Count~ basketball teams this season. 11mc 1s running out to get read\_ "(wish we were 16-0. but we're 8-8." Keith said . "Either I start recruiting in the ne.llt couple of days or we've ~01 to start working harder and making adjustments. With o ur league figunng to be tougher than C\C r. )Ou're going to have to play at a high lnel 1f }OU want to win. Espec1all ) u!i. We're probably the )Oungest and sma llest team 1n a league full of hcavywe iahts. •• In 1ne got the most out of its smaM lineup in the first quarter and led after one 14-11 They were able ·to mo\ e the ball around. and when the 11me came to get a sho t ofT. they were ahle to get 1t into the hands of John Molle Mo lle scored 6 points in the fint, tht'n was bottled up by the Sea Kings' Jeff Jackson in tht second and third. sconng o nly S points. He came ahv{' in the fourth iani.W a • th"arted comeback with 9 pOUlts. He finished "Ith 20 points. five less than when the two team s met a game ago. "Defensively. I thought we picked 11 up after the fi rst quarter:· Orris ~1d. "Last week when we played them. we allo wed Molle to do too much. This time we were a little more aware of where he wa s and helped out. "l\gatnst these a uys. they tum it . IPle._'" CdM/UJ I ~ ~iami, whkb banded NOCN D9IM hi only IOll in 13 pmes, ~ved 39 ~ vota and l,47~ poin&a after ftnllla'tl·l l-l. Non Dune aot l9 ~ ¥Olel wl l ,452 poinu. The olbet two ft........,. ~ went U> No. 3 Aorida State, the only team to beat Mjami this season. '1'bcre ii DO doubl ia my mbld IMI Wre tbe bell 1e1.m in dM country," Ertc:ball .W. .. Reprdlnt of what aayone ehe 19)'1. we're No. l." c:a111 for a ~ l)'Acm ao dctcnlliee tbe • Ncbnlka 41-17 ill t.be ,_.. lowL Mkb-nalional dlampioe. ipn1 wbich enlefed tk .ao. ..,.C whit an .. No Qlleltion about it... be laid. ·~ outside shot at the uUoaal ude. ~ debe1e it IOina '°'°on until there is ooe. &om third to le\leDlb aftilr..,... 11.ro 10 I ...uy believe doWn the roed there will be Soutbern califCwaiL • Nocn DuDe °** Lou Holtz Ille! .... diappoitued that tbe lritb did DOC res-a u national champions. 1 o&aJO« sysaem." It ii the 12th time since tbe AP staned its Tbe 22-point marain wu the ICICOnd clote1t since the AB bepn its poitlellOe POU in 1968. Brigham Youns ed8Dd Wuhinaton by 20 points at the end of the 198' tealOJ\. Miami Coach Dennis Ericklon said voters made the right choice. "You canjuatif)' why Miami won h. Wbat r.ou can't justify 11 why we dktn"9 .. he aid. ·we played the ioLtlbelt tehcdule, we had the best record, we were No. I every week but one and came back to beat No. l quite decisively." ~IOft. who repl8ced Jlmmy Jobneon poll in 1936 tbat tbe nadoMI dllmpioa bid last Mirclt, ia the first coach to win the one loss. Miami won i1a fint tide in 1913 national championship in hJa flnt year at a with an 11 • l record and went 12--0 to capture school since Bennie Oosterbun did it at another crown in J 987. Mlehi_.n in 1948. Prior to Miami, the last five tams to win FJonda State, which won 10 s1raiaht the national championship with one Joa did games after starting the season with two so by defeating the top-ranked team in a losses. moved up two spots after routina bowl pme. Erickson said the close vote will increase ,1•t11tl' HBI \h Two hours of college basketball via 900 adds up to S54 .30 tab f'roftt The Auodatftf ftress LEXINGTON, Ky. -University of ---- Kentucky basketball fans too far away to • ~ pick up Wildcat radio broadcasts won't ' ~ have to scramble any more to listen; they ---- can let their 'fingers do the walking. · With Host Communications. owner of broadcast- television rilhts, and originatins..station WVLK.. UK is ofTerina seven games via a "900" number. Pay 75 cents for the first minute and 45 cents for each mioute thereafter. dial 90()...903-3700 and listen to the Wildcats li ve by telephone. "h's going to be really ibteresting," said Ralph Hacker. executive general manager of WVLK.. "The best idea would be to get a bunch of buddies together to help share the cost. then put it on a speaker phone." The 900 venture has co me about because of th e bailouts of the 50.000-wall stations. From the 1940s until the mid-'80s, WHAS in Louisville saddled up with UK. Its clear-channel siJll.81 reached westward to the Rockies and blanketed the South. For nearly a dccad<'. staning 1n the mid-'70s. games were heard on both WHAS and Cincinnati's WCK Y. wh ose signal headed eastward even more strongly than the Louisville station ·s. I Steroids worth questioned "* LONDON -Anabobc steroids may hav(' a greater effect on the mind than the * body of athletes trying to improve their performances. a Bn11 sh television documentary says. "QED: The Steroid Myth" presents evidence from the United States. Britain and Italy challenging the view that the phys ica l effects alone of steroids can tum good athletes into world champions. _ "The idea that steroids enhance performance may be another damaging myth." the program, scheduled for airing today. concludes. But 1t leaves unanswered a numrer of key ques- tions. including whethl'r Ben Johnson could have won the 100 meters at the Seoul Olympics without being on steroids. Johnson. stripped of his Olympic gold medal after testing pos11tve for steroids. later testified h<' had been on a steroid program sine<' 1981. Whether the Canadian would have triumphed without the help of .steroids "1s something we may ncv<"r know for sure.'' the program says. At a press bnefing Tuesda.Y. the program's producer. C'hns Thau. said the muslle·build1ng powers attributed to steroids could help certain athletes at ceruun times. What the JO-minute program was tryinJ to do. he said. was show that the mental impact oftalc1ng steroids was equally effective. "It was not my brief to appraise it from a moral sta ndpoint.'" said Thau. a former Romanian hammer thrower. "But there 1s reason to believe that what is gained in strength 1s not necessarily matched by power. "I know how compulsive the winning urge can be. But what interested me is what actually happened to people on steroids. It's not like taking a pill. Everything has to be right. .. To suppon this point, the program ci tes evidence at the University of New Mexico at Alberquerque. where a group of male athletes were tested for nine weeks. All were injected with a variety of treatmct1 ts. incuding st<"ro1ds and plac<"bos -substances that have no medical effect and arc used merely as a testing device. tll 0 ·11 01 1111 It\\ "Maybe it was fate. Maybe the Good Lord didn't want my team to win." -Mich igan Coach Be SckmbecWer, followina his team's 17-10 loss to USC in the Rose Bowl Monday. French collide with whale ..__ WELLINGTON. New Zealand -4 ryrench yacht Charles Jourdan sailed into a whale Tuctday and sustained substantiaJ '- damqe, orpntZCtS of the Whitbread round - - the world ocean race said. ~ The yacht, which was in seventh plK.c at the time of the collision, plans to continue the third leg of the race from Fmnantle, Australia, to Auckland. Race officials in Auckland said skipper Mu- Philippe Coutau had radioed to say the French yacht hh the whale earty this afternoon. He .. id the planlrina on the atarboerd side of the bo9t had been dlimaecd, and there wu psb about 6 feet iD leallb and I foot irf width. TM damale was h~ up -at tbe joinin& of the deck &o tJw bull -and 1ust IO the stem on the chain ....... wlMn die mMt nmiJ11 joioa tbe bull. UK had the rest of all broadcasting worlds trien. But WHAS quit broadcasting UK in the mid-'80s as University of Louisvilk basketball reached high-profile status and unsolvable game conflicts !'rose. When an attempted Host buyout of WCK Y angered that station's owners about three years 8fO. WCKY dropped UK and bought University of Cincin- nati rights, Hacker said. UK was able to get WLW to jump into the breach, but an NCAA probation that prompted the depanurc of star players led WL W to switch to Xavier basketball this year. ~ , UK was left without a "boss" station, and its far- Oung fans without a way to pick up the Wildcats. Mike Dodson. network coordinator for Host. has heard some of the mythic stories. "The} 've driven around and parked under a bndge. angled their car one way and their antenna another1 rolled down the window and told the dog in the bac" scat not to move." be said. Hacker, who does color commentary to the loni- ttme "voice of the Wildcats ... Cawood Ledford. said several fans have called dunng pregame talk shows to ask about the service. "Two calls were from Florida and one from Texas.'' he said. "A lot of fans go down to .flonda to s~nd the winter.·· I' THE BLEt\C'HERS ~ , .... ___ _ •It-~ -...... -.....- "Give rn..e a dollar. Henry. I want to know what the hell's going on." Montana named AP's MVP SAN FRANC. ISCO -Joe Montana, who raised his career to new hei~ts in 1989 ~ with the best all-around passing year in 'l.=>' league h1~tol). added a new honor Tuesda} when he was named NFL Most Valuable Player by The Assoc1a1ed Pres!) ThfCc )Car<, after undergoing maJor back surgcl)' and a )Car after h1'i 'itan1ng JOb was put up for grabs b) Bill Wal sh. Montana at age 33 guided the San Francisco 49ers to four founh-quaner comeback wins and the league·., best record ( 14-2) He had a sixth season of 3.000-plus passing yards. tyrng Dan Fouts' league record . and at one point threw 150 passes without an 1nterccp11on. Montana. completing a near-record 70.2 percent of his passes for 26 touchdowns and a career-low eight interceptions. also 111.·as an easy winner of the AP's Offensive Pla}cr of the Year award. In balloting b) a national media panel, Montana received 62 votes for MVP. Green Bay quarterback Don Majkowski was a distant second wi th 6. The only other votc·geucr was defensive tackle Keith Millard of Minnesota with 2 Orange Bowl wins TV wars NEW YORK -NBC's telecast of Notre Dame's victorx over Colorado in the ~ Orange Bowl drew more than twice as many 'l.=>' viewers as ABC's broadcast of Miami's ---- victory over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl. according to O\ernight ratings released Tuesday. The Or.inJe Bowl got a 19.6 rating and a 29 share in the 23 major markets surv<"yed in the overnights. NBC said. The Sugar Bowl got a 7.4 rating and a 12 share. Southern California's 17-10 victory over Michigan m the Rose Bowl. televised by ABC. got the sccond- highest ratin& of the day. a 15. l with a 25 share. 1 1II\1'10,-H \U I O M fami 99-20 • 1n '80s By IEN W AUCER I\, ~ \lltllef NEW ORLEANS Miami changed coaches and quarterback$ and, in the end. its luck. After finishing scrbnd to Notre Dame last year, J~e Hurricanes beat out the Irish for No. I this year. "I'm already looking forward to the game against Notre Dame next season.'' Hurricanes quanerback Craig Erickson said. Erickson threw three touchdown passes as Miami (11 -1) defeated Ala- bama 33-25 in the Sugar Bowl. And that. despite Notre Dame's 21-6 vic- tol) over previously unbeaten and top-ranked Colorado. was enough to earn the Hurricanes their second national championship in three }ears. M1am1 got thl' nod over Notre Dame bccauM" thl' Hurricanes beat the Irish 27-IO on No\. 25 at the Orange Bo"I. "'I'm not ta!..in g an } thing away from what thl') did th1<, sca!>on." Miami Coach Dennis Enchon said of Notre Dame. "It JUSt boiled down to two team11 w 1th one lo~<;. and we heat thl'm." The Encksons are not related b> hlood. onl> h> w1nn1ng. The) each stcppl'd 1n th1<1 season and carried on a trad1tmn that madl' M1am1 such a powerhouse. this atkr the Hur- ricanes "'cnt ~~-67 1n the 1970s and alm(1s1 do"' ngradcd their football status to D1v1<>ion 1-.\..\ "Ho"'anl Schncllentx-rg<'r and J1mm ~ Juhn,un built the program." the coach \aid. "M' concern wasn't followrng thl·m or· comjX'llng with them. I wantl·d tu continue what the) had done. · ··one of the reasons I came tu M1am 1 was to rnmp('tc for the na - tional champ1onsh1p." said Coach Em·!..'>UD . "'ho left Washington State for th" rhance. "There was a coach ing change. but the program d1dn"t change. and the belief the) were the bnt didn't change." Eri ckc;on replaced Johnson. who JOinnl thl' Dalla!> Cowboys after guiding M1am1 to a national title in 1987 and 'ccond·placc fin1shcc; in 1986 and 1988 John<,on strongl} recommended that quarterback coach Gal) Stevens be the !)Ucccssor. but athlc11 c dm·ctor Sam Jankov1ch instead rlll kcd lrickson. whom he had croc;scd path!> with at Washing- ton State and Montana C)tate ··1 ncH·r worned ahuut whether I made the nght dec1c;1on:· .lanko\lch "81d Tul·!>da v ··1 I.new I did ·· Em kson made the right choice "'hen he picked Craig Erickson to be thl· next 1n M1am1·s line of great quanerback~ lkrn1c Kosar. Jim Kell) and Vinn) Tcstavcrde set the standard~ and Stl·' C' Walsh followed before passing ·up h1'> final }ear of chgib1lit~ to go pla) for the Cow- bo)S. In the final tw o games. Enckson played somt of h1-. best ball. He led M1am1 over Notre Dame to end the regula r season and. against Ala- bama. completed I 7 of 27 passes for 250 yards and the three TDs. "I guess l"\l.' kind of staked a da1m to that line of quanerhacks." the QB Ern:kson 'la1d. "It 1s some- thing of a relief."" Erickson pra1c;ed his mild·man- nered coach for making a smooth transition with a cocky-and-cool team molded b' Johnson. a much more volatile t>°pc. ,..,, lllCMI "' ~ 1. Mleml, Fie. (3'l 11-1--0 l,41' 2 2. Notre Deme ( 1') l2-l·O 1,452 4 3. Florlde St. (2) 10-2-0 l,3t4 S '-CotoredO n+o 1,320 ' s. r__... 11-1--0 1,221 1 6. Auburn l0-2-0 1, 161 f 7. Mldltten 10--2--0 1M1 3 I. USC 9·M 1,867 12 '· ~ lC>-2-0 11029 7 10. llllflolt 10--2--0 Utt 11 11.NeW•lk• 1C>-2•0 .... 11. °""*' 1C>-2-t .. 14 1J. AtUnNt lf.2-t .., " ,.. ........ ,..2.. ,. u 1s. ,_.St. e.)-1 m 11 "'~St. ...... ., 22 11. ""*""" f.> 1 OI n "' Ylrtlftle .,.. -lS 19. T-T_., ,._,.. d1 It aT ... A&M t ·H m 1' It.Wiit~ .,.., -'7 a ....... Ytunl »-H D1 " -~ ...... --kONI..... t+t 1Ml1 &MllM ...... ,,_ 15~=:.=i: •L~'T!I. Bo believes official's call will go dol(Vn as one of all-time bloopers By HARRY ATKINS Bo Schembechler and Gary Moeller. Michigan football's Mr. Outsoing and Mr. Incoming. still earned the ache on Tuesday from the Wolverines' 17-10 loss to Southern California in the Rose Bowl. • On the morning after here in Newpon Beach, they agreed that Michigan was outplayed by the Tro- jans, but were more convinced than ever that the Wolverines could have won the game if not for a con- troversial penalty on a fake punt conversion late in the game. Schcmrechler. who ended his 27- year coaching career with the defeat. said reviews of game film show there was no infraction on the play. "Oh. I'll remember this play," Schembechler said. ··This play will go down in history like the phantom touchdown and all those others ... Moeller, who already was getting ready for a recruiting tnp. said he had fallen asleep after the game Y.llhout ever seeing the film. Not Schcmbechler. ·· 1 looked at 11 firs t thing last night, as soon as I got back to the hotel." Schembcchler said. ··Damn nght. I !)lcpt bcttrr knowing I wa<; nght." But this was Schcmbcchlcr the cx- coach tal!..ing now. There was no rage like therl' had been the da y before. No"' he wao; laughing. Relax- ed and at pcan» ..He) lout... 1f ~ou look at the film and Sl'l' 1h:st we got beat on both side!> llf the hall. ufTl·nse and defense. don't rnnw in hl·rc and tell me we dcscncd to "'in the gaml' ... he said. "But. tx·ing a profc!>s1onal coach. I know ''"l' could ha\e still won 1t ·· ~uulhl·rn (al coach Lari) Smith began his career as an assistant under Schcmbechlcr at both Miami. Ohio. and M1ch1gan l ikc h1'i old boss. he had not been 100 c;uccc<;<;ful in the Rose Bowl. Hc'r, no"' 1-2 Schcmbcchlcr l'i 2-8 "'This 1s a lollthall game. He wouldn't haH' wanted me to coach an} different!} ... Smith <>aid "When I talk to him I can't say I'm so~ ahout thl' "''"· I will 'ia) I'm 'iom hc"s leaving rnach1 ng."" MKh1gan ( 10-2). which wound up se,enth 111 tht· final poll. wa'> trying to tx·rnrnc the first Big Tt·n team to win cunsecut1 vC' Rose Bowls. Southern Cal (9-2-1 ). which was ran!..cd ('1ghth. ('Oded a four·y(•ar boY. I losing streak. 1nclud1ng two <>tra1ght 1n ~asadcna I he rrnJans gcll thl· \\Inning touchdown on a 14-)'ard run h) Bo Schembechler Rick~ En ins. the game's most valu- able pla~cr. with I: 10 remaining. R cd,h1r1 fresh man T odd Manno' 1ch led the Trojans on the 75-)ard drnc in the closing minutes. ~chcmlx-l·hkr's ire was provoked h} a CO\tl) pcnalt~ that gav~ USC the momentum tor th e winning drin'. On founh-and·l from their 46. thl' Wnl\l·nm•s p1rked up 24 yards and a tirst do"n on a run by Chns Stapleton off a fake punt. But thl· pla} "as called back on a holding pcnalt~. Schcmbechler then ~elkd at thl· 00ic1als. who nagged him for unsponsmanhkc conduct ano :u.h.kd 15 \3rds to the 10 alread} m;m·hl·d ofT (ur holding. fhc \\ uhcnnes punted, and ~outhl'rn Cal began the winning dn'c frum 1t'> 25-\ard line. ··1t-.. thl' mo<,1 ·unbehe,·ablc call r\ l' C\ er \(.'l'n. and I got II in my la'it gaml·:· Sl·hembcchlcr said Monda) Thl' un i ~ 4Ul'\t1on Schemhcchlcr dodged at a Tue'lday news con- fcrcm·l' Y.3\ thl' onl' concerning his futurl· The Rose Bowl was his last game ao; coarh of the Wolvennes. and he has hinted broadly that he rntend.-. to resign his post as athletic J1rector soon. thus ending his 21 · ~car cmplo) men I at Michigan altogl·ther Informed sources w11h1n the ad- m1n1c,trat1on ha \c <;a1d they expect Schembcchlcr to resign the AD job later this month. after first meeting with univers1tv President James J. Duderstadt. · "'That's inaccurate nght now:· Schcmhcchler said. "That's not m} dcc1\1on a1 this time. I'll make an announcement \Cr) soon. Giants' defense bigger hurdle than weather for Rams this Sunday By KEN PETERS Ill' Spo<f • \lt.ltu The Rams no longer consider themselves JUSt a fair weather te~m. John Robinson ~}S. Of course. the Rams coach added Tuesday in i\nahc1m. the) never considered themselves just a fair weather team. .. A lot of things writers wnte. they assume the players believe it," Rob- inson said, alluding to claims that the Rams don't pla)' well in cold weather. "Despite all the th1np wntten about us. we haven't played that badly in cold weather." The past two weekends. af\<'r prac- ticing In 70.0r 80-degree wannth all week in Anaheim. the Rams tnvelcd to tbe East Coast to play in fri&id weather. They woa both pmet., aecuriDI a playoff spot by beating the New En1- lan4t Patrioll 24-20 on a chilly day at Foitboro, them toppin• the Easies 21-7 at Philadelphia an the NFC wild-card pme. which was played in rainy, 3S-dearce weather. Asked if he considered k.cepina the Rams in the East this week so they could work out in the coad to prepare for Sunday's NFC semifinal pme · 1pins1 the N~ ¥ort Oiantt at the Mf.Adowlandtr Robineon lfinned and ~· ·we didn't "'" to do that ute we're aJreedy a IOOd cold-weather te1m and we don •t -.nttoo~il" TM Ralat .at into the final pme of tbc ~ ICllOft at a ~t in &he .. ~ siacc they ftPted to bave to~ dwtCOl*CUtiftllUMI -o.e r-llltoa n.... Md two plaoyoff 11111!11-Oft ... !al Colle. !1'ej taid k't I ~ to '° ... ud lry to ... dne1n. row,'" Aobi..,. llid ... ~ wre ~(or.two. If wt IP-* dlleN..,., = ~ ".:.:~ .. lt"I ..... *° The Rams ( 12-5) manhandled the Giants dunng a regular-season meet- ing 1n Anaheim, rolling up a 24-3 halftime lead en route to a 3 1-10 victory on Nov. 12. "I think we caught the m at their lowe!>t point of their season." Rob- inson said. "They were on a roll and they JUSI ran out of gas. "But if) ou Sl!rpnsc somebody in this league (as the Rams did the Giants). you can be sure you're not going to surprise them a'8in." That loss was one of JUSt four by the NFC East champion Giants. who. according to Robinson, arc playing much th<' same way u they did when they won the Super Bowl during the 1986 season. "They went throuaft a stretch where they got away from what they wanted &o do; l thinlC t~ were throwi"f the ball too much. R~ inson said ... But (Coach) Bill Parcells said they had to go back to beina who they are." Wbo the Giants arc, aocordina to Robinson. is a team that plays pat defense and doesn't allow bi& pla~a and, offen~vely, doesn't ma&e bia plays but is-iable to control the bell and lfind out yards. "They can reaUy ft'ustrate you. they're stinay with yards." Robinlon said of the N~ Yon *Aw. .. (Lind>ecker) la~ Taylcw cu overwhelm oeoDle. ~ II you uy to blOdt laim widl tbl wrot11 "'Xi thint be (PatceUa) ia 10i111 ba ao whit ttaey were .._ 111ey w.a h. all, only widl a diflln8t Cllll of .._....._ I dbnk tlaly wom five ....... ,. .... ,..., ...... 7 poj1ttl Of .... la. .. ..!°ie:r-·"Z:··:.·11; ....... ;::; ... -~ ... -.'it'R ................. ..... ,,..The AllDdllted ...... .,,. l.af ontaine extended bis aoa•- ICOnna streak to eiaht aames with two aoaJs ~nd Dout CrOssman also scored twtce, lead1n1 the sW)ina New York Islanders to a S-3 victory oyer t~e ~ Anaeles Kinas Tuesday night tn Uniondale, N.Y. Lafontaine who started the ni~t tied for_ •,he NHL lead in aoals wnh ~l. Louis Brett Hull, scored his 34th 1n the first period when the lsJanden took a 3-1 lead, then added an empty-netter wi th one second re- rl'!am1.ns-He now has 14 goals during his eight-game hot streak during which the resurgent Islanders arc 7-1-0 T he victory also extended the Islanders' home winning streak to fi ve games. They opened the season by going 2-10-2 at the Nassau Col- iseum, but are 6-1-1 in their last eight home games. The Ki n}s, who beat Washington 7-4 Monday to stan a four-ga me road trip. lost for on() the second time in seven games ( 4-2-1 ). Ex-King Mark Fitzpatrick played a strong game in the Islander goal. stopping 33 shots for his fou A+t straight win and S«"ond in as many games over his former team. He preserved the victory with several kc} savl-s in the third period. incl ud- ing one on Luc Robttaille while lay- ing on his back with 7: 19 remaining and another on Robitaille from just in front of the crease with less than a minute remaining and the Islanders clinging 10 a 4-3 lead. Crossman opened the sconng with a shot from the low slot at 4:0 I. Bob Kudelski tied 1t for the KinjS when he scored 19 seconds later from the MESA From81 W11h the win. San Clemente earned the right to pla} Nonh Tor- rance for 1lw championship. wh ile Woodbridge takes on Pacifi c Coast League rival Costa Mesa for third. •Santa ..\na dropped Irvine out of the tournament .,.,.1th a 33-27 win in the ronsola11on se mifinals. In girls non-league action Tuesday: • Dcbb1l! Fischer continued her assault on the state 3-point goal re- rnrd. h1 111ng eight of n1n~ fro m long range. as Edison defeated visiting Mater Dei. 78-45. Fischer needs JUSt seven more 3· pointers 10 lie thc.-state r(.'('.ord of 66. She fin ished w11h 32 points on the night and added seven assists. Also helping Ed ison ( 10-2) in the win ning cause was Erika Miller with 18 poi nts. Talia Crooks with 12 \II"-\ HOI '\DI 1• lower left cmk. Crouman scoted apin. &Ilia lhne from inside lbe blue~~·· and Lafontaine 11ve tbe l a J.l lead with a Wri1t I.bot from the Iowa left cirde at 13:-04. ' The lslandtts weot up 4-1 on Brat Sutter's aoal at 4:07 o( the eecond period. Brian Bennina's Iona shot from between the blue line and left circle at 8:07 beat Fiupatrick throuab a screen for the KJnp' second aoaL John Tonelli cut the lstanden• lead to 4-3 when be scored JS secondl into t'1e third period with the Kinp on a power play. Tonelli scored f'rom the low slot after .a feed from behind the goal line by Wayne Gretzky. Elsewhere in the NHL T uesday: • In Detroit, Steve Yzcnnan scored two third-period goals and Glen Hanlon made 32 saves as the Detroit Red Wings beat the slumping Vancouver Canucks. 4-1. • tn Pittsbuf'lh, Ray Bourque and Bob Gould scored first-period goals as the Boston Bruins beat the Pit- tsburgh Penguins 5-2 for their fifth victory in six games. • Jari Kum had a goal and two assist!> to reach 1,000 career points and Esa Tikkanen scored twice as the Edmonton Oilers beat the St. Louis Blues 6-4 for their fi fth win in six games. •In East Rutherford. N.J .. John Maclean scored twice as the New Jersey Dev ils beat Buffalo 5-3 T ues- day night. handing the league-leading Sabres their third straight loss. •In Calgary, Paul Ranheim's goal at 12:53 of the third period gave the Calgary Flames a 4-4 tie with the Philadelphia Flyers. ...,Net ~.,~-­ Rob Doktorczylc frl9htJ battte1 Utah State•1 Gary Patterson. UCI From 81 points and seven rebounds and The) rcall) got onto us and .,.,enl Laura V1nch with nine rebounds. all after us on thr outside. I gue~s we've of whtCh came in the second quan er. got to work on our man offense ... The first half was closely contested Palmer addt"d. ..(Pia} 1ng man) \\Ith Edison holding a 31-25 ad van-helped. He 1old us to pla) hard and tage after two periods. But the tr) to get in thl' pa\stng lanes I guess Chargers exploded for 47 points in that made u' pla} a little more the fi nal \\\O periods to win going aggressive." awa>. UC"I fo rced turnovers on three of • Traq Wolfe had 19 points and Utah S1a1c·s nc"<t (our pos<;ess1ons. Jcnm Su Ill\ an had 17 as Ocean View but hit three of ti\.e free thro.,., handCd addleback a 58-31 non-.,.,h1k the ..\gg1es' JelT Parm hit a league loss at Ocean View High. pair to make 11 65-63. Th<.' ..\nteater~ Sullivan and Wolfe were also the \\Ould ne,er tOOll' do!>cr. Seahawk rebound leaders with 14 Kendall Youngblood . .,.,ho did not and 12 rt•s pecti' ely. The win 1m-score 1n the first 12 minutes of tht• pro, cs Ocean View 10 14-1. • game but fan1~hed with a game-high OceanView1ooka 21-2 fi rst quar-20 points, srnred a la )in on the ter lead and was never threatened. Aggies' sixth etTon of a pos~ss1on Scahawk Coach Ollie Manin played for a 6 7-63 lead 1 hen JefT Hi:rdman the entire roster. lim1 t1ng his starters mis t'd a la~1n and Butler kntKked 10 first and third quaner pla}. the rebound _out of bounds. and Long Beach Poly 1s next up for the Parm h11 a 5-luot turnaround JUmp- Scahawks Saturcfa) at 7:30 p.m. at er at the other enc.I 10 hutld the kad Ocean Vie..... to six. 69 -til "•lh J 23 left J us11n .\ndt'r'>on ·., J-prn nter nJr· ro"ed thl· margin 10 th rt'<.' ., l-M1 ''"h I. I J remaining after Young· oil Palmer":. a~~1st w11h 7:48 re main- ing 1n lht· fi rst hal f. UCI hit one of 11~ lulls .\s lull~ go. this one .,.,as length) l < I did not htt another field goal until '>•~ '>l'l.onds rrrna1ned 1n the tirst half 111 tul l 'tah S1a1e'<i lead 10 s1ngk J1g11'. 44-.35. at in1erm1ss1on .. \\'e rushed things a h11le btt. fon:e<l a 101 of t hin~ ... Palmt•r said '"We d1dn'1 mJ l.t· a 101 of passes out o f lhl· olTt•nw That's ho" the) got 'omc C.lS) '>hots. Wt• \\t'ren't gt·tt1ng hat!.·· fhe -\ggit•s. 1,1,ho al .... a)s ta,or the up·tNllpo \t)k. tool. ad,antage of till' .\nteall·r.,· cold shouting. ··wr \tartt'd good. but the) kicked u'> h1g 111nt· on the m1ss-sho1 break." ~t ull1gan '>.lid .. Wi: don·1 get back. But °"l' u1rrn"tcd that at halftime If \\l" h11 tlw .. ho\\. 11\ a d11Tercnt 'ton Tht·n . thl' \nleater\ h11 onh ont· bJ,l.l·t in lht• lirst li\l' minute<. t)fthl· 'nunJ h,ilf. hu1ld1ng 1hi:ir large'! lktirn. '2· r • • Air Force sinks lJCI hluu<l nmsed the front rnd of ti onr- dnd-one. and after Parm h11 a pair of frce 1hro.,.,,. R1.-,h,,a1n h•I a JI). l"uotcr tu mah· 11 .., 3-711 .. I thin!.. -&hl·~ plJ)l'd reall) gOlld '>tJrttng ol1 ·· "im11h ..aid ... , .... as ll".ilh uinu·rnl·d. \\t• \\t're ahk 10 gl·t 'omt· guoJ fa'>t hreai.., going I fdt ll1r thl·m Thl'' had '>Omr shot<; th.11 ''"ulJn"t Jrop and m1s"M.·<l fret• lhru"' I JU 'I hoJ)l·d 10 get clost· O\ halft1mr \\ t"rr realh fonunatl' ·· Th~ D•lty Piiot Air Force handt•d both UCI men's and .,.,omen's squad losses in non- confcn·nce at11on at Irvine's I kn1age Par" \4ua11cs Complex. T ht· I .t0-1 OJ loss for the men drop- pt•d tht•tr record to :l -1 on the season "htll· the 1.i 1-I02 loss to the Falcons for the "Omt•n dropped them to J-2. The men "ere led b' senior Bnan Judd . .,.,ho "'on the 200~}ard freestyle and 'i''am a leg on the v1c1onous 400-)ard medl) rcla}. Other ind•'-1dual winners for the •\nteater men .,.,.ere JefT Klatt in the 200-}'ard hullcrfl~ and Arian Pajer 1n thr 200-vard hreaststrokc. 1 he ""omen took threc.-1nd1 v1dual e'ent~. Lisa Williams won the 1.000- ~ard freesl)k. "ihannon Endsle} won thr 100-yard freestyle and Danielle Paler won the 20(l-}ard breaststroke. 'Cl returns to action this week on Saturda). ho.,ting the PICK Systems In' 11:111onal at Heritage Park. In college wo men's basketball ac- 11on: GRANCH From 81 .,.,hen those t"'o teams meet. •tJUSI might happen. Hun11 ng1on Beach lost 10 Marina by fiVl' 1n the Marina Tournament. T he Oilers have a very young team that i5 1mproV1 ng "'i th each game. All 11 ..... 111ake for the Oilers to join the top four is a brcak here or there. Don ·1 be surprised to sec the Oilers throw a monke~ wrench into the unset League pict ure. T hey are Just one good bounce away from beating most of the teams. In the Costa Mesa Tournament. both Woodbridge and the host Mus- tanas advanced to the semifinals. At the s1an of the yea r. Woodbridge (8-2) was talking about wi nnina a Cl F title. While not everything has aonc according to plan for the War- riors. they appear capable of achicv- ina that goal. Lt-d by Tami Wilhams. Deanna Harry and Leslie Rathbun, Wood- bfidac once qain appears to be the class of the Paci fic Coast Lcque. and a seventh straiaht leque crown seems to be in the near future for the Warriors. C.osta Mesa ~.S"'4) has a y~n1 team that is rapidly 1mprovins. whiCb makes than vuy daaem>ua. Not only arc tM MUAaftll improvina. but they are winninl too. Led by frttb~n 1ensation Otiva ~ille and mvmiftlstarler'Thuy NavYen. the Muttanp could pro.e IO 6t a thonl in die side of tbe Warrian.. At lk...., o(lbe ,.r, •..- 8elctl COllC'ta Orea M.-. .. llUllld tu. ........... ~ .... , tamche'1 ..... WuudlN-llirlM ..... tide. n.Aitilll ..,.-.•a.: ............ IDI= -ifleyarewadltlt..., ,,-0 l•n ....... GrlWD~lmi•­ •>tflabitao .... •Shannon Unfred's 18 points ofl the bench .,.,asn't nearly enough as l 'Cl dropped 11s Big West Con- fen·nce opener 89-.i5 at LICI. l "nfred and 'honne Catala were the onl) Anteatrrs ( 1-9. 0-1) in double figures as UCI shot JUSt 18 fo r 56 (.321) from the floor. Julll' S1Ul.alsk1 had 22 points while Lena Pl·tcr'>sen added 18 for the T igers (6-3. 1-0). In high school girls soccer: •M ind~ Ha .... le} scoroo on an as- sist from Laun Niles and It would be all Woodbridge .,.,ould need as the Warriors defeated University 1-0 1n non-league action. Ton)a Oru111la had six sa'es for Woodbridge and recorded her sc' enth shutout as the Wamors im- pro\l'd to 7-4-1. Un1ve'itlty got six stops from Kell y Kynock. The r roJans had a chance to lie the score m id .... ay through the '\Ccond period. but Druzilla stopped a point- blank penalty shot to preserve the While the Pacific Coast LeajuC look!> rut and dried. the Sea View League is up in the air. Tustin, which ma ny of the coaches felt was the team to beat. lost in the semifinals of the Costa Mesa Tournamen{ but still has the role as league favorite. However. the play of University (8-3). which wa s supposed to be in a rebuilding year. has brought a cloud of doubt O\ er a possible fustin crown. Last year Tustin and Univer- sity tied for the league title and a repeat of the outco me is not beyo nd the realm of possib1htics. Led by Denise Gandara, the team's only returner and an early fa vorite for lcque MVP. Univenity fin ished third in the Oran,e-Glen Tournament. Coach DouaSorcy has done an excellent JOb rebuilding the Trojans. -· ,.. One of the more confusiq teams in the Sea View Lcque bas to be Estancia. The Eaales (S-6) hav e been playina the best the ClF bas to offer, which means their sub-.SOO record could be deceivina. since the Sea View Lea&ue is not one of the 1trona· er lcqua in Clf. Stin 'he fact remains, Estancia Colch Lisa McNamee th~t her team would be sportina a bc1tet re- cord at this point. &unda loll its lint rwo ~-in tM Marina Tou~ namea~ t finj..., a11 •=note by beeU1'1 Iii teOI ID CW«" Ltd by Pllrice Lumpkin i nd Mel· ody Earle. &tw:i1 • r.2pans. but lately ......... Iii,,. Con.det ......... 1..-m_.t framlMO...._T_u •• and ttCllMllll.... .. ........ - But after l 'tah State·., -\lhcrt ( happcll ml\\t'd the fron1 t•nd of a ont'-and-ont• \\Ith JS 'it'eonds left. Rand~ Fun" grahlx'd the rebound and Youn~bloo<l htt j pair \\Ith 20 ~rl 11nJ'i left w ~al 11 a., l 'C I thrc" thi: ball a"a~ on m final t\\O pt1'i- '\C'i~rons. The ..\n1eaters. .... ho had been pla) 1ng a slo" -paced hrand of ba~"ctball. twgan pushing thl· hall upt·l1un fa\t J unng the l'arf\ 'itagt·~ and h11 se,·cn of their first i 2 shots in building a 19-8 lead. "That's \\ hat "'e stressed o'er the las1 ~" or 'ii:\ en da) s of practice." Palm1.:r said of the running game. .. We JU'>I missed a lot of eas~ shots." But afti:r 1:11.ing a 2g.18 lead earl) on JclT Von LutLO.,., ·s scooping slam In Jll. l IJh ~tale· out'iCored thl· -\nti:ater' '4-'J (l\ a a <,\retch uf 12 2..,. FunJ... tin1\ht•d \\tlh 15 prnn t<; and I IJ rehound'> tor thr .\gg1rs. and did .1 Jt•tent JOl'l defl·n ... ng Butkr htfClre gt'lling 11110 toul 1rouhle ·· 1 \t'l' '>lH11t' light (a1 the enc.I of the 1unnell) ... PJlma said. ··we haH" a tt•ndt·nc) 10 pla~ "l'll and then go into Ill minutr lull'> . .,.,hi:re "c don't .. uirt• an) [><)I OI' \\"l' JUSI Ol'\er ga\e up \.\ e JU\I kt•pt putting up thr ball ·-rm confident Wt' "''II be th('re \\l'''e gut to kcep "ork1ng hard and .... orl. on "h;u .,.,e lack. and hopefull~ thing~ "'II tall into place. "\\ e "erl' looking to starJ con· fcre nce "1th a "in I do n't look for u\ to gl\e up \\'c"re going to kecp pla~ 1ng hard ·· Loyola falls to Xavier in 1 1 5-1 1 3 shootout From TM Associated Press Jamal Walker scored on a \even- foot )ump shot \\1th l\\O ~onds remaining 10 lift Xa' 1er of Ohio to a 11 5-113 \'tClOI) 0\ er No. 15 Loyola Marymount Tucsda } nigh t 1n Cin- cinnati. Xavier improved to R-1. while Lo)ola fe ll to 7-3. Walker hrt the fi rst of two frC'C· throws with 2:51 remaining to give Xavier a I 09-108 lead. He missed the second shot, but Derek Strong tipped 1n the rebound to give the Musketeers a three-point lead. John O'Connell missed a jumper for the Lions and Strona got the rebound and passed to Tyrone Hill. who scored on a I ().foot Jump shot. Hill led the Musketeers wlth 38 points. while Michael Davenport added 18. Strong had 24 rebounds. Loyola's Bo Kimble also had 38. Elsewhere in college bastetbaU Tuesday: •In Tucson. Wayne Womack made sil free throws in the last 62 \ernnds of 0' ert in'lt ar, 1'.o t ~ .\n - 1ona sta,t•d off a Par ifir-10 Con· frrence up~·t b) California with a -( · 70 \ ICtOf"\ • In Las (·ruces. Rand) Brown's off-ba lan(e 12-fovt Jumper at the huller ga' t' Nt·" Mex ico State a 71-69 \ ictnn ~'er Frc'lno State in a Big West Co.nferencc opener • Denni., <;cott scored .6 points. including I 1 .... 1ra1ght earl) m the sec- ond half. to lead unl">caten and 12th- ranked Georgia Tech to an ,86-77 '1cton O\ er Man st. • Ja, 'ion Williams scored 25 points and Boo Hane) had 20 points and 10 assists 'as No. 16 St. John's beat Connecticut 93-62. • Chns Jackson scored a scason- h1gh 51 points and hclped 11th- ranked Loum nna St.ate hold off a second half Te u s rally for a 124-1 13 victory. • <teoraeto wn Coach Jo hn Thompson 11n't sure his team i1 as strong as many people say it is, The Hoyu' latest victim bas no doubts. « Ol 11 c.1 IC\,hl I H\I I ,4 UICI' Charles Smith bit two stra.i&bt baskets to break a late tic and the f.os Anaclca O ippen won their first road pme after 10 losses, defeating the Minnesota Timberwolves 87-79 Tuesday niaht in Minneapolis. Minnesota. which has lost 12 of its last 13 p mcs. scored a team record- low 30 sec-0nd·balf points. The ex- pansion club's onl> offensive threat was Tony Campbell. who scored 31. After a steal and dnve by Minne- sota's Pooh Richardson capped a S-0 run that lied the game 77-77 with 3: 15 to go. Sm11h hit a 10-foot fadeaway jumper. Minnesota's Sam Mitchell missed a shot and Smith made a 1w1sting dn"e with 2:07 left that made 11 81-77. Dann~ Manning's no-look whip pass led to Benoit BenJamin's dunk and an IB· 77 lead. Manning and BenJam1n each nµdc t"o free throws in the final 33 \eeonds 10 seal the \ it tor\. Benjamin scored 20 points. Smith 19 and Ron Ho:irper 16 for Los An- geles Two baskets b} Harper capped? 14-0 '>pun at the end of the first half and bcg1nn1ng of the second. rall ying tht• ( ltppcrs to a 52-49 h:ad. The Ttmbef\\ohes didn't score until ·Hf ' 1010 the third quan er. on Camptw.:ll"s 1 .... 0 free throws. Thc} m1s'>Cd thnr firs t fi,e shot!i and had !Ii\ turn11\l·r~ beforc Campbell htt a 20-toutt·r 5 If' into the period :--;r\enheles'i. the} fought bark to ta kt· a () I ·60 lead on a rebound baslce1 b) Tod ~ urph). "ho had a team- rt·cord and career-high 20 rebounds . But ~t 1nnt·sota -"'h1ch made onl) 21 percent ot 11s shots and rnmm111ed 10 1urno,crs in tht" quar- ter -tin1shed O-fo r-6 and the Clip- pers led 66-63 afta three l)C"nods. Thi: T1mbe~ohes scored SC\en straight points earl> in the fourth quaner for a 7U-6M lead. The} didn't make a basl.e1 during a 6 23 span. ho.,.,t'' rr. and Harper's fou r points CdM From 8 1 and turn 11 and turn 11 so long. the tendenq tor a team that pla~s de- ti:nst· fu r that long. 1s to go do"' n and rush th t• !>hot. I preach that the) ·re going to be patient and .,.,.c·\ e got to be paltl'nt a~ ..... ell 8 ) in large l thought "e did a pretl ) good JOb of II .. Led b} John Paulsen. the Sea Kings outscored the Vaqueros 15-3 1n thl' 'l<.'rnnd quaner to storm ahead at halhimc 26-1 , fhe \ aqueros uni~ three point\ lame off free 1iiro" s b' Molle. Thr th ird quana .,.,as bad for both teams .is 1hn tOrnb1ned for onf\ IJ POI OIS on 5 "of 211 <;hooting . ··That'., bas1call) bttn our trade mark all )Car lo ng:· Keith said .. It st•em\ li ke "e a1 .... a,s have a disaster period. whether 1'1·s in the first. ~·rnnd. third or founh quaner The difference in th1~ game was us get· 11ng dominated on the board s. We cl earl) got out ph) s1caled on the ofTens1 "<' and defens1' e boards .. \\ e don't ha' e a 101 of fire po.,., er uul\ide of \1 ulle. and the) did a gn'.11 1ob on him defensive!) 1n the S<.'t·ond half and .,.,e didn't pick 11 up at the other end ... I" inc made a rush 10 gct back in the game in 1hc fo un h quarter and afta \follc hll a J-po1nter. the Va- quero!I onl) trailed 38-42. Paulsen. ~tar!. Flint and \.\ arren Johnson then each h11 ~ of 2 from the frce- thro.,., lin,t to SC\\ 1t up Moll<'·~ 20 points led all scorers. and .,.,a., follo.,.,ed on his team b) Bnan Booth ro'd and Greg Bains \\Ith 6 eath Paulsen lro the Sea Kings "•th 15 and .,.,as followed b) Flint w11h 10 and Johnson with 9. MULLIGAN From 81 schoolJun1nr 0 One of the top '>OphomClrc\ 1n IF IS 6-foot-5 Jah1 Ball)O ors1 Mon1ra·s. H1sdad fohn rla,ed fo r mt" .... ht"n I \\as an a'"''tant at l ' ·c 1n the '6(l's I ha' e had qutll' n tc.,., pla~ er<; who ha' e had father!. pla} for me. ac:, well. but I can top an) nfthme ston~c:, with this one. I was in a resta urant and ran into Ed Delorme . .,.,ho pla)ed for me at Long Beach Pol). He told mc about his 1v.o grandch1ldren -remember now. he played fo r me. That ts old. man. that 1s old hcJped the Q ippen take a 77-72 leed with 4:43 to JO. Elsewhere 10 the NBA on Tuctday: •In New Yort.. Kevin Joluuon scored 11 of his 26 poinll in tbe foun h guarter a1 the Phoenix Sum snapped New York's nine-taJDC wt. mng streak wnh a 11 3-99 victor)' ud became the first team to beat the - Knicks at home this sc11on. •In Washington. Jeff Malone scored 23 points. Bernard Kina bad 20 and Mel Turpin chipped in with 14 1 n hi s first st.art of the tea.SOD as the Wash1ng1on Bullets beat the New Jer~\ Nets 110-96 to break their fi ve-game losing streak. Malon~. who was 17-for-I ':/at the free-thro.,., line, pulle.d down l 4 rt· bounds and 11ed his season h1&h for point~ as -\tlanta hroke the Bucks' fi\i:-game .,.,,nmng streak. •In .\tlanta. Moses Malone !>(.ored 31 points. including four free thro.,., ~ in thr last minute to seal the -\llanla Ha .... ks' 113-107 win over Mtl .... aukee \.\ llh 5 ·t~ k it. ALlanUl led 102-92. the Ila" h . 1h1rd I 0-point lead of the game But \11lwaukee countered "'11h St'' rn -.1ra1ght points. fi ve by Paul Prl''>'>n . to make 11 102-99. 8 In Orl.indo. Bill Laa mbecr had 26 po1n1-. ,snd lktroll scored 15 of Its last I., po1nt'I from the free-throw ltnl' to hold ufT thc sl umping Orlando \.1agll . I I 5-I I '\ • In Dalla' Rolando Blackman '>l.ort·d 29 point'> and led a 26-~ ru n 10 oix·n the game as Dallas snapped the Pan:r~· fi,c-gamt" .,.,inning streak \\Ith a 110-106 dcCISIOn. •Terr) Teagk scored 36 of his tarrer-h1gh 44 points m the first half. leading thi: Golden State Wamors to a I JJ-l 2tJ '1(·tor: O\ er the Utah Jazz. • Cl~de Drc\ler scored 25 points . 15 in the third quart«. and Ke vin Dud. ..... onh added 24 as the Portland Trail Blazers beat Miami 119-95 and handed the Hea l 11s seventh straJght losi. ··1 thought the guys who came off thc bench dtd a great JOb." Om s '><lid "(Todd1 Kehrh came in and had a couple of baskets and blocked a fe.,., shots and John L'pham pla~ed great defen\l\t"h Paulsen has been pla) 1ng real .,.,l•ll at both ends of the mun. kno.,., 1ng "hen _to sag off to tr) 10 intercept a pass··' In other non-league games. •Laguna Beach improved ns re- curd 10 10-2 "l\h a 77-5 7 v1c\orv 0' er '1s111ng 'ian Clemente as foU:r pla)ef'> scored 1n double figures. Josh Borella led the wa) wi th 22 (>()Int~. follo.,.,cd b~ John T revino (I . Dain Blanton t 13) a nd Brady Butcher ( 11) as the 4.ntsts took command fro m the stan and were ne,er threatened. TreHno and Borella each had a half dozen assists and Blanton. although in earl~ foul trouble and forced to s11 out almost the entire 1h1rd quarter. .,.,as strong on the boards. •Ocea n View improved to 8-4 after a 96-77 'ictory at St. Paul. triggered b} the sconng of Greg E'ans and Ryan Manin . .,.,ho each dropped in 20 points .. .\lso 1n double figures were Dar· ren Ernst. Marcel TcnBerge and Jim c .... altne\, .... ho contnbuted 13. 12 and 1 l P<>ints. respect1vel} . E'ans and TenBerge each had nine rt'bounds and Evans was crcdi- tC'd with Sl'l steals for the Scabawks, .,., ho move on to Long Beach Poly 1onigh1 ( 7.30> for their fi nal tuneup hefore unset League play next \\eCJ... • Newpon Chnstian improved to J.J behind the :!2-point scoring of John O'Bn('n as Lhe Conqueros put a"a) host Pioneer Baptist (Nor- "al._J. 8J-45 1hl· 'e~ best guard in Amena ." C ome on. John. he plays for you and to be honest. there arc probably 25 college guards better than Macon and a boui I 0 of them are on the West ( Oa\I 0 Bovd Grant and his Colorado State '1eam. led by former Mater Dci High star Mike Mttchell. defeated Nonh Carolina rather handily in Den' er last week. Boyd is a bt&-time coach and gets the JOb done. He and I were younaa.ssistant&at Colorado State and USC when our teams played back in 1965. It 1s ha rd to believe ~ were both ~oung. 1fyou look at us today, and he says that he is younger than me. I guess he is. but he looks older. 0 • St.an Isle • .,., ho wrote a weekly column in the Sportina Newa. died of cancer last week at aee 65. I ~ his column wu outlWMli,__. weei aft er week. and he kept writi• ntil a month ~o while bettli"I the drudcd disease. If you read the Spor1il\I NC'l!f'I. you arc aoing to miss his wonttof'• dom. 0 Another 'ood buketball book o,p the mal'Ut IS taUcd "~ T eiun" and is writien by John Ftin• lein. This ls tlis third book iii tbe lul few~ -""bell ICUer,.... "'Seu oa on the 8rin1' -A Y e.r widl ...,, ~~1 ~ ....... Dil&tt •me,._. ...... .. NCAA ialt71_. ... . K= n a ..._ ...... Llllln • L' N: .. " ·"' ,., ..... • 1f Ml !'IJ ,..... 13 1S •• 11/J ....... u 13 ... '~ a.er. 11 1• .., 10 Golder\ Ste .. 1l 17 "" 10Ya ~to 1 20 .25' 1• ....... ~ SM Antonio ,, 1 .n1 Def'lver 19 10 .655 111> Utett 19 10 .'55 llh Odet 16 13 .m •Ya "°"''°" 12 lt .a • Chartolte 6 20 .231 13 MIMetOt• 6 2• .200 1S •• ...,. CHf1,_ AtlMkDM.-w L ~. Ga New York 20 • . 11• Boston 17 11 ·"' 3 Phltedell>tlle 15 13 .w 5 WHhlneton 13 16 .... 7'h New Jersev • 21 I16 12i,.; Ml•ml 7 i• .226 •ll'J c.mr .. DM-. Chlceoo 19 9 .679 lndlene 19 10 .655 ll'J O.troll 19 11 .633 l Atlante 17 11 .'107 2 M llweukee IS l• .517 •VJ Clev.._nd 11 16 .¥J7 71h on.ndo 9 21 .JOO 11 T_.y', SC.. Clll9lrl 11, Mlnnnol• 7' Wa•hl119ron 110. New J«"sev H O.troll 1 IS, on.nOo 113 Atlante 113, MllweultM 107 '""-1• 113. New YOf'll 99 DlllMls 110, lndlane 106 GOiden Stele 133, Ute h 120 PorU•nd 119, Mleml ts T__.,10- 0enlfer II Ult ..... 7:30 p,m. Clll9lrl et O.troll, •:30 P.m. WHhlngron If ~ron, 4:30 P.m. Mllw1ukM 11 New J«"sev, 4:30 P.m. Chic..c> 11 Clelfl'land, 4:30 P.m. lndienl II Hou•ton. S:30 P.m. P'1lla0etonl1 I I San Antonio, S:30 P.m. Utah I I S.1r11e. 7 p.m. TilurMly'a 0- Atllnt1 et New Yono., 4.JO p.m Chartotre If MlnneM>ll, S P.m. O•lla• er Plloenl11, 6:30 P.m. Miami el Gotoen Sl1le. 7:30 P.m Oen.,er •I Sacramento, 7:30 pm CllPMn 17' Timberwetws 79 Cl~UtS -Norm1n 1-3 1-2 l, C,5mlfh 9·17 1·2 19, 8-nlemln I · 11 4·6 20, Grenl S-11 0-0 10, Hari>er 7-112·216, MeMlnQ 2·6 6·6 10, Gerrlck 1·) 0-0 2. Wolf 2-S 1·2 s. YOUtl9 1·2 0-0 2. Totef\ 39·7' IS·20 17 MINNESOTA -Corbin 7-17 2·2 16, Mifchell 1-6 2-2 •. Muronv 3·9 2·2 I. C1mPC>elt 12·29 7·9 JI, Lowe l·l o-o 2. Roth 3· 11 2·2 I. ltk llarcnon 2·S 0-0 4, Rov11 3·S O·O 6, WHI 0-0 CH) O.Tollll 32·1S IS· 11 79 kw• by Que~ LA a.en n n n 21-11 Miiii•.... 11 21 14 16-79 3·Polnl 1><>ell-t.Ol An~l•l 0·7 (Gr1nt 0-1, Youno 0-1), Mlnr1Ho11 0·8 (CemPOetl 0-7. RlchardM>n 0·2, Roth 0·4). Fouled oul-MllCMll Retiounds-l.os A~s 47 IC.Smith, Benlamln 9), Mln,,.soll S3 (Murony 20) AUiltl-LOS Anoetes 22 (Grent II), Mln,,.sole 21 (Lowe 91 TOlll fOUll-LOS Angelu 13, Mlnnesol• 71 Technlcel-lol Angelfl 111eoa1 def•nlt A-23.9'0. COLLEGE MEN Utah s .. te IO, UCI 70 (ale Weal C....,._.) Utah s ... ...... Ip P1rrls I 4 3 6 J1rdl,,. 3 2 4 I F\Jnk 6 3 4 IS aarnes I 2 3 • Y ounot>IOC>d 1 6 3 20 Goroon 2 • • 8 L.•k• 2 0 0 • While S I 1 II P .. tlef'M>n I 0 7 2 C't'lapPffl 0 2 3 2 Lotton 0 0 I 0 Whit• 0 0 0 0 UCI flftpftp Anderson l 0 3 8 0011torc1v1< O 6 3 6 Buller 6 6 J 18 Pelmer S I o 13 Mershell 0 2 I 2 Rl\hwe1n 2 I • 5 Herdman 3 7 7 I Rldoon 0 1 I 2 Mev 0 0 I 0 Von luflow 4 O • a Totels 21 74 2t 90 Totall 7l 20 22 10 Helfrlme Uten Stale, 4-4·3S 3-POlnt ooars· UCl-AnoerlOll 2, Palmer 1 TecMrcers· None 642-5678 "'* UO• • ..... Cl a-· .._.. ua ...... .. .... l..oe9a S t J ft l.llerr"... 0 I J I S&Ullkl IOJID L.M O•t• ,.r.. 1 6 J 'It DI-2 0 1 • AIOlft l211C.lell 5021' ..... "°" 12011 Co11 1012 ~ 1 0 2 2 YMhloke 0 0 0 0 Y°""9 0 0 0 0 Ahltledl 1 0 ' 2 McCoeMerv 2 o o • Hoebl 2 o 1 4 SoMbefg 2 0 2 4 Ltwlt 0 1 2 I Norris 4 1 1 f Unfrtd _ 7 4 2 11 Cllrl•loff 0 0 0 0 Wllliler 0 0 0 0 Totll5 37 13 14 If Totei. II t 16 45 Helfllmr. Paclfle, •·tt. 3-POlnt eoels: .-.Clftc-LooM 2. HIGH ICltOOL llOYS c.... .. Mer .. .,,,.. 40 c-1111111> '-.. ,,,.... n.. ~ .. " .... .. " .... 7 s 1 20 Ject<son 2 1 2 6 Molle' Bains Robefts 8oolhrO'fd Gremllch Elcftstec:lt C.rwn Rk llards Peullno HHM 0121 2 •1 I 6 We.Johnson 3 3 I f 2 0 ' 4 2 2 I 6 2 0 I 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 Peutwn • 3 O IS Fllnl 2 S 0 10 We JOhnson O O I 0 Upham 0 0 2 0 l(enrli l 1 I 7 0 0 0 0 Totals 16 IS 9 41 Totets IS 9 12 40 Scar. by Quartwl Corona det No.Ir II IS 1 1~ 1r.,1ne 14 3 6 17-40 J·POlnl 1><>ets Corone de! MM--f'llnt I, lrvi~Molle' I. LatiUM ... d\ n, Sen a.rn.m. S7 (_..._.., San o.m-te LI-~ Anc!e"on Aldrich Orteoe Northrup 8ennlsier Dunehec Br ail Mor van ...... Ip ....... S 7 4 12 Trevino 6 4 0 II o O o O Borell• 7 S O 22 2 2 S 6 Btenton 6 I 3 13 0 0 I 0 Smith 0 2 5 2 O o J O Butcner S I O 11 2 I 1 S Bun I 0 0 2 4 0 7 10 MurPhy I 7 4 9 9 6 I 7• Kirner 0 0 0 0 Van Uc!en 0 0 I 0 To1a1s 22 II 11 57 Tolals 26 20 14 11 kw• blf Ouet19n San Ctemenll IS II 16 IS-S7 Laguna 8eecn 20 II 16 2>-17 J·POlnl ooeis. Sen Crement-Brall 2 Leoune Beec,,_Trevlno 2, 8orene 3 OcNn vi.w ff, St. PHI 77 (Mn·IN-) OcNfl View St. P'elll Gart>e Evenl Fanc>98 Ha rris UP\lill Quinn Ernlt Martin Gwallney Ten8eroe To1a1s 19ftpflp 3 0 l 7 1 0 20 0 I ) 2 2 6 0 • 7 4 0 0 3 0 5 3 7 13 1 3 3 20 S I 4 II 6 0 I 17 ....... _ Len1en I I I 3 0 1., 8 I 3 II Roen. I I 7 J Ertle • • 7 14 Guu.rrer 7 0 0 6 Munou•• I O 4 7 GrenlllO I 3 4 S De La Oua 3 2 5 I Wetsn • o I 18 3S 19 19 96 Totets 27 17 77 11 Scan by Ouet19n Ocean View 23 20 21 :n-t6 SI Peul 11 10 n 21 -n 3·POlnt ooell Ocean Vlt!W-Ge rt>e I, Evens J, Herrls I Merlin 3 SI Peut-Olu I. Erti. 2. Gullerru 2. Walln 6 NewPort Christian 13, Pioneer Baptist 4S (Mn·IN-1 NewPOrt Clw'lstlan P''-r Baptist Curto O'Brien Viiel Jarrar CMno M 8ahnil'n Tr1DC>el To1a1, .... .,... .. ..... tp 6 3 4 IS ~10 1 0 1 4 10 1 3 71 Bri9g, 7 3 I I 9 1 7 70 Dunao11n 4 3 3 II S 7 J 17 Mullin\ 9 I 71 S 0 0 10 Fr a la 0 3 I I 0 1 7 I 0 0 1 37 9 13 83 l Ol al' 11 II 9 45 kw• bv Que~ Newoort Christian 71 16 71 74-IJ Pioneer Baptist S 11 9 l~S 3·POint OOtll None DEEP SE.\ .. DAVEY'S LOCKIEa (......_, hadl) -4 DOets. S6 1ngte" I bonllo. 43 rock cOd, 1 cellco t>au, 5 sand d•t>l. I S macl<tftl. 9 t>tue shirks. l c;at>e~on. II sllel'Cl()eed, IS I t>lue i>ercn. S sculPln NE~T LANDING -I DOat, 13 eno1 ... , 130 t>lue e>ercn. II rockfl\n, 1 calico t>eu 16 m8lktrel ------ To11i. ...... WllMft ,,,, --2t1• T .. lt12 W... f I 11t ,.,..... 1 •• t '""' • • 1 , ~· 201 • .,.,.. t111 vi.-1 t o i McOYlk.., ' t ' • .._ -.... GoMlwt 1 •• t 13 5 15 3\ Totals H I 9 ti S-..lllW---. Sldcl1-•Ck oc .. n View 2 11 • ......,,1 21 ' ,, ..,_,. l ·POlnl ~: Nona . ..... 11, --Del 4S (-1111 I) --Del ·-McOon11<1 Minic> Meuer Evens lmDrllno 8 ut'llhatter Totelt .. ..... . • 1 1 17 , 1 , s 2 s 0 ' 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 • J 0 4 • ......... Flsc:Mr 10 4 f J2 Vlnch > 0 4 6 MllW 72311 111¥am1sa 4 O O I CrOOk_i 6 0 I 12 Coidoullh 1 0 I 2 Meru.,.rTll 0 0 I 0 19 1 10 4S Totlb 31 6 12 71 ~ .... ~ Meter Del ' 16 1J I~ Edllon '17 14 2ll Z>-71 3·POln1 ooeis. Edlsort-Flscher 1. M»K /,. TecMicell: EdlM>n Coach Abrahem, FIK'ller I El Nor1tl Twr•nce SI, Ceste Mesa S6 (Cnla Mnl T...,..,_) NW'tl Terrence Ctata Meu Collin' [)eleplne Hlremo10 Hlrevame Inn Dvawa Onomure Parker ve1e1 Tot all ....... .. ..... 14 2 J 30 Ton1V1nlk 0 O 1 0 o o 4 O Nguyen 6 4 l 11 4 1 2 IS O.C.mllle I 4 4 20 o 7 4 2 Diez 0 0 0 0 1 I S S Ward I I 2 10 O O J 0 Nlcl>Ol5 2 3 S 7 O O 7 0 8r'l8nl 0 I 0 I 0 ' 3 4 I 0 0 2 21 16 16 St Totals 11 20 IS S6 Sc-by ou.an.n Nortn Torrance 14 It I 17-51 Cosla Mesa 14 12 12 1t-S6 3·P01nl ooell Col t• Me~N9V'len 2. Tecnnlcal' North Torr1nce Coech Rosato, Nk he)jl ((Ml Sen Oemente 49, WoedlN1dee 41 (Ces .. Mew T__.,...> ~n Clemente w .. ....., ........ 1d91_ feftpftp ....... . Stewart S II 4 22 Oun 7 I l 5 Mavs l I 2 7 Ratnt>un S 4 2 14 Moon ) I 4 1 Wllhaml 1 l 3 S K1McOwen l O 2 6 Taut> J I 2 14 KeMcOwen 3 O 4 6 Herrv 1 0 7 4 Cieevt O I 7 I Scnwerll I 0 7 1 ValuOen I 0 ) 7 Fen1on 1 o 1 1 'Totals 11 14 II 49 TOIAI\ 11 14 14 .. kw• b'I ou.rten San Clemente 8 11 8 I~ WOOdllrldOl' 16 I 10 I,._. J·pplnl ooeis San Ciemenl-Slewert I Senti Ana 33, Irvine 27 <Caste Mesa ToumemMttl Se~aAN lrvlne C LOPl'I C. LODel Mendoze Larson Lumlev Mendel Totals lr¥1n~ feftpftp ......... 0 0 2 0 Henley O 0 I 0 4 3 0 11 NaPDer 0 0 I 0 0 0 2 0 Lee 3 2 I 8 7 0 2 14 Cit llv\ S 4 0 14 I 0 2 2 J Nori" 1 0 I 4 J 0 1 6 C Norll'I 0 I 7 I IS l 10 33 Total\ 10 1 6 77 Scor• blf Que~ 8 1 10 t-ll 2 9 • 17-27 3 P01nt ooal\ None Cos .. Mela Tournanwnt CaftMllellert SemHINts Trat>uco Hills 39. Dena Hill' 79 Sente An• ll, Irvin(' 21 Flfttl "'6ct SemHINb T uslln 66 ( ypreu '8 (.001\treno Valley SI, Schurr '6 loll ~Semiflti.h Nortn Torrance St. Coste Mew S6 San Ctem9nle 49, WOOdt>rl«le '8 TODAY'S FINALS SCHEDULE I p..m.-Sen o.n.... on. Nar1ll Terranc. (tin! I •:10 p.m.-w11ier'idee on. c.s .. Mau l!Nnl) 4:40 p.m.-T11sftn on. CapiatraM V.-.V ('""') l p.m.-Tretlua Hlb on. Se""' AM (eeM) I :30 p..m.-Cyprnl on. SclwrT ( Mwnlll) Gintr11 1002 Nnvpon leach CLASflFIEO INDEX 642-5671 ,.,. MOllnt Ollf.W co. ...,. MOii IOUTM Oll•W CO. • 1111 ml ... PINllT1 "· f\1' .. ! '111H ·= . " ... 1111I•18 • 11• 1 • m '° ............. Clllcatt ToronlO Mlmetot1 St. Loul• Detroit IJU i OWIM7 "" '-~­•• I •Ill Ml 1'• 6 •l"IM 1111 6 II 1• 1~ WA'":!:-::MC8 * L T ,Ptt .,._. New J9r1ev 19 II • ct 161 19 PhllacltlPNt 1t 11 ' ct ,. \Jl Walhlll910fl 11 17 4 40 m 111 NV ltl"9eft 15 11 7 17 la 131 NY lllendan 1' 21 4 M WO 116 PfllN>urOll 1' • J H 1• 111 ...,...,.... 8uff1to ~Ion MonlrMI Heriford Quel)ec n 12 6 22 15 3 JO 17 s 19 11 2 7 2S 6 ~·lar'ft N-York 1"811dan S, '°"91 J ao&ton s. PllllOIJrtfl 2 Detroit •, V1ncou_. 1 N-Jt<M'I S, auttMo 3 Edmonlon 6, St. Louil 4 Phlll<IM>hle 4, c.-rv 4 T ......... so.m.t QuttJK 11 Toronto. 4:30 P.m. Winnipeg •I Herllol'd. 4:l.5 P.m. WJ'111noton et New Vorll ltlnMn. 4:35 P.m. Edmonton If Chlca9o. 5135 p.m. 'nWrNIY'•OMws K ..... al N-JerMY, 4:.U p.m. Winnipeg et ~ton. 4:3S p.m . Quebec 11 Detroit. •:JS p.m. V1ncouver 11 Pltt\Ourllf'I, 4:35 p.m. New York Ringen 11 Mhwiaaote, S:JS P.m. Phlledelc>nla 11 St. lout., 5:35 P.m. Les A......, N.Y. lllallders l'ln, ht'led I 1 J-J J 1 1-S I. tffw Yori<. Crouman 6 (Vukot1, Melonevl. 4-01, 2 Los A~les. Kudelslll 12 (Makell, Gre1111.v1. •·20. 3. New Yori<. Crossman 1 (MelO,,.v, Vukola), 7.11. 4. New Yono., lAFon· lalnt 34 (Fl1tlev), 13'04 Penaftv-Suller, NY lnoldino>. 19 40 Seclftd,..,.... s New York, Suiter IS (WOOdl. 4:07; .. Los Anot!fu. Bl'ftnlno s. 1:07 P-tt~-McSor1ev. LA ccnerolno). 9 S2, Nlctlofls, LA (boardlno>. 16 4S, Rot>lnlOll, LA (unWJO<IMT!enllke conduel), 16 •S Bennlno, LA (rouohtng), 19-.JO, Kerr, NY 1rouoh1nol. It 30 Third lll'wtad 7 Los Anoelei. Tonelli 11 IGreflll.lfl. :JS (PC>), I New York LeFonle l,,. JS <Lauer>. 19:St (en). Penenles-Nvluncl, NY (boerdlnol. :11; Baumoertnor, NY (cron-<hecklno>. 2'ot; Laldlew l A (crou ·chKklng), t·29. Sl>Oli on Qoel-LOl Angeles 9·17·10-36. New York 11·1·7-20 A-1004 Hlllt ldlelltill'tl NOM·LRAGW W...,.._ I, UlltWr1ltY 0 WOO(lt>rldoe tcorlno· H1wlev I S.YH: Tonv• Dzurille 6 Unlvt"llv wvea. Kvnock 6. Helllln'\9 WOOdt>rlc!Oe 1-0. llOHSI-: H .\(·I ,G ,_ un2 ,,, ... -,...., ,... -'· ua. ~ -he -1 ..... CAI'>, f'.a.ft1 ·L ,_.,.. (UCU, N.Jll I. leul"9 (A'I. !NIA -.... -1. """' (U(I), 1:6CMI t. ~ '~" ,_. J. F._.. tucn. tlO.t:I to ,, .. -t ~ <•,.>. 11n; 2. tnt.IMM 1ucn, n.11: s. cwrv cucu. n.n. tGO 1M -l, "leta (All), l:Jl.1': I • ....., cuco, 1:Jt.u; s c:..-1ucf>, uu;r. tGO ftv -1. Kiili CUCU, 1:5U5i, 2. Wtlllllnt (AF), 1:•.•; 3. lflllrntM (UCUl 1:,,.06. C 100 frM -Mlcl•Ulf*I (AfE , ... ,,l 2. \I/fry (UC1), AUO; 3. Flelft (AF),..... ...-~ 2 200 Mck -I. FllnlmmoM (AF), ._.,1; . 8eflaon <AF>. t:02.1•: 1 Fullmoto even. t:OU'-3 meter divine -1. 8IOCltN( (AF), 279.ts; 1 ThurMr (AF). flU3; tltumo (AF), 214.JS. 500 frM -•I. Whllllnl (AF), 4='6.67; 2. Judd IUCI), 4:J6.ll; Cl'IWIUI (AF), 4M.9'. 1 meter dMne -I. alummlr IAFl. m.40; 1 Cerev <UCll. 253.0S; 1 ltump (AF), IO.U. JOO brH•I -1. Peltr <UCO, 2:0U7; 1 Hiiiman (AF), t~t,61; l . Ooollllle (AF), 2:12.17. 400 trM rl'lav -1. Air Foree, 3:11.47. c..... ..... **·COMFaa•.:• Air ,wee m, ua 1t2 400 medly relly -1. Air Force, 4:1S.7'. 1000 frM -1. Wllllems (UCI). IC~A-Ut. 8at>alh0ff (UCI), IO:SS.S1; J L.lnnellan (AF), 10'.SUO. 200 frM -I LlnNihan (AF), l:SUt ; 2 Feloul (AF), 2:02.11,) Wa6e IUCll. 1:02.n . so tr" -I Peter'91 (AF). 25.5'; 2. Pelmefo IUCll. 26 54, l . Shoar (UC!), 27.11 200 IM -Mefbef'o (AF), 1:11.S2; 1. P1i.r (UCI), 2:19.47, l Ul5unoml'fl (UCI), 2:209. 200 fty -I Bowden IAF). 2:11.0S, 1. Utsunomive IUCll. 2.12 47, 3. P1rlos IUCll. 2:21.31. 100 tr" -Endsley !UCll, S6.n ; 2. Slaoet lAF), S7.97, 3 Pelmero IUCI), St.5'. 200 beck -Melt>ero IAF), 2:24.2', 1. Kwwln (AF ), 2:26.4S, J. Fuller (AF). 2:21.lt. I meter dlvlno -I. Dishner (AF), n7.33; 2. Powell IUCll. 221.70; 3. COieman IUCI), 116..lt. 500 frM -I Llnna'1an IAFI, S:l6.11, 2. W1111em$ IUCI), S IUO; "'3. 81beshotf IUCI), 5:2•.91 .. 3 meter dMno -I Dishner IAFl, 263.70; 2. Powell IUCll. 7SLSS. J Wolf (UC!), n3.10. 200 breHI -I. Pei.r (UCI). 2:21.lt; 2. Fedel !AF), 2·34.36, ). Melbefll IAF), 2:lU4. 400 frM rN'I -I. All' Force, 3:4'.1'. Ted9Y't ld11•1t1 aAM<ETaALL COl!elle men -CIVlst Colltoe e t Whltller. 1.30, Southern Celllornla Collelle et Cet Stele Sen 8ernerdlno, 1.30 COl!elle w--Cel St1te Ooml~t Hilt\ et Southern Cellfornla Cotteoe. 7·30 Communll\r college men -()r1119e Coesl et Goldefl Wes I, 7 30 Community cotteoe .. omen -GOiden Wtst et Orenge Coest, 7..JO Hilll> Knoot bovs -Mell< Del et Pell~, 1, Marine et Lono BHCh Joroen, 1. Edison et Lono 8HCh WlllOll, 7:l0. Co,t• MHe ., E llencl1, 1-30, tffwPOl'I Herbor at Foothill, 7·30. UnlverlilV el Senla Ane Veltev, 7:30, Hunllno1on BHCh •I Mltllkan, 7, OcH n View •I Lono Beech Pot.,, 7:30. Cvpreu al Wtllmlnster, 7:30, New· POI'! Christian at Rio Honoo Pree>, 7 30. Hloh school olrll -Unlversn., et lrvl,,., 7, Coll• Mn• Tournemenl, Newport Ch<l,llen et Rio Honoo Preo. S SOCCIElt Hloh scnool bovs -Laguna Batch e t Coste Mesa, 3; WOOdbrlc!Qe 11 Tr1ovco Hiiis, l ; Corone de! Mer el Wntmlns1er, J; Meter Del at SI. P1ut, 3.IS. .. ....,, ., ... ill?! 2 ' E. 5eMM1. ..-. -MdllW'M. U.S.. 7-1. S-7,S-7. ....... ..... A. s.ndltl. ,...,, Oii. """"". Ulllted , •••• •·l.tsJ.. ............ Mclnnie-Sflrlvtt, IJ"'"9ll S ...... clef, E. Selldlta·A. SMcMI. StNlll, tsl, .. 2. ~ ............ CatW•IU ........... , ,,, ... .... EmlllOn lendltJ (1), SOMI, 61f, SftWll Gu\', New Ztlland. •·6, 6·1, 6_.; Andrei ChteMllov (?), So¥1tt UNoll, 6ef, Mw11n WO.~, Caftede, 7·5, 2·6, 6· 1; PMlo c-15), llelv Oii. 1t1"'"" KrllMen, India, 6•4. S--7, 6-31 JOt\ell AndlrWll. Autrr.lla. Clef. JellW'Sandlea (6), SHln, 6-l, 6·4; Pe411 Cllembtrlln en. Toledo, Ohio, def. JtM'Wonrmann. Wftl Gennenv. 6·3, 6·7. 6-0; 8ruct Dertln ...... Zetland, ..... A.kl ltehUMf\, Flnlancl. 6-3, S·7, 6-3; Jeremv late., ll'll1ln. 6el Grant Connell. can.cia. 7-S, 6-t, Thomal Hogsltdl. S....cien, Clef. ShulO Metiuotira. Japan, S·7, 74 , 6·1 Au1trlllan...,.....,, ~ , ................... , ....... ,'"' .... ~ Sero! 8nl9U9". ( I). SHlft. def. ,.., Hen· rloson, Sweden, 7·6 17·4), 6-2; Brod DVk•, Australll, def GeN Muller. Soulh Africa, 6·2. 6·4, Mlclllel ScNPef'l (7), Ne~. def Petr Korc!a. Cuecttoslovekla. 6-l, 6·4; Tttomat Mus· ter ()), AuWla. Clef. Claudio Plstolnl ltahlt 6·4, 4·6. 6·3, John Fl1teer11<1. Australia, def. Xe'fler · Oeuff'nne. BelOlum, 3·6, 1·S, 6-J. PIUI An· nee-m. Brlc!QeMmoton, N.V., def. aruno Oreur. YUl>05lllfle, 6·2, 6-2; Merk Koelfermens'(61. tfflherlencls. def. Alu · 1nder'Mron11 W•'' G«-manlf, 6· 1. 6·•. Jlmmv'Arl15I Je<lctlo, N.V., 6ef. Merk Wood· lorde. Austr1lll, 7·6 (9-7), 6·3, IASKSTaALL ... ............. A•Mdlltlen CLEVEL.ANO CAVAl.JERS-Plecec! Wa.,,,. "TrM·• Rollin,, centl'f. on IM lnlurec! llst Acllveled John Morion, ouerd, from 1"4 lnlureci llst ORLANDO MAGIC-Acllvated Morion Wllelf. ouerd, from Int Inlureci fist Placed Jerrlf Reynotch, ouard. on the lniured 1111 PHILADELPHIA 76ERS-Slgnec:t Corey Gal"9", ouerd, 10 a 10-0.v contrect. ~a.Mi .... Auedatlen CBA-SuU>enc!eO Rocktord lightning hH d coech Charll'v Rosen for el9ht i>emel •ncl fined him en unc!lsctostd amount of monev tor hi' eltt'fCetlon with Cl'dar Rapid' "4ed coach Georoe Wnitleker on Dec 29 HOCKEY NaflaMI Hedlev ~ NEW YORK RANGERS-Autone<I Oeve Arcnlblll<I Kevin Mlll('r. Core., Mil~. cenltfs, 10 1ne F1ln1 of lhl' Inter"•'~' Hocto.eY LH ll<J8 ' lllttmltlenll Hadrev ~ PHOENIX ROAORUNNERS-AcQulrl'd IC.errv Clark, rlont wino. from 11'\l' Ntw York lsl•nder• on • Pleyer-toan aorffmenl COLLEGE ARIZONA-Nemec! Pat Hiii offensive hne coacn and Jonn Baitll't' kicking coao1 CAL POL V·SAN LUIS OBISPO-Fired Mlll.t Wll!on, women'' hl'•d volil!vt>all collcl'I Named Cralo Cummings onterlm women's need vol· ll'Yt>•ll coech FRESNO 5T A TE-Named Mike Hiil 11u1,tant toott>all coe cn MIAMI, 0Ht0-Namecl Tim Carras tlefenllvt coordlnelor. Frank Kurth olfl!flllvt taclltes end ttoht endl COien enc:t Kevin WlllOll otfenl lve 11,,. coach. Les Al9mltM TUllSOAY'°' •IWlTS (1 1111 .. U·MY ....._,-I n !Ill.ACTA (4·SI MIO U100 , ••• ut too uo ... Lono JOe l.._l .._.,..Y-M (A-) V1""M "°"I (Y ... __..,I T-JOI J K""""'>l)lloM ILi,.) a1ue 5""' 1a ...... 1 Pow'f'f (r~ t~f!\ ,_ ,~ J60 J • JC 4.0 JJO J JO , .. ST •&Cll Pece I tftile L .. No.._ , ........... a, tu o too uo lh 0<1•• U:#•uno•I 1UO 11.0 n Ool_ILY r.~11 U·t·tl MIO S1S2 00 U II M l Y DOUall (t .. J -1:11 IO U Ill.ACTA IS·ll MIO 'n .o U l llACTA U·SI M"' \1•00 llV9NTH •ACL l>Ke I ..,... C_.lie Krue !Sl•rr•t 100 4-IO •OO Loo .. sc .... ,,.,,I 11 JO 'OUllTH •ACI. Trol I"""' ,,,_ 70. C-n C•ac .. IC.<t'Clvl J .0 UO UEll.ACT4-U11 H IO 'm .O 01¥>0•0.-l(o.f!I J .0 J 60 J IO ~= =:,1~1 t.O ~: J IO n -701 • U ~II: SOI II t ~-7 I I 71 OllO \.t1l t0 w ltfoi I -~ ICA.-1• tf1we '-liitit (.,rYOY ... fol" l°'"""'I 't '8001 TINTH •ACI P•o I ...,.,. SECOND •ACE TIOI t ...... llowov -·-(llllf'lh .. I Ml<"<> Ca"VjllO ICrtMI • .O J 10 J 60 T,,.,. 1~ C"-n•TOOC4"'4f\"' 110 •JO SOO It llo llo I S0•v1 • .. 1 .. 1IO UlllACTA IJ·tl-17000 SI°""', aroll>er ($!Mini J JO J .O U I XACTA 11·7) -UI JO -La<! IW•'"""' •• ,.,,.... 11!01 U DAILY r.tr\.I ft-S-JI -U6J60 S.Cro"""'IO KIO fl ..... 11>•111 JM ,.tnH •At-._ l'9Ce I ..... I-TH •t.el. Tr.,. I ..... U lXACTA ll·SI .,.ICI MO'll ,_ ,.,_, U Ell.ACTA ft II MIO llO 20 Tl••D •ACI P..:1 t ..,... "°"'' _....._. IS-) ISM I-It ._. II N -IW•.,,,,I IUO 11 IO S~•• s.i-.1 l~•f"I IOJO IC..,.._ IOlll-en<eJ ... , .. •OO U OAlllf T'lt~I 11·1 o< J·ll - LIOY (_. ... tK-1 •OO J 00 S!Ol IO a..-.·-1111 ..... 1 • 20 U 1..ATI llOGHT ~ILi 7· II MIO W_.,.,01n ll-I UIO SOO l lO U7IO T1,_ JO'J I u 11 llACT .. ,,. •I .,.., nse .. Timt JIM I a•101-..i IV_•_I 00 720 U llllACTA II 0 OllCI ID JO ... ,,_. 7')0 Mut""' >ii -0 71 IJt .. S0or1t Clu•~) '110 Mii.TH •&Cl. Tr.,. I mlle MINT" •ACI P.ce I mllO From North Orange County From South Orange County 540-1220 496-6800 Coron1 def Mar 2122 Costa Mnl 2124 Newport leach 2169 N!'J)O!t leach 2169 IPTILAIS .i BACK Bay Condo tn •RENTALS AVAILABLE 58R. 3BA. 1 level, 3000 sf Woodstream compl811 •• m •••ID• 3 c.r gar. 180• view. Avail 1120190 3Br •Iott. Marti Agt 6-42-7706 SJ.900/mo 921-0173 21'tBa. lrplc. w/d hkup. YDllALO We'H g ive you IMI down tn exchg tor a share o l own- erlhlp You make· the mthly pymts & we share Generll 1002 lpprec Yo u receive lllboa ltaand 2106 Costa~ .... ..._ 100-~ tax benefits Must - ---....,1111111 .... ------· a11ac11 2-<:ar gar S 1250 2124 261-9 151 Of 54 2-6-415 COLLEGE PARK 4BA. 2BA F1m rm, lrplc, lrg yard Kids & pelS o k Alfa11 1128 S 1275/mo •WESTCLIFF ma 2BR 28A cond o. F/P, pOOl. ltte & airy 2nd fir No pels $950 642 -5114 atlr 6pm Nr Hoag Hospital E19Qan1. lurn 2BR 2BA condo wlbay. ocean & c11y hghts view S 1600 /mo Ca ll RAV DAVIES. 760-5000 , ............... -.-.._ .... ................ c:...-.~• .. ,,, .............. ~ .. "' .... ...... dllMt ..., ...... ._,......,...,, ......_.... ............ ,.. . .,... ... ~ ................ .. ......................... ,...... ................... .................. .,~ , ....... .... --.. ....... ..,..... .... ...._. ........... ~ .. ........ --~-..-....... . ................................. .--. ........ -~ .... ......... ......._.......,., .. • -have clean credil Agt BLUFF VIEWS. 2BA 28A LITTLE 1.i.nd. cut• tludlo • ... 111111 239-•335 Dys. Ev Wknds condo lrplc. every1hlng l'IOUse. u1111tles p1ld S700 BEAUTIFULL y upgraded new. steps te>-pOOI OPEN mo-to-mo. C•ll 873-5559 "E •• plin oYef1oolllng 1he SAT 1-5 200 t Baja belore 1 lam Of atl 7pm pool ind Bic k 81y. COila Mnl 1024 $298.000 631-7164 Prolesalonally decorateo Move-In condltiofl with ---.--• ..._-----·I 3Br 2Ba. g1r, lrplc, w/d. neutral ColOfl, vaulted ~, .. _ BRIGHT & AIRY , Blurts. G· lots or wood & Ille . ceilings. French doors, New from top to bollom Pla n . •Br 3 Ba 10% 3BR 28A I I S 0 S 1700/mo yrly. 873-5348 and extr1 large~ per-. . rp c . hrdwd dow n . 3 9 9 , O O . feet tor entertelnlng. R41-f I oor s . cul· de · sac Ownr/brOker. 721-1550 modeled kl1cMr1 has new s329.ooo. Cioo ISLE • Fabulous CorON dtt MM 2122 cabinets. Ille. floorltfg 0.tJ W114 quiet ·up ot the 1s11nd " I...,...,, ... .....,._ ___ _ and lJ>pllanc .. lncludllng 111·22Q baytront esiate with 55' microwave Owner hll on lhe water & dock for purchased another home large y1chl. Completely 1nd w1nt1 this sold refurbished, 5 bds. den, TODAY 111 Price Includes IOfmal dining & tamlly the land. $484,900 rooms. full batement & , .... ,. MCIUded pool. < ;rQR( ;1~ l·.l .KJ NS NTlllll -831-1•00 .... SJ.900.ooo Ei I._ I._)\ W\~ \ Glemorou1 2 story. built In WATIJO"HONl HI \I IOH~• 1907. 3 Of 4 BA. 2BA. HOMI ~ '-· FOfmal dining rm. tamtly REAL TORS rm, ltvlng rm. country k II c h. n w I break I a 11 ------::-::-,..------,-,..- 2BA COTT AGE In old CdM. a..u1. la.roe p1t1o. trplc, Wty Iffy 1 car gar s 11so1mo. etS-8025 E'SIOE epKioua 3Br 28a trlple11 New decor. lrplc . mlcrowv. d/w, lnd ry, utll pd Fenced yd. grdnr Ouietl S 1175. 673-3600 2BA. 1BA, frplc, 2 car gar, w/d hk·hp. Upgraded kltch & bath. S950. ..., • .,4 U1·2H2 754 -0137 E'S.de, IO 3br, 2ba Twhm. 2'" gat, many Klru . pool, spa, 1ennl1. avl 111 S 1350/mo 548-1889 Hanelaome 3 BA, 2'h BA Condo 1, 700 aq It Many e11tru. Near bus & ahop1. S 1,300/mo . 760-9792 3BR 28A HOUSE. Feoced y1rd, 2 car g1rage Near s c hools S 1400/mo D/548-934 1 E/S..6-2848 Bayrldge 2 BR. 2BA~ Condo. frplc. w/d . pool. spa. 111 gar. sec gate. no pet• s 1,425 85•·2841 BAYVIEW Court Condo 2• 2. lrpl. shutters, sec gate. aitch gar .. avl 211 S 1600/mo. 854-6 195 Hunt. leach 2140 IUll llTTlll l~~-.!""ll~----1S t150/mo. 850-3849 2BR HOUSE. 2-cat gar-age. large backy•rd, gar. CHARMING 3BR, 2BA den«. Near b9ach SOSO, V1rd, spa S1•75/m o $950 09p<>11t 5•8-0290 W1lk to achools Best MlghbOfhOOdl 760-838• 38A 1 'nBa l'IOUM with tn· Iida lndry. S 1050/mo + MC ~. lnci gardnef. ........... 48A executlv. 2-atory on Of 720-3999 Rf.AW .. , \t:\\:l \."l.."lr 1~~\ i1 "AE~TQRS fl> WESTCLIFFlrea. 2Br 2Ba upstairs condo Carport lrplc, pool $950/m o 548--4739 Of 645-2636 uDo 1SLEE >egan1 1 bd. sundeck S 1.600 NWPT TWNHM 3 BR. dock $1.850 S EAVIEW Gµard·gated 3BA house S2. 750 CdM 38R, tab ocn & bay VUI $3,500 PEN PT 4BA. ocnlrnl l\ome S4 ,000 LIDO AREA By1rnt dock. furn. 2BA +den $4,750 ................. IUl.TlllU1·1• .... .... Wm ..... _ ........ ::r-•· :,~--i.~·."p.,:: ~ _.,UdllOllJMdl ...... ~.1116 . WUTMY APT8 9200 MF MOV£-IH1 1 9edloom lllO 11'90/MO. ISt.W. -W. WOOldiiUtftint TheM attrectw APta ..._ 28drm 1'A8a 11" 3 IA. 2 9A. *Pe IO bdl. ::;. d/w, ~ -:-~ hn l>OOI. tpa, pttvew 2250 Venguerd 640-MH oeemt vu, lndry, l*itln8. ~ • Petjoe "" «**•. oer• ----------111 ,.."' at ~ ''"° ~i75-7113 celllnOe. rrcerd pOttlndabeeutlfultV 28drm 1'A8a 1815 141-4a57e, 75?.1115d ...-an •cape Httlng. 29drm28a '8551-........ ------,.._..,,... ,,..,...,.,,....-....,--.....,...,,....,--- LAAGI 1IR i!pt. lf"*'dina Sor7. no s>e'I. 151 E. 2tat St 541.-2408 SIR.,_. '*J*, pM\t ,& 1750. Av811 Fe6 Bedroom M55 blnda. pwklng, lndty, ~ SMt<R ,__, r!NMte f'Zk to CNna Cove 2 Bdrm. 28a twn. Sae6 ;;;: iHCh 2140 btodt to beectl. 11.350. tow 29R houM *'""' Da •• dcl fhi HM,...,. I '~ · ua.....174 · 825 C.,ter at 142-1424 water, OM IN:I. 145-3197 . = frPC;. wetv dryer. HAR'' .,__.... ....... C-.. -xlnt loc, 11u1aav .... 18A 18A, carpets, drapee, BayfJont. fab v6ewt 28' NPT Bd'l IUrW'ly .... vte.. + 12 utt e31..378t HOUSEKEEPER/NANNY Need t.o Clun drlvln ...., ....... , """" •• ._, gar. dlw, coin laundry. 28•, turn. Avail to Pvt tMt. epa, pool, t.W.. wpt Bch br1nd ne• needed. five In or out. record. CIUI 1 Driver~ *"' I , II* 2 BR. 2 BA. encl patio, all 1111 "'1 1875 mo. 2118 Heg; 9/30/90. Sf75+utll & dep Non-amkQ '*" ptof. 1425 etytletl ouatom be.ch hM Some ~11.n req, good -· • •• appllancn. o•r. poot. *ALA ~OANA APTS * IMl-1451or538-3714 175-1140 213-933-3434 +dee>. Ind utll. 850-2728 w/vlew. deck• & 811 pay. BM-108 ,.,. mao iii~iii~iii2iii.~iii:'iii1iii5iii1~iii~iiiiyiii:Oiiiaiiilliiiiiiieiii•Pilt •••w•wi"ir•Aiiiaiiiiiii•iiiiiiaiitaiiil F~ ~'=•~== Jae. 11.350. 145..3525 1 & 2BR. 18A, O/W, •LllllftA ... BEAUT. 3BR 28A, °'*' ,.__._ l718 wnenltlee. 723-6005 HOUSEKEEPER/NANNY No e11p necessary FT/PT perlence on Bulldlng beautiful pool vea. large ~•Uc to bctl. Gar909. Ho beam cell, frplo, •Id. Shr Hotlll~-Prof '*" N/Smkr look Ing w•nted Refined l•dy · c 011 a Me 11 •re 8 Malnten•noe FuM ben- c-· liiSi 2624 rec room.& l•undry room, pets. 960-6231/857-tn8 gar. 8lk to beach. S 1300 UI ----for aame, $445./Mo .. ,.. non-1mkrldrlnkar .to care 111.Y PILIT 631-8672 eflt1 •nd e11cenent wortl -cloM to lhopa & buses. , Mrs. Fox. daya 997-8211, -utll CdM/NB 8• ood for 4-yr-otd girt in CM I -~ll environment Apply tn WESTFIELD APTS S585-S6751mo. 4-PLEX. 1 ~ ye8rl new. eYM 760-0583 .,. • . Apt1 759-02/: Spe•kl r .. d Eng fluently SEEKING * FUI JOI* person. 6am . 3pm. Mon· &Nutlfully Maintained 530TILW~ ~:;sJ!~· :nc~ar:: BLUFFS-view ol the B.ck Wkly S t75-Up. Heat pool Prof n/amkr anr ocean Uve In or out. 75 t-4416 day thru Friday, The Dally •SEVERAL LOCATIONS -• 962'-7205 Of 960..3557 Bay. Spacious. new 1tep1 to bch, cable. kite. vie• lurn Nwpt Bc h Need Gr•ndmothlf type llSIDE SILES Orenge County based Pltot. 330 w Bay St.. 28drm 1'/•B• S755 722-9012 or 642-1603 carpet. quiet. 2+2• comm maid IVC':'i85 N. Cout PenthouM Tennl• pool, b•bysitt8f 1n Eastbtuff tor company now has open. Cost• Mesa A1k tor ~::;. ~8:aon 631_~~ Sorry Ho Pets. 2648 pool. s995. 75e..5050 Hwy. Lag. Beach 494-5294 gym. etc. 673-4550 ~~s~-~~%si' for 10 REPS ~ 1~0 g~l.'v! g:!s~:,~ ~fo'/•r•uz. 642-4321 ---------OIZI lllSE L!frN le«tl Lift. -I Ill LAii 11111. Shr lg TownhOUM in Nwpt We are currently olleflng a states & reso<t areas wtth ---------..t Bedroom S650 LARGE tBR. Ocean vtew, Wkly rentals now av8ll 8ch Prof lem n-smkr compet111ve salary full dynamic supervised mar- 301 Avocedo 642-9850 1111•FJ deck,w/parklng.Ck>Mto l!lllffl $147.00wk&up.2274 pvtBR&BASS25/mo .' £ SS30 t>eneftts.401KPlan and ke11ng te1m Must t>e --------18R IBA. lrg fence yard tbeach ~991ho1pP160ng. bu• 2aR 28A. garage. laundry Nwpt Blvd, CM 646-7445 ,.., utll. 642_4092 rnp!oYment e11cellent work enwon-well.groomed ambitious t Bedroom $645 garage, nice location Lot ransp. ~ • ~ _ room Nice quiet loc. ~==~t;;.___ ICCOUITllli ment t0< energe11c de· & eager to learn lmmedi- 241 w WlllOfl 631-0960 ol privacy. S675/mo S875/mo Roommites \llintedli pendable 1n11de sales ate income e•penses THE SEVILLE 622'., Center ~ kKh 2669 t480 Monrovia 2724 representattves with 45 patd durtng training TSL MGMT 642-t603 T EXCLUSIVE GUARD• TSL MGMT 642· 1603 ---------· R.E. Sitt/Rent •ACCOUNTING CLERKS wpm 1yp1ng skills and Group transportation 2BR 1',.BA w/gar. bltins. -•BOOKKEEPERS some computer e... furnished relurn fart!' fenced yard w/pat10 Wlltl( •GATElllD C~~=TY• NEWPORT HEIGHTS tBR H*om•e. TllFemW. ITDeweclu.Ltlve luslnen/Offlct Rent •AIP CLERKS peflenc.e Tne c.anoodate guaranteed Start 1m- 638-41209-5PM tBr 1Ba. t-car garage II -·-tBA. refrigerator, stove ~ •JR ACCOUNTANTS must have an e.tCceuent mediately For appoint- 2619 Santa Ana 'L $745 $650/mo * 760-8364 2BR, 2BA townhome, Char m i ng & sale S800 721-0400 2769 pnone personahty and menl call Don Hawkini. THE VICTORIAN micro. trplcs In LR & mstr S6501mo 714-675-3381 BALBOA Island. 2BR. lrg WllTIUFf lllLMll vacalion holiday pay en1oy worl\tng with lhe t0·3 P M 645·222 1 e .. 1 2BR w/gar. n-decor. UITlllE BR wet bar. w/d hk-ups, Newport Heights. 2 sty sundeck. ample parking, Crnr ol Westclllf & Irvine bonuses provided Call pubhc as well as so1tc111ng 207 thru Friday bltlns, fncd yd w/patlo 1::25 !BA, gar no pets' 2 car gar central air All Twnhse·style 2 BR. 1''°> ocean 111-. $565 incl ut1I Newport Beach new Ou'>tness Homemal\ers nelp chtl- Wtr pd. 636-4120 9-5PM /mo 722-671 t maintenance incl. Sorry. BA. w/d hkup. encl gar F pref Art. 639-5701 dys Full Service-Gross D L Weaver Temporaroes 1 Id dren learn & earn xlnt in- 667 Victoria 'I' .. $735 Eastslde 4:pleK, 1•BR apt no pets. 544·0S09 Nr Hoag. $875 759-1053 BEAUT 2Br townhouse. Fa• & Copy Service Avl 979-2900 l00% FREE ~·~~~!~~~:e~:~~!e~aonu at come Benet11s. tra1n1ng 1BR. carpet. drapes. lg d~ng'Js~~ $~~ • PETS •WllUfml• Newport lsland.-FURN master suite. Gar. cable, Ottice !.~et1a1110A1vaolable &I H2-4S~1, ht. S01. 71 4•760-0801 EOE fenced patio close to upstrs sm tBR Single. no & ut1I incl. Near Back Bay. -.-1111•RCLUlllll! shops S590/~o See. 382 722'9855 Iv msg llWfllT lllm &Pll pets. Reis req S625 Inc $600/mo * 752-07 t 1 LAYllT /IEllll Good w~s tops tJ~nu!'. Victoria R 13 650-7244 USTSIH •Wlll llAT IL.ft* util Yrly. 650-3801 Beaut. Newport Beach lg Commtrclal Property EXP. IELIY. Pfllll •Int advancement op· 2BR 1BA. patio, w/d hook-2BR. 2BA $725 ~ secur-EXCLUSIVE BEACH NEWPORT PIER AREA BR. kit & lndry priv Empl 2778 Full time Design layout OMV record Swt S6 75 portun1ty 840·0604 up. nice carpets From tty Heat & water 1n-COMMUNITY Yrly ·~ Blk to beachl 2BR. fem. $340 ~ utll. Avl now and some produc11ori ot hr • oene1t1s Call $690/mo. section 8 OK eluded 324 E 20th BAY VIEW Beautiful 2BR gar. new carptsl palnt No Lv msg 645-9515 co!t: *M~:S.* ~1~2~00 Newpaper Ads Must be 9. 1oam 642-20S0 1595 663-A Plumer 854-7592 645-4761 2BA Micro. d/w. lore-pets $900/mo 673-66-40 co•• 2Br 1Ba -cottage. sll avail tor restaurant. organized and have tM Newport Blvd C M • place. garage & enjoy our __ ..., 1n111111ve to lonow pro 2BR. 1BA PRIME EAST-E'SIDE C M. 1BR. stove. prvt beach St600 All OCEANFRONT sharp 2Br. ocean view. across lrom business or retail Big tects lhrough •EllCAL l&CI lfflCI E11peroenced person tor OB1GVN FIT Good ben- elots Newport Beacn Call 650·0822 SIDE IOC8tion Uttltttes relrig lrplc. small yd & maJnt8flance Incl garage Great areal Wtn· park Pet ok $550/mo front window great lral- paid Enclosed gar pa110. utllllles paid ..... lff ldra* ter rental No ... pets 955-~711~ 675-6320/e lie flow Lib move-in al· S600/mo 759-8242 $650 "20-mo 548-1627 SORRY, ro PETS $950/mo 818-795 3018 COM PROF FEM 25_35 lowance NNN 497·5132 142-4121, ht 273 1t 2 BR, 1 BA * llUT LICATlll Clll llO-Ol11 PENINSULA 1BR. steps to Non-smoker. Avail Jan Lg yard. encl gent~ pet 1Br 1Ba upstrs. lg pa110 beaches Closed gar 1 Unfurnished room & OK Avail II 10 $750 $625 2Br 2Ba spacious. 2BR 2BA Newp0rtsh0res. $650/mo Call evenings bath 1n 3Br 3Ba house lndustrfll 2788 &Ltllll-OMllELH 640-7804 $725 Pool. gas relng lrplc. gar. carport 1 blk * 548-4122 * Elegant. quiet neigh· incl No pets $500 sec. 10 bch Avl now $200 OFF -borhood. $425/mo Ca1\ 1200 SO FT w/lront of· FT 2 yrs exp AA oriented lice. large rear drive-in cert pref 493-7333 EOE door S7801mo. 6211 T8f-----* 1BR & 2BR. 1Ba. up-645_5853 145 E IBth St 1st mo rent 7_31-1230 PElllSUU DeeDee. 759-3313 stairs, gar . lndry cable. mlnat Way, Costa Mesa BILBOI 81 Y DAYS 540-9352, EVES 0 1w . no pets ssoo-S675 IOm SEllEU * 11BI SllO* IUILY BTW 645-6662 or 540-5446 Frog. d1shwaaher. stove --•-mt!.! ___ Pres1tg1ous living Quiet, f N ....,. c .. 5_.855 -•5 .._. •2BR DUPLEX Quiet & garden. pool selling 1BR inc ~-""'-'_5 ..,.._ * 1 to 4 Bedrooms good area Large yard $625 Elec1r1c gates 10 •21BI SllO* 1tUnlurnished sngl garage $750 carports cable TV & Frig. dl'shwasher. slove •Close to beach 535-B Bernard 647-7540 BBOs 5 min 10 bch No mcl No pets 545•4855 •Comm·1 Space Avail *•TREES & YARD•-· pets * 642-3146 •Free ltst-CALL TODAY' *•STEPS to bch. lg 2Br. VILU REITILS 2Br 1'-'tBa twnhOuse. lrplc. Tiii ii TIE PLACE!! trpic. beam cell, vac sys, privacy & no pets S 1075 2111 URLI &YE auto gar door 50th & 87& 4912 646-7104 Top area. park-111\e setting River $950 642-3490 • Fem 2 BR E Sode C M apt 2 pools. pvl backyd· 10111 of parking $400/mo incl uttl 642-5688 ~6--068, CLUB FEM non-smkr to shr 2Br 1Ba home wl frplc in Cor-ona del Mar S5001mo l•Bu-nss _______ _ No pets 644-7725 HOUSE to share Back. Opport~s 2904 Bay Area M/F non smkr lllTllllTllSIUP •IHPCUlll Cash register knowledge helpful w1ll tra1n •lCCTlll FILE CLElll Tues. Thurs & 1 oth!!'r week day 8 30·5 • llCl•E llllTOR OLllE Tl lLLl Three 2BRs 18A, laundry room. close to bus & shops wm accept OC Housing $725-$745/mo 2257. 2268. 2272 Maple Beautifully maintained * 1 MONfH FREE RENT lBR Apt w/garage or •BLUFFS 2Br 2Ba. tplc. carport Vaulted ceiling· pool/2carports/coin w/d balcony. fireplace, pool. s 1050 No pets 722-801 1 Jae . w/d Rooms avail All Natural Beauty Aids 1011111 lllYE $300 & up 851·8506 Route. high earnings S 1150/mo yearly 28r 1Ba. M /F lo shr c M pool minimum 1nv $4 500 00 Wknds only. 6am-2pm Computer 10-key helpful spa, BBO Also tBR Apt down WIPOOISlde patio •EASTBLUFF 3BR 2BA TSL MGMT 642-1603 tst • Security Penthouse privacy No pets 549-2447 Fireplace. pool. carports gar No pets 548-5682 hOme. 1 mile 10 beac.h call 1·800·535·5842 · 24 Own BR/BA. lndry & utol nours inc S3951mo 642-5060 11 llmlll II Frplc, relrlg. din rm. pool, lndry Ou1e11secure $875 N B pr o t 3 O s 1142 Rutland 646-3679 clean/quiet N/smlt.r shr Own Americas HOTTEST WUTOllff 21r 21a • PIX IPElllTOll Pleasant voice able to work weekends & hol- idays snolt vaned •WIHSPAATIH Polite good phonP •Clean. quiet & spacious SPACIOUS lBR Pool. $1350 No Pets 722-8011 3BR 2BA. 2 ca.r garage. lndry rm. carport stove. -Do your buv1nn and Mllinn encl patio, storage S 1125 relrig. No pets. $585/mo ~ -• • NO PETS 640-2495 ~ 50 642-1401 alt 3 2BR, 2''t BA twnhse lncls SSSS mal\er hsekeeper $565 • 112 All N~w M achines utlls 721-8213. Premium loca11ons manner For an apot pl!!'ase t.all 645 :.000 !!'•I 52 • 1-100-141-1000 -SHIRT & cap screen llllltHH p /T printing eQu•P Complete 2 oays 6 2 n1gn1s set up Willing t9 train 842-5587 ask tor Mat>e• $4500 Phn 714-889·4559 llHllS CllLlllEl'S If PT STIRE 2908 Now n111ng FT PT POS ~---"""'-~----1t1oni. 2~ t 7QJ 0 ask tor Ann So Coast P1ala CtlCILITlll HITE HPflYllll Cllllllll TH llllUl,P/T Nights & wknds Woody s Wharf 675-04 7 4 WE'RE LOOKl~G FOR STRAIGHT 5HOOTERS! \' _:_. ~~~·: .... ~~.- (" \\llH" l'\11 r 11\1~ _ U 'I ~ H "'' HOOi ......... ~'-'-''-'-'_1_1_1<_1_1_''~~ ~ YOl' CA:'\ EAR!' 550-$200 l't.H Wt:t.K OR ~ORE: I U·o11 r "' 1•1"''' I It .. ~ ....... , 'ih · t/f,'t! \\ +O iJ \ t I I , I• ,,,, ,11,1,,, .,. •"'""" 1• ,..1 ". jf. .. lh• ,.. ' ''' 11r,. •• I 1 II I\" 1111/t • I '\I 11 I"- CAU W.L 4M-ll21 Let your neighbor know ~~~ 'fl'm! F fl & P.JT Sf'IO'M & COU-- ples ~f'or mtn1 storage mgm't Must have prol appearance & good phone sl<llls No e11p nee. will train 992-0743 lllEll•il ;: T M onday -Frtday Sam-1 30pm $6/Hr Benel1ts Light typing •or computer Apply 1n per· son 729 Farad. Costa Mesa 548-5525 • w nen you ve lost somethlft9 valuable. a cl11sifled ad can be a valuable friend lmR Roms available in Costa Mesa Newport Beach Huntington Beach Fountain Valley \:() (01.l f CTlNG \.( > ~ >LICITING I lrll\<1 I ~..-l >.t• /\ ll~ \1·•" •.,.,( JcrenJ•Nr-""' A!1l, f"l--11 llf~tn-.U.AnC.f Call 642-4333 ASk for Bob Of( Byron about your ~ 1hroogh our closs1f1ed sec11on. Call us ... 642-56 78 Daih· Pilot Independent $2.44 per day Thats ALL you pay tor 4 lines 30 day minimum in the ALL YOUR CONCRETE NEEDS Oua11ty work al reas prices Free est 751-8535 Non.profit educa11onal loundatoon seel\s reps Recruit host l<)m•l•es plan & operale 4 wk sum- mer nomestay programs tor lore1gn students Re- sume 1e11er Mr Rossen EROT 1365 Westwood Ste 2~ L A 90064 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE SERVICE DIRECTORY Concrete/ Asphalt Cutttng Coring tor Drainage Concrete Pumping C N Webb 552-0920 .... rttt/lri9l/ ..... For more inlormatton Loe " 469469 Free CALL TODAY" Estimates Call 650-4869 ISi FOR LtlS I Coa$~~~u~tlon Your •Don t delay Call Today lor Service Dtrectory I 811 your Concrete needs Represema11ve L c 515106 714 748-8361 142-4J21 . ht. J10 PllLll•l10I The Catil. Publlc Utllltles Commission. REQUIRES that all used. househOld G,1r ,q1· c:,,, , \ Opt-•it-r~ • • < ...... . -C ALL ME FIRST• FREE EST. REAS. RATES Ho Job Too Big or Small ' Ron 722-8M6 REPAIR. ()n..Slte & Off· UllW ..... Site Fait Response and A*lable. 979-3123 ALL CARE ENTERPRISE ~ 83t-24750t642-11274 Refrlg .. waaher/Oryera. ~ Pl;m~~~lcel ·'' ~~ l' • ""\t • • . fl . .... .. .• Oi9h·waherl. OYent DESIGN · Courteous Serv 760-73118 PERMITS Carpentry. 39 years exp EXPERTISE 96&-083e "" RNIE'S Relrlg /Appl Free Budget Eltlmat• PLUMBING. t1ectrlcal. Svc. 24-hr emMgency c A ave. Heating. relrlg. · wutlef1, dryers. etc. AH mall ... mocMla. 1 yr p•rtl guar, FREE ave call on oompleelon. 730-85841 -. P111"t1"1j 11Yntf._.UNI Ouahty Mlncled Customers Richard Sinor Ilic Ina Rell) 645-7608 FOlN>ADS ARE FREE Cal: Ml-1111 213·475-4396 ., ACROSS 1 rrus m S Naval grout •O 8•000 p;irts " G;i~ pla~f'<l on l>Qr~D.K• IS We>Ql'llt 16 Oectarf' t 7 8rai..1n9 1ns1•nt•v 20 Consume 2 t Small Doll~ 22 St>owt"d plflasure 23 E99 drtni..s /4 Hat>erOaSl"lf'r , <'S 801:>01ns 28 OuHV'n9 arf'a 32 Re~ groups JJ Fe<n lflal 34 Gori s name 3S 0 1:>,ect1vf'S 36 s1 .. n1 J 1 "419hly Pffl' 38 Sum.._ Fr 39 Splash about 40 5uc>ero0f •1 SIOwest 43 8ecl IN,,., s •..,Coast l:>t<CIS 45 L,.,..., 46 Seasone<l 49 ~·()IS SO Blue 9' ass 5J Acl fl<ml'f 2 3 4 14 17 '>6 "' • '>. \..'•' l .. ~8 ui.111Pe S9 l"f'ilO ""'"' 60 W•ld Cl.I•'. 61 Relv~ DOWH 1 01 ~11 ? ,,. or"' 8 J ,l\~rluoe 4 Cl"l1IO s IOt scua 6 Ff~'"'h d•v1s1ons 7 Wor' un•IS II Seit estttm 9 St•es~s 10 Crve4 Pflf son 11 Satanic I? C11y on I~ l 11>e< t )~,-.,..~ml"<l 18 Water t>oO"'' 19 Ct>anqe n Ta<:tl 0 "-S 2 4 lOyllll'f 75 l 1~ •If"" 26 Nume<ica1 Pftlll• 27 Command 28R- 19 ~I! Mlh 30 llroent 3 t E._,,lln 33 Oenlat 6 "'(YIOVS ~zzu S<XVEO )6 Mtae<S ) 1 Ol:>teu<•ty 39 Bew•tChef 40 P11nc:tptl •2 Room OH19ns 4J Farlett~ •S Common 1.11~ 46 R°"' 41 8'9 ca• 8 9 48 p.,, ocutaf ,q At a a.stance 50 Altitude SI Mr W•Sle< S2 Singe. Wollt_,.,ll 54 Bribe 5S f'a•lvfe 10 11 12 t3 18 -PllllllT P/T For prol ... ional office, down1own Costa Mesa. Calf S42·!752 lor app1. Sale• TIE PlllYUVEI Has 1n C>penlng tor a par! l ime pos11100 1n sates Sa le s e•pe r1ence ptelerred. 1660 P!acen111 Ave., Cos1a Mesa. PERFllMANCE BOfllS! $500.00 ' - STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? The 'Legel Oep1r1ment 11 the Pleue 9top by to tile your Dally Piiot Is P'e•ted to an -fict1t1ou1 bualneu s111ement 11 nounce 1 new service now 1v1H-the Oelty P"ot l egal Oeperl- abfe to new bualneuet. ment. 330 West 81y, Costa We will now SEARCH the MHe, California. II you can not ' ~ name lor you 11 no extra Chacge. l f!'P by. pie•• can us and MW you the time tnd the al (7141 6-42-4321, Exlension I rip to the Cour1 HOUM In S1n11 315 or 316 end we will make Ana. Then. of courM, efter the 1rrangement1 for you to handle M•rch ii compteted we wtn file thlt ptocedure by mall . your Hctltlous ~MM nam. II you lhould have any lunhef atatement lllrith the County C..,k, quest Iona, plffM call us end we publlll'l once 1 week for tour will be more than glad to assist weeflla M r9QUlted by tr# Ind you. tMn file your proof of publl· Good luck In your cation -Mth thll County Cl9rtl. new bultneall!