HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-02-12 - Orange Coast PilotNEWPORT BEACH
Freeway Clelays spark OC wrat
CalTrans advises route 55 extension,
two other projects be shelved for a year
officials are ~mmendina delay1 in
projecU to widen both Lapina ~·
itYOD Road and the Onep lf~way.
The combjned price .... (or an three
projects is S6S million.
dep9rt.ment's proposed I 91S State
Transpon.ation Improvement ~ pam, a five.-year transportation plan
prepared by the department but
submitted to the California Truspor-
tation Commission for approval. By JEFF ADLEl\ °' ... ....,,... .....
"fhe Orange County Transpor-
tation Commission demanded to
know Monday why state officials arc
recommendina that three Iona-
It'll cost you more to get
yourcaroutofhockln
Costa Mesa as city ap-
proves fee Increase for
towing cars./ A3
Irvine residents give their
views on the school dis-
trict's d lspute with the
teachers./ A3
California
A stranded woman
·motorist couldn't count
on the Border Patrol for
help./ AS
Nation
Conversations between
Ber.nhard Goetz and a
female reporter about the
shooting of four young
men In a subway were
tape-recorded .IM
Saudi Arabia's King Fahd
Is asking U.S. to put the
pressure on Israel to
agree to concessions
with Palestine./ M
World
South Korean opposition
party does surprisingly
well In elections, but not wen enough./ M
Soviet offlclals say
Chernenko Is 'on va-
cation' and won't be able ·
to meet with Greek
premier .I A5
Mlnd&Body
Toxic shock syndrof1'.le
may not be In the head-
lines anymore, but there
are still cases that can be
deadly./81
Why doesn't the good
news of vintage mar-
riages make the
grapevine? /81
Sports
Tiny Christ College Is
upgralng Its basketball
program In a big way -
with a new $5.2 mllllon
gym./C1
A sellout crowd watched
boxing In Orange County
Tuesday nlght./C1
Fountain Valley Hlgh's
glrls basketball te&IJl Is
cooking behind the play
of Jackie Cook./C3
Entertainment
An ambitious production
of ''Jnua ChrlatSU1>9r-
1tar" hits the right note at
Saddleback College.Illa
BulneM
AT&Tplanaa 15percent
discount for long-dis-
tance callers.JM
llmEX
Erma Bombeck 92
Brtdge 98
Bullettn Board A3
Bual,,_ EM
Ct1111fted CM
Comlcl 88
CrOl8WOrd ca
O.th NotlOll C5
Horoecope C7
Ann Landers 82
Mind and Body 81·2
Opfnlon AS
p.,_uz1 81
Poffoe Log AS
PubUc Notlcel CM
8port1 C1-5
T•:Jtllon 82
'"-'•• B3 W.ttw A2
sou&ht hicJlway improvement pro-
jects -iocludin& the Route SS
extension throUCh Costa Meu -be
delayed a year.
Besides the Route SS extension,
State Department of Transportation .
transportation commissioners asked Caltrans District Director
Heinz Heckeroth to explain the
reasonina behind the proposed delays
at the panel's Feb. 2S meetina.
The delays arc recommended in the
The proposed J98S improvement
propam, which is schedWed for
adoption by the California Transpor-
tation Commission i11 July. rce-
ommends that construction of the
)
School
sKippers
noteff
·theh·ook
Gooeymeee
Coa.Dty worken wen Mill cl•oln& ap a Lapna lll1.la
lntenecdon lloaday nealJa& after a gnJrer track ner-
bamed and mpll]ed 3,000 1alloaa of upbalt ~ material onto tlae road. The mlztare, Nmllar to one ued aa
a road -~a• to barden on contact wttb air. The aceldent · -while Gary Schaetter, is, of Lapna
Nlnel wu tanatn& from Lake Pormt Drlft onto Delia,., Drl.e af aboat 1 p.m. llODdaJ' aad Illa la.d 8lalfted. Tie
tnack belonp to kbolten Roo~ Serrice ofMt_.on Viejo.
No 1*rf• were reported In the accident, bat trafttc wu
affected when the tanlrer'• contenta coated the lntereecdon
to a cleptb of two feet In aome apota.
A rose is a rose and you '11
be paying through the nose
By LISA MAHONEY
a.M SCOTT STODDARD °' ... .,..,,... ....
So. you want to buy roses fbr that
special someone on Valentine's Day.
Candy's still dandy, but on Thurs-
day it just won't do?
Well brace yourself, big spender.
That long-stemmed display of devo-
tion will cost you.
A dozen tastefully arranged roses
arc selling for between $50 and $60 at
area florists. A boxed venio n of the
delicate beauties costs slightly less.
Discouraged? Don't be. Romance
can still bloom by the half-dozen at a
comparable reduction in price. And
cheaper stiU arc red carnations or an
arrangement of spring fl owers like
tuli~ ~isies, sweet peas and inses,
area 11on sts say.
If you're still determined to send
the heart of your heart a rosy message,
consider this: different colored
flowers convey different emotions.
Red roses represent love and arc
the most popular choice for Valen-
tine's Day, says Sandra Rico, man-
ager of the Flower Garden in Hunt-
ington Beach.
White roses symbolize purity and
innocence while the yellow vanety
can sugest either friendship or
jealousy, she said.
Pink roses. like white, mean purity
and simplicity. They arc pven by
those Wlth "a clean heart." says
Emma McCollom. manager and de-
siencr of Magnolia florist in Foun-
tam Valley.
Aoral designers can create arrange-
ments that convey the gJver's feelings.
McCollum says. "It says something.
It's not just a creation. 1t talks.·~
If you want to say. "l love you,"
order a pink and white flower ar-
rangement. If friendship 1s what's on
your mind. smooth yellow blooms
arc the proper choice.
But, while color comb1nattons are
perfectly appropriate. don't make the
mistake of ordenng a wtute. yellow
and and purple flower arrangement
for your honey. florists warn. Such a
grouping conv~s sadness and 1s
commonly used 1n funerals.
Valentine's Day ranks with
Mother's Day and Cbnstmas 1n the
posy trade. flonsts sa) And 1t's
cspcc1ally so now that women have
(Pleue .ee ROSS/ A2)
Business heavyweights boost UCI
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' ... ....,,... .....
• Some of Oranae County's most
influential business leaders wiU play a
larger role in fund-raising for UC
Irvine.
The business leaders have qreed to
serve as overseer directors and mem-
bers of the executive committee of the
UC Irvine Foundation board of
directors.
The group includes developer Vic-
tor C. Andrews of Andrews Brothers
of California; Arnold 0 . Beckman,
vice chairman of SmitbKline
Beckman; Athalie R. Clarke, a stock-
holder in I.be Irvine Co.;-Gavin S.
Herbert. an executive with AJlerpn
Pharmaceuticals; Walter 8. Gerken,
chairman of Pacific Mutual Life
Insurance: developer Donald M.
Koll. chairman of the Koll Co.; Gen.
William Lyon. chairman of the
Willi.am Lyon Co. and co-owner of
AirCal: R4chard J. O'Neill. owner of
Rancho M1ss1on Y1eJo: and de-
veloper Henry T . Scgcrstrom, man-
aging partner of CJ. Sqcrstrom ~nd
Sons.
At a Jan. 31 mceung of the. lJC
Irvine Foundation. Gerken was
named chairman of the non-profit
organization's exttutive committee.
Newly elected to the oversttrs and
executive committee was Donald
B~n. chamnan and pnnc1pal owner
of the Irvine Co. Last year. B~n
donated S 1 m1lhon toward construe·
uon -of a new events center al UCI.
The UC Irvine Foundauon is a
non-profit corporauoo formed to
raise. invest aod admimster contnbu-
t1ons to the univcnny.lt d1rcc1on
(Pleue eee UCI/ A2)
Newport won·tend
truant battle despite
appeals court.ruling
BJ iiEVB MAUIZ .............
Newport Beach police .will not
abandon a suciceuful anll·tnaancy
patrol even thouah state law prohibit.I
police from .dctainina YOUQI ~ unlea there is proof they are p&a)'IDI
~ said they bOl)e to wort
around the recent court nalin& by
k«pina coruacts with ltldl on a •'JoW-
key 1cveL"
Youthful-look:ina peoole should
undenuod that they Ire me to leave
or can refuse to answer questions
when appr<>Kbed by officcn. advited
City Attorney Robert Burnham.
Burnham said police must avoid
leavina the impression that the per-
son is beillJ ordcTed to answer
q uestions or ts beina restrained from lea . vtng. . f The legality o the truancy
crackdown was thrown into question
last month following a rulina by the
4th District Court of Appeals.
The court ruled that police can not
detain a youthful-k>okina penon
unless they have first-band knowl-ed&e that the person is cuttina IChooL
The Orange County District At·
torney's office has asked the state
(Pl-..e .-TllOAJllCT I A2)
PSAasks
OCfor
jet test
• onno1se
By JEFF ADLER °' ... .,.., ........
With the fl1f}lt test of one new
generation quiet jetlin~ already
under Its belt. the Orange County
Board of Supervisors wilT be uked
Wednesda} to consider scheduli04 a
scncs of flight tests for another quiet
aircraft. the 100-rssengcr Bnush
AerOSP!iCC BAc-14
Pacific Southwest Airlines, which
flies the high-wina BAe-146, has
asked supervisors for pcnn1ss1on to
dt'monstrate thai the plane can meet
John Wayne Airport's rigid no1x
gu1dehncs. inctudmg a new regu-
lation that would pennit airlines
Oytng the quietest aircraft to qualify
for additional fltghts.
Just last weekend, AirCal put the
redesigned Boe1n1 737-300 throuah a
seven-flight test and came away
hcanencd by the preliminary find-
1 ngs. Ftnal results of the test are
expected Wednesday The jetliner
probabl) will meet the touaher OOl5'C
standard for tradcout fli~tslS Iona as
(Pl--eee .r&T/A.2)
Can supervisor
play Solemon ROBERT
HYtl>MAN
Compromise.plan
posed for Heights
f Or SA Heights?
The fate of Santa Ana Hdah11, the commu.ni~. ~\IU"llCd b)' both bone
ttaill and flilbt pe&h.t. it apeacd to be delenniDed Wedntlday whm
residents try one lat time 10 penua4c
the Oruae County Boerd of Supe:r-vason on .Ut coune the communi-
ty's future witJ follow.
In wili of their Jan. 30 detilion to
·~ .... ts.out of John Wayne Ajrpon, tbe ~n now m\llt
dcdde bow Santa Ana Heiahts. which
lia ., tbe net of lbe airpon's maan
Nn'ftay, shc:Mald be mteveloptd for it
to be camP1t1b6t wu8' airport n :
F ' ··· N· t\
of Supervisors have all strugled wnh
in rtttnt ~us.
For tomt 1tt1dcnts, f11meu means
ldbD1 ltwtr homes for an cq\utab&c
price IO they can move away ftom \.be
communttf and the Jet no111e that for
~bu ,...urd them. noic raidcn~ reprucnt.ed by a
lfO'IP mMed ABCOM. maintaan .that * swat way to ett a (air pntt is to hi~ tbctr propeny ret0ned to allow
for coeltnlC'tJCM\ of office bu11d1ap
They e1n dWn 5ietl tbclr homes to
commm:.J devdopers 1nct mo .. -e .• ,..
faimesstoothttnt11hbon..1nclu.d·
(PIH• -dl0111'9/ A2)
R tley recommendtn
conversion of 170
noise-affected homes
I J JEFF ADI.Ell · .... ..., .......
Oral\IC County Board of Super·
VltOn ctwrman Tbomu R1tey rte·
ommta.dcd Monday that u~•son ldoPt a com pt91ni1t land·ute plan for
nta n.a He\ab that ~ the e~cntual COft\mion of no Cs 1n
the mot\ 001 ns.n.i<tt 1lfQ1 o( CM
small community near JOhn Waynt
A'
• ~ an a lM'mOf'IJMl\1m dit-
tnbu\C'd to suprNaton. recunmend·
I
cd the board adopt a plan that would
allow C'Ompet1na aroups of residents
"to punue their v1s1on of Santa Ana
Hel&hts."
tfc said h1 plan Ptrmitu vanety of
land WC$ tn the embanled communi-
ty JUSt off the a1rpon's nwn runway
and puts the COUftty ID the PQJtbon Of
ProttSSJf\I land-use pc:mnts 1n ~
cordance with property owncn· indi-
\ 1dual prcfcttnccs.
R1\c 's plan propotCS:
•The m t hea-vily no11e4ffee\ed
ataJ ak>nJ ~ Slrt:C1 t'VCD\"'6lty ,..ouJd ht convened from rea.climtial
use \o a profeqaonaMdmia\IU"ltive
1on1ni to allow mott n~
pttl'* Offl('C bUJJdiqp ·~parks to cX"Clop lft the • ......
(Pinn -an.&T /A.a)
"
a. ... c... DAILY P1l01' l'ruleday, FebruatY 12, 198&
=~Artukovic ' shearing pOstponed
LOS ANOELD (AP) -A U.S. Lawyers for the 8S·yeaM>ld ~te llJeed 10 a lut-mlnute Yuplavian immiarant nowhvinaln
pollpOftement Monday of the exll'I-Surfaide Colony claim that OSI, ~
dibOD beari .. for alleted war crim1· oftice known foT tracklna down Nwa
nal A~ An•ovk,_yiekSina to a in the United States. in11tpttd the
requett fOr tettimony fint fi'Qrn the extradition request by the Yuplav
bl9d ol the 90vemment'1 Nu:i· aovemment. . .. ... b•~ = Brown 111d he would conunue ''"' U.S. ' te Volney Brown extradition burina, which had been
ordend N Sher head of the Officie scheduled to beain Wednctday. until
of Soecial lnveatIPtion1, to ny bete Feb. 19 to allow 'Sher's tetdmO!'Y and
Wtdnelday ud ...Ufy about the Jive defense attorneys more time to ltMlit of the cue ....,t Al1ukovic. ~Jl9re.
TRUANCY PATROLS •••
hoa~l
Supreme Court to overturn the do-
ciJjoa but the hifb court tw not indicated whether it wUI consider the
request.
Jn \be meantime, Capt. Jim Gar-
diner said police will continue to seek
out 1ehool..u.ippin1 students in the
beach city and take them into tempor· arr, custody.
'A lot of this is semantics
conJentual contact versus deten-
tion." Gardiner· explained. "h's a
very fine line.''
"()ptration Back To School" has
resulted in hiaher school atttndance
and lower daytime crime ftaurcs since
it was started last September, Sit.
Paul Hennisey said.
Students found out of school are
taken back to their campus or. if they
arc not Newport Beach residents. arc
held at the city jail until their parents
can a1T1nge to pick them up.
The truancy crackdown has
.. Mr. Shef wlU be the oaly w1tn ...
called on the eole iaaue of duo proc:ett
aad imU111tion,.. Brown uid. '"The
question Will be whether~ wu
any ampemuu!bl. inatiption on the
pan or the United St.tta 1ovem-men1.••
Tbt defeote team hu arsuect
vehemently tba& 1Anukovic is tidna
subjected to ~iolatJon1 of hit civn
ri&hll. forced to face ICCUUtiont which were raited at other pn>clled ..
inp 2S yea.rueo.
broupt aeneraJly favorable raction
from school ldmini1t11ton and
parents. Some 1tudent1, tbouah. have voiced objections.
In the ftnt months of the procram,
the number of tTUanll detained by
police went up S33 pe.rcent from the
previous year -from <42 to 224.
Durina the same period, daytime
crime went down I 2 percent and daily
school attendance ibared 22 percent. accoroina to police fiaures.
JET NOISE TESTS REQUESTED •••
J'rom 1
thOle niabU 11C nown at levels below
the plane's 140-~nger capacity to
lbort·baul destinations such as San
frandtco.
Supervisor Thomas Riley, an a
letteraddtelled to board members, 1s
expected to uk that supervisors
schedule the BAc-146 test series from
Thursday throuah Feb. 21 .
The test series would consist of
1even ftia)lu, two at muimum gross
takeoff wciaht and five others at
viryina weiahts.
Be)'ond meeting minimum noise
rcqu1remenu to be&i!' _pa11en$C! ter·
vice at John Wayne, PSA oftic&al111C
hopeful the new Jetliner will be able to
meet the more 1lrlo,ent requirement
th.It would al1ow them to qualify for ~ditional .. tradeout" tlipts be&in•
nina April 1, when aupervisora ten·
tatively have urud to increue
airpon niabt k've[s to 5S per dar,.
PSA Vice Pmident Ocnnia 0 Dell,
in a Jetter requcstina the ru,bt ttlt,
said the airline would, like 10 ll'lde
three cxi1tin1 PSA fli&hta. which ux
noi1er,exisdn1aircraf'i, forsixquieter
flipu Oown by the BAe-146 once the
new rqulatfon1 JO into effect.
Under the plan approved by the
board Jan. 30, 1fairlines with qualify-
in• jetliners avail them1elves of
001se-rcducin1 "tradeout" fliahll, the
S5 fli&hts permitted at the ai~
woulcfbe flown'by a l11U ofl9 no11jcr
jets, 1uch 11 the MD-80, and 16 ni&hu
flown by the quieter BAe-14€ or
737-300.
COUNTY ROUTE DELAYS PROTESTED ••.
l"romAl
other pr. ojects in order to accommo-
datt the fundin,a of new project~ 1n adj~inin1count1es," he said in a letter
askina Caltrans for an explanation of
the proposed delays.
In addrcssina the commission.
Riley singled out Los Anaeles Coun-
ty, which commissioners long have
believed receives funding at the
expense of Oranae County highway
improvements.
Riley also said he found the
proposaJ "very frightenin•" and
wanted to "challenge it," notmg that
county transportation com-
mi11ionm have several months to
press for cbanaes before a program is
adopted.
However, Supervisor Bruce
Nestande, who recently was elected
chairman of the powerful California
Transportation Commiatio"1 said
that delays were recommended be-
cause there is an acrON-tho-board
funding shortage for biahway pro-
jects.
"The money needed to com~tc
the projects just is not there,' the
chainnan-eJect exp1ained. "The iuuc
is money, pure and simple. We need
hiJhcr taxes to pay for the projects
th.It are on line now ...
Because of the ahonqe, caused by
static psolfoe tu revenues and
lkyrocketina ta.d nwntenance cosu,
projects throu&hout the 1t.t1e may
have to be delayed or canceled,
Ncstande said.
.. All I can say ii Cal trans hat a
responsibility to submit ua a time
frame based on the money available.
It's up to us to take that a1J and
hammer out a coherent plan that is
fair to the state," he added. "J'U do all
in my power to protect Oran,e
County. But Orange County it,not
alone. Others have it more IC{'erc.
Herc. at least there only IJ'C dcla¥1. no
cancie11ations ...
UCI FUND RAISERS NAMED •••
P rom Al
and st.tfTfrom the un1vers1ty manage
various fund-raising programs, an-
cludina the UC Irvine Annual Fund,
the Chancellor's Club, the Business
and Industrial Associates and special
ROSE ••.
From A l
aotten into the act.
More and more women are ro--
mancing their swceucs with flowe rs.
florists say. Thas year. a popular
choice for men 1s a vase of r05CS or
carnations with balloons and a bottle
of champagne attached. one flonst
said.
fund-raising campaigns such as the
one under way now for the Donald
Bren Events Center.
The foundation board members
formerly made up the UC Irvine
Board of Over'lttrs, a panel formed
three years ago to advise the
chancellor on issues of unaversaty and
community cone.em.
The community leaders were
praised by UCI Chancellor Jack
Peltason for assuming the expanded
role in campus fund-raasang.
"UC lrvine·s successes arc due. an
large pan. w the hard work and
ded1cat1on of our fncnds an the
commun1t~ ... Pchason said. "And
our further ambitions can only be
reahzed--wrrh the continued suopen
of Orange County's leadership.
"This new board of directors
represents a maturina of the campus
and gives us the kind of organizatton
which has been so succ.essful al other
maJor research univenities."
Beyond the executive committee:,
1he UC1 foundation has 17 directors
at large.
They arc Patrick Cadipn. Dorothy
Doan. Wilham P. Ficker. James
Gianulia.s, Meredith KhachiaiJln,
Paul F. Marx. James P. McNally,
Thomas H. Nielsen, David L. Quisl·
ing. Elaine Redfield, Mary Roosevelt,
Gerald Si monis, Thomas Testman,
Marion Buie, Marianne Mc0ol)ald
Mon. Hugh Saddington and Robert
Shelton.
RILEY URGES HEIGHTS COMPROMISE ..•
From Al
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HEIGHTS FUTURE GOES oN THE LINE ••.
P'romAl
iog the ,Back Bay Comm~nity M-work with ABCOM members on a goina to put in a three-story office
sociation.. means preservh_11tberural. plan that would represent their wisb-buildina next door," said Stellhorn.
residential atmosphere of Santa Ana cs, uid Rich Adler, the planner who lives on Acacia Street. "It aeates
Hciahll -a community wbOIC work:ina moat closely with the Santa an unstable community."
bucol.ic character they say is an Ana Heiaht• land-use i11ue. Stellhorn said a plan that aJlow1 for
irreplaceable amenity for fut-srow-AdJer uid Ril:l: wanted another homes to coexist with office buildinp · ~-Co nty •• 1A. be Pia simply wouldn't work. ll)J...,•••.., u · plan to consider on..-t n-"YouhavetohavcadefinedlJ'Clof
ABcoM membcn say if their ninJ Commission's recommen-planning. .. she said. "If you all~w for
neilhbon don't want to leave, they dauon. dual-use or au P.A. (profcssiooal-
ahouldn't be forced to IO· They can While the plan ~ by Riley administrative 20nin1 to aJlow for
remain behind with the increased jet Monday wu written memben of offices), the community is gone."
noise and new office bulldinp. his own staff, it is t>. larttly on the Mullan maintains that ABCOM
The Back Bay Community A~ composite plan compjled by the members who want to sell their
sociation, on the other hand, says 1f plannina staff and ABCOM repraen-homes and move from the communl-
ABCOM membert· want to move, t.tlivcs. ty have a better opportunity to do so
then move. Sell your home to The composite p1an calls for allow-under his proposal than the com-
someono who will buy it-but pleue ina a dual use of homes and offices in posite plan they support. .
don't cbanle a community you won't Santa Ana Heiabts. AdleT 11ys. ABCOM mcmben can sell tbru
be 1iving in anymore. homes as residential property for u Not only would residents not be much. if not more. as what they will Both s1de1 present strong argu-forced to move away against their receive under the office zonina.
ments supponcd by their own will. they would be allowed sell their Mullan says.
proposals, drawin~ and other plans homes to either a homcbuyer or an The reason why property values
they say can carry them out. office developer. have declined in recent years, he uys,
Over the past five years. perhaps Adler said while a transition from is because Santa Ana Hei&hts resi-
tbe strongestadvocate ofrezonin(!hc residential to office uses in the dents have been reluctant to make
community for construction of office community might raise problems. improvements an face of an uncertain
buildings and business parks has been they could be addressed by specific future.
Rita Jones, a. Cypress Street resident building requirements and regu-No one WlShcs to P.urchase or
and secretary of ABCOM (an aero-tations. improve a home if it wtU be lost to
nym created from the names of five "There arc going to be inevitable redevelopment, Mullan said.
streets in the community -Acacia, conflicts that arc hard to visualize let "It's like beina told you have
Birch, Cypress. Orchard and Mesa). alone ensure against.. but they can be. cancer. You'd probabl~ stop puttlna
f Sa addressed." Adler said. money into your IRA.' The 22-ycar resident 0 nta Ana The composite plan puttoaethcr by But with defined areas of plannin1i
Heights says Jet noise bas become ABCOM and the county planning both the office and the residential
nearly intolerable and, followina the staff at Riley's sua.,.stion has an•,.red zoning becomes more valuable, he recent Board of Supervisors action to _.. .,.. · da'I fl' .. i. fi 41 those seekin& to preserve the com-said increase average 1 "I i.,Jls rom munity. . Aiso, by limiting the area where
to 55. is expected lO mcrease. J k M II 1 < d l business om,..-can ~ bu1'lt to only . ac u an~ J-year rc11 en • ,._. uic
Last month. the county Planning says allowing homes to exast next to 1hc streets that arc most sensitive to
Commission recommended allowing offi ce buildings would spell noise. it ensures the transition will be
properties in the most noise-sensitive catastrophe. successful.
areas to be rcwncd for office build· "If you put mixed uses in there. you By limiting the supply of office
ings. Some homes would be targeted have destroyed the ~ole neiah-space, propeny owners on thOIC
for possible redevelopment as apan-borhood," Mullan said. "Both the streets have a better chance of scllina
dents would be entitled to pan1c1paLe
an a Purchase Assurance Program to
sell their homes.
maller dunng a public heanng
Wednesday .,.
mcnts or condominiums. But more homcsand the offices would be hun." and moving away. In urgJng supervisors to adopt has amponantly, the remainder of the Mullan and the Back Bay Com-Riley ha.sonly one vote on the five-
compromise plan. Raley notes t~at community would be preserved for munity Association supporud the member board. But becaute he re~ Raley. whose d1stnct include~ both
Sani.a Ana Heights and John Wayne •The area west of Cypress Street Airport, saad he found that neither the
would be zoned to permit both the plan adopted by the Orange Co unty
current agncultural zoning and pro-Planning ( omm1u100 nor a &tafT·
feu1 onal-adm1n1strat1ve. recommended alternative "accom·
•The area cast of Cypress Street modate' the goals of both of the
would be zoned to permit both the philosophies 1hat abound 1n Santa
current agncultural zoning or. upen Ana Heights"
conversion, medium~ensity rcs1· Tht staff-reco mmended altema-
dcntial units, with a maximum of 12 t1vc did no1 go far cnou~ lo
units per acre. accommodate the goals of residents
•The area along the northerly ~1dc who wish to remain in their ho mes,
of Mesa Dnve, except for lots al 1he while 1he Planning Commission's
intersection or Acacia Street, would plan did not adequately address the
be retained for residential uses. dcme\ of those who wish to have
The Santa Ana Heiahts land·u~ !heir propeny rcdcsagnated for non-
plan. an 1mpon.ant component of !he rc\1dcn11al u~s and sold. he said.
wider John Wayne A1rpon expansion R 1lcy aide Ken Hall. who handles
project, 1s intended to bnng the a1rpon-related matters for the supcr-
communny 1nto compliance with visor. \aid there arc 170 homes in the
st.tit noise regulations. core area proposed for full conversion
Supcrv1sor1. who deferred acti on while I O~ ~omcs fall anto the area
on the plan durina a Jan. 30 a1rpon where exa!tang land use' would be
bcarina, are scheduled to take op the · melded wath new 1on1n1t.
opposana sades from the communitx equestrian and residential uses. ~Ian approved J~n .. 22 by the county resents the community, fellow super-
w1ll make "compelhn& arguments Wh'I th Pl C · 's lannina Commission. visors ma~ defer to his nro-...·1. for one plan or another during the 1 e e annang ommissaon ... .,.,... proposal leaves Jones and several of Cisca Stellhorn, president of the Yet wit a history of chanset in the
hcanng. her ABCOM neighbors out of the Back Bay Community Associataon. proposals for their community, Santa
"Bul, I believe at is mandatory that office rezoning plans. Riley's said the plan to be recommended by Ana Heights resi dents uy they're
we seek a compromise, or I am sure proposal does not. Riley''w1pes out the entire commun1-taking nothing for arantcd.
we will accomplish very little in the Faced with the Plannin~ Com· ty." . . "This is the last chance," Mullan
end exceQt that we will continue to ... At ' I n "Who 1s •"an& to want to move tn said. "Sure. we'll make our ftl\jlti•'on have problems wi th land use in Santa mission recommcnu. ion, 1 ey 1 • .-.,.,.. u AnaHcigh~··~wd. ~1s~tru~~~=t~h~e =co~un=t:v:p:l:an~n:i~n~a:s~~~ff:l~o~1~~rle~w:h:e~n:y~o:u~k:n'o~w~y~o~u~r~n~~:·ah~bo~r~ils~kln~o~~~~~~~~~~~~~= Riley also explained that in prepa~-
in& hi s compromise plan. he found 1l
very difficult to recommend any plan
that encouraaed residcntiaJ use of the
mos1 noise-sensitive area. as many
community residents had asked.
Among aroups Riley said he met
with an the put several weeks while
developing the plan were represent.I·
tivcs from the Back Bay Homeownen
Association, proponen ts of the Plan·
n1n1 Comm1ss1on'a plan and mem-
bers of ABCOM, a aroup of home-
owftcrs who preferred the staff.
recommended alternative.
Designed,
Finished
Installed
Just Call
642-6086
What do }OU like aboat Ult Dally Piiot? Wllat don't you like? Call tlte
namber at left and yoer mes1a1e wlll b4' rtrorded, treaacrlbd aad delivered
to U.e appropriate dllOr.
_, , ''°"1 " f...., .,.. "°' ,... '!OJI ~ l!y
• JO II "' t•• c.f"'• 1 I> ,,, MIO 'I""' Cl"1'f Ml bt ,,...._..,
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10 • '" •lie! '"'"' • ,~.,. ""' Dot __ ..,
Clrcue.tlon
T1le ptaonee
~
OtM91 C-"'"''' /lo•-......
Tbt Hmf 24·boar aa1wttrln11en•lce may be Hf'd to record lt&ten to tllle
editor on any topic. Coatrlb•tors to 04tr Letters colema me1t lllcl•de tlllelr
namtt and tf'lt phollt aembtt fer nrlflcatlon. No clrC91atlH calls, ple11e.
Ttll u• what'• oe ynr mllHI.
OAA"ivr COA5 T
lilly Pilat
H.L lchwertz m
Publisher
Frenk Zlnl
Managing Editor
Keren Wittmer
Advertising Olrec1or
Aoeemery Churchmen
Controller
Robert L CantreH
Production
Men Ager
Donald L. wtftlama
Circulation
Meneg r
Clrcu .. tlon 714/142...e:aN
Clet ttfted ~ 7141142·971
Aff oth« depertmentt IU-4121
MAIN CWFtcl
no -· ""' ~· • I.MM C.A ,..., """' ""' l'IM c.ie ~ r A t1.?e11
C.~•IQI~ 11)1 I ()r ... CM'lf ~ ~ No
·-lfQf... llvtltll'(lrle ~~ ... 11 .. Or ..-i ... -,._ _,, .. repr~ .... _ tPK* ,..
-"''""'"""-~------------------• ..... ~ ,.., ro41'Yf r"' ti eu.t• ...... c-.or1111 1Vf'11 IU IOOI ~(II'°" Cl'(,.,,,. .. ,. INlt\INy
D1-4 M 90~
VOL 71. NO. Ml
FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE
ON THE MARKET .TODAY ••• AT PACTORY
DIRmCT PRICDI c.11(714)148-tl41or141-1717
1977 Placentia Avenue • Costa Mela. CA 92127
'
Oranac County'• fire Foxes, 12 wort.i~ firemen wbo
appear in• 1985 calcndar. wUl aell copies of their calendar
at _aj*ial appearance. toni&ht, Feb. 19 and Feb. 26 at TUl"enfa in Newport Beach, 3388 V. Udo.
The firemen will raitc fund' for Bum <:en1.er at
UCI Medical Ceruerby 1elJln11utotntphed copies of their
calendar. Up to S30,000 ia hoped to br railed countywtde
to purchate crhlcal care equipment for the Bum Cenier.
The calendars are marketed by the Oranae County
Bum Auociation and the Ladie1 Auxiliary of the Oranac
County Fire Department. For more infonnation calJ Pegy Olcnn at 960-0'36. '
ArtUt notn work at HBHS
Artlat Ricard Demarco. director of the Edinbura F~1tiv1l, will conduct 1 free 1lidc ahow and an exhibit of
h11 wC>rl( taniaht at the Huntinaton Beach Hip School
Student Center.
The prOlf'lm, titled "The Artist as Explorer " will be
held at 7:30 p.m. and ia open to all student1 ind their parinta. •
Glaucoma .creenbJ6 .clJedaled
The Golden Timers Senior CentU will offer a
1Cteenin1 for alaucoma Wednesday mom in& at the center, 114 E. 19th St., Costa Meaa.
No appointment is nccesl¥)'. Funher information
may be obtained by callina the center at 642-227S.
B 'aal B'rltlJ women meet
The Coastline chapter of B'nai B'ri th Women will
meet Wednesday at the County Line Restaurant in Irvine for a dinner mcctin& at 6 p.m.
Area women are invited, and funher information and
directions are available by caJling SS 1-0184. .
A mton bear Hollytrood talk
The Orampaw Pettibone Squadron of the A1socia-
tion ofNaval Aviation will hold its next mcctina Thursday
morninJ in the Officers' Oub of the Marine Corps· Air
Station tn Tustin. The hangar doors will open at 1 l:30a.m.
followed by a noon luncheon.
For the record
Pflcbolu Profeta, 2, of lnine bu bl8
flnterprlnt. taken by Nancy Laeef, pnet-
dent of tbe lrYtne 8oroptomiat8' Chab, at a
child ldentlflcadon cfialc 9P0U0N4 bJ'
lntae ····"*'· Squadron member Frank Coahlan, who has been
connected with the movie industry since 1919, will be the
day's speaker.Cali S-S 1·11 H for additional information.
I'
Women .et motivation talk
"Motivation Through Team Buildina" will be the
topic of Thursday's meeting of the Balboa Harbor
AJumnae chapter of Gamma Phi Beta at 10 a.m. in the
home of Suzanne Neville in Huntington Beach.
~esa council approves
$2 auto towing increase
I sympathize with tbe
teachcn. But, the kids suf.
fer. If they have to make up
work it's not fair.
Betty Kurkjian, owner of a time management
business, will be the aucst SJ?Clker at the luncheon
meetina. Call 962-7846 for details.
By TONY SAAVEDRA
OfllleOlllr .........
Three towina companies qualify
under city reaulations to impound
cars on private property, such as
apartment complexes and shoppina
ccnten. Private impoundina is
handled by the property owner, while
the city contracts with tow1na com-
paniC$ for removing can from public
areas.
involuntary consumen. While coo-
trollina prices, the ordinance also 1et1
standards that, amona other thinp.
ensure that the car will be stored
within the city. Stre. .emlnar at college
Streu and how to combat 1t will be the topic of a
seminar Thursday at Golden West College in Huntinaton
Beach.
Charges for towin& and impound-
ing cars parked illeplly on private
property in Costa Mesa will soon be
raised, with the basic fee increasina
from $40 to $42 per vehide.
Marriaae and family counselor Rich Sobel will
present the three-hour program at 7 p.m. in the
Community Center. The fee is $8, and additional
mformation is available at 891 -3991 .
Motorists who claim the im-
pounded cars arc responsible for
payin& the city-regulated rates.
The new charges were unofficially
approved last week by the City
Council. which also ordered staff to
draft an amendment to Costa Mesa's
towina ordinance that would provide
for an annual rate increase. The
charaes would be tied to the yearly
Consumer Price Index.
The rate increaaes propoled by
Harbor Towina. G & W Towina and
Custom Towina would only affect
private propeny impounds and not
other services.
Roeder said motorists were havina
problems with towinacompanies that
had taken their cars to Stof'llC yards
on the other side of the county,
runnina up the milca,t fees.
"Not only did they have aU those
fees to pay, but they bad to fiod a way
to set to places like Fullerton," he
said.
Jlarlne Corp11 auction •lated Most of the increases are sli&ht.
with the laraest jump from S 11.SO to
SIS for releasing cars after business
hours. .
Ktn' 1rly ........
lnt.e .w ......
..........
Im.
¥ ............. Typewriters, vehicles and sleeping~ are amona
i1.em1 to be sold by the Defense Property Disposal Office
Thunday at the Marine Corps Air Station in El Toro.
RqJstration wiJI be&in at 8 a.m. at the auction will
bqin at 9 a.m. at the DPOO, Buildina 319. Call Wilma
Stena at 6S 1-3771 for more information.
Council members are expected to
vote on the new f ccs proposed by
towing companies as wcfl as the
amendment next month.
Assistant City Manqer Allan
Roeder said the city towin1 rqu-
lations were approved in 1979 to
provide some protection for the
However, Roeder said rqulatina
fees was harder than merely rqu-
latina standards. because the cny has
not devclot>ed an accurate method for
dcterminina a "fair rate of return."
He had asked the council to
eliminate the rate reaulauons
altoaether.
.. My o.d is a principal
and my brother and
brother-in-law are
teachcn. so I set both l1des
ofh. l don't lb.ink it's ri&bt.
... f wb.at they set will
1 m prove the Cid ucauonaJ
system in lrvinc then rm
all for It."
CJJJ.Jd await program Rt
The Fountain Valley Neighborhood Watch will host a
propam on child assault Thursday evening. The IUC$l
speaker will be Mary Alice Bastian, director of Child
Assault Prevention in Oranae. The 7:30 p.m. meeting is scheduled for the Ci ty
Council chambers of Fountain Valley City Hall, 10200
Slater Ave. Admission is free and refresh menu will be
served.
Public forum Wednesday
on San Joaquin Corridor
State opens case against Moses
By ne Attodate4 Pres1
LOS ANGELES -A prosecutor claimed
today that two-time Olympic aold medalist
Edwm Moses solicited sex from a policewoman
posina as a prostitute in an operation that wu
routine and not desisned to nab celebrities.
Guanno sa1d.
Officen who were moruton~ the con-
vcnat1on between Moses and Officer Susan
Gonzalez on Sunset Blvd. early Jan. 13 allO will
tesll~, Guanno said.
Tueeday,Feb.12
• 6:30 p.m., lrvlae ·City Conell, City Council
Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
• 7:30 p.m. NeWJOrt-M.,. Ualfle4 Sdool Dtttrict Boan ., Ed~. Harper Community Center. 42S E.
18th St., Cos~ Mesa.
• 7:30 sf.m. HuUa,ioe Bead Uldoa Hip ~ltool
Olttrtd District Headquarten. I 02S I Yorktown Ave.,
Huntin&ton Beach.
• 7:30 p.m. Perry Flp t Back Committee, Perry
School, 1923 1 Hardina Lane, Huntington Beach.
The allcptions came in openm& state-
ments by the prosecution that were challenaed
by a defense attorney who said Moses would be
proved innocent. Moses 1s chaf'ICd wtth
soliciting sex from a pohccwoman. a misde-
meanor.
"The combtncd wei~t of this testimony
will make clear to this Jury what sadly and
rearctt.ably IS already Cleat to the people ... lhat
Mr. Edwin Moses did tohcit'' an IC1 of
prostitution. Deputy City Attorney Michael J.
Guarino said.
Municipal Court jurors Will hear testimony
from the undercover policewoman to whom
Moses, 29, allegedly offered SIOO for an act of
oral sex and an act of sexual 1Qtcrcou~.
• Th1s task force operation was not some
special operation destaned to mqnetize (trap)
the cars of celebOties." Guanno told the six-
man. six-woman JUI)' which was seated Mon-
day.
MotCS. who has pleaded mnooent. was
atTeStcd last month dunnc a police prostJtutlon
crackdown m the HollywOod area.
lf conv1cted. be faces up \0 ai.x months in
JaJI and a S 1,000 fine, or both, althouab fir1t-t1me offendcn usually are pven a small line and
put on probation.
In ope"nina remarb for the ddemc.
attorney Edward Mcdvene said it will be proven
that Moses d.id not solicit a 1e. ICt from the
pohocwoman and that thae lft ddc:repancin
brtwcen m1t1al pohce accounu of the incident
and the versions wh•ch wtll be praentcd.
Bandit robs Huntington
photo store of $45 cash
the 300 block of South Bayfronl on
Balboa Island. The intruder made off
with nearly S 1,200 in Jewelry and
several bath towels. • • • A stereo worth S 1,000 was stolen
from a BMW parked at Newport
Center • • • A hfe raft worth $ 1.200 WU stolen
dnvcr'1 suk. • • • A camera and equipment. wonh
SS86, were reported stolen from
TeWinkle Park sometime between 3
p.m.and3:JOp,m. unday The1tems
wett let\ unattended • • • A tool box. tools and 1 scuba tank
were rq>aned stolen from an open
Pf11C 1n the 600 block of Sbahmar
Drive 10metime bc~~n S p.m
unday and 6: l S a.m. Monday. The
loss was reported at SS70. • • •
DamllC was estsmatcd at $2,00Q
after the Marden C.enter School, 695
W I 9th St., was ransacked aometime
between 3 p.m. Saturday and 7:0S
p m Monday. N<>thint was reported
stolen from the IChool. but wtndoM
were smashed and office doors wett
broken.
Police ·are tealthlna for a lone
l'lnman who robbed a Huntlnaton
Beach photo store of about S45
Monday afternoon.
Huntinaton Beach police
spokeswoman Jo Anne Berptrom
slld the holdup occurred at about 4
ButlDCfOD Baacll
A Delaware Street resident fC<o
ported early today that bis yellow
1914 Ni.uan pickup Wit Stolen &om
the 1J1tkin1 lot of the Red Onion
restaurant. 164SO PacificCout Hiah-
way. The loea wu estimated at
SI 1,000. • • •
A Rennrick Circle resident told
pol6te Monday nis.ht that hi• blue
Monterey crulter bicycle wu 1tolen
•hUe be was work.ins at the NautJes muunnt. 7302 Ccnier. The loea wu
esdmated ll SI 00. • • • A faktent of Sianton m>Oned
Monday that his locked 1914 Volk .. =Rabbit wae bu,.Jariied while
in &he Got.bani Street lot at
Wat Collete. The lou in·
d'*'9 aweo ~ui~t wonb S600.
A rltklcnt ofthe6400bk>ckof Aint
Drive RPOf'led Monday lllat htr
dlUiflttt'• whit. 26-nch N1tab ftvt-~ ~ wa11tokn from 1n front
of the houtc. The 1 wu t umated
p.m. at the I Hour Photo shop, 7660
Edlnpr Ave. A mu approached the
drive-up window, displayed a blue
steel revolver concea.led under bis
~elect and demanded money,
Berpttom said. The photo store
employee banded over $45 and the
at SUO. • • • EnleriQ& by breakina a rear
bedroom window, 10meone bur-
alariud a home Monday on the
17400 block of Jacquelyn Lane. The
lo Included S25 in cash and stereo
equipment worth S100. • • • An employee at the Lovo's ret-
taurant. 19881 Brook.bunt t.. told
police a woman ale • meal .. ~lkn •id 1he had lost her wallei. ~ left 1
driver'• licente, her home phone
number and her wort phone number.
The emplo~ later called dc1Cftnined
the wot\ number and the dnvtr's I~ were ~.The lou was (OOd
valued 11 Sl I. ll. • • • Someone tole a red and ilVtt
BMX Motomm b1ke from the '800
block o(Edaneer Avenue. police wcn
told Monday.TM IOSt wu ntimatcd
at Sl60. • • • mcone brokt Into a room at the
Librny Orisuan hoot. 7661 Warn-
tr Ave .. over the ktnd and 110~ 1
robber fled on foot.
The robber was described as a
wh•te man in hiJ 20s, about 6 feet tall
with a medium build, brown hatr and
a dark jacket
No one was iruurcd.
microwave oven worth $200.
'rCMIDtala V..U.,
Someone 1Ud open a &lidina a&a11
window in 1 bedroom in the l'°°° block of Ward and stok two trlc-
viaion teU. 1~reo and the keys to
raadence. • • • • Thieveeatole rourch.rome wire rim
hubcape valued at S6H from • l 977 Cadil&ac Seville petked in the 16000
block of Mullein. • • • • Burtlan encm.d • home in tho 8000 &lock or ta Dou Coun and
stole $2000 an jewetrz indudiQI a
l()ld ntcktact Ind I riftl, •• mcone aiole a S60 pado cU.ir
from "Tranqu1htr," a 40-foot. cabin
cruiser docked at Bayside Manna.
Lapn&Beacb
A Jasmine trcct resident com-
plained to police of a suspc:cted
prowler who, dressed in black
clothinJ. walked up to her door and
looked 1n a window at about 2: IS Lm.
Monday Relatives of the woman
chased tM prowler away, pobce said. • • • Pohce responded to reporu of
juveniles thn>WlDI rodes at the roofof
a Panorama Onvc home. ~
suapecU were not at the ..-enc upon
the officers' amval. • • • A tan 1965 Volk.I....,, van*
stoln f'tom the 400 bl()(k of Ocean
Avtnuc. the victim told pohce Moe·
day. • • • Ju"Ventles 'M'ft ated f'or alJeecd
potemion o( akiohol and VlOlation of curfew It about 2 Lm. Monday on
South Cout HJahYtay. The youthl wn-e tumed o-ver to tht1r ~ve
~n\I.
from aft UQCMlolcd patio 11 an C.-.._.
apanment in the 9000 b6ock o(Oovtt
Coun. • A *1'eO' and• drill. ~ SS'7.
• wrt rcponed ltoWa ft'Olll a cs
Re .... 81aola
A bu,.,.,. snapped off 1 ICIC'Unty
chain on 1 tide door to a residtna on
...
parked It A.lbauoft's Marttt. 2701
H..W •vd., tOmetimc bdween 1
pm tad 7:JO p m. Suday. Enuy
lMde by brabna lbe door lock Oft lM
Newport man pleads
in $4 million fraud
I J STEVE MARBLE ... ..., .......
A (ormtr Nt'wpon lk-1\4 h com·
modme1 dealer plead((! innocent
Monday to charars hC' b1lkC'd in·
vaton out more than S4 m1lhon 1n
to1d and tl"er order\
Kent Gordon Atcunder. 19. has
been held -.1thout bail ~•net ~ wa
returned to the United t.atc late last
~aft.er tcn<1n1 a onc-vtar ttn~nce
an West ~rman) for 1Ch1n1 oounttt·
kit vtdtotapct. Ho~. a bail l'f'ducllon M&nQ&
for lcunckr 1i tehcdulfd rnda) tn
U Fe<krll ('oun m Lot QICles.
Altundcr opcr1tcd cv.pon ln·
~· M~t Corp on Dov•Stft!C\ near John Wa)'ncAirpon
uatil 1981 whtn the F81 raaded ~· officea, I.Slant U Attom~ n1ta
Dymant 11id SM •id 4k~ndtr lef\ the countl')
and went to ttJCO ity •bttc t.t
\
Fahd asks U.S. to
back Palestlnlaas
W ABHJNGTON (AP) -K.iq
Fahd of S.udi Arabia is facina stiff
mi.stance as be appeals to J>mident
lleqan for U.S. ~ oo land to
makt ooncesaions to the Palestinians.
Fabd returned to the White Houee
today for mo~ talb, over breakfast, with lleqan.
The discussions took place apinst
the beckdrop of Monday's an-
nouncement that Jordan's Kina
Huuein and the Palestine Liberation
Orp.nization had llJ-eed on "a
framework for oommon action"
toward peace in the Middle East.
The R•n administration was
cautious in its initial appraisal ... Any-
thing that would brina the parties to
the table would be helpful," said a
U.S. official who insisted on
anonymity. And that apparently is
the intent of Hussein and PLO
chairman Vasser Arafat, he said.
But, the official emphasized, the
United States insists that before
negotiations began Hussein and
Arafat would have to accept U .N.
Security Council resolutions re-coanizina Israel's ri&ht to exiJt and
calliD& for an cxcban&e oflsneli-bcld
territory for peace.
Rcapn on Monday rqi.1tcred bjs
support for the "lqitunate ri&bu" of
the Pakst.iniaos at the a&ar1 or Fahd's
five-day visit. But be stmsed the
Arabs would have to oeaotiate an ..,.eemeot with bract that also 1uarantees the country's security.
So far, only E&Y~t has taken that •
step. Reapn ancfhls 1enior adviten
~ urgj~ Fahd to make it ~ible
for Hussein to follow by f YIDI him
the support of the influcnt.ial Saudis.
Until then. a senior U.S. official
told reporters, the administration
would devote its efforts to such
"building blocks" as urgina Israel to
provide a better life for Palestinians
livinJ under Israel's jurisdiction.
"The major break would co01e the
day that Jordan is able to announce its
readiness to move into direct nq~
tiations," said the official, who de-
manded anonymity.
The announcement Monday in
Amman, Jordan1 by PLO Chairman
Yasser Arafat did not provide any
indication of Jordan's role in a
possible peace i~tiative.
Ravages of hunger
Not kno..nn.r what the future will b.rlnf, a young mother
from the Etiloplan pronnce of Ttce alt.a ln a make.hift are-bat, Iler ae•erely undernou.rtahed child whimpera in Pain at Iler aide.
Opposition strong
inS. Korea voting
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405 rr~eway
But ruling party most
likely to keep control
of pro-West nation
SEOUL. South Korea (AP)
Candidates from a new opposition
party calling for democratic reform in
South Korea made a strong showing
in initial returns from National
Assembly elections today as voters
turned out in record numbers.
The ruling government party of
President Chun Doo-hwan was ex-
pected to retain control by a sizeable
margin. but the showin$ of the
opposition was seen as significant.
South Koreans voted in record
numbers in th e elections. seen as the
first real. 1f hm1ted, test for Chun 's
Democratic Justice Party. But the
voung was not expected to upset
Chun's strong legislative maJonty in
the pro-Western nation.
The new Korea Democratic Party,
which has been outspoken in its
quest10ning of Chun's commitment
to democratic changes, showed more
early support than predicted.
Turnout was heavy for the hotly
contested election. with 84.2 percent
of the nation's 24 million eligible
voters casting ballots. compared to
78.4 percent in the last' National
Assembl y election in March 198 1.
The polls closed at 6 p.m. (I a.m.
PST).
RUFFELL'S
UPHUTEIY, llC.
f• The ant Of , .. lift
1922 HMBOa IUO . COSTA EA -~1·1 1 ~
The balloting was held against a
backdrop of the rough treatment
opposition leader Kim Dae-jung re-
ceived when be returned Fnday from
self-exile 1n the United States.
A controversy has erupted over
who was to blame for the Wlld scuffie
that broke out at Seoul's Kimpo
airport during which police forcibly
separated Kim and his wife from a
delegation of Americans accompany-
ini Kim.
The American delegation argues
the South Korean government was at
fault. But the U.S. ambassador to
South Korea. Robert L. Walker, has
reportedly contended the Amencans
"wanted the confrontation" w11h
secunty agents.
Writer
taped
Goetz
talks
NEW YORK {AP) -In a t9P9-
recorded telephone conwrM-
tlon before his surrender,
Bernhard Goetz told a '*Dhbor
he would "rather put a bullet tn
my head" than face the ______________________ .___ _________ --i maefttrom of publtclty cr•tecl
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AS LOW AS
'20PER
IWJNTH
by hil lhOotlng of four youtht on
a aubw•y train.
Goetz ateo demonatr•ted for
the neighbor, Myra Frtedman,
how one of the youthe hed thrult
hi• hand Into a pocket. lndk:atfng
he had a WMPOf\. "I NW what
WU going to happen. And I
snapped,'' he told het.
Goetz tel~ Fr1edtMn, a
writer, three u.n. ~ the
Dec. 22 lh<>Ottngl Md hie Dec. 31
surrender In Concord, N.H., ac..
cording to her artl9te thll .-c tn
New York m._... She Mid
she taped two of the 08k.
Alkecl If the youthl tied thr•t·
ened hkn, 009tz Mid, "t know
wh8t WU In their minds. And they
know that t know. Do you under-
ttand? ... The ttnata .. wf'tlt
you .... WHh your eyee."
"The thr•ta were numeroua.
Numerous Md tut>tae, •• he con-
tfnued. "Thoel guys. I'm llmolt .,, •• .,. Vklloue. uveoe people.
What l did, I r9epc>nded lft I
w:tout MCI UYll98 way.••
''What I did -I turned Into I
mon8t•, MCI ttm11 the truth. But
" mo9t ~ •• lot of people,
Md belt'l In my ttto., tt.y would Mve done tM ..,,. thing, ••
Gomllkt.
Lmt•, In a ~'°" In f'rledman'I apertment, Goetz
"demonltrated. geeture he ... one of the young meo hed mede.
He "'°"9d .... rtght hind Into ....
poCket Ind "'""' tM """'. ~to .,...i. '""'°"·" ----'" Mloom.ldot'9Wllt,..... """· GMll'• molt ......... ..... _ ..... '° .....
~-llVOkt .. ..,. ''Whet I WMt to '99d II e
norm91 .... n.1'111," .. llld.
""'tum~ In,_..., ..
)Ult gonne run !'?r ... W IW ,_. eewr• montN,' he lllld,
----~~~~~~~
Reagan says 'Star Wars'
project won't be scuttled
I
By Ute A11oelated Prn1 .
NEW YORK -The "Star Wa'1" space d~feose proaram 1~ necessary for
national defense regardless of whether the Sovtets agree to ~bohsh all nuclear
weapons President Reagan says. "l want a defense that simply says that 1f
somebody starts pushing the button on those weapo~s. we've 1ot al~ chance
o( keeping all or ~t least t~e buJ~ of the"? from ,ettmg t<? the target, R~n
said in an interview published in today s Now York Times. The president .
however, drew a disunctioo between research and deployment ~fa defe~se
system. He said the Unilcd States ~ould conduct research even if the Soviet
Union agreed to deep cuts in offensive "1capons.
Wltneu clte. lo•ered ~
NEW YORK -The lllan in charge of evaluating enemy s~rength ~or Gen.
William C. Westmoreland in Vietnam ordered lowered esllma~es in. 1967
without offering evidence to support the changel a.former Army 1ntelh1en~e
officer testified. Maj. Michael F. Dilley, test fyina Monday for CBS 1n
Wcstmoreland's $120 mmion libel suit against the network. set the ~tage for
today's scheduled appearance by retired Col. qains Hawkins. Hawkins, who
estimated troop strength for Westmoreland, 1s eitpccted to be one of the
defense's most important witnesse~. . . . . Westmoreland's lawsuit, now 1n its 18th week in U.S. Distnct Cou!1 here.
resulted from CBS' 1982 documentary, "The Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam
Deception."
Old woman foll• robbery f
TRENTON, N.J. -A 78-ycar-old retired butcher who wrestled a knife
from one of two would-be robbers and screamed until they fled her aroccry
store says she ''looks like a wreck" but feels good. "h made me so mad," Rae
Moskovitz said. recalling the incident at her s~all store Sunday. The S-foot-tall
widow was b'ick in business Monday, sporting a huge bump on her head an~ a
black eye. "She's got style. She's got guts," said police Sgt. Pete Manetto. Police
responding to her screams arrested Vernon K. Howell, 20, and a 16-year-olq
boy.
' CALI FORNIA
Smoken get ll'61Jt Jnrite
SAN JOSE -Smokers who hand over two packs of cigarettes before boardin~ the country's only major non-smoking airline can fly out of
California for free this week under a promotional program. "We have from
time to trme gotten comments from people who smoke and say they ~n't u~
our airline" Scott Hamilton. Muse Air's director of corporate affairs, said .
Monday. "We're basically us in~ this promotion to get people who smoke to try
o ur airhne." Smokers have until Feb. 17 to toss out two ~cks and get aboard
a Muse plane flying from San Jose. After that. the promotion moves to the 10
other cities the 4-ycar-old airline serves.
Actor ay• 'Wllllam• Innocent
LOS ANGELES -Actor Rip Tom says that unlike a prosecutor he plays
in a television movie about Atlanta's string of child murders. he believes
Wayne Williams was innocent of murder. :·1 feel he . m~y have kn<?wn
something about it; maybe he even had something to do with 1t1 b~t I ocrtamly
don't think he killed anyone," said Tom, who played Atlanta Distnct !'ttomey
Lewis Slaton in the two-part CBS movie ~at conclude~ Tuesdar. ~ught. The
controversial movie focuses on the emouon-charged tnal of Wtlhams, who
was convicted in 1982 of murdering two young men.
Director Hathaway dead at 86
LOS ANGELES -Film maker Henry Hathaway,
who worked his way up from prop man to director and
helped John Wayne wm his onl y Oscar in "True Gri.t,"
died following a heart attack. He was 86. Hathaway died
Monday afternoon at the UCLA Medical Center. where
he was admitted two weeks ago folk>wing the heart
attack. hospital officials said. Hathaway. who began
directing low-budget Westerns in 1932, made 60 films.
including such cl assics as "The Desert Fox," the 1951
film about World War II German Field Marshal Erwin
Rommel starring James Mason, "The Lives of a Bengal
Lancer," the 1935 adventure starring Gary Cooper and ------~
"Call Nonhside 777," the mystery with James Stewart in HATHAWAY
1948.
'A-Team' cameraman Injured
LOS ANGELES-A crew member on the set of the television series "The
A-Team·· suffered minor facial bums and a slight concussion when a prop gun
accidentally discharged. officials said. Andy Martinez, 26, was released from
Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center after treatment for the injuries he
suffered about 7 p.m. Monday. Martinez.i a camera assist.ant. was holding the
prop rifle in preparation for filming or a scene for a show scheduled for
broadcast next month. according to Frank Farrell, an NBC publicist. Camera
crews were prepanng to "zero in on the rifle" when it went off. he said.
Hero finally geta SUver Star
SACRAMENTO -Willard McGuire, who pulled a wounded comrade
from a flaming t.ank in World War 11, has finally gotten his promised Silver Star
-40 years late. McGuire, 66. a retired Sacramento trucker, received the
nation's second-highest combat medal followi04 a four-month Army review
initiated by his congressman, Rep. Robert Matsui, D-Sacramento. His citation
said Cpl. McGuire displayed "bravery" and "gallantry in action" after his tank
was hit by enemy fire outside Munich on April 16, 1945.
WORLD
Reward offered for DEA agent
MEXICO CJTY -Saying the United States will not
"be intimidated by mafia thugs," the U.S. Embassy has
offered a SS0,000 reward for information on the
whereabouts of a Drug Enforcement Administration
agent kidnapped by suspected drug traffickers. An
embassy statement Monday announced the reward offer
in the case of Enrique Camarena Salazar, 37, abducted in
Guadalajara on Thursday. Salazar was last seen when he
left the U.S. Consulate m Guadalajara for a luncheon
date with his wife. Four armed men were seen
intercepting him at gunpoint throwing him into a car.
DEA officials said They said there has been no contact
with the kidnapper and no ransom demand. DEA •ients SALAZAR
have been sent from ~exico City and Texas to Guadalajara, a bia drug
traffickjng center 322 miles northwest ofthe Mexican capital, to assist police
police authorities wjth the search.
Plane la LaOll NfJ61Jt
BANGKOK. Thailand -A joint U.S.-Laorian ttam has bqun '°search
at a plane crash site in 'louthem Laos for the remains ofl 3 U.S. airmen miuina
in action in the Vietnam war, a sourc!e at tbc U.S. Embassy in Vientiaac, Laos,
said today. The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, aaid the
embassy was told by the Laotian Foreign Minislry that work bcpn Monday at
the site near Pakse city, where a U.S. Air Force C-130 transport plane craahcd
in December 1972. ~
Iraq mU.Ue JJltll oU t.nker
MANAMA. Bahrain -Iraqi warplanes toda~ fared a beat-seek.ioa missile
at a Greek-owned oil tanker filled with some 230,000 tons of crude oil, settina
it ablaze in the Pmian Gulf, marine aaJvaac executives reported. The Exocet
miasjle punched a hole in the right aide of the Liberi1n-rqi1tered steam linker,
Fellowabip I, after the ship had picked up oil at Iran's Khars tsland oil terminal,
the executives aaid.
Kaela fnritado11 • mywtezy
LONDON -Membcn ofa lqialativc committee of the Houte of Lords
said they know nothina about Ktor Stacy k.each'1 l>u~lana to address
the peen after hia release from prison on a cocaine sm ina oonviction.
Accordina to the New York Daily Ne", Keach wrote a letter t0 the producer
of the "Mickey Spillane'• Mike Hammer" televiaion ~ Jay Bem*tein,
tcllin1 him of an Invitation by the Houte oflordhnd aayina he wau1woua to
become Involved in drua rehabilitation prosrama once he retW"Md to the
United States. H~er, memben of a dnaat dcpcn~ committee In the
House of Lords, who spoke on condition tbC'Y not be identified, aaid Monday
they had no knowledfe ofan invitation for Keach to ldclme the hot.lie.
Viet. poand rebel cam,.
ARANYAPRATHET Thailand -Vietnamete forcet, firina thousands
ofaniUety and monar sheds, today launched a tw<>-proqed anack a Khmer
Ro• po1ition1 in Western Cambodia, foteina thou1and1 of panicked
Cambod.tans into Thailand, Thai miliwy sources said. Tbc IOUfCft 1aid
V1ctnamae forccsdrivina nonh-ard may have eetzed and bUmed the Khmer
Rouae-controUed civilian camp 11 Kbeo Din. •bout 20 mtlel soutb ol thtt key
border town. •
-Belushi
suspect
to trial ·
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Cathy
Evelyn Smith wUI take her cbancet
' with a murder charae rather than eleld auilty to manalauahter in the drua ovmlole death o1 comedian
JobD Belushi bec:'allle grand jury
testimony ahows she's innooent, her
• lawyer uys. -
Smith1 a onetime t.ckup •inaer
with roc1e music p-oupe., uked Mon-
day for a P!Climi.nary hearina to
determine tf there is sufficient
evidepce to try her.
Superior Court Judae Robert De-
vich ordered her and bet attorney,
Howard Weitzman, to appear m
Municipal Court apin Wednesday,
when the district attorney will file a
formal complaint 'Ind a preliminary
hearina date will be set.
0 We.,re back on • case of murder,"
said Deputy District Attorney
Michael Montqna. •
Belushi, 33, a comedian who first
pined fame on TV's "Saturday Ni&ht
Live,.. died March S, 1982, in a
bunplow at the Chateau Marmont
Hotel on the Sunset Strip. The
coroner said he died of acute heroin
and cocaine poisoning.
A year later, a arand jury indicted
Smith, who was with Belushi before
bis death, on one count of murder and
13 counts of furnishing and adminis-
tering narcotics.
Montaana said the decision to go
for a preliminary hearil?J negates a
plea barpin the Canad1an woman
struck with prosecutors before waiv-
ina extradition and returning to the
United States last month.
She bad tentatively agreed to plead
guilty to a reduced charge of involun-
1 tary manslau&hter and tliree counts of
r furnishing and administering
1 narcotics, Montagna said.
Bennett out.SpOkeO
on government loans.
support for Hatch Act
WASHINGTON (AP) -Parents
have been "burned" by schools iis;na
controversial teachina material• and
arc justified in kecpinacl0tew1tch on
what their children study, Secretary
off.d.ucation William J. Bennett sa)'I.
.. J! I were a parent with a child in
tebool ... ,J would take a very clote
look at what my son was bein1 aned
to study. becaute there are lots of
lhinas m the 1ebool1 that in my
judgment don't belona there," Ben-
ca..... -• -••t.. nett said Monday. UJJ.'f •..aP --~ At bis first news conference since
.--------~-~lliiiii minJ the new education sec-.._ retaty this month, Bennett defended
UCLA h ( the Hatch Act rqulations that ~~ire as tehools to get parents' pemussaon
before aivina children any psycho-
pupil glut ~,:1~f':ii~rs'.nquirina about their
Twenty-five major school groups
are lobbyina to aet the rules reppled.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -UCl.A They contend cooscrvativ,s ate try--
has received a glut of applications for in& to use them to exercise veto power
admission next fall and is referrina over school curriculum.
freshmen to the eight Los ~let-"It's not hard ifone looks at the last
area community oolleaes with a IS ycan in education to understand
promise that the classes will be on a why parents were distressed about tbe
par with UCLA's. thinp that· were going on in the
UCLA officials also promise the schools.'' Bennett said.
students they'll be able to transfer to .. Parents have been burned.
UCLA from the community coll*' Parents have looked at materials that
as juniors. students have brought home from
The university received nearly school and have gotten upset. I think
4,000 more applications than it bas in many cases they're entirely justi-
room for. The lower-ranking students fled," he said. without giving speci-
arc being redirected to the two-year fies.
schools. Bennett ~id the outcry over Presi-
The program parallels one an-dent Reagan's proposals to cut loans,
nounced by UC-Berkeley and San grants and other aid for more than 1
Francisco Bay Area community col-mitJion college students "has been
lcges in December. way out ofline."
University officials said the com-He said the cuts were justified by
munity colleges have agreed to offer the federal deficit and by the govcrn-
the acadmic courses on a par with ment's desire to make sure that the
UCLA'seven if the enrollment is low. neediest can afford some college.
That It more 1mponut .-...._
sure tome student.I can eo to IM mOll cx~nsive pnvat.e inl'dta~ Ille
u~ •
Abd while he acknowtedeed tUt
some families stru11lina 10 Mod meir
children to cofkle may bave .. 10
tiahten the belt even further," fot
oihcn it will simply mean doinc
Chernenko 'on.vacation;'
woD. 't meet Gr~ek prelnler
MOSCOW (AP) -President
Konstantin U. Chernenko is va-
cationint outside M0tc0w and will
not rec::etve visiting Greek Premier
Andreas Papandreou, a Soviet of-
ficial said today.
Chernenko's absence is eJLpectcd to
further fuel speculation about bis
health. He is reportedly ailinaand bas
not appeared in public iince late last
year. .
Chernenko normaDy could be ex-
pected to receive a visttina premier.
A Greek Embuly apotet-.oman
11id MondlJ ailbt that the Cina
ck.leption bad .. the impretlioo ·• tba1
Oaemenko would meet with Papan.-
dreou duriaa bit oftkial visit t.o
Moscow.
But a Soviet 90vernment official, who~ on condition that he not be
identified by name, said there would
be no meeting.
"Mr. Chernenko israot in Me»-
cow, .. the official said. Asked where
. !
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Choice of name
for recall group
hides real motive
.. What's in a name?" asked the bard.
Well, bard, consider this: the disgruntled teachers trying to
unseat three trustees of Saddleback Community College have
named their recall organization Citizens for a Better Saddleback.
For-some reason, these people think the college will be better
without trustees whose major sin appears to be support for the
efforts of the chancellor to restore fiscal sanity to the institution.
The chancellor earned the enmity of the teachers when he
initiated a program that, amon_g other reforms, would have
reduced salaries that exceeded S60,000 for many instructors,
topped $70,000 for a handful and, in one case, approached
$80,000.
But you know all about that kind of thing, bard. After all,
you're the author of the immortal, .. The lady doth protest too
much, methinks."
The Saddleback teachers likewise protest too much. They
have turned their guns on the trustees after· their campaign to
oust Chancellor Larry Stevens failed. The teachers' position is
designed to protect a salary schedule that is out ofline with the
rest of the industry, out of line with the college's budget and
unrealistically high. If it is detrimental to the college and an
, improper use of taxpayers· money, that's a price the teachers are
willing to pay. .
The voters, to whom the teachers must appeal if their recall
war is to end victoriously, aren't likely to be sympathetic to
teachers who ean make $80,000 a year. Thus the name, Citizens
for a Better Saddleback, inspired by the same kind of intelligence
that thinks the public will believe every detergent is .. new and
improved."
We should be insulted. Do the teachers think we will be
convinced that ff they are for a .. Better Saddleback," then their
opponents are, per force, advocates for a "Worse Saddleback?"
It's a common enough tactic. Abortion foes worked it to
perfection when they became the "Pro-life" movement, therebX
rendering those who would allow abortions forever .. Anti-life.'
The examples of this kind of thing are almost endless.
Remember the radicals of the '60s who called themselves
Students for a Democratic Society. By logical extension, the
government they opposed would then have represented an
undemocratic society. How about the anti-nuclear Alliance for
Survival. Does it really expect us to support it because our
defense posture is the product of an "Alliance for Destruction?"
The late actress Tallulah Bankhead could have been
observing the Saddleback recall, bard, whe n she uttered the sly
commentary: "There is less in this than meets the eye."
Patterson ouster correct
choice for county voters
To the Editor:
'Mr. Anderson's portrayal of Jerry
Pattc;rson's image (Daily Pilot, Jan.
16) 1s not shared. fortunately. by
everyone. The side of Jerry Patterson
Mr. Anderson saw might very well
exist. as we all have some good in our
being; however, the damage that Mr.
Patterson did in Santa Ana and the
number of people he has hurt hardly
puts him 1n the first categories Martin
Luther King spoke of when he stated.
··Every man must decide whether he
will walk in the hght of creative
altruism or ... " (Mr. Patterson chose
the or) the darkness of destructive
selfishness." And instead of doing
FOR others. Mr. Patterson did TO
others.
Jerry Patterson·s ouster was not a
great loss for the county.
Orange Counuans did sec the real
person before the y voted.
GAY SCOTT
Santa Ana
Adult films should cost more
To the Editor:
I'd hke to bring to the attention of
the readers an IOJUSllce which 1s being
practiced presently in our countr) 's
movie theaters. It's something that
has bothered me since I turned 12
years old and wanted to see ··My
Bloody Valentine." rated ··R." Teen-
agers between the aie of I I and 16 are
charged adult pnces at theaters.
However. until one reaches the age of
17. one 1s not allowed 10 sec adull
movies. Is this fair?
I do not think the minimum age of
17 sho1.1ld be lowered; our youth is
corrupt enough already. I do think the
adult price category of SS-SS.SO
should be raised to meet the 17-year
minimum. The $2.50 the kids save
bu~s a medium popcorn and a
medium coke I want to see this
outrage corrected'
CINDI STREET
Newport Beach
Why waste t he bay on offices?
To the Ed itor·
I am so appalled. deva<;tated, angry
and perplexed that our beautiful city
would even consider allowing an
office building to be constructed on
the old Rosan property on our
beautiful bay.
An office bu1lding??'1 -where
there could be condos or apartments
for people to enjoy 24 hours a day ...
rather than people at desks. com-
puters and typewnters -eight hours
a day? Such a waste that 1t breaks my
heart.
'Everyone 1s so concerned about the
a1rpon .. I think they are letting this
temble thing happen.
Whoever Mr Anderson is ... he
certainly pulled a fast-one on our
Newpon Reach and Ba:r .
I wonder 1f anyone ij:cls as I do?
I'm sorry for the people on the hill;
l"m SOrT) for the homeowners that
bought on the end of a runway. They
were warned in the 1940s.
I wonder what M~ Stewart thinks
about th1~ l'isue7
Does anyone ca/e?
N. POST
Newport Beach
Pilot welcomes comments
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OAANGC COAST
-DailJ P-ilai
PIJOllltle<I _, 011V ot t""' ~"' e1 )'Ill w,.1 Bly 81 C,0.te ...... .A(tOt-CO'-..:_-• I I ,..,.,,
Cc*• -C.A 978111
I
'
H. L. Schwartz Ill r• •b ~"'
Frenk Zlnl
~CO.I,..
Tom T•lt
C'11 Fn•t0<
·'Party endorsements will gtve voters one more gu'dellne, especially
when they know lltUe about anyone running. That may defeat the
purpose of the laws that madesomeofflcesnon-partlsan to begin with
-they a/med to let voters select the best Individuals regardless of party .•.
TBOllA8 BLIA9
COlamatat
J1c1
AIDEISOI
Soviet
• • spies in
space·
targeted
WASHINGTON -Long before
President Reagan brou~t up the
subject of "Star Wars: the mili-
tarization of space had aJrcady begun.
Both the United States and Soviet
Union have been keeping a military
watch on one another for years
through spy sa&cllites high in space.
~on-partisan pqJJ.tics to·go
wayofthedinosaurin '86
But few Americans realize just
what these orbiting Peeping Toms are
capable of, and how big a threat
they'd be in case of a conflict. My
associate Dale Van Atta has obtained
a secret (icneral Accounting Office
report that gives the Pentagon eA-
perts' assessment of the threats posed
by the Kremlin's satellites.
I've already reported on tbc four
types of spy satellites considered most
immediately dangerous to the United
States. But the Pentagon has assigned
a No. 2 priority to other satellites;
these, too. are considered a military
threat.
Court ruling allows
political parties to
endorse h opefuls
California voters who weren't pay-
ing close attention last fall missed
something special: The realization
that they were pa.rtici pa ting in the last
of this state's old-styk elections.
Near the bottom of their ballots. as
usual, millions of voters were asked to
choose judges. county supervisors,
distnet attorneys, school board mem·
bers and even mayors in non-partisan
races where party politics had been
specificall y forbidden since 1911 .
But a new court decision that got
little notice when handed down will
change all that. From now on. parties
will be allowed to endorse and
campaign for all candidates on the
ballot. even though they'll stiU be
forbidden to nominate some.
The first election where this new
reality should be felt in a big way
comes next year, when several of
California's highest non-partisan of-
ficeholders appear on the ballot. One
of them is state Schools Supt. William
Honig, who apparently has little to
fear from the change.
But the real impact will most likely
come in the reconfirmation election
in which voters will be asked to vote
yes or no on five justices of the state
Supreme Court.
Ironically, three of the justices
whose Jobs will be at stake voted to let
parties become involved in their
future 'campaigns. The justices face
confirmation votes 1n the first general
-Taous
EUAS
election afteT their appointment,
again at the end of the term they were
appointed to fill and every 12 years
after that.
A majority of no votes On any
justi ce automatically vacates his seat
and lets the governor appoint some-
one new.
But Justices Stanley Mosk, Joseph
Grodin and Malcolm Lucas, all
among the five high court judges on
next year's ballot, didn't disqualify
themselves from hearinf the case.
By contrast, Chief ustice Rose
Bird and colleagues Otto Kaus, Allen
Broussard and Cruz Reynoso djd
remove themselves. All have been
subjected to Republican-sponsored
recall attempts in the past.
They were replaced by four appeals
court Justices. two of wbom cast the
only votes against allowing full party
participation in non-partisan elec-
tions.
Mosk and Grodin, both likely to
draw stiff GOP opposition next year,
refused to rule that such campajgns
are illegal.
Instead. f>oth said First Amend-
ment guarantees of free speech pre-
vent the co urt from blocking any-
one's endorsement campaigns.
While some of the judges who
decided the case may be the first to
suffer its consequences, the eventual
results will be far wider-ranging.
··This decision means an inevitable
return to Tammany Hall politics,"
said one lawyer who opposed the
change. "If you want to be a judge at
any level, you'll have to get your
county central committee's approval.
The same if you want to become a city
counci lman or county supervisor ... "
Approval of top party officials will
become vital, opponents of the
change argue, because the ready pool
of money and volunteers each major
party can toss into a race will give
endorsed candidates a major advan-
tage over anyone else.
But others wonder ifthe change will
make any difference in the real world.
Sophisticated voters, they point out.
have usually known the party affilia-
tions of most so-called non-partisan
candidates. Does anyone. seriously
think., they ask, that Los Angeles
Mayor Tom Bradley or Sa~1 Fran-
cisco's Dianne Feinstein mignt be a
Republican?
But in other races with less weU-
known figures, there is plenty of room
for doubt and lack of knowledge.
Party endorsements will ~vc
voters one more guideline, especially
when they know little about anyone
running.
That may defeat the purpose of the
laws that made some offices non-
partisan to begin with -they aimed
to let voters sefect the best individuals
regardless of party.
And it w.ill surely mean the begin-
ning of a new and probably more
fractious era in local politics all
around California.
Thm.t• EU.1 & a Sota MoaJca-
baffd col•aul11t o• •tale l1111n.
Reminiscing about a man
who was loved by everyone
FOrmer controller
Bernie Schulman:
'Best we ever had'
One of the problems of writing a
weekly column, for a superannuated
guy like me. is that Searchlight -like
all local columns -must be written
so far ahead of publication date that I
don't get a chance to make a timely
comment on news.
That happened a week ago. Search-
light for Jan. 5 was already in type
before the death of our beloved
former controller Bernie Schulman.
The only comment I had a chance to
maxc was inserted into the story that
was published about Bernie's passing.
The quotation was accurate all
right. Here it is: .. There's no question
about it. Bernie was one of the best
employees I evcT had. He was the best
controller we ever had .. and he was a
very, very fine man."
It is that quotation on which l
should like to have made a timely
expansion. 8u1. unfortunately, dead-
lines re such that the expanded
comment will have to wait until this
week's Scan:hlight.
As some of you may remember.
WAL TEI
Bu11ouc1s
we breathed easier for seven! years.
Then a dreadful thing happened.
She discovered she had cancer.
So. back to work went Dave.
Before going into the Army at the
begi nning of World War II, Dave had
had training and experience in per-
sonnel mana1ement and he was good
at it.
In looking for a replacement. he
remembered a man he regarded as
exceptional. So he brought a young-
lookmg mar\ down from Los Angeles
to talk to me.
Although Bernie was around 30 ~an old at the time. he Jookcd like a
X·ner I had interviewed him. and
Bernie was waiting ou11ide (or the
decision. I said to Dave, .. He seems to
becompetentall riaht, but isn't he just
akidr'
Replied Da ve: "You've always told
me you preferred youn~ters who
haven't had time to get mind set."
"Okay," I answered, .. let's get
him." And we did.
The result most of you know.
Bernie was not only a satisfactory
replacement for the mighty compe-
tent lady we bad had in the job. but
even better. By plugging some
loopholes he put the Pilot on the way
to profitable expansion in outlying
areas -for example, Laguna Beach
and Huntington Beach.
The conrrollcr in those days had to
double as personnel administrator
and, as you may have noted, be
selected Pat Stevenson from a list of
applicants. Mrs. Stevenson is quoted
as sayina "He was the most aentlc
man I have known in my life." He was
indeed that and more.
It is mipty seldom in the news-
paper business that a contr0ller is
loved so ~tty by an entire st.afT.
Often he 11 disliked for insisting on
repayment of advances. But 8cmie
was loved by everyone. including that
old curmuaac<>n the publisher.
W•hH B.,,,...., 11 th Pilot~• , ..... ,~ ..
I
The total number of satellites in the
two top priorities is close to 40. In
case of war. the planned ··star Wars"
defenses would move from Priority
One targets to Priority_ Two in a
matter of seconds.
According to the P~ntagon experts'
assessment, U.S. intelligence-gather-
ing satellites arc still superior to those
made in Moscow. More of ours
transmit their information instan-
taneously, like a live TV show of
Soviet military movements and
equipment. More of theirs operate on
a delayed-broadcast system.
Here arc the PTiority 2 targets listed
in the secret report:
•The SaJyut series of military
space stations. The report says: "The
station possibly can provide near
real-time int.clhgcnce-targcting data
to military forces and can detect
missile launches. Photo-reconnais-
sance is ~lieved to be its major
activjty; however, these stations can
possibly be modified to do reconnais-
sance such as electronic intelligence,
communications intelligence and
command and control."
•High-resolution photographic re-
connaissance satellites that drop film
in capsules by parachute from low
orbit. "The one assessed to be of
primary concern,'' according to the
report, "is capable of ejectjng re-
covery capsules -which minimizes
the time from when the photographs
arc t.aken to when the film is available
for analysis."
The report explains that the photo-
graphs from these sateUites are used
to study troop positions and for
targeting and damage assessment.
"Resolution is capable of distinguish-
ing automobiles," the report st.ates.
It adds: .. As the Soviet Union
projects its forces further from its
borders or into a denied area, such as
China. it becomes incTCasingly de-
pendent on thjs type of (satellite)."
•Navigational satellites. "These
satellites, deployed in regularly-
spaced three-and six-satellite con-
stellations, provide navigational fixes
with an average waiting time of 90
minutes and 45 minutes at the
equator, respecti vely, forNAVSAT-1
and NA VSAT-2." the report states,
adding:
.. NAVSAT-1 is accurate to 200
meters. and NAVSAT-2 is possibly
accurate within 100 meters. .
Knocking out these navigationaJ
aids would make 1t difficult for Soviet
missile subs to precisely determine
their locatfon -and precision is
critical for launching nuclear mis~
iles.
•Communications satellites. The
secret report st.ates: "The Molniya-
Radup types arc of primary concern
because they arc able to provide real-
ti mc command and control to naval,
land and strateaic forces. As Soviet forces operate farther from the Soviet
land mass. they beoome more depen-
dent on these satemttS for control of
military forces .. "
Knockina them out. in other
words. would leave Soviet field
commanders preny much on their
own -which is not the way the
Kremlin likes to conduct wars.
\
Jaa ....,.,_ II' l~•IH
cohrfUl•t
Dave Ring was my pannerat the time
we bought the old Olot»Herald. The
sufT we inherited was not only small,
it was untrained in handlina money.
And somcti mes the r'crt0n who
t ended the counter would
a~ntmindedly drop the cash collec-
tions into his pocket ins<tad of tht
cash boA.
Women have more on the brain
The first solution 0.vc worked out
was to employ a very uocUent and
competent lady u • controller. Prior
to that. such bdlint and record
kcepina as~ had was 1nadeQu1te. So
'
Tht blood ves.sclS of women do nol
IWT()W as JWlnty with aac u do the
bk>Qd vencls of men, so the blood
supply lo the brains of women is
better maintafoed ovtr a tonaer time.
Suc:b is the claim of a theori t who
believes eldetly women wOllld ~rve
betlct than elderly men in h.i&h offite.
You how your SoOd mannen . it's
wd, by bow ..:11 you put up with met
onts.
Q. What's the mean1na in Black
slana o(lhe wont "bawt .. 1
A. Wind. It's that in IOme Baack slant. anyow. Our Lanauaac ma.o
L
. .
.
Toxic shock synd.rorni"Ii ot so deadly
News aboutcjangers le toa.wareness
an ear y treatment, but cases remain
By SUSAN MONAHAN
0., .... C.111, I .....
A few years ago, stories in news.
papers, maaazines and on television
warned of the dangers of toxic shock
syndrome. Less is heard about the
illness these days but toxic shock
syndrome has not disappeared.
As oftast December, 2,500 cases of
toxic shock syndrome were reported
to government health agencies, says
Bonnie Bock, M.D., a specialist an
infectious diseases. "And there may
be many more ca!Ct that have not
been reported." she added.
The good news 1s that the publicity
seems to have helped. "Cases are
beina diaanosed and treated earlier,"
said Bock. While the monality rate
before 1978 was 15 percent., by 1981
deaths related to toxic shock syn·
drome had dropped to 3 percent.
'Bock. who practices in NeWJ)ort
Beach and Huntiniton Beach, ( .. But I
only sec people with a referral from
another physician," she said firmly),
has treated 14 people for toxic shock
syndrome -"probably more than
any doctor in Orange County."
syndrome.
The villaJn 1s a bacteria called
staphylococcus aurcus, which con-
tains a toxin that causes the illness.
About 25 percent of the population
carries this staph bacteria on the skin
or the nose, where it either causes no
problems or produces minor skin
infections. However, in about 25
percent of this ~up, the staph will
produce toxins. 'This can cause toxic
shock syndrome in any location,"
explained Bock.
According to one theory, she
added, when a tampon is in place, it
allows the bacteria to multiply. As the
toxins arc absorbed into the body, the
symptoms of toxic shock syndrome
begin. "When the toxin.is in a boil, it
can produce the same symptoms,''
she said.
Toxic shock syndrome can range
from mild to life-threatcnini. Usuall y
the diagnosis is a clinical one based on
observation of the symptoms,
althou'11 the staph can be isolated and
grown 1n a culture, said Bock.
Because the early symptoms so
clpsely resemble those of the flu, toxic
shbck syndrome is not always
diaJnoscd, she said. Bock oc-
casionally gives lcctul'C$ on toxic
shock syndrome to hospital person-
nel. and one of her patients was a
daughter of a gynecologist "who
didn't know his daughter had toxic
shock syndrome," recalled Bock.
In most cases hospitalization -
sometimes in the intensive care unit
-1s necessary. Severe toxic shock
syndrome can cause kidney fajlutt.
tuna prob~ms. 1rrqulant1cs 1n the
heart rhythm and trrcven1blc shock.
If it is not treated in time, toxic shoci
syndrome can be fatal.
But Bock says that [f the 1Uncss is
treated within the fint two days after
symptoms appear, the prosnosis is
good ... The mortality rate used to be
hjgh," she said ... But now the vast
majority survive without complica·
tions."
The treatment consists of doses of
antibio1ics and larae quant1ttcs of
intravenous fluids. ''The low blood
pressure is what causes death;' said
Bock." Patients often need two quarts
offluid an hour -maybe more -to
maintain blood pressure."
Bock says that women can reduce
their chances of contractJna toxic
,
shock .syndrome to .. almoA i.tn>•• if
\hcy$U>pUW'1&a.mpoOI She.,...
that women at least conaider 1111na
"them only .. interminently and not at
ni&bt."
If a woman bas already auftie1ed an.
episode of &o~ shock syodtome.
Bock warns her not to ute iampoos at
an. Althouah the majority of tbe ~ ~ion ~ devdoped a
resistance &o this strain oft.deria bY •
ate 2S. Bock cit~ raearch which
indicates that women who have b-9
toxic shock syndrome do not develop
an immunity to the to in.
''The m:urnnce rate 11 as bieb as lO
pctUnt m those who col'.'lti:nue to me
tampons and who did not mieive
antibiotics dunn1 the first C'Pltodt ...
said Bock.
Teens get
di~thelp .
Chlldrena Hoepftal of Orange
County 11 hosting an eight-week
program for~ht boya and
glrta, beOlnnlng on arch e.
In approximately 90 percent of the
cases, the toxic shock syndrome
victim is a woman under 30 who atts
the first "flu-like" symptoms either
durina or shortly after her menstrual
period. They may include fever.
muscle aches, vomitina, diarrhea, a
sore throat and faintness.
"A woman should be concerned if
these symptoms appear around her
menstrual period," warns Bock .
The faintness, she explained, is a
result of lowered blood pressure.
another warning sifr! of toxic shock
syndrome. In addition, a rash re·
sembling a sun-bum usually de·
velops.
Vintage pairs miss grapeVine
Setal0n1 fr6m 4 to 5:30 p.m.
Wednesdays wtll future lndMd·
uaHzed weight control diet•
aupervlted by CHOC dietitian•.
According to Debbie Wall,
director of ' food MrVlcea at
CHOC, the program la d811gned
for 11.: to 14-year-olda.
A $100 fee wtll cover all
materlala. Actlvltlea Include
directed exerclM, dltcuaalona on
toptca of lnterelt to thoee wtahlng
to tote W91aht, take-home work
and S)9tent Tnvotvement.
For addttlonal Information,
phone Rebecca Smith, A.O. at
CHOC, 997-SOOO, ext. ~52.
·'When the rash appcan, it is
usually more consistent with toxic
shock symdrome·," Bock said.
Toxic shock syndrome has been
linked with tampon use, and in fact
Bock confirmed that the 90 percent
group is composed of women who use
tampons. However, she pointed out
"about I 0 percent of the cases happen
under other circumstances."
Toxic shock symdrome has ap.
pcared following the use of a
diaphragm or a contraceptive sponge,
she said. It may also begin with a boil,
after childbirth, from a wound infec·
tion or after a surgical procedure.
Men arc susceptible to toxic shock
Especially around Valentine's Day.
I feel sorry for those who arc too
afraid to give love a chance.
You know the type. They avoid
commitment with finesse. For them,
"love" seems to be nothing more than
the last word before the signature in a
letter. They publicly proclaim the
virtues of making love rather than of
keeping love.
In the privacy of my office, it
becomes clear that the romantic ideal
still prevails. Down deep, these hold-
outs really do believe in love. They
trust that somehow, somcwhc~.
they'll find that one m&Jical person
who will transform their lives and
justify their long wait.
Until now, whenever someone has
come too close, they have man~ to
distance themselves just in the nick of
time. "I don't know why we broke
LllDI
Aa.caz1
up," I've heard too many times.
"None of my fnends are happily
married, .. says Tom. He thinks it's
safer to be alone than to risk the
disappointment of a failed rcla·
tionship.
On the surface. it's easy to agree
with him. Although the djvorcc rates
have slowed down, the statistics
continue to challenge the ideal of
everlasting committed love.
"Docs long-term marriage ncccss·
arily equate wtth happiness?" Of
course not, Tom. Bu1 11ven the
changing times and the relative ea~
of divroce, those mamagcs that do
survive are usually worth ~lebratmg.
Everyone d06n't have to be mar·
ried, Tom. but marriage can work -
even for a ljfetime. Take a look at this
party mvitauon which came across
my desk.
A Jmle nostalgia
A litrle romance
Good friends, good fun
A chance to look at
The brides and grooms we wt'"
Not so many years •10
The inv1tauon asked that guests
bring wedding pictures or albums to
share over Valentine's dinner.
The hosts gave prizes for the
Bill McCune, Gean and Dick Klni•ley and Lorraine McCune chatted before '84 marabal Dr. Carl Aitlouo touted b1a aucceuor, Pat Kelly.
'Twas grand suspense
about marshal's name
Parade back ers see
shuffle of envelopes
before Kelly selected
By VIDA DEAN
0.-, .............
Who would be the Grand
Marshal of the '85 Huntinaton
Harbour Philharmonic Commit-
tee's 23rd annual boat parade?
Only three people in the crowd of
525 at the Anaheim Hilton knew the
answer to the closely-guarded
secret.
Dr. Carl AsJl0110, '84 marshal,
had made his farewell speech and
was ready to open the envelope ...
but, where was it? After a mad
scramble on the dais with s huffiina
of notes, Dr. Robert Clo.ee, hus-
band of the sparklinJ Committee
Chairman Sudn, spnntcd from his
table spon lna his new Gioflio Saint '
Anaelo tux and wavin1 the
envelope.
"The 198S Orand Marshal is Pat
Kelly."
He was one of the six cl~ble for
the ho norary position h1v1n1 ser-
ved 11 a lieutenant in '8l, a niaht
captain in '83 and p&r1dc captain in
'84'. This year the entire spcciacular
floatina yuletide parade will be bis
resp,2,nsibility.
• This is one of the three impon·
ant thinas that have happened in my
life. Firit I met and married Yvoue:
steondly J moved to Huntinaton
Harbour and now this," said Kelly.
native of Los AntelC1 and now sales m•nlltf for Wahtolicr. .
Dunna Kelly's year as marshal.
his wife will be very involved in the
committee ... Yvonne moves to the
position of chairman.
Other candidates who waited for
the opening of the elusive envelope
(were they putting us on with
showmanship?) were Clalck Ben·
aen with wife Jeri; Coan Prowell
with Missy; Beme Stelnbers with
Barbara; Ted Lawsoa with J•dJ and
Mille Stltllaser with Barban.
Others honored at the affair were
winners of the boat parade and
decorated houses contest which are
part of the annuat Symphony of
Lights fun. (Thousands cruised by
th e decorations this year to help the
committee cam $60,000 for music
proarams for county youths.)
Earla Saow (there with husband
Kelly) was chairman of the ball and
the evenina dubbed "Evenina at the
Opera" (in honor of Aaliono's love
of the opera) ~n with a social
hour conducted wt th taped music of
Pavarotti.
Snow was wcarin1 a lavender
chiffon aown set oft' with diamond
and amethyst jewelry ... a 40-carat
amethyst in the necklace, 18-carat
rina and three carats in the earrinp.
They were Chrisunu sifts from her
friend and Phil.harmonic member
0111 IU111ley, international
award-winnina jewelry detiancr -
once DcBcera lead desianer who
cu~ntly has her desian studio in
her RH home. .. This ii lhc 'third time I've
worked on the bell;' said Snow u
we chatted durina the social hour.
And she also bad 11urpriK in store
... ''Tbe ballroom is locked. I want
the decorations to be a surprite. ''
On each side of the bendstand
where later The Esquires per-
formed. ~re larae fountains and o n
the tables were tall multi-leveled
clear forms holding flowers and
candles.
Announcement was made that
the centerpieces could be taken
home by the persons who made the
m ost co ntr ibutions to
Philharmonic. A hard decision ...
because members are so comm itted
to the "symphony."
"Almost by the tim e one event is
over. we start on the next one," said
Sandy Wiiliama, president of the
Starboard group. ••A lot of hours are
spent by the women and it comes at
a time when we are all involved with
Christmas and families."
But, Saturday evcnina it was
pany time and celebration with
dinina on Ovenure Salad, Sole a la
(Pleue ... OllAKD/82)
...,.,........,. .., .-:e leillw-1&
Early btrde Baria Snow, left. an4 C>eoirie and Joanna Chue
welcomed p..u to Cn&IM of LICJat. Cf"nad lla..nhal Ball.
J
youngest looking bnde and sroorn.
the most provocative, the most
improved ... and for the IOl'\ICSl
mamagc.
The 20couplcs present repre!ent.ed
a totaJ of 327 years of married life. l
call that a tesumony to bravery and
an affirmation of the reality of love.
For better AND wonc. at lcut thQ
group of people bad manqed to
survive toacther within m~ We
don't bear enouab about this le.ind of
commitment celebration. When
grapevines buzz, it's more likely to be
about rclat1onsh1p failure.
Take a chance, Tom. You may be
payinJ an awfully bia pritt bv
avoiding love. True 10llmacy, which
is most possible between commined
partners. offers a special kind of
sbanr.\g. warmth. comfort and excne-
ment. Sex between strangers can be
fun . but can you understand that the
prom1~ of passion.-between two
commttted valentines may be far
more embracmg and worth any nsk?
Dr. AlgazJ 1s a mamage and falnjJ}
rberapisr in Corona de/ Mtr. She
welcomes your responses. If you Msh
a persona/ reply, pleasie endo~ 1
swnped. ~lr-.ddreSS«J envdope.
Wrire to Lmda 4/zui. Pb.D.. c/o
Daily Pilot. P 0. Box J 560. Costa
Mesa 91626.
Kisses:
Do they
prevent
a cold?
If \OU want to a"o1d a cold this
:-ear. ·:-ou're btttcr off grceung people
w11h a kiss than with a handshake,
accordmg to Jeremiah T1lles. M.D .•
chairman of UC In inc College of
Med1cme's department of mcd1cme.
As chief of UCl's d1v1s1on of
infectious diseases, Dr. Titles. 1s also
an expen on influenza and the
common cold
.\ccordmg to Dr. T1lles. awareness
of ho" colds and influenza arc
transmmcd may be the kc)' to staying
health\ Even as cold weatbCT settles
m. he· bthc' c~ people ma) often
a"o1d tnfccuon when the) take
proper precautions.
Colds. be says, arc far more
common and much more difficult to
pre' ent than the flu . Colds strike
1nd1' 1duals an averaae of three to five
tt mt's a )car.
Dr T11les explains that the com-
mon cold 1s transmitted from du-ect
(On tact Wlth an infected person -not
from acrms floatina through the air. ~rms arc most often spread by
touching the hand of an infected
person. or an obJcct he'sjust touched.
and then touching your nose.
.. Once you have a cold. anub1oucs
"on't cure 1t," Dr. Titles remarks.
··The) may. m fact cause harm."
Ht' cmpbasrzes the importance of
"a1chmg for signs that a cold is
becommg more serious. He also
recommends consutuna )'Our phys.-
1c1an when colds last several days or
are accompamcd b)' fever.
Dr Titles savs that mfluenza,
unhkc colds. 1s tran mmcd b)' germ
tn the air. People catch the nu when
an infoctcd person either coughs,
nerzes or talks to them. lnfluenz.a lS
more easily prrventcd than a cold.
says Dr. Tille ~ho contend the best
prcvenuon 1s bv talo na Ou hot .
"Unht c vaccines of the past,
toda)' 's l\ave been so punficd tbat
there 1s minimal ornorrcact1on to the
drua. .. ht e pla1ns. "Benefit of nu
prevenuon ~1'\a1nly outwc1'h any
po 1blle rcacuons to the vacc1ne."
,... Dr. Tilks e~n rttommead.s Ou
• shots for senior Olttt Smaon i.a
part1tular a~ at bl&h n for de~dop.
1na bronchitis, pneumonia and othu
com_pltcauons from the Ou .
"('olds OC' Ou Qn'\ tit avoaded romp~tcl). but by \akin proper
prttaution pt'Oplc can a tbc f~uenC) of 1n .on··
When tension's the problem, headaches occur
Study finds certain muscles
tighten ana knot during pain
Other mua'des, too, can li&hten durina tcn11on
headaches. accordina lo Dr. Lehrer. For some people
headache pain ttcmsd~ tocleochina lbejaw, a condition
known u bNxiun. Whatever the cause, some specific
mute&e-reluina teehniques can help. Straqely enouab, it'a taken years for researcbcn to
decide lhat musclo-teuion headaches are actually due to
mute&e tension. Qink:al cxl)erieDC:lC and lbeory aaid that
mu1e1e tensjoo could cause beadacbes, but rncarcb
studies failed to show iL It took a recent study at the
-lf you find that you can let your lhoulden drop
lower by relaxina them a bit, you mar be the victim of
1,..peiiu""Uitlefed headache-you re sbrugina .-ourself
into misery.
A heatioapad, bot blthorshowvcan belpby
wannina up the knotted neck and shoulder muscles. Thia
simply increases circulation.
U nivmity ofMedicine and Dentistry of New Jersey to
prove the cue.
Psychologist Paul tebrtr(wbodirectcd the new research) and Anne Marie lnfantino (who oooducted the
stud)') h1t on a method that made all the difference. Tbcy
measuRd muscle tension durina headache&. instead of
measurlna it whenever ~ects came to the lab~ as other
studies bad. Infantino ca particularly heroic
Another quick fix: Put your finaers on your head, with
your thumbs at the back., on the bue of the skull. Genlly
maSlllC around the bl.le, from the ears to the center, and
back apin. Do it slowly, four or five times-or looacr if
you want.
-If your mouth seems to be closed so tiahtly your
teeth arc touchi~ you may be boldina iensioo in your jaw
without realizing 1t.
contribution: She wore a beeper so her sub~could call
bertlie minute a hc.mcbc struck, day or night, and meet
berat the lab.
The study found that one set of muscles in particular
was knotted durina beadacbc pain. That was the tnpezius.
which connects the shoulder blade to the neck and collar
bone. When you sbrua. it is the trapczius you ti&hten.
To relieve a headache due to jaw tension, find the spat
below and in front of your can that buJaesout when you
clench your jaw. Now let your jaw drop open as you
massage that area with your ti ngerti ps, in al iaht, circular
motion.
Y ellirig 'uncle' helps teen
initiate a hands-off policy
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a
l 3-year-0ld prl with a problem and
no one will listen to me. I am praying
you will print my letter. I really need
to show it to my parents. 'fa.Ucing
doesn't act me anywhere.
I have an uncle who is always trying
to feel me up, if you know what I
mean. His hands are aU over me. I just
: bate it. I bave told both Mom and
. Dad about this but they say I have to
be nice to him because he is a member
· of~ family.
Sunday wbco be was here for
· supper he grabbed me in the ball
outside my bedroom and stuck rus
hands down my jeans. I went and told
my mother that very minute and she
said, "Please don't make-any trouble.
Uncle -is a nice man and doesn't
mean any harm. He is just playful."
I am mad and hurt that my own
family woo 't stand up for me. Am I
right or arc they'?-NEW ORLEANS
DEAR N.O.: YOU are riot ud I
U'le J• Mt co back dowa. Staee yH cu't 1et y..,. pueat1' ,.,,.rt. make
a majer IUak • yMr ewa. YM will
ema.rr..1 Gem all -ud tltey
Hleneit. ne •ext ttme tlaat e10it~bllded
Idiot bebve1 bl u Improper mauer,
tell Mm a. a IMd voice tlaat cu be
A11 ·
lMDEIS
lleard by every•e tlaat yoe are aot a
baby uymore ud lf lie d0et.a't keep
Ml mitts off you body YH will live
lllm a CMp la die dtopl. U YH ••
Ge creep yoe meu bHblel• *re
will be aotMa1 more to worry abo•t. • • •
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You
blew it, Babycakes! I refer to your
answer to the person in Missouri who
questioned the passibility of fleas.
ticks, lice, etc .. living in a mattress for
several wcclc.S. You were dead wrong.
For starters, you replied that these
creatures feed on that person or
whoever shared rus or her mattress.
The truth is most fleas and ticks are
spccicwpccific and wiU not feed
continuousJy on human blood. In
addition to this, many fleas can live
for several weeks wtthout feeding.
What's more, some ticks can live up
to five years without a meal.
Next time, Ann. stay with your
field of expertise or seek the advice of
a veterinarian -who has had some
training in parasitology. -HOP-
PI NG MAD IN DELHI, N.Y.
DEAR MAD: I called Dr. Job
Oab, profe110r of vetertaary me4.I·
ctH 18 Ma41Ma, Wis. Ht 18"Hted I ctteet wtG a me41cal e111omoloo1t.
Dr. Ed•ard c.pp, profe110r of M"edl·
cal Ea&omoloa at Conell UDJver1lty
la ltbca, N.Y.
Accordl•& to Dr. Capp,
"Babycaket" 11 Mt 10 far •ff Ge
beam •• JMr letter implied. Y M are
parUally correct wltea Y" IAY Mme
tleb cu live for u ene.ded period
of time •ltllotlt fee41q oa bloM, bet
ftve years •Mid be u extror4.laary
feat. Tllese loq-Uve4 tlcb •1..Uy
dwell la berrow1 ucl cave., aot ID
mattre11e1, ud Gey feed oa rodeat1.
Y..,. 1tatem•t tlaat fle.u are
1pede1-.pedfle II a1IO Ml attrely
correct. Some Oea1 feed OD boD
.. IUDUI ud redeau, w~cti 11 wut
Clued dtt beMaie plape.
Dr. C.,, mMe die P91at tUt Mme
people .._,t bow die .ittereace
betwea Dea•, deb, lice ud bed·
b•I•· Eacll u1 It• owa c'-rac·
terl1tica ud feedia& 1tablt1. B•t
tlaat'1 ... *r coluna, folk1.
Career change rings a bell
: When the kids were small and l was
: looking for a career change from
bathroom to boardroom, I made a list
of my skiUs.
As it turned out, the only job I
could bave filled without additional
traininf was one of those phone · answcnng services. They're an "at
: home" business where a person bas
: 15 or 20 clients and cuts into the
· phone ca.ll and says, "Miss Snow-
. flurry isn't here now, but if you'd care
to leave your name and number.
she'll get back to you."
I guess in my lifetime I have
answered thousands of pbooc calls
for my kids. giving me insights that no
one could believe.
For example, everyone who calls
has the same name . . . Steve or
Debbie. In 30 years. you'd think just
once I'd get someone with a djfferent
Think
Slim.
L osi' up Iii 10 poun<l~
in a" llltlf' as 2 w1•1•k.,
You ..,on·1 f Pt>I hun~r)
~nu "'/// rr1•1 a nr~ con
fi<l<'nrf'. a n1·~ ronL01I
'Jo <lru~s. crash <111'1.s.11r
s1wna1 foods to tiu~
Call ror your fiNI rn·r
ronsultauon IAK1a~
2886 B. Co.et HW)',Si.. 201 Corone Dtl Mar (714) 673-0111
t~l Be.ch Blvd.
Huntin(t4n e..ch
(71.4) 96(). 7eo8
E1u
Bo11Ec1
name. but I never did. Steve and
Debbie have no last names. It's
always, "They know who it is."
And they never do.
l have never answered the phone
for my children that the first words of
the caller weren't "Wbo is tbisr' They
always arc surprised it is the number
they calJcd. When I tell them. their
second response is also suspicious. "It
doesn't sound lilc:c you."
Another revelation is that people
who call your kids expect them to be
there. That is ~bly why, wbeo
they're told they re not, there isa two-
minute pause while they a<!just to the
news. They never have a Game Plan B.
It's always, .. Arc you sure?" fol·
lowed by, "Wow. I thought they'd be
there. Gee. let me think a minute."
N;ADEMY AWARD
ra.w&
BEST ORIGINAL
SCREENPLAY
131:\llEl~~f
1-111.1-'c;
R o . A PAAA>,Wil ll(l[R ' 1 ---............ NOWPLAYWO . -· ,.., . ..,,,. .... ~ ............ ,,.....,.......
..... )I" ~ .... S1' •100 ..... ,.. . ....
~ .. ._ 1--.... ~"'' .....
'*"-·--::.;.-·-.l!:"':.':m"-. ..,...... ·-.... ~~.r-,I~
•t\ -·-(•! ... ,. ....
NEWS
. ..,_
(-~ ........ -:c-=h .. ... .,,.
~"" ,_ ....... -···-
~
Five minutes lat.er, they come up with
the dreaded request, "Can you take a
message?" The m~ usually in-
volves 15 names, five ttme zones, 14
meeting places contingent on weather
and c1rcumstanccs. and finally,
"Have him call me if be can't act the
car."
I don't know bow they do it, but
your children's friends call only
during the hours the family is eating.
You can be as cute as you like about
trying to trick them by eating lunch at
3 and dinner at 8:30 p:m., but they'll
know and before you can act the first
bite into your mouth, the phone will
ring.
There was one caller who was
struck dumb when a different voice
answered than the one he caUcd. He
never said anything. He just hung up.
When I mcntJOned this to the kids ml
son said, "That's Steve. He docsn t
like to wute time.''
I thought a lot about bcc.oming a
professional answcrina service. Ttie
routine was simple and the hours
predictable. But I probably made the
right decision to write. Today, I'd
have been replaced by a little CIC(;
tronic device that wouldl\'t bite the
telephone cord in haJf every time
Steve bung up before the sound of the
beep.
'
I .111q!1t d "'" !11 1·1, II I• ti• i1
1 1 d t 11 I ft 1 I• , 1 1 , , ii , ni 1
I),,, I, fl11 I' I ,, ...
~ ' I , I I " I I I • I l
.. ,,,,\t~"1.1t11••• ... ..,,. ...... _ A Bl Sf~ ~ll~ l
IMA """' -UACil'I IM.,.._ C ..... l.Won!Y ~~It --....,,, _,_ Ul ... #ll.
~--,... .... IR4' •1.-»
mTAmA IA ..... UAC-Wo.-yt ...... '°''" ......... -...... -... -~ IS1 .. -------~
MilWiM ut.11111 ...
-!!t .. ....
l'tfMI .........
~ ••Wllll ,.. ... .,.
~ .,..,
from alt over California Is rounded up each day
In the 111111 Piii
a
-Forlona·tenn prevention, whole-body deep
rcla.xataon maybe an answer. For muscle relaxation to
work. thou&)\. you need to build it into your repllar daily
routine, or at least master the tcc;hn ique so you can call on
it when you need it most.
The troable with cruh dletba&
lldielina wearina you out? Litenlly, say a team of
invcstiptors. Ju.st two weeks oflevcre dietina revs up
subtle mul()Je reactions that spell f-a·t-i-a-u.e.
Dr. David Russell of AuattaUa and colleaaues at the
Univctsity ofToronto have come upwitb one morestrilr.e
ap.inst en.sh dietinJ.. It not onJy cnCOUJ'llel looa·tcrm
wciptpin ahd high blood pressure, it wrecks muJCle
function. The investipton studied five obese women on a
hospital reducina diet: 400calories a day of carb'c:>hydrates
plus vitamin pilJs. The womenaot plenty ofvitam1nu nd
minerals, but not the Recommended Dietary Allowances
of calories, carbohydrates, proteins or fats.
After two weeks, muscle enzymes were changina.
shiftina from those in volvcd in carbohydrate metabolism
to those that metabolize fat -preperina. in effect, for a
Iona famine. They showed microscopic signs of atrophy,
too.
IY8M ---11&1:
15:= MITICOUNIE CllNEWS l!FHOTUtl
•to,; "A Hero Aln't NotNn" &rt A
Slndwlc:tl"" ( 1977) Cbly Tyt0t1. Pllll
Winlield.
CIDMOYE ** "MtteAatorm: Thi 0.tructlon
Of Jlf.S-Syn" ( 1983) .i.ttrey Byron •
Tim Thomlrson.
())MOYIE
Fonunately. •Y the Canadians, the bo4y destruction
they witneased reverses when the women ao beck to better
diets. Still, lbey ..,ee, ctUb clictin& is noth ina to take
liabtly.
Blclclea tuee
Wherever you tum. you are peyina other people's
medical bills:
-12.2 percent of your federa.l tax dollan and 13 . .S
percent of state and local weure used to pe y the national
health-care bilJ.
-Hcaltb<are costs are lbe second taraest expcnJc,
after payroll, in scrvioe bu1inCS1CS; third laraest. after
salaries and materials, in industry.
-S.S50ofthccostofcveryChryslcraocstopay
medical bills for workers.
-$2 of the price of each Goodyear tire goes to
employee medical care.
-Employeebealth-carecostsavenae between 8
pcrcentand 12 derccnt of payroll for larger companies • .S
percent forsmallcr businesses. . . -In five years, the Hcalt.h Car:e Fi!lAnce Admu~as.
tratioo predicts, the U.S. medical b1U wiU doublcap1n to
hit $690 billion.
Americu Heald! M•palM Service
I LCM. Mia1CAN mLE MM~
MOYIE
.. "Bllme " On Rio" ( 1984) Ml-~ Clllne. Joelph 8olognl.
-12:40-
.(J)OOll..a
-1:0G-
P.~. Of The Wiit" (1918)
Aobert Shaw. Mery ure. eMOYE ***lh ··5ep1r1te Tlbles" (1958)
Oeborllh 1(.-r. Ali. Haywor1h.
I EHTaTANIENT TONIGHT
IOU>ONE
-1:06-
(t)MOYIE * * * "Dracull'" ( 1979) Frri LM-_., LJurence Ohler.
-1:16-
®ON LOCATION ••'h "Somewhere In Time" (1990)
CMstopher AeeYe. J~ Seymour
-t:a0-1:~
• MM:Nel I LBtAEA
NEWIHOtJR
CalYin LeTela atan u conYlcted murderer
Wayne Wllltam•, and Raby Dee portraya hla
•apportl•e mother ID .. 'l'be Atlanta Cblld
Marden,•• concladlDt tom,ht at 8 on Chan·
ne12.
-1:10-
• MEAT ABXJfl) AUUM
COUECTIOH e HOU.YWOOO CLOIBJP l~THEfN&.Y
IE:w l:..o'FORTUNE
-7:0G-
l Cl8 NEW8
• ._ NMIE THAT TUNE
I UM~T
~Q ~,
• THREE'S C;l;YWNI'(
I WHEEL OF FORTUNE
W-1 CONTACT lf')Q Cl) p .M. tMUZINE
9 EHTaTAINMIEMT TONIGHT 1:rv ** "Dllqlters Of Stt111" (1972)
Tom Sellek. Berra Gtent.
(%)MOYIE
U~ "Toudlld" (1913) Robert
Hlyl. Kathleen Beller. -7:ao-
• 2 ON THE TOWN
I 8 FN&.Y FBJD
EYIONLA.
NEWS
11 CLIPPERS V8 LAKERSll * LIVE BA8KET8ALUI
I NIA MllCETIALL. .-.Mm
1tn11 -
e Wl.D, WlD WOfl.D OF
MIW.S
et1t1t1A Cl> SAN moo AT LA&
I flfOfll.FI OOUllt'T
MaNG FROM INITA .-rA
CB) NOT NECf.88MLY M NEWS ----• CJ) AT\NfTA QllD MUN8I ll:ETIAM * * "The Sac:ketts" (Pert 2 of 2) (1979)Gltnn Ford, Sam Elliot. e 9 THf&'S A CAOWO
eJOKBfSWlD
13 Al Star Action In
TM Conduelon of
'THE GREAT ESCAPE'! 1tCoP ...,
eMOYE
***~"Thi Great &cepe'" (1983)
Jemes G1rner. Steve McOueen.
etOIA
eMOYE ·~ ··Her Prlmltl\le MM" 11844)
LoulM Albntton. Robert BencNly.
(t)MOYIE
U "The Sting II" ( 1983) Jec:llle
GIMson. MIC De~
®MOYIE
U * "Psycho II" ( 1983) Anthony
Per1cins, Meg Tilly.
Cl) FAERIE TA&..£ THEATflE
-t.i0-
19 WHO'S THE IOU? TIC TAC DOUOH
UM~T e THE LMNG PlAHET: A
PORTIWT OF THE EARTH (%) CtWUI QWlllJN ON THE
FUllCSE ---1~·~
* "The Devonl"9e Terror" (1981)
Su1Mvla LM. Robert Wiik•.
(l)MOYIE * • •,; "LISllter" (1984) Tom Selleclc.
Jene Seymour
(%)MOYIE u •.; "The Buddy System" (199-4)
Rlctwd Dreyluls. &...,, Serendon.
-t.JO-
(f) MOYE
U !_; "V..,_, .. (Pert 1ol2)11970)
Rldwd Wlclmwtt~ Albey. l=-'"QAWRY
-1t.t0-
NIMGTON 8TEB.f eNEWS CALL TO GLORY
MAH, llOOR MAN: IOOK I
MMIWIECl THEATflE
MONTUNE
IOXING
MOYIE ** "O.C Ceb"" (1983) Mt. T. Adlm
Beldwln CB> HrfCHHl(£A
-10'JO-
• llJEPBaJrlT NIWI CB> 80lW.-* OF CMl.DMJt llEYOND THE *"fT
(D)MOYE
U 1.; "The Lonely Guy'' (1984)
Steve Merlin. Chertel GrOdin.
(C)MOYIE
•• "The ~ Hurle" ( 1979)
UrlUll Andr•. Oulio Del Prete.
-12:00-1 :s:~YWOOO * * ··n. Or'tll MM·a WNlllen"
( 1971) '*" .Janel, Cindy Elbechef.
Cf) llJSllaNT NlW8
~=--'NGILa *.. "8'0ldWly Denny Rote"'
( 1tM) Wocxty Allen. Mil Fttrow.
(l)MOYIE
*** "Oreeula" (1979) Frink Lan·
gelll. LJurenoe OIMer.
-12:80-
~.~ N9QHT WOli DAVID
• A&.fflD HfTCHCOOI(
PAEIBITI I=:-u.a. TMMURY
*** "Thlt Toueh Of Mink" (1982) c.y Brent. Doris Day. eMOW
**°" "Beduzled"" 119681 Peter Cook. Dudley Moore.
•• ~ "Bredy'• Elclpe'" ( 198.4) John
Savlge. Kelty Alno.
-tclO-
• CJ) Cl8 NlWI llGHTWATCt4 I~
())MOYIE *** "The Omen" (1976) Gregory
Pa,LeeAema
-2:20-
(B)MOYIE * • "MeteAatorm: The 0.1NCtlon
Of JlftO-Syn" ( 1983) Jeffrey Byron.
Tim Thomerson
-z:ao-
(J) MOYIETONE NEWS eMOYE
... "Calno Roytle'" (1987) Pel•
Selen, Urtull Andreu.
(%)MOYE . ••• ··c.men" (1983) Antonio
Gldes. L11.1r1 del Sol.
-a:oo-
• Otl.DMN IETWEEN LR NtD
DEATH Cil A110TT AMD camu.o
.MOYIE * t "The MM From Ullh" ( 193-41
John W1ynt, G*Y ~ e DEPARTllBT 8
Ct) IAMY liWll.OW
-~
Cf) FAITH20
-a:al-(t)MOYIE ** "O.C. C9b" (1983) Mr. T. MM!
Blldwln.
-HO-
®MOYIE
• .. "Pl)dlo 11'' ( 1983) Anthony
Per1clns. Meg Tlly _.._
• AJM;A:. CONllNBfT .. a. CJ) .aJPPfT8 r 1:acon ** "Oaugllters Of S.t111" (1972)
Tom Selleck. Ban• Gf1nt (l)MOYE ** • "Max DuQli'I Returns" (1983)
M.W Muon, Jaeori Roberds.
-4:30-
~ = TUNEI t t •,; "Touched" ( 19831 Robert
~ •• l<•thleen Beller
GRANDMARSHALCHOSENFOR '85 ••• P'romBl
Crescendo, Sorbet Ag)iozzo, VeaJ
Allegro and Bombay Glace Finale
Sandra. (Glow )jahts from under-
neath the salads shown on the dance
floor as earrings, necklace$ and any
other place guests could find to
attach them.)
The HH oeiahbors socializing
included Mark and Joyce Wet11
(she was boat pande chairman) and
her assistant Helm LaBaJH and
7~1¥MO~
llSIPICllR
-mmca OOlN>I> .Off
-AC1IOlt w.4 WtJ£RSJON
-UfCll9IG AC10lt DR~S.~
mr tc•IN# laled on
Mallftattam#dWKM9cam 8RUC£~
..
--~ ~
~l--lM
Cllftll "' 41 .. ·-a.a~~ .. ,.
u--, ... tQUllll: (1ll)•1-.u -cmCll IM-151.1 ...
~caDl
llllSt•IM
• '? fy
husband Bob, Cruise of Lights
Chairman Jerry and Cbtet Railey,
Assistant Slltrley and Jack
Levereu. Assisting Ball Chairman
Joana and Georp Claue, I.a)' and
Pat Mlluo, Bobbitt and BUI Wll-
llam1, Nucy and Tom l.asabali,
IUttJ Mee.,, 8Mrry and Dale
Skertk, Magle and I.ea Flavia,
Dave and L,.a l1nehQ, Je4Ue and
Jim Miller, Many and Jtb Pa1p,
..
Vicki and J.UU Mars and Betty
and Bob Wataoa.
Also Sae and Dick 8 .......
Committee Founder Jue ana By
~. the Doa1 Ruta (sweepstakes
winner of off-water decorated
homes), waterfront home winners
the Ju Alberti, Sam LaCorte and
Ilea Db•• and put chainnen
ltadlJea StMWardl and Gloria
Hyams.
LOii! W!IQHT
~MlNTl'll 4 ,,._ ...._,_..,...._. .... ....... __.
WITH HYPNOSISll
?AtkY-COWOIYMlY-naMl\l•mY ............................
..._. .... eM ........ ,... ... .. c..,.., ...... ...... ~~ ... .
(114) 47i-MYPN0111 ,.,.,
A~1 tu.o tu
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REVlfW
------
Superb voices
in 'Superstar'
at Saddleback
Amajo .
for deaf actress
-ID&Yauc& ,,,,........_ .
LOS ANOELES -Phytlis fftticb,
a Tony award--winnJna deal actrn1
wbo made a "*' appeat"UCe Oii NBC"1 .. Oimme a Brak.•• Saturday,
makes &he point that nobody it men
realittic in a deaf role in movia and television than a deaf performer.
By CHRIS Cl\AWPORD
Ollr .... 0."11JIR•t ii
Saddleback College South has
opened its sprina theatrical season
with a musical flourish in its spirited
production of "Jesus Christ Super-star."
This contemporary rock opera,
which first appeared in 1971, features
hit music by Andrew Lloyd Webber,
currently of "Cats" fame, who also
wrote the music for "Joseph and the
Amazin$ Technicolor Dreamcoat"
and "Evita," amona others.
Webber's songs, with lyncs by Tim
Rice, offer a musical inte~retation of
the last week of Christ s life, cul -
minating with his crucifi"ion and his
followers' search for meaning in his death.
h is one of Saddleback's most
ambitious and difficult undertakings
lo dale, yet director Patrick J. Fennell
has succeeded in assemblina a very
able cast of over 40 non-professional
participants, drawn from all over
Orange County.
One of the outstanding voices in
the production belongs to Maria Lisa
Pignotti. who plays Mary Magdalene.
Tw<>--0f the highlights of the show are
her deliveries or "Everythmf's All
Right" and the very moving" Don't
Know How to Love Him."
Equally impressive vocals are de-
livered by Timothy Bennett as Pon-
tius Pilate in "Pilate's Dream" during
Act· One and in his encounters with
PRIME TIME SOAPS
Christ. includina lhe trial scene, in Act Two.
Fine vocal work also is offered by
Shane R. Donavon (Jesus), Jack Rein
(Judas Iscariot) and Dave
Hutchinson (Kina Herod). ewffec·
tively backed by the Saddleback
· Colleac Wind Ensemble, Symphony
Orchestra and Strina Orchestra. all
under the direction of Terry New-
man.
Although Donavon is operatina
w1thin the confines of the Webber·
Rice script, his overall portrayal of
Jesus is heavil y somber - a brood-
ing, sometimes anguishina. often
angry Jesus who becomes over-
whelmed by the picas of the sick and
the poor. Yet Donavon docs ajve us
glimpses of the man~ more chari-
table. loving si de early in the play and
in the final moments on the cross.
·As Judas, Rein dominates the stage
in an all-stops-out, eneractic per·
formance. contributing much to the
role with his highly upressive face, as
he delineates. by turns, guilt, fright and sadness.
Hutchinson is splendid as the
decadent Kina Herod, with a pudy
top hat and bfack high heels, accom-
panied by a court contingent of
hedonistic foll owers.
Director Fennell, assisted by Larry
Gordon (vocal direction) and Cyrus
Parker (choreography), has created a
well-paced show that delivers 18
scenes and still clocks m just under
Judu 18C&rlot (Jack Rein) la aurroaaded by tormenton
(from bottom left) Lori Nicklin. Tereu ltmotb, Krlltlna
Powen and A1190n Garrott ln "Jeeua Cb.rtat 8apentar .. at
8add.leback Collea• &oath.
two hours.
Wally Huntoon (set design) and
Jeff Calderon (lighuna design) offer
some powerful visual images in
scenes such as Judas' hanaing, the
tableau vivant oftbe La.st Supper and
the final crucifixion.
. Costuming, by Charles Castagno
and Mary Bcth Muniz, 1s generally
very good and highly effective in
some cases, such as the Rormentors,
Herod and his court people. One
distractina excq>tion is Judas' shirt.
which keeps falhna off his shoulders.
"Jesus Christ Superstar" continues
Thursday throuah Saturday at 8 p.m.
and Sunday at :f p.m. in the campus'
McKinney Theater on the Mission
Viejo campus. Call 831-46S6 for
ticket information.
'
.. We should at lea.at be alio-ed to
audition for the roles... abe said.
"Nobody bas to promise that we wiU
win them, just let us try. There have
been projec:u where we werai•t even
allowed to audhion. a.nd the roles
went to non-deaf actors •...
"People are afraid to work with us.
As a result. deaf people have been
portrayed wronaJy moat or the time
when non-deaf people play the parts,"
she continued. "Anytime I tum on
the TV and sec someone who ·1
supposed to be deafl can insiantly teU
whether the person 11 actually dea.f,
just by the way they move their
hands."
..... ...,
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BJ BJIL Mea.osUY .,. ...... .._ ...
W ASHINOTON -American
Telephone cl TeJeP.pb Co. on Mon-
day unveilod a pncina plan tivina a
IS percent di1COunt to certain lonJ-
diJtanoe callers in rctum for a S2S
monthly fee.
The plan is intended to benefit
those callers, primarily small busi-
nesses, that make between S 167 and
S l ,000 worth of out-of-state calls a
month. accordina to John R. Sman.
vice president-business markets and
IC;!Vicet (or AT & T Qun.(nunications.
l'RO America, u the pricina plan is
called, will be offered nationwide
startina March 29, if the FCC ap-
proves. Smart said AT&T now offers similar in·state dilcount plans in IS
statea.
He estimated lhat the new pricing
scheme will leave AT&T Iona.dis-
tance about 9 or 10 percent mol't expensive than oompetina long-dis--
tanct compan.ies.t down from a cur-
rent averaae of I J.-14 percent.
Asked why a consumer would pay
more for AT&T service. Smart listed
quality and immediate credit for
misdialcd calls u amonJ tbe extra
values in AT&T Iona-distance ser-
vice.
Smart said price is the p1rt of
sdlina Iona-distance service that hu pro~ided the most trouble since the betinninaofcompetition for the long-
distanoc marbt. .. The p~~Uc per·
oeives that our prices are ttiaJ'ler than
they are and our competitors prices
·arc lower than they actually are."
He said a 6.1 percent reduction in
Iona-distance rates last May .. wasn't
enough to dispel tbe perception," so
the company responded with PRO
America and Reach Out America, a
proaram that offers customers an
hour's worth or caJling during late
night and weekend hours for a $JO
monthly fee.
Smart said Reach Out America.
dcs11ned for midential customers,
has signed up I .S miWon cHcnts since
1t was in\roduccd last June 7. Two-
thirds of tbe users are payina a SI S-a-
month surcharae to allow lhcm to
take advant.aac of the service 1n the
even in&.
Sman estimated that a million
business cYstomers and 40,000 to
S0.000 residen tial customers could
save money using PRO America
instead of rcaular AT&T I<
ta nee. He said the pricina plan 11 c
to those who use about six h
Iona-distance a montb, an ave
IS to 20 minutes each ous.incs
For sen 1 NEW Y~I( (AP) -T~ followd: "'' 1 ta 8: r r ""-1 .nowa I OYet -t • ounter e•trSv wt ~ :S s = l/4 ~ M: .• = ~ ~toeka ·~ warrants lh•l hi ve oone up
he mo'clf.: csowrc the~ be.Md on If~· J 8wt ~c:"~ur ti~ 'Tra:B'ne below f; or 1000 blnn 8: ~. k v. -
·~~' ·~ Inc uded. ~un It 1,4 -Up l -1~ a cent• chi er he om 1 I/• 1~ gj .,~ ~Pf=.~ pr~a ~.1= aL3 'h 7-1 ~~ pr ce • ., a 111t price. Vo ::S-t ~~l un
l ~ ~ flo"
l t l
U~f iian -1
ru~ ~~ 1~ fl tc wl ~ ~ 1· Xenarx ' ·~ '"' t~~ ~ ~ ~~hp t ~~1>t ~ UP = ~ un m 1% U• • DOWNS &Vc11 ontlnd 1~ ~: : Hsr~'r L•t~ _Cl)O Pelt 1~ nd
14 = ~ '"rt J ~ me>! ~tt~11~· 13~ = l·/4 §!! i ~~fnd Inf La uo .. v. -1
l •pjiii!ii.Iiiliiil'--------------
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OP"n • Money·M1rke1 av1np Aetounc lofferintc l"f more rh•n ma1or blnlo) •MMA mini-11oi-cw n000/90dor•
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Oiln """" l/111/I\ lliCb ..,b+oa t0 ci!M1t
! ~S 1ULVWG N•mr '1
I ~7 Add"\! ______________________ _ : ~-!
SI ERLING SAVINGS :;,"''"'' '"'~4/fJ/1 51,,,, I 41b City I
'illOO llittfl ~I Suitt 2llO Stitt I llrwpo11 lk•th CA '12660 Zip Codt ____ _
Ttk911onc (7141 lSI 1202 R p
In CA llOOl '5'.4 5179 I Out CA t900t ISHOl6 ($ bonf 1--1 -Bus PhoM 1---1 -----Al+IO ~ A SSDCIAT'ION 19752 MacAnhur Blvd., lrviM. Call Shury ac 752·8200
..
6 MONTH lYEAR --
9.25 % 8.88~ 10.10% 9.66 %
Curran Yield• Cumnt bte Curre.nc Yield• CUmm R.tc
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~ Open your account today. Call the toll-free Financial Une now! 1-800-423-BANK, Ext: lSOO ---· lllO,..,. ol-*t.
Creat American
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WHA T AMEX Orn
AME l L E~DERS
NASDAQ S UMMAR Y
Go Lo Quon s
METAL S Quons
That's an apt description of both bustn ss and
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
where compani are gotn~ and which p ople are helping
them get there.just watch Credit Line· -every day in the
Business s ctlon of your ~ew llilJ Pillt
..
OrMgj Coat DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, February 12, 1985
by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY
. . .. z 11
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"You corrected my English so much I
forgot what I was goin' to soy!"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
BIG GEORGE by Vfrgll Partch (VIP) SHOE
.. . . . . . . . . .
'• ... -.. . ... • •
..... •• 4V(p
"There for • moment I thought I'd lo1t
you."
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
~7" -
i
)
~~ se.EN L.OON'?
by Garry Trudeau
by Jeff MacNally
ME ~T MA~see4 ~mi.a< 9'r' A ~r.
by Charles M. Schulz
.--~~~~~~---. ,.,z n,,.,.,,.,..,, ....... ,.,.,..,.... ~ LITTLE IC:EMINDEI<
OF A LOST LOVE
I
I FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
"Prepare yourself to get up early. 'tM GONNA RU~
AWAY F~ ta/IE .~ Marmaduke wore his Jogging suit to bed."
GORDO
GARFIELD
A H005E 6£COME.5 A MON\E
ONC.f rr·~ WELL f..5T~L1';""..if p)
wtTH CAT HAI~
0 ~-,.....,o
MOON MULLINS
JUDGE PARKER
..
o a.. NO/ n415 15 NOi
A CAI HAIR / IT'5 AWMl~KER /
,
1 DON'T 'f<NCNtl WHAT THE
BOYS ANO I WOULD 00
W ITHO\JT 'tO\.J I
n-4ANt<.S AGAIN '
~I
2 ·IZ.
by Gus Arriola
by Harold Le Ooux
Neither vulnerable. South deal1.
NORTH
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WEST
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EAST
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• K 107&52
SOUTH
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The bidding:
8 .. Q W•tt . . , ...
I 0 P ...
INT P ... , ... , ...
Nwda Eut
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SNT PUt
Opening lead: Four of •.
The Chairman of tht Board -tht
Oor•n EdlW>rlal Board, that it -
Richard L. Frey ctltbrate1 hit IOth
birthday tod17. ·1n the 19309, Frey
w11 a mell\ber of LM Four Acn
team that dominated brtd,.. He left
tht team to become bu.etne11
mau,.r for Ely Culbert.on. Wta.n
the American Contract Brldre
Ltarue created the maater point
achtme. Frey became Llrt Muter
No. 8.
5\QH···· eJ~"/EPR ..
1~<90
1bf\LL 1HIS "TPa:eu:!
.,.
FREY TURNS 80
He 1tlll l1 a prolific writer whoae
articlee appear in many magazlnt1.
In hit day• u editor of the ACBL
Bulletin, he rat.ed the standard of
that publication lo where It wu
regarded 11 one of the world'•
premier bridge maradnea.
That he retain• con1idtrable
o ••• ~
SHARIFF !-1
prowe11 H a player 11 evident from
thl1 hand from a recent rubber
brldre same. HI• rtVtrH bad mlsht
not be W> tHr7one'1 ta1te. but the
rlnal contract wu cer tainly
reaeonable.
Wt1t led the four of 1padea, and
Frey won In hand with the jack.
81Act a 3-8 heart break wu only
about a 85 percent chance, Frey
dtelded lo look tor a better llne. He
ran tht nlae of 1p1dea at trick two,
and when tMt held ht contlnued
with a apede to the qveen. Eut. eluf·
fed clubt Oft thtM two trlcb.
Sine• a club nn .... WU not llktl1
to help, ,,.., ltd a club to the act,
OD which Wllft pla7ed u •• nlDe .••
cue Weat •tarted with the 10·9,
declarer continued with the queen
ol club1. Eut won t he kins and
ehlfted lo a diamond, the ten loalng
to the jack. Weet led a epade to the
table'• ace. and declarer "me lo
hand with a diamond to the act to
lead a heart. When Weet followed
CHARLES
Go1£1
with a low heart, declarer lnttrttd
the t.abl•'• tlsht.
E11t won the ten of btarta and
continued with tht kins. but
declarer allowed him to hold the
trick. E11t'1100tt wu cooktd -If
ht returned a heart, d1.1mm1 would
•core tht laat thrff trickl. If. In·
atud, bt pla7ed a club, declarer
would t.atc. the Jut three trfw In
hand.
Well played, and happ1 blnJtd&J,
Okltl
F• W11•1lf• .... C.....
0 .................. ...... ,..,.,.. .. a... ....... .,....
1 ... Cha >x• A\1'9•, C0
1 '
-.N.:J.mrT .
,
How.abouta $5.2million are:ria?
Christ College Irvine (enrollment 500)
ByCURTSEEDEN
Of .. o.llJ .........
The Western Christian Athletic
Association chose Christ CollCJe
Irvine to be the host team for 111
upcomina basketball tournament.
which wpuld seem odd conaiderina
Christ College Irvine usually plays its
games at Newpon Christian Hiah.
But just. as quietly as this small
college has papped up in the hills of
Irvine, so has a spanking-new, SS.2
million fieldhousc which has been ·
raised in order to showcase the CCI
basketball team.
Not many collCJes the size of CCI
can boast of a SS.2 million field-
housc? There's seating for around
I ,SOO, which means each of CCl's
approximate SOO students can come
to a game and bring two friends
apiece.
And what they'll be seeing is a
pretty decent basketball team playing
an a very classy building.
The 113 acres of land on which
Christ College stands was purchased
an 1962 by the Lutheran Church. The
college wasn't built until 1976, and by
1981 , CCI played its first basketball
game. Coach Dave Wild has been the
onJy bead basketbaJI coach at CCI.
His Eagles finished their first season
with a 6-1 S record.
··The next year with the same five
andividuals, we were 14-9 and fin-
ished in third place,'' says Wild.
West Coatt Christian WU the No. I
ranked team two years ~ in the
National LittJe CoUcaea. wb1cb, u the
name augests, is a national orpniza-
tion for smaller in1titution1 such u
CCI.
"We lost to West Coast Christian
by six paints so we're closillf the pp1"
says Wild. "But we're not m any biS
h, .. urry.
Wild admits CCI may switch to
NAIA or even NCAA Division UI
some tjme in the next few yean, and
the Eagles cenainly have the IYJ1l for
it.
The new fieldhouse features
bleachers on each side of the court
with balcony-like concrete walkways
surrounding the courts. The arena has
an openness about it thanks to larae
windows on the nonh and south walls
which anow the sun to filter in.
An impressive, four-faced
scoreboard hangs above center court,
and there are plenty of practice
baskets on each side of the majn
court. Surround in& the pm iuelf are
fou r locker rooms Wlth showers,
classrooms, coaches' offices, and
whirlpool areas for starters.
Construction worken put the fin-
ishing touches on the fieldhouse lut
week in order to have it ready for
Sunday's dedication. Later this
month, the Western Christian Ath-
letic Association will hold its tour-
nament at CCI, with the winner
advancing to the National Little
Colleges Tournament.
The new field house also figures to a
great deal for CCJ's rccruitina. Since
the college has no scholarships to
offer athletes. the best WiJd and
Brandon can offer is the chance to ................
This year, CCI is 14-S and in third
place in the Western Christian Ath-
letic Association. That docsn 't bother
Wild and assistant coach George
Brandon too much, though. They
both know the conference has been
dominated by LA Baptist and West
Coast Christian (Fresno). They know (Pleue eee $5 .2 lllLLIOJll/C3) Chrlat Collece lmne'• new $5.2 mWton fleldlloa.M flpre8 to appade tta buketba1l Procram qalte a bit.
Boxing;Openerhasalotofpunch
Sellout crowd in Irvine watches Lee
win unanimous decision over Lopez
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
Dlilr .... C.1 J 0 I
So who says professional boxing
won't draw in Orange County? Not
promoter Don Fraser, that's for sure.
By unanimous decision, the Irvine
Marriott Hotel's initial venture into
pro boxing went off as a rousang
success -according to Fraser. the
fighters and a sellout crowd of I ,S49
which watched an entertaining six-
bout card Monday night.
Previous attempts to bring pro
boxing to Orange County failed due
to lack of fao interest Not this tame.
.. We had to tum away several
hundred people," sa1d Fraser. who
has brought boxing back to Orange
County. "It's fabulous. I've never had
the experience of not having enouf_h
tickets. We sold out at noon today. '
In the main event between middlc-
wights Bert Lee (I S4 pounds) of
Anaheim and Danny .. MagJc" lopc7
(I SS), both fighters battled the full I 0
rounds in the Marriott's Grand
Ballroom before Lee came away with
a unanimous dec1s1on.
The 29-year-old Lee. the World
Athletic Association junior middle-
weight champion. used a powerful
right hand and a strong finish to turn
back the game Lopez, a nati ve of
Orange, who gave Lee all he wanted
before running out of steam in the late
going.
.. I didn't think he would come
1os1de but he dad . and he hat me wtth
some good shots."
All three Judges had Lee Wlnn1ng.
98-93. Those paints were piled up
with sting.mg combinations when he
had Lopez (!~)against the ropes.
Lec·s best weapan. ho~ver, was a
straight nght hand that found Lopc7's
chan throuj}lout the fight.
.. I hit him with some &ood nghts
but he took them. I have to say that."
said Lee. who ran his record to 26-8-4.
.. I fought my le.ind of fight. but
wasn't quite as aggresave as I
would've liked 1n the earlier rounds. ..
he added.
Lee staned slowly. feeling out
Lopc7. a fo rmer state kick boxing
champion.
Lopez. who took home S 1.200. said
"I hit him good but not enough ...
The only tame Lopez put together a
sustained flurry was the bcginnini of
1he finaJ round. A combanauon
followed by a left hook staggered Lee.
scndtnf ham agaanst the ropes. Lope7
couldn t follow 11 up. though. and Lee
got back to business.
A ri&)lt to the body b> Lee put
Lope7 an the comer. And two quick
comb1nat1ons later. Lee punched out
any hopes of a Lopez comeback
.. , thought I was in control through-
out the fight. He never hun me. but he
sure could punch." said Lee
Bert Lee (riCht) b•mmen a rl&bt to tbe bead
of Danny ~Lopes llonclay nlibt dartq
o.llJ .... ,......., .......,_ heNer
mtddlewetcbt flCbt at tbe In1ne llarrtott.
Lee won bj an•nlmoaa ded81on.
"He was definately be11er than I
thought " said Lee. who pocketed
$2.000 for the win ... He could really
hit and was sneakier than I an11c1-
pated.
Fo rmer featherwaght champ
Danny "Little Red" lope7 made his
managmg debut with has prote&e 119-
pound G reg Puente of i\lhambra
(Pleue eee BOXIJllG /C3)
Vanguarda
liost tough
Pt. Lo1na
Anteaters go cold iri Fresno, lose, 52-40
UCic an't hcifdo n toSeven-point lead,
Shc>oting only 2 .!_percent in second half
Special &o lite Dally Pllol
FRESNO -After a prime first half
that saw UC Irvine take a 2S-20
halftime lead in front of 10,114 fans
here at the Selland Arena. tbe bottom
fell out on one of Coach Bill
MuUipn's latest tricks.
UCl's aood fint half turned into I
poor second half as the Antealcrs
blew a seven-paint lead before flllina
to Frano lite. 52~ in a_ Pacific
Coast Athletic Association pme.
It was Irvine's lowest sconng
outpul since 1980.
UCI used a succc:ssful three-paint
prcad offense m the first half
(wantina 10 spread out the Fresno
defense) when 1t bit 11 of 29 (33
percent) field •oal trics and sank four
of 20 three-paint goals. but that and
everythina else seemed to disint~
pate for Irvine in 1he second half.
Led by Jerome Ue't four fant balf
steals. UCI played uctllen1 defense
an the first half. too.
But the Anteaters could shoot JUSt
21 percent (6-of-29) an the second
half. undoubtedly the cause of their
sec.and half downfall.
UCI opened thr second halfwuh a
basket to go up 27-20, but Fresno
battled back and WCSlt ahead for the
first time an the game, 3S-34. with
I l:IOrcmaininit
After UCTs Johnny Rop:rs sank a
free throw to ue 1t at 3S. the Bulldogs
rattled off I I straraht paints to take a
46-lS edge with 4:19 to go.
In fact. Irvine recorded Just two
field aoals the last 11 'l'i minutes of the
pme.
Free agent Castillo rejoins Dodgers
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Free qent ~t·handet
BobbyCutallohusiped a on~yearcontractwtth tbe Los
An,eles Doctaera. lhe NaLton.al Laaue ltam announced
Monday.
Ca tallo,29,ttjoanstbeDodacr·uf\erspendinathela t
three ~ason with the Minnesota Twins. He wa lr'k1td lo
the Twins on Jan. 7. 1982 alona with outfielder Bobby
Mitchell In exchanac for two minor lctaucrL
Cu tillo ha a lS. 8 lifetime ruord with t 8 saves and
a 3. 79 earned Nn averqc &n Stl·ohas m~orlelpae KUOn
lie'*" 1~11 wuh a 3.66 ERA 1n 1912 bcfOf't bc1n1
plaaucd by 11tjuncs the last two )'tan.
Uc wa l·ll "'1th a 4'.77 RA :A!forc in 1983 bcfOrc
JOIOI on the disab6e<f hst WI lh a mild lCIHO the rot.a tor C\lfY
m his nahl shoulder on Aua. 21. Last year. Cub I lo was°"
the disabled last until July$. He apptttt<S 10 10 pmes for
the Twin afta bcina actJvatcd and hlld • 2-1 record and a
l.78 ERA.
"Bobby s always l>cen an ouut.andil\I com~litor
and we feel he can help us in our pitcbiJ\I plans. • said
Dodacn' Vi~ Prt ident Al C.mpenis. "~y was
uamined b) our doctor, .,hote ttp:>rt indicates Bobby hu
coml)ktcly iu!ovettd fn>m bis 11\JUI)'."
C1st1llo 11 c:red1~ with tnch1na Fernando
V1lcn1uela 1hc 1erc-.ball at the 1979 Ariiona lMtnactional
Ltquc.
.. The loss was a comb1nat1on of
Fresno's defense and our very inept
offense," said Mulhgan. whose pa51
UCI teams had never scortd f<''4er
points an a sinalc game .. Our I~'"
hav<' been shooung well lately. and
obviously at rcalJy hurt us whe n we
were not hitting toniaht.
"When you start massing shots.
everything seems to break do~n
Defensively. we dado 't pla} bad I). but
~did break down a bit. late an th<'
scoond half "
UCl. 6-7 an PC AA acti on. ho~t
PCAA leader Nevada~Las Vegas t·
urda)' at noon a. Crawford Hall
...c.AA
Cc:*'w• W l
II I
10 1 • • ' \ . '
o-'81 Wl 11 l u • ll • 11 10
It ll u •
It ti .
' 1) • 15 ) 17
UCigets
Bin 9th
for ·12-6
victory
AZUSA -UC Irvine ~
etgnt runa In the ninth irvMng, three
on Bob Perry'• homer. and, .. , ..
8r9tt ~ )<talded ju8t one hit tn
2% '"'*'GI to earn his fttat W:tory
.. the Anteeters po9t9d • 12-t bll_.. wtn OYflt Aw-Padlc
Coflege here Monday •
UCI WM down M entering tM
ninth, but Adlm Ging atltted tM
wffd re/ty wtttl I wlllk and T °"'
Blk'8 followed wtth. ~ beb'9
Petry leuncMd hie P'M" ......
homer that put lrvtne up 7-1. TM
ftrewottc1 ..,. )u9t beglrn-i6ng.
Ed Ctwk ~ In out .....
stote MCOnd Md went to tf*d on•
wtld pltcf\. Folowlng e Wlilk to Mira
Suger, who 1tote MCOnd, Ind In
ln1Mtiot* ... to WW., ~ the bMea. Brady Mdel eon
In Cletk Ind &IQlr, Pllddtng •1
edvllntage to M .
Aft« Andetaon stole eecond,
Peul Hammond btooped a double
ovw MCond to ~ IMne, mllk-
lng It 10"'6. Then. wtth Anderton on
thlrd, Ging. who '9ct the lnrq off,
execuwd a~ In front of Wrd
to ICOr'9 INtM and give the Ant-
eat«1 an 11-8 41dge.
Baine followed vrith hte Mcond
hit of the lnrnng to ecore Hem-
mond, Icing the wtn -UCt'a
98COnd In four GllmM (2-1-1). 1
UCl'1 Doug ~. 11n Ooem\
View High prod'uct. htt a 11111 OM
home run to In the oe>ef*'G lnnlrig.
Azusa gav. up just OM mor9 n.M
before It~ by ttlktng aw
edge ln the ftfth .
Irvine ti.d tt In the ~th. but
Azusa came bedc with two of tta
own In the bottom hMf of the lrWng
tor a 5-3 IMd. UCI added one In h
eighth.
Monday' I gWM Wiii S*t of a
make-up doublef'tllder __, lelt
Saturday's twin bMI Wiii rlllned out.
UCI right-Mn<* Doug L.Jmon
1tat1ed and went 81A lnt*'OI befaire
being reffewd by Martin. UMon
teattered eight htta and •llled
~during his outing.
UC trvtne ho9Wd CMpriwt
today.
McGllnchey .et
for AF Academy
CkTan v,cw H'Jh·s Mtkc
McGhm·hc,, a t1No--rcar All·
unset Le uc footbaJ star and
current!\ a member of the Sca-
hav.-l • h3 kttball tcam, will tp
a nauc>nal letter of 1ntcn1 on Wcdnt~ lo attend tbc Air
f ortt Acadcm 10 Colondo
pnl\&).
A 6-4, 22 pound nt0r,
Mc 1hnch(y' "' s-catcbana abil111 hclptd huri pan hooori
as a Junior. me a complc1.c
ti&ht end v.;ath t!'t nn
bfor 1na a a ttn•Of.
:/
~Capo mn will benefit autistic cbildrren
\
. .
One of prizes is trip to New Orleans
division winnersof the 5k race, as
well as the top male and female
finisher.
The awards will include cnlf"lved
trophic&; medallionli-flMrd\indise, lift cer1ificates and spon equipment. TbeliiifMardiGru"Run aod
Champqne Bnlncb to benefit tbe
Social Vocational Servioea' _.Pf'Ol1'ams
servinaautlsticcbildttn in Oran&e
County will be held at Capiatrano
St.ate Beach at 9 a.m. Sunday.
Rntaunnt in the Dana Point Harbor
for a Mardi Gru ciu.mpaane Brunch.
Entertainment al the brunch will be
provided by tbe UC Irvine Jan
Enttmble. The Laauna Mime
Th.eaterwiJl'J)rovidcfinisb lioc
cntcnainment and the fntivilies will
ooncludewith a grand prizcdra,wing
of a tripior two to New Orleans. All
pa.nic1panu will be eligible lo win.
AU proceeds from the event will be
donated to SociaJ Vocational Services
to aid their work witb a1.1ti1tic people
in~County.
Day of run rea.istration fees arc SI 0
for run and T ·Shirt and SI S for run, T.
shin and brunch.
A turnout of about 1,000 runnen
andspectatorsareexpected toaather
at the stretch ofbeach between
Capistrano Beach and Doheny State
BeacbPark.
A.Skraccand 2k Fun Run willbc
held with rq.istration beJinnina at 7
a.m. At 9:4S a.m .. a white limousine
will take the fint-plaoc male and
female finiaben to Crown Point
Volunteers and supporters of
Social Vocational Services are help.-in, to provide each run participant
Wlthahand pafotcd Mardi Oras Run
T-shirt.
For more inf'onnation. phone the
Mardi Gru Party Une u 680-4313 and ask for Karen or Vicki. .....
* * * On Saturday, Feb. 23) the City of
Ora nae will host its Spnng Games 5 A wards will bt presented to
Globetrotters
to go coed, and
not·all are happy
From AP dlapatdes m WASHINGTON -The Harlem
Globetroners arc putting a new spin on the
ball. as they prepare to end a 58-year "men
only'11:radition and welcome the first woman basketball
player to their ranks.
Not everyone on the team of court comics is happX
·over goina oocd, but head coach Charles "Tex'
Harrison says woman players have become too good to
ignore.
More than 200 women across the country have
answered the Globetrotters' call for applications.
Harrison said that the winner -perhaps more than one
-will be chosen in time to join the team next year.
Harrison said a woman's size will be oo problem.
But she should bt skilled at handling a basketball and
fa.st on her feet, he said. and she should have ''a radiant
personality."
The coach said Cheryl Miller of the University of
Southern California would be an ideal choice, but that
only non-students would be considered. Miller was a
member of the U.S. women's basketball team that won.
an Olympic gold medal last summer in Los Angeles.
The Globetrotters were honored Monday by the
Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Amen·
can Hi~tory as .. an important part of American social
history ... They gave the museum a game unfform. a
warmup suit, tour boob, posters, photographs and
other memorabilia of their performing career.
Hubert "Geese" Ausbie, 45, who is playing his 24th
year with the Globetroners. says the team's adjustment
to having a woman player in its midst "will be kind of
rough."
Ausbie said traveling by bus will be especially
difficult, and he expressed concern over the "wear and
tear on the body" that a woman will experience playing
again$t "some big guys" on opposing teams. ~urly Neal, the bal~ear veteran of the team.
said. "I think it's wonderful.
Qaote of the day
JlltJ."1fff _., ftrat round IMder In the Bing
Crotby Na.tk>M1 Pro-Am, talking abe>lrt the flerQe
wtnd that plegued golfer1 at the Spygtw Hiil
courM: "Old you .. the whfttc8PI the wtnd WU
kicking up OU1 .,_.(on c.m.t Bay)? rt you throw
up tome gr .. to ct'9Ck Wind dtrectlon, and
IOl'Nbodygett hit wtth ft, th9y 09t laoeratlon1."
Dotterer cut by Oakland
MESA, Ariz. -Fonner Edison High
and Stanford University standout Milce
Dotterer was one of 12 players waived by
the Oakland Invaders of the United States
Football League Monday.
Dotterer earned AlJ.-CIF honors at Edison as a
running back.
Also waived by the Invaders were quarterback
Marie Reed, cornerback Alvin Balter. defensive end
Darnel Wall. wide receiver Al Hill. running backs
Darren Wilson and Oeo Miller and linebacker William
Burse.
Slaney (Decker) out 3-6 week•
EUGENE, Ore. -Mary Slaney will be m sidelined three to su weeks with a muscle
tear in her right calf, the Eu,ene middle
distance runner•s coach said Monday
night.
·The formei-Mary Decker is in Los Angeles, with
her husband. Richard Slaney, said her coach, Diclc
Brown, in an interview from bis home in Eugene. He
said she would return home Thursday or Friday.
.. She tore some muscle fibers in the lower pafi of
her right calf." Brown said. "It is not a very senous
iajury ... and she wa~ planning on taking some time off
anyway. She-will get her rest and plans on running the
same outdoor schedule as she had.''
Slaney suffered the injury in the U.S. Olympic
Invitational track and field meet Saturday in East
_Rutherford, N .J .. during the women's l. 500-meter race
with just over two laps remaining.
Luera clip Wings, S-1
INGLEWOOD-Greg Ion had a goal
and an assist Monday night to pace the Los
Angeles Lazers to a 3-1 Major Indoor
Soccer League victory over the Wichita
Wings.
Jon scored the Lazers' final goal, into an open net in
the waning moments of the contest, to give Los Angeles
some breathing room;
The Lazers had taken a 2-0 edge on Stuart Lee's
goal late in the first period, and Willie Molano's taUy-
on a pass from Ion -in the second stanza.
Wichita trimmed the lead to 2-1 on a soal by Omar
Gomez at the 12:23 mark of the third penod.
The Wings pulled their goalie in favor of a sixth
attacker with three minutes remaining in the game, but
still were unable to score again.
Wilkes put on injured list
INGLEWOOD -Forward Jamaal m Wilkes of the l..ake'rs, who suffered tom
ligaments in his left knee on Feb. I. has
been placed on the team·s injured list.
The 6-7 Wilkes. an I I-year NBA veteran.
underwent surgery three days after being injured and is
ex pected to be sidelined for the rest of the season.
The move left the Lakers with 11 players on their
active roster. one below the NBA limit of 12, and two
players -Wilkes and rookie forward-<:enter Earl Jones
-on the injured list. Jones has a fractured ankle. ·
The Lakers also announced that starting forward
Kun Rambis was married to the former Linda Zafrani
in Las Vegas, last Saturday. Teammates Mitch
Kupchak and Michael Cooper were in attendance. The
new Mrs. Rambis is Vice President and General
Manager of Forum Team Tennis.
Santa Clara player honored
SAN FRANCISCO -University of m Santa Clara senior guard Harold Keeling\
who scored 26 points against St. Mary's in
weekend play. was named Monday as the
West Coast Athletic Conference player of the week. It
was his third such honor this season.
In addition to his scoring, including 10 goals from
the floor and six from the line, he grabbed seven
rebounds, seven assists, and two steals.
His two free throws with six seconds left snapped a
71-71 tic and gave the Broncos a two-point victory.
PElllS
BIOSTElllOUS
The course has been accurately
measured and the fee is $9 with T •
shirt aod $4 without with SI late fee
thedayoftberaQe. A tumoutofSSO
ran last year.
RUNNING
Also that day, thcCityofOranae
will hold the SprinJ Games Mutera
Track and field Meet at Santa Ana
Colleae.
and I Ole runs.
The 5k iuct to be&inat 7:30a.m.,
with the I Ok slated for 8 at El Modena
High. 3500 E. Chapman Ave., Or-
ange.
This mecl is forcom~titors 25
years and older, male anCl female. The
entryfccisS lOwithaSl latefcethe
day of the raoe. There was a turnout of
2SO runners last year.
The C0'-'1$C is extremely fast -out
flat with gradual downhill return.
Split times will be provided each
mile.
For mot'e information on either
event. phone Al Siddons at Santa Ana
Colleae at 6-6 7 • 3 300 or the City of
Orange at 532-0383.
USFL may use taped replays
• NEW YORK -The United States EE Football League said Monday it may go f II•
ahead with the use of tape<l replays lo
decide controversial calls even if the
networks that televise the leag1,1e officially woo 't participate in the project. ~
USFL spokesman Jim Byrne said that the league,
which experimented with replays during Saturday
night's New Jersey Generals-Tampa Bay Bandits game.
will-do it again at this Saturday's game between
Houston and Birmingham despite objections Sunday
from ABC and ESPN. the tw.o nctwor.ks that carry
USFLgames.
"I think it will go in for the regular season·if it works
at a second test," Byrne said.
Under the plan used Saturday night, coaches were
allowed one challenfe in each half on calls involving
fumbles. a receivers possessions on out-of-bounds
plays and on whether a receiver has crossed the goal line
-but not on penalties. -
The only challenie came in the second half when
New Jersey Coach Walt Michaels.appealed an official's
decision that the Generals' Danny Knight had fumbled
before he hit the pound. USFL Supervisor of Officials
Cal Lepore, stationed in the press box, reviewed the
tape and upheld the officials. costing New Jersey a time
out because it lost the appeal.
Ezpreu cuts four playera
LOS ANGELES -The Los An~eles m Express placed four players on waivers •II•
Monday mcluding wide receiver Malcolm
Moore. a parto-time starter for the United
States Football League team last season.
Others cut were offensive guard Terry Crouch and
defensive linemen Ivan Lesnik and Jeff Chaffin.
Moore. who attended USC, was the Express' tbird-
leading receiver last season with 31 catches for 354
yards and one touchdowns. He started seven games.
Crouch appeared in 12 games as a reserve for the
Express last season. Lesnik. a 16th-round draft choice
of Los Angeles in the 1984 USFL draft, played in five
games last year. Chaffin, a free agent signed in January.
was a two-year letterman at UCLA.
The Express opens the 1985 season against
Houston at the Los Angeles Coliseum Feb. 24.
Forzando upsets 'Anita field
ARCADIA -Fonando, an 11-1 ~ outsider, used a strong finish Monday to
win the $71,250 Sierra Madre Handicap by
a half-len,th over lucky Buccaneer before
a Lincolns Birthday holiday crowd of 49.925 at Santa Anita.
Forzando, ridden by Fernando Toro and carrying
11 7 pounds. was timed in I: 14 2-5 over Santa Amta's
turf course of about 6V2 furlongs and paid $25.60,
$14. 20 and $ 7. 20. The victory was worth $44.250.
TeleYtalon. radlq
RUVl8ION
7:30 p.m. -'9t0·11Alltn'8AU.: Clppera at
Lakera, Ch8nnel 11.
RADIO
7:30 p.m. -l'llO llAMIT8AU.; Cllpper9 ..
l.akera, KLAC( (570), KHJ (930).
7:30 p.m. -COU.SQI 8AIKaTaALL: Lono
8Mct\ State at 8an Diego State, KEZY (1180~
K800 (1130).
Fullerton
rips Pacific
Neal sparks Titans to romp:
Georgetown belts Villanova
From AP cll1patcllet
Tony Neal scored 17 points and had nine rebounds
Monday night as Cal State Fullenon built its Pacific Coast
Athletic Association basketball mark to 9-4 with an 86-64
victory over Pacific at Fullerton.
Kevin Henderson added 15 points as the Titans broke
open a close game. which was 33-27 at halftime. with a 14-7
streak to open the second half. They led 47~35 with 14
minutes remaining.
The Titans opened their lead to as many as 20 points
with eiJht minutes to go in the.game as they cruised to their
13th Vlctory against nine defeats.
·" Pacific dropped to 7-15 overall and 3-10 in the PCAA.
Fullerton also got solid scoring from Gary Davis, with
14 points and freshman Henry Turner, who came off the
bench to score 12 points and pull down 11 rebounds.
The Tigers were led by Domingo Rosario with 13
points, and Andy Franklin added 12 points and eight
rebounds.
In the Pacific-I 0:
WaalllD&to• 81, Arl1ona State 13: Senior forward
Detlef Schrcmpf scored 20 points aQd grabbed 10
rebounds to lead the Washington Huskies past the Arizona
State Sun Devils.
With the victory. Washington improved its leasue
mark to 8-4 and its overall record to 17-7, while the Sun
Devils slipped to 6-6 in conference action and 11-11 on the
season.
Schremprs two free throws with 47 seconds left in the
first half gave Washin$ton a 34-33 lead at intermission.
Washington never trailed in the second half, and the
Huskies led by as many as 23 points in the closing min lites.
In top 20 action:
Georce&on 57, Vllluova it: Georgetown's Patrick
Ewina scored 16 points and grabbed JO rebounds as the
second-ranked Hoyas held off No.19 Villanova in a Big
East Conference game.
.Georptown, 22.-2 overall and 9-2 in c~n.Mnce play,
todk the fead for good at 46-45 on Ewing's turnaround
jumper from the baseline with 2:S7 rcmaini.na in the
contest.
After Bill Martin's free throws increased tbe lead to
48-46, Ewing convened two free throws and then assisted
on a basket as the Hoyas opened a 52-47 lead with 40 seconds left.
Baylor 9', SMU to: Baylor freshman guard Eric
Johnson came off the bench to score 24 points in leadina
the Bears to victory over 9th-ranked Southern Methodist
in a Southwest Conference game.
)l-2easy, then
it's a swap ·m.eet
From AP dlapatclln
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~= St. John's and Georgetown remained No. l and 2 ~ respectively. in The Associated Press college basketbali
poll Monday, while t~ rest of the Top Twenty swapped
A.
8.
c.
0.
Send Your Sweetheart Special Greetings In The Daily Pilot's .
Valentine of ove oline~
Your own personal 3 line message will appear Thursday,
February 14. 1985. This is a memorable way to remember
your sweetheart, husband, wife, parents, grandparents, or
friends.
Your messoge will appear with the illustration of your choice.
An od like the one below will cost $12 .00. Additional
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strength Jan
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OR Colli 6'2·5678 To Consult Your Valentine Repretentarive.
_________ _.,.~---------____ ,... . '
Gauchos' Brldeweser
will quit after 1985
Saddleback Collc_ae baseball coach Jim Bridcwner
will retire from coaching after this coming season he has
announced.
"I just thought I needed a change." said Bridewoser.
''There s a lot more work involved in being a head coach
now than when I first took the position. It has turned into
a 12-month job with the summer league and all. I've
ertjoyed coaching the kids1 but the other responsibilities
are sometimes overwhelming."
Brideweser will remain at Saddleback as a counselor.
"I've liked coaching. We've had some very aood
years. The two people that have really made it enjoyable
for me arc my assistants, Marshall Adair and Rich
Rommel. They go out and coach the kids and tbey do it
nght. I don't have to worry about coaching if I know
th ey're out there."
Bridewe~r has led the Gauchos to conference
championships the past two seasons. He has an overall
record of 73-43 in three years.
He spent 12 years in the major l~~cs and played
collegiate ball under Rod Dedeaux at USC, where he was
on Dedeaux's first national championshi~ team.
Brideweser was also a member of the I 9S2 World
Champion New York Yankees.
Brideweser has been with the proarant since it started
to tum around, first as an assistant to Dick Stueu in I 97S.
He said his best ball club was the 1983 club that came
wi1hin one same of reachina the state finals after flahtina
throuJ}l a tournament fonnat that required tbem to play
three aamss in one day.
places.
After a week of upsets, the real fight was for No. 3,
where Michigan became the top challenger to the two Big
East powers.
St. John's received 63of64 first-place votes and l,279
pbints from the nationwide panel of sports writers and
broadcasters. The Redmen are currently on the nation's
longest Division I winning streak -14 aames -and they
set a Bi& East Conference record with Saturday's 70-68
decision over Villanova. 11 consecutive league victories.
Georgetown. which received the other first-place
vote: was named second on every other ballot to finish
with 1,2 t 7 points.
Then the scram~le began as six ~hoots -Michipn,
Oklahoma, Memphis State. Oeorg1a Tech, Duke 'and
Southern Methodist -were named third on at l~t one ballot. Two other schools. Syracuse and Louisiana Tech
were tabbed as hi&h as fo11nb on some ballots. '
Michipn, l g.3, which had been No. 8, made the
weck·s bij&lest gain and fin~shcd third in the votina with
1,04:4 pointt .. Th~ WC?~vennes. who beat Bia Ten foes Purdue and llhno1s dunng the week. have improved from
18th to 10th to eighth to this week's standinas in the past
four polls. On Thursday1 Michiaan. 9-2 in conference play
will face Iowa. which trads by just one-half pme in the race
for the automatic berth in the NCAA tournament
Oklahoma. 19-41 jumped from tevcnth last week to
fourth with 987 polnts, while Memphis State which
rectived just five points lcu, fell from third to fifth The
Tlacrs suffered just their second toss or tbe seaso~ lut
weekend when they were beaten by Kansas 75· 71 on tbe
road. Memphis State startina auard Andre Tumer did not
play in the pme becautt of a ~th in the family.
Oeoflla T~h. IM, moved from 10th to sixth with
929 points a.ft.er rea,isteri.na Atlantic Coaat Conference
victories over Du.kt and Wake Forett last week.
The other Leach rips Wilander
DELRAY BEACH. Aa. (AP) -It
was a dream oome true for Mike
Leach -and a niJhtmare for 1wo
members of Sweden's Davis Cup
team.
"I was unseeded, unheralded and a
naive counlt')' boy, and I won the NC AA (tennis championship in
1982, bcatina Bn.d GUbcn in final).'•
Leach said.
"When I went from the NCAA to
the tour, J was lhepy wallunaaround
the lockerrobm settma autQtraphs.
There were auys I read about srowina
up.
.. A couple of weeks after I joined
the IQur I v.ent on the coun apinst
Vitas GeruJaitis. I was act).&ally shak·
in& on the coW"l. He beat me so fast he
dl.dn't even shower."
With a ter'Ve fitter than his quips,
Leach pounded second-fttded Mata
Wilander 7-S, 6-2 Monday to move
into the qua.rterfinala of the ina~ral
S l.8 million Upton lntttnauonal
Players Champions.hips.. a two-Mele
ewnt with identical 1 ll-playeT
sfoalet draws f'of men and women.
Al~ fallina Monday were rounh·
lttded Anden Jarf)'d of Sweden, a
6-l,6-4victimofNo.11 Tom11Smld
"f C' Ltthoalovaki1, and the tr0men '• No. l SC«1. Wendy TumbuJI of
Australia, who l<>1t to Yqoslavia's Andrea Temesvari 6-4, 6-3.
Lach said be is conJCAntly con-
fused .with lquna 8e8cb'a Rick
Lach, another &>layer on the tour 0t Ric~·· rather, Oick l..acb. the Uni-
Vet'JltY of Southem CaJifomia teMil co.ch. He also noted the Alloc'iatiOn
of Tenn it Profettlonala' med~ sukk
lists has rctidence u Wenon, Mall. •
"I lftW up in Botton, to the ATP
Pfa1 P.Y hu me on the eu1 eftd &Dd
the croWd bu me in California-YoU
know, •heftver Dick and llkk Hve.
ht I live in Ann ArlNw (Midl.). f •
have a houte tbert, and hoU1e payments You can uk the blnk. ..
J -----------· .• i 1 ~---·· .... -.--...... .....__.... -
. . ..... _..... ................
Fountain Valley HJ&h junior Jacltle Cook aoee bl«h to .core a two-pointer, blocb out an opponent, then takee-a breather dminC a recent Baron buketball ..... -
This Baron Cook(s)on .court, and off
FV s tandOut s parkles in athletics
while a ls o st a rring in the class room -
team. which has no seniors. Cook is
ave raJing in double figures in scoring
and as one of the team's top re-
bounders with about nine per game.
By DENNIS BROSTERHOUS
Of ... O.., ..........
Jackie Cook was destined to be a
Fountain Valley High Baron.
She even went so far as to si t out her
freshman year in athletics to abide by
CIF rules so she could play spons at
Fountain Valley.
"As a freshman. she was a resident
of the Ocean View High distnct,"
explained Barons' girls basketball
coach Carol Strausburg. ''But her
father (Larry) is a teacher here and I
think that had some influence on her
dcc1s1on."
"It was a toudl dcc1s1on to make at
BOXING •..
Prom Cl
"We're both O-and-0," said Little
Red before the fight. .. He's a little
overanxious but he'll be okay."
Puente locked up with Martin
Escobar of Santa Monica in a four-
round bout that saw both fighters
throw a lot of leather before coming
out with a draw.
One judge had Puente up 39-37 on
his cud. but the other two Judges had
it a draw and th e majority won.
In a battle of light heavyweights,
174-pound Lewis Hightower o( Or-
ange got th e nod via unanimous
decision over Dan Murnan in a four-
rounder.
Hightower took the punch out of
Murnan with a punishing series of
body blows in the fourth round to
open a close fight. Earlier. Hightower
opened a cut above Murnan's left.eye
that almost halted the bout. The fight
was stopped for a moment so the
ringside doctor could check
Murnan's eye and the fight resumed.
Welterweights David Gutierrez
(146 pounds) and Frank White (148)
squared off 1n another four-rounder
WJth Guticn:ez taking a unanimous
decision.
In another all-Orange County bout,
130-pound featherweights Terry
Claybon of Anaheim and Luis Perez
of Santa Ana went at it with Claybon
earning the four-round unanimous
decision.
Fraser. who must be trying to think
of a way to get more chain inside the
ballroom, said "This area is ready.
The gate was $21 .000 toniaht. My
only problem with this whole thing
was a lack of seating."
Boxing returns to the Irvine Mar-
riott March 11 .
the time." Cook said. "since my
friends went to Ocean View. But
thinll..S have really worked out for me.'"'~ ·
Cook. a 5-1 I forward who plays an
the post, has been an integral part of
Fountain Valley's $uccess this season.
The Barons are currently involved in
a dogfight for the Sunset League title
with, ironically enough, Ocean View.
Each have 7.-1 league marks. and
barring an upset in the las' two games
of the Sunset season. will share the
league title.
Cook, aloni with Kem Clower.
share the duties as captain of the
Earlier this season, she was named
to three all-tournament teams -at
Marina-Edison, Costa Mesa and
Artesia.
"As one of the captains, she is
responsible for team cohesiveness
and team upity, both on and off the
court," says Strausburg.
And . unity hasn't been a problem,
according to Cook. "That's one ·good
thing about our team. we really play
together well.'' she said. "And. be-
<:au~ we're all Juniors. we're really
looking forward to next year."
This year, 1he Barons divided two
games with Ocean View. dropping the
first. but rebounding in the second
0.., .... ,..... ".....,_ hellW
Bert Lee (left) and Danny Lopes •par durt.nc Monday
nJcbt'• featured o,bt at the lnine llarrtott.
$5.2 MILLION FIELDHOUSE FOR CCI. • •
J'romCl
play 1n spankm1-new arena.
This year's CCI team has three
st.arten who never played hiah school
besketball -Tim Surridae, Fred
Hanman and Dave Eichelberaer.
Hanman and Eichclbe~er scored 11
points apiece last week 1n one-point
victory over Cal State San
Bernardino.
"We're tryina to find some dcdi-
LaMont to coach
U.S. swim team
USC head women's 1Wlmm1na
coach Don LaMont has been named
headcoech for the U.S. team that Wlll
compete in the 198.5 World tudcnt
OamCJ at Kobe, Japan durina the
middle of Auauat.
The .56-mcmbcr team will be
aclccted durina the Outdoor Na·
tionals from Aus. 6-14 at Ma ion
Viejo, alto a 1,.1nin1 ite for the 198.S
World tudcnt Games team.
LaMont la complct1n.& his . 111tth
year 11 U tht season. fini1h1na 1n
the natton's top.five four of the la.st
n~eyeara.
cated players who arc 10101 to comr
in here land help us," explains
Brandon, who was a mcmberofCCl's
team last year.
In other word~ even recruitina is
limited at CCI at the moment. Wild la
wild about the only community collcac transfer on the teami Brian
Beal a 6-3 forward from Co Iese of
the Canyons. Beal toorcd 22 points in
that win over San Bernardino.
Wild and Brandon keep a clote
watch on the Lutheran hiah tchools in
the area. in their aearctf for players,
but Wild admits: "We're also very
tntcrested in some of the local
a th letcs.''
"We're try1n1 to develop a rappon
with some of the staffs of local htah
schools," Brandon add ·
Christ Collqe lrvineotTeru hbcral
ans curriculom. and approximately
80 percent of the students 1nicnd 10
enter profess1on1l church work. A
private Chriauan Coll*. CCl is
1~1tcd by the Western Auocaa-
t1on of Schools and Collqe . Tuat1on
1s appro:\imatcly $4.000 a year
"That's cheaper than any other
private institution around." says
Wild
.. DanWUd
meeting to cam a tic for the league
lead.
"I think we were much more
posauvc the second ttmc we played
them, .. said Cook. "The first time, we
were very nervous and uneasy.''
Cook's family has an athletic
background as Larry is a scout for the
New England Patnots, as well as a
driver's education instructor at Foun-
tain Valley. l..an'Y has currently taken
a leave of absence to help wi th the
upcoming NFL draft.
"My dad has encouraged me with
sports since the fourth grade." said
Cook. who admits that her first love is
volleyball. She is a member of the Cal
Juniors team based in Fountain
Valley and often goes from basketball
to volleyball practice.
"The coaches have been very
understanding... she said. "but 11
keeps me very busy. Some tunes l
don't get to my homework untal
around 9:30 or 10 o'clock at night."
But that hasn't prevented Cook
from maintaining a 4.1 ~ poini
average. attained by takina honors
classes.
In volleyball. she was an all-league
selection with the Barons last season
and hopes to pursue that sport at a
major uni versity in the futurt.
"Jackie has the quahues a coach
wants to sec in a player." noted
Strausburg. "She is very intense a¥
has an extreme desire to excel.
"On the coun. she 1s very ag-
grcssi ve and quite a compcmor. And
off the court. she 1s very feminine." Jack.le Cook
Wiggins ~igns with Padres
Boddicker. Davis.
Hrbek, Viola avoid
arbitration . sign
From AP dl1patd1e1
Next stop, spring training.. fo r
Baltimore Orioles pitchers Mike Bod-
dicker and Storm Davis and the
Minnesota Twins' duoofKent Hrbek
and Frank Viola.
All four of those players avoided
detours to hcanng rooms for salary
arbitration by signing new contracts
Monday.
They were JOancd by San Diego
second baseman Alan Wiggins. Seat-
tle pitcher Ed Vande Berg. Toronto
patcher Roy Lee Jackson and
Cleveland infielder Mike Faschhn.
each of whom signed contracts after
filin1t for salary arbitration.
15 playing
in first NHL
All-Star game
CALGARY. Alberta (AP) -The
WayM Oretzkys, Mike BoMys and
Mwcet Dk>nMI .,. here. Would It
be.,.. All-Star game wtthOut them?
Along wtth the veter.,,. of theH
mld1111on atfwa are a bunch of
nwicomert, ftrat-tlme All-Stars
who UM word1 like "thrill" and
"honor" and .. ,...,.d.. when
uked about pe.ylng In the National
Hoc*ey Leegue AH-Star game.
,.... .,. 15 ptayera meklng
their Alt-Star game debUt tonight ln
the Otympk: Seddtedome. They
lndude NHL rooklee Chl19 Cheloe,
• Montreal Canadlena de-
~. Kirk Muller, a forwwd
with the New JerMY o.Ale, end
cents Meno Lemieux of Ptt·
tlburgh. the No. 1 draft pk* .... eummer. And ewttnQ Q09ltendera
Tom lerrlllO of tM· .....
&er. Ind tN Prtnoe of w .... eon,.,.._, end Edmonton'•
Arwty Moog of .. a.ence
cempbel Ccif*'•--
''To pe.y on tM ..-...., wftt\ = =.ow=::-::t.:= Dlol•• ........ •nltld ...
Old)• d1fB..-nAIU1alftim
Of ...... ~r::--"And to•'"'P"""' a..en ~,... rtnll .. "' ... ~ ttw11 9W\. ~.., ...
Hrbek led Mannesota"s offensr b)
hnting .311 with 27 home runs and
107 runs batted dunng last season.
Viola topped Twins· pitchers with an
18-12 record and 3.21 ERA .
Together. they boosted the upstan
team 1nto contcnt1on 1n the Amcncan
League West.
Hrbek and Viola were each sched-
uled to havr salary arb1trat1on hear-
ings Friday. But Hrbek. 24. signed a
five-year contract wh ile Viola. also
24. s11U1ed for one year
No contract terms were an-
nounced. but Hrbek had been aski ng
for SI . I malhon while the Twins had
offered $650.000 An arbitrator
would have awarded either one figure
or the other for a one-year contract
Viola. who made $65.000 last
season an salaf') and SI 0.000 an
bonuses. had sought S44 7 000 and th<'
team had offered $300.000 It was
reported 1hat he received a contnct
wonh $375.000. and would get a
$50,--000 bonus for Winning the C)
Young ~ward. He finished sixth an
that voting last season.
Boddicker, 17. was the only AL
patcher to win 20 gam~s last season.
He also led the lcagur with a 2. 79
earned run average tn compalina a
20-11 record. Davis. 23. was 14-9
w11h a 3 12 ERA.
The Onolcs also Slgned outficl<kr
laf'T) Sheets and pitchers Bill Swag-
gert) and Ken Dixon. and now have
30 of 1he 38 players on the1r ma.Jor
league roster under contract for the
1985 season
\\1ggms. 25. had sought $560,000
for the upcoming season while the
Padres offered S425,000. Wiggins.
who batted 258. scored 106 runs and
stole 70 bases. signed a four-year
contract
'Vow Boy' picked
for Hall of Fame
Moscrip, Mille r .
Holleder . Suhey
to-be honored
NEW YORK t ~P) -" former
tan ford standout and a Notre Dame
star from the Knute Rocknr 'rars arr
among four deceased pla)'rrs named
to the National Football Foun-
dation's College Football Hall (\t
Fame.
James "Monk" Moscnp. v. ho pla'
ed on the famed "Vov.-Bo' .. team\ 0t
the 1930s at · tanford, and f rc-d
Miller. a captain of one of Rtx kne\
teams in the 1920s. v.-ere name<l
Monday 1n an announ~mt"nl t\' the
Foundation's cha1nnan of the hoard
Vinccnt dePaulDraddy
Also named we~ Don Holleder. an
end-quanerback at Arm' trorn
1953-5 5 and Stc"e uhe) a Pc-nn
State auard from 1945-4 7
They will be inducted 1n sptcaal on-
cam,us ccrcmon1r at a home foot-
ball pmc this fall and will be form all~
l&lutcd at the foundation·~ ~lhh
annual HaJI of Fame '\ward' dinner
Ott. 3 1n cw Ork
Moscnp was a thrtt-)ear tarter at
end for Coach "Tin)"' Thornhill at
tanford, where he pla ed on the
"Vow Boys" \Cam, so named b«'aust
" vo..-e<t nc"cr to lo1t' a pme to uthcm Cahfom1a or to arth·n,al
Cahfomaa. The pttd~ v.-u krpt
tanford pla)'~ 1n thrtt ma1~t R
Bo.-1 aames. pos11na a ~5-4-. r«ord
Motcnpd1ed of a hean 1ttack at the
II( of 66. af\tt wtnnll\J a valiant fta}\1
1ast alcohol add1c1ton
Miller. a 6-1. 19 pounder tackle.
played at otrt Damr from I 926-2
and lf'lduatcd mqna C'Um lauck.
tstabh htf\I thr haah t 1tho~ ttc
>
aH·ragc of any athlete who lettered.
L 1~l' h1~ legendaf') coach, be died in
an airplane crash along Wllh his son.
frt'd Jr in I Q54 Miller was 48 when
he dal'd. lca\lng a wife and seven
ch1ldrt'n
Hulledu. "rm\ 's Most Valuable
Pla,c-r 1n 1955. stirred as an end and
1hcn upon I.he request of Coach Rod
Bla1L. c;wnched to quanerback ID his
'1<'n1or \Car and led the U dets to a
1-i-ti 'ictor) over NaV) that ~.ason
He 1v. ice turned down offers to tum
prnle~s1onal with the New York
(11ant\. prcfcmng a military career
\faJor HolledCf was klllcd ID rom-
ha1 an Vietnam along With 57 other
.\mcncans an a fierce banle apinst
1he \act long.
~uhe\ a 5-11 . 205-poundcr, played
on Bob H1uins' unbeaten Cotton
Bov.-1 team of 1948 After a standout
career at Penn St.ate, he played
prnfcs~1onal football with the l>\t-
1sburgh teeters and later coached
high school football. uhey was a
father of seven. ancludina lhrtt Penn ~tate ('layers who were tocethcr on
the 1976 team -Larry. Paul and
Matt He died in I 977. on the dale of
h1 S5th banhda)
Carla nder honored
LO ANGEL -Fonner 0cta.n
V1rw H11h standout Waynt
Carlan&r. a scnaor at lht Uruvenicy
of • uthem C&Lafonua. ha been
named Pk-l 0 player of lbe week.
Carlandcr, a 6-t-1ncb, 220-
poundtt. led the Trojans to tbret
v1cumcs dunQI me week. mc1'adi111
the deft.at of'()fteon ~. •b.ich
,.nkcd l l lb "'the nauon. ~rlandtt ICOf'ed I total or $2
points and. srabbed 16 rdMNodl •• the thrtt viaona.
•
'
,
LA fl'Wce •t -~~J: L.Of\t 9-ttl ••
.._.V .... Cllh-w.t Loa ........ at LA Mlt.Moll
• ~~: et LA Trecle Tedi al LA SouthWetl
P.-c C:.... Cl St -~el O~tMOllt ~ Veit¥ el Mir.Co.le SM~etS..~Meta
TMUlllOAY
....,.. .... Cata -....-..--~-.ic:--..--------"" -Santa..,_.,, It T•ft •• 9\4t MoorMl'il el Vtl!tut•
• .WO mt l'tUDAY
.41t •• llllfllM "*" ca•c--·• , • .,.. San e.rn.rcllno •I 09Mrl
.224 23 Glefld91e el l!ast LM MMlel
fthterafde •• ChtfMY
c:..111 OMllilll ,.. 17
)0 If
14 25
21 2'
" 13 " ,..
MmMllV'•lcww
NoNl'llft~
T ....... , ......
~•IUillwt
DWI •' Clrlelend .... ......,.,,. ., lnd141N
Detroit et Cl!lceeo
...... Jerwy •t Mltw.ua ..
Pnotnla •I Houlton K_.1 City et S.n AnlCll'llo
AllMt• •t DMwr
Utefl et Goldlft Stett
loatonat ~
W .. lllllOlon 11 S..lllt
........ -r • ._
Golden St•i. et ~ • C~•t.....,,wwv
,.._YMlat~le o-. •t O..rolt
Attent• •I Ulall
...
.571
.s.tO JOO .... .m
A20
• 196
..SJI
AO
.)S3
NBA Al·Star tllfM MVll's
IMS -RMPh s.mc.ton, Hou1ton
1"4 -tlleh Thome1, Detroit
1"3 -Jullul Ervine. ~ "'2 -LMrv 81rd, 8otton
1 .. 1 -Nei. Arc:Hb91d. eo.ton
1 ....
" 17
2'3 ....
,
' '2~
17
17V>
ltlO -o-.. Genin, SM Antonio
mt -Oevld TllOmPlon, o.n¥er
1'71 -llelldY Smith, 8uf!MI
Im -Julus Ervine, Phbd111ini.
1'76 -Dew 81ne, Oetroll
1'75 -Welt Frailer, New Yori&
1'74 -loD Lanier, Detroit
1'73 -D•ve COW91M, 8oston
1m -Jerrv w .. t. Los AtlllMK
1'71 -LAMY WlllUm, S.."'9
1'70 -Wlllll llMd, New Von
1Hf -OscM ltooertaon, Cincinnati
19't -Hal Gr_., ~le
19'7 -lllck e.rrv. S.n Frenclaco 1"6 -Adrien Smith, ClnclnMll
19'5 -J~rv Luc:a1, Ctncrnn.11
1"4 -Olcltr RoberllOl'I, ClnclnnAll
1"3 -l ltl llu1 .... 8oston
lff2 -loo Pettit, St. Loull
lff 1 -<>sc:.r llao.t"llOl'I, Clnclnnetl
1"° -WIH Cl'lemoerteln, Ph~
1'59 -EIOln e.vtor. Ml,_•DOlll, Boo
Pettit, SI Louis
lfSI -Bob "91111, St Louia
1'57 -Bot> Coun , Boston
1'S6 -800 Pettit, St Louis
ltsS -Biii StlarmM, Botton
1tt4 -8oO COUIY, Bolton
1tS3 -G.c>roe Mlkan, MIMHpoli1
1'S2 -Paul Arzln, Ptilladllphla
ltsl -Eo Macaulrf. Botton
COLLEGE
I'.._ Statit S2.. UC lrWla 40
(~AAI
UC •VINE C4tl -Carmon ,.,, 0-0 9,
~pny 3·1 0-0 6, It~ ,.14 2·3 10, LM
2· t 1 H 6, Kint! 2·1 0-0 '· Enoe111ao 1-1 0-0 2. Ciaccio 1-1 CHI 2, Wllllams 0-0 0-0 0,
~t 0-0 0-0 o. Buren• o-o o-o o, MaGae
0-0 0-0 0 Totab 17·51 2·3 40
l'lllSNO STATE <521-Barnn 7·t 6'-t
20, Kuloen '·10 ,., 9, Emenon 0-1 0-0 o.
St rein 2· S I· l S, Atnold 3·1 0-0 6, 5.ttotW 3·1
,.6 10, Gustin 1· I 0-0 2, Means 0-0 0-0 o.
Coolil 0-1 0-0 0, TrlGe 0·0 0-0 0, Rliev 0-0 0-0 o. Total•. :Z0..'3 12·22 S2.
Halftlme-UC l"'lne, 25·20
Total fOUfl· UC trvlne 17, Fra"10 State
12. FOUied out: EngetslaO (UCI). Rebounds.
UC lrYfoe l3 (ROQef'I and Muron>t I),
Frnno Slate 36 (81(Mj 10) Au"ll: UC
lrvlne 11 (RQffrs 31. Fr .. no State 1' <Streln
SI
Allandar>ca· 10, I 1'
AP '90 20
I.SI JOM'' (6.l) 19· I , v.oroerown (I I 21·2
l MicNoan 11·3
'Olllehoma lt-4
S~l1 St 17·2
6v.oro11 Teen II·' 1 Ouke 17·' I SyracuM 1.6·4
9 So Melhodl" 11·4
10 Kanw1 :Z0..4
11 lowe 19.,
12.Loul•lana Teen :Z0..2
13 North CarOllna ll·S
"Nav ·Las V-s 11·3
IS Tuite ... ,
It VIMano.;a IS·6 17 IHlnols 11·7
11 Oreoon St 17·'
It Ala • Slrmlllilf\em 21 -s
20.MarvtanO 19·7
c ..... SCOl"fl
WHT
FrHno St S2, UC Irvine 40
1279 1117
ICM-I
"1
9t2
929
f'20
llS
161
707
6'3
Sl4
Sil
111
2S1
2'3
136 ,.,
129
123
Cat 5tete Fu1i...1on U . Pacific M
Waltllnoton '1. Arizona St 63
E. Wuhlnoton 66, Goni•o• 63
llOCKIH E Montena 61, Whitworth SS
•AST
G9or1>41lown S7. Villano.; a 50 Canlslu1 90. Miine 11
NIHarl '°· V8f'monl .. Weo,_ n, St Frar>cl1, N.Y 6S
SOUTH
Florida St 91, S Mln inloot 7t
Loul,vllte 70. Vlrolnla Teen 6S
I
2 • ,
3
10
s
6
' 13
11 ,,
IS
" 17
19
9 ..
20
South Alallama 60, South Florlda S9
South CarOllna 73, Tulane 65
T-. ... Teen 17, Austin PNy 65 A,,,_lun 7t, Eut CarOllna '2
A-la<hlan St 7'. Tn ·Cl'lell._. 60
E Tennn'" SI 61, Da111chon 67 (oil
MtOWaST
Akron 54. Morefle.O SI SJ
Bulter 66, St Louts 6 I
Cleveland St 90. IN ·Chieffo n
V•lo«•lto 66, Wis ·GfMtt Ba11 SS
Xa.;I«, Ohio 13, En na11l1te 6l
V-stown St 61, E KentUCllv 60 1011
SOU'THWIST
Bavlor ''· SMU 90 New Or1Mn1 '3, Pen American 76
Orel 1tooer11 11, e>tttallOma Cl!'t 61
Tt .. ,·San Antonlo ~. N Tellls St 69
COMMUNrN COU.EGE
s.utfl CM1t c..-w.
Cerritos
Mt. San Antonio
Fullerton
Cvorftl Or•-Coest
COmoton ~k
Se/lie Ane
Goldefl Wftl
.......... ~11001
Goldeft Wftl 11 Or•noe CoHI
hcl-•Cl •• CYllll'"' Se/lie Ane at C«fttO.
COITlllton al Ml San Antonio
COll#MINJTY COU.IG8
Tllllt ...... ldll ...
WIO-llOAY
1-"'C...Ca 1 www
Ooldtll w .. 1 at 0rwiee COM! hir~••cs • C~•o Seme AM •I C ... , ...
Comoton •' Mt Sen AtltOftHI -.v....,ca ••MC»
O\ltr ..
'fl L
It ' 23 2 13 10
11 ' ,, 11
' 12 14 11
' " 1 11
!Ml lot A~ al Seti lenl4wdlft0 ,,..,,.... .. ~
Clfnn t i • ..._ ..
•le Holldo at Ml Sen Jadnfo De.¥t .. terro COM • MR;a:cr .....
L .. _.,,.... CC •' ~llta Monica ._..,_. al LA Het'W
Mt. kn Jec.lnlo •' Cltrut
Cerro. COec> et llo HoftdO
-.. ....... ca••-
knt• Monlce at El Cemlno
Lone hlldl •I a.kanllekl
LA~ceet~
LCK AtlMIK CC et LA Henot' __... Vall¥ Ct fl MC»
W.t Los AnoelH •I LA Trade Ttcll
LA Ml1slon al LA Soulflwftl IA TUil·
DAY ,_,.c.stc.,.._
OranM Coall •I s.nli AM
C'1'1Weu at GOIOen West FullrlCll'lit~
CerrllCK at C-ton ............ ,...._
NloorNrtl •• o • .,.,.o
VantUt'• •t Hancock
left •I CUMle
P'9dlc CMat Ca•1 .-
lmHf'lal V~ et San Di.to
SouttlWfttern •I Mlreeott•
Sen Oleoo ,,.._•I Petomer
~Vala'YC. ... _
LA V• ..... •I A11telooe V•ltev
Al l9l'MI .. 1:a ~
HIGH SCHOOL STANDtNGS
SUftMt lMtW
YeWe
W L
OcHn \/law I 0
Edison 5 3
Faut1l•ln Valtev S 3
Huntlnoton 8"ch 3 s
Marine 2 ' Wntmlnster I 7
....... .,.. 0-(7:lll
F-t•f11 Valley •I Edllon
°"' .. WL
" 3 13 •
13 • I 11
10 13
4 IS
Ocean View et Huntlntlon laach
Minna at Wntmlnster ,,... ... a--(1:a)
EOllOl'I a l MMlna
Wnlmlmter al OcMn View
FOU11taln V•llav at Hunllnvton 8MCh
SM View lMtW
L....-
WL
Nawpgrl Hart>or 11 I
Estencla 10 2
C«-Cle! MM ' 3 s.d clleOeck 7 s
latlUl\I 8aadl 4 I
Costa '"'-" ' 1 WOOdllrlOoe 2 10
Unlvenltv • 1 I I w.....-... c.-(7:lll
Saddlebadl •I Corona de4 Mer
Cotti Mesa •I Nawoort Harbor
E 1tanci. &I Woodtlt'ldoe Unl~slty at Laouna 8Mclft
FrWaV's ~ (7:JOI
Costa Mau at Estancia
Owrll
WL 10 3
22 l
17 •
14 ' 7 14
' 13 ' IS
' 17
Laouna &Mell ., cor-Cle! Mer
WooOtlf'ldoe 11 N-oorf H•rbor
University al Sac:ldtebadt
s.utfl CMlf LM tlUe
Mlulon Vlelo Dane HIKs
Caol1trano Vallev
El Toro
Laouna Hflls
San Clemente
Ir vine
~
W L
9 I I l
7 ' s s
4 ' ) 1
0 10
o-.1
WL
20 4
16 s
" 6 10 12
12 11 7 ll
6 16
WM11e•Y"1 G-(7:J0) Irvine 11 Mission Vlalo
San C~le at Et Toro
Laouna HIMs al Oana HIR1
.. ,... ... Gamet (7:ll)
'"'lne 11 La9un• Hl•s Minion Vltlo al S.n Clemenlt
Et Toro vs. Caol1treno Vallev e t Saddle·
t>aek coaeoe
An91itul LMtlUe
L-.ue WL
Ml18f' 0.1 I 0
Pi.n X 6 2
SI. P•UI 4 ' Ser11llt 4 4
Bllftoe> Amal I 1
BllllOP MonloomtrY 1 1
Overll
WL
23 0 IS ,
I fl
I 12
' IS • 17
W....-V-1 G-<7:301 BllllOO Amat at Miter Del
5.trvlte II BllllOO Montoomarv
SI P1ul •I Plus X
l'rtda'I'• Games (7:301
81sh0c> Amat al St. Paul
Plus X el Bfshoo Mont~11
Saturde'l's Game (7:JOI
Mater Del vs. Ser11llt 11 Cvl>f' .. • Colleoe
GIRU STANDINGS
SUnMf LMeue
L.Mtue
WL OcN n vi.w 1 I
Fountain Valtev 1 I
EOlton S J
Hunllnoton 6eacll 7 6
Marina 2 ' W1llmlnsf8f' 1 7
O¥erel
WL
11 s
16 6
13 ' 9 13
t ll
7 IS T ......... 1Gamet (7rdedll
Oc.aan Vltw at Hunllnoton 8Heh
Fountain Vallev et EOlson
Marina 11 w .. tmtnsrer
SM View LM9"
LAetua WL
Woodt>rlooe 12 0
Corona oe! Mar 10 2
Coste Mew I ' Newoort Harbor 7 S
Estancle 6 6
SaOdletHtck ' I Unlv8f'sltv I 11
Leoun1 8aact1 0 12
T .......... 1 Gemet (7 roeclll
Corona Cle! Mar al SadOleback
Newoort H•rbor al Cott• Mela W~looe al E1tanci.
Laoun• hacll •' Unlotersltv -
L..lpNftT~
(et 0.-.Y a.di, ,._.)
MM'• ......... Mlltl9I
o..w.I
WL
21 3
13 6
10 10
11 I I 12 s 12
1 17 I 19
Mlke LHC11 (U.S l def Mell Wllancler
($wao«I), 7·~. 6·2, Tomas SmlO (CzectlO·
)loveklel def Anders Jerr>td <Swedenl. 6-1. .. , w_..,._... • ..,..,.._.
AndrH T-varl (~rvl Ott Wendy TUt'ntMI (Austr•llel. 6·4, 6-3
~ . . . "
c-..1111 ......
U( .,.,,... ·~ ..... ~tc:Mc ' sc...iw ...
UC lrvtne 101 000 llt-12 1' O
AJUM Pacific 000 (QO 710-6 t 7
Union, Martin m end Mltr«. Morten
(I) EdwatOt, Alltn 191. fMa4 (I), Gn ni
(I), Mee .... (f) and Shlrln. w-Mertln .
L-Granl 79-Alldarlon (UCI), Hen'W'Mftd
(UCll, ... II (AP) Hlt-trvllle (VCI), ,._,ry
(U(I), IMO (Af'), Matllllel IAf'l
,,.... ......
svsn LOCK•• ,....._, ._., -JO .,....,,... ,. rock OOd
-~T LA ... -40.,,...,.. ti
ICUIDin, .t6 r'odl 11th, I MWld ..... '7
INCJl.ertl
OAMA WMM' -J2 lll!IWa. I DMI, 11
r'Odl aid, 4 C9W cod, 1' tllUI tMe4, J
~
I
Newest Dodger
Al OUYer. recently acquired by the Loe An&elee Dodaera
from Pblladelpbla, participated ln a •olan~ wori'out
Monday at Dodaer Atadlam. OU•er bu a lifetime a•er-
ace of .305 ln llJ yean ln the major l .... ee.
N HL
CAMra•LL COHl'IEllENCa
Smvtlle DMUeft w L T f"tl GF GA
Eomonton 40 10 • .. 213 llS
Caloar>t 21 21 1 63 256 no Wlnnlpeo 21 23 • 62 2A6 U9 Killel 2, 11 10 SI 2SO 237
Vanc.ou.;er 16 33 • 40 194 291
Hems OMWfl
SI Louis 2S It 10 '° 2GI 201
Chk:NO 2S ?I l SJ 211 21S Mlnnnoll ,, 19 10 42 117 m Olfroll " 31 t " 2ro 255 Toronto fl JS 1 33 171 237
WALES COHFEllaNCE
~•tl1dr OMUeft
wu111no1on 34 14 • 76 237 163
Phllaoetoflle 31 16 7 " 227 170
NY lllend41rs 30 22 3 63 253 21S
NV R•l'I04tl'S 17 29 9 C3 191 225
Plllsbur11h 11 29 s " 116 23t NewJ.,.Mv 17 29 7 " 113 211 Adlwnl OMtieft
ButfelO 21 IS 12 66 202 IS2 MonlrHI 27 19 10 .. 214 197
Quebec 26 22 • '° m 199
Boston 2S 24 7 57 20f "' Hartford 17 30 6 40 llO 241
MllltdilV'• SC-No oames~ T__..s~
AM-Ster oamt al Caloarv. Albef'ta
W..__Y"sO-
No oarnn~
NHL Al-Star wme "" .....
(et c.leerv ........ )
CAMPeaU. CO;NPDaNCE
.... ,._YW,TNm Ht Wt a.n.-..
lS Anov ""4oll. Edm s-1 16S l l Gren! Fl/N, Edm S·IO 115
D1fa-2 Al ,MKtnnls, Ca t 6-2 19S
4 Kl'Vln Lowe, Edm •·2 lt5
7 Paul Cofflrv, Eclmonlon •-o 200 I llandY Cartvle. Win S·IO 200
23 P•ul llelnl\9rl, C•I S• I 1 ltS 24 Oouo Wlhofl, Chi 6·1 190 ,_lnll
tt Wavne Grelzkv. Edm 6-0 170 17 Jarl l(urrl, Eorn 6-0 190
2S Jofln Oorodnldl. O.t 6-0 190
9 Glenn Anderton, Edm S· 11 1IO
10 Date Haw.,.Clluk, Win S-11 tlS
II l rla n Suiter. SIL S· 11 190
16 Mercel Dionne, LA H !IS
IS Paul MICL .. n, Win 6-0 20S 23 Thomes Gr9dln, Van S-11 170 14 Mlro11e11 Frvcer, Tor 6-0 200
44 Steve Pavne, Min 6·2 210 2' Mike Krust1e1n1111t1, eom 6·, 200 HHd Cc>aCI Glen Sather
WALH CONl'Ell•NCa o .........
Ne.."'9'lflt,TNm Ht wt 30 Tom 8¥re1so. luf •·l IU 31 P9lle Llnc!Oerlll'I. Phi s-' 170
D1fa4-
S ftOd ~way. Was •·> 215 7 ft1v ._ciue, Bot s-tl 1'7
2' Cl'lrl1 Chellot, Mon •·I 190 eer9d~.PN 6-2 21S > Sco11 s1 .... _, w .. 6-0 200
6 Mike It.mW!'. Bui .. , 115 .. _.,...
22 Miiia eosn. NVI H 115 11 l renf 5'itter, HYt S-11 175
17 Jann Tonelt, HYI 6-1 200 1' erven T rottler. HVI S-11 Its
10 loO Carpen'-. Wei 6-1 190
11 Miiie Gat1ner, W•1 6-0 11.S •• Mldlel Goulet. Que 6'-1 115 12 nm Kerr, Phi 6·l ns
77 K lnl M4l1lef. HJ S.-11 115
IS Anderl~ •• NYlt s-11 17S
10 lton Frendt, Her 6-2 Its 66 Marlo Lemleua, Pit •-4 200 Heao Coadl At At1>0ur
MIM. ....... ~·
W L~ ..
5an04et0 tt 7 ,,,
L.nan It u MO 4\1)
LaiV ... 1 " It .sn s"' Wldllt9 tJ 1l JIO ,.,,.,
~City 10 If ,,. 12 TKOtN 10 " .)4J 12 o.let If ,. .m '"' ......... ~ ..,,.,.,.. tt 1 J1iJ CNceto " ,. MJ J c ...... " I) MJ s~
MIMllof• " I~ Ml I
SI 1.0111t ,, " ..... I~ ""'''°""" 11 11 .m ,.
c--' 111 llO 12Vt
MIMW'tlcer'e
Lnwl J, Wlctllt• I T.......,,._
St Lolli' el co.mos DdMM T-
S4#w1se s.e..... Ol•IA<
,., .. .,, ~. "'9.l
211
Mlllef' Barber,'30,000 76·66·'9
212 0.-vllte MooCIY,111,000 10·11·11
11J
L• EIOtr,SlS,000 n-'1-n
114
Don Januar11.s 12.500 67·n·7S
215
Boo llo\Wr11,16.'33.J.4 n-69·74
Cll ... SlflorO,U,'33.34 n -n -11
G•v lfewer,16,'33.34 71-70-74
Cl'lerlM Owen•,16.'33.34 69-n -u
llllv C•l9tr,16,933.34 11-n -11
loO TOSlll,'6,'33.34 '9-~n
21'
Lionel Het>erl,14,600 11-n-n
0-Liiiie< ,M,600 n -'9-7S
217
Jim F8f'rH ,5',000 72·73·72 , ..
Biii JOMtlon,IJ,700 73·74·71 Paul Harnev.ll,700 71-7,.71
21t Gordon Jonn,IJ..300 n-n-n
Howi. Johnton,ll..300 74·74·71
m
Met Mc.MV"'-n.U..300 11-11-1•
Ari W1UUOO 6'·75--76
221
G.c>roe 8•v8f',12,41'.47 73-Jl-n
Freo H1•klns,S2,41667 14-1s-n
Fred Haas,11,•16.66 n -74·70
m
JOM Ka.llnU,S1,'7S tf-U-7'
Jerr>t lartltr ,S1,'7S n-n-n Douo S.nden,s1.t7S 1'-n-10
Douo Ford,J 1,'7S 74-74·74
~ Lannlnll,J1 ,'7S 74·7S-n
8otl !rid! IOl'I, '1. '7 s 71·71-73 m
Al lelcllntl,11,'7S 71 .. 74.71
Jim Cocrvan.11,.1U7 11-71-71
J.U Ftedl,'1 .. 1'.'6 7'·74•71
224 Hrld Hennfne,tl,4'2.SO 7'·7o-7S
BlllY Ma•wtll,Sl,462.SO 7'·74·7•
D. Hendf ldl IOf'l,J I M2.SO 70-7'·76
A.SM .. tront,S 1,4'2.SO n-n--n m
S.m ~.tl,l6U7 75-7+-76
Mike Fetdlldl,11,:MU7 n-16-n e.n Smllh,tl.366.U 76-75-74 ~
Ted Kroll,11,262.50 74·1s.-n
Jullt\ Borot,S 1,2'2.SO 71 .. 74.74
O.Flnsterwald,t 1.262.SO ~-I0-74 Oen SlkeU 1.26150 1 -11-74
221
SHI Colllnt,S I, 117 50 71-7'·73
Pelt 8rown,f I, 117.50 n -74·76 m
Tom N'-'lt.Sl, 150 74·11-73 m Jim HtlflalcUl, 101.67 n-1s-n
ft Montoomerv.S1,10U7 1'·74-n
Mike ~.11.101 u n-n ·eo m
9ol> s•-·"'°'° I0-7t·7S
ZM
Mason ft udolOfl, s I ,CMO 7'-1s-n
U1
EO Furool.t IA20 n-11-1•
Ult'L
•llHlllf'T'IOM ., .......
W•ST191M CON'a••MC• W L T ~ .. ~A
1 0 0 1 000 ,. 21
1 0 0 1.000. 10 J
1 0 11.•4'1'
0 0 I ... 17 17
0 1 0 -) 10 010000t77
0 1 0 000 21 21
•ASTalUll COMl'Mlrec• ~ t • 0 1.000 ,. 10
..._._ 1 1 o ·• n t4 Wlrlwe 1 I I ... >• U .,"""'*" • 0 0 • 0 • TMl9t 9n 1 I I 1.000 ti 1
JedlM!W.. 0 1 0 ... 0 "
Mern9Ht • 2 I ... " • .. ,..,.. ....
NlwWM\I .. ~ II.,,..._
Lo..,,..... W'l. ~ti Sell,.,_. ..
T •mM 1r1 "' leltfmlln et CIWWte. .. c
Mel'nllHI ., JedllOIWlll ....... ..,~ °"""' et 1811 A,.._. ....... ......
....... Y-. Al'ftOfte •• ,l'IMO .... _ ......
Ho~( lold ...._ (McCerronl
ttllft S'o.ttl ($11*9) UO
Alto rOCIM: VlblWta, Lotllaf, Motl 0.-lermlnld, To. ,._, 8llm1rd Comln, HI
Reeton. Time: 1M l /S. •coeeo llACI. 6 lul'lonO• lruelbllltY (~tTonl 4.40 bo i • .o
Galewac (Mftal 1M 4.M
Good Thoueht WlllY CMcHwtuel UO
Also reoed: Rove! t.ion. ftlne Of
........,,t, Youno L.adVtrne11. 1 . Tredftlonal,
llOPe TICICler, Pawr• Oreetn. HtiM Tum·
ft(, '9YNllO, • .,.,,.,.,.., V el.
Tlmt: 1:11 1/$. u oAM. Y ooue&.• 110-•1 .. 1c1 "100.
™-OllACl.6~
Goldn CwOUMI CMcHr•l MM IUO l.40
8ounllf\ll UdY <Oomlneue11 , • S.AO
lote's lllcll (Otlv.rn l MO ""° r~ Tric.y Twn, ttwO HMt1"
SuTv. Gr'-Pollcv. AU Heturel, Another
Terna, KartunM •unoe. T .. How, A J.'1
Prlftceu, GVPIV Vell.
Tlnw: 1:11.
flOUllTH It.AC.. One mile.
Woolv Han (Lcr1oval 10.IO 00 a 00
Gren Compr• (Meta) 4.00 UO
Green Coietn (Oomllleue1l 3.20
Alla recad: Vflel Score, Proud Doll, l(lncl
Of Mfflc. Time: 1 :37 II S. "'"'" ••c•. • fuflonOI. Wafer Crv1tlllt (Toro) 3.IO l.20 UO
E•rtv Quell CPlncavl 6.40 UO BolllloMlre (Sttven1) l .IO
Al$0 raced: Fair' MetlSM, Mat~v.
Earllt1t, AOll•I~ Miu.
Time: liOt 3/S.
U •XACTA 17·•> peld flU>.
StXTH llACI. 1 111 mll••·
FllC&I Wiii (S'-m•lt•l UO 5.20 3.40 ~ H•rllor (H•WleYI 14.IO 12.60
ll...,.v• (Plncevl uo
AISo r~: ""°',.· Conwn.noer'• 5oflo • So 1111 """1dl. Nol H«:elMl'llV So, $91rltual-
lstlc, Vlclorlou• ltuter, Haro Numoer.
Adolfo, Eallllante.
Time: 1:50 1/S.
SSVINTH llACL 7 fut'tonos
Menfcnl Linch' (D9!u11val 3.IO 2M 2.10
P9t Biro (McCarronl ).40 2 40
Amor• •looe (Loron> uo
Also rec:M: Vlllaoe Sau, T•nl•ff1eo,
MblMI!, .. trs UdY. VMen•1 J.O. B
Tlmr. 1:23 1/S.
U •XACTA (6-41 Nici ..... oo,
IMMn'H It.AC•. 6 1/2 ~
FOl'Dlldo CT oro I 25.60 14.20 7 .20 Luc:tcv B~ tPedroral 1020 7.20 OlamoatM Sid (SIOhfe) UO
Also raced: .Avman. Patrlcll McFICI. WlM Strate11v. A!NrOl. llCIQv MerrlHe.
Retsina Run, Lauohlno Bov, Flttv Sia Ina
Row, Shenanlt, ft h1e11 Factor, Maxim
Gorkv.
Time: 1:1' 2/S.
n ~K StX <J·1·7·1·6-ll oal<t
,Sl,"2.10 •llh ltlrH wlnnlno llc:K•I• (I I•
l>OrM'I), S2 PICK SIX conaolallon oal<t
$'31.40 wllll 190 wlnnlno llCkets (five
horlft).
NINTH llACI. One mile.
No HVll (MaHI S.20 UO 2.60
Putwte (Shoemekar) S.IO J.40
Kn!Ofll Sldlno (Slt>lltel l .20
AllO raced: Tom. For•len Lelllon, S.I
Fr•, Don'' Co'Op.
Time: l:lS 2/S.
SS IXACTA (3•21 oeld 171 SO.
Allenoanc.; '9,'2S.
\
• AMMev's .,.....ctt.11
IASSI Al.L ...... ~
IAL TIMOllE OflltOU:~ Miiie
Boddldter, Storm bevll, 811 Swaeeertv
anO Ken Ol•on. oltehen, encl L.wrv SMets,
oulffelcler. CLEVELAND IHOIAHs--sloned Mlkt
Flsdllln, pitcher, to • --contrect, NEW VOllK YANKEES-Sloned Andre
llooertlOl'I, lh<wlllOO, Keith Smith, lnflelder,
•ncl Dan PH-end Mell Winters. out·
flelderL
MINNE SOT A TWINS-Sloned Kent Hrbek, lint DH.,Nlll, IO • llve-YMr
conlrecl anO Franll Viole, olldler, lo •on.--yn r contract.
SEATTLE MAlllNERs-SloMd Ed
V1nde 8er11, pltellef,
TOltOHTO ILUE JAY$-SloMd Rov
LH Jlldlson, Jonn Cerutti, Sien Clar••· Ron MusMlman allO Melt WllllWM, pllch· en, KellY Grut>er. lnfleldW. and llon ~d encl Mltdl weo.rer, ou"'-iders, to
-...-COfltr.cfa. ....... ~
DOOGElts--sloned ~ CHllllo, oltcner, to • __ .,..r contr.ct.
NEW YOllK METS-SleMd ltefMI S.n·
·-· lhor'latoP. PITTS8Ui.GH Piil.A TES-AorMd lo
1tnM with M111.e 8ieledll encl Chrlt Green,
oltdler•, on one·vMr conlracta.
SAN DIEGO PAOi.Es-sltlned A .. n Wloofns, sac:onCI llatam911, IO • fOur ·y-
CClftfract.
Sunset
League
baseball
Wed., l'eo. n -&.oar• Tourllel'Mft I Tnun,. ,., 21 -. El Setl.tlldo T°""'°"*
<TIA).
kt .. Merell " ~ WttfmlM!er• (Mtll)J l'Uft.. Marett 1'-et OcMtl view•: sat .• ,,.,,,,.. n -et ~tfl\ttOll ...,,... 11 11.m.11 T\111.,
Malett ff -P'ounteln V*"• (el MJ9 ......
Perk, 7 1>.m.l; kt .. Mardi JO -e l AMrlM" (I
pm,). S.t,. .AprW 6 -•I V11811cla (11 •.m.); W...,
Alltll 10 -•I w .. 1tn111tttr; Fri., 4-1 1a -
OcMn view•. Tua. Mr1I 14 -IVltllllloll IMdl• (et Mitt kn Plri.. 7 P.l'T\); ,,1,. AlbrN
It -•I l'-'•111 V....,. (al Mi.. Scluire ~.
7 e.m.)1 Wiid., Aaltl 2• -Marllla" let Mlle ~· p~ 1 p,m.); s.1 .• Allll'll 27 -W.t-
l'lllllt..,. (llOOll); Tun.. -""'' )0 -et Oceell vtew•
S.t., May 4 -•I Hl#llin.ton IWc:ti' 11 P m.)j TUM., May 7 -F-l•ln v.-.,• (el Mlle S4ual• ,..,., 1 p.m.); s.1 .• Mav 11 -•t Maf1na•
(1 IUTI.). , ...... v....,
Tues., F• M -AlurMI; n1un •• l'elll. • -L.oar• Tourl*Mnt (TIA)
S.t., M¥dl t -at LI .#Oen (1)+4, et llelr
Fleld. • p,l'I\.); Sat., Marett f -at c.lttt-
Vellev IOH, 11 e.m.), Tues., March 12 -Ml•Ncln
Vlelo; Fri., Mlwrctt IS -OcM11 View•; w.cl.,
MMCft 20 -al Maftne• (•I llalr' Flelcl), ,,I.,
Mardi n -w .. tm1n11er•; Tuet.. Marctt 2' -
•• EdllOl'I· C•t Mlle SQuate Par•. , P.m.); Fri.,
Marett 2' -Huntllltlon 8Mdl.., Cat Mlle Scluare
P•.rk. 1 11.m.I .
Wed., Aorll 10 -•• Oceen vtew•; Fri., AIWll 12 -Merlna"z Wed., AP!'ll 17 -at w .. , •
minster•; Fri., AMII 1' -Edison• (et Mite SQuare P•rk, 7 o.m.l; Tun., AP!'ll 2J -at
Hunllnoton 9eac11• (•I Mlle Scwar• Park, 1
o.m.); Fr< .• Aorll H -Ocftn vrew•.
Wed., Mlv 1 -., Merine• (•t ... Ir Fleld, 7
o.m.), Fri., Mav 3 -Wntmfn11er•; Tun .. Mav
7 -., Edflon• <•• Mlle ~· Parll. 7 11.m.)/ Fri .. Mev 10 -HunllnotOll e..c11• .
Huo11111t1n Beedl
Wed .. Feb. 27 -l..Oal'i Tournament (TIAI.
Sat.. Merd't t -Lono 8eadl .wo.n ( 11
LmJ. Tun .• MMCh 12 -Maonolla CTI.A)·
Wed., March IJ -INlne (TIA); S.t., Marcfl It
-Merine' (I o.m.); TUM .. Merdl If -el
Wntmlnster•; Sat., Mlwrdl 2l -Edlton" (1
o.m.I; Tua.. Mlrdl 16 -at Ocean view•; Fri.,
MMdl 29 -11 Fountain Valtev" (•I MAI SQuare
Parll, 1 11.m.1.
Wed •• Aorll 10 -., l!Mrlna• <•• "'" Flelf,
' Oft\.); S.I., A.pfH 13 -Wntmlllster• (I p.m.11
Tun .. AMU " -et Eo11on• (et Miii Scluar•
Park. 1 o.m.I; S.I., Aorh 20 -Ocean ~ (1 et.m.), Tun., AorN 23 -Fount•ln v,,.,.,. ,.,
Mite Scluart P•rk, 1 o.m.), Sal.. -'PfU 17 -
M1r1na• (7 o.m.), Tues., Aorll 30 -al Wetl·
minster•.
Sal., Mey ' -eo1son• II o.m.); T-., May
7 -•I OcH n View'. Fri.. MllY 10 -., FOU11181n
'\(eltev'
MafWI
Wed.. Feb. 'D -Cerritos (a l Btalr Ft.Id, 1 o.m.).
Fri., Merell I -al Lak-ood (OH, at BIOlr
Field, 4 et.m.I; Tun .. Mlrdl 5 -Minion Vi.to;
Sal .. Merell 6 -Maler Otl <OH. •I llelr Fc.14, 4 o.m.I; weo .• Mardi 13 -Warren; s.1 .. MMdr 16 -al Hunllnoton 8Mch' Cl o.m.); Wed.
Merell 20 -Fountain V•ltev• (i i Blalr FltlcS, 1
o.m.I. Sat .• Mirth 23 -OC..n View" (I p,m,);
Tues.. Merell 2' -a l Wntmlnst~•; S.t., MMd't
)() -Eo1son• 11 o./T\.l.
Wed., APl'H 10 -Hunlfnolon Beadl" (al BIOlr
Flalcl, 7 o.m.); Fri., AP!'ll 12 -11 FOU1118111 Valley•, Tun., Aol'N 1'-et Oceen VW"; Sat.,
Aorll 20 -Wntmlnster• (I P./T\.); Wed.. -'PfM t•
-at Edison' <••Mlle SQuare P•r11, 1 o.m.I; S.I.,
A.orll 27 -•• Hunllnofon BMdl" (I O.tn.).
Wed., l!Mv 1 -Fountain Va1tev• (at 8lelr
Fleld, 1 o.m.); S.I., Mey 4 -0cMn VJeW• (1 o.rn ), Tun .• Mev 7 -at Wntmlnlter•, kt.,
Mlv 11 -Edi.son' 11 o.m.)
Wed.. Feb. 27 -Loar• Tournament CTIA).
Sal., MlrCfl 9 -San C..,.,_te !OH) tll a.m.I, Fri., March IS -al Fou11teln Vdl'Y"I
TUti. March " -EOllOl'I°; S.I., MMctt ZJ -., Marina' (1 o.m.I; Tues., Marell 2' -HWllf'"9toll
BMch', Sal • Mardi 30 -Wfflmlllal.,.. (I
D.m)
Mon , Aorll I ·Wed., A«ll 3 -Pomona EH'-
Tournamtnl (TSA); Wed., Aorll 10 -Fountain
V111t11•. Fri. AP<ll 12 -•• Eoflon•; Tues.. Aorll
16 -Marina'; Sat., AOl'h 10 -al HuntlnelOll
8Mch' < 1 o.m.l; Tun.. Aorll 23 -•• w .. t•
minster•, Fri., Al>f'll 26 -er FOUlltaln V•lln",
Tun .• Al>f'll 30 -Edison•.
Sat., Mlv 4 -at Marine• (I o.m.I; Tun.,
M111 1 -Hunllnoton Beac:h'; Fri., MIY 10 -
WHlmlnsttr'
Wes1mlnster
Sal., Feb 23 -11 Vatencla (OH, 2 o.m.);
Mon., Fell. 2S -LakeWOOd; Tuea., Feo. 2' -8olsa Granda <DH. •I Mite S-re Perk, 4 o.m.);
Tllurs.. Feb. 21·Sat. Mlrtl'I 9 -El 5"Uflde
Tournament (TIA).
S.I., Matdl t -Foothlll (OH, ,_I; sat,
Mwdl 1' -11 EGllOl'I" (,_), TUM., Mardi It -Hun11n11ton 8Mch'; Fri., Marctl 22 -at
Founteln ..,....,. ; Tun., Marr:ll 2' -Marina•.
Sat .• ,.,,.,Ch 30 -11 Oceen view• < t o.m.) •
Wed., Aorll 10 -Edison•; Sat .. ACN'll 13 -al
Hunt11111ton Beadl" (I o.m.1; Wed., A!lf'll 17 -Founreln v....,•; Sat.. Aorll 10 -at Merine• (1
p.m,); Tun .• Aorll 23 -Ocean View"; Sal., Alllf'M 17 -et Edison• ,,_,, Tues., Awll lO -
Hunllneton 1aectt•
Fri .. Mev l -11 Founteln Valley•. Tuea.,
Mav 7 -Mlrlna•; Frt .• Mall 10 -11 OcMn view•.
• deno.IH SUnwt lAffue Mme. "Al tllf'I*
betfn at l:IS p,m. unleu 01.....,,.. noted.
Kapp gets
star back
for Bears
BERKELEY (AP)-University of
California Coech Joe Kapp gushed
over landing runnin' back M•rc
tfick.s aaa.inst strOJli bids by Ohio
State, Nebraska. Penn State and
Washinaton, and compared the 2()().
pound speedster to former Chicqo
Bean' areat Gale Saym .
Hieb, from Davis, made an oral
commitment Monday to play for the
Bears, lcadina Kapp to proclaim
"This is a peat day for Cal football. •1
Tbe first day of signina official letten
of intent is Wednesday.
The 6-2 back, who runs 40 yards in
4.4 seconds'-was touted by Penn Staie
Coach Joe ntcmo u "the beat hiah
school runnina beck in five yean."
Hicks ICOl'ed 97 touchdown• in
four )'W'S. a! Davis Hiah School • Despite miasma two .. me becauee or
injury last ~son, he pined I 220
y_ards in 170 cames and acorcd t• TO..
"Comina in, Ohio State wu my
fir:st choice and Cal wu No. 2." Hieb
111d. However, he cbanecd bit mind.
he taid. because "I waoled to 90
tomeplace where f'U have I chance 10
help rebulld tomethina. to 1W1
tometbina."
The Bean went 2-9 lut ICUOn, UM wont record of "'-PP'• three year1 .. bald coach.
K.tpp Mid b( Qpecu Hieb to make an .. immedil~ Uftl*t., on the
tam next fall.
"PCOl>lc make compariions -$0tntlhnn tbri're "Pt. tometi,.. not," Kapp ..W. ••1 pla)'Od ,..._
aomcbody wbo loot-Hke MM (Hkb), and lhat WU Oale Se~:·
... •
_ __,,,,
Magi c
gets his
li:ingdom
p.-;.--:-----.-~-_,.,..-ll--biQS--ANGELES (AP) -Earvio
"~'' Johnson sUYI a pine of buket-
baJl ltk.e no one elte1 and now bu a indoor-
outdoor Pllldite 01 a home that it equally
unmaic:bed
Wayne s.tee wu on tbe tllrmllllold of. IJeatDM9 wlaea 8track down.
Estes had it all ...
until tragedy struck
Freak accident fatal
to Utah State
basketball star
EDITOR's NOTE: Twenty years ago,
Wayne Estes played the best pme of bis
basketball career. Three hours later, he died,
under cin:umsta.nces so bi.zzare th•t friends
and family are still haunted by the memory.
By MJIE CLARK
~ ..... --Maybe if Wayne Estes had been an inch or
two shorter, he wouldn't have been an All-
American. Maybe he wouldn't have been a
scoring machine. But, then. maybe be would
be alive today.
"As far as I'm concerned, if Wayne Estes
hadn't been killed, he'd be almost forgotten
today, even though he was one of the greatest
playen ever to play basketball," Del Lyons
said. "I feel bed that a person has to die to be
remembered."
Lyons and Estes were classmates, room-
mates and teammates on Utah State's strona
buketball teams of the rnid-l 960s. They spent
practically every waking hour toacther.
"I did the cooking and Wayne did the
cleaning up," said Lyons, now an insurance
qent in Logan. Utah.
On Feb. 8, J 965, Estes, a 6-6, 225-pound
forward, was averagina almost 34 points a
pme. He bad just scored a field house-record
48 points to boost bis career total to 2,001.
Three hours later, he died.
"I can say without fear of contradiction that
be was the arcatest variety shooter who ever
lived," sa)'1 his coach, Ladell Anderson, now
bead coech at Brigham Youns. "Maybe Bird is
as food, I don't know.
• There's guys who get a million dollan for
beina able to dunk and maybe hit a few
jum. pen, but there's never been anybody who
bad such a command of all the shots that he
did."
Estes, Lyons and Mike Munay went for a
post-came pizza after Wa~ne•s rccord-tettina
show apinst the Univemty of Denver. The
players felt like celebrating. Estes took a break
to call his folks in Anaconda, Mont.
On their way home, they noticed the
remains of a car wreck.
Two can loaded with students bad raced
Ilona a snow-slick sbUt near the Utah State
campus. One went out of control and smashed
into a power pole, kiJtina a pauenaer and
splayina hiah-voltaae lines acrou the road-
way.
Richard Wriaht, now a lieutenant with lbe
Lop.n Police Dept. and one of the officen at
the accident scene. recalls beina concerned
about thOIC downed wires. He called a power
com91ny workman to turn off the juice.
·'The IUJ came and uid there wasn't any
problem. that aJ to0n u the wire bit the street.
a relay switched and the power wu off,··
Wfiabt said. ••And then he jutt rolled up that
wire and went away."
Wrlaht didn't Nl.lize that another wire. also
knocked Jloose by the wrcclc, was dangling
nearby.
"There'd been hundreds of~ple walkina
under it aJJ night Iona." Wnght said. "Of
course. nobody else was 6-6."
Lyons. a 6-2 auard, saw the wire. Estes
didn't.
"I told Wayne to duclc," Lyons said. "But
the wire brushed his head, and he swatted at it.
If rd been an inch laller, I'd probebly have
gotten it, not him."
The electricity shot through Estes' massive
frame, his band lockina around the wire as be
fell to the ground. Murray reached for Estes
but Lyons pushed him away, then kicked the
wire clear. Estes was probebly dead when he
bit the ground.
Joseph Estes, who retired after 31 years at
the Anaconda Corp. smeltina plant, was
working the niaht shift.
"I had stayed home becaUJC I lc:ncw they
were P,layina and he always called after a
game, ' Wayne's father said. "I talked to him,
then gave tbe phone to his mother and I went
to work. •
"later, my brother-in-law came to ~t me at
work. He told me Wayne bad been killed in a car wreck. It wasn't until I got home and
Ladell Anderson called that we found 1out
what really happened."
Wayne bad Just made the fint payment on a
SJ0,000 triple-indemnity life insurance pol-
icy. And, in an interview after that last pme,
be bad talked or numbness in his bands and
arms.
"He told us that, too," Joseph Estes said.
"He said he was shootin4 the ball, but
somebody else was putti!lf 1t in. They kept
writina stories, makina a b~& deal out of this.
like Wayne bad some kind of premonition of
death. We finally had our attorney talk to
them.
"And that insurance policy. We told him he
should wait until be turned pro -you know,
the Laken were after him -and be said he
sjaned because this salesman wouldn't leave;,
him alone. He'd be out playina ball with some
little kids in the plararounds and hcre•d come
thisauy. Wayne said be finally siped it just to
get the IUY off bis back."
.. Hey, we were 21 years old! We never talked
about dyina." Lyons said. "We were excited to
be there. Back then, it WUI bi& thrill just to Ft
a basketbell scholanhip to play at Utah State
Univenity.
"I remember I used to get sick before pmes
and I couldn't wait to set into the locker room
at halftime and throw up apin. It was the
same thin& with Wayne. His hands were numb
because he was so excited."
After Ertcs arrived at Utah State, 0Tq
Hansen, now a sports columnist with the
Arizona Daily Star in Tuaon, wu one of the ''llm rau•• who liked to shadow him around.
Remember when you'd have plarvound
games, how you'd pretend to be some bi.a staJ1
Well, you bad to ttand in line for thru weeks
to be Wayne Es1e.S," Han.en recalls. "It's bard
to explain the bold be had on lbe youna
audience. He was just caP.tivatina. He wu IO
bi&, bul he WU IO ,entJe. '
Olympic profits to stay
LOS ANGELES (AP)-The U.S. Olympic
Committee, whkb rumcd down 1 rcquat '°
reimburte S7 million to other nations for
expeoteS incurred at the Loi Aneeles Olym-
pk:I. eoon will IC'l S50 million of Olympic
turphaa f\uwts.
It was decided Monday at a meetiQI of the
Loi A•ies Olympic Orpnizi111 Comm.inee
eucutive bo4atd that tome oft.he profit tom
the Gama, wbich cunenUy ii dnwinc
interest and coWd total Sl50 million by tbil
IWDJnef, will bo dituibuted tmmediately. n. USOC. ....._..,to ncntualJY. re.. cave 40 J'll'(ltftt of lhe IUl'phaa. IOOD wttl be
ll"91S50lllillion, •id PaulZiffi'cn, chairman
of the LAOOC.
A.nodtc:r HO million will to to a foundation
that -111 UM the fbnds fot ~ prosr1m1 in
Southttn C..,l>rnia, and SI l ,S milhon will be
dittributcd to variou.t U.S. national poru
,ovttnin1 boda
Aftet llvina in an aj)ltlment for five
yean despite his SI million annual salary
with the Los ~ Lakm. JobMon
finally bou&)\t a llll•bedroom two-ttory
Tudor-ttyle home in the hills -with
feat um to ao with hit status u one of the
hi&best-paid athletes in the nation. The home is cqulppcd with a racquet~
ball-~etball court, ~ mind-blowina
muuc system, an unspoiled canyon view
and a bathtub biaatr than a queen-li.u bed.
"I still can't believe it. I cannot believe
1t.," be exclaimed u he dinctcd a visitor
through bis castle.
"Mymom.sbehugedmeandjustabout
~uecz.cd all the air out of me," be aid of
his mother's first visit to the house. ""She
couldn't imasine her son Hvina in a boute
like this.. She was so happy and proud."
His father is "very reserved ... he keeps it
inside," Johnson added. "But when be uw
the house ... To see him smile!"
With some of the money from his fint
pro contract with the Laken, Johnson
bou.&ht his parents a home in Lansint.
Mich., where he grew up.
But he waited five yean before look.ina
for a home of his own .
.. All I had to see was one room (now his
disco), the racquetball coun and the
bathtub ... the house I JrCW up in beck
home could probably fit into the &Y1n
(racquetball coun)."
The home isat the end of a windina road,
with canyon walls slopina to the houae on
both sides, . with the canyon behind
stretching hundreds of acres wt th no •iln of
ci viliz.ation. .
Although it has a heated swimmina pool,
Johnson has yet to use it becauae "I can't
risk gettin& a cold or gettin& sjclc durin& the
season," be says.
But be has broalcfast b~ poolside, with
deer and squirrels sometimes wanderina
outsjde the win4ow, and sa)'1 that "a
couple of times ... I'd be out here catin&
breakfast., rd be daydreaming. just kind of
in a trance, and then I'd look at my watch
and see I was almost late for practice."
DEATH NOTICES
HAReORLA ..... MT.OUYE
Mortuary• Cemetery
Creamatory
1825 Gisi« Ave.
Cotta M ...
~0-55~
l'IPCI MOTHIRI
MU MOADWAY
llOM'UAllY
110 BroedWay eo.ta M9N
642-9150
~---------""----~~-~-----------------·-------"~~-""--------~·--------------·\----~----.... --.._;__,_. ________________________ -=----....;~.._ _____ ............. ~1
•
C9 Ot• .. CMlt ~ILY PtlOT/Tueecs.y, ~ 12, 1N5 · --It m1W "'OJIOT ~DMINll• •-.,. ~ ~ l"AAno.t-AI• I 11 c,_. _ _.....;;;,,;;;,,;;;,;.;;;,,,;,;;,-.-.=.--..--..., ""'"°" "!!!!.W • 111111 W\119 ~n -..,~d 11•11 ... "!. '8CTmOU9 • 11•.. .,.... __ ...... .....,......,......,..__ -n•m '" a •a .,. lliMlllTAW n..._..,......._,. to .. 0.....(7t4J Tiie~,.,.....,.
............ • IY lit clOlf't tMlllNlie •· Nobe. T fll U 0 I< M 0 UN TI D of tfla C~ IM Cit) lclrtini IUOA ....,.ttorn, ~~L~IHQ, H• OATIO: JanualY :,~ hntt ~27'M
...... CA tWlt.,.,... eo.ta OITV ~ .~· 8Y· ~ leoamr~-=· Qwtll "9lw Moor-.~ 11 "' _..... Cttr Me. CA Ul04
Avooedo ~~. Coet• ""*'*' Or Coal' Thie bUtlMM II con-~ 0:u::. .. COi\• Not ~ 5, 12, ~ ~ :,~
dUOtad bv: an lndlYtduel Thie Mai.m.rtt ... fled
CUft"l'll lllA Y MOON T -412 wttll 1ri. County C*1t ot Of.
TN9 •tement ... Ned enge County on JM\HllY ao, wlttl Ole County ca.. ol Of. 1NS
ln09 County on ~ t1, PlaJC M)TIC( l'llml tNe Publllhed <>reno-COMt __ ....__., ..... ,_.. NOTICI Of D111y Piiot Febtu.tY 5. 12. ~-_, ..,.enge Coelt TU'91pWR ,,_ 111. 20. 1918
Dally Pttot Januaty 22. 29, lfTlllDID T-432
February 5. '2. tffO MCUNTY AQI .. .....,.
T-.3N llUMUAlfT TO
CML COM N IMI
Notice II '*eb'/ Qlwn that '1CTTT10U8 .,... ..
AJr Cellfomla. 1 Cellfoml1 ~ ITI\~
CIOr!>Ofltlon wltll ldcllWI It Tiie tollowtng S*90n1 ere ~ llroh ltr•t Newpot1 cloina butlneM ... L. M .... _,.._
CITY 0# ~ 8Mch, Catlf0tnta taffO DATA SYSTEMS. 11315 Mt. C~ ("Traneftror") lntend1 10 lallp, Fountain Vtlley, 0A
NOTtCm WT1NG t~ to and l•••bldt 92128
IMD9 from Integrated Aircraft Lynn Mltllttan, 18316 Mt.
NOTICE 1&. HEREBY C«p., .• Dllewere COfpot· lttlp. Fountain Valley, CA
OIVfN ttlat IMled l>ld1 wlll etlon with ltl pMctoal place 92728 be~ by ttle City CM ol bualnMe 1t 733 1'llird Av· Thll bullnet1 ta oon-lllUllNtl'*'
of tri. City of l(ltlne, Call· enue, New York, New YOttt ducted by: Ah lndlvldull
lornl• tot tumllhlriQ all plant, 10017 ("-rein called 1111 Lynn Mutlkan
labo< Mf'Vlcel, m.aterlala, "Tren1teree-Deb1or") c:.t· Tllla ltltement wu flied
tOOl8, equipment 911~. tlln penon., properly. 1n with the County Clerk ol Of· 19Hiwnitr tr~tlon, utllltlet and connection wtttl IUCh tran• ange County on January 30 •
.it ottw lterna and teclllttea ec:tlon, the Tranet.rM-Oet>t· 1985 •
nece111ry therefor. H or lntenct. to 0tent • Meurtty PWT1flT
prOYlded In tri. oontlect lnttrllt In IUOh pweonal Publllhed ~ Coaat..
documenta. '°' ~ properly to QAZX LMalng Dally Piiot February 5, 12,
Dr!Ye Sound Attenuation Co .. lnCl dci. Gr .. 1 Weetem 19, 28, 1985
Progrem tOQetNr wttll • L.eulng, lnCl., •Nevada cor-
purtenanc:•• t"-<eto, In potatlon with lta ~ ---------.,....,_..._
1t11c1 M:cordanoe wtth 111e ptace ot bu11neM at tat t PtaJC NOTICE tipedftcatlona on Ille 11 1ri. South At11noton, Reno. *-_ _....;..;..;--...;.;..;;..;.;..;;.;;;,___
office of the Olrecior of Pub-vad1 H50f ("-rein c:aHed 'tCnTIOUI ~.. ~ .... ._
lie W011t1. "Seo.wed Plrty"~ The prop-NA• ITA'n•NT
DA Tf OF OPENING BIOS. erty lo be tranlferred and In The fOllowlng pereona ere
Bid• wilt be reoetved at the wt1ich • aeeurlty lntereet II to doing bull,,... 11: Nancy· 1 office of the City CM of tile be granted II generllly cl.-Gue11 VIiiage. 13902 Clln·
Cl1Y Of lrvlna located 11 ICl'lbed II followl: ton, Garden Grove, CA •r..ilecllae
tUOO Jambor.. Roed, en. (1) Pritt & Whitney 92643
lrvtne. Callforn11, 92713, engine Model JTID~ t5, Atlela L. Lopez, 3 Monl10f',
untlt 10:00 a.m. on Febn.iwy manuf1oturer'a .. ,,., Irvine, CA 92714
20, 1985 at which time end number P702952B, Of IUOh Thia bu9lne11 11 con·
P'ace bldl wftl be publlcly n g I n e • • m • y b a duoted by: an lndlvldual
op In e d In Co u n c 11 b9tltuted ltlerefOf. Allc::la L. Lopez
Ctwltnbers. Bids lhell be Thi• tranaactlon .. to ba TIQ tt•lemtnt WU llled
•ubmltted In ••a led aumm111d on or 1fter wtth the County et.nc of Or· IDr1MtMllCI
enYllopM matiled on the FebNaty 25. 1985 11 tri. of-ange Counly on January 30,
outllc», "191da fOf ~ OM of ireH & Manela, 1800 1985
Drive Sound Attenu1tlon Wlll.ll ol the St1r1, Sult• ""1704
Progrem C.1.P. No. !521.30 • Loe Angetea. Calffomfl Publllhed Orange Cout Mefftat 1 "" INtedo The TetTece." 7. TM PlflOfUll prop-Dally Piiot February 5, 12, lmmedtat-nte. II "°
LOCATION OF THE II to be ioo.ted In Or· 19, 26, 198!5 conoce 1 11n a~ado,
WORK: The work to be per. County. T .430 pwde l!Mw a 1M Mftclo
formed hereunder 18 locatad led: February 7, 1985 ,~ .... I ll DlldM
In the Ctty o1 lrvlna, Count) CMtZX LIAllNQ CO., INC. o a 11na oflcMa de 8Jude
of OrlnQI It Unlwnllty OrlYe .... .....,,. LeM-"8.IC fl>TtCE ..... (ffl ..............
between Mleheleon end the. Inc. (a.ow.d ~-"Y), NOTICI CW tonloo). 405 Frwwey. • CrnlMe """'-• n. At· _._._.0 ........ _. The neme and adc:lf ... 01
DESCRIPTION OF WORK: ~Mt '"' ..._. '......, __ 5" the court la· MUNICIPAL
TM work to be perfonnecs Publlehed Orange Cout AND LIAM8ACK COURT OF THE CENTRAL
lhall lnc:lude but not be Mm-Piiot FeOnlary 12, 1985 "'9tl0Alf1' TO JUDICIAL DISTRICT, Coun-
lted to clMrlng Ind grul> T_.37 ~Z-.,J100l(H) 1Y of Orange. S1111 o1 Cl#-blng, demo of exlatlng ..,.._ lornla, 700 CMc Genie< lnclu<flng ,,.. remov .... wall Nollce la hereby g""8n t"-1 Drive w .. 1. Santa Ana Call-
conettuc:11on, landlC8')tng, .. _IC MnTll'r 11 Calllornla, • Callfornla. lorn11 9270t •
lfflgatlon 1'191•"" and main-,.~ nu•"4 oorpofallon with lddr ... al The name lddr"' and
tenance lmprowmen11 In-NOTIC• cw 383e Birch Str .. t, Newport t~ n~mber of pllln·
ltlllled together with ap. TRUITll'I IAU Belc:tl, Galllornl• 92680· In· llff'a attorney, or ptalntlff purtenanc.. tend• to tr1n1fer to 111d without 111y 1uomey 11·
COMPLETION OF WORK -~~~~ IMtebacil from Integrated LANGREN ANO BELZ. A1: .,... -• ~ Y Aircraft Corp , 1 o.c-are 732 ' t AH work I• to be oompleteo YOU ARE IN DE.FAULT corporation with Ill prlnc:I· torneyt " LIW, t 1 Irv ne
within 30 oonMCUtM work· UNDER A DEED Of TRUST pal place 01· busl 1 733 Boulevard. Tullln, Calllornl1
Ing daye from the date apecl-DA TED. JANUARY l 1TH, Third Avenue, = 8 York, 9E2680 Attn: Jeffrey D Rubin.
fled In th• Notice to 1978 UNLESS YOU TAKE ~ York 10017, pet'IOOal 6 1ted SEP 25 1984
Pr=D OF CONTRACT ACTION TO PROTECT property generally de-llO•Un 8 KUHl!L YOUR PROPERTY. IT M.AY 1c:tlbecl 11 loflowl • ' The <>wr. rnetVel the BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC en. (1) Prati & Whitney C I e r II ' 8 r : I II 1 r r I
right, after opening ~. le. SALE IF YOU NEED AN EX· engine Model JTI0-15, c:::; ~ ~~ !!:! .:or~~l'ntc.lt PLANATION OF THE manulacturer'1 1erlal DI"-Pl F•'!. nge C2~91
., ... _., .. ~., N AT U R E 0 F T H E oYmber P702452B or l4x:h a., '01 wurulry 1, . .
bid. to meke ._di In lhf PROCEEDINGS AGAINST en g In e Is m' ay be 26, M1rch 3, 19115 T 3"'
lnterMt of l1ll <>wr. Ind IC. YOU, YOU SHOULD CON· auballluled lherefor -4 "
rejec:1all 01her b!Oa. TACT A LAWYER Thia tr1nuctlon 11 to be
PROPOSAL GUARANTEE CALIFORNIA MORT-conaummated on 0< 11ter
ANO BONDS· Each bid 11111• GAGE SERVICE. A CALI· February 25, 1985 11 the of·
be accompanied by a FORNIA CORPORATION II llc:es ol lrell & Minella, 1800
certified or c:uhler's ctlec:l& duly eppolntad Truataa Avenue of Ille Stirs, Suite
Of by • corporate suret) under the follo"Wlng de· 900. Loa Angeles, California
bond on Ille form furnltltMIO 1c:tlbecl deed OI trult WILL 90067. The Plf'IOOal prop. ::r.:':cs~~f~.:!i.e: SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION arty la 10 ba located In Or· TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER ange County
11 made to him In ac;. FOR CASH 0< u NI forth In O.ted. F.otu•"' 7, 1985 cordanoe wttll the terme of Sec:tlon 2112 1 c -' hll bid, promptly Mc:ure 4h o the lvll AJll CA1.•0RNIA (T..--Coce. all right. !Ille ~ teror~) Workmen'• CompenMllOn lnl8'Ml con~ 10 and 8r. ....... Clan, Cor·
Insurance and liabltlty In-now held by 11 under l8ld poqte c-1,_..,
aurance. axecuta • eonlr8C1 Deed or Trull In tile property Publllhed Or•,,,,. Cou1 In lhe required l0tm and "-rel It ~Ibid -·..-lurnlltl MUafactory bonds 118 " • Dally Pilot Febru1ry 12, 1985
1..., 1 ... f•'t .. tul -"orm~ TRUSTOR· JESSE L • T-438 "" ,,. ., " .....,, -~ TULLY ANO MARY L. Of Ille contract •nd for 1ri. TULLY. HUSBAND ANO---------
payment of C11lrns of ma· WIFE Pla.IC NOTICE
terla1men end laborer• BENEFICI •RY c lllefeunder. Slld chedt or " : ALI· IUHlltlOllt COUllT FOR NIA MORTGAGE SER· -c ... --..... bidder'• bond shall be In an VICE. A CALIFORNIA COR-..... coUHfY'(,;"'
lmOUnl of not IMI than ten PORA TION AIYSlltltO«
(10) percent ol lhe amounl of RECORDED January 17, lft tM ......, of •L EO. :::m=.1'::::.~:,.P,:; 1978 II lnalrument Number WAflO IANCHIZ AND
'"8 than one hundred (100) 22582 8oolt 12533 Page 73 TfUUA*A IAHCHEZ
pet'Cllll of the total amounl ol Offlclll Record• In Ille 01• CAIE NO. A-10000 lice ol Ille Recorder or OR-CITATION ~~: f~~ns: ANGE County THE PEOPLE OF THE
terlaJ• Bond lhall be not feM Said Deed 0' Trust. d.-STATE OF CALIFORNIA.
then one hundred (100) per-acrlbel lhe following prop.-TO FAUTUS MALAUULU
I ... ·• 1 arty You are hereby c;:lled and cen1 o i..., lot., amount O LOT 13, OF TRACT NO r-ulred to IP...,..1at 1 ...._ •• _ l---------
llle bid price nemed In lhe 7236, IN THE CITY OF ,.... ...--. ·-P\8.IC fl>TIC[ contract. Only bond• lllU4KI IRVINE, AS PER MAP RE· ng In thl• court on March r---------
by c:ompanlel which are CORDED IN BOOK 282 18, 1985 11 8:30 A M .. In K·1l204 riled "A" or "All" In the ' Dept 4, located al 4050 NOTICE 0' ""'-11 Rating Gulde" wtll be PAGES 18 TO 21 IN· Main Str .. t Rlverllde Call--.. TH -.,.. C L U S I I/ E . M I S • ' ' ""'" ..,.. ICCePled F111ure to aubmlt CELLANEOUS MAPS IN fOfnla 92501 and to give any AOBElltT W. JOHHIOH
ICCIPllble bonds will be THE OFF CE ' legal rauon wny. ICCO<dlng ANO Of' NTITK>N CIUM fOf rejection of bid I OF THE to lhe verified pellllon ftled TO Ao.ellTlllt
PREVAILING RATES OF ~~1~'b'6u~fvCORDER OF with thll C:OUr1 your perental EITATf NO. A·121791
WAGES In llCCOfdenoe wttn MAY ALSO BE KNOWN rtgn11 with .~Mpec:'I 10 ·~ To. all helra. beMflcierlea,
tile provtalona of Sec:tlon AS 14752 Waverly Lane mile c:hlld ·-••· Falua. cred1tor1 and contingent
1773 of 1ne Cllllornla Llbof lrvtne CA 92714 ' bom December 14, 1982, c:redltor1, and per10n1 wno
Code, the general prevailing (II '1 alraet eodr... or lllould nol be termlneted, may be otherwtM 1n1er .. ted rltn ol per diem wagee and and wny .. Id child lhoutd In the wlll and/or M1ate ol '"""'Id ._,. I ~.... common dHlgnatlon II not be adopted by Mel Ed· ROBERT W JOHNSON . "'" 9Y .. .., over1 me .. ,,. .. In anown •t>ove. no warranty 11 d 8 T tile locality In which Ille wont given aa 10 111 cornpletenen wer 11'\ChQ and euuatn1 A petition 11H been liled
I• lo ba performed hM been or COl'ectneu) Sanchez by MYRNA JOHNSON In the
obtained from the Director The baneflc:I• under aald O.tecl. JAN 31 1985 Superior Cour1 of Orange
of lhe Oeper1menl ol lndu• Deed of Trull, JrMIO(l ol 1 DONALD D SULLIVAN, County requHtlng 1hlt
lrlal Relallon1. a copy ol breach or delauh In the obll· CLERK, by Wiiiiam E Coner· ROBERT W. JOHNSON be
which ta on file In lhe office of gallon• MCured thereby ly. Deputy 1ppolnted H personal rep.
tne City Clerk of the City ol heretofore axec:utad and~ P1trlcla L Anthonr. At· reMnlatlva to admlnllter the
lrvtne i nd wlll ba made 1vall· llve<ed 10 Ille undefligned 1 torner fer l'ellllonera, Mtale of the decedent
•ble to eny lnlerMted par1~ written Dec:leratlon of 0.. 11Q1 ltrootftlunt ltl'Mt. Tile petition requHI• upon requeal The conlrae-fault and Demand for s... lulte 20I, ,_...,. v.-.,, authoflty 10 admln111er the
IOf end any aut>oonlractor and wntten notlc:e 01 breach CA t:Z'70I •tale under the 1ndeC>en·
under ntm 11\aJI pey not .... and of elec110n 10 c:auae Ille ~ 0tlnQI C-t denl AdmlnlS1r1tlon of e.
lhan tile IC)lcifled prevailing under8'gned 10 Mii tald 09'1y l'tlot '*....-Y 12. 1t, 1a1" AC1
"'" of wagee 10 111 W()(I{-property 10 ullaty Mid obll-211. 118fdl I, 1• A hearing on 1he pelltlon
men employeed In Ille ... gallons Ind 1herMfter the T-ot will be held on MA~CH 6,
ICullon ol tile contrlci under•tOned c:aueed Mid 1985 at 9'30 A M In Oec>t
LABOR REGULATIONS notice of bfNCh Ind 01 etec-"8.IC fl>TIC( No 3 11 700 Civic Center
The contract0t lhall c:ompr, lion 10 be Recorded SEP· Ori~ WMt, S1nt1 Ana. CA
wllh Ill the requ1rement1 ol TEMBER l4 1984 11 IN-~IC NOTICI! 92702.
Section 1777.5togethefwlth STRUMENT NO. 84'.-381176 The City of lrvtne hH In· IF YOU OBJECT to lhe
Ill otri.r 14>Pfk;able requlr• 01 Mid Offlclll Record• ltlated I gener11 p11n granting of tile P11ltlon. you
m1nt1 o( ·the C11ifornl1 Slk:l Mle will be mid~ but 1mendmen1 to lmend the lhould either appear 11 the
Labor Code. wlthoyt ooven1nt 0< ~.,. General plan Ctrculatlon Ell-hearing and 1t1te your Ob·
DRAWINGS ANO SPECI· ranty expr ... or Implied r• ment. The prOOOM<t ~d· Jectlon1 Of tlle written objec·
FICATIONS: A ""' Mt 04 gard~ tltle l>OllMslon. or ment would Change the tune-lion• with Ille COUr1 bafOfe
drawtno• Ind IP9Clftc;atlon1 enoumbr~ 10 Pl'/ Ille,.. tlonll clHelllc:a11on1 of lour tri. hearing Your al>PMf-
la 1vll11ble IOf loepectlon rnalnlng prlncipal aum of the road •nka t I redlllgnlte anoe mey be In pereon or by
without charge al the office notl(•l aeeured by hld Walnut Ao b•l•••n your auorney.
Of 1M Director of Pubk Deed of Tru9t wtth lntereet HaNltd Ind Mylord trom IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR
Work• or the City of lrvtM u tn Miid note provided 16-COiiector 10 p11ltway, 2) ,.... or • conting.nt crldltOf of
Complete Mtl of Mid dr-· ¥ancet If Illy. under' the dellgna1e Von K1tm1n be--1"9 decMIMld, you mutt lite
ing9. epeclflc:8ttons end bid t•m• Ot Mid o91d ol Trust tween Main S1 a nd your Claim with the court or
d o cu m • n t 1 m 1 y b 1 ,... ct'llrgee Ind .~ Mk:heleon Drive lrom COllec-preetnt It to tri. PtreOnal
pun1h•td from IM Oepert· of 1ii. Trull• Ind 01 tile tor to p1rkw1y, 3) re-r9P'-tattw aQ90!nttcl by
ment of Public Wonca. Clt}o truat• °'Mted by Mid Deed dHlgnata 81tr1nc1 be the court wtthln lciur month•
Of IMne. 17200 Jamboree of Truit tw.n Red Hiii A.,. Mes trom tile dale of nr11 la-
Ro1d. Irvine, C1t1fornl1. Said Nie wtll be held on Jltnborea Bl vd trom aua~oflett8'111pr0Vlded
92713. A non-retuf'da~ ... TUESDAY FEBRUARY 19 perJl\#IY 10 thruw1y, 4) r• In Seooon 700 OI Ill•
of '30.00 wtll ba chWQed for 1985 It 1'1.oo AM 11 1~ dellgn1te Mein St be!-Probate Code of Camorn11
MCh -ol ctocument1 ICOnoord St'"1 "'tr8no. to SR 65 •nd H1rv1rd AYe. The time tor tiling Clallna will OrewlnQt. epeotflcetlona end the bulldlng toc:at«I '1 1$70 from COllec:tor to Plfllwey not ei191re prior to lour
b'd dOOUmentl wttt be ~ e. 17tn Street Santa Ana The Pfoe>OMd plan,, a rT'!Oflthl from tri. dtt• fl( Ille
ecJ, upon receipt of requeett ca111orn11 t2101' ' copy ot tri. envtronmentet hMt1ng nouce etiow
no let• ~ 10 Ol6lndal The _,11 amount of the d91ermtnatlon (~,. YO\/ MAY EXAMINE IM = to ttle d41t• • tor uns*d belenc. Of the obll-tal envtronmental lmpec1 r• flle kec>t by file ooun. If >'O"
b'da, tor an Id-gatton a.;.urld by Miid Pf• port) and ot1* protect lnfor-are a P«90tl ln1«Mted In awge of 16.00 911y 10 be aold together wttti matlOl'I tte evll\eble for in. the tlQte. you ,,.., ._,.,.
SECURITY 'Ollt COM· lnter•t. tall 'c:tiargee. and apectton 11 tri. COmmunlty U90I\ the ... cutor or ldmtn-
Pt.rTION OF WOAK The eetlmeted coat&. •llJ*tW. 0..llopment Oepenrnent, i.1rator, or upon the at·
oontrect dOcumentl call for and adYanoll .. of tfla dlt• HO t MoGIW, tnotne torMy for Ille h«:utOr or
montNy prOQf911 peymenta hereof 11 S&9 '94 t 33 If you ~ lrrf COfTllMllll. admWW.tratOf, and Ille M1ll
beMd llPOf' ""' ..,...,., o.t~ Jrn#y aa. ;915 oonQIWN « ~tone yc111 the covrt Wftft proof of .., • ..-1mete of the percent~ c..,....., ...,111 11 ..,_ .,. fmltted •lt«lcf 1 pubk lllo9. e wrttt.n reqwet lt•t·
of WCW'k cornoteted. The CIT) floe, • c .... , ,... ~ heWlng to be held by the Ing !hit you dellr• lfP«All wftl Ntlln ten (10) P91'C*lt Of ...._ ........ .,_.... a,r City oflnllne Tr91i1POr11tlon n011ee of the fll~ in.
a.di IWOGfW ~ • O• ._, flWt o.-a.. ~1 . .!on'eONeryU, ventorylnd_,, tat
MOl(lty (Of ~ of ...... 1 _.,_..... -4, 1..-, II :.... P m In IN CllY •fllte MNtl or Of the l*f.
,,. ~of ttlil wcwt1. At .,, D e .. c•lir .... Councll CMmt>art, 11200 110n1or1C1COUt1ttlMf'ltlOned
the requmt and ..,,.... of AlrtllettlM ,....... .... Jambof ... !Mne, ca In Section l200 and l200 5 of
the lllCIDMlllM !Mdder, It. o.... tm ._. t11'I 'or more lntorm1tlon IMCellfom&aPrONteOode
City _.. _, tr. llnouM te-..,...._ ...... I ._..AM, ,,,..... Clll "'9 Froet It *--' AIMIJ I ..,_
rMlllneO IC>Oft ~ CelH•tAll tntt (114) M0-3901 It tl'le Cotnmunlt~ ................ 0.... wttfl 1'llt ~ OI M?-1111 o.r.4QC14'1W11 Dloer1ment 8h4., ..... 1•, L-e
00...T'WMlll Code leotlQr ~ Qf1nge C0411t c ... Ho U..OP"'"32 .... C• -
14402 and lhe prO\ltllonl OI Delly PUot ~ 29 FIC>-PUCllWleO by 1111 °'8nge Publlahed Of1nge COlllt
,,.. contrect document• ,,_.,. 5 12 ttlS ' eoa.t Dall'; ~ 'ICll'u!Wy Delly ll'llot 'IC>Nat'Y tt, 12. ~ to ''$utlltttUUor • T -402 12. 1"6 .. II. ttt.5 Of..,,-lftet " l~ "4T·311S
rta.IC NOTICE
CLA
Telephone ~rvice:
Monday.Friday
8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
Business Counter:
Monday-Friday
8:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
f'l Hl.IC \TIO'
let Us Hee, Y11
Sell . Y •• p,.,.,.,1
The Daily Pilot offers you this eml size ad
on tu "Picture Patt" weebnds fOf just sis Pit daJ, (I( 2 dJys '°' $45.
S.. a pktwe, Of we'I photocraph it for '
,. at I ...... chlf11.
M2· .. 1•
THE REAL
ESTATERS
PllllllU IA"lllT Dlll.LIUTlll
Tradltlonal qu1llty 3
bedroom, 3.5 bath home. Cull p1ld lmmed. Family
Beautltully remodeled need• tiome. 964·5~2
with pl_, for 52' t>o•t and WANT 10 bu~hom• tide tlea. Sweeping view Cd of bay. lkytlne & night w/pool In Nwpt I M
llghta. Private, lerge area 556--0522
courtyerd + 1111r1 park· Int.II Ing. PrlQed to ... , It , ............ ._ ____ _
$975,000 FEE IHMI '9rail~ ..
-
"'°l\fl HI HO'lf I
llOMt., ht<·
REAL ESTATE Ctrtal ••••• , 21U 131-1400 , ...... """""'" ............ __ _ 3 br+den. pool oc.an
--------vlew.$2400agt873-778t PllOllTllll 760-1397
2 eep1rate 2 Bd home•. Designer fully furn 2 8d
Great rental location. 1 townhouM. Pool & tennl•
Blk to t>each. frplc:a & couft $1195 673-0898 garages $230.000
JACOIS
RE.ALTY INC
171-1110
.......... rahW
Gtatral 2202
Winter Rental•
JACOBS RE.AL TY
PROP MANAGEMENT
714/675-6173
I HOROSCOPE SYDNEY o ••••
Send Your Sweetheart Special Greetings In The Daily Pilot's .
Valentine of ove
Your own personal 3 line f'!"•S~e will appear Thursday,
February 1•, 1985. This is d memorable way to remember
your sweetheart, huibond, wife. parenh, grondparenn, or
friends.
Your message will appear witti the illustration of your choice.
An ad like the one below >Nill cost S 12.00. Additional
mes5099 lines can be purchased for S 1 00
J~. Al~~~ you
are aUll my ~ and
•tftnl\h Jan ...
Choose your ilkidration:
A( l l( ) C( ) 0( E( ) f ( G{ )
STATf __ ZIP ___ _
H( )
Moil Toi Vua.wt•1t low UM-I, The Daily Pilot, P.O. le» U60, Coda Melo, CA 92626
oa Colli 6'2~71 To Consult Your Vot.nrine l•--'""'·
. .
H.
-·-IL z=a ·-..
1:1
Newspaper
SALES
roup W Cable Is ottenng
a tant11tlc opportunity In
direct sates In our New-
port Beach system. YOCJr
earning potential Is llm-
lted only by you and your
sales efforts. Group W
Cable Is a great place to
belWe offer·
Xlnt earning oppty
Prof training program
Fantastic benefits plan
• Long term career oppty
Companies total sup-
port ot saJes & marketing
t you want to make great
money. have xlnt benefit•
and the security of work-
ing In a thriving Industry.
apply In pet'aon. at 901
W. 16th Street, Newport
Beach. EOE
IMllUPD/mtll Part-time app<ox 6 hrt
p/day. CPA ofc In CdM.
Computer knowledge
helpful. 67S-2070
llUIHST WAITllSS
IT avau. Exp. nee. Apply
In pet'aon. VIiiage End.
127 Marine Ave, Bal. Ill.
HILD CARE/HSKPG.
one 2 yr old, Nwpt Bch.
$120. p/wk. room &
l>Oafd. 760-8217
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
AGES 11-14
EARN lW TO $75.00 PER WEEK
We no• hne 15 Oll(ntnes tor you111 ueer
beavers to steurt reit<lfrs for Tiie Oranee Cont
Daily P110I Our cmn start al 3 30 p m and
.•ork until 8 30 pm weekdays On Saturday "'
worl a tew mort hours You will urn many tr•PS
. and PlllfS atone with u r mng your own money
fherr 1s no dthve11ng or collection tnYOIYed
Ii you atf '"'""'rd please call Mr E arr
MEA
COOE (714) 548-7058
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
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llllDI
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lnt.,viewt Wednndey 9-1 1
AM It 2518 Newport Blvd .
Cott• MeH (on Newport
8tvd 11 0.1 Mtr)
C•ll (71 •1 537.,,.uo tor
mofe Info EOE
DIMES
-A . LINE
WANT , ADS
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PRIYATI! PARTIES
S•lf your lt.,,-,1 for $50 or lesa Jn
our IMnOUI DIMl!S-A-LINES pub·
lflf*I uch Saturday In the Dally
Piiot.
DIMES·A·LINE ad• mu1t b•
,,,..,,.Jd .o mall or bring th.,,, Into
t,,. 0.1/y Piiot olfletl. S. 1ure to
lnclU<H your phOM number or ad-
dr ... In your ad, have • prlc• on
Melt ,,.,,, & no •bbf9V#atlon1.
DEADLINE:
a p.m. TIMn•r
Ceete ..... Oflloe ..... .., ....... c-. ..... c.. ...
LARGE SELECTION OF
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LIMllAll ...
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SERVICE & LEASING
3870 N. Cherry Ave.
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(No. Cherry exlt~5)
'11•)111-1711 l'rede-lnt Welcome
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IEW'llUW's
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Load.ell (Stl #2207)
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VW-PORSCHE
•• • 1' 1,
8 J7 48 0 0 4 9] · 4 S I I
LARGEST SELECTION ot late model. low mlieeg.
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County! See UI todayt
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2600 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
C~nrtltt 1 * 1t 182 Camaro Z2it;
wtlt/burgandy low mllee,
like new, sn501nnance.
53&-Q681
'72 Chevy Wgn, runt fine.
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IEW GAi IALEI
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714143a-1M1
TOMORROW:
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
:erry parents ·'fighting.back'_,-
Surprise decision to close schoo In HB
promptschargeso · raudanddeceit'
Moffett Elementary School would be
shipped out to possibly three other
schools, which haven't been ident·
ified.
could accommodate the influx
.. aJtbou&h it will be tiaht."
The decision to close Perry came as
a bombshell la.st week. It ran counter
to the recommendations of a special
blue-ribbon committee that said
Perry School should stay open be>-
caulC of special programs and fund-
in' for the IUJC pcn:entqe of min-
onty children 1t serves. The commit-
tee also noted that the transfer would
incur heavy n penlCt becauae the
entire~ student body wouJd bave
to be buicd.
Perry pareoll and ~ were takeo by surprise. They said the
closure of Perry was never mentioned
and they didn •t bother to &bow gp at
acted withOut ~ tM iM••
and LeaCben are mdClllf ~ '° form a~ F'tlhU k:k Com ..... in a.a effort to turn Mide die _.
popular decition. Tbe m 11 ,.. •
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. O.., .......
A holly contested decision to close
Perry Elementary School in Hunt-
ington Beach may displace about 700
younasters -nearly 13111 percent of
Cout
It'll cost you more to get
yourcaroutofhockln
Costa Mesa as city ap-
proves fee Increase for
towing cars.I A3
Irvine residents give their
views on the school dis-
trict's dispute with the
teachers./ A3
California
A stranded woman
motorist couldn't count
on the Border Patrol for
help./A5
Nation
Conversations between
Bernhard Goetz and a
female reporter about the
shooting of four young
men In a subway were
tape-recorded./ A4
Saudi Arabia's King Fahd
Is asking U.S. to put the
pressure on Israel to
agree to concessions
with Palestine./ A4
World
South Korean opposition
party does surprlslngly
well In elections, but not
well enough./ A4
Soviet officials S!lY
Chernenko Is 'on va-
cation' and won't be able
to meet with Greek
premler./A5
Mlnd&:Body
Toxic shock syndrome
may not be In the head-
lines anymore, but there
are still cases that can be
deadly./81
Why doesn't the good
news of vintage mar-
riages make the
grapevine? /81
Sporta
Tiny Christ College Is
upgralng Its basketball
program In a big way -
with a new $5.2 mllllon
gym./C1
A sellout crowd watched
boxing In Orange County
Tuesday nlght./C1
Fountain Valley Hlgh's
glrls basketball team Is
cooking behind the play
of Jackie Cook./C3
Entertainment
An ambitious production
of ·· Jesus Christ Super-
atar" hits the right note at
Saddleback College./113
BuJnaa
AT&Tplans a 15percent
dlecount for long~I ...
tance callera. /M
INDEX
Erma Bomb4tek 82
Bridge 86
BuUetln Board A3
8ullneea 84
Cf .... fted ce.8
Comtca ae
Croaword C8
Oelth Notlcel CS
HorQICOPe C7
Ann Landtn 8 2
Mind and Body 91·2
0ptnton A6
Peparaal 8 1
Potlce Log A3
Pubftc Not1cea cs.e
Sporta C1-5
Tea.""'6on 82
ThMt•• 83
WMthef A2
•
the district's S,200 students -and
increase bulina.
Preliminary figures indicate that
not only would the 493 younpters in
Perry School be evicted from their
school -up to 200 youngsters from
Gooeymaa
The Moffett kids will be moved to
make way for up to 3SO of the Perry
School younpters bein& moved to
Moffett, according to plans.
The remainfog I SO djsplaced Perry
pupils would be sent to Smith School,
which a district spokeswoman said
Coanty worken were atilt cleentna ap a Lapna Hilla
lntenecdon lloa~y eTeDtnc after a ta.Dker truck cwer-
hu'lled and ..,Wed 3,000 aanoaa of uphalt roo~
materlal onto the road. Tbe mllmare, ••mnar to oae aMd u
a road aeelan~ ~ to harden on contact wltb air. The
accident occarred while Gary Schaetter, 25, of Lapila
~n& they are tht victims of
deceit and fraud by the najori!Y of
board memben who. they believe
Ni.aet wu ta.nd.aC from Lake P'Ol'9t Drtn oato Del i.u.o
Dd•e at aboat 1 p.m. M~0~ II.la load alaifte4. Tie truck belonp to Scboltea R Senice of Mlmon Viejo.
No lnjutee were reported ID tbe acdclen~ bat tramc wu
affected wlaen tbe tanker'• con ten ta coated tbe lnterwtion
to a depth of two feet In 80llle •pots.
A rose is a rose and you '11
be paying through the nose
By LISA MAHONEY
ud SCO'M' STODDARD °' .. °""',... .... So. you want to buy roses for that
special someone on Valentine's Day
Candy's still dandy, but on Thurs-
day it just won't do?
Well brace yourself. big spender.
That long-stemmed display of devo-
tion will cost you.
A dozen tastefully arranged roses
are selling for between SSO and $60 at
aJCa florists. A boxed version of the
delicate beauties costs slightly less.
Discouraged? Don't be. Romance
can still bloom by the half-dozen at a
comparable reduction in price. And
cheaper stall are red carnations or an
arrangement of spring flowers like
tulips, daisies, sweet peas and irises, area florists say.
If you're still detennined to send
the heart of your heart a rosy message,
consider this: different colored
flowers convey different emotions.
Red roses represent love and arc
the most popular choice for Valen-
tine's Day. says Sandra Rico, man-
ager of the Flower Garden in Hunt-
ington Beach.
White roses symbolize purity and
mnocence while the yellow variety
can suggest either friendship or
Jealousy. she said.
Pink roses. like while. mean purity
and simphcny. They are gi ven by
those wuh "a clean heart." says
Emma McCollom. manager and de-
s1ener of Magnolia florist in Foun-
tain Valley.
floral designers can create arrange-
ments that convey the gi ver's feelings.
McCollum says. "It says somethmg.
It's not JUSt a creation. 1t talks."
If you want to say. "I love you:·
order a pink and while flower ar-
rangement. If fnends hap is what's on
your mind. smooth yellow blooms
are the proper choice.
But, while color combinations are
perfectly appropriate. don't make the
mistake of ordenng a white. yellow
and and purple flower arrangement
for your honey. florists warn. Such a
grouping conveys sadness and as
commonly used 1n funerals.
Valentine's Day ranks with
Mother's Day and Chnstmas 1n the
posy trade. florists say. And n's
especially so now that women have
(Pleue eee RO&S/ A2)
Business heavyweight~ boost UCI
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of ... O..,,... ....
Some of Orallfe County's most
influential busjncss leaders Wlll play a
laJlCr role in fund-raising for UC
lrvane.
The business leaders h~e qrccd to
serve as overseer directors and mem·
bers of the executive committee df the
UC Irvine Foundation board of di~tors.
The group includes developer Vic-
tor C. Andrews of Andrews Brothers
of California: Arnold 0 . Bcck'man:
vice chairman of SmithKline
Beckman: Athalie R. Oarlce, a stock-
holder 1n the Irvine Co.: Gavin S.
Herbcn, an executive with Allergan
Pharmaceuticals: Walter 8. Gerken.
ch•irman of Pacific Mutual Life
Insurance; developer Donald M.
Koll. chainnan of the Koll Co.; Gen.
William Lyon. chairman ot the
Wilham Lyon Co. and co-owner of
A1rC'al: Richard J. O'Neill. owner of
RanGho M1ss1on V1eJo: and de-
veloper Henry T. Sqcrstrom. man-
agin& panner of .J. Segerstrom and
Sons.
At a Jan. 31 m~t1n1 of the C"
Irvine Foundation. Gerken was
named ch:urman of the non-profit
organ1zat1on's e.xecuuvc committee
Newly elected to the O\lersttn and
executive committee was Donald
Bren. chauman and pnncipal owner
of the Irvine Co. Last year. Bren
donated SI million toward construc-
tion of a new events center at UCI.
The UC Irvine Foundation as a
non-profit corporation formed 10
ra1sc.1nvcstand adm1n1stercontnbu·
uons to the unavcnity.lts directors
(Pl--... UCI/ A2)
IChcduJed It 7:30 p,m. al tM
c:afetorium at tbe ICbool aa 19Jl I
Hardin&. .
Pattnt ~ HUI aaid 9-e'a coe.o
laCled West ()raaer Cowaly·l..oml ~-..m1AS1
Route
delay
angers
Riley
Mesa 55 Freeway
extension may be
shelv~d forayear
By JEPF ADLEA °' ..............
The Oran• County Tmupor-
tation Commission demanded to
know Monday why state officials are
recommendina that three Iona·
sou&ht hi~way improvement ~
jects -1ncludin& the Route SS
extension through Costa Mesa -be
delayed a year. Besid~ the Route SS extension.
State Department of Transportation "'
officials arc recommending delays in
projects to widen both l...qwJ.a Ca-
nyon Road and the Onega Ri&bway.
The combined prioe tag for ail three
projects is S6S million.
Transportation commissioners
asked Cal tranS District Director
Heinz HcckcToth to explain the
re:asonina behind the p1opoted delays
at the pancJ's Feb. 25 meeting.
The delays arc recommended in the
dcpart.mcnfs proposed. 1985 State
Transportation Improvement Pro-
gram. a five-year transportation plan
prepared by the dcparuncnt but
submitted to theCalifomia Ttanspor-
tation Commission for approval
The proposed I 98S improvement
(Pleue eee COUJlfTT I A2)
School
buses'
tires
slashed
By PHIL SNElDERMAN
Of ... O..,,,......,
Police are t.rytng to find the vandals
who slashed about 100 ures on a
dozen school buses and about SO
other vehicles an downtown Hunt-
1 ngton Beach. 1 On Monday morning. Huntington
Be.ach C"ny (glementary) School Dis-
tnct offic1aJs found 42 ttrcs punctured
on I~ buses parked outside a\ !he
dastnct's transportation yard. -110
17th t Four other school vehicles
1ns1dc a locked garage were un-
touched.
Doroth) Phalhps. the dastnct's
transportation supervisor. said the
1nit1al damage estimate was $4,000.
Because Monda)' was a school
hohda)'. the buses were not n~ed to
transpon ch1ldr~n to and from
classes Re pcm crt"ws worked through
the hohda" to rt"paar the buses so that
studcnt'I could be transponed as
usual toda)'. Phillips said
The vandals appal't'ntl) struck
throughout downtown Hunungton
(Pleue 11ee TlllltS/ A2)
Can supervisor
play Solomon
for SA Heights?
ROBERT
HvM>MAN
Compromise plan
posed for·Helghts
The file ofSanu Ana Heaahts. the
communit}'. ~verted by both horse
trails and fliabt Piths. is expected to
be ckte:muned Wcdnetday wben
m1dents try one lut lime to ptrsuade
the Oranac County Board of upcr-
vitor1 on what~• commv"i-
t y's fUture wtll follow.
ln wake of their Jan. 30 dtt111on to
increase fbahts out of John Wa)ne
Aarpon, the suptrv1sors now must
decide ho-w Santa Ana HC1aht,, which
h at tht' end of the a irport's mam
runway".hould be redeveloped for It
to be compaublc with 11rpon e:\·
pansion and the additional noise 1t
W1 II bri J\I.
While boerd Chamnan Thomu
Riley, whose drstnct includes the
community and the airport, has
almlldy come '-'P with a compromise
plan ... ua at. fellow -WpCTVuott lO
suppon Wtdoctday monuna. arsu-
menu att upeacd to be heard an
favor of sev~ o~r lltcmau"n
For nu Ana Het&hts. the de-
cision appcan to focus on a quc taon
of fllmt It has bun tht' quntton
that rcs1dtnt • count) planntrs. the
P1annma Comm1 ion and the hrd
.. of upcrv1sors have all strua&)cd with
in rcttnt )(ti'S. •
For some residents fairness means
sclhn& their homes for an cquaublc
pnce so they can mo"e away from tht
community and the Jct notJe that for
years h ~ucd them.
Th resident rcprntntcd ~a I'~ caUed A M.nwn••ao l
the sumt WI)' to SCl I fair pncc 1' to
have their propcny ~loncd to allow
for COMtrutt1on <>f offiC't bu1ld1
They can then tell their homes to
commcrc;1al dc\lclopcn and mo"c
away
Fa1mc' toothernciahbon.1n lud·
(Pl ....... 11&toRT9/ A.2)
Riley recommending
conversion of 170
notsc-aff ected homes -----
By J1U"1I' A.OLD ..............
Ora.nae County 8oatd of upcr-
\'tton Chatrman Thomu Rak ~
OtlUMftdod Monda Uw ~
adoptacompromitrland..utep&an fQ(
nta Ana Hctahts that PfOP01C1 the e~cntual conversion of 170 homes an
t~ m \ no11C"-n mw area of t.bc
malt eommun1ty Dttt John Wa nc
"arpon
Rile\' 1n a memorandum dt
tnbutcd to ~u~rv1\0n, recommend~
ed the board adopt a plan that would
allow compcuna gtoups of rnKknts
.. to punue thetr v1"on of :nta Ana
He1Jhts"
He said has plan pcmuts a vanct)' of
land u an the embattled comm\in1·
t)' JUSt off the a1rpon's ma.in ru.nway
and put the county 10 thc l)O'ition of
Pro« 1na land-u!t pcrm1t1 an 11e-
con:San~ wuh property owners' 1ndt·
v1duat prd'crcnccs.
Riley's ~n pr:oposes· -
•The m beavdy ft01'e .. ~
areas alona caoa tree\ C\ICOtu.ally
would bt con "1ted from raide'nual
U tO a pro onal~mlndlt'ltJVC
to.nin1 to aUoW m0tt DOlle<'Om-
paoble offttt buildlQp' and buii.-
PI to develop in tht --. (Pl•• ... lllLS1".
I
. . . .. ... . . :s . • -?
. · .·
..
.. -
.
Underpoud blut
ca~ ponr bJ FV
A power out.aae darkened f lbiout
2.000 homtt and businet1et for
neatly an hour Monday nilh• in
ountain -Valley when an uader-
arouno explosion severed • cabk.
acco"2ins to 1 spoltesmao far IM
Southern Cahfomla Edison Co.
Arca.s east and west of Brook.burst
SU. and briwwa Waner ud Talbert IVOlllCI ~ a&ctitd; TbC °''**°"'which~ no il\i~ ocaam.cJ an the u~ aystem
I I BroOtbun& SU'eel and Marlo Line
in Waamu...r. ~ went out at
8:U p.1n. ud wu mtorcd at 9:47
p.m., the iPQtCtinu aid.
UCI FUND RAISERS NAMED.:.
Proa Al
and staff' from tbe university manaac
various fund·raisioa proanms. io-
clud1n.a the UC Irvine Annual Fund,
the Chancellor's Oub, the Businw
and Industrial Associates and special
fuod-raisina campaigns such as the
o ne under way now for the Donald
Bren Events Center.
The foundation board members
formerly made up the UC Irvine
Board of Overseen, a panel formed
three years ago to advise tbe
chancellor.
The community leaders were
praised by UCI Chancellor Jack
Pehason .
"UC Irvine's successes are due. in
large part. to the 'hard work and
dedication of our friends in the
community," Pcltason said. ..And
our further ambitions can only be
realized with the contfoued suppon
of Orange County's leadership.
"This new board of directors
represents a maturina of the cam~us
and gives us the kind of orpnizauon
which has been so successful at other
major research un.ivenities."
Beyond the eucutive committee,
the UCI foundation has 17 directors
at large.
They arc Patrick Cadigan, Dorothy
Doan, WiJUam P. Ficker, James
Oianuliu, Meredith Khac:'}f.an. Paul F. Man, James P. Mt atty,
Thomas H. Nie11ea. David L Qu.ial-
ina. Elaine Redfield, Mary Rooeevelt.
Gerald Simonis, Thomas Testman,
Marion Bui~arianne McDonald
Mori, Huab 'naton and Roben
Shelton.
PERRY PARENTS •.•
Prom Al
Beach Assemblyman Dennis Brown's
office in an effon to force trustees to
explain their actions.
Board President Brian Garland
and trustees Karen O'Bric and Pat
Cohen voted for the closure. Gary
Nelson and Sherry Barlow voted
against it.
O'Bric cited the oosts of mainten-
ance in moving for the cle>Sure of
Perry. Garland argued that the
closure of Hawes -the recommen-
dation of the blue-ribbon committee
-would displace special education
children houacd tbctt.
COUNTY ROUTE DELAYS PROTESTED •••
l"romAl
program, which is scheduled for
adoptjon by the California Transpor-
tation Commission in July, rec-
ommends that construction of the
SS0.3 million Route SS project, which
would extend the Costa Mesa Free--
way from Bristol to 19th Street. be
pushed back one year. from fi scal
1987-88 to 1988-89.
Similarly. the $1 L.7 million project
to widen Laguna Canyon Road and
straja,btenthe curve at Big Bend also
woufd be delayed a year to 1988-89
The delay proposed for the $3.2
million Onega Highway widening
would push back those improve-
ments from fiscal 1986-87 to 1987-88.
"To shelve these projects is very
unfair," Board of Supervisors Chair-
man Thomas Riley. a county trans·
ponation commissioner. said of the
proposal. '
"I am most hopeful that Orange
County will not be asked to bear the
burden of delay on these and perhaps
other projects_m order to ~mm~
date the funding of new projects m
!~~ini113 counties," be said in a lettct · na Caltrans for an explanation of
the propo9ed delays.
In addressina the commission.
Riley singled out Los Anaeles Coun-
ty, which commissioners long have
believed receives funding at the
expense of Orange County highway
improvements.
Riley also said he found the
proposal "very frightening" and
wanted tb "challenge it," noung that
county transportation com-
missionen have several months to
press for changes before a program is
adopted.
However, Supervisor Bruce
Nestande, who recently was elected
chairman of the powerful California
Transponation Commission, said
that delays were recommended be-
cause there is an across-the-board
funding short.aae for highway proi.
jects.
"The money needed to complete
the projects just is not th~.· the
chairman-elect explained. ''TbeiJI~
is money, pure and simple. we--MeCS
hiaber taxes to pay for the projects
that are on line now."
Because of the sbortaee. caUted by
static psoline tax revenues and
slcyrocketin& road maintenance cosu,
projects throuahout tbe state may
have to be delayed or ·canceled,
Ncstande said.
"All I can uy is Caltrans bas a
responsibility to submit us a time
frame bued on the money available.
It's up to us to take that all and
hammer out a coberent plan that is
fair to the state,'' be added. "111 do all
in my PC>'WCf to procect 0ransc
County. But Ora.ate County is not
alone. Others have it more severe.
Here, at least there only arc delays, no
canoellations."
TIRES SLASHED IN HUNTINGTON •••
From Al
Beach late Sunday or early Monday.
Today. officers were continuing to
take crime reporu from angry motor-
ists.
Police were at a loss "to find a
motive for the slashing spree. aside
from basic vandalism.
"Somebody was mad at somebody
or just mad at the world." speculated
Lt. Merle Schneblin.
Officers have re<:eived about 50
reports of tire slashing incidents in
the downtown area roughly south of
Yorktown Avenue and west of Lake
Street. he said.
ROSE •••
From Al
gotten into the act .
More and more women are ro-
mancing their sweeties with flowers,
flonsts say. This year, a popular
choice for men is a vase of roses or
carnations with balloons and a bottle
of champagne attached. one florist
said.
Schneblin said most of the attacks "l couldn't believe it." she said. "It
were made on cars parked on the was quite a sight. Those vehicles
street, although a few occurred in nearest the street seemed to have
carports. received the most damqc."
"In m ost cases. they slashed two or Phillips said each bus is equipped
more tires on each car," he said. -with six tires. She said the vandals
"Rarely did they hit just one tire." apparently walked around each bus
Schneblin said officers have re-puncturinf the front and the outside
ceived one report of three teen-agers rear tires. n most cases. they did not
-two boys and one girl described as damage the less accessible inside
··punker" types -who may be reanires, stle said.
responsible for the slashing spree. But The school official said she sum-
as of early today, no arrests had been mooed mechanics and other person-
made. net in from the holiday to repair what
Officers believe a sturdy hunting-tires they could. For those too badly
type knife may have been used 1n the damaged, they ordered new bus tires.
vandalism. costing about $142 each. She said the
.. To cut a bus ure, you'd have to crew worked all Monday afternoon to
have something hefty." Schneblin fix the vehicles. She said about l, 100
said . children depend on bus transpor-
School transponat1on supervisor tation in the Huntington Beach
Ph1lhps said the knife "probably was district.
extremely sharp and probably was "If this had happened on a regular
somewhat short so it wouldn't bend school day, we might have had a
when it went 1n. Some of the tires co uple of buses on the road," Phillips
were stabbed eight or 10 times." said. ''But we would have bad 10
Phillips said rnends walking by the buses down. The children would have
bus yard spotted the Oat ures Monday had to get to school they best they
morning and phoned her at home. could."
RILEY URGES HEIGHTS COMPROMISE •••
From Al
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HEIGHTS FUTURE GOES ON THE LINE •••
Prom Al
ing the Bade Bay Community As. work with ABCOM members on a going to put 1n a three-story o ffioe
sociation, means prcservtna the rural, plan that would represent their wish-building next door," said Stellhorn,
residential atmoSphcre of Santa Ana es. S&ld Rieb Adler, _the planner who lives on Acacia Street. "It creates
Hei.abts -a community whose working most closely with the Santa an unstable community."
bucolic character they say is an Ana Heights land-use issue. Stellhorn said a plan that allows (or
irreplaceable amenjty for fast..grow-Adler said Rilct wanted another homes to coexist with office bujldings
in• Oran•'" County. la 'd 'd th Pta simply wouldn't work . ... .._ P n to consi er a ongsi c c n· "You have to have a defined area of
ABCOM members say ·if their nin& ·Commission's rccommen-planning,"shesaid.''lf)'ouaUowfor
neiabbon don•t want to leave, they dation. dual-use or all P.A. (prQfessional-
sbouldn't be forced to go. They ~n While the plan proposed by Riley administrative zoning to allow for
remajn behind with the inaused Jet Monday was written by memben of offices), the community is gone."
ooise and new office buildings. his own staff, it is based ~ly on the Mullan maintains that ABCOM
The Back Bay Community ~ composite plan compiled by the members who want to sell their
sociation, on the other band, says if planning staff and ABCOM represcn-homes and move from the communi-
ABCOM members want to move, tatives. ty have a better opportunity to do so
then move. Sell your home ro The composite plan calls for allo~-under his proposal than the com-
someone tfhO will buy it-but please ing a dual use of homesand offices 10 posite _plan they support.
don't chan,eacommunity you won't Santa Ana Heights, Adler says. ABCOM members can sell their
be living in anymore. " homes as residential property for as Not only would residents not be much, if not more, as what they will Both sides present strong argu-forced to move away against their receive under the office zonin.a.
ments supported by their own will. they would be allowed sell their Mullan says.
proposals, drawings and other plans homes to either a homcbuyer or an The reason why property values
they say can carry them out. office developer. have declined in ~nt years, he says.
Over the past five years, perhaps Adler said while a transition from is because Santa Ana Hci.abts resi-
the stronicst advocate of rezoning the residential to office uses in the dents have been reluctant to make
community for construction of office community might raise problems, improvements in face of an unccnain
buildings and business parks has been they could be addressed by specific future.
Rita Jones, a Cyp ress Street resident building requirements and regu-No one wishes to P.Urchase or
and secretary of ABCOM (an aero-tations. improve a home if it will be lost to
nym created from the names of fi ve "There are going to be inevitable redevelopment, Mullan said.
streets in the community -Acacia, conflicts that are hard to visualize let "It's like being told you have
Birch, Cypress, Orchard and Mesa). alone ensure against, but they can be cancer. You'd probably stop putting
f Sa addressed," Adler said. money into your IRA." The 22-year resident 0 nta ~na The composite plan put together by But with defined areas of planning.
Heights says jct noise has become ABCOM and the county planni ng both the offi ce and the residential nearly intolerable and, following the l bl h recent Board of Supervisors action to staff at Riley's suggestion has angered zoning becomes more va ua e, e
· dail trgh fr 41 those seeking to preserve the com-said. increase average '/ 1 ts om munity. Also, by limiting the area where
to SS. is expected to increase. Jack Mullan, a IS-year resident, business offices can be built to only
Last month, the county Plannirtg says aJlowing homes to exist next to the streets that arc most sensitive to
Commission recommended allowing office buildings would spell noise, it ensures the transition will be
properties in the most noise-sensitive catastrophe. successful.
areas to be rezoned for office build· "If you put mixed uses in there, you By limiting the supply of office
ings. Some homes would be targeted have destroyed the whole nelgh-space. property owners on those
for possible redevelopment as apart· borhood." Mullan said. "Both the · streets have a better cha nce of selling
dents would be entitled to part1c1patc
in a Purchase Assurance Program to
sell their homes.
matter dunng a public heanng
Wednesday.
men ts or condominiums. But more homes and the offices would be hurt.'' and moving away.
In urging supervisors to adopt hjs importantly, the remainder of the Mullan and the Back Bay Com -Riley has only one vote o n the five.
comprom ise plan, Riley notes that community would be preserved for munity Association supponed the member board. But because be rcp-
opposing sides from _the communitr, equestrian and residential uses. plan approved Jan. 22 by the county resents the community, fellow super-
•The area west of ()press trect
wo uld be zoned to permit both the
current agncultural zoning and pro-
fess1onal-adm1nistrative.
•The area east of Cypress Street
would be zoned to permit both the
current agricultural zoning or. upon
conversion. medium-density resi-
dential units, with a maximum of 12
units per acre.
•The area along the nonherly side
of Mesa Dnve. e1tcept for lots at the
intersection of Acacia Street, would
be retained for residential uses.
The Santa Ana Heights land-use
plan, an imponant component of the
wider John Wayne Airport expansion
project, is intended to bnng the
community into compliance with
state noise regulations.
Supervisors, who deferred action
on the plan during a Jan. 30 airport
hearing, are scheduled to take up the
Just Call
642-6086
Detty Pl~t
Detlv.fY
I• QuetefttMd
"'°"°"• '• 1<11 " r"" <to "°' ...... '""' -by s )() o "' o• ot•<>'• 7 om ..-o JOO• ropy will OI' ""-""
Riley. whose d1stnct includes both
Santa Ana Heights and John Wayne
A1rpon, said he found that neither the
plan adopted by the Orange County
Planning Comm1ss1on nor a statT-
recommended alternative ··accom-
modates the goals of both of the
philosophies that abound in Santa
Ana Heights ...
The staff-recommended altema-
11 ve did not go far enou~ to
accommodate the goals of residents
who wish to remain in their homes,
while the Planning Commission's
plan did not adequately address the
desires of those who wish to have
their property redesignated for non-
residential uses and sold. he said.
Riley aide Ken Hall, who handles
airport-related matters for the super-
visor. said there are 170 ho mes in the
core area proposed for full conversion
while 102 homes fall into the area
where existing land uses would be
melded with new zonmit.
will make "compelhng arguments While the Planning Commission's Planning Commission. visors may defer to bis proposal.
for one plan or another during the proposal leaves Jones and several of Cisca Stellhorn. president of the Yet with a history of chaOJCS in the
hearing. her ABCOM neighbors out of the Back Bay Community Association, proposals for their community, Santa
"But, I believe it is mandatory that office rezoning plans. Riley's said the plan to be recommended b)' Ana Heights residents say they're
we seek a compromise, or I am sure proposal does not. Riley "wipes out the eotire oommun1-taking nothin& for granted.
we will accomplish very little in the Faced with the Planning Com-ty." "This is the last chance," Mullan
end except that we will continue to mission res;ommendation, Riley in-''Who is going to want to move in said. "Sure, we'll make our position
have problems with land use in Santa structcd the countv planning staff to here when you know your neighbor is known."
Riley also explained that in prcpa~-AnaHcights:hcsaid. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ing his compromise plan, he found 1t
very difficult to recommend any plan
that encouraged residential use of the
most noise-sensitive area, as many
community residents bad asked.
Among groups Riley said be ~et
with in the past several weeks while
developing the plan were representa-
tives from the Back Bay Homeownen
Association, proponents of the Plan-
ning Commission's plan and mem-
bers of ABCOM, a group of home-
owners who pref erred the statT-
rcco m mended alternative.
Desig~ed.,_
Finished
Installed·
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FIRST EDITION
T.11 .[l\~ 111-11 1Jtd·• • I••
reewa
an
I
Coaat
It'll cost you more to get
yourcaroutof hockin
Costa Mesa as city ap-
proves fee Increase for
towing cars./ A3
Irvine residents give their
views on the school dis-
trlct's dispute with the
teachers./ A3
California
A stranded woman
motorist couldn't count
on the Border Patrol for
help./A5
Nation
Conversations between
Bernhard Goetz and a
female reporter about the
shooting of four young
men in a subway were
tape-recorded./ A4
Saudi Arabia's King Fahd
ls asking U.S. to put the
pressure on Israel to
agree to concessions
with Palestine./ A4
World
South Korean opposition
party does surprisingly
well in elections, but not
well enough./ A4
Soviet officials say
Chernenko is 'on va-
cation' and won't be able
to meet with Greek
premier./ A5
Mlnd&Body
Toxic shock syndrome
may not be In the head-
llnes anymore, but there
are still cases1hat can be
deadly./81
Why doesn't the good
news of vintage mar-
riages make the
grapevine? /81
Sports
Tiny Christ College Is
upgralng Its basketball
program In a big way -
with a new $5.2 million
gym./C1
A sellout crowd watched
boxing In Orange County
Tuesday nlght./C1
Fountain Valley Hlgh's
girls basketball team Is
cooking behind the play
of Jackie Cook./C3
Entertainment
An ambitious production
of " Jesus Christ Super-
star" hits the right note at
Saddleback College./83
Bualneu
AT & T plans a 15 percent
discount for long-dis-
tance callera./IM
INDEX
Erma Bombeek 82
Bridge 88
Bultetln Board A3
Buetneu 84
Claulfted C8-t
Comk:a ee
Crouword ce
Death Notices C5
HOf'OICOpe C1
Ann Lenct.rs 8 2
Mind and Body 81-2
Opinion A8
Paparazzi 81
Ponce Log A3
Pubtlc Notto.II CM
Sportt C1-5
TeteYtllOn 82
Thelter1 83
WMther A2
•
'.
er count
Gooeymeea
CoaatJ worken were .mt cleanl•& ap a Lap.Ila Billa
lntenectlon Monday eYeldn& after a tanker track o•er-
turned and epWecl 3,000 tallou of upbalt roonn,
material onto tbe road. The m&ta.re, etmt .. r to one a8ed u
a road Mlfllant, ~ to harden on contact with air. The
accident occarrecf wlalle Guy 8c~aetter, 25, of Lap.Ila
Ntaael wu tarntnc from Lake Foreet Drt..-e onto Del Larao
Drl•e at at-oat 1 p .m. llondaI and ht.8 load aldfted, Tie
truck belonc• to Scholten Roonnc Sentce of ao.ton Viejo.
No injuries were reported ln the accident, bat tramc wu
affected when the tanker•• contents coated the lntenection
to a depth of two feet ln 80me 8J>Ot8.
Rosy Valentines mean more long green
By LISA MAHONEY
ud SCOTr STODDARD
Of .. .,.., ........
So. you want to buy roses for that
special someone on Valentine's Day.
Candy's still dandy, but on Thurs-
day it just won't do?
Well brace yourself, big spender.
That long-stemmed display of devo-
tion will cost you.
A dozen tastefu lly arranged roses
are sellinJ for between $50 and $60 at
area flonsts. A boxed version of the
delicate beauties costs slightly less.
Discouraacd? Don't be. Romance
can still bloom by the half-dozen at a
comparable reduction in price. And
cheaper still arc red carnations or an
arrangement of Spring flowers like
tulips, daisies. sweet peas and irises. ,
area florists say.
If you're Still determined to send
the heart of your heart a rosy message.
consider this: different colored
flowers convey different emotions.
Red roses represent love and arc
the most popular choice for Valen-
tine's Day, says Sandra Rico. man-
ager of the flower Garden in Hunt-
ington Beach.
White roses symbolize purity and
innocence while the yellow variety
can suggest either fnendship or
jealousy. she said.
Pink roses. like white, mean purity
and simplicity. They arc given by
those w1th ''a clean heart," says
Emma McCollom, manager and dc-
siencr of Magnolia Aorist in Foun-
tain Valley.
Floral designers can create arrange-
men ts that convey the giver's techngs.
McColl um says. "It says something.
lf's not just a creation. 1t talks.··
If you want to say. ··1 love you,"
order a pink and white flower ar-
rangement. If friendship 1s what"s on
your mind. smooth yellow blooms
arc the proper choice.
But, while color combinauons arc
perfectl y appropriate. don't make the
mistake of ordering a white. yellow
and and purple flower arrangement
for your honey, flonsts warn. Such a
grouping conveys sadness and 1s
commonly used 1n funerals.
Valentine's Day ranks with
Mother's Day and Chnstmas in the
posy trade, florists say. And it's
especially so now that women have
gotten into the act.
More and more women are ro-
mancmg their sweeties with flowers.
flonsts say. This year. a popular
choice for men ts a vase of roses or
carnauons with balloons and a bottle
of champagne attached. one flonst
said
School skippers aren't off the hook
Newport won·~ halt anti-truancy campaign
In wakeofsupremecourt'sdetention ruling_
By STSVE MARBLE
Of ............
Newpon Beach police will not
abando~ a successful anti-truancy
patrol even though state law prohibiu
police from detaini~ young people
unless there is proof they are playing
hooky.
Police said they hope to work
around the recent court ruling by
keeping contacts with kids on a ''low-
key level."
Youthful-looking people should
understand that they arc free to leave
or can refuse to answ~r questions
when approached by officers, ad\. ISCd
City Attorney Roben Burnham.
Burnham said police must avoid
leaving the impression that the per·
son is being ordered to an wcr
questions or is bemg rcstramed from
lcavtng.
The legality of the truanq
crackdown was thrown into questton
last month following a ruhng b) the
4th D1stnct Court of Appeals.
The coun ruled that pohce can not
detain a )outhful-loolung person
unless the-. have first-hand knowl-
edge that the person is cutting school.
The Orange County Distnct At-
torney's ofli~ has asked the state
uprcmc Court to overturn the de-
c1s1on but the biJh court has not
1nd1cated whether It will consider tht.'
l'C'<JUCSL
In the meantime. C'apt. Jim Gar-
(Pleue eee TRUANCY I A2)
Mesa·sRoute
extension may be
shelved for a year
By JEFF ADLER °' .. ..., .......
The Orange Couo()' Trampcw-
t.atiQn Commission demaDdBd IO
know Monday why stale ofticiala are
recommcoding that three loae-
sought hi~way im provement pn>:-
jcc:ts -1ncJuding the Route SS
extension through Costa Mae -be
delayed a year.
Besides the Route SS ex•msion.
State Department of Transpor1atioe
officials arc rccommendin& delays ia
projects to widen both Lasuna Ca-
CPl-..e .. comfTY/A.2)
Tires
slashed
onl2
buses
Huntington cops say
50 other vehicles
damaged by vandals
By PlllL SNEIDER.MAN °' .. ..., .........
Police are trying to find lhe vandals
who slashed a bow I 00 tU'CS on a
dozen school buses and about 50
other vehicles tn downtown Hunt-
ington Beach.
On Monday morn1ng. Huntington
Beach Ctty (Elemen~) School Dt s.-
tnct officials found 42 ttrcs punctured
on 12 buses parked ouu1de at the
d1stnct's transpon.auon yard. 770
I 7th St. Four other school vehicles
ans1de a locked garage were un-
touched.
Doroth> Philltps. the dtstncfs
transportation supervisor. satd the
tnttlal damage esumate was $4,000.
Because Monday was a school
holiday. the buses were not needed to
transport children to and from
classes. Repair crews worked through
the holtday to repair tht' buses so that
students could be transported as
usual toda)'. Ph1lhps said.
The vandals apparcntJ) struck
throughout downtown Huntmgton
Beach late unda) or early Monday.
Toda). officers were cont1nu10g to
take cnme repons from angr) motor-
ists.
Police were at a loss to find a
mou' e for the slashing spree. aside
from basic vandahsm
··Somebody was mad at somebody
or JUSt mad at the world." speculated
Lt Merle hnebltn.
Officers have recc1 ved about 50
repons of Lire slashmg mcidents in
the do"ntown area roughly south of
Yorl to"n '°''enue and west of Lake
. treet. he \aid
Schnehhn said most of the attaclcs
were made on cars parked on the
street. although a few occurred in
carports
•· 1 n ml1'>t cases the\ slashed two or
more tare' on each · car." he said.
.. Rarel) did the} hit JU~ one tire."
Schnehhn said officers have re-
l"'et' ed one rcpoTl of thrtt tccn-.agcrs
-two ho''i and one g1r1 described as
"punler" I} pes -who may be
responsible for the slashtng spree. But
as of earl' toda-.. no ~ts had been
made
(Pleue eee TIRBS/ A2)
Can supervisor
pl ~y .Solo~on
for SA Heights?
ROBERT
HYNDMAN
Compromise plan
posed for Heights
The fate ofSlrb Ana Heiahts. the M ii brina.
community tra~ by botb hone While board Cbainnan Thomas
trails and ftiaht Dltba. Is Cllpected to Riley, whole di1trict lncluckl tbe
be cktcnnintd · Wednada)' when commum()' and the airport. hu
residents try ont ~time to persuade already come up with a comprom1te
the Ora• ounty 8oetd of Suptt-plan he will ask fellow 1uperv11911 ao
visors on what coum: the co.mmuni-support Wcdnetda:y momina, arp-
ty'1 future will fOQo•. mcnts arc upccted to be Ma.rd 1n
• In wake oflheir Jn. 30 deci ion to favor of seven! other altttnatav
increase flatht• out of John Wayne For Sanaa Ana H•u. lhc de·
Alf1K.>n. the upcf'Vitors now must cmon appan to focus on a question
dttadchowS.nt.aAna Hciahts, which offaimeu. It ha bttn the question
lies at the end of the aarpon's main that ruiden munty p&.nnen. the
nanway, should beRdevcloped for 1t ,,,_nruna Commi ion and iM Board
to be com1>1llblc with airpon 'Jl-ofSu'pcrv1son have a.II strua&led With
pent.ion and the additaoaaJ aoitt il : an m:cnt ~
Focu s o ~ TH f No-.s
For some ~Kknts. fairness man
sclhng their homes for an cq'utabk
pntt so they can move away from the
communitr and the Jet noise that for
years has ptqucd them.
ThOIC' l"CSadcnu. rcprCKntcd by a
lf'OUP called A9COM, ma1nt11n that
the su~t way to get a fiir pntt i to
ba ve thcu property rezoned to allow
for construction of office ~utldi
They can then ttll lhttr horn to
commercial dcvtlopen and move
away
Fa1m toothtrncaahbon. includ-
'"I the Beck 8a Communi A
wcuallon. means prncniina the rural.
~ ... DIOllT8/A2)
Riley recommending
conversion ofi70
notse-aff ected homes
I J JEFF Al>LEJl .... ..., ........
Ontf\l'C Lounty Board of per-
VlSO Chairman Th ma Rak ~
ommcndtd Monda)' that rupcmson
•<S pt a com prom land-use plan for
nta na Hct&)\t that pro the
eventual c n"mion of 170 mes an
tM m0S1 not sen 1t1\C un of tbc
small rommun1ty nnr John Wa 1M
~upon
Ralc~. 1n a memorandum d1
tn~ted to upc" •~n.. l"C\:ommcnd·
C'd the board adopt a plan that would
:allo" oompct1nt lfOUps of l'C$tdcnts
··to purs~ their vtston of nt.a l\na
Hrtght ."
Heg1d his plan ptmutsa vanC't)' of
land u~s 1n the embattled l'Ommuni-
t~ JUSt ofT tht" a1rpon's ma1n runwa)'
and put tht" councy 1n the position of
proct "'' land-use permits an ac-cordance wtth pro~y owncn' ind1·
'wiu.al preferences
R 1 IC')" s plan propoics:
•Tbt m t Miwal\ no1se-af1Cacd
areas alona ACKLI tTCCt eventually
would be convcrud from rcsidc'Otial
u to a prof; 1-edmtnl tl'IU~c
1oruna 10 allow moc-c n0tte<Ofll-
paublt ofT'tet tM.a11J1 and tNsiM'll
P1r to dc-.clop 10 the area. Resi~
~-ltD.&T/A9)
I
~ •• '" ... •• • .. :-..
~ .. " "' !! .. • .. . • • • • t
. . . .. • . .. . .. .. .. .. .
.. .. .. .. .. .. ..
~
"I .. .. .. . ...
:·
Rights question postpones
ex-Nazi war crimes hearfng
LOS ANOELES (AP) -A U • ~ ..... to a a.t.aunuse
pa411pC!D.._t MOllday of die Clltra·
ditioa beeriQI for aUeeed war crimi-
ul Andr:ija Anukovic, riddiq to a
rcqueat for 1eltimony ffnt tom the
had 4f the aovenuneot'• Nazi·
huntina 5';:"ad. U .S. . . 1e Vol~ Brown
ordered N Sher, bmd oftbe Oftkc
of Special love.tiptions. to fty here
Wedoeeday and ladfy about the
aenet.is of the cue apio1t Anukovic.
Lawyen for I.be SS-year.old
Y U&Ollavian illuniarut now livina ill Sumidc Coloay claim that OSI. an
offac:e known for~down Nazis
in the United Scates. liwiated the
extndition rtquest by the Yuaoslav
govenimenl
Brown said be would continue the
enradition hearina, whlcb bad been
ICbedWed ti> bclin Wtdoetday, uatiJ
Feb. l 9 to allow ~her'• ~ony and
p vc defense attorneys more time to
~·Sher will be \be only witness
called on the sole is.sue of duelrocess and wligation," Brown ui .. The
question will be whether tbere was any impermissible instiption on the
pan of the United Statea aovcm·
ment."
Such activity, Brown said. would
.raise: a question of wbetber
Anukovic's riabt of due process was
violated.
The defense team has araued
vehemently that Anukovic is beina
subjected to violations of his civil
ri&bts, for<:ed to face accusations
wllicb were raitcd at other proceed·
inplS~qo. They contend thu11
doubleJeOpardy.
Artukovic, who bas a cablftet
minister in tbe Nazi puppet state of
Croatia durin1 Wortd · War ti, is
accused of beina Uie so-called
"Butcher of the Balltans" who mas-
tennindcd the ala·~ of 7'°,000
Jews, Serbs and Gypties in what is
now Yuaoslavia.
Artukovic bu been fiabtlna efforts
to deport him for some .0 years, but
the current campaiJn to send bim
back to Yu1oslavia is. the first one
spearheaded dircctly by the Yu&oslav
government.
He is hospitalized at J...ong Beeb
Naval Hospital, suJftrio& form mul-
tiple ailments includiq•ffiictions of
ofd qe.
TIRES SLASHED IN HUNTINGTON •••
From Al
Officers believe a sturdy huntins-
typc knife may have been used in the
vandalism.
"To cut a bus tire, you'd have to
have somethina hefty," Schneblin
said .
School nansportation 'supervisor
Phillips said the knife "probably was
extremely sharp and probably was
somewhat short so it wouldn't bend
when it went in. Some of the tires
were stabbed ei&bt or I 0 times.••
PbiUi said friends walk.in& by the
bus y:f:pottcd the Oat tires Monday
momina and phoned her at home.
.. l couldn't believe It," lhe said "It
was quite a si&bL Tboec vehicles
nearest the street teemed to have
received the most damaee ...
Phillips said each bus is equipped
with six tires. She said the vaDda11
apperently walked around each bus
puncturina the front and the outside ·rear tires. ln most calCS, they did not
ctamar the less acx:euible inside . sbe said. ~ool official said lbe sum-
moned mechanics and other pc1"SOD·
nel in from the holiday to repair what
~res they could. For th0te too badly
damlled. they ordered new bua tires,
costinaabout $142 each. She said the
crew worked au Monday afternoon to
fix the vehicles. She said about I, l 00
children depend on bus transpor-
tation in the Huntinston Beach
district. ·
"If this bad happened 00 a f'CIUlat
school day, we mi&ht ba,ve bad a
couple of buses on the road." Phillips wcf. "But we would fiave ~ 10
buteS down. The children would have
bad to act to school they best they
could.''
TRUANCY PATROLS •••
From Al
diner said police will continue to seek
out school-skipping students in the
beach city and take them into tempor·
a.ry eustodv.
"A lot -of this is semantics
consentual contact versus deten·
tion," Gardiner explained. "It's a
very tine line."
.. Operation Back To School" bas
resulted in hi&ber school attendance
and lower daytime crime figures since
it was started last September, Set.
Paul Hennisey said.
Students found out of school are
taken back to their campus or, if they
arc not ~ewport Beach residents, arc
held at the etty jail until their parents
can arranae to pick. them up.
The truancy crackdown bas
brought acnerally favorable reaction
from school administratof1 and
parents. Some students, tbouab, have
voiced objections.
Jn the first months of the propam,
the number of tnWltl detained by
police went up S33 percen.t from the
previous year -from 42 to 224.
During the same period, daytime
crime went down 12 pen:etit and daily
school attendance soared 22 pcrccnt.,
aocordina to police fisures.
COUNTY ROUTE DELAYS PROTESTED •••
From Al
nyon Road and the Ortep HWiway.
The combined price tag for afl three
projects is $65 million.
Transportation commissioners
uked Caltrans District Director
Heinz Heck.eroth to explain the
reasoning behind the proposed delays
at the panel's Feb. 25 meeting.
The delays are recommended in the
department's propoled 1985 State
Transportation Improvement Pro-
iram. a five-year transportation plan
prepared by the department but
submitted to the California Transpor·
talion Commission for approval
The proposed 1985 improvement
prosram, which is scheduled for
adoption by the California Transpor·
talion Commission in July, rec-
ommends that construction of the
SS0.3 million Route 55 project, which
would extend the Costa Mesa free·
way from Bristol to 19th Street, be
pushed back one year, from fiscal
1987-88 to 1988.89.
Similarly, the S 11. 7 million project
to widen Lquna Canyon Road and
straightenBig Bend Curve also would
be delayed a year to 1988-89.
The delay proposed for the $3.2
million Ortep Highway ~defting Nestande, who reccntJy was elected
would push back those improve-chairman of the powerful California
ments from fitcal 1986-87 to 1987-88. Transportation Commission. said
"To shelve these projects is very -that delays were recommended ~
unfair," Board ofSupervison Chair· cause there is an across-the-board
man Thomas Riley, a county trans-funding shortage for highway pro-
portation commjssioner, said of the jects.
proposal. "The money needed to complete
"I am most hopeful that Orange the projects just is not there.' the
County will not be asked to bear the chairman-elect explained. "The iesue
burden of delay on these and perhaps is money, pure and simple. We need
other projects in order to accommo. higher taxes to pay for the projects
date the fundin;1 of new projects in that arc on line now."
adjoining counlles." he said in a letter Because of the shortage, caused by
asking Caltrans for an explanation of static gasoline tax revenues and
the proposed delays. skyrocketing road maintenance costs.
In addressing the comm1ss1 on, projects throu&hout the state may
Riley singled out Los Angeles Coun-have to be delayed or canceled,
ty, which commissioners long have Nestande said.
believed receives funding at the "All I can say is Caltrans bas a
expense of Orange County highway responsiblity to submit us a time
improvements. frame based on the money available.
Riley also said he found the It's up to us to take that all and
proposal "very frightening" and hammer out a coherent plan that is
wanted to "challenge it," noting that fair to the state," be added. "I'll do aU
county transportation com-in my power to protect Orange
missioners have several months to County. But Orange County is not
press for changes before a program is alone. Others have it more severe.
adopted. Herc. at least there only arc delays, no
However. Supervisor Bruce cancellations."
RILEY URGES HEIGHTS COMPROMISE •••
Fr°?' A l
dents would be entitled to participate
in a Purchase Assurance Program to
sell their homes.
•The area west of Cypress Street
would be zoned to permit both the
current agricultural zoning and pro-
fessional-administrati ve.
•The area cast of Cypress Street
would be zoned to permit both the
current agricultural zoning or, upon
conversion, medium-density resi·
dential units, with a maximum of 12
units per acre.
·•The area along the northerly side
of Mesa Drive; except for lots at the
interse~ion 01 Acacia Street, would
be retained for residential uses.
The Santa Ana Heights land-use
plan, an important component of the
wider John Wayne Airport expansion
project. is intended to bnng the
community into compliance with
state noise regulations.
Supervisors, who deferred action
on the plan during a Jan. 30 airport
hearing. are scheduled to take up ttie
Just Call
642-6086
Mond*y ~,.., " \'OU OQ
l'IOl•NW ~ oeC*' Oy
• 10 p "' oel be'foP9 1 o '" and YfNI COPY .,. °" ...... .o
matter during a public hearing
Wednesday.
Riley, whose distnct includes both
Santa Ana Heights and John Wayne
Airport, said be found that neither the
plan adopted by the Orange County
Planning Commission nor a staff·
reco111mendcd alternative "accom·
modates the goals of both of the
philOSO(>hies that abound in Santa
Ana Heights."
The staff-recommended alterna·
tivc did not go far enou~ to
accommodate the aoats of residents
who wish to remain in their homes,
while the Plannina Commission's
plan did not adequately address the
desires of those who wish to have
their property rcdesignated for non·
residential uses and sold, be said.
Riley aide Ken Hall, who band.Jes
airport-related matters for the super·
visor, said there arc 170 homes in the
core area proposed for full convcnion
while I 02 homes fall into the area
where existing land uses would be
melded with new zonin-.
In urging supervisors to adopt his
compromise plan, Riley notes that
opposing sides from the communitX
will make "compelling arguments •
for one plan or another during the
bearing.
"But, I believe it is mandatory that
we seek a compromise, or I am sure
we will accomplish very little in the
end except that we will continue to
have problems with land use in Santa
Ana Heights." he said.
Riley also explained that in prepar-
ing his compromise plan, he found it
very difficult to recommend any flan
that encouraged residential use o the
most noise-sensitive area, as many
community residents had asked.
Among groups Riley said he met
with in the past several weeks while
developing the plan were representa·
tives from the Back Bay Homeowners
Association, proponents of the Plan-
nin& Commission's plan and mem-
bers of ABCOM, a group of home-
owners who preferred the staff·
recommended alternative.
Wbat do you like abo.t tlle Dally Piiot? Wuc don't yoe like? Call Ute
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nlltor on any topic. Coetrtb11on co 01r Letten col1mn m11t lacl1de tlllell'
name aad telef>M•e Hmber for verification. No clrcalatloa calls, please.
Tell •• wltat'• oa yoar mind.
ORANGE COAST
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HEIGHTS FUTURE GOES ON THE LINE •••
Jl'romAl
residential atmosphere of Santa Ana
Heipta - a community whose
bucolic cb&ractcr they say is an
irreplaceable amenity for fast.grow·
inJ Ora~ Countv.
ABCOM members say if their
neighbon don't want to leave, they
shouldn't be forced to go. They can
remain behind with the increased jet
noise and new office buildinp.
The Back. Bay Community As-
sociation, on the other band, says ii
ABCOM members want to move,
then move. Sell your home to
someone who wilJ buy it -but please
don't ehanlc a community you won't
be livina in anvmorc.
Both sides . prucnt strong argu·
ments supported by their · own
proposals. drawings and other plans
they say can carry them out.
Over the past five yean, perhaps
the stroneest advocate of rezoning the
commuruty for construction of office
bui Id i ngs and business parks has been
Rita Jones, a Cypress Street resident
and secretary of ABCOM (an acro-
nym created from the names of five
streets in the community -Acacia,
Birch, Cypress. Orchard and Mesa).
The 22-year resident of Santa Ana
Heights SflYS jet noise has become
nearly intblerable and, following the
recent Board of Supervisors action to
increase average daily Oights from 41
to SS , is expected to mcrcase.
While the proposal approved last
month by the County Planning
Commission leavesJonesand several
of her ABCOM neighbors out of the
office rezoning plans, Riley's
proPOSal docs not.
f'aced with the Planning Com·
mission recommendation1 Riley in·
structed the county planning staff to
work with ABCOM members on a
plan that would represent their wish·
es. said Rich Adler, \he planner
work.in& most closely with the Santa
Ana Heights land-use issue.
Adler said Riley wanted another
plan to consider alongside the Plan·
ninJ Commission's recommen·
dauon.
While the plan proposed by Riley
Monday was written by members of
his own staff, it is based largely on the
composite p~lan compiled by the
planning staff and ABCOM represeo·
tatives.
The composite plan calls for allow·
ing a dual use of homes and offices in
Santa Ana Hei~ts. Adler •YI-
Not only would residents not be
forced to move away apinst their
will, they would be allowed sell their
homes to either a homebuyer or an
office deve}.Qpcr.
Adler said while a transition from
residential to offioc uses in the
community might raite problems,
tbey could be addressed by specific
building requirements and reau·
lations.
"There are &oin& to be inevitable
conflicts that are hard to visualize Jet
alone ensure against, but they can be
addressed." Adler said.
The composi le plan put together by
ABCOM and the county planning
staff at Riley's suggestion has angered
those seeking to preserve the com-
munity.
Jack Mullan, a I S-ycar resident,
says allowing homes to e~ist next to
office buildings would spell
catastrophe.
"If you put mixed uses in there, you
have destroyed the whole nelgh·
borhood," Mullan said. "Both the
homes and the offices would be hurt."
Mullan an<f the Back Bay Com-
munity Association supported a plan
approved Jan. 22 by the county
Planning Commission that allowed
for properties in the most noise·
sensitive areas to be rezoned for office
buildings. Some homes would be
targeted for possible redevelopment
as apartments or condominiums.
But more importantly, the re·
mainder of the community would be
preserved for equestrian and residen-
tial uses.
Cisca Stellhorn. president of the
Back Bay Community Association,
said the plan to be recommended by
Riley .. wipes out the entire comm um·
ty."
"Who is going to want to move in
here when you k.now your neighbor is
going to put in a three•story office
building next door," said Stellhorn,
who hves on Acacia Street. "It creates
an unstable community."
Stellhorn said a plan that allows for
homes to coexist with office buildings
simply wouldn't work .
"You haveto haveadeftnedareaof
planning," she said. "If you allow for
dual-use or all P.A. (professional-
administrati ve zoning to allow for
offices). the community is gone."
MuJJan maintains lbat ABCOM
members who want to sell their
homes and move from the communi-
ty have a better opportunity to do so
under his proposal than the com·
posite plan they support.
ABCOM members can sell their
homes as residential property for as
much, if not more, as what tber will
receive under the office zonina.
Mullan says.
Tbe reason why property values
have declined in recent yean, he says,
is because Santa Ana Heights resi-
dents have been reluctant to make
improvements in face of an uncertain
future.
No one wishes to P.urchasc or
improve a home if it will be lost to
redevelopment. Mullan said.
"It's like being told you have
cancer. You'd probably stop putting
money into your IRA.'
But with defined areas of planning,
both the office and the residential
zoning becomes more valuable, be
said.
Also. by limiting the area where
business offices can be built to only
the streets that are most sensitive to
noise, it ensures the transition will be
successful.
By limiting the supply of office
space, property owners on those
streets have a better chance of selling
and moving away.
Riley has only one vote on the five·
member board. But because be rep-
resents the community, fellow super·,
visors may defer to his proposal.
Yet wi th a history of cbaQJCS in the
proposals fortheircommumty, Santa
Ana Heights residents say they're
taking nothing for granted.
"This is the last chance," Mullan
said. "Sure, we'll make our position
k.nown."
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