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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-12-22 - Orange Coast Pilot• s • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1988 25 CENTS Irvine Co. suit called . . reckless Lawyer s contend heiress spinning 'Wheel of Fortune' By STEVE MARBLE Of .. O.., .......... Joan Irvine Smith's lawsuit challenging the value of The Irvine Co. 1s nothin& more than an ex· pensive and rcckicu cx.crcist "to indulge the whim of a very wealthy woman, .. attorneys for the Newpon Buch·bascd development firm Icing on the horizon argued in coun Wednesday. The drmm of a white Cbrlatmaa appean a bit cloeer In tla1a Piasa area of Coeta lleea. Tlae wlatry look alaoald lut u During closing arauments. lawyers Yiew of •now-capped mountatn. lramln« tlae Sou~ Cout more ra1D 18 forecut for ton1'Jat and tlaturday. said Smith _ a N~n Beach Nation Government officials have Ignored a black mar- ket of classified Defense Department documents for at least five years, Investigators-say./ A4 Cl.\~15TMA5 5HOPPIN6 15 FOR TME BIRO.S Sabotage suspected in jet crash that. killed 281 ..By MA_!.!1lEEN JOHNSON 1"'' ...... p,._.... --Countymaa amond' ca•ualties_ LOCKERBIE. Scotland - A Pan -e Jerry Avritt juag!ed his schedule to spend Christmas with his wife and chiklren. but the family's memories of this holiday season will be ones of pain and loss. not joy. resident and heiress to the Irvine famil y fonune -failed to prove that the development firm is worth three times the val ue placed on it when the company changed hands in 1983. Smith, who was offered $200,000 for each share she hokls in the comeany, ts playin& .. Wheel of For- tune · wtth The Irvine Co.. said attorney William Campbell. "They (Sm ith and her auorneys) arc now asking the j udac 10 spin 'the wheel. hop1n1 it will land on anr. number above $200,000 per share, • Campbell said. He said Smith bas the money to bankroll a lawsuit designed only to inflict .. expense and inconvcnienc::e'" on The Irvine Co. C.ampbcll also scolded Smith for (Pleue ... JaVIJllS/ A2) .. , 0 Am j umbo jet apparently exploded in the air before crashina and killing all 259 people aboard and 22 on the ground, and invesaiptors focused today on terrorist threats to place a bomb on a Pan Am airliner. U.S. embassies had posted warn· ings that a bomb threat had been made on a Pan Am jet flying fro m Frankfu11 to the United States some· Avntt 46. was the flight engineer on doomed Pan Amencan World AirlinesFl:ttn 103. which ended over Scotland ina Oamingshowcrofwrcckagc (Pleue .ee COUllfTY I A2) Two women comfort eacb otlaer u relatl.-of-=.--•• aboard Pan Am FUCJat 103 .. tlaer at New Tork 31hopping d8ys to ChrlltmM time in December. The destruction of the Boeing 747 bound for New York with Christmas travelers sc~uercd bodies and wreck· age over a wide area and ravaged Lockerbie villaae. The d oomed Pan Am Aigha 103 originated in Frank· fun aboard a difTettnt plane. The 22 people killed on the ground were mostly 1n cars hit by wrcc~c. said Dnmond Park. deputy chief executive of the area's local council. He said the information was from other town authorities. The plane smashed into the v ound. destroying 40 houses .. tnggcr· 1ng an explosion at a gas statron and en,ulfing cars in flames. he death toll on the plane rose to 259 today when it was dik'overcd that another flight attendant was on board. said Pamela Hanlon. a Pan Am spokeswoman in New York. The victims included U.S .. servicemen. 38 students from Syracuse Un1"ersi1y and an Assoctated Press exccut"e and five of his family members. Neither Scottish Sccrctal) Malcom Riflcind. the chief British official at 1he site. nor U.S. Ambassador Charles Pncc wouki speculate on the possibility of sabotqc, but both the International Air Trantpon Allocia- uon and the British Airline Pilots Association sajd that was the most likely explanation. In Washington. a U.S. aovcmmena (Pl--.. CRA88/AS) Index Bulletin 8oara Business Classified Comics Crossword Death notices Entertainment Opinion People 85 A5-6 88-10 A8 89 89 8 7 A9 A7 RB council OK's parking structure Public notices Sports Weather 84, 9-10 8 1-4 A2 By ROBERT BARKER OfltleO.., .......... The Huntington Beach City Coun- cil approved a $13.5 million parking structure for the downtown that's poised to get under way at the first of the year along with two other major projects. The parking structure -called the linchpm to new construction -will be designed to accommodate 850 cars Drizzle couldil 't dampen spirit at yule b9at parade CHRISTMAS!" and house 32,000 square feet ot office and retail facilities on the second and third stories. It will be ~id for wi1h bond money from the refinancing of City Hall. Construction also is set to stan 1n February or March on an enaenaine- ment and housing complex at the site of the old Golden Bear nightclub at Mam Street and Pacific Coast High· way. The project includes a thrtt· By IRIS YOKOI °' .. Dllr ........ New York residents Philly and MillieGecewiczcame to California to ncape a white, cold Christmas, but they d idn't seem 100 disappointed with the drizzly conditions as they sat w1tc hin1 the Ncwpon Harbor Christmas Boat Parade of Liahts on a recent evening. Tbc visiting Gecewiczes weren't the only boa1 parade viewers whose spirits weren't dampened by the cold, misty drizzle. More than 100 pcopk . most of whom parked their cars 11 the Ford Aerospace parking lot on Jam· boree R<*i and rode shuttle buses to u;,;;-._...--- In fact, Millie cheerfully led the crowd watcbina the parade from the bleacben at the Sea Scout uilina base in yeUina holiday vecti"P to those abc>ard the briaht bOats. the harbor, showed up to take in the .,.,ade from the Sea Scout Base v~int. story entenainment center with six movie theaters and nightclub as well as a 13()..unit ho using complex. And a few blocks down the coast. construction on the $345 million Waterfront reson also 1s slated to begin about the same time, starting with a Hilton Hotel near Huntington Street and Pacific Coast Highway. City Administrator Paul Cook said today he doesn't believe the parking structure will cost the full SIJ.5 million. But he said It wtU cost more than most parking structures because architects were asked to design and landscape 1t so that it wtll not look hlce a parking structure. Parking structures usualh cos( about S8.000 per space. Coolc said. But 1he one that's planned downto~ n v.ith archttectural amcnmes 1s C\· pccted to cost SI 0.000 to S 12.000 a .. OK every6ody! on the count of three ..... she called cnthusiasticaH~. viVKious in an ivory velour jumJ)IU1t and l9ot pink beret. .. MERRY The 80th annual parade. which ends Friday night. features more than 200 boats decorated in colorful hol· iclly littns. The event. labctcd Soutberi California's la,..est and oldest bcMlt pantdc is sponsored by the Commoclorn O ub. a division of Satla rltltla lpellaten at tlae Newport the Ne~ Harbor Area Chamber ...,._ CllrlmiM lloat Parade ol J.lilata (1'19allWPAllADS/A2) ue(rr...19ft) ....... ftaMrrla.a..-. ........................ 111ach: c~ Ginty, T119t1a: ...a,~. JnlDe; lllke Hadleld, ~•; aM .. .._ ...._udD1n••Pratt. ........... 811c•. ·Late N-M winter break draws fans, foes h ... YO&OI ............. A dcllly iR the IW1 ol'the Newpon- Mm Uaiftld SehOol Dillrict"s r.. = ............. ~ .. ..... OllW..._i•IM •= ............. IO lfH zltU tMl Ille wtn mum ao 1 IDOft en- Wttk and will tttume classes Jan. 2 . .\ few dastrictl. includnw the Hunt-""'°" lllllCtl City SclM>ol O.stnct. held dalRI ""'" the middlt of this wtek and will bclJn das1n .... n Jan. ). The lalltf tchedult ,, wMt the Newport·Me'SI ditenc1 would hl\'e followed. accorchl\I to Super- 1ntcncknt John NK'Oll had 1hc teachers' wuon and ctuaifeed em- pk>)'ftS noc r«'Ommcnded that the vtcatioa run from weelend to weft· end. rather \Mn .._n""'-mid-wed. Tbe tchool ~ ..,..,vec1 "" rccommmdlltioa. "We _. no '*'"'* ....,. to (Pl •-ml.ADD/Ml Sl)ICC. ··We're trying to hide the fact that ifs a parking s1ruc1ure," Cook said. Cook also said the city plans to hire a consultant to determine how much to charge for parkins. "But we want to k.ccp it reasonable. We don't want to discouraac parti na on Main Street." he said . Cook said old Main Street build· (Pleue Me PAJlKIJllG/ A2) No help available for hurt sea lion By GREG ltLERltX Of .. Oellr ........ l\n adult male se. hon be9ched itself at Crescent Bay m La&una ae.cta on Wednesda~, and local wildli~ prescnauon1s1s say thctt is nothina the) can do for the apparently llict animal. The sea hon we1fhs betMleft 400 and 600 p<?unds and 1s 7 to 8 feet IOla said Judi Jones, a director ofFrialila of the Sea Lion in Laauna ee.ct.. n.e animal. behc\Cd to be at least 7 ,_, old. has been spotlcd in '•• waters for more than a week.. Jones said the sea hon a~ IO have 1ntcnt1onally beached itwelf ila ordtr to recover from an 1llncm • inJUI') . "When they're not fedi• .... they Just want to rtlt. •• Jones 1161 .. h's bird for annnall in ~ County becaute theft are vi,....,• !«hided baches Ufll'Oft. .. Dapllr the uimlll'I ........ Jones saecl her Ofllllilaliol9 _, • anythi"I to -. i:rincll ol tllll lJ08 is equipped to .... -pups and ,.,.. ....... ~ :;'c:l "'lb a qww.to11 ..._. ............ ~. Evn ifwewtnlllllt• A•••• uiftllLM .. "llliw•~-.. ~ ........ '-m&---·--lille to .. Him I ......... lilne .. llllw 10 .. -..... ""*"' .. Ft.~ ................. .. IP'••·- ·Bush ignores criticism, names Sullivan to cabinet WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmi· dent~ 8usb aodly named I biKk medical IChool PRlident. Louis Sullivan, to htad the Department of Health and Human Services [)epart- mttn, brusbina asidr criticism trom anti..abonion foes. Bush1 !'Ulhins to complete work on his Caoinet, also named outfOina Rep. Manuel L&Uan of New Mexaco. a veteran of two accades in Conaress, to bead the Interior Department. The president-elect, IS eapectcd. also announced that Samuel Skinner. a Chicqo transit offacial and former federal prosecutor, would head the Dcpenment ofTranspona&ion. But in two IUrprites. be uid he Md 1.1ooed S1.1te DtparttneDI olllcial Edwin Derwinski IO lwl9d lbe newly created Veter1n1Affainl>eputment. and named William Rally, bad of the World Wildlife Fund. to lad &be Enviroamental Proeection Aemcy. Bush said the five appointments nearly comoleled the 1.1sk of con- strucaina a Cabinet. The two Cabinet ~bs still unfilled att the departments of Labor and Eneray. As is his custom, Bush inuoduced each of the five appointments in an appearance bef0tt reporters in Wash- DELAYED RECESSDRA WSF ANS, POES ••• From Al fight with it," Nicoll said. While Nicoll conceded "there arc problems" with the delayed vacation. he said he personally has received no complaints. "I haven't heard about a big to-do." he said. One complaint is that vacation plans have been disrupted for New- port-Mesa students, parents and em- ployees who have family members who attend schools in other districts. Almost all members of the teachers' and classified bargaining units favored the later vacation when asked earlier this year to choose between two schedule options for winter recess.. much to classified uruon President Marshall Bryan's su!:'f1;.oonally didn't like it." Bryan said. 'But we went b)' our majority." Bryan said the unions decided to recommend a change because there bad been an overall uneasiness in the district about following the tra- ditional dates of winter r«css this year. .. They were figuring they'd have problems with getting people to attend that pattial week." Bryan said. However, the adopted schedule apparently has not improved attend- ance. "There arc a lot of students where the parents are aoina ahead and taking t.heir kids out of school," said Belinda Linsday, attendance tech- nician at Estancia. "It's unbelievable the number of students out this week." Estancia junior Chris Kraft esti- mated about 20 percent of the students in his classes were aone this week. Other pa.rents have been anary that some student athletes bad to miss classes to attend tournaments sched- uled during school hours this week since most districts were on vacation, Estancia office personnel said. Students' feelinp were clearl_y split. Estancia soohomore Kami Coulter cheered the adopted schedule, saying. .. It's longer after New Year's." However, that longer recess after New Year's is "the only advantage," said junior Josh Harris. "You can't get any Christmas shopping done." Sop&>omore Sean Evans' holiday plans were allo disrupeed by the ldledule .... WM IUPPQleCj.}C>_ ~ IO (Lake) Elsinore IO visit ray~ but he'D 6c beet in ICbool llrrady, he said. .. A lot of kids are upeea about it. a lot of tacben are ~" acknowl- edpcl Joe Dominic, Estancia aui• tant principal. ahboulh he said he penonaUy Dad not beard the com· plaints. .. l)ey.vc never bed this ex~ of Soi• until Dec. 23," be said "They won•t tie upset in January." He allO speculated dais question of when IO 1ebeduJe winter recess may uite 'Pin next year, sincir Christmas falls OD I Monday. · However, bis colleapes predicted next year's winter VKation probably will fall at the same time as other districts' vacations. ••1 think definitely neat year it is aoina 10 be a week before (Christmas) Ind a week after," Linsday said. "The timing of winter recess is negotiable," said Nicoll. ''I would expect the calendar neat year would be very similar to those (districts) around us." IRVINE CO. LAWSUIT CALLED RECKLESS •• Pram Al failins to ever "set foot" inside the Smith, on the other band, is seeking the fact that other stockbolden. some MichlPn courtroom where the trial $500 million -an amount that could with considerable eaperiencc in the has been dragjng on for nearly 17 well have an impact on near-term business workf.. qr'ecd to the SI months. Smith did not testify during Irvine Co. projects. according to billion value. the trial. company officials. But Smith, usina outside appraisals ~ments arc being heard in Smith's auorneys-wcre to deliver-<>flhe-comp.ny4 holdi~nds Micfillanbccause '.Rte-Irvine C<r.WllS final arguments today. The decision the firm is worth at least S3 billion. Incorporated in that state in 1977. in the case is not expected until Smith lost her chance for a It is estimated the lawsuit has cost spring. premium price, Campbell contended, two of Oranse County's wealthiest · he she t ·ed a bl k e • b citizens _ Sn'lith and Irvine Co. In his closing arguments Wednes-'!' n n o oc: .ren s uyout Chairman DonaJd Bren _ close to day. CampbelLl.Qld a court-appointed an Oranae County Supcnor Court. $30 million in 1-.. 1 and other fees. referee that Smith's expert witnesses She ~s unable t~ stoe the sale, but T'--"Ii"" be ·t· 1 h lacked credibility. filed "d1ssenta's nahts to force the m ;: outcome may en 1ca tot e . . . court to set a value 00 her shares. near future of The Irvine Co. At the Campbell said. he behev~ Smith Whentherulingi~rnade ~tbecourt time he bought up shares ih the · ~hould ~ penah~ financ1all~. for should send her the • that development firm. Bren estimated berarb1trary.~dfa1thconduct. He t.he . . t f4rne::e the The Irvine Co. was worth $1 billion. sugg~ted Smith and b~r mother, stai: •:.:,ri~ i:i:8~a or.~ Cam~ll Smithcontendsitisworththrectimes Athahe Clarke. be siven only said. y, thaL $ 154,000 for each ofthe1rSSO shares U l'k S 'th B has nded ~~n originally offered Smith S 110 of stoc.k. instead of the $200,000 a muc~ ~fethe ":rial i;l~i ~~nes- malhon for her shares. Campbell share.given to other stockholders. day's closina arptments. ng suggested Wednesday that the court lrvme Co. attorneys contend the actually punish Smith and reduce company was worth about $1 billion Th .u..dalftl Pren co.trllMIH Bren's offer to $88 million. when Bren took it over .and point to ,. *-,...,,. PARADE SPECTATORS ENTHUSIASTIC ••• Prom Al torn1s on the way U.S. Tempe. JJ :; Calif. Tempe. • Le •• a• ., .. ...................... "' ... . E.. if::!JJ' ~ ....... 0 -• I •1 =~ t:.'I: ~ =-.... ........ == ,, . .. . .... •• •• ~ = e-n:~ ... ::: ..... .. • ...,.A. •• •• ,.., . ,.....,.,..,.... • II,.,_. ... , .... •a,.,.. ~ ~ .,,,... ....... 1 -.ao.c. •• • fll :: :: = = = 15=--... ...... I :: lMll o.i.o .. 11 === ~ = ..... n fll ... . ,. ~. : ~ CIMr~ .. '' LMllllll' ., .. == 41 II -. ........ M .. 'I I llZ II II......., --~~~~~~~~~ ........... a.rte NII_.,. •• •• 5 ~ SmOI Report ., . 11 • •• •• 41 • •• • 41 •• . ,, 11 • •a ......... ...... E:E ==-.......... T-..v171r ,_ ........ .. . u .. II '4 • 47 .... .. 41 .. 11 61 41 u u ua . ., . .. .. 11 ., •• .. . a N . ,, u .. • • .. . N .. .... ., . r, : . , . It IO • 80 ., 47 . .. . .. 11 47 .. ,, . " • 12 IO IO . .. Tide. ,.., 1:'2•.111. ........ ,..., ......... 1:11&& ....... ....... '"' u . .., ....... 4:41 ·-.... frldly • l ;ll a.lft. • -• 4'4lp.111. MocMt ri111 81 4:11 ,.llL, -M 7:M Lift. frtdlr, Ind,... M 7:3611>.111. FAA does net test security of airports outside the U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) -Federal Aviation Administration tests of teaarity at foreip airportS would be improper' and possibly dantm>us to the inspectors, but the qency should do more to assess airport security abroad, a conpcssional study said today. The study by the General Account- ing Office WIS released a day after a New York-bound Pan American ietlinercrashcd in Scotland, killing all 259 people aboard and 22 people on the ground. The niaht originated in Frankfurt, West Germany, with a changie of pl~nes at London's Heath- row Airport. K.eooetb M. Mead, GAO lllOciate director, said the study did not involve either the Frankfurt or Lon· don airporu. FAA tests security at U.S. airports by intentionally ~'!I hidden mock weapons~ airport 1eeur- i1y checkpoints, but has not con- ducted such tests abrold. The •ncy last year found that 20 percent of mock weapons and bombs smuglcd onto planes at U.S. airports went undetected, with results varying widely amona the 28 airports check- ed. COUNTY MAN KILLED ••• PramAl . and bodies. ·Authorities said 2S9 ~in the plane and 22 on the ground died in Wednetday's crash, the world s 9th-wont air disaster. An American f1aa flew today outside the couple's well-kept, two-story Westminster home near the northern cdee of Huntinaton Beach. Inside, Judy A vritt described her bust.nd and their plans in a calm, controlled voice. A Christmas tree, its lilhts dark, was in one comer of the famil)"s living room as she spoke with reporters. Christmas fiaures decorated the coffee I.Ible. and a cnicifix buna on a wall. ·Her husband flew with the airlines since 1968, and re-arranacd bis GAO investigators accom~nied FAA inspectors to five fore~ air- ports deemed lo be at hi&h nsk for terrorist attacks, w.here ihey inter- viewed security personnel and wit·. nessed security procedures. The U.S. officials did not test the security ..systems lhemxl.ves. None of the airports was identified in the report and Mead said he could not say which ones were visited. "FAA recdgnizes the importance of testina but tfelieves it is inappropriate for FAA inspectors to make tests in foreian countries because of sov- ercianty concerns and possible danaer to ins~tors," the report says. While GAO investigators qree with the FAA concerns. the repon said the aviation aaency should require its inspectors to analyze tests conducted by forcian officials at their own airports. The FAA u~ two-person teams to inspect foreign airports. . A I 98S law requires the secretary of transportation to notify a foreian country when the FAA concludes that security is lax at one of its airports. of Commerce. Several boat owners spent thousands of dollars to entertain viewers. incorporating costumed characters. fest ive music and large- scalc figures in elaborate displays. No alcohol. however. "We're on the wagon this week. with New Year's comina up," said Millie, as the four broke into peals of laughter, raising some doubt about her statement. schedule this week so he could return home in time for Christmas. Judy A vritt voice, whiJe another proclaimed jok-said, flanked by her teen-.rs. SEA LJON ingly, ··That's Tom SelJeck!•' when a lfahe family's Ch~~~~s wett not so important to him, he probebly • • • The drizzle was still a lipit sprinkle that tickled the face as nders of the shuttle buses. sponsored by the New- port Harbor Jaycees. arrived around 6 p.m. at -the grandstand the Jaycees had set up at the sailing base. Dressed in bullty parkas and knit caps and ranJing in age from toddlen to scmors. the expectant spectators armed themselves with spicy cider. chowder and hot dogs slathered with chili from the Sea Scouts' concession stand before seuling down on the bleachers with blankets. The Gecewiczes. treated to the parade by Phil's brother Ed and his wife Mary of Ri verside. came stocked . with their own nourishment. "We've got hot soup. croissants,'' said Millie. pointing toward a tote bag at her fee t. The Geccwicz clan came prq>a~ to the hilt: Mary wore a thick fur coat. The men wore caps and thick jackets. Binoculars were held in gloved hands, and a blanket cove~ everyone's lap. Although Southern California resi- dents, F.d and Mary had never been to the parade and decided the time was right when their New York relatives came fot the holidays. As the boats floated gracefully by, the moist air filled with horn honks. music, singing and shouts from the bleachers and the watercraft. &da- mations of ''Oh. isn't that nice~" and "Herc they come!" as well a awe-- filled questions ljke "How do they &et all that on a little boat'r' drifted from the Geccwicz P.,1rty. / "I wonder 1f Marlon Brando's on that boat?" one asked in a boomina Winning lotto numbers BJ ne A1Mdalft Preu Herc are the winning numbers picked Wednesday niaht for the California Lot~'s twice-weekly ''Lotto 6-49" game: 9, 10. 16, 27, 38, 39 and the bonus number. 15. Players who correctly auesscd all six numbers will share a prize pool of $5.3 million, lottery officials said. All th09C who picked five numbers plus the bonus number will divide ~~ Illy Piii MMIOl'PICE amona themselves a prize pool of'S l .4 million; five of sia will share $744,000; four of sia will share $6 76,000. Three of six is worth an automatic SS per winner. The numbers were chosen by Lotto machine durina a television two.d- cast ofisinatina in Sacramento. The sales from Saturday niaht (o Wednesday's drawing were S Jl.S million. kayaker pMk1led by. would not have been ~, t~ f iaht I 03. she said. Prom A 1 The fun-lovina foursome also The Avriats, Jerry. udy, 16-year-old Marcus and IS-year-old Angela, da~us, Jones said. Sea lions art roused the crowd into cheerina for planned a surpnse Christmas Day trip to Oreaon 10 see Judy's parents, the p<_>Werful animals with jaws capable passina boats. woman said. Now, her e-rcnts were due into Los Angeles International Airpon of snapping a human forearm and to be with their moumana dauahter. move swpnsinaly fast on land. One of the boats, the Merry Maker She said she doesn't know when services for her hust.nd will be, bccau5C "lt'ssonofa6ed idea to feed one of owned by Bobby Cornelius, that she doesn't know if there will be a body to bury. tbele animals because once you stan ~the most oobs and aahs was Authorities said A vritt's Boeina 747 jumbo jet apparently exploded in 1:__.· h' fish '--'II tcb nd 0-.a~-ted ..nth a •i•na_..;_ San•· id . nd . . oda " _.... . th I bo b ~•na am ·~ ca on a "'" ~· ... --...... ... m ..aar, a anvestJptors t y 1ocu~ on terronst teats top ace a m on start aapproa h' le .. J Oaus sittina on a rocket that per-a Pan Am airliner. said. "That ~'\e :On:erous .• ~nes iodically shot out a realistic bunt of Judy Avritt said she had not received official word, but understood that Ona more positive note, Jones said flame, as if in l.lkcoff. terrorists killed her husband. lbe animal's weipl stiU "teems to be About •~thirds of the way into '"He always knew it was possible." she said. "But ifit was aoing to happen, IOod" and there 111 chance that it will the ~. however, the drizzle it WIS aoina to happen... feC better and bead t.c:k out to sea. in&emified into a steady rain. While She said she would teek refuge and comfon in her church. Blessed Hoftver, Jones admitted that onlooken braved the situation u Sacrament in Westmin11er. probably won't happen. Jona 11 Ibey could, with umbrella in .. I won•t let bale into my heart over thi1." she swore 10ftly. ..Nobody said nature was always one band and a~ ofbot bevef'lle in -•1......,..,...,. a1111.-.,._ .,.,.. kind, .. she said. the other. condiuom 100D became r=:=:======================================================~~-----........... '""=~ too ~ IO endure and I stream of bodies made a mad dub for the warmth and dryness of waitina bulea. With windows 11amina over from body heat and a hush of satisfied exhaustion pe1 meati,. lbe crowded ~ the pm'lde.pn rode b9Clc IO their can. l)espite the lelMbao- per(ect weather, lltOll in die but teemed 1114 they diweprded earlier forecasts of rain IO expaience tbe festive holiday event. PARKJKG ••• PnlimAI i_npwil bedemotillMld IO mmlr.eroam -tbe oraieell llDd IMC I .. -line will bc~i1111811ed ia IM donlOWa ua ia hbl miy. .... may be turmoil for awhile. but it will be "'1.h ia in tbeend," he Mid. ---.., II• Gollle ..... CA lillZ~e.1 .. ,C-..._CA ~ ~ .... M1·5e11 ..._ ' ~ • .... , Jaatc-11642-4IOllB .... ,. __ .,.. .. ::. ': '= :.IJ ==-.......... ~ ... __ ...._IMWM-,edllorllll ..... -., ---••,..,_....,lie r.--O ....... ...... I I Of '°""'itlll - I .....,_..,.. -·-~ '1!'!.~---.. ...,.. .. I ' i ' Writer's reasons for loving work brought to a head Ritz-Carlton Hotel fined $115,000 My mother uted to wonder why I chose journalism out of all tbe m>'li.ad professions available in this, tbe pa test land of opportunity on the planet. It couldn't be money. she reasoned correctly. Pool cleaners take home laraer paychecks. It couldn't be prntiae; trained chimpanzees command arcater respect from the aeneral public. So Mom considered, out of desperation, that perhaps it was the creative, free spirit in me that refused to conform to the robotic, Bia Brother-ish demands of bi~r-payina professions like com- puter pr~mmina o~ accouf!ting. No 9-t<?'"S,_ no paper shufflina. no bonna routan~; a frcc-th1nkmJ. open-collared savant out to change the wortd on his own terms .. That reasonina worked for her. Actually. the truth of the matter as I'd alwayi hoped to slink into assignmenu like the one I got Tuesday. Beer drinkins-Thas was an actual assianmcnt, ordered by my .. GIEC 'IW111 editor. Some folks fro m a tiny organiza- tion known as the Bos to n Beer Co. were in town to test- d ri vc their product o n West Coast palates. They had invited media persons from the area to gather at Hotel Meridien in Newport Beach and sample their beer, Samuel Adams Boston Lager. apinst some better-known brands. If there was ever a reponina assignment made in heaven, this was it. In what other profession can you get paid for doinJ something that ~ou n<?rm~lly havctopay to dodunngyouroffhours . Jcan tthmk of one. The folks of Boston Beer Co. have a take-it-to- thc-strccts marketing campaign that apparently involves travelina around the country with a lot of beer, son of like a rock 'n roll tour withQut the groupies. The company doesn't advertise nationally and as virtually unknown among the beer-drinking masses west of the Mississippi. But amo na the beer-drinkina elite of this country (yes, they do exist), Samuel Adams is the Cadillac of American beers. A mere two months after its public unveilina in I 98S, Samuel Adams wu named best brew by 5.000 beer critics, brcwmasters and distributors at the Great American Beer Festival in Denver, bcatins. out nearly 100 other beers, including big names hke Heineken and Michdo~ . IJ IOI VAN EBEN °' ............. The posh Ratz-Carlton Hotel m Laauna Niauel has aarced to pay SI I S,000 1n penalties and costs for fire and sa fety violations, under a settlement agreement filed Wednesday in Orange County Su- perior Court. Most of the violations stemmed from a shortqc of storqe spacef which forced the hotel's manaaement to~ ace banquet cans and other equipment m a bottom noor hallway. said Deputy District Attorney Ga_y Geiser-Sandoval. Sandoval said desiancrs of the exclusive Winter fun ocean front hotel nealected to provide sufficient sto,.e spKC, which left man- agemen1 wi1h few op11ons for stonna the equipment. The shona,e of space also forced man11tmen1 to put a maintenance workshop in the parkana prqe. These makcshan storaae measures meant PHSllC ways were pan1ally blocked, which could have prevented speedy evacuation in the even1 of a fire or other ein~ncy, she said. "A lot of the problems came and went," said Sandoval. ··11 wasn't the same violation that continued for several years. Basically, therejust wasn·1 e11ough room to put things. so they"d move some thina from one locauon to anolhtt place, onl y to have at caute a problem there too." The hotel was dnill_\ed by the Newpon Beacb ardlitecturaJ firm of Wimbcrtr. Allison. Tons and Goo. The compeny s spokeswoman. Marac Sehr, could not be rCachcd for comment this morning. Landa Admas, a spokeswoman for the Rau-Carlton, said aJI of the violations had been corrected more than a year qo. ··we ended up movina thinas off pfe>peny and renuna storage space," said Adams. "All the corridors were cleared and sips were put up showina employees where thangs could be put and where they couldn't." Pomona Elementary Scbool atudenta play follow-the-leader tbroacb pudcllea on tbe playpoand. • The hotel also hi* I .. director ol Ii• and safely .. an 1987 to check for violalioas and to traJn employees in afety prociedurn, Adams said. Oranee County fire officials fina ideal· ifaed the potentiaJ safety hazards in 1914, shortly after 1he hotel opened. F-.re olfici.a. continued 10 find violations in lbe eMUi .. 1wo years and an 1916 asked lbe district Attomey•s office 10 intervene. Sandoval said the problems ~finally cleared up an 1987. bu1 that she hid filed suit in order 10 obtain a settlement for tbe oriainal violauons. The suit and settlemenl were filed simultaneously on Wednesday, she said. MacDonald considers donating settlement Frem staff u4 wire repertl Convicted murderer Jeffrey Mac- Donald. a former Huntinaton Harbour resident, will consider donatina to charity the $325.000 he was awarded in a settlement with the author of "fatal Vision." the best-stiling book based on his cnmcs. his lawyer said. . MacDonald is a physician and former Green Beret servina three life terms at the Terminal Island federal correctional in- sutuuon in Los Angeles for the 1970 murders of his wife and two daus)lten. He has steadfastly maintained his innocence. Mildred KassabJ the mother of Mac- Donald's slain wi1e. offered Tuesday to drop her lawsuit seekina the $325.000 settlement he. received from author Joe McG1nn1s 1f MacDonald aarecs to donate the money plus 1ntcrnt to the United Way chantabk orpnization. MacDonald's lawyer, Gary Boslwick. said althou&h· MacDonald is willina to consider &ivina the money to charity he w9n't be pushed into making a quick decision. "He has told us he does not -want to make any snap decision on this. but we will do whatever he tells us.·· said Bostwick. Samuel Adams proceeded to win the competi- tion for the next three years in a row. It was also the first American beer in this century to pass Germany's tough beer purity laws (only barley. yeast hops and water are allowed). .., Currently, Samuel ACJams Is sold <rn1y fn"Bosto and Munich, hence the trip west to brew up some interest. The founder of Boston Beer Co .. a congenial Harvard-educate<s fellow named Jim Koch, even ca.me alona to help with the sales pitch. G t 9 M I\ T"""\ T"'\ h • The la~ dedincd to reveal wha1 ~ -f)l:lil -'1 S ~H-C 1 :lal-~m~---~~~-,,J~~..Maelotrertol.JOD&ldrop~• .J the suit m exchante for the charitable The Samuel Adam' pitch mvolViC.! a bit of brewina education, a bit of Boston Bee\ Co. history and a whole lot of beer. backs ouster of state leaders :E'&f.;:.~~~~ This is a wise pitch. Instead of boring you to death with endless talk of beer, they provide the real McCoy for your own picky palate to judge. What's better, they stack it up aaainst four other brews -j n this case, Beck's, Heineken. Molson and Corona. And they aive you.full &lasses. For the record. Samuel Adams was by far the tastiest of the five. It was thicker. spicier and smoother than the others. But by the time I'd reached that conclusion. pretty much any beer would have aone down just fine. I'd quaffed a aood ponion offive beers by that time on a stomach containing only a small bowl of Rice Chex. My face was feeling a bit fuzzy even tho~ I'd shaved that morning. My eyesijitt was a bit ossy even though my contacts were m perfect wor ina order. · Ap~rcntly I wasn't the only one feeling no pain. After a few healthy gulps of each beer. a heretofore quiet woman from the San Diego Tribune suddenly burst out in praise of Samuel Adams. "Oh, this is j ust soooo good! I mean it's really. really good," she proclaimed. as if we didn't believe her. Stle then d rai ned thealassof Adams and went to work on the remainder oiher Molson. By JONATHAN VOLZKE Of Ille O.Ur Hot l lell A nft between state and national officials of Mothers .l,ga1nst Drunk Dm - ing won't liherdown to tht' Orange Count} chapter or hinder th<' group's battle in keeping 1n1ox1ca1ed dn"ers ofT 1he road. the local MADD leader said this ~eek. Two ousted MADD leaders announced 1n Sacramento on Tuesday that they would spill from the nauonal group and form a new non-profit organization . .\m\C .l,ll\ e. Flanked b} several MADD members. former state administrator Pa tricia Ramirez and Shirley Graves. a member of MADD's state coordinaung comm11tce. said they would start the ne'' anu-drunl..en dnv1 ng group because the~ ''ere dis· satisfied with the d1recuon ~1ADD "as taking. Ram1 rt'z also said she hired an a11orne' to investigate the poss1b1h1~ of tiling a wrongful-term1nat1on su11 bccauc;c he v.as fired fo r endorsmg insurance rate-cut11ng Propos1t1on 103. Bauer ''a fired for endorsing the failed insurance-cutting Propos1uon 100 Ram1rei: v.as tired 1n a lcttcrth:u \31d her endorsemen t of Propos1u on 1(1' \\3'i .. contra!) to the fundamental pnnc1ple' ol ~t .\DD" bcl:tU~ 11 .. m:I\ re,uh 1n lu''t'r 1nsurann· rJtes for c' en ·1ho11e "ho ha' e been con' 1ctt:d of drun~ dn\ln~ ·· Ramirel. v.ho lo ta $36.0011·:1·\l':lr Job. charged 1hc nauonal leaJcrsh1p ot' \I .\DO v.as pl'l'occup1cd \\Ith fund-ra1<.1ng efforts and fired her under pressure from thr insurance 1ndu tr;. ''h1ch gt'naa ll ~ 'iUP-pon \t .\DD·s ellon . But Janet C3ter. the Oran11l' ( ount' M .\DO chapterd1rec1or. said shr ~upports the na11 on:il dcc1s1o n to fire Cira' ec; and Bauer. . .. Orange Cnunt) \f.l,00 ~uppom the deci"on of the n:u1onal board 10 re· organize C:1hforn1a ~t -\00." Cater said .. This action "as need<.'d 10 1n1pro' <.' commun1ca1wns and l'nhan~·r \l \Offs 3b1ht) to support the California 1.·haptcr' ·· Dcsp11c a lettl'r from .\ttome~ (1cncral John \an de ~amp sa~ mi othl'"' 1~ Cater said those tired knev. 1he1r pohucal actt\ 1t11~s Jeopardtzed \I .\OD's non-profit statu • .. , l nc" them and "hat happened 1s a 'hamc ·· <.. atcr '31d .. But the' made tht'ir lhu1le '>Omt" that I ''ouldn·i ha\t~ made. omc fl\'Ople don't gro" at the saml' rate as organ11:i11on~ ·· C'JJl'r '"shrd 1he ne" group ''ell. but '>aid ht' dou"ted ll \\OUld stnou h C'Ol'npete v. 1th \I .\DD. l'\Cn though some people no"" 1th \I .\OD ma~ chose IOJ01n the ne" group. "I don't c\pect 10 ce them 1n compel•· t1on "1th us." Cater said ··1 l>..nov. "'hat ~I .1,0D 1!> acrnmphshing and "'e ha'c Slll'h a ht'ad of steam on. \\e're \Cl) e\Ctll•d .itlou1 man~ ne'>' programs planned for 19 ~-and I thin!>.. the communll) \\ 111 t'C pleased:· \1 ~DD tx•gan 10 California 10 I %0 and spread na1 1om\Jde that same ~ear. \tore 1h.m I 100 fll.'upk "orl v. 1th the group in Orange t ount' and \1.\DD ha ..ioo chapta'\ nJt1,1n" 1d, he has received to continue to con\CSt his con v1ct1ons. He said MacDonald also has planned to use the settlement money to support his 11hna mother and brother. MacDonald v.-as awarded the settlement after a lawsu11 qa1nst McGinnis ended in a m1stnal more than a year qo. He bad sued the author. cla1m1ng he was misled while helpana McGinnis do research for the book. which was also the basis for a TV manisenes. But MacDonald has never aotten his hands on the money. It was impounded by the courts while Kassab's suit is beina litigated. The Kassab lawsuit. filed last December in Los Angeles County Superior Court. seeks the money and claims MacDonald should not be allowed to profit from his en mes. BostWlck said the settlement in larae pan was for damages to MacDonald and sho"l)dn't be sttn as a windfall. Bamng an out-of<oun settlement dur- ing a conference scheduled today. the suit tS scheduled for tnal Jan. 4. To be fa ir. it was obvious that none of us were professional beer tasters. At best, we were pro- fessional beer quaffers. So we were perfect to represent the general public. Aner the taste test (Samuel Adams was picked best by I 0 of 13 tasters), we staaered into an adjacent room for lunch -and a few more bottles o f Samuel Adams. Tentative agreement ieached lnjail deaths I left the hotel at 2:30. about three hours after I had arrived. A Iona lunch. sure. but then it wasn't just a lunch. It was an assignment. Boy, I love my job. By Tltc Assoclated Press The fa mil ies of two men who '>'rre killed after they were placed in a medical isolation cell with a combative prisoner have reached a tentative settlement 10 which Orange County will pa) $450,000. an attorney said. John Frank W1ICOA. 7 I. of Santa .\na and rthurOv1edo. 25. ofSanta FcSpnngs were killed at the Jail in ~parate 1nc1dcnts two '>'eeks apart. regulauons ""h1ch ""ould have perhaps pre' entt"d tht'~ deaths had the) bttn enforced." said Ke' in McDermott. at· tome\ for the families. agrttmenl ~as to be finalized today. \\ 1lco,·s fa mil ) Wiil receive S 150.000 and Q , 1edo's relatives wiU recei ve $300.000. said private IO\esttptor Mike Madigan As part of the agreement. the county has agreed "to amend and enforce certain Jail Ma·na Bastanchul'. the count) 's nsk manager. also conr.rmed a ten ta ti' e agreement '>'as reached Wednesda). The W11cox's death Jan. 17. 1986. ori&inall y ""as aunbutt"d to natural causes. Bu t. when HB man, his son convicted of selling illegal tax shelters BJ BOB VAN EYltEN °' .. °"" ......... A Huntinaton Beach man and his son have been convicted of multiple counts of fraud for selling a network of illepl tax shelters. Charles D. Spurrier. 67. faces a maximum sentence of 38 years and his son, Dennis C. Spurrier. 34. could spend up to 17 years in federal prison for perticipetina in schemes they claimed could make investors' entire incomes tax-free. I" one of the schemes. developed b_y convicted New York llJl swindler Frank L Fornier. investors' incomes were supposedly convened into non- tuable sifts throup the use of offshore double trusts. One of Forester's proarams. which the Spurriers marketed to hundreds of unwary investors. involved a pepcr corporati o n. lntern111o na l Dynamics. Under that .scheme. in· vestors became employtts of Inter- national Dynamics and si,ancd con-t..a11ran1~n1 all of their wasts 10 the corporation. The compeny then mUl"Md 90 pttttnt o( the mone) 10 c ........ A Slnea Ana ~oman rcoortcd the employct's in the form of "g1fi checks." which "ere 'iupposcdl~ tax- frec. Forester died ma ~l'" York pnson in 1985 after being con' 1cted .1 'ear earlier of cnmmal contcm(11 for refusing to stop selhng his phon~ ta\ shelters. The Spurricrs al o marlcted another scheme. de' eloped b> \. 1r- ainia tax dodger Burton 0 . Linne. under which investors were told the' could hide assets from 1hc fodcrnl aovernment through the uc; ... • of a private banking system and nn ofT. shore commodities e\change. Anotht'r program de\t'lopcd b\ Linne and sold b) 1he pume~ involved a form called an .\dm1n1')· tra11vc Notice and ~larat1l'Hl of lmmun1tv. which chento;, \\Cf'C up. po5'!d to lite in order 10 beco me kg:1I non-ta"<pa)crs. Linne ""as con' •C'ted of ta\ frau d 10 1985 and 1B cl"\m& t1m(' in a \1rgm1a pmon Ttree Bo"-trs. an U\"tant l '. attomc~ ~ho helped PR'P91"C' the Qlt •1n~t the ~P'I""~"" Y id tbe two \\ere abk to g1'e their schl•me'i :in .ur of lcgnht) through the 1,. IC\ er U!>l.' of ..legal mumbo jumbo ·· Others 1nd1ctl'd earh ... ·r 1h1 'car 10 connl'Ct1on \\1th lhl' la\ · fraud chl·mc included Ric hJrJ Dunn of Co ta \tes:i. \\a,nc G Hill l,f rountain \ allr~. H' rum <i \mumbl·n anJ h1~ ~' 1tc. £:.\ .1 ofS:int.i \na. L l'nn (1. Hill nf \11,.,11,n \ tClll .11ld Thoma' R m11h 1ltOrangl'. Dunn rk.Hled guilt) 1n June to on,· ... ·,nrn t of ... ·on<.p1r<ll'' .10,1 .1 llUnl of m.1 11 fraud 1n 1,.•onnc1,.11on ''1th thl' 'IChl'nll'' \11 Ill lhl' lll hl'I dl.'l~mfant "ere Hln\ 1c1cd l'<lrlu:r 1h1' ml"ln th on charge' ,1 ... ·mm1n~ from the 1lkgal IJ\ iihcltt'r'i l hl' Srum ... ·r' \H'rc t~1und guilt' h\ :i tcdc1 al JUI'\ in \Jnt.1 \n:i ,,, c,>n,p1rJC\ tv Jl'fraud th,· l n111.·,1 Stall'' a'i\l<.t1ng an thl' 11re1\lrJl1on ot la l\f la' return' "ttnin~ fal,~· n.·turn" an\J ni.ul fraud In aJd1t1on ll' th"· pniOn lt'rm\, the '" o ,1u!tt I•, 1cd mort" than S 0 0t.X) in tin~·, tJwm. • Srnltft('tna ., "h'"lult'U 11.)r • "'h 1'" fe II na "' · authon ties. Turned out. though. that the woman was hit b} a pa1n1 pclle1 fi red from an aar gun. • • • A man wuh a knchen knife robbed a 7-11 market on Bnstol trect of SIOO ... I know where )OU Inc:· he told the 18-)car<lerk as he left the store. Newport Beach .\ Tusttn woman lost her St> ·o heanng aid ""h1le ""atching the boat parade from Lido I land near V13 Lado Dn\'e. • • • Someone apparentl~ entered a 1ra"'el aacncy m the 4800 block of Birch St~t b) chmb1na a tire ex11 laddt'r to access a falSt' ~1hng and rcmo"'in& one panel above the agcn· C) ·s storqr room. The th1cfthen tool a tclcv1s1on. VCR. stereo. speal ers and t)pewritcr Hanu.,toa lleacla ThievHsc•romputerequ1pment valutd at S l l.000 frOm an unlOC'ked office 1ra1~ at 1he McDonnell Douglas '\stronautacsCo .. 5301 Bolsa .l,H. • • • • Four or fi,e peo ple in a small aold· colored 'eh1clc stoic Christmas dec- ora uons in the 8500 block of 1 .\ ugustine. P'oantain Valley Tools 'alued at $705 were tal en from a 1981 Dodge truck parted an the 16000 bloc~ of Mount Pne10 (enter earh Wednesda\ mom1ntt. • • • Golf cl ubs. carts and shots valued al S Q5 were stolen from a 1972 VW parked 1n the 1600 block of Talbert .\ "enue earl) Wtdnesday momina. Jrrine Som~nt' cut a chaanhnk ~nee at a ronstruc11on site 1n the 17200 block of Oa1ml~r Strttt over the Wttkcnd and stoic one ton of t1tan1um wonh sio.ooo. • • • Several v.indoW1 •ere"'°"''" at El Camino Real Schoof and santanffiu spra -eel on wvcral wallS airty Body found on beach in HB Coroner·, ofTi1:1al tcntat1' clv 1dent1fted tht-bod\ of a man d1i- ro"C'mi tloat1na TucWI' 1n 1he surf off Hunt1natM 'tatc Reach. but arc ~ 1thholJ1n b1\ name pcnd1n1 not1ft\'111on of rtlat1\(' TM bod\. din~ 1n 1 a ket, ~lacb and tt nn1 \h . wn d1\- CO\C'l"C'd ~ htcs~rJ tJ rm 11nd \\-ednesda~ morning. • • • Office equipment worth more than SI 0.000 was stolen from a business in the I 7900 block of ~ Park Boule' ard bet"''CCn 6 p.m. Fnday and am Saturday &arrested at sobriety checkpohlt ... • Officials Ignored secrets .black market Dresel wU1 plead oil~. pay $8&0 alllllon In fbiea W ASHJNGTON (AP) -Pentaeon em- ployees, contracton and defense consuhan&s ~Y deal in a .. black market" of classified Defente Department documents. and the aovem- ment has cloled ill eyes to the ~ice for at least five years. conaressional investapton say. A staff report of the conareuional Joint Economic Committee, released Wednesday. said the Pentaaon'1 internal investiptors discovered the practice in 1983 and souaht to bring it to the attention of Defense Secre&ary Caspar Weinberger and the Justice Department. But efforts to sound the alarm were ignored by bi&her·U{>S. leadina some subordinates to believe the pnctace was condoned. according to testimony at a hearina of the panel's national security subcommutee. . In a practice t'-8t atronaJy paralld1 &be Plllcrn an tht current Pen..,. proc:uttment hud cue. oullide dcimle consultantl would dcveloo aourt.es inside the Penuieon who could fumiah diem with duaifled data. the ~ said. Doaament1 included eecret bid specifk:ation1 for weapona systems and lo111-r1nee defense acquititiQn planL It could not be determined whether Petiuieon employees were Plid for '"' documentL The consultant• then sold the leCretl to contr1etors who couJd use them to set an edle on their competitors, at the same time deorivi"I the aovemment of the cost-savina beneffta of open competition, the investiption concluded. Sen. William Proxmire, 0-Wi&., the subcom- minee cMinnan. laid a& &he heari111 the practice is evn wone than the procurement fraud andal became i& involves n:i:' businetS informal~. but leCretl that if ttV couJd da,....e national ICCUri..,.!r.: • h. h . .d . ol a Qlll;' pnctace. w IC wa&nestes 11a anv ved 11 leMI two dozen defente contl'ICton. is continuina. said Donald Mancuso, an usistant Pentaeon inspecaor ~neral. Jobn F. DonneUy, director of the Defente lnvestiptive Service, told the hearina eipt of lhetn are still under investiption. He iden&ifaed thole as Boeina Co.. General [)ynamicl Coro .• Litton ~~s Inc .• Martin Marietta CQrp., McDonnell Doua1U Corp.:z. North- rop Corp., Sanden Aslociales Inc. and TK W Inc. I IJ n. A11nlaW Prw NEW YORK -After UICrtina inne>ttnct for more than two ~n.. W~ll Street powerhoule Drexel Bumham Lamben Inc. a~ tu plad P.•!tY to six felonies and Pl)'_I record S6SO million fine t~ settle ihc bi~t leCUnUes f~ud cue in hillOr)' The plea ba~in lllftment 11 tht most stunn1~ bftak yet in a criminal ..... of tlw nation s flfth-la~t investment firm. wh1eh ~krol!cd some oflhe ~·corporate takeovers of the decade throuah its PIOMenn1 use of hiah-yt:eld ••junk bond" 1«uri1~. .Th~ lllftmtnt. anno~nccd Wednesday by U.S. Ano~~ Rudolph W. G1uh•!l•· docs not pro&cc1 M1cbael Milken, Drexel'• senior hillf-yield bond executive and a key ~ c;>f t~c criminal probe. The inves&ipuon alrr:edy has cost C?ruel nearly $2 billion 1n lost business and lepl expenees. upped morale of its ~ 0.000 employ~ and seriously undermined what many conside~ Wall. ~trcet s most lllttlSlv~ ~nd able financier. Sources familiar w11h Drexel s.dcc1s1on who spoke on condu1on on anonymity uid its board of directorsaaonizcd Wednesday afternoon before approvina the settlement. U.S. considers military action against Libya U.S • .al dler, Turk arrated f or •ploa .. e sA VANNAH. Ga. -An Army intelliaencc analyst who boasl!!d ot~ing for ~ and 1 Turkish-born Aoridian wcrr arrested for selhllJ. h~ly sensetive" documents to East Bloc qents over ~·" y~rs. authoritaes said. Warrant OfrlCel' James William Hall Ill. 30, who IS stationed at nearby Fort Stewart and served in West Germany. wasarrested here Wednesday and taken to the buc detention facilitr.. said Lt. Col. John Cha~la. an ~rmy ~esman in Washinaton. Huseyin Y11dirim was arrested at hi s home an Belleair !;teach. Fla., near St. Petenbura,and was~hed'!led toappear~fo!t.• U.S. fnlllllrate in Tampa. Fla.. for a bond heanng th11 afternoon. Y1~'""!· a 60-~r-old Turkish native, was charsd with conspiracy to commit cspaonaee. said Ed Dutko, an qent in the Fifi's Savannah office. Hall has not~ been formally chaf'ICd, ChapaJa said. NEW YORK (AP)-Military action against a Libyan chemical-weapons factory is being dis· cussed by the United Stateond its allies, Presid~nt Reapn said in a broadcast interview. "Well. let me say that's a decision that has not been made yet," Reapn said in the interview, portions of wbkh were shown Wednesday on ABC's World News Tonilbl .. We're in communication with our allies and with NATO fon:a and all, and we'rewatchina very closely that situation but even if I had made a decision. I couldn't ... " Reapn didn't finish the sentence. The full interview by David Brinkley is scheduled to be broadcast toniaht. Asked whether military action had been discussed with the allies, Reapn uid, .. We are dilCUllina with them and we want to pin down com~ly so that there is no question but that that 1 what is ... a plant that he is buildina and one of tremendous size." The ~nt said the United States knows where the factory is. Accordin& toa report in The Washinpon Post, intelliJCnce sources say the factory is an a larae complex 35 miles southwest of Tripoli . l t f c r f; l J r; : [: ~; • o 1 i J r; f t : . . . . • . · . . • , I .. · I • T I • · Shop Home Express/or the Best Gifts of the Season! Last inute Gifts At The Guaranteed HoME EXPRESS c .. ,.,,,ffl (JMlity: It begins-with name brand producu backed by the manufacturer's reputation and written warranty. At Home Express every product we sell must sell us first-on quality. style. value. and performance. GuNllt~H Lowat hie~: Our objective is to provide the lowest price and best value in the com· munity. 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IECORD ACALL210I. $2781 lwar•I ~ PACTB.1 Aff4mAaE. All·Allllm .... EcononUCll and dependable, Pactel's Trimstyle phone has 9· number memory, last number miial. tone/pulse sWitchable, is desk/wall mountable and hearina aid competible. There's even a directory In the base for frequently dialed numbers. PACTEL Pi PSI•. SMm ma Aff9Ml.E •M• CAmm WI I U This stylish, comf*l portable f'lam Sen,o li¥lll ,.,_. a IOOd. alr~ble AM/FM ndo and c:a.eue plaJW. Features a 2-way speaker 1ys1em, buih-in mic and more! M9tes a popular lift ror music iow.s on ,.,_., C1lrilbml lilt. SANYO M'7IU. west -· TII lllllm If PAC-llAll From Tencen. PK-Man is back., and he's hungrier than ever! lf you missed the pmc that chanaed the lives of millions the first Lime around, don't misa out now. Blinky, Pinky, Inky and Clyde-the not-so-friendly ghosts-are ready to tobblc. and PK-Man's rad)' to take control! 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CRASH ... . .. ~ P.-Al l source uad the U.S. Embauy 1n ••~ ~ Hdtinki, Finland, rtte1ved a tcle-J.z ~ ~-.1r phone threat about two weeks 110 ~f1-I.. l'rom a per10n da1m1n1 to belona to ~ the Abu N1dal sroup. a radical Palettinlan faction that has been ., : ,~ implicated in terronst attacks. ': ~· ihe caller said a bomb would be • ,,.: placed aboard a Pan Am plane and ll .~ l l ~t n would be earned by a woman, nt . 1~~ Slid the aovemment source. who ~ ~ lr.: spoke on condition or anonymity. 1' #. The aovernment source said that 121~/lC th~t was the basi~ for postina lf • 11'2 not!Cft at U.S. embassies. a~~ • In Helsinki, the Foreian Ministry said it had found no direct connection between the bomb threat and the crash. The ministry indicated in a s&atcment that it knew the caller. that be had made several threats and 1ha1 he had not left Finland since makin& his last threat on Dec. 5. • In Moscow, the U.S. Embassy last week warned American diplomats that a bomb threat had been made apinst a Pan Am flight flying from Frankfun, West German) to the United States sometime in Dccem· ber. The warning left it to the diplomats' div:rction whether to cbanae travel plans. The Washington Post quoted an unidentified Stalf •Department spokesman as sayin& six members of the depenment's Q1plomatic Secur· ity Service, who w~rc returning from Beirut, were aboard the jct. State Dcpanment spokesman Ben Justesen told The Associated Press that he could not confirm the report. In Nicosia. Cyprus. a non-Ameri- can diplomatic source said at least three Americans work ina at the U.S. embassies an Cyprus and Lebanon were killed. The source. who de- manded anonymity. said U.S. Am· bassador Bill K. Perrin confirmed a U.S. Marine guard from the embassy in Nicosia was one of the victims. Press Assoc1a11on quoted in· tellisence sources as saying the tip to the United States came fro m Mossad. the Israeli intelligence service ... h is believed the U.S. rccdved the warn- ina with some c1rcums~tion but advised all its embassies 1n Europe to post an internal memo on their noticeboards," Press Association said. U.S. government sources also said the Federal Aviation Administration warned Pan Am in early December that·thciirlinc might be the target ofa terrorist bombing on its Frankfurt-to- London route. In-Washington, State f>cisanment spokesman Dennis Harter said ncr t1ccs such as that in the Moscow embassy were routinel y posted in the cascofbombthreats. and a warning of that nature ··would not have been viewed as anything unusual.'' In Frankfurt. the a1rpon sccunty chief said officials stepped up sccunt) at Pan Am after rece1van1 threats against the earner earlier this month. An anonymous male caller to The Associated Press in London claimed rcsponsib1h ty for the disaster and said it was in re1ahat1on for the shootina down ofan Iran Air l\irbus by the U.S. Nav} cruiser Vincennes in July. The Nav) said the plane carrying 290 people over the Persian Gulf had been mistaken fo r an Iranian fighter. Al the time. some Islamic extremists vowed revenge. but later Iranian officials said they undentood the attack was a mistake. .. We the guardians of the Islamic revolution arc undertaking this her· oic execution m revenge of blowing the Iran air plane by America a few months ago and keeping the Shah's fam ily in America. We are very proud," the caller said. The aroup also claimed respons1· bilityforaJuly 18. 1987.carbombang in London that wounded Amar Hussein Amlr-Parv1z. chairman of National Movement for Iranian re- sistance and a former Iranian cabinet minister under the Shah. ... ; A &reat 1oaae of eartb aad wrecked bouee of die~ of LoCkerble allow tile patb of tbe cnehln& Pan Am BMl•l.,.47. Victims' fainilies' holiday happiness changed into grief NEW YORK (AP) -A mother cager to welcome hcr'child home for the holidays wailed "my baby, my baby" upon learning the worst 11 Kennedy Airport, where Ail.ht IOJ's fate was reduced 10 a flickcnng message on a gray scrttn: Sec Agent. Over and over. happy ant1c1pat1on chan~ to shock and gnef Wednes- day night, as relatives ofth<>Sc aboard the Pan Am jct learned i I had crashed rouie from~ndon"lo cw one. Authorities believed there were no survivors among the 259 aboard. "Many of these people were com- ing home iust for the holidays. for Christmas, • said Carla Abell. the volunteer disaster nursing chair· woman for greater New York. who helped c-0unscrabou125 families at an a1rpon lounge. "Some of the families arc aomg throuah the terrible pan of. 'Oh. l shoul3n't have ins1sted that the} come home.· or. 'Oh. wh> did I ever allow them 10 go over." Abell said. .\s she spoke. just hours after the flight was to have landed Wednesday. a sobbing woman passed by onl~ to find herself facing dozens of bnght ligh ts and cameras. "Look. my son is dead. What elst do you want?" she screamed. her words hanging in silence long after she had left the spot She was ar\guishcd over the loss of her son, a Syracuse student who celebrated his birthday three days ago. "It's so sad," said Abell. "He just turned 21 and was so excited to come home and share all of his great e:itperience with his famil y and friends. "And, you know, there was a bag party planned for tonight at home wt th a big sandwich and a cake and all the presents and now who's goma to be opening the presents." added Abell. who~ e)cs ghstened v.1th cmot1on. Some of the friends and relatives of the passenF.rs had to be treated for shock or ht&h blood pressure as they learned of t6e crash. accordi"I to Red Cross spokeswoman Debra Ric- ciardi. "It was a horrible surprise," she said. "Some were completely over- come. A couple just collapsed. Othcn nLinto.~·~~ At Syracuse University, more than 25,000 pcop&e anendi"I a basketball ~me 119used for a minute of silence iftcr it was learned that 38 studenu in the school's European study propam had been on . the JCL At the campus chapel, weepina students pthercd in disbelief as they heard the news. Rabbi Milton Elefant, chaplain of the Jewish students at Syracuse, amved at Kennedy a.nd said be spoke with lhc famiti.es of three victims from Syracuse.. .. Socm art just fttlina that the end has come. One woman 6ad to talk her bean out. Another cou~ fdt they would meet the1rson apin in another life and wcrt stror\g. A third eou,plc was somewhert 10 the middle," he recalled. Neither Pan Am nor the univcnity had released passenger names by early today. saying the list still had to be compiled and relatives ootified. However. some names were divulged by other sources. James Fuller. 50. vice president in charsc of Volkswaacn United Saates Inc., and Lou Marengo, 33. the company's maricctiQ& director, had boardina passes for Flight 103 and apparently died tn the crash, Vol~ wagcn spokesman Tom McDonaJd said 1n Troy. Mich. Also aboard were the U.N. com- missioner for Namibia. Bernt Carlsson, 50. of Sweden: and John Mu lroy. The Associated Press direc- tor of intern.at1onaJ communications. Namibia gains independence Al * Otenge CoMt DAILV ptlOT/ Thurtday, December 22, 1988 NYSE CoMPos1 n TRANSACTIONS Due to tr•amlaalon problema, tom,'!9 oloelng ..,._..,, .. not In the o.llJ Piiot THURIDA Y'S 11 A.II. (PIT) PlllCll Market slips some more NEW YORK (AP) .-The stock market showed a small loss today. registering no strong response to news of a settlement in the case of Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. The Dow Jones averqe of 30 industrials dropped 1.6010 2.163.04 by 2 p.m. on Wall Street. WH AT AMEX DID I W H~T NYSE 0 10 NEW YORK (AP) Dec. 21 l l NEW YORK (AP) Dec. 21 AMEX LEADERS , NASDAQ SuMM~RY OTC UPs & DowNs NYS E U rs & DowN s \ PFDPIE Tickling a helpless child is sadism, not harmleSsfun DEAR ANN LANDERS: When I was a little girl my two sisters used to pin me doWn and tickle me until I couldn't breathe. They were both older and biucr than I was, and when they pnaed up on me I didn't stand a chance. ram very ticklish all over so when I protected my ribs and feet. my sisters would still tackle my legs and baek. Summer was always the worst because swimsuits and light clothing left me especially vulnerable. It was an almost daily agony. Sure, my mother steppe<( in when the tickling went too far and J became hysterical, but she couldn't be there all the time. When one or both of my sisters had mcalone in the house, they loved to comer me. I am 26 now and even though my sisters probably never think about what they did 10 me, I still stiffen if either of them comes too close. · I know most people believe tickling is harmless fun. but when someone tickles me, I don't consider it fun . I cringe. Ann, please get the message out 10 parents, and especially older brothers a'nd sisters: Tickling a defenseless kid is not child's play. It's cruel. and that BJ CllARLEI GOREN ... OMAR SllARD' North-South vulnerable. South deals. NORm +Jl \)A Q <> kl763 • 10 9 6 2 EAST •Void \J 9 I 5 WEST +Q9175 \) 10 7 6 2 <> A 4 +A 5 0 I 10 9 5 •Kll743 SOUTH + AK 10 6 4 3 'V KJ43 <> Q 2 •Q The bidclin · Soat.. Wnt 1 + P ... l \J Paa · J. p .. Paa Dbl p .. Nortb I NT 2 NT 4. Pua Eut , .. , .. Paa Pus Opening lead: Two of \I Beware of tipping your hand to declarer. On thi• deal from a nation- child needs to be rescued. -AL-LISON IN N.J. DEAR ALLISON: I bve dealt wl~ da,11 problem before, b•t tlckll•1 Is 111c .. a well-displled form of tort•re &Mt I . feel It 1Htlld be umasked perWk:ally. T1ctUa1 It NOT, repeat NOT, Mrmla1 fu. It Is a sabtle form of 114'11m. CMJdree bve bee• no .. to 10 lato coev1111... after betll1 llckW for a loa1 time. Pare•t• sllo•ld be alert to tlle du1en of tlckli•1, ud It slloald not be toler- atecl. • • • DEAR A NN LA N DERS: ..Bereaved and Grieving" is lucky she found out about her cheating hus- band after his death. Now she can give her best .. friend.. the cold shoulder and gel on with her life. I wasn't so lucky. I found out about my cheating husband 1wo years af\er he retired and we moved out of town. He had been sleeping with prostitutes for many years and was send1n1 money to his fa vonte. One day he neaJccted 10 put a stamp on a lencr to her, it was returned and I got the mail. When I read that letter I staned 10 check his belongings and found additional letters that left no doubt about the d ouble hfe he had been living. I no longer love 1h1s man, but he 1s a good provider and I am a good housekeeper. Sometimes I wonder how long I can endure this loveless life. but so far I don't have the courage to end ii. I'm sure I will someday - one way or another. You cheating men. take Ann's advice and bury your mail before it buries you or your wife. -DIS- 1 LLUSlONED IN FLORIDA. DEAR DIS~LLUSIONED: 'nukl for dae wanla1. MeuwllUe, yH dW.'t ask for advice so I •H't pve uy. l wOllder, laowever, aboat womea wlao stay witll mea wlllo patronize prostitJtet. ID t .. is era of AIDS, 1.n pa11ivity could be a deao se•tence. aJ team championship, a West play-and continued with a club, which er who had represented the U.S. in declarer ruffed. After cashing the internationaJ competition could not diamond queen, he played off the restrain himself-and suffered the king and jack of hearts. East's fail- consequences. ure to ruff confirmed declarer's Nonh was perhaps a trifle awes-card-reading. sive in the auction. In view of the Both declarer and West were now partiaJ misfit, a preference to two down to nothing but five trumps spades at his second turn might have each. A low spade toward the jack been preferable, and certainly a pass sealed West's fate. If he rose with of three spades would not have in-the queen, declarer would be left vokcd anyone's ire. However, there with four winning trumps between was nothing wrong with the finaJ his hand .and dummy. But playing contract-only the 5-0 trump split the seven proved no better. Dum- made it hazardous. Since West had my's jack won, and a trump, no real expectation of beating four ducked to West, forced him to win spades more than one trick, why he and return a trump into declarer's ~ould double for a measly extra 100 A-K-10 tenacc. So declarer lost points is beyond us. • only one trum triil..aod tbe-minor- Dcctate won The can opening -suit aces. lead in dummy. Had he had no help from the defenders, he would more than likely have taken a spade fi- nesse at this point. Warned by the double that trumps were not lying well, declarer cashed the table's re- maining high heart, then led the king of diamonds. West took his minor-suit aces % A..U.ble for a llmiM lime u a apedal offer ls a two-fcw-o• packqe of DOUBLES bookleU. for yoar copies lead S3 to "GOREN DOUBLES," cue lids eewspaper, P .0 . Box 4426, Ortu- do, Ila. 32I02-4426. Make cllecks payable to "Newspaperbooks." Friday, Ott. t3 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Full Moo~11on ac~Lfamil obb- gifiOns. propeny, completion of negotiations. Direction is set. future prospects 1llum1nated. Decision made two weeks ago was correct and ~ou'll know ll. Hurrah! TAURUS(Apnl 20-Ma} 20): Lunar aspect hi&Jlhshts 1nps. visits, ideas that can 0c transformed into profit- able concepts. You·11 be finished with .. losing propos1t1on." Some com- ment. '·Thank goodness. you've seen the light." Annual Yield Current Rat.e * ,. • ON DEPOSITS OF $1 0.000 to $99.999 FOR 180 DAYS IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS REGARDING AMERICAN SAVINGS WE WELCO:ME YOUR CAIL. 1-800-247-7197• Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.•Saturday 8 a.m. to noon •Substantial penalties imposed fOr early withdrawals on term 1CCOUnts. AMual yicJd ba~ on daily compounding when inaerest is left on deposit fbr one-year term. Rate. yield and term \Ubject to change without nocice. AMERI A FEDERAL SAVINGS AND IJ % Orange COMt DAILY PILOT/Thcnday, December 22. 1111 AT Complete t•vtslon llatlnga In Sundlly'a TV Plot GEMINI (May 21-J unc 20): 'e..., approach bnngs profit. H1ghllgh1 independence. creativity. St)·le. Emphasis also on romance. ab1 lit to geH o heart-oflnancrs. SpeeTal ote: Avoid heavy lifting. Leo is in picture. CANCER{June 21-J uly 22): Recent appointment with teacher. psychol- ogist or character anal} sl provided .. missing link:· '\ct on kno...,ledgc. refuse to be put off b} one who lacks talent. fallh. Ifs lime to make public appearance. LEO (Jul~ 23-Aug. 22): Whal }OU learn causes you to diversif}. to ask addll1onal questions. to insist on assurance of fiscal respon5tb1ht). lnd1v1dual was not realf~ frank in ou1hn1ng project. kC"lelons rattle 1n closet. VIRGO (Aug. 13-Sept. 22): Full moon position fa\'ors spcculauon. powers of persuasion. ability to win fnends and influence important people. You·rc on sohd ground and m d nver's seal. Taurus. Scorpio pla' roles. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. -2): Be anal} ucal. discern mou,·es. reahze one 1n authQrity will fa vor >'o ur position. Means be confident, direct, take m111at1vc. Special note: Be wary around electncll). sharp obJects. Virgo cares. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No'. 21 l: Fam- 11~ member 1s serious concerning JOume'. Attention centers around education. philosophy. theolog). metaph)s1cs. You'll be concerned with abstract design. color ..... caring apparel. Taurus mvohed. L.M. BoYo SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): What had been taken for granted requires review. Ask to sec facts. figures. Check ~~ balance be.. pos1t1ve conccmlna insUTancc, tele- phone payments. Needed infor- mation located in file. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Legal decision ~ in your favor. ~oull wtn applause and money. Focus on partnership. public rela- uons.. marital status. What bad been lojt will be recovered -within seven dlys. Aquarian involved. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 18): What had been considcTed an un- pleasant duty will actuallv prove stimulating. Accent on cmPfoymcnt. basic issues. pets, dependcnu. You'll reach more people. recognition and praise comes as surprise. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Lunar aspcct coincides with adventure, travel. vanety. unique romantic rcla- uonsh1p. Morale 1s efC"vated, member of opposite sex pays meaningful compliment Leo, Aquarius fiiurc prominently. IF DEC. U IS YOUll BlllTRDA Y you arc dynamic. creauvc, restless.. attractive to members of opposite sex. You have ·•writer's signature." Gemini. Virgo. ~ltarius pcopk pla) 1mpona nt roles m your life. You recently felt betrayed. but )OU have made comeback and an 1989 you will prosper. ha"c opportunit) to attain "stardom:· You arc capable of over- coming odds, you don't quit under fire and yoy have ability to inspire others. September will be outstanding for )OU in coming year. In bear country, it's a woman's world .\mong black bears. a mother rule a 1erntol). When her daughter 1s a 'ear and a half old. the mother assigns a pon1on of the temlOI) lO said daughter. This doesn't happen to the black bear son When he·s about three 'ears old. he·s j ust fla tout kicked off I \he propen~. Git. Look. there·s one down at the e nd of the bar. 5a) 1ng. .. ," momm' k1c~cd me out when I I was three:· . Pizza ongtnated tn • aples. true. but Neapchtans d1dn ·1 sttck ..... 1th 11 \\ ouldn t ta\e a bite of n for ) ears Then the toun t trade revived it I How do \OU account for the fact that comme"rc1al airline traffic surges hea' ti) e'er) S )ears 6 months" When )OU ne\t eat a pancake for breakfast. tf C' er. bear 1n mind it's JUSI about the oldc t prepart'd food m human h1stor\ Not that pan.cular pancake But 'E.a J?f "hcatcakcs of ~500 8.C. ""C'rcn I all that much d11Tertnt. urcl) wu knc" that a potato ha more acne than )OU do Reason )Ou don't hear much from Burttina. formerh l 'ppcr Volta. is hardl~ an} corrcspondcncccomcsout of there World's IOY>l'.SI htcra<')' rate. .\t 1 pcrttnt. If )OU don't count Vatican Ctt). Ylhert C\'Cl)bod) reads and .,,,cs, that natton ,,.,,h the h~ literacy rate as Finland Near- 1> 100 pnunt. Thtrt's na record tht outdoor tcmptraturt It the South Polr has ever toM lbo\'C I~ F. Q. What"s a "bap"? .\. '\ hamburger bun. Or soft roll ometh1ng hke it. A British tcnn. that one. ··Dogs don·1 cat does." That's what the ancient Ea> pt1ans said. To mean Qroplt' ought not pre) on one another. Old Romans said 1t. too. around 40 B.C. l'heu phrase: .. Canis a Caninum on Es1:· We've 'rumed n inside out . but 1111 allude to 1t. son of:-•tfsa dOt- eat-dog world." Esumators sa) all those Jtfts tn "The Twelve Da~s of Chnstmas" ""ould cost about $68,000 this year. Cheaper than last year. Due to a 2(). pcr<'Cnt drop 1n the cost of .. fivc ac>Jd nngs.·· Fut that! Wasn't the Madrid eanh- quake that rana Boston'sclnardl beth 1n 181 1. but the New Mlldnd ~. ew Madnd 1s 1n Missouri. Still. John F. Kennedy evtdmdy hked Warren Bcatt). Ifs saKI he waaeed Beany to portf111. ham 1n tbc 1963 mo"ie .. PT-109: C'hft"RobenloftlOl the pan. ho~ver. John Omms wrote pllys. la IM 11th century. He in,,.._. ... metallic sheet ---.. -Aw thu~ ~v~ .. :::s .. Appl. 11"8 ...... ~---.. . ~..,,... .......... ._ .. ~ Dn9il ........ ... ........... ~ .. •nrWc IMIL T• ....._ Ill~ ........, ... , ....... ~ _ ............... __ ..., ....... . Orange Coat DAILY PILOT I Thursday, Oecembef 22, 1988 by Bii Keane COUJlfTER CVLTUU by M••tt• & M•att• "Did you get our carp, Grandma? ... I licked the stamp!" ~fllt MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham r ,,., ~ '"'"'• S~t• ~ -, l l f l "Don't worry, I'm sending you one." . REMEMBER , l /JEl/£VE IN YOU!• PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz HI. MARCIE .. Wl-IAT DID "(OU I WROTE ABOUT ~ow I PUT DOWN FOR l-IOW \(QU ~ VISITED THE MUSElJM. AND SPENT '<OUR CHRISTMAS VACATION? : CLEANED OUT OUR 6ARA6E r-~__,,,-,,... __ __, ----i AND 14ELPED MOM POLISH ... A LL Tl-IE SILVERWARE ... : ~ • .;m-..,~ GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS ' R08El8R08E by Pat Brady ARLO AND JANIS FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE JUDGE PARKER FUNKY WIKKERBEAN I. Gar OU,.. fYV.J BIOGRAPH'.' OF B€£1HOV£~ AND ())Pf.:, DOING A "-1'f1l...E READING IONl6HI. .. N .,. u.:~=::::::::IC:..JiLl::J ~ L.;.L..i...-l-llto-~ -1 DOONltSBURY by Garry Trudeau I • I .... ,,_ i.--... "' .... '-IC<• ... 'ecl -dt be-....... .,.,,. ·~ .. ,.. .. ...,d1 I S IHEOE I I I I I' I . by lertce ar.n.d IF~- by Jimmy John10f1 ~ CUP 100 N»f 0 0 by Jeff MacNeti by Harold Le Dou" by Tom Batluk I t i2M r 81' I 1-. _t_E_I G-{-.. -1 ..... l 1 ..:..."":"..;.:. ·=·= ............. ,... _____ ...,, ........... --1 .. I IT •,,s I~ ol o I I e ,_ ........ •""'l .. ..-........... _ __._ ___ ._.. ___ _, -::..!i!.~ =. ";"? = Christmas tree fire, death are somber reminder T~{Dmie Brown is this year's holiday fire trqedy. The 26 year-old woman wu not an Ora• Coast resident. She may have had friends here, but her life had no 0 local hook'' u it's caUed in the news business. lbe same thing can't be said of her death. Wednesday's Associated Preus repon on Brown's death in I~ wu a terse four peraarapbs. It explained that dile Brown was frantically tryina to put out her blazina Christmas tree, she was enveloped in flames and burned to.· death. '"If you've ever seen a Christmas tree catch fire. you know they bun:-very intensely," Inglewood Fire Chief Roben Brown wd. The charred remains of the tree were found on top of her and a pan of water was close to her~. Brown apparently got the water from her kitchen in an attempt to extinguish the fire and somehow got caught in the ~inferno. The AP ended the story by reponing that investigators did not know how the fire, which caused an estimated $20,000 damage to Brown's apartment, started. The potential for a tragedy like the one that ended T~mie Brown's life exists in every home that has a Chris~ tree. That danger docsn 't recognize city boundaries or the difference between.a small apanment and a million dollar home. Each year, local fire depanments issue warnings about the bazarils of Christmas decorations, especially trees. Sometimes they invite photographcn and stage a Christmas tree fire in hopes that the pictures of the inferno will make local ~i~nts stop and remember basic fire safety during this happiest time of the year. Sometimes the warnings work. sometimes they don't. The Orange Coast has been lucky this year. Nothing of the maanitude of what happened to Tammie Brown has happened here. But the danaer is too close for comfort. Fire prevention during the Christmas holidays is not complicated. Common sense works mos lhe..Jime.-But __ ....__ common sense-too-oftentikes t e backseat during the holidays because Christmas trees and decorations are too often notrccognized as potential killers. How close is your tree to the curtains and furniture? Did you check the cords and sockets before the lights were strung? Does the tree have a water reservoir'! Was your tree treated with a fire retardant? What would you do if the tree ignited? These questions may seem fatalistic, but thinking about them is not. It j ust makes good sense. Helmet law Even someone who does not ride a motorcyle can imagine the sense of freedom that comes from riding along a street with the wind whipping through your hair. Never- theless. cyclists should be required to wear helmets. Assemblyman Richard Floyd, 0-Hawthorne. has in- troduced AB 8. a bill that would require cyclists to wear helmets. Each year, an estimated 4.000 people are killed in motorcycle accidents. In many instances. they are the lucky ones. The unluckr individuals are among the 100.000 people injured each.year in cycle accidents-the persons who fly off the cycles and slam their heads into trees, curbs, streets. automobiles and any number of hard, immovable objects. scrambling their brains and smashing their spinal cords .... While we would not want to sec the often abrasive Mr. Aoyd negotiate the next arms control treaty with the Soviets, he happens to be right on target with his helmet bill. AB 8 should quickly become law so we can begin saving lives and tax <lollars. S.crame11to u.1 .. Utilities merger Already, it seems every public agency from the city of Chula Vista to the county Water Authority is certain it can run a power company more efficiently and prudently than the directors of a corporation. Maybe they are rifht; but, maybe they are not, too. We are at least a ittle surprised that a public generally skeptical of its elected politicians' ability to keep the streets clean is tacitly and actively encouraging their various drives to pin control of monolithic structures as complex as San Diego Gas cl Electric or Southern California Edison. It is time to inject at least a measure of calm in this process. and it would be nke if our elec1ed leaders would begin ~ providing information instead of jockeying for a piece of the action. We do not particularly want to sec a Los Angeles-ha~ utility setting electric and gas ra1es or dictatinf utility-service policies to san Diego, nor do we want to sec .000 local jobs Jost. What we do want to sec is the lowest reasonable rates to provide the best possible service to San Diego County, with adequate controls to ensure that the process continues. It may be that a government agency can provide that function. We support. indeed urge. the undertaking of any feasibility studies to find out. ORANGE COAST llllJPillt .....__.,_,o1 ... ~et :llO Wllrll.C......_CA,,.._ a: ¥1*"°'10 .._ 1MO, COM• .._CA ... , ,., .. (dltOI ._r..., Astloltt [dllOI ,.a.. Nlws(MOI ........ City( .. .... c.... ~(-­......... r ..... ,..., c.. ... ..... ... El CaJ• Calllonl .. ....... AMt'*'I--...... _ ........... ..., ....... ADI ..... Slla...., ,.., ..... a........_....., ...... Clilllllllr _ ... c..-. .... ThurMey, December 22. ,... A9 ,,:----1i1i1i111~-- "0K, 'n'\4Sa OR~ \~ ~ ~ \i\\tl&\J ! ,,.'' New congressmen receive as much mail as Santa Claus It's almost Christmas -and I know exactly how Saota feels. The volume of mail a member of Congress receives each day rivals that directed this time of year to .. S. Claus. Nonh Pole." The difference is tha1 Santa has ample helpers. Until Jan. 3. 1989, a congressman-elect has no staff at all. The November-10-January period is the time that new members of Congress hire their permanent staff for the coming two-year term. Con- . grcssional offices are located both in the district and in Washington. so many of the logjstical pro_blcms of setting up a new office arc multiplied. Ifs a real challenge to be up and running b¥ Jan. 3 -and a vinual impossibility to be functional befor then. As a result. until the interviews and the hiring and the office set-up are completed. the new member of Con- gress finds himself awash in a sea of phone messages and letters. Most incumbent members of Con- gress esttmate they receive more than 300 letters during an average week. Thal total is swelled for new mem- bers. however. due to the enormous number of resumes from job seekers. I have now received more than 800 resumes from persons secling em- ployment in either my California or Washington offices. Just correspond- ing wnh the applicants. advising them that their letters have been received and that they are under considcrauon. has become a for- midable task. • Would that I could hire them all! The office work burden would be lifted. In fact. however. the budget for a member's congressional s1afT per· mits hiring only about six people 1n the district and eight or nine in Washington. That means there wilt be about 785 difficult teuers to wnte to people anxious to serve their country in the legislative arena. The good news, though. is that the tremendous interest in these positions has provided a pool from "'h1ch to select an absolutely top-notch 1eam 10 serve Oransc County's 40th Con~ional Distnctr For the last several weeks. I've been reviewing the resumes and organizing them according to the panicular job in a congressional office for which they W"ould be best suited. Herc are ~ principal. Job categonCs. and a bnef dcscnpt1on of each: - Chief of stafT -responsible for overall management and direction of both district and Washington offices. Supervises all staff and reporu di reel· ly to the congressman. Chicflegislat- ive and potiucal sttategisl. Should be ex pen on broad range of national and international iss ues. Legislative director -de velops and drafts legislative proposals. Bri~fs Che co~rnm-sutma - 1ive issues scheduled for hearing or vote. Like the chiefof staff. should be ex pen on broad range of nauonal and international issues. Manages the legislative assistants and correspon- dents. Legislative assistants -respon- sible for expert analysis of particular areas. of law and policy. such as national secunl)'. taxes or education. Legislative correspondents -help ansv.-cr mail from consutuents con· cern1ng the member's pos111on on vanous 1ssun. Alen cons11tuen1s whenCongrcss takes action on mat- ters of concern to them. Office manager -prepares fhe office budget. maintains equipment and supplies. pa)'S bills. District rcprcsentauvc -liaison between the congressman and consll· tuents tn the d1s1nc1. Meets wnh individuals and groups 1n1erested in issues that are. or should be. under consideration in Congress. Caseworkers -help cons111uents with federal agency problems. includ· ing Social Security. 1mm1gra11on. veterans' affairs and 1he I RS. In addition. other me mbers of the congressional staff assist cons11tucn1s with White House. Capitol and other Washington tour requests. as v.ell as w11h 1he processing of applications for nommation to the na11on·s m1h· tary academics. Obviously, these JObs require a vane1y of skills and spcc1ahzed knowledge. Ifs my inten11on to select 1he very best and bnghtest and most qualified people from amona ihe hundreds who have applied. so that each of these tasks 1s performed romptly<md"Cfficrcntty:t\-good-Staff can make all the difference in seeing to ii that legislauon of imponance 10 Orange County is adopted in the Congress. I'm looking forward to being able to repon to )'OU, in a column tn the not· too-distant future. the 1dcnt1tics and backgrounds of Orange County's ne~esl congressional team. Mean- time. rlljust have to k~p up as best l can v.1th the man) demands of a t"ongress1onal office tn trans111on. One detail ts finalized now. tl,lough: m \ Washington office. For those of )'OU who read my earher column of the v1c1sst1udcs and vagancs of the lotteT) for freshman offi ces. you'll recall that for months l'"e predicted that the system "'ould lea"e me wtth an excep11onally modest office on the fifth floor of the Cannon House Office Building. Ifs my privilege to report to you that our Capitol headquancrs will indeed be nght there. on the exact floor of that vc11 building. The address 1s: 510 Cannon House Office Building. Washington. D C 20515-5001 Please wnle-but please wan until after Jan. 3. Before then. )OU ma~ be better off wnting Senta instead of your Congressman. Oris Cox is IM C•pusmu- ~lttl for IM llQ Coopasioul District. Rich Green spreads season's ch~er from a street sweeper Dressed in Santa togs, he has become a Newport Beach Christmas tradition Whatever it is. Christmas cenainl> bnngs It out in us. ome people get strangely gen- erous. magnanimous even. People who wouldn't 11ve )OU 20 cents for a cup on coffee any othcrdayof1he year become sof\ and gooey when Christmas rolls aroun~. The man who speeds up Harbor Boulevard and blithely roars pasl the fellow holding 1he ··Will Work for Food" s11n suddenly fishes mto his pocket and draws out a roll ofb11ls to help 1he needy. Other people take a stroll riiht past generosity and plunge stra1gn1 into excess• veness. These arc the people who ~hove their wa) p;ist the Salvation Arm) kcnle to get into the department st~•;. where the) proceed to dn!I a hole in to the limit on every crcd11 card they own. And still the) arcn 't sausfied. l'hnstmas dccorauons are of\cn a fair puae of how people cmbraC'C the season . Some folks make do with a couple of svands of hahts.. S1molc. neat.~­ wirier, blue and ~n. Noth tr• fancy. Nod9lal ......... Olhm latt t0tcther more cutnsion cords than Circu11 Qty Ql'ries. Tbete·s SI. Ntek and Iha• •• ,,.., IC'enc with fake snow. jll••1M• cmllla. Clullrtte Brown ...... _..., -well. )"OU know l'lii ...... 11 ralllit bct..un thcx c,. t;t;:~--=--ft dw ~ Ul)t to • -tht "IC' of ~kf'« -are the small and tender ac-ts 1ha1 make 1he season special. And that·s whert we find Rich Green. Rich Green 1s a street sw~per. He works for the cit)' of Ne" port ~ach_ Hts beat. if you would call 11 1ha1. includes the area west of 1he San1a Ana River. the neighborhoods around City Hall and the streets m West ch ff. Some people mtght thtnk that being a street sweeper 1s a pcrfunctof) JOb. but Green bnnp sprc1al na1r to II as Chnstmas approaches. For no panicu lar reason. he d res~s up as Santa Claus before malmg his daily rounds. He· been doing 11 for10 vears now and doesn't remember wh) he ever started. "I suppose it's because I hk e kids I like to sec them smile." Green has seven children of his own and tvi.o grandchildren. so I suppose he knows "hat he's talking about. Eachjcar. on the five workin& da) before C'hnstmas. Green slips into his u11. grabs a mammoth suppl) of cand) canes and heads out. He has a public addrns S)Stem anachC'd 10 h1 swttpcr so he can belt out lhe appropriate "ho. ho. ho .. H he rounds comer after comer. O\cr the years. ~pit ha'c come to c'pcct him. Kid tand on come" and *l\C, fam1l~ Uflr him to puU O\'ef '°the) can \nap hi' picture and Othen JU ' tare 1n d&~lt<'f Dunna the rut '~"· Grttn hind· N out a ~ dotcn \:<all\.' nu )'flf. STEVE MAllLE he· hoping .:!00 will be cno14h. GrC't"n·s seasonal ruual s&ancd off anon) mousl). He did not Sttk put>- hcll} In facL he kept h1 Santa habit to himself for t"o ~cars. It "'asn·t until a woman from Irvine sa" Grttn blasting down a side strttt in lull uniform that he v.as found oul. She called Cit~ Hall to compliment 1he c1t\ fathers on 1hcir holtda) pint. "The cit) manaacr caned do•-n here and wanted to know 1f ~Md someone dressing up as San• Claus and my boss said no way," Green said. "Tbtn ht asked me, and I 111d: 'Yep. that's me.' .. b c-n then the San1a S«ret •-a kept fa1rl) intact -1bat 1s. until a pohcc officer radioed 1n a rtpon of a street s"c-eper dres5Cd as Santa Claus. :fen )cars on. Grttn 1s some1h1na of a l~end 1n ewpon Brach. But n 1s not fame or aucnuon that mouvatcs Green. h 's wmcthll\I much simpler than that .. , ou know. l'\e v.aechcd kids Vo"' up. l'"l' tttn )OUn& propic moH into M1$hborhood t\a\:e Chtldrcn andscult~. The> Wl\tlom(and smile at me. That's what I hkc. "'.\nd *Mttmn I e11n ,rt an old srouch who ncvtt smdn and '° a'8Ck '9P, You can't ask for~ tlaa .. hat ... No. I ';c: )'OU ca•'•· ~ ............. nrr.-er. L' 1.' (J 1 t , I r r Letters won 't change vote of no confidence Tow Editor: Althouah we hes1ta1e to continue dtbauna tht morale _problems of the Huntanaton Beach City School Di~ tnct's teachers through the media. 11 is necessary to respond lo the lettcn recently published an your ~ paper. Durins Dr. Peter's two-year rcip as supenntendcn1 at the Huntinatoo Beach City School District, several awards have been received. Even thouah Dr. Peters likes to take credit for ttlesc awards. they were earned by the hard work and dedication of teachers. sue administrators. stu- dents and suppon personnel who wert working towards excellence Ion& before Dr. Peters arrived on the scene. The teachers reluctantly accepted a two-year settlement which had been recommended by a fact-finder. How- ever. many things had chan&cd in the financial picture since the facts were presented b)' the district in June of 1988. The projected I percent r'c$erve in June had ballooned to almost five umes that amount by ~ptember. We were forced to accept a settlement based on erroneous anti outdated information. We are puzzled as to why Mn. Bobbm Williams. a close friend of Dr. Peters who has no children in our schools. Peter G. Mehas who has probably never been to Huntinston Beach and Tom St~le, a Fountain Valley resident. would bother to embroil themselves in our con- troversv. No matteT how many people br. Peters may solicit for hC1" cause. 1hc fact remains that 85 percent of all the teachers in Huntington Beach City Schools voted by secret ballot that they no longer have confidence tn the leadership of either Dr. Peters or the board of trustees. CAROLE. AUTREY . President. Hunungton Beach Elementary Teachers Association S-useys ou reconsider helmet law To the Editor: ow that actor Gary Busey is apparently on his way to a full recovery from his motorcycle acci- dent. lefs hope he rc1hinks his earlier oppos111on to 1he mandatof) use of helmets by motorc)chsts. The Cali- fornia Medical AssdCtat1on would welcome him 10 the ranks of the convened. He came too close to permanent brain inJUr) 10 continue his argument 1hat training, not helmets. is the ans"'er to pre"enting inJury. Mr. Busey 1s a wcll-tratned, cxpc:ricnccd motorc)cltst but nonetheless lost control and struck a curb with his head. There's another consideration, beyond the toll of death and injury. A stud) Cited in the JUI) ISSUC of the JoumaJ of 1he ..\merican Medical Assoc1a11on tells us that 65 ~rccnt of the costs of motorqcle accidents arc ultimately borne by 1he public -you and me. L.\ RE 0 P. WHITE. MD San Francisco TODAY IN HISTOR Y Today 1s Thursday, Dec. 22. 1he JS71h da' of 1988. There arc nine da-. left In the year. toda) ·s H1ghhght 1n History: On Dec !2.1944.dunngtheWorld \\-ar II Battle of the Bulge. the Germans demanded the surrender of encircled i.\mencan troops at Ba togne. Belgium. BnP-dier Gen· eral .\nthon~ C. McAuhffe pvc his famous one-"'ord reply:-Nuts!" The .\mencans were ablt to hold out until add1t1onal . . forces ended the siege four da-.s later On 1h1s date: In 17 5. a Continental naval fleet "as organized in the rebelhou mencan colonies under the com- mand ofEzek Hopkins. In I 94. French arm} offit"cr Alfred Drc>fuS v.as con' 1cted of treason in a coun-man1al 11\at tn,ggcrcd world- wide charges of ant1-Scmit1sm. (Drc~fus "'a ult1matcl) vindicated.) In 1963. an official 3<kia) mourn- ing pcnod for President John F. Kcnntd\ ended. In 19 4.inacasctha1dt-cwnat1onal attention. cw 't ork Cit) l"CSldent Bernhard Goetz shot four black )ouths on a Manhat&an subway. claiming 1hey were about to rob him. Ten )ears aao: In Gu)'8na. a coroner'SJUf) rukd that nearty 811 of the more than 900 ptople who died at 1he P~pks Tnnpk commune 1n Jonestown had been mu~. with the cxccptton of two that lheJUr}' •id committed su1ctde, andOMwbolllll} or may"°' have committed Miki*. Five \lean ..,: PLO ~ YaSKr Arafat. dnvcn into exile~ Ublnon by S)TIAIM!lded ,.._._ man ttbl'ls. stot>Ptd 1n Ca110. fcypl. whet-c he rcttt "ed a _.,,.. • tlcome from PrnMknt Hosnt Mublnk. Toda)"s Btnhdays: Lldy linS John10n 1s 76 TV pttlOMlny Octie Ra)-bum IS 71. nt 5pelHr ~et U.S. Houtt of R~.J1m Wnlht. 1166 . .-..n pll,er ~ C1rfioft • 44. CBS ~ewe 1Ji 11 deft\ a-. s..,. • 4.1. .. 1•1• =~QalwJ114G. ..... Wb ... .._ OM .. --.. -.,n.A n 9 I I"-.. \ t The Intelligent Choice! .,. c:i.-C1ly ............ CONVENIENT HOLIOA Y HOURS: THUUOAY FRIDAY IATURDAY HAM · 1•M t • MtDNtOHT UM • WM DeHvery Avelleble 7 Deya A Week. Aw......_ I 0.p"' ••Mnflefd. 19" REMOTE TV Zenith 1r Cabl•·RHdy TV with Computer Space Command Remo .. 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We uk that you return the merchandise 1n new cond1llon with your sales r•ce1p1, carton and accessories Circuit City l ow Price Guara"'""' If. w1th1n 30 days ol your purchase a1 Circuit City, you ltnd the same item lor l•h f t any local store. 1nclud1ng ours, we'll refund the dlllerence • plus 1~ ot th• difference Thia offer e11cludes the C1rcU1t City Ouaet StOfe. OVER 100 LOCATIONS IN 12 STATES PrtcH Effecttwe Thni laturdey, O.C.ntllNr 24, 1111 ~("1 .. ....... . -·-- 1949 ... _ .. -.......... 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I 839 S La Ci•MP 8 1 ca13> 2eo-0100 Lats.wood 4950 Faculty (213) 408-2168 Montebello 2441 Via campo (213) IU-0000 NOW OPEN IN NORWALK! 11758 Firestone Blvd. 12,3) ... ,000 Pa .. dene 39 N. Rosemead (IHI) 798-4444 Tor'8nce 18020 Hawthorne Bl (2131 370-3333 w. Loa Anvele• 3115 Seputveda (213) 391-3144 ORANGE COUNTY Buene '•"' 200 N Beach Blvd. (714) 220- Hunttngton Beach 7777 Edlnger Ave. (714) 89S·9966 latun• Hiit 23541 Calle De La Louisa ( 714) 155-1118() Oranve 1407 Chapman (714) 634·9393 Saftla Ana 2445 S Britt°' • 2 ''"'" north ol So. co .. 1 Plaza ( 714 I 545-1 eoo SAN FERNANDO VALLEY Northrtdp 17037 Oevonthlre (111) 366-5444 '""' otefll .,....., ... CM# eweryOay IOw pt1ce Alt 11em1 are blClo.ed ti"( OVf 30 Clay I.OW ..,... ~ .All ......... " per c"•"'* .... s '"'0 I Ol\IM Wlltl THO.,., ..... " 001 •rtd ,, ''°"' ........ to IOllHI. .. ..... a Clrcwit c,,., C"•te Cato lut»ieet to""" ewo..11 A" TV tcrMM ~ • ,,,,,..,, ' Yan uya 13e30 Victory Bl. (818) 782·3355 W and Hiiis 21470 Victory Bl. (818) 8&a-1212 N GABRIEL VALLEY Montct•lr 5150 Plan Ln 1714) 625-6665 W••• Co.tna 339 N. AZUH Ave ( 818) 966-8385 SANTA BARBARA 3711 State St {805) 589-0300 OUTLET CENTER 5555 E. Olympic Blvd .. City ol Commerce (213) 72""'381 ) ._..._ ....................... ...... ...... ~c.-.. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1988 Luke Da Vis-quite a diff erei:i t character He fon dly rem em rs h is p laying days an 3 0-year h tstoryo coachtngtnarea Sttond of two f»NS. By JON FERGUSON ............... Just like lhe kids of today arc quite · 1 bit different on the surfa~ from the players on his lint Newport Beach youth bmsebmll team in 19S4. 82- rear~ld Luke Davis was guite a dif- ferent charac- ter from the yo uths o f those earl y t ea ms he -~-------coached. Lake Dam The Costa Mesa man who offered his time to 3S baseball teams .of Sth-through-8th graders over a 30-ycar period and to other community causes, has a back- around rich in history. His family homesteaded 160 acres in Eastland County, Texas in about 1898, grazina cows and farmin& the land for 2S years before his·parcnts picked up and moved to Huntinaton Beach. His first year in California. was his fi rst at Huntington Beach Union High School, where he played football -his favorite sport. plus basketball and baseball. Anaheim won, 7-0. Then Huntinaton defeated Fullerton, which hadn't been scored upon before facin1 the Oilen. ••1 went to school with Clare Van Hoorebekc, .. Davis said ... He wu a freshman when I was a senior. He'd come down and tell me what I wu doi".'J wrona. He was a freshman, but I'd listen to him. I followed him all thouah his coachin1 career." Pictures of Sheue and Van Hoorebeke arc amon1 the many memorabilia that han1 on Davia' walls. Davis aractuated in 1927. went to work for Union Oil and bcaan buildin1 his own house in I 930.1ie built most of it himself durin1 the depression, taking _ his time while )a.vesting the S 1,800 it took to erect the cute little structure on Costa Mesa's west side. Of course. it was built when land wasSSOOan acre in Costa Mesa. when the wood for his three-quarter inch hardwood floors cost a total ofS3S or the complete plastering job squeezed $80 from the wallet. Davis played basketball in rec- reational leagues from 1930 to 19S4. originally competina for the Balboa Pharmacy when basketball "was rouaher than f ootbaJI." tfe retired from Union Oil in 1939 at the age of 33. investing in property for financial freedom. "Most people don't think l ever worked," Davis said. "I have a soft spot in my heart for the workin' people. That's why I give my time. worked 358 days on building the Masonic Lodge. Then a few yearsa,o. they ga ve me their hifhest award.' .... _ .... It's the football championship -a share of the Orange League title with Anaheim and Fullerton after going 8-4 under Cap Sheue in 1926 - which is his fondest memory as an athlete. He was one of l2 players on the team and the starting fullback. Eleven play~ both ways and there was one substitute. He rcmemben the Oilers gaining 17 first downs to Anaheim's one, but Retirtment pve him the freedom wh ich allowed him to perform volun- (Pl eue Me LUXE/113) The orUtna1 1928 Baattnatoa Beach IUf.h champloaahlp at far n,Jat. wu their coach, Cap Slaeae. 8talMllD1 aeat te footballteam met 50 yean later for a rea.nlon . Stan4ln1, Sheae wu Lake Dawia, Illa fallback and lOlll'thM frtend. inoverHme Palmer's la t e 3-potnter wa sted in Anteater los s UCI, 2-1, forced the overtime on a 3-point aoal by Rod Palmer with three seconds left. gas tn°the extra session. . seconds left. the Anteaters had their chan ce for Crony. a sophomore euard who matched the tie. "We had somethi!'I else set up," said UCI Coach Bill Mullipn of the Anteaters' last-ditch play to send the game in to overtime. "(Mike) Labat j~ the ball, then penetrated and kicked it off to Palmer. who very smartly ran behind the.3-point line. his carccr·hiah with 20 points. drove the lane "We came back really well," said Mull(gan . for two baskets and assisted on two Kenny "butwcd1dsometh1ngswecan·1 afTordtodoto CHARLOTTESVILLE. Va.-lftherccan be any consolation from a defeat, the UCI men's basketball team found some Wednesday niaht. Turr.er dunks in the eJttra period. wan pmes. Crotty scored six straight points O\Cr a .. We can't afford to ha\e Rick} Butler foul one-minute span late m rcgulauon. gi ving out as earl) as he did and 11 reall) hun to not Virginia a 75-66 lead. have Rick) and Flo)d ~•th the game on the The Anteaters extended Virsinia into ovenime bcfo~ bowing to the Cavaliers, 99-89. at Univenity Hall. It WIS the first time UCI had ever played an Atlantic Coast Conference school in men's basketball. "If I was Virginia. I would have let Labat take the layup."'' Palmer recovered from a slow start in which he missed hi s first eight shots. He finished with 21 points. hitting "8 of 23 overall and S of IS from 3-point range. Virginia had an 85-78 edge wnh 2:29 to hne ... play. but the Cavaliers missed the front end of Butler. making has first start at UCI. fouled three one-and-one frtt-throw opportunities out Wlth 8:07 remaining on a dispute charging and did not score the rest of the way in call. Butler was whmled for a technical foul regulation. when he argued the pla y an wh ich Croll) ran The Anteaters were able tb battle back as into him. Richard Morpn scored a career-high 27 points and John Crotty helped Virginia outtc0re UCl, 14-4, in overtime. Morgan. a senior auard. also arabbcd IO rebounds as Virginia improved to 7-1. "Palmer had a temblc first half. but a great second half," said Mullipn. "But he was really dying(from fatiaue) in overtime." The Anteaters. on the final ofan eight~ay. three-same road trip. all seemed to run out of Kevin Aoyd hat a pair of free thro~s to make 11 V1rg1nia appeared an command earh. SS-80 with I: 16 lefi. A Virginia miss at the foul L taking a 23-9 lead with 12:52 rema1n1ng 1n the line allowed UCI to climb closer as Flo)d hit a first half. UCI then ~cnt on a 15-~ run and drivi ng layup to make 1t 85-82. and after caught the Cavaliers forthe first ume at ~9 on a another Cavalier failure at the line with 27 3-point goal by Mike Doktorczyk. I . • • ; I I ' I ·Mater Dei hires . !Rollinson to take over football post ~ -F-o-rm-er Monarch Gary Carr gave it a three-year try "'-Price and nelJed a record of 15-10-2. and .. ' resigned under pressure. geTtn Thomu Dain Man1na11 Warren J obntt0n ! assumesjo from t tsmtssed Gallo . Wayne Cochrun tried it for seven years and was 38-32-2. and resigned. ree<!rtedly under prcssurt. 'I don't know whether we can bnng it back or not." said the 39-year-old Rollinson. "but win or lose wc·re goina lo have a successful program. Katovsich Player of Year t By ROGER CARLSON : °' ... °"" ..... ...., 1 Promising a return to the theories which had Mater Oci High's Monarchs on ------...., • the top of the , heap in the early '60s, a football prod- uct of those &Jory dlys has taken over the head coachina duties followin1 the dismissal of Chuck Gallo. Bruce Roll-L....::-.:..:: ..... '-' • inson, who IS a ao11ta •• :_ junior led Mater Dci to the CIF 4-A championship with a 21-0 victory over Mickey Cureton and the Centen- nial As-hes. and to a semifinals bcnb 111inst Anaheim at Anaheim Stadium u a 1nior before 38.000 f'ans, is the Monarchs' eiahth coach in the school's 3&-year hi11ory. His predeceSlor steP:S down with a five-ye9r record of 32-24 and will continue at Mater Dci in the math de~n~nt. Gallo who brouatn in a new look to Maeer bei footbmll with an .. A1r- Moaarch1" philOIOphy, fared little belier than three others .-~ tht llor'Y days of Dick Coury when Rolfinton and others led Mater Dci. "It's going to be a people prcsram. Somewhere in there a.re the ingre- dients.everyone pulling l<>&Cther. and CcfM linebacker heads CIF Division VI squad ; five others fr~m Sea View named I I have to aencratc that spirit. Corona del Mar High linebacker "I wan\ a rttum to 'Look out. here John Katovs1ch. the heart of the Sea comes Mater Dci.' ·• K.mgs· defense which led the wa> to The Rev. John We ling said it was a the Cl F Division VI football cham- dccision by committee which de-p1onsh1pand an unbeaten season. has termined Gallo's fate, a coach who been chosen Player of the Year in all- had been under fire for the past two CIF selections by the First Interstate season by a dcmandina aroup of Bank-Amateur Athletic Foundauon boosters. of Los Angeles· high school awards "It's a toup boosters cl ub." ad-board. mitted Rollinson. "but it's highly Katovsich. a 6-foot-3. 225-pound supponive. too." senior. was a unan imous choice for Rollinson said hlS Monarchs will the award as Coac-h Da\e Holland's become more balanced offensively Sea Kinas swept to a 12-0-2 record. and attack on defense. It was Corona del Mar's first-ever "lhave thetrigcrguycom!ngback . appearance in the finals and the Sea and I have the center rctuminJ. so I Kings made aood on their chance know I have a good snap.· said with a 17-7 victory over the defcndin& RolhnlOn. "But r know there arc champion. Vak'nc1a. some holes lo fill as well." Also honored from the cham· As for dealina with a schedule pionsh1p ttam with first team honors which will 1nc.ludc Edison. Fountain were quarterbmck Ty Pncc and dc- Vallcy. Hununaton Beach. Tustin fensive back Warren Johnson. and Santa Ana next year. in addition lo the Antelu1 lclauc. Rollinson admitted otivious~lcs. as well a Poa. tht competition comina froJTl Sen 1tc 8 and the new Parochaal school to the 8 south. Rancho Mlfllrita. OFFENSE Pa.yer,KMel Three others from the Sea \ '"'~ League -Estancta defens1,c end Kevin Thomas. Saddleback de- fensive lineman Miguel Ochoo .inJ Newport Harbor ltncman Dam ~fan· gnall. were also granted firsHeam honors. All year long 11 was Corona dl'l Mar's defense. with Kato' 1 h &. C"o stopping the run and Johnson and teammates stopping the pass Johnson intercept~ 11 pa.ssc<i and was a sourtt of power 01Tcns1 ' d~. too. as a rccc1' er. Katovsach. too. was a po\\er on offense and was cfTecti\ c not onh as a po~er runner. but as a po"' er blocker But It wasn't unul the am,al of Pncc at quarterback that orona dcl Mar matured into a ClF t11le<0n· ~nde~ • conven~ dcfens1"'c bacl . Pnct (Pleue eee CIJI' /84) Ht. Wt. Yr. Pea. DEFENSE 6-2 210 r DL P\ayer. act.ool l\cvan "'sh~onh. Pacatica S.\O 200 Sr. DL Mickel Jad.son. La \11raJa 6-2 180 . r. DL M 11uc Ochoa. Sadd leba ~ 6-l 175 r. DL Moms fa)lor. -'rtes1a 6-~ 180 Jr. Dl Ke\ln Thomas. fatanna S.9 16S Jr. LB Gttt Hansell. Kenned th. ~·\. Vr. 6-2 :?OS r fl.-S 2 r b-1 ~'\S Sr 6·2 :?IS r S-11 178 Jr 6-5 HO ~r I I I When Romnson completed his scnior 1e1t0n his t~yar run as a runntftl blck netied 23 wins. I loss. I tie. ancfinduduw that final year (Bob Much of his ~ he 11id. will B ~ 1fhc can produce some of the 8 Ravor which Coury was noted for -B ",encratina an atdtudt thll said ·w e B were somdhiM special and 1oup. • " B As rot I slltr.M said he11be1m1na R down with cadl of somt 20 prnm1 R ..asiants W\thin the mtirt 11aff OL within the ne•t two wens. aftd Ol ca\elDnllld '' u "touct\y :· i....,..um Ol as all blndl tonet1 M'd carM from OL S&cve DcPh1lhps. Fullcnon Km uaw~. Valencia Shawn Jones. lkllOov.cr Ptte Montera. Kenned)' Mike Simmons. Bellno"'c:r Chns Shoddcy. Pacifica Ty Pncc. Corona ckl Mar Tom Deep. KtnncdJ Kc .. 1n lalard. BtllOowtr Man Elliott. Troy 6-0 l8S 6-S 245 6-l 180 r. r LB Dana R1plc~. ~nuaao 6 .... 230 Sr. Sr LB John Kato .. ,~h. Coron;i <kl \far fl.-l 22~ Sr ' I . wooc11· tint ....,..,. ttw 60s had pradt ced a recofd of'6S.7-). Woodl. wtM» hll lillce puecd away. .... Oft IO '°"' I record of )6. 16-2 i1er an 11·1-0 ft,. ~r (Coury's NCWMn). end,..._. under P'ftl- we. • w1th1n tht oatlo rt'-. OL ... "' f"-w llMAllCB8/aa) It Mart K~n11-La Mirada 0.1n Mananall. Newport Hatbor MCM<ft Cha\CZ. Anahtim Robtn Southern. Western O"y Sk'perd. Valcftcta ~t Sttrecty. Sonora 6-l 220 ()..~ 220 6-0 HS 6-0 21S 6-1 18$ 6-1 llS S-9 160 ~ Jr Sr. Sr Jr Sr. r . LB Stcvt R•lllltl. Valencia b-1 200 ¥ DB Devtd GYttem"l. La Habra 6-1 17S Sr. DB Scott Hart. La Mirada S.-11 165 Jr DB Warrct1 Johnton. Corona ckl Mar 6-1 170 tr DB Adit llodn~l. ~nn.a 6-0 t90 Sr • 08 Tom Wihon. ro' 6-J ,., Sr p Al Rato. La Habra fl·I IU Sr. B1LL MuLL1CA11 CoLUcE BasKETBALL Losing makes road trip longer UCI heads home after seeing Vegas, Chicago, Virginia_ EIGHT DA VS ON THE ROAD: We left Orange( ount) last Wednesda~ and retum home today. People ~ho 1ove10 tra'el probably would ha'e enJO)edourtnp-twonights1n Las V~s. three nights in Chicago. a top in \l. ash1ng1on D C.. thrte nights in \ 1rg1nia 3nd back to LA The onl) problem 1s that ~e had to pla~ threegamesdunng that penod 1n th rte host 1 lc arenas. cncou n ter 1 ncle- men t ~eat her and battle the Chnstmas rush Jfweh~ , . .._nwinning.thetnp "ould h3' l: 1 .. "l:n bearable. There are not m3n} things ~orse than losing "hen \Ou h3'e"orkcd so hard for so long and ha"cclosc losse . USFand Lo\ ola of h 1cago should have been "uis and at least our record would loo~ fairh de«nt. 0 YO 'CANIG<>HOMEAGAIN:I left Chicago torCahforn1a 1n 1956 and m~ llhno1~ friends informed me at the ume I "ould be back 1n si' month J\o" the> tell me" hat a great (llove I madc(of course.dc-epdown. they feel that onl} ( h 1cagoans kno• am thing) \1\ onl'i'Q UCSllOn IS that 1f the\ arc o man. ho" could tht> lave an that \\Cather for so long? .\n)"ll~. upon my am val last ~ed. the all "anted to ha,·c a party for me. I am sure that they think my ot'cupa11on 1 lmd ofa hobby and that 1tdot' not mailer 1fyou wm ork>R, JUSl so> u ha"c a ,~at pany. .\ft er pract1C'C on Saturda). I wnt to sec m mother. who hvcsJustout of the cit). then to the one peny I could attend, hosted by .ome col .. f ncnd who M>mthow look oktet' than I rcmcmbtr thtm. °TM) attwpmnt~n11of'ld9oal dist net ~nc1pals and tvftt 1 few law)"Cr'S. .\~rt~pany. I vnetal• In h bar owned b) oncofm:r tl· p\a\Cn at Seddaebeck ('~CW Wcik'r. who 111 M l1vt C1u~ and whose dad was a ~Tea Olllcill foqaf'I ThcreWttefoilrl,.._. °"the .... lltttt-1 ~ tMljml provn thtft a~ pitaly OflriU dnnkerl 1f'CMlftd. 0 lleft70lidletltlwlil ..... retat1~ toOW111!119 -01(lf0,.,.., 1111 I Ell . ~ 82 0r.,_ CGelt DAILY P6lOT/ Thursday. December 22. 1988 'Blizzard Defense' winner of Bills• nickname contest From ne Assoclattd Pre11 ORC'HARDPARK.N.Y.-Anolher Ell blizzard is sweeping through Bu ffalo. The •II t effects of this one aren't being felt by residents, but by opposing teams at the Buffalo Bills' Rich Stadium. This blizzard is actually-The Blizzard Defense, which is the name Bills defenders chose for themselves as pan of a local newspaper's "Name Thai Defense" oontest. ·Members of the AFC's top-ranked defense selected that name over dozens submitted by readers of The Buffalo News, which sponsored the contest. "That's the one." saiq Bills linebacker Da rryl Talley, ~ho, along with nose tackle Fred Smerlas. helped conduct a poll of the defensive players on the AFC East champions. "That says it all." Added linebacker Ray Bentley. a sports columnist for a mqazine in Miclaipn: "I think it captures what playing tOotbaJI in Butraro is all about. Weather is a big factor on our side. especially because the fans still come out no matter how cold or snowy it is. And the way we swa~ people ... it is like 1 blizzard." Nearly 4.SOO of the newspaper's readers submitted entries to the contest and the newspaper then had the players vote on a dozen finalists. ''The Blizzard Defense" was the players' choice and also the choice of 86 people who suggested the name. The runner-up among the players was .. The Bill Collectors." The other finalists were: The Blue Blizzard, the Buffalo Blizzard. the Big Chill, the Cold Front, the Ice Crushers, the Snow Seiters, the Smother Brothers. the Billdozers, the Crunch Bunch and the Buffalo Stampede. , But the newspaper received a number of other possibilities. Some played off players' names. such as Freddie's Nightmare (Smerlas). the Biscuit Brigade (the nickname for linebacker Corneli us Bennett).-Corey's Crew (for defensive coordinator Walt Corey), Smith's Stocking Stuffers {for defensive end Bruce Smith) and Conlan's Barbarians (for linebacker Shane Conl an.) Quote of the day John Dennis, announcer on a Boston Celtics telecast. after producer Frank Shorr noted.that 5-3 Charlotte guard Tyrone Bogues was wearing low- cu1 sneakers in the game: .. He has to wear low· cuts._The high-tops go over his knees." Heep won't be offered contract The Los Angeles Dodgers announced • Wednesday that they won't offer a contract to Danny Heep for the 1989 season. thus making the left-handed hilling outfielder a free agent. In 95 games this past season, Heep. 31. hil :-24T""Witn no honfe runs and TIRBl sed often as a pinch-hitter, Heep had 36 hits in 149 at-bats ... Meanwhile. Bob Horner, Buddy Bell, Keo Griffey and Bob BrenJy were among the other players who became free agents when their clubs failed to offer them contracts for the 1989 season. All four players are wanted back by their former clubs. but at salaries far below what they made in 1988. Also becoming non-, tender free agents were pitchers Steve Ontiveros and Matt Young of Oakland. Rod Scurry of Seattle and Frank Williams of Cincinnati: infielder Tom Lawless of St. Louis, and outfielder Jolla Cllristensen of Minne- sota. Also. seven .. regular'' free agents agreed to contracts for next season. Pitc her Frank DiPino, who had been with the Chicago Cubs for 21/i seasons. agreed to a one-year contract with St. Louis; Riek Honeycau, who on Monday agreed to salary arbitration with Oak.land, settled on a one-year con1racr for $800.000: outfielder Joel Youngblood and infielder Manny Trillo agreed 10 one-year contracts with-the Cincinnati Reds. each for $320.000; pitcher Bob Forsell, who had accepted a salary arbi tration offer. and catcher Alu Trevino agreed to one-year contracts with Houston. and pitcher Ed Vande Berg agreed to a one-year contract with Texas. Alabama QB Dunn sent home Three davs before its Sun Bowl clash Ell wuh Army, · Alabama shipped home •II t backup quanerback Jeff Dann on Wednes- day after It was disclosed he has been charged w11h an alcohol-related complaint. The Crimson Tade also announced th at anothe( quar- terback, redshirt freshman Dauy Woodto11, has been ruled ineligible as a result of a challenge of his college entrance examination scores. Dunn. a junior. was arrested early Sunday morning by pofice in Birm- anRham . Ala .. and was allowed to post bond. Team officials said he was allowed to make the trip fol:I Paso only because Coach Bill C.rry was unaware of the arrest at the time ... UniversityofMiami Coach Jimmy Jolmson announced Wednesday the suspension of starting wade receiver ADclre Browa through the Hurricanes' Orange Bowl game against Nebraska on Jan. 2. ''Andre Brown has been suspended for a viola11on of team policy,'' Johnson said in a statement released by the school. "He will not be permitted to practice w11h the team orplayin the-Nebraska game. As 1s the case with any internal disciplinary action within our team. the details surrounding the suspension will remain confidential." ... Comerback Rldaa~ Sa•I• has been suspended by Wyoming Coach Pa•I 8-clt.for undisclosed violations of team rules and will miss next week's Holiday Bowl. according to Roach. "Sauls has been suspended from the squad for a violation of team rules." .Roach said Wednesday without elaborating. IN THE BLEACHERS .. ~u·o BE.TIER CJJ ~I MllT 'ttlJR FATHER • Life with a seven-toot center Cavaliers snap Qarden streak RoD 81rper scored 26 points. Larry m Nnff 25 and Brad Daaptery 22 Wednes- day night as the Ceveland Cavaliers ended a 24-game Boston Garden losing streak with a 115-114 victory over the Celtics. The Cavaliers. who hadn't won a regular season game in the Garden since Oct. 13, 1977, outscored Boston, 41-38. in a first- pcriod shootout and then went on to their founh straight victory ... In other NBA games: Karl Maleae scored 34 points and narl BaUey had 27 as Utah snapped a four-game losing streak and continued its domination over the Bullets in Washin.gton, 98-82. ...._ S&edl ... had 16 assists for the Jazz, who have beaten the Bullets in their last five trips.to the Capital Centre ... Letter Couer and B•ck WUUam1 teamed on a 7-2 spun late in ovenime after C.ria Merrit made a 3- point shot to force the extra period and New Jersey defeated visiting Dallas,_ 122-120. · ending the Mavericks• four-game winning streak ... In Charlotte, J1d Sikma'13-pointjumpercapped a 13-4 Milwaukee run at the start of the fourth period and the Bucks went on to defeat the Hornets. 112-100. Sikma finished with 25_points, while Terry cammi.11 led Milwaukee with 32 ... ln Miami, reserve forward Xavier McDuiel scored 23 points and grabbed 13 rebounds as Seattle's bench accounted for 65 points in a I 09-10 I victory over the Heat. Dale EUia and Seclale Tltreatt each added 18 points for the SuperSonics ... Grq Aadenom led eight Spurs in doub_le figures as_ San Antonio s.napped an eight-game losing streak wuh a I 25· I 07 victory over visiting Sacramento. It was the Spurs' first victory si nce they defeated the New York Knick~ Dec. 3. Skiles quits. then chan es_mirul Reserve point guard Scott Skiles quit • the strugglinJ Indiana Pacers on Wednes- day after 1elhng friends he intended to give up basketball. then changed his mind. "I'm disappointed with losiog and made a decisi.on based on that. Now that I've reconsidered. it was a big mistake and I will rejoin the team tonight in Atlanta." Skiles said Wednesday afternoon ... Los Angeles Raiders Coach MikeSlaanalau sai d hewantstowa1ta week or 10 days before making any changes among his assistants. but added he has given them all the freedom to consider other job opportunities ... Ted Leland, who has been athleuc director at Danmouth College, was hired Wednesday as AD at the University of Paci fic where he was an all-conference linebacker on the football team nearly two decades ago. Leland. 40, was named by UOP President BUI Atdlley to succeed Carl MUler, who resigned in August ... North Carolina State Athletic Director Jim VaJvuo Wednesday refused to comment on the future of football coach Dick Slterldu, saying any word on whether Sheridan was moving to Georgja would have to come from Georgia ... Rudy LuJer, the 1986 Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year, was sentenced Wednesday to life in prison without parole for his pan in a multimillion dollar dru& smuuling operation . . . Benlle Kosar worked out wi th his Cleveland Browns' teammates Wednesday for the first time since he sprained his left knee Dec. 12, but he was still listed as questionable for Saturday's AFC wild card game against the Houston Oilers. Kosar. wearing a brace on his injured knee, participated in more of the practice than he had planned to originally. He took about a half doZcen snaps in the team's seven-on-seven scrimmage and also participated in drills with his receivers and running backs. Television, radio TELEVISION 4:30 p.m . -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Alabema al Georgia, ESPN. 1 5 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: North Caro- lina A& T vs. OePaul al Rosemont, Ill., WGN. 5:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Clippers at Houston, Z Channel. 6:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Wett Vlrotnia at N.C.-Chartolle, ESPN. 7:30 P.m. -INDOOR SOCCER: San Ol~o at Lazers, Prime Tickel. I P.m. -HORSE RACING: HollvwOOd Park rePlavs, Channel 56 <Prime Tickel, 10:30 P.m.). 9 P.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: SMU at Santa Clara, ESPN. 9 P.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: PillsbiJrgh et FIOrlda (delayed). USA. RADIO 5:30 P.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Clippers at Houston, KRTH (93()). 7:30 P.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Weber Slate at Cal Slate Fullerton, KMNY ( 1600). . ----·--·--- ........................ ~ after l•d•n1 at llalftime, 48-11. Bdl8oll, wldcb fell to 4·8 wltb tbe 1-.... led bJ 8teYe Tbobe wltb 15 ~m •. bat coaftlted only 21 of 89 from tbe Ooor. UCLA romps past Cal MaeLean, Wilson lift Bruins to win in Pacific-IQ opener - From Tlte A1sociated Pre11 Freshman Don Maclean scored 25 points and Trevor Wilson had 24 as the UCLA Bruins broke open a close contest early in the second half and coasted to a 76-59 victory over the California Golden Bears Wednes- 'day night in the Pacific-JO Conference opener for both teams. UCLA1 5-1 and 1-0, extended )ts unbeaten streak inst Cal tft-'llattfey-Pa'Vflio11 to-zj-p es. at me u es 24 regular-season games since Pauley Pavilion opened for the 1965-66 season and one game in the 1987 Pac-10 tournament. ' The Golden Bears, 6-3 and 0-1. have lost 32 straight games to UCLA in Los Angeles since last beating them here during_ the 1960-61 season. After Cal's Keith Smith cut the Bruin lead to 40-39 early in the second halfby sinking one of two free throws, Maclean scored eight points and Kevin Walker added a 3-~int shot in an fl-0 spurt to give UCLA a 51-39 lead w1th 14: 17 to play. Walker added two more 3-point jump shots during the next 2:30 to blow open the game. Cal's Leonard Taylor scored 26 points. Elsewhere in college basketball: Nevada-Lai Ve111 88, Rllode Island It: Stacey Augmon scored 21 points and No. I 3 Nevada-Las Veg;lS beat Rhode Island in the 13th annual Rebel Round-tip. Greg Anthony added 19 for the Runnin' Rebels and David Butler had 14. , UNLV improved to 4l2 while Rhode Island fell to J-4. The Rams are off to a shaky start after last year's 28·7 mark that included a trip to the "Sweet Sixteen" of the NCAA Tournament. l>Ue t4, Wile Forest 88: Danny ferry scored 22 of his 33 paints in the second half, lifting No. I Duke past pesky Wake Forest in the opening Atlantic Coast Conference game of the season. The Blue Devils raised their record to 7-0 while Wake Forest fell to 4-2. Ferry, coming off arr ACC record 58-point per- formance last week against Miami. Fla .. continued his torrid pace, hitting 7 of I I shots in the second half. Mlelll1u 1%1, Yo-a1toW11 State 7!: Glen Rice scored 30 points and Loy Vaught 26 as No. 2 Michigan rolled over Youngstown State for the unbeaten . Wol verines' 11th victory. . - -Yo~gstown State. 0-8. has lost 21 consecuuve games since last Jan. 23. Rice scored 21 points in the first halfas Michigan toolLa56"38 lead. He had a career-high 36 points Tuesday night in a SO-point victory over Northern Michigan .. S7r1e11e 14, Westera Mlelll1an 11: Sherman Douglas scored 27 points, leading No. 3 Syracuse over Western Michigan m front of a subdued Carrier Dome crowd stunned by a plane crash earlier in the day that killed at le,ast 36 university students. Prior to the game Lutheran Minister Michael Rothermel said a prayer for the students. That was followed by a moment of silence. No survivors were oond from·a-Pan-J4.mjumbojet-wittt-i·S8~eA-tbat­ crashed in Scotland on its way to New York. M11 ... r1 114, Sotltllen Unlvenlty II: Byron Irvin scored 30 points to lead No. 10 Missouri to the victory. The Tigers. 10-3. were ahead 60-49 at halftime. Johnny Steptoe scored 34 points for Southern, 4-4. Missouri led 83-76 with 8:24 left before going on a 14-3 burst. Irvin made four foul shots in the final minute. Lo1J1ville 71, Ea1tern Keataek) 40: Pervis Ellison made all eight of his shots in scoring 17 points as No. 14 Louisville overcame a sl uggish start. Louisville led 23-17 with four minutes left in the first half before scoring six straight en route to a 33-22 advantage at intermission. The Cardinals. 6-2, then went on a 24-5 scoring run that gave~them a 68-36 lead with 3:47 remaining an the game. James Brewer keyed the outburst with seven points and.Tony Kimbro added five. Teueasee 77, SaD Dle10 State 75: Greg Bell made all seven ofTennessee's basuts in the second half, including a 3-point shot with 17 seconds left that rallied the l 9th- ranked Volunteers past San Diego State for the championship of the San Diego Holiday tournament. Bell hell)Cd Tennessee overcome a 75-72 deficit in the final I :35. He scored 22 of his 25 points in the second halfon six 3-pointers. a two-point shot and a pair of free throws. Kusa1 81, !J'exas Ted st: Mike Maddox made a short jump s.hot with 20 seconds left. rallying No. 20 Kansas over Texas Tech. The Jaybawks, 8-1. squandered an 18-point halftime lead. Texas Tech, 2-6. went in front 80-79 on Sean Gay's shot with I :4 7 left. Su Jose State ta, Eaaten Wa1lllDl10D 75: Guard Steve Haney's 23 points helped San Jose State end a five- game losing streak. The non-conference victory im- proved the Spartans' record to 3-5. while Eastern Washington _dropped to 2-9 with its sixth straight loss. MONARCHS HIRE COACH ••• OCC collects 81-77 victory Prom Bl As for the Gallo years and the criticism which his program received. Rollinson. an Irvine resident, said. "Anytime there's a major change there are questions. I'd JUSt like to thank Chuck Gallo for the contribu- tions he made." Rbllinson's only disappointment was that his father and longtime fan. wasn't present Wednesday as he was imroduced as Mater Oci's head coach. .. My dad supported me tremen- dously," ·said the one-time 9.5 sprinter. "But I still have my mom ind sisters behind me. I'm over- The Monarchs' principal also pointed out his reaction to Wednes- day's edition of the Los Angeles Times over the firing of Gallo. "It would not be appropriate for me to discuss the specifics of this situ- ation," Weling read from a prepared statement. "Making chanaes and saying good- bye are never easy. Suffice it to say that our assistant coaches who were quoted in today's edition of the Los Angeles Times were understandably upset with our decision. The facts they represented were not accurate." VAN NUYS -The Orange Coast College men's basketball team made 9 of IO free throws in the final 1:45 and held on to defeat San Oiqo City College, 81-77, Wednesday night in the consolation final of the Los Angeles Valley Tournament. The,victory marked the 200th for OCC Coach Tandy Gillis in his 13th season with the Pirates. He has 168 losses. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-.,whelmed and excited and thank God He saw me fit for this oPt>Ortunlty." The assistants felt they had been given a vote of confidence two weeks ago. Rollinson's bec~und includes three yean as 1n a111Stant at s.tesian Hip. seven yea11 11 an assistant at Mater Oei and for the pest six years has been with Rancho Santiago College. In the rough game. in which 49 personal fouls and one technical were called, three San Dicgg players and two from Coast fouled out. Kings outgun North Stars, 8-6 From ne Associated Presa John Tonelli scored two goals and Dave Taylor collected his 900th career point as the Los Angeles Kings rallied for an 8-6 victory over the Minnesota North Stars at the Forum Wednesday night. Tonelli scored at 2:06 of the first period to cut Minnesota's lead to 2-1. His second goal. at 3:57 of the third. pvc the Kings their first lead. 6-S. Taylor scored his 900th Point. all with Los Angeles, by setting up Luc Robitaille's goal with 5:31 lcf\ in the second period to bnng the: Kinas within 5-4. He then c.arncd his 901st point on a J><>~cr-play goal wic~ just 11 seconds left in the second penod to tie the pme It i... Six pis w~ within the fint 7:~1 . with Bernie Nicholls of the K..inp ,etuna his leaaue·lcadina 37th to cap the spree. The Kinp ere 23-12·1. t)'.intthem for most victories in the NH with the C1lpry Flames, whom they trail by four points in the Smythe Division. Elsew~re in the NHL: Paplu I, Matle Leaf1 1: In Toronto, Mario Lemieux scored three goals and set up Bob Errey for two more as Pinsburgh won iis fifth straight aame. Paul Coffey also scored for the ~uins, who ue first in the Patrick Oivation with 1 21 -11-2 record, includin1 11-1-2 in their last 14 pmes. Bnilas 4, WUJen J: In Hanford. rookie forward John Canertcorcd his first lWO NHL pis and aoeltender Andy Moos stopped 19 shots 1s Boston beat the Wh1len. The win was only the fourth for Boston in its last 20 pmes. Cam Neely and Randy BurridlC ldded pis for the Bruins, now 4-T0.6 since Nov.6. C1...0w t, N~H •: In Mon· treal. 8ri1n Skrudla hiahliahted a thrce.,oal spurt in 46 1«<>ftds by scorinit twice in nine stconds as the Canadiens spoiled Jean Perron's homecomina as Nordiques coach. Caplcals 4, Bladllawb I: Wash- inaton dealt host Chicaao its 12th loss inthelast 14pmeswhen Kell}' Miller knocked in a short shot from a scramble SI seconds into the final period. The win boosted W11hinaton 1nto a tecond-~ tie Yiith the New York Rantenan the Patrick Division. sill points behind Pinsbul'lh. De9Ua I, Jet1 I: Jim Kom's pl with 13 ICCOnds Id\ in felUlation capped a wild third period and pve New Jersey the tit in Winnipea. Caeet• !, Olien I: Jim Slndlak tcc>red the winnina JOll with 21 tce0nds remainina and Troy Gamble allowed just one 1oat for tbc second strai&ht pme as Vancouver edfecl host tdmonton. .._1,-.1:~ ... r tcond twlte • lufl'alo conunued ns mattery of the Rllllftl with die victory II MaditonSqU.rt<lankn. It WU tbc nfth atrailfn win for the Sabres OVtr the Rlftlft'I. Welina said the selecuon of Roll- inson. a move which was motivated by Mater Oei and not sought out by the new coach. wasa "new era back to the future." OCC ( 12-3) broke out to a 24-9 lead midway throuah the first half. only to have the Knipts (S-6) 10 on a 16-2 run to slice the deficit to one with S'h minutes remaining. Marlna reaches tournament se11JlfbJal The Marina Hiah &iris blsketblll tam ldvanc:ed to the 1emifin1l1 of the ('yprc$S Tournament Wednesday niaht downina Woodbridae. 60-S I. Ttic Vikinp meet Mission Viejo in the 1emi1 1t 7 tonight. The Viki!'JS (8-1) pulled IWIY from I J0.29 hatfhme lead to IO up by eipt enterint the final quancr bj hold•• the Warriors to nine points in the third period. Marint used an 11-2 run to ovrrcome a 36-l~ WoodbndF laid. Woodbridae did ma~ to trim the ddkit 10 live in the ftnal quaner. but CCM&ld set no clolcr. VUtinp junior paard Mcliu Sortino. whO led Ill IC.'Cftfl wtlh 24 poi• .. 9 ol I J "'°"' the floor and icoml leveft poilltl in die third ~ ~ Sillrbldded IOP°'nts and 12 ttboUDcft. , for Woodbridae. Leslie Rathbun poured in 14 points. indud1n1eiaht 1n the fint quaner. . Cnnn H, Oeeu VMw Jt: The Seahiwb were reiqated to the fifth· olace bncket folloW1n1 the loA to the hosts at the ('yprns Tournament. Oc:an View wilf DllY at ':JO tonlpt. Cotettt Smith W 11 points, Jenny Sullivan l 0 and Heidi Hatemann 13 rebounds for Ocean View, which falls to 7-2 after ICOrina its Iowa• total of the MaSOD. C_nftll is alto 7-2. C.UU•t.P ...... V.., II: Cold shootina and some bid ~ftl led to the a.ions' downfall 1n the Tour- nament of Champions pme in Sl1na a.rtma. Founllin Valln (5-4) shot onl~ 17 = oldae ficfcl, nclli• only cas"t =-::: ... ftom 8bdonainal sur- aery, senior auard Kami B1aJcr was Fountain V1lley'1 top1COmwith five points. The Barons were scheduled to close out the tournament this mom- i"tn community colqe pmn: a.... Wetttl,Grw••t 71: The Rustlers ( 13-l) extended lheir win-· nin& streak to e~t with •he non-conkrence roed Win. Dec Dec St111r broke htt own 1ehool record with six 3-9c>int p1s and finished with 24 points. Claudeue Jackson hid ll rebounds to c.~~ 17 poinll. Ki 01m1 .. a.a., II: m Ellermaa led occ (6-9) widl JO poin... f'mblMll M•YJIC Otftn 9dded 19 1Dd Suanne ... ~ down 12 rebDundl .... ~ .-.... non-conl!reneewill•- roed. Bverett a•mecl Pla791'0llV.U NEW YORk(AP)-~ Jim Everett of the Rams wu MllllCI Ofreuive Player of the w-. l8d White of tbe Philldela'il was named Defntive Pil~ o Week by the Nationll Foodilll Conference. the leaillt uid Wedna- day. Everen completed 19 of ll peaa for 20 l yards and four toUCbdown1 u the Rams beat San Francisco, ll-16, for an NFC wild-card playofrbenh. White had two 1Kks and 12 tackles as Philadelphia clinched the NFC East Division title with a 23-7 victory over Dallas. • >'• •A ITA•llH W.... C11llr•c• p.-c ....... LM!en Portland S..ttle Phoenix Golden Stale ~ S.cr•menlo OtllH o.nver Houaton Uteh S.n Antonio Miami MldWnt W L ~. 16 • .6'7 14 10 .513 13 10 .565 12 10 .545 10 12 .455 • 16 .333 s 17 .227 DMlieft 15 I .652 ts 9 .625 15 . 9 .625 14 11 .560 7 16 .JCM 1 21 .IMS EHtwn C:.• we New York ,Plll~I• Boston NewJenev WHhlntlon C"-rlOlle Clev ... nd Oelroll Atlenl• Chbeo Milw•utlN Indiana Alllnlk OM.- 17 7 t• 11 12 12 11 ts 6 16 6 17 c....... OM.- 17 5 11 6 16 9 13 10 13 10 5 11 ....... .,., Saf'ft Clevllend 115. Boston 114 .70I .560 .500 .•23 .273 .261 .m .750 ."40 .565 .56~ .217 New Jersev 122, Dallas 120 Coll Ullh ti, Wes/llneton 12 MllwlUk• 112, CllMIOllt 100 S..llle 109, Mleml IOI Sen Anlonlo 125, Sacramenlo 107 T•Y'"I G.-1 °"'9lrl at Houston, S:JO Pm. Detroit et New York, 4:30 p.m PMenlx et Denver, 6:30 P.m. Portlend •• Golden Stelt, 7:30 P.m. GB 2 2'h 3 s • 10 llJ llJ 2 I 131h 311'2 s 7 10 10'h 211'2 •'h . .,., 121h w. ltllnois n. rennn ... Teen " X.vler. ONo '3, e.tni-·Cookmen S3 • SOUTH ~ N. Weke F«ftt • Louhv,.. 76, E. Kentuav .eel Muffey SI. 7t, Nichoh SI. 65 Pwllerellne IS, MerMlell '9 Vlrtlllle "· UC! " lotl I AST Rober1 Morris 75. c.nlikn n Sw-ecuw t•. W. Mic1119en 71 TCM.laNAMINT1 ll'lnt .... , o.... ........ ... St. "· fie. lnternetlonal " Nonltwfttem '6, Redford " .... ·--Nevede·Las v ... , •. RllOcM lslend '9 ,, ..... , .......... Tennnsee n, Sen Dlloo Stell 75 lflrsl) Ale. ·B~mlnvhem 72. H1rdln·Slmmons so (1t1lrdl COMMUNITY COLL•G• M •N Orlftll C.1t 11, SM Dleee n (LAY,._.T...,.,....) .. '*"' °"' ~ C.1t E/1911ltl ~ V ~ ': Cr1111 ;-~ ~ ~ Hos1ev t I S 26 51*<1 7 • 2 II Wells 2 6 3 11 JoflnlOn • S 7 1' Budlenlin • 7 1 1 S Scllllnes I 3 S If Ewell 3 2 S I DeStlflllO I 0 I 2 &rOOks ooso.._n1on 0111 Glrllfttl 2 4 2 I LOVI 0 0 2 0 Smith l O 2 2 Kot I 0 4 2 Jedllon O I I I cantrtll 0 0 2 0 Totell 23 30 25 n Totell 2t 22 2• II Helfttme: riec1. J7·J7. 3·oolnt ooeb; Sen 01e9o Cllv-Welb I, Or81\91 Coest-Jonnt0n J. T tchlllc& Hol.lev ISO}. ~ SCHOOL BOYS ~ Y81ev 11, ...... SS , ........... , .... .. It ... 0 0 s 0 • 7 • 15 6 0 0 12 s 2 • 12 I 0 I 2 2 2 0 ' 2 0 s 4 I 2 • 4 Cl I tr-v-.. .. It ... "' aoamo 1022 McCorkle t 7 2 2' Kottoff I S I 7 Mazurl 6 0 3 12 l(osl 7 I 2 16 fow I 2 J • Murrev 2 I 2 5 StOker ? 0 2 4 Houotlton 0 0 I 0 Fischer 2 0 0 4 Mono 0101 1------1--~Ja ~ V9tlne Tolels 21 13 23 SS To111s 31 17 II II WIST••• CONn•INCI--- -Scw9..., Quettllrs -R11ults of fen votlno for 1111 W111ern Con· EdllOn . 6 9 12 ~D lertnce Sllflinl lffm In 1111 3'111 Annuel NBA C1PIS1reno Velllv t7 26 21 11-tl AM·Sler Geme. to bl Plevad fltl. 12 at 3·oolnt goals: C•Pblr•no Valllv-McCorkll Aslrodome In Houston: I, Kott I. c..-. Tecllnlcels: None. I AkMm Olaluwon, Houslon, "·902. 2. Ktvfn Duckworth, Porllelld, 14,717. 3, Blelr Resmunen, o.n.,., . .,,Olt. •, Rekltl SamPIOn, Golden Site, 4',122. S, ~ ~.,,....., L.Men. •i.m. 6, Jem11 Oclllalcbon, Dallas, 31,511. 7, Merk E1ton, Utafl. 20.m. I , Ronv Selk•IY, Miami. 7,S71. t, LaSalle TllOmCISOll. Seer-to, 4,006. 10, Franlt &rlc1lowllll, San 4 ntonio, UIS. F---1. wome Ker.ev. Porlland. 75.977. 2. Stew. Jol\nlon, Portlelld, 71."5. 3, All11 Enollltl. Denver, 70,341. •. Xevil< McOent.t. Sffllll, '4.'7S. s. Armon GllllMI, Pholnl•, 5'.SS2. 6. Kerl Melone, Ut11\, S2 .... 7, Merk Aoulrrt, D ... s. S2.727. a. -'-W.,..,, Lellen, 41,ftl. f, O«rlc1l Mc:Kev. S.ettll, U ,512. 10, Row TerPllv, 0.llH, .o,m. .... 1, 1.-"""9ell. L.Man, 12t,17t. 2. Clvdf Drexler, Porttanel, 7' .. S7. 3, Tlf"rY Por1er, Porllend, .,,121. 4, D ... Ellls, Sffllle, 60,357. S, Ed JOllnlOn, Ptlolftl•1 Sf,471. 6, LelaVllte Liver, Denver, S0,219. 7, ROiando Blec.kman, Delles, 43,237. I, Dlrlk Har11«, Dalles, 42,443. 9, Chris Mullln. GOiden State, •1.1ss. 10, MkhHt Ade ms. Denver, 34,7SI. COLLEGE MEN Y.,_. ,,, UCI It (""9·C...--.I UCI .. It ... Label 3 4 2 11 luller 3157 M.Oktravit • 2 • 12 PlllrMr • 0 2 21 floYd I 4 S 20 Andlnon 3 2 3 f Herdmen 2 O • ' Roter• 0 3 I 3 Mey 0030 Mc<:loslllY 0 0 Cl 0 P ... 11 0 0 0 0 """""8 .. It ... Bells 3 2 2 • Stith S 0 S 10 a.Ir 1012 Molean ' 6 • 27 CrotlY S t 2 20 Wllllems S 1 2 11 Turner 3 o 3 6 Deoos ••16 Olivtr 3 I I 7 alundln I 0 3 2 Ketstr• o O O o Oanltl 0 0 0 0 Totell 31 16 2' " Totats 36 23 22 " Halftlml! Vlr9inle, 40-31; """'8tlon: Tied, ls-IS. 3·POlnt eoets: UCl-Pelmlr S, M. Oc*lorc1yl{ 2, Herdmeft 2, LAM! I, Anderson I; Vlr- glnle-MOl'ean 3, Crollv I. TecflnlcM: Butler (UCO. MolNn (VI. C ..... Kern WIST·•OCKllS aolM SI, 65, Akron '2 Brlel\em Youne 74, Uteh SI. 12 E. Mont-71, Cllko SI. 67 Gon1... •, Werner Peclflc 6 I 10.hO "· E. Orl90ll S3 San JOM SI. '3. E. Wallllngton 75 UCLA 7'. Cellfof'nle 5' IOUTifWUT ArkenM\ '7, TI XH Soulhlrn ,, Kenws "· Ttx•• TK,, IO Ttxes·EI PelCI "· Miss. Valley St. S6 MIOWIST &ow1'"9 Gr1111 73, Wr19'11 SI 5' Clevelend St. 14, TolldO 77 Lovole, IM '5, Tn.·Cllallanoota • Mercauetle '6, Molean St. 60 Mlc:tllNn 121. YOU1191town SI 7'1 MlnntSOt• n. D1tro11 " Missouri 114, Sou!Mrn U H Mo.·K-• Cllv 67, MorlNH St '5 COMMUNITY COLLEGE WOMEN Or.._ CNlt 61, CNttev 61 (-·~) ~ Cent CMtl9Y ....... """'"' Arnoolt 2 O 4 4 WellOn 7 0 1 14 Ellertnen I 4 ' I 20 Socrtll l 1 I 7 LIUle 2004PHI 0141 HenM11 4 4 3 12 HoOOs I I I 20 RillenhCMe O 0 I O GI""" S I S II Grllft S 9 ) If MaSSffli 2 2 l 6 Wrklflt 0 I I I WOife I 0 3 2 Bakos 2 4 2 I Totell ?3 n IS 61 Tolals 26 6 It 61 Helftlme: Oranoe Coest, 41M6 3·oolnt ooals Cllalfev-Hol>C>s 3. TKhnlcal\. None Geldln West H, Grnstnoftt 76 , __ ,......_., G-..... Welt GnsllMllt """"' ....... Jol\nson S 2 I 12 Bolsblrl II 2 l 1' Pevnt I 2 2 • LerclYll 2 2 4 6 Co• I 0 2 16 SW'"'°" 9 4 2 22 JKklOn ' 5 s 17 Mvers I 1 I l Swenson I o 1 2 Hendee 3 O 2 6 Gon«l!l1Mr 2 I 3 S Poon 2 2 • 6 Sl!Nr 9 0 I 24 MlllllAA 2 0 2 4 Hemlltorl 1 I 2 l Jent.Ins 0 4 3 4 Totosz S I 2 11 Totels 31 16 22 91 Totels 30 11 11 76 Helftlme: Golden Wiii, 50·37. 3·oolnt llMll: Goldlft Wnl-Stloar 6 Gron· mont-aolltlert s. TldlnlcM: None. HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS c..... 44, Feuntaln V.... 21 (T_ ............ OlemcllOd) , ...... y... c .... ........ """"' Hl~a 1 0 3 2 Klnhda 3 2 0 I Workmen 2 o 3 • H.S.ker S 2 • n l.Mnllr91" O O 3 0 N Bek« S 0 l 10 Blvllf" 2 1 2 5 Hendel! 4 0 I I Fox o 2 O 2 Cornell I O 4 2 a.oaro 1 o I 2 Leonard 2 O O 4 Kuvtiendal 2 0 0 4 LangMrsl 0 2 0 2 Tot1ts I s 12 21 Tot1ts 20 4 13 u S<er• bY °'*""" Fountain Vatlev 6 3 4 t-21 ColfH 6 24 4 10-.U 3·oolnt goal\. None. TKMicets: Nont. Cnns1 52, Oceen View Jt (CYlll'ftl T___.) C""5I oa... ..,,.. ........ .. ....... Ode MurekOllll KOMke Mennlne Harris Plnol Totats l221 Hesemann4031 2024Smll,, 51 311 4 • • 12 Sulllv1n • 2 S 10 1 • 2 20 Nuner I 0 2 1 O O 2 o Tekklo I 0 4 2 3231 WOife 3026 20 12 IS S2 Toteb 11 3 17 3' ~ llY OMrtws t 20 11 l,_S2 10 12 7 ·~3' LUKE DA VIS REMEMBERS •• Froal81 teer coachina over the course of four decides -the frttdom which allow-ed him to become perhaps the area's areatesl SU(>poner of Prtl> and lower revel 1thlet1cs. He played on Huntin1ton Beach's first footblll 11tJist. and he was in the stands to watch Corona dcl Mar win its first CIF title last Saturday. He·s seen chanae -for better and for worse. • .. "I can't believe what s happened. said Davis. spe1kinaof1he chanaes in the surround ins area over the past 60, yean. "It doesn't affect me. thoUfh. t>ecaulC I don't~ on the frttway .. His list of remcmbtt whens 1s published alon• with his family's story 1n a compelataon titted. "Early Settlers of West Texas. .. Amons the best are, "P1onccn rcmembtt thaw days of rtal Ammca. You can remember. • Wb(n you wrrtn't afraid to ao out at ntth•· • When lallCS WCR onl) a necns- ary nu1santt. • Wb(n the ckrlY 1e1ually talked about rd111on. • When clerks and repairmen 1ncd to please you. • When a Sunday drive was a pleasant 1rip. not an ordeal. •When you were proud of )Our hometown and state. •When people expected less ano valued what they had more. • When juden and lawyers were not a dissracc to America. • When everybody knew rtJht from wrona. •When thmp weren't perfect and no one expected it to be. • When pndc and honesty was your first pnoruy. • When tb(y raised kids to fctd ttK-rJ!. !nd raised the pep to fttd the That's just a pon1on. But Davis still en.10ys hfe. II'\ obvtOUS. That's what makes him spttlal. .. Life has bttn Sood to n . thoulfl," 0.vissaid. Arid Divis has bttn eood to rnur lives. Veterans have played key role for Ram Jeter, Ekem important Jeter had the bnt of'has 12 yars 1n the NFL. wuh I I 1h quarterback sacks. four more than he had 1n 1987. "Ekern aad Jeter bodl --... 01 ..... year. and both of them took aua 'uili\le outlooks about it. res in run or p ayo s .,_'he AIMda&M Pren Lmet.cker Eltem had a team-h1&h 93 tackles. 30 more than the next hiahetl Ram defender. Jeter and Eltem are amona the few over-30 players for 1he Rams. wbo picked up a host of draft choices when Ibey trackd Eric Dickerson 10 Indianapolis last year. and have sull more coming up. ''They said. 'Hey, if I'm _IOlllf IO play~ rm '°"" '° have to compete f0r a job. rm llM• to accirpt th11 mvironment and come in ller'e Md win The Rams art a youna team and aoina to ae• YoUrt,er. but a couple of JO..somcthina veterans hive played a major role m gc111n1 them to the playoffs this season. When the Rams face the Vikinp Monday a~moon in their NFC wild-card matchup at the Metrodome, Gary Jeter. 33. and Cart Ekem. 34. fiaure to be amona the key defenders for the Rams. Jeter and Eltem had to make some adJust- a job.· and not become hun or feel daened if your status 11 no1 automauc ... Jeter said a talk wuh Robinson after last season. a fofFt:table 6-9 campaip. helped b1m IC'\ beck on 1be fiaht track. ments with the chanaina Rams. , Jeter and Ekerrl.,nOt only have survived on a team where the average age is about 26. they've prospered this year. "You can ~1 in the downhill side of your career and look back over your shoulder." Rams Coach John Robinson said. .. You can say. ·1 meant this or that to a 1eam and you should keep me because ofth1s or that.' •• 1 went in lul ~ear and obviously my attitude wa1n't lhe areatat. ·Jeter recaUed. "I was at a low P<>•nt. l had to make some chanacs in my life in the off-season, and I mw them. "I was able to come back strona. f'm &)ad that I came back." IMl1M ... w ....... Jt (CV9tftl T....__,) ........ --....... .. It ... 3 0 l 6 Wl!Wlft 3 0 3 6 ._ Retnoun 1 0 I 14 0rOKO 3 2 • • Wlllb • 3 3 11 SOW1's s 0 1 10 Wllleml 2 I 2 s SOrtlno ' 6 2 2• DMll 3 3 2 ' KreUM • 0 2 • Herrv 3 0 0 ' YorU 1 0 ) 2 T1ut1 0 0 I 0 Ono 0 0 0 0 Mite•• 0 0 0 0 IM'l'•o 1 0 0 2 Ftrtle 0 0 0 0 Totell 22 1 12 SI Totals 26 i 1S '° SC.. " QMf1lrs Wooclbrlclle 12 17 ' Merine IS 15 1' 3·oolnt eoels: N-. TldlnlcM: None. N~L •veffl A,C WILD CAllD s.tuNl'f'I G.-Houston 11 c11v11encs, 10'.30 1 I'll. N,C WILD CA•D MMmY's G.- • ...,, 11 MlnnHO••· 11.30 a m IF MINNISOTA WINS Seturdey, Dec. ll Pllllade!Plli• II Cllica90, 9:30 a.m S..1111 .i Clndnnell, 1 o.m:. $UftMy, JM. 1 1)-SI 1....0 Cleveland or Houston at 8uff•lo, 9;30 •.m M1nntso11 •I San Fr•~sco, 1 P.tn. IF •AMS WIN Se1ur•t. Dec. ll C11v111no or Houston at 8uflalo, 9:30 • m P111lad11Phla II San Francisco, 1 om SllftMy, JM. I •ems 11 Chice90, 9 30 a.m. S.•1111 11 Cincinna ti, 1 P.m CON,a•INCE CH~SHlf>S SllftMy, JM. • AFC Glll mPlonshlP, TBA NFC cl\amplonshlP, TBA SUPI• BOWL S41ftdey, JM. 22 (al JM •1111111 StHklm, Mleml) NHL STANDIMGS ~c:. ....... C.19arY Klnei Edmonton V•ncouver W innipeg SmV1M DMlillt W L T fttl 23 6 s 51 23 12 1 47 19 13 • •2 1'17 5 33 13 12 6 32 Norrts Olvllieft · G~ GA 146 93 193 146 167 141 119 115 131 135 pet roil 11 11 • 40 139 126 SI. Louis Toronto Minnesota Chic.go 13 IS S 31 109 112 12 21 2 26 109 155 10 11 6 26 106 lll I 22 4 20 131 165 w.ies C•llerenu '1' ll'•trklr OIVtlieft Pillsburoh 21 11 2 44 163 NV R•noers 17 14 • 31 135 Wuhlnglon-17 14 • 31 120 Phii.dell>hlll 17 17 2 36 142 New Jenev 13 ts 6 32 119 NV lsle11ders I 23 2 II 99 Montreal Boston Buff•lo Hertford QuebK Adams OIVtlieft n 10 6 so 1•9 14 13 9 37 11S 13 17 • 30 119 13 11 2 21 116 u 21 3 21 121 w ...... .-s Sc.- l(lftls I , MollllttOle 6 lkK~~03 U"8IO ), NY IC•""f'S 2---PillsDurllft 6, T oron10 I Monlrffl 6, ~ • New Jersev s. Winn peg S Wesnlnoton •. Cl\lceoo 3 vancou.,., 2. Eomonton I Tade'f's~ Montrul at Bo"on, •:JS P.m Plli18411Pl\la at NY lilenct.s, S:OS 1> m Detroit 11 St. Louis, S.lS Pm. ·fl>., ,,....,.s ~ KIRls •• V•ncouvlf", 7:35 pm Hartford at PllllaOllfiflle, •:3S P.m. Toronto at 8uffel0. •:JS P.m. Pl1tstiur9h al New Jerwv. N S P.m 111 107 1•1~ 115 163 Siii ce1--• Here .,. 111e la•ht conditions at sal rHOf°ls in Cai.torn•• and Nev9da, es r-led IW the C•l1!wnia S••ll Automoooil Auoclellon LnMll ~ertr -1' •ndlft new, 2 1-ioel oa.e. trm oo•dlr, mac111ne groomed, one en.Ir ano 1wo \urfece hits ..,... -2·30 inches new, l ·S·lool oa.e, oowdlr 1no oacl<ld oowdlr, nine c:Niln oa~. two Cl\airs nflll\I o-ier 5*1 •Midi -No reoort S.-~ -2(1-30 oncllll -· 2·S·foor t>He, oowdlr end macntne oroomeo o.Ckld oowcier, """ chain. • S"9r llewl -11·2• lncllff -· 41'1·6vt·foot bue, oowow 1no o.ckld oowOtf, seven cne lrs. TIMI o-ier -12 lncllll new. 2•1·foot bue, oowdlr and pecked oowdlr, two en.In anci one surf1« lift. Ner1ll Star -1.2 tnc1111 new. 2·S·foot oa.e. POWdlr end machine groomed, P8CklCI oowcter 90lldOle lllO "9f\I Cllalfs ~ ~ -11·24 lncllft new, •• >·7· toot oai.e, oowcter end macrilne groomed o.cl\ • Id oowdlr, 10 cnelo anc:t -sunace hfl "-Mw... -2• lncllft new, I '>·•·fool bHI, trnn oowdlt" and P8CklCI oowoer. IOYr" cnairs 1no rwo surlac;e '''"· S..w V..., <1,• .... , -2• lnchl\ new. 6·1oot oase, oowdlr and mecnine oroomeo • none chl1n . . Stiue• v..., 16,• .... , -12 lnclllS MW, l·foot oa.e, oowdlr ano oact11e1 oowoer. ceOil cair.~. eiellt cNlrs end two -1ac. kits. MeeWlllY v-.. -12·11 tnc!llS new, •+ tool oa.e, macnlnl oroomed -• allCI P8CI\· Id oowdlr, tram, 10 Cl\8tri anel lflree wrfac• S-1 ...... -1·10 lnchft -· 2 loot lla.e, mac111ne groomed oowoer and oacklCI oowoer $111 Cl\atfl. Ml•--12·11 •ncllff new, 4 1·1001 bes•. madlttll groomed, oed<ICI -ow. llve cn.irs act. SU1NN1 -NCJ rlC)(lrt Sien• Siii •8lldl -II lnclllS new, 4·1001 111se, oowdlr end machine grOClf!Wd, sl 11 cl\lllrs Klrttweed -24 1nclles new, •·~-toot oa.e, oowOlf •nd oackeo oowdlr. 11 cna1n ioccn """ ldlell ..,. SIMI YAU.aY ~err ,_. v..,., ..... • fO\lllllln v-.., KOl'inl' wrllflt 2. ~ 2 Goelie MVft: P9lleflor 2, 'f'*-1. lolenl eoe4ll MVft: N.umur. f. **·UMMlm .... Dll ........... MelW Del Korine· ~ 2, Mi1W I, Tenner '· RoDlt .... I, Ammenn I. Goele ..-: Va~ 6, Ammenn 4. fUlerton 9MMI MVft: Fll<Mr 21. ~ltllml! Me'9r Del. Ml. .AEC. 'ntniolon '!! NFC ch1mPlon, 2 Pm_ NY Ra"91fs •I Wesninoton, S:OS p ITI Quet>K 11 WlnnlPIO, S·3S Pm Ollroll at Cnlceoo • .s.lS un. Ml. .... -10 111Cllff new, 3 ·loot oa.e, oowdlr •nd oacklCI llOWCler, six dla1rs o-.. •ldee -12 lncnes new. 2·3·1oot 111w. oowdlr a'ld Pecked oo•Oll', "9Vlfl Cllalrs Ind IOUfJ \urfect Ill". a.-r ~·" -16 lncllff new, 2')·l''J·tool k~ oowdlf and Packtd oowdlf. tour dlalrs. Odeh NFL ~LAYOFFS AFC Wild Cero Pllvoff ·c11v111no 3 1 over Housion NFC Wiii C.rd ""'"" ·Mlnnespll s OVlf" "ems '~IH llOtTll IH m TO WIN SU~IE• BOWL San Francisco 2· I, Cincl"fl'tl S-2, Clllc190 3·1, 8 ufll l0 4·1, Nlnnt"Wla •-1, Se•llle S·l, PtttlaOllO'lll 7· 1, Cleveta no :0-1, •em' IS· I HouslOl'I IS·I COL.LIEGE BOWL GAMES 111• ..... !Ce .... cat Sfwu1..,1, La., Dec. DI Tues·Et Paso 1 over Soutl\lfn M1u iJStPP• S...llewl (•I El ...... Tens. Dec. 241 Alabama I• o.,., Armv .... .... t1t H ...... Hewell, Dec. 2S) Houston 4 ovtr Wasllin11ton Stall u.wtY .... (It Memllflll, TMWI., Dec. 2') lndl•na 3 over South Cerolin1 Al·AIMtlcM hwl (II ~. AM .. DK. 2'1 Florida s• 1 over llHnols Freedem 9awt let AMMtm, Dec. 2') Colorado • l over 8 ri911am Vouno Hllldlv hwl (et SM °'"9. DK. JOI Oiltahoma s111t l , ovtf" Wvoml119 ~ ..... (at A...,._, Ge., Dec. 311 low• "' Horii\ Ca rolina St•re. even G.-lhwl (If JeclllMIWllt, Fii., JM. 11 Gforgl• vs Mlcllloan Stitt, even HllefF-llewl (at T.,..., Aa.. JM. 21 SvracUM 3 0.,., LSU .... Olnls .... lat ()NMe, Aa.. JM. 1) C.Mn'ison "' Olllalloma, r;en c..... .... l•t o.Ms. Texes. JM. 71 UCLA S > over Arkansas Fln111 .... let T..,_, AriL. JM. 2) Notre O.me • , over Wt\t Vlf"Oin•• ·-.... ,., ~.s.NeN. JM. 2) USC 7 o.,., NloCll•N n OrMW 8awt ,.. Mieml. ...... JM. 2) M1•ml, Fla 7 over Net>tasu S"9r ..... (et .... C)NeM, La.. Ja.n. 2) Ftortda Slit• 6 over Auoum ,,_ Harrell'• ·-•act & 5"r1I ..... 0...seel"*'9 DAVaY'S LOCK•• C-..wt 9"clll -2 boelS, JS anolln. S1 r~ fish. 21 sano Diss 6 meckerll, 1 hne cOd, 5' KUlc>on. 3 sano oaos I SOii Sooners won 'c appeal decision NORMAN. Okla. (.\P)-Thi.' Univenny of Oklahbma "'" no1 appeal the NCAA's di.' 1s1on '" place tb( Sooner footba ll pr11gram on thrtt yt"ars' prob•lllon. tlK university's intenm prl.'Mlknt said Wednesday. .. We 1«ept 1he penaltll'S im- posed u.{>9n the 1.1ni,ers11) b~ the NCAA. interim prcs1dl.'nt [)a, 1\.1 Swank said in a rclenw 1ssul'J throu&h the school. .. WC haveliln e'<cellen1 athktll proaram. and we will a ' forward in full compliance with all NC' AA naln and rraulat1ons m 1hc ru- ture:· Swank said. The probateon announced by the NC.o\A on Monday bin 1hc Sooncn from postscaton pla~ aft~r tb( 1989 and 1990 KaSOns. and kttps them otfh,·e telc' 111on ntllt aton. Otlahoma 11~ ~ 9tholat· *itlifteKt\Ofthe nt\11WO )t"lf1. ..t lllo must cut blc:lt on its the ··a:;,~paid retnat~ftl \IS.IS 11 C1l9ary at Edl'llOnton, 6.3S P.1'11 KineS I, Nw1tl Sters 6 ken"...,... MlnllHOll Lo\ Anoele\ s 0 3 '1 MemrMill-..... -10-12 I~ new, 2 1·l·foot base, lrnh Pack.a -•· two oon<IOles, It en.lo and one surface ~ft Flnt~ ,,_ ---.. -10-12 1ne/lft new, 2·2 .,. fool oaw, lrfth oacked oowller 1ram eno !Ive 1:1\a•rs I Mlnl'IHOI•, BellOws 13 (Brooke), .17, '1 M 1111HOt1, Ciecartlll 15 (Gile\), l.Jt, l Los Anot!H, Tonelli IS (Krulllltnnkll, 2 06, 4 Lot Anoe!H. Gr111kv 2' 10u9uev, Leidlawl. 3 OI, s M1nnnol•, Coecar 16. S II, 6 Los A~. NiC11ob )7 IROt111•ill, L1.olawl. 7.SI, 1 Monne· sota H•O\Clle.O 7 (Broten, MacL-.n> 14 40, I Nl•nnnot1 G•11Mf 11 I aellowsl 16 S2 Penal· lots-McRM, Nl.n doUOll mo11or (rOU9h•nol 11 13, OeGrn LA ooullle nwior Crouoll•nDI 11 13, Wetters LA (Interfere-nee) u II ~ ~ -i.-n ~ new, l ·loot DIM POwdlr enG Packed OOWO« IOYr" <Tlalf'S ano one wnace r.11 "'111. 5118118 -16 ltlCM~ n1"' 3•4·1001 oa.e, llOWOf' two d\atrS daY, IWO CJlaln n'911f lr9'I ~ -?• inc~ new S·loot base POWoe<" a1'CI CleCked llOWOlr lour U\llotl s.c .......... 9 Los Ange!H, Roo.1a111t 2' IT•vlor Nie:llOllll, 14 2', 10 Los Anolln, Tevtor IS (Nicl\OllS, R001ta11111. "., (pp) Penel· lin-MdlM, N11n m1scondUC1 '1 00 a.umoartner. LA, m•scondUC1, 21!0, Brooke Min CllOIOlno>. • 37, NICSorllv, LA <rouon•no>. 10 4S, Cnambtfs. Min ll••P9lnol. 1'-01 Tlllrd ~ II Los A~. Tonellt 16 (Krusl\elnvslu, DuouaYI. 3 SJ, 12 Lo\ AnoetH. OeGrav 6 INkllOltsl, 7 2S, 13. Los Anoetls CrosW1en 1 CRobll111l1), 19 04. ,. MIMtSO ... Hat>scllekl • (Broten. TonorOll. 19 27 Ptn•lllH-81110ws. Min 1triPOln9l, "· Roolt•illl, LA Cun· sPOl'"m1nli111 conducll. • 36, wauers. LA (llOkllll91, 9.SI. Giles, Min C1ntert1r1nctl, 11.16. McRM, Min Crougl\lng), ,. 16, Alll\Oll, LA TENMn IHI A~ ,,..y INclers NOCICIY ........ ....., L..ee9lle Tiie '* AsM>CtatlOl'I of Tennis Pro!n$>0nel1 monev 1t1oers 111touon Dec tt DETROIT •ED WING~ecaltld s.t'l'I St Laurent, eoeli.ndlr. from GltnS fa"' of 1111 Amlf'lcan HocklY Leeeue. trouohlnol, 1• 16 · 1. M••s w11tnoer 2. 8orl\ 8tckt< 3 Sietan Edt>trg 4. lv1n LtnOI S Andre ACJIUt 6 JlkOO Hl•selo. ShOts on ooel--Minnesol1 13·6· 17-36 Los Anoe!H 7-10-1~27 1 Emilio S.nc1t11 I Henr• Ltcontt t Kenl Carbson 10 T1m ~vo11e II JOM F1IZ0tl"a'<l 12 J0mPU11ll Power·11lav _,-1un1t1es-Mlnneso•• O ot • Los Aneetes I of 4 Goalles-Mlllf'llSOll, Ce.ev Ito '"°" ... wvesl. Mvhs, 0·4·0 (3 S7 rn.rd 7·SI LOS Anoelft, Htalv 113·11, fll1P1tr c~. S+ I I 00 S«Olld, 23·'121 13 Amos iv..nSOOt'f 14 Joh!' McEMot IS. Jommv CO<>nor\ A ltendanc-13, l?S. " ........... rti WSC*e°IOAY'S •HU\.n Uhl .. M-..... tU M _.,.., l'•ST .aACa 6 """"'11• a>1r trt > 0 ....... !e< 15'> 11 .. II tO I .. I.eel• CO'IC0t• l°'9W\I S 111 • '° "'°"' ~" .~, n '° T.mt 1 IU MCOM> "ACL 6 ,.,,_, "°' .. -I$_, 1 .. J60 >• C_,, Cr"" t,.._oa•I l '° • 00 Alloll IS... .. I 160 •OO 1...,.. llU U OML.Y DOUell 1 •1 oa o SIJt 10 TH•O •ACL • 1 '"''°"'' a.'"'""" CM<Cerronl 1010 • .o 1 llO Vttl-tPtfKa•) • 00 1.i Slf.C:I Conh-• c~-•M•tl J 00 Tome I It• u 1xACT• c• 101 .... uno l'OUll TH • ACI. I I 16 "' ;t\ Ha·,,,. \kHI U O J.i 190 C 0•• For Flv"' IS'nO!'•' 7IO S'° troo•u l ao.-1 CV•""'•IW• JIO Timt I SI 12 lllACTA J Ill N O 0000 U OAl\Y Tllll'\.I • •) 11 N O ,,01 .. ""'™ ••c• • ,.,._ • ._.""" .. 1°""'911 • 10 , 00 •• "-"""' ..... 1 11 .. tlO °" ..... -v-........ 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" OJI "' s 1,n, nl 11.69',tSl Sl,402,I02 cou.a•• Sttl 931 "27,062 "'' 716 SSSS,14' B"OCKl"ORT STATE-fMmacl Bl• ao-. aulstant men's oaslle!Oall coacll. US4,4'1 Ss..6 S3t ssos 754 '500 711 M4() t71 '395.,, us..- SJSJ "' CINCINNATl-Nemecl Clwla F. ""lc1l" r.vtor elllletlc Cllrector MIAMI FLA-~ Anclr'I Brown. wldt reo!YW, tor ttll Orenee Bowl. PACIFIC-Nemed Tad Lelend lltlll'IC dlf"K· ror lllCHMONO-AnnoYncact IN ,...._,Ion of Del ~ Med coec:tl. to MComl IHC\ltt\'f VICI Clrftldlftl of ttll flllowslliP of CIYlslle!I A"*- LM Alll"'"" W90t1UOA'l''S •ltul.n , ...... ., ...... _ ........ , l'alT •ACI I -., .. ,_ • .,. e .... , ... ..,. • .,. 110 >.o 1• lt-crv Del ,,_. JAC Ut S.•..,. Greu C I! 11' r,,.. ,.,. U IXACTA S·6 .,.,. \MOO YCOM> •Aca I ...... -Soc.-F"" ttt'fO""l I 00 00 • • a·l•00"9 A--"° •tO ?• .. ,__ .. , ..... ..,. . .. , .. .-... .... r ..... 1~0 st IXACTA •i ti ... "'00 T>llltO .. ACI, I m .. ...c:e A~ ~t )IO 1 .. 1.i $1<cO. N S.. lhK~torCI ) .0 ) .. Mo•• Mo c;,_v tOI T-10:1? U IXACTA ti J -,, .. l"CMlllnt ••c• • .., • ••o• No E-k~..u U IO \00 )00 """'-' E•< ... .._ 1Tr-~ >M , .. t M 0v.,. ...... tAC,.,...,... &10 T-JtQl U •AACTa ll I .... MetO l'WTII •ACa I oe Net • --S-re"I J .. 14t 1 .. ,_ .. ,_ o .. ~ 1• \eo a.nt llAC&. I milt _,, ....-s.or .. ,_) '. • • , .. .... .._ 10.0-.t JM t.ll c.u ....... ~ (¥ ............ , 1 .. T.,. UIU. U l.XACTA tt·SI M.O GUI tawmrnt •ACS. 1 ...... --_....., $oM , .. _, S4t UI t.• s.-_.,,. 1........,1 Ut OI -111 L.-(T-..UI JM To-HU 11 1.XACTA (M l MIO SIS.1' I.~ """· I m4lt trot. S.C._..,..,,. Slorm (Prcl SM Ut Ut -.1 ...... 10.-1 uo ,. 11-.a.<;,C--I llM T.,,,. HU U 1.XACTA IMOl -SM• ..,.,.. aaca. 1 ,,,... --w .... .., .. c-...1 1\M '1t Ut u $1\et ... ,..,... 4M , .. ..._,,. FlfN CW•IN9n1 UI T-Hiil U l.X.ttCTA IM I -M1• U IMWLY ntlP\.9 IS .... 31 ---· A•-tM __ ,...JG. Carr tells of money offer Ne\v Orleans back says Johnson tried to bribe him to attend OSU TULS.\. Okla ( ..\P) -Fullback L\ddl Cur of the New Orlcan' Samts said Wedncsd~~ he 'knc"' his formtr roomma1e. Ke11h Jad.son. rcccned alumni mOnl.'} "hale at Oklahoma. but claimed the mone) "as no1hin Ilk<' what he was offered b) then-O~lahoma 1aa· oach Jimmy Johnson. "You wouldn't bche\C the things he tJ ohn~on) offered when he "as at m)' h1&h ~hool.'' Carr told Thc Tulsa Tnbunc 1n a 1ckphonc 1n1cn1c• Carr's comments came one da> af\cr Jackson. now with the Ph1laddph11 Eqlc said he had accepted monc). without 1hc ltno"kdlC of coachc!., from alumm while at ffilahoma. The Sooncrs earlier 1h1~ •cc~ "ere placed on three )Can· prot\auon b the "'I for rul ,·1olat1on (arr did no'*'' e 5pe'(tfiC1 abou1 "hat he ":i" utTm.•d wMn Johnson rttTu1tcd him as a tcn1or runo1n1 ~k at Enid H11h hool. but he told the nt•spapc ... 1 almost had to ao to l ' tr t hid tc>M to OSL'. I Ymuldn't ha' c hid 10 tum pro " John~. no" held c(ll('h at M1am1. Fla • ~"\lfkd at (arr\ rtm.1rb ··Whal he "" qU(ltl-J ., W\ in.a ·~ tan \..Ul J:'IJ -( UI fabncatcd lw. Johnson said in a Matcmcnt issued through the schoors ports 1nform1uon offtet. "lydell Carr didn't even' 1s1t our campus. "The only con\crsat1on I C\er had with him was when I met him and SJ>Oke to him for five minutes in his high school roach's office." Johnson said. Oklahoma State "thlcuc Otrutor MYTOn ~odenctc said Carr's allcpuons ne\er ftrc bf'oulht up 1n the NC "A's cumnt 1nvesup11on of the 11nivasity .. We would rather no1 comment on tomethi._ we know noth1na about.·· Roderick said. Oklahoma ~lite 1s awatti• an NCAA report. c'pcctcd by Fndl). on an 1n¥e1Ci111tton iftto 119-d \ 1olat1ons dunna Johnton's ltfturt. ftom 1979 to 1913. Carr played with Jldlt0n • OklBholnaand Mid he was aware Jackson rctt1vcd ~from alumni. tMlt was surpn!Cd he d1tck>ltd tt to 1cponen Tunday. "l It""° (Jackson) was ~ ~· lNt I aho know that the COKhcs knew ~ ibout it. -Cmr iaid. - <\sited 1fhc ever tool money"--lhunn1. C'trr seid: .. rm not 19'"1 to sa~ an}thi• .-.. 1Mt. .. Carr " fDl"I ••to ·IMI _._.. ,_-ol a .....,_, S420.000COfttnict .............. iadlllH•-- ~~tht drift~....... . NC'"' cliM10r ol rn• 1cc•• DPid ..,. •• Wf'dnada) the 1nvn1-1• ol Oltdl a ••1 ..... prop11m would not br "•Id • IOllk ilile Jae• 11 r'1 rtmar\1. I ' . ~cJoluleoa f Four-game slide cone s ostng streak Is _:--lo-n -est-of 'Magic Era· - INGLEWOOD (AP) -The Los Angeles Lakers are in their lonacst regular-season losina streak of the Magjc Era, four games. and Maaic Johnson. for one, is awfully depresKd about ii. "losing two in a row is not a aood fccli ng." Johnson said after the Lakers were beaten. 116-103. Tuesday night in Chicago by \he Bulls. "Losing three in a row rs hard 10 deal wi1h. Now. this is an all-time low for me. I'm try ins to figure out how to deal wi1h 1his. It's not easy." The Bulls outscored the Lakers, 23-5, after two free throws by Johnson with S: 11 rtmain-ina pve Los AnseJes a 98-93 ~ad. Johnsonhad31poin1sand12assists.butil wasn't nearly enouah. h's their lonsest losin& . streak since they lost five in a row in March of 1979. . Johnson joined the team the followinJ fall . and has led lllem to five championships in his nine seasons with the 1cam. The Lakerl lost four straight to Philadel- phia in the 1983 NBA finalund 10 Houston in the 1986 Western Conference finals, but had never lost more than lhrtt straiahl durina the reaular season with Johnson around un1il now. ''A lot ot &eams lotc fourin a row." Liken Coech Pat Riley said. "But it's the firs& time 11'1 happened 1n my coachina career. It feels bid. It feels hke every other coach who's lost four in a row. "We'tt in a ptriod where we arc struglina. and we'll have to deal witb it. .. Riley became the Lakers' coach on Nov. 19, 1981. His teams have I 429-1.SS reaular- sason ~rd and an 87-38 post-season mark and have won four ltquc championships. The recent losses to New Jersey. Boston. Washinaton and Chicqo -all on the road -have dropped the Lakers to 16-8. but they still lead the Pacific Division by 1wo game~ ov('r La ers PonJand. And dnpite what's happened in 11\e la11 ~ the Lakm are 9-8 on the ro9d and one of only tour NBA teams who have won more than they've lost away from hom~ . All thinas consickrcd. thinp ann't so bid for the two-time dtfcndina NBA champions. They've played 17 of their first 24pmnon &he road, and still have won twice as many as they've lost. The Josi~& streak fttum to come 10 an abrupt end Friday niaht when the l.akcrs. 7-0at home! cntenaln the Sacramento Kinas. who were .>-16 overall and 1-10 on the ra.d before playina at San Antonio Wednesda~ ni&)lt. UCI HEADS HOME ... From Bl wanted that aame badl:r-.JuSt to prove I could coach. I guess I flunked that test. but that may happen quite a few times this season. My sisterinvited some people over afterthegame. I broughrsomeofour players and, at this point they may not like me very much, but they enjoyed my sister's food. I also cal led Loyola's former coach, who was a grammar school teammate of mine and isnowdyiogofcanccr. Somehow, the loss to lo)'.ola seemed much more insignificant af\eit, talkiJlg with him. Anyway, it is great . to be back in Orange County and I : know this is where I belong. nol in Chicago. ~; 0 My youngestson, Brian, is the basketball coach at Orange Glen High School in Escondido. Four of his 1op five players played football and went to the finals. so Brian just received them for basketball I Iii weeks ago. The program he inherited did not win a league game las1 year. because 1t was run by the players and parents. They hired him to be strong. Last week, one of the football pla yers. who is the starting point guard in baske1- .ball. gave Onan some static and he 1old the player to knock it off. The player responded that he could do whatever he pleased and had started for three years. Brian kicked him offlhc team and now the principal. athletic director and parents are involved. My son. who I am very proud of. has told them that if they force him to take back 1he player, !hey will have a new coach the next day. because he is throu~. This is an other case of who is in charge. We sec it everyday in Orange County on every level and in every sport. We need more coaches like Bria11 Mulligan who will ma1cca stand. The situation is now in the hands of the administrators to make a decision. I wi II keep you posted as 10 the ti nal result. Attend a little-league game in any sport and be prepared to vomi1 at the insanity tha1 occurs at those games. 0 Best wishes for an enjoyable and safe holiday season. Orange Coast offering winter sailing course So you want to learn 1osail. Or maybe you already have a smattering of knowledge about sai 1- i ng and want to upgrade your skills. -Tn eltl\erevcnt. this is the ti me of yearto find qut everything you wanted to know about sailing but were afraid to ask. Whether novice. intermediate or advanced. Orange Coast Ccllege's winter sailing program is the answer to all of your questions. OCCs public sailing program is dedicated to helpingyou learn more about sailingand marine activities. All of the courses are "hands on" with approximately 80 percent of cl ass ume being spen t in boats -sailing in Newport Harborortheadjoining ocean, depending on your skills or lack of same. Private gjfts make the program possible and enable OCC to offer the courses al low prices. All sailing courses meet at the Oranie Coast College Rowingand Sailing Base on Pacific Coast Highway. Newpon Beach, between 1he Balboa Bay Club and theOrange Coun1ySeaScout Base. Thecollege's J989wintersailing program gets underway Jan. 6and continues througfi Feb. 8, dependrn1 on which course you are interested in. Registration should be made through lhe OCCCommunityScrvices.2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. or by telephoning432-5880. - Here isa rundown of the classes offered: • Beginning sailing: Through lec- tures and on-the-water practice in Lido-14dinghiesyou'll lcarn the basics ofsailing-terminolgy. rig- ging, safety. docking under sail, tackingandjibingand the five points of sail. The fee isS50weekdaysor$69 eveningsand weekends. The seven weeks course meets Jan. 61hrough Feb.19. • Intermediate Lidos: For those who have taken the beainninJclass but want more time in dinghies. This course reviews basic sailing skills before moving on to refining helm work and sail trim. and is the primer course for ln1ermediate Shields. Fee Field hockey often overlooked '\, sophomore Courtney Everts. who plays center forward. and junior Laura Olsen. who plays center has some strong teams halfback. "The ker for us is we need 10 start passing better,"said Edison Coach Debbie Ortega. By ST AN GRANCH 0.-."9tCen1 ... 1..-it Perhaps the most overlooked high school sport isgfrls field hocke)'. First of all. not man y schoolHven field a team. Second. it is hard to find any scores in the paper. letalon~me summary. So. for this column,girlsfi~ hockey will be Queen fora Day. "Thinp ~m to be coming together now as theairlsarc bqinnina to play belier. The girls s1ill need to work on moving.setting picks. and reversing the field of play. Weare young and we are still learnil!J. but by the lime league starts we should do fine." In the Orange Coast area. most of1he schools that field a team play in the Sunset Lea~ue. The league is comprised of Edison, Fountain Valley. H untinJtOn Beach. Newport Harbor. Marina and Westminster. Last year. Fountain Valley(.3-4-1) finished second to the Chargers. but this year Coach Mike Coleman feels things will be much tougher: "The whole leaJue is balanced and whoever ~tsthebreaks is going to win ii," Coleman said. 'Everyone is having trouble scoring. and everyone seems to be evenly matched. Last year, the Edison Chargers captured the league crown. However this year. with the rain and the loss of many pla yers to graduation. the Chal)ers have only played four times with a record ofl -2-1. "Ourgoal is to make the playoffs. To do thal. you have to finish in the top two, we did it last year. and I think we can do ii again. "for us 10 make the playoffs we need to be more aggressive. Wehaveonlyfourseniorsand we need to make things happen, and not sit back and Leading the attack for 1he Chargers are Aa.101 UCIUO BoA TiHG is1'50'weekdaytor-$69eYenin1u weekends. • Intermediate Shields: For 1hose who know the basics and want to move on to the finer points of sail trim and sailing theory. This course introduces the 30-f oot Shields class sloop and includes wind shifts, sail shape, anchonngand rules of the nauucal road. Course meets for seven weeks from Jan. 6 through Feb. 17. Feeis$50wcckdaysorS69evenings and weekends. From Bl went through the regular season with a rcpuation for .. not hurting" Cor- ona'sgame, with statistics often in the rangeofS for 15. or 10 for 21 , less than 100 yards and usually interception free. But when the playoffs began, Price . turned 11ger. connecting for 160, 166. 120 and 228 yards. as well as some piercing runs ofrthe optron. - _ __.,I(---..,,.~ In the 1i1le game. he completed 13 of 17 for the 228 yards and a touchdown. Thomas. Ochoa and Mangnall each loomed very big on defense for their respective teams. although Mangnall was selected on the offense. Scroll awards will be presented to all players named, and division champion coaches and the Player of the Year (Kato vsicb) will also be recognized. .U,-1 OcbM wail forthingsto happen. Since we are starting tour freshman, we need 10 hustle to make up for our lack of experience." Leading the way for the Barons are seniors Mignon Taylor(cen1er forward). Anna Schlotzhauer(forward)and Vinh Nguyen (de- fender). Despite finishing in a lie for fourth last year. Huntington Beach Coach Kari Quinlan has high expectations for her squad. "We have the most ex~rience of any team in the league with 13 seniors.' Quinlan said. "Most everyone else lost a majoFit y of their players to graduation. and our goal is no1jus1 to win league. but to go undefeated." Yet things have not gone quite to Quinlan's expectations thus far as the Oilers are 3-1-4. "We have been making silly mistakes. which is why we keep tyingevel)'one," Quinlan related. "We have the talent to'o undefeated. All we have to do is play error f rcc.' 1, Pacing Huntington ;ch are senior Brenda Blackham (ri t link). se rTracyGray(center back). seniorFrica Terre ighl inner) and junior Jenni Walker (wing). Syraeuse's - Coleman arraigned SYRACUSE. N.Y. (AP)-Derrick Coleman, a s1aner on the na11onally- ranked Syracuse University basket- ball team, was arraigned Wednesday -00.harassmcnland criminal mischief char1es in connec11on wiil\i lignt an ' a disturbance earlier this month. officials said. Syracuse City Coun Judge James Tormey released Coleman. 21. on his own recognizance pending a Jan. 31 pre-trial hearing. said Laura Del . ecchio. a court spokeswoman. • Advanced Sailing. For sailors who have solid intermediate skills such as basic boa1 handlin.i. 1erminol<>JYand points of sail down cold. TaugM in Shields class sloops, thiscourscfocuseson refining helm work and sail trimmin& skills. More imponantly, this class uuroduces 1he use of the spinnaker, scuing,jibing and take-downs. This course meets from Jan. 81hrough Feb. 19. Fee is $79. Joyner-Kersee Woman of Year Coleman pleaded innocent to fourth-degree criminal mischief. a misdemeanor. for allegedly kicking in a door about 12:30 a.m. Dec. 11 during a fight a1 a campus center where a fraternity was holdini a party. she said. George Rooks. the only freshman starter on Syracuse's nationally- ranked football team. was charged with a violatJon in the fraterniJy incident, a source in the district attorney's office told 1he Syracuse Herald-Journal. ST. LOUIS (AP)-Jackie Joyner- Kersec, who broke her own world record in the heptathlon at last summer's Seoul Olym_pics, on Thurs· day was named The Sporting News' first Woman of the Year. Joyner-Kersee 1s the first woman 10 receive the weekly publication's top yearly award. It was called Man of the Ytar the first 20 years ii was presented. Ml.IC llJTlC( NlJC tl)TICE NI.JC tl)TICE NlJC tl)TICE . I Ml.IC tl)JICE ML.IC tl)TICE MUC tl)TICE NlJC tl)TICE NI.JC NOTICE Ml.JC tl)TICE lllWC*S lucha, LUCHS & MIHELICH. 6th day of Sept91'11ber, 1988 MOTICI OP ITION TO PROTECT YOU ~ NO.F271157 ITAT'lmlfT OP 1979 ducted by 1 corp«etlon (CfTACM>N .IUOK:IAL) INC , 734-t Megnolle Av· c....-8rectlw.,, City ""'lna'I IAU PROPERTY, IT MAY BE ITAW Ofl JoM 0 . 1.41911 & Son. AaANDGllWlllT OF Edwerd Lu The regl1trent com- NOTICE TO OEl=ENOAHT· enue. Suite 250, ~. CWti 9lf the City ef Huftt-f·1IMI SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. AeA..OfP'IWT OP 17550 Giiiette Avenue, Cati· UM OP PICTITIOUI Thia atetement wu flied menc:ed to trenMCt bull- (Avleo • Acuudo) QUALi-CA 92504 (7141688-7400. ....... ..... On January 12. 1919 It IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA· UM OP '9CTl110UI tornll. IMM, Clltf. 92714 .._ .. NAMI with the County Clefk ol Or-,,... under the lictltloua FIED ESCROW COMPANY, DATE. (Fech•) NOV CM ......... l"-4 (714) 11:1>0 Lm r:lrl1 American NATION Of THE NATURE .._ .. NAMI Security Peclllc Stet• The foltowtna s-1on1 ... County on December bUllMM name or ,,_ tNC , LORI SCHNAUFER: IHI ......, Tiiie lneurence Compeny, • OF THE PROCEEDING The toffOwlng peraon1 Ber*, 14222 ~ Ol'I .... , MW ebendoned tM UM o4 18. 1988 lleted lboW on .My 1, IN& DO NALD SCHNAUFER; ...... l .CeftertJ,C'-tl, Publllhed Orenge Co11t Cellfomle corporetlon .. AOAINST YOU, YOU hew Hendolled tN uee o4 Cellfornla, Irvine, Calif. the Flctltloua 8u1lne11 ~ Eduerdo Jorden, Sec· WINDJAMMER INVESTORS ., N. Merflnea,.,...,., DellY Piiot December 22, 29. TruatH. or Succuaor SHOULD CONTACT A LAW· th• FlctltlOul Bu1lne11 9211• Neme: WOOLF PAK l!NGI-Published Orenge COllt r.tary . 1978-2. A LIMITED PART-Publllhed OfenOe Coe.t 1988. January s. 1919 Tru1tH or Subltltuted YER N•me: LUSK HOMES -Thie bulinMI WU con-NEERING, 2005 w. Balboe Delly PMot December 22. 29, Thi• atatement ... flled NERSHIP, ET Al Delly Piiot Oeeember 8, 15. Th-182 Tnm•. of that Clrtllln Deed December 18, 1Ma COHCOAO. 17550 Ollet1e duc1ed by. genetll partner-Blvd. Ste. 217, Newport 1Ma, January 5, 12, 1919 with the County Clerk of Of. YOU ARE BEING SUEO 22. 29, 1eaa ot Tru1t hecuted by fWtlT .-..CM nna Avenue, !MM, Cellf. 12714 lfllP IMctl, Cell!. 92883 Th-190 ange County on Decembel BYPLAINTtFF·(AUd lefftl Th183 PtalC tl)TlC[ RANCHO PARK APTS., IMMMANCI COMPANY._: The Flctltloue .,.,... Tl"9 etatement wu filed The Flctltloul 1k1e1neM 14. 1Ma =°•;~~ ~H,.":.;~gsi ....C tl)T1C[ K444GI ~~=~= ::_•;.-:.=:ii. 0.: ::-1n~::,!0 ~-= =:.t=~ ~~ :=-1n~0 C:: W: MUC tl)T1C[ Put>Mlhed Orenge ~ TOMEONI FICTITIOUl.,_11 the &ewe of the Stale of ._,,1M._.,_ ...... Mey 10, 1H5 ,ILE 12,1... November. 1187 FILE fllCTITIOUl-11 DeltyPllot0ecember22,29, You heft IO CALENDAR MOTICI MA• ITAff•WT CAI.If'~. Md recanted ..... AM,C • 1•11111 NOF271158 Publllhed Ol'lf199 Coat IN().F361'15 NAM18TAW t .... Jenuary5, 12, ttet DAYI...., ... --INYfTINQ MDI fhe lollowlng P9flON .,. APRIL 7, tMa• lnetrument (114) ...,, "°"" D. Luell I Son, ~ Piiot December 15. 22. St9'119S. Murld. 24872Vla The fottowlng per90nt.. Tll-18e ......... Oft ,_ te .. • CC-718 dol~ bullneet ... NO .... 15t409, of OfficMll PubMeMd Orenoe Coeet 17550 Glllet1e Awnue, Cell· 29, 1Ma, Jenuary 5, 1Nt "'°'·· MIMlon Viejo, Celll. doing bullneel u : "8JC llrf1C( typwwrltten ,..._. .... Notail~~tha1 N RTHWOOD CHINA Aecord1o40RANOECoun· OeltyPtlot0ecember22.29. fomla.ll'Wle,a.lf.12714 Th-177 Htt1 VAN SMITH PLANNING----=------~- ... -'. tMled bid9 w111 be recetved GARDEN RESTAURANT. ty. Cellfomla. end punuent 1NI, Jenuery 5. 1Mt S.C:urlty Pec:lflc: ltete 1rtan AC>Pel. 950 Arlt St . CONSULTANT, 1991 Tllltln A lettef •~call wllf by the City of Huntington 4790 lrvlne Blvd. • 10I, to ttlat cettllln Nata o4 0.. Th185 Ber*, 14222 ~ DriYe. MUC llJT1C( Hermo11 BHch. Celli. Avenue, Coete Mee&, Cellt PIC~A~ll '"'4 prelect ,.u; ,_type-8Mch et the office of the lrvlne, Cellf. 9271• teutt there unw l'9COfded Cellfornle, lrvlne. Cellt. 9025" t2927 wrttteft r11p1w mwt be Cltr Cleril e1 Clty Hiii. 2000 Tel Sun T.-ig, 2 Led•, Auouet 25. 1 ... • lnltru-MUC llJT1C( 92714 PICT1TIOU8 -II Thia bulllneM w11 con-l!v1n1 Temple Smith, ~ = ~.,. lft,,,..,. ..... '°"" tf ,_ Mlln Str .. t. Huntington lrvlne. Cellt. 92714 ment No. 11-423037, of Of. Thie bullfl9ll ... con.-IUlm ITA~ ducted by co-partner• 1tM Tustin Avenue, Coe1• A -,.LUS FOR AWNtNGS WMt the cewt to,..._,_ Beec:ti. Callfomla. until the Freida Feng Yun Y. Teeng, flcial Aecordl of Mid eaeti. ITAW OP duc1ed bye generel per1Nr· The foloMrtl ,.,_ ere Tlllll lt9t.,,_.t -llled MMe. Clllf. 92827 20 • • -· llOur ot 10:00 e.m. on Jenu· 2 Leda. Irvine, Callf. 9271• lewful money o4 the United A8AflDClll•WT OP lfllP doing bullfl9M ee: with the County Cieri! of Of· Thl9 bullne.. 11 con· 2 "-*-2. Huntington tf ,_ do not ftte r-ary 13. 1Mll. et wttldl time Thll bu11neu II con· 8tltH of Amerlce, e UIS OP PIC1TT10UI ftlle _....,_,. WM llled CAAPENTEA & CO., 919 er'Q9 County on ~-duct9d by: an Individual Beech, Calif. 112148 reap•-IHI "'-· rou ...., tMy will be opened end ~t>-ducted by hulbaN:l Ind wife C9lfller1'1 ct** pey..,._ to .,_11...,... with the County Clerf( o4 Or· Vitt• Bonita. Newport 1, ,... The reglllrent com· Le!::. Shote tnduatrlel, .... ltle -· end ,._ 11cty end r-.c1 Ibid in the The reg11trent com-l8'd frue1• drewn on • The fottow4}'9 s-aona .,. County on December IMctl, Calf. t2teO Pu04llhed Ofenge Coeat menced to trenwt bull-Thl9 t>val 1 ...... _, end prep-Council Ctlamtl«I tor the IMnCed to trenaact bull-_. ... « netlonel benlt, • ,....... lbandolled IN 1119 of 12, 1... Carolyn Car11ent•. 819 Delly Piiot December a. t5, -under the flctltloua . neu • con. ~ fMJ ltie tal!en w'"*'1 IUl'nllhlng I con11ructlon of nee. under tile flctltlOua Cfl9Ck drewn·by • 1t1te or th• FlctlUoua BuelneH Publlltled Orange eo.t Vl1ta Bonlte, Newport 22. 21. 1... bullMM neme « nemee dufhed by. •1~•tlotn fWtMf Wemlnf "°"' tM trefflc 119na1 lmprowment1 bullnMI neme or nemee '9derll credit union, or I Neme· AMEAICAN HOTEL Delly Piiot DIDlmtlef 15, 22, IMch. Calif. 92MO fh· 112 lilted ebolle on Mey, 1M5 men!cs r~: : ::'act c.::· oewt. & modlflcatlone on Warner listed lbove on NIA Cfl9Ck dr-.wn by e 1tat1 « LIOU.IOA TOAS 1415 29, 1 .... J..-y 5, ,.. Carolyn Car11entw. 819 __ ,,, ~ Evena T Smith ,,._ ndCJf rlhe llctltou. Thef-..,. oUlef ..... ,... A\19. et Meono19, Newland. Tei Sun T.-ig '9derll Mvtnge end 1oen .. Spurgeon St Me 418 Th-178 Vlate Bonlte. Newport ,.._ ""'-. Thia llltement w• flied u • ~te.Youm.,wem Edwerda. Sprlngd•I•. T111111atement -Ned IOdetlon. « uvlngl blink SenteAne ~ 92701 • •-•llfWW IMctl.Cellf.taeeo 1 __ .iththeCountyClertiofOr· :=-a11ow""': ~"-: le call 1111 ettemey ,.. Grlhern Boise Ctllca Ind with the County C.k of Or· IJMClfted In MCtlon 5102 of The Fic'tltlou · Bualnell ~ ~ Thia bullnesa la con-TA·-· vr 1111ge County on December _.,. tt rou do Mt"'"""' ~. In the City of enoe County on ~-the flnanclel Code end Heme r.._red t! ~wee duct«t by: en lndlYldU•I ~f!!.D~ t•. 1981 15~".: A pltl Preeldent • ....._,, ,_...., oel M Hunt1n91on IMctl U . 1988 ewthottlled to do bulllneM In flled In Oflf1ge CountY on ...,. The r•tlatrent com· -vr Nl1171 f""'" _...:.__.:_ ......... ..,_,.., retwtet _.... • A ... ot ptane IC>9Clfl-,_ tt11e It ... It tM main en-7 17 ;1 L ITATW OP menced to 1renuct bue1-........ ...,... Publllhed Orenge..Collt ·-·-·• -,,_, a ..... efd oMae (..._In cation.. end ott1w'contrec1 Publllfled Ofenge CoMt trence to ~at Amwlclen ~h.;,37 191 I E AaAlmDI I nOP -under the flctltlout Tiie fonowlng pereont o.1tyP11oto.c:.mo.r22.29. wlffltNCountyClettlofOr· ._,..._Met!). doeumentemeybeobtllned Dally Piiot December 8. 15. Title lneuence Compeny Vlctlle Aubin 1415 ~~-MllhOue bullfl9ll name °' nem. MW IMl'ldonecftN uee of tNl,Jenuary5, 12. lMll lf19917 1~'Y on November D....-. •.-le_. on0ecember22. t"811t"8 22,29.19118 IOCee.d at 114 ea.c Flftft Spurgeon St sMta Ana. MJll•M...,... lleteCIMIOveonJuty7, 1913 tlle Flct11lou1 Bu1lne11 Th·19l • ,_ .............. ~ .. Depertmenl of Public Th-153 Street, In the dty ot Sant• Cell! 12701 ., The fel=Me s-eona C.0¥! Car11enter Heme: A·PlUI FOR AWN· PutlleNcl Coeet _... WIM ..._ • ..... Wortlt 2000 Mein Streec. Ana Caltfomle Ill tflet right. Thie bullfl9ll ,_,. ... _,. ttle \lie ot TIMI Meternent WM tiled INOI. 220 Venloe •2. Hunt· ftmJC llMWlr Ofenae die IO DIAi CAl.IW..,. Huntington ... ell. Cell· MUC llJT1C( tftte end lntefeet ~ duc1ed by en~ con-tit• flctllloue luelneH wftfl the County Cleril of Or· lnQton IMctl. Calf. t2t4I ~ ~2 ":..CeoemMc t, I . pere pruenter 11"• fomll. UCIOfl receipt of a to end now held by tt under Tiiie etaternent -flled Nerne: LUSK HOMES · SAN _,.. County on December 1'he FlctltlOul BuelMM PICTITIOUI ........ 1 • • n1911111 .. ...,.._ e ,.... non-relundeDI• IH of ic.-Mid Deed of fruit In tM wlththeCountyClertiofOr-JOSE, 17llO W.. Av-11.1... ...,,.,..,.,.,..,oeboveWM IUlmlTATWT Th-147 ~~-=-._.. l20~tl6dlheflbeinadeon '=•~11 =,tyendelt=~= ~~ty on Deurt*f en:.-=·:::.. Nlllf'9CI Orenge~ ::c~ ~~~,I~ .l':::i:J:r--are WllmCE •ltll .. ne le ..,_e tM PropoMI Form Ind In The ......... ,.,_. ere •: ~ Of C.. ..... ,....... IO eboww = "9ot D10ll'flber 12. 21. NO P'3ICMI p~ WINO T~ W jililllllln; IU , .. , ...... the mennet prO'Med In the doing llullne98 •: THE NORTHWUTEALY DeilY Piiot o.oe:: 21 2t ...... "' Or-. County on • ~I, 12. ,.. ....... ,Lynn~· I FINANCIAL llAVICH PICTITIOUl Wll ...................... contrecl document•. end p~o·s MTOftANTI!, 412 F!l ~LOT 41, NEW-1 .... JefMary 5. 12. -• May 10J_ 1tU ,.ILi! Th-187 220 Vence. untlngton COMPANY. 7022 Moonllgltt ..... ITAT11•1n H"'pffr H" IH t•r• .,_..be eeeompen!ec1 by e 1to7 .. "9rtlor. Coeta ....... PORT HEIGHTS, IN THI Th-1'3 N0.'2111" Beedl. Cellt t2t4I Clfde Hufttlfttton 8eec11 The._.....·,;;;;;;. are "'e 11d1 du 1 e' e I u oartlfled « caefller'1 cllectl Cellt. t2l2t CrrY Of COSTA MfSA. JoM O. Luek I Ion, f9JC ..,. THI ~ WM con-Ce11f 9*1 ' _.,. ~a 8'Wlpl1f11 et_....,. or e tl6d bond tor not .... T~ H. Ooen, 14t1t COUNTY OF OAANGI. 17llO GilM1e A._.., eel--duCMd ~Ill PNeton Jey ~ llC"ICUTIYI INVEaT .. le Mfte ......_ • tNn 10% ot the -t of Bowllng OrHn, WHt• ITATEOFCALIFOANIA,AI PmlJC m'1C( fofnle, '""'9,c.-f. 12714 .... Thie twee~ 70HMoonllQfttClfde.Hunt; MINT GAOUP 2114; -. IN tl6d, 1Nde peyeble to the mlnlW. Calif. t2113 PIA MAP AECON:>ED IN leouflty Pectftc ltete ITA~ OP wltfl tile County Cleril ot ..,... ~ IMClfi, CeMI t2t..1 ~ die Allcla. ...... llO • ...., ... ,,...... • City o4 HuMtngton Bwfl. DonD Ooen,14tt1Bowl-900t<4,PAOfn.~MtS. 8TAWOP .... , ... cu.. Drtwie, ··•all I ITOP ... County on Nowmber Tlllt ~ '11 COft• Cell..., . r1111 11• e ......_ ,_.. LebOr Code 9lf ttle State of Ing Oreen, W•tmlnltlf, CEUANIOU8 MAPI. IN A•,_DI Yff OP C.lltorlMe, lrwlne, Callt, .m •MttfiOUe 17, 1tM Mt9d e.r-_, lftdtw1dtlel ~ ~--• toen- ,.,_ .. _,, ._ ,_.... c.Momleendoehwi...of Cellf.tll83 THE OFFICE OF THI U.OPlllCm'IOUe "71• ........... """"'*'~.Cwt Th• '•llttrant com·.,., ,.,.Mf) 'H•l•kH _.., • ....,.., • ._. tile St ... Of Celtfornla ~ o.nll H, ~. 14t t 1 COUNTY AIOOROEA OF W• ,.._ THI bullfl9ll WM con-The fo=Mtl per90na Dellr Ptlot o.o.no.. 1. I, IMft09d IO tr8'1NCt bull-F KMIU4ii H I 1 • ., ....... • n GllMe ....,...., w1tt1 the ... low11n1 Green. Weat-IAK>COUN'TY. ™~OllOWtn!I pertoM ductedttraoen-11...,,,_ • ..,._....,.._ .. H.b . ,. ,_ llftder ... lktttlowl .. ~· a. .... ......... , .......... ~ """'ot 9'ICfl ..... ,,..,,...,,Callf t2tl3 EXCEPT THEAIFORM heW ................... of... • ... Flctltlow IUllftffe Th-1 .. ~ ,..... or ,.,.. ~I °"* eo.- )1 ..::c lli9fW .......... ..,,. tMt !Ny ... ~ °" H Hoene. , .. ,, .... THI NOATHWllTIAL y tit• Flclltlout lueln... "'* ......,.,, ............ OONTININTAl .... ..... .... on NIA .. ,.,...,. ·,.11....,.. ..... n UIJltte under the apeolet -...ueee Ing Green, w .. tmln•tar, 171 Fll'T. Nefl!el MUAAO a MUAAO ~ .... County Clertl ot Or-VllTMINT8 ANO PN>P--.,C !DJ!iE ,,_.,. ~ AY9 It Helena Cetlf ................. lllllad ~to wt16Ct1 ptooeed-Cellf. tll83 TheM•Uddr .... oroehw INIUAANCl llAVICH ..... County Oft D'lnmllef PTY MANACllMBfT, 20l1 TIMI ecete '*" wee flied ... ?'. ' ' ' ........ a .......... ~ .. , • .,, Not Ven~. 14'11 COfMIOft•u1wsietlol10fMld IOOS w .............. 11.1..1• ....... c.. °'· •tlO. MmlOUIW• WIOltN()ountycaertiofOr· .... Cotpor ... Celt- ,, •1• I ......... .,,, .............. .,_, lo•llng Gr~ WHt• PfOl*ty. .. ~ .. -117. ~ ....,_, Clll. r\ollllJfled Or ... c.. '"""9.Cell.11711 ... ITAW ... County on DUl"14lel .....-~ .0:.... -• • 1111101 ,_.. euperud•d b1 tlle ,,.,...,Cellf. Mahe,....,,..., Pn. t2la ~,_D1111-~n. n. ,........ ••nw n.......,......,. .. 14 ,... ,..,_,,MOO~ COMI ....................... ~0¥ieloM of the 1.al>Or Ngefl Tiii Tren. 14t11 1'3 I 1 .... ltfeeC, C:.. The 11\cWoue lullfleel It. 1W.-...YI, , ... ...,., ... , .... e11ow .. ..,......,__ ' ..,_ ...,._, eor.. dll Mer =---===I.:.: =·.:=~Oln-= ==~ca:~~ WHI• ~c:..-:. M ..... :-... r-=:.IO=:-: Th-171 ==:: ... ,=-i.~ --=~.:.= =~.:=n ~-=--II oon~ ............... ~brlew TIMI bueineM II oon-.-out e911•••1 or...,. 0cteMr 7, 1117 ,Ill ... ..:1 NO Cell... ,,.,__,,ta ttil ' -11¥: ..... ,_, Noblch1tellbeoo11'•1 ed dUCted by:•....,,. s-1• 'lfllY,....,....,........,. N0.'111111 .-A......., Ital ldwud Lu, HU • ' '~,........ • • --....... " .. ,,.... OflefOtm,..,..,. to .... 11111111'11 or ... Deetta Mured, 11147 .... a-. v.e_!!.:i. '°""' ......... A!!:.t,. WUflUI Tu retl•tr•n• GOlll• TtleMIMMdaddrWflf.,,...... ~ ... Qty°' n. retletrlfU COlll-~···-.. ...._ ........ ......,VtafO.Celll. n•• . L.Wle,Clll ... ,, .... c..1, .. , -.s.. ,...... .. .,.... .... the oowt Ir. Cll ......... 1 "41:11•'°'1 8eecll IN • ...,.., to .,__. .,..._ _,., ~ dll9., .. -1 ,7iiilll..,... 0... I. ......... 1a1 .... o ~ W - -...., .. ..._. ~die II oorta eet: ,,....,,WOldelioewlll'llN ,_ llftder tfle ~,...or....,...,.. tty Din• Mwred. 1711 JlltllllUI ,__ LW. ,....,_., ........ UN.Y UNI. ...,. =-,_ •.,.... ......... ....,_ eoun. ~1111oo1 ,of ttM P'CIPOMI llullne9I neme or ,.,.. Mid o.11 of TNlt, 10 •: Clla11ldle, ~ 0... --Cllf. -Celt~ ._ 11 lllGllt--• ..... ...._ ., Na ..., , 4080 Mein..,.,.., fl.O. lc»c ,..,.,.,,..... .....MIOveonN/A 1111,14111,pM ......... Cellf. lf•n Tfte -=::1 ,.,... 1'NI ...... oon--· A. -· .... ....".,_, 11.,.. . 411 .......... CA tttoa. tecJt .,....., _,.. " '*"' H. ~ "" -· ••• ..... ... TNe ...,..._ .. OOft-... ~ ......................... ~. ~=-.,... Tiie................ ...... ... ....,,., ... """'"I Tlle,..., ........ Md......., 9!1d aleo pre-TMllCI outt_fled,__............................. 1"9,....... ................ IMa. · ~--TNe•lllTia•:.119d Ill ;l'lol• nutWar ot ~ ........... ,...,.,.., .., ... .. .. Coune, can °'Or-.............. ,.ian ..... I TNe 1!.!?.·~~ _ .... Or --. I LUllCNTON~,.... !!.-I ..... """'0r .: ~ ·~~ ~ Dr nu. .. , Dito .... c...., a.-.. Or-...... 9"0mt¥, « __, n.. Qty~ of tN ... ~on DNam-.r of INI Notloe of ... "'91tfle.__,.r_...., • 'L A A • • .... _a.. .. · ...,. ---_ .. =~._*·!MM.._~• Dtn a1 : ~ ., ettorlley, 11· 1• Qty ot """,..,........,,... 1. ,... . l!J!!·• ..,_TO ..,. °"""' ., Hauan• ...... ...., ......, Olll . ._ O...."' D1u1-,.... . w111 1,,.. ,...,...ledlNclllorly .. nu-_... .... 118f!t10,..My W ......... rt._ t,,... 117M I. -Tiie , .. lltren1 COlll• ..... T1le, IM., Cal-' N11111im1 m.,o d• ••l•fOftO d•I orlllMdl. "*"'*' Ofenta c.... YOU""' IN DIPMILT ,.., .... ~ c.... The "••• • ...._ Pl..LL:Jll °'*'II c.... ....... IO .,.,.... ............. , .... ....., ......... , ...... a.._ 0.. .... die ................ 0 ., -.,. of lite ~ Deity Plot Deoemeer 1-6..1-H• UNDIJU DllD Of nutT. Dlllr "°' DiOIURtilf •• 11 .................... DnlW .... Du I ... ::..·· -..... .. .................. n a -Dllw ..... c ...... . dal defllandene. .,_ no Cownc11 ot tt1e City ot Hum-21. 1 .... ....,.,., I. ,... OATIO ~ 1. tW. 12. 91, 1... fled ., ~ c...ew ., •• lta -..YI. .....,_ ,.,. .. • O: Celt. Inn R . lta......., t_ ---~ abOfedo, .. _Pott i.!!!I!...°" laec'ft. ~ tt1e fh.1'70 UNLlll YOU TMCa At; ~ n..1e1 lilly H , .:!Ill ,ILi ~174 ..... Mow_ Tiiie ........... ~ te C11A6 .,..__ ' , Kan BolCIU It's hard to believe there's only three days left before Christmas abd school will be out for the holidays. So if you're a parent ofa youngster between the age of 5 and I I ,you may wantto check out the New~n-Costa Mesa YMCA Holiday Day Camp. Two sessions of day care are offered frQm Dec. 26 through Dec. 30, and then again from Jan. 2 through Jan. 6. The Holiday Day Camp will be NEIGHBORHOOD FOCUS DAILY PtLOT/Thur8dlly, December 22. 1111 CE • History lesson fascinates sixth-graders ly L\TV BOUCHER delivery 10 lhe home . ., .. ..., .... ...., "Most of these childrtn couldn't J·11 M h hed h · understand why fan1ilits would need 1 at er approac t c micro-ice and 11 rcall) sumnsed them." she phone and told the audience her · 1"" • arandfather invented the rcfuchna saisd. . . system for ihe B-52 bomben not 10 he said the children were amazed mention the A for An&el Stadium. ,, thal doc1ors actuallY. came to the Mather was one of I so who home and charged as little as $3. They pthcred recently at Harbor View also learned tharfor$1, they could 10 Elementary for an annual event 10.a mova~ and buy popcorn and a known as the Oral Haslory Tea. dnnk -with money le!\ over . .. Evef)'one in all four sixth arades ~nd some of!hescch1ldren learned panic1patcs." said Marilyn Von a l!.'ll,c famil y history. . .. Klein Smid-Randolph. si"th...,.ade l 1nterv1ewed myp-eat...,..nd~. teacher. ··students choose someone said 12-ycar-old Matt Roters· She SO years older than they are -~ually use<! to dance on staae at n11tn ind it's their grandparents:· 1hat s how she met !"'Y arandfat~c~ The students are 11ven the assi•n· He ~as lhe man pulhna tlic curtaio. ment in Oc1ober and are asked to JOI Sull others learned about the down 30 quesuons for their inter-~p~ssion. • views. Most students ask double and I intervie"'ed a "'!~" w~o d ~n even 1riplc 1he required number of mamed 56 ..Years, said Bnan qucs1ions. Once 1he interview has Fracalos_y. 12. He was a map drawer been complrted. s1uden1s are asked 10 tn the Depression. He p~e all the wnte a repon and may add photo-mone) to has f~m1ly. He laved on .a graphs and maps of where the penon farm and .~ 1ra1 n went throuah his they interviewed was born. back yard. Von Krein Smid-Randol{>h said the And 1hen there were some unusual curious children ask questions rana· incidents they reported. . ing from "What was your childhood One little girl. Tracy Oark. ~1d her like?" to "Ho:t;uch w. as rent?"' grandmother was born on the k.itchcn . . ta ble and 6i weighed 2 pounds . . She said chi ~ren arc also rcspon· The tea onginated in 1979 by ~1ble for esconing those they have Barbara' rrington. the school's interviewed to tl\eir scat.s while ~hey librarian. At the time Harrinaton • ma.ke presentatiOJ'.'S. Besides the ora l made the suggestion, Von Klein \o repons. ~h1ldren sang songs and read a Smid-Randloph's students were por· held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m . Monday through Friday, and for the working parent, extended day care will be offered. ........... .,'--~ Suzanne Fontrom ebowa ber report to Art Pera, 8&, of Newport Beach. welcoming poem. 1ng over Ale" Haley's "Roots." And the big revelation to studen1s " ... we decided to try it," the teacher this }'ear was that there used to be ice-said. "We've done this every year." The cost is $65 for members and S 70 for non-members. There will be lots ofans, crafts, games, and a tripeach week- and many holiday surprises. Space 1s limited and pre-regis· trat1on ends Friday. • • • And speakmgofthe YMCA ... Sign-ups are being taken for their Camp Osceola Winter Getaway for children ages 8 Love for tinkering grows from tr~kes to ·paint, tio<ly sho_p_ through 14. By JOYCE BODLOVICH and minibikes. The camp takes place Dec. 0t1MOe11r"•"'.,, "It was during the age of go-ca ns. If 27-30. Fountain Valley businessman you had one whe n )Our were 12 }'OU The camp is located in the San Da ve March has come a long way were the en'' of the block." March Bernadino Mountains and isa from fixing tricycles to pounding said. "Now 1( a kid doesn't have an winter playland for children. dents out of Mercedes Benz cars. A TC by the t1me he is 4 or 5. he's not U nderthe direction of trained March's success story. stans at a cool." YMCA I h'ld ·11 very yo ung age when nary one trash And when March graduated from counsc or~ 1 ren..w .... a ~-c-an in Fountain-Valley-was saf~ from-go-caas-Lo..aUUlcno.bll hi s f~mJ!)i_ enjoy indoor and outdoor his pillaging. His friendly looting home was constantl y surrounCJedoy actvities. snow games and more. brought him an assonment of uscable fixer-uppers. Interested? parts to build go-cans and bicycles-"We would buy a car for S50. fix it Call Renee To Ii i ver at and later minibikes and cars. up and sell i1." he said. "There \Ii ere 642-9990 fo r more information "I guess I've always been mechan-alwa)S a couple of cars around. But on either of these programs. ical." said the 33~}ear-old Corona del my dad insisted '-"C keep the garage • • • Mar resident. "Some people throw closed and the cars inside:· Talk about keeping it in the away a broken alarm clock and some March said has neighbors \I/ere .... ,..._.. .... ......, family. Qulnn Reilly of Hunt· look inside to sec how the nuts and tolerant of the fleet of parked cars. Of Dave March, owner of Fountain Valley Body Shop, atand8 lD front ol a llacedee. ington Beach. a senior at USC. has bolts fall into place. course they had good reason. been selected to receive the · ··when I "as a kid. }OU could bu~ a "I ended up fixing their cars:· he and It "'as S:?OO." he recalled. "I s~ud After graduation from Fountain Valle}' High School. Ma rch "'cnt on to cam an associate of a n's degree 1 n business adm1mstrauon from Gold· en West College. an education he has incorporated "Ith the o"nersh1p of two body shops in Fountain Valle). ~venue. then my business kept growing and growing. and I bought him out in 1977," he said. -The shop has 5.500 square f~t and on a "'~kda} "'e probably had 40 cars out front on the street. We had to pull I hem an evCf) night·· S 1,000 ReilJy Trust Fund Schol· can of spray paint for 39 cents. paint a said.·· 1 was propbabl) 15 or 16: 1t was that 1s ridiculous. I can fi' 11 for less arship-offered exclusively to bike a new color and trade or sell it to a way to cam mone}:· 1han that and 11 will be half as much another kid." March was still a teen-ag~ "'hen he work as taking an engine out of a car. members of the Reill~ fami ly· March said 1n the tract of homes he discovered pounding dents out of ··So I started painting one car a The scholarship, a S 1.000 trust grew up in. off Brookhurst trcct and smashed cars and repainting the"\ ""eek tn the garage. It was kinda fun . fund left by Rei lly's grandfather. Ellis Avenue. neighbors '-"OU Id had the potential for a lucratl\el. You "ould take an ugl) car. paint It is open to anyone in the family dona1e old lawnmowers to his cause . career. 1 and overn1~ht the people could sec who maintains a 3.5grade pomt He '-"Ould use the motors forgo-carts "I got an e 11mate for a httle dtnt the results: '"First I rented a stall from the owner of a mo1or shop on Warner March said he researched the area (Pleue eee LOVS/118) average throughout his academic career. Reilly, a double major in com- munications and English. isa memberofSigma Chi fraternity and a Newport Beach lifeguard as well. After graduation next May. he plans to pursue a radio broad· casting career in Australia. Reilly's parents, Beverl y and Paul Rei ll y, reside in Huntington Beach. • • • And do we have some avid readers in Newpon Beach. More than 900students in Newport Beach schools signed up for New~n Beach Public Library cards th ts fall. Dr. John Nicoll. super· intendcnt of the Newpon-Mesa Unified School Distnct. kicked offthecampaign by issuing a proclamation namins last Octo· ber as Library Card Sign-up Month. Mother, daughter team uptorun clothing stores for profit, charit}r By KA TY BOUCHER OfhO.-, ...... ..,, 'h ia Rodriguez and 'Darla Khachadoonan ha' e more m common thanJUSt being mother and daughter. They're also business partner 1n the clothing mdust0 for profit and cha rity. Rodnguez. 46. and Khachadoonan. 2i. arc o"ners of M~ Girl '-"Omcn's·shop. and when 1he) ·re not "orl..ang at their o"n store. they put in long hours at the Orange"ood Boutique in Corona del Mar. The boutique was a brainchild of Kathr)n G. Thompson. builder and de' eloper. Opened last September. the boutique's profits go to the Orangc"ood Children's Foundauon. "h1ch supports the Orangewood home for abused and neglected children. "Orangewood is Kathf)n's pct proJect:· Kodn$_Ul't said. ··1 thought. 'No way could I start another prOJCCl. but alter a tour of the home 'that "as 1t. the home. lo&s expenses. In t"o months. we've made S 13.000." ~n example of""l\at they offer was a Bob Mackie evening gown. ongmall~ pnccd at $8.000, that sold at Orange"ood for S 1.500. Most of the top designer labels are displayed with more than reasonable prices. Rodnguez said the reason Thompson asked for their se!"-1ces-wasn·1,ust because the) v.ere close fnends. "I've "orked 1n 1h1s industry for more than IS years." Rodnguez said. "It rt'all) staned out as a fluke." she said. ··1 "as asked b} a fnend to help open a store in South Coast Plaza. '\fter awh1 le I met .\men \\ ard\ and he asked me to come to work for him. · "After a..-. h1le I lefl and "ent to "ortc: for Hal ston where I tra"eled and learned to bu) and bas1call) how to run a business:· she added. "I ""ent bad. to ~men as his assistant for awhile and decided 1t was lime for something else." While Rodnguez "as learning the clothing business, Khacbadoonan found herself following tn her footsteps -at an earl) age. "When I wns 13 m) mom opened the store tn South Coast Plaza and 1hev needed a stock person." she said ... Soon I learned sales techniques. merchandising and displays.." Children's librarians visited all the elementary schoo ls telling children ofall the wonderful things the library has for free. At the end of the campaign, (PleaM eee IUCADltRS/86) . D..., ..... ,._...., • .., .__ Darla Kbachadoorlan and her mother Sylvia Roclrlguez wltb a dreu from their boutique. "What im presses you about the home 1s tt's not institutional." she said ... It's \\arm and the J..1ds arc happ):· Rodriluez said the purpose of the Bout1qu<.' is to have co ntinued lund1ng. .. Clothes "'e sell there are either put on consignment or donated.'' she said. "It's a businesslike "3' to run things Th<.' \\hole idea 1s to make a profit -onl) mo i of the prolit goe to Khachad oonan kne" her lo' e for fashion was no passing fanC). 'he graduated frotn high school at age 16: she went to (Pleue eee llOll/86) -Library storytime designed to encourage young.readers Preschool S1orytime will be held at the Newpon Beach Pubhc Library as part of its panicipation in Tht Year of the Young Reader. a nationwide campaign by the Library ofConarcss to promote the Joys and imponance of books and readin& for younpters. The Newpon library will present the seuions th rouah January and February on weekdays. Hours are Balboa branch, 10:30 a.m. on Tuesdays: Corona del Mar branch. 10 a.m. on Tuesdays: Marillt'rs branch, 11 a.m. on Mondays and Tuesdays: and lhe Newpon Center branch. I 0:30 a.m. and I :30 p.m. on Wednesdays. Storyume is free and parents are u~ed to enroll children a1 their local branch. 1hc Feb. -1 session at Corona dcl Mar will be SiJned by Vicki Ka11in for the he1rin1 impaired. Addiuonal information may be obtained by calhna Judy Kelley at 644-3186. Coarse for piano teachers A three-unit course. "Tcachina tht Piano." will be · , offered 11 Golden West Colltac in tht spring SCmt'jtcr. Studmts will am throup lectures. d1scunt0ns. rtadinp. rncarch. dtmonstration ind obStf'ed tcadtine. Tbe coune 111ntmdtd for tcachen. or anyoM-who pllys lht peano. The class will bt tauaht by Dr. Alltn 01ln ftom 10 a.m. until I p.m. on fric11)s atanina Jan. ll. S.udtata antu~ 1f they mca the prcrequilitn for tht dMI lf't 8dviled to enroll anyway and 1tlnd IM fin& clay fll dall IO review courw rtiq9tmn111cs. • Reg1stra11on as under ~a}. Funher 1nformat1on ma) be obtained b) calling 895-8306. College patrons to meet Golden We 1 College's new prts1dent Judith \ allc will address the GW( Patron on Fnda)~ Jan. 13 at a luncheon 1n the college's communit~ centt'r. The volunteer suppon group will hear how 1hc~ can help the college premlcn1. who was appointed in .\ugust. to achieve campus goal'i 1n the next decade. The luncheon~ 111 be held :it 11 :45 :ind will cost S6 50 per person. Rescn at1ons can be made b> calltng Cathcnnc la) maker at 891 -3349 Tree-trlmmlng ln lrvlne The firs1 trC'C·1rlmm1n1 C\h1b1t1on at Tht' Market· place 1n If\ inc runs through Saturda). s.howt'a "'' holiday trendccora1ed b) ~tudcnts from IO<"al clcmcntar) and~nlOr h .. KhootS TIW.Uw1ty1sco-sponwmib) Thelr"1neCo a\part of'na11~1111anti'1hc PanMnh1p 1n Edu auon pn'Sram 1n lM lrvtM Ullled khOol District Panu.:1p;it1ng ~hool~ can wta • ft'om tbt e'h1bit1on "h11;h can he uted.. or athlt11c proar.am ot the• r <'ho1'c. 1100 tae:h v.111 b( aY1arded 10 fhc CM'm~tf~ 1hc 'pant oft he h'>hda~ •111 he maJc 10 th~ lninc ---on hehalfot th~ \tudcnt' b) ••1tt. n a•11rds prncnlat1on 1 Dail y Pilot readers and ad' <.'ti1scrs are urged 10 donate unwrapped new gifts 10 help maJ..t' the papt"r's founh annual "Give a Little Chnstmas" program a success. Thtg1f\l w1ll be turned O\Cr to the group Share OurSehM tn Costa Mesa. "'h1ch an 1um v.111 distnbute them on C'hnstma £, e to local needy fam1hcs. G1f\s can be Id\ under the C'hnstmas tree-1n 1hc lobby of the Daily Pilot offices. 330 Ba) t .. Co tn Mesa. on wed.da s 8 a.m. to S p.m. Gif\s will be accep1cd through fA'<'. 23 The "Otvc a Link Chnstmas" proaram "'as stancd in I 98S "'hen 0.11) Pilot cmplo)ces realtted man) children -c pcc1all) tttn ... 1tn-would not receive 11f\s bc'<-ausc of fam1I) hardships In lhe first thrtt )ears.. more than 3,000 g1f\s ha'c ~n d1sttft>uttd throuah the proaram. Qoet 2.000 gtn1 fOf tocal children c...,.. ....tr: s 10 Khcduk-d Saturda) at noon 1n the Markctplattcourt)anl Ca ll .&-37"9 fot lddnional 1nforma1ton YollerbJ6•eroblec,.nu lfoncohour~ Ycar' rnolutlOMnlOtetbKlun 'ha~. now "·,he lltM '°""*'for• lift'Obit dal&M * • '('~OOn·< O\la Mna YMC1 , • CE OrMgl Cout DAILY PILOT/ Thur8d-v. December 22, 1988 We're lookln1 for gooct •por& MOM, DAUGHTER TEAM UP IN BUSINESS ••• PromU Tbe Daily Pilot wants to ftpor1 the sportin& exploits of you and your ncipbors. Oran~ Coas1 College. got her degm.-very visible. I'm aood al buyi na and I in fashion mert'handisina and landed love cus&oimr contact." a job wilh lhc Wet SeaJ. a chain Of Tottther they combintd their tal· and she knows I mean it. I also tell them when they fall in love with so1Mthin1 and they don't look thear best." If your recreation teaaue learn finished on top, if you led the PKk in a 10-K run. your neiahbor landed a marlin or your spouse won a tennis tour- nament. let us know. fashion boutiques. cn1s. not only to benefit Orln,ewood. By lhis time. Khachadoorian had but to sec what lhey could ICt'Omplish worked her way into management for themselves. Both mother and dauahtcr l&1'Cfd that their family comes before l>usi- nCJS. training and had opened a number of Wet Seal stores and trained the They opened ~ir three yean aeo. personnel. Ro("aaez said their SlCKf has at And Rodr11ucz said 11 far 11 Send us 1 bricfaccount of the sportina accomplishment and a pbotop'lph if you have one. Address your correspondence to Neiahborhood Focus in care of the Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, 92626. Both mother and daughter knew least 125 reaular custorMn year-competition ps, ··1 would love it if they each had special qualitities that round. they put 20 more stores in hue. The combined could lead to somtthing "Sometimes we buy aownu year in draw more people to Corona del Mar. new and exciting. advance," Rodriaun said. "A cus-Most imponantly. it's aood for Or- "We had always talked about doing tomcr will know when a ball is ansewood." things together." Khachadoorian comina up and I'll purchase the outfit Khachadoorian has hiah hopes for said. "Most of my work was behind ·for her. OranJCWO()d as well as her store. the scenes. I'm very good at oreniz-"One thin& about me is I am "My fututt includes continuina to ing and putting things logether. • honest. .. she added. "If a woman build My Girl." she said. "We plan to !!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~-~R~od~ri~au~cz~sm~iled~a~n~d~a~dd~ed~. : .. 1~·m~~l~ook~s~1~ood~~in~so~m~c~th~in~1~J'l~I ~te~ll~hc~r~be~hcrc~~for~a~lon& time." Low Ae MO P..-Month• With Q&A .. Software 80286 PC compatible with Q&A database/Word processor, CM-5 color monitor, Personal DeskMate• 2. e&AJTM Symantec Corp 11111111----------Cll' (Mlg. Sugg ~ail 5349) Save~g,,na_m; 3::ts •120 ' u=.Per~· 20·• Herd Dlek Cent. Seve l200. Dot-Matrix Printer. Saw MO. Reg. Reg. 599.00. 125·1032, Sale 391.00 219.95. #26-2802, Sale 159.IS Remote on-screen programming makes setting 1 year/6 event timer easy. 122-channel tuner. HO, VHS. 116-513 Remote bell.,_.,,. All Color Computer ....:_,_...are In Stock 25~/o Off! Now's the time to buy the Color Computer software you've been wanting! Choose as many different titles as you like-no limit! Digital-Ready Speaker Optimu~· 1000 By Realistic HALF PRICE! 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A. botla WOil tile.~ Sweetlaeut boaor, tile, wl1I compete at lltate leftl ID llaJ. LOVE FOR TINKERING ••• P'rom85 for several years looking for a large building for his second shop. In June, a bankr'clptcy caused lhe auclionina of a 12.000-squarc-foot building on Newhope Street and Slater A venue. "It was a machine shop," he said. "After the bankruptcy. they came in and took the liahts. sinks. toilets - even the copper wiring oul of the walls. "We worked 18-hours-a-day to &ct this ready to open in August." he said. The new shop brings with it a unique concept in the body/paint industry. The location on Warner Avenue is used to paint the cars and the Newhope A venue site is the body shop. That would explain the trendy decora1ed corporate offices in the new buiJding. "The paint shop gets real dirty. and lhe body workers don't like that. The pain crrdon~t like the noise. from banJing on the cars. so splining the business has worked oul real well." he said. Today March employs 30 workers. His business has evolved into a family enterprise. His wife, Laurie, is the company's accountant, his molher, Dorsey. the interior decor· ator and his father, John, the parts manager. .. My mother and father retired lo Lake Havasu six or seven yean qo," March said. ··But my dad got bored so now he's my parts rruanqer. My dad is a pilot and lhcy fly in each week. stay in, an apartment and go home for the weekends. "It is the best of both worlds, and really good for me. Who better could I trust lhen my dad? It has been an exciting group efTon." he said. "We all pulled t6gcth~ ~d did it." --- READERS APLENTY ••• Prom85 Harbor View Elementary School and Mariners Elementary School tied with 54 percent for the 1highest percentage ofregistered borrowers. Each school will receive a set of natural science books for their library, counesy of Marshall Cavcndjsh Corp. In 14 classrooms. all of the children have a public library card. These students will receive coupons for free Big Macs. ..This is not a one-time_effon, ~)!111~9:--­ but an ongoing one in whtch we intend to reach all children and their families." said Judy Kelley. children's services coordinator. • • • And for those who tind nothing to do once the holidays arc over. you might want to check with the city ofNcwpon Beach Parks. Beaches and Recreation Depan- ment. Classes from cooking to gym- nastics will be offered. Tennis, crafts. and bridge are some of the courses that will be staning in the new year. A vid golfer finds success Andy Skwarek of Newportetach has been an avid aolfer for SO years. He fai1hfull y writes down the sq>rc of each panner every pmc and wouldn't think of taking the honor ofT the tee -unless he won the previous hole. However, last October was a dif· ferent story. Skwarek teed ofT with his brother- in-law, Ed Rosolowski. and wouldn't you know it. on the ninth hole at Newport Beach Golf Club, he aced the I SO-yarder. And that's not all. Less than a week later while in a foursome, Skwarck's tee shot on the third hole hit the pin and stopped six inches ofT mark. Then the following week Swarek was playing with Mac McNamany and did what few golfers do in a lifetime -anolher hole-in- one. Last we heard, Swarek refused to give out the secret of his success - even to his friend Cy Norris of Newport Beach, who has played lonaer than Skwarek. -By Katy Beeekr When you think the world of someone, give 'em a taste .of it. DeUclous fbod gifts from arouild the world. We Ship Gtfta. HICKORY FARMS SOUTH COAST PLAZA ·-·············· e TWO CHRISTMAS 4t e LOCATIONS e e .. e e SEARS CHR5lllM LANE e e ft L~~~~ ti~~ ti CUST.SVC.AREA MAIN MALL nam>L£VEL OUTSIDI NOIDSTROMS ····---··-·~--­PHONE OltDlll CHRISTMAS & YR ROUND ,...... . I' # ,. I' .. ' 'I . ,. r. r; ,. ' ,, Orange Coat DAILY PILOTfThureday, o.c.mw 22, 1988 87 'Monday After the Miracle' tops our list for 1988 (Editor's no~: This is the filth in a ~rin of ieven columns rrviewin1 the year 1988 in Oran,e County Theater.) 11 TOM mus o.1J""CU11 4 fr I Not for many seasons -perhaps since the vintqe year of 1971 -has community . theat~r distin{uishcd itself so ldm1rably 1n Oranic County than in the year juSl ended. until · the true champion emeraiecs. Director Howard Shan_,,.w·s pro- duction of "Monday After the Mir- acle" WIS a true theatrical experience, one of those totally involvtn1 and beautifully acted shows that one remembers Iona-after the final cur· tam. Yet "Monday" did not stand head and shoulders above the crowd. There were many top-quality offer- inas in Oranae County during 1988. and here is this column's choice for the 10 most admirable: 1. ''MoMaf After lite Miracle," Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, directed by Howard Shangraw. Profalional.q'6Ality productions and performances were the rule, rather than the exception, durin1 this banner year. In fact. as this column belln compilina its "top 10" list for 1918, it became evident that fhe second 10 shows would have made the blue ribbon list in just about any other year. Community theater, in which most of the acton work 9-to-5 jobs and devote their evenin1s and weekends to their anistic avocation, is hardly a consistent commodity. The level of excellence jumps like a heart patient's chart. A playhouse which produced a shoso rival anythin1at South Coast Re ory one month may hatch the tur ey of the year the next. Z. .. .... , AfraW .. Vlrpata Woolf?" Garden Grove Community Theater, directed by Cristofer Careillo. 3. "Grease," Westminster Com- munity Theater. directed by Kent Johnson. 8uaa M••e, llarc Wlal--. aad Deenoa Pampeaa (fnm left) la ··11on~1 After tlae lllracle" at tlae Coeta ..._ Ct.tc PlaJlaoue, tlae top ~malty tlaeater now of l&aa. In 1988, however, consistency was the keynote and six local producin1 groups placed at least one production in the Oaily Pilot's top 10 listings. A notable exception was the Irvine Community Theater which, due to your correspondent's status as man- afing director of that group. tra- ditionally does not figure into the equation. Throuahout the year there were several suberb community J>!CSCn- tations on a handful of different stageS, yet it WIS not until November 4. ''Tlte Uoa 18 W19ter," Laguna Playhouse. directed by Marthella Randall. S. "Com,..ay," Newport Theater Arts Center, directed by Beth Hansen. I. "How to s.cceed 19 8n1H11 Wl.._t Re.Uy. Tryla•," Lquna Pla~o~directed by Jay Julian. 7. 1'Tlte Gm Game," HuntinJton Beach Playhouse. directed by Scott Zuck man. 8. "P .S. YMr Cat Is Ded," Garden Grove Community Theater, directed by Peter Dolan. t. "A Ooru Llae," Huntington Beach Playhouse, directed by Candi Mitchell. lt. "'fte w.lte Arrow,'' Newpon Theater Ans Center. directed by Kent ohnso·--- Since 1988 was a banner year for community theater, it seems only right to bring out the second I 0 shows for bel•tcd curtain calls. They arc: '11. "MrlNts.Radio HHr," West- minster Community Theater. directed by Ken\ Johnson. IZ. "No Momer B•t J111," f:'Jewport Theater Arts Center. directed by John and Susan Lee. 13. "Jose-ud die Amallq Tedultcolor l>reamcoat," La Habra Community Theater, directed by Tim Nelson. 14. "See How Tiiey Ru," West- minster Community Theater, directed by Greg Cohen. H . "Tribete," Laguna Playhouse. directed by Joan McGillis. 11. "A MldHmmer Nl11tt'1 Dream," Huntington Beach Play- Celebrities in 'Special Christmas' LOS ANGELES (AP) -"A Very the show's host. hope to realize Special Christmas Party," tonight on separate goals: ABC gets a low-cost - ABC, is an example of a holiday about $650.000 -holida special to -vanC.ly program-thaninp'With good-compete with NBE's •· he--Cosby- will. It's a one-hour celebration of the · Show." And Special Olympics. which tnumphs of the mentally retarded. organizes athletic competitions for the mentally retarded. receives the Yet. ultimately. the show mustalso dchver viewers to ABC. and toward kind of free publicity that drives that end, ifs filled with the kind of ------------ C'Clebrit1cs -Barbara Mandrell. Danny Ck Vito. Randy Travis. Susan Saint James and Mike Tyson. to name a few -to whom television fans arc drawn. Both ABC and Special Olympics. Settin~ a holicfay standard --·--·11---1111-----~-.. - charitable organizations skyward. .. The show will make the abilities of pcopfc-with mentat-rctardaticnrrear and apparent to millions of people.'' said Sargent Shriver. who joins his wife. Eunice Kennedy Shriver. in heading Special Olympics. ---- SPEND TIIE HOLIDAYS Wl1H AMERICA'S #JCOMFDY! . ... , ' ~ : ; • ••• The Pacific Chorale brought its famous brand of Christmas cheer to the Orange County Performins Ans Center Tuesday evening with a seasonal protram culled from around the world and through the centuries. "THIS IS (Y\F Of I HF · <IRF:\T O'F'-' .. John Alexander directed the 142- voict choir with clear. uncomplicated motions that were both precise and subtle. His direction produced the usual hiah standard of musicianship and technical excellence from his 21- ycar-old chorale. I ' ' I I· I I ' • • 1 \' I t· 1 ' • ~ "I ' • •• D l ' S T ' 'l () HOFFMAN CRL1SE ~c-.RAINMAN ~ houK. directed by Greg Cohen. 17. ''TM MHlcaJ Come4y Manlen ef 1141," Laguna Playhouse, directed by Joan McG1lhs. 11. "Brt11tton Bean MHMln," Westminster Community Theater. directed by Daniel Halkyal'd. It. "A Fmy 1'Mll1 Ha~ oa ~ Way to Ute Fo,.m," C.:osta Mesa Civic Playhouse. directed by Stan Wlasick. II. ''TtatJpel," South Coast Musi- cal Theater, directed by Daniel Trevino. From this superior list of com- munity theater achievements. a number or individual performances stood out. Friday's column will bring the top actors and actresses of 1988 forward for a year-end bow. while Sunday will spotlight the Daily Pilot's 16th annual man and woman of the year in theater. RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY llC. ... , ..... C...llnl ltll -11.11 .• Cl,STI •S&-541-115' RAIN MAN (R) 11 :45 2:30 5:15 l:(IO 10:40 COCOON: THE RETURN(PGI 51!0 7 15 9:30 -----· ... _.. .... ....• , ... ... __ _ n•u.A .. ••••• • ... l:Jl .. UI ... • SCAOOllD CPlt u•1•••1••• * CHILD'S PlAY C•I .....~ ... , "-~--'­~ ...... Ill ....... , ...... -••ao--ITW • ... ,.. .. -1••-----... Jtal ..... 11 .. .. , , ..... -·-·-~ ... Ill .. ............. ..., ··--........... °'""'-...... 11zlliM ... lrlllt2S .... ...,~_.., ..,...,., .. . ........... .... -.. -- coalllt ·-"' ................. WU~ eu11 a c.MT fTI IJ:J91'1e ...... l .. 9!tl a.I'S.UY llt ........ A,_ CA&UI-111 ,,. ....... .,,.10 _ .. _ ...... •All ..... N11t1.-11 •r I t•H ..... ---· __ .__ lllWwilll~~ -··-.--lmTICIMUCG•IPILI l'lfl llTaB-1• -----........ .. ..... ...,........ ..'°-..... IM_.T CICWl-'i~ _+§ __ __ .,,,,...,...,....... ... ........ .. 1Mll71·.U ... _ ..... -.. .. The busy, two-hour-plus program was hiahli1hted by the local concen debut of Argentinian composer Ariel Ramirez' "Navidad Nuestra" (Our Christmas). Each of its six move- ments, with poetry by Felix Luna and based on an Arsentinian folk song from a different region of Arge ntina. had its own subtly different character. . ..-----·--- NOW PLAYING •.u •ll. lOltO • ..,,_ *°"""81: •STA#TON '*'TY AOnEN SCOUNORELS (PG) 5:15 7:30 9:45 Ftclings ran&ed from the poignant, carol-like "Los Pastores" (The Shepherds). wuh a heartfelt solo by tenor Wilham Smith (who had a handful of solos that night). through the celebratory "fi rst Christmas" mood of "Los Reyes Magos" (The Maai Kinp). to the restless under- current in the instrumental accom- paniment emphasizing the nomadic nature of''La Huida" (The Flight). On a conccn thaC boasted no less than two doun pictcs. the Pacific Chorale ~n 1n typical Pacific Chorale fashion: exuberantly yet con- trolled. with clean enunc1at1on and clarity of tone. Never mind that the open1na work was ··welcome. Yule." by EdW1n Fissinacr (who?). The choir treated this buoyant little song as they treat vinuallycvcrythina they do: au muccrwort. Canadian composer Healey Willan's "The Thr« Kings" allowed the choralt to show off another of their world-renowned traits: 11s superl) ute of the dynam,ic pale~tc. SoOthi ... ethereal harmonics noauna a~ to0n swelled and tteeded in volume 11 female and male vo1tU werr petted 111inst one another and combiMd. 11'e men were ihown off to 1m1t ad~ 1n Fran1 B1cbfs "Avt Mana. ..... 1n11ohc>MI work in whd t~ ~ tined up ••nst ~w sidll of the "911 and answenna CKh oiilr la tnftCIUll aonn. The WOtMll Pli•llll lft evocative pic1ure of sllble llil••ll ill Duicl Ptnkham's ··com. PlllJ • u.e crec1w.·· _ ... _ ~me *COR09IA ~eoi..11 119-11• eCOTTA~ t-*0.-C.. ~m eCOTTAmM ~--ea. -~· (-(1 foto [................. a.-. l-WletC- Ml·tlOO Ml·OUS Qt.MM HHM7 •a'°"° •LA•AOA oaAllGa •wu,,_.TP [ ..... ~ l"ltillCtUI...... a.....Or_.. e...Or-.W. 511-.Ytl ... 1. 13MTlt lll-39S5 ._...,._ •wetYCJO eSMtaW WUIWllM --· (_()_.,..., ~-Dll9" l'w:lflt•"'-WWr>f ---.... 120 •• ,. ~ .. "1·'"3 ·~TUCM ·~ TaACM I • l'MTINTID IN I I --"'!....'""=-I ~Clll!Wro.t ::.-.-iQi...,. __ ........ , ... --. '1111 MWIY-formied Plc1(1C' Hind-.. -.n&ec pla~ thrtt r1thtr • u .. mled tranteriP1ion• by 111 ~ Ald11 frct"man with 1ma11ftl ......, .... Mitty •••ca«tntll. •••••Iii 1"1 ........ ..._,,. '1•1 '5Jel97• ..... ,... ., "'a-•• tO:tl SCROOGED (PG-13) 1:15 3:305:'51:00 10:15 TI4E NAKED GUN (PG-13) 12:112-Jll UD l!JD IJO ll:JI ... ... ••• THE NAKED GUN (PQ.11) tHIHl4eteleH OLIVER a CX.-Alff ne1eU1H1t1M•11ra-~lll ,, 1:-.-0 , I I Ll. I ~""'!:D ··-···· ~ CIClfltlt...,,_ ........ OUVH &COllPAIYClt .............. C•LD'I PLAY Cit ~~ ... ..., __ --IY_._ •• ...... l:ISMl .. 11 .. n• ...,_ -I ........ ~-­• .. ut ....... _,,_ ----.-•a.9---• . ........... , ..... ~-.. -...... •Ml-1Mlll1·ml .... ----.. ---Qf ""'-""'· -.... ' .. OJ1nge eou. OAILV PILOT/ Thureday, Oecembef 22, 1988 CALL 642-5678 COLDWC!U. BANl(eR O associated """. ,.... • • ~ f'cl • • •· P. • r .. ~ • ~~ '"~,..... ~ Merrill Lynch Realty NEAR HOAG 0.. bdrm penmo•te. 1potle11. with view nf1ht end dliy. V.ultcd cclllna•. 1un porch and lkyllfht•. Near tcHI• coart1, Hoq H0tp. and !Mach. $190,000. 759-6600 T _._.,... ___ _ llLlllllY GUI CLASSIFIED ADJ'EBTISIN6 SALE§ We are ADDING to our sales stall. If you can type at least 45 wpm and have ---great te ecommun1cat1on si11 e can " • off er you a base salary + commission AND a ljeMlt place to work. hH 'Date• P•rt Tl•e A ¥•H•llle. Do yoaneU a favor -Call 111. P ~«Y B levlns er J I• V en•e•• 842-4321 330 West Bay St: Costa Mesa, CA One Yard Apron NIW:aWTMM -.&.WMWAY Mol'Mwy • CNpel 110...,_y ~Mlle ..,..,50 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE 61 F0t-dait1 13 Actr ... -....,. 84 Once mc>I'• 15 Sc:cnch .... M •· MVt'""G - 17 Aidl~• M A11ow11noe • EJdremet DOWtt 1 Murdered 2 Clo'* s Medi9t9d 4 Pric:tct-( '-'ti S~t e ,.,.., tether• 7T,.. l)foblen1 • l.n. t Kind of~ 10 Aoutinea 11 Touctl on 12 PleblaclM 13 Acie 19 ,._, lhruba 24 M•oeholy 2t Fooliltl on. 21 In eddruon 30 Pootlttdl 31Ad~t 32 9rftWI st.-.nen 3.3 London .,_ MS... SS /llnoa OCM9CMI e 7 37 Weld 38 Fon1t'8d ~ Penod 4 1 F.wty 46 FO'ldles 48 -benefit 49 v .. ,. so~ 52 DMtl °"' 53~t I 54 ~ $5 WOftl pr'9f 541 ""*-clww klrlg 57~ se ....., .. , .. a Est 11¥& 10 11 12 13 " •&a QNri9e COMt OAJLY PILOT/ Thursday, December 22, 1988 ...:...JmlJl!!L MUC 11m11 MMC mn11 ..c .a MJC !119 !WUC pg !WIC !!!!I MUF.. ~ ..... ~ OfllW II""" vwt-.:1aG11. Celle ...... C-1... .... ._. ...,_ MIN ., ,.... ...._...._. ...... -• -. -W Miene-.. 1N¥ Ille requilfed t2t11 r.wy OrttMn ..Cftl'IOU9 W• Min ... ._.. ...... .-owe an Novemoer '9INY AIP I. • C.· ......... Oft fll ••• 1.' .._ U11Ger.,.. ...-. 11a1uw. Tendy 1reftd9, 1nc . Cele-Tlllll 11atement ... 111ect ..... naw cownYOf•All• .,...natWT 11.1111 tor• a.-.,.., •• -.. -. ......_ .. ..._ ..... , P"f~ '° wNct1 proceed· war• ai-..11e. wo Beller .... .,. eouncy ce.tt of Or-. r11e ~..,.. •• 1n.,. ...._ ot • ,,. ......._ ....... .,. a-.n J ~ ao .,.. .,..., .,_., c.11. ,,.... "'.... • .... "-.... ,___. .. Mr9Uftder .,. t•eti AllenUe au... MO, Fort ... Councy on DeGemller doiflQ ~ -AllPl'C .. '°'" of ckliftg........ TNI .....,,.,. ........ 127'11 '1111 9 fl, ... -... ~ .. Olw el Hun11ngton 9'ld wflidl heW not tie.I Wortfl.TnM11101 15,1111 ,.._ MltTH !'RON,_TIU,a l"NIST STUART, ON AIDISINACTIONNUR&-...,..,_eouneyce.ttofOr· Helen W.DoNIO. 4M .... ~a.otQr. ........ olloe °'IM 1up•n•d•d b y th• TMe ~ 11 con· ~ ar.,. COM? c.lltor• ....... ----IEHAlf OF IRON GAV CA ll MCMITRY °' OAANGI .... Cownty Oii Nouen .... WNllftl Wooda ..... Gian-... ~ ... D111wa. Clew a.ta•~ H11. IOOO provtllonl Of the Labor duC'9d by·• corporatlOn ~Hot~ H . 21. llllp, 3114-F Allwtr/ Aw. MIHOAI COUNTY ,.._ 8 9rlllol II, ltll Mia, e.111 11111 7'. 1- ... "'-'· ~ton Code ,,. .... .,a lo 1MK>t The re9l1tr1nt com-1 .... J#IUWY 5, 12, 1... C-a Meea. CaM 12121 tor CMnge of N9'M ,,310, Coate ...... Calf ..... TMI ~ 11 oon-rn ....... caMeorftla, untf.,.. ltlll Ille °"" ontv In tM menced to tranue1 bull· Th-IM ...... l41f• Holdlngl .... No A Al•llUI 11121 ~ Orenp COM? ~ by .• .,.., .. '*1· ~ 0..,.. hOweft:t0 ... ICl.onJenu9ty mennerprovldedbylew Mii undet IM llc11llOUI '""*'' Tnm. clo 0.Yld OAOIATOIHOWCAUSI lacelHealdllerwoeelnC., ~Hot DH .... I, •• --~PloCDu1.-11.1. 4, -· .. "'*"time !Ny Nobid.nlllbeconeidered bu'*-Mme or nemee ..a.IC.. Hlreon. bq .. One Park FOR CHANG«°' NAMI • Caldornla corporation. 15. 22. 1111 TM r .. lltrlftt COM· It., .... .....,.,., s. ttM .. IM........, Md~ un1eM it le mede on 1 fofm 11...S lbove on Novwnber Plua. S1e. 580. ~. Clllf EANHT STUART. Ofll 2111 Smoll .. ood, full-Tfl..l•l IMMled to tflftNOf ..,.._ Th-tn Md .... aloud lfl 1119 Coull-lutnllMd by 1M Cf1Y ol 23, 1tll PtCTmOUe ...... 11714 IEHAlF OF IAON GAY CA wton, CaM 12131 Mii UflCler tfle lctltioul 1---------cll Ch1111ber1 tor th• Huntln9ton .. ICtl Ind ts C111on A. Thompson. NAl9 IYAW Aott1'1 Orlglnal Artworll• MINOA) w Ned 1 pelttJon Tiiis bu9lnell '' con-P9JC .,la ~ name °' ,..,,_ ... ,II.home Plrk ... made In ICCOfdlr\C:e with Iha p,...,.., The IOlloWlno l*'IOM .,. of Alben• Retirement TNll. Ill '"" COUt1 tor Ill order II-duct«I by • corporltlon --lllled lboW on NIA , _____ illiilioiiiiloioiiliilO.-- .......... located It the PfO'Mion• of ttle Pfopoul Tflil etat.....,.t wu flied doing~• c/o Devld Hnon. Elq .. ~ lowing pelhtoner to C'*'9e Th• regl1tr1111 com-,,_ MecDoNld •IOI• l MI corn. of Gold-requlfemente. With !tie County Cterk of Or· THE IOAT SERVICE. 515 park Plu1, Ste. 580, Irvine. 1111/tler Mme from 1..atf mer1C9C1 to trlllMC1 butt· Thia .. ....,_., WM lllCI ...... lt.andElll9A--. Eech bidder mu•t .,_ M99 County on~ Hernllton 5,, .. , Unit I , CMl.92714 QAY lolAOHITUAAT. • .... under IM lictlt~ ..... 9TAW wlltlltleCoufttyClatllofOr· ..,...ITAW lft -C6ey of Huntington llcenNd 1nd 1110 pr•-21, 1... ,... Coat• ...... Clllf. 92121 WhcMelale Warenoullng IT IS HIAHY ~RED bu...... NIM Of ,.,,,.. TM ............. .,. .,. County on DeoemMr TM ....... ,.... .. leedl. QUlllfled "requited by lew. Publiefled Or COU4 MICheel D Brode. 696 of Alberti Retirement Ttue• 11111 Ill parlOnl IMereMect In listed abc>ve on NIA doing IMlalr'9llli •: 1, ,... doing....,_• A ... of ptana, epecffl-TM City Council of the o.MyPllotr>ecetn":a IS Hernlllon Str .. t Unit B, Teneb1um, c/o D111ld tt)ernatterlloreulcl..,_. Ahmad$ed9hl,Secfet1ty "IGl~CVGTAAVll ..... ~TIOHAL IDUCATIOH c.tiona, and otftef oontrlCI City Of Huntington Beach t• i 2. 29 ltll ' ' Cotti Mell. Calif. 12827 Hlraon Eeq .. One P11k belore ttlll court"' Dlclert· Thia 111191Mrtt w• !tied SOUTH COAST, •2 l11· ~ Orange CoMt ClNTIR 11400 Von doOu Ml• INIY be obtllned Nr\191 ttle rlgiitto reject any ' • Th· 152 Tiii• bu•I~~ It con-P1aa. Ste. 580. Irvine, Clllf. metit No 3 11 100 CMc With ftle County Clerk of Or-9C1U1M Clrcle. Sul!• no. o.lly 1'11ot Decelllber IS, n .. KatmM Aw. Irvine, onD1••• 21, 111111 ttte or Ml bide. dueled by: 1n ..,..l\ridUll 1111• Center Drlw W• a.m. 111119 Count~ on NoWmber WW., Cellt.127'1• It, I .... Jlnulry 5, 1• Calif 127'15 D•ptr1men1 of Public By Iha order ol the City ptmtJC lln1C( Th• reg111rent com-Herb Jc¥ En1erp11Me Re-An1. Clllfornle, on 'o.c.m. 23, 1HI Aleort Communicltlonl. Th-113 Net1on11 l duut1011 • woru, 2000 Mein Str•t. Council of the Cl1y of Hunt-mer1C9C1 lo tranMCt bl*-tlrement tr1111 c/o Dlvtd ber 21 1111 et I o'ctocll ,_ Inc· Cel!Mmle. P.O. lo11 Cam• 1ftC Cllltornle oor Huntington Beech, Cell· lngton llMch, Cllifornl• the PtCTITICMM Mflll•H NII under the flctltloul Hlraon, Elq .. ' One P11k P.M.'. ~ th9n 9'ld there PubllMed OrMge COM1 11700, IMM. Calif 1271S ..a.IC llRIC( por1tion " 1 UOO Vo~ tornla. upon receipt Of 1 1fth day Of December. 1HI. um ITA~ bu11neM name or names plua, Ste. 580. lrvtne, Calif. show c1UM. II 1ny tNy hive. DlllY Piiot December 1, I , Thl9 IM*neea 11 con-Kermen A~ 1r1ln1 non°refund1bl1 fee of C .... ._. • .,, Cttr The followlno pereone .,. lilted •boYe on JlflUIFY 1· 12114 wtty Slid petition for ctianoe 15, ~2. ,.., dueted bV' • corporetlon .._. Callf. 11115 ' ' ln.00. c..ei., tM City ef Hunt· dOinO bulinees ac 1N9 Thi• bu9ineH 11 con· of neme ltlOUld not be Tfl..140 Th• re9l1tr1nt com-..crmoue WU Tiiie bullnell 1e OClft- bdl bid et'9ll M meOe on ....... .._.. AME A IC AN H 0 TE l MlchMI D. Brode ducted by: I generll Plf1· granted. INl1CICI lo lrlNICt bul6-..... ITA~ duCtld by: 1 corporlllon "" "otMIUI Fcwm Ind In ~ublWled Orenoe COM1 LIOUIOATOAS. 3400 Av-Thl9 ltlfement WH flied .,.,. IT IS FURTHER ordered ..a.IC flJTIC( ,... under tfle flctlt'°"9 TN folowlflg perlOnl.,. Th• r . l1tt1nt com-,.."*--PfO'lllded In ttle Diiiy Piiot December 22, etlU9 Of TM Ma, eo.11 with IM County Clerk of Or· The regl1tr1nl com-11111 1 copy Of tMI order to buliMle ne1ne or """" doiflQ bullneel • mencec1 : trlflMICt ..,._ CIOMracl docu1Mne1, Ind 1HI Th-184 Mesa. Calif. tH2t 111119 County O('I '9<*"ber IMnOed to trlnMCt bull-lhow c;.,.. be puOllet'9d In K..-lated lbow on NIA CALlfOANIA MAL ES. neea under IN flctltlOua 9tw1 be ~ by 1 Mary P. <>runan, 3400 Av· 13, 1911 Nt1017 -under the llctltloul the OfMge COiet Deity Ptlot. PtCTmOUe MWH Kereti A. Drlng. Ptealdent TATI GUIDE. IMS Meal ~ MIN Oii w oartlAad or CMNar'1 .Cftec* ..a.JC fl)TIC( _,. Of TM Arts. Coe11 Pub119hed Orange Coat ~ neme or namee • newapeper Of gener11 um ITA~ Tilll statement .,.. Ned v.roe Dr. •I. Coal• Mela. 1191eo 111ow1 on 1113 or • bid bond lot not lees Meea. c:.Hf. 92121 Delly Piiot December 22, 29, llltectlbolle on NoWmbef 4, ~wlltlon, !)Ublllheel In "* The folklwlnO per90M •• Witt. the County C1ert1 of Or· Cellf. t2l2I lt\efl 10% of the -.ii Of K....,. TN1 bul4neu 11 con-1eet, Januery 5. 12. 1919 1911 county It IMlt orioe 1 week dOlng ~ 11: 111119 County on Noll9lftber Guy Robert Tor ... 2M5 Jelfr9y A. llrtl. Vtoe,,..... the bid, made P9)'9ble to the '1CTIT10U9 llU9MM ducted by: 1n Individual Th-192 Urry T eneblum. T ruet• for lour coneec:utll/9 week• AIOES IN ACTIOH PEA-21, 1111 Mell V•de Or. •I. Coaia dent City of HunetnolOn 8eedl. MAm aTAnMINT The re9l1tr1nt com-__ .,. 11t1TIC( TNI etetement -•flied prlor tothedayofMldhelr· SONNELSEAVICESOFOR· ,_,. MIM,Clllf.tH2t Tflil......,..,. Wiii lled L.Mlor Code of IN SIMe of The fo11ow1ng persons ere menc:ed to tranue1 bus'-~ nwr with ttle County Clefk of Of. ing ANGE COUNTY. 3•20 S. Publlltlect OrMge Colet Thie bv91Ma1 11 con· wtttl IN County Clertt al Of. CellofNe Md ottw .._ ol dolno ~ u: ,_. under the llct1Uou1 K.a. ange County on Decembef 01ted November 17. lHI Brl9tol •310, Coall Meea, Oellw Plot December I , 15, dUcled by "' lndMdull 1n09 County on DID ... !tie.,... of Calltomil applt-THE BOMBAY COM· t>u.n-name or """" 2, 1981 JMma L • ....,,. callf. tH2t 22. 21. 1tll The re9le1r1nt COM• 9, 1111 cllble tMNIO, with the ... PANY. -3333 Bristol Street haled •bOYe on October 20. ,~~.~· "8ll07 Judge Of tM Ellcel HMlth SeMcel Inc.. Tll· IS. menced to tr-.ct bull--,_ STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? Pteue atop by to Ille xour ftctttloul ~ 11etemenl et the Deily Pllol Legel Depart-,_,,, 330 W..1 h y. Costa· Mela. CllMfornlL If you can not llop by. plMM call UI •• (714) 142 .. 321, Ex1enelon 315 or 318 end -will mek• errengementa for you 19 handle ltll9 procedure by mlll. If you ahould have lll'IY lutther ~lone. plMM call u• end -_. be more lllen glee! to ...,., you. Good llldl In ~ MW~!! -. Publlehecl Orange Coat Superior Court • Calttorn11 corporetlon. nea under the llc11tlou• Publiehed Orenp COM? The~ ~aon• .,. Daily Pilot December a. 15. IWaT IJUA"T, w 2128 Smok .. ood. Full· ..a.IC m1ICl bullflell Mme or namee Dally Piiat Deoemblr 1S, 22. doing bullnetl ... 22, 29, 1911 CAQNIV LAlm wton. calll. 9213 I Meted lbove on o.c.mber 1. 21, 1 .... .-.-y 5. ~ STOCKDALE PAD PART· Th·155 l14, •WORT mACH, Tiils bulln"' 11 con· '1CTlllOUl Wla 1tll Th-111 HERS. 2925 South Bristol CA _, dueled by: e corporetion ..... 8TA~ Guy Torelli Street. eo.11 Mnl. Calif. PlaJC NQTIC( Publllhect Orenoe Coael Th• re9l•tran1 com· TMlalowlnt ,.,_,.we This lletel'Nnt WM flied 1--------- 12121 . Deify Piiot December 1 a menc:ed to tranMCt bull· dolna bualflW •: With the County ce.tt of Or· P!l&JC llJllCE Ro.,_,, T. Best, 2925 '1CTmOUe ....... 15 22 1911 . . ""' under the llctltou• GOLD COAST WINOOW lngl County on o.c.mber 1-------..... ------Soulh Brletol SlrMI, Co111 um ITAnMRNT ' ' Th-131 bueineU NIM or names CLEANING. 1116 Cflurch St. 1. l118 l&.- M .... Cellf. 92526 TM followlng '*'°"' .,. lle!ed lboYe on NIA Ste. B, eo.11 ...... Clllf. ' Nmll '1Cnnou9 ....... Peter J .. Koetting, 2925 doing bulinea 11. Ml.JC fl)TIC( Ahmad Sedelll Sec:tetery 92121 Publlllled Orange Collt MAm 8TA~ South Brl1tol Str'Mt, Coate EUROPEAN AUTO RE· Thia 1t1temeni w .. filed David Howlrd E•ton Jt., Diiiy Piiot December 15 22 TM followlr'I ,.,_...,. Mau, Calif. 92126 PAIR 520 w Dyer Rd ,scnnoue ....... with the County Clefk of Or-1985 Church St. S te. B. 2t 1111 JlllUlfY 5 INt ' deloll.,....,.. II: Robert K. Brlzlus, 11 Sa.nt8.Ani. caiit. 92707 " NAm ITA~ ange County on November Colll Meel, Calif. 12127 ' • 'Tfl..171 SEAEN81.!!. 1 Aaal Ea- Tru11 .. under Oect111t1on or Eduardo CltnerOI, 1872 The follOWing pereone ire 23. 19N Thl9 bu•lne•• I• con· t1te M1tketTirD DHlgn Trull dlled 5-plember 18, New Hemlepttere Coats doing bueineU u · ,_ ducted by: In lndMdual °'°""· 17'580 GlletM A ..... 1917, 2925 South Brlatol Men, Clllf. 92821 . AMIR AUTO SERVICE. Publi.hecl Otange Co11t The re9l1tr1nt com-..aJC flJTIC( INIM, Callf.1111• Str .. 1, CO.II Me ... C1lll. Thanh T. Vu, 40l W. 30l E. PCH, Newport S..Ch, Delly PHol December 1, I , menced to trlftNCt bull· Lu.a lnearior9, lne., Call· 12128 Lavell ,, 195, Orange, Celit. Celll 12883 15. 22, 1911 MM under the lict11IOUI ic.-tornla. 11550 Gllette Ave., Thi• bu1lne11 I• con-926&8 Amit A lllchln 7 Agate Th-1•1 bu1ineM name or n.,,,.. PICTmOUe .,_.. INIM. Callt.127'1• duc:1ed by: • gener11 Plf1· Tiii• bualn•H 11 con· ll'VIM, c.ilf. 9271; • lia1ed •bc>ve on Decemw 2. NAm ITA~ Thie bullnne le con- nerlhlp ducted by: • generll Plf1· Thia 1>1.111111.. 11 con-"8JC fl)TIC( 1911 The folowlng per90na.,. ducted by:• corporation Th1 regl1tr1nt com-ner9ftlp dueted by: .,, lndlvldull Devld EMl9f'I . doing~ M : Th• re9l1trant com- menced to ltlnlael bUll-The reo lalrlnt com· The ragl1tr1nl com· PtCTmOUe ..,_.. TN1 1111ement WM llled IUANS STAINLESS. 1013 ~ to trlllMC1 buli-nea~ under Ille f1Ctltou1 mencect to trlMICI bu9io-IMnOed to trlnMCt bull· um ITAftmln with IM County Clerlt of Or· W. 1lttl 11rMI. Colta Meea. ,_. under IN flctltlow9 bu.-.a name or "*'* ,_. under the llc11tou1 ,_. under 111e llctltou• The lollowinO Plr9onl .,. M99 County on o.c.mber Callt. 12121 ~ NIM OI ""'* 119ted •bc>ve on Noveinblr !Ml"'-lllrM or ""'* ~ nllM or nema doing ~ •: 2. I... ~ John A. Burne. 304 llted lllOV9 on Oeolmber, 30;.: Ta.. Gener liltectabolleonN/A llac.d•boveon.July21.ltl2 Sl'lVENSCAAPETS,451 Publiehed Orange COiet Awn6dl C41mbfl. Newport 1982 . t, .. TMnh T. vu A.mlr A llkhln Fllr Dr. • 108. eo.ta Meu. Delly Piiot ~ •• 15. lwtl. Calif t2llO Nancy K. luelc. Pteeldent Pettner Thie lllletnenl -flied Thi• ltetemenl ... hied Calif 92121 22 29 1911 Aldi E. Popovlt•. 27212 Tlllil Ma1etnen1 ... fllad Thl9 1111ement wu filed with the County Clerk of Or· with the County Clerk Of Or· Steven John Hvn-. •51 • • Tfl.. 151 Jlfdlnel, Min ion Viejo, wtttl 1he County Clafll of Or- 1 wittl the County Clerk of Or-enge-county on November ange County on Nowmber Fllr Or. •108. Coate Mea, Callt 11109 County on DeG1mbei ange County on Nowmber 18, ttel IO, 1w Clllf. 92121 "8JC flJ11C( TMI bullnn• i• con-I , 1 ... 22. 19N ,_ P.an ,_,.. Thia 1>1.111MM I• c(>n. dueted by 1 generll Plrt· ,_ PubliWled OrMge Coal Publillled Or1nge Coest Published Otange Coul dueled by' an lndMdUll M9'I neralllp Publllhed OrMge COM? Oelly Pilot o-Tlber 1, a , Diiiy Pilot December 1. a. Deily Pilot o.c.mw 1. a: Th• re9l1tr1n1 com-PtCTinOUe .-u The re9 l1tr1nt com· o.My Piiot Decetnber 11, n . 15. 22. 1911 15, 22, 1981 15, 22, 1911 mencecl lo tr-.ct bu9io-um ITATmmllT menced to trlMaet butt-21, I .... .-..,Y 5, 1• ~~~~=====~========::==========:'J Th· 141 MM under !tie fictltOUI TM fo1k1w1nO per10n1.,. 11911 under !tie flctltioua Th-187 •n.9CFIEVRO -W. Home of the Serengeti Blazer Mi#lh;"ffil Call our fnendly salesmen lor details 579-5100 1-800-228·7240 17071 E. Imperial Hwy.· Yorba Linda. California THE BEST BUYS IN ORANGE COUNTY ARE ON THIS PAGE.· CALL ONE NOW! o SADDLEBACll Sales L~asing & Service Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-eoo-a31-33n 714-380-1200 2850 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA G) JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS . • s:~~Y.ttittG NEW LOCATION! SANTA ANA AUTO MALL 1500 Auto Mell Dr., SMu Ana 835-3171 Newport/SS Frwy. at Edinger .,Sales Dept. open 7 days Service Hours: Mon.~Fri. 7am-10pm i i BUENA PARK STANTON GARO N GROVE PACIFIC OCEAN -I e..e. ?Nu. "~ OOUNTY8 ou.T t..EAOIA OF THE IMPORTS" • (714) 540-0713 2llO HARBOR BLVD.• COSTA MESA ., • NO GIMMICKS ® •NO HASSUS • NO OVlRPRtl;~G NEWPORT FWY & WINGER 546-0220 0 • OLDSMOBILE • CADILLAC • GMC TRUCKS m/582·0800 SAN DIEGO FWY • AVERY EXIT LAGUNA NIGUEL lnertiu 11 Tlli• •11• C1ll fir hlli11 842-4321 CALL ONE OF THESE DEALERS FOR THE BEST BUY 0 HOUSE of IMPORTS, Inc. Mercedes-Benz 6862 MandlCaler Boulevard Buena Park SERVICE :us or 714/llERCEDES . M·F 7a-6p M -F 8a-6p Where 1-5 and 1-9lmttt. Sat. 8a-2p aperlor &n VOLKSWAGEN® ~ IN WESTMINSTER~ • (7l3ft~~gster Blv<'ii~~~iW Orange Coast Jeep Eagle ,,._. ~. Sales OW #I 1WerlCf • Senlce 1• 10Z1 • Leulac llM Barbor Blvd. • Coata Meaa • t r-CAMPBEi I .NISSAN/~~ • low Pricu • No G1mm1clu • Greal Selection • Fr1endlv People • E•cellenl Sen11ce 1113S 1eoct1 eo.-d (714) 142·7711 •11ACH .._. ..... °' .._._ (21J) "2·1461 SALES -LEASING SERVICE -PARTS (714) 848-7739 ll800 lelCla ahd. (714) 956-1008 Haatia9toa 8-c' CA taM7 • • 411 BORDA •ALU m O.AJIGS CO.