HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-12-17 - Orange Coast PilotI
I
NEWPORT BEACH
.. ,, "'• r .·, f ' r •,4 r • • • • : (~;....A~ -, f ')', '• . , :.. _ :: _ ·· •• A . · ~ ~ '• "
Campus guard held in.200 heists -·
Sadd eback College officer suspected -
in ap.artment bur lartes over two years
years and could involve several
hundred thousand dollars worth of
stolen property, some of wh1ch has
been recovered.
ment tentatively is set for Tuesda)' at
Harbor Municipal Coun an Newpon
Beach.
sets and Jewtlery, Offiar Tom Little
wd.
"We're ant1cipatin1 recovcrina
more," Little added.
1Ueaedly WH bei'!I uted al tbc
school's police oflietn in lrvtae,
Lillie taid.
Until rcctntly, Miller lived at tbc
0.kwood apanmentt, wbidl ~
over an enure block at tbc tDICf-
section of lrvide Av~ and 16th
By STEVE MARBLE
Ot •Dellr""' ....
A campus pohce officer at Saddlc-
back Colloee in lrvmc has been
arrested o n suspicion of pulhna up to
200 burglaries at a huae Ncwoort
Coast readers respond""o
the kidnapping of animals
of used for medlcal re-
search by the City of
Hope./A3
A professor allegedly
slain by a Vietnamese
refugee lived a double
life./A3
CalHomla
Ollvla Newton-John weds
In Malibu; Bette Mldler
ties the knot In Vegas
ceremony./ AS
Nation
Heart patient Wiiiiam
Schroeder said despon-
dent following stroke at
hospital./ A4
Gen. Westmoreland's
suit against CBS heads
for three more days of
testimony before holiday
break./ AS
World
Actor Stacy Keach
preaches against use of
drugs from his London
jell cell.I A4
No. 2 In Soviet leadership
continues to hold talks
with British about ending
apace arms war before It
begins./ AS
People
It was a knight to re-
member at tbe UC Irvine
Madrigal feast./ A7
Sports
Area prep basketball ls
second to none and the
first two weeks of play Is a
good lndlcator./81
The third annual Irvine
basketball tourney be-
gins today with 32 team
lnvolved./82
JlmmyConnors Is fined
$2,000 for "un-
sportsmanlike behav-
lor."/82
Entertainment
South Coast Repertory
headed Into Its 20th
season on the wings of a
"Seagull" In 1984./A&
George C. Scott stars as
Ebenezer Scrooge In a TV
version of•• A Christmas
Carol" tonight./ Al
Bualneu
Treasury proposals for
sweeping tax changes
have created unwanted
results./84
INDEX
Erma Bombeck A6
Bridge A10
Bulletin Board A3
Bual nest 84-5
California News A4
Claaslfled 88-10
A10
Beach apartment complex where he
once was employed as a sccunty
offic.er.
Police said today the strina of
buraJarics at the Oakwood Garden
Apartments spans more than two
John Lconar4 Miller, 34, was
a~ted Fnday momma while on
duty at the Saddlcback campus in
Irvine where he is employed as the
lead campus safety officer.
He as being held on $2501000 bail at
the Newoort Beach city jail. Arraign-
Vision• ~f au.gar plums
Pohce said they have recovered
about SI S0,000 wonh of stolen
merchandise from M11Jer's residence
in Laauna N11uel and h1s colleae
campus office. The recovered items
include guns. video cassette re-
corders, stereo CQu1pmcnt. television
The man became a uspcct in the
1partment crime wave two Wttk.s 110
when • fellow campu pohccman
bcaamc susptcious when Miller con-
tJnucd bnnging new stereos to work
With bJm.
One of the stolen stereo system
tteet.
Maller fonnerly worked as a 1«Ur-
1ty officer at the tarwe complex. pobcef
(PleUeMe0UAJl.D/A2
Vari driver faces--
manslaughter ~ap
in teens' deaths
Prosecutors reject
Illurderchargesin
fatal police chase
>
By STEVE MARBLE oe .. .,..,,... ...
Prosecutors have decided to file
manslaughtcT rather than murder
charges against a Sant.a Ana man who
allegedly caused the death of two
Cost.a Mesa high school students
during a police chase last week.
Ruben M. Valle, 21 , will be
arrai411cd Wednesday on felony man-
slaugntcr charges, which carry a
maximum sentence of eight years in
prison.
Valle reportedly was dnvtng a
stolen van and was being pursued by
police when he coUidcd with the
students' Volkswagen after runnina a
red light, according to Costa Mesa
police.
8111 Dearing and Roy W1lhamson.
both 17-ycar-old seniors at Esuncaa
Hi&h, weTC killed tn the collision.
Patrolman initially arrested Valle
on susp1eton of murder but the
District Attorney's office filed man-
slaughter charies instead. ovcrrulin&
the police department's recommcn~
dauon that Valle be charged with two
counts of sccond-dqrce murder.
Deputy Distnct Attorney Rick
KJng wd hu office ts reserving lhc
nght to upgrade the cbarge:s to
second-degree murdtt af CVldcnOC
supporu 1t
Although state law allows pros-
ecutors to seek murder cbaraes in
connection with a fatal car acetdcn·t. a
recent appellate court decision nar-
rowed the etrcumstances under which
murder charges can be filed. ·
The recent decision limits murder
charges to dnvcrs who arc undeT the
influence of drugs or alcohol.
Costa Mesa traffic 1nvcsugator Ken
Waldron said a blood test conducted
after the accident showed Valle was
not 1ntox.icated. Waldron said more
extens1ve tests that would show
whether Valle was under the in-
(Pl-..e Me D1l.IVBR/A2)
Man rescued,On Cliff . . . ..
Teen-ager shot
in head during
Mesa reception
Police check n ames in Santa Anagang files
after altercation at Rea Com munity Center
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of ... .,..,,... .....
Costa Mesa detecti ves said toda>
they will be re' 1ewing gang files kept
b' Santa .\na police 1n hopes of
finding the S!.!5pt.:CI who ~hot a t~n·
Gomez was treated early Sunday
morning at Hoag Memonal Hosp1tal
1n Newport Beach and released.
Children ba•e plenty to do while waltlne to
aee 8'nta Claua ln the Carousel Court of
Soath Cout Plaza ln Coeta Meaa. Thi•
dl8play, created by the plasa and South
Cout Repertory, la called "Santufac-
. ~ at a wedding rf't.'t"-flt1on la te tion" and featurea &lant animal balloon•,.· Saturda'
mlmea, maatclan• and other exhlblta. It'• Th<· Hlllffi Manin Ramm·1
open Mondaya throu&b Saturday• from 10 C1omc1. 17 ot \anta \n.t rew't'd a.m. to 9:30 p.m. and Sunday• from 11 onh· minor in1um·, when a hullet
Dctcct1 vc Paul Cappuroll1 said
witnesses 1dent1fied the gunman as
po 1bly a member of a street gang m
<;!lnla 4.na However Cappucc1lh
\aid witnesses did not k.now tht'
J~-.a1lant's name
Thl' \hooung occurred about 11 4 5
p m out 1de Rea ( ommun1t) (enter
1n ( oc;ta Mesa. where a wedding
(Pleue eee SHOOTING/ A2) a.m. to 6 p.m. until Dec. 24. grazed his forehead. police n-poncd
;
Doctor has 'new' --idea house calls
oly stethoscooe, a doctor who
makes house caJls~
Nobody with an M.D. behind has
name still makes house calls. Every-
o ne knows they went o ut of style at
about the same time smallpoA dtd in
this country.
STEVE
llTCIELL . -·
Arsenal
found in
car fire ·
GuM, '>t'"cral hundrro rounds of
ammunitio n and a large amount of
ca h ~-ere found unday inside a car
that caught on fire on the n Diqo
Frcewa.y outside or San Juan
--
Comics
Cro11word 09
But there arc always cxccptton ...
and o ne of those uccptions 1s Dr.
Bernard Huss, a San Juan Capistrano
family practitioner who v1 its a half
dozen 01 so of his patients at th'CTT'
south Oranae County home each
. ('ap1strano
0 c Coun_!y fircf~ten saul __ --i
the d1soove the weapons and ltve
round IS they ~"" attempttna to Death Notices 87
FMturea A7
Horoecope 88
Ann Land•• A6
Mutual Fund• B5
National Newt A4
Opinion A8
Paparazzi A7
Police Log A3
Public Notices B7
Sport• 81-3
Stock Market• EM
Televl1lon A8
Theatef'I A9
Weeth« A2
World NeWI A4
week. whale both ~re workina at a Nonh
''There are a lot of re tired folks 1n Dakota hospital.
this area and someumc it' difficult They opeMd the walk-tn famtl)'
for them to act out of the house," the medical poup more than sax yun
white-hatred, mustad\ioed doctor q9 in a ama_ll I, 100-scauarc-foot
says "Sometimes )I'• been more than office Today, their offices boa t tv.o
a Y'N" mce they ve " a full-lime pb)lioan•, 1wo pan-umc
They don't come 1n for a \.anct).' of ~tors. a Pl)'Choloaist. t}e ~octO~:
reason Some of them are bcdnddcn, pochatmt, ul'9C0n, ncurolOIJ t ano
o Lhcrs can't dnvc anymore." l 2 cmplo)tt workina out ora S, 700-
Huaa. •ho operates the n Juan squat'C'-IOot m~m ofrttt build.Ina
Capistrano Family Mcdtcal Group ·on 1m1PO e11l.raft0; fbc SS.ycar·
with his wift, Lyn, a r'CIJ tercd nu~. old phys1c11n flaurn l~ office scc
,,.ys his elderly patient don't always 1b0u1 .SO paUtnls a day.
.. tet the care 1hcy Med. TM ann nd many ofthC'm are eldnty.
couDle are out to chanat all that. -we•.., btcn heR IUK't ·t 971 and
Hu• who hQ been a phy i ian for \\'<'know a lot of1bcte pc()plt~u~
a quamr of a centurv. met ha w1fi (...._ .. DOCTOltJ A2)
t
.... .... , 1 .....
Or.Berna.MBwm•lD•AmellaATtla.89,aawtfeLra
wlataoa oaeof Hw' ~ .clledaleolltouecalla.
moth« a fire that bTokc out an the
enaine oh late model Ford Mu una
-apparently abandoned by •ts
dnver near the n Juan Clttk Rold
offramp
enff's ~cpull called to tht
ICt'ne fimtlf'lters, id~ found a
nOt at to the firewa)l or tht'
tnaint. • siconJ ntle hld n i Midt a ~ar bumperand t,.b b ndauns i 1dc
the "chick .
'\CBT'bOx ofammun1tton and a
ronta1n1n $2,620 also ~c"'
found an the car. -...b~camcd
Mu\t'IO l1<tnic pt lCS, deputies wa
uthonh "-'trt uMurt ""bo wa
dnv1na the cu .
-
(
•--oiiing9CoMC DAILY PILOT/Monday, Oeoember 17, 1984
Rocking for CHOC
Tom Warde and Jim Sbllllto, memben of
tile Delta Theta Chl eemce clab at,llarlna
W,h School in Hunttncton Beach, puticl-f pate lD teeter-totter marathon to ralee
; money for the Children'• Boepltal of
Orao&e County. A boat 20 etudenta took
put lD the eYeDt tbat ))e&ao S p.m. Friday
and ended 48 boan later. The &roup teeter-
tottered under a C&DT&a covertoa durlo&
hea~ ralna and ralaed $1,500. .
~ .......................................................................... ..
~Patterson to take law post
~ ~after losing Congress seat
Orange County Congressman JerT)
M. Panerson will become a panner
with Leff & Mason. a Cahfom1a and
Washington law firm, when he leaves
office at the end of the month. ll was
announced today.
phases of banking and savings and
loan matters including legislative
activny and in helping mutual in-
st11u11ons convert to stock form of
ownership.
banking debt problems resulting from
the troubles of such nations as
Argentina."
"( expect to become mvolved m
various aspects ofbanlCJng and tbnfi
law. much of which I helped to draft
during m y 10 years m Congress." the
Democrat from Santa Ana said. f Patterson was defeated by Re-
publican Roben Dolan in November.
The congressman. asked what he
feels is the "unfinished legacy" he is
leavrng for congressional solution,
said, "There are urgent problems still
remaming -the defLcit, the need to
mcrease the level of savings, and the
inte rstate merger problems
emphasized by the growth of non·
banks. a<1 well a'i the international
Patterson served aschainnan of the
International Development and
Financ.e Subcommittee of the Bank-
ing Committee and on the Interior
Com mittec while in Congress. He isa
native of El Paso, Tcus, and holds
degrees from Long Beach State Uni-
versity and UCLA.
He served in the Coast Guard pnor
to becoming a laWyer. Leff & Mason 1s mvolved in all .
f
'
} ------------------------------------------------------------1. Coast bank workers helped
i
. 'back to normal' after Ordeal I i By a.e Assoclated Pren the following day.
Only panly in Jest. bank tellers ace
their fears and reacuons. Kramer
said. t
Humor and counseling are helpmg volunteering to "work 1n the vault
several bank employees m San ever) day" to be o ut of harm's way.
Clemente recover from the ordeal of Kramer said.
being taken hostage dunng an at-One wisecracking emplo)'ce said
tempted robbery Dec. 4, m which 23 "that the 11 workers .. had gone beyond
, people bid ma vault. the call of duty m customer service by
Within ho urs of the hostages· spending six hours with customers in
release, bank personnel trained m the vault," be said.
trauma counseling were sent to the Another line that drew laughter
Security Pacific National Bank in. from employees came from a com·
said Anthony Kramer. vice president mon phrase used by robbers. who
of _the bank's personnel employee order .. eve!] bod) .. to hand over their
assistance department mone\. ·
The 12 custom ers a·nd 11 cm-· "lfi hear the wvrd 'everybody' in
ployees forced mto the vault by an the next month, I'll dive under m}
armed gunman. who was later c.ap-desk," one employee joked .
tured, escaped IDJUry. An extortion The counseling provided by Sccur-
attempt was made agamst the bank 11y Pacific allows people to talk about
"It helps to say that 'I was scared;
to recognize that nobody has to be a
strong person, and that what they
went through was, indeed. a very
frightenfog experience." he said.
San Oemeote bank manager Roger
Loveless, who escaped the I: IS p.m.
robbery attempt because he was at
lunch. said he believes the dis-
cussions are helpful.
"Some people might feel they are
destroyed by such ~n experience and
may take weelcs to get over 1t. We
relived the experience and our feel-
ings in the sessions and understood
that e'4~one was having normal
reactions, • Loveless said.
Students plan holiday cheer for hospital veterans
Corona del Mar H 1gh School
seventh and eighth grade pupils will
present a holiday program Tuesday
for patients at the Long Beach
Veterans' Hospital
The pupils will be 101ned b) stafT
members from the school and mem-
bers of the PT.\ on the bus tnp
departing from the high school at 9
a.m.
The program will include a choral
performance of holiday music and
individual talent performances for
CONTINUED STORIES
SHOOTING •..
From Al
reception was being held Police said
Gom ez was seen argumg with a group
of male H1span1cs outside the kitchen
area of the center. at 661 Ham1ltot1 St
One of the youths, about I 7 years
the m o re than 90 veter.ms at the
hospital.
Refreshments. potted plants and
gifts will also be offered to the
veterans. fhe high schoors art classes
have designed the gift collection
boxes, buttons and banners while the
computer classes printed the holiday
cards.
Suspect pleads innocent
An Orange County man pleaded Teofilo Medina, 41 . of Santa Ana,
innocent in Municipal Coun to who is being held in the county 'ail
charges that he killed four gas station without bail, entered the plea dunng
and convenience store clerks. arraignment Friday.
old. ~uddcnl} pointed J 1.1'lm-<:allh~:r
handgun at Gome1 and fi red twice.
police reported.
Cappucc1ll1 said he did not know
what -s parked the argument or
whether (JomeL was a guest or a
worker at the reception.
Apparently. no members of the
wedding party were mvolved in the
incident.
DRIVER FACES CHARGES ...
From Al
tluence of drugs have not been
completed.
Kingsa1d because the ruling 1s from
the appelle1e court. not the state
Supreme Coun. 1t 1s not v~wed by
prosecutors as the final word.
Valle is being held at O ra nge
County Jail on $750.000 bail -a
figure that likely will be reduced
durini arraignment.
Pohce, meanwhile, are looking for
witnesses to the police chase which
started on Fair Dnve near Harbor
Boulevard at about 9:30 a.m .. and
proceeded alo ng Pomona and Vic-
toria streets before coming to a
violent end at the intenection of 19th
Street and Placentia Avenue.
A memorial service for Dearing
and Williamson was conducted Sat-
urday in Costa Mesa.
GUARD ARRESTED •.•
FromA2
said. They did not know whether he
investigated any of thchuriJarj__e.s.he 1s
charJCd with committing.
LJttk said the campu, policeman
has been hoked to about 90 burglaries
and 1 a suspect in about 110 other
burglaries at the apartments Police
saicf anyone who was a victim of a
buraJary at the Oakwood apartJTlcnt,
Just Call
between Nov., 1982 and the present
should contac .detcc11ve at
644-3786.
Miller has been employed by
SaddJeback College as a campus
safety officer s11YCe 1980. according to
William Schreiber. as 1stant to the
college chancellor.
Schreiber said Miller worked pan
ttme for the college until Octobct
when he was hired full time and
J>rnotcd to the lead Position at the
co cge·s North Campus in rvme.
"Obv1ou ly. the collesc is cooper-
ating /1 fully with the authorities.''
Schreiber said.
-)\S a campu '8fcty officer, Miller
bad police au1hority and carried a
weapon, Schreiber said.
•
Wbal do you like aboul Ult Dally Pilot? Wut don't yoe Ille? Call U11e
numbu al ltfl and yoer mesu1tt will bt' recorde4, truscribtd ud dellvtre4
to thtt appropriate editor. ----,.--.. ne tatnt U·lllo•r aoawerlat ervlce may be ••td 10 ncord lt&&tn to U..
f'dltor on a.oy topic. Coatl"fbotort to o•r Ltlltr1 colamn must lnclade thtlr
n1mt aod tettpltont 111mbt'r for verification. No clrculaalon c1 Jl1, plea1t. 642-6086 Tell us what's on yoar mind .
• l
-
A eOld air meat over ttw •tatt a.nd clNr •• cauMcl
tempetatu,... to drop Into th4 30t an" 40. In the baaln and atono
the cout Nrty today, and continuing fair weather wt" keep
Southern Callforni. chllly through Tuttday.
A new ttOf'm ~oping on the coast la not expected to
aprMd llgt'tt rain end ahoWet9 any flJrthef IOUth than Centtfal
Cellfornla. the National WMther s.rvlce •aid.
T 9"\pefatures wlll drop Into the 40• at the cMe center
tonight. with hlQhe TU..Oay In the mld•eot, the NWS •aid. Valley Iowa wtll range from th• 40• down to the 30s, warming to hlgha In
the 50t and 801. Along the Ora~ Coaat, the forcaat calla fO< mostly aunny
and allghtly warmer luetday. Lowa tonight In the tow 30a to mid
40a. High• Tue.day In the upper 50• to mid 60s.
Tempe M«ftphlt 72 ee
Mleml BMc:h 77 14
MUWM• Sf 32 .. Lo Mplt.St PIUI 47 14
AllMlny ~ .u NMh'flltf 14 12 =:t:ciw 33 ,, NewOt!Mtle eo ..
53 36 NewY0tll 41 41
"'0NTI ~~ .. ,., Watm -ColO,...
A-.n F~mu Snow OetlUO•O....,. SllhOllaly ~ SN>wera ~· 21 13 NOrlOlll, Va M 45 NI-WM-5-wt H()AA U S C)eol of C-<t Atlente 11 49 OkWIOIN City 55 0
Alltnl!Q Olty 52 48 Onlatlt 411 20 .441etHI 12 &a OrlWldo • 15 llO
8elUmore ... ... ~ .. 47 45 ~ 72 65 Phowola ., :; Calif. Tempe 10 ..01 =="~ 112 tolM 25 10 41 3o4 Hlgll, low e><tdPl111JOn fOt 24 ~ s.tltaAN llO 9otlon 47 43 Por11Md.O. 41 58 9lldlne •• 5 • '" today SantaCrw 59 911f!llo ... •• Pr~ 44 44 .. .,.lle6d 51 53 TallMVt/Wf " ~ " ..• Aalelgll $3 51 EUtaU « 40 Clwletton.S C N 57 Reno 34 12
"·-50 32 OharlaMon w v " 61 Alclwnond •• « t..ancaal• 48 24 Cllanona,N C 15 4S 8tui.M 61 43 Loe~ Id 43 E:dended =~ 30 ot SI Pat•l811'11141 &2 85 Oelltend 52 3t llO 2t 84111 Lal<• Clly 39 01 ,,_ AoCllee 4t 2t ClncmMu 11. 51
45
39 20
San Antonie> 12 se Aolcl llufl •• 41 Verl4IOl9 ~ wltll a~ of a...tand 114 49 "San Juan,P A t3 11 AaOwood City 54 ,. CO!umbut,Oll ... 47 81SteMwla •9 21 Sacramenlo 50 35 rain aOOUI lateW~ T,._.
d..,wtth=wlf>da '"" -~ Concotd,NH 34 31 S-ltlt ,. 32
o.tta.FI Wottll 12 $3 ~ 70 ee a...... 53 37 55 IO 17 In 40t IO IOw 50ll but San OleOO 58 45 deOI-ootda< ftldey ITIOtnlng O'Y'on .. 48 SP<*-24 11 S... FrenollOO 55 42 o.n-48 15 Sy.-$3 4f s.t\ta 8arlMI" 118 34 OMMoin. ff 2 1 T~ M 32 81odl1on 51 3 1 Detroit 85 37 r.-IM :M High. low pteclpttatlon IOt 24 llOlltt Duluth 44 ot Tula 118 41 Tides EJP-60 29 WNNngton ... ... endll10 at 5 p ... 52 31 Fllrbenka 54 37 8M9IOW 21 Ill Wloh«a BIOS-33 20 Fargo 35 02 Wllk-8arr• 43 .,,
8lllhop 3t " TOOAY FleQll•" 21 2' tllytlle 54 47 Second lllOll S:Mpm 3 1 Grend Raipida 61 35 Surf report C.llltna 57 47 Second IOW It 03p.m 12 Gr•tFalla .oe ·23 Long e..cn 51 44 HMllOtd 40 40 Mont'~ llO 39 TUHOAY ..01 .,, HtMIM LOCATIOtl 81ZI aHAN Monl•ay 51 40 Flrll lllQll 5.40 ··'"· 60 Honolulu .. 70 341 22 Fir.ttow 12:37 P•'" 00 Huntington 8aec:ll 1-3 lelr MtW"-1 Houlton 10 ee 1·3 pOOt Hewpoft &Mell 58 46 Second hlQll IJ·43pm 38 tnctleNpollt 66 39 Alwr Jetty. Nawpo<1 1·2 OnlatlO 56 43 Second low tt•48p.tn 1 5 Jlebon,Mt 79 15 40lh Stteet, IW#C>Ot1 poor
Palm Springe 62 41 Jlldl~ 711 65 22nd si.-. Newport ' pOOt 55 31 Sufi Nl• todey at 4·c16 p m . ,._ .iu.-II oe ea1b0tl waove ' poor p .......
1 A-llkM 54 4$ T.-091 II 8:53 Lm end Mii 90eir> et !<..-City 51 SS t.aoun• 8aacfl Sen~•· 1-3
poor
good SM Bemetdtno 54 48 4 47 p'" LUVaQM •• 2t Moon ..c. at 1-24 p 111-. ,._ Tuaec!ey Wat« *'IP 5-4-6 7 SenGalltial llO 40 Utlta Aodl 17 M San.ION $7 )5 et 2 0 a tn. and Nit..., .. t $8p.m LOUltYtlla 70 5a &wall dllaction aouu.w.t
CONTINUE D STORIES
DOCTOR MAKING HOUSE CALLS ...
From Al
they've become our fnends," says
Lyn Huss. "So mt ny of them are
alone and we know of their needs."
It was one of these older patients
who put the first down payment on an
idea that evolved mto thei r unique
Medivan service.
"She used to come here m a
wheelchair. using public transpor·
talion." Lyn Huss recalls. "She had to
call two days ahead of time to
schedule a pickup. Sometimes the bus
showed up late. sometimes it didn't
show up at all.
"And when they did dump her off
here, she sometimes had to wait two
hours to be picked up again for the
tnp home. Then they'd put her o ut at
the curb when she finally did get
borne because of'rcgulations.'"
That 79-ycar-old woman sparked a
notion in the mind ofLyn Huss to buy
a van and bring some ofthe1r patients
to the o ffice.
That plan was tossed out w11h the
old tongue deprcsscrs.
"I told her I didn't want to 'et m the
transporta t 1on business,' Huss
groused. "That's ~h~n Lyn s.uJ.&ested
we buy a van, equip tt, and v1sn some
o f our o lder patients at home."
Bingo.
They purchased a three-year-old
Volkswageo~.bus, painted it, put in
shelves and cupboards and equipped
it with just about everything short of
an operating room.
"We can do aud1~rams and
Deity Piiot
Dellvery
la Oueranteed
Moncley·f•IOly " ~ 00 "°' ,_ .,_ PllP9I ti)' S:JOpm C91be!Ore7Plll
and 'fOll copy ... !Ml
~
pulmonary tuncuon testmg and we And that. they say. 1s makmg them
even have a centnfuge to spin down more willing to take better care of
blood samples," Lyn Huss says. themselves.
"Now we can bring the office to the "We take on Medicare assign·
patient." ments," Huss u.plained. "Whatever
Every Thursday afternoon. Huss Medicare allows, we take that. The ~cks up his little black bag {OK. so patient picks up the other 20 per·
it's a baby blue plastic tray.) al_l~ !he cent."
medical duo are on the road. v1S1t1ng · s J c · s And. since Medicare only allows patients m an uan ap1strano, an $32 for a home visit, the patients pay Clemente. Dana Point and Capistrano Beach . onl~ about $6.40 for most visits.
The Huss' bedside manner 15 But the couple haven't limited their
begirining to draw referrals from wcekl} treks to v1sitmg the elderly. O nce they took their Medivan pro-
patients and even from nurses whose gram o n the road. other possibilities bosses don't make ho use calls. opened up.
Arid their pills-on-wheels program "We drove out to Capistrano
1s expanding rapidly. ' Valley High School one night to give
· "We're going to see two new spons ph}s1c~I exams in the gym,"
pauents today who were referrals,'' Lyn Huss said.
Huss said on a recent Thursda.Y
afternoon. ,. . Another time. they answered a
request from.theownerofa plumbing
One reason their mobile medical business who wanted his employees
service is becoming so popular, Lynn 10 get influenza inJecttons. Huss believes. 1s the cost to the elderl>
patient. ··He told them he didn't want them
calling in sick all wu11er.:· Huss said.
"Old people hve o n a hm11ed laughing.
budget. even in this area;· she said.
"They thought they had enough Like the ir successful family med1·
money to last the rest of their lives. cal group, the Huss' are hoping their
but they don't. What they do is fledgling Medivan program will ex·
eliminate what they think are the pand. They're already considering
non-essentials." putting a few more doorstep doctors
on the Rx route.
One of the first things they give up "We'd like to see 11 grow," Lyn
is visits to the doctor. Huss said.
The Husses say most of their Huss agrees. "If the demand 1s ~lderly patients pay only about $6 for there, we'll meet the demand."
a house call. On 1he road.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H.L. SChw•rtz 111
Publisher
Circulation 714/142-4333
ClaHlfted advertlalng 714/142-54171
All other department• 142--4321
MAIN OFFICE
330 Ww Bat St Co&la ""-CA Mu addl-Bo.t.•ISIO COiia ...... CA 92626
Satvrdey enc) $un09y II
rou oo not ·-"°"' OOl>I' O\I 1 • '" ca" oetor• 10 a m ~"" roor COl>"f #Ill btlt~vfllf""1
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Managing Editor
K•r•n Wittmer
Advertising Director
Col>yt!Qlll 1963 O.enge Cont PuClW""Q Compeny Ho ,_, •tor,.. ilkllt•ations adilorte1 men.. or e0var1 ...
mania n.,..,, mey be rapr~eo wltr.ou. ~pat· """'°" of cocryngtll -
SacOl1d c-pottage e>etd •• Co.le "'-Calototnia IUPS U4 8001 S-"puon by c.,,.., $' 7S montnly
by ..... M> "° mon1 "'Y
Clrculatlon
Telephone•
Roaemary Churchman
Controller
Robert Cantrell
Production
Manager
Donald L. Wllllama
Circulation
Manager VOL. n , NO. 352
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-
15 county1gr0ups
s eek voluDteers
'Whatareyourfeellngson the ..
recentkldnapplngoflheresearcb
animals from the "City of Hope
Cancer Laboratory?
Volunteers arc belna 10u~t for ~1ition1 at more
than lS non-profit orpnization1 in Oranje County. Amo~nna the volunteer positions available are:
• • wrappers for the Oranae Count1 Counselina Center fund-raiser at South Coast Plaza In Costa Me11.
•Offioe workers for Westar, a learnlna oenter in
Westminster for the developmentally diaabled.
Co • ln,terviewen for the t.qal Aid Society of Oranae unt~ m Santa Ana.
•Child auidance and child care workers in Seal Beach
at lnterv~I House\ a shelter for woplen and chlldren.
For information of volunteeri poistion1, contact the
Volunteer Center in Garden Orove at 898.()()43.
Homewor~ ollalc la 'llB
Tpe Children'• Resource Center of the Huntinaton
Beach Library has opened a homework clinic for
younjsten m the elementary arades. JerrrTttel·
New,...i .... dl
RetlHra&ear The clinic is open Monday and Thursday afternoons ~m 3 to S p.m. in the Balboa Roo!'\_ 9tildrcn who would
hkc to re<:eive assistance in math, Enaiish or other subjects
may brina their homework to receive help from student voluqteen.
. St.uden.ts in t~e sixth grade or above who would like to
assist m 'this proJect are asked to contact the children's
laG1Baru
Newport Bea~
Eecrow Secrelar)'
"I don't think they
should have stole them.
Some we~ injected with
h.erpcs and cancer. It could
be danaerous to people e~posed." ·
"Well, 1 feel it•1JO(>d that
they want to fiod out about research. But, they ahould
find Other wa1•· rat.her than
USC animals.
depanment at 848-7813. ·
Retlree• plan IJoUday fete
Christmas chicken and pot luck tixinJS will be the
menu Thursday at the annual meetini of the Ne~n
Beach chapter of the American Association of Retired
Penons, scheduled for the Veterans Hall, 56S W. 18th ST.,
Costa Mesa.
The chapter will elect directors and officers for 1985
at the session, to be held at noon. Memben are asked to
call Jim Sawyer at 646-4550 to give their chicken
preference (white or dark meat). The meetina will be
followed by a Christmas party and gift exchanae.
· Mountaln Chrl•tm•• planned
An old fashioned Christmas in the mountains is being
offered at lalce Arrowhead Village through Jan. l.
Where you caii view the parade
Tbla la the route l>Nm will take put
nlected epota In the 8Sth annual
Cbrlatmu Boat Parade of llibm. ~an•aa
tonllbt and nmnln« na,bt1j tbroaill 8aD·
day. A Ylewlq area hu been Ht up by tbe
Newport HartiOr Area Cbamber Of Com·
merce at tbe lea Scout bue on W•t Cout
BJpway.
In celebration of Charles Dickens, the villaae wjll don
Christmas wreaths, lights, a grand tree and a series of
weekend activities. Horse and carriaac rides around the
village, greetings by Dickens characters, carolers and
Christmas gift drawm1s will take plaoe on weekends.
Slain Fullerton professor's
notes reveal his double life Bob Vaaaturo
Newport Beac•
Electrical HsiDeer
"I feel they should not
have rescued them, be· Cooperman received funds and said causeJ. thest animals are for
Debbie Jacta.
Butta1to• Bead
Bair 1t7Uat
"I thtnk that a man's life
is more' important There's
lots of ammals out there
and to save a human life is
much mo.re important."
CSF educa tor had contrlbuted money to spy.
purchas ed high-tech equipment for Vietnam he was only a technical adviser for specinc research purposes. Vietnam programs. Ho\I -1 The-traditional "Christmas Carol," a production ·of
the mountain's Community Theater Group, K.rossroads,
will hiJhlight the turn of the century events. 'M"e play is
scheduled to run each afternoon for four consecutive
weekends beginnina Dec. 1 in the.village.·
"The Foundation for Scientific ow 1;1se art you going to
C . 'th v· had find the affects of a disease. r
By &be A11ocla&ed Pre11 death was a politicafassassinallon. OOJ?Cf&UOn ~ Jetnam., . And they weren't &tTy· nothing to do with UNESCO, said bddy's peL"
The newly restored Lake Arrowhead Villaac is open
daily from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. On Dec. 21and22; 28 and
29 1ts hours are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. From Southern
California, take freeways 91, 10 and 60 to 1-215 in San
Bernardino and the Mountain Resorts turnoff to Highway
18 and Lake Arrowhead.
WIJale-watclJlng crul•e• •et
Three-hour, 'fully narrated wha.le-watching cruises
from the Catalina Terminal, San Pedro, will beg.in Dec. 26
and continue at regular intervals until March 17,
according to an announcement by Tim Mazur, general
manager of Catalina Cruises.
A physics professor allegedly slain
by a Vietnamese refugee lived a
double life. funneled money to a
convicted spy and bought high-tech
equipment for postwar Vietnam, a
newspaper says.
The anti-war professor, Edward
Lee Cooperman, 48, slain Oct. 13,
lived modestly with his wife and two
daughters, but his notes reveal he had
access to hundreds of thousands of
dollars given by the United Nations
subsidiary UNESCO to his Foun·
dation for Scientific Cooperation
with Vietnam, according to news-
paper repons Sunday. He visited
Vietnam a dozen times since 1977,
the raper said.
"I believe there is a lot more
international intrigue involved than
the story of a 20-year-old student who
was just horsing around," said
Cooperman's brother, William.
Police believe they still have a
simple murder case.
"In relation to foreign intriaue, I
can say that his death has caused
information to come out that prob-
ably wouldn't have been known,"
~ltce Capt. Don Bank.head said.
'But we have nothing to indicate that
his death was a plot or pa.rt of an
international cause."
Mrs. Cooperman's attorney, Law-
rence Teeter, said federal agents who
investigated Cooperman should have
probed the threats against him and
taken steps to protect him.
. C.S. Hakansson, UNESCO scien~
proaram specialist. "We did not give
him funds."
Cooperman also spent money -
S 15,000-on Monon Sobel}, 66. who
was convicted in 195 I of conspiracy
to commit espionage with Julius and
Ethel Roscnbera, who were executed
for their roles in giving Russia
information about the atomic bomb.
Sobell, sentenced to 30 years but
paroled in 1969. said from New York
that he used the money for soil tests
and to develop hearing aids for
Vietnam.
Twyla Mlaer ·
Butt.asioa Beaeb
Lab tecludclan
CbackCattu
The triple-decked vessels of Catalina Cruises afford
''excellent, hi~ vantage points for watching gray whales .. t
said Mazur. • Our craft are the largest used on the Pacinc
Coast for viewing the whales. The height of the second and
third decks of our 700-passcnger boats (I 5 and 25 feet
above the water) provide great viewing."
Group rates are available, and information may be
obtained by writing CataHna Cruises. Box 1948, San Pedro
90733, or calling (213) 775-61 I I , (21.3) 514-3838 or (7 14)
527-7 111.
I
" went from Hanoi to Hong Kong
(and returned) to buy computer
components-supplies." Cooperman
wrote in notes on bls travels last May
27 through July I 6 through Southeast
Asia. Moscow. East Germany. Paris.
Brussels and New York.
U.S. policy prohibits shipping any
commercial goods to Vietnam and
the · current wlicy is to approve
permits onty for urgent humanitarian
aid. said Steve Johnson, the State
Department's Vietnam desk officer.
"Cooperrnan's activities were
under intense scrutiny by agents of
the Department of Commerce, the
State Department. the CIA and FBI."
Teeter said. "In fact. agents from.the
CIA and FBI visited him at his
office."
Thomas Eaton of the Commerce
Depanmcnt's Office of Expon En·
forcement in Bur~ank,' a suburb of
Los Angeles, confirmed that his office
was look.ing into Cooperman's af-
fairs.
"I was aware of the materials he
was shipping to Vietnam," Sobell
said. "So were people in the aovern-
ment. I was amaz.ed that the State
Department and Commerce Depart-
ment were allowini him to operate
that easily. But I didn't look a gift
horse in the mouth.
"Those were not the only agencies
aware of what was being sent." he
said. "The FBI and CIA were also
aware. I'm sure of that."
Coopermao's records show that he
rece1 ved about $1 50,000 1n checks
made out to cash-or himself. and that
he used the foundation jlccount to
purchase high-tech scientific and
nuclear components. The records
indicate tha\ some purchases were
made for UNESCO projects in Viet-
nam, the paper said.
.. No, I don't thtnlc what
they did was ng.ht. Ruining
a mimon dolfar research
project 1s wrong. Their
cause may be O.K.. but the
wa y tht') went about 11 1s
without a doubt wrong ...
Coat.a Mesa
Rest.a.rut maaa1u
"l'd ~ oppoad tO any
forceable kidnapping or
talccover hke that. Just on
the bam of the law. There's
other rttourst' to change things·· ·r
Gay center plan• blood drive
A blood drive will be held Dec. 30 at the Gayu and
Lesbian Community Services Center of Orange County
from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
According to Barbara Brock, program director of
Lesbian Focus, which is sponsoring the drive, "Lesbians
are encouraged to donate their blood to help the
community since gay men should not be giving blood
because they are at high risk for AIDS."
Appointments for blood donations may be made by
calling the center's hotline any evening from 6:30 to 10:30
p.m. at 534-3261 . Walk-in donors also are welcome at the
center, 12832 Garden Grove Blvd .. Suite E. Garden
Grove.
Cooperman 's activities triggered
death threats from right-wing Viet-
namese extremists and caused
Cooperman to fear for his life,
especially after a friend was critically
wounded and the friend's wife killed last May, colleagues have said.
The FBI told him to buy a gun and
learn how to use it, according to his
widow, KJaaske. Police reports show
that he bought two weapons and
CALENDAR
completed a National Rifle Associa-
tion course in August. a month after
------returning from his world travels. Minh Van Lam. 20, of West-
minster has pleaded innocent to the
"We opened a file on this case
about four months before he died,"
Eaton said. "We got information
from another federal agency (Cus-
toms) to the etT.ect that he may be
violatinJ ex~rt regulations'' by ship-
11ing sc1enttfic equipment to Viet·
nam.
FBI spokesman Fred Regan in Los
Angeles said hjs office was told not to
discuss the case because 11 involves
foreign counterintelligence.
"for our pro~ects we buy aU
equipment here,' Hakansson said.
"We know we can't buy this equip-
ment from the Unjted States, so we
don't because there is .. an emb¥go."
John E. LeVan, owner of Genie
Scientific of Fountain Valley, said
Cooperman bought scientific testing
equipment from b.is company. Rike Landon
Newport Beacb
Entertainer
Wayn~Smltb
Fountain Valley
Store owner
Monday, Dec. 17
• 6 p.m., lrvlDe Rueb Water Dlatrtct, district office
board room. 18802 Bardeen Ave., Irvine.
• 6:30 p.m .. Costa Mesa Clty Coaacll, City Council
Chambers. Costa Mesa City Hall, 77 Fair Drive.
murder of Cooperman and is sched-
uled toJo to trial next month. Lam
has sai the professor was shot by
accident as they horsed around in his
campus office at California State
University-Fullerton.
But friends and family contend his
Cooperman collected hundreds of
thousands of dollars in donations.
including $575,000 from the United
Nations Educational, Scientifi~ and
Cultural Organization, for his roun·
dation for Scientific Cooperation
with Vietnam, which he created in
1979. his records show.
But UNESCO officials contacted
bv reports in Paris denied
··He said 1t was U.N. money and 1t
was to be used m analyzing lhe soil in
Vietnam ,1nd helping the farmers
grow more," LeVan said.
Cooperman's research projects in-
cluded using solar technology for nee
drying. windmills for power and a
study of the effects of the chemical
defolianl .\gent Orange.
"I'm m the medical field
(part time). [ feel you do
need research worlt. but,
there's gotta be another
way Destroying little
animals JUSt doesn't Sttm
fair."
"I JUSt believe 1n choice.
anything should have a
choice. h seems children
and animals don't have
man) choices. Down
through time man has
'entcd on children and
animals "
PoucE Loe
• r ..
Sea·rch team rescues two
lost Orange County hikers
ment wonh $1 ,100. • • • Someone stoic 200 1nfanl·s1ze T·
shii:ts. ·a checkbook and credit cards
from a brown 1973 Datsun 240Z
parked Saturday at the FHP offiet'S.
9930 Talbert Ave. The loss was
estimated at S l OS. • • •
A. S 150 batter. \\3S taken lrom a
I 982 Datsun Stanza parked 1n the
carport in the 7000 bllX'°t of Maddo\. ••• J.\ man told pohct that someone
removed S460 in ca<;h from under his
.bed in the 16000blod. of l \nn • • • About $2.500 1n Jcv.clr, wa~ taken
BYtn-Aaaodated Pre11
Two lost hikers from Orange
County were rescued early today by a
search team that bnved ~ng
temperatures and ruaaed terrain in the San Gabriel Mountains,
authorities said.
The two Westminster men. Ron
Schrantz and Rick Opalka., both 37
and experienced hi.ken, were tc·
poned IOft b~ Schrantz's airlfriend
after they falled to rctum home
ca.ta ......
Two people were arrested Friday
niaht fbr allcaedl~ tryina to sneak
$310 wonh oi whiskey out the back
door of the Alpha Beta supermarket.
245 E. 17th St• An officer on routine
petrol spotted the suspcet's vehicle
petked to the rear of the market
around I 0:40 p.m. Polict questioned
Ketri Arin Fellows, 22, of Costa Mesa,
--who11idshc.wuwaitmgin \Mcarfor
her friend to come Nck with some
cardboard bOxes. Minutes liter
Charles Anhur Jones, 35, of Upland
-ntkcd out t~ back door, triucrin'-a
bell alarm. A shopping can filled Wllh
whi~~ bottles wa.tt found near the
door. Fellows and Jones wert booked
into Costa Mesa city Jail for invc tlaa·
tion ofburaJary. • • • .A camera and stereo equipment,
Sunday evening from triking in the
Angeles National ForesL
An eiaht-man rescue party began
searehin1 about 12:30 a.m .. and the
pair was found at S: 18 a.m.. Los
Angeles County sheriff's Sgt. Cliff
Morden said.
"They're in &ood condition."
Morden said. "The rescue party is
walking them out. Whether they
suffered any exposure or not, we don't
k:n9w at th.ii time." •
totaling SSOO, were reponed stolen
from a car parked at South Coa t
Plua sometime between 12:10 p.m.
and 12:35 p.m. Sunday. A jimmy
devic~ apparently had been used to
break into the locked vehicle. • • • A stereo worth $400 was reported
stolen from a car parked at 87S Bear Creek sometime between 12:30 a.m.
1Saturday and 4 p.m. uoday. Entry was made by -smasttina a tdc vent
window.
Fountain Valley ,~
A Westminster re ident rcponed
unday that someone smashed a
window 10 buralarizc hi oran&e 1976
Datsun pickup, p&rk~ in the lot at
Rtc:Quetb&ll World, 1011' Talbcr1
Ave.., Fountain Val~y. The los
included a ponable n.d10 wonh SI 00.
The men were discovered in Bear
Canyon. about five miles from where
their car had been found earlier near
Switter's Campground on the An·
aeles Crest Highway.
A resident of tht 10600 block of La
Bahia Avenue awoke Saturday to find
that someone ~ad felauered eggs. tomato juice and cola on two cars in
his driveway and a screen door. The
damage was esumated at S 1.000. • • • A Costa Mesa man reported Fnday
during a large fam1l\ gathcnng in the
5000 block of R1Hera • • • ~ omcone stole a 'acuum cleaner
and butTcr "alu<.'d al SI 000 from a
cleaning repair scr' ll'C in the 16000
bloc~ of Pacific Coast H11th"'" Overnight temperatures dippcd ·tO
30 dqrees at the 3,SOO-foot level of
the forest, located about IS miles
north of downtown Los An1elcs.
that he lcf\ his disabled light blue Newport Beach
1977 Pl ymouth Volarc on the San Two fish1ngcha1r\wonhS'OOrarh
Diego Frccway at Brookhurst Street were stoltn from tht' dt>d; of a bont
1n Fountam Valley. When he re-docked at J()Q9 8.n~1dt' Dn\.t' The Montrose Search and Rescue
team aided deputies in the search.
Morden11id.
turned for tbe car later. 1t was gone. • • • apparently stolen. The loss was A black cast iron tx-nrh was -.tole-n
estimated at S 1,000. from the front ya rd of a re"dcn~ on
• • • • Hillsbbrouah ~Vt The hcn\'h wa~ Someone stole four chrome spoke-valued at S'>OO
type hubcaps from a bronze 1979 • • • Ford Mu~tang parked Fnd.a( 1n a · More than Sl.000 wonh nf1e,..Tlf)
• • • Someone wed a bnck to smash a
window at Susan's Flowers, 16076
Harbor Blvd., while the store was
closed, the owner reported Sunday.
The vandal took SS.SS in coins from
the store. Damaae to th( window wu
carpon on the 10400 blOC'k o later was stolen from a re\ldtn~·r on the
Avenue. The lo s was ~l1mated at 2000 block of Hohda) Burgla~
SSOO. cntcl't"d the house by cu tting· out a
tnanak-shapcd p1ctt of gla~ from a
kitchen ~indow. estimated .i $200. BuntlnCton Beach
Two othtr •~sf nCSttS, Dollar Someone stoic all the Chnstmas
C'tmtm and Lee Donavan ic tree liaht bulbs and let\ tbc Wlf'CS
Hair. at 1604().. Hamor .Blvd.. also hanain& in the 5000 block.J>f
r"portcd that someone used a rock to Ncuple. .. . .. smash wiodows thtre qiriy Sunday. Thte"c tole a dirt bile 'alucd at
From a cath rqisttr, tomeoM toot S.00 and a tool bo~ valued at S 1.000
$31 18. The W1ndow da.m11t W9S from mobile home at Huntington·
csumated at $200. 1 b)'·tbe-Sea. 21851 Newland t. . . ~ . . . . A rtSJ~t of the 1 1 S900 bloet of 81.al"llan siok a port.able rtd.Jo O~r1on trttt tt~.ntd. u.a.rday va•utd •t $9'5. a stetTO v1lucd at
that mcone broke uu~ has ttd 1984 Sl.000 and S25 1n tapes f~ 1car1n
To}ota Cehca. puktd 1n front o.f ~i 1he 20000 block of um11ltr. home. Thelo ancluMd ~rt0tiqu1p-• • • ...
• • • A '"lady Kenmore" wa.,hil\& ma-
chine was \lOlen from us temporal')
re ti J pot out 1de a prqc on the
k of hore,.Dnve • • • Two nngi1 valued at SI.I SO and a
book of ch«ks wert stolen from a
micfen{'C on tM t ~ bloc~ of
Pla{'Cnt1a • • • >\ v.'Oman rtponcd t~t mcone
stoic her purse from a hopi>iaaca.n at
tturhe Market. I l <1 lrv1ne he
c~1matcd tbt loss at U1f>: . • • • \.r-
.\ :!O-year-old v.oman said she'd
iust finished showering when sht'
nouced a man stanng rn a Wlndow of
her Ltdo lsk residence • • • .\ spear gun and tool box were
stolen from an unlocked Dodge
parkt'd on tht 3100 block of West
Balboa bouk' ard Tht' loss was put at
S'~5 • • • .\ S ~00 Merco unit was 'iltolen from
a n-d TO) Ota ( chca parked on th.1f300
hlod. of Walflut Tht' c-ar Mis l~ed.
Irvine
4\l'mcont' 'ila~hed th<' top and tl~5
ot a '°""<'rt1hlt' parl<.'d on Almond
TrC<' Lant' 'aturda\, talinga $450C'~r
'l<'rt'O • • • hath room burgler ocuod S 190
•worth of (.'t\Sh. a watch - and ~P -
lrum a Ru,thng \\ md tts1dencc • • • I h'l\d J Wohlford. 21 wanted on
an ou.tstand1na ftlon)' warrant wtl!>
taktn into cu tO<h in I rvmc Saturday
The-su\~l s "anted on suipic1on
of ..elhng dangerous dru~. pohcc
s~ud ••• Two Can)'on Rod c homes wert
burglente-d Satu~ A v11Seo as~t
re fe'C"Onlr-r. m1rn>W11"-e 1.nd. r.ash
\llued at S 1 .1~ ""1l1 la.kcn from one
residence .\n S 30 video cas~tte
recorder wu remo"cd fmm the other • • • Audto-v1sual ~wpmcnl valued at
S 1,400 ""'3~ taken from 1 busin at
2741 8usmeu Center 0n~~ Thu.rs-
~)or fnda) • • • Ph v.ood \hC'\'t '\\Orth Sl, \00 ~
taken from a ron~trun1on ~tt on
\ It ""cnu<-riday.
Ortnge Coat DAILY PILOT /Monday, December 17, 1984
Heart p8.tient
withdrawn
like an ostrich
LOUI VILLE. Ky. (AP) -
Artificial heart rtt1pient William
Schroeder has apparently recovered
physically from a paralyzing stroke,
but the experience has left him
p ychologjcally withdrawn and h.i~
doctors say they ho~ he can regain
his enthusiasm for hfe.
Schroeder, 52 , sat up in a cbaJr
Sunday fo r the first time since the
stroke on Thursday and talked with
family members. said Humana Heart
lns11tute' spokesman George Alkins.
Bui doctors remain concerned
about the Jasper. Ind . man's mental
withdrawal, s:ud Dr .i\llan M. Lans-
ing. director of the 1nst1tute.
Schroeder ma) be reac11ng to the
reahzatton of "the' boA s1111ng beside
him. the mechanical hcan. the uncer-
-L.aint1fi~abou1 the future. the feeungof
the heart beating inside his chest. a nd
then you add a stroke on top of 1t."
Lans1n$ said
"He 1s not weeping. He doesn't act
that way at all. But he seems lake an
ostnch. He as withdrawn 1n a way." he
said. adding a psychiatrist would v1£1t
Schroeder today.
Lansing 'Klld he would be w n-
cerned only if "over the next two or
three days we t·an't shake him out of
th is a nd $Cl him responding.
were fUnctionin.a normally and that
"the thinkina pan of the brain end the
!"otor.~wer ~rt of the brain remain
mtaot. he said. •
But he was not eating as he had
before the stroke, and "be has lost his
appeHte for many thinas, for perhaps
life, for food; he's lost his enthusiasm
in a way," Lansing said.
Before the stroke, Schroeder \Vas
frequently on his feet a nd walked
around the hospital with the portable
Heimes Heart Driver attached to tbe
air hoses from the mechanical hean .
Since the stroke he has not used the
I I-pound ponable unit, rcma1nmg
attached to a 323-pound Utahdrive
UDJl.
Schroeder has been hsted m serious
but stable condition smce the stroke,
when he was returned to the tntensive care unit room he occupied after the
surgery Nov. 25.
He 1s being tube-fed a nd getting
intravenous protein to help rum
regain strength. A nurse stayed with
him in the room Sunday, and family
members visited periodically, Lans-
ing said.
Schroeder had to be helped into the
chair Sunday but was alert and
respons1ve for about an hour before
he ttred and was returned to bis bed,
Atkins said.
Hlatorlc protest
People dreued aa colonial patriota and Indiana dump tea
OYerboard the BrlC Beaver D in Boetoo Barbor Sunday
durina annual reenactment of the Boeton Tea Party. The
actuaf event occurred in 1773 in a protest againat Brltiah
ta.Kon tea.
Reagan seems unwilling
to support Pentagon cuts
By Ute Auoclatecl Pre 1
WASHINOTON -President Rcaaan appears unw1ll.ina to seal~ t?ack the
nation's military buildup to help red uce the budaet ~eficat -a dec1s101,1 that
would force deeper cuts in dorne tic {)roar~ms, a tax hike or the ab~ndonma of
his deficit-reduction taraets. Admimstrataon SOL!rccs say the president ~uld
make it known this week that he will ianore the virtually ~narumous a.dv1cc of
budget aides that the Pentagon should be forced to share in. the spending cuts.
Senior budget advisers who have the support of Republican conarcssJonal
leaders as well as many state and local officials, have recommended an $8
billion cut in defense outlays d uring the 1 98~ fiscal y~ar. But th~ so~~s. w~o
stx*.e only on condition they not be 1den11ficd , said Reagan, !s s1d1n.a wuh
Ocfensc Secretary Caspar Wetnberger's refusal to accept tbe m1h~ary cutbacks
outlined ir1 the plan drafted by White House budget director David Stockman.
Opera tenor Jan Peerce dead
NEW YORK-With the death of Jan Pecrce, the open world lost ~ne of
its most popular and gifted {>Crformers, a viohnist-tumed-teno~ w~o crcd.1ted a
disciplined technique for his ab1ltty to sing with stunning c~an1y mto his ~ate
70s. Funeral services were scheduled today for Pecrce, who d.1ed Sat.ui:day niaht
at the age of80. He had been ma coma for nearly~ year. and in declirung healt.h
since suffering a stroke in May 1982. But until th~, ~e k~pt up. a ~~t1r
performance schedule' and was credited by f nends and cnttcs with mamta101og
the vocal quality that made ha m a star. '
ZZ Top.gtdtarlst shot ln stomach
HOUSTON -Joe "Dusty" Hill, a gu11an st with the rock band U To p,
was in fair condition today after he was shot an the ~bdomen. by a gun that fell
from his boot and discharged accidentally. authonttes say. H~ll. 35, was shot 1.n
the abdomen Sunday morning whe n his girlfriend was pulhng off one of his
boots and .the .38-caliber derringer fell out, said pohce Sgt. Steve. OaP,part."lt
was strictly accidental," he said. Police have been unable to talk with Hill about
why he was carrying the gun, he, said.
Chicago teachers return to classrooms
"A pa11ent's own inner strength. h1!1
own determination. 1s the most
important med1c1nc in his gettmg
0e11er "
Roben Irv ine, Human • .!"<. direc tor
of publll relauo ns. said toda) that
Schroeder's cond1t1on was bas1callv
unchanged. ··offic1all) 11's listed a-s
senous but stable. but overnight there
have been so me encouraging signs ..
Recovery from the -;troke, Irvine
said, "1s not a day-to-da} s11ua11on
It's a s1tua11on that has to be
measured over a longer period of
time. It'll be probably several da) s
before we see a s1gn1ficant change tn
Schroeder's conditi on."
Hospital security guard
finds abducted infant
CHICAGO -Tentative approval of one-year contracts. fo_r 35,000
teachers and other workers in the nation's third-largest school d1stnct paved
the way for classes 10 resume today for 430.~ students i~led by a two-wt:ek
strike. "We are pleased to tell the parents a nd c111zens of Chicago. that the ~tnke
is suspended and classes can start." Chicago Teachers U01on President
Jacqueline Vaughn said Sunday after the u01on's House of Delegates voted
605-59 to accept the agreem'tnt worked out d uring an all-night bargajning
session.
'Doonesbury' stripped from paper
MEMPHIS. Tenn. -Garry Trudeau's Pulitzer pnz~-winninf~m1~ stnp
"Doonesbury" has been withdrawn from The Comme~c1al Appea in a dispute
over the size of its display. the newspaper says. Universal P~ess S~d1cate
canceled the newspaper·s subscription because 1t refused to run It at .a width of
44 picas. about 7.3 inches, as required by Trudeau, :The Co~merctal Appeal
said Sunday. T he newspaper has been runnmg the stnp ~t 3 7 picas, or about 6.1
inches. Executive editor David Brown said the dispute involves a newspaper's
right to determine how material will appear By Sunday. Schroeder had no
apparent difficulty speaking and no
remaining weakness on his nght side.
which had been paralyzed . Lansing
said, adding that doctors would urge
Schroeder to sit up and walk around
more.
Tests indicated his body and brain
S ALE!
MERCEDES-BENZ
(7 1.J ) 773-01 25
Woina n dis ulsed in nurse's garb arrested
~ter she· s ide n tified in composite dra w1ng
BELLFLOWER (AP) -A 4-day-
old infant and his mother were
reu01ted after a three-day kidnap
ordeal that ended with the help of an
alert hospital security officer and an
anonymous phone tipster.
Teresa Marie Smith. I 9, of Com-
pton was held in lieu of SS0,000 bail
?kw ~,, &
11'1111/a, eUIUN
Cnise Newport or Lone Beach
Harbors aboard 136' ship.
-150 cuesls muinun -
14 241-75()()
for mvestigation of abducting Robert
Odell Crenshaw Jr. from his mother's
room at the Kaiser Foundation
Hospital in Bellflower on Friday.
Los Angeles County shentl's De-
tective Ben Hilliard said Smith and
the baby -still wrapped in hospital
blankets -were (ound Sunday
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, lllC.
r ar The Rest Of Yu Lift
1922 HUBOR Bl.YO . COSU MESA -S41·11!16
morning at a Compton area home
with about I 0 other people. They
incl uded a man who identjfi ed
himself as her boyf rierrd and a
woman who said Smith, a fonner
nursing student, had been saying for
some ta me that she was pregnant.
"The baby is doing fi ne." said
Kaiser spokeswoman Janice Seib.
"The baby was examined by a
pediatrician this morning and he 1s in
good co ndition ...
The baby boy vanished Friday
along with a woman dressed like a nu~ who told his 16-year-old
mother. Geyne Sharon Mitchell. that
she was taking the in fa nt to be
photographed for iden11fi ca11on
purposes.
Although an anon} mous phone
Barge ezploslon lcllls two
NEW ORLEANS -An explosion and fi re ripped through a barge docked
in the Mississippi River G ulf Outlet on Sunday night, and a (J .S. Coast Guard
spokesman said two people were believed dead a nd one was injured. The barge,
which had been carrying oil. was docked near the town of Hopedale. southeast
of New Orleans, when it exploded at about 9:30 p.m .. said Coast Guard
officials. There may have been enough resid ual oil on the barge to cause more
explosions.
_____________ ....__ _____________ ..__ _____________ 1 call prompted the house-to-house
search that led to the mfant"s re-
CHICAGO - A Hollywood producer wants his fil m negatives back, and
he's offenng a SI OJ)OO reward to get them -no questions asked. Jack Sidney.
the producerof"Amenka," a S 12 m1lhon sc1ence-fict1on movie set in the 23rd
century. said Sunday the negatives were to be used 1n des1gnmg the picture. He
fo und out the) were gone Saturday mornmg. when he went outside of the
Nonh Side hotel where he was staymg to check on has leased car and two
cameras inside. The car had been stolen.
( .
covery. inve 11gators were already
searching for Smith based on a
secunt}' guard's 1dent1ficat1on o f a
composite ~ketch.
"When we went tnto the house, we
saw the baby first -10 the top bunk of
a bunk bed." said Hilliard. "Then we
went in1 0 an adJac;cnt bc<iroom and
there were three ladies tflere. one
looking exactl~ like the composite. I
said Teresa Mane Sm ith and she
came nght to me ... She JUSt looked
upset. ..
The composite identifi cation was
made by Odell McCormick. an armed
security officer a t Martin Luther King
Jr. Medical Center 1n nearby
Willowbrook, who said she re-
cogn11ed the woman 1n the sketch as
one she had ejected from the hospital
last week after noting down her name
and address.
LONDON (AP)-Stacy Keach,
who plays a priVete flf9 In the
te'8vlalon at.ow "Mickey Spllt-ane·~ Mike Hammer.'' pieached
from hie prtlOn Olll ._.,.. ~
cocaine. .ccordlng to • letter
that 11ppe9red In the DaHy Ex·
pr ... on Monday. .
·•ff you want to, you c.n·qutt,"
read the e.ner from Ke.ch.
''Don't wtltt wrtA lt'a too late, until you•• toroec1 to qun aw vtrtue o1
getttng bulted. • t .... '' the
i9tter rn the tablold lllld.
K9M;h, 48, .. .,,.. at
Two UC campuses 'overbooked' . .
_,. LOS ANGELES -Freshman apphcat1ons to enter the Un1vers1ty of
California have increased '>harply for the fifth year 1n a row, and college
officials are ha ving to Juggle place'> among the burgeonmg campuses. That
means only the top students will ma ke 11 mto the most popular campuses at
Berkeley and Los Angeles, with the rest being dealt among campuses at Davis.
Riverside. San Die~o. lrvtne. Santa Barbara and Santa Cruz. The increase
upset long-range universi ty plans. which had been based on a predicted decline
in enrollment dunn$ the 1980s. based on a decline in the nu mber of high
school graduates beginning 1n 1975.
,.
Jarvl11 seeks cash I or debt
LOS -:\NGELES -Saymg he 1s loc;mg sleep over a SI 00,000 Propos1t1on
36 ~mpa1gn ~ebt. Lax crusader Howard Jarvi'> 1s once again resorting to the
maJIS to ask has suppon ers for money. "The defeat of our Proposiuon 36 brings
several ~ords to .. mind .. . none of them pnntable," Jarvis said in a
computenzed ma1hng to the 315.000 people who have rcspOoded to h is
appeals in the past. ''Not only did we lose, we also ran up a substantial
campaign debL·'.Jan lS wrote. "J authonzcd th1sdeb1 when the poll$ weredead
even near Elecuon Da y. Jt was too late to conL.act you." Jarvis asks for
contributions of "at least S 15," SB} mg: 'Tm 82, with very modest assets and
one small home. It isn't possible for me to shoulder this debt alone."
Animal rights proponents picket
DUARTE -Some 20 to 25 anti-vivisectionists, fa r fewer than the 200
who were supposed to show. de mostratcd.during the weekend outside the City
of Hope research e:enter, where !06 lab animals were stolen a week earlier. The
picketerttamedstgns Saturday that bore such slogans as "Animal Research ts
Sc1~i:itific Fraud." City of Hope official~ had designated a special site near the
facili ty for the demonstration and denied the protesters' allegations of
inhumane research.
WORLD
--~----=-____.!
Thatcher begin• world trip
• LONDON -~ri~e Minister Margaret Thatcher leaves today on a n
around-the-world tn p gi ving her a chance to w and out top leaders in the West
and. East o n arms control and ~ther issues three weeks before U.S.-Soviet talks
beg!n. Her tnp ~11s for meetings ~1th P.resad.ent Reagan in Washin4ton and
major ~mmumsl .Pany figures m Ghma, mcluding Deng Xiaoptng. The
ccnLerptccc of her tnp comes Wednesday, when she will sign an accord turning
over control of the colony of Hong Kong to China after the British lease on
nearly all of the capitalist enclave expires in 1997.
London'I HMthrOw Airport on
Apr11 4 wtten OU1tome oftloll'9 Poll•IJ pollce, prote.ten cla•h
found 1.3 ounoel of OOCllne "' •
canof ..,OIOl~~anet
........ In ...... ~ ......
come to 8'IUilh an:-e ~ "*" Frmoe to do llm Woflc.
He pt11ded gully Oft 1*:1-7 IO
tn"tp0tt111g v.. eouraw n •• Mntencecl to nine ....... In =::=t.~ their OI~ ~ reas:l a ....... "'°""' ....... ..,.._
G DANSK. Poland.-In th~ most. violent clash between Polish security
forces and protesters this year, not ~hoe used clubs an~ tear gas to dj1penc
thousands of marchers commemoratmg workers slain dunnaanti-governmeot
protests in 1970. During the confrontation, which trigered runnina street
battles Sunday afternoon, Solidarity founder Lech Walesa laid a wrath at the
feet of police officers when they blocked his way 10 a monument for the dead
workers. WaJeta wu-shoved by polict burnot-iniured. Meanwhile sccrea of
students who were protesting the removal of crucifixes from clwroom1 left the
vocational school they had occupied for two weeks in a town south ofWaruw
the ao~c~mcnt-run PAP !'ews agency rcponcd. PAP said the students ended
their s1t-10 at the 700-pupil school an Wloszciowa on Sundar after ta1b with A~xihal)' Bishop MiCC'l)'slaw Jaworski of Kielce and several Roman CathoUc
pncsts. ::-.red,,.=..-:= ........ --. Salvador deatlJ -iuaa active qabJ
The~ blw•:• ..... ._. SAN SALV DOR, El lvador-Thc archbtshop of San Salvador aay1 .,. the urtJOllcW IMW from death squads resumed their 1cuv1t1cs laat week. cnd1na a two-month lull that
AH .. Prtlon. • • ~n when 1ovemm~nt and kft1 t rebel leaden opened oeaoc talks Oct. 15.
At Ni tiW fCliiiii"'_.-: In rcccntdaJ', l v1lcnmesofthc d,1th tcna1Chhave.tt1umcd.'' Monlipor ~~ .. 1_......._ 1 Arturo R1vmy Damassa1d unday.Thcarchbishopsa1dtheRomanCatbolic
_.., 9-r!".. Churth't )qaJ 11dc·omc:c ~·vtd ttPotU or three suspected death aqiald _ ,.,. __ :i'• • kilhnp lu 1 -k. The vic11m1 had b«n mutilaltd, ulUlll~ a ..,. 1llcy ...,.. pereon. tllldnl• M killed b y thc-njhtistaanprespon11blcforthou11nd1ofpolnrcal murdcnin the trYtna to .... Ill Jll In pas1fivcycars.R1vcrayDtmu,who hu actcdu1mcdi.ator inthepc1cu11b Nihaf*ttatton." . • also praised a 11x-day holiday U'\ICC announced by the Juttnllas lut week. '
OU91& Newton-Job wttll new buband. llatt Lattaul.
Olivia Newton-John weds;
and so dOes Bette Midler
MALIBU -Grammy award-
winning linger Otlvla · Newton-
.John rMtrled ector Matt Lat-
tanzi, who appeared with her In
the motion pk:ture "xan.du," in
a welkehd cMt ceremony at their
HMldehome.
Mwwmlle, ftwnboyMt llng«-
actrela Bette Mldlerwaa married C'" ltllVeguto Martlnvon o.g, delortbed by her LOI
Mg9lll publdty ftrm Sunday ..
• ·~ .ttst and com-modlttll treder •••
Mill Newton-John, 36, •net
Lattlinzt, 26, were rrwrted by s.a Monica 8upertor Court
Judge Jerry Pecht on Saturday,
publclat P8UI Bloch Mid.
The COllDle met ...... working on •cx.nedu'e. ftve ~ llQO.
Famlty members attended the
private ctvtl cetemony.
''The groom la a performance
..-and commodtuea trader,••
IM ltatement read. ''The bride 18
In lhow btz. ·•
In his stage persona, von
Hllelberp WU one of the "Kip-
per Kida' a duo whoM atege act
Included throwtng food on the
audience Ind ..ah other.
Bob Glbeon of The Group Mid
he wu only told of Miia Madler'•
low-key wedding pler'8 Frldlly.
"She just told me what 8he
W8nted out," Glbeon Aki of the
bft9f statement. "They weren't
even going to do this."
"They didn't want a big Hoity-
wood wedding,.. he Mid. "She
didn't want a zoo."
It .. the first man1age tor Mias
Mldler, 38.
Soviet defector now· says be wants to ieturn home
WASHINGTON (AP)-A young
Soviet soldier who de(ccted an Af-
ghanistan and later deno unced his
country for wagm~ a "dirty war"
CBS trial
winding
down for
holidays
NEW YORK (AP) -Lawyers for
retired Army Gen. William C. West-
moreland have three more days to
present evidence before the 1 l~weelc
old trial of 1hc general'~ S 120 ltbcl suit
against CBS 1s recessed for the
holidays.
CBS producer George \nle was
due back on the wnness stand today
for his sixth day of testimony an U.S.
District Coun.
Westmoreland attorney Dan M.
Bun abruptly broke ofT the question-
ing of Cnle late Thursday afier five
days of fruitlessly trying to get the
producer to admit he erred in creating
'The Unoountcd.Enemy: A Vietnam
Occcption."
Westmoreland. who commanded
U.S. troops in Vietnam from 1964 to
1968, contends he was libeled by the
1982 broadcast, which charged that in
1967 he conspired to suppress data on
enemy troop strcnath 1n an effort to
make it appear that American forces
were winnina the war.
The gencTal maintains that C BS
distorted the facts about an honest
disagreement among 'ntelligence
analysts to make it appear that he
suppressed unfavorable information.
The trial, which beaan in m1d-
Octobcr, ii hcduled to recess
Wednesday afternoon ror a two-week
hol idl)' break.
Burt ma)' need several weeks after
the holiday recess to fin ash prcscntint
hi cue. Richard Riese, who is a.ss1stJna Burt. said the attorney plans
t<> summon at lcait five other C BS
employees.
.They are correspondent Mike.
Wallace, who narrated the documeo·
&ary,Samuel A Adam ,a formcrClA
analyst who became a consultant for
lhe network on the broadcast; How-
ard tnnaer. the c" utivc proou r
or lhc documentary; Andrt"W Lack,
the senior produ r; and 1 ra Klein, a mm editor who has been critical o(
Cnle's methods.
Cal Wallace and Adam art co-
defcndaots m the u1t.
agamst the Alghan peoP.lc. now wants
to return home and will do so soon.
officials at the Soviet Embassy said
today.
An cmbass} spokesman said
Nikolai Ryzhkov, 20. who desened
from has military construction unit
inside Afghanistan in June 1983.
contacted the embassy several da)'s
ago and asked to go home.
Ryzhkov was interviewed by U.S.
officials at the State Department
today, apparently assunng them his
wish to return was genuine. Depart-ment ofhetals confirmed that
Ryzhkov had been interviewed, but
said they would provide details later.
"Mr. Ryzhkov asked the embassy
to arrange for his return home and he
plans to do 1his." said Michael
Lysenko, an embassy spokesman.
"He isa Soviet citizen and he wants to
go back home. It was his personal
decision"
.. He came to us several days ago."
Ryzhkov said ... Ifs his decision to go
home and he will go home."
Ry1hkov's apparent change of
hean stands in sharp contrast to his
remarks at a news conference in New
York City 1n December 1983.
Then, he painted a picture of
widespread disillusionment and low
morale among Soviet soldiers serving
an Afghanistan.
Ryzhkov, a pnvate. slipped away
from a Soviet military construction
unat during an outdow:Jll.OYiconJ un
16, 1983. and contacted anti-Soviet
Afghan resistance fighters in Kabul.
the capital. He was hidden by them
for several months before being
smuggled to Europe.
Ryzhkov told the news conference
that many Soviet draftees serving in
Afghanistan are ill prepared, politi-
cally and sometimes militarily, and
. have become demoralized. ·
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Orange Com DAILY P1LOT JMonct.y, o.c:.nbef 17, 19M A8
TOp Soviet continues
'frank' talks on arms
Curbln arms race
in outer space topic
of British discussion
LONOON (AP) -SeoJor Soviet
leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev, in bis
first comment on the upcomina
superpower nuclear arms talks,
S"tressed today that they should aim to
ban weaPons in space. • In a statemen& distributed to news
orpniz._ttions in London by the
official Soviet news agency Tass.
Gorbachev said he emphasized the
concern about space wcaPons 1n
"frank" talks Sunday with Prime
Minister Marpret Thatcher.
talk.I rev~ .. an 1ocrea.te in reaifstje
tendencies.. in the Briush JOVtrn-
mcnt ~ bf Thatcher, who once
earned the sobnquct "Iron lady" for
bcr lougli· unce tOWard the Soviet
Unron.
Pravda reponed ··a 11ow1n1 con-
viction" in Wm European capitals
thatthearms race 1 scnseles and that
there wu awareness in Bnta1n ••ofthc
hopelessness and dangtT of the in-
tensifyina military and Political con-
frontauon between Ea t and West"
The agreeable tone itruck by
Gorbachev with his smihns public
appearances was well rcocwcd by
Briush medt.a today. Most news--
papers ptaced rePorts of the Chequen
meeting on their front p&&es. His
conduct seem desianed &o project a
fneftdher Soviet i~ after months
of chilly East-West relations.
.. There's not lbe s.liah1a1 doubl
that the Soviet Union wa.nlJ bct1e'r
relation wilb the West," ()pp0tit1on
Labor Party foret.111 affairs spokes.-
man Denis Healey aid in an m\e'r-
vicw, · •
Gotbacbev bro\.l&ht Thatcher a messaa.e from Soviet Pttsiden&·
Kon1tantin U. Chernenko. Thatcher
will Wief President Reapn oa M1
discu .ion with aon.chev when she
goes to Washioaton later this week.
The ~n administration uyt at
•• f<>rmulat•na its polltJoo on arms
control io prcxnt wbto Shultz meeu
Of'omyko.
Both sides said the dialoaue. which
continued today with Gorbachev
mcc1ing Foreign Secretary Sir Geof·
frey Howe, bad produced atrecment
on the need to curb the nucfcar arms
race and stop it from rcactiang space.
"I would like to stress that during
the meeting we stated the Position of
the Soviet Union on such questions
as the prevention of the threat of
nuclear war, restraining the arms
race," Gorbachev said.
Removal Of killer
gas moving along
··10 this connection we emphasized
tbe sianificancc of the forthcoming
talks with the U.S.A. on the whole
complex of -space and nuclear
weapons, prevention of mili-
tarization of outer space."
Gorbachcv's repeated mention of
the space weapons issue indicated
this is the Kremlin's main concern at
talks between Secretary of State
George P. Shultz and Soviet Forei$Jl
Minister Andrei A Gromyko an
Geneva Jan. 7-8.
Gorbachev, considered 1he No. 2
man in the Soviet leadership h1CT-
archy, said more than fou r hours of
talks Wllh Thatcher at her weekend
residence Chequers were "business-
like and construcuve" and called for
improved Briush-Sovaet relations.
BHOPAL, India (AP) -Oper-
ations to remove deadly methyl
isocyanate from the Union Carbide
plant neared the halfway mark today
with officials reparting ;nothin& out
of the ordinary' and a 1ew residents
returning to homes around the fac-
tory.
However, the slums su1Tounding
the tarpaulin-shrouded pesticide
plant were still virtual ghost towns
two weeks after the leak of toxic ps
that killed more than 2,000 people.
Last week's announcement of plans
to convert the remaining supply of
the C'bemicaJ into pcst1etdc touched
off a frantic exodus from this city of
900,000 people.
"Conditions arc safe and normal.
There is nothing ou1 of the ordinary,"
said a duty officer at 1he government
control room monnoring the oper-
auon.
On Sunday, four of the plant's
remaining 16.2 tons of liquid methyl
isocyanate were converted into
pesticide during a 12-bour opention,
said the city official. speakioa on
condiuon that be not be identified.
Arjun Sin&h. chief minillef. of
Madhya Pradesh state, told reporters
this afternoon that t.hrtt more tons of
the methyl i~tc bad been
processed and an cighth ton should be
neutralized by rughtfall
"If the present rate continues, the
opcrauon should be over in another
two days." St nab said wben be
cmc~ from the plant. He described
cond1uons at the plant as .. norm.al
and safe."
Sangh said people had started
returning to Bhopal. but he was
unable to give any figures.· "Jn the prevailing international
situation, the need to establish
mutual understanding between our
two countries-is cspec1ally great,"
Gorbachev said.
Both Gorbachev and Thatcher
realized "that what the other wants 1s
security at a much lower level of
armaments," a Bntish source said.
Briefing rcPorters on condition he
not be funher identified, the source
added that the Soviets "quite clearly
were concerned as we arc to prevent
an arms race in space."
CHP vows increase
in sobriety stops
Strict security was imPosed for
today's talks between Gorbachev and
Howe at Hampton Court, the red·
brick Tudor palace once occupied by
King Henry VIII.
Gorbachev amved an the black
Rolls-Royc,c -adorned with the red
Soviet hammer-and-sickle flag -
that has con veyed him everywhere in
Britain so far.
In Moscow, 1he Soviet Communist
Party daily Pravda said toda> the
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
California Highway Patrol will man
up to four more sobncty checkpoints
before New Year's Day 10 its state-
wide holiday crackdown on drunken
dnvers, the CHP said today.
Four C HP divlSions m the st.ate -
Glendale, Bakersfield. Rcddmg and
North Sacramento -are authonud
to conduct a maximum of four more
tests after launching the program
Friday ntght. CHP Pubhc Affairs
Offiett Kent Milton said 1n Sacra-
mento.
"The prescnption is that they will
announce the checkpoints 48 ho~ an
advance."' Milton said.
CHP officers stop motonsts at pre-
selected sites for mvcsugation of
possible drunken dnving.
Several city Pobce depanmeots
around the stale conducted similar
pT<>gramS.
In the Glcodak area cbcckpoln1
Fnday 01ght. CHP officers stopcd
I .02S motorists and booked one for
anvcst1gauon of drunken dnVUlg.
Offi~r Mike Momssey said.
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hristmas Fantasy
A Special Ti111e
Presented by the Orange County Fairgrounds SWAP MEET
" The fun has begun! The magnificent
Orange County Fairgrounds Swap-
Machine is in full production.
Wonderful gifts beyond the imag·
ination ar~ pouring into the
Orange ct>unty Fairgrounds
Swap Meet. Bicycles
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0r8nge Coeet OAIL.Y PILOT/Monday, December 17, 1984
Environmental
I
worries getting
the Navy's goat
Displaring a combination of humanitarianism arid logic
unrivaled since the Roosevelt administration decided to send
Japanese-Americans to camp for a few years, the United States
N'avy has decided to rescue four varieties of plants, two species
of birds and some lizards by exterminating 1,500 goats.
The plants, birds and lizards -all on the federal
endangered species list -share San Clemente Island with the
goats. The goats are bad neighbors, however; they eat the plants
and other foilage used by the birds and the lizards to build nests.
The Navy feels so strong.ly about its legal obligation to
protect these endangered species that it has hired three
marksmen who, armed with semiautomatic shotguns, are
supposed to wipe out the goat population. The marksmen are
required, apparently. because the bombs and artillery shells that
pummel the island SO weeks a year are~ -doing the job. The
goats, it seems, present a bigger threat to the eoologjcal balance
on San Clemente Island than several tons of military ordnance.
The three marks1pen may be overmatched. Rather than
killing the ioats, perhaps the Joint Chiefs of Staff should
consider enlisting them as our newest secret weapon.
Seriously, if the Navy feels duty-bound to protect these
endangered plants, birds and lizards. 1t should look for another
target for its war games. It is, after all, doins the most damage to
the island·s ecosystem -which naturally includes the soats.
If nationa1 'security concerns render that impractical, the
Navy might consult with concerned environmentaJists about
-moving portions-of the plant, bird and lizard populations tu
.Dther habitats in which they can thrive. Or, it might pursue with
renewed vigor the current, semi-successful plan to relocate the
goats.
The whole concept of the Navy enforcmgan environmental
law is, at best~ odd. When the lawbreakers are goats, it becomes
absurd and unnatural.
Reader replies to Harvey
coluinn on John Wayne
To the Edttor. One of the biggest problems with
the current controversy over John
Wayne Airport 1s the presentation of
aross misinformation and blatantly
unfair comments about those of us
who oppose unbridled expansion of
this facility. A pnme example of such
misinformation and unfairness was
Bill Harvey's column of Dec. I 0.
1984.
Mr. Harvey says that an}one who
moved anywhere near the airport
since jets beg.an Oy1ng out of there has
no nght to complain and no nght to
demand that this a1rpon be closed. As
a Newport resident. I have NEVER
met anyone who seriously advocates
that th1~ airport be closed. What
Newporters -and most c1t1zens of
:rustin and othCT ciues in the 01$ht
pattern do oppose -1s massive
expansion of this facility.
People bought homes in the 01ght
pattern based on the current use of the
airport. which until recently was a
"short haul" fac1hty: people bought
homes in the area 1n reliance on the
presumed (incorrectly) good sense of
the supervisors to listen to their own
blue ribbon committee which
proposed at least two v1able l~tions
for a second airport in the county.
Newport and Tustin (the latter coun-
cil passed a resolution opposing
expansion of John Wayne) are not
opposing current use of the airport
(assuming the noise abatt."m ent rules
are enforced). Newpofters and others
DO op po St." massive expansion of this
facility. which every study ever done
has concluded will NEVER be able to
meet tht." county's demand for air
transportation.
If Mr. Harvey is unable to wnte a
fair col umn, I hereby volunteer to
take~ver his job as~n as-you people
have lhc good sense to fire him. Oh
yes -what are his quaJifkations.
anyway. for this column?
MICHAEL YUSKIS
Newport Beach
Harvey's peeves match hers
To the Editor
I love Bill Harvey's stones and
especially the ones on his pet peeves.
More seriously, the one about tht."
young man suing the city of Newport
Beach reall y got me worked up as I
have been angry about that ever since
the story broke. His grievances
always see,o to coincide with mine.
I am wondenng 1f my number one
"pain" might be one of his. That 1s.
diesel cars (Gosh. I hope he doesn·1
dnve one!) Any chance of doing a
story on these. as I am sure you will
rt."ce1ve a lot of favorable response? If
you have ever dnven behind one of
these horrors in heavy traffic. you will
know what I mean. I have written to
evef) hving politician about the
problem M~rian Bergeson was klnd
enough to respond but gave me the
u'iual hnt." about "not ·enough tcch-
nolog~ at this point. ..
To top 1 t off. people who own d 1eseJ
car'> do not need smog checks'
Thanks for h'itening.
MARJL YN STRAW
Laguna Beach
Why all th e vitamins?
What's with all the vitamins'> In the
past decade. about three times as
many people started taking them as
ever took v1tamms previously.
Outlawed street coaunt." sells for a\
much as $2.000 an ounce. Mt."TCk and
Company at last report sold cocamc
legally to hospitals for $47 an ounce.
Some law enforcers say tht." law they
enforce 1s in itself magnifying the
drug problem immensely -by dnv-
ing up pnces thus to make smuggling
and pushing so profitable. A real
dilemma;-that one_
Takes an Amcncan auto factory 31
hou" to build a car, typically. Japan's
robot-equipped Zatba plant can do 1t
in nine hours
Q Doe your blood type have
ao)'lhinJ to do wtth }'our personaltt)''>
ORANGE COAST
DlilyPilat
Largt."st concentration of Cubans in
tht." United States -outside of South
Florida -1s in Union Cit)'. N.J.,
which 60.000 now hve. That's 65
pe rcent of tht." city's population.
More of a un1 vcrs1ty'!i football
players graduate 1n years when its
teams have losing seasons. Or at least.
that has been tht." case at un1vers1t1cs
in Florida. according to the stat1st1-
c1ans.
That movie "Toot~ie " started out a J !ltreenidea called "Shirlefllbo a tennis player.
Takes 110 silkworm cocoons to
makt." a aood necktie. .
L.M. Boyd I• a •Y•dlcat~d
col•m.llht.
H. L. 8chwart1 UI
Frank Zlnl
....... 11~ r tor
Tom Tait
I t, l f W
Craig Sheff
i• I (d IOI
''TherelssomethJngnewunderthesun -co.nservatlvessay/ngthat
antt-communlsmlsnojustlflcatlonforhumar;i-rlghtsabuse. ••
TRUST Me. INVesT A 11(1U.ION f N
~IS New DefeN~e
&YSTGM AND ~'LL MA~ WARFARe ~ere!
Columnist 'begs for bucks'
asvolunteerforKOCE TV
RICHARD COHEN
columnist
R1c11A1D
· CoHEI
Letter
meant
to woo
blacks
Condemnation of
S. African racism
-signals a change
WASHINGTON -Back in July.
Commentary magazi ne published an
article by Irving Kristof. a leading
neo-conservative, telling the Ameri-
can-Jewish community it was about
time it faced rea1ity and voted
Republican~ The article was partly a
tutorial in which Kristo! tried to
t."xplain to his co-religionists that they
should not fear Jerry FaJwcll. As a
latter-day Moses., Kristo! was a mag-
nificent failure. He led. But almost no
one followed.
shows and the lack
of commercials
About once a year or so. Ann and I
gt."t our nerve together, climb into our
car. drive over to Golden West
BILL
HanEY
grautude. A lady from Leisure World, Ncvt."rtheless. when it came to hwmholfjatedttmllit~toi-dSt<toxr.80-"ftyrncarrs'd,eicaiPilll:e-edltrinr--;F:;a:;,lw~c"'li'.il.l-Kristol bad som_ething of a
r.act that she had ca' tara~s. ::;~~~~ point. He was ancmptin_g to tell the
i • Jewish community that JUSt because barely see her TV. She was very Falwell spoke with a Southern accent.
concerned about KOCE, and wanted was a born-again Christian and
to do what she couJd to see to it that espoused conserv11tive causes. he was
the station remains solvent noun archetypal anti-Semite of yore.
KOCE is owned by the Coast Sometimes something that wallts like
Community College District. Be.. a duck, talks like a duck and acts like a
cause of state and federal fund duck is not a duck. College 1n Huntington Beach. and the station solicits funds from the public. volunteer. That's where Ann and I come m. Golden West College 1s. as you may We answer telephones.
already know, the home of KOCE ActuaJly, it's a lot of fun. We've
TV, Channt."I 50. The Kin KOCE is a volunteered about five times, and
prefix assigned to all radio and we've met people like Ann Jilhan.
television stations in the western part George Fcnneman. Ron Palillo
of the United St.ates. Back East, all of (Horshack from "Wt."lcomt." Back
tht." TV and radio stations start with Kottt."r"), and this t1mt." we met
W. and in BaJa. n's X. So much for Meredith MacRae.
that Most of the people who call in love
The OCE 1s an acron} m for Orange KOCE, and pledge as much as they
Count} Education. can afford. There are. however. a few
KOCE 1s our local Pubhc Broad-weirdos. Time befort." last, a man
casung Service (PBS). called, and wanted to know which one
Ann and I both en)OY watching I was. I described myself. and be
Channel 50. and I especially CilJOY tht." yelled out "Your beard looks like
National Geographic specials. but bicep! Shave 1t offi" and slammed
probably the very best pan is lhe totaJ down the phone before I could tell
lack of commercials. No carnival him to go bleep 1n his hat. If you
barkers. carefully dressed to resemble happen to be reading this. mister. go
dentists. trying desperately to con· bleep in you r hat!
\'1nce }OU that the·tube of toothpaste The lady who's in charge of taking
on your screen 1s magic~ No wide-us rank amateurs and whipping us
eyed, sparkle-toothed, perfectly com-int9 shape to deal with those phones
plex1oned Young Americans trying to is Bette Kain. She's a small package of
sell you a soft drink by subtly dynamite. who sort of bubbles over
thrcatt."ntng you with totaJ ostracism with enthusiasm and energy. She's
unless you guzzle the stuff by the case. the first person we meet upon arrival.
By the way, did you ever notice bow She sits us down and explains the
they al~ioo~ -whole ptcx:edUTC"to us:-·ft can befairiy
t."yc. but turn their heads when they complex, depending upon what in-
dnnk? I think that's so you can watch cent1vcsare being awarded that night.
their adam's apples bob up and down For example. the night we were there.
so that you'll know that they're really there was one, and only one. Kermit
dnnk1ng the stuff. the Frog telephone, to be awarded to
Back to business. KOCE has no the first person who called in SI 00
commercials. such as regular TV and wanted 1t. Bene 1s the one who
does. and charges no fee to watch the has to know when that phone 1s gone.
way Cable TV does. How does it and somehow notify all of us of the
manage to stay on the air? fact so we can relay 1t to our callers.
Part of the funding comes from Some of the calls arc very touching.
communttyservicegrants, but there's A child called mand pledged 16cents.
never enough, so a few times a year Her pledge was accepted with sincere
cutbacks, the KOCE TV Foundation Now, there is another non-duck to
has been formed, and during the next contend with. They are the 35
two years KOCE will be gradually conservative members of Congress.
transferred from the college district to al most all Republicans, who wrote to
the foundation. It will still be non-the South Africa ambassador rc«nt-
profit. and it will still be PBS. Jy, sayina that just because they were
PBS 1s something that we NEED! If conservative, does not mean that
there's one word that describes the they're racist. The Jetter was written
programming at KOCE. it's class. For by Rep. Bob Walker (R-Pa.).
example, what do Liberace, The chances are in the short run
Baryshnikov. Pavarotti, Hepburn that the importance of this letter will
a nd Indiana Jones aJI have in com-10 the way of the Kristof article.
moo? They all come to you over People, especiaJly liberals. are so KOCE. So. of course, do Sesame d ·
Street. Masterpl·ccc Theatre and accustome to equating . con-servatism with racism that they will Nova. Not to mention Mr. Rogers' considCT the letter a mere aberration
Neighborhood and the Electric Com-and not realize its importance. At the
pany. What the heck, Bill Alexander vt."ry Je.ast , though, it means that when
will even teach you how to paint in it comes to civil and human rights
oils if that's your desire. you can no longer count on lhe new
And it's all for free. conservatives being, well, con-
As you can probably tell from the servative.
foregoing. Ann and I arc sold on But it means something else and
KOCE. so much that we volunteer to the White House, not to mention the
go over there and. for lack ofa better Democratic Party, ought to pay
term. "beg for bucks." The pledge attention. Jn the letter, the con~
drive that we were in is over. There servatives concede the strate&ic im·
will be one in March. and another in pon.ancc of South .Africa but say
August, but I've got some great news that's no reason "to condone policies ~rAfT~lu\?a%h~N'T HA VE TO of apartheid." If this says what it
appears t rnaUy then there-. is You can send your donation to: somethine new under the sun _
KOCE TV conservatives saying that anti-com-
Membership Office mun1sm is no justification for
P.O. Box 2476 human-nghts abuse.
Huntington Beach. CA .. 92647 This 1s a total re versal of traditional
By the wa y. if you were watching on conservattve dogma which has been,
Sunday. Dec. 9. you probably saw more or less. anti-Gommunism •bu
Ann and me. She was the pretty lady alles. Up to now, whert."ver aging
with the ~n blouse sitting next to Young Americans for Freedom
the guy walh lhe Santa Claus hat. gathered, it ·was enough for a country
That was me under the hat. j ust to be anti-communist After that,
Co/ullJIJl•I BJll Harv~y Jin• I.a 1t could kill, tonure, maim. repress. It
Hu.atl.agtoa Be•cb. could, in shon, be Chile, Argentina,
Paraguay. Greece under the oolonels.
Iran under the Shah and South Africa
Pests inf est the Capitol
the real kind, that is
under the Afrikaners -especially
South Africa since it, like old-time
conservatism. cherishes both free
enterprise and the white race.
Although the letter's signers go out
of their way to praise the adminis-
tration's handling of South Africa.
their message is nonetheless a quibble
with it. The justification for "con-
Thrifty lawmakers
don't pay enough
so job· s do~e rtght
WASHI NGTON -Capitol Hill is
overrun with pests -and they're not
JACK
AIDEISOI
all lobbyists. nosy reporters or de-it &°"JO _ not at Congress' pnocs, manding constituents. -
Cockroacht."s infest the 0 1p1tol and anyway. tht." House and Senate office buildings Tht."rt .arc other problems besides
_ t."ven the newer ones. con~ssu5nal s~mgincss that .are
It's not that Congress has ignored peculiar .!o the JOb. For one thma.
tht." problem. h has contracted with Budowki screws .arc only allowed to
exterminators for years. But in the ~pray for ve~m by rcquc t -
peculiar, penny-ptncbin& way of 1nst~d of dotl'\J ~ on a more
people with billions to spend, the efTecl1vc, rqular bes1s. .
hononable members are too cheap to · . for another thins. Budowski, Like
pay for a proper job. h11 prcdCOCSI0'1, has found th~t mara
The current contract, wttll Enteeh :,.:~'::c'!o°ie~t?!:."M'::belh~e~ta ~
Inc., pays $2.000 a month for sup-aliie how Huie Eniech is beina paid,
posedly kccpn~J roach~s our of. the and fi1urc that any company that gets bundrc~s of offices. suites ~nd hide· only about SIS a hour can't have
aways 1n the nmo bu1ld1nas a~d much clout.
surroundsna grounds that compnse At any rate;. few conarcss1onal
thcstead1lnrowangCap1tolcomplex employees arc willina or able to
Gene Budowskl. president of authonu tbe eitterminaton to move
E.ntcch. told my rcponer Scott .Barren boob and papen so lbey n spray
1bat a more reali tjc ft1urc would be ttic cracks and crannies where the
SS,000 to S6.2SO 1 month, and oq,e.r httle stx·leaed rascals lurk. ''It's v~
extenmnators fam1har with the JOb fru traunf beau1e it's IO simple,•
.qrcc. Budowk 1 wd--A
Like Abe Lincoln's lcsendary hero Funhermorc, Buelow k.1 claim -
btina nddcn out of town Of\ a raJI, and this may shock some of you
Budow lo tnd1ca1cd that 1f tt weren't who've read about fancy, thrcoe·
.forthc honor of the tluna. he'd just ai. C•mP.An lunchet 1n Wa hin(ton -
soon Sklp It. ThouJh adcnowlediana that many Conata JOO&) St.&O"crs eat
that the Capitol JOb was a "prcsti lunch at their desks and keep nacb
account." he ~1d he wouldn't btd on 1n thcjr d k drawcn for cmcratncics.
l 1
-.
Crumbs and torgotten tef\overs are
the meat and potatoes of the
cockroach community.
Another headache stems from the
fact that the buildings' cafeterias and
k.itchens arc in the jurisdiction of
another exterminating firm, and
there's no coordination between the
two assault teams. As one fonncr
contractor explained, foodcansbeina
wheeled throuah the oorridon to
catered events/ick up roaches in the
kitchens, an the nervy little
hitchhikers peel off along the way in
search of new fields to conquer.
h's barely possible that help will
amve with the new Congress next
month. Rep.-eJeet Tom Delay, R·
Texas, is an exterminator by trade,
and was understandably app&lled at
the number or roaches he saw
slilhcrin&. round tht office he's us'
Before he learned the finaociaJ
realities of life as a conaresaional
exterminator, Delay cracked to a
rcponer, "I could make a fonune here
if 1t wasn't a conflict ot1ntaat." But
when told what the Job peys, he
bed&cd: "I'd have lO SUTVf'¥ the
situation before I woukf do at (or
S2 000(• montta)." Will he, then. try to rem~y the
roach problem by ra111na the anlf? No
doubt rcmcmbmna the con.avative
const1tucn1.L wbo Jeni him so W
1nf1on, OeLay said. "I can't •Y I'm
soma to won for men C=· uoiu) money ... T hat. be e. · it
"a typtUI ao~cmmtnt tolvteon:
Tb row money 11 tht ~m."
Jed ... .,.,.. " • qMka,.
t!Ol"11Jallt.
l.
strucuve engagemcnt'' is notjust that
South Africa has to be encoW"a4ed to
abandon apartheid. but that it is too strat~cally located a country to be
anything less than an American ally.
Tbe presence in Angola of Cuban
sold.iul is justification enough for
constructive enpaement. according
to this lfJ\lmcnt.
Jn the t."nd, an administration that
has to wony about conservatives
staying on the policy reservation is
bound to reassess that policy. But the
Democrats to whom a good ftaht
within theGOPisapleasinaprospect
ou&ht to think about the imponanc~
oflhis letter. Up to now, to be black
and to be a Democrat has been a
redundancy, b'!t that issomethina the
new c~nservallvcs are clearly tryinj
to chanae. Rep. Jack Kemp (R-N.Y. ·~~~fore the Urben Leaaue and
1 -• ded oonscrvative.s...(bw...not_ _
Kemp) si&ned the letter to the South
Afn"ca ambauedor.
If Jews needed something more
than the word oOrvina KristoJ to vote
for Ronald Reqan, than clearly
blacks will need somethif\I more than a mere letter to make them vote
Republican.
But • new aencratton or -con-
terVali ves is reachina out to a new
,enttauon or blacks. These COO•
atnatJvea tent a letter to the South
Africa ambetlador, but 11 wet rellly
not a le\lef and it was meant for
aomcone cite. It wu llddre.ed to
Amerialn blKb and it WU an
invicauon to a party -the Re..
publican OM, • IUtllltft a.. ,, • ,,.,..,.
cnm8*t
-·
~·
•
----Orange ec.t OAll:.V PILOT/Monday, Decembet 17, 1"'4
I INT£RMI SS ION
-~--------
~CR soared high with 'Seagull'
n11 ,, t.te lttOlld la • 1trlt1 of
1evta col•mo1 revJewlll1 lite Yt•r
"" ,. t•eater a1001 tlte or .. 1e Coa1t. .
On March 12 of next year, Soutb
Coast Repertory will complete its
second decade on the Orange Coast, •n impending anniversary the Costa
Mesa company has been celebrating
since September. .
SCR has reason to be proud. Over occasional clinkers have been over· its . first 20· years, the uoupc has shadowed by some magnificent
rewritten Orange County's standards achievements, and the year 1984 was
of theatrical professionatism and a microcosmic example.
attracted national attention as one of This _P?st year, SCR reached its
America's leading regional theaters. peak with a superb production of
Its successes have been legion. its Chekhov's "The Seagull" OD the
failures few. mainstage and a deeply involving
The past seven seasons have been study of female friendship, ··~tty and
mounted in the imposing Fourth S tep Marsha," on the ~ond Staae. At the
Theater, a two-stage complex in the ~u~m of the ,9µaJitX ~ale were."Th~
city's South Coast Town Center soon G1gh Concert an~ 'Life and Lm;ib1 Jo be dwarfed by the Orange County two plays badly in need of art1st1c
'Performing Arts Center going up surgery. .
across the street. And wh.ile SCR may . Of the dozen produc~1ons mounted
literally be in the Arts Center's on both SCR .stages 1n 1984, these
shadow. it's doubtful that this de-
scription ever will apply in the
figurative sense.
South Coast Repertory's first two
decades have not been one artistic
triumph after another, being human.
directors David Emmes and Martin
Benson have selected some plays
better left unproduced. But these
Ousted TV
newscaster
on 'SB' soap
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Christine
Cran. who sued after she was dropped
as anchorwoman on a Kansas City
television station, will play a news-
woman in a brief appearance· on the
NBC soap opera .. Santa Barbara.··
Craft filed suit against Metromedia
Television for sex discrimination,
fraud and--viulatiorr-ufl~I
Rights Act. after she was let go at
KMBC. She won her suit, but the
award was later reduced. Both sides
have ap~led the decision. ·
She will appear on "Santa Barbara"
Thursday and Friday. It will mark the
acting debut for Craft, the daughter of
were the top five from thi reviewer's
aisle SC4l:
I. "Tlat Seapll" by Anton
Chekhov, directed by Sharon Ott.
%. "Sally aad M1r1ll1 by Sybille
Pearson. directed by Lee Sballat.
3. "Salat Jou" by George Bernard
Shaw, directed by John Allison.
4. "AatelJ Fall" by Lanford
Wilson, directed by Mary 8. Rob-
inson.
5. "Good" by C.P. Taylor. directed
by David Emmcs.
lndividuat accomplishments
abounded, as always, with Mary Beth
Fisher in "The Seagull" and Jordan
Charney in "Angels.Fall" standing a
shade above the pack. Also notable
were Troy Evans in "Binf and
Walker," Ruth De Sosa to ·saint
Joan" and both Laura Esterman and
Gun-Marie Nillson in the two-
character play "Sally and Marsha."
Other memorable pcrf ormances
included thqse of Thomas Hulse io
.. The Seagull," Dnld Ackroyd in
"Good," Ron Bou som ud Larry
Drakt in·· a1ntJoan,·· Jenifer Parktt
in "Top (hrl ," Rand Rocca 1.n
"ShadC1" and, as u uaJ, ~al Landon
Jr. in "A Chnstmas Carol"
The company also presented a 13th
play. a reprist production of tts
1983-84 season opener, "Men's
Singles," one of the btggcSl h1l on the
Second Stage. Another Second tagt
product, .. Top Girls;• went on to a
brief engagement 1D Los An&eles
following its SCR run.
For the immediate future, at least
on the mainstage, SCR's path will
wend nosi.lfically backward with
George Kelly s "The Show Off" and
Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of
Bein& Earnest" next on the agenda.
Y,pcoming on the Second Stage is
·Play By Play," a new one by the
author of"Men's Singles."
Ntxt: Strltlllf op Lile bud •I tte
tlluu tbeater1.
an~~~'t.~s. who now lives i~ ., Kay E. Kuter, Andra Aken and John Drh·er ln SCR'• top abow, "The Seagull."
Laara lteterm&Jl (left). Gaa-llarte l'flleeoa ID ...... ,. ...
Mania& .. OJI South Cout llepertory'a 8ecOad Staee.
RE VIEW
----
Philosophies c18.sh
in 'MassAppeal'
By 808 THOMAS ments, "I didn't know there was such
• ·' •"'-•,.. a thing."
"Mass Appeal" is the story of an An eusperaring young man, o:r-
older priest and his younger assistant taanly. But his naging questions
who share a parish church. The cause Father Fa.,lcy to examine his
comparison to "Going My Way" own values. including his coooept of
ends there. the Sunday col.lection as the .. Nidsen
Mark Dolson is a seminarian with a ra1ing" of reception to tile sermon.
penchant for asking uncomfonable The role of Father Farley requires
questions, such as: Did Jesus have a an actor with magnetism and
sex life? He becomes a problem to the faJlability, and ifs hard lo imagine
head of the seminary, Monsignor anyone better than Jack Lemmon.
Burke. especially when he challenges Whether cracking jokes in the pulpit
the expulsion of two candidates for or struggling with self-doubt over too
priesthood suspected of homosexual many glasses of wine. he remains in
relations. total charge of the character. Add
Dolson turns up in the c-0ngrega-another Oscar-worthy performance
tion offather Tim Farley. whose one-to his lonf string.
liners and comforting homilies have Zeljko vanelc, born in Yugoslavia
made him. immensely popular with and Broadway-trained, plays the
· tpatisiooc1s. Fathc1 Farley younge1 cbwchman witb uncanny
is irritated, then intrigued by the accuracy, capturing bis intellectuaJ
outspoken young man. With con-curiosity as weU as bis priggish self-
siderablemisgivings, the priest agrees assurance. Monsignor Burke, -who
to accept Dolson as his temporary was only talked about in the play, is
assi,tant, especially since the scm-portrayed by the over-reliable
inarian faces imminent expulsion. Charles Durn10g, who may well be
The young man accuses Father the screen's best character actor.
Farley of trying to play .. Father "Mass Appeal" deals with contem-
Bojangles." When Farley claims a po~ issues of the Catholic church.
falcshood he told a parisioner was "a but it ts not a religious film. Rated PG
harmless lie," the young man com-for oocasional swearing. Carpenteria. Calif.. had become ac-
quainted with Jerome and Bridget
Dobson, the creator-writers. and was
invited to make an appearance.
.~~~~~~~~~~~~~--ro:=====~----------------====-=~~~---------------------,. ~
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She is at work writtnga book about
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by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY by GaiiYTrudeau
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
"I'm allowed to ask for anything as
long as it's assembled." "Are you the one who's on the soft diet?"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DE NNIS THE &{ENACE
"You'll have to divorce one of us!"
GORDO
GARF IELD
GEE. ( ft\155 MAVING-
GARF1£.U7 AROUNP. f EVEN Ml5?
TME A005£
MOON MULLINS
FURST THIN~S FURST ...
WHAT t>o YOU WANT
FOR
CHRISTMAS>
EMMA?,
JUDGE PARKER
WHeN CRA1G LEw1s
CALLS AeBEY 10
TN0C1tfl'e •e<JVT MIS SONS SHE TELLS
HIM THEV ARE NO
PROBLEM ANO
SHE EN.JOYS
HAVING THEM AT
SPENCER FARMS'
PE.ACE
ON E',ARTM,
<Oooe> WILL
!OW.ARDS
MfN,AND
,A MINK
CO,AT.
by Hank Ketcham
~ 11-11
• I'M RE.ADY FOR ~RtSliMS I &.IT l ~T
l<K:MJ IF IM GOOD ""'° READY.~
"j
t J t
by Gus Arriola
by Jim Davis
by Harold Le Doux
,,
SHOE
Pear Vi?Wnia =
Yes, Vi~nia. t1tere ~
a. Santa Claus
PEANUTS
11M 60IN6 TO ASK THE
TEArnER IF I CAN BE
MARI./ IN ™E CMRl5TMA5
PLAV TMl5 VEAR ...
DRABBLE
It·s a suburb
of LosAngeies.
by Jeff MacNally
Thank yC!tJ. for writin~
tht TatUe.r Tr1bune.
Acbon Lme
'f.r ·.
by Charles M. Schulz
---~--.....-~~~~~ I LIKE lME PART
WMERE ~E AA6EL
GABRIEL TALKS
TO ME
by Kevin Fagan
61\1€. ME. A Of.6GRlfTION or 1\-\t. ~f..l.T'
'IE.A~' r~ l~':ifANl.E., w~~T !>IZE. w~~ ~E.. "')
BRIDG E
L~ -
~ QE.~R.1Pi10N7
I G01' 6AA~ IN MV rJAIJl:L. FROM
CRAWL.ING-ON MY 11JMM¥.
~ \\ ii n • i .....-"1........-~..>
0
by Tom K. Ryan
AN WER TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ A. -You have one story to tell:
ht•art!>, ht'arts. heart!>. Evtn though
partner 1s not enthused with your
!>uit. you <Jhould persevere to four
hc•art 'I. l' nless partner can make
nint• trick-, 1n his own hand. he is
unlik1•ly lo fare well in no trump
h1•cauSl• your su1l won't provide him
w11h any lrrrk~. With heart:-as
I rumps. however. you have a source ,,r Lnck'i which may be just enough
to '>ee you through.
Q.1-Nrither vulnerablt'. as !)outh
you hold:
+ 10654 Q92 (' 10852 +73
ThP hrcMing ha'> µrc><·eedt.>d:
WHt !'lorth Ea8t South
l Obit> l'as!i I +
Pass 3 Pass ?
Whal .ll"l1nn do _vou take'!
A. -F1r'>t. partner\ Jump to thrt-e
hearts 1' not forcing. ll 'how a
very good hand with about nine
playing trick~. hut it requires some
help lrom you to mah game. Do
you hilVl' that help"' Most <'l'rtarnly
\ou ha ve three trumps 10 a h!8h
honor and a ruffing value in club . A
raise to four heart" 1 rlear cut
Q.2-Both vuln•rable. Mi 'outh you
hold:
+JlOO A94 I 1093 • AKJ 3
The bil1ding has proct'eded:
South W eat orth Ea1t
I • 1 l NT Pa11
?
What 11ct1on do you Lnke?
12 points. Settle £or game. and since
you have honor card:--rn every suit
thert' is no reason why you should
not prefer three no trump tu f1v1•
duh"
Q.4 -As Soul h.
hold: + 105 . 76
OMAR
SHARIFF
vulm·rablt-. you
Q8754 +J932
The biddang has proceeded:
East outh Weet North
Paaa Pua 1 + Obie
Pau 2 0 PH1 2 i;?
2 • Pa111 PaH Obie
Pa11 ?
CHARLES
GOREN
Q.6-A!4 South. vulnerable. you
hold:
+ 762 c;,.. AQJ3 0 AJ 9 •843
The bidding ha. proceeded:
North •:a~t South Weet
l + "i O l <:I l +
A.-l'nrln<'r i~ <1how1ng a
rea .. onahle hnnd and you have t.'X What fl<'tio~ do you take'/ 2 • Pa11 ?
What do you bid now'l
rellt>nl 1111p11ort cards. Howevt>r, A.-The quciJtion is: Is partner's
1."Vt1'Mt pnrtncr hM n maxirfrnm-yot.1 ISmible for tnkeour-or-penaltles'/
~till ht1ve 11 combined <"ount of only Thf' answer is simple. Since you
i4 not enough for 1<:tmt-. l'a<1s. havt• already bid. t.hfl double is for
A . -Since partner rebid Ireely. he
~hould hllVe-rbetteT thnn minimum
opening bid, either in high cards or
di'ltrlbution. Therl'fore, your aide
s hould hav(" the values for game.
Rut where an• you going to play the
hand'/ No trump looks th mo l
prom1 mg contract. but you don't
Q.S-Ro1h vulnnable, a<1 South you"
hold ..
•QJ KM <1 K8 •AKQ1062
Nu.• bidding hu prl>C"1·1·dl"d:
Nerth F.ut .uth Weat
Pa11 PaH J + Pa 1
2 T PHI 7
WhuJ~ do you bid nt1w'!
A. -You h,tvt! 11 vt•ry good hand, but
1fon'1 •"t n •nlf!rta1n thouKht• of
lam Rl'm(lmbC'r, jlartnfr I n p;a
t-d hand."" tht mo t he can have is
penalties. Ptntncr 111 telling you hr
can bt-at two pad·~. Trust him .
Pass.
have a "pade Lopper. Bad two
diamond~ ·t't' how lh~ auction Q.5-Hoth vulnerable. as outh you dev lop~.
hold: How do J OU ehoo .. th beit 0,. ••
•Q92 QJ9852 0 876 +t .., foe lead? Ch.arlea Ger • ILu llat
Th b1dd1ng has pro<' d('d~ , a.aiwer. •'or a copy of ~l••J••
erth Ea1t outh W .. , 0,.afq Lead1," Mod 11.85 C:
I • PaM I ' Pue "Gerea·Lead1," care ef tllli
2 T Pua J o Pu1 • ,. ,.per, P.O. Ot I, Pal•7ra, .. •. 3 1' • l'H• ? na-5 u -• vovv • •~•lie elt•ek P.Jable t. What artlon do JOU lakt-'t 1 ."1,.,.,.._11
Rams
root for
Miami
Pittabur&b defenalve end Keith Gary (92)
grabe R&lder running back Frank Bawklna
,.,.,.,.....
durinC Sunday•a &a.me at the Collaeum. Lookln& on la Mareua Allen.
* ...,.... MONDAY, OECEMBER l7, 19M
Unlde olf:
Thepurae
.. higher
In 1115. 82.
R8.iders: It's
off to Seattle
LA loses home field
advan e with loss
to Steelers, 13-7 -LOS ANGELES (AP) -Veteran
strong safety Donnie Shell has made a
lot of bi' plays durina his 11 -y~
Nattonal Football l...eque career.
Without bis latest one, the PitUbursh Stee~rs mi t be watcbm th~ up.
Shel 's second interception Sunday
snuffed o ut the final Los Angeles
threat as the Steelers posted a 13-7
victory over the Raiders to capture
the American FootbaU Conference's
Central Division title and cam a berth
in the playoffs.
-'""It feets -great, It said Shell, one of
three players on the current Pit-
tsburgh roster who played on bis
team's f9ur Super Bowl cham-
pionship teams of the 1970s. "This is
where we wanted to be all during
training camp and now we have to iet
ready to go up to Denver."
The Steelers. who weTC 6-point
underdogs, needed to beat the
Raiders or tic them to qualify for the
playoffs because Cincinnati had over-
powered Buffalo 52-21 earlier Sun-
day. .
Pittsbu~ finished the rcaular
season with a 9-7 record while
Cincinnati wound up 8-8. Had the
teams tied for the top spot, the
Bengals would have been declared
champions because of their supenor
record in division action.
"We weren't going to give up today
no matter what," said . Shell, who
picked off a Jim Plunkett pass at the
Pittsburgh 46-yard line with 2:24
remaining. "If we went out and lost.,
we were still going to give it our best.
That's the attitude we took into the
game."
The loss~Ral<krs lhG.homo-
field advantage in next weekend's
AFC wild<ard playoff game. Los
Angeles finished with an 11 -5 record
NFL playoff echedale
(M ... POT)
-..0 CMD eAMaS .................
~ .......... ., s.ni.. 1 •Jn.
~ New YW1l G..,_ et ._, tt:al ll.m.
wo.-. ..... -... ~
.... .. o.ia.. ~ aJft.
......,.. ., --· I •..m.
CONf'UINCS ...... AU
.....,, IK SMtfte et N\leml, "° e...m. c~. Oel!M, °' ..._ vn G'9nb •• SM ,,eftCIKo, I •.m.
s..lly,Dec. ...
Chlc.e9o °' ..,.. •' w~ f'll e.m
Plltlllurlfl •• 0..-. 1 •Jn.
COMl'l••NCa CM'"AONIMIP ..... .... ,... ... _.,.. ---1-----"I AFC~~
NFC SemHffl9I WINw'a
SUPft IOW\. ........... ..........
AFC ~ vs. NFC ~. J
-""-
,and will play the wild<atd pme at
Seattle, which lost to Denver 31-1•
Saturday to finish 12-4.
Had the Raiders beaten Pittsbur&h,
the wild-card game would have been
played at the Los AnJCJes Coliseum,
where a crowd of 83,0S6 watched
Sunday's pme.
The Steelers will play at Denver,
the AFC West champion. either Dec.
29 or Dec. 30. The winner of the
Raiders-Seahawk.s game will play at
Miami that same weekend.
"We don't have any excuses.," said
Los i\ngclcs Coach Tom Flores,
whose team had a four-tame~
streak snapped. .. The Steelers
th1sgamcverybadly. Theycameafter
us. .
"It would have been nice to win this
one and play here nut week. But . .
week. We're still in this thing. We're
tn the playoffs and now all we have to
(Pleue Me llAIDEll8/BS)
Area prep basketball: It ranks with the best
But pairings at some tournaments
are not exactly rated in the top I 0
With just two weeks of the tour-
nament and non-league ponion of the
high school basketball season played .
it's ratherclearthat the qualJty of
Orarigc Coast area teams ranks with
the best.
When you consider last Friday's
arrangement at three tournaments it
borders o n amazing. For instance:
•In the scmifinaTsofthc Tour-
nament of Champions: Ocean View
and Mater Dci.
•In thesemifinalsofthcSonora
Invitational: Newpon Harbor and
Irvine.
•In the semifinals of the San
Clemente Invitational: Costa Mesa
and Laguna Beach.
The capper, of course, was Ocean
View and MaterDei ~uaringoffa1
the Anaheim Convention Center for
the T ofC championship. This ts no
run-of-the-mill tournament, not with
Long Beach Poly, Cleveland (Re-
seda), Santa Clara, Compton. Santa
Monica and Dominguez standing
U.S. almost out
of Davis Cup
Americans down
2-0 after ConnorS.-
McEnr'oe defeated
GOTEBORG. Sweden (AP) -
Sweden, after losing all fi ve previous
Davis Cup tenms matches w11h the
United States, has a huge jump on
overcoming the big brother Jinx.
"Things aren't looking too bnght.
We could lose 0-5," said John
Mc Enroe after he and Jimmy Con-
nors failed to win a set in Sunda~s
two opening singles of the best-of-fi ve
match series.
The doubles is set for tonight.
McEnroe and Peter Fleming must
win it to stay alive in the final. The
Yanksarc 14--0in Davis Cup doubles.
but lost their only previous match -
the U.S. Open semis -to Swedes
Steckel fired
by Minnesota
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Les
Steckel was fired today as head ,.,._ ___ coach of the Minnctota-V' · o
the National Football Lcaaue,
General Manaaer Mike Lynn
said.
Lynn said the dcci ion to fire
Steckel was reached Friday. He
said the fitst·'year coach hMi been
asked to rniafl, but had refused.
.. On cvaJuatina our head coach,
we ju t didn't feel that under Lu
and his prosram. we didn't feel
the V1kJngs would suttced 1n
I 98S," Lynn wd. "Wc·rc an a vqy competitive
divi Jon where fif\h-plact teams
have come hick and won 1t the
next )Cir," Lynn said an mak1na
the announcement. "We want to
win It and we want to come back
and>win 1t in 1985."
Anders Jarryd and Stefan Edberg.
"If we win the doubles and I beat
(Mats) Wilanderon Tuesday it might
give Jimmy some momentum and
confidence in the.Jast match," said
McEnroe after f\fs 13-11, 6-4, 6-3 loss
to Henrik Sundstrom on the Scan-
dinavium Arena's indoor clay-coun.
It was only the third defeat of the
year for the Wimbledon and U.S.
Open champ, who came here after a
seven-week layoff.
Wilander, who defended hts Aus-
tralian Open title a week ago. adjusted
quickly from grass to clay and
whipped Connors 6-1 , 6-3. 6-3 in
Sunday's first match.
And, Connors got himself into
trouble with the officials durin' has
match. His was penalized for three
counts of misbehavior -equipment
abuse, verbal abuse and audible
obscenity.
He could be fined or defaulted or
both, though Alan Mills of Britain.
the referee conceded that the chance
of default was "not very real."
Connors problems aside. the
outlook for the Amencans was not
very good.
.. We're in a very difficult situation.
We could very well lose our three
remaining matches," said McEnroe,
who hH lcd the U.s:-to victory-in the
Davis Cup four times in the past six
years. -~
The New Yorker. who was banned
three weeks after pushin4 tus fines
past the $7,SOO ltmit this year in
Stockholm Nov.Sand then idehncd
with a wrist injury when actt1n1 ready
to play the AU$11'ltan Open, wa
praised by Mills for his bcha~
Sunday.
"Considering thcstrc and the fact
that the USA was down(). I, I think he
behaved very wc11,•· said Mills, ttle
Wimbledon rcfcru.
McEnroe complained about the
clay surface in pr1ct1ce before the
final and <lid it qain af'\er his defeat.
··The court was an lou y shape for a
Davis Cup final. I thought u would be
better:• he said.
around watching. instead of playing.
Among the schools which couldn't
even gel past the first round were
Verbum De1. Banning.St. Bernard
and Fountain Valley(the latter falling
by the wayside when its top guard
went down with an injury).
* * * There's not much argument about
thequalityofarea teams-but if
you're looking fo r a different point of
view regarding prep basketball to ur-
naments. look no further than the
first roundsoftonight's Irvine Inv1ta-
t1onal and the Dec. 26 Orange
Opt1m1st Tournament at Chapman
College.
Corona del Mar and Foothill
RocER
CuLS011 ·
PREP SPORTS
squarcofftonightat UC Irvine in the
first round of the 32-team Irvine
tourney. which means one 1s headed
for the consolattons nght now.
But the all-ttme first round match
of strong vs. strong(a maneuver b)'
'
host schools to help ensure their team
to at least a semifinals ~nh) as at lhc
Orange tourney.
There. on opening night. will~
Mater Dea and Santa Clara. who met
in the T ofC semifinals wt th Mater
Dei pulling out a 63-60oven1me
\.ICtory.
Well. nobody guarantees anytha ng
when you accept an inv1ta11on to pla)-
10 a tournament.. but most look for
some son of equitable first round
match ups.
lt'sstrong vs. weak. giving the best
o flhe bunch a reasonable chance to
advance an thechamp1onsh1p
bracket
If that's not enough-the winner
of the Mater Dci-Santa Oara game
gets currently unbeaten Estancia in
the second round. assuming the
Eagles defeat Villa Park in the first
·round.
Don ·1 bother 10 look for answers -
because questtons arc answered in
such vague areas as "Santa Clara
came an late and ll messed it up ...
Pressed watb the fact that San ta
Clara has been 1n the Orange Tour-
nament for several years. the answer
1s switched to "lt'sa matter of trying
to keep teams from the same leagues
away from each other ...
Well thatonccouldbeanswered,
too. but at would only create another
(Pleue eee PREP /82)
Here's a milestone
Shue will for get
ING LE WOOD < .\P)-Gene Shue
had two chances to reach a significant
plateau, but the milestone he htt wu
one of dubious d1s1inct1on.
The Washingto n Bullet~· coach.
whose club dropped a I 09-10 I de-
cision to the · Los Angeles Lakers
Sunda) night. became the fir~t conch
an National Basketball .\sscx·1at1on
hastof) to ha've 700 career losses
He'd gone into the rontest with a
chance to reach 700 of a different
"anet~-he ~lso had 699 career
\ICtones.
.\fter the defeat. hue said that.
while he was aware of his wins total.
he hadn't known he was approach1n1
the losses milestone. too
"I've been around .500 most of my carttr:· he said. "l'vc been with
rcbu1ld1ng te.ams a loL ..
hue also has been 1n"ol~ed 1n
mort BA games -2.098 games as a
pht)er and coach -than an)one else
Hts 699 coaching nctone rank ham
~hand onl) Jacl Ramsay at 716. and
Red .\uerbach at 938. 1n NBA ha tOf).
Dacie Motta. with 659 career de-
feats. as closest to hue in that
column.
James Worthy's 26 points and 11
rebounds led the takers. who also JOt
17 points :ind a scason-hig.'1 18 assist:.
from Earvin "Magic .. Johnson. and
17 points from Kareem i\bdul-Jab-
bar.
Jeff Ruland scored :?4 points to lead
the Bullets. and Jeff Malone and
Darren Daye each added 20.
Lo Angeles Coach Pat Riley said
1ggrcss1ve defense in the second half
made the daffcrcncc m the win .
.. I was happy Wlth the change -0f
paC'C. our trapp1n1 defense to st.an the
second half.'' he said. "That turned
lhe pme around for us. We staned to
~t them o n the run in the second
h.alf.''
Worth) was happier wnh has team-
hlgh rebound total than with his
point saymg. 'T ve been concentrat-
ing on m) rcboundmg. which 1 where
I need to improve Rebounding ts
very important to get11ng our fa'it
~ak goin1."
Smith gets revenge
--1.0S .\NGELES (AP)--..Dc.ttk.
muh carher had nprcs~ h1s
d ispleasure at bcana cast off by the
Golden talc Wamors.
The Lo .\n,cles Chp~n· &uard
c-..prcs~ h1 fech 1n a cWTettnt
manna unday nt&bt -he scored a
pmc--ht&b 21 points to pace his club
to a 103-Si victory over his formtt
allonal Basketball .\Uociation
team mat"
"We alwa) b\:cd bimi" Wamors'
Coach John 8acb said anc:r the
"Rut ~'Chad& pktborao(pard with
contract$.''
81ch 1d he had raid mtth' comments about brint au by the
Wam n at the end ofla t , and
that he approecb«t the Oappn-s'
&uard before the prne at the
f\ ti porn ttn.a.
"I told hi dtdn't C'JUt \OU
loo becau~ \'O\J rouldn't pla)'
and that a_n honest. fair d~mon wa
made."' the Golden ta tr C' h
rclatcd
The '1c1on b-. the C11ppcn.. who
stpcd math after he was "'med b
tbt Warnon. was their fifth 1n • ro~·.
aoche,cnth an thc1ttastelJ1tt out.mp
"-H1 ofkn •"c 1mJW0~cment ln
\hat po 1uon (stani~ ~) 1s rc-
marbbtc ... Bach said of Snuth ··1
ha~eoo11l ftth toward him. Tbcrr
ii "° q t1on b¢ ha ~}"Cd a "'w ro&t 1n their up.wf'IC. ~
m1th aot off \0 a low llrt. with
onl four potAts before the inter·
mt~ aon.
"l didn't pla) well in the first half."
he ..auJ. ·•rm J\l t than\:fl.ll that thc:rc
'' a nd half;•
.......
, I
'UnsportsDlanlike
behavior' costs
Connors $2,000
Hancock, Streck win in golf
BOCA RA TON, Fla. -Phil Hancock !I
and Ron Streck, fighting off strong
challenges down the stretc h, birdied the
final two holes for 4-undcr-par 68 Sunday
and the ltlle in the PGA Team Championship.
Hancock and Streck, who led aficr thm! rounds on
the 7.180-yard. par-72 Boca West Reson course.
finished the tourney with a 33-under 255. o ne stroke
ahead of Gary Hallberg and Scott Hoch.
Hallberg and Hoch. former teammates at Wake
Fo rest, carded a final-round 65 in the Professional
Golfers' Assoc1at1on event.
Dan Pohl and Greg Powt'rs, who shot a 70 Sunday.
claimed third with 258.
"It was silly. we almost gave the tournament
away," said Streck afier his 15-foot putt at the par-4
18th ho le.
Hallberg birdied No. 17. but Streck pulled even a
few minutes later, chipping up about 50 feet before
tapping the ball in.
Hallberg had a chance to recover on the next hole,
but missed the 10-footer .
Streck then got out of trouble on the 18th fairway
with his ball lyi ng in an old grass-covered divot -by
making the 15-foot putt.
Hancock and Streck split the S I 00.000 top pnze.
while Hallberg and Hock each took home S28.700.
Odyssey stuns Futurity field ,
INGLEWOOD-Stephan's Odyssey ~
surprised at odds of 11 to I Sunday to win
the SI :!4 m1lhon HOU) wood Futunty and
bnng trainer Woody Stephens hol'.)C"s of
anothn Kentucky Dcrb) winner:
In ~1nn1ng the nchest race ever for :!-year-old
thoroughbreds. Stephan's Odyssey beat out two o ther
long shot'i m the field of I 3 to capture the fi rst pmc for
the man" ho trained the late Swale. winner of the 1984
Kentuck) Dcrb) and Belmont Stakes
W ith Eddie Maple riding. tephan's OdY'iSC\
fin1!>hcd a kngth ahead of 14-L <,h ut Fim Norman· w11h
R1ght Con 19-1,thitd. ·
~tcphenna1d, "ljust tolc.J Eddie to try to relax him.
I didn't want him rushed. Hc"d onlv run three times
before this and never been around two turns.
"I guess he's got to be the best coll I've got. Of co use
I've never thought he was a Swale or a Devil 's Bag. I'll
take him back to Florida as soon as I can. But he won't
be running again unt1ll March."
Tulane hires football coach
NEW ORLEANS -Tulane Univer-[i]
sit> announced Sunda> 1t has hired Mack e II t
Brown. the: 33-year-old offensive coordi-
nator at Oklahoma. as its head football
coach
Bro" n succeeds Wall> English. fired 19 days ago at
the chma.1t of a t~O-)Car feud with athletic director
Hindman Wall
North Stan outlast Chicago
dnlled a shot past Chicago Black Hawks ,
Minnesota right wing Mark Napier ~
goalie MW't'ay BaJlDermu in the third
period to give the Nonh Stars the go-ahead
goal in a 5-3 National Hockey lea$UC victory over the
Hawks Sunday. Napier. who contnbuted three assists.
helped break the North Stars five-game losing streak.
They were 0-6-1 in their last seven outings. All the
Hawks' sconng was done by center Denil Savard, who
tallied three goals tn the second period to pick up hi~
third career hat tnck. Hts three-goal performance gavt
him 19 for the year and I 0 in the last 12 games ... In
other games Sunday, center Laurie Boscbmaa scored a
goal and added an assist as the Winnipeg Jets defeated
the Detroit Red Wings. 5-2. Doug Small, Paul
MacLean, Andrew McBain and Sci>tt Arniel also scored
for the Jets. who improved their record to 17-10-3 and
movt'd into second place 1n the Sm> the 01' 1sion w11h
37 potnts. two pol.lits ahead ofCal&ffY Flames ... Len
wtng Paul Cyr scored on a rebound with 7:30 remaintng
1n the third penod to give Buffalo a 2-:! overtime tie
with Vancouver. Jobn Tucker scored Buffalo's o ther
goal as the Sabres got the ir seventh tie in their last nine
games and fifth stra1g~ at home .. Bob Carpenter and
Dave Christian each scored two goals to lead the
Washington C'ap11al~ to a 6-3 "ictory over the New
York Rangers . Ton Turvers' th1rd-1_>Criod goal broke
a tie and handed the Montreal Canad1ens a 3-2 victory
over the Philadelphia Flyers in a hard-fought game.
Turvers broke the tie al 14:53 of the third period when
a wrist shot by Mats Naslund deflected off Philadelphia
goahc Pelle Lindbergh's left pad. Turvers. standingjust
to the nght of the net. then fired the puck into the far
corner of the net.
Telemlon. radio
RUYISION
8 p.m. -PRO 'OOTaAU.: Da1t8' at Miami,
Chamef 7.
MOM)
8 p.m. -PRO FOOTllALL: Dallas at Mlaml.
KNX ( 1070). I
"Good S«Vice.
good CO't'erllge. "6ood /Jf'ICe·
Thats State Farm
insurance."
ll CAITtl llSUUICE ACHCY, t•C. .........
A
INSUIANCI
S46-9222
2900 Bristol St., •·101
Costa Mesa
---
1
Golf
-----------~--~
Irvine
tourney
launches
32 teaffiscOtnpete,
including eight -
from the area
Moseley's boot does it
Washington edges Cardinals for title:
Kenney passes Chiefs past Chargers
From AP dispatches
WASH I NGTON M a rk
Moseley's 37-yard field goal w11h I :33
remaining hfled Washington to a
29-17 '1ctory over St. Louis Sunday
as the Redskins successfully defended
their National Conference Eastern
D1v1S1o n title. t'ltminating the
( ard1nals from National Football
League playoff contention.
The Ca.rdinal had a final attempt
to pull out the victory. but Neil
O'Donoghue 50-yard try sailed wide
lcfi on the game's last play.
Th•: rardmals had gone :n front
27-26 for the first time. o n an 18-yard
Angeles Rams as a wild-card team 1n
the playoffs if Dallas loses to M 1am1
Monday night. Dallas would take the
final postseason bcnh 1fthe C'owboyc;
beat the Dolphins.
In other NFL game!> Sunday·
Falcons H, Eagles 10: At Atlanta.
rookie Dave Archer threw a touch-
down pass on his first NFL comple-
tion and set up two other \Cores as
Atlanta snapped a mne~gamt losing
streak with a victory over Philadel-
phia.
Archer. who entered the game
midway through the second quaner,
co nnected with Anhur Cox on a I 6-
yard sconngstnke with 2:45 lef\ in the
first half. o ne play after Fulton
Kuykendall returned a fumble 9
yards.
Cbltf1 4%, Chargers U : At San
Otego. former San Oemente High
and Saddleback College standout 8111
Kenney ravaged San Diego's defen~
for 245 yards and three touchdowns
1n shghtly more than o ne half, and
Kansas City closed its 1984 season
with its third straight victory.
The Chiefs finished at 8-8 under
second-year Coach John Mackov1c
(Pleue eee NJ'L/83)
tourh<lown pass from Neil Lomax to
Ro) (ircen with 6: 15 to play.
The 5 '-yard dn vc to set up
Moseley's winning kick included
PREP BASKETBALL •••
From Bl
passes of7 and 20 yards to Art Monk. ".reason" a~d.tt"'iall moot anyway,
who earlier set a s1n.sJe season NFL since the pamngsaren't going to be
record for receptions. breaking h d o h' · ~ C'harhe Hennigan 's 20-year-old mark c ange . net ing is ior 4'Urc, however, no one's fooltnganyonc.
of I 01 catches. There'sanother side to 11. however.
-as if they're no t already there.
Among those in the wings are 6-3
freshman Matt Allen, averaging over
30 points a game, and 6-8 sophomore
Sttve Barkley. The Washington victory also kept andalthough strong vs. strong 10 the
•• ahve the New York Giants' playoff first round doesn't make sense. it's 1--~~~~~~~~~.--~~~-'-h_o~pc_s_._T_h_e~G_1a_n_t_s_Wl~ll~1~0_1n~th_e~Lo~s .notnecessanly wion~
•The Shnne football game, absent
fora year because motorcycles ruined
the turf at the Rose Bowl just prior to
the Olympic Games, is scheduled for
July 20. The site?Tt's to be an-
nounccd. lfit doesn't return to the
Rose Bowl ifll be at the Lo Angeles
Coliseum. EXCELLENCE BY ELEGANZ
/• p.11nr 1•\t t •• I•, i.'.illt o1lwr1,..., 1 •rnp<Jri \\Ill
·t' 1 1 th,1• • ... 1 n 1, f rn lrt' l.ih .idvo11ll<1~1
f 1111-. 11111. •dtH I 1r, l lll1•• .ir11 I \1 >;J .I fl.'l c1 ·'
.i J ""''' 1• 1t1 11 1 rr J , 111f'.ro1ri.f111c \.ilt1(
lnlrodu<tory Off"' J<,·,wl11r Spe<io l
I f,•,11111 • -.111111l11r,J s 210.
[[1•<11111 Ddi11. J (jf) s 250.
ll1·111m I 1111• i'ill s 300.
CWPORT IOULtV'ARO •
• ---------• 7 .. , ,. • 77 16 -----------•
..
\
'
Who wants to see Mater Dc1playa
struggliJ"lg team and win I 00-40?
Not many would pay to watch
Mater Dci orOcean View scrimmage,
and that would be a better a u ractton
than some first round matches.
The real question is this: Why docs
anyone want sof\ opponents? You
d on't get better playing struggli na
pr<>Jrams. And the statistics piled up
against such teams arc mcaninalcss.
Struggling teams schedule other
struggJcrs, trying to improve their lot.
So. what's the beef? I don't know.
Just wondering ...
In o ther areas:
•Rumors of a Scrv1tc·FAliM9 mrtCbup In football in I 98!'aoesnit
appcarin the makint AJthouah
Edison'sth1rdgamc pponcnt-
Ba.nnina-is cau&ht in a schedule
squCCLC, 1t appears the Pilots will
~dJUSt 10 1t to kcc_p their date with
Edison, lcavinaScrvitc whh an
opening in week three.
··rrsanninacan accommodate us
wcfcclobliptcdtoconunucour '
~rics." say Ed1sqn Coacb 8111 Work-
mant who 1 0-3 a&flin t the Pilots.
.. We ~not 1n the habit of d~k1nt
people"
Workman says. howc~cr, a f uturc
scric with Scrv1te 1u vcrtdlstinct
po s1bil1t).
• pcalunaof lhc future-watch
out for E'tanc1a·, Ea11c, in ba ketball
•Two former Edison Hi&h football
stars from the 1981 edition have been
na.mcd eo<aptainsat Weber Statc-
M1ke P<?wcll and Craig Oumity.
Dum1t'Y a 6-2 245-pound center
a.nd Powell. a 6-0, 220..pound outside
h.nebacke.r, have been teammates
smc.c Junior All·Amencan football.
•Our congratulations to El MOO..
cna H iah football coach Bob Le tcr
whose team's 26-0 victory over '
Espcraau Hi&h m tbeCIFSouthem
Conf ere nee finals probably oon·
vmc.cd almost everyone that Espcra~\l.a was not the grutcst team
10 the htstoryofSouthcm California
football.
•Edison's R •ck Di Bernardo (foot·
blll)and MateT-Dci'1 Man
8ce\IWJ1Cr'l (hetkClbeJ!}ar-'t the
only areaproducu strUuina lhe1r cuff
at Not.re Dame. Add Fountain Val
Hi&h's Kathy 8aker(vollcyba.ll). A.la
frcshmanshchclpedthcln htoa
14.13 OV'1"8fl ~rd Willi 71'\JIJ 49
d1p1nd 12 solo blocb. •
• ~n the road from South Beed,
at Ith nots tale, another Fountain
Valley product wasaettina it done in
women's volleyball -Melodic Ho·
1mcr.
FoR THE RE coRo
N,L
NATIONAL CON,.ll•NC•
W"t
x•Sell Fren W &. T ~ct. ~,
15 I O y·lt•m• ,.,. 47S 10 • 0 '21 34' New Orle•n• 7 , 0 .,. ,,.
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x·Chic.110 Celm'el
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x•Wethl1>Gton ... ,
II s 0 ... 426 Dene a t • 0 ·'°° 217 NY Olenta ' 1 0 sum SI. L.oult 9 7 0 5'>42> Ptllledefoh•e ' , I -27t AMlltlC&N CONPllllNC8
•·~ver Wftt
13 ) 0 ,llJ Ul v S..111• 12 • 0 750 "' v·lleMlwt II 5 0 • w KenuaCltv • • 0 .500 )13 Sell Dleoo 7 ' 0 431 )t•
l ·PllttburOh e.ntr• ' 7 0 5'S .,
Cllldnnell I I 0 500 l39 Clevelena 5 II 0 31l 250 Houston J IJ 0 , .. 240
•·Ml•ml
.. .,
13 ' 147 .. s New E nol•na t 7 5'3 361 NY Jtlt 1 9
Buff•lo 2 l• o 125 250
•·dlnctled dM•lon lltle
v·cllnched wltd·etrd Dl•voH ~th
SuftcleV'I ktrff Pllttbllfoh 13, lte!Oen 7
N•w Enolend 16, lndl•n•PDll• 10
GrHll Bey JI, MlnllffOte 14
Cievtlend 27, Hou•ton 20
Tempe l•v 41, New York Jett 21
CbkaDO ~ Detroit 13
W•ihlnoton 29, St. Louis 27
Clnclnnetl 52, l uHelo 21
KenMs Cttv 42, s.n Dleoo 21
Allanl• 26, Ptlll•dtlPl'lle 10
T""""'1 0-
,A
2'11
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414
310
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310
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352
Dtltet et Mle ml (Chennel 7 11 6 o'Clock)
I ND ltlGULAll SRASON
N'L lllav .... (Al tlmel ~DTl
WILD CAllO GAMH
"Mlllnl """ o.le• S.tvnlily
lleldtn et Sffltlt, I D m SIMdev
New Y«k Glenta et Items. 12.lO Dm
H Dellis """ Mleml S4Mdlv
ltemi 11 Delles, ".30 a m
;ll•ldtrs et S.ente. I D m
CONFEllENCE SEMIFINALS
S.lvtdlly, Dec. 2'
lleldln or S..tlte 11 Mleml, 9.30 e .m
Chlceoo, Delles, °' New York Giants at
$en Fre ncl.co, I D.m.
~v.Dec..>O
Chlceoo or •em• et Wuhlnoton, ,..30 a.m. .
Plttsburoh Ii'! Denver. 1 o.m
CONl'llllNCI CHAMl'IONSHI~
Sllfldey, JM 6
Tlmet elld SltM TIA
AFC Stmlflnat WIMtrt
NFC Stmlflnal Winner•
SU~llt IOWL Sundev, Jen. llO
At~· An.
., p ,:Fe Chamt>lOfl v' NFC CN>me>lon, l
Steeten 13, Raiden 7
kert bY Oll•rtws Plt1M>ur0fl 3 0 0 IC>-13
R11den 0 0 0 7-7
lflnt ~W1ed
Plll-FG A~.on 26, 12~ ll~
hried
Pltt-Pollerd I rv" (AoOerlOll klcltl. 04
Ptlt-FG Anderton 37, US.
LA-0 Wllllams 2 oau from Plunk111 (BllV kick), 11 SO
A--G,°'6
~lt LA Fin l down1 21 14
llulhes·vtrd• 50· 197 20-57
Penll'Q v1rds 161 131
Rerurn vards 39 S4
Penn 13·23· I 14·33·7
S.Ck• a v l·J7 2·23
Punrs S·4l e-.a Fumolft·lost I· I l·O
Ptr>ellln ·vard• 7·67 10·67
Time of Pouenlon 37 43 n 11
lfldlvldutl Stttlslks
lllJSHtNG-Plttat>uroh, Abercrombie
2'·111, Poffard 19·71. Malone 3·1 L~•
Anfflft, Allen 13•3t, H1wklns S· 13. Wiiton
1·1, Pruitt l·(mlnus 21
PASSING-Pflllt>uf'Oh, Matone
13-23· I· 191. Lot Anoele1, Plunkett
9·20-H?J, Wit.on S· 13-1-45
llECElVINCi-f'lllsburoh. Steltworth
•·39, LIPP\ l·.31. Abefcroml>lt 7·n .
ErtC>eto 2·1l, Cvnnlnof'lem 1·21, ThOme>M)ft
1·6 Lot Anoeln, Christ.-4·31,
Bernwtff 3·52, 0 WIMMlm• 3·49, Allen 2·14.
Brandl 1·17, HtWklns 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOAl.$-:-PlllsburOh,
Andtnon 3t
13
20
14 ,.
33
2t 2'
24
0
16 ,, • J4
3A
21 16
2•
11
21
33
13
2'
23 ..
" • 14
17
21
45 ,.
7
NH LOGS
Rams (10.-6)
Dalles
Clevet•nd Plltsburoh
Clnclnnetl
NY Glenh
Alie"'• N-OflMns
Atltnte
Sen French Q)
St. Louli
Chlcaoo
Grten Bev
T emPt Bev
New Orlun'
H°"'ton S.n Frtn<;IKO
Raiden (ll·S)
Hou•ton
Grten Bev
Ka"' .. Cllv
San Dleoo Otnvar
*'"' Mlnnnote
Sen Oleoo
Denver
Clllceoo
*"" KenM• Cllv
tndlenePOt;s
Mleml
De troll
PllllburOfl
C ..... bowt reundUO
1&1 llrMI ~)
SATUllDAY, DIC. 1S
~ .... <•• ....... , Nevade Les Vtoa• )0, TOltdO 1)
....... lee ....
(et """'"""' .... , Air Fore. t), Vtrotnle TKh J
l'alOAV ............
(et SM '*"I
20
17
74
14
12
30
10
10
l3
13
13 31
l3 21
16
l9 ..
1
20
lO 16
14
20
37
(OI) 21
17
14
7
1
J.4
l
13
IYU (12·01 Yl. Mlctllo•n 16·Sl IC'henntl
11 ., 6 p"')
SATURDAY ,..,.. °'"" .... ,., °"""" ..... ,
Ototole (7-41 vt frtoflOt St1te (7-2-11
(C.._.. 6 al I D.m.} ,.
,~-.:=.,
TtMetHe IM •11 Vt MtNIMd 11-ll ICheMtl , 11 ,_,,
CMn'Y ....
(It °""91f)
Ml(flt,.n Stele 16•51 "' Arm'I 17-3-11
ICNnMI IJ el 10 un.I
WIOM .. OAY, DaC. » .. ,..... .... ............ ,
lowe 11·••11 "' TeKH 11•3 1) I J 11 s•wn
TMU.SOAV, M C. ti ~ .... ... Ma!NIHtl
Af1'tlfl... (7 )-1) "' AUOUr" 11·•1
ICl\enntf 11 11 10'~ fl m .... vect>
IA~OAY, DIC. 2t ........ , .......... ,
SMU ( .. 1) ¥'-Notre DllTll 17·•1 IClle"· ... s •• s p m,) ...... """"' .... (atM~MLI
Wisconsin (1·3·1) vs Kent~v 1•·>1
CCheMll 11 et 10 • m., dtlavecll
MONDAY, D•C. JI "Md! .....
lttA.._I Purdue <1•41 n. Vlrolnle IM·11 ICl'ltn•
Ml t •I noon) ............ , ......... ,
TCV t•'3> vt. Wttl Vlrolnl• (7·4)
CChenMI 13 et S p.m ,)
TUISOAY, JAN·. I , ..........
(•t Delel)
Houston (7·•> "" ~Ion Colfeoe 19·2) (CheMll t et 10;30 e.m.) , .........
(et Tll'l'IM. Atta.I UC~ <•->> v.. Mleml, Fte,. <•·•>. (Cllennel 4 el 10'.30 e.m.> .......
let Pe...._)
Ohio Sii i• (9'-2) .,.. use II·]) (Cllenntl
4 et t o,m.)
~ ..... let..._ OrtMMI uu ll •J..11 YI ... ..-. Cf·2> (ClleMel
7 e t H O 11.m.I °' ......... <•• IWaml) OtllehOnwl 1t~1-11 vs Welhlneton (10-11
ICheMel 4 11 $ pm.)
Htl\-....... ,ertt
SU.DA Y'S lllSUL TS mat" 11·•• 1Mt---.ci "'"""'-> ~-ST UCI. 7 lunonn Ol'lfelt (Otlv1rttl 22.IO IQ IO UO
lsmHI IC>elehouueve) ~ ) 40
Ster Snow (Ptdroze) ) to
Also rec:ed, Phi .. ,. K•PH. ~·ltuef\Jl, Our Olttt. AtnbasudOr llllv, ~I Pe•nu••· ll'IOUOtl ltooe. Court Ace. Tll'llt: 11t
saCOND llAC• •• f\,jftoflo ..
lllllo L CMcCtrrOfl) UO J IO ) 00
Mitt $11Ute IH1w1tvl 4 ao '"° Muiletl ••• (Orltoa) 7 IO "I'° riCH· Ma•lc .. foretnouont, Grend Stem tebv, lwMt .Jeenne, Ms Lltfltnlne toll, Merlllll Ellubtth, OYNMOMdt, Ca"· tornle Jut>llM, SW.tt1r SuMv. Time. 1:10 3/S.
$2 DAii. V OOUILI 17•)) Mid SIOS 00
THaD UCI. One Miit
lhdll\lwe 0"'1e (Shtmkr) 7.0 J.40 uo
Bey Shoft Drtw lVallfllutlel 3,00 2 40
Covnotron (Ort'"> s..oo
AltO rle*S SUUl!dYY, Sll'Yedre, T V
OI. 09'1Ctv Gii'(, HIOll NetunL
Tl"""= l:fl >IS. .. IXACTA (3•4) Peld m.oo
c ........ I.,..
M9N K.,_n,~M
400 mtClle'I reta'f-UC lrwl/le, lJf.
1,000 1r..--1 Hooe (It), 10:)00. '
hdli.t (UCI), lU'-"· I 'elven (UCll,
10At..J2 200 fr..-1 FHll'lff"on IUCI), 147.11, 7
Merttnei (Pl, 1·4Uti 3 Toilet CUCll,
15231.
50 k-1 l'uchJ. IUCll. 21.13, t
Tflomotol\ (~). n S01 , ~CllllOl.IMI (P ),
22.P . 200 1110 l'fttod-1 e ... 11t1. 2-ot -.. 2
Hvvrwn IUCU, t'0>.12, 3 Nie"°"°" <UCtl. 2-0Ul
200 ft-I Hooe (110), 11J0.14, 1 JCIMIOll
IP), 2112'7, 3. hrr"e (UCll, 2 o:l 17
100 fr..--FMltltnlon IUCI), 4U•, 2.
St•ln cucn. so"· > T"°"'"4fl <~>. s11t 200 beek-1 CeM (P), t-Gi SI, 2 Huvlltfl
(IJCll. 2 IU2, , Celltaf'1 !'), 1.IU6
500 1r ..... 1 s.101 en mM. 1 ~,..
(UCO, S'Oa.2'; ) GelYeon <UCl>.t t• 7$
20t 111r ... .-1 H~ (~ll. 2 lUt. 2. Htl'belln IUCll. 1-1) ti, 2. O'•Mll (lit),
2. 1'.17
400 Ir• r•-uc: IN-, l 1t 71.
l'OU.TH aAc•. One milt. UC WN 11, Cal ..... HtVWtn JI
PulJ.al• Csno.m.url 32.40 12.IO 7.20 400 mlelleY rtlav-1 UC lrvlnl. ):4,.4
Fleet Paul Allison l\l•ltnt.uelel 4.20 3.40 l,000 tr..-1 C-• (CSHI. IOM 02 t
Air litoCUI (McHeroue) 5.00 Prlldlard (UCll. IO'G "· J Marlin lU(I),
Alto flCld Cller Verdict, lrVl'l'mer, 10:52.tl.
·8Ml\ldol, Ml Wttl, DrMm toet, Pen· 100 fr~l FudK (UCI), I 46.IS, 2 cr.cto. SluclenttlOd't Left Carlton {CSH), ...... "· s. StWI (UCO. .... >"'--Time. 1:36 2JS. 1'51.07 '
------i-tw11~••4fit,.• +tlhPU-iOHl3~. ilt:--------lMH--~1 • .-,l"<•N•lfl"*''*'"'°" (\ICl),...iUJ.-2-
NBA
Wl!STlllN CONl'IRINC•
Pacific Dlvltlon
W L ~ct. GI
LA ~en 16 10 ,61S ·-Phoenix IS 11 .sn 1
Porllencf 13 12 .SlO 2'h
LA~ 13 14 Ml 3'h S..ttl• 12 13 4IO 3...,
Goldtft Stete I 17 .320 7lil
111114fw•t OM1*I Otilwer 15 9 .62S
Hou1ton IS 10 MO V)
Detlet 12 It 500 l
Sen Antonio 12 13 4'0 3112
Uta h 12 14 441 •
KanMJ Cllv 7 16 .304 7~
IUSTlllN CONl'IRINC•
Bolton
PtllladtlPtll•
We.tnlnoton
N-Jaf's.ev
N.w Yof'k
Detroit
Mltweukft Chkeoo
Atlenle
tndlene
Clevtlend
Alelllk DMslell
21 3 '75 tt 5 .m 2
I• 11 5'0 711)
10 14 417 11
11 16 .a7 "',,
Ctntrll DMUM 14 10 513
IS 11 ID 13 13 500
10 15 400 41">
6 " .250 I l 19 13' 10
SUftdllV's SG-.
LA Uken 109. WHhlnolon 101
LA ~ 103, Golden Sl11t IS MHweuk .. I IS, Ulth 102
Stellte 112, Denver 101
T..,._t', Gemn
No oames scnectultd
TUHdeV's Gamn
LA Liken 11 Atlenla
Boston et New York
New JerMv et Welhlnoton
Sen Antonio et Ctevet1ne1
Ut1h at tndl•n•
H°"'ton et Chkeoo
DeHas el MltweukH "'-11. at Kense$ Cllv
o.nvar et Golden Stet• Po<tlend •• S.•ttle
Lalren tOf, a... 101
WASHINGTON (ltl) -B1tlerd t ·12 0-0
16, Mlhorn IH 0-0 0, Rulend 7·9 10-IO 24,
Melone 9· 11 2·2 20, Gui Wlliema S-16 H
11, lloOinM>n S-12 0·0 10, F Johnson 0-S 0-0
0, Dev• 7· 10 6• 7 20, Bradltv 0-0 o-f> O Toteb '1·12 lt-23 101
LAL.AKERS llOf) -$clr19o$ 2·6 M S.
Worthy 12•20 2·3 26, Abdul·J•tioer 1·13 1-1
f7, E.John'°" 5·15 7·1 '7, Scott 7·1S 2·2 1'.
C_.. 2·S M · 5. McAdoo 6·9 0-0 12.
ltemols 1-1 M 2, Wiikes 3·6 l·l 9 Totels
46·90 11·20 109.
ktn by Over111n
WalhlnOton 2' 22 21 2'-10 I
LA Lalltrt 30 26 l l 22-109 F outed oui-non. llabounds-WHhlnoton
31 (Ruland IOI. Lo• Anoetts S4 (WO<'trW II)
Anltts-Welhlnolon 27 1w 1n1am1 61. Loa
Angeles 33 (JoMlOll 181 Tote I
1ou1s-WHl'llnoton 23, Lo• Anotltt 14
Tecn1"a1s-Los A"9elH llleoel defen ...
Atltndan« -.IS,070
OIOC*'' 103, Warriors lS
GOLDEN STATI (lSl -Johnaon 7· 13 6·7 20. Smith 4·10 2·4 10, Whltlheed 5·20
4·4 14, Conner 3·6 0-0 '· Flovd •·2 I H 17. Wiiton 0-2 O•O o. Tnfbffu• 3·7 1·2 7,
Atek•lnet 0-0 1·7 1, 8urtt 1·7 O·O •. Plummer 1-1 0-0 2, Br•ll 1·2 2·2 4 Totels
34·8' 17·?2 IS.
LA CLIPPEllS ( 1031 -8rld9emen t-17 0·0
Jt, Cage 3·7 2·3 a. Walton 3·9 0-0 6, Nl11on
9·19 M 19, Smith l ·lt S·6 71. Werrlcll 1-l
0-0 2. DoneldlOll 6·7 7·1 1', White M 2·2 4,
C•tcrllnos 0·1 2·2 2, GordOfl 2·3 0-0 4,
Murl>tly 0-3 0-0 o Totets '2·'9 19·23 103
SC.. by Ouertoen
GOiden Stell 21 17 77 20-IS
LACll-l 21 22 32 ~lOl
Fouled out-none. llt«IOund~ Slelt 49 (Smith I)), Loi Anoeles 62 (DonelCbon
"" Aulsts-Golclen Sl•t• .. ICOlll't( 11. LOI .Anoelff 2' (Nixon I I Tol•I
loult-Golden Stele 21, Lot Anotlff II
T ecMICah-Ooneldson.
Alllndence -6,162.
c .....
SUNDAY'S SCottlS
TOie«> '2. Aleorn SI. 70
Penn SI 92, Pnlle. T .. tlte n
How AP toe> 10 fared
No. I, Ge«oetown 17·0) beet Arntrlc1n
116·~. beet O.P1ut n -S7
No 2, O.P•ul 16· I) l>HI Penn Sl•I•
11·61, '°'' to Ge«oetown n ·S7 No 3, Ouk• (S-01 did not l>lt Y
No 4, SI John's 15· ll beel Oevld•on
n ·SI, lost lo Nl•O•rt 62·S9
No 5, Meme>hls St1•• (6·01 l>Ht Mlssl•· ,,pp1 S7-S2, OT, bul MlnlsslPOI Stele
6'·S9
No. 6. 1"1noll CIO· ll belt South Cerollnll
S1'tl 13·47
No. 7, SOUthern MelhOdhl 16-01 OHi tdel'IO at Oalle1 Mornlno Newt Claulc
to-71. beet Olllelle>ma Stitt 1?·65
No I, Wuninoton <•·01 did not olev No 9, North Ceroltne State (S-1) to11 to
0-911 Tedi 66·64
Ho 10, Svrecvsa IS·O) DHI St 8-wen
tun 11·S9. ·
No 11, Vlrolnle Tech 16· 1) Deal io.e
Stete to-SJ; tov 10 Tennnse. N ·7S
No. 12. Georol• Tec.h t•· II '°'' t0 °""919 60-Sf, !»Ml Notm Ctrelfne s i.11
66-64.
No 13, Hortn Caroline (S-01 l>Mt W111t
Forfft 7t-n
No 14, Loulivllle I•· 11 but Kentuckv
71·64 No IS, Ollte/IOme (6·2) llHI South·
•fflern, Texes 12 ... 76. bMl Puoet SolMd
101-11 No 16, lncllane (S-?I bNI Iowa Stet•
69·67: llffl W9'1tfll t<tnlUCk'r to-57, but
St Jolejlh's a1-.u, ·
No. 17. Atet>em•·l frmlnQllam <•·ti to••
to Cl!lclnn•ll 69·'7, bffl EHi TIMll ...
Stete n •S7
No. 1'1 KenMt 11• H Mel $0Ulh Cerollne
St11e 11·54, bNI Houston a'1•7S
No 1', l.oul1I-Sltlt (-·II dl4 !'IOI ...... ' ' No. 10, Mlcfllten (6•0) bNI Wnlefn
MICllH" A·.ft, beet lHtern Mlchloen .,.,,
l'll'TH ltACI. One milt, Al>le CCSHI, 22.16. 3 Mull>t!Y CCSHI, n ..
Auntie hll'I' (McCerron> 4 oo 2 60 2.20 200 Ind. mtc1.-1 Huvnen IUCll, 2·ou1, Mlmt Ilk" IMcGurnl 3 20 7.60 2. teltev (UCI), 2117 lS: 3. HUrllltn IUCll.
SIH1no LOOM (Dtlehousseval 3.20 7!'20.90. Alto reuct. How Ye Doon, Min Et>onv. 100 flV-1. Ber,_,• (UCI), 53.71, 2
AHlrmetlvelv, tnten,lve Care. Cerlton (C$H), 5Ul; 3 l•llnlln (UCO. Time: 1:37 4/S. S6 2'. u •XACTA 13·7) oeld sn.so. 100 trw-1. FMtllllnton (UCI), 41.11; 2.
SUlTH •ACI.' fu!'Jonos. . Murpny (CSH), 49.n . 3. Stien (UCll, fOOS.
Tne floor~ Fur (~rn} I~ uo .$.20 500 fr-1. C•twr• (C$H), UUD; 2
lroedwey Wonder (Stev-1 17.to 7AIJ Prlldlefd (UCI), S<OS.24) a hdlltl (UCI), S:11.7J. Pe1"11M SUll (HeWlty) 7.00 100 ll<M•t-1 Htrbll" (UCI), liOo.t•: 1 "'"° rlCld. Pro Bowllf, ltoval Olympie, Mu<fltlY CCSH), 1:02 1'; 3 N~-(UCI), Alne1lno Coureoe. Celeslot1e, July 8eeu. l:OUO.
TllM': 1:10 2/S. 400 ll'H rtlev-1 UCI, ):IS.If
U IXACTA 11-SI oeld MS),00. One meter dMno-1 Grev CUCI), 317 90,
Sl\llNTH RACI. One mite. 2. s.trest (CSH). 1'2.IO; 3 Krutelk IUCt,,
I Bet OtllMlt IMcHarouel •.to 2,60 2 .a 16615
Lltfllln {V11tnrutle) UO UO Thr" meter dlvlno-1 Grev IUCI),
Fettlloroe Mariner (St9intr) 4 00 40I 00; 2 Seorfft ICSH), 192 IO. J 1C.rute1k
Alto receo· Snadttlmt. Prometneu1 IUCll. 166 25
Bound. Br-erv aov
Time· 2: 16 115
U IXACTA (1·2) Daiei '2S.OO.
$2 l'1Q( SfX (l/t ·3·.-J+t l3171 oeld
t9M4.00 with 15 wlnnlno tickets lab
honn ) n PICK SIX conMlletlon Dald
•26100 with SSl wlnnlnt tldl•li lllvt
l'lortel)
llGHTH ll&C•. I 1116 miles.
Stte>lllln't Odvuv IMoltl 24 40 11.IO 9 to
Finl Norman <~ar> 16.00 t 1.00
ll19rtt Con (l.ltne/IG4) 13.60
Alto receo: T1nk's Protoect, S.vw11ker,
• lfneoe Of Gr .. tntts, Fren'• Vetentlne,
Outstandlnolv. Matthew T Perller, l rKOll$
Cllllroe, Centrft Premier. Bold Smoocner, Jull The F1Ctl.
Time. 1:43 21S.
SS IXACT& (1·1) oald 1161.50.
NINTH aACI. One ml ...
,\ Le Clcl <Lo1on> · 27.40 6.60 3.60
Ella Bravfft Song (McC1rronl 2.60 2.20
Sllck•ll• (Hawley) 3.20
Time· 1:35 2/S,
$S EXACTA (1-S) pefd on so.
Attendenc•· 34.37'1.
PGA Teem Geff.tewNment
(at hal .. -. Ae.)
Hanc~·Slftck,IS0,000 62-'2·6J·6t-2S.S
Hetlberg·Hocfl,S2',700 64·63-6'·6S-1S6
Polll·Powera,t1'.300 61·6J-64·1C>-2.5t
HtvH·Tewttl,'11,633.34 66-'1-6S-67-2Sf
Flovd·Sutton,111,633 l3 61·~-67·66-25'
Fu o·Woocl.511,633 33 '2·61·'8·61-259
Ntlfof'd·ZOkoU7,72S . AS-64·65-U-260
Eldef·PHIU7.ns 64-43-6'·'5-260
Adam•·Nuekoll,,S5.IOO 61·60-'7·66--261
Mudd·N~,tj,tOO 6$-63·66·61-261
J•co«nen·Weft>rlno,M,6.SO 63·61-63·6t-242
llHn·Norman,SJ,467 SO 6S·67-6S-66-26J
Kratzart·Rodr111.S3,462 SO 64·67·61·6~263
Nlcnotell•·Norra.SJ.462.SO 62·67·67·67-263
Miiier ·Nlckleut, 13,462.SO 62·6'·69·66-263 Mehaffey· Thmosn, •2,'50 4'·6S·65·6t-264
Ko>tls·Sultlven,S2,4SO 65·66·69·6S-24S
Nekllllm•·Slndetar ,s2.•SO 62·66·70-67-765
Denl·llolt.U ,000 67·64·68·67-266
Cochre n· Landrum. '2 ,000 68·62·'8·61-266
Brooks·Fora.m.1n,S2,000 65·6'·69-66-26'
Thoroe· Trevlno,11,no 64·67·67·69-167
Wadkins ·Wedkln•. I I ,720 6S-66-66·7C>-2'7
Murl>tlv·RelcU l,720 66·'5·61-69-2'7 COl.btrl ·Slmon,,11 ,S20 66·6S·68·69-761
Gerndlf·Maltblt,S l,520 63·66·61·71-?61
1nm•n·Rachel1,1 l,l20 65·'7·61·69-269
COO<lv·Douolu,1 l,)20 65·66·69·69-269
Llnd .. v·McCutlooh.S l .320 69·63·67·7C>-269
PGA tour CIUafffVlnt
(It Llt Quinta) l'ourth round scortt
Pnll Blackmar
Steve Pate
P•ut A1inger Tom Sleclimenn
Steven Bowman
Rooert Wrenn
Mark Wiebe
JoM DeforHI
BollllOl'lr
Chris Pe<rv
Jeff Hert
llM Buttner
8rad Fel>el
MlllitHulw t
Stuer! Smith
Steven Jones
Jav OetslllQ
BIN leroln BIH l rltton
Mick Soll Tom Lenmen
Ernie Gonia1e1 W1vneGredv
Skffltf' Heath
Ttrrv Sn<>dor1u
Bin Gleuon
Steven LltOltr
R lck Dele>os
JoM Hamerlk
Kennv Kno•
Ron Commons
JHn·Lol.lh L•merr•
Tim Conltv
Oevld Thor•
G« don JOflnM>n
JeftGtumen
Griff Twloos KenG,_,
Boll Twev
1<11111 Perker
Mike Ftf'Ollto11 tvenSmlth
Jeff Mltcllell
LlndV Mitter
OevtO.vb
Tom Woodard
Alex Her111r
WOO<tv Blldlburn
JOMSttflJ.
Ger v PIMf'l\t
s.na... uun
Wi<fllte
LeJ.V ... •
Tecorne
o.119• IC.-..OIY
•t-n-1G-66--211 67-69·61·7-271
69·71·69·7C>-279 n· 10-69-69-?tO
61·69-7)-7~
71·n·7H9-2'2
10-n·n·66-?11
10-12-10-11-m
71·70-72·~
n-10-41-»-m
73·70-67-7-114
11-10-n· 11-1'4
67·69·72·7~
6'·n ·n -1e>-n. 70-7•~69·71-2M
n ·69·72·71-2'4
67·72·n ·74-2'S
70·7S·70·7C>-2'S 71·70-7H'3-11S
70·72·71 ·7?-71S
n·71·17·7C>-21S
74·76·61·61-115
73·69·72·71-215
7Hl-10·71-21S
71-10-77·7)-216
7H7·70·n-116
1•·11-11 ·70-2'6
74·73·71 ·6t-216
73-73·n ·61-?M
73·71-72·7C>-716
69·75·10-73-197
n -74·69-n-2'7
71 •61·61·7>--2'7
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Otenge Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday. December 17. 11M •
Giants need
Miami victory
to wln exacta
New York has been
roottn for different
teams all weekend
By HAL 80Clt .,....,....,...,
Like some medieval character coo ..
victed of a heinous crime apinst the
state, the New York Giants rcmatn
strapped to the Nauo naJ Football
leaJUC playoff' f'Kk, sun alive. still
sqummng.
As uncomfortable as their con·
d1t1on 1s. they remain 10 much bcner
shape than the St. Lou1' Cardinal •
who already have fallen 1mo the
moat. •
They arc not as well off. however,
as the Los An~eles Rams. swe~~~
phiyoffs by1c han~
from Washingon.
Quaint torture, this uc-breakma
business.
Sance los1na to St. Louis a week ago,
the Giants have been reduced to
rooting for others to help them pm a ~pot in Pete Rozelle's postseason
JOUSt.
First, they cheered for Los Anieles
to beat San Francisco Fnday ruibt.
Had the Rams won, tt would have
allowed New York to control its own
destiny, to cam a playoff spot on its
own by beatJng New Orleans on
Saturday.
The 49ers had their own 1ncenuvc.
though, seeking to beco~ the first
NFL team to wm IS regular season
games. And that was enough to propel
them past LA. 19-16.
That loss depnved the Rams, at
least temporarily, of an NFC wild
card berth and chm mated one of the
three rou1cs t hey had to the playoffs.
Now, like the Giants, they were
reduced to root inf for others -either
Washington agamst St. Louis on
Sunday or Miami against Dallas on
Monday night.
The Rams' loss al&<> rendered the
Giants' game the next day against the
Saints meanin&lcss. which was usct·
ly how New York played 1t, losing a
listless 1 ()..3 contest.
The best explanation for the
Giants' woeful pcrfonnanct against
New Orleans is that the)' wen!
conserving theu energy for the play·
off push on telev1s1on unday and
Monday.
On Sunday. they needed a Wash-
inaton victory to ehminatc St. Louis
and &tay in the dlue. Like the 49en.
the RedWns had incentive. A win
would dtlwCT the NFC Ease Litle aad
avoid next weekeod's Wi.ld<..d
shootout. providina tbe-rn inllad
wt th a week of tut.
So Wu.Junaioo dthvm:d and ibe
dramatic 29·27 win not only ktpt c.bc
G1anu alive, but put LA in tbc
pla)'off's as well.
Tonta,ht, New Yor'k needs a Mwn1
victory over Dallas to complete 1ts
weekend eucta, eliminate the Cow-
boys and rwl down the othCT NF
wt.Id card.
The Giants' Sllu.ataon Sunday wa
1ron1c.. 11ven the Iona. bttter nvalty
between New York and the Redtk.i.M.
But the tie-break formula someumes
fo~s strange. new alliances.
Had the Cardtnal won Sunday,
they would have been fiBt ~
finishers for only the third time in 2S
years in St Louts. By losina. they
instead became alscrrus, sent home
early.
The Cardmal season came down to
o ne last, desperate drive, 87 tec0ods
with the ball after Mark Moseley bad
11ven WashinJlOD the lead with a 37-
yard field goal.
Hurrying his team down the field.
quarterback Nell Lomax., wbo com-
pleted 37 of 46 passes for 468 )'al1k,
took SL Louu lO t.bc Redskins' lJ.
With the C.arcb rushina to beat the
clock. Net! O'Dooogbue ltned up fora
SO.yard field goal. no cinch in the bc$t
of c1rcomstances.
"I didn't even know when he wa~
ioing to snap the ball," O'DonOlhue
said. "It was a rush p:tting out there
Wlth nine seconds left. I didn•t c-ven
know 1fthey were set."
With RFK Stadium's l40th con.-
secut1ve sellout crowd coontin1 off
the final seconds, O'DooO&hue pvc 11
his best shot but the ball booked left
and the Cardinal season was over.
O'Donoghuc took the failuTC
philosophically, in the trad.itlon of the
place kicking fraternity. ··1 l°t a aood
hck on it. but 1l was wide, be said
··You w1sb you had it over. but that's
the way 11 goes ...
LA. of co~. benefined unmed1-
atcl) fro m Washington's win. And
the Gtants were happy too, allowed to
rem1m in the rack for one mo~ day.
at least.
NFL.ROUNDUP •••
From 82
and placed founh m the rugged ~FC
West d ivmon. behind playoff-bound
Seattle. Denver and the lo'i Angeles
Raiders. They beat the Broncos and
Scahawks m the two ~ed..ends
preceding Sunda~ ·$ finale
Bengals 5%, BUl1 U : .\t C"1ncinna11.
Ken Anderson fired three first-half
touchdown passes, one of them to
depanmg receiver C'ns C'olhns"'onh.
as Cincrnnatt buned Buffalo.
The ~ngals' easiest v1ctof} of the
season raised their o rd to 8-8. but
Cincinnati failed to m ·e the A FC
playoffs when Pittsburgh d he
Los .\ngeles Raiders Later 1n the )
Bears 30, Lions 13: .\t Pontiac.
Mrch .. agmgGreg Landr), pla)tngh1s
first game m almost thrtt ~ears.
passed for one touchdown and ran for
another while the Chicago def en~ set
a season re<:ord for sacks as the ~ar$
beat bedraggled Detroit
Landi'\<. who will tum 38 on
Tuesda): completed 11 of ~O pas~s
for 199 yards with three 1ntercepuon~
against the Lions, a team he pla)ed on
for I I ~cars before being traded a~a)
and later JUmpmg to the Un11ed
tatcs Football League
Buccaneers U . Jets %1 : ~t Tampa,
Stev;; Ddk1¥ iU)~U tlucc tuu'-h·
down passes and James Wilder ran
for I 03 yards and two T~ as Tampa
Ba) gave rt'tanng Coach John Ml Ka\
a fare"ell gift 1n the form 11la \lllor-
over New Yor~
Mc Ka'. "ho .rnnoumed hie, res"
nation six "eeks ago fin..,hc-d hi~
m ne-year reign as the onl) head rnach
m the cl ub·s h1ston "1th a 4 5-~ I· I
rC"Cord.1ncludanga~IO mark rn I~ 4
The Jets. lo~rs of se' en ot their 11)1
eight gam~ aftt'r a 6-:? \tan. fimsh~
'7.Q
Dc8e11-~ho completed n of 34
passes for 280 yards. tossed touch·
down passes of 3 .and 18 yards to Jem. &II •
BroW11s 17. Olten U : .\t Houston
Cle\ eland rookie Earnest 8\ nC'r had
his b•wst da~ as a pro with i88 yards
rushing and touchdown runs of2 and
15 )ards to lead the Browns to a
'1ctol) 0 ' t'r Houston.
Byner bolted 15 ~ards for his
S«ond touchdown in the third quar·
ter and had a 54-yard run m the fourth
quaner to s.tt up a 29-yard field ioal
b' Mau Bahr and put down a late
Houston rall)
Patriots 11, Colts 10: .\t Foxboro
\iass . Craig James rushed for a ca~r-h1gh 138 yards and Ton)
Franklin kicked three field goals as
"'e°"' EnsJand held on for a VlClOry
oHr lnd1anapohs
The Patnots t'nded their season m
\CC'Ond pla~ m the 4.mencan Con-
ference East but out of the playoffs
wtth a 9. 7 record. The Colts. playing
their first game under mtmm head
coach Hal Hunter after Frank Kush
quit Thursday, finished at 4-12 and 1n
founh place in tht' d1v1s1on.
P1cllers 31, Vlkt111s 14: At Mrn·
neapohs. Lynn Dicke; :hre-..\.' for two
touchdo"'ns and dived m for another
and C'ornerbeck Mark Lee ~t up
~ore~ "1th an 1ntt"rccpt1on and
fumble re<'O\C'f"t as Green Bav routed
\fmncsota in 'thC' ~ason~nder for
both cl ub.,
The Pad.en. the hottest team m the
"FL dunng the S«Ond halt of the
\Ca'°n. ~on seven of their last elJht
a,ame<, to fi01'lh 8-8. That was good
enough for S«ond plaC't' m the
National C'onfrrence Central
Ot\ 1s1on bcbmd the Ch1c~o Bears.
RAIDERS LOSE, 13-7. • •
From Bl
do 1s gear up lor nt''t wed. and pla)'
better than "'C' pla)cd toda) "
Los ~ngelc'l managed onl)' I 8
yi'rds an total otTenM" to 36. for
P1ttsbur&h. ThC' Ratd('r\' onh touch-
do~ n camr on a ~-\ard p3' from
Plunkt'tt to Dok1c \\ 1lham' "'th' 10
left to pla).
Tht Raider.. had a chanct to wm.
actuna the ball back short!} later
when ahe} forced Pittsbura.h to punt.
but hell \po1lcd their final 1 hot
TM tcclcrs took their 13-0 lcadoo
a 26-> rd field goal h)' Gal) .i\nckrson
1• the first quarter. a I ·>•rd touch-
down run b Frank Pollard on tht
fi~t pla) of the fourth pcnoJ. and a
'7-rard f~ld pl b) .\ndt"non "uh
S 35 rtma1n1na-
.. , ean't 1('-!I ~ hov. proud I am of
our football team," \aid Pitt.sburah
Coach Chuck oil, v.hosc dub bad
lost thrtt oft la t fhC' pme bcfi rt
unday to ~Plrdlle 11 playoff
hopes. .. We lncw wt had a Job to do,
had OW' to the ""'Ill
··rm a proUd ofth1 football \tam
a an)' 1t.tm l'\e been around beau
tht) huns in lhttt v.hen than "'~"
tt>u&h anJ pla)~d l(>Od footba I ··
l..t'\ to the P\Ult>llrah olTellw wa'
Walter btl"CTOmbit, who N htd for
111 ~-.nbon ~ me and"'•· on tht
rCC'C1\'1n& end ot a swing J>3.,'i\ from
quanerback Mar._ Malone that
ptned S9 yard' to tnc: Lo'i An&cle1 I ·
yard hne. Pollard 'iC'Ored hLS touch·
do"'n on thC' nc't pla)
.. Cons1dcnng the nrcumstantts
this ts the mbst sat1sf) ing game of my
career:· Abt'~romb1e said "We had
to run the ban on them to open up our
passin.a auack.
"A lot of pcopk ~Tote us off. but
thafs nothma unuo;ual .\nr,one can
be beaten on any p~ •
Plunlett play~ the sttond half 1n
rthef of Lo A.natles start« Marc
\\11 n and completed ni ne of .h15 20
pa for 1 H yards. W1bon ~-. .. JUst
fivt' of I.' for • )vch.
Shell" first uucrcep&.io(l came in
th( Pimhu end zont w1th 4:42
rema1n1na Ott halfume The •
Ra1de" • re at the tttlcn. 20.yard
hnc -. htn W11 n tned to hit \\r ll
hams buuhc •auhon and hell pack~ 1t off. .
The Ra1~n 1 t to tht "Pin.shuflh
~l·)·ard line hue 1n the third quancr.
but on a f<lUf1h nd-one '*>'· runn1na Ma A.lien wa Mid to no
pin Tht tttlt~ then mond 79
)afd an n ... c pll)\ for their only
touchdo•1'
Tax reform has
caused an air
of uncertainty
At a time when economic recovery
ts beginning to slow! the mood hurts
By JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK Treasury
proposals for sweeping tax changes
have had two immediate results, only
one of which was sought by the
Rellgan administration.
The desil'ed effect is that the
proposals have opened up discussion
of tax reform, a subject that for years
was a voided as too hot to handle even
by those who felt the system was
distorted, ex ploited and riddled by
inequities.
Now, every big accounting firm.
umversity economics department
and 1,0()1 special interest groups are
declaiming on the subject -making
speeches, sending instant analyses to
clients. preparing criticisms. offering
jmprovements.
The other impact is a decidedly
unwelcome one: It has created further
uncertainty at the very time the
economy is going through a troubling
period. Experience has shown that
uncertainty inevitably postpones de-
cisions.
The most significant of such de-
cisions involve investments -in
stocks, bonds, real estate projects.
second homes, plant and equipment
and other areas where taxes might be
changed and con seq ucnces can not yet
be measured.
Investments in some of these areas
were expected to help the economy
regain strength in 1985 after ns late-
ycar faintine spell. but now the
likelihood exists that delays Wlll take
place. at least until matters become
more clear.
Even some of the discussions that
were sought b> the administrauon are
rife with questions rather than
answers. as indicated by a recent
letter to members of the National
Small Business Association, which
calls itself .. The voice of small
business."
"Is the plan equitable for in-
corporated business?" the NSBA
asked members.
It noted that all corporations would
be asked to pay a flat rate of33 percent
on taxable income, thus negating a
20-year tight by the organization to
obtain a graduated tax-rate structure,
which it achieved just a decade ago.
"Should we now abandon this
position in favor of the 33 percent
rate?" 1t asks.
It seems unlikely that small busi-
nesses will suppon such a move, in
view of a quick analysis of the
proposal made by the NSBA.
That analyses found that small
companies -those with taxable
income of less than $100,000 -
would have their taxes increased by
120 percent in the lowest bracket to 28
peTcent in the SI 00.000 bracket.
But the largest businesses, it states,
would realize a 28 percent decrease in
their tax rate.
Such evidence would seem to ·
dictate a negative response from
small-business people, but so many
other factors conceivably could have
an impact on taxes the association
refrained from issuing a verdict.
Instead, it asked for opinions.
While some uncertainty is bound
to gi ve way within weeks as the
proposals are assessed, some uncer-
tainty is bound to survive throughout
what 1s expected to be a prolonged
congressional debate.
But there is one near-cenaintV'
already. Developers of tax·shelte·r
schemes. especially those 10volved
wtth real estate, alread) know that
whatever tax bill is passed will give
top priority to taking the shelter out of
tax shelters.
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, Bl
DaYid Foland. n.bt, coet reduction m&Da41er of the
Aeroepace Bydraufic• DIYialon of Parker Bannllln Corp. of
IrYine recelvea a. plaque and a $500 award u ftnt place
winner lo the lotemational papen compedtio__o apon80red
by the National Aaeoclatfon of 8UUeation Syateam.
Foland, received tbe award from Edmund E. Elli.a, NASS
prealdent and coet reduction manaier for Pratt A WbJtney
Aircraft lo Weat Palm Beach, Fla.
Irvine man honored
for his papers entry
emment Products Div1s1on, West
Palm Beach. Fla.
Foland'Si winning paper provided a
detailed description of how to com-
putenze employee suggestion sys-
tems.
N<\SS is a non-profit association of
' BUSINESS NOTE S
Anderson Communications has
LA account for fast-food chain
Anderson Communications Co .. Newport Beach, has been ~lected to
direct a public relations program for the Los AnJeles Zone of Jack in the Bo1.
The Anderson agency will handle pubhc relation~ and coordinate
promotional activities for all 20~ of t~e ~ha1n's res~urants tn the Greater ~s
Angeles area. The agency also will ass1st in the opening of a number of J.ack a.n
the Box restaurants next year, and will be involved in the introductton of
several new food items.
Bank selects new PR fl1;m
Joe R. Saucedo, preside~t 9f Qu~n City ~k. Long Beach, bas'
announced the selection of Ervin Advertmng and Design, Inc., to handle tbe
bank's marketing and advertising. ~.
The Seal Beach agency wilJ be responsi ble for communi~tion e~orts from
development of campaign strategy to production of media adverusements,
collateral materials and customer newsletters.
Zigner lands Llakletter accoa.nt
Gloria Zigner & Associates, Newport Beach, has been named public
relations counsel for LinkJetter Properties. based in Cos1a. MCA. Ac.count
manager Judy Lynes will supervise publicity and promotional efforts for
Linlcletter Mobile Storage, based in Long Beach, and LinkJener's self-stor-.e
division with locations throughout Orange County.
Techreatonls moves to NB
Techreations. a fast-growing computer data processing services and
software development company, has moved its offices from the Santa Ana-
Tustin area to Newport Center tn Newport Beach.
The company relocated to Civic Plaza, an Irvine Company-owned office
complex adjacent to the Newport Harbor An Museum. Broker Joe Pierik with
lllifThorn & Co, Newport Beach, handled the lease transaction.
"Newport C.enter is recognized as Orange County's pTCmiere business
district, and we wanted our company to be associated with that reputation,"
said Tcchrcations' president, Tom Arranaga.
HB flrm receives award
Tierra Verde Landscape, lnc .. a Huntington Beach-based landscape
main tenance firm, was awarded an achievement award at the 29th annual
Trophy Awards competition, sponsored by the California Landscape
Contractors Association. Tierra Verde's achievement award was one of 50 awards present~d based
on quality of workmanship, co nstruction detail, quality landscape materials
and adherence to design.
Over 137 projects were entered in the statewide competition that
recognizes the work of professional landscape contractors in California.
Tierra Verde owner-operator Allen Chariton accepted the award at the
annual CLCA Convention, held in lxtapa. Mexico.
David Foland, a resident of Laguna
Hills, and cost reduction manaser of
the Aerospace Hydraulics Division of
Parker Hannifin Corp., Irvine, was
honored as first place winneT in the
international papers competition by
the National Association of Sugges-
ti on Systems at the group's recent
annual conference in Orlando, Fla.
Presenting Foland with a plaque
and a $500 award at the conference
was Edmund E. Ellis, NASS president
and cost reduction manager for Pratt
& Whitmey Aircraft Group's Gov-
administrators of suggestion sy~tems,.... --::1~··· Its current membership of approx-•
imately 800 firms and organizations.
many of them Fortune 500 com-
panies, represents close to 12 million
employees.
Ohio group predicts state laws
will put end to· hostile takeovers
Michele d 'Arlin nanies
president of the HBC
Michele d' Arlin of Ponderosa Homes has been in~lled as president of the
Home &ildera Council, the educational arm 'of the Bllildlng l1td111try
Association. Eric Sbleld of Finl American Tille is first vice president, Garry
Tarquinio of Minion Viejo Co. is second vice president and Julie Edwards of
Lifescape1, lnc. and Denoia Sundslorm of the Carma-Sandling Group are
treasurer and secretary, respectively. . . . '
Advocates say new generation of innovative
laws will guarantee shareholder democracy ----
Corporate raiders bent on hostile
takeovers to the disadvantage of
stockholders of pubhcl) held com-
panies may no longer be able to nde
roughshod over the entrepreneucs
who founded these compa01es and
the thousands of local stockholder-;
who invest in them.
"There is a neV; generauon of
1nnovat1 ve state laws that guarante1:
shareholder democraC)." said Leigh
Trevor. one of the drafters of Ohw's
takeover law and a partner 10 the
Cleveland-based law firm of Jones.
Day. Reavis & Pbgue "These lav.s go
a long way 10 stopptng the plundering
of corporate assets. Several states
have adopted these laws. and I e'pcct
that many others will be doing so
soon."
Trevor and a numhcr nt other
takeover law speciahst\ al(,o ad\ ncate
federal leg1slat1 on 10 curb dOU\t' i:
tactics in hostile corporate takco.,.cr~
The first const1lullonal test ofthc'>c
new state laws 1ust occurred in
Minnesota. according to Erwin N.
Griswold. a former Harvard Law
School dean. a former Solicitor
General of the United States, and a
Jones. Day partner. Griswold, Trevor
and John W. Edwards II were among
the Jones. Da} attorneys who helped
defend the const1tut1onalitv of the
\iinnesota Jaw. -
The Minnesota statute applies only
when at least 20 percent of the ta rget
company's stock 1s owned by Minne-
~ota residents _jnd the target has
'iubstantial assets 1n the state, said
T re' or Any suspension of a tender
offer applies onl) to Minnesota
residents.
The Minnesota Act also requires
that the bidding company give
Minnesota stockholders an analysi~
of the effects that a takeover will ha vc
on the target company's operations.
it-. 1:mrlo~ees. suppliers and cu-;.
aomc:r!>. and the tommun1t1cs 1n
v.h1ch 11 operates.
Griswold said: .. In a decision that
Everybody'~ tcdk.irlg about thl' AT&-T
~ 1rs 2·~ timl>)< fa . .,l<·r than the 1 RM · PC. And ha~ a hi$(h•·r n•-.ol11lion ~<'t'f.•<•n
for betwr grnphw~.
..
Set> what all tht' l':witۥmf'nt ii' about.
'T'alk to your AT&T lnfurmnt 11 ms, ~t,'ml'
Account Ex""uthf', vi~Jt tHl auth;•rized
AT&T PohK>nal C'omµutt•t' d1•alt•1·. ur
eall l·R00·247 l212.
ATltT lnfnrmntion 8yMt.em-..
Whe11 you\·(> JfOl to be ri$lht.
...
ATa.T
Wlll play a maJOr role rn the continu-
ing debate about regulation of tender
offers, the United States Court of
Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. on
Nov 29. 1984. upheld the constitu-
tionality ofa recently enacted Minne-
sota statute regulating corJ)orate
takeovers."
The coun's decision resulted from
a lawsuit involving a hostile takeover
attempt of the St. Paul-based Conwed
Corp. by Cardiff Acquisitions Inc. of
California. an affiliate of Leucadia
National Corp.
The court affirmed that the states
have a significant role to play in the
tender offer process," said Griswold.
"Since the United States Supreme
Court (in Edgar vs. MITE Corp.)
struck down lllino1s· Business
Takeover Act 10 1982, both federal
and state courts have invalidated
similar state statutes on at least half a
dozen occasions."
The l 1.S. Supreme Co.urt ruJed that
the llhno1s Act was unconstitutional
because It allowed Illinois officials to
block a tender offer m other states,
nOlJUSI IO lll1no1s.
The Supreme Coun said: "While
protecting local investors is plainly a
legitimate state objective, the state
has no legitimate interest in protect-
10g nonresident shareholders. Insofar
as the Illinois law burdens out·of-
state transactions, there is nothing to
be weighed in the balance to sustain
the law." The Illinois Act was an
undue burden on interstate com-
merce, the coun ~id.
Griswold said: "Several states in-
cluding Ohio, Mmnesota, Wisconsin,
Pennyslvama, and Maryland have
passed takeover legislation in an
effon to comply with the Supreme
\oun's dec1sion in MITE. The
Minnesota statute requires that a
tender offcror make an economic
impact disclosure and authonzes the
Minnesota commissioner of com-
merce to suspend an offer in Minne-
sota if the disclosures are inadequate.
"The E1gh1h Circuit's decision.
which is the first federal court of
appeals case addressing the constitu-
tionality of a post-MITE statute. will
likely provide sigifica nt impetus to
other state takeover legislation."
Trevor contends that any tender
offer legislation enacted by the 99th
Congress should:
--Require that no tender offer
governed by the Williams Act be
consu mmated until it has been ap-
proved by the requisite vote of th e
stockholders of both bidder and
target. What co nsti tu tes the "requi-
site vote" would be left to the
corporate law of the relevant St.ate of
incorporation.
--Extend the minimum offering
penod under the Williams Act from
the present 20 business days to a
period sufficient for orderly co mple-
tion of the stockholder votes. A
period of 60 business days is sug-
gested for this purpose.
-Require bidders to disclose the
anticipated economic effects of a
tender offer. on themselves as well as
on targets.
"I believe that, 1n a lime of intense
and increasing competitive pressures,
stockholders on both sides should be
entitled to know what will be left of
their enterprises when the tender
offer is o\ler." said Trevor.
"There is no question in my mind
that this new geneTation of takeover
laws provides a means of _proteting
stockholders and lessening the impct
of hostile takeovers on the state," said
Trevor. "As a general matter. hostile
takeovers have hurt industrial
Ameriql, which is also being battered
by foreign cb"1petition. As a resuJt of
hostile takeovers. corporate head-
quarters have been moved from
states like Ohio. Factories have been
closed and jobs lost. These new state
laws do not stop hostile takeovers,
but they add a vital dimension of
shareholder protection and overall
fairness to the process."
I-Daniel has NartlrSlope}a ,
I U-V:;.
Atlantic Richfield Co. bas awarded a $20 mill ion contract for the
manufacture of moduJar faciHtics for its Usbumc field development on
Alaska's North Slope to Danlcl lnicm\u ional Corp, ofOrcenvitle, S.C.
Daniel is a $ubsjdiary of the Fluor Corp. •
This second phase of the Lisbumc manufacturinaproject will take place at
a 23~acrc site at the port of Ponland's Swan Island, bqinn1na in April I 98S and
continumg through J unc 1986. to meet that t ummtf's sea lift barct schedolc10
the Nonh Slope.
Tite $20 mrlhon contract is part of a $30 million second phase wh ich also
includes SI 0 million for local equipment rental and construction materials.
This phase of the project is for the manufac;turina of six crude oil and natural
aas-l)roduetng modules •
Daniel lntemational ts a worldwide eniincenn1. construction and
maintt'n&ncc company.
· Laguna Beach resident Bob Thomas has been appointed regional director
and president of Century %1 of tbe Pacific, based in Anaheim. Thomas joined
Century 21 in 1978 as vice president of in vestment services, after founding and
servi ng as president of Robert L. Thomas & A11oclates, h e. in Atlanta.
Thomas is also an instructor for the Realtors National Marketing IDtdtate.
• • • • Jobn Solberg has been appointed area sales director for the central region
of military-aerospace division of Fountain Valley-based ITT Ca.uoa. Solberg
D'ARLIN TRAXLE R THOMAS
has been with ITT Cannon si nce 1976. ITT manufactures a wide range of
connectors. interconnection systems and assembly tools. • • • MarUn A. Traxler has been promoted from vice president and creative
director to executive vice president of creative services for Advertl•lDJ Groap
Services, lne. of Irvine. Traxler has been wi th AGS since its inccpuon fou r
years ago. • • • Alec Andrew (Andy) Jobn1on has been elected a trustee of Chapman
College. The vice president of Wllllam1, Inc. and president of Sea Eaerc
Corp., he has been a member of the Cbapmu Athletic Fouda tloa since 1979
and is a former coach of the Chapman tennis team. Johnson and his wife,
Ollvla, are founders and benefactors of South Co11t Repertory Tkater and u e
11 a member oJ the theater'• board of dJrectora.
d •••
Marina Philltpfll\as been named branch sales manager of the Costa Mesa
office of Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate Services Soatllena
Callfornla~Phillippi, of Corona del Mar, opened Coldwell Banker offices aMbe
first 10 Sean FlDaaclal Ce1atera in Southern Califoornia and was a district
manager of those ofice prior to her new appointment. • • • Clay CommuJcatlont Marketlnc Grotip will conduct the marketing
program for Seacrest, a seven.unit, ocean-oriented condominium in Hennosa
Beach. The project developer is Garl J. Scbnelder of Costa Mesa.
"''L •• S111a:n Ju per of Laguna Hills has won $25,000 cuh in AJph Beta'• C.sh
and Cruises Sweepstakes. • • • Bradley B. Hubbard of Cos~ Mesa has been appointed to repre1ent
Amertcaa Service Bareaa/Bodlmetrlc Pr ofllea, a national insurance service
company providing paramedical exams for the life and health insurance
industty. • •• Huntin.gton Beach resident Cral1 S. ScJa1b h•s joined Coc~ue. Claue
Llvt.11aoa Ir Co. of Newport Beach as senior account executive in the firm·~
Med Blo-iduce Groap. In his new pott,SC1wb will be l'C$ponsible for the'H .. e
Heal*' Care of America and USC/lleuetll Non1t Jr, Cuc:er B•&al
accounts. Schub was formerly with MarlteU.1 OlrecdO.t Jae. of r'lreWp<>rt
Beach. • • • Pul Spedt has Joined RE/MAX of 811u.,... Bftda lac. as a sales
associates, movina to lbe IOQJ>Crcent commission real cttate company from
the west Huntinaton Beach office of Tifful' Real Estate. lpect 11 a member of
the Hada,._ lSada/Foa&ala Valley Boar4 of Realton, the CalH9"1Ja
A11edatt.. et Ree1•r1 ind the Natt ... 1 ~•hon. • • •
G11· Vbtceat •~PHI has been named president and chiefeucutive officer
ofVlikNl l11ttt1teof America, with locations in Irvine and Anaheim Hills. The
two centers opened last month. They ware staff with eye surseions and m(dlcal
staff who provide services for eye exams, cncnded wcar eon\let lcnle$ and
raidal keratotomics, a microsurik.al procedure to cotTeCt or reduce
near ilhtedncis. .... • • • • -------------------------.. Jerry AmerMe is the new central rqional service manaaer for trvine-
Keep an eye on local c • D11·1J Pllll based Al,U Mtc,..y•te••· m1nuflcturtr of multi-user ~ dneat mtero-computcr systems. Amerson is the former pruidcnt of Tua c..,.....
government in. f he s...rt. recntly ecquared by Alpha Micro u pan oh company-ownct' dj~t Ocld service proeram.
' -
Tahiti bound
R11n~n Beach reeldenta ltllen and Jack Brandt clup
banda lD celebration of a Tahiti vacation that they will take
u winnen of Real lt•tate by Mc Vay'• Orance County trlYla
conte.t. They anawered correctly se qaemtlona about
coanty place., people and hlatory to win firmt place ln the
trtTI& conte.t.
' Employee group will buy
$ lM of Ultrasystem stock
The emeloyec stock ownership
plan (ESOP1ofUltrasystems Inc. said
Friday that 1t has decided to purchase
up to SI million worth of Ultra-
systems' c-0mmon stock from time to
lime in the open.market aJ prevailing
prices. The ESOP has authorized
such purchases to bcain immediately.
the company said.
Uhrasystems is a hiJh-tcchnology
enaineenng company involved in a
Wldc range of defense and space
systems projects. with heavy
emphasis on command, control.
communications and mtelhgcncc
programs, as well as satellite, m1SS1le
and ground combat systems. The
company is also actively involved m
the design , construcuon, ownership
and operation of power plants.
alternative energy projects and food-
processmg plants.
NEW YORK (AP) -The followlng list s1low1 the Over -tt'le • Counter 1tock1 end warrants lllat have gone uP
lhe mo11 af.!down th~1t baaed on percent of ~ anee for Fr dav. No ..cur!I trading w S2 or 1000 '"le-!" are Inc uded. et and ptreentaee change1 art Iha
d enee bet~u · rhe rrevlou1 Clol !Iii ~ b price end .-r"1{;\ 181 bid l>l'ICe. ~
j Wl~~":1 Lis~ le~ utc•~· ·1 ~ 1sr•1T1 .vn •n UP . 6 AWAI~ 1n Ill• Up . . i ~ ~~ , f ~~ ~: 8~ :a io M~~~~lr un 6!~ + 1 ~ ~~ ,:! 1
trmd.C 'I• ~ UP 1· u Sv J{n 1h ~ Up . 1' ~Y.li1 ~ ~ 8~ : " ~ ":!-~ ·;~ ~~ '!i ~·i nzon w1 ~ ~ Up . ~Am 1 ~ 1~ UP . Jent~ WI ~ I/• 8~ 1 :
Name ~vmbln oin~~~ unnv Vodavl ~Al~~~
wight ~g.l, ti
Mnlkm ~~rllO 1nL1nt ~o~~:P
o ln aln un J~d el
vtor
erfdJa GrPhSc Naugle
J .. • . ...,
~ l.4
UP Up
UP UP UP UP
j.j
ct fp
lj':
1 ·
l 11
i1·IJ
'I·
1 • I l .
-l1'l''iiiiMiiilil-------
orange Coatt OAJLV PILOT/Monday, 0.-cember 17, 19M -
San Diego
economy
on a roll
SAN DIEGO (AP) -San Dicao
County's economy w•ll condnue to
outperform the rtst of California in
1985, but won't match the strooa
recovery that wat posted thi1 year,
accordina to a Chamber of Com-
merce rtport hcrt.
The county's aross reaional prod·
uct, which it the total value of all
1ood1 and services produced1 will
climb 11 'h percent to $37.S billion,
accordina to the report, which was prepared~ the chamber's Economic
Research Bureau.
Allhou&h that arowth ii &reltcr
than economiats' predictions for the
national economy, it is below this
year't 14percentincrcase. Thcrepon,
issued Thursday, attributes the lower
fiaure primarily to risina interest rates
and a levelina ofT of tht post-recession
recovery.
"It's not realistic to c~pect that
1985 will maintain the sU"ona 1984
arowth.t" said Max Schetter, director
of the Kc~arch Bureau.
The inflation rate in San Diqo
County will climb sliahtly to 6 percent
from this year's 5.8 percent. the report
said. When the rate is applied to the
~oss reaional product, the adjusted
'real" arowtb will be 7.3 percent in
198$, down from this year's inflation-
adjustcd arowth of I 0, l ~rccnt.
About 31,400 new Jobs will be
created in 1985, the report predicted,
a drop from this year's 54,000.
But unemployment also will in-
crease -to 6.5 percent of the work
force. compared to this year's esti-
mated 6.2 percent -because of the
"inability of the slowinf economy to
absorb all new entrants tnto the labor
forte," the report said.
San Otego County's . population
will increase by 53,200 to 2.15
million, the repon said. Of those
people, 32,200 will move here and
21 ,000 will be products of a "natural
increase."
Scheuer said interest rates will lead
to a better perf ormancc by the local
economy in the first half of 1985 than
the second half.
"Rates will be moderating between
now and summer, and then they will
increase in the last half of 1985," he
said.
To meet the population growth, the
Chamber of Commerce report predic-
ted that 30,000 new housing permits
will be issued countywide in 1985 -
12,000 single-family dwellings and
t 8.000 multi-famil units.
--------·-----The more you know
about b s, the more
• . .,J: you'll like
Home Federal.
That's becau~e Home
Federal can provide eveiy1hinq
vou look for in banking service'>
And more.
Be.cause unlike many hank~.
Home Federal built it future 011
you.
STRENGTH MEANS STABILITY
Our strength and ~ecuntv
come from a tradition of
TI1,1t\ Wh\' \<\ ht'n(.'Vt'f \0\1
Wcilk 11110 t1 Hume frder.d ollit t
vo11 'I I l>t· met h\ 1wuplt• '" hn
kno"' hm .. to help vnu Frtt'ttd h .
\It'' But 1-.nowled~t'dhlt> too
And vou'll al'o find tllclt
...-. hl'n drc1 ... 1onc; have to be mad<
thev are mrlde then and there "11
b1\<\t't•kl\ llll't'ltn~~ o l ur1~et·11
r t>n 11111 tt t't'~
investing in California. In helping CCOUNTS TO UIT YO R
p ople throughout the ~late LIFESTYLE
tmprtWe--th quality of tht-iir It~--lhcinY Home Feder81
Time has shown JUSt ho"' • contmut·~ to 1m·e't in Ct1hfnrn1a
ound that tt1inking 1 -Homt> ul1tnme v.a"' than rwr
Federal 1s today rega rded as one \\h1le mamtamrn~ our or the.mo t stable finan 1al lrdd1llondll" ht·lt~r than bdnk
1ru;t1tutron~ in lht' oun&ry. rate:">, we'"' rttm offettn~ intere ... t-
KNOWLEOOE: t•t1rninR che-c-ktn'l at<ounh
·THE KEY TO SERVICE ~r,on t lin 'ot cl1'cht.
It' on th ing to qr ted automobile lOdll!'i .md credit
_ .in~ quite another to bt' helped rard' ( 1ortg< ~too. ol cour't'
\lld tht'll llH H "cl lull trl,1\
111 I lt-\1hlt lll\l''lllll'lll .111d
,,I\ Ill~' •ll l l lllllh h I 'iUlt \lllH
llldl\ 1d111:1l llt't-d" tdl h p,1VH1~
""" .tll e\ttn dt\lih•nd fWrtt-t' ol
1111 m I
I l<llllt' rt'<lt·r,11 Wt h11pt•
110\\ \01111 ... t'l' \\"\ l'\l'f\tl1111~ \\l
lt.1\t' ltl tiltt•r 1 ... lwth•r thclll llllll\t \
111 I tw h~111 h
Call us at 1-800-862-0539.
-
-
On
the , •
....
WHAT NY SE Div
NEW YORK CAP)°;' l1~ Pv. -
~~ l v~=· New hlOtll New low•
NYS E LEADER S
UPs AND DowN s
NEW VORK CAP) -Tl'le followlno 11•1 •hOWS ll'lt NP York Stock. Exchange
JIOGkl •rnd werrantl that N!Yt eont~UP ll'lt mos 1 Jnd down ll'lt .rnott be on f!Gt't~~nenoe reoeroiet' of
'"'Mo ~;m$1v. tredlnt btto¥' t2 •rt '"'!'I·· ·u~. Net • Ptr~t•" clwll'Otl •r• the d'1 er•nct befw~ Jhe 1>r11111ou1 tto• no pr ce •nd Mondav ~ho,m. or ct.
I !~;I Lo~•J C~ f 11:1 P~P 1 2~~=. Kollmor lV. P . Scotrvstnc 1 "'1 1"t BP POf'I~ 1 ~ JYi P .4 ~~1:~ m: l'9 o: :~ ~ PenAm ~t ~Vt k! UP ·l ~ ~P.~Jt11111' ~ 1~ 8i :1 88\iv~,,~kl V. ~. Up . 1 Net ta lf:V. ... Uo ~:~tr 22n itt ~u: . l GrunttlFln 4ti & P I Hatelll~ 271/i 1 o Valero nr 7~ i;. HP Bel(er nd ~ • uo . . Watk!nJ s 2111• I Uo
4 F:"lnS1B•r Ji '"-UP . S Publ ck Ind ~ 'It Up 4. DO MS
l w.:J~'?:. L•;1~ =C~ clll:.j
l 2t;riskSe Iii = ~ :~
Trenscn Inc ~ -,. i
McOrmlnt wt m-'h .•
0 ~~~yare o 1 = 1~ ·j h -rri1111:ti' ~ = ~ .
15 Sedcolnc J = 2~ •· 4 Eniourct 2 ,,
lJ Home1teke 20Ye -l'I• 1 lnsol~ 4114 -11.
1 Amrg"'ffi s It -~
18 3~rk ~ vZ = ~ ~ ~n c1.{blde M~ -1 ¥. ~~0re_. w• li = ~ 8~1n:ts1 ~ -.,.. rlon~tct ofE 1 -IV•
WHAT AMEX Dm .
NEW YORK (AP) DK. 17
AMEX LEADERS
COLD QUOTES
MET ALS Quo TEs
That· s an apt description of both business and
bust n people along the Orange Coast;. To keep track of
w erecompanie aregotn~andwhichpeopl arehelptng
themgetth r .justwat h CredttLtn~'-verydaytnthe
Bu in llonofyourn w llilyPid
l .
)
l
-ll i ·. · f1 N:1 r ., f,
C&UllEALAJN
CH A.ft L & 8 A
CHAMBERLAIN ,
Chuck WH born A~t 3, 1902 In In·
dlana. He paated away December 18,
1984 In La1una
INch. He la IWVived
by~Elaa, ~d, Be~e':~
Hilla; IOn, Willlam,
Anaheim HUlt; liate.r,
Lolei Ooahen, In-
diana; lllter, Maxine:
Bedford, Indiana;
Florence: St.
Petet1bur1, FLA.; aranmona. William &
Michaet, of Santa
Barbara; grand.
dtuahttt. Carol of
Loi Anplea. ~ en pending. Padftc
View Mortuary, Of.
r«tof'I, 6+4 -2700
DIEHL
ftUTH KRAMER
DIEHL. age 74 yean.
Survived by hua·
band. Robert: daugh·
I.en, Bobbie Diehl.
Debbie Shepler;
Catherine Smith,
Olana Havlena, and
arandchlldren, Ve·
f\etU. Travis, Sara,
and Erin; ..alater.
Catherine Henninger.
Memorial aervicea
wW be held at Padflc
View Memorial
Chapel lPM Tuetday
Dec. 18, 1984. Inter·
ment Allentown, PA.
Please omit flowers.
Pacif ic V iew
Mortuary Directors,
&44-;2100
IAL n llRGIRON
IMITH A TUTMLL WllTCLlfl' CHANl
427 E. 17th St.
Cotta M ...
848-9371
'ACIPIC YllW
Ml.MONAL'AN<
C..-netery •Mortuary
Ch~ • Crematory
3500 Peclflc View Drive
Newport Beach
844·2700
McCOIWICK
fllOfn'UARY
1795 ~=Canyon
Laguna Beech, Ce
92851
·~·9415
HAMOR LAWN·
MT.OUVI
Mortuary • ~tery
Crematory
1625 Git* Ave
Co1ta M ...
M0-555-4
NACI MOTMIRI
MUPOADWAY
MOltTUARY
110 Broadway
Costa Mue
6-42·9150
... I ,.----
.....
leO'nCI °' ···-•. ._ IMnt CW If tHlcet!on for OH-MOTIC8 °' M.11MnM W, IA\.1 .__ 11 ...._ tt1e DUnt OP
LCll M & M rOlloMng nodce 1N191 De AMI lilOM'Olt'f
M9 OP N fiflON flUtllWleid onoe MWn W\ MMC* TO Ul•HT9 (10) ~In ans 1p1J1 O! Am OP •N.,f"'fTlfiQN,,_
HTATl eeo. A,_ OtMrei C1Jc111at1on °"* TO A&1•1na To .. ,...., ~. tt\91\ • llolll 0t prormtao• HTATI NO.
et9dlton Md oontlnteftt trldt pu~lon The PIM-A·,_
cred!IOB, end l*'IOnl wt10 cetlon rnuM bl In tM ~In To .. heh,~. mey IM otllel .._ lnl«•ad wNcfl ll.ICfl .,,...... .,. credlton end oontlnfent
In h Wiii end/or ... .._ ot lltUlltM, Of If IUdl ~ CfeclftOtl, and P«IOM wtlO
eLIZAll!TH W. LONG· .,.. not In I ctty, ~ Mlh mey IM otNI_... ~
NOO publtcatlon Wil 1M Nde In In the wlll 9/tdl0t ..t9'1 of•
A P91ttl0ft 11a1 Merl ti.ltd a ""'I,._ of Olf*al JIAN MOH,°"T ALISON
by ANNA MARY LDlAHAH CWoulatlOn ot11et then a legel A petltloft NI Min tlltCI
In the ~ Coun. of Of· or ptOfWl°"91 tfldt putil-by ~ M, Allton In the enoe Co\inty reqUMtlnQ tfMlt cation '*""t tt1e .,,.,,,...., Su9«10f Court of Ofenge
ANNA MAltY LENA.HA"H be Affidavit of ~ ~ County r~11atttno thlt
llSIPQlnlM • Pl"Of'ltll r1po IM Iliad with IN OfftOI Of CM "°"" ~. Alleon be ep. r-.ntattve to ldf?\lnlltlt tM 0epat11Mftt of AloohOllC polni.d M r>eraonlll rep-
'1ttat1 of tfll c:Mcedtnt. The hwir191 Cont.rol • whlotl reeentetlYll to adl'nlnll1« the 119t"lon rllQUetle autflot1ty the IPPtloetlOn wee ftlM. ..tit• of the dtoldlnt. The
lo ldrnlnl.t., the •tell MOTICI OP 119t"lon '~ IUtf\ortt)
under tM l~t Act-~ATION TO to ~ the .. let•
mlnlttrltlon of lltet• Act. MU M.COH01 tc 111\der thl lndll*'ldent M-A '*'1na on CM l*ltlon ISVDAGlt mlnlettatloft of htat• Act.
wtll "Mic{ on JANUARY I , 12·7.... A hMma on the petition
IHI, It t •30 A.M. 'In Oec>t. To WhOm" ~ Conc9m: wffl be Mid" on JANUARY 2, No. 3 et 100 CMc Ctn• BEST IAOEI.. All· 1Na at 1:30 A.M. In Dept OrlYe Wett. &.n1e Ana, CA TAUAANTS, IHC. 11 eppfylno No. 3 It 700 CMc Ctnltf
12702, lo the ~ . of -liI. 0rM Weet, 8-nta Ana. CA
" YOU OUCT 10 !tie cohollo ~ ContrOl IOt 12102 QfMtlfto of tDI petltloft, you "41" On 84M i..., a Wine IF YOU 08JECT to thl
lflould lftfler ~ et lfla (Putl. e.t. Pl.) to .,.. • grentlng of the petition. you
"-int end ttltl your ob-cohollc .,.....,agel .. 2340 lflould ""* '9CIM' It the Jecllone Of NI wr!Mn obtec-Hwt>or BM., ea.ta Meta hMrtno and •~you o~
11one With the ooun ~en 92827 t1on1 °' Ille ~ obteo-thl Mating. Your ~· Publlllhed Orenot CoMt tloftl with ttMt OOUtt ~Otl
enoe ,,..., " 1n penon °' by O.ity Piiot Deotmw 11. the flMt1ng Your ~· Yo4if ettomey 1984 MOe mey be In P«ton Of I>)
IF YOU AA.E A CREOfTOR M·242 Yo4if ettomey. l
Of a contlnQlnt cradlt0t llilmlll 11' W\TIC( IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR
the d9Q1111d, you 'inU9t 1111 l"-.n. "" Of • tonltnolnt credlt0t Of
Yo4if el.aim with the CIM1 or YOU ARE IN DEFAULT the dlcuud, you tnul1 flit
Pf'eaef\t It to the l*IONll UNDER A DEED Of TRUST your Clelm with the court OI rt~~t~lvl1 .. .._eoooint9dt~ DATED MAACH 24, 1N1'. r.=,~tl:. the~~ ... """"• ... '"'1 tc>ur mon ,,. UNLESS YOU TAKE AC-vi from the d1t1 of nret i.. TIOH TO PROTECT YOUR the court within our montfll tuanetofi.tter.Mpro'lld«I PROPERTY IT MAY BE from the dltl of flnt I•
In Section 700 of th• SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE t11M01ofi.tt1tuepnwldld
Probeta Codi Of Callfomla. IF' YOU NEED AN EXPLA~ In Section 700 of tllt TM time 10t tlllng c1e1m1 w111 NATION Of THE NATURE Probate Codi of c.tlfornle
not uplte ptlor to tour OF THE PROCEEOINO TM lllM tor filing clalm1 wll
montflt from Iha dee. of the AGAIN 8 T y 0 u y 0 u not explte ptlcW to fOUt
llMrtna notice abo¥a. SHOULD CONTACT A LAW· monthl from tfll dlt• of thl YOU" MAY EXAMINE thl hearing notice ebo¥9.
Illa k..,. by the COU11. If you YER. N01'1CI °' YOU MAY EXAMINE tflf
.,. • !*ton lnt•tetld In ""'8Tll'I IALI Ille kept by the court. If "!°" the llteta, you mey ..w NO t04&87EQO .,. • pet.on lntereetld Ir\
upon tfll lllecutOf °' edmln-ON Jenuary 14 1185 It tfll •tetl . you mlY _..,. "'"'°'· °' upon "" et· 10·00 AM t THE REAR upon the uecutor or edn'ltn. torMr tor lhe 9MCUtOt or ENTRANcE L~Y ON 5TH lltret0t, or upon the •1·
edmlnlltretor, end NI With STREET OF CHICAOO tomey tor the executor OI
the QOIKt with proof of Ill'· TITLE INSUAANCE COM· adtnlrMlt'rttor, and 1111 wtth
vice. a Wftttetl requl9t ltl t· PAHY LOCATED AT 601 N the COUfl with proof of Ill'· 1no tNt you ...,.. ~ ·s • vice, • wrttten requeat etat· notice of tM llllno of ., In-M.AIN TAEEl, In the City of Ing lhet you dealrt ~
t end >Of~ of Senta Ana. County of Of. notice of the llllnQ of en In-=•~ .... ":'of ttle P9ll-~A I ~~·R c:: I ~ wntOty end ew-.m.nt ot tlone °' eccount1 rnentlonld tetat• eeMta or of the ~ In 81ct.lon 1200 end l200 5 of COH\IEYANCE COMPANY, tlon1 Ot accounta rnentlonect • • ~ Corpomlon, .. In Section 1200 end l200 5 of the Cellfotnla Probeta Codi. duty eppolnted TrultM the C.ilf n1a p obet cOd. ...._ , .... _,. At· undlt that cenln OMd ot o.ww <; ...;.., ;. *" ..,.,_,et~.= Tru11 u •cut1d by Aw .f .._. ......... pue om.,----· GREOORY I. ~TT AND ••11 L ... _.......... c.a CA-KATHERYN M. SCOTT. t-1 M _.............., ,.
PublleMd Ofat199 Co.I HUSBAND AND WI~. • Publlefled Ofenge Cout
Dally Piiot Deolmw 10. 11, '"'"°" recorded on A!H'll Detty Piiot o.c.mw 10 11 17, 1H-4 MT 239 8, 1N1: .. lnttt\lrnent No. 17 198-4 •
• . 8062, In Boole 14011. Peoe ' MT·23!
14 7 4, of Otflclal f'ecorde of
Orenge County. 4Wt• of
Callfomle. undlt the ~
01 NII therein contained.
wlll NII I t public auc11on to
--------the hlQlleet l>lddlt for c:eah, flt&.IC NOTICE or cfie<:k H de1crlbad __ ..;..;..--.__..__..__ below. peyet11e at the time ot "8JC NOTICE
K·1D11 NII In leWf\ll ~of the _ ....... _._........, ......... ...._-1
llOfOW No. Unllld Stew. of Amettca. T.-.
'1tl LA wltflOut warrenty • .,,,_. or NOT1Ca °'
NO'T1C8 TO Implied M 10 tltle, 1111, poa. TMleTD'I IA.LI
CMDITOR9 °' ...ion or encumbtenoea. LMft ...., --llUU( TRAMRR ell right. tlt11 and lnt•eat T.t. Me.14-1N
AND CW now held b"J tt M "'°" NOTICa INTRNnON TO TNttM In and to the fo4low. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
nweePa Ing ~Md Pf'OOlrtY' lltU-UNDER A DEED Of TRUST Al.COMOUC atld In the 1tor1Mtd County DATED AUGUST 13, tM2
MVIMM UC.... end Stew. to wit: UNLESS YOU TAKE AC-
, ..... 1101~1'1 PARCEL 1: TIOH TO PROTECT YOU U.C.C. f/1111191 Unit 163. In the City of PROPERTY, IT MAY 8
Min a I ") !MM, County of Ofenoe, SOLD AT PUBLIC SALE. If Notice"~ glwn IM1 St•t• or Celfornla. .. ehOWl'I YOU NEED AN E>IPLA·
e t>u* tr'""-' of per10M1 and defined on that oertllitl NATION OF THE NATURE ~o:'L.~ a trWfw ot Condominium Plan re· OF THE PROCEEDING
1) la about to COfded APf'I 21, 1818 In AGAINST YOU. YO
bl midi. book 12644 page 911, of Of· SHOULD CONTACT A LAW TMIWN(1),SodalSecur· flclal f'ecordl of Orenge YER
lty (0() Ftdltal Tax Numblt, County. Clllfoml&. On Jenuery '· 1N5. II end malUng eddr .... end tip PARCEL 2: 10'00 A.M . CALIFORNI ~ numl:litr. of the Iran• Anundtvldld 11521nt11'9et MORTGAGE SERVICE
lltoril)are: DAVID WINTER-In end to Lot 1 Of Treat No duly eppolnt1d Tru1t
HAL f ER, IRENE WINTER-10t37 M lhown on • mep under end purlUent to OMd
HAL TEA, 14892 Doheny Cir· recorded In bc>c* 42t pegee of Tru•t r9C:Ofdld Augul127,
Cle, lrvtnt, CA 112714. 48 lo 50 of Mlleellaneou• 1118 2. • • In. t . N 0
Thi name Social Securlt) Mepe. r1001d1 ol Orat199 82·30221&, of Offlolll
E °' Flderel Tu Number, inc County. Cellfornla. togethel corc11 In the omc:. ol tlll
melllng addr.... end Zip with 111 tmprOYtmentt Iller• County Recordlt ol OR--=======~-cod• nvmblf. of tfll ttana-on, excepting tfllretrom ANGE County, Stet• ot C•ll· P\liUC NOT1t£-'"" aft : l'O~ Condominium Unit• 157 lornla, Executed ti
--------DEWALLE. S.S. No Through tor. fnctu1t'11, NELSON w. HENWOO
'1CTTT10UI _,..... 633· 74·5263; MICHAEL lout9d thetlOl'I. AND MASAKO HENWOOD,
NAm' ITATIMINT RE ITH , 6 S . Ho EXCEPTING THERE· HUSBAND ANO WIFE,
The tollowlng pertonl .,. 017-38-8721; PAUL LINO, FROM all oll, oll r1gtlt1, min-JOINT TENANTS, A
doing 1>ua1Me1 M : S.S. No. I 10-40-83f1; 310 1tall. mlnttel rlQhtt. natural TRUSTOR WILL SELL A
AMERICAN TELESIS Anita Street, Uiguna BMc:tl. gH rlgllta end otllll PUBLIC AUCTION TO
IJINANCIAL, 815 Town CA 12651. llydrocerbon 1ube1tnce1 HIGHEST BIDDER FO .t.ntet Drtve. 8ultl 800, That IM Pet.onal prop-below • dlc>th of 500 ,_. CASH (peylbl9 at time o
Coale M111. C11tfornl• W1y 10 IM trenalltrld 11 <»-undlt the ParClld of l~d .... In lewful rnoMY of t •212& ecrlbld In genltal M ma-h1r11nebov1 11cr "' United Stat•) II the Horth
lteptlarlle Anna Berger. tlt1ell, euppllla, mtrdlfin. without thl right °' eurlact front entrance to the oounty '°31 Jev• Roed. Cotta dlM, ~t. tumnura. entry•~lntflldeed courlhouH, 700 Civic
....... Cellfornle 12t2t f I 11 tu,... • q u Ip m. n I, from Quall Ruo-Nortflwood. Centlt OrM W•t. Santa
Donald Albert OIJI 1300 QOOdWlll ..... INMhOIO • Limited Pwtntt'lfllp r• Ana. CellfOf'nla. all rlgfll, lh
Ademt •tOG, Coet1°Mela, linprMnent,1t0ca tntrldt. corded Hovernblf 20. 11178 end lnt.,•I QOtlvwyed t'
Clllfomll 12t2t oovenent not to ~ In bc>c* 12930 page 1'27. end now held by It un6t
Tflll buetnel• 11 con· ind lredaname: GREEK Oflldal Reoorda. Mid OMd of TNlt In tt ~Id by. CC>-i*1'*" OEU and 11 ioc:atld It. PARCEL 3: ptoperty eltuetld In Mid a T E pH A H IE AN NE 14220 CulWt om., Sult• 8. An IXCIUIM MMtntnt for County end St•t• deacrlbld
HROER.OONALO AL8EA'T Irvine, CA together wttll the perklno and rtl 1t1d at: LOT 75 OF TRACT NO.
DIX tollowlng 011.crtbed •I· purpoeee OvtJt Ulet POf110n 3648, AS PER MAP AE·
TNe ttetemlnt WM llled oohollc bwll'ege llcenw. of Lot 1 of Mid TrllCt Ho CORDED IN BOOK t2t,
With tM County Cletlc of Of· OH SALE BEER a WINE t0137 ... lltlOWn on Exhibit PAGES 37 TO 44 OF MIS· Moe County on Nov9nl:litr LICENSE NO. 41...ot3311 "A" to the Dedetatloft of CELLANEOUS MAPS, IN n 1984 now t11u1d for Hid Allttletlonl tor The 8prlngl TtU OFFICE OF TH ' ,.,_ preml•••. tor premlHt . Condominium, rtcord1d COUNTY RECORDER OF
Publlltl9d Orenge C0Mt locetld et 14220 CvlYel' Aprfl 21, 1171InbO<*12644 SAID COUNTY
o.tfV Plldt Oeqeml:litr 3, 10, Ortve. Suitt 8, Irvine, Cell-page 829, ~ ~d3t The etreM llddrell end
17. 24. 1N4 • lornle. end re-raoor.._ ..,ay · other common deelQNtlon, • • M-233 . Thlt IM totel conlldlt· 1178 In book 12ee0 page If any, of thl ,.., .,,,...,_,IV!
ettonlOtlfllt1'11"1fwofMld 678, ot Offlc:4al Aelorda ol d .. ct1b1d 1bove I
--------bullneae end of Mid llolnM Orenge County, Callfornle purported 10 IM: 328 t IN· P\8.IC MQTIC[ 11 the eum ot S-41.000.00 In· (flerllnatt1t !,efll'ted to u DIANA AVENUE, COSTA
eluding lnventOty •tlmatld "OectaretlOn ) .. cerl)Ol'1 MESA. CA 9282& '1CTITI0Ue M.1 ... ll 11 $1,000.00, wNctl oonellll IP-183. Seid ..-nent la TM Uf\derllgtlld TNllM
MAm ITATIMINT of the tottowt"": Ptreonai lurtllef defined and d• dleclalml enw flablllty tor.,, .. TM tOlowlng pettonl ''1 Cfleck In tM ... emount o1 ecribld In Mlc:tea II end Ill 01 tnc:or"rtctneM of the 1tt..t dOI~ bulln9ll • st .000.00; Demand Note to IN O.CW1tion. edd,.. end other common
W81,..NSh l4,1~ ~~".-~_4 bl 1epl1c1d wllh CH ll PARCEL 4: Olalgnetlon, " llfl'J, lhoWn
•• '" .... , """''' -Ill rough ••crow In the A non-exc:lualV9 ....ment '*""· Clllfornla 92121 emount of S 15,000.00, tor 1111 end en)O"Jment of the Seid MM.,... IM midi. but
,rank Showalt.,, 1514 PromlMOfynotealntevotot CommonAr•o..cin..Stn wlthou1 COV9Mnt Of Wll·
hit Pllm, Orange. Cell-....., herein In tti. emount ot the Oecllrtetton. Mid .... ren:i:aitPr .. Of frnC>led, r• lomlau ... !28!8~•t 1514 S25,00000. rnent bllnll ~ln~~11 oer tttte, pa11111lt>n, Of • n-g,..,.., er, That It hie tlMfl egrlld end delct1bed ,....,_ enc:um anct1, to pey the JMt Ptim, Ofanqt. Cell-betWMn Mid tr.,,...,._ end Ill °' the 0.-lltlon. ttfMlnlng prlnelpel Mn Of
foml• latee IOd Mid ".,,.._°" that The tote! emount of the the notet _,,., by Mid
Tiii• t>ullneaa 11 con· contldll'lllon lot the ~.,. unpaid pf1ntlpal ~. OMd of Trvet, wtttl .,,__
illct9d by: llllebend end wtte flt of Mid ~ end o1 lntlfelt "*-"· tcioet'* ttweon ... Pf'<wldld 1n Mid
FRANK SHOWALTER Mid 11cer19e 11 to 1M ~ wlttl ~ ...,,._._, not•. edvenoee, M any,
Tilll 91etement wM Med onty •ft• trenefw Mt belt' coeta. ~ and ..,.. undlt the temll of Mid OMd twtttl tn. Coun1y Cletlc Of Or· epprCMld by ~ OI venoee It tM !WM of the In-Of Trwt, ..... a-v-. "
.,.. County Of\ AlooflOlc lellerllOI Control ltlel putlllcetlon of tNa Ho-..,,.,,._of the Trwtee end rr. 111' pureuant to Sec. 24073 .. ttce .. sn.sao.12 °' tflt trueta crettld by Mid
eeq. eurr.ntty CSeted 0...... OMd of TM! ~ Ofenge CoaM TMt tM,...,..., Oeectlbed OMckl °' Cettl"9d °'**' TM total imount or the OMY Pt104 Deoamber lJ. 10, 1,.,,....,. 10 IM ooneum-peyflble to the T""'-Of IMlpllld b1Mr1o1 of the obl-
11, 24, tit' INMCI, ~to the .00.-. btctdat .,. ,eooes>tebll to gatton MCurad by tN prop.
M-2'2 prQYlllon• I I •UAAOW Tru.t.. ptcMded pr()pel eny '° " I04d end ,.......
UCROW OoMPANY, 1887 Iden~ la ewllal*. ab1ie a.tlfNlt9d coeta. ex· --.-,.--IC-MO_TICE ___ 11Mt Uncotn A~ Or-From 11\fonMtloft wNclt' penee1 end lldYenoee et the
_ ....;..;;;;.;--..;.;.;..;.;.;..___I _,., CA l2M& on 0t eflel the Truetee dMltle ,....,.. time Of the lnltlal publlcatlon
'9CTIT10UI .,_.. JaNW'/ 1t, 1Na. bUt IOt ~ TNltee mite• of tM Notice of a. 11 MAm ITA~ "" other buelnW '*'* no ,. ... itatton °' .,.,. 11u.seo.11
TM lolOwtftCI l*90M IOd liddfelMt UMd by tflt renty, the IMt..c ~ °' TM hnetlelary under
•01nl1 b u1lne11 •• tren1fetore within ti'irM ooftt*...._ ~~re:; leld Owl of Truet ,,.,__ C D I M Y 0 yeett lelt !Ml'I. IO flt II u.. e...,~ -r ~ ~ end 0.-
UAGll 1411 V .Mown Jo tt•...... .,., P r GJU lH -I 1 : 1 I 3 IMNcl 10 lt!e-vo •1 lltll8d a • io1 NONI. STAL'MWDOD, IA\llHI -""" D-.r9tton of 0..
leecfl ~t2MI· Heme end Mdr... of CA 127.... '-"" end Demand for ..... lMlin ~ 4100 .-ow flotdef. auMow Uct Pf°'*1Y " '*"' and • WfltMn Nottoa °' o..
flatr!M Road Newpot UCPIOW COMPANY, tM7 I04d ,!_!r="-""::*.:.:, ,_. IN Bdeft to .... IMcf\. CA tata3 I.Mt Uncoln A~ Of· Ina ,.,. •~• n-. llftderllonect _,_
Tiiie t>ullneM 11 c .,,.., CA t2tll. by Mid Of Tl\llt ~ -"d Notice Of °"*" and
---~::"1dllll Deted: NO•lf'ftt>ef 12 tnaT .._~~'-:"Of ttlc Eecttort 10 W IO bl ,.. -. • ,_ ,.... ,,,,..._.,. oonlldlnN~.._. um.-. ...... ....... • • .... OMed ~ 21. 1... ttla,... PfoPlr1Y It looMect.
__ ,,..,.~~otOr ......XS .Ti ur •• C:,:~=·~:J; o.w~1.1..,.
-eouri.y Of\ , •• , ..........1-. mr:-c •• '~J ..... -_...-..... ~ ,_.UM ..... T ......... -..... a,i iliii-1 ..... 11• ,..,. Tia•.••-•,. °"•• :.:' !.!.. -..!.... ~ •...... .... ...... ..,,.. ..... c.M·••-•_._ .. ,.... ............ CA .. -97 ... U..-.A• ••H, ,.,...._, C' -• .._ 9'D ...., ,_..,,, CA -"~,,.,,.... ,_, ·~~ Coe11 ~ ewe '"::...... er.,.. c.... . ....._ _____ ......;.;;;;...;..;""' ~ "°' oeoem• 11 Oll1Plol ceoe ,.., 10. '1 Olllly "'°' °'°1lnll1r "· 14,
ln••••-n•elve• 1t1o1 14• 1* 31, , .... ...-q ~w 1
"(In !ti "*' ""' "°' hl9" In ptlCe, 1euon10le, it IWU)nl)')Q your renea =~ ...,.... ffaJ(AllCQ ,,._. •• ..._,.....;s;.;....._~-~= ....... " " ............... ~-,_~ Ctaatlfltd Advtftt.1ng ad 1~ be C • dod . ,._ ... ,... -• -~ e..2-5e7ft w Kl' ,;-' ......... ,.,., ...... ...,_,
. '
Otenge CoM1 DAILY PILOT/Monday, OeolmMr 1~, 1 ....
LA
T HE D IL P ILOT
IFIED OFFI E HO R
Tdtl'hone-Sfrv ... e:
Monda\·Fn<la\
8:0<J A.M 5 '30 P M.
Bu 111t Cou11ttr
\londa,.f nda\
8:00 .\.~t..5:00 P.M.
OE OIJ'\E
Pl HI IC \'I It•~
\1onda\
Tut"~a'
"t>dnf" .. da'
Thur da\
f nda'
aturd,i\
unda\
ERROR
frt
\fon
1 Uf"..,_
\\ f'ri .
fhur!!>
f ri.
fr1
IH· \l>l 1".'
l .30 pm
l·JO p.m.
t· iO p.111.
4:30 p.111.
l 30 p rn.
J·UO p.rn .
J:OO p.m.
Chec.'k your ad dail~ and rt>porl
-errors immedia1eh. Th~ l> .\IL\
PILOT a ~umei, liabilil~ for lht• fin~•
inc·orrec·1 imerlion onh .
CLA IFIED 642-5678
11: Macnab -lr~tne
llUB ... ..i
Na. ~eoom. 1'A
GE l'-)Q 9100
beth home. Pt1ced low to 1 ""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Mii fMt. VA ter!M. c.11 1•
now"46-2313 t.m•n• 111'*"1 ~~~'I!!~~~ R2 lot'" grMt eo.t. .....
Bdnn home wltt'i room tot I•------• qulckty o.ys ~ addltlonalunlt. Fut! pttca -------.... nllTD .. only •1.000t Adjeeent 1------· a.1a1a ..... R2 lot II -.0 ~ ..... --· _ 1-----------
Aaumne sao~ooo ~ ~~~t: ~ ..._ hnltW
lr\fil b1tow market waton call &46-7171 ~
1ntw..i goroeow IMnQ ... ..-~ ......... ._ • • tiliill W Wii nu [:Ef~ f:J-U!•'f!1 -;.;~-~~~
~ ... ~'~.:::: • 1111.-........... dtM S46-~ 13 • Excellent 1 .. To-c.n t>e Cneral ut2
UIWl'led Super ".,,., ;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim
• home, •:r. yard, recant· BALBOA COVES 2 8d
ty pejnt lnt1tlot. cloM home on wetll' w/IP&
to thOPPlng. bMGtl and ltreptece $200tmo
freewaY9. Comc>ar• wit.ti B A L 8 0 A I S L A N 0 YA• 11W1 °'""" '" ne1gt1bofh<>Od. 3 Bdrm 2 bath WM new Y04J won't nnct • bett• Bayfl"ont 3 Bd. IUmltfled
THE REAL
ESTAT&:RS
,..... 11-.1.• -val·-w /Matn Bay vua cari>et• and new d-·· , ._ ns" ..... S2000/ •1"' """"' waietw. Encloaed tTont Front row locetlon notllloQ .......... rno. " _,,....,
courtyerd. Convenient but neture, 2 Bdrm Wlhlfr ...........
Cott• Meaa toeatlon townnov• In N9wport ~~~~~~~~ 111·1· llM•
cloM 10 tchool• and So. 8MCt\ with two muter .al llLU
eo..t Plaza. St2t,900 1ultu. Great loa n L°""VG,...,.,t>rootl 3 broo
7.51-3 191 St 11,900 qui.t ~. &it>mlt Winter Rentala
C::. SELECT I ~H.l f f C ~f S on terrM Afilt 631""'300 P~~;o~~~~T
-r' PROPERTIES l••AMlt-•·°"-8•7•wo6o--• Nil.. 714191~1 73 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_______ 3 9d 2 t>a Colege Partt 1aJ.Ma
LIDO ISLE
7'-l.1f\ .. 111u ... ti Br Od\ front 78 cm hd' po• I
"I' I \1111' h•i.tl '>p<ll't' X lnt Fin s~ H'ill 11011
l 'li 1rmin_g Sp.tni ... h :i Br. 2 ~ on l ' l11t
d11 k rnUrt\Jrd p1t•r & shp !-1 1011 111111
BAYSIDE PLACE BA YFAONT
Spe<·ta<.'ular ba~Cront dplx 2 Br. 2 Ba up
2 Br. 2 Ba down 2 tx>at Spac'l'S $1.2:'>0.000
PENINSULA HOME OCEANFRONT
Ex<.·1Ur\g CXean & Jetty views . .t Br. 3 Ba
3700 sq ft car parking $1.1 50.000
WEST BAY AVE BAYFRONT
,\t 'I.: II \ C Tr.1dit11111.1I ' Rr 'P"' t.u d.11
h,i\ \ \I' \.I. 0\.\ nt I I Ul.1 ill 11\,i... $ l II 11 It ii l
LAGUNA BEACH HILLSIDE
P.trlll(dlllk. •11.l .10 (\.lit\>\ I•\\ ..,~Hdl1ll'
Hi i R.1 Xlnt lm<inlln~ n•" ,-'' •1111
COTTON POINT ESTATES
l ll \11111 Cl~t .tll \It \lo l,•1' Ill 'I •' l •''•'
P,I\ ti ll'<t S,111 Ch rtlt ntt Ir •111 '' '" Ill(!
WE STWOOD VILLAGE
Pnmt En~h'h tr.ulttron,al ~ Bel i B.1 \
f'rpl< ·._, hrd1,.1,d llr.; 111 UCLA h!-15 .1100
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
141 p.0 .,.,,d. D•" '-I B o!'> tilol --'::~~~· Set:~~~ -~ r.,;r .
-----...... "' Cl•'f • "'O<A""' -..................... ..,.. .. ~ '•
'-' ... ....,~ -·· ... . ··~ ....... ~ ... , .. ~ ..
MOVE UL J I r I I I
:;:-R~ ~ l Ptaia1ali 2211
exlltl~ loen Full pr1oe 2 W llll Ul-llll
113 Eat Belboe BMt. $13.5
Traditional
1 I Realty
6.11-7370
•RARE FlNO $99,500*
Upgrtded 2Br 28a• loft.
ffpl, CI W A.gt 631·5737
I
Wtmbeldon villefile ec:roea
trm ~ 3 t>r 2 be usum fin. 199,000 562-1835
tm •• --1044
PRICE
IEllCEI
on-1nt1 ellCIPllOnel
Brentwooo model in
Arborllkl • Woodbf'Kige
Ught tl'ld e1ry L°""V
2BR 1tr.8A. 119'>9 to beech
some vie.-S 1150
990.,.228 or 960~229
2 BR 1b&. cerpetltenge.
refrlliJ _ !•undry. olf •1
parlllng J800 ~
llble edUltl oll 940--0128
28R 2be, lrplc, petlO, yard,
Ieundry, 2 bltct IO bMc:t\
UM/mo yrty 199. LMW
rnesuge 67~ 1068
daCOf Nice pettO Just 38' lwn rm•den, 2'"8a. 2
st•P• to the talo.• I 1p1ce dbl Qar. ma 1·~ S 189.500 bits bcil S 1695 5734229
c::;. Ctlannlng tpleiout 2bf ~ lfi iso r 1be +tem rm: frpt, $1t00 ~; It 11t/1aa1• ..c: 720--t 11•
8 0 Y Spec vv-28R 2b&. on bd\,
untum pvt ~t• S 1900. 7 6-l t 7 2 lltl lnOI 2 13--92 .. 114'
.... S..'9
•28A, den, lmm~IA'
$117,500
•28A 2tMI '°'" ., .... 000
57~
i2&ra get• ye:Sbdrm wf2
beth, llPPf9 &. more kld8
ftM 11C1 tut MM 190
S..1 Att) tee
$985/mo ~--3-8<1_2_be _
flOUM wt ywd. lndry rm,
9W. ell blt-N. nlOe Mat·
tide locatlon. u111 pd
23 I Cabflllo
TILM'lt'D"1
M2·Tm-
QIANT 4br 3N 9lt9C 5 ~
new 3 min tron'I So Cll
Ptu.e s 1450 mo lfld
gerctnr vecant. 432-7128
Like ,,,._ 3&. ger, IQ Y"S
rnk:ro & men a 102~ No
._ CelU7·103t
---\ ,
-
'
-
HOROSCOPE
•
IMllllP!l/llml
HouMkeep 1 day, care for
1oddler 2 dayt Must be
mature, Eng te>kg. own
tra1199. Reta. req. Call
day/9'19 75t-092&
INTERIOR DECORATING
Color-Dealgn-People
PT /FT wlll trlln n~1
KENNEL HELP. Mollly
wlmda & llv•ln Ml.lat
have drivers llcenae. 540-.2~
WlllU
FOR NEW CUSTOM
110ME, 47~ 11ra p/wk. 5
dly. S5 p/hr, 17 50 over-time. 675-3023
LJlllO&Ptll Land~ m1lnt.,-.anQ9
laborer, full time. 15.
p/hr. Exper. pref. Apply
Tuea-Sat Dan• ·Pf
Matln1 Co 24705 Dana Dr. Dena Pt.
LIQUOR CLERK Flt or Pit,
Daya, NIQhta or Wknda
•K-0212
L ... tr .... lttt1,_.
Newport 9-ctl ., .. ioc.. er room, female, pert
time, Tue.-Wed· Thurs.
2· 10. Call Karen ,
762.oMs (8-12)
1111./llftl.ll.lll
Newport 8Mctl A.!. Co. Outlea lnctd: mall P6ck-ut>
& dlatrlb .. euppty dlttrlb.,
thpg a r~. P'O<leea
f'NIU mlga. Mutt own c.w '°' .,,.,. HMvy llfttno lnvotvecs. lbp'd pref. IM-1100 .
I
Newtpaper
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
AGES 11-14
EARN lW~ TO $75.00 PER WEEK
Wt now llavt I~ oC>tlllf1i lor JOU"I HCtf
buvtrs lo secure readers fol The Orqt Coast
Oatl7 Pilot Our crews start al 3 30 pm lllCI
WO<\ untll 8 30 pm .,..\d,ys On Saturdly, we .on 1 tew more hOurs You will earn many tricxs
and pnns. Jlonc ••th urnenc your own money ,
there 1s no del4vtt1fll or collection tnYOIYed.
d you are Hrtertsled, pluse call M< [111
(714) 548-7058
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACAOll
1 r.~o•~•ar
6 Put lorth
IO M1ICl~IP't
1~ ()f><roei..
IS US lnCl•.Jn
•6 Me•l'O 9enu•
I 1 Sturr~
t8 S111c~f'"'
20 LOO"«''
;'I f n»I lf'HC"••
]} .,, )•'
23 lrT'I.'' "'9
2'i V•r t>O
2~ S101e ,' "'0
30 vamps
3 I F A8CI 1Clta
32 Haro~ sot>Q
33 Goll 0<9
36 COOlf'CI 37 O•on~ t>•ac~
38 Sror•nOuH
J9 Youngst•• s
011ytn1ng
40 E•ce11ent1
A 1 Bruocn fooo
•2 Prooos•t•ons
U MuSCIH
<IS Cu1to"'''' •1 Tootn
Al H•'f"'Orlll
end G am
2 •
49 Betrieno
SO Sp1ek-1n<1-soan
S4 Sha1onett S7 OIO Bettem•an
sa Bacon 1ype
59 W1thd11w
60 Ooor part
61 F1atw11e at>t>r
62 Soc1at>le1
63 PrMt>yte<
DOWN
I Me1Ql'l!
•' ,t.ppf'JI
.l Valu•toon
4 F91rl4!SS
5 Snei1•r
6 Funoy onf'
1 MoCl•cum
8 GrounO cover
9 Fr()n\ -10
green
10 Carv•CI
11 Tn• neav•n•
12 8rit11n guos
13 Fleetness
t9Fuo11me
2 1 co ... ereCI up
24 Gr•en 1n101
25 Moreev11
26 "'"' 27 Hit harCI
5
28 Teu1c1ty
;>9 Clumsoness
30 Go;iloe leats
32 Lane! points
3A Eniarge
35 St t>ark Q'umtne source
37 Brown snaCle
38 c .. oee AO Feel
At Ct1t> 1 AJ Auto pen
..
"Oowncut
45 Stul)t(I
•6 Approv.O
H Ctutchft
•9 Conuntnt
5 I Out•r layer
52 Loni. Sh•ba s-
crHlor
SJ Rullntf
55 Cleat
~UK rtYtr
57 AM.Cit
= 1114 R&JX sli '1:: Org 12100. -• :;o 640--190011?$-.5258
t ~ .
CHEVROLET
., ... ..,,.., H If,.,, t' . '
' • ,., i ' \1 ~ " \
S4b-I 200
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
JObO HA•llO• llllfO
CO'>TA Ml'>A b4 l 001"
Or~ Coast DAIL:Y PILOT/Mondn, Olcembtlt 17, 1N<t -
LAAG! IWCTION CW ~EW a USED IMW'81 Lm---VOlUMEIAlU
SERVICf & l~NO
3470 N Cherry A~ LONO~
(No a.,., mt~)
<11•) .... 111 1r..,._lnt W9'colM
m
II'! flll 1 '« ' Ill ll(lf l\r~ I
SOUTH cou11n
VOLKSWAGEN
'l '••IOC•ll•I 11.nlSl .. WU c.a;,, IU ,. ..
WECIRE
hwlhH
BILL YATES
VW-PORSCHE
"\.1n Jqdr • ~1 ~·1,• r .1n1
837·48004U-4S1 1
----CONMUL
CHEVROL H
•. ' .
I r • \~ '
S4b-I 200
74 Cott Weg, auto, nu
tll'• '400 080 '499-2•TO
77 Dodge Diplomat. Mmt
eond. $1500 0 80
850-8&35
'•" t l
..
'Ml Musting 289 _,, r'btC •
engltrans xlnt cond
sm5 PP 760-9353
87 MuetanQ. F'n rd nu
219 eng, trlnS. ont. pm
Power B&S. aw 12950
494-2806 PIP
71 Pinto, 2 df. HOO 0 80 &42~. 631-2515
·re c.,n v ~ aitomctlc • •
9if tun root $1800 cau
after 8pm 846-3027
82 M USTANG GT.
Load•d w ith power
eQUIP"*'lt & v-a engm.. J
In bMullM Red U-. new (1EHE522) 17995
JohMOn & Son Uncoltl
Mercury, 2629 Hllt't>«
Blvd. Costa Mesa.. (7141
S40-56.30
Liac9la l
82 LINCOLN CONTINEN-
T AL t doc<. GIYenehy
Edition Equipped with
every Uneoln luJWry.
{ tFWHS391 S 1',H S
JC>Meon l Son Unc:oln
~ 2626 H~
Blvd Costa t.Aesa (714 I
SA0-5630
&4 LI~ TOWN CAA Uk• ~ Loeded wfTh lors o1
luxury OPllOf\I Ml.lit tee!
S 13 599 Will finance.·
(1JMU912) JOMllOO I
Son Lincoln Mercurx
2626 Hart>o< Blvd Costa
Mesa t714) 5AO-Sa30
,, ... a. ••• a.••
Or11ct C.•ltl's '"''' u.cthiltrury •eater
, .. , '"" '" .... lty. ulu. stmet. & lus•&
2'2' llllW llnl
Sii 9eu 5'..SUI
•nca~ t32S 13 CA RIS with iota 01
P<>W9f optJons Must See
(7912A) $6995 JonnlOn &
Son Ltneoln Mercury,
2626 Harbor Btvd, ~
Meaa_ (7 14) SA0-5630
83 COUGAR with Iota Ql
~ optlON and '°""' ml* ( 110H08) "995
JOhnSOl'I & Son UncOln
M ury 2626 Hatbor
• COst• Mesa (7141
540-5630
' -.
I'
BUENA
PARK
GARDEN GROVE
~.
0 ....
(/)
~ . co
EDINGER
r WARNER ~
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porache • Audi
441 E. Ce1st hy., lew,.rt h1cll
111-0IOO
Highest Quality Sales & Service
co
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales. Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts.
Competitive Rates On Lease & Dally Rentals
20IO •• ,.., lhtl., htt• llSI
142-0010 er 140-1211
0 NABERS CADILLAC ~ 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC.
' 2100 HARIOR ILYI., COST& IES&
(714) 140-1100 (213) 117-1211
• Best Prices •Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
• Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People
0 RAY FLA DEBOE HONDA
# 11 A1t1 C11ter Ir., lni11
In The Irvine Auto Center
830-7600
Complete Sales, Service & Leasing
•LONG TUM LEASES
• COMHTITIVE 'lJRCHASE PRICES
• HUGE INVENTORY
dial MERCEDES
213/714 837-2333
Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on
Manchester/Beach Blvd.
CI> RAY FLADEBOE
VOLKSWAGEN
# 20 A.ti O.lter Ir., lm11
In The Irvine Auto Center
830-7300
Orange Countys Ntwest Volkswagen Oealer
Compltte Sales, Semce & Leasing
91 FWY.
22 FRWV
-
LAGUNA
HILLS
' 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET
2121 •• ,.., ...... , .........
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Service • Leasing
546· 12H S,edll Parts Ult 541-MH
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM
SATURDAY 8:30 AM_ -6:00 PM
SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM
WE'IE
IEW
Salts
Service
G BILL YATES
WE'ii
IUUll
Patts
Body Shop
YILllWAIEI • PlllOIE • PEllEIT
SA LES • LEASING• PARTS• SERVICE
12112 Yallt leatl, I• .I•• Oa,htr•• 411-4111 111-4800
MISSION
VIEJO fl
I.AKE()
MISSK1H
Vlf'JO
SAN
JUAN
CAPISTRANO
0 BAUER MOTORS
BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU
Compte1e Automotive Need•
SALES • SERVICE • LEASING
Fine s.tectlon of Quetlty UMd Vehlclet
# 1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY
2925 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 979-2500
0 RAY FLADEBOE
LllOILI IEIOllY .IAllU
#11 a.ti 0.1ter Ir., lm11
In The lrvlne Auto Center
830-7000
G CREVIER BMW
lllZI
SALES •.SERVICE • LEASING
"Where Professional Attitude Prevails"
Spec:laH1lng In EurGPMft DeltYetJ. hc:.llent hlec:tlon of
.... end carefuftJ prepet9d UMd llMW't always In atocic.
835-3171
208 W. 1at St., Santa Ana
Corner of Bfoedwey & 11t St. Closed Sundays
G) ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT
# 1 /1 Th Wtsl For & w.sG !!E~GPAITs IR • UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE GJIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
#1rt lHp Slk1 For I Y11rs
r"" •SERVICE oa t • LEASING
Overseas Delivery Specialists
PARTS DEPART•NT ~
IATUN>AY MORMNGI
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
1540 Jamboree Rd.
HONDA
2880 Harbor Blvd.
Coate Me•• · 540-0713
1301 Ou.II Bl. -INw C•r Location
1001 Ou•ll Bl. -,. ... ,. Dlvl•lon
'\ World's Largest Selection of 0
Mercedes Benz ,,>.....
. 833-9300
· ii. O(':n~e • sALEs
"'~,;.~~-::::,.l~o • ACCESSORIES DEPT
549-8023 . Newport Beach ~' 640-8444 Salta · IMMI& ·Pitta · Stnlct · IMy si.1,
3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy.
G> INTERNATIONAL
MOTOR COACH INC.
751-5488 .-.. ~ ·• 0 t ... •f' .... ·• , .
t.
DOING
BUSINESS ·
UNDER A
FICTITIOUS
N"ME?
.
All new bu1lnesse1 (t1lng • flctlfhRia
n•me, must by l•w be registered wtth
the County Cink. The DAILY PILOT
provides the forms end flllng Hrvlc••·
for our \;Ultomera. If you •re at.,11ng e
new buslneu cell the DAILY PILOT for
Information end forms 1'
142-4321 DT. UI
Daily Pilat
, . ~ .
TOMORROW:
MON[) A y DI ( I ·.11H I. , , •H l
..
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN 'VALLEY
..
Caln pus guard held in 200 heists
-Saddle back College officer suspected
tn apartment bur lartes over two years
Apartments spans more than two
years and could involve aeveral
hundred thousand dollars worth of
stolen property, some of which bas
bail at the Newport Beach city ~.
Arraipment ientatively is let for
Tuesday at Harbor M1~'licipal Court
in Newport Beach.
Little said.
"We're antic1patina recoverina
more, .. Little added.
Until recently. Miller lived at the OalcYtOOd apanmeou, which sprawl
over an enure block at tbe rnt.er-
sec:tion of Irvine Avenue and 16th
Street
invcstipted any of the bursJaries be ii
ctwaed with committina.
Little said the campus policemu
bas been linked to about 90 bwJl,lriel
and is a suspect in about 110 otber
bu.rllarics at the apartment&. By STEVE MARBLE oi-.wr ........
A campus police officer at Saddle-
baclt College in Irvine bas been
arrested on suspicion of pulling' up to
Coast readers respond to
the kidnapping of animals
of used for medical re-
search by the City of
Hope./A3
A professor allegedly
slain by a Vietnamese
refugee lived a d ouble
llfe./A3
California
Olivia Newton-John weds
In Malibu; Bette Mldler
ties the knot In Vegas
ceremony./ AS
Nation
Heart patient William
Schroeder said despon-
dent following stroke at
ho~ital./ A4
Gen. Westmoreland's
suit against CBS heads
for three more days of
testimony before holiday
break./ AS
World
Actor Stacy Keach
preaches against use of
drugs from his London
)all cell./ A4
No. ·21n Soviet leadership
continues to hold talks
wltt:I Brltlsh about ending
~ell1f'i'is war before It
begins./ AS
People
It was a knight to re-
member at the UC Irvine
Madrig al feast.I A7
Sports .
Area prep basketball is
second to none and the
f lrst two weeks of play Is a
good indicator./81
The third annual Irvine
basketball tourney be-
gins today with 32 team
lnvolved./82
Jimmy Connors is fined
$2,000 for "un-
sportsmanlike behav-
lor. "i62 ·
Entertainment
South Coast Repertory
headed int o Its 20th
season on the w ings of a
"Seagull" In 1984./A9
George C . Scott stars as
Ebenezer Scrooge In a TV
version of ''A Christmas
Carol" tonight./ Al
Bualneu
Treasury proposals for
sweeping tax changes
have created unwanted
results.JIM
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Callfornla News
Cfiastfled
Conilcs
Crossword
Death Notices
Features
Horoscope
Ann Lander• Mut~ Funds
Natrona! Newa
Opinion
Paparazzi
Poffce Log
Public Notice•
8POrt•
Stock Marketa
Tetevtiton
Theltet'I
W•ther
World Newt
A6
A10
A3
04-5
A4
.~ 98-10
A10
89
07
A7
88
A6
05
A4
AS
A7
A3
87
81-3
B6
A6
A9
A2
A4
200 buralaries at a huge Ncwpon
Beach apanment compleit where be
once was employed as a security
officer. .
Police said today the string of
burglaries at the Oakwood Garden
been recovCTed. .
John Leonard Miller, 34. was
arrested Friday momina while on
duty at .the SaddJebac:lt campus ip
Irvine where he is employed u the
lead camp~ safety officer.
Miller is beina held on S2SO.OOO
Vlaloaa of •agar plum•
Police laid they have recovered
about Sl S0.000 worth of stolen
merchandise from Miller's residence
in l.quoa Niluet The recovered
iiems include suns. video cauette recorden. stereo equipment, ietc-
vision seuandjewelery, Officer Tom
Cblld.ren haft plenty to do wblle walt:lnC to
.ee Santa Claaa in the Carouel Coart of
South Cout Plua in Coeta lleea. Thia
dlaplay. created by the plua and South
Coaat Repertory. la called .. Santufac-
don° and featura atant animal ballooaa.
ml.ma. ~clana and other ezhiblta. tt•a
open llond&ya tbroqh 8atardaJS from lQ
a .m . to 9 :30 p.m. and Sa.Dela,.. from 11
a .m . to 8 p.m. until Dec. 24. -
Doctor has 'new'
idea house calls
Holy stethoscope, a doctor ~ho
makes house caJts?
Nobodr· with an M.0 . behind his
name stil makes house calls. Every·
one knows they went out of style at
about the same time smallpox did in
this country.
But there are always uceptions.
a nd one of thote ~ccptions is Or. .. Bernard Hu ·a San Juan Capittrano
family practtt1oncr wl\o visits a half
dozen or so of bis patients at their
south Oranie County hom es each
week.
"There are a lot of retired folks in
• th ts area and JOmetuncs 1f s d1fYk ult
for thtm to eet out o( \M hou.e ••• tht
whiu-haired, mu Uleh1otd doctor says. .. Sometimes '1·s been more lhal\ a Yt11f since they've tttn a doclOf'.
They don't come 1n for a "afi.ety or
teMOM. Some of lbem are bedridden.
othtn can•t drhe anymo re."
while both wc:re work.ins at a North
Dakota hOfPltal.
They QptMd the walk-in fam tly
mtdacal IJ'OUP more than aiA yean
llO tn I small 1,100-square-foot
office. Today, their officn bolst t-o
futl-til'J'C phyaeaans. t-0 pet1·lUM
doctors. I Pl)"ChQtosi t. ~~~J podiatrist. Mql()n MU • MCI
12 em plo)eel won:lna out o a s. 70():.
aquare-foOc modern office wildana
on Camino Cap11nno. Tbt S~,ar
okS phy,iau ftl\lrtS the office
about SO patien11 a day.
Miller formerly worked as a ICC\lr-
ity officer at the llf&C compleit, police
said. They did not k.now whether he
Miller bas been employed by
Saddleback Co!Jeee u a cadlput safe~ officer since t 980. accordinl to
William Schreiber. assistant to tbe
(Pleue .. 00Alll>/A2)
Huntington eyes
$237 ,000 worth.
off ee increases
Council will vote
tontghton boosts
for city services
By ROBERT BARltER oi-.o.-, ........ .,
It will cost more to park at the
beach or to camp overnight there,
rent city buildings -especially tf
aJcobot is going to be used -or to
play sports in city ~tfon leagues if
H untmgton Beach •City Council
members give tb~ir approvalJonight
to a series of fee increases. '
The officiaJs meet at 6:30 p.m. at
City Hall, 2000 Main St. to cons1der
the pToposals that are slated to brio&
about $237,000 extra to the city
treasury.
The biggest chunk of revenue.
S80.3SO. would come ID the form of
fire department permits. inspecuons
and fines. About $47,000 would be
provided by increases in park.in&. day
use. annual passes and campin& on
the beach.
The cost to park for a day at the•
beach for buses, motorhomcs or
vebicks oycr 25 feet ID length would
go from $12 to s2q per day.
An annual parkJ~g pass for vehicles
of ct ty residents would go from $22 to
$30 per vcar. For non-residents. the
(Pleue Me RE/A2)
Van driver faces
manslaughter rap
in teens' deaths
By STEVE MARBLE
Ot .. 0.-, ........
Prosecutors have dcctded to file
manslauahter rather than murder
charscs against a Santa Ana man who
allq edJy caused the death of "'°o
Costa Mesa htah school students
during a pohcc chase last week .
Ruben M. VaHc. 2l, w1:: ~ arrai~ed Wednesday on felony man-
slau411ter charges. which carry a
maximum sentence of eight yea~ in
pnson.
Valle rcponedly was dnv1ng a
stolen van and was be1na punucd b\
pobcc when he colhdcd with the
students' Volkswagen after running a
red light. according to Costa Mesa
police.
Bill Deanna and Roy W1lhamson.
both 17-ycar-old scruors at Estancia
Hi.Rh. were lttlled m the colhs1on.
Patrolman initially arrested Valle
on susp1eton of murder but the
District Attomey•s office filed man-
slaughter cbarJcs instead. ovenullna
the pobce department's recommen-
dation that VatJe be chl.l'Jed Wltb two
count! of Y<'nnd-detree murder.
Deputy Distnct -Attorney R.Jck
King said his offioc is rcserv1na the
nght to uJ)lnlde the ch~cs to
\Ccond-dearee murder if eVldenc.c
suppons 11
.\llhou,gh state law allows pros-
ecutors to seek murder char&es 1n
connccuon with a fatal car acx:u1ent, a
recent appclJate court decision nar-
rowed thcarcumstances underwb.icb
(Pleue ... DIUVSR/ A.2)
Irvine
rejects
school
facility
By PlllL SNEIDER.MAN °' .. ...,,.. ...
dmirt\na they tf>rn betv.un
safety corittms and !he need for
additional chtld-care facthties. Irvine
City Counctl members have vottd
not to permit ~_pretebool to open in a
Northwood om~ comple~.
In recent Wtt trvmc City Coun-
cil mem Q\-e acbowicdaed a prcssina need for tdd1tsonal day-<:att
faolittcs by run a aty ch11d-<:a.rt
coorduwor and by iotftU'I the lrvmt
Unified hool Di uic\ t a new
:ncy a.tmcd at arranai CSa cart at
locaJ cam pu · · H.-; who optf'llH tht San Juan•
Cape1trano Famdy Medical Group
wttb his wile, Lyn. 1 reaisttrtd nul"lt, •Y• hi elderly peticntt doa•t always
It' the care •MY Med. nw cam11
oouDle are out to cbante all daat. And m8ftY of'tlwtn '"' ddaty, "We·~ bllft heft llnc't l 971 and
. .. ................... .......
HU.,, •ho .... been I phytidln ,_ ·······••r',.. I quaner of I fttut'Y. met hil W1.
we know a tcM of'thttt ~ bKWw ....... 'Ga/Al)
Dr • ......,.. a-cn•t._ Amelia 4-Ylla. 19. M WU. Lyn •• s ... oeoaeofBw'~IClaedw.leofu•ecalla. . . ~
8'1l in a 4-t vote Tuctday~niPt.
coune:1l refus.cd to all Fran and
Marpret Couahlin to ope t
MlJlll"t' Pmcb l, a 1ar cb1ld.-
carc facility for up to SS d\lklrc~
within Nonbwood Plaza, ~2uu iPI• ..... n.ucJIOOI;/ Al)
\1 . '
,
I
J
Rocking for CHOC
Tom Warde and Jlm Shillito. memben of
· the Delta Theta Chi Mrrice club at Marina
lllah 8cbool lo B1lDdntton Beach. pu1ici·
pAte in teeter·totter marathon to ra1ae
money for the Cblldren '• Boepltal of
Ora.nae Co1lDty. About 20 •tudente took
put m tbe eYeDt that be&an S p.m. Friday
and ended 48 boun later. The ll'Oup teeter-
totterecl under a can.a• covertne during
hea-.y rain• and raiaed $1,500.
: .......................................................................... ..
fl
~ Patters9n to take law post
)
Orange County Congressman Jerry
• M. Patterson will become a partner
• with Leff & Mason, a California and
Washington law firm. when he leaves
office at the end of the month, it was
announced today.
CONTINUED STORIES
"I expect to become involved in
various aspects of banking and thnft
law, much of which I helped to draft
during my I 0 years in Congress," the
Democrat from Santa Ana said.
Patterson was defeated by Re-
publican Roben Dolan an NovembeT.
Patterson seTVed as chairman of the
International · Development and
Finance Subcommittee of the Bank-
ing Committee and on the Interior
Com mince while in Congress.
PRESCHOOL REJECTED IN IRVINE •••
Prom Al
Trabuco Road. Mrs. Coughlin now
provides day-care service 1n her
. home. She had rented space at·
••. Northwood Plaza and had begun
making improvements before obtain· · in, the required city permit.
n refusing to grant the Cou~lins a
conditional use permit, councd mem-
bers said the location, close to the
Santa Ana Freeway. was inap-
propriate for a preschool. The council
upheld an earlier Plannmg Com-
mission decision to deny the permit.
Several parents told the council
about the difficulty in finding cnild-
_car~ programs in lrv1ne, and they
pnuscd Mrs. Coughlin's superv1S1on
But council members sa1d their
decision was not based on the quality
of care that would be provided by the
preschool staff. The,Y 'Said the plaza
Jocatipn was not suitable for a day -
care center because of physical and
environmental problems.
<.. ougltn said many parents had
viewed the proposed preschool site in
recent months and said all were
willing to enroll a child there. Offer-
ing to work with city officials to
resolve the planning staffs concerns.
she said, "There's not one n~tive
impact that we cannot correct.'
Councilwoman Sally Anne Miller
said she was worried about traffic
hazards children might face at the
Nonhwood Plaza. "Tlus 1s not a food
site for this particular act1v1ty,' she
said.
'Tm concerned about the size and
configuration of the play area,"
Councilwoman Barbara Wiener said.
Refemng to the proposed noise wall,
she added, "I think ofth1s play yard as
bctng son of a cell with an open top "
Wh ile acknowledging the need for
additional day care, Wiener said
heallh and safet) concerns forced her
to vote against the prOJCCt.
Ma vor David Sills said food and
lx'\·erage businesses were not allowed
at Nonhwood Plaza in part because
they miaht attract school children.
RCJl!rding the preschool proposal,
he said, "It just seems like there are
too many negatives. I don't think we
can err on the side of safety for
children."
Councilman David Baker said be
was affected by the picas of P.atents
who favored the new ch1Jd-are
facility. By approving the project,
Baker said, the council would be
"making a bad site acceptable to meet
a need we know is out there.''
During a roll call vote, BaJcer
hesitated before Joining Sills, Wiener
and M.Uer in refusing to grant 1be
permit.
The Jone vote of suppon for the
preschool came from Councilman
Larry Agran. While acknowled~ng ii
was "a lousy site," Agran s&1d be
believed the preschool should be
allowed to open 1f strict city-imposed
conditions were met.
City planntng staff members had
recommended the preschool not be
perm med at Northwood Plaza Man)
of their concerns focused on a rear
play area.
Planning officials said a 131/i-foot
wall would have to be built to reduce
freewa y noise and that outdoor play
hours would have to be restricted
because of air pollution problems
associated with the freeway They
also expressed concerns about the
unusual tnangular configurauon of
the play area.
DRIVER FACES CHARGES •..
Because of the d1flicuh1es that have
surfaced regarding the preschool.
applicant Barbara Coughlin told the
council. "I have not slept a night
through since May"
From Al
murder charges can be filed.
The recenl dcc1s1on limits murder
charges to dnvers who arc under the
1nOuence of drugs or alcohol.
Costa Mesa traffic 10vest1gator Ken
Waldron said a blood test conducted
after the accident showed Valle wa~
not intoxicated Waldron said more
extensive tests that would show
"hether Valle was under the rn-
Ouence of dru~ have not been
IRVINE TEENS HELD ...
From Al
But the plan started falling apart after two 12-year-olds playing In
the groves fou:1d the Ill-gotten gain and carted It away to their
apartments.
Sgt. Dick Bowman said the youngsters naturaJly bragged about
their flnd and news soon reached the teen-agers that someone had
taken the goods they allegedly had gone to so much trouble to
purloin.
The teens confronted the 12-year-olds demanding the return of
the .stolc-n Items. Bowman said, and after some argument, the oldest
boy reportedly pulled a knife to reinforce his point.
Apparently more by accident than design, one of the 12 year olds
rcratched a finger on the knife blade, Bowman said, at which point
potlce officers arrived to break up the altercation.
Tne oldest boy Wat taken to Orange County juvenile h~I whlle the
15-ye~-old was released to his parents. Both were erres1ed on
burglary charges while 12 years olds weren't held, Bowman said.
None of 1he4r names was released.
Pol!ce are still trying to recover some Items not found In the
groves Including money, jewelry and a video cassette recorder, he
saltt
completed.
King said because the ruling 1s from
the appellete court. not the state
Supreme Court, it is not viewed by
prosecutors as the final word.
Valle 1s being held at Orange
County Jail on $750,000 bail -a
figure that likely will be reduced
durins arraignment.
Pohcc, meanwhile, are looking for
witnesses to the police chase which
started on Fair Drive near Harbor
..&uleva~l--abouti-~., -and
proceeded along Pomona and Vic-
toria streets before coming to a
violent end at the intcrscctfon of 19th
Street and Placentia Avenue.
A memorial service for Dearing
and Williamson wu conducted Sat·
urday in Costa Mesa.
GUARD ...
FromA2
college chancellor.
Schreiber said Miller worked pan
time 'for the college until October
when he was hired full ti me and
promoted to the lead position at the
college's North Campus 1n Irvine.
"Obviously. the college 1s cooper·
ating fully with the authorities,"
~hreibcr said.
As a campus safety officer, MilleT
had police authonty and camed a
weapon, Schreiber said.
FEE INCREASES CONSIDERED •••
. From Al
cost chm bs from S40 to S45 a year
The annual parkmg pass for ~nmr
c1t1zens would Jump from SI 0to S1 5
per year. For non-resident senior
citizens. the fee would double to $30 a
year
Camp1nJ'lJV'Cm1ght at the beach 1n
· n camper t'ttucle would go from SS'"
SI 0 a day. But the S 10 fee for n tro1lcr
and automobile would remain at $1 0
a day Also enchanged will be the $ l-
a-day parluna fee for automobile~.
Other proposed mcrca\C include
hike for rcn1 at the Edison and
MurdS' Park community center\.
Present rental rates that r:-.1ae from
SIS to $30 peT hour would climb to
$30 to S3S per hour But rf alcohol 1~
to be ~St'd. the rate climb\ to S3' 10
Just Call
I 642-6086 (.o------
S60 per hour IOffrt 1al~ \3y that the
use 9f akohol entail~ addttlonal
habthty and cleanup \ °'t~.)
If approved by the City Council,
fees to part1c1pate rn the cny's Junior
lifeguard program would cltmb from STro to S 120 for each youngster
For adult SP<'lrt' league, the rcai •
trat1on fee per tC"am would climb from
$285 10 $100 .\nd for youth sport ,
each player would pay SI ~ 1asteotd of
$14.
fire Dep rtmcnt 1nspec11on fee
would clt mb f~I OO to $200 and
duplic:at1on o ns would climb
from SS to $9 provided the rcpon ''
'stll page~ or less 1n lcnath
Official~ <Jay the proposed increase'
a1c dll11uJ .il l.t•c ping p..au: with
increased costs of ~rv1ccs to the city.
But Cit> Councilman Bob Mandie
said today "that the city 1s doina
better (financially) than had been
expected and maybe it oug.hl to give a
little ( hnstmas present to Jhe people
and not r.usc f cc -
Mandie said hewn rcferrin to the
rccc'nt d1sclo urc that 1he city will be
recc1v1n& about SJ.2 mlllJon 10 motor
vehicle license fees that tt hadn't
expected from the t.atc ofCahfomia.
But 1ty Admfo1 trator harles
ThomJ)SOn said the money had bceo
tarmritcd for a helicopter mainten-
ance bu1ld1ng. the purchase of a new
hehcoptcr and for a new lire depart·
mcnt commun1ca11on 'ystem
Wtla1 do you Ilk<' bout 1bt Dally Pilot? What don't you llkC'" Call tht
Hmbtr 1 t left and your mf' ••1e wtlJ be retorded, tran1crlbt"d and dellvtred
to the approprl1te editor
The aml' t 4·1touran wuln1 Sfr\llC'f' m1y be u.td to rctord ltttl'rt to tht
editor on any 1optc:. Coni?lbaton to our v tttrs rol1mn mu11 locludt 1hflr
namt' and ttlephoot 11umbtr for vulfltation No t'lreulatlon rail•, plt11t.
TtlJ u• wbat't nn your mlnlf,
I l• ~ ......
WcATHER
I -
A cold air mua over the 1t1t• and cleat 1ki.t cauMd
temperalvr .. lo drop Into the 30t and 40s In the bUin Md along the cottt early today, and contlrnilng fair weether Will keep
Southern Callfornla chllly through Tuesday.
A new atorm devetoplng off the coast la not expeQttd to
aprud llght rain and lhower. any lurther .outh than Centwal
Callfornla, lhe Nallonal Weather s.rv1oe Mid. Temperature• will drop Into the 40t 11 the civic center 1
tonight, with hlohs Tuesday In the mld·60s, the NWS aald. Valley '"""''""--' Iowa wlll range from the 401 down to the 301, warming to high a In ,.....~.-c...i..~~~
the sos and eoa.
A.long the Orange Coast, the fOfcaat calla '°' mostly tunny and slightly warmer Tuesday. LOWI tonight In the low 30s to mid
40s. Highs Tuaday In the uppa< 601 to mid SO..
~· n ee
Mltml 8Mc:fl 17 ,. Temps Mllweuk• SI n • ~~ FllOHTS HI Le Mpll-8tP .... ., 1• An-y ., 43 ~ ,. 12 wwm -Coia ..
~que a3 II .... o........ IO ... Occlud•O..,. S11lt0n¥• .. AINflllo S3 31 Ne. 'l'Ofk .. .. St>owtr• RMI flumu $1\0• Ancnorege 21 ,, Not1olh.V1 54 45 NI-WM"'-' SeMt• "l().U US ()eot <" (,,....' ' Atlanta 17 48 Ollllhe>nle Chy 55 42 Altenoc Clly 52 •O Omehe .. 20 Auel In 12 61 C>l1tftdo 76 eo leltlmot• 41 •• PNllclelpNe (7 45 =-n 55 ~ .. I ~ Calif. Temps 10 .01 ""'-=r.: 12 11o1 .. 25 10 PW\ ..... ., r. HIQll, !ow, preclpitllllOn IOI 24 noute ao 4~ ao.ton 47 43 f>o'tllenel,Ot ., Sanl• An• « 9'ld4n0 al 5 a m toc:ley Sarua Ctuz 59 )8 Bullak> 6-4 40 Ptovtoenc:e .. Cupe< 33 ·ti Relelgll 53 51 ...... lteld 51 33 Ta1-Vattey 26 20
Cherletton S C 61 $7 Reno ,.. 12 IWAll• jl4 40
Cl\enettonWV .. 81 Rldwnond 49 .. F.-50 31
Cf\etlotie,N C 15 45 .,.._ .. 43 ~-49 24
C1>ey9nne JO 09 S1,...._T_ 82 " loe Angelle ao 43 Extended Crllcago eo 29 Sall Lllk• City 3t 01 Oekland 52 :It
0tnc1nn111 17 51 hi\ Antonio 12 541 p-~ 49 2t
CleWlend .. 49 Sen Ju11n,P R 13 7 I A4ld 8IUfl •e 4t Vatleble ~"-with a~ ot
ColumbU•.Ofl .. ., St Ste Marte •• 2 I ReOwoocl Cny 54 31 rllln aboul lat• Ww.ad•f enO TlllH't· Concord,H H 34 31 S..llle ae ll2 8--10 60 35 0eyw1111cwtnc1• Fa!< r101y ~ o.llu-FI WOttll 12 53 Slweo.llp0'1 70 .. =-l>lego 53 37 !>5 10 87 in 40910 low SOI out
Oeyton .. .. SPOii-t• : a.n fl'MdlCO
51 45 deQI-oold9' Frteiay morninO o.n-48 15 ·"'-53 55 42 se 34 a.--51 21 Toptika M ll2 Senl•~· Oelron a& 37 r-.. 3.-atocaion s 1 31
• ' Hlgll. '°"'· preclplletton lot 2• .._,, Oululh 44 oe Tulle 61 Tides El PalO 50 2t WMNnglon .. 441 fl!Cllng 111 5 p.m.
F~ 21 11 Wlctlll• 54 n ..,.ow s2 31
43 ..... 33 20 ,.,"° " 02 w. ...... 43 TOOA'I' ="Rapo9 " " ..... 31 It 38 47 SeconCI lllQh 534 om 11 35 _... 54
OrealF ... ~ ·23 Surf report c.telna 57 47 S«:o<wl low 1103pm t 2
HtlrtlOtd 40 40 l.ong llNcl't 57 ...
~ .01 ·10 Monrovte eo 30 T\JtlOA'I'
Honolulu 14 10 LOCAnott MD IHAn Monletey 51 40 Finl lllQh S·40am eo
Houaloft 70 M HunUnoton 8Mcn 1·3 '"' Ml Wlleon 38 22 Fttat low 12 37 pm 00 lrldlel...,. es 31 ~Jelly. Newpor1 ,., poOt ~Beadl SI .. S-,OhlQll 8 43pm J8
Jedi-..... 79 16 40tfl ,,,... Hewpor1 1·2 poOt Oniano 55 43 s-io-11 410"' 15
Jtclt-..ille 79 $5 22nd Slfeel. Newpor1 I SIC'°' P.-nSpttnQa 11 41
~ 11 oe 8al«loe WedQe t poot P8Mdena 55 31 Sun Mii today II 4 48 p m
,,_
K.._.Clty 81 as Leoune 8Mcll I Poot RlwnkM 54 45 T....Oay et e 53 • m ""° NI• ag..., at
L.uVeou 4t 2t San OietMnl• 1-3 0000 ..,,..,_.dlno 54 48 4 47 om
Uttle floe* ., 61 Wetet tetnp 54-57 .... ~ eo ~ Moon .... al I 24 pm.·-Tuetd•Y
~ 70 61 S.... dhc:tlon IOUI-SlnJoM 57 35 11 2·43 a m encl MU lgaln Ill I 6' P m
-IB·!~lll~llll1lil1lillm .
DOCTOR MAKING HOUSE CALLS .•.
From Al
they've become our fnends," says
Lyn Huss. "So many of them arc
alone and we know of their needs."
It was one of these older patients
who put the first down payment on an
idea that evolved into their unique
Med1van service.
"She used to come here in a
wheelchair. using public transpor
tat1on," Lyn Huss recalls. "She had to
c.all two days ahead of time to
schedule a pickup. SomeUmC$ the bus
showed up late, sometimes it didn't
show up at all.
"And when they dtd dump her off
here, she sometimes bad to wait two
hours to be picked up again for the
trip home. Then they'd put her out at
the curb when she finally did get
home because of 'regulations.' "
That 79-ycar-old woman sparked a
notion in the mind ofLyp Huss to buy
a van and bnngsomeofthc1r patients
to tht pffiC'e
That plan was tossed out wtth the
old tongue depressers.
"I told her I didn't want to,et m the
transporta11on business,' Huss
groused. "That's when Lyn su$8ested
we buy a van, equip it, and visit some
of our older patients at home."
Brngo.
They purchased a three-year-old
Volkswagen bus, painted it, put in
shelves and cupboards and equipped
11 with just about everything shon of
an operating room.
"We can do aud1 ovams and
DeltJ Piiot
Detlvery
11 GuarllfttMd
MOnde'/·f•tdlY It you dO
tlOI -YOU! Piii* bl' 6 30 p m c.l IMdOt• 1 o m
and '°"' C«'V .... .,. ~..,
pulmonary !unction lesung and we
even have a centrifuge to spin down
blood samples," Lyn Huss says .
"Now we can bring the office to the
patient."
Every Thursday afternoon, Huss ~cks up his little black bag (OK. so
11's a baby blue plastic tray,) and the
medical duo arc on the road, visiting
patients in San Juan Capistrano, San
Clemente, Dana Point and
Capistrano Beach. ·
The Huss' bedside manner is
~nning to draw referrals from
patients and even from nurses whose
bosses don't make house calls.
And their pills-on-wheels program
is expanding rapidly.
"We're going to see two new
patients today who were referrals,"
Huss said on a recent Thursday
afternoon.
One reason their mobile medicaJ
service 1s becoming so popular, Lynn
Huss believes, is the cost to the elderly
patient.
"Old people li ve on a limited
budget, even in this area." she said.
"They thought they had enough
money to last the rest of their lives.
but they don't. What they do is
eliminate what they think are the
non~ssentials."
One of the tint thinp they give up
is visits to the doctor.
The Husses say most of their
elderly patients pay only about $6 for
a house call.
And that. they say. ts making them
more willing to take better C'are of
themselves.
"We take on Medicare assign·
ments," Huss explained. "Whatever
Medicare allows, we take that. The
patient picks up the other 20 per-
cent."
And. since Medic~re onl y allows
$32 for a home visit. the patients pay
only about $6.40 fo r most v1s1ts.
But the couple haven't limited tbetr
weekly treks to visiting the elderly.
Once they took th eir Med1van pr<>-
gram on the road, other poss1bih11es
opened up.
"We drove ou1 to Capistrano
Valley High School one night to give
sports physical exams 1n the gym,"
Lyn Hus said
Another ttme. they answered a
reque~t from the owner of a plumbing
business "ho "anted hrs employees
to get 1nOuen1a tnJCCllons
"He told them he didn't want them
calhn~ th sick all winter." Huss said,
laughtng.
Like their successful famil y medi-
cal group, the Huss' arc hopin$ their
Oedgltng Med1van program Wlll ex-
pand. They're already considering
putting a few more doorstep doctors
on the Rx route.
"We'd hke to see tt grow," Lyn
Huss said.
Huss agrees. "If the demand is
there, we'll meet th e demand."
On the road.
ORANGE COAST Clrculatlon 714/142-4333
D1ily Pillt
H.L. 8chwart1 HI
Publisher
Cla•elfled lldvertl•lng 7141142·5'71
AH other depertment1 142-4321
M~IN OFFICE
330 WMt Bay St Colta M... CA
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5111,,,.,.y a<lCI Svnoay " you 00 r>OI rte f'N4! yOVA
COl)y l>y 1 a IT CAM t.<t!Ofl
I .. f"' t1rtd , •1' <I N M
Frank Zlnl
Managing Editor
Karen Wittmer
Advertising Director
Coc>yf.gr>t t9e3 Ole"Q41 Coa1I Publl!llw'Q ~ No ~ ator~ oiu-1111.ona llOttor• mane< or -1-
"-" ,,....,, ..... y be •tO<OIJYCe<) ...,t>o<ll .-.. '"" ~,,.CnpyttQlll-
Clrculetlon
Telephonea
Aoaemary Churchman
Controller
~f!'CONI clan P<l91AQ@ P•"l al C.Ctt1a Meta Cal•forn•a
IUPS IU 8001 Sv~11>1on Dy ea""" ~ 1~ "'°"Inly
Dy me• S6 "° mon1Ny
M'>'ll
(Jo•rlQ"Co"''Y ..... 142~
I '°9"'• NoQllll ........
Robert Cantrell
Produclion
Manager
Donald L. Wllllama
Circulation
Manager VOL. n , NO. 352
MALE
SALE
A COIPLnE ID'I CLOTBllCI ITOU
FAMOUS BRAM> .-s Ll<E BOTANY 500
StlPP£RD * COATTAlS * ADCl.Ftritt ORSll
IVITI
....
TUX RElfTALS
2300 Harber ~.
Cotto Meto, CA 92624
• (714) .540-1111
INrt Ceata , ........
-~· .. ...
TAl.tlfllS /JOIE Olt TIE noats
[112&1 -l I
•
t,
...
FIRST EDITION
een-.a er·s otin
e l
' . at we ID reee ti on
Co~st readers respond to
the kidnapping of animals
of used for medical re-
search by the City of
Hope./A3
A professor allegedly
slain by a Vietnamese
refugee lived a double
life./ A3
Calif om la
Olivia Newton-John,
Bette M idler wed In sep-
arate ceremonies./ AS
Nation
Heart patient Wiiiiam
Schroeder said despon-
dent following stroke at
hospital./ A4
Gen. Westmoreland's
suit against CBS heads
for three more days of
testimony before holiday
break./ AS
World
Actor Stacy Keach
preaches against use of
drugs from his London
)all cell.I A4
No. 2 In Soviet leadership
continues to hold talks
with British about ending
space arms war before it
begins./ AS
People
It was a knight to re-
member at the UC Irvine
Madrigal feast./ A7
Sports
Area prep basketball is
second to none and the
first two weeks of play is a
good lndicator./8 1
The third annual Irvine
basketball tourney be-
gins today with 32 team lnvolved./Bl -____ ._
Jimmy Connors is fined
$2,000 for "un-
sportsmanlike behav-
lor. "/82
E n tertainment
South Coast Repertory
headed into Its 20th
season on the w ings of a
"Seagull" In 1984./ A9 ·
Visions of sugar plum•
George C. Scott stars as
Ebenezer Scrooge In a TV
version of ''A Christmas
Carol'' tonight./ Al
Children ha•e plenty to do while waiting to
Me s.nta Cla• ln tile Carouel Coa.rt of
Soatla Coat Pl~ ID Coeta lie... Tbl•
dlaplay, created by the plua and Soath
Cout Repertory, la called .. Santufac-
tlon" and features aJant animal balloon•,
mimes, mactclana and other ezh.lbJta. It'•
open Mondiya tlaroach Satardaya from 10
a.m. to 9:30 p.m. and Sandaya from 11
a.m. to 8 p.m. until Dec. 2 4.
Baalneu
Treasury proposals for
sweeping tax changes
have created unwanted
results./84
·noctor has 'new'
idea. house calls
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Buatness
Cattfornia News
Ct UM fled
ComJca
Croasword
O..th Notices
F .. tures.
Horoecope
Ann Landers
Muiuat Funds
National Newt
Opfnlon
Paparaz:zJ.
Poffce Log
Publlc Notices
lporta
Holy stetb0tc0pc. a doctor who
makes house caJJs?
A6 Nobody with an M.D. bchmd his
0 name sllll makes house calls. Every-
A 13 one knows they went out of style at
about the same time smallpox did in
84-5 this country.
A4 But there arc aJways uccption ,
88-10 and one of those except.Ions is Dr. -""'"'""-+-~M.&,L!"ULHus . a San Juan C::.ia..-·~-. .... 69 amity prtctitioner who v1S1ts a hat
67 dozen or so of his patients at their
A7 south Orange County homes each
week. 88 °Therc arc a lot of retired folks in
A6 this area and sometimes it's difficult
BS for them to act out.of thc boux. .. lbc
A4 wh1te--hairtd, mustachioed doctor
-A8 sa '"Someumes \f Ml\ more thin
A7 a year since they've seen a doctor A3 They don•t come an for a vancty of
rcatont. Some of them a.-e bediidckn. 81~73 others can't drive anymore."
lf uu, who operates the o Juan
68 Capt9trano f amity Mtdical Oroup
A8 with his wife, Lyn, a ttai ttrtd aune.
A9 sa)s his eldcrtr P1tien11doa·a1!1~1'
STEVE
llTCIELL .
P lOPL t IN l Hl Af'r't S
wtulc botb were worki"I at a Nonh
Dakota hospital.
They opened the walk-in f•mll)
mtd1cal 119up more lhan six ~
IJO 1n a small I I square-foot
omct. Today, thdr o s boa :t t1W'O
full-time PhY ician • t~o part-time
doctors. a psychol()lis" c)c doctor,
oodiatrist. suraeon, nt1roto1m and l l emplo)'ea worki"I out of ,s.100: ~U6fe..fo0t modern of'lke build1111
on Camino Caeistrano. 1'bc SS.~r
Old Plt)'Jiau ftprH tht oflQ lt'tt ... '°..,.baday.
Police c~ecking Santa Ana gang files
after Rea Community Center incident
By TONY SAAVEDRA
OfllleO-, ........
Costa Mesa detectives said today
they will be reviewing gang files kept
by Santa Ana police in hopes of
finding the suspect who shot a teen-
ll&CT at a wcddana rcc:cption late
Saturday.
The victim, Manin Ramirez
Gomez, 17, of Santa Ana, received
only minor injuries when a , bullet
grazed bis forehead. police reported.
Gomez was treated early Sunday
morning at Hoag Memorial Hospital
in Ncwpon Beach and released.
Detective Paul Cappuccilli said
witnesses identified the gunman as
possibly a member of a street gang 10
~nta Ana. However. Cappuccilli
said witnesses did not know the
assailant's name.
The shooting occurred about 11 :45
p.m. outsjde Rea Community Ceater
tn Costa Mesa. where a weddiJ11
reception was be1na held. Police eaicl
Gomez was seen lllJUin& with a~
of male Hispanics outsJde the k:i1Cben
area oftbe cent.er, at 661 Hamilton St.
One of the youths, about 11 yean
old. suddenly pointed a .380-ca_liber
handgun at Gomez and fired twioe,
pollce reported.
Cappuccdh said he dtd not kn.ow
what sparked the argument or
whethCT Gomez was a aucst or a
worker at the recept1on.
Apparently, no members of the
wedding part} were 1nvolvcd in the
incident.
Irvine rejects
new preschool
due to location
Chlld~care facility
would have opened
near busy freeway
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
-Of .. ...,""' ....
Adm11ung they v.erc tom bctv.~n
safet)' concerns and the net'd tor
add111onal chald <are fac1lt11es. Inane
City Council members ha"e \.Oted
not to pe'mi11 a preschool to oben an a
Nonhwood office comptcx.
In recent weeks. lrvine Ctt)' Coun-
cil members have acknowlcdced a
prnstng need for add1llonal day-care
fac1ht1cs by hinna a aty ch1ld-carc
coordmator and by JOtrung the lrvtne
Unified School Otstnct in a new
agency a1med at arranging day care at
local campuses.
But in a 4-te>-I \.Ole Tuesday rughL
the council refused to allow Frank
and M~rct Coughlin 10 open S1
l\ifargaret s Prtschool. a secular ch1ld-
1.:are faoltt} for up to 55 children
(Pleue Me PllltSOJleOL/ ~2)
Manslaughter rap
set in teens' deaths
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Dlllr""' ....
Prosecutors have decided 10 file
man$lau&hter rather than murder
charges against a Santa Ana man who
allegedly caused the death of two
Costa Mesa high school students
during a police chase last week.
Ruben M. Valle. 21. will be
arraifJled Wednesda) on felon} man-
slau"1tcr charges, which carf) a
maximum sen ten~ of eight )Cars an
pnson.
VaJle reponedl) was dm mg a
stolen van and was hcang pu~ued b\
police when he colltdt.'d \\oath th<'
students' Volkswagen after running a
red hght. according to ( osta ~fr\d
po lace.
Ball Deanng and Ro' \.\ 1lham~on
both 17-year-old ~n10~ at Estancia
H•&h-. v.erc killed 1n the colhs1on
Patrolman 1n111all) arrested Valk
on suspicion of murder but the-
Dtstnct A11omey's office filed man-
slaughter charge instead. ovurubng
the police depanment'~ recommen-
da11on that Valle be charged with two
rount& of ~econd~~
~!though state law allows pros-
t'<."Uto~ 10 seek murder characs 1n
connection with a fatal car accident. a
recent appellate coun decision nar-
rowed thec1rcumstances underwbicb
murder charges can be filed.
The recent dec1s100 linuts murder
charges to dnvers who are under the
1 n fl uence of drugs or alcohol.
Costa Mesa traffic investigator Ken
"' aldron said a blood test conducted
Jlkr the accident showed Valle was
nn1 1n10,ica1ed \.\ aldron said more
ntl·n.,l\c te\t~ that would bow
"hethcr \ allc "a\ under the in·
tluence of drup have not been
l omplett.'d
Valle 1s be1n11 held at 0ra"IC
(Pleue eee DRIVEa/ A2)
HBmay
• 1nc·rease
city fees
By ROBERT BARKER
OllMDlll!y .........
It wtll co t more ~to park at the
beach or to camp overnight there,,
rent city bu1ldin -espcc1ally tf
akoh 01n to bc used -or to __ ..,..
pl•> pons an ctt)' rccrut1on tcaa~ 1(
Jiunta :ton ~ h C'1t)' Coui\c1l
members •'-• tNipprov.U ton · t
to a scncs of fee 1nctt~sn.
The officials meet at 6:30 p.m. at
City Hall. 2000 Main t. to consider
the propo I that arc latC"d to bring
about Sl37, ("(tn to the city
treasury. -The b t chunk of rcvc~
S .3SO. v.ould com an the form of
fi~ department pemu~ 1n pct110M
and ~nes, bout $47_.000 ... 9uld ~
provaclctf_,y tncrcucs 1n parking,. da)
u • annual pa and camp1na on
the h.
The c t to
Stock Markets
TeteviaJon
n.tera
W.her
Wdtd ....
A2 It' me care tteY ae.d. n. Clftll M _,._out to chi"'9 .. iMI.
-"--~-.... .-..... 1 Quancr of 1 «nuarv. lM1 r-11 ~
..., °'*"" ltt ~. •w.-w bieeft 9'ere sancc 197' and
we----aloeOf..,_~1\ise
._ .... ,. "'" '"""" 0r . .....,.Bwmm•n•AlaellaA9Ua,88,uwtfeL79
uel-oa~ofBw'l.Dcneel ..... 1llU.OfM•1ciau..
ht h f; r bu motorho or
\Chicle$ 0\:Cr lS t tn I nith 'Uld
o from SI 2 to S20 r dav.
cPI 111-AA) (Pt ... ns/A2J
• • . .
' 1.
Rocld.iur for CHOC
Tom W~e and Jim SbJlllto, memben of
the Delta Theta Chi aentce club at M.arlna HICh School in Bunttncton Beach, partici-
pate ln teeter-totter marathon to ral.e
money for the Children'• Boepltal of
<>ranie Coanty. Aboat 20 etudents took
put fn the e.ent that befan 3 p.m. hlday
and ended 48 boon later. Tbe croup teeter-
tottered under a canYU co•ert.na darln&
heavy rain• and ralaed $1,500.
Coast bank workers helped
'back to normal' after ordeal
By tbe Associated Press
Humor and counseling arc helping
several bank employees . in San
Clemente recover from lbe ordeal of
being taken hostage dunng an at-
tempted robbery Dec. 4, in which 23
people hid in a vault.
Within hours of the hostages'
release, bank personnel trained in
trauma counseling were sent to the
Secunty PaCJfic National Bank in
said Anthony Kramer. vice president
of the bank's personnel employee
assistance department.
The 12 customers and I I em-
ployees forced into the vault by an
armed gunman. who was later cap-
tured. escaped anJUr) An extortion
attempt was made against the bank
the follow1 ng da>
Only partl> 10 JC!)\, bank 14.:ller\ arc
voluntcenn& to .. work 10 the vault
every day" to be out of harm·, wa).
Kramer said. ·
One wisecracking cmplo}'ee !>aad
that the 11 worker'i "had gone be)ond
CONTINUED STORIES
the call of <iuty 1n cuslomer service by
spending six hours with customers in
the \ault," he said.
Another hne that drew laughter
from employees came from a com-
mon phrase usc<l by robbers, who
order .. everybody" lo hand over their
money.
''If I hear the word 'everybody' in
the next month, I'll dive under my
desk ... one cmplo)'ec JOked.
The counseling provided by Secur-
ll> PaCJfic allows people to talk about
their fears and reactions. Kramer
said
.. It helps to '3) that 'I was scared.'
to recogn11e that nobod) has to be a
~trong person. and that v.hat they
'-'Cnt through was. indeed. a \'Cl)
lngh1cn1ng t"\pcncnce ... he ~ad
<;an Clemente bank manager Roger
Lo-.clcss. "'ho e\Capcd the I 15 pm
robbery attempt Ix-cause he was at
lunch. said he believes the d1s-
CU'>\1ons urc helpful.
"\omt• ix·oplc might leel lht') .uc
destroyed by such an experience and
may ta.Ice weeks to get over it. We
relived the experience and our feel-
ings in the sessions and understood
that everxonc was having normal
reactions. • Loveless said.
Students planning
holiday cheer for
hos pital veter a n s
Corona del Mar High School
stvcnth and eighth grade pupils will
present a holiday program Tuesday
for patients at the Long Beach
Veterans' Hospttal.
The pupils will be JOaned b)' staff
members from the school and mem-
bers of the PT A on the bus tnp
depanmg from the high school at 9
a.m.
The program will include a choral
oerformance of holiday music
FEE INCREASES CONSIDERED ..•
From Al
.\n annual parking pass for vehicle\
ol <.It} resident<, would go from S.22 to
\ l() per year F-or non-residents. the
co<,t cl1 mb'i from $40 to $4 5 a year.
The annual parktng pa'>s for senior
t 1t11cn' would Jump from SI 0 10S15 rcr year. f·or nnn-rc'i1den1 senior
ut11L n\. the fee would double to S 10 a
\ t Jr
<.imping O\\.'rn1ght at the beach 1n
.1 Jm~r veh1dc would go from SS to
\ llt .i da\ Rut the SI 0 Ice for a trailer
anJ JUH;mob1lc would rcmatn at SI()
J da} l\l\o unchanged will be the S \.
a-dJ~ p11rlong fee for automobile\
'>thn propo<it•d increases include
hike' tor rent at the Edison and
\.1urd) Park rnmmunst) center\
Prc\ent rcntc1I rate\ that range from
SIS to $30 per hour would chmb to
\ \IJ to S 1 ~ p<'r hour Hut 1 f akohol 1\
I•• Ix: u~d. the rate rl1mh' to SJS to
\1 n pt·r h11ur IOffa 1,11., -.a~ that thl'
u~ ol alcohol entails add111onal
hab1ht} and cleanup cow, l
If appro."cd b} the Cit} ( ounttl,
kcs to part1c1patc 10 the ci t)\ JUn1or
lifeguard program would climb from
SI I 0 to S 120 fo r each youngster
For adult '>DOn'> kaguc. the reg1<,-
trat1on fee P<'r team would climb from
SJ.85 to $300 \nd lor }OUlh \pom
each pla)cr v.ould p:n S 15 instead ol
\IJ
I m· Depanm1.·n1 1nspect1on kt''
1.1.ould t hmb from S 11)() to $200 and
duplacat1on of report<i would chmh
tnim $5 to $9 provided the rcpon •~
\P. pages or less 1n length.
< >flic1als '>3} thl' proposed 1 ncrca!>Cs
art c11med at krepang pace with
lnl rl'ased costs of -.crv1ccs to the ca t)
Apt< 11} C ounulman Boh Mandat
\atd tnda\ 'thnt the cit} 1<, domg
tx•tll:'r I Ii nanc1alh I than h.1'd ·been
\ \rx'l lt·d and ma\ h<: 11 ou11.h1 to g1~c a
l111lr ( hnstma\ prc<,<.·nt lo tht• rcork
and not raise fees ..
Mandie said he was refemng to the
recent disclosure that the c1ty wlll be
receiving about $3.2 million in motor
vehicle license fees that 1t hadn't
ex~cd from the state of California.
But Caty Administrator Charles
Thompson ..aid the money had been
earmrked for a hel icopter mainten-
ance buildtng, the purchase of a new
helicopter and for a new fire depart-
ment communication system.
DR IVER ...
From Al
County Jail on $750,000 bail -a
figure th:it likely will be reduced
during arraignment.
A mcmonal service for Dearing
Jnd Wllham<,on wa' conducted Sa t-
11nla\ 10 < O'ita Mr'ia
PRESCHOOL REJECTED IN IRVINE ...
From Al
1.1.1 1h1n Northwood Plata. 4200
I rabuco Road. Mr., ( ooghlin no""
pro\-1dcs day-care <,crv1C:c 10 her
home She had rented space a1
"-ionhwOO<t Pia.ta :ind had begun
making improvements before obtatn-
1ng the required ell) perm at.
In refusing to grant the ( ou~hlln!I a
cond111onal use permit, counc1J mcm
hers ~id the location, clo~ to tht•
~anta Ana Freeway wac, inap-
propnatc for a prcS<'hool fhc council
upheld an earlier Planning C om-
m1'is1on dt<C1s1on tu deny the permit
<,evcral parenl'I told the count.al
about the difficult) 1n finding child-
care program'> 1n Irvine, and the>
praasod Mr'i < oughlan's supervmon
But council members said thr1r
decision wa'i not ba'l(·d on 1hc quallt>
of care th1tt ~provided by the
pre~hool staff They ~1d the pla1a
loca11on wa'i not 'iuawbk for a day-
care center becau11e of phy~IC'al and
env1ronmcnt.ol problems < 1ty planning 'ltaff member\ had
recommended the pre~hool not be
permitted at Northwood Plau Many
of their concern~ focused mi a ~ar
play area.
Plttnn1ng oflici I' \aid a 1 3'/1-fc)()t
wull would have to be built to reduce
, WrRr L1srr N1NG
------
lrl'cwaj 001.,e and that outdoor pla)
hour'> would huve to be rc~tm:1cd
lx:cau'e of air pollution probkm\
ac.,oc1ated with lht• frecwa)'. They
also c-xprnscd rnncems about the
unusual tnangular configuration of
the play area
Because of thcd1fficult1C$ t~t have
surfaced regard ing the preschool,
applicant Barbara Coughlin told the
council, "I haw not slept a night
througH SIOCC May ..
Cougl1n-~1d many parent, had
viewed the proro..cd prc\lhool •ute 10
recent month' and \aid all were
walhna to enroll a child then· oncr-
ang to ,work w11h u ry oflicial'i 'to
re'IOlve the planning \tatrs conet'rn~.
'ihe said. "There' not one ncptivc
1mpact_!hat we cannot Col'fect.'
C:ounc1lwoman \ally Anne Miller
aid \he was worried about traffic
ha7ards children m11ht face at the
Northwood Plua. "l his is nota food
~ate for this pantcular activity,' 'he
said.
"I'm concerned about the 'i11e and
confiJurat1on of the play area,"
Councilwoman Barbara Wicru:r •
Refemna to the propo'itd no15e woll.
•he oddcd. "I think of tha\ play yard n
being <,0rt ol a lcll with an open lop
While acknowlcdgtng the need for
additional day care. Wiener said
health and safety con~ms forced her I
to vote apanst the proJect.
Mayor David Sills said food and
beverage businesses were not allowed
at Northwood Pl11~ rn part bccaust
they m1ght attract school children.
Rcprding the preschool proposal,
he sa id, "It j ust seems like there arc
too many negative . j don't thank we
can err on the ide of safety for
children."
Councilman David Baker suad he
was affected by the pleas of ~rent"
who favored the new child-care
facili ty. By approving the proJcct,
Bak.er said, the council wou ld be
"makanaa bad me acceptable to meet
-a..nccd we know 1s out t~·
Dunna a roll call vole. Baker
h«1tatcd before Joining Sills. W11.·ner
and Miller an refu rna to grant the
perm at.
The lone vote of 'upport ror the
pre hool came fro m Councilman
Larry Agron. W~1lc acknowlc:dg1na it
wa "a lou~y 'Ile," Aaran ..ald he
bcltC'ved \he preschool \hould be
allowed to open if ~tnct Clty-ampo~d
cond1t1on were met.
Whal do )'OD lib abo11t lbe Dally Piiot? Wlual don't you llkt? Call the
numbtr 11 lefl Hd your me1111e •lll bf-rttorded, lrH rlbff and dellvtrtd Just Call / lo tllt 1ppropritlt editor.
Tiit same U ·boor IH•trl•1 •rvlc• may used to ru ord ltttut to tbt
flfllor on an~ topic. Contrib11ore to our f.ftttr• rolama m11t lncludt lbtlr .
642-6086 n1mt and 1ef•1ltonf Hmbu for verlfl<'lllon. No clr<'aa.tlon t11l1, pin t .
Ttll o .-hit'• on your mllld. ,.
-
WrATH lR
!~~......___-~-
A cold air m ... ~ the 1tate and o-.r tklet C.U..O
tempe<atur" to drop Into the 30a and 40t In the bUln and along
the cout Mrly today, Mid contlnulno r11r ..atN!' wtll keep
Southern California chtlly thr~h Tu.tday.
A °" etorm devefoplng ott lhe cout 11 not exS*>ted to
8'>rtad light raJn and ~• any further .auth than c.nter ..
catlfornla, lhe Nattonal WMther Service Mid
TemP«aturM wUI drop Into the 40t It lhe cMc: center
tonlghl, with h1Qh1 TIHllday In lh• mld-eot, the NWS tald Valley
lows will, .. from the .Os down to the 301, wll'mlng to highs In
the 50t and 801.
Along the Orange,CoUI, the forcnt calla for moatly sunny
and .ilghtly warmer Tueaday. Lowa tonight In the tow 30I to mid
409. Hight Tueaday In the UPPlf 501 to mid 80t .
Tempe ......... 1a ..,
MIMlllMlll n 74
MllwM .. M )2 HI IA MOll-tthlll 47 14 ~ 43 43 ........ 74 ea :=qu<J 33 11 Hew O.i..N eo ... 63 3e Hft YCW11 4e •• SN>wers Anchorage 21 13 NortOl!I, V• ... 0 Ne!IOl\ll w .... S.-• NO•• us Oeo• .... Cot'"'•". Atlante 97 41 010.i-coy 15 42 AllM!le City 52 49 OrNllt 41 20 Aut.tlrt 12 5t OflA/\do 711 IO lell-• 41 •• ~e 47 3 Calif. Tempe ~ 12 u "'-* 11
10 -01 ~ ... 12 90IM 16 10 41 ,.. eo 4S 8clelon 47 4) ~.Or. 41 lit Hlgl\. '°"' ~tlon tot 24 llOUrl lani.AN
len11Ctw SI 3t 8uf!lllO ... 41 "~ 44 44 etldinO • 6 e "' 1ocs.y c..,., » ·11 :=eh 53 51 .. .,..,.., 51 )3 T.,_V..., ,. 20
CllafWton.8 c II 57 ,.. 12 EU<eltl 44 40
Qtlttelton,W V ea . 11 fllcMlon4 41 44 ,,_ llO 32
ChMIOllt.NC 15 ·~ Sil-.. 4G LAlncalltt 49 24
c~ 30 ot 91 Pel• bmpe 12 ea LoeMgele9 eo 43 E:stended ChleaQO eo 29 8tl1 Lelle Clly 39 07 Otllll#ld 52 31
ClnclMall 87 51 Sen MtonlO 12 H PMORoOiel 49 2t
0-...0 .... 49 SM'°"*'·"' II 83 71 lleCI 1"'11 .. 41 \IWIMl!e aloud-wllh e ~Of COlumoue.On IM 47 SI lteM.ne •• 21 "9dwood City S4 38 rlllll llbout le .. ~ end Th<n-C-dNH 34 ,. tM!rit st :12 a.er-to 50 S5 O.y with= wtnOt ,. tldey ~ o.IM-Ft WOflh 12 63 ·~ 70 .. ...... 63 37 1111017. 1n.o.1oiowaoe11o11 O.yton 14 .. ac--24 11 IMO!ego Ill 4S degr-cOidtt 'fldt'f momlng o.n-.. IS lyr-113 ... Sttlf"~ 56 41
Oee~ !le 21 T°'*'a .. )2 lltinl• lllfbet• 5e 34
81°'*'°" 51 31 Oe!rOll 15 37 r-... 34 CMIUI .... ot TulM OI 41 """· 1c>w, prec1p11e11on 10t a4 "°"'' Tldea El Puo 60 29 WMNng1on ... ... ef1C1inO II 8 p m,
Fllirl>tnb 21 11 Wlehlta IM 37 ~ 52 37
Fwoo 36 02 Wllll ....... nt 43 ~ ---33 20
="RacHd9 2t 2t a.op 39 Ill TOO.AV
11 36 ~ 54 47 8-tdhltll 534 p"' )8
OtwtF• -48 .23 Surf report CatWIM 57 47 Second low 1103pm 12
ttar110fd 40 40 lQng8-ft S7 44
~ ..01 11 Monto\lla IO 39 T\MIOAY
~ ... 70 LOC ATION am ....,. MoftMrey 51 40 ,.,.. hlQI> 5401 111 8 0
Ho<dlOn 70 .. Hwlt~on llNcf\ 1~ lw Ml Wllleon 38 n '"' lc)w 1237pm 00
~~ 15 ,. ......, .i.tty, 1"wpott 1·3 poor ......,,,llMdt Ill 48 s.conct ""'"
114.lpm 3t
Jec:Uon.Mt 79 116 40lh • ., .... Hewpofl 1·2 poor On!Mio " 43 ~-11•48 p"' I 5
JllCll__.. 79 55 t2nd811Mt.~ 1 poor Plllm 6prlnQe 12 41
~ 11 oe == I poor P-o.na 55 34 Sun MU 1od1y et 4 4e P m . ri..
KaMM City ti is 1 poor ~ 54 46 T....Oey el & $3 e m end Mii eoaill 11
LaaVegu .. 2t hit Cflmen1• 1·3 good Sen 9emltdln0 S4 41 4 47pm
Ullle AOC* 117 N Watet M1110 ~57 SMOlbl'ltl eo 40 M-9 Ml• al t 24 pm , r1Me Tu.day
~ 10 .. ..... cllntGtlon ~· ..,,,,_ 57 3S ttt 2 43 em and Mteegalnet 1st pm
CONT INUED STORIES
DOCTOR ~AKING HOUSE CALLS ...
From Al
they've become our friends." says
Lyn Huss. "So many of them are
aJone and we know of their needs."
It was one of these older patients
who put the first down payment on an
idea that evolved anto their unique
Medivan st"rv1ce.
"She used 10 come here in a
wheelchair. using public transpor
tat1on," Lyn Huss recalls ... She bad to
call two days ahead of time to
'iChedule a pickup. Sometimes the bus
c,howed up late, w metimes it didn't
show up at all.
"And when they dad dump her off
here. she sometimes had to wait two
hours to be packed up agatn for the
tnp home. Then they'd put her out at
tile curb when she finally did get
home because of 'regulations.'"
That 79-year-0ld woman sparked a
notion an the mand of Lyn Huss to buy
a van and bnng some of their pauents
to the office
That plan was IOS$Cd out w11h ihc
old tongue depres!lers.
.. , told her I didn't want to get in the
transportation business." Huss
groused. "That's when Lyn supcsted
we buy a van. equip 1t, and visit some
of our older pauents at home."
Ban go.
They purehascd a three-year-old
Volkswagen-bus, painted it, put in
shelves and cupboards and equipped
It witb just about everything short of
an operating room.
"We can do aud1avams and
Deity Piiot
Del Ivery
I• Ouarentffd
Mondlll Fttdey If Y°" 00 no4 ,...... ...-Pt'* by s 30 p "' c.e btofOI• 1 p "' eno 'fOAJI copy .,.. oe
Olllwrld
pulmonary tuncuon tcsttng and we
even have a centnfuge to spin down
blood samples," Lyn Huss says.
"Now we can bring the office to the
patient."
Every Thursday afternoon, Huss
~cks up his littJc black bag (OK, so
it's a baby blue plastic tray,} and the
medical duo arc on the road, visiting
patients tn San Juan Capistrano, San
Clemente. Dana Point and
Capistrano Beach.
The Huss' bedside manner is
begi nning to draw referrals from
patients and even from nurses whose
bosses don't make house calls.
And their p1lls-on-whecls pr<>vam
1s expanding rapidly.
"We're aoing to sec two new
patients today who were referrals,"
Huss said on a recent Thursday
afternoon.
One reason their mobile medical
service as becoming so popular. Lynn
H u~heves, 1s the cost toJhe elderly
patient.
··otd . people hve on a limited
budget. even in this area," she said.
"They thought they bad enough
money lo last the rest of their lives,
but they don't. What they do 1s
eliminate what they think are the
non-essentials."
One of the firsl things they give up
is visits to the doctor.
The Husses say most of their
elderly patients pay only about $6 for
a h&u5«alL
And that. they say, 1s making them
more willing to talcc better care of
themselves.
"We take on Medicare assign-
ments," Huss explained ... Whatever
Medieare allows, we take that. The
patient picks up the other 20 per-
cent.··
And. smce Medicare only allows
$32 for a home v1s1t. the patients pay
onl y about $6.40 for most v1s1ts.
But the couple haven't limited their
weekly treks to visiting the elderly.
Once they took their Med1van pro-
gram on the road, other poss1b1ht1cs
opened up
.. We drove out to Capistrano
Valley High School one ntght to gi ve
sports physical exams in the gym ...
Lyn Huss said.
Anorher time, they answered a
request from the owner of a plumbing
business who wanted his employee,
10 get 1nflucn1a IOJCCllons.
'"He told them he didn't want them
call1ni 1n s1rk all winter," Huss said.
laughing .
Like their successful family medi·
cal group, the Huss' are hopin• their
fledgJing Mcd1van program will ex-
pand. They're alread y cons1dcnng
putttng a few more doorstep doctors
on the Rx route.
"We'd hke lo see ll grow," Lyn
Huss said.
Huss agrees. "If the demand is
there. we'll meet the demand."
Qo tbuoad__ ----
ORANGE COAST Clrculatlon 714/842-4333
Daily Pilat
H.L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Cla11lfted lldvertlatng 7141142-5871
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S.turoey e"<! S.,nelav H '°" dO nol 19(.-1""" copy by 7 a m ~•" ~,,,..
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Managing Editor
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mtteiOt\ Ol CQl)ytqll °"-
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VOL. n , NO. 352
A COMPLETE MD'I CLOTlllC ITOIE
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